Hong Kong: Isolation facility handed over to Govt Chief Secretary John Lee today visited the community isolation facility (CIF) in Tsing Yi after attending a seminar to firm up the detailed arrangements for handing over the facility from the contractor to the Hong Kong Special Administrative Region Government. Mr Lee met Liaison Office of the Central People's Government (LOCPG) in the Hong Kong SAR Deputy Director Chen Dong and representatives of contractor China State Construction International Holdings during the seminar to discuss the handover arrangements. Constructed with the Mainland's support, the CIF in Tsing Yi is the first facility completed in just seven days. It will offer around 3,900 additional beds for emergency isolation, mainly for COVID-19 patients with no or mild symptoms. In addition to accommodating actual isolation needs, the facility is equipped with common facilities including bathrooms and toilets. Such an arrangement is similar to those in the community treatment facility at AsiaWorld-Expo and public hospitals, meeting the requirements of public health control. The Hong Kong SAR Government will commence operation of the facility after its handover. Mr Lee then visited the Tsing Yi facility together with Secretary for Development Michael Wong and several officials. They were briefed by relevant bureaus and departments about the preparatory work on the daily management of the facility, as well as the preparation and support for medical personnel who will provide services at the facility. While chatting with the Hospital Authority's medical personnel, Mr Lee showed support for them and expressed gratitude for their services at the facility which will soon be in operation. He encouraged members of the Security Bureau's anti-epidemic task force and the Civil Aid Service to be dedicated in their duties in providing necessary supplies and appropriate support to people staying in the facility. The Chief Secretary also went to Lok Ma Chau and the former site of The Boxes in San Tin to inspect the construction progress of two other community isolation and treatment facilities being constructed with the Mainland's support. He thanked colleagues in various departments and contractors for their close co-operation in providing a large number of additional CIFs for Hong Kong within a short period of time. He also requested relevant departments to strengthen communications and respond promptly to ensure the smooth operation of the facilities after they have come into service. Mr Lee said he is very grateful to the central government for its support measures and the LOCPG for its all-out co-ordination for Hong Kong in the fight against the epidemic. The Hong Kong SAR Government will make good use of the country's support and rally the community's efforts to win the battle against the virus and stabilise the epidemic as soon as possible, he added. This story has been published on: 2022-03-02. To contact the author, please use the contact details within the article. Winners for "When Koala Meets Panda" 2021 China-Australia Short Video Contest announced 17:12, March 01, 2022 By Mengyuan Chen ( People's Daily Online Sydney, March 1 (People's Daily Online) The Online Award Ceremony for the 2021 "When Koala Meets Panda" China-Australia Short Video Contest was held on Feb. 25, 2022. With over 1.64 million views on China's social media platforms, the Final Award went to Kevin Huang with his video called "Interpret NT with the Book of Changes." The Online Award Ceremony of When Koala Meets Panda 2021 China-Australia Short Video Contest. (Photo/People's Daily Online) The contest was hosted by the Consulate-General of The Peoples Republic of China in Brisbane and organized by Peoples Daily Online Australia. The Online Award Ceremony was hosted by Max Silk, the Final Award winner of the 2018 "When Koala Meets Panda" China-Australia Short Video Contest. Aiming to deepen mutual understanding between the two countries, build on the relationship between Chinese and Australians, and promote cultural exchanges, the theme for this year was "2021 When Koala Meets Panda." From September 1 to November 30, 2021, nearly 150 entries were received through Facebook, Twitter, Instagram and TikTok. Reviewed by a professional judging panel consisting of well-known Australian TV presenters, producers and academics, eight Outstanding Awards and four Individual Awards were selected in December 2021. "Best Story Award": Mark and His Wing Chun story by Zhiyuan Ren http://v.people.cn/n1/2021/1220/c239891-32312307.html "Best Experience Award": Interpret NT with the Book of Changes by Kevin Huang http://v.people.cn/n1/2021/1220/c239891-32312306.html "Best Presentation Award": My 2021 by Siqi Zhong http://v.people.cn/n1/2021/1220/c239891-32312305.html "Best Cooperation Award": Vegetarian Abalone by Haoran Lv and Lorne Jones http://v.people.cn/n1/2021/1220/c239891-32312304.html These four Individual Awards were posted on social media platforms in China and received more than 5 million views, with the entry "Interpret NT with the Book of Changes" winning the Most Popular in China Award. At the ceremony, Kevin Huang received the award from Xu Jie, Consul-General of the People's Republic of China in Brisbane. Huang, from Guangdong, China, is currently working in Darwin, Australia. In 2013, he came to Darwin to study at the age of 19. Majoring in Architecture, he is very interested in video production and has participated in the contest for the past two consecutive years in a row. Im honored to win the Most Popular in China Award. Its a great opportunity for us Australian-Chinese to express our feelings and experiences with videos. Thanks to this platform, he said. Colin Mackerras, an Australian sinologist and Emeritus Professor at Griffith University, attends the ceremony. (Photo/People's Daily Online) Professor Colin Mackerras, Australian sinologist and Emeritus Professor at Griffith University, is a member of this years judging panel. He affirmed the positive role played by the contest, saying it is extremely important for each of us to understand other people's cultures. Cultural exchange is something that is not so rare, but it's really important, because it is part of people-to-people exchanges. And that, I think, is something that is so important for bilateral relations between different countries. Xu Jie, Consul-General of the Peoples Republic of China in Brisbane, gives a speech at the ceremony. (Photo/People's Daily Online) Chinas Consul-General thanked the participants and judges for their active involvement and support during the competition. We received more than 500 videos in the past five years. Some videos depict beautiful sceneries. Some tell touching stories. Some introduce life overseas. But there is one scene in common: They're all breaking down cultural barriers and promoting mutual understanding between Chinese and Australians, he said. (Web editor: Hongyu, Bianji) Global law firm Norton Rose Fulbright is expanding its financial services regulatory practice in the Middle East with the hire of new partner Matt Shanahan. Shanahan joins the firms Dubai office from Clyde & Co, where he was a partner and Head of the Middle East regulatory practice. He has 18 years experience in financial services regulation, including 13 in the UAE, and has also worked as a regulator at the UK FSA (now FCA) and the Dubai International Financial Centres DFSA. Shanahans appointment will significantly increase Norton Rose Fulbrights financial services capability in the Middle East and he will work with the firms wider global team to develop the offer in the region. An experienced financial services partner, Shanahan advises on both contentious and non-contentious financial services matters. His direct regulator experience means he is also able to advise clients on the likely behaviour of regulators. Mohammed Paracha, head of Middle East at Norton Rose Fulbright, said: We are delighted to welcome Matt to the team. Matt has extensive experience within financial services and has worked at two leading regulators, making him perfectly placed to spearhead the development of our offering across the Middle East and further enhance our ability to provide clients with robust, multi-disciplinary advice. Shanahan said: I am excited to be joining Norton Rose Fulbright, which has an excellent reputation and long history within the Middle East. Internationally, the firm is already recognised as one of the top financial services firms and I am really looking forward to working with the team to expand our practice within the region. Norton Rose Fulbright has grown significantly in the Middle East over the past two years with several lateral hires including Zubair Mir, Nicholas Kramer, Nicholas Robinson and Kayaan Unwalla in Dubai, and Zayd Alathari in Riyadh. The firm promoted Angela Croker to partner in Dubai in January 2021. Norton Rose Fulbrights Dubai office has won a string of Law.com Middle East Legal Awards over the past two years, including Crisis Management Team of the Year for its cyber risk work and Diversity Initiative of the Year in 2021, and Litigation Team of the Year in 2020.-- TradeArabia News Service Kathmandu, March 2 The government announced a public holiday across the country on the occasion of the Gyalpo Lhosar on Thursday. A cabinet meeting on Monday made the decision, informs the Ministry of Home Affairs in a notice on Wednesday. Sherpa and some other communities of Nepal celebrate Gyalpo Lhosar as their new year. Different communities have different dates for Lhosar in Nepal. Of late, the government has been providing public holidays on every Lhosar these days based on ad-hoc decisions. They say Nepal is a backpackers paradise thanks to all the budget hotels and cheap eateries across the country. But, over the past few decades, there have been people trying to promote Nepal as a high-end tourist destination. Following Bhutans suit, Nepali businesspersons have been trying to cater to the needs of high-end tourists by opening properties that best suit them. While Kathmandu has always had places like Dwarikas Hotel, Hyatt Regency and Soaltee Crowne Plaza, properties similar to their stature are popping up away from the valley as well. Hotels/resorts targeting high-end tourists have opened in remotest places like the Everest and Annapurna regions while Chitwan and Bardiya have also seen a rise in properties built to cater to them. These places have state-of-the-art amenities, the friendliest staff and offer an experience worth all the money one says. This, experts believe, will help increase the flow of high-end tourists who are looking for a bit more than just a pretty view. Today, we bring you a list of these places are that so good that once you get there, you will not want to come back. 1. Ker and Downey Guests enjoying breakfast at a Ker and Downey, a high-end tourist property, in Ghandruk. Photo: Ker and Downey Ker and Downey offers tourists a luxurious way to experience the Himalayas. Its cosy lodges are spread across the Annapurna region and offer spectacular views of the mountains. The food is great as is its staff who are well trained and very friendly. It has lodges in Lumle, Birethannti, Ghandruk, Landurk, Majgaon and Dhamups. All of them have clean rooms and running hot showers. For people who want to trek and experience the Annapurnas without giving up on luxury, this is the way forward. It has some really good packages that have been curated keeping high-end tourists in mind. 2. Yeti Mountain Home View of Everest from Yeti Mountain Home in Kongde. Photo: Yeti Mountain Home Spread across the Everest region, Yeti Mountain Home provides high-end tourists with indulgent comfort, high-quality cuisine and a very warm Sherpa hospitality. These lodges are in one of the most remote parts of Nepal yet none of them compromises on anything. The property, especially in Kongde, a hill opposite Namche Bazar, is ridiculously good. The views from there are worth every penny you have paid to get there. An underrated gem expensive, yes, but underrated. 3. Jagatpur Lodge The room at the luxury tent at Jagatpur Lodge, a high-end tourist facility in Nepal. Photo: Jagatpur Lodge Set by the Rapti river near the Chitwan National Park, the lodge for high-end tourists combines the natural beauty of its surroundings with understated elegance. Spread eight acres of land, Jagatpur Lodge oozes luxury. While the rest of the resort is similar to others around the place, its USP is the luxury tents that have been imported from South Africa. Inside these tents are rooms that even five-star hotels would be envious of. Imagine going back in time during the time of the Maharajas of Asia; this is what staying here will feel like. Sited on raised platforms, each tent has its own private viewing deck, from where you can sit and stare at the magnificent jungle that is Chitwan National Park. 4. Karnali Lodge by Tiger Tops Tiger Tops has been promoting sustainable tourism since its formation. Photo: Tiger Tops Many people know about Tiger Tops property in Chitwan. But, it also has one in Bardiya and it is even better. Karnali is an intimate lodge with ultra-personal service and expert wildlife guiding for high-end tourists. For wildlife lovers who want to see the elusive Bengal tiger, this is the property to visit. The place is also calming and soothing. Signature rooms each with an adjoining bathroom, Karnali Lodge is the epitome of comfort with a focus on privacy and calm. All of its rooms are designed to minimise their impact on the environment and are adorned in soft natural colours and fabrics and locally sourced furnishings. It is a place that promotes sustainable tourism, so you have another reason to go visit. 5. The Terraces The Terraces Resort and Spa is a haven at a hill only 16 km from Kathmandu valley. Photo: The Terraces The Terraces is a newly opened property in Kathmandu valley. Set on a ridge to the south of Kathmandu valley, the place offers some of the most jaw-dropping views. The sunsets from the place are magical as is the view of the valley with the mountains in the backdrop. The place offers seclusion and exclusivity and a deeper engagement with the natural environment without sacrificing comfort. It is a great spa so why not wind down and relax away from the hustle and bustle of the city. 6. The Farm by The Pavilions Himalayas Photo: The Pavilions Himalayas The Pavilions is an eco-sensitive luxury resort for high-end tourists in Pokhara. Its place has been built to give back to the local community. But that said, it does not compromise luxury. It is a place where luxury meets adventure. By the very definition of glamping, you get the best of both worlds the comfort and elegance of a villa combined with the beauty and wonder of camping in nature. It is a perfect place to come wind down after a long trek. Believe us, it is worth it. 7. Baber Mahal Villas Photo: Baber Mahal Villas It is a known fact that Kathmandu once had a lot of palaces. While some have been lost due to urbanisation and earthquakes, there are some that have turned into hotels. One such is the Baber Mahal Villas which is certain to take you back in time. Its interior and decor echo the grand lifestyle of the Ranas who lived here. So if you want to live in the palace of one of the most powerful dynasties in Nepal, this is your place to be. Home Just In On Mahashivaratri, visit one of these 12 Shiva temples in Nepal. Or, at least, read about them Mahashivaratri, literally translated, is the greatest night of Shiva. It is one of the most important festivals for Hindus in both Nepal and India. It is believed that Shivaratri is celebrated to mark the day when Lord Shiva saved the world by drinking poison that emerged from the ocean during Samudra Manthan. This poison got stored in his throat thus making it blue which is the reason why Lord Shiva is also known as Neelkanth (blue throat). Many celebrate the Mahashivaratri festival by staying awake all night beside a pyre singing Lord Shivas name. Others fast the entire day and visit Shiva temples nearby to honour him. Today, on Mahashivaratri, we bring to you a list of Shiva temples across Nepal where you can go and pay your respects to the destroyer. But, to ensure you are safe from Covid-19, please maintain distance where possible and put on a mask. 1. Pindeshwar, Sunsari Photo: Wikimedia Commons Pindeshwor temple in Dharan of Sunsari is another popular pilgrimage site in eastern Nepal. A lot of devotees come here during Shrawan, but it is also a popular site during Shivaratri as well. If you are a Shiva devotee from the area, offering water from the Koshi river would be the thing to do. 2. Halesi Mahadev, Khotang Photo: Wikimedia Commons Halesi Mahadev situated in the Khotang district of eastern Nepal is considered the Pashupatinath of Eastern Nepal. The temple lies inside a beautiful and mysterious natural cave on the top of a small hill through which two rivers Dudhkoshi and Sunkoshi flow. Halesi hosts various ceremonies on Mahashivaratri and is a must-visit place if you are from eastern Nepal. 3. Jaleshwar Mahadev, Mahottari Photo: Wikimedia Commons Located at the centre of Jaleshwar in Mahottari, this is considered an important Shiva temple of the area. The temple is a Gumbaja-style construction that includes an enclosed pond where the object of worship a plain Shivalinga lies. Historical records indicate that the temple has been known since the days of the Janaka dynasty of Janakpur. The place is likely to be full of people so if you are going, make sure you reach there early. 4. Kusheshwar, Sindhuli Kusheshwar Mahadev in Sindhuli is quite popular in central Nepal due to its mention in the Himawatkhanda which talks about how gods like Brahma and Indra have gone there to meditate to be at one with Shiva. Many also believe that the temple is from the Lichhavi time. The state of the temple, however, is not great as it has been neglected by everyone. But still, a great place to go and pay homage to Shiva on Mahashivaratri if you are around that area 5. Doleshwar, Bhaktapur Doleshwar A good option for people who do not want to go to a crowded Pashupati on Mahashivaratri is Doleshwar in Suryabinayak, Bhaktapur. This temple holds a special significance for all Shiva devotees, as many believe that it is related to Kedarnath in India. There is even a belief that a trip to Kedarnath is incomplete without visiting Doleshwar Mahadev and Pashupatinath. 6. Ashapuri, Bhaktapur If you are going to Doleshwor, you should also go to Ashapuri (Ashapurneshwar Mahadev) which is quite close and offers quite a view as it is located on a hill. With most temples in the valley likely to be full of devotees, this Shiva temple will offer you the best escape where you can be at one with Shiva. There is a myth that if you wish something with a pure heart at this temple, it will come true. 7. Pashupatinath, Kathmandu File: Pashupatinath Temple Pashupatinath is the busiest and the most crowded temple on Mahashivaratri as it holds a lot of significance to pilgrims. It is one of the oldest Shiva temples in Nepal. In previous years, the aura around the area would be quite surreal with sages, most of who come from India, where they would inhale marijuana smoke. This year, however, the celebration might be a bit lowkey due to the virus. 8. Gokarneshwar Mahadev, Kathmandu Photo: Wikimedia Commons Even though this Shiva temple is mostly visited during Kuse Aunsi, when people gather and pray that their deceased fathers achieve liberation, it is another temple you can visit during Mahashivaratri. It is not as crowded as other temples and is quite peaceful. 9. Santaneshwor Mahadev Temple, Lalitpur Photo: Wikimedia Commons According to myths, a part of Shivas wifes remains was dropped where this temple stands, which is why it holds a special place in the heart of some devotees. Unlike other temples around the valley, this one will be quite crowded because it was mentioned in Swasthani. 10. Gupteshwar, Kaski Photo: Wikimedia Commons If you are in Pokhara or around and want to visit a significant Shiva shrine there on Mahashivaratri, Gupteshwar is a good option. Located close to the Davis Fall, it is believed that this 16th-century cave is one of the longest in Nepal. Even though it is home to multiple shrines, many go here to pay homage to Lord Shiva. 11. Siddhababa Temple, Palpa Photo: Wikimedia Commons There are quite popular temples away from the valley as well. Siddhababa, located in Dobhan near the border of Rupandehi and Palpa, is one of them. It is just around six km away from the core city area of Butwal, the Lumbini provincial capital. For people around Palpa, Syangja, and Rupandehi, this is the place to be on Mahashivaratri. People normally make a wish here and if it comes true, release pigeons. 12. Baidyanath Dham, Achham Photo: Wikimedia Commons Baidyanath Dham is one of the most important Shiva shrines in the far-west region of Nepal. Located in Achham district at the confluence of the Budhi Ganga and Saraswati rivers, it is a place where many believe Lord Shiva gave his blessing to Ravan. From the archive Samsung Galaxy Tab A8 has been recently made available in Nepal. This is an update from the existing Tab A7 Lite which was released last year. This is not exactly a multitasking or power-performing tablet, but it does offer a lot more than its predecessor. This can be a great multimedia tablet especially for watching movies, reading books, browsing the internet or attending online classes. However, its market performance is still doubtful given the presence of better competitors. Lets get into the details of the Tab. Specifications Dimension Height: 246.8mm Width: 161.9mm Thickness: 6.9mm Weight: 508 grams Display 10.5-inch TFT Sim Nano sim Resolution 1,200*1,920 pixels OS Android 11, One UI 3 Chipset Unisoc Tiger T618 (12nm) GPU Mali G52 MP2 Storage 32GB/64GB/128GB SD card slot Dedicated RAM 3GB/4GB Camera Front: 5MP Rear: 8MP Sound 4 stereo Loudspeakers 3.5mm headphone jack Battery 7040mAh, Li-Po, non-removable 15W fast charging Sensors Accelerometer Proximity Gyro Compass Hall sensor Light sensor Colours Gray, silver, pink, gold Price Rs 31,999 (4/64GB Wifi only) Rs 37,999 (LTE variant) Rs 40,999 (4/128GB LTE variant) Design and display Photo: Samsung Samsung Galaxy Tab A8 has a solid metallic build on the back. The back of the tab also houses the camera panel and Samsung branding is done neatly. Unlike Samsung Galaxy phones, the branding is done vertically. Though having a huge battery backup, the tab is only 6.9mm thick and weighs around 508 grams. Photo: Samsung On the front, there is a 10.5-inch TFT LCD display that has a maximum resolution of 1,920*1,200 pixels. This big display can be very handy for web surfing, video streaming or for virtual classes. Samsung has one of the best displays in the market and this tab should be no exception. Photo: Samsung Samsung Galaxy Tab A8 also features quad stereo speakers with Dolby Atmos, which can be extremely loud and can add a pleasing audio experience for the big display. There is also a 3.5mm headphone jack on the tab if you need some privacy. Camera Photo: gsmarena Samsung Galaxy Tab A8 only has a minimal camera setup. It only features a single camera on both back and front. On the front, there is a 5MP selfie camera and there is an 8MP camera on the rear end. The rear camera has autofocus and can record videos in 1080p resolution. The front camera can also record videos in the same resolution but does not have autofocus. There are camera features like portrait mode, professional mode, panorama, hyper-lapse, and food mode. The camera specification on the tab indicates that it is mostly good for scanning documents or attending virtual classes. The front camera should be better than the ones on most laptops and should be handy during virtual meetings and classes. Performance and battery life Photo: Samsung Samsung Galaxy Tab A8 runs on One UI 3 based on Android 11 and is powered by Unisoc Tiger T618 (12nm) chipset. The graphics of the tab are handled by Mali G52 MP2. Samsung is very clear about the users here. The chipset on the tab indicates that it is not the fastest in the market and heavy-duty works or intense gaming sessions cannot be expected from this. However, this does not mean it cannot perform the basic tasks. It is perfectly equipped to perform basic tasks like editing with Google Docs, web browsing, checking emails or normal gaming. It will also provide the same user experience as the Samsung phones, so if the user has a Samsung phone, the tab should look familiar. Giving the life to Samsung Galaxy Tab A8 is a 7,040 mAh non-removable Li-po battery. The tab can be charged with a 15W fast charger. This power should be enough for a longer session use and should be very handy during online interaction or for web surfing. Storage, connectivity and price Samsung is offering three variants of the Samsung Galaxy Tab A8 in Nepal at the moment. There are 4/64GB Wifi only, 4/64GB LTE and 4/128GB LTE variants. The storage of the tab can also be expanded with a microSD card and there is a dedicated spot for it. The tab supports a single nano sim. For further connectivity, the tab has Bluetooth 5.0 and uses USB Type-C 2.0. The starting price of the Samsung Galaxy Tab A8 is Rs 31,999 for the base 4/64GB Wifi only variant. The prices are fixed at Rs 37,999 for the LTE variant and Rs 40,999 for the 4/128GB LTE variant. Verdict Photo: Samsung Samsung Galaxy Tab A8 puts the buyers in an awkward situation. The pricing of 40,999 for the 4/128GB variant rivals Xiaomis Pad 5 which costs Rs 44,999 for a 6/128GB variant. Not to forget that, Pad 5 is a powerful tablet and is better than Samsung Galaxy Tab 8 in every sector. The Pad 5 has a bigger, better, higher refresh rate, higher resolution display. It also has a powerful chipset, a bigger battery back up and a faster charger. This can really put the buyer in a dilemma if one should spend so much money on Samsung Galaxy Tab A8 for minimal features rather than opting for Xiaomis Pad 5. However, if one has no need for extra and powerful features and only needs a tablet for multimedia purposes, the base variant will be the best option. Spending more for better storage and on the LTE variant seems a bit overspending with the existence of Pad 5. Home Just In Politicised and polluted: Tribhuvan University, Nepals biggest academic institute, is sick of protests and padlocks The central office of Tribhuvan University, Nepals oldest and biggest university, has been shut down for over two months now. The padlock, put up by the various student unions, is not close to being off as the dispute continues to escalate between the university officials and them. Moreover, there are regular demonstrations. Student unions, teachers and staff of the Tribhuvan University have been protesting for their own selfish needs. They have nothing to do with academics or the betterment of the university. Despite that, none of them wants to budge as they want political appointments in various positions in the university. This is not the first time that such a protest has taken place. Since 2006, the university has seen a lot of these protests which has affected the future of over 400,000 students that are affiliated with the university. So what does this imply? How can the countrys biggest university be held to ransom by unions associated with political parties? Setting a (bad) example The government time and again has been promoting good governance. But, examples from the Tribhuvan University show where the country stands. Resham Thapa, associate professor at the Department of Economics, says this problem should have been solved by the prime minister. TU officials cant solve this issue. Unless the prime minister does something, the central office will remain closed, says Thapa. Thapa says so because the prime minister is the ex-officio chancellor of the Tribhuvan University. Currently, the student union affiliated with Prime Minister Sher Bahadur Deubas Nepali Congress is at the forefront of repeated protests, say TU officials. The union has padlocked the offices since January 20. The union has demanded that people who gave a private college in Janakpur the permission to operate the bachelors in computer application resign. They have accused the people involved of taking a bribe. There has been no proof to support their allegations so far. A few weeks later, on February 6, some Tribhuvan University professors added another padlock demanding that the university fulfil the promises it made to them before. In reply to the allegations made by the student union, the university has already formed a high-level investigation committee. When it comes to the teachers, the university says it has three options. First, they want the affiliated colleges to hire their own part-time teachers. Second, the university hires the teachers through the service commission. The third option is urging the government to release funds to hire 1,480 staff as asked by it. This was done a month ago yet, the padlocks remain. Hoping to make things better, the Tribhuvan University officials met Prime Minister Sher Bahadur Deuba and Education Minister Devendra Paudel. They urged the two to create a system that would stop padlocking from happening in the future. Deuba did ask his partys cadres to unlock the offices, but a month on, nothing has changed. The polluted politics Tribhuvan University central office. Photo: Shankar Giri The trend of protesting to get a permanent appointment at the Tribhuvan University started around 1990. The head of the Department of Anthropology, Dambar Chemjong, says once Nepal was declared a multi-party democracy, things started to get worse at the university. He says that after 1990, people started getting jobs without even being eligible for it as political parties started appointing people. This escalated further after 2006 when whichever party was in power started appointing people close to them as professors and head of departments, says Chemjong. He says that after 2006, power-sharing between parties and the idea of inclusiveness further weakened the Tribhuvan University. But, former education minister Giriraj Mani Pokharel says this had started in the 1990s when political parties started using their influence to appoint people and share various positions in the university. But, it was only after the king was overthrown in 2006 that the student unions also started to get involved in this. The Department of International Relations and Diplomacy professor Khadga KC says if these people do not have their way, they may protest and cause chaos until their demands are met. That is what is happening now, says KC. Professor Chaitanya Mishra says this shows how political parties and not the government runs the Tribhuvan University. The country is run by political parties. Its effect will definitely rub off on this institution too, he says. When political parties use their power to appoint people for their interest without considering the rules and regulation, things will definitely get out of hand. That is what is happening at the TU right now. Resham Thapa from the Department of Economics says student unions have also started to get financially rewarded because there is a belief that it is the student union that decide who gets appointed in the university. They use the protests to get money. They do this via their role in getting someone appointed or via infrastructure development in the university. Because they see financial gain, they continuously try and disrupt things at the university, says Thapa. Locked in, locked out Temporary teachers padlocked the TUs central office demanding they get tenure. Student union protesting against the Tribhuvan University for giving a private college the permission to run the BCA programme is odd, say professors. If they think and have proof that TU officials were at fault and took a bribe, they could have gone to the Commission for the Investigation of Abuse of Authority. Why do they lock the campus, questions KC. Other professors feel that there is another issue surrounding the process. One professor believes that the padlock became a trend during former VC Thirtha Khaniyas term. When he was the VC, this group of students saw how they could get away with doing anything and even earn money through political appointments. When you have so much power and it gets taken away now, things will get out of hand, says the professor. After the government changed, Khaniya, who was close to the Nepali Congress, was replaced by Dharma Kanta Baskota who is close to the CPN-UML. Similarly, the registrar and rector of the Tribhuvan University were also appointed from the CPN-Maoist Centre and UML fronts respectively making the Nepali Congress student union angry. That is why they are creating a scene. They want their people in power, says a professor. When Baskota and others came to the university, they started removing people and that did not go down well with the student union, after which they resorted to protest, the professor adds. Assistant professor Prem Chalaune had proposed that the university break the padlocks and commence classes. But, the Nepal Congress student union issued a notice threatening to cut the hands of anyone who broke the lock. A few days after the notice, Chalaune was beaten up. Police arrested those who beat Chalaune and said that they had done so upon orders from Hari Acharya and Yogendra Rawal. These people were found guilty and asked to pay Chalaune compensation and released on bail of Rs 500,000. Following their release, Acharya and Rawal were both active around the Tribhuvan University premises and have locked down the central office. A professor says what they really want is to transfer Chalaune and make him take back the case against them. Part-timer professors on strike That was about the students padlocking the Tribhuvan University office. Lets look at the teachers doing so. A few part-timer temporary teachers on February 11 padlocked the TU office demanding to be made permanent. But, this is not the first time that TU professors are on strike. In 2006, some teachers staged a protest on campus and even staged a hunger strike demanding they be made permanent. The then Girija Prasad Koirala-led government gave in to their demand and announced that 1,380 contractual appointments would be made. Out of them, 900 even landed permanent jobs. Those that were not included on that list have been protesting that should also be made permanent. Some of them were on the verge of getting contractual appointments during Pushpa Kamal Dahals term as prime minister in 2009, but it was never implemented. Since then, the issue has been constantly plaguing Tribhuvan University. After Baskota was made the vice-chancellor, there was a verbal agreement with these teachers about finding a solution. A committee was also formed. The committee recommended the university raise the per-class wage of temporary teachers forms Rs 360 to Rs 500. But, even this was not implemented resulting in the teachers locking the central office. After discussion with the teachers, the Tribhuvan University decided to speak to the government ask them for the funds to make 480 seats, that were vacant, available for these professors. While some accepted this, many were still against it and with the decision not being implemented, they were back to padlocking the office. The root of the problem: The prime minister File: Office of the Prime Minister and Council of Ministers Many blame Prime Minister Sher Bahadur Deuba for the problems at Tribhuvan University. Ever since he took office, he has said nothing about this. Professors at the TU want politicisation at the university to stop. KC even says that maybe it is time to remove the prime minister as the chancellor of the university. Maybe, we need to start this discourse, says KC. I dont think TU will be free from politics until we remove this provision. Thapa also says the root of the problem is the government, and hence it needs to come up with a solution. When the university is locked for over a month and the PM doesnt say anything, I think we need to start thinking he is the problem, says Thapa. But, he also has the solution. Blockchain gaming giant Animoca Brands will halt services to Russian users amid the war in Ukraine, Bloomberg reported on Wednesday. In doing so, the Hong Kong firm is breaking with major crypto firms, many of whom have kept providing services to Russian users amid the security crisis. The legal advice weve been receiving is we now have to impose some restrictions, Animoca co-founder and Chairman Yat Siu told Bloomberg in an interview. He added that Its a sanctioned country on par with North Korea. The moment we end up doing business in those areas, we might ourselves become financially excluded from the financial system. The decision will apply to subsidiaries such as Gamee and Lympo, but it won't have any material impact on the company's performance because it doesn't have many users in Russia, Siu said, according to Bloomberg. Animoca's latest valuation in January was $5.5 billion, following a $360 million funding round. The firm has invested in well-known non-fungible token (NFT) and metaverse projects, like Sandbox. Earlier this week, Binance, Kraken, KuCoin and Coinbase declined a request from the Ukrainian Ministry of Digital Transformation to block Russian accounts. One of the world's largest Ethereum mining pools, Flexpool, said on Feb. 25 that it will cancel all services to Russian users and refund their outstanding balances, in support of Ukraine. Russian entities, including major banks, have been heavily sanctioned by several countries in the past few days following the Kremlin's decision to invade Ukraine. The rules include warnings to crypto exchanges, the U.S. Treasury said. Nationwide Expansion Brewing for Leading Coffee Franchise as it Aims to Double Store Count By 2023 DENVER, March 2, 2022 /PRNewswire/ -- Bad Ass Coffee of Hawaii, a leading coffee franchise renowned for its premium sourcing, roasting, and quality 100% Hawaiian coffees and international blends, unveils new prototypes that emphasize franchisee and customer flexibility, including double drive-thru lanes and streamlined order pickups. Bad Ass Coffee of Hawaii Debuting this year is the brand's freestanding full cafe with drive-thru model, spanning approximately 1,650 1,800 square feet, that is slated to open in Hendersonville, Tennessee in late Q3 2022. As an evolution of this model, that is gaining vast interest among prospective franchisees, the brand is set to rollout a freestanding double drive-thru model, spanning 500-740 square feet, with pickup windows and no interior cafe seating by Q4 2022. Store model flexibility will play a key role in adapting to various market-dependent real estate options, fueling the brand's overall franchise growth strategy as it aims to open 150 locations over the next five years. Franchisees will have the ability to select a store model that works best for their desired location with full build-out and design support from the Bad Ass Coffee of Hawaii team. Traditional in-line store with cafe (and drive thru with end-cap locations) Freestanding single or double-drive thru kiosk with pickup windows and no interior cafe seating (outdoor seating optional by location) Freestanding full-cafe with drive-thru and exterior seating Non-traditional kiosk: grocery, shopping malls, airports, transportation centers, etc. (square footage dependent on location and limited menu offering) "Flexibility is a big driver for accelerating our franchise expansion," said Scott Snyder, CEO of Bad Ass Coffee of Hawaii. "With a roster of buildout models, we're able to better address consumer needs and give our franchisees the freedom to open a Bad Ass Coffee model that makes sense in their desired market. In site selection, we understand a one-size-fits all model doesn't work. We're confident our roster of store models enables us to provide solutions to franchisees while also offering our customers the most convenient and enjoyable environment possible." Story continues Bad Ass Coffee of Hawaii is entering a new era of growth following its acquisition by Colorado-based Royal Aloha Coffee Company in 2019. During the last three years, the company has re-launched the national brand with a new logo, packaging, and restaurant design, resulting in a revived 32-year-old brand with a cult following. Bad Ass Coffee of Hawaii was born on the Big Island of Hawaii in 1989 with the dream of sharing American-grown, premium Hawaiian coffee from Kona, Ka'u, Maui, Moloka'I, and Kauai with coffee lovers everywhere. In addition to premium Hawaiian coffees, Bad Ass Coffee of Hawaii serves up a full menu of popular blended drinks, signature lattes, cold brews, teas, innovative foods with a Hawaiian twist, and branded merchandise. With rapid expansion underway, the brand has set aggressive expansion plans to open 150 new locations over the next five years, with territories available nationwide. "We have aggressive growth plans to expand our franchise network on the mainland and to re-establish a strong presence in Hawaii," said Snyder. "It's an exciting time to be part of this brand as we embark on this next chapter of our history. In addition to new store models, we are also pursuing multi-channel growth of our brand through grocery, hospitality, and online sales channels." Bad Ass Coffee of Hawaii is looking to partner with qualified and engaged individuals seeking single and multi-unit opportunities. The brand offers an affordable, highly scalable opportunity with strong profit-potential. Franchisees can expect a total investment range between $304,500 - $620,000. As International Franchise Association VetFran members, veteran franchisees who join will receive a $10,000 discount off the initial franchise fee. For more information on Bad Ass Coffee of Hawaii franchise opportunities, visit badasscoffeefranchise.com or call 833-205-2224. About Bad Ass Coffee of Hawaii Bad Ass Coffee of Hawaii was born on the Big Island of Hawai'i in 1989 and is dedicated to sharing premium Hawaiian coffees "with a kick" from the Hawaiian Islands through 20-plus franchise locations with additional 70 shops in various stages of development. Today, Bad Ass Coffee of Hawaii stores also serve popular blended drinks, teas, food, along with other international premium coffees and sell popular branded merchandise with exceptional service and the Aloha Spirit. Bad Ass Coffees are available in franchise stores, online and will soon be available through grocery, hospitality, and specialty retail channels. The Bad Ass Coffee of Hawaii brand and franchise is owned by Royal Aloha Franchise Company, LLC. For more information, visit badasscoffee.com and connect on Facebook and Instagram @badasscoffeeofhawaii. Franchise information is available at badasscoffeefranchise.com. Cision View original content to download multimedia:https://www.prnewswire.com/news-releases/bad-ass-coffee-of-hawaii-adds-new-store-models-to-growing-roster-allows-franchise-owners-location-specific-customizability-301492929.html SOURCE Bad Ass Coffee of Hawaii Real Estates Forever Brand launches Berkshire Hathaway HomeServices Bayside Realty BELLINGHAM, Wash., March 02, 2022--(BUSINESS WIRE)--Berkshire Hathaway HomeServices, a global residential real estate brokerage franchise network, is pleased to announce its further expansion in the West region with the addition of Berkshire Hathaway HomeServices Bayside Realty. This marks the Berkshire Hathaway HomeServices brands continued growth with its 13th location in the state of Washington adding 10 network agents to the global brokerage. Berkshire Hathaway HomeServices Bayside Realty will be led by Chris and Mike Farkas. The brokerage specializes in residential, relocation services, commercial, and Luxury with Chris Farkas recently selling the 2nd most expensive home ever sold in the Bellingham, WA market. In the words of Mike Farkas, "We founded our company on the principles of family, teamwork, collaboration, fun, superior service and high integrity which aligns perfectly with Berkshire Hathaway HomeServices core values." "The fact that Berkshire Hathaway HomeServices is the Forever Brand with Forever Agents, is something we want to be part of and grow as a brand," said Chris Farkas, Broker, Berkshire Hathaway HomeServices Bayside Realty. "We strive to be a relationship brokerage not a transactional brokerage, with the Berkshire Hathaway HomeServices global leadership and our connection to more than 50,000 real estate professionals around the globe, this goal is now more achievable than ever before." "Living in Bellingham offers residents an urban-suburban mix feel," said Christy Budnick, CEO, Berkshire Hathaway HomeServices. "Chris and Mike have led a successful company and are true experts in their community and in real estate overall. We are thrilled to welcome them to real estates Forever Brand!" By joining the network, Berkshire Hathaway HomeServices Bayside Realty agents gain access to Berkshire Hathaway HomeServices active referral and relocation networks, and its "FOREVER Cloud" technology suite, a powerful source for lead generation, marketing support, social media, video production/distribution and more. Story continues The brand also provides an exclusive Luxury Collection marketing program for premier listings. Its Prestige Magazine showcases network members premium listings with a strong lineup of feature stories covering topics that appeal to high-end real estate clients. "As former military officers, our company philosophy is based on honor and integrity," said Mike Farkas, Owner, Berkshire Hathaway HomeServices Bayside Realty. "We operate on a culture of collaboration, truth-telling and not cutting corners, which supports the Berkshire Hathaway principles of trust, integrity, stability and longevity." In the words of Allan Dalton, CEO of Real Living Real Estate and the former CEO of Realtor.com, "Chris and Mike just raised the bar on a new level of ethics, integrity and professionalism in the residential real estate industry." Berkshire Hathaway HomeServices Bayside Realty has one office with plans for continued growth. The company is actively involved in the community with local charities and organizations such as Homes Now and the Historic Fairhaven Association where both Chris and Mike serve as members and volunteers for community events. For more information visit: https://www.bhhsbayside.com/ About Berkshire Hathaway HomeServices Bayside Realty Berkshire Hathaway HomeServices Bayside Realty is a full-service real estate brokerage franchise company with a comprehensive and integrated suite of resources for franchisees and their sales professionals, as well as its clients. The real estate company with an emphasis on extremely high customer service servicing all of Whatcom County and beyond. About Berkshire Hathaway HomeServices Berkshire Hathaway HomeServices is a global residential real estate brokerage franchise network with more than 50,000 real estate professionals and nearly 1,500 offices across 12 countries including, the U.S., Canada, Mexico, Europe, the Middle East, The Bahamas and India. In 2021, the Berkshire Hathaway HomeServices global network represented more than $179.9 billion (USD) in real estate sales volume. The network, among the few organizations entrusted to use the world-renowned Berkshire Hathaway name, brings to the real estate market a definitive mark of trust, integrity, stability and longevity. View source version on businesswire.com: https://www.businesswire.com/news/home/20220302005036/en/ Contacts Chelsea Freeman PR & Communications +1 949 241 5239 chelseafreeman@hsfranchise.com GUADALAJARA, Mexico, March 2, 2022 /PRNewswire/ -- Betterware de Mexico, S.A.P.I. de C.V. (Nasdaq: BWMX) ("Betterware" or the "Company") today announced that Campalier, S.A. de C.V. ("Campalier"), the Company's controlling share holder has purchased 321,964 shares of the Company in the open market for an approximate $4.8 million USD. (PRNewsfoto/Betterware de Mexico, S.A.B. de C.V.) Campalier now holds approximately 53.4% of the issued and outstanding shares of Betterware. Luis G. Campos, Executive Chairman of the Board of Betterware and controlling shareholder at Campalier, stated, "We remain confident that our advantageous business model centered on three growth pillars of product innovation, business intelligence and technology has us positioned to deliver on our near-term growth objectives and pursue the significant opportunities we see ahead for the company to drive revenue at increasing rates of profitability in the future. The purchase announced today reflects our belief that our current share price does not reflect the underlying value of the business. We remain focused on the successful execution of our strategic initiatives and believe this has us poised to deliver consistent long-term profitable growth and increased value for our shareholders." About Betterware de Mexico, S.A.P.I. de C.V. Founded in 1995, Betterware de Mexico is the leading direct-to-consumer company in Mexico focused on creating innovative products that solve specific needs regarding organization, practicality, space saving and hygiene within the household. Betterware's wide product portfolio includes home organization, kitchen, commuting, laundry and cleaning, as well as other categories that include products and solutions for every corner of the household. The Company has a differentiated two-tier network of distributors and associates that sell their products through twelve catalogues per year. All products are designed by the Company and under the Betterware brand name through its different sources of product innovation. The Company's state-of-the-art infrastructure allows it to safely and timely deliver its products to every part of the country, backed by the strategic location of its national distribution center. Today, the Company distributes its products in Mexico and Guatemala, and has plans of additional international expansion. Story continues Supported by its asset light business model and its three strategic pillars of Product Innovation, Business Intelligence and Technology, Betterware has been able to achieve sustainable double-digit growth rates by successfully expanding its household penetration and share of wallet. Cision View original content to download multimedia:https://www.prnewswire.com/news-releases/betterware-de-mexico-sapi-de-cv-announces-share-purchase-by-campalier-the-companys-controlling-shareholder-301494449.html SOURCE Betterware de Mexico, S.A.B. de C.V. In his first State of the Union address, President Biden has asked Congress to implement new laws to increase child safety on Facebook, TikTok and other social media platforms. "It's time to strengthen privacy protections, ban targeted advertising to children, demand tech companies stop collecting personal data on our children," he said on Tuesday evening. To get started on implementing those changes, the White House will specifically ask for funding to study the question of child safety on social media. Biden also plans to request $5 million in next year's budget to research the mental health impact of social media, while launching a "national Center of Excellence on Social Media and Mental Illness." The aim of that is to develop new guidance on the impact of adolescent social media use. Much of the motivation for the changes appears to have come from the Facebook whistleblower Frances Haugen, who attended the address as a guest of Jill Biden. She recently testified before Congress, accusing Facebook parent Meta of disregarding child safety on the platform. Her revelations impacted politicians on both sides of the aisle, who agreed that stronger rules were required. Last month, Republican and Democrat Senators (respectively) Marsha Blackburn and Richard Blumenthal introduced a bill, the Kids Online Safety Act (KOSA), that would give parents and children more control over their privacy and safety on social media, while setting new rules for social media platforms. "As Frances Haugen, who is here with us tonight, has shown, we must hold social media platforms accountable for the national experiment theyre conducting on our children for profit ," the President said. Update 3/2/2022 10:38 AM ET: The post has been updated to make clear that Marsha Blackburn is a Republican senator. Paris-headquartered TotalEnergies, a global multi-energy company, said it will no longer provide capital for new projects in Russia. TotalEnergies said in a statement that it condemns Russia's military aggression against Ukraine, which has tragic consequences for the population and threatens Europe. TotalEnergies expressed in the statement its solidarity with the Ukrainian people who are suffering the consequences and with the Russian people who will also suffer the consequences. TotalEnergies is mobilized to provide fuel to the Ukrainian authorities and aid to Ukrainian refugees in Europe, it said. TotalEnergies supports the scope and strength of the sanctions put in place by Europe and will implement them regardless of the consequences (currently being assessed) on its activities in Russia, the company statement added. TradeArabia News Service WASHINGTON (Reuters) - U.S. airplane manufacturer Boeing Co said on Tuesday it was suspending parts, maintenance and technical support for Russian airlines as well as major operations in Moscow after Russia's invasion of Ukraine. "As the conflict continues, our teams are focused on ensuring the safety of our teammates in the region," a Boeing spokesperson said. The announcement came a day after Boeing said it had paused operations at its Moscow Training Campus and temporarily closed its office in Kyiv. (Reporting by David Shepardson in Washington; Writing by Jamie Freed; Editing by Christopher Cushing) Rosneft's Vankorskoye oil field north of Krasnoyarsk in Russia BPs ties with Russia endured Putins attacks in Syria, the annexation of Crimea, poisonings in Salisbury and support for Venezuelas contested president Nicolas Maduro. The assault on Ukraine, however, has finally pushed the oil and gas giant to fundamentally rethink the entanglement and announce plans to exit its 19.75pc stake in the states giant oil producer Rosneft, held since 2013 and worth as much as 6bn. This military action represents a fundamental change, chairman Helge Lund said on Sunday. It has led the BP board to conclude, after a thorough process, that our involvement with Rosneft, a state-owned enterprise, simply cannot continue. The decision was taken at such speed that BP hadnt worked out the next steps: who exactly would it sell to? While Russia is the world's second-largest oil producer by volume, giving any buyer big power, growing corporate backlash against the country increasingly limits BP's options for a sale. Norways sovereign wealth fund and its state-owned oil and gas company Equinor have also announced plans to exit Russian investments and cooperation with Rosneft, with others under pressure to follow suit. Shell, BPs rival, has also decided to cut its ties to Russia by exiting the Sakhalin-2 offshore gas project with state giant Gazprom, and end funding for the Nord Stream 2 gas pipeline to Germany. BPs decision was made days after a meeting with the Business Secretary, Kwasi Kwarteng, who expressed his deep concern over the companys commercial interests in Russia. Any UK, US or European company contemplating taking on the stake would likely face fierce criticism, adding to its unpalatability even for private giants such as Ineos, Sir Jim Ratcliffe's chemicals and energy empire that has recently been buying up oil and gas assets. Glencore, the blue-chip miner and trader, sold most of its stake in Rosneft in 2017 and would face backlash if it tried to reverse that decision, particularly as it tries to reposition itself as a greener, more ethical company. The prospect of new sanctions on Rosneft add to the potential problems for any buyer. Story continues Despite the stated intentions, it is not really clear whether there are any buyers for BPs Russian stake: it may be a pathway that takes substantial time to unfold, say Citi analysts, who slashed their valuation of the stake to reflect the challenge of liquidity/finding a buyer. In reality, private or state-backed companies more friendly with Russia, such as from China or Venezuela, may pick up the stake. Russia is deepening its energy ties with China: earlier this month Rosneft struck up a deal to supply 100m tonnes of oil to the China National Petroleum Corporation. Venezuela, where Russia already owns some oil assets, has blamed Nato and the US for the crisis in Ukraine. Qatars sovereign wealth fund, the Qatar Investment Authority, already owns almost 19pc of Rosneft and last week, Putin reportedly wrote to the countrys ruler about ways to strengthen bilateral relations. Syria has also signalled its support for Russia. Monetising the stake for fair value looked difficult even in more normal times, and now, to us, it looks extremely challenging, said Biraj Borkhataria, associate director of European Research at RBC Capital Markets, in a note. BP's options could include selling its shares on the open market or via private placements, he said, or even surrendering the shares to Rosneft itself in a big financial hit for the company. It is one chief executive Bernard Looney, at least, appears prepared to take. On Sunday, he said: I am convinced that the decisions we have taken as a board are not only the right thing to do, but are also in the long-term interests of BP. BP shares slide on potential $25bn hit from abandoning Russia BP shares slid by more than 7pc after it said it would abandon its near 20pc stake in Rosneft immediately, ending a 30-year venture with the Russian oil giant. The London-listed energy companys stock suffered the biggest fall in nearly three months after revealing that ditching the 19.75pc stake would result in a financial hit of up to $25bn (18.7bn). The BP chief executive, Bernard Looney, was summoned to a meeting with the Business Secretary, Kwasi Kwarteng last week to explain the companys Russian ties. In a memo to employees, Mr Looney warned there would be financial consequences from the move, which a spokesman said could mean a writedown of up to $25bn. Mr Looney also said he would resign from Rosnefts board, along with BPs former boss Bob Dudley. It may prove difficult to find a buyer for the stake given the introduction of new sanctions will preclude many international buyers from involvement. However, a collapse in Russian asset prices means it may be at an attractive valuation for a deep-pocketed domestic buyer. Biraj Borkhataria, an analyst at Royal Bank of Canada, said: Walking away at this time is obviously not ideal from a shareholder value perspective. Rosneft said the move had destroyed a successful 30-year cooperation between the companies. BP shares had been rising strongly this year off the back of high oil prices, with Brent crude trading above $100 a barrel for the first time since 2014 in the wake of Russias invasion of Ukraine last week. The chairman, Helge Lund, said Russias action had created a fundamental change. "It has led the BP board to conclude, after a thorough process, that our involvement with Rosneft, a state-owned enterprise, simply cannot continue, he said. BP, which was one of the first Western oil giants to establish itself in Russia after the collapse of the Soviet Union, had defended its position in recent weeks, with Mr Looney claiming in early February that it could avoid politics in the country. Norwegian energy group Equinor is also withdrawing from Russia as a result of current events. Its chief executive Anders Opedal said its position had become untenable. By Kanishka Singh March 1 (Reuters) - The British Columbia Investment Management Corp is actively working to sell Russian securities after Russia's invasion of Ukraine, the Canadian province's public sector pension fund said on Tuesday. "BCI has not only been working to sell the Russian shares in our clients' portfolios but also to have Russia removed from all global and emerging market indices," Chief Executive Gordon Fyfe said in a statement. The fund started selling its holdings in Russian securities prior to the invasion, but trading in these securities has now ground to a halt due to international sanctions, trading restrictions, and Russia's ban on foreigners selling Russian securities, the pension fund said. "Regardless we will continue to work to sell the $107 million in Russian stock that remains." Russia said on Tuesday it was placing temporary restrictions on foreigners seeking to exit Russian assets, as it tried to stem an investor retreat driven by crippling Western sanctions imposed over the invasion of Ukraine. British Columbia Premier John Horgan welcomed the decision by the pension fund, saying on Twitter that it "reflects our values as British Columbians and our desire to support the people of Ukraine." As part of moves by Western nations to isolate Russia, Canada has imposed sanctions on Russian President Vladimir Putin, closing its airspace to Russian planes, and forbidden Canadian financial institutions from dealing with the Russian central bank. Canada's second-biggest pension fund, Caisse de depot, said last week it had sold positions in Russia and would avoid exposure. (Reporting by Kanishka Singh in Bengaluru; editing by Richard Pullin) Churchill Resources Inc. Figure 1 Figure 1 Figure 2 Figure 2 Figure 3 Figure 3 TORONTO, March 02, 2022 (GLOBE NEWSWIRE) -- Churchill Resources Inc. (Churchill or the Company) (TSXV: CRI) is pleased to announce that planning and arrangements for its second phase of drilling and geophysical surveys at Taylor Brook in western Newfoundland are nearing completion. Results from the 2021 work continue to support the exploration model of a magmatic Ni-Cu system on the property outcropping at the Layden Showing and appearing to have significant scale. In particular: Two grab samples collected at the Layden Showing assayed 4.46%Ni, 1.07%Cu, 0.08%Co plus 0.479ppm PGEs (Pt + Pd + Au), and 3.69%Ni, 0.57%Cu, 0.11%Co and 0.761ppm PGEs. Interpretive processing, including inversions, of the 2021 detailed magnetic and electromagnetic surveys, along with regional magnetic survey data, suggest that the mineralized Layden Intrusive may be part of a much larger system with 8-10 kilometres of strike length. Airborne VTEM (Versatile Time-Domain Electromagnetic) survey results, including anomaly picks, have recently been generated for the Taylor Brook South property which covers the majority of the interpreted strike length to the postulated Layden Intrusive system. The VTEM results are being compiled, with conductor plate modelling commissioned shortly, to define drill targets along the Layden trend. Borehole Electromagnetic (BHEM) survey results from the 2,500m cumulative length of Phase 1 drillholes have identified several off-hole, high conductance plates at the Layden Intrusive in the area of the high-grade showing. These are priority drill targets for massive or semi-massive sulphide concentrations. BHEM conductor plate orientations appear to support field interpretations that there are several mineralized breccia sequences structurally hosted within the Layden Intrusive, ranging from 5-15m wide, and which have thus far demonstrated sulphide contents up to 40% (pyrrhotite-pentlandite-chalcopyrite) locally over 10-20cm. Preliminary petrographic results have confirmed Churchills field interpretations that a discrete intrusive body, consisting of meta-gabbroic to meta-pyroxenitic rock, hosts the sulphide breccia magmatic system comprising the Layden mineralization, ie. Typical hosts to this style of magmatic nickel deposits. Geochemical data corroborates the petrographic and field classifications of the lithologies and mineralization, as the mineralized breccia structures intersected in core exhibit similar trace element profiles as the high grade, exposed Layden Showing. Radiometric age-dating of the Layden intrusives, under the direction of Dr. Derek Wilton, defines a Late Grenvillian age (ie. Ca. ~1000Ma), suggesting emplacement during the very last period of extensive continental margin magmatism marked by intrusion of alkaline magma of felsic to intermediate, and mafic (anorthosite, troctolite) compositions. Assay results have been received for the first hole from the Phase 1 program, TB21-01, which had no significant nickel or copper values. The hole is interpreted to not have sampled one of the mineralized breccia structures due to its vertical orientation, oblique to the predicted trend. TB21-01, designed to test a flat-lying VTEM conductor at depth to the east of the Layden Showing, intersected ~90m of weakly mineralized breccia between 101m and 196m downhole, beneath metagabbro cap rocks, before exiting into basement gneisses. Assays for the remaining Phase 1 holes are in-progress and expected later in March and April; their delay was due to unprecedented demand at the laboratory. Paul Sobie, Chief Executive Officer of Churchill remarked, We are well into planning Phase 2 drilling now as more results have been received and integrated into our geological model. All results continue to support the model of discrete magmatic intrusive(s) hosting potentially economic Ni-Cu-Co mineralization which we will aggressively evaluate. With our better understanding of the geology and mineralization at the Layden Showing area, we will focus on defining a systematic program to evaluate the proximal strike length of the Layden Intrusive through drilling, large loop and BHEM surveys. Once the snow is gone, we will institute a regional program of geochemical sampling and prospecting over magnetic and EM targets along the Layden Trend that extends for at least 8-10km on the Taylor Brook South property based on current interpretations. Story continues Taylor Brook Project Churchills Phase 1 program consisted of 13 diamond drill holes totalling 2,477m completed between early October and late November 2021, before a break was scheduled for borehole EM surveying, and the initiation of geochemical and petrographic studies, as well as completion of assay results. The thirteen Phase 1 holes served to test several proximal VTEM conductive plates, as well as to better understand the overall geology of the Layden Intrusive where the historical mineralization had been found. Figure 1 shows simplified results of that drilling in relation to the position of both the BHEM and VTEM conductors. In general, it appears that the VTEM plates are mapping major lithological variations and structures, whereas the higher conductance BHEM plates appear to map sulphide concentrations; most BHEM plates have not yet been intersected by historical or Churchill drilling. Figure 1 is available at https://www.globenewswire.com/NewsRoom/AttachmentNg/02b35760-1c32-4fe3-98f2-27c137134dab Drilling, mapping, and geophysical surveys indicate that the mineralized outcrop at the original Layden Showing appears to be part of a much larger intrusive magmatic Ni-Cu system striking east-southeast and plunging shallowly to the southeast. The Layden magmatic system is hosted by a discrete, magnetic, meta-gabbroic to meta-pyroxenitic intrusions within basement gneiss. The Ni-Cu mineralization is in the form of pods, thin horizons and blebs of pyrrhotite, pentlandite and chalcopyrite which brecciate the host pyroxenite in sub-vertically oriented linear structures. Figure 2 is a regional magnetic inversion encompassing Churchills detailed 2021 magnetic data over the Taylor Brook and Taylor Brook South properties, with Figure 3 an enlargement of approximately 4km along strike from the Layden Showing. A large magnetic stock associated with the southern portion of the Taylor Brook Intrusive Complex, the large differentiated gabbroic intrusive in this area, appears to be the source of the trend hosting the Layden Intrusive some 8-10km to the northwest. The magnetic stock feature correlates well with the known gravity anomaly in this area. As mentioned above, work on this trend will include immediate assessment of the VTEM results as well as systematic regional work to be conducted Spring and Summer 2022 to target drillholes. Gravity traverses over the stock feature will also be carried out. Figure 2 is available at https://www.globenewswire.com/NewsRoom/AttachmentNg/909cf86a-b33f-4a20-99c3-7686baeacf9a Figure 3 is available at https://www.globenewswire.com/NewsRoom/AttachmentNg/f981f0a7-41ff-455e-bb1f-feef730f0600 Florence Lake Project The helicopter-borne VTEM and Horizontal Gradiometer Geophysical Survey will re-commence in early April, at the Florence Lake Project in Labrador, after having been postponed due to deteriorating weather conditions in December. No production flights were carried out in the previous mobilization. Churchill has commissioned Goldspot Discoveries Corp. (TSX-V: SPOT) to compile all historical exploration data on the project, for integration with the results from the VTEM survey. This work is scheduled to be completed later in March. The Florence Lake Property contains Raglan-type ultramafic volcanic-hosted massive and disseminated sulphide nickel showings. It was last explored by Falconbridge and JV partners between 1990-1997 during which time approximately 6,250m of drilling were completed in 45 shallow holes. The 1996 drill core is located on the property for relogging and sampling, whereas, 1992-3, partly sampled core, is stored at NL Government core library in Happy Valley Goose Bay. Highlights of that work included drill testing of the high-grade Baikie Showing where shallow drilling (<-100m depths) returned: DDH FLK-92-02: 2.19% Ni, 0.22% Cu, 0.16% Co over 11.32 metres from 44.7 to 56m DDH FLK-92-12: 1.33% Ni, 0.05% Cu over 13.5 metres from 83.0 to 96.5m The Baikie Showing has demonstrated mineralized continuity over 110m of strike length from twelve drillhole intercepts and ground mapping, and is interpreted to be a near vertically plunging subzone of disseminated, semi-massive and massive sulphide mineralization, possibly similar to the Raglan or Kambalda style of nickel deposits. Other showings along strike have generated +1.0% nickel grab samples or short drill intersections and need modern exploration work along with Baikie. Churchill announced positive results of due-diligence resampling of the historical core in a news release dated October 7, 2021. The technical and scientific information in this news release has been reviewed and approved by Dr. Derek H.C Wilton, P.Geo., FGC, who is a qualified person as defined under National Instrument 43-101 Standards of Disclosure for Mineral Projects and independent of the Company. The Churchill drill core samples are half core samples laid out and split by qualified geologists and technicians under the direction of Senior Project Consultant Dawn Evans-Lamswood, P.Geo. at the Companys drill camp near the property. The samples were placed in labelled, sealed plastic bags and periodically batches are delivered to Eastern Analytical for analysis. Standard OREAS 13b and blanks were inserted in the assay batches. Eastern Analytical is an ISO/IEC17025 accredited laboratory. About Churchill Resources Inc. Churchill is managed by career mining industry professionals and currently holds four exploration projects, namely Taylor Brook in Newfoundland, Florence Lake in Labrador, Pelly Bay in Nunavut and White River in Ontario. All projects are at the evaluation stage, with known mineralized Ni-Cu-Co showings at Taylor Brook, Florence Lake and Pelly Bay, and diamondiferous kimberlitic intrusives at White River and Pelly Bay. The primary focus of Churchill is on the continued exploration and development of the Taylor Brook and Florence Lake Nickel Projects. Further Information For further information regarding Churchill, please contact: Churchill Resources Inc. Paul Sobie, Chief Executive Officer Tel. +1 416.365.0930 (o) +1 647.988.0930 (m) Email psobie@churchillresources.com Alec Rowlands, Corporate Consultant Tel. +1 416.721.4732 (m) Email arowlands@churchillresources.com Cautionary Note Regarding Forward Looking Information This news release contains "forward-looking information" and "forward-looking statements" (collectively, "forward-looking statements") within the meaning of the applicable Canadian securities legislation. All statements, other than statements of historical fact, are forward-looking statements and are based on expectations, estimates and projections as at the date of this news release. Any statement that involves discussions with respect to predictions, expectations, beliefs, plans, projections, objectives, assumptions, future events or performance (often but not always using phrases such as "expects", or "does not expect", "is expected", "anticipates" or "does not anticipate", "plans", proposed, "budget", "scheduled", "forecasts", "estimates", "believes" or "intends" or variations of such words and phrases or stating that certain actions, events or results "may" or "could", "would", "might" or "will" be taken to occur or be achieved) are not statements of historical fact and may be forward-looking statements. In this news release, forward-looking statements relate to, among other things, the Companys objectives, goals and exploration activities conducted and proposed to be conducted at the Companys properties; future growth potential of the Company, including whether any proposed exploration programs at any of the Companys properties will be successful; exploration results; and future exploration plans. These forward-looking statements are based on reasonable assumptions and estimates of management of the Company at the time such statements were made. Actual future results may differ materially as forward-looking statements involve known and unknown risks, uncertainties and other factors which may cause the actual results, performance or achievements of the Company to materially differ from any future results, performance or achievements expressed or implied by such forward-looking statements. Such factors, among other things, include: the expected benefits to the Company relating to the exploration conducted and proposed to be conducted at the Companys properties; failure to identify any additional mineral resources or significant mineralization; the preliminary nature of metallurgical test results; uncertainties relating to the availability and costs of financing needed in the future, including to fund any exploration programs on the Companys properties; business integration risks; fluctuations in general macroeconomic conditions; fluctuations in securities markets; fluctuations in spot and forward prices of gold, silver, base metals or certain other commodities; fluctuations in currency markets (such as the Canadian dollar to United States dollar exchange rate); change in national and local government, legislation, taxation, controls, regulations and political or economic developments; risks and hazards associated with the business of mineral exploration, development and mining (including environmental hazards, industrial accidents, unusual or unexpected formations pressures, cave-ins and flooding); inability to obtain adequate insurance to cover risks and hazards; the presence of laws and regulations that may impose restrictions on mining and mineral exploration; employee relations; relationships with and claims by local communities and indigenous populations; availability of increasing costs associated with mining inputs and labour; the speculative nature of mineral exploration and development (including the risks of obtaining necessary licenses, permits and approvals from government authorities); the unlikelihood that properties that are explored are ultimately developed into producing mines; geological factors; actual results of current and future exploration; changes in project parameters as plans continue to be evaluated; soil sampling results being preliminary in nature and are not conclusive evidence of the likelihood of a mineral deposit; title to properties; ongoing uncertainties relating to the COVID-19 pandemic; and those factors described in the most recently filed managements discussion and analysis of the Company. Although the forward-looking statements contained in this news release are based upon what management of the Company believes, or believed at the time, to be reasonable assumptions, the Company cannot assure shareholders that actual results will be consistent with such forward-looking statements, as there may be other factors that cause results not to be as anticipated, estimated or intended. Accordingly, readers should not place undue reliance on forward-looking statements and information. There can be no assurance that forward-looking information, or the material factors or assumptions used to develop such forward-looking information, will prove to be accurate. The Company does not undertake to release publicly any revisions for updating any voluntary forward-looking statements, except as required by applicable securities law. Neither the TSXV nor its Regulation Services Provider (as that term is defined in the policies of the TSXV) accepts responsibility for the adequacy or accuracy of this news release. Fortune Business Insights Key Prominent Players Covered in the contract research organization (CRO) services market Research Report are Pharmaceutical Product, Development, LLC., Medpace, Clintec, IQVIA, PRA Health Sciences, ICON plc, KCR S.A.PSI, Parexel International Corporation., Covance and other key market players. Pune, India, March 02, 2022 (GLOBE NEWSWIRE) -- The contract research organization (CRO) services market size was USD 38,396.4 Million in 2018 and is projected to reach USD 90,926.3 Million by the end of 2026, exhibiting a CAGR of 11.4% during the forecast period. Rising number of clinical trials across the globe will be the primary force propelling this market in the forthcoming years. Contract research services are provided by organizations that specialize in providing outsourced clinical research services to biotechnology, medical devices, and pharmaceutical companies. The demand for CRO services is on the rise owing to the increasing number of clinical trials worldwide. According to the World Health Organization (WHO), the number of clinical trials registered on its International Clinical Trials Registry Platform (ICTRP) from Europe, Western Pacific, and the Americas were higher than most other regions in 2018. In Western Pacific, for instance, the registered trials were numbered at 14,655, while in Africa they were only 630. Japan and China have seen a meteoric rise in number of trial registrations since 2015, the WHO notes. Thus, steady rise in the number of clinical trials, especially in Asia-Pacific, is touted to be one of the major CRO services market trends in the near future. Request a Sample Copy of the Research Report: https://www.fortunebusinessinsights.com/enquiry/request-sample-pdf/contract-research-organization-cro-services-market-100864 North America to Dominate: Increasing Research & Development Activities to Favor Growth The market can be geographically categorized into Latin America, Europe, North America, the Middle East and Africa, and Asia Pacific. Amongst them, North America will be in the dominant position during the forthcoming years. The growth is attributable to the rising demand for innovative therapies for managing chronic diseases and increasing investment in research and development activities by many organizations. Moreover, huge spending on healthcare services, growing need for therapeutically effective products, and increasing awareness regarding healthcare will contribute to the growth in this region. Story continues Increasing Number of Non-Profit Organizations are Getting Involved in CRO launches The demand for CROs has been increasing ever since healthcare institutions have unlocked various benefits of contract research organizations in business operations. With the inflating demand for CROs, investors have identified huge growth potential within establishing CROs. The rise in the number of investors involved in developing contract research organizations has contributed to the growth of the global CRO services market. Besides non-profit organizations, the market continues to witness newer CRO launches from leading companies around the world. IN April 2019, FHI 360 announced the launch of a new CRO service, named FHI Clinical. Click here to get the short-term and long-term impact of COVID-19 on this market. Please visit: https://www.fortunebusinessinsights.com/industry-reports/contract-research-organization-cro-services-market-100864 Prominent Players Focus on Strategic Collaborations to Expand Product Portfolio The market is highly competitive owing to the presence of a large number of key players. However, the number of collaborations, acquisitions, and mergers have increased since the past few years. It will, in turn, help the mammoth players in gaining high CRO services market share in the coming years. Two of the most recent key industry developments are given below: February 2019: Pharmaceutical Product Development, LLC (PPD), a provider of clinical trial development, management, and post-approval services, headquartered in the U.S., announced that it is signing an exclusive agreement with Happy Life Tech (HLT), medical AI company based in China. Highlights of the Report: In-depth analysis of various insights, namely, Contract Research Organization Services Market trends, growth drivers, opportunities, and other related challenges. Comprehensive details of key market players, their core competencies, and Contract Research Organization Services Market share. The potency of suppliers and buyers to make better business decisions. Lists out the market size in terms of volume. Quick Buy - Contract Research Organization Services Market Research Report: https://www.fortunebusinessinsights.com/checkout-page/100864 Key Players Operating in The Contract Research Organization Services Market Include: Key players are involved in mergers and acquisition to strengthen their market position. Owing to increasing competition frequent innovations are taking place in the market. Some of the companies operating the industry are: Pharmaceutical Product Development, LLC. Medpace Clintec IQVIA PRA Health Sciences ICON plc KCR S.A. PSI Parexel International Corporation. Covance Other prominent players Have Any Query? Ask Our Experts: https://www.fortunebusinessinsights.com/enquiry/speak-to-analyst/contract-research-organization-cro-services-market-100864 Detailed Table of Content: Introduction Research Scope Market Segmentation Research Methodology Definitions and Assumptions Executive Summary Market Dynamics Market Drivers Market Restraints Market Opportunities Key Insights Mergers & Acquisitions Among Key Players The Regulatory Scenario in Key Countries/Region Competition Matrix for the Services Provided by Key Players. Global Contract Research Organization Services Market Analysis, Insights and Forecast, 2015-2026 Key Findings / Summary Market Analysis, Insights and Forecast By Service Type Discovery Pre-Clinical Clinical Laboratory Services Market Analysis, Insights and Forecast By Application Oncology Cardiology Infectious Disease Metabolic Disorders Others Market Analysis, Insights and Forecast By End User Pharmaceutical & Biotechnological Companies Medical Device Companies Academic & Research Institutes Others Market Analysis, Insights and Forecast By Region North America Europe Asia pacific Rest of the World TOC Continued.! Get your Customized Research Report: https://www.fortunebusinessinsights.com/enquiry/customization/contract-research-organization-cro-services-market-100864 About Us: Fortune Business Insights offers expert corporate analysis and accurate data, helping organizations of all sizes make timely decisions. We tailor innovative solutions for our clients, assisting them to address challenges distinct to their businesses. Our goal is to empower our clients with holistic market intelligence, giving a granular overview of the market they are operating in. Contact Us: Fortune Business Insights Pvt. Ltd. US :+1 424 253 0390 UK : +44 2071 939123 APAC : +91 744 740 1245 Email: sales@fortunebusinessinsights.com FAIR Statement on Biden's State of the Union Address PR Newswire WASHINGTON, March 2, 2022 WASHINGTON, March 2, 2022 /PRNewswire/ -- The following statement was issued by Dan Stein, president of the Federation for American Immigration Reform (FAIR), in response to President Biden's plea for amnesty as part of his State of the Union address: The Federation for American Immigration Reform (FAIR) is a national, nonprofit, public-interest, membership organization of concerned citizens who share a common belief that our nation's immigration policies must be reformed to serve the national interest. Visit FAIR's website at www.fairus.org . (PRNewsFoto/FAIR) "Tonight, President Biden spoke of the 'need to secure the border,' something we have long championed. Oddly, policies that were actually keeping the border secure were in place when he took office a little over 13 months ago. "Perhaps President Biden forgot that it was he who ended construction of a border wall that the American public had already paid for. Maybe it slipped his mind that he suspended agreements with Northern Triangle nations that sought to prevent massive flows of migrants from heading north. Perhaps he overlooked his administration's attempt to end the Migrant Protection Protocols (MPP) program which deterred asylum fraud by requiring applicants to wait in Mexico for a hearing. We could go on and on. "The American public has not forgotten. They are witnessing unprecedented flows of illegal immigration. They see control of our border ceded to criminal gangs that smuggle and traffic human beings, and flood our country with lethal narcotics. The American people know who is responsible for the chaos at the border: It is President Biden and his Homeland Security Secretary Alejandro Mayorkas. "While offering little in the way of reassurance to an alarmed American public, the president once again called for amnesty for illegal aliens and more cheap labor for business interests. Rewarding illegal immigration and flooding the labor market with low-wage foreign workers is not immigration reform, and the American public will not be fooled. "President Biden also spoke extensively about the importance and sanctity of national borders. But he was talking about Ukraine's, not ours. All Americans share his outrage about Russia's invasion of Ukraine. But whether it is a power hungry madman or criminal cartels reaping billions in profits by brazenly smuggling people and lethal narcotics, both inflict lasting damage on the country whose borders are being breached. As the leader of the free world, President Biden has an obligation to ensure that Vladimir Putin's aggression does not stand. As the president of the United States, he has a sworn duty to end the wholesale breach of our nation's borders." Story continues Contact: Preston Huennekens, 202-328-7004 or phuennekens@fairus.org ABOUT FAIR Founded in 1979, FAIR is the country's largest immigration reform group. With over 3 million members and supporters nationwide, FAIR fights for immigration policies that serve national interests, not special interests. FAIR believes that immigration reform must enhance national security, improve the economy, protect jobs, preserve our environment, and establish a rule of law that is recognized and enforced. Cision View original content to download multimedia:https://www.prnewswire.com/news-releases/fair-statement-on-bidens-state-of-the-union-address-301493629.html SOURCE Federation for American Immigration Reform (FAIR) Flow Capital Corp. TORONTO, ON, March 02, 2022 (GLOBE NEWSWIRE) -- Flow Capital Corp. (TSXV:FW) portfolio company EverWash, recently announced they have closed on a $6M Series B from Spring Mountain Capital (SMC). The round will be used to continue to scale the EverWash network of car washes, widely implement recently acquired omnix Labs technology, expand marketing for the consumer facing brand, and grow the Philadelphia-based team. This equity funding round comes on the heels of Flow Capitals recent $5M growth capital venture debt investment into EverWash. EverWash offers consumers unlimited car washes at a low monthly price at in-network wash operators and a user-friendly app to check-in at the neighborhood carwash. The tech company provides car wash partners with a tech-enabled membership platform, staff training, customer service, marketing support, and more. Car washes are a $15 billion industry in the US and growing the percentage of drivers that report getting regular car washes skyrocketed from just 48% in 1994 to more than 77% in 2019. It is also a highly fragmented industry, with no one player holding more than 5% market share nationwide. EverWash has built the largest and fastest-growing network of independent and largely local operators, with more than 800 partner locations. Flow Capital Corp. is proud to be associated with high growth companies like EverWash. We would like to congratulate EverWash on their continued strong growth and execution. We are thrilled to have a strong technology investor like SMC join us in our support of EverWash. Their investment further validates our view of the significant high growth opportunity facing EverWash, said Alex Baluta, CEO of Flow Capital. About Flow Capital Flow Capital Corp. is a diversified alternative asset investor and advisor, specializing in providing minimally dilutive capital to emerging growth businesses. To apply for financing, visit www.flowcap.com. For further information, please contact: Story continues Flow Capital Corp. Alex Baluta Chief Executive Officer alex@flowcap.com 1 Adelaide Street East, Suite 3002, PO Box 171, Toronto, Ontario M5C 2V9 Neither 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 release. Filtered Ai Filtered automates technical interviews and reduces bias to dramatically speed hiring, deliver the highest quality matches and accelerate digital transformation initiatives BOSTON, March 02, 2022 (GLOBE NEWSWIRE) -- Filtered today announced that Dan Finnigan will join the company as the Chief Executive Officer. The company also announced $10 million in financing led by AI Fund, Silicon Valley Data Capital and TDF Ventures. Filtered is the first and only automated technical interview platform to enable the worlds largest companies to effectively hire technical talent from a complex, virtual, and global talent pool. In minutes, Filtered evaluates a candidates fit for the job, team, and company through capabilities-based hiring. Filtered automates applications, screening calls, and coding interviews, allowing companies to hire top talent faster across AI, data science, computer science, full-stack development, blockchain, and DevOps. The digital transformation imperative, accelerated by the pandemic, turned every company into a technology company. While companies now have access to a global talent pool, their processes for engaging, interviewing and evaluating technical talent are costly and ineffective. As hiring managers and talent acquisition teams work in overdrive, theyre facing inordinate challenges keeping up. Filtered is addressing this issue head on, automating interviews and technical skills evaluation to securely and rapidly hire the most sought after talent. The concept of skills-based hiring is not new, but today it matters more than ever. As companies hire from around the globe they need to embrace a new standard for technical interviews that evaluates what candidates can actually do, instead of relying on biased algorithms, where an individual went to school, or their employer history, said Dan Finnigan, CEO of Filtered. When I saw Filtereds approach and dynamic platform, I knew that our founders, Paul Bilodeau and Oliver Weng, had created a new way for even the largest companies to efficiently screen, interview and assess engineers and data scientists anywhere at scale worldwide. Filtered will fundamentally change how companies interview and hire. Story continues Founded in 2018, Filtered was built to replace a candidate's first online application and phone screen as well as the initial skills, coding and culture interviews, effectively streamlining the entire interview process. In the last year, the company has seen significant growth, increasing customer sign-ups by 80 percent. Fortune 500 companies, such as Cigna, Enterprise Holdings and The Federal Reserve Bank, already use Filtered. On average, customers have decreased time-to-fill a role by 3x and boosted their interview-to-hire ratio from 17 to 58 percent. Remote work is opening up new opportunities for software engineers across the globe, while creating more pressure on companies that are now competing globally for talent. Employers need better tools to identify emerging top talent, and Filtered offers a great solution," said Andrew Ng, Managing General Partner at the AI Fund. "The company has built a world-class technical interview platform that makes it easy for hiring managers to get a holistic view of candidates and for companies to build a better, more diverse recruiting engine. Dan Finnigan, who held CEO roles at Yahoo!, HotJobs, and Jobvite is a leader in the recruitment technology space. Over the last 25 years, Dan has built fast growing companies and delivered unprecedented value to their customers. As a part of this role as CEO of Filtered, Dan will usher Filtered into its next phase of growth. Filtered targets the overwhelming task of not just screening, but actually conducting interviews reliably and thoroughly assessing a candidates fit while speeding up response times for applicants and hiring managers, said Usama Fayyad, Executive Director of the Institute for Experiential AI at Northeastern University and Chairman at Open Insights. Leveraging AI to accelerate interviewing, matching, and progressing to a job offer is the holy grail in a super-competitive talent recruiting market. A leading figure in the data science community, Fayyad will join Filtereds Board of Directors, bringing his AI and data expertise as the worlds first Chief Data Officer at Yahoo! and Global Chief Data Officer at Barclays Bank. To learn more about Filtereds automated technical interview platform, visit: https://www.filtered.ai/ About Filtered Founded in 2018, Filtered is an automated technical interview platform used by Fortune 500 companies and the worlds fastest growing startups to hire technical talent faster. Built from the ground up, Filtered is reinventing the interview process with evaluations that replicate real on-the-job environments, boost collaboration and unlock insights into a candidates skill sets, problem-solving abilities and culture fit. Filtered is dramatically reducing interview-to-hire, days-to-fill, and cost-per-hire ratios. About AI Fund AI Fund is a venture capital firm and startup studio that strives to move humanity forward by accelerating the adoption of AI. We help entrepreneurs solve large problems with creative uses of machine learning. We are a team of AI pioneers, operators, entrepreneurs, and investors, supported by top-tier partners including NEA, Sequoia, and Greylock. Connect with AI Fund at www.aifund.ai . About Silicon Valley Data Capital Silicon Valley Data Capital is a seed and early-stage venture capital fund focused on partnering with and supporting entrepreneurs who are creating the next generation of leading enterprise and financial technology companies. With deep investment and operating experience in enterprise data, SVD Capitals partners help companies accelerate growth by making meaningful connections, including executive talent, customers, and partners. About TDF Ventures TDF Ventures is an early-stage venture capital firm with offices in Washington, DC and Silicon Valley. We focus on startups that serve enterprise markets within infrastructure, software, and services (IaaS, SaaS, XaaS). We are currently investing out of a $150M Fund V. Current areas of focus include AI/ML, business process automation, cybersecurity, e-commerce, future of work, fintech, and logistics tech. Media Contact: LaunchSquad for Filtered amolaro@launchsquad.com Industrys first patented fiber cascading FRTek PrimAer smart repeaters powered by Movandi semiconductors and approved by top 5G operators SAN JOSE, Calif., March 02, 2022--(BUSINESS WIRE)--MWC Barcelona FRTek, a leading supplier of wireless, amplifier solutions and advanced repeater technologies to the mobile communications industry, today announced that it has entered an original equipment manufacturer (OEM) partnership with Movandi providing semiconductors and antenna modules for FRTek PrimAers smart repeaters in the 24/26 GHz (n258), 28 GHz (n257/n261) and 39 GHz (n260) spectrum bands. FRTek PrimAer smart repeaters with patented fiber cascading capabilities are being deployed today with global tier one 5G service providers including Verizon to deliver unprecedented 5G mmWave coverage. This press release features multimedia. View the full release here: https://www.businesswire.com/news/home/20220301005565/en/ FRTek PrimAer Smart Repeaters (Photo: Business Wire) FRTeks PrimAer 28 GHz smart repeater was recently used at Qualcomms Snapdragon Tech Summit, November 30 December 2, 2021 at the Fairmont Orchid Hotel located on the western side of Hawaii. Qualcomm released their Snapdragon 8 GEN 1 Mobile Platform and demonstrated the industrys first 8K HDR live video streaming using Snapdragon 8 powered reference smartphones in a video call that took place between Qualcomm President and CEO Cristiano Amon in Hawaii and Verizon CTO Kyle Malady in New Jersey. Click here to see the demonstration. "The FRTek PrimAer 5G mmWave smart repeater family is the most innovative on the market with patented fiber cascading capabilities that enable service providers unequaled deployment versatility for fixed wireless access to residences and businesses and to extend outdoor and indoor range and coverage," said Milla Woo, CEO and president at FRTek US, LLC. "Only with Movandi feature and performance innovation in 5G mmWave RF silicon technology solutions were we able to deliver the FRTek PrimAer family. We are excited to enable service providers to bring the 5G vision to life for their customers." Story continues Widespread deployment of FRTek PrimAer repeaters will extend 5G mmWave coverage to a broader range of customers who need reliable, high-speed internet access and 5G mobile service anywhere they are. FRTek PrimAer repeaters are designed to amplify 5G mmWave signals derived from nearby base stations and retransmit them to underserved areas. High-density areas, indoors or outdoors, especially those with multi-story buildings, stadiums, and shopping environments, will benefit from increased deployment of FRTek repeaters. "Our collaboration with FRTek, and their expertise in the designing and manufacturing smart repeaters for 5G mmWave, helps to ensure that were able to meet the high-performance requirements of our mutual customers," said Maryam Rofougaran, CEO and founder with Movandi. "We're committed to driving innovation and helping mobile network operators scale 5G deployments economically by offering unmatched core semiconductor technology to ODMs and OEMs." The new FRTek PrimAer smart repeater portfolio are field proven and now support all global markets and licensed spectrum bands. The FRTek PrimAer repeaters use phased array modules including Movandi beamformers, up/down converters, PLL synthesizers, phased array antennas, algorithms, and software to bring the 5G high bandwidth and low latency vision to life. FRTeks PrimAer smart repeaters are 3GPP compliant and offer industry leading capabilities that reduce service provider deployment costs and time, while enhancing range and coverage for outdoor, indoor and outdoor-to-indoor applications such as urban densification, fixed wireless access, venue/campus coverage, office and residential indoor coverage, and private networking. Highlights include: Patented fiber connectivity and cascading allows up to four smart repeaters to be daisy chained up to 600 meters apart providing great deployment flexibility. See video for details. Cascading capability allows one donor unit to support multiple server units connected via fiber or over-the-air (OTA) enhancing deployment flexibility and enabling mmWave to be directed around obstacles. Movandi BeamXR software defined beam networking (SDBN) enables remotely programmed beam forming and steering allowing continuous coverage optimization and reducing OPEX. Donor units automatically find the best server, decodes the SSB, synchronizes TDD, and supports 38 dBm per polarization at 64 QAM with 45-degree azimuth and 45-degree elevation scan angles. Single server units can support multiple beam patterns from narrow to wide beams depending on coverage objectives with 38 dBm per polarization at 64 QAM and programmable angle coverage of 30-degree azimuth and 15-degree elevation Internal LTE modem enables remote operations and maintenance Independent studies by Mobile Experts LLC, a leading industry analyst firm, have shown that smart repeaters can cut mmWave costs and deployment time in half solving the twin deployment problems of capital cost and time to market. Click here for the white paper. About FRTek Founded in 2000, FRTek (Fiber Radio Technologies) is a leading supplier of wireless and amplifier solutions with a strong track record of providing advanced repeater technology to the mobile communications industry. Headquartered in South Korea, FRTek is a global company with manufacturing facilities in South Korea and offices in Japan and the United States. FRTeks wireless solutions include distributed antenna system (DAS) repeaters, interference cancellation system (ICS) repeaters, and RF repeaters for 5G mmWave, WCDMA and LTE networks. FRTek developed and tested Radio Units for ORAN. In addition, FRTek is also actively engaged in wireless projects for the government sector. Learn more at frtek.com or follow us on Linkedin. About Movandi Movandi is a 5G and beyond RF semiconductor technology company enabling a hyperconnected world, broad 5G adoption and AI applications across multiple industries. Movandi has substantial intellectual property with 90 patents filed, and 60 patents issued in 5G RF semiconductors, algorithms and software. Our engineering innovation and know how optimizes 5G RF chipset performance, size and power efficiency, and dynamic beam forming and steering beam using intelligent algorithms, and software with cloud AI and ML. Founded in 2016 by former world-recognized Broadcom RF and SoC pioneers, the Movandi management team includes executives from Cisco, MediaTek, Qualcomm and Samsung. Movandi powered BeamXR smart repeater semiconductor modules solve difficult 5G engineering and economic challenges by speeding up extending range, enhancing coverage, and penetrating physical barriers in indoor, outdoor and mobile environments, and accelerating large-scale 5G commercialization by significantly reducing service provider capital investment and operating expenses. For more information, go to movandi.com or follow us on Linkedin or Twitter. View source version on businesswire.com: https://www.businesswire.com/news/home/20220301005565/en/ Contacts Milla Woo CEO frtekglobal@frtek.com DUBLIN, March 2, 2022 /PRNewswire/ -- The "Growth Opportunities for Communications, Collaboration and Contact Center Solutions in the Financial Services Industry" report has been added to ResearchAndMarkets.com's offering. Research and Markets Logo An important pillar of the global economy, the financial services industry is experiencing rapid and substantial transformation. Contact center, unified communications and collaboration technologies have risen in prominence as financial services institutions have needed to connect a workforce that is more widely distributed than ever before and adopt new business models to address rapidly evolving customer needs and interaction preferences. This study leverages the input of IT decision makers from a global survey conducted in November through December 2021, which was analyzed in 2021. IT decision maker participants spanned across global regions, and business sizes. The survey focused on the current state of adoption among various unified communications, collaboration and contact center tools, key investment drivers and future investment plans, perceived benefits of those tools, top challenges that financial services organizations face, the current and future state of hybrid work, as well as future office and real estate plans. The financial services sector encompasses a rage of business types, from commercial and consumer lending, investment, insurance collections and more. As such, the industry is comprised of a diverse mix of worker roles across back office and frontline staff, including industry-specific and general business roles. Growth opportunities abound for providers that can address this diversity with impactful solutions that can meet the requirements of today while bridging the chasm to meet the future goals and objectives of financial services organizations. This study leverages empirical data to show leaders of financial services organizations how their business stack up with their peers as well as shows providers how their financial services customers can get ahead of the curve and remain the forefront for sustained growth. Key Topics Covered: 1. Market Overview Story continues Why Financial Services? Why Now? Financial Services Industry Overview Financial Services Industry in the Spotlight Frontline Workers in the Financial Services Industry 2. Digital Transformation in the Financial Services Industry IT/Telecom Decision Maker Perspectives Current Stage of Digital Transformation Strategy Hurdles to Purchasing Transformative Technologies Top Priorities for Digital Transformation Investment Digital Transformation Success Measurement Departments Driving the Adoption of Digital Solutions Transformative Technologies Investment Factors 3. Unified Communications, Collaboration and Contact Center Adoption in the Financial Services Industry IT/Telecom Decision Maker Perspectives Communication & Collaboration Tools Used Today Communication & Collaboration Tools Deployment Strategies Number of Contact Center Agents in the Organization Type of Interaction Channels Employed Factors Preventing Contact Centers from Meeting Goals and Objectives Technologies Used to Improve Contact Center Performance and Workforce Engagement IT/Telecom Decision Maker Perspectives Technologies Used / Planned for Frontline Workers Tools Used Most Often by Frontline Workers Satisfaction with Technologies Used by Frontline Workers Factors Preventing Frontline Workers Empowerment 4. Work from Home and Remote Work in the Financial Services Industry IT/Telecom Decision Maker Perspectives Impact of COVID-19 on the Organization Workforce Working from Home Percent of Agents Moved to Work-from-home Since the Start of Stay-at-home Provisions Changes to Remote Agents Post-pandemic Covid-19 Impact on Technologies for Remote Workers IT Challenges in Supporting Remote Work Workplaces and Workspaces in the Financial Services Industry 5. IT/Telecom Decision Maker Perspectives Covid-19 Impact on Physical Office Space AND Real Estate Workplace Evolution over Next Year Future Investment in Open Offices 6. Future Investment Plans in the Financial Services Vertical IT/Telecom Decision Maker Perspectives Future Investment Prioritization CX Priorities over the Next Two Years Key Drivers for Investing in Communication & Collaboration 7. Vertical Industry Trends Disruption in the Banking and Insurance Industries Best Practices in Delivering Value to Verticals and Frontline Workers 8. Conclusion Growth Opportunities for Technology Providers 9. Appendix Research Objectives Research Methodology Sample Distribution - Country 10. IT/Telecom Decision-maker Survey - Respondent and Organization Profile Respondent Profile - Decision-Making Authority Respondent Profile - Familiarity with IT Budget Respondent Profile - IT/Telecom-Related Purchase Involvement Organization Profile - Size of Organization Organization Revenue List of Exhibits Legal Disclaimer For more information about this report visit https://www.researchandmarkets.com/r/c0w726 Media Contact: Research and Markets Laura Wood, Senior Manager press@researchandmarkets.com For E.S.T Office Hours Call +1-917-300-0470 For U.S./CAN Toll Free Call +1-800-526-8630 For GMT Office Hours Call +353-1-416-8900 U.S. Fax: 646-607-1907 Fax (outside U.S.): +353-1-481-1716 Cision View original content:https://www.prnewswire.com/news-releases/global-financial-services-communications-collaboration-and-contact-center-solution-market-report-2022---new-business-models-to-address-rapidly-evolving-customer-needs-and-interaction-preferences-301494052.html SOURCE Research and Markets Brent crude oil extended its rally, almost hitting $110 even as the International Energy Agency warned that global energy security is under threat following Russias invasion of Ukraine. Brent crude jumped 4.52% today to hit $109.49, while Nymex crude oil saw a rise of 4.51% to reach $107.92. The situation across energy markets is very serious, IEA Executive Director Fatih Birol said on Tuesday after the US and other economies agreed to release oil reserves. The market will be watching for a response from Opec+ when the group meets on Wednesday (March 2) to discuss April supply. Only a modest increase is expected despite the turmoil rippling through the sector. The global oil market had already tightened significantly prior to the invasion after economies rebounded strongly from the pandemic, and the disruption to Russian exports has the potential to drive crude prices even higher. NASHVILLE, Tenn., March 02, 2022--(BUSINESS WIRE)--HCA Healthcare, Inc. (NYSE: HCA), one of the nations leading healthcare providers, today announced that the organization and the HCA Healthcare Foundation gave more than $41 million to community organizations in 2021. The funding includes contributions made to organizations focused on addressing disaster relief, education and high priority community needs, as well as matching gifts to support colleagues charities of choice. HCA Healthcare supports communities in multiple ways, including direct contributions from the organization, matching gifts of colleagues, and encouraging colleagues to volunteer their time and talents. The HCA Healthcare Foundation provides leadership, service and financial support to nonprofit organizations working individually and collectively. "For more than 50 years, HCA Healthcare has been caring for the communities where its colleagues live and work, and 2021 marked significant milestones in expanding the ways we give back," said Joanne Pulles, vice president of community engagement at HCA Healthcare and president of the HCA Healthcare Foundation. "Whether its through volunteering our time, making charitable donations or partnering with other organizations, we are committed to improving more lives in more ways." HCA Healthcare and the HCA Healthcare Foundation have a long history of supporting the Middle Tennessee community where HCA Healthcare is headquartered. Last year marked the launch of two initiatives designed to help address important issues in communities around the country. In May 2021, the HCA Healthcare Foundations presence was expanded with the launch of its Healthier Tomorrow Fund, an $80 million community impact fund established to support initiatives focused on high-priority community needs and health equity in 25 communities in five states where HCA Healthcare has a presence. Since its launch, $4.5 million in funding has already been allocated to 13 different organizations, including the American Heart Association, Jobs for Americas Graduates and Educate Texas. "Jobs for Americas Graduates has had convincing success over 40 years in supporting and educating thousands of young people through leadership development, project-based learning and mastering our 37 employability skills competencies," said Ken Smith, president and chief executive officer of Jobs for Americas Graduates, a recipient of a grant from the Healthier Tomorrow Fund. "The HCA Healthcare Foundation helped create our new healthcare occupation project-based learning module and expanded opportunities for our young people to learn more about the full range of healthcare occupations." Story continues Additionally, in May 2021, HCA Healthcare announced a $10 million commitment over three years to support Historically Black Colleges and Universities (HBCUs) and Hispanic-Serving Institutions (HSIs) in communities where HCA Healthcare has a presence. In December, HCA Healthcare donated $1.5 million to Florida A&M Universitys School of Allied Health Sciences. This donation and future partnerships are intended to strengthen student pathways from undergraduate to graduate to management careers in healthcare, while also advancing diversity in healthcare and supporting the next generation of healthcare leaders. Since its inception, the HCA Healthcare Foundation has provided more than $247 million to nonprofit organizations headquartered in and serving residents of seven Middle Tennessee counties. In 2021, the HCA Healthcare Foundation donated more than $5.5 million to 145 nonprofit agencies in Middle Tennessee aimed at providing solutions in the areas of health and wellbeing, primary care or basic needs services, education, and the arts. Additionally, HCA Healthcare and its colleagues supported communities through the following initiatives in 2021: Disaster Recovery Efforts: Last year, HCA Healthcare continued to support its communities affected by natural disasters. For example, when a severe tornado system struck Kentucky, HCA Healthcare stepped up to provide care at TriStar Greenview Regional Hospital and contributed $250,000 in funding to support organizations providing relief services. When floods impacted Middle Tennessee, affecting many HCA Healthcare colleagues and neighbors, HCA Healthcare and the HCA Healthcare Foundation contributed $250,000 to support relief efforts. When Category 4 Hurricane Ida hit Louisiana in September, HCA Healthcare and its affiliate Tulane Health System donated $225,000 to aid in recovery and relief efforts. Additionally, when winter storms hit Texas in February 2021, leaving thousands without power, HCA Healthcare and its affiliate Texas hospitals contributed $250,000 to support relief efforts by charitable organizations. Healthy Food for Healthier Tomorrows Food & Nutrition Drive: HCA Healthcare colleagues across the country took action against food insecurity with a holiday food drive and fundraiser that delivered nearly 370,000 meals to food banks. The effort supported HCA Healthcares inaugural Healthy Food for Healthier Tomorrows Food & Nutrition Drive, and included 77,830 meals donated by colleagues, 52,000 meals provided by colleague charitable donations, and 240,000 meals from $60,000 in grants provided by the HCA Healthcare Foundation. Volunteerism: In 2021, giving and volunteering continued to evolve in response to the ongoing pandemic. Many nonprofits continued with socially distanced operations and virtual volunteer service opportunities. While giving back and volunteering might have looked a little different, HCA Healthcare colleagues showed up stronger than ever, marking a 20 percent increase over last year in the number of volunteer hours logged. About HCA Healthcare Nashville-based HCA Healthcare is one of the nations leading providers of healthcare services comprising 182 hospitals and approximately 2,200 ambulatory sites of care, including surgery centers, freestanding ERs, urgent care centers, and physician clinics, in 20 states and the United Kingdom. With its founding in 1968, HCA Healthcare created a new model for hospital care in the United States, using combined resources to strengthen hospitals, deliver patient-focused care and improve the practice of medicine. HCA Healthcare has conducted a number of clinical studies, including one that demonstrated that full-term delivery is healthier than early elective delivery of babies and another that identified a clinical protocol that can reduce bloodstream infections in ICU patients by 44 percent. HCA Healthcare is a learning health system that uses its more than 35 million annual patient encounters to advance science, improve patient care and save lives. Please click here to connect with HCA Healthcare on social media. About HCA Healthcare Foundation The mission of the HCA Healthcare Foundation is to promote health and well-being and strive to make a positive impact in all the communities HCA Healthcare serves. We accomplish this mission by providing leadership, service and financial support to effective non-profit organizations working individually and collectively. All references to "Company," "HCA" and "HCA Healthcare" as used throughout this document refer to HCA Healthcare, Inc. and its affiliates. View source version on businesswire.com: https://www.businesswire.com/news/home/20220302005963/en/ Contacts INVESTOR CONTACT: Frank Morgan 615-344-2688 MEDIA CONTACT: Harlow Sumerford 615-344-1851 IDEX BIOMETRICS ASA The board of directors of IDEX Biometrics ASA has resolved to issue 1,765,791 ordinary shares at NOK 1.70 per share to employees who participate in the companys Employee Share Purchase Plan (ESPP), which plan was approved by the annual general meeting on 12 May 2021. 45 employees participated in the ESPP in this period. The participating employees have elected to invest a part of the base salary in ordinary shares in the company. Purchase takes place every six months. Following the issue, the Company's share capital will be NOK 151,823,136.75 divided into 1,012,154,245 shares each with a nominal value of NOK 0.15. Primary insiders IDEX discloses transactions by the following primary insiders in IDEX shares ISIN NO0003070609: - CEO Vince Graziani acquired 52,446 ordinary shares at NOK 1.70 per share. - CTO Anthony Eaton acquired 19,683 ordinary shares at NOK 1.70 per share. IDEX 2021 ESPP The ESPP was approved at the annual general meeting on 12 May 2021. Reference is made to the notice of said meeting where the plan document for the ESPP was attached. All employees in the Company and its subsidiaries, except in China, have been offered to subscribe for shares in the Company in connection with the ESPP. The ESPP is structured around two contribution periods a year, starting on 1 September and 1 March and lasts for the following six months. During each contribution period, a fixed amount (up to 20% of the employees gross base salary) is withheld from the employees net salary. The employee may sign up to participate in the ESPP from the date of the public disclosure of the interim report before the contrubution period until the beginning of the contribution period. Unless the employee actively withdraws from the ESPP, participation is automatically renewed for the same amount for subsequent contribution periods. The board's resolution to issue new shares in connection with the ESPP is made pursuant to the authorization granted by the Company's annual general meeting on 12 May 2021 to increase the Company's share capital in connection with the ESPP. Story continues In accordance with the ESPP, the subscription price is the lower closing price of the Companys share, as traded on Oslo Brs, on the first or last day of the contribution period, less 15% discount. Payment of the subscription amount is made out of the relevant employee salary withholding. In accordance with Regulation (EU) 2017/1129 (the Prospectus Regulation) Article 1 (5) h, issuance of shares in connection with the ESPP is exempt from the obligation to publish a listing prospectus. For further information contact: Marianne Be, Investor Relations E-mail: marianne.boe@idexbiometrics.com Tel: + 47 918 00186 Brett L. Perry, U.S. Investor Relations E-mail: bperry@sheltongroup.com Tel: +1 214 272 0070 About IDEX Biometrics IDEX Biometrics ASA (OSE: IDEX and Nasdaq: IDBA) is a leading provider of fingerprint identification technologies offering simple, secure, and personal touch-free authentication for all. We help people make payments, prove their identity, gain access to information, unlock devices, or gain admittance to buildings. We invent, engineer, and commercialize these secure and safe yet incredibly user-friendly solutions. Our total addressable market represents a fast growing multi-billion-unit opportunity. For more information, visit www.idexbiometrics.com and follow @IDEXBiometrics STMicroelectronics N.V. Italy and France: EIB supports strengthening of Europe's semiconductor industry with 600 million loan to STMicroelectronics A loan to finance research and development (R&D) and new innovative production lines of a global semiconductor leader This support is in line with the policy of the European Union and its Member States to strengthen the semiconductor industry in Europe Funding that also contributes to the strategic objectives of European technological sovereignty in the semiconductor industry Paris, March 2, 2022 The European Investment Bank (EIB) is providing significant financial support to STMicroelectronics: a 600 million loan for the semiconductor group's research and development (R&D) and pre-industrialisation activities in Europe. The operation concerns investments in R&D activities for innovative technologies and components, as well as in pilot production lines for advanced semiconductors. These investments will be implemented in STMicroelectronics existing facilities in Italy (Agrate and Catania) and France (Crolles). They will contribute to the development of technologies and products to address the major challenges of environmental transition and digital transformation in all sectors. The global semiconductor market is currently worth more than 500 billion and is expected to double by 2030. Europe accounts for around 10% of world production capacity, a sharp decline compared with previous decades (24% in 2000 and 44% in 1990). The EIB's support for STMicroelectronics actively contributes to the policies put in place at European level in coordination with the Member States, in order to strengthen the semiconductor industry in Europe, in research and development, design and production and bring public financing to strategic industrial projects. The aim is to support the competitiveness of European players of this key sector, as it affects all industrial sectors, particularly those in which European manufacturers hold leadership positions. Story continues Bruno Le Maire, French Minister for the Economy, Finance and Recovery, said: There will be no political sovereignty without digital sovereignty. Europe must use all the tools it has, to invest in new technologies. The EIBs role is crucial, when it grants a 600 million loan to STMicroelectronics. Our goal is clear: to accelerate the production of semiconductors in France and Italy. It is only by mastering this technology, that we will be able to safeguard the European Unions strategic independence. Those investments contribute more broadly to the support to our new growth model that creates high-value industrial jobs in our countries. Daniele Franco, Italian Minister for the Economy and Finance, said: The semiconductor industry is fundamental for the digital transition of the European Union economies. The support that the EIB provides to STMicroelectronics, one of the worlds most advanced and innovative companies, represents an important step towards strengthening and making the European semiconductor industry more competitive, with a significant impact on employment and growth. Jean-Marc Chery, President and CEO of STMicroelectronics, said: "This new loan from the EIB, with which we have been working in partnership for many years, is complementing the various existing instruments supporting our industry, such as the important projects of common European interest (IPCEI) and others that are currently being set up by the European Commission and the Member States. It is essential to work in Europe on the whole value chain: R&D, design and manufacturing, in collaboration with the different European ecosystems. ST will contribute to the goal of 20% of global production in Europe by 2030 and will continue to develop and manufacture in Europe innovative technologies and products to support the environmental transition and the digital transformation of all industries. EIB Vice-President Gelsomina Vigliotti, said: "Semiconductors are the key components without which no digital and ecological transition is possible. Thanks to the long-standing relationship between the EIB and ST, which has resulted in eight financing operations since 1994 worth more than 3,15 billion, the EIB supports Europe's autonomy, competitiveness and technological sovereignty. EIB Vice-President Ambroise Fayolle, said: Financing innovation, a key factor in European competitiveness and technological sovereignty, is an EIB priority. This 600 million loan to support the R&D efforts of one of Europe's leading semiconductor companies illustrates Europe's commitment to this sector, which is crucial to the future of our economies and our strategic autonomy. Background information STMicroelectronics STMicroelectronics is one of the world's leading semiconductor companies, with a strong European R&D and manufacturing footprint. Since 1994, the EIB has been able to support ST through seven operations for a total amount of over 3.15 billion. An independent device manufacturer mastering the semiconductor supply chain with state-of-the-art manufacturing facilities, ST employs over 48,000 people working with more than 200,000 customers and partners to enable smarter mobility, more efficient power and energy management, and the wide-scale deployment of the Internet of Things and 5G technology. ST is committed to becoming carbon neutral by 2027. Further information can be found at www.st.com. European Investment Bank The EIB, whose shareholders are the 27 Member States of the European Union, is the Union's long-term financing institution. It finances quality investment that contributes to the achievement of the European Union's policy objectives. In 2021, the EIB provided more than 3 billion in Italy and France for projects dedicated to innovation and digital transformation. Press contacts EIB Christophe Alix, c.alix@eib.org, tel: +352 43 79 84303, mobile: +33 6 11 81 30 99 Lorenzo Squintani, l.squintani@eib.org, tel: +352 4379-82528, mobile: +352 691 285 772 Website: www.eib.org/press - Press Office: +352 4379 21000 press@eib.org STMicroelectronics Media relations: Alexis Breton, alexis.breton@st.com Investor relations: Celine Berthier celine.berthier@st.com Website: www.st.com France Cabinet of Bruno Le Maire: presse.mineco@cabinets.finances.gouv.fr, +33 1 53 18 41 13 Italy Ministry of Economy and Finance: ufficio.stampa@mef.gov.it, +39 06 47614605 Attachment BREA, Calif., March 2, 2022 /PRNewswire/ -- LaiFug, a manufacturer focusing on pet home products, was founded in 2015, and its products have been sold to 3 million customers in over a dozen countries worldwide. LaiFug is currently approaching its 7th birthday and recently launched a customer appreciation festival to express gratitude to all its customers for their love and support for LaiFug. The festival begins with the sale of products of all categories during the second week of March. From March 7 to March 13 , customers will be able to purchase LaiFug's most popular items at discounts of up to 20% on the official LaiFug website, with various discounts on other products as well. In addition, LaiFug will have a special page on its official website, called the Fan Club, for users to discuss LaiFug products and brands, where they can feel free to post any feedback or suggestions about products and brands, or contact LaiFug directly if users have more comments they wish to leave on the LaiFug blog. LaiFug will also find on the First Three LaiFug users who comment in the Fan Club. They will receive a complete set of LaiFug pet products, tailored to their pet type. LaiFug strongly believes that the trust of its customers has laid the foundation for its success today, and that the foundation started from day one. Since its foundation in 2015, LaiFug has been fulfilling its mission to connect pet products with home furnishings with its multi-functional LaiFug memory foam dog bed as well as to create a global brand. LaiFug dog bed is one of the most popular dog beds on Amazon and currently keeps a 5-star rating of over 5,700 on Amazon. Since its debut in 2015, the LaiFug memory foam dog bed has attracted a lot of attention. "In the past, I just wanted to save money and buy cheap beds, but they never lasted until I found LaiFug," said a customer from the U.S. on Amazon. Similar comments can be found in almost all of LaiFug's other dog bed categories. LaiFug's various pet products have served more than 3 million adorable pets to date. Story continues Devoted to its mission of connecting to the home furnishings and creating a global brand, LaiFug has been listening to its customers feedback. After realizing the great demand for quality dog beds, LaiFug introduced several dog bed products to meet the needs of all customers. For example, the LaiFug Jumbo Orthopedic Memory Foam Double Pillow Dog Bed is available in 3 color options and 2 sizes. The suede cover is durable, chewable and removable for cleaning, and the cover can be purchased separately even if it is accidentally damaged. The LaiFug mattress is made of memory foam and high-density support foam laminated to provide both enough softness for your pet to sleep comfortably and enough thickness and support to prevent your pet's bones from deforming. Also the extra-large size and pillows of various heights can accommodate multiple pets resting together at the same time, and the dense waterproof fabric protects the sponge well for long-term use. The minimalist appearance and ultimate comfort reflect LaiFug's art of balancing aesthetics and practicality. Over the past six years, LaiFug has always been listening to its customers. Having inspired by them, LaiFug has further expanded to products in other segments, including pet toys, pet clothes, wooden pet houses and so on, to meet their needs and provide all-round comfort and beauty in everyday life. To celebrate and commemorate success of the first seven years and to look forward to many prosperous years ahead, LaiFug has also recently upgraded its brand concept to become closer to its customers and to create more value. Looking forward, LaiFug remains committed to continuing its legacy of always putting customers first and fulfilling its mission of creating a global brand by providing all-round comfort and beauty for pets as well as becoming a leader in the pet home products industry. About LaiFug Making pets feel loved. Founded in 2015, LaiFug is a leading manufacturer of pet products sold to over 3 million customers in the United States and Europe. Since its foundation, LaiFug has been maintaining a 40% compound growth rate for five consecutive years. While LaiFug has grown into a global company with a wide range of products offered to meet the diverse needs of its customers, it has remained deeply committed to the pet sector and its focus on the value of pet home products has remained constant. Cision View original content:https://www.prnewswire.com/news-releases/laifug-launches-customer-appreciation-festivals-to-celebrate-7th-anniversary-301493641.html SOURCE LaiFug RICHMOND HILL, ON, March 1, 2022 /CNW/ - Mazda Canada Inc. (MCI) today reported February sales of 3,616 vehicles, representing a decrease of 12.1 percent versus February 2021. Sales year-to-date (YTD) are 7,109, which is a decrease of 12.8 percent compared to the first two months of 2021. Mazda Canada Inc. Logo (CNW Group/Mazda Canada Inc.) FEBRUARY 2021 SALES HIGHLIGHTS: With spring around the corner, the MX-5 collected the most new owners in February since 1995, with a 26.8 percent increase versus February 2021. Fresh off an AJAC win for Best Sports/Performance Car in Canada for 2022, there's much to celebrate for MX-5 as driving season approaches. Mazda3 sales jumped up 31.4 percent compared to the same month last year. CX-3 sales rose 23.6 percent year-over-year. February February YOY YTD YTD YOY 2022 2021 Change 2022 2021 Change Mazda3 942 717 31.4% 1,877 1,500 25.1% Mazda6 0 137 -100.0% 0 291 -100.0% MX-5 104 82 26.8% 177 98 80.6% Passenger Car 1,046 936 11.8% 2,054 1,889 8.7% MX-30 50 0 0.0% 97 0 0.0% CX-3 550 445 23.6% 973 884 10.1% CX-30 432 670 -35.5% 493 1,251 -60.6% CX-5 1,304 1,709 -23.7% 3,113 3,420 -9.0% CX-9 234 354 -33.9% 379 709 -46.5% Light Truck 2,570 3,178 -19.1% 5,055 6,264 -19.3% MAZDA TOTAL 3,616 4,114 -12.1% 7,109 8,153 -12.8% Mazda Canada Inc. is responsible for the sales and marketing, customer service and parts support of Mazda vehicles in Canada. Headquartered in Richmond Hill, Ontario, Mazda Canada has a nationwide network of 163 dealerships. For additional information, visit Mazda Canada's media website at www.media.mazda.ca. SOURCE Mazda Canada Inc. Cision View original content to download multimedia: http://www.newswire.ca/en/releases/archive/March2022/01/c2021.html Health Partners, the UKs largest non-hospital private healthcare services provider, with more than two million patients across 500+ corporate, insurance and government clients, announces partnership with MedX Health to launch a pilot program of MedXs DermSecure Screening Platform MISSISSAUGA, Ontario, March 02, 2022--(BUSINESS WIRE)--MedX Health Corp. ("MedX" or the "Company") (TSXV: MDX), a global leader in teledermatology, is pleased to announce a Memorandum of Understanding ("MOU") and the launch of a new commercialization pilot project with Health Partners (OH) Limited, a well-respected, privately-owned corporate health, treatment and primary care services company in the United Kingdom. Serving a broad client base comprising corporates, government agencies, insurers, health trusts, pension funds and individuals, Health Partners ("HP") employs 700+ people with telehealth, mobile and on-site operations across the UK and the Republic of Ireland. The pilot will span three to six months and involve an estimated 600 patients across two of HPs sites. Upon the successful completion of the pilot, the MedX DermSecure Screening Platform will be made available to Health Partners' two million-plus patients. The agreement is the latest initiative in MedXs global commercialization strategy and follows pilots recently launched across the Europe and Middle East region. "Health Partners Clinical Team constantly strives to identify leading technological innovations that offer the highest level of support to our two million-plus patients," said Health Partners Managing Director Andrew Noble. "MedX's leading skin assessment technology allows dermatologists to not only make more accurate diagnoses of pigmented lesions and moles, but to do that remotely and quickly. We are very proud to be partnering with MedX Health to bring this innovative and life-changing service to our clients." In addition to expanding its DermSecure Screening Platform network globally, MedX has focused on building a presence in multiple market verticals such as pharmacies, medical clinics, building hubs, medical scanning clinics, mobile and remote medical practices, as well as esthetics and skincare clinics. The partnership with Health Partners represents MedXs expansion into a new vertical; occupational health and wellbeing services. Story continues MedX Managing Director, Europe, Middle East and Africa (EMEA), Naman Demaghlatrous, added, "MedX is pleased to have established a presence in the strategic occupational health vertical. Health Partners brings our technology to a population of more than two million workers across the United Kingdom, thus expanding our footprint in the EMEA region considerably. We continue to execute on our strategy to identify strategic partnerships in the region that will allow us to grow our business and save lives simultaneously." Health Partners will pilot MedXs high-definition image-capture technology, SIAscopy, and its secure, cloud-based patient management system, DermSecure, which transmits and stores patient data throughout the assessment process. MedX's SIAscopy is the only technology available that captures five high-resolution images of suspicious moles, lesions and skin conditions, including four spectrophotometric images taken 2mm below the skin's surface. This technology provides detailed patient scans, which a certified dermatologist can virtually assess within 72 hours. "We are honoured to be working with Health Partners on this most important initiative. According to Health & Safety Executive-commissioned research, there are more than 3,000 cases of skin cancer annually in the construction industry alone. We are delighted to be entering the occupational health services market with a leader in the industry," stated Mike Druhan, MedX President, Dermatology Services. About Health Partners (OH) Ltd. Health Partners, headquartered in Uckfield, East Sussex, United Kingdom, is a leading health and wellbeing company, providing a full range of corporate health, treatment and primary care services to corporates, government, insurers, health trusts, pension funds and families. We combine expert advice and clinical services with smart systems to deliver impact-driven health programmes, tailored to improve peoples wellbeing and performance. Health Partners is founded on patient privacy and holds a significant number of accreditations, certifications and memberships, including ISO27001, CQC, SEQOHS and ISO9001. Health Partners offers its services across the United Kingdom and the Republic of Ireland, reaching two million plus people in organisations across several industries. For more information, visit www.healthpartners.uk.com. About MedX Health Corp. MedX, headquartered in Ontario, Canada, is a leading medical device and software company focused on skin health with its SIAscopy on DermSecure telemedicine platform, utilizing its SIAscopy technology. SIAscopy is also imbedded in its products SIAMETRICS, SIMSYS, and MoleMate, which MedX manufactures in its ISO 13485 certified facility. SIAMETRICS, SIMSYS, and MoleMate include hand-held devices that use patented technology utilizing light and its remittance to view suspicious moles and lesions up to 2mm beneath in a pain-free, non-invasive manner. Its patented software then creates real-time images for physicians and dermatologists to evaluate all types of moles or lesions within seconds. These products are cleared by Health Canada, the U.S. Food and Drug Administration, the Therapeutic Goods Administration and Conformite Europeenne for use in Canada, the U.S., Australia, New Zealand, the European Union, Brazil and Turkey. For more information, visit www.medxhealth.com. Neither TSX Venture Exchange nor its Regulation Services Provider (as that term is defined in policies of the TSX Venture Exchange) accepts responsibility for the adequacy or accuracy of this release. This Media Release may contain forward-looking statements, which reflect the Company's current expectations regarding future events. The forward-looking statements involve risks and uncertainties. View source version on businesswire.com: https://www.businesswire.com/news/home/20220302005737/en/ Contacts Bill Mitoulas, Investor Relations MedX Health Corp. bill@medxhealth.com +1-416-479-9547 Minera IRL Limited LIMA, Peru, March 01, 2022 (GLOBE NEWSWIRE) -- Minera IRL Limited (Minera, the Company or we) (BVL:MIRL) (CSE:MIRL) announces that it has terminated the engagement agreement with Haywood Securities Inc. (Haywood) dated December 17, 2020. Haywood was originally engaged as an exclusive financial advisor to Minera as the latter transitioned away from arbitration with its largest lender and back to its primary goal of advancing the Ollachea gold project. Immediately following Haywoods engagement, Minera with assistance from Mining Plus and others spent nine months studying the feasibility of a revised project at Ollachea, filing a Preliminary Economic Assessment (PEA) in September 2021. Since filing the PEA, Minera has engaged with and it continues to engage with a number of parties interested in Ollachea and is assessing a variety of approaches to its development, including strategic alternatives to traditional financing. While the development of Ollachea remains Mineras priority for 2022, it has become evident to management that an exclusive relationship with a financial advisor may not be the best path forward and, after discussions with Haywood, the decision was taken to terminate the exclusive engagement. This does not prevent Haywood from procuring a transaction for Ollachea should the opportunity present itself, but the Company believes that it would be better served without the constraints of an exclusive appointment. MARKET-MAKING SERVICES Minera also announces that it has entered into a market-making agreement with Independent Trading Group (ITG) effective March 1, 2022. ITG has agreed to provide market-making services for Minera on the Canadian Securities Exchange (CSE) in an effort to maintain an orderly market and improve liquidity. About Minera IRL Limited Minera IRL Limited is the CSE and BVL listed holding company of Minera IRL S.A. and Compania Minera Kuri Kullu S.A., two precious metal mining companies engaged in mining exploration, development, and operations in Peru, with a primary focus on gold. Minera is led by an agile and experienced senior management team with extensive mining industry experience, particularly in South America. Minera operates the Corihuarmi Gold Mine located 5,000 meters above sea level in Central Peru while assessing opportunities to advance its Ollachea Gold Project located in the Department of Puno, Southern Peru. For more information, please visit www.minera-irl.com. Story continues On behalf of the Board of Directors of Minera IRL Limited Gerardo Perez Executive Chairman Diego Benavides CEO and Director FOR FURTHER INFORMATION, PLEASE CONTACT: Minera IRL Limited Susan Gabbie Manager, Communications +51 1 418 - 1230 Pedro Valdez Manager, Investor Relations +51 1 418 - 1230 No stock exchange, securities commission or other regulatory authority has approved or disapproved the information contained in this news release. Cautionary Statement on Forward-Looking Information Certain information in this press release constitutes forward-looking statements. Forward-looking statements in this press release include the expectation that the Companys goal of developing Ollachea would be better served without the constraint of an exclusive engagement with a Canadian financial advisor such as Haywood Securities Inc. Forward looking statements are based on assumptions. While management believes these assumptions and statements are reasonable in context, forward-looking statements are inherently subject to political, legal, regulatory, business, and economic risks and competitive uncertainties and contingencies. The Company cautions readers that forward-looking statements involve known and unknown risks, uncertainties and other factors that may cause Minera IRLs actual results and future performance to be materially different than those expected or estimated future results, performance or achievements and that forward-looking statements are not guarantees of future performance, results, or achievements. Minera IRL assumes no obligation, except as may be required by law, to update or revise them to reflect new events or circumstances. Risks, uncertainties and contingencies and other factors that might cause actual performance to differ from forward-looking statements include, but are not limited to, Perus ability to contain the COVID-19 crisis, changes in and access to the capital or precious metals markets, and changes to legislative, political, social, health or economic developments both within Peru and in general. Ottawa, Ontario--(Newsfile Corp. - March 2, 2022) - Northern Graphite Corporation (TSXV: NGC) (OTC Pink: NGPHF) (FSE: 0NG) (XSTU: 0NG) (the "Company" or "Northern") announces that it has received a 30 day extension from the TSX Venture Exchange (the "TSXV") to close the final tranche of its private placement (the "Private Placement") being conducted in connection with the Company's previously announced acquisition of the producing Lac des Iles graphite mine in Quebec and the Okanjande graphite deposit/Okorusu processing plant in Namibia from subsidiaries of Imerys Group ("Imerys") for approximately US$40 million (the "Transaction"). The final date for acceptance by the TSXV of the Private Placement has been extended to April 4, 2022 in order for the Company to finalize documentation associated with the debenture, royalty and streaming financings with the Sprott Group. It is anticipated that the Transaction, the final tranche of the Private Placement and the debenture/royalty/stream financings will close in mid-March, 2022. As previously announced, the Company completed an initial closing of the Private Placement on February 10, 2022, in which it issued a total of 25,762,500 subscription receipts (the "Subscription Receipts") at a price of $0.75 each for gross proceeds of approximately $19.3 million, through a syndicate of agents led by Sprott Capital Partners LP and including Cormark Securities Inc., Canaccord Genuity Corp. and Tamesis Partners LLP. Affiliates of the Sprott Group have indicated their intention to purchase the remaining 5,000,000 Subscription Receipts not issued in the initial closing for additional gross proceeds of $3.75 million in a follow-on closing of the Private Placement pending agreement on final documentation for the debenture, royalty and streaming financings. The net proceeds from the Private Placement will be used by the Company to partially fund the purchase price for the Transaction. In addition, US$3 million of the purchase price for the Transaction will be satisfied by issuing Units (as defined below) to Imerys on the same terms and conditions as those issuable on exercise of the Subscription Receipts. Each Subscription Receipt shall be deemed to be automatically exercised, without payment of any additional consideration and without further action on the part of the holder thereof, into one unit of Northern (a "Unit") upon satisfaction of certain escrow release conditions related to the completion of the Transaction. Each Unit shall be comprised of one common share of Northern, and one-half of one share purchase warrant of Northern. Each whole warrant shall be exercisable to acquire one common share of the Company at a price of $1.10 per share for a period of 24 months from the date the escrow release conditions are satisfied. Story continues The Private Placement remains subject to the final approval of the TSXV. This press release does not constitute an offer to sell or solicitation of an offer to sell any of the securities in the United States. The securities being offered under the Private Placement have not been, and will not be registered, under the United States Securities Act of 1933, as amended (the "1933 Act"), or any state securities laws of any state in the United States and accordingly may not be offered or sold within the United States or to any person in the United States or to U.S. persons unless registered under the 1933 Act and any applicable state securities laws, or exemption from such registration requirements is available. About Northern Graphite Northern Graphite is a Canadian company, listed on the TSX Venture Exchange and focused on becoming a world leading producer of natural graphite and upgraded, high value products critical to the green energy revolution including anode material for lithium-ion batteries/EVs, fuel cells and graphene, as well as advanced industrial technologies. Completion of the Transaction will enable Northern to become the only North American and the world's third largest graphite producing company outside of China. Northern will also own two large scale development projects that have high quality flake graphite and are located close to infrastructure in politically stable jurisdictions. These projects will enable the Company to significantly expand production to meet rapidly growing demand from the EV/battery markets. For additional information Please visit the Company's website at http://www.northerngraphite.com/investors/presentation/, the Company's profile on www.sedar.com, contact Gregory Bowes, CEO (613) 241-9959 or visit our Social Channels. LinkedIn YouTube Twitter Facebook This news release contains certain "forward-looking statements" within the meaning of applicable Canadian securities laws. Forward-looking statements and information are frequently characterized by words such as "plan", "expect", "project", "intend", "believe", "anticipate", "estimate", "potential", "possible" and other similar words, or statements that certain events or conditions "may", "will", "could", or "should" occur. Forward-looking statements in this release include statements regarding, among others: the Company's intention to complete an additional closing of the Private Placement and the timing thereof; the use of proceeds from the Private Placement; the Company's intention to complete the Transaction and the debenture/royalty/steam financings and the timing thereof; the Company's market position post-Transaction and the future demand for graphite. All such forward-looking statements are based on assumptions and analyses made by management based on their experience and perception of historical trends, current conditions and expected future developments, as well as other factors they believe are appropriate in the circumstances. However, these statements are subject to a variety of risks and uncertainties and other factors that could cause actual events or results to differ materially from those projected including, but not limited to, unexpected changes in laws, rules or regulations, or their enforcement by applicable authorities; the failure of other parties to perform as agreed; social or labour unrest; changes in commodity prices; unexpected failure or inadequacy of infrastructure and the failure of ongoing and contemplated studies to deliver anticipated results or results that would justify and support continued studies, development or operations. Readers are cautioned not to place undue reliance on forward-looking information or statements. Although the forward-looking statements contained in this news release are based on what management believes are reasonable assumptions, the Company cannot assure investors that actual results will be consistent with them. These forward-looking statements are made as of the date of this news release and are expressly qualified in their entirety by this cautionary statement. Subject to applicable securities laws, the Company does not assume any obligation to update or revise the forward-looking statements contained herein to reflect events or circumstances occurring after the date of this news release. 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 release. NOT FOR DISTRIBUTION TO UNITED STATES WIRE SERVICES OR FOR DISSEMINATION IN THE UNITED STATES To view the source version of this press release, please visit https://www.newsfilecorp.com/release/115374 VALLOUREC OneSubsea awards Vallourec a contract to supply work-over risers for Equinors Bacalhau field in Brazil Meudon (France), March 2, 2022 Vallourec, a world leader in premium tubular solutions, has been awarded a contract by OneSubsea, the subsea technologies, production, and processing systems division of Schlumberger, to supply 3,000 meters of upset riser joints equipped with VAM TTR HW NA connection for the Bacalhau Project offshore Brazil. The contract was awarded on behalf of Subsea Integration Alliance, a strategic global alliance between Subsea 7 and OneSubsea. Discovered in 2012 and located 185 km from the coast, the Bacalhau field is at a water depth of 2,050 m in the presalt Santos basin. The development will consist of 19 subsea wells tied back to one of the largest floating production, storage and offloading units (FPSO) in Brazil. The first oil is planned in 2024. After a comprehensive design phase to meet the expectations of Bacalhau field operator Equinor, OneSubsea selected the Vallourec high-performance solution for the Open Water Intervention Riser System (OWIRS). This solution is based on seamless shaped steel pipes equipped with a special premium VAM TTR HW NA connection to cope with fatigue conditions and the sea corrosive environment. Vallourec PFP tube mill in Aulnoye-Aymeries (North of France) will produce shaped pipes whose upset ends will also be threaded on site. We are very proud to have been selected by OneSubsea and Equinor for the Bacalhau project. Being selected for the supply of a demanding open water intervention riser system gives us an opportunity to prove that our shaped pipes are highly efficient and competitive. Our Aulnoye-Aymeries PFP tube mill has unique capabilities to manufacture reliable pipes with upset ends, optimized body weight and versatile options for VAM or customer-supplied connections said Hubert Paris, Senior Vice President Europe/Africa. About Vallourec Vallourec is a world leader in premium tubular solutions for the energy markets and for challenging industrial applications such as oil and gas wells in harsh environments, new generation power plants, daring architectural projects, and high-performance mechanical equipment. Vallourec's pioneering spirit and cutting-edge R&D continually open new technological frontiers. Operating in more than twenty countries, its nearly 17,000 dedicated and passionate employees work hand-in-hand with their customers to offer much more than just tubes: they deliver innovative, reliable, competitive solutions to make every project possible. Story continues Listed on Euronext in Paris (ISIN code: FR0013506730, Ticker VK), Vallourec is part of the CAC Mid 60, SBF 120 and Next 150 indices and is eligible for Deferred Settlement Service. In the United States, Vallourec has a sponsored Level 1 American Depository Receipt (ADR) program (ISIN code: US92023R4074, Ticker: VLOWY). Parity between ADR and a Vallourec ordinary share has been set at 5:1. About Subsea Integration Alliance Subsea Integration Alliance is a non-incorporated strategic global alliance between Subsea 7 and OneSubsea, the subsea technologies, production, and processing systems division of Schlumberger, bringing together field development planning, project delivery and total lifecycle solutions under an extensive technology and services portfolio. As one team, Subsea Integration Alliance amplifies subsea performance by helping customers to select, design, deliver and operate the smartest subsea projects. This eliminates costly revisions, avoids delays and reduces risk across the life of field. For more information, visit www.subseaintegrationalliance.com. For more information, please contact: Investor relations Jerome Friboulet Tel: +33 (0)1 49 09 39 77 Investor.relations@vallourec.com Press relations Heloise Rothenbuhler Tel: +33 (0)6 45 45 19 67 heloise.rothenbuhler@vallourec.com Individual shareholder relations Toll-Free Number: 0 800 505 110 actionnaires@vallourec.com vallourec.com Follow us on Twitter @Vallourec Attachment - StoreDot's technology roadmap will deliver 100 miles of range on a 2-minute charge by 2032 - Fast-charging battery cells offering 100 miles in 5 minutes will be ready for mass-production in 2024, followed by 100 miles in 3 minutes by 2028 - StoreDot is at the advanced stages of developing groundbreaking semi-solid state technologies - StoreDot's battery cells are currently in real-world testing by global automotive electric vehicle manufacturers - StoreDot gives automotive manufacturers a clear, realistic technology roadmap for solving the Range Anxiety barrier to help create a cleaner world - Extreme fast-charge multi-patented battery technologies with proven battery chemistry can now be applied to any cell format, including the 4680 family form factor HERZELIYA, Israel, March 2, 2022 /PRNewswire/ -- StoreDot, the pioneer of extreme fast charging (XFC) battery technology for electric vehicles, has revealed its strategic technology roadmap, labeled '100inX', which will deliver batteries capable of charging a 100 miles of range on just a 2 minute charge, with mass production readiness planned within 10 years. StoreDots 100inX battery cell roadmap (PRNewsfoto/StoreDot) StoreDot is also firmly on track for its first milestone for global automotive manufacturers: producing its silicon-dominant anode XFC lithium-ion cells at scale by 2024 that will be capable of delivering 100 miles of range in 5 minutes of charge. In parallel, StoreDot is already at the advanced stages of developing groundbreaking semi-solid-state technologies which will further improve the batteries by 40% over 4 years delivering 100 miles of charge time in just 3 minutes and be mass production ready by 2028. 100in5, 100in3 and 100in2 of miles per minute of charging are three generations of StoreDot technologies of Silicon dominant XFC, semi solid state and full solid state. They will be delivered over the coming decade with 100in5 by 2024, 100in3 by 2028 (40% improvement) and 100in2 by 2032 (additional 33% improvement). Story continues Dr Doron Myersdorf, StoreDot CEO "It's absolutely crucial that we give global automotive manufacturers a clear, realistic and hype-free roadmap for the introduction of our fast-charging battery technologies. After intense development of our silicon-dominant chemistries we will be mass-production ready by 2024, delivering a transformative product that will overcome the major barrier to the widespread adoption of electric vehicles charging times and range anxiety. "However, we are committed to a rapid transition to a cleaner, zero-emissions world and our strategic technology roadmap extends long after 2024, where each milestone represents a radical 20% performance improvement - a major impact on the driver's experience. We are also progressing with our semi-solid state battery aiming for its production at scale by 2028, which will demonstrate a better charging experience for EV drivers in terms of miles per minute of charging. "Our ultimate goal though, and one that is now absolutely in our grasp, is to produce cells that will revolutionize charging times, achieving 100 miles of range in only 2 minutes. This breakthrough performance that was once considered impossible - is achievable with StoreDot's technology in just 10 years from now." StoreDot's ground-breaking extreme fast charging cells will be available in both pouch and the 4680 family form factor the formats increasingly favored by the majority of global car manufacturers. Pioneering work for these XFC cells has been undertaken with participation of global experts from Israel, the UK, the US and in China. '100in5' cells of StoreDot's XFC technology are already being tested in the real world by a number of automotive OEMs. About StoreDot StoreDot is a pioneer and leader of extreme fast charging (XFC) batteries that overcome the critical barrier to mainstream EV adoption range and charging anxiety. The company has revolutionized the conventional Li-ion battery by designing and synthesizing proprietary organic and inorganic compounds, making it possible to fully charge an EV in just five minutes the same time it takes to refuel a conventional combustion engine vehicle. Through it's '100inX' strategic roadmap, StoreDot's battery technology is optimized for best driver experience with XFC in Li-ion batteries, as well as future technologies for extreme energy-density (XED). StoreDot's strategic investors include VinFast, BP, Daimler, Samsung Ventures and TDK. In 2019, the company achieved a world first by demonstrating the live full charge of a two-wheeled EV in just five minutes. In 2020, the company demonstrated the scalability of its XFC batteries and is on target for Electric Vehicle battery production at scale by 2024. For more information see: www.store-dot.com. Cision View original content to download multimedia:https://www.prnewswire.com/news-releases/storedot-the-extreme-fast-charging-battery-pioneer-on-track--to-achieve-100-miles-per-5-minutes-of-charge-in-2024-and-100-miles-in-2-minutes-within-a-decade-301493092.html SOURCE StoreDot Acwa Power, a leading Saudi developer, investor and operator of power generation, desalinated water and green hydrogen plants worldwide, has broken ground on a 100MW wind project coming up in the Karatau district, Karakalpakstan region, in the North-western part of the country. The Nukus wind project is being built at a total investment of $108 million and is set to reach financial close by Q3 2022. This is Acwa Powers fourth facility in Uzbekistan. The companys in-country portfolio also includes a combined cycle gas turbine plant, and two wind projects. Once this project achieves commercial operation in 2024, it will contribute 1.25% to Uzbekistans overall renewable energy goals. Additionally, it is expected to power 120,000 Uzbek households and offset 200,000 tonnes of carbon emissions per year. The ground breaking ceremony was attended by Uzbekistan President Shavket Mirziyoyev, Saudi Arabias Ambassador to Uzbekistan Yousef Saleh Algahrah Al-Otaibi, Acwa Power Chairman Mohammad Abunayyan and oher senior Uzbek officials. This comes less than two months after binding project agreements were signed with the government of the Republic of Uzbekistan and JSC National Electric Grid (NEGU), the off taker. The Nukus wind project marks the former Soviet republic's first open, competitive tender in the wind energy sector. It comes in line with government's plans to diversify Uzbekistan's energy mix with a target of 8 GW solar and wind capacity by 2026. Uzbekistan has been working closely with the IFIs to open up the countrys power sector to private investment and to help us reach our goal of 25% of energy consumption deriving from renewable sources by 2026, stated Alisher Sultanov, Minister of Energy of Uzbekistan. "Uzbekistan is committed to policy goals to improve energy efficiency and increase renewable energys share of the countrys energy mix. We have a huge variety of projects underway, and already completed," he added. Acwa Power won the bid after proposing a tariff of US 2.5695 cents/kwh, which was the lowest in a tender process that included 11 other bidders. Acwa Power Chairman Mohammad Abunayyan said: "Laying the cornerstone of the Nukus plant shortly after the signing of the official purchase agreements is as an affirmation to supporting the ambitious vision of the Uzbek leadership to enhance the potential of the Uzbek energy sector." "The project will comprise wind turbine generators using advanced design and technical features. Each WTG will have a capacity of generating more than 5 MW of electricity, which demonstrates Acwa Powers ability to keep optimising design together with manufacturers for continuous innovation," noted Abunayyan. "Furthermore, Acwa Power will also endeavour to give local advisory, manufacturing, and manpower firms an opportunity to participate in the project," he added.-TradeArabia News Service Verizon Sourcing LLC NEW YORK, March 02, 2022 (GLOBE NEWSWIRE) -- Verizon Communications Inc. (NYSE, Nasdaq: VZ) will hold its Investor Day 2022 on Thursday, March 3. Hans Vestberg, Chairman and CEO, and members of the senior leadership team will share updates on Verizon's strategy and its continued leadership in network performance and execution of 5G initiatives. The meeting will begin at 9:00 a.m. ET. Access instructions and presentation materials will be available on Verizons Investor Relations website, https://www.verizon.com/about/investors/investor-day-2022 Verizon Communications Inc. (NYSE, Nasdaq: VZ) was formed on June 30, 2000 and is one of the worlds leading providers of technology and communications services. Headquartered in New York City and with a presence around the world, Verizon generated revenues of $133.6 billion in 2021. The company offers data, video and voice services and solutions on its award-winning networks and platforms, delivering on customers demand for mobility, reliable network connectivity, security and control. VERIZONS ONLINE MEDIA CENTER: News releases, stories, media contacts and other resources are available at verizon.com/news. News releases are also available through an RSS feed. To subscribe, visit www.verizon.com/about/rss-feeds/. Media contact: Kim Ancin Kimberly.ancin@verizon.com Featured articles and commentaries explore social, cultural and economic factors related to HIV/AIDS in the Black Community Northampton, MA --News Direct-- Gilead Sciences Were proud to have supported a special issue of Tuskegee Universitys Journal of Healthcare, Science, and the Humanities. The issue highlights factors that have historically driven the disproportionate impact of HIV on Black communities, and it outlines policy and programmatic solutions to help eliminate disparities. About Gilead Sciences Gilead Sciences, Inc. is a research-based biopharmaceutical company that discovers, develops and commercializes innovative medicines in areas of unmet medical need. The company strives to transform and simplify care for people with life-threatening illnesses around the world. Gilead has operations in more than 35 countries worldwide, with headquarters in Foster City, California. Originally Publiched by Gilead Sciences View additional multimedia and more ESG storytelling from Gilead Sciences on 3blmedia.com View source version on newsdirect.com: https://newsdirect.com/news/were-proud-to-have-supported-a-special-issue-of-tuskegee-universitys-journal-of-healthcare-science-and-the-humanities-756134294 A high rise condominium in Manhattan. Getty Images More New Yorkers are buying off-market homes, known as "whisper" listings. It's a way for them to circumvent a tight, increasingly expensive real estate market. While it's boosting NYC's economy, it's also undermining fair housing laws. In New York, people with the right money and the right connections are purchasing real estate before it goes on the market. While so-called "whisper," "pocket," or "off-market" sales aren't new, they provide a major advantage at a time of limited housing availability and outsized demand and many realtors say they are unethical. They're also surging in one of the most expensive cities in the world. According to Redfin, the amount of off-market transactions in the US has increased 67% since 2019. In New York City alone, 20.6% of homes that were sold in the third quarter of 2021 were pocket listings. The Wall Street Journal reported that 2021 saw a total of $188 million in off-market sales in the city. Related video: Why Hong Kong is the most expensive housing market in the world Pocket listings happen when agents tell potential buyers of a property that isn't yet listed on a multiple listing services (MLS), the databases of properties for sale shared between agents and brokers. This gives the buyer a chance to make an offer without competition. "Whisper listings have always been very desirable," Cathy Franklin, a New York City-based Corcoran agent, told Mansion Global, a luxury real estate listings site. "It allows a purchaser to have a first look before there's a larger audience." In California, pocket listings are in a legal grey area. And in a 2019 fair-housing initiative, the National Association of Realtors introduced a policy that attempted to restrict these types of transactions. Despite NARs efforts, the practice remains popular in New York among real estate agents who aren't NAR members. Those agents can still do them, but they can also be sued for not following proper procedure. Story continues "[Although] pocket listings remain a common practice; they can exacerbate segregation and wealth inequality because only certain people are seeing certain listings," mortgage adviser Arnell Brady wrote in a Redfin report. As New York rebounds from the COVID-19 pandemic, housing is shining a bright spot on the economy. However, lackluster inventory has increased prices and intensified homebuyer competition. To circumvent a tightening market, many wealthy buyers in the Big Apple are no longer relying on MLS for leads but instead participating in off-market transactions. They are driving real estate growth, but also undermining fair housing laws and escalating a worsening inventory crisis. "Actively discouraging submission of listings in the is inconsistent with the fundamental cooperative nature of the MLS and the obligation of the Code of Ethics," a NAR spokesperson told Insider, adding that the policy "was created in order to protect the best interest of consumers and promote equal opportunity for all by ensuring that publicly marketed property listings are widely available and accessible to all consumers." Pocket listings are a boon to NYC's economy, but threaten housing equality After plunging during the pandemic, New York City's real estate market began to make a comeback in winter 2021 as residents came trickling back during the winter to take advantage of discounted apartments. But the market really started to soar come spring when the city reopened. Properties in Brooklyn began to bounce back first, followed by a rebound in Manhattan. "Since April, I don't think we've ever done this many transactions in such a tight period of time," Jeff Adler, a broker with Douglas Elliman, told The Financial Times in September. The year ended on a record-breaking note, with more people than ever snapping up a home in Manhattan. Apartment sales hit a 30-year high in the fourth quarter of 2021 with 3,559 closed purchases of co-ops and condos, according to a report by Miller Samuel Inc. and Douglas Elliman Real Estate. The median price of the apartments sold in the fourth quarter also soared to the highest they've been since 2018, at $1.17 million, with 9.2% of sales above asking price. The snapback is a sign of market correction after the slump, Jay Parsons, vice president and deputy chief economist at real estate software company RealPage, previously told Insider. "You had a lot of pent-up demand from people who either temporarily left or were planning to move to the city at some point and put those plans on hold," he said. While a hot luxury market is driving much needed revenue for the city's economy, it's creating stress for the many hopeful buyers who find themselves in cutthroat competition. That's why many are keeping their ears to the ground for off-market listings, which offer them a leg up over their peers. Read the original article on Business Insider The Spotsylvania School Board agreed Tuesday to hire a consulting firm to conduct the search for a new superintendent, but accomplished little else during another disorderly meeting. The board had to call a 5-minute recess midway through the meeting after a chaotic 15 minutes during which Battlefield District representative Nicole Cole asked other members to stop talking while she had the floor, Chair Kirk Twigg called for votes on a motion while other members wanted to continue discussion, Chancellor representative Dawn Shelley attempted to put forward a substitute motion and School Board Clerk Dennis Martin tried to provide guidance on procedural rules. Tuesdays special meeting was the first time the School Board discussed the process of replacing Scott Baker, who was fired without cause by a 43 vote in January. According to Virginia Code, school boards must appoint a superintendent within 180 days of a vacancy occurring. If a vacancy has not been filled within 120 days, the board must submit a report to the Department of Education demonstrating its timely efforts to make an appointment and may request up to an additional 180 days. Shelley first requested Twigg call a special meeting to discuss the process of replacing Baker on Jan. 30. The board did not publicly discuss the superintendent search until the Feb. 14 regular meeting, when Mondays special meeting was scheduled. At the special meeting, board members argued for two hours over whether a motion stating that the board will hire an outside firm should include a specification that the firm be hired through a request for proposal process. Lee Hill District representative Lisa Phelps made the original motion stating that the board would hire an outside firm. Shelley, Cole and Salem District representative Lorita Daniels requested that Phelps amend her motion to state that an RFP process would be followed. No guarantee of an RFP is concerning, Shelley said. I feel there will be a lack of transparency. Cole said that the formal RFP process will ensure there is agreed-upon criteria that a firm will have to follow as it conducts the search. This is a serious matter and we need to make sure we have enough informed information and informed options that we can actually compare, off of an agreement between us on the different criteria, she said. Phelps said her motion did not exclude the possibility of an RFP process. She also said she is not on board with RFP right now because it is a long process that will take our admin staff away from their jobs. Shelley then proposed a substitute motion that specified the board would follow the RFP process. Vice Chair April Gillespie proposed a second substitute motion stating only that the board will hire an outside firm and directing the school divisions procurement officer to report back by Friday on how the selection of a firm should happen. That motion passed 43, with Shelley, Cole and Daniels dissenting, and reiterating that they wanted the RFP process to be part of the motion. Phelps and Gillespie came to Tuesdays meeting with a proposal from GR Recruiting, a firm that, according to its website, specializes in recruiting and supporting educational leaders. Fairfax County Public Schools is using GR Recruiting to conduct a superintendent search, and board members suggested the possibility of Spotsylvania jumping on the existing contract with Fairfax. Phelps said she received the proposal from GR Recruiting on Monday afternoon. She and Gillespie said they have been conducting research on the superintendent search process. Shelley said she appreciated their effort, but raised another concern. This is supposed to be a board process, Shelley said, not two people starting to do some research on their own without discussion. Gillespie said obtaining the proposal from GR Recruiting was not done with malintent and that having the proposal does not mean the board is choosing the firm. Were just trying to do our due diligence, she said. We figured everyone was doing their own research. According to the section of Virginia Code known as the Public Procurement Act, all procurement procedures [must] be conducted in a fair and impartial manner with avoidance of any impropriety or appearance of impropriety, that all qualified vendors have access to public business and that no offeror be arbitrarily or capriciously excluded. It was not clear Wednesday morning how the board plans to discuss the information it receives from the school divisions procurement officer. Want to see more like this? Get our local education coverage delivered directly to your inbox. Sign up! * I understand and agree that registration on or use of this site constitutes agreement to its user agreement and privacy policy. Dry conditions will continue into the weekend for Fredericksburg. This Wednesdays temperature regime is somewhat topsy-turvy thanks to a cold front wobbling over Northern Virginia. Shortly after midnight, temperatures at Shannon Airport, Stafford Regional Airport, and the University of Mary Washington all hovered in the mid-50s. By dawn, thermometers at those sites registered 35, 34, and 40 degrees, respectively, as that front slipped just south of the region. By mid-afternoon, those readings will bump up to the mid-60s after the boundary edges back north of Fredericksburg as a warm front. The increasingly higher March sun angle will aid in the warming process, along with southerly breezes which will guide warmer air into the area. No rain will occur and only a few clouds will result from that back-and-forth frontal movement. In fact, no rain is expected through the weekend since the Fredericksburg vicinity lies between the polar jet and the subtropical jet streams (see graphic). The former is keeping colder air locked up north of the MasonDixon line, while the latter is suppressing moisture down along the Gulf Coast states. This split flow regime maintains a quiet status quo for the areas located between these two upper air streams. Thus, no significant storm systems will affect the Burg over the next several days. The western portion of the aforementioned front will finally pass through Fredericksburg on Thursday morning. Winds will swap around out of the north and become gusty, ushering in somewhat cooler air. Temperatures Thursday afternoon will still top out in the upper 50s, several degrees above average highs for the first week in March. Friday then looks to be the coolest day of the week. Another manifestation of the cold air damming wedge will set up as high pressure slides across New England. Cool surface air will wedge its way south along the Piedmont and coastal plain all the way into Georgia. The end of the work week will thus feature a few more clouds in and around Fredericksburg, with afternoon temperatures halting their rise in the upper 40s. Details about the weekend weather will be forthcoming in Fridays Weather Blog entry. Meanwhile, happy hump day! The Taliban's chief spokesman on March 1 rowed back comments he made suggesting Afghans would be barred from leaving the country, saying he had been misunderstood. Zabihullah Mujahid sparked alarm over the weekend when he told a press conference that Afghans would need "an excuse" to travel abroad and confirmed Afghanistan's new rulers had put a stop to any more evacuation flights. After seizing power in August, the Taliban promised Afghan citizens would be allowed to come and go as they pleased -- as long as they had passports and visas for their destinations. But on February 27, he told a press conference: "I have to say clearly that persons who leave the country along with their families and have no excuse...we are preventing them." On March 1, he tweeted that his "meaning" was: "Our compatriots who have legal documents and invitations can travel outside the country and can return to the country confidently." The Taliban's deputy minister for refugees and repatriations, however, said on March 1 it was "not appropriate" for Western nations to invite Afghans abroad or facilitate their departure. "To a larger extent, the international community is interfering in Afghanistan's affairs and are inviting people promising asylum," Mohammad Arsala Kharutai told a press conference. "This is interference and against international law, and we condemn it." Mujahid's February 27 announcement alarmed many Afghans who have been promised asylum abroad after working with U.S.-led foreign forces or other Western organisations during the Taliban's 20-year insurgency. More than 120,000 Afghans and dual nationals were evacuated up to August 31 when the last U.S.-led troops withdrew, two weeks after the hard-line Islamists seized Kabul. Thousands with similar links remain in Afghanistan, however, desperate to leave and fearful they may be targeted by the Taliban as collaborators. The last official evacuation by air was on December 1 although organized road convoys to Pakistan have taken place as recently as last week. Hugo Shorter, Britain's top envoy to Afghanistan based outside the country, said barring Afghans from leaving amounted to "unacceptable restrictions on freedom of movement." "I call on the Taliban to clarify their remarks urgently," he tweeted. "The world is still watching the Taliban's behaviour." In Washington, the State Department said the Taliban had a commitment to allowing free passage, and that the United States continues to try to facilitate the exit of U.S. citizens and eligible Afghan allies who want to leave. "We will continue to engage diplomatically to resolve any issues and to hold the Taliban to their public pledge to let all foreign nationals and any Afghan citizen with travel authorisation from other countries to freely depart Afghanistan," a department spokesperson said. "Our ability to facilitate relocation for our Afghan allies depends on the Taliban living up to its commitment of free passage. We have repeatedly reiterated this point to them." 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. Endress+Hauser, a global leader in measurement and automation technology for process and laboratory applications headquartered in Reinach, Switzerland, has opened its new sales office in Oman capital Muscat. The office, which began operations in January this year, is being headed by Country Manager Haitham Al Rawahi, said the company in a statement. An industry veteran, Al Rawahi has 15 years of experience in oilfield operations, corporate development and sales with national and international companies. He is also a graduate of the governments Etimad Senior Leadership Program for executives. Endress+Hauser has been working successfully in the Omani market for two decades, supporting customers in all major industries. With the opening of the sales office, the Swiss measurement and automation technology expert, is now able to further expand its local offering of products, solutions and services and help customers use their installed base even more efficiently. This will further help boost Endress+Hauser's global network for sales and service in order to provide even better support to customers on the Arabian Peninsula across all industries, said the company in its statement. According to the Swiss group, Oman is a major market for the group, as it is the third largest country on the Arabian Peninsula. Its geographical location on the eastern tip is an important factor in its economic development, which has been characterized by good progress and great stability in recent years. The sultanate is considered a pioneer in the introduction of new technologies; a well-trained workforce makes the country an attractive location for companies, said Endress+Hauser in its statement. The team in Oman receives administrative support from Endress+Hauser International in Reinach, Switzerland, and regional unit based in Dubai, it added.-TradeArabia News Service A Colorado Springs-area teacher has been placed on administrative leave for allegedly using a racial slur in class, according to officials. Widefield School District 3 leadership disciplined Brian Gauck, a Navy Junior Reserve Officers Training Corps instructor at Mesa Ridge High School, after he allegedly using the N word multiple times in class last month. The incident was reported the week of Feb. 14, according to District 3 spokeswoman Samantha Briggs. Gauck did not address anyone directly with the slur, Briggs told The Gazette in an email. The word was not used to call or refer to any person, she said. It was in the context of a class discussion around freedom of speech and language. A student notified Mesa Ridges principal, Levka Craft, about the slur and Craft took immediate action, officials said. With the principal observing, Gauck publicly apologized to the classes. Craft has notified all the families involved, and she and Gauck are in the process of holding one-on-one meetings with parents, according to Briggs. Gauck did not immediately respond to a Gazette request for comment. His district email account has been suspended. The district would not say if Gauck will be paid while on leave, or when he will return to work. The International Energy Agency (IEA) announced yesterday (March 1) that it would release 60 million barrels of oil reserves in a bid to stymie the relentless rally in oil prices following Russias invasion of Ukraine. "At face value, whilst welcome, the magnitude is insufficient. The response is limited as we believe it only represents an only ~1 month offset to the prospects of around a one-third (~2m b/d) loss of Russias 6m b/d oil exports," says a MUEF Global Markets Research report. The current self-sanctioning of Russian oil (and broader commodities), with buyers and shippers skittish to move Russian barrels despite energy carve-outs in sanctions (be it for uncertainty about precisely whats legally permissible, concerns surrounding reputational repercussions or merely for moral objections) is creating a large production distortion in global oil markets, it says. The immediate rally in oil prices is a testament that markets are already looking through the announcement and remain squarely focused on the extreme state of shortage oil markets are in today corroborated by the super backwardation levels with Brent crude prompt timespreads currently trading ~USD5/b above the next month an unprecedented level that indicates trades are paying huge premiums to secure more immediate supply, the study pointed out. Furthermore, it is critical to state that the since the last ~80 million barrel coordinated SPR release in November 2021, strategic reserves have in fact only fallen by 27 million barrels. Thus, the initial tranche would have to be absorbed before the second tranche hits global markets. In short, 60 million barrels is far below what levels that could jolt todays supply constrained market. As a one-off crude release, it is dwarfed by the extraordinary magnitude of Russias export disruptions. The markets critically depleted inventories and thinning spare capacity levels in the face of a record long unresolved deficit ultimately leaves one lever to rebalance oil markets demand destruction. "This has been our central premise we advocated in early February as the mechanism that can slowdown demand growth so that the physical flow of oil can balance. That is the cure for high oil prices is higher oil prices a self-correcting process. All eyes will be on Opec+ when it meets today (March 2) to discuss its output levels for April crude deliveries. There is intense pressure on the group to increase output more aggressively given the unprecedented geopolitical tensions and a powerful bullish price environment. The consistent rhetoric in recent days, which has been reinforced by the groups Joint Technical Committee (JTC) on March 1, suggests that Opec+ will stick to increasing output by 0.4m b/d. This is premised on their current assessment that the current high price environment is being driven by the paper oil market taking a precipitous level of long positions to reflect geopolitical risks rather than physical supply and demand imbalances. With this, anything more than 0.4m b/d would be a surprise to the market which could led to a knee-jerk bearish move lower. Though such potential weakness will ultimately prove short-lived given the relentless forces keeping oil prices elevated anchored on the simultaneous blend of depleting inventories and thinning spare capacity amid a dearth of structural underinvestments. "Of more concern has been the groups struggle to keep pace with its 0.4m b/d monthly increase in target. The latest data from the group signalled that they were collectively increasing output by ~0.28m b/d that has not changed much in the past six months. Even if Opec+ does find a way predominantly through the few countries where spare capacity exists namely Saudi Arabia, the UAE and Iraq to actually pump closer to their collective output target, that raises its own challenges. With most Opec+ members already pumping at maximum levels, the cushion of spare capacity even amongst these three countries is shrinking this tapering of shock absorbers will rattle investors in the months ahead, in our view," the report said. Thinning spare capacity is increasingly nerving markets "As we recently catalogued, our bottom up country-by-country modelling analysis points to spare capacity falling to distressingly thin levels by this summer below 2m b/d by July 2022 and remaining below this level throughout H2 2022. This has historically been a threshold wherein a small temporary supply disruption, caused by a geopolitical or weather related event, would cause acute price spike risks to the upside. This has historical precedence. In 2004, the exhaustion of spare capacity triggered a significant rally in long-dated crude oil prices from $25/b to $65/b. At the time, the surge in long-dated prices created demand weakness that allowed inventories to build, creating a precautionary inventory cushion to buffer the oil market from a lack of spare capacity. We could very well witness a similar dynamic playout in oil markets this year. In short, capacity matters much more than Opec+ baselines at the current juncture, and it looks to get more scarce," it said. Opec+ optimisation is for backwardation and has been successful Beyond spot prices, the supply tightness in oil markets is being shown up in futures markets wherein prompt timespreads which are one of the best indicators of market tightness given they price fundamentals and not expectations corroborate with this market tightening. They remain in super backwardation which are bullish structures where near-dated contracts trade at a premium to later-dated ones (signalling acute market tightness). This strikes at the heart of the Opec+ optimisation strategy in achieving fiscal stability through higher revenues and market share. In essence, backwardation favours Opec+ as it eliminates the financial incentive to store oil over time and discourages US shale producers from locking-in prices for future production (as low deferred prices through the backwardation structure can restrain higher cost producers ability to secure future cash flows and attract funding). Furthermore, backwardation maximises low cost producers (namely, Opec+) revenues relative to higher cost producers (such as shale) that hedge, as they instead sell higher production levels at spot prices. "Key to this view is our belief that backwardation can rationalise shale growth by reducing returns expectations and increasing leverage expectations, both of which drive funding costs higher and slow capital allocation," the report says. Uber-bullish oil price forecasts being played out "The sheer dizzying of the oil price strength in recent weeks has even surpassed our above consensus bullish thesis anchored on the narrative that oil prices have ecome so disconnected from the marginal cost of supply that they are marching to the level where demand erosion becomes prevalent. We estimate this at $100-115/b and hold conviction that oil can rise up and register inside these levels consistently for the coming quarters ahead. "This is anchored on the narrative that when the simultaneous deficit of depleting inventories, thinning spare capacity and structural underinvestments blends towards extremely distressed levels as continually corroborated by futures in acute backwardation (signalling market tightness) then demand growth needs to slowdown so the physical flow of oil can balance. This in effect is carving out a scarcity premium.'," it said. It is important to state that this narrative has little to do with the geopolitics of the day, which is merely turbocharging the severe supply story. Such is the state of severe depletion in oil markets today, that the system is highly susceptive to even the smallest shocks precisely what we are witnessing in Russia-Ukraine crisis today with markets increasingly pricing in losing Russian oil supply outright. Whilst it is not in either sides interest to use oil (and broader commodities) as a tool, the market is having to price in the consequences of even an unlikely and mild disruption with large asymmetric upside price moves such is the extreme shortage state of oil markets today. Succinctly put, geopolitical risks are on the rise in an oil system with no slack. "With this context in mind, we reiterate that seldom has the strategic case for being long oil been this strong and we remain highly convicted that the price appreciation potential is substantial in 2022 as well as for the first half of 2023. With this our Brent average forecasts point to an average of $96/b in 2022 and $112/b in 2023," said the report. "We envisage demand destruction through a slowdown in the global economy being realised by next summer with Brent peaking at $121/b thereafter we see a correction to the downside in H2 2023 as markets begin to rebalance themselves to a more normalised equilibrium." In the immediate term, the only potential short-term supply response would need to come from Opec+, as a surge in Saudi Arabian, Emirati and Iraqi production as well as a potential easing in Iranian crude sanctions leading to ~2m b/d increase in supply by the summer, with the 60m barrels in coordinated global SPR release helping bridge the gap. While such an manoeuvre becomes increasingly likely, the more Russia is shunned from the global economy, driving core-Opec+ (Saudi Arabia and the UAE), Iran and the West closer together, it would nevertheless come at the expense of a complete depletion of the global oil markets spare capacity still meriting much higher oil prices. We are not at maximum pain yet, says the report. -TradeArabia News Service The Louisville City Council late Tuesday agreed to find a way to let residents whose homes were destroyed by the Marshall fire to opt out of net-zero building code requirements that were implemented just weeks before the deadly Dec. 30 blaze. Colorado Springs police officer Cem Duzel leads in a procession of 31 medal recipients during the annual Medal of Valor luncheon at The Broadmoor on Nov. 18, 2019. While on duty in 2018, Duzel was shot in the head. Duzel was a recipient of two awards, the Medal of Honor and the Purple Heart. A new set of guidelines that will help both governments and businesses better address the needs of women in the tourism sector has been published by the World Tourism Organization (UNWTO). The guidelines were developed with the support of the German Federal Ministry for Economic Development (BMZ), the Deutsche Gesellschaft fur Internationale Zusammenarbeit (GIZ) and UN Women. They aim to ensure an inclusive and resilient recovery from the impacts of the pandemic. They recognise that, given the disproportionate loss of employment suffered by women, as well as the high proportion of women workers within tourism and their concentration in lower-skilled and lower-paid jobs, plans for the sectors restart and recovery must address their specific needs, said a UNWTO statement. Tourism has proven itself a true champion of gender equality and these new guidelines will help both governments and businesses harness the sectors power as a driver of womens empowerment as the world opens up again, it said. Tourism as a driver of equality UNWTO Secretary General Zurab Pololikashvili said: The restart of tourism must include everyone and the benefits must be enjoyed by all. Tourism has proven itself a true champion of gender equality and these new guidelines will help both governments and businesses harness the sectors power as a driver of womens empowerment as the world opens up again. The guidelines for the public sector provide specific tools to support national, regional, local and other tourism institutions, focusing on policies, programmes and thematic issues in the tourism sector. Meanwhile, the strategy for businesses is intended to support tourism enterprises of all types and sizes to achieve effective and consistent strategies and programmes for gender equality across their operations. Tourism steps up commitment to women The recently published gender mainstreaming guidelines continue UNWTOs work on womens empowerment and are in line with a growing trend within tourism to address gender inequalities. The guidelines stand alongside a growing number of similar initiatives such as the Womens Empowerment Principles (WEPs) or the Environmental, Social and Governance (ESG) Reporting scheme, it said. Moreover, these guidelines provide concrete recommendations for governments working to achieve the Sustainable Development Goals (particularly Goal 5 Gender Equality and Womens Empowerment) and the objectives of international womens rights treaties such as ILO Conventions 100, 111, 156, 183 and 190 or the Convention on the Elimination of all Forms of Discrimination Against Women (CEDAW). - TradeArabia News Service 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 Interior of classroom in elementary school. Row of empty desks are in illuminated room. The Surf Ballroom in Clear Lake noted some additions coming to the community later this year. On Monday, the Surf Ballroom announced on its Facebook page that the Surfside Hospitality Group would be opening not one, but two restaurants in Clear Lake in the coming year. The first of the two restaurants will be located at 444 North Shore Drive and be named The Surfside. The new restaurant will be have a Caribbean theme according to the Facebook post and will be "a casual-elegant dining concept." The second restaurant will be at 619 Buddy Holly Place and will be named The Legacy Grill, which will feature "a fun and vibrant music-inspired atmosphere, with a menu featuring a diverse selection of American classics." "These restaurants will simultaneously add services offered to the events we host, while revitalizing properties that surround us and offering quality dining options for visitors and residents of Clear Lake," the Facebook post stated. 444 North Shore Drive used to be home to the Bread & Buttercreme restaurant, while 619 Buddy Holy was the former home of the Surf District Rock N' Roll Grill. North Iowa Cultural Center and Museum and Surfside Hospitality Group, the organization that operates the Surf Ballroom, purchased the property at 619 Buddy Holly Place for $400,000 in October of 2021. Surf Ballroom purchases former Surf District restaurant North Iowa Cultural Center and Museum and Surfside Hospitality Group, an organization that o The 444 North Shore Drive location was sold in October of 2021 for $400,000, according to records from Beacon, to Jeffery Brakke, the former owner of Brakke Implements. Rudy Flores was hired as the executive chef for both restaurants and will oversee both the kitchens according to the Facebook post. Both restaurants are gearing up for openings sometime this spring or summer. Zachary Dupont covers local government and business development for the Globe Gazette. You can reach him at 641-421-0533 or zachary.dupont@globegazette.com. Follow Zachary on Twitter at @ZachNDupont Love 0 Funny 0 Wow 0 Sad 0 Angry 0 Assistant Majority Leader Waylon Brown, R-District 26, has announced his reelection bid in Iowa Senate District 30. In the last six years, I have proudly supported important legislative priorities, advocating for common-sense licensing reform, pro-agriculture legislation, high-quality schools and historic tax reform, Brown said in a press release. I look forward to continuing my work in the Iowa Senate and serving rural Iowa. Weve made a lot of progress in the Iowa Senate since 2016, but our job isnt done yet. I plan to continue reforming the regulatory burden on small businesses, reducing the tax burden and implementing policies to get Iowans back to work. Brown was first elected to the Iowa Senate in 2016. Currently, he serves as the chair of the Transportation Standing Committee and the Administrative Rules Review Statutory Committee. He also sits on the Commerce, Rules and Administration, State Government, and Ways and Means committees. After the passage of the new redistricting maps for the 2022 election cycle, Senate District 30 will include Mitchell, Worth and Cerro Gordo counties, as well as part of Floyd County. Brown states in the press release that he understands the importance of sustainable and reliable spending. He knows that for hard-working Iowan families, every dollar they earn matters. Brown said he had been a leader in delivering historic tax cuts to the state of Iowa, advocating for a flatter and fairer tax code and reforming Iowas licensing laws, easing the pathway for professionals to work. Brown has served as a former member of the Mitchell County Farm Bureau Board, and the St. Ansgar Planning and Zoning Board, according to the press release. A St. Ansgar High School graduate, he owns a construction company and farms in Worth and Mitchell counties. Love 0 Funny 0 Wow 0 Sad 0 Angry 0 Karl Zimmerman is a WWII Navy Veteran living in Mason City, Iowa. He farmed by Aredale for most of his life, and moved up to Mason City about 20 years ago. Scattered throughout his home are pieces of homemade furniture, with beautiful dovetail joints showing the craftsmanship in his walnut dressers. Karl hasnt worked on large projects like those for a long time, but he remains busy in his workshop. While out on a run one day last summer, Michael Geary, also of Mason City, was also picking up any litter he came across. As he jogged around, an old man driving a pickup stopped to thank Geary for picking up the trash, handing him a pen as a gift. That old man was Karl Zimmerman, and the pen was encased in hand-carved wood, crafted by Karl himself. Michael has visited Karl weekly, since. When he arrives, he walks past Karls workshop and ever-changing rows of pens that make their way to people Karl believes make the world a better place. Karl started making pens 15 years ago, after buying some supplies secondhand. He is gifted wood like Orange tree and Cyprus, which is Karls favorite wood despite it being difficult to turn. He recently was gifted a piece of sumac, which grows throughout his neighborhood. Karl lives alone, with the company of a nurse and caretaker, Gail Anderson, throughout the week, which kept him from being exposed when COVID-19 hit. Karl kept busy during the pandemic, maintaining almost the same schedule as before. I never got bored, I just turned pens, he said. and hes made 70 within the last few weeks. I used to buy (clips) 20 at a time, then it went to 50. Now I went to 100, he laughed. As Michael and Karl caught up during a recent visit, Gail brought a large scrapbook to the table. Each page of the scrapbook held a personal letter to Karl from senators throughout the United States. Last Spring, Karl made a wooden pen for each state senator inscribed with their name, and included Karls business card. He also made a pair of deer antler pens for President Biden and Vice President Harris. There was a mixture of formal stationary, handwritten letters, and I used your pen to write this comments scattered throughout the book. Karl noted that he had run out of sleeves for the letters, so Gail was going to get him more from the store. Hes had about 40% of U.S. Senators send him thank-you notes since giving them out. Right now, Karl is in the process of making pens for a group of doctors and nurses taking care of his great-granddaughter, who was born prematurely and is in the hospital. Each pen clip is in the shape of a medical staff, and they are made from different types of wood Karl has acquired, though Karl has also made pens from deer antlers and corn cobs from time to time. He has also given pens to local EMS workers, firefighters, police officers, and others he feels help the community. A Methodist pastor in Aredale who leads service for three different churches in the area each Sunday is on his list as well. Next to the pens already promised to people, sits a longer row waiting for owners. Pine, sumac, redwood and walnut rest on the doily running across the cabinet, golden clips shining. Karl buys generic clips in bulk, but for special gifts, like his yearly auction piece for Pheasants Forever, he buys special clips to fit their purpose. After Michael left, Karl went down into the workshop to make a pen from a Sumac branch. He starts by cutting the wood into blocks and drilling a hole in the middle, which Gail does for him. Then Karl lines the hole with epoxy resin and drills that smooth before putting the block onto his wood turner, shaping the top and bottom of the pen in a few strokes of his lathe. He remembers getting his very first lathe from his father the same year his house got electricity. Karl then sands the wood until it is smooth. Before removing the two pieces from the wood turner, Karl wipes them with a finish. Then he takes them to the table, where he fits his pens with ink, a coil, fasteners and a clip. Despite their hand-crafted detail and arguable beauty, Karl's pens are not for sale. Gail noted the pens are strictly for people in the community Karl wants to thank for their public service. I started out saying I would never sell one, Karl said of his pens. He said any price he charged wouldnt accurately reflect how he feels when he gives them as a gift to others. Rae Burnette is a GA and Crime & Courts Reporter at the Globe Gazette. You can reach her by phone at 641.421.0523 or at Rae.Burnette@GlobeGazette.com Love 3 Funny 0 Wow 0 Sad 0 Angry 0 Get local news delivered to your inbox! Subscribe to our Daily Headlines newsletter. Sign up! * I understand and agree that registration on or use of this site constitutes agreement to its user agreement and privacy policy. Two North Iowa men have been arrested and are facing multiple charges relating to a series of burglaries that took place in Grundy County. Authorities say that Ryan Marek, 30, and Brandon Hufstedler, 36, took part in numerous burglaries across the county in January, including attempts to remove ATMs at banks in Dike, and a break-in at the Memorial Building in Reinbeck. Marek was apprehended on Monday in Garner by Hancock County sheriff's deputies on Grundy County warrants. His bond is set at $90,000. And Hufstedler, who is presently being held in the Cerro Gordo County Jail on numerous felony charges for alleged thefts and parole violations, is awaiting transport. Marek and Hufstedler each face charges of second-degree burglary, three counts of third-degree burglary, operation without owner's consent, third-degree attempted burglary, second-degree criminal mischief, and possession of burglar tools. Lisa Grouette is the Local News Editor and Photographer at the Globe Gazette. Reach her at 641-421-0525 or lisa.grouette@globegazette.com. Follow Lisa on Twitter @LisaGrouette Love 1 Funny 1 Wow 1 Sad 0 Angry 2 Be the first to know Get local news delivered to your inbox! Sign up! * I understand and agree that registration on or use of this site constitutes agreement to its user agreement and privacy policy. harshalc4 wrote: Since 1990 the percentage of bacterial sinus infections in AQADESTAN that are resistant to the antibiotic perxicillin has increased substantially. Bacteria can quickly develop resistance to an antibiotic when it is prescribed indiscriminately or when patients fail to take it as prescribed. Since perxicillin has not been indiscriminately prescribed, health officials hypothesize that the increase in perxicillin resistant sinus infections is largely due to patients failure to take his medication as prescribed. Which of the following, it true of Aqadestan, provides most support for the health officials' hypothesis: A) Resistance to several other commonly prescribed antibiotics has not increased since 1990 in Aqadestan B) A large number of Aqadestanis never seek medical help when they have a sinus infection. C) When it first became available, perxicillin was much more effective in treating bacterial sinus infections than any other antibiotic used for such infections at the time. D) Many patients who take perxicillin experience severe side effects within the rst few days of their prescribed regimen E) Aqadestani health clinics provide antibiotics to their patients at cost - Percentage of infections that are resistant to perxicillin has increased substantially.- This can happen when it is prescribed indiscriminately or when patients fail to take it as prescribed.- perxicillin has not been indiscriminately prescribed,Conclusion: Patients do not to take this medication as prescribed.We need to strengthen the conclusion. Something that says that patients who are prescribed this medicine do not take it properly. That this is the reason for increased resistance. Note that there could be a 100 other reasons so eliminating one other would barely strengthen this but that is a call we will take as per our options.A) Resistance to several other commonly prescribed antibiotics has not increased since 1990 in AqadestanOne way to look at it is that there doesn't exist one other common reason because of which resistance is developing against all antibiotics but that barely strengthens our argument. Another way to look at it is that people are taking other antibiotics as prescribed since resistance to them is not increasing. Then it is unlikely that they are not taking perxicillin as prescribed. This actually weakens our argument.B) A large number of Aqadestanis never seek medical help when they have a sinus infection.People who are not prescribed perxicillin are irrelevant.C) When it first became available, perxicillin was much more effective in treating bacterial sinus infections than any other antibiotic used for such infections at the time.Tells us that perxcillin was the best at one time. Doesn't impact our argument.D) Many patients who take perxicillin experience severe side effects within the rst few days of their prescribed regimenThis provides a good reason why people may not be taking perxicillin as prescribed. Then it certainly strengthens the conclusion that patients not taking the medicine as prescribed is the reason for increased resistance.E) Aqadestani health clinics provide antibiotics to their patients at costIrrelevant.Answer (D)_________________ madGMAT wrote: Twelve years ago and again five years ago, there were extended periods when Darfir Republic's currency, the pundra, was weak: its value was unusually low relative to the world's most stable currencies. Both times a weak pundra made Darfir's manufactured products a bargain on the world markets, and Darfir's exports were up substantially. Now some politicians are saying that, in order to cause another similarly sized increase in exports, the government should allow the pundra to become weak again. Which of the following if true provides the government with the strongest grounds to doubt the politican's recommendation, if followed, will achieve its aim? a) Several of the politicians no recommending that the pundra be allowed to become weak made that same recommendation before each of the last two periods of currency weakness. b) After several decades of operating well below its peak capcity, darfir's manufacturing sector is now operating at near-peak levels c) the economy of a country experiencing a rise in exports will become healthier only if the country's currency is strong or the rise in exports is significant. d) those countries whose manufactured products compete with darfir's on the world market currently all have stable currencies e) a sharp improvement in the efficiency of darfir's manufacturing plants would make darfir's products a bargain on the world markets even without weakening of the pundra relative to other currencies. Can someone explain??? It is a 'weaken the plan' question.What is the plan?Plan: When currency weakens, exports increase. (Foreigners can buy more using same amount of their currencies so they buy more.) Therefore, in order to cause [highlight]another similarly sized increase in exports[/highlight], the government should allow the pundra to become weak again.Focus on the highlighted words. The aim is to cause a similarly sized increase in exports. That is what the plan is trying to achieve. On weaken questions, we focus on the conclusion. What the plan is trying to achieve is parallel to conclusion. So we focus on trying to weaken what the plan is trying to achieve. We need to find something that tells us why we will not get a similarly sized increase in exports even if we weaken pundra.Options a, c, d and e do not talk about the reasons we will not see similarly sized increase in exports.Option B tells us that darfir's manufacturing sector is now operating at near-peak levels. If this is true, exports cannot increase much because darfir cannot manufacture more than it is manufacturing now. If there are no extra products manufactured, there cannot be extra exports. In previous instances, darfir was manufacturing below capacity so they could manufacture extra products. Hence the plan worked in those instances but this time it may not. Therefore, option (B) is correct._________________ Hospitalized COVID-19 patients at Sovah Health have dropped 85% since the peak in mid-January. On Monday, the health system was treating 10 people across its campuses in Danville and Martinsville who had tested positive for the illness caused by the novel coronavirus, Dr. Sheranda Gunn-Nolan, market chief medical officer for Sovah Health, told the Register & Bee. The drastic decline mirrors similar trends throughout the nation and Virginia. Also Monday, hospitals across the state were treating about 900 patients for COVID-19, a 76% decline from the peak of more than 3,800 on Jan. 19. Even though the Centers for Disease Control eased masking recommendations last week, Sovah Health will still require face coverings at all of its facilities for staff members, patients and visitors. While we are seeing a decline in cases across our system, its important that the public remain vigilant and continue to practice mitigation tactics, which include wearing a mask in indoor public places and large groups, practicing social distancing and proper hand hygiene and most importantly getting vaccinated or boosted, Gunn-Nolan told the Register & Bee. Based on the new guidance from the CDC, the federal agency no longer recommends Danville residents wear masks for indoor public spaces. The move comes after pivoting from viewing the pandemic through the lens of transmission to weighing the burden on local health care systems. For the first time since July, Virginia reported fewer than 1,000 daily cases of COVID-19 on Monday. Danville and Pittsylvania County are averaging about 44 new infections per day but only added nine new cases in Mondays daily dashboard update from the Virginia Department of Health. Danville is the lone locality in Southern Virginia with a low level of COVID-19 based on the CDCs new guidance. Pittsylvania Countys level is medium, meaning those at high-risk for severe illnesses are suggested to talk to their health care provider about precautions like masking wearing. However, counties to the north and east remain in the high level, a designation that still carries the face covering recommendation from the CDC. Get local news delivered to your inbox! Subscribe to our Daily Headlines newsletter. Sign up! * I understand and agree that registration on or use of this site constitutes agreement to its user agreement and privacy policy. A House subcommittee on Tuesday again voted down proposed constitutional amendments to remove defunct language barring same-sex marriage from the state constitution and to automatically restore voting rights for felons who have completed their terms. The votes in the House Privileges and Elections subcommittee are the death knell for those measures in the General Assembly session that is scheduled to end March 12. The House and Senate had backed both proposed amendments last year when Democrats led the legislature. A proposed amendment must pass in consecutive years before going to the state's voters in a referendum. The panel voted 6-4 along party lines to defeat a resolution from Sen. Adam Ebbin, D-Alexandria, to remove the defunct language from the state's constitution and the resolution on felons' rights proposed by Sen. Mamie Locke, D-Hampton. Under current Virginia law, people convicted of felonies lose the right to vote unless a governor restores it on an individual basis. The proposed constitutional amendment would restore voting rights automatically once felons complete their terms. Locke told the panel she was under no illusions about the resolution's prospects, given the subcommittee's Feb. 8 vote to reject a similar measure from Del. Charniele Herring, D-Alexandria. "It's too early in the morning to waste my time or yours," Locke said. "You know what this amendment does and that's all I've got to say." Del. Schuyler VanValkenburg, D-Henrico, a member of the subcommittee, said that when the state's 1902 constitution took effect, putting in place barriers to voting such as poll taxes and literacy tests, Virginia became "the worst democracy in the country." While Virginia adopted its current constitution in 1971, the continuing prohibition on voting for felons is a vestige of that era, he said. "We should not be in the business of telling people they can't participate in a country that is theirs," VanValkenburg said. Representatives of Green New Deal Virginia, the ACLU of Virginia, Prison Fellowship and the Virginia Catholic Conference spoke in favor of the measure. No one spoke in opposition. The measure's backers included Richard Walker of the advocacy group Bridging the Gap in Virginia. Walker has said that he received an 18-month sentence for a felony as a result of drug use and then-Gov. Bob McDonnell restored his rights. "It's one thing to be punished for the fault that you've done," Walker told the panel, "but it's another thing to be left on punishment for the rest of your life." As for the other resolution, in 2006, Virginias voters backed a constitutional amendment to bar same-sex marriage. In 2015 the U.S. Supreme Court struck down state laws that prevented same-sex marriage. Ebbin told the committee that the 2006 amendment "stained" Virginia's constitution. He said his proposed amendment to remove the language and affirm a right to marry "provides a fundamental dignity and equality to our friends, family and neighbors, and to me." Representatives of Equality Virginia and the Virginia Sexual and Domestic Violence Action Alliance spoke in favor of Ebbin's resolution. Representatives of the Virginia Catholic Conference and the Virginia Assembly of Independent Baptists spoke against the measure. "We affirm the dignity of every person," said Caruso of the Virginia Catholic Conference. "We also believe marriage has an original design and purpose that predates any nation, religion or law." The crowning touch of the year for economic development in the region came with the announcement of an aluminum beverage can operation coming to Henry County. The creation of 126 new jobs was announced in January 2021, but it was the promise that Crown Holdings would invest $145 million in a production facility at Commonwealth Crossing Business Centre in Ridgeway that raised eyebrows. "This is the largest single initial investment in the history of Henry County," EDC President and CEO Mark Heath told the Bulletin in an interview this week. "It made 2021 a really big year for economic development in Henry County." Crown's facility has been under construction, with operations expected to begin in August. The facility will produce an average of 5,600 cans a minute, 24 hours a day. The company initially planned to open in April and even though that's been pushed back four months, it already is ramping up the hiring effort with two job fairs this month. The company says it will train those employees at the Commonwealth Centre for Advanced Training (CCAT) and other Crown facilities. "It is exciting to see the construction of Crown Holding at Commonwealth Crossing Business Centre," said Henry County Deputy Administrator Dale Wagoner. "It's even more exciting to see them already hiring for good-paying advance manufacturing jobs. Crown is committed to innovation and sustainability, and we are elated they are growing their business in Henry County." Crown employees will average $49,000 annually, which is substantially higher than the area's average per-capita wage of roughly $24,000, Heath said. The company, founded in 1892 and headquartered in Yardley, Pennsylvania, considered expanding in North Carolina and South Carolina before choosing Henry County as the place for the construction of a 335,000 square-foot aluminum beverage can production facility, a statement from the Governor's Office said in January 2021. "We are thrilled to see a longtime Virginia employer and Fortune 500 company like Crown Holdings select Henry County for its new East Coast manufacturing operation," former governor Ralph Northam said in the statement. "The addition of 126 high-quality jobs is a huge opportunity for the people of Southern Virginia, and the region's tireless efforts to build a skilled workforce pipeline will benefit the company for decades to come." The aluminum beverage can manufacturing plant is ranked 272 on the Forbes Fortune 500 and has operations in 47 countries employing over 33,000 people. Those operations include facilities in Frederick County and Suffolk. "The top five people in the company met with local industry people and when they came back and decided to locate here they said, 'We don't need to look anywhere else because we know we can get everyone we need trained right here in Martinsville and Henry County,'" said Heath. "This was 100% Angeline Godwin and P&HCC," referring to Patrick & Henry Community College and its former presideny. Before Godwin retired in the summer, she helped facilitate much of the economic growth being seen in the county now, because of her responsiveness and interest in developing training programs that met the needs of new employers, Heath said. "Everyone had confidence in her, and she always made a positive impression because she understood, learned what was needed and found ways to meet that need," said Heath. By December, Crown Holdings had already scheduled multiple hiring events with offers of jobs with titles such as chemical process operators, accounting clerk, electrical engineer and plant engineer with a pay range from $19 to $35 per hour depending on the position. "As we look forward in 2022, the company expects to have another outstanding year," a fourth quarter 2021 financial report from the company released Feb. 8 stated. "Beverage can demand remains in excess of supply and in 2022 the company expects to commercialize new production capacity at new plants in Martinsville, Virginia, and Uberaba, Brazil, as well as with can line additions to plants in Phnom Penh, Cambodia and Monterrey, Mexico." Bill Wyatt is a reporter for the Martinsville Bulletin. He can be reached at 276-638-8801, Ext. 2360. Follow him @billdwyatt. Be the first to know Get local news delivered to your inbox! Sign up! * I understand and agree that registration on or use of this site constitutes agreement to its user agreement and privacy policy. Chinese farmer helps fellow villagers make a fortune after inheriting traditional folk craft People's Daily Online) 17:27, March 01, 2022 A farmer has become an inheritor of the national intangible cultural heritage gourd pyrography, a traditional artform involving burning designs onto dried hard-shell gourds with hot iron rods, having used this craft to help local villagers make a fortune. Photo shows gourd pyrography works created by Xue Gailian. (Photo courtesy of Xue Gailian) Having cultivated an interest in painting since childhood, Xue Gailian, a gourd grower in Wucun village, Wenshui county, north Chinas Shanxi Province, came up with the idea of painting images onto her gourds, but the results were not to her liking. Later on, Xue learned the folk craft of gourd pyrography from her friends and developed her skills in the craft. Xue explained that gourd pyrography combines hot iron rod painting together with carving techniques. To make her pyrographic gourd handicrafts more exquisite, the folk artist learned hot iron rod painting and deep-processing skills for gourd craftwork produced in east Chinas Shandong Province and north Chinas Tianjin Municipality. Gradually, Xues pyrographic gourd handicrafts gained popularity among local villagers, who also showed an interest in learning the craft. Xue then established a gourd planting and processing base, where she teaches villagers how to grow gourds and create pyrographic gourd handicrafts for free twice a year, helping her fellow villagers to increase their incomes. Photo shows gourd pyrography works created by Xue Gailian. (Photo courtesy of Xue Gailian) According to Xue, Wucun village is now home to over 10 gourd processing plants, and more than 100 villagers have mastered gourd pyrography. Under the influence of Xue, her two daughters returned to their hometown to start businesses after graduating from college, having engaged in the gourd craft just like their mother. To attract more young people and better pass down the traditional craft, Xue has continuously made innovations by introducing more methods for decorating the gourds as well as adding modern-day elements. Xue has also promoted gourd pyrography in schools and communities, helping the traditional craft reach a wider audience. I will introduce modern gourd planting technologies, continue to refine gourd pyrography, and help villages improve their gourd processing skills, in this way expanding their incomes, Xue said. Besides, she hopes that more and more people will appreciate the unique charm of the traditional Chinese folk craft. Xue Gailian creates a gourd pyrography work. (Photo courtesy of Xue Gailian) (Web editor: Hongyu, Bianji) "Find Me" by Alafair Burke; Harper (304 pages, $26.99) The friendship between Hope Miller and Lindsay Kelly runs deeper than most. It began 15 years ago, when Lindsay happened upon an overturned SUV on a lonely, dark New Jersey road. Lindsay, a police chiefs daughter, quickly called for help and gave emergency first aid to the young woman splayed unconscious on the pavement. When the woman was loaded into an ambulance, her arm moved, as if reaching for Lindsay. The rescuer jumped in, and the two have been friends ever since. Not that its been easy. Hope recovered physically from the accident, but she suffered complete memory loss she has no recall of her life before the crash, and no trace of her identity was found. Hope Miller is the name she chose for herself because she cant remember her real one. But she and Lindsay are inseparable. That friendship is at the core of "Find Me," the irresistible new thriller by Alafair Burke. The daughter of crime fiction master James Lee Burke, she has written three mystery series, including six books co-written with the late Mary Higgins Clark, and several stand-alone thrillers. She currently serves as the president of Mystery Writers of America and is the first woman of color to be elected to that position. A former prosecutor, she teaches criminal law at Hofstra University and lives in Manhattan and East Hampton, New York. "Find Me," Burkes 20th novel, brings back one of her series characters whos been on hiatus since 2014, New York Police Detective Ellie Hatcher. Ellie will cross paths with Lindsay, whos now a defense attorney living in Manhattan, after Hope decides to start a more independent life by moving from Lindsays hometown in New Jersey to East Hampton, a small town on Long Island. There, Hope finds a cottage to rent and a job staging houses for a real estate agent. And then she vanishes. When Hope stops answering calls and texts, Lindsays devoted boyfriend, Scott, advises her not to worry. But Lindsay heads for East Hampton and finds the cottage empty and Hopes boss unhappy that she stopped showing up for work especially right after hed loaned her $2,000. Lindsay is infuriated by the lackadaisical attitude of Carter Decker, the local cop she reports Hopes absence to; he clearly thinks Hope is missing by her own choice, a grifter whod moved on to her next mark. Until, that is, a spray of Luminol reveals a bloodstain inside the front door of the house Hope was staging on the last day she was seen. Then a body is found floating in the local marina but its not Hopes. The DNA tests of the bloodstain bring a shocking result: Its connected to a string of killings committed in Wichita, Kansas, by a serial killer called the College Hill Strangler. Thats how Ellie gets connected to Hopes case: Ellies father was a Wichita police detective who investigated the College Hill Strangler murders. But how could the long-ago serial killer case be connected to Hopes disappearance now? What about the body in the marina? And does any of it link to Hopes lost life, the years hidden behind the blank wall of her memory loss? And how do you search for a woman who has no identity? The Hamptons are usually associated with the celebrities and hedge-funders who have luxurious vacation homes there the house Hope was staging when she disappeared was a $3 million teardown. But Burke draws most of her East Hampton characters from those who live there year-round, the working-class people whose jobs help make the posh lifestyles possible. Its an interesting look at the social dynamics of resort towns that gives the book another layer. Its good to see Ellie back in action, too, hard-driving as ever but haunted by her own ghosts. Burkes arrangement of all the puzzle pieces is wickedly clever, as are the twists she gives them just when you think you know something. "Find Me" is beautifully crafted, a swift and gripping read. And those twists keep coming at you until the very last sentence. A fascinating, though flawed deep dive into the German college town that spawned the Romantic movement. "Jena 1800: The Republic of Free Spirits" by Peter Neumann, translated from the German by Shelley Frisch; Farrar, Straus & Giroux (244 pages, $27) As most intellectuals today write about superficial matters such as race, class and gender, it's hard to imagine a time when thinkers focused on deeper matters of the mind, exploring how truth could be perceived through imagination, intuition and the creation of art. Of course I'm referring to the Romantics. Though the Romantic Movement flourished in England and America, it's the German Romantics who originated ways of thinking that still dominate so much of our culture, from our idealization of nature and art to our (mis)understanding of Buddhism. In "Jena 1800," German poet and philosophy professor Peter Neumann beautifully captures the special moment when, guided by Goethe and inspired by Kant, the young philosophers Fichte, Hegel and Schelling, poets Schiller and Novalis, brothers Fritz and Wilhelm Schlegel and their wives Dorothea and Caroline all lived in the same small university town, Jena, at the same time, and tried to remake the world. In many ways, Romanticism was an intellectual counter-revolution to the Enlightenment. By 1790, the pure reason promoted by French philosophers led to the bloody Terror, and when Napoleon ended the revolution, the center of European thought moved into the Germanic states of the Holy Roman Empire, and to Jena in particular. Fichte arrived there in 1794 and students flocked to hear him build on Kant's "Critique of Pure Reason" by declaring that, now that "we can know nothing about how things in themselves actually are," as Neumann writes, because "the scope of our knowledge is limited," no individual should obey any law that they themselves did not find rational. Schiller was already known for lectures proclaiming that "art liberated man from the rule of mere conceptualized thinking," and Schelling focused on nature, which "functioned as a medium for the mind to recognize itself." Novalis' spiritual poetry and prose promoted a re-enchantment of the world, with his blue flower symbolizing the ineffable search for the infinite, and the Schlegel brothers put everyone's ideas together in the short-lived but immensely influential journal Athenaeum, which made the German Romantics what they are. Being a literary artist himself, Neumann tells this story so much like a novel that I often forgot it wasn't. With a sweeping style, he charmingly animates the atmosphere of Jena, with its lecture halls, living rooms and Saale River. Yet he focuses on relationships, the alliances and rivalries of friends and lovers. And like most biographers, Neumann plays with the hypothetical. For instance, after Fichte's unabashed atheism gets him ousted from Jena and he unsuccessfully suggests that all the Schlegels come live with him in Berlin, Neumann gets in Fichte's mind: "Fine, he thought let them figure it out for themselves." But if you're going to put words in your subjects' heads, why not actually write a novel? Indeed, "Jena 1800" would have been much better as fiction. For despite Neumann's knowledge, everyone blurs together; to me, only Novalis is distinct. And this is perhaps because I adore Penelope Fitzgerald's novel about him, "The Blue Flower." As Polish author Olga Tokarczuk asked in the New Yorker, isn't it often the case "that we remember characters better from novels than we do real people?" Alas, though Peter Neumann seems the ideal person to write a novel about the German Romantics, he's left that opportunity to someone else. Randy Rosenthal teaches writing for Harvard University. His work has appeared in the New York Times, the Washington Post, the American Scholar and many other publications. WINSTON-SALEM Two Winston-Salem women were convicted Monday of inciting two female residents at an assisted-living facility to fight each other in 2019. The fight was recorded and shared with others. Marilyn Latish McKey, 35, of Underwood Avenue pleaded guilty to two counts of misdemeanor assault of an individual with a disability. Judge Todd Burke of Forsyth County Superior Court gave her a suspended 45-day jail sentence and placed her on 12 months of supervised probation. McKey has to complete 50 hours of community service and must stay away from the Danby House. She also must have no contact with any residents at the Danby House. Taneshia DeShawn Jordan, 28, of Clemson Circle pleaded guilty to one count of misdemeanor assault of an individual with a disability. Burke gave her a 30-day suspended jail sentence and placed Jordan on 12 months of unsupervised probation. As with McKey, Jordan must stay away from Danby House. She cannot have any contact with the two residents from the video nor can she have any contact with McKey or another co-defendant, Tonacia Yvonne Tyson, 23. In August 2021, a Forsyth County jury acquitted Tyson of one count of misdemeanor aiding and abetting an assault of an individual with a disability after a trial. Assistant District Attorney Jessica Spencer said in an email that McKey and Jordan pleaded guilty without a plea arrangement, meaning there was no deal on what kind of sentence they would get. The incident happened on June 19, 2019. All three women worked for Danby House in the memory care section where residents suffer from some form of dementia. On that day, one of the female residents put her arm around the neck of another resident. The face of the resident who was being strangled was turning red and she called for help. Spencer said Jordan and McKey did not intervene. Jordan used a cellphone to film the altercation and later shared copies of the video with McKey and Tyson. Jordan told investigators that she encouraged one of the women to punch the other woman in the face, Spencer said. Jordan told investigators that she and McKey allowed the fight to continue because they had some behavioral issues with one of the residents and wanted to get some justice, Spencer said. McKey told investigations that she was also there and didnt intervene. Ursula Walder, McKeys attorney, said in court that McKey did call for help. Walder declined to comment further when reached Tuesday. Spencer argued in court that McKey called someone else to watch the fight. Laraque Stewart, Jordans attorney, did not return a message Tuesday seeking comment. McKey also admitted, Spencer said, to pushing one of the residents into her room, cutting the light off and slamming the door. She said no one checked on that resident after the incident. According to Winston-Salem police, the two female residents did not appear to be injured. Attorneys for one of the women, Betty Elaine Moore, filed a lawsuit in October 2020 in Forsyth County Superior Court against Danby House LLC; ALG Senior LLC, which operated Danby House; and McKey, Tyson and Jordan. A settlement in the lawsuit was reached in late 2021. Details of the settlement were not disclosed. The lawsuit made several claims, including negligent hiring, supervision and retention and medical negligence. Danby House released a statement soon after the incident, saying that what happened was an isolated incident and that Danby House does not and has never condoned such egregious misconduct, which is contrary to the training, policies and values of this community. After the incident, the N.C. Department of Health and Human Services temporarily barred Danby House from admitting new residents because of numerous patient-care deficiencies. The state health agency said that employees were not properly trained and that they failed to administer medications to residents as prescribed by a doctor. The agency also found evidence that employees allowed, and in some cases encouraged, the residents to fight. The employees videotaped some of the fights because they didnt like the residents involved. Danby House currently has no deficiencies listed with the state health agency. RALEIGH An effort to block this years candidacy of U.S. Rep Madison Cawthorn was revived Wednesday by two new voter challenges, which question his qualifications in light of a federal constitutional prohibition against insurrectionists serving in office. The new paperwork officially seeking Cawthorns disqualification, presented by two voters in North Carolinas far-western 11th Congressional District, was anticipated. The first-term Republican filed to run in the 11th District earlier this week. About a dozen voters had previously asked that election officials investigate Cawthorn after he had filed in December to run in what was then the 13th District. Now the 13th District extends at least 150 miles farther east because of redistricting moves the latest coming last week. Citing the redrawn map, the State Board of Elections told voters that earlier challenges couldnt continue because they no longer lived in the 13th. Free Speech for People, a voting rights and elections reform group assisting with the 13th District challenges, had said challenges would be refiled by voters in whichever district Cawthorn would ultimately compete. Cawthorn must be held accountable for his actions which have threatened our democracy, said Raleigh attorney John Wallace, who helped filed Wednesdays challenges. Wisely, the Constitution provides a remedy for our protection. The voters allege that Cawthorn was disqualified from running because he fails to comply with a portion of a post-Civil War amendment to the Constitution pertaining to insurrections, citing his involvement in the rally that preceded the U.S. Capitol riot on Jan. 6, 2021. Cawthorn has said hes never engaged in insurrection against the U.S., and has sued to overturn the states challenge process as unconstitutional. A close ally of former President Donald Trump, Cawthorn has said the previous effort to disqualify him was part of an organized effort to go after Trumps biggest supporters in Congress. Free Speech for People has said similar candidacy challenges would be filed against members of Congress in other states associated with the Jan. 6 violence. While a handful of political activists spend their time trying to disenfranchise the voters of NC-11, Congressman Cawthorn is in Washington fulfilling his promise to fight for the patriots of western North Carolina, Cawthorn spokesman Luke Ball said Wednesday in an email. The latest challenges, one of which was filed by former Transylvania County Commissioner Mike Hawkins, point to a section of the 14th Amendment. It states no one can serve in Congress who, having previously taken an oath, as a member of Congress ... to support the Constitution of the United States, shall have engaged in insurrection or rebellion against the same. Cawthorn addressed the Jan. 6 rally crowd and voted against certifying Democrat Joe Bidens presidential victory. The amendment was aimed in part at preventing congressmen who had fought on the Confederate side during the Civil War from returning to Congress. Cawthorns federal lawsuit, which is still pending, says the provision doesnt apply to him. The 14th Amendment states Congress can vote to remove such disqualifications, and legislators did just that in 1872 by ending them for most Confederates. Cawthorn also says the states candidacy investigation process violates his constitutional rights in part because its triggered by a reasonable suspicion of wrongdoing and shifts the burden of proof away from his accusers and to him. A hearing on the lawsuit is set for March 21. CHARLOTTE Many bars, restaurants and liquor stores in North Carolina are pledging to stop selling Russian-made alcohol because of the invasion of Ukraine. But that doesnt mean youll have to go without many popular brands. Still, the state agency that governs liquor sales in North Carolina has said it will be suspending the sale of some Russian-made products in accordance with an executive order from Gov. Roy Cooper. These suspensions will remain in effect until further notice, according to a statement from the N.C. Alcoholic Beverage Control Commission. That move came shortly after Cooper issued an executive order in response to Russias invasion of Ukraine calling on state entities to review all existing contracts and operations to determine whether they directly benefit any Russian entities and take all reasonable steps to terminate that contract or operation. In his executive order, Cooper said Russia has inflicted and will continue to inflict significant harm and suffering on the people of Ukraine. Ending the sale of Russian-made goods is meant to impose economic consequences on the regime of Russian President Vladimir Putin, although economists have said the prohibition of Russian vodka sales wont have much of an impact on the countrys economy because most vodka in the U.S. isnt Russian-made. North Carolinas decision is also meant to show solidarity with Ukrainian people who live in the state. But if youre a vodka fan, you dont have to give it up completely to show solidarity with Ukraine. Many popular brands are not based in Russia, including Absolut Vodka (Swedish), Grey Goose (French) and Smirnoff (American). One of the vodka brands thats been most commonly mistaken as Russian is Stoli. The brand said in a statement that Stoli vodka brands and its owner Yuri Shefler were exiled from Russia nearly two decades ago. Village idiocy Well, our Village Idiot and his handful of Bad Actors have been videoed calling a Russian dictator and madman genius, savvy, very shrewd, capable and giving him enormous respect while he is invading, killing and maiming in Ukraine a free country. Putins own countrymen, and people all over the world (including most of us in America), are protesting his aggression while there are some in our country who are furnishing Putin with recorded propaganda to be played in Russia propaganda that airs on Russian media showing Americans who respect Putin for his actions. Congratulations to you people. You have sunk to a new low! America is ashamed of you. Miriam Hamill Greensboro Isolate Russia Is Ukraine enough of a true democracy? Is its independence vital to American security enough to sacrifice American lives particularly when we somewhat contributed to this situation by showing we arent ready to protect our own borders and our lack of resolve when in 2014 Russia annexed Crimea? No doubt all of this emboldened Putin to invade Ukraine, and to even threaten to go nuclear, should we or anyone else attempt to stop his aggression. Considering our mishandling of this from the beginning, we cannot now militarily challenge Russias actions halfway around the world. However, if we dont do something soon to reestablish the respect, and fear, our adversaries once had of our influence and our economic and military might, the free world will be in jeopardy, e.g., Communist China/Taiwan; Iran with nuclear capabilities; North Korea with nuclear capabilities, and the ability to deliver it; Russias threat to surrounding NATO nations, etc. Short of military intervention, we should unite and support all democratic nations in an effort to totally isolate Russia, and to cripple it economically, socially, politically and militarily. Even China could not take up this slack. No contact with Russia in any away, period. The initial pain to all freedom-loving nations involved would be well worth it. International bullies must be stopped. Clyde Hunt Jr. Greensboro Gentleman barber What a wonderful surprise to see Bill Cockrell on the front page (Greensboro barber retires after more than 60 years, Feb. 24)! Bill has been cutting my hair for 20 years. He helped me survive the going bald phase of my life. You will never find a better man than Bill. He is kind and masterful. Id also like to bring up the shop from where he is retiring. Huffmans Barber Shop has been sold. Pete Huffman opened the shop in 1968. Pete gave me my first haircut in 1974. He was a fine man, also. If I remember correctly, the N&R did a piece on him a few years back, as well. Thank you so much, Bill, for making me look good for all these years. You are a fine man and gentleman. Thanks to Huffmans Barber Shop also. Memories of the old neighborhood ... David Smith GreensboroLike it is Clarence Henderson (Feb. 28 column) tells it like it is. A former original Woolworths protester gives the lowdown on CRT or critical race theory attempting to be taught in our public school system. In Hendersons words CRT tries to keep Black students in a victims mentality. Hendersons title, Americans must learn from the past, not relive it, just about says it all. Instead of giving a Black student yet one more reason why he or she cannot get ahead in society, which is an affliction most young folks, white and Black, have to begin with, forget this CRT education. It is nothing but digging up old wounds that further divide whites from Blacks. Congratulations to Clarence Henderson for calling it like it is. Richard Rainey Greensboro Silence, please Hasnt Ex-President Trump always praised Vladimir Putin? Both men have similar characteristics, the willingness to hurt people for popular gain. How did Putin know that Trump was of great political value when Trump announced his 2016 run for office? Putin saw him as slow to understand complicated matters and impulsive. Putin took a free strategic move, believing the West has no powerful response to challenge him. On the chessboard of world domination, the Ukraine invasion strikes a cracking blow to world stability. People like Putin are everywhere and this move emboldens them. A man with leadership skills and low morals, like Trump, can easily stir people in America to upset the peaceful purpose of democracy and weaken our ability to give leadership around the world. This was Putins goal in cultivating a relationship with Trump. Putin is smart in his calculations but dumb regarding his responsibility to the world population. Trumps typical response in his headline grab on invasion day was Who cares? Never forget that. We dont need this man playing a part in Americas discourse over calculated moves by criminal minds in positions of power. John C. Miller Randleman With cash grain prices at record highs and Russias war on Ukraine likely to push them higher still, one might assume that farm trucks would be lining up a mile deep at grain elevators hoping to cash in as theyve done before. Not so, says Mitch Konen. The Fairfield wheat farmer said many farmers, himself included, were hit so hard by the 2021 drought that it took everything they could harvest just to fill contracts that were supposed to be just 30% of what they would cut in a normal year. You see $10 cash prices, now. Thats only good if youve got it in the bin, said Konen, past president of Montana Grain Growers Association. There are probably not a lot of people who have grain in the bin to sell because they already sold it. Montana's 2021 wheat harvest of 100.85 million bushels, was just 49% of the 10-year average, according to USDA's National Agricultural Statistics Service. The last time wheat prices were in this territory was 2008, the start of the Great Recession, a time when positive Montana grain sales buoyed a state economy that was being rocked by a collapse in the housing industry. It marked the first time state wheat sales were valued at $1 billion or more. This round of robust prices might not produce the same outcome, as Montana farmers enter the second year of an extended drought with little wheat in reserves and farmers concerned about whether spring moisture will turn things around. Prices were already trending upward before Russia invaded Ukraine, casting doubts of whether one of the biggest wheat-exporting regions in the world would be shipping grain in 2022 or selling at a price damaged by sanctions. Ukraine accounts for 20 million to 29 million metric tons of the worlds wheat exports, depending on the weather. Thats 10% to 15% of world exports, according to the U.S. Department of Agriculture. If Ukraine wheat doesnt ship, or planted acres are down, it will influence export prices, said Vincent Smith, economist at the Montana State University's Department of Agricultural Economics and Economics. Exports, from all countries, all exporting countries, are getting close to 200 million metric tons, depending on the year, the weather, Smith said. So, we're looking at a significant share of world exports. Farmers need to be thinking about crop insurance for the coming year and whether it makes sense to lock in contracts for fall delivery, Smith said. Market prices are tempting. At local elevators a farmer with ordinary hard red winter wheat to sell could get $10.95 a bushel at Golden Triangle elevators, Tuesday, according to the U.S. Department of Agriculture. In Great Falls, the cash price was $10.89. Billings was a little lower at $10.35. Those prices are double what ordinary wheat was selling for during the same period last year. Ordinary wheat is typically the lowest priced variety, selling for less than wheat graded for higher protein. Tuesday, September futures for hard red winter wheat on the Kansas City Board of Trade were at $9.97 a bushel. Hard red spring wheat September contracts finished at $10.10 on the Minnesota Grain Exchange, December contracts finished $10.09. One thing Smith cautions consumers against is over associating bread prices with a beneficial increase in what farmers are paid for wheat. From the point of view of the price of a loaf of bread, folks need to understand that currently, for every dollar they spend on a loaf of bread, 94 cents of that is covering the cost of getting the wheat to the miller, to the baker, to the supermarket, Smith said. Only six cents of that, on average, is involved with purchasing the bushel of wheat from which the flour comes." The issue, probably for all food prices, as well as every other price, is actually the impact of the Ukrainian crisis on the price of oil, diesel and the price of gas. But that's the problem common to every commodity being produced, whether it's a new Ford Escape, or a loaf of bread. There are factors other than the war pushing up the price of wheat, which was trending upward strongly before the invasion, said Cassidy Marn, Montana Wheat and Barley Committee executive vice president. Its Marn who works directly with foreign buyers of Montana wheat. Much like Ukraine, Montana exports up to 80% of the wheat it grows. The state ranks third nationally in wheat production. Drought is a big concern this year for U.S. wheat, not just in Montana. We also had some new drought monitor information come out, and it's pretty bleak across the U.S., Marn said. Montana's certainly the worst. But it's a pretty bad situation, we're kind of getting into a pretty critical time for the Southern Plains, where they're looking to harvest not too far out. The weather could turn around in the Southern Plains and the drought pressure on the U.S. wheat crop would diminish, Marn said. Another impactful turnaround would be a quick end to the Russian invasion of Ukraine. Montana farmers arent strangers to mercurial shifts in grain production in the Black Sea region. In 2010, Montana grain prices jumped 60% in a little more than a month after drought-stricken Russia announced that its wheat production would be down 15 million metric tons. There had been a 23-million-ton surplus of wheat before the announcement by Russia. Suddenly, buyers that usually trade with Russia, namely Egypt and parts of Africa, were in the market for U.S. wheat. Similarly in 2012, Ukraine announced that because of drought it wouldnt be exporting as much grain in November. Montana benefited. Love 0 Funny 0 Wow 1 Sad 0 Angry 0 Be the first to know Get local news delivered to your inbox! Sign up! * I understand and agree that registration on or use of this site constitutes agreement to its user agreement and privacy policy. A 36-year-old Helena man was arrested on suspicion of raping a child younger than 12. Brandon Michael Watson is charged with felony sexual intercourse without consent and felony sexual assault. On Feb. 28, a Lewis and Clark County Sheriff's Office deputy was informed by an elementary school that a child younger than 12 had disclosed sexual contact by the defendant. The school also informed Child Protective Services and the deputy that this was disclosed after the victim spoke with friends at her school. The victim said she told her mother about the sexual contact in the fall of 2021. The mother reported that she confronted the defendant, and he convinced her the touching was accidental. The victim reported that Watson would remove her clothing and touch her inappropriately while he thought she was sleeping. The victim said the contact with the defendant was "painful." Many of the things the victim told detectives were able to be corroborated. A CPS report confirmed the defendant's criminal history of domestic violence and endangering the welfare of a child. Love 2 Funny 2 Wow 4 Sad 1 Angry 32 Sign up for our Crime & Courts newsletter Get the latest in local public safety news with this weekly email. Sign up! * I understand and agree that registration on or use of this site constitutes agreement to its user agreement and privacy policy. To put a finger on the pulse of what is happening around the world, look no further than Montana Flag and Pole in Helena. Fred Verzani, owner of the longtime business at 829 N. Last Chance Gulch along with his wife Patti, said he has received quite a few requests for Ukrainian flags since the country was invaded by Russian forces last week. Its amazing, he said in a telephone interview Tuesday, adding they have received about a dozen requests for the flags after selling a couple that were in stock. People want to show support and be there any way (they) can, he said. Patti Verzani said they have received calls from the governor's office and various government agencies about Ukrainian flags, but they are sold out. She said they found another supplier and will have nearly two dozen flags in the store by Thursday or Friday. The American-made flags will be available in 3-by-5-foot and 2-by-3-foot varieties. The shop now has a small Ukrainian flag on its front desk, just for display, plus a Ukrainian map on the wall, Fred Verzani said. Patti Verzani said she has had people offer to buy that tiny flag, but she and her husband "wont sell it." Fred Verzani said the flags that people want can change in the blink of an eye, depending on world events. He said people often check out Amazon.com before coming to his store. He said people often drive by the store on Last Chance Gulch, see the large flags on poles outside and decide to stop in. But its not just Ukrainian flags. Canadian flags have also been popular as of late at the store, the Verzanis said. Some Montanans have joined Canadian truckers in a three-week convoy protesting against coronavirus mandates. The protest closed a handful of Canada-U.S. border posts and shut down key parts of Ottawa for more than three weeks, but all border blockades have now ended. A convoy is expected to be rolling on Interstate 90 across Montana Wednesday, with multiple rallies at cities along the way. Fred Verzani said some people even called and had flags shipped to truckers. People are always concerned about Canada, he said. They want the good neighbor relationship. This story contains information from the Associated Press. Assistant editor Phil Drake can be reached at 406-231-9021. Love 2 Funny 0 Wow 0 Sad 0 Angry 0 Get local news delivered to your inbox! Subscribe to our Daily Headlines newsletter. Sign up! * I understand and agree that registration on or use of this site constitutes agreement to its user agreement and privacy policy. New Braunfels, TX (78130) Today Cloudy and windy this evening with scattered thunderstorms developing overnight. Low 74F. Winds SSE at 20 to 30 mph. Chance of rain 40%.. Tonight Cloudy and windy this evening with scattered thunderstorms developing overnight. Low 74F. Winds SSE at 20 to 30 mph. Chance of rain 40%. A House subcommittee on Wednesday rejected a Senate bill to bar most personal use of campaign funds, scuttling a measure that had passed the Senate on a vote of 37-3. A GOP-led subcommittee of the House Privileges and Elections Committee voted 5-3 along party lines to defeat the bill sponsored by Sen. John Bell, D-Loudoun, ending the legislation for this session, which is set to close March 12. Virginia is one of the few states with no rules governing how legislative candidates and state lawmakers spend their campaign money. Lawmakers studied the issue last year, which resulted in Bell's bill. Bell told the subcommittee that the measure "isn't a perfect bill" but it was meant to prevent the "the most egregious things." "We have nothing today," Bell said. "There is nothing to stop anybody from, frankly, doing anything they want with these funds." He added: "Frankly, when a candidate or an elected official does one of these most egregious things and it hits the paper it makes all of us look bad." Republicans who control the House of Delegates previously killed legislation that would ban the personal use of campaign money. Bell's bill differed in several respects. For instance, it would have allowed candidates and lawmakers to spend the money on food and clothing. "If a candidate has a piece of pizza at the campaign office with their staff, technically that could be a violation," so the bill removes references to food, Bell said. "Clothing is another issue," Bell said. "If a candidate has a shirt with a campaign logo" that also could have been a violation, so Bell's bill does not bar spending on clothing. The bill also would have allowed use of campaign funds for professional development that relates to campaign or legislative training. Del. Kim Taylor, R-Dinwiddie, a member of the subcommittee, said she disagreed with the bill's exemption for child care as an appropriate use of campaign funds. "This is a position of public service," Taylor said. "If you have children that need child care, I do not think that that should come out of campaign funding." Bell said the provision was meant to help volunteers serving in a campaign. He said a working group that looked at campaign finance issues recognized that child care is a challenge for volunteers in both political parties. Bell said he would be willing to remove the provision if it moved the bill forward. "I'm not looking for the perfect solution," Bell said. "I'm looking for a start - and sometimes we need to do that in very complex areas." Del. Candi King, D-Prince William, said she could not support the measure without its exemptions for child care and dependent care. She said that without continuing to allow such expenditures, the legislature would continue to see disparities between "independently wealthy" candidates who can afford to run and serve and "working people" who face more challenges in seeking public office. Del. Margaret Ransone, R-Westmoreland, said she is not comfortable putting a measure in the state code that, as Bell said, is not perfect. Ransone noted that the House has backed a bill that would continue the work of a panel that is studying campaign finance issues. Tribute band to perform in Newton The Classic Drifters will perform at 7 p.m. Saturday at the Newton Performing Arts Center, with doors opening at 6 p.m. Tickets range from $40 to $55. Tickets can be purchased on the Newton Performing Arts Centers website. The Classic Drifters are a tribute band to The Drifters, who were famous for several songs, including Under the Boardwalk, This Magic Moment and There Goes My Baby. Thumbelina auditions at The Green Room The Green Room will host auditions for Thumbelina from 4-6 p.m. Saturday and Sunday. Under the direction of Grace Bollinger, a group of young performers will build a show that will be performed at the Catawba Valley Festival of the Arts, as well as at various other libraries and parks. Show dates are April 22-24, April 30 and May 7. Actors only need to attend one night of auditions. Actors will be asked to tell a short, funny story, perform cold readings from the script and play improv games. Actors must be available for all performances. Auditions will be held at the Old Post Office Playhouse at 10 South Main Ave., Newton. Actors will enter at the lower-level door at the back of the building. American roots music event is Saturday Caldwell Community College and Technical Institutes J.E. Broyhill Civic Center in Lenoir will present the 24th annual Caldwell Traditional Musicians Showcase concert Aint Misbehavin: a Celebration of American Roots Music. The show is at 7:30 p.m. Saturday. Tickets are $13 for adults and $6 for students and children. A pre-showcase dinner buffet will be held at 5:30 p.m. upstairs at the center. Cost of dinner is $17, and reservations are required. Tickets can be purchase on the centers website. Local band Strictly Clean and Decent organized the show and will be the host. Other featured performers include The Page Brothers, the Never Bs and the Shelby Rae Moore Band. Nancy Posey will serve as master of ceremonies. Art show reception is Sunday The Rock School Arts Foundation will be hosting an exhibition featuring paintings and pottery featuring artists Helen Tueffel, Lynn King and Will Rogers. A reception will be held from 2-4 p.m. Sunday. The exhibition will be up from March 4 to April 8 in two of the galleries at the Old Rock School in Valdese. The art will be featured on the foundations website from March 4 to April 22. The Old Rock School is at 400 Main St. W, Valdese. The school is open from 8:30 a.m. to 5 p.m. Monday through Friday. Violinist joins symphony for concert Violinist Tai Murray will perform with the Western Piedmont Symphony on Saturday as part of the groups Masterworks concert series. The concert will start at 7:30 p.m. at P.E. Monroe Auditorium at Lenoir-Rhyne University. Tickets range from $25 to $45. Murray has performed with ensembles around the world, including the Atlanta Symphony Orchestra, Baltimore Symphony Orchestra, BBC Scottish Symphony Orchestra, Chicago Symphony Orchestra and Los Angeles Philharmonic. Murray will be featured in Felix Mendelssohns Violin Concerto in E Minor. The symphony also will perform Amy Beachs Gaelic Symphony and Maxwell Davies An Orkney Wedding With Sunrise. " " Pope Formosus' body was exhumed in 897 and his corpse was put on trial by Pope Stephen. Howstuffworks.com Exhumations happen. Sometimes it's during a criminal trial; other times it's to identify historical figures; then there are times when it's used to simply determine paternity. Whatever the reason, there have been many cited cases throughout history when authorities have had to reexamine the physical evidence of the dearly departed. But having an actual cadaver stand trial for crimes already excused is when things start to get way more unusual. That's exactly what happened in 897 C.E. when the body of Pope Formosus was unearthed and taken to a courtroom presided over by the then-current pope whose only intention was to find Pope Formosus guilty. The trial is known as the Cadaver Synod. The "cadaver" part is easy to understand considering Formosus' actual dead body sat accused. But if you're not familiar with the term synod, it is an ecclesiastical council or gathering where decisions about issues related to faith or disciplinary matters are determined. While trying a dead body would be unimaginable in Vatican City today, the Cadaver Synod took place during a time when political machinations ruled the papacy, long before 11th-century reforms that regulated papal elections. It was a time when there was little distinction between private property and public trust, according to Rev. John W. O'Malley, S.J. Popes during the Middle Ages could dispense favor. It was a prize for a family to be aligned with the pope, and there were lots of rivalries. And like many stories, this one begins with the end of a great ruler. Advertisement The Set Up: Death of Charlemagne While Charlemagne reigned over the Roman Empire (he was crowned emperor in 800 C.E.) life was pretty good in the Christian West, according to O'Malley's "A History of the Popes from Peter to the Present." Charlemagne had high standards for education and clergy and facilitated political stability. Unfortunately, his son Louis the Pious was less capable. So after Charlemagne's death, the empire was divided into three under Charlemagne's grandsons Louis the German, Charles the Bald and Lothair. More divisions occurred over time. Internal political complications were met with numerous external threats from the Normans, the Magyars and the Saracens, O'Malley explains. "The whole political situation was very upset," he says. Papal elections were manipulated in favor of noble factions. At the time, bishops were elected by local clergy with the approval of the laypeople, which meant that local families held significant influence in elections, and that included the office of the pope who also was the bishop of Rome. Getting your man in the pontificate was a coup for any faction. " " Stephen VI exhumed Formosus' body in 897 and put his corpse on trial. Yes. He put his corpse on trial for crimes he committed while alive, as depicted in Jean-Paul Laurens' painting, "Le Pape Formose et Etienne VII" ("Pope Formosus and Stephen VII"). Public Domain Advertisement Enter Pope Formosus Thanks to the territorial divisions of Charlemagne's empire after his death, major rifts occurred, according to Francesca Romana Valente, an archaeologist with a specialization in early Christian archaeology and iconography, who works with Through Eternity Tours. At this time in history, popes weren't elected because they were recognized as spiritual leaders; they were elected because they were supported by a certain party. A successful missionary and cardinal bishop of Porto, Italy, Formosus had increased the presence of the Church in Bulgaria enough that Bulgarian prince Bogoris petitioned Nicholas I to have Formosus as the archbishop of the Bulgarian church, Michael E. Moore wrote in the paper "The Body of Pope Formosus." Nicholas denied the request because of a canonical rule that a bishop could not move from one episcopal see to another. Formosus returned to Rome and Bulgaria entered the Byzantine church. Nevertheless, Formosus gained the recognition of powerful supporters, which in ninth-century Europe meant he attracted plenty of enemies, too. Formosus' growing influence eventually led to his excommunication by John VIII in 876 C.E. Charges against Formosus included an attempt to become bishop of Bulgaria, being a traitor to Charles the Bald (who Formosus disapproved of) and that he coveted the papacy. Luckily for Formosus, John VIII's pontificate ended when he was assassinated in 882, and Pope Marinus I reinstated Formosus, who returned to his bishopric in Porto. Marinus I lasted about two years, his successor St. Adrian III just one, and Stephen V about six long years. Finally, Formosus acceded to the papacy in 891 C.E.. Guy of Spoleto (Guido) was now ruling over a much larger portion of Italy, which was very dangerous for the papal states. Stephen V had unwillingly crowned Guy of Spoleto emperor, and consequently, Formosus, was forced to recognize him and his son Lambert Roman emperor, as well. Formosus initially looked to them for strength and protection in his new role. Except, Formosus also was collaborating with the King of Germany, Arnulf, who attempted a siege on Rome with the support of Formosus. Guy of Spoleto died that same year, however, leaving his son as emperor, and Arnulf took a second chance to attack Rome. This time Arnulf was successful and Formosus crowned Arnulf emperor of Rome. The new alliance didn't last long, however. Arnulf was paralyzed as he marched on toward Spoleto, and Formosus died in 896. " " "The Cadaver Synod," the posthumous ecclesiastical trial of Pope Formosus, 897 C.E., engraving by Francesco Bertolini (1836-1909). DEA/BIBLIOTECA AMBROSIANA/De Agostini via Getty Images Advertisement The Posthumous Trial Two popes later, Emperor Lambert recovered his authority in Rome in 897 and Stephen VI was pope. Stephen was determined to revisit the crimes of his predecessor Formosus. It wasn't enough to simply accuse him or smear his name. Stephen had Formosus' body dug up, dressed up (in pontifical robes) and put up (on a throne) to stand trial. The Cadaver Synod levied the charges of coveting the papacy and ruling over multiple bishoprics at the same time. The prohibition against being bishop of more than one place at a time makes political sense as it would help prevent a bishop from amassing too much power. As for seeking the papacy, that's clearly inappropriate. "It's a holy office," says O'Malley. Buying and selling ecclesiastical goods is forbidden, and just as buying your way into an election isn't just a political crime, it's an ecclesiastical one too. While Stephen VI didn't give Formosus what would be considered a fair trial today, he did assign a deacon to speak for him. Stephen is reported to have screamed at the corpse, and the deacon's weak defense did little to plead Formosus' case. The drama of the macabre scene was increased when an earthquake shook the San Giovanni Laterano basilica. Unsurprisingly, Formosus was found guilty. He was stripped of his robes and his three fingers used for the blessing were chopped off. All his measures and acts were annulled, and all the orders conferred by him were declared invalid. After burying him (a second time) in a cemetery for strangers outside of Church lands, Stephen VI had Formosus dug up yet again and thrown into the Tiber River. A fisherman or a monk, depending on the legend, found his body, pulled it from the water, and hid it. Later, Formosus was reburied (a third time) at St. Peter's and his name cleared. Advertisement The People's Reaction to the Synod of Formosus The people of Rome were disgusted by the trial, and a few months later there was a riot, according to Valente. Stephen VI was imprisoned and strangled to death. His maneuver was clearly not appreciated, so what was he hoping to gain from the trial? "Everything is tied to the politics of the time," Valente says. For one thing, Stephen VI was supported by Emperor Lambert. "So this grotesque trial was a way to show his allegiance to Guido [Guy]." Another benefit was that the result of the trial made all of Formosus' acts as pope null and void, according to Amelia Soth in the journal JSTOR Daily. That was good for Stephen because he had been made bishop by Formosus, which meant he was guilty of holding multiple positions at once too. Now That's Interesting The Cadaver Synod was the last instance of a posthumous trial by the Church, but in the 17th century, English Civil War leader Oliver Cromwell's body was exhumed, tried for high treason and executed by hanging and beheading. " " This painting by Luigi Russolo is titled "Nietzsche and Madness." Fine Art Images/Heritage Images/Getty Images/HowStuffWorks Friedrich Wilhelm Nietzsche (who was famous for the quote "God is dead") was the son and grandson of Lutheran ministers. He was expected to follow their path, but the precocious young Nietzsche had his own ideas. And these were enormously influential in the 20th century. Born in 1844 in a small town near Leipzig, Germany, Nietzsche excelled in school, played and composed music and was a fan of Ralph Waldo Emerson's essays. His papers on philology (the structure and development of languages) were so impressive that young Nietzsche was called to be the chair of philology at the University of Basel (Switzerland) before he even finished his doctoral dissertation at the University of Leipzig (Germany). He was only 24. The Nietzsche we know, however, isn't the brilliant student of his early years, but rather the iconoclastic, mustachioed philosopher at the height of his intellectual and creative power. The author of books and essays with wickedly provocative titles like "The Anti-Christ" and "Beyond Good and Evil," Nietzsche said that the purpose of his work was to "overthrow idols" and "ideals." He had no patience for religious or philosophical views that looked beyond the earthly, human experience, and gleefully attacked conventional ways of thinking (including classical philosophy) with dagger-like strokes of his pen. That said, Nietzsche isn't for everybody. His prose is playful and musical, but his meaning is often opaque. For example, Nietzsche loved to write aphorisms short, pithy truisms that would fit nicely on a bumper sticker. But the aphorisms, while clever, often present more questions than answers. Here are a few from the opening chapter of "Twilight of the Idols": Even the bravest of us only rarely have the bravery for what we actually know... All truth is simple." Isn't that doubly a lie? What? Is humanity just God's mistake? Or God just a mistake of humanity? Reading Nietzsche, it's clear that you're in the presence of a rare genius, but unraveling the meaning of his grand pronouncements has kept scholars arguing for more than a century. To help us make sense of Nietzsche's unconventional mind, we reached out to Dale Wilkerson, a professor of philosophy at the University of Texas Rio Grande Valley and author of the excellent entry on Friedrich Nietzsche in the Internet Encyclopedia of Philosophy. Here are five quotes from Nietzsche, starting with the most famous (and infamous) of them all. Advertisement 1. "God is dead. God remains dead. And we have killed him." These notoriously controversial lines from "The Gay Science" (1882) are spoken as part of a strange, allegorical tale. In aphorism 125 of the book, Nietzsche writes of a "madman" who wanders into the town market crying, "I seek God! I seek God!" The crowd of unbelievers mock and laugh at the madman, who turns on them and responds, "Whither is God? I will tell you. We have killed him you and I. All of us are his murderers." To a person of faith, Nietzsche's claim that "God is dead" sounds like an atheist philosopher claiming the victory of humanism over religion, or reason over superstition. But Wilkerson argues that Nietzsche isn't saying that humanism or Nietzsche himself has "killed" God. "There's nothing triumphal about what Nietzsche is saying here," says Wilkerson. "What he's pointing to is what he thinks is a historical fact European society is no longer as dependent upon religion as it once was." " " A portrait of Nietzche. ullstein bild/ullstein bild via Getty Images The second half of the 19th century was a time of tremendous social, economic and political upheaval. Railroads moved people, goods and ideas like never before. Old kingdoms gave way to the rise of the nation state. And Darwin challenged the traditional religious basis of creation with his earth-shattering theories of evolution. When Nietzsche says that "God is dead," he's not just saying that the authority of the Church has been nullified (though he believed that), but rather, there is no such thing anymore as an "absolute." No philosophical absolutes, no logical absolutes, no absolutes in nature, and certainly no religious absolutes like absolute "good" or absolute "evil." "All of that has been disrupted by the 19th century," says Wilkerson. Does that mean that in the absence of absolutes, Nietzsche advocated for strict utilitarianism (actions are "right" if they promote happiness for the most people) or wanton hedonism (the pursuit of pleasure is the highest good)? Absolutely not. "Nietzsche believes that God is dead, therefore we have to challenge ourselves to become 'noble' and it's up to each of us to figure out how to do that," says Wilkerson. "We don't do that by purely seeking pleasure, though." Bonus quote: "After coming into contact with a religious man I always feel I must wash my hands." Advertisement 2. "That which does not kill us makes us stronger." You might be surprised to learn that Nietzsche came up with that line, too, sometimes written as "What doesn't kill you makes you stronger." But what exactly did Nietzsche mean by this statement, which sounds like a coffee mug cliche about resilience or puts you in mind of a certain Kelly Clarkson song? First of all, it's "objectively not true," says Wilkerson. There are plenty of things that might not kill you, but can leave you weaker (physically, mentally or emotionally) than before they came around. Nietzsche himself was reduced to a "mental vegetable" for the last 11 years of his life, says Wilkerson, after suffering a breakdown and two strokes probably caused by syphilis. The disease didn't kill him immediately, but it didn't make him stronger, either. Instead, Wilkerson sees Nietzsche's statement as a continuation of the themes introduced with the "death of God." Nietzsche is often accused of being a nihilist, which is someone who rejects conventional morality and religiosity under the belief that life, at its core, is meaningless. "Nietzsche admits that his work raises some difficult issues," says Wilkerson. "His work could be considered nihilistic, but Nietzsche says that he's confronting nihilism head on. Losing the idea of God could be depressing and some would consider that to be nihilistic, but Nietzsche insists that it's not." To Nietzsche, the death of God and other "absolutes" doesn't make life meaningless. It frees us to create new values and paradigms for finding meaning. Out of the ashes of religion and conventional morality, Nietzsche foretells the rise of the Ubermensch or "overman" (sometimes translated as "superman") who will be "stronger" psychologically and physically than what came before. Bonus quote: "He who cannot obey himself will be commanded. That is the nature of living creatures." Advertisement 3. "It is only as an aesthetic phenomenon that existence and the world are eternally justified." If God is "dead," then what do we raise up in place of his absolute authority? As a late-19th century philosopher, you might expect Nietzsche to land on the side of reason and logic. But cold reason and pure logic were just as empty and meaningless for Nietzsche as religion. Explaining why something is logically "true" doesn't necessarily imbue it with meaning. For Nietzsche, the highest expression of the human spirit was art. Nietzsche was a musician and poet and was once very close friends with the German composer Richard Wagner. Before they had a falling out over Wagner's nationalism and anti-Semitism, Nietzsche was enthralled by the composer's sweeping artistic vision. The above quote comes from a book called "The Birth of Tragedy" (1872), which Nietzsche wrote when he was still very much under Wagner's spell. So, what does Nietzsche mean when he says that existence is only "justified" as an "aesthetic" phenomenon"? "Human beings are unique in that we create a world for ourselves," says Wilkerson. "We create whole systems of beliefs. We create gods, we create rituals, we create social/moral norms. All of that is an aesthetic phenomenon, but that's everything for Nietzsche. We wouldn't be who we are without that kind of creativity." Art, for Nietzsche, isn't just a creative exercise or outlet, but a way of accessing a deeper sense of understanding beyond mere logic and reason. He was a huge fan of Greek tragedies and identified with the "Dionysian" spirit of unbridled passions and a sense of wonder rather than the cool rationality of Western philosophy. Bonus quote: "Without music, life would be a mistake." Advertisement 4. "The world is the will to power and nothing more, and you yourself are also this will to power and nothing more." Now we're getting into the really deep (and confusing) stuff. Scholars agree that one of Nietzsche's key doctrines is something called "will to power," but that's about all they agree upon. Nietzsche doesn't lay out his arguments in the traditional philosophical fashion, and often prefers questions over answers, so it's rare that he says something is unequivocally "good" or "bad." But in a late book called "The Anti-Christ" (written in 1888, published in 1895), he writes: What is good? Everything that heightens the feeling of power in man, the will to power, power itself. What is bad? Everything that is born of weakness. What is happiness? The feeling that power is growing, that resistance is overcome. As a philosophy, that sounds kind of brutal power is good and weakness is bad. It's no wonder that Adolph Hitler latched onto (and misinterpreted) Nietzsche as his favorite German philosopher. But Wilkerson sees "will to power" in a different light, as Nietzsche's way of trying to explain how values change over time. Since nothing is absolute, including values or morality, then what is underlying the force that causes them to shift? In his notebooks, Nietzsche explains "will to power" as a primordial force that governs all interactions, on both a cosmic and human level: "My idea is that every specific body strives to become master over all space and to extend its force (its will to power) and to thrust back all that resists its extension. But it continually encounters similar efforts on the part of other bodies and ends by coming to an arrangement ("union") with those of them that are sufficiently related to it: thus they then conspire together for power. And the process goes on." Wilkerson interprets this to mean that human beings have a twofold drive: the first is to preserve themselves, but the second (and perhaps more important) is to enhance themselves. That's what Nietzsche means by "extending" the will to power. And there's a constant game of tug-of-war between those two drives. Sometimes enhancement comes at the risk of preservation and sometimes preservation hinders enhancement. How does this connect back to values? "Values change over the course of time, and if you investigate the nature of any specific value, they reveal an ancient will to power," says Wilkerson. "They reveal how people try to enhance themselves and preserve themselves at the same time." Bonus quote: "Your will and your values you set upon the river of becoming. What the people believe to be good and evil reveals to me an ancient will to power." Advertisement 5. "And this secret life itself spoke to me: 'Behold,' it said, 'I am that which must always overcome itself.'" That quote is from "Thus Spoke Zarathustra" (1883), a philosophical novel in which Nietzsche uses the ancient Persian prophet Zarathustra as a mouthpiece for his philosophies. One of the themes of the novel hearkens back to the "death of God" conundrum. Mankind has arrived at a philosophical crisis that requires a thorough questioning not only of religious morality, but of the entire Western philosophical tradition. Nietzsche took up this theme again in "Beyond Good and Evil" (1886) and concluded that the growing dissatisfaction with religion has created a "magnificent tension of the spirit... the likes of which the earth has never known: with such a tension in our bow we can now shoot at the furthest goals." That "furthest goal" is the Ubermensch ("overman"), the next evolution of mankind that "overcomes" our current selves. Hitler equated the Ubermensch with the Aryan physical ideal of tall, blond and blue-eyed. But Nietzsche's Ubermensch is a psychological hero who is brave enough to forge his own moral paradigm through rigorous self-examination and honesty in order to (in modern lingo) "live his best life." The secret revealed to Zarathustra (by life itself) is that life is all about "overcoming" oneself to become something greater. The problem, says Nietzsche, is that our psychological strength is always being sapped by the polar opposite of the Ubermensch, the enemy of self-actualization that Nietzsche calls "the last man." The last man only seeks pleasure and comfort, not the hard work that it takes to overcome ourselves. "We have to plumb the depths of our psyche and ask ourselves tough questions and be prepared to deal with whatever honest answers that we can formulate," says Wilkerson. "In 'Beyond Good and Evil,' Nietzsche extols the virtue of honesty. It's one of the most recent virtues and perhaps the most important." Bonus quote: "Have I made myself understood?...'Absolutely not, sir!' So let's start at the beginning." HowStuffWorks earns a small affiliate commission when you purchase through links on our site. Now That's Cool Nietzsche didn't lack for self-confidence and delighted in his controversial persona. "I know my fate," he wrote. "One day there will be associated with my name the recollection of something frightful of a crisis like no other before on earth, of the profoundest collision of conscience, of a decision evoked against everything that until then had been believed in, demanded, sanctified. I am not a man. I am dynamite." With as much data as is collected on dairy farms today, the old saying You cant manage what you dont measure may be getting less traction, but it remains just as true. Perhaps a third step should even be implied between the two: you cant manage what you dont measure and then benchmark. Benchmarks provide a point of comparison for the data collected, and without them, the raw data might not be very useful if you dont know what it is reflecting. Many producers probably have access to and utilize local or regional benchmarks to track their progress on areas like milk production, feed costs, or labor expenses. National data in these areas and many more can also be valuable. But perhaps the most useful comparison should be to your own operation. When you compare your data to that for your area or the country, youre always going to end up higher or lower. Instead, comparing information to your farm over time provides perspective on the trend youre taking, shared Jason Karszes during the Pennsylvania Dairy Summit. Look at what happened last week, last year, and the last three years, for example, in comparison to what is happening now. This long-term approach can also help you see the big picture of average performance rather than just one or a few good or bad years. The Cornell University dairy farm management extension associate also said that self-comparison should include your farm goals. Look at What was I trying to do? he explained, and then you can determine success by knowing if you hit that target. Later during the conference, producer Dale Hemminger described that comparing their costs against their own previous data every year has proven to be more valuable than using generic standards. I struggled to see where we could fit in with those benchmarks, said the businessman who milks 1,500 cows and oversees more than 3,000 acres of dairy forages and vegetable crops with his son, Clayton, and team of managers. Evaluate consistently To generate benchmarks, Karszes emphasized that they must be calculated the same way over time. That way, they are useful to monitor daily activities and make decisions in each of the enterprises on your farm. Start by asking the questions of what you want to measure and what information is needed to understand that area. Once you have your data, evaluate where it is in relation to your benchmarks and consider how the task you measured is being done. Then, ask what you may need to look at further to fill in any gaps of information or make the best decision. Benchmarks can be prepared internally or with the help of multiple types of consultants, Karzses shared. Calculating them consistently and with regular standards can help you determine if your business is competitive and analyze its strong and weak points strategically. To comment, email your remarks to intel@hoards.com. (c) Hoard's Dairyman Intel 2022 February 24, 2022 The De Pree Art Center and Gallery at Hope College will be hosting the exhibition On Bare Foot, featuring work by new faculty members Leekyung Kang, Emily Mayo and Jason Contangelo, from Thursday, March 3, through Wednesday, March 30. There will be an opening reception at the gallery on Thursday, March 3, from 6 p.m. to 8 p.m. The three artists, who each joined the faculty in the fall of 2021, will deliver talks at 7 p.m. The public is invited to the exhibition and the reception. Admission is free. Attendance to the exhibition is by appointment, and guests may register on the gallerys website at hope.edu/depree Leekyung Kang, an assistant professor of art, earned her MFA from Rhode Island School of Design and BFA from Seoul National University. She has taught at Rhode Island School of Design, Virginia Commonwealth University in Qatar and Idaho State University. Born in Flint, Emily Mayo, an adjunct member of the faculty, has had work showcased in exhibitions around the U.S. including in Indiana, North Carolina, Pennsylvania and Connecticut, and at the Grand Rapids Art Museum and the Manifest Gallery in Cincinnati, Ohio. Jason Contangelo, a visiting assistant professor of art, completed his MFA from the University at Buffalo in 2021, with previous studies at the University of Michigan and the North American Lutheran Seminary. His work has been exhibited at CEPA Gallery and the University at Buffalo Art Galleries, both in his hometown of Buffalo, New York. On Bare Foot has been curated by Maddie Reyna, a Chicago-based curator and artist, and the interim director of academic programs for Ox-Bow School of Art in Saugatuck. The De Pree Art Center and Gallery is located at 275 Columbia Ave., between 10th and 13th streets. The gallery is open Monday-Friday from 10 a.m. to 5 p.m., although it will be closed on Friday, March 18, through Sunday, March 27, because of the colleges spring break. Cryptocurrency exchanges and any businesses holding crypto assets should be required to have minimum cyber security standards in order to protect Australian investors, a committee has told the government. On Wednesday, the cyber security Industry Advisory Committee (IAC) created by the Department of Home Affairs in 2020 published its recommendations for how the government can protect Australians from risks related to cryptocurrency. It offered five recommendations including mandatory cyber security standards, extra resources for law enforcement cybercrime divisions, and more ways for consumers to understand the risks and evaluate the integrity of cryptocurrency products and vendors. Andy Penn, chair of IAC and CEO of Telstra, said the government should offer increased support and education for Australian cryptocurrency investors. Every day there are headlines about new crypto billionaires alongside those losing their life savings by betting on crypto or being caught in a scam, he said. Cryptocurrencies are more vulnerable to scams, confidence tricks and online rug pulls, which could easily see Australians lose their investments. Now that more and more ordinary Australians are investing in such currencies, there is an urgent need for more education about how to stay safe when trading and using cryptocurrency. Rug pull describes the nefarious practice of a cryptocurrency project that looks legitimate and encourages people to buy-in and drive up the price before the creators quickly cash out, making the coin worthless. There are ways to spot a rug pull but this type of due-diligence can be esoteric and lost on people who are rushing in to buy a crypto asset quickly as the price rises. The cyber security IAC wants to see the government produce educational programs that have accurate, consistent messaging to help investors understand both the investment and cyber security risks inherent in cryptocurrency. Clarify regulation It is also calling on the government to build a regulatory framework that provide[s] greater clarity and confidence about how the cryptocurrency market can operate in Australia and how consumers can be best protected. This framework would function beyond existing anti-money laundering and counter-terrorism financing (AML/CTF) legislation that cryptocurrency exchanges must already follow. At last weeks ACS Reimagination Thought Leaders Summit 2022, Senator Andrew Bragg said the government was undergoing a policy shift around how it treats cryptocurrency, and is aiming to put more regulatory levers in the hands of government in order to encourage capital and skilled workers to Australia. This follows an announcement from Treasurer Josh Frydenberg late last year in which he said legislative reform aimed at cryptocurrency and digital assets could begin by the middle of the year. But while they welcome a drive toward increased education, local cryptocurrency businesses are wary of tightened regulation. Jonathon Miller, Australian Managing Director of the Kraken exchange, said the company broadly supports IACs recommendations. Minimum standards for security, and greater resourcing to fight sophisticated cybercrime will go a long way to protecting investors, he said. Regulatory settings however is something that should be very cautiously approached. Australia has built a reputation for being a crypto-savvy and friendly jurisdiction which goes a long way to ensuring crypto businesses remain onshore in Australia. Onerous regulation such as market licensing and/or a crypto asset custody/deposit regime could risk driving these innovative businesses offshore, repeating the mistakes of the past when it comes to encouraging local innovative businesses onshore. Likewise, Ian Lowe, CEO of cryptocurrency investment firm Dacxi, said heavy regulation could stifle innovation within the maturing local industry. What's really needed is a drive on public education, he said. Digital assets are fundamentally different from their traditional counterparts. Many have a select utility, for example facilitating payments, some represent real physical assets through tokenisation, and others are entire ecosystems like Ethereum. Wednesday, March 2 The Cabarrus Senior Center Photo Club is alive and clicking away. If you like taking photos, come join us on the first and third Wednesdays of the month from 1:30-3 p.m. at the Cabarrus Senior Center, 331 Corban Ave. SE, Concord, and share your photographic creativity. Whether you are a seasoned photographer or strictly amateur, all are welcome. Thursday, March 3 Cabarrus Disabled American Veterans (DAV) will meet at 7 p.m. at 2400 Rock Hill Church Road in Concord. All are welcome. Friday, March 4 The Concord Duplicate Bridge face-to-face games through Concord Parks and Recreation at Hartsell Recreation Center, 60 Hartsell School Road, at noon. Cost is $5 per player. You must have a partner and provide proof of vaccination. Heavenly Hot Dogs at Mount Olivet United Methodist Church, 301 Mount Olivet Road, will be offered from 10 a.m. to 2 p.m. Free delivery for orders of more than $15, and takeout is available. Homemade desserts and chicken noodle soup are available. For more information, visit www.mtochurch.com or call 704-782-8846. Hot dogs at McGill Baptist Church, 5300 Poplar Tent Road, will be sold along with fried bologna and barbecue sandwiches and desserts from 10 a.m. to 2 p.m. Saturday, March 5 The Eastern Cabarrus Historical Society will hold its Spring Yard Sale from 8 a.m. to noon at the museum, 1100 N. Main St., Mount Pleasant. Reserve a space by calling 704-436-6612. Spaces are $15 each and free for ECHS members. The Piedmont Farmers Market is open from 9 a.m. to noon at 518 Winecoff School Road. It features lots of local produce, meat, flowers and other products. Sunday, March 6 Auditions for THE ADDAMS FAMILY: A NEW MUSICAL will be held at Old Courthouse Theatre. Registration is from 7-8 pm. Auditions are open to everyone interested in performing. You only have to attend one night. THE ADDAMS FAMILY: A NEW MUSICAL will be Directed by Andy Rassler, Stephanie Campbell is the Music Director and Sharlie Duncan is the Choreographer. Visit www.octconcord.com for more information. Monday, March 7 The Concord Duplicate Bridge face-to-face games through Concord Parks and Recreation at Hartsell Recreation Center, 60 Hartsell School Road, at noon. Cost is $5 per player. You must have a partner and provide proof of vaccination. Auditions for THE ADDAMS FAMILY: A NEW MUSICAL will be held at Old Courthouse Theatre. Registration is from 7-8 pm. Auditions are open to everyone interested in performing. You only have to attend one night. THE ADDAMS FAMILY: A NEW MUSICAL will be Directed by Andy Rassler, Stephanie Campbell is the Music Director and Sharlie Duncan is the Choreographer. Visit www.octconcord.com for more information. Friday, March 11 The Concord Duplicate Bridge face-to-face games through Concord Parks and Recreation at Hartsell Recreation Center, 60 Hartsell School Road, at noon. Cost is $5 per player. You must have a partner and provide proof of vaccination. Heavenly Hot Dogs at Mount Olivet United Methodist Church, 301 Mount Olivet Road, will be offered from 10 a.m. to 2 p.m. Free delivery for orders of more than $15, and takeout is available. Homemade desserts and chicken noodle soup are available. For more information, visit www.mtochurch.com or call 704-782-8846. Hot dogs at McGill Baptist Church, 5300 Poplar Tent Road, will be sold along with fried bologna and barbecue sandwiches and desserts from 10 a.m. to 2 p.m. Saturday, March 12 The Piedmont Farmers Market is open from 9 a.m. to noon at 518 Winecoff School Road. It features lots of local produce, meat, flowers and other products. Sunday, March 13 The Piedmont Prime Time Community Band is presenting a spring concert titled American Cameos at 4 p.m. at Kannapolis Middle School, 1000 Virginia Dare St. The band consists of community members of all ages from the local area. This will be the first concert directed by Chris White, who is also the band director at Hickory Ridge High School. Admission is free, but donations are accepted. Monday, March 14 The Concord Duplicate Bridge face-to-face games through Concord Parks and Recreation at Hartsell Recreation Center, 60 Hartsell School Road, at noon. Cost is $5 per player. You must have a partner and provide proof of vaccination. Wednesday, March 16 The Cabarrus Senior Center Photo Club is alive and clicking away. If you like taking photos, come join the members on the first and third Wednesdays of the month from 1:30-3 p.m. at the Cabarrus Senior Center, 331 Corban Ave. SE, Concord, and share your photographic creativity. Whether you are a seasoned photographer or strictly amateur, all are welcome. Friday, March 18 The Concord Duplicate Bridge face-to-face games through Concord Parks and Recreation at Hartsell Recreation Center, 60 Hartsell School Road, at noon. Cost is $5 per player. You must have a partner and provide proof of vaccination. Heavenly Hot Dogs at Mount Olivet United Methodist Church, 301 Mount Olivet Road, will be offered from 10 a.m. to 2 p.m. Free delivery for orders of more than $15, and takeout is available. Homemade desserts and chicken noodle soup are available. For more information, visit www.mtochurch.com or call 704-782-8846. Hot dogs at McGill Baptist Church, 5300 Poplar Tent Road, will be sold along with fried bologna and barbecue sandwiches and desserts from 10 a.m. to 2 p.m. Saturday, March 19 The Piedmont Farmers Market is open from 9 a.m. to noon at 518 Winecoff School Road. It features lots of local produce, meat, flowers and other products. Old Courthouse Theatre is hosting an ANTIQUES APPRAISAL EVENT on from 10 a.m.-5 p.m. The cost is $10 for one item and $15 for two items. Bring your treasures in to find their monetary worth. No written appraisal given. Owner can write all information given down. Email info@octconcord.com with any questions. Sunday, March 20 Old Courthouse Theatre is hosting an ANTIQUES APPRAISAL EVENT from 2-5 p.m. The cost is $10 for one item and $15 for two items. Bring your treasures in to find their monetary worth. No written appraisal given. Owner can write all information given down. Email info@octconcord.com with any questions. Monday, March 21 The Concord Duplicate Bridge face-to-face games through Concord Parks and Recreation at Hartsell Recreation Center, 60 Hartsell School Road, at noon. Cost is $5 per player. You must have a partner and provide proof of vaccination. Friday, March 25 The Concord Duplicate Bridge face-to-face games through Concord Parks and Recreation at Hartsell Recreation Center, 60 Hartsell School Road, at noon. Cost is $5 per player. You must have a partner and provide proof of vaccination. Heavenly Hot Dogs at Mount Olivet United Methodist Church, 301 Mount Olivet Road, will be offered from 10 a.m. to 2 p.m. Free delivery for orders of more than $15, and takeout is available. Homemade desserts and chicken noodle soup are available. For more information, visit www.mtochurch.com or call 704-782-8846. Hot dogs at McGill Baptist Church, 5300 Poplar Tent Road, will be sold along with fried bologna and barbecue sandwiches and desserts from 10 a.m. to 2 p.m. Saturday, March 26 The Piedmont Farmers Market is open from 9 a.m. to noon at 518 Winecoff School Road. It features lots of local produce, meat, flowers and other products. Hot Dogs at Center United Methodist Church at 1119 Union St. S., are offered on the second and fourth Saturday of each month from 11 a.m. to 2 p.m. Currently takeout only. Call-in orders are welcomed at 704-782-1785. Monday, March 28 The Concord Duplicate Bridge face-to-face games through Concord Parks and Recreation at Hartsell Recreation Center, 60 Hartsell School Road, at noon. Cost is $5 per player. You must have a partner and provide proof of vaccination. Tuesday, March 29 Vietnam War 50th Commemoration Ceremony Honoring Vietnam War Veterans will be held at American Legion Post 51 on 165 Wilshire Ave. SW in Concord. The program, which includes a social gathering and refreshments, will last from 10 a.m. to 1 p.m. The program is sponsored by the Cabarrus Black Boys Chapter, Daughters of the American Revolution and The Cabarrus Veterans Coalition. To RSVP, call 703-371-6850 by March 15. A Memorial Service at Vietnam Veterans Park will be open to the public at 2 p.m. The park is at 760 Orphanage Road in Concord. An RSVP is not required. Friday, April 1 The Concord Duplicate Bridge face-to-face games through Concord Parks and Recreation at Hartsell Recreation Center, 60 Hartsell School Road, at noon. Cost is $5 per player. You must have a partner and provide proof of vaccination. Heavenly Hot Dogs at Mount Olivet United Methodist Church, 301 Mount Olivet Road, will be offered from 10 a.m. to 2 p.m. Free delivery for orders of more than $15, and takeout is available. Homemade desserts and chicken noodle soup are available. For more information, visit www.mtochurch.com or call 704-782-8846. Hot dogs at McGill Baptist Church, 5300 Poplar Tent Road, will be sold along with fried bologna and barbecue sandwiches and desserts from 10 a.m. to 2 p.m. Saturday, April 2 The Piedmont Farmers Market is open from 9 a.m. to noon at 518 Winecoff School Road. It features lots of local produce, meat, flowers and other products. Hot Dogs at Center United Methodist Church at 1119 Union St. S., are offered on the second and fourth Saturday of each month from 11 a.m. to 2 p.m. Currently takeout only. Call-in orders are welcomed at 704-782-1785. Monday, April 4 The Concord Duplicate Bridge face-to-face games through Concord Parks and Recreation at Hartsell Recreation Center, 60 Hartsell School Road, at noon. Cost is $5 per player. You must have a partner and provide proof of vaccination. Wednesday, April 6 The Cabarrus Senior Center Photo Club is alive and clicking away. If you like taking photos, come join us on the first and third Wednesdays of the month from 1:30-3 p.m. at the Cabarrus Senior Center, 331 Corban Ave. SE, Concord, and share your photographic creativity. Whether you are a seasoned photographer or strictly amateur, all are welcome. Friday, April 8 The Concord Duplicate Bridge face-to-face games through Concord Parks and Recreation at Hartsell Recreation Center, 60 Hartsell School Road, at noon. Cost is $5 per player. You must have a partner and provide proof of vaccination. Heavenly Hot Dogs at Mount Olivet United Methodist Church, 301 Mount Olivet Road, will be offered from 10 a.m. to 2 p.m. Free delivery for orders of more than $15, and takeout is available. Homemade desserts and chicken noodle soup are available. For more information, visit www.mtochurch.com or call 704-782-8846. Hot dogs at McGill Baptist Church, 5300 Poplar Tent Road, will be sold along with fried bologna and barbecue sandwiches and desserts from 10 a.m. to 2 p.m. Saturday, April 9 The Piedmont Farmers Market is open from 9 a.m. to noon at 518 Winecoff School Road. It features lots of local produce, meat, flowers and other products. Hot Dogs at Center United Methodist Church at 1119 Union St. S., are offered on the second and fourth Saturday of each month from 11 a.m. to 2 p.m. Currently takeout only. Call-in orders are welcomed at 704-782-1785. Monday, April 10 The Concord Duplicate Bridge face-to-face games through Concord Parks and Recreation at Hartsell Recreation Center, 60 Hartsell School Road, at noon. Cost is $5 per player. You must have a partner and provide proof of vaccination. Got news or events? Does your community group or nonprofit agency have an upcoming event that would be of interest to the public? Email it to mplemmons@independenttribune.com. Ann Street United Methodist Church 335 Ann St., Concord. Pastor: Rev. Randy L. Wall. In person and Facebook Live worship at 11 a.m. at Ann Street Church. Sermon: When Our Prayer Request Is Not Granted: Paul. Scripture: II Corinthians 12:1-10. Bethpage United Methodist Church 109 Fellowship Ave. at West C Street, Kannapolis. Pastor: Rev. Gary MacDonald. Christian Education at 9 a.m. Worship at 10 a.m. Wear masks and follow social distance protocols during indoor worship. Bogers Chapel United Methodist Church 1775 Flowes Store Road E., Concord. Pastor: Eric Shaver. Worship service is at 10 a.m. in person or on Facebook. Social distancing and masks are optional. Sermon: How Do We Stay Strong? Opening Reading: Romans 10:8-13. Scripture: Deuteronomy 26:1-11. Childrens Reading: Footprints For Children. (Author Unknown). Crossroads Church 220 George W. Liles Parkway, Concord. Pastor: Lowell McNaney. Live worship streamed on Facebook, Crossroads Concord Church app or mycrossroads.co website at 9:30 a.m. and 11:11 a.m. Eastside Missionary Baptist Church 199 Elgin Drive, Concord. Pastor: Rev. Stephen Burrow. In person services: Sunday school at 9:30 a.m. and worship services at 10:30 a.m. and 6 p.m. Recorded worship services and other information at EastsideMissionaryBaptist.org. You will be welcomed. Practice social distancing. Epworth United Methodist Church 1030 Burrage Road NE, Concord. Pastor: Rev. Bill Roberts. Church has reopened its 10 a.m. worship service for attendance. Epworth UMC continues to follow the appropriate COVID-19 social distancing guidelines as outlined by the governor and the CDC. We welcome you to join us in worship. Sermon: It Is Written. Scripture: Luke 4:1-13. Forest Hill United Methodist Church 265 Union St. N., Concord. Senior pastor: Rev. Mandy Jones. Associate pastor: Rev. Wes Judy. We are open for in-person worship. Contemporary worship is at 9 a.m. Sunday School/small groups are at 10 a.m. Traditional worship is at 11 a.m. Both the contemporary and the traditional worship services will also be livestreamed at foresthillumc.org or facebook.com/foresthillumc. Harmony United Methodist Church 101 White St. NW, Concord. Pastor: Rev. Thad Brown. Service is held in the sanctuary at 11 a.m. Masks are not required at this time. Social distancing is requested. Sermon: God Is with Us and Its Not Boring. Scripture: Leviticus 26:11-12; John 14:6; Romans 8:28; John 10:10; John 1:4. We welcome you to join us in worship. Service is live on Facebook.com/HarmonyUnitedMethodistChurch. For more information, call the pastor at 704-791-2883 or the church at 704-782-8237. Jackson Park United Methodist Church 715 Mable Ave., Kannapolis. Pastor: Laurie Knoespel. Adult Sunday school at 9:30 a.m. In-person worship service at 10:30 a.m. Nursery will be provided during worship service. Replay the service on Facebook on Monday at 5 p.m. Sermon: Do We Imagine Ourselves to Be Immune to Temptation? Scripture: Matthew 4: 1-11. We will have Communion. McGill Baptist Church 5300 Poplar Tent Road, Concord, in-person services. Pastor: Rev. Steve Ayers. If you have not taken the COVID-19 vaccine, wear a mask. McGill will stream a worship service Sunday at 10 a.m. on www.facebook.com/mcgillbaptistchurch/ and on YouTube. The services will be live and also available on recording afterward. Sermon: Temptations. Scripture: Deuteronomy 26:1-11; Romans 10: 8b-13; Luke 4:1-13. Midway United Methodist Church 108 Bethpage Road, Kannapolis. Pastor: Rev. Craig Allen. Come join us on Sunday morning at 9 a.m. for Sunday school and 10:30 a.m. for worship. At this time, masks are required and congregants are asked to social distance in the pews as COVID-19 precautions are in place. Our service is also livestreamed on the web at midwayunitedmethodistchurch.org or facebook.com/midwayUMC. Sermon: Facing Temptation. Scripture: Psalm 91:1-2, 9-16; Luke 4:1-13. Suggested Hymns: UMH 117, O God, Our Help in Ages Past and UMH 395, Take Time to Be Holy. Mount Mitchell United Methodist Church 6001 Old Salisbury-Concord Road, Kannapolis. Pastor: Joel Locklear. Sunday school at 10 a.m. (adult and children classes) Worship at 11 a.m. in person or on Facebook. Masks are optional and social distancing recommended. If you have not taken the COVID vaccine, wear a mask. Multiply Church Concord 150 Warren C. Coleman Blvd. N., Concord. Pastor: Rev. Douglas Witherup. 8:30 a.m. service held at 280 Concord Parkway S., Suite 15, Concord. Services at 150 Warren C. Coleman Blvd. N., are worship and sermon at 9:30 a.m. and worship and sermon at 11:15 a.m. New Gilead Reformed Church 2400 Old Salisbury-Concord Road. 9:40 a.m.: Bible study. 10 a.m.: Childrens Bible school. 11 a.m.: Inside worship, Facebook worship, drive-in worship at 1600 AM radio. Oak Grove Baptist Church 200 Sims Parkway, Harrisburg. Pastor: Rev. Franklin D. Watkins. 10 a.m.: In-person worship service and Facebook Live. Sermon: Right and Wrong Reasons to Fast and Pray. Scripture: Luke 18:9-14 (NKJV). Second Presbyterian Church 1578 Dale Earnhardt Blvd., Kannapolis. Assistant minister: Rev. Aaron Price. Worship at 11 a.m. in the sanctuary and on Facebook Live. Sermon: A Study on the Book of Philippians. Scripture: Philippians 4. St. Johns Reformed Church 901 N. Main St., Kannapolis. Pastor: Rev. Chris King. Sunday school has been temporarily discontinued due to increased COVID numbers in the community. Sunday morning worship is in person and online at 10:30 a.m. Adult Bible study is at 4 p.m. Sunday. Sermon: Lessons from the Judges Introduction. Scripture: Judges 2-3. Information for Sermon topics must be submitted by 10 a.m. on Wednesday. Email your topic to jstamey@independenttribune.com WASHINGTON (AP) As President Joe Biden was coming to the end of his State of the Union address Tuesday night, a somber moment about his son's death turned into a stunning outburst by one of the Republicans' most outspoken members. Delivering the loudest heckling of Biden during the speech, Rep. Lauren Boebert of Colorado blamed Biden for the 13 service members who were killed during the U.S. withdrawal in Afghanistan. It was just the latest breach of decorum for a presidential address, an annual event where unruly behavior by lawmakers has become almost expected. Republican Rep. Joe Wilson shouted "you lie!" at President Barack Obama during a joint speech to Congress in 2009. Eleven years later, Democratic House Speaker Nancy Pelosi ripped up a copy of President Donald Trump's speech while standing behind him. Boebert's moment came as Biden began to discuss how his son, who died of cancer, was among the many veterans who may have suffered from toxic exposure injuries from military burn pits, used extensively in Iraq and Afghanistan. "A cancer that put them in a flag-draped coffin" Biden started to say when Boebert yelled, "You put them in. Thirteen of them!" The comment drew an outpouring of boos from Democrats, adding a note of division to an address that received several moments of robust bipartisan applause. Democrats and Republicans from both chambers stood up and clapped as the president discussed the strength and resolute of the Ukrainian people in the face of Russian aggression. Members stood together as Biden called for an end to the opioid epidemic and when he declared that "defund the police" is not the answer to the crisis between law enforcement and the communities they serve. But it was when the mention of veterans and providing support for victims of burn pits, a normally bipartisan topic, that Boebert stood to make her case about what many in the GOP see as Biden's failed withdrawal of U.S. troops in Afghanistan last summer. "I couldn't stay silent," Boebert tweeted after the speech. "Our heroic servicemen and women deserve so much better." *** By itself, being able to read smartphone home screens in Cherokee wont be enough to safeguard the Indigenous language, endangered after a long history of erasure. But it might be a step toward immersing younger tribal citizens in the language spoken by a dwindling number of their elders. That's the hope of Principal Chief Richard Sneed of the Eastern Band of Cherokee Indians, who's counting on the involvement of a major tech company to help out. Sneed and other Cherokee leaders have spent several months consulting with Lenovo-owned Motorola, which last week introduced a Cherokee language interface on its newest line of phones. Now phone users will be able to find apps and toggle settings using the syllable-based written language first created by the Cherokee Nations Sequoyah in the early 1800s. It will appear on the company's high-end Edge Plus phones when they go on sale in the spring. Its just one more piece of a very large puzzle of trying to preserve and proliferate the language, said Sneed, who worked with members of his own western North Carolina tribe and other Cherokee leaders who speak a different dialect in Oklahoma that is more widely spoken but also endangered. Its not the first time consumer technology has embraced the language, as Apple, Microsoft and Google already enable people to configure their laptops and phones so that they can type in Cherokee. But the Cherokee language preservationists who worked on the Motorola project said they tried to imbue it with the culture not just the written symbols they are trying to protect. Take the "start" button on the Motorola interface, which features a Cherokee word that translates into English as just start. That's a clever nod to the casual way Cherokee elders might use the phrase, said Benjamin Frey, a member of the Eastern Band of Cherokee Indians and professor at UNC-Chapel Hill. It could have said lets get started in many different ways, Frey said. But it said halenagwu just start. And thats very Cherokee. I can kind of see an elder kind of shrugging and saying, Well, I guess lets do it. ... It reminds me very fondly of how the elders talk, which is pretty exciting. When Motorola thought of incorporating Cherokee into its phones, Frey was one of the people who was contacted. The company was looking to incorporate a language that the U.N.'s culture agency, UNESCO, had designated as among the world's most endangered but also one that had an active community of language scholars it could consult. We work with the people, not about the people, said Juliana Rebelatto, who holds the role of head linguist and globalization for Motorola's mobile division. We didnt want to work on the language without them. Motorola modeled its Cherokee project on a similar Indigenous language revitalization project a company called Rebelatto helped work on in Brazil, where the brand part of China-based parent company Lenovo has a higher market share than it does in the U.S. The company last year introduced phone interfaces serving the Kaingang community of southern Brazil, and the Nheengatu community of the Amazonian regions of Brazil and neighboring countries. Several big tech companies have expressed interest in recent years in making their technology work better for endangered Indigenous languages, more to show their good will than to fulfill a business imperative. Microsofts text translation service recently added Inuinnaqtun and Inuktitut, spoken in the Canadian Arctic, and grassroots artificial intelligence researchers are doing similar projects throughout the Americas and beyond. But theres a long way to go before digital voice assistants understand these languages as well as they do English and for some languages the time is running out. Frey and Sneed said they recognize that some Cherokee will have concerns about tech companies making a product feature of their work to preserve their language whether it's a text-based interface like Motorola's or potential future projects that could record speech to build a voice assistant or real-time translator. I think it is a danger that companies could take this kind of material and take advantage of it, selling it without sharing the proceeds with community members, Frey said. Personally, I decided that the potential benefit was was worth the risk, and Im hoping that that will be borne out. Frey didnt grow up speaking Cherokee, largely due to his grandmothers experiences of being punished for speaking the language when she was sent to boarding school. For over 150 years, Indigenous children in the U.S. and Canada were taken from their communities and forced into boarding schools that focused on assimilation. She and others of her generation were beaten for speaking the language, had her mouth washed out with soap and was told that English was the only way to get ahead in the world, Frey said. She didnt pass it on to Freys mom. This was a 13,000-year chain of intergenerational transfer of a language from parents to children that was broken because the federal government decided that English was the only language that was worthwhile, he said. Only about 225 of the thousands of members of the Eastern Band of Cherokee Indians spoke Cherokee fluently as their first language at the start of the COVID-19 pandemic. Now I think were down to 172 or so, said Sneed, the principal chief. So weve lost quite a few in the last couple of years. Frey hopes the new tool will be a conversation-starter between older Cherokee language speakers and their tech-savvy grandkids. But it will take more immersive language interactions, not just text-based smartphone interfaces, to really make a difference. If the youth today are watching TikTok videos, we need more TikTok videos in Cherokee," Frey said. If theyre paying attention to YouTube, we need more YouTubers creating content in Cherokee. We do have to make sure that the language continues to be used and continues to be spoken. Otherwise, it could die out. In nearly four and a half centuries of working the land that stretches from the stubborn soils of the sandy coastal plain to the rolling red Piedmont, North Carolina tobacco farmers have never had more riding on a crop than they do this year. Cured tobacco reigned for generations as the top crop in North Carolina. Prized around the world for its quality and flavor, it was so certain to be a moneymaker that nearly every farmer had a few acres, enough to pay the bills and a little extra. It was sometimes said that even farmers who didnt use tobacco were addicted to it, because in a good year nothing else that sprang from the earth could bring as much profit. It wasnt just farmers who relied on the crop. In rural North Carolina, a summer spent working tobacco was a hard but instructive first job that could pay for a secondhand car or college tuition. Retailers who sold seed, fertilizer and farm equipment were in business to supply the farmers, who also supported clothing and furniture stores and car dealers. In the manufacturing towns of Durham and Winston-Salem, factories employed tens of thousands of people at a time, putting billions more dollars into circulation. The taxes those workers and farmers paid built schools, community centers and infrastructure the very towns themselves. But it couldnt last forever. Once the surgeon general warned and manufacturers acknowledged that tobacco was addictive and harmful, consumption declined in the U.S. and around the world. China remained a reliable market, but from 1997 to 2017, during which Big Tobacco agreed to pay billions to states for medical costs and the government dismantled the tobacco price-support system, North Carolinas annual production dropped almost in half, from about 700 million pounds to about 364 million pounds. Still, some farmers hung on, mechanizing to reduce labor costs, renting or buying extra land for economies of scale and always hoping for price increases at harvest time. Nearly all planted other crops as a hedge, the way they used to plant tobacco to prop up everything else. Then 2018 came, bringing a trade war with China that prompted U.S. tobaccos biggest customer to stop buying the American leaf. It found cheaper alternatives in Brazil, Zimbabwe, Turkey and elsewhere. A China trade deal was announced in 2020, but by then, the damage had been done. North Carolina tobacco production bottomed out at under 179 million pounds a level not seen in nearly a century. And though it rebounded in 2021, prices for the supplies needed to bring a tobacco crop from seed to harvest have doubled or worse ahead of the 2022 planting season, spurred by problems related to the COVID-19 pandemic. Prices paid to tobacco farmers for their crop, meanwhile, are expected to rise by less than 10%. North Carolina is down to about 1,300 tobacco farms, and many growers say this could be the year that pushes them out of the business, too. In another decade, some farmers say, the crop once so ubiquitous that loose tobacco leaves fluttered across interstate highways during market season might finally be nearing the end of the row. Dancers Oksana Maslova of Ukraine and Moscow-born Aleksey Babayev are friends, and they're performing together in Philadelphia Ballet's "Swan Lake." President of Ukraine Volodymyr Zelensky and President of Kazakhstan Kassym-Jomart Tokayev discussed the security situation in the region and agreed to cooperate on humanitarian issues. "Conversation with Kassym-Jomart Tokayev has just ended. The difficult security situation in the region was discussed. We agreed to cooperate in humanitarian issues. We keep in touch," Zelensky said on his Twitter page. Consultancy services giant Deloitte and Salesforce have teamed up to develop a national talent development program aimed at boosting diversity in the technology industry and help close a growing skills gap in Australia. The Digital Career Compass program will focus on reaching a diverse cross-section of the community, including Indigenous Australians, women returning to the workforce, and retired athletes, who will be provided with the training and technical skills to kick-start a career in technology. Deloitte Lead Partner, Salesforce, Claire Gillies said: In response to the growing technical skills gap in Australia we wanted to take a lead in being part of the solution. We have therefore developed a unique program, in partnership with one of our key alliance partners, Salesforce, to create a diverse development program that will give people the opportunity to learn new skills. Our focus will be on working with candidates who demonstrate the right aptitude and attitude, rather than on higher education qualifications, to reflect the rich diversity of our community. Participants will receive Salesforce technical and business skills training, access to Salesforces Trailhead Virtual Bootcamp program, mentoring from highly experienced professionals, career support and access to masterclasses - and at the end of the 12-week training period, participants will be connected with employers in the Salesforce ecosystem. IDC Research, commissioned by Salesforce, found that by 2026 Salesforce and its ecosystem of partners and customers will add over 104,000 new jobs in Australia. The initiative will also contribute to Deloittes global commitment to impact 100 million futures by 2030. Eligible participants can reach out to Fitted for Work, Goanna Solutions and Australian Athletes Alliance for further information on the program. The first intake commences in March and will graduate May 2022. Tara Ridley, Vice-President Alliances and Channels at Salesforce ANZ said: There is an urgent need to increase the number of skilled professionals in the technology industry and for the industry to better represent the diversity of the Australian community. Deloitte and the programs NFP partners will help Australians from all backgrounds enter rewarding new careers. Elizabeth Trewhella, She Works Manager, Fitted for Work said: This is a real opportunity to upskill women and provide them with the opportunity to re-enter the workforce. Were proud to partner with Deloitte and Salesforce to bring this program to our community. Lisa Sarago, Chief Executive Officer, Goanna Solutions said: As an Aboriginal-owned and operated organisation, we are focused on closing the digital gap by offering opportunities to equip our community with skills for the future, access to employment opportunities and networks. We celebrate the commitment by Deloitte, Salesforce and other organisations in the ecosystem to create a diverse workplace. Jacob Holmes, General Secretary, Australian Athletes Alliance said: Were pleased to be working with Deloitte and Salesforce on this program to provide the opportunity for elite athletes to learn valuable skills to assist them with a meaningful career beyond sport. SPRINGFIELD The Illinois House has passed a bill that would give teachers, professors and other educational employees paid leave if they miss work for COVID-19-related issues, but only if theyve been fully vaccinated. The House voted 70-28, with only Democrats voting in favor, on Tuesday to advance House Bill 1167, which would make the benefit retroactive to the start of the 2021-22 academic year. The bill is similar to one that lawmakers passed with broad bipartisan support during last years fall veto session, but which Gov. JB Pritzker vetoed in January because it did not include a vaccine requirement. Well over 90 percent of teachers and staff would see a great, positive impact from this bill and I know they would all appreciate your support to pass this bill, Rep. Janet Yang Rohr, D-Naperville, said during floor debate on the proposal. But the vaccine requirement turned the new bill into a harshly partisan issue with Republicans calling it an unfair vaccine mandate. This does nothing to stop the spread of COVID in schools, said Rep. C.D. Davidsmeyer, R-Jacksonville, who noted that he contracted the virus despite being fully vaccinated and that he caught it from someone else who also was fully vaccinated. So, the idea that vaccine is stopping the spread of COVID in schools is absolutely nonsense. The reality is this is a mandate. The bill would apply to vaccinated K-12 and higher education employees who take time off because they or a family member contracts COVID-19. It would also apply to employees who miss work because the school where they work is forced to close due to a COVID-19 outbreak, unless those days are later rescheduled. Rep. Katie Stuart, D-Edwardsville, argued that Illinois is already suffering from a shortage of teachers and that passage of the bill would send a message that the state values the work they do. Legislation like this that shows the respect for the profession and understanding the nature of the work that they do is how we are going to help fight our teacher shortage crisis, she said. We have to show that we respect teachers. We want teachers to be supported in their classrooms. Republicans, however, argued that the bill unfairly discriminates in the way employee benefits are provided to educators on the basis of vaccination status because it provides a greater benefit to a vaccinated worker than an unvaccinated one even if neither contracts the virus. If the teacher is fully vaccinated and her kid is ill, she can take the admin days, said Rep. Mark Batinick, R-Plainfield. But if the teacher is unvaccinated in that same situation, the kids ill, he or she does not get the benefit of those admin days. The bill will head to the Senate for further consideration before it can head to Gov. JB Pritzker. Love 0 Funny 0 Wow 0 Sad 0 Angry 0 A rare stretch of virgin prairie has received yet another reprieve from the bulldozer, with the Federal Aviation Administration telling the Tribune that Chicago Rockford International Airport has agreed to delay construction until June 1. The airports previous agreement to refrain from construction ended Tuesday. The airport wants to build a road through the Bell Bowl Prairie, one of the last remaining places in the state where prairie exists much as it did 8,000 years ago. Conservationists are fighting the road in the name of rare plants and animals found on the 5-acre stretch of land, including the federally endangered rusty patched bumblebee. Were not trying to stop the airport expansion, said Kerry Leigh, executive director of the Natural Land Institute, a conservation group based in Rockford. Were trying to get them to redesign the road and avoid the prairie. Environmentalists, she said, are calling on the airport to turn what remains of the prairie into a nature preserve. The airport declined to comment, but the FAA said via email that airport officials have agreed to a new time frame for any possible construction. The Airport Authority has made a commitment that construction work will not begin before June 1, 2022, an FAA spokesman wrote. Leigh showed the Tribune a Feb. 16 letter from the FAA to the airport, thanking airport officials for confirming they did not immediately intend to proceed with construction in the prairie area, and outlining an environmental review process involving the U.S. Fish and Wildlife Service. The thing theyre trying to determine at the moment is whether there are (rusty patched bumblebee) queens hibernating in the prairie, Leigh said. Rusty patched bumblebee queens hibernate underground in winter and emerge to lay eggs in spring. Endangered species laws say a habitat needs to be protected when a rare animal is on the property, but once the animal leaves, the habitat can be disturbed. The prairie, which is owned by the airport, has experienced a series of reprieves since August, when environmentalists, alerted that an area near Bell Bowl was being bulldozed, discovered the airports 280-acre expansion project. Not long after that, on Aug. 8, the Illinois Department of Natural Resources identified the rusty patched bumblebee in the Bell Bowl area. Informed of the presence of the bee, the airport stopped construction on the project and the FAA began discussions with the Fish and Wildlife Service regarding the bumblebee and other species, according to the FAA. The airports $50 million expansion project includes a new cargo center and cargo ramps for more planes, as well as new roads and parking areas. Bell Bowl was used as a U.S. Army training camp during World Wars I and II, which protected its ancient ecosystem from grazing and plowing. The land is considered a remnant prairie, a rare throwback to the days before European settlement when buffalo roamed freely. Less than one-hundredth of 1% of the original ancient prairie has survived in Illinois, according to a white paper by John White, a former chief ecologist for The Nature Conservancy. A high quality, old-growth prairie is the Midwest equivalent of a cathedral redwood grove only far, far rarer, White wrote. Bell Bowl is home to at least 164 species of plants, many of which are rare, and birders have found rare nesting birds such as the grasshopper sparrow. The prairies star species, the rusty patched bumblebee, has declined by 87% in the past 20 years and is likely present in 0.1% of its historical range, according to the Fish and Wildlife Service. The fight to preserve Bell Bowl dates back to the 1960s, when it was championed by George Fell, founder of the natural areas movement and conservation organizations like The Nature Conservancy. Over the years, the prairie has been reduced to 5 acres from 20 acres, but it remains a rallying point for Illinois environmentalists. In October, the Illinois Environmental Council told the Tribune that environmental groups were urging citizens to send letters and make phone calls asking politicians to save the prairie. Leigh, for her part, hopes this battle for the Bell Bowl Prairie will be the last of its kind. Love 0 Funny 0 Wow 0 Sad 0 Angry 0 Q: My husband and I have been filing joint tax returns for many years. If one of us dies and there are no minor children involved, can the other spouse file a return as head of household rather than as a single taxpayer? - W.P. Answer: No. Richard Dawson, a spokesman for the Internal Revenue Service explains why that isnt possible. When a spouse dies during the year, the IRS allows the widowed individual to still file married jointly for that year in most cases. They would not file head of household with no other dependents. The IRS has a tool for helping you determine what your filing status should be. Its on the IRS.gov website. Click on Get Answers to your Tax Questions on the home page, which will take you to the Interactive Tax Assistant section. Click on What is my Filing Status. Youll have to answer some questions, then it will give you your status. Q: Our last leaf collection was on Dec. 10 and the streets in our neighborhood are filled with leaves. Can you find out when we can expect our third leaf pick-up? We live off North Stratford Road. D.B. Answer: Johnita Campbell, the deputy director of the sanitation department for the City of Winston-Salem, said that crews are expected to be in the area by next week. Q: I miss seeing Meghann Mollerus on WFMY. Has she left the station? D.B. Answer: No, Mollerus is still at WFMY, said Larry Audus, the president and general manager of WFMY. Meghann is on maternity leave after the birth of her second child, Audus said. Shell be back on the air with WFMY News 2 after her leave. Mollerus is the co-anchor of the Good Morning Show and WFMY News 2 at noon. Q: On Stratford Road at Thruway recently, the car ahead of me had a bumper sticker with a very specific four-letter vulgarity. Although the owner would probably argue freedom of speech, what are regulations regarding this? B.J. Answer: The short answer is none. Free speech is free speech, which can include words considered vulgar. Kira Boyd, a spokeswoman for the Winston-Salem Police Department, checked and said that there are no regulations against having a bumper sticker that has naughty things on it. Bulky item pick-up to begin The citys annual bulky item pick-up begins Monday and will run through Sept. 9. Among the acceptable items are furniture, mattresses, appliances, grills, carpet, old toys and lawn furniture. Televisions, computer equipment, building materials, hazardous waste, tires, cement, cars and car parts, stumps, tanks and oil drums are not acceptable. Do not mix bulky items with recyclables or brush. Only single-family residences can take part. The Sanitation Division will mail postcards in advance to let home owners know crews will be in their neighborhood. Items must be at the curb by 6 a.m. the Monday of your collection week. To find out when your collection week is, go to CityofWS.org/BulkyItems and click on the link for online address lookup. If you dont have computer access call CityLink at 311 or 336-727-8000 and a CityLink agent will look up your collection date. Email: AskSAM@wsjournal.com Write: Ask SAM, 418 N. Marshall St., Winston-Salem, NC 27101 Get local news delivered to your inbox! Subscribe to our Daily Headlines newsletter. Sign up! * I understand and agree that registration on or use of this site constitutes agreement to its user agreement and privacy policy. Two Winston-Salem women were convicted Monday of inciting two female residents at an assisted-living facility to fight each other in 2019. The fight was recorded and shared with others. Marilyn Latish McKey, 35, of Underwood Avenue, pleaded guilty to two counts of misdemeanor assault of an individual with a disability. Judge Todd Burke of Forsyth Superior Court gave her a suspended 45-day jail sentence and placed her on 12 months of supervised probation. McKey has to complete 50 hours of community service and must stay away from the Danby House. She also must have no contact with any residents at the Danby House. Taneshia DeShawn Jordan, 28, of Clemson Circle, pleaded guilty to one count of misdemeanor assault of an individual with a disability. Burke gave her a 30-day suspended jail sentence and placed Jordan on 12 months of unsupervised probation. As with McKey, Jordan must stay away from Danby House. She cannot have any contact with the two residents from the video nor can she have any contact with McKey or another co-defendant, Tonacia Yvonne Tyson, 23. In August 2021, a Forsyth County jury acquitted Tyson of one count of misdemeanor aiding and abetting an assault of an individual with a disability after a trial. Assistant District Attorney Jessica Spencer said in an email that McKey and Jordan pleaded guilty without a plea arrangement, meaning there was no deal on what kind of sentence they would get. The incident happened on June 19, 2019. All three women worked for Danby House in the memory care section where residents suffer from some form of dementia. On June 19, 2019, one of the female residents put her arm around the neck of another resident. The face of the resident who was being strangled was turning red and she called for help. Spencer said Jordan and McKey did not intervene. Jordan used a cellphone to film the altercation and later shared copies of the video with McKey and Tyson. Jordan told investigators that she encouraged one of the women to punch the other woman in the face, Spencer said. Jordan told investigators that she and McKey allowed the fight to continue because they had some behavioral issues with one of the residents and wanted to get some justice, Spencer said. McKey told investigations that she was also there and didnt intervene. Ursula Walder, McKeys attorney, said in court that McKey did call for help. Walder declined to comment further when reached Tuesday. Spencer argued in court that McKey called someone else to watch the fight. Laraque Stewart, Jordans attorney, did not return a message Tuesday seeking comment. McKey also admitted, Spencer said, to pushing one of the residents into her room, cutting the light off and slamming the door. She said no one checked on that resident after the incident. According to Winston-Salem police, the two female residents did not appear to be injured. Attorneys for one of the women, Betty Elaine Moore, filed a lawsuit in October 2020 in Forsyth Superior Court against Danby House LLC; ALG Senior LLC, which operated Danby House; and McKey, Tyson and Jordan. A settlement in the lawsuit was reached in late 2021. Details of the settlement were not disclosed. The lawsuit made several claims, including negligent hiring, supervision and retention and medical negligence. Danby House released a statement soon after the incident, saying that what happened was an isolated incident and that Danby House does not and has never condoned such egregious misconduct, which is contrary to the training, policies and values of this community. After the incident, the N.C. Department of Health and Human Services temporarily barred Danby House from admitting new residents because of numerous patient-care deficiencies. The state health agency said that employees were not properly trained and that they failed to administer medications to residents as prescribed by a doctor. The agency also found evidence that employees allowed, and in some cases encouraged, the residents to fight. The employees videotaped some of the fights because they didnt like the residents involved. Danby House currently has no deficiencies listed with the state health agency. Sign up for our Crime & Courts newsletter Get the latest in local public safety news with this weekly email. Sign up! * I understand and agree that registration on or use of this site constitutes agreement to its user agreement and privacy policy. Forsyth County began March with a slight uptick in new COVID-19 cases and two additional related deaths, according to Wednesdays update from the N.C. Department of Health and Human Services. Forsyth had at least 69 COVID-related deaths in February, the second-highest monthly total since tracking began in mid-March 2020. The county ended January with 73 COVID-related deaths. There are now 763 deaths in Forsyth since the pandemic began. One caution: DHHS lists COVID-19 cases and deaths on the day they are confirmed by medical providers and public health officials, so people could have been infected or may have died days or weeks before their cases were counted. Statewide, 63 additional COVID-related deaths were listed in Wednesdays update, bringing North Carolinas total COVID-related deaths to 22,671. The DHHS update had Forsyth with 49 new cases, compared with 36 reported Tuesday and 23 Monday. There have been 91,336 cases for the pandemic. Meanwhile, DHHS reported 2,243 new cases Wednesday, up from 1,231 on Tuesday and 909 on Monday, which was the lowest since July 20 and before both the delta and omicron variant surges. As of Wednesday, Forsyths positive test rate over the past 14 days was 8.2%, down from 8.6% on Tuesday. The statewide rate was 5.6% on Wednesday, down from 6.9% from Tuesday and at its lowest level since 5% on Nov. 25. Wednesdays update had Forsyth averaging 19 cases per 100,000 residents over the most recent 14-day period. Thats down from 82 per 100,000 residents in the Feb. 11 report. Dr. David Priest, an infectious diseases expert with Novant Health Inc., said Tuesday he is encouraged by the rapid decline in new cases and hospitalizations in the Triad and Novant network. This trend should translate to fewer hospitalizations related to COVID-19 in the weeks ahead, which is great news, Priest said. Still, local public-health officials say it may be several weeks before communities learn what effect ending mask mandates will have. Those officials still encourage residents to wear a mask in indoor public settings if they believe there is a risk for exposure. Its very important to understand your own risks and COVID complications, and act accordingly, Priest said. We could see a little bit of a bump (in cases) as schools unmask, little pockets of an outbreak. K-12 schools DHHS latest K-12 school cluster report contains no new outbreaks for Winston-Salem/Forsyth Country Schools. Outbreaks still listed are at: Southwest Elementary with six infected students; Old Town Elementary with five students. There were no new outbreaks reported among Forsyth daycare facilities. The three continuing clusters involve: Bright Horizons with six children; Clemmons Moravian Preschools with five children and one staff; and Epiphany Early Childhood Center with four children and one staff. DHHS said its report on school and child care clusters is based on data entered into the N.C. COVID-19 Surveillance System. Time is required to determine whether a given COVID-19 case is associated with a child care or school setting, gather follow-up information, and enter it into NC COVID, DHHS said. Thus, data included in this report may differ from data available through media and other sources. According to the Forsyth health department, at least 8,496 children ages 5 to 11 in Forsyth are considered as fully vaccinated with the kids version of the Pfizer vaccine. That represents about 24% of the 35,400 children in that age range in the county. Among those ages 12 to 17 in Forsyth, the fully vaccinated rate is at 48%, which mirrors the statewide rate. Statewide update North Carolina has recorded more than 2.59 million cases during the pandemic, according to DHHS. The record-high daily case count stands at 35,759, reported Jan. 14. COVID-19 hospitalizations remain on a downward trend with 1,461 patients statewide on Tuesday, down 82 from Monday. Statewide, COVID-19 hospitalizations had dropped for 33 of the past 34 reports. Hospitals in the 17-county Triad region had a combined 268 COVID-19 patients Tuesday, down 32 from Monday. Statewide, 175 patients are on ventilators, including 32 in the Triad region. There were 32 children hospitalized with COVID-19 statewide, including six in the Triad region. Priest said the vast majority of COVID-19 patients remain unvaccinated or under-vaccinated, whether lacking a second dose to be fully vaccinated, or lacking a booster dose for those fully vaccinated. He said its the same scenario for those on ventilators. Concerned about COVID-19? Sign up now to get the most recent coronavirus headlines and other important local and national news sent to your email inbox daily. Sign up! * I understand and agree that registration on or use of this site constitutes agreement to its user agreement and privacy policy. A spill of about 100 gallons of milk and natural butter fat caused Winston-Salem police to close the 1300 block of Ivy Avenue Tuesday, authorities said. No injuries were reported. The incident began shortly before 4:30 p.m. when a tractor-trailer carrying the milk and natural butter fat had a leaky valve and spilled the dairy product, said Capt. Daniel Everhart of the Winston-Salem Fire Department. The driver had a made a delivery in Winston-Salem for the Pet Dairy plant on Glenn Avenue before the incident happened, Everhart said. The spill covered a quarter-mile of the 1300 block of Ivy Avenue near its intersection with Northwest Boulevard, Everhart said. About 15 city firefighters responded to the scene to monitor the spill and prevent vehicles from traveling on the affected section of Ivy Avenue, Everhart said. The affected section of Ivy Avenue was expected to be shut down Tuesday for several hours while the dairy product is cleaned up, police said. Drivers are encouraged to find alternate routes of travel. Anyone with information about this spill can call Winston-Salem police at 336-773-7700, Crime Stoppers at 336-727-2800 or its Spanish line at 336-728-3904. Crime Stoppers of Winston-Salem/Forsyth County is on Facebook. The Text-A-Tip program at 336-276-1717 allows people to text tips, photos and videos to the police. Get local news delivered to your inbox! Subscribe to our Daily Headlines newsletter. Sign up! * I understand and agree that registration on or use of this site constitutes agreement to its user agreement and privacy policy. A legislative committee exploring whether to expand the states Medicaid program was given Tuesday a lengthy primer on the potential demographic and financial impacts on about 650,000 North Carolinians. It was the second in a series of meetings by the Joint Legislative Oversight Committee on Access to Healthcare and Medicaid Expansion. The next is set for March 15. Medicaid currently covers 2.71 million North Carolinians, which is a 34% increase, or 522,000, since the COVID-19 pandemic outbreak surfaced in March 2020. The biggest increase, at 94% or from 205,000 to 402,000, is the category of parents and older adults. Those who might be eligible under the expanded program are those who earn too much to qualify for Medicaid coverage, but not enough to get help in the private insurance marketplace. Even though Medicaid expansion has been a hot-button political issue since North Carolina became eligible to participate in 2012, committee members were content to be mostly in listening mode during the presentation. Co-chairman Rep. Donny Lambeth, R-Forsyth, has said the goal is coming up with a recommendation by the fall. Were going to look at anything that will make improvements, co-chairwoman Sen. Joyce Krawiec, R-Forsyth, said at the start of the meeting. Krawiec has emerged over the past three years as a key GOP health-care reform proponent, but has supported changing the states certificate-of-need laws rather than Medicaid expansion. North Carolina is one of 12 states that has not expanded its Medicaid program through the Affordable Care Act, also known as Obamacare. North Carolina had, at 1.2 million residents, the sixth-highest uninsured rate in the nation in 2019. The number likely has increased during the COVID-19 pandemic. Demographics Tuesdays presentation from state Medicaid officials offered some descriptions of which sectors of society could become beneficiaries from expansion. For example, low-income parents earning between $8,004 and $30,305 annual for a family of three would be eligible, along with some military veterans and their household in the same earnings range. The committee was told that 14,000 N.C. military veterans could benefit from Medicaid expansion. Just 46% of the states 730,357 veterans receive health care in Veterans Administration facilities, and even those who do may not have health insurance for family members. Also eligible would be low-income adults without children making less than $17,774 annually. Those would include young adults who age out of current Medicaid coverage and women prior to pregnancy. North Carolina is ranked 39th in terms of individual access to health care, but fifth out of the 12 non-expansion states. According to Americas Health Rankings, 11.5% of adults ages 18 to 64 avoid seeking health care because of out-of-pocket costs. Of the current Medicaid recipients ages 18 to 64 nationally, 43% are working full time, 20% part time and 12% are family caregivers. This shouldnt be a shock to anybody that most of the people in our state who are uninsured are poor, said Dave Richard, head of the states Medicaid program. It doesnt mean that they are not working. It means that they are poor. Who could benefit The committee was shown a PowerPoint display listing eight employment categories with significant uninsured rates among workers before the COVID-19 pandemic surfaced in March 2020. About 28% of hotel and hospitality workers (annual average salary $24,450) and restaurant workers (average annual salary $17,160) in North Carolina were uninsured. Child-care day workers (annual average salary $22,360) and hair cutters (annual average salary $28,320) were each at 20% uninsured levels. At 19% were grocery workers (annual average salary $21,680) and home-health workers (annual average salary $29,952). At 14% were clothing-store workers (annual average salary $19,800) and nursing home workers (annual average salary $33,280). The committee was told that rural residents are 40% more likely to be uninsured. In recent legislative sessions, there has been a ground-swelling of awareness about opioid and behavioral health challenges facing an increasing number of North Carolinians. The committee was presented with the summation of 197 Medicaid expansion studies compiled by the Kaiser Family Foundation. The analysis of the studies found that the 38 states that have expanded their Medicaid program had improvements in self-reported mental health, reductions in opioid overdose deaths, improved access to medications and services for treatment and increased behavioral-health providers enrolling in Medicaid. A KFF study determined that in 2019, Medicaid was the largest funding source at 44% of treatment nationwide for opioid use disorders. Background The formation of the committee represents an agreement between Republican legislative leaders and Democratic Gov. Roy Cooper. That agreement played a role in reaching a compromise on the 2021-22 state budget the first signed into law by Cooper since the GOP lost its super-majority in January 2019. Of the 38 expansion states since 2014, none has decided to end the expansion, including red states such as Alaska, Arkansas, Indiana, Kentucky, Missouri, Oklahoma and West Virginia. The federal government picks up 90% of the additional administrative costs and the states health care systems would agree in principle to pick up North Carolinas 10% funding requirement through a financial assessment. The federal share to North Carolina is estimated at $1.7 billion annually. North Carolina taxpayers already are paying to help subsidize the Medicaid expansion costs in other states. The nonpartisan Commonwealth Fund, based in New York, released a study in May that found North Carolina could gain at least 80,000 health-care jobs by expanding Medicaid coverage. Lambeth has been doing the heavy lifting behind state House attempts to advance a form of Medicaid expansion. Lambeths House Bill 655 required a Medicaid-expansion work-requirement that gained begrudging Democratic support. After clearing the House committee process, HB655 failed to get a floor vote during the 2019 session. Our committee will explore and seek solutions to critical health-care issues with the goals of broadening access to quality health care for working people, lowering health insurance premiums for everyone, addressing the cost of uncompensated care especially for rural hospitals, and providing more affordable health-care options to help small businesses retain employees, Lambeth said in a Jan. 5 statement. Lambeth added separately that this is an important topic for N.C. and has been debated for several years. Concerned about COVID-19? Sign up now to get the most recent coronavirus headlines and other important local and national news sent to your email inbox daily. Sign up! * I understand and agree that registration on or use of this site constitutes agreement to its user agreement and privacy policy. As often happens among the political class in Washington, we met on television debating each other. I liked him immediately, despite our political and even religious differences. Bob Beckel and I became friends and eventually more than friends. Twenty years ago, after debating a long-forgotten subject on Fox News Channel, we came back to the green room where I noticed a streak of sadness in his face. Are you OK, Bob? I asked. In what he would later describe as a rare moment of transparency, he said, No, Im not, and began to cry. I had never seen him like this. He told me his personal life had fallen apart and he was receiving death threats after being accused of trying to flip electors to Al Gore following the 2000 presidential contest. He had denied the accusation. I told him, You need Jesus, who will change your life. He said he had tried everything else and it hadnt worked, so he was open. After giving him a Bible and a book titled Evidence that Demands a Verdict, Bob started coming to church with me and came to believe what Scripture says about our need for redemption and a redeemer. What followed was a unique bond that lasted until the day he died last week. In the early 2000s, we decided to write a column together called Common Ground in which we presented our positions on certain issues and then tried to reach agreement at some level. USA Today immediately bought the idea and we were featured on its op-ed page for 10 years. We also wrote a book together with the same title. It was on the lecture circuit where I think we had our biggest influence. Bob spoke openly about his history with alcoholism and his genuineness endeared him to even conservative audiences. We traveled together, ate together and got to know each other and our respective stories in ways that rarely happen in Washington these days. At the end of our presentation, I would say that I rejected the notion that Bob was on the other side. Both of our fathers were in World War II. They werent fighting for or against Franklin Roosevelt, but to preserve an ideal. America has always been an idea in search of the ideal. If we want to put someone on the other side, make them external enemies like the Ayatollah in Iran, or the leadership in China and Russia. Lets not destroy each other. We are fellow Americans. Bob would then get up and say how I had saved his life and introduced him to God and other nice things. We embraced, prompting wild cheers from the audience. People would say, Why cant we see more of this in Washington? It helped that neither of us was interested in running for office, which would mean having to raise money and say things to satisfy various interest groups. At his memorial service there will be Republicans and Democrats, liberals and conservatives. It will be a moment of common ground. Bob was my closest and dearest friend. His hope and mine is that our friendship will serve as an example to others of what can be and must be if we are to survive as a nation. Argue, yes, but dont demean the humanity or patriotism of someone with whom you disagree. Bob always urged people to sit down and listen to someone who belongs to a different political party, a different religion, a different ethnic or cultural group. You might not end up agreeing with each other, he said, but you will better understand the other person. It remains good advice. We could honor him and make it his legacy if more of us followed that advice. Rest in peace, Bob. You have finished the race and kept the faith. We will meet again. Readers may email Cal Thomas at tcaeditors@tribpub.com. Im writing this as Vladimir Putin is eating up Ukraine. Did we fall asleep and wake up in 1938 to hear that Hitler had taken the Sudetenland? Who knew this could happen in 2022? Actually, we knew. Putin told us he was going to do it with every public statement that avoided a direct no, with every troop movement at the border, with every invocation of the sovereignty of the pro-Russian separatist regions. There are no surprises when it comes to Putins desire to reconstruct the Soviet Union. Its not a matter of if. Its always been a matter of when. As I watch this invasion unfold, switching between networks and social media sites, Ive come to the conclusion that we are no longer the breed of American who parachuted onto the shores of Normandy. That sacrificed lives in a bloody grave in the waters of Pearl Harbor, marched with the Fighting 69th to battle Germany a generation before them, and battled in the heat of deserts to avenge the murder of 3,000 fellow citizens. We are now tribes, divided by loyalties and political expedience. Its not a surprise, given what weve seen unfold over the past 20 to 30 years, but its a devastating commentary on where were headed as a nation. I spent a good part of the last few days unfriending those who blamed Biden for weakness and those who blamed Trump for loving Putin. I dont need their alternative viewpoints, and wont be enriched by their separate takes on the crisis at hand. Im done with dissent. Thats because whatever you might think of the wisdom of putting boots on the ground in a country located thousands upon thousands of miles away, you cannot simply throw up your hands, offer thoughts and prayers, and believe that youve done your duty as an American when a dictator swallows up a sovereign nation. You are also derelict if you try to compare whats happening in Ukraine to our southern border, blaming liberals for caring more about a foreign nation than about our own security and national integrity. Thats comparing apples and bloody bodies, or bananas and those standing in front of tanks in Tiananmen Square. We are obligated to care about our legacy in the world, which has been battered and bruised by many different flawed men and women. Obama was one. Trump was another. Biden, the failed bureaucrat of Afghanistan, is most definitely and glaringly a third. But those leaders are not America. We the people are, and when we start backing off and saying things like Well, I dont want my nephew or my son or my grandson or my whatever putting boots on anyone elses territory, I despair of ever again being proud of this nation and its history. And if that makes me sound like Michelle Obama, so be it. On the other hand, you have liberals who are so damn obsessed with what happened on Jan. 6 something that was regrettable but did not destroy our essential character they ignore the absolute failure of their own tribe and reach back to blame Trump. To be clear, this invasion happened on their leaders watch, not under the guidance of the man they despise. And yet, if they are calling for engagement, they are making penance for the repellent anti-Americanism they have exhibited in vilifying conservatives over the past years, and decades. I am devastated to be in this middle place, because I am no moderate. I actually hate that word, because it communicates a lukewarm, tasteless, insubstantial broth. A person without values, in other words. That will anger moderates who believe that they stand on high moral ground. But only those who are willing to make a choice, a decision in moments of crisis occupy that summit. And those who try and see both sides are often those who see no side clearly. Any American who takes more pleasure in attacking her political rival than in seeking comfort and protection for the threatened, or who excuses evil if it advances his own partisan goals, is someone I renounce, and excommunicate, from my life. Effective immediately. But if you are still reading, and you are still listening, hear this: As someone who cannot shoot a rifle but who has worked with war refugees, please contact me at the below email address if you know of someone in need of assistance in Ukraine. I will try and direct you to someone who can help. Christine Flowers (cflowers1961@gmail.com) is an attorney and a columnist for the Delaware County Daily Times. The steady march of the local COVID-19 risk dial into safer territory continued Tuesday. Lincoln-Lancaster County Health Director Pat Lopez announced that the risk dial moved from the low-orange to the mid-yellow range, where it hasn't been since late October, as cases and hospitalizations continue to decline. The move to yellow means indoor mask-wearing is no longer recommended for healthy people who have no symptoms of COVID-19, although it is still required in some places, including hospitals, airports and on public transportation. Though masks are still required, Bryan Health announced it was dropping many of its visitor restrictions at Lincoln hospitals effective Tuesday. Lancaster County recorded only 264 COVID-19 cases last week, which is the lowest weekly total since late July. The number of people hospitalized with COVID-19 locally fell to 41 on Tuesday, also the lowest level since late July. The case numbers do not include people who test positive through a home test. Leah Bucco-White, a spokeswoman for the Health Department, said there have been roughly 60 positive results from at-home tests reported through the department's online form, which went live about two weeks ago. "Were happy to see sustained improvement in our local situation, Lopez said. At the same time, were also aware of how quickly our situation can change. The future of this pandemic remains uncertain, but right now, we are very encouraged by our progress. Nearly every indicator used to set the risk dial improved over the past week, and she said she is more optimistic now than at the same point last year, largely because of the high vaccination rate and the availability of treatments to battle the virus. "Right now I feel greatly encouraged by where we are as a community and where we're moving forward to," Lopez said. The decline in cases and hospitalizations locally mirrors what is happening statewide. Nebraska recorded only 968 cases last week, according to data from the Centers for Disease Control and Prevention, and its per-capita case rate was the lowest in the nation, the Omaha World-Herald reported. Hospitalizations at the state level have also declined sharply. As of Monday night, the total stood at 267, its lowest level since mid-August. The one statistic that has yet to improve is deaths from COVID-19. Thirty-two Lancaster County residents died of COVID-19 in February, which was only a slight decline from 39 in January. Deaths often lag cases and hospitalizations, so it will likely take longer for that statistic to decline. Lopez said there were no local deaths to report Tuesday. Reach the writer at 402-473-2647 or molberding@journalstar.com. On Twitter @LincolnBizBuzz. Love 0 Funny 0 Wow 0 Sad 0 Angry 0 Build your health & fitness knowledge Sign up here to get the latest health & fitness updates in your inbox every week! Sign up! * I understand and agree that registration on or use of this site constitutes agreement to its user agreement and privacy policy. A 28-year-old Lincoln man got prison time Tuesday for a more than six-hour crime spree a year ago where he stole three vehicles and slammed into the back of a fire truck and head-on into a police cruiser. Hieu Nguyen, who has mental health and substance-abuse issues, has very little recollection of that day, according to his attorney, Deputy Lancaster County Public Defender Tim Eppler. Eppler said Nguyen was in a bad place, but it was out of Nguyen's character, and he understands that his behavior was completely unacceptable. On Feb. 11, 2021, police took the first call shortly after 3 p.m. to Silver Ridge Road, near 70th and A streets. A 79-year-old man had driven up to see a Dodge Dakota stuck in a snowdrift near his home and went to help dig him out. Though it hadn't been reported yet, Nguyen had just stolen the truck from 68th and A. As the good Samaritan tried to dig him out, Nguyen jumped out and started to take off with his Volkswagen Jetta, dragging the man a short distance as he tried to reach for the wheel to stop him. Then, close to 9 p.m., Nguyen, still in the Jetta, ran a red light at 84th and Adams streets and crashed into two vehicles, ultimately sending two people to the hospital, one with a broken pelvis, according to Deputy Lancaster County Attorney Tara Parpart. When an 82-year-old man came upon the scene and stopped to help, Nguyen took off with his Jeep Grand Cherokee, only to return and smash into the back of a Lincoln Fire & Rescue engine. Police started to pursue but ended the chase out of concern for public safety. A half hour later, Nguyen popped up at 25th and M streets. As officers caught up to the Jeep, Nguyen sped away, slamming the Jeep head-on into a police cruiser, injuring an officer and disabling both vehicles. Police ultimately broke out the rear window of the Jeep and used a Taser on Nguyen to remove him from the Jeep. Nguyen later pleaded no contest to attempted robbery, assault on an officer using a vehicle, attempted theft, leaving the scene of injury accident and obstructing a police officer, all felonies but the last. Parpart called Nguyen a danger to society as well as himself. "It does appear that the only time he really isn't violating the law is when he's in custody," she said. District Judge Andrew Jacobsen gave Nguyen 10 to 13 years in prison on the charges, saying he hoped that Nguyen could get a handle on his mental health and substance abuse issues because "what happened here, it's just a disaster." Reach the writer at 402-473-7237 or lpilger@journalstar.com. On Twitter @LJSpilger Love 0 Funny 0 Wow 0 Sad 1 Angry 0 Sign up for our Crime & Courts newsletter Get the latest in local public safety news with this weekly email. Sign up! * I understand and agree that registration on or use of this site constitutes agreement to its user agreement and privacy policy. One of Paul Gausman's selling points to the Lincoln Board of Education was his transition plan essentially a road map for his first 90 days if chosen to be the next Lincoln Public Schools superintendent. Suffice it to say, the board was sold. Add in his experience leading the Sioux City school district in Iowa, plus his ties to Lincoln and the Cornhusker State, and Gausman became the clear favorite for the position. Now that he has the job a contract will be approved in the next few weeks Gausman will turn to that six-page transition plan when he officially starts work in Lincoln on July 1. He has been clear since the start about what the plan ultimately boils down to: Building relationships. "But I want to be clear: That's not just at one level within the organization, that's with all levels within the organization," Gausman said last week. The 55-year-old Fremont native makes that abundantly evident in his 90-day plan, which he shared with the Journal Star on Monday. In it, Gausman spells out his goal of getting to know people both inside and outside the district from retiring Superintendent Steve Joel and his executive team, to board members and students, to city, state, business and higher-education leaders. "I look forward to working with the staff, working with the board, working with different agencies and businesses ... and really celebrating the notion that this is a one-town, one-district system," Gausman said. Joel has known Gausman for years from their work with the Urban Superintendents Association of America. Gausman is now president of the national group that Joel previously led. Joel and Gausman are also a part of the same superintendent consulting group, McPherson & Jacobson, which is based in Omaha. "Without question, he shares what we believe: We don't rest until all of our students are successful," Joel said. "I'm just convinced he's going to be a good fit." Joel said he plans to work with Gausman closely during the transition, once a contract is approved. The school board will also likely approve a separate agreement to compensate Gausman for any time spent working in Lincoln before he officially starts this summer. A lot of the transition work will include Joel introducing him to key staff members and community leaders. Joel recalled that when he first arrived in Lincoln, the existing executive team took him under its wing, and he expects the same to be true for his successor. "Come in, look, listen and learn," Joel said. In his transition plan shared with district leaders, Gausman said he intends to meet with a variety of people and groups, including Mayor Leirion Gaylor Baird, the Lincoln Chamber of Commerce, college leaders, community and multicultural groups, the governor, state education officials and more. Through those meetings, Gausman hopes to identify strengths and weaknesses of the district, as well as gather insight for strategic planning. LPS' current comprehensive strategic plan the district's five-year road map expires June 30, which is good timing for Gausman, Joel said. The current school board is locked in through 2023, as well, Joel said, which will also be advantageous for Gausman since he won't have to deal with this year's election cycle. The plan also details a report Gausman will create for the board by November articulating what he's learned and identifying short- and long-term goals for LPS. "I think what impressed me about it was it showed that he clearly recognized that when you step into a new leadership role, (it's) about learning the system before making changes," said board member Lanny Boswell, who pointed to Gausman's transition plan in discussing candidates before the board's vote last week. "Having the plan in place helps put some timelines to (the transition), helps put some definition to it." It also gives the board an opportunity to provide feedback to Gausman in his first days in the district, Boswell said. Just as a school board's most important job is hiring and evaluating the superintendent, building relationships is the "single-most important thing a superintendent does in their first 90 days," said board member Kathy Danek. And having a transition plan will be helpful, said Danek, who plans to take Gausman around her northeast Lincoln district once he arrives. "Lincoln wants to be accessible," she said. During his 11-year tenure, Joel has been a visible member of the community. When he was first hired, he made it a goal to visit each LPS building at least once in his first year. Whether Gausman will follow Joel's lead in that regard is unclear, but Danek knows Joel's successor is just as capable. "I think he's up to the job." Contact the writer at zhammack@journalstar.com or 402-473-7225. On Twitter @zach_hammack Love 0 Funny 0 Wow 0 Sad 0 Angry 0 Want to see more like this? Get our local education coverage delivered directly to your inbox. Sign up! * I understand and agree that registration on or use of this site constitutes agreement to its user agreement and privacy policy. Alisa Hoodikoff couldnt sleep for days. She watched from Annapolis as her home in Ukraine was invaded by thousands of Russian troops on Thursday, the conflict spilling into the capital city of Kyiv, where she spent the first 20 years of her life. The 23-year-old artist worries for her friends who are still there. She talked on the phone for hours with her best friend Paola, who lives in Kyiv, listening to explosions in the background as the city of nearly three million people was bombed by Russian missiles. When they ran out of things to talk about, the friends sat in silence. Simply feeling a bond through an open phone connection helped stave off the dread of war. Advertisement We hardly even talk; we just keep the phone on speaker and just say a few things here and there. It just feels like were next to each other, you know, said Hoodikoff, who runs the Habitat Art Gallery out of the Downtown Hope Church on West Street. I hear her cry and it makes me cry. Like many Anne Arundel County residents who have roots in the warring countries, Hoodikoff and her parents, Victoria and Kelly, watched anxiously as Russian President Vladimir Putin ordered the invasion of Ukraine, sending Eastern Europe into the worst armed conflict since World War II. Fighting entered its sixth day Tuesday as Russian bombing pounded Kharkiv, Ukraines second-largest city, which Ukrainian President Volodymyr Zelenskyy condemned as a blatant campaign of terror by Putin. Advertisement The elder Hoodikoffs worked as missionaries in Kyiv for 26 years, raising two children there and making lifelong friends before coming to Annapolis in 2019. Over the weekend, they decided they needed to take action. They plan to travel back to Ukraine in April to provide humanitarian aid. These are our friends; we dont just forget them, Victoria Hoodikoff said Monday. She hopes the conflict will have died down in a month, but if the war is still ongoing, the family will enter the country through Poland. Alisa Hoodikoff, a dual U.S. and Canadian citizen, said she is at peace with the decision to go back. After days of trying, her friend Paola successfully escaped to Poland on Monday, Hoodikoff said, but other friends remain. She wants to take art supplies to give to children and just help them process what theyve been through with art. Alisa Hoodikoff, right, and her friend Paola, left, who still lives in Kyiv, Ukraine. Hoodikoff is returning to the country in April to provide humanitarian aid. (Courtesy Photo) Im not nervous, Alisa Hoodikoff said Monday as she wore a Ukrainian vyshyvanka, a traditional embroidered shirt worn by citizens, in a sign of solidarity. Its better than being here and doing nothing. Well try to do whatever we can, but were also just coming with open hands. Other Anne Arundel residents with Ukrainian roots have also begun to mobilize to send aid to their homeland. Gene Hudyma, a first-generation Ukrainian-American and retired podiatrist, is planning to donate equipment to Ukraine from his former medical practice in Glen Burnie. He said he has to do something to help the people of Ukraine because their struggle reminds him of what his relatives went through 80 years ago to escape the conflict of World War II. We are children of people who were refugees in World War II, said Hudyma, 66, who now lives in Millersville. Between the Nazis and the Russians, they were caught between a rock and a hard place, and they had to survive in very much the same story thats going on in Ukraine today. There is a small but close-knit Ukrainian community in the Baltimore area that Hudyma grew up in, he said. Speaking Ukrainian at home and learning about the centuries-long history of his culture was a critical part of his upbringing. The last week has been heartbreaking and devastating and morally crushing, Hudyma said. Advertisement Were looking to get together some supplies to hopefully send a container to Ukraine and find the right people who can get it into their hands because theyre going to need all the help they can get, he said. Hudyma attended services at St. Michael the Archangel Ukrainian Catholic Church in Baltimore on Monday where Gov. Larry Hogan visited for a special prayer service. Afterward, Hogan announced he would end Marylands symbolic Sister State relationship with Russias St. Petersburg region. Baltimore, meanwhile, is reforging its ties with the Ukrainian city of Odesa, a partnership that dates back to 1974, Mayor Brandon Scott said Friday in a news release. Karina Mandell, a Ukrainian by birth who now lives in Baltimore, serves as the chair of the Baltimore-Odesa Sister City Committee. She took a diplomatic trip to the southern port city in August to meet with its mayor, Gennadiy Trukhanov, during the 30th anniversary of Ukrainian independence to discuss collaborations with the citys symphonies and a study abroad program. Six months later, Mandell called Trukhanov as Russian troops laid siege to his city. When I met him we werent talking about war, we were talking about collaborations, she said. That has been derailed because of an invasion. Advertisement Since fighting began, Mandell has been raising awareness by facilitating a webinar about the conflict and calling on Hogan and other leaders across the state to light up buildings in the colors of the Ukrainian flag in solidarity. The Governors Mansion, Annapolis City Hall and other buildings across the state were bathed in blue and yellow over the weekend. The people of Ukraine are being unimaginably courageous in the face of a threat that few of us could fathom, Annapolis Mayor Gavin Buckley said Monday during a City Council meeting. An invading Russian army, armored vehicles rolling down city streets, artillery fire, missile strikes into residential neighborhoods. The invasion is audacious but the fight Ukrainians are waging is heroic. David Sislen, the rabbi at Kneseth Israel Congregation in Annapolis, said he planned to add a prayer and a poem written by a Ukrainian author to his sermon at the Forest Drive synagogue in support of the tens of thousands of Jewish people who live in the country. The war is an ominous sign for Jews everywhere, Sislen said. We are in a weird place because, on the one hand, its distant, he said. But on the other hand, there isnt a Jewish person alive or familiar with history that doesnt see the incredibly ominous tidings of Russia completely ignoring international norms. Its scary. The last time conflict flared between Ukraine and Russia was in 2014 when Russia annexed Crimea, Ukraines southern peninsula in the Black Sea, in an effort to continue asserting its influence in the region. The Hoodikoffs were still living in the country at the time. Advertisement The Morning Sun Daily Get your morning news in your e-mail inbox. Get all the top news and sports from the baltimoresun.com. > Weve always known that Russia was bullying us for many years ever since 2014. So this wasnt new to us, Alisa Hoodikoff said. However, the degree of how much [Putin] has really taken action. That we were not expecting. A protest outside the White House in Washington, D.C. that Alisa Hoodikoff and her family attended on Friday to call on President Joe Biden to provide more military aid to Ukraine. (Courtesy Photo) On Friday morning, the Hoodikoffs attended a rally in Washington, D.C. with some other Ukrainian friends. Outside the White House, the group chanted and sang the Ukrainian national anthem as they called on President Joe Biden to immediately increase military and humanitarian aid to Ukraine. Biden did so on Sunday, announcing an additional $350 million in military aid to the country. The gathering was emotional but uplifting, Alisa Hoodikoff said, because of the sense of unity she felt with people there from other countries. She plans to attend other rallies in the coming weeks as she prepares to head back to the country she still calls home. Despite that moment of solidarity, the ubiquity of smartphones and second-by-second updates about the conflict on social media and television often arent enough to convey to Americans the seriousness of the situation, Hoodikoff said. Think about how you would feel if somebody took over Maryland, she said. The state next to us decides one day theyre going to start bombing you. Advertisement You cant go to school. All of your friends are in a bomb shelter. Youre hearing sirens constantly in downtown Annapolis. How would that make you feel? Former Sen. Danielle Conrad resigned Tuesday as executive director of ACLU of Nebraska and filed as a candidate to return to a seat in the Legislature. Conrad served in the Legislature from 2007 to 2015, when she was term-limited out of office. Lincoln City Councilman James Michael Bowers earlier filed as a candidate in northeast Lincoln's District 46. James Herrold is also a candidate for that seat. When Tuesday's filing deadline passed, only two senators Myron Dorn of Adams, who has Lincoln constituents in District 30, and Tom Brandt of Plymouth, who represents District 32 including parts of Lancaster County will enter the 2022 election unopposed. The primary is May 10. Former Lincoln City Councilman Roy Christensen filed earlier as a candidate for the Legislature, setting up a contest with City Councilwoman Jane Raybould for the District 28 seat. Christensen, a Republican, served two terms on the council before losing a reelection bid last year. Raybould is a former Lancaster County commissioner and was the Democratic nominee for a seat in the U.S. Senate in 2018. The legislative seat is currently held by Sen. Patty Pansing Brooks of Lincoln, who is seeking the Democratic nomination for the 1st District seat in the U.S. House of Representatives now held by Republican Rep. Jeff Fortenberry. Four legislative candidates filed in Lincoln's District 26: George Dungan, Bob Van Valkenburg, Russ Barger and Larry Weixelman. All three Lincoln senators who will be term-limited out of office Pansing Brooks, Adam Morfeld (District 26) and Matt Hansen (District 46) are Democrats. Meanwhile, Janet Chung, a Lincoln marketing and management professional, filed as a candidate for the District 2 seat in the Legislature now occupied by Sen. Rob Clements of Elmwood. The daughter of immigrants, Chung is a graduate of Lincoln Southeast High School and the University of Nebraska-Lincoln. Chung is former chairwoman of the Lancaster County Democratic Party. Clements is a Republican who was originally appointed to the Legislature by Gov. Pete Ricketts, then elected to a four-year term in 2018. Sarah Slattery of Plattsmouth is also a candidate for the seat. District 2 was redistricted by the Legislature last year to include new portions of Lincoln and Lancaster County. Seven candidates, including five Republicans, filed for the 1st District seat in the U.S. House of Representatives now held by Fortenberry. The Lincoln congressman is under federal indictment for allegedly lying to federal agents about illegal foreign contributions to his 2016 reelection campaign. He has held the eastern Nebraska House seat since 2005. Sen. Mike Flood of Norfolk, one of his Republican opponents, has been endorsed by Gov. Pete Ricketts and former Gov. Dave Heineman. A dozen candidates, including front-runners Charles Herbster, Jim Pillen and state Sen. Brett Lindstrom and six fellow Republicans, have filed for governor, a contest that already has been underway for months. Sen. Carol Blood is the only Democrat in the race. No Democrats filed for secretary of state, state treasurer, attorney general, state auditor or for seats on the Public Service Commission. Mike Groene, who had been a candidate for a seat on the University of Nebraska Board of Regents, was not on the list. Groene asked to be removed after he resigned from the Legislature last month after it was revealed that he took photos of a female staffer without her permission. In the race for State Board of Education, Helen Raikes of Ashland will face Kirk Penner of Aurora in a district that includes portions of Lancaster County. Penner was appointed to the seat by Ricketts. Reach the writer at 402-473-7248 or dwalton@journalstar.com. On Twitter @LJSdon Love 0 Funny 0 Wow 0 Sad 0 Angry 0 Get Government & Politics updates in your inbox! Stay up-to-date on the latest in local and national government and political topics with our newsletter. Sign up! * I understand and agree that registration on or use of this site constitutes agreement to its user agreement and privacy policy. A Lancaster County District Court judge ruled Wednesday that state Sen. Adam Morfeld can remain on the May 10 primary ballot as a Lancaster County attorney candidate, though state and local GOP officials could appeal the decision. If the GOP plans to appeal, it would need to happen quickly: State law requires a decision reversing the election commissioners finding by March 16. Judge Kevin McManaman denied the GOP appeal of the Lancaster County Election Commissioner's decision that found Morfeld met the statutory requirements to be on the ballot. Morfeld said in a statement that the court affirmed "what is plainly obvious to everyone in the community: I am an actively practicing attorney engaged in the practice of law in multiple ways. Lancaster County voters have the constitutional right and deserve to vote for the candidate of their choice for county attorney." The state and local GOP filed an objection with the election commissioner arguing that Morfeld doesnt meet the statutory requirement that he has actively practiced law for at least the last two years. Election Commissioner Dave Shively denied the objection and said Morfeld could be on the ballot. That led to the district court lawsuit, and attorneys for both sides argued in court last week just how strictly actively practicing law should be defined. McManaman found that attorneys representing the GOP did not carry their burden of showing Morfeld has not practiced law in a constant, daily or routine manner. At issue was whether Morfelds work as executive director of his nonprofit Civic Nebraska, as co-chair of a group trying to get the medical marijuana issue on the ballot and as a member of the Legislatures Judiciary Committee fits the statutory requirement. Morfelds attorney Andre Barry argued the definition should be liberally interpreted and that the GOP couldnt overcome the high bar set to remove someone from the ballot. GOP attorney David Lopez pointed to attorney practice and bar admission rules enacted by the Supreme Court and said Morfeld didnt meet any of the ways those rules defined being substantially engaged in the practice of law. McManaman found that both those rules and others cited by Morfeld's attorney were not relevant because they were written decades after the statute was enacted. He also noted that the Supreme Court has defined the practice of law broadly, which encompass Morfeld's legal advice to his nonprofit, to individual voters and as co-sponsor on ballot initiatives. The legislative history of the law, in which the senator introducing the bill said it was important the county attorney have "some experience" is noteworthy, McManaman wrote. "Here the candidate has some experience," the ruling said. "Whether he should be the next county attorney is therefore for the voters to decide." Morfeld is challenging incumbent Pat Condon, a Republican and longtime deputy county attorney appointed to replace Joe Kelly when he became U.S. Attorney for Nebraska. Condon ran unopposed in 2018. Reach the writer at 402-473-7226 or mreist@journalstar.com. On Twitter @LJSreist Love 0 Funny 0 Wow 0 Sad 0 Angry 0 Get Government & Politics updates in your inbox! Stay up-to-date on the latest in local and national government and political topics with our newsletter. Sign up! * I understand and agree that registration on or use of this site constitutes agreement to its user agreement and privacy policy. The Lincoln City Council ordinance that extends discrimination protections to include sexual orientation and gender expression is likely headed to the ballot box. The Nebraska Family Alliance announced Tuesday it gathered more than four times the number of signatures needed to require the City Council to either put the so-called fairness ordinance to a public vote or rescind it. A crowd of supporters holding Let US Vote signs gathered at Nebraska Family Alliances office at 11th and E streets for a news conference where leaders of the group announced theyd gathered 18,501 signatures. Thats well more than the 4,137 signatures 4% of city voters in the previous gubernatorial election required to stop the ordinance from taking effect, and well beyond the 10,000 signatures supporters collected a decade ago after the City Council passed an initial ordinance to extend discrimination protections to include sexual orientation and gender expression. Today is about due process, to give a voice to Lincoln residents who love their city and love their neighbors, said Nebraska Family Alliance Executive Director Karen Bowling. Moms, dads and grandparents walked their neighborhoods with their kids to give them firsthand experience of grassroots mobilization because they believe that the government shouldn't pick and choose who is allowed to think and speak freely. Bowling said the group circulated 1,365 petitions, an effort that included 339 volunteers and 72 churches. After the successful referendum petition in 2012, the council didnt rescind the ordinance or put it to a vote, and it was in limbo until the current council passed a broader revision of the municipal code last month. In addition to extending protections to include sexual orientation and gender expression, the ordinance adds active military and veterans as a protected class. It also updates definitions of marriage, race and natural origin, strengthens definitions and updates disability protections and reorganizes the section to clarify the process of the city's Human Rights Commission. Tuesday afternoon, at least four council members said they supported putting the ordinance to a vote, which could happen in a special election or the general election in November. Lancaster County Election Commissioner Dave Shively said state law prohibits holding a special election too close to a regularly scheduled election, which means a special election could be held only in July or August this year. Before any of that happens, the city clerk must turn the petition signatures over to the election commissioner for verification. A decade ago, that took a week to 10 days. Once that happens, Shively will report the verification to the city clerk, then the issue goes back to the City Council, which will either rescind the ordinance or pass a resolution to put it on the ballot. If it does the latter, City Attorney Yohance Christie said, the council will spell out when that will happen. Councilwoman Sandra Washington, who introduced the ordinance, said she supports putting it to a vote something she said petition circulators seem to want to happen as quickly as possible. She said shes filed paperwork with the Accountability and Disclosure Commission for a campaign committee supporting passage of the ordinance. Im not surprised they (ordinance opponents) were able to get the signatures, given the fact that the message they were putting out was untrue, she said. They were playing to peoples emotions and fears and they werent telling the truth." The work of supporters, she said, will be to tell the truth: that the ordinance puts into local code protections in the Civil Rights Act, which the U.S. Supreme Court spelled out in a 2020 decision. Council members Tammy Ward, Jane Raybould and Richard Meginnis also said they supported taking the issue to a vote. Bennie Shobe said he wanted to confer with his fellow council members before commenting. Tom Beckius and James Michael Bowers could not be reached for comment. At the news conference, Nate Grasz, Nebraska Family Alliance policy director, said the ordinance is overly broad and poorly written. Redefining sex opens up bathrooms and locker rooms to those who identify as transgender, he said, and a broad definition of sexual harassment means people could be held liable for expressing Biblical views. Our City Council chose politics over people and advanced an ordinance that punishes free speech and violates the safety and privacy of women and girls in Lincoln, he said. Let's be clear. No one here today opposes fairness. A police officer stood by during Tuesday's announcement and one of two opponents in the crowd loudly disrupted the news conference, though after it was over he and several petition supporters shared a conversation. Both ACLU of Nebraska and OutNebraska, a statewide advocacy organization, issued statements supporting the ordinance and pledging to help educate and mobilize voters. OutNebraska Executive Director Abbi Swatsworth said a vote shouldnt be needed for peoples basic civil rights to be recognized. Now that this petition has been submitted, every person who cares about protecting LGBTQ people from discrimination should not only prepare to vote, but prepare to talk to their friends and neighbors and to respond to lies and misinformation about transgender people. This work must start today and it has to involve all of us." Reach the writer at 402-473-7226 or mreist@journalstar.com. On Twitter @LJSreist Love 5 Funny 0 Wow 0 Sad 2 Angry 1 Get Government & Politics updates in your inbox! Stay up-to-date on the latest in local and national government and political topics with our newsletter. Sign up! * I understand and agree that registration on or use of this site constitutes agreement to its user agreement and privacy policy. A day after they lost their factory and storefront in an early-morning fire that destroyed an estimated $80,000 worth of cheese products alone, the owners of Shadow Brook Farm and Dutch Girl Creamery were back to work Tuesday afternoon. "That's the thing about dairy animals," said Charuth Van Beuzekom, who has operated the farm with her husband, Kevin Loth, since 1996, and who was milking goats during an interview with the Journal Star on Tuesday. "Even though there was a fire, and I don't have any way to make cheese, I still have to milk them twice a day. Because they make milk. And they don't stop." In the wake of the fire that broke out at about 4:30 a.m. Monday, gutting their $200,000 facility and hospitalizing Ian Richmond, their 37-year-old business partner, Van Beuzekom and Loth, both in their 50s, haven't stopped, either. For more than two decades, the couple has sold farm-grown vegetables at local farmers markets and from their own storefront at 2201 W. Denton Road, tucked away near Lincoln's southwestern city limit. In 2006, the couple expanded their operation as Van Beuzekom began making goat cheese products, building an on-site cheese factory in 2013 to manufacture and store the byproduct of 150 goats. Together, Van Beuzekom and Loth have sold the products at a handful of local markets from May through December, while amassing more than 200 Shadow Brook "farm share" subscribers, who pay up to $40 a week for a supply of locally produced meat, cheese and vegetables. When the fire broke out on the second floor of the facility Monday, Van Beuzekom said Richmond had been sleeping there a common occurrence this time of year, as the operators log 80-hour weeks in preparation for the coming market season. Van Beuzekom said she and Loth had been asleep in their home on the property when Richmond woke them up shortly before 4:30 a.m., alerting them to the fire spreading at the store. Van Beuzekom called 911 and her husband ran toward the facility, she said. In an adrenaline-altered state, he ran into the building looking for Richmond, who had already made it out and woken the couple up, Van Beuzekom said. "That tells you how absolutely bonkers your brain is when something like this happens," she said. By the time the first of a handful of rural fire crews rolled in, Van Beuzekom said the fire had spread to the creamery, where the cheese product was stored. Van Beuzekom said she was grateful for the quick work of firefighters, saving the equipment stored in the creamery. The structure itself, though, was a total loss. Richmond remained hospitalized in CHI St. Elizabeth's burn unit Tuesday afternoon, Van Beuzekom said. Organizers on Tuesday launched a GoFundMe page to help support Richmond, who lost $8,000 worth of seed in the fire and faces a "a stretch of recuperation time ahead," according to the page. The State Fire Marshal Agency determined the fire was accidental and electrical in nature, according to the agency's chief fire investigator. As Van Beuzekom watched the flames engulf the facility Monday morning destroying the building's entire second floor along with Eastman's plant seeds, their packaging and a winter's worth of cheese products she said she weighed the value of the businesses they had built and the cost of keeping going. "It definitely came up in conversation. 'Is this it? Are we done?'" Van Beuzekom said. "And then you just start thinking about the customers that are depending on you." So Van Beuzekom and Loth have opted to rebuild. They're navigating the headaches of making an insurance claim and toured a restaurant Monday only hours after the fire as a possible temporary location for their cheese-making operation. They're aiming to be operational again by April 1. Much of the couple's livelihood was destroyed in the fire. But their resolve was not. "We don't want to give up on that dream," Van Beuzekom said. Correction A previous version of this story misidentified Ian Richmond. The article has been updated to reflect the correction. Reach the writer at 402-473-7223 or awegley@journalstar.com. On Twitter @andrewwegley Love 0 Funny 0 Wow 0 Sad 0 Angry 0 Get local news delivered to your inbox! Subscribe to our Daily Headlines newsletter. Sign up! * I understand and agree that registration on or use of this site constitutes agreement to its user agreement and privacy policy. With state government increasingly flush with revenue, Gov. Pete Ricketts argued Wednesday for $500 million in funding for construction of a South Platte River canal and reservoir system and a new $270 million state prison coupled with substantial state tax relief. The state is "in a strong position" to fund critical projects while also moving to reduce the top state income tax rate, accelerate elimination of the state income tax on Social Security benefits and continue to fund substantial local property tax relief, the governor said during a news conference. A recent $775 million increase in anticipated state revenue for the current biennium came "on top of an earlier $900 million," Ricketts said, freeing the state to fund those priority projects while also returning money to taxpayers through tax reductions. "That money is not my money," the governor said. "We need to give that money back to the people." Funding is available to take action now to protect Nebraska's crucial water supply flowing into the state from Colorado and to replace the aging State Penitentiary in Lincoln with a modern new prison, Ricketts said. Scott Frakes, director of the Department of Correctional Services, said the proposed new $270 million prison needs to be constructed not only to house inmates safely, but also to provide room for adequate programming that can prepare them to "become productive members of society." "The longer we wait," he said, "the greater the problem." Tom Riley, director of the Department of Natural Resources, said construction of the South Platte canal and reservoir system is needed to divert and store water flowing through Colorado's rapidly developing Front Range for use in Nebraska not only for irrigation, but to protect urban water supplies. Nebraska needs to act now to protect its water rights under a century-old compact with Colorado, he said. "There is no way to enforce our entitlement" to the water already guaranteed in a 1921 compact between the states without building that canal, Riley said. Riley said he has begun discussions with the Department of Water Resources in Colorado about the compact and Ricketts said he raised the issue with Colorado Gov. Jared Polis when they were together at a recent meeting in Washington and they "potentially set up opportunities to talk." "Colorado is moving more quickly" to secure the water because Nebraska is beginning to act now, Riley said. "Delay only benefits Colorado," Ricketts said, as it continues to "accelerate projects" that would retain more of the water in that state. Sen. Lou Ann Linehan of Elkhorn, chairwoman of the Legislature's Revenue Committee, joined Ricketts in calling for tax cuts. Nebraska's state taxes are "way out of line in our region," Linehan said, and they have an impact on individual decisions on "where to live and where to retire." "We have no right to keep this money," she said, referring to the large anticipated revenue surplus. Pending in the Legislature is a bill (LB939) introduced by Linehan that would gradually reduce Nebraska's top individual income tax rate from 6.84% to 5.84%. The accompanying reduction of state revenue is estimated at $61.7 million in fiscal 2022-23, rising to $363.4 million in fiscal 2026-27. Ricketts has proposed that construction of the South Platte project be funded with $400 million from the state cash reserve and $100 million in federal pandemic recovery funds. The Legislature's Appropriations Committee has recommended $22.5 million in funding from the cash reserve to study and design the project. On a separate topic, when asked about his reaction to the Russian invasion of Ukraine, Ricketts said "we need to isolate Russia ... go after its energy exports ... sanction them." And, he said, the United States needs to "reinstate the Keystone pipeline," the proposed oil pipeline between Canada and the United States that would have traveled through Nebraska. President Joe Biden canceled the pipeline last year shortly after he was sworn in to office. Reach the writer at 402-473-7248 or dwalton@journalstar.com. On Twitter @LJSdon Love 1 Funny 0 Wow 0 Sad 0 Angry 3 Get Government & Politics updates in your inbox! Stay up-to-date on the latest in local and national government and political topics with our newsletter. Sign up! * I understand and agree that registration on or use of this site constitutes agreement to its user agreement and privacy policy. After the murder of George Floyd in 2020, Americas racial struggle was thrown into the global arena, sparking reactions from Atlanta to Berlin to Accra. Leaders took a stand against racism, creating diversity committees and hiring positions responsible for inclusion. Now that the dust is settling, I ask the question: Are we making progress towards creating a more inclusive world? As an ameliorative gesture, the Associated Press began capitalizing the b in Black because the term captures an essential and shared sense of history, identity and community among people who identify as Black, including those in the African diaspora and within Africa. APs move deserves plaudits, but it comes short as this appellation is loaded with negative import. First, if African is used to define Blacks that is, anyone with African ancestry then, why not simply stick with the identifier African? Moreover, Black is problematic because it creates space for white, a corollary that also has racist roots. As W.E.B. Dubois and others have long argued, whiteness is a socially constructed category and an invented terminology used as a machinery for the advancement of western European dominance. The term itself is an aberration since so-called whites are really, in the more accurate description of pigmentation, mostly orange and pink. Hence, the reason why I think this dubious binary of Black and White only serves to divide us. In the English language, black is the opposite of white, with the former having a net negative connotation when compared to the latter, which has a net positive connotation. The terms are expedient. Yet, we have to drop them altogether if we are going to create a more inclusive world together. After my youngest child was born in 2020, the nurse brought a form for me to fill our information. I was supposed to indicate my race. I noticed that the races were not listed in alphabetical order. It was "White" followed by "Black." However, the rest of the races that followed (e.g. Asian), listed in alphabetical order, were not color-based. This says something about how perniciously these terms are used and where the tension lies. Not surprising, there is a great deal of racial tension between people of African and European origins. Both cultures have historically interacted with each other on the African continent and presently Africans immigrate to Western countries more than other regions of the world. If we can resolve this tension, the world would breathe a sigh of relief from racism. An appellation that would more convincingly signify ancestry would be to replace the term white with European Americans, so that it would form a parallel term with what we already have as African Americans. Calling some people Black and others "white" suggests they are diametrically opposite to each other. In an ideal world, every American would simply be "American," without any qualifiers. If we must categorize, however, culture not color should be the basis of classification. Another problematic term is people of color, an umbrella term used to categorize non-European Americans. Again, instead of emphasizing color, a practice discouraged by Dr. Martin Luther King Jr., why not use non-European"? The world has stopped using yellow to describe the Chinese, and red to describe Indigenous Americans. We have also stopped using negro, even though it translates to Black." We can drop Black, person of color and white from our vocabulary as well. These terms create an inferior-superior gradient, which divides us. To foster harmony, organizations can remove "white" and Black from their nomenclature and replace them with European or "European American" and African or African American, respectively. We can recognize our human differences based on cultural heritage. There are over 80 ethnic groups in Europe and over 3,000 ethnic groups in Africa, yet many from these continents are of the same hue. It cannot be that color is a key differentiating factor among humans. Therefore, let us acknowledge our common humanity as well as historical injustices, which continue to haunt us today, all while decolonizing our language. Decolonizing our language, along with implementing initiatives that empower minoritized groups in America, is how to honor our differences. It is because of this belief that I will continue to skip all race options on forms, writing only Human in place of race. By doing this, I am paying service to the fundamental and true axiom: I am because we are Ubuntu! Prince JK Osiri, lives in Lincoln and is a professor of management practice and a Daugherty Global Institute fellow at the University of Nebraska-Lincoln. He is the creator of MARVEL: My African Roots Verified by Experience and Love and founder at Osiri University, a platform that is championing a decolonized curriculum. Love 0 Funny 0 Wow 0 Sad 0 Angry 0 MOUNT PLEASANT A Mount Pleasant man allegedly choked and threw a woman into a wall, assaulting her multiple times. Tracy D. Young, 18, of the 1600 block of Summerset Drive, was charged with felony counts of false imprisonment and strangulation and suffocation and misdemeanor counts of battery and disorderly conduct. According to a criminal complaint: On Friday, an officer was sent to a residence on Kinzie Avenue for an assault that occurred on the 1600 block of Summerset Drive. A woman said she was assaulted by Young and was thrown into a wall, choked and had her life threatened. Upon arrival, contact was made with the woman and it was noted that she had visible marks on her forehead, side of face and neck. She said Young got angry with her because she did not have sex with him. He then began yelling and throwing things around. He then put his hands around her neck and began choking her and tried to smother her mouth to prevent her from screaming. She then left the residence and he followed her, attacked her, threw her down in the snow, choked her again, dragged her by the sweater and forced her back in the residence. He made repeated threats to kill her. She said the next day Young threatened to kill her again, punched a hole in the wall and forcefully grabbed her by the neck. She showed the officer several photos of herself with black eyes, bruising to her arms and large bumps on her forehead. Young was given a $1,500 signature bond and a $500 cash bond in Racine County Circuit Court on Monday. A preliminary hearing is set for March 16 at the Racine County Law Enforcement Center, 717 Wisconsin Ave., online court records show. RACINE The city's mask mandate has officially been lifted, an expected change that the City Council made official Tuesday night with only one alderman voting nay. Masks are now optional for students and staff in Racine Unified School District facilities, including on buses. Wednesday was the first time students and staff did not have to wear masks in RUSD schools since virtual learning ended on March 1, 2021. All schools in Racine County and almost all schools throughout Wisconsin no longer require masks to be worn inside their buildings. While local health leaders still encourage mask wearing and other COVID-19 mitigation strategies, the City of Racine Public Health Department indicated it was supportive of lifting the mandates, citing significantly lowered case rates. Cody Pearce, city epidemiologist, said Tuesday: We saw the highest number of cases and our highest case rate two months ago in January, back on the 9th." At that time, the case rate was 1800 cases per 100,000 individuals, which was a couple of times more than we had seen previously, Pearce said. Now, seven weeks later, the rate has dropped to 58 cases per 100,000 individuals over a 7-day period. Pearce called it "a tremendous drop in cases." Waiting Tuesday night's sole nay vote on removing the mask mandate was from District 13 Alderman Natalia Taft, an associate professor in the University of Wisconsin-Parkside Biological Sciences Department, feared that lifting the mandate could leave "the most vulnerable" more exposed to the coronavirus, especially since there are no vaccines available to those under the age of 5. She also noted that local case rates are falling, but could still fall lower. "I'd be comfortable to see a couple more weeks," Taft said. Additionally on Tuesday night, the City Council voted to go back to in-person meetings on April 20. Mayor Cory Mason noted that schools, churches, businesses and other establishments can require masks inside their buildings. "I'm hoping that many parents will decide to continue with the masks," Public Health Administrator Dottie-Kay Bowersox said. Home testing Alderman Jason Meekma asked how much of the drop in cases could be attributed to people just staying at home and not seeking medical care. Bowersox said some drop in the case rate could be attributed to the new home testing kits. However, she continued, hospital rates have also dropped dramatically. Pearce explained there are three indicators that determine community levels: The case rate. Hospital admissions of new COVID patients over a seven-day period. Percentage of hospital beds occupied by COVID patients over a seven-day period. Currently, the City of Racine rate of hospital admissions of new COVID cases is 16 per 100,000 over a 7-day period and the percentage of beds occupied by COVID cases over a seven day period is a little more than 2%. Utilizing guidance from the federal Centers for Disease Control and Prevention, those three factors put the city in the yellow, or moderate, zone for COVID. Pearce estimated the city had been in the yellow zone for a couple of weeks. Bowersox remembered the previous overcrowding of hospitals during other surges and said: Were not seeing that right now." The CDC guidelines for combating community spread remain in place: good hand-washing practices, and sneezing/coughing etiquette that includes covering the mouth. Further, those who are immunocompromised should consult with their doctor before mingling with others indoors without a mask. Concerned about COVID-19? Sign up now to get the most recent coronavirus headlines and other important local and national news sent to your email inbox daily. Sign up! * I understand and agree that registration on or use of this site constitutes agreement to its user agreement and privacy policy. Dee Holzel Reporter Dee Holzel has been reporting since 1999 and joined the Journal Times in October 2020. Dee graduated with an MA in History from the University of Wisconsin - Milwaukee, specializing in the intersection of history and journalism. Follow Dee Holzel 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. Save Manage followed notifications Close Followed notifications Please log in to use this feature Log In Don't have an account? Sign Up Today Claiming some nursing home residents cast ballots without knowing what they were doing, and repeating complaints about grants from a liberal organization to help administer the 2020 election, the former state Supreme Court justice leading a GOP review of the 2020 election said Tuesday the Legislature ought to take a very hard look at decertifying the states presidential election something experts say is a legal and constitutional impossibility. In a sweeping critique of current election rules, Michael Gableman also called for the elimination and dismantling of the bipartisan Wisconsin Elections Commission after it instructed clerks in 2020 that they did not need to send poll workers into nursing homes to assist with absentee voting after many were turned away due to the COVID-19 pandemic. At best, WEC is hopelessly derelict of duty, Gableman told the Assembly elections committee in a three-hour presentation of his 136-page interim report from his ongoing one-party review. The report reiterates past GOP criticisms of the states presidential election, including that millions of dollars of private grants allocated to cities to help administer the election amid the pandemic constituted bribery a claim courts have rejected. The commissions nonpartisan administrator, Meagan Wolfe, denounced the report, saying it was based on mischaracterizations and that almost every item flagged by the review has already been litigated or addressed. The opinions in the Special Counsels latest interim report were fixated on topics that have been thoroughly addressed, Wolfe said. The integrity of the November 2020 election, and of the WEC, has been shown time and time again through court cases and previous investigations. A recount and court decisions have affirmed that President Joe Biden defeated former President Donald Trump in Wisconsin by almost 21,000 votes. Reviews by the nonpartisan Legislative Audit Bureau and the conservative Wisconsin Institute for Law and Liberty found no evidence of widespread fraud. Multiple court rulings have also found no evidence of irregularities. Further, the results of the 2020 election have been confirmed by county canvassing boards, recounts in Dane and Milwaukee counties, post-election audits by local and state election authorities and a voting equipment audit by the elections commission. Gableman indicated that his review, for which Assembly Speaker Robin Vos, R-Rochester, has allocated $676,000 in taxpayer money, is far from complete. He said he continues to speak with Vos about extending the contract, which expired at the end of December. The eight-month review has been plagued by legal challenges against multiple subpoenas issued by Gableman. The former justices lengthy, meandering and at times openly partisan attacks on elections commission staff and Democratic appointees underscored to critics the one-sided nature of the investigation. This circus has long surpassed being a mere embarrassment for our state, Democratic Gov. Tony Evers said in a statement. From the beginning, it has never been a serious or functioning effort, it has lacked public accountability and transparency, and it has been a colossal waste of taxpayer dollars. Decertification Republican lawmakers and legislative attorneys have repeatedly said overturning the election after it was certified by the state and Congress would be illegal and impossible. And in his report, Gableman makes clear that his purpose is not to challenge the states certification. But an appendix does sketch how that might be done, he said. It is clear that the Wisconsin Legislature could lawfully take steps to decertify electors in any presidential election, for example in light of violations of state election law that did or likely could have affected the outcome of the election, according to the report. UW-Madison political science professor and elections administration expert Kenneth Mayer said the claim is meaningless. Even if the Legislature did pass some sort of decertification now it would have no legal effect, he said. Once the electors have cast their ballots, and they have been counted in Congress, thats the end of it. Assembly Majority Leader Jim Steineke, R-Kaukauna, has repeatedly rejected efforts to overturn the 2020 election. In a world where partisan divides are deep & seemingly anything can be justified as long as it results in retaining power, handing authority to partisan politicians to determine if election fraud exists would be the end of our republic as we know it, Steineke tweeted. Following the hearing, committee chair Rep. Janel Brandtjen, R-Menomonee Falls, and member Rep. David Murphy, R-Greenville, did not rule out the possibility of pursuing decertification, though Murphy said that bar needs to be extremely high. To undo an election would be extremely detrimental to our republic. This is a very destabilizing act, Murphy said. On the other hand, elections that are stolen, thats also destabilizing for the republic so we have to look at this with an open mind from both directions. Gablemans report comes weeks after Rep. Timothy Ramthun, R-Campbellsport, launched a campaign for governor focused largely on claims of widespread fraud and a desire to take back the states 10 electoral college votes already certified for Biden. Other Republicans in the race former Lt. Gov. Rebecca Kleefisch and anti-establishment candidate Kevin Nicholson have also lobbed criticism at the 2020 elections administration, but have not openly called for decertifying the results. Voting deputies Gableman took special aim at the elections commissions decision to exempt clerks from the requirement that they send poll workers, known as special voting deputies, into care facilities in 2020, showing several videos of attorney Erick Kaardal questioning nursing homes residents who evidently voted but seemed to have trouble understanding questions he was asking them about the election. The commissions guidance was issued in March 2020 shortly after the COVID-19 pandemic was declared. The directive remained in place for the November 2020 presidential election and the February 2021 primary. John Sauer, CEO of LeadingAge Wisconsin, which represents nursing homes, said there are instances in the report that, if true, would certainly warrant further investigation. But, he said, even if a few of the examples cited turn out to be factual, we have to remember this was a very unusual circumstance, where the pandemic forced a suspension of the use of special voting deputies. Sauer noted the Gableman report said investigators vetted 24 nursing homes in Dane County, but the county has only 18, according to the state Department of Health Services. The videos Gableman showed appeared to call into question whether the people interviewed, in some cases appearing confused or uninformed, should have been allowed to vote. But under election law, only a judge not an elections clerk or a special voting deputy can reject a persons right to register to vote after finding the person is incompetent. Simply being forgetful or appearing to be confused doesnt mean that person cant formulate their opinion on who they choose to vote for, Sauer said. If theres not a determination, then the assumption is that person is competent and able to cast a ballot. Dane County Clerk Scott McDonell criticized the videos, which he described as using seniors as political props, adding that families concerned a relative may be incompetent should have a judge make that finding. You wouldnt want special voting deputies to be determining that on their own, he said. Private grants Gableman also contends that the private grants by the Mark Zuckerberg-funded Center for Tech and Civic Life, which were distributed around the state but went primarily to the states five largest cities, were aimed at boosting turnout in areas more likely to go for Biden. In taking the money, Gableman said, Milwaukee, Madison, Racine, Kenosha and Green Bay engaged in what he called election bribery, defined in state law as accepting anything of value, such as money, to induce any elector to go to or refrain from going to the polls or vote or refrain from voting. His report also points to provisions in the CTCL and the cities Wisconsin Safe Voting Plan that, among other things, encourage the use of ballot drop boxes and reaching out to historically disenfranchised voters such as racial minorities and the poor, which not-coincidentally, matched that of the Biden-voter profile. A Wisconsin State Journal review of the CTCL grants found that the money was spread around to about 214 municipalities, while the five largest cities received two to four times more money, per capita, than smaller cities. At the same time, no community that asked for money from the group was denied, with communities in 39 of the states 72 counties receiving grants, including ones won by Trump. A state Legislative Audit Bureau survey also found that drop boxes were common across Wisconsin, appearing in 24 to 54 municipalities in each of seven different regions of the state, including in the northeast and northwest where Trump won the vast majority of counties. The 2020 election is over. Heres what happened (and what didnt) The 2020 election was the most secure in American history, according to the Department of Homeland Securitys Cybersecurity and Infrastructu The states anti-election bribery law also specifies other things that also cost money that are aimed at helping people vote but dont constitute bribery, such as giving employees paid time off to vote, and driving people to the polls. The conservative Thomas More Society on Tuesday released its own private review of the 2020 election, which also alleges the CTCL grants constitute bribery and raises questions surrounding special voting deputies at nursing homes. The separate review was conducted on behalf of the Wisconsin Voter Alliance, one of a handful of groups that unsuccessfully sued to overturn the results of the states 2020 presidential election. The organization shares office space in Brookfield with Gableman, according to lease documents, and the groups president, Ron Heuer, as well as Kaardal, are members of Gablemans team. State Journal reporters Chris Rickert, Alexander Shur and David Wahlberg contributed to this report. Editor's note: This story has been updated to reflect a correction. A previous version misstated the reason why Skaalen Retirement Services in Stoughton shredded four absentee ballots in the 2020 election. It was because the residents decided they didnt want to vote. None of the residents at the nursing home at the time had been found by a judge to be incompetent. Love 0 Funny 1 Wow 2 Sad 0 Angry 2 A Chesapeake High School student was arrested Wednesday when Baltimore County police were called to the school in Essex for an ongoing fight, police said. A student resource officer, an armed police officer stationed at a school, called for additional police to come to the high school for a physical altercation between two groups of students, police said. One of the student resource officers was assaulted while breaking up the fight, police said. Advertisement Additional officers arrived at 1 p.m. to the school in the 1800 block of Turkey Point Road and arrested a female student. A Baltimore County police spokesman did not provide details of the girls age or the circumstances of the assault. A Dane County judge on Wednesday ruled that Assembly Speaker Robin Vos and former state Supreme Court Justice Michael Gableman arbitrarily and capriciously denied or delayed access to public records related to the GOP-ordered review of the states 2020 election. Circuit Court Judge Frank Remington ordered Vos and Gableman, who has been allocated $676,000 in taxpayer funds for the one-party review, to release the records, which were requested last year by liberal watchdog group American Oversight. Remington put enforcement on the ruling on hold until after a hearing on the case scheduled for Tuesday. (The Office of Special Counsel), Robin Vos, and the assembly each arbitrarily and capriciously denied or delayed access to records, Remington wrote in the ruling. Remington ruled that Gableman had no basis for withholding the public records, which the former state Supreme Court justice requested to keep secret as they pertained to strategic information to our investigation, according to court documents. In sum, (the Office of Special Counsels) decision at the time of its denial of access was to send a three-sentence, misspelled, summary rejection email, Remington wrote. This is the sort of unconsidered and irrational conduct deserving of punitive damages. Remington ordered the three parties to each pay $1,000 in damages to American Oversight and cover the groups legal fees, with those penalties on hold pending next weeks hearing. Those fees could very well fall on taxpayers and Remingtons ruling is likely to be appealed. Speaker Vos and Michael Gableman have done everything in their power to avoid running a transparent investigation, American Oversight senior adviser Melanie Sloan said in a statement. Their claims of seriousness and non-partisanship have been belied by their actions from the outset. The courts ruling is clear: Wisconsin law gives the public the right to see these records. We look forward to the (Office of Special Counsels) prompt compliance. The case is one of three lawsuits filed by American Oversight against Gableman, Vos, his attorney Steve Fawcett and Assembly Chief Clerk Ted Blazel. The records, which have also been requested by several news outlets including the Wisconsin State Journal, pertain to Gablemans ongoing review of the 2020 election, which focuses on a number of things including election administration, guidance from the Wisconsin Elections Commission and private election grants provided to cities to administer the presidential election during the COVID-19 pandemic. Gableman provided an update on his review Tuesday, including a 136-page interim report on the 2020 election. During a three-hour presentation, Gableman suggested the Legislature consider decertifying the states presidential election results something legal experts and legislative attorneys say is a legal and constitutional impossibility. Gableman also called for the elimination and dismantling of the bipartisan Wisconsin Elections Commission after it instructed clerks in 2020 that they did not need to send poll workers into nursing homes to assist with absentee voting after many were turned away due to the COVID-19 pandemic. Vos, who hired Gableman last year to conduct the review, has opposed both proposals in the past. Gableman said Tuesday he plans to continue carrying out the review, though negotiations with Vos continue over an extended contract. His previous contract with the state expired at the end of December. Love 0 Funny 1 Wow 0 Sad 1 Angry 0 1. Yes. Raising the bar for future developments will boost the citys housing market. 2. Yes. It will help in newer areas, but more needs to be done to change Killeens image. 3. No. The new standards will just slow down homebuilding and drive away developers. 4.No. The ordinance will do little more than drive up the price of new homes in the city. 5. Unsure. Its hard to say what the effect will be until they have been in place for a while. Vote View Results DOVER, Del. A Delaware judge on Tuesday granted a motion by federal prosecutors to dismiss an indictment against a man accused of participating in a street feud involving a drug kingpin that resulted in the kidnapping and slaying of a woman and the shooting of a 6-year-old boy. The ruling came exactly one week after a scheduled hearing at which Maurice Cooper was to enter a guilty plea. But Cooper, who was acting as his own lawyer, changed his mind, and prosecutors filed a motion Monday to dismiss the case. Advertisement Prosecutors noted that Cooper, 41, is already serving a 75-year sentence for state court convictions after being arrested in January 2018 on heroin-trafficking and gun charges. They said he would not be released from prison until he is nearly 100 years old, if not older. Dismissing the indictment would preserve the governments limited resources, prevent the unnecessary expenditure of the courts time and resources, and allow the victims and their families to put this horrid chapter of their lives behind them, they added. Judge Joshua Wolson granted the motion. He said dismissing the charges would have little practical effect and noted that all five of Coopers co-defendants have pleaded guilty. Advertisement Cooper, who was initially indicted in October 2018, was charged with stalking, kidnapping and other charges. He was among several men tied to drug kingpin Dwayne White who had engaged in a yearslong feud with a former affiliate, Markevis Stanford. One of Coopers co-defendants, Ryan Bacon, had described Stanford in rap songs as a rat. As the feud escalated in 2017, Stanford allegedly hired a friend for $10,000 to kill Bacon, but the plot failed, prosecutors said. The defendants later began tracking Stanfords girlfriend, Keyonna Perkins, in an attempt to locate and kill him, the prosecutors said. On June 6, 2017, Dion Oliver seized Perkins at gunpoint and took her cellphone. The defendants later found Stanford walking along a highway and shot at him, but he escaped unharmed. A couple of hours later, Oliver and Michael Pritchett saw Stanford get into a car in New Castle and followed him as he rode to Wilmington. As Stanford got out of the car, Oliver shot at him several times from Pritchetts truck. Stanford was not hit, but a bullet struck 6-year-old Jashown Banner in the head while he was sitting in the back seat of his mothers vehicle. The boy was left permanently disabled. That same day, Perkins was blindfolded and thrown into the trunk of a car, then driven by Bacon and Dontae Sykes to Elkton, where she was killed, according to prosecutors. Breaking News Alerts As it happens Be informed of breaking news as it happens and notified about other don't-miss content with our free news alerts. > Prosecutors say White, the drug kingpin, later tried to bribe Jashowns family, offering them $20,000 to deny that Pritchett was involved in the boys shooting. White was sentenced in state court in 2019 to more than 45 years in prison after being convicted of 21 felonies, including racketeering, drug dealing, conspiracy and money laundering. Sykes pleaded guilty in federal court in January 2020 to conspiracy, stalking, using a firearm in relation to a crime of violence, and kidnapping resulting in death. The latter offense is punishable by death and carries a mandatory life sentence. Advertisement Sykes is scheduled to be sentenced July 11. The other co-defendants face sentencing May 27. Oliver and Pritchett pleaded guilty on Jan. 31 to conspiracy to commit kidnapping, stalking and other charges. The pleas came on the same day their trial was to start. In exchange, prosecutors agreed to drop kidnapping charges and stipulated to prison sentences of 27 1/2 years for Oliver and 25 years for Pritchett. The judge is awaiting presentencing reports before approving the deals. Bacon pleaded guilty in December to the same charges as Oliver and Pritchett did, with a stipulated sentence of 30 years. The other co-defendant, Teres Tinnin, pleaded guilty in November to conspiracy to stalk and stalking. Sykes girlfriend, Jaclyn McCain, faces sentencing May 10 after pleading guilty in 2018 to four counts of lying to FBI agents about providing the vehicle that was used to take Perkins to Maryland, and one count of obstructing the investigation into her death. KEARNEY A Lincoln man is accused of throat-punching a female employee while he was a resident at Kearneys Youth Rehabilitation and Treatment Center. Brendan Wubbels, 18, of Lincoln is charged as an adult in Buffalo County District Court with felony first-degree assault of the staff member on Aug. 22 at YRTC. He is accused of punching the staffer after he was involved in a fight with another YRTC teen. Wubbels is scheduled to appear in court in April. Court records outline the alleged charges: Around 7:15 p.m. on Aug. 22, Wubbels and another teen got into a fight in a common area at YRTC. Several staff members intervened, and the female YRTC employee tried to hold Wubbels back when she was punched in the left side of her neck. Neither of the other two staff members saw Wubbels hit the woman. The woman clenched her throat, fell to the floor unconscious, and started seizing. Records show the woman gained consciousness and later walked to an ambulance, although she passed out again in the YRTC parking lot. At the hospital the woman spoke to an investigator in a whisper. She was later discharged with a cervical muscle strain. Wubbels was 17 years old at the time of the incident, but turned 18 in November. Three days after his birthday, records show his public defender, Brandon Dugan of Kearney filed a motion asking the case be sent to juvenile court for prosecution because Wubbels was a minor at the time of the alleged offense. In December, Judge Ryan Carson ruled the case would remain in district court because Wubbels nearly had exhausted the juvenile court system and its services. Records show Wubbels was committed to YRTC for one year in December 2020 for third-degree assault. Wubbels has received several major violations for prior assaults on other youths and staff members at YRTC. There is also a pattern of violence and physical assaults in other placements before YRTC, records show. Previous YRTC records indicate Wubbels was cited for major violations approximately eight times, excluding the Aug. 22 incident. Many of those events involved serious threats and acts of physical aggression toward other youths and staff members. Records say one incident happened two weeks after Wubbels arrived on the YRTC campus. Wubbels allegedly punched another youth in the face and placed him in a choke hold until the youth became unresponsive. When staff tried to intervene, Wubbels refused to let go of the youth, and allegedly threatened to kill the teen. A YRTC therapist also testified before the Aug. 22 incident, Wubbels had shown progress in his therapy, actively participated in therapy, learned coping skills, demonstrated fewer assaultive-type behaviors and become a role model. Other witnesses testified Wubbels could succeed if transferred back to YRTC, but many services offered at the facility would expire when he turned 18. Before arriving at YRTC records indicate Wubbels received several services in the juvenile court system, including outpatient services, individual therapy, psychiatric services, foster home placements and other interventions. Wubbels remains at the Buffalo County Jail on a $40,000 bond. @HubChic Nebraskans, please think twice about which candidates deserve your support. In particular, we are referring to the gubernatorial candidates who say in their TV commercials that they are men of faith yet seem to have forgotten that all of us are Gods children. As part of Gods creation, we are deserving of respect and inclusion. Instead, certain campaign ads pick out groups to be disrespected, apparently because the candidates cynically believe they will attract voters by singling out select groups of Nebraskans for exclusion. We are talking about immigrants, the LGBTQ community, and everyone those candidates claim is liberal. That would include university leaders and faculty, journalists, medical experts and our nations Democratic president, Joe Biden. If given the opportunity to ask God about diversity, we wager that God would tell us he is totally in support of it, considering that he has created so many different kinds of people. Perhaps we come in so many shapes, sizes and colors because God is drawn to diversity. Or perhaps its a test of our ability to accept and include those who may outwardly appear different from us, but deep inside were pretty much the same. Heres another theory about God and diversity. Could it be that humanitys many differences actually could make us stronger? If that is true, then candidates who reject diversity and inclusion also are rejecting the potential for humans to be all they can be. We believe if given the opportunity, every one of us can bring something positive and important to the table. Rather than ignoring that concept, candidates always should be scouting for ways to lift up and accept the potential of all they might someday govern. Leaders who seek to capitalize on hate and fear will not succeed. Only when we accept and make the most of our differences do we move forward as one Nebraska. Unhealthy workplace? There are a number of lessons in state Sen. Mike Groenes exit from the Nebraska Legislature. Last week the Republican lawmaker resigned after a former female staffer discovered the senator from North Platte had photos of her on his computer. Groene said he would quit to spare his family from embarrassment, but then he tried to blame Democrats for the scandal. Groene has only himself to blame. Had he been more mature he might not have added to his familys humiliation. How he and his family handle the situation is a private matter; however, the circumstances bring up concerns about workplace issues and need to be investigated. Were other lawmakers or legislative staffers aware that Groene had the photos? QUESTION: When did people stop believing the Earth was flat? ANSWER: The short answer: about 600 B.C. Early people had no idea they were living on a sphere, a huge ball, if you will. They thought they walked around on a large flat disk. They were not stupid. Most scientists believe the human brain has not changed much over the past 50,000 years. It made sense to them that the Earth is flat. Even today, most activities that we engage in can be performed without a hitch by assuming the Earth is flat. We use a tool for building and carpentry call a level! Many people think that Christopher Columbus proved the Earth was round by sailing to the Caribbean area in 1492. But long before that, humans knew the Earth was round as soon as a single civilization spread across a large north-south distance and could exchange information. Those were the Greeks. The Greeks saw the positions of the stars change as they traveled north or south. The farther south they went, the higher the southern stars would rise each night. That only made sense if the surface of the Earth curved away in every direction, as if it were a sphere. It also explained why the shadow of the Earth on the moon during a lunar eclipse appeared to be round. Additional proof came when folks noticed ships sailing away from ports. The last piece of the ship they saw was the top of the mast. Irrefutable evidence came when Portuguese explorer Ferdinand Magellan (1480-1521) finished circumnavigating the Earth in 1521, under the flag of Spain. Magellan, with five ships and 270 sailors, set out in August 1519. Magellan was killed in the Philippines, three of his ships were lost, and only two ships and 19 of the original 270 complement made it back to Spain. Thats a rough trip. The first photo of the Earth from space was taken in 1959 by NASAs Explorer VI satellite. It was blurry, but you could tell the Earth was round. The most famous single photo of the whole Earth was the Blue Marble taken by the Apollo 17 crew in 1972 with a Hasselblad point and shoot camera, 28,000 miles from Earth. The crew of Eugene Cernan, Ronald Evans and Harrison Schmitt were on their way to the moon. If you have difficulty believing the Earth is round, you may join the Flat Earth Society. Their core tenets are: Gravity doesnt exit. The Earth does not rotate or revolve. NASA is the biggest hoax of all time. If the Earth was round, airplanes would fly out of the atmosphere. The Earth is not a planet. Annual membership is $10. Larry Scheckel is a retired Tomah High School physics teacher. Love 0 Funny 0 Wow 0 Sad 0 Angry 0 Be the first to know Get local news delivered to your inbox! Sign up! * I understand and agree that registration on or use of this site constitutes agreement to its user agreement and privacy policy. MADISON Wisconsin residents have an opportunity to share their stories about their local waters and shape a public conversation about their vision for Wisconsins Water Future. Beyond the Headlines Wisconsins Water Future, a program of Wisconsin Humanities, is partnering with local media to explore what information residents want about their local waters, the stories they think need to be told, their vision for the future of those waters, and what they think we need to do to get there. The story-sharing project aims to excerpt and publish some of the stories on its websites; concerns raised by those stories will help shape programming later this spring. Sharing stories whether they are of a lazy afternoon paddle and the lunker bass that got away, or of the horror of a flash flood helps connect us to think more collectively about Wisconsin waters. Thats something Monique Hassman, watershed planner for Vernon County Land and Water Conservation Department and Valley Stewardship network, saw in her research collecting post-Katrina flood stories. Those narratives changed me significantly in ways that I didnt anticipate were possible. Stories of the power of water and what it can wash away, but also how it brings folks together and what can come from that can be empowering. We need that sense of empowerment, says UW-Madison Associate Professor Caroline Gottschalk Druschke. There is a sort of accountability, a responsibility, to really get connected with the waterways we love to make sure that theyre protected into the future. Wisconsinites are invited to complete a web form here: https://wisconsinhumanities.org/beyond-the-headlines/ to share their story and/or a photograph. For more information about Beyond the Headlines: https://beyondtheheadlineswisconsin.org/ Beyond the Headlines is funded in part by the Andrew W. Mellon Foundations Democracy and the Informed Citizen initiative, and the National Endowment for the Humanities. Love 0 Funny 0 Wow 0 Sad 0 Angry 0 In his commentary, Bret Stephens starts by asking all the right questions and concludes with a profoundly wrong one, Who but us? (Putins greatest strength is self-belief, which America has lost, Feb. 28). He wants to entangle the U.S. in yet another war when, in reality, there has been no just or fruitful U.S. war since 1945. For his macho vision of national power, he is willing to risk heightened nuclear tension that could lead to the worst disaster since humans first walked this Earth. We are in the midst of the most dangerous confrontation of nuclear powers since the crisis of 1962 over missiles in Cuba. President John F. Kennedy resolved the crisis by blockading Cuba to try to force the Soviet Union to remove their missiles and by agreeing to remove U.S. nuclear missiles from Turkey. Advertisement Today, we need our leaders to show restraint. President Joe Biden must keep his pledge not to send U.S. soldiers to Ukraine. U.S. Sens. Ben Cardin and Chris Van Hollen and our representatives in Congress must resist the calls of the warmongers and insist on continued diplomatic efforts to demilitarize Eastern Europe. Charlie Cooper, Baltimore Advertisement Add your voice: Respond to this piece or other Sun content by submitting your own letter. Tickets are now available for the La Crosse-Bantry Friendship Association (LBFA)s annual Coulee Hoolie Ceili Fundraiser, with proceeds to support nonprofits in La Crosse and sister city Bantry. Since 2016, the Coulee Hoolie Ceili has combined a celebration with dancing, storytelling and food with a charitable mission. This years event will be held from 6 to 10 p.m. Saturday, March 26, at the American Legion Hall, 711 S. Sixth St. Tickets are $20 per family or $10 per adult, and $8 for seniors, students, and military members. Music will be provided by the Coulee Hooligans, with caller Tim Jenkins leading group dances. Terry Visger will share Irish stories, and there will be a silent auction. Funds will support La Crosse Citizen Advocacy and CoAction of Bantry, organizations which offer support services for individuals with intellectual disabilities or autism. Lynn Marie West, past president of LBFA and 2022 Hoolie chairperson, says it is kind of unique that a nonprofit such as LBFA raises dollars for other nonprofits, but our goal is to keep the wonderful connection we have with our sister city, Bantry, a beautiful town in County Cork on the north Atlantic Coast, alive. Tickets can be purchased in advance at Festival Foods locations in La Crosse or at the door. Emily Pyrek can be reached at emily.pyrek@lee.net. Love 0 Funny 0 Wow 0 Sad 0 Angry 0 Get local news delivered to your inbox! Subscribe to our Daily Headlines newsletter. Sign up! * I understand and agree that registration on or use of this site constitutes agreement to its user agreement and privacy policy. A 22-year-old Topeka, Kansas, man accused of bringing a record amount of methamphetamine into La Crosse County Feb. 19 will stand trial. Jimmy Castillo faces a single felony count of possession of methamphetamine with intent to deliver. La Crosse County Circuit Court Judge Scott Horne found probable cause to move forward with the case during a Tuesday preliminary hearing. Castillo pleaded not guilty and is being held in the La Crosse County Jail on a $100,000 cash bond, which was reduced from $250,000 during a hearing Monday. La Crosse Police Department investigator James Mancuso told the court that police received a confidential and reliable tip that a Hispanic man named Jimmy operating a vehicle with Kansas license plates would be bringing a substantial amount of methamphetamine to the Holiday Inn & Suites in Onalaska. Mancuso testified police staked out the hotel for nearly six hours before Castillo entered the hotel with only a backpack. He returned to his vehicle a short time later. Mancuso said Castillo tensed up and tried to run away when police announced themselves. Mancuso said police summoned a K9 to sniff for the presence of drugs and recovered 15 pounds of methamphetamine divided among seven plastic bags. He testified that Castillo told police he was supposed to collect $63,000 in exchange for the drugs, which included $3,000 for Castillos courier role. Castillo faces up to 40 years in prison and a $100,000 fine if convicted of the charge. Love 0 Funny 0 Wow 0 Sad 0 Angry 0 Sign up for our Crime & Courts newsletter Get the latest in local public safety news with this weekly email. Sign up! * I understand and agree that registration on or use of this site constitutes agreement to its user agreement and privacy policy. KHARKIV, Ukraine A Ukrainian official says the advance of Russian troops in Kharkiv has been stopped, but that Russians have responded by shelling the city with heavy rocket launchers and air attacks. Kharkiv today is the Stalingrad of the 21st century, said Oleksiy Arestovich, an adviser to Ukraine President Volodymyr Zelenskyy. Oleg Sinehubov, head of the Kharkiv regional administration, said that over the past 24 hours 21 people were killed and at least 112 were injured by Russians. Explosions on Wednesday thundered on Constitution Square, near the buildings of the City Council and the Palace of Labor. A missile attack also destroyed the building of the regional police department in Kharkiv and the university building, which is located across the street. Arestovich said that several Russian planes were shot down over Kharkiv. The Russians used Iskander missile systems to bombard Ukrainian cities, including Kyiv, Zhytomyr, Kharkiv and Chernihiv. Arestovich said Iskander missile systems can deviate from their target, making them a danger to civilian objects." Read more live updates on the Russia-Ukraine crisis here: Love 0 Funny 0 Wow 0 Sad 0 Angry 0 Claiming some nursing home residents cast ballots without knowing what they were doing, and repeating complaints about grants from a liberal organization to help administer the 2020 election, the former state Supreme Court justice leading a GOP review of the 2020 election said Tuesday the Legislature ought to take a very hard look at decertifying the states presidential election something experts say is a legal and constitutional impossibility. In a sweeping critique of current election rules, Michael Gableman also called for the elimination and dismantling of the bipartisan Wisconsin Elections Commission after it instructed clerks in 2020 that they did not need to send poll workers into nursing homes to assist with absentee voting after many were turned away due to the COVID-19 pandemic. At best, WEC is hopelessly derelict of duty, Gableman told the Assembly elections committee in a three-hour presentation of his 136-page interim report from his ongoing one-party review. The report reiterates past GOP criticisms of the states presidential election, including that millions of dollars of private grants allocated to cities to help administer the election amid the pandemic constituted bribery a claim courts have rejected. The commissions nonpartisan administrator, Meagan Wolfe, denounced the report, saying it was based on mischaracterizations and that almost every item flagged by the review has already been litigated or addressed. The opinions in the Special Counsels latest interim report were fixated on topics that have been thoroughly addressed, Wolfe said. The integrity of the November 2020 election, and of the WEC, has been shown time and time again through court cases and previous investigations. A recount and court decisions have affirmed that President Joe Biden defeated former President Donald Trump in Wisconsin by almost 21,000 votes. Reviews by the nonpartisan Legislative Audit Bureau and the conservative Wisconsin Institute for Law and Liberty found no evidence of widespread fraud. Multiple court rulings have also found no evidence of irregularities. Further, the results of the 2020 election have been confirmed by county canvassing boards, recounts in Dane and Milwaukee counties, post-election audits by local and state election authorities and a voting equipment audit by the elections commission. Gableman indicated that his review, for which Assembly Speaker Robin Vos, R-Rochester, has allocated $676,000 in taxpayer money, is far from complete. He said he continues to speak with Vos about extending the contract, which expired at the end of December. The eight-month review has been plagued by legal challenges against multiple subpoenas issued by Gableman. The former justices lengthy, meandering and at times openly partisan attacks on elections commission staff and Democratic appointees underscored to critics the one-sided nature of the investigation. This circus has long surpassed being a mere embarrassment for our state, Democratic Gov. Tony Evers said in a statement. From the beginning, it has never been a serious or functioning effort, it has lacked public accountability and transparency, and it has been a colossal waste of taxpayer dollars. Decertification Republican lawmakers and legislative attorneys have repeatedly said overturning the election after it was certified by the state and Congress would be illegal and impossible. And in his report, Gableman makes clear that his purpose is not to challenge the states certification. But an appendix does sketch how that might be done, he said. It is clear that the Wisconsin Legislature could lawfully take steps to decertify electors in any presidential election, for example in light of violations of state election law that did or likely could have affected the outcome of the election, according to the report. UW-Madison political science professor and elections administration expert Kenneth Mayer said the claim is meaningless. Even if the Legislature did pass some sort of decertification now it would have no legal effect, he said. Once the electors have cast their ballots, and they have been counted in Congress, thats the end of it. Assembly Majority Leader Jim Steineke, R-Kaukauna, has repeatedly rejected efforts to overturn the 2020 election. In a world where partisan divides are deep & seemingly anything can be justified as long as it results in retaining power, handing authority to partisan politicians to determine if election fraud exists would be the end of our republic as we know it, Steineke tweeted. Following the hearing, committee chair Rep. Janel Brandtjen, R-Menomonee Falls, and member Rep. David Murphy, R-Greenville, did not rule out the possibility of pursuing decertification, though Murphy said that bar needs to be extremely high. To undo an election would be extremely detrimental to our republic. This is a very destabilizing act, Murphy said. On the other hand, elections that are stolen, thats also destabilizing for the republic so we have to look at this with an open mind from both directions. Gablemans report comes weeks after Rep. Timothy Ramthun, R-Campbellsport, launched a campaign for governor focused largely on claims of widespread fraud and a desire to take back the states 10 electoral college votes already certified for Biden. Other Republicans in the race former Lt. Gov. Rebecca Kleefisch and anti-establishment candidate Kevin Nicholson have also lobbed criticism at the 2020 elections administration, but have not openly called for decertifying the results. Voting deputies Gableman took special aim at the elections commissions decision to exempt clerks from the requirement that they send poll workers, known as special voting deputies, into care facilities in 2020, showing several videos of attorney Erick Kaardal questioning nursing homes residents who evidently voted but seemed to have trouble understanding questions he was asking them about the election. The commissions guidance was issued in March 2020 shortly after the COVID-19 pandemic was declared. The directive remained in place for the November 2020 presidential election and the February 2021 primary. John Sauer, CEO of LeadingAge Wisconsin, which represents nursing homes, said there are instances in the report that, if true, would certainly warrant further investigation. But, he said, even if a few of the examples cited turn out to be factual, we have to remember this was a very unusual circumstance, where the pandemic forced a suspension of the use of special voting deputies. Sauer noted the Gableman report said investigators vetted 24 nursing homes in Dane County, but the county has only 18, according to the state Department of Health Services. The videos Gableman showed appeared to call into question whether the people interviewed, in some cases appearing confused or uninformed, should have been allowed to vote. But under election law, only a judge not an elections clerk or a special voting deputy can reject a persons right to register to vote after finding the person is incompetent. Simply being forgetful or appearing to be confused doesnt mean that person cant formulate their opinion on who they choose to vote for, Sauer said. If theres not a determination, then the assumption is that person is competent and able to cast a ballot. Dane County Clerk Scott McDonell criticized the videos, which he described as using seniors as political props, adding that families concerned a relative may be incompetent should have a judge make that finding. You wouldnt want special voting deputies to be determining that on their own, he said. Private grants Gableman also contends that the private grants by the Mark Zuckerberg-funded Center for Tech and Civic Life, which were distributed around the state but went primarily to the states five largest cities, were aimed at boosting turnout in areas more likely to go for Biden. In taking the money, Gableman said, Milwaukee, Madison, Racine, Kenosha and Green Bay engaged in what he called election bribery, defined in state law as accepting anything of value, such as money, to induce any elector to go to or refrain from going to the polls or vote or refrain from voting. His report also points to provisions in the CTCL and the cities Wisconsin Safe Voting Plan that, among other things, encourage the use of ballot drop boxes and reaching out to historically disenfranchised voters such as racial minorities and the poor, which not-coincidentally, matched that of the Biden-voter profile. A Wisconsin State Journal review of the CTCL grants found that the money was spread around to about 214 municipalities, while the five largest cities received two to four times more money, per capita, than smaller cities. At the same time, no community that asked for money from the group was denied, with communities in 39 of the states 72 counties receiving grants, including ones won by Trump. A state Legislative Audit Bureau survey also found that drop boxes were common across Wisconsin, appearing in 24 to 54 municipalities in each of seven different regions of the state, including in the northeast and northwest where Trump won the vast majority of counties. The 2020 election is over. Heres what happened (and what didnt) The 2020 election was the most secure in American history, according to the Department of Homeland Securitys Cybersecurity and Infrastructu The states anti-election bribery law also specifies other things that also cost money that are aimed at helping people vote but dont constitute bribery, such as giving employees paid time off to vote, and driving people to the polls. The conservative Thomas More Society on Tuesday released its own private review of the 2020 election, which also alleges the CTCL grants constitute bribery and raises questions surrounding special voting deputies at nursing homes. The separate review was conducted on behalf of the Wisconsin Voter Alliance, one of a handful of groups that unsuccessfully sued to overturn the results of the states 2020 presidential election. The organization shares office space in Brookfield with Gableman, according to lease documents, and the groups president, Ron Heuer, as well as Kaardal, are members of Gablemans team. State Journal reporters Chris Rickert, Alexander Shur and David Wahlberg contributed to this report. Editor's note: This story has been updated to reflect a correction. A previous version misstated the reason why Skaalen Retirement Services in Stoughton shredded four absentee ballots in the 2020 election. It was because the residents decided they didnt want to vote. None of the residents at the nursing home at the time had been found by a judge to be incompetent. Love 0 Funny 0 Wow 0 Sad 0 Angry 2 A Dane County judge on Wednesday ruled that Assembly Speaker Robin Vos and former state Supreme Court Justice Michael Gableman arbitrarily and capriciously denied or delayed access to public records related to the GOP-ordered review of the states 2020 election. Circuit Court Judge Frank Remington ordered Vos and Gableman, who has been allocated $676,000 in taxpayer funds for the one-party review, to release the records, which were requested last year by liberal watchdog group American Oversight. Remington put enforcement on the ruling on hold until after a hearing on the case scheduled for Tuesday. (The Office of Special Counsel), Robin Vos, and the assembly each arbitrarily and capriciously denied or delayed access to records, Remington wrote in the ruling. Remington ruled that Gableman had no basis for withholding the public records, which the former state Supreme Court justice requested to keep secret as they pertained to strategic information to our investigation, according to court documents. In sum, (the Office of Special Counsels) decision at the time of its denial of access was to send a three-sentence, misspelled, summary rejection email, Remington wrote. This is the sort of unconsidered and irrational conduct deserving of punitive damages. Remington ordered the three parties to each pay $1,000 in damages to American Oversight and cover the groups legal fees, with those penalties on hold pending next weeks hearing. Those fees could very well fall on taxpayers and Remingtons ruling is likely to be appealed. Speaker Vos and Michael Gableman have done everything in their power to avoid running a transparent investigation, American Oversight senior adviser Melanie Sloan said in a statement. Their claims of seriousness and non-partisanship have been belied by their actions from the outset. The courts ruling is clear: Wisconsin law gives the public the right to see these records. We look forward to the (Office of Special Counsels) prompt compliance. The case is one of three lawsuits filed by American Oversight against Gableman, Vos, his attorney Steve Fawcett and Assembly Chief Clerk Ted Blazel. The records, which have also been requested by several news outlets including the Wisconsin State Journal, pertain to Gablemans ongoing review of the 2020 election, which focuses on a number of things including election administration, guidance from the Wisconsin Elections Commission and private election grants provided to cities to administer the presidential election during the COVID-19 pandemic. Gableman provided an update on his review Tuesday, including a 136-page interim report on the 2020 election. During a three-hour presentation, Gableman suggested the Legislature consider decertifying the states presidential election results something legal experts and legislative attorneys say is a legal and constitutional impossibility. Gableman also called for the elimination and dismantling of the bipartisan Wisconsin Elections Commission after it instructed clerks in 2020 that they did not need to send poll workers into nursing homes to assist with absentee voting after many were turned away due to the COVID-19 pandemic. Vos, who hired Gableman last year to conduct the review, has opposed both proposals in the past. Gableman said Tuesday he plans to continue carrying out the review, though negotiations with Vos continue over an extended contract. His previous contract with the state expired at the end of December. Love 0 Funny 0 Wow 0 Sad 0 Angry 0 Utilities behind some of Wisconsins largest solar generators say nothing in the state constitution prohibits the long-term leases that opponents claim are illegal. Opponents of a proposed 2,400-acre solar-plus-storage project in southeastern Dane County last month asked regulators to toss out the permit application on the grounds that the 25-year leases violate language in the constitution that appears to limit agricultural leases to 15 years. They say projects that depend on legally void leases arent in the best interest of ratepayers and should be stopped. Similar petitions were filed asking the Public Service Commission to revoke permits for two other large-scale projects, including one already operating in Iowa County. Attorneys for the WEC Energy Group and Madison Gas and Electric, which co-own the Iowa County solar farm and are seeking to buy the Dane County project for $649 million, say opponents misunderstand the constitution and that their outlandish interpretation would upend nearly 200 years of real estate law and invalidate leases for things like cell towers, billboards and mines. In responses filed Tuesday, the utilities asked the PSC to deny the petitions, which they called frivolous and unfortunate, and chided opponents for basing their reading on a one-page primer on agricultural lease law prepared by a former UW-Extension professor. The language in question comes from Article 1 of the Constitution, which states: All lands within the state are declared to be allodial, and feudal tenures are prohibited. Leases and grants of agricultural land for a longer term than fifteen years in which rent or service of any kind shall be reserved, and all fines and like restraints upon alienation reserved in any grant of land, hereafter made, are declared to be void. Utilities say opponents misconstrued the 174-year-old provision, which exists primarily to differentiate the American system of land ownership from that of medieval Europe, where people who farmed land were rarely allowed to own it and instead were given access in exchange for pledges of loyalty and service. That provision is intended to make land more easily transferable, not less, the utilities argue. Furthermore, they say it applies only to land leased for agricultural use. And while most of the land under lease is currently farmland, thats not how the utilities plan to use it. Citing tax code and a Supreme Court ruling, they argue that agricultural use basically means growing crops. There can be no dispute that the land dedicated to solar panels, batteries and related equipment will not be used to grow crops. Utilities say adopting the opponents interpretation would invalidate any long-term lease of any land that was agricultural at some time in the past, including an untold number of cell tower, wind turbine, billboard and mineral extraction leases. Attorneys for Invenergy, the developer of the Koshkonong Solar Energy Center west of Cambridge, accused opponents of grasping at straws and say they are trying to inhibit the free transfer of property rights the constitution aimed at preserving. They say the provision was intended to protect tenants from oppressive landlords, not to prevent land owners from voluntarily leasing out their land. The PSC has not indicated if it will consider the petitions, which are automatically denied after 30 days if no action is taken. In November the commission rejected a motion to dismiss the Koshkonong permit application on the grounds that the utilities and Invenergy were exploiting a legal loophole to avoid regulatory scrutiny. The project has sparked fierce opposition from neighbors and the nearby village of Cambridge, which wants to develop some of the farmland for future housing. Love 0 Funny 0 Wow 0 Sad 0 Angry 0 Be the first to know Get local news delivered to your inbox! Sign up! * I understand and agree that registration on or use of this site constitutes agreement to its user agreement and privacy policy. Theres been a lot of recent developments in the conflict between Ukraine and Russia. Ive noticed the popular narrative is that Russia is solely responsible for this, that they are the bad guy, and that this came out of nowhere. However, this issue is far more nuanced than this common liberal narrative. First and foremost, none of the working class in either Ukraine nor Russia have asked for this war. Its purpose is merely to push bourgeois interests at the expense of the working class, the proletariat. There are several protests happening within Russia over the initiation of this conflict. Second of all, neither side in this conflict are the good guys. Russia is a capitalist oligarchy using imperialism to further the interests of its ruling class and Ukraine has been keeping warm relations with literal neo-Nazis. In fact, theyve gone so far as to make a fascist paramilitary militia, the Azov Battalion, part of their national guard! Lastly, the actions of NATO and the USA have also been a partial cause in this event. For years now, the US ruling class has been using Ukraine as a weapons dump, making billions off a then false threat of Russian invasion, all while the US keeps surrounding Russia with American allies and other shows of Americas own imperialism, including stationing missiles. Why would one not expect them to lash out, when theyve been pushed back against a wall, and all their neighbors are being heavily armed, by us? Chris Miller La Crosse Love 1 Funny 2 Wow 0 Sad 0 Angry 0 Fulton Financial announced Wednesday an agreement to absorb Philadelphia-based Prudential Bank through stock and cash considerations, part of an effort to make inroads with commercial and consumer-level customers in Pennsylvanias largest metro area. Under the merger agreement, current Prudential shareholders will see their holdings converted into Fulton stock and will also receive $3.65 for each Prudential share owned, according to a joint press release from the two companies. Fulton shares closed at $17.24 on Tuesday. Prudentials total stock-market value as of Tuesday was $112 million. The deal is set to close in the third quarter of this year, according to a press release. I have shared with investors Fultons desire to be more active in mergers and acquisitions of companies that are a good fit for us strategically, culturally and geographically, said E. Philip Wenger, Fultons president and CEO in a press release. We look forward to working with the Prudential team to bring our mutual community-oriented style of banking, our comprehensive range of products and services, and our talented teams together to help even more customers and communities in Philadelphia achieve financial success. Lancaster-based Fulton Financial is the parent company of Fulton Bank, the countys largest bank. Fulton Bank, which holds assets of about $26 billion, operates 200 branches across the mid-Atlantic, with large presences in south-central Pennsylvania and southern New Jersey. The addition of Prudential's eight branch locations in Philadelphia gives Fulton 11 there, a much bigger presence in a major city in the region. Federal data from June 2021 showed Fulton held $93 million in Philadelphia in total deposits, compared to Prudentials $652 million, according to the data. Prudentials savings bank operation, which holds assets of about $1.1 billion, also has locations in Montgomery and Delaware counties. Founded in 1886, Prudential reported at the end of last year $594 million in loans and $721 million in money deposits. Its loans are mostly tied up in real estate development, both residential and commercial projects, according to a business profile presented by Fulton. Sam Lombardo said the major renovation he recently oversaw of Lombardos restaurant was meant to create a lasting legacy for his extended family. Now, just over a year after finishing work on the Italian restaurant begun by his uncles in 1946, the businessman and philanthropist has unveiled plans for a five-story apartment building next door. The new project would also expand the Lancaster city restaurant and add an Italian deli, creating an eye-catching gateway project near a major city intersection. The plans, which were reviewed at a recent city historical commission meeting, call for the construction of a 27,000-square-foot, five-story apartment building at Harrisburg Avenue and Water Street, next to Rotary Park. The new apartment building would replace the former 211 W. James St. home of Penn State Electric Supply Co., which moved to Mountville. A row house at 221 W. James St. would be torn down. The project, which is situated near where Harrisburg Avenue angles toward North Prince Street, also calls for new preparation and storage areas to be added to the back of Lombardos restaurant. That expansion would connect to three row houses at 217-221 W. James Street where a new Italian deli would have a home on the first floor. An outdoor dining courtyard described as the jewel of this development would be created along West James Street between the deli and the new apartment building. Lombardo is the founder of Benecon Group, a Lititz-based insurance agency, benefits administrator and consulting firm. Through a spokesperson, he declined to comment. During their preliminary review at a Feb. 22 meeting, members of the citys historical commission were generally supportive of the proposal, which they will further scrutinize when a formal application is made. Plans will also be reviewed by the citys zoning hearing board, traffic commission, shade tree commission and planning commission. The propertys zoning allows for a residential and commercial building, but city zoners would need to approve a height variance for a building of this size. The city planning commission will have the final say. Another local investment The project next to his namesake restaurant represents a different kind of local investment for a Lombardo, who has become a major benefactor of education and health organizations. Along with his wife, Dena, Lombardo has given $10 million to Millersville University, including $5 million for the renovation of a welcome center now called Lombardo Hall. The couple also gave $750,000 to the Lancaster Cleft Palate Clinic for the renovation of its Lancaster city location, now called the Sam and Dena Lombardo Health Clinic. To revitalize the restaurant where he recalled spending time as a child, Lombardo estimated he spent $2 million. Following the November 2020 debut of the sleek, new eatery Lombardo began buying nearby properties through his Immobili Commercial LLC. In all, Lombardo spent $1.64 million on real estate, which is in addition to the $750,000 he paid in April 2021 for the restaurant property which he had initially leased. The recent real estate purchases include $750,000 Immobili Commercial paid in December 2020 for the Penn State Electric Supply Co. building, which is the largest of the nine tracts in the project area bounded by Harrisburg Avenue, Water Street and West James Street. The Penn State Electric Supply Co. building was constructed in 1978 as a 7-Eleven and then became a Turkey Hill convenience store in 1985. Penn State Electric Supply Co. expanded it before moving in in 2000. Lombardo told BizNewsPA that the total investment in the new project would be between $12 million and $15 million, adding that he planned to live in one of the two 2,450-square-foot penthouse apartments himself. Construction could start next year and wrap up in the spring of 2024, BizNewsPA reported. Baltimore City Council President Nick Mosby won approval Wednesday to hire a consultant to assist the City Council with Baltimores redistricting process as the city awaits the mayors own redistricting proposal. The City Council will spend $33,750 to retain the Virginia-based company CensusChannel to assist with compiling the citys demographic information and producing several maps based on the data, according to the contract. Advertisement While many communities across Maryland already are considering redistricting plans following the nations 2020 census, Baltimores charter does not require the mayor to submit a plan until 2024, when the citys next municipal election is held. James Bentley, spokesman for Mayor Brandon Scott, said the mayor will submit his plan by the statutorily required deadline. Bentley declined to answer further questions on the contract. Advertisement Baltimores charter says the mayor is required to submit a redistricting plan to the City Council following each census by the first day of February in the next municipal election year. The council then can adopt or amend the mayors plan, or choose to adopt another plan, the charter says. If no plan has been adopted by the council within 60 days of the mayors plan presentation, the mayors plan takes effect, according to the charter. Additionally, the charter requires officials to consider equality of population, contiguous territory, compactness, natural boundaries, existing council district lines and standards set by the U.S. Supreme Court when making redistricting decisions. Since 2002, Baltimore has had 14 council districts. The council president, the boards 15th member, is elected citywide. Maryland Policy & Politics Weekdays Keep up to date with Maryland politics, elections and important decisions made by federal, state and local government officials. > The contract with CensusChannel was approved Wednesday by the citys Board of Estimates, which includes Scott and Mosby as well as Jim Shea, the citys solicitor, Jason Mitchell, head of the Department of Public Works, and Comptroller Bill Henry. Mosby abstained from the vote, and the measure was not discussed by the board. According to the boards agenda, CensusChannel will assist in evaluating the citys redistricting plan with independent, expert data. The City Council and City Council President desire to begin this process as expeditiously as possible, the agenda states. Mosbys spokeswoman did not respond to questions about the scope of the work CensusChannel is expected to perform on the City Councils behalf. Advertisement An appendix attached to the citys contract with the company states that CensusChannel will compile information about the citys current boundaries as well as demographic data. That information will be used to analyze changes in district populations and draw several versions of corresponding maps, the appendix states. The company will identify communities of interest and work with a local designated entity to gather suggestions for those communities of interest, according to the contract. Baltimores charter states that no member of the City Council can be required to vacate their office due to a change in boundary lines made during a members term, so long as the member remains a Baltimore resident. In elections following the adoption of a new redistricting plan, members of the City Council are required to be residents of their districts since the preceding July. A vendor marketplace opened this week in the village of Lampeter joining a retail bake shop at the newly christened Lampeter Corner, located at Village and Lampeter roads. Lampeter Corner Boutique features products from some two dozen vendors who offer a variety of handmade products for sale, including pottery, candles, clothing, jewelry, functional art pieces and greeting cards. The retail space occupies roughly 1,200 square feet of the first floor of the former Lampeter Cafe at 1702 Lampeter Road. Lampeter Corner Boutique is operated by Betsy Trimble, who said there are plans to expand by June to the second floor of the building, which will nearly double the retail area. The vendor marketplace joins Tempting Treats by Theresa, a retail bakery that has been operating in the building since November. The takeout shop is the first retail bakery for Theresa Taylor, who has been a commercial baker for 30 years. Her shop features cupcakes, cookies, cakes and chocolates as well as muffins and danishes. She also makes custom desserts, including wedding cakes. Lampeter Corner consists of a main building at the corner and an outbuilding that was added during renovations in 2017 when the complex opened as Lampeter Cafe. After being run by two different operators, the cafe closed for good in September 2020. The complex is now operated by Ken and Debbie Helm, owners of Britain Hill Venue & Vineyard south of Quarryville who opened a tasting room last fall at the annex at the complex. Debbie Helm said they considered a variety of options for the main building, saying their experience hosting pop-up makers markets gave them confidence in the concept of a vendor marketplace. Lancaster's First Friday continues in March with a full schedule of things to see and do. Some offerings include exhibit openings, an organ and trumpet concert, a documentary viewing and a poker night, among other events. Here are 18 things to do in Lancaster County this Friday. Baldwin's Gallery Baldwin's Gallery in Altana will host its first First Friday event of 2022 featuring artists Megan Nelson, Thomas Valentine, Jain Coble, Jenni Buffington, Jazmine Gabriel and Steven Georges. More information: Baldwin's Gallery in Altana (second floor), 26 E. King St., Lancaster | Hours: 5 to 9 p.m. | More info The Candy Factory The Candy Factory will host a poker/game night with food catered from Afro Boricua Cocina. More information: The Candy Factory, 342 N. Queen St., Rear Warehouse D, Lancaster | Hours: 7 to 10 p.m. | Cost: $10 for The Candy Factory social club members, $12 for non-members | More info Curio Gallery & Creative Supply Curio will feature works from the Pennsylvania College of Art & Design's senior fine art and photography majors in a collection called "Headspace." More than 10 artists' works will be on display through March 26. More information: Curio Gallery & Creative Supply, 106 W. Chestnut St., Lancaster | Hours: 9:30 a.m. to 8 p.m. | More info Deerfoot Downtown Deerfoot Vineyards and Winery's tasting room, Deerfoot Downtown, will host works from artist Allison Lacy with an artist's reception Friday night. There will also be a Chardonnay pairing with white chocolate passion fruit truffles. More information: Deerfoot Downtown, 348 N. Queen St., Lancaster | Hours: 6 to 8 p.m. | More info First Reformed Church Organist Larry Hershey will perform "Organic Reflections: Bach's Birthday Bash" in a 30-minute concert experience. Trumpeter Doug Albert will accompany Hershey. More information: First Reformed Church, 40 E. Orange St., Lancaster | Hours: 8 to 8:30 p.m. | More info Franklin & Marshall College Franklin & Marshall College will host a photography exhibit at the Winter Visual Arts Center. The exhibit features an intimate look at barbershops and beauty salons amid the COVID-19 pandemic from photographer Shelby Wormley. Barbershops and beauty salons serve as cornerstones for communication and connectivity in Black and brown communities, Wormley says in a press release. They offer more than just a fresh cut. Our hair care is a culture that is preserved through the craftsmanship of our barbers and stylist. Wormley will be at the exhibit on First Friday for an artist's reception. The exhibit runs through Saturday, March 26. More information: Winter Visual Arts Center, 825 Buchanan Ave., Lancaster | Hours: 6 to 8 p.m. | More info Friendship Heart Gallery The Friendship Heart Gallery will host a preview for its upcoming auction, starting March 17. The Friendship Heart Gallery features works of art from those with intellectual disabilities and autism. More information: Friendship Heart Gallery, 118 N. Water St., Suite 101, Lancaster | Hours: 5 to 8:30 p.m. | More info The Iris Club The Iris Club will host the first Indigo dance night since the start of the pandemic. Dancer Jordie Ashley will offer lessons. When participants enter, they will be given a different colored wristband contingent on they want their partner to be vaccinated and/or masked. More information: The Iris Club, 323 N. Duke St., Lancaster | Hours: 8:15 p.m. to midnight | Cost: $10 for general admission, $5 for students or starving artists | 18+ | More info Lancaster Science Factory Every First Friday, the Lancaster Science Factory offers free admission and features over 70 interactive exhibits for kids and adults alike to enjoy. More information: Lancaster Science Factory, 454 New Holland Avenue, Lancaster | Hours: 5 to 7 p.m. | More info LancLiving Gallery Root 222, which consists of Schon Wanner, Deric Hettinger and Anthony Mark, will host their works at LancLiving Gallery. The three paint on the same canvases, working in synchronicity. The works feature sensitive topics, so the gallery encourages viewer discretion. There will be a separate gallery with more "controversial" works available by special request. More information: LancLiving Gallery, 309 N. Queen St., Lancaster | Hours: 5 to 8 p.m. | More info The Parrot Gallery The Parrot Gallery will host an exhibit titled "South Africa Reflections" from Lancaster-native artist Renee King. This exhibit focuses on King's oil paintings inspired by her trips to South Africa. The exhibit will continue through May 29. More information: The Parrot Gallery at Community Mennonite Church, 328 W. Orange St., Lancaster | Hours: 5 to 8 p.m. | More info Pennsylvania College of Art & Design The Pennsylvania College of Art & Design will host an artist talk with illustrator Zach Heffelfinger in coordination with his exhibit, "Sensical Nonsense," on display at the college's gallery through April 5. Heffelfinger has worked on projects for Nickelodeon, Netflix, DC Collectibles and more. Masks are required for this event. More information: Pennsylvania College of Art & Design, 204 N. Prince St., Lancaster | Hours: 2 to 3 p.m. | More info Pop-Up Shop The Pop-Up Shop will host works from local textile artist Michael Dennis. The one-day exhibit, titled "Useful/Beautiful Things," will feature prints, jewelry, vintage and upcycled items. More information: Pop-Up Shop, 354 N. Queen St., Lancaster | Hours: 9 a.m. to 9 p.m. | More info Red Raven Art Company Red Raven Art Company will host works from artists Abigail Dudley, Allison Miller and Portia Mortensen. It will also highlight works from East Petersburg painter Kim Smith, who mainly paints flowers and birds. More information: Red Raven Art Company, 138 N. Prince St., Lancaster | Hours: 10 a.m. to 8:30 p.m. | More info Small business crawl Several city businesses, including Sophie Stargazer, Nook Books, Endo Cafe, Alley Kat, Nicole Taylor Boutique, Chyatee and Ville & Rue, will take part in a small business crawl hosted by the Claire Chivington Team from Realty One Group Unlimited. Visit the businesses, post a photo on Instagram with the hashtag #luckoflancaster and be entered into a drawing to win a $150 gift card. Crawl starts Friday and continues through March 31. More information: Friday to Thursday, March 31 | Several participating Lancaster city businesses | More info United Zion Art Gallery United Zion's art gallery will host works from oil painter David Gibson, whose style is described as "representational impressionism." More information: United Zion Art Gallery at the United Zion Retirement Community, 722 Furnace Hills Pike, Lititz | Hours: 8 a.m. to 8 p.m. | More info The Ware Center The Ware Center will host an art exhibition called "GIRL" in a collaboration with The Femina Network. It will feature art from Lancaster-based female artists and will continue through March 25. "'GIRL' is a reclamation, a naming and celebration of what we might be without historical limitations and contemporary assumptions," says the exhibit's press release. The Ware Center will also host a screening of documentary "Equal Means Equal." More information: The Ware Center, 42 N. Prince St., Lancaster | Hours: Starts at 5:30 p.m. | More info Zoetropolis Cinema Stillhouse Zoetropolis will host First Friday Fright Night with '80s film, "The Wraith" featuring Charlie Sheen and Randy Quaid. Proof of full vaccination against COVID-19 is required. More information: Zoetropolis Cinema Stillhouse, 112 N. Water St., Lancaster | Hours: Starts at 9 p.m. | Cost: $11 | More info Lancaster County has a bail problem. And John Choma who died following his imprisonment was in jail because of a $5,000 bail set on a case accusing him of shoplifting $28 worth of items from Sheetz. Both of the above statements are true. I am the president of Lancaster Bail Fund, a nonprofit. We post bail for people who are in the Lancaster County Prison because they cant afford their freedom pretrial. We do this for free. And because we get the money back at the end of each case, donations are used again and again, for more and more people. John was the 10th person we helped. When John died in his sleep Feb. 7, he was 66 years old. He died five days after being released from jail. There are many ways in which being arrested and incarcerated pretrial hurts people. In Johns case, it may have hastened his death by disrupting his home care and medication management. This is the story of Johns final weeks, told with the consent of his friend. His story matters because it illustrates how our system can be arbitrary, wasteful and inhumane. On Jan. 31, John was arrested on a warrant issued after he missed his Jan. 19 preliminary hearing for the shoplifting case. The next morning, John was arraigned via video at the jail. There is no transcript or other record of the reasons the judge set bail at $5,000. We learned about John on Feb. 2 and, using donated funds, posted his bail. He was released a little after 8 p.m., roughly 36 hours after arraignment and 48 hours after arrest. I met John in the jail parking lot to give him a ride. He told me that he was hospitalized when he missed his Jan. 19 hearing. When I asked him about his arraignment, he said the judge must not have believed him. He was wearing medical scrubs. Because John was unhoused, when he was discharged from the hospital on Jan. 27, the hospital paid for a motel so John could receive the care he required from a visiting nurse. According to John, he was arrested at this motel when police ran the names of the motel guests for warrants. John told me he had 23 surgeries over the last five years and took more than 20 medications. He told me and others that he wasnt getting his medications at the jail. At the Feb. 17 Lancaster County Prison Board meeting, I voiced a legitimate concern about how promptly and completely a person is provided care after arrest. Putting aside Johns claim that he wasnt receiving his medications, its intellectually dishonest to assume that a perfect continuity of care is possible: There are practical, logistical barriers involved. I also hoped to discuss how John ended up in jail in the first place. Because if we dont untangle what happened, we will continue our harmful practices, needlessly revolving the most vulnerable among us in and out of jail at great expense to taxpayers. When I spoke up, Lancaster County President Judge Ashworth and Lancaster County Commissioner Josh Parsons attacked my credibility. Their criticism made LNPs front page (Warden rebukes assertion, Feb. 18) and became the basis of an editorial calling Lancaster Bail Fund's social media posts hasty and emotional (Pause before posting, Feb. 23). I appreciate LNP | LancasterOnline providing me with this opportunity to respond so that I can set the record straight and direct this conversation back to the issues. Despite the claims by Ashworth and Parsons, John was in fact jailed for just a $28 matter at the Sheetz. If he was being held on anything else, John wouldnt have been released when we posted bail. The eight outstanding warrants referenced were for traffic matters. These warrants are still outstanding. This means John was not arrested on them. And, contrary to Ashworths insinuation, these warrants dont demonstrate a longstanding history of failure to appear. Five were for failure to pay stemming from a single traffic stop in July 2021. John was cited with five traffic violations for that stop. He was later found guilty of each and, when he failed to pay on Jan. 6, five warrants were issued. The next day, Jan. 7, John was in an accident and cited with three traffic violations. He was taken to the hospital, where he stayed until Jan. 27. While there, three additional warrants were issued for failure to respond to the citations. Also while hospitalized, John missed his Jan. 19 preliminary hearing for the shoplifting case. Is this how we envision justice? Was it necessary to pull an ailing man from a setting where he was getting treatment? Was it necessary to do so in the evening, when that meant he would be kept overnight before seeing a judge in the morning? And isnt it time we move away from cash bail, especially for cases like these? These are some of the issues I wanted to raise by sharing Johns story. Because he can no longer speak for himself. To learn more about Lancasters bail problem and what we can do about it, join me virtually on YWCA Lancasters Listen Learn Lead platform at 7 p.m. Thursday. Register by visiting bit.ly/BailTalk. Michelle Batt is a former public defender and president of Lancaster Bail Fund. Can legislators draw fair maps? Sometimes. With great difficulty. State Sens. Kim Ward and Jay Costa and state Rep. Joanna McClinton demonstrated their willingness to negotiate, compromise and work with a nonpartisan chair to yield new Pennsylvania House and Senate maps that will serve the commonwealth well for the decade ahead. The final maps show that its possible to balance concern for incumbents with traditional redistricting criteria, provide representation for minority communities and yield maps that limit partisan bias. We applaud them for putting partisan rancor aside long enough to get the job done. We also note that the choice of chair had much to do with the success of the 2021-22 Legislative Reapportionment Commission. The Pennsylvania Supreme Court could have chosen a more partisan chair, but didnt. And the chosen chair could have chosen a more partisan approach, but didnt. We celebrate the work of Mark Nordenberg and his team in shepherding a very partisan process to an outcome much more aligned with constitutional criteria than maps of the past few decades. However, the legislative process for the congressional map was far less successful. Despite the show of public hearings and a platform housed on a partisan website, there was no transparency in the selection of a proposed map, no bipartisan negotiation in adjusting that map and no vote from the minority party in support of the final map. Should legislators draw district maps? Most democratic nations say no. Its a conflict of interest. No other major democracy allows it. For decades, groups like the League of Women Voters, Common Cause and Committee of Seventy have been asking for a less partisan redistricting process. Fair Districts PA was formed in 2016 to encourage focused advocacy for an independent citizens redistricting commission. But despite having more co-sponsors than any other bills in recent legislative sessions, and despite resolutions of support from counties and municipalities representing more than 70% of the population of Pennsylvania, proposed bills were never given a vote. The argument from state legislative leaders, who blocked every effort was this: Legislators, and legislators alone, should be the ones to draw the maps. Those leaders had the opportunity to show a watching public that legislators can collaborate, negotiate and draw fair maps for the people of Pennsylvania. But state House Republican leaders are now loudly proclaiming the opposite. State House Majority Leader Kerry Benninghoff insists that the Legislative Reapportionment Commissions House map is a Democratic gerrymander. He has appealed both the House and Senate maps. He has also asked to use current maps for the 2022 election, thus proposing extreme underrepresentation of regions that have seen significant growth. State House Government Committee Chair Seth Grove insists that the Legislature did its very best in the most transparent process ever for congressional redistricting, heaping blame on Gov. Tom Wolf. The bar for that was so low as to be nonexistent. As Wolf rightly noted in his veto message, repeated promises of bipartisanship were only kept to the extent that several Republican members of the House of Representatives crossed the aisle to vote against this unfair map. Despite these state House leaders repeated insistence that legislators alone should draw the lines, theyve now ensured that the Pennsylvania Supreme Court is likely to have the final say on all of Pennsylvanias maps (unless the U.S. Supreme Court intervenes). States like Michigan and California, which have moved to genuinely independent citizens commissions, are now celebrating new maps while Pennsylvania waits for court decisions. Meanwhile, we lament yet another round of legislative dysfunction and increasing partisan gridlock. Throughout the hearing on Feb. 18, Pennsylvanias high court judges said, repeatedly, We did not choose this role, and we hope not to find ourselves here again. We share their frustration and know better ways are possible. If youre wondering how we can avoid this disruptive redistricting roller coaster a decade from now, join Fair Districts PA in asking for an independent citizens commission. And plan to vote for legislative candidates who support that essential reform. Carol Kuniholm is the chair of Fair Districts PA, a nonpartisan, citizen-led coalition working to stop gerrymandering. THE ISSUE As LNP | LancasterOnlines Colin Evans reported earlier this week, Lancaster County is home to about 2,250 people with Ukrainian ancestry and about 350 Ukraine-born residents, according to 2019 estimates from the U.S. Census Bureau. Since 2008, 104 Ukrainian refugees have been resettled in the county, the third-highest figure in Pennsylvania behind Philadelphia and Erie counties, according to data from the state Department of Human Services. About 88% of those refugees have been resettled since 2014, when protesters in Ukraine ousted then-president Viktor Yanukovych and Russia invaded and annexed Crimea. Lancaster County has several Ukrainian community hubs, including St. Andrew Ukrainian Catholic Church in Manheim Township and two Slavic churches in Ephrata: Bethany Slavic Church and Light of the World Fellowship. To our Ukrainian friends and neighbors we offer our strongest moral support. What Russian President Vladimir Putin is inflicting on Ukraine is monstrous. On Tuesday, a Russian missile struck a Kyiv television and radio tower, according to Ukraines foreign affairs minister, Dmytro Kuleba. As he noted on Twitter, the tower is located near a Holocaust memorial center at Babyn Yar, where Nazis executed more than 33,000 Jews in just two horrific days in September 1941. Evil and barbaric, Kuleba wrote, and it mostly certainly was both the Nazi massacre of Kyivs Jews and Tuesdays Russian missile strike. Amid news reports such as this, we are glad that Lancaster County residents of Ukrainian birth or descent have places here to gather. As LNP | LancasterOnlines Erik Yabor reported Monday, St. Andrew Ukrainian Catholic Church which holds its worship services in the former Dominican monastery in Manheim Township is one such sanctuary. Its our little island in America, said Oksana Kerod, a Rapho Township resident from the village of Skalat in heavily Catholic western Ukraine. The courage of the Ukrainian people a courage that has won the admiration of people around the world is reflected in the fact that many St. Andrew parishioners have family members who have remained in their country, even as Russian forces seek to lay siege to cities such as Kyiv and Kharkiv. They dont want to leave, Oksana Dudko told Yabor. They said, If we leave, who will protect Ukraine? Now a York resident, Dudko hails from Ivano-Frankivsk, a city in western Ukraine. She has lived in the U.S. with her parents for nine years. She said some of her family members have been taking refuge in bomb shelters in the capital city of Kyiv, while other family members have been fighting Russian-backed separatists in the eastern part of the country for years. Every night they go to bed without knowing if they will wake up tomorrow, she said. This is heartrending. So, too, are the images of children sheltering from Russian bombs in Ukrainian basements and subways. But we can turn our heartache and concern into action, as the members of St. Andrew have been doing. Dudko said 40 to 50 boxes of supplies food, clothing, blankets, tourniquets, painkillers and other items began their journey Saturday from the parish to Eastern Europe. Once in Poland, she said, the boxes will be driven across the Ukrainian border, where theyll be put to use. The St. Andrew parishioners asked Lancaster County residents to continue to apply pressure on American political leaders to sustain their support of Ukraine. And they asked that people pray for Ukraine. If you know anyone Ukrainian, ask them how they are doing and support them, Dudko said. We will never dismiss the power of prayer. But we also know that many of us want to help in other ways, too. Right now Ukraine needs everything, Gregory Kushnir, a Cumberland County resident who came to the United States 10 years ago from Ternopil, a city in western Ukraine, told Yabor. Monetary donations are easier to make and deliver than material goods. The watchdog website Charity Navigator (charitynavigator.org) has created a webpage listing highly rated nonprofits engaged in relief efforts in Ukraine. Among them: Save the Children (savethechildren.org). That nonprofits website notes that Ukraines children are in grave danger of physical harm, severe emotional distress and mass displacement. Donations to Save the Childrens Ukraine Crisis Relief Fund can help provide children and families with immediate aid, such as food, water, hygiene kits, psychosocial support and cash assistance. Direct Relief (directrelief.org) says it is mobilizing the delivery of medications that the Ukrainian Ministry of Health said are needed, as well as critical care medical items for blood pressure support, intubation/ventilation, IV antibiotics, fluids and combat application tourniquets and bandages. A large shipment of diabetes supplies was delivered last week to Ukrainian health care providers, the agencys website said, noting that Direct Relief has supplied Ukrainian health care providers with more than $27 million in medical aid since January 2021. GlobalGiving (globalgiving.org) says that all donations to its Ukraine Crisis Relief Fund will support humanitarian assistance in impacted communities in Ukraine and surrounding regions where Ukrainian refugees have fled. GlobalGivings local partners are bringing relief to terrified and displaced communities, and they need resources to continue their life-saving work. Donations will help to provide shelter, food, clean water and health support, as well as access to education and economic assistance, to Ukrainian refugees. International Medical Corps (internationalmedicalcorps.org) says that it is already on the ground in Ukraine, working with health agencies and local partners to provide primary and emergency health services, mental health and psychosocial support services, gender-based violence services and COVID-19 prevention and awareness services, to keep refugee and displaced populations safe from the pandemic. And Unicef USA (unicefusa.org) says that UNICEF is scaling up its emergency response in Ukraine as escalating conflict continues to pose an immediate and growing threat to the lives and well-being of the countrys 7.5 million children. Its also working with the United Nations High Commissioner for Refugees to mobilize support for children and families who have fled the country to escape the violence. We would add one more: Mennonite Central Committee (mcc.org). That nonprofit, which has its U.S. office in Akron, says on its website that it is assessing the changing situation with local partners to determine the appropriate response. Its response will be focused on a longer-term scale-up of existing programs that support vulnerable people and extending those services to internally displaced populations. You can donate via the website or mail a check to MCC, PO Box 500, Akron PA 17501. These are all very worthy causes. Please give if you are able. If not, remember: The parishioners of St. Andrew welcome prayers for Ukraine. People are dying. Kids are dying, said Oksana Dudko. She noted: Every bit of news makes my heart break in more pieces. Ours, too. Russian President Vladimir Putin is providing to everyone a teachable moment. His seeming desire to satisfy his ego and glorify his name at the expense of anyone in his way clearly proves his lack of manhood. Real men care for others. They help others and treat everyone with respect. Putins actions are causing death and needless suffering that will span a lifetime for thousands among the innocent residents of Ukraine who were just living their lives. Then, seemingly to help prop up Putins actions and ego, former President Donald Trump, and his former secretary of state, Mike Pompeo, made what I view as traitorous comments in praise of Putin. Did they forget that they are Americans? Politics are supposed to stop at the waters edge. God examines rich and poor, not according to their lands and houses, but according to the riches of their hearts, said St. Augustine of Hippo, commenting on Psalms 48:3. Jim Hamaker Lancaster Baldwin Vista Residents Oppose Countys Opening Public Trail in Their Neighborhood At 3:30 a.m., on December 14, 1963, less than two years after Dr. Martin Luther King, Jr.s famous visit to Los Angeles, the Baldwin Hills Reservoir Dam, in South Los Angeles broke, releasing 250 million gallons of water, destroying homes and killing five people. Then, L.A. County Supervisor Kenneth Hahn, the White politician who stepped in amidst the racial strife of the 1960s to welcome Dr. King at the LAX tarmac, also stepped in to not just save, but bolster the fast-emerging Black South LA enclave surrounding the reservoir. His heroic decision was to replace the reservoir with a world-class park and begin the process of restoring safety and economic health to a community that was evolving as one of the leading hubs of Black wealth in America. He did so with diligence and planning to ensure the safety of those immediately impacted next to the park. Hence, public access to the Kenneth Hahn Recreational Park was established on La Cienega Blvd. while protecting the adjacent residential community by not permitting park access through our neighborhood. ADVERTISEMENT The neighborhood remains a predominantly Black community and the residents who, in the 1960s, bought into what is now called Baldwin Vista, are deeply hurt and angered by the recent decision of the Los Angeles County Department of Parks and Recreation and the State of Californias Baldwin Hills Conservancy, to open two pedestrian gates at the end of two hillside cul-de-sacs, which dead-end against Hahn Park. The countys plan is to allow access to the public and actively promote these entrances as public trails. Shockingly, LA County Supervisor Holly Mitchell, who is Black, supports the move. The properties adjacent to the park have recorded easement rights to access the park from two locked gates at the terminus of Cloverdale Ave. and Padilla St. This legal right has existed for nearly 50 years. To justify this intrusion into our neighborhood, the county used the term equitable access as its license to establish and promote new trail access points from these two locations. There is no issue of equitable access as everyone has the same access to the park and trails from the main entrance. The county staff response was to say they had the right to do as they saw fit. Weve been trying for years to reduce crime in our neighborhood and establish a peaceful place for families to thrive. Smart urban planners try to further that agenda by helping to reduce traffic through neighborhoods. In this case, theyre doing the opposite. They want to increase traffic, increase public access and in doing so are potentially in violation of the California Environmental Quality Act (CEQA), which requires environmental, traffic, public safety and other reviews prior to implementing a project, said Angela Baber, a 20-year resident, schoolteacher and co-chair of the new association. Baber continued, Equity would actually dictate that we have a crisis of dying generational wealth in the Black community and government should leverage its resources towards protecting not destroying property values and our quality of life. ADVERTISEMENT Ben Reznik, a leading Los Angeles area land use attorney hired by the neighborhood association agreed and sent a letter to the county, stating, The county is turning our clients neighborhood into state-park entrances, without considering how doing so will impact the neighborhood, our clients rights as access easement holders, or how it will impact community safety, traffic management, crowd control, noise, security, parking or trash management. The letter went on to state, The Parks [Departments] proposal amounts to a project under the California Environmental Quality Act (CEQA) and therefore would require review and action under CEQA prior to implementation. Since the City of Los Angeles owns the park, Reznik also wrote to Mayor Eric Garcetti, the L.A. City Council and city officials stating, How ironic that the City of Los Angeles has gone to great lengths to protect similarly situated neighborhoods around the Griffith Park area, the Hollywood Hills area, and the Brentwood Area from users of the adjacent parks and trail John Murrell, a 47-year resident and former manager for L.A. County said, This is a stunning and outrageous chapter, in a long history of government using the facade of public necessity to willfully bulldoze South L.A. neighborhoods. This would never happen in Malibu or Beverly Hills. We will not take this sitting down. I was so grateful when Kenneth Hahn visited my home in the 1970s to tell me that the dam was being replaced with a park, and to further remedy us for the trauma, we would always have a safety access point to that park given that in the future, we would only have one way up and one way down our hillside. Weve been great neighbors to the park and why they would do this to us after 60 years is wrong, Murrell said. Theres nearly 6.4 miles of parkland perimeter space. At a time when violent, home invasions are on the rise, why they chose the 20 feet into our residential neighborhood for their version of equity, when they had thousands of other options, is risky, irresponsible and dangerous, he stressed. Black History Month: Black Caucus Honors Unsung Heroes Last week, to mark Black History Month, the California Legislative Black Caucus (CLBC) held a virtual ceremony honoring people with the groups Unsung Heroes award. The 11 CLBC lawmakers nominated an individual from their respective districts people who exemplify selflessness, courage and service, and whose work to lift others often goes unrecognized. From our earliest days in the United States, the course of this countrys history has been influenced by African American heroes and pioneers that go far beyond slavery and fighting for our freedom, said Bradford. ADVERTISEMENT We have contributed to science, medicine, business, education, government, industry and social leadership, he continued. Bradford said he hopes the CLBC tradition of honoring a wide variety of people doing extraordinary work serves as a reminder that no matter who you are you can create long-lasting change. Here is a list of the CLBCs 2022 Unsung Heroes: 35th Senate District (Los Angeles County) Bradford nominated Dr. Keith Curry, president of Compton College and CEO of the Compton Community College District (CCCD). Curry is responsible for overseeing all departments and functions of Compton College and serves as secretary for the CCCD Board of Trustees. He helped raise $11.3 million to help the school transition to an independent college. 30th Senate District (Los Angeles) ADVERTISEMENT Sen. Sydney Kamlager (D-Los Angeles), co-chair of the CLBC, nominated Charles Bear Sprately. Sprately founded Brothers Against Banging Youth (BABY) in 2008. The community-based nonprofit provides gang prevention and crisis intervention for young men and women in underserved neighborhoods. BABY has been key to opening up new opportunities to thousands of Los Angeles area youth. 7th Assembly District (Sacramento and Yolo Counties) Assemblymember Kevin McCarty (D-Sacramento) nominated Sharron Chandler, founder and executive director of Yes2Kollege Education Resources, Inc. The Sacramento non-profit provides African American students with real time educational tools and resources to live healthy and productive lives, while helping them aim for academic excellence and prepare for high-skill jobs. 9th Assembly District (Sacramento and San Joaquin Counties) Assemblymember Jim Cooper (D-Elk Grove) nominated Dr. Janine Bera, chief medical officer at WellSpace Health. The non-profit community health center system provides medical, dental, behavioral health, and supportive services to more than 100,000 people each year at 31 greater Sacramento area locations. 18th Assembly District (Alameda County) Assemblymember Mia Bonta (D-Alameda) nominated Nancy Harvey, owner of Lil Nancys Primary Schoolhouse, a home-based family childcare program in Oakland. The school serves children 4 years old and younger, teaching them language, arts, math, science, and social skills. The program prides itself on its low staff-to-child ratio designed to increase interactions with adults, promote learning, and prevent education gaps so children enter school kinder-ready. 54th District (Los Angeles County) Assemblymember Isaac Bryan (D-Los Angeles) nominated Cassandra Steptoe-Sampson, founder of A Childs Dream-CA. The non-profit is dedicated to helping children in South Central Los Angeles and their families access resources they need for school and to stay healthy. Under her leadership, the organization has distributed backpacks, school supplies, shoes, clothing, hygiene kits and toys to the families in Los Angeles, and beyond, with the help of sponsors and partners. 59th District (Los Angeles County) Assemblymember Reggie Jones-Sawyer (D-Los Angeles) nominated Dr. John Griffith. Griffith began his career at Los Angeles Kedren Community Health Center in 1981, serving as the chief operating officer of Mental Health Services until 2002, when he became the president/CEO. During his tenure at the health facility, he has instituted several changes to help meet the health needs of residents in the surrounding community. Griffith was instrumental in setting up a relationship between Kedren and Charles Drew University, Californias only HBCU. Medical students participate in the project as part of their residency requirements. 64th Assembly District (Los Angeles County) Assemblymember Mike Gipson (D-Carson) nominated Dr. Ayanna E. Davis, an advocate for education, political empowerment and social justice. She lives in Compton. Over her 27 years of service in education, Daviss has touched the hearts and helped to shape the minds of thousands of children. Currently, Davis is the vice president and Political Action Council member of the Association of Administrators of Los Angeles (AALA). In her role as president-elect of the Southern California Chapter of the California Association of Early Young Children, she advocates for disadvantaged children (from birth to 8 years old). 79th District (San Diego County) Assemblymember Akilah Webber (D-San Diego) nominated William Jones, president, CEO and director of CityLink Investment Corporation, a commercial real estate company. A civic leader and advocate for African Americans and other minorities, Jones is also the lead independent director of Sempra Energy. Earlier in his career, Jones served in San Diego city government as a councilmember, deputy mayor and chief of staff to City Councilmember Leon Williams. 62nd Assembly District (Los Angeles County) Earlier this month, Assemblymember Autumn Burke (D-Inglewood), who was a member of the CLBC, resigned from the Legislature, citing personal reasons. The CLBC honored a nominee from the Burkes district: Derek Steele, a Morgan State University graduate who started his professional career as an electrical engineer at Northrop Grumman. Later, he began serving his community as a volunteer with the Social Justice Learning Institute (SJLI). His work focused on figuring out how to recreate local food access systems to solve health disparities and food insecurity in Inglewood and nearby communities. Finding service to others more fulfilling than corporate pursuits, Steele was recently appointed SJLIs executive director. You can watch the ceremony here. Exploring Mental Health Effects of COVID-19 on African Americans As Black History Month 2022 winds down, I find myself doing a mental assessment regarding how much progress we have truly made regarding addressing health disparities, especially as it relates to mental health, which now has everyone carrying more awareness and possibly less stigma. I naturally think about the impact COVID-19 has had on the emotional wellness of the African American community. I ponder about the additional barriers and challenges my community will need to navigate. ADVERTISEMENT For example, how damaging is distance learning for Black students? Will our elders thrive and get back to socializing, going to worship services, and visiting family; or will they feel more comfortable continuing to isolate? Has so much death, economic loss, and social unrest during this pandemic created an increased sense of hopelessness and despair? As an optimist and activist who relies heavily on my faith, I dont allow myself to focus on the negatives very long. I prefer to spend more time considering solutions, potential opportunities and focusing on who I need to join forces with to promote improved outcomes. My staff and I at NAMI Contra Costa take our roles offering non-clinical supports and resources to African American communities across California to heart. We all are fully committed and strategically built strong networks and collaborate effectively with statewide cultural brokers in each county, Black faith leaders and centers/churches, athletes, entertainers and social influencers across the state and beyond. We closely monitor the communitys needs and respond swiftly to fill gaps and offer resources. Our team has facilitated a minimum of two targeted trainings or awareness events each month since we began doing this work. Ive spoken on panels with Assembly members, Congressional representatives, and other elected officials at town halls to lift up the mental health needs of African Americans due to COVID-19. I have spoken on the radio and had the opportunity to speak at concerts, etc. My team members have participated at health fair events across the state, as well as showing up virtually or physically wherever there is an opportunity to spread the word about CalHOPE. The CCP staff is diverse across ages; we can offer all services in a culturally responsive manner with a primary objective to reduce the harm and prevent challenges due to the pandemic. ADVERTISEMENT As California moves toward less restrictive protocols, I recognize it is indeed a great blessing to have NAMI CC participate as a CalHOPE Campaign subcontractor. We greatly appreciate the role we play in delivering ethnic-specific messages that reminds African Americans that because of low vaccination rates and the greater risk, they must proceed with more caution. We have not been able to change the minds of every Black community member who carries vaccination hesitation due to misinformation and broken trust based on past hurts. However, we have been very successful with getting those deciding not to be vaccinated to reduce their risk of getting infected. We target the unsheltered and have partnered with our county supervisors and the Public Health Department and given out thousands of face masks, hand sanitizers, and even COVID-19 rapid tests. We have had CCP staff at vaccination clinics around the state with information about our ethnic-specific support groups, resources, warm line, and the CalHOPE Live Chat. I know that as the months move on and we forget about how we honored our African American heroes in February, our work will continue and we will stand on the shoulders of those heroes. We already see the negative impact and the statistics continue to highlight glaring disparities, such as more hospitalizations and higher death rates even for Black children, but we will adapt and develop new community-defined targeted strategies. My prayer is that others, especially decision-makers, will join me and take time to look at how much our program has done to reduce risk, and consider where we can be used to address other concerns faced by African Americans and others impacted by mental illness. NAMI CC supports the new 988 services to offer a non-police response for those experiencing a mental health emergency. Our crisis counselors are fully trained and can easily support that effort, recognizing too often that African Americans are statistically at the greatest risk when law enforcement is needed. At NAMI CC, we are already the trusted go-to agency for African Americans responding to those that call and understand how to triage as needed. There is no need to build a new responsive prevention system when one already exists through the culturally, ethnically and linguistically sensitive programs that CalHOPE has in place across California. Gigi Crowder is the executive director of NAMI Contra Costa. Western section of national park in Fujian welcomes first ecological research effort People's Daily Online) 17:40, March 01, 2022 An ecological research activity was kicked off on Feb. 27, 2022 in the western section of the Wuyi Mountain National Park in southeast Chinas Fujian Province, aiming to investigate the forest ecosystem and the wild plant and animal resources there. Experts conduct a survey on the forest ecosystem in the western section of the Wuyi Mountain National Park in southeast Chinas Fujian Province. (Peoples Daily Online/Jiao Yan) The western section of the Wuyi Mountain National Park is located in Zhaili township, Guangze county, Fujian. Fifteen experts from nine scientific research institutions took part in the activity. On April 13, 2021, a survey was launched in the Wuyi Mountain National Park to investigate the parks biological resources, including its ecosystem, vegetation system, higher order plants, terrestrial vertebrates, aquatic species, insects and microbes. So far, 11 species have been newly discovered during the survey, which will be carried out over three years. About 377,700 mu (25,180 hectares) of land under the jurisdiction of Guangze county has been put under protection inside the Wuyi Mountain National Park, accounting for 25 percent of the total area of the park. Officially approved in 2021 as one of Chinas first five national parks, Wuyi Mountain National Park has a primary forest area covering 210.7 square kilometers, preserving the most complete, typical and largest primary forest ecosystem characteristic of a mid-subtropical zone at the same latitude on the planet. There are 358 protected areas in Fujian and we have primarily established a protected area system which is able to preserve more than 85 percent of rare and endangered species and more than 70 percent of typical ecosystems in the province, said Wang Zhizhen, director of the forestry bureau of Fujian. Experts conduct a survey on the forest ecosystem in the western section of the Wuyi Mountain National Park in southeast Chinas Fujian Province. (Peoples Daily Online/Jiao Yan) An expert investigates soil collected in the western section of the Wuyi Mountain National Park in southeast Chinas Fujian Province. (Peoples Daily Online/Jiao Yan) Photo shows mosses and lichens discovered in the western section of the Wuyi Mountain National Park in southeast Chinas Fujian Province. (Peoples Daily Online/Jiao Yan) Photo shows the huperzia serrata, a plant species under second-class state protection in China, in the western section of the Wuyi Mountain National Park in southeast Chinas Fujian Province. (Peoples Daily Online/Jiao Yan) Photo shows the launch ceremony for the three-year ecological research activity to be carried out in the western section of the Wuyi Mountain National Park in southeast Chinas Fujian Province. (Peoples Daily Online/Jiao Yan) Photo shows the scenery of a lake located in the western section of the Wuyi Mountain National Park in southeast Chinas Fujian Province. (Photo/Huang Hai) Photo shows scenery in the western section of the Wuyi Mountain National Park in southeast Chinas Fujian Province. (Photo/Huang Hai) (Web editor: Hongyu, Bianji) There is a long tradition in the African nation of Ghana of local artists painting movie posters to advertise films. But as interest in local movie theaters continues to drop, Daniel Anum Jasper has found success selling his posters in other countries. Jasper recently spoke with reporters from Reuters from his studio workspace in Accra. He presented one of his current works, showing actor Paul Newman holding a pair of guns in a poster for the 1969 movie Butch Cassidy and the Sundance Kid. He also showed unfinished paintings that included actors John Travolta and Bruce Lee. Jasper was one of the countrys first movie poster designers and has been doing the job for 30 years. From the late 1970s through the 1990s, Ghana developed a tradition of advertising films with colorful and descriptive hand-painted posters. During that period, local movie theaters were extremely popular throughout the country. Artists competed over who could bring in the most people with their imaginative -- and often violent -- designs. But over the years, the market for Jaspers work has greatly changed. With the rise of the internet, Ghanas independent theaters began to disappear. "People are no longer interested in going out to watch a movie when it can be watched from the comfort of their phones," Jasper said. "But there is a growing interest in owning these hand-painted posters internationally," he added. "Now they hang them in private rooms or show them in exhibitions." One market where Jasper's work has gained appeal is the United States, where the posters are valued as unusual representations of a specific period in African art. Westerns and action movies were traditionally popular, as were Bollywood and Chinese films. Many of the posters included supernatural elements and extreme violence even if the films had none. And physical details of the actors were often exaggerated. Joseph Oduro-Frimpong is a pop culture expert and professor at Ghana's Ashesi University. He has been collecting movie posters for years and owns several of Jasper's paintings. He plans to show his posters at the Centre for African Popular Culture when it opens at the university later this year. He said he hopes people will realize the historical importance of the posters. "Of course there is an esthetic value to the posters -- how crazy it is and all of that, Oduro-Frimpong said. But we use them to have a conversation with students." "We tell them not to think about what they're seeing now... (but) to think of these art forms as symbols of history that can tell their own stories." Im Bryan Lynn. Reuters reported this story. Bryan Lynn adapted the report for VOA Learning English. We want to hear from you. Write to us in the Comments section, and visit our Facebook page. _____________________________________________________ Words in This Story poster n. a large printed picture or advertisement that is placed on the wall exhibition n. an event at which objects such as paintings are shown to the public supernatural adj. things that cannot be explained by our knowledge of science or nature exaggerate v. to make something seem larger, better or worse than it actually is esthetic n. relating to beauty and the way something looks symbol n. a sign or object that is used to represent something Catherine Russell is the newly appointed chief of the United Nations Childrens Fund (UNICEF). She said on February 25 that the Taliban leaders in Afghanistan are showing a commitment to permitting girls to go to school across the country next month. The international community has demanded the Taliban continue educating women. Russell was appointed earlier in February. She said it remains to be seen if the Talibans commitment to reopening schools for girls and women on March 21 will change conditions or restrictions. Russell told the Associated Press that Taliban officials have given UNICEF signs that they will open schools for girls and women. She said that we are hopeful that is going to happen, and we believe it should happen. Even though there is no legal ban, girls around the age of 12 have effectively been barred from going to school in most of the country since the Taliban took control six months ago. The Taliban government has blamed delays on lack of good spaces, especially in cities, to support schools that must have a separate area for girls. Schools in about 10 provinces have continued without stopping since the Taliban takeover. Private universities and schools in the capital, Kabul, have remained open. Universities for women have also restarted in several provinces. The Taliban government has promised all universities will reopen for women in the coming weeks. Apart from statements saying that schools will re-open for all girls, little else has been made public about other possible restrictions or changes in education. Russell said she met with Taliban officials this week to discuss concerns from child health to rights to education. The United Nations and international organizations face growing difficulties with Afghanistans increasing humanitarian crisis. The U.N. projects this year that over one million children will need treatment for malnutrition and that 97 percent of Afghans could be living below the line of poverty. A UNICEF $2 billion request from donors for aid is only 17 percent financed. Kabuls Indira Gandhi Hospital for Children is filled with mothers from across the country seeking treatment for their malnourished babies. Zermina Mohammed said she did not have the $10 needed to pay for medication. She asked a family member in Kabul for the money. But as she held her sick baby, she said she still needs more. As more people become poor, billions of dollars of Afghanistans foreign monies are blocked to the still un-recognized Taliban government. The government is still unable to pay public workers, including people in health and education. Donors and nongovernmental-organizations have picked up the costs. Russell said money from the European Union is paying teachers. She said that the system is by no means a long-term solution. Its not something that humanitarian organizations can solve on their own, Russell said. Im Gregory Stachel. Samya Kullab reported this story for The Associated Press. Gregory Stachel adapted it for VOA Learning English with additional material from Reuters. ____________________________________________________________________ Words in This Story commitment n. a promise to do or give something province n. any one of the large parts that some countries are divided into humanitarian adj. concerned with or seeking to promote human welfare malnutrition n. the unhealthy condition that results from not eating enough food or not eating enough healthy food poverty n. the state of being poor de-facto adj. used to describe something that exists but that is not officially accepted or recognized We want to hear from you. Write to us in the Comments section, and visit our Facebook page. A group of former senior United States defense and security officials sent by President Joe Biden arrived in Taiwan on Tuesday. The visit has been denounced by China and is happening in the middle of Russia's invasion of Ukraine. The visit is led by Mike Mullen, a former top U.S. military officer. It comes at a time when Taiwan has raised its alert level. Taiwan is worried China could move against it as the West is distracted with the events in Eastern Europe. Mullen is a retired Navy commander who served as the top U.S. military officer under former presidents George W. Bush and Barack Obama. He is joined by Meghan O'Sullivan, a former deputy national security adviser under Bush, and Michele Flournoy, a former undersecretary of defense under Obama. Two former National Security Council senior directors for Asia are also part of the group. Taiwanese Minister of Foreign Affairs Joseph Wu met the group when it arrived in Taipei. Tsai Ing-wen is the president of Taiwan. Her office told Reuters the visit would permit an in-depth exchange of views on Taiwan-U.S. cooperation issues in various fields. Taiwan hopes the sides will continue to deepen the steady development of Taiwan-U.S. relations, continue to jointly maintain regional peace and stability, and continue to jointly contribute to global peace and prosperity, it said in a statement. The American group will meet Tsai on Wednesday, the same day former U.S. Secretary of State Mike Pompeo will arrive. Pompeo is coming separately as a private citizen. China describes Taiwan as the most important issue in its ties with the United States. China is angered by any high-level meetings between the two. "The will of the Chinese people to defend our country's sovereignty and territorial integrity is immovable. Whoever United States sends to show support for Taiwan is bound to fail," said a Chinese Foreign Ministry spokesperson. Russias invasion of Ukraine has drawn attention to Chinas threat to use force to take over democratic Taiwan. China claims the island as its own territory. The two situations are very different, however. Taiwan lies 160 kilometers across the Taiwan Strait from mainland China. It also enjoys strong support from the U.S., which is legally required to make sure the island can defend itself. China has not denounced Russias war against Ukraine. It has also criticized the use of sanctions against Russia. The two countries share a feeling of resistance towards the U.S. and Western Europe. China has been sending military airplanes into Taiwans air defense zone almost every day. And on Saturday, Chinas Defense Ministry protested the passage of an American warship through the Taiwan Strait. The strait is in international waters. The U.S. Navy said the ships passage demonstrates the United States commitment to a free and open Indo-Pacific. China often protests U.S. contacts with Taiwans government. It announced in November that its military conducted air and naval activities in the direction of the Taiwan Strait. This came after five U.S. lawmakers met with Tsai on an unannounced one-day visit. Biden, like past presidents, is making more contacts with Taiwan. His administration is also selling it military equipment. I'm Jill Robbins. Dan Novak adapted this story for VOA Learning English from reporting by Reuters and The Associated Press. ___________________________________________________________________ Words in This Story distract v. to cause to stop thinking about or paying attention to someone or something and to think about or pay attention to someone or something else instead region n. a part of a country, of the world, etc., that is different or separate from other parts in some way stability n. the quality or state of something that is not easily changed or likely to change prosperity n. the state of being successful usually by making a lot of money sovereignty n. country's independent authority and the right to govern itself integrity n. the quality of being honest and fair sanction n. an action that is taken or an order that is given to force a country to obey international laws by limiting or stopping trade with that country, by not allowing economic aid for that country, etc. commitment n. a promise to do or give something A big debate in American schools is over how much control parents should have in their childs education. Parents around the nation have been protesting how certain topics, such as race, history and religion, are taught in schools. Some have gone to school board meetings and demanded their politicians take steps to control what is taught in the classroom. A school board is a group of elected officials who control educational policy and finances. At least 12 Republican-led states have recently introduced bills that require school districts to post their teaching materials online. Some of the bills permit parents to bring legal action against schools that do not follow the rules. These are called transparency bills. And in the United States Congress, Republicans have introduced a Parents Bill of Rights. Included in the proposal is a list of rights parents should have when it comes to their childs schooling. For example, parents should have the right to know what their children are being taught, and have the right to see the school budget and spending. Republicans that support the proposal said in a statement that Democrats want to take power away from parents and hand over more control to politicians and teachers unions to dictate what our children should be taught in classrooms. The bill of rights has gained popularity among conservatives in response to things like critical race theory and mask and vaccine mandates in schools. Critical race theory is based on the idea that systemic racism has deeply shaped American society, laws and policies. The bill was first introduced in November and is unlikely to pass the Democratic-controlled Congress. But it may have caused some Republican states to introduce similar measures. Georgias state Senate last week approved a measure that protects parental rights in public education. The measure says parents have the right to examine all classroom materials, the right to see all records relating to their child, the right to remove their child from sex education, and the right to prevent the creation of photos, videos and voice recordings of their children except for security purposes. Many of the rights already exist. A December survey by EducationWeek found that most teachers say parents should have a say in the curriculum, or the subjects and materials that are being taught. But just 33 percent of teachers surveyed said parents were involved in selecting curriculum and materials in their district. The survey also suggested that parents and teachers may have differing opinions on what topics should be taught. For example, just 51 percent of teachers said they believe parents want them to teach about race. But 80 percent of teachers said they should teach about race and racism. In Virginia, Republican Glenn Youngkin made parents rights a big part of his campaign for governor, an election he won. He has said that parents should be in charge of their kids education. But teachers and educators say transparency bills are unnecessary because information on curriculum and spending is already publicly available. Opponents of the bills say it would make teachers jobs even more difficult. In a Washington Post column, authors Jack Schneider and Jennifer Berkshire argued that parents have no legal right to determine their childs curriculum. United States law supports the idea that education should prepare young people to think for themselves, even if that runs counter to the wishes of parents, they said. Robert Estice is a middle school science and critical thinking teacher in Ohio, one of the states that introduced a transparency bill. He said the bill is a way to control what is taught in the classroom. He told The Associated Press the bill is a way to get into the classroom to pick through what they see and point us in different directions or stop us from doing things. I'm Dan Novak. Dan Novak wrote this story for VOA Learning English with additional reporting from The Associated Press. Quiz - Parents Look to Have More Influence Over School Curriculums Start the Quiz to find out Start Quiz ____________________________________________________________________ Words in This Story district n. an area established by a government for official government business mandate n. an official order to do something transparency n. the quality that makes something obvious or easy to understand dictate v. to say or state with authority or power survey n. an activity in which many people are asked a question or a series of questions in order to gather information about what most people do or think about something curriculum n. the courses that are taught by a school, college, etc. counter adv. in a way that goes against or does not agree with something The number of those arrested in connection to a Feb. 9 assault of a 13-year-old in Sweet Home captured on video is now five. SALEM After an emotional three-hour debate, the Oregon House voted 37-23 on Tuesday, March 1 to end the states agricultural exemption from higher overtime wages. The measure is awaiting a vote in the Senate. The overtime exemption would be phased out over five years under House Bill 4002, and tax credits would cover some of the higher wages paid by farmers. But critics claimed those provisions wont prevent the inevitable loss of family farms. They could be the nail in the coffin for farmers who cant absorb any more increased costs, Rep. David Brock-Smith, R-Port Orford, said. Many growers operate on razor-thin margins and would likely go out of business while waiting for the promised money from tax credits, because they cant afford higher overtime payments, he said. Rep. Raquel Moore-Green, R-Salem, said House Bill 4002 also isnt likely to help farmworkers, as their employers will likely seek to reduce weekly hours, switch crops or simply exit the industry. They could reduce their operation size or cease farming altogether and sell out, she said. Quality journalism doesn't happen without your help Support local news coverage and the people who report it by subscribing to the Albany Democrat-Herald. Supporters of HB 4002 cast the legislation as a matter of constitutional fairness and noted that if an ongoing lawsuit against the agricultural overtime exemption is successful, farmers wont get assistance to ease the economic blow. I believe its time to live up to the promise of equal protection of the law, said Rep. Paul Holvey, D-Eugene. We owe basic protections to farmworkers and we owe it to farmers not to make a major change to their bottom line without a safety net. Before approving HB 4002, the House voted 32-27 against remanding the bill back to a joint committee to consider an amendment favored by Republican lawmakers. There is still time to find a more workable solution. An Oregon solution, said Rep. Shelly Boshart-Davis, R-Albany. Under that amendment, farmworkers would receive overtime relief payments from the state government after theyd worked more than 40 hours per week. Meanwhile, farmers would pay workers time-and-a-half overtime wages after a weekly threshold of 48 hours during most of the year and after 55 hours during an 15-week peak labor period. It is more generous to farmworkers than any other policy, Rep. Daniel Bonham, R-The Dalles, said. They wont have their hours cut nearly as much and will still earn overtime wages after 40 hours. Holvey opposed the amendment, he said, because the state overtime payments wouldnt include contributions to social security insurance, unemployment insurance or workers compensation insurance. Farmworkers would also have to wait up to two months to receive the relief payments from the state government, he said. The amendment was already thoroughly discussed and rejected by the Joint Committee on Farm Worker Overtime, Holvey said. Sending the bill back to committee would not end up with a different outcome. Under the version of HB 4002 passed by the House, the weekly threshold for farmworker overtime would begin at 55 hours next year and incrementally drop to 40 hours in 2027. Most farms will be divided into three tax credit tiers based on their number of employees: Growers employing fewer than 25 workers would qualify for tax credits of 90% of their added overtime payments next year, which would decrease to 60% in 2028, after which theyd expire. During that time, the tax credit rate would shift from 75% to 50% for growers with 25 to 50 employees, and from 60% to 15% for farmers with more than 50 workers. Dairies would be treated differently due to their round-the-clock need for animal care. Those with fewer than 25 workers would be eligible for a permanent tax credit rate of 100% of overtime payments, while those with more employees would qualify for a rate that incrementally shifts from 75% in 2023 to 50% in 2028, its final year. Rep. Andrea Valderrama, D-Portland, said that lawmakers heard from thousands of farmers and workers while deliberating the bill, but said she was most moved by the testimony of employees. Farmworkers testified about enduring chemicals, dust and injuries while not having enough money to cover their rent, education and healthcare needs, she said. Why is it the people who do the most sacred work are the most oppressed, the most exploited? Rep. Andrea Salinas, D-Lake Oswego, said the agricultural exemption was created more than 80 years ago at the national level to appease Southern lawmakers who wanted to maintain segregated conditions for Black farmworkers. It was not about economics back then, it was about race, she said. Rep. Paul Evans, D-Monmouth, said HB 4002 was not the bill hed hoped for but it will be possible for lawmakers tweak it as its implemented in future years. This bill is just the beginning of the conversation, Evans said. As lawmakers, its their obligation to recognize the equality of human labor and not to tolerate injustice, he said. We are supposed to confront it, not sweep it under the rug. Love 0 Funny 0 Wow 0 Sad 0 Angry 0 Oregons chief union of quasi-municipal governments has recognized Lebanons fire department for a volunteer firefighter program that is probably the only of its kind in the U.S. Lebanon Fire District was awarded Outstanding Special District Program Feb. 12 during an annual Special Districts Association of Oregon awards ceremony, according to a news release. The special districts advocacy and lobbying group that represents more than 920 limited-purpose governments chose Western University-Lebanon Fire Emergency Alliance as that outstanding program among the largest districts, those with 26 or more employees. Lebanon Fires WLEA program pronounced wheelie, said staff connects first-year medical students at Western University of Health Sciences to the department where theyre trained in-house and qualified as an entry-level firefighter. They come all over the country, and this is a cool way to get them serving, said district administrative assistant Crystal Patterson. The students get volunteer hours, a graduation requirement, and the department gets seven to eight volunteers each year in a district where 50 volunteers are required to back up professional firefighters. All are qualified to pull on Nomex turnouts, air tanks and helmets and to attack fires in Lebanon. They all get the same certification. Theyre combat firefighters, Patterson said. The district assigns two firefighters to a firetruck or ambulance. WLEA volunteers are assigned as a third crew member on a rig. Quality journalism doesn't happen without your help Support local news coverage and the people who report it by subscribing to the Lebanon Express. Most are with the district for two years before they start in-clinic training at the medical school, Patterson said. The special districts association also recognized the district for Fire Corps, a program that trains supporting volunteers in emotional support, the release states. Alex Powers covers business, environment and healthcare for Mid-Valley Media. Contact him at 541-812-6116 or alex.powers@lee.net. Love 1 Funny 0 Wow 0 Sad 0 Angry 0 If not for Jane Does courage, former Rep. Aaron von Ehlinger, R-Lewiston, a man who stands convicted of raping her and now faces spending the rest of his life in prison would no doubt be on his way toward securing a second term representing this area in the Legislature. A Lompoc man pleaded guilty last month to a manslaughter charge in the death of his 26-day-old daughter in May 2019 and is set to be sentenced Monday. Thank you for reading! Please log in, or sign up for a new account and purchase a subscription to continue reading. 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United Arab Emirates United Kingdom of Great Britain & N. 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 The Dane County Medical Examiner's Office on Wednesday identified the man who was killed after getting electrocuted during a tree-trimming operation in Madison. Dustin L. Gurney, 38, of Janesville, died from the injuries he sustained during the workplace incident on Tuesday around 12:20 p.m. near the intersection of West Broadway Street and Hoboken Road, the Medical Examiner's office said preliminary results from a forensic examination show. A company authorities have not specified the company's name was trimming trees when a branch got stuck on a power line. A worker pulled on the branch and it snapped the wire, which swung down below, Madison police spokesperson Stephanie Fryer said. The wire hit a company vehicle that Gurney was leaning on, electrocuting him. He died on the scene, Fryer said. The Medical Examiner's Office said the incident was an accident, but the death is still being investigated by the Madison Police Department. The Medical Examiner's Office is conducting additional testing. Sign up for our Crime & Courts newsletter Get the latest in local public safety news with this weekly email. Sign up! * I understand and agree that registration on or use of this site constitutes agreement to its user agreement and privacy policy. A 60-year-old man was arrested Wednesday afternoon in Waushara County for allegedly operating a vehicle while under the influence for the ninth time, the Wisconsin State Patrol said. A state trooper responded to a report of a vehicle running off the road around 12:20 p.m. on 17th Drive north of Highway MM near Wautoma, the State Patrol said. The driver of the car was identified as Charles R. Donald, 60, of Wild Rose. The trooper reported that Donald was showing signs of impairment. Field sobriety testing showed that Donald was under the influence, the State Patrol said. Donald was arrested on tentative charges of an OWI, 9th offense; and operating with a revoked driver's license, and a probation violation, the State Patrol said. Sign up for our Crime & Courts newsletter Get the latest in local public safety news with this weekly email. Sign up! * I understand and agree that registration on or use of this site constitutes agreement to its user agreement and privacy policy. WAUPUN At 3:35 p.m. Tuesday, March 1, Waupun Fire Crews responded to Waupun Area Junior/Senior High School, 801 E. Lincoln St., for a report of a fire in a dust collector. Upon arrival, smoke was visible coming from the dust collector located outside the wood shop. All students had been removed from the shop area by school staff when the fire department arrived. Crews quickly knocked down the fire in the dust collector while also using ventilation fans to remove smoke that had filtered into the wood shop via the dust collector ductwork. As crews continued with overhaul and ventilation, they discovered light smoke continuing to come from a drum sander machine in the shop. Crews removed the dust collection hoses from the machine and discovered a fire that was smoldering within the equipment. Fire Crews worked with school staff to open up the machine so the fire could be extinguished. The property is owned by the Waupun Area School District. Damage was contained to the dust collector and the drum sander with initial damage estimates unknown at this time. While the cause of the fire remains under investigation, the fire is believed to have originated in the drum sander. No firefighters or people at the scene were hurt during the incident. All areas of the school were re-opened and turned over to school staff. Agencies assisting included the Waupun Police Department and Lifestar Ambulance. Sign up for our Crime & Courts newsletter Get the latest in local public safety news with this weekly email. Sign up! * I understand and agree that registration on or use of this site constitutes agreement to its user agreement and privacy policy. Utilities behind some of Wisconsins largest solar generators say nothing in the state constitution prohibits the long-term leases that opponents claim are illegal. Opponents of a proposed 2,400-acre solar-plus-storage project in southeastern Dane County last month asked regulators to toss out the permit application on the grounds that the 25-year leases violate language in the constitution that appears to limit agricultural leases to 15 years. They say projects that depend on legally void leases arent in the best interest of ratepayers and should be stopped. Similar petitions were filed asking the Public Service Commission to revoke permits for two other large-scale projects, including one already operating in Iowa County. Attorneys for the WEC Energy Group and Madison Gas and Electric, which co-own the Iowa County solar farm and are seeking to buy the Dane County project for $649 million, say opponents misunderstand the constitution and that their outlandish interpretation would upend nearly 200 years of real estate law and invalidate leases for things like cell towers, billboards and mines. Ethanol no better than gasoline, study finds; UW scientists seek better plant fuels Though popular with Midwestern farmers and long hailed as an environmentally friendly alternative to imported oil, ethanol made from corn isn In responses filed Tuesday, the utilities asked the PSC to deny the petitions, which they called frivolous and unfortunate, and chided opponents for basing their reading on a one-page primer on agricultural lease law prepared by a former UW-Extension professor. The language in question comes from Article 1 of the Constitution, which states: All lands within the state are declared to be allodial, and feudal tenures are prohibited. Leases and grants of agricultural land for a longer term than fifteen years in which rent or service of any kind shall be reserved, and all fines and like restraints upon alienation reserved in any grant of land, hereafter made, are declared to be void. Utilities say opponents misconstrued the 174-year-old provision, which exists primarily to differentiate the American system of land ownership from that of medieval Europe, where people who farmed land were rarely allowed to own it and instead were given access in exchange for pledges of loyalty and service. That provision is intended to make land more easily transferable, not less, the utilities argue. Furthermore, they say it applies only to land leased for agricultural use. And while most of the land under lease is currently farmland, thats not how the utilities plan to use it. Wisconsin Supreme Court hears arguments in regulator bias case spawned by power line The court is being asked to decide if a former utility regulators personal relationships could invalidate a power-line permit. Citing tax code and a Supreme Court ruling, they argue that agricultural use basically means growing crops. There can be no dispute that the land dedicated to solar panels, batteries and related equipment will not be used to grow crops. Utilities say adopting the opponents interpretation would invalidate any long-term lease of any land that was agricultural at some time in the past, including an untold number of cell tower, wind turbine, billboard and mineral extraction leases. Attorneys for Invenergy, the developer of the Koshkonong Solar Energy Center west of Cambridge, accused opponents of grasping at straws and say they are trying to inhibit the free transfer of property rights the constitution aimed at preserving. They say the provision was intended to protect tenants from oppressive landlords, not to prevent land owners from voluntarily leasing out their land. The PSC has not indicated if it will consider the petitions, which are automatically denied after 30 days if no action is taken. In November the commission rejected a motion to dismiss the Koshkonong permit application on the grounds that the utilities and Invenergy were exploiting a legal loophole to avoid regulatory scrutiny. The project has sparked fierce opposition from neighbors and the nearby village of Cambridge, which wants to develop some of the farmland for future housing. Be the first to know Get local news delivered to your inbox! Sign up! * I understand and agree that registration on or use of this site constitutes agreement to its user agreement and privacy policy. The two candidates vying for the Dane County Boards 36th District include a Monona Grove School Board member highlighting his experience as a Black man and an incumbent who has been a driving force in ongoing efforts to approve a plan for a consolidated Dane County jail. The term is for two years. Andrew McKinney Age: 53 Address: 4574 American Way, Cottage Grove Family: Wife and six children Job: Employment and educational specialist Prior elected office: Vice president of Monona Grove School Board for four years Other public service: Junior Vice Commander Day Post 7591 for two years Education: Master of Ed-Counseling from Concordia University Wisconsin and Bachelor of Arts in Business Management from Concordia Email or website: andrewmckinney4education@gmail.com Melissa Ratcliff (I) Age: 45 Address: 242 Forreston Drive, Cottage Grove Family: Married for 20 years with two teenage children Job: Paralegal at Eisenberg Law Offices Prior elected office: Dane County Board Supervisor since 2018 and Village of Cottage Grove Trustee since 2018 Other public service: Member, Friends of the Cottage Grove Library since 2018; member, the Optimist Club of Cottage Grove since 2017 Education: Certified paralegal through Madison College and Wausau East High School graduate Email or website: www.RatcliffForDaneCounty.com Q&A Why are you the best candidate for this office? Ratcliff: During my time on the Board, I have been working collaboratively with other supervisors, local officials, county and municipal staff, community groups, leaders and residents to understand the needs of our district and communities to bring forward initiatives and amenities that help our residents, communities and municipalities. I will continue to listen, learn, partner, collaborate and grow in order to advance items to help people in our district, communities and county. McKinney: Im a product of the failed policies that have been a burden on the minority community, especially to Black men. From being raised in poor, polluted areas and the failing school system of Gary, Indiana, to the same systemic racial injustice of Wisconsin, Im living proof. My opponent cant comprehend what life is as a Black man and/or minority. Now, it is time for minority voices to step up, be heard and take action. Although Im not a politician, I am a change-maker and it is time for a change. What is the most important issue in this election and how would you address it? Ratcliff: Covid-19 remains prevalent in all of our lives. Addressing the recovery of our economy, residents, and lives back to a more normal sense following this pandemic is very important to me and our residents. The County Board should continue to work toward putting forth initiatives that address these needs including working with schools, businesses, nonprofits and other entities. McKinney: Continue to improve on policies on ending racial disparities, equity and social-economics. Wisconsin is ranked No. 1 in racial disparities, which means that nothing has been done to address this. Im a Black man, who has lived in racial disparities all my life and I honestly dont see that happening and this has been proven in our current state. Ive been fighting for racial disparities to end, but never had my voice heard, as well as other people of color. How should the county resolve the debate over building a new jail? Ratcliff: There is no debate about whether we need a new jail we need one. Its how we go about it and what to build that is the debate. The Board needs to work together. The Board in 2018 and 2019 was able to compromise and approved the 922-bed Jail Consolidation Project after a decades worth of research and studies with key stakeholders input. Working together is the only way that a project of this magnitude and scope that will address our needs will be moved forward. McKinney: This project needs to happen. We are in a society that is struggling financially, mentally and emotionally. We have several outstanding nonprofit organizations in our community that are addressing this issue and I believe the new jail should partner with them to fix the racial disparities in our criminal justice system that disproportionately marginalizes, arrests and incarcerates Black and brown people and give them a fair opportunity to succeed. Claiming some nursing home residents cast ballots without knowing what they were doing, and repeating complaints about grants from a liberal organization to help administer the 2020 election, the former state Supreme Court justice leading a GOP review of the 2020 election said Tuesday the Legislature ought to take a very hard look at decertifying the states presidential election something experts say is a legal and constitutional impossibility. In a sweeping critique of current election rules, Michael Gableman also called for the elimination and dismantling of the bipartisan Wisconsin Elections Commission after it instructed clerks in 2020 that they did not need to send poll workers into nursing homes to assist with absentee voting after many were turned away due to the COVID-19 pandemic. At best, WEC is hopelessly derelict of duty, Gableman told the Assembly elections committee in a three-hour presentation of his 136-page interim report from his ongoing one-party review. The report reiterates past GOP criticisms of the states presidential election, including that millions of dollars of private grants allocated to cities to help administer the election amid the pandemic constituted bribery a claim courts have rejected. The commissions nonpartisan administrator, Meagan Wolfe, denounced the report, saying it was based on mischaracterizations and that almost every item flagged by the review has already been litigated or addressed. The opinions in the Special Counsels latest interim report were fixated on topics that have been thoroughly addressed, Wolfe said. The integrity of the November 2020 election, and of the WEC, has been shown time and time again through court cases and previous investigations. A recount and court decisions have affirmed that President Joe Biden defeated former President Donald Trump in Wisconsin by almost 21,000 votes. Reviews by the nonpartisan Legislative Audit Bureau and the conservative Wisconsin Institute for Law and Liberty found no evidence of widespread fraud. Multiple court rulings have also found no evidence of irregularities. Further, the results of the 2020 election have been confirmed by county canvassing boards, recounts in Dane and Milwaukee counties, post-election audits by local and state election authorities and a voting equipment audit by the elections commission. Gableman indicated that his review, for which Assembly Speaker Robin Vos, R-Rochester, has allocated $676,000 in taxpayer money, is far from complete. He said he continues to speak with Vos about extending the contract, which expired at the end of December. The eight-month review has been plagued by legal challenges against multiple subpoenas issued by Gableman. The former justices lengthy, meandering and at times openly partisan attacks on elections commission staff and Democratic appointees underscored to critics the one-sided nature of the investigation. This circus has long surpassed being a mere embarrassment for our state, Democratic Gov. Tony Evers said in a statement. From the beginning, it has never been a serious or functioning effort, it has lacked public accountability and transparency, and it has been a colossal waste of taxpayer dollars. Decertification Republican lawmakers and legislative attorneys have repeatedly said overturning the election after it was certified by the state and Congress would be illegal and impossible. And in his report, Gableman makes clear that his purpose is not to challenge the states certification. But an appendix does sketch how that might be done, he said. It is clear that the Wisconsin Legislature could lawfully take steps to decertify electors in any presidential election, for example in light of violations of state election law that did or likely could have affected the outcome of the election, according to the report. UW-Madison political science professor and elections administration expert Kenneth Mayer said the claim is meaningless. Even if the Legislature did pass some sort of decertification now it would have no legal effect, he said. Once the electors have cast their ballots, and they have been counted in Congress, thats the end of it. Assembly Majority Leader Jim Steineke, R-Kaukauna, has repeatedly rejected efforts to overturn the 2020 election. In a world where partisan divides are deep & seemingly anything can be justified as long as it results in retaining power, handing authority to partisan politicians to determine if election fraud exists would be the end of our republic as we know it, Steineke tweeted. Following the hearing, committee chair Rep. Janel Brandtjen, R-Menomonee Falls, and member Rep. David Murphy, R-Greenville, did not rule out the possibility of pursuing decertification, though Murphy said that bar needs to be extremely high. To undo an election would be extremely detrimental to our republic. This is a very destabilizing act, Murphy said. On the other hand, elections that are stolen, thats also destabilizing for the republic so we have to look at this with an open mind from both directions. Gablemans report comes weeks after Rep. Timothy Ramthun, R-Campbellsport, launched a campaign for governor focused largely on claims of widespread fraud and a desire to take back the states 10 electoral college votes already certified for Biden. Other Republicans in the race former Lt. Gov. Rebecca Kleefisch and anti-establishment candidate Kevin Nicholson have also lobbed criticism at the 2020 elections administration, but have not openly called for decertifying the results. Voting deputies Gableman took special aim at the elections commissions decision to exempt clerks from the requirement that they send poll workers, known as special voting deputies, into care facilities in 2020, showing several videos of attorney Erick Kaardal questioning nursing homes residents who evidently voted but seemed to have trouble understanding questions he was asking them about the election. The commissions guidance was issued in March 2020 shortly after the COVID-19 pandemic was declared. The directive remained in place for the November 2020 presidential election and the February 2021 primary. John Sauer, CEO of LeadingAge Wisconsin, which represents nursing homes, said there are instances in the report that, if true, would certainly warrant further investigation. But, he said, even if a few of the examples cited turn out to be factual, we have to remember this was a very unusual circumstance, where the pandemic forced a suspension of the use of special voting deputies. Sauer noted the Gableman report said investigators vetted 24 nursing homes in Dane County, but the county has only 18, according to the state Department of Health Services. The videos Gableman showed appeared to call into question whether the people interviewed, in some cases appearing confused or uninformed, should have been allowed to vote. But under election law, only a judge not an elections clerk or a special voting deputy can reject a persons right to register to vote after finding the person is incompetent. Here are 26 ways Michael Gableman is seeking to change Wisconsin's election laws Recommendations former state Supreme Court Justice Michael Gableman makes in his "interim investigative report" for changing Wisconsin election laws. Simply being forgetful or appearing to be confused doesnt mean that person cant formulate their opinion on who they choose to vote for, Sauer said. If theres not a determination, then the assumption is that person is competent and able to cast a ballot. Dane County Clerk Scott McDonell criticized the videos, which he described as using seniors as political props, adding that families concerned a relative may be incompetent should have a judge make that finding. You wouldnt want special voting deputies to be determining that on their own, he said. Private grants Gableman also contends that the private grants by the Mark Zuckerberg-funded Center for Tech and Civic Life, which were distributed around the state but went primarily to the states five largest cities, were aimed at boosting turnout in areas more likely to go for Biden. In taking the money, Gableman said, Milwaukee, Madison, Racine, Kenosha and Green Bay engaged in what he called election bribery, defined in state law as accepting anything of value, such as money, to induce any elector to go to or refrain from going to the polls or vote or refrain from voting. His report also points to provisions in the CTCL and the cities Wisconsin Safe Voting Plan that, among other things, encourage the use of ballot drop boxes and reaching out to historically disenfranchised voters such as racial minorities and the poor, which not-coincidentally, matched that of the Biden-voter profile. A Wisconsin State Journal review of the CTCL grants found that the money was spread around to about 214 municipalities, while the five largest cities received two to four times more money, per capita, than smaller cities. At the same time, no community that asked for money from the group was denied, with communities in 39 of the states 72 counties receiving grants, including ones won by Trump. A state Legislative Audit Bureau survey also found that drop boxes were common across Wisconsin, appearing in 24 to 54 municipalities in each of seven different regions of the state, including in the northeast and northwest where Trump won the vast majority of counties. The 2020 election is over. Heres what happened (and what didnt) The 2020 election was the most secure in American history, according to the Department of Homeland Securitys Cybersecurity and Infrastructu The states anti-election bribery law also specifies other things that also cost money that are aimed at helping people vote but dont constitute bribery, such as giving employees paid time off to vote, and driving people to the polls. The conservative Thomas More Society on Tuesday released its own private review of the 2020 election, which also alleges the CTCL grants constitute bribery and raises questions surrounding special voting deputies at nursing homes. The separate review was conducted on behalf of the Wisconsin Voter Alliance, one of a handful of groups that unsuccessfully sued to overturn the results of the states 2020 presidential election. The organization shares office space in Brookfield with Gableman, according to lease documents, and the groups president, Ron Heuer, as well as Kaardal, are members of Gablemans team. State Journal reporters Chris Rickert, Alexander Shur and David Wahlberg contributed to this report. Editor's note: This story has been updated to reflect a correction. A previous version misstated the reason why Skaalen Retirement Services in Stoughton shredded four absentee ballots in the 2020 election. It was because the residents decided they didnt want to vote. None of the residents at the nursing home at the time had been found by a judge to be incompetent. Get Government & Politics updates in your inbox! Stay up-to-date on the latest in local and national government and political topics with our newsletter. Sign up! * I understand and agree that registration on or use of this site constitutes agreement to its user agreement and privacy policy. SUPERIOR President Joe Biden, struggling to regain his political footing as the midterm elections approach, visited the crucial state of Wisconsin on Wednesday to promote one of his top accomplishments, a bipartisan infrastructure measure that will distribute billions of dollars to fix roads, bridges and other public works. Bidens trip was part of a customary post-State of the Union blitz that enlisted Vice President Kamala Harris and Cabinet officials, who fanned out across the country to showcase the administrations plans. Along with first lady Jill Biden, the president shook hands with workers in hard hats and neon vests near the base of the John A. Blatnik Memorial Bridge, which connects Wisconsin and Minnesota by spanning a corner of Lake Superior. The span is a perennial candidate for replacement because its too corroded to support heavy trucks, limiting its ability to serve as an economic lifeline for the region. After years of talking about infrastructure, were finally getting it done, Biden said in a speech at nearby UW-Superior. Several Wisconsin Democratic politicians attended the event, including Gov. Tony Evers; Sen. Tammy Baldwin, D-Madison; U.S. Rep. Mark Pocan, D-Black Earth; and Lt. Gov. Mandela Barnes, who is running for U.S. Senate. Outside the campus several dozen Trump supporters had set up with Trump flags and chanted, Lets go Brandon, a euphemism for a profane expression that was also emblazoned on some of their flags. Joe Bidens public relations stop in Superior only exemplifies why his approval ratings are plummeting hes too busy planning photo-ops to focus on the issues that matter, Wisconsin GOP chair Paul Farrow said in a statement. Rocky first year Although the $1 trillion infrastructure legislation was a bright spot in his rocky first year, Bidens broader agenda including education programs, price controls for prescription drugs and financial incentives for fighting climate change remains stalled on Capitol Hill. The White House has brushed off questions about whether Biden was rebranding his legislative proposals, previously known as Build Back Better, but the signs flanking the president in Wisconsin told a different story. Building A Better America, they said, echoing a line from his State of the Union address. Biden is also trying to demonstrate that his administration remains focused on domestic issues even as he confronts the Russian invasion of Ukraine, a crisis that has required close coordination with European allies. When the history of this era is written, Ukraine will have left Russia weaker and the rest of the world stronger, Biden pledged. Harris was in North Carolina, a swing state that remained out of reach for Democrats in the last election, to visit an apprentice training program for union electrical workers. She was joined by Labor Secretary Marty Walsh, one of several Cabinet officials who were traveling Wednesday. One of the most notable trips was made by Treasury Secretary Janet Yellen, who rarely makes appearances with political undertones. She touched down in Chicago, where she had lunch at a Ukrainian restaurant in a show of solidarity with the besieged country and spoke at the University of Illinois campus in the city. Yellen defended the administrations economic sanctions on Russia, saying theyve driven down the worth of the ruble and forced Moscow to close the stock market for days to limit losses. The objective is to keep the pain to the maximum extent possible, focused on Russia and not on the rest of us, she said, an acknowledgement that economic ripple effects could affect Americans with higher gas prices. Midterm reboot Bidens approval ratings have sagged since last summer, and Republicans are poised to retake control of Congress. The White House has said Biden intends to spend more time traveling this year to promote his administrations plans. Hes got to take his message above and beyond the national press, and the chattering class of the northeastern corridor, said Cornell Belcher, a Democratic pollster. Hes got to hit the local television networks, hes got to get into the local paper. Belcher encouraged Biden to take a page from President Ronald Reagan, who promised morning in America, at a time when polls show voters are pessimistic about the future. Hes got to be cheerleader in chief, he said. Hes got to make Americans feel better. Other trips are highlighting a mix of administration successes and pending proposals. Environmental Protection Agency Administrator Michael Regan planned to promote investments in water infrastructure during a visit to South Carolina, while Interior Secretary Deb Haaland was headed to Connecticut to talk about funding for tribal communities to expand broadband internet access and repair roads. Energy Secretary Jennifer Granholm was going to Kentucky to tour a solar farm and participate in a roundtable discussion about clean energy investments across Appalachia. More trips are coming up. Health and Human Services Secretary Xavier Becerra heads to Manchester, New Hampshire, on Friday to pitch Bidens new initiatives on mental health, along with other administration priorities on COVID-19 vaccination and health equity. An emotionally conflicted Madison City Council awarded $700,000 in federal relief Tuesday night to help undocumented immigrants via organizations largely serving the Latino community over a competing proposal that would have broadened the populations served by the funding. Lamenting the lack of money to meet the needs of vulnerable immigrants, the council voted 14-6 to provide one-time grants to eight Madison nonprofits to provide direct assistance for immigrants living illegally in the United States, such as legal aid, transportation, rental assistance, food security and internet access. We thought that the biggest impact we could make with this way too small amount of money was what we proposed, said council Vice President Arvina Martin, who sits on a committee that made the recipient recommendations last month. We really felt that we could serve more people with the recommendations we put out from that committee. City staff initially recommended a slightly different group of eight from the 15 grant applicants to be funded out of the citys share of American Rescue Plan Act funds. A majority of the groups recommended by city staff serve Latino immigrants living in the United States illegally, but also included more nonprofits than what was ultimately approved that have experience aiding Southeast Asian, Hmong and African immigrant communities. Supporters of the Community Services Committees recommendations said Latinos represent the vast majority of Madisons undocumented community, and the nonprofits selected for the grants have an established history of helping the population. This is a community that deserves attention and more funds, said Karen Menendez Coller, executive director of Centro Hispano of Dane County, which would have received a grant under both proposals. How they voted: Voting for: Alds. Syed Abbas, Christian Albouras, Brian Benford, Juliana Bennett, Sheri Carter, Tag Evers, Gary Halverson, Barbara Harrington-McKinney, Lindsay Lemmer, Arvina Martin, Charles Myadze, Mike Verveer, Regina Vidaver and Nasra Wehelie Voting against: Alds. Nikki Conklin, Jael Currie, Yannette Figueroa Cole, Grant Foster, Keith Furman and Patrick Heck Ald. Yannette Figueroa Cole sponsored a competing proposal to award the $700,000 to the eight groups initially recommended by staff. The staff recommendations were more inclusive of the undocumented communities we currently have in Madison, said Figueroa Cole, 10th District. Im saying provide funding for organizations that serve the Latinx community in addition to other organizations. Kabzuag Vaj, co-executive director of Freedom Inc., which was recommended by staff but not awarded a grant by council, said the Southeast Asian community is a population nobody else is serving. According to a city chart on the grant applicants, six of the eight approved for funding are identified to primarily work with Latino immigrants. Under the staff recommendation, four of the eight predominately help Latinos. Ald. Christian Albouras, 20th District, said the Community Services Committee went through a deliberative process of evaluating staff recommendations on Feb. 23 before coming up with its own, which included four of the same nonprofits supported by staff. He was also critical that some nonprofits which scored high on an evaluation rubric were not included in the Community Development Divisions staff recommendations. Yolanda Shelton-Morris, the citys community resources manager, said staff also considered what populations nonprofits serve and how quickly they could provide aid, in making recommendations. The score is important, its not the only actor for staff in terms of funding recommendations, she said. While council members werent aligned on how to allocate the money, they agreed there is a large need to help a community disproportionately affected by the pandemic. I know that everybody who has been involved in this conversation tonight cares deeply about the welfare of undocumented folks in the Madison area, said Martin, 11th District. I dont want that to get lost. The nonprofits and grant amounts awarded are: African Center for Community Development, $100,000 Catholic Multicultural Center, $50,000 Centro Hispano Inc., $150,000 Community Immigration Law Center, $100,000 Latino Academy for Workforce Development, $150,000 The Rainbow Project, $25,000 Rise Wisconsin, $50,000 Vera Court Neighborhood Center, $75,000 Get Government & Politics updates in your inbox! Stay up-to-date on the latest in local and national government and political topics with our newsletter. Sign up! * I understand and agree that registration on or use of this site constitutes agreement to its user agreement and privacy policy. Gov. Tony Evers is set to decide whether to sign a bipartisan bill that would require the Department of Corrections to change course on a contract that gives a Texas firm an effective monopoly on providing personal items to correctional inmates and their families. The bill, which passed the Legislature in mid-February with support from Republicans and Democrats, requires DOC to contract with at least three vendors after the state prison system opted to contract with only one vendor last year. The single-vendor contract with Union Supply Group, which began in October, has led to longer customer service wait times, higher prices and fewer available items, activists and families have said. The move by DOC also effectively shut off access to a brick-and-mortar store operated by the company J.L. Marcus in Milwaukee that allowed families to pick out items in-person and have them sent to state prisons. This is something thats a common-sense thing, said Sen. Van H. Wanggaard, R-Racine, who sponsored the bill, SB 564, in the Senate. The DOC just arbitrarily decided that they werent going to put out bids, the senator said. We just felt that there should be an option and there should be a choice. Rep. Samba Baldeh, D-Madison, who co-sponsored the bill, AB 565, in the Assembly, said he hopes the governor will sign the bill, adding that the legislation shows issues that affect incarcerated people are simply not partisan. I sponsored the bill because I believe the DOCs plan to provide a monopoly on items for purchase would almost certainly ensure that incarcerated individuals and their families would end up paying higher prices for the basic goods that they depend on, Baldeh wrote in an email. Britt Cudaback, a spokesperson for Evers, said the governors team was still reviewing the bill. For and against The bill was lobbied against by the contracts beneficiary, Union Supply, in September, while J.L. Marcus, the company that previously contracted with DOC and operates the in-person storefront in Milwaukee, lobbied in favor of it. In testimony to the Assembly in September, DOC said its years-long competitive process to award a single contract aimed to obtain good customer service as well as a wide range of products for purchase for people in our care. DOCs contract with Union Supply is set to last until the end of September 2023 with four one-year renewal options. The contract is at no cost to DOC, said spokesperson John Beard. Beard declined further comment on the bills passage and its prospects on being signed into law. Union Supplys corporate office in Texas did not respond to a request for comment. For J.L. Marcus, the loss of a contract with DOC and the shuttering of the Milwaukee store has cost the company 30% of its business, said president Jodi Weber. We actually still have people who come to us daily and say, Can you please help us? Can you please send this order to our loved one? Weber said. You have a captive audience, she added. They dont have the ability to go down the street and go to a Walgreens and get the essentials that they need. Wisconsin prisons rely on third-party vendors to provide items, which have to meet a facilitys rules. A prison radio, for instance, has to be see-through to prevent smuggling. Prior to the shift to Union Supply, families could browse online and physical catalogues offered by three different companies, then order items for shipment to state correctional institutions. A moms story Kay Lanctot, a Mauston resident whose son Levi is incarcerated at New Lisbon Correctional Institution, said she always used J.L. Marcus over other vendors to mail items to her son because it was cheaper and had more options. But since Union Supply became DOCs only vendor, prices have jumped and the variety of available items has decreased, Lanctot said. Other items, from deodorant to coffee, are either not available or have months-long delivery delays. In recent months, Lanctot said, she had to send shoes to her son three separate times because the ones she sent were not allowed by the prison and Union Supply doesnt say which items are available at which facility. If you have competition, theyre much better at it (than) if youre the only person, Lanctot said of the change to a single vendor. It was so frustrating when they went down to just Union Supply and they do it sneakily, she said. There was nothing we could do about it. Though she once had to wait over an hour to speak with a customer service representative, wait times have vastly improved recently, Lanctot said. A call by the Wisconsin State Journal to Union Supplys customer service line got a representative on the phone in about a minute on Thursday afternoon and in about 15 minutes on Monday afternoon. Ramiah Whiteside, the associate director of Ex-Incarcerated People Organizing, said his group has also heard reports of long customer service wait times, shipping delays, higher prices and fewer options. They have a certain routine that theyve done for over a decade to be able to send items to their loved one, and you completely cut that up with a process that you say is going to better and its not, Whiteside said. I think the motivation was to make it more efficient, make it faster, he added. However, in practice it didnt work. Should it be signed by Evers, the bill requires DOC do everything necessary to implement the law within 90 days. An amendment to the law also allows for DOC to contract with only two vendors if fewer than three bids satisfy the bid criteria. Get Government & Politics updates in your inbox! Stay up-to-date on the latest in local and national government and political topics with our newsletter. Sign up! * I understand and agree that registration on or use of this site constitutes agreement to its user agreement and privacy policy. Wisconsin departments that support consumers are warning residents to be careful of charity scams targeting those who are trying to donate to help Ukrainians as Russia continues to attack their country. The state departments of Financial Institutions and Agriculture, Trade and Consumer Protection issued a release Tuesday urging consumers to research organizations before donating to them. The departments noted that websites for legitimate charities typically end with .org instead of .com, and residents can look up charities by name at charitynavigator.org or www.give.org. Scammers see tragedies as a way to line their pockets at the expense of well-meaning citizens, said Lara Sutherlin, administrator for DATCPs Division of Trade and Consumer Protection. Give generously to a charity if you are inclined, but always research an organization before sending money. Fake charities often make high-pressure pitches over the phone, online or by mail, the department said. They can also use names and website addresses that are similar or nearly identical to those of major, reputable charities. The departments offered the following tips for consumers: Avoid donating cash or wiring money to people or organizations that you dont know. Be wary of social media messages, emails or text messages that claim to have exclusive information or photos. Clicking on links or attachments can expose your devices to viruses. Be cautious of charities that have been created since the invasion of Ukraine started. Research who will administer the money, how it will be used and whether donations are tax-deductible. If donating through a public fundraising website, review the sites safety and security policies. If youre wondering whether a charity is legitimate, seek out contact information for the organization on your own rather than using the contact information provided in the pitch or search listing. We certainly encourage generosity to help the people in Ukraine but caution donors to avoid questionable appeals, said Michelle Knuese, administrator for DFIs Division of Corporate and Consumer Services. With a little research and a few precautions, you can help protect yourself from scammers and make sure you are donating to a legitimate charity. Get local news delivered to your inbox! Subscribe to our Daily Headlines newsletter. Sign up! * I understand and agree that registration on or use of this site constitutes agreement to its user agreement and privacy policy. Is this the start of World War III? Adolph Hitler had an intense hatred of Jews and visions of grandeur in trying to rid the whole world of Jews, even if he had to destroy the world. He was a sick man, physically and mentally. The director of the Russian space agency called President Joe Biden's sanctions Alzheimer's sanctions. Not my words, his words. That's how Russia perceives Biden. That an evil leader such as Vladimir Putin could invade an innocent country such as Ukraine is mind-boggling to freedom-loving people. He's doing it because he wants to reestablish the Russian Empire. Ukraine is Europe's breadbasket. Germany, a member of NATO, gets its gas and oil from Russia. Germany is compromised. No longer energy independent, America now is compromised also. In a way, we are supporting Russia. How about that? Ukraine is not a member of NATO, so it's basically on its own. America is both compromised and has lackluster, weak leadership. Putin is taking advantage of all these current factors. Ukraine is on her own. Ukrainian President Volodymyr Zelenskyy's reply to America's offer to help him flee his country was priceless: I need ammunition, not a ride. What spirit. Joyce McRoberts, New Glarus When we think of Social Security, most of us immediately think of seniors. And while it's true that seniors make up the vast majority of those claiming benefits, they're not the only ones who ought to be thinking about their checks. You might be decades away from claiming, but the decisions you're making today have a huge effect on your future finances. Here are two reasons you need to begin preparing for your Social Security benefits right now. 1. The size of your Social Security benefit affects how much you must save for retirement Obviously, the larger your Social Security benefits are, the less money you'll need to save on your own for retirement. If you don't know how large your Social Security checks will be, you can't figure out how much you personally need to save. That could lead to a dangerous financial shortfall. It's not easy to know exactly how much you'll get from Social Security before you claim because your benefit is based on your income during your working years. But you can get an estimate by creating a my Social Security account. Here, you can view the record of all the income you've paid Social Security taxes on over the years and see what kind of benefit you'll qualify for at various starting ages. You can also see how changes to your annual income could affect your benefit. Use this information to decide on the best time for you to sign up for benefits. Starting as soon as you become eligible at 62 might seem like a good idea, but doing so shrinks your checks. Every month you delay benefits boosts your monthly payout until you hit 70. Or if you don't want to wait that long, you could claim in the middle at your full retirement age (FRA). That's somewhere between 66 and 67 for today's workers. Once you have an idea of when you plan to claim and what your monthly benefit will be, you can figure out how much you need to save on your own for retirement. Multiply your estimated monthly Social Security benefit by 12 to get your estimated annual benefit. Then subtract this from your estimated annual expenses to figure out how much you have to come up with. If you find you're not saving enough right now, try to boost your savings rate or consider delaying retirement to give yourself time to make up the difference. 2. Understanding how Social Security works can help you maximize your benefits Once you know how the government calculates your Social Security benefits, you can leverage this information to maximize your benefit. There are a few ways to do this. First, do what you can to maximize your income right now. The government bases your benefit on your average monthly earnings over your 35 highest-earning years, so larger paychecks today correspond to larger Social Security checks in retirement -- with one exception. Those who earn more than $147,000 in 2022 won't boost their Social Security checks by upping their income. That's because you only pay Social Security taxes on the first $147,000 you earn this year. You can also increase your benefits by choosing your claiming age carefully. Typically, those with shorter life expectancies benefit more by claiming early, while those who expect to live into their 80s or beyond get more overall by delaying benefits. But you don't have to follow this rule if you don't want to. Married couples can maximize their household benefit by choosing the right time for each person to sign up. When both people earned similar amounts over their lifetimes, it's best for each to delay benefits as long as possible. But if one person significantly outearned the other, it's more important for the higher earner to delay. The lower earner can start early if need be to help the couple out. Then, when the higher earner signs up, the Social Security Administration will switch the lower earner to a spousal benefit if it's worth more than what they qualify for on their own. Be ready to adapt as necessary Thinking through your Social Security claiming strategy is a smart move, but you can also be flexible. Your retirement goals could change over time, and the government could make changes to Social Security too. Review your Social Security strategy every year when you look over your retirement plan so you can stay on top of any changes. The $18,984 Social Security bonus most retirees completely overlook If you're like most Americans, you're a few years (or more) behind on your retirement savings. But a handful of little-known "Social Security secrets" could help ensure a boost in your retirement income. For example: one easy trick could pay you as much as $18,984 more... each year! Once you learn how to maximize your Social Security benefits, we think you could retire confidently with the peace of mind we're all after. Simply click here to discover how to learn more about these strategies. The Motley Fool has a disclosure policy. Love 0 Funny 0 Wow 0 Sad 0 Angry 0 TWIN FALLS What do you get when four local residents passionate about their town come together? You get the next Herrett Forum lecture. This upcoming lecture, A Century Plus of Growth, Now What? Preserving the Magic of Downton Twin Falls, is all about examining the past, present, and future of Twin Falls and how to keep its uniqueness while it continues to grow and develop. It will provide opportunities for locals to ask questions, give ideas and express their concerns for their hometown, while it will be a great way for new residents to the area to learn about the history of Twin Falls. The lecture will be at 7:30 p.m. March 8 via Zoom. The Herrett Forum Lecture Series began in January 2006 at the Herrett Center for Arts and Science at the College of Southern Idaho. (A list of past lectures can be seen here). Lectures on science, archaeology, history, art and other topics of local interest are featured by lecturers from all over, with many who have roots in the Magic Valley. The Idaho Humanities Council will often provide speakers as well. The lectures run from September through November and from February through May. Due to the need for social distancing, all Herrett Forum lectures for the 2021-22 season will be presented virtually via Zoom. In preparation for the next lecture, Herrett Forum moderator Melody Lenkner invited speakers Samra Culum, Mychel Matthews and Nathan Murray to gather at Twin Beans in downtown Twin Falls to discuss the most important topics they want to touch on. The presenters of the lecture are an example of the sense of pride people come to have in the town and its history, while preserving that history as the town grows. Matthews, a fourth-generation Idahoan, grew up on a ranch in the Magic Valley. Culum is a refugee from Bosnia but has lived here since the 1990s. Murray grew up in Boise. Downtown is the memory of Twin Falls for us all, Culum said. Its the history we can touch. Culum is the chairperson of Twin Falls City Historic Preservation Commission and teaches at the CSI. Historian Matthews is the senior reporter at the Times-News and former director of the Twin Falls County Historical Museum. Murray is a former executive director of the Twin Falls Urban Renewal Agency and economic and community development adviser at Idaho Power Co. Weve all experienced any town USA, Lenkner said. We want to keep the culture of Twin Falls. We want to keep that essence that makes this town. Bringing in a historical architect has been important to the growth of Twin Falls, Murray says. These architects come in and inspect what is important historically, but also help find the aspects that can help create something new for the city. Its a delicate balance of historic preservation and new development, says Culum. Its about growing as a city and community, but also having that awareness of the past. Downtown Twin Falls has always been a special place for residents throughout the years, even when it undergoes new development. There are so many places using expendable buildings, Lenkner said. But Twin Falls has been able to keep a lot of the same structures that keep the essence of the town, and thats the point. These buildings are artifacts articles of fact, Matthews said. They are proof that things happened here. Without artifacts, our stories become folktale. Murray explained how the cycle of appreciation of the past goes around. Its like if you grew up in a castle you think its lame and you want out, he said. Then you grow up and leave. You then look at the castle and realize how awesome it is, and eventually move back. Its this whole cycle of residents growing up, leaving, but ultimately coming back because of that sense of pride they find that they have had in their hometown all along. For residents, its important to know where they came from because if they know that, they also know where they are going. Culum talked about the tours her commission gives of downtown and the balance that both old-timers and newcomers bring to the conversation. (Their input) is great because you have the locals who have been here for so long that they add their own stories and knowledge, and the newcomers have that sense of curiosity to learn more about the town they now call home. Want to hear about more lectures? To receive notices about upcoming lectures, send an e-mail with the subject "add" to herrettevents@csi.edu. Here's where to view the lecture https://herrett.csi.edu/herrettforum/index.asp Love 3 Funny 0 Wow 2 Sad 0 Angry 0 BOISE Idaho Republicans are floating legislation that would eliminate most property taxes on owner-occupied homes while increasing the sales tax to the highest rate in the nation. The proposal, which has yet to be finalized, would eliminate all property taxes for owner-occupied residential properties, except those associated with voter-approved bonds and school levies. It would remove city and county levies, along with other taxing districts, such as highway, cemetery and mosquito abatement districts, and replace those collections with an increase in sales tax. Its a significant change, Sen. Jim Rice, a Caldwell Republican who is helping write the bill, told the Idaho Statesman on Monday. Rice is working with Sen. C. Scott Grow, an Eagle Republican, and other stakeholders to draft the legislation. Idahos owner-occupied housing rate is 70%, according to the American Community Surveys five-year estimates from 2019. The proposal would cut about $760 million in property taxes, Rice recently told Red Wave Radio, a talk show hosted by GOP Chairman Tom Luna and Ada County Republican Central Committee Chairman Victor Miller. This is a major, big-dollar cut, Grow said on the show. One home in Meridian, for example, could see a decrease in property taxes from $2,600 to less than $600 annually, Rice said on the show. He also told the Statesman the proposal would benefit first-time homebuyers by reducing the amount of property tax for which they must qualify. The reduction in property taxes would be offset by an increase in the sales tax, from 6% to 7.85%, Rice told the Statesman. With that jump, Idahos sales tax would surpass Californias as the highest in the nation, according to data collected by the Sales Tax Institute, a Chicago-based tax education and consulting firm. Last fiscal year, 11.5% of the $2.5 billion in sales taxes collected by the state went to local governments, according to the Idaho State Tax Commissions annual report. A new formula for distributing sales tax would replace local governments property tax revenue stream under the new proposal, Rice said on the radio show. Rice told the Statesman local government representatives advised the senators on the legislation, but some have yet to weigh in. The senators are also looking to increase the grocery tax credit by $60 from $100 to $160, and from $120 to $180 for seniors which is meant to help shoulder the sales tax increases. A House bill that would increase the grocery tax credit by $20 is awaiting a hearing in the Senate Local Government and Taxation Committee, which is chaired by Rice. Rice said the new property tax bill likely will be introduced in the coming days. If passed, it would be the second-major tax bill this session. The Legislature already passed, and the governor signed, a $600 million income tax cut and rebate package, backed by the majority of Republicans. The bill lowered the top-bracket individual income tax rate and the corporate tax rate to 6%. It also provided $350 in one-time tax rebates. Love 0 Funny 0 Wow 1 Sad 0 Angry 2 In a recent poll, it was reported that the majority of Republicans approve of Vladimir Putin as a leader. Our Lt. Governor, Janice McGeachin, who is interning for the big job, made national headlines again by speaking by video at the America First Political Action Conference. That conference applauded Russias invasion of the Ukraine. It hurts my heart to call this group of people Republicans. They have hijacked the brand and all but destroyed it. They call themselves conservatives, but they turn away from the reluctant, skeptical view of change characteristic of the name. By admiring the current head of the Russian Republic, they are championing the ideal of a kleptocratic autocracy. Putin has given up any pretense of adhering to Communism and calls his opponents fascists. That is a throwback to what started as an anti-communist movement absorbed into a movement against Jews and others and committed to annexation of other countries. In some ways, Putin is as much a fascist as the WWII opponents who laid waste to western Russia. Putins grand plan to weaken the United States and take its place as a world power gained traction during the twenty-tens. Using traditional KGB originated propaganda techniques enhanced by modern psychological warfare, the Russian FSB identified Americans and Western Europeans who had parallel agendas and weaponized them. The geography of Russia poses a specific dilemma. The greater land mass is in Asia. During the last half of the second millennium, the leaders of the country courted integration into Western Europe. After Lenin and the Stalin took power, the country became fixated on increasing the population of White Russians. The government still is. In our country, we might call them white nationalists. Putin is motivated by deep nationalistic feelings. He longs for the days of being the major power countering the west as much as he desires to be accepted by the west. He found common cause with people in the United States whose feelings of marginalization were fed by efforts to encourage other minorities. In addition, he is notoriously homophobic and misogynistic. His my way or the highway style of posturing power to those common causes he has with them appeals to the alt-Republicans. However, copying him is not in their best interests. The strategies being employed to be the successor to Trump in an autocratic government show how brutal the fight can be. If the alt-Republicans long for the day when their voice is heard above the liberals, they do not understand the historic measures for maintaining power in an autocracy. Putin and Trump both throw out any acolyte who publicly deviates from his agenda in the slightest way. Freedom of speech and thought ceases when it sways others away from the leaders power. Putin is not hiding his grand plans. The invasion of Ukraine is a failure. He hoped to weaken the country from within and simply threaten further action. The rest of the world is appalled and seems to be uniting in non-lethal measures to counter the occupation. China may be able to benefit from the petroleum products flowing in their direction as a means of continuing Russias export efforts, but they are unreliable as a Russian ally. Meanwhile, we have a problem in Idaho. How do the traditional Republicans distance themselves from the usurpers and counter their anti-democratic, autocratic agenda? Some are registering as independents, but they are often also giving up on engagement in government. Some are registering as Democrats. Still others, like the Lincoln project, are promoting an anti-Republican message, really meaning the alt-Republicans. The actual need is to gather strong opposition to the alts. The alts leave the Republicans, or the mainstream regroup and rebrand before the 2024 elections. I have given up on the 2022 election season unless few alts prevail in the primaries. Before March 11, I hope there is strong opposition from traditional Republicans or Democrats to every alt-R in Idaho. If the alt-Republicans have a vision for American government, name it and claim it. Dont use the party of Lincoln as your brand. Linda Brugger, retired from the Air Force Reserve, leaning Democrat and community activist can be reached at IdahoAuthor@outlook.com. Love 2 Funny 1 Wow 0 Sad 0 Angry 2 On Thursday, March 3 at 7 p.m., Lindsay Chervinsky, Ph.D., a nationally known scholar and presidential historian, will speak about the importance of George Washingtons Cabinet, its path-breaking years, and what those precedents mean today. The discussion is the centerpiece of the 2022 Robert J. Christen Program in Early American History and Culture, hosted by the Manhattan College History department. Chervinsky will deliver a presentation on the first president of the United States and his surrounding supporters, then will take questions from the audience online via Google Meet. The virtual event is free and open to the general public. Please visit this link to participate. Chervinsky is the author of The Cabinet: George Washington and the Creation of an American Institution and the forthcoming book, An Honest Man: The Inimitable Presidency of John Adams. She is a columnist at Governing and Washington Monthly, a regular contributor to media outlets and podcasts, and teaches audiences of all ages. Founded in 1986, the Robert J. Christen Program in Early American History and Culture honors the late Robert Christen, a longtime Manhattan College history professor who also served as a member of the New York City Board of Education until his death in 1981 at age 53. He was one of the founders of the Pacem in Terris Institute of Manhattan College, developed during a time of war to advance the study of peace. Public School 81 in Riverdale has since adopted his name. For more information about the Christen Program, please contact Adam Arenson, Ph.D., professor of history, at adam.arenson@manhattan.edu or (718) 862-7317. NEW YORK (AP) Until a year ago, Stephana Ferrell's political activism was limited to the occasional letter to elected officials. Then came her local school board meeting in Orange County, Florida and an objection raised to Maia Kobabe's graphic novel "Gender Queer: A Memoir." And the county's decision last fall to remove it from high school shelves. "By winter break, we realized this was happening all over the state and needed to start a project to rally parents to protect access to information and ideas in school," says Ferrell, a mother of two. Along with fellow Orange County parent Jen Cousins, she founded the Florida Freedom to Read Project, which works with existing parent groups statewide on a range of educational issues, including efforts to "keep or get back books that have gone under challenge or have been banned." Over the past year, book challenges and bans have reached levels not seen in decades, according to officials at the American Library Association, the National Coalition Against Censorship (NCAC) and other advocates for free expression. Censorship efforts have ranged from local communities such as Orange County and a Tennessee school board's pulling Art Spiegelman's graphic novel "Maus," to statewide initiatives. "There are some books with pornography and pedophilia that should absolutely be removed from K through 12 school libraries," says Yael Levin, a spokeswoman for No Left Turn in Education, a national group opposed to what it calls a "Leftist agenda" for public schools that has called on Attorney General Merrick Garland to investigate the availability of "Gender Queer" among other books. "Now we're not talking about a public library or bookstores. We're talking about K through 12 school libraries, books that are just pornographic and with pedophilic content." According to PEN America, which has been tracking legislation around the country, dozens of bills have been proposed that restrict classroom reading and discussion. Virtually all of the laws focus on sexuality, gender identity or race. In Missouri, a bill would ban teachers from using the "1619 Project," the New York Times magazine issue which centers around slavery in American history and was released last fall as a book. The responses have come from organizations large and small, and sometimes from individuals such as Ferrell. The American Civil Liberties Union, PEN America and the NCAC have been working with local activists, educators and families around the country, helping them "to prepare for meetings, to draft letters and to mobilize opposition," according to PEN America's executive director, Suzanne Nossel. The CEO of Penguin Random House, Markus Dohle, has said he will personally donate $500,000 for a book defense fund to be run in partnership with PEN. Hachette Book Group has announced "emergency donations" to PEN, the NCAC and the Authors Guild. Legal action has been one strategy. In Missouri, the ACLU filed suit in federal court in mid-February to prevent the Wentzville school district from removing such books as "Gender Queer," Nobel laureate Toni Morrison's "The Bluest Eye" and Keise Laymon's memoir "Heavy." The civil liberties union has also filed open records requests in Tennessee and Montana over book bans, and a warning letter in Mississippi against what it described as the "unconstitutionality of public library book bans." Vera Eidelman, staff attorney with the ACLU Speech, Privacy and Technology Project, cited the U.S. Supreme Court's 1982 ruling declaring that "local school boards may not remove books from school library shelves simply because they dislike the ideas contained in those books." The tricky area, Eidelman acknowledged, is that schools officials are allowed to ban books for reasons other than not approving of the viewpoints the books express. Officials might determine, for instance, that the book is too profane or vulgar. "The problem is just that often our definitions, for example, of vulgarity or age appropriateness, are for lack of a better word, mushy, and they can also hide or be used as pretext for viewpoint-based decisions by the government," she said. Two anti-banning initiatives were launched in Pennsylvania. In Kutztown, eighth grader Joslyn Diffenbaugh formed a banned book club last fall that began with a reading of George Orwell's "Animal Farm." The Pennridge Improvement Project has started a drive to purchase books that have been removed from schools, including Leslea Newman's "Heather has Two Mommies" and Kim Johnson's "This is My America," and place them in small free libraries around the district. The wave of bans has led to new organizations and to a change of focus for existing groups. Katie Paris, an Ohio resident and the founder of Red, Wine & Blue, a national network of politically engaged "PTA mamas and digital divas" founded in 2019, said that last year she began receiving calls from members begging for help as debates over "critical race theory" erupted. Red, Wine & Blue started online sessions it calls Trouble Maker Training, which includes such guidance as "Present a calm face to counter the yelling and shouting" and "Own individual freedom: You can decide what is right for your child, but you don't get to dictate what's right for other families." Red, Wine & Blue also launched a website that tracks book bans, raised about $65,000 to organize against bans and is organizing an event in March featuring authors of banned books and parents from communities where books are being challenged. "We think education works best when it's parents and teachers working together," says Paris, the mother of 7- and 3-year old boys. "And if you don't want your child to have access to a book, then opt them out. That's fine. You just don't want to just take that opportunity away from my kids." Trying to get a book restored is often like other kinds of community activism letter writing, speeches, attending meetings. Meenal McNary is a member of the Round Rock Black Parents Association, based about 20 miles from Austin, Texas. The association was founded in 2015 after a Black teenager was slammed to the ground by a police officer, but more recently became active in diversifying the curriculum and fighting efforts to remove books. Last year, a parent's objection led to Round Rock school district officials considering whether "Stamped: Racism, Antiracism, and You," by Ibram X. Kendi and Jason Reynolds, should be taken off middle school reading lists. "We worked with a middle school teacher who started a petition, and that gained a lot of traction, with more than a 1,000 signatures," McNary says. The district followed a three-step review process culminating with a school board vote during which McNary and others helped organize people into writing letters, turning up for board meetings and telling others about the petition. "We had children speaking up in favor of this book, even though it was traumatic for some of them to read," McNary says. "We had everyone from middle school students to grandmothers and grandfathers stating their reasons why this should remain on the shelves. The board ended up voting in our favor and the book is still there." *** Hollingsworth reported from Mission, Kansas. British-Swedish multinational pharmaceutical and biotechnology company AstraZeneca has unveiled plans to double its investment in Egypt in the next three year, reports say. Hatem Werdany, Director of the company in the Arab Republic, has indicated that the multinational has invested over EGP 1 billion ($60 million) since entering the Egyptian market in 2006. Werdany also indicated that the company seeks to take part in supporting the local healthcare sector as Egypt is one of the main regional and global markets for AstraZeneca, reports note. AstraZeneca Egypt produces 900 million tablets per annum. The company in 2021 reportedly recorded sales of EGP 1.92 billion, with a growth rate of 15.8%. Moroccos Parliament Upper House and Egypts Senate have agreed to enhance further cooperation between the two legislative institutions on issues common concern. An agreement to this end was inked Tuesday in Rabat by Speaker of the House of Advisors, Naama Mayara and Speaker of the Egyptian Senate Abdel-Wahab Abdel-Razek. The two sides discussed ways of fostering consultation, coordination and joint parliamentary action to counter shared regional and international challenges. Mr. Mayara voiced Moroccos willingness to deepen coordination and consultation on all bilateral, regional and international issues, stressing the need to build strategic partnership between the two countries, especially in the economic and commercial fields. For his part, the speaker of the Egyptian Senate, currently on a visit to Morocco to take part in the 11th Congress of the Association of Senates, Shura and Equivalent Councils in Africa and the Arab World to open doors Thursday at the House of Advisors, welcomed the momentum spurred in relations between the two countries and called for the exchange of experiences on various issues of common interest, such as environment, women and human rights. Abdel-Razek also lauded the parliamentary relations between the two legislative institutions, inviting Moroccan peer to visit Egypt to continue the parliamentary dialogue. Abdel-Razek held earlier Tuesday a meeting with Foreign Minister Nasser Bourita. The encounter provided an opportunity to reaffirm the convergence of views of Rabat and Cairo regarding several issues of common interest and to underline the shared resolve to step up cooperation to higher levels. Today, The United Nations General Assembly adopted a resolution on the situation between the Russian Federation and Ukraine. The Kingdom of Morocco has decided not to participate in the vote on this resolution, says a statement from the Ministry of Foreign Affairs. Moroccos non-participation cannot be the subject of any interpretation in relation to its principled position regarding the situation between the Russian Federation and Ukraine, as reaffirmed in the Communique issued by the Ministry of Foreign Affairs, on February 26, 2022. The Kingdom of Morocco continues to follow with concern and worry the evolution of the situation between the Russian Federation and Ukraine. The Kingdom regrets the military escalation which has, unfortunately, to date, resulted in hundreds of civilian deaths and thousands of injuries and which has caused human suffering. This situation impacts, also, all the populations and States of the region and beyond, the Ministry says in the statement. The Kingdom of Morocco reaffirms its strong attachment to the respect for the territorial integrity, sovereignty and national unity of all the Member States of the United Nations. The Kingdom of Morocco recalls that, in accordance with the Charter of the United Nations, the Members of the Organization must settle their disputes by peaceful means and according to the principles of international law, in order to preserve peace and security in the world, the statement adds. The Kingdom of Morocco has always endeavored to promote the non-use of force to settle disputes between States. The Kingdom calls for the continuation and intensification of dialogue and negotiation between the parties to end this conflict and encourages all initiatives and actions to this end. Furthermore, and in response to the appeal of the UN Secretary General, the Kingdom of Morocco has decided to grant a financial contribution to the humanitarian efforts of the United Nations and neighboring countries, the statement said. Nearly 1,000 Ukrainian tourists have been stranded in the Zanzibar archipelago since Ukraine closed its airspace due to the Russian invasion, the semi-autonomous Tanzanian archipelagos tourism minister Lela Mohammed Mussa said Monday. The first thing we did was to make sure they stay where they are, even if it was time for them to leave, Mussa said. We allow them to stay in the hotels and be served as human beings, she added, assuring that they will receive all the services, comfort and remain free. These hundreds of tourists are unable to return to their country, which closed its airspace to civilian flights on Thursday, citing a high security risk after the invasion of its territory by Russian forces. Plans are under consideration to evacuate the tourists to countries like Poland, added Lela Mohammed Mussa. Former DDRR (disarmament, demobilization, reintegration, and repatriation) minister and senior CPC rebel leader Maxime Mokom returned to NDjamena after being arrested on Sunday, February 27, at the Central African Republic border by the Chadian National Security Agency (ANS). The anti-balaka militia leader, who is under U.S. Treasury sanctions, is currently residing in Chad with the main leaders of the Central African armed groups, awaiting talks led by Angola. Former DDRR (disarmament, demobilization, reintegration, and repatriation) minister and senior CPC rebel leader Maxime Mokom returned to NDjamena after being arrested on Sunday, February 27, at the Central African Republic border by the Chadian National Security Agency (ANS). The anti-balaka militia leader, who is under U.S. Treasury sanctions, is currently residing in Chad with the main leaders of the Central African armed groups, pending talks led by Angola. According to several sources, Maxime Mokom had a dispute with the ANS over the distribution of funds allocated by Angola to finance this exile. The Central African government does not like the presence of Mokom in Chad and is calling for him to go into exile, far from its borders. While most of its partners believe that the objectives contained in the Luanda roadmap are slow to materialize. The United Nations General Assembly adopted, this morning, a resolution on the situation between the Russian Federation and Ukraine. The Kingdom of Morocco has decided not to participate in the vote on this resolution, says a statement from the Ministry of Foreign Affairs, African Cooperation and Moroccans Living Abroad. Moroccos non-participation cannot be the subject of any interpretation in relation to its principled position regarding the situation between the Russian Federation and Ukraine, as reaffirmed in the Communique issued by the Ministry of Foreign Affairs, African Cooperation and Moroccan Expatriates, on February 26th, 2022. The Kingdom of Morocco continues to follow with concern and worry the evolution of the situation between the Russian Federation and Ukraine. The Kingdom regrets the military escalation which has, unfortunately, to date, resulted in hundreds of civilian deaths and thousands of injuries and which has caused human suffering. This situation impacts, also, all the populations and States of the region and beyond, the Ministry says in the statement. The Kingdom of Morocco reaffirms its strong attachment to the respect for the territorial integrity, sovereignty and national unity of all the Member States of the United Nations. The Kingdom of Morocco recalls that, in accordance with the Charter of the United Nations, the Members of the Organization must settle their disputes by peaceful means and according to the principles of international law, in order to preserve peace and security in the world, the same source adds. The Kingdom of Morocco has always endeavored to promote the non-use of force to settle disputes between States. The Kingdom calls for the continuation and intensification of dialogue and negotiation between the parties to end this conflict and encourages all initiatives and actions to this end. Furthermore, and in response to the appeal of the UN Secretary General, the Kingdom of Morocco has decided to grant a financial contribution to the humanitarian efforts of the United Nations and neighboring countries, the same source concludes. Fig. 1. Adelaide study area showing the HAVEN Index quintile classification for postal areas. Credit: DOI: 10.1093/ageing/afac029 Research from the University of Adelaide has shown that neighborhood characteristicsfrom the location of medical services and how much green space there is, to the number of people involved in volunteer activitiescan have a significant impact on older people's ability to age successfully at home. Researchers from the Adelaide Geriatrics Training and Research with Aged Care Centre (GTRAC) and the NHMRC Centre of Research Excellence in Frailty and Healthy Aging have developed a sophisticated new measure known as the Healthy Aging/Vulnerable ENvironment index, or HAVEN, to evaluate how complex aspects of neighborhood environments can influence the health and wellbeing of older people. Lead researcher and post-doctoral fellow Dr. Danielle Taylor says the development of the index has been the first stage in mapping out, not only the kinds of environmental factors that support aging in place, but also what factors may make older people more vulnerable in the community. In the first study to use the HAVEN index, "A vulnerable residential environment is associated with higher risk of mortality and early transition to permanent residential aged care for community dwelling older South Australians," published in Age and Ageing today, the research team has mapped 142 Adelaide postcode areas to determine those where people over 65 years are most vulnerable or most protected. The study used retrospective data from the Registry of Senior Australians (ROSA) database looking at older people living in metropolitan Adelaide and receiving their first eligibility assessment for aged care services between 2014 and 2016. "HAVEN employs a deficit accumulation model where we assessed more than 40 variables across six indicator groupsincome and employment; education; housing and health; social connectedness; geographical access; and physical environmentto develop composite indicators," Dr. Taylor says. "While environments are by their nature complex, using the HAVEN index, we have shown that neighborhood environments are significantly associated with the health and wellbeing of older people and the ability of older Australians seeking care to age in place." Dr. Taylor says outcomes from the recent Royal Commission into Aged Care Quality and Safety show that most Australians would prefer to stay in their homes for as long as possible, rather than transitioning into aged care. "Keeping older Australians independent, active, healthy and happy for longer is a worthy goal, not only because of the benefit to them, but also because of the economic benefit it can deliver." Dr. Taylor says. "We are not simply talking about savings to the public purse through their reduced need for health services, but also the productivity gains brought about by the contributions older Australians make to the economy and society when they are able to age well. "Analysis using the HAVEN index has clearly shown that to best support healthy aging, we need to better understand and optimize the environmental factors that support that goal. "Identifying the geographic differences in neighborhoods and regions where mortality and entry into permanent residential aged care is high or low gives us a basis for targeted local environment interventions to improve vulnerable areas, reduce inequalities and help all Australians age well." Director of the University of Adelaide's GTRAC and member of the World Health Organization's Clinical Consortium of Healthy Aging, Professor Renuka Visvanathan, says the research is especially relevant in the context of the United Nation's Healthy Aging Decade (20212023). "This is a period where internationally, we are focussing our efforts on developing a more comprehensive understanding of the many factors that contribute to successful aging," Professor Visvanathan says. "This research is making an important contribution to our knowledge of how both the health characteristics of individuals, and the environments in which they live, influence their ability to achieve healthy aging." Explore further New frailty index to improve aged care outcomes More information: Danielle Taylor et al, A vulnerable residential environment is associated with higher risk of mortality and early transition to permanent residential aged care for community dwelling older South Australians, Age and Ageing (2022). Journal information: Age and Ageing Danielle Taylor et al, A vulnerable residential environment is associated with higher risk of mortality and early transition to permanent residential aged care for community dwelling older South Australians,(2022). DOI: 10.1093/ageing/afac029 White House COVID-19 Response Coordinator Jeff Zients removes a face mask as he prepares to speak at a press briefing at the White House in Washington, April 13, 2021. The White House said Wednesday, Feb. 9, 2022, that it was beginning to prepare for the next phase of the pandemic response amid growing impatience for the federal government to ease up. Zients said officials have started consultations in recent weeks with state and local leaders and public health officials "on steps we should be taking to keep the country moving forward." Credit: AP Photo/Patrick Semansky, File It's time for America to stop letting the coronavirus "dictate how we live," President Joe Biden's White House declared Wednesday, outlining a strategy to allow people to return to many normal activities safely after two years of pandemic disruptions. One highlight is a new "test to treat" plan to provide free antiviral pills at pharmacies to people who test positive for the virus. The 90-page National COVID-19 Preparedness Plan spells out initiatives and investments to continue to drive down serious illness and deaths from the virus, while preparing for potential new variants and providing employers and schools the resources to remain open. "We know how to keep our businesses and our schools open with the tools that we have at our disposal," said White House COVID-19 coordinator Jeff Zients. Meanwhile, 140 million Americans, or 43% have now had COVID, according to a new assessment from the Centers for Disease Control and Prevention. That estimate comes from a surveillance program that tested nearly 72,000 blood samples that were sent to commercial labs from late December to late January. The samples were checked for antibodies from infection, and were distinguishable from antibodies that came from vaccination. More than 947,000 people in the U.S. have died from the virus according to the CDC. Wednesday's White House announcement follows Biden's Tuesday night State of the Union speech, in which he pointed to progress against the pandemic since last year, with a dramatic reduction in cases, along with readily available vaccines and the likelihood of new tests and therapeutics soon becoming more accessible. "This plan lays out the roadmap to help us fight COVID-19 in the future as we move America from crisis to a time when COVID-19 does not disrupt our daily lives and is something we prevent, protect against, and treat," the White House said. "We are not going to just 'live with COVID.' Because of our work, we are no longer going to let COVID-19 dictate how we live." That tracked Biden's speech statement, "Tonight, I can say we are moving forward safely, back to more normal routines. It's time for Americans to get back to work and fill our great downtowns again." President Joe Biden speaks at an event to celebrate Black History Month in the East Room of the White House, Monday, Feb. 28, 2022, in Washington. Credit: AP Photo/Patrick Semansky COVID-19 cases have fallen to their lowest level since last summer in recent weeks, after a winter spike from the highly transmissible omicron variant. Deaths, though, which lag cases by weeks, are still elevated, with an average of nearly 1,700 people dying in the U.S. each day. Officials emphasize that most instances of serious illnesses and death in the U.S. occur among those who are unvaccinated or who have not received a booster dose of vaccine. The White House's strategy comes days after the CDC loosened its guidance for when face masks should be worn in public indoor settings, placing more emphasis on local capacity to treat serious disease than overall case counts. Now more than 70% of the country can safely remove masks indoors, the CDC says, and the percentage is expected to grow as cases continue to decline. While most states and localities moved to relax their mask requirements even before the CDC change, many have kept mandates in place for schools, and the federal government continues to require face masks on public transportation, including airplanes. The federal mandate is to expire on March 18, and health officials did not provide any indication whether it would be extended. Meanwhile, businesses across the country are struggling to navigate employees' lingering concerns about COVID-19 and desire for the flexibility of working from home. Many companies' would like to get workers back into offices. A key component of the administration's plan to convince American that it is safe to resume normal activities is the increasing availability of an antiviral pill from Pfizer that has been shown to reduce the risk of hospitalization from COVID-19 by 90%. By the end of the month, the administration says, 1 million pills will be available, with double that ready for use in April. A White House official said the "test-to-treat" plan would initially roll out in hundreds of pharmacies across the country, including CVS, Walgreens, and Kroger locations, and would soon expand beyond that. Those who test positive at the sites would be able to obtain the antiviral pills for quick use, dramatically reducing the risk of bad outcomes. One possible problem: The test-to-treat plan drew early concern from some pharmacists. Anne Burns, a vice president with the American Pharmacists Association, said pharmacies across the country have struggled with staffing issues in recent months. Pharmacists already doling out vaccines, prescriptions and health advice are worried about the extra time needed if they add more COVID-19 testing and treating. "There's just a lot of considerations that go into this," she said. "It takes far longer than it takes to dispense most normal prescriptions." The administration said it also stands ready to rapidly administer millions of vaccine doses for children under 5 once the vaccines are approved by federal regulators. While there had been hope for the first shots to be authorized last month, Pfizer is now waiting on the results of a study including a third dose of the vaccine for that age group, and that will likely delay approval until April. Students wear face masks and are seated with empty desks separating them from their classmates in a 2nd grade class at School 16 in Yonkers, N.Y., Oct. 20, 2020. Credit: AP Photo/Mary Altaffer, File As part of the new strategy, the administration is calling on Congress to reinstitute tax credits for businesses that provide paid sick leave for employees who are sick with COVID-19. The White House is also asking Congress for additional funding to invest in new COVID-19 drugs, including research into the development of pan-coronavirus vaccines that would prevent against multiple strains and even several different types of viruses. Meanwhile, federal officials emphasized they have greatly improved the public health system's capacity to identify and track any potential new variants, with new investments in surveillance testing and genomic sequencing. Zients said the administration believes that if needed, it can authorize, produce and deliver new vaccines and treatments "in just 100 days rather than in many months or years." Biden, in his remarks Tuesday night, said that in addition to starting the new antiviral initiative, his administration would allow people in the U.S. to order another round of free tests from the government. He said that starting next week, the administration would make available four more free tests to U.S. households through COVIDTests.gov, which has sent more than 270 million to nearly 70 million households since it launched in mid-January. Juan Gallego, a 58-year-old resident of Chelsea, Massachusetts, a majority Latino city north of Boston that was one of the state's hardest hit during the pandemic, says Biden's comments were appropriate, given how far the nation has come over the plast two years. "Before, we didn't know how to treat it. We were all paranoid, we didn't know what to do," he said of the virus. "Now we know, with all the experience, all we've done with the vaccines and new treatments." Gallego, a real estate agent who during the worst of the pandemic helped make face masks and deliver groceries and other essentials to quarantined families throughout Chelsea, said safety habits won't quickly fade, especially in cities like his that took the brunt of the pain. Many along Chelsea's bustling main street and even children in local schools have continued to mask up, although a statewide mask mandate in classrooms was lifted this week, he said. "He sent a message of hope, not desperation," Gallego said of Biden. "We are in a much better place. And he's right." 2022 The Associated Press. All rights reserved. This material may not be published, broadcast, rewritten or redistributed without permission. Credit: Pixabay/CC0 Public Domain A foundry worker in the Navy for more than two decades, Velvin Bill of La Mesa often cast metal parts for broken ship pumps, allowing vessels to stay underway many decades after they were built. It's fitting, then, that this World War II veteran arrived at his 100th birthday last week with a little help for his own personal pump. Two years ago, he received a high-tech heart valve when his original equipment began to fail. Like so many who make it past 90, the aortic valve he was born with had significantly narrowed, causing severe weakness as too little freshly-oxygenated blood made it out of his heart's main pumping chamber to the rest of his body. Like a buildup of barnacles on a ship's hull, the situation slowed him down, diminishing his ability to move around his home, eroding opportunities for healthy exercise. It has been possible to replace worn-out heart valves since the 1960s. But until recently, the option was usually unavailable to those over 90 because sewing in a new model made from pig or cow tissue required open-heart surgery. Most in their ninth decade of life have been considered too frail to survive having their chest cavities opened. But a relatively new technique called transcatheter aortic valve replacement or TAVR has sunk those old assumptions. Cleverly constructed replacement valves built inside collapsable wire support structures allow teams of interventional cardiologists to deliver a fix by traveling through the body's arteries, allowing recipients to skip the body blow of invasive cardiac surgery. Open heart valve replacement generally means a week in a hospital bed and a month of recovery at home. But TAVR generally requires only an over-night stay before going home and getting on with life. For Bill, the difference was immediately obvious. Like most, the improvement was nearly immediate. "It was surprising, because I didn't feel nearly as tired anymore, just like that," Bill said. "When he came home from the hospital, I could tell the difference right away, how he moved around the house and could do more things without getting so tired," added Debbie Bill, Velvin's daughter who lives within walking distance of his home. It is an experience that has become increasingly common as TAVR has gradually supplanted open-heart aortic valve replacement surgery since the technique first gained federal approval for high-risk patients in 2012. Dr. Jeffrey Cavendish, an interventional radiologist with Kaiser Permanente and chair of the cardiology department at Scripps Memorial Hospital La Jolla, explained that it's not just the TAVR valve's design that has delivered recent gains. Today's precise imaging capabilities can show blood vessels and heart anatomy in exquisite detail, allowing teams to assess whether the device will be a good fit. The thin wires called catheters used to deliver the valve travel inside the femoral artery accessed with a small incision at the groin or, more recently, through a smaller artery in the arm. Imaging can help check the path of travel and spot potential problems before a decision to move forward is made. "The imaging capabilities we have today allow us to have our roadmap, our game plan, all set before we start, so when it comes time to do a procedure, we just have to execute," Cavendish said. Kaiser San Diego has now performed more than 600 TAVR procedures since 2012, with more than 270,000 TAVR valves installed nationwide through 2019, according to an annual special report published in 2021 by the Society of Thoracic Surgeons and the American College of Cardiology. By federal law, the results of every TAVR procedure performed in the United States must be recorded in a special registry so that problems can be detected. The latest report shows that TAVR overtook surgical aortic valve replacement in 2015 or 2016, becoming more common than surgical replacement combined with other heart procedures like heart bypass in late 2018 and early 2019. Dr. Vinod Thourani, chief of cardiovascular surgery at the Marcus Heart Valve Center in Atlanta and co-chair of the valve replacement registry, said nationwide TAVR use approached 85,000 cases each of the past two years. Often performing a half-dozen TAVR procedures per day, Thourani has seen the technique and technology evolve since he installed his first valve under early clinical trial protocols in 2006. While its use has exploded in recent years, the physician said some estimate that only about 20% of those who could benefit are receiving TAVR valves today. The main symptoms of aortic stenosis are chest pain or tightness, dizziness or fainting and shortness of breath, all which are more common during physical activity. Older patients, especially those in their 90s, are still being offered monitoring and medication instead of TAVR. "There are a lot of patients with severe aortic valve stenosis who are not getting the option of surgery or this therapy," Thourani said. "We think that's sad, because you can really turn somebody's life around with an overnight stay." Analysis of registry data indicates that it has gradually become safer for patients. According to the latest study, the overall in-hospital mortality rate after TAVR fell from an initial 5.4% to 1.3% in 2019. The possibility of death for patients deemed to be at the highest risk has fallen from 24% to just under 17% one year after surgery. The number of strokes suffered after surgery has also fallen as has the number of patients who end up needing a pacemaker after TAVR. As interventional cardiology teams have gained more and more experience, they have been increasingly willing to approve patients such as Bill who are significantly past their 90th birthdays. Thourani said he recently installed one of the valves in a woman who was 103. "She went home the next day in her Mustang with her family," he said. "It went well." Locally, Cavendish said that Bill is the oldest of Kaiser San Diego's TAVR patients, and several who received the device in recent years are turning 100 in 2022. Some will not qualify due to the specific twists and turns of their anatomy, or because they suffer from other severe maladies that would keep them from having a good long-term prognosis, even with a new and much more functional heart valve. "We want to make sure that this is going to confer a benefit for patients, that they're going to feel better and live longer," Cavendish said. "We're not going to do something like this just because we can." While there are many who have the kind of valve narrowing that makes them good candidates for TAVR, the device cannot fix other issues, such as valve regurgitation, a condition where some previously pumped blood is sucked back into the heart. Because regurgitating valves have structural damage, rather than being gummed up by calcium deposits, TAVR often will not work because the device cannot properly seat itself in the surrounding tissue. "We don't want to put the valve in and have it slip or move," Cavendish said. "If we're worried that we're not going to get a good seal, then we'll send the patient for open-heart surgery instead." Of course, patients who do successfully undergo a TAVR procedure usually have other medical problems present that do not go away after surgery. That is the case for Bill, who suffers from macular degeneration that prevents him from seeing fine details. The disease has forced him to stop doing some things he really loved, including flying his private plane and high-end woodworking. Born in 1922 on an Oklahoma farm and one of 14 children, he came to California with his parents just as the Great Depression was starting, enlisting in the Navy when he turned 19, then deciding to stay in San Diego with his wife, Marian, after two years fixing Navy ships in the South Pacific during the war. Though his options are more narrow than they were, and certainly more than he would like, Bill said he has no trouble finding reasons to get up in the morning. A better-circulating blood supply, while it has not solved all the problems of age, has helped him get outside more often, especially with Debbie by his side during regular walks at nearby Lake Murray. Though he'd surely rather have his eyesight back to the sharpness he once enjoyed, he can still listen, whether it's to books on tape, ballgames or family members, including six grandchildren, one great grandchild and two great great grandchildren. "You just have to find something that you love to do, even if you can't see it or you can't do it like you used to do," he said. Explore further Trends in aortic valve replacement among patients with dementia 2022 The San Diego Union-Tribune. Distributed by Tribune Content Agency, LLC. Credit: CC0 Public Domain Low-income Illinois residents will soon be able to receive free dental care at a new 25,000-square-foot clinic being opened in Chicago's Fulton Market district this summer by The Aspen Group, which operates dental and medical clinics across the country and recently moved its headquarters to Chicago. While a number of clinics across the Chicago area offer low-cost and sometimes free dental care to vulnerable people, the new clinic will focus exclusively on dental services and be free to all patients who make no more than 200% of the federal poverty level or are on Medicaid. "We know that oral care is essential for overall health," said Julie Frantsve-Hawley, executive director of the new TAG Oral Care Center for Excellence. "Having a healthy mouth is really essential, and a problem we see is many struggle to access dental care, and because of this they can have potentially dangerous situations that go untreated. What we hope this will do is fill this critical gap for thousands of patients in Illinois." Among Illinois adults who had not visited a dentist in the past year, 64% cited cost as a reason, according to a 2015 survey by the American Dental Association's Health Policy Institute. The new clinic, at 1040 W. Randolph St., will include 14 treatment rooms and another two rooms for advanced surgical procedures. The clinic is expected to serve about 2,500 patients a year. Aspen plans to work with community groups and organizations to get the word out to patients who might benefit. The clinic will have a full-time staff of licensed dentists and specialists as well as dental technicians and hygienists, said Dr. Sundeep Rawal, a senior vice president at Aspen. The clinic will also be a training ground for licensed dentists from Aspen Dental and ClearChoice Dental Implant practices across the country, who will go to the center to learn advanced dental technologies and procedures. Some Chicago-area dental leaders had expressed concerns, earlier in the planning process for the clinic, about Aspen bringing in dentists from out of state for only short periods of time to treat low-income patients. "Our concern was that there would be no accountability, and if a patient was harmed there was no continuity of care because that individual came in, worked on the patient and left, then you basically are leaving somebody in the middle of dental care without any follow-up," said Dave Marsh, director of governmental affairs for the Illinois State Dental Society. Ultimately, the state dental society and other groups reached an agreement with Aspen that Aspen would have to have patients sign consent forms acknowledging they were being treated by out-of-state dentists, and Aspen would have to use licensed Illinois dentists to provide any follow-up care a patient might need, among other things. Gov. J.B. Pritzker signed a bill into law in August spelling out those requirements and others. Bill sponsor Rep. Lakesia Collins, a Chicago Democrat, said the new center will help to "fill a massive need in Chicago and the state of Illinois." The new center will join a number of organizations that offer low-cost and free dental care in the Chicago area. The Chicago Dental Society Foundation, for example, has a free dental clinic in Wheaton with three treatment rooms. And many federally qualified health centers, which are centers that receive federal funding, offer dental services alongside other medical services and may charge patients on a sliding scale, based on their abilities to pay. UI Health's Mile Square Health Center, which is a federally qualified health center, expects to have 26 dental chairs across numerous sites by the end of this year, said Dr. Sue Etminan, the center's dental director. Many of those sites are in neighborhoods with the greatest needs for services, she said. "Our most successful programs at increasing access to care have been meeting patients where they're at, in their communities," she said. The new Aspen center will be in Aspen's former headquarters in the Fulton Market district, Rawal said. That location was also chosen because it's near public transportation and has parking on-site, he said. Aspen moved to a new headquarters at 800 W. Fulton Market in October 2021. The Aspen Group now supports more than 1,100 locations in 45 states through Aspen Dental, ClearChoice, WellNow and ChapterSM. Under Aspen's model, dentists own the practices, but the company handles administrative and training services, and the practices are branded as Aspen Dental. The company has faced a number of legal challenges over the years. Late last year, Massachusetts Attorney General Maura Healey filed a lawsuit against Aspen Dental Management alleging it engaged in deceptive advertising and marketing practices, including charging patients for services it advertised as free. In 2015, the company paid $450,000 to settle with the New York attorney general's office after an investigation found Aspen was making business decisions that were adversely affecting patient care, including pressuring staff to increase sales of dental services and products. Aspen also reached a $175,000 settlement with the Pennsylvania attorney general in 2010 after it was accused of using confusing or misleading information about discounts, coupons and interest-free financing. Aspen did not admit wrongdoing as part of those settlements. In 2020, dentists, dental hygienists, dental assistants, and a dental marketing worker filed lawsuits in Cook County Circuit Court against Aspen Dental Management and the owner of an Aspen Dental clinic in Crestwood. The employees and former employees alleged they were secretly videotaped while using the clinic's bathroom. They alleged that a dental hygienist placed two hidden cameras in the bathroom and that the clinic's owners and supervisors should have known about that person's alleged criminal background before hiring him. "While we do not comment on active litigation, several of the cases are nearly a decade old and do not reflect the positive experience that more than 30,000 patients have at the independently-owned Aspen Dental practices across the nation every day, and nor does it reflect the values of (The Aspen Group)which continues to strive to expand access to quality, affordable care for those who need it most," The Aspen Group said in a statement. Explore further Patients who are afraid of dental care should be identified and the fear alleviated at an early age 2022 Chicago Tribune. Distributed by Tribune Content Agency, LLC. Credit: Unsplash/CC0 Public Domain Tinnitus, most often described as "ringing" in the ears even though no external sound is present, also can be perceived as humming, hissing, buzzing or roaring sounds. According to the United States Centers for Disease Control and Prevention (CDC), more than 50 million Americans experience some form of tinnitus2 million have extreme and debilitating cases. Worldwide, about 30 percent of people will experience tinnitus at some point in their life. Many individuals impacted by COVID-19 experienced changes in their sense of smell, taste, hearing, balance and in some cases, tinnitus. Among the various causes of tinnitus is stress, including tension, anxiety and depression. What's unclear, however, is whether the psychological impacts of the pandemic such as stress actually worsened tinnitus and its impacts. Researchers from Florida Atlantic University, the Royal Surrey NHS Foundation Trust in the United Kingdom, and the University of Cambridge conducted a study that focused on the potential indirect effects of COVID-19 on the experience of tinnitus. They assessed whether the severity of tinnitus, as measured using ratings of tinnitus loudness, annoyance, and effect on life, was influenced by the lockdown related to pandemic. Although COVID-19 upended so many aspects of society, there is some good newsat least as it relates to tinnitus. For the study, researchers compared two independent groups of new patients; one group assessed during three months of lockdown in the United Kingdom and one group assessed during the same period in the preceding year. They examined patients' pure-tone audiometry, and their score on visual analog scale (VAS) of tinnitus loudness, annoyance, and effect on life, which were imported from their records. Researchers compared VAS ratings from both groups. All patients were seeking help for their tinnitus for the first time. Results of the study, published in the Journal of the American Academy of Audiology, do not support the idea that the pandemic led to a worsening of tinnitus loudness, annoyance, or impact on life and the mean scores did not differ significantly for the groups seen prior to and during lockdown. Any changes in psychological well-being or stress produced by the lockdown did not significantly affect ratings of the severity of tinnitus. "People experienced various types of adversities during the pandemic, including loss of income, difficulty in obtaining services, experience of the virus itself, and the impact of constant bad news and social distancing," said Ali Danesh, Ph.D., co-author, professor, Department of Communication Sciences and Disorders/Communication Disorders Clinic within FAU's College of Education, a member of FAU's Stiles-Nicholson Brain Institute and FAU's Institute for Human Health and Disease Intervention, professor of biomedical sciences, FAU Schmidt College of Medicine, and an affiliate faculty, Department of Psychology, FAU Charles E. Schmidt College of Science. "It's possible that pandemic related factors exacerbate the experience of tinnitus, as tinnitus is linked to general anxiety and psychological well-being. On the other hand, perhaps the effect of COVID-19 on everyday life made individuals with tinnitus realize that there are more important things than tinnitus, putting it into perspective and leading to a decrease of the impact of tinnitus that counteracted any effect of increased anxiety and decreased well-being." Several studies on tinnitus reported sleep-related problems, poor mental health, and suicidal ideations as consequences of the COVID-19 pandemic and its associated social isolation and economic uncertainties. "It is questionable whether people are able to judge reliably whether their tinnitus itself has changed or whether their tinnitus-related symptoms such as sleep disturbances or anxiety have changed," said Hashir Aazh, Ph.D., affiliate associate professor at FAU and Honorary Hearing Research Consultant, Department of Audiology, Royal Surrey County Hospital. "Prior studies of the indirect effects of COVID-19 on the experience of tinnitus have used different methodologies, which may have led to biases." The current study avoided potential biases by comparing self-reported tinnitus severity between new patients seen during lockdown and another group of patients seen during the same time frame, preceding lockdown. "If a given respondent felt that their tinnitus was worse during the pandemic than before the pandemic, how could they determine whether this was due to lifestyle changes, health concerns, or social distancing?" said Danesh. "Visual analog scale scores for tinnitus loudness, annoyance, and impact on life did not differ significantly between new patients seen prior to and during lockdown. This may indicate that tinnitus can influence anxiety and well-being, but there is not an effect in the opposite direction." The retrospective study examined data for 105 consecutive patients who were seen at a tinnitus clinic in an audiology department in the United Kingdom during lockdown and 123 patients seen in the same period of the previous year. The average age of the patients seen during the lockdown was 50 years, while the average age of the patients seen in 2019 was 56 years. The two groups were reasonably well matched in age, gender, and severity of hearing loss. Explore further Constant tinnitus is linked to altered brain activity More information: Hashir Aazh et al, Self-Reported Tinnitus Severity Prior to and During the COVID-19 Lockdown in the United Kingdom, Journal of the American Academy of Audiology (2022). Hashir Aazh et al, Self-Reported Tinnitus Severity Prior to and During the COVID-19 Lockdown in the United Kingdom,(2022). DOI: 10.1055/s-0041-1731733 Graphic representing a young adult with cancer crowdfunding. Credit: Justine Ross, Michigan Medicine Crowdfunding has become a means for people with cancer to get help managing the financial impact of their disease. But while there's relief in paying bills, a new study finds that it comes at a cost: a sense of shame and stigma from asking for help and revealing personal health details. The issue is particularly critical for young adults with cancer, a specific group that is understudied and yet faces distinct needs. "Young adults are at that point in life where they are beginning to achieve financial independence and finding career employment. When a cancer diagnosis hits, it can really impact that young person's financial wellbeing," said Lauren V. Ghazal, Ph.D., M.S., a postdoctoral nursing student at the University of Michigan Rogel Cancer Center and a research fellow at the School of Nursing. To understand the role of crowdfunding, researchers surveyed 46 young adult cancer survivors who had sought financial help from friends and family. The survey asked survivors to describe both their experience with and their thoughts about crowdfunding. Results are published in the Journal of Cancer Survivorship. Crowdfunding involves raising money from friends and family. The most commonly known platform is GoFundMe, which says it hosts more than 250,000 medical fundraisers per year, raising more than $650 million per year. People also use social media to ask for help, or may hold raffles, church dinners or other events in their community. In the study, the average crowdfunding campaign raised just under $3,500, with about half reporting they did not meet their goal. Participants described relief at raising money to help defray their medical expenses or living expenses while undergoing treatment. They called it "a lifesaver" and noted that they might not have been able to afford treatment or other daily living necessities without it. But survivors also expressed unease, considering crowdfunding to be humiliating and questioning why it is necessary. The authors describe it as the "Crowdfunding Compromise:" tensions between the vulnerable feelings of disclosing a personal situation, the stigma of asking for help and the relief of receiving much-needed funds. "Asking for help is difficult. It's even harder for a young adult who just got diagnosed with a serious illness. This is not something a young adult cancer patient does lightly. And it's not something that necessarily should be expectedthat they immediately have to disclose their whole history on a social media site to pay their bills," said Ghazal, the paper's first author. Survivors noted feeling uncomfortable with the idea of crowdfunding, struggling with how much detail to reveal while still positioning their situation as worthy of others' support. Expenses can stem from cancer treatment, including high insurance deductibles, or they can be a result of not being able to work during treatment. In addition, financial burden can last well beyond the end of treatment, with ongoing prescriptions and scans, mounting bills and loans, and potential challenges regaining a footing in the workplace. The study also suggests that crowdfunding could be increasing racial and economic disparities, with people from wealthier socioeconomic backgrounds more likely to raise more money and more likely to meet their goal. The researchers focused specifically on young adult cancer survivors, but Ghazal said crowdfunding concerns could easily extend to people with cancer in other age groups or to people with other serious medical conditions. "Crowdfunding serves a purpose in addressing young cancer survivors' immediate needs," Ghazal said. But the authors call crowdfunding "the epitome of treating symptoms without attention to their root causes." "Crowdfunding is an individual solution," Ghazal said. "We need to look at broader interventions to reduce financial toxicity and increase social support for young adult cancer survivors." Explore further Psychological distress may lead to more care and high medical costs for adolescent and young adult cancer survivors More information: Lauren V. Ghazal et al, "Both a life saver and totally shameful": young adult cancer survivors' perceptions of medical crowdfunding, Journal of Cancer Survivorship (2022). Journal information: Journal of Cancer Survivorship Lauren V. Ghazal et al, "Both a life saver and totally shameful": young adult cancer survivors' perceptions of medical crowdfunding,(2022). DOI: 10.1007/s11764-022-01188-x Rice University bioengineer Omid Veiseh with a vial of bead-like implants his lab invented to serve as anti-cancer drug factories. Veiseh and colleagues showed the implants could eradicate ovarian and colorectal cancer in mice in as little as six days. Credit: "Jeff Fitlow/Rice University" Rice University bioengineers have shown they can eradicate advanced-stage ovarian and colorectal cancer in mice in as little as six days with a treatment that could be ready for human clinical trials later this year. The researchers used implantable "drug factories" the size of a pinhead to deliver continuous, high doses of interleukin-2, a natural compound that activates white blood cells to fight cancer. The drug-producing beads can be implanted with minimally invasive surgery. Each contains cells engineered to produce interleukin-2 that are encased in a protective shell. The treatment and animal test results are described online today in a Science Advances study co-authored by Omid Veiseh, Amanda Nash and colleagues from Rice, the University of Texas MD Anderson Cancer Center, the University of Virginia and others. Veiseh, an assistant professor of bioengineering whose lab produced the treatment, said human clinical trials could begin as soon as this fall because one of his team's key design criteria was helping cancer patients as quickly as possible. The team chose only components that had previously proven safe for use in humans, and it has demonstrated the safety of the new treatment in multiple tests. "We just administer once, but the drug factories keep making the dose every day, where it's needed until the cancer is eliminated," Veiseh said. "Once we determined the correct dosehow many factories we neededwe were able to eradicate tumors in 100% of animals with ovarian cancer and in seven of eight animals with colorectal cancer." Rice University bioengineering graduate student Amanda Nash is creating cell-encapsulation technologies to treat cancer. Nash and colleagues created the technology with an eye toward rapid approval for human clinical trials, using only components that have previously proven safe for use in humans. Credit: Jeff Fitlow/Rice University In the newly published study, researchers placed drug-producing beads beside tumors and within the peritoneum, a sac-like lining that supports intestines, ovaries and other abdominal organs. Placement within this cavity concentrated interleukin-2 within tumors and limited exposure elsewhere. "A major challenge in the field of immunotherapy is to increase tumor inflammation and anti-tumor immunity while avoiding systemic side effects of cytokines and other pro-inflammatory drugs," said study co-author Dr. Amir Jazaeri, professor of gynecologic oncology and reproductive medicine at MD Anderson. "In this study, we demonstrated that the 'drug factories' allow regulatable local administration of interleukin-2 and eradication of tumor in several mouse models, which is very exciting. This provides a strong rationale for clinical testing." Interleukin-2 is a cytokine, a protein the immune system uses to recognize and fight disease. It is an FDA-approved cancer treatment, but Nash, a graduate student in Veiseh's group and the study's lead author, said the drug factories provoke a stronger immune response than existing interleukin-2 treatment regimens because the beads deliver higher concentrations of the protein directly to tumors. "If you gave the same concentration of the protein through an IV pump, it would be extremely toxic," Nash said. "With the drug factories, the concentration we see elsewhere in the body, away from the tumor site, is actually lower than what patients have to tolerate with IV treatments. The high concentration is only at the tumor site." Rice University bioengineers Amanda Nash (left) and Omid Veiseh with vials of bead-like drug factories they created to treat cancer. The beads are designed to continuously produce natural compounds that program the immune system to attack tumors. Credit: Jeff Fitlow/Rice University Nash said the same general approach used in the study could be applied to treat cancers of the pancreas, liver, lungs and other organs. The drug factories could be placed next to tumors and within the linings that surround those organs and most others, she said. And if a different cytokine is needed to target a specific form of cancer, the beads can be loaded with engineered cells that make that immunotherapeutic compound. The bead's outer shell shields its cytokine-producing cells from immune attacks. The shells are made of materials the immune system recognizes as foreign objects but not as immediate threats, and Veiseh's lab leveraged that in its design. "We found foreign body reactions safely and robustly turned off the flow of cytokine from the capsules within 30 days," he said. "We also showed we could safely administer a second course of treatment should it become necessary in the clinic." Avenge Bio, a Massachusetts-based startup co-founded by Veiseh, has licensed the cytokine-factory technology from Rice. Additional co-authors include Maria Jarvis, Samira Aghlara-Fotovat, Sudip Mukherjee, Andrea Hernandez, Andrew Hecht, Yufei Cui, Shirin Nouraein, Jared Lee, David Zhang and Oleg Igoshin of Rice; Peter Rios, Sofia Ghani, Ira Joshi and Douglas Isa of CellTrans Inc.; Chunyu Xu and Weiyi Peng of the University of Houston; Rahul Sheth of MD Anderson; and Jose Oberholzer of both CellTrans Inc. and the University of Virginia. Explore further Method for delivering immune system-stimulating drugs may enhance cancer immunotherapy More information: Amanda M. Nash et al, Clinically translatable cytokine delivery platform for eradication of intraperitoneal tumors, Science Advances (2022). www.science.org/doi/10.1126/sciadv.abm1032 Journal information: Science Advances Amanda M. Nash et al, Clinically translatable cytokine delivery platform for eradication of intraperitoneal tumors,(2022). DOI: 10.1126/sciadv.abm1032 Your Colleagues Taylor named to 400 Years of African-American History Commission UBNOW STAFF UB faculty member Henry-Louis Taylor Jr. has been appointed by Gov. Kathy Hochul to the 400 Years of African-American History Commission, which aims to highlight contributions by Africans and African-Americans to the U.S. and to New York State. The commission, composed of historians and academics, will partner with community-based organizations to bring people together to celebrate African American history and culture via events, activities and educational research. Taylor, professor of urban and regional planning, and director of the Center for Urban Studies, is one of seven Hochul appointees to the commission; other appointments will be made by the secretary of state, state education commissioner, president of the Senate, speaker of the Assembly, and Senate and Assembly minority leaders. Hochul announced the appointments at a news conference last week in Newburgh, where she also announced commemorative plaques would be dedicated in honor of Robert Mulliner and Robert Lewis, two victims of racially motivated lynchings in Orange County. Mulliner was killed in Newburgh in 1863; Lewis was killed in Port Jervis in 1892. For every reminder of the pivotal role New York has played in the fight for civil rights, there is another, more painful reminder of why that fight was necessary in the first place, Hochul said. We must recognize and acknowledge shameful chapters in our states past, ensure New Yorkers have a better understanding of our history, and fight racism and bigotry in all forms. This Black History Month, I am honored to dedicate these plaques and appoint these seven leaders to the 400 Years of African-American History Commission, she said. These actions will help us understand our history better, while pushing us to continue making progress. Taylor is recognized internationally for his work on distressed urban neighborhood and social isolation among people of color. His research focuses on a historical and contemporary analysis of distressed urban neighborhoods, social isolation, and race and class issues among people of color, especially African Americans and Latinos. Within that framework, his research also focuses on these issues in Cuba, the Caribbean Islands and Latin America. Taylors work is concerned with the redevelopment of shrinking cities and metropolitan cities, with a focus on social, economic and racial justice. Credit: CC0 Public Domain The deterioration in people's mental health linked to COVID-19 is showing no sign of returning to pre-pandemic levels, a new study finds. Researchers from the University of Exeter Business School and the Adam Smith Business School at the University of Glasgow used the UK Household Longitudinal Study to compare the mental health of more than 10,000 UK individuals. They found that on average, mental distress in the height of the pandemic in April 2020 was 11 percent higher than it was before the pandemic in 2017-19. But in March 2021, amid the vaccine rollout and with restrictions starting to lift, the researchers found no evidence of any improvement in the population's mental health. The average mental distress in March 2021 was essentially the same as in April 2020. Mental distress was measured by the 12-point General Health Questionnaire (GHQ-12), a screening device for identifying minor psychiatric disorders. Respondents completed the GHQ-12 once between 2017 and 2019, again in April 2020, and again in March 2021. Climent Quintana-Domeque, a Professor of Economics at the University of Exeter Business School, said, "Our study shows that the COVID-19 pandemic has affected the mental health of people across society, and that these negative consequences continue to be felteven when we are told the worst is over." Previous research has found that women and Black, Asian and ethnic minority individuals experienced higher increases in mental distress during the pandemic. The researchers found these gender and ethnicity gaps persisted in March 2021. "More needs to be done by policymakers to address these plateauing mental distress levels and to explain the differential deterioration on mental well-being among women and those in ethnic minority groups," said Professor Quintana-Domeque. Explore further Mental health of UK women, ethnic minorities especially affected during pandemic More information: Climent Quintana-Domeque et al, On the Persistence of Mental Health Deterioration during the COVID-19 Pandemic by Sex and Ethnicity in the UK: Evidence from Understanding Society, The B.E. Journal of Economic Analysis & Policy (2022). Climent Quintana-Domeque et al, On the Persistence of Mental Health Deterioration during the COVID-19 Pandemic by Sex and Ethnicity in the UK: Evidence from Understanding Society,(2022). DOI: 10.1515/bejeap-2021-0394 Healthcare risks falling behind other sectors in providing training to help employees address sexual harassment and violence within the workplace. A group of doctors and academics writing in the Journal of the Royal Society of Medicine are calling for NHS institutions to train people to intervene and challenge poor behavior. Lead author Dr. Sarah Steele, of the University of Cambridge, said: "Five years after the #MeToo movement highlighted both sexual misconduct and harassment occurring within the healthcare profession, there remains little training for healthcare professionals on how to support and respond to incidents in the NHS. With surveys suggesting one in ten healthcare workers report experiencing harassment at work, including from colleagues, each year, it is critical to train people on what to do and how to intervene." Dr. Christopher Adcock, another of the authors and a consultant at Cambridge University Hospitals NHS Foundation Trust, added: "Speaking as a male-identifying clinician, I have both experienced harassment and witnessed it, particularly in the early part of my career. I think that it is vital that the whole healthcare workforce gain the tools to speak up and be part of the solution to sexual harassment in medicine." "The #MeToo movement highlighted the pressing need to consider respectful relationships and for all of us to assume roles as active bystanders. One step that crosscuts all levels of healthcare is training people to intervene, empowering all to challenge any poor behavior." In their paper, the authors describe how active bystander programs can develop the skills and confidence of individuals to challenge beliefs and assumptions that lead to poor behavior, using different tools, either in the moment or after the event. They go on to explain the five Ds approach to active bystander trainingdirect action, distract, delegate, delay, and document. Co-author Eliza Bond, of the University of Oxford, said: "Whilst the higher education sector has been quick to adopt various forms of intervention training, healthcare has fallen behind. Good practice in the clinical setting requires that staff are equipped with the necessary skills to intervene." Co-author Dr. Joy Clarke, a trainee doctor in the NHS, added: "Intervention and culture change programs offer not only the chance to practice and refine bystander skills, but allow restatement of the institutional, professional and NHS ethos. It is time the NHS and Health Education England, alongside other healthcare and professional bodies in the UK and beyond, develop training and take proactive steps to empower the healthcare workforce and create a culture of respect, inclusivity and equality." Explore further Co-worker interventions can moderate customer sexual harassment in service industry In this photo provided by Pfizer, a lab technician visually inspects Paxlovid tablet samples in Freiburg, Germany in December 2021. Studies showed that the first pill to treat the virus led to a nearly 90% reduction in hospitalizations and deaths among patients most likely to get severe disease. Credit: Pfizer via AP Pfizer's new COVID-19 treatment came with a catch when it debuted late last year: Supplies were limited, and it can take months to make the tablets. Company leaders say they are expanding production and expect big gains in the next several months. That could help if another wave of cases develops. WHAT'S THE LATEST ON SUPPLIES? The U.S. government distributes Paxlovid, the first pill authorized to treat the coronavirus. White House coronavirus response coordinator Jeff Zients said Wednesday that the government will have 1 million treatment courses available this month. He expects that to more than double in April. Pfizer Chief Global Supply Officer Mike McDermott says there is "an ample amount" of Paxlovid available for high-risk patients who need it. Physicians also have several other treatment options, including a less effective capsule treatment from Merck that U.S. regulators say should be considered only if other options aren't available or appropriate. Dr. Raymund Razonable of the Mayo Clinic said Paxlovid supplies would have to increase if another surge materializes that's as big as the one caused recently by the omicron variant. WHY DOES IT TAKE SO LONG TO MAKE PAXLOVID? The short answer: It's a complex drug that involves chemical reactions that need time to develop. Pfizer's manufacturing experts compare Paxlovid to a complicated Lego model where key parts are made at different locations and then brought together and combined. The initial building blocks can take up to three months to make. Some chemical reactions need days to develop at a controlled temperature and pressure. In this photo provided by Pfizer, a lab technician places a Paxlovid tablet into a machine which applies pressure to test the pill's physical strength, in Freiburg, Germany in December 2021. Studies showed that the first pill to treat the virus led to a nearly 90% reduction in hospitalizations and deaths among patients most likely to get severe disease. Credit: Pfizer via AP "If you put it all in together very quickly, it can all go wrong," said Charlotte Allerton, Pfizer's head of medicine design. Those initial building blocks are shipped to another location that makes the main part of the drug, the active ingredient. Tack on another three months for that process. Then the ingredient heads to an additional location that turns it into tablets and packages the medicine. That can take six weeks. Add another week for quality checks and testing. Paxlovid production involves more than 20 different sites in over 10 countries. IS THIS TIME FRAME UNUSUAL? No. Pfizer executives say some drugs for other conditions take even longer. The company said it has already shaved average Paxlovid production time down to about seven months from close to nine. The drugmaker is adding more manufacturing and packaging sites. It will try to cut production time further, as long as it can do so without affecting quality. Merck says it takes about six months to make its treatment, molnupiravir. The company expects to reduce that to around five over time. WHY USE SO MANY LOCATIONS? Pfizer doesn't have time to build a plant just to make Paxlovid. This photo provided by Pfizer shows a test to check if Paxlovid tablets dissolve within a specific amount of time, before the fluid is tested to ensure the proper quantity of ingredients, in Freiburg, Germany in December 2021. Studies showed that the first pill to treat the virus led to a nearly 90% reduction in hospitalizations and deaths among patients most likely to get severe disease. Credit: Pfizer via AP Merck also uses 17 plants across eight countries to make molnupiravir. "If you knew you were going to making this product for 10 years at a given scale, you'd probably build a plant just for it, but otherwise this is the way we typically do business," said John McGrath, a Merck senior vice president. WHEN DID PFIZER START MAKING PAXLOVID? The company began preparations in June, about six months before the U.S. Food and Drug Administration authorized the medication. That also was before researchers finished late-stage studies on its effectiveness. Pfizer made its first commercial batch of the active ingredient at scale in September. The company then had to wait for FDA authorization before it could package and label. The drugmaker spent about $1 billion to get that head start, said Paul Duffy, a vice president with Pfizer Global Supply. WILL SUPPLIES IMPROVE? Yes. McDermott said Pfizer expects to make 30 million patient packs by the middle of the year and 120 million by the end of 2022. Outside those totals, Pfizer is letting some generic drugmakers produce Paxlovid in a deal with the public health organization Medicines Patent Pool. That's expected to boost supply, especially for low-income countries. President Joe Biden announced Tuesday night that his administration will launch a "test to treat" plan that involves providing free antiviral pills at pharmacies to customers who test positive for the virus. When asked if Pfizer could handle additional demands from that program, a spokesman said the company was "confident in our supply capacity." He added that the drugmaker remains on track to deliver 10 million treatment courses to the U.S. government by June. Explore further EU watchdog approves Pfizer COVID pill 2022 The Associated Press. All rights reserved. This material may not be published, broadcast, rewritten or redistributed without permission. The Greyhound Hotel, photographed in 1937. Credit: State Library Victoria The John Curtin Hotel in Carlton, another of Melbourne's cultural landmarks, is set to close. Nearly 150 years old, the pub has long been a haunt of the union movement, Labor leaders, detectives, journalists and the live music scene. The building will probably be sold to overseas property developers. While the building has some degree of heritage protection, there appears to be nothing to prevent developers from gutting the interior, keeping the facade and then building a further six stories on top of the lobotomised carapace. There's no requirement that this site continues to provide a community setting for people to build social ties, both strong and weak. Once again, Australian planning systems are set to fail the individual and collective identities and biographies of those who live here, and those who came before us. Once again, residents of a colonial Australian city are experiencing what First Nations, other colonized peoples, asylum seekers and climate refugees have long known: when we are forced to leave a loved place, or when that place changes beyond our control, we experience loss and grief, and our individual and collective identities can be wounded. A feeling of destierra Social psychologist Irwin Altman said the loss of buildings and places where we have lived our lives and built community can feel like the loss of a personal relationship which we expected to last indefinitely. Our experience of a change in a place is "both a serious environmental issue and a deeply personal one." In Returning to Nothing: the meaning of lost places (1996), historian Peter Read challenged us to not "underestimate the effect which the loss of dead and dying places has on our own self-identity, mental well-being and sense of belonging." Read pointed out that, unlike the English language, there's a word in Spanish, destierra, which describes the psychological trauma of being uprooted, displaced or dispossessed from a loved place. Our colonial planning laws, which are steeped in the tradition of terra nullius, give very limited weight to the personal and collective emotions and identities of those who seek to preserve the links between threatened buildings, places and spaces, and their own biographies, ongoing Indigenous presence and community identity. Liveable cities With its focus on healthy, liveable neighborhoods, the Victorian government's Plan Melbourne has sought to build on the legacy of Melbourne's claim to be the world's most liveable city. Certainly, the Australian Urban Observatory shows that many parts of Melbourne offer easy physical access to diverse affordable housing, local employment, social infrastructure, fresh affordable food, green space, walkable neighborhoods and efficient public transport. But liveable places also welcome us. They make it easy for us to feel like we belong and to experience a sense of community. The built environment is far more than a backdrop to our lives. Environmental economist and planner Michael Jacobs said "People do not simply look out over a landscape and say, 'this belongs to me." They say, "I belong to this'". Our overtly formal and "rational" planning and heritage laws typically assess the value of buildings and places on their architectural merit alone, rather than how these places and spaces serve as repositories of cultural memory and settings for building community. The loss of The Greyhound While the John Curtin Hotel has never been one of my tribal haunts, its significance resonates. In 1996, I moved to Melbourne to study. I found a flat in Balaclava, and immediately felt at home. The urban form provided a sense of intimacy that I'd never experienced living elsewhere in Australia. One of my favorite St Kilda haunts was the Greyhound Hotel. This raffish, Victorian/art-deco pile had served as a community meeting place for local LGBTQ+ residents and other locals for almost 100 years. The hotel, and nearby St Kilda Town Hall, each on opposite sides of Brighton Road, served as a symbolic gateway to my local neighborhood. The Greyhound certainly wasn't a fancy building, but it was quirky. For 160 years, it had been a vital "third place" for building community: a space we gather in away from home and work. The Greyhound was integral to the character of the local neighborhood, and to people's individual and collective stories. Despite its acknowledged social significance and a community petition, neither local heritage laws nor the State Planning Minister would protect the Greyhound Hotel from destruction in 2017 by the international consortium that had bought it. Because the original Victorian hotel had been remodeled extensively in the 1930s, the council indicated that it could not include the building on its "historic" register, which apparently only recognizes buildings that remain largely unchanged. Think about all the historic buildings in Europe that have evolved continuously over the centuries. Locals mourned the Greyhound's destruction and took home bricks as mementos. Several years following the hotel's demolition, the site remains an empty scar: there's no history there at all. Even now I try to avoid going near it. May the John Curtin Hoteland those who identify with it and love itexperience a different fate. Explore further Regeneration may cause isolation for older people, study finds This article is republished from The Conversation under a Creative Commons license. Read the original article. Credit: Pixabay/CC0 Public Domain In the latest update to the pulmonary function tests technical standard series, the American Thoracic Society and European Respiratory Society address the uncertainty around the interpretation of the tests which are essential in determining the extent of respiratory dysfunction. The update was recently published in the European Respiratory Journal ahead of a planned webinar series by the ATS. The update builds upon prior recommendations from the American Thoracic Society/European Respiratory Society Task Force on the Standardization of PFTs. Among the concerns of the task force charged with making new recommendations were the high rates of variability in interpretation of results as well as the reliance on outdated evidence. Sanja Stanojevic, Ph.D. Task Force Co-Chair noted that "the updated PFT interpretation standard focuses on the levels of uncertainty relating to (i) how representative the obtained result was of the individual's lung function at the time of testing, (ii) how the pre-test probability of disease may influence what is the appropriate threshold for that individual, and (iii) how valid the reference population against which the test is being judged is for the individual." The ATS /ERS standard comes as PFTs have come under increasing scrutiny in the wake of efforts to address health inequities and a lack of parity in health care distribution. Research presented at the ATS 2021 international conference highlighted the use of "race correction" in the tests as contributing to the higher prevalence and severity of lung disease among Black individuals. "The historical approach of fixed adjustment factors for race is not appropriate and is unequivocally discouraged," said Dr. Stanojevic. "As there are observed population differences in body proportions and lung function, in some contexts it may be relevant to interpret results for an individual relative to that of a similar ancestral grouping, whereas in others it may be more appropriate to compare to the whole population." She added that "an individual's medical history, symptoms, and social circumstances must be considered when applying PFT results to inform clinical decision making." Components of the pulmonary function tests technical standard series that have previously been updated include single-breath carbon monoxide uptake in the lung and the standardization of spirometry. The standardization of lung volume measurement is in the process of being updated and completion is expected soon. More information: Sanja Stanojevic et al, ERS/ATS technical standard on interpretive strategies for routine lung function tests, European Respiratory Journal (2021). Journal information: European Respiratory Journal Sanja Stanojevic et al, ERS/ATS technical standard on interpretive strategies for routine lung function tests,(2021). DOI: 10.1183/13993003.01499-2021 ZAMBOANGA CITY Eight villages in the southern Philippine province of Sulu are now free from the influence of the pro-ISIS group Abu Sayyaf... "Find Me" by Alafair Burke; Harper (304 pages, $26.99) The friendship between Hope Miller and Lindsay Kelly runs deeper than most. It began 15 years ago, when Lindsay happened upon an overturned SUV on a lonely, dark New Jersey road. Lindsay, a police chiefs daughter, quickly called for help and gave emergency first aid to the young woman splayed unconscious on the pavement. When the woman was loaded into an ambulance, her arm moved, as if reaching for Lindsay. The rescuer jumped in, and the two have been friends ever since. Not that its been easy. Hope recovered physically from the accident, but she suffered complete memory loss she has no recall of her life before the crash, and no trace of her identity was found. Hope Miller is the name she chose for herself because she cant remember her real one. But she and Lindsay are inseparable. That friendship is at the core of "Find Me," the irresistible new thriller by Alafair Burke. The daughter of crime fiction master James Lee Burke, she has written three mystery series, including six books co-written with the late Mary Higgins Clark, and several stand-alone thrillers. She currently serves as the president of Mystery Writers of America and is the first woman of color to be elected to that position. A former prosecutor, she teaches criminal law at Hofstra University and lives in Manhattan and East Hampton, New York. "Find Me," Burkes 20th novel, brings back one of her series characters whos been on hiatus since 2014, New York Police Detective Ellie Hatcher. Ellie will cross paths with Lindsay, whos now a defense attorney living in Manhattan, after Hope decides to start a more independent life by moving from Lindsays hometown in New Jersey to East Hampton, a small town on Long Island. There, Hope finds a cottage to rent and a job staging houses for a real estate agent. And then she vanishes. When Hope stops answering calls and texts, Lindsays devoted boyfriend, Scott, advises her not to worry. But Lindsay heads for East Hampton and finds the cottage empty and Hopes boss unhappy that she stopped showing up for work especially right after hed loaned her $2,000. Lindsay is infuriated by the lackadaisical attitude of Carter Decker, the local cop she reports Hopes absence to; he clearly thinks Hope is missing by her own choice, a grifter whod moved on to her next mark. Until, that is, a spray of Luminol reveals a bloodstain inside the front door of the house Hope was staging on the last day she was seen. Then a body is found floating in the local marina but its not Hopes. The DNA tests of the bloodstain bring a shocking result: Its connected to a string of killings committed in Wichita, Kansas, by a serial killer called the College Hill Strangler. Thats how Ellie gets connected to Hopes case: Ellies father was a Wichita police detective who investigated the College Hill Strangler murders. But how could the long-ago serial killer case be connected to Hopes disappearance now? What about the body in the marina? And does any of it link to Hopes lost life, the years hidden behind the blank wall of her memory loss? And how do you search for a woman who has no identity? The Hamptons are usually associated with the celebrities and hedge-funders who have luxurious vacation homes there the house Hope was staging when she disappeared was a $3 million teardown. But Burke draws most of her East Hampton characters from those who live there year-round, the working-class people whose jobs help make the posh lifestyles possible. Its an interesting look at the social dynamics of resort towns that gives the book another layer. Its good to see Ellie back in action, too, hard-driving as ever but haunted by her own ghosts. Burkes arrangement of all the puzzle pieces is wickedly clever, as are the twists she gives them just when you think you know something. "Find Me" is beautifully crafted, a swift and gripping read. And those twists keep coming at you until the very last sentence. You must be logged in to react. Click any reaction to login. Love 0 Funny 0 Wow 0 Sad 0 Angry 0 WEDNESDAY, March 2, 2022 (HealthDay News) -- People who've had COVID-19 may have long-term immune protection against new variants of the virus, but researchers say vaccination remains the best safeguard against reinfection. Their small new study analyzed blood samples from 24 people whose COVID infections ranged from symptom-free to severe enough to send them to the hospital. While those who had mild or no symptoms didn't always have SARS-CoV-2-specific antibodies in their blood, all 24 had patrolling immune cells called memory B cells that produced SARS-CoV-2 antibodies when exposed to the virus. "We think these results give us real reason for optimism," said senior author Dr. Bill Messer, an assistant professor of molecular microbiology and immunology at Oregon Health & Science University. "The current variants of concern are not likely to truly escape the immune system of people who have recovered from infection," Messer said in a university news release. As long as 11 months after infection, these memory B cells not only appeared to react to the original virus, but also recognized so-called variants of concern. The findings were recently published in the Journal of Infectious Diseases. But researchers said it's not possible to say for sure whether the B-cell response they discovered would actually provide an effective immune response against virus variants. Messer stressed that vaccination offers the best protection against reinfection, and also offers the best protection against serious illness or death for people who have not had COVID. "We probably don't have enough longitudinal data at this point," said study lead author Zoe Lyski, a graduate student in Messer's lab. "These data do allow us to think optimistically about handling the variants. It suggests that if someone is exposed to a variant of concern, the memory B cells generated by vaccination or natural infection are poised to respond." More information There's more on COVID-19 reinfection at the U.S. Centers for Disease Control and Prevention. SOURCE: Oregon Health & Science University, news release, Feb. 28, 2022 You must be logged in to react. Click any reaction to login. Love 0 Funny 0 Wow 0 Sad 0 Angry 0 Originally published on consumer.healthday.com, part of the TownNews Content Exchange. Buffalo, WY (82834) Today Some clouds this evening will give way to mainly clear skies overnight. Low near 40F. Winds W at 5 to 10 mph.. Tonight Some clouds this evening will give way to mainly clear skies overnight. Low near 40F. Winds W at 5 to 10 mph. WEDNESDAY, March 2, 2022 (HealthDay News) -- Though they're on the front lines of the COVID-19 pandemic, U.S. health care workers' paychecks don't always adequately reward those efforts. Wages for health care workers actually rose less than the average across all U.S. employment sectors during the first and second years of the pandemic, according to a new study that also reported a nationwide decline in the number of health care workers. The research was done by investigators from Indiana University, the University of Michigan and the nonprofit Rand Corporation in Santa Monica, Calif. "While federal programs provided financial assistance to hospitals and institutions, it is important to focus on the effect of the pandemic on health care employment levels and wages, especially if we want to prevent such shortages in the future," said study co-author Christopher Whaley, a policy researcher at Rand. He spoke in an Indiana University news release. For the study, the researchers analyzed federal data covering 95% of all U.S. jobs during 2020 and the first six months of 2021. Overall, wages increased 6.7% in 2020 and 6.9% in 2021, compared to 5% and 1.5%, respectively, for health care workers. Meanwhile, the number of health care-related jobs fell from 22.2 million in 2019 to 21.1 million in mid-2020, a 5.2% drop. The largest decreases were in dental offices (10%) and skilled nursing facilities (8.4%). While employment levels in most health care sectors rebounded to pre-COVID levels last year, employment at skilled nursing facilities was 13.6% lower in 2021 than in 2019. The findings -- recently published in JAMA Health Forum -- are important for planning for and responding to ongoing and future public health crises, the researchers said. They said though employment declines in the health care sector have received extensive media coverage, nationwide employment and wage evidence had been scarce. "These findings provide a data-driven picture of employment levels by various health care settings and can help guide decision-making not only around the current health care shortage but also during a future crisis," said study co-author Kosali Simon, a professor of public and environmental affairs at Indiana University Bloomington. More information For more about the COVID pandemic's impact on health care workers, visit the Chicago School of Professional Psychology. SOURCE: Indiana University, news release, Feb. 25, 2022 You must be logged in to react. Click any reaction to login. Love 0 Funny 0 Wow 0 Sad 0 Angry 0 Originally published on consumer.healthday.com, part of the TownNews Content Exchange. WEDNESDAY, March 2, 2022 (HealthDay News) -- It looks like coronavirus variants can hide out in the human body much like some of their viral cousins do, making it hard for infected people to get rid of the virus entirely, researchers report. Successive variants have appeared since the original version of SARS-CoV-2 triggered the global pandemic, and vaccines and antibody treatments have proven less effective against some of these variants. Our results showed that one can have several different virus variants in ones body," said Kapil Gupta, a senior research associate in biochemistry at the University of Bristol in the U.K. "Some of these variants may use kidney or spleen cells as their niche to hide, while the body is busy defending against the dominant virus type. This could make it difficult for the infected patients to get rid of SARS-CoV-2 entirely." Gupta is lead author of one of two new studies recently published in the journal Nature Communications. The international team of researchers found that the virus can evolve distinctly in different cell types and adapt its immunity in the same infected person. They focused on the function of a specific pocket in the SARS-CoV-2 spike protein and concluded that it plays an essential role in the virus' ability to spread. An incessant series of variants have completely replaced the original virus by now, with Omicron and Omicron 2 dominating worldwide, said team leader Imre Berger, a professor of biochemistry at University of Bristol. Researchers analyzed an early variant discovered in Bristol dubbed BrisDelta. It had changed its shape from the original virus, but the pocket we had discovered was there, unaltered," Berger explained. BrisDelta represents a small subpopulation in samples from COVID patients, but it appears to infect certain cell-types better than the virus that dominated the first wave, researchers noted. In a related study, researchers created synthetic, safe versions of the virus (virions) to determine how the pocket drives infection. They found that the spike protein on the virus changes shape after binding with a fatty acid. This makes it less visible to the immune system. It appears that this pocket, specifically built to recognize these fatty acids, gives SARS-CoV-2 an advantage inside the body of infected people, allowing it to multiply so fast," said study author Oskar Staufer. "This could explain why it is there, in all variants, including Omicron. Staufer is a joint member of the Max Planck Institute in Heidelberg, Germany, and the Max Planck Center in Bristol, U.K. Intriguingly, the same feature also provides us with a unique opportunity to defeat the virus, exactly because it is so conserved with a tailor-made antiviral molecule that blocks the pocket, he added. A company founded by the researchers is working to develop antiviral drugs that target the pocket. More information For more on COVID-19 variants, go to the U.S. Centers for Disease Control and Prevention. SOURCE: University of Bristol, news release, March 1, 2022 You must be logged in to react. Click any reaction to login. Love 0 Funny 0 Wow 0 Sad 0 Angry 0 Originally published on consumer.healthday.com, part of the TownNews Content Exchange. Nearly 300 students from across the state participated in an annual international education conference hosted by the Montana World Affairs Council that featured diplomats and conversations of global understanding. The Academic WorldQuest is a two-day conference organized by the Montana World Affairs Council. The event was offered in a hybrid format this year, with a majority of students participating in events on campus at the University of Montana. Nearly 60 students attended remotely. I feel like bringing the world to these kids, who maybe havent had the opportunity to travel yet, gives them maybe not that same experience but a taste of it, said Ryan Cooney, a teacher at the Project for Alternative Learning in Helena who led a group of 12 students to the event this year. I can see it in their faces, they kind of light up, they get that spark and you can tell that because they have become interested in the world around them, he continued. Cooney has been bringing students to the event for four years now. He was also named the Global Educator of the Year during the conference and received a $500 donation for the purchase of international classroom materials, publications and resources, sponsored by Drs. Edwin and Janet House. High school students from across Missoula attended, as well as teams from Browning, Libby and Geraldine. In total, 19 high schools from around the state were represented at the conference. This years event brought distinguished speakers such as Michael McKinley, a former U.S. ambassador to Afghanistan; Oliver Schramm, German consul general in San Francisco; and Ted Osius, former U.S. ambassador to Vietnam. Students and their teachers tuned in for different presentations led by the guest speakers and were encouraged to ask questions. Osius spoke of his efforts to bring peace between the United States and Vietnam in the wake of the Vietnam War. He stressed the importance of honestly addressing the past in order to forge a path of peace. Early in his career, he traveled to Vietnam and was told to not use the terms Agent Orange or dioxin when speaking with Vietnamese officials. This was kind of stunning to me that we couldnt speak honestly about what had happened in the past, Osius said. Over time, those sentiments shifted to a more honest approach in their discussions, he said. In 2011 the United States began projects to clean up dioxin hot spots around Vietnam. But it required a lot of persistence and a lot of determination to take that last step and being honest about that path, Osius said. Its not easy sometimes to be honest about the past, you want to brush it under the rug and for many years. But I believe the only way you can create a new relationship is by being honest with each other, he continued later. We have to be honest about the past. When the floor was opened for questions, nearly 20 students sprang up from their seats to approach a microphone in the University Center movie theater. The questions ranged from seeking methods for fostering international relationships to Osius personal career experiences. Some of Cooneys students said that Osius message resonated with them the most. If you dont pay attention to history and you ignore what happened leading up to that point youre going to repeat it, said Nova Charlton, a junior at the Project for Alternative Learning. If youre just going to continue to repeat history because you arent learning from your mistakes, youre just ignoring and hoping for the best. Novas classmate, Charles McLaren, a senior, agreed and added that he appreciated all that he learned over the two-day conference. Both of the students spent hours studying in Cooneys classroom and on their own in preparation for this years competition. Both students are passionate about being informed about the world around them, they said. I like fresh perspectives and I love people who have different perspectives and what comes out of those conversations and having common understanding and feeling like youre more of a worldly person, McLaren said. I think ignorance is what gets us into a lot of issues. After lunch on Tuesday, students reconvened in the University Center ballroom to battle in the Academic WorldQuest competition, where teams of four students answered a wide variety of multiple choice questions. Teams from Sentinel High School captured first and second place, students from Gardiner won third and a team from Columbia Falls finished in fourth. The winners received an all-expenses-paid trip to Germany in summer 2023, sponsored by the Goethe-Institut and Transatlantic Outreach Program, and will represent Montana at the national competition in Washington, D.C., in April. In addition, the champions each received a $2,500 scholarship to attend UM, as well as $500 each to participate in a study abroad experience in college. Second-place team members won $1,500 scholarships, and third- and fourth-place finishers received $500 scholarships. Academic WorldQuest has provided over 4,000 students with global experiences and opportunities to engage in interactive, international programs since 2005. The Montana program is the third-largest in the country and is the only one to offer a multi-day conference for students. The Montana World Affairs Council was established in 2000 by Ambassador Mark Johnson of Great Falls to provide residents more opportunities for understanding global affairs. You must be logged in to react. Click any reaction to login. Love 4 Funny 0 Wow 1 Sad 0 Angry 0 Get local news delivered to your inbox! Subscribe to our Daily Headlines newsletter. Sign up! * I understand and agree that registration on or use of this site constitutes agreement to its user agreement and privacy policy. The Missoula County commissioners have unanimously recommended to the Federal Highway Administration that the historic Maclay Bridge over the Bitterroot River near Missoula be removed if a new bridge on South Avenue is eventually constructed. The county is working with the Montana Department of Transportation to complete the National Environmental Policy Act documentation required for construction of the South Avenue Bridge, which would connect South Avenues western terminus with River Pines Road. The new bridge is estimated to cost up to $15.4 million, to be paid for by the federal gas tax and the state. It would divert traffic away from the one-lane Maclay Bridge, built in 1953, which connects North Avenue to River Pines Road. The project is on track to start construction in 2024 if all documentation is completed in time. On Feb. 24, county public works director Shane Stack had HDR Engineering in Missoula present the county with a list of options and all the benefits and negative impacts of each choice. This is simply a recommendation to a federal agency thats involved in reviewing and approving the NEPA documents for the proposed South Avenue Bridge Project, Stack said. The commissioners recommendation on this does not commit Missoula County or any other agency to that course of action. Apart from removing the bridge, the commissioners could choose to take no action, raise and rehabilitate the bridge for use as a nonmotorized connection, or complete a multi-stage rehabilitation. Dustin Hirose, a project manager with HDR Engineering, said that if the South Avenue bridge is constructed, removing Maclay Bridge would be the option that would have the least financial burden on county taxpayers. Some advantages of that is its the lowest-cost, long-term solution, he noted. It best mitigates flood risk and mitigates the environmental impacts of the (proposed) South Avenue Bridge located upstream. It would cost roughly $350,000 to remove the bridge, he noted. It would cost about $3.6 million to rehab it. Although it wouldnt cost anything in the short term to leave the existing bridge in place as it is, it could end up costing the county much more in the long term because leaving the structure increases the flood risk. The county would be on the hook to pay for any improvements to Maclay Bridge. It is a historic resource, he said. Obviously the structure is aging and really beyond the expected useful service life. Its vulnerable to deterioration and corrosion. A group called the Maclay Bridge Alliance opposes the removal of the bridge and wants the county to instead rehab the structure. Bog Gentry, an attorney for the group, said the commissioners are violating the National Environmental Policy Act by making a decision that constitutes a predetermined outcome of that review process. Expressing a preference for the fate of Maclay Bridge today is premature, he said. Sharon Sterbis said that because the commissioners cant guarantee that therell be bike and pedestrian facilities on the new South Avenue Bridge, they shouldnt make the decision now. Several other citizens also argued that the commissioners shouldnt make the decision now. Don St. Peter told the commissioners that they should take the tax impact of their decision into consideration. Weve just seen a preview of the lawsuit that the Maclay Bridge Alliance intends to file at some point in the future as part of their ongoing attempts to delay the South Avenue Bridge, he said. Their attempts started in the 1990s and continue through today. The Maclay Bridge Alliance has been relatively successful in delaying the South Avenue Bridge project for going on 20 years. You do not have to be sucked into their program of delay, delay, delay. County commissioner Dave Strohmaier noted that the decision they recommended didnt have anything to do with whether or not the South Avenue Bridge gets built. Weve heard from Fish, Wildlife & Parks, our floodplain administrator and the Clark Fork Coalition, he said. As far as hydrologic impacts, the consensus was pretty clear that if one new bridge is to go in, namely the South Avenue Bridge, for the sake of mitigating hydrologic impacts the Maclay Bridge should be removed. Strohmaier said hes also made it clear in no uncertain terms to the state that the new bridge must have pedestrian and bike access. Commissioner Josh Slotnick said that the presentation from engineers made it clear that removing the bridge was the best option. Just looking at that matrix, it seemed obvious to me that if South Avenue Bridge is built then the best thing for the river is to have Maclay Bridge go, he said. I have deep empathy to everyone involved. Commissioner Juanita Vero said that the situation is unfortunate because she understands that some neighbors dont want to see the bridge go. This is what happens when a vibrant dynamic community like ours is growing and this is a reality, she said. You must be logged in to react. Click any reaction to login. Love 5 Funny 1 Wow 1 Sad 2 Angry 1 Get local news delivered to your inbox! Subscribe to our Daily Headlines newsletter. Sign up! * I understand and agree that registration on or use of this site constitutes agreement to its user agreement and privacy policy. Last week, Donald Trump called Putin a genius, and Mike Pompeo said Putin was shrewd. The most effective Soviet soldiers were from Ukraine, however Putin grossly neglected comparing the resistance of Ukrainian military to the weakness of invading Russian armed forces. Putin decided that undertrained foot soldiers under command of undisciplined officers could seize control of Kyiv, Ukraine, the 10th-largest city in Europe. Putin failed to see how his obviously unprovoked war on Ukraine would devalue the ruble, exclude oligarchs from making bank to bank transactions through SWIFT, and much more importantly, block Russian access to $640 billion of Russian-held foreign currency reserves. And bring sanctions, and asset seizures, against himself (estimated wealth over $150 billion), his banks, his Security Council, his prime minister, and many of his greedy oligarch co-conspirators. Europe knows that Putin has gone nuts and has to go. Now, what to do with seized assets of people associated with Putin's war on Ukraine? As honest brokers, the USA, also the UK, could place seized assets in irrevocable trusts held in the name of the people in Russia, also Ukrainian people displaced by Putin's war (an estimated 400,000). Bob Williams, Stevensville You must be logged in to react. Click any reaction to login. Love 7 Funny 0 Wow 0 Sad 0 Angry 0 " " Think carefully before giving a professional recommendation to someone. Jose Luis Pelaez Inc/Getty Images Years ago, I received an email from a former employer asking for a reference for someone who worked previously for me at a different company in a temporary capacity. I politely declined at least twice, but she kept coming back at me with the request. Apparently, she was on the fence about the potential employee, and "needed my insight." I finally caved and gave her the two-sentence, watered-down version, mostly on punctuality and deadline-related issues. Not long after I found out that she still hired the employee on a trial basis and told him that the trial period was because of an unfavorable reference. It didn't take much for the employee to put two and two together that I was the "culprit," indeed, he said as much to others in our industry. I was absolutely floored, first because the high-level professional basically broke all the rules and ratted me out, but then that the employee would perpetuate my less-than-stellar opinion by bad-mouthing me around town. After this experience I pledged to never again give a reference unless I could really gush about the individual in question. In my opinion, my silence should have spoken volumes. But is my revised approach what the experts recommend? I talked to a couple of human resource experts to get the scoop on how to avoid reference minefields, from the perspectives of both the former employer and employee. Advertisement Reference Tips for the Employee 1. Cultivate Relationships All Around In this age of social media and networking platforms, it's easy for potential employees to obtain references other than those you expressly provided. In fact, many hiring professionals prefer to get information from these "backdoor references." "Employees need to know that a hiring manager may use this method to seek information about them, so it's important to cultivate strong relationships while they're employed and to leave a job on good terms," says Greg Everett, senior recruiting manager at Randstad US. "While employees may pick and choose the references they proactively provide to a hiring manager, there's always a chance that their future employer could look beyond this carefully curated pool of references." So, try to leave your former boss and co-workers with the best impression you can because you never know who's going to get the old reference request email. That said, it's still important to have a short list of people who are comfortable singing your praises if asked. "If an employee chooses to leave a company, they should make sure they have a mentor, supervisor, manager or peer to turn to for a strong recommendation. This way, if a future employer reaches out to someone they know in a company a candidate has worked for, they can feel confident great things will be said about them," Everett explains. 2. Make the Ask While employers may sometimes use a "backdoor" reference, they'll always ask for some "upfront" references. It's surprising how many job candidates fail to ask their former supervisors/peers in advance if they're comfortable being used as references before supplying their names. Just because you worked for (or are friends with) someone doesn't mean they will give you a glowing recommendation. So always ask, first, if you can put someone down as a reference and, second, whether they would be able to give you a very positive recommendation. If you would like them to write you a reference letter, Everett says that careful consideration should be given regarding whose opinion a future employer will value. "I personally prefer references from a supervisor, a subordinate (direct report) and then finally a peer," he says. This is so a potential employer can determine how well you work under, with and above people. When you're making the ask, he adds, give the person a breakdown of the position you're applying for, to help frame the recommendation. It's also helpful to email your resume over, as well as highlighted accomplishments because this can help to jog their memory of your contributions. However, avoid drafting a letter and asking for a signature. "As a recruiter, I can almost always tell when the candidate wrote the letter and simply had it approved by their reference," Everett explains. Advertisement Reference Tips for the Employer 1. Don't Feel Obligated to Give One Providing an employee reference depends on your company's policies, as well as your personal comfort level. Some companies refuse reference requests altogether, opting instead to only verify first and last dates of employment. So, before you give a reference, familiarize yourself with your employer's particular policy. Jake Penney is the head of human resources for English Blinds, located in the United Kingdom. "As an HR professional, I have worked for more than one company that had a blanket policy on not providing bad references for ex-employees, with very little leeway on this!" he explains in an email. "The only loopholes were if an employee had been convicted of an offence (such as workplace theft) in which case we were permitted to state that they stole from us and that this was proven, and/or to detail their exact manner of leaving the company, i.e., 'was let go and another person placed within their role,' or 'resigned to avoid dismissal,'" he says. It is also true in the U.S. that a former employer can say that someone was fired for stealing, assuming this is proven fact (e.g., the employee was caught in the act.) But because of the legal ramifications with this, most employers will just provide names and dates of employment. Even if your company permits references, it's 100 percent OK to dodge the chore if you don't want to do it. "If the person being asked for a reference doesn't feel comfortable providing a recommendation, they should politely respond and let the candidate know out of respect they decline," Everett says. If the person asks why you are declining, you can be honest with them and tell them you have some hesitations (name them if you feel comfortable) and so it would be better for them to find someone who can sing their praises. 2. Honesty Is the Best Policy If you do want to give the reference and your employer allows it, then go for it! A positive reference can go a long way to helping someone land that next job. "Those providing a professional reference are free to say anything they honestly believe about the individual. The law protects individuals from lawsuits for defamation, as long as they are being honest," Everett says. You can ask the employee to refresh your memory about past achievements as well as specific skills to highlight in your reference. But don't feel pressure to be all rainbows and sunshine. "A reference should highlight the strengths of an employee, but the person providing the reference can and should be honest," Everett explains. "The employee or former employees requesting a reference should already know where they stand with you. And while you should make an effort to understand the role they're applying for, as well as what skills and experiences they bring to the table, you shouldn't feel obligated to follow a script. After all, the hiring manager or recruiter is looking for your honest opinions about the candidate." Still, those who wish to avoid potential conflict can do so by declining specifics. This can be helpful when you're caught off guard with an unexpected reference call about a less-than-stellar former employee. "A lack of comment or refusal to comment can be hugely enlightening for the person asking the question, without placing the company making the comment at risk," Penney says. "For instance, if asked about the timekeeping skills of someone who was perpetually late, stating that 'we're unable to provide a comment on this subject due to company policies' or a simple 'no comment' is often much more damning than throwing the employee under the bus in exact terms, even when this might be warranted!" Now That's Good to Know Don't bother putting reference contact information on your resume (or the useless statement "references available on request"). If an employer is really interested in you, they'll request it after a couple of positive interviews are over and done with. In the meantime, protect the privacy of your professional references. Republican Senate candidate Herschel Walker speaks at a rally featuring former President Donald Trump in Perry, Ga., on September 25, 2021. Sean Rayford/Getty Images Republican Senate candidate Herschel Walker backed out of an event featuring Greene, per the AJC. Walker's campaign said he wouldn't attend an upcoming rally in Rome, Georgia. The move comes as GOP leaders reject any ties between party members and white nationalist figures. Georgia Republican Senate candidate Herschel Walker on Tuesday backed out of an upcoming event organized by conservative Rep. Marjorie Taylor Greene in the aftermath of her appearance at a white nationalist rally where attendees cheered Russian President Vladimir Putin, according to The Atlanta Journal-Constitution. Walker the frontrunner for the GOP nomination for Democratic Sen. Raphael Warnock's seat was slated to speak at the congresswoman's "Second Amendment and Freedom Rally" in Rome on Saturday. Other planned guests include Rep. Matt Gaetz of Florida, former White House chief strategist Steve Bannon, former Georgia senator and current gubernatorial candidate David Perdue, and other individuals with ties to far-right organizations, The AJC reported. However, Walker's campaign told the newspaper that he wouldn't attend the rally, which will focus on access to guns throughout the state. Walker's move come as other Republicans across the country, including Senate Minority Leader Mitch McConnell and House Minority Leader Kevin McCarthy, have rejected the influence of white supremacist organizations within the party. "There's no place in the Republican Party for white supremacists or anti-Semitism," McConnell said in a statement on Monday after being asked by a reporter about the appearances. But the Republican leader who endorsed Walker's Senate bid last year did not mention any lawmakers by name. McCarthy, who has been criticized by many for failing to rein in Greene following earlier controversies over her comparison of mask mandates to the Holocaust, said that it was "unacceptable" for Greene and Rep. Paul Gosar to speak at the America First Political Action Conference in Florida this past weekend. Story continues One of the event's organizers was Nick Fuentes, who has a history of making racist and antisemitic remarks. Last year, Gosar was also a speaker at the America First conference, where Fuentes spoke of a desire to shield "the white demographic core." And this year, Fuentes called on attendees to give a "round of applause for Russia" as Putin escalates his invasion of Ukraine. The House Republican leader who is angling to become House Speaker after the midterm elections reiterated that white nationalist ideology is unwelcome in the party. "For me it was appalling and wrong. And there's no place in our party for any of this," said McCarthy. "The party should not be associated any time any place with somebody who is anti-Semitic." Sen. Mitt Romney of Utah, the Republican presidential nominee in 2012, on Sunday criticized both Greene and Gosar. "Morons. I have morons on my team," he said of the two lawmakers. "And I have to think anybody that would sit down with white nationalists and speak at their conference was certainly missing a few IQ points." In Georgia, where Greene represents a congressional district anchored in the northwest corner of the state, her appearance at the pro-Putin event was slammed by several GOP leaders including one of Walker's opponents. Republican Lt. Gov. Geoff Duncan, who has spoken out against the influence of former President Donald Trump within the party, on Monday rejected any praise of Putin. "Vladimir Putin is a selfish, brutal dictator and anybody who would tell you otherwise is lying," he said in the chamber of the Georgia Senate at the state Capitol in Atlanta. "I call on this country, I call on this state, I call on this chamber to stand in support of the Ukrainian country as they fight for freedom." And state Agriculture Commissioner Gary Black, who's facing off against Walker in the Senate race, called Greene's worldview "poison." "Her ideas, her associations and her utter lack of wisdom and judgment are a poison in the bloodstream of our party," he told the Journal-Constitution. "I believe this behavior is a distraction and an embarrassment." Read the original article on Business Insider Washington The Senate Judiciary Committee will begin four days of hearings to consider the nomination of Judge Ketanji Brown Jackson to the Supreme Court on Monday, March 21, committee Chairman Richard Durbin said Wednesday. Jackson, 51, currently serves as a judge on the federal appeals court in Washington, D.C., and was selected by President Biden to replace outgoing Supreme Court Justice Stephen Breyer last week. She would be the first Black female Supreme Court justice in U.S. history if confirmed. "As I have said from the time that Justice Breyer announced his retirement, the Committee will undertake a fair and timely process to consider Judge Jackson's nomination," Durbin wrote in a letter to colleagues. "I look forward to Judge Jackson's appearance before the Committee and to respectful and dignified hearings." Durbin said the first day of hearings will feature opening statements from Judiciary Committee members, an introduction of Jackson and a statement from Jackson herself. The next two days will be reserved for questioning by committee members, and outside witnesses will testify on the fourth and final day of hearings. Democrats control the evenly divided Senate and hope to move quickly to confirm Jackson to the high court. A simple majority is needed to confirm Supreme Court justices in the Senate, thanks to a change in the chamber's rules in 2017. Jackson began meeting with lawmakers on Capitol Hill on Wednesday, including Senate Majority Leader Chuck Schumer and Minority Leader Mitch McConnell. Judge Ketanji Brown Jackson meets with lawmakers on Capitol Hill on March 2, 2022. / Credit: Kent Nishimura/Los Angeles Times via Getty Images Jackson is a graduate of Harvard University and Harvard Law School, and clerked for Breyer in 1999. She worked in private law firms and as a public defender, and served on the U.S. Sentencing Commission. She was a federal district judge in Washington for eight years before being named to the U.S. Court of Appeals for the District of Columbia Circuit in 2021 to replace Merrick Garland, who stepped down to become attorney general. Story continues Three Republican senators voted to confirm Jackson to the D.C. Circuit last year: Susan Collins of Maine, Lindsey Graham of South Carolina and Lisa Murkowski of Alaska. Graham, who was previously chairman of the Judiciary Committee, said he expected a "respectful but interesting hearing" when her nomination was announced. Saturday Sessions: Punch Brothers perform Cattle in the Cane" Saturday Sessions: Punch Brothers perform Any Old Time" Saturday Sessions: Punch Brothers perform Church Street Blues" This is interesting: Arizona Cardinals wide receiver Andy Isabella has been granted permission to seek a trade, his agent tells the NFL Wire Networks Henry McKenna. A second round pick in the 2019 NFL draft, Isabella has been buried on Arizonas depth chart and could really benefit from a change of scenery during a contract year. And the New Orleans Saints are, potentially, a great fit for him. If nothing else, there should be enough competition at the position for Isabella to be worth adding for training camp. Michael Thomas and Marquez Callaway are returning from the 2021 roster. So are practice squad holdovers Easop Winston Jr., Kevin White, and Kawaan Baker. Jalen McCleskey and Kirk Merritt also signed reserve/future contracts. Isabella couldnt make some noise in that group? Several other Saints receivers are headed for free agency Deonte Harty, LilJordan Humphrey, TreQuan Smith, Kenny Stills, and Ty Montgomery and it isnt guaranteed that they re-sign with New Orleans. The Saints arent in a position to turn down the help. Any team acquiring the 25-year-old will be on the hook for his $1,126,350 salary cap hit, which is easily affordable. If he can find a role and maybe crack the starting lineup in New Orleans, it looks like a steal. The Cardinals only played him in eight games last season totaling 30 snaps of offense and 24 on special teams. He caught his only target of the year to gain 13 yards and convert a first down. There werent many snaps to go around behind Christian Kirk, A.J. Green, DeAndre Hopkins, and Rondale Moore, but Arizona didnt do Isabella any favors by playing Antoine Wesley (a favorite of head coach Kliff Kingsbury, who was brought with him from Texas Tech) ahead of him. Of that group Kirk, Green, and Wesley are headed for free agency, but it appears Isabellas time in Arizona has run its course regardless of the changes around him. So this is worth exploring for the Saints. Isabella wouldnt be a high-end addition to start with Thomas, but he could improve the depth chart and compete for a roster spot in that second tier of receivers. If Isabella can be acquired for, say, a conditional seventh round pick in 2022 or 2023 its worth a try. You probably walk away from a higher asking price than that, though. Maybe he thrives in a better environment and you end up with a nice player gotten at a discount. Story continues Isabella could flame out in New Orleans, too, but its not like the Saints have found many diamonds in the rough during the drafts final round lately the last four players theyve picked in the seventh round have appeared in 34 combined games, with linebacker Kaden Elliss accounting for 31 of them. Its a gamble either way, but fairly low stakes for NFL standards. Id bet on a second-round talent rather than another rookie who may not be drafted at all if the Saints dont pick them, like Baker, Tommy Stevens, Alize Mack, or their predecessors. List A McDowell County teacher has been reinstated at a different school after an investigation into his use of a racial slur in the classroom. That incident, videotaped by students, went viral online and prompted a call for action from a community organization. In the video, former McDowell High School math teacher Jack Jensen is seen with his arm around a student of color and says, Im a white man, so I cant say n---. Other students can be heard chiming in before and after the remark. The version published online by The McDowell News mutes the word the teacher uses and blurs the face of the student. The McDowell News did view the original version. Jensen was hired on Aug. 21, 2012 as a secondary math teacher. He was transferred from East McDowell Middle School to McDowell High School on June 30, 2014. His salary as a 10-month employee is $5,200 a month. He was suspended with pay on Nov. 22, 2021. He now works at McDowell Academy of Innovation as a math teacher. West Marion Community Forum Coordinator Paula Swepson sent the video to school board members and the superintendent after she was made aware of the situation. The forum works in the McDowell community combating inequalities involving race and other social issues. The school system suspended Jensen with pay during the investigation. On Tuesday, McDowell County Schools released this statement: In late November our administration was made aware of an allegation that McDowell High School staff member Jack Jensen made an inappropriate racial remark. Upon learning of the allegation, the teacher was suspended and the district immediately initiated an investigation. All allegations of misconduct are taken seriously and are thoroughly investigated. The investigation into this allegation has been completed. Mr. Jensen has completed his suspension and has returned to duty as a math teacher at McDowell Virtual Academy. Because state law prohibits the release of certain personnel information, the district is unable to provide additional details other than Mr. Jensens actions were addressed in a manner consistent with district policies. In McDowell County Schools, we are committed to providing a safe and inviting school environment that facilitates student learning and achievement. As stated in our Board policies, MCS does not tolerate any form of unlawful discrimination or harassment, and this incident has been dealt with accordingly. The McDowell County Board of Education adopted its most recent Strategic Plan at the December meeting. One of the strategic goals addresses this issue specifically: "BOE Subgoal 1.4: By June 30, 2022, McDowell County Schools will develop a comprehensive plan to promote diversity, equity, and inclusion within our school communities. The MCS Strategic Plan is available on the district website. In January the Board initiated a sub-committee to focus on the development of this goal. The district staff has also established a working group to support the sub-committee. The sub-committee's first meeting was held in February, and the next meeting will be held later this month. Diversity, equity, and inclusion are important to our Board and our staff, and this strategic goal is at the forefront of current planning. We will continue to work together with our community partners to make our schools better for all students. On Tuesday, Swepson said she wasnt surprised at the outcome of the investigation. It was just a stall tactic to justify keeping him. I have looked at the policies. I think they took this situation as an isolated incident and tried to put it on the students. We met with (Superintendent) Mark Garrett and he said we didnt know the whole story, and we agreed, without a doubt, Swepson said on Tuesday. But what we do have on video is a teacher trying to have a teachable moment not equipped with what he was trying to teach. He assaulted the young man because he had his hands on him. He tries to move away and he pulls him back, and thats assault, but no one is taking that seriously. Is it okay to put your hands on kids? I dont think so, but it's all justified to them because he was just trying to make a point and he didnt mean any harm by it. Swepson said she doesnt know if there was any malice behind what the teacher said, but that he is the person of power in the room and he didnt handle the situation appropriately. She said Garrett did attend their most recent Racial Equity Training in February. Even as a person of color who took the training, there were some hard truths that I had to listen to. Its not a feel-good moment, Swepson said. He (the teacher) could have said, I dont have the knowledge to have this conversation with you, but the knowledge I do have is math, so lets get back to it. Swepson said she feels they have been shunned by the McDowell County Board of Education and Superintendents Office after a work session on a Joint Racial Equity Statement was postponed. We are talking with the Southern Coalition of Social Justice on holding a Town Hall meeting because we are not going to continue to let them treat our kids this way in the schools and think it's okay. We want to work with them, but they arent meeting their obligation. The Forum has released a survey in English and Spanish on their Facebook page for the community. The goal of the online poll is to collect stories and data in an effort to hold McDowell County School system accountable and to a higher standard on issues of racism and bullying incidents in our schools. Data collected from this survey will be shared with the school board to inform current policies and procedures and produce a much needed shift in how these issues are handled and addressed. You can choose to share your name and contact details or complete the survey anonymously, according to the poll. You can take part in the poll by visiting https://tinyurl.com/y8z2zsd5. These incidents are not isolated. Hopefully this way we can gather stories. We are trying to work with, and not against, said Swepson. I know that he has an obligation as a superintendent of the school system, but number one is to make sure the students are safe. I just want to see some action and lets get this done. The McDowell News spoke to Garrett late Tuesday evening and he reminded the public there is an anonymous reporting system in place, called Say Something, which can be accessed by visiting https://www.sandyhookpromise.org/say-something-tips/ or calling the 24/7 Crisis Hotline at 1-844-5-SAYNOW (1-844-572-9669). We investigate every single tip that is submitted, said Garrett. I am hopeful the community survey results will be shared with the district so that we can use them to learn and improve for the benefit of students. MCS is actively working toward a diversity, equity and inclusion goal that is contained in the current district strategic plan that was adopted in December. The draft version of the strategic plan contained this goal well before the incident took place. The Board of Education formed a subcommittee to begin addressing this specific goal with the administration, which has already met once with a scheduled meeting this month. There will be opportunities for input as the work continues. To learn more about McDowell County Schools, visit www.mcdowell.k12.nc.us. If this were an ordinary column, Id offer some neat prescription or exhort policymakers to take action on the solution to the crisis happening in Ukraine thats staring them in the face. But the truth is that I dont have a pithy solution or a soundbite-sized call to action as the United States and its allies confront a humanitarian disaster in the making. There are no easy answers. The fact that we are even in this place to begin with is the fruit of two decades of failures and missteps, across presidential administrations, to bring Russian strongman Vladimir Putin to heel. I do, however, know one thing: There is only one language that a bully and murderous thug such as Putin understands. And if our nation and elected leaders truly are serious about defending liberal democracy in Ukraine and around the world, they have to speak loudly, and with one voice, and tell Putin he can go no further. I realize this is far easier said than done. Its hard enough for the United States to speak with one voice at home on the most basic of issues. It is a problem exacerbated by our polarized politics and the sad reality that theres a whole segment of one of the major political parties that has proven, through its actions on Jan. 6 and beyond, that it has little to no interest in democratic norms. It can appallingly dismiss the carnage of that horrible day as an exercise in legitimate political discourse, and actively try to erase from its ranks those who think otherwise. I am also painfully aware of the kind of reality distortion field that must be erected to decry Putins war of choice in Ukraine, even as the specter of three decades of American misadventures in the Persian Gulf and a war of choice in Iraq glares over our collective shoulder. But its clear that every tool in the international communitys arsenal, short of direct force, has to be deployed as Putin tries to reset the international order that traces its origins to the fall of the Berlin Wall in 1989 and the collapse of the former Soviet Union that followed just a few years later. Make no mistake, that is his goal a resurgent Russia that stands above the west. On Thursday, President Joe Biden piled more sanctions on Russia, decrying Putins brutal assault on Ukraine and its people. The Pentagon ordered an additional 7,000 soldiers to Europe, a move that cheered allies but surely sent a shudder through American military families already weary of more than two decades of continuous war. On Thursday, a veteran armed forces officer told me that they were closely watching developments in Ukraine unfold, and the Pentagons response to it. The officer, who spoke on condition of anonymity, so that they could speak freely, said a U.S. response could start with such rapidly deployable forces as the 82nd Airborne Division, as was the case with the evacuation of Kabul Airport last year. Indeed, elements of the 82nd already have deployed to Poland, according to published reports. A military response is surely the least palatable and most potentially catastrophic option. History teaches that ground engagements with the Russians never end well. As one expert notes, that currently does not appear to be in the cards. Instead, the U.S. is rallying the world to isolate Russia through economic sanctions and to respond to cyber attacks, analyst Jon Hutson wrote on Twitter. And with Putin muttering threateningly about nuclear strikes if the west launches reprisal attacks, according to The Telegraph, the West cannot engage in similar saber-rattling. Thats effectively how Europe blundered into World War I. Still, theres no middle ground here. This is a battle between good and evil. Everything that the Kremlin says is a lie. Please dont both sides this, podcaster and analyst Terrell Jermaine Starr wrote on Twitter on Thursday. Putin is killing innocent people and Ukraine did nothing to deserve it. Thats a message that needs to be repeated over and over again. John L. Micek is editor-in-chief of The Pennsylvania Capital-Star in Harrisburg, Pa. Email him at jmicek@penncapital-star.com or follow him at twitter.com/ByJohnLMicek. On Monday, Russian and Ukrainian delegations met for talks on Ukraines border with Belarus one sign of how Vladimir Putin has swallowed the country of Belarus while the world was watching the war in Ukraine. Belarusian troops may now supplement Russians in the effort to conquer Kyiv, and Belarus could serve as a new base for Russian nuclear weapons. Heres some background on how Putin effectively annexed Belarus, and made it the model for what he still hopes to do with Ukraine. What is the relationship between Russia and Belarus? Belarus, a country of around 9.5 million people that sits on Russias eastern border and Ukraines northern border, has been in Vladimir Putins sights as long as Ukraine has. Putin considers those two independent countries, both of them former Soviet republics, to be a part of the historic Russian heartland. He claims they were unfairly separated from the motherland after the breakup of the Soviet Union in 1991. Since 1994, Belarus has been ruled by the authoritarian Alexander Lukashenko, who managed to maintain a certain balance between West and East, while also maintaining centralized state controls over the economy and the political system. That supposed neutrality was why peace talks over Putins first invasion of Ukraine in 2014 were held in the Belarusian capital of Minsk. However, the Kremlin has been pursuing what some called a soft annexation of Belarus for some time. Russian oligarchs members of the super-wealthy elite who managed to acquire private control over major industries as the Soviet Union collapsed have bought up key pieces of the Belarusian economy. And Moscow has pressed Belarus to export goods through Russian ports. But until now there were never Russian troops based on Ukrainian soil. Why is Belarus helping Russia invade Ukraine? In 2020, Lukashenko became beholden to Putin for saving his dictatorship. A younger Belarusian generation one that was allowed to travel and was tired of Soviet-style rule rebelled against Lukashenkos rigging of a presidential election. Exit polls and election monitors believed the election had been won by Sviatlana Tsikhanouskaya, a former English teacher and homemaker who courageously stepped in to run after her popular candidate husband was jailed. When hundreds of thousands of citizens protested the stolen election, Lukashenko crushed the demonstrators with the full political and economic support of Putin. The Russian leader bailed out the Belarusian economy, and made clear he would oppose any effort to democratize the country. So Lukashenko was in no position to say no when Putin sent 30,000 Russian troops to Ukraine in February for joint exercises with Belarusian troops, in obvious preparation for the Russian invasion. The Belarusian border lies only around 140 north miles by good road to the Ukrainian capital, Kyiv. Those Belarusian troops, so far, have remained loyal to Lukashenko, and it now appears that some of them will join the Russian invasion of Ukraine. All expectations are that Russian troops will remain in Belarus and Russia will establish bases there. Moreover, Lukashenko just pushed through a referendum renouncing Belarus non-nuclear status, which it agreed to when it gave up its Soviet-era nuclear weapons in 1994. That means Russia could move nuclear weapons into Belarus. Does Putins effective takeover of Belarus have bigger security significance to NATO beyond the serious threat it poses to Ukraine? Yes. If you look at a map, you see that Belarus also borders Poland and Lithuania. That means that Russia can now move nuclear weapons up to the border of those states, both of them NATO members. It also means that Lithuania and the other two Baltic states, Latvia and Estonia, are almost cut off by Russia-controlled territory from other NATO countries connected only by a 60-mile strip of border with Poland known as the Suwalki Gap. So why was Belarus the site of peace talks, held Monday between Russian and Ukrainian delegations? The talks were not held in Belarus. Ukraine turned down Russias first proposal to conduct the talks in Minsk, precisely because of the risk that the Ukrainian delegation would not return alive. Instead, the talks were held on the border of Belarus and Ukraine, after assurances from Lukashenko that the Ukrainian delegation would remain safe. President Volodymyr Zelenskyy had suggested other locations, but Russia refused, so the Ukrainians took a risk and went to the Belarus border. At least for this first round of talks, they returned unharmed. Trudy Rubin is a columnist and editorial-board member for the The Philadelphia Inquirer. Write to her at: Philadelphia Inquirer, P.O. Box 8263, Philadelphia, Pa. 19101, or email at trubin@phillynews.com. With cash grain prices at record highs and Russias war on Ukraine likely to push them higher still, one might assume that farm trucks would be lining up a mile deep at grain elevators hoping to cash in as theyve done before. Not so, says Mitch Konen. The Fairfield wheat farmer said many farmers, himself included, were hit so hard by the 2021 drought that it took everything they could harvest just to fill contracts that were supposed to be just 30% of what they would cut in a normal year. You see $10 cash prices, now. Thats only good if youve got it in the bin, said Konen, past president of Montana Grain Growers Association. There are probably not a lot of people who have grain in the bin to sell because they already sold it. Montana's 2021 wheat harvest of 100.85 million bushels, was just 49% of the 10-year average, according to USDA's National Agricultural Statistics Service. The last time wheat prices were in this territory was 2008, the start of the Great Recession, a time when positive Montana grain sales buoyed a state economy that was being rocked by a collapse in the housing industry. It marked the first time state wheat sales were valued at $1 billion or more. This round of robust prices might not produce the same outcome, as Montana farmers enter the second year of an extended drought with little wheat in reserves and farmers concerned about whether spring moisture will turn things around. Prices were already trending upward before Russia invaded Ukraine, casting doubts of whether one of the biggest wheat-exporting regions in the world would be shipping grain in 2022 or selling at a price damaged by sanctions. Ukraine accounts for 20 million to 29 million metric tons of the worlds wheat exports, depending on the weather. Thats 10% to 15% of world exports, according to the U.S. Department of Agriculture. If Ukraine wheat doesnt ship, or planted acres are down, it will influence export prices, said Vincent Smith, economist at the Montana State University's Department of Agricultural Economics and Economics. Exports, from all countries, all exporting countries, are getting close to 200 million metric tons, depending on the year, the weather, Smith said. So, we're looking at a significant share of world exports. Farmers need to be thinking about crop insurance for the coming year and whether it makes sense to lock in contracts for fall delivery, Smith said. Market prices are tempting. At local elevators a farmer with ordinary hard red winter wheat to sell could get $10.95 a bushel at Golden Triangle elevators, Tuesday, according to the U.S. Department of Agriculture. In Great Falls, the cash price was $10.89. Billings was a little lower at $10.35. Those prices are double what ordinary wheat was selling for during the same period last year. Ordinary wheat is typically the lowest priced variety, selling for less than wheat graded for higher protein. Tuesday, September futures for hard red winter wheat on the Kansas City Board of Trade were at $9.97 a bushel. Hard red spring wheat September contracts finished at $10.10 on the Minnesota Grain Exchange, December contracts finished $10.09. One thing Smith cautions consumers against is over associating bread prices with a beneficial increase in what farmers are paid for wheat. From the point of view of the price of a loaf of bread, folks need to understand that currently, for every dollar they spend on a loaf of bread, 94 cents of that is covering the cost of getting the wheat to the miller, to the baker, to the supermarket, Smith said. Only six cents of that, on average, is involved with purchasing the bushel of wheat from which the flour comes." The issue, probably for all food prices, as well as every other price, is actually the impact of the Ukrainian crisis on the price of oil, diesel and the price of gas. But that's the problem common to every commodity being produced, whether it's a new Ford Escape, or a loaf of bread. There are factors other than the war pushing up the price of wheat, which was trending upward strongly before the invasion, said Cassidy Marn, Montana Wheat and Barley Committee executive vice president. Its Marn who works directly with foreign buyers of Montana wheat. Much like Ukraine, Montana exports up to 80% of the wheat it grows. The state ranks third nationally in wheat production. Drought is a big concern this year for U.S. wheat, not just in Montana. We also had some new drought monitor information come out, and it's pretty bleak across the U.S., Marn said. Montana's certainly the worst. But it's a pretty bad situation, we're kind of getting into a pretty critical time for the Southern Plains, where they're looking to harvest not too far out. The weather could turn around in the Southern Plains and the drought pressure on the U.S. wheat crop would diminish, Marn said. Another impactful turnaround would be a quick end to the Russian invasion of Ukraine. Montana farmers arent strangers to mercurial shifts in grain production in the Black Sea region. In 2010, Montana grain prices jumped 60% in a little more than a month after drought-stricken Russia announced that its wheat production would be down 15 million metric tons. There had been a 23-million-ton surplus of wheat before the announcement by Russia. Suddenly, buyers that usually trade with Russia, namely Egypt and parts of Africa, were in the market for U.S. wheat. Similarly in 2012, Ukraine announced that because of drought it wouldnt be exporting as much grain in November. Montana benefited. Love 0 Funny 0 Wow 0 Sad 0 Angry 1 Be the first to know Get local news delivered to your inbox! Sign up! * I understand and agree that registration on or use of this site constitutes agreement to its user agreement and privacy policy. Hunters and anglers in Montana have a new digital option for managing licenses with the launch of a mobile application released this week. The MyFWP app was released in conjunction with Montanas new license year, which began on March 1. The app allows download and storage of hunting and fishing licenses, including the ability for successful hunters to electronically tag animals on their phones. Its all about options, said Dillon Tabish, spokesperson for Montana Fish, Wildlife & Parks. Its an option for people to use their phone in the field. For those that arent interested in using their phones or technology, paper licenses remain available. When purchasing licenses for 2022, hunters must choose either electronic or paper licenses and may not switch after purchase. Through the app, hunters will be asked to download their licenses or permits for storage on their mobile device. Once downloaded, the platform is functional with our without cellphone service, Tabish said. If a hunter successfully takes an animal, he or she must then validate the license or permit, essentially an electronic version of punching the date on the tag. Information needed at that time is the date, time and hunting district, with the hunting district being the most specific location the agency will request. Tabish said there has been some early confusion about what it means to validate licenses, with hunters electronically punching in the current date. He emphasized that validation should only occur once a hunter is tagging an animal. FWP is stressing three aspects of the app for hunters: keep phones charged; make sure carcass tags are downloaded; and stay logged into the app as it only functions offline if hunters or anglers remain logged in to their account. Its really a digital wallet right now, but moving forward were exploring some new functions and services, this is really building a foundation coming out of the gates for some other ideas and exciting advancements, Tabish said. The goal is to make this a useful tool for those that want it. Additions FWP hopes to have online by fall include mandatory reporting capabilities. The Montana Fish and Wildlife Commission has asked the department to implement hunter harvest reporting, meaning once a hunter tags an animal, it would then be reported to FWP as collected data paralleling what currently occurs through phone surveys. Hunters could also be asked additional survey questions posed by wildlife managers, such as whether wolves were encountered during the hunt, Tabish said. FWP does not have a goal for the number of hunters and anglers it would like to go digital. Other states offering a digital option have seen one-quarter to one-third of their populations choose digital in the first year, although Tabish noted that some states allow hunters to carry both digital and paper licenses. More than 1,300 hunters opted to use electronic tags within the first 24 hours that the app was available, he said. The platform is available at both the App Store (Apple) or Google Play. Some users have reported some issues finding the app on Google Play, Tabish said, which should improve with more downloads. The new app is part of a $10 million upgrade authorized by the Legislature in 2019 to FWPs licensing system. FWP solicited feedback from both license providers and the public through listening sessions in 2019. The contract to overhaul the agencys business systems was awarded to Deloitte through a competitive bidding process, Tabish said, and the company has built much of the programing from scratch. Testing of new systems has been ongoing behind the scenes, he added. In addition to the app, the first phase included a new system for running permit lotteries. The recent lottery for the Smith River was the first under the new system, which Tabish said seemed to run well. Gov. Greg Gianforte touted the app as "modernizing the way state government does business." I applaud FWP for bringing this idea to life, and I look forward to the convenience it will bring our hunters and anglers," he said in a statement. Tom Kuglin is the deputy editor for the Lee Newspapers State Bureau. His coverage focuses on outdoors, recreation and natural resources. Love 0 Funny 0 Wow 0 Sad 0 Angry 0 Get Government & Politics updates in your inbox! Stay up-to-date on the latest in local and national government and political topics with our newsletter. Sign up! * I understand and agree that registration on or use of this site constitutes agreement to its user agreement and privacy policy. Montana is among a growing number of states in the U.S. moving to distance their finances from Russia-linked assets and companies amid sweeping sanctions aimed at the Kremlin and a bipartisan backlash by American politicians to Russias ongoing invasion of Ukraine. The Montana Board of Investments staff has identified about $15 million in assets that are tied to Russian interests within its roughly $25 billion portfolio, Executive Director Dan Villa said Tuesday. Several weeks ago, the boards staff began reviewing assets in the state Unified Investment Program with potential economic exposure to the region, he said. The program includes assets held by the states pension funds, workers' compensation funds and funds owned by schools, universities and local governments. Russian President Vladimir Putin ordered troops to invade Ukraine last week, but that incursion was preceded by a military buildup along Russias and Belarus borders that began in 2021 and prompted growing diplomatic tensions over the past two months. Weve been monitoring these assets for several weeks, and in the boards belief, given the economic picture with Russia thats likely to continue within the long term, we think its prudent to begin the process of exiting our Russian assets, Villa said. The board operates independently from elected officers in state government, although it is comprised of nine political appointees selected by the governor. They serve four-year terms. Beyond those assets implicated by sanctions, Villa said the board will move to divest the states holdings in other assets that could be exposed to the economic fallout of the war in Ukraine. Following consultations with the board and due to significant developments within the Russian economy, the Montana Board of Investments is working with our asset managers to exit any remaining assets in Russia consistent with sanctions and our fiduciary duty, he wrote in an email Tuesday. Villa added that the vast majority of the states Russia-linked assets are passively managed by BlackRock Inc., a multinational asset manager based in New York. He declined to put a timeline on the states divestment plans, citing unclear financial signals from Moscow. Authorities there have recently responded to Western sanctions by moving to block foreign investors from selling off Russian assets. Villa also cautioned that any immediate sales could present substantial losses to the asset owners. On Monday, Gov. Greg Gianforte wrote on Twitter that the state was reviewing assets tied to Putin, who has been among the targets of Western sanctions, along with those of other Russian politicians and business leaders. The State of Montana is reviewing assets and operations that may benefit Vladimir Putin, his cadre of profiting oligarchs, and his vicious war machine, Gianforte wrote. Beyond assets managed by the state fund, its unclear whether the state has any contracts or other ties to Russian companies or assets. In several states, for example, Russian products have also been pulled from the shelves of state-run liquor stores. In an email, Gianforte spokesperson Brooke Stroyke declined to elaborate on the governors statement, and did not respond to questions about what role the governor could take regarding liquor sales or other economic ties to Russia. A spokesperson for the Montana Department of Revenue, which oversees the state's Alcoholic Beverage Control Division, referred press inquiries to the governors Twitter statement. Love 0 Funny 1 Wow 0 Sad 0 Angry 0 Get Government & Politics updates in your inbox! Stay up-to-date on the latest in local and national government and political topics with our newsletter. Sign up! * I understand and agree that registration on or use of this site constitutes agreement to its user agreement and privacy policy. The measure of a man is what he does with power. Plato We see too many of our leaders using their power simply to increase and/or maintain their power; not to do good; not to positively inspire; not to lead by directing citizens to pursue lofty goals. Daily we see the truth of Lord Actons admonition that power corrupts. I am not naive; the misuse of power is as old as civilization. But today we accept power wed to ignorance, foolishness and prejudice as never before. Our public moral standards have become ossified by tolerating unethical leadership. While it may seem to be unrealistic to talk about what ought to be and while it may be expedient to base actions on how people actually behave instead of how they should behave, we still need to hold our leaders to an ethical/moral leadership standard; we still need to hold a view of what this nation ought to be. If we do not, we become complicit in their ruinous behavior. A man without ethics is a wild beast loosed upon this world. (Albert Camus) The ethical character of a leader demands knowledge, probity and a genuine desire not for self-glory but for the good of the political community and public. Unless the leaders character is ethical, the behavior cannot be ethical. Being a leader does not mean pandering to every popular prejudice, rumor or myth as too many leaders are doing today. Excellence in character demands a person who habitually practices the public virtues of wisdom; prudence; justice; fortitude; courage; liberality; magnificence; magnanimity; temperance. Before supporting someone, ask yourself if they display these elements of virtuous character? Our chief want is someone who will inspire us to be what we know we could be. (Ralph Waldo Emerson) But we cant put leadership all on our official leaders. Democracies demand citizen leaders who inform themselves about the issues, deliberate about what course of action we should take as a nation and voice their opinions. A good citizen participates in the affairs of the state and sets aside his/her private concerns in order to attend to the public duty of promoting the common good. Citizenship is not just a passive legal distinction. Citizenship demands the active exercise of leadership. Too many abdicate their leadership duty by deferring to others to decide what they should think or do. For all the discussion of freedom, too many rely on the opinions of others to substitute for their own. A good citizen must be more concerned about promoting the common good and general welfare than always feathering his/her own nest. No democracy can exist unless each citizen is as capable of outrage at injustice to another as he is to outrage at an injustice to himself. The salvation of the community is the common business of them all. (Aristotle) Do we measure up? Are we clear thinking, civically engaged citizens? Being a good citizen means knowing something about the issues and this knowing must be based on factual data and evidence not posts on Twitter or Facebook. Being a good citizen demands skill at rational, evidence-based deliberation. Being a good citizen demands that our public behavior is based on such deliberative outcomes. Such citizenship is not common today but we must not loose sight of what good citizenship entails and demand it. Good citizenship does not mean constantly roaring about freedom as the only political value. We have a political community to provide for public goods, regulate the harmful conduct of others, deal with negative externalities, promote common endeavors and provide protection, order and justice to citizens. The freedom that too many talk about means having no constraints and doing exactly what one pleases which produces chaos, confusion and conflict. Contradictorily, many of these freedom fanatics support authoritarian leaders who would deny freedom. But rational thought is not a characteristic of these fanatics. Let us embrace once again our commitment to be led only by ethical, thoughtful leaders. Let us embrace once again our personal obligation to be citizen leaders. Let us remember as John Quincy Adams said: If your actions inspire others to dream more, learn more, do more and become more, you are a leader. Dr. John W. Ray teaches classes in political theory, ethics and philosophy at Montana Tech. He has published and given numerous presentations in the areas of deliberative and discursive democracy, ethical discourse and promoting democratic values and leadership in society. The views expressed are his own and do not necessarily reflect the views of Montana Tech. Love 3 Funny 2 Wow 0 Sad 0 Angry 0 ARCHIVED - Camping and Airbnb accommodation growth in Spain outperforms hotel stays in January 2022 Foreign tourists visiting Spain are to thank for most of this growth in non-hotel activity Non-hotel overnight stays in Andalucia those in Airbnb flats, campsites and hostels rather than hotels amounted to 757,636 in January, up 221% compared to the same period in 2021, when they totalled 235,672, according to data published on Wednesday by the National Statistics Institute (INE). In the case of overnight stays in tourist flats in Andalucia, there were 378,934 this January, compared to 108,213 in January of last year, while in campsites there were 304,947, in comparison with the 106,982 in the same month last year. In Spain as a whole, overnight stays in non-hotel tourist accommodation exceeded 4.7 million in January, which is more than three times higher than in the same month of 2021 (+231%). This boost was mainly due to the fourfold increase in overnight stays by travellers from overseas. While there were just over twice as many Spaniards staying in this type of accommodation, the number of stays by foreign nationals increased by nearly three times that (316.5%). Read also: The war against illegal tourist apartments wages on in the Region of Murcia If we add hotels into the mix, overnight stays in Spanish tourist accommodation as a whole almost quadrupled in January, increasing by 292.3% compared to the same month in 2021. This adds a mere 61.3% rise on top of non-hotel stays, indicating that campsites and other means of accommodation outside of hotels are quickly becoming more popular. Meanwhile, in the case of Spaniards, both hotel and non-hotel stays rose by 155.8%, while overnight stays by people visiting on vacation from other countries were almost six times higher than in January last year, with an increase of 493.4%. Image: Archive ARCHIVED - Polar air mass will radically reduce temperatures: Spain weather forecast March 1-3 Heavy rainfall and a DANA storm are predicted in Spain as the week moves on While spring begins in Spain in mid-March, the arrival of the new month is set to herald far more winter-like weather as a polar air mass sweeps across the country, bringing rain, night frosts and daytime temperatures between 5 and 10 degrees lower than what we have been experiencing Spain welcomes March with relatively stable weather and rain confined to the north but all this will change in Thursday 3, according to the experts. As of Thursday we are going to have significant changes in the atmospheric situation, Ruben del Campo, spokesman for the State Agency for Meteorology (Aemet) warned. A mass of polar air arrives in our geographical environment air coming from higher latitudes, not necessarily from the pole, despite the name much colder than what we currently have. The cold air is likely to give rise to a DANA weatherfront (with isolated depression at high levels) in the coming days with storms predicted along the Mediterranean coast, causing a significant reduction in temperatures and widespread rain as we come into the weekend. While Spain is braced for a few days of wintery weather that may slightly alleviate the ongoing drought situation , the meteorologist doesnt foresee any long-lasting rain. Tuesday March 1: An inactive Atlantic front will enter the peninsular northwest, leading to rainfall in Galicia and the north of the country but generally clear skies throughout the rest of Spain. Temperatures will rise in eastern parts where the mercury will hit the low 20s. An inactive Atlantic front will enter the peninsular northwest, leading to rainfall in Galicia and the north of the country but generally clear skies throughout the rest of Spain. Temperatures will rise in eastern parts where the mercury will hit the low 20s. Wednesday March 2: Rain will persist in the north but the weather will remain stable in the rest of Spain, although temperatures will drop everywhere except for the Mediterranean coast, where the thermometers could top 25C in cities like Valencia. Rain will persist in the north but the weather will remain stable in the rest of Spain, although temperatures will drop everywhere except for the Mediterranean coast, where the thermometers could top 25C in cities like Valencia. Thursday March 3: A fairly active front will cross Spain from the northwest to southeast, leading to rainfall in large areas of the northern half of the peninsula and, to a lesser extent, the south and east. A mass of cold air will significantly lower temperatures across the country, with the coldest weather being felt on Thursday night. Image: Aemet MUSCATINE While the City of Muscatine is denying allegations of violating the Iowa Wage Payment Collection Act and Fair Labor Standards Act, the city council is expected to vote Thursday evening on whether to settle a lawsuit brought by five firefighters. According to the city council agenda, a vote is being requested for the city to approve a release and settlement agreement, paying a total of $31,778.54 to settle the lawsuit. If approved the settlement will be funded from the Muscatine Fire Departments operating budget. The summary of the settlement says the settlement requires action by both parties. The suit, filed Sept. 7, 2021, in Iowa District Court for Muscatine County, was brought by firefighters Julie Anne Gaeta, Theodore Hillard, Darrell Janssen, Andy Summitt, and Joseph Timmsen. According to the suit, Muscatine is an enterprise as defined by the Fair Labor Standards Act, as it has more than two employees and makes more than $500,000 annually. The suit alleges that until March 2020 Muscatine classified fire department captains as exempt from overtime and compensatory time off. It also says that in 2019 the defendants noticed that captains were not exempt from overtime requirements but took no action to correct the misclassification until March 2020. Since March 2020 Muscatine has paid captains time-and-a-half for overtime hours. Also, battalion chiefs were exempt from overtime pay until March 2021. The defendants also noticed in 2019 battalion chiefs were not exempt from overtime requirements, but took no action. In March 2021 Muscatine properly reclassified battalion chiefs as non-exempt. The suit alleges that Muscatine failed to pay captains and battalion chiefs back pay for the time during which they were misclassified. The suit also says as a result of the omissions, the plaintiffs in the case lost wages. Attorneys for the city of Muscatine argued the plaintiffs had failed to state any claim on which relief could be granted and that the claims were barred by the statute of limitations and because they had been improperly pleaded. The city also filed to have the suit removed to federal court, which was approved. In the notice of removal, only Gaeta and Timmsen were listed as plaintiffs. Love 0 Funny 0 Wow 0 Sad 0 Angry 0 MUSCATINE During the Muscatine School Board work session Monday, the board learned the proposed tax levy to the community from the school district to fund the 2022-23 budget. District Director of Finance Tom Anderson told the board Muscatine School District property taxpayers will see a slight decline in their rate with a 9-cent decrease per $1,000 of taxable valuation. The districts overall askings will drop $91,000. There are a lot of things that are going into this, Anderson said. One is obviously enrollment, but another is tax reduction incentives the legislature has approved. The general fund levy this year is expected to be $13.43. The public hearing for the 2022/23 budget will be April 11. The time and place will be set during the March 7 meeting. The budget has to be to the county auditor by April 15. The board is also planning to implement self-funded health insurance for its faculty and staff. Anderson said one of the lines on the budget is now rebates from medical companies. In the coming year, the district is looking at a 5.4% increase over this years $5.2 million. The cost per employee per month is calculated to be $939.44, which Anderson said is lower than what is budgeted for. There will be 458 contracts in the district, down from 474 last year. Reasons given for an increase in insurance costs is the provider is predicting an increase in claims in the coming year. Superintendent Clint Christopher told the board that in speaking with other school districts, there is an 8 to 10% increase in the cost of insurance across the board. Christopher said the district going self-insured is keeping the cost per policy down and is allowing the district to have more control over its coverage. This was a good decision, he said. Love 0 Funny 0 Wow 0 Sad 0 Angry 0 EDITOR'S NOTE: Nathan Penfold is a native of Mitchell County. He has lived in the eastern Ukrainian port city of Mariupol for the past 12 years, where he worked as an English teacher. Last week, Mariupol was bombed by the Russian Federation and Penfold was forced to flee the country. Currently in Poland, Penfold plans to return to Osage. Mariupol sits between Crimea, which Russia took by force from Ukraine in 2014, and the eastern section of the country occupied by pro-Russian rebels. The following is Penfold's unedited account of escaping the Russian invasion, as relayed by email to Mitchell County Press Editor Jason Selby. Some readers may find the details of this disturbing. Wednesday was a usual day in the eastern Ukrainian city of Mariupol. The sun was shining, people were walking in the streets, there was a general optimism among everyone that war, real full-out war, would not come after all. I really believed that everything would be solved diplomatically. I'm an American but over the last 12 years Mariupol has become my home. I came there originally as a volunteer English teacher, and fell in love with the generosity of its people. Over the years that city has become my world, a place where I'm surrounded by old friends and memories. It's population numbers around a half million people, but at times feels like a big village where everybody knows each other. We had been living next to conflict for eight years, so when on Saturday morning we were woken by the rumbling of shellfire outside the city, it frightened us, though we had heard such shelling years before. A few quiet days passed and just when people started to feel safe again, the world ended. I was woken on Thursday morning by the sound of loud explosions. I looked at my computer and there was a message from a student in the city of Dnipro who I give lessons to. "What is going on there? We can hear the shooting all the way over here!" Dnipro is halfway across the country, I thought to myself that it couldn't be possible he heard the shelling from our region. I called my friend Ira and asked what the hell was going on. She said, "They're bombing the whole country, Mariupol, Dnipro, Kiev, Harkiv, and even in the west, everywhere! You'd better come up to our house." I live near the beach in an area that could be dangerous if we were attacked from the sea, so I threw my documents and some clothes in a travel bag and started walking up the hill toward the city center where Ira lives. As I walked I could hear explosions that seemed to come from right over our heads, it was like watching a film, so strange and different from reality. I just kept going and praying all the time. I met Ira and her friend Ivan near the center. All I could think about was getting to cover but Ira said, "No, we need to get to the market now and buy two sacks of potatoes." She and Ivan wanted to buy more groceries, but all the cash machines were empty. I gave them some money I had so we could finish buying supplies. As soon as we got home she told us we needed to start filling bottles with water. After we were prepared we sat with tea in front of the television to watch the news, and from time to time we could hear explosions that shook the house. Ivan, who just finished a tour in the Ukrainian army, got very excited every time they told that Russian tanks or planes had been hit, but still, the news was enough of a mix of good and bad to leave us feeling quite nervous about our situation. Then we heard there would be an emergency evacuation train leaving the city in 15 minutes. I had actually wanted to leave the city for some time since the shelling the Saturday before but had been sick with the flu and not well enough to travel earlier. I decided to try. So we quickly drove to the train station, and just as the train was about to pull out I jumped on without a ticket or anything. Two lady conductors told me I was welcome, but there was no free place and I would have to stand. They were making the sign of the cross over themselves as we left. "My God, where are we taking these people?" the one exclaimed. "Into Hell, straight into Hell where all the worst fighting is happening," the other replied. The train passed through the town of Volnovaha about 50 miles north of Mariupol, which is right near the front. We learned later that 30 minutes after we passed through there the town had been shelled, and the next day it was hit again very hard. Our train slowly snaked its way all across the country from east to west, stopping at times while routes were changed to avoid some dangerous areas. All the time we heard rumors about formations of Russian tanks crossing the border and cities being attacked. We prayed we wouldn't meet any of them out there on the dark plains. I was grateful when later the conductors found me a place in a different carriage. I rode in a compartment with a very nice woman who was trying to return to Italy where she lived with her husband. She had come back to Ukraine to visit family. I called my mother in America who was by then sick with worry, partly to let her know I was alright, and, in the back of my mind, to hear her voice just one more time in case anything would happen. We finally got to Lviv, the most western large city in Ukraine, at about nine p.m. after 30 hours of travelling. I asked the taxi and bus drivers about the situation at the border, and they said they could drop people off there, but the line of people waiting to cross into Poland was 12 miles long. They stand all night in the cold, sometimes waiting more than a day to get through. Later, I learned there was a free train that would come at midnight to take people across into Poland. I waited on the platform with a huge crowd of mostly women and children. Ukrainian men who are between 18 and 55 years of age are prohibited from leaving the country at present. There were however some old men and foreign men like myself waiting. A railway worker walked through the crowd shouting, "Men stand back! Women and children first!" I remembered the Titanic. And just as I'm sure it was back then, when people were trying to get into the lifeboats, there was a mad rush as soon as that train pulled in and the doors opened. People pushed to get in the train and there were screams of hundreds of frightened children. Even though I had moved aside for the women and children I still was able to get into a carriage with no problem. However after the initial rush, more people continued to run up the platform and before long the train was packed with standing room only. People were standing everywhere in the central aisle, children were sitting on the floor between the benches. I had a seat on one of those hard wooden benches in the old carriage, which wouldn't have been so bad, except for the fact that we would be stuck in that train for 14 hours while we waited for the Ukrainian border authorities to check everyone's documents. There were so many people packed in that car that a person could barely move. After travelling about 20 miles we stopped in a field, in the dark with no lights on in the train. I think now we were simply waiting until the driver got permission to pull into the customs checkpoint, but at the time the people were frantic with panic. There were rumors that they had turned off the lights so Russian planes could not see us moving. I don't know if that was true or not, but just the idea was enough to frighten people, and every time someone's telephone screen lit up others would shout to switch it off. So we sat in the dark and waited for about two hours, then moved into the checkpoint. The poor Ukrainian border authorities were completely overwhelmed. An officer shoved her way through the carriage, filling a plastic shopping bag with hundreds of passports as she went. We waited for hours there, and finally when we were worried that we would never see our documents again, the officers started to bring them out of the building. Somehow they managed in that mess to return each person his document. We still had to wait until the train received permission to go on, and by then most of the children had been more than 13 hours without anything to eat, so the border authorities brought in large boxes of cookies and began to distribute them. After another hour or so we moved into Poland. It took a while more to unload all the cars so while we were waiting for the doors to open, the Polish border authorities passed us bottles of water through the windows. Finally when we were able to leave the train we moved into the processing terminal, near which stood crowds of people and reporters. As soon as we got through passport control we were met by some women who spoke English and asked if we needed assistance or a place to stay. Outside the building there were more people who held up signs advertising free places to stay, free rides or free food. After visiting a welcome center that had been set up for Americans I went to the train station where I was surprised to find more volunteers distributing food and toiletries to the refugees. When I went to buy a ticket I spoke to the cashier in Ukrainian, as I don't know Polish. Because these are both Slavic languages I could understand her more or less, and she asked me several times if I were Ukrainian. I said no, that I have American citizenship, and she explained that in Poland they are giving railway tickets for free to citizens of Ukraine now. I reached my friend's home in Krakow after an exhausting ordeal. In one day, my life and the lives of millions of Ukrainians were turned upside down. We woke up to a nightmare. In this time of terror we have seen the worst people are capable of and the best. I have the utmost gratitude for the citizens of Poland who have so generously opened their country, and their hearts, to traumatized citizens forced to flee their own homes to save their lives. I am certain that Ukraine will prevail, and that I will meet my dear friends there again one day. My heart is filled with hope, and at the same time with great sorrow, that such great tragedy which has caused so much pain, never had to happen in the first place. Love 0 Funny 0 Wow 0 Sad 0 Angry 0 The Johannesburg Stock Exchange (JSE) is facing a big problem many companies are delisting from the exchange with very few new listings to make up for the decline. The JSEs latest financial results revealed 25 companies delisted from the JSE in 2021. It follows 20 delistings in 2020 and 24 delistings in 2019. New listings in the JSE are few and far between. In 2021, there were only seven initial offerings and only four the previous year. It means that the JSE experienced a net loss of 34 companies over the last two years a sizeable portion of the 340 listed companies on the bourse. To put the JSE exodus in perspective the local bourse had 850 listed companies at its peak in the nineties. Many IT companies, including Adapt IT and Alaris, form part of the wave of delistings from the JSE. Marius Strydom, CEO at Austin Lawrence Gidon, said small and mid-cap shares do not get much coverage and do not attract the attention of investors. Most investors only focus on the top companies on the JSE, which means small companies are struggling to achieve high trading volumes. Another trend is the increase in passive funds. If you are not in the index, youre not held, said Strydom. The low trading volumes mean their shares are often heavily discounted, and they are not seeing the benefits of being listed on the JSE. Small-cap tech shares like Huge Group and Telemasters can go days without any trading. The costs to be listed make no sense to these small-cap companies. Strydom said the JSE needs to get the more interesting and exciting companies on its platform. You have to offer them more than simply a place to trade the shares. These companies must find improved access to capital and improved visibility through the listing, he said. However, it will be difficult for the JSE to compete against the vibrant private equity industry, which provides an excellent alternative for new companies to raise money. Tech startups like Ozow and VALR, for example, raised R750 million and R731 million, respectively, which show the appetite from venture capitalists to pump money into South African companies. It would have been impossible for these two companies to raise the same amount by listing on the JSE. Despite the high number of delistings and challenges to attract new listings, JSE CEO Leila Fourie downplayed the situation. Fourie said that while the number of listed entities declined, the market capitalisation of listed companies on the JSE grew by 15% during 2021. Most of the recent delistings have been in small-and mid-cap companies and largely off the back of corporate actions and schemes of arrangements, she said. She did, however, admit that the delistings harmed the JSE. They are now actively cutting red tape and attracting quality dual listings from foreign exchanges to address this problem. Commenting on the discounts to net asset value at which many JSE listed companies trade, Fourie said this discount is narrowing. She said the current geopolitical tensions would work in South Africas favour and make it more favoured among international investors looking for emerging market exposure. These inbound flows will translate into an increase in valuations [of JSE listed companies], she said. Now read: JSE chief financial officer resigns South African cryptocurrency exchange VALR announced that it had raised $50 million (R770 million) in the continents largest-ever crypto funding round. Additionally, the value of the crypto exchange company reached $240 million (R3.7 billion), with VALRs valuation growing ten-fold since it raised $3.4 million (R52 million) in its Series A round of funding in July 2020. VALR has processed over $7.5 billion (R115 billion) in trading volume since its launch in 2019 and now serves over 250,000 retail customers and 500 institutional clients from across the globe. VALRs Series B funding round was led by Pantera Capital, with help from several other organisations, including Alameda Research, Cadenza, Coinbase Ventures, and Avon Ventures. Pantera is extremely excited to be leading the Series B round for VALR, as we believe that Africas future is bright for the adoption of cryptocurrencies for both asset diversification and payments, said Paul Veradittakit, a partner at Pantera Capital. VALR brings an amazing product and service to onboard both retail customers and institutions. The funds raised are earmarked for expansion across Africa and other emerging markets like India. Societys financial tools should unite us, not divide us. There is no longer any room for doubt regarding the impact crypto assets are having on our global financial system, VALR CEO and co-founder Farzam Ehsani said. We already help VALRs customers enter this new world of crypto from the traditional financial system using their USD or ZAR, and Im very excited that this round of funding will allow us to serve so many more across Africa and the world. VALR has intentions to onboard more institutions from the traditional financial system, including large banks, insurers, and hedge funds, to help them enter the crypto market. The world is on the precipice of huge financial change. Crypto assets will become more and more pivotal to all our lives, Ehsani said. Now read: Cryptocurrency exchanges resist pressure to block all Russian users Marie-Elena studied creative writing, art, and photography at University of Nebraska at Omaha, graduating with a BA in Studio Art -Visual Media. She moved to California from Nebraska in 2019 and is happy to call Calaveras County her home. Comment Policy Calaveras Enterprise does not actively monitor comments. However, staff does read through to assess reader interest. When abusive or foul language is used or directed toward other commenters, those comments will be deleted. If a commenter continues to use such language, that person will be blocked from commenting. We wish to foster a community of communication and a sharing of ideas, and we truly value readers' input. Fuel price increases the Central Energy Fund announced on Friday have kicked in today, bringing the inland petrol price to over R21 per litre. From Wednesday, 2 March 2022, the price of both grades of unleaded petrol increased by R1.46 per litre. The price of 500ppm diesel increased by R1.44 per litre, and 50ppm diesel rose by R1.48. In addition, the energy department also hiked the price of illuminating paraffin by R1.21 per litre. The Department of Mineral Resources and Energy explained that several factors have caused fuel prices to rise sharply. While the rand strengthened slightly against the US dollar between February and March, the average Brent Crude oil price increased from $93.00 to $96.47. The main contributing factors to this rise were threefold: The escalating crisis between Russia and Ukraine led to a surge in crude oil prices amid supply fears. Sanctions on Russia by the UK, US, and Europe have contributed to increasing crude oil prices. The Organisation of Petroleum Exporting Countries (OPEC) and Non-OPEC members are still not meeting agreed production targets, leading to lower crude oil supplies and an increase in prices. The increase in crude oil prices drove up international refined petroleum product prices. This led to higher contributions to the Basic Fuel Price of petrol 95 and 93 by 149.66c/l and 148.11c/l respectively, diesel 50ppm and 500ppm by 148.65c/l and 151.90c/l respectively, and illuminating paraffin by 140.26 cents per litre. The impact of these changes on the petrol price is summarised in the table below. Fuel price changes February 2022 March 2022 Inland 93 Unleaded R19.89 R21.35 95 Unleaded R20.14 R21.60 Coast 93 Unleaded R19.37 R20.83 95 Unleaded R19.42 R20.35 While rising oil prices are the reason for this significant increase, much of the price South Africans pay at the pumps is due to various taxes levied on fuel. Some good news is that finance minister Enoch Godongwana announced during his 2022 budget speech that the general fuel levy and Road Accident Fund levy would not increase in the 2022/23 financial year. His announcement was in line with suggestions from industry associations and civil action groups like Outa. In addition, Godongwana also revealed that he was discussing a full review of South Africas petrol price with energy minister Gwede Mantashe. The intention is to make sure that we can have a petrol price which is competitive with this economy. However, while the taxes on fuel may not have increased, they remain high. The Organisation Undoing Tax Abuse (Outa) has explained that the combined levies on motorists have risen by 126% in ten years, while the basic fuel price increased by much less. As a result, South Africans have gone from paying around 42% taxes on petrol to over 50%. The following table shows how much more you will pay inland to fill up your cars tank petrol from today. Price to fill up typical vehicle tanks Tank size February 2022 March 2022 Increase 93 unleaded (inland) 45 litres R895.05 R960.75 R65.70 60 litres R1,193.40 R1,281.00 R87.60 80 litres R1,591.20 R1,708.00 R116.80 95 unleaded (inland) 45 litres R906.30 R972.00 R65.70 60 litres R1,208.40 R1,296.00 R87.60 80 litres R1,611.20 R1,728.00 R116.80 Now read: South African car insurance companies rejecting claims due to speeding The Addams family delights in misery, and its hard to imagine them reacting to a global pandemic with anything but utter glee and a jaunty da-da-da-dum, snap, snap. Likewise, high school students hope audiences are ready for some morbid but good-natured laughs as St. Helena Drama presents "The Addams Family," its first musical since 2020. Quality journalism doesn't happen without your help. Subscribe today! Support local news coverage and the people who report it by subscribing to the Napa Valley Register. Cast member Clayton Burton said the shows unique mood of gothic cheer is a good fit for the current moment when the world is gradually returning to normal after the pandemic. This has been a really dark experience, but when you look back you can find light in it, Burton said. In The Addams Family theres also a lot of light and dark. People should come because this is an experience we havent seen for two years, Burton said, adding that the dark humor will especially appeal to older audience members. The Addams Family runs March 4-13 at the St. Helena Performing Arts Center. Its directed by Patti Coyle and Craig Bond, with choreography by Francesca Menegon and sets by Bill Kauffman. The Star was invited to sit in on a recent rehearsal. The show starts, fittingly, in a graveyard, with a musical number introducing the family members living, dead and undecided. The ever-cheerful Uncle Fester (Rhett Ryan) sets the plot in motion by revealing that Wednesday, the ever-sullen daughter of Gomez (Gabriel DuBois) and Morticia (Kaitlyn Valenzuela), is in love with the surprisingly normal Lucas (Liam Joy). Shes even been seen to smile at him, which Morticia finds particularly concerning. With Lucas and his parents set to visit the Addams home for dinner, Uncle Fester bars the familys dead ancestors from returning to their crypt until love prevails, and the audience gets the sense that the dinner is going to go spectacularly wrong in the best possible ways. Alejandro Guzman plays Pugsley, whose first big scene takes place while his sister Wednesday stretches him on an old-fashioned torture rack. Pugsley is clearly loving every excruciating minute of it. Hes a really weird kid, Guzman said. When hes on the rack I get to scream my heart out, which is cool. The role includes a solo, Guzmans first ever. As a senior, this will be his last show with St. Helena Drama. We havent had live musical theater in two years, Guzman said. Its finally back and were still going strong. Im ready and Im excited. Reina Erwin performs in the ensemble and is Uncle Festers understudy, but her most important role might be behind the scenes. A dancer since the age of 3, shes one of the productions dance captains responsible for training the rest of the cast during rehearsals. The moves are pretty simple, but it doesnt necessarily look all that simple when everybodys onstage, she said. Its been a lot of fun. Being offstage for two years, except for last falls mostly outdoor non-musical Almost, Maine, has been really tough, said Erwin, a senior. This is my last show, she added. The other day I got super-emotional backstage thinking, Oh my God, this is my last show. It hadnt felt that way because weve been missing so many shows. Burton plays Lurch, the familys zombie butler who communicates in grunts and is coming out of a dark place, as Burton puts it. To reveal much more would be a spoiler. Burton said the The Addams Family feels completely different from Newsies, St. Helena Dramas 2020 spring musical that premiered just as pandemic restrictions were ramping up. Newsies was a very bubbly, move-all-over-the-place kind of show, he said. This show is all about stiff movements, but you still have to show a lot of expression, which is hard when youre wearing a mask. So you have to do it with your eyes and your body. (The cast has been masked during rehearsals but will perform unmasked starting on opening night.) Kaitlyn Valenzuela plays the confident Morticia, who couldnt be more different from the high-strung, insecure character Valenzuela played in Almost, Maine. She didnt feel like her performance as Morticia clicked until mid-February, when Coyle gave her some helpful notes. Valenzuela watched clips of Morticias from TV and film adaptations to give her a better sense of the character. Im not a very commanding person in real life, so this is a really, really fun role, Valenzuela said. Being back onstage in a musical feels like home, said Valenzuela, who made her St. Helena Drama debut in 2017s Thoroughly Modern Millie and is now appearing in her final show. To know that Im going to be onstage without a mask and people are actually going to see my face after all this time it actually makes me emotional, she said. You can reach Jesse Duarte at 967-6803 or jduarte@sthelenastar.com. Be the first to know Get local news delivered to your inbox! Sign up! * I understand and agree that registration on or use of this site constitutes agreement to its user agreement and privacy policy. The city of St. Helena and Pacaso have spent the last year in court arguing over whether the citys timeshare ban applies to the company's home co-ownership model. Now the city is getting ready to rewrite its code to remove all doubt. Quality journalism doesn't happen without your help. Subscribe today! Support local news coverage and the people who report it by subscribing to the Napa Valley Register. The Planning Commission voted 5-0 Tuesday in support of an ordinance that would overhaul the citys timeshare regulations for the first time since 1982 and redefine time-share to explicitly ban fractional ownership plans like Pacasos in residential zoning districts. Neighbors who oppose Pacaso are hailing the proposed ordinance as an important step toward preserving the integrity of residential neighborhoods, preventing the noise and parking nuisances associated with short-term stays, and protecting St. Helenas precious housing stock. We are pleased to at last see our city join others fighting Pacaso, the pending lawsuit notwithstanding, wrote St. Helena resident Susan McWilliams in a letter to the Planning Commission. It is just unfortunate that the ordinance offers no relief to the aggrieved neighbors of existing Pacaso houses, who will continue to suffer the intrusions that living adjacent to a hotel bring. Connie Wilson, who has organized neighborhood protests in front of several Pacaso homes, called the proposed ordinance thoughtful and correct. This ordinance fortifies and protects our residential neighborhoods from commercial encroachment from companies such as Pacaso, Wilson wrote. Pacaso claims that its homes are not timeshares. The company forms a limited liability company (LLC) to take ownership of each property, and then allows up to eight parties to buy shares in the LLC. According to Pacasos website, each 1/8 owner can use the property in increments of between two and 14 days, for up to 44 days per year. Pacasos website currently advertises 1/8 shares in St. Helena homes on Hillview Place ($418,000), Riesling Way ($455,000) and Madrona Avenue ($614,000). Naseem Moeel, a public affairs manager for Pacaso who lives in St. Helena, called the ordinance an overreaction and said the city should instead be focused on issues like water and wildfires. Pacasos model is not quite a timeshare, Moeel told the commission. These are co-ownerships, she said. These are people who want to invest in our community. Its not taking away housing stock either. People who would like to be involved in Napa Valleys lifestyle are now being asked to own a whole home to be involved in that community, Moeel said. City staff initially delayed changing the ordinance in light of the ongoing litigation, according to City Attorney Ethan Walsh. However, staff decided to move forward due to the continued marketing of time share uses within the City, Walsh wrote in a staff report. The ordinance now heads to the City Council for possible adoption. You can reach Jesse Duarte at 967-6803 or jduarte@sthelenastar.com. Be the first to know Get local news delivered to your inbox! Sign up! * I understand and agree that registration on or use of this site constitutes agreement to its user agreement and privacy policy. The dead sleep peacefully here. There are history lessons here for those who care to learn them, but the abiding mood is one of pastoral tranquility. In the early evening, deer venture forth to graze among the resting places of pioneers, vintners, and beloved small-town characters. Mice and squirrels forage in the grass, mindful of the nesting raptors roosting in the branches overhead. Is there any better place to take a walk than the St. Helena Public Cemetery? We recently learned more about the nonprofit cemetery, which has been run by local volunteers since 1872, from boardmembers John Sales, Mariam Hansen, Stephen Taplin, Darrell Quirici and Mike Thomas. The original property, once owned by the Hudson family, has been steadily expanded to encompass some 12,000 graves and more than 30 acres of land, including some vineyards to the north. For all the complaining we do about the condition of city parks, we should acknowledge the cemetery as a sort of park in its own right a beautifully maintained park with a purpose. The cemetery is the site of cherished rituals like the American Legions annual Memorial Day ceremony and the cemetery walk put on by the St. Helena Historical Society and the school drama department. Both have been on hold during the pandemic, but were hopeful they will return this year. Even without public events, the cemetery speaks for itself. Edward Turner Bale, builder of the Bale Grist Mill, is there. So is Charles Krug, one of the cemeterys founding boardmembers. So are Robert and Margrit Mondavi. So are Chick Gandil of Chicago Black Sox infamy, once-celebrated vaudevillian Claire Vance, and the family of writer Ambrose Bierce although not Bierce himself, which is its own fascinating and mysterious story. Many of us have special loved ones resting there, all with their own stories. No wonder the cemetery was awarded a spot on the National Register of Historic Places in 2019. There's also a Jewish cemetery, a Chinese cemetery dating back to before St. Helena's Chinese community was cruelly driven out of town, and an area to accommodate the homeless and indigent under an agreement between the cemetery and the county. Every community treasure needs continual tending, and the cemetery is no exception. A typical grave costs around $4,000. Some of that money goes into an endowment that pays for long-term upkeep, including the $80,000 it cost to remove pine trees that died during the drought. The vineyard lease also generates revenue for the cemetery. The money wouldnt do any good without the people to manage it. Thats where the boardmembers come in. Theyre dedicated, and the condition of the cemetery grounds is a testament to their competence. But they're not young, as they're quick to admit. Theyre hoping for a new crop of boardmembers with the energy to carry on the cemeterys legacy as the current generation bows out. Ideally those boardmembers would be as ethnically diverse as the cemeterys permanent denizens, who run the gamut from Italian to Latin American to Scandinavian to Chinese. The demand for burial plots is slowing due to the popularity of cremation, which requires less space. But the cemetery is bound to run out of space eventually, and wise leadership will be needed to guide its future. Everyone whos ever enjoyed the cemetery and if youve never been there we strongly urge you to pay a visit shares a vested interest in maintaining this serene oasis in perpetuity. After all, many of us will end up there eventually. Its easy to find neglected, overgrown cemeteries that have been left to fend for themselves against time, nature and vandalism. Our own cemetery is nowhere near that point, but only the continued work of staff, volunteers and benefactors will ensure that future generations can enjoy it as much as we do. The Star editorial board consists of Napa Valley Publishing president Jay Scott, Interim Napa Valley Register editor Samie Hartley and community volunteers Norma Ferriz, Shannon Kuleto, Bonnie Long, Peter McCrea, Chuck Meibeyer, Gail Showley and Dave Yewell. Two American Canyon High School students, Mistura Bankole and Paige Rosal are the winners of the Napa County-wide contest for Poetry Out Loud: National Recitation Contest. The first-place winner, 11th grader Mistura Bankole, received a $200 award. The first runner-up winner and recipient of a $100 award is 10th grader Paige Rosal. The competition, presented in partnership with Arts Council Napa Valley, California Arts Council, the National Endowment for the Arts, and the Poetry Foundation, is part of a national program that encourages high school students to learn about great poetry through memorization, performance, and competition. On Feb. 4 and 7, six high school students from Napa County participated virtually in the Poetry Out Loud County Competition produced by the Lucky Penny Community Arts Center and sponsored by the California Arts Council, National Endowment for the Arts, The Poetry Foundation, Napa Bookmine, and The Robert Louis Stevenson Museum. Mistura Bankole, who will now move on to the state competition on March 16, recited an impassioned yet powerfully graceful rendition of Cage Bird by Maya Angelou. On her second recitation, Bankole narrated Brother Ive Seen Some by Kabir with a clever repartee that seemed as if she had lived the story herself and was telling it first-hand. Paige Rosal started with a strong performance of Idea 61: Since Theres No Help, Come Let Us Kiss and Part by Michael Drayton, and finished commandingly with The Contract Says: Wed Like The Conversation To Be Bilingual by Ada Limon. A complete list of the contestants and the poems recited can be found on the Arts Council Napa Valley website. A much-deserved recognition also goes to the contestants who won first and second place at their respective schools and organizations across the county. These students performances stood out amongst their peers, carrying them to the county-wide competition where they were able to perform for a wider virtual audience. They include Gabrielle George From Justin-Siena High School; Emma Ordonez-Eno from Vintage High School and Jenifer Canseco and Veronica Morris from New Tech High School. To learn more about the California Poetry Out Loud contest, visit www.poetryoutloud.org. To watch the Napa County 2022 Poetry Out Loud contest, visit www.artscouncilnv.org. A new evaluation of a charter school planned for Napa generally compliments its mission and educational model but also cautions its creation may harm the finances of the school district that earlier shot down the project. The application to create the Mayacamas Charter Middle School, a technology-focused academy for grades 6-8, won generally favorable reviews in a study compiled by the Napa County Office of Education and released Monday. Quality journalism doesn't happen without your help. Subscribe today! Support local news coverage and the people who report it by subscribing to the Napa Valley Register. Backers of the self-governing school, slated to open this August inside a defunct Catholic school in downtown Napa, appealed to the county agency to override the rejection of their plan in December by the Napa Valley Unified School District board, which blasted the proposal as poorly organized and a dangerous drain on district funds and staffing. NCOEs board, which held a hearing on the plan last month, is scheduled to vote to approve or deny Mayacamas at its March 15 meeting. If blocked by the county board, the charter application can be appealed to the state Board of Education. The Napa County reports largely optimistic view of Mayacamas prospects is a stark contrast to the clash in recent months between the schools applicants and NVUSD, during which charter advocates accused the district of hostility toward schools not under its full control and suggested a rejection would drive more families into private schools. However, NCOEs favorable review comes with a major caveat one that the agency suggested may justify rejecting an otherwise worthy school start-up. With NVUSDs enrollment steadily shrinking since the mid-2010s, opening a charter school in the district for which it would not receive its normal per-student funding from California could drive the school system into insolvency and a state takeover at least a year earlier this decade than otherwise, in 2025-26, the county office said in its evaluation. Such a finding, according to the report, could give NCOEs board cause to veto Mayacamas on the grounds that it, by weakening other NVUSD schools, is unlikely to serve the interests of the entire community where it would operate. Napas public school system will enter 2022-23 having closed four schools in two years, and canceled American Canyons planned second middle school, as its leaders work to prevent its reserve funds from dropping below 3% of the budget a threshold that would allow California to take over its finances. NVUSD is going to have to make significant cuts to staffing and programming over the next couple of years if it is going to stay financially solvent; NVUSD has acknowledged as such, according to the authors of the NCOE report. NVUSD likely is going to need to close more schools, with or without (Mayacamas). The additional loss of students to (Mayacamas) only exacerbates that need. The NCOE is obliged by law to safeguard the fiscal health of school districts within Napa County, the report reads. NCOE thus is required to review NVUSDs financial condition and intervene if and when NVUSD is in fiscal distress. It is out of this obligation that NCOE expresses reservations about granting the petition. Funding cuts will loom over school districts in Napa and across the state starting in the fall. An emergency policy that began in March 2020 when the arrival of COVID-19 drove schools into months of at-home remote learning forced by social distancing rules propped up educational funding to the higher pre-pandemic student counts, but that policy will expire before 2022-23, resetting per-student revenues to actual and for Napa, lower present-day attendance. One change that could stem some of the state funding losses from opening a new charter school is Californias extension of transitional kindergarten to all 4-year-olds, according to NCOEs authors. The roll-out, which will take place in stages through 2025-26, will increase the Napa school districts average daily attendance by about 460, according to the report. Despite such worries about Mayacamas potential spillover effect on its parent school district, the Napa County report was otherwise far more sanguine than NVUSD officials about its chances for academic success, and declared the school should receive its charter unless it can be shown to undermine the health of existing schools or its district as a whole. Mayacamas promise to use a curriculum based on that of Napas New Technology High School would give preteens a natural on-ramp to project-based online learning, as well as solid preparation for college and careers, according to NCOE staff. In addition, the report praised the charter school supporters emphasis on close teacher-to-student attention as a way to recover many benefits of River Middle School, a former NVUSD charter academy that will close in June. The Mayacamas application, filed in September by the nonprofit Napa Foundation for Options in Education, envisions an August opening with 180 students at 983 Napa St. in the former home of St. John the Baptist Catholic School, which closed in 2020. Enrollment would be gradually increased to 336 by its fourth year, 2025-26, according to the application filing. Since the Mayacamas schools lead applicants Lauren Daley and Jolene Yee filed the plan in September, the project has pitted charter supporters calling for alternatives to conventional charter schools against NVUSD directors, teachers and board members, who have argued the school would benefit only a fraction of students at the expense of others. Calls on Tuesday to Daley and Yee were not immediately returned. Later Tuesday, NVUSDs superintendent Rosanna Mucetti reiterated the districts stance against granting Mayacamas a charter, saying the resulting drain of middle schoolers would strip the school system of about $2 million of per-student state funding and force further budget cutbacks and undo budget-stabilizing steps NVUSD began carrying out three years ago after the county education office warned of deficit spending. In their hands is a decision that could take us right back to where we started, she said of the NCOEs power to approve the Mayacamas school, criticizing what she called the new reports scanty analysis of the charter schools finances. Mucetti also denied that Mayacamas would provide services not already offered by Napa-area schools, pointing to the districts gradual addition of middle-school grades to two elementary schools Browns Valley and Shearer to provide a smaller-school option. (Both campuses will host sixth graders starting in August, and Shearer also will teach seventh grade.) The only charter school currently operating within NVUSD is Stone Bridge, which teaches kindergarten to eighth grade and offers a low-technology Waldorf curriculum. Stone Bridge is in its first year at the former Mt. George Elementary campus in the Coombsville area after leaving its previous campus in Carneros, which was damaged in the 2014 earthquake. You can reach Howard Yune at 530-763-2266 or hyune@napanews.com Get local news delivered to your inbox! Subscribe to our Daily Headlines newsletter. Sign up! * I understand and agree that registration on or use of this site constitutes agreement to its user agreement and privacy policy. Napa County schools will follow Californias lead in lifting requirements to wear masks on campus later this month. Effective March 12, the five public school systems in Napa County, along with local private schools, will replace indoor mask mandates with strong recommendations to wear face coverings, the countys Health and Human Services agency and Office of Education said in a joint announcement late Tuesday. The move followed Californias Monday announcement easing the masking requirement, which had applied to in-person teaching from kindergarten through 12th grade since the arrival of the coronavirus pandemic in early 2020. Quality journalism doesn't happen without your help. Subscribe today! Support local news coverage and the people who report it by subscribing to the Napa Valley Register. County public health and education authorities will work with school districts to offer further guidance in the coming days, officials said in their statement. In the meantime, students and staff will continue to be asked to use face coverings. While masks will no longer be required in most education settings beginning March 12, we continue to strongly recommend students and staff mask-up in indoor settings to avoid disruption to in-person learning, said Napa County Public Health Officer Dr. Karen Relucio. We all know how important it is for kids to be in school and will continue to work with our partners in education to keep kids, their families, and schools staff safe. County authorities recommended continued mask wearing to protect the health of more vulnerable groups, including: Children younger than 5 who are not yet eligible for a COVID-19 vaccine People who are disabled People who are 65 and older People with compromised immune systems People with multiple chronic conditions, including asthma, diabetes, lung disease and heart disease Also Tuesday, Napa County said it will follow state guidance lifting mask requirements in indoor areas for unvaccinated people. California on Monday changed that mandate to a recommendation. State health orders continue to require face coverings in certain settings, regardless of vaccination status. Those settings include public transportation, health care centers, prisons and jails, homeless shelters, and group-living facilities like long-term care homes. The end of mandatory in-school masking in California, Oregon and Washington was jointly announced Monday morning by the governors of all three states. California continues to adjust our policies based on the latest data and science, applying what weve learned over the past two years to guide our response to the pandemic, Gov. Gavin Newsom said in a statement. Masks are an effective tool to minimize spread of the virus and future variants, especially when transmission rates are high. We cannot predict the future of the virus, but we are better prepared for it and will continue to take measures rooted in science to keep California moving forward. This does not necessarily mean masks will not be mandated in some school districts. Local county public health offices in high coronavirus transmission areas could require masking as could individual districts. In a press conference last month, California Health and Human Services Secretary Dr. Mark Ghaly said the state planned to review student vaccination rates, COVID-19 case numbers, hospitalization rates and national and global trends to determine an appropriate time to drop the mandate. The announcement comes on the heels of new guidance on indoor masking from the U.S. Centers for Disease Control and Prevention, released Friday, which introduced a new rating system to determine if indoor masking should be required. The new system measures the number of COVID-19 patients admitted to hospitals, a hospitals capacity to handle additional cases, and new COVID-19 cases in the county. Previously the CDC considered coronavirus positivity rates and caseloads. If the state would have followed this guidance, masking would have remained in Los Angeles, Kern, San Diego, Fresno and most rural counties until their high COVID-19 rating, shown as orange on the CDCs color-coded system, falls to the medium (yellow) or low (green) tier. After California rescinded indoor mask mandates for everyone but schools, several school boards, in counties where opposition to masking had been strong, voted to defy state law and make masking optional. On Feb. 22, the board of the Nevada Joint Union High School District became the latest district to adopt a policy of voluntary masking. The district is in a county where masking indoors would have been required under CDC guidance. Teachers at Nevada Union High School called in sick for two days to protest the action, forcing the school to close. The teachers walked out, in part, because they feared they would be disciplined by the California Commission on Teacher Credentialing if they violate state law, according to union leadership. In Napa, a small group of Vintage High School students walked out of campus Feb. 18 and joined adult protesters in a march against mask-wearing requirements, which was followed by a protest picnic at nearby Solomon Park. Despite the protests against masking, almost two-thirds of California voters support mask and vaccine mandates in schools, according to a poll conducted in early February and released Friday by the Institute of Governmental Studies at UC Berkeley and co-sponsored by the Los Angeles Times. Among parents, 61% approved mask mandates in schools and 55% approved vaccine mandates, according to the poll. Approval for these mandates was divided along political lines, with the vast majority of Republicans disapproving and the vast majority of Democrats approving. With reports from Register reporter Howard Yune and EdSource reporter Diana Lambert. Napa County will do a Walt Ranch redo, though only on the limited topic of greenhouse gas emission mitigations for the controversial vineyard project. The Board of Supervisors on Dec. 14 tentatively approved mitigations by a 3-2 margin. But, with Supervisor Alfredo Pedroza recently deciding to recuse himself after conflict-of-interest allegations, supervisors on Tuesday tabled taking a final vote. Quality journalism doesn't happen without your help. Subscribe today! Support local news coverage and the people who report it by subscribing to the Napa Valley Register. Special offer: Subscribe for $5.99 per mo Pedroza was in the majority of the 3-2 tentative vote. That made it possible a final vote to cement a previously-announced action might end in a 2-2 tie. Instead, the Board of Supervisors on April 19 will start over. It will once again hold a public hearing on how to mitigate for the loss of 14,000 carbon-sequestering trees, this time without Pedroza. Ross Middlemiss, an attorney for the Center for Biological Diversity, said the group will continue to advocate for stronger mitigations. Historic floods and fires are getting worse with the ongoing climate catastrophe, he said. We certainly support the countys effort to take a step back and look at this again, Middlemiss said. Winegrowers of Napa County urged supervisors to come to some sort on conclusion on the greenhouse gas (GHG) emissions topic. Executive Director Michelle Benvenuto saw a bigger issue than Walt Ranch. A finding that GHG impacts for vineyards cannot be mitigated would represent a serious policy shift in our county, Benvenuto wrote to the county. Rather than promoting agriculture, such a policy would prohibit or strongly discourage agriculture. Walt Ranch is 2,300 acres in the mountains between the city of Napa and Lake Berryessa purchased in 2005 by Craig and Kathryn Hall of HALL Wines. The county in 2016 approved allowing 316 acres to be disturbed to create 209 acres of vineyards. But Walt Ranch proved to be a flashpoint for environmentalists and residents concerned about vineyard development in the watershed. Opponents sued and the courts returned the greenhouse gas mitigation piece only to the county for further work. County staff last fall approved Walt Ranchs revised proposal to preserve 124 acres of woodland and plant 16,790 trees on the property. The Center for Biological Diversity wanted stronger measures and appealed the decision to the Board of Supervisors. That led to the Dec. 14 tentative Board of Supervisors decision denying the appeal and backing the staff decision, though supervisors increased the amount of trees to be planted to 17,852. Walt Ranch officials said many of the 14,000 trees to be cut down burned in 2017 Atlas Fire and 2020 Hennessey Fire. Still, they didnt seek to decrease amount of carbon dioxide that requires mitigation. Doing so could reopen the tally to legal challenges. Pedrozas recusal is related to a land deal that citizens discovered and made public. Vinedos AP, LLC in May 2021 bought 400 acres with potential vineyard land along Atlas Peak Road next to Walt Ranch. Papers filed with the state list Pedrozas father-in-law as manager of the limited liability company. Pedroza has said he believes he has no conflict-of-interest because of Vinedos, but will recuse himself from further Walt Ranch decisions to ensure public confidence in the results. Some citizens say the Vinedos matter needs to be investigated by a third party. Resident George Caloyannidis in a letter to the county mentioned one concern that Walt Ranch opponents have long voiced. A secondary entrance to Walt Ranch, one off Atlas Peak Road, could open the door to having vineyard estate homes there, he wrote. A link could be created between Atlas Peak Road and Walt Ranch by passing over the Vinedos property. The Halls have never said publicly that they are seeking to have estate homes on Walt Ranch. Still, opponents brought up the possibility during the 2016 Walt Ranch hearings. The Napa Valley Register on Feb. 11 asked Pedroza if Vinedos might someday allow access from Atlas Peak Road over its land to Walt Ranch. That would be a decision my father-in-law makes, Pedroza said. This (owning a vineyard) is (his father-in-law's and mother-in-law's) dream. This is a dream come true. I fully anticipate they will be good neighbors to Atlas Peak, but I dont think their plan is beyond that. One thing seems likely the April 19 Walt Ranch redo could come with much ado. You can reach Barry Eberling at 256-2253 or beberling@napanews.com. Get local news delivered to your inbox! Subscribe to our Daily Headlines newsletter. Sign up! * I understand and agree that registration on or use of this site constitutes agreement to its user agreement and privacy policy. Morning session of Tuesdays Napa County Board of Supervisors meeting turned out to be almost all about Supervisor Alfredo Pedroza, with defenders and critics speaking. Pedrozas in-laws are involved in Vinedos AP, LLC, a limited liability company that bought land next to Walt Ranch. With Walt Ranch being one of the more controversial issues facing the county, some citizens want to know more about Pedroza's potential ties to an adjacent property. Quality journalism doesn't happen without your help. Subscribe today! Support local news coverage and the people who report it by subscribing to the Napa Valley Register. Special offer: Subscribe for $5.99 per mo All of this came to a head both outside the county administration building and inside the Board of Supervisors chamber. By 9 a.m., several dozen people were rallying outside the county building with signs asking Pedroza to resign. Honking from passing cars could be heard inside the third-story Board of Supervisors chamber as supervisors conducted business. That business as always included listening to public comments for items not on the agenda. Supervisors for about an hour-and-half heard from Pedroza defenders and Pedroza critics. Some defenders said critics had gone too far in their words and actions. I urge our community to rise above the bitter and cruel behavior being leveled against Supervisor Pedroza and his family, said Linsey Gallagher, who is CEO of Visit Napa Valley. Vintner Paul Woolls alluded to a quote from Rodney King, who amid riots in the wake of his 1991 beating by Los Angeles police asked, Can we all get along? Words matter, Woolls said. Civil is the word that comes to mind as I reflect on what is happening...We have seemingly lost our civility. I certainly hope we can retrieve it." Napa Vision 2050 speakers and several residents asked the county to initiate an independent, third-party investigation of Pedrozas possible connections with Vinedos. We urge you, our countys leadership, to support the public trust and fully investigate the information which may include that Supervisor Pedroza had a conflict-of-interest in his decisions on Walt Ranch, Vision 2050 co-president Gary Margadant said. He and others noted that the Board of Supervisors last year ordered an independent investigation on county COVID-19 vaccine distribution after Supervisor Belia Ramos received an early vaccination. Ramos said it was an end-of-the-day shot that otherwise would have been wasted. Resident Amber Manfree said an independent investigation needs to be done by an agency with subpoena power. She wants to find out if Pedroza has a conflict-of-interest on such topics as remote vineyards, remote wineries, road improvements and fire management expenditures. Members of the public have uncovered information that calls the integrity of Alfredo Pedroza into question, Manfree said. Chuck Wagner of Caymus Vineyards was among those supporting Pedroza. Pedroza is honest and forthcoming and has gone beyond the call of duty learning about wine-making and grape growing, the primary businesses of Napa Valley, he said. With that, possibly, he is disliked by the likes of (Vision) 2050, etcetera, because they are anti-winery and anti-vineyards, Wagner said. Thats my own point, my own views. Beth Nelsen, whose research made the Vinedos matter public, told supervisors they needed to take the matter seriously. She urged them to put an external investigation on the agenda. We are not an audience; we are concerned citizens who only want the truth, she said. Pedroza during a break in the meeting said some residents have filed complaints with the state Fair Political Practices Commission (FPPC) on the Vinedos issue. He has provided the FPPC with financial and other information. The FPPC will use this information when deciding whether to investigate, Pedroza said. He made it clear he believes he has no conflict-of-interest and said he has not benefitted financially from Vinedos. Im committed to assuring the FPPC having the information they need and they want, he said. Interim County Counsel Thomas Zeleny said it could take one or two weeks for the FPPC to issue an opinion. It could be longer if the FPPC decides to do an investigation with subpoena power and investigators and attorneys. At the end of the meeting, Pedroza told his colleagues he was sorry for the moment were in and what we have experienced. He has a track record for following the rules, he said. As for the flap over Vinedos, he said, Ive lost sleep over it. Its impacted my family. Supervisors did not and could not discuss having the county launch a third-party investigation of Pedroza and Vinedos, given the matter was not on Tuesdays agenda. Whether it ends up on a future agenda remains to be seen. You can reach Barry Eberling at 256-2253 or beberling@napanews.com. Get local news delivered to your inbox! Subscribe to our Daily Headlines newsletter. Sign up! * I understand and agree that registration on or use of this site constitutes agreement to its user agreement and privacy policy. A former University of Virginia lacrosse player who fatally beat his girlfriend in 2010 has been ordered by a jury to pay $15 million in a wrongful death lawsuit. George Huguely V is currently serving a 23-year prison sentence in the killing of Yeardley Love after being convicted of second-degree murder in 2012. Huguely and Love both played lacrosse at UVA and had an on-again, off-again relationship before Huguely drunkenly killed her. The lawsuit sought $29.5 million in compensatory damages, plus $1 million in punitive damages. The jury ruled that $7.5 million in compensatory damages should be given to both Love's sister and her mother. Punitive damages weren't awarded. Xi tells young officials to have strong faith, work hard Xinhua) 08:10, March 02, 2022 Chinese President Xi Jinping, also general secretary of the Communist Party of China (CPC) Central Committee and chairman of the Central Military Commission, addresses the opening ceremony of a training program of young and middle-aged officials at the Party School of the CPC Central Committee (National Academy of Governance), March 1, 2022. (Xinhua/Shen Hong) BEIJING, March 1 (Xinhua) -- President Xi Jinping on Tuesday urged young officials to strengthen their ideals and convictions, develop and put into practice a right perspective on their performance, and work hard for the causes of the Party and the people. Xi, also general secretary of the Communist Party of China (CPC) Central Committee and chairman of the Central Military Commission, made the remarks when addressing the opening ceremony of a training program for young and middle-aged officials at the Party School of the CPC Central Committee (National Academy of Governance). STRONG FAITH IN MARXISM Xi said that it is vital for young officials to carry on the firm faith in Marxism and strive for the ideals of communism and socialism with Chinese characteristics. "It is a lifelong endeavor, rather than an attempt for a while, to consolidate one's ideals and convictions," he said. He urged them to rigorously abide by Party discipline and the law, and to protect their integrity from corruption in every detail of their life and work. Party officials were told to take a sober and firm stance on major issues of principle, particularly those of political principle, and exercise their power justly, lawfully, honestly, and for the good of the people. They should have a "clean circle" of social interactions and friends, live a healthy and simple life and discipline their relatives. FOR PEOPLE'S WELL-BEING "Communists must bear in mind that working for the people's well-being is their greatest political achievement," Xi stressed. He said that, when making and implementing plans, they must remain committed to the Party's fundamental purpose of wholeheartedly serving the people, and to the principle that development is for the people, reliant on the people, and that its fruits are shared by the people. "What are concrete services to the satisfaction of the people should be determined by the needs of the people," Xi continued. "Whether officials are doing a good job depends on how the people feel and is judged by the people." In delivering real, substantial benefits to the people, Xi said, officials should avoid only addressing the immediate concerns of the people and also ensure that no undesired consequences are created. Xi said that Party officials must walk the talk with solid work, and refrain from talking big and setting ambitious goals but taking little action to achieve them. In achieving long-term goals, Xi said, officials must maintain a strategic resolve and have patience. He urged young Party officials to step up theoretical studies, combine theory and practice, and pursue truth through practice. DARE TO STRUGGLE The great rejuvenation of the Chinese nation can only be achieved when all Party members shoulder their responsibilities and maintain the spirit of struggle, Xi noted. Xi urged Party officials, especially those in leading positions, to take the initiative instead of hesitating to seize opportunities, and rise to the difficulties and risks instead of evading their responsibilities. Noting that all work must be built on the CPC Central Committee's decisions and plans, Xi stressed that partial and local interests should not be pursued at the expense of overall interests, and short-term advantage should not be put above fundamental or long-term interests. "Only with the courage and capacity to struggle can we win respect and seize the initiative, and effectively safeguard China's national sovereignty and security, as well as its development interests," Xi stressed. Work related to the masses must be improved in pace with the times, Xi said, calling on officials to actively respond to the concerns of netizens in particular. Wang Huning, a member of the Standing Committee of the Political Bureau of the CPC Central Committee and a member of the Secretariat of the CPC Central Committee, attended the event. Chinese President Xi Jinping, also general secretary of the Communist Party of China (CPC) Central Committee and chairman of the Central Military Commission, addresses the opening ceremony of a training program of young and middle-aged officials at the Party School of the CPC Central Committee (National Academy of Governance), March 1, 2022. (Xinhua/Liu Bin) (Web editor: Peng yukai, Liang Jun) The Paris Grevin Museum on Tuesday removed the wax figure of Russian President Vladimir Putin in protest against his invasion of Ukraine and after it was damaged by visitors over the weekend, Reuters reported. The statue, which was created in 2000, was moved to a warehouse until further notice and the museum is considering replacing it with a statue of Ukraine President Volodymyr Zelenskyy. "Today is it no longer possible to present a character like him...for the first time in the museum's history we are withdrawing a statue because of historical events currently under way," museum director Yves Delhommeau told France Bleu radio. Over the weekend the statue had suffered attacks from visitors and was looking disheveled, he said. "Given what has happened, we and our staff do not want to have to fix his hair and appearance every day," Delhommeau said. A museum spokesman said it was not clear under what circumstances the statue might return. Asked who might now replace Putin in the empty spot between the statues of U.S. President Joe Biden and Chinese President Xi Jinping, Delhommeau said it might be Ukraine's Zelenskyy. Denmark, Finland support European Commission proposal on Russian oil sanctions Bulgaria to seek exemption from EU proposed Russian oil embargo Biden says he is ready for additional sanctions against Russia Switzerland braces for serious power shortage Uruguay freezes ambassador appointment to Ankara after Cavusoglu's gesture Czech Republic to seek exemption from proposed EU embargo on Russian oil imports Charles Michel on the likelihood of Moldova's EU membership Resistance Movement actions to resume tomorrow early morning Elon Musk is invited to UK Parliament for buying Twitter Disobedience march reaches France Square, rally starts US crude oil shipments to Europe hit highest level in April NEWS.am digest: Large-scale protests being held in Armenia to demand PMs resignation Armenia Defense Minister meets with Georgian PM UK bans imposes sanctions on 63 individuals and organizations in Russia EU plan to completely ban Russian crude oil threatens Hungary's energy security EU interested in expanding energy cooperation with Azerbaijan Germany: Gradual EU ban on Russian oil imports could lead to 'supply disruptions' Opposition demonstration reaches government residences Aliyev insists so-called Zangezur corridor 'is already a reality' Slovakia seeks exemption from EU oil embargo for three years Defense Ministers of Armenia and Georgia sign cooperation program for 2022 Romanian President approves entry of Stryker Brigade and US fighter squadron into country Dollar goes up, euro also rises in Armenia EU studying possibility of providing military assistance to Moldova Public demand for Nikol Pashinyan's resignation Opposition supporters move toward Armenian parliament building EU envoys can not agree on Russian oil Armenia Security Council chief briefs Georgia PM on Karabakh conflict settlement process Armenia deputy police chief says law enforcement has right detain MPs Large-scale opposition rally starts in central Yerevan Many teenagers in New Zealand are illiterate AFP: EU proposes to impose sanctions on Patriarch Kirill Arestovich says Israel could supply Ukraine with weapons Azerbaijan used in Karabakh war Parliament speaker threatens Armenian opposition, clergy Armenia opposition MP: Ex-President Serzh Sargsyan will not hold office in new government Beijing closes over 60 subway stations due to COVID-19 outbreak Bayramov, Roquefeuil discuss Azerbaijan-Armenia relations normalization process Armenia FM meets with US National Democratic Institute president Armenia ruling force MP: Opposition will not achieve its goal Armenia 2nd president Robert Kocharyans son blocking road with citizens in Yerevan Oklahoma bans almost all abortions Number of children in Japan falls to record low Karabakh President meets with of Free Homeland-UCA parliamentary faction members Armenian judge waves Artsakh flag at Ironman Triathlon (PHOTOS) There is still lot to do in 'October 27' case, says Armenia Prosecutor General Ambassador Wiktorin to finance minister: EU ready to continue providing assistance to Armenia government Armenia Prosecutor General admits there are difficulties in investigation of 'March 1' criminal case Copper price is stable 3 COVID-19 new cases confirmed in Armenia American Armenian youth hold protest rally outside Armenia embassy in Washington Japan protests against North Korean missile Gold is getting cheaper U.S.-Armenia Strategic Dialogue issues joint statement Newspaper: Armenia Patrol Guard Service head to be summoned to Investigative Committee to give explanation Armenia parliament regular sittings continue Newspaper: Armenia opposition members falling into National Security Service trap by opening links Civil disobedience protests resume in Yerevan Earthquake shakes Armenia-Georgia border zone Microsoft urges to abandon Internet Explorer Mark Milley: Potential for significant international conflict between great powers is increasing EU: Poland fines in rule of law dispute now top $170 million Putin and Lukashenko discuss ongoing situation Greece and Bulgaria say new LNG terminal will help reduce dependence on Russia German vice chancellor calls for rapid construction of LNG terminals Rally of Resistance Movement takes place in France Square Robert Kocharyan takes part in opposition march Mario Draghi calls on EU to abandon requirement of unanimity in making foreign policy decisions Finland and Sweden not yet decided whether to join NATO Croatian president uses veto power to block Finland and Sweden from joining NATO Slovakia will seek exemption from the EU embargo on Russian oil imports NEWS.am digest: Blinken meets Mirzoyan in US, people detained during protests in Yerevan Turkish Foreign Ministry on meeting of special envoys in Vienna Opposition rally in central Yerevan starts with Sirusho's performance Italy to face serious issues in winter if Russian gas supplies are cut off now Johnson announces new military aid to Ukraine in amount of 300 million euros Resistance Movement rally on France Square in Yerevan EU hopes to adopt sixth round of sanctions against Russia at next EU Council meeting Peaceful rallies of disobedience held in Spitak Spain extends OVID-19 entry restrictions Vayk joins demand for Nikol Pashinyan's resignation Putin and Macron discuss Ukraine Citizens demanding Pashinyan's resignation block road from Vayots Dzor to Yerevan Peaceful rallies of disobedience held in Vanadzor demanding PM's resignation Citizens demanding Pashinyan's resignation block Gyumri-Yerevan highway Sirusho: Today I will join our compatriots in France Square Third meeting of Armenia and Turkey special representatives held in Vienna Dollar rises slightly after long decline, euro also goes up in Armenia Civil disobedience actions in regions: Yerevan-Goris highway blocked Azerbaijan settling occupied Armenian Hadrut, Shushi cities of Artsakh New colors and new services: Team Telecom Armenia completes rebranding Armenia legislature speaker receives France-Armenia Friendship Group delegation France senator: We are leaving for Armenia with Senate group Putin signs decree on economic measures against unfriendly countries Armenia legislature speaker: Authorities have repeatedly proposed dialogue to opposition Backpack action of protest being held outside Armenia parliament (PHOTOS) Armenia defense ministry: Azerbaijan MOD statement does not correspond to reality Armenia defense minister receives Kansas National Guard delegation Armenia Police: Yerevan-Sevan motorway reopened Ned Price: Mirzoyan-Blinken meeting will launch US-Armenia strategic dialogue Mirzoyan, Nuland discuss Armenia-Azerbaijan peace agreement process YEREVAN. Hraparak daily of Armenia writes: Our source in the authorities circles says that in order to establish Armenian-Turkish relations, the Turkish side demands to close the page of the past and not to touch upon any conflict topic existing between the two peoples. And this refers not only to the topic of the Armenian Genocide, but also to the events of the later periodin particular, the [Artsakh (Nagorno-Karabakh)] war of 2020, and the references to the Turkish state among the culprits of that war. The main demand of the Turks is to forget the past, close the black pages of history, not even remember 2020, and look forward to a bright Armenian-Turkish fraternal future. The ruling team [of Armenia] was also told to review their lexicon and avoid making anti-Turkish statements. American financial company American Express suspends cooperation with partners in Russia, TASS reported referring to a statement by the company's chairman and chief executive officer Stephen Squeri. "Since the beginning of this crisis, we have been complying with U.S. and international sanctions, which has resulted in us halting relationships with impacted bank partners in Russia, and we will continue to comply with all relevant laws as the situation evolves," said American Express Chairman and CEO Stephen Squeri in a memo to employees obtained by Yahoo Finance. He clarified that the company has few partners in Russia - one that issues cards, and several more that use merchant acquiring to make payments. American Express will provide one million US dollars to organizations that provide assistance to the affected population of Ukraine, he added. Turkish authorities did not allow three Russian ships to cross the Bosphorus and the Dardanelles, Turkish Foreign Minister Mevlut Cavusoglu said, TASS reports. "Turkey has demanded that Russia cancel the request to allow ships not included the Black Sea Fleet [of the Russian Navy] to cross the straits," the Turkish diplomat said. According to him, the Russian side has agreed to this demand. Cavusoglu had said Monday that Turkey had warned all countries that it will not allow warships to cross the Dardanelles and the Bosphorus. He had also stated that Turkey considers what is happening in Ukraine a "war," and therefore it plans to oversee the implementation of the Montreux Convention. As the Turkish FM had explained earlier, Turkey may close the Bosphorus and the Dardanelles for warships, but even then Russia will have the right to use them to return its navy ships to their base. Moreover, if Turkey makes this decision, it will apply to Ukraine as well. The debates on the matter of the election of the new President of Armenia has started in the National Assembly (NA) Wednesday. Hakob Arshakyan, deputy speaker and currently acting speaker of the NA, informed that by the written petition of 65 MPs, Vahagn Khachaturyanwho currently serves as the Minister of High-Tech Industrywas nominated for the post of the President of Armenia. The opposition "Wit Honor" and "Armenia" Factions, which have not nominated a presidential candidate, left the sessions hall. Presenting the track-record of Khachaturyan, Hayk Konjoryan, the leader of the ruling majority Civil Contract Faction of the NA, noted that Khachaturyan had partaken in many programs toward the establishment of Armenia. According to Konjoryan, Khachaturyan has proved that he can and deserves to hold the office of the President of Armenia. Konjoryan added that the Civil Contract Faction will unanimously vote for Vahagn Khachaturyan. As Armenian News-NEWS.am reported earlier, on January 23, Armen Sarkissian announced his resignation from the post of President of Armenia. According to the Armenian Constitution, at least two-thirds of the total number of votes of the MPs, or 81 votes in favor, are needed to elect the new President of Armenia in the first roundbut the NA ruling majority faction has only 71 seats. In the second round, however, the President is elected by three-fifths of the lawmakersin this case, by 65 votes in favor, and therefore the votes of the majority faction legislators should be enough this time. The American corporation Boeing has suspended technical support for Russian airlines, the press service of the company said in a statement. We have suspended the provision of spare parts, service and technical support for Russian airlines, the company said, adding that the main operations in Moscow were suspended and the office in Kyiv was temporarily closed. On February 28, Boeing announced that it was suspending its office in Ukraine. The day before, the European Union obliged leasing companies serving commercial airlines to break contracts with Russian carriers until February 28. The opposition of the National Assembly (NA) of Armenianamely, the "Armenia" and the "With Honor" Factionshave boycotted the debates on the election of the new President of Armenia at Wednesdays session of the legislature. The opposition MPs left the NA sessions hall, thus expressing their attitude towards what is happening. The ruling majority "Civil Contract" Faction has nominated Vahagn Khachaturyanthe serving Minister of High-Tech Industry and former mayor of the capital Yerevanfor this position. He is the only presidential candidate, as the parliamentary opposition has not nominated a candidate for this vacant position. In his address before the NA, Khachaturyan thanked the ruling majority faction for trusting him. "I am confident that this National Assembly will fulfill its historic mission," the presidential candidate said. According to him, the Armenian authorities need to ensure the safety of their citizens, and put Armenia on a new path of development. "We need wisdom, stability, unity, and trust," Vahagn Khachaturyan added. If there is any way to adequately characterize the wine world in the mid-1980s, it would be revolution. The United States, France and Italy were teeming with young rebels who were abandoning traditional winemaking practices to craft better wine. European grape varieties, smaller barrels, native yeasts and biodynamic farming outraged older generations who wanted their successors to strictly adhere to long-lived traditions. Younger generations who inherited the winemaking mantel saw their chance to improve wine quality. Facing financial peril, a young and brash Michel Chapoutier swapped his fathers chestnut oak barrels for new French barrels, introduced biodynamic farming and created luxury wines from the Northern Rhone Valley. Angelo Gaja, a fourth-generation winemaker in Piedmont, feuded with his father before introducing Bordeaux grape varieties and small French oak barrels to make barbarescos. His wines achieved international acclaim. Advertisement This internecine war between generations was no more bitter than in the Barolo commune of Piedmont. It was even the subject of a 2014 documentary, The Barolo Boys, a movie that can still be found on Netflix. In the movie, Elio Altare talks about how consumers would spit out tannic, underdeveloped barolos. He visited Burgundy to help him understand why that regions wines were held in higher esteem. When he returned, he introduced several changes to his familys wines: he cut up the large, worm-infested Slavonian oak barrels into firewood, invested in smaller French barriques, eliminated herbicides and pesticides, used only indigenous yeasts and eliminated fining and filtering. His father, Giovanni, was so aghast, he wouldnt speak to him. Worse, when he died in 1985, Elio found out he was cut from his will. Advertisement Altare worked to buy back the winery from his siblings and today Elio Altare wines have the elegance and balance that eluded his father. Altare was just one of many young winemakers who led Barolo into a new world, particularly in the United States, where consumers were willing to pay big money for expensive barolos that didnt require decades of aging to be enjoyed. They were so idolized that they toured the United States like they were the Beatles. So, how did history treat this movement? Many of these wine producers, once living in poverty, were seeing profits like they never had seen before, thanks in part to this countrys emerging love affair with Italian food. Barolos were racking up high scores from critics and that drove demand. Financially, the changes were a success. However, even the Barolo Boys will admit the revolution may have gone too far because of the deep rift it caused. Maybe gradual, less radical change would have achieved the same success but without the family acrimony. The young winemakers have grown old and now have offspring to judge them. Altare, for instance, turned over the reins of the winery to his daughter, Silvia, in 2016. Today were seeing more of a bridge between traditional and progressive winemaking in Barolo. French barriques are still favored to soften tannins through shorter maceration and to create a second layer of flavors coffee, vanilla, chocolate and more. But today there is some Slavonian oak being used. We recently tasted two 2007 barolos that demonstrated different approaches. The Azelia Bricco Fiasco Barolo was aged 24 months in a mix of Slavonian, French and Austrian oak barrels. Maceration was a long 55 days, just as in the old days. The Domenico Clerico Pajana Barolo was macerated for half the time and aged 16 months in French barrique. Domenico Clerico, who recently died, was one of the progressive Barolo Boys. Both high-scoring wines were impressive for different reasons. The Domaine Clerico was more approachable with round tannins and layered fruit, but at 15 years old it showed the new style didnt hurt its endurance. The Loire The Loire region of France may be known more for its picturesque castles that dot a rolling-hill landscape. But beyond those castles are acres of vineyards that consumers often overlook. Although the region has a dizzying array of 87 appellations, there are only four grape varieties grown here: sauvignon blanc, chenin blanc, melon de bourgogne and cabernet franc (the only red grape variety). Advertisement What is really overlooked is the beguiling profile of the white wines: low acidity and moderate alcohol. Those elements make the wines very approachable for sipping as well as pairing alongside simple foods. The popular sauvignon blancs are dominated by grapefruit, freshly mowed grass and minerality. The chenin blancs usually have a melon character. The muscadets that deploy the unique melon de bourgogne are simple and crisp a perfect match to oysters. Discover or rediscover this region. Domaine de Villalin Quincy 2020 ($18). This sauvignon blanc is full-bodied and has herbal aromas, grassy, grapefruit and citrus flavors. Long in the finish, we found this wine to be impeccably delicious. This is one of our favorite appellations in the Loire Valley. Pierre-Olivier Bonhomme Tesniere Blanc Touraine 2019 ($25). Menu pineau and chenin blanc grapes make up this refreshing Vin de France. Apples notes and crisp acidity. Chateau de Montgueret, M de Montgueret Tete de Cuvee Saumur Brut ($14). Not all sparkling wine from France is Champagne. This region plays home to quite a few sparkling wines made in the same style. Unlike Champagne, though, the composition includes chenin blanc, chardonnay and groleau. Flowery aromas with peach and brioche flavors. Wine picks Aperture Cellars Bordeaux Red Blend Sonoma County 2018 ($55). Malbec (40%) and merlot (34%) dominate this fantastic wine with the remaining blend made up of the other three red Bordeaux varietals. This is a massive wine with abundant fruit notes of cherries and berries and an interesting spice note that includes hints of fennel. A very well-balanced wine. Advertisement Girasole Vineyards Pinot Blanc 2019 ($15). Grapefruit and peach aromas with orange and apple flavors typify this Mendocino gem. Fresh acidity and a dash of classic minerality. Lake Sonoma Winery Lazy Dog Vineyards Malbec 2019 ($45). Dense, purple-tinged color with vibrant plum and blackberry flavors. Tenuta Sant Antonio Monti Garbi Valpolicella Ripasso Superiore 2018 ($18). Good complexity and body highlight this ripasso-styled wine that brings together corvina, rondinella and other native red grape varieties. One of the best bargains on the market considering the structure of this wine. Tom Marquardt and Patrick Darr have been writing a weekly, syndicated wine column since 1985. See their blog at moreaboutwine.com. They can be reached at marq1948@gmail.com. The Russian defense ministry spokesman, Major General Igor Konashenkov, informed about the course of the Russian special military operation in Ukraine, adding that the Russian army had captured Kherson city, Gazeta reports. "The units of the Armed Forces of the Russian Federation have established control over the settlements of Tokmak and Vasilevka, where the Ukrainian servicemen have refused to resist and voluntarily laid down their arms. After signing the inscriptions on the refusal to take part in the hostilities, the Ukrainian servicemen will return to their families. The units of the Armed Forces of Russia have full control over regional center Kherson," Konashenkov said. According to him, at present there are no problems with food and the work of city infrastructure in Kherson citywhich has about 300 thousand inhabitants. "Negotiations are underway between the Russian command, the city and regional administrations to assist the activities of social infrastructure facilities, to resolve the issues of law and order and ensuring the safety of the population," Konashenkov concluded. According to Ukrayinska Pravda, as per the latest data, the Russian Armed Forces have captured the city station and the port in Kherson, and the Russian military equipment is standing in front of the regional hall building. Heavy equipment and infantry can be seen in the city streets. People try not to leave their homes. And the mayor of Kherson is asking for a green corridor. The Chinese Embassy in Washington urged citizens to increase security measures due to increasing discrimination against the Chinese in the United States. Sinophobia has intensified. Many Asians have been subjected to malicious attacks, and the security of Chinese citizens in the United States has been seriously affected, the embassy said. The embassy advised citizens to avoid quarrels and physical conflicts, remain calm, and also pay attention to collecting evidence to ensure their own safety. Judge Anna Danibekyan, who is presiding over the Yerevan court hearing on the criminal case against second President Robert Kocharyan and former deputy prime minister Armen Gevorgyanwho is now an MP of the opposition Armenia Faction in the National Assembly of Armenia, on Wednesday denied the defense's motion to petition to the Constitutional Court. Kocharyan's defense lawyer Hayk Alumyan had motioned to petition to the Constitutional Courtand due to the ambiguity of the accusation against his client. He had argued that the reason for petitioning to the Constitutional Court was the legislative gap in the Criminal Code of Armenia. According to him, the Code does not enable the court to explain the accusation when it is not clearly stated, but it does not impose an obligation on the prosecution to explain it. At the same time, the lawyer had motioned the suspension of the case. The next court session is scheduled for March 15. Along the lines of the aforesaid criminal case, Robert Kocharyan and Armen Gevorgyan are charged with taking bribesand based on the respective testimony of businesswoman Silva Hambardzumyan. A group of American Republican senators has prepared a bill to stop the United States from importing Russian oil. In a joint statement published on Senator Roger Marshall's website, the authors of the bill call on the United States to restore independence in the energy sector and stop funding the military machine of Russian President Vladimir Putin. U.S. President Biden needs to restart America's energy production and stop funding Vladimir Putin's war in Ukraine by buying crude oil from Russia. Under the previous administration, our country was energy independent, but President Biden reversed course and turned hostile countries like Russia into America's gas station, the statement said. The document notes that in 2021, the United States imported almost 700,000 barrels of oil from Russia daily. The senators emphasize that this must be ended, and as a solution they propose to increase oil and gas production in the United States itself. Vladimir Putins invasion of Ukraine must be a wake-up call to the Biden administration to maximize home-grown energy and not diminish America's energy independence, said Sen. Moran. Russia is Americas third largest supplier of oil. Each day the U.S. and our European allies are sending hundreds of millions of dollars to Russia for its energy resources. We can no longer subsidize Russian aggression. We need an all-of-the-above approach to energy independence, and it cant be accomplished without enabling our oil and gas producers to play a larger role. The Biden administration must reinstate the Keystone XL Pipeline and promote sensible solutions that boost jobs at home and keep money out of the pockets of our adversaries. The participation of the parliamentary opposition in the election of the President of Armenia would legitimize the process of the head of state becoming an attache to the executive poweras it is happening today in the case of the parliament. Seyran Ohanyan, leader of the opposition "Armenia" Faction in the National Assembly and former defense minister of Armenia, told reporters about this on Wednesday. He expressed a view that the President of Armenia should be non-partisan, whereas the sole presidential candidateVahagn Khachaturyan, the serving Minister of High-Tech Industry and the former mayor of the capital Yerevanhas been and remains a representative of the incumbent authorities until he is nominated as a member of a political party. According to Ohanyan, the matter of non-participation was discussed in detail, and nothing has changed in this regard. "The President [of Armenia] must play a balancing, consolidating role, whereas a person appointed by the political team cannot be impartial," Ohanyan said. Evaluating the activities of fourth President Armen Sarkissian, he emphasized that the preceding president had not fulfilled his respective duties. "According to the Constitution, he was the head of the state, and he had to lead the protocol procedures; [but] this norm was not always observed [by Sarkissian]," Seyran Ohanyan concluded. As reported earlier, opposition of the National Assembly of Armenianamely, the "Armenia" and the "With Honor" Factionshave boycotted the debates on the election of the new President of Armenia at Wednesdays session of the legislature. Police arrested a Baltimore man on murder charges after reviewing a surveillance video that showed three shooters opening fire on a teenage victim in the parking lot of a Northeast Baltimore apartment, according to charging documents. Advertisement Around 10:30 p.m. on Jan. 27, Baltimore police found Damond Price, 19, suffering from multiple gunshot wounds in the 4800 block of Lorelly Avenue in the citys Frankford neighborhood. He was transported to Johns Hopkins Bayview Medical Center for treatment but was pronounced dead shortly after arriving, officials said. On Feb. 18, police arrested Devon Young, 21, in connection to the killing. Court records show a warrant for his arrest was issued three days earlier. Advertisement Young is charged with first-degree and second-degree murder. He is currently being held without bail, police said. The public defenders office declined to comment so early in the case. Afternoon Update Weekdays Updating you on the day's biggest news before the evening commute. > Surveillance footage from the night of the shootings shows a car pull into the parking lot of the Sinclair Gate Apartments and Price walking up to it, according to court documents. Someone gets out of the back of the car to greet Price when the drivers side passenger gets out and starts shooting Price. The person from the back seat pulls out two handguns and also starts shooting, according to court documents. The driver of the car got out with a rifle and started shooting Price, according to court documents. Police recovered 21 shell casings from the scene. Police found an iPhone near the shooting and detectives originally thought it belonged to Price, according to court documents. Detectives got a search warrant for the phone and determined it belonged to Young, police said. Police said a car registered in Youngs name matched the car scene in the surveillance footage of the shooting and on Feb. 6, officers pulled Young over, seized a handgun and arrested him on several gun charges, according to court records. Its not clear if police have identified the other two shooters. At this time only Mr. Young is listed as a suspect in this case, Baltimore Police Det. Vernon Davis said. The European Union is preparing a fourth package of sanctions against Russia because of its military operation in Ukraine, said Austrian Foreign Minister Alexander Schallenberg. According to him, on Friday, March 4, a special meeting of the Foreign Ministers of the EU member states with US Secretary of State Antony Blinken will take place. Schallenberg noted that the new anti-Russian sanctions would affect major Russian businessmen, the so-called oligarchs. The diplomat did not specify which persons will be discussed. Earlier, High Representative of the European Union for Foreign Affairs and Security Policy Josep Borrell said that the European Union is not at war with Russia, but in the current situation it supports Ukraine. On March 1, MEPs unanimously approved a resolution condemning Russia's special operation in Ukraine and calling for tough sanctions against Moscow. The parliamentarians called for limiting the import of oil and gas from Russia and closing all ports for Russian ships. They also called for reducing the number of diplomatic missions in the EU countries and completely disconnecting Russia from the international SWIFT system. Leading bank Belarusbank, hit by Western sanctions, says it is operating normally, but there are problems with transactions in a number of foreign services. "Transactions with individuals of payment cards are carried out in the normal mode. The cards issued by the bank work without restrictions in our country and foreign countries," a statement on the bank's website said on Wednesday. However, payment and cash withdrawal transactions using Apple Pay, Samsung Pay, Wallet Pay, Garmin Pay, Huawei Pay and Fitbit Pay services may not be available in the bank's devices at the moment. Another systemically important bank, Belinvestbank, said it had stopped Visa and Mastercard card transactions abroad. "Transactions with international payment systems Visa and Mastercard cards of our bank have been suspended outside Belarus," said the financial institution. The Bank recommends Belarusians abroad to withdraw cash. To this end, Belinvestbank has abolished fees for cash withdrawal at ATMs in other countries. The cards of these payment systems operate normally in the country. Under the sanctions, BelVEB Bank, Belarus' leading commercial bank, was one of the first to announce the suspension of lending to individuals. Loans are not granted from February 25, 2022. In addition to consumer loans, no loans are issued for the purchase of housing in the secondary housing market, for the construction of new flats, as well as for subsidized housing. February 25, Belarus's second-larges bank Belagroprombank actually suspended issuing loans under certain programs. Bank Dabrabyt, also under sanctions, explained that citizens can withdraw cash from ATMs and cash registers of the bank, as well as pay in shops, but transactions using Apple Pay, Samsung Pay, Wallet Pay and Garmin Pay are not available. The Bank recommends that citizens who are abroad and cannot pay in shops with Bank Dabrabyt cards issue a virtual card in Belgazprombank or BNB bank app. CHINCOTEAGUE, Va. A once-wild pony that was treated by Chincoteagues volunteer fire department after her mother was killed by a car has a new home. Moonbeam, born on the Maryland side of Assateague Island last year, was injured when a vehicle hit her mom in July 2021, the Chincoteague Volunteer Fire Company said in a Facebook post on Monday. Advertisement The National Park Service and the fire department, which maintains the herd, decided Moonbeam would come to live on the Virginia side of Assateague. We brought her here, tended to her injuries and she has made many friends down the carnival grounds, the company wrote. Advertisement Despite showing signs of improvement and growth, it was determined that Moonbeam wouldnt survive in the wild. Her new home is at a stable in Hughesville, Pennsylvania, according to The Daily Times. Chincoteague Islands signature summer pony events will be held in person this year after a two-year pandemic hiatus. The week of festivities which includes the famous pony swim and an auction is set to begin July 23. Italian oil giant Eni has refused to participate in the Blue Stream gas pipeline, which is used to transport natural gas to Turkey from Russia. Eni intends to sell its 50% stake in the company, a company spokesman said, Agence France-Presse reports. Global energy companies including Shell and BP have also announced they are pulling out of projects in Russia or with Russian companies due to the conflict in Ukraine. French energy giant TotalEnergies is no longer providing capital for new projects in Russia, but will not abandon ongoing projects. More than 874,000 people have fled Ukraine since Russia's invasion last week, the UN refugee agency says, adding that the figure is growing exponentially which could push it past the 1 million mark within hours, AP reported. UNHCR spokeswoman Shabia Mantoo said people continue to flee to Ukraine's neighbors to the west, with more than 200,000 fleeing since Tuesday. A day earlier, Mantoo had warned that an exodus of refugees from Ukraine could make it the source of the biggest refugee crisis this century. She noted that the UNHCR had previously forecast that up to 4 million people could leave Ukraine, but said the agency would revise its forecast. The latest figures show that more than half, or almost 454,000 people, went to Poland, more than 116,300 to Hungary and more than 79,300 to Moldova. Another 69,000 left for other European countries, while 67,000 fled to Slovakia. Foreign Minister Ceyhun Bayramov of Azerbaijan, the aggressor country that initiated several wars with Artsakh, a country that has carried out ethnic cleansing and used banned weapons and mercenaries against Artsakh, calls on Russia and Ukraine to engage in dialogue in order to prevent further escalation. Azerbaijani media reported that at the 49th session of the UN Human Rights Council, Bayramov said that "Azerbaijan deeply regrets that the ongoing conflict in Ukraine has led to civilian casualties." "In order to prevent the negative impact of the current situation on the civilian population, urgent measures must be taken to prevent a humanitarian crisis. In this regard, Azerbaijan is taking steps to provide the Ukrainian people with medical equipment and other means of first aid," Bayramov added. The Minister also said that "the end of the conflict between Armenia and Azerbaijan creates new economic opportunities not only for Azerbaijan, but also for the region." He noted that the restoration of the liberated territories will be one of the main priorities of the development of Azerbaijan in the coming years. A total of $1.3 billion has been allocated for this purpose for 2021. Thousands of dead, prisoners still held, indiscriminate strikes, attacks on civilians, occupation of part of the territory of Artsakh, invasion of the sovereign territory of Armenia - this is the result of the war unleashed by Azerbaijan with the direct support of Turkey against Artsakh and Armenia in autumn 2020. No sanctions were taken against Turkey, the second-largest country in NATO, or against the CoE and OSCE member Azerbaijan; NATO and the civilized West limited themselves to mildly scolding the aggressors. Malta has stopped granting citizenship and passports to applicants from Russia and Belarus in exchange for investment, saying it cannot conduct due diligence under the current situation, Reuters reported. The Mediterranean island began selling passports in 2014 under what is officially called citizenship by investment. Prime Minister Robert Abela initially resisted calls to end the program for applicants from Russia and its ally Belarus, saying the program had raised hundreds of millions of euros and enabled Malta to provide generous assistance to businesses during the COVID-19 crisis. But on Wednesday, the agency responsible for processing the requests said the scheme had been put on hold for Russians and Belarusians because recent developments meant that necessary background checks on potential buyers could not be carried out. The scheme allows wealthy foreigners to obtain citizenship in exchange for an investment of around 1 million euros. Russians make up more than a quarter of all those who have bought citizenship. The United States is "very open" to imposing sanctions on Russia's oil and gas industry, White House press secretary Jen Psaki said. She added that Washington is weighing their possible impact on global markets and US energy prices. Asked whether Washington and its Western allies would impose sanctions on Russia's vast energy sector, Psaki said, "We are very open." "Were considering it. Its very much on the table, but we need to weigh what all of the impacts will be," she added. President Joe Biden's administration has said it may block Russian oil if Moscow continues its aggression against Kyiv. However, on Wednesday, Psaki said the White House was weighing up how this could shake markets. Oil prices hit an eight-year high, peaking at $113.02 a barrel. OPEC+ oil producers, meanwhile, plan to stick to moderate production increases, according to a draft plan seen by Reuters. "What we also factor in...is how we can maximize the impact and the squeeze on (Russian) President (Vladimir) Putin and the financial sector...," Psaki said. "But we want to minimize the impact on the global market place and that includes the global oil marketplace and the impact of energy prices for the American people. Were not trying to hurt ourselves, were trying to hurt President Putin and the Russian economy, Psaki added. On Tuesday, the United States and its allies agreed to release 60 million barrels of oil reserves to make up for supply disruptions. Phyllis S. Shapiro, who survived the horrors of the Holocaust as a young teenager, was sent to Bergen-Belsen in northern Germany and later reclaimed her life in the United States, died Feb. 17 at Sinai Hospital after suffering a fall in her Pikesville home. She was 96. The former Phyllis Szpira, the daughter of Moshe Szpira, a grocer, and his wife, Esther Szpira, a homemaker, was born in Chrzanow, Poland, and was raised in an apartment above the family grocery store. Advertisement She attended a public elementary school for girls, and in the afternoon, she attended Bais Yaakov, which was a Jewish supplemental school, said a son, Robert M. Shapiro, of Pikesville, who is a professor of Jewish and Holocaust history at Brooklyn College in Brooklyn, New York. In 1941, Nazi soldiers arrived and took her oldest brother to a camp then held her father hostage and threatened to send him to Auschwitz unless he gave up his daughter. Advertisement The Nazis want strong, young people to work in labor camps, and, at age 13, she is a good prospect, The Evening Sun reported in a 1986 profile of Mrs. Shapiro. The Germans always operated with an abusive psychology. They used coercion to get things done, her son said in a telephone interview. Phyllis S. Shapiro is pictured in a May 1986 Sun file photo. I hope and pray you dont ever have to go through what I went through, she told a group of students that year. (Check with Baltimore Sun Photo) So my mother decided to hide me in the cellar, Mrs. Shapiro said in the article. But I decided to go to the Nazis so they wouldnt hurt my mother. At the train station I had a feeling I would never see her again. I felt my heart break. I had nothing to live for. Mrs. Shapiros parents and two sisters, whom she never saw again, were sent to Auschwitz, where they perished, and she was sent to several slave labor and concentration camps before eventually being interned at Bergen-Belsen, where she worked making thread. The Nazis exploited their Jewish labor to make things for the German economy, her son said. On the train ride to Bergen-Belsen, Mrs. Shapiro made a vow that she would live and encouraged a friend who was traveling with her to do the same. I dont know, I just had a will to live, she explained in The Evening Sun article. I kept saying to my girlfriend, Dont die, dont die. Conditions at Bergen-Belsen were harsh, and food was sparse, with hunger and fear being constant companions. Overcrowding and poor sanitary conditions led to outbreaks of typhus, tuberculosis, typhoid fever and dysentery. Advertisement Expand Autoplay Image 1 of 24 Lois H. Feinblatt was a pioneering sex therapist who practiced with the Johns Hopkins Sex and Gender Clinic for more than three decades and was a also a philanthropist. (handout) We were always hungry. I looked like a shadow, I was so skinny, she told the newspaper. Most meals consisted of a piece of bread and watered soup. Sometimes we would get horse meat on Sunday. It tasted good, she said. Death was never far away, she said. They once took us to the showers and we all knew it was the end because we had heard about the gassing, Mrs. Shapiro told the newspaper. We were so surprised when the water came down. In the winter of 1944-1945, as the Russian Army began to move west, her son said that many concentration camp victims were forced to march hundreds of miles to other camps, away from the advancing army. Advertisement The Germans evacuated the camps and put them into what were death marches, where they were starved and exhausted, her son said. If they stopped, they were shot. Mrs. Shapiro, who was a 5-foot-4 teenager, remained at Bergen-Belsen and weighed only 70 pounds when she witnessed the British 11th Armoured Division liberating the camp April 15, 1945. What the British encountered was staggering. The camp was jammed with more than 60,000 inmates while 13,000 unburied corpses littered the ground. Some 50,000 had died there, including sisters Anne and Margot Frank. Expand Autoplay Image 1 of 61 Ron Galella, the celebrity photographer whose pursuit of Jacqueline Kennedy Onassis resulted in a restraining order against him after he stalked her for years, died at age 91 on April 30, 2022, at his home in Montville, N.J., of congestive heart failure. (Carlo Allegri/AP) Mrs. Shapiro and her girlfriend had managed to survive the unimaginable when so many others did not. After the war ended, relief committees and organizations posted lists of names to help families connect with their loved ones. Mrs. Shapiro was reunited with her brother in 1954 for the first time since the Holocaust. He had survived 17 concentration camps and had immigrated to what was then Palestine after World War II. Advertisement She learned that a cousin, Sender Shapiro, who was living in the American-controlled zone and had been imprisoned in concentration camps, including Auschwitz, had survived. They managed to meet and decided to marry. They married in 1949, her son said. In 1951, the couple, who decided to become farmers, settled in Woodbine, New Jersey, and later Vineland, New Jersey, where they owned and operated a chicken and egg farm. There were a lot of Jewish farmers in that area of New Jersey, and they became traditional Jewish farmers, her son said. [ Barbara P. Katz, a Baltimore philanthropist, dies ] In the mid-1950s, the couple became U.S. citizens and in 1962 moved to Baltimore, where they opened a corner grocery store on Laurens Street near the Lafayette Market. After the 1968 riots, they relocated the business to Pigtown. She primarily raised her kids while working in the store morning, noon and night, her son said. The hours were long, and they worked seven days a week. I hope and pray you dont ever have to go through what I went through, she told a group of students in 1986. Advertisement Afternoon Update Weekdays Updating you on the day's biggest news before the evening commute. > Mrs. Shapiro and her husband participated in what is now the USC Shoah Foundation, established in 1994 by film director Steven Spielberg, producer and director of the Academy Award-winning film Schindlers List, to record and preserve the reminiscences of Holocaust survivors. It was not a subject Mrs. Shapiro easily discussed. On occasion, shed talk about it, but different survivors have a different response to it. It depends on the circumstances, her son said. Some are quiet, and some cant talk about it. In my mothers case, it was just always there. Mrs. Shapiro was a member of Bnai Jacob Shaarei Zion Congregation. Her husband, Sender Sandy Shapiro, died in 2008. Services for Mrs. Shapiro were held Feb. 20 at Beth Jacob Anshe Veshear Cemetery in Rosedale. Advertisement In addition to her son Robert, she is survived by three other sons, Arthur J. Shapiro of Columbia, John H. Shapiro and Willy S. Shapiro, both of Pikesville, and a granddaughter, Simone Shapiro of Boston. Poland wont send fighter jets to Ukraine, the country said Tuesday the latest in a series of similar denials from EU countries, Politico reported. Here is the full article by Politico: In addition to Poland, the Bulgarian and Slovakian governments have also recently ruled out the delivery of military aircraft to Ukraine. Yet at the same time, a Ukrainian official was claiming as recently as Monday that Ukrainian pilots had left the country to pick up planes donated by EU countries. Such conflicting remarks peppered the rocky first few days of the EUs attempt to serve as a logistics coordinator for the delivery of military aid to Ukraine as it faces down a surging Russian invasion. In a historic move, the EU on Sunday said it would take a much more assertive role in funneling weapons and other military equipment from its members to Ukraine, even using 450 million of EU funding to help finance the effort. On Monday evening, a Ukrainian official said pilots had arrived in Poland to receive military aircraft from EU partners. The planes in question were Soviet-era jets like the Mig-29, which Ukrainian pilots are already trained to fly. The Ukrainian parliament even put specifics on the donations: Europe, it tweeted, was sending 70 fighter planes in total, including 28 MiG-29s from Poland, 12 from Slovakia and 16 from Bulgaria, along with 14 Su-25s from Bulgaria. Not so, the countries said. Bulgarian Prime Minister Kiril Petkov explained that his country had a deficit of serviceable aircraft and parts and did not have sufficient fighter jets to guard its own airspace, let alone to lend jets to Ukraine, a Bulgarian official told POLITICO. A spokesperson for the Slovakian Ministry of Defense on Tuesday also denied any donation: Slovakia will not provide fighter jets to Ukraine, the spokesperson said. Polish President Andrzej Duda joined the chorus on Tuesday. Speaking alongside NATO Secretary-General Jens Stoltenberg at the ask Air Base in Poland, Duda said his country is not going to send any jets to the Ukrainian airspace, arguing that would open a military interference in the Ukrainian conflict. NATO, Duda stressed, is not a party to Russias war in Ukraine a key caveat the military alliance has tried to make despite several of its members supplying the Ukrainian military with lethal arms while also hitting Moscow with crippling sanctions. However, Dudas comments were not entirely clear. He did not specify whether his denial was referring to Poland not sending jets operated by Polish pilots into Ukraine which would indeed mean an open military interference in the war or whether his rejection referred more broadly to any potential delivery of Polish fighter jets to Ukraine. Hours later, Polish Prime Minister Mateusz Morawiecki issued a more direct denial. Poland doesnt have such plans, he said at a press conference. Talk about European fighter jet deliveries was sparked by EU foreign policy chief Josep Borrell, who went off-script during a press conference on Sunday to reference the possibility. We are going to supply even fighter jets to Ukraine, he said, adding that some EU countries had the kinds of planes that Ukraine needed to fight off Russia. Borrell even suggested such planes could be funded by EU money. On Monday, however, Borrell had to publicly backtrack: At another press conference, he acknowledged that even though fighter jets were part of the request for aid that we received from Ukraine, the EU did not have sufficient financial means to pay for those airplanes, which would have to be donated bilaterally by individual EU countries instead. According to EU diplomats, Borrell informally asked Bulgaria, Poland and Romania some of the few EU countries that still use Soviet-era fighter jets whether they could potentially deliver some airplanes to Kyiv. A Romanian official had no comment about the request or potential deliveries. One EU diplomat said EU countries were outraged about Borrells public statement about the fighter jet delivery, which had not been agreed upon. Making such announcements on the same day that Russian President Vladimir Putin announced to put his nuclear deterrence force on high alert risks to escalate the situation further, the EU diplomat said, adding that even if countries had considered sending planes to Ukraine, those plans might have been called off after Borrell made them public. The frustration and mixed messaging were perhaps a predictable side-effect of the EU, by definition a peace project, trying to swiftly move into the military supply domain. Borrell elaborated about the move on Monday, saying the EU would set up an institutional framework to provide better logistical coordination for weapons deliveries from the EU to Ukraine. We have created a clearinghouse to keep track of the Ukrainian requests, in one site, and their needs and our member states offers, in order to ensure maximum effectiveness and coordination of our support, he said. And in doing so, this cell, this clearinghouse, will be working in coordination with NATO. Borrell also added that Brussels would provide military intel to Ukraine, feeding the countrys armed forces geo-spatial intelligence about Russias troop movements. We are mobilizing our satellite center, which is placed in Madrid, Borrell told reporters. Russia informed the International Atomic Energy Agency (IAEA) that its armed forces took control of the territory around Ukraine's Zaporizhzhia nuclear power plant (NPP), Director General Rafael Grossi said. "In an official letter to the director-general dated 1 March, the permanent mission of Russia to international organizations in Vienna also reported that plant personnel continue to work to ensure nuclear safety and radiation control in normal operating mode. Radiation levels remain normal". Earlier on Tuesday, Ukraine told the IAEA that all its nuclear power plants remained under the control of the national operator. This morning, Ukraine's State Nuclear Regulatory Inspectorate said it was in communication with the country's nuclear facilities and that the NPPs continue to operate as normal. Zaporizhzhia NPP is the largest of Ukraine's nuclear power plants, with six of the country's 15 nuclear power reactors. In a letter to the Director-General received on Tuesday, the Acting Chief State Inspector asked the IAEA to provide immediate assistance in coordinating activities related to the safety of the Chernobyl nuclear power plant and other nuclear facilities. The Director-General will consult and maintain contact in order to respond to this request. The IAEA continues to follow developments in Ukraine closely, with particular emphasis on the safety and security of its nuclear power reactors. The IAEA is in constant contact with its partner and will continue to provide regular updates on the situation in Ukraine," it said. The Harford County Board of Education voted unanimously Monday to make masks optional for students and staff, effective Tuesday. It has been a long two years. We are all tired, but it is time. We need to move on, said Dr. Roy Philips, a member of the school board. Advertisement HCPS also updated its operational status, removing restrictions on before- and after-school activities and making its COVID testing program voluntary for all activities. Field trips, assemblies and social events are allowed on campus with district approval and a COVID-19 safety plan for students who show symptoms of illness. In-person meetings are allowed with social distancing wherever possible. An unrestricted number of spectators can attend outdoor events; indoor events will have restricted attendance. Use of public school facilities by outside organizations will be allowed with reduced capacity indoors and visitors to any campus must abide by district policies. Advertisement Masking is also optional on school buses. Masks are still required while visiting a schools health suite. The school system will continue its COVID-19 diagnostic testing program with voluntary testing for all students and staff. No person with COVID-19 symptoms, or anyone in isolation due to a positive COVID-19 test, in quarantine due to close contact with a person with COVID-19 symptoms or a COVID-19 positive test, may work in or visit HCPS property. In line with Centers for Disease Control and Prevention guidance, students and staff who have completed their five-day isolation or quarantine period should continue to mask in all public settings, including schools, for five more days. Marylands Joint Committee on Administrative, Executive and Legislative Review rescinded the current mask mandate last week, as recommended by the Maryland State Board of Education. After the Maryland State Board of Education and a General Assembly committee rescinded the statewide school mask mandate last week, the CDC introduced a new metric for determining community transmission levels, which placed Harford County at the low community level for COVID-19. Although the board agreed to make masks optional, one member said that this decision could backfire as new COVID variants, like omicron, develop. Here we are with the pandemic winding down and we are going back to how things used to be pre-pandemic, Dr. David Bauer said. This happened last summer, too. Cases dropped really low back in June, lower than they are now. Then, HCPS lifted the mask mandate. Back in fall when I gave my presentation, we had beaten the alpha variant. Delta was different and therein lies the problem. Now, delta is gone. This time is different, said board member Dr. Carol Mueller, in that the school system now has KN95 and the smaller KN94 masks available at each school for students who still want to wear them. Advertisement There a lot of people who still want masks in place because of their family stories. There are people in their family who are immunocompromised, said Mueller. I am very happy we will be providing the KN95 masks for the students that want them. I believe that was one of the things at the beginning of the pandemic was not readily available. After voting, the board urged the public to be kind to others who make different choices about masking. As we transition to this choice situation, I would kindly ask parents to talk to children about being courteous to others who have made a different choice, said board member Sonja Kawrwacki. Despite the request for kindness, there were flashes of anger and frustration during the hourlong public comment portion of the meeting. Some people turned their backs on the board while speaking and disregarded meeting rules. Afternoon Update Weekdays Updating you on the day's biggest news before the evening commute. > There should be no reason the masks should have been on in the first place, Kayla Mirkanage said. [The mask] requirement has been removed, and it has nothing to do with the people in these seats [the board]. It has something to do with the people in these seats [the public]. Residents also expressed concerns about the psychological impact of the pandemic on their children, the safety implications of wearing masks, and other issues. One citizen said masks and vaccinations should not be required since both could possibly hurt children more in the long run. Advertisement We have 80% of children vaccinated when it should be zero, said resident Tracey Ostrodami. I do not care what anyone says, you do not know the long term effects on these children. Even though Harford County is at the low community transmission level for COVID-19, the school system strongly encourages people to get vaccinated. According to the CDC, wearing masks should be optional in communities at the low transmission level. However, masks are recommended for people with symptoms, a positive test, or exposure to someone with COVID-19. With the boards ruling on school masks reversed, face coverings are now optional in Harford, Anne Arundel, Carroll and Frederick county schools. Aberdeen Middle School students and teachers get settled in to their rooms at the Learning Support Center at Aberdeen Middle School for the first day of school Tuesday. (Matt Button / The Aegis/Baltimore Sun Media) Student Maliyah Grimsley listens for instructions while getting logged in to her laptop computer as classes begin at the Learning Support Center at Aberdeen Middle School for the first day of school Tuesday. (Matt Button / The Aegis/Baltimore Sun Media) As spring blooms on campus, March brings a full calendar of arts events to Emory, including a myriad of musical performances and programming from the Michael C. Carlos Museum. Experience all that Emory Arts has to offer by adding these events to your calendar. Carlos Museum programs The Carlos Museum continues its Works on Paper series on Wednesday, March 2, at 4 p.m. in Ackerman Hall. Linda Merrill, senior lecturer in art history, examines an etching by James McNeill Whistler, The Little Putney, No. 1 (1879), and considers how Whistlers view of London bridges was conditioned by the art of Japan. This program is held in conjunction with the exhibition The Eye, the Mind, and the Heart: In Honor of Clark Poling. As part of the exhibition And I Must Scream, Atlanta artist Amie Esslinger discusses her new work created during eight months of the pandemic in a gallery talk on Thursday, March 3, at 7:30 p.m. Esslingers work explores and expands on the hidden elements of the physical world, highlighting apparent contradictions between order and disorder, observable and unobservable, beauty and monstrosity to emphasize the richness, potential and threat of the physical. Join the wait list for this talk at the Carlos Museum. Also in conjunction with And I Must Scream, artist Anida Yoeu Ali presents a live performance of The Buddhist Bug project on Sunday, March 20, at 12 p.m. The Buddhist Bug project is an interdisciplinary series combining live performance, installation, photography and video art, reflecting the artists autobiographical exploration of hybrid identities and her own spiritual turmoil between Islam and Buddhism. These Carlos Museum programs are free of charge with museum admission. Music recitals and concerts Join the nationally recognized Emory University Symphony Orchestra and conductor Paul Bhasin on Thursday, March 3, at 8 p.m. for a performance at the Schwartz Center for Performing Arts. This concert features the winners of the 2020 and 2021 Emory Concerto and Aria Competitions: Caleb Park, cello; Kaito Mimura, piano; and Jason Lin, piano. On Friday, March 4, at 6 p.m., Schwartz Artist-in-Residence Alan Chow performs a piano recital in Emory's Performing Arts Studio in the Burlington Road Building. A Steinway Artist, Chow has performed recitals and concerts to critical acclaim in such major venues as New Yorks Lincoln Center and Merkin Hall and Chicagos Symphony Center and Ravinia. He has taken the stage with orchestras throughout the United States and Asia. The recital is free but registration is needed. Chow also serves as a guest juror at the final concert of the Emory Young Artist Piano Competition on Saturday, March 5, at 7 p.m. This annual competition is hosted by the Department of Music Piano Studies Program and features some of the most talented pre-college pianists from across the United States. The long-awaited Atlanta Master Chorale concert The Ways of Stars debuts on Friday, March 11, at 8 p.m. This concert features a world premiere by the brilliant young composer Jake Runestad. "The Ways of Stars" is inspired by the life of scientist Maria Mitchell and by her description of a total solar eclipse that took place in 1869. There will be a repeat performance on Saturday, March 12, at 8 p.m. Tickets cost $30 ($10 for Emory students) and are sale for the Friday and Saturday performances. Ford Fourqurean (clarinet), Matheus Souza (violin), Issei Herr (cello) and Daniel Anastasio (piano), core members from the Unheard-of//Ensemble, present Fire Ecologies on Wednesday, March 16, at 8 p.m. in the Performing Art Studio. Unheard-of//Ensemble is a contemporary chamber ensemble dedicated to connecting communities across the United States through the development and performance of new music. Register to attend the free show or view the livestream. The Emory Chamber Music Society of Atlanta presents the next installment of the Cooke Noontime Chamber Music Concert Series at the Carlos Museum on Friday, March 18, at 12 p.m. The concert is free but registration is required to avoid overcrowding. As part of the 20212022 Candler Concert Series, Grammy-nominated violinist and composer Jeremy Kittel performs Friday, March 18, at 8 p.m. Kittel & Co. makes its Schwartz Center debut with the quintet performing selections ranging from Bach to bluegrass. Tickets are on sale ($45 for the public; $10 for Emory students). On Sunday, March 27, at 7 p.m., talented Emory undergraduate students perform some of the best-known pieces in four-hand and two-hand piano repertoire in the Emory Collaborative Piano concert. Finally, swing into spring with the Emory Jazz Combos in concert on Tuesday, March 29, at 8 p.m. This final concert of the month is at the Schwartz Center for Performing Arts and is free of charge with no registration required. Poetry and book readings Award-winning Chinese American poet Marilyn Chin will deliver a virtual reading on Sunday, March 13, at 3 p.m. in celebration of Womens History Month and as part of the Raymond Danowski Poetry Library Reading Series. A self-described activist poet, Chin says her work both laments and celebrates her hyphenated identity. Her widely taught poems have been alternately referred to as funny, fearless and feminist. Register online. Clint Fluker, curator of African American collections at Emorys Rose Library, leads a discussion of Nnedi Okorafors Who Fears Death, at a Carlos Reads discussion on Monday, March 28, at 7:30 p.m. Okorafor won the World Fantasy Award for Best Novel and Le Prix Imaginales (France) for Best Translated Novel for Who Fears Death. Participation costs $25 for Carlos Museum members and $40 for nonmembers, and includes the cost of the book. Space is limited and registration is required. Theater performances Theater Studies student Abrianna Belvedere presents MORNING HAS BROKEN, an undergraduate research project, Friday, March 18, and Saturday, March 19, at 7 p.m. MORNING HAS BROKEN is a devised piece that explores intergenerational trauma and the systems that perpetuate the cycles of violence and poverty. Viewers should be aware of a content warning due to topics of child abuse, death and mental illness. The performances are free, but food donations for Free99Fridge, an Atlanta-based community fridge network, will be accepted. Register to attend one of the performances. Story Highlights 68% say it is important for the U.S. military to be No. 1 16% say the U.S. economy is No. 1 in the world Half say it is important for the U.S. to be the economic leader WASHINGTON, D.C. -- About one in six Americans (16%) say the U.S. is No. 1 in the world economically, rather than just one of several leading economic powers. They are much more likely to view it as the No. 1 military power (51%), a consistent pattern in Gallup's trend dating back to 1993. Line graph. Americans views that the U.S. is the number military power or economic power in the world. Currently, 51% of Americans say the U.S. is the number one military power, down from 58% last year. Additionally, 16% of Americans view the U.S. as the number one economic power, down from 20% last year. These data are from Gallup's annual World Affairs survey, conducted Feb. 1-17 -- prior to Russia's invasion of Ukraine. It is unclear whether these attitudes would be affected by the conflict since the U.S. military is not directly involved. Perceptions of the U.S. military as the leading global power have fluctuated over recent decades, between 49% and 64%, averaging 56%. The current figure is down seven percentage points from the prior measure in 2020. This decline could be at least partly influenced by the U.S. military's chaotic withdrawal from Afghanistan last summer. In contrast, most Americans have consistently viewed the U.S. as being one of multiple global economic powerhouses -- rather than the No. 1 economic power -- over this same period. While the latest 16% is, by one point, the lowest in the trend, it is statistically similar to the previous lows of 17% recorded in 2010 and 2015. Americans were more than twice as likely as they are now to view their country as the economic leader in 1999 and 2000, during the dot-com boom. Most Say U.S. Military Superiority Is a Priority More than two in three Americans say it is important for the U.S. to be No. 1 militarily. Most Americans have viewed this as a priority throughout the question's trend, which began in 1993. The current figure is on the high end of the 59% to 70% range recorded in that time. The public is mixed on whether being an economic superpower is a priority, however, with 50% saying it is important and 49% saying it is not. The current 50% who say it is important matches the previous high recorded in 2015. Line graph. Americans views of the importance that the U.S. is the number one military or number one economic power in the world. 68% of Americans now say it is important that the U.S. be the number one military power, while 50% say it is import the country is the number one economic power. Americans' views of U.S. military and economic superiority are largely influenced by how they view the country's current standing in these realms -- those who say the U.S. is No. 1 are more likely to view it as important to be No. 1. Regardless of how they view the current status of the U.S. military, majorities of Americans say it is important for the nation's military to reign supreme. But those who believe the U.S. military already is No. 1 (74%) are consistently more likely to view it as a priority than those who view the U.S. as merely one of several leading military powers (55%). Meanwhile, about two in three Americans who say the country is No. 1 economically in the world (68%) see this as important, while those who say the U.S. is not economically dominant are almost half as likely to agree it is a priority (38%). Importance of U.S. Having No. 1 Economy and Military, by Perceptions of Whether U.S. Is No. 1 U.S. is No. 1 U.S. is one of several leaders % % Military Important for U.S. to be No. 1 74 55 Economy Important for U.S. to be No. 1 68 38 Averages since 2000 Gallup As Gallup has previously reported, Republicans are more likely to prioritize U.S. dominance, both militarily and economically. In the latest poll, 88% of Republicans say that being the leading military power is important, while much smaller majorities of independents (64%) and Democrats (55%) agree. And while two in three Republicans (67%) prioritize economic superiority, less than half of independents (47%) and Democrats (38%) view this as a national priority. The gap between Republicans and Democrats has widened to 29 points on this measure; in 2000, just seven points separated the two groups. Democrats have been fairly consistent in their view of the importance of the U.S. being economically dominant, ranging from 38% to 43% holding this view since 2000. Republicans, on the other hand, have become more likely over time to see this as important. In 2000 and 2007, about half of Republicans held this view -- but it increased to more than six in 10 in the mid-2010s, and now about two in three view it as important. Bottom Line The U.S. economy and the role of the nation's military are in a state of transition, as the country recovers from the economic trauma of the COVID-19 pandemic and as U.S. troops have been out of Afghanistan for six months now. While Americans are fairly negative in their assessments of the U.S. economy, they are mixed on whether the country should aspire to be a global economic power. They do, however, see their military as one that needs to stand above all others, despite their mixed views on whether it currently does. And the Russian attacks on Ukraine may influence how they view their military and the importance of its dominance in the future. To stay up to date with the latest Gallup News insights and updates, follow us on Twitter. Learn more about how the Gallup Poll Social Series works. View complete question responses and trends (PDF download). As a girl growing up in San Diego, Rachel Silverstein was fascinated by marine environments and the creatures that inhabit them. That interest sparked what eventually became her lifes calling. Now, as executive director and waterkeeper of the non-profit organization Miami Waterkeeper, whose mission is to ensure swimmable, drinkable, and fishable water for all, her work is animated by a passion for the environment and grounded in the science of conservation. At 14, Silverstein earned her SCUBA certification and, as she recalled, there was no going back for meher future path as a scientist and environmentalist beckoned. From California, she went to New York, where she earned a bachelors degree in environmental biology from Columbia University. As an undergraduate, Silverstein worked with Andrew Baker, Ph.D. 99, now professor of marine biology and ecology at the Rosenstiel School of Marine and Atmospheric Science. At that time, Baker worked at the Wildlife Conservation Society and was an adjunct faculty member at Columbia. He would bring corals back to the lab [in New York], where we studied their genetics and resistance to climate change, Silverstein said. Silverstein followed Baker to the Rosenstiel School, where she worked in his lab, studied the effects of climate change on corals, and earned her doctorate in 2012. She spent a year in Washington, D.C., as a Sea Grant Knauss Fellow, part of a marine policy fellowship program of the National Oceanic and Atmospheric Administration (NOAA). She worked with the U.S. Senate commerce subcommittee that oversees NOAA and is responsible for matters affecting oceans, coasts, and atmosphere. Silversteins fellowship experience served to crystallize her long-term ambition. The issues I worked on [in Washington] made me want to come back to Miami and work to protect the ecosystems here, she said. In 2014 she was appointed Miami Waterkeeper, an independent non-profit that is part of the global Waterkeeper Alliance. She immediately found herself confronting a daunting challenge right on Miamis doorstep. Dredging by the U.S. Army Corps of Engineers to expand navigation channels at the Port of Miami had buried more than 250 acres of coral reef near the port in sediment between 2013 and 2015. Miami Waterkeeper, along with other local environmental groups, filed a lawsuit under the Endangered Species Act to obtain protections for the elkhorn and staghorn corals that were under severe threat from the dredging. After protracted litigation, the Army Corps and Miami-Dade County reached a settlement that provided for the restoration of 10,000 staghorn corals led by Diego Lirman, Ph.D. 97, associate professor at the Rosenstiel School, and funding for the Miami-Dade County Mooring Buoy program to prevent anchor damage to reefs. The settlement was a first step, and Silverstein and her colleagues are still fighting to get proper mitigation for the entire area damaged by the dredging. A 2019 paper co-authored by Baker, Rosenstiel School alumnus Ross Cunning, Ph.D. 13, Brian Barnes, and Silverstein estimated that the dredging killed more than half a million corals and the impacts may have spread across more than 15 miles of Floridas reef tract. For Silverstein, the experience provided a clear example of how science can both tell a devastating story of loss and inform environmental protection efforts. [It starts] with a foundation of science, making sure the science is solid and data gaps are filled for the benefits of managers who are making decisions about how to protect the environment, she said. Along with sound science, two other key elements to protecting the South Florida watershed are citizen engagement and community action. Both are major areas of focus for Silverstein and her team at Miami Waterkeeper. One of their signature community programs is 1,000 Eyes on the Water, which trains members of the public to identify, document, and report pollution issues affecting South Florida beaches and waterways. We train people on what to look for and report so that notices of violation can be issued to get the pollution stopped, Silverstein said. Miami Waterkeeper also has water monitoring sites around Miami-Dade County, including at the Rosenstiel School, to keep watch on bacteria levels in Biscayne Bay. Miami Waterkeepers media, legal, and legislative advocacy focuses on the major threats to South Floridas watershed, including fertilizer overuse, stormwater runoff, sewage leaks, and septic tanks, all of which contribute to nutrient pollution that endangers fish populations, triggers algae blooms, and/or closes beaches. Silverstein cites fertilizer runoff as an example of the way Miami Waterkeeper engages with county and municipal authorities to drive solutions. In an effort to get new regulations to limit fertilizer pollution, she noted. We worked city by city and have helped pass eight municipal fertilizer ordinances, until it was finally passed in Miami-Dade County. As of 2021, Miami-Dade County has one of the strongest residential fertilizer ordinances in Florida, Silverstein said. No fertilizer use [is permitted] between May 15 and October 15, and never within 20 feet of storm drains or waterways. We are now working on a statewide ordinancewe want Miami-Dade to become a model for the state, tailored to the different regions. Above all, there is the existential threat posed by sea-level rise. South Floridas aging sewer infrastructure and 120,000 residential and commercial septic systems are vulnerable to compromise or failure due to rising groundwater and seawater intrusion. Silverstein and Miami Waterkeeper are on the front lines advocating for sustainable solutions, including the removal of flood-vulnerable septic tanks and increased funding to strengthen the countys sewers. For Silverstein, being a waterkeeper is a multidimensional, multidisciplinary job. At its core she serves as a spokesperson for the water. Our water is what makes Miami, Miami. We have a lot to lose if we dont get water pollution under control. My job is to represent our environment in our community. New Delhi [India], March 2 (ANI/ATK): Headquartered in Gurugram, Haryana, India, Big Growth Digital is one of India's first performance marketing agencies with expertise in building digital customer acquisition channels for the new-gen D2C brands. Founded by Tanuj Gupta, an IIM Jammu Alumni, BGD (Big Growth Digital) is transforming the future of eCommerce brands with its experience of catering to a variety of categories like FMCG, apparel, nutraceutical, fashion, skincare among others. Over the years BGD has built in-house algorithms and deep human expertise to provide multi-dimensional growth to e-commerce businesses in India. With its agile and adaptive approach, Big Growth Digital specialises in a host of services such as building brand identity, data-backed media buying, SEO, social media marketing, and bespoke content creation that help D2C brands target the right customers at the right time by expanding their market base in the digital domain. In the past few years, the company has celebrated multiple successes in creating high-impact marketing solutions and unique brand identities for various D2C brands all across India. Power Gummies, Super Bottoms, Pavers England, My paperclip, Fitspire are some of the brands BGD has been working with. "In the list of client success stories at Big Growth Digital, the case studies of Power Gummies and Pavers England are the most inspiring to give a quick read," says the CEO & Founder Tanuj Gupta when interviewed on the company's best wins. He further adds, "While handling ad budgets of over $1 Million and counting, over this year, we have delivered exceptional ROI compared to industry standards and that has been only possible because of our deep human expertise and in-house algorithms" Also talking about some of the clients he shared how BGD enabled one of the prominent brands to scale their ROI (Return On Investment) by 2200 per cent in less than 120 days after the launch of their website. It witnessed exponential growth in sales with effective data analysis & multi-channel marketing. All in all, BGD's paid acquisition funnel and content remarketing strategies helped the brand not only achieve its goal of reaching the masses but also push its top line to 10 digits figures (ARR). Big Growth Digital has been successful in scaling more than 30 D2C brands and are on their journey to enable more than 50 brands by the year's end. Big Growth Digital is a 360-degree performance marketing organisation based in Gurugram, Haryana, India. Founded by Tanuj Gupta, Big Growth Digital has delivered personalized, end-to-end marketing solutions to D2C brands all over India. It is one of India's leading performance marketing agencies with expertise in the D2C industry. This story is provided by ATK. ANI will not be responsible in any way for the content of this article. (ANI/ATK) Ahmedabad (Gujarat) [India], March 2 (ANI/PR Newswire): Vasant Masala, the leading spices brand of Gujarat for the past 52 years, has started production from its new plant facility at Dehgam in Gujarat. The ultra-modern plant is equipped with fully-automated technology and processes. It can produce a wider range of spices without any kind of human intervention. The plant has the capacity to produce & process 1,800 MT of spices per month. The brand follows a strict quality process through an in-house laboratory for quality tests and regulations at each stage of the production. The R&D team at Vasant consistently strives to raise the benchmark of product quality with the help of highly qualified and experienced professionals, a world-class lab, and state-of-the-art equipment across the phases of production, i.e., raw material, in-process, and finished product. The entire plant is now on full automation (untouched-by-hand), which helps provide bacteria-free final products. Proper storage of spices is crucial to retain their aroma and taste for a longer period of time. It is critical to ensure that the spices are kept at the appropriate temperature, and in hygienic conditions. Speaking on the occasion, Chandrakant Bhandari, the CMD, commented, "Purity is one crucial attribute and we are committed to delivering purest and unadulterated Indian spices. From the procurement itself, we buy only natural ingredients and follow compliances as per the global standards." Vasant's contribution has been recognized by the reputed industry and state bodies. Vasant has received "The Best Hygiene Solutions Award" by ASSOCHAM and "Gujarat Brand Leader Award" by ABP Asmita. With all the necessary industry affiliations and certifications under its belt such as AGMARK, FSSAI, ISO, Spice Board, APEDA, and BRC compliant plant, Vasant has established itself firmly and is all set to grow fast and grow right. Vasant Masala aims to be an indispensable companion in every kitchen by flavouring authentic and delicious Indian cuisine. Bhandari highlighted the tagline 'Shuddhata Aisi, Mamta Jaisi.' - mentioning the essence of purity and warmth, that the brand delivers to its connoisseurs. The brand has also come forward for numerous corporate social responsibilities. Taking ahead the purity and health attribute and with a mission to create "Healthy Child - Healthy India", the brand has taken the onus to provide supplementary nutrition to the expecting mothers from 10 villages in Dahod district. Additionally, the brand has been active in the collection and disposal of plastic waste in an environment friendly way from 4 villages near its Dehgam factory. Plus a regular plantation drive is also undertaken as a contribution towards improving the environment. In addition to producing quality spices, the new manufacturing unit is supporting in generating employment opportunities for the residents of surrounding villages. The name 'Vasant' is an inspiration from Smt. Vasantiben Bhandari - wife of Shri Bapulal Bhandari, the founder. The journey of Vasant Masala began in 1970 when Shri Bapulal Bhandari started Vasant Gruh Udyog in Jhalod, a small village in Gujarat. And over the last 5 decades the company has 200-plus distributors and 40,000 retailers selling Vasant Masala products to millions of families across Gujarat, Rajasthan, and MP. Their key products are Basic Spices, Blended Spices, Whole Masala, Powder Masala, and Asafoetida. Vasant Masala is exported to countries like the UK, Australia, and USA & Africa as well, where it is spreading fast due to its unmatched quality. Photo: https://mma.prnewswire.com/media/1757873/Vasant_Masala.jpg This story is provided by PRNewswire. ANI will not be responsible in any way for the content of this article. (ANI/PR Newswire) Sonipat (Haryana) [India], March 2 (ANI/OP Jindal University): The Jindal School of International Affairs (JSIA) of O.P. Jindal Global University (JGU) has been awarded two significant grants from the governments of the United States of America and Australia to further training and research that enhance India's strategic partnerships. In February 2021, JSIA successfully bid and won a competitive and prestigious Grant from the US State Department for delivering a high-quality Massive Online Open Course (MOOC) on 'Understanding US Foreign Policy and US-India Relations'. The MOOC will draw upon the expertise of faculty at JSIA and other schools of JGU where there are specialists on various aspects related to political, economic and cultural ties between the US and India. JSIA will produce and deliver the MOOC and also liaise with colleges and universities across north India to enrol students in this course. Under the terms of this Grant, the MOOC which will be designed and produced by JGU, will be enrolling at least 100 college students in the age group of 20-24 from educational institutions spread across the six states and one Union Territory of north India- Chandigarh, Haryana, Himachal Pradesh, Punjab, Rajasthan, Uttarakhand and Uttar Pradesh. The MOOC, for which video lectures and assignments are being prepared in the coming months, is expected to be hosted on the Coursera platform and epitomises the larger goals of JGU to raise the stature of online learning in India. This Grant is also a testament to the high quality of teaching and research on foreign policy issues that is being conducted by JSIA's globally qualified faculty members. A similar milestone was also traversed recently in February 2022, when JSIA and its Australian partner institution, the University of Wollongong, were awarded a sizeable financial Grant by the Government of Australia, under the ongoing Australia-India Indo-Pacific Ocean initiative, for analysing different aspects of Integrated Maritime Management and Security across the Indo-Pacific. Under this Grant, intensive joint research on 'Integrated Maritime Management and Security across the Indo-Pacific: A Framework to Unify the Seven IPOI Pillars, with a Case Study to Reduce Plastic Debris in the Indian Ocean', will commence in March 2022 and is slated to be completed before the end of June 2023. This project would further enhance understanding between Indian and Australian academia and forge closer ties between the two friendly countries which boast of a 'Comprehensive Strategic Partnership'. In the context of these recent achievements, the Founding Vice-Chancellor of O.P. Jindal Global University Prof. Dr C Raj Kumar said, "JSIA is our university's core School for promoting research and training on matters concerning foreign policy and India's strategic partnerships. We are honoured to have received multiple Grants from the US and Australian governments and believe that the faith that these two countries have placed in JSIA, is a validation of the high academic rigour and quality being promoted in our university. In coordination with developed countries that are closely aligned with India, we hope that our university can play a major capacity-building role for the benefit of Indians as well as citizens of fellow developing countries." Expressing immense satisfaction at these achievements, the Dean of JSIA, Professor Sreeram Chaulia said, "The two grants will go a long way in catapulting JSIA into a new league, which will combine JSIA's academic strengths with eminent experts and scholars from countries that are strategically vital for Indian foreign policy. Such interaction will also facilitate meaningful research and analysis on various aspects of India-US and India-Australia bilateral relations on critical security-related themes in the Indo-Pacific maritime region." In previous years, JSIA had led efforts at JGU for winning large Grants from the World Bank and the US State Department for training programmes of civil servants and college teachers of developing countries, including those from Afghanistan. This story is provided by OP Jindal University. ANI will not be responsible in any way for the content of this article. (ANI/OP Jindal University) Hosur (Tamil Nadu) [India], March 2 (ANI/NewsVoir): TVS Motor Company, a reputed manufacturer of two-wheelers and three-wheelers in the world, today announced the launch of the feature-rich offering in the 125cc segment TVS Raider for the aspirational young customers across countries in Latin America (LATAM). The distinctly young and sporty motorcycle comes with first-in-class features such as an LCD digital speedometer, 3V i-Touch Start, animalistic LED headlamp and first-in-segment under-seat storage. The new generation bike has been launched for Gen Z customers in Colombia, Guatemala, Honduras and Nicaragua. Speaking on the occasion, R Dilip, President - International Business, TVS Motor Company, said, "LATAM is an important market for TVS Motor Company. Our products have always been well appreciated in this region. We are delighted to launch the 125cc TVS Raider across key markets like Colombia, Guatemala, Honduras and Nicaragua to delight the new-age customers. We always focus on understanding local customer needs and offering them products across segments that boast best-in-class features and cutting-edge technology. I am certain that our young customers would admire the distinctive ride character of the TVS Raider." Key Features -Reverse LCD digital speedometer-Easily accessible under-seat storage-Advanced 3V engine-Mono-shock suspension-Wider split seat-3V i-Touch Start-Animalistic LED Headlamp-USB Charger-Helmet reminder Style TVS Raider embodies the TVS Motor Company design spirit of innovation with a unique and bold design theme. The motorcycle has a distinctive macho personality and a special logo to symbolise this theme. The strong and sculpted tank profile lends TVS Raider muscular, solid appeal. At the same time, it is a sporty, compact and agile motorcycle for your everyday ride. Signature design elements of the TVS Raider are its distinctive and aggressive headlamp and tail-lamp that provide excellent visibility. The youthful colour schemes with specially designed textures and finishes are inseparable aspects of its sporty and energetic design. Performance TVS Raider is coupled to an advanced 124.8 cc air & oil-cooled 3V engine, and it churns a maximum power of 12.9 PS @ 8,000 rpm and torque of 11.5 Nm @ 6,500 rpm. The motorcycle boasts a best-in-class acceleration of 0-60 km/h in 5.7 secs. The dynamic comfort and handling can be attributed to the gas-charged 5-step adjustable mono-shock suspension, low friction front suspension and split seat, 5-speed gearbox and 17" alloy chunky wide tyres. A Reverse LCD digital speedometer is an advanced hi-tech gadget with accurate and easy to read details. The switch cluster, footpegs, and mechanical details are designed in harmony with the motorcycle for uncompromised functional benefits. Comfort, Safety and Convenience The ergonomics of the TVS Raider is developed with supreme focus on the comfort and convenience of the rider. Based on the TVS Motor Company's performance motorcycle DNA, the configuration of low seat height balanced on a long wheelbase, perfect ergonomics triangle, and a mono-shock delivers engaging ride and handling. With its distinct note, the exhaust design is tuned to perfection as it reverberates the indomitable spirit of the motorcycle. Features such as first-in-segment easy access under-seat storage for all your essential belongings, helmet reminder, and the USB charger are focused on creating a fulfilling ride experience. TVS Raider will come in a colour selection of Striking Red, Blazing Blue, Wicked Black and Fiery Yellow. TVS Motor Company is a reputed two and three-wheeler manufacturer globally, championing progress through Mobility with a focus on sustainability. Rooted in our 100-year legacy of Trust, Value, and Passion for Customers and Exactness, we take pride in making internationally aspirational products of the highest quality through innovative and sustainable processes. We are the only two-wheeler company to have received the prestigious Deming Prize. Our products lead in their respective categories in the J.D. Power IQS and APEAL surveys for five years. We have been ranked No. 1 Company in the J.D. Power Customer Service Satisfaction Survey for consecutive four years. Our group company Norton Motorcycles, based in the United Kingdom, is one of the most emotive motorcycle brands in the world. Our subsidiaries in the personal e-mobility space, Swiss E-Mobility Group (SEMG) and EGO Movement have a leading position in the e-bike market in Switzerland. TVS Motor Company endeavours to deliver the most superior customer experience across 80 countries in which we operate. For more information, please visit www.tvsmotor.com. This story is provided by NewsVoir. ANI will not be responsible in any way for the content of this article. (ANI/NewsVoir) Prime Minister Narendra Modi is scheduled to address a post-budget webinar on 'Make in India for the World' on Thursday that will delve on the issues related to manufacturing and trade sectors, the Ministry of Commerce & Industry said on Wednesday. In line with the vision of Prime Minister Narendra Modi to make India a global hub for manufacturing, the Department for Promotion of Industry and Internal Trade (DPIIT), Ministry of Commerce and Industry is organising a post-budget webinar on "Make in India for the World" on March 3, the Ministry said in a statement. The Union Budget 2022 has laid down a roadmap for India@100 with manufacturing as one of the key drivers of growth and employment generation. The webinar will include discussions on a paradigm shift in manufacturing in India, realising the trillion-dollar goal in Exports and also on MSMEs as a growth engine for the economy. "The objective of the webinar is to sustain the momentum of Union Budget 2022 by synergizing efforts with all stakeholders on various initiatives taken for boosting manufacturing, increasing exports and strengthening the MSMEs," the Ministry of Commerce & Industry said. "By leveraging stakeholders' expertise and experience, an Action Plan for the Industry's way forward and monitoring framework for effective implementation of growth reforms in areas of manufacturing, exports and MSMEs will be finalised," it added. The Prime Minister will deliver a special address to all participants on the vision of 'Make in India for the World,' and its convergence with Union Budget 2022 and the expectations from the webinar. Minister for Commerce and Industry Piyush Goyal is scheduled to deliver concluding remarks at the event. (ANI) New Delhi [India], March 2 (ANI/NewsVoir): Raksha4U, India's leading online healthcare platform recently released a social and digital advertising campaign 'JugJugJiyo' addressing the need of an aggregator for all the healthcare solutions without juggling between various apps for different healthcare needs. With its unmatched services Raksha4U comes as a boon of good health and long-life hence the slogan 'JugJugJiyo' which means 'Live Long'. Every Indian kid will relate to being blessed by elders in the family with a blessing - 'JugJugJiyo!'. For generations, this blessing has been passed on to us wishing for our good health & well-being and making lives longer. With Raksha4U App one can improve the quality of their life with best healthcare solutions under one roof. The brand campaign is an overarching statement of the brand working as an aggregator to provide end-to-end Healthcare Services. Raksha4U aims at creating a better world by providing all-round care. From doctor consultation to ordering medicines, finding Ayurveda remedies to booking a lab test, elderly care to opting the right hospital, Raksha4U app has all one needs for a healthy life. The campaign also includes a brand film featuring people from all walks of life and age groups, leading healthy and happy lives with introduction to Raksha4U app in their lives. Speaking on the campaign, Pawan Kumar Bhalla, Director, Raksha4U said, ''With the launch of Raksha 4U Mobile App, we aim to bring best-in-class medical services to our consumers and create a world-class digital healthcare ecosystem in India that is easy to access and simple to use. Last two years have been an eye-opener for the healthcare industry. We believe every Indian has the right to avail economical quality healthcare services and digital is the way forward. Our latest campaign 'JugJugJiyo' resonates with our commitment to create a comprehensive healthcare ecosystem that allows our users to lead healthy, happy and disease-free life.'' The campaign is developed by incumbent creative agency CNVRS8 Integrated. Speaking of the campaign, Cnvrs8's Strategy Head & Founder 'Karan Kaushik' said, "Partnering with Raksha4U brand comes across as a creative as well as a strategic opportunity for us. We look forward to creating campaigns that touch the nerves of people and make them aware of the importance of choosing a brand that cares for them & their healthcare needs. 'JugJugJiyo' is one such campaign that makes an emotional connect with the audience bringing them closer to the brand. Reaching out to people struggling to find the right healthcare solutions and interacting with them in the language they understand is our primary objective as the creative agency." Speaking on the brand film, Alok Pal, Creative head (Films) at CNVRS8 said, "Healthcare is all about trust. The film showcases how trust lay down the foundation of our relationships. Trust that someone is there to take care of us all the time. Our family never fails to astonish us with their love and care. Similarly, Raksha4U just like a family member is there to help us in need of any healthcare solution. The film is filled with warmth of relationships and subtly places the brand into their stories of trust and care." In the brand film, an elderly man plans surprise for his wife on her birthday with Raksha4U elderly care, an overweight man's wife orders green tea and Ayush products for him, an anxious mother is relieved by her daughter who books the blood sugar test for her, a young son takes care of his ailing mother, and a mother addresses her daughter's worry for acne by booking an online doctor consultation. The film is backed by a poetic monologue which touches upon emotions and talks about the trust of someone being there to always help just like Raksha4U App. The film beautifully captures the everyday struggles of people looking for healthcare solutions and concludes with the brand messaging of 'JugJugJiyo' with end-to-end healthcare solutions all in one app, Raksha4U App. Link to the film: www.youtube.com/watch?v=rndwoK0t0xE One app for all your health-related needs and wellness. Find 360 healthcare solutions at India's No. 1 healthcare platform. Raksha4U offers 20+ healthcare services and has partnerships with 200+ healthcare institutions. Its extensive services are available across 200+ cities in India. For more information, please visit www.raksha4u.com. This story is provided by NewsVoir. ANI will not be responsible in any way for the content of this article. (ANI/NewsVoir) Bengaluru (Karnataka) [India], March 2 (ANI/NewsVoir): The healthcare segment in the last few decades has seen myriad challenges. The aging population, fund scarcity, limited resources, and unreasonable pressure on the healthcare workers are some of them that have contributed to adding a digital equation to the healthcare sector. Need for digital infrastructure Digitalization of healthcare ensured digital innovation and the continued wellbeing of patients with the help of the Internet of Medical Things (IoMT), telehealth, and AI-driven diagnostic tools. This enhanced the need for digital infrastructure considering the criticality of the sector that cannot afford any downtime of the server. According to secondary research, a 36% annual growth rate of data for healthcare is anticipated by 2025. Especially as a response to the COVID-19 crisis, the healthcare sector has started depending upon patient management platforms, telehealth services, remote care solutions, and healthcare self-service portals. This contributed to the demand for IT infrastructure to support such digital complexity and ensure that access to medical records becomes smooth and feasible. Infrastructural growth and support are possible through flexible modular products that provide scalability and agility while reducing maintenance and upscaling costs. A modular UPS can be added or removed based on the power requirement. This makes the process energy-efficient and robust. A high-density modular cooling solution enables heat reduction of high heat density systems. In this regard, airflow management also involves easily-installed rack fan units with an energy-efficient design. Thermal solutions also help manage heat in small spaces such as; network closets and edge applications. Deployment of PDU However, choosing an intelligent modular rack PDU can enhance the infrastructural agility of a data center catering to a critical sector such as healthcare. Hence, preconfigured infrastructure solutions are rapidly gaining popularity with integrated environmental monitoring capabilities. With time, the dependence of the operation of the IT infrastructure of the healthcare sector grew on PDU - which became the powerhouse to disseminate power to the servers and business-critical equipment. Types of iPDU in general Metered Inlet PDU Metered Outlet PDU Switched PDU Switched PDU with Outlet Metering The advantage of using an intelligent PDU is its multiple outlets that connect with the networking equipment and all the storage devices within the rack. Hence, it can cater to the healthcare IT infrastructure with complex requirements. This ensures reliable, adequate, and consistent power supply throughout the servers and networking equipment for assured business continuity. Benefits of iPDU Optimal use of power Optimal Usage of Servers Monitor circuit breakers Intelligent features Cost-efficient Addresses all challenges Reliable Plug and play sensors The following are the focus areas that enhanced the capacity and capability of the healthcare sector through the deployment of high-density power rack solutions to support the digital infrastructure of the healthcare industry. Improve power efficiency Ensure business continuity Ensure scalability Promote a green data center Collect real-time data to monitor alerts Ensure cooling efficiency Improve capacity planning Improve temperature. Humidity monitoring Reduce downtime NetRack Enclosures Pvt. Ltd. offers intelligent PDU solutions to the healthcare sector to enhance the utilization and maintenance of power resources. Netrack has 3 types of PDUs to cater to the industry. Standard Power Distribution units 1 & 3 Phase Metered Power Distribution units 1 & 3 Phase Intelligent Power Distribution units 1 & 3 Phase In General the PDUs must have the following features and accessories. 256-bit AES encryption hardware core User authentication through LDAP, MSAD, CCSG Alerts and traps through SNMP, SMTP, Syslog PDU-level, and outlet-level power switching PDUs offerd by NetRack ensure reliability and protection with MCB & fuses. It has input either open or with Indian/IEC Plugs. They are available in horizontal, vertical mounting, and standard shelf models customized as per requirement. This story is provided by NewsVoir. ANI will not be responsible in any way for the content of this article. (ANI/NewsVoir) With only two of the seven county Board of Education seats on the ballot this year, three candidates have filed so far to replace outgoing incumbents Chao Wu and Vicky Cutroneo. Neither Wu or Cutroneo is running for reelection. Wu, of Clarksville, has filed to run as a Democrat for a Maryland State Delegate seat in District 13. Advertisement School board members are elected to four-year terms on a staggered basis in even-numbered years. Candidates have until March 22 to file for candidacy. The primary election is set for June 28 and the general election is set for Nov. 8. Advertisement Heres a look at the candidates running for the Howard County Board of Education: Tudy Adler Tudy Adler, Candidate HCPSS School Board (James Ferry) Adler, 65, of Clarksville, is a realtor with Maryland Real Estate Network and has lived in Howard County for three decades. As a mother of two sons who attended Howard County public schools and grandmother of two students now in county public schools, Adler said she wants to help the school system refocus on teaching students basic core subjects rather than social-emotional learning. She mentioned issues such as the importance of keeping schools open amid the coronavirus pandemic and keeping school resource officers in schools. She also wants to prioritize allowing students to stay in schools in their own neighborhoods with family, friends and support systems. If elected, she said she would urge educators to continue to focus on teaching academics and leave parents to teach values to their children. I do think that we just need to work at having a respectful conversation, be able to work out differences respectfully and work together to just get our arms around educating the students, rather than politicizing the whole system, Adler said. Linfeng Chen Linfeng Chen, Candidate HCPSS School Board (Rafael4u) Chen, 45, of North Laurel, has lived in Howard County for more than a decade. He works as a structural engineer and earned bachelors and masters degrees from Hefei University of Technology in China and a doctorate in applied mechanics from the University of Virginia. Chen currently serves on the Board of Education Operating Budget Review Committee and Social Study Advisory Committee and previously served on the School Calendar Committee for two years and the Science Advisory Committee for one year. He said he wants to focus on matters such as committing to the quality of education, investing in school infrastructure, prioritizing students physical and social-emotional well-being and promoting the strength of diversity. Advertisement Chens three children attend Reservoir High School, Hammond Middle School and Hammond Elementary School. He said he hopes to help provide better quality public education for everyone. I want to contribute and make sure that the schools [are] still doing well and all the kids can benefit from that, he said. Dan Newberger Dan Newberger, Candidate HCPSS School Board (David Hobby) Afternoon Update Weekdays Updating you on the day's biggest news before the evening commute. > Newberger, 47, of Columbia, has lived in Howard County for nine years. He graduated from the U.S. Naval Academy in Annapolis and went on to serve in the Navy for seven years. According to his Linkedin page, he is government regions demand manager, worldwide public sector for Amazon Web Services. A husband and father of two children in the countys public schools, he said he is running to help ensure that public education remains the crown jewel of the county. Newberger said some of the priorities of his campaign are rebuilding and recovering from the pandemics impact by offering a trauma-informed, culturally competent environment in schools where children can learn and access mental health care. He wants to ensure that all the countys children get the opportunities they need to be successful. Advertisement Newberger said he hopes the school system can continue to support all families. Every student has their own challenges and its easy for us to let students suffer in silence, he said. We need to make sure that every child, every student, every family, sincerely experiences the wonderful schools that we have. New Delhi [India], March 2 (ANI/SRV): Leading fasteners suppliers manufacturer Kotadia Inc. expects the electric vehicle (EV) business to account for about 15 per cent of its portfolio over the next 3-4 years. The company is forecasting an increase from 3 per cent now, with a strong pick up in its EV Fasteners orders with Indian OEMs (original equipment manufacturers) implementing the China Plus One strategy on the back of growing momentum for EVs in India. "Our EV business is starting to look good with a surge in orders from India Electric vehicle OEMs. The China Plus One factor is also playing in this," Soni Pravin, Managing Director of Kotadia Inc., told ANI. The company has signed a few new contracts with Electric Vehicle Charging Station and battery makers in India and Europe. They are also in discussion with a few more to supply Stainless Steel and other alloy fastener parts for their upcoming new launches. Talking about the growth and the recovery, Soni said, "We expect the auto industry to perform better once the second dose of vaccination is over. We are seeing strong double-digit growth on the commercial vehicles side due to the low base." The role of fasteners around EVs is significant; not only are fasteners a necessary component in the vehicles themselves but also charging units, EV battery casings and general infrastructure equipment all require high-quality fastenings to provide robust and secure settings for this valuable technology. The growing consumer demand for EVs, coupled with the rapid development of EV and battery technology, has enabled Kotadia Inc to combine its extensive fastener product range and breadth of knowledge into the ideal package to support and contribute to these groundbreaking sectors. The company stated it is betting big on electric vehicles in the domestic market in two-wheelers and three-wheelers and has already started supplying to India and Europe. Soni further added that the Company is focusing on non-auto segments such as the solar sector, furniture industry, FRP (fibre reinforced polymer) segment, windmill, aerospace, electronic-electrical industries, medical and healthcare equipment industry, oil and gas pipeline industries and defence sectors. Further, the company also wants to increase its sales from 32 per cent now to 50 per cent per annum. For more information, visit - https://www.kotadiainc.com This story is provided by SRV Media. ANI will not be responsible in any way for the content of this article. (ANI/SRV) New Delhi [India], March 2 (ANI/India PR Distribution): leap.club, a community-led, professional network for women today announced the launch of 'the table'(https://bit.ly/3vt0PYt), an early-stage fund, exclusively for women-led businesses. the table will look to participate in the first funding round of female-led companies. leap.club has partnered with Angellist and has launched a syndicate and will lead investments as the primary investor. Over the next 12 months leap.club will work with 10-15 early-stage businesses and the cheque size will range from $50,000 to $500,000. Ghazal Alagh (co-founder & CEO, Mamaearth) who was recently part of Shark Tank India has joined the syndicate along with Ankur Warikoo (Entrepreneur, founder, nearbuy.com), Lizzie Chapman (CEO - Zest Money) Ankita Vashishta (Founder, Saha Fund), RadhikaGhai (Co-Founder, Shopclues), Megha Chawla (Partner at Bain & Company), Nandini Maheshwari (Senior Director, Uber), Ahana Gautam (Founder, Open Secret), Amit Damani (Founder, Vista Rooms), Sandeep Jethwani (co-founder Dezerv). Enzia Ventures, Whiteboard Capital, Titan Capital have joined as venture partners and will fast track evaluation of the shortlisted companies for independent investments. leap.club will invite other prominent angels, founders along with their 4500+ members to invest in these companies as well. The leap.club team will work with the founders to help them for their raise and help and get them investment ready. Leap.club plans to expand its members base to 100,000 in the next 2 years. "Venture funding in 2021 broke all records. But there is one stat that did not move at all-female founders raising just 2% of venture capital money. In India, the situation is even worse. We at leap.club are on a mission to bring gender equity in all aspects of business, work and social life. There are 800+ female founders who are our members and through our interactions with them, we have learnt that access to capital and networks is a big blocker. WE realised we are in a position to make a difference and 'the table' was born," say, Ragini Das and Anand Sinha, Cofounders, leap.club. leap.club leap.club was founded in May 2020 and is a fast growing community-led professional network for women. Today they have 4,500+ paying members across cities, age groups, and top companies like Nykaa, Amazon, Sequoia, Google. The startup is backed by funds like Enzia Ventures, Whiteboard Capital, Titan Capital and prominent angels like Kunal Shah, Amrish Rau and Sweta Rau, Deepak Abbot. The company is targeting 100,000 members in the next 2 years. Entrepreneurs form a sizable, 20% of the member base at leap.club. * Revenue - ~$500,000 ARR * Major Investors: Sequoia Capital Scout Fund, First Cheque, Enzia Ventures, Titan Capital, Whiteboard Capital, Artha India Ventures, Kunal Shah, Amrish Rau * Funding: $1.3 mil as seed capital Instagram - https://www.instagram.com/leap.club/ LinkedIn - https://www.linkedin.com/company/leapclub/?viewAsMember=true Twitter - https://twitter.com/leapdotclub Syndicate - https://angel.co/s/leapclub/lg3MK This story is provided by India PR Distribution. ANI will not be responsible in any way for the content of this article. (ANI/India PR Distribution) Bengaluru (Karnataka) [India], March 2 (ANI/NewsVoir): This year thousands of devotees from across India arrived at the Art of Living International Center to celebrate Maha Shivratri in the presence of the humanitarian and spiritual leader, Gurudev Sri Sri Ravi Shankar, Founder, Art of Living. "Let us all pray for peace to prevail in Europe. Our Art of Living volunteers across Europe are reaching out to the refugees and Indian students with all help and support," Gurudev said. Maha Rudrabhishekam, an ancient Vedic ceremony was performed by Vedic priests from Veda Agama Samskrutha Maha Patashala, Art of Living's Heritage School, for world peace, safety and good health of everyone. Powerful chanting and offerings, sounds of drums and cymbals filling up the atmosphere with sacred and positive reverberations. Along with prayers, The Art of Living volunteers in Europe have moved into action to serve and support Ukrainian refugees. Here are the highlights of the ongoing work: Some highlights of the ongoing work by Art of Living volunteers across Europe: The Art of Living volunteers in Hungary Poland, Romania, Slovakia, Ukraine, Bulgaria, and Germany have moved into action to provide all the support to those who are fleeing Ukraine including thousands of Indian students. In Hungary, The Art of Living has arranged shelters for more than 150 people. More than 500 beds in Poland have been arranged. Our volunteers at Poland border providing assistance to refugees arriving. There are families with children who are as young as 2 months old. All essential supplies have been stocked up by our team. Refugees centers operational in Hungary, Poland, Romania, Slovakia, Ukraine, Bulgaria and Western European countries like Germany The Art of Living also has a large volunteer base in Ukraine who are helping the Indian community. This story is provided by NewsVoir. ANI will not be responsible in any way for the content of this article. (ANI/NewsVoir) Mumbai (Maharashtra) [India], March 2 (ANI/NewsVoir): AjnaLens, Mumbai-based XR hardware and software company raised Rs. 12 crore from renowned investors like Let's Venture Angel Fund, JITO Angel Network & few visionary angel investors, in another round of a Pre-Series A. The one-of-its-kind Indian player in the XR space has clocked funding in the past from noteworthy angel investors like Vijay Shekhar Sharma, PAYTM; Japan Vyas, Roots Ventures; Chirayu Khimji, Khimji Ramdas Group of Oman; Jay Jesrani, Private Equity Investor; Maharashtra Defence & Aerospace Venture Fund managed by IDBI Capital Markets and Securities Ltd., Chetan Kajaria, Kajaria Ceramics, Manish Bhatia, Bhatia Brothers UAE; MHD Group from Oman among others. The company has seen repeat investors during this current and the last two rounds of funding. Announcing the investment, Sunil Kumar Singhvi, Vice Chairman JITO Angel Network said, "It's just a few years back, start-up companies were lagging far behind in competing with the established defence companies. But, thanks to the start-up revolution, the Indian defence system is booming with a range of defence start-ups. AjnaLens is one of them where we at JITO Angel Network are proud to back the dynamic team who have developed critical solutions for the security and defence space and at present developing several indigenous technologies, including the appreciation worthy iDex challenges." AjnaLens is an OEM who designs and manufactures Virtual, Augmented & Mixed Reality glasses with utility across sectors like enterprise, defence and skill training. In addition to hardware, the company provides end-to-end VR/AR/MR solutions customized to business needs. "With rapid adoption of technology, deeper internet penetration in India, terms like metaverse will become common tech vocabulary in the near future. We thank the above investors for believing in our vision to augment human intelligence and empowering them to progress towards higher awareness. Focusing on growth, AjnaLens will utilise the funds to propel tech innovation, manufacture in India, expand the team and customer base," said Abhijit Patil, Co-founder & COO, AjnaLens. Under the Ministry of Defence's iDEX initiative, AjnaLens has successfully completed user field trials of their indigenous see-through armour technology AjnaESAS to upgrade the battle tanks of our nation. As pioneers in building intelligent defence solutions using augmented reality, artificial intelligence and sensor fusion, AjnaLens is upgrading India's existing MANPAD (Man-portable air-defence system) systems by providing the operators with an enhanced vision to effectively engage the target. "We will continue to create sustainable impact by facilitating digital transformation across public and private sectors. Current projects with the Ministry of Defence's iDEX initiative and Tata Technologies are examples of effective collaboration for lasting impact," Abhijit Patil adds. Few noteworthy clients include the Indian Army, Indian Navy, DRDO, Ministry of Defence, President of India, Tata Technologies, Vedanta, L&T, Cymax Infotainment, Forster Consulting, PM Experts, VR Coating, Maharashtra State Innovation Society and many more. In 2021, Tata Technologies onboarded AjnaLens as their 'Extended Reality' partner to upgrade 150 Industrial Training Institutes in Karnataka and 149 in Bihar. AjnaLens is a Mumbai-based XR hardware and software company primarily for Defence, Enterprise and Training sectors. Founded in November 2014 in IIT-Bombay, AjnaLens is committed to advancing the capabilities of humans and empowering them to progress towards higher awareness. Being on a mission of making world-class holographic computers in India for the world, AjnaLens is the first XR hardware OEM to manufacture augmented reality glasses in India. AjnaLens is helping India's government and fortune 500 companies in their digital transformation journey by providing end-to-end solutions related to VR training simulations, AR-based remote assistance, Digital twin, Enterprise Metaverse as well as providing indigeneous defence solutions like see-through armour to Indian Defence forces. AjnaLens has filed 15+ National and International patents in augmented reality and allied fields. The company has also won accolades like the Graham Bell Innovation Award; CII's #1 Innovation across India; Top 5 hardware startup by Qualcomm Design Challenge, Innovation Leadership award by Frost & Sullivan, Most promising startup by ECLINA Defennovation for cutting-edge innovations. AjnaLens is a family of 50 people that is growing rapidly and inviting more bright minds to join them to turn their vision into reality. This story is provided by NewsVoir. ANI will not be responsible in any way for the content of this article. (ANI/NewsVoir) New Delhi [India], March 2 (ANI/ATK): Unified Brainz celebrated 3rd anniversary of its international magazine - Passion Vista with most eminent personalities from the globe in its exclusive edition "The Global Icon 2021" which was launched virtually on 31st January 2022. This spectacular event witnessed not only powerful personalities but also leading visionaries from different walks of life. Founder of Swiss Gulf Investment Partners, Valery Lorenz got felicitation for her uncanny ability to judge a Start-up and foresee its fate, making her indispensable in the world of entrepreneurs. With a decade of experience in project brokerage and investor relations, and her team of professionals in Switzerland and Dubai, Valery has been able to connect innovative project sponsors and profitable start-ups, successfully all over the world. Valery herself was born and raised in Switzerland, where she completed her education and training in human resource management, marketing and finance. Her key competences include the identification of high potential start-ups in the fields of tech, sustainability, BioTech, AI and commodities, as well as professional communication and promotion of her clients. Speaking about how she reached her final goal, Valery reveals, "I've always wanted to change the world, but could never really decide in which area, our present time offers simply too many possibilities. That's how the idea for 'Swiss Gulf Investment Partners' came about." Valery is the Founder of Swiss Gulf Investment Partners, as well as an International Partner for the UAE at World Business Angels Investment Forum. The SGIP provides you with a high quality advisory and investment opportunities in geographically attractive areas, and are ultra-flexible. Valery also has a life sciences company that has projects on Alzheimer's early detection, antibody screening, etc. Another company is working on the CO2 problem to achieve the NetZero emissions goal. Yet another company gives the population access to holistic wealth management advice. These projects are all very close to Valery's heart and it is great to see how many people have already benefited from them. She also has a vision to start private schools for children. "I'm not a big fan of our current education system; financial intelligence, leadership, and social skills come far too short. And exactly these things are elementary important," states Valery. No matter how much she accomplishes, it is never enough for Valery personally. "Basically, I am an extremely self-critical person. But what means a lot to me is when I can support other people in some way," she says. This is especially true in case of investments, where money and trust are both involved. "The interest of an investor is to manage a diversified portfolio and thus to split his risk. Our philosophy is to give an investor in the sectors - real estate, digital assets, commodities as well as company participations - equally interesting and tested investment opportunities," explains Valery. No journey is complete without its share of obstacles and bumps. How did Valery cross the entrepreneurship hurdles? "Most people would call challenges problems - entrepreneurs see them as opportunities to grow and learn new things. The more successful you are, the bigger the challenges become. It also pushes you to achieve things that you would probably never achieve otherwise. I'm convinced that behind every career there's a lot of work at the beginning, and every now and then a lucky situation has a positive effect as an additional push," says Valery. She would know, for this woman is almost an oracle when it comes to the fate of a company. A fact not gone unnoticed by many who have honoured her over the years. She won an award for 'Best of the Year Management & Finance' in 2014; 'Best Female degree Investment Advisor' in 2018; was honoured as 'Top 5 innovative female entrepreneur 2020'; and was the International Partner for the UAE at the World Business Angels Investment Forum (WBAF) for the Global Start-Up Committee in 2021. Valery is a true paragon of change. And she leaves us with an important message: "Something I see so often with people and it breaks my heart is how they don't use their talent and potential. So many wait for a 'motivator' and have no self-drive. It's okay to have weak moments. The important thing is to keep them as short as possible and learn from past situations. Our present time offers so many chances and opportunities as never before, you just have to be brave and grab them." To know more about international brand checkout www.passionvista.com or to nominate for upcoming projects email at info@passionvista.com This story is provided by ATK. ANI will not be responsible in any way for the content of this article. (ANI/ATK) Continuing the surge in exports, India's merchandise shipments in February 2022 of USD 33.81 billion registered an increase of 22.36 per cent over USD 27.63 billion of exports in February 2021 and an increase of 21.88 per cent over USD 27.74 billion in February 2020. Merchandise import in February 2022 was USD 55.01 billion, an increase of 34.99 per cent over USD 40.75 billion in February 2021 and an increase of 45.12 per cent over USD 37.90 billion in February 2020. The trade deficit in February 2022 was USD 21.19 billion, while it was USD 176.07 billion during April-February FY 2022, as per the preliminary trade data from the Ministry of Commerce and Industry released on Wednesday. According to Aditi Nayar, Chief Economist, ICRA, a rebound in oil and gold demand amid the waning of the third wave, along with rising global commodity prices fanned by escalating geo-political tensions, boosted imports and bloated the merchandise trade deficit above USD 21 billion in February 2022. India's merchandise export in April-February FY 2022 was USD 374.05 billion, an increase of 45.80 per cent over USD 256.55 billion in the same April-February period of FY 2021 and an increase of 28.16 per cent over USD 291.87 billion in April-February of FY 2020. Merchandise import in the April-February FY 2022 was USD 550.12 billion, an increase of 59.21 per cent over USD 345.54 billion in the corresponding period of FY 2021 and an increase of 24.11 per cent over USD 443.24 billion in April-February of FY 2020. Value of non-petroleum exports in February 2022 was USD 29.70 billion, registering a positive growth of 18.04 per cent over non-petroleum exports of USD 25.16 billion in February 2021 and a positive growth of 22.23 per cent over non-petroleum exports of USD 24.30 billion in February 2020. Value of non-petroleum imports was USD 39.96 billion in February 2022 with a positive growth of 26.0 per cent over non-petroleum imports of USD 31.72 billion in February 2021 and a positive growth of 47.33 per cent over non-petroleum imports of USD 27.12 billion in February 2020. On a cumulative basis, value of non-petroleum exports in April-February FY 2022 was USD 319.09 billion, an increase of 36.16 per cent over USD 234.36 billion in the same period of FY 21 and an increase of 26.07 per cent over USD 253.10 billion in April-February FY 2020. The cumulative value of non-petroleum imports in April-February FY 2022 was USD 408.63 billion, showing an increase of 49.61 per cent compared to non-oil imports of USD 273.12 billion in the April-February FY 2021 and an increase of 26.61 Per cent compared to non-oil imports of USD 322.74 billion in April-February FY 2020. The ICRA report notes that non-oil non-gold imports moderated on a sequential basis in the shorter month, even as the pace of YoY growth rose in February 2022 relative to January 2022. While gold imports remained lower than February 2021, they nearly doubled sequentially in February 2022, as restrictions eased in parts of the country. (ANI) The Reserve Bank of India (RBI) said on Wednesday that it has cancelled the licence of Maharashtra-based Sarjeraodada Naik Shirala Sahakari Bank Limited as it has failed to comply with the regulations and does not have "adequate capital and earning prospects". "Today, the Reserve Bank of India (RBI), vide order dated March 02, 2022, has cancelled the licence of Sarjeraodada Naik Shirala Sahakari Bank Ltd, Shirala, Dist. Sangli, Maharashtra. Consequently, the bank ceases to carry on banking business, with effect from the close of business on March 02, 2022. The Commissioner for Cooperation and Registrar of Cooperative Societies, Maharashtra has also been requested to issue an order for winding up the bank and appoint a liquidator for the bank," the RBI said in a statement. The RBI said that continuance of the bank is prejudicial to the interests of its depositors, the bank with its present financial position would be unable to pay its present depositors in the full and public interest would be adversely affected if it is allowed to carry on its banking business any further. "Consequent to the cancellation of its licence, Sarjeraodada Naik Shirala Sahakari Bank Ltd, Shirala, Dist. Sangli, Maharashtra, is prohibited from conducting the business of 'banking' which includes acceptance of deposits and repayment of deposits as defined in Section 5(b) read with Section 56 of the Banking Regulation Act, 1949 with immediate effect". On liquidation, every depositor would be entitled to receive deposit insurance claim amount of his/her deposits up to a monetary ceiling of Rs 5,00,000/- (Rupees Five lakh only) from Deposit Insurance and Credit Guarantee Corporation (DICGC) subject to the provisions of the DICGC Act, 1961. As per the data submitted by the bank, more than 99 per cent of the depositors are entitled to receive the full amount of their deposits from DICGC. As of January 27, 2022, DICGC has sanctioned Rs 64.70 crore of the total insured deposits under the provisions of Section 18A of the DICGC Act,1961 based on the willingness received from the concerned depositors of the bank, the RBI said. (ANI) Actor Lee Jung-jae, who is the main protagonist of the hit Netflix series, won the Outstanding Performance by a Male Actor in a Drama Series award. Jung Ho-yeon, too, bagged her first SAG Award in the category of Outstanding Performance by a Female Actor. Elated to receive the prestigious trophy, Lee Jung-Jae said, "Thank you so much. This is truly huge that it's happened to me. I appreciate global fans for your love for 'Squid Game'." Jung Ho-yeon also expressed her happiness over receiving the award. "I have seen many actors on the screen and dreamed of becoming an actor. This is the big honour to me that I am standing here," she said. In the Outstanding Action Performance by a Stunt Ensemble in a TV series category, 'Squid Game' emerged victorious leaving 'Mare of Easttown', 'The Falcon and the Winter Soldier,' 'Loki' and 'Cobra Kai' behind. Created and directed by Hwang Dong-hyuk, 'Squid Game' revolves around a contest where 456 players, all of whom are in deep financial debt, risk their lives to play a series of deadly children's games for the chance to win a prize money of 45.6 billion. It has become the most-watched drama on Netflix, with more than 111 million subscribers, in 17 days since its release last year. (ANI/Global Economic) Oscar-winning star Sean Penn, who was in Ukraine to film a documentary, said he "walked miles" to the border of Poland recently. The 61-year-old actor travelled to the country last week to work on a documentary about the Russia-Ukraine crisis, chronicling the military operation launched by Russian President Vladimir Putin. On Monday, he tweeted a photo of himself rolling luggage as he walked along the side of a road, where a traffic jam showed cars bumper to bumper. Alongside the picture, he wrote, "Myself & two colleagues walked miles to the Polish border after abandoning our car on the side of the road. Almost all the cars in this photo carry women & children only, most without any sign of luggage, and a car their only possession of value." Penn has been vocal about the ongoing conflict between the two nations. As per People magazine, Penn said in a statement on Saturday, "Already a brutal mistake of lives taken and hearts broken, and if he doesn't relent, I believe Mr. Putin will have made a most horrible mistake for all of humankind. [Ukrainian President Volodymyr Zelenskyy] and the Ukrainian people have risen as historic symbols of courage and principle." "Ukraine is the tip of the spear for the democratic embrace of dreams. If we allow it to fight alone, our soul as America is lost," he added. For the unversed, last week, Russian President Vladimir Putin announced a military operation in Ukraine and warned other countries that any attempt to interfere with the Russian action would lead to "consequences they have never seen." (ANI) Hollywood actors Ryan Reynolds and Mark Ruffalo recently addressed the ongoing Russia-Ukraine crisis, expressing support for the victims. They also focussed on the real-life heroes helping the Ukrainian people escape the country after Russia's military operation, reported Variety. "What we're seeing is this incredible outpouring of goodwill toward Ukrainian people and democracy at a time when democracy has been under attack throughout the world by Putin and his cronies, including Tucker Carlson," Ruffalo told Variety during the premiere of Netflix's sci-fi film 'The Adam Project' at New York's Lincoln Center. "It's a beautiful representation of who we are as human beings and how we've come together, and the Ukrainian people are incredible. They're heroes. [Ukraine President Volodymyr] Zelenskyy is a hero. That's what it looks like when people come together to fight for something that's right. I'm praying they succeed in what they're trying to do," he added. On Saturday, Reynolds announced that he and his wife Blake Lively would match up to USD 1 million in donations to help Ukrainian refugees through the United Nations High Commissioner for Refugees. "We just felt that we were incredibly fortunate to be able to do something like that, and it's hard not to elicit enormous empathy to the idea that families big and small are being told they have to flee their homes they've had their whole lives in a matter of minutes. I just can't imagine how that would feel for a parent, let alone anybody," Reynolds told Variety. His co-star Jennifer Garner has also been sending supplies to Ukrainian families through the charity Save the Children. "My heart goes out to the people in Ukraine. I'm thinking especially of the women and children," Garner told Variety. She added, "We work hand-in-hand with UNHCR and Red Cross to make sure, while they're building shelters and refugee camps, that children, babies and mothers are specifically cared for, whether that's psycho-emotional support, diapers, children's clothing, shoes, socks, infant formula, baby food, toys, books, teddy bears, blankets, things they might not have grabbed as they left their homes and fled. [We are] trying to get education up and running for them while they figure out where they're going to be next. I'm proud of that work and am happy to be supporting it." 'The Adam Project' may be premiering at a turbulent time for the world, but director Shawn Levy, who worked with Reynolds on last year's 'Free Guy', hopes that the film can serve as escapist art for viewers. "It is a crazy time and it always feels weird to be celebrating something when there is such strife and hardship going on elsewhere," Levy told Variety. Levy added, "Certainly what I hold onto is the whole point of this movie was to make a human and emotional connective experience. That baseline humanity that movies and storytelling can reconnect us to has value." For the unversed, last week, Russian President Vladimir Putin announced a military operation in Ukraine and warned other countries that any attempt to interfere with the Russian action would lead to "consequences they have never seen." (ANI) The minute-long release trailer, available in Malayalam, Kannada, Hindi and Telugu, gives a glimpse of the story of Vikramaditya, played by Prabhas, an expert palmist who can predict everything -- even the minutest details of someone's death. The trailer unveils a sneak peek into the state-of-the-art visual effects, picturesque visuals from Italy, Georgia and Hyderabad and the electric chemistry between Prabhas and Pooja Hedge. Megastar Amitabh Bachchan has turned narrator for the upcoming Astro-thriller movie. Directed by Radha Krishna Kumar, the multi-lingual love story is set in Europe in the 1970s. Produced by Bhushan Kumar, Vamsi and Pramod, 'Radhe Shyam' is scheduled for a theatrical release on March 11, 2022. (ANI) The actor held a cute little pup, whom she named Beau Pednekar, in the two adorable pictures that she posted on her Instagram handle. She added a heart-warming caption that read, "Please Welcome Our Main Man - Beau Pednekar Since he's come into our lives, he has filled it with tons of love, laughter, sussu and potty You're my baby jaan @thebeauway @samikshapednekar @sumitrapednekar #insta #petlife #doggo." Talking about the new family member, Bhumi said, "We've finally welcomed a new family member - Beau Pednekar. His energy has changed our lives. He has made me kinder and more compassionate. My love for animals has only gone deeper since beau happened to us." Bhumi's 'Saand Ki Aankh' film producer, Nidhi Parmar, filmmaker Karan Boolani and actor Patralekhaa were amongst many who showered their love on the post. Bhumi's sister Samiksha, who also captured the lovely pictures, commented, "Oh my world", adding a heart emoji. Bhumi was last seen in the critically acclaimed film, 'Badhaai Do', which also starred Rajkummar Rao. She recently wrapped up 'Bhakshak'. She will also be seen sharing screen space with Akshay Kumar in 'Raksha Bandhan'. (ANI) "In response to the ongoing humanitarian crisis in Ukraine, Universal Pictures has paused planned theatrical releases in Russia," a Universal spokesperson said in a statement, reported The Hollywood Reporter. Universal had the animated 'The Bad Guys' due out in Russia on March 24, with Michael Bay's 'Ambulance' to follow on April 7. 'The Bad Guys' is a DreamWorks Animation production and voice-stars Sam Rockwell, Marc Maron, Craig Robinson, Anthony Ramos and Awkwafina. 'Ambulance' stars Jake Gyllenhaal and Yahya Abdul-Mateen II as bank robbers who, after a heist gone wrong, commandeer an ambulance and take the driver and passenger hostage. Disney kicked off the wave of studio action on Monday, saying it would pull its releases from Russia, including Pixar's 'Turning Red'. Warners and Sony followed suit, while Paramount made its own announcement on Tuesday morning. The major studios pulling their films followed a weekend move by the European Union to ban Russia from the global interbank messaging system SWIFT. Without SWIFT, studios may not be able to get any money back from their Russian distribution partners, reported The Hollywood Reporter. For the unversed, last week, Russian President Vladimir Putin announced a military operation in Ukraine and warned other countries that any attempt to interfere with the Russian action would lead to "consequences they have never seen." (ANI) Actors Fawad Khan and Sanam Saeed have wrapped up shooting for their upcoming untitled OTT project helmed by critically acclaimed director Asim Abbasi. A picture featuring the 'Ae Dil Hai Mushkil' actor from the film wrap up is doing rounds on social media. Fawad Khan and Sanam Saeed are reuniting after eight years of their hit show.The upcoming yet-to-be-titled web show will be streamed on ZEE5. Abbasi had earlier helmed Zindagi's first original 'Churails'. As per an earlier statement, the show blends together magical realism and supernatural fantasy within a family reunion setting and deals with themes of love, loss and reconciliation. In the series, Fawad will be seen playing the role of a single parent - charming but ridden with guilt for what he has lost. With his son, he tries to be every bit the father his own father was and wasn't. Sanam plays the central female character in the show. Excited about the project, Fawad, who is also known for his Bollywood films such as 'Kapoor & Sons', and 'Ae Dil Hai Mushkil', said, "I think Zindagi is taking bold and brave decisions when it comes to storytelling. It's naturally evolving into a platform that encourages diversity of opinion and inclusiveness for all filmmakers and material ranging from everyday mainstream to avant-garde and noir. I feel there's a place for everyone in this artistic landscape." Sanam had also expressed her excitement about the series in an earlier statement."I am thrilled to be collaborating with one of my favourite directors Asim Abbasi again, this time for Zindagi. This new project embarks on a fantastical journey with some stunning performances by a very meticulously picked cast. I can't wait for everyone to see the magic that's been created in this beautiful limbo land," Sanam said. The series was shot on location in Karachi and the picturesque Hunza valley, Pakistan. (ANI) Karnataka Chief Minister Basavaraj Bommai on Tuesday spoke to the family of the Indian who died in a shelling incident in war-torn Ukraine. Naveen Shekharappa Gyanagoudar, the deceased student, was a resident of the state's Haveri district. "It is a big blow. May the Almighty bestow eternal peace on Naveen. You must be brave to bear the tragic happening," Bommai told the family while expressing grief. The 21-year-old Indian, a student of Kharkiv National Medical University, was reportedly standing in a queue to buy food when he was killed in Russian shelling in Ukraine's Kharkiv earlier today. "With profound sorrow we confirm that an Indian student lost his life in shelling in Kharkiv this morning. The Ministry is in touch with his family. We convey our deepest condolences to the family," tweeted the External Affairs Ministry, confirming Gyanagoudar's death. Efforts are now on to bring his mortal remains to India. "PM Narendra Modi had spoken to the family. We will try our best to recover the body and bring it back to India. I have requested PMO and MEA to help us to recover mortals," said Bommai. Choking with grief, the deceased's father Shekharappa Gyanagoudar said that he had spoken to his son in the morning as he used to call up twice or thrice every day. Till now 49 students of Karnataka have returned from Ukraine, as per the state's official release. The Union government has launched Operation Ganga to bring back stranded students and Indian citizens from the conflict-torn Ukraine. Over the last few days, Indian nationals are being evacuated on flights from Hungary, Poland, Slovakia and Romania-- countries that share borders with Ukraine. Special flights are being operated by Air India, SpiceJet and Indigo as part of the massive rescue mission. The seventh flight carrying 182 Indian nationals reached Mumbai from Romania's Bucharest. After special flights reach Mumbai and New Delhi, the evacuees are facilitated to reach their respective states, where local administration helps them to reach their homes. (ANI) Union Minister Ashwini Vaishnaw received the students at Indira Gandhi International Airport. He also interacted with the students at the airport. Speaking to ANI, Vaishnaw said, "Prime Minister Narendra Modi is putting all efforts in Operation Ganga to safely bring students back home. Students are joyous and believe the efforts by the Government of India were great." "I appeal to these students to tell their friends in Ukraine to have the strength and keep patience. They will very soon be evacuated safely. Flights are coming in continuously. Four ministers have also been deployed in that area for effective coordination," added the Union Minister. Meanwhile, a flight carrying 182 Indian nationals stranded in Ukraine reached Mumbai from Romania's Bucharest as part of 'Operation Ganga' on Tuesday. Union Minister Narayan Rane received the evacuated Indian nationals at the Mumbai airport. The Union Government has been ramping up its efforts to evacuate Indians from Ukraine. The government has deployed 'special envoys' to four neighbouring countries bordering Ukraine to coordinate and oversee the evacuation process of Indian nationals. Union Minister for Petroleum and Natural Gas Hardeep Singh Puri will oversee evacuation efforts in Hungary, Union Law Minister Kiren Rijiju in Slovakia, Civil Aviation Minister Jyotiraditya Scindia in Romania while Gen VK Singh in Poland. The Indian government has launched Operation Ganga for the return of Indians from Ukraine amid military operations by Russia. Earlier on Tuesday, Prime Minister Narendra Modi chaired a high-level meeting to review the efforts to bring back Indians stranded in Ukraine. The meeting is being attended by External Affairs Minister S Jaishankar, Minister of Commerce and Industry Piyush Goyal, Foreign Secretary Harsh Vardhan Shringla, National Security Advisor (NSA) Ajit Doval and senior officials. The Prime Minister had on Monday chaired two meetings to review the ongoing efforts under Operation Ganga for the return of Indians from Ukraine amid military operations by Russia. Another meeting was held on Sunday. The Cabinet Committee on Security had met on February 24 in the wake of Russian military actions in Ukraine. (ANI) Amid the unnecessary hype surrounding the uniform of students in Karnataka, most commentators seem to have forgotten how the talented community of Indian Muslim women refused to given in to the propaganda around hijab. In fact, even when numerous lawyers attempted to woo Islamic clerics into the conversation with unfair comparisons between a hijab and a bindi/ghunghat, Muslim women in India did not engage themselves, correctly believing that the comparison did not merit any further discussion. Unlike the hijab, neither bindi nor ghunghat alter the uniform scheme of dressing that a school asks students to subscribe to. It is noteworthy that in many schools of Karnataka, where guidelines have been prescribed as such, the prohibition is only limited to the classrooms and not corridors or canteens or other parts within the school premises. It is in this context that the demand of clerics for Muslim girl students to wear hijab even inside the classroom is a bullying tactic, aimed at further strengthening the patriarchal structure that has gripped the Islamic community in India. By constantly bombarding Muslim girl students with the message that wearing hijab is far more essential to their existence than their education, the propaganda machinery and Islamic clerics are doing a great disservice to the nation and the society as a whole. This stand not only smells of patriarchy, but is also regressive and hypocritical in nature. Time and again, numerous civil society organisations have surveyed a vast number of Muslim women and girls and reported that such issues are of little concern to the community. Instead, Muslim girls aspire for better security, education and facilities to make their lives easier and uplift their families along with themselves as well. In fact, one of the most vociferous critics is the famous Bangladeshi-Swedish author Tasleema Nasrin, who believes that the hijab is an attempt to create a mobile prison at all times as punishment for having been born as a female. Though Article 25 grants the freedom to an individual to practise their religion, most commentators seem to have forgotten that the right is subject to public order, morality and health as well as other provisions. These educational institutions are free to subscribe to a uniform dress code for their students as well. In a couple of petitions filed before the Kerala High Court, a uniform dress code was prescribed for the All India Pre-Medical Entrance to ensure that no unfair methods are used. The court went ahead to state that the students must abide by the rule as the collective right of an institution is far greater than the individual right. In any case, an atmosphere is being created to showcase that the rights of Muslim woman are under threat. However, most individuals from the community (especially women) are aware that this is not the case. Instead, the expansion and widening of rights of Muslim women that has happened in the last half a decade has never happened in the history of Independent India. After the Triple Talaq judgment of the Supreme Court, Muslim women who had approached the court to outlaw the cruel practice expressed happiness for those women who had suffered due to no fault of their own. Hailed as a historic judgment, it gave a new lease of life to women who were divorced in this manner. In fact, the top court went a step further to state that the government must ratify a new law that guarantees equal rights for women in an Islamic marriage. With the new law, all propaganda stating that personal laws of Muslims would be interfered was put to rest and a fair law guaranteeing an equal process was put in place. Adding to that is the recent law that increased the marriageable age for women from 18 to 21 years, which was a big cause of happiness for different generations of Muslim women that were interviewed. Ensuring a higher minimum age would ensure that girls get a better chance to move forward in society and studies instead of being thrust into a marriage and childbearing responsibilities at a young age. Overall, it seems fair to state that the hype surrounding the dress code and hijab ban is one that has been propped up by those with vested interests. As equal and rightful partners in the Indian society, the Muslim women and girls are aware that this is yet another attempt by patriarchs to ensure that talented Muslim girls are not given the opportunity to achieve lofty aspirations and goals. However, a democratic society that has been founded on ideals of equality and fraternity also ensures that Muslims in India are well-integrated, happy, satisfied and daring to go and achieve even more. --IANS arm/ ( 798 Words) 2022-03-01-20:48:02 (IANS) Veteran leader Sharad Yadav on Tuesday termed Tejashwi Yadav as the only leader who has capability to lead the RJD in Bihar. "No Misa Bharti, no Tej Pratap Yadav, I strongly believe that Tejashwi is the only leader who has the capacity to take the party forward from here on. "Whatever I and Lalu Prasad Yadav did with politics in the country, Tejashwi will follow the same ideology in his political career. We have handed over our political legacy to him. He is all in the party and he is the only one who takes decisions on behalf of the party," he said. Sharad Yadav's statement, which came as Tejashwi Yadav called on him at his residence in New Delhi, comes as a step forward for the young leader to present himself as the candidate for the his party's national President. Tejashwi Yadav, after the meeting, said that Sharad Yadav is like his guardian and he always gives important political suggestions in the context of Bihar and country. "I came here to take blessing and guidance from him," he said. "I am not the only one but all leaders and workers have the contribution of running the party," he added. Earlier, current national President Lalu Prasad Yadav, during the national Executive Committee meeting in Patna, ruled out the chances of handing over the top post to any of his family members. Tejashwi Yadav was projected as the prime contender for the national President post by his supporters earlier. Besides him, Lalu Prasad's eldest daughter Misa Bharti and his elder brother Tej Pratap Yadav are also in the race. Considered as the most respected socialist leader of Bihar, Sharad Yadav has great political sense. He has given several political tips to Lalu Prasad Yadav during the latter's Chief Ministerial tenures as well as when he was Union Minister. However, he has been ill for the past few months, and his Rajya Sabha tenure is also ending later in this year. Despite this, several senior leaders from the state including former CM Jitan Ram Manjhi, JD-U parliamentary board President Upendra Kushwaha, Lalu Prasad Yadav, Chirag Paswan and his mother Reena Paswan had called on him recently. --IANS ajk/vd ( 378 Words) 2022-03-01-20:48:03 (IANS) The Special Cell of Delhi Police on Tuesday arrested a dreaded gangster of Lawrence Bishnoi-Kala Jathedi syndicate, who was wanted in dozens of criminal cases executed by him with the help of his jailed gangster accomplices. The accused, identified as Virender Partap (28) alias Kala Rana alias Tiger, a resident of Yamunanagar, Haryana, was carrying a reward of Rs 1,00,000 upon his arrest. Furnishing the details, DCP Manishi Chandra said that Partap's entry into the world of crime began with his friendship with a person named Monu Rana, who was an active member of SOPU (Student Organisation of Panjab University), and a rival of Bhuppi Rana, belonging to a rival student group in Panjab University, Chandigarh. In 2014, Partap along with Rana had executed a murder in this ongoing rivalry. While in jail, he became close friends with Sampat Nehra, a close associate of gangster Lawrence Bishnoi. Partap made the headlines in 2017, when he, along with Nehra and others, opened fire on the brother of former Haryana MLA Dilbag Singh. In 2019, it was reported that Partap had left India using a fake passport. Next year, a criminal named Raj Kumar alias Raju Basodi was deported from Thailand, who during interrogation disclosed that Partap was also operating from Thailand. "Of late, Partap had become the most feared name in at least four north Indian states. He was the one who, along with another fugitive gangster Goldy Brar, suspected to be operating from Canada, had got brutal muders executed as part of inter-gang rivalry as well as extortion-related cases," the DCP said. The officer informed that after the arrest of Kala Jathedi from Saharanpur in July 2021, long-term surveillance was mounted on Partap which led to his apprehension on Tuesday. --IANS uj/arm ( 304 Words) 2022-03-01-21:30:05 (IANS) The world's single largest ecosystem, covering nearly three-fourths of the earth's surface, oceans are vital to the economies, security, and livelihoods of lakhs of communities in India that has a coastline of 8,118 km, spanning nine states and four Union Territories, an official statement said on Tuesday. The Centre said that it is in the forefront in transforming the fisheries sector to formulate fisheries management plans along with regulatory framework towards effective fisheries governance to ensure sustainable and responsible development through an ecosystem approach. Now, an evolutionary journey of 'Sagar Parikrama' is envisaged across the coastal belt demonstrating solidarity with all fisherfolk, fish farmers, and stakeholders concerned as a spirit of 'Aatmanirbhar Bharat', a release from the Ministry of Fisheries, Animal Husbandry and Dairying said. The journey of 'Sagar Parikrama' shall focus on sustainable balance between the utilizstion of marine fisheries resources for food security of nation and livelihoods of coastal fisher communities and protection of marine ecosystems, it said. Union Minister for Fisheries, Animal Husbandry and Dairying, Parshottam Rupala will inaugurate the programme on March 5. The first leg shall start from Gujarat's Mandvi and end at the state's Porbandar on March 6. It will be organised by the Department of Fisheries under the Union Ministry and the National Fisheries Development Board along with Gujarat's Department of Fisheries, the Indian Coast Guard, the Fishery Survey of India, the Gujarat Maritime Board, and fishermen representatives. The Parikrama, a part of 'Azadi Ka Amrit Mahotsav', is an endeavour to know the problems of coastal fisherfolk. It will be organised in other districts of Gujarat and other State/UTs in subsequent phases. It will be accompanied by the state fisheries officials, fishermen representatives, fish-farmers entrepreneurs, stakeholders, professionals, officials, and scientists from across the nation. During the event, certificates/sanctions related to Pradhan Mantri Matsya Sampada scheme (PMMSY), KCC, and state schemes will be awarded to the progressive fishermen, especially costal fishermen, fishers and fish farmers, young fishery entrepreneurs etc., the release added. --IANS niv/vd ( 345 Words) 2022-03-01-21:50:02 (IANS) The Supreme Court has termed the decision taken by the Bihar government in 2016 to declare 'Lohar' caste as Scheduled Tribe as illegal and arbitrary. A bench of Justices K.M .Joseph and Hrishikesh Roy said: "What is the basis for the respondent state to take it upon itself to issue the impugned notification by which referring to the 2016 amendment repealing the 2006 Act, it proceeded to give approval to caste certificate of Scheduled Tribe to Lohara, Lohar community? Lohar is not the same as Lohara. Including Lohars alongside Lohara is clearly illegal and arbitrary." The top court had held that Lohars are, admittedly, blacksmiths, a backward community in Bihar, whereas Loharas are Scheduled Tribes in Bihar. However, the state government's order allowed the 'Lohar' to invoke the Scheduled Castes/Scheduled Tribes (Prevention of Atrocities) Act, 1989, which affected the fundamental rights of other citizens. The bench emphasised that it is important to realize the impact of a decision on the rights and what is more, fundamental rights of the citizens flowing from the government's action, and the need to increasingly evolve a system, whereby decision making promotes and strengthens the rule of law. "Respect for the decisions of the courts holding the field are the very core of Rule of Law. Disregard or neglecting the position at law expounded by the courts would spell doom for a country which is governed by the Rule of Law," it said. The top court said when it comes to taking decisions which affect the rights of the citizens, it is the paramount duty of the executive to enquire carefully about the implications of its decisions. "At the very minimum, it must equip itself with the law which is laid down by the courts and find out whether the decision will occasion a breach of law declared by the highest court of the land," it added. The bench noted that in this case, it is clear as daylight that the Lohars were not included as members of the Scheduled Tribe from the beginning and they were, in fact, included as members of the OBCs in Bihar. The top court judgment came on a plea filed by Sunil Kumar Rai and three others, filed under Article 32 of the Constitution, seeking quashing of the 2016 notification issued by the Bihar government. The petitioners suffered imprisonment in a criminal case after the complainant, belonging to 'Lohar' caste invoked the 1989 Act, which did not allow them to seek pre-arrest bail. The bench noted that the implications of this notification are deep and it affects the rights of the citizens in the most adverse manner. On the aspect of the state government issuing the notification, the bench added that at the very minimum, it betrayed total non-application of mind and attracted the wrath of Article 14 of the Constitution. Quashing the notification, the bench said: "We clarify that the quashing of the impugned Notification will be qua 'Lohar' community and the Lohara will continue to get the benefit vouchsafed for them under the Presidential Order as amended by the Acts. We direct that the respondent No. 1 shall pay costs in the sum of Rs 5,00,000 (Rs Five lakh) which shall be done within a period of one month from today and the respondent shall produce proof of the payment of the costs by production of the receipt of the same within a period of six weeks from today." --IANS ss/vd ( 588 Words) 2022-03-01-22:28:02 (IANS) Forest and wildlife officials said that on the basis of the tiger repository database of camera trap, the four and a half year old tiger was identified as "Kazi". "The cause of death was ascertained as suspected poisoning. Preliminary offense report has been submitted to the Sub-Divisional Judicial Magistrate of Bokakhat and investigation is on," a senior wildlife official said. He said that poisoning of tigers near Mihimukh, the prime tourist zone in Kaziranga, is a disturbing trend for all concerned. Last year, four Royal Bengal tigers of different ages were killed due to various reasons including infighting among the animals in Kaziranga, one of India's seven UNESCO world heritage sites. Extending across Assam's Golaghat, Nagaon, Sonitpur, Biswanath, and Karbi Anglong districts, it is home to more than 2,400 one-horned Indian rhinos, approximately two thirds of the total world population. It also has 121 tigers, 1,089 elephants and huge numbers of Asiatic buffalo, swamp deer, wild boar, hog deer, porcupine and other endangered animals. --IANS sc/vd ( 200 Words) 2022-03-01-23:00:04 (IANS) Delhi Police PRO Suman Nalwa told IANS that a complaint was received at the South Avenue police station that four people, staying at MP flat no 105 South Avenue, were taken away by some unknown persons. Nalwa said of the four, three were guests of the former parliamentarian, who is now in the BJP, and the fourth person, identified as Tilak Thapa, was his driver. "Upon receipt of this complaint, a case under section 365 (Kidnapping or abduction with intent secretly and wrongfully to confine person) of the Indian Penal Code has been registered at the South Avenue police station," the PRO said, adding that an investigation into the matter is under progress. Meanwhile, the former Telangana MP also conveyed the information through social media that his personal driver Thapa and social activist Ravi Munnur were kidnapped on Monday night. "I have filed a complaint with the concerned police department. Hoping for quick action and speedy justice," Reddy wrote on Twitter. --IANS uj/vd ( 198 Words) 2022-03-01-23:10:04 (IANS) Karnataka Chief Minister Basavaraj Bommai said on Tuesday that if the body of Naveen Shekarappa Gyanagoudar, a medical student from the state studying in Ukraine who was killed in Russian shelling in Kharkiv on Tuesday, cannot be retrieved immediately, the External Affairs Ministry should try to bring back his mortal remains in the next two to three days. "I am saddened by the turn of events," he said. Speaking to reporters, Bommai said that Naveen from Haveri was pursuing his fourth year in medicine in Ukraine. He was staying in a bunker since last week. On Tuesday, he came out to join others but got killed in an air strike, becoming the first Indian casualty in the ongoing war in Ukraine. Two other boys who were with him also belong to Challageri village in Haveri district. One was hurt in the incident. "Another student has escaped unhurt. The information has come from them while I have also spoken to the Ministry of External Affairs on the matter," Bommai said. "Naveen's father is known to me and I have spoken with him. I know his family members as well. I am in touch with the Ministry of External Affairs to get complete information on chances of recovering the body. It is a war zone, and we do not yet have any information on the condition of the body of the deceased," he said. "I have spoken with officials in the PMO as well. Prime Minister Narendra Modi has expressed his desire to talk to Naveen's family members. I have sent all the details to his office. He has spoken to them," he said. --IANS mka/arm ( 290 Words) 2022-03-01-23:26:04 (IANS) Following the announcement of results, Chief Minister and BJD president Naveen Patnaik said, "This unwavering love has further strengthened our commitment to public service. My congratulations to the winning party candidates and all the workers who turned the BJD into a movement through dedicated work." As per the State Election Commission, out of 852, BJD won 766 seats, Bhartiya Janta Party (BJP) got 42 Zilla Parishad seats while the Congress managed to win 37 seats. Further, Jharkhand Mukti Morcha (JMM) won three seats, CPI-M got one set and independent candidates won three seats. Out of the total 853 Zilla Parishad seats, one seat was won by BJP uncontested. Starting from February 16, the Panchayati Raj Institutions elections in Odisha were held in five phases. The counting of votes took place on February 28. (ANI) Awasthi while speaking to ANI said, "All the students of Uttar Pradesh arriving from Ukraine will reach their homes safely from Delhi and the full cost will be borne by the UP government." The Indian government is continuously evacuating students who were stranded in Ukraine via neighbouring countries, he said. Awasthi added, "The Home Department and other departments of UP have been given the responsibility of ensuring their (evacuated) students' security." (ANI) The Communist Party of India (Marxist) general secretary Sitaram Yechury on Tuesday criticised Prime Minister Narendra Modi over Centre's 'Operation Ganga', initiated to help evacuate Indian students from Ukraine, saying that it is just a "big photo op". Speaking at the inaugural session of the CPI (M) Kerala State Conference, Yechury said, "Our people stranded there... a big photo-op session is going on for the last three days. Yesterday was the Prime Minister's own photo op." "India had evacuated more than a lakh people during the Gulf War, over a lakh during the Libyan crisis... but there were no photographs of people coming back with Indian flags and 'thank you Modi' postcards those days," he added. Slamming the Centre for selling Air India, Yechury claimed that the government does not have (air) planes to bring back people. "You have the right to command aircraft from any airline in a state of national emergency. The lives of Indians there, particularly our students, will have to be saved. The Central government must pay the required attention and actually get their act together," he said. Yechury lambasted the Centre and said that under the BJP government, India's international position has further been dented as a junior subordinate partner of US imperialism. "During these four years, these strategic and military tie-ups and agreements between US imperialism in India have not only deepened but widened. India joining this imperialist sponsored groupings, and therefore, taking a partisan position, is actually undermining India's independent foreign policy and standing in the world," the CPI(M) leader alleged while referring to NATO. After Russia's forces launched military operations in Ukraine on February 24, the Government of India has launched "Operation Ganga" to bring back stranded students and Indian citizens from the conflict-torn Ukraine. (ANI) Three more Indian Air Force aircraft are scheduled to fly to Poland, Hungary and Romania on Wednesday to ramp up the Centre's efforts to evacuate Indian nationals stranded in Ukraine, informed IAF officials. The Indian Air Force aircraft are carrying tents, blankets and other humanitarian aid and are to take off from Hindon airbase shortly. Notably, one C-17 Globemaster took off at 4 am earlier today for Romania under 'Operation Ganga'. This comes after Prime Minister Narendra Modi chaired a high-level meeting on Tuesday to review the efforts to bring back Indians stranded in Ukraine and asked the Indian Air Force to join the evacuation efforts under 'Operation Ganga'. The sources said that leveraging the capacities of the Air Force will ensure that more people can be evacuated in a shorter time frame and it will also help to deliver humanitarian aid more efficiently. After Russia's forces launched military operations in Ukraine on February 24, the Government of India launched 'Operation Ganga' to bring back stranded Indian nationals from the conflict-torn Ukraine. As part of the 'Operation Ganga' mission, special flights are being operated to facilitate returns of the stranded Indians free of cost. The first such evacuation flight carrying 219 Indian nationals stranded in Ukraine landed in Mumbai on February 26. Several such flights have landed in the country so far. The 24x7 control centres have been set up to assist in the evacuation of Indian nationals through the border crossing points with Poland, Romania, Hungary and Slovakia. A new route has been opened through Moldova and an MEA team is also now in place there and is operational. The team will assist in the evacuation of Indians through Romania. A dedicated Twitter Account (@opganga) has been set up to assist Operation Ganga. The Indian Embassy in Kyiv has advised Indian citizens against moving to any of the border checkpoints without prior coordination with government officials at border posts. In a bid to energize the evacuation efforts, the Government of India appointed four special envoys who will oversee evacuation operations of stranded Indians in Ukraine's neighbouring countries. Union Minister for Petroleum and Natural Gas Hardeep Singh Puri will oversee evacuation efforts in Hungary, Union Law Minister Kiren Rijiju in Slovakia, Gen (retd) VK Singh in Poland while Civil Aviation Minister Jyotiraditya Scindia will be going to Romania and will also go to Moldova. Prime Minister Narendra Modi has held several meetings so far to review the ongoing efforts under Operation Ganga to bring back Indians stranded in Ukraine. He has also said that India will help people from neighbouring countries and developing countries who are stranded in Ukraine and may seek assistance. Meanwhile, Foreign Secretary Harsh Vardhan Shringla informed on Tuesday that all Indian nationals have left Kyiv and nearly 60 per cent of Indians in Ukraine have left the country so far. He said out of an estimated 20,000 Indian citizens in Ukraine, 60 per cent have left the country since the first advisory was issued by the government."Of the remaining 40 per cent, roughly half remain in the conflict zone in Kharkiv and the other half have either reached the western border of Ukraine or are heading towards the western border. They are generally out of conflict areas," Shringla said. Briefing the media about the evacuation of Indians including students from Ukraine in the wake of Russian military operations, Shringla informed that over the next three days, 26 flights have been scheduled to bring out Indian citizens. "Apart from Bucharest and Budapest, airports in Poland and the Slovak Republic will also be used," he said. An Indian student, Naveen Shekharappa died in Ukraine's Kharkiv following shelling in the area on Tuesday. He hailed from the Haveri district in Karnataka. PM Modi has spoken to the father of Naveen Shekharappa to express his condolences. Russian forces launched military operations in Ukraine on February 24, three days after Moscow recognized Ukraine's breakaway regions - Donetsk and Luhansk - as independent entities. Several countries including the UK, the US, Canada, and the European Union have condemned Russia's military operations in Ukraine and imposed sanctions on Moscow. These countries have also promised Ukraine to help with military aid to fight Russia. The US, Canada and European allies agreed to remove key Russian banks from the interbank messaging system, SWIFT, which means Russian banks won't be able to communicate securely with banks beyond Russia's borders. President Putin has also signed a decree on special economic measures against the US and its allies. Fighting in Ukraine has so far pushed more than 500,000 people across the country's borders, according to the UN refugee agency. Speaking at an emergency session of the UN General Assembly on February 28, Russia's Permanent Representative to the United Nations, Vasily Nebenzya, had said that Russia has no plans to occupy Ukraine. On February 28, negotiations between delegations of Russia and Ukraine were held in the Gomel Region of Belarus and another round of talks is scheduled for March 2. (ANI) Four people, including the driver of a former member of parliament A.P. Jithender Reddy, have allegedly been abducted from the MP's flat in South Avenue on Tuesday. Jitender Raj, PA to Reddy, while speaking to ANI said, "Three guests of AP Jithender Reddy came to stay at his flat at 105 South Avenue. On Tuesday morning I came to know that our driver Tilak Thapa is missing along with the guests." "We saw the CCTV footage installed nearby and came to know that some people in two vehicles have taken them from here," he added. Reddy took to Twitter and posted, "Shocking incident at my residence in Delhi. My personal driver Shri Thapa and social activist Shri Ravi Munnur were kidnapped last night. I have filed a complaint with the concerned police department. Hoping for quick action and speedy justice. @DelhiPolice" The CCTV footage of the alleged abduction was also put up by Reddy on his Twitter. A senior official from Delhi police said, "Four people who were staying at Flat no. 105 South Avenue were taken away by some unknown persons." An FIR has been registered under Section 365 (kidnapping or abducting with intent secretly and wrongfully to confine a person) of the Indian Penal Code (IPC) in the South Avenue police station and investigation into the matter is under progress, the officer added. (ANI) There was a time when alcohol consumption was considered morally irresponsible behaviour. But nowadays, it has become as common as stopping by for a cup of coffee. Past research has shown that people drink more frequently and consume greater amounts of alcohol when they have more bars and restaurants in the neighbourhoods where they live. But a recent study added another angle to it. The study, focusing on parents of young children, suggested that it wasn't just where people lived that's important - it also mattered where they spent their time. The study results were published in the journal 'Drug and Alcohol Dependence'. Findings showed that alcohol use was related to how many bars and restaurants were near where parents shopped, where they worked, and where their children went to school. "What we found suggests that parents may choose where they shop based on opportunities to engage in other activities, including drinking. They may also be cued to drink when they go out shopping or when they finish work by the convenience of nearby bars and restaurants," said Bridget Freisthler, co-author of the study and professor of social work at The Ohio State University. "If you have a tough day at work, you may stop at the nearby bar for a drink before going home. If you're out shopping with your kids, you might stop for dinner at the chain restaurant next door that serves alcohol." Freisthler conducted the study with Uwe Wernekinck, a doctoral student in social work at Ohio State. The study involved 1,599 people in 30 cities in California, who participated in a telephone or web-based survey. All participants were parents or guardians with at least one child aged 10 years or younger who lived with them at least half the time. Participants answered questions that allowed researchers to calculate how frequently they drank alcohol (number of days over a year) and the total volume of alcohol they drank over a year. Data was collected before COVID-19, in 2015. All participants listed where they lived, grocery stores where they most often shopped, another store where they often shopped (such as a big box or drug store), the child's school or preschool and the parent's place of employment. The researchers then calculated the density of alcohol outlets - bars and restaurants where alcohol was consumed on-site - near these sites where people spent time. (The researchers called these sites "destination nodes.") The findings confirmed other studies that suggested parents living in neighbourhoods with higher bar and restaurant densities drank on more days and drank more alcohol during the past year than those living in areas with fewer such outlets. Parents who visited destination nodes with higher densities of bars and restaurants that served alcohol did not drink more frequently than others, but they did report drinking more total alcohol over the course of a year than did others. "We can't tell how they spread out their drinking over the course of the year, but it is concerning that parents who frequent these areas with bars and restaurants are indeed consuming more alcohol," Freisthler said. Freisthler said the data doesn't show if parents had children with them when they drank alcohol. "But that's something to pay attention to," she said. "Based on where parents reported going, these were places where they could bundle a lot of errands together at one time and could likely have their kids with them. They could go shopping and then go to a chain restaurant that serves alcohol, but is still appropriate to bring children, unlike a bar or pub. It gives parents opportunities to drink." The issue was not that parents may have an occasional beer or wine at a restaurant with their children present, Freisthler said. But studies, including this one, showed that people drink more alcohol when there are more places that serve alcohol nearby. "Are there additional risks in terms of how people parent their kids, such as drinking and driving? That's what we should be worried about," she said. (ANI) An Indigo flight carrying 211 students studying in the war-torn country, Ukraine, landed in Delhi on Tuesday. Union MoS Rajeev Chandrasekhar said, "This is one of the most complicated operations, Operation Ganga, because it is happening in the backdrop of conflict. It is the government's mission to bring back all the students out of harm's way and reunite them with their families. Private airlines and the Indian Air Force are responding to the Prime Minister's call and it is a very satisfying thing to welcome these students. This mission will continue till every single student is brought back." Three more Indian Air Force aircraft are scheduled to fly to Poland, Hungary and Romania on Wednesday to ramp up the Centre's efforts to evacuate Indian nationals stranded in Ukraine, informed IAF officials. (ANI) Union Minister and Bharatiya Janata Party (BJP) leader Smriti Irani on Wednesday received the Indians who were stranded in Ukraine after they returned on a special flight from Poland. "Welcome back home! Your families are waiting with bated breath. You have shown exemplary courage...Let's thank the flight crew as well...," Irani told the students on the flight. Irani welcomed the students by speaking in regional languages on their return from war-torn Ukraine. "I am happy to be back in India. I hope other Indians are also evacuated soon. Operation Ganga is really helpful. I thank the Government of India," said Kumar who returned from Ukraine. Russian forces launched military operations in Ukraine on February 24, three days after Moscow recognized Ukraine's breakaway regions - Donetsk and Luhansk - as independent entities. Several countries, including the UK, the US, Canada, and the European Union, have condemned Russia's military operations in Ukraine and imposed sanctions on Moscow. These countries have also promised military aid to Ukraine to fight Russian forces. The US, Canada and European allies agreed to remove key Russian banks from the interbank messaging system, SWIFT, which means that they won't be able to communicate securely with banks beyond Russia's borders. President Putin has also signed a decree on special economic measures against the US and its allies. Fighting in Ukraine has so far pushed more than 500,000 people across the country's borders, according to the UN refugee agency. Speaking at an emergency session of the UN General Assembly on February 28, Russia's Permanent Representative to the United Nations, Vasily Nebenzya, had said that Russia has no plans to occupy Ukraine. On February 28, negotiations between delegations of Russia and Ukraine were held in the Gomel Region of Belarus and another round of talks is scheduled for March 2. (ANI) Singh's statement came after the reports of no evidence against Aryan Khan in the Cordelia cruise ship drug case surfaced. "Highly premature to say that there's no evidence against Aryan Khan. Probe still in progress; recorded multiple statements. Have not reached any conclusion yet," Singh told ANI. Earlier in December, the Bombay High Court relieved Aryan Khan, who was arrested in the drugs-on-cruise case, from appearing before Narcotics Control Bureau (NCB) every week. However, the court had directed him to appear before Delhi's Special Investigation Team (SIT) whenever summoned. Aryan Khan, along with other accused Arbaaz Merchant and Munmun Dhamecha, was granted bail by the High Court on October 28 in the drugs-on-cruise case. An NCB team had busted an alleged drugs party on the Cordelia Cruise ship which was on its way to Goa at mid-sea on October 2 night. Eight persons were detained for questioning by the Narcotics Control Bureau (NCB) in connection with the case. Eight people were later arrested on October 3 including, Aryan Khan, Arbaaz Merchant, and Munmun Dhamecha. Later, a total of 20 people were arrested in connection with the case. (ANI) In a bid to further scale up the evacuation efforts, nine flights will take off on March 4 from neighbouring countries of Ukraine with stranded Indians under 'Operation Ganga', the government sources told ANI on Tuesday. A total of 16 flights have already brought back stranded Indian nationals from Ukraine till today. Sources told ANI that the government has accelerated the evacuation plan for the Indians stranded in Ukraine. Total flights ferry has been increased to bring more and more Indians. By March 4, a total of 36 flights are scheduled to evacuate the stranded Indians. These flights belong to the fleet of Air India, Air India Express, IndiGo and Spice Jet. Sources also told ANI that the first flight taking off on March 4 from the Romanian capital Bucharest is IndiGo at 2:30 hours and the landing is scheduled at Delhi Airport at 2:30 am on March 4. IndiGo has a capacity to carry 216 passengers on board. Six flights are from IndiGo, and the rest belong to Air India, Air India Express and Spice Jet. Sources also stated that approximately 1800 Indians will be evacuated from Ukraine by these nine flights, scheduled to take off from Budapest, Bucharest and Rzeszow. Air India flight is taking off on March 4 from Bucharest at 5:30 pm and landing is scheduled at Mumbai Via Kuwait at 6 AM on March 4. All other flights will arrive at the Delhi airport. The Indian Air Force (IAF) has also been pressed in the evacuation exercise after Prime Minister chaired the third high-level meeting on the Ukraine-Russia crisis. Two Indian Air Force aircraft took off for Romania and Hungary from the Hindon airbase to bring back Indians stranded in Ukraine today. Indian Air Force aircraft are carrying tents, blankets and other humanitarian aid. Three more Indian Air Force aircraft are scheduled to take off for Poland, Hungary and Romania today to bring back Indians from Ukraine. One C-17 Globemaster took off at 4 am earlier today for Romania under 'Operation Ganga'. External Affair Minister S Jaishankar today in a tweet said that six flights have now departed for India in the last 24 hours, including the first flights from Poland, with 1377 more stranded Indian nationals from Ukraine. (ANI) CM Vijayan tweeted, "180 students will be flown down from Delhi to Kochi in an @AirAsiaIndia chartered flight at 4 pm, by the Govt. of Kerala. We are ensuring that all Keralites repatriated from Ukraine, reach back safe and sound. Those who are yet to register should do so with @Norka_Roots." On Tuesday, the government said as many as 36 students hailing from Kerala arrived from Ukraine on Monday evening and 25 of them left for Kochi and the rest for Thiruvananthapuram. The Kerala government tweeted on Tuesday, "Kerala students update: Among 36 students arrived from Ukraine to Delhi yesterday evening, 25 left for Kochi by Vistara UK 883 at 5.35 (arrival 8.45) and 11 left for Trivandrum by Vistara UK 895 at 8.10 (arrival 11.25)." These students were brought back under 'Operation Ganga. (ANI) The High Court's Single Bench upheld the order of the Ministry of Information and Broadcasting to revoke the license of the channel from the list of permitted news channels citing security reasons. The bench comprises Chief Justice S Manikumar and Justice Shaji P Chaly dismissed the petition. Earlier the Single Bench of Justice N Nagaresh dismissed petitions filed by the employees of the news channel against the government order. (ANI) Bahujan Samaj Party (BSP) supremo Mayawati on Wednesday condoled the death of an Indian student in Ukraine and said that the Centre should pay more attention to the rescue operation. Taking to Twitter, Mayawati said, "Very sad news of the death of a young Indian medical student in the war between Russia and Ukraine. My deepest condolences to the victim's family. This incident has increased the wave of concern not only in Karnataka but across the country. Government should pay more effective attention." She also stated that there is a dire need for the Center to play a more proactive role in providing relief to the victims' families by ensuring the evacuation of 15,000 Indian students who are currently surviving by taking shelter in the bunkers from the horrors of war in Ukraine. "About 18,000 students from many states of the country, including Uttar Pradesh, are in faraway Ukraine to study and after the outbreak of war, only a few of them have been able to return and the rest are still facing uncertainty and anxiety every moment," the BSP chief added. Naveen Shekharappa, a 21-year-old student studying at Kharkiv National Medical University, Ukraine died in shelling in Kharkiv on Tuesday. Shekharappa was reportedly standing in a queue to buy food when he was killed in Russian shelling in Ukraine's Kharkiv. "With profound sorrow, we confirm that an Indian student lost his life in shelling in Kharkiv this morning. The Ministry is in touch with his family. We convey our deepest condolences to the family," tweeted the External Affairs Ministry. Efforts are now on to bring his mortal remains to India. News of the student's death came within an hour of the Indian embassy in Ukraine asking its citizens to urgently leave the capital Kyiv on Tuesday. Prime Minister Narendra Modi expressed condolences over the demise of the Indian student in Ukraine. He spoke to Naveen Shekharappa's father. Karnataka Chief Minister Basavaraj Bommai also spoke to the family. Russian forces launched military operations in Ukraine on February 24, three days after Moscow recognized Ukraine's breakaway regions - Donetsk and Luhansk - as independent entities. Several countries including the UK, the US, Canada, and the European Union have condemned Russia's military operations in Ukraine and imposed sanctions on Moscow. These countries have also promised Ukraine military aid to fight Russia. Fighting in Ukraine has so far pushed more than 5,00,000 people across the country's borders, according to the UN refugee agency. (ANI) Union Minister of State for External Affairs V Muraleedharan on Wednesday said that of the 20,000 Indians stuck in Ukraine, over 6,000 people have been brought back to India so far and the Centre is making all efforts to bring back the remaining. Speaking to reporters here, Muraleedharan said, "Around 20,000 Indians were stuck in Ukraine. Of these, 4000 people returned by February 24. Till yesterday, over 2000 more people have returned. We are trying to bring back the remaining Indians via Romania, Poland Hungary, Slovakia and Moldova." The minister MoS MEA V Muraleedharan interacted with parents of students who are stranded in several parts of Ukraine and updated them on the Government's rescue operations under Operation Ganga. Three IAF aircraft have been sent to Romania and Hungary since this morning to evacuate Indians stranded in Ukraine. One more is scheduled for Poland later today. "The evacuation operation will run round the clock. Relief materials are also being sent. The operation is underway in coordination with MEA," Vice Chief of Air Staff Air Marshal Sandeep Singh said today. IAF have deployed C-17 aircraft as part of the evacuation efforts in coordination with the Ministry of External Affairs under 'Operation Ganga'. This comes after Prime Minister Narendra Modi chaired a high-level meeting on Tuesday to review the efforts to bring back Indians stranded in Ukraine and asked the Indian Air Force to join the evacuation efforts under 'Operation Ganga'. (ANI) The deceased Sahil Jadhav, a resident of Vartak Nagar in Thane city, was stabbed by his friends Pranav Mali and two other juveniles after they had a fight while playing PUBG. A senior officer from Vartak Nagar police station said, "The three accused under the influence of alcohol got hold of Sahil near his house and stabbed him after enmity while playing PUBG." The three accused stabbed Sahil over 10 times and the victim died on the spot. The body has been sent for postmortem, added the police official. The officer further added, "All the three accused and the victim are school drop-outs and used to regularly engage in fights with each other." (ANI) A Public Interest Litigation (PIL) has been filed in the Supreme Court seeking to direct the Bureau of Police Research and Development (BPRD) to collect data in a time-bound manner from all the state police organisations on investigations revealing a direct link between viewing pornographic material and rape. The petition has been moved by advocate Nalin Kohli, who has apprised the Court about an investigation by the Police in Assam into the gruesome murder of a six-year-old girl wherein it has been revealed that the four perpetrators of the crime, including two minor boys between eight and 11, were porn addicts. As a consequence of this, the Assam Police has issued guidelines to be followed by the investigating officer for collecting digital evidence while investigating offences related to rape, molestation and other sexual offences. The petitioner sought the direction of the Court to all the state police organisations to collect data in a time-bound manner on the linkage between the viewing of pornographic material and rape and also consider formulating an SOP by its police to include the aspect of viewing of pornographic material while investigating cases of rape and sexual assault. The petitioner has urged the Court to direct the state governments to urgently make available such data from their respective police and investigation agencies to the BPRD. The petitioner argued that there's an alarming increase in cases of sexual assault and rape against women and innocent children in various parts of the country. He also said that he feels responsible to raise this issue which may have significant and long-term implications in terms of preventing incidents of sexual abuse and violence against women and children. "It is not surprising that news articles, as well as police investigations on rape and murder, are increasingly pointing towards the existence of a link between watching pornographic content and/or sexually explicit content, particularly of a violent/non-consensual nature that appears to have acted as a stimulus for committing rape and/or sexual assault, and thereafter even murder, in an attempt to eliminate evidence," the petitioner said. Unfortunately, our newspapers on a daily basis are filled with extremely disturbing and distressing news of rape and sexual abuse against all age groups, the petitioner further said. "The most appalling fact of such news is that many of the victims of such crimes are children, including infants. This becomes a matter of even greater concern in an environment where sex education for appropriate sexual behaviour is not part of the education system and treated as socially inappropriate and even a taboo, " the petitioner said. Studies have highlighted the link between pornographic viewing and sexual crimes against women and children, the petition said. (ANI) Voters head to polls in Texas, kicking off 1st 2022 U.S. midterm primary Xinhua) 08:11, March 02, 2022 A woman walks to a polling station to cast her ballot in the Texas 2022 primary election in San Antonio, Texas, the United States, on March 1, 2022. (Photo by Nick Wagner/Xinhua) During the primary campaign, Republican and Democratic candidates in Texas have spent more time talking about the economy, pandemic, power grid, immigration, schools and health care, local analysts observe. HOUSTON, March 1 (Xinhua) -- Voters across the second most populous U.S. state of Texas are heading to the polls on Tuesday, kicking off the first primary of the country's 2022 midterm election season. It's also the first statewide election in which voters will cast their ballots following the redistricting based on the results of the 2020 national census, as well as the first statewide election after Texas enacted its controversial voting law. Governor Greg Abbott, 64, facing seven other Republicans, is seeking a third term. On the Democratic ticket, Beto O'Rourke, a 49-year-old former U.S. Senate nominee and presidential candidate, is the best known and challenged by four other Democrats. "I think the one big race here in Texas is going to be for governor. That is a huge race because it is very political, red, blue, it's time for change," Michael Martinez, a San Antonio voter, told Xinhua. Voters wait in line to cast their ballots in the Texas 2022 primary election in San Antonio, Texas, the United States, on March 1, 2022. (Photo by Nick Wagner/Xinhua) "This is stage one of what will be a tremendous battle as we go forward to November 8," Abbott said in a campaign speech in El Paso last week, touting the state's economy under his leadership while slamming O'Rourke on his climate change positions, catering to the fossil fuels industry seen as the state's lifeline. It is "a real struggle just to stay alive" in Texas under the all-Republican leadership, O'Rourke claimed during his weeks-long run, blasting the governor for the failures of the state energy grid last winter, which claimed at least 246 lives and resulted in huge economic damage in the state. Democrats haven't won a statewide election since 1994. During the primary campaign, Republican and Democratic candidates in Texas have spent more time talking about the economy, pandemic, power grid, immigration, schools and health care, local analysts observe. The abortion issue so far haven't taken center stage. "Hot topic for me would have to be education. As a former teacher, retired teacher, I always look to see how they're talking about education so that would be the hot button topic for me," Rosalinda Casillas, 63, told Xinhua at a polling place in San Antonio. Brianna Menard, a college student living in Austin, the capital city of Texas, told Xinhua that in her view, voter suppression "is the number one concern right now" after the state's new voting law took effect in December. Texas is one of 18 U.S. states that passed more restrictive voting laws after the 2020 presidential election. According to a National Public Radio report on Sunday, only in Harris County, home to Houston and the state's most populous county, 40 percent of mail-in ballot applications prior were flagged for rejection. Voters arrive at a polling station for the Texas 2022 primary election in Austin, Texas, the United States, on March 1, 2022. (Photo by Bo Lee/Xinhua) However, most Texans just skip the primary elections, said a report in The Texas Tribune on Friday, citing the seemingly low turn-out and the Republican-led redistricting following the 2020 national census. "The political maps rig most of the districts in the congressional delegation, state House and Senate and State Board of Education so that only a Democrat or only a Republican can win. Few are competitive," said the report. Three percent of Texans will decide who governs the other 97 percent, the report claimed, noting that a candidate could have won a Republican nomination for the governor race with support from 2.1 percent of voters while a Democrat would have needed just 1.5 percent. Data from the Texas secretary of state show that 17.1 million Texans are registered to vote but there are 29.1 million Texans and out of them, 21.7 million are 18 years old or older. The state's races for major state positions also include lieutenant governor, state attorney general and some others. Texan voters will also choose each party's candidates to face off in November for district-based congressional and legislative offices, which will offer clues about where the country's midterm cycle is headed, local analysts said. According to local media reports, Texas is an open primary state, which means voters in the state don't register as members of a particular political party. Instead, they can cast a ballot in either party's primary election, though not both. (Web editor: Peng yukai, Liang Jun) Vice Chief of Air Staff Air Marshal Sandeep Singh on Wednesday said that the Indian Air Force (IAF) can send up to four aircraft to help the Centre's efforts to evacuate Indian nationals stranded in Ukraine under 'Operation Ganga'. He also informed that the four aircraft can bring back 200 people on each trip. Addressing a press conference, Singh assured that the Air Force would safely bring back stranded Indians in Ukraine, and said, "IAF can send four aircraft in a day to evacuate Indians stranded in Ukraine, and 200 people will be brought back in one round. I am sure we will bring all our people back safely." He apprised that, since today morning, three IAF aircraft have been sent to evacuate Indians. "The evacuation operation will run round the clock. Relief materials are also being sent. The operation is underway in coordination with the Ministry of External Affairs (MEA)," Singh said. Notably, another IAF aircraft is scheduled to fly to Poland to facilitate the evacuation of stranded Indians. The Vice Chief of Air Staff informed that the sanctions imposed on Russia by the United States will not affect the IAF significantly. "India's relations with both countries are strong," he added. The US President Joe Biden has announced the suspension of flights from Russia in the US airspace and has also said that they are cutting off Russia's largest banks from the international financial system and preventing Russia's central bank from defending the Russian Ruble making Putin's USD 630 Billion "war fund" worthless. After Russia's forces launched military operations in Ukraine on February 24, the Government of India launched 'Operation Ganga' to bring back stranded Indian nationals from the conflict-torn Ukraine. As part of the 'Operation Ganga' mission, special flights are being operated to facilitate returns of the stranded Indians free of cost. The first such evacuation flight carrying 219 Indian nationals stranded in Ukraine landed in Mumbai on February 26. Several such flights have landed in the country so far. The 24x7 control centres have been set up to assist in the evacuation of Indian nationals through the border crossing points with Poland, Romania, Hungary and Slovakia. A new route has been opened through Moldova and an MEA team is also stationed there. The team will assist in the evacuation of Indians through Romania. A dedicated Twitter Account (@opganga) has been set up to assist Operation Ganga. The Indian Embassy in Kyiv has advised Indian citizens against moving to any of the border checkpoints without prior coordination with government officials at border posts. In a bid to energize the evacuation efforts, the Government of India appointed four special envoys who will oversee evacuation operations of stranded Indians in Ukraine's neighbouring countries. Union Minister for Petroleum and Natural Gas Hardeep Singh Puri will oversee evacuation efforts in Hungary, Union Law Minister Kiren Rijiju in Slovakia, Gen (retd) VK Singh in Poland while Civil Aviation Minister Jyotiraditya Scindia will be going to Romania and will also go to Moldova. Prime Minister Narendra Modi has held several meetings so far to review the ongoing efforts under 'Operation Ganga' to bring back Indians stranded in Ukraine. He has also said that India will help people from neighbouring countries and developing countries who are stranded in Ukraine. Meanwhile, Foreign Secretary Harsh Vardhan Shringla informed on Tuesday that all Indian nationals have left Kyiv and nearly 60 per cent of Indians in Ukraine have left the country so far. He said that out of an estimated 20,000 Indian citizens in Ukraine, 60 per cent have left the country since the first advisory was issued by the government."Of the remaining 40 per cent, roughly half remain in the conflict zone in Kharkiv and the other half have either reached the western border of Ukraine or are heading towards the western border. They are generally out of conflict areas," Shringla said. An Indian student, Naveen Shekharappa died in Ukraine's Kharkiv following shelling in the area on Tuesday. He hailed from the Haveri district in Karnataka. PM Modi has spoken to the father of Naveen Shekharappa to express his condolences. (ANI) Union Minister Gajendra Shekhawat said that more people will be evacuated in the next two or three days. Shekhawat said, "All of you have come with a sad memory to India. Many of you must not have been able to sleep for hours, days... The government working day and night for you...More people to be evacuated in next 2-3 days." He further said, "I know that you might not have slept for days before coming to India due to fear. I want to tell you that even the officials and Ministers were worried about your safety." Under Operation Ganga, Air India flight 1946 landed in India, carrying 215 students stranded in Ukraine from Bucharest at 9.30 am. (ANI) Union Minister for State Chemical and Fertilizer, Bhagwanth Khuba, on Wednesday, flagged off mobile vans, e-rickshaws and 'Jan Aushadhi Raths' for wider awareness about Jan Aushadhi stores and medicines on the occasion of Jan Aushadhi Diwas 2022 from his residence. He said that Ministry's top priority is to provide generic medicines to the poor at low cost. Speaking to ANI Khuba said, "On the occasion of Jan Aushadhi Diwas, we are spreading and highlighting more and more Jan Aushadhi medicines. Doctors should also know more and more about it." "Generic Medicines is available for the poor people at 50 to 90 per cent less cost at Jan Aushadhi Kendra. There are about 1,450 types of medicines, 250 types of surgical instruments are available in the store." Union Minister Khuba told ANI MoS Chemical & Fertilizer Bhagwant Khuba further told ANI, "Prime Minister Narendra Modi's mission is to provide generic medicines at low prices and for the poor people and they should not face any kind of difficulties due to medicines is Ministry's top priorities. For this purpose, our Ministry is celebrating from March 1 to March 7 as Jan Aushadhi Diwas to spread more awareness and information about it to the poor and giving information about its importance." Chemical and Fertilizer Ministry organising weeklong Aushadhi Diwas on January 4 at different locations across the country covering all States/UTs. This will generate awareness about the usages of generic medicines and the benefits of Jan Aushadhi Pariyojana. (ANI) Prime Minister Narendra Modi on Wednesday said that it is because of India's "rising strength" that the government was able to evacuate the Indian nationals stranded in Ukraine amid conflict with Russia. Addressing a public rally in Uttar Pradesh's Robertsganj, PM Modi said, "It is due to India's rising strength that we are able to safely evacuate our nationals stuck in Ukraine, for which we are running Operation Ganga." "We're making all efforts to evacuate people stuck in Ukraine under Operation Ganga. Thousands of citizens were brought back to India. To accelerate this mission, India has sent its four ministers there, and the government will leave no stone unturned for the safe evacuation of Indians," he added. Slamming the Opposition parties for mocking the 'Atmanirbhar Abhiyan' (self-reliance motion) initiative by the Centre, the Prime Minister said that they can never be a party to India's strength. "People who mock 'Atmanirbhar Abhiyan' insult our (defence) forces. Such dynasts can never strengthen India. They are the same people who spread rumours about the country's COVID vaccines," he said. Tomorrow, Uttar Pradesh will go to the sixth phase of the polling in the ongoing state Assembly elections, determining the fate of 676 candidates, including Chief Minister Yogi Adityanath in 57 Assembly seats spread across 10 districts of the state. Of the total 57, the Bharatiya Janata Party (BJP) had domination in the last elections in 2017. The BJP had won 46 seats while Apna Dal had won one seat. The Samajwadi Party (SP) had won only two seats, while Bahujan Samaj Party (BSP) won five seats. Congress and Suheldev Bharatiya Samaj Party (SBSP) had won one seat each respectively. The 10 districts going to the polls in the sixth phase are Gorakhpur, Ambedkarnagar, Ballia, Balrampur, Basti, Deoria, Kushinagar, Maharajganj, Sant Kabir Nagar and Siddharthnagar. The 2022 Assembly elections to elect 403 members of the Uttar Pradesh Legislative Assembly are being held in seven phases. The votes will be counted and the results will be declared on March 10, 2022. (ANI) The airline will use its Boeing 737 MAX aircraft for these special flights. SpiceJet will operate ferry flights to Kosice on March 2 and 3 from Delhi and to Bucharest from Delhi and Amritsar on March 4 and 5. The airline has already operated two evacuation flights under 'Operation Ganga'. SpiceJet's evacuation flight from Budapest with Indian students will be arriving at the Indira Gandhi International Airport in Delhi at 6.30 pm today. This comes after Prime Minister Narendra Modi on Monday deputed four Union Ministers to neighbouring countries of Ukraine to coordinate evacuations of stranded Indians amid ongoing Russian military operations in Ukraine. Other ministers deputed to manage evacuations include Union Minister of Civil Aviation Jyotiraditya Scindia in Romania and Molodova, Minister of Petroleum and Natural Gas Hardeep Singh Puri in Hungary and Minister of State in the Ministry of Road Transport Gen (Retd) VK Singh in Poland. This is the second evacuation flight being operated by SpiceJet under 'Operation Ganga' after a special flight left yesterday night for Budapest, Hungary from New Delhi. The airline is in discussion with the concerned authorities to operate more evacuation flights in the coming days. The Union government has launched 'Operation Ganga' to bring back stranded students and Indian citizens from the conflict-torn Ukraine. Special flights are being operated by Air India and other airlines as part of the 'Operation Ganga' mission. Earlier on Monday, the ministry of external affairs said that India has evacuated over 8,000 nationals since the initial advisories were issued by the country. (ANI) Sources say that External Affairs Minister Dr S Jaishankar is likely to brief the Committee members in the meeting tomorrow. This news comes a day after Prime Minister Narendra Modi chaired a high-level meeting to review the efforts to bring back stranded Indians in Ukraine. The meeting was attended by External Affairs Minister S Jaishankar, Minister of Commerce and Industry Piyush Goyal, Foreign Secretary Harsh Vardhan Shringla, National Security Advisor (NSA) Ajit Doval and senior officials. India on Tuesday sent the first tranche of humanitarian assistance to Ukraine through Poland, informed Foreign Secretary Harsh Vardhan Shringla. The consignment comprised medicines, medical equipment and other relief material. On February 24, Russian President Vladimir Putin recognized Ukraine's breakaway regions - Donetsk and Luhansk - as independent entities escalating the ongoing tensions between the two countries. Ukraine gained independence in 1991 after the disintegration of the Soviet Union. Earlier in February, Russian President Vladimir Putin said that special military operations are being launched "to protect" the people in the Donbas region. He also warned other countries that any attempt to interfere with the Russian action would lead to "consequences". Leaders from a number of countries including the UK, the US, Canada, and the European Union have condemned Russia's military operations in Ukraine. (ANI) Atul Garg, director of Delhi Fire Service (DFS) informed that the fire station had received a call from the Delhi State Industrial and Infrastructure Development Corporation Ltd. (DSIDC) Narela about a factory fire at around 11 am. Garg further stated that a building that had plastic material caught fire. 22 fire tenders were present at the spot and brought the fire under control. Garg also stated that no injury in the incident has been reported so far. (ANI) Union Minister Gajendra Singh Shekhawat on Wednesday slammed Opposition parties, who accused the Indian government of delaying the evacuation process of Indian nationals stranded in Ukraine. After welcoming 251 students who returned from Ukraine on an Air India flight today, Shekhawat told ANI, "The government is doing its duty. Even before this, there have been governments in the country for many decades and such situations have come up many times in the world. Opposition leaders should introspect had they performed in the past when they were in power." "It would not be possible to find political ground only by criticizing. When you had the opportunity, what did you do for the people of the country? You should have thought and act on this," he added. While giving assurances on behalf of the government, he said every Indian will be evacuated safely from Ukraine. "This is the Narendra Modi government, whether Indians are trapped in Ukraine, or in Yemen or whether Indians are in trouble in any other country of the world, our government will always stand with them. Today I would like to remember former External Affairs Minister Late Sushma Swaraj, who once in a tweet said that if India's son is on the moon and holds a blue passport, I will bring him out. Every BJP leader believes in this vision and passion under the leadership of PM Modi," said the Union Minister. On the question on the completion of Operation Ganga, he said that no date can be fixed in such a situation but until we bring back the last Indian the operation will continue. Operation Ganga has been started by the Government of India to bring back the Indian citizens trapped in Ukraine. Apart from civil airlines, the Indian Air Force has also been roped in the ongoing Operation Ganga, so that all Indians can be brought home safely. Along with this, four central government ministers Kiren Rijiju, Hardeep Singh Puri, General VK Singh and Jyotiraditya Scindia have been sent to different countries sharing the border with Ukraine, so that they can speed up this operation by establishing better coordination with the authorities. Under Operation Ganga, Air India flight 1946 landed in India, carrying 251 students stranded in Ukraine from Bucharest at 9.30 am. (ANI) Bengaluru's twelth edition of the three-day-long "Bengaluru India Nano" event having 'Nano for Sustainable Future' as its theme will begin from March 7 and will end on March 9. Addressing a press meet on Wednesday, C.N. Ashwatha Narayana, State Information Technology (IT) Biotechnology and Science and Technology Minister stated that the event will be inaugurated by Chief Minister Basavaraja Bommai. Dr C.N.R.Rao, Bharat Ratna awardee scientist and chairperson of state vision group for Nano Technology, and Rajeev Chandrashekhar, Union Minister of State for IT will be present. He further stated that over 10 countries including Israel, Japan, Germany, Canada will be participating and the event which is being organised in association with 5 leading industries including such as India Electronics and Semiconductor Association (IESA), TiE Young Entrepreneurs (TYE) Bangalore, and many more. "The 12th edition of the 'Bengaluru India Nano' focuses on nano-medicine, nano-photonics, nano-textiles, hydrogen technology among others. 75 eminent speakers, 2500 delegates, 25 sessions, and over 4000 attendees are expected to participate," Minister Narayana explained. Ashwatha said that this is for the first time, programmes like 'nanotech quiz' and 'nano for young' have been introduced with the objective of sensitising young minds about futuristic nanotechnology. "Around 650 students belonging to 23 states and 5 Union Territories have already registered for the quiz event. Sessions that will be held on the final day are designed in a tutorial model keeping students in mind," he added. In this event, the 'Nano Excellence Award' will be presented to 5 young researchers who are pursuing a PhD in Nano Technology. Professor Navakanta Bhat, Chairman, state vision group for Nano-Technology, said, "The integration of nanotech, life sciences, and health sciences has resulted in revolutionary innovations like messenger RNA (mRNA) vaccine and many such innovations are in the pipeline to be unleashed." (ANI) Uttarakhand Government has set up coordination centers in Delhi and Mumbai for the people of Uttarakhand returning from Ukraine, informed in-charge Chief Secretary Radha Raturi on Wednesday. State Disaster Operation Center has also been activated at the state level to bring back the people of Uttarakhand trapped in Ukraine safely and to know about their present location. In these centres, the information received from all the districts and information departments will be given to the Ministry of External Affairs (MEA). Uttarakhand In-charge Chief Secretary Radha Raturi instructed all the District Magistrates through video conference in the Secretariat to establish constant contact with the families of students and other citizens of Uttarakhand in Ukraine. "Information about the current location of the citizens and students of Uttarakhand trapped in Ukraine should also be given to the government and the local commissioner's office in Delhi from time to time so that all information can be exchanged to Ministry of External Affairs (MEA) expeditiously," she said. She said that information is also being taken from the Indian Embassy in the countries bordering Ukraine. "So far, information has been received of 282 people from Uttarakhand, who are stranded in Ukraine and its adjoining countries, out of which 33 have returned home safely," added Raturi. Raturi further informed that three WhatsApp groups have been formed linking the mobile numbers of students trapped in Ukraine and their families living in Uttarakhand, in which all senior officials are also connected. "District-level officials are personally in constant contact with the families of students trapped in Ukraine. With the joint efforts of the Government of India and the State Government, efforts are being made to bring everyone back safely," she said. The arrangements have been made for lodging and food for all the visitors, arrangements have been made by the state to bring them from Delhi to their destination. Whatever information is being received about the current location of the citizens of Uttarakhand coming from Ukraine, that information should be exchanged expeditiously so that the information can be sent to the local commissioner's office and MEA in time, she added. She directed all the district magistrates that on the basis of the data received, a team should be sent to the citizens of Uttarakhand stranded in Ukraine and its adjoining countries or their families who have not been contacted yet. Nodal officers have been deployed at the district and tehsil levels to bring back all the citizens of Uttarakhand from Ukraine safely and to establish better coordination. All arrangements are being made by the government, administration and police with mutual coordination. Secretary Vinod Kumar Suman has been sent to New Delhi as nodal officer to establish better coordination on behalf of the Uttarakhand Government. In the meeting, Additional Chief Secretary Anand Bardhan, ADG Intelligence Sanjay Gunjyal, Secretary SA Murugesan, Vinod Kumar Suman, DIG Intelligence Nivedita Kukreti, Additional Secretary Sonkar, all District Magistrates and ARC Ajay Mishra were present through a virtual medium. (ANI) Clay Center, KS (67432) Today Cloudy with periods of rain. Low near 50F. Winds NE at 5 to 10 mph. Chance of rain 70%. Rainfall near a quarter of an inch.. Tonight Cloudy with periods of rain. Low near 50F. Winds NE at 5 to 10 mph. Chance of rain 70%. Rainfall near a quarter of an inch. Union Cabinet Minister for Social Justice and Empowerment, Virendra Kumar welcomed Indians who were stranded in Romania amidst Russia's military operation in Ukraine, after they landed in the national capital on Wednesday. Speaking to ANI today briefly, the Union Minister said, "The Prime Minister of the country is worried for each and every child. Four ministers have also been sent to four countries so that all the children from Ukraine can reach those countries and then they can be brought back safely to the country." On February 28, Prime Minister Narendra Modi chaired a high level meeting to review the ongoing efforts under Operation Ganga to bring back Indians stranded in Ukraine. The Prime Minister said that the entire government machinery is working round the clock to ensure that all Indian nationals there are safe and secure. The government also informed that the first consignment of relief supplies to Ukraine to deal with the humanitarian situation on Ukraine's borders has been despatched. On February 24, Russian President Vladimir Putin recognized Ukraine's breakaway regions - Donetsk and Luhansk - as independent entities escalating the ongoing tensions between the two countries. Ukraine gained independence in 1991 after the disintegration of the Soviet Union. Earlier in February, Russian President Vladimir Putin said that special military operations are being launched "to protect" the people in the Donbas region. He also warned other countries that any attempt to interfere with the Russian action would lead to "consequences". Leaders from a number of countries including the UK, the US, Canada, and the European Union have condemned Russia's military operations in Ukraine. (ANI) The first Indian Air Force C-17, a heavy-lift transport aircraft that went to Romania to bring back Indian students from Ukraine, would be landing at the Hindan airbase at 11 pm on Wednesday. "The first C-17 that left on Wednesday morning will return from Romania tonight with around 200 Indian citizens being evacuated from Ukraine at 11 pm tonight," Indian Air Force (IAF) sources said. "Two more planes will return from Poland and Hungary by early minor No V tomorrow. IAF has till now launched four flights to bring back people from Ukraine," IAF officials said here. Prime Minister Narendra Modi had issued orders to the Air Force to pitch in the rescue operations to augment the level of operation Ganga. The Indian Air Force had put its fleet of C-17 transport aircraft on stand by for evacuating citizens from Ukraine. Indian Air Force is geared up for any requirements of the evacuation of our citizens from Ukraine, an IAF spokesperson had said. The American C-17 Globemasters and IL-76 transport aircraft are the most capable for flying to long distances with around 400 passengers. The C-17 transport aircraft had helped in a big way to evacuate citizens and officials from Kabul when the Taliban captured Afghanistan and forced Americans to exit from there. On February 28, Prime Minister Narendra Modi chaired a high level meeting to review the ongoing efforts under Operation Ganga to bring back Indians stranded in Ukraine. The Prime Minister said that the entire government machinery is working round the clock to ensure that all Indian nationals there are safe and secure. The government also informed that the first consignment of relief supplies to Ukraine to deal with the humanitarian situation on Ukraine's borders has been despatched. On February 24, Russian President Vladimir Putin recognized Ukraine's breakaway regions - Donetsk and Luhansk - as independent entities escalating the ongoing tensions between the two countries. Ukraine gained independence in 1991 after the disintegration of the Soviet Union. Earlier in February, Russian President Vladimir Putin said that special military operations are being launched "to protect" the people in the Donbas region. He also warned other countries that any attempt to interfere with the Russian action would lead to "consequences". Leaders from a number of countries including the UK, the US, Canada, and the European Union have condemned Russia's military operations in Ukraine. (ANI) West Bengal Chief Minister Mamata Banerjee on Wednesday slammed the Central government for delaying the evacuation of Indian nationals from Ukraine and asked when the government was aware of developments then why didn't they act earlier. "Somebody died, some people are moving from here and there. somebody is waiting in bunkers, somebody is waiting in Romania, somebody is not getting food. They search for food and get killed. When the government was aware of developments, why didn't they bring the students earlier?" said Banerjee. The Chief Minister further said that she is not in favour of criticising the government, especially for the Ministry of External Affairs. "I don't want to criticise the government, especially for a matter of external affairs, because we're one. But sometimes I have seen that in external affairs matter, because of some coordination gap and political business, we are lagging behind and our students are stuck there," she said. As part of the 'Operation Ganga' mission, special flights are being operated free of cost. The first such evacuation flight carrying 219 Indian nationals stranded in Ukraine landed in Mumbai on February 26. Several such flights have landed in India so far. Indian Air Force (IAF) has also joined the government's evacuation efforts as its C-17 transport aircraft left for Romania in the early hours of Wednesday morning from the Hindan airbase near New Delhi. The Chief Minister said that she has written a letter to Prime Minister Narendra Modi over an all-party meeting. "He is busy with the Uttar Pradesh elections. So, I am also going to Uttar Pradesh. But I have done my duties after that," said the Chief Minister when asked about her letter to PM Modi offering unconditional support to the government and suggestion for an all-party meeting if needed. She further said that she is going to Varanasi to campaign for Samajwadi Party chief Akhilesh Yadav. (ANI) The Election Commission of India on Wednesday announced that elections to 24 seats of the legislative council in Bihar will be held on April 4 and the counting of votes will be done on April 7. The notification for the Legislative Council elections will be issued on March 9. Candidates will be able to file their nominations till March 16, while the scrutiny of nomination papers will be held on March 17 and the last date for withdrawal of candidature is March 21. The constituencies which are going for poll are Patna, Nalanad, Gaya-cum-Jahanabad-cum-Arwal, Aurangabad, Nawada, Bhojpur-cum-Buxar, Rohtas-cum-Kaimur, Saran, Siwan, Gopalganj, West Champaran, East Champaran, Muzaffarpur, Vaishali, Sitamarhi-cum-Sheohar, Darbhanga, Samastipur, Munger-cum-Jamui-cum-Lakhisarai-cum-Sheikhpura, Begusarai-cum-Khagaria, Saharsa-cum-Madhepurs-cum-Supaul, Bhagalpur-cum-Banka, Madhubani, Purnea-cum-Araria-cum-Kishanganj and Katihar. Of the 24 seats, three were vacant since November 11, 2020, as the members were elected to the Legislative assembly. These members are Rit Lal Ray, Dilip Ray and Manoj Yadav. Two seats Darbhanga and Samastipur fell vacant due to the death of the sitting members. As per the election commission, the polling was delayed as the rural local bodies that make for the majority of the electoral college for the MLC polls were not in existence at the time. "Biennial elections to fill up 24 seats could not be conducted by 16.07.2021 as the Constituent Local Bodies/Electors therein were not in existence at that time. The Commission vide letter 21.05.2021 had sought information regarding the existence of constituent Local Bodies functioning and their percentage in the said Constituencies. The CEO, Bihar vide letter dated 27.05.2021 had informed that the term of all Rural Local Bodies which constitute 97.56 per cent of the total electoral college for said election was to expire on 15.06.2021 and accordingly, the election could not be held at that time," the election commission said in a statement. The election can now be held as the vacant seats in local bodies have been filled via recent panchayat polls. "Now, CEO, Bihar vide letter dated 27.12.2021 has submitted the updated status regarding the percentage of Local Bodies functioning as well as the percentage of electors therein in all 24 Local Authorities' constituencies. The Chief Electoral Officer, Bihar has informed that the percentage of Local Bodies functioning as well as the percentage of electors therein is more than 75 per cent," it said. The Chief Secretary of Bihar is being directed to depute a senior officer from the state to ensure that the extant instructions regarding COVID-19 containment measures are complied with while making arrangements for conducting the elections. (ANI) BJP national president JP Nadda on Wednesday promised to start metro services in some districts of Uttar Pradesh including Agra, Gorakhpur, Varanasi, Prayagraj, and Meerut in the next five years if Bharatiya Janata Party retains power in Uttar Pradesh. The senior BJP leader also claimed that Uttar Pradesh has marked the lowest unemployment rate under the Yogi Adityanath-led government. "In the next five years, we'll start metro services in Agra, Gorakhpur, Varanasi, Prayagraj, and Meerut. UP has marked the lowest unemployment rate under the Yogi government. Through MSMEs, more than three lakh jobs have been created in the state," Nadda said while addressing a public rally Varanasi . Further, Nadda mentioned the other development works done by BJP in UP and said that the state stands at second position in the Ease of Doing Business ranking. He said, "Today UP stands at number 2 in Ease of Doing Business ranking. Per capita income has doubled, the state is becoming a leading destination for investments under the Yogi government. If you vote for BJP, we promise to take UP to the first position." Uttar Pradesh will go to the sixth phase of the polling tomorrow in the ongoing state Assembly elections, determining the fate of 676 candidates, including Chief Minister Yogi Adityanath in 57 Assembly seats spread across 10 districts of the state. Of the total 57 seats, the BJP had swept the last elections in 2017, winning 46 constituencies, while Apna Dal had won one seat. The Samajwadi Party (SP) had won only two seats, while Bahujan Samaj Party (BSP) had won five seats. Congress and Suheldev Bharatiya Samaj Party (SBSP) had won one seat each respectively. The 10 districts going to the polls in the sixth phase are Gorakhpur, Ambedkarnagar, Ballia, Balrampur, Basti, Deoria, Kushinagar, Maharajganj, Sant Kabir Nagar and Siddharthnagar. The 2022 Assembly elections to elect 403 members of the Uttar Pradesh Legislative Assembly are being held in seven phases. The votes will be counted and the results will be declared on March 10, 2022. (ANI) Indra Nooyi, former CEO of PepsiCo, on Wednesday said that the time has come for the men in power to come forward to create a level-playing field to promote gender parity for women. Delivering the keynote address at an event organised by Ananta Centre on the theme of "The Levelling towards an ungendered world", Nooyi said, "The time has come for the men in power to come to the table and say we want to create a level-playing field because we are short of talent. Once we bring them in, why do we discriminate against them? Men in power have to be held accountable. Human Resource policy did not say exclude women. It is Human Resources that means everybody. " "Are we treating all the talent we have as equal? Are we giving them an opportunity to contribute? If we don't do that, we will have a talent shortage, we deserve to fall back," she added. Talking about the maternity leaves for women, the former CEO noted that having kids is a "service to the society". She also emphasised that companies should not deny jobs to women having children as it will deprive the corporates from having the best talent. "Why do we have to say if a guy has to step out, it's ok but if a girl has to step out to do essential work for the country, but to have kids is not. Having kids is a big responsibility. You are doing a service to the country because it needs young people," she said while advocating that employees embrace gender diversity at work and the benefits of incorporating both male and female perspectives into workplace programs and projects which makes an ideal work environment. Urging corporates to recruit without gender bias, she said, "If you think it that way, you will give her the time to take off some time and come back and reintegrate into the company. It is a human issue and not a political issue. We have to think about what's best for the country." Rama Kirloskar, Joint MD, Kirloskar Brothers Ltd, Anuradha Razdan, Executive Director HR and Vice president HR, Unilever South Asia, Sunil Khurana, COO JCB India Ltd also attended the event. (ANI) The NDRF has provided relief material including blankets, sleeping mats, and solar study lamps etc. for the people of Ukraine. The relief material was sent through a flight that left for Poland this morning and another on an Indian Air Force (IAF) flight that left for Romania this afternoon, the Ministry of Home Affairs informed today. On February 28, Prime Minister Narendra Modi chaired a high level meeting to review the ongoing efforts under Operation Ganga to bring back Indians stranded in Ukraine. The Prime Minister said that the entire government machinery is working round the clock to ensure that all Indian nationals there are safe and secure. The government also informed that the first consignment of relief supplies to Ukraine to deal with the humanitarian situation on Ukraine's borders has been despatched. On February 24, Russian President Vladimir Putin recognized Ukraine's breakaway regions - Donetsk and Luhansk - as independent entities escalating the ongoing tensions between the two countries. Ukraine gained independence in 1991 after the disintegration of the Soviet Union. Earlier in February, Russian President Vladimir Putin said that special military operations are being launched "to protect" the people in the Donbas region. He also warned other countries that any attempt to interfere with the Russian action would lead to "consequences". Leaders from a number of countries including the UK, the US, Canada, and the European Union have condemned Russia's military operations in Ukraine. (ANI) Taking to Twitter, the chief minister wrote "Sought PM @narendramodi 's urgent intervention with the Russian leadership to set up a humanitarian corridor for our students to come out of the war zone. Requested urgent steps to provide food and water to those in bunkers with the help of concerned governments and NGOs like @ifrc." Earlier on February 27, Vijayan wrote to Prime Minister and requested an urgent intervention for Indian students stranded in Ukraine. In his letter, Vijayan said that many people (mostly young students), who have taken refuge in bunkers are going without food and water, and are in a thoroughly disturbed mental state."Those who have taken refuge in bunkers in places of eastern Ukraine like Kiev, Kaekhiv and Sumi are in urgent need of food and water. Urgent help for evacuating them through Russia is required," the letter read. The Chief Minister also mentioned that a large number of students have walked to the Poland border braving freezing cold, but the Ukraine officials are not allowing them to cross the border."There are reports that force is being used against them. Step for sending officials from our embassy, who can effectively communicate with the Ukraine officials at the border may be taken immediately," he requested. The government said on Wednesday that fifteen flights are scheduled in the next 24 hours to bring back Indians from countries neighbouring Ukraine, which is facing a conflict situation, and that some of these flights are en route their destinations. Briefing the media here on the government's evacuation efforts, Ministry of External Affairs spokesperson Arindam Bagchi said that Indian Air Force aircraft has joined Operation Ganga. "As many as 15 flights are scheduled over next 24 hours, some of these are already en route. Indian Air Force aircraft has joined Operation Ganga, with the first C17 flight from Bucharest expected to return today to Delhi," he said. (ANI) The Chief Electoral Officer (CEO) of Assam, Nitin Khade stated, "As directed by the Election Commission of India (ECI), we made all the arrangements regarding webcasting, which will be done in all the 203 polling stations of the Constituency." He further stated that these arrangements are done to ensure a free, fair and safe bye-election to the Assam Legislative Assembly, 2022. The poll proceedings will be monitored live by ECI, CEO Assam, District Election Officer and other concerned officials on duty. Khade also said that the half section of the Central Armed Police Forces (CAPF) will be deployed at each polling station to ensure full-proof security on poll day. The voting will start at 7:00 am and end at 5:00 pm. (ANI) Telangana Pradesh Congress Committee president Revanth Reddy on Wednesday alleged that the state is in trouble due to Bihari Indian Administrative Service officers posted in the state. Addressing a press conference here, Reddy said, "After K Chandrashekar Rao became the Chief Minister, everyone in Telangana thought that he will give opportunities to the people of the state, but as it was not done, the people of the state have doubts and insecurities. Chief secretary Somesh Kumar, Director General of Police Anjani Kumar and other important posts were given to officials from Bihar state. Each officer carries six to eight departments each. The situation of Telangana region officials has become questionable. Due to Bihari IAS officers, Telangana is in trouble." "CM KCR in an interview in 2008 stated that his ancestors are from Bihar," the Congress leader alleged. Alleging that the "Dharani portal is the reason for the murder which took place in the Ibrahimpatnam area on March 1," he said that the Chief Minister has repeatedly called the portal a model for the country. "In Greater Hyderabad, Somesh Kumar, the current CS, removed 30 lakh votes. CS Somesh Kumar has not worked in the IAS for seven years. According to Somesh Kumar's seniority, he is limited to Principal Secretary but was given responsibilities of chief secretary. Out of 152 members, are only IAS officers of Bihar category talented? Reddy asked. (ANI) A Delhi Court on Wednesday granted bail to Rajesh Ambwani, accused in multiple FIRs for duping investors with crores of rupees. Dr Pankaj Sharma, Chief Metropolitan Magistrate (CMM) of Patiala House Court on Wednesday while granting bail to Ambwani also imposed the condition that the accused shall always share his location with the Investigating officer by dropping a google pin on google map. Court also directed that accused's release will not interdict with the fair and proper investigation in any manner given his conduct and the stage of the investigation. Also, the evidence qua accused is in possession of the department, said court. It was alleged that Ambwani represented himself as a scholar and alumni of IIT, Delhi with Masters in M.Tech. and Business Management and a highly reputed professor/mentor in IIT, Delhi. He also represented himself to be a financial advisor of great repute who was making substantial profits in trading of equities shares and had generated huge returns on investments for his clients who have invested with him and running a very successful stock trading coming to M/s Hedge Stack. Initially, it was alleged that Ambwani induced the victims to invest their money and ensured the return of 4 per cent per month on their investment, later on, 9 more victims have been added to the FIR, having similar allegations. Moreover, it has also been alleged that Ambwani has not only cheated the investors but has also forged the signatures of the investors on the KYC document to make a wrongful gain of their investments. Advocate Vijay Aggarwal along with Advocate Yugant Sharma appearing for Ambwani argued that the FIR is ex facie absurd, lack bonafide and has been filed with malafide as the FIR has been filed with the unreasonable delay of 3 years, hence the same is not credible as no money was ever given to Ambwani as it was straight away credited and debited in the trading accused of the Investor which was with M/s Edelweiss Broking Ltd. Advocate Aggarwal also argued that the complainants knew that their money would be invested in the share market and share markets are prone to ups and downs as per the market fluctuations and one fails to understand how the complainants were convinced that the invested amount gives a return of 4 per cent per month. Adv. Aggarwal also stated that no complaint was filed when the investors admittedly earned profits but filed a Complaint when they incurred loss in trading. Additional Public Prosecutor (APP) which was being assisted by Counsel for 9 victims, who were also present in Court, vehemently opposed the Bail Application of Ambwani and argued that Ambwani allured that he would get a minimum 4 per cent return per month on investment. In addition to this, Complaints from other complainants have been received alleging the same modus operandi. It is submitted that the accused used to obtain a password of his client in good faith and used to speculate in highly volatile stocks and currency. Ambwani used to give false information about the profits in the client account. Although there were losses in the said account. He gave instructions to broker Edelweiss Derivatives Trading for transferring the amount from the customer trading account to the link bank account. Ambwani charged a fake bill for the same showing it to be profitable. (ANI) General Officer Commanding-in-Chief of Eastern Command Lt Gen RP Kalita on Wednesday interacted with Assam chief minister Himanta Biswa Sarma at Chief Minister Office (CMO) and discussed the security situation in the state and Civil-military bonhomie. "IndianArmy #LtGenRPKalita #ArmyCdrEC interacted with Himanta Biswa Sarma, Hon'ble Chief Minister of Assam at Chief Minister Office and discussed security situation in the state and Civil-military bonhomie. @adgpi @SpokespersonMoD @ProAssam@CMOfficeAssam," Eastern Command, Indian Army tweeted from its official account. (ANI) A supplementary charge sheet has been filed before Additional Sessions Judge Amitabh Rawat on Wednesday. Police told the court the copies will be supplied by Thursday morning. The Court took cognizance of the charge sheet. Special public prosecutor (SPP) Amit Prasad submitted that this chargesheet has details of photos of the accused who attended the meeting of 22 and 23 January 2020 at Chandbagh . He claimed that the conspiracy was hatched there at Aiyaz's Basement. It also contains the full report of the acid attack on the police personnel. It is found that the acid used was as hidrochloric acid, he said. Police said that the chargesheet also has the voice sample of Asif Iqbal Tanha's mobile conversation. It also has the supporting statements of witnesses recorded by the Police and before the magistrate. This case pertains to riots that happened in the North East of Delhi in February 2020. In this riot, as many as 53 people died and hundreds had got injured, the police reported. (ANI) He was speaking at the press meet in the wake of the ongoing party state conference at Kochi. CPIM state secretary said, "In the CPIM State Conference, Kerala Chief Minister Pinarayi Vijayan yesterday presented a policy document on the party's vision for a 'New Kerala'. A detailed discussion on the matter will be held at the conference tomorrow. Amendments to it will be taken into account." He also said that the presented document suggest development in technology, a leap in the field of knowledge, improvement in the higher education sector, science and technology to be made available to the entire population, governance should be made people-friendly and the improvement in the content of public education. "The document states that loans can be accepted without compromising the interest of the state. The conference will also discuss the need for changes in the attitudes adopted by trade unions in various fields," Balakrishnan added. (ANI) The meeting was attended by Union Ministers S Jaishankar, Piyush Goyal, National Security Advisor Ajit Doval, Foreign Secretary Harsh Vardhan Shringla and other officials. For the past few days, the Prime Minister has been chairing crucial meetings on the issue. On Monday the Prime Minister chaired two meetings to review the ongoing efforts under Operation Ganga for the return of Indians from Ukraine amid military operations by Russia. Another meeting was held on Sunday. The Cabinet Committee on Security had met on February 24 in the wake of Russian military actions in Ukraine. The Centre has ramped up efforts to evacuate Indian citizens stranded in Ukraine amid heightened tensions. The government has also deployed 'special envoys' to four countries bordering Ukraine to coordinate and oversee the evacuation process of Indian nationals. (ANI) Enumerating the benefits of the new National Education Policy, Union Minister Dharmendra Pradhan on Wednesday called on the people to form a decisive government in Uttar Pradesh to boost this policy. Addressing a teachers' conference organized by Nihal Singh Degree College, Pradhan said, "After years of knowledge acquisition, Prime Minister Modi ji brought a change in education policy. The Education Policy came during the tenure of Rajiv Gandhi ji. Then, in 2020, PM Modi revised the education policy." "I have come to Uttar Pradesh after a long time period. Over 25 crore students reside in Uttar Pradesh. Elections are crucial for Uttar Pradesh at the moment. I call for forming a decisive government in Uttar Pradesh again," he said. The Union Minister highlighted that knowledge, talent, skill and research of the youth of the country not only helped India but also the world during the COVID-19 pandemic. He said, "The knowledge, talent, skill and research of the youth of the country not only helped India but also the world during the COVID-19 period. The credit for empowering youth with the right education and knowledge goes to teachers. All of you academicians are the main facilitators of making India a knowledge-based economy." The BJP leader said many reforms are taking place under the National Education Policy. "Teachers are the capital of India. The people of UP know the truth about the hollow promises of these family-oriented leaders like free electricity, pension. Today many positive reforms are taking place under the National Education Policy during the government of PM Modi. For the first time more than Rs 1 lakh crore is being spent on education in the budget," he said. The Union Minister said that the state has reposed faith in BJP in 2014, 2017 and 2019. "The Yogi ji-Modi ji combination has made sincere efforts to keep that trust intact. I have full faith that on March 7, the people of Kashi will strengthen the hands of Modi ji and Yogi ji by pressing the lotus button," he said. Varanasi will go to polls in phase-7 of state elections to be held on March 7. The 2022 Assembly elections to elect 403 members of the Uttar Pradesh Legislative Assembly are being held in seven phases. The votes will be counted and the results will be declared on March 10, 2022. (ANI) Union Home Minister Amit Shah on Wednesday, pointing out the "difference" between the previous governments in Uttar Pradesh and the current BJP rule in the state, said that the illegal weapons were used to scare the people earlier, however, currently, missiles are being made to protect the country. "Earlier, illegal weapons were made in Uttar Pradesh, which was used to scare or kill people. Today, shells and missiles are being made here, which are used to protect India. This change has come during the BJP government," Shah said while addressing a rally here. Lauding the work done by Chief Minister Yogi Adityanath in coordination with the Centre in his five-year tenure, the Union Home Minister said that the BJP government has groomed the future of the people of the state. "The BJP's double engine government has done the work of grooming the future of the poor people of the state by laying a network of expressways, medical colleges and metro all around," he said. Meanwhile, Uttar Pradesh will go to the sixth phase of the polling tomorrow in the ongoing state Assembly elections, determining the fate of 676 candidates, including Chief Minister Yogi Adityanath in 57 Assembly seats spread across 10 districts of the state. Of the total 57 seats, the BJP had swept the last elections in 2017, winning 46 constituencies, while Apna Dal had won one seat. The Samajwadi Party (SP) had won only two seats, while Bahujan Samaj Party (BSP) had won five seats. Congress and Suheldev Bharatiya Samaj Party (SBSP) had won one seat each respectively. The 10 districts going to the polls in the sixth phase are Gorakhpur, Ambedkarnagar, Ballia, Balrampur, Basti, Deoria, Kushinagar, Maharajganj, Sant Kabir Nagar and Siddharthnagar. The 2022 Assembly elections to elect 403 members of the Uttar Pradesh Legislative Assembly are being held in seven phases. The votes will be counted and the results will be declared on March 10, 2022. (ANI) In a scathing attack on the Punjab government, Congress Lok Sabha MP Manish Tewari accused it of not voicing up for people affected by the Ukraine crisis. The Congress leader Tewari alleged that Congress leaders Charanjit Singh Channi, Navjot Singh Sidhu, Sunil Jakhar and Harish Chaudhary "are nowhere to be seen or heard". "I am appalled great leaders of @INCPunjab. Congress are nowhere to be seen/heard when thousands of our children our in jeopardy. Is it only Punjab MP's who have to do heavy lifting. Where is @CHARANJITCHANNI, @sherryontopp, @sunilkjakhar, @Barmer_Harish. Is power be and end all?," tweeted Tewari. Meanwhile, a delegation of six Members of Parliament from Punjab on Wednesday met Minister of State for External Affairs Meenakshi Lekhi and urged her to evacuate Indian students from Ukraine at the earliest. They laid special emphasis on students held in Kharkiv which is on the Russian border but almost 1600 kms from Poland and Romania border and that city is the epicentre of conflict between Ukrainian and Russian forces. The ministers also requested Lekhi that after the death of one student, the anxiety of people has increased. Jasbir Singh Gill, Manish Tiwari, Gurjit Aujla, Ravneet Bittu, Chowdhary Santokh Singh, Dr Amar Singh were part of the delegation. Amidst the ongoing political hussle in the country, Prime Minister Narendra Modi on Wednesday chaired a high-level meeting on the issue. The meeting was attended by Union Ministers S Jaishankar, Piyush Goyal, National Security Advisor Ajit Doval, Foreign Secretary Harsh Vardhan Shringla and other officials. For the past few days, the Prime Minister has been chairing crucial meetings on the issue. On Monday the Prime Minister chaired two meetings to review the ongoing efforts under Operation Ganga for the return of Indians from Ukraine amid military operations by Russia. Another meeting was held on Sunday. The Cabinet Committee on Security had met on February 24 in the wake of Russian military actions in Ukraine. The Centre has ramped up efforts to evacuate Indian citizens stranded in Ukraine amid heightened tensions. The government has also deployed 'special envoys' to four countries bordering Ukraine to coordinate and oversee the evacuation process of Indian nationals. (ANI) The Fisheries Department of the Jammu and Kashmir government is offering up to 100 per cent support to encourage young educated girls of Anantnag district of South Kashmir to set up trout fish farms under Pradhan Mantri Matsya Sampada Yojana (PMMSY). A flagship scheme focused on the development of the fisheries sector in the country. The department of fisheries in the Anantnag and Kulgam districts has established around 210 trout fish farms and with about 20 per cent run by girls. The unemployed educated girls of Anantnag district are taking benefit from this scheme and are presently earning a good amount of money. The farming of the commercial trout can be done with a piece of land close to a water body. Interested people in the district are coming forward and establishing their units with the help of this scheme. Under this scheme 60 per cent of the money is being provided by the central government and 40 per cent by the Union Territory (UT) administration. Everything including the seed, feed, and construction-related work is made available to them. These youth who have been benefited from these schemes hailed the steps taken by the central government and fisheries department of Jammu Kashmir. The Department of Fisheries has started providing all facilities including motors, nets, and feed to the farmers. Speaking to ANI, Mohd Sadiq, Assistant Director Fisheries department for Anantnag and Kulgam district said under the PMMSY scheme, the Fisheries department established 210 tout farms, in which women occupied 25 per cent. "Farmers have a success story. there are farmers who are earning more than 20 lakh to 30 lakh annually," Sadiq said. Shaista Shakeel, the beneficiary of the scheme said it was difficult to get jobs as unemployment was increasing but the fisheries department helped and provided me with a subsidiary. "The business running well and I am happy," she said. "I want to give a message to all those educated unemployed girls sitting at home and seeking jobs, they can apply for this and can start their own business," she added. Another beneficiary who sought help from the fisheries department said now she is happy as she is working. "I was looking for a job earlier but there were disappointments only so I sought help from the fisheries department and they helped me. I recieved a subsidiary from the department and started this work. Now my family is also happy with this." she added. (ANI) He was speaking at the meeting that was held at Janata Bhawan (Assam Secretariat) in Guwahati. According to the press release from the Assam Chief minister's Office, the Assam CM held the meeting with the officials of the state Public Works Department (Building) and asked them to speed up the construction of medical colleges, universities, model degree colleges, engineering colleges and many more in the state. Himanta also held another meeting with PWD (Roads) officials for expeditious execution of roads under Pradhan Mantri Gram Sadak Yojana (PMGSY), Asom Mala, State-Owned Priority Development (SOPD), and many more, besides railway over bridges and flyovers. The statement also states that Himanta directed the officials to submit specific fund requirements immediately for incorporation in the upcoming state budget 2022-23. He also took note of the hurdles in project execution and initiated steps to resolve them. (ANI) Parents who bought recalled infant formulas made by Abbott Laboratories are filing proposed class-action lawsuits against Abbott, as the U.S. Food and Drug Administration investigates reports of three babies who became sick and two who died after consuming the formulas. At least half a dozen of those lawsuits have been filed in the U.S. District Court for the Northern District of Illinois, with filings on Feb. 25 and March 1. Many of the lawsuits allege that north suburban-based Abbott failed to warn consumers about the risks of feeding the formula to their babies before they purchased it and that Abbott didnt promptly replace the recalled formulas. Advertisement The FDA announced Feb. 17 it was investigating complaints of Cronobacter sakazakii and Salmonella Newport infections among four babies who reportedly consumed powdered infant formula made at an Abbott facility in Sturgis, Michigan. All four babies were hospitalized, and Cronobacter may have contributed to one babys death, according to the FDA. The FDA said it found several instances of Cronobacter sakazakii in environmental samples, and a review of the firms internal records also indicated environmental contamination with Cronobacter sakazakii and the firms destruction of product due to the presence of Cronobacter. Advertisement Abbott announced the same day it was voluntarily recalling Similac, Alimentum and EleCare powder formulas made at that Sturgis facility. On Feb. 28, Abbott expanded its recall to include one lot of Similac PM 60/40 made in the facility after the death of a baby who consumed the formula and tested positive for Cronobacter sakazakii. That case, like the others, is still under investigation. Cronobacter bacteria can cause life-threatening infections or meningitis, with symptoms potentially including poor feeding, irritability, temperature changes, jaundice, grunting breaths and abnormal movements, according to the FDA. It can also cause bowel damage and can spread to other parts of the body. Salmonella bacteria can cause diarrhea, fever and abdominal cramps, with severe cases potentially leading to lethargy, rash, blood in the urine or stool and, in some cases, death. Abbott spokesman Scott Stoffel said in a statement: We are very sympathetic to families in these situations. We value the trust parents and caregivers place in us, and ensuring the safety and quality of our products is our top priority. He said all of Abbotts infant formulas are tested for Cronobacter sakazakii, Salmonella and other pathogens and must test negative before any product is released. He said no distributed product from the companys Sturgis facility has tested positive for Cronobacter sakazakii or salmonella. One of the Illinois lawsuits was filed by a South Carolina mother who said her baby had diarrhea for two weeks after drinking Alimentum formula. The other five Illinois lawsuits were filed by consumers in Maryland, Arkansas, Texas, Florida, Louisiana, Delaware, Pennsylvania and Indiana who bought the formulas and then were unable to use them because of the recall. Those plaintiffs said they wouldnt have bought the formulas if theyd known about the risks, and they are seeking damages. Despite the recall, Abbott is not crediting or replacing affected recalled products, which many parents and caretakers rely on daily to feed and care for their children, several of the lawsuits allege. Since Abbott is now telling consumers it is not safe for their infants to consume these products, but many consumers rely on them to feed their children, Abbott leaves many consumers with no safe option but to pay full price for a newer version. Advertisement A Florida father also filed a lawsuit seeking class-action status Feb. 18 in the U.S. District Court for the Southern District of Florida. That father said he purchased Alimentum for his daughter in late January, and she developed diarrhea, abdominal pain, diaper rash with blisters and blood, dehydration and sleeplessness. The FDA is advising consumers not to use Similac, Alimentum or EleCare powder infant formulas if the first two digits of the lot code on the container are 22 through 37; and the code on the container contains K8, SH or Z2; and the expiration date is April 1 or later. Also part of the recall is Similac PM 60/40 with lot code 27032K80 for a can, or 27032K800 for a case. Consumers can also go to Abbotts website to check if they have formula that is part of the recall. Parents whove used the products and are concerned about their childrens health should contact their doctors, according to the FDA. lschencker@chicagotribune.com Ahead of the last two phases of the seven-phase Uttar Pradesh Assembly elections, Congress general secretary Priyanka Gandhi Vadra will emphasise the party's reach out to the Dalits backward classes and weaker sections of the party through her visit to Kabir Chaura Math in Varanasi. She is expected to stay at the math for the next three days, sources said. Varanasi is slated to go to the polls in the seventh phase of the Uttar Pradesh elections. Associated with Sant Kabir, a great saint of the 15th century, the place was visited by Mahatma Gandhi in 1934. India's first Prime Minister Jawaharlal Nehru and Nobel Laureate Rabindranath Tagore had also come to the place. Congress sources said Priyanka Gandhi's visit to Kabir Chaura Math is being seen as a "big political message" by the party in the Uttar Pradesh elections. The Dalits and most backward classes in Uttar Pradesh are attached to the message of social justice given by Sant Kabir and have a sizeable presence in the areas going to the polls in the seventh phase. Sant Kabir's words also have immense cultural significance and the places near the Kabir Chaura Math have homes of artists who have won laurels in their respective fields. Congress sources said Priyanka Gandhi Vadra has continuously raised her voice for the rights of Dalit and backward classes and the party's manifesto has announcements for these sections. "Her stay will send a good message for the party in Varanasi," a party worker said. (ANI) The Narcotics Control Bureau (NCB) on Wednesday dismissed as 'speculation' some reports suggesting that the agency has cleared Aryan Khan, son of Bollywood megastar Shah Rukh Khan, who was nabbed in a drugs case in October, though few found it credible. Soon after certain reports surfaced, NCB Deputy Director-General Sanjay Singh and the Special Investigation Team (SIT) issued a statement claiming that "the media reports are not true and they are just speculalions", since "the investigation is not yet complete". Singh added that "these reports were not cross-checked with the NCB, and it would be premature to say anything at this stage". However, few in Maharashtra believed the agency's contentions, as state political leaders whacked the NCB, reiterating how "central probe agencies" are being "grossly misused" by the BJP against the Maha Vikas Aghadi (MVA) government. The ruling MVA allies -- Shiv Sena-Nationalist Congress Party-Congress -- said now it is clear that though there was no evidence against Aryan Khan, he was deliberately "framed" by the former NCB Mumbai Zonal Director Sameer Wankhede. The media reports claimed that the NCB-SIT ostensibly found no evidence to link Aryan Khan with the larger drugs conspiracy or an international drugs syndicate, besides pointing at the glaring lapses in the high-profile raids on the luxury ship Cordelia Cruise on October 2, 2021 in full media glare. Shiv Sena MP and chief spokesperson Sanjay Raut said this was "another case of abuse of the central agencies", and demanded to know who was behind it. "Those who are misusing the central probe agencies will go to jail. The NCB-SIT report has come and its proved that Aryan Khan was framed because he's Shah Rukh Khan's son. The truth has finally emerged, hasn't it," Raut asked. Referring to the case, NCP state President and minister Jayant Patil pointed out that a senior MVA minister, Nawab Malik, has been targeted with false charges because he had exposed the NCB last year. Congress state General Secretary Sachin Sawan said that the SIT has revealed how Aryan Khan didn't have drugs with him and has exposed the mistakes committed by Wankhede's team during the (ship) raids. Sawant said it's clear now that the allegations of an extortion racket were true, and demanded why no action has been taken against NCB officials for visible violation of the NCB's rulebook. "Since October last year, I have been saying the NCB's claims that the action was taken as per the procedures when these were seriously violated while nabbing the so-called accused in the ship raid. Now it seems the NCB wants to shove the matter under the carpet," Sawant said. Sena farmer-face and MoS Kishore Tiwari said he smelt "something fishy" in the entire episode from the beginning and had demanded in October last year that the Supreme Court should appoint a sitting judge to probe the fundamental rights violation of Aryan Khan by the NCB. "The BJP is on a vendetta spree with the help of central probe agencies. Nawab Malik's exposure has proved to be correct... Even if the NCB denies its SIT report, who will believe it now," asked Tiwari. NCP spokesperson Mahesh Tapase said the NCB-SIT report has confirmed Nawab Malik's campaign for the past five months that the "whole Cordelia Cruise ship raid was a big 'farjiwada' (hoax)" with the direct involvement of BJP activists working in tandem with Wankhede. "The SIT report has also exposed the NCB's style of functioning, the gross mistakes during the raids, why they were not videographed and help of BJP persons taken to trap innocent youngsters," Tapase said. Sena MP Priyanka Chaturvedi said Maharashtra had exposed how CBI was misused by the Centre during the Sushant Singh Rajput case whose final closure report is still awaited. "Now, NCB is forced to admit wrongdoing on the part of its officials in the drugs case. Next will be exposing ED officials misusing their authority to please the Centre," said Chaturvedi, dropping broad hints. Pune-based RTI activist Prafful Sarda said that akin to the Sushant Singh Rajput case probe delayed by the CBI, "the NCB is also dragging the Aryan Khan matter to please the BJP and help it politically". "After the report has been leaked, the NCB must be under pressure from its BJP 'masters'. I am filing an RTI plea seeking the SIT report in public interest and not for the vested interests of some politicians or officials," Sarda said. It may be recalled that former Attorney-General of India, Mukul Rohatgi, had labelled the NCB as "an Ostrich with its head buried in the sand" while the rich kid Aryan Khan was "paying the price for being a celeb". The sensational raids on Cordelia Cruise led to a total of 20 persons being arrested, including many from the glamour world like Aryan Khan. Later all were released on bail. (Quaid Najmi can be contacted at: q.najmi@ians.in) --IANS qn/arm ( 830 Words) 2022-03-02-19:26:05 (IANS) Leader of the Opposition in the Bihar assembly Tejashwi Yadav has claimed that Chief Minister Nitish Kumar is running an opportunistic government and it has been proven through the mud slinging at the leaders of all the four alliance partners. Nitish Kumar is not running a Sarkar (Government) but a circus in Bihar, he added. "JD-U national president Rajiv Ranjan Singh alias Lalan Singh said that the alliance between his party JD-U and the BJP is based on circumstances. A former minister from the BJP quota had levelled corruption charges at current land reforms minister Ram Surat Rai who is also from the BJP. Several ministers openly say that officials are not listening to them. The Speaker (Vijay Kumar Sinha) of the Bihar Vidhan Sabha claimed that the SHO of a police station in his home district was not listening to him. Jitan Ram Manjhi is challenging the liquor ban decision of Nitish Kumar and has levelled allegations against senior officials for drinking liquor after 10 p.m. every day. A BJP leader, Hari Bhushan Thakur, is threatening Muslims and the chief minister is silently watching them. He is not running a Sarkar but a circus," Tejashwi said. He also gave the example of Mullah Nasiruddin (a character from folklore) in the Bihar Vidhan Sabha during the discussion on the Governor's speech. "Mullah Nasiruddin purchased one kg of meat and asked his begum (wife) to cook it. While the cooking process was underway, Mullah Nasiruddin went to the market to eat paan. Until then, delicious meat was cooked. As he had not returned home, his wife tasted the gravy of the meat. As it was delicious, she ate the one kg meat. When Mullah Nasiruddin returned home and asked his wife to serve the meat, she served an empty plate. When Mullah Nasiruddin asked where the meat was, she blamed a cat for eating the entire meat. Mullah Nasiruddin caught the cat and put it on the weighing scale. The cat was exactly 1 kg. Then Mullah Nasiruddin asked his wife, "If it is meat then where is the cat and if it is a cat then where is the meat. The speech of the Governor is similar to the story of Mullah Nasiruddin. If he (Governor) claimed that the state is running on the development path then why is unemployment so high in Bihar and youth are migrating to other states in the search of jobs? Why did Niti Aayog declare that Bihar is at the bottom on every front? If crime is under control, why is the NCRB saying that crime is high in the state? Why is the constitution under threat? Why are farmers not satisfied with this government?" Tejashwi asked. Following the allegations of Tejashwi Yadav, chief minister Nitish Kumar said that the crime graph in Bihar has come down significantly. "As far as cognizable crimes are concerned, Bihar is in the 25th position. Comparing to 2020, the 11.14% murders, 33.16% riots, 11.90% kidnapping for ransom and 4.4% dowry murder, reduced in Bihar in 2021," Kumar said. "We are increasing numbers in the police force to maintain law and order. At present, there are 115 police personnel for every one lakh people. We are increasing this by a large number of recruitments. There are 25000 women cops in Bihar which is the highest in the country," Kumar said. "We are working hard in all sectors. During the pandemic, we have carried out a huge vaccination programme across the state and given booster doses as well. We have given Rs 4 lakh compensation to the family members of 11 lakh deceased who lost their lives due to corona in the state," Kumar said. --IANS ajk/bg ( 629 Words) 2022-03-02-20:16:04 (IANS) In a big development, NASA has successfully launched the third in a series of next-generation weather satellites for the National Oceanic and Atmospheric Administration (NOAA). The newest Geostationary Operational Environmental Satellite, GOES-T, was launched on a United Launch Alliance Atlas V rocket from Cape Canaveral Space Force Station. It has been confirmed that the spacecraft's solar arrays were successfully deployed and the spacecraft was operating on its own power. "We at NASA are proud to support our joint agency partner, NOAA, and their mission to provide critical data and imagery to forecasters and researchers tracking hazardous weather," said NASA Deputy Administrator Pam Melroy. "While the GOES-R series satellites' main job is to help with weather prediction, these satellites produce observations that also help with NASA science. Our agencies' collaboration brings great benefits toward understanding our planet," she added. The satellite will be providing continuous coverage of weather and hazardous environmental conditions in the Western Hemisphere. For the unversed, the GOES program predicts space weather near earth that can interfere with satellite electronics, GPS, and radio communications. "We at NASA feel honored to continue to work with NOAA on this strategic and successful partnership. Besides our work on spacecraft development and launch, NASA supported science teams are looking forward to analyzing the precious data that GOES-T will provide," said Thomas Zurbuchen, the associate administrator for the Science Mission Directorate at NASA Headquarters in Washington. Once GOES-T is positioned in a geostationary orbit 22,300 miles above earth, it will be renamed GOES-18. Following a successful orbital checkout of its instruments and systems, GOES-18 will go into service over the U.S. West Coast and Pacific Ocean. This position puts it in a key spot where it can observe weather sweeping in from the west to the east over the U.S. - giving forecasters an upstream view of what is coming. "This launch continues a 48-year history of NOAA, NASA, industry, and academia working together on geostationary satellite observations," said John Gagosian, director of NASA's Joint Agency Satellite Division. "GOES satellites help us every day. They bring advanced new capabilities to help forecasters better monitor and predict dangerous environmental conditions like hurricanes, thunderstorms, floods, and fires," Gagosian added. NASA's Goddard Space Flight Center in Greenbelt, Maryland, oversees the acquisition of the GOES-R spacecraft and instruments and built the Magnetometer instrument for GOES-T, as well as for the future GOES-U satellite. NASA's Launch Services Program, based at the agency's Kennedy Space Center in Florida, provided launch management for the mission. NOAA oversees the GOES-R Series Program through an integrated NOAA-NASA office, managing the ground system, operating the satellites, and distributing their data to users worldwide. Lockheed Martin designs, builds, and tests the GOES-R series satellites. L3Harris Technologies provides the main instrument payload, the Advanced Baseline Imager, along with the ground system, which includes the antenna system for data reception. (ANI) 'Wearing a mask is mandatory' is one announcement that has become ingrained in everyone's mind, ever since the beginning of the COVID-19 pandemic. Masks have been widely considered an important first-line defense against airborne transmission of the disease, as is supported by a preponderance of the evidence. But is every mask effective against the airborne virus? A recent study opened up about this. The study was published in 'Physics of Fluids' by AIP Publishing. Like many other viruses, COVID-19 too is transmitted primarily via particles carried in the air. An infected person breathes out particles containing the virus into the air, which can then be inhaled by another person, who then becomes infected. Fuelled by the omicron variant, the latest wave of the pandemic prompted public health officials to recommend more protective face coverings because not all masks are created equal. In the study, researchers from England, Germany, and France focussed their expertise -- and their microscopes -- on examining the efficacy of particle filtration by woven fabric, which, unlike material used in standard air filters and masks, consists of fibers twisted together into yarns. There are, therefore, two length scales: the diameters of the fiber and the yarn. Using 3D imagery produced by confocal microscopy to see the airflow channels, the scientists simulated the airflow through these channels and calculated filtration efficiency for particles a micrometer and larger in diameter. The study concluded that, for particles in this size range, the filtration efficiency is low. "Masks are air filters, and woven fabrics, such as cotton, make for good jeans, shirts, and other apparel, but they are lousy air filters," said co-author Richard Sear, from the University of Surrey. "So, use woven fabric for clothing, and N95s or FFP2s or KF94s for masks." Indeed, the flow simulations suggested that when a person breathed through cloth, most of the air flows through the gaps between the yarns in the woven fabric, bringing with it more than 90 per cent of the particles. "In other words, these relatively large gaps are responsible for cloth being a bad material to make air filters from," said Sear. "In contrast, the filtering layer of an N95 mask is made from much smaller, 5-micrometer fibers with gaps that are 10 times smaller, making it much better for filtering nasty particles from the air, such as those containing virus." While earlier research revealed similar findings, this study represented the first one to simulate particles going directly through the gaps in woven fabric. Sear added that good masks should feature the "two Fs: good filtration and good fit." "Surgical masks fit badly, so a lot of air goes unfiltered past the edges of the mask by the cheeks and nose," said Sear. (ANI) The Ukrainian leader "could order troops to lay down arms, and there would be no casualties", he suggested, RT reported. Asked about the post-invasion status of Ukraine and what Russia would expect from its future elections, Peskov said the issue had nothing to do with the Russian government. "The Kremlin cannot play a role in holding elections in Ukraine. It's a foreign country," he said. Peskov lamented Western attempts to put pressure on Russia over its attack on Ukraine, claiming that the US had induced on its European allies Washington's long-held taste for illegal restrictions. The practice "spread through Europe like an infection", he remarked, RT reported. Moscow will not submit to pressure, he said, adding that Russia perceived the retaliatory policies to be temporary. "With time, leaders will arise in the EU, who will have a broad vision and realise that they need to be developing together with our nation. We will be working with that potential in mind," he said. --IANS san/arm ( 200 Words) 2022-03-01-21:38:04 (IANS) Even before the Kiev TV tower was hit by a missile, the Security Service of Ukraine had said that if communications and the ability to check whether information is reliable are lost, there can be no capitulation or surrender of Ukraine's interests. "Initially, they plan to disconnect communications. After that, there will be a lot of fake reports that the Ukrainian military and political leadership seems to have agreed to surrender. "So-called confirmation of this fake news will be distributed by allegedly signed documents, as well as filmed fake videos," the Defence Minister of Ukraine, Alexei Reznikov, had warned, Ukrainska Pravda reported. Reznikov warned that the enemy is preparing disinformation about the alleged capitulation of the country's military and political leadership. Reznikov denied this was the case. "According to our information, the Russian occupiers are preparing to launch a large-scale informative and psychological operation in the near future. Its goal is to break the resistance of the Ukrainian people and the Ukrainian army using lies," Reznikov said, the report said. The minister posted a photo of himself from the city centre, urging people not to believe in fake news and to warn everyone they can. The country's leadership remains in the capital and is continuing to work. Explosions erupted around Kiev's 1,300-ft TV tower on Tuesday afternoon (local time), just hours after Russia told civilians to evacuate because it was about to begin bombarding 'strategic' targets in the Ukrainian capital, Daily Mail reported. At least two large blasts were seen near the foot of the tower, around three miles from central Kiev, at around 5.30 pm local time. It was not immediately clear whether the tower had been the target of the strikes, or whether they had been targeting nearby buildings. The tower remained standing, but several state broadcasts went off air, the report said. That raised fears that Kiev was about to come under heavy bombardment after the cities of Kharkiv, Mariupol and Kherson were hit by indiscriminate shelling earlier in the day, Daily Mail reported. --IANS san/arm ( 355 Words) 2022-03-01-23:20:03 (IANS) The Embassy of India in Warsaw, Poland, on Tuesday (local time) issued an urgent advisory to Indian nationals in Ukraine saying Indians in Lviv and Ternopil in the western side of the country may travel to Budomierz border for quicker entry into Poland. "Indians presently in Lviv and Ternopil and other places in western Ukraine may travel at the earliest to Budomierz border check-point for a relatively quick entry into Poland," the Embassy of India in Poland said in a statement. Alternatively, they are advised to travel south to transit via Hungary or Romania, the embassy added. The embassy stated that Indian citizens may avoid the Shehyni-Medyka border crossing which continues to be congested. The Embassy of India in Poland said that it has officials deployed in Medyka and Budomierz border check-points who receive all evacuees and facilitate their travel to India. "Those who enter Poland from any other border crossing where Indian officials are not deployed may kindly travel directly to Hotel Prezydencki, ul. Podwislocze 48 in Rzeszow where all arrangements have been made for their stay and from where Operation Ganga flights to India are being operated regularly," the embassy said. It further said that the transportation charges will be paid at the hotel by the Embassy, in case the Indian student does not have the funds for this. After Russia's forces launched military operations in Ukraine on February 24, the Government of India has launched "Operation Ganga" to bring back stranded students and Indian citizens from the conflict-torn Ukraine. 24x7 Control Centres have been set up to assist in the evacuation of Indian nationals through the border crossing points with Poland, Romania, Hungary and Slovakia. A dedicated Twitter Account (@opganga) has been set up to assist Operation Ganga. (ANI) After reaching Bucharest as a Government of India-appointed special envoy to oversee the evacuation efforts of Indian nationals stranded in Ukraine, Civil Aviation Minister Jyotiraditya Scindia on Wednesday met and interacted with Indian students awaiting their flights at the Bucharest Airport and assured them of their quick departure from the Romanian capital. "Met & interacted with Indian students awaiting their flights at the Bucharest Airport. Overwhelmed by their grit & concerned by their anxiety amid the tough times. However, assured them of their quick departure from Bucharest. PM Narendra Modi ji & all of India have got their back!" tweeted Scindia, who will oversee the evacuation efforts of Indian nationals in Romania and Moldova. After Russia's forces launched military operations in Ukraine on February 24, the Government of India launched 'Operation Ganga' to bring back stranded Indian nationals from the conflict-torn Ukraine. As part of the 'Operation Ganga' mission, special flights are being operated free of cost. The first such evacuation flight carrying 219 Indian nationals stranded in Ukraine landed in Mumbai on February 26. Several such flights have landed in India so far. Indian Air Force (IAF) has also joined the government's evacuation efforts as its C-17 transport aircraft left for Romania in the early hours of Wednesday morning from the Hindan airbase near New Delhi. 24x7 control centres have been set up to assist in the evacuation of Indian nationals through the border crossing points with Poland, Romania, Hungary and Slovakia. A new route has been opened through Moldova and an MEA team is also now in place there and is operational. The team will assist in the evacuation of Indians through Romania. A dedicated Twitter Account (@opganga) has been set up to assist Operation Ganga. The Indian Embassy in Kyiv has advised Indian citizens against moving to any of the border checkpoints without prior coordination with government officials at border posts. In a bid to energize the evacuation efforts, the Government of India appointed four special envoys who will oversee evacuation operations of stranded Indians in Ukraine's neighbouring countries. Union Minister for Petroleum and Natural Gas Hardeep Singh Puri will oversee evacuation efforts in Hungary, Union Law Minister Kiren Rijiju in Slovakia, Gen (retd) VK Singh in Poland while Civil Aviation Minister Jyotiraditya Scindia will be going to Romania and will also go to Moldova. Prime Minister Narendra Modi has held several meetings so far to review the ongoing efforts under Operation Ganga to bring back Indians stranded in Ukraine. He has also said that India will help people from neighbouring countries and developing countries who are stranded in Ukraine and may seek assistance. Meanwhile, Foreign Secretary Harsh Vardhan Shringla informed on Tuesday that all Indian nationals have left Kyiv and nearly 60 per cent of Indians in Ukraine have left the country so far. He said out of an estimated 20,000 Indian citizens in Ukraine, 60 per cent have left the country since the first advisory was issued by the government. "Of the remaining 40 per cent, roughly half remain in the conflict zone in Kharkiv and the other half have either reached the western border of Ukraine or are heading towards the western border. They are generally out of conflict areas," Shringla said. Briefing the media about the evacuation of Indians including students from Ukraine in the wake of Russian military operations, Shringla informed that over the next three days, 26 flights have been scheduled to bring out Indian citizens. "Apart from Bucharest and Budapest, airports in Poland and the Slovak Republic will also be used," he said. An Indian student, Naveen Shekharappa died in Ukraine's Kharkiv following shelling in the area on Tuesday. He hailed from the Haveri district in Karnataka. Russian forces launched military operations in Ukraine on February 24, three days after Moscow recognized Ukraine's breakaway regions - Donetsk and Luhansk - as independent entities. Several countries including the UK, the US, Canada, and the European Union have condemned Russia's military operations in Ukraine and imposed sanctions on Moscow. These countries have also promised Ukraine to help with military aid to fight Russia. The US, Canada and European allies agreed to remove key Russian banks from the interbank messaging system, SWIFT which means Russian banks won't be able to communicate securely with banks beyond Russia's borders. President Putin has also signed a decree on special economic measures against the US and its allies. Fighting in Ukraine has so far pushed more than 500,000 people across the country's borders, according to the UN refugee agency. Speaking at an emergency session of the UN General Assembly on February 28, Russia's Permanent Representative to the United Nations, Vasily Nebenzya, had said that Russia has no plans to occupy Ukraine. On February 28, negotiations between delegations of Russia and Ukraine were held in the Gomel Region of Belarus and another round of talks is scheduled for March 2. (ANI) "We will keep the sanctions in place right up until Russia recognizes and admits they made a huge mistake and withdraws its soldiers from Ukrainian soil," Trudeau told the House of Commons during the day's Question Period session. Canada has imposed multiple rounds of sanctions against Russia following President Vladimir Putin's approval of a military operation in Ukraine, including a ban on all engagements with the Russian central bank, a freeze on Russian sovereign fund assets and personal sanctions against top Russian officials. Last Thursday, Russia launched a military operation in Ukraine, responding to calls for help from the Donetsk and Luhansk people's republics in countering the aggression of Ukrainian forces. The Russian Defense Ministry said the operation is targeting Ukrainian military infrastructure only, stressing that the civilian population is not in danger. (ANI/Sputnik) A day after Gov. J.B. Pritzker lifted the mask mandate at Illinois schools, a downstate attorney asked an Illinois judge to halt the COVID-19 masking requirement at Chicago Public Schools one of only a handful of districts in the state still enforcing the practice. Tom DeVore, who recently launched a bid for the states Republican nomination for attorney general, filed a motion Tuesday with Sangamon County Circuit Judge Raylene Grischow requesting a temporary restraining order, arguing the children of Chicago parents who filed a lawsuit against the governor and the Illinois Department of Public Health are suffering continuing harm. Advertisement Each is being subjected to wearing a mask as a type of quarantine without being provided their rights of due process, DeVore said in the motion. Kenwood Academy High School students return to school, Jan. 12, 2022, after five days off for COVID-19 protocol discussions between Chicago Public Schools and the Chicago Teachers Union. (Antonio Perez / Chicago Tribune) While new federal COVID-19 guidance prompted Pritzker to halt the school mask mandate, CPS officials said universal masking still will be enforced as part of a COVID-19 safety agreement with the Chicago Teachers Union. Advertisement DeVores latest effort to halt the CPS mask mandate also arrives after the Illinois Supreme Court last week declined to hear the case, vacating a prior temporary restraining order and sending the lawsuit challenging the mandate back to Grischow. On Tuesday, DeVore said the high court vacated the prior order halting the mask mandate because it wasnt needed anymore, after a bipartisan panel of lawmakers last month refused to renew the IDPH guidance, and an appellate court rendered the issue moot. While some of the CPS students whose parents filed the lawsuit were allowed in their classrooms without a mask last month, DeVore said his clients alerted him yesterday that has changed, and CPS has now forced their children to wear masks. Students must wear masks at Kozminski Community Academy in Chicago's Hyde Park neighborhood, Feb. 7, 2022. (Jose M. Osorio / Chicago Tribune) CPS is still continuing to push the envelope on masks as long they can, said DeVore, who will take his case before Grischow at a March 10 hearing. CPS officials were not immediately available for comment Tuesday. The teachers union said the suit is being pushed by someone trying to leverage the safety and wellbeing of our school communities for his own political gain. The CTU statement cited longstanding inequities that have deepened during the pandemic and masks provide a critical layer of protection as our school communities struggle to get lifesaving vaccine shots in the arms of our students and families. But earlier this week, CPS CEO Pedro Martinez reminded families in a letter that universal masking is still required in all of its schools and offices for now. Advertisement CPS is working with our labor and public health partners on how to preserve a safe, healthy learning environment for all as we transition into this new phase of the pandemic, Martinez said. Officials with the Illinois Federation of Teachers, one of the states largest teachers unions, which includes the CTU, said in a Tuesday statement that educators are grateful for Governor Pritzkers leadership throughout the pandemic ensuring that science, not politics, has informed guidance. It has been a long two years, but there is finally light at the end of the COVID tunnel, IFT President Dan Montgomery said, adding no one should be pressured into unmasking. These last two years have taught us that we must protect each other and that we all have a duty to protect our most vulnerable populations. By far the largest school district in Illinois, CPS enrolls nearly 340,000 students at 626 schools, with roughly 80% of students from low-income families, according to the Illinois Report Card for the 2020-2021 school year. Chicago Tribunes Tracy Swartz contributed. kcullotta@chicagotribune.com Russia and China seek to expand their military influence both regionally and globally, with Moscow having invaded Ukraine and Beijing seeking to wrest control of Taiwan, US Department of Defence said in a statement on Tuesday (local time). "Officials discussed the United States', allies' and partners' efforts to counter those ambitions during a House Armed Services Committee today," the statement said. "The United States is at a pivotal moment with our allies and partners in meeting the challenges of today and tomorrow," Mara Karlin, assistant secretary of defense for strategy, plans and capabilities, said, referencing Russia and China. She said, "Security cooperation is an important tool that helps key allies and partners strengthen their defense and enhances our ability to rely on one another in a time of need." The forthcoming National Defense Strategy will emphasize how the department will strengthen these alliances and partnerships to advance national security through integrated deterrence, Karlin said. Karlin noted that in Asia, the US has been strengthening its partnerships with India, Australia, Japan and nations in Southeast Asia. "Our support for Taiwan is rock solid," she said, referencing the Taiwan Relations Act. The U.S. has provided USD 18 billion to them in security assistance and will continue to ensure they have the appropriate asymmetric defense capabilities, she added. Meanwhile, a delegation of former US defense and security officials will arrive in Taiwan on Tuesday for a two-day visit, which is likely to evoke a strong reaction from China. (ANI) Ottawa [Canada], March 2 (ANI/Sputnik): Canada and its allies are preparing additional sanctions against Russia over the ongoing special operation in Ukraine that will be announced in the coming days, Deputy Prime Minister and Finance Minister Chrystia Freeland said. "I want to assure all Canadians and I want to assure Russia that we are preparing additional measures and we will announce them in coming days," Freeland told a news conference on Tuesday. Last Thursday, Russia launched a military operation in Ukraine responding to calls for help from the Donetsk and Luhansk people's republics to defend against intensified attacks by Ukrainian troops. The Russian Defense Ministry said the operation was solely targeting Ukrainian military infrastructure and emphasized that the civilian population is not in danger. (ANI/Sputnik) Civil Aviation Minister Jyotiraditya Scindia, who is overseeing the evacuation efforts of Indian nationals stranded in Ukraine as a Government of India-appointed special envoy, on Wednesday (local time) met the Indian Ambassador to Romania and Moldova, Rahul Shrivastava to discuss the operational issues for evacuation and the flight plan from Bucharest and Suceava in the coming days. "Met the Indian Ambassador to Romania & Moldova, Sh Rahul Shrivastava Ji to discuss the operational issues for evacuation and the flight plan from Bucharest & Suceava in the coming days. #OperationGanga in full gear!" Scindia tweeted. The ministers informed that Moldova's borders have been opened for incoming Indian students and talks are underway to make arrangements for their journey to Bucharest for onward flight to India. "Moldova's borders have been opened for incoming Indian students. Proper shelter and food arrangements will be made. Talks are on to make arrangements for their journey to Bucharest for onward flight to India," he tweeted. Earlier in the day, Scindia, who will oversee the evacuation efforts of Indian nationals in Romania and Moldova, met and interacted with Indian students awaiting their flights at the Bucharest Airport and assured them of their quick departure from the Romanian capital. "Met & interacted with Indian students awaiting their flights at the Bucharest Airport. Overwhelmed by their grit & concerned by their anxiety amid the tough times. However, assured them of their quick departure from Bucharest. PM Narendra Modi ji & all of India have got their back!" he tweeted. After Russia's forces launched military operations in Ukraine on February 24, the Government of India launched 'Operation Ganga' to bring back stranded Indian nationals from the conflict-torn Ukraine. As part of the 'Operation Ganga' mission, special flights are being operated free of cost. The first such evacuation flight carrying 219 Indian nationals stranded in Ukraine landed in Mumbai on February 26. Several such flights have landed in India so far. Indian Air Force (IAF) has also joined the government's evacuation efforts as its C-17 transport aircraft left for Romania in the early hours of Wednesday morning from the Hindan airbase near New Delhi. 24x7 control centres have been set up to assist in the evacuation of Indian nationals through the border crossing points with Poland, Romania, Hungary and Slovakia. A new route has been opened through Moldova and an MEA team is also now in place there and is operational. The team will assist in the evacuation of Indians through Romania. A dedicated Twitter Account (@opganga) has been set up to assist Operation Ganga. The Indian Embassy in Kyiv has advised Indian citizens against moving to any of the border checkpoints without prior coordination with government officials at border posts. In a bid to energize the evacuation efforts, the Government of India appointed four special envoys who will oversee evacuation operations of stranded Indians in Ukraine's neighbouring countries. Union Minister for Petroleum and Natural Gas Hardeep Singh Puri will oversee evacuation efforts in Hungary, Union Law Minister Kiren Rijiju in Slovakia, Gen (retd) VK Singh in Poland while Civil Aviation Minister Jyotiraditya Scindia will be going to Romania and will also go to Moldova. Prime Minister Narendra Modi has held several meetings so far to review the ongoing efforts under Operation Ganga to bring back Indians stranded in Ukraine. He has also said that India will help people from neighbouring countries and developing countries who are stranded in Ukraine and may seek assistance. Meanwhile, Foreign Secretary Harsh Vardhan Shringla informed on Tuesday that all Indian nationals have left Kyiv and nearly 60 per cent of Indians in Ukraine have left the country so far. He said out of an estimated 20,000 Indian citizens in Ukraine, 60 per cent have left the country since the first advisory was issued by the government. "Of the remaining 40 per cent, roughly half remain in the conflict zone in Kharkiv and the other half have either reached the western border of Ukraine or are heading towards the western border. They are generally out of conflict areas," Shringla said. Briefing the media about the evacuation of Indians including students from Ukraine in the wake of Russian military operations, Shringla informed that over the next three days, 26 flights have been scheduled to bring out Indian citizens. "Apart from Bucharest and Budapest, airports in Poland and the Slovak Republic will also be used," he said. An Indian student, Naveen Shekharappa died in Ukraine's Kharkiv following shelling in the area on Tuesday. He hailed from the Haveri district in Karnataka. Russian forces launched military operations in Ukraine on February 24, three days after Moscow recognized Ukraine's breakaway regions - Donetsk and Luhansk - as independent entities. Several countries including the UK, the US, Canada, and the European Union have condemned Russia's military operations in Ukraine and imposed sanctions on Moscow. These countries have also promised Ukraine to help with military aid to fight Russia. The US, Canada and European allies agreed to remove key Russian banks from the interbank messaging system, SWIFT which means Russian banks won't be able to communicate securely with banks beyond Russia's borders. President Putin has also signed a decree on special economic measures against the US and its allies. Fighting in Ukraine has so far pushed more than 500,000 people across the country's borders, according to the UN refugee agency. Speaking at an emergency session of the UN General Assembly on February 28, Russia's Permanent Representative to the United Nations, Vasily Nebenzya, had said that Russia has no plans to occupy Ukraine. On February 28, negotiations between delegations of Russia and Ukraine were held in the Gomel Region of Belarus and another round of talks is scheduled for March 2. (ANI) Amid the ongoing Russia-Ukraine conflict, more than 2000 Pakistani nationals including 600 students are still stranded in Kyiv and other cities of Ukraine. Ironically for stranded Pakistani nationals and students, the Russian mounted an attack the day Pakistani Prime Minister Imran Khan landed in Moscow on a 2-day visit. The Pakistan government, Foreign Office and Embassy have miserably failed in meeting the challenge of evacuations of its nationals, according to media reports. The reports said that by February 26, the Pakistan government could manage only 116 Pakistanis including 21 family members of the embassy staff and 35 students. Pak students in large numbers are stuck in Kharkiv. Stranded Pakistani workers and students accused Pakistani Embassy and Ambassador Major General (retired) Noel Israel Khokhar of cheating them and alleged that they are moving towards the borders of Romania, Poland and Hungary on their own without any assistance from the Pak Embassy. Pakistanis have been asked to gather at Ternopil for their transportation to Poland. Pakistan Embassy has temporarily shifted to Ternopil. Family members of stranded students alleged that Pak authorities and the embassy are apathetic to their increasing concern, the report said. Except for the Pakistani elite including rulers, senior civil and military officers and top businessmen and industrialists, Pakistanis as well as overseas Pakistanis in general view Pak diplomatic missions abroad in a scornful way. Commenting on the state of affairs in Pak missions, a Pakistani media personality, having deep access to foreign office hierarchy suggested that the performance audit of Pak embassies and diplomatic missions spreading all over the world is urgently required to be carried out to find the service they are providing to the Pakistanis and overseas Pakistanis. This audit result will definitely be not above 5- 6 per cent if it is not a big zero. In connection with the situation in war-hit Ukraine, he said that the staff and diplomats in the Pak embassy in Ukraine are still indifferent to tackling aggravating conditions of Pakistani students studying there. Despite hue and cry by Pakistanis and media after the Russian invasion of Ukraine, Pak embassy staff appears unmoved. All Pakistani students complain that the Pak embassy is not providing any help or assistance to them. People of Pakistan who had bitter memories of Pak diplomats and staff in China in tackling the same kind of crisis during the breakout of the COVID-19 pandemic have urged the Pak government to suspend all officers and staffers of the embassy and call them back to Pakistan as soon as Pakistani students return home. It will set an example for Pak embassies in other countries to take their diplomatic obligations sincerely, the report said. A political observer of Pakistan informed that whenever he visited the US, UK, Europe, Japan, Saudi Arabia, Turkey, UAE etc., Pakistanis always expressed their grievances about the arrogant treatment meted out to them by their embassies and diplomats. He also visited some embassies and diplomatic missions, where he found the same situation, which generally prevails in all government departments of Pakistan. There is no one to address their grievances. Those who visit Pak embassies are treated in such a way as if they are being obliged. Overseas Pakistanis generally complain that Pak diplomats and staff members misbehave with them. They blatantly misuse their official power and display arrogance and stubbornness, instead of carrying out their required duties. Educated and ambitious segments of Pakistani society consider postings abroad as highly lucrative and for making money, spending vacations and ensuring citizenship of the countries they will be posted as diplomats, for their children. On the other hand, diplomats of other countries hold meetings and establish contacts with government functionaries and business companies of the countries they are posted to for bringing business and investment from the host countries, said the report. Contrary to it, diplomats and staff members of Pak embassies enjoy western-styled parties and consider it as their insult to meet the business class of the country they are posted to. As far as overseas Pakistanis are concerned, they don't want to see their faces. Diplomats and other staff members are appointed in Pak embassies abroad on the basis of recommendations and nepotism, the report added. It further reported that foreign postings are considered a great source of income, instead of serving the people. Pakistanis, who have been victims of Pak embassies' insensitive attitude, regretted that Pakistani diplomats are never asked as to what they have done for Pakistan and overseas Pakistanis. Pak embassies are not subjected to a performance audit. It has also been a major complaint of Overseas Pakistanis that Pak diplomats instead of doing their actual work continue to extend protocol and services to their rulers, elite class, ministers, advisors, MPs and government officers, said the report. Their performance is judged on this parameter. It is also a tradition that every government appoints their favourites as ambassadors for rewarding them. It doesn't matter that they don't know anything about diplomacy. Likewise, a quota is allocated for retired generals with the objective of rewarding favourite people. There is no such system through which the work and performance of Pak embassies are monitored on regular basis. A poor country like Pakistan spends trillions of rupees annually on its embassies and diplomats and if this system cannot provide any help to Pakistanis living abroad in difficult times, what are the need for such embassies and diplomatic missions? It is totally unprofitable deal that these embassies are kept intact only for this purpose that favourite diplomats and staff continue getting lucrative postings and minting money. Their children get an education and citizenship of the countries they are living in. In exchange, they continue providing the best protocols to the Pakistani elite with the hard-earned money of Pakistani taxpayers, the report added. (ANI) "We will join our allies in closing off American airspace to all Russian flights, further isolating Russia and adding additional squeeze on their economy," Biden said. "He has no idea what's coming," the US President told Congress. The move comes after several European countries including the UK, France, Italy, Spain and Canada closed their airspaces for Russian flights following Russian President Vladimir Putin's declaration of the Ukrainian breakaway regions of Donetsk and Luhansk as independent republics and launching of "special military operations" in Ukraine. Biden also announced that the US along with its partners is working on imposing tougher sanctions on Russia, targetting its banks, financial institutions and key individuals. Earlier on Monday, Russia banned flights for airlines from 36 countries in a retaliatory move against the European Union (EU) airspace ban. (ANI) "Putin may circle Kyiv with tanks, but he'll never gain the hearts and souls of the Iranian people," Biden said in his State of the Union speech that was an emotional appeal for putting up a united front against the Russian aggression. The awkward moment immediately began trending on Twitter and other social media with the word "Iranian". This is not the first time that the 79-year-old Biden, has tripped over words. As a child he had problems with his speech and had to work to overcome a stutter and it has been widely reported that he used to spend long hours reciting works of Yeats and Emerson to overcome his speech condition. Last year social media had pounced on his gaffe when he mistakenly called his Vice President Kamala Harris as "President Harris". Meanwhile, during his SOTU, President Biden has reiterated that his country will not deploy troops in Ukraine against the Russian forces. Condemning Russia's "premeditated attack" in Ukraine, Biden said that Russian President Vladimir Putin sought to shake the very foundation of the free world. (ANI) Condemning Russia's "premeditated and unprovoked" attack on Ukraine, US President Joe Biden on Tuesday (local time) said that Russian President Vladimir Putin is isolated from the world more than ever. Biden said that Putin rejected repeated efforts at diplomacy and thought that the West and NATO wouldn't respond. "We prepared extensively and carefully. We spent months building a coalition of other freedom-loving nations from Europe and the Americas to Asia and Africa to confront Putin. I spent countless hours unifying our European allies. We shared with the world in advance what we knew Putin was planning and precisely how he would try to falsely justify his aggression," said Biden. "We are inflicting pain on Russia and supporting the people of Ukraine. Putin is now isolated from the world more than ever," he said, adding that the US, along with its allies, is now enforcing powerful economic sanctions against Russia. Biden further said that they are cutting off Russia's largest banks from the international financial system and preventing Russia's central bank from defending the Russian Ruble making Putin's USD 630 Billion "war fund" worthless. "We are choking off Russia's access to technology that will sap its economic strength and weaken its military for years to come," he said. He further announced that American airspace will be closed for Russian flights, which will further isolate Russia. "The Ruble has lost 30 per cent of its value. The Russian stock market has lost 40 per cent of its value and trading remains suspended. Russia's economy is reeling and Putin alone is to blame," he stated. Biden clarified that American forces are not going to Europe to fight in Ukraine, but to defend its NATO Allies - in the event that Putin decides to keep moving west. "For that purpose, we've mobilized American ground forces, air squadrons, and ship deployments to protect NATO countries including Poland, Romania, Latvia, Lithuania, and Estonia," he said, adding that the US will not engage in conflict with Russian forces with Ukraine. "Putin has unleashed violence and chaos. But while he may make gains on the battlefield - he will pay a continuing high price over the long run," he added. Calling Putin a "dictator" invading a foreign country, US President announced that the US, along with 30 other countries, will release 60 million barrels of oil from reserves around the world "to help blunt gas prices here at home" that rose as a consequence to Ukraine-Russia conflict. (ANI) India's national tricolour came to the rescue of not only the stranded Indians but also those hailing from Pakistan and Turkey to cross into the neighbouring countries of Ukraine. The Indian students who arrived in the city of Bucharest in Romania from Ukraine said that the national tricolour helped them as well as some Pakistani and Turkish students in safely crossing the various checkpoints in the war-torn country. The Indian students arrived in the Romanian city to catch the special evacuation flights being operated under 'Operation Ganga' from the neighbouring countries of Ukraine. Air India, SpiceJet and Indigo are flying special evacuation flights. "We were told in Ukraine that being Indians and carrying Indian flag, we won't have any problems," said a medical student who arrived from Odesa in Southern Ukraine. The students narrated how they bought spray paints from the markets to prepare Indian flags. "I ran to the market, bought some colour sprays and a curtain. I then cut the curtain and spray-painted it to make the Indian tricolour," said a student. They added that even some Pakistani and Turkish students passed checkpoints using the Indian flag. "The Turkish and Pakistani students were also using the Indian flag," a student said, adding that the Indian flag was of great help to the Pakistani, Turkish students. The students from Odessa moved from Molodova to Romania. "We booked the bus from Odesa and came to the Molodova border. The Moldovan citizens were very nice. They provided us with free accommodation and taxis and buses to get to Romania," a student said. Further adding that they did not face much problem in Molodova as the Indian embassy had already made the arrangements. The students also expressed their gratitude to the Indian embassy officials who arranged for their food and shelter as they awaited their flights back to India. "When a student is arriving here, he's first taken to a proper shelter and provided with food while the registration takes place while dates on which they will be evacuated are finalised," the student said. Earlier on Monday, the Indian government deputed four Union Cabinet ministers to the neighbouring countries of Ukraine to coordinate the evacuation efforts following a high-level meeting chaired by Prime Minister Narendra Modi. (ANI) Amid the increasing radicalisation of its youths, especially men, Pakistan's institutional mechanisms are proving to be incapable of stopping crimes against women, a report said on Wednesday. The report cited several recent cases to assert that the ugly heads of patriarchy who see women as objects who need to be kept under veils and always monitored are slowly taking over Pakistani society. Most recently on February 14, Lahore High Court (LHC) acquitted the prime suspect in the murder case of a model named Qandeel Baloch as the parties to the case had an agreement and the statements by the witnesses were retracted. Qandeel Baloch was strangulated to death by her brother, Muhammad Waseem, an honour killing on July 15, 2016, in Muzaffarabad. Meanwhile, a recent report by the police in the Punjab province showed that around 41,000 women were reported as missing from the province in the last five years, with a staggering 3,571 of them unrecovered to this day. The scary situation with regard to women's rights and safety in Pakistan has also been under the international radar, Islam Khabar said citing the Human Rights Watch's (HRW) annual World Report 2022. The HRW, in its Annual World Report 2022, documented allegations of extensive rights abuses against women along with children in Pakistan, which ranks 167 out of 170 countries on the Global Women, Peace and Security index released by Georgetown University. "Violence against women and girls, including rape, murder, acid attacks, domestic violence, and forced marriage, is endemic throughout Pakistan. Human rights defenders estimate that roughly 1,000 women are killed in so-called honour killings every year," the HRW report stated. According to Pakistan Demographic and Health Survey data of 2017-18, 28 per cent of women aged 15 to 49 years had experienced intimate partner violence in their lifetimes. The report stated that as domestic violence is an issue covered in secrecy and embarrassment, these figures are likely a gross under-estimation. The report also talked about a recent law titled, 'Protection against Harassment of Women at the Workplace (Amendment) Bill, 2022', saying that the real test of this new law will be its full execution, which needs political will. Rights groups and various members of Pakistan's civil society have been criticizing Pakistani Prime Minister Imran Khan and his government, saying he panders to the religious right and excuses the perpetrators who attack women. He is known to be notorious while 'demonizing' women in every possible chance he gets. Male supremacy prevails in the Pakistani society at all levels, yet their "honour" fails to match their masculinity in all other matters and remains extremely delicate, easily compromised by and exceedingly dependent upon their women's modesty, the report commented. The report comes when Pakistan has witnessed four horrific incidents against women in different parts of the country within a week, suggesting a serious rise in crime against women. (ANI) China's refusal to condemn Russia's military operation in Ukraine is not only affecting the evacuation of its citizens from the war-hit country but has also become a cause of worry for its traders who are concerned regarding the conflict's potential impact on certain aspects of the China-Europe freight train and shipping routes by sea and air, said a media report. China, though refusing to condemn Russia's invasion of Ukraine, has said that it supports a diplomatic dialogue and negotiations for the peaceful settlement of the Ukraine crisis. However, it is worried that refraining from taking a side will come back to haunt it in case Russia takes a hardline approach in talks with Ukraine, reported The Hong Kong Post. China's statement that the legitimate security concerns of all countries should be respected points how it has subtly blamed the western powers, especially the US and NATO, for the Ukraine crisis. However, this has affected thousands of Chinese students in Ukraine as the Ukrainian authorities refuse to cooperate with a country that apparently has a pro-Russia approach. Notably, after Ukraine closed its airspace, the Chinese ambassador in Kyiv said evacuees must wait until it is safe for them to go, cautioning them not to antagonise local residents or take videos out of curiosity in Ukraine, reported the media outlet. Videos on Chinese social media platforms shows students "hiding in air-raid shelters and police closing off roads to the airport". Besides the safety of these stranded Chines nationals, the invasion is beginning to impact China on the trade and commerce front as its traders have warned their government about the conflict's potential impact on certain aspects of the China-Europe freight train and shipping routes by sea and air, reported the publication. "While the actual impact remains unclear given the fast-changing developments, some Chinese and international traders have cancelled or diverted certain trading channels and routes to fend off possible disruptions," the media outlet quoted The Global Times. President of Shanghai EPU Supply Chain Management Co, Tommy Tan said: "What is worrying the traders most is some European clients have expressed deep concerns over the possible impact from the escalating tensions and have started cancelling orders delivered by China-Europe freight trains, with small and medium-sized traders bearing the brunt". Notably, Chinese President Xi Jinping on February 4 signed a major strategic agreement with his Russian counterpart Vladimir Putin, securing the economic and diplomatic ties between the two countries. Moreover, Chinese social media, filled with pro-Russian sentiments, clearly demonstrates Beijing's pro-Kremlin attitude. Also, prior to Russia's military operations in Ukraine, Chinese state media accidentally published guidelines on how to handle the Russia-Ukraine conflict: to support Moscow and expurgate content presenting Russia in a negative light. (ANI) The Chicago Tribunes annual dining awards are back, and (if youll pardon the hubris) better than ever. First and foremost: Weve decided that calling our yearly celebration the Dining Awards doesnt quite encapsulate all the great food this city has to offer, especially as our concept of what a restaurant can be continues to evolve. Last year, we pivoted to the Takeout Awards, acknowledging that dining in 2020 was nothing like before. Advertisement Going forward, were proud to present the Chicago Tribune Food Awards. Whether its some of the citys best barbecue delivered out of a virtual kitchen in Avondale or an Asian food wonderland in the form of a food court, we want to celebrate the best food this city has to offer, in all its forms. Advertisement Its a bittersweet moment, as most are these days. We mourn the loss of celebrated greats, the Blackbirds and the Yoshis Cafes and the Lost Lakes. Just as much, we honor the workers who have moved on from the exhausting shifts and backbreaking work, coupled with the threat of hostile clientele and health hazards around every corner. We thank the front-line enforcers who gave everything to keep people as safe as possible while still endeavoring to serve up platefuls of joy and comfort. Below, youll find our nine recipients of the 2022 Critics Choice Food Awards. But youve also got a say in awarding the best and boldest food in Chicagoland with the Tribune Readers Choice Food Awards. Nominations for your favorite new restaurants, bars, pizza and more are open through March 11 at chicagotribune.com/FoodAwards2022, and mark your calendars for April 12, when well announce the Readers Choice winners during the Great Tribune Takeout Night. Restaurant of the Year: Kasama Kasama chefs and owners Tim Flores and Genie Kwon received a four-star review in 2021 from Tribune critics, Feb. 17, 2022. (John J. Kim / Chicago Tribune) When Kasama chefs, owners and spouses Tim Flores and Genie Kwon learned of this latest accolade, they were surprised, even after receiving our only four-star review of 2021, but they did have some fortuitous foreshadowing. The only thing Ive eaten today is a fortune cookie, Kwon said. And it said, You will receive good news. By day, they and their team make ube huckleberry Basque cakes, plus pork adobo and longganisa sausage, Italian beef-style combo sandwiches, and much more at their extraordinary Filipino-inspired restaurant in the East Ukrainian Village neighborhood. At night, their tasting menu translates the culture into 13 creative, concise courses. Its really cool to have some of our regulars from daytime come in, people who have been coming in since we started the restaurant, Flores said. I always tell them, Thank you so much for supporting us through this past year and a half. Because we were not sure that we were going to make it to this point. The tasting menu dinner they originally didnt want to do was added as a means to survive the pandemic. It quietly brought them to their full, fierce potential and has proven to be an emotional experience for everyone. Advertisement One of our servers was like, I dont think Ive seen this many people cry ever, just coming into dinner, Kwon said. Our regulars have been on this journey with us. And theyre just so genuinely proud, and were so grateful. I can confirm crying multiple times, and wondered if they have to take tears into account with flavor profiles. The salinity does add so much more salt, Kwon said, laughing. Louisa Chu 1001 N. Winchester Ave., 773-697-3790, kasamachicago.com Front-line Enforcers: The Wieners Circle The Wieners Circle general manager Evelyn Morris, center, with co-workers Manuel Rodriguez, left, and Ragen Eggert at the restaurant on Feb. 18, 2022, in Chicago. (John J. Kim / Chicago Tribune) Last year our Critics Choice awards focused on takeout, and created a Person of the Year award to recognize the essential hospitality worker in lieu of a Chef of the Year. Since then, many of those same workers have had to adapt yet again through waves of variants, surges and mandates. Some took on a new role as front-line enforcers. At bars such as The Hideout, the door person exchange seemed seamless, simply adding a proof of vaccination with your ID. At Lula Cafe, it simply added a momentary pause at the host stand. Advertisement At The Wieners Circle, however, theyve had their ups and downs, but emerged with a redemption story. So much so that after employees asked one would-be customer to wear a mask while ordering, he threw snow at them, then a brick, shattering the glass front door. Theyve handled it with their signature humor on social media, a catharsis for many hospitality workers whove had to hold back when confronted with abuse. General manager Evelyn Morris wasnt working the night of the incident, but her night manager called while waiting for the police. I asked her if she was OK, said Morris, who started working at the hot dog stand 35 years ago when the Lincoln Park area at night was far worse than it is now. She told me she pretty much was; nothing had hit her or anything. I asked her if she needed to go home and if she was just emotionally OK. She said yes, and ended up finishing the duration of her shift. I asked Morris what advice shed share with her peers throughout the Chicago area, whove had to act as front-line enforcers while just trying to serve people food. Try to stay calm, she said. Thats the most important thing. You have to try to stay as safe as you can, considering that thats your place of work, she added. So someone always knows where you are. L.C. Advertisement 2622 N. Clark St., 773-477-7444, wienerscirclechicago.com Best Cinderella Story: Provare Jourdan Higgs, who opened Provare with Michael Williams in the middle of the pandemic, at the restaurant Feb. 22, 2022. (John J. Kim / Chicago Tribune) Opening a restaurant is always a risky business endeavor, so what do you call it when two people without any industry experience launch a restaurant during the middle of a pandemic? Thats exactly what Jourdan Higgs and Michael Williams did with Provare, a tiny restaurant on West Chicago Avenue thats been a runaway success from the moment it opened. Part of that has to do with the welcoming atmosphere. Thanks to the staff, its the kind of place where you feel relaxed as soon as you walk through the doors. We live in hectic times, but we want to make sure everyone has a great experience, Higgs said late last year. Thats true even if the host has to explain to you as politely as possible that there are no tables, because you forgot to make a reservation. (Plan ahead, because those seats go fast.) But it wouldnt be packed if it werent for chef Higgs fascinating menu, which combines traditional Italian ingredients with Creole flourishes. Higgs flew in a pasta extruder from Italy, so he could make dried pasta with precisely the right texture. You can taste that obsessiveness in dishes such as the shrimp Hennessy scampi with mafaldine ($26). But what makes the dish work is how he balances the creaminess of the sauce with the fresh sweetness of cherry tomatoes and the incisive heat of sliced Fresno chiles. And thats what makes this runaway success story so satisfying. Nick Kindelsperger 1421 W. Chicago Ave., 312-988-0943, provarechicago.com Comeback of the Year: Solazo Pepe Barajas, at Solazo on Feb. 18, 2022, renovated his restaurant after a fire destroyed it. (John J. Kim / Chicago Tribune) In 2019, Pepe Barajas was just trying to take a vacation. Exhausted from running two restaurants without any days off, he left with his family for a relaxing trip. But on the very first night, he was awakened by an urgent phone call telling him El Solazo, the restaurant he opened in 2007, was on fire. Advertisement Because of the damage, it would have been an ordeal simply to reopen El Solazo as it was before. But Barajas decided it was the perfect time to update the West Elsdon spot. He shortened the name to Solazo, and set about renovating the space. Walls were knocked down, which opened up the dining room to make it more spacious and modern. A bar was added, allowing guests to view the bustling kitchen. [ Review: Solazo emerges from the fire better than ever on Chicagos Southwest Side ] The biggest change came to the food menu. Barajas took a research trip to Oaxaca City, Mexico, where he sampled the many local markets and worked at one of the citys hottest restaurants, El Destilado. Along the way, he became infatuated with mole coloradito, one of the areas famous seven moles. You can now sample the chicken enchiladas ($18) bathed in the deeply complex mole. But dont forget about the camarones a la Diabla ($23) or the suadero tacos ($9 for two). Barajas even refreshed the drink menu, turning the restaurant into an area hot spot for cocktails. In other words, Solazo is back and better than it ever was. N.K. 5600 S. Pulaski Road, 773-627-5047, elsolazo.com Pizza Trend We Cant Get Enough Of: Caramelized crust George F. Bumbaris co-owns Georges Deep Dish in the Edgewater neighborhood with his wife, Ana Bumbaris, Feb. 16, 2022. (John J. Kim / Chicago Tribune) Someday soon, the rest of the world will be talking about caramelized crust with the reverence its due when discussing Chicago-style pizzas. Advertisement Thats such a subcategory of a category, said pizzaiolo George Bumbaris, laughing. I love it. He co-owns Georges Deep Dish in the Edgewater neighborhood with his wife, Ana Bumbaris, although these days its mostly his mother, Jana Bumbaris, helping out in the takeout-only shop. My mom was a hairdresser for years, said her son. And one of her old clients was like, I heard about your sons restaurant, this guy mentioned it on the radio! That guy was my fellow Tribune food critic Nick Kindelsperger, who mentioned Georges, Uncle Jerrys and Millys, all on the forefront of the emergence of these thick-yet-light crusts, ringed around with the defining crisp cheese. It wasnt easy for any of them to open what have become some of the most in-demand pizzerias in the city and suburbs. I dont think we would have ever opened had it not been for COVID, Bumbaris said. I was thinking about doing a pizzeria; it was kind of always on the back burner, but I was Ubering prior to opening this place. Advertisement He stopped driving for the ride-share company because of the pandemic, then consulted his mother. I talked to Mom, and was like, What do you think? You know, Ive been making this pizza for a little bit of time now. Do you think we kind of perfected it and should move forward? They did, and hes made a destination pizza, through a lot of trial and error, he said. It wasnt an overnight thing, Bumbaris said. Nothing overnight ever really is. L.C. 6221 N. Clark St., 773-801-1551, georgesdeepdish.com Best Line Worth Waiting in: Oooh Wee It Is Mark and Shae Walker call their food at Oooh Wee! It Is! restaurant soul food with a twist," Feb. 19, 2022. (John J. Kim / Chicago Tribune) Show up when Oooh Wee It Is opens at 11 a.m., and youll find a line stretching from the front door, around the corner of the building, and into the parking lot.Its been that way since Mark and Shae Walker opened in Chatham in February 2021, but that success is built on years of their hard work. Advertisement The story begins with a sweet tea recipe Mark Walker created while working at a factory. Made with real tea leaves and fresh fruit, it was such a hit that he partnered up with a local Harolds Chicken Shack, where he eventually sold 276,000 cups of his tea. Then came a location at the River Oaks Center mall in Calumet City. After the pandemic forced the couple to restart, Shae Walker started posting photos of her dinner on Facebook, and curious followers asked where they could buy her food. Before long, they opened the original Oooh Wee It Is, a takeout-only operation in south suburban Burnham. The couple went all out for the massive Chatham location, creating a brightly colored cereal bar stocked with hundreds of brands, along with a few swings suspended from the ceiling for those important social media shots. But its the food that really inspires people to line up. The couple call it soul food with a twist, which explains items such as pot roast cupcakes and the shrimp and grits bowl. And, of course, you can find some of the Walkers irresistible sweet tea, garnished with loads of fresh fruit. N.K. 33 E. 83rd St., 872-244-7505; 2208 E. State St., Burnham, 708-933-0363; ooohweeitis.org Best new Chicago-style barbecue: Soul & Smoke When the pandemic wiped out their catering events, Heather Bublick and D'Andre Carter pivoted to Soul & Smoke, Feb. 18, 2022. (John J. Kim / Chicago Tribune) Creating the most exciting new barbecue restaurant in the Chicago area was not something DAndre Carter and Heather Bublick had in mind when 2020 first rolled around. The married couple were far more invested in Feast & Imbibe, their upscale catering operation based in Evanston. Soul & Smoke, which they launched in 2015, was originally conceived as a more affordable option to offer for casual events. While they took the food seriously from the beginning, you couldnt experience Soul & Smoke unless you placed a large catering order. Advertisement [ Review: Soul & Smoke deserves to join the ranks of the Chicago areas best barbecue ] But when the pandemic wiped out their catering events, the two had to pivot as quickly as possible. This unwittingly unleashed one of the Chicago areas most passionate barbecue pitmasters in Carter. The South Side native was always obsessed with barbecue, but he also spent years working in some of Chicagos most prestigious restaurants, including Moto, where he geeked out on the science of cooking. This led to months taste testing various dry rubs and barbecue sauces, along with experimenting with various smokers for just the right flavor. You can taste all that dedication in the smoked meat, from the luscious pulled pork to the best-in-state brisket. Absurdly juicy, with a delicate smokiness that floats around the edges, this is barbecue worth savoring. The sides turn out to be just as well thought out and executed, especially the braised collard greens and cornbread muffins. But what is most exciting about Soul & Smoke is the sense that these two are just getting started. N.K. 3517 N. Spaulding Ave.; 1601 Payne St., Suite C, Evanston; Time Out Market, 916 W. Fulton Market; 847-491-9744; soulandsmoke.com Most endlessly satisfying brewery: Dovetail Dovetail brewers and co-founders Hagen Dost, left, and Bill Wesselink have one of the citys most ambitious spontaneous beer programs, Feb. 16, 2022. (John J. Kim / Chicago Tribune) One brewery above all others has sustained us through the pandemic: Dovetail. The Ravenswood operation, which celebrates its sixth anniversary in spring, shines not by embracing trends or looking for the hot new thing. Dovetail simply applies an array of time-tested practices common in continental European brewing to create fantastically delicious beer. Advertisement Much of the Dovetail portfolio is built on approachable and easy-drinking styles, including all five of its year-round offerings: helles lager, hefeweizen, kolsch, Vienna lager and its flagship lager, which is generally available only on draft (unfortunate, because if canned, it would endlessly stock my fridge). But thats certainly not all Dovetail does; it boasts one of the citys most ambitious spontaneous beer programs (fascinatingly funky beer aged in oak barrels, sometimes with fruit added) and embraces smoked beer with fervency matched by few other American breweries. You wont find the styles of beer that move the needle for many competitors no India pale ales and no stouts. Dovetail instead makes its own fun, innovating in fresh, surprising ways, such as its occasional Kolsch nights, a style of service with German and Czech roots where patrons are served glass after glass of the brewerys lightly fruity and deeply refreshing kolsch until declaring theyve had enough. Its largely the pitch-perfect lagers that make Dovetail sing. Though it is not the oldest lager-focused brewery in town (thats Metropolitan) and its not the trendiest (thats Goldfinger), Dovetail has centered itself at the heart of Chicagos movement toward expertly executed no-fills beer, revering tradition while always pushing forward in a way thats endlessly rewarding. Josh Noel 1800 W. Belle Plaine Ave., 773-683-1414, dovetailbrewery.com Best Food Court: 88 Marketplace Kevin Situ of Chiu Quon Bakery puts together a collection of baked goods at the 88 Marketplace food court on Feb. 17, 2022, in Chicago. (John J. Kim / Chicago Tribune) Before the pandemic, we saw the rise of fancy food halls. Now weve sought comfort once again in proletarian food courts. The vendors at 88 Marketplace, the Asian food wonderland in East Pilsen, prove up to the challenge. Eat. Watch. Do. Weekly What to eat. What to watch. What you need to live your best life ... now. > Through it all, Chiu Quon Bakery, the oldest bakery in nearby Chinatown, has remained an anchor. Both bakeries are owned by siblings Joyce and Matthew Chiu, who took over the business founded by their parents in 1986. Advertisement At the main bakery, they are focusing on making the product the traditional way, said Kevin Situ, head baker at Chiu Quon Bakery x 88 Market. Over here, Im still using the same base, like with the dough and the mochi, but trying to infuse it with different flavors, because Im trying to aim toward the younger crowd. That means we have Situ to thank for the irresistible milk tea egg tart, infusing tannic flavor in the silky custard within a flaky handheld crust. Its a remarkable achievement, especially for a first-time Chinese pastry chef who previously worked at Somerset restaurant in the Gold Coast. Right now, the food court also includes 312 Fish Markets creative sushi; A Place in Northeast; the venerable B.B.Q. King House; Pho Home; Victory Cafe (aka Victors Cafe) offering Hong Kong-style diner food; and Ying Dim Sum steaming stacks of dumplings. But get there soon, because life in the food court can move fast. L.C. 2105 S. Jefferson St., 312-929-4926, facebook.com/88MarketplaceChicago Big screen or home stream, takeout or dine-in, Tribune writers are here to steer you toward your next great experience. Sign up for your free weekly Eat. Watch. Do. newsletter here. Shanghai [China], March 2 (ANI/Sputnik): The main stock indexes of the Asia-Pacific region (APR) slid on Wednesday under the possible impact on the global economy of the sanctions imposed by the European Union and the United States against Russia. As of 04:30 GMT, the index of the Shanghai stock exchange Shanghai Composite is decreasing 0.41% to 3,474.45 points, the Shenzhen Stock Exchange Shenzhen Composite is down 0.84% to 2,306.81 points, and the Hong Kong Hang Seng index is down 1.1% to 22511 points. Japan's Nikkei 225 is falling 1.87% to 26347.5 points, At the same time, the Australian S&P/ASX 200 is rising 0.14% to 7,106.2 points, and South Korea's KOSPI [Korea Composite stock price index] is up 0.24% to 2,705.61 points. The shares of several car manufacturers started to fall in price after they announced temporary termination of operations in Russia. Nissan Motor shares are dropping by 4.13%, Hyundai Motors - by 2.29%, and Toyota - by 4.48%. Last Thursday, Russia began a special operation to "demilitarize and denazify" Ukraine as it responded to calls from the Donetsk and Luhansk people's republics to defend them from intensifying attacks by Ukrainian troops. The Russian Defense Ministry said the "special operation" is solely targeting Ukrainian military infrastructure, stressing that the civilian population is not in danger. The United States, the United Kingdom, members of the European Union and several other countries imposed comprehensive sanctions against Russia, including closing their airspace to Russian aircraft and sanctioning a number of Russian banks and officials. Russian President Vladimir Putin has signed a decree authorizing counter-sanctions. (ANI/Sputnik) Taiwanese President Tsai Ing-wen on Wednesday said that Taiwan hopes to work more closely with the United States on security issues as China's threat continues to rise in the Asia-Pacific region. On Tuesday, an unofficial US delegation, headed by former US Joint Chiefs of Staff Chairman Michael Glenn Mullen, arrived in Taiwan for a two-day visit. The delegation also included former US Deputy National Security Advisor for Iraq and Afghanistan Meghan O'Sullivan and former US Defense Under Secretary Michele Angelique Flournoy. "Currently, China's military threat in the Taiwan Strait and across the region continues to grow through the efforts on limiting Taiwan's international involvement or through the use of cognitive warfare and disinformation tactics against the Taiwanese society," Tsai told a meeting with the unofficial US delegation. The president noted that Taiwanese nationals "will not give up their beliefs because of these actions."She added that Taiwan looks forward to "closer cooperation with the US and other countries on security issues in the region." Mullen said that the US will continue opposing any unilateral changes to the status quo in the Taiwan Strait, adding that maintaining peace and stability in the region is in the interest not only of the US but also of the world. The People's Liberation Army Air Force (PLAAF) fighter aircraft routinely violate Taiwanese airspace with incursions. The largest incursion so far this year occurred on January 23 when the PLA flew 39 aircraft into Taiwan's Air Defence Identification Zone (ADIZ). However, the largest ever intrusion consisted of 56 aircraft on 4 October 2021. Chinese Foreign Ministry Spokesperson Wang Wenbin said on Tuesday that Beijing condemned the US for sending the delegation to Taiwan. "The attempt by the US to show support to Taiwan will be in vain, no matter who the US sends. China urges the US to abide by the one-China principle and stipulations in the three China-US joint communiques, stop all forms of official interactions with Taiwan, and handle Taiwan-related issues in a prudent manner, lest it should further undermine the larger interests of China-US relations and peace and stability across the Taiwan Strait," Wang told a briefing. (ANI) During a press briefing, Alipov said that Russia is in touch with Indian authorities concerning the evacuation of Indian nationals stranded in Kharkiv and other areas of eastern Ukraine. "We have received India's requests for emergency evacuation of all those stranded there through the Russian territory. We are actively working on all ways and means to launch such an operation and provide a humanitarian corridor for evacuation of the people there," he stated. Alipov also expressed his gratitude towards India for its unbiased stand on the Russia-Ukraine conflict. "We are strategic allies with India. We are grateful to India for its balanced position displayed at the United Nations. India understands the depth of this crisis," he stated. The Russian ambassador-designate also consoled the demise of an Indian student in Kharkiv and assured that Russia will do everything in its power to support the evacuation of the Indian citizens from Ukraine. He also stated that Russia will launch an investigation into the "unfortunate incident" of the Indian student. Notably, one Indian student lost his life in Kharkiv on Tuesday because of shelling in the area. Meanwhile, the Union Government has launched 'Operation Ganga' to bring back stranded students and Indian citizens from the conflict-torn Ukraine. The government has also deployed 'special envoys' to four neighbouring countries bordering Ukraine to coordinate and oversee the evacuation process of Indian nationals. (ANI) Taking note of Ukraine's earlier application, the International Court of Justice (ICJ) on Tuesday called on the Russian Federation to act in a manner that would allow any provisional measures ordered by the Court to have an actual impact. While addressing an urgent communication to Russian Foreign Affairs Minister, Judge JE Donoghue, International Court of Justice President, said, "I call the attention of the Russian Federation to the need to act in such a way as will enable any order the Court may make on the request for provisional measures to have its appropriate effects." "This is another clear indication that Russia must cease its military activities in Ukraine," US State Department spokesperson Ned Price said in a press statement briefing on the development. Ukraine on February 26 had filed an application at the ICJ to initiate proceedings against the Russian Federation under the Convention on the Prevention and Punishment of the Crime of Genocide. Ukraine seeks to address what it calls "Russia's groundless claims" that genocide has occurred in the Luhansk and Donetsk oblasts of Ukraine and establish that Russia has no lawful basis to take military action on the basis of those "false" claims. The ICJ will hold public hearings on the Ukraine-Russia crisis on March 7 and 8 in a hybrid format. Ukraine has also requested the ICJ exercise its authority to indicate provisional measures to preserve Ukraine's rights and limit the ongoing and irreparable harm to the Ukrainian people as well as Ukraine's sovereignty and territorial integrity within its internationally recognized borders. "Considering the gravity of the crisis in Ukraine that has resulted from Russia's unprovoked invasion, we trust the Court is taking into consideration the dire circumstances and rapidly unfolding events and hope that it will act with utmost urgency on Ukraine's request for provisional measures," Price said. Reiterating US's support to Ukraine, the US spokesperson further said, "Each day that Russia is unconstrained in its aggression is a day that brings more violence, suffering, death, and destruction in Ukraine. The United States stands with the people of Ukraine." Several countries including the UK, the US, Canada, and the European Union have condemned Russia's military operations in Ukraine and imposed sanctions on Moscow. These countries have also promised Ukraine to help with military aid to fight Russia. The US, Canada and European allies agreed to remove key Russian banks from the interbank messaging system, SWIFT which means Russian banks won't be able to communicate securely with banks beyond Russia's borders. President Putin has also signed a decree on special economic measures against the US and its allies. Fighting in Ukraine has so far pushed more than 500,000 people across the country's borders, according to the UN refugee agency. Speaking at an emergency session of the UN General Assembly on February 28, Russia's Permanent Representative to the United Nations, Vasily Nebenzya, had said that Russia has no plans to occupy Ukraine. On February 28, negotiations between delegations of Russia and Ukraine were held in the Gomel Region of Belarus and another round of talks is scheduled for March 2. (ANI) As per the State Emergency Service of Ukraine, the airstrikes resulted in piles of debris, flattened homes and buildings. Rescue operation is underway after a Russian missile hit a residential area, informed the State Emergency Service of Ukraine. The video shows demolished homes and rescue workers who are searching for alive persons by digging through the debris. The fire department is also engaged in the rescue operation who are also seen spraying water to douse the flames. Meanwhile, since Tuesday the Russians have intensified the shellings. Eight people have died and 35 injured in a rocket attack on a housing block in the second-largest city of Kharkiv in Ukraine. According to Ukrainian authorities, more than 70 Ukrainian servicemen were killed by a rocket attack and dozens of civilians have died in the shelling. (ANI) According to Sputnik News Agency, a sign, indicating that this is the building of a diplomatic mission, was also dismantled. The entrance doors have also been sealed. Earlier in the day, the Consulate General of Ukraine in Russia's St Petersburg stopped its work. Last Thursday, Russia launched a military operation in Ukraine. Russia has been facing immense criticism in the international arena after Russian President Vladimir Putin on February 24 declared the breakaway Ukrainian regions of Donetsk and Luhansk as independent republics and announced 'special military operations in Ukraine. Earlier, negotiations between delegations of Russia and Ukraine in the Gomel region of Belarus ended and the second round of talks will be held on the Belarusian-Polish border in a few days. (ANI) Russian Foreign Minister Sergei Lavrov has said that Moscow is preparing for the second round of talks with Kyiv but the Ukrainian side is dragging its feet at the behest of Washington. "We are ready for the second round of the negotiations, but the Ukrainian side is playing for time on the US' orders", Lavrov told Al Jazeera. Amid Russia's military action in Ukraine, the second round of talks between the Russia and Ukraine delegation is scheduled to be held on Wednesday in Belarus. Earlier, Kremlin spokesman Dmitry Peskov said that the Russian delegation will wait for the Ukrainian negotiators at the site of the talks late in the evening on Wednesday, Sputnik reported. Peskov had confirmed that presidential aide Vladimir Medinsky remains the main Russian negotiator in Russia's talks with Ukraine. The first round of talks between the two sides was held in the Gomel region of Belarus on Monday. The talks are aimed at finding a way to end the Ukraine conflict. Vladimir Medinsky told reporters that during the negotiations, the sides managed to find "some common points on which we predict common positions can be found". Following the talks, Ukrainian President Volodymyr Zelenskyy's office said Russia and Ukraine identified some priority topics on which they have outlined certain decisions. His office had said earlier that the key "issue of the negotiations is an immediate ceasefire and the withdrawal of troops from the territory of Ukraine". Before its military action in Ukraine, Russia had on February 24 recognized the independence of Ukraine's breakaway regions. The Western countries have imposed tough sanctions on Russia. (ANI) Moscow [Russia], March 2 (ANI/Sputnik): The permanent representatives of EU countries have agreed on new sanctions against Belarus, including the economic ones, the French Presidency of the Council of EU States said on Wednesday. "COREPER II just approved new sanctions against Belarusian officials and military involved in the Russian aggression against Ukraine, Certain sectors of the Belarusian economy, in particular, the wood, steel and potash sectors," the presidency tweeted. (ANI/Sputnik) Russian Foreign Minister Sergei Lavrov on Wednesday said that if a third World War happens it would prove to be destructive as it will involve nuclear weapons, Russian media reported citing Qatari broadcaster. According to Lavrov, US President Joe Biden is an experienced man, who had said earlier that the only alternative to war sanctions. On Tuesday, Lavrov said that the "real danger" of Ukraine acquiring nuclear weapons required a response from Moscow. "Today, the dangers that (Ukrainian President) Zelenskyy's regime poses for neighbouring countries and international security in general, have increased substantially after the authorities set up in Kyiv have embarked upon dangerous games related to plans to acquire their own nuclear weapons," Lavrov said while speaking at a meeting in Geneva yesterday, The Hill reported citing UK media. Meanwhile, the Russian delegation is ready to meet with Ukrainian negotiators on Wednesday evening. "There really is a certain element of contradictory information. But I will tell you which part does not refer to contradictory information. So, this afternoon probably in the evening, our delegation will be on the spot waiting for Ukrainian negotiators. Our delegation will be ready to continue the conversation tonight. And everything else is controversial," Kremlin spokesman Dmitry Peskov said today. Russia has been facing immense criticism in the international arena after Russian President Vladimir Putin on February 24 declared the breakaway Ukrainian regions of Donetsk and Luhansk as independent republics and announced 'special military operations in Ukraine. (ANI) With Operation Ganga being carried out on a war-footing basis, Union Civil Aviation Minister Jyotiraditya Scindia on Wednesday interacted with Indian students at Henri Coanda International Airport in Bucharest in Romania. The Union Minister met everyone with warmth and praised them for their bravery and resilience. He assured each one of them that they will be flying home today. While speaking to the Indians at the airport today, the minister said that those still stuck at Romanian borders or coming to the borders will no longer be made to travel to Romania's capital to catch the flight. He said he will arrange for those students to be sent home directly from there. Students seemed happy to see him and greeted him and shared any problems they had with him. On February 28, Prime Minister Narendra Modi chaired a high level meeting to review the ongoing efforts under Operation Ganga to bring back Indians stranded in Ukraine. The Prime Minister said that the entire government machinery is working round the clock to ensure that all Indian nationals there are safe and secure. The government also informed that the first consignment of relief supplies to Ukraine to deal with the humanitarian situation on Ukraine's borders has been despatched. On February 24, Russian President Vladimir Putin recognized Ukraine's breakaway regions - Donetsk and Luhansk - as independent entities escalating the ongoing tensions between the two countries. Ukraine gained independence in 1991 after the disintegration of the Soviet Union. Earlier in February, Russian President Vladimir Putin said that special military operations are being launched "to protect" the people in the Donbas region. He also warned other countries that any attempt to interfere with the Russian action would lead to "consequences". Leaders from a number of countries including the UK, the US, Canada, and the European Union have condemned Russia's military operations in Ukraine. (ANI) Expo Chicago, the international exposition of contemporary and modern art on Navy Pier, has released the full lineup of participating artists and speakers for its ninth annual event, which is taking place April 7-10 in Festival Hall. The event, returning for the first time since the pandemic, will include more than 140 galleries representing 25 countries around the world. This April will be the first time since 2019 that the fair will be able to bring its global community of artists, curators, designers and art world leaders together in person, and the incredible range and depth of the core programs reflect this built energy and enthusiasm, Kate Sierzputowski, director of programming, said in a news release. Advertisement The Expo includes the /Dialogues panel program with art world leaders; interactive daily panel discussions on the Northern Trust Exchange Stage; installations of large-scale sculpture, video, film and works as part of IN/SITU; and OVERRIDE | A Billboard Project that will use digital billboards across the city to display a selection of contemporary artwork. Tea pots by Roberto Lugo presented by Wexler Gallery of Philadelphia at EXPO CHICAGO at Navy Pier, Sept. 19, 2019. (E. Jason Wambsgans / Chicago Tribune) Some notable participants include Jamillah James, Manilow senior curator at Museum of Contemporary Art Chicago; Koyo Kouoh, executive director and chief curator of the Zeitz Museum of Contemporary Art Africa in Cape Town; and Hans Ulrich Obrist, the artistic director of Serpentine Galleries London. Advertisement Expo Chicago runs April 7-10 at Navy Piers Festival Hall, 600 E. Grand Ave.; tickets range from $25-$50 and are available at expochicago.com The Indian embassy in Ukraine on Wednesday issued a fresh advisory for its nationals living in Kharkiv and asked them that they "must leave" immediately and reach Pesochin, Babaye and Bezlyudovka settlements by 1800 hrs, amid the escalating military operation in Ukraine. "Urgent advisory to all Indian Nationals in Kharkiv. For their safety and security, they must leave Kharkiv immediately in light of the deteriorating situation. They should Proceed to Pesochin, Babaye and Bezlyudovka as soon as possible for their safety. Under all circumstances they must reach these settlements by 1800 hrs (Ukrainian time) today," India in Ukraine said in a statement. Meanwhile, a total of 16 flights have already brought back stranded Indian nationals from Ukraine till today. Foreign Secretary Harsh Vardhan Shringla said on Tuesday said that Indian nationals have left Kyiv and nearly 60 per cent of Indians in Ukraine have left the country so far. "All of our nationals have left Kyiv. The information with us is that we have no more nationals left in Kyiv, nobody has contacted us from Kyiv since. All our enquiries reveal that each and every one of our nationals have come out of Kyiv," Shringla said at a media briefing on the evacuation of Indian citizens from Ukraine in the wake of Russia's military operations. He said out of an estimated 20,000 Indian citizens in Ukraine, 60 per cent have left the country since the first advisory was issued by the government. "We had an estimated 20,000 Indian nationals in Ukraine at the time we issued our first advisory. Approximately 12,000 have left Ukraine so far, which means 60 per cent of the people have left the country. Of the remaining 40 per cent, roughly half remain in the conflict zone in Kharkiv and the other half have either reached the western border of Ukraine or are heading towards the western border. They are generally out of conflict areas," Shringla said. He also said a high-level meeting was also chaired by Prime Minister Narendra Modi. (ANI) Students of Petro Mohyla Black Sea National University in Mykolaiv, Ukraine expressed gratitude for the efforts put in by the Indian Embassy in Romania and the Government of India for their safe evacuation. They thanked the embassy and Government of India for providing them with bus from Moldova to Romania and helping them reach safely with full facilities. "Thankful for providing a bus for us from Moldova to Romania and thanking Indian Embassy and Indian government for providing us with full facilities and we reached safely very thankful," said one of the students. "Very thankful for the embassy for arranging these facilities for us," said another one echoing the same sentiment of gratitude for the efforts put in by the Embassy and the Government of India. Several other Indian students who arrived in the city of Bucharest in Romania from Ukraine said that the national tricolour helped them as well as some Pakistani and Turkish students in safely crossing the various checkpoints in the war-torn country. "We were told in Ukraine that being Indians and carrying Indian flag, we won't have any problems," said a medical student who arrived from Odesa in Southern Ukraine. The students narrated how they bought spray paints from the markets to prepare Indian flags. "I ran to the market, bought some colour sprays and a curtain. I then cut the curtain and spray-painted it to make the Indian tricolour," said a student. They added that even some Pakistani and Turkish students passed checkpoints using the Indian flag. "The Turkish and Pakistani students were also using the Indian flag," a student said, adding that the Indian flag was of great help to the Pakistani, Turkish students. The students from Odessa moved from Molodova to Romania. "We booked the bus from Odesa and came to the Molodova border. The Moldovan citizens were very nice. They provided us with free accommodation and taxis and buses to get to Romania," a student said. Further adding that they did not face much problem in Molodova as the Indian embassy had already made the arrangements. The students also expressed their gratitude to the Indian embassy officials who arranged for their food and shelter as they awaited their flights back to India. "When a student is arriving here, he's first taken to a proper shelter and provided with food while the registration takes place while dates on which they will be evacuated are finalised," the student said. Earlier on Monday, the Indian government deputed four Union Cabinet ministers to the neighbouring countries of Ukraine to coordinate the evacuation efforts following a high-level meeting chaired by Prime Minister Narendra Modi. (ANI) Refuting reports of delaying the evacuation of stranded Indians in Ukraine, the Union Minister of State for External Affairs V Muraleedharan said that the students did not want to leave Ukraine as universities refused to conduct online classes. Speaking to reporters here, Muraleedharan on Wednesday said: "Allegations that we were late to initiate evacuation of our students are not right. Students didn't want to leave as universities were not ready to conduct online classes. We released our first advisory before February 24 for students to leave Ukraine." Union Minister of State for External Affairs also informed that out of the 20,000 Indians stuck in Ukraine, over 6,000 people have been brought back to India so far and the Centre is making all efforts to bring back the remaining. Speaking to reporters here, Muraleedharan said, "Around 20,000 Indians were stuck in Ukraine. Of these, 4000 people returned by February 24. Till yesterday, over 2000 more people have returned. We are trying to bring back the remaining Indians via Romania, Poland Hungary, Slovakia and Moldova." Muraleedharan interacted with parents of students who are stranded in several parts of Ukraine and updated them on the Government's rescue operations under Operation Ganga. Three IAF aircraft have been sent to Romania and Hungary since this morning to evacuate Indians stranded in Ukraine. One more is scheduled for Poland later today. "The evacuation operation will run round the clock. Relief materials are also being sent. The operation is underway in coordination with MEA," Vice Chief of Air Staff Air Marshal Sandeep Singh said today. IAF has deployed C-17 aircraft as part of the evacuation efforts in coordination with the Ministry of External Affairs under 'Operation Ganga'. This comes after Prime Minister Narendra Modi chaired a high-level meeting on Tuesday to review the efforts to bring back Indians stranded in Ukraine and asked the Indian Air Force to join the evacuation efforts under 'Operation Ganga'. (ANI) They are facing problems like starvation besides a constant death threat, reported Pakistan vernacular media. The Pakistani citizens have expressed concern over problems in bringing back more than 2000 Pakistanis stuck in Ukraine amidst ongoing war. However, many claims were made by the Pakistan Foreign Ministry and Pakistan Embassy in Ukraine but the ground facts speak differently and people and students are facing a lot of troubles, reported Pak vernacular media. The local media urged the Pakistan Government to take this issue seriously and make immediate arrangements before any loss. Meanwhile, India's national tricolour came to the rescue of not only the stranded Indians but also those hailing from Pakistan and Turkey to cross into the neighbouring countries of Ukraine. The Indian students who arrived in the city of Bucharest in Romania from Ukraine said that the national tricolour helped them as well as some Pakistani and Turkish students in safely crossing the various checkpoints in the war-torn country. The Indian students arrived in the Romanian city to catch the special evacuation flights being operated under 'Operation Ganga' from the neighbouring countries of Ukraine. Air India, SpiceJet and Indigo are flying special evacuation flights. (ANI) The government said on Wednesday that fifteen flights are scheduled in the next 24 hours to bring back Indians from countries neighbouring Ukraine, which is facing a conflict situation, and that some of these flights are en route their destinations. Briefing the media here on the government's evacuation efforts, Ministry of External Affairs spokesperson Arindam Bagchi said that Indian Air Force aircraft has joined Operation Ganga. "As many as 15 flights are scheduled over next 24 hours, some of these are already en route. Indian Air Force aircraft has joined Operation Ganga, with the first C17 flight from Bucharest expected to return today to Delhi," he said. Bagchi added that three more IAF aircraft will return today with Indians from Budapest (Hungary), Bucharest (Romania) and Rzeszow (Poland). Ukraine is facing a conflict situation due to Russia's military action. Meanwhile, the Indian embassy in Ukraine today issued a fresh advisory for its nationals living in Kharkiv and asked them that they "must leave" immediately and reach Pesochin, Babaye and Bezlyudovka settlements amid the escalating military operation in Ukraine. "Urgent advisory to all Indian Nationals in Kharkiv. For their safety and security, they must leave Kharkiv immediately in light of the deteriorating situation. They should proceed to Pesochin, Babaye and Bezlyudovka as soon as possible for their safety. Under all circumstances they must reach these settlements by 1800 hrs (Ukrainian time) today," India in Ukraine said in a statement. Bagchi also said that during the last 24 hours, six flights have landed in India from countries neighbouring Ukraine. "During the last 24 hours, six flights have landed in India, taking the total number of flights that have landed in India to 15 and the total number of Indians who have returned on these flights to 3,352," Bagchi said. Foreign Secretary Harsh Vardhan Shringla had said on Tuesday that all the Indian nationals have left Kyiv and nearly 60 per cent of Indians in Ukraine have left the country so far. He had said that over the next three days, 26 flights have been scheduled to bring out Indian citizens and apart from Bucharest and Budapest, airports in Poland and the Slovak Republic will also be used. "We will mount as many flights as required," he had said. (ANI) The Ministry of External Affairs on Wednesday said that nearly 17,000 Indian nationals have left Ukraine's border since the first travel advisory was issued by the Indian Embassy in Kyiv and as many as 15 flights were scheduled over the next 24 hours. Speaking at the special briefing on Operation Ganga, to bring back Indian citizens from Ukraine amid Russia's military operation, MEA official spokesperson Arindam Bagchi said, "I am happy to inform that there has been a sharp increase in the number of Indians who have left Ukraine. We now estimate that nearly 17,000 Indian nationals left Ukraine's border since our advisories were issued, this, of course, includes some Indians who have not registered with the embassy earlier." Bagchi also informed that flights under Op Ganga has increased sharply, saying "Flights under Operation Ganga have also increased sharply. During the last 24 hours, six flights have landed in India taking the total number of flights that have landed in India to 15 and the total numbers of Indians who returned including this flight to 3,352." Highlighting the ongoing evacuation operations, he said, "I am also happy to share, as many as 15 flights are scheduled over next 24 hours, some of these are already en route," adding, "the Indian Air Force aircraft has joined Op Ganga with the first C17 flight from Bucharest expected to return today in Delhi from Bucharest later tonight." "Indian Air Force aircraft have joined Operation Ganga with the first C-17 flight from Bucharest (Romania) expected to return to Delhi later tonight. 3 more IAF flights will be undertaken today from Budapest (Hungary), Bucharest (Romania) & Rzeszow (Poland)," Bagchi added. Giving insight into the present situation in Ukraine, he said that the cities in eastern Ukraine remain areas of concern for India due to continuing violence. However, he said that there are encouraging reports that some students were able to board trains out of Kharkiv yesterday night, today morning and "we assisted in this process through the student contractors and other partners," Bagchi said. Regarding today's advisories to Indian nationals, he said that India has been in communication with the Russian side regarding the safe passage of our nationals from Kharkiv and other nearby cities. "The advisory that has been just issued by our Embassy a little while ago and also by us on the need for our nationals to leave Kharkiv immediately is on the basis of information received from Russia. We would urge all our nationals to leave Kharkiv immediately to the safe zones or further westwards using any means available including on foot, keeping safety in mind," said Bagchi. He also dealt with the western border of Ukraine, he said, "You would have seen the advisory put out today morning by our Embassy in Warsaw regarding the movement across Poland-Ukraine border, Indian nationals were advised to head to the Budimir's border point for a relatively quicker entry into Poland avoiding the Shehyni-Medyka border crossing that continues to be congested. I am happy that it is working out quite well, more people are leaving through that. Those who do cross the border on their own can directly proceed to the reception point on Polish site, indicated in an advisory." Bagchi also reiterated that India is also trying to make arrangements for shelter and food in towns near the borders. Moreover, he said that after the arrival of Indian officials at Lviv office, the evacuation process will be strengthened and the Indian embassy will be able to assist people crossing the borders. (ANI) Union Civil Aviation Minister Jyotiraditya Scindia on Wednesday met Ambassador of India to Romania, Moldova and Albania, Rahul Shrivastava, in view of the ongoing Russian military operation in Ukraine. The Union Minister highlighted that a meeting was held to decentralise the evacuation operations and map out responsibilities, including assisting with medical emergencies. In a tweet today, the Union Minister said, "Chaired a meeting with Ambassador Rahul Shrivastava and the Indian diaspora - heads of Indian companies in Romania to decentralise the evacuation operations and map out responsibilities, including assisting with medical emergencies, a 24*7 call center and state-wise data collection." With Operation Ganga being carried out on a war-footing basis, Union Civil Aviation Minister Jyotiraditya Scindia earlier on Wednesday interacted with Indian students at Henri Coanda International Airport in Bucharest in Romania. The Union Minister met everyone with warmth and praised them for their bravery and resilience. He assured each one of them that they will be flying home today. While speaking to the Indians at the airport today, the minister said that those still stuck at Romanian borders or coming to the borders will no longer be made to travel to Romania's capital to catch the flight. He said he will arrange for those students to be sent home directly from there. Students seemed happy to see him and greeted him and shared any problems they had with him. On February 28, Prime Minister Narendra Modi chaired a high level meeting to review the ongoing efforts under Operation Ganga to bring back Indians stranded in Ukraine. The Prime Minister said that the entire government machinery is working round the clock to ensure that all Indian nationals there are safe and secure. The government also informed that the first consignment of relief supplies to Ukraine to deal with the humanitarian situation on Ukraine's borders has been despatched. On February 24, Russian President Vladimir Putin recognized Ukraine's breakaway regions - Donetsk and Luhansk - as independent entities escalating the ongoing tensions between the two countries. Ukraine gained independence in 1991 after the disintegration of the Soviet Union. Earlier in February, Russian President Vladimir Putin said that special military operations are being launched "to protect" the people in the Donbas region. He also warned other countries that any attempt to interfere with the Russian action would lead to "consequences". Leaders from a number of countries including the UK, the US, Canada, and the European Union have condemned Russia's military operations in Ukraine. (ANI) Ministry of External Affairs spokesperson Arindam Bagchi on Wednesday said that Prime Minister Narendra Modi has been speaking to the leaders of several countries and has been sharing his concerns over the escalating turn of events in Ukraine. Replying to a question whether PM Modi will speak to Russian President Vladimir Putin again today, Bagchi said "PM Modi has been speaking to leaders of several countries. We share with you whenever such talks take place. I would not like to say anything beforehand." Speaking at the special briefing on Operation Ganga to bring back Indian citizens from Ukraine amid Russia's military operation, MEA official spokesperson Arindam Bagchi divulged about PM Modi's initiative regarding the security and safety of Indian nationals. PM Modi on Monday spoke with Slovakian counterpart Eduard Heger and on Tuesday he spoke with French President Emmanuel Macron, President of the European Council Charles Michel and Polish President Andrzej Duda and shared his concerns over the humanitarian situation in Ukraine. PM Modi on Tuesday spoke with French President Emmanuel Macron and discussed the ongoing situation in Ukraine. According to a release by the Prime Minister's Office (PMO), both the leaders also shared their concerns over continuing hostilities and the deteriorating humanitarian situation in Ukraine. PM Modi reiterated India's consistent appeal for cessation of hostilities and a return to dialogue and diplomacy. Moreover, PM Modi on Tuesday spoke with President of the European Council Charles Michel and expressed his anguish over the deteriorating situation and humanitarian crisis in Ukraine. During the talks, PM Modi reiterated India's appeal for cessation of hostilities and a return to dialogue, according to PMO release. On the same day, PM Modi also spoke with Polish President Andrzej Duda and thanked him for providing assistance for evacuating Indian citizens from Ukraine. The Prime Minister warmly thanked President Duda for the assistance provided by Poland in the evacuation of Indian citizens from Ukraine, and for the special gesture of relaxing visa requirements for Indian citizens crossing over to Poland from Ukraine, according to a release by the PMO. Earlier on Monday, PM Modi spoke to his Slovakian counterpart Eduard Heger and thanked him for the assistance provided by the Slovak Republic in the evacuation of Indian citizens from Ukraine and for permitting special evacuation flights from India. In a phone call, PM Modi requested for Slovak Republic's continued assistance in the next few days as well as India undertook to evacuate other citizens from conflict zones. (ANI) Union Civil Aviation Minister Jyotiraditya Scindia on Wednesday ushered an Indian national with a ligament tear to the front row of an aircraft under Operation Ganga and asked fellow passengers to take care of her. The Indian national, Srishti, who had a ligament tear and was stuck in Bucharest, had met the minister last night. Scindia earlier on Wednesday interacted with Indian students at Henri Coanda International Airport in Bucharest in Romania. The Union Minister met everyone with warmth and praised them for their bravery and resilience. He assured each one of them that they will be flying home today. While speaking to Indians at the airport today, the minister said that those still stuck at Romanian borders or coming to the borders will no longer be made to travel to Romania's capital to catch the flight. He said he will arrange for those students to be sent home directly from there. Students seemed happy to see him and greeted him and shared any problems they had with him. On February 28, Prime Minister Narendra Modi chaired a high-level meeting to review the ongoing efforts under Operation Ganga to bring back Indians stranded in Ukraine. The Prime Minister said that the entire government machinery is working round the clock to ensure that all Indian nationals there are safe and secure. The government also informed that the first consignment of relief supplies to Ukraine to deal with the humanitarian situation on Ukraine's borders has been despatched. On February 24, Russian President Vladimir Putin recognized Ukraine's breakaway regions - Donetsk and Luhansk - as independent entities escalating the ongoing tensions between the two countries. Ukraine gained independence in 1991 after the disintegration of the Soviet Union. Earlier in February, Russian President Vladimir Putin said that special military operations are being launched "to protect" the people in the Donbas region. He also warned other countries that any attempt to interfere with the Russian action would lead to "consequences". Leaders from a number of countries including the UK, the US, Canada, and the European Union have condemned Russia's military operations in Ukraine. (ANI) According to students, plain-clothed officials snatched their mobile phones and dismantled the protest camp, reported local media. Students activists claim that the peaceful protesters were unnecessarily manhandled and beaten by the Police. As per the latest development, the Baloch students have blocked the main road in Islamabad, reported local media. Balochistan's Human Development Index (HDI) ranks below 0.40 as compared to the other provinces of Pakistan that lie above 0.50. Within Pakistan, Balochistan lags far behind other provinces and 15 out of Pakistan's least-developed districts are in Balochistan. Meanwhile, enforced disappearances and arbitrary killings of Balochs have also become a new 'normal in the region'. (ANI) Made of spit and spirit, cunning and chaos, deliverance and destruction, Kristiana Rae Colon's "Octagon" takes apart the world of slam poetry with bravado and brio. Though at times self-indulgent, self-conscious and insufficiently clear in its exploration of sexual politics well, that too feels honest to the characters onstage. They're learning how to read between the lines of their relationships even as they're shouting what they insist is their truth into a microphone. Colon, a Chicago-based writer and organizer, premiered this play with London's Arcola Theatre in September 2015. But it's fitting that it should land home here in Chicago, just a mile and a half up the road from the Green Mill, where Marc Smith gets credit for inventing the "poetry slam." Jackalope Theatre's sweaty, exuberant and at times frustrating production, directed by Tara Branham, functions in part as a guide to the roots of the slam. Advertisement The MC, here called "The Watcher Named Pen" (Sydney Charles), lays out the basic rules for us. Three-minute time limit, five judges giving a score between zero and 10, with "zero being the poem that makes you wish you were aborted, 10 being the poem that liquefies your Liechtenstein, shivers your timbers, halogens your heart, chiropracts your soul." But the competition at "the Junction," the saloon presided over by Pen, isn't just for individual glory. It's also for a shot to join the four-person team that will compete at the prestigious national "Octagon" slam one that Pen won three times before she stopped "spitting" to host other poets and raise her daughter. It was a four-man team (emphasis on "man"), but internecine infidelities have caused one member the never-seen Iggy, a "civilian" investment banker who was slumming with the slam to quit. Advertisement So who will take the spot? Jericho (Tina Munoz Pandya), the woman with the rap sheet as an activist that matches her fearless political poetry? Prism (Kiki Layne), a woman who owns her sexuality and refuses to be held down except in bedroom games that veer into dangerous territory? Or Atticus (Ryan Hallahan), the mysterious new guy who wears Army dog tags and carries scars from self-cutting on his arms? There's an elliptical fever-dream element to Colon's play that somehow meshes with the familiar showbiz recriminations threaded through the narrative. Chimney (Mykele Deville), the leader of the team, has invited a documentary crew to follow him around, creating resentments. Palace (Eric Gerard), the man whose affair with Jericho blew up the original lineup, challenges Chimney's dominance and advocates for bringing her aboard, while Chad (Will Kiley), an inner-city schoolteacher and Christian, echoes Chimney's barely concealed misogyny amid his own search for connection. In the middle is soft-spoken Tide (Travis Delgado), entranced by Prism but not eager to tear her down as the other men do. Colon's exploration of sexism and patriarchy even in a world as proud of its self-proclaimed rebellion against societal conventions as slam poetry is one of the strongest elements in the play, but paradoxically, it also feels the most frustrating. Layne's Prism bristles with confidence, but there are hints of underlying darkness to her psyche, the reasons for which we don't fully learn. While we learn that Palace learned to "spit" by working off his grandfather's sermons and Chad fended off bullying jocks in high school by serving as "Cyrano" and writing their love poems for them, Prism still feels mysterious and a bit inchoate the archetypal Unknowable Woman. That's not a small problem and it feels jarring that Colon, who clearly knows that misogyny runs rampant through art scenes, alternative and mainstream alike, doesn't let us see more of what Pen suggests is Prism's own damage. A plot twist no less disturbing for having been telegraphed early on takes us into ethically murky waters late in the play. But Colon's kaleidoscopic vision ultimately proves absorbing and aggravating in equal measure. She also shoots off a few observations that are simultaneously sardonic and sorrowful, as when Chimney advises Palace to lose a reference to Oscar Grant (the subject of the film "Fruitvale Station") because Grant's death at the hands of a transit cop is too out-of-date as "a social-justice plug." "Make it Trayvon or who's that new one?" We know too well that there will always be "a new one." Like a good slam poem, Colon's play seems at first to be arising from spontaneity of emotion aiming for the solar plexus, but upon reflection, she's provided a sort of diptych in the structure. The performative first act, where we see the poets "audition" for the coveted Octagon slot, gives way to a series of "private" scenes in the second act that reveal the self-doubts plaguing all the characters. Where does the stage persona end and the "real" poet, the real soul, emerge? And can any of them hope to figure that out without an audience of friends to call them out and prop them up along the way? "Octagon" sometimes feels more like an octopus, with many tentacles reaching in multiple directions. But by the end, it proves exhilarating, exhausting and plain exciting. Just like a great poetry slam should be. Kerry Reid is a freelance critic. Advertisement ctc-arts@chicagotribune.com REVIEW: "Octagon" (3.5 STARS) When: Through Dec. 11 Where: Jackalope Theatre, Broadway Armory Park, 5917 N. Broadway Running time: 2:30 Tickets: $25 at www.jackalopetheatre.org This halt reportedly comes amid the increasing COVID-19 pandemic in the country and the measures taken by the Chinese government. Since Nepal imports daily essential products, including food items, construction material, equipment via this border port, the suspension of imports has created difficulties for the locals living in the areas. Meanwhile, sources said that the Nepal side has urged Chinese authorities to open the border but the supplies are yet to be resumed. China's withholding of trucks and containers at the Nepal-China border has become a concern for traders in Nepal, leading to delays and disruptions. Statistics show a decline in exports to China from the past three years. According to the Trade and Export Promotion Centre, exports in the last fiscal year 2020-21 fell by 14.7 per cent from 2019-20 to Rs1 billion, reported The Kathmandu Post. However, reports said that the government has been negotiating with Chinese authorities to allow more containers to pass into Nepal. On November 23 last year, Nepali Consul General in Lhasa Navaraj Dhakal tweeted, "A meeting was held with China's TAR Port and commerce-related authorities. Discussions were made to increase the number of cargo going to Nepal from Kerung and facilitating speedy movement of fertiliser among others." He added, "TAR authority assured that they will increase the trucks to 20 trucks from Tatopani, facilitate the transport of 15,000 tonnes of fertiliser cargo and study to increase cargo from Kerung, "Kathmandu Post reported. (ANI) A total of 17,000 Indian nationals have left Ukraine since the advisories were issued and flights under Operation Ganga have been increased to facilitate the evacuation of remaining students stranded in Ukraine. The students who left Ukraine also included some Indians who had not registered with the Embassy of India in Kyiv previously. Flights under Operation Ganga have been increased. During the last 24 hours, six flights under Operation Ganga have landed in India, taking the total number of flights to 15. Out of these, 8 flights were from Bucharest, 5 from Budapest and 2 from Rzeszow. The total number of Indians who have returned onboard these flights is 3,352. Out of these, 1796 were evacuated through Romania, 430 through Poland and 1126 through Hungary. As many as 15 flights are scheduled over the next 24 hours, many of which are already en route. IAF has joined Operation Ganga, and the first C-17 flight from Bucharest is expected to return to Delhi from Bucharest later tonight. Three more IAF flights will be undertaken today, from Budapest, Rzeszow and Bucharest. Humanitarian aid in form of medicines, medical equipment, tents, blankets, solar lamps and other materials is being sent to Ukraine in tranches. The first tranche weighing 2 tons comprising medicines was sent on March 1 through Poland and 3 more tranches (tents, blankets, sleeping mats etc - 16 x 2 tons) were sent on March 2 (1 by IAF flight) through Romania and Poland. The MEA Control Room, as well as the Control Centres operated by Indian Embassies in Ukraine, Poland, Romania Hungary and the Slovak Republic, continue to operate on a 24x7 basis. The MEA Control Room has attended to 9,874 calls and 7,657 emails to date. The embassy of India in Romania in coordination with Moldovan authorities is organizing the movement of Indian nationals stranded in Odessa (Ukraine) to Bucharest (Romania) via Moldova. Airspace in Moldova is closed so Indians are being sent to Bucharest The embassy is organising two routes for buses -- one set of buses for those crossing the Palanca border (Ukraine-Moldova) and being sent directly to Romania without stopping in Moldova. Another route is for those who are in the camps located in and around the capital Chisinau. The bus services are being provided free of cost. Since March 1, about 250 students have crossed over to Romania. They have all been sent by buses organised by Embassy directly to Romania (Bucharest) from the border. About 80-100 nationals are still left in and around Chisinau (capital) and most will be leaving by bus today (on March 2). In Bucharest, Indian Embassy is helping the Indian nationals with flights under Operation Ganga. The embassy in coordination with Romanian authorities has ensured that no visa is required to exit Romania via special flights. (ANI) The banners installed by Canadian Embassy for supporting Ukraine were vandalized by the Chinese nationalists in Beijing. The information was shared by the Chinese social media handle Badiucao. Banners with slogans Canada in solidarity with Ukraine and its people displayed #StandWithUkraine banners earlier. Rong Zhen, a film director with 57k followers on Chinese social media platform Weibo, was behind the vandalisation of Canadian banners and he showed off his despicable action on Weibo. Meanwhile, Actress Kela and Jin Xing were banned from Weibo for sharing anti-Russian comments. Weibo account from Chinese actress Kela with almost three million followers also got banned for sharing Russia's anti-war protest against Putin's invasion of Ukraine. She posted "nothing is forever, only goodbye is". Weibo suspended the account of Jin Xing - a Chinese Trans dancer with over 13 million followers - after he posted critical comments on Putin and the Russian invasion of Ukraine. Moreover, the Chinese students in Ukraine are appalled at the apathy shown by the Chinese embassy regarding their evacuation from the war-ridden country. Due to Beijing's support of Russian President Vladimir Putin, Chinese students in Ukraine are desperate now. They are calling for help on WeChat. One such user said, "the embassy never comes, no plane comes, we can only save ourselves, they abandoned us, and even China's journalists /internet censored our voice for asking help". At present, there are about 6,000 Chinese nationals in Ukraine, mainly in Kyiv, Lviv, Kharkiv, Odesa and Sumy, according to Global Times. Notably, the Chinese embassy initially advised its citizens to display the flags of the People's Republic of China (PRC) on their cars as a sign of their neutral position concerning the ongoing conflict. However, revoking this decision on February 26, the embassy told its citizens to "avoid ... flaunting symbols of their identity", the publication reported citing Radio France Internationale (RFI).(ANI) The Chinese embassy also advised the PRC nationals to maintain "harmonious relations with the Ukrainian people " and "avoid confrontations on specific issues." With China's pro-Russia attitude in the whole conflict, showing the PRC's colours got some Chinese citizens in Ukraine in trouble. "I put the national flag on my car, as the embassy recommended. Then people started chasing me, what the [expletive]," the media outlet quoted a Telegram user. "Do you dare take responsibility for your words? Putting the flag on yourself and going outside is looking for death. Everyone knows that the Chinese here are affluent and well-supplied, and on top of that people here think the Chinese support Russia's invasion of Ukraine," said another user berating the Chinese embassy. Notably, though the Chinese Foreign Ministry on February 23 said the sovereignty of all nations, including that of Ukraine, must be respected, it has accused the United States and its allies of augmenting the situation. Further, Chinese President Xi Jinping on February 4 signed a major strategic agreement with his Russian counterpart Vladimir Putin, securing the economic and diplomatic ties between the two countries. (ANI) Opposition Party in Pakistan has urged the Election Commission of Pakistan (ECP) to 'take punitive action' against those involved in 'glaring theft' in the 2018 general elections. The Opposition party Pakistan Peoples Party (PPP) on Tuesday handed over a report on the alleged rigging in the 2018 general elections to the Chief Election Commissioner (CEC). The report was prepared by the party some two and a half years ago. A three-member PPP delegation comprising Taj Haider, Farhatullah Babar and Nayyar Hussain Bokhari handed over the 'Rigging Report' to CEC Sikandar Sultan Raja, reported Dawn. Along with the report, there was a letter attached describing "the pre-poll, polling day and the post-poll rigging." "Sir, crimes once committed are never time-barred and in the background of the punitive actions that the ECP has already taken against violations of Elections Act 2017, we look forward to furthering punitive actions on the theft of general election 2018," read the letter. "Unfortunately, the polling staff appointed by the ECP miserably failed to stop these crimes. It is also possible that some of the appointed staff became partners in these crimes," it stated. Earlier, Last year in December, PPP Chairman Bilawal Bhutto-Zardari expressed his resentment over Imran Khan-led Pakistan Tehreek-e-Insaf (PTI) resorting to violence and rigging to undermine ongoing local government elections in Khyber Pakhtunkhwa (KP). Bilawal called on the ECP to take action against the rigging and ensure free and fair elections. He also urged the people of KP to come in large numbers to use their right to vote instead of getting dissuaded by "PTI's tactics", and requested the PPP workers to report violations to the party's election cells or directly to the ECP. (ANI) Prime Minister Narendra Modi spoke with Russian President Vladimir Putin and reviewed the situation in Ukraine, especially in Kharkiv, according to the prime minister's office on Wednesday. Both the leaders also discussed the safe evacuation of the Indian nationals from the conflict areas. "The leaders reviewed the situation in Ukraine, especially in the city of Kharkiv where many Indian students are stuck. They discussed the safe evacuation of the Indian nationals from the conflict areas," the PMO statement said. The Ministry of External Affairs on Wednesday said that nearly 17,000 Indian nationals have left Ukraine's border since the first travel advisory was issued by the Indian Embassy in Kyiv and as many as 15 flights were scheduled over the next 24 hours. The MEA further said that PM Modi has been speaking to the leaders of several countries and has been sharing his concerns over the escalating turn of events in Ukraine. On Monday, PM Modi spoke with Slovakian counterpart Eduard Heger while on Tuesday he spoke with French President Emmanuel Macron, President of the European Council Charles Michel and Polish President Andrzej Duda and shared his concerns over the humanitarian situation in Ukraine. PM Modi reiterated India's consistent appeal for cessation of hostilities and a return to dialogue and diplomacy. Moreover, PM Modi also spoke with President of the European Council Charles Michel and expressed his anguish over the deteriorating situation and humanitarian crisis in Ukraine. During the talks, PM Modi reiterated India's appeal for cessation of hostilities and a return to dialogue, according to PMO release. (ANI) Punjab cabinet on Tuesday approved an amendment to the West Pakistan Rules under Muslim Family Laws Ordinance 1961 where it included a clause wherein couples intending to get married would have to take an oath to testify their belief in the finality of Prophethood (PBUH) at the time of nikah. Following the approval, civil society and legal fraternity questioned the intentions of the Punjab government and slammed it saying there was no need for such an amendment and the laws were sufficient. According to Dawn, it appears to be a bid to win over the right-wing vote bank. They said that the law and Constitution already contain relevant provisions and clauses about faith and the changes were unnecessary. Lawyer Asad Jamal said that the amendments were legally wrong as Muslim Family Laws were not a provincial subject. "They should rather propose any change to the Centre and justify that the nation will collapse if such a move is not made. Is religion under some special threat in Punjab? The right-wing movement is indeed strong in the Punjab Assembly, and may not even face resistance because people will be scared to talk about it," he said. He asked whether the Punjab cabinet thought that some people were lying about their faith. "Such legislation is usually done in mischief unless there is evidence to support the need for it. It's like the blasphemy law was amended in the 1980s without evidence that the Muslim faith was under any threat," he added. The senior lawyer mentioned that such declarations were already required for identity documents like ID card and passport and the present laws are sufficient. "aren't the present laws and Constitution enough? What safety could such proposals ensure? This is just playing politics on religion and religious sentiments", Jamal remarked. Lawyer and women's rights activist Nighat Dad echoed Mr Jamal's views and said, "The identity documents for every citizen of Pakistan already require such an oath and when a person isn't assuming a public office, why would this be required? Religion or belief is a personal choice anyway, so why take an oath to declare it before marriage or anything for that matter?" "The nikahnama contains all the relevant clauses already, so this appears unnecessary," she added. (ANI) Union Minister for Civil Aviation Jyotiraditya Scindia on Wednesday said that a total of six flights with 1,300 Indian students onboard will depart from Bucharest (Romania) to India today. "Yesterday I met around 300-400 Indian students at the airport. They have been through a lot of trials and tribulations. It is our responsibility to send them back home safely," he said. He explained that the entire task of evacuation is divided into four parts. "First is to bring all our students from Ukraine to neighbouring country borders; second is to enable them to cross the border into the neighbouring country." Moreover, he said that "the third part is to bring them from the border of the neighbouring country to the site of embarkation for the airports, and the fourth is to evacuate them safely to India." Assuring Indian of providing help in the evacuation process, Scindia said, "We're setting up two call centres--one in Bucharest and another in the Siret (Romania) to coordinate the Indian students." The Union Minister met Romanian Prime Minister Nicolae Ciuca in Romania on Wednesday and thanked the latter for facilitating the safe evacuation of Indian citizens amid heightened tensions in Ukraine. Taking to Twitter, Scindia said, "Met the Hon'ble Prime Minister of Romania, Mr Nicolae Ciuca to thank the government for facilitating entry and ensuring the safety of our citizens amid the grim situation at the Ukrainian borders." (ANI) Speaking to journalists in Islamabad on Wednesday, Fazlur Rehman said he was 100 per cent certain a no-confidence motion against the government would win, reported SAMAA. The PDM chief claimed that the no-trust vote could succeed without support from the Pakistan Muslim League Quid-e-Azam (PMLQ), a key government alley. Rehman said that the next two to three days were important for the success of a no-confidence vote. The opposition parties need the support of 172 MNAs to pass a no-trust vote to remove Prime Minister Imran Khan from office. The same number is required for the removal of National Assembly Speaker Asad Qaiser. However, it is not clear immediately if the opposition alliance would first move a no-trust motion against Prime Minister Imran Khan or National Assembly Speaker Asad Qaiser, reported SAMAA. Some political pundits believe that removing the speaker first will improve the chances of a successful no-trust vote against the prime minister, as the speaker has a major role in controlling the proceedings of the house. (ANI) The Chinese government demolished the Tibetan Buddhist statue Padmasambhava, built six years ago to stamp out the Tibetans' religious traditions. Sangyal Kunchok, writing in Radio Free Asia (RFA) said that this is the third Tibetan Buddhist statue destroyed in the past three months, since December. The razing of Padmasambhava is seen as the latest infringement on Tibetan religious freedom. The statue of Padmasambhava, also known as Guru Rinpoche. It once stood three-storyed high at the Chanang Monastery in Drago (in Chinese Luhuo) county of the Kardze (in Ganzi) Tibetan Autonomous Prefecture. It was razed in late January, sources living in exile and satellite imagery revealed. "This is the second massive destruction in Drago in January alone," a Tibetan living in exile told RFA's Tibetan Service. RFA reported that another three-story statue at a different monastery in Drago had been destroyed in early January, only weeks after authorities toppled a 99-foot Buddha statue just 900 meters (2,700) away. A three-story structure is around 40 feet high. Satellite imagery of the Chanang Monastery taken October 3, 2019, shows the site of the statue of Padmasambhava which stood three-storyed high, but an image taken February 25, 2022 shows the destruction of the statue as indicated by the circular objects on the ground, said Kunchok. "Though there has been no explanation of the reasons for its destruction, it falls in line with the Chinese government's policy of demolishing Tibetan religious sites in the region," the exiled Tibetan said. "Though the Chinese authorities warned that they would demolish the statue last year, one of the Lamas of the monastery had documentation supporting the significance of the statue, so the demolition was pushed to a later date," the source said. Meanwhile, Chinese authorities make up regulations to justify the demolition of Tibetan statues, another Tibetan exile told RFA. "When the Chinese government demolished the 99-foot statue of Buddha and the three-story statue of Maitreya Buddha at Gaden Namyal Ling monastery in Drago, they trotted out unbelievable justifications such as that the height of the statue was not appropriate ... or that it was blocking the pathway within the monastery compound," the second source said. "But this statue of Padmasambhava is not in the way of the monastery, so it is evident that it can be nothing but the Chinese government's encroachment on Tibetans' religious freedom," the second source said. (ANI) As the Russia-Ukraine enters its seventh day, the tensions in Ukraine's Kharkiv heightened with missiles damaging the government offices, residential buildings in the city. However, Kremlin has denied the reports of attacking infrastructure, residential areas in Ukraine. Furthermore, a Russian missile struck a residential building in Zhytomyr located in the north of the western half of Ukraine. As per the State Emergency Service of Ukraine, the airstrikes resulted in piles of debris, flattened homes and buildings. Meanwhile, voting took place at United Nations General Assembly on Wednesday in the 11th emergency special session and fourth plenary meeting on the ongoing Russian military operation in Ukraine. Voting results displayed on screens at the UN General Assembly showed that 141 nations voted in favour of the move and five nations were against it, with 35 countries abstained. As the crisis continues, US President Joe Biden extended the national emergency regarding Ukraine by one year due to extraordinary threat national security and foreign policy threats posed to the United States by the situation in the Eastern European country. The permanent representatives of EU countries have agreed on new sanctions against Belarus, including the economic ones, the French Presidency of the Council of EU States said. Director-General of the International Atomic Energy Agency (IAEA), Rafael Mariano Grossi also conducted consultations in order to address an overnight request from Ukraine's nuclear regulator to extend immediate assistance to ensure the safety of Chernobyl NPP and other nuclear facilities in the country. After the increased conflict in Kharkiv, Indian Embassy in Kyiv issued an 'urgent advisory' for its nationals stranded in Ukraine asking them to leave Kharkiv immediately and to proceed to settlements at Pesochyn, Babai and Bezlyudivka by 1800 hrs (Ukrainian Time) on foot if they are unable to find vehicles for commuting to specified locations. The Embassy issued this 'urgent advisory' for Indian Nationals stranded in Kharkiv in view of the 'deteriorating situation in the city. Ministry of External Affairs spokesperson Arindam Bagchi said that Prime Minister Narendra Modi has been speaking to the leaders of several countries and has been sharing his concerns over the escalating turn of events in Ukraine. Amid the ongoing Russian military operation in Ukraine, PM Modi on Wednesday chaired a high-level meeting on the issue. The meeting was attended by Union Ministers S Jaishankar, Piyush Goyal, National Security Advisor Ajit Doval, Foreign Secretary Harsh Vardhan Shringla and other officials. For the past few days, the Prime Minister has been chairing crucial meetings on the issue. PM Modi spoke with Russian President Vladimir Putin and reviewed the situation in Ukraine, especially in Kharkiv. Both the leaders also discussed the safe evacuation of the Indian nationals from the conflict areas. "The leaders reviewed the situation in Ukraine, especially in the city of Kharkiv where many Indian students are stuck. They discussed the safe evacuation of the Indian nationals from the conflict areas," the PMO statement said. MEA added that nearly 17,000 Indian nationals have left Ukraine's border since the first travel advisory was issued by the Indian Embassy in Kyiv and as many as 15 flights were scheduled over the next 24 hours. Union Minister for Civil Aviation Jyotiraditya Scindia also informed that a total of 6 flights with 1300 Indian students onboard from Bucharest (Romania) to India will be deported today. Scindia met Romanian Prime Minister Nicolae Ciuca in Romania and thanked the latter for facilitating the safe evacuation of Indian citizens amid heightened tensions in Ukraine. Showing solidarity with the Indian students, Polish universities said that they will be opening their doors to Indian students evacuated from Ukraine so that they can finish their studies, informed Union Minister VK Singh. Amid the ongoing conflict in Eastern Europe, the number of refugees is also rising by the day. Refugees from Ukraine do not need to go through the asylum procedure, and will receive immediate protection for up to three years in the European Union, German Minister of the Interior, Building and Community Nancy Faeser said. "We provide help quickly and without bureaucracy. Refugees from Ukraine do not need to go through the asylum procedure. They receive immediate protection in the EU for up to three years," Faeser tweeted. As the temperature in conflict-ridden Ukraine continues to rise, in the latest development, the Ukrainian flag was removed from the flagpole of the Ukrainian embassy in Russia amid the ongoing conflict between Moscow and Kyiv, state media reported on Wednesday. (ANI) WASHINGTON When Russia seized Crimea in 2014, President Vladimir Putin was so worried about Russian casualty figures coming to light that authorities accosted journalists who tried to cover funerals of some of the 400 troops killed during that one-month campaign. But Moscow may be losing that many soldiers daily in Putins latest invasion of Ukraine, American and European officials said. The mounting toll for Russian troops exposes a potential weakness for the Russian president at a time when he is still claiming, publicly, that he is engaged only in a limited military operation in Ukraines separatist east. Advertisement No one can say with certainty just how many Russian troops have died since last Thursday, when they began what is turning into a long march to Kyiv, the capital. Some Russian units have put down their arms and refused to fight, the Pentagon said Tuesday. Major Ukrainian cities have withstood the onslaught thus far. American officials had expected the northeastern city of Kharkiv to fall in a day, for example, but Ukrainian troops there have fought back and regained control despite furious rocket fire. The bodies of Russian soldiers have been left in areas surrounding Kharkiv. Videos and photos on social media show charred remains of tanks and armored vehicles, their crews dead or wounded. Advertisement The Russian Defense Ministry spokesman, Maj. Gen. Igor Konashenkov, acknowledged on Sunday for the first time that there are dead and wounded Russian troops but offered no numbers. He insisted Ukrainian losses were many times higher. Ukraine has said its forces have killed more than 5,300 Russian troops. Neither sides claims have been independently verified, and Biden administration officials have refused to discuss casualty figures publicly. But one American official put the Russian losses as of Monday at 2,000, an estimate with which two European officials concurred. The body of a Russian soldier left on the side of a road on a highway outside Kharkiv, Ukraine, Feb. 25, 2022. The Russian government admitted for the first time on Sunday that "there are dead and wounded" troops, but offered no numbers. (Tyler Hicks/The New York Times) Senior Pentagon officials told lawmakers in closed briefings on Monday that Russian and Ukrainian military deaths appeared to be the same, at around 1,500 on each side in the first five days, congressional officials said. But they cautioned that the figures based on satellite imagery, communication intercepts, social media and on-the-ground media reports were estimates. For a comparison, nearly 2,500 U.S. troops were killed in Afghanistan over 20 years of war. For Putin, the rising death toll could damage any remaining domestic support for his Ukrainian endeavors. Russian memories are long and mothers of soldiers, in particular, American officials say, could easily hark back to the 15,000 troops killed when the Soviet Union invaded and occupied Afghanistan, or the thousands killed in Chechnya. Russia has deployed field hospitals near the front lines, say military analysts, who have also monitored ambulances driving back and forth from Russian units to hospitals in neighboring Belarus, Moscows ally. Given the many reports of over 4,000 Russians killed in action, it is clear that something dramatic is happening, said Adm. James G. Stavridis, who was NATOs supreme allied commander before his retirement. If Russian losses are this significant, Vladimir Putin is going to have some difficult explaining to do on his homefront. Rep. Adam Schiff, D-Calif., the chairman of the House Intelligence Committee, added, There are going to be a lot of Russians going home in body bags and a lot of Russian families grieving the longer this goes on. Advertisement In particular, Pentagon officials and military analysts said it was surprising that Russian soldiers had left behind the bodies of their comrades. Its been shocking to see that theyre leaving their fallen brethren behind on the battlefield, said Evelyn Farkas, the top Pentagon official for Russia and Ukraine during the Obama administration. Eventually the moms will be like, Wheres Yuri? Wheres Maksim? Already, the Ukrainian government has begun answering that question. On Sunday, authorities launched a website that they said was meant to help Russian families track down information about soldiers who may have been killed or captured. The site, which states it was created by Ukraines Ministry of Internal Affairs, says it is providing videos of captured Russian soldiers, some of them injured. The pictures and videos change throughout the day. If your relatives or friends are in Ukraine and participate in the war against our people here you can get information about their fate, the site says. The name of the site, www.200rf.com, is a grim reference to Cargo 200, a military code word that was used by the Soviet Union to refer to the bodies of soldiers put in zinc-lined coffins for transport away from the battlefield; it is a euphemism for troops killed in war. The website is part of a campaign launched by Ukraine and the West to counter what American officials characterize as Russian disinformation, which includes Russias insistence before the invasion that the troops surrounding Ukraine were simply there for military exercises. Information and the battle for public opinion around the world have come to play an outsize part in a war that has come to seem like a David vs. Goliath contest. Advertisement On Monday, Ukraines ambassador to the United Nations, Sergiy Kyslytsya, read out before the General Assembly what he said were the final text messages from a Russian soldier to his mother. They were obtained, he said, by Ukrainian forces after the soldier was killed. We were told that they would welcome us and they are falling under our armored vehicles, throwing themselves under the wheels and not allowing us to pass, he wrote, according to Kyslytsya. They call us fascists. Mama, this is so hard. The decision to read those texts, Russia experts and Pentagon officials said, was a not-so-veiled reminder to Putin of the role Russian mothers have had in bringing attention to military losses that the government tried to keep secret. In fact, a group now called the Union of Committees of Soldiers Mothers of Russia played a pivotal part in opening up the military to public scrutiny and in influencing perceptions of military service, Julie Elkner, a Russia historian, wrote in The Journal of Power Institutions in Post-Soviet Societies. On Tuesday, a senior Pentagon official said entire Russian units have laid down their arms without a fight after confronting surprisingly stiff Ukrainian defense. In some cases, Russian troops have punched holes in their vehicles gas tanks, presumably to avoid combat, the official said. The Pentagon official, who spoke on the condition of anonymity to discuss the operational developments, declined to say how the military had made these assessments presumably from a mosaic of intelligence including statements from captured Russian soldiers and communications intercepts or how widespread these setbacks might be across the sprawling battlefield. Images of body bags or coffins, or soldiers killed and left on the battlefield, a Biden administration official said, would prove the most damaging to Putin at home. Ukrainian officials are using the reports and images on social media of Russian casualties to try to undercut the morale of the invading Russian forces. Advertisement On Monday, Ukraines defense minister, Oleksii Reznikov, offered Russian soldiers cash and amnesty if they surrendered. Russian soldier! You were brought to our land to kill and die, he said. Do not follow criminal orders. We guarantee you a full amnesty and 5 million rubles if you lay down your arms. For those who continue to behave like an occupier, there will be no mercy. c.2021 The New York Times Company Naveen Kumar, first secretary at Indian Embassy along with Purna Joshi, Minister for Internal Affairs and Law of Sudur Pashchim Province inaugurated the infrastructure, the Indian Embassy said in a statement. As per the release, lately inaugurated project falls under one of 75 projects being inaugurated in Nepal as part of "India@75 AzadiKaAmritMahotsav" which celebrates 75 years of India's independence. These new buildings at Nepal Police School have been constructed at a cost of Nepalese Rupees 42.26 million under India-Nepal Development Cooperation with Government of India's financial assistance. The school, set up in 1985, currently has 665 students. "As close neighbours, India and Nepal have multi-faceted and multi-sectoral development partnerships. The creation of infrastructure under India-Nepal Development Cooperation reflects the continued support of the Government of India in bolstering the efforts of the Government of Nepal in education sector," the Indian Mission in Kathmandu stated. (ANI) India abstained from voting against Russia at United Nations General Assembly on Wednesday at the 11th emergency special session and fourth plenary meeting on the ongoing Russian military operation in Ukraine. Voting results displayed on screens at the UN General Assembly showed that 141 nations voted in favour of the move and five nations were against it, with 35 countries abstained. The UNGA overwhelmingly voted to condemn Russia's invasion of Ukraine. As the results were placed on the screen in the chamber, a rare standing ovation occurred, UNGA statement said. However, Russia's Permanent Representative to the United Nations Vassily Nebenzia said that Moscow is not carrying out strikes on civilians and civilian facilities. Speaking at UN General Assembly (UNGA) emergency session on Wednesday, the Russian envoy said that a peaceful scenario of Ukraine could happen if the radicals were concerned about preserving lives of civilians rather than hiding behind them. "We are not carrying out strikes on civilian facilities and civilians. A peaceful scenario of Ukraine could happen if the radicals concerned about preserving civilian lives rather than hiding behind them," Vassily Nebenzia today. Earlier on Sunday (local time), India abstained from voting on a resolution to call for a special emergency session of the UNGA on the Russia-Ukraine conflict. This came two days after India abstained from voting on the UNSC resolution condemning the Russian invasion of Ukraine, along with China and the UAE. Justifying India's stand at UN General Assembly, Foreign Secretary Harsh Vardhan Shringla has said that it was based "on certain careful considerations" and taken "in the best interests" of the country. "In United Nations, we take positions that are based on certain careful considerations and certainly, we do regard the merits of each and every case that comes before us...take decisions in our best interest," Shringla said while replying to India's decision to abstain from voting on a resolution to call for a special emergency session of the UN General Assembly on the Russia-Ukraine conflict. (ANI) The C-17 Globemaster aircraft of the Indian Air Force (IAF) carrying 208 Indian nationals stranded in Ukraine left for Delhi from Poland's Rzeszow on Wednesday (local time) under Operation Ganga. Amid ongoing Russian military operations in Ukraine, Union Minister VK Singh on Tuesday landed in Poland to coordinate and oversee the evacuation process of Indian nationals from Ukraine. Singh is one of the four 'special envoys' deployed by the Government of India to oversee the evacuation process of Indian nationals in Ukraine's neighbouring countries. Taking to Twitter, the Union Minister said, "Here at Rzeszow Airport in Poland where the impressive and dependable C-17 Globemaster has been called to take our students back home. Two Indigo flights also added to the numbers being brought back. Good to have all of our Indian students aboard on the IAF C-17 Globemaster ready to return to the safety of our motherland." Singh interacted with the Indian nationals before the departure of the aircraft. A total of 17,000 Indian nationals have left Ukraine since the advisories were issued and flights under Operation Ganga have been increased to facilitate the evacuation of remaining students stranded in Ukraine. The students who left Ukraine also included some Indians who had not registered with the Embassy of India in Kyiv previously. Flights under Operation Ganga have been increased. During the last 24 hours, six flights under Operation Ganga have landed in India, taking the total number of flights to 15. Out of these, 8 flights were from Bucharest, 5 from Budapest and 2 from Rzeszow. The total number of Indians who have returned onboard these flights is 3,352. Out of these, 1796 were evacuated through Romania, 430 through Poland and 1126 through Hungary. As many as 15 flights are scheduled over the next 24 hours, many of which are already en route. Meanwhile, Prime Minister Narendra Modi on Wednesday chaired a high-level meeting on the issue. The meeting was attended by Union Ministers S Jaishankar, Piyush Goyal, National Security Advisor Ajit Doval, Foreign Secretary Harsh Vardhan Shringla and other officials.For the past few days, the Prime Minister has been chairing crucial meetings on the issue. Russian forces launched military operations in Ukraine on February 24, three days after Moscow recognized Ukraine's breakaway regions - Donetsk and Luhansk - as independent entities. Several countries including the UK, the US, Canada, and the European Union have condemned Russia's military operations in Ukraine and imposed sanctions on Moscow. These countries have also promised Ukraine to help with military aid to fight Russia. The US, Canada and European allies agreed to remove key Russian banks from the interbank messaging system, SWIFT which means Russian banks won't be able to communicate securely with banks beyond Russia's borders. President Putin has also signed a decree on special economic measures against the US and its allies. (ANI) Six flights carrying Indian nationals stranded in Ukraine will depart shortly from the Romanian capital Bucharest on Wednesday (local time) under Operation Ganga, informed Union Civil Aviation Minister Jyotiraditya Scindia. Scindia, who is in Romania to oversee the evacuation of Indian nationals stranded in Ukraine, on Wednesday said that a total of six flights with 1,300 Indian students onboard will depart from Bucharest to India on Wednesday (local time). Scindia is one of the four 'special envoys' deployed by the Government of India to oversee the evacuation process of Indian nationals in Ukraine's neighbouring countries. He said, "A total of 3,500 students will leave for India from Bucharest and around 1,300 from Suceava in the next two days. Tomorrow I will be leaving for the Siret border and staying there for two days until each and every Indian is not evacuated from Siret. We are setting up two call centres -- one in Bucharest and another in the Siret (Romania) to coordinate the Indian students." "Today we have six flights from Bucharest (Romania) to India. Around 1,300 students are departing for India today. Yesterday I met around 300-400 Indian students at the airport. They have been through a lot of trials and tribulations. It is our responsibility to send them back home safely," said the Union Minister. He explained that the entire task of evacuation is divided into four parts. "First is to bring all our students from Ukraine to neighbouring country borders; second is to enable them to cross the border into the neighbouring country." Moreover, he said that "the third part is to bring them from the border of the neighbouring country to the site of embarkation for the airports, and the fourth is to evacuate them safely to India." Assuring Indian of providing help in the evacuation process, Scindia said, "We are setting up two call centres--one in Bucharest and another in the Siret (Romania) to coordinate with the Indian students." The Union Minister met Romanian Prime Minister Nicolae Ciuca in Romania on Wednesday and thanked the latter for facilitating the safe evacuation of Indian citizens. Scindia also took stock of the arrangements and supplies in the Indian Air Force C-17 flight at Bucharest on Wednesday. Taking to Twitter, the Union Minister said, "With the C-17 Globemaster crew, taking stock of the supplies. I thank IAF, along with the Romanian Embassy and the Indian Embassy in Romania for working round the clock without rest on all aspects of evacuation operations. Thank you! Bharat Mata ki Jai! #OperationGanga." External Affairs Minister S Jaishankar on Thursday said nine flights took off on Thursday from Hungary, Romania, Slovakia and Poland. "Nine flights have taken off today from Hungary, Romania, Slovakia and Poland. Includes IAF aircraft. 6 flights more are expected to depart shortly. Altogether, will bring back more than 3000 Indian nationals," tweeted Jaishankar. A total of 17,000 Indian nationals have left Ukraine since the advisories were issued and flights under Operation Ganga have been increased to facilitate the evacuation of remaining students stranded in Ukraine. The students who left Ukraine also included some Indians who had not registered with the Embassy of India in Kyiv previously. Flights under Operation Ganga have been increased. During the last 24 hours, six flights under Operation Ganga have landed in India, taking the total number of flights to 15. Out of these, 8 flights were from Bucharest, 5 from Budapest and 2 from Rzeszow. The total number of Indians who have returned onboard these flights is 3,352. Out of these, 1796 were evacuated through Romania, 430 through Poland and 1126 through Hungary. As many as 15 flights are scheduled over the next 24 hours, many of which are already en route. Meanwhile, Prime Minister Narendra Modi on Wednesday chaired a high-level meeting on the issue. The meeting was attended by Union Ministers S Jaishankar, Piyush Goyal, National Security Advisor Ajit Doval, Foreign Secretary Harsh Vardhan Shringla and other officials. For the past few days, the Prime Minister has been chairing crucial meetings on the issue.Russian forces launched military operations in Ukraine on February 24, three days after Moscow recognized Ukraine's breakaway regions - Donetsk and Luhansk - as independent entities. Several countries including the UK, the US, Canada, and the European Union have condemned Russia's military operations in Ukraine and imposed sanctions on Moscow. These countries have also promised Ukraine to help with military aid to fight Russia. The US, Canada and European allies agreed to remove key Russian banks from the interbank messaging system, SWIFT which means Russian banks won't be able to communicate securely with banks beyond Russia's borders. President Putin has also signed a decree on special economic measures against the US and its allies. (ANI) Indian students have been taken hostage by Ukrainian security forces to use them as a human shield, claimed Russian Embassy in India on Wednesday (local time). This comes after Russian President Vladimir Putin spoke to Prime Minister Narendra Modi and reviewed the situation in Ukraine, especially in Kharkiv and discussed the safe evacuation of the Indian nationals from the conflict areas. "According to the latest information, these students are actually taken hostage by the Ukrainian security forces, who use them as a human shield and in every possible way prevent them from leaving for Russia. Responsibility, in this case, lies entirely with the Kyiv authorities," Russia in India wrote in a tweet. "According to our information, Ukrainian authorities forcibly keep a large group of Indian students in Kharkov who wish to leave Ukrainian territory and go to Belgorod," the spokesperson of the Russian Ministry of Defence said during the briefing. "In fact, they are being held as hostages & offered to leave the territory of Ukraine via Ukrainian-Polish border. They offered to go through the territory where active hostilities are taking place," he said. He further said that Russian armed forces are ready to take all necessary measures for the safe evacuation of the Indian citizens and send them home from the Russian territory with its own military transport planes or Indian planes, as the Indian side proposed to do. However, Ukraine has reacted to Russia's allegations and called on the Russian Federation to "immediately cease its hostilities in Kharkiv and Sumy so that they can arrange the evacuation of the civilian population, including foreign students, to safer Ukrainian cities". "There are students from India, Pakistan, China and other counties who cannot leave because of the indiscriminate shelling and barbaric missile strikes by the Russian Armed Forces on residential areas and civilian infrastructure," Ukrainian Foreign Ministry said in a statement. The statement said that the Ukrainian government stands ready to assist foreign students to relocate from Kharkiv and Sumy. "The Government of Ukraine stands ready to assist foreign students to relocate from Kharkiv and Sumy should Russia commit to a ceasefire. Attempting to arrange evacuations through cities that are being subjected to Russian bombing and missile strikes is extremely dangerous," read the statement. Ukraine demanded Moscow to allow the opening of a humanitarian corridor to other Ukrainian cities. "We urgently call on the governments of India, Pakistan, China and other counties whose students have become hostages of the Russian armed aggression in Kharkiv and Sumy, to demand from Moscow that it allows the opening of a humanitarian corridor to other Ukrainian cities," said Ukraine's Foreign Ministry in a statement. Meanwhile, Ukrainian Foreign Minister Dmytro Kuleba, in a tweet, said that the country has established an emergency hotline for African, Asian and other students wishing to leave Ukraine as the tensions between Moscow and Kyiv rages on. "We have established an emergency hotline for African, Asian and other students wishing to leave Ukraine because of Russia's invasion. +380934185684 We are working intensively to ensure their safety & speed up their passage. Russia must stop its aggression which affects us all," he tweeted. (ANI) By Riham Alkousaa BERLIN (Reuters) -Two Afghan brothers suspected of killing their sister for adopting a Western lifestyle went on trial in Berlin on Wednesday, in a case that highlights the violence against women and cultural tensions among some recent migrants to Germany. The defendants, identified as Sayed H. and Seyed H. under German privacy laws, are accused of luring their 34 year-old sister to meet them last July in Berlin and choking her and cutting her throat, the Berlin prosecutor's office said. All three siblings had Afghan citizenship and had been living in Germany for several years. The brothers, aged 23 and 27, did not accept that their sister had divorced her husband, to whom she was married at the age of 16, after a violent marriage. They are believed to had put the body of the woman, who was a mother of two, in a suitcase and transported it on a train to Bavaria where she was buried near one of the brothers' residences, the prosecutors added. The men have been in custody since August and could face life imprisonment if convicted. The case casts a light on gender-based violence within migrant communities in Germany which received more than one million refugees in 2015 and 2016. So-called "honour killings" in Syria and Afghanistan, from where the majority of refugees in Germany came from six years ago, are socially accepted and common in some communities there. The two countries rank near the bottom of the United Nations Development Programme's Gender Inequality Index. German women's rights organization TERRE DES FEMMES (TDF) said the Afghan mother's murder was not an isolated case, calling for support services for refugee women and to close cultural gaps in refugees' integration policy in Germany. Some 25 people were victims of attempted or actual "honour" murders in the last two years in Germany, TDF research found. "However, this number is only the tip of the iceberg," TDF said in a statement. (Reporting by Riham AlkousaaEditing by Alexandra Hudson) Nasrin Nawa, a graduate student at the University of Nebraska-Lincoln and an Afghan Fulbright Scholar in Lincoln, Nebraska, on Tuesday. (Photo: Walker Pickering for HuffPost) As the Taliban overtook Kabul last August, 119 new Afghan Fulbright scholars were just leaving for their new academic posts in the United States. Bahara, an Afghan Fulbright scholar, was at the airport in Kabul on the morning of Aug. 15 shortly before the city fell a narrow escape from one of the most chaotic events in the history of Afghanistan. It was a normal morning, and I was excited. I had just landed in Istanbul for a transit, and it was then that I heard the bad news, said Bahara, who asked HuffPost not to use her last name out of safety concerns. I was shocked and could hardly believe my ears. Bahara arrived in Boston the next morning, but the sudden turmoil in her home city has continued to haunt her. Sometimes, she finds herself feeling overwhelmed with memories of that day and anxiety over what will come next. The Fulbright Program is an international educational exchange program that is sponsored by the U.S. government and designed to increase mutual understanding between Americans and people in other countries. Up until the Taliban takeover, the Fulbright program for Afghans had been one of the largest U.S. investments in education in Afghanistan. Since 2001, 970 Afghan Fulbright scholars have come to study in the United States, according to the U.S. Bureau of Educational and Cultural Affairs. That includes the 119 current Afghan scholars. This years scholars are now facing deep uncertainty. The country of Afghanistan is no longer what they once knew it to be, and the objectives they laid out in their Fulbright application statements including their hopes of making contributions to their homeland now hold little or no meaning. I wasnt able to concentrate on my studies because I was in a weekslong phase of shock and denial after what happened back in my country, said Nasrin Nawa, a journalist and a Fulbright scholar at the University of Nebraska-Lincoln who left for the United States only a few days before the fall of Kabul. I was a survivor carrying the guilt of leaving behind my family and friends. Story continues Fulbright Alumni Not Safe Under Taliban Besides the current scholars living in limbo in the United States, more than 100 Afghan Fulbright alumni and their families are still in Afghanistan hoping to flee the country. They worry about becoming targets for the regime because of their involvement with the United States. But they also feel like they have not accomplished what they had hoped to in Afghanistan after returning from their studies. I was committed to my country and the goals of the Fulbright in Afghanistan, said Mohammad, a Fulbright scholar who returned to Afghanistan in May 2020 and had held a senior position in the previous government. He asked to use a pseudonym out of fear of possible repercussions. But things have changed. I am not safe, my family is not safe. I can no longer work. Most of the Fulbright alumni held high-ranking positions in the previous government, including ministers and deputy ministers, and at international organizations, putting them in vulnerable positions under Taliban rule. In late January, the Associated Press reported that the United Nations had received credible allegations that more than 100 former members of the Afghan government, its security forces and those who worked with international troops have been killed since August. That includes notices of enforced disappearances and other violations impacting the right to life and physical integrity of former government and coalition members, according to U.N. Secretary-General Antonio Guterres. Human rights activists and members of the media also continue to come under attack, intimidation, harassment, arbitrary arrest, ill-treatment and killings, Guterres said. Although some U.S.-based universities and congresspeople have made promises to evacuate Fulbright alumni, there have been no official attempts to do so since the fall of Kabul last summer, Mohammad told HuffPost. Fear Of An Uncertain Future In October, U.S. Rep. John Garamendi (D-Calif.) introduced the Special Immigrant Visas for Afghan Fulbright Scholars Act, which would direct the State Department to automatically issue a special immigrant visa, or SIV, for every Afghan who lived in the United States as a Fulbright scholar and their immediate family members. It would also allow those who are currently in the United States to adjust their statuses so they can stay beyond their fellowships, which generally last for two years. Currently, SIVs are only available to Afghans and Iraqis who worked for or on behalf of the U.S. government as translators, interpreters or other professionals. Garamendis proposed legislation would also apply to other Afghan exchange visitors in the United States, including those in the Fulbright Scholar-in-Residence Grant Program, the Fulbright Foreign Language Teaching Assistant Program and the Hubert H. Humphrey Fellowship Program. The measure was included in the America COMPETES bill that theHouse of Representatives passed in early February. It now needs to be reconciled with the Senates version, which was approved in June 2021 but does not include the provision about Afghan Fulbright scholars. Immigration advocates say lawmakers need to act urgently to provide relief for these scholars. Were being very supportive of Garamendis bill, said Jill Welch, senior policy adviser at the Presidents Alliance on Higher Education and Immigration. However, advocates would like the bill to address the exchange visitor, or J-1, visas that Fulbright scholars typically receive. Those visas require scholars to return to their home countries for at least a two-year period or apply for waivers before they are eligible to apply for more permanent immigration status in the United States. That has created a major impediment for Afghan Fulbright scholars and other exchange visitors now hoping to resettle in the United States especially for the 119 scholars who remain in the United States and cannot return to Afghanistan. Without waivers, they would be forced to either return to a dangerous situation or remain in the United States in legal limbo. While applying for a waiver successfully is possible, it is often a lengthy and costly process. It would be easier to just include those issues in that legislation and Congress gives the [Department of Homeland Security] permission to waive that two-year home residency, Welch said. I was a survivor carrying the guilt of leaving behind my family and friends.Nasrin Nawa, an Afghan Fulbright scholar at the University of Nebraska-Lincoln Nawa is considered a well-known journalist in Afghanistan with strong liberal and westernized views. She hopes to continue her work as an investigative reporter assuming the U.S.-backed government provides the protection to do that. I wish I could return, she said, recalling a time when her Kabul neighborhood felt relatively safe and progressive. Now, Taliban soldiers control it and are restricting peoples everyday lives, especially women. Many of my friends and women I know are abducted and threatened by the Taliban, and those who werent are in hiding trying to keep a low profile, Nawa said. Given the current situation, it is impossible to go back to Afghanistan, said Mahdi Soroush, a Fulbright scholar at the Hubert H. Humphrey School of Public Affairs at the University of Minnesota. After graduation, remaining in the U.S. is challenging and requires a lot of work. Several Fulbright alumni who are in the United States did not want to risk waiting for legislation to pass and were advised by their immigration lawyers to apply for asylum. That is what Ahmad, a Fulbright alumnus who graduated last summer, has tried to do. He also asked to use a pseudonym out of concern for his familys safety in Afghanistan. But seeking asylum is also difficult, given the backlog of 412,000 pending applications. I hired a lawyer to whom I paid a great deal of money, Ahmad said. I also needed to waive my J-1 home residency requirement. That is a lot of work and money, yet I do not know when it will be approved. At least several dozen other Fulbright scholars have relocated to Canada and sought asylum there, in part because the immigration system in Canada makes it easier and faster to get permanent residency, Ahmad told HuffPost. The SIV provision in Garamendis bill would provide a pathway for scholars but does not guarantee a swift resolution, as there are an estimated 40,000 pending SIV applications. Afghan advocates are also seeking to include a similar provision in the Afghan Adjustment Act, a proposed framework for creating a pathway to lawful permanent residence for Afghan evacuees beyond the current SIV, asylum and priority refugee processes. In late January, the U.S. State Department announced that it had canceled the selection process for next years Fulbright program in Afghanistan. The news shattered the dreams of 140 semifinalists who were already a year into the process and suspended the program indefinitely. EDITORS NOTE: A previous version of this article was published with Baharas full name and the name of the university where she studies. After publication, Bahara requested that her last name and university be withdrawn out of concerns for her familys safety. The article has been updated. This article originally appeared on HuffPost and has been updated. Chicago Public Schools CEO Pedro Martinez expects that the school district the largest in the state to still require masks indoors will move to a mask optional model for all students and staff in the near future, according to a memo he sent to principals this week. We understand that this will be a major adjustment for our school communities, and we are committed to providing you with all the support you need during this transition, Martinez wrote. We will provide you with materials shortly, including communications to be shared with your families and staff and more details about how we will operationalize this change in schools. Advertisement The district released a statement Wednesday afternoon saying more details about the move to a mask-optional policy will be shared early next week. The Chicago Board of Education just last week reaffirmed CPS universal mask mandate, which is part of the safety agreement the district forged with the Chicago Teachers Union in January after a bitter dispute that led to five days of canceled classes. Board members cited student vaccination rates that vary widely between CPS schools as a reason to keep the mandate in place. Advertisement Chicago Public Schools CEO Pedro Martinez joins students, teachers and CPS leaders on Feb. 14 outside the newly renamed Harriet Tubman Elementary School. (Raquel Zaldivar/Chicago Tribune) CTU reiterated its support for CPS mask mandate in a Wednesday letter to members that asked them to weigh in on face coverings and other COVID-19 protocols as we look past spring break and toward the end of the school year. Spring break runs April 11 to 15. Polling has overwhelmingly shown that mask mandates are still supported by parents and many throughout the U.S., and we stand behind that support, especially with an unvaccinated prekindergarten population and low vaccination rates in many vulnerable school communities, CTU President Jesse Sharkey said in the letter. We also know student and parent concerns best because these are the families we work with daily, so we will continue to organize and fight on their behalf. CTU Vice President Stacy Davis Gates released a statement later Wednesday saying that while the COVID-19 situation has improved in the last month, we also understand that schools are congregate settings, and less than 25% of students in many South and West side schools are vaccinated. Unfortunately, CEO Martinez neglected to venture into those communities to alleviate concerns today. Still, our agreement with the district sets the table for equity and safety for all, and well continue to advance COVID mitigations that help keep Black and brown children and families safe. Gov. J.B. Pritzker announced the end of the statewide school mask mandate Friday in light of new guidance from the Centers for Disease Control and Prevention. Many districts had already opted to go mask-optional after litigation challenging the mask mandate scored some legal victories last month. Downstate attorney Tom DeVore who is representing Chicago parents who filed a lawsuit against Pritzker and the Illinois Department of Public Health, arguing the CPS mask mandate violates their students due process rights said Wednesday he was not surprised to learn about Martinezs memo to building principals. DeVore and a CPS representative are expected to appear before Sangamon County Circuit Judge Raylene Grischow on March 10 regarding DeVores request for a temporary restraining order to halt the CPS mask and quarantine mandate for the students of parents who filed the lawsuit. Within hours of the judge calling a hearing for next week, Martinez announces CPS will be making a change to mask optional, so you need to ask yourself, is that a coincidence, or not? DeVore said. CPS has been running in circles, and now, they know its over, and will have to make the change, DeVore said. This has always been about the children, and CPS needs to accept that and deal with the union. Advertisement Nancy Griffin, a co-founder of the Chicago Parents Collective, which has been pushing CPS to move to a mask optional policy, said in a statement that given the new federal guidance, and Pritzkers lifting of the school mask mandate, CPS needs to follow suit. When will this citys children be able to experience a normal school day without the need for politics and negotiations? Why cant the district and union just do what is right for the children? Griffin said. Other parents rallied in support of the mask mandate outside City Hall on Monday, saying the district has a responsibility to protect its most vulnerable population. Data obtained by the Tribune last week shows some West and South side elementary schools have just over 5% of their students fully vaccinated, while student vaccination rates at some North Side schools approach 90%. Troy LaRaviere, president of the Chicago Principals and Administrators Association, chided CPS leadership for not soliciting principal opinions on the mask mandate. No group of educators knows as much about running schools as principals. Yet the experience and views of principals are routinely disregarded by district management when it comes to making policy or offering solutions that impact the schools and students under our care, LaRaviere said in a statement that also promoted state legislation that would allow Chicago principals to unionize. This is what happens when district leadership is more concerned about optics and politics than about creating effective policies that benefit schools and students. Advertisement tswartz@tribpub.com kcullotta@chicagotribune.com Although the numbers differ across racial groups and political parties, a majority of Americans think that the US either experienced more job losses last year, or only the same level of growth as usual. Getty Images The United States added more jobs in 2021 than any year in history. Most Americans, however, think that the US either lost jobs or gained the usual amount. President Biden clocked the second lowest approval rating of any president on record this week. The United States added more jobs in 2021 than any year in history, but more than two-thirds of Americans don't know that. In fact, many think the country lost jobs. That's according to a new survey of 1,395 registered voters conducted last month by Navigator, a political research firm. The researchers found that although the numbers differ across racial groups and political parties, a majority of Americans in each category think that the US either experienced more job losses last year, or only the same level of growth as usual. That perception of the economy is not the messaging that the Biden administration wants, especially given that President Biden clocked the second lowest approval rating of any president on record this week, at about 41%, according to FiveThirtyEight. The survey as a whole suggested that Biden's administration might have problems conveying their plans across the board. Biden's Build Back Better (BBB) plan was killed in Congress last month, for instance, but nearly a quarter of Americans support BBB despite disapproving of Biden on the economy. "When including the $1.75 trillion price tag, as well as universal pre-K, Medicare covering hearing, and lower drug prices, 60% support, including 86% of Democrats and 50% of independents," the researchers wrote. "Dropping the price tag and universal pre-K, while adding in clean energy, drives support up to 66%, including 89% of Democrats, 59% of independents, and 42% of Republicans." The US added a record number of jobs, but Americans haven't noticed Last year, the US gained 6.4 million new jobs. That's the biggest single-year gain on record and, on a percentage basis, the best year for job growth since 1978. Story continues The unemployment rate experienced a strong recovery too. The Bureau of Labor Statistics reported in December that the benchmark fell more than expected to 3.9%, placing it close to the historic lows seen right before the pandemic. That's down from the 6.7% unemployment rate from the start of 2021, making the one-year decline the largest in data going back to 1949. And hiring recovery was better than expected in the first few months of 2022: the Bureau of Labor Statistics showed that hiring rebounded in January despite the US sitting in the peak of the Omicron wave. Which makes some of the findings from the Navigator survey perplexing: 35% of overall respondents said that the US experienced more job losses than usual over the last 12 months, with 33% estimating that it experienced the same level of growth, and only 19% correctly assessing that the country saw more job growth. Democrats were the group with the largest percentage that said the country saw more job growth last year but it was less than a third that did, at 31%. Only 9% of Republicans correctly assessed that the country gained more jobs. There are at least a few possible explanations for why Americans are so out of step with the actual job growth rate: for instance, they spent nearly a year resigning in massive numbers. The Bureau of Labor Statistics said the country added 467,000 nonfarm payrolls in January, far exceeding economists' estimates of only 150,000 payrolls. But that's still after nine months of American quitting at record or near-record rates, over 38 million for all of 2021. And many more people, especially young people, say they plan to quit this year. Read the original article on Business Insider San Diego (AP) Dozens of U.S. Navy officials have admitted to being bought off by the gregarious, rotund Malaysian defense contractor known as Fat Leonard who plied them with prostitutes, Cuban cigars and free stays at the Philippines' Shangri-La hotel, among other things. Now as the last five of 34 defendants stand trial in federal court in San Diego, whats more shocking is how little the case has changed the Navys way of doing business, according to former military officers and government watchdog advocates. You would expect that one of the largest corruption scandals in the history of the United States Navy would provoke pretty dramatic changes to prevent something like this from happening again in the future. But sadly, thats not really the case, said Dan Grazier, a former Marine who now works as a military analyst at the Project on Government Oversight in Washington. The case has centered around Leonard Glenn Francis who admitted in 2015 to offering $500,000 in bribes to Navy officers. In exchange, the officers passed him classified information and even went so far as redirecting military vessels to ports that were lucrative for his Singapore-based ship servicing company, Glenn Defense Marine Asia, or GDMA. Twenty-nine people, mostly Navy officials, have pleaded guilty to helping Francis including providing classified ship schedules in exchange for extravagant outings in South Asia with prostitutes and meals with tabs totaling more than $20,000. While scores of Navy officials were partying with Leonard Francis, a massive breach of national security was in full swing, U.S. Attorney Randy Grossman said recently. Prosecutors say Francis and his company overcharged the U.S. military by more than $35 million for its services between 2004 and 2013, which included providing food and water to the ships at Pacific ports in Asia. Francis, who is scheduled to be sentenced in July, has been cooperating with the U.S. Department of Justice since his arrest in 2013 in San Diego. Story continues Five officers Rear Adm. Bruce Loveless, Capts. David Newland, James Dolan and David Lausman, and Cmdr. Mario Herrera have maintained their innocence and have gone to trial. It's unclear whether Francis, who is in poor health and has been under house arrest, will testify at the trial, which is expected to last months. Defense lawyers have been trying to prevent him from taking the stand after he gave his version of events in a podcast last year. Navy officials vowed to clean up their contracting processes in response to the scandal and implemented more oversight. Sailors received more ethics training. Supply officers have less independence. Goods and services now must be priced at current market rates as determined by the Navys Fleet Logistics Centers. But thats not enough for Grazier, who said the military needs to move away from contracting out so much of its work. As bases have closed worldwide, the Navy has increasingly turned to contractors to do what it once did in-house. I think unless the Navy really changes the way it does business, future Fat Leonards are just going to be more cautious, but its not going to change their practices, Grazier said. Grazier fears the case's biggest impact has been on young people like his son who is an enlisted sailor. They think theyre signing up for something really noble, and then they see all these people that theyre supposed to look up to behaving in such an unethical and often times illegal fashion, Grazier said. Thats hugely crushing for these young idealists. I think thats one of the biggest tragedies of all this. Craig Hooper, a defense contractor, said the Navy needs to increase its auditing teams and also adapt its rules so they fit the cultural norms of where it operates. In Asia, for instance, it's common to go out for drinks or dinner to form business relationships yet many junior officers are expected to pay out of their own pockets, though many can't afford it. Hooper said the Navy should be footing those bills rather than creating situations that lend themselves to corruption. Bryan Clark, a fellow at the Hudson Institute, said the Navy's brass has also long turned a blind eye to contractors who might be unscrupulous but who could get things done. When he was a sailor in the Pacific more than 20 years ago, it was known then Francis was sleazy," but he was also well-connected in the region, he said. He hopes the case will teach officers that those things can no longer be ignored, though he said it's unfortunate that many high-ranking officers who were investigated got off with early retirements while lower-ranking officers were charged. Its just a huge black eye for the Navy from a cultural perspective and a legal perspective," Clark said. Because it wasnt just, you know, a couple of bad apples." ARLINGTON, VA Starting Thursday, Arlington County will no longer require masks for the public and most employees while inside county government facilities based on new guidance issued by the Centers for Disease Control and Prevention, the county said Wednesday. With Arlington's announcement, all Northern Virginia jurisdictions have lifted mask requirements inside government buildings or have made plans to make masks optional. Across the region, masks will still be required in some locations, such as public transportation and where health or medical services are provided. By federal mandate, for example, masks must still be worn on Metro buses and Metro trains, as well as commercial aircraft. Arlington County's decision follows new CDC guidance issued last Friday, which updated how it monitors COVID-19s impact on communities. The CDCs new tool looks at hospital beds being used, hospital admissions and the total number of new COVID-19 cases in an area to determine a level of low, medium, or high. Currently, Arlington County is low, meaning individuals may choose to wear a mask based on personal preference and level of risk of developing severe illness. For the public and most employees, masks will no longer be required inside county facilities, so long as Arlington is in the low level. On Tuesday, Arlington Public Schools gave everyone entering a school building the option not to wear a mask. This included students, teachers, staff members and visitors. No opt-out form was required. People who are at increased risk of severe illness should still consider taking extra precautions even when the COVID-19 community level is low, the county said. On Monday, Fairfax County announced that masks would no longer be required in most county government facilities for county employees and visitors. The City of Alexandria made masks optional in government buildings on Tuesday. The City of Falls Church said Wednesday it was lifting its mask requirement in government buildings, effective immediately. Story continues Arlington County warned residents that the pandemic is not over and that vaccination remains the best protections from COVID-19. The CDC recommends everyone 5 years and older be up to date on their COVID-19 vaccines. To find a vaccine location, visit vaccines.gov, walk in to one of the Countys clinics, or call the county's COVID-19 hotline at 703-228-7999. RELATED: New COVID-19 Mask Guidance Issued For Arlington Public Schools This article originally appeared on the Arlington Patch The Daily Beast ReutersTroops sent into Ukraine to back up Russian forces say they had no choice but to leave because Russian military was in shambles and they deceived us at every step.Soldiers from the breakaway state of South Ossetiaspeaking to South Ossetian leader Anatoly Bibilov at a meeting publicized by the independent news outlet MediaZonarattled off a list of complaints about faulty equipment, lack of leadership and intel, and brainless tactics.South Ossetia, which relies heavily on military and f MOSCOW (Reuters) - Belarus said on Wednesday it had stepped up security at its western and southern borders as Russia invades neighbouring Ukraine. Belarusian leader Alexander Lukashenko said on Tuesday that his country had no plans to join Russia's military operation in Ukraine and dismissed Kyiv's allegations that Russian troops were attacking Ukraine from Belarusian territory. (Reporting by Reuters; Editing by Andrew Heavens) President Biden kicked off his first State of the Union address Tuesday evening by condemning the ongoing Russian military assault on Ukraine. Six days ago, Russias Vladimir Putin sought to shake the foundations of the free world thinking he could make it bend to his menacing ways. But he badly miscalculated, Biden said, urging those in the crowd to rise if you are able and show that Yes, we the United States of America stand with the Ukrainian people. President Biden delivers the State of the Union address on Tuesday evening. (Jabin Botsford/Pool via Reuters) In response to Putins decision to attack Ukraine last week, the U.S., in conjunction with a coalition of international partners, including the 27 members of the European Union, has announced a variety of severe financial sanctions designed to hurt Russias economy and Putin himself, as well as many in his inner circle. Putin is now isolated from the world more than ever, Biden declared to applause from Democrats and Republicans alike. He announced that the U.S. will join allies in closing off American airspace to all Russian flights. Biden also highlighted the more than $1 billion in security assistance that the U.S. has provided to Ukraine over the last year, while reiterating his promise not to send American troops to fight in the country. Putins latest attack on Ukraine was premeditated and unprovoked, Biden said. He thought the West and NATO wouldnt respond. And he thought he could divide us at home. Putin was wrong. We were ready. While former President Donald Trump has praised Putins bloody bid to reclaim Ukraine as savvy, he is in the minority among prominent Republicans, many of whom have spoken out against the Russian leader. The bipartisan support for Ukraine was on display at Tuesdays joint session of Congress, where many officials on both sides of the aisle wore blue and yellow, the colors of the Ukrainian flag. Others wore Ukrainian flag patches on their lapels. Where are Russian forces attacking Ukraine? Check out this explainer from Yahoo Immersive to find out. President Joe Biden. Jim Lo Scalzo-Pool/Getty Images President Joe Biden said Wednesday he is open to the idea of banning Russian oil exports. "Nothing is off the table," Biden said when asked whether he would consider barring oil exports from Russia over the country's invasion of Ukraine. Russia is one of the world's largest producers of oil. President Joe Biden on Wednesday said that he is open to the idea of banning Russian oil exports as a punishment for Russian President Vladimir Putin's invasion of Ukraine. "Nothing is off the table," Biden told reporters on the White House lawn when asked whether he would consider barring oil exports from Russia one of the world's largest oil producers according to a White House pool report. The US, United Kingdom, and the European Union have already imposed a slew of severe sanctions against Russia since it attacked Ukraine a week ago. "Putin is now isolated from the world more than he has ever been," Biden said as he delivered his first State of the Union address on Tuesday, promising that the Russian president "has no idea what's coming." Biden announced during the address that the US will close its airspace to Russian planes. Meanwhile, when asked on Wednesday by reporters whether Russian forces were deliberately targeting civilian areas in Ukraine, Biden replied, "It's clear they are." He also said it was too "early to say" if Russia was committing war crimes in Ukraine. "We are following it very closely," Biden said. Ukrainian President Volodymyr Zelensky called Russia's missile strike on the city of Kharkiv's Freedom Square a "war crime" and "state terrorism" this week. Earlier this week, the US State Department accused Russia of "widespread" human rights abuses in Ukraine, while top human rights groups warned that bombings against Ukrainian citizens may be considered war crimes. Read the original article on Business Insider Mascots of China int'l consumer products expo revealed Xinhua) 08:21, March 02, 2022 A visitor takes photos of the mascots for the 2022 China International Consumer Products Expo, styled after the Hainan gibbon, in Haikou, south China's Hainan Province, March 1, 2022. Hainan gibbons are the most endangered of all gibbons and the world's rarest primate. They are endemic to the southern Chinese island of Hainan. The mascots reflect the green consumption approach of the expo, according to Ruslan Tulenov, a global media officer at the Hainan Provincial Bureau of International Economic Development. The mascots embody the three dominant and distinctive industries of Hainan, namely the seed industry, deep-sea industry and aerospace industry. Designers have endowed the mascots with diverse personalities, expecting that global enterprises and consumers can share opportunities and create a better life together through the expo, Tulenov said. (Xinhua/Hu Zhixuan) HAIKOU, March 1 (Xinhua) -- Authorities in south China's Hainan Province on Tuesday revealed the mascots for the 2022 China International Consumer Products Expo, styled after the Hainan gibbon. Hainan gibbons are the most endangered of all gibbons and the world's rarest primate. They are endemic to the southern Chinese island of Hainan. The mascots reflect the green consumption approach of the expo, according to Ruslan Tulenov, a global media officer at the Hainan Provincial Bureau of International Economic Development. The mascots embody the three dominant and distinctive industries of Hainan, namely the seed industry, deep-sea industry and aerospace industry. Designers have endowed the mascots with diverse personalities, expecting that global enterprises and consumers can share opportunities and create a better life together through the expo, Tulenov said. Themed "Share open opportunities, co-create a better life," the event is scheduled to run from April 12 to 16 in Haikou, the capital of Hainan. France will be the guest-of-honor country this year. The exhibition area will span over 100,000 square meters, 80 percent of which will be set up for overseas exhibitors featuring fashion, jewelry, food, medicine and other professional services. The expo is expected to become a leading platform for global consumer fashion, and well-known brands will release their latest products during the exhibition. A visitor walks past a billboard showing the images of the mascots for the 2022 China International Consumer Products Expo, styled after the Hainan gibbon, in Haikou, south China's Hainan Province, March 1, 2022. Hainan gibbons are the most endangered of all gibbons and the world's rarest primate. They are endemic to the southern Chinese island of Hainan. The mascots reflect the green consumption approach of the expo, according to Ruslan Tulenov, a global media officer at the Hainan Provincial Bureau of International Economic Development. The mascots embody the three dominant and distinctive industries of Hainan, namely the seed industry, deep-sea industry and aerospace industry. Designers have endowed the mascots with diverse personalities, expecting that global enterprises and consumers can share opportunities and create a better life together through the expo, Tulenov said. (Xinhua/Hu Zhixuan) A visitor takes photos of the mascots for the 2022 China International Consumer Products Expo, styled after the Hainan gibbon, in Haikou, south China's Hainan Province, March 1, 2022. Hainan gibbons are the most endangered of all gibbons and the world's rarest primate. They are endemic to the southern Chinese island of Hainan. The mascots reflect the green consumption approach of the expo, according to Ruslan Tulenov, a global media officer at the Hainan Provincial Bureau of International Economic Development. The mascots embody the three dominant and distinctive industries of Hainan, namely the seed industry, deep-sea industry and aerospace industry. Designers have endowed the mascots with diverse personalities, expecting that global enterprises and consumers can share opportunities and create a better life together through the expo, Tulenov said. (Xinhua/Hu Zhixuan) Photo taken on March 1, 2022 shows the mascots for the 2022 China International Consumer Products Expo, styled after the Hainan gibbon, in Haikou, south China's Hainan Province. Hainan gibbons are the most endangered of all gibbons and the world's rarest primate. They are endemic to the southern Chinese island of Hainan. The mascots reflect the green consumption approach of the expo, according to Ruslan Tulenov, a global media officer at the Hainan Provincial Bureau of International Economic Development. The mascots embody the three dominant and distinctive industries of Hainan, namely the seed industry, deep-sea industry and aerospace industry. Designers have endowed the mascots with diverse personalities, expecting that global enterprises and consumers can share opportunities and create a better life together through the expo, Tulenov said. (Xinhua/Hu Zhixuan) (Web editor: Peng yukai, Liang Jun) A grand jury declined to indict a Chicago police officer who was accused of punching a handcuffed suspect who had been shot Christmas Eve outside a Near West Side police station, prosecutors said. Officer Christopher Hillas, 43, was charged Feb. 16 with the felonies of aggravated battery on a public way and official misconduct, but a grand jury returned a decision of no bill for the indictment, which dismisses the charges against Hillas. On Monday, his case was dropped based on the grand jurys finding, the states attorneys office said in a statement. Advertisement Hillas has been a Chicago police officer since 2016, and he surrendered to the bureau of internal affairs the same day as the charges, the Police department said. Hillas was relieved of his police powers Dec. 31 and the matter was turned over to the Civilian Office of Police Accountability, according to the Police Department. Advertisement During Hillas bond hearing, Assistant States Attorney Lynn McCarthy said on Dec. 24, police were at the 12th District station when they saw the suspect with a handgun. As officers approached, he fired the weapon at them, McCarthy said. That prompted officers to return fire, McCarthy said, and the man was shot twice. McCarthy said after a brief pursuit, the suspect surrendered and was placed in handcuffs and escorted to a squad car for transport to a hospital. As they approached, Hillas opened the rear door of the squad car and told the suspect: Here, I got you man, according to McCarthy. Hillas then began a search of the man from his waist to his feet, McCarthy said, as hed been told the suspects weapon had not been found yet. Hillas then stood up slightly and punched him four times in the groin area, McCarthy said, adding that the suspect had not made any verbal or physical threats. Advertisement Attorney Tim Grace, who represented the officer, asserted that Hillas believed the suspect hit him first. Hillas was in a vulnerable position, with his head near the suspects knees, elbow and stomach, Grace said. He rose very quickly thinking the suspect was going to hit him and at that point, he and another officer head-butted each other, but Hillas though it was the suspect. While the search was deliberate and emotion was strong this was not a battery but an effort to remove a gun from an offender who had just attempted to murder two Chicago police officers, Grace said. Grace objected to the judges restriction on guns for Hillas, a ruling the judge said she made in an effort to treat Hillas the same as any other defendant. Advertisement pfry@chicagotribune.com mcrepeau@chicagotribune.com President Joe Biden vowed to continue to support the Ukrainian military and punish Russian leadership in his State of the Union address on Tuesday, proclaiming that freedom will always triumph over tyranny. With fighting in Eastern Europe entering its second week, Biden praised the spirit of the Ukrainian fighters and said that his administration will continue to provide military, economic and humanitarian assistance in coming weeks. We are giving more than $1 billion in direct assistance to Ukraine, Biden said. And we will continue to aid the Ukrainian people as they defend their country and to help ease their suffering. Ukraines drone strikes reveal Russian planning failures, expert says As he has in recent weeks, Biden promised that American military forces are not engaged and will not engage in conflict with Russian forces in Ukraine. However, the American president said that Russias latest invasion of its neighbor has strengthened the NATO alliance instead of weakening it. About 14,000 American troops have been activated in recent weeks for support missions through Europe, and Biden said even more could be on the way. Our forces are not going to Europe to fight in Ukraine, but to defend our NATO allies in the event that Putin decides to keep moving west, he said. For that purpose weve mobilized American ground forces, air squadrons, and ship deployments to protect NATO countries including Poland, Romania, Latvia, Lithuania, and Estonia. The United States and our allies will defend every inch of territory of NATO countries with the full force of our collective power. Earlier on Tuesday, international observers reported that Russian forces were slowly advancing on the Ukrainian capitol of Kyiv but facing a stronger-than-expected resistance from the Ukrainian military and new civilian volunteers pressed into combat service. Punishments for Russia include a host of economic sanctions against Russian oligarchs and Russian President Vladimir Putin himself. Biden also announced on Tuesday night a new move to close off U.S. air space to all Russian flights in hopes of further isolating Russia. Story continues Pentagon revisiting long-term US troop levels in Eastern Europe He warned the American people that the moves will have economic consequences for the country, especially in regards to gas and energy prices. This is a real test. Its going to take time, he said. So let us continue to draw inspiration from the iron will of the Ukrainian people. The ambassador of Ukraine to the United States, Oksana Markarova, watched the address from the first ladys viewing area in the House gallery and received a standing ovation when Biden asked the assembled lawmakers to show their support for the people of Ukraine. In addition, numerous lawmakers wore blue and yellow as a sign of support for the countrys fight against Russia and held up small Ukrainian flags throughout the evening. The lawmakers were back; the masks were (mostly) gone; and the partisan banter that typically accompanies the president's annual update on national affairs returned in force to the House chamber. But as President Biden delivered his first State of the Union address to the nation Tuesday night, there were signs everywhere that the customary speech had found extraordinary times: Russia's invasion of Ukraine marks the first conventional war in Europe since the Second World War, and no one knows how it will end. That somber reality hung over the outer fanfare of the occasion like an anvil dangling over a Macy's parade. And even Biden's allies acknowledged that the breach of peace had raised the stakes - and expanded the audience - of Biden's address. "It's really a state of the world speech, more than a state of the union speech," said Rep. Brad Sherman (D-Calif.). A number of lawmakers, to show solidarity with the outgunned Ukrainians, wore the blue and yellow of the Ukrainian flag. The first lady, Jill Biden, watched from the gallery with a special guest: Oksana Markarova, the Ukrainian ambassador to the United States. Speaker Nancy Pelosi (D-Calif.), perched next to Vice President Kamala Harris behind Biden, wore a lapel pin featuring the U.S. and Ukrainian flags side-by-side. And White House aides, fearing a blitz of Russian strikes on Kyiv in the midst of Biden's speech, reportedly massaged his words so they wouldn't sound tone deaf if that grim scenario came to be. (It didn't). Russia's unprovoked aggression has fashioned an environment of uncertainty and apprehension, but also of global defiance and rare bipartisanship on Capitol Hill, where lawmakers of all stripes are vowing additional help for Kyiv. Biden launched his address with a direct warning to Vladimir Putin, saying the Russian president "badly miscalculated" in believing the Western world was too divided to mount a unified defense on behalf of Ukraine - a massive effort that's featured billions of dollars in both military and humanitarian aid. Story continues "Putin is now isolated from the world, more than he has ever been," Biden said. "And he will never, never weaken the resolve of the free world. With his focus on Ukraine, Biden won plenty of hearty applause from both sides of the aisle - a show of bipartisanship, rare in today's Washington, that the president's speech seemed specifically designed to elicit. Indeed, Biden touched on a host of issues backed broadly by both parties, including promises to fix crumbling infrastructure, reform a broken immigration system, tackle the opioid epidemic and provide support for veterans. Not once did he mention last year's attack on the Capitol. "While it often appears that we never agree, that isn't true," Biden said. But the reality of the entrenched political polarization on Capitol Hill was nevertheless on full display. Far-right rabble-rousers like Reps. Lauren Boebert (R-Colo.) and Marjorie Taylor Greene (R-Ga.) repeatedly heckled the president during his speech with chants of "build the wall!" And in an extraordinary breach of decorum, Boebert yelled out at Biden that he put American troops in coffins, "13 of them" - an apparent reference to the 13 service members killed in a bomb attack in Afghanistan last August amid the chaotic U.S. military exit from the country. Boebert's outburst came as Biden was talking about the scourge of American troops developing cancer due to exposure to toxic smoke from massive burn pits in places like Afghanistan and Iraq. "A cancer that would put them in a flag-draped coffin," Biden said. "You put them in, 13 of them!" Boebert yelled out, drawing gasps and shouts of "whoa!" from shocked fellow lawmakers. Despite the interruption, Biden pressed on to explain how the issue hits close to home for him: his late son, an Army veteran who served in Iraq, died of brain cancer in 2015. "One of those soldiers was my son, Major Beau Biden," Biden said. There were other Republican concerns, some noting that the promotion of vague concepts - getting kids back to school, getting workers back to work - is far different than finding bipartisan agreement on specific legislation. And while Republicans cheered Biden's tough words for Putin, they quickly shifted gears to hammer many of the individual items on the president's domestic agenda, including efforts to expand the social safety net and overhaul the way elections are conducted around the country. "It was a rehash of the Build Back Better plan," said Rep. Stephanie Bice (R-Okla.), who was also skeptical of even the more popular plans Biden laid out. The president did not say "Build Back Better" at any point during the speech. "Oftentimes the idea sounds great," she said, "but it's the details that actually tank it." Biden gazed out at an audience that looked much different than the one he'd faced last April, when he delivered his first joint address to Congress after his swearing in three months earlier. Then, COVID-19 numbers were up, vaccinations were low and the safety protocols governing the chamber required not only masks but also limited the number of lawmakers who could attend in person. Biden's cabinet, along with the members of the Supreme Court, were absent altogether. Eleven months later, the mask issue has grown only more contentious around the country, and Pelosi defused any controversy by announcing this week that there would be no requirement to wear one. Even those Democrats most diligent about masking around the Capitol - lawmakers like Sens. Ron Wyden (Ore.), Elizabeth Warren (Mass.) and Sherrod Brown (Ohio) - left them behind during Biden's speech. In all, only around a dozen Democratic lawmakers still donned masks during the address. The threat of COVID-19 still hovered over the address, however. Lawmakers were spaced apart on the House floor and in the galleries above, and could not invite guests like at past addresses. Many chose to invite "virtual guests" instead. All attendees were also required to get tested for COVID-19 the day before. Yet some Republicans blew right past those protocols. Several House GOP lawmakers ignored the distancing measures and sat right next to each other. And while about half a dozen Republicans announced beforehand that they'd boycott the address due to the COVID-19 testing requirement, Boebert said that she was still allowed into the chamber despite not getting tested. "Like all evil, COVID tyranny ends when you stand up to it! I refused to get tested tonight, and no one got in my way. We win when enough of us stand up and say we've had enough of this nonsense," Boebert tweeted. Security was a concern heading into the speech, not least because of a scheduled rally of truckers from around the country who'd threatened to descend on Washington this week to protest Biden's COVID-19 policies. But that rally was a dud. And aside from a security fence installed around the Capitol building, the only noticeable precautions were those familiar to joint addresses of years past, including the bomb-sniffing dogs - yellow labs and German shepherds - being shepherded around the complex by Capitol Police. For Biden's Democratic allies, who are facing a tough midterm cycle and the real prospect of losing the House, the speech marked what they hope will be a turning point - one that resurrects their stalled legislative agenda and improves their odds in the midterms. First, however, they acknowledge the urgency of managing the crisis in Ukraine. "It's the issue that's front and center for all of us - both the challenge that the world faces in dealing with Putin, but also making sure that we're challenging ourselves to make sure that we can stop Putin and still protect the American family," said Rep. Dan Kildee (D-Mich.). "And I think he laid out exactly how we'll do that." Alexander Bolton contributed. President Biden speaks during an event to sign an executive order regarding project labor agreements at Irownworks Local 5 in Upper Marlboro, Md., on Friday, February 4, 2022. President Biden will visit Texas next week to highlight one prong of the "unity agenda" he proposed at his first State of the Union: support for veterans. Biden will head to Fort Worth next Tuesday, the White House announced. It will mark his second trip to the red state since taking office. He previously toured the state after it was hit by damaging winter storms. During Tuesday night's State of the Union, Biden proposed a "unity agenda" comprised of four items he urged Congress to pass on a bipartisan basis: addressing the opioid epidemic, providing resources for children's mental health, supporting veterans and ending cancer. The president specifically called on Congress to pass a law to ensure care for veterans exposed to toxic chemicals while serving in Iraq and Afghanistan. Biden has said he believes the chemicals from burn pits may have contributed to the brain cancer that ultimately killed his son, Beau, in 2015. "Veterans are the backbone and the spine of this country. They're the best of us," Biden said. "I've always believed that we have a sacred obligation to equip those we send to war and care for those and their family when they come home." But Biden's plea for more aid for veterans was interrupted on Tuesday night when Rep. Lauren Boebert (R-Colo.) heckled the president over the death of 13 U.S. troops in Afghanistan during the evacuation of American forces from the country last August. The conservative congresswoman's comments prompted boos and groans from others in attendance. A man will serve 20 to 40 years in prison for stabbing his friend to death during an argument in York. Sergio Chevalier-Rosado, 34, of York, pleaded guilty on Wednesday to third-degree murder for killing Alexander Fuentes Santana on West Locust Street near South Sheridan Street on Aug. 22, 2020. He will get credit for the 557 days that hes spent incarcerated in York County Prison. Through a Spanish-language interpreter, Chevalier-Rosado admitted that he fatally stabbed Santana, 34, of York, who lived across the street from him. When pressed for more information, he said, I dont want to get into details. What happened, happened. Im guilty. Sergio Chevalier-Rosado, 34, of York, pleaded guilty on Wednesday to third-degree murder in exchange for a sentence of 20 to 40 years in prison for fatally stabbing Alexander Fuentes Santana on Aug. 22, 2020. The York County District Attorney's Office dropped a charge of first-degree murder as part of the plea agreement. 'How could you take his life?':York man sentenced to life in prison for first-degree murder Santana, he said, was threatening him. Chevalier-Rosado said he did not think before he acted. Common Pleas Judge Gregory M. Snyder said he would not accept the plea agreement unless he was convinced that Chevalier-Rosado committed the crime. I was blinded, Chevalier-Rosado said. At the moment, and when I came to realize, it was already done. Chevalier-Rosado later agreed that he got into an argument with Santana, became angry and stabbed him. 'You just don't care': York County judge sentences man to 30 to 60 years for fatal overdose The York County District Attorneys Office dropped a charge of first-degree murder. Senior Deputy Prosecutor Dave Maisch said he consulted with Santanas wife and York City Police Detective Tiffany Pitts about the plea agreement. Though Santanas wife would have liked to see Chevalier-Rosado serve more time, Maisch said, she did not want him to spend the rest of his life in prison. Everyone is in agreement with this resolution, your honor, Maisch said. Read: Reputed South Side gang member in York sentenced to life in prison for first-degree murder Outside the courtroom, Chief Public Defender Bruce Blocher, Chevalier-Rosados attorney, said his client is remorseful. Story continues Chevalier-Rosado, he said, stayed at the scene and provided first-aid. Blocher said his clients anger got the best of him. Im glad hes not spending the rest of his life in prison, Blocher said. Twenty years is a long time. Theres no doubt about it. Also of interest: Kevin Dowling, sentenced to death in infamous 1997 Spring Grove murder, awarded new trial Dylan Segelbaum is the courthouse reporter at the York Daily Record, part of the USA TODAY NETWORK. Contact him at dsegelbaum@ydr.com, by phone at 717-916-3981 or on Twitter @dylan_segelbaum. This article originally appeared on York Daily Record: Sergio Chevalier-Rosado pleads guilty to third-degree murder in York U.S. Secretary of State Antony Blinken speaks in a joint press availability with Fiji acting Prime Minister Aiyaz Sayed-Khaiyumduring Secretary of State Antony Blinken is traveling to Europe to consult with NATO allies and other European partners as Russia continues its invasion of Ukraine. Blinken will travel to Belgium, Poland and Moldova, as well as the Baltic states of Latvia, Lithuania and Estonia from March 3 to 8, State Department spokesperson Ned Price said in a statement. Russia's war with Ukraine has entered its seventh day, but fighting is only projected to escalate despite the defense Ukraine has been able to maintain thus far. The U.S. and other allies have continued to place economic pressure on Moscow, imposing crippling sanctions while providing Kyiv with defense capabilities. The Biden administration earlier on Monday unveiled a new round of sanctions targeting the defense sectors of Russia as well as Belarus, which has been a staging ground for Russian troops entering Ukraine. Blinken will first travel to Belgium, where he will participate in a NATO Foreign Ministerial on March 4 and hold additional meetings, Price said. He will then travel to Poland on March 5, where he will meet with his Polish counterpart, Zbigniew Rau, to discuss further security assistance. Blinken will then go to Moldova, where he will speak with President Maia Sandu, Prime Minister Natalia Gavrilita and Foreign Minister Nicu Popescu on the country's efforts to assist refugees fleeing Ukraine. The secretary will then travel to Lithuania, Latvia and Tallinn, the capital of Estonia, from March 6-8. While he is in those countries, Blinken will "discuss joint efforts to support Ukraine, strengthen NATO's deterrence and defense, promote democracy and human rights, and pursue deeper economic and energy cooperation with our Baltic Allies," Price said. Rep. Lauren Boebert, R-Colo., heckled President Biden during Tuesdays State of the Union, just before he recalled his late son Beau Bidens brain cancer. Biden was in the middle of calling on Congress to pass legislation to help Iraq and Afghanistan War veterans suffering from exposure to toxic burn pits that were used to incinerate waste, with troops often using jet fuel as an accelerant. When they came home, many of the worlds fittest and best-trained warriors were never the same: Headaches. Numbness. Dizziness, Biden said. A cancer that would put them in a flag-draped coffin. You put them there! Boebert yelled, according to reporters in the House Chamber. "Thirteen of them," she added in a reference to the 13 U.S. service members who died last year in a bomb attack in Kabul, Afghanistan. Biden briefly paused before continuing his speech. President Biden delivers his State of the Union address in the Capitol on Tuesday. (Jim Lo Scalzo/Pool via Reuters) I know. One of those soldiers was my son Major Beau Biden, the president said. I dont know for sure if the burn pit that he lived near in Iraq, and earlier than that, in Kosovo, was the cause of his brain cancer, or the diseases of so many of our troops, but I am committed to finding out everything we can. Beau Biden died in 2015 of brain cancer at age 46. Last year, Rep. Mark Takano, D-Calif., chairman of the House Veterans Affairs Committee, introduced bipartisan legislation that would streamline the Veteran Administrations review process to recognize toxic exposure as a cost of war. The bill, the Honoring Our Promise to Address Comprehensive Toxics Act, passed out of committee last summer, but has yet to receive a full vote in the House. On Monday, the Biden administration released a statement calling on Congress to pass the legislation. Reps. Lauren Boebert, R-Colo., Marjorie Taylor Greene, R-Ga., heckle President Biden during his State of the Union address on Tuesday. (Evelyn Hockstein/Pool via AP) Boeberts tenure in Congress has been heavily focused on opposing Biden. By the end of her first month in office, the Colorado Republican, who previously embraced the pro-Trump QAnon conspiracy theory, had introduced four bills opposing executive orders issued by Biden regarding a range of issues, from mask mandates, to U.S. reentry into the Paris climate agreement and funding for the World Health Organization. Story continues In June 2021, she introduced a bill to censure Biden for his dereliction of duty at our Southern border. Last September, Boebert introduced articles of impeachment against Biden and Vice President Kamala Harris over the Biden administrations handling of the U.S. withdrawal from Afghanistan. Joe Biden willfully abandoned his duty as president of the United States and violated his constitutional oath to take care that the laws be faithfully executed, by failing to ensure the national security of the United States and its citizens, Boebert said at the time. Her impeachment bill has yet to receive a vote. A 26-year-old Boise man who was shot by police officers on July 11 has filed a claim against multiple Boise agencies for $1.27 million, according to records obtained by the Idaho Statesman. Ezra Smith filed a tort claim against the city of Boise and the Boise Police Department for excessive force and police malpractice during the officer-involved shooting. The Idaho Press first reported the claim. Smith was charged with five felonies, including two counts of assault or battery upon certain personnel; grand theft; fleeing or attempting to elude a police officer; and use of a deadly weapon in commission of a felony enhancement, according to online court records. In another case, also on July 11, Smith was charged with two felonies driving under the influence and possession of a controlled substance. In the claim, Smith alleged police shot through his windshield and passenger window 12 times, and that six of the shots struck Smith two of which went into his back. Smith also said in the claim he was unarmed. The Boise Police Department has not confirmed how many times officers fired their weapons or how many times Smith was shot. The involved officers, David Skube and Robert Denney, were both placed on administrative leave per department policy, according to a news release. As officers attempted to take the suspect into custody, an officer-involved shooting occurred, according to an initial news release from the department. Smith said he suffered multiple face and body fractures, and permanent nerve damage, which resulted in loss of feeling/sensation in (the) right side of face and neck. He also has post-traumatic stress disorder, night terrors and anxiety, he said. Smith was in custody at the Ada County Jail as of Tuesday on a $351,000 bail, according to online arrest records. Smith has multiple probation violation charges which means he cannot currently place bail. He is currently represented by the Ada County Public Defenders Office, according to online court records. Attempts to contact Smiths attorney were unsuccessful. Story continues Boise police didnt immediately respond to a request for comment Tuesday. Ada, Canyon have seen 11 police shootings in 2021. Heres what we know and dont know Details of the July incident At 7 p.m. on July 11, officers responded to the 7000 block of Overland Road after a report of a reckless driver potentially under the influence in a moving van, police said. Upon further investigation, Boise police learned the van was reported as stolen and tried to pull over the vehicle. That led to one pursuit that police discontinued because of its high rate of speed, reckless driving behavior, and potential danger to surrounding vehicles. Later, the van was seen in the 10000 block of Riley Court, a residential street in West Boise, according to the release. As police again tried to stop the driver, officers reported over radios he rammed the van into a patrol car multiple times, which led to the shooting. The incident is under investigation by the Critical Incident Task Force, with the Meridian Police Department as the lead agency. The task force is formed when an officer is involved as a principal, victim or custodial officer where death or injury likely to cause death was the result of the use of force, according to the departments policy manual. Gerald Reed greets supporters from the back seat of a car after being released from Stateville Correctional Center on April 2, 2021, in Crest Hill. Gov. J.B. Pritzker commuted Reed's sentence after he served 30 years of a life sentence for allegedly being tortured into confession for a double murder under the direction of former Chicago police Cmdr. Jon Burge. (John J. Kim / Chicago Tribune) Gerald Reed, whose life sentence was commuted last year amid allegations he was tortured into confessing to a double murder, can stand trial again for the 1990 killings but he cannot go back to prison if convicted, a Cook County judge ruled Wednesday. Circuit Judge Steven Watkins said in a videoconferenced court hearing that he would formally dismiss Reeds initial convictions and grant him a new trial without the use of the confession. But because Gov. J.B. Pritzker commuted Reeds sentence to time served, he cannot serve any further prison time even if he is convicted again, Watkins ruled. Advertisement It was the latest twist in a case that has become so complicated that one court filing compared it to the Gordian knot. For years, Reeds attorneys argued his conviction should be thrown out, saying he was tortured by detectives connected to notorious Chicago police Cmdr. Jon Burge. Prosecutors cast doubt on those claims and fought to keep the guilty verdict intact. Advertisement In 2018, one Cook County judge sided with Reeds attorneys and ordered a new trial; more than a year later, a second judge unexpectedly reversed that decision and reinstated Reeds conviction. Reeds sentence was commuted in April of last year, and he was released from custody after about three decades behind bars. Pritzkers order affected only Reeds sentence his conviction remained intact. Gerald Reed talks to reporters after being released from Stateville Correctional Center on April 2, 2021, in Crest Hill. (John J. Kim / Chicago Tribune) The next month, the state Supreme Court ordered that Reeds conviction should be thrown out but for months, a Cook County judge had not signed an order formally dismissing the conviction. Prosecutors long ago vowed to bring Reed, 58, to trial again, which they cannot do unless Reeds conviction is thrown out. And so the commutation prompted an interesting reversal: Prosecutors argued that Reeds double-murder conviction should be formally dismissed. Reeds attorneys wanted it to remain intact. Since Reeds sentence was commuted, Reeds attorneys argued, the matter is closed. Prosecutors cannot try him again since the order to throw out his conviction was never technically signed, they said, and Reeds sentence has been completed. Any further action would be in violation of Reeds double jeopardy rights, they argued at a hearing in November. But prosecutors noted that the higher court explicitly ruled Reed should be granted a new trial. And since his sentence is finished, they would not seek to put him back in custody if hes convicted, they said. We cant send him back to prison, we know that, but were not going to let him walk, were not going to pretend he didnt kill these two people, special prosecutor Robert Milan said in court last year. Advertisement Reed was convicted in a gruesome 1990 double murder and sentenced to life. In 2018, after extensive hearings about his allegations of police torture, Judge Thomas Gainer threw out his statement to police and his convictions. Prosecutors vowed to bring him to trial again, saying they had enough evidence to prove his guilt without the tainted confession, and Reed stayed in custody pending retrial. After Gainers retirement, the case was assigned to Judge Thomas Hennelly, who in February 2020 threw a stunning curveball. After reviewing the record on his own, he determined that Reed was not entitled to a new trial after all, and reinstated the conviction and life sentence. Reeds attorneys took the matter to the state Supreme Court, which declined to dismiss the case or assign a new set of states attorneys like Reeds attorneys had asked. But the court did rule that Gainers order throwing out Reeds conviction should be reinstated, and the case went back to Cook County court. Gainer had tossed Reeds conviction after lengthy legal wrangling over allegations that two detectives under Burge beat him into confessing to the fatal shootings of Pamela Powers and Willie Williams on the South Side. Reed was found guilty and sentenced to life in prison. Reed alleged that Detective Victor Breska kicked him so hard that he broke a rod that had been placed in Reeds leg to aid in his healing from an earlier gunshot wound. Breskas partner, Detective Michael Kill, who was repeatedly accused of abuse before his death in 2018, never reported the beating. It was one in a litany of cases in which Burge and his midnight crew of detectives who worked under him have been accused of torturing or abusing dozens of mostly African American men into confessing to killings in the 1970s and 80s. The scandal has stained the citys reputation and cost taxpayers tens of millions of dollars in settlements, legal fees and other compensation to victims. Advertisement Prosecutors have maintained that they have enough evidence to prove Reed guilty without the tainted confession. Two witnesses told authorities that they saw Reed and co-defendant David Turner one night in October 1990 with a terrified Powers in their control, barefoot and without her coat, prosecutors have said in a court filing. Reed threatened Powers, asking her where the money was, while Turner ominously warned he would drop this b---- behind Kennedy King, prosecutors alleged. Early the next morning, Powers was found under a viaduct near Kennedy-King College in the Englewood neighborhood, shot in the head and naked from the waist down. The same day, police found Williams shot to death in Powers ransacked apartment. Prosecutors allege that the murder weapon was a Gangster Disciples community gun that one of the same witnesses a woman saw Reed and Turner carry on several occasions. Once, the witness said, she and Turner were handling the gun in the hallway, and it accidentally fired, lodging a bullet in the wall that later analysis showed was fired by the same weapon that killed Powers and Williams. Turner, who never alleged he was beaten by police, is serving a life sentence. Advertisement mcrepeau@chicagotribune.com SOFIA (Reuters) - Bulgaria's prosecutors said on Wednesday that a Russian diplomat was involved in alleged espionage in the country and that they had informed the foreign ministry. Prosecutors also said a Bulgarian reserve general was being investigated for handing out information considered state secrets to the Russian diplomat. They did not provide details of the timing of the events. Since 2019, the European Union and NATO member Bulgaria has expelled eight Russian diplomats for suspected spying. (Reporting by Tsvetelia Tsolova; Editing by Bernadette Baum) The State Bar of California confirmed on Tuesday that it has been investigating John Eastman, an attorney for former President Trump, for possible ethics violations related to the 2020 election. The announcement from George Cardona, the state bar's chief trial counsel, noted that details of the investigation were to remain confidential in order "to give the investigation the greatest chance of success." "A number of individuals and entities have brought to the State Bar's attention press reports, court filings, and other public documents detailing Mr. Eastman's conduct," Cardona said. "We will be proceeding with a single State Bar investigation in which we will continue to gather and analyze relevant evidence and go wherever it leads us," he added. "As was his duty as an attorney, Dr. Eastman zealously represented his client, comprehensively exploring legal and constitutional means to advance his client's interests," a spokesperson for Eastman said in a statement to The Hill. "Subsequent to that representation, he also sought to protect his client's privileged communications 'at every peril to himself,'" the spokesperson added. "Dr. Eastman expects the Bar's investigation into these matters will fully exonerate him from any charges." In October, a bipartisan group of legal minds and former officials asked that the California bar investigate Eastman to determine if he "violated his ethical obligations as an attorney by filing frivolous claims, making false statements, and engaging in deceptive conduct." During the "Stop the Steal" rally ahead of the Jan. 6 attack on the U.S. Capitol, Eastman, the former dean of the law school at California's Chapman University, made a speech and took the lead on two memos detailing why then-Vice President Mike Pence could change the election's outcome. However, Pence, whose role was largely ceremonial, had no power to stop the Electoral College count by Congress and has since called the idea of overturning the election results "un-American." Story continues In a previous interview with The Washington Post, Eastman said he laid out options for the White House and was using the right to petition "the government for redress of grievances." "One of the grievances was that nothing was being done about acknowledged illegality in the conduct of an election - asserting a constitutional right is not a disbarrable offense," Eastman said at the time. Updated: 6:36 p.m. CHICAGO -- Low-income Illinois residents will soon be able to receive free dental care at a new 25,000-square-foot clinic being opened in Chicago's Fulton Market district this summer by The Aspen Group, which operates dental and medical clinics across the country and recently moved its headquarters to Chicago. While a number of clinics across the Chicago area offer low-cost and sometimes free dental care to vulnerable people, the new clinic will focus exclusively on dental services and be free to all patients who make no more than 200% of the federal poverty level or are on Medicaid. We know that oral care is essential for overall health, said Julie Frantsve-Hawley, executive director of the new TAG Oral Care Center for Excellence. Having a healthy mouth is really essential, and a problem we see is many struggle to access dental care, and because of this they can have potentially dangerous situations that go untreated. What we hope this will do is fill this critical gap for thousands of patients in Illinois. Among Illinois adults who had not visited a dentist in the past year, 64% cited cost as a reason, according to a 2015 survey by the American Dental Associations Health Policy Institute. The new clinic, at 1040 W. Randolph St., will include 14 treatment rooms and another two rooms for advanced surgical procedures. The clinic is expected to serve about 2,500 patients a year. Aspen plans to work with community groups and organizations to get the word out to patients who might benefit. The clinic will have a full-time staff of licensed dentists and specialists as well as dental technicians and hygienists, said Dr. Sundeep Rawal, a senior vice president at Aspen. The clinic will also be a training ground for licensed dentists from Aspen Dental and ClearChoice Dental Implant practices across the country, who will go to the center to learn advanced dental technologies and procedures. Some Chicago-area dental leaders had expressed concerns, earlier in the planning process for the clinic, about Aspen bringing in dentists from out of state for only short periods of time to treat low-income patients. Story continues Our concern was that there would be no accountability, and if a patient was harmed there was no continuity of care because that individual came in, worked on the patient and left, then you basically are leaving somebody in the middle of dental care without any follow-up, said Dave Marsh, director of governmental affairs for the Illinois State Dental Society. Ultimately, the state dental society and other groups reached an agreement with Aspen that Aspen would have to have patients sign consent forms acknowledging they were being treated by out-of-state dentists, and Aspen would have to use licensed Illinois dentists to provide any follow-up care a patient might need, among other things. Gov. J.B. Pritzker signed a bill into law in August spelling out those requirements and others. Bill sponsor Rep. Lakesia Collins, a Chicago Democrat, said the new center will help to fill a massive need in Chicago and the state of Illinois. The new center will join a number of organizations that offer low-cost and free dental care in the Chicago area. The Chicago Dental Society Foundation, for example, has a free dental clinic in Wheaton with three treatment rooms. And many federally qualified health centers, which are centers that receive federal funding, offer dental services alongside other medical services and may charge patients on a sliding scale, based on their abilities to pay. UI Healths Mile Square Health Center, which is a federally qualified health center, expects to have 26 dental chairs across numerous sites by the end of this year, said Dr. Sue Etminan, the centers dental director. Many of those sites are in neighborhoods with the greatest needs for services, she said. Our most successful programs at increasing access to care have been meeting patients where theyre at, in their communities, she said. The new Aspen center will be in Aspens former headquarters in the Fulton Market district, Rawal said. That location was also chosen because its near public transportation and has parking on-site, he said. Aspen moved to a new headquarters at 800 W. Fulton Market in October 2021. The Aspen Group now supports more than 1,100 locations in 45 states through Aspen Dental, ClearChoice, WellNow and ChapterSM. Under Aspens model, dentists own the practices, but the company handles administrative and training services, and the practices are branded as Aspen Dental. The company has faced a number of legal challenges over the years. Late last year, Massachusetts Attorney General Maura Healey filed a lawsuit against Aspen Dental Management alleging it engaged in deceptive advertising and marketing practices, including charging patients for services it advertised as free. In 2015, the company paid $450,000 to settle with the New York attorney generals office after an investigation found Aspen was making business decisions that were adversely affecting patient care, including pressuring staff to increase sales of dental services and products. Aspen also reached a $175,000 settlement with the Pennsylvania attorney general in 2010 after it was accused of using confusing or misleading information about discounts, coupons and interest-free financing. Aspen did not admit wrongdoing as part of those settlements. In 2020, dentists, dental hygienists, dental assistants, and a dental marketing worker filed lawsuits in Cook County Circuit Court against Aspen Dental Management and the owner of an Aspen Dental clinic in Crestwood. The employees and former employees alleged they were secretly videotaped while using the clinics bathroom. They alleged that a dental hygienist placed two hidden cameras in the bathroom and that the clinics owners and supervisors should have known about that persons alleged criminal background before hiring him. While we do not comment on active litigation, several of the cases are nearly a decade old and do not reflect the positive experience that more than 30,000 patients have at the independently-owned Aspen Dental practices across the nation every day, and nor does it reflect the values of (The Aspen Group) which continues to strive to expand access to quality, affordable care for those who need it most, The Aspen Group said in a statement. China has downplayed U.S. support for Taiwan after a delegation of former Washington officials arrived in Taipei on Tuesday. The two-day visit came amid Russias invasion of Ukraine, which prompted Taiwans President Tsai Ing-wen to raise its military alert level against foreign forces intending to manipulate the situation and affect the morale of Taiwanese society. The Biden-appointed delegation was led by Mike Mullen, who served as one-time chairman of the Joint Chiefs of Staff in the George W. Bush and Barack Obama administrations. He was joined by former national security advisers Evan Medeiros and Mike Green and former senior defense officials Michele Flournoy and Meghan O'Sullivan, as per Newsweek. Taiwan Premier Su Tseng-chang said the visit showed the importance both of the Taiwan-U.S. relationship and Taiwans position, as well as the United States strong support for the island, according to Reuters. Last week, Su announced that Taiwan was joining democratic countries in imposing sanctions on Russia. In response to the U.S. visit, Chinese Foreign Ministry spokesperson Wang Wenbin reiterated Beijings position on Taiwan and dismissed American support as futile. The will of the Chinese people to defend our country's sovereignty and territorial integrity is unwavering. Whoever the United States sends to show so-called support for Taiwan will be futile," Wang told reporters. The official also responded to news of a U.S. warship sailing through the Taiwan Strait on Saturday, which the U.S. military called routine activity. If the United States is trying to threaten and pressure China with this, then we need to tell them that in the face of the Great Wall of steel forged by 1.4 billion Chinese people, any military deterrence is but scrap metal, Wang said. On Wednesday, the U.S. delegation met Tsai, who expressed solidarity with Ukraine ahead of their correspondence. The Ukrainian people's commitment to protect freedom and democracy and their fearless dedication to defending their country have been met with deep empathy from the people of Taiwan, as we too stand on the front line of the battle for democracy, Tsai said before the meeting, according to CNN. History teaches us if we turn a blind eye to military aggression, we only worsen the threats to ourselves, she added. Now is the time for all democracies around the world to come together. Russias invasion of Ukraine has drawn comparisons to China and Taiwans situation. Emily Feng, an NPR correspondent in Beijing, said theres not a lot of similarity, but there is a common thread of territory. With Russia's pretext for invasion, their rationale was that there's this pro-Western state right on its borders, Ukraine, that has very strong cultural ties with Russia. And if you look at Taiwan, it's also this pro-Western state right next to China and which shares these overlapping cultural ties with China, Feng told NPRs Morning Edition. Mullen said he hopes their visit will reassure Taiwan of the U.S. governments commitments. We come to Taiwan at a very difficult and critical moment in world history. As President Biden has said, democracy is facing sustained and alarming challenges, most recently in Ukraine. Now more than ever, democracy needs champions, Mullen said. After Wednesdays meeting, Tsai said Taiwan will create a donation account for Ukraine. She also pledged, along with Su and Vice President William Lai, a months salary to be donated to aid Ukrainian refugees. Featured Image via Formosa TV English News Story continues Enjoy this content? Read more from NextShark! There Are Now 2 Species of Red Panda, Study Finds Madison Cawthorn vows to seize 'every Chinese asset in America' if GOP retakes congress Director Paul Thomas Anderson responds to criticism of mock Asian accent scenes in 'Licorice Pizza' 3-Year-Old Girl in Japan Dies After Mother Leaves Her Home Alone for a Week to Visit Boyfriend A 43-year-old Moss Point man faces multiple charges after police found two men dead in a double homicide Tuesday morning. Police responded to the 6000 block of Elder Street about 8:30 a.m. and found the two victims dead from gunshots wounds in the yard of the residence, according to a Facebook post from the police department. The suspect, Willie Hurd, was on scene and suffered a gunshot wound to the foot, police said. He was transported Singing River Hospital for treatment. Hurd notified police that there were two other shooting victims at the residence. The victims were identified as: Tremaine Moore, 38, of Moss Point Marcus Davis, 42, of Pascagoula Working alongside South Mississippi Metro Enforcement Team, the Pascagoula Police Department Crime Scene Unit and investigators from the Jackson County District Attorneys Office, detectives found evidence to implicate Hurd for the shootings of Moore and Davis. Police also found marijuana in Hurds home while executing a search warrant, they said. Upon his release from the hospital, Hurd was arrested and charged with two counts of first-degree murder, felony possession of marijuana and possession of a firearm by a convicted felon. Two Sedgwick County commissioners on Wednesday criticized a community task force for sending a letter seeking a federal investigation into potential civil rights violations by city, county and state departments after the in-custody death of 17-year-old Cedric Lofton. County officials have said federal law enforcement officials are already reviewing Loftons death. But the scope of the review is unclear, and the FBI has declined to comment. The Sedgwick County Taskforce to Review Youth Corrections Systems Standards, which holds its meetings at a county building and has a page on the countys website, finalized a letter to U.S. Attorney General Merrick Garland on Monday. It asks for a federal investigation into a potential pattern and practice of civil rights violations by the Wichita Police Department, Sedgwick County Juvenile Intake and Assessment Center and Kansas Department for Children and Families, including but not limited to the death of Cedric Lofton. Commissioners Jim Howell and Pete Meitzner said Wednesday that the letter is outside the scope of the letter the County Commission voted to endorse at a special meeting last month. Meitzner, who had voted to endorse the task force letter, pulled his support on Wednesday after the letter called for an investigation instead of a review. I recall that I was specific on that motion that said we support a review of the case, so any insinuation that I was supporting an investigation or everything the task force has done, is not accurate, he said at Wednesdays commission meeting. Howell, who was the lone dissenting vote when the commission endorsed a letter from the task force, said Wednesday that he would like to review the letter and have the County Commission weigh in on whether it supports a full-scale investigation by the DOJ. Im supporting the task force in their review of policies and procedures, Howell said. But in terms of a letter to the Department of Justice to investigate Sedgwick County looking for things wrong the FBI was involved in this case from the very beginning its unnecessary and its inappropriate. Story continues Commissioner Lacey Cruse, who said she supports a civil rights investigation, said the commissioners move could threaten the independence of the citizen-led task force that is reviewing city, county and state policies surrounding Loftons death. I think it is important to understand that this task force was told to the community and explained to the community by Commissioner Dennis and by Commissioner Lopez that this was to be run by the community, and so I support that, she said. The moment that this commission starts meddling in what they do, I dont believe thats the best course of action to take because thats not what this community is under the impression that this task force is supposed to be designed for. Shes asking for the commission to vote to endorse the task forces finalized letter next week. Commission Chairman David Dennis would not commit to putting it on next weeks agenda. I would like to request, as a commissioner from this bench, that its on the next meeting, Cruse said. At a future meeting, we will put it on, Dennis said. OK. Well, I am making a request. I guess if you disagree, thats fine. But Im making in a request to put that on the next meeting. I think its timely and important to do, Cruse said. The task force is seeking a federal investigation after Sedgwick County District Attorney Marc Bennett announced he would not pursue criminal charges against any of the law enforcement officers or juvenile detention staff involved in Loftons death. Bennett said the case would likely be dismissed under the states Stand Your Ground law. Consulting funds flowing from AT&T to a lobbyist with deep ties to then-House Speaker Michael Madigan and eventually to a former state representative are at the center of a federal investigation into the telephone giants lobbying practices in Springfield, the Tribune has learned. Last month, AT&T disclosed in a regulatory filing that federal prosecutors had notified them they were considering filing criminal charges against its Illinois subsidiary, formally known as Illinois Bell Telephone Co. LLC, involving a single, nine-month consulting contract in 2017 worth $22,500. Advertisement State records show the company that year had hired a stable of Madigan-connected lobbyists working for the Illinois subsidiary as AT&T was fighting for a controversial bill to end landline service. Former Illinois House Speaker Michael Madigan at the Balzekas Museum in West Lawn on Feb. 25, 2021. (Brian Cassella / Chicago Tribune) Among them was Thomas Cullen, and two sources familiar with the probe said a contract with Cullen is among those under scrutiny. Investigators are looking specifically at thousands of dollars in contract payments allegedly passed on to former state Rep. Edward Acevedo, a onetime member of Madigans leadership team whod recently left the General Assembly, the sources said. Advertisement Acevedo was a registered lobbyist at the time, state records show, but not for AT&T, and sources said the amount of work Acevedo actually did for AT&T is in question. Neither Cullen nor Acevedo has been charged with any wrongdoing involving AT&T, and there was no indication in the SEC filing that they might be in legal jeopardy. Cullen, a former Madigan staffer and longtime political strategist aligned with the speaker, has not responded to repeated requests for comment. The filing with the U.S. Securities and Exchange Commission said the subsidiary has been cooperating since 2019 in the widely reported investigation of certain elected Illinois politicians and related parties for corruption. Based on our own extensive investigation of the facts and our engagement with the U.S. attorneys office, we have concluded that the contract at issue was legal in all respects and that any charge against Illinois Bell or its personnel would be without merit, the filing stated. Acevedo, in a brief telephone call last week, said he would rather not say whether he worked on behalf of AT&T. Asked if he had received a contract through Cullens firm, Acevedo said: I have no idea what you are talking about. Acevedo could not be reached this week. His attorney did not respond to a message seeking comment. A spokesman for AT&T declined to answer a list of questions by the Tribune, referring instead back to the SEC filing. Advertisement Madigan, who was dethroned from his role as speaker in January 2021 and later resigned his House seat, has not been charged and has denied wrongdoing. Federal investigators first focused on the payments to Acevedo more than two years ago as part of a broader probe into whether AT&T was improperly rewarding those favored by Madigan in exchange for the powerful speakers help with the landline bill, according to the sources familiar with the matter. Several other contracts AT&T gave to other Madigan-connected lobbyists were also being scrutinized, and investigators have interviewed numerous people involved in the companys lobbying push, sources said. That investigation appeared to be on the back burner for months as the U.S. attorneys office focused on similar allegations against utility giant Commonwealth Edison, which has been accused of trying to influence Madigan by funneling money to lobbying and consulting firms headed by the speakers allies. Five people, including Madigans longtime confidant, Michael McClain, and former ComEd CEO Anne Pramaggiore, have been charged with bribery conspiracy as part of that case, while ComEd entered into a deferred prosecution agreement admitting its conduct in the scheme in exchange for prosecutors dropping the charges in 2023. Madigans former chief of staff, Tim Mapes, was charged last year with lying to a federal grand jury investigating the case. Also charged as an offshoot of the ComEd investigation was Acevedo, who pleaded guilty in December to evading about $37,000 in taxes owed on income from his consulting business from 2015 to 2017. Though the charges dont specifically mention ComEd, Acevedo previously told the Tribune hed been interviewed by federal investigators as part of that probe. Advertisement The federal scrutiny of AT&T was first revealed on the day ComEds deferred prosecution deal was made public in July 2020, when federal prosecutors subpoenaed Madigans office for any and all documents and communications concerning AT&T, including contracts and correspondence related to the hiring of anyone to provide consulting or lobbying services to the public utility. Later that month, the Tribune reported that AT&T itself had been subpoenaed by federal prosecutors amid the widening criminal probe into Madigans vaunted 13th Ward operations. In a statement to the Tribune at the time, AT&T said only that, in general, it cooperates with any requests from law enforcement. Like all companies, from time to time we are required by law to provide information to government and law enforcement agencies, the statement read. As always, we cooperate with their fact gathering process. Similar to the ComEd case, AT&T had a big legislative goal in 2017: passing a controversial bill to end traditional landline telephone service to the remaining 1.2 million customers in Illinois. Critics of the landline bill including the AARP Illinois and the Citizens Utility Board watchdog group were pushing back, saying the legislation would leave behind hundreds of thousands of Illinois residents, particularly seniors, who disproportionately rely on traditional landline telephone service for everything from connecting with family to monitoring life-threatening medical conditions. In the midst of the debate, former Madigan political director Eileen Mitchell returned to AT&T after a brief stint as then-Mayor Rahm Emanuels chief of staff. She is now the head of AT&T Illinois subsidiary. Advertisement And, like many companies trying to get legislation passed in Springfield, AT&T employed a long roster of Madigan-connected lobbyists in the run-up to the votes. After a protracted fight, the landline bill passed during the final hours of the spring legislative session. Republican Gov. Bruce Rauner vetoed the legislation, but the Democrat-led General Assembly overrode him. Among the lobbyists enlisted to get the bill over the hump was Cullen, one of a group of former Madigan staffers whod capitalized on access to the speaker. Cullen lobbies for a string of notable clients, from Pepsico to the Pharmaceutical Research and Manufacturers of America. A onetime ComEd lobbyist, Cullens major utility client is now Ameren, the dominant power company in downstate Illinois. Cullen was also one of five current and former utility lobbyists identified by the Tribune in 2019 who had written checks to Kevin Quinn, a one-time ranking Madigan aide who the speaker ousted over alleged sexual harassment of a Democratic campaign worker. According to emails the Tribune disclosed in 2018, the effort to rally financial support for Quinn was orchestrated by McClain, a Quincy Democrat and former lobbyist who served on Madigans legislative leadership team in the early 1980s and is now facing charges in the ComEd probe. Advertisement While Acevedo was never a part of Madigans inner circle, the Chicago Democrat was considered a Madigan ally. In 2020, Acevedo, a former Chicago police officer, told the Tribune he had worked as a consultant paid by John Bradley, a former House Democrat from Marion who was a contract lobbyist for ComEd until November 2019. Acevedo said then that he did not lobby for ComEd, but he said he was a consultant for Bradley about ComEd issues. Acevedo also said he previously worked as a consultant in a similar role for lobbyist Shaw Decremer, a former Democratic House staffer and campaign operative ousted from the speakers political organization following complaints that he was abusive. Details of Acevedos involvement in the ComEd scandal trickled out in hearings by a special House committee in 2020 tasked with investigating Madigans role with the power company after he was named Public Official A in federal court documents. Among the records ComEd turned over to committee was a January 2017 email in which McClain told Fidel Marquez, then vice president of governmental affairs for ComEd, about a frank conversation hed had with Acevedo about his shortcomings and an unflattering list of directives, including to watch the booze. Marquez, who cooperated with investigators and recorded conversations with McClain and others for the FBI, pleaded guilty in 2020 to bribery and is awaiting sentencing. Advertisement The McClain email went on to note whom Acevedo would be allowed to lobby, even though he was not registered as a ComEd lobbyist. At the end of his email, McClain thanked Marquez for letting him talk to Acevedo first and told Marquez, You may now talk to him. And in a reference he commonly used for Madigan, McClain wrote: I will tell our Friend to proceed. jmeisner@chicagotribune.com rlong@chicagotribune.com COVID Current data shows Monroe County has been downgraded to experiencing a substantial level of COVID-19 transmission, reflecting a nationwide decline in case rates. As of Tuesday, numbers from the Centers for Disease Control and Prevention calculate there have been 138 cases of COVID-19 within the last seven days, a more than 46% decrease compared to the week prior. The county's new designation is an improvement to its past label as high, which the CDC reserves for counties experiencing the most cases of the virus. For several months, Monroe and most counties in Michigan were labeled as having high transmission rates. This week, several were moved to substantial and moderate, marking relief from an elongated surge that began gaining momentum locally in September before greatly spiking in January and early last month. Approximately 1,700 tests were performed last week, down about 16% compare to the week prior. Similar to case rates, testing is mirroring trends observed late last year and the last few months. Positivity rates have also fallen to 6.4%, a modest decline of about 3% compared to last week, Declining transmissions come in the wake of updated guidance from the CDC, outlining what prevention measures should be taken in response to the pandemic. At minimum, the CDC is advising anyone eligible to receive a vaccine to do so and to continue testing if symptoms occur. That level is considers low/green. Monroe County is currently at a medium/yellow level, which advises residents to speak with healthcare professionals as to whether they should wear a mask, highlighting some of the health agency's recent changes to its recommendations. High/red level areas are encouraged to wear masks indoors. As of Tuesday, few counties in the state were ranked as high. No county in southeast Michigan or northwest Ohio ranked above medium risk. Local vaccination rates have largely remain unchanged in recent weeks. About 61.8% of Monroe County residents age 5 or older has had at least one vaccination dose, while about 56.1% has completed a full vaccination. Story continues About 44.3% have received a booster dose. "Everyone 5 years and older is eligible for the COVID-19 vaccine and everyone aged 12 and up can receive a booster dose," said Dr. Natasha Bagdasarian, chief medical executive of the Michigan Department of Health and Human Services in an online statement. "Make sure you and your family are up to date on COVID-19 vaccinations." Area hospital admissions related to COVID-19 have also declined. Last week, there were eight admissions in Monroe County related to the virus. That's down about 38.46%. This article originally appeared on The Monroe News: Monroe County's COVID-19 cases, rates, admissions declining (Getty Images) The White House will include Dr Seuss books in its annual Read Across America Day, after removing the authors books from the event last year. On Tuesday, President Biden followed the tradition of proclaiming 2 March as National Read Across America Day. The event, founded by the National Education Association in 1998 to promote reading among children, occurs each year on the birthday of Dr Seuss. For many young Americans, the path to literacy begins with treasured and timeless traditions, President Biden said in his proclamation. Childrens classics such as Dr Seuss Green Eggs and Ham and Oh, the Places Youll Go! have inspired a passion for reading and endless creativity that spans generations. Todays stories and adventures are as diverse as the world in which we live, and by reading them, we come to more fully understand the vibrant diversity of our Nation - and the world, the White House said. This is especially important as young people learn and grow with their own sense of identity. Last year, the National Education Association pivoted away from Dr Seuss books to focus on more diverse childrens books. The removal of the authors books - whose real name is Theodor Seuss Geisel - came after much scrutiny over his use of racist undertones and tropes within his work. When asked why the authors books were left out of the celebration in 2021, White House press secretary Jen Psaki directed the comment to the Department of Education. As we celebrate the love of reading and uplift diverse and representative authors, it is especially important that we ensure all children can see themselves represented and celebrated in the books that they read, she said according to Forbes Following the controversy, Dr Seuss Enterprises pulled six books from publication over their use of hurtful and wrong imagery. The company, which manages the authors estate, explained in a statement last year that it had worked with a panel of experts, including educators to review its catalogue, bearing in mind values of hope, inspiration, inclusion, and friendship. The woman accused of plowing her vehicle into another car in Alabama, killing a pregnant body builder who was driving with her four sons at the time, has been charged in connection with the deadly head-on collision. The fatal incident occurred July 5, 2021 along U.S. 43, about 10 miles north of Northport. Anna Lea Dalrymple and her infant daughter were traveling northbound when her 2007 Volvo crossed over the center line, according to a police report obtained by AL.com. In the opposite lane, Audra Mary Rogers was driving her Honda Pilot, with all of her kids strapped into the backseat at the time. Despite Rogers best effort to avoid the collision, Dalrymple collided with her vehicle. Rogers, who was pregnant at the time, was pronounced dead on the scene. Her four sons were all injured in the crash but and transported to the hospital with non-life-threatening injuries. Darlymple and her daughter, who was not buckled in at the time, were also seriously injured. According to the police report, the 36-year-old was under the influence of a series of drugs, including methadone, Xanax, Klonopin, and Gabapentin during the crash. She has been charged with reckless murder in Rogers death. She also faces four counts of first-degree assault for injuries to Rogers sons, and domestic violence and reckless endangerment for injuring her own infant daughter in the wreck, AL.com reported. Darlymple was jailed on Feb. 24 but released later the same day after posting $137,500 bond. A man died at a hospital days after he allegedly was stabbed by a friend last month at an apartment in Northwest El Paso, police said. Hector Miguel Gomez, 29, of El Paso, was arrested Tuesday afternoon on a murder charge in connection with the death of 29-year-old Cesar Galnares, of Houston, police said. The death is the first murder case of 2022 in El Paso, compared with three at this time last year, police officials said. Crime: Four teens arrested in stabbing of 14-year-old E boy outside Peter Piper Pizza Galnares told police that he didn't want to press charges after he allegedly was stabbed by Gomez on Feb. 17 at the Villas at West Mountain apartments at 1330 New Harvest Place, police said. Police located Gomez in an apartment and arrested him on unrelated charges. Galnares was transported to a hospital in stable condition with a stab wound that at the time was not believed to be life-threatening, a police news release stated. Homicides: Man stabbed to death at Socorro supermarket over splash of water, prosecutor says More: El Paso-area man accused of beating sister to death after she allegedly slept with another man On Feb. 23, Galnares died at the hospital. The medical examiner ruled the death was a homicide. Detectives with the Crimes Against Persons Unit obtained an arrest warrant for Gomez on a murder charge. Violent crime: El Paso man arrested in street shooting that wounded 2 after strip club dispute Gomez, accompanied by his lawyer, surrendered at the El Paso County Jail in Downtown on Tuesday afternoon. His jail booking photo has not been released. Daniel Borunda may be reached at 915-546-6102; dborunda@elpasotimes.com; @BorundaDaniel on Twitter. This article originally appeared on El Paso Times: El Paso man arrested on murder charge in friend's stabbing death Police investigate a crime scene, which included an incident at Handy Spot Liquor, after a fatal shooting by an officer in a parking lot near West Hively Avenue on Wednesday, Dec. 15, 2021, in Elkhart. ELKHART Elkhart County Prosecutor Vicki Becker said Wednesday she would not file criminal charges against Elkhart police officers who shot and killed a man after he attempted to break into a liquor store. According to a press release from the prosecutor's office, 20-year-old Jahad Patterson, who is Black, was raising a gun toward officers when he was shot and killed by Sgt. Benjimin Martin and officer Scott Swanson of the Elkhart Police Department in the early morning of Dec. 15 in a parking lot off West Hively Avenue. "Given the information reasonably known by Officers Martin and Swanson at the time of their use of deadly force, it is clear that no criminal charges are appropriate as the evidence demonstrates that each of them were reasonably acting within the law of self-defense," the release says. The Elkhart County Homicide Unit, which reports to the prosecutor's office, conducted the investigation. More: Prosecutor rules fatal Mishawaka police shooting justified, will not file criminal charges Police were called to West Hively Avenue around 5:30 a.m. on Dec. 15 for reports that a man was attempting to break into Handy Spot Liquor. Video footage from security cameras at Handy Spot Liquor on West Hively Avenue shows a man in light blue sweatpants and a black shirt slamming on the stores front door with his hand. Officer Scott Swanson of the Elkhart Police Department The man, identified as Patterson, then stumbles away from the store, picks up a bicycle and heads west on Hively. Martin and Swanson located Patterson in the parking lot of a Big Lots, a few hundred feet west of the liquor store, and "engaged the male subject," police said. According to the release, the officers ordered Patterson to show them his hands. Patterson then pulled a gun out of his pocket and began raising it at Swanson. "Upon seeing the gun, Officer Swanson fired his weapon," with Martin also shooting at Patterson, officials said. After Patterson collapsed to the ground, officers found him holding a handgun, the release said. Patterson was declared dead at the scene. Story continues A woman who declined to give her name, but lives in the Elkhart Green Apartment complex directly across the street, said she woke up that morning to the sounds of sirens and yelling. I heard the officer scream Put the gun down! and then I heard shots, she said on Dec. 15. Prosecutors said Patterson was "under the influence of alcohol" when he was shot by police, though the release does not say what his blood alcohol content was. Police shootings justified The Dec. 15 incident is the latest in a number of fatal police shootings that have recently been ruled justified by area prosecutors. On Monday, Marshall County prosecutor Nelson Chipman announced a Marshall County officers was justified in fatally shooting a suspect in Culver following a pursuit. Police were initially called to a gas station in Culver for a suspected intoxicated driver. Last month, St. Joseph County prosecutors said they would not file charges against Mishawaka police officer Garrett Schock when he shot and killed 37-year-old Michael Haas following a standoff at the Village Green mobile home park. Officials said Haas exited his trailer with a long gun and "fired his weapon and a Mishawaka police officer returned fire." Becker also declined to file criminal charges in connection to a fatal police shooting in Elkhart in August. Becker said she found Elkhart city police Sgt. Mike Davis was justified when he shot and killed Lonnel Cephas Jr., 19, on Aug. 27 while responding to the fatal shooting of Danton Munoz, who was days shy of his second birthday Email Marek Mazurek at mmazurek@sbtinfo.com. Follow him on Twitter: @marek_mazurek This article originally appeared on South Bend Tribune: Elkhart County prosecutor rules fatal Dec. police shooting justified Former Illinois Speaker Michael Madigan departs from his lawyers' office, March 9, 2022, after making his first virtual court appearance for his indictment. (Brian Cassella / Chicago Tribune) Former Illinois House Speaker Michael Madigan, for decades the most powerful politician in the state, was indicted Wednesday on federal racketeering charges alleging his elected office and political operation were a criminal enterprise that provided personal financial rewards for him and his associates. Advertisement The 22-count indictment returned by a federal grand jury comes after a yearslong federal investigation and alleges Madigan participated in an array of bribery and extortion schemes from 2011 to 2019 aimed at using the power of his office for personal gain. The long-awaited charges punctuate a stunning downfall for Madigan, the longest serving leader of any legislative chamber in the nation who held an ironclad grip on the state legislature as well as the Democratic party and its political spoils. He was dethroned as speaker in early 2021 as the investigation swirled around him, and soon after resigned the House seat hed held since 1971. Advertisement Both Madigan and his attorneys denied the allegations in written statements Wednesday and said they intended to fight them in court. [ Democrats seek to distance themselves from Michael Madigan as Gov. J.B. Pritzker acknowledges meeting with feds during investigation ] Also charged in the indictment was Madigans longtime confidant, Michael McClain, a former state legislator and lobbyist who is facing separate charges alleging he orchestrated an alleged bribery scheme by Commonwealth Edison. That same alleged scheme forms the backbone of the indictment returned Wednesday, outlining a plan by the utility giant to pay thousands of dollars to lobbyists favored by Madigan in order to win his influence over legislation the company wanted passed in Springfield. Michael Madigan arrives at his West Lawn home on Wednesday afternoon before it was announced he was indicted on federal racketeering charges. (Antonio Perez / Chicago Tribune) The indictment also accused Madigan of illegally soliciting business for his private property tax law firm during discussions to turn a state-owned parcel of land in Chinatown into a commercial development. Though the land deal never was consummated, its been a source of continued interest for federal investigators, who in 2020 subpoenaed Madigans office for records and communications hed had with key players. Then-Ald. Daniel Solis, who was secretly cooperating with the investigation, recorded numerous conversations with Madigan as part of the Chinatown land probe, including one where the speaker told Solis he was looking for a colleague to sponsor a House bill approving the land sale. I have to find out about who would be the proponent in the House, Madigan allegedly told Solis in the March 2018 conversation. We gotta find the appropriate person for that. I have to think it through. The indictment also alleged that Madigan met with then Gov-elect J.B. Pritzker in December 2018 in part to discuss a lucrative state board position for Solis, ostensibly as a reward for helping Madigan win law business. Advertisement Before that meeting, Solis allegedly recorded Madigan telling him the speakers communication with Pritzker did not need to be in writing, according to the indictment. I can just verbally tell him, Madigan allegedly said. His office issued a statement Wednesday saying Pritzker does not recall Madigan ever asking him to consider Solis for any position and that the administration has no record of the alleged recommendation. A spokesperson for Pritzker also revealed the governor was informed by federal law enforcement that he was only a witness in the investigation, and that he agreed to a voluntary interview in his home in late February. Pritzker spoke to investigators for about an hour about his experiences with and knowledge of Mike Madigan and that he was pleased to cooperate and provide information. [ Michael Madigan, ComEd and corruption: Timeline of how the investigation unfolded ] Both Madigan, 79, of Chicagos Southwest Side, and McClain, 74, of downstate Quincy, were scheduled to be arraigned on the charges March 9 before U.S. Magistrate Judge Jeffrey Cole. It was unclear as of Wednesday evening whether that hearing would be conducted in person or by telephone under the courthouses COVID-19 protocols. Advertisement In addition to the criminal charges, the indictment also contains a forfeiture allegation against both Madigan and McClain seeking $2.8 million in alleged ill-gotten gains. At a news conference Wednesday at the Dirksen U.S. Courthouse, U.S. Attorney John Lausch said the indictment was yet another sign of the states seemingly intractable issue of public corruption. U.S. Attorney John Lausch announces the indictment of Michael Madigan, former speaker of the Illinois House of Representatives, at the Dirksen U.S. Courthouse in Chicago on March 2, 2022. (Chris Sweda / Chicago Tribune) Unfortunately, this type of criminal conduct drastically undermines the publics confidence in our government, Lausch said. Simply put, its not a good thing. In his written statement Wednesday, Madigan said he never engaged in any criminal activity and that prosecutors were attempting to criminalize legal political actions such as job recommendations. That is not illegal, and these other charges are equally unfounded, the statement read. Throughout my 50 years as a public servant, I worked to address the needs of my constituents, always keeping in mind the high standards required and the trust the public placed in me. I adamantly deny these accusations and look back proudly on my time as an elected official, serving the people of Illinois. His criminal defense lawyers, Sheldon Zenner and Gil Soffer, said in their own statement the charges were baseless overreach by prosecutors and that the evidence would prove so in court. Advertisement McClains attorney, Patrick Cotter, said in a statement that the government for years has been trying to force him to cooperate in its quest against Madigan and that the latest charges are nothing more than a continued attempt to pressure him to do prosecutors bidding. He remains innocent of the recycled and new charges in this latest indictment, Cotter said. He will never testify falsely about himself or anyone, no matter how many indictments are brought against him. We will fight to prove his innocence. A major focus of the indictment is what prosecutors call the Madigan Enterprise, an ongoing arrangement with Madigan, McClain, the speakers 13th Ward Democratic organization, Madigans chairmanship of the state Democratic Party and his property tax appeals firm, Madigan and Getzendanner. Lobbyist Mike McClain outside House Speaker Michael Madigan's office at the State Capitol in Springfield in 2012. (E. Jason Wambsgans / Chicago Tribune) The purpose of the enterprise was to exercise, preserve and enhance Madigans political power and financial well-being, reward his political allies and workers financially for their loyalty and to generate income for members and associates through illegal activities. The indictment alleges the illegal acts ranged from Madigan using his vast power as speaker, including his ability to virtually pass or block legislation, to reward friends and political allies. Advertisement The indictment was the culmination of a long-running federal probe of Madigan that broke wide open in summer 2020, when prosecutors identified him as Public Official A in bribery charges against ComEd. Four people, including McClain, former ComEd CEO Anne Pramaggiore, former lobbyist John Hooker, and Jay Doherty, a consultant and longtime leader of the City Club of Chicago, were charged that November with bribery conspiracy and are awaiting trial. A fifth, former ComEd Vice President Fidel Marquez, has pleaded guilty to his role and is cooperating with investigators. In bringing new charges against McClain, the U.S. attorneys office seems to be putting the squeeze on him to cooperate. If he doesnt, hell be left simultaneously fighting both the racketeering case and separate ComEd bribery case, which is set for trial in September. Advertisement Illinois House Speaker Michael Madigan leaves after a House Democratic caucus meeting on Nov. 12, 2019, at the Capitol in Springfield. (Zbigniew Bzdak / Chicago Tribune) By indicting Madigan, a famously shrewd tactician who rarely used email or cellphones, the U.S. attorneys office in Chicago has reached the apex of the states political food chain, even in the pantheon of Illinois political figures whove gone down on corruption charges before him. Four Illinois governors went to prison during Madigans five decades in Springfield one for crimes after leaving office and three others for misdeeds while serving as public officials. Madigan even held the gavel in the House when Illinois, for the first time, impeached a governor, Democrat Rod Blagojevich. But none of those politicians had the staying power of Madigan, who used patronage jobs and other perks to build an army of foot soldiers sent to work campaigns on key legislative seats that reinforced Madigans position. His stature, in turn, brought him considerable personal wealth by helping land clients at his law firm, which handles high-dollar property tax appeals on some of Chicagos biggest buildings. The investigation into Madigan had already taken a toll, with waning political support forcing Madigan to give up the speakers gavel in January 2021, followed by his abrupt resignation weeks later from the legislative seat hed held since 1971. The probe came on the heels of another bombshell case the racketeering indictment against Chicago Ald. Edward Burke, who like Madigan represented one of the last vestiges of Chicago machine politics. An undated photo of Kevin Quinn. Quinn's home was raided by federal agents in May 2019. (Evergreen Park Police Department) Just two weeks before Burke was indicted for alleged corruption at City Hall, federal agents in May 2019 quietly executed search warrants on McClains home, as well as the homes of Madigan allies Kevin Quinn and Chicago Ald. Mike Zalewski. Advertisement The first public hint of the burgeoning probe came the next month when the Chicago Tribune reported that Quinns South Side home had been raided. Over the next several months it became clear that federal prosecutors were interested in money flowing from ComEd lobbyists to operatives in Madigans vast political operation. In November, the Tribune reported McClains cellphone had been tapped by the FBI. In July 2020, the U.S. attorneys office announced it had charged ComEd with bribery as part of a deferred prosecution agreement that called on the company to pay a record $200 million fine and cooperate in exchange for charges being dropped after three years. ComEd has cooperated fully with the investigation, been transparent with customers, and implemented comprehensive ethics and compliance reforms to ensure that the unacceptable conduct outlined in the agreement never happens again, ComEd spokeswoman Shannon Breymaier said in a statement. Four months after the ComEd charges were announced, prosecutors charged McClain, whose friendship with Madigan dates to when they served in the House in the 1970s and early 1980s and who later, as a lobbyist, was one of the only people in the General Assembly to have consistent access to the speaker on a broad range of issues. In May 2021, chief of staff Timothy Mapes, another key member of his inner circle, was charged with perjury and obstruction of justice for allegedly lying to a federal grand jury about Madigans relationship with McClain as well as other matters involving the ComEd scheme. Advertisement In addition to a goal of financial gain, the indictment returned Wednesday alleged Madigan as part of the criminal enterprise used his speakership to mete out punishment, such as taking away staff if a lawmaker didnt go along with the speakers wishes. One previously highlighted example of Madigan and McClain protecting the speakers interests came in 2016, when McClain allegedly interceded with Pramaggiore to restore legal work that ComEd sought to cut back from the law firm of Victor Reyes, a Madigan operative in the Hispanic community. Reyes has not been charged. The Madigan push to re-up the Reyes law firms ComEd contract allegedly came in connection with the companys desire to reward the speaker for the promotion and passage of major legislation in 2016 to get consumers to underwrite costs of two power plants. ComEd allegedly looked the other way when some of Madigans choices for internships for students coming out of the 13th Ward didnt hit a minimum grade-point average, according to the indictment. The company at times waived the requirements for the Madigan internships, the indictment alleged. The indictment alleged code-names were used when speaking about Madigan. Prosecutors formally said people in the conspiracy referred to Madigan as our friend or a friend of ours rather than using Madigans actual name. The Tribune had previously reported McClain referenced Madigan with another cozy nickname: Himself. Advertisement The indictment also describes how Madigan allegedly gave ComEd a heads-up in April 2018 about legislation that they may want to oppose. He allegedly made the move around the time he was pressing to put Juan Ochoa, the former chief of McPier, into a slot on the board of directors of ComEd, a company regulated by the state. On May 2, 2018, McClain allegedly informed Madigan of ComEds resistance to Ochoas appointment, and Madigan instructed McClain that they continue to support Ochoa, who was only identified as Individual BM-1 in the indictment. The indictment described a series of calls in which McClain talked individually to Madigan, Pramaggiore and Hooker, noting in some that Madigan first warned of the potentially adverse legislation, that he pressed for Ochoas appointment and that he gave McClain permission to kill the bill. The legislation was sponsored by Rep. Greg Harris, a Chicago Democrat who was an assistant majority leader soon to become majority leader, a trusted member of Madigans leadership team. The bill would have made a series of changes to the state public utilities act, including a requirement that some retail electric suppliers submit rate information every year to the Illinois Commerce Commission and the attorney general as well as assorted other provisions. Harris, who later served as Madigans majority leader, could not be reached for comment Wednesday. Advertisement Beyond the board of director job, the indictment also alleged McClain worked with ComEd officials to steer payments to other Madigan allies. In December 2018, McClain informed an unidentified intermediary of Madigans decision to terminate payments to one person and instructed the intermediary to make it falsely appear that a remaining payment was simply a holiday bonus even though the person had performed little or no work, according to the indictment. Chicago Tribunes Dan Petrella and John Byrne contributed. jmeisner@chicagotribune.com rlong@chicagotribune.com Demolition at Building 9210, part of Y-12's biology complex, took place recently. The Department of Energy is looking at creating a landfill for demolition debris from old buildings as the current landfill for that purpose fills. An environmental group has expressed concerns regarding a proposed landfill's impact on fish. The landfill, the Environmental Management Disposal Facility, still has more steps before the U.S. Department of Energy can use it for demolition debris from old contaminated federal buildings at Y-12 National Security Complex and Oak Ridge National Laboratory. The Southern Environmental Law Center has sent letters to the U.S. Environmental Protection Agency, expressing concerns about procedures with this future landfill. They are also concerned with water pollution that might occur and which they say has already occurred with the existing on-site landfill, the Environmental Management Waste Management Facility. That facility has held similar waste to what the EMDF will hold, such as "soil, sediment, building demolition debris, personal protection equipment, and scrap equipment," as stated on DOE's website. The existing landfill has been already discharging radionuclide pollution into Bear Creek for many years and unfortunately without any real limits on those discharges, Amanda Garcia, director of the Tennessee office for the Southern Environmental Law Center told The Oak Ridger. DOE on its own website contests this claim, stating "for more than 15 years, Oak Ridge employees have safely operated the current facility without negatively impacting human health or the environment." DOE states the waste that goes into this Environmental Management Waste Management Facility is "low level" waste, while higher level, more radioactive waste goes to Nevada National Security Site or DOEs Waste Isolation Pilot Plant (WIPP) near Carlsbad, New Mexico. Ben Williams, communications specialist for DOE's Oak Ridge Environmental Management, has not addressed The Oak Ridger's request for comment on radionuclide pollution allegations, but said DOE is looking at comments it has received and plans to do more outreach this winter. Story continues Basically, they're saying, 'Were going to discharge a bunch of pollution largely untreated into Bear Creek,' Garcia said of the future landfill standards. Its going to go downstream, and DOE isnt worried about it because itll be diluted." Garcia said if a smaller fish thats in Bear Creek swims downstream and gets eaten by bigger fish in the Clinch River, that might cause problems for people who are trying to catch and eat the bigger fish. Eric Hilt, SELC Tennessee communications manager, stated in an email to The Oak Ridger that the radionuclide pollutants include chemicals that are known to cause cancer and are bioaccumulative, meaning they will continue to build up in waterways, fish and other wildlife over time. "This threatens to have a major impact on communities that use, fish and enjoy Bear Creek and the Clinch River," Hilt stated. Garcia said signs installed in 2016 told people not to eat the fish in an area downstream from the landfill. However, she said a nearby greenway may lead to fishing there. Technology and 'environmental justice' The SELC forwarded both its letters and the EPA's response to The Oak Ridger. "EPA ... does not expressly address whether DOE will be required to comply with technology-based effluent limits (TBELs) or the State of Tennessees antidegradation policy," the SELC's letter stated. TBELs refer to requirements to use the best available technology to limit water pollution. The letter accuses DOE of a pattern of "putting the cart before the horse in pre-selecting a remedy at Oak Ridge." It warned of "high groundwater concentrations" at the proposed site of the EMDF and said that plans will have to account for how "wet weather conditions" will affect pollution flowing from the site. "It is worth noting, in this regard, that the contact water holding ponds at the existing EMWMF have come close to failing in the past during heavy rain events, and as a result, thousands of gallons of untreated wastewater containing radionuclides and other hazardous pollutants have been discharged from EMWMF into Bear Creek," the SELC letter, dated to last November stated. Nevertheless, the SELC letter complimented the EPA for asking DOE to better address "environmental justice" issues. "EPA notes that a screening-level analysis of the preferred remedys potential impacts on and existing risks to minority, low-income, and indigenous populations is needed," the SELC stated. "The importance of these measures is underscored by the close proximity of the Scarboro community to DOEs preferred disposal location, as well as the anecdotal information Community Groups have provided to EPA Region 4 regarding fishing practices of nearby low-wealth Latino communities." DOE has stated the Scarboro Community is 3.9 miles from the proposed site it plans to use in the Bear Creek Valley in Oak Ridge. The nearest residential area, Country Club Estates, is more than eight-10ths of a mile from this site. DOE stated all nearby communities are separated by Pine Ridge from the proposed EMDF site. In addition to the SELC's attorneys Amanda Garcia and Stephanie Biggs, the SELC letter was also signed by several Oak Ridge and East Tennessee residents, including Jimmy Groton, president of Advocates for the Oak Ridge Reservation; Axel Ringe, water quality chair of Tennessee Chapter Sierra Club; Sandra Goss, executive director of Tennessee Citizens for Wilderness Planning; and Virginia Dale, land management chair of the Tennessee Chapter Sierra Club. The letter also called for more public engagement. EPA responds Responding to this SELC letter, the EPA's Barry N. Breen, acting assistant administrator, assured the senders that the EPA is looking at various issues. "The EPA is working with the Department of Energy (DOE) and the Tennessee Department of Environment and Conservation (TDEC) to ensure that the selected remedy for the EMDF will be protective of human health and the environment; meet applicable or relevant and appropriate requirements (ARARs) unless a waiver is justified; and that the public has an opportunity to engage in and provide input on the cleanup decisions at the site, consistent with the Comprehensive Environmental Response, Compensation, and Liability Act (CERCLA) and the National Oil and Hazardous Substances Pollution Contingency Plan (NCP). EPA continues to evaluate Administrator Wheelers Dec. 31, 2020 decision on the formal dispute with DOE regarding the discharge to surface water of wastewaters generated during a response action under CERCLA for the Oak Ridge Reservation," Breen's letter stated. James Pinkney, a public affairs specialist with the EPA, told The Oak Ridger the EMDF "must protect impacted water bodies," adding that the relevant Superfund Act requires any solution to waste cleanup to "protect human health and the environment" and "comply with applicable, or relevant and appropriate, requirements, which consist of both federal and state regulations." "The EPA is working with the DOE and the TDEC to ensure that the selected remedy for the EMDF will be protective of human health and the environment; meet applicable or relevant and appropriate requirements (ARARs) unless a waiver is justified," he said. The released draft record of decision document by DOE describes "construction of groundwater and surface water drainage features, as needed, to ensure long-term protection of human health and the environment," a landfill wastewater treatment system and "a multilayer cover to reduce infiltration and permanently isolate the waste from human and environmental receptors," among other features to try and protect from environmental effects. The draft record of decision states the EMDF won't hold elemental mercury. As for the mercury that does get in, the draft lays out limits on the amount that can be discharged in the wastewater from it and states the discharge water will be treated to the "most stringent" standards. Why a landfill? While the current and future landfills have caused some controversy, issues might also come up if older buildings at Y-12 National Security Complex were allowed to stand. J. Brad Stephenson, TDEC geologist and environmentalist, addressed Anderson County Commission on that issue in 2019. Stephenson said there are already issues with mercury seeping from the buildings set for demolition. County Commissioner Denver Waddell, of Norris, asked Stephenson about the urgency of cleaning up the old buildings and not just letting them stand. He said he didn't want to wait while mercury is seeping (from the buildings) into groundwater. Waddell asked, Is it not beneficial to get this building torn down? I would say it is. But it is better to put it in a suitable facility, Stephenson said of the waste, adding that he was not certain about DOE's plans for the facility as they existed in 2019, citing, as SELC would later, issues with water pollution. The EMWMF currently holds the kinds of wastes the EMDF is planned to hold. However, as of July of last year the current landfill was 78% full. A DOE document describes future demolition and cleanup efforts as creating "soil and soil-like materials" and demolition debris, which DOE will have to deal with. The cleanup and demolition efforts will be at Y-12 and ORNL. The landfill will not accept waste from outside the state. Ben Williams, communications specialist for Oak Ridge Environmental Management, said the EMWMF is currently at 75% capacity and has enough room for waste from the Biology Complex demolition, but not for future demolition projects at Y-12 and ORNL. A recent news release described cleanup at Y-12 and ORNL, addressing risks, eliminating hazards, and opening land for research and national security missions. Regarding that priority of opening land, Roane County Executive Ron Woody recently thanked similar cleanup efforts at East Tennessee Technology Park, the former K-25 site, for making the area available for the new Kairos test reactor. There are, however, alternate proposals for what to do with debris after demolition and cleanup efforts. Dale told The Oak Ridger that DOE should ship the waste further west to a drier place instead of keeping it in Oak Ridge. "Oak Ridge and the state of Tennessee were promised that the federal government would clean up the environmental contamination on the Oak Ridge Reservation to the extent possible, but this proposal would just move a lot of waste and contamination to a part of the Reservation that was not previously contaminated," Dale said. "The existence of this new landfill can be expected to have a stigmatizing effect on the Oak Ridge community and its economy for decades to come." Still there are arguments toward keeping the debris in the Oak Ridge area rather than shipping them. DOE's website lists some of them with regard to the current EMWMF. "In addition to reducing costs, onsite disposal to the EMWMF minimizes transportation risks and uncertainty. Onsite disposal only uses a private, designated road on DOE land, known as the Haul Road, which eliminates the risks associated with tens of thousands of truckloads traveling across the country on public highways. Also, onsite disposal is not impacted when other states change policies that could restrict the relocation of waste," the official website states. U.S. Congressman Chuck Fleischmann, R-Oak Ridge, has told The Oak Ridger the EMDF is "critically important. "It has got to be built. I can't stress the necessity of that more," he said in a phone interview. "The first cell is going to fill up," he said regarding the EMWMF. "There's so much material that needs to be buried." Fleischmann said it would be "financially prohibitive" to ship the material to another site in another part of the country, predicting that if the EMDF is not built, other sites with cheaper cleanups such as at Los Alamos, N.M., and the Savannah River Site in South Carolina will get funding instead of Oak Ridge. What steps are next? Additional approvals and steps are required for the landfill to go ahead. Pinkney stated in an email these steps include groundwater studies, design and a construction plan. During this process, EPA and TDEC will need to approve various documents. He said DOE is planning to host a public meeting to share new information with the public and to request public comment on the landfill. Pinkney said DOE will announce the dates of the meeting and public comment period soon. Ben Pounds is a staff reporter for The Oak Ridger. Call him at (865) 441-2317, email him at bpounds@oakridger.com and follow him on Twitter @bpoundsjournal. This article originally appeared on Oakridger: Environmental group has concerns for future landfill. Today is Tuesday. Welcome to Equilibrium, a newsletter that tracks the growing global battle over the future of sustainability. Subscribe here: thehill.com/newsletter-signup. Electric vehicle owners on principal freeways outside Moscow pulled into charging stations to find them disabled - and showing anti-Putin text on the station displays, automotive industry news site Jalopnik reported. AutoEnterprise, the Ukrainian company that built the main components for the charging station, left open a "back door" into the chargers' controllers, allowing hackers to take control remotely, the Russian energy company Rosetti wrote on Facebook. The disabled chargers showed text like "Glory to Ukraine" as well as crude insults about Putin, according to a video shared by AutoEnterprise - highlighting the potential risks to infrastructure when increasingly complex global supply chains intersect with geopolitical conflict. Today we'll look at a proposal to help cancel out the considerable climate and environmental costs of cryptocurrencies. Then we'll sit down with an environmental activist who fueled her advocacy work from the seat of her race car. For Equilibrium, we are Saul Elbein and Sharon Udasin. Please send tips or comments to Saul at selbein@thehill.com or Sharon at sudasin@thehill.com. Follow us on Twitter: @saul_elbein and @sharonudasin. Let's get to it. Study: Bundle Bitcoin with carbon credits The environmental costs of using cryptocurrency could be drastically reduced by combining the digital coins with carbon offsets, a new study suggested. Step one: Bitcoin and thousands of other digital currencies such as Ethereum and Monero are generated and verified by decentralized global networks of computers solving math problems of increasing complexity. But crypto-mining requires massive amounts of computing energy, producing staggering environmental impacts, Singapore's Centre for Nature-based Climate Solutions said in the study released Tuesday. Story continues Bigger than Beijing: "Studies suggest that the total carbon from the Bitcoin network alone could potentially ... surpass the total carbon footprint of some of the most populous cities in the world including Beijing, Sao Paulo and New Delhi," wrote author Aakash Lamba of the National University of Singapore. Bans spread the emissions wider: Concerns over the power requirements and climate impacts of Bitcoin mining were both partial factors in the Chinese government's decision to ban the practice last fall, as we reported last August. Ironically, by pushing mining into jurisdictions with less renewable energy that displacement is leading to a greater environmental impact from cryptocurrency, a recent study suggested. Here to stay: With $2 trillion in stored value, cryptocurrencies are likely "here to stay," meaning that we need solutions for them now, Lamba wrote. Cryptocurrencies also have the potential to evade the oversight and sanctions of central banks, as has been seen in Russia since the cut-off of SWIFT, CNBC reported. Like renewables? Partly. There have been calls to reduce these impacts by powering coin mining with renewable energy or by switching to less energy-intensive methods of computation - like the newer Proof-of-Stake algorithm, which requires less than 1 percent of Bitcoin's slower, but more secure Proof-of-Work standard, according to Lamba's study. But those solutions alone aren't enough: While new cryptocurrencies can use different algorithms and privately held cryptocurrency networks can move toward using renewable power, such shifts are "very challenging" for established, distributed networks like Bitcoin and Ethereum. In these networks, mining is spread across a wide variety of jurisdictions unbound by any shared regulatory authority that can get them to switch to renewable energy, Lamba wrote. CARBON CREDITS OFFER ANOTHER OPTION Such proposed changes to algorithms and energy sources would work well "in tandem" with carbon credits, which can be as decentralized as the cryptocurrencies themselves, Lamba wrote. What are carbon credits? Like cryptocurrencies, carbon credits are a new form of financial tool - in this case designed to help companies counter their carbon emissions. One credit is generated for every ton of carbon dioxide pulled out of the air - or kept from being released into it - by industrial, forestry or ocean projects. Then these credits can be sold on voluntary or mandatory carbon markets, as we explained in November. There are accounting problems: Particularly with double-counting, which both seller and buyer of carbon credits both "count the emission reduction toward their climate targets, which may lead to net increase in emissions," Lamba wrote. But despite these pitfalls, he added, a solution must be found, because with Bitcoin isn't going away any time soon, "given the immense wealth locked away in the network." Last words: There is a long way to go in "making bitcoins truly 'green'" Lamba wrote. But "investors may be willing to pay a premium to offset this environmental damage," he added. BE IN THE KNOW We've got you covered morning, noon, and night! Sign up now for The Hill's new Evening Report. Taking the wheel for green change Leilani Munter For former stock car racer Leilani Munter, plastering her cars with graphics trumpeting the virtues of veganism and warning of the threat of mass extinction made them the ultimate vehicles for influencing public policy on the ground. First words: "That race car was what allowed me to talk about these issues that I cared about with the environment and animal rights to a group of people, a demographic of people, that weren't really hearing that message," she told Equilibrium. Munter, 48, sat down with Equilibrium to discuss her parallel professions of racer and activist - and what propels her forward today. "A completely different road": After earning a degree in biology from the University of California, San Diego, Munter worked as a stunt double for Catherine Zeta-Jones. She saved enough money to fulfill a "bucket list" goal of enrolling in racing school, which she said took her "down a completely different road from biology." Her first race was in 2001 in Southern California, where she finished fourth, according to her website bio. In the 18 years before she retired in 2019, she has participated in various NASCAR, ARCA, Indy Pro races and others. What sparked her activism? While she always tried to incorporate sustainable practices into her life, Munter said the 2006 film "An Inconvenient Truth" struck a chord with both her and her now-husband. "It was no longer enough to just talk about the environment and nice things that we cared about, just to family and friends," Munter said. "I needed to somehow try and use my place as a driver to address them." How does she reconcile driving with sustainability? Munter said she pledged to adopt an acre of rainforest every time she sat in her car. Carbon-offsetting, she explained, was the only way she could address the fossil fuels she was burning while racing. "I ended up adopting over 1,500 acres of rainforest over my career," Munter said, adding that most recently, she did so through the Rainforest Trust. Her fuel usage - about 30 gallons per race, across 61 lifetime races - was small in comparison to what she would have been using in her daily life, had she been driving a gasoline-based car at home, Munter said. She has driven the same Tesla - which recently hit 100,000 miles - since 2013. An environmental "billboard": Throughout her racing career, Munter said she prioritized sponsorships from environmental companies and groups. She also ran ads - through crowdfunding - for the 2009 Oscar-winning film "The Cove" and the 2013 film "Blackfish." And at one point she had a "vegan-themed car," from which she distributed vegan cheeseburgers and chicken nuggets to fans. "It was really my vehicle to reach people," Munter said. "Once I retired, I lost that. I lost that billboard." AN ONGOING GREEN LEGACY, NOT JUST BEHIND THE WHEEL Munter's deep-rooted environmental activism continues today, even though she's no longer behind the wheel. Munter first became an ambassador for the National Wildlife Federation in 2008, advocating for clean energy legislation on Capitol Hill. She began working in 2012 with the Oceanic Preservation Society on their film "Racing Extinction," which explores mankind's contribution to mass extinction. Some of her current work includes advocating for electric cars in her home state of North Carolina, as well as fighting against efforts to reduce solar rooftop subsidies in other states - an issue we reported on earlier this month. Munter also powers her house with solar panels, recycles rainwater and composts organic waste. The population problem: Concerned that the world's population growth is unsustainable, Munter and her husband have also decided to not have children. While emissions-reducing behaviors do help, she expressed doubt that these efforts would be sufficient "to combat the overall driving force behind species extinction." "All those things are increased when we continue to increase our numbers," Munter said. Last words: Looking back at her choices, Munter said she feels like racing helped her become a more effective activist than she ever could have been as a scientist. "You can't expect a NASCAR fan to show up at an environmental-level film festival," she added. "But if I put the environmental film on the hood of my race car, then they might be inclined to watch the film." To read our full interview with Munter, please click here. Tech Tuesday "Manual" electric cars; solar stills for desert crops; and a step forward for green hydrogen. Toyota toys with simulated 'manual transmission' for electric vehicles Carmaker Toyota has filed patents to build stick shifts into their electric vehicles in an effort to draw enthusiasts into a driving experience that recalls the feeling of manually shifting through the gears, Edmunds reports. Though electric vehicles (EVs) are technically gearless, if the stick-shift emulator could give the driver a pleasant feeling of greater control over their car's impressive torque, "the faux-manual EV might make a case for itself," according to Edmunds. Saudi Arabia scientists use solar power to pull water from air for crop irrigation Scientists in Saudi Arabia have created a solar-driven mechanism that can cultivate water spinach by drawing water from the air while generating electricity, publishing their findings in Cell Reports Physical Science on Tuesday. The scientists placed a solar photovoltaic panel on a top of layer of hydrogel - a gel-like polymer that attracts and absorbs water. Then they mounted the system on a large metal box to condense and collect water, which they used to irrigate water spinach seeds, according to the study. New screening system could help make hydrogen fuel production more efficient Penn State University scientists have developed a highly sensitive system for detecting hydrogen production - which they said could help position hydrogen as an environmentally friendly alternative to fossil fuels. Their findings, published in the Review of Scientific Instruments, showed that their tool could screen promising photocatalysis - materials that split water molecules into hydrogen and oxygen gases when placed in water and exposed to sunlight - and detect very small amounts of hydrogen. Please visit The Hill's sustainability section online for the web version of this newsletter and more stories. We'll see you on Wednesday. By Aditya Kalra NEW DELHI (Reuters) -Amazon.com Inc plans to initiate criminal court proceedings this week against its Indian partner Future Retail for allowing the transfer of assets to a major rival despite a legal prohibition, three sources with direct knowledge of the matter told Reuters. For more than a year, Amazon and Future Group have been in a legal stand-off that has stalled Future's $3.4 billion sale of assets to Reliance Industries. Amazon successfully halted Future's asset sale to rival Reliance since 2020 by citing violation of certain contracts. Future, India's second largest retailer, denies any wrongdoing. Amazon's position has been backed by a Singapore arbitrator and Indian courts. Reuters reported this week that Reliance had started to take over around 500 of Future's stores, rebranding them as its own outlets. Reliance had previously transferred leases of some of Future's flagship supermarkets to its name, but allowed Future to continue to operate them. Reliance has now begun to take possession of them after Future failed to make rental payments to it, sources have said. Amazon plans to initiate criminal proceedings against Future in a New Delhi court, and to urge the court to order an investigation into the matter, one of the sources, who has direct knowledge of the plans, said. Two other sources said the lawsuit could be filed as early as this week. Future, Amazon and Reliance did not immediately respond to Reuters' emails seeking comment. Amazon will allege that Future concealed information during legal proceedings and allegedly transferred leases of its stores to rival Reliance, even though a Singapore arbitrator had halted any transfer or disposal of assets in the ongoing dispute, the first source added. "This is going to be Amazon's last attempt (to stop the deal)," said this source. The plan to start criminal court proceedings would mark a significant escalation in the legal battle between Amazon and its Indian retail rivals - Future Retail and Reliance, which is led by Indian billionaire Mukesh Ambani. Story continues The protracted fight over Future's assets is seen as a battle for retail supremacy between Reliance and Amazon in India's booming retail market. In blocking the Future-Reliance transaction, Amazon has long argued that Future violated the terms of a 2019 deal in which the U.S. company invested $200 million in part of the Indian company. Debt-laden Future has previously said Amazon is incorrectly interfering in its retail business. (Reporting by Aditya Kalra in New Delhi. Editing by Euan Rocha and Jane Merriman) The Food and Drug Administration (FDA) on Tuesday named three unauthorized rapid COVID-19 tests that it says people should not use due to the risk of false results. The FDA instructed people to not use the Celltrion DiaTrust COVID-19 Ag Rapid Test, the SD Biosensor Inc. STANDARD Q COVID-19 Ag Home Test and the Flowflex SARS-CoV-2 Antigen Rapid Test (Self-Testing). "The FDA is concerned about the risk of false results when using this unauthorized test," said the agency. All three tests work through the use of a nasal swab. The agency has recommended that healthcare providers and testing program organizers retest patients who have used any of these unauthorized tests less than two weeks ago. All three companies have issued recalls for these tests. At least 162,000 unauthorized tests from Celltrion were distributed in the U.S. Two other COVID-19 tests from Celltrion have been authorized by the FDA: the DiaTrust COVID-19 Ag Home Test and the DiaTrust COVID-19 Ag Rapid Test. The Celltrion tests that are being recalled are the European version of the DiaTrust COVID-19 Ag Rapid Test, according to the company, and were illegally distributed throughout the U.S. The European version of the test differs visually from the U.S.-authorized version, with a green and white package that can be seen on the FDA's website. SD Biosensor also has a test that has been approved for use in the U.S., the COVID-19 At-Home Test. This product is distributed by Roche and can still be used by patients. ACON Laboratories' Flowflex COVID-19 Antigen Home Test was also authorized by the FDA in October. In a statement, ACON Laboratories called the unauthorized tests an "adulterated and misbranded counterfeit product." Like Celltrion's test, ACON Laboratories said the test being recalled was only authorized for use in Europe and other markets outside the U.S. The unauthorized version of ACON Laboratories' product differs visually, features mostly dark blue packaging while the version authorized by the FDA is mostly white with light blue details. People walk past one of the columns that will make up the gateway arch in Historic Filipinotown. (Genaro Molina / Los Angeles Times) People come to Little Ongpin from as far as Las Vegas for lumpia, steamed pork buns, beef caldereta and other Filipino specialties. But few of these loyal customers know that the restaurant is on the edge of a neighborhood called Historic Filipinotown. We have Koreatown, Chinatown, Little Tokyo, but in Filipinotown, nothing," Beth Villago, whose mother opened the restaurant in 1980, said as she rang up meals and fielded phone orders. That may soon change with the construction of an arch spanning Beverly Boulevard near the 1st Street Bridge, its foundation inlaid with oyster shell windows in a nod to a common feature of traditional homes in the Philippines. Beth Villago, right, owner of Little Ongpin restaurant, helps a customer in Historic Filipinotown along Beverly Boulevard. (Genaro Molina / Los Angeles Times) Filipino Americans are one of the largest Asian American groups in California, with 1.2 million residents, about half of whom call Greater Los Angeles home. But they have never had the visibility of Chinese, Japanese or Koreans, whose distinctive neighborhoods and widespread culinary influence are long established. Historic Filipinotown is easy to miss while driving down its main thoroughfares, Beverly Boulevard and Temple Street, just west of downtown Los Angeles. Aside from Little Ongpin and a few other restaurants, there are no neon-signed clusters of Filipino businesses, no knots of tourists buying souvenirs and sampling the food. The new arch will mark the eastern entrance to the neighborhood, much as the twin-dragon gate over Broadway welcomes visitors to Chinatown. It will arrive at a moment when Filipino cuisine is finally being recognized by the gourmet dining world, earning Michelin stars. Filipino musicians such as Olivia Rodrigo, Saweetie and H.E.R. and politicians including California Atty. Gen. Rob Bonta are raising awareness about Filipino Americans. As the neighborhood fights gentrification, Filipinotown leaders hope the arch will inspire greater engagement with city politics and with Filipino history, both for residents and for the larger Filipino American community. Story continues Los Angeles City Hall is framed by one of two towers that will be part of a gateway arch in Historic Filipinotown. (Genaro Molina / Los Angeles Times) The arch, which will be completed this month, was spearheaded by Jessica Caloza, the first Filipina American on the Los Angeles Board of Public Works. After she was appointed to the board in 2019, she wanted to act on the long-standing wishes of some fellow Filipino Americans to build a gateway arch on Historic Filipinotown's eastern edge. She flagged some money left over from construction of the Red Car pedestrian bridge spanning the L.A. River. Councilman Mitch O'Farrell, who represents the area, also came up with some money from his office's budget for the $587,000 project. "I feel proud, and I hope the community ultimately feels proud, because it's for them," said Caloza, who moved to the U.S. from the Philippines as a young child. The arch, titled "Talang Gabay: Our Guiding Star," was designed by artist Eliseo Silva, who wanted to illustrate for Filipino Americans the narratives absent in history lessons they learned at school. A man walks past a mural of famed Filipino American labor organizer "Larry" Dulay Itliong on Beverly Boulevard. (Genaro Molina / Los Angeles Times) Much of the symbolism Silva included in the arch predates the Spanish and American colonization of the Philippines, from a shape that echoes precolonial palaces to roofing and beams that resemble traditional homes on stilts. The arch is topped with ancient mythological figures, including the sarimanok, a bird that guides the harvest seasons, and the naga, a serpent-like dragon associated with lunar and solar eclipses. Silva is known for the "Gintong Kasaysayan" mural in Filipinotown, which depicts a timeline of events in the Philippines and the U.S., including the 1965 Delano grape strike. Many Filipino immigrants work long hours, not only providing for their families in the U.S. but sending money home to relatives in the Philippines. Sometimes, that doesn't leave much time to pass Filipino culture on to the next generation, Silva said. Franklin Lopez, 8, swings in front of Eliseo Silva's mural titled, "Gintong Kasaysayan" (A Glorious History) in Unidad Park in Historic Filipinotown. (Genaro Molina / Los Angeles Times) Until we do that, we actually are not yet part of America, said Silva, who recently moved back to the Philippines after decades in Southern California. Were not living to live, were living to work. In the coming weeks, two pillars that were erected on both sides of Beverly Boulevard months ago will be joined across the four-lane thoroughfare to make the 30-foot-long, 82-foot-wide steel arch. The arch will contain a QR code for an online walking tour highlighting the neighborhood's cultural landmarks. Filipino Americans settled in the area after being displaced from their original neighborhood, called Little Manila, on Bunker Hill in downtown L.A. to make way for massive redevelopment projects such as the 101 and 110 Freeways. Gerald Gubatan's father was one of the Filipino Americans forced to move west from Bunker Hill after World War II. At the time, restrictive racial covenants limited where Filipinos could live. Signs such as "No Filipinos or Dogs Allowed and Positively No Filipinos Allowed were a common sight, according to a city report that Gubatan, an urban planner, helped write. A metal sculpture that symbolizes community among the Filipino diaspora is one of several attached to streetlights in Historic Filipinotown in Los Angeles. (Genaro Molina / Los Angeles Times) In my mind, symbolically, it connects ... Little Manila with the community that was displaced westward to Historic Filipinotown, Gubatan said of the gateway arch, which points east toward the original neighborhood. Gubatan, 60, grew up in Historic Filipinotown and moved to Burbank in the 1990s, a choice made by many upwardly mobile Filipinos. Others fanned out to L.A. neighborhoods including Eagle Rock and Panorama City, as well as suburban cities such as Carson and West Covina. Historic Filipinotown is now majority Latino, with a Filipino American population of about 15%. Even so, it remains an important commercial and cultural center for Filipinos across the region. When Gubatan moved back to the neighborhood in 2012, he was shocked by how much it had changed. He and others fear that gentrification will do to Historic Filipinotown what postwar public works projects did to Little Manila. In a city of rising real estate prices, Filipinotown's location near gentrified, trendy neighborhoods such as Echo Park and Silver Lake make it a prime target for new development. Luxury apartments are sprouting where strip malls once stood and where working-class Filipino families once lived. Luzon Plaza, which features some Filipino businesses, is slated to be demolished and replaced by an apartment building on Temple Street in Historic Filipinotown. (Genaro Molina / Los Angeles Times) Luzon Plaza, a strip mall on Temple Street, was developed in the 1970s by community advocates aiming to boost Filipino businesses. Through the years, the businesses in the strip mall have helped feed, dress, heal and educate Filipino Angelenos. The Filipino restaurant, karaoke bar, beauty salon, tax services office and dental clinic still operating there will soon be demolished for a five-story apartment complex with mostly luxury units. Four other large luxury apartment projects are also going up along Temple Street. Joseph Bernardo, an adjunct professor at Loyola Marymount University who researches Filipino American history in Los Angeles, is part of a coalition that opposes gentrification in the neighborhood. Having the gateway is good, said Bernardo, a lifelong Northridge resident. But whats going to happen here with Luzon Plaza? Wheres the policy that addresses gentrification in the neighborhood? Joselyn Geaga-Rosenthal has seen many of her Filipino neighbors move away or die in recent years. Their homes were then sold to developers, she said. A longtime Historic Filipinotown resident and community leader, Geaga-Rosenthal was part of the campaign that gave the neighborhood its name in 2002. Angel Napiere uses one of the communal grills to cook skewers of meat at Dollar Hits restaurant on Temple Street in Historic Filipinotown. (Genaro Molina / Los Angeles Times) Her mother, Remy V. Geaga, who co-founded the Filipino American Service Group, is honored at Temple and Alvarado streets. Remy V. Geaga Square, Fearless Filipino-American Community Leader," signs at the intersection say. Geaga-Rosenthal is on the planning committee for the arch and sees it as an important part of fighting gentrification. The arch will give a new generation of Filipino Americans a better understanding of their culture and history, which may motivate them to fight for the neighborhood, she said. But it was hard to come up with a design that represents all things about Filipinos just as it was hard to encapsulate her mother in a few signs. I guess we arent there yet ... where were recognized, that our story is known, and so we feel like we have to tell our whole story in a square inch of art," she said. The planning committee consisted of community leaders such as Geaga-Rosenthal and the heads of local Filipino organizations. But some have complained that process wasn't inclusive enough. Other projects, such as the lampposts along Temple Street decorated with Filipino sun medallions, incorporated public input in the design process. Some have also objected to the arch's depiction of a "parol" a star-shaped lantern displayed by Filipinos during the Christmas season because of its associations with Spanish and American colonialism. Others had hoped the arch would reckon more with the American colonial presence in the Philippines, which drove many Filipinos to immigrate to the U.S. Dulce Capadocia, a dance artist and choreographer who grew up in Historic Filipinotown and lived there until recently, said she is pleased the neighborhood is getting such a large monument. But she wonders why the project didn't include more community members and artists. What would this have been like if this were a collaborative project, if more people were involved maybe a team of artists to make this more equitable? Capadocia said. Joseph Cipriano lives in Historic Filipinotown, across the street from a memorial to Filipino and Filipino American World War II veterans. He moved to L.A. from the Philippines in 2018 to join his mother, settling in the neighborhood because of the affordable rent and the many Filipino immigrants. Dollar Hits, a buffet-style restaurant on Temple Street serving Filipino street food, is one of his favorite hangouts. Theres a lot of Filipinos here, Cipriano said. Were just comfortable having Filipino neighbors. A mural stating, "Welcome to Historic Filipinotown," was painted on film producer Dan Lin's production company offices on Beverly Boulevard. (Genaro Molina / Los Angeles Times) He is proud of the World War II monument. But because he works so much, putting in 80 hours a week as a certified nursing assistant at a nearby convalescent home, he said he has had little time to think about the new arch. Cipriano is also worried about his rent, which keeps going up, and the new luxury apartments on his street. "It's just too expensive those new ones," he said, pointing toward the luxury complexes. For the record: 11:16 a.m. March 2, 2022: A previous version of this post identified Joseph Bernardo as a professor at Loyola Marymount University; he is an adjunct professor. This story originally appeared in Los Angeles Times. Jamir Bradford was arrested, handcuffed and charged with robbery and battery for riding his own bicycle, his mother, Melani Brown, lamented. A Florida woman is demanding answers after learning that her 11-year-old son was handcuffed and forced to sit in the back of a police car last month. An MSN report notes that Apopka Police responded to a robbery call related to a stolen bicycle. Young Jamir Bradford was identified as the person who took the bike, but his family says thats completely incorrect. They claim Bradford was riding his bike in his neighborhood on Feb. 20 when a person in a truck pulled up and accused the boy of stealing it. Melani Brown, the mother of 11-year-old Jamal Bradford, says her son has been traumatized by being handcuffed by Apopka Police. (Photo: Screenshot/WESH 2) According to MSN, when he arrived at a nearby park, police came and questioned him, then put the boy in handcuffs. He was ultimately released upon further examination of the bike. Bradfords mother, Melani Brown, said that her son has been traumatized by the incident. He was arrested, handcuffed and charged with robbery and battery for riding his own bicycle, Brown lamented, per WESH 2. He said Mommy, when I seen the officer with his hand on his gun, I wanted to run. I said, For what? You did nothing wrong. Brown said she believes charges are still pending against her son, but according to reports, no charges have been filed. The incident is under administrative review by Apopka police. Florida has a minimum arrest age, banning the arrest of anyone under the age of 7. The law was named after Kaia Rolle, a girl who was arrested at the age of 6 for reportedly kicking and punching several staff members at her school, Lucious and Emma Nixon Academy, in 2019. The sponsor of the bill, Orlando Sen. Randolph Bracy, advocated for the law to cover children 12 and under, according to Florida Politics. Rolles grandmother recalled the incident to WESH 2 in July 2021. One of Kaias greatest fears, said Meralyn Kirkland, is that every time she saw a police officer they are coming to arrest her, one of her friends or one of her family members. Story continues I thought the brunt of the trauma was the day it happened, she added, but Im finding out day by day it is going to be a long road. Kaia still has night terror, shell be up at 3 oclock in the morning, crying, scared. TheGrio is FREE on your TV via Apple TV, Amazon Fire, Roku and Android TV. Also, please download theGrio mobile apps today! The post Florida mom demands answers after police handcuff her 11-year-old son appeared first on TheGrio. Marta Farion received a call from a friend in Ukraine on Tuesday, asking her how she was helping the embattled country from Chicago. Her friend, a veteran in Ukraine who had stayed behind to fight, was calling from an actual trench, one of many that have appeared in the country as it resists its Russian aggressors, using a generator for a phone charge. Farion, president of a nonprofit that supports the National University of Kyiv Mohyla Academy, had a variety of answers: lobbying the American government, supporting a protest this weekend and fundraising. Advertisement For Chicagoans with or without connections that close in Ukraine, it can be overwhelming to know how to help. Here are some of the ways advocates suggest people get involved. Where can I donate supplies? Ukrainian shipping service Meest-Karpaty is organizing a major effort to send a plane of supplies from Chicago to Kyiv every week, a representative from the companys location in Palatine said. Advertisement Theyre looking for military goods, as well as nonperishable food, blankets and clothes, advocates said. Supplies can be dropped off or shipped to the Chicago location, 6725 W. Belmont Ave. The shipping service is also collecting supplies at 1645 Hicks Road in Rolling Meadows, a representative posted on social media. Edgewater resident Leonard Mogul, a community advocate and founder of Chicago childrens organization Arts4Kids Foundation, is partnering with Waukegan pastor Julie Contreras to send care packages to women and children in Uzhhorod, Ukraine, Mogul said. Moguls organization has previously sent food to refugee children in detention centers at the Mexican border, he said, so Contreras reached out to him about turning aid toward Ukraine. Theyre looking for essentials including diapers, childrens clothes, socks and womens hygienic products, Mogul said. People can donate or volunteer time by contacting Arts4KidsChicago@gmail.com, he said. When is the next big rally? Supporters of Ukraine plan to gather in Daley Plaza at 2 p.m. Sunday, said advocates including Pavlo Bandriwsky, vice president of the Ukrainian Congress Committee of America in Illinois. How can I tell if a fundraiser is legitimate? Chicagoans should look for established organizations that have a proven track record of providing assistance with low administrative costs, Bandriwsky said. Smaller campaigns, like those organized on social media, can be positive resources as they may have very low overhead, said Mogul, who has helped found and moderate Facebook pages for Eastern European people across Chicago. But potential donors should make an effort to ensure those smaller fundraisers are legitimate, he said. Donors should see how well the purpose of the money is described, and what means the fundraiser has to deliver the results, Mogul said. They should also feel free to ask the organizer any questions, he added. Advertisement What are some national or international organizations I can donate to? Locally, people can donate to the Ukrainian Congress Committee for America in Illinois, advocates said. F.R.E.E., a synagogue for the Russian Jewish community in Chicago, is hosting a fundraiser for Jewish people in Ukraine. The nonprofit Razom for Ukraine has a list of army, medical and humanitarian initiatives accepting donations, and is accepting aid to its own emergency response fund. The National Bank of Ukraine is accepting funds to both its humanitarian account and military account. The Red Cross, UNICEF and World Central Kitchen are all accepting donations for the crisis. Advocates have also asked people to contact their representatives to demand stricter sanctions against Russia, and the closure of airspace over Ukraine. One Chicago couple is worried and asking for funds to get their preemie newborns, born via surrogate, home safely from Ukraine. Alexander Spektor and Irma Nunez became parents on Feb. 25 when their twin sons, Lenny and Moishe, were born in Kyiv. They were born two months early and need continued medical care before traveling to the U.S. The family is frantically trying to coordinate a specialized medical transport capable of moving preemies out of the country. Advertisement Its unimaginable, Spektor told the Today show. He explained that the twins prematurity works against them as they need stability and care, but also to be moved out of a war zone. In the meantime, they were able to transfer the twins to a hospital in Kyiv better equipped with supplies and staff, according to a GoFundMe raising money to help cover medical and travel costs. What if I want to help refugees? Or advocate for Ukrainian citizens in the US? The Ukrainian Congress Committee of America in Illinois is starting to prepare for refugees to resettle in the Chicago area, Bandriwsky said. People in Chicago with space to potentially help shelter refugees can contact the Ukrainian National Museum, he said. Northbrook immigration lawyer Gene Meltser started a petition to grant temporary protective status to Ukrainian citizens in the United States, a form of deportation relief for people whose visas are from places involved in strife. Meltser, an immigrant from Belarus with family and friends in Ukraine, said he hopes people will sign the petition and call their representatives in favor of granting the status, regardless of political party. Advertisement What will people need when they arrive? Many groups in Chicago constantly work with refugees and are always taking donations to help the many refugees already in Chicago. World Relief, RefugeeOne and Catholic Charities are all groups that work with federal agencies to resettle refugees. People who may eventually arrive from Ukraine will be handling layers of trauma, said Corina Ratz, a faculty member of The Chicago School of Professional Psychology who trains people on treating immigrants and whose family in Romania has seen firsthand waves of people already arriving at the border. Not only were their lives suddenly upturned by war, she said, they are suddenly faced with uncertainty they never could have prepared for. It is something you can imagine may happen, but until it actually happens, youre not dealing with the repercussion of it, she said. So they will arrive fresh from a wartime exodus, likely unable to bring much from home, with the double uncertainty of not knowing whether or when theyll be able to return. When people have the ability to have a conversation with an immigrant or a refugee, she said, whats important is to listen. Hear their story, and their narrative of what happened. Validate their story, she said. Its so basic, and it is so important. People might assume that refugees are thrilled to be here, or heartbroken. Its different for everyone. Advertisement How have people in Ukraine reacted to support from the States? How do Ukrainian Chicagoans feel about the support from the city? Advocates described the support from Chicago over the weekend as overwhelming nothing short of incredible, Mogul said. People in Ukraine are grateful Americans are protesting and not remaining indifferent, he said. Orysia Kourbatov, administrator at the Ukrainian National Museum in Ukrainian Village, said people have been calling every five to 10 minutes, asking for flags to display. The museum was out as of Tuesday afternoon but was expecting more shipments soon, she said. The conflict may have even incited a cultural change: If theres a silver lining to any of this, its that people are becoming more familiar with Ukraine and rallying around it, said Yara Klimchak, a Chicagoan who grew up visiting relatives in Ukraine. Klimchak, who once heard people frequently mistake Ukraine for Russia, now has people from all different parts of her life reaching out and asking how they can help, she said. Ford CEO Jim Farley is dividing up company operations, creating three separate automotive business units that include its existing commercial arm, as well as two new ones: Ford Blue, which will focus on the traditional internal combustion engine, and Ford Model e, which will develop the battery electric vehicles and connectivity, the company revealed Wednesday morning. This step is designed to make the 118-year-old automaker more competitive against Tesla, the biggest electric vehicle competitor in the industry, as well as others, Farley told the Free Press during an interview. Each division will have its own leadership, with the traditional vehicle skill team led by Kumar Galhotra, who has been Ford president of the Americas and International Markets Group. The newly created all-electric vehicle (EV) skill team will be led by Farley. By making this move, Farley hopes to speed up innovation, improve quality and cut costs while also ensuring Ford's ability to deliver high-volume production that startups can't. Here's the overview: Ford is dividing its auto business into three separate units under the Ford automotive umbrella. First is Ford Pro, the automaker's existing commercial arm that doesn't make vehicles but will continue to distribute them, sell them and offer services including hardware and software solutions for vehicle charging and digital support that allows small business owners to manage and maintain fleets. Ford Pro will essentially serve as a distribution and service company. Its CEO is Ted Cannis. The second is the internal combustion engine (ICE) business called Ford Blue, which will create products for the whole company, including commercial vehicles for its Ford Pro unit, but also source and sell them to retail customers. Finally, Ford Model e, with a lowercase "e," is a "digital electric business" that will create products for Ford Pro and for retail, and will handle the sourcing and the engineering of those electric vehicles. Ford Model e will also design the facilities for the electric vehicles and digital vehicles and provide services for ICE products, like the interior digital experience or over-the-air technology updates for the ICE vehicles. Story continues "We have created, effectively, three separate parts of our auto business because we believe they need that focus," Farley said. "You cant ask an electric person to work on Ford telematics for a Pro customer. You cant ask an ICE person to work on the sourcing of raw materials for battery electric vehicles. We have to specialize now." Leadership changes Farley will serve as president of Ford Model e, in addition to his role as CEO and president of Ford. Doug Field, Ford chief advanced technology and embedded systems officer with extensive experience at Apple and Tesla, will lead product creation as chief EV and digital systems officer for Ford Model e and also lead development of software and embedded systems for all of Ford. The Model e team includes: Marin Gjaja, a former Boston Consulting managing director, who becomes chief customer officer also heading new business initiatives; Lisa Drake moves from chief operating officer of Ford North America to vice president of EV industrialization, and Darren Palmer, who moves from general manager of battery electric vehicles to vice president of electric vehicle platforms. Doug Field, named Ford chief advanced technology and embedded systems officer on Sept. 7, 2021, is seen here working on the Ford 351 Cleveland engine in his De Tomaso Pantera. "Designing truly incredible electric and software-driven vehicles with experiences customers can't even imagine yet requires a clean sheet approach," Field said in a news release issued Wednesday. "We are creating an organization that benefits from all of Ford's know-how and capabilities, but that can move with speed and unconstrained ambition to create revolutionary new products." Lawsuit:Newly unsealed emails suggest Ford targeted high-performing older workers Settled: Ford settles lawsuit alleging automaker targeted high-performing older workers Galhotra becomes president of Ford Blue and the rest of his team will be revealed soon, a Ford spokesperson told the Free Press. Stuart Rowley moves from president of Ford of Europe to chief transformation and quality officer focused on reduced complexity and tighter costs. Hau Thai-Tang moves from chief product platform and operations officer to chief industrial platform officer. He will lead product development, supply chain and manufacturing engineering for ICE products and common systems across Ford Pro, Ford Blue and Ford Model e, the company said in the news release. Rowley and Thai-Tang hold "enterprise positions that don't fall within Ford Blue or Ford Model e and each reports to Farley," a spokesperson said. Kumar Galhotra, president of Ford North America, in the cafeteria at Ford World Headquarters in Dearborn. But just because these newly created divisions will be separate doesnt mean they won't rely on each other in certain areas of common technology and materials at a scale that will help save money, Farley said. Transparency To illustrate the company's strength, Ford will also begin tracking profit and loss (P&L) financial statements separately for Ford Pro, Ford Blue and Ford Model e. The statements will summarize the revenue and expenses for each entity. Except for Tesla, automakers tend to fold their electric business information into the bigger operation, making it hard to track and critique. "We are going further," Farley said. "Now, people are going to understand how profitable our EV business is. They'll know how profitable our Pro business is. They'll know how profitable our ICE business is. We'll need that inside the company, not only for focus but for accountability." Ford Motor Company CEO Jim Farley stands in a room with Model T vehicles at the Ford Piquette Avenue Plant in Detroit on Jan. 14, 2021. Ford's new structure is effective immediately, though it will take time to fully evolve, as "two distinct but strategically interdependent auto businesses." More: Ford CEO gives employees sobering data about Tesla, challenges ahead More: She is chief engineer of all-electric Ford F-150, leading a revolution This is about having "startup speed and unbridled innovation," Farley said, that take Ford beyond the award-winning Mustang Mach-E and Ford F-150 Lightning being launched in coming months. The creation of Ford Model e was inspired by the success of small teams that developed the Ford GT, Mach-E SUV and Lightning pickup. "Ford Model e will be Ford's center of innovation and growth, a team of the world's best software, electrical and automotive talent turned loose to create truly incredible electric vehicles and digital experiences for new generations," Farley said in a news release Wednesday. More: Ford CEO hired Doug Field away from Apple in 'huge coup' More: He's a big deal at Ford, but down-to-earth exec hides in plain sight Meanwhile, the Ford Blue team "will be hellbent on delivering leading quality, attacking waste in every corner of the business, maximizing cash flow and optimizing our industrial footprint," Farley said in the release. Ford Blue will strengthen the F-Series, Ranger and Maverick trucks, Bronco and Explorer SUVs and Mustang with investment in new models. Ford also plans to invest in brand new ICE vehicles, such as the truck fleet, but Farley declined to go into detail now. Job cuts? With transition comes change in staffing. What about buyouts or layoffs? Ford plans to roll out to its global team the fact that the company is growing, Farley told the Free Press. "There are going to be areas where we'll have to get our structure costs down. I'm not going into specifics but, generally, this is a growth story for Ford. Will some areas be adjusted? Our business is always that way. But we're not going to make any specific announcements." Super Duty remains key "I'm not going to go into specifics but we're not going to stop investing," Farley said. "It's still going to be 50% of our volume by the end of the decade. And those customers, like Super Duty, if you're hauling a horse trailer in northern Michigan, an electric vehicle won't work on an 800-mile trip. We're going to have a very vibrant ICE business that will continue to be more profitable. Over time, its volume will start to fall off. But we think there's a lot of growth opportunity." Plan: CEO Jim Farley vows Ford Motor will not split in two previews restructuring Behind the scenes: Private moments with Ford CEO Jim Farley reveal how he works Clue: Ford CEO Jim Farley gave us big clue automaker's stock was going to surge The lucrative ICE business funds the high costs of research and development establishing a battery electric business for all automakers. "We're going to have dozens of new electric vehicles that no one has ever seen before. We're working on them now. And that's why we're setting up battery plants," Farley told the Free Press. "This team is working on, not only the development of the vehicles and the platforms the braking systems, the battery systems, the inverters, the motors but they're also working on sourcing all of those." Ford is planning to get new products to market by 2026, not 2030, Farley said. "We want to give people the idea that we're moving quickly." Car dealers here to stay Beating Tesla in customer experience long term is the plan, and car dealers will play an essential role, he said. "Were committing to the dealer model," Farley said, which is not how Tesla operates. "Were not keeping dealers in the mix 'for the moment.' We are betting on dealers for the long term," he told the Free Press. "I want to make that really clear. Im not mincing words. We will have new standards and a new experience. But we learned a lot by watching Tesla." While Tesla customers like the digital experience in the first few years, they eventually have problems such as nonworking doors or accident damage or issues related to an over-the-air update, and providing consumers with the ability to speak with real people in person can be really good and yet Tesla doesn't offer dealership support, Farley noted. "Just like your Target experience is different than your Amazon experience, but Target didnt go away when Amazon became the dominant retailer, they just had a change," he said. "Circuit City went away, and lots of others went away, because they didnt change. ... We believe in a superior customer experience. I dont want to mince my words. We are betting on the franchise model." More: Mach-E just beat out 10 competitors: 'This award is a massive deal' As for a possible Genius Bar-style help desk for EV customers, like what Apple provides for its clientele, Farley said everything is on the table. It's likely going to be a WebEx style option that allows for direct interaction. Dearborn forever Despite the big announcement, all operations will remain under one umbrella company with its world headquarters in Dearborn, Farley told the Free Press. 'We're not moving anywhere. This is our home. We have people coming from all over the world, including the West Coast of the U.S. to move to Michigan to be part of this transformation at all levels," he said. "We ain't going anywhere. Will we open a bigger office in Tel Aviv (Israel) or in Palo Alto (California)? Yeah, probably. But that won't change our headquarters." Ford CEO Jim Farley tweeted Tuesday, March 1, "Tonight, Ford honors the Ukrainian people by raising their flag at our World Headquarters in Dearborn, Michigan." In fact, he said, in addition to investing in Corktown, the company is spending "billions" revamping its physical presence in Dearborn the largest investment since the 1950s. There is no plan to establish a presence in Kentucky or Tennessee that's any different from other Ford plants, such as Kansas City Assembly in Claycomo, Missouri, Farley said, swatting away rumors of a potential move inspired by the recent battery investment. The electric business may also have a presence in Southern California and possibly China, because growth is expected, Farley said. "There will be more jobs and more growth for the company. We're going to have new expertise areas or hot zones for talent and know-how based around the world, as we do today. But the headquarters, nothing is changing about Ford Motor Co. Dearborn is our home." More: Ford doubles annual bonuses amid worker fury over controversial formula More: Ford memo outlines plan to put unvaccinated salaried workers on unpaid leave Contact Phoebe Wall Howard: 313-222-6512 or phoward@freepress.com. Follow her on Twitter @phoebesaid. Read more on Ford and sign up for our autos newsletter. This article originally appeared on Detroit Free Press: Ford to create EV company within automaker, CEO Farley says A former member of the Colonial School District Board of Education was sentenced to 22 years in prison for several counts of child sexual abuse. In November, Ronnie Williams, 44, was found guilty by a jury of second degree-rape, continuous sexual abuse of a child, unlawful sexual contact, sexual abuse of a child by a person of trust and sexual solicitation of a child. Williams was elected to Colonial's seven-member school board in May 2018. In the past, he had volunteered with children in other capacities, at Special Olympics Delaware, Thomas McKean High School and various elementary schools to teach third- and fourth-graders. In 2004, he was charged with sexually assaulting three boys, but was found not guilty, court records show. Williams was charged with multiple felonies including several counts of sexual abuse in September 2019. Those charges led to last month's sentencing. According to court documents, the victims were children of a woman Williams knew. Police said Williams often befriended women to form relationships with their children, according to court documents. He would buy the children expensive items and take them on trips to get close to them, according to court documents. THE CASE AGAINST WILLIAMS: Charges against Colonial school board member revealed The first victim met Williams at age 7, court records show. The victim told police that they and other children would routinely share Williams' bed. The victim said that Williams had access to their cellphone account and threatened to expose that they were watching porn if they didn't participate in "treatment sessions" with him, court documents describe. The sessions continued until the victim was in 10th grade, court records show. The victim informed police about the sexual assault after a physical altercation with Williams in July 2018, according to court documents. Police talked to a second victim in September 2019, who said that they first met Williams when they were 12 and that he gave them everything they wanted and paid for things, court documents describe. Story continues The victim said that Williams frequently performed oral sex on them, in almost-daily sessions, according to court records. CALLS FOR RESIGNATION: Colonial School District board calls on member to resign following allegations of child sexual abuse Williams' arrest in 2019 led to an outcry from board members calling for his resignation. Under Delaware law, only the governor can remove an elected official from their position, Superintendent Dusty Blakey said in a statement at the time. School districts have no say in the election process, the vetting of candidates who are elected by voters or the consequences of being arrested. The school district said at the time that it did not believe any of the assaults happened on school property. It is unclear if the victims were Colonial students. Contact the reporter Yusra Asif at yqureshi@delawareonline.com. This article originally appeared on Delaware News Journal: Ex-Colonial school board member gets 22 years for child sex abuse Former Louisville officer Brett Hankison testified Wednesday that he did nothing wrong the night Breonna Taylor was killed when police raided her apartment and called the incident a "tragedy." "Its something that didnt have to happen, he said. Hankison is on trial for endangering Cody Etherton and his family after he fired shots into their apartment on March 13, 2020. Police were at the complex to raid his neighbor's apartment in connection to a narcotics investigation. Taylor, a 26-year-old Black woman, was fatally shot by police after her boyfriend fired a gun fearing a home invasion. Hankison was fired from the Louisville Metro Police Department in June 2020, about three months after the shooting. He was later indicted by a grand jury on three counts of first-degree wanton endangerment for bullets that went into Etherton's apartment. He has pleaded not guilty. The grand jury declined to directly charge Hankison, or the two other undercover narcotics officers who opened fire inside the house, with the death of Taylor. Hankison appeared to get emotional Wednesday as he recounted the night of the raid. He described how he saw "a muzzle flash" immediately after police broke through Taylor's apartment door. "The muzzle flash was not a muzzle flash that I would commonly identify as a handgun muzzle flash. This was a large fire muzzle flash that I could see directly in front of me," he told the court. "With the muzzle flash, it then gave the illumination to that hallway." Hankison then asked the judge if he could stand up and demonstrate what he saw. Crouching down in a shooting stance, he said: "So I could see in the hallway a subject, and I could not tell if it was a male or female, in a shooting stance at the ready. Hankison said that, immediately following the muzzle flash, Sgt. Jonathan Mattingly dropped to the floor. Police said Taylor's boyfriend shot Mattingly in the leg, but lawyers for the boyfriend have disputed those claims. Story continues At one point in his testimony, Hankison said that he believed his colleagues were going to be executed. "So, I returned fire through the sliding glass door and that did not stop the threat," he said. He went on to say that he fired multiple shots in the direction of where the muzzle flash came from. When asked how he felt about bullets going into the neighboring apartment, Hankison said he was "shook." "I found out later that ... Ms. Napper testified they had a small child in there and I felt horrible," he told the court. Hankison was later asked if he thought he did anything wrong. "Absolutely not," he responded. When asked about his overall feelings about the incident, he said it was a "tragedy." "Its something that didnt have to happen," he said. Etherton, 29, also testified during the trial and said he believes police acted recklessly the night of the raid. His sliding back patio door had been shattered as bullets rang out. He told the court that he believes officers thought his patio door was Taylor's. "I could put two and two together I was like, 'They think my backdoor is her backdoor.' Thats what I thought, which to me is just very unorganized, he said. To me, a professional well-trained officer, they should have had the floor plans. They should have had the blueprints. They didnt even know whose backdoor that was. They didnt even know who lived there. So, to me that kind of upset me. It was just reckless to me. Etherton's partner, Chelsea Napper, who was pregnant at the time, testified that it "sounded like somebody set off a bomb or something" outside their apartment. "It was so scary and crazy I didnt know what was going on, she said. The couple and their 5-year-old son were not injured in the chaos. Following the aftermath of the raid, two other Louisville police members were fired. Detectives Myles Cosgrove and Joshua Jaynes, who applied for the search warrant in the raid, were terminated in January 2021. In a letter from then-Chief Yvette Gentry, Cosgroves employment was terminated because he violated standard operating procedures for deadly force and failed to activate his body-worn camera during the raid. Jaynes was fired for two departmental violations tied to his work securing the search warrant, the letter stated. Mattingly retired from the police department. Cosgrove, Jaynes and Mattingly have not been charged in any way related to the raid. No charges were ever filed directly related to Taylor's death. In this episode of "Intelligence Matters," host Michael Morell speaks with Mike Vickers, former undersecretary of defense for intelligence and a former Special Forces officer and CIA operations officer. Vickers and Morell discuss whether and how Russian President Vladimir Putin's invasion of Ukraine may have been a gross strategic miscalculation, how and when the West might have deterred his moves, and what future scenarios for the conflict exist. They discuss Putin's options and decision-making and how his pariah status will affect developments domestically and globally. Highlights Russia's military performance to date: "He's really in a no-win situation. I mean, the Ukrainian Armed Forces and Territorial Defense Forces are way overperforming and Russia's forces are way underperforming. They haven't been able to take any major cities. Its forces have been repelled and pushed back in several places. They haven't even been able to achieve air superiority after four days of war. You know, in short, Ukrainian David is just kicking the crap out of the Russian Goliath." Has Putin changed? "He was always cold, calculating and ruthless. A KGB man through and through. And you know, a lot of these anti-West, anti-U.S. statements really started in 2007. Or even, some of them, like the collapse of the Soviet Union being the greatest geopolitical catastrophe of the 20th century, I think dates back to 2005. But he's now more emotional, more erratic, more rambling, I think more reckless, perhaps from increasing self-isolation and confidence in himself. He's been ruling for 22 years and he's really gone for broke here, as we've talked about earlier. This looks like a major strategic blunder that the potential losses way outweigh the gains. And so, I think in that sense, he really is a different man now, and therefore potentially more dangerous." Could Putin be toppled? "He's really in a no-win position here in Ukraine. I just don't see how he achieves his objectives. And so he's got to find a way out. And you know, they're clever about saying anything they want for justification. So maybe he'll resort to that at this point. I wouldn't rule out that he could be toppled. I know it's a long shot, but he really has put himself in a bind here. But you know, it could get ugly before it gets better. And I hope we have the stomach to see this through." Story continues Download, rate and subscribe here: iTunes, Spotify and Stitcher. INTELLIGENCE MATTERS - MIKE VICKERS PRODUCER: OLIVIA GAZIS MICHAEL MORELL: Mike, welcome back to Intelligence Matters. It is great to have you on the show again. For those who don't remember Mike, he is a very special person, tons of experience in the intelligence community. Also tons of experience at the Department of Defense. Very close friend of mine. We closely together during both the Bush and Obama administrations. Mike, it's great to have you back. MIKE VICKERS: Thank you, Michael. It's pleasure to be with you. MICHAEL MORELL: I should also mention that we're taping this on Monday, the 28th of February. It's going to run on Tuesday, March 2nd as a podcast. I just want everybody to keep that in mind because what's going on in Ukraine is a very fast-moving event. So please just remember that as you're all listening. I should also say that that this is not going to be sort of a standard Intelligence Matters interview where I'm asking questions and Mike is answering them. We're going to actually try to turn this into a conversation, maybe the kind of conversation that we would have had in one of our offices when we were back in government, or the kind of conversation that we have today when we're having breakfast together. So we'll try to make this a conversation. So. Mike, I'd love to start by talking a little bit about where we are and then we'll go to how did we get here and where might we be going? But I really want to start with with the situation that Vladimir Putin finds himself in right now. And the question on my mind is: did he miscalculate? Nothing seems to be going right for him. Not the fight in Ukraine - most people thought, sure, the Ukrainians would put up a struggle, but he would quickly get to the capital. Nothing seems to be going right for him in terms of the international response. Most thought it would be more split, and it's, as you know, significantly unified. And certainly not the response that he hoped to get at home, right? We have people out in the streets protesting. So I'm just wondering how you think about that question of miscalculation. I'm beginning to think this might be one of the most significant miscalculations he's made as president. MIKE VICKERS: Not surprisingly, Michael, I agree with you. I think this is a major strategic blunder. And I think it stems from the fact that he's overconfident, that he always wins his wars. Second Chechnya war, Russo-Georgia war in 2008, annexation of Crimea and the seizure of the Donbass in 2014, his intervention in U.S. presidential elections in 2016 and 2020. And now this. But he really in a no-win situation. I mean, the Ukrainian Armed Forces and Territorial Defense Forces are way overperforming and Russia's forces are way underperforming. They haven't been able to take any major cities. Its forces have been repelled and pushed back in several places. They haven't even been able to achieve air superiority after four days of war. You know, in short, Ukrainian David is just kicking the crap out of the Russian Goliath. Now it's only four days in. The Ukrainian leadership and and people's grit and societal mobilizations is inspiring the world. You know, as you noted, Europe, and more and more the world, is mobilized in opposing Russia. The turnabout in Germany is particularly striking, supplying stingers and other weapons. Several countries, including small ones on Ukraine and Russia's borders, are providing weapons to the Ukrainian resistance. And then you mentioned his position at home. You know, the Central Bank sanctions are already biting. The ruble fell 20 percent today. And so while he's progressively turned Russia into a police state and killed or attempted to kill and jailed his opposition, he's increasingly vulnerable at home. MICHAEL MORELL: You know, I think you're right about history driving his calculation here and how easy he had things in other places militarily. But history may have been affecting how he was thinking about how the West would respond. Because before they didn't respond as a group, the EU didn't join sanctions in 2014. The US sanctions after Georgia, after the invasion in 2014 in Ukraine, after the 2016 election - they were essentially slaps on the wrist. So again, if history was guiding him, it's not turned out the way that it had turned out before. MIKE VICKERS: Yeah, exactly. I think that's right. That's certainly what he expected. I don't really see the theory of victory he had other than he thought he could really divide the West and conquer Ukraine easily. But you know, I would add, he doesn't have enough force to achieve his objectives. If he keeps his forces in Ukraine, even if he were to nominally install a puppet government, Russia's casualties will increasingly mount as long as the U.S. and the West support the resistance. And if he withdraws, that public regime would be in mortal danger from day one. So he's in a real tough spot. MICHAEL MORELL: So Mike, you think he's at risk militarily in Ukraine, that he could get bogged down, that he could fail to meet his objectives? Is that your sense? It's certainly mine. MIKE VICKERS: Yes. Now he does have escalation options and a lot depends on what the West continues to do. MICHAEL MORELL: So how do we make it more likely that he fails militarily? MIKE VICKERS: Well, I think it's really important that he fail. Boris Johnson has said that, and I certainly agree with it. If we don't defeat him here, if he does prevail, he's likely to go on. Ukraine isn't his sole interest. He's likely to go on and and do other things. So the way we make it more likely is strong support of the resistance. Ukraine has a lot of things going for it that resistance movements would need: friendly border countries, 2,500 kilometers of border with NATO countries, external sponsor in the United States and others, favorable terrain, and most importantly, a society really mobilized for irregular warfare. So that's one way. And then really biting sanctions. We haven't put sanctions on the energy sector yet. They've been exempt. We haven't put full sanctions on SWIFT. They've been mostly symbolic. There's ways to really hurt the Russian economy and to undermine Putin's role at home through non-lethal covert measures. He's done it to us. We should certainly return the favor. My concern is if he escalates internally in Ukraine, if he levels cities like he did in Chechnya and Syria, indiscriminately kills civilians, employs chemical weapons, I hope we would get off our duffs and use air power to stop that carnage. You know, U.S. air power could certainly bring an end to this war much sooner than irregular warfare could, although irregular warfare will make its position increasingly untenable. MICHAEL MORELL: I wonder, Mike, why he's struggling so militarily, right? I mean, one is the will of the Ukrainians to fight, right, and will to fight is incredibly important - as we saw in Afghanistan, where there was not a will to fight. So there's the will to fight of the Ukrainians, who are very effective at what they're doing. But I'm wondering to what extent the Russians made mistakes militarily, number one, and number two, I'm wondering to what extent his own troops, Putin's own troops, don't have a will to fight here against their Ukrainian brothers, particularly killing women and children. MIKE VICKERS: Yeah, I think that last part is a big part of this. Russian troops seem to be surrendering even in fairly elite formations, 1st Tank Guards Army, for example, that's led part of the assault on Kyiv has really struggled. Even their special forces don't seem to be performing all that well. So I think the Russian military here was really overestimated in its capabilities. Taking cities is hard, but they haven't even done well on the outskirts. MICHAEL MORELL: So back to the question of is he at risk politically at home. My view is that this may be the first time that he has done something that significantly risks undermining his strength and perhaps even risks him losing his job. The oligarchs are paying significant costs here. His whole society is paying a significant cost. Women and children dying in Ukraine and being stuck in subways and struggling to get out of the country - that kind of thing doesn't sell well in Russia. And I'm just wondering how you think about the vulnerability that he faces politically at home? Could we see an end to Vladimir Putin's rule here if things continue to go badly for him? MIKE VICKERS: Yeah, I think it's not out of the question. I mean, he has this tacit alliance with China, and China may prop him up in some ways, although there seems to be some wavering there. But I think this is the most precarious position he's been in in his 22 years of rule by far. He had a good economy the first eight years, after that interregnum with Medvedev, for four years when he was prime minister, then he came back and he's been increasingly belligerent. It actually started in 2007 at a speech he gave in Munich that was vehemently anti-West. But he's had this string of victories. And they've built up reserves and he's clamped down on the opposition. But this changes things very dramatically. The tenuous position that Russia is in now globally, and then the costs at home, including the psychological costs of this brutality. MICHAEL MORELL: And back to something you said earlier. I'm wondering about the risk of escalation here. Will things not going right for him lead him to be more reckless? You talked about Chechnya-style activities in Ukraine. Any risk, Mike, that you think he might use tactical nuclear weapons in Ukraine? MIKE VICKERS: It's possible. I think he would flatten cities and then use chemical weapons and then potentially nuclear weapons. Then if he did use nuclear weapons, I think the first thing he'd do, likely, is a demonstration shot. Something we talked about a lot in the Cold War, to signal intent and try to get your opponent to back down, you know, fire off a weapon in some area without a population, over water or something to say, 'Look, I'm serious.' And so I think that would be their first move. But you know, the Russians consider tactical nuclear weapons as just another weapon to employ under the right circumstances. And their fundamental doctrine is to escalate to de-escalate. And he's got options; the internal ones I talked about in Ukraine. He could widen the war to a NATO frontline state, particularly the the Baltic countries. We tend to think of sanctions as almost this free lunch, something you could do if you don't want to use hard power and punish an adversary. It works against some adversaries, although it takes time. Putin's not likely to take that lying down. You know, if you do enough real damage to his economy, something like defeating him in war conventionally or other means, he would lash out to try to stop that and cyber is his most likely weapon to do that against the West and the U.S.; particularly maybe in the energy sector, financial sector is a harder target. But he also could cut transatlantic cables, and that would really have a bad effect on the global economy and do other things. So he seems desperate and he's reckless and he doesn't seem like the same guy he was five years ago. So there definitely is an escalation risk. MICHAEL MORELL: So Mike, you mentioned a few minutes ago that if he starts indiscriminate killing, the leveling of cities, use of chemical weapons, that the West should essentially join the fight from the air. I certainly see the logic in that. But I also see the risk for escalation of general war between Russia and NATO or Russia and the United States. How do you think about that risk? How do you think he would respond to, you know, F-35s over Ukraine shooting down his aircraft, bombing his troops on the ground? How do you think he'd react to that? MIKE VICKERS: Well, there certainly is a risk. But I think he'd also fear it in some way because we have superiority in those areas, and that would put him in an even bigger bind. Most of his available combat forces are tied up in Ukraine right now, and so he's bitten off more than he can chew already. And so, you know, if he succeeds there, then he could do other things. He might lash out with a strike or two against NATO countries, but an all-out invasion - they're invading Ukraine right now. So I think there's a bit less risk of that. I would add we had to deal with this problem in the Cold War. We were prepared to defend Europe against Soviet forces on the inner German border where there was the risk of escalation. If we're going to defend South Korea against a North Korean attack, there's a risk of escalation; North Korea has plenty of nuclear weapons. If we're going to defend Taiwan, China has nuclear weapons - so this is not a problem you can wish away, I think. And so Ukraine has to be put in that larger strategic context. You know, if we can win indirectly, that's great. I think it was a real mistake to take at least the possibility that we would use U.S. air power and build up forces to match Putin's buildup in Europe like we would have done in the Cold War before the conflict. I think we might have prevented this war had we done that. We and the Russians and the Brits are all signatories to a thing called the Budapest Memorandum of 1994, where Ukraine gave up its nuclear weapons in return for assurances that its sovereignty and territorial integrity would be respected. And now it wasn't a collective defense treaty, but it should have some force and we haven't even mentioned it. MICHAEL MORELL: And it was a promise. It was an absolute promise. MIKE VICKERS: That was a promise. That's right. From a U.S. administration and I think that might have deterred Putin. There are lots of things that could have deterred Putin, had we done things, if we could wind the clock back to 2008. But we can't. MICHAEL MORELL: And what about, Mike, what about the risk of other ways we get to escalation between Russia and the United States or Russia and NATO? You know, I'm thinking of the foreign arms that are flowing into Ukraine now and the Russians tangling up with that, or in the Black Sea, right? I mean, there's numerous countries' ships in the Black Sea, the risk of an accident there. I guess that's another way we could get the escalation between Russia and NATO and Russia and the United States. MIKE VICKERS: Sure, absolutely. You know, when I was supporting the Afghan resistance in the 1980s, there was always concern that the Russians might - the Soviets might invade Pakistan. And so we supplied Pakistan with a lot of capabilities. They they did a number of cross-border raids and airstrikes and sabotage. They didn't have the forces then just like today to invade. But, you know, the threat was there. And as I said, this is war, whether we like it or not. If the sanctions really bite, he might escalate in response to that. We do irregular warfare, he might strike base areas, even if he doesn't fully invade NATO countries. As you know from our prior experience, there is always the threat that the Iranians might try to close the Strait of Hormuz in any crisis, and it would take us a while to clear it. And so there are any number of ways this could escalate. That's just part of great power war. MICHAEL MORELL: So, Mike, maybe we switch now a little bit to talk about. how did we get here? And I guess the first thing to talk about is what does Putin want? Why did he do this? How do you think about that? MIKE VICKERS: So, this is not about Ukraine possibly becoming a member of NATO way down the road. It's not about resolving the Donbass conflict, so-called Minsk-2 agreement or recognition of Russia's annexation of Crimea or, even more laughable, Ukraine posing a military or nuclear threat to Russia. The threat Ukraine posed to Russia is a democratic threat to Putin's authoritarian rule. And he's been very clear about this. One of the things I've learned from you over the years is, when dictators say something, you ought to listen to them; it's an important part of international relations. And he's been saying since 2007 that Ukraine is not a real country, that it should be incorporated back into a Russian empire along with Belarus, and he's become increasingly obsessed with denying the legitimacy of Ukrainian identity and sovereignty. It's almost a cult following they put in Putin's speeches about Ukraine illegitimacy in Russian military education and send these these these things to all their soldiers. So that's his main goal here, is to extinguish Ukrainian sovereignty. His broader goals are to reverse NATO's expansion, weaken and dissolve NATO and weaken the US. At a minimum he wants a sphere of influence over territory formerly controlled by the former Soviet Union. At a maximum, he wants to bring Europe more under Russian domination and reverse the U.S. victory in the Cold War and upend the world order. And the bottom line is if he wins in Ukraine, he is not going to stop there. MICHAEL MORELL: I agree with all of that. I would just add that Ukraine, of all the nations that border Russia, Ukraine special for him, right? It's not only all of the things you said, but it's also to him a very significant political risk, at least the way he thinks about it. If Ukraine is aligned with the West, if it's a vibrant democracy, if it's a vibrant economy, if it's not aligned with him, then in his mind because of the closeness of the two nations, historically, culturally, etc., in his mind, that would be an existential risk to him because he would fear that his own people would look at Ukraine and say, 'Hey, we want to be like them; we want to be a democracy, we want to be tied to the West and we want you to go away.' That is a major concern here for him. It's what drove him, I think, more than anything else in 2014, because he was afraid what was happening in the streets of Kiev could happen in the streets of Moscow. So I agree with everything you said. I would just add that one piece. MIKE VICKERS: Oh, I agree. And it's personal in a bizarre way, and he's very crude about it. I don't know if you've heard this joke he made about, basically, "Remarry me, Ukraine, or I'll kill you like we've killed you before." You know, it has this line in Russian: "It's your duty, my beauty," which means, we're going to abuse you and you do what I say. And it's sick and Ukraine has a special place for him in lots of ways. MICHAEL MORELL: So, what do you think, when he started this war, what was his preferred outcome? Was it to incorporate Ukraine back into Russia or was it simply to get rid of the Zelensky government to put his own Ukrainians in charge who would align themselves with Russia, who would destroy Ukrainian democracy, who would put down any protests in the streets? Which of those two things do you think it was? MIKE VICKERS: I think it was really to incorporate Ukraine back into Russia. MICHAEL MORELL: Really? MIKE VICKERS: Yes, I think if he were able to install a puppet government, that puppet government would do just what those idiots in the Donbass did in these new Russian-recognized republics and ask, you know, for independence, but in this case, to be incorporated into Russia. And he'd reluctantly say, "OK." And I think also he would see that as a way to further guarantee the security of Ukrainian territory, because then it would be Russian territory, and the risk to the West of trying to dislodge it would be higher in his mind. MICHAEL MORELL: Either way, whether it was to install a puppet government and he needs to keep some force there to support that government, or he incorporates it and he keeps force there, he would be incredibly vulnerable to an insurgency. Just as the Ukrainians did after World War II, and they sent thousands of dead Red Army soldiers back to Russia. MIKE VICKERS: Yeah, I agree completely. MICHAEL MORELL: So that's the specific goal, right, with regard to Ukraine. What's the general - go through that again, just for people to understand that? MIKE VICKERS: Yeah. So I think more broadly, as he said, it's to really reverse NATO expansion, essentially to rewrite the history of the end of the Cold War, and then to weaken or dissolve NATO or to weaken U.S. ties with Europe, and then importantly, to weaken the U.S., which he sees as his main adversary. I think he wants the whole kit and caboodle. It's not like NATO is going to expel 13 countries or whatever it is from NATO that have joined since 1997. But that's his goal. MICHAEL MORELL: So, Mike, here's an important question, I think. Is Putin in any way a different person than he was five years ago or 10 years ago? Are we dealing with the same guy or has he fundamentally changed? I mean, some people have talked about the isolation he's been in in the last two years because of COVID. I don't know about that. But are we dealing with the same guy or not? MIKE VICKERS: I think yes and no. He was always cold, calculating and ruthless. You know, a KGB man through and through. And you know, a lot of these anti-West, anti-U.S. statements really started in 2007. Or even, some of them, like 'the collapse of the Soviet Union being the greatest geopolitical catastrophe of the 20th century,' I think dates back to 2005. But he's now more emotional, more erratic, more rambling, I think more reckless, perhaps from increasing self-isolation and confidence in himself. He's been ruling for 22 years and he's really gone for broke here, you know, as we've talked about earlier. This looks like a major strategic blunder that the potential losses way outweigh the gains. And so I think in that sense, he really he really is a different man now, and therefore potentially more dangerous. MICHAEL MORELL: I wonder, you know, the isolation with only a small group of advisers for a very long time, they've all become Yes Men. That probably plays a role here. His age probably plays a role in terms of him worrying about whether he can get to his ultimate goal in time, right? MIKE VICKERS: Right. MICHAEL MORELL: Must play a role here, too. But I agree. I mean, he is being reckless. And that does make him more dangerous. But we can't - this is just really important - we can't let that stop us from taking the steps we need to step to keep pressure on him. MIKE VICKERS: Yeah, absolutely. That's the so-called 'Madman Theory' of international relations. Sometimes it's faked. Sometimes it's unfortunately real, but you're absolutely right in that. MICHAEL MORELL: So Mike, do you think we could have deterred him from this invasion? Was there any way? Is there anything we could have done? You mentioned this briefly earlier. Is there anything we could have done to deter him? In my mind, there's kind of two buckets here. One is a longer term, 20 year kind of bucket and then the other is maybe more of a short-term. Maybe I'll take the longer term and say, if we had responded anywhere near as tough and as unified as we're responding today back to what he did against Georgia in 2008 or against Ukraine in 2014 or against the United States political system in 2016, I believe that would have been enough to deter him from thinking that he could get away with this. So A- your thoughts on that and B- your thoughts on could we have done something in the immediate months before the invasion that could have deterred him? MIKE VICKERS: So I agree fully with that, and I think you're right to look at this in the long term and in the short term, you know, the immediate crisis. I strongly agree that had we responded more forcefully to his early adventures, it would have deterred him, and we didn't - he won all those. And that's why he thinks he can't lose. I would add a couple of others. One, Ukraine applied and Georgia applied for NATO membership in 2008, and it's been progressively stalled by NATO members. You have to have unanimity among 30 countries - particularly Germany and France. If they had agreed to that, particularly after 2014, I think that would have done it, you know, that he was actually taking on NATO. Alternatively, if we recognized that NATO membership was unavailable, but we created a sub-alliance of frontline states - you know, the Poles have been asking for more guarantees, the Baltic states, etc. So if we had them and Romania and Slovakia and the US and UK, you know, just like we created this new Australia, UK, US alliance in East Asia, I think that would have deterred him. Had the Europeans not made themselves so totally dependent on Russian energy, going back years, where he thought he had a stranglehold on them, that might have helped deter him as well. But moving to the near term, I think the biggest thing we could have done was if we had not taken U.S. military intervention - particularly air power intervention, not ground forces, and had matched Putin's build-up with one of our own, and had we made it clear that we intended to enforce the 1994 Budapest Memorandum, which Russia signed and we signed, I don't think he would have started this war. We did none of that. We just watched for months hoping that sanctions would deter him, and they didn't. MICHAEL MORELL: This is a great place to transition to how well the Biden administration has handled this. How do you think about that? MIKE VICKERS: I think reasonably well. I think looking at our government as a whole, the performance of the IC has really been outstanding. I think the administration's rallying of allies in support of Ukraine has been very good. I think military support to Ukraine could have been better. It was very poor during the early years - that's another thing we could have done, potentially, to deter this, was to make Ukraine a much harder target than it is. But that's been pretty good. And the sanctions on the Central Bank have hurt them. I'm reluctant to criticize the administration, so I offer these thoughts solely in the spirit of wanting to see more effective U.S. policy, but, I think we misread Putin for most of the Biden administration's first year in office. MICHAEL MORELL: What do you mean by that? MIKE VICKERS: I think we thought we could just park the Russia problem and deal with China. And the Biden administration said they wanted a stable and predictable relationship with Russia. Well, they sure as heck didn't get that. I think our withdrawal from Afghanistan and then these repeated statements very early on that we would not use direct military force to contest a Russian invasion convinced Putin that we were weak and he could take Ukraine unopposed. And as I said, I think we put too much faith in the deterrent power of sanctions. After the invasion, our response has been better, but it's still been characterized a bit by incrementalism. So overall, I give them reasonable marks MICHAEL MORELL: And no doubt in your mind that we should sanction the energy sector? It's 60 percent of his exports and 30 percent of his economy. And with energy prices skyrocketing, he actually benefits to that to the extent that he can continue to export energy. So I think it's your view - I don't want to put words in your mouth here, but I thought you said it earlier - it's certainly my view that that's the next step here. MIKE VICKERS: Yeah. So there's obvious reasons why we're not doing that. European dependence on Russian oil and gas and not wanting to have the U.S. population pay more at the pump than they already are. But we're working at cross-purposes. It's the same thing with these symbolic sanctions on SWIFT. Either do it or don't do it, you know? And as you said, even if they can't convert their oil gain dollars into rubles, they're still getting richer. They can live to fight another day with when this conflict is over. So I think we're kind of in the half-measures place on sanctions at this point. MICHAEL MORELL: So Mike, if we think about the scenarios for how this ends, what do you think? MIKE VICKERS: That's really tough to say. I mean, they've got these talks going on at the Belarus border today. We don't know the outcome; most are pessimistic about it. He's really in a no-win position here in Ukraine. I just don't see how he achieves his objectives. And so he's got to find a way out. And you know, they're clever about saying anything they want for justification. So maybe he'll resort to that at this point. I wouldn't rule out that he could be toppled. I know it's a long shot, but he really has put himself in a bind here. But you know, it could get ugly before it gets better. And I hope we have the stomach to to see this through. MICHAEL MORELL: You know, the irony for him is, the more reckless he is in Ukraine or even elsewhere, with, say, cyberattacks against the West, the more reckless he is, the greater chance that he gets toppled. MIKE VICKERS: That's right. MICHAEL MORELL: And that's why he's stuck, it seems to me. MIKE VICKERS: Exactly. MICHAEL MORELL: He's in a horrible position. MIKE VICKERS: Yeah, exactly. And that depends, obviously, on our response. But I think that's exactly right. We have lots of ways to hurt him that we haven't done yet. And we could certainly do that. MICHAEL MORELL: And do you - I don't - but I'm wondering if you see any way that he comes out of this with a win from his perspective, or is it right now just minimizing the damage? MIKE VICKERS: I think it's more minimizing the damage unless we were to suddenly capitulate and the Ukrainians were suddenly to capitulate, which certainly doesn't seem likely. So I think it really is damage limitation. I just don't know that they know how to do that. MICHAEL MORELL: Yeah. If you think about him being toppled, there's really only three possibilities, right? One is somebody walks in and arrests him; the other is somebody shoots him; and the other is he shoots himself. He's not going to be able to go anywhere in the world. Nobody's going to accept him. So, you know, being toppled is not pretty from his perspective, which loops back to being as reckless as he thinks he needs to be in order to try to stay in power. MIKE VICKERS: Right. Although, if he's concerned about being toppled and some of the advisers speak up and he doesn't kill them, he might decide that it's better to forestall that and find a way out of this crisis. MICHAEL MORELL: Just one more question. We're kind of running out of time here a little bit. But one more question, Mike: if this ends badly for him and he limps his way out of Ukraine, he's undercut significantly at home in terms of his politics, maybe he's even toppled - does this end up being a revitalization of the global order? Is this a shot in the arm to the global order that's been eroding the last decade and a half? MIKE VICKERS: So I think it's definitely that, but it depends on what the outcome really is with Russia. If he's toppled, there's still China to deal with. And at least Europe, the European West, may revert back to, you know, the good days of the 1990s again, slowly, over time, because China's too distant and they have multiple interests there. If he manages to survive, if he cuts his losses and then rebuilds, you still have this tacit China-Russia alliance that has a very different vision of the global order. That makes it a bigger challenge for us than any time since the end of the Cold War. So I think that that's still uncertain. You know, on the other hand, if he does survive, I think he's really lost the West and Europe at this point. MICHAEL MORELL: He's a pariah forever, MIKE VICKERS: He's a pariah forever. So there's a number of ways this could go. But this has changed the world. There's no question of that. MICHAEL MORELL: Also, if you're China and you see the world's response to his invasion of Ukraine, it's got to make you think twice about invading Taiwan. MIKE VICKERS: Well, I think both both are true. If this had gone easy for him, they might have taken advantage of that and now it ought to make you think twice. MICHAEL MORELL: Yeah, yeah. Mike, thank you so much for joining us. It's been great to have you. MIKE VICKERS; My pleasure, as always. Fact-checking claims in the State of the Union and GOP response Iowa Governor Kim Reynolds delivers Republican response to State of the Union Special Report: President Biden's 2022 State of the Union address By Layli Foroudi PARIS (Reuters) -France's highest court on Wednesday upheld a ban on barristers wearing the hijab and other religious symbols in courtrooms in the north, a ruling that is the first of its kind and sets a precedent for the rest of the country. The conspicuous display of religious symbols is an emotive subject in France and the court's decision may stir a nationwide debate over so-called core Republican values of secularism and identity ahead of April's presidential election. The case was brought by Sarah Asmeta, a 30-year-old hijab-wearing French-Syrian lawyer, who challenged a rule set by the Bar Council of Lille that bans religious markers in its courtrooms on the grounds that it was discriminatory. In its ruling, the Court of Cassation said the ban was "necessary and appropriate, on the one hand to preserve the independence of the lawyer and, on the other, to guarantee the right to a fair trial." Banning the wearing of religious symbols "does not constitute discrimination," it added. Asmeta told Reuters she was shocked and disappointed with the ruling. "Why does covering my hair stop my client from the right to a free trial?" she told Reuters. "My clients are not children. If they choose me as their lawyer, with my veil, then it is their choice." There is no law that explicitly says Asmeta cannot wear her hijab, a headscarf worn by some Muslim women, in the courtroom. In the months after she took an oath and entered law as a trainee barrister, the Lille Bar Council passed its own internal rule banning any signs of political, philosophical and religious conviction to be worn with the gown in court. POLITICAL SHIFT Asmeta challenged the Lille Bar Council's rule, calling it targeted and discriminatory. She lost the case in an appeals court in 2020 and pushed the matter up to the Court of Cassation. Religious symbols and clothing are banned for public servants in France due to its principle of "laicite", or secularism - the separation of religion from the state. Story continues French lawmakers and politicians have in recent years sought to extend curbs on wearing the hijab to cover, for example, mothers who accompany their children on school trips and football players. As a presidential election in April approaches, right-wing candidates have focused on identity issues. Asmeta said she was contemplating taking her fight to the European Court of Human Rights. The case has provoked a heated debate within the legal community. More than three dozen lawyers from Paris, where the Bar Council has imposed a similar ban, on Monday penned an open letter calling for a nationwide rule against the head covering in courtrooms. "We, lawyers, do not want a communitarian and obscurantist judiciary," they wrote in the French publication Marianne. Slim Ben Achour, a lawyer specialising in discrimination, disagreed and said such bans were hypocritical. "It is not possible that we, lawyers, the defenders of rights, or at least that is how we sell ourselves, block Muslim women [from practising]," he told Reuters. (Reporting by Layli Foroudi; Writing by Richard Lough; Editing by Geert de Clercq) Flaky will be available to stream and watch on demand March 22 Flaky, a brand new drama, is getting ready to drop on VOD later this month. The film is set to come to platforms through Freestyle Digital Media, a digital film distribution division of Allen Media Group/Entertainment Studios, which also owns theGrio. Flaky follows the story a Nigerian immigrant in New York City. (Credit: Bill Vergos) The film stars Tinuke Adetunji as Ibinabo, an immigrant working in New York City at a seafood who is confronted with loss and betrayal. Per the films synopsis, Formerly a renowned track-star in Africa with a masters degree in sociology, young Nigerian expat, Ibinabo, works at a seafood restaurant in Harlem in order to support her family back home. Working alongside her is her only true friend in the city, Aliyah, a New Yorker born and raised coming to grips with the realities of motherhood and shared custody. Mimi owns the restaurant, and manages her subordinates with an iron will. When combined, we have a classic case of workplace rock, paper, scissors as the manager manages the new girl, the new girl bonds with the old-timer, and the old-timer storms out on the manager. During this ordeal, the rhythm of the shop is thrown into jeopardy when Aliyahs flyboy cousin, Reggie, shows romantic interest in Ibinabo while stopping by one day for a family discount. In any other place, this would be a modern fairytale. But New York always has other plans. (Credit: Bill Vergos) Along with the official press release, creator and director Michael A. Obiazi shared in a statement, There is no better time to tell a resonating immigrant story than now. Being an immigrant myself and hearing different stories from immigrants pursuing the American dream, my interest was tickled to tell this story influenced by the people around me. Not just telling the story of survival but also addressing stereotypes and social issues affecting Africans living here and the African-American community, in general. Story continues Check out the official trailer for the film below: Flaky will be available to rent and own on global digital HD internet, and satellite platforms on March 22. TheGrio is now on your TV via Apple TV, Amazon Fire, Roku, and Android TV. Also, please download theGrio mobile apps today! The post Freestyle Digital Media releases Flaky trailer from Michael A. Obiazi appeared first on TheGrio. A sergeant who has worked for the Fresno Police Department for nearly 20 years has been arrested on suspicion of DUI, drug possession and robbery. Police Chief Paco Balderrama and Fresno County District Attorney Lisa Smittcamp on Wednesday morning outlined the case against Sgt. Donald Dinell, who has worked for the department since 2003. He was arrested after he was involved in a crash in his police cruiser, and a drug test found him positive for fentanyl, according to Balderrama. Dinell acquired methamphetamine laced with fentanyl by taking it from a woman in a suspected robbery earlier on the day of his crash on Dec. 30, Balderrama said. He faces charges for DUI, drug possession and robbery. His bail after arrest will be $31,000, according to Smittcamp. Balderrama said Dinell remains on paid administrative leave since Jan. 11. Dinnell turned himself in Tuesday afternoon on the outstanding arrest warrant. He then placed his bond, allowing him to be released. As of today, he is employed. There is a protocol and process for termination, which we intend to follow, Balderrama said. An administrative investigation related to Dinells employment is ongoing and Balderrama said he would not discuss it. Crash and police response A witness reported a patrol car about 4:30 p.m. Dec. 30 driving erratically on Riverside Drive, south of the Marketplace at El Paseo near Herndon Avenue and Highway 99, police said. Dinells cruiser knocked over a tree a struck a curb in an empty parking lot, police said. Balderrama said police initially responded to the incident thinking Dinell was having a heart attack or other medical episode. Then after attending to him, police said, they believed he had accidentally been exposed to fentanyl. Officers administered Narcan, the life-saving drug used on people during an overdose, and the sergeant recovered, Balderrama said. During the follow-up investigation, Balderrama said, officers found Dinell had gone to a drug-related call earlier on the day of the crash. Other officers who were headed there were pulled away to a more important call but Dinell continued on, he said. Story continues Dinell found a woman who had used meth and then by force or fear took the drugs from the woman before ingesting them, the chief said. Balderrama said Dinell did not write a report about the initial incident and his body-worn camera did not provide footage. Thats what first made me suspicious, Balderrama said. There should have been. Police said Wednesday they did not have any evidence of other times Dinell may have used drugs. As a patrol sergeant, Dinell has been a supervisor for several years and did not routinely make arrests, Balderrama said. District attorney involved Smittcamp commended the police department, saying the chief was transparent about the arrest and brought Fresno County District Attorneys Office investigators in on the case. She said Wednesday during the news conference that her office would file the three charges against Dinell. The felony trial team will handle the prosecution, she said. Investigators are reviewing any cases in which Dinell was recently involved, she said, for potential issues related to the Brady Rule. That rule forces prosecutors to disclose any information to the court that could potentially affect the outcome of a trial, including evidence that could possibly impeach an officers credibility, legal authorities have said. Any case where Dinell might need to be called as a witness will be reviewed, she said. As the chief said, (Dinells) job duties do not include those types of things where hes the primary person involved usually with the suspects or the witnesses in the cases, she said. So we have started to audit some of his cases and we will be looking in depth at the details of all the cases that he has been involved in. Fresno Police Chief Paco Balderrama announces the arrest of veteran police sergeant Donald Dinell, on suspicion of DUI, drug possession and robbery, at a press confernce, March 2, 2022, with Fresno County DA Lisa Smittcamp, at police headquarters. Chicago Mayor Lori Lightfoot reported making $383,005 in total income for 2020, her first full calendar year in office, according to a tax return released by the mayors office. Lightfoot reported $192,437 in city wages to the Internal Revenue Service. She also took out $100,000 from a retirement account, as well as $76,846 from an IRA. The 59-year-old mayor paid an effective tax rate of 23.6%. Advertisement Disclosing tax returns is a rite of transparency for many candidates who have run for major elected office, an act of disclosure that not only tells the public how much the political hopefuls earn in income but where their financial interests reside, how they have made their money and what potential conflicts of interest could arise if they are elected. The Tribune annually requests the Chicago mayors tax returns. Advertisement Mayor Lori Lightfoot in City Council chambers before a meeting on Feb. 23. (Brian Cassella / Chicago Tribune) While working as a partner at the law firm Mayer Brown before becoming mayor, Lightfoot reported an average adjusted gross income of $971,626 from 2014 through 2017. Lightfoot, who left the firm to campaign for mayor, paid an effective tax rate of 38.6% over the four years. In 2018, Lightfoots last year before becoming mayor, she reported an adjusted gross income of $813,000 from Mayer Brown, according to her tax filing. In 2019, Lightfoots first year in office, Lightfoot reported making $497,000, according to a tax return released by the mayors office. Lightfoot, who was sworn in May 20, 2019, made $111,120 in city wages for the portion of the year she was mayor and $352,645 from Mayer Brown, the return shows. Lightfoot officials previously said the mayor reported income from Mayer Brown in her first year as mayor because there were still cash collections allocated to Mayor Lightfoot related to work in process when she was a partner at Mayer Brown. They said there was no income reportable to Mayor Lightfoot from Mayer Brown in 2020. The 2020 tax return shows no income from Mayer Brown in 2020. Advertisement Lightfoots office did not address why she pulled money out of her retirement accounts, which financial planners generally discourage. Mayor Lightfoot and her family pay their taxes diligently every year and follow the guidance of their accountant for all matters related to appropriate deductions, Lightfoot press secretary Cesar Rodriguez said in a statement. Advertisement gpratt@chicagotribune.com On Thursday, the State Special Communications Service of Ukraine called claims that Google Maps "labels" were being used by Russia's military "another fake." In a post to its official Telegram channel, the country's intelligence agency debunked a wave of social media rumors that claimed Russian insurgents had tagged airstrike locations on Google Maps of Kyiv and other Ukrainian cities. The agency described these false claims as a psychological operation "to sow panic and misinformation among the population." On Tuesday, responding to claims that its Maps were being used to coordinate Russian military activity in Ukraine, Google began removing user-submitted locations within the borders of Russia, Ukraine, and Belarus. The company is removing new content such as photos and business information out of an abundance of caution, a Google spokesperson told BuzzFeed News. Across social media platforms on Tuesday, people accused Google Maps of hosting content allegedly used to target airstrikes on cities such as Kyiv and Kharkiv. The tags in Google Maps were created on Feb 28th, and people noticed that the tags match the places the missile strikes today, one of these individuals, Oleksandr Balatskyi, told BuzzFeed News in a Twitter DM. People claimed that the tags, or user-generated pins, began appearing yesterday with titles such as , or Ukrainian for farm, and , or Ukrainian for agriculture. BuzzFeed News could not independently verify the existence of specific pins, or the claim that Russias military added them to Google Maps. Dozens of Twitter users have shared the same set of screenshots showing pins labeled in Kyiv, though it is unclear when they were created and by whom. After investigating the claims, Google said that some of the edits that reference farms were made more than a year ago. Still, the company said it is removing edits made to maps in the region since Feb. 24, and it would pause new edits. Story continues Out of an abundance of caution, we are removing user contributions like photos, videos, reviews and business information and all user-submitted places from Google Maps in Ukraine, Russia and Belarus since the invasion began, and are temporarily blocking new edits from being made, a Google spokesperson said. Google also told BuzzFeed News on Thursday that it is implementing an analysis of Ukraine maps data to detect and remove inaccurate business information. Ukrainian-language accounts on Twitter and Telegram urged people to report suspicious location tags to Google Maps. A Google Maps help request posted on Tuesday asked the company to limit the creation of labels on the territory of Ukraine until the end of the war with Russia. The request was later shared to the Ukrainian parliaments Telegram channel. In the days since the invasion, Google has disabled certain features from its Maps app, including live traffic information and data about how busy places are, in order to protect the safety of Ukrainians after speaking to local authorities. On Friday, the Ukrainian news outlet Kyiv Independent tweeted that Kyiv city administrators warned citizens to check for and obscure any markings on the roofs of their buildings that could have been painted to guide Russian bombers. And it appears some Ukrainian citizens believe that digital markers could be used to target them as well. Since Russia launched its deadly invasion last week, Silicon Valley companies have been facing intense pressure to safeguard their services from abuse. Over the weekend, Facebook and Twitter said they had taken down two disinformation campaigns pushing anti-Ukraine agendas. One of the campaigns had used artificial intelligence to create fake personas posing as bloggers to spread the false information. On Monday, YouTube, which is owned by Google, said it had removed a series of channels associated with one of the campaigns. On Tuesday, Apple announced it had halted all product sales and limited Apple Pay use in Russia, and disabled traffic and live incident features in Apple Maps in Ukraine. YouTube, Facebook, and TikTok have also banned Russian state-backed media outlets RT and Sputnik across their platforms in Europe, and Apple has removed them from the App Store outside of Russia. UPDATE Mar. 03, 2022, at 20:46 PM More on this Russian President Vladimir Putin's invasion of Ukraine has revealed tensions within the Republican Party over how hard to push back on the aggression and how to respond to former President Trump's glowing praise of Putin. The national security crisis has shown Trump to be seriously out of step with GOP leaders on characterizing Putin's motives and moves, even though Trump looks increasingly likely to run again for president in 2024. Senate Minority Leader Mitch McConnell (R-Ky.) on Tuesday contradicted Trump's recent praise of Putin as "smart" and "savvy" by declaring that he views the Russian president as a "ruthless thug." Asked about Trump's comments, McConnell said: "What President Putin did as a ruthless thug is just invade - invaded another sovereign country and killed thousands of innocent people." "That's what President Putin did," he emphasized. It's not the first time that McConnell has indirectly admonished Trump for speaking glowingly of Putin. McConnell pushed back against the then-president in 2017 when Trump, shortly after taking office, equated the U.S. government with the Kremlin. "There are a lot of killers. You think our country's so innocent?" Trump told then-Fox News host Bill O'Reilly. McConnell told CNN in response: "I don't think there's any equivalency between the way the Russians conduct themselves and the way the United States does." The GOP leader noted that "Putin's a former KGB agent, he's a thug, he was not elected in a way that most people would consider a credible election." Senate Minority Whip John Thune (R-S.D.) on Tuesday unleashed another salvo at Putin when asked to comment on Trump's characterization of Putin's plan to seize parts of Ukraine piece by piece as "genius." Asked about Trump's praise of the Russian president, Thune, who is up for reelection this year, said "Putin is a murderous thug and I think the world is now seeing that." Story continues "That's my view of it and I think that's going to be most Americans' view of it. That was before and will be for sure after what we're seeing on display," he said. Thune predicted that the invasion of Ukraine will bolster support for NATO, which Trump discussed pulling the United States out of when he was president. "Obviously people are realizing more than ever now the value of NATO and seeing on full display, again, the true character of Putin," he said. "A lot of people for a long time have maintained this is what he's about, but I think now the whole world is seeing it in a way that they never have before and coming to the realization that this guy is after one thing, and that's power." Trump broke from the Republican Party's longtime distrust of Russia when he was elected to office. He held a two-hour one-on-one meeting with Putin in Helsinki, Finland, sending senior officials out of the room. After that meeting, Trump said he believed Putin's claim that Russia didn't interfere in the 2016 presidential election, even though U.S. intelligence agencies found substantial evidence of meddling by Moscow. The late Sen. John McCain (R-Ariz.), then the chairman of the Senate Armed Services Committee, lambasted Trump's joint press conference with Putin as "one of the most disgraceful performances by an American president in memory." Years later, Trump still seems to hold a favorable opinion of Putin, telling an audience at the Conservative Political Action Conference this weekend: "I like to tell the truth. Yes, he's smart." "The problem is not that Putin is smart, which of course he's smart, but the real problem is that our leaders are dumb," he added. He doubled down on comments made in a radio interview with "The Clay Travis and Buck Sexton Show" in which he praised Putin's strategy as "genius" and "pretty savvy." Those statements surprised Republican senators who publicly condemned Putin. Sen. Mitt Romney (R-Utah), who voted twice to convict Trump on articles of impeachment, said statements defending Putin are "almost treasonous." "It just makes me ill to see some of these people do that. But of course they do it because it's shock value and it's going to get them maybe more eyeballs and make a little more money for them or their network," he told CNN's "State of the Union." Sen. Jerry Moran (Kan.), a mainstream Republican senator who usually avoids controversy, took to the Senate floor on Monday to declare that Putin alone is responsible for the crisis in Ukraine. "Vladimir Putin is a thug and is solely responsible for the invasion of Ukraine. Putin, I condemn him, and he's even being condemned by his own people in Russia and by a growing alliance around the world," he said. "There is nothing that justifies Russia invading Ukraine. This is the most significant intrusion from one country to another since the beginning in the 1930s of what resulted in World War II." Moran later told The Hill that he felt compelled to speak out. "Reading history, Churchill in that era is important to me. My dad was a World War II veteran. It stands out. It's easy to look the other way, but that's a mistake," he said. Asked whether he was trying to clear up questions of whether President Biden deserves some blame for the invasion, as Trump has suggested, Moran only said: "Vladimir Putin is responsible for what's transpiring in Ukraine." "I think these are points in time in which these circumstances require us to be united in making sure the blame rests with Putin," he said. Not all Republicans are responding to Trump's comments with forceful denunciations of Putin. Sen. Ted Cruz (R-Texas), who is eyeing a run for president in 2024, said the "corporate media" is distracting from what he views as the Biden administration's reluctance to impose sanctions on Russia sooner by focusing on Trump. "I think the corporate media is desperate to drive a narrative. By any measure, Trump's policies were much, much tougher on Russia than Biden's policies," he said, noting sanctions on the Nord Stream 2 pipeline that Trump signed into law. "Putin did not invade Ukraine throughout that time until Joe Biden became president." Former Trump national security adviser John Bolton told Newsmax in an interview that he disagrees with claims that Trump's policies deterred Putin. "It's just not accurate to say that Trump's behavior somehow deterred the Russians," Bolton told host Rob Schmitt. Bolton also disputed the claim that Trump stopped or slowed construction on Nord Stream 2, a pipeline that would carry natural gas from Russia to Germany. "We didn't sanction Nord Stream 2. We should have. We should have brought the project to an end. We did impose sanctions on Russian oligarchs and several others because of their sales of S-400 anti-aircraft systems to other countries. But in almost every case, the sanctions were imposed with Trump complaining about it, saying we were being too hard," he said. Sen. Lindsey Graham (R-S.C.) speaks during a press conference following the U.S. Senate approval of the Ending Forced Arbitration of Sexual Assault and Sexual Harassment Act in Washington, D.C. on Thursday, February 10, 2022. Sen. Lindsey Graham (R-S.C.) is working a resolution to throw Senate support behind having an international court investigate Russian President Vladimir Putin for potential war crimes. "What I'm doing today ... is introducing a resolution supporting the complaint filed by the Ukrainian government," Graham said. "This is a good example of where the International Criminal Court should exercise jurisdiction ... I want the Senate to vote and speak with one voice in support of this complaint." Graham unveiled a non-binding, draft resolution at a press conference with U.S. Rep. Victoria Spartz (R-Ind.), who was born in Ukraine. Spartz grew emotional as she recounted messages she is receiving from friends and family in Ukraine. "This is criminal. This is pure killing of individuals," Spartz said. "This is just brutal." Graham said that he has discussed the resolution with a handful of Democrats and that they seem interested. "I'm going to introduce this thing pretty soon and I'm going to try to build consensus," he said. The chief prosecutor of the International Criminal Court announced late last month that it was opening an investigation into the situation in Ukraine. Graham stressed that the resolution, which is still being tweaked, doesn't pre-judge the outcome an investigation but instead would throw the Senate's support behind having a probe. The International Criminal Court (ICC) investigates and, where warranted, tries individuals charged with the gravest crimes of concern to the international community: genocide, war crimes, crimes against humanity and the crime of aggression. The draft resolution would throw Senate condemnation behind "the ongoing violence, war crimes, crimes against humanity, and systematic human rights abuses continually being carried out by the Russian Armed Forces and their proxies," urges nations to push for a war crimes investigation and supports an investigation into Putin for war crimes. Story continues The resolution comes as lawmakers are working on a package that would provide billions in aid for Ukraine. The administration requested $6.4 billion, though senators have floated that it could be closer to $10 billion. Lawmakers are looking at including it in a massive government funding bill that they need to pass by March 11 in order to avoid a government shutdown. "The Senate must keep working on a bipartisan basis to pass a robust aid package in the upcoming omnibus, so we can send an unmistakable signal to Ukraine that we stand with them and that we stand against Putin. The omnibus needs to get done next week, so I'm glad that we seem to be having bipartisan support to get that done," Senate Majority Leader Charles Schumer (D-N.Y.) said. Hawaii will lift its strict entry requirements later this month, eliminating its self-quarantine requirement and allowing domestic travelers to enter the state more easily. Starting March 26, domestic visitors will no longer have to show proof of vaccination or a negative test result to bypass a mandatory five-day quarantine as part of the state's Safe Travels program, Gov. David Ige, a Democrat, announced Tuesday. Subscribe to The Post Most newsletter for the most important and interesting stories from The Washington Post. International travelers to Hawaii will still be subject to U.S. rules of providing proof of a negative test taken no more than 24 hours before departure and proof of vaccination. "We started the Safe Travels program to protect the health, lives, and livelihoods of the people of Hawaii," Ige said in a statement. "The program put in place safety protocols that included a multi-layered screening and testing approach that kept our communities safe during the COVID-19 surges that endangered the most vulnerable of our citizens. Right now, we are seeing lower case counts, and hospitalizations are coming down." The state's mask mandate will remain in place, and Ige said that officials are "watching disease activity closely across the state, the country, and globally, and we will adjust accordingly to keep our entire community healthy." Hawaii is the only state that has yet to drop a statewide indoor mask mandate. The Safe Travels program started in October 2020 and required testing and other steps to enter the popular destination. Lt. Gov. Josh Green, a Democrat, told The Washington Post in February that officials were considering eliminating all entry restrictions by spring, in the absence of any additional coronavirus surges. New cases in the state have trended downward after a spike caused by the highly contagious omicron variant. Last year, officials had said Hawaii would lift travel restrictions after the state was 70% vaccinated, but omicron derailed that. According to tracking data compiled by The Washington Post through Wednesday, 77.2% of the state's population is fully vaccinated. Story continues At one point during the surge, Ige said the state was considering a booster shot requirement for vaccinated visitors, but he nixed the idea last month. American visitors have flocked to Hawaii during the pandemic, and the state's economy depends heavily on tourism. Green told The Post last month that tourism was around 30 to 40% below numbers in 2019, but it had almost returned to the baseline before the omicron wave hit. Related Content For these expecting mothers in Kyiv, night is passed in a maternity ward bunker Trump's border wall has been breached more than 3,000 times by smugglers, CBP records show In hip-hop and basketball, Flau'Jae Johnson is a two-way star By Steve Gorman (Reuters) - Days after visiting the Ukrainian capital Kyiv to film scenes for his documentary on Russia's invasion, Hollywood actor-director Sean Penn found himself among thousands of refugees fleeing to Poland, joining the exodus on foot. Penn, 61, posted a photo to his Twitter feed on Monday showing the movie star wearing a backpack and toting a piece of luggage on wheels as he trudged along the shoulder of a road beside a line of cars stretching into the distance. "Myself & two colleagues walked miles to the Polish border after abandoning our car on the side of the road," Penn said in a caption tweeted with the picture. "Almost all the cars in this photo carry women & children only, most without any sign of luggage, and a car their only possession of value." The tweet did not explain why the Academy Award-winning actor and his companions were forced to abandon their vehicle. A spokesperson in Los Angeles, Mara Buxbaum, told Reuters by email on Tuesday that Penn had "made it out of Ukraine safely." She declined to answer other questions about his whereabouts or the circumstances of his departure from Ukraine. Penn was in Kyiv last Thursday attending a press briefing at the office of President Volodymyr Zelenskiy on the first day of Russia's invasion, recording footage for a documentary chronicling the crisis, Zelenskiy's office said in a statement at the time. "Sean Penn is among those who support Ukraine in Ukraine today. Our country is grateful to him for such a show of courage and honesty," the statement said. It said Penn had interviewed Ukrainian political and military figures as well as journalists as part of the production, for which he initially visited Ukraine in November. In a statement last week, the actor acclaimed for Oscar-winning roles in "Mystic River" and "Milk" praised the Ukrainian people as "historic symbols of courage" and called Ukraine "the tip of the spear for the democratic embrace of dreams." Story continues "If we allow it to fight alone, our soul as America is lost," Penn wrote. Penn, whose directorial credits include "Into the Wild" and "The Crossing Guard," is also known for his political activism and involvement in various humanitarian causes, including relief efforts for victims of Hurricane Katrina, the Haiti earthquake of 2010 and Pakistan floods in 2012. He made headlines in 2016 when Rolling Stone magazine published an interview Penn had secretly conducted with Mexican drug lord Joaquin "El Chapo" Guzman at his jungle hideout prior to the arrest of the cartel boss. Penn is producing the Ukraine documentary for Vice Studios, a U.S.-Canadian digital media and broadcasting company, according to Hollywood trade publication Variety. (Reporting by Steve Gorman in Los Angeles; Editing by Sandra Maler) (Getty Images) Celebrity news blog Hollywood Unlocked has reported on Queen Elizabeths return to work on Tuesday after releasing a false report that the monarch had died. Two days after it was publicly announced that Queen Elizabeth II had tested positive for Covid-19, Hollywood Unlocked published a story on 22 February titled, HU Exclusive: Queen Elizabeth Dead. The story read, Sources close to the Royal Kingdom notified us exclusively that Queen Elizabeth has passed away. The blogs founder, Jason Lee, responded to criticism of the story, insisting: We dont post lies and I stand by my sources. Lee doubled down on his claim in a tweet posted the following day stating that the site had not retracted its story despite a fake Twitter account that issued an apology. Now, Hollywood Unlocked seems to have backtracked on its original reporting when the blog published a new article on Tuesday, 1 March, which was headlined: Queen Elizabeth Recovers From Covid To Host Virtual Audiences At Windsor Castle Home. The 95-year-old monarch carried out two virtual meetings from Windsor Castle on Tuesday after being diagnosed with coronavirus on 20 February. Last week, a Hollywood Unlocked author and Lee explained their reasons for believing the rumours of the Queens death to be true in an article titled, Fact Check: 10 Reasons We Believed Queen Elizabeth Was Dead. Lee explained that he was contacted directly from a source who attended the wedding of British Vogue editor-in-chief Edward Enninful. The source claimed the news led to dismay among the attendees. Although Ive never been wrong when breaking a story because this involves The Queen this is one time I would want to be, a statement from Lee said in the article. And based on Wednesdays report from the Palace, I can say my sources got this wrong and I sincerely apologize to The Queen and the Royal Family. STORY: Japans big firms may be starting to join the corporate exodus from Russia. Honda said Wednesday (March 2) that it had suspended exports to the country. The carmaker said that was due to difficulty shipping vehicles and making payments amid sanctions. Now its Japanese rivals are expected to follow suit. The Nikkei newspaper says Mazda also plans to suspend shipments. Nissan said it was monitoring the situation in Russia very closely. And Mitsubishi said it could suspend production and sale of cars there. That leaves the focus on the worlds biggest automaker - Toyota. It says business in the country is continuing as normal, though there had been some disruption to shipments. Japanese firms have been very muted in their response to the crisis in Ukraine, compared to U.S and European rivals. Ford and other global automakers had already said they planned to suspend operations. Pressure on the Japanese firms is only likely to mount. Edgar D. Ned Jannotta, the chairman emeritus of the Chicago investment bank William Blair & Co., sold Tuesday his home on Lake Michigan in Winnetka for $6.3 million. (Cook County Assessor / HANDOUT) Edgar D. Ned Jannotta, the chairman emeritus of the Chicago investment bank William Blair & Co., sold Tuesday his home on Lake Michigan in Winnetka for $6.3 million. The 90-year-old Jannotta joined William Blair in 1959 and became the banks chairman in 2001. He remains affiliated with William Blair as its chairman emeritus. Advertisement He paid $4.8 million in 2000 for the 3,406-square-foot, Cape Cod-style house, which is on Whitebridge Hill Road in Winnetka. Built in 1955, the house has 3-1/2 bathrooms, a white kitchen and a living room with a fireplace. Outside on the 1.07-acre lakefront property are a deck, a patio and a winding path and staircase down to the shore. Jannotta, who now lives on Jupiter Island in Hobe Sound, Fla., listed his Winnetka house in January for $6.25 million, and he went under contract to sell it just three days later for an amount that ultimately was above his asking price. Advertisement The house had an $86,981 property tax bill in the 2019 tax year. Public records do not yet identify the buyer. Jannotta previously had owned the home immediately to the south, which is a 7,626-square-foot, 19th-century house. He paid $4.2 million for that home in 1991 and sold it in 2010 for $6.5 million. Goldsborough is a freelance reporter. Join our Chicago Dream Homes Facebook group for more luxury listings and real estate news. MADRID (Reuters) - More than 2,500 migrants attempted to climb a high border fence separating Spain's North African enclave of Melilla from Morocco on Wednesday, and around 500 managed to cross into Spanish territory, local authorities said. The central government in Melilla said in a statement the migrants from Sub-Saharan Africa were armed with hooks, sticks and screws, and threw stones as security forces tried to stop them from climbing the six-metre (20-ft) fence. Sixteen police officers were injured and 20 migrants were being treated for minor injuries, the central government said. Melilla and Ceuta - a second Spanish enclave also on Africa's northern coast - are popular crossing points for illegal African migrants trying to get into Europe. (Reporting by Christina Thykjaer; Editing by Catarina Demony and Bernadette Baum) VIENNA (Reuters) - The U.N. nuclear watchdog's 35-nation Board of Governors, which is currently holding an emergency meeting on Ukraine, will not vote on the draft resolution criticising Russia that was submitted to the meeting until Thursday, three diplomats said. The draft, which was submitted shortly before midnight, has been watered down from a previous version reported by Reuters in a bid to increase the majority of countries supporting it, diplomats said. The latest version seen by Reuters says the Board "deplores the Russian Federation's actions in Ukraine". (Reporting by Francois Murphy, Editing by Louise Heavens) VIENNA (Reuters) - The U.N. nuclear watchdog is working with "all sides" after Russia's invasion of Ukraine on providing assistance requested by the country's nuclear regulator to ensure the safety of its facilities, the agency's chief Rafael Grossi said on Wednesday. "I am in contact with all sides to ascertain in which effective way we could be providing this assistance. Since these consultations are ongoing I would not be in a position to tell you right now what kind or when this assistance is going to be delivered," Grossi told a news conference, adding that it could include sending staff. (Reporting by Francois Murphy; editing by John Stonestreet) New York officials are calling for a wider array of language options in severe weather alerts after Hurricane Idas floods disproportionately claimed Asian lives and devastated lower-income immigrant neighborhoods in September. State Attorney General Letitia James sent a letter Tuesday calling on the National Weather Service and the U.S. commerce secretary to expand emergency alert language beyond just English and Spanish. In the letter, she cited the alerts that were sent out ahead of Idas catastrophic rain, urging residents to find higher ground in preparation for the life-threatening flooding. But she said the messages didnt reach those who needed them the most. The storm caused 18 deaths in New York, and the majority of those individuals were of Asian descent and did not speak or had limited proficiency in English or Spanish, her office said in a news release. James letter cited reporting by NBC Asian America documenting Idas impact on Asian neighborhoods in the city, where families drowned in their basement apartments. She urged the weather service to make translations available in all the languages spoken by members of a region where a given severe weather event will happen. In New York City, she said, that would be Chinese, Russian, French Creole, Bengali and Korean, as well as Spanish. The Service has recognized that the failure to issue alerts in Spanish when it is commonly spoken in the impacted area has contributed to tragic loss of life, she wrote, adding, Hurricane Ida struck more than seven years after these critical recommendations, yet the Services alerts were not distributed in several languages commonly spoken in the impacted areas in New York City. Image: Ida flood clean-up (Mark Lennihan / AP file) The letter was endorsed by a variety of city and state officials, including U.S. Rep. Grace Meng, state Sen. John Liu, State Assembly member Yuh-Line Niou and New York City Council members Linda Lee, Sandra Ung and Julie Won. It is sad that a loss of life is what it takes in order for key weather service updates to be available to non-English speaking New York City communities, Meng said in the release. Story continues Nearly a quarter of Asian American immigrants live in poverty, and an estimated 13 percent are undocumented, city data show. And experts say even those statistics are underestimates. Queens neighborhoods affected by the flooding relied on local organizers and neighbors to help with translation efforts when it came to distributing food and providing shelter to victims. The day after the storm, nearly 500 people contacted Myoungmi Kim, the executive vice president of the Queens-based nonprofit group Korean Community Services of Metropolitan New York, or KCS. Although government assistance was available, she has said, it was difficult to navigate, especially because it was offered only in English. The day after the storm, so many people wanted to talk to me because of the KCS emergency fund distribution. But they couldnt speak because of their crying, Kim said in October. They just cried and kept crying and crying because they had lost everything. James said its clear that offering disaster alerts and services in more languages saves lives. With climate change, it will only become increasingly necessary, she wrote. As federal, state and local governments confront increasingly extreme weather tied to climate change, the Service plays a critical role in providing Americans with potentially life-saving warnings, she said. Fortunately, the widespread use of cellular and internet technology, in addition to the array of television broadcasts, including those in foreign languages, makes it possible for the Service to instantaneously reach more Americans in harms way than ever before. It is now up to individual day care facilities to decide whether or not masks are required. NEW DELHI (Reuters) -Indias foreign ministry on Wednesday urged Indian students in an advisory on Wednesday to immediately leave the northeastern Ukrainian city of Kharkiv that has come under heavy Russian bombardment. Russian air and rocket strikes pounded Kharkiv on Wednesday, almost a week into Russia's invasion of Ukraine, according to local emergency services. On Tuesday, an Indian student was killed by shelling in Kharkiv, while thousands remained trapped in the war zone. "We have issued this advisory based on inputs that the Russian side has given," foreign ministry spokesman Arindam Bagchi told reporters in New Delhi. He did not provide a specific number of Indian students in Kharkiv. The advisory said students must reach nearby cities and settlements by any means of transport or on foot by 1600 GMT, "under all circumstances" for their own safety. Kharkiv is Ukraine's second largest city with a population of 1.5 million people located near the Russian border. It has been heavily shelled by Russian forces, leaving its centre a bombed-out wasteland. Before the conflict began, Indians made up around a quarter of the 76,000 foreign students in Ukraine, by far the largest number, according to Ukrainian government data. The Indians in Kharkiv are mainly studying medicine. India has urged Russia and Ukraine to cease hostilities and stepped up demands for safe passage for its nationals. New Delhi has resisted pressure from allies such as the United States to condemn Moscow's invasion. (Reporting by Devjyot Ghoshal and Neha Arora;Editing by Sanjeev Miglani) NEW DELHI India is now gearing to counter the impact of new economic sanctions on Russia by the U.S. and Europe that could hamper armaments and military spares supplies from Moscow. Russia has been the largest arms supplier to India since the early 1970s. Today, 60% of Indias military hardware inventory is from Russia or the former Soviet Union and the bulk of Indias license-based defense manufacturing comes from Russia. Senior government and military officials and other experts told Defense News the sanctions, put in place after Russias invasion of Ukraine, will affect deliveries from Russia. Still, the officials, who are not authorized to speak to media, said there is no immediate threat to Indias defense preparedness as the armed forces have adequate reserves of Russian ammunition and spares. We are closely monitoring the impact of [financial] sanctions on Russian entities and how it will unfold [and affect] armament supplies from Russia in the future, one of the defense officials said. Defense officials said so far the Russian government has not officially said defense supplies to India will be delayed or stopped. Russian arms export agency Rosoboronexport executives here did not respond to requests for comment. India, which has ordered about $8 billion worth of military supplies from Russia, faces new uncertainty. Indian military officials said they expect short-term delays in deliveries of S-400 Triumf missile systems, Grigorovich-class stealth frigates, and Kalashnikov AK 203-7.62x39mm assault rifles, as well as spares supplies for Kilo-class submarines, MiG-29 fighters, and Kamov Mi-17 military transport helicopters. Big-ticket weapons in the pipeline like the S-400 missile system are likely to be delayed, said Satinder Kumar Saini, a military analyst and retired Indian Army lieutenant general. Defense officials noted the new sanctions will certainly halt the financial transactions of several Russian defense companies. This will have a direct impact on India as contracts between the two countries are valued using U.S. dollar calculations, but, in some cases, the payment is made through the rupee-ruble mechanism. Story continues India will now propose barter trade instruments for supplies of weapons and spares with Russian defense authorities, one of the officials added. Gopinathan Mohan Kumar, a former Indian defense secretary, told Defense News that even if spares for past procurements are not included in the list of sanctions, financial transactions will be seriously affected. Even before the present situation in Ukraine emerged, there were issues with spares and ammunition supply from the original equipment manufacturers. India today imports over 10,000 types of spares and line replacement units worth over $500 million annually from Russia. Defense officials acknowledged efforts to indigenize spares and line replacement units for Russian weapons and platforms to reduce the dependency on imports have not been very successful, mostly, they say, because local suppliers are not given long-term commitments. Vijainder Kumar Thakur, a Russian military expert and retired IAF wing commander, said in the short-term, its likely the supply of spares will be impacted. But, in the medium-turn, Indias close relations with Russia would help stabilize supply. Kumar said efficient maintenance of old equipment will depend on the inventories India has built up. Defense officials refused to say whether India will freeze payments to Russian defense manufacturers for ongoing defense supplies for past contracts. The Indian government has focused on self-reliance in defense manufacturing. Under this plan, India has already launched domestic manufacturing of diesel-electric submarines in strategic partnership with the original manufacturers, and medium-weight multirole fighters and naval utility helicopters are also planned. One defense official said a significant worry is the sanctions on Russian defense companies will lead to cost overruns and delays as many of the manufacturers could face bankruptcy and closure of their supply chains. The major casualties could be the production of over 600000 AK-203 7.62x39mm assault rifles in partnership with Kalashnikov Group, and the export of Brahmos cruise missile batteries to the Philippines. Planned pitches to Indonesia and Vietnam could also take a hit. Indias other ambitious projects for joint development of hypersonic missiles and an over-the-horizon surface radar system could face uncertainty, said a senior defense scientist who requested anonymity because hes not authorized to comment. India is also now unlikely to finalize any technology partnership agreement with Ukroboronprom, the umbrella corporation of Ukrainian defense companies for local production of sub-assemblies and spares for Soviet and Russian weaponry. One Indian Air Force official said it seems India will not ever get deliveries of Vympel R-27 air-to-air missiles and upgraded kits and sub-assembly for Antonov An-32 military transport aircraft from Ukraine because the factories could be destroyed in the ongoing Russian invasion. Indian armed forces also procured directly from Ukrainian defense companies limited quantities of LRUs and other spares for Russian BMP-2 infantry combat vehicles, Grad & Smerch multi-barrel rocket launcher systems and Mi-17V-5 helicopters. India is exploring alternatives from other countries, and procurement of 30 armed Sea Guardian drones through a foreign military sales deal with the U.S. is in process. An Indianapolis real estate investor who owned or managed hundreds of troubled rental properties across the city pleaded guilty to a fraud charge in federal court Tuesday, the Department of Justice announced. Herbert "Bert" Whalen, 47, made the plea during a video conference. The charge of conspiracy to commit wire fraud carries a maximum potential sentence of 20 years in prison and a fine of up to $250,000 or twice the gross loss or gain caused by the offense, whichever is more. Whalen preyed on "innocent victims desire to improve their own financial position through what they thought were sound investments, Philip R. Sellinger, U.S. Attorney for the District of New Jersey, said in a statement. The statement called the crime part of a "Ponzi scheme" to defraud investors nationwide, including in New Jersey. "These misrepresentations and others led to millions of dollars in losses to investors, which Whalen used to, among other things, fund his lifestyle," the statement said. Whalen's attorney, John Tompkins of Indianapolis, said his client is "glad to be moving forward and getting this episode of his life behind him." Whalen was indicted following an IndyStar investigative series in 2019 that examined his association with Clayton Morris, a former "Fox & Friends" co-host who left the show to promote his real estate investment business. Investors told IndyStar that Whalen and Morris misled them. People living in the homes Whalen owned or managed were routinely forced to endure deplorable conditions while he lived a lifestyle of luxury. It included a home on Geist reservoir once owned by former Gov. Mitch Daniels and a yacht in Florida. Morris has not been charged with a crime and was not named in the indictment or the statement from the U.S. Attorney's office. Whalen and Morris are also the subject of a pending civil lawsuit brought by the Indiana Attorney General's Office. David Hensel, an attorney for Morris, declined to comment on either case. Story continues Federal prosecutors said Whalen, who operated Oceanpointe Property Management in Indianapolis, concealed poor conditions at properties the company managed and failed to make promised repairs. He and an unnamed conspirator created fake leases for unoccupied homes to make it seem to investors that the properties were occupied and generating income for investors, prosecutors said. When investors asked to see the homes, "Whalen directed employees to cover the windows to conceal the poor condition of the properties and the fact that the properties remained vacant," according to the U.S. Attorney's office. "Whalen and others commingled tenant rent payments and selected which investors would be paid from the pool of funds in order to silence investors who voiced concerns and evade detection of the fraud." Prosecutors also alleged Whalen directed an employee to create a false identity online and falsely claim Oceanpointe had addressed all concerns regarding an investment property. Sentencing is scheduled for July 14. Contact Tim Evans at 317-444-6204 or tim.evans@indystar.com. Follow him on Twitter: @starwatchtim. Contact IndyStar reporter Tony Cook at 317-444-6081 or tony.cook@indystar.com. Follow him on Twitter: @IndyStarTony. This article originally appeared on Indianapolis Star: Indianapolis landlord Bert Whalen pleads guilty in federal fraud case element6 Dynamics nature-based solutions will transform one million acres of industrial hemp to impact global paper, plastics, and protein industries. SANTA FE, N.M. --News Direct-- element6 Dynamics element6 Dynamics CEO Kim Kovacs SANTA FE, N.M., March 2, 2022 /3BL Media/ - Santa Fe Farms, a company harnessing the power of science to regenerate our planet by addressing its serious carbon imbalance at scale, announced today that its new corporate identity will be element6 Dynamics. The new identity better reflects the companys position at the forefront of an industrial paradigm shift away from putting carbon into the atmosphere to taking carbon out. element6 Dynamics uses the industrial hemp plant to capture carbon from the atmosphere, locking it into its plant fibers and into the soil, where it has many beneficial effects including soil regeneration and the reduction of toxins. Industrial hemp grows rapidly in a wide range of conditions, sequestering large amounts of carbon while being rich in cellulose and other materials that make it an ideal and sustainable source of industrial fibers, oils, and plant-based proteins, which the company believes will particularly benefit the protein plastics and paper industries. element6 Dynamics nature-based solutions further impact the planet by reducing tree harvesting, hydrocarbon emissions, and livestock methane emissions. The company will be both a net-negative carbon business and an important source of nature-based carbon offsets used by enterprises seeking to reduce their carbon footprint to meet their ESG goals and/or regulatory requirements. Under the leadership of Executive Chairman Steven Gluckstern and CEO Kim Kovacs, element6 Dynamics has evolved from an organization with roots in farming to a carbon-centric company that will be a driving force in the creation of a new industry. Our opportunities have grown, and our focus has become clear, said element6 Dynamics CEO Kim Kovacs. We are creating an industry that will ultimately impact new technologies and products that are grounded in science and the realization of the power of hemp which is a climate-smart commodity. Story continues At the core of element6 Dynamics corporate focus will be dedicated to research and development, a commitment to cultivating over one million acres of industrial hemp, and the creation of 60 processing facilities that transform the crop into essential hemp-derived materials for major paper/pulp, plastics, and protein industries. Kovacs continued, We are challenging the imagination of scientists, leaders of industry, universities, and Capitol Hill to think differently, act differently and be a part of a movement to address the perishability of our planet. Our new name elevates our global brand position and mission, and reflects our commitment to bringing nature-based solutions to the planet. About element6 Dynamicselement6 Dynamics, formerly Santa Fe Farms, provides nature-based solutions to industry that accelerate the regeneration of the planet by addressing its serious carbon imbalance. Its large-scale cultivation of industrial hemp will sequester vast amounts of carbon and be processed into essential, value-added, hemp-derived materials for major paper/pulp, plastics, and animal feed manufacturers that further impact the planet by reducing tree harvesting, hydrocarbon emissions, and livestock methane emissions. The company will also be both a net-negative carbon business and an important source of nature-based carbon offsets used by enterprises seeking to reduce their carbon footprint to meet their ESG goals and/or regulatory requirements. For more information, visit element6dynamics.com. # # # View additional multimedia and more ESG storytelling from element6 Dynamics on 3blmedia.com View source version on newsdirect.com: https://newsdirect.com/news/industrial-hemp-leader-santa-fe-farms-rebrands-as-element6-dynamics-to-reflect-its-focus-on-addressing-earths-carbon-imbalance-at-scale-592019978 A Lake County judge set bail at $3 million Wednesday for a Grayslake man accused of inflicting 50 stab wounds on a man with whom he was in a relationship. Jesus I. Vargas, 29, appeared in court for an initial appearance on two counts of the first-degree murder of Brian Mahdee, 37, of Round Lake Beach. Advertisement After hearing a brief description of the alleged crime, Judge Theodore Potkonjak ordered Vargas held in lieu of $3 million bail. Authorities alleged that Vargas killed Mahdee Monday afternoon at a residence in the 2000 block of Apache Trail in Round Lake Beach. Advertisement A witness told police that Vargas and Mahdee arrived together at the residence, and that they and the witness were in the garage. Vargas and Mahdee, according to the witness, began arguing about the state of their relationship, and Vargas grabbed a knife and began repeatedly stabbing Mahdee about the face and chest, Assistant States Attorney Kelse Banks said. Vargas then cut his own arm with a box cutter, Banks said. Police estimate that Mahdee had approximately 50 wounds, the prosecutor said. An autopsy conducted by the coroners office confirmed that Mahdee died from multiple sharp force injuries. Vargas was taken to a hospital for treatment of his wound, police said, and was released Tuesday. He was interviewed by investigators and admitted stabbing the victim, according to Round Lake Beach police. Vargas told the judge that he would attempt to hire a private attorney, and Potkonjak set a March 23 hearing to get a status update. Vargas also has an outstanding warrant for failing to appear in court on a 2019 drug arrest that happened in Mundelein, according to court records. More Africans now suffer from chronic diseases such as diabetes and hypertension than ever before. A growing population and lifestyle changes, especially around urbanization and food habits, are significant factors that contribute to this sharp rise. This isnt an issue in developed markets, as healthcare systems change with the times to adequately provide healthcare when necessary. But in Africa, thats not the case, as most people do not have access to quality healthcare due to the ill-equipped nature of hospitals and lack of insurance. Healthtech startups across Africa, such as Ivory Coast- and French-based Susu are stepping up to fill this need. And in a bid to continue providing affordable and accessible healthcare for its customers in Ivory Coast, Senegal and Cameroon, the Ivorian startup is being backed with $1 million in pre-seed funding. The equity raise saw participation mainly from angel investors, as the company also raised $1.2 million in debt and grant financing from BPI France, the French governments public investment bank. Bola Bardet founded the company with Laurent Leconte (CTO) and Sandrine Egron (COO) after losing her father to complications from a chronic health condition due to poor management. My father died in 2017 after he had a heart issue in Benin and could not be saved. The health issue was a complication from his hypertension that was poorly managed, Bardet told TechCrunch over a call. At that moment, I was finishing my MBA at HEC Paris and the goal I set for myself was to try to prevent that happening to other people, maybe that will be something good that I can do in my life. So thats how the story started. Having worked in a luxury firm, as an investment banker at JP Morgan and her own consulting firm, Bardet decided to start Susu in 2019. Susu founders Susu founders Susu offers care packages or bundles to patients suffering from chronic diseases like diabetes and hypertension and pregnant women who require careful management to ensure their conditions are monitored and get the preventative advice to live the best way with their conditions. Story continues According to a few reports, the medical insurance penetration rate is less than 3% in Africa. While insurtech incumbents and upstarts such as CarePay and Reliance Health try to make insurance readily available for the rest of the market via partnerships with companies or by enabling weekly to monthly subscription charges, users are still required most times to pay out of pocket. Thats where Susu tends to be different. In addition to allowing patients to finance their bills, Susu proposes a collective financing solution where family members living locally or in the diaspora can also help patients finance their monthly subscription fees via care bundles. Care bundles are basically medical calendars composed of doctor consultations, nurse visits, medical advice sent by SMS and a combination of other medical activities for patients. A survey we carried out proved that family members are used to helping and supporting sick family relatives, and they are willing to do so. So its something that is already done today, lets say informally in our countries, said the chief executive on the companys strategy to allow family members of patients to pay for the healthcare of their loved ones. So these are the possibilities that are offered and we are today contemplating the possibility of having NGOs or government-funded programs contribute to the bundles, but its long term. With this model, Susu faces fresh competition from companies like Techstars-backed Fleri. The U.S.-based company allows immigrants to send money directly to services their families need back home. However, Susus approach is pretty unique, Bardet says. According to her, the company targets solely insurance, not a bunch of services, and provides a financial escape for those who cant afford it. The product seems to have resonated well with its 5,000-strong customer base, which grew 5x last year. Revenue also increased more than 400% in 2021, the company said. I have been following Susu since the beginning of the project. And I see its huge potential, focused on building a solution to provide access to affordable healthcare in Africa through technology, said Christopher Neves, one of Susus angel investors who has several years of experience working with multinational insurance companies. Susu intends to grow its team and introduce new features with its recent funding. Bardet also said the company would launch its services across six more countries in sub-Saharan Africa, including Nigeria and Ghana. Jacob Elordi has opened up about what its like filming his nude scenes on Euphoria. During an appearance on The Ellen DeGeneres Show on 1 March, host Ellen DeGeneres joked that Elordis character Nate was naked during most of his scenes. She then asked whether or not Elordi was consulted before filming his nude scenes. You have no choice, Elordi responded. Every scene is like, He sleeps with this person. He does this with this person naked. He went on to add that the crew on set has been the same since the first season, so getting naked in front of them is like getting naked in front of your family. Its always weird, he laughed. However, the Australian actor explained that the nakedness comes with the territory of the character. Jacob Elordi as Nate Jacobs in Euphoria' (Warner Media, LLC) Hes this ultra-masculine, macho jock. Those guys, I think, tend to go around pretty shirtless, so its sort of OK, Elordi said. He added that they have an intimacy coordinator on set whom he feels is like a second mother and frequently checks in with them. Shes like, Are you comfortable? Are you OK? To the point where youre like, Yeah, yeah, yeah. Im fine, Elordi said. Elordi isnt the first castmember to talk about the shows much-discussed nudity. In recent interviews, other actors including Sydney Sweeney, Minka Kelly, and Chloe Cherry have also discussed their experiences filming nude scenes on the show. Euphoria can be streamed on HBO Max and on Sky and NOW in the UK. TOKYO (Reuters) - Japan prepared on Wednesday to extend infection controls in some regions amid high numbers of hospital patients hit by the Omicron variant of COVID-19. The central government has received requests from five prefectures, including Osaka and Kyoto in western Japan, to extend measures set to expire on Sunday, Chief Cabinet Secretary Hirokazu Matsuno told reporters. Media said 10 prefectures, including Tokyo, the capital, were expected to seek an extension of two to three weeks for the curbs, which encompass shorter business hours and limits on the sale of alcohol. A panel of health experts will meet later on Wednesday to advise on the state of the coronavirus battle. Although new cases have trended down from last month's record, hospitals still struggle to treat a flood of patients with serious symptoms. February was the deadliest month with 4,856 fatalities, a tally by national broadcaster NHK showed. Most were elderly patients left vulnerable by a lagging vaccine booster effort that has covered just a fifth of the population. (Reporting by Rocky Swift) Affidavits describe behavior of Rep. Aaron Coleman, D-Kansas City, during a traffic stop in Douglas County in November. A Kansas Highway Patrol trooper pulled his gun in response to "erratic" behavior by Rep. Aaron Coleman during a traffic stop in Douglas County last year, according to court documents released Wednesday. Coleman was initially arrested for alleged driving under the influence, a charge that was eventually not pursued by the Douglas County district attorney. Instead, the Kansas City, Kan., Democrat faces two traffic violations speeding and failure to yield to an emergency vehicle. Sworn affidavits filed by Master Trooper Michael Hamilton don't shed light on why Coleman was initially booked for driving under the influence and don't describe field sobriety tests or blood tests being performed during or after the Nov. 27 traffic stop near Lawrence on the Kansas Turnpike. More: Rep. Aaron Coleman charged with traffic infractions in Douglas County incident; faces no further charges But Hamilton does describe Coleman's behavior as "erratic" and noted he didn't comply with verbal instructions to the point where the trooper requested backup from the Kansas Highway Patrol and Lawrence Police Department. While driving on the Turnpike over the Kansas River Bridge, Hamilton clocked a white Pontiac Grand Prix belonging to Coleman going 92-miles-per-hour in a 75-mile-per-hour zone. He also observed Coleman "straddling the yellow fog line and more than halfway into the left shoulder, even though the right turn signal was activated." More: Lawbreaking lawmakers remain in Kansas Legislature. Colleagues want to kick an accused one out. Upon the trooper turning on his lights and siren, Coleman did not immediately stop but instead pulled off to a nearby toll plaza, coming to a halt one minute and 50 seconds after Hamilton first initiated the traffic stop. After the vehicle stop, Coleman immediately exited his car with his hands raised, holding an unknown black object. "MSTrp Hamilton put his patrol car in reverse and quickly backed up to create distance before exiting his patrol car, drawing his pistol and holding it at the high ready position while ordering the driver to get back in the vehicle," the affidavit said. Story continues Coleman continued to hold the black object, which was identified as a cell phone, but did not get back in his car, instead saying "Ok! Ok, officer!" and placing the phone on the ground. He then placed both of his hands on his head while saying "Ok! Ok, man! Hands up! Don't shoot! What do you want?! What's going on?!" according to the affidavit. Hamilton said Coleman also did not respond to his command to walk to the rear of the car, instead walking "in a circle with his arms raised above his head while saying: 'Alright, man!'" After repeated instructions, Coleman eventually complied. Backup arrived at the scene and Coleman was then searched for weapons before being handcuffed and detained. In a text message to The Capital-Journal in December, Coleman said he was going to the Statehouse at the time of his arrest, although he did not indicate why. Coleman didn't immediately respond to a text Wednesday seeking comment. Kansas Democratic Party suspends Coleman related to string of alleged misbehavior Coleman's political career has been controversial, leading to members of his own party to call for his resignation or removal from office. The Kansas Democratic Party approved a resolution at their convention Saturday suspending Coleman for two years, effectively denying him access to party resources, though he was already largely ostracized within the party apparatus. A group of Democratic lawmakers filed a complaint against Coleman after his arrest in Douglas County, seeking his removal from the Legislature. A committee has been formed to investigate the matter, but Rep. John Barker, R-Abilene, who chairs that panel has said he wants to wait until Coleman's legal issues have been dealt with. Previously: Kansas Rep. Aaron Coleman arrested on domestic violence allegations in Johnson County The Douglas County charges come after Coleman was arrested and charged in Johnson County with misdemeanor domestic battery stemming from an altercation with his brother, where police records show the 21-year-old lawmaker allegedly hit and spit on his brother and made threatening remarks to his grandfather. Court records show Coleman applied for diversion last week, where charges could be dismissed as long as the 21-year-old complied with a set of restrictions. In October, the Kansas Department of Labor advised Coleman he was banned from its Topeka headquarters after allegedly attempting to access an employee-only area of the building and speaking to building security in a "loud and demanding tone." During the August 2020 partisan primary against former Rep. Stan Frownfelter last year, Coleman admitted to cyberbullying and revenge porn while in middle school, gaining national attention in the process. After Coleman defeated Frownfelter in the primary, an ex-girlfriend later came forward alleging he abused her, physically and verbally, while the pair dated in 2019 and that the harassment continued until his Kansas House bid in 2020. The Topeka woman said Coleman physically assaulted and threatened to kill her during their two-month relationship. Coleman was the subject of a restraining order from a staffer who worked for a former political rival, although the matter was settled and dropped by mutual agreement earlier this year. Andrew Bahl is a senior statehouse reporter for the Topeka Capital-Journal. He can be reached at abahl@gannett.com or by phone at 443-979-6100. This article originally appeared on Topeka Capital-Journal: Rep. Aaron Coleman erratic during November traffic stop, report says Mar. 2Anne-Marie McMahon watched the withdrawal of U.S. troops from Afghanistan last August with horror. Like many Americans, she was shocked and dismayed by the chaotic images that appeared on her television screen. Masses of desperate people descending on an airfield, looking for a way to get out. Afghans who had aided the U.S. suddenly in danger as the Taliban regained control of the country. There were widespread arrests. There were senseless killings. McMahon of Robeson Township watched it all unfold, feeling helpless. "Like so many people watching the new coverage of the withdrawal from Afghanistan, I was just devastated realizing that the path of destruction was so big," she said. Then, while reading an article in The New York Times, she found a possible answer. She discovered a way that she might be able to make a difference. Resettlement program McMahon was introduced to a new effort called the Sponsor Circle Program, which was created through a partnership between the U.S. Department of State and the Community Sponsorship Hub. The program enables groups of people to form "sponsor circles" to provide initial resettlement assistance to Afghans as they arrive and build new lives in communities across the U.S. The program is intended to allow greater flexibility and open more locations for refugees to set up new lives. But it's dependent on people submitting applications to host families and proving they have the resources to support them. As part of that application, they will commit to fundraising in order to financially support evacuees for up to three months, complete training and develop a plan for the family. If approved, the sponsor circle will then be responsible for a number of aspects related to resettlement. These include securing housing, supporting refugees as they seek benefits that are available to them through the federal government and helping to enroll children in school. To date, 103 sponsor circles have been certified in 28 states. They have provided welcoming and resettlement services for 357 Afghan refugees. Story continues McMahon was enthralled by the idea of being able to help Afghan refugees resettle in the U.S. Sense of responsibility She said she believes Americans have a moral responsibility to the people of Afghanistan who helped U.S. military forces that were there for the last 20 years. And she said she thought the way the American troops left the country put so many of those people at risk under the Taliban rule. McMahon figured that doing something locally to help could bring the community together and span the political divide. Her first move was a walk across the street in front of her house to Robeson Evangelical Lutheran Church to see if the people there wanted to play a role in the effort. They most certainly did. "It was really with the help of people at the Robeson Lutheran Church that our group got started, and that was purely a function of me not knowing many people in southern Berks County and thinking that there would surely be other people who would want to get involved," she said. One of the members of the church who eagerly jumped on board was Doug Metcalfe. "This effort just really spoke to me," he said. "This is just citizens of the world helping citizens of the world. These are individuals who were supporting freedom and democracy. And now, as local members of the community, if we can help a family resettle in Berks County, I'm happy to be involved with that effort." Other local organizations have joined the effort, including the Islamic Center of Reading. "Early on in this process, we reached out to the Islamic Center of Reading because we knew that if we were going to be welcoming an Afghan family the chances were great that they would be Muslim and that they would appreciate connections to the local Muslim community," McMahon said. But just having a group of people and organizations willing to pitch in isn't enough. The Sponsor Circle of Greater Reading also needs money. In order to apply for the Sponsor Circle Program, a local group must secure 60% of the cost to resettle refugees. The Berks group which now consists of 10 people is hoping to resettle a family of five, and at $2,275 per refugee that totals $11,375. So they must raise at least $6,825. That's why the group is teaming up with Wyomissing Family Restaurant & Bakery for a fundraising event. Tickets are being sold for all-you-can-eat dinners at the restaurant on Tuesday. "Once we have this money, we can finalize our application and hopefully get matched with a family that needs our help," Metcalfe said. "We're hoping that this fundraiser gets us to that mark." McMahon said she believes the Berks group is well positioned to sponsor a family given that the city boasts two mosques, that the county has a growing diverse population and has support from various community partners. While the initial 76,000 Afghan refugees have been placed, thousands more are still waiting to be approved for resettlement and are in need of safety. And those still in Afghanistan remain in danger and need help. "As we watch certain events unfold around the world, when you see the fear and oppression that people are facing it is very hard not to feel for what these people are going through," Metcalfe said. "Their lives are being upended and they risk their safety by staying behind." If you want to help The Sponsor Circle of Greater Reading is hoping to resettle an Afghan refugee family in Berks County. The Wyomissing Family Restaurant & Bakery is sponsoring a dinner to raise funds for the cause, with 100% of the proceeds going to the group to cover the costs of getting the family situated with housing, food, transportation and other basic needs. When: Tuesday from 4 to 8 p.m. Where: Wyomissing Family Restaurant & Bakery, 1245 Penn Ave. How much: Tickets cost $20 with 100% of the proceeds going toward the resettlement effort. To purchase tickets Visit: AfghanCircleReading.Eventbrite.com Send an email to: AfghanCircleReading@gmail.com Call: 484-336-0935 (AFP via Getty Images) Over a year after filing for divorce from Kanye West, Kim Kardashian is now legally single. A judge granted Kardashians request to end her marriage from West, 44, also known as Ye, on 2 March at the Los Angeles Superior Court. As noted by Billboard, the ruling means the couples marriage will be legally ended immediately, while more detailed questions regarding their assets and custody of their four children will be addressed at future proceedings. Kardashian attended the hearing through a video conference while her divorce lawyer, Laura Wasser, appeared in person. West did not attend, but was represented by his attorney, Samantha Spector. Last month, West objected Kardashians request to be legally single, claiming that it could create a risk of adverse consequences and that it creates barriers to obtaining evidence if one of them decide to remarry before the case is closed. During the hearing, Wasser argued against Wests demands, while the judge also said that Wests objections appeared to be theoretical. Spector noted they werent trying to stop Karadashian from being legally single, but just trying to make sure that Mr Wests rights were protected. According to the outlet, the judge ultimately denied two of Wests requests, including one that placed a restriction on Kardashian if she ever chose to remarry. One of Wests requests was granted, regarding what would happen to their children - North, eight, Saint, six, Chicago, four, and Psalm, two - if either of their parents die before their divorce is finalised. The day before the hearing, West made changes to his legal team. In a statement shared with People, Wests divorce attorney, Chris Melcher, confirmed that he was no longe representing the musician. While Kardashian first filed this divorce back in February 2021, after six years of marriage, the reality star recently opened up about how ready much she was to be legally single in her court documents. I very much desire to be divorced, she said in the documents obtained by Billboard. I have asked Kanye to keep our divorce private, but he has not done so. Kanye has been putting a lot of misinformation regarding our private matters and co-parenting on social media, which has created emotional distress. I believe that the Court terminating our marital status will help Kanye to accept that our marital relationship is over and to move forward on a better path which will assist us in peacefully co-parenting our children, she added. More recently, Kardashian has been dating comedian Pete Davidson. Last month, Wests relationship with actress Julia Fox ended, after almost two months together. Kroger Co. plans to distribute groceries throughout Northeast Ohio from a distribution center planned for construction in Oakwood in southern Cuyahoga County. Although it hasn't had any grocery stores in the area since 1985, Kroger Co. is planning to return to Northeast Ohio as a delivery service, the company announced this week. A 270,000-square-foot, $100 million customer fulfillment center would be built in Oakwood, on the Summit County border in southeast Cuyahoga County. Plans are for construction on just over 28 acres at the Alexander Road and Macedonia Road. The company said the facility will deliver to northeastern Ohio and Pennsylvania and is expected to become operational 24 months after the construction begins. A start date for construction was not immediately available. On Tuesday, the Ohio Tax Credit Authority approved a 1.551%, eight-year Job Creation Tax Credit for the project. The credit is performance-based, calculated as a percent of created payroll and applied toward the company's commercial activity tax liability. Kroger expects to create 400 full-time positions, generating $18 million in new annual payroll. A development agreement still must be approved by Oakwood Village Council. However, that agreement could be subject to amendment, Oakwood Mayor Gary Gottschalk said. "There's been no agreement signed, and in fact Kroger doesn't even own the land yet," he said. "Kroger is clearly interested in putting up a facility in the Cleveland area." Kroger plans to offer same-day and next-day home-delivery service. Oakwood named for new facility: Grocery giant Kroger looks to re-enter Northeast Ohio market with delivery services Regional delivery system The automated warehouse will be operated by the U.K.-based Ocado Group, and will combine machine learning and robotics in its operation. The business development agencies JobsOhio and Team NEO helped facilitate the plan. Luke Jensen, CEO of Ocado Solutions, said the facility "will allow Kroger to achieve the lowest cost-to-serve in the market, combined with the best freshness, accuracy and service in grocery delivery." A 270,000 square-foot automated warehouse will be the center of Kroger Co.'s regional grocery delivery service. JobsOhio President and CEO J.P. Nauseef said the facility is Kroger Fulfillment Network's second hub distribution facility in the state. Story continues The service also will help improve access to fresh food in communities without physical stores, he said. First of 20 centers built in Cincinnati: Inside Kroger's big bet on growing home delivery this spring In 2018, Kroger and Ocado announced their plans to establish a delivery network that combines artificial intelligence, advanced robotics and automation. The first automated fulfillment center opened outside Cincinnati in April, followed by centers in Groveland, Florida, and near Atlanta. How will Kroger's distribution center and delivery work? A news release describing the center operations says more than 1,000 robots on a giant 3D grid, known as "The Hive" carry products and customer orders. The central hub in Oakwood will serve delivery in areas up to 90 miles away, according to Kroger Co. As customer orders near their delivery times, the robots deliver items to packing stations to be sorted. Computer algorithms ensure fragile items are placed on top, bags are evenly weighted and each order is optimized to fit into the lowest number of bags to reduce plastic use. After being packed, groceries are loaded into a refrigerated delivery van, which can store up to 20 orders. Algorithms optimize delivery routes, considering factors such as road conditions and optimal fuel efficiency, according to Kroger. Vans may travel up to 90 miles to make deliveries. Associates at remote spoke facilities will deliver orders within their service areas. Initial service areas will be expanded by ZIP code as demand grows, the release said. Eric Marotta can be reached at 330-541-9433, or emarotta@gannett.com. Follow him on Twitter @MarottaEric. This article originally appeared on Akron Beacon Journal: Kroger's regional grocery distribution hub in Oakwood gets tax break On February 25, 2022, Ambassador Qin Gang had a talk with members of the Board of Directors of the US-China Business Council (USCBC) in Los Angeles. The talk was chaired by Ambassador Craig Allen, President of the USCBC, and attended by some of its Board member companies. During the discussion, Ambassador Qin pointed out that this year marks the 50th anniversary of President Nixon's visit to China. His visit was a "week that changed the world", when China and the United States issued the Shanghai Communique, which started the normalization of relations between the two countries and changed the international strategic landscape. Its far-reaching impact lasts till today. Looking back to 50 years ago, there was almost no US companies operating in China. Now the two countries are each other's most important economic and trade partner, and their interests are deeply intertwined. The business community has always been an important force to rely on at a difficult time for bilateral relations. China stays committed to high-standard opening-up, and will keep improving foreign investment environment. China has always been sincere in developing win-win trade relations with the US, and has taken consistent policies and solid measures to do so. We welcome US companies growth in China and wish them well, so they can share in the dividends of China's development. During the Q&A session, Ambassador Qin updated the attendees about China's latest industry policies and addressed their questions and concerns. Rep. Lauren Boebert (R-CO) attempted to make Tuesday nights State of the Union address all about herselfonly to get booed by her colleagues as President Joe Biden solemnly talked about his son dying of cancer and military veterans suffering from burn pit exposure. Towards the end of his speech, the president turned his attention to an issue that has drawn bipartisan support and attention: increased care for soldiers who have suffered the effects of toxic exposure. As he announced his plans to provide health care and disability compensation for military members whove become ill due to breathing in toxic smoke from burn pits, Biden began explaining how this was a personal issue for him. Many of you have been there. I've been in and out of Iraq and Afghanistan over 40 times. These burn pits that incinerate waste, the waste of war, medical, and hazardous material, jet fuel, and so much more, he stated. And they come home, many of the world's fittest and best-trained warriors in the world, never the same. Headaches, numbness, dizziness. A cancer that would put them in a flag-draped coffin. Here's the moment where Lauren Boebert was booed for shouting that Biden put soldiers in flag-draped coffins -- all while the president was talking about his veteran son dying of cancer and how it potentially could have been due to burn pits. pic.twitter.com/fJzsPwkQza Justin Baragona (@justinbaragona) March 2, 2022 In a moment that went miles beyond GOP Rep. Joe Wilsons notorious 2009 you lie outburst, Boebert shouted that Biden was the one who had put Americans into those flag-draped coffins. You put them in, 13 of them, she yell, referencing the terror attack during last years chaotic Kabul withdrawal that left 13 American soldiers dead. Her heckling immediately drew loud jeers from Democratic lawmakers. Making the matter more cringeworthy, Boeberts shouted comments came just as the president mentioned the death of his son, a military veteran. Story continues Newsweeks Rightward Swing Has Kushner Written All Over It I know. One of those soldiers was my son, Major Beau Biden, the president continued. I don't know for sure if the burn pit that he lived near that his hooch was near in Iraq and earlier than that in Kosovo is the cause of his brain cancer, the disease of so many other troops, but I am committed to find out everything we can. He then began honoring affected soldiers and their families, who happened to be in attendance for the State of the Union. Elsewhere in the speech, Boebert and fellow MAGA troll Rep. Marjorie Taylor Greene (R-GA)who was also seen mouthing that Biden is a fucking idiot as the president spokeattempted to get a Build the wall! chant going after the president praised border security, only to find no takers. Read more at The Daily Beast. Get the Daily Beast's biggest scoops and scandals delivered right to your inbox. Sign up now. Stay informed and gain unlimited access to the Daily Beast's unmatched reporting. Subscribe now. The irony of Regina Health Center is that few, if any, staff will need religious exemptions when the federal vaccine mandate hits health care workers this month. More than 97% of staff at the faith-based facility in Richfield had at least started their COVID-19 vaccination by the end of January. "Were vaccinators," said Administrator Mark Yantek, who estimated that, even before the pandemic, 85% of his employees got flu shots every year. "We encourage everybody to do the right thing. Roll up your sleeves. It's for the residents. And that is just part of a culture of people who get it, he said. Trilogy Health Services owns The Oaks at Bethesda and The Oaks at Northpointe, both in Zanesville. The two facilities have an employee vaccination rate of 95% and 87% respectively. The Bethesda location's 95% is the highest in Muskingum County. The vaccine mandate covers 10.4 million health care workers nationwide, Other facilities aren't looking as fortunate. As of Jan. 30, Ohio had the second-lowest vaccination rate in the nation for staff in Medicare-certified nursing homes and rehabilitation centers. Only Missouri has a worse rate. Under a new Centers for Medicare & Medicaid Services (CMS) rule, millions of health care workers had until Feb. 14 to get the single dose COVID-19 vaccine or the first shot of the two-dose vaccines. Allowing time for the second shot, CMS has set March 15 as the final deadline for all staff to be vaccinated. Without a religious or medical exemption, unvaccinated workers could face dismissal when facilities with unvaccinated employees risk falling out of compliance with CMS and potentially losing Medicare and Medicaid reimbursements. Facilities have been busy educating staff on the added protection the vaccine affords them and the elderly or disabled residents they serve. Some have incentivized employees with gift cards. Many are streamlining the process for applying for exemptions. Story continues But it doesnt appear the push for vaccinations hasn't gotten through. At the average nursing home or rehabilitation center in Ohio, about 70% of employees were fully vaccinated (and 73% at least partially vaccinated) by the end of January. Nonprofit nursing homes, especially facilities with religious ties, have the highest vaccination rates. As a group, 77% of staff, on average, were fully vaccinated against COVID-19 by the end of January, compared with 68% of staff at Ohio's for-profit facilities. Government-run nursing homes split the difference at 72%, according to a Beacon Journal analysis of CMS data. Made with Flourish Vaccine uptake stalls in Ohio The U.S. Supreme Court last month upheld CMS vaccine mandate for health care workers while conservative justices in the majority struck down a broader Occupational Safety and Health Administration rule requiring vaccines for other private sector employers. The mandate took effect in 25 states on Jan. 28. Ohio bought itself a couple months as part of a group of states that filed for an injunction before the Supreme Court ruled on the administrative order. The mandate puts pressure on front-line workers whove refused the shots for nearly a year. It could also exacerbate staffing issues at already understaffed facilities, especially in heavily unvaccinated states like Ohio. More than 1 in 4 nursing homes in the United States lost at least 60% of their employees last year, according to CMS. With the vaccine mandate looming, little progress was made in January to avoid losing more staff. Of the 904 Medicare-certified nursing homes and rehabilitation centers in Ohio that reported staff vaccination rates at the beginning and end of January, rates went down or didnt budge for 406 facilities. The statewide average for fully vaccinated staff inched up from 68% to 70%. Area nursing homes fare better with vaccination rates "Virtually every person living in a nursing home is at a medical disadvantage or risk, based on age or comorbidities," said Dr. Jack Butterfield, medical director of the Zanesville-Muskingum County Health Department. Since most residents don't often travel from the facility they live in, the virus is most often carried in by employees, he said, many times without symptoms. According to data from the CMS for the week ending Feb. 6, the most recent data available Continuing Healthcare at Sterling Suites reported 78% of residents were vaccinated with 42% boosted. The staff had a vaccination rate of 40.9% with 0% boosted. There were 44 COVID-19 cases among residents, with 23 cases among staff. Other facilities: Oaks at Bethesda reported 94% of residents vaccinated, with 84% boosted. The staff vaccination rate was 95%, with 8.2% boosted. There were 12 cases of COVID-19 among residents, 16 among staff. Altercare Zanesville, 76% of residents vaccinated, 63% of boosted; staff vaccination rate of 56%, 26% boosted; 107 cases among residents, six deaths among residents, 70 cases among staff, 0 staff deaths. Continuing Healthcare at Cedar Hill, 82.9% of residents vaccinated, 55% boosted; staff vaccination rate of 75.3%, 0% boosted; 78 COVID-19 cases among residents, 14 deaths, 46 cases among staff, 0 staff deaths. Continuing Healthcare at Willowhaven, 78% residents vaccinated, 70% boosted; staff vaccination rate of 80.4%, 17.8% boosted; 94 COVID-19 cases with 12 deaths among residents, 60 cases and 0 deaths among staff. Becket House, 73% of residents vaccinated, 45% boosted; staff vaccination rate of 71%, 20% boosted; 98 COVID-19 resident cases with 18 deaths, 79 COVID-19 staff cases, 0 deaths. Oaks at Northpointe, 84.4% of residents vaccinated, 98% boosted; staff vaccination rate of 87%, 6.2% boosted; 87 COVID-19 resident cases with 2 deaths, 15 COVID-19 staff cases. SKLD New Lexington, 90.3% of residents vaccinated, 62.5% boosted; staff vaccination rate of 59%, boosted 37%; 52 COVID-19 resident cases with 8 deaths, 87 COVID-19 staff cases. Continuing Healthcare at Adams Lane, 87.2% of residents vaccinated, 84% boosted; staff vaccination rate of 74%, boosted 29.7%; 89 COVID-19 resident cases with 16 deaths, 75 COVID-19 staff cases. Highland Oaks McConnelsville, 79% of residents vaccinated, 26% boosted; staff vaccination rate of 87%, 29% boosted; 30 COVID-19 resident cases with 4 deaths, 14 COVID-19 staff cases. "We made the decision in April of 2021 to make the COVID-19 vaccination a condition of employment for our employees," said Trilogy CEO Leigh Ann Barney. The company set a late-summer deadline, depending on the location, and held vaccination clinics on-site. "We felt being in the health care business, particularly long-term care, and knowing the effects of COVID-19 to our industry and residents, it was the only truly safe way to operate," she said, "to make sure as many of employees are possible are vaccinated." The company recruited to fill the positions vacated by employees who declined to get the vaccination and did not qualify for a medical or religious exemption, Barney said, and, despite some staff turnover, the process was not disruptive to service. Reach reporter Doug Livingston at dlivingston@thebeaconjournal.com or 330-996-3792. Times Recorder reporter Chris Crook contributed to this article. This article originally appeared on Akron Beacon Journal: Ohio nursing homes second worst in US with as vaccine mandate begins A stack of direct fit catalytic converters for domestic truck exhaust systems at ACAT Global LLC in Charlevoix on Sept. 29, 2020. A man arrested last year on suspicion of stealing over 100 catalytic converters pleaded guilty to owning and operating a chop shop, third-degree burglary and shoplifting. Detectives from the Tempe Police Department Special Investigations Bureau arrested then 40-year-old Justin Dunkins at his Scottsdale home on March 9, 2021 where they found additional evidence of his involvement. Investigators estimated Dunkins stole between six and 20 catalytic converters per week. Dunkins pleaded guilty to the three counts in exchange for having two third-degree burglary charges and an additional operating chop shop charge dropped. He was sentenced in June 2021 to 8.5 years in prison, according to court documents. Dunkins is serving time at Red Rock Correctional Center, a private prison in Eloy, and is scheduled to be released on April 5, 2028 according to the Arizona Department of Corrections, Rehabilitation and Reentry. There has been a rise of catalytic converter thefts over the past two years. A study from BeenVerified states in Arizona there were 30 catalytic converter thefts in 2019, 142 in 2020 and 2,046 in 2021. Catalytic converters contain metals such as platinum, palladium, and rhodium, all of which have gone up exponentially in value. The theft of this part can be done in minutes and it can be sold to recyclers for $50 to $250 each, according to BeenVerified. The cost to repair catalytic converters is between $1,000 and $3,000. More: Chandler police arrest three men in connection to many catalytic converter thefts Reach the reporter Perry Vandell at 602-444-2474 or perry.vandell@gannett.com. Follow him on Twitter @PerryVandell. Support local journalism. Subscribe to azcentral.com today. This article originally appeared on Arizona Republic: Man suspected of stealing over 100 catalytic converters pleads guilty Ukraines government blasted Cubas support for the Russian invasion, as the islands government opposed efforts to condemn the attack at the United Nations and even arrested a Cuban activist who left flowers at the Ukrainian Embassy in Havana as a sign of solidarity. In a diplomatic note, Ukraine formally complained and expressed its strong protest against the statements of the Government of Cuba in support of Russias aggression against Ukraine, the countrys deputy foreign minister, Emine Dzheppar, tweeted in Spanish on Sunday. She said her government called on Cuba to urge Russia to put an end to this aggression. Although it has called for a diplomatic resolution, the Cuban government has not condemned the invasion and instead has blamed the United States for the current conflict. Cuban state media has hidden the true extent of the attack and has repeated Russian propaganda claims about the demilitarization and denazification of Ukraine as the goals of the military operation. But risking detention, many Cubans have rejected the war on social media and in messages to the Ukrainian Embassy in Havana. The volume of the calls has been so extraordinary, the embassy said, that it asked Cubans to send their messages of support to a dedicated email address to clear the phone lines for those seeking information about their family members trapped in Ukraine. To all those friends and brothers who wish to express their solidarity with Ukraine, we really feel your support, every call from you is important to us, and it really moves us to tears, the embassy said. More than 300 members of Cubas independent civil society signed a statement supporting the Ukrainian people, activist Saily Gonzalez said. The letter was sent to the embassy via email on Sunday. We have seen with dismay how the Cuban state, which claims to defend the inalienable rights and sovereignty of the peoples of the world, has not condemned the Russian military intervention in Ukraine, the statement said. We denounce the illegal actions of the Russian Federation. Story continues The signers condemned the imperialist war and urged the Cuban government to review its position. A Cuban activist, Pablo Enrique Delgado Hernandez, was detained and interrogated Saturday after leaving roses at the Ukrainian Embassy in Havana in a show of solidarity. A Ukrainian diplomat had to escort him and pick up the flowers because the Cuban security officers guarding the embassy did not allow him to get closer to the building, Delgado Hernandez said on Twitter after he was arrested. As Ukrainian forces were resisting the attack on Saturday, the Cuban government lamented the deaths of civilians. Still, Cuba said Russia has a right to defend itself against U.S. threats in a statement that decried hypocrisy and double standards. Cubas representative to the United Nations repeated those claims in an emergency session of the U.N. General Assembly discussing the invasion on Tuesday as Russian carpet bombing of residential areas in several Ukrainian cities continued. History will hold the U.S. government accountable for the consequences of an increasingly offensive military doctrine outside NATOs borders, which threatens international peace, security and stability, said Pedro Luis Pedroso Cuesta, Cubas ambassador to the U.N. The Cuban official also suggested that his country would oppose a proposed resolution condemning Russia. Cubas statements also drew condemnation from the U.S. Embassy in Havana, which called the Cuban governments efforts to blame the military aggression on the U.S. false rhetoric. Russia bears full responsibility for its premeditated invasion of Ukraine and the resulting catastrophic loss of life, the embassy tweeted Monday in Spanish. Efforts to shift responsibility from Russia to the U.S. and NATO have no credibility and are a form of disinformation. Cuba also voted Monday with Russia, China and Venezuela against a resolution to discuss the attack in an emergency meeting of the U.N. Human Rights Commission. Later that day, Cubas foreign minister received a barrage of criticism and insults after tweeting that Cuba is committed to International Humanitarian Law and calls on all parties to protect the civilian population, their property and civilian infrastructure in Ukraine. The islands authorities have not said how many Cubans are in Ukraine, how many have evacuated or are still in danger. The website of the Cuban Embassy in Kyiv was down on Tuesday and the embassy has not updated its Facebook page since December. Many Cuban nationals are also stranded in Russia after its airline, Aeroflot, canceled flights to Cuba following international sanctions and prohibitions to use the airspace of several European countries. Russia is one of the few countries that does not require Cubans to apply for a travel visa, and many Cubans travel there to emigrate or buy products to sell back on the island, where scarcities of food and goods are rampant. Social media chatter among Cubans about Ukraines lifting visa requirements for all foreigners wanting to fight against Russia was picking up on Tuesday. As the Cuban economy sinks and the crackdown on civil liberties continues, thousands of Cubans have recently left the island through countries that do not ask Cubans for travel visas. The Ukrainian Embassy in Havana promptly clarified that Cubans would need transit visas to reach Ukraine by land through a neighboring European country. Follow Nora Gamez Torres on Twitter: @ngameztorres Marjorie Taylor Greene and Lauren Boebert heckled Joe Biden during his State of the Union speech, yelling build the wall, build the wall as the president discussed immigration. The pair continued throughout the entire address; starting by appearing to turn their backs as the president entered the chamber and continuing through tweets, shouts and personal attacks. About halfway through his speech, Mr Biden pivoted from talking about his Supreme Court nomination to immigration reform. Folks, if were going to advance liberty and justice, we need to secure our border and fix the immigration system, he said. As the pair continued chanting build the wall, Mr Biden continued, saying: As you might guess I think we can do both. It came after the pair either turned their back on the president as he entered the chamber, or appeared slightly lost, according to some observers. Ms Boebert shouted thats right when Mr Biden spoke out against defunding the police, while New Republic writer Grace Segers noted that Ms Taylor Green yelled at Biden during a passage on transgender children. They just look slightly lost pic.twitter.com/Cz18xVd5Xu Molly Jong-Fast (@MollyJongFast) March 2, 2022 Boebert gets hushed and called shame when she claims that Biden put Americans in flag-draped coffins...right before he mentioned his son who died of cancer, Ms Segers observed. When Mr Biden began talking about the burn pits that gave his son Beau Biden cancer, Ms Boebert interrupted to shout about the 13 soldiers killed during the withdrawal of Afghanistan. Boebert gets hushed and called shame when she claims that Biden put Americans in flag-draped coffins...right before he mentioned his son who died of cancer. Grace Segers (@Grace_Segers) March 2, 2022 They come home, many of the worlds fittest and best-trained warriors in the world, never the same, headaches, numbness, dizziness, a cancer that would put them in a flag-draped draped coffin. I know, Mr Biden said. Story continues During a pause, Ms Boebert shouted 13 of them. One of those, Mr Biden continued, speaking about a different casualty of war. One of those soldiers was my son. When Biden said flag draped coffins I couldn't stay silent. I told him directly he did it. He put 13 in there. Our heroic servicemen and women deserve so much better. Lauren Boebert (@laurenboebert) March 2, 2022 Ms Boebert was unapologetic after the speech, saying she couldnt stay silent when Mr Biden mentioned flag-draped coffins. Our heroic servicemen and women deserve so much better, she added. Joe Biden wants us to tackle mental health. I agree. We must start with the presidency. Rep. Marjorie Taylor Greene (@RepMTG) March 2, 2022 Ms Taylor Greene joined the heckling as the president turned to mental health policy, calling for full parity between coverage for physical and mental health care. Joe Biden wants us to tackle mental health. I agree. We must start with the presidency, she tweeted. Requiem, a forthcoming movie bringing together Chinese and Japanese artists, is scheduled to open across domestic theaters on March 25. The movie, adapted from the novel of the same name by Zhou Daxin, a winner of the Mao Dun Literature Prize, tells a fathers grief over the death of his only son. With a cast including veteran actor Wei Zi as the father and award-winning actress Chen Jin as the mother, the film is directed by Taro Hyugaji and written by Motofumi Tomikawa, both established Japanese artists known for excelling at depicting delicate emotions. This is a film for parents all over the world who have lost children to illness or disasters. The movie is soothing, redemptive and gives (audiences) the courage to confront death, said Zhou, a native of Henan province, in a written speech released during the movies premiere held at the China Film Archive on Sunday. Ming Zhenjiang, chairman of the China Film Producers Association, said the movie has boosted cultural exchange between China and Japan and reminds people to cherish those they love. Mark Martin's eye injury is one of the worst we've seen all year. Photo by PFL MMA fighter Mark Martin suffered one of the nastiest injuries of the year so far. The American was hit, and then blew his nose, blowing his eye out of the socket. See a photo and video from the incident right here, but be warned, it is graphic. An MMA fighter's eye popped out of his socket when he got hit and then blew his nose during a recent Professional Fighters League match Friday at Universal Studios in Orlando, Florida. Mark Martin was competing against Dilano Taylor in a welterweight fight during the four-bout PFL Challenger Series 2 card, designed to funnel promising talent into the full PFL season that begins April 20. The 28-year-old American's bout was waved off after the first round after the referee consulted a doctor because of an eye injury. It was quickly apparent Martin's left eye was protruding from his skull, and seemed to be in a near-detached state. WARNING: Graphic See a photo and video from the incident right here: Mark Martin suffered a nasty-looking eye injury Friday. Photo by PFL AJ Ariosa, a manager at First Round Management, represents Martin and told MMA Junkie that it all happened because the pressure from blowing his nose caused his eye to blow out. "It's looking like he's going to be good to go," Ariosa said. "No surgery." Martin was advised not to fly home from Florida because "air pressure in the plane could move the fracture," which could cause the fighter greater discomfort. They instead began a 2,200 mile cross-country drive to Arizona. Elsewhere on the card, Chris Mixan beat Nathan Pierce in the second round with punches, Carlos Leal Miranda finished Korey Kuppe in the opening round, and Jarrah Al-Silawi defeated Michael Lilly with a knee. Read the original article on Insider Sarah Hyland, at the 2021 People's Choice Awards, talks about managing her chronic illness while starring on Modern Family. (Photo: Rich Polk/E! Entertainment/NBCUniversal/NBCU Photo Bank via Getty Images) Sarah Hyland says there are entire episodes of Modern Family that she doesn't remember shooting because her chronic illness depleted her energy. The actress, 31, reunited with TV mom Julie Bowen, host of Quitters Podcast, to share how she's been feeling as of late now four years after her second kidney transplant and reflect on how her health struggles impacted her tenure on their hit show, which ended its 11-year run in 2020. "I'm well," Hyland said of her health today. "Everything's stable. I haven't left the house in a very long time right now, but everything is stable as of now." Hyland was born with kidney dysplasia, a condition in which the kidneys dont fully develop in the womb. She had two transplants: First when she was 21 with her father's kidney. After her body rejected it, she quietly had a second transplant, at age 26, with her younger brother's kidney. And those were just transplants she had over 15 surgeries in all for her kidney condition. Both transplants took place while Hyland was starring as Haley Dunphy on the ABC comedy. On the podcast, she talked about often being in excruciating pain on the set and suffering from exhaustion. "There are some episodes of Modern Family where I do not remember filming because I was asleep," she said. "Dead ass asleep. The episode where Haley asked [Luke for] money and he's like, 'Don't worry, I've got it on ice.' It's in the freezer or something. The entire episode I was asleep," referring to Oct. 2011's "Hit and Run." "You have to be a certain level of sick in order to receive a transplant. I was reaching that certain level of sick," she said prior to her first transplant. "I was not able to be awake for eight hours at a time. I was so exhausted. So I'd be on the set, I'd be dead asleep, my head on the table, I would hear, 'and...'" before "action" the cue taping was to begin and her head would shoot up and she'd deliver her lines. When they cut, she'd fall back asleep. Story continues Bowen and Hyland filming an episode of Modern Family in 2010. (Photo: Michael Desmond/Disney General Entertainment Content via Getty Images) Bowen recalled Hyland being "doubled over" in pain while shooting "The Old Wagon" episode in 2010. "I will never forget 'What's the plan, Phil?' [on location at L.A.'s] Griffith Park," Bowen said. "It was cold. [Hyland's] wearing a Haley special like a Vegas skirt. The sun had set... She's a small girl to begin with and she had kidney issues." When they were told they needed another take, Bowen privately asked Hyland, who was doubled over with hot packs on her kidneys, to see if she had one in her. She said Hyland got up "like a robot" to do the scene. "She [was] in a lot of pain, but you'd always turn it on when you needed to take care of business." "I never really said no," Hyland replied. Bowen added, "You never really said no until you were in the hospital." Hyland said the first five years of being on Modern Family, the show was "a nice escape" from her medical woes. However, after her body rejected her first donor kidney and it was removed, her health greatly declined. With no kidney function, she was on dialysis three times a week for a year while still taping the show. It was then, when she was so sickly, that she had suicidal thoughts, ahead of her second transplant in 2017. Julie Bowen and Sarah Hyland at the 22nd Annual Critics' Choice Awards in 2016. (Photo: Kevin Mazur/WireImage) "'What if this happens again?'" Hyland recalled of her worry that her body would reject a second donor kidney. "Plus, [my donor brother] is so young. What do I do?' That's where I felt suicidal. I would avoid going into [organ] rejection and being on dialysis [again] at all costs." She said her thoughts were a culmination of "years and years and years" of chronic illness. "Twenty-seven years of almost always being in pain," she said. "Always being in and out of the hospital. I don't think I've gone more than one or two years without being hospitalized." It was "exhaustion of fighting because it's draining," she said. "Just energetically I was like, 'This is just hard for me to do anymore. And it would just be easier for everyone else too,'" as she felt like a burden to her loved ones. Video: Sarah Hyland describes her two kidney transplants It was also years of masking her pain. "When you have grown up your entire life having health issues and always being pain, you have to learn how to have thick skin, put on a show ... otherwise you're just going to be looked at as a really weak and pathetic and sad person," she said. "I don't like to victimize myself. I don't like other people to victimize me. I had almost 27 years of putting on a show, whether it was on Broadway or in my family living room." Hyland said she was proud of herself after revealing her depression in 2019. "I've had people write to me saying thank you for talking about this," she said. In the interview, Hyland also spoke about media pressure to discuss her health publicly, especially at times when she wasn't ready to. Before she had her first transplant, she said a makeup artist leaked her private health condition to the press. A magazine said they would be doing a story around it, so Hyland agreed to discuss it. She also recalled public speculation when she was privately on dialysis and her weight dropped to 75 pounds. "People thought I was dealing with an eating disorder when I was just really sick," she recalled. Ditto when she was taking steroids to stay alive resulting in her face getting puffy. She had to respond to public criticism that she looked "fat" and address rumors she was pregnant. That's why she said she waited until months after her second transplant to publicly disclose it. She wanted to "be on the other side" and know that it worked, having learned from experience. Coming soon for Hyland is a wedding. She's been engaged to Wells Adams since 2019 and they twice postponed their nuptials due to the pandemic. If you or someone you know are experiencing suicidal thoughts, call 911, or call the National Suicide Prevention Hotline at 1-800-273-8255 or text HOME to the Crisis Text Line at 741741. Montgomery family dining spot Mr. Gus Ristorante, known among locals as Mr. G's, plans to reopen soon after working out a plan to pay back thousands of dollars in debt that forced it to shut the doors last summer. Former state lawmaker Dimitri Polizos opened the Greek and Italian spot in 2008 and named it after his father. Polizos died of a heart attack in 2019 while in the process of selling the restaurant to family friend Michael Passineau. After his friends death, Passineau completed the deal and took over the restaurant just before the pandemic hit. An existing debt quickly mounted. According to an online fundraiser set up by Passineau, the restaurants total debt jumped from about $10,000 in March 2020 to about $100,000 a year later. That campaign raised about $6,000. Mr. Gus' Ristorante opened in 2008. The restaurant was stripped of its business license in July 2021. A post on its Facebook page announcing the closure had more than 100 replies, many of them from people sharing memories about the food and the family behind it. The Montgomery City Council voted unanimously last Tuesday to approve a new business license for the restaurant after Passineau agreed to pay what Council President Charles Jinright said was about $16,000 in debt to the city. That plan requires Passineau to pay 40% of the debt upfront and to pay the remaining balance within a year. City officials said Passineau would make a down payment by the end of the business day Wednesday. No reopening date was immediately announced. The restaurant is at 6268 Atlanta Highway. Contact Montgomery Advertiser reporter Brad Harper at bharper1@gannett.com. This article originally appeared on Montgomery Advertiser: Greek and Italian spot Mr. Gus' Ristorante to reopen in Montgomery A Ukrainian-born woman who lives in Nashville is raising money to help her family and friends still trapped in the war-torn country. Jennifer DeMaster, a Milwaukee assistant city attorney, opined on state-owned Russia Today that Russian President Vladimir Putin did nothing wrong by recognizing two breakaway regions in eastern Ukraine and deploying troops there. The nation's largest Muslim civil rights group on Tuesday applauded the firing of a Milwaukee assistant city attorney who had previously worked for anti-Islamic "hate groups." City Attorney Tearman Spencer fired attorney Jennifer DeMaster on Monday, days after the Journal Sentinel reported that she appeared on Russia Today TV backing Russian President Vladimir Putin's actions leading up to his country's invasion of Ukraine. Russia Today, registered as a foreign agent, is owned and controlled by the state of Russia. However, the termination notice did not provide details about why she was fired. Instead, the notice to the city's Department of Employee Relations cited only "Job performance. Poor fit." The Council on American-Islamic Relations, also known as CAIR, on Tuesday called the decision "'welcome, but long overdue." "Given Ms. DeMaster's past support for efforts to enshrine anti-Muslim bigotry into law, the city should have investigated whether she could fairly uphold the law for all Milwaukee residents," CAIR Deputy Director Edward Ahmed Mitchell said in a statement. "The city's failure to do so sent a message that the constitutional rights of American Muslims were not important to city officials." More: Milwaukee City Attorney Tearman Spencer says 'a number' of officials are under investigation but offers no details or evidence More: Milwaukee Common Council ends Couture feud in repudiation of City Attorney Tearman Spencer DeMaster was hired in October to work in the litigation division, which typically handles cases in state and federal court. In that city post, DeMaster made $71,780 per year. Spencer did not return a call on Tuesday. DeMaster also could not be reached for comment. Also, on Monday, Spencer fired a second assistant city attorney, Nicholas Zales, citing "job performance" as the reason. Both Zales and DeMaster were on probation with the city. Story continues Spencer hired DeMaster and Zales after an exodus of attorneys from his office, with some citing a "toxic work environment" under the relatively new city attorney. Spencer was elected in April 2020. On Tuesday, Zales said in a LinkedIn message that he had received a 40% pay increase during his time in Spencer's office and successfully defended the city in "a high-profile wrongful death case against two highly skilled litigators" in Milwaukee County court. "If I was doing poorly, why would the city attorney give me a large raise, and how did I win that case that nobody else wanted to take to trial?" Zales asked in the message. He said he was fired as retaliation for contending that his supervisor, a deputy city attorney, was engaging in "micromanaging and bullying" to the point of making some staff physically ill. CAIR was one of a number of local and national groups that called for Spencer to fire DeMaster in November unless she "publicly renounces her past efforts to restrict the rights of Muslims and pledges to treat all people equally under the law." Of particular concern to those groups was her past work for the Clarion Project, a group that has been labeled one of the major proponents of Islamophobia in the United States. Before that, she worked as a law clerk for the American Center for Law and Justice, prepping attorneys on "Sharia law (and) radical Islamic ideology," according to a resume she filed in federal court. DeMaster also wrote "Babylon Unveiled," a book in which she argued that Islam is not a peaceful religion. The groups had also said it was "deeply concerning" to see video of Spencer's Special Deputy City Attorney Celia Jackson responding to criticism of DeMaster's hiring by saying in a staff meeting that people hold "different views." DeMaster appearance on Russia Today Last week, as Russia was on the brink of invading Ukraine, DeMaster went on Russia Today to argue that Putin was within his rights to recognize two breakaway regions in eastern Ukraine and deploy troops there. "When people like Secretary of State (Antony) Blinken of the U.S. or (British Prime Minister) Boris Johnson or others or (President) Joe Biden come out and say this is a clear violation of international law, that's simply not true," she said. "It is not a clear violation of international law because they cannot name an international law that this violates." Her opinion was rejected by international law experts interviewed by the Journal Sentinel who said Russia's actions were a clear violation of the United Nations Charter. DeMaster also told the Russian propaganda network that the conflict between Russia and Ukraine had no impact on America. "There's no threat to U.S. national security," said DeMaster, who was listed as a "legal analyst" in the broadcast. "We have lots of issues going on right here at home that are, in effect, a danger to national security." In the past five years, DeMaster has made dozens of appearances on Russia Today as an expert on everything from American foreign policy to Jeffrey Epsteins suicide. It is not known if DeMaster was paid for her appearances on Russia Today. City officials said Monday that she did not file a statement of economic interest that would have detailed her sources of income from the past year. Contact Alison Dirr at 414-224-2383 or adirr@jrn.com. Follow her on Twitter @AlisonDirr. Our subscribers make this reporting possible. Please consider supporting local journalism by subscribing to the Journal Sentinel at jsonline.com/deal. DOWNLOAD THE APP: Get the latest news, sports and more This article originally appeared on Milwaukee Journal Sentinel: National Muslim group applauds firing of Milwaukee assistant attorney UN chief calls for funds for Ukraine humanitarian aid, end to conflict Xinhua) 08:25, March 02, 2022 UNITED NATIONS, March 1 (Xinhua) -- UN Secretary-General Antonio Guterres on Tuesday called for resources to meet the increasing humanitarian needs in Ukraine and for efforts to end the conflict. "The international community must give them our unequivocal support. We must help Ukrainians help each other through this terrible time," he said at the launch of a flash appeal for Ukraine and a regional refugee response plan for neighboring countries. The three-month flash appeal for Ukraine requires 1.1 billion U.S. dollars to meet the humanitarian needs of more than 6 million people affected and displaced by military operations. The regional response plan needs 551 million dollars to help Ukrainians who have fled across borders, principally to Poland, Hungary, Romania and Moldova. "I urge you to respond to these life-saving appeals," Guterres told the launch event in Geneva via video teleconference. He warned that the crisis in Ukraine could have a serious impact on vulnerable people around the world -- not only because it will stretch humanitarian funding even further, but because Ukraine is a vital source of grains. The World Food Programme buys more than half its wheat from Ukraine. Disruption to the harvest could drive up prices and add to global hunger, he warned. This speaks to the urgent need for global solidarity -- not only to fund humanitarian aid programs, but to invest in peace, he said. "The most effective humanitarian relief is to silence the guns. Now, more than ever, we must intensify our efforts for peace, everywhere," he said. "Soldiers must return to their barracks. Leaders must turn to diplomacy. I urge all those with influence to use it to end this senseless conflict." UN agencies and partners are working 24/7 to assess humanitarian needs and scale up aid, particularly to women, children, older people and those with disabilities, he said. The United Nations is coordinating partnerships between organizations and groups inside and outside Ukraine, and surging personnel into the country. "As we ramp up our efforts, it is essential that all humanitarian workers are safe and protected, and have guaranteed freedom of movement," he said. "Unimpeded access to all affected people and communities must also be guaranteed. I call on all sides to uphold their obligations under international humanitarian law," said Guterres. (Web editor: Peng yukai, Liang Jun) China's development offers an opportunity, and not a challenge or "threat", to the European Union, and the two sides share more for cooperation than competition, China's Commerce Minister Wang Wentao said on Tuesday. Wang told a media briefing in Beijing that China is willing to join hands with the EU to promote the Belt and Road Initiative and align with the EU's Global Gateway, an infrastructure initiative announced last year, while expanding cooperation and deepening related mechanisms. "It is normal for the two sides to have differences and disputes due to different histories and cultures, social systems and development stages, but the two sides could strengthen communication to promote healthy competition," he said, adding China and the EU are partners, not rivals. The two sides could have pragmatic cooperation in COVID-19 containment, green, digital, financial and technology areas among many others, and should jointly advance the ratification and entry into force of the EU-China Comprehensive Agreement on Investment, to inject more stability and positive energy for bilateral relations, Wang said. They could step up coordination and cooperation under multilateral frameworks such as the G20, the United Nations, and the World Trade Organization, to promote the implementation of global development initiatives, maintain the multilateral trading system with the WTO at the core, and promote the WTO reforms toward right direction, he added. "We must adhere to openness and inclusiveness, abandon zero-sum mindset, oppose protectionism, and deepen market opening-up," Wang said. "China and the EU could strengthen bilateral cooperation, as well as cooperation in the third-party markets, which will not only contribute to the economic development of both sides, but also the recovery and stable development of the world economy." Cui Fan, a professor of international trade at the University of International Business and Economics in Beijing, said China and the EU should enhance communication to remove obstacles to the implementation of their bilateral investment agreement. According to Zhou Mi, a senior researcher at the Chinese Academy of International Trade and Economic Cooperation, China and the EU already have a solid cooperation base that has huge potential for growth, especially because the global supply chain is under disruptions and the two sides share broad common interests in multilateral economic and trade rules including that under the WTO. "The EU and China should take more initiatives to jointly promote pragmatic cooperation," Zhou said. The two sides, he said, are expected to advance long-term economic and trade cooperation, including mechanism-based cooperation arrangements, which will reduce uncertainties for enterprises seeking to grow. Based on shared interests and the world economic development trend, the two sides should also strengthen cooperation and coordination in new areas that have no widely established rules, like e-commerce and anti-trust regulation in the digital economy, he said. The Ohio Supreme Court has joined Kentucky in temporarily suspending Kenton County lawyer Ben Dusing from practicing law. The Ohio court on Tuesday imposed an interim remedial suspension on Dusing. The Courier Journal reported in November that Dusing had threatened two attorneys in a profanity-laced video later played in court. The Kentucky court ruled last week that an inquiry commission had found probable cause to believe Dusing either poses a substantial threat of harm to his clients or the public or that he is mentally disabled and lacks the mental fitness to continue to practice law. Moving for suspension in Ohio, its disciplinary counsel said Dusing "has a history of domestic violence and has made multiple threatening statements towards women and one of his children including direct statements or insinuations that he was going to kill them." The counsel also said the judge in Dusing's custody cases noted concerns that Dusing "was involved in offering one of the custody experts involved in the case $5,000 if he were to denote a report as a 'preliminary' report." Opposing the Ohio motion, Dusing said the findings that he threatened domestic violence were 503 days old. And he said that read in context, his threat to blow up the lawyers in his Family Court cases was not a threat of physical violence, but is a threat of exposing their activities and having them prosecuted for their misconduct. But the Ohio Supreme Court found probable cause that he violated the code of conduct and posed a threat to the public. The suspensions in Ohio and Kentucky are interim and will continue until the high courts in both states take final action. Dusing, who filed in January to run for Family Court in Kenton County, may continue to campaign. But any voter or opponent could challenge his qualifications, according to the Kentucky Secretary of States Office. Dusing did not immediately respond to a request for comment. Andrew Wolfson: 502-582-7189; awolfson@courier-journal.com; Twitter: @adwolfson. This article originally appeared on Louisville Courier Journal: Ohio joins Kentucky in suspending lawyer accused of threats (Reuters) - A member of the Organization for Security and Cooperation in Europe's special Ukraine monitoring mission was killed on Tuesday during the shelling of Kharkiv, the OSCE said on Wednesday. In a statement, the OSCE named the victim as Maryna Fenina, and said she had died "while getting supplies for her family in a city that has become a war zone". (Reporting by David Ljunggren; Editing by Chris Reese) Anna Sakawsky, a fourth-generation Ukrainian Canadian, says she grew up eating foods like borscht and pierogi, made with recipes handed down by her great-grandmother. (Photo: Anna Sakawsky) Anna Sakawsky grew up hearing stories of when her great-grandparents, whom she called Baba and Gido, moved from Ukraine to Canada, leaving behind "the old country" and eventually settling in British Columbia. While her Baba Sophie was still living when she was born, Sakawsky says her great-grandmother died when she was 4, leaving behind a treasure trove of family stories and recipes, including a darn good pierogi recipe that Sakawsky's family still gets together to make once a year. "Pierogies are a simple recipe made from humble ingredients that go a long way toward feeding hungry bellies," says Sakawsky, whose Ukrainian name is Anastasia. "They're essentially dumplings filled with mashed potatoes that are boiled or fried and topped with loads of fried onions and sour cream." As conflict continues in Ukraine, Sakawsky, who blogged about her family's pierogi recipe, says she and her family have looked to food traditions as a way to feel connected to their heritage. And she's not the only one: Across social media, families who share Ukrainian heritage are posting about their favorite recipes and the stories that go along with them, something Sakawsky thinks is helping people far from Ukraine feel connected in the midst of the turmoil. Sakawsky's family pierogi recipe, which is always served with fried onions and sour cream as toppings. (Photo: Anna Sakawsky) "Now that Ukraine is at war with Russia and facing an uncertain future, it's even more important to preserve our cultural heritage," says the fourth-generation Ukrainian Canadian. "Hearing stories of family friends hiding in bomb shelters and fleeing the country has been difficult for me, but has been especially difficult for my mom who worries she may never be able to return to Ukraine or see her friends again." Sakawsky says she began Ukrainian folk dancing at age 3, and performed and entered dance competitions into her teen years. (Photo: Anna Sakawsky) Sakawsky says it's simple things like cooking pierogi, cabbage rolls or borscht, a stew made with beets, that have reminded her of who she is. "No matter where Ukrainians migrate to," she says, "one comfort that we will always have comes from knowing we can always connect to our culture through food and remember what it means to be Ukrainian." Story continues Sarah Mock is a classically-trained chef and culinary blogger whose great-grandfather immigrated to the U.S. from Ukraine through Ellis Island in 1906. Mock, who lives in Pennsylvania, recently tweeted about her family's paska (or Easter) bread recipe, saying, "Part of my heritage is Ukrainian. Ukrainian Easter bread is something we make each year. This year it will hold more significance." UKRAINIAN EASTER BREAD RECIPE Part of my heritage is Ukrainian. Ukrainian Easter bread is something we make each year. This year it will hold more significance. #StandingWithUkraine https://t.co/yXZAn24j72 pic.twitter.com/OP2JeEO5Tf Savoring The Good (@SarahBMock) March 1, 2022 Mock says paska bread is only served by Ukrainian families at Easter. "When I was little I would get excited to go to my grandmother's house for Christmas but then would be disappointed that there was not paska that was just reserved for Easter," she tells Yahoo Life. "It was sliced thick and spread with softened salted butter. The butter had to be salted. If there was any leftover, the next day my grandmother would make French toast out of it: the best French toast ever." As Easter approaches, Mock says she'll be thinking of the Ukrainian people as she prepares her own paska. "I know the traditions are important and run deep," she says. "With hundreds of thousands on the move, households disrupted and lives shattered I know many will not be cooking their traditional Easter recipes. I will cook and carry on these recipes because so many don't have the opportunity this year." Cathy Luciuk is co-president of the Regina, Saskatchewan branch of the Ukrainian Women's Association of Canada (UWAC), a non-profit organization that produced Ukrainian Daughters' Cookbook, a book first released in 1984 that's now in it's 15th printing due to its popularity with Ukrainian families worldwide. "It's been around a number of years and we're well over 100,000 copies," says Luciuk. "The group that [put the book together] still exists and was established in 1926: We're a group of women from Regina and the ladies like to have some project intended to be a money generator because we earn funds that we then distribute to charity." Ukrainian Daughters' Cookbook is available by contacting the Ukrainian Women's Association's Regina branch by mail, phone or email. (Photo: Cathy Luciuk) Within the book, Luciuk says readers will find information about traditional Ukrainian festivals and holidays as well as sections on Ukrainian foods and recipes with photos. And, while the book is available online through used book resellers, Luciuk explains that ordering one directly from the organization by mail is the best way to get a current copy of the book and make sure the UWAC can fund Ukrainian relief efforts. Luciuk says Ukrainian food is "comforting," made from fresh ingredients and guaranteed to channel memories of home and family for those who eat it. "Anyone from a Ukrainian background will always recollect recipes that baba made," she says. "The foods bring back pleasant memories ... I think people have good memories they have not abandoned and even when things are heartbreaking like they are now, people can repeat those happy experiences through a meal and be mindful of times with friends and family." Tamara Schroeder, who lives in Alberta, Canada, shared her own experience with Ukrainian Daughters' Cookbook on Twitter, saying, "Show of hands, who has this? It was a rite of passage in our family." Show of hands, who has this? pic.twitter.com/hXOqhOm6Fb Tamara (@TamIWas) March 1, 2022 "I think I do," replied one follower. "And if I don't, my mom definitely does." "I used to," said another, "but I lost somewhere it and haven't been able to find it." Schroeder says both of her paternal grandparents were Ukrainian. She remembers receiving the cookbook for her 13th birthday after her grandmother died. "One of my aunts made sure that my cousin and I were each given a copy," she recalls. "I only realized as I got older that most of the friends I met with Ukrainian heritage had been given one at some point in her life, whether it was new or handed down to her from another family member: I think it's the bible of traditional recipes for Canadian Ukrainian families." Schroeder says while she recalls eating Ukrainian foods growing up, she only has one Ukrainian recipe in her arsenal: nachinka, a cornmeal casserole. Seeing the conflict in Ukraine, however, has made her pledge to try cooking more dishes from the book. "This crisis awakened a desire to reconnect with this part of my past that I knew so well in my younger years, but not well enough to execute or teach my own children as an adult," says Schroeder. "I want my kids to understand these connections as they grow." Tamara Schroeder with her Ukrainian grandparents as a child. "My granny taught all her daughters how to cook the traditional foods I grew up on," says Schroeder. (Photo: Tamara Schroeder) What's first on her list? "I plan to start making some of the simpler things I remember from my childhood," she says, explaining she'll start with borscht and nalysnyky, a type of Ukrainian crepe. "I think food is a universal language and a way we connect with others. We all eat, whether it's for enjoyment or survival. It's a basic necessity that connects humans and allows us to share in a way we can all understand." "I think we crave that connection," she continues, "especially in times of crisis. It can connect us to our past, our families and loved ones, but also people we've just met or maybe haven't even met. I can't think of many other things that bring people together as broadly and universally as food." Want lifestyle and wellness news delivered to your inbox? Sign up here for Yahoo Lifes newsletter. By Michael Erman (Reuters) - Pfizer Inc is expected to provide around 10 million courses of its highly effective COVID-19 antiviral treatment Paxlovid to low- and middle-income countries this year, according to an official with the Global Fund, a healthcare NGO working to buy the pills from the drugmaker. The Fund's head of strategy for policy, Harley Feldbaum, said Pfizer had committed to at least that many doses and could increase shipments later if organizations involved show they are able to distribute the pills well, noting most will be available toward the end of the year. "That's obviously not enough or sufficient" to meet the need in those countries, said Feldbaum, during an online meeting of non-government organizations (NGOs), activists and academics hosted by influential consumer advocacy group Public Citizen. It is unclear whether there is funding available globally to buy the pills and pay for the infrastructure necessary to distribute them. Pfizer has said it will charge less for the drug in lower income countries, but has not disclosed a price. For wealthy countries, it said it plans to charge around $700 per treatment course - though its U.S. deal priced Paxlovid at $530. "We are working with the ACT-A partnership on supply of Paxlovid for low- and lower middle-income countries as part of our commitment to equitable access for the COVID-19 oral treatment," Pfizer spokesperson Kit Longley said in a statement without providing details. The Global Fund is part of the Access to COVID-19 Accelerator partnership (ACT-A), an effort by governments and NGOs like the World Health Organization to procure tests, treatments, and vaccines for lower income countries. Pfizer has said it plans to produce at least 120 million courses of the two-drug treatment this year. That falls well short of the company's estimate of the 2022 market for antiviral pills of 250 million people globally. Paxlovid is expected to be a key tool in treating COVID-19 after it reduced hospitalizations in high-risk patients by around 90% in a clinical trial. The results were significantly better than those from a clinical trial of Merck Inc's rival oral antiviral molnupiravir. Story continues Pfizer has signed contracts for close to 30 million courses already, almost entirely to high income countries, according to Knowledge Ecology International. The United States has secured 20 million courses of the drug. Last month, Pfizer said it expects at least $22 billion in sales of Paxlovid this year, based only on currently signed contracts, noting that the figure could climb much higher as more deals are signed. The 10 million treatment courses destined for lower-income countries is "nowhere near enough," Peter Maybarduk, director of Public Citizen's Access to Medicines program, said in an email. "Indeed it's a frustratingly small portion of a frighteningly scarce supply that fails to learn from the lives lost and the moral catastrophe of vaccine inequity over the past year," he said, referring to early COVID vaccine supplies that were scooped up by richer nations. Pfizer has agreed allow generic drugmakers to produce versions of Paxlovid for 95 low- and middle-income countries through a deal with international public health group Medicines Patent Pool (MPP). But Pfizer and MPP do not expect any of the generic drugmakers to be able to manufacture significant supply of the drug by year end. MPP expects to announce in mid-March which generic drugmakers have signed agreements to produce the treatment. (Reporting by Michael Erman; Editing by Caroline Humer and Bill Berkrot) Federal Reserve Board Chair Jerome Powell testifies about 'monetary policy and the state of the economy' before the House Financial Services Committee on March 02, 2022 in Washington, DC. Win McNamee/Getty Images Rep. French Hill suggested the Fed shift its focus away from the jobs market and just to inflation. That would remove the maximum-employment goal that's been part of the Fed's dual mandate since 1977. Powell rebutted the idea, saying central banks with sole mandates take actions similar to the Fed's. Federal Reserve Chair Jerome Powell shot down a proposal made by a GOP representative on Wednesday to end the central bank's maximum-employment target. During Powell's regularly-scheduled testimony to the House Financial Services Committee, Rep. French Hill of Arkansas' 2nd congressional district suggested a complete revamp of the Fed's dual mandate. Instead of pursuing price stability and maximum employment, Hill proposed the Fed nix its employment goal and focus solely on easing inflation. "Considering the fiscal policy stimulus and the monetary policy we've had in the past couple of years, we really have to focus on price stability ... I'm proposing that we go back to price stability," he said, adding the central banks of Canada, Australia, New Zealand, and the UK already follow a single mandate. Though Powell didn't explicitly refuse the idea, he offered a few reasons why it wouldn't aid the country's inflation fight. For one, only Congress has the authority to change the Federal Reserve Act and, in turn, adjust the Fed's mandate. The dual mandate has been in place since the act was amended in 1977, and with Congress historically split, it's unlikely such an adjustment would win required support. Cutting out half of the dual mandate would also have less of an effect than Hill might hope. Most central banks either have a sole inflation mandate or a dual mandate similar to the Fed's, yet the way they go about policy is similar, Powell said. Since the labor market plays such a critical role in the economy, it always factors into inflation, whether it's in a central bank mandate or not. Story continues "You wouldn't actually see any difference in their reaction function, because they do have to look at resource utilization, which is employment, in order to determine policy," Powell told the committee. "You wind up with very similar answers." Hill's office told Insider the representative is working with colleagues to introduce his proposal for the Fed's mandate soon. With inflation trending at four-decade highs and the Fed on the verge of removing its pandemic-era monetary support, lawmakers repeatedly questioned the Fed's efforts to cool price growth. Powell revealed he is "inclined" to support a 0.25 percentage-point increase to the Fed's benchmark interest rate at the Fed's March 16 meeting. Higher interest rates serve as the central bank's best tool for fighting inflation, and the widely-expected hike represents a major step in that effort. Yet major reports on February inflation and hiring are scheduled for release before the Fed's decision. Should hiring unexpectedly reverse course, the central bank could be forced to rethink how it's balancing both ends of its dual mandate. Read the original article on Business Insider China will proactively align with high-level international economic and trade rules, to further deepen reform and expand institutional opening-up, according to senior commerce officials on Tuesday. To that end, the country has been communicating and negotiating with the members of the Comprehensive and Progressive Agreement on Trans-Pacific Partnership, or CPTPP, and the Digital Economy Partnership Agreement. Wang Wentao, the country's commerce minister, told a news briefing in Beijing that China is willing to negotiate and sign free trade agreements with more economies and countries. China's official applications to join the CPTPP and the DEPA last year have demonstrated the nation's determination to deepen reforms and expand opening-up, while also showing its sincere willingness to strengthen cooperation in international digital economy, and promote innovation and sustainable development, he said. An FTA covering 11 Asia-Pacific economies that took effect at the end of 2018, the CPTPP is widely considered to have the highest standards for trade rules and market access. The DEPA is a new type of trade partnership agreement on digital trade signed in 2020 by New Zealand, Chile and Singapore. Vice-Minister of Commerce and Deputy China International Trade Representative Wang Shouwen said at the briefing that the country is willing to fully meet the high standards of CPTPP through active efforts. "To join the CPTPP, China will make openness commitments exceeding all those in its existing free trade agreements for market access," said the vice-minister. "That will not only facilitate China's expanding opening-up, pushing for high-level domestic reforms, and promotion of its high-quality development, but also widen market access to the world's second-largest economy for the 11 members of the CPTPP and help them to scale up cooperation with China in sectors including goods and services trade and investment." Although the CPTPP content covers broad areas, with some provisions being quite complicated and sensitive, it is in harmony with China's progress in reform and opening-up, he said, taking examples of the provisions on State-owned enterprises and e-commerce. According to Huo Jianguo, vice-chairman of the Beijing-based China Society for World Trade Organization Studies, the task of aligning domestic rules, regulations and management with high-level international economic and trade rules has become key to China's deepening of reforms and expansion of opening-up. "What matters more is not merely expanding market entry, but rather, building a more transparent, fair and predictable business environment that levels the playing field for all market entities," Huo said. Since China has showed its readiness to negotiate and make commitments to join the CPTPP, the country is expected to make more breakthroughs in expanding opening-up, he said. According to Wang, the vice-minister, China has the right conditions to fulfill obligations of CPTPP rules on State-owned enterprises, because as independent market entities, China's SOEs base their operations on commercial considerations, and participate fairly in market competition with private and foreign-funded enterprises, and conduct business activities in accordance with market-oriented and law-abiding principles. The core CPTPP provisions on SOEs ask for a level playfield for SOEs and other types of enterprises, and that is in line with China's ongoing market-oriented reforms of SOEs, he said. The vice-minister also said the high-standard rules of the CPTPP on e-commerce are also in line with China's efforts to participate in global digital cooperation and continuously improve the business climate for the digital sector. The Chinese authorities have been formulating regulations for the implementation of the three laws unveiled in recent years on data security, cyberspace security and personal information protection, respectively. During the process, the Chinese authorities concerned have been figuring out how to meet the requirements of the CPTPP rules. Before officially applying for the CPTPP membership last year, China had conducted comprehensive and in-depth studies on CPTPP provisions, the vice-minister said, adding the country has already sorted out laws and regulations and reform measures that China needs to improve or modify for joining the agreement. For any issue or clause of the CPTPP, China is ready to have detailed communications and negotiations with the CPTPP members concerned. trooping the colour Tim Rooke / Shutterstock Prince William and Kate Middleton are the proud parents of their three kids, Prince George, Princess Charlotte, and Prince Louis. And while their royal duties take them away from their little ones at times, they are always on their minds. During an outing for St. David's Day, which is the feast day of Saint David, the patron saint of Wales, locals greeted the pair and asked them a few questions about their family. "How are the children?" one fan of the royal couple asked, People reported. Prince William replied, "The children are very well, thank you," before noting how the family manages their time apart. Prince William noted that when he and the Duchess of Cambridge travel away from their children, they follow one tradition to ensure the kids know exactly where they are in the world. "They are always asking us where we are going," he said. "And we show them where we are on the map." Related: Prince William and Kate Middleton's First Encounter Was Hilariously Awkward, Says a Royal Memoirist Amid their recent outings, Kate also noted that family is always on her mindand that she often experiences a bit of baby fever, especially when meeting other little ones. The royal couple previously confirmed that they won't be expanding their happy family of five, but the Duchess just shared that she's been feeling "broody" while spending time with parents and their newborns. "William always worries about me meeting under one-year-olds. I come home saying, 'Let's have another one,'" she shared during her solo overseas tour in Denmark. Kate has admitted to having babies on the brain before this tour, too. When the duo visited Lancashire earlier this year, they met Trudi and Alastair Barrie and their daughter, Anastasia. "Don't give my wife any more ideas!" Prince William joked as Kate held the baby for a photo. "Don't take her with you," the Duke added in jest as Kate returned the baby to her parents. Randy Newman has postponed a number of dates on his forthcoming European touring after breaking his neck. The musician and satirist made the announcement on Wednesday (2 February) on his website, reassuring fans that rescheduled dates would be confirmed as soon as possible. Commenting on his injury, Newman wrote: Recently, I noticed I was shrinking. People over whom I had towered now towered over me. Could this be payback for having written [Newmans 1977 hit song] Short People? Turns out, my neck was broken, he continued. They operated on me successfully, I think. For even now, I look less like an anteater and more like a folk rock artist from the early sixties. But the doctor said Im not quite ready to tour. Newman, who is also known for his award-winning work as a film composer, added that he had been really looking forward to coming to Europe to perform. I miss performing a great deal and I look forward to a time when I can come, he concluded. Im sorry I wont see you this time but I will see you soon. INDIANAPOLIS Robert Saleh and his coaching staff arent attending the NFL combine in person. The coaching staff will conduct interviews virtually and the Jets front office and scouting department is in Indianapolis. Saleh felt staying in New Jersey was a better alternative for the Jets staff as they prepare for free agency. Really felt for us its just a more efficient way to utilize our time, Saleh said. Theres a lot of medical checks, theres a lot of testing, theres a lot of poking and prodding players. So, theres a ton of downtime. So, we felt like itd be a great use of our time to stay here, dive deep into the draft work on free agency, revisit the Senior Bowl. Weve gotten a lot of work done....We still have pro days, we still have private workouts. We still have our 30 visits. We still have so many more conversations. Later on in the week, the positional coaches will fly down to observe the drills for the prospects. So the Jets coaching staff will be there in some capacity. Artem Dzyuba is a striker for Zenit St Petersburg (Reuters) Russia captain Artem Dzyuba has hit back at criticism from Ukrainian players in the Premier League, accusing them of sitting on their ass in mansions in England and being nasty. Up to now Dzyuba had been silent on his countrys invasion of Ukraine, a stance which had brought condemnation from some Ukrainian players. Evertons Vitaliy Mykolenko called Dzyuba a silent b***h, while West Hams Andriy Yarmolenko referred to Dzyubas infamous sex tape, saying: I know some of you like to show your balls on camera but now the time has come to show your balls in real life. Dzyuba, 33, posted a long Instagram message on Wednesday denouncing war as frightful, although he stopped short of condemning president Vladimir Putins deadly invasion of Ukraine. He also appeared to criticise Fifas move to ban Russia from international football, and in effect from the 2022 World Cup. Russian clubs have been banned from European competition, while the city of St Petersburg has been stripped of its right to host the Champions League final. I am not afraid that I am Russian, wrote Dzyuba, who plays as a striker for Zenit St Petersburg. Im proud to be Russian. And I dont understand why athletes have to suffer now. I am against double standards ... Why has everyone shout about sports staying out of politics but, at the first opportunity, when it comes to Russia this principle is completely forgotten? He added: I repeat, war is scary. In stressful situations, people show their true colours, sometimes negatively. How much anger, dirt and bile has now been poured on the Russian people, regardless of their position and profession? ... It is doubly strange to hear all this from people to whom Russia has given very, very much in their lives. And to some colleagues who sit on their ass in mansions in England and say nasty things: It cannot offend us, we understand everything! Peace and health to everybody! Yarmolenkos video, posted on social media, saw him urge Russias players to speak out against the war. I have a question for Russian players, he said. Guys, why are you sitting like s***heads and not saying anything? In my country theyre killing people, killing wives, killing mothers, killing our children. But youre saying nothing, youve given no comments. Tell me please, what will happen if all of you together, united, show the people what is really happening in my country? I know a lot of you, Im familiar with many of you and you all told me it shouldnt be like that, that your president is acting incorrectly. So guys, you have influence over the people. Show this, I am asking you, please. One Russian player who has spoken out is Fedor Smolov, the Dynamo Moscow striker, who tweeted No war!!! last week as the invasion began. MOSCOW (Reuters) - Russia will not allow Ukraine to obtain nuclear weapons, TASS news agency quoted Russian Foreign Minister Sergei Lavrov as saying on Wednesday. Russia launched an invasion of Ukraine last week in what it called a special operation to demilitarise and "denazify" the country, a justification dismissed by Kyiv and the West as propaganda. (Reporting by Reuters, Editing by Timothy Heritage) Yachts owned by Russian billionaires are on the move as the U.S. and its allies seek to hunt down the assets of Russia's wealthiest in direct response to the invasion of Ukraine. The wealthiest Russian money including Russian President Vladimir Putin's has pushed to sea. Data from MarineTraffic, a global intelligence group, shows yachts owned by oligarchs are on the move, including aluminum magnate Oleg Deripaska's $65 million Clio and oil executive Vagit Alekperov's $80 million Galactica Super Nova. "No self-respecting oligarchy exists without a super yacht. And so what we're seeing now is a hightailing it on the high seas," financier and anti-corruption activist Bill Browder told CBS News. A super yacht is typically over 40 meters long. The Clio and Galactica are each over 70 meters long. The superyacht Galactica Supernova, built by Heesen Yacht Builders BV, sits moored in the harbor during the Monaco Yacht Show on Sept. 28, 2016. / Credit: Chris Ratcliffe/Bloomberg via Getty Images In response to Putin's war against Ukraine, the Biden administration created a task force to go after Russian oligarchs' "yachts, luxury apartments, money and their ability to send their kids to fancy college[s] in the West." Browder said the goal is to get the oligarchs to pressure Putin to stop the war. "We're not ready to engage in military warfare. And so there's an expression: We should fight them in the banks if we can't fight them with tanks,'" he said. Some oligarchs have made statements taking issue with the Russian invasion. Mikhail Fridman, who founded one of Russia's largest private banks, said he does "not believe that war would be a solution." Evgeny Lebedev the son of an oligarch, and who owns a London newspaper wrote an op-ed pleading with Putin to "save the world from annihilation." The financial pressure is really about undermining support for Putin, both "among rank-and-file Russians as well as the oligarchs who help control the economy," said John Smith, former director of the Treasury Department's Office of Foreign Assets Control, which administers and enforces all foreign sanctions. Story continues Weeks before Russia invaded Ukraine, the $100 million "Graceful" believed to be owned by Putin himself left a German port for safer Russian waters. The yacht reportedly owned by Russian President Vladimir Putin, Graceful, is seen moored at the port of Sochi, Russia, July 13, 2015. / Credit: Marcus Brandt/picture alliance via Getty Images "He's a former KGB agent, and he has worked his entire career to appear on the surface to be the common man when below the surface, it's apparent that he has significant wealth stored," said Smith. Former government officials and experts told CBS News that cutting off Putin's revenue from the energy industry is key but this is an area where both the U.S. and its allies are vulnerable. Further disrupting the energy supply could send prices even higher. President Biden calls for unity on Ukraine and domestic issues Cargo ship carrying luxury vehicles to U.S. sinks in Atlantic Texas primary election results are in, and several races go to runoffs President Xi Jinping on Tuesday urged young officials to strengthen their ideals and convictions, develop and put into practice a right perspective on their performance, and work hard for the causes of the Party and the people. Xi, also general secretary of the Communist Party of China (CPC) Central Committee and chairman of the Central Military Commission, made the remarks when addressing the opening ceremony of a training program for young and middle-aged officials at the Party School of the CPC Central Committee (National Academy of Governance). Strong faith in Marxism Xi said that it is vital for young officials to carry on the firm faith in Marxism and strive for the ideals of communism and socialism with Chinese characteristics. "It is a lifelong endeavor, rather than an attempt for a while, to consolidate one's ideals and convictions," he said. He urged them to rigorously abide by Party discipline and the law, and to protect their integrity from corruption in every detail of their life and work. Party officials were told to take a sober and firm stance on major issues of principle, particularly those of political principle, and exercise their power justly, lawfully, honestly, and for the good of the people. They should have a "clean circle" of social interactions and friends, live a healthy and simple life and discipline their relatives. For people's well-being "Communists must bear in mind that working for the people's well-being is their greatest political achievement," Xi stressed. He said that, when making and implementing plans, they must remain committed to the Party's fundamental purpose of wholeheartedly serving the people, and to the principle that development is for the people, reliant on the people, and that its fruits are shared by the people. "What are concrete services to the satisfaction of the people should be determined by the needs of the people," Xi continued. "Whether officials are doing a good job depends on how the people feel and is judged by the people." In delivering real, substantial benefits to the people, Xi said, officials should avoid only addressing the immediate concerns of the people and also ensure that no undesired consequences are created. Xi said that Party officials must walk the talk with solid work, and refrain from talking big and setting ambitious goals but taking little action to achieve them. In achieving long-term goals, Xi said, officials must maintain a strategic resolve and have patience. He urged young Party officials to step up theoretical studies, combine theory and practice, and pursue truth through practice. Dare to struggle The great rejuvenation of the Chinese nation can only be achieved when all Party members shoulder their responsibilities and maintain the spirit of struggle, Xi noted. Xi urged Party officials, especially those in leading positions, to take the initiative instead of hesitating to seize opportunities, and rise to the difficulties and risks instead of evading their responsibilities. Noting that all work must be built on the CPC Central Committee's decisions and plans, Xi stressed that partial and local interests should not be pursued at the expense of overall interests, and short-term advantage should not be put above fundamental or long-term interests. "Only with the courage and capacity to struggle can we win respect and seize the initiative, and effectively safeguard China's national sovereignty and security, as well as its development interests," Xi stressed. Work related to the masses must be improved in pace with the times, Xi said, calling on officials to actively respond to the concerns of netizens in particular. Wang Huning, a member of the Standing Committee of the Political Bureau of the CPC Central Committee and a member of the Secretariat of the CPC Central Committee, attended the event. By Alistair Smout and Muvija M LONDON (Reuters) -Russia's invasion of Ukraine will not have a dramatic impact on bookings in eastern Europe so long as the war doesn't escalate, Ryanair boss Michael O'Leary said on Wednesday, adding the airline was well-placed to deal with surging oil prices. Ryanair, like others, suspended all of its flights to and from Ukraine last week as Moscow launched a full-scale invasion of its neighbour. O'Leary said bookings were down 20% last Thursday and Friday compared to the previous week and around 10% over the weekend, but believed the short-term hit to demand would recover. "I think you will not have a dramatic impact on bookings as long as the period of war doesn't escalate and spread elsewhere," O'Leary told reporters. "If nothing untoward happens, I expect (bookings) would be back to normal by next week." Airlines, trying to recover from two years of the coronavirus pandemic, also face a potential hit to their earnings from surging oil prices that have risen to over $100 a barrel since the invasion. O'Leary predicted bigger problems for his rivals, saying that Ryanair's strong recovery from two COVID-hit summers would be driven by our "somewhat fortuitous fuel-hedging strategy, which means we can pass on the benefit of oil at $65 a barrel for almost all of the next 12 months". Ryanair is 80% hedged on fuel out to 2023, but rising prices will still cost the airline group around 50 million euros ($55.5 million) over the next 12 months, O'Leary said, adding Ryanair would not introduce fuel charges for the summer. O'Leary vowed Ryanair would be the first airline back into Ukraine when it reopened, which could be this year, depending on the extent of damage to its airport infrastructure. He also pointed to a huge increase in demand for flights to and from Polish cities as many Ukrainians attempt to reunite with their families, and predicted people in Britain and Ireland who had chosen domestic holidays over the last two years would be desperate to go abroad. Story continues "I think you're going to see families returning to the beaches of Europe this year," he said. "They went to the beaches of the west of Ireland and Cornwall last year, and I think they never want to go back there again." ($1 = 0.9016 euros) (Reporting by Alistair Smout and Muvija M; Editing by William James and Jan Harvey) By Jennifer Rigby and Manojna Maddipatla (Reuters) -A first shipment of medical aid for Ukraine will arrive in Poland on Thursday, the World Health Organization (WHO) said, as the UN agency warned of an escalating health crisis in the country following Russia's invasion. The delivery includes 6 tons of trauma care and emergency surgery supplies to help 150,000 people, but how to get them to Ukrainians in need remains unclear, WHO Director General Tedros Adhanom Ghebreyesus told a media briefing in Geneva on Wednesday. He said WHO had supplied emergency supplies to 23 hospitals in Ukraine prior to the conflict, but its supplies in Kyiv were currently inaccessible. WHO said it also had reports of imminent shortages of cancer medications and insulin for patients with diabetes in the country, as well as oxygen tanks. "There is an urgent need to establish a corridor to ensure humanitarian workers and supplies have safe and continuous access to reach people in need," Tedros said, although he said that he had not yet spoken to the Russian or Ukrainian leadership about this. Ukraine country director Jarno Habicht said that negotiations were ongoing to ensure the supplies in Poland and elsewhere reached conflict zones. The kits being sent to Ukraine include sutures and skin grafts, as well as equipment for amputations and other major trauma operations. WHO said it was also prioritizing COVID-19 therapeutics, including the new antiviral pills, to Ukraine over the last 72 hours to mitigate a potential surge. WHO also condemned unconfirmed attacks on health workers in Ukraine, and stressed that medical needs remained acute. Three major oxygen plants in the country have also closed, threatening access for patients, the body said, with at least 2,000 people requiring medical oxygen even before the conflict. WHO emergencies director Mike Ryan said: "We call on all the parties and particularly the government of Russia to reconsider his position in the light of the suffering that's being generated in Ukraine." (Reporting by Jennifer Rigby in London and Manojna Maddipatla in Bengaluru; editing by John Stonestreet and Lisa Shumaker) A gunman was caught on video firing a wild shot into the air as he walked down a snowy Harlem sidewalk, police said Wednesday. Cops are asking the publics help identifying the shooter and tracking him down. Startling surveillance video shows him raising his right arm high and firing at the sky near E. 132nd St. and Madison Ave. about 7:15 a.m. on Feb. 1. Nobody was struck. The shooter was last seen running east toward Park Ave. Anyone with information is asked to call Crime Stoppers Hotline at (800) 577-TIPS. All calls will be kept confidential. Senate Republicans on Wednesday voted to strike down President Biden's vaccine mandate targeting health care workers, in a rebuke of the administration. Senators voted 49-44 to approve the GOP effort to nix the rule - a vote they were able to force under the Congressional Review Act. Though no Democratic senators voted with Republicans to eliminate the rule, GOP senators were able to get it through the evenly divided Senate because of Democratic absences. Six Democratic senators missed the vote. The mandate was rolled out by the Centers for Medicare and Medicaid Services, which sought to require the COVID-19 vaccine for health care workers at providers that participate in Medicare and Medicaid. But the effort to nix the rule is facing headwinds. The Congressional Review Act sets up a fast track process in the Senate, but it does not greenlight the same procedure in the House. If it made it to Biden's desk, Democrats expect that he would veto it. "If it passes this won't go anywhere in the House, and President Biden would veto it," a Democratic Senate aide said. China has released a five-year plan on elderly care for the 2021-2025 period, aiming to boost the health of the country's aging population. According to the plan, over 78 percent of China's senior population has at least one chronic disease and the number of incapacitated elderly individuals continues to grow, calling for more relevant institutions, personnel, services and policies to meet the demand of the elderly. It pledges efforts to improve the preventive health service system for the elderly, reducing or delaying the occurrence of disability and dementia. It underlines the accelerated development of barrier-free environments, elderly friendly renovations of residential buildings, and the installation of automated external defibrillators at public venues. The plan lays out concrete measures to enhance medical services for the elderly, improve the coordination of elderly home care and institutional services, and promote the application of traditional Chinese medicine in elderly care. Singapore's United Nations Ambassador Burhan Gafoor speaking at the UN General Assembly on 28 February 2022. (SCREENSHOT: United Nations/YouTube) SINGAPORE Singapore and 140 other members of the United Nations General Assembly on Wednesday voted overwhelmingly for a resolution demanding an immediate halt to Russias offensive in Ukraine and withdrawal of all its troops. In an emergency session of the General Assembly, five voted against the resolution and 35 abstained. Russia, Belarus, North Korea, Eritrea and Syria voted against the resolution while China, India, Pakistan, Bangladesh, South Africa and Vietnam were among the member states that abstained. The resolution stated that the UN deplores in the strongest terms the aggression by the Russian Federation against Ukraine. It demanded that the Russian Federation immediately cease its use of force against Ukraine and immediately, completely and unconditionally withdraw all of its military forces. Singapore one of 94 co-sponsors of the resolution has been issuing statements to condemn the invasion, including from Prime Minister Lee Hsien Loong and Foreign Minister Vivian Balakrishnan, after Russia launched its full-scale military operations across Ukraine last Thursday. A resolution tabled before the General Assembly requires two-thirds support for it to be adopted. General Assembly resolutions are non-binding but they carry political significance in highlighting world opinion on issues being tabled. Singapore condemns in the strongest terms possible any unprovoked invasion of a sovereign country under any pretext, said its UN Ambassador Burhan Gafoor in the General Assembly on Monday. After delivering his emphatic speech to deplore the invasion, Gafoor was hugged by his Ukrainian counterpart Sergiy Kyslytsya . In the wake of the Ukraine crisis, Singapore said it will impose export controls on items that can be used directly as weapons in Ukraine, as well as certain financial sanctions on Russia . The passing of the resolution in the General Assembly comes five days after the 15-member UN Security Council (UNSC) failed to pass a similar resolution following a veto by Russia, a permanent member of the UNSC. Eleven other members voted for the resolution while China, India and the United Arab Emirates abstained. Singapore was one of the 82 co-sponsors of the UNSC resolution. Stay in the know on-the-go: Join Yahoo Singapore's Telegram channel at http://t.me/YahooSingapore Entrance signs in front of a re-modeled courtroom located on the second floor of Lincoln County's Courthouse, in Canton on Tuesday, January 25, 2022. A House bill that would allow children under the age of 16 to testify via closed-circuit television passed through the Senate on Tuesday. HB 1099 would allow minors who were victims of either sexual abuse, physical abuse or human trafficking to testify in a courtroom without the jury present. Instead, the jury would be in another room watching the testimony. Representative Tim Reed, R-Brookings, wrote the bill and during its initial hearings said that the bill would protect children from further traumatization. More: House of Representatives passes bill concerning courtroom changes for child witnesses, goes to Senate next Originally in state law, children under the age of 12 had the option to testify via closed circuit. During the Senate hearing, Senator Jack Kolbeck, R-Sioux Falls, voiced his support for the bill. "I'm glad they included human trafficking," he said, adding that the average age for a victim of human trafficking is 14. The bill passed with 34 yeas and one excused. The bill now heads to Gov. Kristi Noem's desk for signing into law. More: South Dakota Senate kills bill that would let counties fund jails with sales tax Follow Annie Todd on Twitter @AnnieTodd96. Reach out to her with tips, questions and other community news at atodd@argusleader.com or give her a call at 605-215-3757. This article originally appeared on Sioux Falls Argus Leader: Child witness modification bill heads to Noem's desk for signature (Reuters) -Spotify said on Wednesday it has closed its office in Russia indefinitely in response to what the audio streaming platform described as Moscow's "unprovoked attack on Ukraine." Since July 2021, Russian legislation signed by President Vladimir Putin has obliged foreign social media companies with more than 500,000 daily users to open local offices or be subject to restrictions as severe as outright bans. Ahead of the March deadline, only a few companies, including Spotify, had complied. Since Russia's invasion of Ukraine last week, which Moscow calls a special operation, Western governments have urged companies to push back on Putin in any way possible. "Our first priority over the past week has been the safety of our employees and to ensure that Spotify continues to serve as an important source of global and regional news at a time when access to information is more important than ever," Spotify said in a statement. Spotify said it has reviewed thousands of pieces of content since the start of the war, and restricted the discoverability of shows owned and operated by Russian state-affiliated media. Earlier this week, it also removed all content from state media RT and Sputnik from Spotify in the European Union, the United States and other markets around the world, except for Russia, following similar steps by Meta Platforms Inc's Facebook and Twitter. Sputnik on Wednesday said by email that "any restrictions on members of the press are blatant censorship and the dirtiest example of freedom of speech violations." RT said earlier this week that tech companies removing it had failed to cite any issues with its coverage. Spotify said it would match employee donations, two-to-one, to support local humanitarian efforts. (Reporting by Dawn Chmielewski; Editing by Leslie Adler, Marguerita Choy and Kim Coghill) Some residents of a Harborcreek Township home found themselves perplexed in the late afternoon of Feb. 25 when Pennsylvania State Police troopers surrounded the house and ordered the occupants outside. The troopers raced to the house on Walbridge Road after a caller reported an active domestic incident involving weapons was taking place there. The occupants had no idea what the troopers were talking about. A search of the house revealed no domestic, no weapons, and no one hurt. Authorities would soon determine that they were dealing with a "swatting" incident. Swatting is when someone makes a prank call claiming an emergency situation is taking place at a particular address in hopes of sending large numbers of law enforcement officers to a location. October 2020 report: Inside an online swatting feud that led to Delaware bomb threats, nationwide manhunt Deadly consequences Such pranks have played out across the country, including in Erie County, although local state police troopers have not seen one in some time, said Lt. Gary Garman, patrol section supervisor for state police Troop E in Lawrence Park Township. The prank has proven deadly. School prank: How unfounded threats of violence to Erie-area schools stir stress, create more work In 2019, California resident Tyler Barriss was sentenced to 20 years in federal prison. Authorities accused him of committing dozens of crimes including a swatting incident in December 2017 that sent police in Wichita, Kansas, to a house where a man was reported to have killed his father and was holding family members hostage. Police shot and killed a man during the encounter, according to information released by the U.S. Attorney's Office in the District of Kansas. The crime comes with serious consequences to those who are caught. In March 2021, a former student at Old Dominion University in Virginia was sentenced to 33 months in prison after authorities accused him of being involved in a conspiracy in which numerous swatting attacks were committed, according to information released by the U.S. Attorney's Office in the Eastern District of Virginia. Story continues Garman said the call that sent state police to the Walbridge Road residence on Feb. 25 was made though an electronic device. Authorities traced the call to a vacant house in Kane, but it's likely that number was used to mask the number that the call actually came from, he said. State police are continuing to investigate the incident. Internal affairs: PA State Police resist recommendations requiring outside inquiry when troopers kill, injure Contact Tim Hahn at thahn@timesnews.com. Follow him on Twitter @ETNhahn. This article originally appeared on Erie Times-News: Erie County crimes: State police probe 'swatting' in Harborcreek Stevie Nicks, who's known for her way with words, wrote down her feelings toward Russian President Vladimir Putin amid his country's invasion of Ukraine. Nicks shared them Tuesday, with the caption, "From my journal...." Then, in more than enough words to make a song, the Rock and Roll Hall of Famer spoke directly to Putin, asking him if he's lonely and talks to ghosts. "Because you really have no friends everyone is afraid of you; afraid to even offer up good advice, because great emperors don't listen to anyone but ghosts," the Fleetwood Mac singer wrote. "Your ghosts must be shaking their heads concerning the killing of children and young people and destroying the houses of young families just for sport. Your ghosts disapprove." She went on to say that Russia's "amazing creative history," filled with ballerinas, writers and more, would not save Putin. "You will never be forgiven" and ghosts will forever haunt him, Nicks said. "They will shake their heads and say, 'This time, Vladimir you went too far. You crossed a sacred line. You tried to take a beloved country away from its beloved people.' So far, you are responsible for hundreds of dead (including civilians and children), thousands injured and hundreds of thousands of people are running for their lives... and it is just the beginning." The "Landslide" singer told Putin that she hopes he never sleeps again, that he's stuck at a "long, ugly, lonely table" and that he turns to dust. She also hoped that Russia's history books stopped including him. "The ghosts are coming, Mr. Putin," Nicks wrote. "They're coming for you. Perhaps, they're already here...." Nicks is one of the many celebrities, including Sean Penn, Brian Cox and Ashton Kutcher, speaking out against Russia and in support of Ukraine during the international crisis. The Supreme Court on Wednesday wrestled with whether to allow a civil lawsuit to proceed against a Border Patrol agent accused of using excessive force during his search of an inn located just south of the U.S.-Canada border. The case was procedural in nature, but at its core was the question of what legal recourse, if any, is available to an American innkeeper who claims the federal agent violated constitutional limits on unreasonable government searches and free speech protections. The dispute arose in 2014 when Customs and Border Patrol Agent Erik Egbert entered the property of an inn located in Blaine, Wash., near the U.S.-Canadian border, and refused to leave after a request from innkeeper Robert Boule and despite having no search warrant. Boule alleges that Egbert shoved him, which prompted Boule to lodge a complaint with Egbert's supervisors. According to Boule's account, Egbert later retaliated by asking the IRS to investigate Boule. Boule's lawsuit followed. An attorney for Egbert emphasized that, at the time, the agent harbored suspicions about the legal status of one of the guests at Boule's inn. She also argued that her client's conduct, which occurred around 20 feet from the border, cannot be separated from the inherent national security concerns embedded in border patrol operations. The Supreme Court has allowed civil suits for monetary damages over alleged constitutional violations to proceed against federal officers in only a limited set of circumstances. Wednesday's argument asked the justices to consider whether the case before them fit within the court's existing framework, and if not, whether its scope should be expanded. Since the court's landmark 1971 decision in Bivens, which permitted a Fourth Amendment claim to proceed against federal drug enforcement officials, the justices have expanded their criteria for permissible suits only twice over the intervening 40 years - in a gender discrimination case against a member of Congress, and in a suit against jailers over an alleged violation of the Constitution's ban on cruel and unusual punishment. Story continues The question in Wednesday's dispute was whether Boule's lawsuit is the kind of case the court has previously allowed to proceed - in other words, whether it is similar enough to Bivens. And if Boule's case is deemed to fall outside the court's recognized framework, an overlapping question is whether the justices should expand their criteria to allow the suit to survive. The main argument advanced by Boule's attorney was that the legally relevant circumstances of her client's Fourth Amendment claim matched those in Bivens. The Department of Justice, which sided with the federal agent, countered that the case raised national security issues that were absent from Bivens and other relevant precedent. An attorney for DOJ said that allowing border patrol agents to be held liable would have a chilling effect that could erode the U.S.-Canadian security relationship at the border. "The agents who work at the board in Blaine will tell you that their most important partnership is with the Royal Canadian Mounted Police," said Michael Huston, a DOJ lawyer. "We work together with them to police our shared border: they protect their side for our benefit, we protect our sites for their benefit. And it's that mutual cooperative relationship, which involves daily type of liaising, that really is what enables us to protect the border." A decision in the case, Egbert v. Boule, is expected by this summer. A screen capture from the Russian Ballet Theatre Facebook page. For now, "Swan Lake" will be performed later this month by Russian Ballet Theatre at the Abilene Convention Center. The performance a rare touring professional ballet in Abilene remains scheduled for March 20. On its Facebook page, the company is billed as an independent ballet company with a multinational cast. A current prominent photo is captioned "We dance for peace." Lower on the page, a circle, topped by blue over yellow the colors of the Ukraine flag was imposed over a cast photo. Below it was a statement from the company: "We were born and raised in different countries. Ballet is our passion and profession. It brings us together on one stage." Touring ballet performances elsewhere, such as in the United Kingdom, have been canceled after Russia's attack of Ukraine beginning last week. "Swan Lake" still is scheduled for Abilene this month. Comments on the RBT Facebook page include a show Feb. 24 in Durham, North Carolina, noting dancers performed "with tears on our eyes. We are grateful to Carolina Theatre, and the people of Durham, for their support and spreading the message." Another commenter noted, "Showing how much we have in common as lovers of all forms of art." In Abilene, there have been reactions in support of Ukraine. For example, Russian-made alcohol is not being sold at Pinkie's locations, an employee confirmed Wednesday. Asked if the upcoming ballet would be canceled at the local level, City Manager Robert Hanna issued a statement on behalf of the city of Abilene: "During this period of naked aggression undertaken by the Russian government, we are careful to not dismiss those Russians who are equally dismayed and appalled by the actions of President Putin. We unite in solidarity with the Ukrainian people, and with those Russians who protest the calamitous actions of their leaders. "That said, our solidarity must not come at the cost of dismissing those beliefs we hold dear as a community. Free markets and the First Amendment are near and dear to the hearts of every Abilenian. Story continues "We encourage those who may not wish to attend the March 20 performance of 'Swan Lake' by Russian Ballet Theatre at the Abilene Convention Center to not attend. Those that wish to attend, should be free to do so. "This is the beauty of a free and open society, that is to say, there is no place for government censorship of the arts." The statement continued: "Art is a reflection of the culture and values of the place where it is created. Perhaps nowhere else does one see artistic cultural expression better than in ballet, where the combination of music, dance and storytelling are intertwined into something greater than the component parts. "Art is an avenue for understanding and peace between two different cultures. We pray for peace and justice for Ukraine." The ballet coming in two weeks will feature the "oldest St. Petersburg version" of the story, hand-painted sets and 150 hand-sewn costumes. Choreographer is Nadezhda Katinina. Greg Jaklewicz is editor of the Abilene Reporter-News and general columnist. If you appreciate locally driven news, you can support local journalists with a digital subscription to ReporterNews.com. This article originally appeared on Abilene Reporter-News: 'Swan Lake' by Russian Ballet Theatre still a go in Abilene this month Swiss billionaire Hansjorg Wyss has claimed Roman Abramovich, pictured, is open to selling Chelsea (Adam Davy/PA) (PA Wire) Swiss billionaire Hansjorg Wyss has claimed he has been offered the chance to buy Chelsea, according to reports. The 86-year-old has admitted interest in purchasing the Stamford Bridge club from Roman Abramovich, but only as part of a consortium. Russian-Israeli billionaire Abramovich is understood to want to retain his ownership of Chelsea. But that could effectively prove close to impossible should the UK Government impose sanctions on the 55-year-old, who has owned the west London club since 2003. Wyss has admitted he will look into the details of any possible deal to buy Chelsea, with the asking price thought to push beyond 2billion. (PA Wire) Abramovich is trying to sell all his villas in England, he also wants to get rid of Chelsea quickly, Wyss told Swiss newspaper Blick. I and three other people received an offer on Tuesday to buy Chelsea from Abramovich. I have to wait four to five days now. Abramovich is currently asking far too much. You know, Chelsea owe him 2 billion. But Chelsea has no money. As of today, we dont know the exact selling price. Abramovich attempted to step back from the daily running of Chelsea on Saturday, in the wake of Russias invasion of Ukraine. The Blues boss has tried to hand the stewardship and care of Chelsea to the clubs charitable foundation trustees. That led the Charity Commission to contact the Stamford Bridge club for more detail on Abramovichs plans, after several of the trustees raised concerns over technicalities. I can well imagine starting at Chelsea with partners, but I have to examine the general conditions first Hansjorg Wyss Labour MP Chris Bryant has called for the UK Government to impose sanctions on Abramovich after a number of Russian oligarchs have already fallen under such penalties. Abramovich is understood to have attempted to hand control of Chelsea to the foundation trustees in a bid to protect the club. The Chelsea owner would not receive any protection from sanctions through stepping away from daily control at Stamford Bridge. Story continues Abramovichs spokesperson told the PA news agency on Monday that the Russian-Israeli businessman was attempting to broker a peace deal between Russia and Ukraine. Swiss billionaire Wyss, who founded medical device firm Synthes USA, insisted he could only consider a deal for Chelsea with a clutch of investment partners. I can well imagine starting at Chelsea with partners, said Wyss. But I have to examine the general conditions first. But what I can already say: Im definitely not doing something like this alone. If I buy Chelsea, then with a consortium consisting of six to seven investors. A newly built community isolation facility (CIF) started admitting its first batch of COVID-19 patients in Hong Kong on Tuesday evening. The facility, located in Tsing Yi, is open for service one day after its construction was completed within just one week on Monday with the support of the mainland. At around 7 p.m. local time, Xinhua reporters saw vehicles, each carrying one confirmed patient, drive into the facility one after another. The patients were then accompanied by staff in protective clothing to go through the check-in procedures. The CIF, with the capacity of accommodating about 3,900 patients, is a combination of modular cubicles, with each room equipped with basic furniture and bedding, air conditioner, smoke detector, and fire extinguisher. John Lee, chief secretary for administration of the Hong Kong Special Administrative Region (HKSAR) government, said the Tsing Yi facility symbolizes the united fight against the epidemic, and the week-long fast construction is nothing short of a miracle. Designed and built by China State Construction International Holdings Ltd., the project took a total workforce of over 1,800 people, including about 300 mainland employees and over 1,500 Hong Kong workers, who had been working around the clock since Feb. 22. The facility, covering an area of about 60,000 square meters, is the first of its kind completed since the fifth wave of the COVID-19 epidemic began in the HKSAR. The facility will admit asymptomatic or mildly ill patients, and early isolation of those diagnosed can reduce the risk of infecting others and help break the chain of transmission in the community, Lee said on Tuesday during a visit to the compound. Meanwhile, site formation has been completed for HKSAR's five temporary CIFs. Two permanent CIF projects at Penny's Bay and Kai Tak Pier are also in progress. On Tuesday, Hong Kong registered 32,597 new COVID-19 cases and 117 deaths, official data showed. (Reuters) - Texas Attorney General Ken Paxton faces a run-off in the Republican Party primary and it is too early to call who the second candidate will be, CNN projected on Tuesday. Paxton, who launched a failed legal effort to overturn the 2020 presidential results, had won the endorsement of former President Donald Trump. (Reporting by Makini Brice, Moira Warburton and Costas Pitas; Editing by Christopher Cushing) Photo Illustration by Elizabeth Brockway/The Daily Beast/Getty/Reuters HOUSTONAs voters in Texas most populous county headed to their polling places for Tuesdays primary election, they were met with seas of colorful campaign signs, hopeful candidates and electioneers delivering last-minute stump speeches. Campaign supporters filled parking lots, sometimes playing music and handing out treats to rile up attendees. Politicos shook hands and waved posters all around. But amid all the political glamor, voters at some polling sites were also met with long lines and malfunctioning voting machines. And those issues came on top of already significant struggles with SB 1, a voting bill signed into law last year that heightened ID requirements for mail-in voters, banned drive-through voting and banned 24-hour voting sites, which the county used in 2020. The problems started early. When voting began at 7 a.m., the countys website mapping out nearby polling places for individuals crashed. In an effort to quickly mitigate the issue, Harris County Elections pointed voters to a written list of its polling sites, requiring early-morning voters to parse through a catalog of 375 different locations. Harris County allows voters to vote at any location within county limits. Once voters arrived at a polling location, they faced dramatically mixed experiences with wait times and access. While some locations offered quick turnarounds, others were bogged down with hefty wait-times, sometimes spanning 30 to 45 minutes. USA-ELECTION/TEXAS "People line up to vote in the primary election at the Lakewood Branch Library in Dallas, U.S., March 1, 2022. REUTERS/Shelby Tauber" SHELBY TAUBER Primary elections in Texas also structurally differ from county to county. Some counties offer joint primaries, where staff and equipment serve Democrat and Republican primary voters alike. Otherslike Harris Countyhave consolidated primaries, where Democrats and Republicans stand in separate lines and use different equipment. At times on Tuesday, that led to backlogs more severely impacting voters from one party over another. At one of the countys most popular polling locations, the West Gray Multi-Service Center, the parking lot was nearly full for hours, prompting voters to park outside stores across the street and walk over. And lines, divided by party affiliation, stretched well outside the buildingbut not for everyone. Story continues Machines on Democrats voting side experienced technical issues throughout the morning, leaving voters waiting for long stretches of time while Republicans walked right in. The Daily Beast As they waited, Democratic voters had Republican-passed legislation on their minds. It tees me off that I cant choose how I control my own body, Karen, a Houston voter who declined to give her last name, told The Daily Beast in reference to a six-week abortion ban enacted in Texas last year. Matt Lupin, a Harris County voter who works for an endocrinology clinic, told The Daily Beast that Abbott's decision to sign into law a ban on transgender health services for minors concerned him to the point he wanted to get them out of office because trans-childrens healthcare is not child abuse" as outlined in the new law. Tuesday wasnt even the beginning of the countys electoral woes. Harris County election officials last week reported a staggering 29 percent of returned ballots being at risk of rejection, in large part due to issues with the stricter ID requirements passed into law last year. The new requirements stipulate that voters include an identification number that matches what the state has on file on both their mail-ballot application and their returned ballot. Individuals with rejected ballots in Harris County who did not resort to voting through other means, like going to a polling location, now have to rectify their ballot within six days of the election in order to be counted. Rose Clouston, the voter protection director for the Texas Democratic Party, told The Daily Beast on Tuesday that Texas-Democrats voting hotline was filled with reports from voters about polling locations opening late, poll-worker shortages and people struggling to figure out how to navigate outstanding issues with their mail-in ballots. Texas voters are entitled to a chance to correct their mail-in ballot if theres an error, but elections officials say theres a lack of uniformity from county to county on how voters are notified their ballot has an issue. Leah Shah, spokesperson for Harris County Elections, told The Daily Beast earlier this year that her office is well-staffed and fortunate to be able to handle the influx of work in contacting voters. Other county elections officesespecially those in rural or less populous areasarent always afforded the same level of resources. Its been so frustrating and exasperating, quite frankly, Clouston said of navigating the ballot correction process with voters, with some elections officials not using common sense in how theyve alerted voters to needed changes. Molly Cook, a 30-year-old Democratic candidate for the Texas state senate, told The Daily Beast that improving voting access in Texas is an essential priority. Shes running against incumbent state Sen. John Whitmer (D), who is also a candidate for Houston mayor. Most of us did not start off with a vote in this country You have stay on top of maintaining civil rights, she said. And issues with voting on Tuesday have prompted Harris County election officials to pump the brakes on counting ballots, according to Houstons Fox 26, which reports that Harris County election officials have asked the Secretary of State for a an extension beyond 24 hours to count ballots. Amid much of Tuesdays chos, voters remained persistent in making it to the ballot box. Marissa, who only gave her first name and was one of the last voters in line at the West Gray Multi-Service Center on Tuesday, told The Daily Beast showing up to vote was important to her. Its a mean to enact change, she said. Change. This matters. This is everything, she said. Read more at The Daily Beast. Get the Daily Beast's biggest scoops and scandals delivered right to your inbox. Sign up now. Stay informed and gain unlimited access to the Daily Beast's unmatched reporting. Subscribe now. Rashida Tlaib gave her own response to President Joe Biden's State of the Union address, touting the wins of the White House while directly contrasting with Biden's talking points on climate change and police reform. Speaking on behalf of the progressive Working Families Party, the Squad member mirrored many of the issues mentioned in Bidens remarks, commending the administration for boosting the struggling economy and for quickly tackling the coronavirus pandemic through health care and financial relief. But the Michigan lawmaker quickly pivoted, homing in on talking points that the president either avoided, or had a differing opinion on. Tlaib particularly focused on climate change, calling on Biden to ban federal fossil fuel leasing and to direct federal agencies to reject permits for new projects. In contrast, the president barely mentioned climate change which was at odds with his domestic agenda of making the biggest climate investment in U.S. history. Other progressives noted Bidens meager climate mentions, including Alexandria Ocasio-Cortez (D-N.Y.), who told MSNBC, It definitely was a lost opportunity. Tlaib's comments also contrasted with the presidents on police reform, specifically on defunding the police. We can't police away homelessness, poverty or our mental health crisis in our country, said Tlaib. Care, not more criminalization is how we ensure lasting safety for all. During Bidens address, he attracted bipartisan applause with his continued support for police. We should all agree the answer is not to defund the police. It's to fund the police. Fund them. Fund them. Tlaib also dinged both the Republican Party and corporate-backed Democratic obstructionists for blocking the partys $1.7 trillion social spending plan, formerly known as Build Back Better. The bill, which would increase climate provisions, lower drug costs, and offer universal pre-K, was shot down by Republicans and Sen. Joe Manchin (D-W.Va.), although Tlaib did not call out the detractors of the bill by name. Story continues The Michigan lawmaker announced she would be delivering remarks on behalf of the Working Families Party last Thursday, continuing the organizations tradition of recruiting a progressive response to the State of the Union. Previous remarks were delivered by Rep. Jamaal Bowman (D-N.Y.) in 2021 although this was in response to Bidens joint address Rep. Ayanna Pressley (D-Mass.) in 2020, Wisconsin Lieutenant Gov. Mandela Barnes in 2019, and former Rep. Donna Edwards in 2018. Her speech was live streamed on the organizations Facebook page following the presidents address. Its quite unusual for members of the presidents party to respond with their own remarks its a role usually reserved for the opposing partys. But its a growing trend in recent years. The congresswomans decision to rebut the presidents message was not well received across the political spectrum, with both Republicans and Democrats mocking the divisions with the governing party. But Tlaib is not the only one to offer a Democratic response to the State of the Union Rep. Colin Allred (D-Texas) delivered remarks on behalf of the Congressional Black Caucus, while Rep. Josh Gottheimer (D-N.J.) gave a bipartisan perspective for the centrist group No Labels. Gottheimer also blasted Tlaib for offering her own response, comparing it to keying your own car and slashing your tires, according to Axios. A State of the Union response has been seen as a slot that could highlight rising talent within a party but on the flipside, it could be a point of blunder for lawmakers whose mid-speech mistakes could stain their reputation. CORRECTION: A previous version of this report misspelled Rep. Jamaal Bowman's name. Tony Visconti: If you had 12 million streams, you could barely afford lunch for two people (Press) I dont know why you guys dont vote Boris Johnson out, says Tony Visconti. We got rid of Trump The accusation hangs heavy in the air. Whats your story? It would be easy to bristle at an American lecturing the UK about politics, but Visconti has more right than most. It was London where the renowned producer lived and worked for 23 years, and where he met David Bowie and Marc Bolan, with whom he helped shape the glittering glam-rock era of the Seventies. Its a typical political move, he says of the prime ministers removal of Covid restrictions in England this week. So many people in the UK dont like him this is a little bone hes throwing them to say, OK, Boris is cool because I dont have to wear a mask now. Viscontis camera is off hes in New York where he lives with his partner of 20 years, musician Kristeen Young. Yet the 77-year-old has a warmth and humour to his voice that makes it seem as though were in the same room. Despite his views on Johnson, he still admits, wistfully: Half of my heart is in the UK. Its not long before Visconti will be back there to tour with Holy Holy, his Bowie supergroup (not a tribute act, their website says sternly), for a Best of Bowie tour featuring English singer-songwriter Glenn Gregory and guitarist James Stevenson. Until two months ago, that lineup also included Woody Woodmansey, who performed with Bowie in his backing ensemble The Spiders from Mars. A statement released by the drummer in January disclosed a fallout with the band due to his medical exemption from the Covid-19 vaccine. The band do not feel safe having me involved and have replaced me, he said. We tried everything to make it work, Visconti sighs. The discussions started in December last year when [cases of the Omicron variant were] very high, there were loads of infections it was very risky. After Woodmansey left, Visconti says they offered him the job back when cases began to drop again in the UK. Hes ghosted me, he says. I really am very sad about it, as other members of the band are, but we had to look after our own safety were gonna be in dressing rooms, buses we cant afford to get sick. Story continues Its strange to hear of Visconti falling out with anyone. As a producer, hes famed for his ability to make artists feel validated in the studio. He also tends to only work with artists he believes hes compatible with. Many of his working relationships have spanned decades, including the albums he produced with Bowie, from 1969s Space Oddity to the musicians final album, 2016s Blackstar, released two days before he died. Visconti had only just landed in London in the late Sixties, apprenticing with British producer Denny Cordell, when he read an advertisement for Tyrannosaurus Rex playing at the UFO Club on Tottenham Court Road. A week later, Bolan was in his flat making demos. Visconti brings an elegance, a kind of American glamour, to much of the music he produces, along with a spidey sense for innovation. He was responsible for the swooning symphonic arrangements heard on T-Rex songs such as Cosmic Dancer (1971), and for the pioneering use (or misuse) of the gating technique that led to Bowies impassioned vocal delivery on Heroes. Visconti with Welsh singer Mary Hopkin in 1971 (Getty Images) He speaks of both artists with great fondness, not just for their music and friendship, but for the ways in which they challenged societal norms of the day. Bowie made it cool to be androgynous, he says. He opened the door for so many people living in secrecy and darkness over the years. Bolan, he notes, was perhaps a month ahead when it came to pioneering the glitter and satin-shrouded look of the glam-rock era, but Bowie was already experimenting with androgyny. He thought, Why do I have to look like a guy I dont wanna look like a woman either, why cant I just be something else? he recalls. He believes this attitude, the way Bowie challenged stereotypes surrounding gender and masculinity, helped make it possible for Sebastian Viscontis son with his third wife, former music executive May Pang (previously girlfriend of John Lennon) to come out as gay years later. So its affected me on some level. Visconti shares small pieces of his family life with his followers on social media old family photos, birthday dinners, his new grandchild and plenty of opinions, too. In January, he tweeted asking his followers to help him delete his Spotify account. Does that mean he sides with Neil Young in the row over Joe Rogans controversial podcast? I thought about it, but I use Spotify as a tool, he says, and I can almost hear him shrug. In the end, he didnt delete it. You cant start banning people because they have a different political view than you, and I think the truth comes out anyway. Once you start banning people and censoring them its not free. You have to give people equal time and let others decide whats the truth. Im surprised, given the stance he took over his former bandmate. If its a physical threat, you have to make a choice, Visconti says, calling the situations totally different. If its people shooting their mouths off, so what? Turn it off! You cant start banning people because they have a different political view than you Tony Visconti He does, however, support the off-shooting debate surrounding Spotify, about the pitiful amount they pay artists per stream (0.002 to 0.0062). Spotify is disgusting, the money they make out of [artists], he says. If you had 12 million streams, you could barely afford lunch for two people. Its ridiculous, I dont know why its allowed. Spotify does nothing to support the culture of music. Its something else that Bowie foresaw, having once claimed that the way we listen to music would become similar to the way we consume water or electricity. He was really ahead, he understood the concept of the internet before most people did, Visconti says. He was a visionary, and youll find many things he said that have come to pass. Visconti shares Bowies apparently ceaseless desire to create. Hes appeared on the credits of at least one album every year for the past 50 years, from albums by Bowie and Bolan to Sparks, The Stranglers, Iggy Pop, The Moody Blues, Manic Street Preachers and, in 2019, The Damneds first album in a decade, Evil Spirits. After the Best of Bowie tour, hell stick around in London to work with English socialite and designer Daphne Guinness, on her fourth album. He sounds excited to be moving around again, but wary of the ways in which social behaviours have shifted during the pandemic. Its a new world we developed some bad habits during lockdown, he says. A lot of people are angry. He thinks we lost a little bit of civilisation during the pandemic. The anger is so strong, he says, slowly. We just have to get over it. The Best of Bowie tour is from 2 March TUNIS (Reuters) -Tunisian military judge ordered on Wednesday the imprisonment of Abd Errazak Kilani, a lawyer and prominent opponent of President Kais Saied, who seized almost all powers in July, for inciting police to break the law, a lawyer told Reuters. The imprisonment will reinforce opposition fears that Saied is seeking revenge on his opponents, after he also last month dissolved the Supreme Judicial Council, the body which guarantees independence of the judiciary. "The military investigative judge ordered a the imprisonment against Kilani, claiming that he incited the police not to enforce the law last January", the lawyer Anouar Awled Ali said. In July, Saied suspended parliament and seized most power in a move his opponents described as a coup, drawing widespread criticism at home and abroad. But Saied said it was aimed at saving the country from collapse. Last month, a military court also sentenced in absentia a member of Tunisia's suspended parliament, Yassin Ayari, to 10 months in prison on charges of insulting the president and the army. Saied's critics accuse him of seeking dictatorial powers and undermining the rule of law. But Saied has said he will uphold rights and freedoms won in the 2011 revolution that brought democracy to Tunisia and will put a new constitution to a referendum this summer, with new parliamentary elections to follow in December. (Reporting By Tarek AmaraEditing by Marguerita Choy) ANKARA (Reuters) - Russia cancelled a bid to send four of its warships through Turkish waters into the Black Sea at Turkey's request, Foreign Minister Mevlut Cavusoglu said, adding the decision was made before Ankara closed the straits over Moscow's invasion of Ukraine. NATO ally Turkey borders Ukraine and Russia in the Black Sea and has good ties with both. On Monday, Ankara said it had closed its Bosphorus and Dardanelles straits under a 1936 pact, allowing it to curb some Russian vessels crossing. The pact exempts vessels returning to their bases. Cavusoglu told broadcaster Haberturk late on Tuesday that Turkey had asked Russia not to send its ships through before it labelled Moscow's invasion a "war" on Sunday, legally allowing it to curb passages under the Montreux Convention. "Russia has said four of its ships would cross the straits on Feb 27-28, three of which are not registered to bases in the Black Sea," Cavusoglu said. "We told Russia not to send these ships and Russia said the vessels would not cross the straits." "Nobody should be offended by this, because the Montreux Convention is valid today, yesterday and tomorrow, so we will implement it," he said. Reuters reported earlier this week that at least four Russian ships - two destroyers, a frigate, and an intelligence vessel - were waiting on Turkey's decision to cross from the Mediterranean. Two of them, a frigate and a destroyer, had asked to make the journey this week. The United States "expressed appreciation" for Turkey's move to close the straits. Ukraine's ambassador to Ankara said Kyiv was "grateful" to Turkey for "meticulously" implementing the pact. While calling Russia's invasion an unacceptable violation of international law, Turkey has carefully formulated its rhetoric not to offend Moscow, with which it has close energy, defence and tourism ties. It has called for dialogue and offered to host peace talks. Story continues Cavusoglu repeated on Tuesday that Turkey would not join its Western allies in imposing economic sanctions on Russia. While forging close cooperation with Russia, Turkey has also sold drones to Kyiv and signed a deal to co-produce more, angering Moscow. It also opposes Russian policies in Syria and Libya, as well as its 2014 annexation of Crimea. Ukrainian Defence Minister Oleksii Reznikov said on Wednesday the country was set to receive another shipment of Turkish drones, a move likely to anger Russia. (Reporting by Ezgi Erkoyun and Tuvan Gumrukcu; Editing by Daren Butler and Andrew Heavens) By David Shepardson WASHINGTON (Reuters) -The Biden administration is considering following Canada in barring Russian ships from U.S. ports, a government official said on Wednesday. A White House spokeswoman said no decision has been made. On Tuesday, Canada shut its ports to Russian-owned ships and barred them from Canadian waters. Russian-flagged ships represent a very small percentage of U.S. traffic, but barring Russian cargo from the United States would have a dramatically larger impact, the source said. It was not clear if the administration is seriously considering that more drastic step. U.S. Transportation Secretary Pete Buttigieg said earlier Wednesday that the Biden administration could take further action against Russia after the administration announced it would bar Russian airlines from U.S. airspace. "There may be other steps that would be appropriate that are within our authorities," Buttigieg told a U.S. Senate panel. "There are a number of things with regard to infrastructure and certainly with regard to travel that we need to look at as a way to make good on our commitment to support the Ukrainian people." Asked by Reuters after the hearing if the United States could follow Canada's action, Buttigieg said: "There are lots of things on the table. I can't share anything right now by way of news on that." Buttigieg disclosed he had a conversation on Tuesday with the Ukrainian minister of infrastructure and Ukraine's ambassador to Washington. Buttigieg said the United States is not just talking to Ukraine, but also to Canada and other countries "to make sure there is a consistent flow of information about what different countries are considering. Obviously, these measures have different impacts." Buttigieg said Ukrainian officials had asked the United States to impose the ban. President Joe Biden announced the ban during his State of the Union address Tuesday night. (Reporting by David Shepardson, Editing by Franklin Paul and Leslie Adler) By Patricia Zengerle WASHINGTON (Reuters) -Two Republican U.S. lawmakers, including the only Ukrainian-American in Congress, on Wednesday announced a resolution calling for Russian President Vladimir Putin to be investigated for war crimes and crimes against humanity. U.S. Representative Victoria Spartz, the only Ukrainian-American in Congress, and Senator Lindsey Graham held a news conference on their resolution amid debate in the U.S. Congress about how best to support Ukraine, including plans to approve billions of dollars in humanitarian and military aid for the Kyiv government in the wake of the Russian invasion. The resolution supports Ukraine's war crimes complaint to the International Criminal Court and urges the ICC and the International Court of Justice to expand their investigations to include Russian commanders who might be carrying out war crimes. "This is real bad for all of us and I hope these people can survive," Spartz said, after reading chilling messages she had received from Ukraine about attacks that have injured civilians, forcing them to flee for their lives. The office of the prosecutor of the International Criminal Court said on Monday it would seek court approval to open an investigation into alleged war crimes in Ukraine. Since Russia invaded Ukraine on Feb. 24, rights groups have alleged violations of international war crimes law, including the targeting of civilians, as well as indiscriminate attacks on schools and hospitals. British Prime Minister Boris Johnson said on Wednesday that he believed Putin's actions toward Ukraine already qualified as a war crime. And Canada said on Tuesday it had decided to refer the situation in Ukraine to the International Criminal Court. (Reporting by Patricia Zengerle; editing by Jonathan Oatis) By Michelle Nichols UNITED NATIONS, March 2 (Reuters) - The United Nations General Assembly is set to reprimand Russia on Wednesday over its invasion of Ukraine and demand that Moscow stop fighting and withdraw its military forces, a move that aims to diplomatically isolate Russia at the world body. By Tuesday evening nearly half the 193-member General Assembly had signed on as co-sponsors of a draft resolution ahead of a vote on Wednesday, diplomats said. The text "deplores" Russia's "aggression against Ukraine." It is similar to a draft resolution vetoed by Russia in the 15-member Security Council on Friday. No country has a veto in the General Assembly and Western diplomats expect the resolution, which needs two-thirds support, to be adopted. "Russia's war marks a new reality. It requires each and every one of us to take a firm and responsible decision and to take a side," Germany's Foreign Minister Annalena Baerbock told the General Assembly on Tuesday. While General Assembly resolutions are non-binding, they carry political weight. The draft text "demands that the Russian Federation immediately, completely, and unconditionally withdraw all of its military forces from the territory of Ukraine within its internationally recognized borders." Dozens of states are expected to formally abstain from the vote or not engage at all. In two votes by the 15-member U.N. Security Council on the Ukraine crisis in the past week, China, India and the United Arab Emirates abstained. "We must leave space for a diplomatic off-ramp," UAE U.N. Ambassador Lana Nusseibeh said on Tuesday. "Channels must remain open and those countries that did abstain have those channels with President Putin and will use them to help and support in whatever way we can." The General Assembly vote will come at the end of a rare emergency special session of the body, which was convened by the Security Council on Sunday. Russia was unable to veto the move because it was a procedural matter. Story continues More than 100 countries will have addressed the session before the vote. The moves at the United Nations are mirroring what happened in 2014 after Russia annexed Ukraine's Crimea region. The Security Council voted on a draft resolution opposing a referendum on the status of Crimea and urged countries not to recognize it. It was vetoed by Russia. The General Assembly then adopted a resolution declaring the referendum invalid. It received 100 votes in favor, 11 against and 58 formal abstentions, while two dozen countries didn't take part. (Reporting by Michelle Nichols; Editing by Mary Milliken and Richard Pullin) (Reuters) - The United States said on Tuesday it has reopened a refugee program for Iraqis that was placed on hold for more than a year during an investigation into fraud. Officials will resume processing applications that were suspended during the probe and accepting new petitions for resettlement as part of the Iraqi "Direct Access" refugee program, according to a statement from the U.S. Department of State. More than 40,000 applications that covered more than 104,000 people were frozen when the probe was launched in January 2021. U.S. investigators suspected some 4,000 Iraqis of filing false applications for resettlement as refugees. The U.S. Department of State said it "identified and resolved" its concerns about the program and would ensure that only "bona fide and qualified Iraqis" are considered for resettlement. "The United States is committed to ensuring those who sacrificed their own safety for our collective interests have an opportunity to seek refuge in the United States," department spokesperson Ned Price said in the statement. "This includes Iraqis who have served alongside U.S. service members." The program was suspended after an indictment was unsealed that accused three foreign nationals of fraud, records theft and money laundering. The alleged fraud ran from February 2016 until at least April 2019, according to the indictment, and the investigation began in February 2019, a State Department document said. Sponsored by the late Senator Edward Kennedy, the "Direct Access" program was authorized by Congress four years into the 2003-2011 U.S. occupation of Iraq and the sectarian bloodletting it unleashed. The program aimed to speed resettlement in the United States of Iraqis endangered by working for the U.S. government. The program had shortened the process for Iraqi groups "of special humanitarian concern" to obtain U.S. refugee resettlement, dropping a requirement that they first obtain referrals from the United Nations refugee agency. Story continues "All refugees undergo the highest level of security screening and vetting, including extensive interviews and the vetting of biographic and biometric information," Department of State spokesperson Price said in the statement. "Only after an applicant has cleared all security vetting can they be deemed eligible for admission to the United States." (Reporting by Tyler Clifford; Editing by Kenneth Maxwell) LONDON (Reuters) - British Prime Minister Boris Johnson said on Wednesday that he believed the actions of Russian President Vladimir Putin towards Ukraine already qualified as a war crime. The office of the prosecutor of the International Criminal Court on Monday said it would seek court approval to open an investigation into alleged war crimes in Ukraine. "What we have seen already from Vladimir Putin's regime in the use of the munitions that they have already been dropping on innocent civilians ... in my view already fully qualifies as a war crime," Johnson told parliament. Fierce fighting and Russian bombardment since the invasion began last week have killed dozens in Ukraine and sparked a refugee crisis. Strikes have hit hospitals, schools and homes. The most intensive bombardment has struck Kharkiv, a city of 1.5 million people in the east, whose centre has been turned into a bombed-out wasteland of ruined buildings and debris. On Tuesday, Johnson said the shelling of Kharkiv by Russian forces was an atrocity reminiscent of the attacks on Sarajevo in the 1990s. (Reporting by William James, Writing by Kylie MacLellan. Editing by Andrew MacAskill and Michael Holden) Flash China on Tuesday urged the United States to handle Taiwan-related issues prudently to avoid further undermining China-U.S. relations as well as peace and stability across the Taiwan Strait. Foreign Ministry spokesperson Wang Wenbin made the remarks at a daily press briefing, in response to recent media reports that the United States will send five former high-level officials to visit Taiwan in a show of U.S. support to the island. Wang said the Chinese people are firmly committed to safeguarding their national sovereignty and territorial integrity. "The U.S. demonstration of so-called support for Taiwan is futile, whoever it sends." He urged the United States to abide by the one-China principle and the provisions of the three China-U.S. joint communiques, stop all official exchanges with Taiwan, and handle Taiwan-related issues prudently to avoid further undermining China-U.S. relations as well as peace and stability across the Taiwan Strait. When asked to comment on the U.S. recent act to hype up the passage of the guided-missile destroyer USS Ralph Johnson through the Taiwan Strait, Wang said if the U.S. side intends to embolden the secessionists seeking "Taiwan independence" via such a move, "this will only expedite the collapse of the 'Taiwan independence' forces, and the United States will pay a heavy price for its risky behavior." "If the U.S. side attempts to intimidate or pressure China via such a move, we'd like to warn the United States that any military deterrence is as weak as scrap iron in front of the Great Wall of steel constituted by the 1.4 billion Chinese people," Wang said. (Independent) Ukraine has claimed that more than 2,000 of its civilians have been killed during the first week of the Russian invasion. The countrys emergency service also said that hundreds of structures including transport facilities, hospitals, kindergartens and homes have been destroyed since the conflict began. Children, women and defence forces are losing their lives every hour, it said in a statement. It comes as the the mass shelling of Kharkiv city, a key Russian target in northeastern Ukraine, is reported to have killed at least 25 people and injured at least 120 as Russian paratroopers attacked the city overnight and on Wednesday morning. Most recently, the regions deputy governor, Roman Semenukha, claimed that Russian forces launched a missile into the city council building earlier today. Kharkiv is a Russian-speaking city. Every fourth person in Kharkiv has relatives in the Russian Federation. But the citys attitude to Russia today is completely different to what it ever was before, its mayor, Ihor Terekhov, said in an online video statement. We never expected this could happen: total destruction, annihilation, genocide against the Ukrainian people - this is unforgivable. The southeastern port city of Mariupol has also suffered significant casualties and a water outage as it faces continued bombardment from Russian forces, its mayor said on Wednesday. The enemy occupying forces of the Russian Federation have done everything to block the exit of civilians from the city of half a million people, Mayor Vadym Boichenko told Ukrainian broadcasters. He did not provide an exact number of casualties. Ukrainian authorities are also investigating possible Russian rocket or artillery fire on an airport in Ukraines Black Sea port of Odesa today, the countrys deputy defence minister Hanna Malyar said. Meanwhile, Kyivs mayor earlier warned that Russian troops are drawing closer to the Ukrainian capital as thousands continue to flee the city. We are preparing and will defend Kyiv!, Vitali Klitschko wrote in an online post. Kyiv stands and will stand. More to follow... Ukrainian authorities said they foiled an assassination plot by Chechen special forces against President Volodymyr Zelensky. Ukrainian Presidency/Handout/Anadolu Agency via Getty Images Ukraine on Tuesday said it defeated Chechen forces sent to kill President Volodymyr Zelensky. A Ukrainian defense official said double agents in Russia's security agency gave intel on the plot. Insider couldn't confirm the news, but Zelensky is widely considered a key target of Russia's. A Ukrainian security and defense chief said on Tuesday that Ukrainian forces had thwarted an assassination plot against President Volodymyr Zelensky with help from members of Russia's security services. A Telegram post published Tuesday by Ukraine's Center for Strategic Communications cited Oleksiy Danilov, the head of Ukraine's National Security and Defense Council, as saying that an elite group of Chechen special forces known as the Kadyrovites was dispatched by Russia to "eliminate our president" but was "destroyed directly." Axios first reported the story. Per the post, Danilov said Ukraine had "received information" about the plot against Zelensky from people in Russia's Federal Security Service who "do not want to take part in this bloody war." The Federal Security Service, also known as the FSB, is a successor to the KGB. "And thanks to this, I can say that Kadyrov's elite group was destroyed directly, which came here to eliminate our president," Danilov said. He added that the assassins were split into two groups, with one destroyed in the town of Hostomel, just northwest of the Ukrainian capital, Kyiv, and the other "under fire." Several reports and rumors of assassination attempts against Zelensky have emerged since Russia invaded Ukraine last Thursday. Zelensky himself said that "enemy sabotage groups" had entered Kyiv and that he was their "number one target," though he insists on remaining in the capital. On Monday, The Times of London reported that The Wagner Group, a Russian paramilitary group allied with President Vladimir Putin, flew 400 mercenaries into Kyiv to assassinate Zelensky in return for what the outlet described as a "handsome financial bonus." Story continues Danilov's Tuesday announcement is one of the latest victories claimed by Ukrainian authorities, who frequently report they've inflicted heavy casualties on Russian troops trying to advance into Ukraine's major population centers. But the accuracy of these claims remains unclear; Moscow has been silent on the exact losses suffered by its forces, as well as the existence of the supposed death squads on Zelensky and his government. Read the original article on Business Insider (AFP via Getty Images) Ukraine has asked two international internet bodies to remove Russia from the internet. Two representatives for Ukraine, Andrii Nabok and deputy prime minister Mykhailo Fedorov, emailed the Internet Corporation for Assigned Names and Numbers (ICANN) and Reseaux IP Europeens Network Coordination Centre (RIPE NCC) to introduce strict sanctions against the Russian Federation in the field of DNS regulation. The government officials claim that Russias invasion of Ukraine violates the Geneva Conventions, but the atrocious crimes have been achieved due to the Russian propaganda machinery using websites continuously spreading disinformation, hate speech, promoting violence and hiding the truth. The letter also says that Ukraines IT infrastructure has been attacked numerous times by Russia which has caused the country to recruit a volunteer cyber army and that Russias aggression could beget nuclear war. It demands the organisations revoke, permanently or temporarily, the domains .ru, .NN and .su, as well as revoking SSL certificates and shutting down domain name servers commonly described as the address book of the internet - in Russia. All of these measures will help users seek for reliable information in alternative domain zones, preventing propaganda and disinformation, it concludes. The Kremlin did not respond to a request for comment from The Independent before time of publication. Many large technology companies have already taken action to restrict Russian content. This includes Facebook and Instagram blocking RT and Sputnik, Google banning the YouTube accounts of the state-sponsored media, and Reddit quarantining its r/Russia subreddit for spreading misinformation. However, many believe that walling Russia off from the rest of the internet could have dramatic consequences. Russia has previously tested attempts to launch a country-wide alternative to the global internet, but such demands may exacerbate this isolationism. Story continues Bill Woodcock, an executive director of the internet infrastructure NGO Packet Clearing House, tweeted that the actions would make Russian civilian Internet users much more vulnerable to man-in-the-middle attacks, such as are used to compromise banking credentials and web site passwords while having little to no effect on the Russian government and military. They would have little to no effect on the Russian government or military. Remember, this is _exactly_ the attack the Russians practiced for last July, which means their defenses are probably at optimum readiness right about now.https://t.co/1pCT6I4BU3 Bill Woodcock (@woodyatpch) March 1, 2022 In the short-term, this is a bad plan because it would cut the Russian man-on-the-street off from international news and perspectives, leaving them with only what the Russian government chooses to tell them. Thats not a great way to decrease Russian public support for the war. The former president of the ICAAN supported this analysis. Keeping the protocol layer operating in Russia is the best way to ensure that sites carrying diverse views to Russian audiences are effective, Paul Twomey wrote in a reply to the Twitter thread. Flash Italy's government is studying ways to reduce the country's reliance on gas imports from Russia, Prime Minister Mario Draghi told Parliament on Tuesday. Draghi sought to reassure Italians concerned about the rising security risks and spiraling energy prices stemming from the Russia-Ukraine military conflict that "the government is working non-stop to counter the possible repercussions." Energy prices have been surging in Italy since before the Ukraine crisis. According to the country's National Institute of Statistics (ISTAT), energy prices surged 29.1 percent in December 2021 and a further 38.6 percent in January. Preliminary data show that prices will continue to increase as a result of the crisis. Draghi noted that Italy imports 95 percent of the natural gas it uses, and more than 40 percent of its total imports come from Russia. He said that gas imports from Russia are not expected to be suspended, but "it is important to assess all eventualities." With spring approaching, that the rising temperatures will reduce the need for gas for heating. The country has 2.5 billion cubic meters of gas in storage, which should allow it to absorb disturbances in supply, he said. The "situation risks being more complex for the next winter period and also for the more immediate future," he acknowledged. Nuclear waste barrels Hundreds of Ukrainian nuclear power plant workers and nearby citizens on Wednesday blocked Russian troop access to a nuclear power plant, attempting to prevent Russian forces from advancing in the area, according to a video shared to social media and verified by CNN. In the video, the crowd of people is seen holding up Ukrainian flags and impeding roadway access to a facility in the Ukraine town of Enerhodarby, standing in the way of the route and using garbage trucks to block streets, CNN reports. "We conveyed the position of our city and its residents that the ZNPP [Zaporizhzhia Nuclear Power Plant] is under reliable protection, that its workers and residents of Enerhodar are under Ukrainian flags. ... All municipal services are working in emergency mode. Nobody is going to surrender the city. People are determined," wrote Enerhodar Mayor Dmytro Orlov to his Facebook page, CNN notes. The International Atomic Energy Agency (IAEA) on Wednesday said that Ukraine had requested assistance "to provide immediate assistance in coordinating activities in relation to the safety of the [Chernobyl Nuclear Power Plant] and other nuclear facilities," according to CNN. Ukraine's request comes after Russia notified the IAEA on Tuesday that Russian forces had taken control over the Zaporizhzhia Nuclear Power Plant. According to CNN, the Russian letter to IAEA said that employees at the Ukrainian nuclear site continue to "work on providing nuclear safety and monitoring radiation in normal mode of operation. The radiation levels remain normal." Last week, Russian forces took control of the site of the Chernobyl nuclear disaster. Chernobyl is the site of the worst nuclear incident in history. In 1986, several explosions occurred at the Soviet-designed reactor. The reactor's core experienced a meltdown and radioactive material was released into the atmosphere. As Tennessee slowly transitions out of the pandemic, the state's flagship academic health system is tackling its next short- and long-term battles with a new leader. Dr. Peter Buckley started as the new Chancellor of the University of Tennessee Health Science Center in Memphis on Feb. 1, and he has plans for transforming the health of all Tennesseans. And while there are universal health care challenges across the state, such as high rates of child obesity, diabetes and smoking, there are some struggles unique to East Tennessee that Buckley wants to mitigate. "There's the issue of improving general health and general workforce development (in Knoxville) ... and significant addiction issues," Buckley said in an interview with Knox News. "But we have the opportunity to work with faculty there and leverage some of its unique strengths." Here's a look at how the UT Health Science Center is impacting the lives of East Tennesseans. Knoxville's health care strengths While its main campus is in Memphis, the UT Health Science Center serves Chattanooga, Knoxville and Nashville. The institution also has more than 100 clinical and educational sites across Tennessee. "Memphis is our home, but the state of Tennessee is our campus," Buckley said. East Tennessee's strongest connection to Health Science Center is through the UT Medical Center. The hospital holds the Knoxville campus of the College of Medicine. Medical students spend their first two years in Memphis, then rotate through Knoxville, Chattanooga and Memphis for clinical training. Approximately 150 medical students from across the United States elect clinical rotations at the hospital. It's a pivotal relationship: The hospital has served the Appalachian region since 1956. The UT Medical Center offers clinical training in nine practices: anesthesiology, family medicine, general dentistry, medicine, obstetrics and gynecology, oral and maxillofacial surgery, pathology, radiology and surgery. Story continues "The involvement the organization has with the broader Knoxville community is very impressive, so there's a very good foundation to build on there," Buckley said. Peter Buckley is the new chancellor of the University of Tennessee Health Science Center. Not only has Buckley been impressed with UT Medical Center's response to the pandemic, but he's also looking forward to further advancing two programs in Knoxville: the Department of Audiology and Speech Pathology and the Amyloidosis and Cancer Theranostics Program. "As I've looked at the statewide program, it's an opportunity to pull together the synergies and talents that reside in this one area," Buckley said. Improving the health of East Tennesseans While Knoxville is home to several of the state's health care strengths, there's also room for improvement, he believes. There is a huge need for dentists, especially in rural areas of East Tennessee. Buckley shared in his inaugural address that in Tennessee's Appalachian region, there are only four dentists for every 100,000 people. To mitigate the problem, the UT Health Science Center hopes to create a statewide dental health clinic network. By partnering with the Tennessee Department of Health, the university hopes to open six new dental clinics this year to serve rural and low-income residents. "As the state's only (public) dental school, this is our responsibility to step up," Buckley said. East Tennessee hasn't been spared from the medical staffing shortages, either, so making sure that UT Health Science Center graduates stay in the state is a priority for Buckley. Peter Buckley plans to improve access to dentists for those in Tennessee's rural areas. "Knoxville is beautiful. Knoxville is excellent. And when you have that academic relationship (with the hospital), it can give you an opportunity to bring in people," Buckley said. He said the key to expanding East Tennessee's health care is bringing in a diverse group of health care professionals, including medical students from outside of the United States. Only 17% of the state's health care workforce are international medical graduates. According to Buckley, international doctors and health care professionals are more likely to serve rural areas, like parts of East Tennessee, where Tennessee's health care needs are greatest. "You have all of the professional assets that are embedded in a high-quality environment that's a good place to raise a family," Buckley said. "That's what we should sell, and not just UTMC, but areas surrounding UTMC." What is the UT Health Science Center? The UT Health Science Center is the state's flagship public academic health system. Started in 1911 in Memphis, the college eventually combined with the UT Graduate School of Medicine in Knoxville, based at the UT Medical Center, and the UT College of Medicine in Chattanooga, based at Erlanger Health System. The university, which is part of the UT System, has six academic programs: dentistry, graduate health sciences, health professions, medicine, nursing and pharmacy. Who is Peter Buckley? Buckley most recently served as the dean of the school of medicine at Virginia Commonwealth University. He was also the executive vice president for medical affairs at Virginia Commonwealth University Health System and carried the system through the pandemic. Before VCU, he worked at the Medical College of Georgia in Augusta for seven years and oversaw regional campuses across the state. Originally from Ireland, Buckley has and his wife, Leonie, emigrated to America in 1992. He has two kids and three dogs, including a Great Dane. Buckley, a psychiatrist and expert in schizophrenia, takes over for Dr. Steve Schwab, who served as UT Health Science Center chancellor for approximately 12 years. Rebecca Wright: Higher education reporter at Knox News Instagram | Twitter | Email | 865-466-3731 Enjoy exclusive content and premium perks while supporting strong local journalism. To get started, visit knoxnews.com/subscribe. This article originally appeared on Knoxville News Sentinel: How UT Health Science Center's new leader wants to help East Tennessee MAIQUETIA, Venezuela (AP) Emily Mayora's family once supported the opposition to Venezuelan President Nicolas Maduro, especially when a fresh young leader injected life into that movement three years ago and drew huge crowds into the street. But when the same leader showed up recently to rally support in Maiquetia, a town on the Caribbean Sea, Mayora didn't bother to walk a block to see him. She stayed in the little store she runs from her home, selling soda and snacks while Juan Guaido, made a speech to about 90 people. Her disappointment is widely shared in Venezuela, where the economy is dismal and many people are fed up both with the government and the groups that oppose it. I dont believe in either side, neither the opponents nor the ruling party, the mother of two said. Why? Because they promise and promise and do not deliver. They get up there, Were going to get rid this nefarious government, just talk. There are many people here who do not leave their homes (to attend the gathering) only a few do because they no longer believe in any of this. That broad malaise follows a brief burst of enthusiasm generated by a few notable local election victories and it undercuts opposition efforts to reconnect with supporters after a pandemic-forced hiatus of large marches and gatherings. Guaido, then the head of congress, declared himself Venezuela's legitimate leader in 2019, asserting Maduro's reelection had been illegitimate. He drew enormous crowds of backers into the streets while also winning widespread international recognition from the U.S., Canada and many European nations. But much of the momentum seems to have evaporated. Guaidos popularity has dropped from about 60% three years ago to under 15% in February, according to the the Venezuela-based polling firm Datanalisis. That's because many believe he lacks a viable way to oust Maduro, who has held power since 2013, said David Smilde, senior fellow at the Washington Office on Latin America and professor at Tulane University. Story continues Unless its somebody whos just really enamored with Guaido or somehow close to the opposition movement, its pretty hard to find people that think that this is the guy, Smilde said. Most everyone else thinks, Well, this just led to nothing; nothings changed. And theyre going to remain passive until they see some kind of really different new offering. Government crackdowns, too, have made many wary of getting involved. Domestically, some key opposition leaders and some vocal citizens have been imprisoned or fled abroad. The government has squeezed out opposition and most independent news outlets. Many fear that expressing opposition could endanger their access to subsidized goods distributed by the government. Internationally, Guaido's failure to capitalize on his initial burst of popularity has dimmed his appeal. Several of the countries that once recognized Guaidos parallel government no longer do so. A much smaller crowd turned up on a narrow, dead-end street in a hillside neighborhood last month to hear Guaido, still just 38. Some had been bused in and wore the orange or blue t-shirts of political parties in his U.S-backed movement. Others stood outside their homes to listen and a few walked over to shake his hand. But for many, daily routine continued. A man delivered water to homes, another left for work. Mayora, 44, kept her shop open. A customer struggled to do math trying to figure out how best to stretch $5. People right now have become very selective, if you will, about the things they attend to and the things they put energy and effort into, said Benigno Alarcon, director of the Center for Political and Government Studies at the Andres Bello Catholic University. When you tell people, Well, we are going to protest, people are going to tell you, Well, exactly what for and what is it going to be used for? And what is this protest going to lead to? And why is this one going to work if the other didnt work? So there are very, very low expectations" for change. Only about 42% of registered voters participated in November's regional elections and Alarcon said many people do not think that their vote will be respected. The socialist government won most of the races, but it suffered a notable setback in the northwest state of Barinas, where the family of the governing movement's founder, the late President Hugo Chavez, had governed for more than 20 years. The opposition candidate was retroactively disqualified while leading the vote count. Electoral authorities then scheduled do-over for January and disqualified two other opposition candidates. Yet the opposition eventually won again, shocking the ruling party. Government employee William Gomez was among the throngs who turned out for Guaido in 2019, but says he wont do it again. I no longer believe in anyone, Gomez, 60, said shortly after Guaido finished his speech. What are we going to do if these gentlemen do not make good politics? Another leader who really dedicates himself to the people has to be born. Guaidos movement is trying to revive enthusiasm while mobilizing support for early, and fair, presidential elections. It gathered some 700 of its local leaders in Caracas last month to prepare them to push for the election and other demands. At the rally in Maiqetia, party activists like Yoliana Salazar said they are trying to win back over doubters like Gomez. It is a little ant work, a little-by-little-type work, she said, and echoed Guaidos assertions of progress, such as an investigation by the International Criminal Court into possible crimes against humanity committed against protesters in 2017. NEW YORK (Reuters) - Wells Fargo & Co's head of communications and brand management, Barri Rafferty, is leaving the bank in May, a spokesperson confirmed on Wednesday. Rafferty was in charge of improving the bank's public image and communications strategy, according to a memo viewed by Reuters that announced Rafferty's departure to staff last week. Rafferty joined the bank in 2020, several years in to Wells Fargo's effort to clean up its reputation after its sales accounts scandal raised the ire of regulators in 2016, the Wall Street Journal reported earlier on Wednesday. "Barri brought an innovative approach to our communications," Bill Daley, vice chairman of public affairs, wrote in the memo which was dated Friday. "We've seen our reputation metrics improve resulting in enhanced favorability, trust and ... media sentiment." Rafferty's replacement has not yet been named. (Reporting by Elizabeth Dilts Marshall in New York; Editing by Matthew Lewis) Nearly 100 people gathered Tuesday night to remember the four people, including three children, who were shot and killed at a Sacramento County church. Neighbors, community members, law enforcement chaplains, classmates, school staff and strangers filled the driveway of the Church in Sacramento. Authorities say 39-year-old David Mora Rojas on Monday shot his three daughters and another man during a supervised visit at the Church in Sacramento before turning the gun on himself. The Sacramento County Coroner's Office identified the three sisters as 10-year-old Samantha Mora Gutierrez, 9-year-old Samarah Mora Gutierrez, and 13-year-old Samia Mora Gutierrez. The White House is encouraging Major League Baseball and the Major League Baseball Players Association to get back to the bargaining table after the league canceled the first week of games after the two sides failed to reach an agreement this week. "The major league baseball negotiations are a matter for the players, the league and the owners. Baseball fans may have some opinions as well. We leave that to them," principal deputy press secretary Karine Jean-Pierre told reporters on Air Force One when asked for the president's reaction to the cancellation of Opening Day. "The best role for government is to encourage the parties to commit themselves fully to collective bargaining that reaches an agreement, and that's how we feel here," she continued. "We encourage Major League Baseball and Major League Baseball Players Association to stay at the bargaining table and reach an agreement as soon as they can so we can kick off the season and get back to enjoying baseball games." The league canceled games after owners and union representatives for the players failed to come to an agreement before a deadline imposed by the owners, who locked out the players late last year when the latest collective bargaining agreement expired. Talks have been at an impasse over details such as minimum salaries for players, free agency rules, taxes on payroll and expanded playoffs, the latter of which would provide more TV revenue for the league and owners. Opening Day had been scheduled for March 31, but owners had imposed the deadline of earlier this week for a deal to be in place before wiping out the first week of the season. Players have said the deadline was a negotiating ploy meant to pressure the union into signing off on a less favorable deal. You are here: World Flash The Russian Armed Forces have destroyed 1,325 Ukrainian military infrastructure objects since the start of the operation, Russian Defense Ministry spokesman Igor Konashenkov said Tuesday. Among them were 43 control points and communication centers of the Ukrainian Armed Forces, Konashenkov told a regular briefing on Russia's "special military operation." In addition, 395 tanks and other armored combat vehicles, 59 multiple launch rocket systems, 179 field artillery guns and mortars as well as 286 units of special military vehicles were destroyed, he added. The access of Ukrainian troops to the Sea of Azov has been completely blocked, Konashenkov told reporters. He said that Russia will strike the information warfare and psychological operation center of the Ukrainian Armed Forces as well as technological facilities of the Ukrainian Security Service in Kiev with high-precision weapons. The raid will be aimed at countering Ukraine's "information attacks" on Russia, including cyberattacks against various state institutions and bomb threats, he said, urging people living near these facilities to leave. Brown County Jail Warning: This story contains graphic descriptions of violence. A 24-year-old woman has been charged with the murder of a man whose body parts were found strewn about a Green Bay property and vehicle last week. A person living at the home summoned police on Feb. 23 after discovering a severed head in a bucket, according to a criminal complaint obtained by local outlet WBAY. Officers arriving at the scene made their way down the basement stairs, finding the head still lying in a black bucket on the floor, covered by a towel, and what appeared to be dried blood on a nearby mattress. A further search of the property turned up a storage tote, in which the upper part of a torso had been stored. Taylor Schabusiness, allegedly the last person to have seen the 25-year-old victim alive, was found at a nearby house. Her clothing was spackled in dried blood, according to the complaint, and police searching her van found a crock pot box containing other human body parts, including legs. When police asked her what had happened, Schabusiness replied, That is a good question. She was later charged with first-degree intentional homicide, mutilating a corpse, and third-degree sexual assault. Schabusiness allegedly killed and dismembered her victim after first smoking methamphetamine with him, according to the complaint. They initiated a sexual encounter that then escalated to include the use of chains, which Schabusiness characterized as a dogs choke collar. There were two, she saidone for her, and one for him. Eventually, Schabusiness says she began strangling him with her bare hands. She told investigators that she could feel his heart continuing to beat as she choked him, so she kept pulling and choking him harder. She kept going as the mans face turned purple and blood came out of his mouth, local outlet WISN reported, citing the complaint. She then played with the cadaver for two to three hours after his death, using several knives to dismember the body, prosecutors alleged in the complaint. A bread knife worked the best, she explained in a police interview, because of the serrated blade. Story continues Schabusiness told the police that theyd have fun trying to find all of the organs, according to the complaint. Her plan had been to bring all of the body parts with her, but, being paranoid and lazy as she put it, she left the head behind. I cant believe I left the head, though, she said Schabusiness told investigators that she had just gone crazy, and blacked out during at least part of the encounter. She asked them if they knew what it was like to love something so much that you kill it, according to the Green Bay Press Gazette. The name of the victim was not immediately released by the authorities. On Tuesday, a Brown County court set bail for Schabusiness at $2 million, deeming her a flight risk. She had been placed on probation just weeks before the alleged murder, and was missing the monitoring bracelet she was supposed to have been wearing. I think the facts alleged are extremely concerning and disturbing and go to the violent and grave nature of the offense, Assistant District Attorney Caleb Saunders said at the hearing. He called it one of the most serious offenses committed in the county in a long time. Appearing via video link, Schabusiness said little at the hearing, WBAY reported. She seemed calm. If convicted, she faces life in prison. Read more at The Daily Beast. Get the Daily Beast's biggest scoops and scandals delivered right to your inbox. Sign up now. Stay informed and gain unlimited access to the Daily Beast's unmatched reporting. Subscribe now. By David Lawder CHICAGO (Reuters) -U.S. Treasury Secretary Janet Yellen travels to Chicago on Wednesday to amplify President Joe Biden's State of the Union messages on punishing Russia for its invasion of Ukraine and advance his economic agenda, including investments in child care, education and clean energy. The brief trip comes after Yellen spent several intensive days working with U.S. allies on crippling sanctions and asset freezes against Russia's central bank, major financial institutions, Russian President Vladimir Putin and the wealthy elites close to him, denying them access to the international financial system. "We expect these efforts to have a debilitating impact on Russia's economy and hamstring the Russian government's ability to fund its invasion," Yellen said after a call on Tuesday with G7 counterparts and Ukrainian Finance Minister Sergii Marchenko. Biden, in his speech on Tuesday night, closed U.S. airspace to Russian aircraft, adding: "When the history of this era is written, Putin's war in Ukraine will have left Russia weaker and the rest of the world stronger." Yellen's actions on sanctions will resonate in the Chicago area's 54,000-strong Ukrainian-American community, one of the largest in the United States. She will meet with Illinois Governor JB Pritzker, who spoke on Sunday of his family's origins in Kyiv at a rally in support of Ukraine. At the University of Illinois-Chicago's Innovation Center, Yellen also will tout big job gains and Biden's efforts to persuade Congress to pass key parts of his domestic agenda, including new investments in manufacturing research and development. While he spoke, Yellen tweeted: "I am optimistic about the U.S. economic recovery. President Bidens policies will increase the productive capacity of our economy to boost long-term growth, protect the environment, and promote equity." Biden dropped the term "Build Back Better" from his speech, the name for a sweeping $2 trillion spending package that stalled at the end of last year amid opposition from moderate Democrats, premiering the new phase "Build a Better America." He emphasized his focus on key elements of the previous proposal, including universal preschool, cutting child care costs for families, and clean energy tax breaks, paid for by tax hikes on the wealthy and new, 15% minimum corporate taxes. (Reporting by David Lawder; additional reporting by Andrea Shalal; editing by Jonathan Oatis) Choosing a future in college or the workforce can be a daunting task for many high school students. Amherst County High Schools Future Center strives to expose students to various options for life after graduation, is in its inaugural year of helping ease that burden. The goal and emphasis of the program is to increase the number of students, especially first generation and minority students, who enroll and succeed in some aspect of training or education after high school. The center is located on the high schools main hallway adjacent to the auditorium and its walls are adorned with flags from colleges across the United States. Two key educators, Laura Casler and Abby Wallen, are driving the dual mission of forging college-bound students and those ready to immediately enter the workforce. Casler is head of the counseling department and the Future Center. Wallen is a college adviser, a new position at the high school this year. Wallen said the centers location is in the middle of where students pass each day and it is a great, visible location that sparks natural interest. That is literally the hub, said Wallen. It really is the perfect location for what were trying to do, which is reach out to students and let them know theres all these resources to help them plan for graduation. So were lucky in that respect. Wallen works for the Virginia College Advising Corps, which is affiliated with the University of Virginia and a program Amherst County Public Schools is partnering with. She said college advising operates within the living, breathing program of the Future Center. This is a larger problem in the fact that post-secondary enrollment is dropping, especially among underrepresented students, like students of color, low-income students, first-generation students whose parents didnt go to college, Wallen said. Theres really a need among these populations who want to achieve upward economic mobility but dont necessarily have the means or support to actually be accepted and financially fund a college education, which is going to be their ticket. She meets with students from all four grades at the high school and primarily works with seniors and juniors helping to get them plugged into what they need in the process of inquiring about and applying for colleges. The one-on-one support reaches students where they are, fill out necessary forms and paperwork, including scholarships and financial assistance, and figuring out college is the right fit for future plans, she said. Its really that direct support piece and that relationship piece that helps close that achievement gap, she said. While the bulk of her meetings are in person, she also interacts virtually through Zoom and Google Meet. Casler said she feels the students have been extremely receptive to the centers efforts. Any time you can give students another adult to connect with, to help them in any way, whether or not its in their daily, personal school experience and especially what we do to help them plan for their future, Casler said. This is a great program because were here to give them a personalized experience to plan for their future. The center works with students on writing resumes, interviewing skills for jobs and college, brings in guest speakers and engages in field trips to local businesses, among other activities. There are tons of opportunities, especially right now, Casler said. Our labor field is in dire need of workers. There are just a wealth of businesses within the Lynchburg region that would gladly hire our students after they graduate. On Feb. 16, a group took to a trip to Cooper Steel in Monroe and CSE, Inc. in Madison Heights. It was amazing, Casler said. I had never been in a steel mill before. Another trip is planned in late March to visit a few businesses in Buena Vista, she said. A local job fair also is planned in April in the back lot of the high school with many hopeful businesses participating in a cookout-style setting. The center has Facebook and Instagram pages and students have been in the programs main room on a Zoom call with college representatives answering questions, Wallen said. It was about as close to an in-person experience as we could do, she said. Casler said the center in future years also will benefit from a planned expansion project at the high school, which includes adding more opportunities for career and technical education fields, a major priority for the Amherst County School Board in pursuing the construction project. The hope is to expand those opportunities, bring in more students and increase female participation in career fields such as cosmetology and barbering, Casler said. She said students who arent interested in college can immediately find jobs making $15 to $16 an hour or higher starting out, and the center can help them map out ways to plug into those opportunities. The more adults that they have to connect with, that they feel they can go to ask questions, the better its going to be for all of them, Casler said. Principal Derrick Brown said he has seen the center get much use this year and it is becoming part of the fabric at the high school. Students need opportunities for the workforce and college and finding the right path for their futures can be a complicated process the center is tackling head on. Having a Future Center that is a one-stop shop that allows everybody to get the resources they need is crucial for our kids, Brown said. Be the first to know Get local news delivered to your inbox! Sign up! * I understand and agree that registration on or use of this site constitutes agreement to its user agreement and privacy policy. In the documentary 8 Billion Angels, fishers, farmers and scientists look at the impact of human population on the ecosystems we all need to survive. The picture is grim. Fisheries are crashing and industrial farming is devastating soil, water and forests. We are eating our way to extinction is the title of another documentary shown in the RVA (Richmond, Va.) Environmental Film Festival, which wraps up Friday. Oceans and rivers are filled with plastic, often in tiny particles, as is most of the water we drink: 93% of bottled water and 83% of tap water. Watching a series of films on what we are doing to the planet is difficult, to say the least, but so important if we are to understand the dire straits we are in. Its not just runaway climate change we have to worry about. We are polluting and destroying the land, air and water that all life forms need to thrive. As much as we say we want to leave a better world to our children and grandchildren, most of us arent willing to see that our way of life is the opposite of what is sustainable. The way we treat livestock and grow food to feed livestock is the most destructive of our land-based actions. In the oceans, we are destroying fisheries and coral reefs, and filling the oceans with plastic. In other words, Whats on your plate affects the worlds fate. At the same time, we seem unwilling to face the fact of our numbers. When I was born, there were fewer than 3 billion people. Just 60 years later, there are nearly 8 billion. According to the film, one American child consumes as much as 40 children in Bangladesh. Let that sink in. We have an even larger responsibility to curb our voracious appetites and the number of children we have. The key, most population experts say, is to educate girls because when they understand they have the right to have smaller families and choose careers, thats what they do. But boys and men also need to be educated! In much of the world, girls and women are still subjected to extreme patriarchy. They are not given the chance to attend or finish school, decide how old they are when they get married or limit how many children they have. So its true that we need global action from governments and corporations if we are to stop the destruction of the planet as we know it. To get there, however, a critical mass of people has to demand and take action, especially by voluntarily controlling our population. In The Story of Plastic, another solution is to require extended producer responsibility, which means the oil and petrochemical companies that make plastic need to be responsible for producing plastic that can be truly be recycled and buy it back: Only 2% of plastic is effectively recycled. This idea could extend to a carbon tax. Instead, taxpayers keep subsidizing oil companies. Its time for change. Shannon Brennan can be reached at shannonw481@gmail.com. Several dozen Japanese men have answered a Ukrainian call for foreign volunteers to fight Russia's invasion, according to a media report on Wednesday. A Ukrainian Embassy spokesperson acknowledged receiving calls from people "wanting to fight for Ukraine," but said they knew nothing further about volunteers. A Feb 28 social media post from the embassy said it thanked Japanese for their many inquiries about volunteering but added a proviso. A Feb 28 social media post from the embassy said it thanked Japanese for their many inquiries about volunteering but added a proviso. "Any candidates for this must have experience in Japan's Self-Defence Forces or have undergone specialised training," it said. Japan has told its nationals to put off travel to Ukraine for any reason, a warning reiterated on Wednesday by Chief Cabinet Secretary Hirokazu Matsuno, who said he was aware of the reports about the volunteers. "The Japanese foreign ministry has issued an evacuation advisory for all of Ukraine and we want people to stop all travel to Ukraine, regardless of the purpose of their visit," he told a news conference. Local officials were notified Tuesday of a confirmed positive case of highly pathogenic avian influenza in Pottawattamie County. The virus had infected a non-commercial, backyard flock of chickens and ducks in a rural part of the county and resulted in the death of several chickens, according to Pottawattamie County Emergency Management. The site is not part of the commercial food supply chain and, according to the Centers for Disease Control, poses a low risk of transmission to humans. As of Wednesday afternoon, the situation at the identified site was contained and being monitored, according to the agency. There were no concerns related to human health, and no other sites had been identified as having an exposure at that time. Officials from Emergency Management, Pottawattamie County Public Health and the Pottawattamie County Sheriffs Office were briefed by the Iowa Department of Agriculture and Land Stewardship on Tuesday, a press release from Emergency Management stated. IDALS has worked directly with the site to mitigate potential spread of the virus and will continue to monitor the site and area. The Iowa Department of Public Health and PCPH will monitor the individuals who were in contact with the flock to rule out any potential of bird-to-human transmission regarding this case. The CDC reports that there have been no detected human cases from this type of bird flu in the United States. Local, state and federal plans developed to respond to these kinds of incidents are being implemented, and there is no immediate public health or food-related safety concern at this time, said Doug Reed, director of Emergency Management. IDALS is the lead agency for HPAI and other foreign animal disease responses, the press release stated. Local officials will provide support to the state-led event, as needed or requested. Domestic poultry with highly pathogenic avian influenza may display the following symptoms, according to IDALS: Severe lethargy Severe difficulty breathing Blood-tinged discharge from eyes or beak Unfeathered skin appearing blue on the head, comb and wattle (and snood in turkeys) Swollen combs, wattle or shanks Decreased food and water intake Decreased egg production Deformed or shell-less eggs Sudden death A lab test is needed to identify avian influenza. Anyone who suspects that birds they are caring for have bird flu should contact a federal or state animal health official immediately. Bird flu usually does not infect people. However, rare cases in people have been reported, according to IDALS. Infected birds shed the virus in their saliva, mucous and feces. Human infections can happen when enough virus gets into a persons eyes, nose or mouth or is inhaled. This is why everyone should practice proper biosecurity when around birds. For more information on avian influenza in people, contact the Iowa Department of Public Health or visit idph.iowa.gov. Poultry producers, residents with backyard poultry or bird flocks and the public can find more information, updates and resources at https://pcema-ia.org/hpai. Build your health & fitness knowledge Sign up here to get the latest health & fitness updates in your inbox every week! Sign up! * I understand and agree that registration on or use of this site constitutes agreement to its user agreement and privacy policy. On Tuesday Pottawattamie County Emergency Management issued a reminder that an open burn ban has been in place since Feb. 8. The ban prohibits all open and controlled burning in Pottawattamie County, including all incorporated city limits within the county, the agency said in a release. On Monday, there were six different fires that utilized 12 of the countys 15 fire departments, units from Pottawattamie County Conservation and the Pottawattamie County Sheriffs Department due to residents failing to observe the burn ban, according to the agency. There were two additional fires out of county that departments also assisted with. The burn ban is put in place to save lives and property. Violation of a burn ban can subject a person to citation or arrest for reckless use of fire or disobeying a burn ban, the agency said in the release, noting there were four citations issued Monday. We understand that the weather has turned nice and land owners have fuels to burn, but with how dry our county is at this time, fires can become out of control quickly, resulting in catastrophic damage, Emergency Management Specialist Michell Bose said in the release. As a reminder to citizens during these dry conditions, do not throw cigarettes out from moving vehicles (advice that should be heeded despite weather conditions) and discontinue burning trash, yard waste, piled tree debris, grass/agricultural ground and set-asides or other items during the ban. Be the first to know Get local news delivered to your inbox! Sign up! * I understand and agree that registration on or use of this site constitutes agreement to its user agreement and privacy policy. Heartland Christian School has graduated from candidacy accreditation to full accreditation with Christian Schools International, which is recognized by the Iowa Board of Education. School staff learned of the accreditation during a meeting with CSI officials after school on Thursday, according to Larry Gray, executive director of Heartland Christian School. On Friday, Gray sent out a message to the Heartland Christian community. This is a huge step for HCS and for our community and God gets all the glory, he said in the message. A huge gratitude of thanks goes out to the Wilson family, the Parton family and the founding board members who, 20 years ago, decided Christian education was needed in our community so they continued (to) work to not let the ministry die that was carried on from prior churches and dedicated people. This accreditation is an extension of that dream and desire to persevere by creating Heartland Christian School. The school opened in fall 2001 after Loess Hills Christian School, directed by Gary Wilson, and Victory Christian School, operated by Carolyn Parton, merged. Gray thanked the executive committee, board of directors, school improvement committee, staff, students and parents for making accreditation possible. The news came after a site visit last week by a team from CSI, Gray said. A five-member team was on site conducting interviews, observing operations and looking at policies and financial records. Heartlands efforts to prepare for the visit paid off. The preK-12 school received candidacy accreditation for all grades in 2019. Although it had always been accredited for elementary, that marked the first time it had achieved that designation for grades 7-12. The past two-plus years, the HCS Executive Committee, along with the board of directors, school improvement committee and countless other individuals have been preparing for our site visit with the hope of advancing from candidacy to the final step of accreditation, Gray said. The process has been long and difficult, with everyone simply dissecting everything that makes up HCS, from finances to staff, from parent relationships to board policies and everything in between. The best way to put it we were put under a microscope, and no stone was left unturned! The accreditation is good for five years before renewal is needed, Gray said. Until that time, our executive committee, school improvement committee and board of directors will continue to build on this success and prepare for HCS to be an accredited school in Council Bluffs for many generations to come, he said. It will take all of us to keep the work going and to make sure that our community knows that we are here to serve them and their educational needs. Be the first to know Get local news delivered to your inbox! Sign up! * I understand and agree that registration on or use of this site constitutes agreement to its user agreement and privacy policy. DES MOINES Iowa workers will see a gradual reduction in the state income tax on their paychecks over the next five years, thanks to legislation signed into law Tuesday by Gov. Kim Reynolds. The tax cuts will be phased in over five years, at which point they will provide tax relief and thus also reduce state revenue by $1.9 billion. Iowas current state budget is roughly $8 billion. It is the third significant tax cuts legislation signed in the five years that Reynolds has been governor. Were sending a very clear message to the rest of the country that Iowa is open for business, all the while still protecting state priorities like education and public safety the Republican governor said Tuesday during a public bill-signing event for House File 2317 at LBS, a publishing and packaging company in Des Moines. Right now, most Iowa workers pay between 4.14% and 8.53% state tax on their income. Under the new law, the first round of state income tax reductions will begin in tax year 2023. Each year, the rates and the number of income brackets will be reduced until tax year 2026, when all Iowa workers will pay a 3.9% state tax on their income. The new law also eliminates the state tax on retirement income, also starting in tax year 2023. And it contains a mechanism that will lower the states tax on business income. Currently, the state taxes business revenue from $100,000 to $250,000 at 9%, and all income beyond that at 9.8%. Under the new law, for every year that the state collects more than $700 million in business tax revenue, the rate will be lowered until it reaches 5.5%. That threshold has been crossed only once, according to the states nonpartisan fiscal analysis agency. But the state budget department projects it will continue to be surpassed annually. Theres never been a better time in Iowa for bold, sustainable tax reform, and thats exactly what todays bill represents, said Reynolds, who was scheduled later Tuesday to deliver the Republican Partys response to President Joe Bidens State of the Union address. Dozens of Republican state lawmakers attended the bill signing ceremony, which was held just a few miles from the Iowa Capitol. The tax cuts passed the Iowa Legislature with mostly Republican support, with just four Democrats joining all Republicans in voting for the bill. Democrats expressed concerns about the impact the $1.9 billion reduction in future revenue could have on the state budget, and criticized the new law for favoring higher-income workers. While the highest wage earners will see their tax rate slashed in half, lower-income workers will see only a modest rate reduction. This is a tax bill that is going to overwhelmingly benefit the ultra-rich and big corporations, Zach Wahls, the Democratic Senate minority leader from Coralville, said Tuesday during a news conference. You are here: World Flash At least seven people were killed after a clash in Shikarpur district of Pakistan's southern Sindh province, local media reported on Tuesday. According to the ARY news, the killings occurred as a result of crossfires between two groups. Both the parties exchanged heavy cross-fire while also using rocket launchers, police told local media. The reason for the clash was old enmity, police said, adding that all the deceased had been identified. Reportedly, police reached the site after the incident and started an investigation. EDITOR'S NOTE: Nathan Penfold is a native of Mitchell County. He has lived in the eastern Ukrainian port city of Mariupol for the past 12 years, where he worked as an English teacher. Last week, Mariupol was bombed by the Russian Federation and Penfold was forced to flee the country. Currently in Poland, Penfold plans to return to Osage. Mariupol sits between Crimea, which Russia took by force from Ukraine in 2014, and the eastern section of the country occupied by pro-Russian rebels. The following is Penfold's unedited account of escaping the Russian invasion, as relayed by email to Mitchell County Press Editor Jason Selby. Some readers may find the details of this disturbing. Wednesday was a usual day in the eastern Ukrainian city of Mariupol. The sun was shining, people were walking in the streets, there was a general optimism among everyone that war, real full-out war, would not come after all. I really believed that everything would be solved diplomatically. I'm an American but over the last 12 years Mariupol has become my home. I came there originally as a volunteer English teacher, and fell in love with the generosity of its people. Over the years that city has become my world, a place where I'm surrounded by old friends and memories. It's population numbers around a half million people, but at times feels like a big village where everybody knows each other. We had been living next to conflict for eight years, so when on Saturday morning we were woken by the rumbling of shellfire outside the city, it frightened us, though we had heard such shelling years before. A few quiet days passed and just when people started to feel safe again, the world ended. I was woken on Thursday morning by the sound of loud explosions. I looked at my computer and there was a message from a student in the city of Dnipro who I give lessons to. "What is going on there? We can hear the shooting all the way over here!" Dnipro is halfway across the country, I thought to myself that it couldn't be possible he heard the shelling from our region. I called my friend Ira and asked what the hell was going on. She said, "They're bombing the whole country, Mariupol, Dnipro, Kiev, Harkiv, and even in the west, everywhere! You'd better come up to our house." I live near the beach in an area that could be dangerous if we were attacked from the sea, so I threw my documents and some clothes in a travel bag and started walking up the hill toward the city center where Ira lives. As I walked I could hear explosions that seemed to come from right over our heads, it was like watching a film, so strange and different from reality. I just kept going and praying all the time. I met Ira and her friend Ivan near the center. All I could think about was getting to cover but Ira said, "No, we need to get to the market now and buy two sacks of potatoes." She and Ivan wanted to buy more groceries, but all the cash machines were empty. I gave them some money I had so we could finish buying supplies. As soon as we got home she told us we needed to start filling bottles with water. After we were prepared we sat with tea in front of the television to watch the news, and from time to time we could hear explosions that shook the house. Ivan, who just finished a tour in the Ukrainian army, got very excited every time they told that Russian tanks or planes had been hit, but still, the news was enough of a mix of good and bad to leave us feeling quite nervous about our situation. Then we heard there would be an emergency evacuation train leaving the city in 15 minutes. I had actually wanted to leave the city for some time since the shelling the Saturday before but had been sick with the flu and not well enough to travel earlier. I decided to try. So we quickly drove to the train station, and just as the train was about to pull out I jumped on without a ticket or anything. Two lady conductors told me I was welcome, but there was no free place and I would have to stand. They were making the sign of the cross over themselves as we left. "My God, where are we taking these people?" the one exclaimed. "Into Hell, straight into Hell where all the worst fighting is happening," the other replied. The train passed through the town of Volnovaha about 50 miles north of Mariupol, which is right near the front. We learned later that 30 minutes after we passed through there the town had been shelled, and the next day it was hit again very hard. Our train slowly snaked its way all across the country from east to west, stopping at times while routes were changed to avoid some dangerous areas. All the time we heard rumors about formations of Russian tanks crossing the border and cities being attacked. We prayed we wouldn't meet any of them out there on the dark plains. I was grateful when later the conductors found me a place in a different carriage. I rode in a compartment with a very nice woman who was trying to return to Italy where she lived with her husband. She had come back to Ukraine to visit family. I called my mother in America who was by then sick with worry, partly to let her know I was alright, and, in the back of my mind, to hear her voice just one more time in case anything would happen. We finally got to Lviv, the most western large city in Ukraine, at about nine p.m. after 30 hours of travelling. I asked the taxi and bus drivers about the situation at the border, and they said they could drop people off there, but the line of people waiting to cross into Poland was 12 miles long. They stand all night in the cold, sometimes waiting more than a day to get through. Later, I learned there was a free train that would come at midnight to take people across into Poland. I waited on the platform with a huge crowd of mostly women and children. Ukrainian men who are between 18 and 55 years of age are prohibited from leaving the country at present. There were however some old men and foreign men like myself waiting. A railway worker walked through the crowd shouting, "Men stand back! Women and children first!" I remembered the Titanic. And just as I'm sure it was back then, when people were trying to get into the lifeboats, there was a mad rush as soon as that train pulled in and the doors opened. People pushed to get in the train and there were screams of hundreds of frightened children. Even though I had moved aside for the women and children I still was able to get into a carriage with no problem. However after the initial rush, more people continued to run up the platform and before long the train was packed with standing room only. People were standing everywhere in the central aisle, children were sitting on the floor between the benches. I had a seat on one of those hard wooden benches in the old carriage, which wouldn't have been so bad, except for the fact that we would be stuck in that train for 14 hours while we waited for the Ukrainian border authorities to check everyone's documents. There were so many people packed in that car that a person could barely move. After travelling about 20 miles we stopped in a field, in the dark with no lights on in the train. I think now we were simply waiting until the driver got permission to pull into the customs checkpoint, but at the time the people were frantic with panic. There were rumors that they had turned off the lights so Russian planes could not see us moving. I don't know if that was true or not, but just the idea was enough to frighten people, and every time someone's telephone screen lit up others would shout to switch it off. So we sat in the dark and waited for about two hours, then moved into the checkpoint. The poor Ukrainian border authorities were completely overwhelmed. An officer shoved her way through the carriage, filling a plastic shopping bag with hundreds of passports as she went. We waited for hours there, and finally when we were worried that we would never see our documents again, the officers started to bring them out of the building. Somehow they managed in that mess to return each person his document. We still had to wait until the train received permission to go on, and by then most of the children had been more than 13 hours without anything to eat, so the border authorities brought in large boxes of cookies and began to distribute them. After another hour or so we moved into Poland. It took a while more to unload all the cars so while we were waiting for the doors to open, the Polish border authorities passed us bottles of water through the windows. Finally when we were able to leave the train we moved into the processing terminal, near which stood crowds of people and reporters. As soon as we got through passport control we were met by some women who spoke English and asked if we needed assistance or a place to stay. Outside the building there were more people who held up signs advertising free places to stay, free rides or free food. After visiting a welcome center that had been set up for Americans I went to the train station where I was surprised to find more volunteers distributing food and toiletries to the refugees. When I went to buy a ticket I spoke to the cashier in Ukrainian, as I don't know Polish. Because these are both Slavic languages I could understand her more or less, and she asked me several times if I were Ukrainian. I said no, that I have American citizenship, and she explained that in Poland they are giving railway tickets for free to citizens of Ukraine now. I reached my friend's home in Krakow after an exhausting ordeal. In one day, my life and the lives of millions of Ukrainians were turned upside down. We woke up to a nightmare. In this time of terror we have seen the worst people are capable of and the best. I have the utmost gratitude for the citizens of Poland who have so generously opened their country, and their hearts, to traumatized citizens forced to flee their own homes to save their lives. I am certain that Ukraine will prevail, and that I will meet my dear friends there again one day. My heart is filled with hope, and at the same time with great sorrow, that such great tragedy which has caused so much pain, never had to happen in the first place. 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. Speaker of Egypts Senate Abdel-Wahab Abdel-Razek has called for enhancing further cooperation ties with Morocco through support measures propping up partnership between the two countries. He made the remarks following his meeting Tuesday in Rabat with Moroccan foreign minister Nasser Bourita. Speaker of the Egyptian Senate is visiting Morocco to take part in the 11th Congress of the Association of Senates, Shura and Equivalent Councils in Africa and the Arab World to open doors Thursday at the House of Advisors (Moroccos Parliament Upper House). Mr. Abdel-Razek said his meeting with Bourita was an opportunity to reaffirm the convergence of views of Rabat and Cairo regarding several issues of common interest. He hailed Moroccos backing of all initiatives seeking to strengthen further political relations between the two countries which share the same resolve to step up cooperation to higher levels. A court in Tunisia has indicted former Prime Minister Elyes Fakhfakh for illicit enrichment during his tenure in power from February to September 2020 after which he was forced to step down over accusation of conflict of interest. According to the communication office of Tunis court of first instance, the former Premier who has been under investigation, was charged for illicit enrichment and the submission of a false declaration and non-assignment of other persons to generate the earnings within the legal deadlines. Fakhfakh, appointed Prime Minister by incumbent President Kais Saied in February 2020, was forced to resign after it appeared he was still owner of a company after his designation as Prime Minister. After he stepped down, the court opened in October 2020 an investigation against him over three alleged accusations related to conflict of interest. The first accusation alleged that he deliberately submitted a false declaration to conceal the reality of his earnings and those of his spouse, and not to designate other persons to manage his shares. The court on Monday confirmed the allegation following the investigation and referred to the tribunal the former Premier, who also served as Tourism Minister in Hammadi Jbalis cabinet from December 2011 to March 2013, and in the following Government of Ali Laarayedh as Finance Minister. Fathi Bashagha, Libyas new Prime Minister designated by the countrys parliament, promised Tuesday a peaceful transition although outgoing and rival Abdul Hamid Dbeibah vowed to remain in office. The House of Representatives (HoR), as expected, approved Tuesday Bashaghas cabinet lineup after the latter made amendments to a first team he proposed on Monday and which was rejected. Out of the 101 lawmakers who attended the evening session, 92 granted the former Interior Minister confidence vote. The HoR appointed Bashagha on Feb. 10 to replace Dbeibah, the head of the outgoing Government of National Unity (GNU), whose mandate, according to the Tobruk-based parliament, came to an end on Dec. 24, the proposed date of UN-backed presidential elections. The HoR also adopted a new road map, according to which the government will be reconstituted and elections will be held within a maximum of 14 months. Dbeibah rejected the February HoR decision arguing that it is contrary to Libyan Political Dialogue roadmap. He also pledged to organize elections in June after which he would resign. Following the vote, Bashagha in a recorded message, indicated that the transition will be smooth and safe in the capital, Tripoli, without any problems. The new Prime Minister added that has begun taking legal and administrative measures, and that he contacted all the security and military authorities. He said his government has arrangements with them, and the handover process will be smooth and safe without any problem. I did not come for revenge or settling scores, but rather we came to build the country and to extend our hands to everyone, he said. We are committed to holding the elections on schedule, as approved by HoR in the road map, he added. The GNU after the vote issued a statement criticizing the session and warned against any attempt to use force to occupy government buildings. It added that it will continue in office and work for June elections. The Moroccan Ministry of Health and Social Protection announced, Tuesday, the end of the Omicron wave, after two consecutive weeks of green level and the beginning of the post-wave phase or the third inter-period. Meanwhile, lOffice National Des Aeroports (ONDA), said on Tuesday that tests on arrival at airports in the Kingdom are no longer compulsory for all travelers. On arrival at Moroccan airports, screening tests are no longer systematic for all passengers. The rapid antigen test is done randomly, ONDA tweeted. The Omicron wave was, as expected, a fast and short wave that lasted 11 weeks and reached its peak in the week of January 17 to 23, 2022, said the coordinator of the National Center for Public Health Emergency Operations of the Ministry of Health, Mouad Mrabet, in his presentation of the bi-monthly assessment of the epidemiological situation during the period from 15 to 28 February 2022. Unlike the wave Delta, the Omicron wave is less virulent and less lethal. The percentage of serious and critical cases during the Delta wave was 4.3%, while this percentage was 2% during the Omicron wave. In the same context, it was noted that the past week, from February 21 to 27, was marked by the continuation of the rapid decline in the number of new cases for the fifth consecutive week, and thus the continuation of the decline in the rate of positivity of tests, since it went from 24.4% during the peak week to 1.9% last week. As for the case reproduction index, it has been maintained at less than 1 for 38 days, reaching 0.79 last week. Regarding other indices, it was reported a 40% decline in the number of severe cases in life support emergency services to 133 new cases while 171 patients have left these services after the improvement of their health condition. Concerning the death cases, they reached 84 during the past week, a decrease of 26% compared to the previous week. Meanwhile, the case fatality rate stands, until Monday, at 0.6 pc for the Omicron wave and at 1.3 pc for Delta, i.e. a drop of almost half. This decline is explained by several factors notably the effectiveness of the vaccination campaign. Regarding the national vaccination campaign, the rate of people who received the first dose reached 67.5%, against 63.3% for those who received the second dose, while 15.7% got the booster dose, according to the Ministry of Health, which urges citizens to continue adherence to the national vaccination campaign by receiving the three doses of vaccine. The reports of discrimination against African nationals trying to flee Ukraine have caused uproar, after Africans, mostly students, have accused Ukrainian security forces of racially profiling them, and of stopping them from getting on trains. The current Chair of the African Union and President of Senegal, Macky Sall, and the Chairperson of the AU Commission, Moussa Faki Mahamat, have expressed concern at reports that African citizens on the Ukrainian side of the border are being refused the right to cross the border to safety. The two Chairpersons said they were following closely the developments in Ukraine and underlined that all people have the right to cross international borders during conflict, and as such, should enjoy the same rights to cross to safety from the conflict in Ukraine, notwithstanding their nationality or racial identity. Reports that Africans are singled out for unacceptable dissimilar treatment would be shockingly racist and in breach of international law, the AU Chairpersons said, urging all countries to respect international law and show the same empathy and support to all people fleeing war notwithstanding their racial identity. They commended the efforts by AU Member States and their embassies in neighboring countries to receive and orientate African citizens and their families trying to cross the border from Ukraine to safety. At a special session of the United Nations General Assembly on Tuesday, African envoys also spoke out strongly at the mistreatment of African nationals trying to flee Ukraine. The diplomats described this situation as unacceptable and reiterated their rejection of racism and demand for the respect for human dignity, calling for the fair treatment of all people in distress. They urged European countries to take steps to resolve this situation as all people have the right to cross international borders during times of conflict. Several African students took to social media to denounce the discrimination they suffered, saying they had been bypassed to allow Ukrainians and other European nationals to cross the border into Poland first. They said they were made to spend hours and days in freezing temperatures without food or sanitation facilities. In response to the concerns voiced by the African Union and African countries, the European Union said that there is no proven discrimination and that the European External Action Service, headed by Josep Borrell, has exchanged Tuesday on this subject with the authorities of both Ukraine and Poland. Warsaw on its part rejected on Tuesday the accusations of racism. Poland helps everyone regardless of their nationality, ethnicity or race, the Polish authorities said. Some western journalists and analysts were also finger-pointed for their comments on the war in Ukraine that reveal a eurocentrism and distressing discrimination as they differentiate between the refugees from Ukraine and those from other countries, based on their geographical belonging to Europe, their race, mode of dress not taking into account the fact that they are also fleeing the war zone. Morocco exported 851 Ghw of electricity in 2021, worth 565 million dirhams ($60 million), as it continues to diversify its energy mix away from fossil fuels, the treasury said. Electricity exports were up 700% compared to a year earlier while imports grew only 20% to 688 Gwh, the treasury said in a recent report. The national electricity utility invested 9 billion dirhams last year and the overall installed capacity grew from 10.627 MW in 2020 to 10.968 MW in 2021. This increase was achieved after Morocco started operating two solar plants in Zagora and Missour (80W) as well as the Solar PV plant of Tafilalet (120 MW) besides the wind park of Oualidia. Wind represented the second most important electricity source in Morocco with 12.4% compared to 8.5% for gas. Morocco saw its gas supplies from Algiers halted in October last year, due to Algerias unilateral decision to suspend supply through the Maghreb-Europe pipeline. The decision served as a trigger for speeding up Moroccos renewable energy plan which now aims to exceed 52% of the energy mix by 2025. Danish shipping giant Maersk suspends operations in Russia Xinhua) 08:32, March 02, 2022 COPENHAGEN, March 1 (Xinhua) -- The Danish shipping giant Maersk on Tuesday decided to temporarily curtail operations in Russia, saying it is "deeply concerned by how the crisis keeps escalating in Ukraine." "As the stability and safety of our operations is already being directly and indirectly impacted by sanctions, new Maersk bookings to and from Russia will be temporarily suspended, with the exception of foodstuffs, medical and humanitarian supplies," the company said in a statement. Maersk will keep monitoring the situation, and will keep the "customers informed during today and the coming days as we progress on the planning," said the statement. (Web editor: Peng yukai, Liang Jun) Flash U.S. nursing homes have been an epicenter of COVID-19 spread during the pandemic, as the virus initially tore through facilities before vaccines were available in 2020, and then continued to sicken and kill residents at an elevated rate last year, reported The Washington Post on Monday. Some 200,000-plus COVID-19 deaths occurred among nursing home residents and staff during the pandemic due to inadequate conditions, said the report, citing the White House's Monday announcement of plans to boost nursing home staffing and oversight. The nursing home industry has warned that the pandemic has exacerbated long-running staffing shortages, noting that roughly 420,000 employees in nursing homes and long-term care facilities, many of whom complained about low pay, have departed over the last two years, according to the report. On Monday, officials of the federal government said that it plans to set minimum staffing levels, reduce the use of shared rooms and crack down on the poorest-performing nursing homes to reduce the risk of residents contracting infectious diseases. The White House also said it would scrutinize the role of private equity firms, citing data that their ownership was linked with worse outcomes and higher costs. As election races on Lincoln County ballots took their final shape Tuesday, the most notable development involved a primary race that shrank instead of growing. Mel McNea, who was first to declare for the Legislative District 42 contest last June, announced his withdrawal after the unexpected appointment and candidacy of new state Sen. Mike Jacobson. His decision left Jacobson, Lincoln County Commissioner Chris Bruns and Brenda Fourtner in the race for the seat previously held by term-limited Sen. Mike Groene, who resigned effective Feb. 21. Besides its longtime Lincoln County base, District 42 now also includes Hooker, McPherson, Logan and Thomas counties and northern and eastern Perkins County. Gov. Pete Ricketts appointed Jacobson Feb. 23, and the NebraskaLand Bank president and CEO filed for a full four-year term Thursday at Nebraska Secretary of State Bob Evnens office. McNea, who retired at the end of 2021 as Great Plains Healths CEO, said after Ricketts appointed Jacobson McNeas longtime friend that he and his wife, Michelle, have a lot of hard decisions to make in the coming days. Their thought process culminated in a Tuesday press release. Im proud to offer my support to my friend and mentor Mike Jacobson in his campaign for (the) Legislature, McNea said. Mike will be (a) strong and effective conservative voice for families in our district. I know he shares in the principles of limited government, Nebraska values and efficient use of taxpayer dollars. McNea had announced his District 42 candidacy not long after revealing his plans to step down as leader of North Plattes hospital after more than a decade. Ill forever be grateful for all of the conversations, connections and support Ive gotten from District 42 over the last six months, he said in his press release. Bruns, the County Boards current chairman, said Tuesday he respects McNeas decision to withdraw but will keep it a three-candidate race himself. Im slightly disappointed in the outcome that led to Jacobsons appointment, said Bruns, who also interviewed with Ricketts as did McNea and Fourtner for the chance to finish Groenes term. It doesnt change what Im going to do. Its forward march, and Im going to continue working hard every day to earn the trust, respect and vote of the people of District 42. Because, at the end of the day, it doesnt matter who the people in Lincoln think should represent us. Its who the people in west central Nebraska want to represent us. The districts top two vote-getters in the May 10 primary will advance to the Nov. 8 general election. Jacobson, meanwhile, will serve as senator through the rest of 2022. West central Nebraskas other legislative primary will be in District 44, where Edward Dunn, superintendent of the city of Grant, will face Teresa Ibach of rural Sumner. She farms in Dawson County with her husband, Greg, a former director of the Nebraska Department of Agriculture and U.S. undersecretary of agriculture for marketing and regulatory programs from 2017 to 2021. Both Dunn and Ibach will appear on Mays District 44 primary ballot but also advance to Novembers general election. The winner will replace term-limited Sen. Dan Hughes of Venango. Besides the now three-way District 42 contest, North Platte voters May 10 will be asked to help winnow fields in the following races: Democrats will choose either David Else of rural Overton or Daniel Wik of Norfolk to face eight-term Republican Adrian Smith of Gering in the 3rd Congressional District race. Both major parties now have contested primaries in the race to succeed term-limited GOP Gov. Pete Ricketts. Roy Harris of Linwood joined the Democratic race Monday against Sen. Carol Blood of Bellevue. Republican voters face a nine-candidate gubernatorial primary field. GOP voters also will nominate candidates for Nebraskas separately elected offices of secretary of state, state treasurer, attorney general and state auditor. Two Republicans are running for each office except secretary of state, where incumbent Bob Evnen faces two GOP opponents. The areas races for the State Board of Education, the Nebraska Public Service Commission and the University of Nebraska Board of Regents have three candidates apiece. One will be eliminated from each contest in Mays primary. Republican voters in Lincoln Countys Commissioner District 2 will choose between one-term incumbent Kent Weems of rural Stapleton, Todd Roe of Brady and final-day entrant David Huebner of rural North Platte. The GOP winner will be unopposed in Novembers general election unless someone not running in May petitions onto the fall ballot. No one filed for District 2s primaries in the other recognized parties. North Platte school board patrons will advance two candidates apiece from a three-person field in Ward 1 and a four-candidate lineup in Ward 3. The Ward 2 race, where board Vice President Jo Ann Lundgreen is opposed by Thomas Hagert II, wont appear on the ballot until the fall election. The seven candidates for four open North Platte City Council seats likewise wont be on the primary ballot. City voters, however, will narrow the lone North Platte Airport Authority race from three to two candidates. More by Todd von Kampen Be the first to know Get local news delivered to your inbox! Sign up! * I understand and agree that registration on or use of this site constitutes agreement to its user agreement and privacy policy. North Plattes annexation package including Lee Bird Field won second-round approval Tuesday, setting up final decisions by the City Council March 15. A second four-pack of 5-3 council votes advanced the proposals quartet of annexation ordinances, one for each of the four parts of the nearly 2,000-acre package. Council members Ed Rieker, Donna Tryon and Mark Woods voted no on each ordinance, as they did after first-round debate Feb. 15. Council President Jim Nisley and Councilmen Jim Carman, Brad Garrick, Ty Lucas and Pete Volz repeated their yes votes from two weeks earlier. Tuesdays council debate featured the first though indirect public reaction from Croell Inc., whose sand and gravel pit at U.S. Highway 30 and Newberry Access occupies the pivotal parcel in bringing Lee Bird into the city. Without annexing the Croell land the lone parcel touching both the airport and the current city limits Lee Bird cant be legally annexed because it doesnt border city limits itself. Volz and Planning Administrator Judy Clark said they separately discussed the annexation package Tuesday with Brian Marchant, a regional manager for Croell. City officials had said at recent council and Planning Commission meetings that they had been trying to reach a Croell representative without success. Volz said Marchant expressed concerns that annexation would cost Croell more in property taxes and could force them to charge city sales taxes and deal with different zoning regulations. But Clark said she told Marchant that Croell already falls under city zoning regulations because its inside North Plattes 2-mile-wide zoning jurisdiction outside current city limits. Even though its now outside the city, she added, Croell also already must charge both Nebraskas 5.5% and North Plattes 1.5% sales taxes to customers inside the city. Only the state sales tax applies for customers located outside city limits. If Croell already were inside city limits, she added, it would have paid just over $2,200 in 2021 city government property taxes. Croell also would be subject to North Platte Airport Authority taxes once annexed. Based on figures listed on Lincoln County GIS, applying both city and airport 2021 tax rates would have boosted Croells gross 2021 tax bill by $2,541.47 from its actual total of $7,645.67. None of those figures deducts the states two property tax credits, which together reduced North Platte property owners gross 2021 tax bills by 18.7%. Council members, reacting only to the $2,200 Croell would have owed City Hall, split over whether thats asking too much. I know its only $2,200, and we have to make those decisions, Woods said. But as a businessman, thats still $2,200 coming out of your pocket. And its going to go up every year ... My opinion (against annexation) hasnt changed. Its just become stronger now. Volz said he and Marchant had a cordial conversation about Croells concerns, with Clark saying likewise about her own call. But Volz noted that Croell typically does about $200,000 to $1 million worth of business annually with City Hall, selling asphalt and aggregate for street projects. I feel that $2,200 is, honest to goodness, a cost of doing business, Volz said. Council members also reviewed concerns from residents north of the airport about whether or when they might be brought inside a widened 2-mile zoning jurisdiction due to the annexation. I think the expansion of that extra (zoning) area is the biggest topic on this, Lucas said. State law would allow the city to redraw its 2-mile-wide jurisdiction to account for newly annexed areas, Clark said. But its not a given that would happen, she added. A future City Council would have to vote to take that step, and even if it did, it could choose to extend it less than 2 miles out in given areas. Future council members may never want to extend that 2-mile jurisdiction, she told the current council. Clark repeated her recommendation that the council wait at least a year before even thinking about extending the 2-mile zone. But that time frame isnt baked into the annexation proposal at all, she said. She suggested waiting at least a year because thats how long affected property owners have to challenge one or more parts of the annexation. David Huebner, 1640 N. Airport Road, said he was relieved when Clark told him that. But his farming and ranching neighbors fear much higher costs if theyre brought inside the 2-mile zone, he said. Huebner, who filed Monday for the Republican nomination for Lincoln Countys District 2 commissioners seat, said he put up a metal barn on his property for storing animals and keeping farm equipment. But the barns site happened to sit just inside the citys current 2-mile zone, which runs through his property, Huebner said. He had to spend an extra $20,000 for city building permits and inspections that Lincoln County doesnt require, he said. We live in the country to live in the country, he said. Having to deal with city zoning rules can be very costly for someone building a grain bin. Rieker said Huebners story hardened his opposition to annexing the airport. I understand zoning, and I understand the reason for it, he said. It just seems like weve gotten ourselves into a pattern of ever-encroaching government on the rights of the people. In other business, the council: Gave second-round approval to an unrelated ordinance creating a street improvement district for the expected 2023-24 reconstruction of U.S. Highway 83s southbound lanes on South Jeffers Street between First and Leota streets. The Nebraska Department of Transportation initiated the project and will pay about 65% of the cost, with the city paying the rest. A final vote on the street district ordinance will take place March 15. Approved the assessment schedule for a recent water-main extension along North Carr Avenue south of West Ninth Street. Get local news delivered to your inbox! Subscribe to our Daily Headlines newsletter. Sign up! * I understand and agree that registration on or use of this site constitutes agreement to its user agreement and privacy policy. North Platte Catholic Schools students hoped to raise $3,000 to replace textbooks and school supplies for a school in Kenya they brought in $12,000. A fire last spring destroyed the school and adjacent orphanage in western Kenya and McDaid students Ben Hankla, Jack Condon, Oliwia Wiezorek, Gianna Pieper and Justin Davies initiated the fundraiser. The original purpose was to replace supplies, but with the money coming in far above the goal, the funds generated another opportunity for service. Dr. Kim Baxter, North Platte optometrist, returned from a recent Kenya eyecare mission and he will give an update on the trip at 7 p.m. March 6 at St. Patrick Catholic Church parish hall, 415 N. Chestnut St. The extra funds were directed primarily toward purchasing typhoid vaccine, medications and supplies utilized by Dr. Eric Schwartzkopf and a group of Kenyan doctors, nurses and other volunteers, Baxter said in a press release. Medical camps were conducted at the same school/orphanage and a few others in the area with the help of the funds. Schwartzkopf, who was previously an internal medicine physician in North Platte, now practices in Walla Walla, Washington. He recently accompanied Baxter and the team on the Kenya eyecare mission. Due to the extra funds provided by the kids fundraiser, Baxter said, a whole other medical mission materialized under the direction of Dr. Schwartzkopf and the administrators of the Kakamega County Hospital. Baxter said there is a lot to tell, along with the history of several mission trips to that area of Africa. He will also report on a number of other congruent projects supported by Rotary Clubs from North Platte, Arnold and other area communities. More by Job Vigil Get local news delivered to your inbox! Subscribe to our Daily Headlines newsletter. Sign up! * I understand and agree that registration on or use of this site constitutes agreement to its user agreement and privacy policy. Trump-endorsed but scandal-plagued Texas attorney general Ken Paxton, who led but did not vanquish George P. Bush in a March 1 primary. Photo: Michael Wyke/EPA-EFE/Shutterstock The 2022 primary season is now underway with Texas voting on March 1 under the states new restrictive GOP-imposed voting law. Its hard to say how the new conditions affected turnout in a year with less drama than some. But voters will get another chance to participate in two of the highest-profile contests. In the Republican primary for attorney general, scandal-plagued but Trump-endorsed incumbent Ken Paxton finished a comfortable first against three well-known opponents but didnt clear the 50 percent threshold necessary to avoid a May 24 runoff. Land commissioner George P. Bush, scion of the states great but fading GOP political dynasty, managed to squeeze past former Texas Supreme Court justice Eva Guzman and Representative Louie Gohmert for a runoff spot opposite Paxton. With most of the vote in, Paxton had 43 percent, Bush 23 percent, Guzman 18 percent, and Gohmert 17 percent. It will be interesting to see how active Trump becomes on Paxtons behalf during a runoff campaign that may otherwise be focused on the incumbents many ethical issues. The 45th president has described George P. Bush whose father is Jeb, and uncle is W., and grandfather is H.W. as the Bush who got it right. But it wasnt enough to get a Trump endorsement. Another anticlimactic result was in the red-hot Democratic primary in the heavily Latino 28th congressional district of South Texas. In a rematch of their very close 2018 primary, nine-term incumbent Henry Cuellar, generally regarded as the most conservative Democrat in the U.S. House, narrowly finished first (with some votes still out) against progressive challenger Jessica Cisneros but will also face a May 24 runoff. Cuellar scored 48.5 percent of the vote and Cisneros 46.8 percent. The incumbent was hampered by a mysterious FBI raid of his home, reportedly in conjunction with the investigation of shady business figures from Azerbaijan. The challenger, an immigration lawyer, hopes to join another progressive insurgent, Austin city councilman Greg Cesar, in Congress. Cesar easily won the Democratic nomination in the new Austin and San Antoniobased 35th Congressional District. Unlike the 35th, the 28th is expected to be competitive in November, and Republicans there will also hold a runoff between former senator Ted Cruz staffer Cassy Garcia and 2020 nominee Sandra Whitten. The top of the ticket race in Texas was relatively quiet. Former Senate and presidential candidate Beto ORourke won an uneventful Democratic gubernatorial primary. And two-term incumbent Republican Governor Greg Abbott, another Trump endorsee, easily dispatched three opponents, including former Florida congressman and Texas state GOP chairman Allen West, winning 67 percent of the vote after running hard to the right. Once the party nominations are set, Texas will be watched carefully in November as a state where urban demographics have helped Democrats make gains while Republicans are doing surprisingly well among South Texas Hispanic voters. Shouting Lets go Brandon actually would have been classier. Photo: Bloomberg via Getty Images It was a safe bet that some Republican lawmaker would try to make a name for themselves by heckling President Biden during his first State of the Union address, like Representative Joe You Lie! Wilson. But anyone who thought folks like Lauren Boebert and Marjorie Taylor Greene would do something tacky, like wearing a shawl emblazoned with the words Drill Baby Drill or chanting Build the Wall, seriously misjudged them. To be clear, the two far-right congresswomen did both of those things on Tuesday night, but Boebert also managed to find a far more crass way to disrupt the presidents speech: She heckled him as he was discussing his son Beau Biden, a veteran who died of brain cancer in 2015. Biden was calling on Congress to do more to help Iraq and Afghanistan veterans who have suffered health issues after being exposed to burn pits, where waste is disposed at military sites. When they came home, many of the worlds fittest and best-trained warriors were never the same, Biden said. Headaches. Numbness. Dizziness. A cancer that would put them in a flag-draped coffin. Boebert chose this moment to shout, You put them in. Thirteen of them! It was a reference to the 13 U.S. troops who died in an August bombing at Kabuls airport during the withdrawal from Afghanistan. Several Democrats booed Boebert, and the president continued. One of those soldiers was my son, Major Beau Biden, he said. We dont know for sure if a burn pit was the cause of his brain cancer, or the diseases of so many of our troops. But Im committed to finding out everything we can. Rep. Lauren Boebert, ever classless and attention-seeking, yells out "You put them in, 13 of them" when Biden mentions flag-draped coffins coming home from Afghanistan. #SOTU pic.twitter.com/GnHHNG8weY The Recount (@therecount) March 2, 2022 Boebert took to Twitter immediately after the speech to say she had no regrets about cutting off Biden just as he spoke about Beau, saying she couldnt stay silent. When Wilson interrupted Barack Obama back in 2009, shouting You lie! though the presidents assertion that he was not offering free health coverage for undocumented immigrants was correct, he apologized immediately after the speech. Wilson said his remarks were inappropriate and regrettable adding, I extend sincere apologies to the president for this lack of civility. Nevertheless, Wilson was formally rebuked by the House several days after the incident. The Times reported, Seven Republicans joined 233 Democrats in approving the resolution; 12 Democrats joined Mr. Wilson and 166 other Republicans in opposing it. Maybe Congress will take another bipartisan stand, making it clear that theyre staunchly anti-heckling the president as he talks about his dead son. Or perhaps todays House Republicans feel they need to save their scorn for the next member who dares to speak ill of Donald Trump. 7 a.m. Wake up early for the drive to St. Helena Island Coming to Charleston, I knew I wanted to check out the Gullah Geechee community descendents of Africans who were enslaved on rice, indigo, and Sea Island cotton plantations so I cold-emailed BJ Dennis, a Charleston-based chef whos part of the Gullah community. He always gets mentioned in association with the South Carolina food scene, and he appeared in the Netflix documentary High on the Hog, which traces the origins of African American food. We have mutual friends, so I sent him an email a month before my visit and told him I was coming into town with a girlfriend. We told him wed love to drive out to St. Helena Island, about an hour and a half outside of Charleston and where the Penn Center is located, and asked for some recommendations. He gave us some and agreed to meet us. (He does formal events with the Gullah Geechee community, but this was much more informal.) He also recommended some quintessential southern spots we should go check out, and one of those places was Fuel Zone (5981 Savannah Hwy.) an inconspicuous gas station thats en route to the island. The gas station having good food is a southern thing. In New Orleans, some of the best fried chicken Ive had was at the gas station. Chef BJ recommended Fuel Zone to us because it has a good quick breakfast. He recommended the fish and grits and the South Carolina pudding, a local delicacy similar to blood pudding. We got the fish and grits and ate it on the tailgate of the car. 10 a.m. Take a moment by the Combahee River On the way to St. Helena, we stopped by the Combahee River, where Harriet Tubman helped enslaved people cross. If youre not paying attention, you can kind of miss it; its just like a sign on the street. We pulled over and parked the car. Theres a little bridge that goes halfway into the water and stops. Its really nice. Theres an energy there. I had a similar feeling when I went to the National Museum of African American History and Culture in D.C. I like to sit in that silence and pay respect and imagine what that could have been like. 12 p.m. Eat a traditional Gullah Geechee lunch in the sun We arrived at the Penn Center (16 Penn Center Cir. E), which was the first school for newly freed enslaved people in the United States. When you drive out there, you notice its a bit separate from things. It was one of the few safe places in the South during that time. Now its a cultural center, and theres a shop where a lot of artisans from the Gullah Geechee community sell their work. The Penn Center has a museum of photos that showcase the schools history as well as artifacts, tools, and items from when the Gullah Geechee people occupied the space. BJ met us there, and he brought a spread of food from his home made with Gullah Geechee ingredients. It was mostly plant based, but some of the food included shrimp and turkey because it was right after Thanksgiving. There was perloo, which is rice mixed up with those ingredients. He brought us kumquats, which were in season, okra, and benne seed, which is like a sesame seed but with a more elevated flavor. We ate on paper plates outside. It was so delicious. If we hadnt had lunch with BJ, we would have gone to one of BJs recommendations: Gullah Grub (877 Sea Island Pkwy.), owned by another Gullah Geechee chef, Bill Green. People come from all over to eat his food. 1 p.m. See the praise houses BJ showed us around the island. We saw these little structures called praise houses, where newly freed people would gather. Theyre smaller than a one-room schoolhouse. You could fit maybe six rows of church pews in the space. I read that this was done purposely because they didnt want the masters thinking they were trying to plan large events or movements. It was a solace and a refuge. People didnt call the police or the authorities; they fixed and solved their problems accordingly within the community. We went to two praise houses, which had no driveways or kept landscapes. Anyone can visit, but you cant go inside because theyre unoccupied. We just followed BJ, but if you wanted to find one on your own, you can go to a website called Explore Beaufort. It has addresses for two of them: Coffin Point Community Praise House (57 Coffin Point Rd.) and Mary Jenkins Community Praise House (355 Eddings Point Rd.). 3 p.m. Make a Nickelodeon-inspired pit stop Because of the Nickelodeon show Gullah Gullah Island, we also went to a small local fish shop, Bradleys Seafood (1452 Sea Island Pkwy.), which was featured on the show. BJ wanted to show us how Gullah Geechee people have owned businesses generationally. Theyre very much still active in the fishery community. You can get fresh shark and fresh fish and all that. BJ recommended that we stop at a prominent Black-owned seafood shop, Ravenels (5925 Savannah Hwy.), on our drive back to Charleston. Its in Ravenel, about halfway back to the hotel. It was honestly the best seafood Ive ever had. I got soft-shell crab, garlic shrimp, and garlic crab. Its counter service, so we ordered and then ate it outside on the benches. 5 p.m. Swing by a wine shopslashbar As we headed back to Charleston proper, I went to visit my friend Femi who went to college in Charleston and now owns a wine shopslashbar called Graft (700b King St.). He was in the music industry previously, and when you walk in, you see the paraphernalia of his past life, like record covers in the bathroom and all along the walls. You can grab wine from the cooler, and theres a beautiful bar where you can drink any of the wines you purchase. Elisa got an orange wine, and I got Champagne. Graft also does weekly pop-ups in its outside parking-lot space with various businesses. Its every Monday, and theres pizza. Its almost like a block party. 8 p.m. Catch a live band Femi recommended we check out Bar Mash (701 E Bay St.) for live music. It reminded me of a feel-good bar youd find in a small college town. It was sepia-toned almost. Lots of friends together wearing flannel. The band onstage was a motley, diverse crew playing a mix of soul and rock and roll. It was dope, and their voices were great. The long-running The Goldbergs marks its milestone 200th episode with daughter Erica heading down the aisle-she hopes. Two major Oscar contenders, West Side Story and Drive My Car from Japan, make their streaming debuts. Is New York City ready for a visit from Harry, the Resident Alien? Things get serious on The Conners when the family goes into lockdown after a shooting in the neighborhood. 8/7c What better way to mark a milestone 200th episode than with a weddingnot that the nuptials of Erica (Hayley Orrentia) and Geoff (Sam Lerner) are destined to go smoothly. (This is The Goldbergs, after all.) First, theres the matter of a deposit that never got made at the venue. Then a forecast for a looming storm, which doesnt even take into account Hurricane Beverly (Wendi McLendon-Covey), who has her own vision for the ceremony. Pop star Richard Marx plays himself, singing Right Here Waiting, so you might as well get the rice ready. Movie Premiere Mark your Oscar ballots now for Ariana DeBose to continue her sweep on the awards circuit as the fiery Anita in Steven Spielbergs wonderful remake of the Leonard BernsteinStephen Sondheim musical classic. This rousing film, which features the immortal Rita Moreno (who won an Oscar as Anita in the 1961 version), deserved a better fate at the box office, but can now be enjoyed on streaming anytime. Movie Premiere Also nominated for a best-picture Oscar, as well as best international film, director and adapted screenplay, Japanese director Ryusuke Hamaguchis acclaimed expansion of Haruki Murakamis short story makes its early streaming debut. The film tracks the relationship of a widowed theater director and his driver while mounting a production of Chekhovs Uncle Vanya. 9/8c How exciting for Harry (Alan Tudyk), the alien in human disguise, to find himself in the land of Law & Order, the show whose reruns helped him learn the ways of our peculiar species. Arriving in New York City after a personal tragedy, with Asta (Sara Tomko) at his side to urge him to avoid attention, Harry is overcome with sensation: Why does this city smell like so many things ripening at once? (This Manhattan-ite seconds that opinion.) But it wouldnt be Resident Alien if things didnt go sideways, and Harrys trippy misadventures make him right at home amid the flotsam of Times Square. 9/8c Long accustomed to using comedy for getting through rough times, the family sitcom tackles another contemporary crisisgun violencewhen the family goes into lockdown at home after a shooting in the neighborhood. Theres a viewer discretion advisory for this episode. In the penultimate episode of the unexpectedly engrossing celebrity docudrama, Pamela Anderson (Lily James) is dismayed that the furor over her and husband Tommy Lees (Sebastian Stan) sex tape is upstaging the premiere of her big-screen flop Barb Wire. (Maybe this is a blessing in disguise?) As for Rand (Seth Rogen), the boob who stole the tape and set the scandal in motion, hes forced to work for the loan shark (Andrew Dice Clay) whose investment in the tape hasnt paid off the way anyone expected. Finales: The Amazing Race (8/7c, CBS): The season that was halted by the pandemic goes into its final legs in a two-hour finale, with the final four teams racing through Portugal on their way to Los Angeles, where the finish line beckons with a $1 million first prize. DCs Legends of Tomorrow (8/7c, The CW): In the Season 7 finale, the Legends are desperate to get back to their original timeline, racing to find time-traveling pioneer Gwyn (Matt Ryan), while team leader Sara (Caity Lotz) tries to hide key intel from wife Ava (Jes Macallan). Batwoman (9/8c, The CW): A showdown with Ryan (Javicia Leslie) and her Batpals is inevitable now that brother Marquis (Nick Creegan) is armed with the Jokers favorite weapon, ramping up his plan against Gotham City. Next Level Chef (9/8c, Fox): The final three cheftestants work their way upliterallyin the last round, with appetizers in the basement kitchen, seafood dishes in the middle and a meat entree on the top floor. The winner gets $250,000 and a year-long mentorship with Gordon Ramsay, Richard Blais and Nyesha Arrington. Inside Wednesday TV: Thanks to the high prices they command, avocados are sometimes referred to as 'green gold.' Jose Castanares/AFP via Getty Images To the relief of avocado lovers from coast to coast, the recent drama between the United States and Mexico was fleeting. The U.S. Department of Agriculture banned imports of the fleshy fruit from Mexico on Feb. 11, 2022, after an employee of its Animal and Plant Health Inspection Service, who was working in Mexico, received threats after refusing to certify a mislabeled shipment of avocados. With only a two- to three-week supply stored in American warehouses, any extended disruption to the avocado pipeline would have been quickly felt. Eight days later, the ban was lifted, and cooks could resume smashing avocados into guacamole, blending them into smoothies and smearing them onto bread without trepidation. Yet to me, this disruption however brief reveals just how reliant the U.S. has become on its neighbor for a product that has seen its demand soar. When I was working on my book Avocado: A Global History, I was struck by the extent to which this lucrative trade has evolved over the past 25 years, making it an attractive business possibility for both legitimate and criminal enterprises. Mexicos cash crop Avocados from Mexico have been fueling Americas taste for the fruit since 1997, when the U.S. Department of Agriculture lifted a 1914 import ban, which originally was implemented due to fears over pests like seed weevils infesting U.S. crops. At the time, Southern California produced about 90% of the avocados eaten by Americans. Since then, per capita avocado consumption in the U.S. has ballooned from 2 pounds in 2001 to nearly 8 pounds in 2018. This increase in the popularity of avocados, coupled with the limitations of domestic sources, has allowed Mexican avocados to dominate the American market. Today, Mexico specifically, the Mexican state of Michoacan, which is the only state certified to sell the fruit to the U.S. supplies about 80% of the 60 million pounds of avocados eaten north of the border each week. Avocados are sometimes referred to as green gold because of the price they command in international commodity markets. Exports of avocados from Mexico were valued at nearly US$3 billion in 2021, ahead of both tequila and beer, two other popular Mexican exports. The average price of an avocado is up 10% from a year ago; during the brief ban, the price of a carton of the fruit catapulted to nearly $60, up from around $30 a year ago. Currently, less than 1% of avocados eaten in the U.S. come from places other than Mexico and the U.S. Countries like Peru and Colombia also produce the fruit. Cartels want their piece of the pie In Mexico, the high profit margins of the avocado trade attracted the interest of crime cartels, and those operating in Michoacan began to infiltrate the avocado business more than 20 years ago. As various cartels have vied for control of the avocado industry, violence and extortion have escalated in the region. In the beginning, cartels were content to extort farmers, packers and exporters in essence, taxing them for the ability to do business without interference from the cartels. Members of a self-defense group guard an avocado plantation from drug cartels in the state of Michoacan, Mexico. Enrique Castro/AFP via Getty Images But a bloody turf war has intensified in recent years. In 2019, the Jalisco New Generation Cartel killed nine people in Uruapan, Michoacans hub of avocado distribution, hanging their corpses from a prominent overpass in the city. They dumped seven more bodies on the side of a road, leaving a banner at the scene that taunted a rival gang, the Viagras. There are even reports of cartels using drones to drop bombs as part of their efforts to control the economy of the region. Threats directed at inspectors have happened before. While no individual cartel has been directly tied to a specific threat, U.S. officials seem to think the threats are linked to increased cartel participation in the avocado trade. In 2019, a team of USDA inspectors working in Ziracuaretiro, a city just west of Urupan, were robbed and threatened with violence. Later that year, the USDA wrote a memo stating it would suspend inspection activities if threats of physical violence and intimidation against inspectors continued. After the most recent threat, the USDA referenced this memo when announcing the temporary import ban. The Hass holds all the cards Mexican president Andres Manuel Lopez Obrador dismissed the notion that the suspension was due to cartels associated with the avocado trade. Instead, he blamed unspecified political interests in the U.S. and pressure from other countries who want a share of the lucrative American avocado market. One of the reasons the U.S. began allowing Mexican avocados to be imported over the objection of domestic growers was NAFTA. The U.S. wanted the ability to send corn and other agricultural goods to Mexico under the rules of the 1994 free trade agreement. But the Mexican government demanded some sort of agricultural export quid pro quo to help balance trade between the two countries, and avocados were ripe for the job. The recent brief disruption underscores the risks of being so heavily reliant on a product that comes from one region in one country thats rife with violence and corruption. Yet it isnt easy to simply open up an avocado spigot from another country. Americans really prefer just one variety of avocado: the Hass, which is the type imported from Mexico. While the U.S. allows Hass avocado imports from Peru and Colombia, wholesalers prefer not to sell them because theyre thought to be lower quality. Hass is the dominant variety grown in California, too, but American growers cant grow nearly enough to meet the demand. Greenskin avocados, which are grown in Florida and the Caribbean, along with many other countries, arent nearly as popular with consumers due to textural differences and the fact that they dont change color to indicate when they are ripe. Greenskin avocados could ease U.S. dependence on Mexican avocados, but until they gain acceptance by avocado eaters, they wont help wean Americans off the Hass avocados grown in Michoacan. Avocados might be a source of political tension, but their unicorn status as a creamy, delicious food thats considered healthy makes most people willing to put politics aside and pass the guacamole. ___ Jeffrey Miller does not work for, consult, own shares in or receive funding from any company or organization that would benefit from this article, and has disclosed no relevant affiliations beyond their academic appointment. ___ Decrease Font Size Font Size Increase Font Size Article body Auburn University and Fort Benning have agreed to a 10-year partnership for the universitys Department of Risk Management & Safety to assume management of the Georgia Army bases environmental services. The Intergovernmental Support Agreement, or IGSA, connects the university and military basewhich are located just 40 miles apartin a long-term partnership that will expand research opportunities for Auburns colleges and units. The universitys Department of Risk Management & Safety, or RMS, will support Fort Bennings environmental compliance program needs for the next decade as part of the $18 million deal, which begins in April. Auburn RMS operates with a mission to protect people, the environment, property, financial and other resources in support of Auburn Universitys teaching, research, outreach and student services. RMS also will help the base adhere to state and federal Clean Air Acts and Clean Water Acts and hazardous waste regulations, oversee staffing needs and expand research opportunities for Auburns colleges and units. The partnership marks a significant advancement in the collaboration between Auburn and Fort Benning. This long-term partnership between Auburn University and Fort Benning is a welcomed joint venture that will link our two great neighboring institutions for years to come, said Lt. Gen. (ret.) Ron Burgess, Auburns executive vice president and a 38-year U.S. Army veteran. Auburn has long been a friend to the military and veterans, and this collaboration will strengthen that bond as we help the Army manage the bases environmental needs through our Department of Risk Management & Safety. The potential for faculty research opportunities through this agreement will be a profound boost across campus, and we look forward to a long alliance with Fort Benning. For the base, the deal represents an opportunity to streamline operations, maximize efficacy and partner with a major land-grant institution. The Intergovernmental Service Agreement model has been successful across the Army and has been a great tool to work with surrounding communities to create mutually beneficial partnerships, said Maj. Gen. Patrick J. Donahoe, commanding general, Fort Benning and the Maneuver Center of Excellence. We are excited to build on those lessons learned and apply them here at home. The partnership was initially conceptualized by College of Sciences and Mathematics Interim Dean Edward Thomas Jr., who views the collaboration as a mechanism for additional research funding at Auburn. I am excited for this opportunity to have Auburn faculty work in conjunction with Fort Benning to conduct research and help solve problems that have real-world applications, Thomas said. This partnership will spark new innovations and help Auburn work on long-term projects with the United States Army. As part of the partnership, Auburns various colleges, faculty and campus units can apply for research funding for projects relevant to Fort Benning missions. The university will form an advisory board to process funding applications, consider new projects related to the Army base and communicate opportunities for faculty to consider during their research. Fort Benning relies on our partnerships and contracts to support our operations, said Brandon Cockrell, deputy to the Garrison Commander, Fort Benning. Intergovernmental service agreements like this allow us to reduce the administrative costs and focus on the partnership and our mission. Auburn RMS will manage many of the same environmental compliance responsibilities for Fort Benning that it does for the university, including chemical waste management, stormwater pollution prevention, spill response and personnel training. This is a tremendous opportunity for Auburn University and Fort Benning to work together in this first of its kind partnership, Auburn Department of Risk Management & Safety Executive Director Chris OGwynn said. Through this agreement Auburn University Risk Management & Safety will be providing Fort Benning with singular oversight of environmental compliance including Hazardous Waste Management, Clean Water Act compliance, Clean Air Act compliance and a variety of environmental education and training services. Our goal is to help them create more efficient processes and improved coordination of personnel, on-site inspections, and tracking of materials. Our Environmental Health & Safety team does an outstanding job for the university, and the opportunity to work with Fort Benning to provide the same exceptional level of support is very exciting. Additionally, Auburn University will have the opportunity to establish new types of educational, research and professional development opportunities for its faculty, staff and students. We are looking forward to a long, collaborative partnership. Thank you OP for providing these updates for us and making these posts every day Reply Thread Link Seriously. I find it grounding at this point to check in here each night. Reply Parent Thread Link Same..I know technically we're a gossip site but I trust what people say here and its a comforting place in these dark times. Reply Parent Thread Link Same. I try to tune out during the work day and reading these posts at night and everyones perspectives and sources helps me catch up. Reply Parent Thread Link honestly same. I've been keeping up on my own but it is really nice to have these posts to make sure I'm keeping everything straight but also for the community aspect of them. Reply Parent Thread Link Yes, I completely agree. It's just so hard to keep up with everything <3 Reply Parent Thread Link I am glad Belarus is getting sanctions too. I have been following news about the 40mile long convoy, and find it confusing and scary. (Is russia prepping to siege Kyiv? Kyiv is only about 150 miles away from Belarusian border, why was it moving for what seemed like 48 hours?) I am very annoyed at news sources i follow, bit not sure anything is better at this point. Edited at 2022-03-02 01:26 am (UTC) Reply Thread Link It apparently hasn't moved for the past day or so. Reply Parent Thread Link probably out of gas and food. i don't think they've updated any of their shit since the ww2 or the cold war tbh. maybe their nukes, but the tanks and ships? lmao. they probably upgraded some stuff but not all of it. Reply Parent Thread Link they just said the think it ran out of gas and food? Also why is it just sitting there? Surely the Ukrainians could bomb it. Whats the delay? Reply Parent Thread Expand Link https://www.cnn.com/2022/03/01/politics/russian-aircraft-to-be-banned-us-airspace/index.html Edited at 2022-03-02 01:25 am (UTC) Reply Thread Link damn this is very interesting bc it would mean the US would retaliate if a plane came in just casually even a pax plane and that could escalate things so quickly Reply Parent Thread Link That might just look like fighter jets ~escorting~ the plane out of US airspace. So it doesn't mean that it'd be a violent confrontation, just a firm reminder that they're not allowed. Reply Parent Thread Expand Link I just read this article, as Canada banned them a couple days ago and it has caused problems since it's a natural route for planes particularly those headed to the US (esp when they also have to avoid the EU) - https://onemileatatime.com/news/aeroflot-flight-turns-around Reply Parent Thread Link largely symbolic. Canada already did it so that was a buffer. Reply Parent Thread Expand Link Shiiiiiiiit Reply Parent Thread Link Thank you, OP! The Dailys episode today was super rough. They talked to some men being forced to stay and fight. Theyre only in their early 20s. The one poor guy was already there as a refugee from Crimea. I started crying when one guy was saying how hes sad to kill Russians because he knows they are also being forced to fight and every time a Russian soldier dies someone loses someone they love. Fuck war. Reply Thread Link Today at my job we got to hear from our main eastern European partner today. And this was something he mentioned. My coworker from Belarus mentioned it too and you could hear the heartbreak in her voice. :( Edited at 2022-03-02 01:39 am (UTC) Reply Parent Thread Link all these people being forced to point guns at each other against their wills because ONE MAN needs to satisfy his massive, sick ego. it's infuriating. it's horrible. it's heartbreaking. Reply Parent Thread Link I came in this post to talk about this episode, Im listening now and it made me cry. Absolutely heartbreaking. Reply Parent Thread Link I wonder if this is why the DWTS guy was arrested. He didn't give a reason for the arrest, but he is in the age range to fight except he has an American passport. The last update I saw I think he was going to try to get out through Poland. Reply Parent Thread Link Wait.. Maks got arrested?? Last I saw was at a hotel in Poland? Reply Parent Thread Expand Link Not to mention a lot of the Russian soldiers were sent to Ukraine without them knowing they would be invading, and not doing military exercises. I saw a thread with pictures of captured Russian soldiers and many of them didn't look a day over 20. All my sympathy goes to the people of Ukraine but fuck Putin for sending these literal kids to fight for his pitiful ego. Reply Parent Thread Link https://www.cnn.com/2022/02/28/europe/students-allege-racism-ukraine-cmd-intl/index.html Racists gonna racist any time I guess. I know in the earlier days we heard about this and then some of the twitter's seemed to be Russian propaganda but seem confirmed now by CNN that it is happening. I felt so bad hearing about the guy being beat Edited at 2022-03-02 01:41 am (UTC) Racists gonna racist any time I guess. I know in the earlier days we heard about this and then some of the twitter's seemed to be Russian propaganda but seem confirmed now by CNN that it is happening.I felt so bad hearing about the guy being beat Reply Thread Link One TT had me so worried they walked to Hungry, they did make it. Reply Parent Thread Link I wonder what the breaking point will be for the oligarchs/other members of Putin's inner circle or if there will ever be one. Reply Thread Link I really appreciate this being made into an post series on ONTD. Did anyone see or heard about how they left Black folks stranded there at some train station? Horrifying. Enraging, devastating and heartbreaking beyond words. Unforgivable. Like. Wow. Its really that fucked up big time globally Reply Thread Link The last group I've watched were in some tunnel it looked like maybe subway. I don't know it was a re-upload. It's about the time people start uploading updates for the day. Reply Parent Thread Link I don't think I have- I've read about Black people getting turned away when they're trying to enter other countries. :( Reply Parent Thread Link The people were students from an African country trying to get home. Everyone is extremely vulnerable in situations like these (having to flee home), but POCs are more vulnerable still. I saw some organized efforts in Poland to advocate specifically for POCs on the border. I saw they were asking for volunteers. If anyone is in Poland please please please consider helping! Here is a link: I only learned of them earlier today from the last war post we had. But i spent time looking at them, and saw people who are respected human rights activists working with them/mentioning them. Edited at 2022-03-02 02:38 am (UTC) Yes, i saw the video of white people cutting in front of black people on a queue to get on a bus or train.The people were students from an African country trying to get home.Everyone is extremely vulnerable in situations like these (having to flee home), but POCs are more vulnerable still. I saw some organized efforts in Poland to advocate specifically for POCs on the border. I saw they were asking for volunteers. If anyone is in Poland please please please consider helping!Here is a link: https://linktr.ee/BlackPeopleInUkraine I only learned of them earlier today from the last war post we had. But i spent time looking at them, and saw people who are respected human rights activists working with them/mentioning them. Reply Parent Thread Link I donated to them. I understand people's reluctance to donate to places they do not know. And all the other places i donated had someone i knew vouching for them. And I definitely cannot vouch for them. But willing to take this risk. Reply Parent Thread Link Russias invasion of Ukraine has affected Ukrainians and non-citizens in many devastating ways. Africans seeking evacuation are our friends and need to have equal opportunities to return to their home countries safely. Ukraines government spares no effort to solve the problem. Dmytro Kuleba (@DmytroKuleba) March 1, 2022 hopefully any action that follows is swift and people can get to safety. i saw in the feed yesterday (can't find now) a nigerian government official tweeted about working with the ukrainian government to get nigerian and other nationals from african countries evacuated. *edited to add: by feed, i mean the @ddale8 list that's on the post Edited at 2022-03-02 02:45 am (UTC) it's fucked up how even when fleeing from death people still somehow manage to prioritize racism. ukraine's minister of foreign affairs tweeted this today:hopefully any action that follows is swift and people can get to safety. i saw in the feed yesterday (can't find now) a nigerian government official tweeted about working with the ukrainian government to get nigerian and other nationals from african countries evacuated.*edited to add: by feed, i mean the @ddale8 list that's on the post Reply Parent Thread Link I've been hearing about this. Horrifying but somehow, sadly, not surprising. We're always subhuman no matter what, huh? Reply Parent Thread Link Watch Putin give the orders for his troops to go all out right as Bidens speech begins Reply Thread Link Somebody said Russian troops struggle to fight in the dark. Reply Parent Thread Link this would be the funnisest shit if it wasnt an actual war. The Russian armed forces are a mess Reply Parent Thread Expand Link Looks like they're struggling to fight no matter the time. Reply Parent Thread Link I'm surprised that so many of the senators and reps are wearing blue and yellow to the State of the Union. Reply Thread Link Russian troops in Crimea refuse to take part in Ukraine invasion. The Center for Defense Strategies, citing their sources in the marine personnel in Crimea, says members of Russias 810th Detached Marine Brigade are in a demoralized state." The Kyiv Independent (@KyivIndependent) March 2, 2022 Earlier, A senior U.S. Defense Department official told reporters during a briefing that morale is flagging in some of the Russian units. Acts of vandalism include puncturing vehicle gas tanks, presumably so soldiers can avoid transport into combat, the official said. The Kyiv Independent (@KyivIndependent) March 2, 2022 I really feel like the military uprising needs to continue. I really feel like the military uprising needs to continue. Reply Thread Link Wouldn't it be beautiful. Putin wants to be an emperor so bad, let him be Nicholas II. Reply Parent Thread Link I'm going to take Kyiv Independent's news with a grain of salt but these tweets still make me a lil happy. Reply Parent Thread Link This is, again, not a controversial position. Every credible political economist will tell you this. But the war is whipping up such bloodthirst that this simple observation is now considered apologism. Its terrifying to witness https://t.co/buB3RpcZd8 David Adler (@davidrkadler) February 27, 2022 I do think its bad that the sanctions are mostly just hurting normal people but I dont know what else can be done. When I saw this yesterday it kind of sent me downwardsI do think its bad that the sanctions are mostly just hurting normal people but I dont know what else can be done. Reply Thread Link Easy to them to say that without giving a different plan? Reply Parent Thread Link I would love for these people to tell me what they would do in this situation. Because diplomacy without any teeth hasn't worked and it's not going to work because Putin is dead set on restoring the Russian empire. You can't do straight diplomacy with someone like that. Reply Parent Thread Link But you have to do diplomacy because the alternative is nuclear war. Is this working or is it just going to embolden him to do even more insane shit because he's backed into a corner? At the very least you have to lay out a path forward to have the sanctions lifted. Reply Parent Thread Expand Link Same. What else are you supposed to do? Reply Parent Thread Link So...what else do they recommend? Reply Parent Thread Link The thing is if sanctions actually worked, it would be one thing but has there ever been a time in recent history where wide-sweeping sanctions like this accomplished their goals and didn't just kill poor people? Reply Parent Thread Expand Link Idk, I'm torn cause one could say sanctions worked for example on South Africa to help end apartheid but didn't in Cuba when JFK tried it and even that is relative and debatable (re it working at all). I think sanctions are a good way to save face in the sense that one could say they used every resource and option available to avoid flat out physical war until they have to actually you know, go to war. Or it might depend on the leader being sanctioned. I personally don't think sanctions will work on Putin bc I don't think he gives a fuck. He's emboldened and is willing to destroy the world for decades if not centuries in a war he'll most likely loose anyway and doesn't care. Edited at 2022-03-02 02:29 am (UTC) Reply Parent Thread Link i can't see any answer outside of putting boots on the ground, which seems to be the last thing he or anyone wants to do... like honestly, what is the other option? Reply Parent Thread Link I don't agree with people saying there has to be an alternative mentioned, to me it reads like simple consequence analysis. Sometimes even the best option isn't great. That being said his other thread goes into more detail. Reply Parent Thread Link Introduced 2/8 and 2/9, @RepRosendale and @RepCawthorn introduce bills to ban aid to Ukraine until Mexico border is secured. https://t.co/9jC4PnpysN pic.twitter.com/rWSsjv6uqN GovTrack. (@govtrack) March 1, 2022 It must be exhausting to be this stupid and racist Reply Thread Link God. I want to punch them both so bad. Theyre just mad their Russian money got Reply Parent Thread Link the absolute brainrot on display rn... Reply Parent Thread Link Those boots must be tasty for the usual suspects to keep licking them this eagerly Reply Parent Thread Link I wish God would ban those two from Earth. Reply Parent Thread Link these people need to have a date with an urn, sorrynotsorry Reply Parent Thread Link That Cawthorn turds face is like a dictionary definition of frat boy rapist. Reply Parent Thread Link He looks like a rapist is literally exactly the first thing I thought after seeing his pic Reply Parent Thread Link The fuck are they talking about??? Pendejos. Reply Parent Thread Link these bitches lol Mexico will probably be the first place these assholes try to run to if push comes to shove. forgive me for using the word bitches and also I am so sorry to Mexico for the countless asshole Americans that love to shit on you as a country but consistently only buy tickets to Cancun and expect to eat Mexican food even when in the fucking Caribbean as if their own cuisine doesn't exist, the savages. Edited at 2022-03-02 02:34 am (UTC) Reply Parent Thread Link i went through one of their twitters and i want to throw them through a wall or something. Like how in the hell are these people so dumb? Reply Parent Thread Link Can these guys just die of diarrhea already Reply Parent Thread Link Neither one of them has a top lip. Just an observation. Reply Parent Thread Link Vile, VILE pieces of shit Reply Parent Thread Link This aged poorly, in typical Jacobin fashion. The javelins fly and Russian tanks fry and Ukraine still stands defiant. https://t.co/d1cz6Jqwir pic.twitter.com/AkhQCGDYRK Bastiat (@EverydayBastiat) March 1, 2022 Reply Thread Link I think Jacobin is often tone deaf but they're right. Thousands of Ukranians and Russians are dead but a bunch of suits have made $$$ because weapons manufacturing stock has shot up. They are the only winners in this situation. Reply Parent Thread Link Idk, I think Ukrainians having the arms they need to repel an invasion is a pretty big win. Someone bad profiting from that doesn't erase the good. Reply Parent Thread Expand Link The fact that people targeted by violent imperialism often have very few choices but to accept support from other imperialist powers to defend themselves is a product, not an accident, of imperialism. Your Friendly Butch Anarchist (@butchanarchy) March 1, 2022 I found this thread helpful I found this thread helpful Reply Parent Thread Link I'm just a little concerned about things happening during the state of the union. :/ Reply Thread Link i'm not so much afraid for what's happening DURING, but after. I'm already in it and... I can see Putin acting up because of it. Reply Parent Thread Link Although I left Mexico ages ago, I am still a Mexican and will die a Mexican. I hope my countrymen can pressure the government to reverse their cowardly stance at this moment. Fuck Putin Fuck AMLO https://www.reuters.com/world/mexicos-president-says-will-not-take-any-economic-sanctions-against-russia-2022-03-01/ I'm exceptionally heartbroken and angry at the news that AMLO is refusing to sanction Russia, and further, is criticizing the West for "censoring" Russia on social media.Although I left Mexico ages ago, I am still a Mexican and will die a Mexican. I hope my countrymen can pressure the government to reverse their cowardly stance at this moment.Fuck PutinFuck AMLO Reply Thread Link AMLO is a mess. I'm honestly embarrassed rn because he's more worried about the media criticizing him than any other thing going on in the country, much less the world. Reply Parent Thread Link Pinche AMLO me lleva la verga. Pendejazo Reply Parent Thread Link Que chinge a su pinche madre ese puto. no puede ser que con este puto nos quedamos jodidos. fuuuuuuuuuuck that puto forever Reply Parent Thread Link I HATE amlo and I HATE as well the people who still roots for him and voted for him. I hate him. I hate him. Reply Parent Thread Link ughhh pinche pendejo como me dan ganas que se lo chinguen pero tampoco quiero que quede como martir con su culto, ojala covid hubiera hecho su trabajo cuando se enfermo y lo peor es que todavia nos quedan 2 anos con el Reply Parent Thread Expand Link he built bieber and ariana, sparred with taylor, and became the most famous music manager of his generation. but who is the real scooter braun? i spent a few months trying to find out: https://t.co/9tUPmnLaM5 Anna Silman (@annaesilman) March 1, 2022 - He cares a lot about his image as a good guy and has a specific curated persona. One source said: "[Scooter] speaks as if he's perpetually delivering a TED talk a combination of candid riffs, long pauses, and choice moments of vulnerability that make him sound somehow both unstudied and carefully rehearsed." - He became very close with several journalists and editors. One major media outlet adopted a "we don't speak badly about Scooter and his clients" attitude. - Braun turns his clients personal challenges into "marketing gold". He was the one who introduced Ariana to Pete Davidson, which became a media frenzy and hyped her "thank u, next" single after the breakup. The music video had a mention to his "big d*ck energy", but Pete was left "blindsided by the release". - He was a "quasi-parental" figure for Justin so he would deal with every aspect of his life, including his relationship with Selena and in the end there was "bad blood between the two camps". - Taylor Swift was "appalled" by the way Braun handled aspects of Selena and Bieber's relationship. And this is one of the reasons she was so against him buying her masters. - Braun's side claims he was actually friendly with Taylor and still mantains a good relationship with Selena. - Kanye accused Braun of trying to trick him into selling Yeezy, but sources have different versions of this. - Lil Twist was allegedly the scapegoat for all of Justin's behaviors. He believes Braun planted stories against him to distract from Bieber. In 2013, a TMZ story about Justin doing weed in a hotel room highlighted how "his team blamed his black friend Lil Twist for his bad behavior". And another story said people in his life were concerned about Twist bad influence. - Braun lost interest in managing Madison Beer's career when a boy leaked nude pics of her online. She was just 14. - People close to Demi Lovato questioned the timing of the docuseries "Dancing with Devil", claiming it was too soon to "tie their story in a neat cinematic bow", because they still needed healing. But Braun's docs are always about a "redemption narrative". Oil demand in both Ukraine and Russia is set to plunge if an end to the conflict does not materialize quickly. War in Ukraine could result in as much as 1 million barrels per day (bpd) of oil demand being removed from the global market, Rystad Energy research shows. The human and material costs of the conflict have been catastrophic just seven days into the military operation. Russia has so far shown no signs of backing down, and prospects of a breakthrough in negotiations appear slim. As a result, investors and markets are scrambling to assess the ramifications of the worsening crisis as the West slaps even more stringent sanctions on Russia, while institutions and companies distance themselves from Moscow. Oil demand in both Ukraine and Russia is set to plunge if an end to the conflict does not materialize quickly. Ukraine is likely to see the largest drop in relative terms, potentially losing more than 50% of demand so long as the war persists, with long-term implications inevitable due to infrastructure damage and the speed of getting facilities back online once the conflict has come to an end. Russia also stands to suffer significantly, although the impact in relative terms will be less. The direct and indirect sanctions imposed by the West on Russias financial system will reduce economic activity significantly, complicating the process for Russian companies to conduct business internationally and for its citizens to travel abroad. That could result in an oil demand destruction of between 15% and 30% or more. The economic fallout from the war in addition to the humanitarian crisis is going to be sweeping, both for Russia and Ukraine, and the regions oil demand is going to take a severe hit if the conflict is prolonged and recently enacted sanctions remain in place," says Sofia Guidi Di Sante, oil market analyst with Rystad Energy. Ukraine outlook Total oil demand in Ukraine averaged around 260,000 bpd in 2019, with the road transport sector accounting for more than half of the total, at 138,000 bpd. Aviation demand is minimal, representing 5% of total consumption and estimated at 7,000 bpd in 2019. Aviation demand was wiped out almost immediately as airports closed and flights were grounded. However, road traffic has remained high, sustained by heavy traffic as residents drive out of the country. The spike in traffic to the border compensates for the fall in commutes elsewhere and other regular activities. Yet, if the war drags on and fighting continues, demand could fall by 50% or more. Such a drop in road and air traffic alone will shave off around 65,000 bpd of oil demand, which is 28% of expected monthly oil consumption for the country. In addition, disruptions in the supply chain and the impact on gross domestic product (GDP) growth would harm other sectors, where we factor in a potential additional estimated impact of 40,000 bpd. This would amount to about 50% of Ukraines oil demand, an estimate aligned with the demand drop witnessed in other countries that have in recent years suffered from military conflict or unrest, such as Syria and Yemen. Russia outlook The international response to Russias actions has been swift and powerful. Financial markets are volatile as a result, and it will not take long for the trickle-down effects of sanctions to take hold of the countrys economy. Russia is the sixth-largest oil consumer globally, with oil demand totaling 3.6 million bpd in 2019, and a slowdown in consumption would have severe domestic and international consequences, affecting global balances. The European Union (EU) and Canada have already shut their airspace to Russian planes, and international travel demand is expected to drop swiftly in the coming days. A complete halt in international travel would wipe out 54% of the countrys total jet fuel demand, amounting to a negative impact of around 110,000 bpd. Although it is too early to estimate the impact of international sanctions against Russia on oil demand, we can gain an insight by considering the demand realities from countries with recent experience of similar sanctions Iran and Venezuela. Oil demand dropped in these countries by a range of between 10% (Iran) and more than 30% (Venezuela), with the extreme case of a 50% drop between the peak and trough in Venezuelan demand from 2011 to 2019. A 10% to 30% drop in Russian demand would correspond to a total contraction of 350,000 to 1 million bpd in 2022. We expect that half of that deceleration would be from industrial activities, while the rest would be driven by reduced internal mobility, although it is too early to make a sectoral assessment. By Rystad Energy More Top Reads From Oilprice.com: Guyana now plans to form its own national oil and gas company to develop its oil and gas economy and ensure that it is in control of its own energy future. The discovery of huge oil reserves in Guyana has the potential to transform the country, although it will have to work hard to avoid the resource curse that has hit so many other countries. Will Guyana fulfill its potential and become a major hotspot for oil over the next decade? As several oil majors invest in the tiny state, it looks set to become a vital bridge in the transition to cleaner energy, offering low-carbon oil opportunities while demand is still high. Several new discoveries and the development of a national oil sector could see Guyana become one of the biggest energy players in Latin America and the Caribbean. This little-known country in the Caribbean has quickly transformed into an energy hub, offering low-cost, low-carbon oil prospects for oil majors looking to develop promising oil regions while global demand for fossil fuels remains high. Over the last 7 years, energy firms have made offshore discoveries of over 10 billion barrels of recoverable oil and gas, around a tenth of the world's conventional discoveries. An Exxon Mobil Corp, Hess Corp, and CNOOC Ltd consortium hopes to be producing as much as 1 million bpd from the Stabroek, Corentyne, and Demerara blocks by 2030. Exxon has already begun its second offshore development with hopes to produce huge amounts of oil in the Stabroek Block. The block covers an offshore area of 26,800km2 controlled by Exxon, Hess, and CNOOC. Since 2015, the companies have made 20 oil discoveries. Having begun crude output from Stabroek with its Liza 1 (Destiny) floating production, storage, and offloading (FPSO) vessel in 2019, producing around 120,000 bpd, Exxon is now launching its second project in the region. Lisa 2 (Unity) started producing crude in February and is expected to have an output of 220,000 bpd by the end of the year, as operations gradually come online. Exxon hopes to boost production by bringing two additional FPSOs into operation by 2025, the Payara and the Prosperity which is currently under construction. This should bring the capacity to over 800,000 bpd if Exxon gains regulatory approval. Related: Oil Prices Soar Despite News Of Strategic Petroleum Reserve Release Liam Mallon, president of ExxonMobil Upstream Oil and Gas, explained We are collaborating closely with the government and people of Guyana to develop this world-class resource responsibly, helping to meet the worlds energy needs and delivering enhanced value for all stakeholders at a record pace and well ahead of the industry average. Further, With unparalleled project execution, we now have two production facilities operating offshore Guyana, he said. Oil projects have boosted Guyanas employment and economy significantly in recent years, with around 3,500 Guyanese workers supporting Exxons operations. With a population of just 800,000, a substantial percentage of the workforce could eventually work in the energy sector. Based on the development of its energy sector, Guyana could see economic growth of 500 percent by 2030, according to government officials. But Guyana is not simply handing away its assets to international players, as it plans to form a new national oil and gas company to develop its domestic oil and gas economy. In place of carrying out an oil auction in 2022, the Guyanese government may establish a national energy company, according to officials. This would see Guyana getting a piece of the action rather than relying purely on foreign oil firms to develop its waters. Vice President Bharrat Jagdeo stated, "We have some proposals from some people in this room, from large operators, to work with the government and utilize the remaining blocks." He explained, "We will either go to an auction, sometime in the third quarter this year, with or without seismic (surveys) from our part or alternatively use those blocks to form a national oil company." Other state leaders are encouraging Guyana to introduce protections to ensure it sees the profits from its newfound oil wealth. In a bid to enhance Guyanas involvement in its oil industry Ghanas President Akufo-Addo stated, To ensure energy sustainability, it is critical that we manage socio-economic and environmental benefits in a continuously changing world. No energy project, therefore, no matter how high its return in value, is worth it if the interests of some or the majority of the stakeholders are not properly represented and they are left impoverished and dissatisfied. So, could this tiny nation become the next UAE in terms of oil? Guyana has already established a sovereign wealth fund (SWF), following in the footsteps of Norway and the UAE, and is planning on using the funds for its $2.6 billion 2022 national budget. It will pump $975 million in oil revenues back into the SWF this year. While Guyana expects to produce about one-quarter of the oil the UAE currently produces, it has a much smaller population, around ten times fewer people, meaning its per capita output may become the largest in the world. With a combination of international and local investment and a focus on economic diversification, Guyana could quickly become a major world economy, considering its size. By Felicity Bradstock for Oilprice.com More Top Reads From Oilprice.com: Last weeks failure of the UAE and India along with just China to vote in favor of the UN Security Councils resolution to condemn Russia's aggression against Ukraine and to demand the immediate, complete, and unconditional withdrawal of Russian forces from the neighboring country earned all three countries the explicit thanks of Russia. It also highlights the broader shift in the once clear-cut global political alliances to the two principal power blocs in the world: the U.S. and its allies on the one hand, and China-Russia and its allies on the other. Nowhere has this shift been more evident in recent months than in the cases of the UAE - which on 13 August 2020 became the first country to sign a U.S.-sponsored relationship normalization deal with Israel - and of India. Saudi Arabia is on the same level, as is analyzed in-depth in my new book on the global oil markets, and reinforced this with the very recent statement that it is still committed to working alongside Russia in OPEC+. The clear and principal purpose of the U.S. in brokering these relationship normalization deals, and those that followed, was to counter the burgeoning influence of China and Russia in the Middle East. However, not only has the UAE in recent months been keen to distance itself from such a unipolar view of its global political allegiances but also now India which had been intended by the U.S. as a replacement global bid for China in the oil market has stepped back from fully committing the role envisaged for it by Washington. Shortly after the concept of the relationship normalization deals between Israel and as many countries in the Middle East and North Africa as possible had been originated in the U.S., various high-level sources in Washington let it be known that its new oil and gas market world order would, as far as the Middle East was concerned, involve Gulf states selling oil and gas predominantly to U.S. allies, including India, and that India as well would be the big back-up global bid for the commodities. This meant that in times of crisis, such as is now occurring in Ukraine, energy supplies to Western powers would not be subject to the potentially devastating threats that could proceed from Russia simply cutting off its gas supplies to Europe or, as has more recently happened with widespread sanctions against Russia, leave many U.S. allies in Europe scrabbling around to find alternative energy supplies. It was thought, as also analyzed in-depth in my new book on the global oil markets, that the relationship normalization deals would allow the U.S. and its allies to, in effect, corner large elements of the oil and gas supply in the Middle East. It was also thought by Washington that, by positioning India as the global replacement buyer for oil and gas instead of China, Chinas geopolitical position in its own backyard of Asia Pacific would be weakened over time. There is every reason to expect this strategy to work, provided that the U.S. begins to encourage the countries involved to understand that the new world order (as clearly heralded by the Russian invasion of Ukraine) is a zero-sum game, with one side ultimately winning at the others expense, and that all countries need to pick a side and be prepared to be judged by which side they pick. At the time that the U.S. made the decision to substitute China with India in the global oil and gas markets, military units of India and China had clashed on 15 June 2020 in the disputed territory of the Galwan Valley in the Himalayas. As also examined in my new book on the global oil markets, this clash reflected a much greater change in the core relationship between the two countries than the relatively small number of casualties might have implied. It marked a new push back strategy from India against Chinas policy of seeking to increase its economic and military alliances from Asia through the Middle East and into Southern Europe, in line with its multi-layered multi-generational project, One Belt, One Road (OBOR). Until China dramatically upped the tempo of this OBOR-related policy at around the same time as the U.S. signaled its lack of interest in continuing its own large-scale activities in the Middle East through its withdrawal from the Joint Comprehensive Plan of Action with Iran and its withdrawal from much of Syria India had stuck to a policy of trying to contain China. With the announcement in August 2020 of the U.S.-brokered Israel-UAE normalization deal it appeared that a new corridor of co-operation was being developed from the U.S. (and Israel), through the UAE (and Kuwait, Bahrain, and in part Saudi Arabia) to India, as a regional counterbalance to Chinas growing sphere of influence. Also around the same time, the International Energy Agency (IEA) released a report showing that India will make up the biggest share of energy demand growth at 25 percent over the next two decades, as it overtakes the European Union as the worlds third-biggest energy consumer by 2030. More specifically, Indias energy consumption is expected to nearly double as the nations GDP expands to an estimated US$8.6 trillion by 2040 under its current national policy scenario. This is underpinned by a rate of GDP growth that adds the equivalent of another Japan to the world economy by 2040, according to the IEA. At that time, the U.S. believed that Indias then-willingness to play this role in the global oil and gas markets would allow it to retain influence over the UAEs oil flows set to move from around 4 million barrels per day (bpd) to 5 million bpd given the Emirates already close links to India. Also around that time, the chief executive officer of the Abu Dhabi National Oil Company (ADNOC), Sultan al-Jaber, stated that he looked forward to exploring partnerships with even more Indian companies across the energy giants hydrocarbon value chain. He added that he wants this to include expanding the commercial scale and scope of the strategic reserves partnership, in line with ADNOC being the only overseas company to hold and store Indias vitally-important strategic petroleum reserves (SPR). In keeping with the developing scope of this relationship, Indias government approved a proposal that allows ADNOC to export oil from the SPR if there is no domestic demand for it, in the first instance from the Mangalore strategic storage facility (the other major SPR pool being at Padur). This decision marked a major shift in the policy of India in the handling of these vital energy reserves, with the country having previously completely banned all oil exports from the SPR storage facilities. This commitment to meeting Indias increasing energy demands was reiterated by the UAE last week - as the Brent oil price broke through US$100 per barrel - with its inclusion in the Joint UAE-India Vision Statement, which follows the signing of the India-UAE Comprehensive Economic Partnership Agreement on 18 February 2022. The problem for the U.S. in this and as has just been echoed as well in Indias unwillingness to sync with the U.S. and its allies condemnation of the Russian invasion of Ukraine last week is that Russian President Vladimir Putin used the chaotic domestic political situation in the U.S. following its withdrawal from Afghanistan and then end of combat mission in Iraq to sneak in and do a huge, wide-ranging deal with India, effectively scuppering Washingtons own vision for India and the UAE. As exclusively highlighted by OilPrice.com, mid-December 2021 saw Russias state-owned oil giant, Rosneft, sign a deal with Indian Oil to supply it with almost 15 million barrels of crude by the end of this year. The deal takes on even more significance as it was just one part of 28 investment deals between Russia and India signed during the very recent visit of Putin himself to Indian Prime Minister, Narendra Modi. These covered a broad range of subjects, including not just oil, gas, petrochemicals, steel, and shipbuilding, but also military matters. Specifically, said Modi: We have set a target of US$30 billion in trade and US$50 billion in investment by 2025. A joint statement from Russia and India said: [We have] reiterated their intention to strengthen defense cooperation, including in the joint development of production of military equipment. Specifically, according to further official statements from one or both sides, India will produce at least 600,000 Kalashnikov assault rifles the weapon of choice for terrorists and militias across the Middle East and elsewhere and, even more disturbing for the U.S., Indias Foreign Secretary, Harsh Vardhan Shringla, said that a 2018 contract for Russias S-400 air defense missile systems is now being implemented. By Simon Watkins for Oilprice.com More Top Reads From Oilprice.com: The Biden Administration could couple releases from the Strategic Petroleum Reserve (SPR) with a longer-term policy to support the U.S. oil industry if it wants to reduce the soaring gasoline and oil prices and ensure Americas energy security, Mike Wirth, chief executive at supermajor Chevron, said on Tuesday. The U.S. Administration is discussing another SPR release to ease the upward pressure on oil prices which shot up to over $100 per barrel after Russia invaded Ukraine. According to Chevron, an SPR release is a short-term remedy, while ensuring a long-term energy securityespecially in light of Putins war in Ukrainecould be achieved through a balanced and pragmatic conversation. A new SPR release would best serve energy security if it is accompanied by an attitude to support investment in U.S. resource development, Wirth said on a call during Chevrons investor day, as carried by Bloomberg. Support to the domestic oil and gas industry would ensure that this country remains strong from an energy security standpoint, Chevrons top executive said. The Biden Administration continues to press for a green energy transition and has called several times on the OPEC+ group over the past months to ramp up production more than planned to tame surging oil prices and support the economic recovery from the pandemic. U.S. oil executives, however, have felt ignored. Earlier this week, Devon Energys chief executive Rick Muncrief told Bloomberg, Im a little mystified that there hasnt been some dialog, referring to the lack of dialogue between the U.S. Administration and the U.S. oil industry. If they were to reach out and maybe be a little more collaborative, it might provide some cover, Muncrief said. Yet, White House press secretary Jen Psaki said earlier this week that a proposal by Republican lawmakers to increase U.S. crude oil production amid the fast-deteriorating conflict in Ukraine that could compromise the security of energy flows was a misdiagnosis. By Charles Kennedy for Oilprice.com More Top Reads From Oilprice.com: By signing up to our newsletter, you agree for your email address to be shared with our third party mail providers. As oil prices reach seven-a-half-year highs, a number of countries in the Middle East have unveiled fiscal measures designed to balance their budgets after two years of pandemic-related spending. Saudi Arabia, the Gulfs largest economy, in mid-December announced that it expected to post its first budget surplus in eight years in 2022. The government has estimated that it will achieve a surplus of SR90bn ($24bn) this year, equivalent to 2.5% of GDP. This comes after the Kingdom recorded a deficit of 2.7% of GDP last year, which followed an 11.2% deficit in 2020 as Covid-19 weighed heavily on the economy. With oil prices currently sitting above $100 a barrel levels not seen since 2014 the anticipated turnaround will be driven by both an increase in revenue and a reduction in spending. Revenue is forecast to increase by around 12%, to SR1.05trn ($266.7bn). Despite this increase in revenue, largely driven by high oil prices, Saudi government expenditure is budgeted to fall by 6%. Mohammed Al Jadaan, the minister of finance, told local media that the surplus would be used to bolster government reserves hit by the pandemic, support national development funds, strengthen strategic economic and social projects, and partially repay debt. In terms of the latter, the government has forecast public debt will decline from 29.2% of GDP to 25.9% this year, while the economy is expected to grow by 7.4% in 2022, up from 2021s expansion of 2.9%. Bahrain looks to balance the budget This plan may be compared to the fiscal rationalisation strategy of neighbouring Bahrain, which late last year released a plan designed to balance the budget by 2024. In addition to doubling the countrys value-added tax (VAT) to 10%, the plan includes a reduction in expenditure, a streamlining of cash subsidies to citizens and the introduction of new revenue initiatives. Although Bahrain was previously aiming to balance the budget by 2022, it was forced to revise this target as a result of the economic disruption created by the pandemic. While the Covid-19 pandemic resulted in prolonging fiscal balance targets to beyond 2022, the governments discipline in curtailing expenditure raises expectations that it will narrow the fiscal deficit gap and achieve a fiscal balance in the coming years, Yaser Alsharifi, group chief strategy officer of the National Bank of Bahrain, told OBG in January. Furthermore, amid the economic recovery trend in 2021 and a higher oil price environment, one could expect a robust economic performance in 2022, which will further support the governments fiscal situation. UAE introduces corporate tax Elsewhere in the region, a number of countries are looking to different strategies to improve their respective fiscal situations. In late January the UAE announced that it would introduce a tax on corporate earnings. The 9% tax, applied to earnings over Dh375,000 ($102,000), will come into force in July next year as the country seeks to align itself with international tax standards. The tax will also help to diversify the UAEs budget revenues and further reduce its reliance on hydrocarbons. The introduction of the corporate tax is the latest in a series of fiscal measures introduced by the federal government. In 2018 the country implemented a 5% VAT, which was followed by a 5% Customs duty on imports. Despite the planned introduction of corporate tax, the country remains a competitive business destination. Companies operating within free zones remain exempt from the tax, while there is no personal tax. The introduction or raising of taxes is an approach that a number of Gulf countries have employed in recent years. Saudi Arabia increased its VAT to 15% in 2020, while in April last year Oman introduced its own 5% VAT. Qatar and Kuwait are the only two GCC members yet to introduce VAT following the signing of the Common VAT Agreement in 2016. Funding the transformation These efforts to improve their fiscal situation come as countries in the Gulf look to recover from the pandemic and reduce their reliance on hydrocarbons. For a number of years governments across the region have sought to diversify their respective economies by investing heavily in non-oil industries and renewable energy. With the pandemic resulting in massive government spending to address the resultant health and economic fallout, there were concerns about how this would affect long-term economic development plans. Although the initial stimulus resulted in much spending being directed towards the health care sector and financial assistance for citizens, Gulf countries remain generally committed to their transformation strategies, with some even looking to accelerate them. By Oxford Business Group More Top Reads From Oilprice.com: The government must immediately intervene to stop two Russian tankers containing enough liquid gas to supply the UK for up to 12 days from docking in Kent at the weekend, a union said this afternoon. The Boris Vilkitsky and Fedor Litke are bound for Grain LNG with plans to unload on Sunday, according to UNISON, which represents around 200 workers at the Isle of Grain importation terminal owned by National Grid. Grain LNG is the largest terminal in Europe for importing liquefied natural gas (LNG). It is situated on a 600-acre site on the Isle of Grain near Rochester in Kent. The tankers are on their way despite a law passed yesterday banning ships with any Russian connection from all UK ports. A loophole has left open the possibility that the Boris Vilkitsky and Fedor Litke could still dock and unload their cargo. The union calls on transport secretary Grant Shapps to confirm that the ban applies to these two vessels, and that both will be prohibited from berthing at the Thames Estuary site, which is 30km from London. Staff working at Grain LNG are angry that they might be asked to unload the ships cargoes, the union claimed, saying they fear losing their jobs if they refuse once the Boris Vilkitsky and the Fedor Litke have anchored off the Isle of Grain, according to a statement sent to City A.M. UNISON head of energy Matt Lay said: The law passed speedily yesterday should have made the Boris Vilkitsky and Fedor Litke turn back. But both vessels still seem to be very much Kent-bound. Grant Shapps must send these two ships packing. He needs to make it clear that all Russian ships are banned from every UK port and terminal, he added. By City AM More Top Reads From Oilprice.com: For the past several years, federal and state health officials have been working to get Narcan, a drug that can reverse opioid overdoses, into the hands of more people. Pharmacies across Nebraska have made Narcan, or naloxone, available to any resident, often at no charge. A website maintained by a statewide campaign called Stop Overdose Nebraska allows Nebraskans to search for pharmacies near them that offer the drug. A change in Nebraska Medicines electronic medical records software appears to be boosting those efforts. In August, the health system added an advisory to its patient records system, known as One Chart, that alerts health care providers ordering opioids for patients who meet certain criteria to also prescribe naloxone for them. Since the alert launched in August, the number of prescriptions for naloxone filled at the health systems pharmacies has increased from 36 in the five months before the move to more than 1,290, said Dr. Alena Balasanova, an addiction psychiatrist with Nebraska Medicine. In addition, the number of prescriptions for naloxone statewide increased roughly four- or fivefold in August over the previous average of 150 to 180 prescriptions a month. The number remained well above that level through December, the latest month for which data was available. The data was collected by CyncHealth, which contracts with the Nebraska Department of Health and Human Services to manage its prescription drug monitoring program. Kevin Borcher, CyncHealths vice president of pharmacy informatics, said further research would be needed to confirm that the Nebraska Medicine project directly impacted the statewide prescribing numbers. But Balasanova noted that Nebraska Medicine has clinics throughout the Omaha metropolitan area and that other hospitals elsewhere in the state use its health record system. We want to flood the community with naloxone, she said, because we know this is the No. 1 thing that can help to reverse an opioid overdose. Balasanova said a naloxone prescription might be warranted when opioids are prescribed for people who have respiratory illnesses or other conditions that affect breathing. The same goes for people who take other medications that can interact with opioids to impact breathing. Even when a person takes an opioid as prescribed, the drugs can result in an accidental overdose if breathing slows or stops. Most opioid overdoses, Balasanova said, are accidental. I think of naloxone like a fire extinguisher, she said. You want to have it in your house just in case something should ever happen. You dont ever expect to use it, nor do you want to use it. But gosh, if you end up having a fire, arent you glad you have that fire extinguisher? More than 200 Nebraskans died of drug overdoses in 2020, an increase of nearly 43% from the previous year, according to a report last summer from the federal Centers for Disease Control and Prevention. The CDCs report did not specify which drugs are responsible for the overdose deaths. In Nebraska, Balasanova said, methamphetamines, not opioids, have been the predominant contributor. Balasanova said the change to the medical records system originated with feedback she got while meeting with other Nebraska Medicine providers. She leads an effort for the state health department to educate providers on opioid safety as part of a CDC grant. In a separate but related initiative, Balasanova also spearheaded an effort to create a new set of orders, added to the system in December, that provides a way to assess opioid withdrawal in patients and offer treatment options. Kristin Daniel, Nebraska Medicines pharmacist program coordinator for pain stewardship, said officials edited the medical records system to make it easier to prescribe naloxone. Its just good to know that were increasing the availability of naloxone, Daniel said. If we prevent just one death, then its all worth it. Omaha World-Herald: Live Well News, advice, a calendar of fitness/race events from Live Well Nebraska and occasional offers will keep you in shape and informed. Sign up! * I understand and agree that registration on or use of this site constitutes agreement to its user agreement and privacy policy. Beyond the tumultuous past and the criminal coverup, prosecutors say, the only evidence of Camisha Hollis death in 2018 came from the ears of the couples 10-year-old daughter. From the daughters bedroom, she heard scuffling and not unusual Hollis yelling ouch and pleading with longtime boyfriend Marvin Young to stop. She told prosecutors she believed she heard her father hit her mother with a boot. It was the last she would ever hear from her mother. Young spent the next half a day trying to cover his tracks, taking his daughter for a drive and taking away her cellphone so she couldnt call 911. Prosecutors say he then brought the daughter back home, loaded Camishas body into a car, drove around eastern Nebraska and western Iowa and, presumably, dumped her body at the Schilling Wildlife Management Area on the Missouri River near Plattsmouth. Chief Deputy Douglas County Attorney Brenda Beadle said authorities compiled ample evidence of Young attempting to cover up Hollis death. But they never found Hollis body, perhaps because of rampant flooding along the Missouri River that year. With no remains, they had no evidence of how she died, other than the 10-year-old daughters description of what she heard during the ordeal, combined with Youngs history of abusing Hollis. In turn, prosecutors reduced a first-degree murder charge against Young to manslaughter. Tuesday, Young pleaded no contest to that, three counts of child abuse and one count of tampering with evidence. The 40-year-old faces up to 33 years in prison a sentence that is cut in half under state law. Beadle had originally argued that Young giving cough medicine to the couples daughters the source of the three child-abuse charges was an indication that he premeditated that he was going to kill Hollis that night. However, subsequent interviews with the girls revealed that Young had sometimes given medicine to them so they would wind down and get to sleep on school nights. About 12:30 a.m. April 2, 2018, Omaha police went to the couples home near 57th and Hartman Avenues after Marvin Young called 911 to try to claim that he was afraid of Hollis mother, Martha. At that point, Camisha Hollis was still alive and officers observed no injuries. A home security system showed her alive at 1:57 a.m. Then came the scuffling. Investigators eventually filled in the rest: Camisha Hollis had told her mother that she had given Young a deadline of April 1 to move out of the home. She had asked her landlord if she could keep the lease on the home without Youngs name on it. Martha Hollis frantically called police about noon April 2 after she had visited her daughters workplace and made numerous calls to her daughters cellphone that went unanswered. Martha Hollis reported that her daughter was missing and that she believed Camisha Hollis was in danger. Later on April 2, Martha Hollis and authorities went to the couples home and found their three daughters, then ages 10, 8 and 6, home alone on a school day. Homicide detectives later found five shell casings, two live bullet rounds and drops of Hollis dried blood in the garage and basement. Without Hollis body, Beadle said, investigators turned up no other evidence that she had been shot that night. The oldest daughter said she did not hear gunshots during the turmoil early that morning. Hollis had warned her mother that Young might kill her. Hollis had audio recordings on her phone from 2015 of Marvin Young threatening to kill everyone in the house and photos of her bloody lip, purportedly caused by Young. She told police in December 2017 that Young had beaten her unconscious six months before she had woken up in a tub with cold water running. Hollis also wrote a draft email on July 9, 2017, explaining that if anything happened to her, it was Young who did it. Beadle said she is frustrated that she couldnt get a bigger range of punishment. She said she met with Martha Hollis and both Beadle and Martha were incredulous that there arent higher penalties for getting rid of a body. In some cases, its just a misdemeanor. At most, that act alone equates to four years in prison. Beadle said she told Youngs attorney, Douglas County Public Defender Tom Riley, that Camishas loved ones desperately want to know where she is. Young has provided no answers. Cameras showed him arriving at the Schilling Wildlife Management Area about 1 p.m. April 2 and leaving about 1:30 p.m. Divers searched that area but turned up nothing. Beadle said the couples daughters then 6, 8 and 10; now 10, 12 and 14 deserve answers. Its absolutely heartbreaking, Beadle said. He threw her away like she was trash, and they dont know where she is. Do I think the facts match a manslaughter charge? I do. I think we got as much out of this case as we could, given the evidence. But I dont think its enough. When you leave behind three kids with the troubles and trauma theyre enduring, I dont even know that forever is enough. Sign up for our Crime & Courts newsletter Get the latest in local public safety news with this weekly email. Sign up! * I understand and agree that registration on or use of this site constitutes agreement to its user agreement and privacy policy. Two people died on Nebraska roads over the past weekend in separate one-vehicle rollover crashes. Jacob D. Johnston, 15, of Chapman, Nebraska, died Sunday in a one-vehicle crash in Merrick County. Johnston was a freshman at Central City High School. The crash occurred about 6:40 p.m. on Fifth Road half a mile north of Chapman Road, according to the Merrick County Sheriff's Office. Investigators determined that the vehicle left the road and rolled over before stopping. Johnston, who was not wearing a seat belt, was pronounced dead at the scene. The village of Chapman is about 12 miles northeast of Grand Island. Jeff Jensen, superintendent of Central City Public Schools, said the community "is deeply saddened by the loss of Jacob. He was a kind, considerate, and compassionate young man." He noted that the district's crisis team, which includes counselors and other professionals, has been available this week to students and staff. A 44-year-old woman from Oakland, Nebraska, died in a one-vehicle crash about 4:30 a.m. Saturday. Burt County Sheriff Eric Nick said Angela Harney was pronounced dead at the scene of the crash, which was about 3 miles west of Decatur. Investigators determined that Harney was driving on Nebraska Highway 51 when her vehicle left the road and rolled over before coming to a stop. It's not known whether she was wearing a seat belt at the time of the crash, Nick said. Decatur is about 60 miles north of Omaha. Be the first to know Get local news delivered to your inbox! Sign up! * I understand and agree that registration on or use of this site constitutes agreement to its user agreement and privacy policy. LINCOLN Nebraska lawmakers easily advanced a bill Tuesday requiring that schools teach about the Holocaust and other acts of genocide. Legislative Bill 888 cleared first-round debate with no dissenting votes. But the measure sparked concern from some senators, who questioned whether it went far enough or was specific enough. State Sen. Jen Day of Omaha, who introduced the bill, said the measure is needed to ensure that future generations learn the lessons of the Holocaust and the potential outcomes of unchecked hate. Although the events were relatively recent, she said national surveys have found that large majorities of young adults do not know how many Jews were killed in the Holocaust and cannot identify Auschwitz, one of the Nazi concentration camps where much of the killing occurred. About 6 million European Jews and millions of other people were killed by the Nazis and their allies during World War II. Some 1.5 million were children. The ignorance will only increase as it moves further into history, Day said, noting that only nine people who survived the Holocaust are still alive in Nebraska. Sen. Mike Flood of Norfolk said the bill matters because of how the Holocaust and the Nazis are misused in politics today. He pointed out that Russian President Vladimir Putin has justified the invasion of Ukraine in part by claiming that Russia needed to de-Nazify the country. The problem with the Holocaust is the truth has to prevail, he said. Sen. Patty Pansing Brooks of Lincoln also related the bill to current events. She said she has heard from numerous Jewish people about their experiences with antisemitism and their fears of increased hate in the United States. According to federal data, crimes targeting Jews account for more than half of all religiously motivated hate crimes. But Sen. Justin Wayne of Omaha said he was concerned about a mandate that schools teach the Holocaust without any acknowledgment of Americas original sin of slavery. He cited the millions of Africans who died on the voyage to the United States and during enslavement. He also pointed to events such as the Tulsa Race Massacre of 1921, when White mobs killed as many as 300 Black residents of what was known as Black Wall Street. We have to talk about all of history, Wayne said. Sens. Bruce Bostelman of Brainard and Steve Erdman of Bayard called for more specifics about what is included under the term other acts of genocide. Erdman said schools need to know what they should teach and what should be considered out of bounds. But Day pointed out that former Omaha Sen. Sara Howard ran into difficulties when she listed several acts of genocide in a similar 2019 bill. The Turkish government and local residents from Turkey objected because the list included Armenians. They disputed the genocide label being applied to the killing of between 600,000 and 1.5 million Armenians during and after World War I. Howard ended up removing the list of examples from her proposal, which was then incorporated into an omnibus education bill. During first round debate, lawmakers added an amendment from former Omaha Sen. Ernie Chambers that would have required teaching about slavery, lynching and racial massacres in America. At the time, Chambers said that if the Holocaust was to be taught, crimes against black humanity should not be ignored. They did more horrendous things to us than they did to the Jews in Germany, the senator said. It wasnt organized on such a massive scale. Sen. Mike Groene of North Platte, who recently resigned from the Legislature, objected to Chambers amendment, saying that his own Irish ancestors were subjected to slavery by the English, and that it was wrong to single out the slavery imposed on Blacks. Groene resigned after a female staff member found photos that he had taken of her, without her knowledge, on his computer, including some that were allegedly focused on specific body parts. She filed a workplace harassment claim against him, which is under investigation. Get Government & Politics updates in your inbox! Stay up-to-date on the latest in local and national government and political topics with our newsletter. Sign up! * I understand and agree that registration on or use of this site constitutes agreement to its user agreement and privacy policy. Voters, take note: The list of candidates for public office in Nebraskas May 10 primary is largely set. New candidates for public office had until 5 p.m. Tuesday to file with the Nebraska Secretary of States Office. And, in the most high-profile races, plenty of candidates did. A total of 12 people filed to run for governor. A handful of them have been actively campaigning and fundraising for months, while others are lesser-known. On the Republican side, University of Nebraska Regent and livestock producer Jim Pillen, businessman Charles Herbster, State Sen. Brett Lindstrom and former Sen. Theresa Thibodeau are the most recognizable candidates. But several other Republicans have also thrown their hats into the ring: Breland Ridenour of Omaha, Michael Connely of York, Donna Nicole Carpenter of Lincoln, Lela McNinch of Lincoln and Troy Wentz of Sterling. State Sen. Carol Blood had long been the sole Democrat to announce a run, but Roy A. Harris of Linwood has now also filed as a Democrat. Scott Zimmerman of Omaha is the lone Libertarian candidate. In the 1st Congressional District, incumbent Rep. Jeff Fortenberry is vying to keep his seat while battling felony charges in federal court. His most well-known challenger in the primary is Sen. Mike Flood, who counts Gov. Pete Ricketts and former Gov. Dave Heineman among his backers. But Republicans Curtis D. Huffman of La Vista, Thireena Yuki Connely of Palmyra and John Glen Weaver of Omaha have all filed as well. Two candidates will battle for the nomination on the other side of the aisle: Lincoln Democrats Sen. Patty Pansing Brooks and Jazari Kual Zakaria. Republican Rep. Don Bacon in the 2nd Congressional District faces one challenger from his party, Steve Kuehl of Gretna. Democrats Alisha Shelton and State Sen. Tony Vargas have been campaigning for months, in hopes of meeting Bacon in the general election. Twenty-four of Nebraskas 49 legislative seats are also up for election. In some cases, incumbents are running to keep their seats. Two of them, Sens. Myron Dorn of Adams and Tom Brandt of Plymouth, are running uncontested, while the others will face challengers. Twelve senators are barred from running again due to term limits, leaving those seats open. And two senators, Steve Lathrop of Omaha and Tim Gragert of Creighton, didnt file for another term despite being eligible. In a last-minute development, a former state senator is leaving the helm of the ACLU of Nebraska and trying to reclaim her seat in the Nebraska Legislature. Danielle Conrad served two terms in the Legislature before becoming executive director at the ACLU in 2014. The organization announced her departure Tuesday, and Conrad posted about her run on Facebook, writing that she will work joyfully and tirelessly to have the opportunity and honor to serve North Lincoln once again. Shell face two other candidates, James A. Herrold and James Michael Bowers, in the race to represent the 46th District. Missing from the list of candidates: Mike Groene, who had planned to run for the University of Nebraska Board of Regents. Groene recently resigned from his post as state senator and withdrew his regent candidacy after it was revealed that he took photos of a female staffer without her permission. Voters have until April 22 to register to vote or make changes to their registration online or by mail and until May 2 to do so at a county office. The Secretary of States Office could still make adjustments to the list of candidates up until it certifies it with counties, which will happen no later than March 18. Get Government & Politics updates in your inbox! Stay up-to-date on the latest in local and national government and political topics with our newsletter. Sign up! * I understand and agree that registration on or use of this site constitutes agreement to its user agreement and privacy policy. Sara Gentzler State Government reporter Follow Sara Gentzler 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. Save Manage followed notifications Close Followed notifications Please log in to use this feature Log In Don't have an account? Sign Up Today Whos more responsive to Nebraskans: The governor or the Nebraska State Board of Education? State lawmakers differed on that question Tuesday as they took testimony on a proposed constitutional amendment that would significantly change oversight of public schools. The amendment, proposed by State Sen. Lou Ann Linehan, would eliminate the elected state board and make the education commissioner and Department of Education accountable to the governor. Linehan, whose district includes Waterloo and Elkhorn, said the department should be set up like Health and Human Services or the State Patrol. The commissioner would be appointed by, and work for, the governor instead of a board the public knows little about, she said. So when people are mad, they can hold a governor accountable because they do know who the governor is, she said. Sen. Patty Pansing Brooks of Lincoln, an Education Committee member, said the change could lead to instability in education policy. What worries me is you start electing different governors, and so every four years or every eight years, you could have a totally different vision of what our education systems going to look like, Pansing Brooks said. Another committee member, Sen. Adam Morfeld of Lincoln, said he had a hard time believing that the governor would be more accountable to the people than the board. I think a lot of people I talk to in my district feel completely powerless when trying to advocate with the governors office as opposed to their state board of education, Morfeld said. Nebraska is one of six states where the state education board is elected and the board appoints the commissioner, according to a 2021 report by the National Association of State Boards of Education. In more than two-thirds of states, the governor appoints all or some of the members of the state education board, the association says. About a third of the state governors appoint the commissioner. In Nebraska, the boards duties include approving academic standards in core subjects, implementing academic testing and the states accountability system, ensuring schools are accredited and that teachers are certified. The board also has a quasi-judicial role in disciplining teachers. The department has more than 500 employees. Members of the education board operated with a low profile in recent years until last years contentious fight over health-education standards. The board proposed, then indefinitely postponed, adoption of a set of inclusive standards that riled many conservatives for including teaching students as young as first grade about gender identity and sexual orientation. Linehan said concerns over health standards and critical race theory didnt motivate her to propose LR 278CA. She said there are too many elected bodies that are overseeing public education, from local boards and Educational Service Unit boards to the state education board, Legislature and the governor. Were not as coordinated as we need to be, Linehan said. Laura Rauscher testified in favor of the change, saying we arent being listened to by the state board at all. We have no control whatsoever on what our children are going to see, going to hear, in our public school system, she said. Abbi Swatsworth, executive director of OutNebraska, a statewide nonprofit advocating for lesbian, gay, bisexual, transgender and queer Nebraskans, said more people supported the standards than it appeared. While it seems theres a huge disconnect, I think that disconnect is somewhat smaller than it appears from a vocal minority, she said. Nebraska Commissioner of Education Matt Blomstedt spoke against the amendment. An elected board with an appointed commissioner makes for more stable oversight, he said. When the state first faced the pandemic, Blomstedt said, he worked closely with both the governor and the board. Although people criticize the board for the health standards, he said, The board was responsive to public input. Dave Welsch, a school board member for Milford Public Schools, testified on behalf of multiple statewide public education groups opposed to the measure. Public education should not be about one persons political agenda, Welsch said. Rather it should be governed by an independently elected, nonpartisan body. Linehan, however, said the education board is inherently political. State board members should be working on raising academic achievement and addressing the teacher shortage, she said. The effort to raise achievement needs to be a very determined effort, led by somebody with the strength of the governor behind him, she said. Get Government & Politics updates in your inbox! Stay up-to-date on the latest in local and national government and political topics with our newsletter. Sign up! * I understand and agree that registration on or use of this site constitutes agreement to its user agreement and privacy policy. Nebraskans have always considered the Sandhills one of the states jewels. Now a study by the University of Nebraska-Lincoln has underscored how significant that jewel is. Work by UNL researchers Dirac Twidwell and Rheinhardt Scholtz has concluded that the Sandhills are Earths largest remaining intact, temperate grassland. Thats probably a surprise to some because the Sandhills arent well-known outside the state, Twidwell said. While the Sandhills are recognized here, they havent gained the recognition internationally of other grasslands, he said. The duos research found that the Sandhills are among seven large-scale grasslands of any type that remain mostly intact. Another is in the Wyoming Basin, two others in Asia and one each in Africa, South America and Australia. Of these, the Sandhills are the only region that doesnt have an internationally focused conservation strategy, he said. That may be because the region lies wholly within one state and one country and doesnt straddle borders requiring international cooperation. The Sandhills, located in northwest and north-central Nebraska, cover about a quarter of the state, and more than 90% of the land is privately owned. One of the groups already working to protect the area is the rancher-led nonprofit Sandhills Task Force. The organizations goal is to promote profitable ranching hand-in-hand with conservation, said Shelly Kelly, executive director. Kelly said the key to success in the Sandhills is collaboration between ranchers and conservation organizations. Because we are ranchers, we have trust and credibility, she said. Weve built partnerships. Her group and the UNL researchers identified the same major threat to the Sandhills: invasive eastern red cedar trees. Its our number one threat, Kelly said. The seedy evergreens, often planted as windbreaks, spread rapidly. Eradicating them takes a major, year-after-year effort, Kelly said. The UNL research distinguishes between types of grassland-like regions based on climate and vegetation. Africas Serengeti, for example, is larger than the Sandhills, but its a savannah, not a grassland, Twidwell said. The Serengeti naturally supports trees, but trees are not a natural part of the Sandhills landscape. Likewise, there are shrubby desert grasslands that are more intact than the Sandhills, but they arent found in a temperate climate, Twidwell said. Be the first to know Get local news delivered to your inbox! Sign up! * I understand and agree that registration on or use of this site constitutes agreement to its user agreement and privacy policy. SPRINGFIELD A bill meant to stem nutrient pollution resulting from farm runoff has met opposition from a formidable foe the Illinois Farm Bureau as negotiations on a final package continue. Nutrient loss is one of the most serious pollution threats in the country, creating a dead zone in the Gulf of Mexico, poisoning local lakes and streams and causing serious health problems for people and domesticated animals. The state aimed to reduce nitrates and nitrogen by 15% and phosphorus by 25% by 2025, but the latest Illinois Nutrient Loss Reduction Strategy Implementation Report showed that nutrient loss increased by 13% and phosphorus losses increased by 35%, compared with a baseline period from 1980 to 1996. The bill, Senate Bill 3471, was introduced in January, but was amended in early February, changing substantively from its original form that funded a program incentivizing the planting of cover crops by offering discounts on crop insurance. The amended bill creates the Healthy Soils and Watershed Initiative that would be administered by the Department of Agriculture in cooperation with the states soil and water conservation districts, the Illinois Environmental Protection Agency, and the University of Illinois Extension program. The Department of Agriculture would create guidelines to help with soil and water conservation districts to create a plan and establish funding levels with measureable, cost-effective and technically achievable goals to reduce nutrient loss. The Initiative would then produce a study every two years, beginning in 2023, outlining efforts to combat nutrient loss and their overall effectiveness. It would also measure the overall picture of nutrient loss and whether the state was moving towards goals set out in the Nutrient Loss Reduction Strategy. Supporters say the bill creates a baseline to gauge the scope of the problem and identify appropriate spending limits and strategies that work, and it also provides accountability to taxpayers. The information collected by the agencies would also make it easier to obtain federal monies set aside to combat nutrient loss, said Maxwell Webster, Midwest Policy Manager for America Farmland Trust, a proponent of the bill. The Illinois Farm Bureau voiced opposition to the bill in committee hearing because they say it is duplicative, complicated and bureaucratic. The Farm Bureau said the bill put various state and federal agencies, authorities, and programs under one umbrella, making it difficult to implement. Adding provisions to already existing laws, like the Soil and Water Conservation Act, would make the Nutrient Loss Reduction Strategies less confusing and eliminate bureaucracy, said Lauren Lurkins, Director of Environmental Policy for the Illinois Farm Bureau. We believe that the current NLRS program is moving us in the direction of protecting the environment and helping farmers better manage their land and resources, Lurkins wrote in an email. SB 3471 has some great ideas in the proposed language, but does it in a way that is awkward and duplicative. We feel that there are many laws in place that can be changed to include the goals that this bill lays out in a more efficient and workable format. The Farm Bureau also voiced its opposition to mandates, stating that voluntary implementation will make the programs more palatable to farmers. The bill is not designed to increase regulation and it does not create additional mandates. It is focused on making sure the state maximizes existing resources and successfully attracts additional investment from the federal government, Webster said. Mandates are not the answer to this problem. Farmers are our greatest stewards of the land and the focus needs to be on getting more resources in their hands to implement conservation practices, Webster said. Thats why this bill seeks to update our existing voluntary conservation programs so that they are more responsive to the needs of farmers and the goals of the nutrient loss reduction strategy while also addressing emerging challenges like climate change. The bill states the initiative shall promote voluntary and incentive-based conservation efforts. No part of this act shall be used to impose mandates or require practice adoption. The original bill proposed an increase in funding for nutrient loss reduction policies over the next 10 years from $10 million to more than $25 million in 2027, extending through 2032, but that language was removed in the latest Senate amendment. The original bill would also have expanded the eligible uses for the Partners for Conservation Fund, including funding the Fall Covers for Spring Savings Program. But that language was also stripped from the bill in Senate Amendment 1. The funding mechanism of that program will now be spread out across IDOA, IDNR and IEPA in wider appropriation discussions, but the funding request for the cover crop program is the same as in the last bill. We look forward to working with Sen. Ram Villivalam, D-Chicago, and the other stakeholders of this legislation to work out all the technicalities of the legislation, Lurkins said. Advocates for the bill said they are hopeful it will be able to move when the Senate returns next week, as the deadline for its passage was extended to March 11. It passed the Senate Agriculture Committee on an 8-6 vote last month, with only Democratic support. Committee chair Patrick Joyce, D-Essex, was the lone Democrat to oppose the bill in committee, joining Republicans in voting against it. Love 0 Funny 0 Wow 0 Sad 0 Angry 0 BLOOMINGTON With new residents arriving in Bloomington-Normal, the McLean County Chamber of Commerce announced Wednesday new initiatives to welcome them. The chamber will offer welcome kits to residents moving to the area from outside the county, sponsored by chamber members. Filled with premium items, the New Resident Welcome Kit is an exciting way to inform people who are new to the area about the dynamic and vibrant community we live and do business in, according to the chambers announcement. Sponsors include CM Productions, Eastview Christian Church, OSF HealthCare, Christie Clinic, CIBM Bank, Marcfirst, Carle BroMenn Medical Center, VisionPoint Eye Center and WGLT. The kits also include the Bloomington-Normal & Surrounding Area Residents Guide, compiled by the chamber and Pantagraph Media, detailing our local brews, farm-to-table restaurants, cultural events, activities, organizations, people and so much more that make this community unique. New residents can reserve their welcome kits online at bit.ly/WelcomeToMcLeanCo and claim them at the chamber office at 2203 E. Empire St. in Bloomington. The chamber will also host a new quarterly event called Becoming BN, where new residents can connect with others in the community and learn more about what Bloomington-Normal has to offer. The first Becoming BN will be 4:30-6:30 p.m. Tuesday, April 5, at Carle Health & Fitness Center, 1111 Trinity Lane, Suite 120, in Bloomington. These initiatives come as Bloomington-Normal works to expand housing opportunities in the area. Last week, the Normal Town Council approved plans that will expand three subdivisions and add 69 homes. In Bloomington Mayor Mboka Mwilambwes annual address reflecting on local economic developments and challenges of the last year, he said Bloomington brought in more than $20 million in new housing starts. During the address made in February, he also said 2022 is "off to a record start" with more than $24 million in new construction in January, including $2.1 million in new housing. Growing industry in the Twin Cities, including Rivian Automotive and Ferrero, are believed to be behind the population growth as more workers move into the area to work. Contact Kelsey Watznauer at (309) 820-3254. Follow her on Twitter: @kwatznauer. Love 0 Funny 0 Wow 0 Sad 0 Angry 0 The business news you need Get the latest local business news delivered FREE to your inbox weekly. Sign up! * I understand and agree that registration on or use of this site constitutes agreement to its user agreement and privacy policy. BLOOMINGTON McLean County Zoning Board of Appeals members passed a series of zoning amendment recommendations Tuesday, including one that would set the countys definition of a farm in compliance with state law. Zoning board of appeals members approved a recommendation to the county board to remove the countys size limit for farms, as the Illinois Counties Code prohibits counties from regulating agriculture based on size. McLean Countys current definition of a farm is a tract of land that is 40 acres or more in size and is used for agricultural uses. Anna Ziegler, assistant manager of the McLean County Farm Bureau testified at Tuesdays meeting in support of the recommendation. Our position is basically that 40 acres is kind of an arbitrary definition, Ziegler said. Its been in the zoning ordinance for a long time (since 1999) and nobodys ever questioned it, but when we reviewed it and saw it didnt comply with state law, we might as well take it out and give those that are smaller than 40 (acres) the opportunity to be recognized as a farm when in fact they are. McLean County Farm Bureau President Mark Hines brought the issue to McLean County States Attorney Don Knapps attention in a letter last August. Hines cited in his letter the Illinois Counties Code and a 1999 Illinois Attorney General opinion that said state law does not, however, grant to counties the power to prescribe minimum acreage requirements in order for land to be considered to be devoted to an agricultural use. Ziegler said the McLean County Farm Bureau realized the issue through research after its members raised question about how agriculture exemptions are applied to certain farms. The recommendation for a text amendment to the McLean County Code regarding its definition of a farm heads to the full county board for its approval. The McLean County Land Use and Development Committee had initially sent a recommendation to the executive committee to remove the countys farm definition altogether. Executive committee members balked at that request because of the countys recurring use of the word farm, and instead sent back a recommendation to delete 40 acres or more in size from the countys farm definition. Zoning board of appeals members also approved three other recommendations to amend county code, including adding impacted residential land to the mitigation requirements for wind energy farm developers. Currently, only impacted agricultural land is included in the mitigation requirements for wind farms. The recommendation adds the following specific types of land within agricultural and residential areas to be included in repair and mitigation requirements: septic fields, residential drain tile, pasture, meadow, yard or other land tracts and private roads. Developers for the 250-megawatt Sapphire Sky Wind Energy project in southeast McLean County expects the wind farm to begin commercial operations in December. It will be McLean Countys fifth wind farm. Another recommendation passed Tuesday would require wind farm applicants to notify the residents of a home if the developer contemplates building more than five wind turbines within one mile of that occupied residence. Currently, McLean County Code only requires the building and zoning director to call a public hearing when it receives a special use permit application. As the McLean County Board approved in December to combine the countys land use and development committee with the transportation committee to create the land use and transportation committee, zoning board of appeals members also accepted a recommendation Tuesday to allow the new committee to submit applications to the zoning board of appeals for text amendments. Contact Kade Heather at 309-820-3256. Follow him on Twitter: @kadeheather Love 0 Funny 0 Wow 0 Sad 0 Angry 0 Get Government & Politics updates in your inbox! Stay up-to-date on the latest in local and national government and political topics with our newsletter. Sign up! * I understand and agree that registration on or use of this site constitutes agreement to its user agreement and privacy policy. LEROY A U.S. flag billowing 50 feet high just off Interstate 74 acted as a beacon Tuesday afternoon, bringing together Central Illinoisans in support of a convoy of truckers calling for an end to COVID-related mandates. Not having the freedom of choice I think thats the biggest fight right now, said Staci Dixon of Graymont, standing next to a semi truck outside the Shell gas station and Woodys Diner in LeRoy. Just everyone being able to be Americans and be free. If they would just lift the mandates and people losing their jobs and everything, then this wouldnt be necessary. A crowd of about 100 people gathered in the station parking lot waiting for a convoy of trucks expected to arrive from northern Wisconsin. After a few hours, a convoy of about 25 vehicles including cars, semis, pickup trucks and a bus headed east on I-74 with the intent to meet a larger convoy traveling on I-70. The Peoples Convoy left Southern California last Wednesday and has traversed the country, gathering more truckers and supporters along the way as they head to Washington, D.C. We demand the declaration of national emergency concerning the COVID-19 pandemic be lifted immediately and our cherished Constitution reign supreme, the convoy website says, calling it the truckers declaration. Mitch Osman, an Indiana resident, thanked the crowd for the support before they departed. This is not about the truckers. This is about the nurses and teachers and doctors and everybody else that works in factories and warehouses that are being forced to get the vaccine against their will, he said. This is just the beginning of it. It will not stop until this government is finally put in their place and realize that they work for us and we do not work for them. Chanel Apsey's daughter made posters calling for freedom while they waited for the convoy. I just want to stand for freedom, stand for choice, said Apsey of Bloomington. I get choked up every time I think about it. I just want my children to be able to grow up and know the freedoms that I had. Despite several states, including Illinois, dropping mask mandates and other mitigation rules related to the pandemic, several said these types of protest are still necessary. I still have family members still facing termination because they wont get the vaccine, Dixon said of her aunt who works in a nursing home. They shouldnt be put into a position of losing their jobs for a personal medical decision. Eric Baileys truck featured several flags and before he drove down the highway, he set up a dash camera to record his journey as part of the convoy. He said the convoy was an opportunity for people to stand together peacefully against a tyrannical government. We the people. We can just leave it at that: we the people, said Bailey of Belvidere. There needs to be healing. Lisa Hines of Eureka said President Joe Biden and all the elites have taken Americans freedom, and thats what I want back. We want our lives back and our freedom back and our country back, she said. Several small Canadian flags were among the American flags and Dixon said they are showing support for Canadians facing vaccine mandates. A similar protest, dubbed the Freedoms Convoy, has spanned Canada in recent weeks. Trucks also blocked a crossing between Michigan and Ontario. If we dont take a stand, who is? This is where everybody comes for freedom: America, said Deb Reynolds of Graymont. If we dont have it here, were pretty much toast. Contact Kelsey Watznauer at (309) 820-3254. Follow her on Twitter: @kwatznauer. Love 8 Funny 6 Wow 2 Sad 3 Angry 2 Get Government & Politics updates in your inbox! Stay up-to-date on the latest in local and national government and political topics with our newsletter. Sign up! * I understand and agree that registration on or use of this site constitutes agreement to its user agreement and privacy policy. LEROY The LeRoy Community Food Pantry and LeRoy Park District have each been selected to receive $5,000 grants tied to the countys planned wind farm. Apex Clean Energy, the Virginia company behind the planned 300-megawatt wind farm project in southern McLean County, announced a fourth round of grants this week as part of the Diamond Grove Wind Community Grant Program, which is named for the project. Paula Ingram, director of the food pantry, said she expects this funding to be a huge help. We have old refrigeration equipment that needs to be updated and improved upon so we can adequately store all the food we need, she said of the pantry, which serves those in LeRoy who are food insecure with bimonthly food supplies. Our shelving will be improved as well, and well be able to provide a lot of food for our people in need. In addition to equipment needs, the funding will help the pantry serve seniors and students whose families struggle to pay for school lunches and meet their families' needs on weekends and during breaks from school. The second grant recipient, the LeRoy Park District, plans to use the funds to support the community recreation center known as the Replex. This grant will help us purchase new exercise equipment for our patrons use, said Corey Windle, executive director of the Replex. Many of our current pieces of equipment have been in use since we opened and have been waiting to be upgraded. Any contribution helps, and we appreciate the support Apex has given us and other organizations in our community. The Diamond Grove Community Grant Program has awarded grants in McLean County on a quarterly basis with the goal to fund projects and programs that build healthy communities, according to a statement from Apex. The first round was awarded in April to United Way of McLean County; the second round to the Heartland Community College Foundation in August; and the third round to the Heyworth school district and City of LeRoy. Apex aims to begin production on Diamond Grove by 2024 with 75 turbines planned. Contact Kelsey Watznauer at (309) 820-3254. Follow her on Twitter: @kwatznauer. Love 0 Funny 0 Wow 0 Sad 0 Angry 0 Get local news delivered to your inbox! Subscribe to our Daily Headlines newsletter. Sign up! * I understand and agree that registration on or use of this site constitutes agreement to its user agreement and privacy policy. At both facilities, the number of employees is below the budgeted amount, with the IDOC citing the pandemic as severely impacting its hiring schedule. Any changes would need to be bargained with the labor union representing correctional officers. Anders Lindall, spokesman for ASFCME Council 31, said that the department "has yet to fulfill its responsibility to bargain with our union over the impact of its planned closures." "Under the law, the department cannot move forward with any changes until that bargaining is complete," Lindall said. Lindall added that "the only thing consistent about the Department of Corrections' shifting plans and explanations is their inconsistency." This echoes the frustrations of area lawmakers, who have been frustrated with the lack of communication on the department's plans for the facilities, which are major source of good-paying jobs in their respective regions. Jeffreys met with several lawmakers in private on Tuesday where he reiterated that plans would be finalized once IDOC meets with the union. State Sen. Jason Barickman, R-Bloomington, said Jeffreys promised to participate in a public meeting to answer questions from their constituents, who have been confused by the department's end game. "On the one hand, they're hearing that the plan is not yet final, and on the other hand, they're seeing the plan being implemented," Barickman said. "And so it begs the question as to what's going on." Two states, along with Washington, D.C., Puerto Rico and the Virgin Islands were removed Tuesday from Chicagos optional travel advisory for unvaccinated people. Nebraska and Ohio are the latest states removed, meaning there are now 47 states and one territory on the list of domestic areas from which unvaccinated travelers are urged to take extra COVID-19 precautions. Illinois is not included in the list because officials do not want to restrict intrastate travel. Children under age 5 are exempt because they are not yet eligible for the coronavirus vaccine, but the adults they are traveling with must be inoculated. The changes to the travel advisory come as the city lifted its mask mandate and proof-of-vaccination requirement for most indoor settings this week. But federal mask requirements remain in public transportation and airports. The advisorys latest guidance calls for unvaccinated people to test for COVID-19 one to three days before leaving Chicago and three to five days after they return to the city. They must also quarantine for five days upon coming back to Chicago regardless of the test result. States get on the travel advisory if they track more than 15 daily COVID-19 cases per 100,000 residents. Thirteen more states could get off the list next week, as they have already dipped below that threshold. Meanwhile, Illinois daily case rate is at 14.7 per 100,000 residents, while Chicagos is 7.6. The most recent city data shows an average of 206 cases per day and a positivity rate of 1.1%. Love 0 Funny 0 Wow 0 Sad 1 Angry 0 100 years ago March 2, 1922: Illinois Wesleyan University made a pitch to Hedding College of Abingdon to merge with IWU in Bloomington. But Hedding rejected IWUs offer and a similar one from Rock Island. The city of Abingdon offered Hedding a package to stay, and it was accepted. 75 years ago March 2, 1947: The Bloomington chapter of Alcoholics Anonymous has been in business for 18 months now, and has 24 members. A year ago it had seven. Two women are now members of the chapter, which this paper calls the citys most exclusive club. Peak membership was 30. 50 years ago March 2, 1972: Eugene Phelps, his wife and six kids saw their home burn down Monday. He had $4 in his pocket and makes $80 a week at Bloomington Township. Since then they have marveled at the outpouring of kindness, a lot of it from others who also didnt have much themselves. 25 years ago March 2, 1997: Scientists have successfully cloned a sheep and named the result Dolly. While cloning has already sparked a debate, ISU professors are hailing the achievement as a breakthrough. Among other applications, they say this could end the shortage of blood donors. Compiled by Jack Keefe; jkeefe@coldwellhomes.com. Energy Minister, Dr. Matthew Opoku Prempeh is leading a delegation of senior officials from Ghanas energy sector to attend EXPO 2020 underway in Dubai in the United Arab Emirates. Dubbed by the Ghana Investment Promotion Centre, lead organisers of Ghanas participation in the EXPO as the Energy Month, March will be used to position Ghanas energy sector favourably in the minds of investors and decision-makers. The Ministry and its sector agencies at the EXPO will showcase Ghanas energy potential in the upstream, downstream and renewable energy sectors with strong emphasis on the 2030 Petroleum Hub agenda, one of the important visions of His Excellency the President among other key areas. As part of a series of planned engagements to attract investor partners into Ghanas energy sector, the Ministry will host an investment forum on Saturday 5th March 2022 where sector agencies will use the opportunity to pitch for investment into their various sectors. The forum will be attended by Ghanas Ambassador to the UAE, Alhaji Ahmed Ramadan, the CEO of the GIPC and leading figures of the investor community in the UAE. There will also be one-on-one sessions between Ghanas energy sector CEOs and prospective investors. The Ministry will also participate actively in the Ghana Day on 8th March, 2022 where the President of the Republic, H.E Nana Addo Dankwa Akufo-Addo is expected to address a business forum organized by the GIPC in close partnership with the Ministry of Energy. The President is also expected to highlight strongly, the numerous opportunities in the energy sector as well as other areas of the economy. All these events are strategically geared towards making Ghana attractive to the investor community at the EXPO. Beyond these events, the Ministry has scheduled rotationally, the use of the Ghana pavilion by the sector agencies. My sector agencies will provide deeper insights into the operations of their sectors. They will indeed demonstrate the limitless opportunities in the generation, transmission and distribution value chain of the power sector Dr. Prempeh said at a strategic meeting. He continued They will also demonstrate Ghanas hydrocarbon potential evident in acreages for exploration, farm-in opportunities as well as the rapid expansion of our gas market, among other important areas of the petroleum industry On the theme connecting minds, creating the future, EXPO 2020 which started on 1st October, 2021 and ends on 31st March, 2022 is the first to be held in the Arab world, gathering about 200 country participants. Ghanas energy sector players are confident that Ghana can make the most out of this strategic gathering. Source: Peacefmonline.com/Ghana Disclaimer : Opinions expressed here are those of the writers and do not reflect those of Peacefmonline.com. Peacefmonline.com accepts no responsibility legal or otherwise for their accuracy of content. Please report any inappropriate content to us, and we will evaluate it as a matter of priority. Featured Video The AU group of Opoku Ware alumni, which graduated from the school in 1996, has donated a duplex for staff accommodation to the school at a brief but colourful inauguration ceremony held on campus yesterday. The two unit-accommodation, which is valued at GHS300,000, each has a two-bedroom facility. The President of the group, Katakyie Andrew Osei Adu Akoto (AU247) explained that the group had embarked on the project to mark the silver jubilee of their graduation from the school and also as a 70th-anniversary birthday gift to the school. He explained further that the group selected staff accommodation because they were away many of the tutors live off-campus, which in turn affects discipline on campus, especially after classes. We had to do something to demonstrate our support for the teachers who work so hard to bring up these young boys and try to make an impact on their lives and also lift the schools image, he said. The headmaster of the school, Rev. Fr. Stephen Owusu-Sekyere, expressed his gratitude on behalf of the school for the kind gesture and praised the AU group for their selflessness and love for their school. He stated that he was very gratified by the relationship he has had with the alumni fraternity since assuming office and prayed this relationship would endure in the times ahead. A member of the schools governing board, Kat. J B Danquah (AL53) who is also the alumnis immediate past president and a member of the 70th anniversary planning committee, also commended the group for their project and indicated that the board will continue to work hand-in-hand with management to ensure that staff accommodation on campus is given priority attention. A pioneer student of the school, Kat Lawrence Gyempeh (K36) was also full of praise for the group and noted that over the years, the schools population, like that of many schools in the country, had grown in leaps and bounds. He was confident that the school, together with important stakeholders like its old boys, will continue to cooperate to make the school a much better place. The building was blessed and formally inaugurated by the Vicar-General of the Metropolitan Archdiocese of Kumasi, on behalf of the Archbishop, Most. Rev Gabriel Anokye, who is an old boy of the school. Source: Peacefmonline.com/Ghana Disclaimer : Opinions expressed here are those of the writers and do not reflect those of Peacefmonline.com. Peacefmonline.com accepts no responsibility legal or otherwise for their accuracy of content. Please report any inappropriate content to us, and we will evaluate it as a matter of priority. Featured Video A Deputy Minister of Finance, Mr John Ampontuah Kumah, has described as untrue claims that the government may not be able to pay salaries of public workers in the coming months. The Speaker of Parliament, Alban Bagbin said last week on the floor of Parliament that information available to him suggested that the government might not be able to pay public workers in the next three months if critical decisions were not taken. However, Mr Kumah, who is also the Member of Parliament (MP) for Ejisu, has refuted the claims. He said the government had been able to pay workers during the height of the covid-19 pandemic and would continue to honour its obligations to public workers. It is not true, even when the COVID-19 hit the country, and we were struggling as a country, we still managed to pay all public workers on time, he said. In January this year, workers were paid on time, we are hopeful that February will also be paid on time, so the workers should not fear, he assured. According to him, the Speaker of Parliament made a genuine call to all MPs that they must move Parliament beyond partisanship and support the governments domestic revenue mobilization programmes, especially the e-levy. I think the Speaker made a very genuine call on all Members of Parliament to move Parliament beyond partisanship and support the governments domestic revenue mobilization programmes, especially the e-levy so that we do not create very difficult financial constraints for the government, he said. The Deputy Minister was optimistic that the economic situation would not deteriorate to the point where the government would be unable to pay public workers. Source: graphiconline.com Disclaimer : Opinions expressed here are those of the writers and do not reflect those of Peacefmonline.com. Peacefmonline.com accepts no responsibility legal or otherwise for their accuracy of content. Please report any inappropriate content to us, and we will evaluate it as a matter of priority. Featured Video The Secretary of the University of Ghana chapter of UTAG, Prof. Ransford Gyampo, has asked President Akufo-Addo to back his words with action as far as addressing their challenges is concerned. The President speaking at the National Labour Conference on Monday, February 28, 2022, at Kwahu Nkwatia, in the Eastern Region said, government is determined to find a satisfactory solution to this impasse, and ensure that the academic calendar is not, substantially, derailed . . . the best forms of negotiations are those in which both parties to the dispute exhibit good faith within the context of what is affordable and equitable". I continue to hope that our dons will see this in that light, and help bring the impasse to an end so that the education of our young people can resume in serenity, he added. Prof Gyampo in an interview with Kwami Sefa Kayi on Peace FM's morning show 'Kokrokoo' commended the President for breaking his silence but urged that it should not be mere rhetoric. "President Akufo-Addo should be able to add this to his legacy that in his tenure, the issues of civil servants not only UTAG were addressed. It's good that he's spoken to the issue but we hope it will not just end there". Listen to him in the video below Meanwhile, Prof Gyampo has indicated the reason why UG-UTAG rescinded its decision not to return to the classroom. "If we say we would not return to the classroom, we would end up fighting with our management while at the same time fighting with government . . . some of us felt it will be a needless dissipation of our energies . . . our target is better conditions of service and that is from government and not management . . . not to say we're afraid of management," he pointed out. Listen to him in the video below Source: Peacefmonline.com Disclaimer : Opinions expressed here are those of the writers and do not reflect those of Peacefmonline.com. Peacefmonline.com accepts no responsibility legal or otherwise for their accuracy of content. Please report any inappropriate content to us, and we will evaluate it as a matter of priority. Featured Video Disclaimer : Opinions expressed here are those of the writers and do not reflect those of Peacefmonline.com. Peacefmonline.com accepts no responsibility legal or otherwise for their accuracy of content. Please report any inappropriate content to us, and we will evaluate it as a matter of priority. A 22 year-old Nigerian medical student, Fehintola Moses, has told the BBC about his unsuccessful attempts to leave Sumy, in north-east Ukraine, where there has been fighting with Russian troops. Sumy is also near another frontline in Kharkiv. Through WhatsApp message and voice notes, the Nigerian student spoke of how he was unable to leave the city after his university told him that the train lines nearby were controlled by Russian forces. He said he had been told to stay at the campus. He said there was no public transport in the city as some roads have been damaged. "We still have a good supply of food, grocery shops are still open - which I fear may not last long. The school is providing foodstuff for people who need it. We have water. We are still trying to sleep and wake up."We still have a good supply of food, grocery shops are still open - which I fear may not last long. The school is providing foodstuff for people who need it. We have water. We are still trying to sleep and wake up." "What we need is someone who can remove the Russian soldiers from the streets, someone who can repair the bridges, someone who can make sure the railroads are safe. That's what we honestly need right now."What we need is someone who can remove the Russian soldiers from the streets, someone who can repair the bridges, someone who can make sure the railroads are safe. That's what we honestly need right now." Mr Moses said he was feeling mentally drained and wished the whole situation would end. Over half a million civilians have fled Ukraine, according to the UN. Source: BBC Disclaimer : Opinions expressed here are those of the writers and do not reflect those of Peacefmonline.com. Peacefmonline.com accepts no responsibility legal or otherwise for their accuracy of content. Please report any inappropriate content to us, and we will evaluate it as a matter of priority. Featured Video Deputy Minister of Lands and Natural Resources in charge of Mining, George Mireku Duker is currently in South Africa on a mission to inspect works on an assembling of speed boats meant for patroling river bodies polluted by illegal miners in Ghana. The Mineral Commission, last year, contracted a company to mould five speed boats. ''The speed boats, which will be managed by the Ghana Naval Command, shall be supported by permanent River Gaurds who will be constantly patrolling the banks of the river bodies. The speed boats are built to withstand challenges associated with the river bodies in the Country. The patrol of these speed boats and the vigorous monitoring of the river gaurds is highly expected to mitigate illegal mining activities on our water bodies'', a statement by the Deputy Minister read. This effort by the Lands and Natural Resources Ministry is aimed at clamping down on illegal mining, locally called ''galamsey''. Read full statement below: HON. DUKER INSPECTS SPEED BOATS IN SOUTH AFRICA AHEAD OF DELIVERY. On behalf of Hon. Samuel A. Jinapor, Hon. Duker is in South Africa to inspect works on the Assembling of Speed Boats meant to patrol the major river bodies being polluted by illegal mining in Ghana. Minerals Commission contracted a special company to mould five (5) speed boats in December 2021. The speed boats, which will be managed by the Ghana Naval Command, shall be supported by permanent River Gaurds who will be constantly patrolling the banks of the river bodies. The speed boats are built to withstand challenges associated with the river bodies in the Country. The patrol of these speed boats and the vigorous monitoring of the river gaurds is highly expected to mitigate illegal mining activities on our water bodies. Works on the Assembling of the speed boats is over 80% done and will be delivered to Ghana in four(4) weeks time. Hon. Samuel A. Jinapor, Minister of Lands and Natural Resources is expected to commission the boats in the first week of April, 2022. The government is very committed to winning the Galamsey battle and shall succeed. Thank you. Source: Ameyaw Adu Gyamfi/Peacefmonline.com/Ghana Disclaimer : Opinions expressed here are those of the writers and do not reflect those of Peacefmonline.com. Peacefmonline.com accepts no responsibility legal or otherwise for their accuracy of content. Please report any inappropriate content to us, and we will evaluate it as a matter of priority. Featured Video Parents and relatives of Ghanaian students in Ukraine have appealed to the government to consider putting in measures to enable the returnee students, especially the medical students, to continue their education in the country. They said some of them had been studying for between six and 10 years in Ukraine and were left with a few months to complete their education when the Russian invasion of Ukraine occurred It would, therefore, not be in order for their education to be truncated just because of what had happened, the parents and relatives said. They called on the Ministry of Foreign Affairs and Regional Integration to immediately constitute a committee involving other ministries to see what could be done for the students to continue their education on their return. One of the parents, Dr Collins Tay, whose daughter is in her fourth year of a six-year medicine programme, said the University of Ghana Medical School could be called in to help organise some form of training for them, depending on the level the students had reached so that they could be integrated into the system. He said some of the students studying in Ukraine were refusing to come home, probably because they did not know of their fate after their return. The parents expressed their concerns during interactions with the Ministry of Foreign Affairs and Regional Integration at the Accra International Conference Centre. Background That was after the first batch of Ghanaians from Ukraine had arrived at the Kotoka International Airport (KIA) in Accra on Monday, March 1, 2022. Numbering 17, the evacuees were received by a delegation, led by a Deputy Minister of Foreign Affairs and Regional Integration, Mr Kwaku Ampratwum-Sarpong, and a Deputy Minister of Information, Ms Fatima Abubakar. They arrived in Accra aboard a Turkish Airlines flight from Istanbul, Turkey, and Qatar Airways via Doha, the capital of Qatar. While the Turkish Airlines flight, operated with Airbus A330-303, landed at 6.27 a.m., the Qatar Airways flight, operated with a Boeing 787-9 Dreamliner, touched down at exactly 7:30 a.m. The government has entered into an agreement with Qatar Airways and Turkish Airlines to evacuate Ghanaians stranded abroad as a result of the ongoing Russian invasion of Ukraine. The move is part of plans being explored by the government to evacuate Ghanaians who have been able to cross the Ukrainian border to neighbouring countries, such as Poland, Romania, Hungary, Turkey and Slovakia, and are willing to return home. Students held up in bomb shelters Some parents who have their children or relations studying at Sumy University, an area close to the Russian border considered one of the hotspots of the Russian invasion of Ukraine, expressed concern that their children there were held up in bomb shelters where they had run out of food. They, therefore, wanted to know the attempts the ministry was making to evacuate such students. The parents also appealed to the government to organise psychological counselling for the students who were arriving, especially because some of them might be traumatised by the experience of the war. Efforts by the ministry Responding to their concerns, the Minister of Foreign Affairs and Regional Integration, Ms Shirley Ayorkor Botchwey, said the continuing education of the evacuees would be the responsibility of their parents. However, she explained that the current exercise was meant to evacuate the students. Some of the students answering questions from the media. Picture: GABRIEL AHIABOR She, therefore, appealed to the parents to allow the government to do that exercise, so that afterwards, it would see what it could do about their education. However, for those doing their clinicals (practicals), online studies will be a bit difficult, she admitted. On counselling for the evacuees, Ms Botchwey gave an assurance that the ministry was liaising with the Ghana Psychological Association to provide such a service. Earlier at the meeting, Ms Botchwey had expressed the commitment of the ministry to ensure that all Ghanaians in Ukraine, including those who had successfully exited the country, avoided harm and travelled back home. Ghanaian students in Ukraine She disclosed that as of 5 p.m. last Monday, 527 Ghanaians had crossed the Ukrainian border to various European countries and they would soon be home as long as they were willing to be evacuated, at no cost to them. She said unconfirmed information indicated that about 1,200 Ghanaians were in Ukraine, with 945 of them being students registered with the National Union of Ghana Students (NUGS), Ukraine, with 29 of them on government scholarships. Source: graphiconline.com Disclaimer : Opinions expressed here are those of the writers and do not reflect those of Peacefmonline.com. Peacefmonline.com accepts no responsibility legal or otherwise for their accuracy of content. Please report any inappropriate content to us, and we will evaluate it as a matter of priority. Featured Video A nine-year-old Ghanaian child cancer survivor, Brenna Fosua Addai, has appealed to international organisations and donors, to go to the aid of cancer children in Ukraine. According to her, because of the war in Ukraine, there could be a shortage of cancer drugs in the country. This is because there had been the cancellation of international flights to the country and medical supplies could not be made to the country. Reports from international media indicate that children suffering from cancer have had their treatments interrupted after Russia invaded Ukraine. The report states that doctors fear a lack of treatment would mean the children would get sicker or even die if they were not evacuated. In a solidarity message to the two countries and world leaders, she called for a ceasefire and negotiation to end the conflict in Ukraine and bring peace in the region. They're vulnerable and this is not their fault of theirs. I plead with world leaders to have mercy on them so that they could have their treatment to save their lives," she stated. Little Breana who has been advocating for childhood cancers and hoped to become an ambassador for children with cancer also called on the President, Nana Addo Dankwa Akufo Addo to intervene by using his international reputation to influence Putin to end the war in Ukraine. I know the president is a listening father and will hear our cry, I plead with him and his wife to intervene to ensure these kids survive, she added. Source: Peacefmonline.com/Ghana Disclaimer : Opinions expressed here are those of the writers and do not reflect those of Peacefmonline.com. Peacefmonline.com accepts no responsibility legal or otherwise for their accuracy of content. Please report any inappropriate content to us, and we will evaluate it as a matter of priority. Featured Video Ukraine has invited mums to come and collect Russian troops captured during the battle. In an apparent attempt to embarrass Moscow, the Ukrainian defence ministry said in a statement: A decision has been taken to hand over captured Russian troops to their mothers if they come to collect them in Ukraine, in Kyiv. Kyiv Independent reports that Ukrainian civilians are providing captured Russians with tea and food, and are letting them call their mothers via video chat. It comes after Ukraines Deputy Prime Minister Iryna Vereshchuk asked for the International Red Cross to help repatriate the dead bodies of Russian soldiers. Last week she said: There are thousands of invaders bodies. This is a humanitarian need. We ask for the bodies of the invaders to leave Ukrainian territory and go to Russia. We call upon Russians again to make it so that there are fewer bodies of your sons, of your men, otherwise, there will be thousands of them. I say it again, victory will be ours. Last week a platoon of Russian soldiers who surrendered claimed they werent aware they had been sent out to kill, according to the Ukrainian military. In a statement released, the platoons commander is said to have claimed he only learned of the invasion the day before and believed they were going to return home. A quote attributed to the commander, named as Konstantin Buynichev, said: Nobody thought that we were going to kill. We were not going to fight we were collecting information. The claims were reiterated by Ukraines ambassador to the US, Oksana Markarova, at a press conference in Washington. Russia is now on its seventh day of its invasion of Ukraine and is no where near running to schedule. Disclaimer : Opinions expressed here are those of the writers and do not reflect those of Peacefmonline.com. Peacefmonline.com accepts no responsibility legal or otherwise for their accuracy of content. Please report any inappropriate content to us, and we will evaluate it as a matter of priority. Featured Video Mr Ras Mubarak, former Member of Parliament (MP) for Kumbungu, has petitioned the Speaker of Parliament, Mr Alban Bagbin, to refer four MPs to the Privileges Committee for breaking the rules of the house on absenteeism. Mr Mubarak in his petition cited Madam Sarah Adwoa Safo, MP for Dome-Kwabenya; Mr Henry Quartey, MP for Ayawaso Central; Mr Ebenezer Kojo Kum, MP for Ahanta West and Mr Kennedy Ohene Agyapong, MP for Assin Central, as MPs who had absented themselves from Parliament for more than fifteen sittings without the Speakers permission. According to him, their conduct required immediate action as it breached Constitutional Provisions and Standing Orders of Parliament. It has come to my notice through parliaments Hansard, newspaper and radio report that four Members of Parliament have all absented themselves from Parliament for more than fifteen sittings of a meeting of Parliament without the permission of Mr Speaker in writing. "Given this reported breach of the constitutional provision, I respectfully petition your high office to direct for their conduct to be referred to the Privileges Committee for consideration and necessary action, segments of the petition said. The petition comes following concerns over Madam Safos absence from Parliament. It is reported that Madam Safos last appearance in Parliament was in December 2021. However, the Minority Caucus alleges that "she had been impersonated to enable the majority to secure the right numbers to vote on the contentious Electronic Transaction Levy." Mr Mubarak explained that the petition was necessary to regain the publics confidence in Parliament. He has therefore indicated the hope that Parliament would unite to support his petition. I humbly submit that democracy can only work if Parliament puts the common good ahead of the party and personal interest. "At a time of seeming collapse of trust in politics and Parliament as an institution, it is my fervent prayer that the House would rise to the occasion and be united on this matter, to uphold our constitution and also win back waned public confidence," the petition said. Speaker of Parliament, Mr Bagbin, has dismissed media reports suggesting he permitted Madam Safo to be absent from parliamentary proceedings on health grounds. Its important I diffuse some fake news, which is being circulated that I granted an interview to say that Adwoa Safo received permission from me to absent herself from Parliament on health grounds. "I want it to be known by all; that I have not granted any such interview anywhere. I have not said anything like that anywhere," he said on the floor of Parliament. Source: GNA Disclaimer : Opinions expressed here are those of the writers and do not reflect those of Peacefmonline.com. Peacefmonline.com accepts no responsibility legal or otherwise for their accuracy of content. Please report any inappropriate content to us, and we will evaluate it as a matter of priority. Featured Video STC Chief Executive Officer, Nana Akomea has fired salvoes at the opposition National Democratic Congress (NDC) for petitioning the Commonwealth of Nations to investigate what it says is human rights violations against its members by the incumbent government. The party has asked the Commonwealth Nations to monitor the human rights situation in Ghana as well as what they believe is the criminal persecution of its members. The General Secretary of the NDC, Mr Johnson Aseidu Nketia at a press conference in Accra Monday (February 28, 2022) announced the petition saying it was necessitated by the "harassment, criminal persecution and human rights violations" against some leading members of the NDC including its National Chairman, Samuel Ofosu Ampofo. "There are some practices that are not in accordance with good governance and the principles of the Commonwealth so we have petitioned them to take the appropriate action," he said. Nana Akomea's Response Nana Akomea, discussing the issue on Peace FM's 'Kokrokoo', labeled the NDC petition as insensible saying the government has done nothing wrong. He explained that the prosecution of the abovementioned names is in accordance with the country's laws, hence wondering how sending someone to court amounts to human rights infractions. ''What NDC is doing won't make Ghana take them serious," he stated. He also referred the NDC General Secretary and the party to similar prosecutions they made while in power saying, "you, Asiedu Nketia and your party, when you were in government, you took people to court, the same court. So the court cannot be a good court when you were in power and suddenly the courts are bad when you are out of government. It doesn't make sense". He added; "When you were in government, you took people to court . . . You took former Foreign Ministers to court, nobody said anything about the court. We went through the process. So, if you are out of power and the same court, you're now saying the court is not good meaning you don't have any better job doing. Find a better job and do." "Beyond the court system, what else do you have?", he asked. Background In reference to examples of alleged persecutions and harassment, the NDC General Secretary cited some cases that are currently being prosecuted in court as the basis for the petition. In the case of the Republic v Stephen Kwabena Opuni and two others, which is cited in the petition, Mr Nketia said the Judge hearing the case, Mr Justice Clemence Honyenuga had made some pronouncements on the case which "in any fair legal system would warrant his recusal from the case on the ground of real likelihood or appearance of bias." He also cited the case involving the Republic vrs Samuel Ofosu Ampofo and Anthony Kwaku Boahen and the Republic Vrs Cassiel Ato Forson among others as examples of the criminal persecution of NDC members by the President Akufo-Addo's government. "The conduct of the government of Ghana in this matter has been dreadful leaving no doubt the government is bent on a conviction regardless of the quality of the evidence," Mr Nketia said. In relation to the case involving Dr Ato Forson, the party said it believes that the charges are politically motivated and engineered to weaken his opposition to the passage of the E-levy. "This is a brazen abuse of power by the government," Mr Nketia said. Source: Ameyaw Adu Gyamfi/Peacefmonline.com/Ghana Disclaimer : Opinions expressed here are those of the writers and do not reflect those of Peacefmonline.com. Peacefmonline.com accepts no responsibility legal or otherwise for their accuracy of content. Please report any inappropriate content to us, and we will evaluate it as a matter of priority. Featured Video The Communications Director of the NPP, Yaw Buaben Asamoa, has said that the petition by the opposition NDC, to the Commonwealth Secretariat over allegations of harassment by the government is premature. According to him, the use of the countrys legal system to prosecute past government officers accused of committing crimes is well within the permit of the law and does not amount to harassment, asaaradio.com has reported. Buaben Asamoa further stated that the behaviour of the National Democratic Congress (NDC) is consistent with their tendency to vilify state institutions. Its premature, all that they are doing is premature. What do they want us to do, abandon the judicial system with processes ongoing based on their opinion of the way justice is meted out in this country? They have never edified the judiciary in this country. They have consistently attacked the judiciary in and out of power They want to operate above the law and they want to operate in a way that sets them apart from the rest of us. So, in what way is the Commonwealth going to benefit us when we have a judiciary, Asamoa was quoted by asaaseradio.com. The NDC announced it has lodged a petition with the Secretary-General of the Commonwealth Secretariat over what it describes as a gross violation of the human rights of its leading members by the NPP government. The NDC contends that the use of the judiciary by the current administration to intimidate and harass its members sharply contradicts the tenets of good governance. The party further indicated that the petition is to draw the attention of the international body to instances of abuse of the judiciary, political persecutions, and abuse of human rights. Disclaimer : Opinions expressed here are those of the writers and do not reflect those of Peacefmonline.com. Peacefmonline.com accepts no responsibility legal or otherwise for their accuracy of content. Please report any inappropriate content to us, and we will evaluate it as a matter of priority. Featured Video Yaw Buaben Asamoa, the communications director of the governing New Patriotic Party (NPP) has accused the opposition National Democratic Congress (NDC) of attempting to bastardise state institutions including the judiciary. Asamoas comment comes after the NDC petitioned the Commonwealth Secretariat in the UK over what it called human rights violations, criminal persecutions and harassment of its members. Its premature, all that they are doing is premature. What do they want us to do, abandon the judicial system with processes ongoing based on their opinion of the way justice is meted out in this country, Buaben told Asaase News on Tuesday (1 March). They have never edified the judiciary in this country. They have consistently attacked the judiciary in and out of power. Asamoa added: They want to operate above the law and they want to operate in a way that sets them apart from the rest of us. So, in what way is the Commonwealth going to benefit us when we have a judiciary. Petition The opposition National Democratic Congress (NDC) has petitioned the Commonwealth Secretariat in the UK over what it called human rights violations, criminal persecutions and harassment of its members. Addressing the media in Accra on Monday, the general secretary of the NDC, Johnson Asiedu Nketia says the judiciary is being used by the Akufo-Addo-led government to harass its members and fears most of the cases against NDC officials will not go in their favour. The NDC has, therefore, petitioned the Commonwealth to bring a team of investigators and lawyers to assess the adequacy and quality of the justice being administered to its members. Disclaimer : Opinions expressed here are those of the writers and do not reflect those of Peacefmonline.com. Peacefmonline.com accepts no responsibility legal or otherwise for their accuracy of content. Please report any inappropriate content to us, and we will evaluate it as a matter of priority. Featured Video The former Member of Parliament (MP) for Gomoa Central constituency, Rachel Appoh wants Ghanaians to stop attacking Dome/Kwabenya MP, Sarah Adwoa Safo, over her absence in Parliament. According to her, Ghanaians must rather pray to support the former Gender and Social Protection Minister instead of subjecting her to harsh public criticisms. Wondering if Adwoa Safo is the only MP absent in Parliament, the NDC former Legislature is sure the Dome/Kwabenya MP is still serving her constituency wherever she is. Adwoa Safo was last seen in Parliament in December 2021, when she appeared in the House to dismiss claims by the Minority Caucus that she was impersonated. She has since not returned to the Chamber. Her action has infuriated her colleagues who have accused her of blackmailing government with a list of demands, including the Deputy Majority Leader post. But the former Gender Minister in a video that has since gone viral on social media said she is not surprised at the attacks on Adwoa Safo because she was also subjected to similar fate when she was a Gender Minister. She stated that women in Ghanaian politics are always tagged to their disadvantage indicating that the posture defeats calls on more women to join politics. Urging, those who know the truth in the whole saga to confess noted that the frustration is too much especially when some people are paying loosing bonuses for Adwoa Safo to lose her seat. Ms Appoh further intimated on her Instagram page, stop the unnecessary politics on Adwoa Safo and E-levy saga and tell Ghanaians the truth. May God bless all female activities and those supporting women in politics especially we the young ones. Our story would be told one day. God has spoken wherever you find yourself hon. Adwoa Safo# pray for women in politics. God bales you all. Disclaimer : Opinions expressed here are those of the writers and do not reflect those of Peacefmonline.com. Peacefmonline.com accepts no responsibility legal or otherwise for their accuracy of content. Please report any inappropriate content to us, and we will evaluate it as a matter of priority. Featured Video James Kwabena Bomfeh, a former Acting General Secretary of the Convention People's Party (CPP), has lashed out at the National Democratic Congress (NDC) over their petition to the Commonwealth Nations to investigate what they term as violations of human rights under President Nana Akufo-Addo's regime. The NDC has appealed to the Commonwealth Nations to monitor the human rights situation in Ghana and what they believe is the criminal persecution of its members. The General Secretary of the NDC, Johnson Aseidu Nketia announced the petition at a press conference in Accra on Monday, February 28, 2022. He stated the petition was necessitated by the "harassment, criminal persecution and human rights violations" against some NDC leading members including their National Chairman, Samuel Ofosu Ampofo. "There are some practices that are not in accordance with good governance and the principles of the Commonwealth so we have petitioned them to take the appropriate action," he said. Background Mr. Asiedu Nketia cited some cases that are currently prosecuted in court which they find to be persecution and harrassment of their members by the current administration. Citing the case of the Republic v Stephen Kwabena Opuni and two others, the NDC General Secretary stated that the Judge, Justice Clemence Honyenuga, hearing the case, made some pronouncements which "in any fair legal system would warrant his recusal from the case on the ground of real likelihood or appearance of bias". He also made reference to the case involving the Republic vrs Samuel Ofosu Ampofo and Anthony Kwaku Boahen and the Republic Vrs Cassiel Ato Forson among others as examples of the criminal persecution of NDC members saying ''the conduct of the government of Ghana in this matter has been dreadful leaving no doubt the government is bent on a conviction regardless of the quality of the evidence". "This is a brazen abuse of power by the government," Mr Nketia added. Regime Change Addressing the issue during a panel discussion on Peace FM's 'Kokrokoo', James Kwabena Bomfeh, popularly called Kabila, was of a firm belief that the NDC petition is all about one thing; that's to change the current regime. Other than seeking a regime change, he sees nothing tangibly right in petitioning the Commonwealth Nations if not for the purposes of deception, he noted. "Much of the talk is about regime change and nothing more", he asserted, emphasizing '' . . we live deception. We live deceitful lives. The theatre and theatricals are too many. That is our problem. The insincerity with which we discuss our problems in Ghana". In relation to the human rights violation claims raised by the NDC, Kabilla rhetorically asked; ''Is it indeed true there is insecurity in Ghana? People cannot speak?" ''You cannot always be right just as you won't always be wrong," he replied the NDC. He however called on President Akufo-Addo and his Ministers handling the security of Ghana to sit up. "I will call on the President, the National Security Minister, Defence Minister; you should be on your toes . . . Look at who is policing the Police and how they are doing their work." Source: Ameyaw Adu Gyamfi/Peacefmonline.com/Ghana Disclaimer : Opinions expressed here are those of the writers and do not reflect those of Peacefmonline.com. Peacefmonline.com accepts no responsibility legal or otherwise for their accuracy of content. Please report any inappropriate content to us, and we will evaluate it as a matter of priority. Featured Video US president, Joe Biden has announced the closure of US airspace to Russian aircraft and pledged to go after Russian oligarchs in retaliation for the invasion of Ukraine. The move, which follows European allies, has been considered for several days and was revealed after discussions with US airlines on the possible repercussions. Biden said on Tuesday night that the moves would further isolate Vladimir Putin. The Ruble has lost 30% of its value, he said. The Russian stock market has lost 40% of its value and trading remains suspended. Russias economy is reeling and Putin alone is to blame. The president said the US would also join its European allies in pursuing oligarchs and seizing their wealth. We will join our allies in closing off American airspace to all Russian flights, further isolating Russia and adding additional squeeze on their economy, President Biden said. In a moment ad-libbed to the speech he said: He has no idea whats coming. Jen Psaki, the White House press secretary, warned about retaliation from Russia when asked at Mondays press briefing whether the US was considering a ban on Russian aircraft over the US. "No option is off the table," Ms. Psaki said. "I would note that there are a lot of flights, US airlines, that fly over Russia to go to Asia and other parts of the world and we factor in a range of factors. Disclaimer : Opinions expressed here are those of the writers and do not reflect those of Peacefmonline.com. Peacefmonline.com accepts no responsibility legal or otherwise for their accuracy of content. Please report any inappropriate content to us, and we will evaluate it as a matter of priority. Featured Video Children standing on a small mud dyke are reflected in stagnant water following extreme flooding, in Langic, Northern Bahr el Ghazal State, South Sudan on Oct. 20, 2021. Africa has contributed relatively little to the planet's greenhouse gas emissions but has suffered some of the heaviest impacts of climate change and the reverberations of human-caused global warming will only get worse, according to a new United Nations report released Feb. 28, 2022. Credit: AP Photo/Adrienne Surprenant, File Although Africa has contributed relatively little to the planet's greenhouse gas emissions, the continent has suffered some of the world's heaviest impacts of climate change, from famine to flooding. Yet from its coral reefs to its highest peaks, the reverberations of human-caused global warming will only get worse, according to a new United Nations report The U.N. Intergovernmental Panel on Climate Change predicted Monday that Saharan flooding, heat and drought will increase, Africa's rich array of wildlife and plants will decline and glaciers on its most iconic mountains will disappear in coming decades. On a continent already grappling with high poverty levels and food insecurity, the panel warned that fishermen and farmers will feel the pain of future climate change on their lives and livelihoods. In Kenya, farmer Safari Mbuvi already is trying to weather his country's a four-year droughtand watching his crops fail, again and again. "Since I was young, my father used to get a bounty harvest in this farm, but now, there seems to be a change in climate and the rains are no longer dependable," he said. "I will not harvest anything, not even a single sack of maize is possible. ... And I am not the only one. Every farmer in this area has lost everything." Stephen Mudoga, 12, the son of a farmer, tries to chase away a swarm of locusts on his farm as he returns home from school, at Elburgon, in Nakuru county, Kenya on March 17, 2021. Africa has contributed relatively little to the planet's greenhouse gas emissions but has suffered some of the heaviest impacts of climate change and the reverberations of human-caused global warming will only get worse, according to a new United Nations report released Feb. 28, 2022. Credit: AP Photo/Brian Inganga, File Warming temperatures will weaken Africa's food production system by leading to water scarcity and shorter growing seasons, the U.N. report said. Yields of olives, sorghum, coffee, tea and livestock production are expected to decline. "Agricultural productivity growth has been reduced by 34% since 1961 due to climate change more than any other region." the panel said. Climate change, along with conflicts, instability and economic crises, has contributed to hunger. Since 2012, the undernourished population in sub-Saharan Africa has increased by 45.6%, according to the U.N. Food and Agriculture Organization. And in 2020, approximately 98 million people suffered from acute food insecurity and needed humanitarian assistance in Africa, said the Global Report on Food Crises by the World Food Programme. Residents cross flooded fields following Cyclone Enawo in Madagascar's capital Antananarivo, on March 9, 2017. Africa has contributed relatively little to the planet's greenhouse gas emissions but has suffered some of the heaviest impacts of climate change and the reverberations of human-caused global warming will only get worse, according to a new United Nations report released Feb. 28, 2022. Credit: AP Photo/Alexander Joe, File If the world warms just another degree Celsius (1.8 degrees Fahrenheit) by 2050, an additional 1.4 million African children will suffer severe stunting from malnutrition that limits growth and cognitive development, the IPCC said. "The lack of food and under-nutrition are strongly linked with hot climates in the sub-Saharan area and less rainfall in West and Central Africa," the panel said in a FAQ document. "Climate change can undermine children's education attainment, thus reducing their chances for well-paid jobs or higher incomes later in life." Jean Paul Adam, who heads the climate change division at the U.N. Economic Commission for Africa, said, "Africa constitutes 17% of global population but only accounts for less than 4% of global greenhouse gas emissions. This is the region of the world already being severely impacted of climate change plus having an extremely low adaptive capacity." Boolo Aadan, 63, who fled drought-stricken areas, holds her 9 month old grandchild outside the tent where they now live at a makeshift camp on the outskirts of the capital Mogadishu, Somalia on Feb. 4, 2022. Africa has contributed relatively little to the planet's greenhouse gas emissions but has suffered some of the heaviest impacts of climate change and the reverberations of human-caused global warming will only get worse, according to a new United Nations report released Feb. 28, 2022. Credit: AP Photo/Farah Abdi Warsameh, File Climate change has a major social injustice component, with the poor hit harder by pollution from the rich, said former Ireland President Mary Robinson, now with The Elders, a Nelson Mandela- founded group of senior statesmen. "All of the injustices are captured by looking at the region of Africa." Drought is a problem that hits the continent particularly hard. While only 7% of the world's disasters were drought related, they caused slightly more than one-third of the disaster deaths, "mostly in Africa," the IPCC report said. Droughts have also reduced Africa's hydropower by about 5% compared to the long-term average, hindering growth, the report said. "When we look at impacts, it isn't just that Africa is getting hit with the droughts and cyclones and the sea level rise and the disruption of rainfall patterns," said Canadian climate scientist Katharine Hayhoe, chief scientist for The Nature Conservancy. "It's that their vulnerability is so much higher than a lot of other places." Newly arrived Somalis, displaced by a drought, receive food distributions at makeshift camps in the Tabelaha area on the outskirts of Mogadishu, Somalia on March 30, 2017. Africa has contributed relatively little to the planet's greenhouse gas emissions but has suffered some of the heaviest impacts of climate change and the reverberations of human-caused global warming will only get worse, according to a new United Nations report released Feb. 28, 2022. Credit: AP Photo/Farah Abdi Warsameh, File Scientists say it is impossible to untangle Africa's poverty and harm from climate change. "Africa gets the short shrift because it's in some ways more vulnerable to physical impacts, but also because there's going to be a lot of people living on less than a dollar a day," said climate scientist Zeke Hausfather of the Breakthrough Institute. Monday's report said sea-surface temperatures are projected to rise, threatening fragile marine ecosystems, including East African coral reefs. The report warns of threats posed to livelihoods of 12.3 million people who depend on fisheries. The report said global warming also will hit Africa's famous wildlife and highest mountains. It predicted glacier ice covers on the Ruwenzori Mountains and Mount Kenya would be gone by 2030 and that Mount Kilimanjaro would lose its around 2040. Mohamed Mohamud, a ranger from the Sabuli Wildlife Conservancy, looks at the carcass of a giraffe that died of hunger near Matana Village, Wajir County, Kenya on Oct. 25, 2021. Africa has contributed relatively little to the planet's greenhouse gas emissions but has suffered some of the heaviest impacts of climate change and the reverberations of human-caused global warming will only get worse, according to a new United Nations report released Feb. 28, 2022. Credit: AP Photo/Brian Inganga, File By 2100, the report said, climate change is expected to lead to loss of more than half of African bird and mammal speciesand a 20% to 25% decline in the productivity of Africa's lakes and plant species. Increased damage to coral reefs from pollution and climate change is expected to harm fisheries and overall marine biodiversity. In the coming decades, Africa's mainland, islands and coastal cities will be exposed to climate change risks that can seriously undermine economic sectors such agriculture, tourism, transportation and energy. The report predicts reduced frequency of Category 5 cyclones, although it says they are projected to be more intense with high impacts upon landfall. By 2030, the report projects that 108 to 116 million people in Africa will be exposed to sea-level riseand that without adaptation measures, 12 major coastal cities will suffer a total of $65 billion to $86.5 billion in damages. Houses lay between the Senegal river, top, and the Atlantic Ocean beach that has been affected by erosion in Saint Louis, Senegal on Nov. 3, 2021. Africa has contributed relatively little to the planet's greenhouse gas emissions but has suffered some of the heaviest impacts of climate change and the reverberations of human-caused global warming will only get worse, according to a new United Nations report released Feb. 28, 2022. Credit: AP Photo/Leo Correa, File This shows the Ouarzazate solar plant in central Morocco on Feb. 4, 2016. Africa has contributed relatively little to the planet's greenhouse gas emissions but has suffered some of the heaviest impacts of climate change and the reverberations of human-caused global warming will only get worse, according to a new United Nations report released Feb. 28, 2022. Credit: AP Photo/Abdeljalil Bounhar, File Herder Yusuf Abdullahi walks past the carcasses of his forty goats that died of hunger during a drought in Dertu, Wajir County, Kenya on Oct. 24, 2021. Africa has contributed relatively little to the planet's greenhouse gas emissions but has suffered some of the heaviest impacts of climate change and the reverberations of human-caused global warming will only get worse, according to a new United Nations report released Feb. 28, 2022. Credit: AP Photo/Brian Inganga, File A herder boy who looks after livestock quenches his thirst from a water point during a drought, in the desert near Dertu, Wajir County, Kenya on Oct. 24, 2021. Africa has contributed relatively little to the planet's greenhouse gas emissions but has suffered some of the heaviest impacts of climate change and the reverberations of human-caused global warming will only get worse, according to a new United Nations report released Feb. 28, 2022. Credit: AP Photo/Brian Inganga, File Wilson Saro carries a green turtle that was unintentionally caught in a fisherman's net, before releasing it back into the Watamu National Marine Park on the Indian Ocean coast of Kenya on Sept. 22, 2021. Africa has contributed relatively little to the planet's greenhouse gas emissions but has suffered some of the heaviest impacts of climate change and the reverberations of human-caused global warming will only get worse, according to a new United Nations report released Feb. 28, 2022. Credit: AP Photo/Brian Inganga, File A woman who scavenges recyclable materials from garbage for a living is seen through a cloud of smoke from burning trash, surrounded by Marabou storks who feed on the garbage, at the dump in the Dandora slum of Nairobi, Kenya on Dec. 5, 2018. Africa has contributed relatively little to the planet's greenhouse gas emissions but has suffered some of the heaviest impacts of climate change and the reverberations of human-caused global warming will only get worse, according to a new United Nations report released Feb. 28, 2022. Credit: AP Photo/Ben Curtis, File A herd of adult and baby elephants walks in the dawn light as the highest mountain in Africa, Mount Kilimanjaro in Tanzania, sits topped with snow and glaciers in the background, seen from Amboseli National Park in southern Kenya on Dec. 17, 2012. Africa has contributed relatively little to the planet's greenhouse gas emissions but has suffered some of the heaviest impacts of climate change and the reverberations of human-caused global warming will only get worse, according to a new United Nations report released Feb. 28, 2022. Credit: AP Photo/Ben Curtis, File The carcass of a dead goat lies in the desert in a drought-stricken area near Bandar Beyla in Somalia on March 8, 2017. Africa has contributed relatively little to the planet's greenhouse gas emissions but has suffered some of the heaviest impacts of climate change and the reverberations of human-caused global warming will only get worse, according to a new United Nations report released Feb. 28, 2022. Credit: AP Photo/Ben Curtis, File Smoke billows from the chimneys at the coal-fired Lethabo power station in Vereeniging, South Africa, on Dec. 5, 2018. Africa has contributed relatively little to the planet's greenhouse gas emissions but has suffered some of the heaviest impacts of climate change and the reverberations of human-caused global warming will only get worse, according to a new United Nations report released Feb. 28, 2022. Credit: AP Photo/Themba Hadebe, File Rapid African urbanization, inadequate infrastructure as well growth of informal settlements will expose more people to climate hazards, the report said. It noted that sub-Saharan Africa is the only region that has recorded increasing rates of flood mortality since the 1990and that millions of people were displaced by weather-related causes in 2018 and 2019. "A lot of cities are completely unprepared for the scale of the challenges ahead, or even actively making the situation worse," said Kaisa Kosonen a senior policy advisor at Greenpeace Nordic. "Real action on climate change requires resilient urban development and justice." Explore further 13 million face hunger as Horn of Africa drought worsens: UN 2022 The Associated Press. All rights reserved. This material may not be published, broadcast, rewritten or redistributed without permission. Credit: CC0 Public Domain Research by University of Liverpool ocean scientists has found that found that food webs in the Barents Sea have been affected by our changing climate since at least the 1950s. The study, which involved researchers at the University of Liverpool, the University of St. Andrews, the National Oceanography Centre alongside the Institute of Marine Research in Norway used archives of teeth from harp seals, information on seal migration patterns from telemetry and a global numerical model to provide new insight into how Arctic ecosystems are responding to climate change over decadal timescales. Harps seals are ice-dependent predators and considered to be excellent indicators of ecosystem health. Collaborators in Norway provided access to archives of teeth from harp seals dating back to the 1950s. Seal teeth are like tree rings, with annual growth layers of dentine being deposited, allowing for an individual's age to be determined. Using analytical facilities at the University of Liverpool (LIFER), cutting-edge biomarker analyses of these dentine layers allowed chronological reconstruction of key properties of the Arctic marine ecosystem since the 1950s. Published in the journal, Global Change Biology, the study used model simulations to reveal that these multi-decadal trends were driven by an increase in anthropogenic nitrogen deposition in the North Atlantic and its subsequent transport into the Arctic alongside an increase in productivity within the Arctic. Ultimately, the results suggest that the Barents Sea ecosystem has been impacted by anthropogenic activities for at least 60 years (since the 1950s), extending beyond the time period accessible from satellites and direct oceanographic observations. The research was jointly led Dr Camille de la Vega and Dr Pearse Buchanan, who are post-doctoral researchers on the NERC-funded ARISE project. Dr Camille de la Vega, a researcher on the ARISE project at Liverpool and now based in Germany, said that "biomarkers are powerful tools for food web analysis and being able to reconstruct food web properties using archives of seal teeth has provided new understanding of how ecosystems are responding at timescales unfathomable by direct observations. We will now extend this study to consider the decadal trend in the trophic position of the seals." Dr Pearse Buchanan, PDRA with the ARISE project at the University of Liverpool said that their "results highlight the connectivity between the Arctic and other ocean basins and demonstrate that we need to look beyond specific ocean regions when considering the impact of climate change on marine ecosystems." Dr Rachel Jeffreys, Marine Biologist at the University of Liverpool's Department of Earth, Ocean and Ecological Sciences, said that "biomarker analysis of harp seal teeth has provided new insight into the impact of environmental change on the Arctic. The analysis in this paper was underpinned by a unique set of previous long-term archive samples only accessible through international collaborations. Now that we have established this new capability at Liverpool, we can now confidently reconstruct past ecosystem dynamics in a whole range of environments exposed to environmental change using archives of biological tissues." Explore further Researchers find consistent mercury levels in arctic seals More information: Camille de la Vega et al, Multidecadal environmental change in the Barents Sea recorded by seal teeth, Global Change Biology (2022). Journal information: Global Change Biology Camille de la Vega et al, Multidecadal environmental change in the Barents Sea recorded by seal teeth,(2022). DOI: 10.1111/gcb.16138 Archaeologists excavating the well-preserved surface at the Xiamabei site, northern China, showing stone tools, fossils, ochre and red pigments. Credit: Fa-Gang Wang When did populations of Homo sapiens first arrive in China and what happened when they encountered the Denisovans or Neanderthals who lived there? A new study in Nature by an international team of researchers opens a window into hunter-gatherer lifestyles 40,000 years ago. Archaeological excavations at the site of Xiamabei in the Nihewan Basin of northern China have revealed the presence of innovative behaviors and unique toolkits. The discovery of a new culture suggests processes of innovation and cultural diversification occurring in Eastern Asia during a period of genetic and cultural hybridization. Although previous studies have established that Homo sapiens arrived in northern Asia about 40,000 years ago, much about the lives and cultural adaptations of these early peoples, and their possible interactions with archaic groups, remains unknown. In the search for answers, the Nihewan Basin in northern China, with a wealth of archaeological sites ranging in age from 2 million to 10,000 years ago, provides one of the best opportunities for understanding the evolution of cultural behavior in northeastern Asia. The article published in Nature describes a unique 40,000-year-old culture at the site of Xiamabei in the Nihewan Basin. With the earliest known evidence of ochre processing in Eastern Asia and a set of distinct blade-like stone tools, Xiamabei contains cultural expressions and features that are unique or exceedingly rare in northeastern Asia. Through the collaboration of an international team of scholars, analysis of the finds offers important new insights into cultural innovation during the expansion of Homo sapiens populations. "Xiamabei stands apart from any other known archaeological site in China, as it possesses a novel set of cultural characteristics at an early date," says Dr. Fa-Gang Wang of the Hebei Provincial Institute of Cultural Relics and Archaeology, whose team first excavated the site. Cultural adaptations at Xiamabei "The ability of hominins to live in northern latitudes, with cold and highly seasonal environments, was likely facilitated by the evolution of culture in the form of economic, social and symbolic adaptations," says Dr. Shixia Yang, researcher with the Chinese Academy of Sciences and the Max Planck Institute for the Science of Human History, in Jena, Germany. "The finds at Xiamabei are helping us to understand these adaptations and their potential role in human migration." Ochre pieces and stone processing equipment laying on a red-stained pigment patch. Credit: Fa-Gang Wang, Francesco dErrico / Wang et al. Nature. 2022 One of the significant cultural features found at Xiamabei is the extensive use of ochre, as shown by artifacts used to process large quantities of pigment. The artifacts include two pieces of ochre with different mineral compositions and an elongated limestone slab with smoothed areas bearing ochre stains, all on a surface of red-stained sediment. Analysis by researchers from the University of Bordeaux, led by Prof. Francesco d'Errico, indicates that different types of ochre were brought to Xiamabei and processed through pounding and abrasion to produce powders of different color and consistency, the use of which stained the habitation floor. Ochre production at Xiamabei represents the earliest known example of this practice in Eastern Asia. The stone tools at Xiamabei represent a novel cultural adaptation for northern China 40,000 years ago. Because little is known about stone tool industries in Eastern Asia until microblades became the dominant technology about 29,000 years ago, the Xiamabei finds provide important insights into toolmaking industries during a key transition period. The blade-like stone tools at Xiamabei were unique for the region, with the large majority of tools being miniaturized, more than half measuring less than 20 millimeters. Seven of the stone tools showed clear evidence of hafting to a handle, and functional and residue analysis suggests tools were used for boring, hide scraping, whittling plant material and cutting soft animal matter. The site inhabitants made hafted and multipurpose tools, demonstrative of a complex technical system for transforming raw materials not seen at older or slightly younger sites. A complex history of innovation The record emerging from Eastern Asia shows that a variety of adaptations were taking place as modern humans entered the region roughly 40,000 years ago. Although no hominin remains were found at Xiamabei, the presence of modern human fossils at the contemporary site of Tianyuandong and the slightly younger sites of Salkhit and Zhoukoudian Upper Cave, suggests that the visitors to Xiamabei were Homo sapiens. A varied lithic technology and the presence of some innovationssuch as hafted tools and ochre processing, but not other innovations, such as formal bone tools or ornamentsmay reflect an early colonization attempt by modern humans. This colonization period may have included genetic and cultural exchanges with archaic groups, such as the Denisovans, before ultimately being replaced by later waves of Homo sapiens using microblade technologies. Extraordinarily well preserved bladelet showing microscopic evidence of a bone handle, plant fibres used for binding, and plant polish produced by whittling action. Credit: Andreu Olle / Wang et al., Nature. 2022 Given the unique nature of Xiamabei, the authors of the new paper argue that the archaeological record does not fit with the idea of continuous cultural innovation, or of a fully formed set of adaptations that enabled early humans to expand out of Africa and around the world. Instead, the authors argue that we should expect to find a mosaic of innovation patterns, with the spread of earlier innovations, the persistence of local traditions, and the local invention of new practices all taking place in a transitional phase. "Our findings show that current evolutionary scenarios are too simple," says Professor Michael Petraglia of the Max Planck Institute in Jena, "and that modern humans, and our culture, emerged through repeated but differing episodes of genetic and social exchanges over large geographic areas, rather than as a single, rapid dispersal wave across Asia." Explore further French cave tells new story about Neanderthals, early humans More information: Shi-Xia Yang, Innovative ochre processing and tool use in China 40,000 years ago, Nature (2022). www.nature.com/articles/s41586-022-04445-2 Journal information: Nature Shi-Xia Yang, Innovative ochre processing and tool use in China 40,000 years ago,(2022). DOI: 10.1038/s41586-022-04445-2 Floodwaters crashed into more towns on Australia's east coast as a deadly storm front barrelled south on Wednesday towards Sydney, where the main dam began to spill water. Floodwaters crashed into more towns on Australia's east coast as a deadly storm front barrelled south on Wednesday towards Sydney, where the main dam began to spill water. The death toll rose to 12 in a week-long disaster that has washed cars from roads and forced tens of thousands of people to evacuate their homes as waters lapped at balconies and roofs. "This is terrible. This is terrible. One life lost is too many," said New South Wales deputy premier Paul Toole after confirming a third death in the flood-hit town of Lismore. After bringing havoc to Queensland, the storm front moved southwards, dumping vast quantities of water and sparking a string of flood alerts in New South Wales including Sydney, Australia's largest city. "Today, the focus is on Sydney. We are expecting heavy rainfall over the afternoon into the night and into tomorrow," Toole warned in a news conference. Sydney's main Warragamba dam, lying southwest of the city, had reached capacity and started spilling water in the early hours of Wednesday morning, Toole said. He told residents at risk to flee if they are told to do so. "If you are getting a knock on the door, if you are asked to leave, please leave," Toole told a news conference. "We are looking at substantial rainfall over the coming days. We don't want to see those images where people were standing on the roofs of their houses, not leaving and then having to be rescued." Map of eastern Australia, showing areas that had the most rainfall in the past week. In the coastal town of Ballina in New South Wales, some 55 hospital patients were evacuated overnighthours before a high tide from the sea combined with waters overflowing the banks of Richmond River. A "makeshift emergency department" was set up in a Catholic college for urgent cases, regional health officials said. 'Eerie' An hour inland from the coast, water levels in Lismore were falling but resident Tom Wolff prepared to head out for rescues. "It all feels kind of eerie now, is how I would describe it," he said. The hardest part was trying to navigate around power lines and other hazards in a boat, Wolff said. "We know the streets of Lismore, but it's just totally different when you're 10-12 metres above them," he said. "There are signs around town for the '74 flood levels, but they were underwater." At one house, they rescued a sausage dog that had been left at the highest point of the house. A local farmer watched the rising flood waters in the outskirts of Grafton, New South Wales, which this week saw buildings submerged almost to roof level. "She must have just been treading water for god knows how long, maybe hours. Her heart rate was through the roof when we found her," he said. In an airfield in Graftonwhere residents saw buildings submerged almost to roof level this weekflight club president Bob King rowed out in a metal dingy to check on his aircraft as the smell of fuel hung in the air. Most of the 25 aircraft at the field were now underwater, he said. Flight instructor Peter Clement surveyed the damage done to his planesfour light aircraft each worth Aus$100,000 ($73,000)sitting half-submerged in a hangar where the mud-brown waters came up to his waist. "I'm hoping it's not a total loss," he said. "This is the biggest flood I've ever seen and I've been here 20 years." Australia has been on the sharp end of climate change. Droughts, deadly bushfires, bleaching events on the Great Barrier Reef and floods have become more common and intense. Because a warmer atmosphere holds more water, scientists say climate change increases the risk and intensity of flooding from extreme rainfall. Explore further Rooftop rescues in Australia as tens of thousands evacuated from floods 2022 AFP In the Chinese penduline tit, there are three different arrangements for parental care: only by the father, only by the mother, or by both. This picture shows a male and female building the nest. Credit: Jinshan Jiang Sex roles in birds describe sex differences in courtship, mate competition, social pair-bonds, and parental care. Different explanations have been put forward to explain these differences but none are based on a comprehensive study. Therefore, an international team of experts set out to analyze data on 1,800 of the approximately 9,000 different species of birds as their study organisms. The results show that adult sex ratios are the main driving force for differences in sex roles. A paper on this study was published in Ecology Letters on 25 February. In birds, there can be huge differences between the sexes, both in characteristics, such as size or color, and in behavior, such as courtship or parental care. "There are differences between bird species but there is also quite a bit of variation within species," says Jan Komdeur, Professor of Evolutionary Ecology at the University of Groningen. All this may affect how birds can adapt to changing circumstances, such as climate change, and cope with anthropogenic threats, such as habitat loss. It is therefore useful to know exactly how differences in sex roles have evolved. Choosier A classic explanation is that of gametic investment: females produce just a few eggs each year but each rich with nutrients, while males have nearly unlimited supplies of tiny sperm in their semen. "The idea is that this makes females choosier," explains Komdeur. However, this alone is not enough to explain all sex role differences. Other contributing factors that have been proposed are climate, life histories, and social factors. "However, no comprehensive analysis has been performed of their effect across bird species." Back in 2014, Komdeur discussed this with his colleague Tamas Szekely, Professor at the Milner Centre for Evolution in the UK, who spent several months at the University of Groningen as a visiting scholar funded by the Dutch Research Council NWO. "We got in touch with a postdoctoral researcher, Alejandro Gonzalez-Voyer, who was keen to undertake such an analysis." This task turned out to be of Herculean proportions: there are around 9,000 bird species and he had to collect data on sex roles and variables that might affect them for all of these. In the pheasant-tailed jacana, males take care of the eggs and the young as is shown in this picture. Credit: Ghulam Rasool Complex The sex roles in this study were competition and attraction of mates, pair-bonding, and parental care. Sexual size dimorphism, sexual dichromatism, social mating system, and parental investment in post-mating care were used as proxies for these roles. Four drivers for differences in sex roles were analyzed: the climate in which each species lives, life-history (such as the life span), social environment (especially the sex ratio in adult birds), and phylogeny (the ancestry of a species). "The job was more complex than we had anticipated," acknowledges Komdeur. "It could take up to a week to assess one species. Some 6,000 birds were investigated and, in the end, we obtained a full data set for 1,800 species. Only those were used in the analysis." The results showed that climate, life histories, and phylogeny had no significant effect on sex roles in birds. "This is surprising since the literature suggests that climate and life history are important; however, this was often based on studies with just a few species." Sex ratio The only factor that significantly influenced sex roles was the social environment, specifically the adult sex ratio. "One explanation for this is that when there is a surplus of males, they have to compete fiercely for a mate and will have less energy to care for the young." On the other hand, when there is a surplus of females, they do not have to spend a lot of energy on finding a mate and, therefore, can invest more in their young. The scientists made sure that the statistical power of a comparison between 1,800 species was enough to detect significant contributions to sex roles. They also corrected for other possible confounders. Overall, the biologists found a lot of variation in sex roles within species. "It is very rare that sex roles are completely fixed in a species." The adult sex ratio is determined by a difference in mortality between the species and this may be driven by climate changes. These processes should be investigated in a new study. Komdeur says that "we do not know everything but our study does show that the social environment is an important driver of sex roles." Explore further Research suggests male birds have stronger immune system than females More information: Alejandro GonzalezVoyer et al, Sex roles in birds: Phylogenetic analyses of the influence of climate, life histories and social environment, Ecology Letters (2022). Journal information: Ecology Letters Alejandro GonzalezVoyer et al, Sex roles in birds: Phylogenetic analyses of the influence of climate, life histories and social environment,(2022). DOI: 10.1111/ele.13938 Over the course of Trumps presidency, ISCAP survey numbers showed that Americans perceptions of anti-Black discrimination held constant. However during the period between Feburary and October of 2020 when BLM protests filled the streets Democrats and Independents reported seeing more discrimination against Black Americans than against white Americans. Credit: Institute for the Study of Citizens and Politics Panel Survey, University of Pennsylvania It was a turbulent run up to the 2020 U.S. Presidential election: COVID-19 struck, ending and upending lives and livelihoods, while the murders of Ahmaud Arbery, George Floyd and other Black Americans led to Black Lives Matter (BLM) protests nationwide. There has been much conjecture around the effect these momentous events had on the 2020 election, but a new study from the University of Pennsylvania offers the first evidence that the Black Lives Matter movement encouraged swing voters more toward Biden than toward Trump. During the election, many pundits voiced concerns that the BLM protests would drive swing voters toward Trump, given his campaign's "law and order" emphasis, and the lack of widespread support for defunding the police. Instead, increased awareness of discrimination against Black Americans encouraged support for the Democratic candidate. The study also found that concern about COVID-19 and the dramatic drop in GDP that ensued, had little effect on vote choice. The study used responses from six nationally-representative probability surveys of more than 3000 random Americans each from October 2012 until October 2020, collected by the Institute for the Study of Citizens and Politics (ISCAP) at Penn. The surveys also included panelists who were reinterviewed from survey to survey. By comparing those who changed presidential vote preferences between 2016 and 2020, author Diana C. Mutz, the Samuel A. Stouffer Professor of Political Science and Communication at Penn, was able to analyze the kinds of opinion changes that predicted vote choice over time. More than 1,200 individuals completed the ISCAP surveys in both October 2016 and October 2020, capturing their opinions and voting intention just before each election. In addition, a survey in February 2020, just before COVID-19 and BLM came to dominate American media coverage, allowed Mutz to see which opinions changed immediately before the 2020 election. The degree to which people perceived discrimination against Black Americans remained constant through most of Trump's presidency, but it rose significantly among Democrats and Independents of all races between February and October of 2020, the time when BLM protests took place. Across this entire period, Republicans remained stable in their beliefs that, on average, there is no more anti-Black discrimination than anti-white discrimination. "Regardless of partisanship, Americans see Democrats as more likely to address racial justice issues than Republicans," says Mutz, who is also the director of ISCAP. "By changing people's assessments of the extent of ongoing racial discrimination against Blacks and the need for government to address these issues, BLM opened their eyes to what was going on, and encouraged consideration of racial issues on vote choice." Mutz also notes that roughly 90% of voters reliably vote with their party, and only about 10% of voters are likely to shift their vote from one party to another. It was that group that she focused on, finding that as their awareness of discrimination against Black people rose, so too did their likelihood of voting for Biden. Interestingly, many voters who had voted for third parties in 2016 also shifted to major party candidates in 2020, and disproportionately moved toward Biden. Concern surrounding COVID-19 caused voters on both sides of the aisle to favor their own candidate more, but it did not cause any significant vote change from Trump to Biden or vice versa. Nor, Mutz says, did factors relating to the economic effects of COVID. As levels of concern about COVID became increasingly partisan, the issue lost its ability to change vote choice so much as to reinforce it. Does that mean BLM decided the election? That question remains unanswered. While increasing perceptions of racial discrimination against Black people was clearly linked to changing voter preferences in the popular vote, the electoral college makes it difficult to know how key swing states might have been affected. Mutz finds that people in battleground states were no more or less affected by increasing perceptions of discrimination than those in non-battleground states. But without large samples within each of those states, it is impossible to know the effect it had on the Electoral College. "Effects of changes in perceived discrimination during BLM on the 2020 presidential election" by Diana C. Mutz will be published online in the journal Science Advances on Wednesday, March 2, 2022. Explore further Who does the electoral college favor? More information: Diana C. Mutz, Effects of changes in perceived discrimination during BLM on the 2020 presidential election, Science Advances (2022). www.science.org/doi/10.1126/sciadv.abj9140 Journal information: Science Advances Diana C. Mutz, Effects of changes in perceived discrimination during BLM on the 2020 presidential election,(2022). DOI: 10.1126/sciadv.abj9140 Part of the Vinuela reservoir is seen dry and cracked due to lack of rain in La Vinuela, southern Spain, Feb. 22, 2022. Declining agricultural yields in Europe, and the battle for diminishing water resources, especially in the southern part of the continent, are key risks as global temperatures continue to rise. These conclusions are part of a new United Nations report that will help countries decide how to prevent the planet from warming further. Credit: AP Photo/Carlos Gil "Herders and farmers have their feet on the ground, but their eyes on the sky." The old saying is still popular in Spain's rural communities who, faced with recurrent droughts, have historically paraded sculptures of saints to pray for rain. The saints are out again this year as large swaths of Spain face one of the driest winters on record. Even as irrigation infrastructure boomed along with industrial farming, the country's ubiquitous dams and desalination plants are up against a looming water crisis that scientists have been warning about for decades. "We are facing a drastic situation," said Juan Camacho, a farmer in the southern province of Granada, as he looked hopelessly at withered leaves of avocado plants and their fruits, smaller than usual this year. Not far from his orchard, the region's largest reservoir is down to 15% of its capacity after over two months without a drop of rain. And at least half of that, Camacho said, "is just muddy water, completely useless." Declining agricultural yields in Europeand the battle for diminishing water resources, especially in the southern part of the continentare perils that lie ahead as global temperatures continue to rise, the world's top climate scientists say. Their conclusions are part of a report this week by the United Nations' Intergovernmental Panel on Climate Change released Monday. The panel's periodic assessments inform policymaker decisions about how to prevent the planet from warming beyond the 1.1 degrees Celsius (2 Fahrenheit) already gained since industrial times. Joaquin Montes, owner of an avocado field, walks next to some fruit trees with practically dry leaves due to the lack of rainfall in Almunecar, southern Spain, Feb. 23, 2022. Declining agricultural yields in Europe, and the battle for diminishing water resources, especially in the southern part of the continent, are key risks as global temperatures continue to rise. These conclusions are part of a new United Nations report that will help countries decide how to prevent the planet from warming further. Credit: AP Photo/Carlos Gil For Europe, heat and flooding in addition to agricultural losses and water scarcity will be major climate impacts, the report said. And while European awareness of global warming motivates policymakers to do more, scientists say the ambition and execution of solutions vary greatly from country to country. Extreme heat, floods and droughts will lead to widespread disruption of the economy, including damage to infrastructure and energy supplies, the need for more air conditioning and greater water demand, the report warned. As warming rises faster in Europe than the global mean, panelists paint a picture of a continent divided: an increasingly arid south, struggling with desertification and competing for scarcer waterand a north adopting a more traditional Mediterranean climate that could provide some increased crop yields and forest growth, but with risks of its own. If temperatures rise an additional 1.9 degrees Celsius (3.4 Fahrenheit), corn harvest losses could reach 50%, especially in southern Europe, the report warned. Harvests of wheat, meanwhile, could increase in the north as long as warming doesn't exceed 2 degrees Celsius since pre-industrial levelsor 0.9 degrees above the current average temperature. Joaquin Montes, owner of an avocado field, looks at dry leaves due to the lack of rainfall in Almunecar, southern Spain, Feb. 23, 2022. Declining agricultural yields in Europe, and the battle for diminishing water resources, especially in the southern part of the continent, are key risks as global temperatures continue to rise. These conclusions are part of a new United Nations report that will help countries decide how to prevent the planet from warming further. Credit: AP Photo/Carlos Gil But this is no silver lining. From a continental perspective, the report says due to combined heat and drought, "substantive agricultural production losses are projected for most European areas over the 21st century, which will not be offset by gains in Northern Europe." "There are some vegetables and warm climate crops that might see benefits in the short term," Rachel Licker, a climate expert at the Union of Concerned Scientists, told The Associated Press. "But the major cereal crops, the major commodities, the major crops that are exported and really form the basis of a lot of the economy are the ones that are likely to be negatively affected." Europe will also suffer other negative impacts. Coastal damage is projected to increase at least tenfold by the end of the centuryand, if the 3 degree Celsius (5.4 Fahrenheit) warming threshold is reached, "damage costs and people affected by precipitation and river flooding may double." For some coastal communities it will be "an existential threat," the report said, adding that traditional lifestyles of the Sami and the Nenets peoples are already under threat in the European Arctic. The Vinuela reservoir is see with a low water level due to lack of rain in la Vinuela, southern Spain, Feb. 22, 2022. Declining agricultural yields in Europe, and the battle for diminishing water resources, especially in the southern part of the continent, are key risks as global temperatures continue to rise. These conclusions are part of a new United Nations report that will help countries decide how to prevent the planet from warming further. Credit: AP Photo/Carlos Gil Inequality is expected to grow within and among countries as the continent sees more deaths from heatstroke, unbearable summers and irreparable damage to ecosystems. Joaquin Montes, 50, is among those set to lose more. He is one of roughly 10 million farmers in the European Union who feed 440 million consumers inside and outside the bloc. Sandwiched between the tourist-magnet Costa del Sol and the Sierra Nevada range in southern Spain, the ravines where Montes' custard apple and avocado orchards sit should have plenty of water. But with 41% less rain since October than average for the same period between 1980 and 2010, dams contain almost no water. Private ponds that are supposed to last farmers through summer are exhausted. And, with no fresh water replenishing aquifers, salty seawater is making them useless. An avocado tree with yellow leaves due to lack of rain sits in an avocado field due to the lack of rainfall in Almunecar, southern Spain, Feb. 23, 2022. Declining agricultural yields in Europe, and the battle for diminishing water resources, especially in the southern part of the continent, are key risks as global temperatures continue to rise. These conclusions are part of a new United Nations report that will help countries decide how to prevent the planet from warming further. Credit: AP Photo/Carlos Gil "Us farmers, we are used to dealing with drought," said Montes, who learned the job from his father when he was 14. "But every year we see less and less rain. I fear for my livelihood." Environmentalists say landowners who switched from traditional crops to profitable but thirsty ones such as avocados or mangoes are the tip of a larger problem: industrial-scale, single-crop agriculture that has displaced smaller, traditional farmers. "The model is one of ill-planning and pure false developmentalism," said Julio Barea, a geologist and water activist with the environmental group Greenpeace. In Spain, the surface of arable land devoted to intensive agriculture with irrigation has increased to a quarter of the total in recent decades, according to the Agriculture Ministry, taking over terrain once used for rain-fed crops. A workers pushes a barrow with avocados in an avocado field in Almunecar, southern Spain, Feb. 23, 2022. Declining agricultural yields in Europe, and the battle for diminishing water resources, especially in the southern part of the continent, are key risks as global temperatures continue to rise. These conclusions are part of a new United Nations report that will help countries decide how to prevent the planet from warming further. Credit: AP Photo/Carlos Gil "We are hitting the wall of having no water," Barea said. "And it's going to be catastrophic. We need to change our mindset." In neighboring Portugal, authorities have restricted the use of some reservoirs for hydroelectric power and irrigation amid an unusual winter drought, prioritizing drinking water. As water scarcity hits southern Europe first, followed by Western and Central Europe, the U.N. report says irrigation will continue to be a solution for some to feed a warming continent, but it will be limited by water availability. Additional means for watering crops won't even be an option in places like Spain's southeast, according to food systems expert Marta Rivera-Ferre, who helped review the report. "The elevated risk of drought there has to let us think again about how best to adapt," she said. The Vinuela reservoir is seen with a low water level due to lack of rain in la Vinuela, southern Spain, Feb. 22, 2022. Declining agricultural yields in Europe, and the battle for diminishing water resources, especially in the southern part of the continent, are key risks as global temperatures continue to rise. These conclusions are part of a new United Nations report that will help countries decide how to prevent the planet from warming further. Credit: AP Photo/Carlos Gil Patrick Verkooijen, chief executive of the Rotterdam-based Global Center on Adaptation, said the report's message is "that for many, now the time is already adapt or die." "The cost of inaction is much higher than the cost of action when it comes to making agriculture and food systems climate-resilient," he said. 2022 The Associated Press. All rights reserved. This material may not be published, broadcast, rewritten or redistributed without permission. As the moon heads into southern summer the region around the south pole is better seen by LROC. One of the many goals of the LRO mission is to improve our cartographic knowledge of the moon. Credit: NASA/GSFC/Arizona State University Since 2009, the Lunar Reconnaissance Orbiter (LRO) has been taking high-resolution pictures of the lunar surface. This data, along with the information from a laser altimeter mapping instrument has allowed scientists to create an incredibly detailed map of the moon. NASA says they can now confidently pinpoint any feature on the moon, including the exact location of its south pole. Whenever humans return to the moon, a detailed "roadmap" will be extremely helpful for astronauts to accurately find their way. The LRO team has put together an interactive "QuickMap" where you can view and search for various areas on the moon. Even before LRO launched, the science team adopted a coordinate system for all the data called the Mean Earth/Polar Axis (Moon ME) coordinate system. This has now become the standard for mapping all lunar data. The video above is a data visualization showing the location of the moon's south pole. In the moon ME system, the moon's south pole is located on the rim of Shackleton crater at a point marked by a red pin. The visualization team at Goddard Space Flight Center says that if you imagine Shackleton as a very big face of a clock with noon pointing toward Earth, the south pole is about halfway between 10 and 11 o'clock. The topographical maps from LRO includes information from the laser altimeter which zaps the moon an incredible 140 times every second, measuring the ups and downs, nooks and crannies on the lunar surface to an accuracy within four inches. Map showing the optimal traverse around persistently illuminated points on the rim of Shackleton crater (SR-1, SR-2, and SR-3) and the connecting ridge between Shackleton and de Gerlache crater (CR-1, CR-2, and CR-3) as well as a permanently shaded crater where water ice is predicted to be stable at the surface. Credit: Speyerer et al., 2016 In my book, "Incredible Stories From Space: A Behind the Scenes Look at the Missions Changing Our View of the Cosmos," LRO's Project Scientist Dr. Richard Vondrak told me that LRO's legacy will be the basic 'guidebook' to the moon, a handbook of maps to guide future explorers. "We can provide topographic maps of the moon that have finer grid spacing than the hiking maps at the US National Parks," Vondrak said. "We know what the moon looks like in tremendous detail, and we actually have better knowledge of the shape, contours and topography of the moon than any other object in the solar system. That includes the Earth, because most of the Earth's surface lies beneath the ocean, and the seafloor is not mapped as well as the moon." You can see all the incredible imagery of the Moon captured by the Lunar Reconnaissance Orbiter Camera (LROC) at their website. Explore further Image: MoonLIGHT retroreflector bound for the moon Artist conception of the "Spacesuit DIgital Thread." Credit: Bonnie Dunbar One of the best motivators to solve a problem is to experience it yourself. Dr. Bonnie Dunbar happened to have just such an experience. She is a former NASA astronaut and is now a professor of Aerospace Engineering at Texas A&M. While she was in the astronaut corps, she realized that some of her fellow astronauts couldn't fit in an extra vehicular activity suitmore commonly known as a spacesuit. So she decided not only to create one for the individuals with the original problem but to create a process by which any other astronaut launched on any future mission can have a spacesuit tailored to their own specific body. And now, her former employer (NASA) is funding her and her lab to complete a feasibility study of this customization process as part of the recently announced NASA Institute for Advanced Concepts (NIAC) program. Dr. Dunbar's submission, known as The Spacesuit Digital Thread, received $175,000 to fund the research over the next nine months. It doesn't actually use high-tech digitized thread to create spacesuits. Instead, it utilizes the Digital Thread framework commonly used in the industrial Internet of Things settings. The best way to describe the Digital Thread is to think of it as a piece of data that connects an individual part through all the design, manufacturing, and delivery processes. Get enough of these pieces of data to describe an individual object, and you end up with what is called a digital twina representation of the object in a digital space. Digital twins can then reproduce the object ad infinitium if necessary. But they can also be used to tweak and individualize the item based on the inputs on specific characteristics. That seems to be the path that Dr. Dunbar and her team are going down. While she was an astronaut, Dr. Dunbar noticed a significant shortfall of spacesuits for the astronaut core during the shuttle periodonly 18 suits were manufactured for 200 astronauts. Not all of the astronauts could fit in those suits, and many suffered from problems using them, including lost fingernails and a significant loss of strength. What's moremany are still in use today, over 40 years after they were initially designed. Motion capture of a subject in an old Russian spacesuit. Credit: Hall et al. & Art Dula Screenshot of the range of motion image captures completed as part of the digital twin modeling. Credit: Hall et al. But there is an alternativeduring the Apollo era, each space suit was explicitly tailored to the individual for whom it was intended. They had no such problems, with Apollo 17 astronauts saying they were happy with how their suits functioned. The problem is that there weren't too many Apollo astronauts; now, hundreds of people, including civilian tourists, are planning to go to space. It would be prohibitively expensive to fit them all with custom suits, even with the exorbitant price tags some space tourists are willing to pay for their flight to orbit. Enter Dr. Dunbar's "digital thread" idea. Creating a digital twin of a generic space suit would allow designers to take measurements specific to a user and alter that digital twin to create a custom-fitted suit without the massive expense of creating one from scratch. To that end, Dr. Dunbar's previous research focused on finding the metrics that would be necessary to customize a spacesuit. Her research lab used a full 3D body scanner to create a complete digital twin of an individual, including their range of motion. That information could then be applied to the digital twin of the spacesuit, allowing quick customization. Having a specially designed digital twin is excellent, but spacesuits aren't useful unless they are physical objects. So what would be the process of actually making one of these tailored suits? That seems beyond the scope of this Phase I grant, though the proposal hints that in situ repairs and fabrication of parts could be in the offing. Most likely, that would require a type of 3D printer, particularly one that could recycle previously made spacesuit parts. No such technology existsyet. Maybe, if Dr. Dunbar's research is successful, it could crop up in the next round of NIAC funding. Explore further NASA image: Astronaut spacesuit testing for orion spacecraft More information: Dillon C. Hall et al, Range of Motion (ROM) Analysis for Pressure Garments (EVA and LES) using 3D Photogrammetric Motion Capture. Dillon C. Hall et al, Range of Motion (ROM) Analysis for Pressure Garments (EVA and LES) using 3D Photogrammetric Motion Capture. ttu-ir.tdl.org/bitstream/handl 0-430.pdf?sequence=1 The rate of plastic production has grown faster than any other material and is expected to double within two decades, the UN says. The United Nations on Wednesday agreed to start negotiating a world-first global treaty on plastic pollution in what has been hailed as a watershed moment for the planet. Nearly 200 nations at the UN Environment Assembly in Nairobi unanimously agreed to create an intergovernmental committee to negotiate and finalise a legally binding plastics treaty by 2024. UNEA chair Espen Barthe Eide declared the resolution passed with a strike of the gavelitself made from recycled plasticas the assembly hall erupted into cheers and applause. "We are making history today. You should all be proud," said Eide, who is Norway's climate and environment minister. Negotiators have been given a broad and robust mandate to target plastic trash in all its forms. It addresses not just the bottles, straws and shopping bags floating in rivers and oceans, but invisible microplastics found in the deepest oceans and highest mountains, and within the air, soil and food chain. 'Historic crossroad' Supporters described the commitment as the most important environmental decision taken by the UN in years. "We stand at a crossroad in history when ambitious decisions taken today can prevent plastic pollution from contributing to our planet's ecosystem collapse," said Marco Lambertini from WWF. Map showing where scientific studies have found plastic in the seas and waterways since 1960, according to data from the Alfred Wegener Institute. The broad treaty framework approved by 193 UN nationsamong them major plastic producers like the United States and Chinadoes not spell out specific measures but leaves particulars to negotiations. But the scope covers pollution "from source to sea"a key demand of many nationsand could for the first time introduce caps on the production of new plastic from fossil fuels. Other regulations could require that industry redesign products to make recycling easier and stem the torrent of trash created by single-use items. Less than 10 percent of plastic is recycled. Most of the 460 million tonnes of plastic produced in 2019 wound up in landfill and oceans. "This is a clear acknowledgement that the entire life cycle of plastic, from fossil fuel extraction to disposal, creates pollution that is harmful to people and the planet," said Graham Forbes from Greenpeace. 'Landmark' decision The amount of plastic entering the oceans is forecast to triple by 2040, and governments have been under pressure to unite against the trash "epidemic". The amount of plastic trash entering the oceans is forecast to triple by 2040. The rate of plastic production has also grown faster than any other material and is expected to double within two decades without urgent action. By some estimates, a garbage truck's worth of plastic is dumped into the sea every minute. Large pieces of plastic are a notorious peril for sea birds, whales and other marine animals. But at the microscopic level, particles of plastic can also enter the food chain, eventually joining the human diet. To address the urgency, talks toward concluding the treaty are being fast-tracked and the first round is slated for later this year. Diplomats and conservationists cautioned that the strength of the treaty would be determined by the level of political will shown in these negotiations. Setting targets, ensuring accountability, and monitoring success or otherwise could prove sticking points, said UN environment chief Inger Andersen. Negotiators will need to establish what measures are binding or voluntary, and some countries are pushing for flexibility in setting their own goals through national action plans. By some estimates, a garbage truck's worth of plastic is dumped into the sea every minute. "There will be a number of thorny issues as there always is when we start a negotiation," said Andersen, head of the UN Environment Programme. Big corporations had expressed support for a binding agreement and negotiators were urged to engage industry players in the process. Dozens of major businesses had called for a common set of rules around plastic to create a level playing field for competition. "This is a landmark decision by UN member states," said Richard Slater, chief research and development officer at British consumer goods group Unilever. Trade group Plastics Europe said its products played a vital role in society and industry was doing its part to bolster recycling and invest in solutions. "The UNEA resolution represents a major step towards the creation of a waste free future which is critical to achieving our collective climate ambitions," said Plastics Europe president Markus Steilemann. Explore further UN urged to tackle plastic trash 'epidemic' with treaty 2022 AFP Hotspot maps use empirical data to assess protein binding sites to understand the druggability of the pocket, prioritize drug design, and spot differences in similar proteins that might drive compound selectivity. Credit: Mihaela D Smilova, co-author and postgraduate researcher at the Centre for Medicines Discovery at Oxford University The amount of structural data on protein drug targets continues to grow. However, successfully mining this data to form testable hypotheses that drive drug discovery can prove challenging. Selectivity for the target protein is a crucial property in the development of new therapeutics. In a recent paper in the Journal of Chemical Information and Modeling, authors from the CCDC, Exscientia, and Oxford University show how an automated process leveraging "ensemble hotspot maps" can identify key structural differences that contribute to the selectivity of a compound for one protein over another. The power of hotspot mapping to advance drug design Hotspot mapping quantifies the propensity for compounds to exploit interactions in a preferred binding siteproviding a 3-D grid of data to help score and prioritize compounds. The power of this method lies in how it finds key interactions during early-phase drug discovery and then distills the information into easily interpretable results. Chris Radoux is Head of Structural Bioinformatics at Exscientia and a co-author on the paper. "Adding hotspot maps early in a drug discovery project can provide a molecular blueprint using the protein structure alone," says Radoux. "This can be used to help determine how druggable a given pocket of a target protein is and to prioritize fragment starting points for compound design. The highest scoring interactions can then be used to guide computational methods and algorithms." Hotspot maps drive cohesive drug design This approach automates analysis across a protein family, as proteins in the same family often have similar binding sites. According to Mihaela D Smilova, co-author and postgraduate researcher at the Centre for Medicines Discovery at Oxford University, selectivity profiles in both the complete proteomeand within the target protein familymust be understood to develop safe and effective drugs. Interactions with unrelated target proteins can lead to unwanted side effects and toxicity, she says. However, effective drugs often exploit the benefits of "polypharmacology." "Introducing polypharmacology, or the ability to modulate multiple targets, may help to prevent the development of resistant disease phenotypes," says Smilova. "Consequently, a successful drug candidate has a finely tuned selectivity profile within its target familyinteracting with targets that positively impact the disease phenotype and avoiding interactions that lead to unwanted side effects." Using hotspot maps as inputs for computational workflows means researchers can rapidly explore the chemical space. "This saves time by summarizing the information and presenting it in a way that is both interpretable by medicinal chemists and can be used in further computational analyses," says Smilova. Leveraging real-world, empirical data for reliability The script used to generate the hotspot maps is a Python package called "Hotspots API," which leverages the data in the Cambridge Structural Database (CSD) via CCDC's IsoStar library of interactions. The CSD is the world's repository for small-molecule organic and metal-organic crystal structurescontaining over 1.1 million structures from X-ray and neutron diffraction analyses. IsoStar is a web application that uses the CSD to generate thousands of interactive 3-D scatterplots that show the probability of occurrence and spatial characteristics of interactions between pairs of chemical functional groups. Dr. Jason Cole is a Senior Research Fellow at CCDC. "Using CSD data for this type of analysis provides different insights from energy-calculation-based methods, as the interactions observed in the CSD are influenced by more than their strength," says Cole. Impacts of the study Exscientia is a global leader in pharmatech, which sits at the interface of advanced AI application and complex drug discovery. They have implemented the hotspot mapping in-house within multiple drug discovery programs and use it to guide target validation and drug design. In addition, a research team at the University of Cambridge recently published in Nature how they used fragment hotspot mapping to identify structures that may assist in designing DNA-dependent protein kinase catalytic subunit inhibitors, which show potential as cancer therapeutics. Explore further Is your machine learning training set biased? How to develop new drugs based on merged datasets More information: Mihaela D. Smilova et al, Fragment Hotspot Mapping to Identify Selectivity-Determining Regions between Related Proteins, Journal of Chemical Information and Modeling (2022). Mihaela D. Smilova et al, Fragment Hotspot Mapping to Identify Selectivity-Determining Regions between Related Proteins,(2022). DOI: 10.1021/acs.jcim.1c00823 Peter R. Curran et al, Hotspots API: A Python Package for the Detection of Small Molecule Binding Hotspots and Application to Structure-Based Drug Design, Journal of Chemical Information and Modeling (2020). DOI: 10.1021/acs.jcim.9b00996 Shikang Liang et al, Structural insights into inhibitor regulation of the DNA repair protein DNA-PKcs, Nature (2022). DOI: 10.1038/s41586-021-04274-9 Journal information: Journal of Chemical Information and Modeling , Nature Provided by CCDC - Cambridge Crystallographic Data Centre Smartphone apps like the soon-to-be-released new EDDmapS platform are promising tools for monitoring, predicting, and reducing the spread of invasive species. However, the same explosion of reports has not been realized as that which has been experienced by biodiversity-wide platforms. Howard et al. investigate why there has not been the same boom in use observed for these invasive species-specific apps. Credit: Leif Howard and Charles van Rees Invasive alien species (IAS) are a leading contributor to biodiversity loss, and they cause annual economic damage in the order of hundreds of billions of US dollars in each of many countries around the world. Smartphone apps are one relatively new tool that could help monitor, predict, and ideally prevent their spread. But are they living up to their full potential? A team of researchers from the University of Montana, the Flathead Lake Biological Station and the University of Georgia River Basin Center tried to answer that in a recent research paper in the open access, peer-reviewed journal NeoBiota. Going through nearly 500 peer-reviewed articles, they identified the key features of the perfect IAS reporting app and then rated all known English-language IAS reporting apps available to North America users against this ideal. Smartphone apps have the potential to be powerful reporting tools. Citizen scientists the world around have made major contributions to the reporting of biodiversity using apps like iNaturalist and eBird. But apps for reporting invasive species never reached that level of popularity; Howard and his team investigated why. User uptake and retention are just as important as collecting data. Howard and colleagues found that apps tend to do a good job with one of these, and rarely with both. In their paper, they emphasize that making apps user-friendly and fun to use, involving games and useful functions like species identification and social media plug-ins is a major missing piece among current apps. "The greatest advancement in IAS early detection would likely result from app gamification," they write. Another feature they would like to see more of is artificial intelligence or machine learning for photo identification, which they believe would greatly enhance species identification and might increase public participation. The authors also make suggestions for future innovations that could make IAS reporting apps even more effective. Their biggest suggestion is coordination. "Currently, most invasive species apps are developed by many separate organizations, leading to duplicated effort and inconsistent implementation", they say. "The valuable data collected by these apps is also sent to different databases, making it harder for scientists to combine them for useful research." A more efficient way to implement these technologies might be providing open-source code and app templates, with which local organizations can make regional apps that contribute data to centralized databases. Overall, this research shows how with broader participation, more complete and informative reporting forms, and more consistent and structured data management, IAS reporting apps could make much larger contributions to invasive species management worldwide. This, in turn, could save local, regional, and national economies hundreds of millions or billions of dollars annually, while protecting valuable ecological and agricultural systems for future generations. Explore further Scientists says Corona apps can be a risk More information: Leif Howard et al, A review of invasive species reporting apps for citizen science and opportunities for innovation, NeoBiota (2022). Journal information: NeoBiota Leif Howard et al, A review of invasive species reporting apps for citizen science and opportunities for innovation,(2022). DOI: 10.3897/neobiota.71.79597 A female Joro spider crawls across a branch. Credit: Davis et al, Physiological evaluation of newly invasive joro spiders (Trichonephila clavata) in the southeastern USA compared to their naturalized cousin, Trichonephila clavipes, Physiological Entomology (2022). If you live in Georgia, it's hard not to notice the state's latest resident. The bright yellow, blue-black and red spiders' golden webs will be all over power lines, in trees around town and even on your front porch come summer. The Joro spider first arrived stateside around 2013 and has since spread across the state and Southeast. But new research from the University of Georgia suggests the invasive arachnids could spread through most of the Eastern Seaboard of the U.S. There's really nothing we can do to stop them. But that's not necessarily bad news. Joros don't appear to have much of an effect on local food webs or ecosystems, said Andy Davis, corresponding author of the study and a research scientist in the Odum School of Ecology. They may even serve as an additional food source for native predators like birds. "People should try to learn to live with them," he said. "If they're literally in your way, I can see taking a web down and moving them to the side, but they're just going to be back next year." "The way I see it, there's no point in excess cruelty where it's not needed," added Benjamin Frick, co-author of the study and an undergraduate researcher in the School of Ecology. "You have people with saltwater guns shooting them out of the trees and things like that, and that's really just unnecessary." A caterpillar finds itself caught in a Joro spiders web. Credit: Davis et al, Physiological evaluation of newly invasive joro spiders (Trichonephila clavata) in the southeastern USA compared to their naturalized cousin, Trichonephila clavipes, Physiological Entomology (2022). High metabolism, heart rate and ability to withstand cold may help Joros spread Published in Physiological Entomology, the study contrasts the Joro spider with its relative, the golden silk spider, which first moved to the Southeast from the tropics around 160 years ago. The golden silk spider hasn't been able to spread beyond the Southeast due to its vulnerability to cold. Before the study, scientists didn't know whether the Joro spider faced similar geographical limitations. The researchers used records from iNaturalist to track sightings of the spiders across Georgia throughout the year. iNaturalist is a joint venture from the National Geographic Society and California Academy of Sciences that plots user reports of animals to create location data on a variety of species. They also performed tests to compare the species' cold tolerance, including measuring the arachnids' metabolic, heart and survival rates during a brief freeze. The study found that despite their similarities, the Joro spider has about double the metabolism of its relative, has a 77% higher heart rate and can survive a brief freeze that kills off many of its cousins. These findings mean the Joro spider's body functions better than its relative in a cold environment. And that means the Joros can likely exist beyond the borders of the Southeast. Sunlight streams through the elaborate webs made by Joro spiders. Credit: Davis et al, Physiological evaluation of newly invasive joro spiders (Trichonephila clavata) in the southeastern USA compared to their naturalized cousin, Trichonephila clavipes, Physiological Entomology (2022). Humans likely to transport Joro beyond current borders It's not just cold-hardiness that makes the Joro likely to spread beyond its current region. In their native Japan, Joro spiders colonize most of the country. Japan has a very similar climate to the U.S. and is approximately the same latitude. "Just by looking at that, it looks like the Joros could probably survive throughout most of the Eastern Seaboard here, which is pretty sobering," Davis said. Joros can also use their silks to carry them across the wind to new locations, a behavior called ballooning. It's part of the reason why Joros were able to spread so rapidly across the state of Georgia. When hatchlings emerged in the spring, they'd ride along to someplace new. Their offspring did the same the next year. But humans also factor into the equation. "The potential for these spiders to be spread through people's movements is very high," Frick said. "Anecdotally, right before we published this study, we got a report from a grad student at UGA who had accidentally transported one of these to Oklahoma." The first Joros to arrive in the U.S. were likely stowaways on shipping containers. Now that they're here, the chances of Joros hitching a ride to a new locale on a car or in luggage are high. But that's still no reason to panic. The spiders are relatively harmless to people and pets, making their presence more of a nuisance than dangerous. Joros won't bite unless cornered, and their fangs are often not large enough to break human skin. "There's really no reason to go around actively squishing them," Frick said. "Humans are at the root of their invasion. Don't blame the Joro spider." Explore further Asian spider takes hold in Georgia, sends humans scurrying More information: Andrew K. Davis et al, Physiological evaluation of newly invasive joro spiders (Trichonephila clavata) in the southeastern U.S. compared to their naturalized cousin, Trichonephila clavipes, Physiological Entomology (2022). Andrew K. Davis et al, Physiological evaluation of newly invasive joro spiders (Trichonephila clavata) in the southeastern U.S. compared to their naturalized cousin, Trichonephila clavipes,(2022). DOI: 10.1111/phen.12385 USAID workers support a mangrove planting activity as part of a climate change adaptation strategy in the Philippines in 2011. Climate scientists have called for urgent investment in adaptation, such as early warning systems. Credit: Jessie F. Delos Reyes, Public Domain A lack of extreme weather early warning systems means millions of lives are at risk in climate-vulnerable communities in the global South, climate scientists warn in a landmark report. Billions of people are living in hotspots of high climatevulnerabilityin Africa, South Asia, Central and South America, and small island developing states, warns the latest adaptation assessment report from the Intergovernmental Panel on Climate Change (IPCC). Petteri Taalas, secretary-general of the World Meteorological Organization (WMO), said during the launch of the report's summary for policymakers that it was critical to increase attention on adaptation, as extreme weather events continue to get worse in the coming decades. "One of the powerful ways to adapt is to invest in early warning services. But the basic weather and climate observing networks have severe gaps in Africa and island states," Taalas said. Only half of the 193 members of the WMO had these services, resulting in higher human and economic losses, he added. Increasingly frequent and intense global weather events have reduced food and water security and hindered efforts to meet the Sustainable Development Goals, the report found. "The scientific evidence is unequivocal: climate change is a threat to human wellbeing and the health of the planet. Any further delay in concerted global action will miss a brief and rapidly closing window to secure a liveable future," said Hans-Otto Portner, co-chair of the IPCC's Working Group II that produced the report. UN secretary-general Antonio Guterres said that the assessment report was like no other scientific report he had ever seen, calling it an "atlas of human suffering and a damning indictment of failed climate leadership." The document examines the risks posed by global warming, while offering ways that communities in different regions can adapt to the impacts of climate change. Urgent adaptation Small islands present the most urgent need for investment in capacity building and adaptation strategies, the report found, while Asia is facing increasingly severe heatwaves, monsoons and glacier melting. Impacts on rural livelihoods and food security, particularly for small and medium-sized farmers and indigenous peoples in the mountains, are projected to worsen in Central and South America. Working Group II co-chair Debra Roberts said that current global finance for adaptation was insufficient, especially for developing countries. The "overwhelming majority" of global climate finance was targeted at emissions reductions, said Roberts, head of the sustainable and resilient city initiatives unit at South Africa's eThekwini municipality, which includes the city of Durban. Climate finance for adaptation in Africa is billions of dollars short of what it needs to be to reach even the lowest adaptation cost estimates, according to the report. Analysis released last week (25 February) by Power Shift Africa, a think tank led by founding director Mohamed Adow, found that governments in Africa are spending up to US$90 million a year on climate adaptation, despite contributing the least to global greenhouse gas emissions. Meanwhile, small island developing states lack access to data for climate modeling, the report says, which impedes their abilities to plan for and adapt to future extreme weather. "This report shows that the rich world needs to radically increase adaptation support to those on the front lines of this emergency," said Adow. "With 2022 seeing the UN climate summit COP27 taking place in Africa, this is the perfect year to address the adaptation crisis." Mami Mizutori, special representative of the UN secretary-general for disaster risk reduction, said: "The IPCC report points to many solutions on improving regional and local information, providing sound data and knowledge for decision-makers. This does work. Countries have succeeded in saving many lives through improved early warning systems and preparedness." Mizutori said that more investment in disaster prevention and risk reduction was needed for the world's most vulnerable countries. The report identified 127 risks covering a wide range of sectors, including agriculture, economies, infrastructure, and ecosystems. However, it suggests there are adaption measures that are feasible and effective and can reduce risks to people and nature. Ecosystem restoration is a powerful tool for improving adaptation, the report says, while flood risks can be met by enhancing natural water retention by restoring wetlands and rivers, or upstream forest management. Effective adaptation strategies and supportive public policies can enhance food availability and stability, and reduce climate risk for food systems while increasing their sustainability, the report says. Explore further IPCC report says climate change is causing dangerous disruption to nature Provided by SciDev.Net University of Chicago graduate student Mark Lewis observes the compact detector next to the containment wall of the Dresden-II reactor. Credit: University of Chicago A nuclear reactor at an Illinois energy plant is helping University of Chicago scientists learn how to catch and understand the tiny, elusive particles known as neutrinos. At Constellation's (formerly Exelon) Dresden Generating Station in Morris, Illinois, the team took the first measurements of neutrinos coming off a nuclear reactor with a tiny detector. These particles are extremely hard to catch because they interact so rarely with matter, but power reactors are one of the few places on Earth with a high concentration of them. "This was an exciting opportunity to benefit from the enormous neutrino production from a reactor, but also a challenge in the noisy industrial environment right next to a reactor," said Prof. Juan Collar, a particle physicist who led the research. "This is the closest that neutrino physicists have been able to get to a commercial reactor core. We gained unique experience in operating a detector under these conditions, thanks to Constellation's generosity in accommodating our experiment." With this knowledge, the group is planning to take more measurements that may be able to tease out answers to questions about the fundamental laws governing particle and nuclear interactions. The technique may also be useful in nuclear nonproliferation, because the neutrinos can tell scientists about what's going on in the core of the reactor. Detectors could be placed next to reactors as a safeguard to monitor whether the reactor is being used for energy production or to make weapons. 'Orders of magnitude' Neutrinos are sometimes called "ghost particles" because they pass invisibly through almost all matter. (Billions have already zipped through your body today without your notice, en route from elsewhere in outer space.) But if you can catch them, they can tell you about what's happening where they came from, and about the fundamental properties of the universe. In particular, scientists would like to learn about specific aspects of neutrino behaviorwhether they have electromagnetic properties (for instance, a "magnetic moment"), and whether they interact with as-yet unknown particles hiding from our notice, or in new ways with known particles. Taking extensive measurements of as many neutrinos as possible can help narrow down these possibilities. The need for many neutrinos is what drew Collar's team to nuclear reactors. "Commercial reactors are the largest source of neutrinos on Earth by orders of magnitude," he said. In the normal course of operation, nuclear reactors produce astronomical numbers of neutrinos per second. They occur when atoms inside the reactor break up into lighter elements, and release some of the energy in the form of neutrinos. However, there's a problem. Because neutrinos are so lightweight, and interact so rarely, scientists normally have to find them by filling an enormous tank with detecting fluids and then search for the telltale signal that a passing particle has produced one of a number of known reactions in it. But there's no room inside a commercial nuclear reactor for a multi-ton detector. The researchers needed something much, much smaller. Luckily, Collar is an expert in building such devices; he previously lead a team that built the world's smallest neutrino detector. In a second stroke of luck, Illinois is one of the leading nuclear energy statesabout half the state's electricity is generated at nuclear reactors. Constellation granted Collar permission to test the detector at Dresden Generating Station, one of the first-ever commercial nuclear plants in the nation. Previously, Collar and his team had tested their tiny detectors at a particle accelerator in Oak Ridge National Laboratory in Tennessee, where they were able to carefully control much of the environment in order to get a good signal. But in order for the detector to work at Dresden, they had to build a new version adapted to deal with the much noisier environment of an operating commercial reactor. "You're getting radiation, heat, vibration from the turbines, radiofrequency noise from the pumps and other machinery," Collar said. "But we managed to work around all the challenges that were thrown our way." They designed the detector with a complex multi-layered shielding to protect it from other stray particles that would contaminate the data. Eventually, they were able to leave the detector in place to function unattended for several months, taking data all the while. The team next hopes to take data at another reactor down the road at Constellation's Braidwood Generating Station, or at the Vandellos nuclear plant in coastal Spain. "This method can really contribute to our understanding of neutrino properties," Collar said. "A lot of theoretical knowledge can be extracted from our data." The knowledge about operating small detectors in such noisy environments is also in high demand. "There is an interest in the nuclear nonproliferation community to set detectors next to reactors, because they can tell you what's going on in the corerevealing any deviations from the declared use," Collar said. The output of neutrinos changes according to what kind of fuel the reactor is burning and what it's producing, so detectors should be able to monitor for warning signs of weapons production, or whether fuel is being secretly diverted elsewhere . But to make this goal a reality, such detectors would have to be small, robust and easy to use; Collar said the Dresden work helps gather valuable data to make such detectors possible. There may also be many other uses for neutrino detectors. "For example, once we have sufficiently sensitive neutrino detectors, you could use them to map the interior of the Earthperhaps even detect oil or other useful deposits," Collar said. "A lot of thinking along these lines has been done, but it is still in the future." While working on the design, Collar was reminded that his laboratory on campus continues a line of work initiated by Prof. Willard Libby in the 1950s to discover how to use carbon-dating to tell the age of an object. "These pioneers had to come up with techniques that we still use today to find a relatively small signal amongst a great deal of background noise," he said. "It's rewarding to think our work is part of a long local tradition. And Illinois is a special place for nuclear power generation, for similar reasons." The research was published in Physical Review D and on arXiv. Explore further Solid start in the quest for an elusive particle More information: J. Colaresi et al, First results from a search for coherent elastic neutrino-nucleus scattering at a reactor site, Physical Review D (2021). J. Colaresi et al, First results from a search for coherent elastic neutrino-nucleus scattering at a reactor site,(2021). DOI: 10.1103/PhysRevD.104.072003 J. Colaresi et al, Suggestive evidence for Coherent Elastic Neutrino-Nucleus Scattering from reactor antineutrinos, arXiv, arXiv:2202.09672 [hep-ex] arxiv.org/abs/2202.09672 Journal information: arXiv , Physical Review D LiDAR map showing the Sapelo Island Shell Ring Complex. Credit: Carey J. Garland, CC-BY 4.0 (creativecommons.org/licenses/by/4.0/) Mollusk shells at 4,000-year-old Native American shell ring villages indicate that environmental change may have driven the formation and abandonment of these coastal communities, according to a study by Carey Garland and Victor Thompson in the open-access journal PLOS ONE on March 2, 2022. Shell ring villages were coastal communities built around fishing, as indicated by their sitting next to shellfish estuaries, and their large mounds of mollusk shells which remain to this day. Shell rings formed some of the earliest human village settlements along the U.S. South Atlantic coast but were abandoned at the end of the Late Archaic around 4,000 years ago. While scholars have proposed socio-ecological explanations, there has been limited examination of the physical evidence for these. Garland, Thompson and colleagues analyzed the biochemistry and paleobiology of mollusk shells found at three abandoned shell rings on Sapelo Island in Georgia, U.S. For example, they measured the size of oyster shells as an indicator of the health of the environment and compared oxygen isotope values to determine salinity conditions. They integrated their findings with chronological datasuch as tree ring analysesusing a Bayesian chronological model, to determine environmental fluctuations over time. The researchers found that the three Sapelo shell rings, known as Ring I, Ring II and Ring III, were occupied in the Late Archaic for varying, sometimes overlapping, periods. Ring II appeared to be the oldest and longest-lasting, founded around 4290 years ago and being occupied until 3950 years ago, with Ring I lasting around 150 years in the middle of this period. Ring III was the newest and outlasted the others, before abandonment around 3845 years ago. While Rings I and II featured large oyster shells, those at Ring III were significantly smaller, indicating a decrease in oyster shell size over time. Smaller oysters tend to be less healthy or younger, so this may indicate a depletion in oyster stocks and/or oyster health. Oxygen isotopes also indicated significantly lower salinity conditions by the time of Ring III as compared to Rings I and II. The map was created by CJG and VDT using ArcGIS Pro and wetland shapefile data from Georgia GIS Clearinghouse (data.georgiaspatial.org/index.asp). Credit: Garland et al., 2022, PLOS ONE, CC-BY 4.0 (creativecommons.org/licenses/by/4.0/) The analysis suggests that the inhabitants of the shell ring villages experienced environmental fluctuations, especially around the occupation of Ring III. Coastal settlement may have initially been an adaptation to climate change as a way to effectively manage fisherieswhich are highly sensitive to such changes. However, by the time of occupation of Ring III, fishing may have become unsustainable, leading to dispersals to other settlements and other forms of subsistence. The authors believe that their work provides "comprehensive evidence for correlations between large-scale environmental change and societal transformations on the Georgia coast during the Late Archaic period." The authors add: "The emergence of village life and adaptation to coastal environments are significant transitions in human history that have occurred at various times and places across the globe. Our research shows that Indigenous peoples who established North America's first coastal shell ring villages some 4200 years ago were resilient and, through cooperation and collective action, were able to adapt to environmental instability and resource shortfalls." More information: Garland CJ, Thompson VD, Sanger MC, Smith KY, Andrus FT, Lawres NR, et al. (2022) A multi-proxy assessment of the impact of environmental instability on Late Holocene (4500-3800 BP) Native American villages of the Georgia coast. PLoS ONE 17(3): e0258979. Journal information: PLoS ONE Garland CJ, Thompson VD, Sanger MC, Smith KY, Andrus FT, Lawres NR, et al. (2022) A multi-proxy assessment of the impact of environmental instability on Late Holocene (4500-3800 BP) Native American villages of the Georgia coast.17(3): e0258979. doi.org/10.1371/journal.pone.0258979 Credit: Unsplash/CC0 Public Domain New research from a Kingston University expert shows people with one of three personality traits are more likely to support the fair trade concept. The findings highlight the potential benefits of using personality-based marketing to sell fair trade products. Ethical consumer behavior and sustainability expert at Kingston Business School, Dr. Smirti Kutaula, examined the relationship between personality and fair trade engagement, which means how emotionally involved people are with the fair trade ethos. Dr. Kutaula, alongside academics from the University of Surrey, University of Cyprus and Cyprus University of Technology, conducted a survey on 323 consumers in the UK and India. This used the Big Five Personality trait model, a psychological theory that measures five key dimensions of an individual's personalityagreeableness, conscientiousness, openness, extroversion, and neuroticism. This was followed by 18 in-depth interviews with British customers to get a greater understanding of how their personality influence their perceptions and behaviors around fair trade. The interview process also sought to identify how their involvement with the fair trade ethos influences their attitudes towards the circular economy. The findings of the study, published in the Journal of Business Research, revealed that individuals who are extraverted, agreeable, or conscientious are more likely to support fair trade. "Our analysis of the interviews highlighted that extraverts were significantly more engaged with fair trade and spreading awareness of its ethos." Dr. Kutaula explained. "They are more likely to share their beliefs around supporting the fair trade ethos with their family and friends, as well as recommending products," she added. Those with the agreeableness trait were aware of the impact of their consumption on producers and workers down the supply chain and those with the consciousness trait felt strongly that they had an individual responsibility to help protect the environment when consuming fair trade products. The research revealed that having the openness personality trait does not have any significant impact on fair trade engagement, while neuroticism has a negative effect. "We found that interviewees who exhibited the openness trait were more curious to experiment and try out different products, rather than focusing on fair trade products. While openness means you are honest about whether you behave ethically or not, it might not necessarily lead to ethical behavior." Dr. Kutaula explained. They also discovered that people who displayed high levels of fair trade engagement were more ethically conscious in their decision making and consumption choices relating to the circular economy. "They had an increased understanding of how wider sustainability issues are linked with fair trade," Dr. Kutaula said. "They recognized that fair trade products are produced in a way that is not harmful to the environment and that these products use packaging which can be widely recycled, reused, or repurposed. Some were even re-purposing the packaging from their tea bags or coffee to store items such as make-up or jewelry," she added. Dr. Kutaula stressed this finding highlights the importance of marketing fair trade products in conjunction with the circular economy rather than treating them as separate issues. "Fair trade companies could look at ways to incorporate the circular economy in their strategies to raise awareness for multiple social and environmental issues," she said. "A lot of marketing around fair trade focuses on the social implications, the poor working conditions of developing countries. Fair trade is also increasingly linked with economic and environmental aspects of sustainability and our research shows that these issues feed into consumers decisions to support fair trade and buy fair trade products." The research also demonstrates personality-based marketing could be a beneficial tool for selling and promoting fair trade products, Dr. Kutaula said. "Companies producing and selling these products could explore ways to target consumers who demonstrate the three personality traitsextraversion, agreeableness, and conscientiousness," she said. "For example, they can target extraverts with promotional campaigns which stress the importance of fair trade and the circular economy and provide opportunities for them to actively share what they have learnt with other consumers." Explore further Study finds Fair Trade logo boosts consumer's willingness to pay More information: Smirti Kutaula et al, Integrating fair trade with circular economy: Personality traits, consumer engagement, and ethically-minded behavior, Journal of Business Research (2022). Journal information: Journal of Business Research Smirti Kutaula et al, Integrating fair trade with circular economy: Personality traits, consumer engagement, and ethically-minded behavior,(2022). DOI: 10.1016/j.jbusres.2022.02.044 The two FLASHForward plasma cells observed through a vacuum window. The cells are filled with argon gas and then ionised with a high-voltage electrical discharge to form a plasma. As the plasma recombines it emits light in the blue wavelength range. Both plasma cells, of length 50 and 195 millimetres, can then be used for plasma acceleration of electron bunches in gigavolt-per-metre accelerating gradients. Credit: DESY, C.A. Lindstrm An international team of researchers led by DESY scientists has demonstrated for the first time at the FLASHForward experiment that, in principle, it is possible to operate plasma accelerators at the repetition rates desired by particle physicists and photon scientists. This opens the opportunity to utilize such high-gradient accelerators as booster stages in existing high-repetition-rate facilities, such as the large-scale X-ray free-electron lasers FLASH and European XFEL, in order to significantly increase the energy of long trains of particles in short distances. The team presents the results of their studies in the journal Nature today. Plasma acceleration is an innovative technology for application to the next generation of particle accelerators due to both its compactness and versatility, with the aim being to utilize the accelerated electrons for various fields of application in science, industry, and medicine. The acceleration takes place in an extremely thin channeltypically only a few centimeters longwhich is filled with an ionized gas, the plasma. A high-energy laser or particle beam fired through the plasma can excite a strong electromagnetic fielda kind of "wake"which can be used to accelerate charged particles. In this way, plasma accelerators can achieve acceleration gradients up to a thousand times higher than the most powerful accelerators in use today. They could thus drastically reduce the size of kilometer-scale facilities such as particle colliders or free-electron lasers. Modern accelerators for cutting-edge science must also meet high requirements in terms of efficiency, beam quality, and number of bunches accelerated per second. In order to generate a particularly large number of light flashes or particle collisions in the shortest possible time, thousands or even millions of densely packed particle bunches must be propelled through accelerators in a single second. Plasma accelerators would, therefore, have to achieve a similar repetition rate in order to be competitive with state-of-the-art particle-accelerator technology. Current test facilities for plasma acceleration are usually operated at much slower repetition rates in the range of one to ten accelerations per second. The team led by DESY researcher Jens Osterhoff has now proven that much higher rates are possible. "At FLASHForward we were able to show for the first time that, in principle, repetition rates in the megahertz range are supported by the plasma acceleration processes," says Osterhoff. The novel diagnostic technique developed to enable this result relies on a pair of electron bunches (top right) interacting with the plasma perturbed by the leading bunch (bottom left). The recovery time of the plasma is defined as the separation between these two bunches at which the properties of the trailing electron-bunch pair after interaction with the perturbed plasma are identical to those without the presence of the leading bunch. Credit: DESY, M. Lindstrm, Mortani Design and Illustration At FLASHForward the accelerating wavethe so-called wakefield in the plasmais generated by an electron bunch from the FLASH accelerator that plows through the plasma at almost the speed of light. The electrons of this "drive beam" cause the freely moving electrons of the plasma to oscillate in its wake and thus generate very strong electric fields. These fields accelerate the electrons of a particle packet flying directly behind the driver bunch. "Unlike in conventional accelerators, where long-living electromagnetic waves stored in a resonating cavity can accelerate several particle bunches in quick succession, the electromagnetic fields generated in plasma decay very quickly after each acceleration process," explains Richard D'Arcy, first author of the study. "To start a new similar acceleration process, the plasma electrons and ions must then have 'recovered' to approximately their initial state such that the acceleration of the next pair of particle bunches is not modified by that of the previous one." In their experiments, the scientists took advantage of the highly flexible superconducting FLASH accelerator to generate particle bunches with extremely short temporal spacings. The first bunch generated plowed through the plasma, driving a high-strength wakefield and thus perturbing the plasma in its wake. At variable intervals thereafter, pairs of particle bunches were sent through the plasma cell; the first driving a second wakefield and the second being accelerated by the resulting fields. The properties of these subsequent bunches were precisely measured by the experimenters and compared with those of bunches that had experienced this process in an undisturbed plasma. The result: After about 70 billionths of a second (70 nanoseconds), it was no longer possible to distinguish whether the second acceleration had taken place in a previously disturbed or undisturbed plasma. "We were able to precisely observe the decay of the perturbation, which reached completion within the first 70 nanoseconds, and to explain it exactly in simulations," says D'Arcy. "In subsequent measurements, we want to check how different framework conditions in the setup influence the recovery time of the plasma wave." For example, the heating of the plasma medium due to high-frequency operation may have an influence on how quickly the plasma takes to replenish. The FLASHForward beamline (right in the picture) is located next to the second undulator line (left) of the free-electron laser FLASH. The FLASHForward beamline is used to transport the electron bunches from the FLASH linear accelerator to the FLASHForward interaction area for interaction with plasma. The beaming consists primarily of magnets, such as quadrupoles for maintaining the ultra-small bunch sizes during transport and dipoles for bending the bunches onto desired trajectories. Credit: DESY, Dirk Nolle The current findings, which involved scientists from DESY, University College London, and the Universities of Oxford and Hamburg, open the door for equipping todays particle accelerators, which are operated at repetition rates in the kilohertz-to-megahertz regime, with plasma accelerator modules acting as booster stages to significantly increase the particle energy over the shortest distance. "The findings have a profound impact on the potential for implementation of the plasma technology towards future high repetition rate facilities for which DESY is world renowned," concludes Wim Leemans, Director of the Accelerator Division at DESY. Explore further FLASHForward accelerates first electron bunches More information: Richard D'Arcy, Recovery time of a plasma-wakefield accelerator, Nature (2022). www.nature.com/articles/s41586-021-04348-8 Journal information: Nature Richard D'Arcy, Recovery time of a plasma-wakefield accelerator,(2022). DOI: 10.1038/s41586-021-04348-8 Graphical abstract. Credit: Molecular Cell (2022). DOI: 10.1016/j.molcel.2021.12.010 Most people are familiar with the cell nucleus from grade school biology as a storage compartment for DNA. But the nucleus also contains several distinct structures, called nuclear bodies or domains, whose roles scientists are just beginning to understand. Some of these structures are brimming with genes' messages, also known as RNA transcripts. Now, U of T researchers have reported the first large-scale survey of RNA transcripts that are associated with different nuclear bodies in human cells. Their work suggests that these structures act as hubs to coordinate gene regulation and cell division. "It was known that some nuclear domains contain RNA, but the composition of that RNA was not systematically probed in previous studies," said Benjamin Blencowe, senior author on the study and a professor of molecular genetics in the Donnelly Centre for Cellular and Biomolecular Research, at the Temerity Faculty of Medicine. "Our data has shed light not only on the RNA composition of different nuclear domains, but also provides clues as to the functions of some of these domains," he said. Molecular Cell published the findings. Until now, the information on nuclear body composition has trickled in piecemeal because there were no methods enabling a systematic survey of RNA localized to these structures. But postdoctoral fellow Rasim Barutcu and graduate student Mingkun Wu realized they could apply a method called APEX-Seq, which had been developed by Stanford and Berkeley scientists. APEX is an enzyme that can be fused to any protein of interest and allows labeling of RNAs, and other biomolecules, in its proximity. The labeled RNAs can then be isolated and identified by sequencing. By fusing APEX to various marker proteins residing in the different nuclear bodies, Barutcu and Wu were able to create RNA maps for each. In this effort, they collaborated with Ulrich Braunschweig, a senior research associate in the Blencowe lab, and with the groups of Anne-Claude Gingras, a U of T professor of molecular genetics and a senior scientist at the Lunenfeld-Tanenbaum Research Institute, at Sinai Health System, Philipp Maass , a U of T assistant professor of molecular genetics and scientist at The Hospital for Sick Children, and Robert Weatheritt, a principal investigator at the Garvan Institute of Medical Research, Australia. The team discovered swaths of novel RNAs, from several hundred to thousands, across the nuclear bodies. Previously, only a handful of transcripts were known to be associated with some of these structures, said Barutcu, whose research was supported by the Banting Postdoctoral Fellowship and a fellowship from the Canadian Institutes of Health Research (CIHR). One piece of data immediately struck the researchers. The nuclear bodies known as the speckles were associated with surprisingly high numbers of RNA transcripts with retained introns, segments which do not code for proteins. When a gene is transcribed into RNA, introns must be spliced out in the nucleus before the transcript can be released into the cell's interior to serve as a template for making proteins. The finding led them to realize that speckles are associated with a class of introns with delayed splicing. The nature of the transcripts provided a clue to their function. They were transcribed from genes that control various aspects of gene regulation and the cell division cycle. Genes controlling cell cycle progression must be activated in a timely manner so that their protein products are made only when they are needed. Errors in this process are well known drivers of cancer. The researchers came up with a model in which the role of the speckles might be to coordinate intron removal from transcripts in order to regulate their release from the nucleus, and their subsequent translation into protein factors required for gene regulation and the cell cycle. This mechanism would help ensure a rapid response to cellular signals to make the right kinds of proteins at the right time. Furthermore, when speckles were disrupted, this altered the splicing of the retained introns, including those located in genes that are directly involved in control of the cell cycle, supporting the idea that the speckles are linked to cell cycle progression. The model opens up new ways of thinking about cell cycle regulation with implications for cancer research, said Blencowe, who holds Canada Research Chair in RNA Biology and Genomics and Banbury Chair in Medical Research. "We've uncovered a mechanism involving differential intron retention linked to speckle integrity that could play an important role in not just normal cell division but also how it goes wrong in cancers," he said. In addition to the speckles, the team also found large numbers of intron-retained transcripts associated with the nuclear lamina, which forms at the periphery of the nucleus, but the functional significance of this observation remains unclear. The researchers said they hope others in the field will take advantage of their datasets and open new avenues of research into nuclear body function where many questions remain open. Blencowe also added that the project was made possible by the freedom to pursue new directions afforded by the now scrapped CIHR Foundation grant scheme that provided long-term research funding. More information: A. Rasim Barutcu et al, Systematic mapping of nuclear domain-associated transcripts reveals speckles and lamina as hubs of functionally distinct retained introns, Molecular Cell (2022). Journal information: Molecular Cell A. Rasim Barutcu et al, Systematic mapping of nuclear domain-associated transcripts reveals speckles and lamina as hubs of functionally distinct retained introns,(2022). DOI: 10.1016/j.molcel.2021.12.010 Impact craters cover the surface of the moon, seen from Berlin, Germany, Tuesday, Jan. 11, 2022. The moon is about to get walloped by 3 tons of space junk, a punch that will carve out a crater that could fit several semitractor-trailers. A leftover rocket is expected to smash into the far side of the moon at 5,800 mph (9,300 kph) on Friday, March 4, 2022, away from telescopes' prying eyes. It may take weeks, even months, to confirm the impact through satellite images. Credit: AP Photo/Michael Sohn, File The moon is about to get walloped by 3 tons of space junk, a punch that will carve out a crater that could fit several semitractor-trailers. The leftover rocket will smash into the far side of the moon at 5,800 mph (9,300 kph) on Friday, away from telescopes' prying eyes. It may take weeks, even months, to confirm the impact through satellite images. It's been tumbling haphazardly through space, experts believe, since China launched it nearly a decade ago. But Chinese officials are dubious it's theirs. No matter whose it is, scientists expect the object to carve out a hole 33 feet to 66 feet (10 to 20 meters) across and send moon dust flying hundreds of miles (kilometers) across the barren, pockmarked surface. Low-orbiting space junk is relatively easy to track. Objects launching deeper into space are unlikely to hit anything and these far-flung pieces are usually soon forgotten, except by a handful of observers who enjoy playing celestial detective on the side. SpaceX originally took the rap for the upcoming lunar litter after asteroid tracker Bill Gray identified the collision course in January. He corrected himself a month later, saying the "mystery" object was not a SpaceX Falcon rocket upper stage from the 2015 launch of a deep space climate observatory for NASA. Gray said it was likely the third stage of a Chinese rocket that sent a test sample capsule to the moon and back in 2014. But Chinese ministry officials said the upper stage had reentered Earth's atmosphere and burned up. But there were two Chinese missions with similar designationsthe test flight and 2020s lunar sample return missionand U.S. observers believe the two are getting mixed up. The U.S. Space Command, which tracks lower space junk, confirmed Tuesday that the Chinese upper stage from the 2014 lunar mission never deorbited, as previously indicated in its database. But it could not confirm the country of origin for the object about to strike the moon. "We focus on objects closer to the Earth," a spokesperson said in a statement. Gray, a mathematician and physicist, said he's confident now that it's China's rocket. This 2011 image made available by NASA shows the lunar far side. The moon is about to get walloped by 3 tons of space junk, a punch that will carve out a crater that could fit several semitractor-trailers. A leftover rocket is expected to smash into the far side of the moon at 5,800 mph (9,300 kph) on Friday, March 4, 2022, away from telescopes' prying eyes. It may take weeks, even months, to confirm the impact through satellite images. Credit: NASA/Goddard/Arizona State University via AP "I've become a little bit more cautious of such matters," he said. "But I really just don't see any way it could be anything else." Jonathan McDowell of the Harvard and Smithsonian Center for Astrophysics supports Gray's revised assessment, but notes: "The effect will be the same. It'll leave yet another small crater on the moon." The moon already bears countless craters, ranging up to 1,600 miles (2,500 kilometers). With little to no real atmosphere, the moon is defenseless against the constant barrage of meteors and asteroids, and the occasional incoming spacecraft, including a few intentionally crashed for science's sake. With no weather, there's no erosion and so impact craters last forever. China has a lunar lander on the moon's far side, but it will be too far away to detect Friday's impact just north of the equator. NASA's Lunar Reconnaissance Orbiter will also be out of range. It's unlikely India's moon-orbiting Chandrayaan-2 will be passing by then, either. "I had been hoping for something (significant) to hit the moon for a long time. Ideally, it would have hit on the near side of the moon at some point where we could actually see it," Gray said. After initially pinning the upcoming strike on Elon Musk's SpaceX, Gray took another look after an engineer at NASA's Jet Propulsion Laboratory questioned his claim. Now, he's "pretty thoroughly persuaded" it's a Chinese rocket part, based not only on orbital tracking back to its 2014 liftoff, but also data received from its short-lived ham radio experiment. JPL's Center for Near Earth Object Studies endorses Gray's reassessment. A University of Arizona team also recently identified the Chinese Long March rocket segment from the light reflected off its paint, during telescope observations of the careening cylinder. It's about 40 feet (12 meters) long and 10 feet (3 meters) in diameter, and doing a somersault every two to three minutes. Gray said SpaceX never contacted him to challenge his original claim. Neither have the Chinese. "It's not a SpaceX problem, nor is it a China problem. Nobody is particularly careful about what they do with junk at this sort of orbit," Gray said. Tracking deep space mission leftovers like this is hard, according to McDowell. The moon's gravity can alter an object's path during flybys, creating uncertainty. And there's no readily available database, McDowell noted, aside from the ones "cobbled together" by himself, Gray and a couple others. "We are now in an era where many countries and private companies are putting stuff in deep space, so it's time to start to keep track of it," McDowell said. "Right now there's no one, just a few fans in their spare time." 2022 The Associated Press. All rights reserved. This material may not be published, broadcast, rewritten or redistributed without permission. Nearly 100 asylum-seekers evacuated from Libya to Italy Xinhua) 08:33, March 02, 2022 TRIPOLI, March 1 (Xinhua) -- The United Nations High Commissioner for Refugees (UNHCR) on Tuesday said that nearly 100 asylum-seekers were evacuated from Libya to Italy. "The first humanitarian evacuation flight of the year brought nearly 100 vulnerable asylum-seekers out of Libya to safety in Italy," the UNHCR said in a statement. The evacuated asylum-seekers included children, women at risk, survivors of violence and people with serious medical cases, the statement said. "Some were recently released from detention while others had been held in captivity by smuggling or trafficking networks," it added. The UNHCR expressed gratitude for the support from Italy, while calling on other states to consider similar safe pathways for bringing vulnerable asylum-seekers out of Libya. Many illegal migrants, mostly from Africa, choose to cross the Mediterranean Sea to European shores from Libya which has been suffering from a state of chaos since 2011 when former leader Muammar Qaddafi was overthrown. So far this year, nearly 2,500 illegal migrants have been rescued at sea and returned to Libya, including women and children, according to the International Organization for Migration. (Web editor: Peng yukai, Liang Jun) Credit: Antiquity (2022). DOI: 10.15184/aqy.2022.5 It had long been thought that the famous site of Stonehenge served as an ancient calendar, given its alignment with the solstices. Now, research has identified how it may have worked. New finds about the stone circle's history, along with analysis of other ancient calendar systems, prompted professor Timothy Darvill to take a fresh look at Stonehenge. His analysis, published in the journal Antiquity, concluded that the site was designed as a solar calendar. "The clear solstitial alignment of Stonehenge has prompted people to suggest that the site included some kind of calendar since the antiquarian William Stukeley," said Darvill, from Bournemouth University, "Now, discoveries brought the issue into sharper focus and indicate the site was a calendar based on a tropical solar year of 365.25 days." Crucially, recent research had shown that Stonehenge's sarsens were added during the same phase of construction around 2500 BC. They were sourced from the same area and subsequently remained in the same formation. This indicates they worked as a single unit. As such, Darvill analyzed these stones, examining their numerology and comparing them to other known calendars from this period. He identified a solar calendar in their layout, suggesting they served as a physical representation of the year that helped the ancient inhabitants of Wiltshire keep track of the days, weeks, and months. Credit: Antiquity (2022). DOI: 10.15184/aqy.2022.5 "The proposed calendar works in a very straightforward way. Each of the 30 stones in the sarsen circle represents a day within a month, itself divided into three weeks each of 10 days," said Darvill, noting that distinctive stones in the circle mark the start of each week. Additionally, an intercalary month of five days and a leap day every four years were needed to match the solar year. "The intercalary month, probably dedicated to the deities of the site, is represented by the five trilithons in the center of the site," said Darvill. "The four Station Stones outside the Sarsen Circle provide markers to notch-up until a leap day." As such, the winter and summer solstices would be framed by the same pairs of stones every year. One of the trilithons also frames the winter solstice, indicating it may have been the new year. This solstitial alignment also helps calibrate the calendarany errors in counting the days would be easily detectable as the sun would be in the wrong place on the solstices. Such a calendar, with 10 day weeks and extra months, may seem unusual today. However, calendars like this were adopted by many cultures during this period Credit: Antiquity (2022). DOI: 10.15184/aqy.2022.5 "Such a solar calendar was developed in the eastern Mediterranean in the centuries after 3000 BC and was adopted in Egypt as the Civil Calendar around 2700 and was widely used at the start of the Old Kingdom about 2600 BC," said Darvill. This raises the possibility that the calendar tracked by Stonehenge may stem from the influence of one of these other cultures. Nearby finds hint at such cultural connectionsthe nearby Amesbury archer, buried nearby around the same period, was born in the Alps and moved to Britain as a teenager. Professor Darvill hopes future research might shed light on these possibilities. Ancient DNA and archaeological artifacts could reveal connections between these cultures. Nevertheless, the identification of a solar calendar at Stonehenge should transform how we see it. "Finding a solar calendar represented in the architecture of Stonehenge opens up a whole new way of seeing the monument as a place for the living," he said, "a place where the timing of ceremonies and festivals was connected to the very fabric of the universe and celestial movements in the heavens." Explore further Stonehenge likely made with stones from older monument: study More information: Time keeping at Stonehenge, Antiquity (2022). Journal information: Antiquity Time keeping at Stonehenge,(2022). DOI: 10.15184/aqy.2022.5 Plastron (left) and carapace (right) of the new turtle species Dortoka vremiri from the Late Cretaceous of the Hateg Basin (Romania). Credit: Zoltan Csiki-Sava Palaeobiologists from the University of Tubingen have described a previously unknown turtle species that lived in what is now Romania some 70 million years ago. The reptile, measuring 19 cm in length, has no close relatives now but is a member of the larger group of side-necked turtles that are today found mostly in the southern hemisphere. Its closest relative is recorded in more recent fossils dating to about 57 million years ago, also from Romania. This indicates the evolutionary lineage survived the Cretaceous-Paleogene extinction event 66 million years ago, which killed off at least 75 percent of all life forms, including the non-avian dinosaurs. University of Tubingen biogeologist Dr. Marton Rabi headed the research team, whose description of the species has been published in the latest Journal of Systematic Palaeontology. The species is named Dortoka vremiri, after Matyas Vremir, a key researcher into Cretaceous vertebrate faunas who passed away in 2020. Working with colleagues from the University of Bucharest in Romania and from Hungary's Natural History Museum and Eootvoos Lorand University, the team identified the turtle fossils from the Hateg Basin of Transylvania. The locality is one of the most important fossil sites for Late Cretaceous vertebrates in Europe, and is renowned for its insular fauna of dwarfed dinosaurs and other species. The site has a research history spanning more than 120 years. Evidence of Dortoka vremiri was found in the 1990s. The find provides a rare insight into selectivity during the end-Cretaceous mass extinction. How did this small turtle survive when most other species died out? "Intriguingly, members of the same family of turtles did not survive this extinction event in western Europe," says Felix Augustin, a Ph.D. student and the study's lead author. The more remote and potentially more protected palaeogeographical setting of the Transylvanian landmass may have played a role in the differential survival of the eastern European turtles, he says. Another factor may have been Dortoka vremiri's immediate environment. "The only other chelonian that co-existed with the new species was a land-dwelling tortoise which did not survive the mass extinction. In contrast, this new species was a turtle living in fresh water," says Zoltan Csiki-Sava of the University of Bucharest, "This fits a previously observed pattern from North American faunas where terrestrial vertebrates were notably more impacted by the end-Cretaceous extinction than freshwater species." Researchers speculate it may be because freshwater food chains are based on decaying organic material, which remains available even when high environmental stress causes terrestrial food webs to collapse. This pattern has been observed during other extinction events and may be common, however, Marton Rabi says the evidence is still rare. Such findings take on an urgent significance in the current and ongoing massive extinction of species caused by human activity. Understanding the selectivity of past extinctions is crucial for setting conservation priorities. Explore further New study of fossil caimans in North America determines their evolutionary history More information: Felix J. Augustin et al, A new latest Cretaceous pleurodiran turtle (Testudinata: Dortokidae) from the Hateg Basin (Romania) documents end-Cretaceous faunal provinciality and selective survival during the K-Pg extinction, Journal of Systematic Palaeontology (2022). Journal information: Journal of Systematic Palaeontology Felix J. Augustin et al, A new latest Cretaceous pleurodiran turtle (Testudinata: Dortokidae) from the Hateg Basin (Romania) documents end-Cretaceous faunal provinciality and selective survival during the K-Pg extinction,(2022). DOI: 10.1080/14772019.2021.2009583 To cause an infection, SARS-CoV-2 must don a cap that disguises its genetic material. Researchers investigated how viral parts (multiple colors above) place this cap. Blocking the process could lead to new treatments for COVID-19. Credit: G. Park et al./bioRxiv.org An investigation into how SARS-CoV-2 camouflages itself from cells has unmasked a potential vulnerability in the virus that scientists hope to exploit. Biochemist Vincent Tagliabracci's lab has delineated key steps by which SARS-CoV-2, the virus responsible for COVID-19, disguises one end of its genome. Without this cover-up, the virus can no longer hijack cells to cause an infection. The research team described their work, which has not yet been peer-reviewed, in a preprint posted on bioRxiv.org on February 9, 2022. "If we could develop an inhibitor against this camouflage process, that would represent a new way to target the virus," says Tagliabracci, a Howard Hughes Medical Institute Investigator at the University of Texas Southwestern Medical Center. A handful of antiviral medications to treat SARS-CoV-2 infection, including remdesivir, molnupiravir, and nirmatrelvir, are currently used in hospitals and clinics. In some cases, doctors can combine multiple antivirals to pack a stronger punch, though having additional options can come in handy should a virus become resistant to one drug. To fight COVID-19 over the long term, Tagliabracci says, "we are going to need a combination of antiviral drugs that work in different ways." SARS-CoV-2's genome is composed of RNA, a molecular cousin of DNA. During an infection, the virus sneaks past human cells' defenses and tricks them into manufacturing more viruses. SARS-CoV-2 uses several strategies to perpetrate this subterfuge, including covering one end of its RNA with a chemical cap, like a spy slipping on a wig. It's no coincidence that this covering is identical to the one atop human mRNA, which contains the cell's protein-making instructions. With a cap in place, SARS-CoV-2 can trick the cell into assembling viral proteins as if they were its own. While researchers already knew that the virus depends on its protective cap, they didn't know how it donned this disguise. Tagliabracci's lab studies what he calls "weird kinases," odd members of a large family of enzymes crucial to many processes within the cell. Over the last 35 years, kinases have emerged as important drug targets for disease. Once scientists decoded SARS-CoV-2's genome, his team combed through it looking for kinases, regular or strange. Within the code for a large multifunctional protein, they recognized a kinase-like enzyme, known as the NiRAN domain. Building on earlier research, Tagliabracci's team, including graduate students Gina Park and Adam Osinski, pieced together the steps the NiRAN domain takes to move viral RNA into place before adding the cap. When they interfered with NiRAN's ability to do its job, SARS-CoV-2 could not multiply inside human cells, the team found. Given the NiRAN domain's status as an unconventional kinase relative, Patrick Eyers, a kinase biochemist at the University of Liverpool, is optimistic about the prospects for new antivirals. "Kinases are really fantastic drug targets, not just in human cells but in any disease where a kinase is involved," says Eyers, who was not part of the study. Scientists have years of experience creating drugs that alter kinase activity in cancer and inflammatory conditions, he says. Viral RNA capping had already attracted the attention of researchers seeking new means to fight not only COVID-19, but other viral infections, says Warner Greene, a virologist at Gladstone Institutes, who was not involved in the research. But scientists have not yet had success. The primary challenge is that human cells also cap their mRNA, so interfering with the virus could have unintended consequences. Tagliabracci's team has shown that the steps SARS-CoV-2 takes to cap its genome are performed by viral proteins, "which make them legitimate targets," Greene says. "But you've got to be darn sure there is no spillover onto the host proteins that carry out the same steps." The work to identify a new antiviral based on Tagliabracci's lab's discovery has already begun. His team is now searching for small molecules that interfere with the virus's capping mechanismwithout hindering human cells. Explore further New research suggests way to turn SARS-CoV-2 against itself More information: Gina J. Park et al, The mechanism of RNA capping by SARS-CoV-2 (2022). Gina J. Park et al, The mechanism of RNA capping by SARS-CoV-2 (2022). DOI: 10.1101/2022.02.07.479471 A multicenter research team investigated an outbreak in 2019, which proved to be due to a subtype of the pathogen that causes Newcastle disease. Credit: Victor Vizu/Wikimedia Commons In 2019, not long before the unusual weather event that changed day into night in Sao Paulo City (Brazil), dozens of pigeons mysteriously dropped dead. Birds displaying wounds as well as neurological symptoms were found dead or dying near the municipal animal disease control center. A multicenter research team discovered that the deaths were unrelated to the pollution blown into the city from forest fires in the Amazon, despite the proximity of the dates, but were in fact due to Newcastle disease virus (NDV), a serotype 1 avian paramyxovirus. The cases in question were caused by subgenotype VI.2.1.2, which is almost always deadly for pigeons. Also known as pigeon paramyxovirus (PPMV), this pathogen only rarely infects humans when transmitted by close contact with infected birds. "We discovered that this virus has been circulating silently in Brazil since 2014. Our analysis of molecular data showed that it's the same PPMV that had been identified five years before in Porto Alegre [the capital of Rio Grande do Sul state]. Sao Paulo and Porto Alegre are 1,100 km apart, which only goes to show how much the disease can spread without being noticed," said Luciano Matsumiya Thomazelli, first author of an article on the team's findings published in the journal Viruses. Thomazelli is affiliated with the University of Sao Paulo's Biomedical Sciences Institute (ICB-USP), where he works at the Clinical and Molecular Virology Laboratory. Since 2005, a team from the laboratory has conducted epidemiological surveillance in various parts of Brazil, under the aegis of the Virus Genetic Diversity Network (VGDN), which is funded by FAPESP and coordinated by Professor Edison Luiz Durigon, last author of the article. The group also works with the Network for Surveillance of Viruses in Wild Animals (PREVIR), funded by the National Council for Scientific and Technological Development (CNPq), an arm of the Brazilian government's Ministry for Science, Technology and Innovation (MCTI). Deadly to pigeons NDV normally causes disease in hens and chickens but not in pigeons. According to the researchers, however, the opposite occurs with subgenotype VI.2.1.2. "It's endemic in pigeon populations worldwide, causing neurological symptoms and high mortality rates. Cases are frequently reported in Asia, Europe and North America. Although this is the second reported outbreak in Brazil, there are no grounds for alarm because this subgenotype isn't a significant threat to humans or poultry farmers," said Helena Ferreira, a professor at the School of Animal Sciences and Food Engineering in Pirassununga (FZEA-USP), a member of PREVIR-MCTI, and principal investigator for the study. The researchers stressed the importance of active surveillance and monitoring to control outbreaks and epidemics, and to provide early warning of the emergence of new diseases. "Active surveillance throughout Brazil is vital to control pigeon populations near poultry farms and in urban areas," Thomazelli said. "Monitoring of NDV is also important from the economic standpoint, as Brazil is the world's leading exporter of frozen chicken." Before the researchers could identify the disease that was killing feral pigeons (Columba livia) in Sao Paulo, the animal disease control center and official veterinary service collected and organized several specimens of dead birds. "Initially the cause of death was thought to be a bacterium, but no pathogenic species were identified," Ferreira said. "They sent samples to ICB-USP and the Federal Agricultural Defense Laboratory [LFDA-SP], where characterization was performed, in line with the standard procedure for notifiable viral diseases affecting poultry. Our lab in Pirassununga then sequenced the viral genome." Her team also performed analyses to identify tissue wounds. "We sequenced the whole genome and identified the virus as VI.2.1.2," she said. "This enables us to conduct an in-depth investigation, compare the outbreak with others elsewhere in the world, track the pathogen's evolution in Brazil, and predict its behavior from now on, including whether it may adapt to other feral birds, for example." The genomic analysis showed that the virus found in Sao Paulo and Rio Grande do Sul (in 2014) can be grouped with samples from Africa. "Other cases need to be identified so that we can propose classification of the genotype that has circulated in Brazil. It's relatively different from the African one," she said. "This kind of monitoring is most important. In the specific case in question, the genotype can't infect domestic birds [hens] efficiently. If a hen is infected, it doesn't transmit the virus to others in the same flock. However, studies have suggested that this genotype can adapt in hens over time and cause disease in other domestic birds. Even so, it isn't considered very dangerous for commercial poultry." Explore further New virus discovered in migratory bird in Rio Grande do Sul, Brazil More information: Luciano M. Thomazelli et al, An Outbreak in Pigeons Caused by the Subgenotype VI.2.1.2 of Newcastle Disease Virus in Brazil, Viruses (2021). Luciano M. Thomazelli et al, An Outbreak in Pigeons Caused by the Subgenotype VI.2.1.2 of Newcastle Disease Virus in Brazil,(2021). DOI: 10.3390/v13122446 The Antarctic ice sheet. Credit: Stephen Hudson / Wikipedia A group of scientists walked out on to frozen Lake Michigan to do something they've done time and again throughout the Great Lakes: collect water. They drilled down past the shoreline of a park in Green Bay, Wisconsin, where it was quiet enough to hear the ice pop as sunlight warmed the frozen surface. But back on land, everything started to freeze. Pens, people's hands. Most concerning, the water samples. The work was part of the first coordinated sampling across all five Great Lakes to figure out what's happening in one of the world's largest freshwater systems in wintersomething scientists know surprisingly little about. The first attempt wasn't without challenges, but researchers see the work as an overdue and necessary step toward understanding a fast-changing season in which ice could become increasingly rare. With sampling of more than 30 sites from Lake Superior to Lake Erie wrapped up, some Chicago researchers will now play a key role in making sense of the lakes' tiniest memberswho pose some of the biggest mysteries. Microbesincluding bacteria and virusesare generally smaller than the naked eye can see. Yet they wield significant power, especially as the Great Lakes respond to climate change. "Maybe we projected that as humans, we sort of hunker down in winter, and stay indoors and watch Netflix. So maybe all the biology is hibernating," said Maureen Coleman, associate professor of geosciences at the University of Chicago. "But clearly it's not." Coleman began the first long-term study of Great Lakes microorganisms in 2012, leading to the discovery of hundreds of new species. Her lab will analyze samples from the Great Lakes sites to get a better picture of what the minuscule sentinels are up to. Analysis will likely take a few months once all the samples arrive, Coleman said, and then scientists will work together to make sense of the results. "It's a great endpoint because we're going to have data," Coleman said. "It's also a great starting point for a lot of future work." 'Microbes doing their thing' It can be hard to navigate the Great Lakes in summer, between weather conditions that change on a whim and the planning required to sail out. In winter, ice arrives, ships dock, buoys are pulled. Research involving humans is likely to require some bundling up, not to mention a strong constitution. While conditions may be extreme for us, some microorganisms may be accustomed to the cold, Coleman said. In the depths of Lake Superior, for instance, microbes are actively growing all year round, even when they're enveloped in frigid water and darkness. "That may seem inhospitable to us," Coleman said. "But that's what they're adapted for, so they don't mind. That's how they live." When it comes to winter, Coleman said she's curious to see if there are cold specialists, and expects there will be "plenty of microbes doing their thing." "We have a bit of a feel for who lives throughout the Great Lakes at different depths and in different lakes," Coleman said. "Now we're excited to see how the winter community compares to that spring and summer community." Already, there have been some unexpected realizations. "It was a surprise to me to realize that maybe there's actually more photosynthesis happening under ice than without ice," Coleman said. Light can penetrate ice, and the ice calms water below, which can prevent photosynthetic organisms from mixing down to the lake bottom, or cloudy sediment mixing up. How much photosynthesis is happening has implications for how many fish can be supported later in the year. At Green Bay, water under the ice was bright green, Coleman said, and although it was likely not a harmful algae bloom, photosynthesis was in full force. Coleman's lab has collected samples for years with the U.S. Environmental Protection Agency in warmer months, which researchers can now use to make connections between winter conditions and what might happen later. "It's not just confined to the winter," Coleman said. "There are these longer term impacts." Among samples coming out of the freezer will be some taken near the Apostle Islands National Lakeshore, where unexpected algae blooms have turned clear water green. Bloom predictors would be a welcome development as scientists try to figure out why potentially toxic blooms are happening in a lake that has largely escaped human blight. In Lake Michigan, the proliferation of invasive quagga mussels offers an example of why a baseline is important, Coleman said. "Our understanding is that the mussels have just completely changed the microbial community, but we don't have samples from pre-quagga mussel time, so it's hard to say." As samples come in to the lab, analysis will involve steps including DNA extraction and sequencing a gene that serves as a bar code for different species, Coleman said. Sequences can then be compared between sites, as well as with spring and summer samples to see if there are, in fact, cold specialists. 'Oh my gosh, it's frozen' A hole in the ice stretching a few feet in a lake with a shoreline that stretches more than 1,600 miles won't paint a complete picture. But the winter research was a first step, said Michael Henson, a postdoctoral researcher at the University of Chicago who was out on the ice at Green Bay. "This is an active, living, breathing ecosystem under the ice, and it's time we start treating it like that," he said. To get the clearest picture of what was happening at Bay Shore Park in Green Bay, with a temperature in the teens and some ice fisherman in the distance, the original plan was to filter on site. U. of C. graduate student Maria Hernandez Limon, used to sampling on the Lake Guardian, the EPA's Great Lakes research vessel, said the trip required more thinking on the fly. "It's the technology, it's the protocols, but it's also we as humans are not meant to be out in chilling temperatures," Limon said. "You want to move fast but your fingers are just not responding." Researchers set up a filtering apparatus on a nearby picnic table. But water froze as it moved through the lines. The group moved from the table to the back of a van, hoping some heat would help. They ended up hand filtering the water, pumping it through syringes like you might see in a doctor's officenot the easiest task with water from Green Bay, an algae hot spot. "There's a lot of living things there and they are quite active," Henson said, which can make filtering more difficult. By the end of the hourslong stretch outside, the group collected its data, even if the process unfolded differently than imagined. "Oh my gosh, it's frozen," Henson said. "The theme of the day." Despite the cold, Limon spent some time marveling at the frozen expanse. But she was also filled with a sinking feeling, she said, "to think that there will come a time in my lifetime when there might not be ice." 'What's happening on the lakes hits home' The sampling effort, coined the Winter Grab, reaches back to a 2019 summit on winter limnologythe study of lakeswhich led to an article published last year on what's known about changing winter conditions and what could help grow existing knowledge. With major climate shifts projected ahead as a result of human action, largely the burning of fossil fuels, winter warming is expected to lead to diminishing ice cover. Already, maximum ice coverage is decreasing at a rate of 5% per decade and there are fewer days overall with coverage. "When we think about the effects of climate change, seeing what's happening on the lakes hits home," Limon said. "We're seeing less ice coverage. We're seeing that the winters are more mild." What happens in winter can affect what's happening months later, and ice coverage plays a major role. But, the study noted, it's tough to say or understand those consequences with a lack of winter research. "After all, how can we predict and manage the future of an ecosystem if we do not understand how it functions for significant portions of the year?" the study said. Henson said he likes to tell people microbes are the first responders. "They're going to best help us predict what the future water's going to look like, by understanding how they're changing and are impacted by the decreasing ice coverage," he said. "This work is critical for us to begin to understand what happens as ice coverage stops, and the waters warm." For those living around the Great Lakes, a growing body of research could mean fewer surprises from a system that provides drinking water to millions of people, as well as an escape from hot summer days. "You don't want to be walking around the lakeshore, looking to your left or right, and seeing a giant swath of green algae everywhere," Henson said. "And you can't swim. You can't actively participate. You can't drink that water." Ted Ozersky, the organizer of the Winter Grab and an associate professor at the University of Minnesota Duluth, said sampling overall was surprisingly smooth, aside from hiccups like snowstorms that caused delays. The University of Minnesota Duluth will hold on to some samples for analysis, and send others around the Great Lakes, including to Coleman's lab at U. of C. Ozersky said a heartening outcome of the project is the collaboration between researchers with different specialties coming together to answer a yet unresolved question: "What the future of winter is going to be like here in the Great Lakes." Explore further Great Lakes ice cover lowest in decades: What it means for the rest of winter 2022 Chicago Tribune. Distributed by Tribune Content Agency, LLC. DC Youth Climate Strike 2019 at the U.S. Capitol. Credit: Hillel Steinberg/Flickr, (CC BY-ND 2.0) Like many of its predecessors, the 2021 United Nations Climate Change Conference (COP26) in Glasgow, Scotland concluded with bold promises on international climate action aimed at keeping global warming well below 2 degrees Celsius, but few concrete plans to ensure that those promises will be kept. While it's not too late for the Paris Agreement's nearly 200 signatory nations to take concerted action to cap global warming at 2 Cif not 1.5 Cthere is simply no guarantee that they will do so. If they fail, how much warming is the Earth likely to see in the 21st century and beyond? A new study by researchers at the MIT Joint Program on the Science and Policy of Global Change and the Shell Scenarios Team projects that without a globally coordinated mitigation effort to reduce greenhouse gas emissions, the planet's average surface temperature will reach 2.8 C, much higher than the "well below 2 C" level to which the Paris Agreement aspires, but a lot lower than what many widely used "business-as-usual" scenarios project. Recognizing the limitations of such scenarios, which generally assume that historical trends in energy technology choices and climate policy inaction will persist for decades to come, the researchers have designed a "Growing Pressures" scenario that accounts for mounting social, technological, business, and political pressures that are driving a transition away from fossil-fuel use and toward a low-carbon future. Such pressures have already begun to expand low-carbon technology and policy options, which, in turn, have escalated demand to utilize those optionsa trend that's expected to self-reinforce. Under this scenario, an array of future actions and policies cause renewable energy and energy storage costs to decline; fossil fuels to be phased out; electrification to proliferate; and emissions from agriculture and industry to be sharply reduced. Incorporating these growing pressures in the MIT Joint Program's integrated model of Earth and human systems, the study's co-authors project future energy use, greenhouse gas emissions, and global average surface temperatures in a world that fails to implement coordinated, global climate mitigation policies, and instead pursues piecemeal actions at mostly local and national levels. "Few, if any, previous studies explore scenarios of how piecemeal climate policies might plausibly unfold into the future and impact global temperature," says MIT Joint Program research scientist Jennifer Morris, the study's lead author. "We offer such a scenario, considering a future in which the increasingly visible impacts of climate change drive growing pressure from voters, shareholders, consumers, and investors, which in turn drives piecemeal action by governments and businesses that steer investments away from fossil fuels and toward low-carbon alternatives." In the study's central case (representing the mid-range climate response to greenhouse gas emissions), fossil fuels persist in the global energy mix through 2060 and then slowly decline toward zero by 2130; global carbon dioxide emissions reach near-zero levels by 2130 (total greenhouse gas emissions decline to near-zero by 2150); and global surface temperatures stabilize at 2.8 C by 2150, 2.5 C lower than a widely used "business-as-usual" projection. The results appear in the journal Environmental Economics and Policy Studies. Such a transition could bring the global energy system to near-zero emissions, but more aggressive climate action would be needed to keep global temperatures well below 2 C in alignment with the Paris Agreement. "While we fully support the need to decarbonize as fast as possible, it is critical to assess realistic alternative scenarios of world development," says Joint Program Deputy Director Sergey Paltsev, a co-author of the study. "We investigate plausible actions that could bring society closer to the long-term goals of the Paris Agreement. To actually meet those goals will require an accelerated transition away from fossil energy through a combination of R&D, technology deployment, infrastructure development, policy incentives, and business practices." Explore further How energy-intensive economies can survive and thrive as the globe ramps up climate action More information: Jennifer Morris et al, Future energy: in search of a scenario reflecting current and future pressures and trends, Environmental Economics and Policy Studies (2022). Jennifer Morris et al, Future energy: in search of a scenario reflecting current and future pressures and trends,(2022). DOI: 10.1007/s10018-021-00339-1#Abs1 This story is republished courtesy of MIT News (web.mit.edu/newsoffice/), a popular site that covers news about MIT research, innovation and teaching. FORT ANN A worker clearing tree branches near a road was hit and killed by a passing vehicle Tuesday morning, police said. Washington County sheriffs officers responded to a report of a car-pedestrian accident with a serious injury on county Route 16 in Fort Ann at 11:15 a.m. Tuesday. Officers found that workers had been trimming tree branches using a bucket-style truck. Nicholas A. Montello, 19, of Argyle, was identified as one of the individuals picking up the fallen branches in and around the roadway when he was hit by a passing vehicle. Montello was transported to Glens Falls Hospital by Fort Ann EMS, where he was pronounced dead. Police said the driver was identified as Kecia L. Freiberger, 56, of East Farm Woods Lane in Fort Ann. The accident remains under investigation as police continue to look into the circumstances, according to the Sheriffs Office. Police are asking anyone who may have been in the area at the time of the accident or may have information related to it to contact the Sheriffs Office. The Washington County Sheriffs Office was assisted by personnel from Fort Ann Fire and EMS, West Fort Ann Fire and the Warren County Sheriffs Office. A memorial Mass for the victim will be celebrated at 11 a.m. Tuesday, March 8, at St. Josephs Catholic Church at 164 Broadway in Fort Edward. This is the third motor vehicle accident involving a pedestrian who was fatally injured in the area over the last month. The first occurred on Broad Street in Glens Falls on Feb. 6. In what was initially thought to be a hit-and-run incident, a 41-year-old Stony Creek man was traveling south through Glens Falls when he hit 71-year-old city resident Nina Dever, police said. Dever was pronounced dead as a result of the injuries sustained in the accident. Preliminary investigations indicated that Dever was walking with another pedestrian in the eastbound lane on Broad Street. The accident took place in front of Broad Street Commons at 186 Broad St. Police said that the sidewalk was covered with snow at the time of the accident. The name of the driver has not been released as of this point, and the investigation is still ongoing. Police said the driver stopped and rendered medical assistance after the accident. The second fatal motor vehicle-pedestrian accident occurred Sunday when motorist John Lincoln-Lynch, 55, of Moreau, was involved in a hit-and-run that resulted in pedestrian Paul Trombley losing his life. Trombley, 67, was a retired Glens Falls High School teacher. He taught business at the high school for over 30 years. Lincoln-Lynch struck Trombley near the intersection of Fifth and Main streets in South Glens Falls, police said. Lincoln-Lynch was arrested by the Saratoga County Sheriffs Office and arraigned in Wilton Town Court on Tuesday, where he was charged with a felony of leaving the scene of a personal injury incident resulting in death. He was sent to Saratoga County Jail and is due back in court at a later date. Jay Mullen is a reporter for The Post-Star covering the city of Glens Falls, Warren County and crime and courts. You can reach him at 518-742-3224 or jmullen@poststar.com. Sign up for our Crime & Courts newsletter Get the latest in local public safety news with this weekly email. Sign up! * I understand and agree that registration on or use of this site constitutes agreement to its user agreement and privacy policy. U.S. Rep. Elise Stefanik, R-Schuylerville, said she agrees with President Joe Bidens suggestion in his State of the Union speech of four topics that have bipartisan interest: the opioid epidemic, mental health, veterans, and cancer. To kick-start the bipartisanship, she spoke right after the speech with federal Veterans Affairs Secretary Denis Richard McDonough about several veterans bills that she plans to introduce in the coming weeks. Were hoping to get his (President Bidens) support, Stefanik said in a telephone interview after the speech on Tuesday night. Stefanik said the opioid epidemic has long been one of her priority issues, and she was glad to hear Biden address it. But his strategy should include a crackdown at the southern border to prevent fentanyl from being smuggled in from Mexico, she said. In a statement, Stefanik said: The state of our union is in crisis because of President Joe Biden. Tonights speech will not rewrite the abysmal failure of the past year under one-party Democrat rule in Washington. U.S. Rep. Paul Tonko, D-Amsterdam, said in a statement that Biden delivered a powerful message of unity and hope to the American people. Tonko said Biden was candid about the nations challenges. As the president detailed the strong and immediate actions being taken by his administration to address these challenges, he reflected on just how far we have come since he first took office over one year ago, Tonko said. Thank you, President Biden, said Senate Majority Leader Charles Schumer, D-N.Y., on Twitter. The future of America is looking bright, and Im proud to be building that future together with President Joe Biden, said Sen. Kirsten Gillibrand, D-N.Y., on Facebook. Stefanik, in the telephone interview, said it was a moving moment when congressional members of both political parties gave a standing ovation for Ukraine Ambassador Oksana Markarova. I think that was very important for them (the people of Ukraine) to see, she said. Stefanik said Biden should do more to increase domestic energy production, not just in foreign countries. Instead, weve seen a blizzard of regulations, she said. Stefanik, who holds the No. 3 leadership post in the House Republican Conference, was part of the delegation that escorted Biden into the House chamber. She said she took opportunity of the moment to speak with Biden about the importance of reopening the U.S.-Canadian border without restrictions. I think he listened. It was quick, she said. Love 0 Funny 0 Wow 0 Sad 0 Angry 1 FORT EDWARD The village of Greenwichs proposal to update its zoning code is not yet a county concern, members of the county Planning Agency agreed during the agencys meeting Tuesday. The village wants to amend the code to update parking regulations and ensure new development along Main Street is pedestrian-friendly and conforms with the villages 2019 streetscape plan for the medium-density residential and Commercial 1 zone, agency clerk Pamela Landi told agency members. Other goals include creating a Main Street overlay district from Church and Academy streets to Mill Hollow; establishing a site plan review process for the overlay district; bringing parking requirements into agreement with Institute of Transportation Engineers standards; and creating guidelines for food trucks and EV charging stations, flexibility, and addressing ambiguity and inconsistency in the codes. The agencys three members agreed that since there are as yet no projects that would impact county concerns in the area, the proposals could be handled at the local level. Four more items on the agencys agenda were also ruled to be of local concern only: Amendments to the town of Kingsburys zoning code for solar energy collectors. The town wants to preserve farmland and scenic areas by encouraging the siting of ground-mounted solar collectors in industrial zones, brownfield sites and areas that are predominantly wetlands, where solar arrays would be the primary land use. The proposed amendments would limit arrays visibility and potential adverse impacts. Net-metered solar systems would come under the same regulations. A request to waive setback requirements for a proposed garage at 242 River Road, Greenwich. The agency members questioned why the town Planning Board had sent the project to them for review because there was no apparent reason in the application. Some on-the-spot research by Landi showed that the property adjoins Consolidated Agricultural District 4, which triggers county review, but the agricultural data form was missing from the application. A proposal for a dog-grooming business at 173 Broadway, village of Fort Edward. The board ruled it would have no impact on traffic on Route 4. A proposal by Glens Falls Heating and Propane to install two 30,000-gallon liquified propane gas tanks at 10921 Route 149, Fort Ann. The tanks, fencing and driveway will take up 0.15 acres of a 4-acre parcel. County review was necessary because the site is in a agricultural district and on a state road. Agency members were concerned that town and planning board clerks were sending applications to the agency with the wrong boxes checked and without necessary documents such as agricultural data forms. Landi said she was drafting a revised application form and would update the planning agencys website to make application information easier to find. She asked the agency members to review the drafts and comment before the agencys next meeting. Love 0 Funny 0 Wow 0 Sad 0 Angry 0 An "alarming" 92% of schools in Atlantic County have had lead in at least one or more of their tap water systems, according to a report released Wednesday by the Environment New Jersey Research & Policy Center and the Black Church Center for Justice and Equality. Representatives of the two groups planned to discuss their findings during a news conference Wednesday morning. Among the report's findings were that Pleasantville and Galloway Township schools registered lead detection in all 13 buildings in both districts. The testing data, accessed through the New Jersey Department of Education website, was collected from water samples from 66 of 72 schools in all 25 Atlantic County school districts, where at least 43,000 students use the school's water faucets and fountains daily. The six schools not tested were part of the Hammonton and Buena Regional school districts, due to unavailable public information kept on a Google Drive, according to the study. "We wanted to shine a light on South Jersey and Atlantic County while also focusi.ng on the communities that our partners, the Black Church Center, has an active presence in," said Doug O'Malley, the state director of Environment New Jersey The study states that lead is to be considered toxic even at the lowest levels, but the American Academy of Pediatrics says, "lead in schools' drinking water should not exceed one part per billionth." "Notably high levels of lead were 695 ppb at Roland Rogers School in Galloway Township and 229 ppb at Washington Avenue School in Pleasantville, among others," according to the study. Out of the 619 faucets and fountains tested in the two school districts, lead was detected in 44.9% of the Pleasantville school district's water taps, with Galloway water revealing lead in 45.63% of the township's taps. Almost half, 45.4%, of all faucets and fountains in all Pleasantville and Galloway schools contained lead, with four schools having more than half of their taps contaminated with lead. Pleasantvilles North Main Street School had the highest percentage of contamination of water taps, with 72.73% contaminated. The study notes that fixing the lead contamination in the area is feasible with the more than $100 million Atlantic County schools have received from American Rescue Plan Elementary and Secondary School Emergency Relief funding. The study said a new federal infrastructure investment law could also help area schools and districts with their lead issues since $200 million in funding from the plan will be used for schools to conduct lead reduction efforts. As of Sept. 15, Pleasantville schools have been awarded more than $11 million in ARP ESSER funding, while Galloway schools have received more than $5 million. The study notes that schools can fix the lead contamination issue by replacing all fountains and hydrating stations with lead-certified filters, shutting off taps and simply taking the lead out of the water to ensure safe drinking water for Atlantic County schools. This is a developing story. Check back for updates. Contact Selena Vazquez: 609-272-7225 svazquez@pressofac.com Be the first to know Get local news delivered to your inbox! Sign up! * I understand and agree that registration on or use of this site constitutes agreement to its user agreement and privacy policy. MILLVILLE After their Atlantic County counterparts dashed their plans, the Cumberland County commissioners are trying to decide what they should do with the county jail. The Board of Commissioners hosted a special meeting Tuesday night to hear residents views on what the county should do with its jail and where it should send the inmates held there. The meeting became necessary when the Atlantic County Board of Commissioners rejected a proposal to expand its jail to hold Cumberland inmates. Cumberland County had initially planned to build a new, $65 million jail, but decided against the plan in favor of a potential shared-services agreement. The county is currently sending female inmates to Atlantic County and male inmates to Hudson County. Corrections officers, former inmates, public defenders and criminal-justice reform advocates all spoke at the meeting, which was held at the Cumberland County Improvement Authority in Millville but also livestreamed. While there was no agreement among the speakers on the best solution, all expressed frustration about how the situation has been handled by the county. Victor Bermudez, president of PBA Local 231, which represents Cumberland County corrections officers, said the commissioners failed to give corrections officers the resources they needed, leading to layoffs and making him feel as if he and his officers were at war. Disruptions to the operations of the jail, he added, cost jobs and did not create any gains in efficiency that would have been realized with a shared-services agreement with Atlantic County. Cumberland County commissioners to weigh alternatives for jail's looming closure MILLVILLE Cumberland County will begin reexamining plans to close its jail after Atlantic Not to say I told you so, but I told you so, Bermudez said. Were all here in limbo for some political scheme that fell through, that fell through on the backs of the taxpayers. Darren Govan, a corrections department employee, said he and his colleagues did not have the resources needed at the current jail and that sending inmates as far away as Hudson County, in North Jersey, was not a sustainable solution. While he said he did not believe the county needed the new, $65 million jail, he suggested it could refurbish the current one. Somebody is going to get hurt, Govan said. You guys got to do better, you guys got to come up with a plan. Jenna Harvey, a family and community-services worker in the county, criticized what she considered the jails substandard treatment of inmates. She said the county would not be able to address the concerns of a federal special master over inmate safety with renovations, but would have to gradually close the jail. She similarly rejected the idea of building a new jail, saying county leaders have proved themselves incapable of treating inmates with the compassion needed to rehabilitate them and reduce recidivism. Converting the jail into a holding facility, she said, would save the county $4 million to $8 million annually while preserving the jobs for corrections officers. Harveys criticisms were echoed by several people who had spent time there. Union president berates Cumberland County jail officials' continued closure plans VINELAND The leader of the Cumberland County corrections officers union is calling on coun Eddie Bartee, a Bridgeton resident who said he previously sued the county for the condition of the jail while he was held there, spoke in opposition to the construction of a new jail. While stressing that he had a positive relationship with some of the corrections officers, Bartee said building a new facility would only deepen the countys reliance on mass incarceration and over-policing. He said the money would be better spent investing in helping children and improving education. To tell me that you need ($65 million) for a new jail, and dont feel like you need nothing for new children, or the new generation, is wrong, Bartee said. Its time for us to start embracing people as humans and not as inmates. The Cumberland County jail is not a stranger to controversy, with federal and state authorities having recently scrutinized it for its COVID-19 protocols. In a separate legal issue, two female inmates each have filed lawsuits alleging a male corrections officer sexually abused them. The women, who filed separately, alleged they felt forced to perform sexual acts to secure better in-house jobs. Atlantic County jail won't expand to take Cumberland inmates NORTHFIELD There will be no expansion of Atlantic Countys jail to accommodate Cumberland The Atlantic County commissioners rejected a proposed $997,150 architectural addition to their jail to accommodate Cumberland inmates Feb. 15. The addition would have been part of an estimated $7.7 million expansion of the jail in Mays Landing, which would have seen it gain 256 more beds, additional counseling rooms and a larger intake room. Cumberland County would have covered the entire $7.7 million upfront cost as well as attendant staffing costs. The commissioners said they were concerned about safety, especially considering the proximity of the proposed expansion to the Atlantic County Institute of Technology. They similarly expressed alarm about Cumberland Countys purported gang problem. Other commissioners claimed bail reform meant there was now a higher concentration of people who had committed serious gun and drug crimes in the jails. Atlantic commissioners also said they should prioritize needed repairs to their jail before embarking on large expansion projects, and that taking in additional inmates from other counties would amount to commercializing the jail. The expansion had been supported by Atlantic County Executive Dennis Levinson, who believed that further sharing of services is necessary to reduce unsustainable tax burdens on residents. Atlantic and Cumberland counties currently have a direct-service contract, which dictated that the Mays Landing jail would begin housing 30 inmates beginning in November 2020 and would increase that total monthly until it reached a number between 200 and 250. There was not sufficient space at the Atlantic County jail for all those additional inmates, owing to an increase in its own jail population. Contact Chris Doyle cdoyle@pressofac.com Get local news delivered to your inbox! Subscribe to our Daily Headlines newsletter. Sign up! * I understand and agree that registration on or use of this site constitutes agreement to its user agreement and privacy policy. MAYS LANDING Democrats argued at a redistricting meeting Wednesday that Atlantic City and Pleasantville should no longer be in the same district for choosing Atlantic County commissioners. Democratic Chairman Michael Suleiman said splitting the two cities would create two competitive districts for minority representation, where only one now exists. It would also create two districts in which the Democratic Party has an advantage, his numbers showed. Currently, District 1 is overwhelmingly Democratic, while District 2 is largely Republican. Republican Chairman Keith Davis, by contrast, argued Atlantic City and Pleasantville must stay in the same district to keep a minority majority district in the county. If the two municipalities are split, Davis said, neither resulting district would meet the 50% minority threshold needed to have a minority majority district. Suleiman disagreed, saying District 1 would remain 61% minority. The two acknowledged early in the meeting they were using different sets of data, with Davis focusing on citizen voting age population and Suleiman on all voting age population. The county has five districts for which each elects one representative to the Atlantic County Board of Commissioners, and also elects four at-large members. Looking at election results, Suleiman said the current Democratic African American commissioner representing the 1st District, Ernest Coursey, has run unopposed two of the past three elections and won with almost 70% of the vote in 2019, showing the district is improperly packed with minority voters. He called that voter dilution, since minority voters are so concentrated their candidate wins with a greater number of votes than needed. We need to unpack it to allow a greater participation of the minority community (countywide), Suleiman said, particularly because the Hispanic population has grown countywide. The Latino population has grown so dramatically in Pleasantville it is now the dominant ethnic group there, Suleiman said. Yet there are no Latino commissioners. The Democratic map would group Atlantic City with the Downbeach communities of Ventnor, Margate and Longport; and Pleasantville with the Mainland communities of Northfield, Linwood and Somers Point as well as Absecon. That map has the support of several prominent Democrats including Coursey, Atlantic City Mayor Marty Small Sr., Pleasantville Mayor Judy Ward and Atlantic City Councilman Kaleem Shabazz, who signed a letter of support along with Suleiman and redistricting commission member Thelma Witherspoon. The Republican map would continue to group Atlantic City and Pleasantville in the 1st District and the Downbeach communities of Ventnor, Margate and Longport with the Mainland communities of Northfield, Linwood and Somers Point in the 2nd District. It also would add a section of Egg Harbor Township to the 2nd, since the 3rd has grown so much that it has become too large under state law. The two presented their maps of proposed boundaries and data to back them up Wednesday afternoon at a meeting of the Atlantic County Commissioner Redistricting Commission, held at the Atlantic County Criminal Court building. Davis said only Districts 2 and 3 need to be redrawn, as the county population has remained remarkably stable overall from the 2010 Census to the 2020 Census. New legislative district map may shore up GOP in South Jersey State Sen. Vince Polistina is happy with the new state legislative district map, which inclu Those two districts had population changes that require some adjustment to keep all districts of similar size (within 5% of each other). District 2 has lost population and so needs its territory enlarged. And District 3, currently covering Hamilton Township and part of Egg Harbor Township, has grown too big in population and so must give up some territory. Davis also said the Democratic map changes districts for far more voters compared to the Republican map. Our map impacts 3,700 voters, thats it, in those two districts, Davis said, to minimize impact and insure continuity in how elections are run. The Democratic map, Davis said, affects over 44,000 voters from last years election more than half the number of people who participated in the gubernatorial election of last year. Voting maps at all levels are redrawn every 10 years after the national Census, in response to new population and demographic data. A vote on which map to accept must come by March 7 under state law. The four-member commission earlier requested that state Supreme Court Chief Justice Stuart Rabner appoint a fifth tie-breaking member. Rabner appointed as the tiebreaker Georgia M. Curio, a former Superior Court judge and assignment judge for Cumberland, Gloucester and Salem counties. Atlantic County is one of just three counties in the state that have voting districts for county office. The others are Essex and Hudson counties. All others elect their county commissioners at large, according to Suleiman. For more information visit atlantic-county.org/redistricting. REPORTER: Michelle Brunetti Post 609-841-2895 mpost@pressofac.com Get local news delivered to your inbox! Subscribe to our Daily Headlines newsletter. Sign up! * I understand and agree that registration on or use of this site constitutes agreement to its user agreement and privacy policy. After a six-week delay, residents will have an opportunity to voice their opinions on a proposed trash transfer station. St. Marys Episcopal Church will host a town hall at 6 p.m. Thursday for residents of Pleasantville and neighboring municipalities to discuss plans for a transfer station for debris waste to be built just off West Washington Avenue. The town hall was once scheduled for mid-January and again for early February, but was twice postponed due to COVID-19 outbreaks fueled by the omicron variant. The Atlantic County Utilities Authority is scheduled to present its analysis of the project at the meeting Thursday. The ACUA has been the chief opponent of the proposed station. Over the past several months, the authority has organized a Stop the Dump campaign, posting signs near the proposed station and launching a website explaining its stance on the issue. ACUA officials have argued the transfer station would increase traffic in the neighborhood and expose residents to loud noises and odors. They also have maintained the proposed facility is not large enough to handle the amount of waste it is slotted to receive. James DiNatale, the developer for the project, has disputed the ACUAs characterization of the project. He has cited similarly sized facilities that handle as much waste at other locations from around the state as evidence the size of the development is sufficient to transfer the 400 tons of waste it is slated to receive. He also noted the facility is only to handle construction and demolition debris waste, not typical household trash, and so would not smell. Governing bodies at the county and city level have expressed support for the project. The Atlantic County Board of Commissioners passed a resolution endorsing the project in December by a 7-0 vote, with one recusal and one abstention. Pleasantville City Council voted 5-2 to pass a resolution endorsing the project in May, although one councilwoman who voted for the resolution announced she was opposed to the project several months later. Mayor Judy Ward has been one of the principal supporters of the project within city government. She said the transfer fees collected from the project would provide the city with much needed revenue it could leverage into important investment projects. The station is to handle 100,000 tons of debris per year, something that would necessitate 230 truck trips to the facility every day, six days per week. It would ship debris at the center via rail line to an Ohio landfill. The city will be paid a $4 per ton transfer fee, thus amounting to $400,000 in annual revenue. The proposal for the transfer station comes as the ACUAs Egg Harbor Township landfill is scheduled to close within the next seven years. DiNatale has argued the impending landfill closure makes a project like his necessary. ACUA President Rick Dovey has said the authority would be able to find an alternative location for the trash before the landfill closes. The ACUA projects it would lose about $9 million per year in revenue if the station is built. To recoup its losses, the ACUA said it would have to raise rates on municipalities by 62%, which in turn could force municipalities to increase taxes on residents. Contact Chris Doyle cdoyle@pressofac.com Get local news delivered to your inbox! Subscribe to our Daily Headlines newsletter. Sign up! * I understand and agree that registration on or use of this site constitutes agreement to its user agreement and privacy policy. Zachary Hocker was curious about the tall, fair-haired, pale-blue-eyed gentleman he noticed in an old family photo. So, in October 2017, he called his aunt, Martha Annette Hocker Bradley, a retired teacher in Willingboro, Burlington County. She was 82, widowed and battling cancer, but her voice was strong, her mind sharp and her memories clear. His Aunt Annette had many stories to tell about their family in Virginia, going back generations to the Jim Crow era and earlier, to the time of slavery. "She had a way of breathing life into these stories," Hocker, 38, said from San Jose, California, where he grew up and works as a private tutor. "Listening to her, I felt like I was there." During a yearlong series of telephone conversations that he recorded with his aunt's consent, Hocker and his aunt were inspired to write down key portions of the rich oral histories she had amassed in her lifetime. Including the story of his great-great uncle, Tom Lewis, the man in the photo. "Aunt Annette passed down to me, in intricate detail, the family stories she had been told as a child," Hocker said. "She kept their names alive. She kept their stories alive." Bradley completed 55 pages written on lined notebook paper in the precise and graceful penmanship of an earlier era and drew from memory a map of the Black community in Farmville, Virginia, home to many roots of their family tree. Material from what she called her journal, as well as from their conversations, are blended into the manuscript of a novel the two finished shortly before her death Nov. 19, 2018. "It was a beautiful collaboration," said Hocker. "Without Aunt Annette, these stories of our ancestors could have been forgotten, the way many African American stories have been forgotten." The first story Bradley told him about was that of his great-great uncle, whose blond hair, blue eyes and light complexion meant he could "pass" as white. But he identified as Black and is the title character in their manuscript. Lewis married a dark-skinned Black woman named Bessie and sat with his wife in the "colored" back seats of buses and trolleys in segregated Richmond, Virginia, upsetting white passengers and sometimes attracting the attention of the police. "I remember Annette saying that Tom would just tell the police, 'We paid our fare,'" Hocker said. "Despite the hatred he faced for identifying as an African American and marrying a Black woman, Uncle Tom never allowed society to determine who he chose to love." Bradley devoted much of her 55 pages to her grandmother (Tom's half-sister) Rebecca Early, a legendary midwife known throughout Virginia for having delivered more than 700 babies without losing a single one. Early was a woman who loved to grow flowers and who would wait patiently on her front porch in Richmond when her granddaughter was out on a date, Bradley wrote. "Rebecca was a brave, independent, hardworking (sort of person), but at the same time Rebecca was a giving person, lovable (most of the time) but don't make her angry, because she was going to tell God about it," wrote Bradley. Tracing back to slavery Hocker said Bradley also spoke about "my great-great-great grandmother, Amanda, a house slave who tried to escape the plantation each of the four times she was raped and impregnated by (the owner). His overseers finally threatened to sever her feet if she tried to escape again." Bradley traced the family's maternal line even farther back, to an enslaved 12-year-old girl in the late 1700s or early 1800s. She wrote: "Her name was Jermame. That was the name the white people gave to her. Like Aunt Jemima. She was from Africa. ... She was captured and brought over to America. She had several children that were taken or sold. I know she had a Mary, an Amanda and a Martha. And there was another one, because there were four girls. They may have had different fathers. Because they would just mate you or breed you ... like you were cattle." Bradley's only child, a son named Wayne who cared for her during her final years, died just eight months after she did. She had no grandchildren. But while she and Hocker had only met once, when he was a child, they bonded quickly, especially given that her brother Andrew, who is Hocker's dad, was on some of the calls. Hocker said his aunt spoke often about her 30 years as an elementary school teacher in Mount Holly, Burlington County. As a young married woman she taught for three years in Guam, where her husband, Gus, was serving in the U.S. Air Force. The couple also traveled to Japan. "I remember her telling me how over in Japan people were so nice, and treated them with dignity and respect, unlike in the segregated South," said Hocker. The stories attest to the ugly realities of the Jim Crow South: Tom was born as the result of the rape of Hocker's great-great grandmother, Ida, by a white man. Tom was ostracized by some in the family, but not by Rebecca, and they remained close into Tom's adulthood. By then a skilled mason, he returned her kindness by giving her daughter Alma and husband Andrew (Bradley's parents) a wedding gift of a lot for a new home in Richmond. That was where Bradley snapped the photo of her well-dressed Uncle Tom in 1953. 'Found a way to rebuild' "I believe Annette wanted me to know that while slavery was the beginning of our family's story in America, it was certainly not its end," said Hocker. "She spoke of how they found a way to rebuild." "Thank God for this young, brave, and strong African girl whose blood flows through the bodies of her great grandchild, Rebecca's children's children today!' Bradley wrote. "Many of her children's children are ... doctors, teachers, preachers, scientists, authors, actors, world travelers, managers, plus much more." Hocker, who studied anthropology at Yale, said he hopes to get the novel he and Bradley wrote published, "even though I have no connections" in the literary world. "Annette saw the seed of a writer that had been lying dormant within me," he said. "She watered that seed with her love, encouragement and faith in me, until it blossomed. "Aunt Annette spent the last year of her life entrusting me with these stories," said Hocker. "It's my obligation to keep on telling them." Traffic over Centennial Bridge will see some disruption March 12 for the St. Patrick Society Grand Parade XXXVI. In order to allow the parade to cross over from Rock Island into Davenport, the Iowa-bound lanes on the Centennial Bridge will be closed from 11 a.m. to approximately 1:30 p.m. March 12. Traffic will alternate on the Illinois-bound lanes on the bridge, escorted by police. Before the Grand Parade sets off Mass will be held at 10 a.m. at St. Marys Church, 2208 4th Ave., Rock Island. The Grand Parade will kick off at 11:30 a.m. at 4th Avenue and 23rd Street in Rock Island, moving through downtown before crossing the bridge onto West 3rd Street in Davenport. The parade will end at East 3rd and Perry streets. Celebrations will continue after the parade with the Post-Parade Bash, which will go from 1 to 4 p.m. at the RiverCenter, 136 E. Third St., Davenport. Membership to the St. Patrick Society is required for admission and can be purchased at the door. Love 0 Funny 0 Wow 0 Sad 0 Angry 0 Stay up-to-date on what's happening Receive the latest in local entertainment news in your inbox weekly! Sign up! * I understand and agree that registration on or use of this site constitutes agreement to its user agreement and privacy policy. From New York to Paris to Muscatine, bridges and buildings are displaying yellow and blue lights to show support of Ukraine. Why not the Interstate-74 bridge in the Quad-Cities? Bettendorf and Moline have received several requests to do the same on the I-74 bridge, Bettendorf officials said. But they ran into a snag. The lighting system can't display blue and yellow at the same time just yet. "The aesthetic lighting on the I-74 bridge is anticipated to be fully operational in late spring/early summer," according to a news release from Bettendorf. "Until then, there are limited capabilities for illuminating the bridge. The colors blue and yellow cannot be displayed simultaneously at this time." Bettendorf is working with the lighting vendor to find a solution, the release said. And as a temporary solution, the bridge lights were blue on Monday night and yellow Tuesday night. How the lights work The lighting system was designed by a team from New York City-based HLB Lighting Design and Chicago-based engineering firm Alfred Benesch & Co., which designed the bridge. While overhead lights provide safe entrances and exits for the twin spans, each will have more than 100 fixtures, mounted to the floor beams, to supply the aesthetic lighting for the arches. The light shines upward, rather than down. The floor-level fixtures contain LED chips, and the glow of the luminaries follow the suspension cables. The chips and their circuitry provide the illumination, rather than traditional filament and bulbs. "The best way to highlight the structures was to go under the ribs (arch segments) ... to help it look its best," Elizabeth Johnson, project manager/designer for HLB, said in an interview when the bridge opened. The three primary colors in use red, green and blue appear at varying intensities through dimming, which creates countless colors and combinations of color. Faith Baum, principal in charge at HLB Lighting Design, said in an interview last year that the system would supply an enormous number of color combinations, explaining that mixing light was different from mixing paint. "The difference is that light mixes to create more light," she said. "You can't make brown." The colors, through programming, can be static or dynamic. Changes must occur slowly, though, Baum said, so they don't distract motorists. Reporter Barb Ickes contributed to this story. Love 0 Funny 0 Wow 0 Sad 0 Angry 0 Iowa cities could take bar owners to court to have their liquored license pulled for safety concerns rather than having to rely on state regulators under a bill passed by the Iowa House. House lawmakers on Monday approved a bill that Davenport city officials say will give cities more control over addressing public safety nuisances stemming form establishments that serve alcohol. House File 2340 would allow city and county attorneys to sue alcohol establishments for creating a serious threat to public safety and seek a temporary injunction before trial, rather than relying on the Iowa Alcoholic Beverages Division. Licensed food establishments that sell alcohol, such as restaurants, would be exempt. Some Iowa lawmakers and Iowas restaurant and beverage association say the bill creates an unnecessary second system for complaints and isnt enforceable. Davenport tried to deny a liquor license to the now-closed Shenanigans Irish Pub at 303 W. 3rd St. because of its public safety history. The city was overruled by the Alcoholic Beverages Division, which is responsible for regulating and investigating complaints about alcohol establishments. Law enforcement responded to more than 2,000 calls for service to Shenanigans over a three-year period, including reports of gunfire and large fights. The bar closed in 2019 because the landlord ended its lease. The bill, which heads to the Iowa Senate, states a public safety nuisance exists if "it is established by clear and convincing evidence that an owner, manager, employee, contemporaneous patron or guest of the licensed premises unlawfully discharges a firearm or uses an offensive weapon, assaults another person with a dangerous weapon, or engages in a riot on at least three separate days within any 12-month period, on the premises, on any property contiguous to the premises, or within 500 feet of the premises." The bill previously addressed a radius of 1,000 feet of the establishment, but lawmakers winnowed it to 500 feet because of concerns from the restaurant and beverage industry. City officials said the changes still keep the integrity of the bill, which is to provide a path through the court system for local governments to address public safety concerns at alcohol establishments. Going through local courts, which typically handle nuisance complaints in all other capacities, will bring parity to the process and, hopefully, swifter resolution, Davenport city officials have said in support of the bill. Should a district court determine a threat to public safety exists, the court could temporarily close the business, revoke its alcohol license or require a change in business practice or operations. It could also require the owner post bond to keep the property open pending final resolution of the lawsuit. Jessica Dunker, president and CEO of the Iowa Restaurant Association, said the organization is still opposed to the bill as written over concerns that bar-owners or managers would be discouraged to call 911 for emergencies for fear of being flagged as part of the problem. She said the organization is hopeful the Iowa Senate will put a pause on the bill to allow stakeholders to propose a different solution for addressing issues with nuisance bars, and fix what's not working with the Alcoholic Beverage Association's complaint system. "I think it's best to fix the system that isn't working rather than create a second system as an end-run around," Dunker said. Sponsor Rep. Ross Paustian, R-Walcott called it "unconscionable" to allow a business with more than 2,000 public safety calls to stay open. The problem has become more pronounced in communities bordering Illinois, Rep. Cindy Winckler, D-Davenport, said. Illinois cities can suspend liquor licenses indefinitely if there is a public safety issue, she said. Rep. Rick Olson, D-Des Moines, expressed concerns about holding establishment owners responsible for activity that happens close to but not on the property, and called the bill "classic code clutter." Davenport Mayor Mike Matson praised the House's approval of the bill. "Im pleased that it passed the House, and look forward to it passing the Senate," Matson said. James Q. Lynch of the Cedar Rapids Gazette contributed reporting to this article Love 1 Funny 0 Wow 0 Sad 0 Angry 0 Get Government & Politics updates in your inbox! Stay up-to-date on the latest in local and national government and political topics with our newsletter. Sign up! * I understand and agree that registration on or use of this site constitutes agreement to its user agreement and privacy policy. Rock Island is partnering with other communities to address blight and abandoned properties in the Illinois Quad Cities. City council members on Monday approved an intergovernmental agreement with Moline and East Moline for the creation of a regional land bank called the Quad-Cities Land Bank Authority. The land bank will use its funds to acquire abandoned properties, clean them up and return them to the tax rolls once the homes are sold. As a result, new homeowners will bring life to neighborhoods, improving the city and region as a whole. "It's fair to say Rock Island has an abundance of the abandoned and blighted properties in the three cities, but no one is safe from that problem," said Miles Brainard, community and economic development director for Rock Island. "It can be very difficult to keep track of how many properties fall in into that category. The land bank will help us get a better handle on that problem. "The land bank is another tool in the tool box for Rock Island to address abandoned and blighted properties," he said. "It can pursue additional funding and add more staff time." Rock Island began discussions after the city of Moline completed a feasibility study funded by a grant from the Illinois Housing Development Authority (IHDA). The IHDA is advocating for the establishment of regional land banks throughout the state in an effort to clean up abandoned properties. One advantage of the arrangement is that the land bank will be able to pay off tax liens on abandoned properties, which can be costly and deter potential homeowners. The ability to provide a clear title will assist in being able to sell the homes. To establish the land bank, the three cities have agreed to contribute start up costs in amounts relative to population. Rock Islands portion for the first year is $36,570. Moline has already covered the total cost with the expectation Rock Island and East Moline will reimburse them at a later date. The Quad-Cities Land Bank Authority, as its own entity, will apply for funding from IHDA with startup costs provided by the three cities. Now that the land bank has been established, a board of directors will be created with representatives from each of the three cities. A land bank manager, likely a Moline city employee, will conduct the day-to-day business and report to the board. If the partnership is not working out for Rock Island, the city has the option to withdraw. Brainard said once the three communities have selected representatives for the board and a land bank manager has been hired, homes can be purchased and the process will begin. "This is a long-term approach; we are looking at five to 10 years from now that it will be of great benefit to residents of the community," he said. Love 2 Funny 0 Wow 0 Sad 0 Angry 0 Get Government & Politics updates in your inbox! Stay up-to-date on the latest in local and national government and political topics with our newsletter. Sign up! * I understand and agree that registration on or use of this site constitutes agreement to its user agreement and privacy policy. Iowa park rangers facing eviction by the Department of Natural Resources have filed a grievance claiming the state is unilaterally changing the terms of a collective bargaining agreement. The DNR decided in November it would require park rangers, park managers and other staff living in state-owned houses in Iowas state parks to move out by the end of November 2022, partly because the agency does not want to pay up to $1 million to repair housing. We have been trying to work with DNR to come to an agreement about the park ranger housing situation, but we were told Friday that the DNR is no longer interested in trying to work with us to resolve the situation, Sue Cave, executive director of the State Police Officers Council, said Tuesday. Evicting rangers from their homes in 23 state parks would be a huge disservice to Iowans, union President Jason Beardsley said. Its time for all of Iowas elected officials to prove that each of them mean it when they say that public safety is one of their highest priorities, especially when it involves a unique state asset Iowas state parks. The union called the eviction of rangers a potential violation of its contract with the state because living rent-free in state-owned housing falls under the category of supplemental pay and is a mandatory subject of collective bargaining. No collective bargaining discussions initiated by the DNR with the State Police Officers Council occurred, according to the union. Rangers have lived rent-free in state-owned housing in the parks since the 1960s. Their presence was seen as a way to provide better public safety and visitor assistance. It is ironic that the DNR has decided there is a business need to maintain state-owned housing at state fisheries while evicting park rangers and staff from state park houses to protect and assist people, Beardsley said. A DNR spokeswoman said it does not respond to union grievances. A state senator agreed Tuesday that the DNR evicting the rangers is not in the best interest of park visitors and the communities where they are located. The rationale for the eviction the cost of bringing the housing up to code doesnt hold water, Sen. Joe Bolkcom, D-Iowa City, said in remarks on the Senate floor. Somehow (the governor and DNR) think that visitors quality experience and park safety will be unchanged when park personnel are 30 minutes away from problems that arise at the parks, Bolkcom said. Park rangers keep people safe from severe weather, bad behavior, fighting, unruly visitors, medical emergencies and more. Bolkcom put the blame for the current condition of park ranger housing on the Republican legislative majoritys slumlord approach to managing these properties. Are you guys really that cheap that we cant afford to fix these properties, so everyday Iowans can have a good, safe, secure time when they visit our parks? he said. If the state cant afford to fix and maintain park ranger housing, Bolkcom asked, Why are taxpayers paying hundreds of thousands of dollars to house the governor and university presidents? Weve got money to house the big shots, but we dont have money to house our park rangers, he said. Maybe its time for every state employee to find their own housing. Love 0 Funny 0 Wow 0 Sad 0 Angry 0 SPRINGFIELD Illinois Department of Public Health Director Dr. Ngozi Ezike will resign on March 14 after three years leading the agency and two years navigating a deadly pandemic that has claimed the lives of more than 32,000 Illinoisans. Ezike, who was appointed IDPH director in 2019, became a widely recognized public figure in the state as the COVID-19 pandemic upended daily life across the globe. There is something particularly heroic about the service of an extraordinary individual who did not seek greatness, but found it anyway, Gov. JB Pritzker said, proclaiming March 1 Dr. Ngozi Ezike Day in Illinois. Beginning with daily updates in March 2020, Ezike appeared at more than 160 COVID-19-related news conferences alongside the governor, putting a public face on the medical side of the states executive branch-driven pandemic response. IDPH consists of a team of unsung heroes, that by nature and definition works behind the scenes, who's committed to public health. And that commitment gave me strength every day, she said. Pritzker said the department will be led in the interim by Dr. Amaal Tokars, an IDPH top deputy who has at times appeared next to the governor at his news conferences as well. Ezike thanked her family for tolerating the absences over the past two years. You have stood by and you have supported me and you've not complained and you have made dinners and you've done all the pickups and the drop-offs, Ezike said. But now it's time for me to make you my priority. And give back a portion of the attention and the encouragement and the support that you lavished on me. An emotional Ezike thanked the governor and the people of Illinois for giving her strength in a difficult time. I acknowledge and mourn with the families of all the lives lost not just to COVID, but to gun violence, to suicide, to drug overdose, to racism, to cancer, and all the other diseases and ills that public health officials and all of our partners work tirelessly to curb, she said. Ezike also said that while the statewide indoor mask mandate was lifted as of Monday, its important to be respectful of Illinoisans who still choose to wear face coverings for medical or other reasons. We have embarked on a new chapter in our COVID journey, and I just want to highlight that as the mask requirement has been lifted it does not mean that it's not recommended, she said. And as we think about our individual situationsIt may absolutely be the case that you are an individual either because of your own self-assessment or because of those that you live with, that you will continue to wear a mask. Ezike said declining COVID-19 transmission rates and hospitalizations, as well as increasing vaccination rates, are leading to a lull in the pandemic that created a window for her to step down. I'm hoping that with all the vaccinations and the therapeutics that are available that we will have, you know, a quiet spring. Spring and summer have typically been stable times. So this is my chance, she said. She said IDPH will continue to monitor for future surges and adapt accordingly. Love 0 Funny 0 Wow 0 Sad 0 Angry 0 With the Family Families can head to the Wapsi River Environmental Education Center in Dixon, Iowa, this weekend to learn more about mushrooms and maple syrup. On Saturday the educational center will offer two programs. The first beginning at 10 a.m. is "Native Mushroom ID and Cultivation." Naturalist Becky, from the Wapsi River Center, and guest speaker, Nick Buonauro, co-owner and laboratory manager of Dark Shadow Mushrooms will talk about native Iowa mushrooms, how to identify and cultivate them. Next up at 1 p.m. is the maple syruping program. Naturalist Mike will present a lesson on maple syruping with the history of syruping and tree identification. Participants will learn how to gather sap. Registration for both programs is required. To register, call 563-328-3286. Dine and Drink Everyone's favorite time of the year is here, Girl Scout cookie season, and Iron and Grain Coffee House in Davenport is celebrating with a cookie and coffee pairing event. Visit the coffee house from 8:30 a.m. to 1 p.m. Saturday, where an $8 flight will feature four coffees as well as thin mints, samoas, shortbreads and tagalongs. For more information, visit www.irongraincoffee.com. In Real Time Soon spring will be in the air and the Spring Antique Spectacular Vintage Market will be back at the QCCA Expo Center, 2621 4th Ave., Rock Island. This market will feature a line up of 70 vendors with a wide variety of fine antiques and vintage collectibles for sale including furniture, art, stoneware, books, prints, primitives, jewelry, silver, antique glassware, coins, quilts, dolls, toys, vintage textiles, period pieces and more. Shop the market 4-8 p.m. Friday, 10 a.m. to 6 p.m. Saturday and 10 a.m. to 4 p.m. Sunday. Admission costs $8 with free parking. For more information, www.antiquespectacular.com. On A Date Bereskin Gallery and Art Academy opened a new exhibit, "Dialogues Within," by Philip Laber on March 1. The exhibit will run through April 27. A public reception with the artist will be held Friday, March 4 from 5:30-7:30 p.m. at the gallery, 2967 State St., Bettendorf. Laber, of Maryville, Missouri, was the chair of the art department of Northwest Missouri State University. An experimental printmaker, painter and photographer, who retired in the summer of 2016 to become a full-time artist, he has displayed his art all over the country and abroad. This exhibit will showcase 17 of his latest acrylic paintings of varying sizes. For more information about the gallery, visit www.bereskinartgallery.com. Just For Fun Hiplet, a ballet that fuses classical pointe technique with African, Latin, hip-hop and urban dance styles rooted in communities of color, will take the stage in Davenport on Saturday as part of the Quad-City Arts Visiting Artist series. The ballet was designed to make ballet accessible to all by mixing it with popular songs familiar to audiences who don't normally attend ballet performances. The Hiplet ballerinas are a performance group based out of the Chicago Multi-Cultural Dance Center. The performance will take place at 7:30 p.m. in Galvin Fine Arts Center on the campus of St. Ambrose University. $20 adults, $15 faculty and senior citizens, $10 for children. To purchase tickets, visit Website: www.showtix4u.com/event-details/60268. Love 0 Funny 0 Wow 0 Sad 0 Angry 0 Bettendorf Police have identified the two people killed in a car crash in Bettendorf early Saturday. They were identified as Brooke Neff, 37, from Bettendorf, and Archie Britcher, 28, from Davenport. Police said the investigation remains open and no further information will be released at this time. The rollover crash occurred about four hours before the wreckage was discovered, police said Monday. The vehicle had been occupied by two people and came to rest in a grove of trees on the east side of Interstate 74, just before the Spruce Hills Drive exit. It would not have been visible in the dark, Bettendorf Police Chief Keith Kimball said. No one reported the crash. Police believe it occurred around 2:30 a.m., Kimball said, but it was not discovered until about 6:30 a.m. An Iowa State trooper on routine patrol spotted the vehicle, a 2017 Audi A3, right around daybreak. The driver and passenger had been ejected from the car, which was destroyed. "It was really in bad shape," the chief said. "It was rolled, and they were ejected. If we got a call, it wouldn't have mattered. They were fatal injuries." Over the weekend, police canvassed the townhouses along Hawthorne Drive, which is just east of the crash site, the chief said. Investigators were questioning residents, and some reported hearing something early Saturday, but no one had information about the crash. At daylight, passing motorists saw first responders recovering the victims and removing the vehicle from the trees. Kimball said authorities used a drone to take aerial photographs. Even in the photos that were taken during daylight, he said, it was difficult to see the car in the wooded area along the fence line that separates the interstate from the residential area. "It was upside-down, tucked into the trees and a darker car," the chief said. "The trooper just happened to see it." Love 0 Funny 0 Wow 0 Sad 0 Angry 0 Sign up for our Crime & Courts newsletter Get the latest in local public safety news with this weekly email. Sign up! * I understand and agree that registration on or use of this site constitutes agreement to its user agreement and privacy policy. The iconic Black Hawk Native American statue long associated as a symbol of Rock Island might not be moving to the parking lot of a bank in Milan after all. Following push back from the public, Rock Island Alderman Dylan Parker, Ward 5, asked council members on Monday to revisit their decision to donate the statue to Blackhawk Bank & Trust from the vacant Watchtower Plaza site, where it served as a sign holder on 11th Street since the 1960s. Council members approved a resolution during the Feb. 14 meeting declaring the statue as surplus property and donated it to the bank, which plans to place the statue next to drive-thru teller lanes at its Milan location, 301 W. 4th St. "I think it's only right to give (residents) the right to voice their opinion," 1st Ward Alderman Moses Robinson said. Alderman Bill Healy, Ward 7, said he was contacted by a few of his constituents regarding removal of the statue. He encouraged transparency by allowing members of the public to speak about it at an upcoming meeting. Mayor Mike Thoms said he also was contacted by a number of residents. "Some were excited about (the donation), some were disappointed by it and there was a group that thought it should be destroyed that it is against Native Americans that it is the wrong representation," Thoms said. "Still, we should give them an opportunity to come here and voice that," Robinson said. "I don't think there was enough time, enough notice to do that." Robinson said approving the statue donation on a one-vote resolution is "an echo" of the recent incident with a controversial Black History Trail Grant the city won through the National Park Service in which Black residents were not consulted or invited to participate in the process. Residents only learned of the grant's existence when the city was close to hiring contractors to work on the project. The $33,500 grant was subsequently returned to the NPS by the city following a public outcry. "We have to do a better job with communicating and finding out if there are parties interested in these things," Robinson said. Thoms said seeking public input on every single agenda item would bog down meetings. "On large issues, like selling the water and sewer, you get public opinion," Thoms said. "We were elected to make these decisions for the constituents, not for them to have input on every item that we make a decision on." Thoms reminded council members that the statue is not registered as a historic landmark and was originally designed as a sign holder, not a statue. City Attorney Dave Morrison said he would need to find out if there could be legal issues with Black Hawk Bank & Trust since council members already voted to donate the statue and if the bank had already made arrangements to move it. "Ultimately, we are not going to make everyone happy on this decision," Thoms said. Resident Ray Lind appealed to council members before the meeting and asked them to reconsider their decision. He said Wednesday he was shocked with how quickly the city decided to donate it. "I have a lot of issues with it; it was like back-room politics," Lind said. "Did the bank go to the city and ask for it? Or did the city approach them? We have no idea how it happened. How could you not know that (statue) has value? "You can imagine the history. Going back as a kid, I remember when it was lit up and it was really cool looking," Lind said. "It means something to me; it's an iconic landmark. I couldn't believe that they just pushed it through. We thought (the city) would just leave it there. None of us had any idea they would do something with it, let alone give it away to Milan. "The main problem I have is how it happened. It was shocking to see it on the city council agenda; we never got a chance to do anything." Lind said the aldermen don't seem to understand how much the statue means to longtime Rock Island residents. The statue and the former Watchtower Plaza are in the 2nd Ward, represented by Alderman Randy Hurt. "While I understand the concern of both sides, there is no guarantee that the sign would remain there if the property was purchased for development," Hurt said Wednesday. "If we leave it as it is, someone would buy the property and we would have to figure out what to do with it at that time. There would be associated costs of moving it and maintaining it if it remains city property. "By donating it, we can ensure that statue would be maintained and not end up in the scrap heap," he said. "I'm surprised the sign hasn't been targeted for removal considering the nationwide movement to remove Native American symbols." Love 0 Funny 3 Wow 1 Sad 2 Angry 1 Get Government & Politics updates in your inbox! Stay up-to-date on the latest in local and national government and political topics with our newsletter. Sign up! * I understand and agree that registration on or use of this site constitutes agreement to its user agreement and privacy policy. Ross Paustian, a state Republican representative from Walcott, announced Wednesday he's running as a Republican for Scott County Supervisor this election cycle. With the decennial redrawing of legislative district lines, Paustian was drawn into the same district as Republican Bobby Kaufmann, from Wilton. Paustian announced in November he would retire from the legislature at the end of his term in December 2022. "As a life-long citizen of Scott County, I want to bring my experience as a farmer, small-businessman and state legislator to the County Board of Supervisors," Paustian said in an emailed press release. Two sitting supervisors have announced plans to run for other office. Ken Croken plans to run for Iowa House District 97, a newly drawn district in Scott County that lacks an incumbent. And Tony Knobbe announced plans to run for treasurer. Davenport attorney Jazmin Newton plans to run again for a supervisor seat. She lost by fewer than 70 votes to chairman Ken Beck in the 2020 election. Paustian and his wife, Carol, live in Walcott. Paustian is a family farmer with a livestock and row crop operation in rural Scott County. He is also past president of the Scott County Farm Bureau and Scott County Pork Producers. The media release highlighted his experience in the Iowa Legislature and said his priorities there included tax cuts, reducing bureaucracy and supporting law enforcement. "While I'm stepping away from my role as a state representative, I know I have more to give back to the people of Scott County. I'm excited about this next opportunity to continue my service. I'm confident that I can bring my experience of delivering results to the Scott County board and keep us moving in the right direction," Paustian said, according to the prepared statement. Love 0 Funny 0 Wow 1 Sad 0 Angry 2 Get Government & Politics updates in your inbox! Stay up-to-date on the latest in local and national government and political topics with our newsletter. Sign up! * I understand and agree that registration on or use of this site constitutes agreement to its user agreement and privacy policy. An afternoon fire Tuesday damaged three Rock Island homes, at least two of them heavily, and injured at least one person. Rock Island firefighters were called about 1 p.m. for a structure fire in the 800 block of 22nd Street, Rock Island Fire Chief Jeff Yerkey said. "When crews arrived they found heavy fire coming from 845 (22nd St.)," which began to spread to 843 22nd St., Yerkey said. Smoke from the fire could be seen from Davenport. "It's like a blast furnace," a responding firefighter could be heard saying over the radio at one point. The fire remains under investigation. "Obviously this is going to be a long, drawn-out process," Yerkey said Tuesday afternoon. "Theyre going to have to find hot spots, put them out, overhaul and make sure both structures are fully out." Rock Island Fire Marshal Greg Marty said the American Red Cross would assist families displaced by the fires. Moline, East Moline and Rock Island Arsenal fire departments assisted Rock Island in battling the fire, Yerkey said. The Moline Second Alarmers and Advanced Medical Transport Ambulance also aided Rock Island firefighters at the scene. All three houses sit close to one another at the northeast corner of the intersection of 22nd Street and 9th Avenue. Two of the houses were built at the turn of the last century in Rock Islands nationally recognized historic district, Broadway. They are nearly identical in size at 1,800 square feet. The house at 843 22nd St. was built in 1894 and the neighboring home a year later, according to the Rock Island County Assessors office. James Dean, 73, lives in the home at 843 22nd St. with his wife, 70, their daughter, 50, and granddaughter, 24. Dean said he and his wife were the only ones home when the fire broke out on the back porch. "I was taking my afternoon nap when I woke up," Dean said. "The cat freaked out and was running all over the place. We went into the kitchen and flames were coming in the back door from the closed-in porch. ... I think I lost my cat and the dog. That's horrible. I was trying to get back in, but I couldn't see." Dean said his wife burned the bottom of her feet and was taken to a local hospital. Tracy Woods, 57, stood across the street and watched as her house and her neighbor's house burned. Woods said she lived at 845 22nd St. with her son. "I raised my boys by myself in that house," Woods said. She said she and her son were both home, along with several pets. She said she heard a crack, looked out the window and saw fire on the back of 843 22nd St., saw it was spreading and called 911. Woods and her son were able to exit the house with four of six pets. Two cats were missing, she said, adding it wasn't clear if they were able to escape. Once the stability of both structures could be assessed, a search for the missing animals would take place, according to the fire marshal. Woods' son, Graham, 24, sat on the steps of a neighbor's porch across the street and watched smoke pour from his childhood home. "The (neighbor's) back porch was engulfed in flames," Graham said. "My mom was screaming. I tried to get outside to use a hose to put the neighbor's house out, but I couldn't get out (back) because the flames had already engulfed their back porch and they were touching our house. So I grabbed the leashes, put them on the dogs and gave them to my mom outside. I went back inside for the cats." "It's going to be like starting all over," Graham said. 'My mom and dad bought this house when I was 6 months old. My whole entire life has been in this house. Our whole life is in this house." Randall Smith, 836 23rd St., lives directly behind the two homes and was surprised to see the Dean's dog in his backyard. Smith said he called 911 when he noticed flames coming from the Dean's back door at 843 22nd St. a few minutes later. "I saw Tracy (Woods) come out and call for help," he said. "I dialed 911 and reported the address. By the time I made the call, this fire blew up very quickly and you saw it licking out the windows, and it came very quickly up to the second story and out of the attic. Pretty suddenly, when it was lapping out, it got air and it hit the siding of the blue house, which is Tracy's house." Marty, the Rock Island fire marshal, stressed the importance of having working smoke detectors in the home. "This is a reminder of how fast fire can move and how little time you have to get out," he said. "We had people that were home, alert and awake, and we still have an injury from this fire." Barb Ickes contributed to this reporting Love 0 Funny 0 Wow 0 Sad 4 Angry 1 Get local news delivered to your inbox! Subscribe to our Daily Headlines newsletter. Sign up! * I understand and agree that registration on or use of this site constitutes agreement to its user agreement and privacy policy. Anthony Watt Follow Anthony Watt 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. Save Manage followed notifications Close Followed notifications Please log in to use this feature Log In Don't have an account? Sign Up Today A cheerful contingent of kindergartners queued up outside Patton Elementary School in Arlington Heights Monday morning, blissfully unaware that Feb. 28 marked a dramatic milestone in their nearly two-year trek through the COVID-19 pandemic. For students in kindergarten through first grade, who have never experienced a typical, prepandemic school year, COVID-19 masks have become as ubiquitous as crayons, glue and scissors, and masked or unmasked, the youngsters greeted their arriving classmates with spirited squeals. It does feel like were turning a corner, but for our students, masks have been a nonissue, Patton Principal Eric Larson said as the kindergartners headed to their classroom on the first day of the halting of Gov. J.B. Pritzkers school mask mandate. The kids have done a really good job treating each other with mutual respect, kindness and empathy, and their teachers have done a great job helping them understand that people make different choices about masking for different reasons, Larson said. Despite months of fervent parent protests, a flurry of lawsuits, and increasingly polarized communities where grievances have erupted between even the closest of neighbors, the Illinois school mask mandate ended Monday without fanfare. Coinciding with the governors lifting of the mask mandate for the general public, and prompted by the latest guidance from the Centers for Disease Control and Prevention, federal rules also were relaxed for student transportation, with children no longer required to wear face masks while aboard a school bus. While universal masking will still be enforced at Chicago Public Schools as part of a COVID-19 safety agreement with the Chicago Teachers Union, the vast majority of the roughly 850 Illinois school districts had shifted to mask-optional policies weeks before the Friday release of the CDC recommendations. At Barrington 220 School District, where frustrated parents have packed school board meetings in recent months, demanding an end to the mask mandate, Superintendent Robert Hunt said in a letter to parents that even with the new CDC guidance, anyone who wishes to continue wearing a mask is welcome to do so. As I have stated in the past, this is an individual choice and we must respect one anothers decisions, Hunt said. The pandemic is constantly evolving and guidance may change in the future. It is possible that we will have to add mitigations if there are significant increases in transmission rates in our schools. However, these latest changes indicate a positive step forward in this process, Hunt said. At the Washington-based National Education Association, union officials said although they are encouraged by the new guidance, local governments must bring educators to the table with our in-school experience when determining how to keep school communities safe including those with disabilities who are more vulnerable to the exposure and effects of COVID-19. School districts should act cautiously in response to todays announcement, with the health and safety of students, educators and their families always in mind, NEA President Becky Pringle said in a statement. Attorney Tom DeVore, who represents hundreds of Illinois parents who filed a lawsuit against the governor and the Illinois Department of Public Health, arguing that the school mask mandate was authorized illegally, said the governor didnt lift anything, because there was nothing for him to lift. State lawmakers failed to renew IDPH rules on masking in mid-February, prompting an appellate court to dismiss the governors appeal over a Springfield judges Feb. 4 restraining order as moot. In an order late Friday, the Illinois Supreme Court refused to take the case, and found that since the appeal had been dismissed as moot, the restraining order should also be tossed. DeVore said with the vast majority of school districts statewide were already mask-optional, even before the new CDC guidance, CPS remains the sole district requiring universal masking. DeVore said he plans to ask a judge for an order halting masking at city schools later this week. Officials at Northbrook School District 28 said the district will continue its existing mitigation strategies, including the exclusion of positive COVID-19 cases and individuals with symptoms, SHIELD saliva testing, increased fresh air intake and hand sanitizing. In addition, remote instruction will continue to be available for students excluded from school for COVID-related reasons, District 28 Superintendent Larry Hewitt said in a letter to parents. Anyone who wishes to continue or discontinue wearing a mask in school is free to do so, and we respect and support each familys decision to act in the best interest of their children, Hewitt said. In Arlington Heights, engineer and mother of two Tina Fries waved goodbye to her kindergartner Monday morning, saying that while she appreciates the value of the CDCs recent change of guidance, her children will remain masked in the classroom, at least for now. If I continue to see the trajectory of the data moving in the right direction during the next two weeks, Ill start to feel a little better, Fries said. Arlington Heights District 25 Superintendent Lori Bein expressed cautious optimism at last weeks school board meeting, pointing to virus data moving steadily in a positive direction in recent weeks. The pandemic came in like a lion, and hopefully is going out like a lamb, Bein said. Were definitely in a much calmer place than we have been for the past two years. Love 0 Funny 0 Wow 0 Sad 0 Angry 0 A day after Gov. J.B. Pritzker lifted the mask mandate at Illinois schools, a downstate attorney asked an Illinois judge to halt the COVID-19 masking requirement at Chicago Public Schools one of only a handful of districts in the state still enforcing the practice. Tom DeVore, who recently launched a bid for the states Republican nomination for attorney general, filed a motion Tuesday with Sangamon County Circuit Judge Raylene Grischow requesting a temporary restraining order, arguing the children of Chicago parents who filed a lawsuit against the governor and the Illinois Department of Public Health are suffering continuing harm. Each is being subjected to wearing a mask as a type of quarantine without being provided their rights of due process, DeVore said in the motion. While new federal COVID-19 guidance prompted Pritzker to halt the school mask mandate, CPS officials said universal masking still will be enforced as part of a COVID-19 safety agreement with the Chicago Teachers Union. DeVores latest effort to halt the CPS mask mandate also arrives after the Illinois Supreme Court last week declined to hear the case, vacating a prior temporary restraining order and sending the lawsuit challenging the mandate back to Grischow. On Tuesday, DeVore said the high court vacated the prior order halting the mask mandate because it wasnt needed anymore, after a bipartisan panel of lawmakers last month refused to renew the IDPH guidance, and an appellate court rendered the issue moot. While some of the CPS students whose parents filed the lawsuit were allowed in their classrooms without a mask last month, DeVore said his clients alerted him yesterday that has changed, and CPS has now forced their children to wear masks. CPS is still continuing to push the envelope on masks as long they can, said DeVore, who will take his case before Grischow at a March 10 hearing. CPS and CTU officials were not immediately available for comment Tuesday. But earlier this week, CPS CEO Pedro Martinez reminded families in a letter that universal masking is still required in all of its schools and offices for now. CPS is working with our labor and public health partners on how to preserve a safe, healthy learning environment for all as we transition into this new phase of the pandemic, Martinez said. Officials with the Illinois Federation of Teachers, one of the states largest teachers unions, which includes the CTU, said in a Tuesday statement that educators are grateful for Governor Pritzkers leadership throughout the pandemic ensuring that science, not politics, has informed guidance. It has been a long two years, but there is finally light at the end of the COVID tunnel, IFT President Dan Montgomery said, adding no one should be pressured into unmasking. These last two years have taught us that we must protect each other and that we all have a duty to protect our most vulnerable populations. By far the largest school district in Illinois, CPS enrolls nearly 340,000 students at 626 schools, with roughly 80% of students from low-income families, according to the Illinois Report Card for the 2020-2021 school year. Love 0 Funny 0 Wow 0 Sad 0 Angry 0 Illinois top public health official, Dr. Ngozi Ezike, will leave Gov. J.B. Pritzkers administration days after the second anniversary of the coronavirus being declared a pandemic, a major departure as the administration attempts to move on from COVID-19 restrictions. Ezike joined the administration as director of the Illinois Department of Public Health early in 2019 and has stood by Pritzkers side throughout the pandemic as the first-term Democrat made the case for his actions to combat COVID-19. Her last day will be March 14. I ran for office; she did not. But throughout the crisis she has stood by me every step of the way, Pritzker said Tuesday during a news conference at Rush University Medical Center to mark the end of his statewide mask mandate. Ezike became a public face of Pritzkers coronavirus response as she joined him at daily briefings in the early days of the pandemic, drawing praise from those who supported the governors moves and scorn from those who believed he was overstepping his authority. Before being named public health director in 2019, Ezike was medical director at the Cook County Juvenile Temporary Detention Center. Ezike, a board-certified internist and pediatrician, earned her medical degree at the University of California at San Diego. During the pandemic, Pritzker came to rely on Ezike not just for her medical guidance but also for her ability to communicate with Spanish-speaking residents during COVID-19 briefings. Ezike wiped away tears as Pritzker designated March 1 Dr. Ngozi Ezike Day. She received a standing ovation from Rush workers attending the news conference. I am so blessed to have been able to bring some measure of comfort to Illinoisans, to quiet some of the chaos and to infuse some calm, Ezike said. Im proud to be an example that empathy and strength can exist in the same body and in the same breath. Ezikes assistant director, Amaal Tokars, will take over as interim director. Tokars, who is not a medical doctor, has a Ph.D. in leadership and policy from Northern Illinois University and previously worked for the Kendall County Health Department and as president of the Northern Illinois Public Health Consortium. Love 0 Funny 0 Wow 0 Sad 0 Angry 0 Iowas Republican governor hits Democratic President Joe Biden on foreign policy, the economy and crime By Erin Murphy, Gazette Des Moines Bureau DES MOINES Americans feel like they are the enemy, Iowa Gov. Kim Reynolds told a national audience Tuesday evening as she gave the Republican Partys response to Democratic President Joe Bidens State of the Union address. Wearing dual American and Ukrainian flag lapel pins, and with the Iowa Capitol in the background, Reynolds spoke for roughly 15 minutes shortly after Bidens address. Reynolds blamed Biden for inflation, crime and Russias military invasion of Ukraine. And she leaned heavily into pro-law enforcement, tough-on-crime rhetoric. She claimed that under Biden, violent crime is soaring and criminals are not facing sufficient punishment. And she criticized the federal justice department for monitoring violent threats made at school board meetings but not pursuing charges against looters and shoplifters, presumably referring to the social justice protests in 2020 that at times turned destructive. It seems like everything is backwards, Reynolds said, according to her prepared remarks. The American people are left to feel like theyre the enemy. U.S. inflation is at a 40-year high of 7.5 percent, although many other countries are experiencing similarly high inflation rates also. And violent crime rates are increasing in the United State, although the trend started before Biden took office a little more than a year ago. Reynolds said Bidens actions helped pave the way for Russian President Vladimir Putins decision to invade Ukraine, specifically citing the Biden administrations waving of sanctions on an oil pipeline in Russia and, according to Reynolds, focusing on political correctness rather than military readiness. Biden devoted roughly the first third of his address to the Russian invasion, declaring that the United States stands with the Ukrainian people. Reynolds addressed racism, saying, (Americans) are tired of people pretending the way to end racism is by categorizing everybody by their race. And she criticized Democrats who have spoken out in favor of mask-wearing as a COVID-19 pandemic mitigation strategy and then have been photographed in public places not wearing a face mask themselves. Frankly, (Americans) are tired of the theater, where politicians do one thing when the cameras are rolling and another when they believe you cant see them, Reynolds said. Where governors and mayors enforce mandates but dont follow them. Where elected leaders tell their citizens to stay home while they sneak off to Florida for sun and fun; where they demand that your child wear a mask, but they go out maskless. Reynolds, who faces reelection this fall, said Republican governors have led through the pandemic by empowering citizens to make their own decisions, and not necessarily through government action. Republican governors faced the same COVID-19 virus head on. But we honored your freedoms and saw right away that lockdowns and school closures came with their own significant costs; that mandates werent the answer, Reynolds said. And we actually listened to the science, especially with kids in masks and kids in schools. The federal Centers for Disease Control and Prevention consistently throughout the pandemic recommended face masks for all students. Reynolds highlighted her decision to reopen schools and businesses sooner than most other states, and her joining other Republican-led states that sent state law enforcement officers to the U.S.-Mexico border to assist with federal immigration enforcement. She also highlighted the $1.9 billion in state income tax cuts that she signed into law earlier Tuesday. Earlier in her remarks, she accused federal Democrats of proposing tax breaks for millionaires and billionaires in Democrat-led states. A frequent criticism of the tax cuts that Reynolds signed into law Tuesday is that it disproportionately benefits the wealthiest individuals and companies. Iowa Democrats spoke earlier Tuesday about their opposition to many of the policies that Reynolds championed. Jennifer Konfrst, the Democrats leader in the Iowa House, said Reynolds was chosen for Tuesday nights address because she has enacted policies that follow the wishes of national leaders in the Republican Party. Its not because shes done amazing things for the state of Iowa. Its because shes done amazing things for the Republican Party. And thats who shes answering to, and thats who she leads for, Konfrst said. Reynolds is the second Iowa Republican in recent years to be chosen for the annual response by the party that is out of power in the White House. U.S. Sen. Joni Ernst delivered the response to President Barack Obamas address in 2015. Love 0 Funny 0 Wow 0 Sad 0 Angry 0 Edward Guerra Kodatt, who was appointed Sunday to replace Former Speaker Michael Madigan, resigned abruptly Wednesday after Madigan and Chicago Ald. Marty Quinn issued a statement Tuesday night urging Kodatt to step down in light of unspecified alleged questionable conduct. The Office of Inspector General found strong evidence of race-based disparities in an analysis of Chicago Police Department stops and use-of-force incidents. The inspector generals office announced in a news release Tuesday that it found these disparities after looking at incidents from Oct. 17, 2017, through Feb. 8, 2020. The office found that Black people were consistently at a disadvantage and white people were consistently at an advantage when faced with such policing scenarios. The results were mixed for Hispanic people and the numbers of other racial and ethnic groups were too small to evaluate, according to the inspector generals office. The office looked over the police departments Tactical Response Report data, which is a compilation of the forms officers have to fill out when an officer uses force. The data showed that Black people were overwhelmingly disproportionately stopped by CPD despite the demographic composition and crime level in the district where the stop occurred, according to the release. Among those who were stopped, Black people were also more likely to be subjected to force. Black people were overrepresented in investigatory stops that lead to uses of force relative to their population in 17 out of 22 police districts, the release said. Black motorists vehicles were 3.3 times more likely to be searched than white motorists, the inspector generals office found. During investigatory stops, Black people were also 1.5 times more likely to be searched than non-Black people and 1.5 times more likely to be pat-down. Chicago police officers were also more likely to use higher-level force options against Black people, the release said. When it came to deadly force, Hispanic people had higher odds than non-Hispanic people of facing a higher-level force option, according to the release. While this report is primarily driven by quantitative analysis, OIG recognizes that quantitative data analysis cannot capture the complexity or situational uniqueness of individual use-of-force incidents, the release said. OIGs report does not draw conclusions on whether the individual stops or uses-of-force under analysis were justified by law or consistent with CPD policy. OIGs report also does not make a finding that the observed disparities are attributable to racial or ethnic bias by CPD members. The Chicago Police Department did not immediately comment on the report. The office did not make recommendations to the police department but invited the department to respond, according to the release. The department gave a description of officers use-of-force-related trainings and trainings planned for the future. It also mentioned the departments creation of the Force Review Division that reviews individual reports of force and makes recommendations for training opportunities, refers incidents for accountability review if necessary and reports out. Since [OIGs period of analysis], the Department has made great strides in Use of force and Procedural Justice training and has revised numerous policies including, but not limited to, the entire Use of force suite of orders. In fact, the Department has achieved preliminary compliance on the use of force paragraphs in the Consent Decree, the police department told the inspector generals office. Love 0 Funny 0 Wow 0 Sad 0 Angry 0 The Panhandle Veterinary Clinic will see someone new behind the counter, as long-time veterinarian Dr. John Doc Gamby, DVM, is hanging up his hat in March. Gamby said his interest in veterinary medicine came from his father, John W. Gamby. I rode with him from the time I was six years old, so I was pretty well acquainted with it. His father, he added, worked with mostly large animals in central Missouri. In those days, every little farm in that area had a few cows, quite a few dairy cows. Every farm had pigs. They were all fenced with hog-tied fences, so the pigs would be out there picking up the corn that fell out of the combine. And the lady of the house also had a flock of chickens. The family moved to Missouri from Kansas in 1950 when his father graduated from veterinary school. Gamby said he certainly had other interests in veterinary medicine, as hed helped his grandfather farm since he could reach the pedals on the H Farmall tractor, but after he graduated high school his principal took him and other students down to the University of Missouri at Columbia to make future plans. I tell people Pre-Vet was the only thing I could spell, Gamby said with a laugh, and I never looked back. I was undecided when I left home that morning. His schooling included three years of Pre-Vet, and another four of vet school. He graduated in 1969. But while in college, Gamby also met the love of his life and the woman he knew he was going to marry just two days in. In English I, a little blond girl sitting up in the front row caught my eye. The longer it went, the more she caught my eye. I didnt have many notes. I think the only not I put in my notebook was her name Glenda Crockett. She is a direct descendant of Davy Crockett. The two were married on Sept. 3 of 1967. She didnt want to get married until she had her degree in Library Science. Missouri didnt have this program, so Glenda went to the University of Illinois while Doc remained in Missouri. I made many a trip over there, he said, and they married the fall of 1967 after she graduated. The two had three children Diane, Sarah Jean and Jack before Glenda passed in September 0f 2019. Gamby noted his college days were during the military draft, and an S2 classification provided him four years of immunity since he was at school. But after that ran out, you were subject to the draft. Before that happened, I joined the early commissioning program for veterinarians. That got me out from underneath the draft board, because I was already committed. While in vet school, he noted, there was a drawing for the draft, predicated on birthdays. The drawings were done on television, with cheers going up for local men whose birthdays came up. But as time went on, Gamby started thinking hed missed the broadcast when they called his. Finally, No. 300 came up and it was his birthday. Being already committed to the Air Force, though, the drawing didnt mean much. With his commitment, Gamby was required to join the Air Force right after school. I had my orders, he said, but I had to go for a physical. I broke my leg the spring of my senior year and they didnt think my leg had healed to the point where I could go. I was still obligated to go. Gamby had a friend from Cozad, Oliver Hobein, whom he called since he always thought hed like to work in Nebraska. After visiting with Hobein and other veterinarians, he chose to work with Dr. Jim White in Bridgeport. Though he was with White for about 18 months, Gamby was called into service with the Air Force. He was discharged in 1974 at the rank of Captain, but remained in the reserves from 1978-94 and retired with the Air Force in 1995 with the rank of Lieutenant Colonel. When he returned from his military service, White already had someone at his clinic so Gamby came up to work in Chadron. I really liked it down there [in Bridgeport], he said, but coming to Chadron was one of the best things for him. When he first came to Chadron, he worked with Dr. Hawley at practice near Fourth and Maple. Gamby purchased the practice from Hawley in 1980, still maintaining the Fourth Street office until he built his own on Highway 385 in 1985. "I moved in here about the time we had the centennial, he said. The new facility provided some more space as there are not as many houses, though Gamby praised his neighbors near Fourth and Maple for not complaining about the smell while he was there. When Gamby first started, he estimated his practice was 75% large animals and 25% small. These days, its about 40% large and 60% small by his guess. He speculated this change has come from consolidation of small ranches into larger ones, and families moving from having one family pet to multiple. Over the years at his practice, Gamby said, hes had a lot of college students who have worked for him, and a lot of those have been Pre-Vet as well. Id have to say, that is the highlight of my practice career, being acquainted with all those Pre-Vets that have worked here and gone on to vet school, and now are in successful practices. One such student, Shari Sandoz, will take over at Gambys office. Among the highlights of his practice, Gamby said hes always enjoyed obstetrics calving the most. He plans to stay in Chadron for now, but may plan to move closer to his children. For sure, he intends to put some miles on his camper, travelling across the country. I want to wear it out before I die. Ive got places I want to go, friends I want to go see. Aside from his veterinary practice, Gamby served on the Chadron City Council for 22 years starting in 1990, and was mayor from 1996-98 and from 2003-06. His time in Chadron, he noted, has been quite rewarding. You must be logged in to react. Click any reaction to login. Love 0 Funny 0 Wow 0 Sad 0 Angry 0 The South Dakota Game, Fish & Parks Commission will meet Thursday and Friday in Pierre and is expected to make a decision on purchasing 400 acres in Meade County for a proposed shooting range just north of Rapid City. The commission's meeting is scheduled to begin at 1 p.m. Central time on Thursday at the Missouri River Event Center, 217 W. Missouri Ave., in Pierre. The meeting is open to the public, with public comment expected to begin in an open forum after 2 p.m. Central. GF&P's website states in-person or remote public comment is generally limited to three minutes. To provide public comment in person or via Zoom, GF&P is requiring registration by 1 p.m. Central Thursday via email to Rachel Comes at rachel.comes@state.sd.us. Written comments can be submitted to GF&P by filling out a form on the GF&P website at https://gfp.sd.gov/forms/positions/. According to the schedule, the meeting will last until 5 p.m. Central on Thursday and will reconvene from 8 a.m. Central to 12 p.m. Central on Friday. GF&P staff is encouraging the Commission to purchase the Meade County property to build a 175-bay shooting range. The proposed site is along Elk Vale Road, approximately three miles north of the intersection of Elk Creek Road. Rapid City businessman Jim Scull initiated a purchase agreement for the property in late 2020. He then transferred the purchase agreement to the South Dakota Parks and Wildlife Foundation. The foundation completed the transaction on March 25, 2021. Proponents of the shooting range said it is a needed addition to West River because of proximity to the Northern Hills and Rapid City. It would include a long-range bay, an advanced range for competitive shooting and law enforcement training, and a hunter education building. Law enforcement and competition organizations would pay for use of those facilities. The general public would be able to access the shooting ranges with no admission charge, GF&P Secretary Kevin Robling has said. Opponents said they are concerned with noise, safety, increased traffic on gravel roads, increased crime and the financial burden on Meade County for a facility that will mostly be used by Pennington County residents. They also say there are environmental concerns because the site is near the Elk Creek watershed. Additional state funding for the proposed shooting range has passed the Senate. The funding bill will be heard in the House Appropriations Committee on Wednesday afternoon. Contact Nathan Thompson at nathan.thompson@rapidcityjournal.com. You must be logged in to react. Click any reaction to login. Love 1 Funny 1 Wow 0 Sad 0 Angry 8 Get local news delivered to your inbox! Subscribe to our Daily Headlines newsletter. Sign up! * I understand and agree that registration on or use of this site constitutes agreement to its user agreement and privacy policy. A woman in her late 20s died at Monument Health Hospital Wednesday morning after a single vehicle crash on Skyline Drive. The woman, whose name is pending release due to family notification, was the driver of a 1999 Toyota 4-Runner that rolled over in the 2000 block of Skyline Drive around 1:30 a.m. Brendyn Medina, spokesperson for the Rapid City Police Department, said two of the four occupants were ejected from the vehicle, which was found down the hill to the east of the roadway. The two who were ejected were taken to the hospital. The second ejected passenger was transported with serious injuries, Medina said. He said the other two occupants sustained minor injuries and were wearing seatbelts. The other occupants were in their mid-20s or younger, Medina said. Police are investigating the crash but believe speed and alcohol were factors. DUI Around 5:30 a.m., Jyles Salomon, 19, of Allen, was arrested for a DUI after following an officer into the Pennington County Jail booking area in the secured garage. An officer who pulled into the area off of St. Joseph Street saw Salomon's vehicle pull in behind him. Salomon narrowly made it into the garage before the gate closed. The officer saw the vehicle had extensive damage to the front of it. Salomon got out of the car and said he needed help with the damage. The officer noted slurred speech and the smell of an alcoholic beverage. Medina said the DUI investigation included a preliminary PBT that showed a 0.2 blood alcohol level. He said the department is submitting a blood test for a more official toxicology report. Salomon was arrested for a DUI. The 19-year-old was charged with an under 21 driver with a sentencing of court fees, 20-day suspended license, unsupervised adult supervision for one year, and 20 days in jail with 28 days suspended and two days credit. Medina said the RCPD has made 98 DUI arrests so far this year. "It's not ideal, but I think with both these incidents we encountered this morning, the message is drinking and driving is a very dangerous activity, and if you're consuming alcohol, always find a sober driver," he said. Contact Siandhara Bonnet at siandhara.bonnet@rapidcityjournal.com You must be logged in to react. Click any reaction to login. Love 0 Funny 1 Wow 2 Sad 2 Angry 0 Get local news delivered to your inbox! Subscribe to our Daily Headlines newsletter. Sign up! * I understand and agree that registration on or use of this site constitutes agreement to its user agreement and privacy policy. SUMMERSET | A public forum is set for Monday, March 14, to explore the need for more school space to accommodate an expected surge in student enrollment in the fast-growing Piedmont Valley corridor along Interstate 90 between Sturgis and Rapid City. The forum, set for 5 p.m. to 6:30 p.m., opens the Meade 46-1 school boards monthly meeting at the Stagebarn Middle School gymnasium. The board will hear comments from residents who live within the district boundaries and those who live outside the district but whose children attend Meade 46-1 schools, said organizer Alex Radway. Following the forum, as the school board continues its monthly agenda, the forum will reconvene in the schools cafeteria where anyone may speak, Radway said. We want to give our community as many facts as possible during the first part of the meeting, he said. The second part, we want to get as many options as possible on the table. Whats our one-year, five-year and ten-year plan. Were going to get as many perspectives as possible, schedule another meeting, then pick a path forward, said Radway, whose family lives in the Marble Mountain Subdivision east of Black Hawk, outside of Meade 46-1 district boundaries. Of the familys four children, three are school-age and attend classes through open enrollment at Piedmont Valley Elementary in Piedmont. Radway said his initial hopes were for the district to build a new high school to accompany the middle school, which opened in 2018 on the site of the old Stagebarn Elementary School on Sturgis Road west of Interstate 90s Exit 48 in Summerset. I started out advocating for a high school, but maybe thats not the direction we need to go, Radway said. Currently, kindergarten through 8th-grade students from Summerset and unincorporated Piedmont and Tilford and other housing developments attend classes at Piedmont Elementary School, (K-4) with grades 5-8 at nearby Stagebarn Middle School. The town of Summerset straddles the boundary between the Meade 46-1 district, with the nearby Black Hawk fully within the Rapid City school district. Were being split as a community, with some kids going to Sturgis and others going to Rapid City. Right now, we dont have the K-12 option for our kids. Its K-8, he said. Its kind of a mess. Meade 46-1 superintendent Donald Kirkegaard met with a small group of Piedmont and Summerset residents in December, when plans for a full board meeting and public forum at Stagebarn were first discussed. Kirkegaard said the district is making improvements to classrooms at Piedmont Valley Elementary along with changes to bus schedules at both schools. Last fall, the district completed a $1 million purchase of an additional eight acres of land just east of the new middle school with future growth in mind. But he told the board at its December meeting that the district would not have the funding to build a new high school at Stagebarn in the next five years. That truly will be a board decision going forward, Kirkegaard said. Its not necessarily in the works right now and the community needs to know that. Still, enrollment at Piedmont Valley and Stagebarn Middle School has seen steady increases over the last five years. As of last September, The middle school is right at capacity with 454 students, while 522 students attend Piedmont Valley Elementary. Radway said Meade County Commission representatives will present about expected growth in housing developments in the area. He also invited other city and neighboring school district officials, the governor, members of the state legislature and congressional delegation. We need to talk about infrastructure, schools and our kids. Thats the heart of it, he said. You must be logged in to react. Click any reaction to login. Love 0 Funny 0 Wow 0 Sad 0 Angry 0 U.S. Rep. Dusty Johnson said Tuesday that President Joe Biden's action on Monday to increase financial sanctions on Russia was a wise move as the world reacts to Russia's invasion of Ukraine but more needs to be done. "The president's actions in recent days have been better than the early actions. The sanctions that were announced immediately after the invasion, I thought were underwhelming and given the fact that we had months to prepare for that unfortunate day, I was surprised that the initial announcement wasn't more robust. Since that time, I do think we've been moving in the right direction," Johnson said. South Dakota's member of the U.S. House of Representatives said the sanctions are "unprecedented and sweeping" and are having a clear impact on the Russian economy. "The ruble has crumbled. Their stock market has cratered. They are unable to access more than half of the reserves of Russian currency across the globe. This is imposing serious costs on Vladimir Putin," Johnson said. Johnson said he hopes the Biden Administration and European allies will add even more penalties on Putin by stopping the export of oil and natural gas from Russia. "I don't know why we would continue to allow him to sell natural gas and oil products for billions of dollars to finance his war and line Putin's pockets," Johnson said. Bipartisan congressional support for policy on Ukraine and Russia has been refreshing, Johnson said. "Congress has been on the same page for quite a number of weeks (on Ukraine and Russia). Overwhelming bipartisan majorities have supported this, providing a billion dollars of military and security assistance to Ukraine," Johnson said. "An overwhelming majority of members on both sides of the aisle have supported the sanctions. "And there are a number of bills and resolutions that make that clear. It would not surprise me at all, when we pass a spending package next week that there is some additional assistance for the Ukrainian people in there." Johnson said the conflict in Ukraine shows how dangerous it is for a country to be dependent on others to supply energy and food, something he hopes President Biden will also address. "I think we've seen with Europe, how dangerous it is to be dependent upon an adversary for your energy or your food," Johnson said "I think the president needs to take the opportunity to talk more about how we can decouple key energy and food needs from both China and Russia." Contact Nathan Thompson at nathan.thompson@rapidcityjournal.com. You must be logged in to react. Click any reaction to login. Love 2 Funny 1 Wow 0 Sad 0 Angry 1 Get local news delivered to your inbox! Subscribe to our Daily Headlines newsletter. Sign up! * I understand and agree that registration on or use of this site constitutes agreement to its user agreement and privacy policy. The Oxford dictionary defines representative as (of a legislative or deliberative assembly) consisting of people chosen to act and speak on behalf of a wider group. Who are Helene Duhamel and Tim Goodwin representing other than Kristi Noem and Kevin Thom? Just think how much South Dakota legislators would get done if they worked as hard to solve real problems as they are working to get an unwanted rifle range built in Meade County. There will never be affordable housing in Rapid City/Pennington County until the state lowers the 30% increase in property taxes for non-owner occupied housing which property owners must pass on to tenants. What is South Dakota doing to support the people of Ukraine? We have trust funds here that should freeze Russian assets in protest against their violent attack on the Ukraine. Wow, living in South Dakota under the "rule" of Kristi Noem and her band of conservative legislators is starting to feel like what it must feel like to be Russian where the "state" has the final say on everything from taxes to guns and marijuana. What's next? I can hardly wait. You must be logged in to react. Click any reaction to login. Love 4 Funny 1 Wow 0 Sad 0 Angry 2 South Dakota native Calvin Jones and his wife, Inga, were safely in Romania on Tuesday after leaving their home in Kyiv, Ukraine. The couple, like thousands of others, are now refugees from Ukraine who fled as the Russian invasion began last week. I spoke with several people in Kyiv and most of them said emphatically that Putin would never invade Kyiv. Never, Jones said Tuesday. A week ago it was the last thing they ever thought would become reality. Thats what most Americans would think today as well. This could never happen to them in their country. Think again. Jones is a musician, composer and recording artist who first visited Ukraine in 2012. He began performing concerts there in 2013 and met Inga. The couple married in 2014. Inga was born in Kyiv and still has relatives there, one of whom has been killed in the Russian invasion. Though Jones travels internationally, he said Kyiv has been the couples home base since 2014. Theyve been considering a move to another country, he said, and had spent several weeks in Turkey. Theyd recently returned to Kyiv. On Feb. 24, the couple were awakened about 5 a.m. by huge thunderous booms and feeling the apartment shake, Jones said in an interview with the Journal. My wife got up and didnt know what to make of it right then. I pretty much figured out this is not good. A couple of phone calls confirmed bombs were going off. Jones retrieved their car from a parking lot a couple of blocks away while his wife packed as much as she could. Jones said he was grateful hed filled their cars gas tank earlier in the week. Figuring out the route away from Kyiv was their first challenge. Kyiv is a city on the Dnipro River, with people living on its left and right banks. Six million people live in the Kyiv metropolitan area, Jones said. You have just a couple of bridges if you want to go from the left side to the right side, Jones said. Everybody was heading west (away from Russia) where they thought it would be safer. The problem was, as Im thinking about this early in the morning, do I go with everybody else, because I can see traffic jamming. But going the other way is where we heard some of these bombs going off. Thats toward the Russian encampment. Jones chose to travel southeast away from the heaviest traffic, to Kaniv, a town with a dam and bridge where he knew the couple could cross the river with less traffic. It was counter to what almost everybody did. It was a good decision, he said. Getting out of Ukraine and into Romania was largely possible because of a network of friends and others who were able to assist. After getting to Kaniv, Jones contacted an audio mixer hed worked with who lives in the western Ukraine city of Ternopil. Sure enough, he invited me down. He had three apartments between him and his father and mother, and plenty of space so we thought thats where we were heading, Jones said. Along the way, they passed gas stations with huge lines of cars. Fortunately, Jones said, the couples car still had enough gas that they could keep driving until they found a gas station with only three or four cars in line, so he stopped there to fill the tank and drive to Ternopil. Continuing down the road we could see the end in sight, with Ternopil about 150 miles (away). One huge problem is the road surface conditions in Ukraine. We took the advice of one guy and we got on P32, and Ill never forget the name of that road. It was Swiss cheese potholes connected by sections of gravel, Jones said. The potholes some large enough for a person to fit into meant the Joneses in their Fiat could only travel about 5 miles an hour. When you start hitting these potholes with your car, it starts hitting the rims and your tires start falling off. We were passing people trying to get through this stuff, which is getting worse and worse, and its getting dark, Jones said. They passed cars with flat tires and then, with about 75 miles to go, their Fiat succumbed. I heard the dreaded sound of something on my car not sounding good at all. My left front tire was shot. So were sitting in the dark on a really bad road and trying to find a tow truck in Ukraine on this night of the invasion, Jones said. Inga began calling people and a friend called people until a tow truck was located. Somehow Inga convinced him to come out from Ternopil. It took him two hours. We needed somebody to carry us over this road, Jones said. The man loaded the Joneses Fiat onto his truck, telling Jones he was never coming out to P32 again. The Joneses and their car arrived in Ternopil about 4 a.m. Friday. The couple was able to eat and sleep before figuring out how to get their car fixed. Ternopil by that time was far enough away from the conflict that gas lines were not hardly anything. Stores were open, people were doing business. Things hadnt hit yet, Jones said. We were able to get a couple of new tires and the guy had to pound the dents out on both front wheels to get them to be circular again. Thats how beaten these things had become. The next challenge was figuring out how and where to cross a border. Wheres the best place to do it, and now you have to think about which roads are going to take me there, Jones said. The farther you get from Kyiv, the worse the roads are. You need to get some advice. Jones said he was fortunate that a friend of the man the Joneses were staying with showed him a map and bad roads to avoid. The Joneses ultimately headed for Sighet, in northwestern Romania, where Christians the Joneses knew were helping on both sides of the border. Theres all kinds of things youve got to think about. (Information) isnt readily available. Some of it you can get from the U.S. embassy but really, its networking and connecting with people who know people at the border and where to go and how to get it done, Jones said. They left Ternopil and arrived in Sighet about 2 a.m. Saturday, gassed up their car and searched for the border crossing. The line of vehicles waiting to cross the border was blocks and blocks long, going around corners and into a residential neighborhood, Jones said. He estimated the line was about 1-1/2 miles long when they got into it, and there was no getting out of line once they were in it. We got in line about 3 a.m. Saturday morning. Fortunately, we connected with some folks down there. Around 8 a.m., Inga went to some peoples house to use the bathroom and about 9 a.m. one of these guys from a church comes over and takes my position as driver, Jones said. Every 10 minutes, youve got to move your car. It gets really long but because of these Christians there, I was able to spend from about 9 a.m. to 5 p.m. getting rest and eating. The Christian community was a huge help. The Joneses finally got to the border about 1 a.m. Monday but werent sure theyd be able to keep their car. People typically are required to show power of attorney documents or are forced to leave behind their vehicles and any belongings they cant carry, Jones said. Fortunately, the Joneses were only asked for their car registration, which they had, and were allowed into Romania. The Romanians are unbelievable. Once you get over the border youre getting free SIM cards with data, packets of food, water. They just throwing all this stuff at you and asking if you need a place to stay. The Romanians are opening their apartments to you for free, Jones said. One of the men whod been assisting the Joneses was a refugee who recently crossed the border into Romania. He directed the Joneses to a dormitory-like center where they were able to eat and sleep. The Joneses car troubles persisted and they feared the car needed a new transmission, so the next morning they set out to get the car repaired at a Fiat dealership. They found one in a small town near Sighet. Fortunately, the car didnt need a new transmission but did have an overheated clutch caused by hours and hours of stop-and-start slow traffic while waiting to cross the border. The Joneses went to Baia Mare, Romania, a city about 30 miles from Ukraine, where they stayed at a hotel. Their next stop this week is Bucharest, where they hope to obtain an emergency visa for Inga so she can accompany Jones to the United States. A friend of a friend said Call this person and talk to this person and 20 minutes later we were told, they have an apartment ready for you, Jones said. Were headed where we have a place to stay so that really is a blessing. We dont know how long were going to be (in Bucharest). If you didnt have a place to sleep and eat, theres so many offers by so many people. They are so hospitable here and so gracious. Its really amazing, and theres a lot of English speakers here, too. Were glad we did the border crossing into Romania, Jones said. Theres amazing people here and I just cant say enough about the way we have been treated here and welcomed. Its absolutely incredible, he said. People wanting to give of themselves and help you that is not always common in the world. If they can both get to the United States, Jones said they hope to remain until they can determine where in the world they want to live next. Jones was born in Eureka and graduated from high school in Pierre. Though he no longer has any family in South Dakota he still has lots of friends here, he said. Jones hopes to schedule concert dates once he knows when and how long hell be in the United States. Jones said hes concerned about friends who werent able to leave Kyiv and are still in their homes in some cases caring for ill or disabled family members. Hes dismayed for the plight of some Russian troops, as well. One of the worst parts is these paratroopers that were flown over and sent out. They hardly have a chance. They thought they were going on a training mission. These are young kids. Theyre cannon fodder, Jones said. Its just sad to see this waste on both sides and these soldiers. Its ridiculous what Putins doing. Hes meeting really, really, really strong resistance, Jones said, adding that what Ukraine needs is more weapons to defend themselves and international support. The problem is if Ukraine falls to Russia, all of a sudden the Hungarians, Romanians, Slovakians, Polish have a new neighbor and it wont be Ukraine. Its going to be Putin, and thats going to get closer and closer to western Europe if he takes this thing, Jones said. Theres many lessons learned here. No nation is immune from this and I would say nations better take heed, Jones said. This can happen anywhere, including the United States. You must be logged in to react. Click any reaction to login. Love 0 Funny 0 Wow 3 Sad 0 Angry 0 Its hard to know where to start. Like most everyone, Ive got this sick feeling in my stomach over the Russian invasion of Ukraine. If gas prices go to $5 or over $6 per gallon, that really will have an impact on our economy here in South Dakota. In the Black Hills its not uncommon to see license plates from every state on any given day. Sky high gas prices will definitely have an impact on that. Also, our farmers and ranchers rely on diesel fuel as do our over-the-road truckers. This could be a very serious blow to our state economy. Im not totally sure some of our sanctions on Russia are strong enough. For instance, not sanctioning Russias oil exports. This seems crazy to me. With $100 per barrel of oil, we, and the rest of the free world, are actually financing Russias invasion of Ukraine. I feel that freezing their assets in their foreign bank reserves is the right thing to do. Russias currency is in rubles. Movement in the currency this week proves these banking sanctions are destroying their currency. The next thing the Biden administration needs to do is reinstate the Keystone XL pipeline. This is a national security issue Mr. President. Copying Reagans famous line, Mr. Gorbachev, tear down that wall, we should chant, Mr. President Biden, bring back the Keystone XL pipeline. We had a bill this last week that rolled back the cent sales tax added for teacher pay in 2016. In the House, we passed this rollback, taking our state sales tax from 4-1/2 cents back to 4 cents. The Senate killed this initiative last Friday. With the current world situation, it probably was the right thing to do. Speaking again of the worlds situation, how about the Ghost of Kiev? Google it and you will see this Ukrainian fighter pilot has gotten credit with over 9 kills of Russian Migs (fighter jets). Now how cool is that? Also very encouraging is the will of the Ukrainian people staying to fight. All men 60 and under were ordered to stay in the country to fight the Russians. Even the president of Ukraine is staying in their capital and is prepared to fight to the end. During WWII, the Germans (Hitler), and the Japanese Emperor decided not to invade the continental United States, as both said the cost of conquering a country that has a rifle behind every tree is too high. Russias Putin no doubt is learning that lesson now. I pray Putin doesnt go nuke on Ukraine or any part of the world. These are unprecedented, scary times. God bless the Ukrainian people and God bless the United States of America. Tim R. Goodwin, District 30 Representative You must be logged in to react. Click any reaction to login. Love 0 Funny 0 Wow 0 Sad 0 Angry 0 The Salvation Army reports the Hamilton community has been hit hard with many residents facing challenges of food insecurity and a lack of affordable housing but reminds the community that they are available to provide assistance. Hamilton Service Center Director Fidelis Temukum said food insecurity is on the rise with area families Luckily, The Salvation Army is here to support families in need through this challenging season, Temukum said. We are here to help with groceries, prevent eviction and stop utility disconnects. Hamilton is full of families and individuals who are hard-working, loving and ready to help one another through hard times. He noted that The Salvation Army in Hamilton has been a proud partner in Hamilton for over 125 years and continues to serve. For example, during this recent Christmas season, The Salvation Army of Hamilton was able to help meet the needs of families. Temukum and volunteers gave 1,128 toys to 188 kids, provided over 100 food cards and 100 food boxes (valued at $80 each) and prevented dozens of power shutoffs. Dozens of families benefited from our emergency rental and mortgage assistant program, Temukum said. We continue to daily provide gas cards to needy families, hygiene supplies, auto repairs, case management, counseling, bus tickets and many other needs. He said The Salvation Army in Hamilton is proud to serve the community and encourages families in need to reach out. The Salvation Army is a Christian service organization based on the bible verses, Above all, love each other deeply. Peter 4:8 and The Lord is my shepherd, I shall not want. Psalm 23:1. It helps people overcome poverty, recover from disasters and economic hardships through a range of emergency disaster services and social services. The Salvation Army provides food for the hungry, clothing and shelter for the homeless, disaster relief, senior activity and outreach, adult rehabilitation and opportunities for underprivileged children. The Salvation Army in Hamilton is open from 8 a.m. to 3 p.m. on Mondays, Wednesdays, and Fridays and is open on Tuesdays and Thursdays by appointment only. Stop by The Salvation Army office at 217 N. 3rd St., Suite B-2, in Hamilton, call for an appointment at 406-210-1453, or email fidelis.temukum@usw.salvationarmy.org. Love 0 Funny 1 Wow 0 Sad 0 Angry 0 Get local news delivered to your inbox! Subscribe to our Daily Headlines newsletter. Sign up! * I understand and agree that registration on or use of this site constitutes agreement to its user agreement and privacy policy. Ravalli County Council on Aging is celebrating March for Meals to honor the 50th anniversary of the federal legislation helping fund community-based programs and is inviting people to ride along with food delivery volunteers. On Monday, Meals on Wheels volunteer Jamie Gronlund delivered to six homes in the southeast Hamilton area. She has delivered nutritious meals hot or frozen for three years. Gronlund and her husband moved to Montana five years ago and before that were self-employed in the roofing industry for 28 years. I didnt have time to be a community volunteer except at my church, I worked in the parking ministry, Gronlund said. I always saw the Meals on Wheels truck coming down the street and I always wanted to do that. I thought, I could do that, greet everyone, chat them up and bring their food. Now Im doing it. She drives two days a week and loves driving throughout the valley because of the gorgeous scenery on her routes. On Tuesdays, she delivers meals to 13-16 customers around Corvallis. It takes three hours because I talk to everyone, she said. They are very lonely, some are extremely lonely. I enjoy visiting with people. She knows shes not just serving a meal but also providing socialization. Sometimes were the only people they see, Gronlund said. Their kids live in different states, dont want their farm or different things. It is sad, but they just want human interaction like everybody else. Its the women who are lonely, they really want to talk. They want you to come in and have coffee. They want to have a friend. She said God motivates her to do community service. Ive been that way my whole life, Ive brought home strays and more, Gronlund said. It gets in you that you have to do something. We are all here to serve one another. RCCOA Nutrition Supervisor Kayla Paddock said she wants a person from each community where RCCOA delivers to ride-along. Call 406-363-5690 to schedule a ride. We want to let them see what we do for their seniors and get the word out, Paddock said. Two years ago, Meals on Wheels had a successful ride-along with Hamilton Mayor Dominic Farrenkopf before the COVID shutdowns occurred. Paddock said she talks to many people about the program and enrolls them. Its amazing to me how few people know we exist, Paddock said. Executive Director Cathy Orr said the Meals on Wheels program is an essential service that adapted during the pandemic by serving to-go meals as centers were closed but by the end of last year the number of participants increased. Senior Centers opened back up and people slowly started coming back to socialize as well as get a hot meal a few days a week, Orr said. We provided over 28,000 Meals on Wheels meals. In January and February of this year, 163 senior citizens received Meals on Wheels in Ravalli County. Other nutrition programs include congregate meals (lunches at senior centers) which RCCOA served over 8,000 meals and Commodities (the Commodities Supplemental Food Program) which RCCOA provided over 1,400 orders of supplemental food boxes and RCCOA sold over 8,500 cases of the Liquid Supplemental Food Program (Ensure and Glucerna) at cost. Numbers are increasing but with the rise in cost of everything, we are feeling the strain, Orr said. We wont pass that burden on to our clients, who are feeling the strain also, so we will maintain our $3 suggested donation for Meals on Wheels clients 60 and over. She said seniors on a limited budget continue to be the vulnerable population and rises in prices make it important to promote the program and who it serves. Donation jars have been placed around the valley for March for Meals fundraising and RCCOA is accepting donations in the main office and online at https://www.ravalliccoa.org/. Meals on Wheels started 50 years ago in March of 1972 when President Richard Nixon amended the Older Americans Act of 1965 to include a national nutrition program for individuals age 60 and older. Meals on Wheels is designed to meet the nutritional and social needs of older adults. Council on Aging serves congregate meals at 11:30 a.m. at the Darby Clubhouse the first four Thursdays of each month; at the Hamilton Senior Center each Monday, Wednesday and Friday; in Stevensville Monday through Friday; and at the Victor Senior Center Monday, Wednesday and Friday. Paddock said that meals will be served at the Florence Fire Hall and the new Lone Rock Center when staff shortages are resolved. Meals on Wheels programs from across the country are celebrating 50 years of success and raising the support needed to continue addressing food insecurity and malnutrition, combat social isolation, enable independence, and improve health for years to come. President and CEO of Meals on Wheels America Ellie Hollander said she commends all 2022 Community Champions for stepping up in support of Meals on Wheels. Despite decades of proven success and bipartisan support, funding for this program has failed to keep pace with the rapidly growing need for its services, Hollander said. With the nations senior population increasing dramatically, now is the time to support local Meals on Wheels programs through volunteering, donating and speaking out to ensure we are able to deliver for another 50 years. Orr encourages riders to join the delivery routes. Come see what we do, she said. We would love for you to join us to ride along with your local Meals on Wheels volunteer. We have a route in your area Monday through Friday, from Sula to Florence. Love 3 Funny 0 Wow 0 Sad 0 Angry 0 Get local news delivered to your inbox! Subscribe to our Daily Headlines newsletter. Sign up! * I understand and agree that registration on or use of this site constitutes agreement to its user agreement and privacy policy. In light of a recent wave of officer decertification following a nationwide push for police reform, the Hanover NAACP has called for further investigation into a former Hanover County sheriffs deputy. Legislation proposed by Virginia Sen. Mamie Locke and approved in March 2021 created statewide professional standards of conduct for law enforcement officers and established a process for decertifying officers who violate those standards. Officers who are decertified are unable to attain jobs at any law enforcement agency in the Commonwealth. The new legislation aimed to keep officers with histories of ethical misconduct from resigning from one Virginia police department and working at another and expanded decertification offenses to include dishonesty and excessive force. These offenses were previously fireable but not written into Virginia law as calls for decertification. According to the Virginia Department of Criminal Justice Services master list, 146 officers have been decertified as of mid-January, with more than half added to the list in the past two years. Hanover NAACP President Pat Hunter-Jordan held a press conference last Monday to call attention to recent allegations against former officer Christopher Ryan Payne, who was employed with the Hanover County Sherriffs Office from January 2015 through December 2021 and previously named officer of the year several times. According to the Hanover County Sheriffs Office, Sheriff Col. David Hines ordered an internal investigation into then-deputy Christopher Payne in late November 2021 after finding discrepancies between his reports and body camera footage during a regular audit. The sheriffs office worked closely with the Hanover Commonwealths Attorneys Office while reviewing Paynes cases. Payne resigned with cause on Dec. 16, 2021, based on the results of the internal investigation. Per Virginia Code 15.2-1707, the sheriffs office submitted the decertification paperwork to the Department of Criminal Justice Services (DCJS) within the required 48 hours. After reviewing the provided information, DCJS decertified Payne. According to the sheriffs office, the agency cannot legally disclose full details of the investigation, as the case involves a personnel matter. Hunter-Jordan said the Hanover NAACP has received at least 30 complaints about Paynes conduct prior to learning of his decertification and had begun investigation, specifically in regard to alleged false charges that were filed by the former officer. Hunter-Jordan said she continues to receive complaints regarding Paynes conduct. She said she received a complaint last week that was identical to another complaint made, which involved a citizen who was allegedly issued a DUI after receiving a ticket from Payne for a rolling stop. This person said this cost them over $1,000. This one was over a year ago and nothing has changed with that case, Hunter-Jordan stated in an email. The Hanover NAACP sent a letter to the commonwealths attorney requesting further review of all of Paynes cases that are free of influence of the sheriffs office. We do not want the sheriffs department involved in it, but we trust our commonwealths attorney to be able to carry this out. If we see that the results are not as expected, as anticipated, then we may make a further request for outside investigation, Hunter-Jordan told WTVR CBS 6 during Mondays press conference. Hunter-Jordan furthered the Hanover NAACPs concerns with the lack of transparency with which this issue was managed by the sheriffs office in a letter to The Local editor. The transparency would have allowed our citizens the right to appeal decisions made where Officer Payne was involved, Hunter-Jordan said in the letter. If you or I lied about information on cases or on our jobs we would be fired. Former Officer Payne was not terminated. He was allowed to resign, which entitles him to retain benefits earned that we as taxpayers are responsible for funding. In the same letter, Hunter-Jordan said NAACP members support officers who perform their duties and abide by the law but cannot sit by and allow officers to taint the reputation of the countys officers or tolerate adverse actions that affect community members. Commonwealths Attorney R. E. Chalkley said he already reviewed the cases when the sheriffs office conducted the investigation. I met with the sheriff some time ago, reviewed the matters, the officer in question, certain actions were taken to prevent people from being prosecuted most of the time, there was nothing that had to be done. And there is no criminal investigation going on now and there are no permanent criminal charges, Chalkley said. He said he had not yet received a letter from the Hanover NAACP requesting further investigation. Hunter-Jordan said this could be due to post office delays due to the holiday. Hunter-Jordan said they are deciding how to move forward if Chalkley ultimately decides he will not investigate the cases. Russian vodka brands pulled from state-owned liquor store shelves in solidarity with Ukraine will be kept in storage for now a move with precedent in the liquor monopolys nearly 100-year history. The seven Russian-sourced vodkas in Virginia ABC inventory amounting $77,500 in stock will be kept in store back rooms and other state facilities for the time being, ABC spokesperson Carol Mawyer said in an email. Another $30,000 in stock, still owned by suppliers and not purchased by the ABC, will also be held back from shelves. The Russian vodka brands to be removed include Beluga, Hammer & Sickle, Imperia, Mamont, Organika, Russian Standard and ZYR. The Russian-sourced spirits accounted for $1.2 million in Virginia ABC sales during fiscal year 2021 a fraction of the $57.9 million generated in the same time frame by Titos brand vodka, the top-grossing vodka in the state. Its unclear what will ultimately happen to the liquor. The products wont be destroyed, Mawyer said. The state-run liquor store system attributed the decision to Gov. Glenn Youngkins call on Saturday for the state to take decisive action in support of Ukraine. . It isnt the first time the Virginia ABC has pulled alcohol from its shelves based on political sentiment. Stolichnaya, or Stoli, was pulled from Virginia ABC shelves at least two times in the 1980s amid the Cold War. It was the only Russian-imported product carried in state liquor stores at the time, The Virginian-Pilot reported in 1983. The vodka was quietly returned to ABC shelves once tensions thawed. This time around, Stolichnaya is one of the Russian-themed vodkas staying on the shelf, as it is made in Latvia, according to its website. Still, the vodka with hard-to-pin-down origins in Moscow was an instinctual target of wrath during chills in U.S.-Russian relations in the 1980s. The first removal in 1980 was prompted by the then-Soviet Unions invasion of Afghanistan in 1979. The Virginia ABC halted orders of Stolichnaya but kept remaining inventory up for sale until stock ran out, the Associated Press reported. The product returned in April 1981, The Pilot reported. A Petersburg man was sentenced Wednesday to serve 20 years in prison for voluntary manslaughter and six related offenses in a shooting that killed a 22-year-old shopper at Chesterfield Towne Center during a brawl initiated by the defendant, who opened fire in the malls crowded food court after he began losing the fight. Following a two-hour sentencing hearing in Chesterfield County Circuit Court, Judge Steven C. McCallum sentenced William E. Taylor Jr., 25, to a total of 36 years in prison with 16 years suspended on seven convictions related to the June 23, 2020, shooting that fatally wounded Kimani Donovan and injured the defendants sister. The punishment is a significant upward departure from discretionary state sentencing guidelines calculated for this specific case. The guidelines recommended an active term of incarceration of between four years and two months at the low end and 10 years and 2 months on the high end. The court finds numerous aggravating factors [in the case] ... beginning with the tragically ironic fact that Mr. Taylor came to Chesterfield mall because he believed it to be a safer location than where he lived, McCallum said in remarks from the bench. But the irony is, in coming to what he believed was a safer location, he illegally packed a firearm in a backpack. The judge said it was undisputed that Taylor initiated contact with Donovan a person who he did not have a past friendly relationship. Taylor also initiated a physical fight, the judge said, adding, Theres no dispute that he threw the first punch. Then as the fight played out for several seconds, with Taylor getting the worst of that physical encounter, he went to his backpack and pulled out his gun. He didnt tell Mr. Donovan, Im going to shoot you, Im going to get a gun, the judge continued. He didnt brandish it to say, Get away from me Ill shoot. In fact, Mr. Taylor went to his backpack [and], in a heartbeat, got three rounds off. He didnt aim, he shot wildly, he could have hit anybody ... because we know two shots hit Mr. Donovan [and] one shot hit his own sister where there were dozens of other folks present. In arguments before sentencing, Chief Deputy Commonwealths Attorney Jennifer Nesbitt told the court that the sentencing guidelines were grossly inadequate for Taylors actions that day, and he deserved a punishment much, much greater than even the high end of this sentencing range. You heard from [the victims] family how much he suffered, Nesbitt said. He fought for his life and you heard from his loved ones that they desperately hoped for his recovery, and they watched him slowly die. This is a crime that the defendant admitted happened because his pride got the better of him, Nesbitt added. This was over a woman that [Taylor] was not even still involved with. He hit a man, he shot a man because of that woman. And all of this occurred in a crowded mall. His actions have had a terrible impact on [Donovans] family and on the community. You heard from people at the mall that day and how it terrorized them. The lead detective in the case testified that 93 Chesterfield police officers and forensic investigators converged on the mall within an hour of the 6 p.m. gunfire. In arguing for leniency, defense attorney Ed Riley recalled Taylors testimony at trial that Taylor had been the victim of previous gun violence, and that he didnt intend to harm Donovan but felt like he had no choice but to fire in self-defense after he began losing the fight fearing he would suffer serious injury or worse. Taylor and his brother had been shot during incidents in 2016 and 2017, which combined with other acts of violence made Taylor feel constantly paranoid. He began carrying a gun everywhere he went. That was the mindset he had when this event occurred, Riley told the court. He is a good individual who ended up in a very difficult situation and made a very difficult decision, a very difficult choice. He accepted responsibility that this is what I did and heres why I did it. When given a chance to speak, Taylor, who has no prior criminal record, turned to Donovans family in the courtroom and apologized. Im sorry, he said. I cant say it enough. It hurts me that Ive caused so much pain. Wednesdays sentencing comes six months after a Chesterfield jury, following 9 hours of deliberations, rejected the defendants claim of self defense. But they also scrapped a charge of second-degree murder sought by prosecutors, in finding Taylor guilty of voluntary manslaughter. The panel also returned guilty verdicts on felony use of a firearm, unlawful wounding, carrying a concealed weapon, felony child neglect and three counts of maliciously shooting inside the mall the latter offenses for exposing dozens of shoppers and their children to gunfire. But following the verdicts, the court set aside the jurys guilty verdict of using a firearm in the commission of a felony, because the panel did not find Taylor guilty of second-degree murder, which requires malice. The child neglect conviction was for exposing his son to the gunfire and leaving him behind as he fled the mall. Taylor had arrived with his mother, sister and young son for a shopping trip and, after the shooting, they eventually reunited and left together for the drive back to Petersburg. McCallum determined Taylors punishment instead of the jury, due to a July 1, 2021, change in state law that removes juries from the sentencing process. Before the change, juries would hear additional evidence and recommend a punishment, which in the great majority of cases was imposed by the presiding judge. Donovan, who was with two friends at the mall, suffered two gunshot wounds that led to all his vital functions shutting down, and he died 12 days after the shooting. The fight and subsequent shooting stemmed from a petty incident three years earlier between Taylor and Donovan during a FaceTime conversation that Taylor was unable to let go. The two men had not met in person until Taylor, believing he recognized Donovan, approached him in the malls food court. Their conversation quickly escalated into a confrontation, with Taylor throwing the first punch. But Donovan, an athlete, soon gained the upper hand, prompting Taylor to pull a gun he had concealed in a knapsack that was used as his sons diaper bag. Prosecutors said the fight and shooting never would have occurred had Taylor left the mall with his family instead of circling back to confront Donovan. The two men spoke in a video chat in 2017 shortly after Taylor had broken up with his former girlfriend. She and Taylor had a child together, and Taylor apparently didnt like it when Donovan had contacted her, even though Donovan and the woman were just friends, not romantically involved. Police are requesting public assistance to identify two suspects connected to a December killing at a convenience store in South Richmond. Shortly after 7 a.m. on Dec. 20, police responded to the 700 block of Richmond Highway for a person reported shot. Officers arrived to discover a man, later identified as Christopher Barnes, 26, suffering a gunshot wound. Police said he was unresponsive when they arrived and was pronounced dead at the scene. Two suspects left the store while firing shots at people in the parking lot, according to authorities. They fled on foot through an alley, toward Dinwiddie Avenue. Police said one suspect wore a jacket with gray stripes and colorful images on each side. Anyone with information about these suspects or this homicide is encouraged to call Major Crimes Detective N. Reese at (804) 646-0712, contact Crime Stoppers at 780-1000 or submit a tip to the P3 Tips Crime Stoppers app. Chesterfield Elections Director Constance Hargrove is leaving her county post in the coming weeks to take on the same position in Pima County, Ariz. Hargrove joined Chesterfield County in 2013, first as the deputy registrar of voters, before being named the elections director in 2017. Before Chesterfield, Hargrove worked for the city of Richmond for 16 years. In highlighting Hargroves work in Chesterfield in a Monday memo to county officials, Jan Lesher, acting county administrator for Pima County, wrote about Hargrove spearheading early satellite voting locations for the 2020 election to reduce exposure risks to COVID-19 as well as wait times. Hargrove also worked to increase and expand voter engagement in Chesterfield. I am deeply impressed with Ms. Hargrove and her experience and knowledge of modern elections systems, as well as her ability to adeptly manage elections expectations during these times of heightened scrutiny as to how elections are conducted in Arizona, Lesher wrote. I believe she will be an excellent Elections Director and a great addition to the County. Lesher added Hargrove was the top-ranked candidate by an ad hoc review committee. Israeli Prime Minister Naftali Bennett (R) and German Chancellor Olaf Scholz (L) give a broadcast press conference in Jerusalem, on March 2, 2022. German Chancellor Olaf Scholz said Wednesday he would like to see a new Iran nuclear agreement reached in Vienna. (Koby Gideon/GPO/Handout via Xinhua) JERUSALEM, March 2 (Xinhua) -- German Chancellor Olaf Scholz said Wednesday he would like to see a new Iran nuclear agreement reached in Vienna. "Now is the time to make a decision," Scholz said on his first visit to Israel since taking office. "This must not be postponed any longer and cannot be postponed any longer. Now is the time to finally say yes to something that represents a good and reasonable solution," he said during a broadcast press conference alongside Israeli Prime Minister Naftali Bennett. Bennett said that Israel views talks in Vienna over a renewed nuclear deal between Iran and world powers "with concern." The two sides also exchanged views on the ongoing Ukraine-Russia conflict, calling for achieving a ceasefire through talks. A kitten picked up in Northside Richmond late last week has tested positive for rabies, the Richmond and Henrico Health District announced Tuesday. The stray kitten was found along 5th Avenue dropped off at the Richmond Animal Shelter late last week. Health officials say residents, especially those in nearby neighborhoods, should be more vigilant about not leaving out food, keeping their pets leashed, reporting stray animals to animal control and making sure their pets' vaccinations are current. After receiving the results yesterday evening. RHHD has been in contact with 12 people who may have had contact with the kitten to determine whether they'd been exposed or contracted the virus. The General Assembly is advancing a bill that would prohibit the governor or his aides from interfering with an investigation by the Office of the State Inspector General. The lawmaker who filed the bill said he did so after reading Richmond Times-Dispatch reporting in 2021 that documented how senior aides to then-Gov. Ralph Northam summoned the inspector general to a meeting in 2020 when he was investigating misconduct at the Virginia Parole Board. Northams aides then questioned his power and reprimanded him. The bill from Del. Les Adams, R-Pittsylvania, passed the House of Delegates without opposition and got a 14-0 vote of support Wednesday in the Senate General Laws and Technology Committee the bill is expected to pass the Senate and head to Gov. Glenn Youngkin for consideration. Governors appoint the inspector general, a position that oversees investigations of fraud, waste, abuse and corruption in executive branch agencies of state government. The 2020 meeting in which the governors staff summoned Inspector General Michael Westfall and his team followed the start of investigations by OSIG that concluded the Virginia Parole Board violated state laws and policies in the process used for release of certain people from prison. That included not properly communicating with the families of victims. The Times-Dispatch obtained a recording of the meeting. Under questioning from the governors team during the tense meeting, Westfall promised his agency would not look into new complaints about the parole board but would instead forward them to the governors office. Brian Moran, the secretary of public safety and homeland security under Northam, asked Westfall how OSIG even had authority to examine something like whether the parole board had met the requirement to notify a commonwealths attorney of an inmates parole. Moran told the OSIG investigators they were being used as political tools. Westfall told his team after the meeting that he feared for his job. Ill be honest with you, in the back of my mind you know, no rumor starting but this is the type of stuff that leads to me getting a new job. Against my will. And Im fine with that. I knew that when I took the job, he said. Adams told senators Wednesday that he looked at state law and was surprised there was no prohibition on such interference because the inspector general was intended to be independent. The office was created in 2012. The legislation would prohibit interference or undue influence on OSIG by the governor, chief of staff, counsel, policy director and Cabinet secretaries. The lead OSIG investigator looking into the parole board was fired and filed a federal lawsuit in January over her termination. Attorney General Jason Miyares is now investigating the parole board. Of Virginias 95 counties and 38 cities, very, very few boast a state historical marker that shares some of the incredible stories of United States Colored Troops. Now, Culpeper does. Some 70 area residents joined historians and a state official in Brandy Station on Saturday to unveil and dedicate the new marker on Brandy Road in the history-rich hamlet beside busy U.S. 29. Vietnam War veteran Ed Gantt, a retired Navy officer and pilot who led Fighter Squadron 31 at Naval Air Station Miramar, introduced the events speakers at the Brandy Station Volunteer Fire Department. But first, he offered his perspective. Our real honored guest is invisiblethe 190,000 to 200,000 African Americans who decided they werent going to wait for the end of slavery, but would make sure that freedom came by the sword, Gantt said. And when they did that, they did it at tremendous risk. If they hadnt done that 160 years ago, we would be a very different nation, he said. The world would be a different place. Brandy Stations marker, one of a handful in Virginia that educates the public about USCT soldiers, notes the first African American soldiers to serve in the Unions Army of the Potomac during the astonishing Overland Campaign of 1864. Brainstorm of Lt. Gen. Ulysses S. Grant, headquartered in Culpeper, the campaign spelled the beginning of the end for the Confederacy. Eleven months after it began, Gen. Robert E. Lee surrendered his army at Appomattox Court House. Culpeper County native Howard Lambert, president of The Freedom Foundation of Virginia, welcomed everyone to its event in Brandy Station. You are in a very special place today and for a very special occasion, Lambert said. Welcome to Culpeper County; theres a lot to see and do here. This is my hometown; this place is near and dear to my heart. But years ago, when I rode the school bus as a boy here, little did I know the history of Brandy Station. The crossroads village was the center of fighting in American historys largest cavalry engagement and is home to the Graffiti House, a wartime field hospitalnow a museumwhere Union and Confederate soldiers scrawled artwork and inscriptions. Fought on June 9, 1863, the wide-ranging Battle of Brandy Station inflicted 1,300 casualties and impacted Lees Gettysburg Campaign. But it is the wars later Overland Campaign that the new marker describes. On May 5, 1864, some 4,000 African American soldiers marched into Culpeper County at Kellys Ford as part of Grants Army of the Potomac, the Unions primary fighting force in the wars Eastern Theater. Seven USCT regiments entered Lees Central Virginia turf via Culpeper, after crossing the Rappahannock River. Many had been enslaved, some in Culpeper and nearby counties, before joining the armys ranks and returning south. Culpeper researcher Zann Nelson has identified at least 120 USCTs who were born in Culpeper. Representing those 4,000 Black soldiers on Saturday were living historians with the 23rd Regiment, USCT, a Spotsylvania-based re-enactment unit. On May 15, 1864, the 23rds men became the first Black soldiers to fight in combat against Lees vaunted Army of Northern Virginia. They prevailed. Dr. James K. Bryant II, a historian, author and former Shenandoah University professor, detailed the Black regiments service in Virginia. All of the USCT soldiers were green, having never served together in combat, said Bryant, the dedications keynote speaker. But that makes their accomplishments during the Overland Campaign all the more remarkable, as they stepped forwardmarching at the double quickto fight Lees cavalry and infantry, and again in the horrific Battle of the Crater in Petersburg, he said. As May 1864s Battle of the Wilderness grew desperate when Confederates launched a massive counterattack, Union headquarters told Brig. Gen. Edward Ferrerro, commander of the Black regiments in the Ninth Corps Fourth Division, to attack and press the enemy with all dispatch, he said. The 23rd Regiments men went straight from guarding Grants supply trains to combat in Spotsylvania County, to hold the armys right flank. That instance, the first combat between Black troops and Lees army in Central Virginia, hints at the significance of the U.S. Colored Troops in the Overland Campaign, Bryant said. Its a subject that merits being better noted in the annals of the Civil War, he said. This is our history, Bryant said. Im not talking about African Americans or just Black people. Its important history for all people who consider America their country. Entering Confederate-held territory, the soldiers of Brig. Gen. Edward Ferreros 9th Army Corps knew what they were getting into, Bryant said. One can only imagine what went through their minds as they marched into Culpeper. Black troops risked execution or re-enslavement because the Confederate government considered them to be slaves in revolt. Bryant gave shout-outs to Culpeper historical researcher Zann Nelson and Culpeper historian Clark B. Hall for helping bring to light more of the stories of USCTs in Culpeper. Virginia Board of Historic Review member David Ruth, who serves on the panel that approved the marker, came from the state capital to speak at the dedication. Hundreds of state historical markers note Civil War events and people, but only a handful focus on United States Colored Troops, said Ruth, a former superintendent of Richmond National Battlefield Park. So this marker is a critical and much-needed addition to the state historic marker program, he said. And its important to note that this program could not exist without community-minded citizens. He thanked Lambert, The Freedom Foundation and the Virginia Department of Transportation for their work on the Overland Campaign project. Gantt asked Ruth to convey the foundations appreciation to Gov. Glenn Youngkin. Ruth said that in the past five years, Virginia has devoted more than half of its new markers to African American history. Brandy Station resident Eugene Triplett, a Freedom Foundation director, urged participants to dig more into their family history to see if they could discover a connection to Civil War-era history. He acknowledged the search can be hard, saying USCT descendants first have to find their genealogical haystack before they can search for a family member, the proverbial needle in a haystack. That is difficult because slaveholders records often listed only first names for enslaved people. But as Harvard professor Henry Louis Gates Jr.s popular Finding Your Roots TV program attests, it is possible, Triplett said. If everyone who attended Saturdays event did a DNA test, theyd probably find they are related to a USCT soldier in the seven regiments mentioned on the Brandy Station historical marker, he said. Triplett recognized many of the soldiers surnames among the events attendees. During Saturdays event, Civil War women were represented, too. In the Brandy Station fire hall, Spotsylvania resident Jamie Perdue and her son Royal portrayed Dinwiddie County native Elizabeth Keckley, first lady Mary Lincolns dressmaker and confidante, and Keckleys baby George. Outside, Culpeper County resident Delores Triplett Brown, descendant of a soldier in the 27th USCT, removed the state historical markers wrapping as Culpeper sheriffs deputy Chris Williams stood in Brandy Road to direct traffic. A House subcommittee on Wednesday rejected a Senate bill to bar most personal use of campaign funds, scuttling a measure that had passed the Senate on a vote of 37-3. A GOP-led subcommittee of the House Privileges and Elections Committee voted 5-3 along party lines to defeat the bill sponsored by Sen. John Bell, D-Loudoun, ending the legislation for this session, which is set to close March 12. Virginia is one of the few states with no rules governing how legislative candidates and state lawmakers spend their campaign money. Lawmakers studied the issue last year, which resulted in Bells bill. Bell told the subcommittee that the measure isnt a perfect bill but it was meant to prevent the most egregious things. We have nothing today, Bell said. There is nothing to stop anybody from, frankly, doing anything they want with these funds. He added: Frankly, when a candidate or an elected official does one of these most egregious things and it hits the paper it makes all of us look bad. Republicans who control the House of Delegates previously killed legislation that would ban the personal use of campaign money. Bells bill differed in several respects. For instance, it would have allowed candidates and lawmakers to spend the money on food and clothing. If a candidate has a piece of pizza at the campaign office with their staff, technically that could be a violation, so the bill removes references to food, Bell said. Clothing is another issue, Bell said. If a candidate has a shirt with a campaign logo that also could have been a violation, so Bells bill does not bar spending on clothing. The bill also would have allowed use of campaign funds for professional development that relates to campaign or legislative training. Del. Kim Taylor, R-Dinwiddie, a member of the subcommittee, said she disagreed with the bills exemption for child care as an appropriate use of campaign funds. This is a position of public service, Taylor said. If you have children that need child care, I do not think that that should come out of campaign funding. Bell said the provision was meant to help volunteers serving in a campaign. He said a working group that looked at campaign finance issues recognized that child care is a challenge for volunteers in both political parties. Bell said he would be willing to remove the provision if it moved the bill forward. Im not looking for the perfect solution, Bell said. Im looking for a start and sometimes we need to do that in very complex areas. Del. Candi King, D-Prince William, said she could not support the measure without its exemptions for child care and dependent care. She said that without continuing to allow such expenditures, the legislature would continue to see disparities between independently wealthy candidates who can afford to run and serve and working people who face more challenges in seeking public office. Del. Margaret Ransone, R-Westmoreland, said she is not comfortable putting a measure in the state code that, as Bell said, is not perfect. Ransone noted that the House has backed a bill that would continue the work of a panel that is studying campaign finance issues. A House of Delegates proposal to create a fund for school construction is headed to the Senate for negotiations, which will have everything to do with the final two-year state budget and how it will address a multibillion-dollar problem of crumbling school buildings across Virginia. The Senate Finance & Appropriations Committee amended a House bill Wednesday to conform it with a Senate measure that originally aimed to do the same thing create a separate fund to issue grants to local school divisions to repair or replace schools. But House Bill 563, proposed by Del. Israel OQuinn, R-Washington County, is now part of the larger budget debate over whether to make grants to localities or offer them interest-subsidized loans with rebates for a portion of the cost for those that can least afford to pay. Senate Finance Chair Janet Howell, D-Fairfax, made clear she wants the legislation sent to a conference committee for negotiations with the House in conjunction with the debate over the budget. This is obviously one of the major topics of this session, Howell said. The committee approved a substitute for OQuinns bill that would conform it to Senate Bill 473, proposed by Sen. Jennifer McClellan, D-Richmond, chair of the Commission on School Modernization and Construction. The House bill also includes provisions identical to Senate Bill 238 proposed by Sen. Jeremy McPike, D-Prince William, to direct the state departments of education and general services to develop a way to help school divisions assess the condition of each school building and the cost to maintain it properly. By conforming the two bills, the Senate and House will have to resolve the differences in conference committee just as they will for pending budgets. House Speaker Todd Gilbert, R-Shenandoah, announced on Wednesday the House members on the conference committee to negotiate the budgets for this year and the next two years. They are: House Appropriations Chairman Barry Knight, R-Virginia Beach; Vice Chairman Terry Austin, R-Botetourt; Del. Rob Bloxom, R-Accomack; Del. Emily Brewer, R-Suffolk; Del. Luke Torian, D-Prince William; and Del. Mark Sickles, D-Fairfax. The Senate named its members on the committee on Friday. They are: Howell; Vice Chairman George Barker, D-Fairfax; Senate Majority Leader Dick Saslaw, D-Fairfax; Senate President Pro Tempore Louise Lucas, D-Portsmouth; Senate Democratic Caucus Chair Mamie Locke, D-Hampton; Senate Minority Leader Tommy Norment, R-James City; Sen. Emmett Hanger, R-Augusta; and Sen. Steve Newman, R-Lynchburg. The Senate budget includes $500 million in state funds that then-Gov. Ralph Northam proposed in December to help localities address a problem that would cost as much as $25 billion replacing all of the school buildings in Virginia over 50 years old, or more than half of them. The budget also includes language that McClellan proposed in a separate bill, Senate Bill 471, that would continue to use the Literary Fund for school loans, raising the amount available and lowering the interest cost to borrowers. That bill also appears headed to a conference committee for negotiations. The House budget eliminates that language and takes a different approach to avoid setting a precedent by using state money to pay for what has been a local responsibility. It would establish a loan rebate program with $292 million in state funds and $250 million from the Literary Fund that the state would use to subsidize the interest on up to $2 billion in loans, with rebates of up to 30% of the loan principal for the poorest localities. Ultimately, the House is counting on proceeds from casino gaming to replenish the fund. The budget provision passed the House on a 52-48 party-line vote last week, with Democrats arguing that local governments cant afford to pay back big loans without additional help, including the option for a voluntary 1% sales tax for school construction, a concept that House Republicans have blocked twice during this session. OQuinn told the House last week that the loan rebate program may not be ideal, but he said, 2 billion dollars is a lot of money in any context. McClellan said in an interview said their bills are alike in that the fund is the same, [but] the bottom line is the grant program. She is wary of using the Literary Fund from which the state has routinely diverted money to pay for teacher retirement for a loan-rebate program that would rely on casino gaming. Im still skeptical that the casino money is going to be enough, she said. Despite the differences, McClellan regards the debate as a long-awaited opportunity for the state to address the problem of crumbling schools. I think the fact that were even talking and theyre willing to do something is real progress, she said. The question is whether theyre willing to do enough. For the past couple of weeks, about 10 legislators from both parties and both chambers have been meeting privately, taking baby steps toward closing another, albeit overlooked, divide separating House Republicans and Senate Democrats: picking judges most significantly, two for the Virginia Supreme Court. The Republican-dominated House of Delegates and the Democrat-controlled Virginia Senate have had their differences since the legislature convened in January. Some have been especially bitter and they are rippling through talks over how a split General Assembly, scheduled to adjourn March 12, fulfills a constitutional duty lawmakers take very personally. I know legislators love handing out robes, says Steve Emmert, a Virginia Beach lawyer and authority on the appellate courts the Virginia Court of Appeals and the Supreme Court, both of which have been the source of nasty tussles among delegates and senators for whom control of judgeships and control of political patronage are one and the same. Indeed, when lawmakers talk about my judges a term often heard in floor debates and committee hearings they are just as often referring to the jurists they have personally selected as they are underscoring the concerns those enrobed men and women may have about the outsize impact of a wrinkle in state law. While judgeship fights might seem routine giving rise to Byzantine machinations, particularly in the closing hours of a General Assembly, when they often occur the brewing brawl over vacancies on the Supreme Court is not just a partisan spat. It is one unfolding at an intriguing point for a court with a long tradition of conservative jurisprudence. With the recent expansion of the appeals court the legislatures former Democratic majority added judges, many more moderate in their outlook; broadened the courts jurisdiction to civil matters and guaranteed review of possible trial error the Supreme Court, as the last stop for legal disputes, could be handling cases of greater consequence. Court-watchers say that likely includes possible limits on police searches of stopped vehicles an issue that can have a racial component because Black motorists have said they often are pulled over for reasons that have nothing to do with suspected criminal wrongdoing. On civil issues, the seven-member court currently, with a Black chief justice and with two women justices, one of whom is Black may have to weigh in on the application of federal law to how a divorced couple in Virginia shares a military pension. With the departures of former Chief Justice Don Lemons and Justice Bill Mims it is rare the General Assembly fills two Supreme Court seats in a single session logic would dictate each chamber gets one pick. Judicial selections are, at bottom line, the sole prerogative of the majority party. Thats 52 Republicans in the House; 21 Democrats in the Senate. Logic, however, may have nothing to do with this exercise. That apparently is complicating discussions within the House Republican Caucus and the Senate Democratic Caucus and with each other, though those conversations, so far, have involved only the leadership. Talks, at this point, have been more about procedure than possible candidates. That said, names are in circulation. House Republicans have mentioned two appeals court judges, Randy Beales and Wesley Russell, both alums of the attorney generals office and viewed as tough on law and order. Senate Democrats are floating the names of Stuart Raphael, an appellate judge who also worked in the AGs office, and Fairfax circuit judges David Bernhard and Tom Mann. The cascading effect of bumping judges from one court to another creates more opportunities to name more judges. For some legislators, thats desserts dessert too delicious to pass up. Because at the legislature, as the old-timers say, everything is connected to everything else, it is difficult not to assess the maneuvering over judgeships without considering the backdrop. Government is again divided and the early consequences have been somewhat poisonous. There are sharp disagreements between the House and Senate over policy tax cuts, race teaching and voting and civil rights as well as personnel, with appointees of Gov. Glenn Youngkin and Democratic predecessor Ralph Northam rejected in an escalating tit-for-tat. Republicans believe they have the upper hand in the three-dimensional chess game that can be judicial appointments. Should the General Assembly fail to agree on Supreme Court picks appellate and circuit judgeships, too Youngkin would make interim appointments that ultimately would be subject to the legislatures approval. But Senate Democrats have signaled to Youngkin theyll reject his selections if only out of revenge for what a Republican General Assembly did in 2015: It removed from the Supreme Court Jane Marum Roush, a respected Fairfax circuit judge, out of spite for the Democratic governor who appointed her, Terry McAuliffe, narrowly defeated by Youngkin in 2021. A rerun of that episode may dampen the enthusiasm of some for a gubernatorial appointment to the high court, knowing they could be out of work in a year or less. But there are trade-offs that could cause or clear a judicial muddle. For example, might the House GOP restore Democrat Angela Navarro to the State Corporation Commission? In return for what? Its some of the stuff that judicial dreams are made of. On Tuesday afternoon, in his office overlooking the state Capitol, House Speaker Todd Gilbert, R-Shenandoah, conferred with aides on judgeships. There had been speculation that both sides, which met for the first time about two weeks ago, would convene Tuesday evening, but the get-together was canceled because of a scheduling conflict. Its a small subset of members in the majority parties trying to create some dialogue, says Sen. Scott Surovell, D-Fairfax, a Senate negotiator. You cant have 52 Republicans and 21 Democrats in the same room. That would be a pretty thick soup. A House counterpart, Del. Rob Bell, R-Albemarle, chairman of the Courts Committee, says the talks are not that far along. And the House Republican majority leader, Terry Kilgore of Scott, says the inter-chamber negotiations had begun only recently because you never do anything down here before the deadline. Guilty as charged. Sen. Mark Warner, D-Va., applauded Gov. Glenn Youngkin and state lawmakers from both political parties on Tuesday for stepping up to economically boycott Russia for its military invasion of Ukraine. Warner, deeply involved in the U.S. response to the crisis as chair of the Senate Intelligence Committee, credited Sen. Louise Lucas, D-Portsmouth, for leading the effort to remove Russian vodka from state ABC shelves and Youngkin for seeking to end state investment in Russian companies. Over the weekend, the governor singled out investments by the $107 billion Virginia Retirement System, which estimates that Russian investments account for 0.1% of the total fund. We do need to re-examine [state investments], whether its VRS or state agencies doing business with Russia, Warner said. We are trying to economically boycott them ... and make these sanctions hurt. I think the more we can do as a state and as a community, I support Governor Youngkin on it. But Warner also warned that Virginians will feel the pain, too, especially at the gasoline pump, where prices were already high two years after the COVID-19 pandemic began but could rise above $4 a gallon by St. Patricks Day, according to AAA Virginia. He supported the release of oil from strategic petroleum reserves President Joe Biden announced Tuesday that the U.S. and its allies would release 60 million barrels, half of it from the American reserves. However, Warner said, Weve got to recognize that standing up to Russia, standing up to Russian energy could mean in the short term higher gas prices across the whole world and that will affect energy prices here in America. White House Press Secretary Jen Psaki said Tuesday that the president had made the decision to release the reserves in coordination with allies and the International Energy Agency. We are prepared to use every tool available to us to limit disruption to global energy supply as a result of President Putins actions, Psaki said. We will also continue our efforts to accelerate diversification of energy supplies away from Russia and to secure the world from Moscows weaponization of oil and gas. Warner regretted the cancellation of the Keystone oil pipeline which he said he broke from my party to support and called for an all of the above approach to energy production, while attempting to mitigate climate change caused by fossil fuels and its effect on vulnerable communities such as Hampton Roads. If there are ways to increase production in this crisis, it has to be on the table, he said. Rep. Abigail Spanberger, D-7th, a member of the House Foreign Affairs Committee, on Monday had called on Biden to release oil from the U.S. strategic reserve to buffer American consumers from runaway gas prices. Spanberger said she met Monday with Ukraines ambassador to the U.S., Oksana Markarova, who also is a member of the Ukrainian parliament. We must continue supporting our Ukrainian allies who are bravely fighting for their freedom by providing the arms, technical equipment, and humanitarian support they need, she said Tuesday. And as the invasion continues, we must further ensure that Putin, his oligarch cronies, and his enablers face unrelenting economic, social, and worldwide consequences. Warner and Sen. Tim Kaine, D-Va., joined 37 other senators in urging Biden on Tuesday to grant temporary protective status to Ukrainians living in the country to prevent them from being expelled and returned to the war-torn country. Granting [temporary protected status] to the limited population of Ukrainians who are currently in the U.S. on a temporary basis will create a minimal disruption for our country, but forcing these individuals to return to a war zone would be unacceptable, they said. As sanctions bite deeply into Russias economy, Warner warned, We should expect Putin to unleash cyberattacks against our country and other NATO nations. He also acknowledged the sanctions could undermine cooperation between the United States and Russia on the space program, especially the International Space Station that is partly supplied from Virginias spaceport on the Eastern Shore with rockets that depend on supplies from Russia and Ukraine. This kind of economic break with Russia could lead to all kinds of spinoffs, he said, and Im not surprised to see some of our cooperation in space break down. Rep. Don Beyer, D-8th, chair of the House Subcommittee on Space and Aeronautics, said Tuesday he is encouraged by NASAs statement that it is continuing to work with Russias space agency, Roscosmos. Beyer said hes also encouraged by the fact that the International Space Station partnership has been successfully preserved through periods of geopolitical stress in the past, and that sustaining its safe and productive operation has always been a focus of the partnership. Warner said the U.S. and its allies in NATO must remain unified against Russian aggression in Ukraine, but avoid a potential military confrontation between nuclear superpowers that he suggested may be rapidly moving past even what happened with the Cuban Missile Crisis in 1962. We have to be very cautions about escalation or having direct confrontation between NATO and Russia he said, but we cant walk away from our commitment to NATO and we cant walk away from continuing to provide our friends in Ukraine with weapons. Warner also acknowledged that Russia is likely to use its military superiority to overwhelm Kyiv and other Ukrainian cities, but he doesnt expect the war to end there. You can take the cities, but can you control the population? he asked. I think the Ukrainians are going to fight back. As we began another Womens History Month in 21st century America, equal rights for women is still not enshrined in the U.S. Constitution. Our state Capitol was a site of celebration two years ago as Virginia became the 38th and final state needed to ratify the Equal Rights Amendment. The state became a plaintiff in a federal lawsuit to certify the ERA into the U.S. Constitution, amid legal questions about whether ratification by the states came too late. But elections have consequences. Virginias new attorney general, Republican Jason Miyares, withdrew from the lawsuit. Thats the same Miyares who told the U.S. Supreme Court shortly after taking office in January that Virginia now views the landmark Roe v. Wade abortion decision as wrongly decided. Its not as if either of these about-faces reflects a reversal in public opinion. Polls show that a majority of Americans still support abortion rights; three-quarters support the Equal Rights Amendment. But equity and equality have become four-letter words among Virginia Republicans, who have shifted the Old Dominion into reverse and pressed their feet on the gas. It is a deep shame for this state that were moving away from widely held, bipartisan views that could bring people together, says Kati Hornung, executive directory of the nonpartisan VoteEqualityUS. But there are lessons to be learned here, as Republican lawmakers work feverishly around the clock to turn it back. Were not in 2020 anymore. Our moment of social justice and racial reckoning is starting to look as quaint as the 1967 Summer of Love. This turnabout may be fine for social conservatives and true believers in Virginias rightward lurch; others labored under the illusion we were in a Trump-free zone, says Claire Guthrie Gastanaga, a lawyer and former director of the American Civil Liberties Union of Virginia. Tuesday, two constitutional amendments were summarily killed in a House of Delegates Privileges and Elections subcommittee. The measures with voter approval would have automatically restored voting rights to people with felony convictions upon completion of their sentence, and purged the Virginia Constitution of the 2006 amendment declaring marriage solely between a man and a woman. They got rid of those in less than 15 minutes at 7:30, said Gastanaga, who witnessed the votes. [Republicans] tell their caucus members how to vote. And if they dont toe the line, they get punished. Virginia lawmakers last year voted to send these questions to the voters. But the constitutional amendments required two consecutive years of approval to gain the ballot. Virginia, to its disgrace, remains one of two states, along with Kentucky, that permanently disenfranchises people with felony convictions. Glenn Youngkin, who convinced enough on-the-fence voters that he was a moderate, has governed as a hardliner so far. Its anyones guess whether hell move to tighten the screws on felon disenfranchisement that were loosened by his Democrat and Republican predecessors. As for the GOPs ongoing romance with the states misbegotten marriage amendment, it doesnt seem to matter to them that the right to marriage by same-sex couples is the law of the land. In 2015, the United States Supreme Court, by the narrowest of decisions, declared same-sex marriage a fundamental right protected by the Fourteenth Amendments equal protection clause. Some states just cant quit bigotry, even after federal law demands a divorce. It wasnt until 2000 that Alabama overturned its ban on interracial marriage 33 years after the Supreme Courts Loving v. Virginia ruling declared such bans unconstitutional and nearly a century after Alabama inserted the ban into its constitution. Similarly, Virginia appears to be holding onto the marriage amendment as an ace in its back pocket. The high court has become more conservative since its Obergefell v. Hodges decision. Should it reverse it, The Family Foundation wants to make sure its there, Gastanaga said of the socially conservative lobbying organization. Its all on the table ... in the sense that, they dont have to do anything, except not change the [Virginia] Constitution, to destroy marriage equality she said. Thats not all thats on the table as Virginia moves inexorably right in its attempts to undo Virginias efforts to become a more just and evolved place, less inclined to assign whole classes of people to less than status. Our state and our nation will someday be judged by the way we treat women, the formerly incarcerated and LGBTQ people. A society that contracts equal rights instead of expanding them is broken. A retreat from advancement is the opposite of progress. Were backsliding toward the graceless state we thought wed left behind. In March 2004, Shawn Weneta was arrested and sentenced to 30 years in prison for embezzling $60,000 from his employer. Weneta remained in state prison for more than 16 years until his release in 2020, when he was pardoned by former Gov. Ralph Northam. While in the Virginia Department of Corrections, Weneta was a model inmate with a clean record. He participated in rehab programs, trained rescue dogs and developed restorative justice programs to help people in prison understand the impact of their crimes. Weneta's post-conviction efforts got noticed. His pardon application gathered support from key players such as Theo Stamos, then-commonwealth's attorney for Arlington County; the Arlington County sentencing judge; his former employer; then-Secretary of Public Safety Brian Moran; and his state senator. Even with all this support, his application still took three years to get granted. After his release, Weneta transitioned successfully to civilian life. He started a business, which provides emergency training for citizens, employing two other men who were returning to the community from incarceration. Buoyed by his own experience, he also has volunteered for criminal justice reform organizations and currently is working as a policy strategist to advocate for criminal justice reform in the General Assembly. This happened primarily due to Weneta's extraordinary efforts, but also because of his personal network of connections in Fairfax County, which culminated in him getting in front of Northam and being granted a pardon. Currently, the only way for inmates with extended sentences to earn a second chance is through a pardon from the governor. Receiving this pardon often is based on whom you know not what you know or what youve done. It is a system based on high-level judgments that can be arbitrary and capricious. By definition, a chief executive not the trial judge or prosecutor is making a subjective determination regarding a crime that happened years ago. This year, I have legislation (Senate Bill 378) that would allow an inmate who has served at least 15 years and met certain criteria to return to the original sentencing judge for a second look at their sentence. This is not a get-out-of-jail-free card. There are many disqualifying factors that prevent inmates from receiving this hearing. But at the end of the day, it provides a second chance for long-term inmates who otherwise have none. Here's how it would work: John Doe gets arrested and sentenced to 30 years for a crime, such as embezzlement or drug distribution. While incarcerated, Doe enrolls in rehabilitative programs, work studies and stays out of trouble. After 15 years, Doe becomes eligible to have his sentence reviewed by the judge who sentenced him. Once the petition is filed, there is a 90-day process before appearing again before the sentencing judge. The commonwealths attorney and victims are notified. The judge then reviews the changes in Does life, including behavior in prison and participation in prison programs, as well as input from all interested parties. Discretion then is reserved to the sentencing judge to determine if the original sentence still is appropriate. Of course, there are financial savings involved. Housing a single individual in state prison costs taxpayers $20,000 to $50,000 annually. But if this policy were passed in Virginia, it could mean an estimated $10 million in cost avoidance, as well as $27 million in taxable wages earned by returning citizens. This is not a new solution. Minnesota, Vermont, West Virginia and other states have introduced similar legislation. In 2021, Maryland approved a policy that allows incarcerated individuals who were convicted as adults before their 18th birthday to petition the court for a reduction, after serving 20 years. This just makes sense this middle-aged prisoner now is a different person than the young man who was sentenced a generation ago. This also is a bipartisan issue. The state Senate passed my version of this bill on a 24-16 vote, with three Republicans in support. When this bill was in front of a subcommittee, there was supporting testimony from advocacy groups like the Humanization Project, Americans for Prosperity and Justice Forward Virginia, which span the left-to-right spectrum. When purchasing an item or a service a new appliance, a car repair, a meal and more consumers generally know how much it will cost beforehand. Customers visiting a home improvement store, an auto care shop or a restaurant without any idea of the bill likely would walk out. Why should health care be any different? In January 2021, a new federal rule took effect to help patients understand the cost of medical needs before receiving care. Per the Centers for Medicare & Medicaid Services, the price transparency policy requires each U.S. hospital to provide information in two ways online: via a comprehensive machine-readable file with all items and services; and in a display of shoppable services in a consumer-friendly format. Virginians have every right to assess financial considerations in advance, not after the fact. Yet a study released in February by the nonpartisan, nonprofit PatientRightsAdvocate.org shows facilities across the commonwealth are failing to follow the new directive. Virginia hospitals can do better on price transparency. Of 23 that were profiled in the report, only three were rated as compliant: Carilion Roanoke Memorial Hospital, Sentara Norfolk General Hospital and Winchester Medical Center. Of the 20 commonwealth hospitals deemed noncompliant, seven were in the Greater Richmond region: Chippenham Medical Center, Henrico Doctors Hospital, Parham Doctors Hospital, Retreat Doctors Hospital, VCU Medical Center, Johnston-Willis Hospital and John Randolph Medical Center. Centra Virginia Baptist Hospital in Lynchburg, Spotsylvania Regional Medical Center in Fredericksburg, UVA University Hospital in Charlottesville, and LewisGale hospitals in Low Moor, Blacksburg, Pulaski and Salem also did not meet the mark. To make its assessments, PatientRightsAdvocate.org reviewed each hospitals website, looking for a machine-readable list of all items and services. It also checked if prices were present for the 300 most common services, either via a list of charges or an estimator tool. The advocacy group then scrutinized the completeness of the required data. Were there clear codes and descriptions for services or charges? If a hospital used a price estimator tool, were consumers able to see clearly identifiable options, regardless of insurance status? PatientRightsAdvocate.org also found consumers faced barriers to determining costs notably requests to submit personal or plan information, which are not part of the federal price transparency rule. Hospitals were deemed noncompliant for reasons including blanks or zeros in key fields, a lack of descriptions for items and services, or the absence of both negotiated rates with insurers or discounted cash prices for patients going that route. Virginia hospitals and their staff members have worked tirelessly and heroically over the past two-plus years to provide lifesaving care amid a historic pandemic. Perhaps there are legitimate variables that explain why the new transparency rule is not being followed. Perhaps area facilities are facing their own hurdles unrelated to a new federal regulation that largely was implemented amid a crisis. But no matter what is causing the lack of compliance, America continues to spend much more than other developed countries on health care, with worse outcomes and life expectancy. According to Health System Tracker, a partnership between the Peterson Center on Health Care and the Kaiser Family Foundation, the U.S. spent $11,945 per person in 2020. Thats roughly double the amount incurred by comparable countries. Health care as a share of U.S. gross domestic product also has ballooned from 6% in 1970 to 19% in 2020. The lack of compliance by hospitals is about more than simply the failure to follow the legal requirements, PatientRightsAdvocate.org argued. It is also about the failure of hospitals to provide critically needed information to consumers so they can make better health decisions. PatientRightsAdvocate.org suggested a few steps to improve the hospital price transparency rule going forward. The federal government could step up enforcement beyond issuing warning letters or publicly disclosing names of hospitals that fail to comply. The rule could be revised to end nonbinding estimates and push hospitals to pivot toward fixed prices. CMS also could engage local patients and hospitals to gather feedback about first-year challenges, and work together to set data standards that promote efficiency and accountability for all parties. If patients are not equipped with reliable cost choices, and providers are not able to supply them, how will our health care system ever improve its spending habits and achieve better outcomes? Virginia hospitals can do better on price transparency. Chris Gentilviso TIANJIN, March 2 (Xinhua) -- Ali Hasnain, a Pakistani studying in China, waved goodbye to his Chinese teachers and classmates at an airport in Beijing in last November, but he may never forget them for their companion and care during his hardest moment between life and death. In his first month of PhD studies in a foreign land, the 29-year-old Pakistani was diagnosed with a viral encephalitic caused by the Herpes Simplex Virus (HSVI) which attacks the human brain and can result in fatal brain damage. Hasnain started his study in China for a PhD degree in Control Science and Engineering at Tianjin University in north China's Tianjin Municipality last year. Unfortunately, he suddenly fell into a deep coma in his dormitory in the early morning of September 2021. The emergency waked up Wang Hai, director of the university's Admission Office of International Students, the School of International Education. He rushed to the Tianjin First Central Hospital, where the Pakistani student was receiving treatment. "He was lying on a stretcher and his body was twitching constantly. The nurses and I carried the stretcher together and ran for various examinations," Wang recalled. After the initial diagnosis, the hospital arranged Hasnain to an intensive care unit (ICU) for further brain surgery. "When I was shifted to the hospital by the management of Tianjin University, Chinese doctors told my family, who were in constant contact with the hospital administration, that I have a low chance of survival and that they are exploiting every single option to save my life," Hasnain said. Tang Bowen, Hasnain's counselor and teacher from the university's school of international education, came to the hospital almost every single day and helped update the boy's parents and university of his condition. With the help of an interpreter, Tang made video calls to Hasnain's family. "His father was really sad and sighed again and again. I also felt bad for the potential loss of such an energetic young man." Suggested by the Chinese doctors, Hasnain's family recorded some videos and voice clips that they could play for him in an effort to wake him up. Wang also helped to hire a full-time nurse to take care of Hasnain. "Hearing that Hasnain's family was facing some financial difficulties, the university provided necessary support in his treatment and nursing." A silver lining finally appeared after Hasnain underwent some major surgeries. On Oct. 20, 2021, Hasnain opened his eyes for the first time after he fell into a coma a month earlier. "He was on his way to receive a computed tomography (CT) scan. I was pushing his stretcher in the corridor when I suddenly found Hasnain opened his eyes," said Ali Mazhar, a fellow Pakistani student in the university. Tang immediately reported this to the doctors. "We finally see the hope after nearly one month of dark days." Hasnain recovered gradually and was moved out of ICU about eight days later. Tang helped to arrange a video call for Hasnain and his parents. "Although Hasnain could not speak, his eyes brightened up when seeing the faces of his parents. He nodded several times in response to his family members," Tang said. Ali Muhammad, Ali Hasnain's father, said he really appreciated the way his son was taken care of in China. "China is like a second home for us. That's why I have sent my son to China for higher education. The Chinese side also hired a full-time nurse for him," Muhammad said. "Besides providing huge financial support, they (the Chinese side) are still in contact with us and always inquire about my son's condition or if we are facing any financial problems regarding treatment," he added. As Muhammad would like to have his son back in Pakistan for further recovery under the companionship of his family members, the Embassy of the People's Republic of China in Pakistan arranged the flight as soon as possible with the help of Chinese teachers. Wang, Tang and Mazhar sent Hasnain to the airport in Beijing together. "He sat on the wheelchair and sent his sincere gratitude to all of us. I still remember him waving goodbye to us with a cotton hat on. The hat was a goodbye gift from me," Wang said. CHRISTIANSBURG Montgomery County School Board Chairwoman Sue Kass apologized Tuesday night for an incident two weeks ago, when she abruptly left a meeting following an exchange with a parent. Kass, who was elected chairwoman in January and is just starting the third year in her term, read a statement at the start of Tuesdays board meeting. She directed her apology to fellow board members and constituents. During her comment, Kass also spoke about her reasons for running for school board and the difficulties of the COVID-19 pandemic. The former teacher spoke about her family moving to the New River Valley nearly two decades ago and said her decision to run a few years ago was driven by a desire to give back to the community. Locally elected officials have been challenged in ways theyve never been challenged before, Kass said. The coronavirus has tested the very institutions weve come to rely on, she said. Kass also said shell remain on the board including as chairwoman and continue to serve the remainder of her term. She made an appeal to not lose sight of the greater good, which she said only hurts students. Kass comments came exactly two weeks after she abruptly left a meeting following an exchange with speaker and local parent Alecia Vaught, who during her comments singled out the chairwoman over the issue of masking. The two began trading words even prompting Kass at one point to call on a deputy to escort Vaught out of the room after the speaker showed social media photos of the chairwoman without a mask while in a crowd. Kass has been a proponent of mask requirements in the schools during the pandemic. The exchange was recorded as part of the school districts streaming of the meeting and went viral, drawing national attention. The interaction was by far among the most heated over the past several years between a sitting member of the elected body and a speaker during a meeting and even among board members themselves, who have frequently found themselves at odds since the start of the COVID-19 pandemic. Vaught returned Tuesday and once again called out Kass during her comments. Board member Penny Franklin called for Vaught to be removed. Kass, however, told the board to let Vaught stay and speak. Ms. Kass, I believe you me an apology for infringing on my First Amendment right, said Vaught, who added that she also expects an apology for the deputy being called on her during the event last month. The comments from Vaught that again prompted controversy were a reference to past social media comments Vaught said Kass had made. Vaught took issue with what she said was Kass once referring to people in the region as Becky Sues. Vaught also questioned Kass attitude toward certain students. The speaker said the board member, online, had previously described a 13-year-old as a filthy mouthed elitist. What do you think about my son? said Vaught, who added that her son is 14 years old and a supporter of former President Donald Trump. Kass did not respond to Vaught during the meeting. While not all of Vaughts recent comments were entirely over masking, the recent situation did come amid debates over the issue. Masking in schools has led many boards across the state and country to become the targets of parents who have viewed the matter strictly as one of family choice and who have questioned the effectiveness of face coverings and their effect on early educational development. The debate has frequently put school boards in the difficult position of either acquiescing to parental pressure or following the guidance of experts and health agencies that have continued to recommend masking as effective tools in controlling the spread of the coronavirus within schools. The recent exchange also came amid Gov. Glenn Youngkins push to end the mask mandate in schools. The governor eventually signed legislation to keep school boards from requiring masking in schools, a measure that went into effect this week. Long before the signing of that legislation, Montgomery County Public Schools was among the Virginia districts in January that voted at the time to continue its indoor masking requirement a move that drew criticism from a contingent of local parents. Kass was among the board members who voted in favor of the measure. A Mechanicsville man who before his 21st birthday started to engage in a series of online consumer fraud schemes involving the sales of fictitious drone businesses, among other fake ventures, was sentenced to more than 3 years in federal prison Tuesday for wire fraud. Prosecutors said at least five victims were bilked of $706,000 in 2018 and 2019. Harlan Barry Coxs elaborate scam, in which he created websites for his fictitious businesses that included bogus company logos and financial statements, drained at least two victims of their life savings or retirement investments. The damage incurred went well beyond financial loss, prosecutors said, with some reporting severe mental and emotional repercussions. It is impossible for me to trust anyone, one victim wrote in a statement quoted by prosecutors in court documents. Ive experienced anxiety and depression for which I had to seek medical attention. It took me a long time to stop blaming myself for what happened. I felt angry, ashamed, guilty and embarrassed. I have even had suicidal thoughts. I have become numb and very distant from my family and friends. Its been over two years and not a single day goes by that I dont relive what happened to me. Another victim, who was seeking to acquire a business that would allow him the freedom of quitting work as a trucker, reported feeling anger, numbness and depression, placing him in shutdown mode ... unable to gain the strength to crawl out. Cox, now 24, used most of the money he fraudulently obtained to support his lifestyle and pay personal expenses including trips to Miami, New York City and Los Angeles and the purchase of a $103,000 Mercedes SUV, according to a statement of facts signed by Cox. Prosecutors said Cox used deliberate and calculated methods to take advantage of unsuspected victims online planning and executing his schemes over many months. RICHMOND A state Senate committee is wrestling with a bill that would essentially undo a change in the law made last year and broadly stop the public from getting access to police investigative files in closed cases. Misinformation about the current law has muddled the debate. While records that are used in criminal court cases are public, police and prosecutors have long had discretion over whether to release records that arent filed in court. Even in police cases that are long closed, police routinely denied releasing any records. After families of those killed in the 2019 mass shooting at the Virginia Beach government center had trouble getting police records about the case, lawmakers changed the law in 2021 to require police to provide records to the public in cases where release of records wouldnt hinder a prosecution. The law, sponsored by then-Del. Chris Hurst, D-Montgomery, went into effect on July 1 and has been in place for eight months. It was vetted through the Virginia Freedom of Information Advisory Council and included some key privacy provisions: Police cant release photos or records that show or identify a victim. The law doesnt apply if release of records would constitute an unwarranted invasion of personal privacy. And records that would disclose the identity of a confidential source or information provided to police only by a confidential source would not be released. But police and prosecutors want the law largely overturned, to shift back to a policy in which the default is that they dont have to disclose any closed case files they dont want to, unless its to the immediate family of a victim. Supporters of the proposed legislation, filed by Del. Rob Bell, R-Albemarle, say the priority should be protecting victims and avoiding public and media access to criminal records that could re-traumatize the survivors of people who were killed. Crime victims didnt ask to be in the situation theyre in, Bell told the Senate General Laws and Technology Committee a week ago. Theyve been dragged in, in this case because of the deaths of their daughters, he said, referring to the parents of two college students who were murdered. That their records would be used for this is atrocious. Its obscene. Once the public realizes they can get such records, he told senators, they can get everything. This will not end at made-for-TV movies. It will be on TikTok videos. It will be on Facebook. Theyll be making YouTubes. Bells bill would allow only immediate family access to records in closed police cases (and attorneys working on post-conviction issues) but shut off access to all closed police records to the rest of the public, not just in sensitive murder cases but in any closed police investigation in Virginia history. Open government advocates who oppose the bill say it doesnt strike the right balance between family privacy and allowing public access to government records, and say the Senate committee should avoid passing the bill until more time can be spent on how to fix any real problems that exist. The committee is scheduled to address the bill again Wednesday. Despite the speculation that sensitive records could be released, no evidence emerged in General Assembly hearings that any sensitive photos or records related to a murder or violent crime actually have been released since the new law took effect July 1. Unanswered questions and misinformationHannah Graham, an 18-year-old University of Virginia student, was murdered in 2014. The man convicted in her death also pleaded guilty to killing Morgan Harrington, a 20-year-old Virginia Tech student, in 2009. In testimony this year, Hannahs mother, Susan Graham, said that she and her husband learned in November that Albemarle County police had received a FOIA request under the 2021 law from an international media company that apparently wants to make a documentary movie. Graham said release of new records would traumatize her family, and has asked lawmakers to pass Bells bill. Bell testified that an Albemarle detective called him and cursed, saying he had been told he needed to handle a FOIA request to a TV producer. But its unclear whether Albemarle police have yet provided any records, or if they withheld any records for reasons allowed by existing law, or if the FOIA request is still pending. A senator asked Bell last week if he knew its status. I dont know where theyre at or how hard theyre fighting or what they turned over, Bell replied. And Albemarle County police and county officials arent saying. A police officer did not respond to a voicemail asking about the status of the FOIA. Someone who answered the phone at the police department referred questions to a countys communications director, Emily Kilroy. She did not respond to inquiries made since Thursday to her desk voicemail, cellphone voicemail and email. So if theres no evidence any sensitive records have been turned over to anyone in the eight months since the change in law, why the need to change it back? Its based on speculation, and thats where the misinformation comes in. On Monday, the National Center for Missing & Exploited Childrens president and CEO, John F. Clark, sent a letter in support of Bells bill to members of the Senate committee. But the letter misstated how photos are handled under current law, saying current law allows unlimited access for anyone to crime scene photographs when a child has been murdered. The letter falsely claimed that Bells bill would protect photos, audio or video depicting a victim from being released. Again, current law already does that. Bell told senators the issue is the guy who wants to see as many disgusting pictures as he can and put them on TikTok. After Bell made that comment last week, Sen. Adam Ebbin, D-Alexandria, told the committee he might favor an approach that focused on photos and videos and salacious things movie producers might use. Asked in an interview Tuesday if he believed photos of victims could currently be released, Ebbin said, Thats what they made it sound like during the hearing. Although the 2021 law also doesnt require police to release records identifying confidential sources or information provided solely by confidential sources, Bell made this comment to senators about why his proposed change is needed: If you are a witness, who saw something, talked to the officers and were promised that they wont use it in court, it wont ever come up, that is no longer much protection because someone across the street can get the whole file. Not just see what you said and how you said it, to whom you said it, they can actually get the video if its a video case. In an interview for this story, Bell acknowledged he was unaware of any police agency or prosecutor under the 2021 law who was forced to turn over a sensitive photo from a closed case file. He said he knows of no police agency that was forced under the 2021 law to turn over records that had the name of any confidential source in a case. I agree that this hasnt happened, he said. We are trying to prevent this from happening. Because once it has happened its too late to address it. Representatives of the Virginia Association of Commonwealths Attorneys, who support Bells legislation, didnt respond to a question Tuesday about whether they know of any examples since July 1 of police or a prosecutor being required to turn over sensitive records about a murder or a violent crime to news media. Megan Rhyne, executive director of the nonprofit Virginia Coalition for Open Government, told senators last week that the 2021 law allows a balance of privacy rights with public access that can be used by journalists, historians, family of victims or someone who was arrested but not charged and wants to see what evidence the police had. Under Bells legislation, she said, essentially were going back to no access again. A Mechanicsville, Va., man who before his 21st birthday started to engage in a series of online consumer fraud schemes involving the sales of fictitious drone businesses, among other fake ventures, was sentenced to more than 3 years in federal prison Tuesday for wire fraud. Prosecutors said at least five victims were bilked of $706,000 in 2018 and 2019. Harlan Barry Coxs elaborate scam, in which he created websites for his fictitious businesses that included bogus company logos and financial statements, drained at least two victims of their life savings or retirement investments. The damage incurred went well beyond financial loss, prosecutors said, with some reporting severe mental and emotional repercussions. It is impossible for me to trust anyone, one victim wrote in a statement quoted by prosecutors in court documents. Ive experienced anxiety and depression for which I had to seek medical attention. It took me a long time to stop blaming myself for what happened. I felt angry, ashamed, guilty and embarrassed. I have even had suicidal thoughts. I have become numb and very distant from my family and friends. Its been over two years and not a single day goes by that I dont relive what happened to me. Another victim, who was seeking to acquire a business that would allow him the freedom of quitting work as a trucker, reported feeling anger, numbness and depression, placing him in shutdown mode ... unable to gain the strength to crawl out. Cox, now 24, used most of the money he fraudulently obtained to support his lifestyle and pay personal expenses including trips to Miami, New York City and Los Angeles and the purchase of a $103,000 Mercedes SUV, according to a statement of facts signed by Cox. Prosecutors said Cox used deliberate and calculated methods to take advantage of unsuspected victims online planning and executing his schemes over many months. The fake businesses he offered for sale on online marketplaces included Drone Purple and Pelagoon, companies that purported to sell drones, and Margin Street Inc., a company purported to serve as an online marketplace where other internet-based businesses could be bought and sold. In soliciting the sales of these phony businesses, Cox created various alias names and individualized email accounts for fictitious business representatives and provided prospective buyers with purported due diligence materials consisting of false and doctored documents. That included fraudulent financial statements that purported to show that the businesses for sale were generating millions of dollars in revenue with net profits exceeding $1 million. Thereafter, Cox made numerous material misrepresentations to induce prospective buyers to provide large down payments on quick closing timelines for the purchase of these fictitious businesses, assistant U.S. attorneys Avishek Panth and Michael Moore wrote in the governments sentencing memorandum. In reality, none of these businesses had any revenue or were viable concerns. The victims would sign purchase agreements, which Cox signed using one of his aliases. To close on the sale, the victims were instructed to wire initial down payments to bank accounts he controlled. The prosecutors said Cox also used various shell companies, and bank accounts created in the name of such companies, to receive the buyers money. He then quickly moved that money out into different accounts in other shell companies names to avoid recoupment of the funds. In total, Cox utilized 10 bank accounts at six different banks in an effort to avoid detection. He sometimes would close bank accounts within months of opening them to obfuscate efforts at detecting his wrongdoing, the prosecutors wrote. At all times Cox was the sole individual in control of the bank accounts of all these shell companies. Following a sentencing hearing in U.S. District Court in downtown Richmond, Judge David J. Novak sentenced Cox to 39 months behind bars, which is near the low end of federal sentencing guidelines, which called for a term of punishment between 37 and 46 months. Novak gave Cox credit for time he has already served nine months as he awaited the disposition of his case. Panth urged Novak to sentence Cox to 46 months, noting the leniency Cox received in Richmond Circuit Court after being found guilty in January 2020 of obtaining money under false pretenses a charge that was reduced from a felony to a misdemeanor and netted him a six-month suspended jail term. After getting that break, Cox continued to lie about his criminal behavior, Panth said. But Assistant Federal Public Defender Nia Vidal urged a downward variance in punishment of 18 months, noting that Coxs crimes started just before he turned 21, and played out during a short period of time in an otherwise law-abiding life. In comments from the bench, Novak noted that Cox attended, by way of scholarship, the Veritas School, an elite private secondary institution in Richmond, and appeared to be a very bright person. The judge also noted that Cox has a very supportive family his mother, father, brother and grandmother attended Tuesdays hearing and he had other advantages that most defendants who come before him dont have. In spite of that, Cox became an internet con. Im not seeing whats going on here, Novak said. None of this makes any sense. How does this happen? When given a chance to speak, Cox said his immaturity and greed were the principal factors. I was just outside of myself outside of my character. I have no excuse. He added hes a different person now, after spending nine months behind bars to reflect on his actions. You started off with such a head start, Novak replied. The good news is, everybody wants you to succeed. Although Novak gave him a slight break in prison time, the judge ordered that Cox make $561,776 in restitution; the government indicated he already has repaid some of some of the stolen funds. Novak also ordered Cox to undergo mental health treatment while in prison, believing that may partially explain his aberrant behavior, along with his youth and immaturity. Novak wished Cox luck, but made it clear that if he appears before the judge again, Im going to give you every day [in prison] that I can. Arkansas Times columnist Gene Lyons is a National Magazine Award winner and co-author of "The Hunting of the President" (St. Martin's Press, 2000). You can email Lyons at eugenelyons2@yahoo.com. " " Ukraine's ambassador to the United States, Oksana Markarova, accused Russia of using a vacuum bomb, also known as a thermobaric bomb, against the Ukrainian military. Leonid Faerberg/SOPA Images/LightRocket via Getty Images As Russia's horrifying invasion of Ukraine continues to unfold, Oksana Markarova, Ukraine's ambassador to the U.S., has alleged that Russia used a vacuum bomb. According to reports, the attack was aimed at a Ukrainian army base in Okhtyrka and 70 soldiers were killed in the blast. The use of a vacuum bomb has yet to be independently confirmed. But on Feb. 26, 2022, CNN reported that members of its team had spotted Russian military vehicles fitted with thermobaric rocket launchers near the Ukrainian border. Advertisement Vacuum bombs, or thermobaric weapons, work in two stages. Stage one releases a large cloud of combustible material, usually fuel or small metal particles such as aluminium. Stage two triggers an explosion that ignites this material to create a massive fireball and a shock wave. The effect is similar to what's caused in accidental dust explosions in coal mines or flour mills, where the flammable particles become so dispersed, they catch fire and generate huge blasts. Thermobaric weapons are also called vacuum bombs because the explosion sucks up all the oxygen around the device. This process leaves victims close to the explosion unable to breathe, killing them by asphyxiation. Besides suffocation, the pressure from the explosion can essentially crush a person to death and cause major internal damage to the body's organs, such as rupturing the lungs. The effects of thermobaric weapons are much more intense and destructive than a more conventional bomb. The explosion lasts longer and happens at a much higher temperature. As a result, these weapons can devastate vast areas of land, destroy buildings and can even vaporize a human body from the extreme heat. The materials used are also often highly toxic and can be as dangerous as chemical weapons. Thermobaric weapons are not seen as very effective against heavily armored targets, so we wouldn't expect them to be used on targets such as tanks. They are suited to taking out infrastructure, troops and civilians. Russia's use of thermobaric weapons raises serious legal concerns. Markarova has said that the alleged attack would violate the terms of the Geneva Conventions. Meanwhile, White House press secretary Jen Psaki has noted that if the allegations are true as well as allegations Russia used cluster bombs, another controversial weapon this would potentially be considered an international war crime. This wouldn't be the first time Russia has employed these devices. Human Rights Watch condemned Russia for using vacuum bombs in Chechnya in 1999, noting that these weapons "kill and injure in a particularly brutal manner." In 2007, Russia tested the largest ever thermobaric weapon, dubbing it the "father of all bombs." Russia has also reportedly used these weapons in Syria. Other countries have also used these weapons. For example, the U.S. employed thermobaric devices, not only in the Gulf War, but also in Vietnam and against al-Qaida in Afghanistan. Given Russia's history of using thermobaric weapons, it would not be surprising if they are found to have been employed in this case. But the move would signal a worrying intensification of the conflict. Russia may be trying to speed up its invasion of Ukraine by using more destructive weapons rather than more conventional bombs. Michelle Bentley is a reader in international relations and director of the Royal Holloway Centre for international security at Royal Holloway University of London. She receives funding from the Leverhulme Trust. This article is republished from The Conversation under a Creative Commons license. You can find the original article here. FLORENCE, S.C. A Francis Marion University professor says Ukraine winning the information war is helping to keep Europe united in putting sanctions on Russia. Lauren Perez, a third-year political science professor, told the Morning News Tuesday afternoon it was a little surprising for Ukraine to win the information war because of the Russian propensity to produce propaganda favorable to its position. I think some of that is they were expecting things to go more quickly, she said. They didnt think they needed to ramp things up like they needed to if this is going to be a prolonged and a protracted conflict. She praised Ukrainian President Volodymyr Zelenskyy in particular because he has been leading from the field and showing himself to be a man of the people. Perez added some of the European-implemented sanctions were done after Zelenskyy spoke with other European leaders. Perez also praised the Ukrainian government for using a video of a cat and for tweeting to Elon Musk to get Starlink internet service to the country. I think its helped to keep Europe united, to get the West behind them and to get both more sanctions [placed on Russia] and more material aid in terms of satellite internet and weapons and all of that. She said another major factor is that the Russian invasion of the Ukraine is one of the first times since World War II the world has seen a country invade another country because it wanted to and many of the countries formerly allied with the Soviet Union dont want to go back to being influenced by Russia. She acknowledged that weather could also be playing a factor, too. Most of the eastern European countries rely on Russian natural gas for heating and with spring and summer coming up, theres not as much need as there will be in the fall for Russian gas. Perez added the reliance on Russian gas has also intensified efforts toward using non-fossil fuels for power in Europe. Perez said she thought everyone expected the Russians to provide more reasons for their invasion of Ukraine. Efforts toward that have been pretty flimsy, she said. She mentioned a Russian allegation of genocide toward Russian speakers. Theyre not even trying to present evidence. Theyre just saying theres a genocide against Russian speakers and ethnic Russians particularly in eastern Ukraine. Perez said the other Russian reason thats been mentioned is the de-Nazification of Ukraine. In 2018, Reuters published an opinion piece arguing that Ukraine had a problem with far-right vigilantes willing to use intimidation and even violence to argue their points and that these groups sometimes received tacit approval from law enforcement agencies. I dont know who the Nazis are supposed to be in Ukraine, Perez said. The president is Jewish and is running a liberal democracy. Perez said the Russian government could be using Nazism to harken back to the days when Russia last became involved in a European war, World War II. In 1979, the Russian-controlled Soviet Union invaded Afghanistan. The Soviets remained in Afghanistan for several years and the invasion and war are thought to be one of the causes of the collapse of the Soviet Union. Get local news delivered to your inbox! Subscribe to our Daily Headlines newsletter. Sign up! * I understand and agree that registration on or use of this site constitutes agreement to its user agreement and privacy policy. BEIJING, March 2 (Xinhua) -- The attempts of "Taiwan independence" separatists colluding with external forces to challenge the one-China principle are doomed to fail, a Chinese mainland spokesperson said on Wednesday. Zhu Fenglian, a spokesperson for the State Council Taiwan Affairs Office, made the remarks in response to a press inquiry regarding UN Resolution 2758, which was again targeted by Taiwan's Democratic Progressive Party (DPP) authority to challenge the one-China principle on the occasion of the 50th anniversary of the issuance of the Shanghai Communique. By turning a blind eye to the international law and basic norms governing international relations, the DPP authority aims to negate by any means possible the fact that Taiwan is part of China, seeking to excuse their advocacy of "Taiwan independence," Zhu said. Although the two sides of the Taiwan Strait have yet to be reunified, the sovereignty and territory of China have never been severed and the fact that the mainland and Taiwan belong to one and the same China has never changed, she added. Seguin, TX (78155) Today Cloudy skies this evening followed by scattered showers and thunderstorms overnight. Low 73F. Winds SSE at 15 to 25 mph. Chance of rain 40%.. Tonight Cloudy skies this evening followed by scattered showers and thunderstorms overnight. Low 73F. Winds SSE at 15 to 25 mph. Chance of rain 40%. US Sentencing Commission getting an early start on possible guideline amendment | Main | Prez-Elect Trump says he now has a SCOTUS short list among his not-so-short list of 21 December 2, 2016 Should I be more troubled by Dylann Storm Roof being allowed to defend himself at his federal capital trial? The question in the title of this post is prompted by this intriguing commentary authored by Chandra Bozelko and headlined "Dylann Roof shouldnt be allowed to act as his own lawyer." Here are excerpts: Dylann Roof, the avowed white supremacist accused of killing nine black parishioners at a historic Charleston, South Carolina church last year, is a 22-year-old man with a presumed history of drug use. He did not graduate from high school. He could be sentenced to death if a jury finds him guilty. And yet he is acting as his own lawyer to defend himself against 33 federal charges of murder and hate crimes. Roof is representing himself in court against the advice of the presiding judge, Richard Gergel. And by doing so, Roof will likely go the way of other self-represented defendants like Joan of Arc, Jesus, Socrates and Ted Bundy: hes probably going to be convicted and killed. But what many people dont understand is that the judge had no choice but to let Roof represent himself. Since the Supreme Court decided Faretta v. California in 1975, the right to represent oneself is absolute regardless of intellect or educational attainment. Requests to relinquish counsel must be honored out of that respect for the individual which is the lifeblood of the law. Because its likely to be little more than a spectacular suicide, the Roof trial should get us to admit that the lifeblood of the law has clots in it. Unprepared defendants shouldnt be allowed to represent themselves in capital trials; the Supreme Court precedent established in Faretta needs to be overturned or modified in a meaningful way. I wasnt as successful as Dylann Roof. In 2007, I tried to represent myself in a criminal trial but was denied, Princeton degree and two years of law school notwithstanding. The judge claimed that, because my request came after jury selection but before the start of the states evidence, it was a delay tactic and made my motion untimely. I hadnt asked for a continuance and was prepared to start right away. I had a lawyer forced upon me, one who admitted she hadnt read the police reports and went on to advise the jury that there was no reasonable doubt about my guilt. I ended up being convicted of ten felonies and four misdemeanors and sentenced to five years in prison for identity theft-related crimes, but without a lawyer I might have been sentenced to the maximum on every charge consecutively, which was 185 years in jail. I wasnt facing the death penalty and the judge assigned to my case still wouldnt let me represent myself. Scholars, judges and attorneys have long seen self-represented defendants as calves pulling their own leads to slaughter. Accordingly, theyve chipped away at Faretta with decisions like the one in my case. Courts look for ways to deny requests for self-representation because they know the unfairness that can ensue. Federal circuit courts are actually split on what constitutes a valid self-representation request. The Supreme Court itself curbed the Faretta right in 2008 in Indiana v. Edwards when it held that defendants can be competent to stand trial yet not competent to represent themselves. Whether self-representation would hurt every defendant who engaged in it is debatable. The limited evidence we have on the number of self-represented defendants who win is encouraging. But many of those successes come in cases where lethal injection isnt a possible penalty. Every self-represented person in a capital case has lost. And yet we still allow defendants like Dylann Roof to act as their own attorneys, despite their obvious inability to do so.... Saying that minimally educated or mentally ill criminal defendants who face lethal penalties must be free from government intrusion in the form of counsel is the same thing as saying suicide is part of individual liberty. While it may be true, it contradicts our countrys alleged respect for life. What is judicially permissible may not be moral.... Removing self-representation as a possibility in capital cases could and should be corrected for with some type of minimum standards for capital defenders.... This denigration of the right to effective assistance of counsel is what makes it easy to allow defendants like Dylann Roof to represent themselves. If appointed counsel wont do much better, why not let people exercise their rights under Faretta and get themselves killed? Especially when the trial will add glorious sound bites and scenes of an allegedly racist killer getting to cross-examine his African-American victims. In the name of individual liberties that weve already stopped protecting, we will watch Roofs slow, elaborate, taxpayer-funded self-harm unfold. The trial of the Charleston church shooter places us at a crossroads of Constitution and conscience. If we overturn Faretta v. California and prevent defendants in capital cases from defending themselves while providing them with qualified and paid counsel, we wont have to choose. I am tempted to assail many contentions in this commentary, and yet I feel I must give it some respect because it was authored by someone who seemed to have been burned by his her own inability to serve as his her own attorney. I will just comment that I always look for principles of liberty and personal freedom to guide me when I think I might be "at a crossroads of Constitution and conscience." And principles of liberty and personal freedom lead me to the view that persons who are competent should generally be allowed to represent themselves when on trial for their lives or for any other interest. A few of many prior related posts on prosecution of Dylann Storm Roof: December 2, 2016 at 08:54 AM | Permalink Comments At the end of the day, I would probably agree with someone's right to defend themselves especially with the presence of stand by counsel. I say "probably" since I'm somewhat less firm about it than other things. But, partially since provision in the Bill of Rights really shouldn't just be seen in a vacuum here, it is not a total simple call. An actual defense counsel is very useful to protect the overall sanctity of the trial and the safeguards of the Bill of Rights generally. So, e.g., if someone is ignorant of the law and doesn't know how to object, blatantly unfair results can occur by default. Also, the trial's truth finding aspects can be cited with some cynicism, but again, the whole idea is to have two actual lawyers there to have a sort of battle with the end result being some form of justice. Finally, it will be harder for the witnesses to be questioned by an unhinged uninformed (if allegedly competent) defendant here. Posted by: Joe | Dec 2, 2016 9:43:31 AM I haven't followed the court proceedings closely and have no access to his confidential mental health information, so I can't comment on his particular choice or the district court's ruling. The law is clear, however, that competence to stand trial and competence to act as your own attorney are different, and the standard for competency for the second is higher. Particularly in a death case, I think the court should give real weight to the distinction and pause before letting any person represent themselves when death is on the table. Posted by: defendergirl | Dec 2, 2016 9:53:14 AM I also read analysis arguing that the judge in the case is applying the rules with too heavy of a hand and should let's say let the standby counsel be able to object in certain cases (unless Dylann Roof clearly opposes it) & that other judges handled it differently. Posted by: Joe | Dec 2, 2016 10:35:13 AM He did it. There's no doubt he did it, and he deserves to die for it. Who cares? This handwringing is just pathetic. Posted by: federalist | Dec 2, 2016 10:35:32 AM The author of this piece sounds like he had an amazing Faretta issue on appeal, if he's accurate about his trial. And for the record, of COURSE people should have the right to represent themselves, if they're sane enough to manage it. It's an important right, and it exists to stop people from having incompetent or conflicted counsel foisted on them to prevent them from speaking their piece. That judges sometimes punish pro se defendants with consecutive sentences doesn't mean we should stop people from representing themselves--it just means we should be looking more closely at such trial taxes to ensure fair sentencing. Posted by: Andrew Fleischman | Dec 2, 2016 11:03:02 AM I got curious and looked up the opinion. It makes more sense now. https://scholar.google.com/scholar_case?case=137246112903201289&q=Chandra+Bozelko&hl=en&as_sdt=4,7#[8] "The representation of counsel that the defendant "was willingor she's prepared to go forward pro se, if need be," is not precisely the same as a representation that the defendant would proceed without any delay or disruption and that none would occur during trial. The circumstances, of course, would be different had trial not begun." Posted by: Andrew Fleischman | Dec 2, 2016 11:07:22 AM "it exists to stop people from having incompetent or conflicted counsel foisted on them to prevent them from speaking their piece" The defendants are likely to be less competent than even counsel so incompetent that even a conservative would find appeals on the point sound. If they merely want to "speak their piece," do that. Relying on the person to question/challenge jurors etc. isn't necessary for that, I gather. Basically, it seems Dylann Roof didn't want his counsel to put on a defense suggesting he is unhinged. Anyway, even if he's obviously guilty, etc., one would think some might worry about the victims here, who now have to have him asking them questions. Colin Ferguson asking people in that train questions, I gather, was pretty hard, harder than if his counsel to. Or, if a rapist "obviously guilty" was asking his/her victim questions directly especially a child. And, how much harder it makes for the judge etc. Posted by: Joe | Dec 2, 2016 11:10:59 AM "Anyway, even if he's obviously guilty, etc., one would think some might worry about the victims here, who now have to have him asking them questions. Colin Ferguson asking people in that train questions, I gather, was pretty hard, harder than if his counsel to. Or, if a rapist "obviously guilty" was asking his/her victim questions directly especially a child. And, how much harder it makes for the judge etc." Not relevant to the inquiry. If he gets to, he gets to, and those issues do not bear on the question. Stop handwringing and get on with it. Posted by: federalist | Dec 2, 2016 12:26:39 PM The constitutional right is "to have the assistance of counsel." The rules of professional conduct give the final say over most defense decisions to defense counsel. At least in my experience (both as a public defender and as a prosecutor), it is not unusual for defendant's and defense counsel to have different opinions on what the defense should be. If after receiving the advice of counsel on how the case should be defended, competent (in the Edwards sense) defendants decide that they do not want "assistance" that amounts to counsel overriding the defendant's wishes, then that seems to me to be part of the concept of "ordered liberty" that the Bill of Rights as a whole protects. While we all wish for a fairness and accuracy in legal proceeding, some values take higher priority. The issue is not whether counsel being foisted on defendant is competent (although that is a frequent complaint that those seeking to represent themselves make), the issue is whether a defendant has to surrender control of his case to a counsel when they disagree about how the case should be managed. There is always the question of standby (i.e. ready to step-in), hybrid (shared responsibilities), and advisory counsel. But all of these variations are ways of cluttering up the fact that nobody in the legal system likes the fact that defendants have a right to represent themselves. Assuming that the judge dotted the i's and crossed the t's during the Faretta hearing (and appellate judges are prone to seize on the tiniest errors in those hearings), I am not "bothered" that Root gets to represent himself. I think that it's probably a dumb move that increases the likelihood that Root will not outlast the Trump Administration, but it's his right to cut his own throat in court. Posted by: tmm | Dec 2, 2016 12:42:46 PM He wants to represent himself so he can spew his racism. This is a trial that people really need to listen too. Let him talk about the sites on the internet he got his information from. AS a Blk Man, I want to hear this, you should too. it shows a Cancer growing in this country. Not saying this to be Racist, but White's need to listen very closely, this type of mindset is growing in this country. He is not Cutting his own Throat, this is what he believes. he told the Cop's he did it because of Racism. We minorities have been complaining about racism in courts, policing, education and how we are perceived. America needs to look at it's self because this country is getting more diverse everyday. Almost 1000 hate related incidents since the election of 2016, and there are more people like him in this country. People need to quit ignoring what's happening and pay some attention because this is going to get worse. Posted by: Kevin Newbill | Dec 2, 2016 4:33:54 PM The "assistance of counsel" -- and this was brought up during oral argument in Faretta -- doesn't suddenly mean ipse facto he himself can act like counsel here. It is not merely that he is waiving counsel. He is making decisions now a counsel makes. He is not saying "judge, you decide" or something. That's a major concern even if "ordered liberty" gives him the right to act as his own counsel. That's why to me it's a tad harder than some here appear to be making it. federalist notes: "Not relevant to the inquiry. If he gets to, he gets to, and those issues do not bear on the question. Stop handwringing and get on with it. " The fact someone "gets to" do things doesn't mean there shouldn't be a concern about it. It's a major reason why we don't blithely accept certain things, like guys like this causing problems -- including to victims, which federalist repeatedly cites as an important concern -- by being their own counsel. Legal and something to worry about is not the same thing. Posted by: Joe | Dec 2, 2016 8:15:16 PM Defendergirl. The success of the pro se litigant in criminal court is better than your success rate, much better. You stink at your job. Any criminal off the street, uneducated, unhinged, and unpaid can do a better job than you kind can. http://digitalcommons.law.uga.edu/cgi/viewcontent.cgi?article=1002&context=advocate Posted by: David Behar | Dec 3, 2016 1:44:27 AM Adherence to the constitutional protections enshrined in the Bill of Rights = "handwringing." It's good to be reminded that there are those who really think this way. Posted by: Mark M. | Dec 3, 2016 8:49:05 AM Professor Berman, the author of the commentary you reference, Chandra Bozelko, is a woman. I think there should be a special rule at least for capital trials, in which the court can determine whether it is in a defendant's best interest to represent herself in capital trials. I think it could be fairly argued that a defendant who insists upon representing herself is either attempting to fail or uneducated about her ability to succeed/ the system she is working within. If the individual is attempting to fail, that is indicative of a suicidal intent. How can the adversarial system work if the defense counsel is ineffective and willing to lose? The state wields great power in sentencing someone to death, and even lay-bystanders can see that Dylann Roof is "troubled." Surely the process by which this person's life could be ended, in our name, should have more dignity than the three ring circus it will be if Roof represents himself. If not for Roof's dignity, than for ours. Though I especially think this is true when considering liberty and personal dignity for Roof himself-- perhaps in the very short term, he will have the liberty of saying (some of) what he pleases in court. But in the long run, it seems clear that he will face the ultimate deprivation of his liberty and personal dignity. Posted by: Law student | Dec 4, 2016 12:26:10 AM Dear Student: I want you to learn about the Rent Seeking Theory. See the good Wikipedia review. The lawyer adds no value to the defense, indeed has an inferior performance to the pro se criminal litigant. Stop being a rent seeker to generate lawyer jobs with false propaganda. Such propaganda violates the Rules of Conduct and the fiduciary responsibility of the lawyer to be candid about the benefit of representation. Posted by: David Behar | Dec 4, 2016 12:49:40 PM I have fixed my pronoun reference, law student, and thanks for reminding me I needed to do so. But speaking of pronouns, though, I think it is misguided to talk of a woman wanting to "represent herself in capital trials" because only about 5 of every 100 charged with capital crimes are women. On substance, the point of the adversarial system is to serve defense interests, which is why defendants can waive so many of its features and plead guilty. If rather than plead guilty, if a defendant wants to just tank his own defense, so be it. I agree that Dylann Roof is "troubled," but the same can be said about most serious criminal defendants. Meanwhile, what does it mean for a system to have "dignity" and whose choice is that. Is it dignified for Roof to have court decisions made by someone not of his choosing? (Make this personal: would you like some govt-appointed person completely in charge of picking what law school courses you take, what jobs you work and how you spend your salary? Would that feel dignified to you?) And isn't it a given, whether forced to have representation by a govt-appointed lawyer or going on his own, that Roof "will face the ultimate deprivation of his liberty and personal dignity" via either an LWOP or death sentence? Posted by: Doug B. | Dec 4, 2016 5:35:22 PM Post a comment GOP Senate Judiciary Chair Chuck Grassley says federal sentencing reform a priority after Trump nominations completed | Main | Florida Supreme Court adds to the mess that is the current Florida death penalty limbo January 4, 2017 "Why Dylann Roof Has a Right to the Death Penalty" ... OR "Why Dylann Roof Representing Himself Is A Constitutional Tragedy" The title of this post is the headline of this effective and timely new NBC News commentary authored by Andrew Cohen. Here are excerpts: Dylann Roof has a constitutional right not to try to spare his own life.... In the end, despite the drama of a closed hearing in the middle of a capital trial, it likely wasn't a close call as a matter of law to allow Roof to continue to represent himself. The standard for "competency" in these circumstances is low, on purpose, to give defendants the chance to control their own fates. Roof has consistently shown he understands the nature of the proceedings against him. The truth is that Roof's decision not to present mitigating evidence seems entirely consistent with his racist beliefs and with his evident antipathy toward psychiatry and psychology. He wrote in the past that he is "morally opposed to psychology," calling it a "Jewish invention." Roof also appears to share the mentality of other notable murderers who for one reason or another eschewed a defense their lawyers would have chosen for them. For example, Theodore Kaczynski, the Unabomber, rejected his attorneys' plans for an insanity defense on his behalf before accepting a plea deal that spared him the death penalty. Oklahoma City bomber Timothy McVeigh gave up the rest of his appeals following his capital conviction and opted for an expedited execution, which took place at the federal death chamber in Terre Haute, Indiana, on June 11, 2001. The Beltway Sniper, John Allen Muhammad, also sparred with his own lawyers in Virginia before he was convicted and sentenced to death. For all the hand-wringing over the constitutionality (and morality) of self-representation in a capital case, for all the arguments that every capital defendant should always present every non-frivolous defense at trial, the truth is that Roof has a constitutional right not to present a defense, to choose to increase the likelihood he'll get the death penalty instead of a life sentence without the possibility of parole. It is not necessarily a sign of mental illness, or mental instability, or mental incompetence, to take responsibility for one's murderous actions rather than blame them, in some fashion, on some sort of mental disease or defect. Some killers, like McVeigh, saw it as one final act of control over their lives. This may be why Roof on Wednesday in his first direct interaction with jurors chose not to beg for his life but rather to tell the panel: "There is nothing wrong with me psychologically." Nor is it necessarily a sign of mental incompetency to chose to want to die sooner, rather than later, after spending years in solitary confinement in a federal prison which is where Roof will be headed no matter what his jury decides. If he doesn't want to save himself, in other words, or if he doesn't want the world ever to perceive him as having been mentally ill when he killed those innocent people inside that church, there is nothing his lawyers can do to save him so long as he's judged competent. Finally, a point that's been under-reported these past few days: Just because Roof won't put on any mitigating evidence doesn't guarantee he'll get the death penalty. All it would take for the jury to preclude a capital sentence for Roof is for one juror to decide that consigning the 22-year-old defendant to 50 or 60 or 70 years in ADX-Florence, the federal prison in Colorado that Roof soon will call home, is a punishment worse than a death penalty. That, too, is not an unreasonable position to take. UPDATE : Not more than an hour after I posted the Andrew Cohen commentary above, I learned of this new Huffington Post commentary by lawprof Scott Sundby which has the headline I have added to the title of this post. Here are this piece's final two paragraphs: The Supreme Court has justified the current death penalty regime on the premise that the jury will act as the conscience of the community. Jurors can only carry out this sacred function, however, if they hear all of the evidence, both for and against imposing a death sentence. Jurors often feel betrayed in cases when they later learn that a defense lawyers ineffectiveness meant they did not hear compelling evidence about a defendants mental illness or abusive childhood. And well they should. The justice system asked them to make a profoundly difficult moral and spiritual decision and then failed to give them the information that they needed to carry out their mandate. In Roofs case, the court may believe that its ruling furthers certain values, but it has missed a far more important constitutional principle: a death sentence should never be imposed unless we have complete confidence that the jurys decision is a reliable and knowing one based on all of the facts. With Dylann Roof representing himself, that outcome is simply impossible. We owe it to the jurors and to ourselves as the society for whom the jurors speak that they hear all about Roofs life before we ask them whether he should be sentenced to death. January 4, 2017 at 04:34 PM | Permalink Comments We are all dying. Posted by: anon4 | Jan 4, 2017 5:03:34 PM "The Supreme Court has justified the current death penalty regime on the premise that the jury will act as the conscience of the community. Jurors can only carry out this sacred function, however, if they hear all of the evidence, both for and against imposing a death sentence." Really? Could this just stop? First of all, and no one here will deny it, the decision about executing a guilty murderer is far less weighty than the guilt/innocence determination of the lowliest of misdemeanors. And good grief--the function is "sacred"? That's just stupid. The decision to execute a guilty murderer just isn't that big a deal. The murderer deliberately took a life. Posted by: federalist | Jan 4, 2017 5:35:54 PM "Jurors can only carry out this sacred function, however, if they hear all of the evidence, both for and against imposing a death sentence." They have heard all the evidence the defense wants to present. "Jurors often feel betrayed in cases when they later learn that a defense lawyers ineffectiveness meant they did not hear compelling evidence about a defendants mental illness or abusive childhood." That is a fair point but irrelevant because the defendant in this case is not mentally ill. Nor is the defense ineffective. So this jury will have no cause to feel betrayed in this case for those reasons. "a death sentence should never be imposed unless we have complete confidence that the jurys decision is a reliable and knowing one based on all of the facts. With Dylann Roof representing himself, that outcome is simply impossible." Why? Nothing in the article demonstrates this outcome is impossible. In fact, the logical conclusion is the opposite. Posted by: Daniel | Jan 4, 2017 5:36:23 PM I agree with the first writer. This Roof person is telling the jury he is not insane. He killed people out of racial hate. Is that insanity? I think not. Otherwise all of the Nuremberg defendants should have been not guilty by reason of insanity. All the Klansmen hanging the guy at the tree are not insane. Partially drunk maybe. They have a belief system that it is their right to go kill all the black people who they do not think are fit to walk the planet. This Roof guy needs to be listened to. The jury would be right to have him killed. There is no evidence he is insane. Killing others is not insane. Many states have laws which allow a court and a jury to decide to kill a human. This is in violation of the Sixth Commandment. All these jurors may go to church on Sunday and not think they violated the Sixth Commandment if they order Roof killed. They think there is an exception to the Sixth Commandment. It is called: The Y'all Can Exception. Posted by: Liberty1st | Jan 4, 2017 10:35:54 PM Daniel: "They have heard all the evidence the defense wants to present." That's avoiding the argument, not addressing it. It may very well be that it's the correct thing to do, as the article suggests, to let a defendant choose the death penalty or let him defend his arguments solely on the basis of justification. But the argument you responded to is that the jury should hear the full arguments for and against the death penalty in the case. If the defense doesn't want to present that second argument, it's not the full argument. Think of it like the Supreme Court appointing an Amicus to defend a side of an issue neither side wants to defend. They do that routinely to make sure they reach the correct decision. Like I said, maybe the correct decision isn't the only important criteria here or maybe correctness should only be as the parties see it, but if you're going to reply to an argument, you should address its actual argument. As for whether Mr. Roof is mentally ill, we have no evidence one way or the other, so I wouldn't be so confident he's not. He himself doesn't believe mental illness exists, which makes it difficult for him to agree to present any evidence, if it exists. He's competent to represent himself, which is far different from being mentally ill. Posted by: Erik M | Jan 5, 2017 8:58:11 AM I totally agree with you as every body has their rights and law is equal for everyone whether they politicians, government employee or any VIP, Law is equal for everyone Posted by: Amanda Ruano | Jan 5, 2017 9:35:06 AM Dylan Roof's closing argument in the penalty phase: " I only regret that I have but one life to lose for my for my racist ideology, for my anti-semitism, and for the the Confederacy. Long live slavery, lynching, Auschwitz, and the Second Amendment right to kill whomever I wish, whenever I wish, wherever I wish! Ladies and Gentlemen of the jury, rot in hell!" Posted by: anon | Jan 5, 2017 11:47:06 AM "But the argument you responded to is that the jury should hear the full arguments for and against the death penalty in the case." There is no "full argument" that is separate from the legal argument. In other words, the full argument is legally speaking identical to the legal argument a competent defense freely chooses to make. "As for whether Mr. Roof is mentally ill, we have no evidence one way or the other." The judge held a competency hearing. He found Mr. Roof not mentally ill and therefore competent to defend himself. It therefore a malicious lie to say there is no evidence one way or the other when the court heard the evidence and found him competent. Posted by: Daniel | Jan 5, 2017 12:18:31 PM "He found Mr. Roof not mentally ill and therefore competent to defend himself." It is unclear to me how terms are being used by the different sides here. A person can be competent to defend himself and have some sort of mental illness. There is a relatively low bar here -- he has to be not mentally ill ENOUGH to be able to do it. Also, I'm loathe to toss around "malicious" -- if the person is mistaken, fine -- many are, including in confused ways that are bothersome. But, "malicious" is step further. Anyway, yes, Roof has a right to defend himself (at least under current law) and to choose a defense approach that invites the death penalty. He could stand mute after all while the state brings forth its case. I'm wary of him representing himself because there is more to it than this. The state prosecutes and here aims to execute him. Two competent advocates that understand the laws in place protects the system in place there. If the state is going to kill someone (and a jury hand them the authority to do so), I rather a better advocate than Mr. Roof. The update references concerns me as well. Posted by: Joe | Jan 5, 2017 1:22:18 PM A 16 year old daughter testified, she misses her murdered mother, would want to hug her just one more time. The jury wiped tears away. Posted by: David Behar | Jan 6, 2017 12:52:38 AM Post a comment "Objective Punishment" | Main | "The Power of Parsimony" May 24, 2021 Charleston church shooter Dylann Roof to have appeal of his death sentence heard by (unusual) Fourth Circuit panel As detailed in this website, candidate Joe Biden pledged to "Eliminate the death penalty" if elected. But many months into his presidency, it appears that Prez Biden's Department of Justice is continuing to actively defend the application of the death penalty in at least on high-profile case. Specifically, as detailed in this local article, tomorrow a Fourth Circuit panel will hear arguments on Dylann Roof's appeal of his conviction and death sentence with DOJ apparently seeking to defend that punishment. Here are the basics: Defense lawyers will advance arguments Tuesday on up to 20 issues in the U.S. 4th Circuit Court of Appeals in Richmond as to why Dylann Roof was wrongfully convicted and sentenced to the death penalty in 2017 after a weeks-long trial. They will ask the court to vacate both the conviction and the death penalty. Those arguments will be countered by a team of prosecution appellate lawyers from the U.S. Department of Justice. They seek to uphold the conviction and sentence. Roof, 27, who grew up in Columbia, was sentenced to death in January 2017 by U.S. Judge Richard Gergel after a jury found him guilty of 18 death eligible federal hate-crimes and firearms charges. In a subsequent proceeding to determine sentence, the same jury ruled Roof deserved the death penalty. Judge Gergel then pronounced the sentence. Evidence at Roofs trial, which included his own writings and selfie photos and videos, portrayed him as a self-described white supremacist who wanted to start a race war by killing African-Americans. To implement his plan, Roof traveled to Charleston in June 2015, entered a prayer meeting at an African American church and executed nine Black churchgoers, including beloved Democratic state Sen. Clementa Pinckney. Multiple issues arising from convictions for hate crime, religious obstruction, and firearms offenses resulting in death and from imposition of death penalty will be considered, according to a description about the case on the Fourth Circuits web site. Roofs purported mental illness and inability to be his own lawyer casting aside an active defense role by David Bruck, one of the nations most experienced death penalty lawyers is a major feature of Roofs defense.... Though Roofs mental state was the subject of two competency hearings, and five experts found him delusionalfindings swiftly dismissed by the court, in its rush to move the case alongjurors never heard any of that evidence. Instead, prosecutors told them Roof was a calculated killer with no signs of mental illness. Given no reason to do otherwise, jurors sentenced Roof to death. Roofs crime was tragic, but this Court (the 4th Circuit) can have no confidence in the jurys verdict, the defense brief on the case says.... Prosecutors will argue that Judge Gergels rulings in both the guilt or innocence, as well as the penalty, phases of the trial were correct. (Judge Gergel) did not clearly err in finding Roof competent to stand trial. The finding was supported by expert testimony and was not arbitrary or unwarranted, the prosecutors brief said. Roofs right to self-representation was correctly defined and properly protected. No error occurred at the penalty phase, the prosecutors wrote. The death penalty was not plainly erroneous based on Roofs age or mental condition. Finally, Roofs convictions rest on sound legal and constitutional grounds. Interestingly, though this appeal is technically being considered by the Fourth Circuit, no Fourth Circuit judge will actually be hearing the appeal. The press article explains: The judges on the panel are Judge Duane Burton of the 8th Circuit Court of Appeals; Kent Jordan of the 3rd Circuit Court of Appeals; and Senior Judge Ronald Gilman of the 6th Circuit Court of Appeals. Usually, judges on a panel are chosen from the full 4th Circuit, which has 15 judges. However, 4th Circuit Judge Jay Richardson of Columbia was in the U.S. Attorneys Office in South Carolina in 2017 and the lead prosecutor on the Roof case. I welcome reader comment on the (interesting?) metaphysical question of whether an appeal in the Fourth Circuit heard by no Fourth Circuit judges is really a Fourth Circuit appeal. (I also wonder if there will have to be an additional 12 judges appointed by designation in order to properly consider any en banc petition that might follow a ruling from this panel.) A few of many prior related posts: May 24, 2021 at 10:09 PM | Permalink Comments Quirky but still following 4CA precedent and all that. Posted by: Joe | May 25, 2021 7:00:06 AM An excellent point, Joe, that the parties and the judges on the panel will still focus particularly on Fourth Circuit precedents (although in some circuits en banc proceedings are often the means to reverse troublesome past precedents). Posted by: Doug B. | May 25, 2021 7:29:48 AM No one has ever explained how a Senior Circuit Judge from the 9th Circuit ended up sitting on my 3-Judge panel in the Fourth Circuit and writing the opinion for the Appeals Court. The record was large because we had a 17-day jury trial in Huntington, West Virginia. See, United States v. Bollin, et al., 264 F.3d 391 (4th Cir. 2001). Posted by: Jim | May 25, 2021 9:05:39 AM Weird question, why are all of the other judges on the Fourth Circuit recused? My experience is that normally only the judge with the conflict recuses. I know that, when Judge Benton went from the Missouri Supreme Court to the Eighth Circuit, he recused on all of the Missouri habeas cases, but the other Eighth Circuit judges still sat on those cases. Posted by: tmm | May 25, 2021 10:39:58 AM tmm, it's not weird at all. I had the same question earlier, but it somehow got moderated into oblivion. Also, it's interesting that Roof has counsel now. I note on PACER that he filed his own "supplemental brief" too in a pro se capacity. Posted by: hardreaders | May 25, 2021 12:25:25 PM This confusion suggests the usefulness of there being a public statement of why there are recusals. == Audio of the argument: https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=13iJKqfwiRQ Posted by: Joe | May 25, 2021 2:00:07 PM Reasons would be nice. Congress has power to require that for lower court judges. In this case of circuit-wide recusal, it seems like CJ Roberts decides which out-of-circuit judges sit on the panel. He doesnt have to give reasons for his choices either Posted by: hardreaders | May 25, 2021 2:37:28 PM The lead prosecutor at Roof's trial was Jay Richardson. Not long after that trial, he was confirmed as a judge on the Fourth Circuit. When Roof's appeal came up, all of the judges on the Fourth Circuit recused themselves because it would be inappropriate for them to judge a member of their bench. The panel for the argument (which lasted about three hours) consisted of three federal appeals court judges, each from a different circuit. The judges mentioned several times that they must consider the issues under Fourth Circuit precedent, not the precedent of their home circuits. Posted by: mjb | May 25, 2021 4:46:46 PM "When Roof's appeal came up, all of the judges on the Fourth Circuit recused themselves because it would be inappropriate for them to judge a member of their bench." Prosecutors become judges & the cases they prosecuted at times come to the court they are on. If this rule is standard, it is curious why people here (including lawyers) are surprised. Judges recuse regularly over the years because a case arises that touches upon their public service. Maybe, e.g., as a member of the Justice Department they worked on something. Thurgood Marshall, e.g., was Solicitor General before he became a justice. Tom Clark was attorney general. And so on. Many state examples surely can be cited as well. The concern here for a very sensitive case is not surprising really but it is not consistently applied this strictly. Posted by: Joe | May 25, 2021 6:52:13 PM A standard recusal rule for Judges is that they are to avoid even the possible appearance of impropriety, even if there is no actual impropriety. This would seem to explain why all of the sitting 4th circuit Judges recused themselves when this highest of high profile DEATH PENALTY cases came before the 4th Circuit on appeal. The defendant is someone that our Government intends to kill (execute), so the Judges never want anyone to question whether they might have been influenced by the new 4th Circuit Judge, Jay Richardson, who was the lead prosecutor in the Roof case in District Court. Let me add that virtually all Judges and their law clerks are much ore careful and give additional attention to death penalty cases (based on my personal conversations). They never want someone to receive the death penalty who has not received all possible consideration and Due Process of Law. As some so eloquently put it, "death is different". Posted by: Jim Gormley | May 26, 2021 7:40:01 AM Joe, the thing is that the rule is not standard. Appellate courts regular judge cases in which their colleagues played a role -- either as attorneys or as lower court judges. While the norm is that a judge recuses from any case in which they played a role, the other judges on the court usually do not. For example, Judge Benton was the state Director of Revenue in Missouri before being appointed to the Missouri Supreme Court. At the time, there were multiple revenue cases pending in the Missouri Supreme Court. Judge Benton recused from all of those cases and a special judge sat in on those cases, but the remainder of the Missouri Supreme Court did not recuse even though they were effectively judging their colleague's decisions. So it's not surprising that the attorney who handled the Roof case at trial recused. What is surprising is that the entire court recused. Posted by: tmm | May 26, 2021 10:51:57 AM Those three judges probably *are* the en banc 4th Circuit in this case Posted by: Jason | May 27, 2021 5:39:43 PM Yes, tmm, I didn't think the rule was standard though appreciate the extra details. The statements (including in another law blog where this came up) that imply that came off as too flippant. As Jim Gormley suggests, I think the special nature of the case is why they are being extra concerned here. It would make sense, as I noted, a clearer statement to avoid this confusion imho. Posted by: Joe | May 30, 2021 6:10:57 PM Post a comment "When the Conditions Are the Confinement: Eighth Amendment Habeas Claims During COVID-19" | Main | "Crime trends and violence worse in Californias Republican-voting counties than Democratic-voting counties" August 25, 2021 Unusual Fourth Circuit panel affirms federal convictions and death sentence for Charleston church shooter Dylann Roof I noted in this post from May 2021 that an unusual Fourth Circuit panel had to be assembled to hear the capital appeal of Charleston church shooter Dylann Roof because all the member of the Fourth Circuit were recused. The mass recusal resulted from the fact that now Circuit Judge Jay Richardson was in the U.S. Attorneys Office in South Carolina in 2017 and the lead prosecutor on the Roof case. And it meant that Judge Duane Benton of the Eighth Circuit, Judge Kent Jordan of the Third Circuit and Senior Judge Ronald Gilman of the Sixth Circuit considered Roof's many issues on appeal. That trio of judges today handed down a 149-page opinion in United States v. Roof, No. 17-3 (Aug. 25, 2021) (available here). The per curiam opinion starts and concludes this way: In 2015, Dylann Storm Roof, then 21 years old, shot and killed nine members of the historic Emanuel African Methodist Episcopal Church (Mother Emanuel) in Charleston, South Carolina during a meeting of a Wednesday night Bible-study group. A jury convicted him on nine counts of racially motivated hate crimes resulting in death, three counts of racially motivated hate crimes involving an attempt to kill, nine counts of obstructing religion resulting in death, three counts of obstructing religion involving an attempt to kill and use of a dangerous weapon, and nine counts of use of a firearm to commit murder during and in relation to a crime of violence. The jury unanimously recommended a death sentence on the religious-obstruction and firearm counts, and he was sentenced accordingly. He now appeals the convictions and sentence. Having jurisdiction under 28 U.S.C. 1291 and 18 U.S.C. 3595(a), we will affirm.... Dylann Roof murdered African Americans at their church, during their Bible-study and worship. They had welcomed him. He slaughtered them. He did so with the express intent of terrorizing not just his immediate victims at the historically important Mother Emanuel Church, but as many similar people as would hear of the mass murder. He used the internet to plan his attack and, using his crimes as a catalyst, intended to foment racial division and strife across America. He wanted the widest possible publicity for his atrocities, and, to that end, he purposefully left one person alive in the church to tell the story. (J.A. at 5017.) When apprehended, he frankly confessed, with barely a hint of remorse. No cold record or careful parsing of statutes and precedents can capture the full horror of what Roof did. His crimes qualify him for the harshest penalty that a just society can impose. We have reached that conclusion not as a product of emotion but through a thorough analytical process, which we have endeavored to detail here. In this, we have followed the example of the trial judge, who managed this difficult case with skill and compassion for all concerned, including Roof himself. For the reasons given, we will affirm In capital cases, it is pretty common for the losing party to seek en banc review. But, as was discussed in my May post, it is unclear whether and how an additional 12 judges would get appointed by designation in order to properly consider any en banc petition that might come next. Roof can, of course, proceed now to seek certiorari from the U.S. Supreme Court (which will surely happen eventually even if he does seek en banc review). A few of many prior related posts: August 25, 2021 at 04:34 PM | Permalink Comments "His crimes qualify him for the harshest penalty that a just society can impose." That wouldn't be the death penalty, but "just" in this context would be as found by the Supreme Court. Posted by: Joe | Aug 25, 2021 5:13:06 PM Agree with Joe. For en banc, is 12 mentioned because 12 + the initial 3 = 15, which is the same number of non-senior judges currently on CA4? I think it wouldnt be hard to scrounge up 12 more judges if needed. But would the size of the en banc court sitting by designation necessarily have to match that of an ordinary CA4 en banc court exactly? It seems like at least an open question. Also, for en banc it would be quite interesting to have some judges writing separate opinions, whereas here you just had a per curiam. PS its Judge Benton not Burton. Posted by: kotodama | Aug 25, 2021 8:59:27 PM BTW, the recusal thing was discussed here in the past, but I still find it a bit much that the whole circuit recused themselves. I realize this case is rather unique. Posted by: Joe | Aug 26, 2021 10:03:23 AM Thanks for the correction, kotodama, and I have fixed the name in the post. My numerology is based on the fact that the Fourth Circuit has 15 authorized active judgeships. So that would be the usual en banc voting number, which I presume should be replicated. I say that because I think we would surely have thought it weird an problematic if somehow this first panel of designated judges for the initial appeal was comprised of only 2 judges or was 5 judges or some other number other than the usual 3 judges for a circuit panel. I also wonder who makes these calls and decides on the substitute judges. In less unusual settings, I assume it is the circuit chief in charge. But that judge is here recused, so it must be someone else. Chief Justice Roberts is the circuit Justice for the Fourth Circuit. I would guess he is somehow involved in running this show, but I do not know the rules of judicial administration to speculate whether there could be more to the story (e.g., should CJ Roberts appoint a Fourth Circuit Chief Judge by designation who then makes key decisions here or does he just do it himself? Is there any worry that whatever might be the Chief's possible role at the Fourth Circuit, it then impacts his SCOTUS work when the Roof case comes to SCOTUS?). This is all likely academic, as I cannot imagine any group of 12 new designated circuit judges voting 8-4 to consider this case en banc (presumably the three panel members will all vote against). Then, again, I could imagine certain possible designated judges being eager to write a concurrence or dissent from a negative en banc vote in order to try to encourage a SCOTUS cert. grant. One last point --- can you tell I find this fascinating? --- however this plays out on direct appeal, the Fourth Circuit will likely have to confront these issues again if/when Roof brings a 2255 action and appeals that collateral attack. And if he eventually brings a successor 2255 (imagine if the Roper age limit for who can be executed gets raised to 21 sometime in the 2030s), a panel of designated judges will be needed to decide if he can under AEDPA. Posted by: Doug Berman | Aug 26, 2021 10:59:52 AM I find it quite interesting too, obviously because, as Joe observes, it's such an unusual arrangement. On the point about the initial panel size vs. a potential en banc panel size, I think there are some key distinctions. This is hardly an area where I claim expertise, but I did a little basic research and found some relevant info. On the initial panel, that size is specified exactly by statute. 28 U.S.C. 46 provides that in typical situations, it must be a 3-judge panel. But for en banc it's different. No exact size is required; instead, the statute just states that an en banc panel ordinarily "shall consist of all circuit judges in regular active service." So the size will vary for each court depending on how many active judges there are. I certainly agree that, here, the path of least resistance in the event of en banc would just be to replicate the existing composition of CA4 precisely--that is, by adding another 12 assigned judges. But I don't think that's strictly required. Again, the size of the en banc panel isn't specified numerically, but just as a function of each individual court's personnel. I also think you can argue that in a case like this where "all circuit judges in regular active service" are recused anyway, there's no requirement to match the numbers exactly. Of course, if en banc does in fact happen, the most conservative approach would be to compensate completely for all the recusals, and I suspect that's how it would play out. As to who makes the call, my research indicates that CJ Roberts is the ultimate decider. 28 U.S.C. 291(a) provides: "The Chief Justice of the United States may, in the public interest, designate and assign temporarily any circuit judge to act as circuit judge in another circuit upon request by the chief judge or circuit justice of such circuit." So, here, if Gregory (the CA4 chief judge) wasn't recused even for the purposes of making an assignment request, then he requested from Roberts, and Roberts took it from there. Or, if Gregory was recused, as Prof. B. notes, Roberts is the circuit justice anyway, so he could just "request" assignments from himself(!). Either way, Roberts makes the final call. I don't know that his role as assigner is necessarily a cause for recusal at SCOTUS either. Presumably, there is no difference in which judges are assigned and they're all expected to apply the law (here, CA4 law) in the same way as another assigned judge would. In other words, Roberts isn't "stacking the panel" (an accusation that's been leveled at the PTO director) to achieve a desired outcome. And if simply making assignments were adequate grounds for recusal, then Roberts would be recused every time a case with an assigned circuit judge came up for SCOTUs review. That seems a little excessive. Of course, this is also not a typical case. Yet another thing that would be fascinating, especially for me as a patent wonk, is, if en banc does in fact happen with 12 additional judges, could a Fed Circuit judge end up on the panel? Criminal matters are of course totally absent from that court's docket, so it'd be quite amusing if one of the judges had a role in deciding a DP appeal. And speaking of this case playing out for many years, what if Biden wins another term and the DP moratorium remains in place? Does that mean an appeal on that issue isn't ripe yet? I have no idea. Finally, I agree with Joe that the recusals are way overboard. But I guess they don't want to take even the slightest chance of creating an appeal point, and so are being excessively cautious. Posted by: kotodama | Aug 27, 2021 12:47:27 PM Post a comment Why is getting the EQUAL Act through the US Senate proving so challenging? | Main | Rounding up some reviews of SCOTUS argument in appeals by doctors convicted of opioid drug dealing March 2, 2022 Will the US Supreme Court be interested in any issues being pressed by Charleston church shooter Dylann Roof? The question in the title of this post was prompted by this new AP article headlined "Dylann Roof takes church shooting appeal to US Supreme Court." Here are excerpts: Attorneys for convicted Charleston church shooter Dylann Roof have asked the U.S. Supreme Court to decide how to handle disagreements over mental illness-related evidence between capital defendants and their attorneys, an issue that has played a role throughout his case over the 2015 racist slayings of nine members of a Black South Carolina congregation. When a capital defendant who has been ruled competent to stand trial and his attorneys disagree on whether to present mitigating evidence depicting him as mentally ill, who gets the final say? Roofs appellate team wrote in their petition, filed late last month with the high court. Justices consideration is needed to resolve a deep divide among the lower courts over who client or lawyer gets to decide whether mitigation evidence will be introduced at a capital penalty hearing. Roofs self-representation and desire to block any evidence potentially portraying him as mentally ill even if it could have helped him avoid the death penalty has been a constant part of his case. During the sentencing phase of his death penalty trial, Roof fired his legal team and opted to represent himself. This move, his appellate attorneys have written, successfully prevented jurors from hearing evidence about his mental health, under the delusion that he would be rescued from prison by white-nationalists but only, bizarrely, if he kept his mental-impairments out of the public record. Roof made his decision, his team argued in the petition, after the district court told him that counsel could introduce evidence depicting him as mentally ill over his objection. But there is a disconnect, his attorneys argued, between how such cases have been handled in the 4th Circuit versus other jurisdictions, where the vast majority of state and federal courts hold otherwise, leaving this deeply personal choice to a defendant. Notably, this AP article is only focused on one of three questions presented in Roof's recently filed cert petition. Here are all there issues set forth in this document: 1. When a competent capital defendant and his counsel disagree on whether to present mitigating evidence depicting him as mentally ill, who gets the final say? 2. Does the Commerce Clause authorize Congress to regulate an intrastate, noneconomic, violent offense based solely on the defendants pre-offense uses of interstate highways, GPS navigation, the Internet, and the telephone? 3. Should federal courts assess legislation enacted under the Thirteenth Amendment using the same tests that apply to legislation enacted under the Fourteenth and Fifteenth Amendments, where the three Reconstruction Amendments share substantively-identical enforcement provisions? A few of many prior related posts: March 2, 2022 at 01:58 PM | Permalink Comments The short answer to the question posed in the title is no. I'll bet $100 cert is denied. Any takers? The more serious question in this case is why it's taking so long to impose the only sentence that fits. There is zero doubt that he did it, intended to do it, acted out of hate, and knows right from wrong. The extent of manufactured procedural wrangling for this character is a measure of how unserious we've become. Posted by: Bill Otis | Mar 2, 2022 3:36:57 PM Technically, Bill, the sentence has been imposed (and affirmed). I surmise that what you are really asking is that there be some sort of timeline or deadline for capital appeals in the federal system. If you were supreme, what capital appeals deadline/timeline would you seek to impose? Posted by: Doug B. | Mar 2, 2022 5:19:35 PM I certainly won't be taking Bill Otis' offer, certainly not with the court we have now or any likely court we shall see over the next year. This question strikes me very much as a spaghetti defense. If someone was competent to self-represent the fact that counsel would have done something different over the defendant's objection is entirely irrelevant. Posted by: Soronel Haetir | Mar 2, 2022 7:16:06 PM Doug -- You mean I'm not already supreme? Well phooey. Yes, you're right, I meant "carried out," not "imposed." Thanks for the correction. Off the seat of my pants, I would impose a three year deadline from imposition of sentence to its being carried out, with two caveats: (1) capital cases go to the head of the line ahead of everything else on the docket, and (2) the deadline could be extended if but only if there were a reasonably convincing case that the defendant was factually innocent, i.e., that he did not do the act he was accused of doing. I did a lot of criminal litigation and I never heard of a case you couldn't figure out in three years. The massive majority can be figured out in a small fraction of that time. Posted by: Bill Otis | Mar 2, 2022 8:15:05 PM I am not sure that the three-year time line is realistic. I think my state does a decent job of expediting at the appellate level, but even under its time-line: 1) court reporter has three months to prepare the transcript; 2) parties have a combined 105 days to brief the case (60-30-15); 3) court then has to hear argument and right an opinion (typically having to deal with a large number of claims on the appeal). Because capital cases are long and the court reporter has to prepare transcripts when the court is not in session, it is not unusual for the transcript to take longer than the 90 days. Looking at a case in which I represented the State in the initial stages of federal habeas, they actually managed to get the transcript done without an extension, but the briefing took an extra four months. While the argument was set relatively quickly after the end of briefing, it took four months to write the opinion. In short, the direct appeal took approximately fifteen months. While potentially that could be improved slightly, I do not see much room for improvement. The real delay is in state and federal collateral review. In my state, the defendant has ninety days after the conclusion of the direct appeal (i.e. mandate) to start their state collateral review. That time is not extended by a cert petition. Counsel is supposed to be appointed within thirty days and counsel is given 120-days (up from 90-days) to finalize the claims for relief. The trial court then has to schedule a hearing (frequently a multi-day hearing) and issue written findings after the hearing. While I know the defense bar would like a longer period to finalize the claims, the reality is that the public defender system can (and often does) assign an attorney to the defendant while the direct appeal is still pending. Realistically, done properly, the trial court part of state collateral review could be completed in one year. In the case noted above, it took three years. Then, there is the appeal from the denial of state collateral review. The same time standard applies as above. Again, the patter was similar (about four months extension of the briefing schedule, but a quick argument and opinion resulting in a total of fifteen months on appeal. In short, I think three years is a reasonable period for resolving the state part of a case. Presumably for a federal prisoner (assuming not grant of certiorari), it would be possible to be done in three years. For a state prisoner, there will be some additional time tacked on for federal habeas. At the federal level, for state prisoners, it would help if federal courts would be willing to find that states have properly opted in on capital cases and follow the accelerated rules. Even under the "normal" rules, the petition should be filed within one-year. Then (giving time for the State to respond and the inmate to file his reply with amended petitions allowed only under exceptional circumstances), it should be possible to schedule the hearing and issue findings within a year, and the appellate rules for the federal system is not that different from my state rules so an additional year to have an appellate opinion. Even giving time for cert, that is 3-4 years after the conclusion of the state process. In short, I would say a reasonable time line is 3-5 years for federal prisoners, and 7-9 years for state prisoners. Posted by: tmm | Mar 3, 2022 11:40:35 AM Just FYI. In the case that I worked on (over six years ago when the federal habeas proceeding was just starting), it has now been fourteen years since sentence was imposed. The cert petition on the federal habeas is on the March 18 conference. So, assuming that cert is denied, it will be just under fifteen years by the time that the execution is scheduled and carried out. Posted by: tmm | Mar 3, 2022 11:46:00 AM tmm -- Timelines don't fall out of the sky. We create them. We also allocate (or decline to allocate) the resources that could make for a much more efficient system. Where there's a will -- a will to do better, that is -- there's a way. The present amount of delay in capital cases (running maybe 14 or 15 years on average, IIRC) is scandalous and bespeaks a complete lack of seriousness. One thing we could do for starters is require courts to prioritize, and then expedite on a stated schedule, the disposition of such cases, and give them the resources to do it. As an aside, I read your comments with interest because they are always well informed, on topic, bereft of all the personal stuff, and fair minded. I hope you will say more. Posted by: Bill Otis | Mar 3, 2022 1:54:37 PM Post a comment Drivers for Singapores food delivery and ride-hailing companies are often working almost 60 hours a week, a survey found. (PHOTO: Getty Creative) By Olivia Poh (Bloomberg) Drivers for Singapores food delivery and ride-hailing companies are often working almost 60 hours a week, a survey found, underscoring the lack of protections for gig workers in the city-state. About 29% of drivers work more than 59 hours a week, according to a survey of nearly 1,000 workers by the National University of Singapores Institute of Policy Studies. About one-quarter of the drivers surveyed worked exclusively for Gojek. The rest said they also drove for other companies, including Grab Holdings Ltd. Singapore, along with governments around the world, is considering legislative changes to protect gig-economy workers. Ride-hailing and food-delivery companies like Gojek, Grab, Delivery Hero SEs Foodpanda and Deliveroo Plc. have flourished during the pandemic but also exacerbated social inequities. Many who lost jobs during downturns have taken jobs delivering food or driving passengers but now find it difficult to exit the industry. Labour laws in Singapore limit the work week to 44 hours for employees, but because gig workers are not considered full-time staff, these protections do not apply to them. People working for ride-hailing and food-delivery apps are often under pressure to hit targets in order to earn a meaningful wage, the report said. Effectively, those incentives require drivers to work non-stop for 14 to 16 hours a day, said Harris, 55, a driver that was interviewed by the institute. Its dangerous. Companies encourage or penaliae riders to nudge them toward certain behaviours, the institute found. Canceling jobs assigned would have an impact on their ranking and future earnings, in turn limiting the freedom workers have. Around half of drivers surveyed said that they would leave the ride-sharing industry if there were job opportunities. However, only 31% said that they could easily get a job similar to their previous role or related to their education. Nearly 60 hours a week behind the wheel takes time away from building skills to develop a career, and those who are more educated may find theyve fallen behind their professional peers, the institute said in its study. 2022 Bloomberg L.P. SINGAPORE - Media OutReach - 2 March 2022 - Kyberlife, a Singapore-based e-commerce marketplace start-up for the Life Sciences, Pharmaceutical and Healthcare industries, has closed an oversubscribed Pre-Series A funding round. Together with its seed funds garnered in August last year, the company raised around one million Singapore dollars. Management Team, Kyberlife Pte. Ltd. Front row, from left: Ms. Felicia Lee, Finance Lead; Dr. Sven Henrichwark (PHD), CBDO / Advisor, Global Seller Lead; Mr. Ryan James Lim, Co-Founder & CEO; Mr. Michael Tillmann, Co-Founder & Chairman; Mr. Leonard Yeo, Operations Second row, from left: Ms. Gladys Aw, Marketplace & Product Lead; Assistant Professor, Dr. Ching Jianhong (PHD), Chief Science Officer; Ms. Olivia Choo, Marketing Lead; Ms. Aletheia Ng, Commercial Lead (Not present in photo) Mr. Wesley Lim, Co-Founder, China Channel Lead Photo credit: Cheryl Faith Ho Kyberlife is funded and backed by industry leaders and seasoned executive management investors of multi-national companies. The Pre-Series A round was led by PE Global, the venture arm of PANSAR Group, and industry leaders such as James Simkins who is CEO of GETZ Healthcare, Dr. Michael Gorriz who served as Global Group Chief Information Officer of Standard Chartered Bank and Dr. Soenke Weissenborn, Group Operations Director for IDS Immunodiagnostics Systems. Several existing investors including Rapzo Capital and Amatar Investment also pumped in fresh funds again. About Kyberlife Kyberlife facilitates the buying and selling between principals in the Life Sciences, Pharmaceutical and Healthcare industries with their B2B consumers of scientists/researchers, institutions, academia, businesses, laboratories and hospitals. "With Kyberlife we are solving an imminent and overlooked problem within these traditional industries where consumers experience a labourious process of searching for products while principals have little control of their products on third-party platforms. It is our mission to achieve an efficient and active network for the community by being the one-stop shop for both parties to communicate and transact with each other. Consumers will experience a higher transparency across products for easy sourcing while the principals will retain full control over their products," says its Co-Founder and CEO, Mr. Ryan James Lim. Kyberlife has secured partnerships with reputable multi-national companies such as Eppendorf, Merck, Roche and Tipbio Systems. "We are thankful for the support of our investors who share our vision for a connected global medical supply industry. We will be investing the fresh funds to develop user traction and growth in Singapore, and for regional marketing," he says. To explain the relevance of the e-commerce platform for the industry, Mr. Lim shared that there are many Life Sciences principals in Europe and the United States of America who do not intend to enter Asia and South-East Asia due to high set-up cost (which are exacerbated by Covid-19 travel related restrictions). With Kyberlife, they now have the option to reach out to their consumers conveniently and without any risk to new market segments, via its open marketplace. About The Founders Kyberlife is led by a young and tech-savvy management team, and backed by senior and veteran entrepreneurs with vast experience and international connections. Kyberlife was founded and incorporated in Singapore by three founding partners: Mr. Ryan James Lim (CEO), Mr. Michael Tillmann (Chairman) and Mr. Wesley Lim (China Channel Lead), bringing with them diverse expertise in business and tech, and across several industries. Prior to Kyberlife, Ryan Lim and Wesley Lim started an e-commerce marketplace for B2C users in the cosmetics industry. Its technology was then absorbed into Kyberlife for the Life Sciences, Pharmaceutical and Healthcare industries. Its Chairman, Mr. Michael Tillmann, has over 25 years of experience in senior executive and supervisory board positions for multinational companies in the pharmaceutical and diagnostics industry. He held the position of President and CEO for Roche Diagnostics in North America and before that, in Asia Pacific and Europe. Michael also founded a polymerase chain reaction (PCR) company, Vela Diagnostics. It was there where he met and formed a mentor-mentee relationship with Ryan Lim, who had worked as an intern at his company. Their mentor-mentee relationship has come full circle as co-founders of Kyberlife. Story continues Kyberlife Pte. Ltd. Kyberlife Pte. Ltd. is headquarted in Singapore, at 48 Mactaggart Road, #04-02, Mae Building, Singapore 368088. For more information on Kyberlife, please visit: https://www.kyberlife.com/sg LinkedIn: https://www.linkedin.com/company/kyberlife/ Instagram: https://www.instagram.com/kyberlife/ #Kyberlife The issuer is solely responsible for the content of this announcement. A cargo train bound for Vientiane, Laos, is about to depart from Xiaonanya station in Jiangjin District, southwest China's Chongqing Municipality, March 2, 2022. (Xinhua/Tang Yi) CHONGQING, March 2 (Xinhua) -- Carrying 37 twenty-foot equivalent units (TEU) of goods worth over 4 million yuan (630,000 U.S. dollars), the first cargo train departed Xiaonanya station in Jiangjin District, southwest China's Chongqing Municipality, for Vientiane Wednesday. The train, carrying chemicals, building materials, mechanical parts, and daily necessities, is expected to arrive in Vientiane by way of Yunnan Province in about five days, halving the time it used to take from Chongqing to Vientiane by road. Chongqing launched the China-Laos international freight train service in Chongqing International Logistics Hub on Dec. 4, just one day after the China-Laos railway launch. A staff member patrols along the cargo train bound for Vientiane, Laos, in Jiangjin District, southwest China's Chongqing Municipality, March 2, 2022. (Xinhua/Tang Yi) A cargo train bound for Vientiane, Laos, waits to depart from Xiaonanya station in Jiangjin District, southwest China's Chongqing Municipality, March 2, 2022. (Xinhua/Tang Yi) Aerial photo shows a cargo train bound for Vientiane, Laos, departing from Xiaonanya station in Jiangjin District, southwest China's Chongqing Municipality, March 2, 2022. (Xinhua/Tang Yi) A cargo train bound for Vientiane, Laos, departs from Xiaonanya station in Jiangjin District, southwest China's Chongqing Municipality, March 2, 2022. (Xinhua/Tang Yi) A cargo train bound for Vientiane, Laos, waits to depart from Xiaonanya station in Jiangjin District, southwest China's Chongqing Municipality, March 2, 2022. (Xinhua/Tang Yi) STORY: The U.N.'s refugee agency has said it has spoken to countries bordering Ukraine after reports that African citizens fleeing conflict were being denied access. Thousands of Africans and other foreign nationals, particularly students, have been scrambling to leave Ukraine following Russia's invasion. Several videos and testimonies have circulated on social media, complaining of discrimination at border posts and train stations. Buchizya Mseteka is a South Africa-based spokesperson for UNHCR. UNHCR is aware and is very concerned about reports of racial profiling - weve received many of these. We are following up and where possible made interventions." Mseteka said there were reports - which the agency has not verified - of Africans being stopped from boarding trains that are taking people to neighboring countries and of other being denied access to cross borders. "Our position at UNHCR is that irrespective of nationality and race people seeking protection should be allowed to seek safety and to leave the country." The African Union has also said it was "disturbed" by reports about the treatment of Africans fleeing what Russia calls a "special operation". Ukraine's Minister of Foreign Affairs said in a tweet that Africans seeking evacuation need to have equal opportunities and that his country would help. The Chancellery of the Prime Minister of Poland said on Twitter that Poland provides shelter to everybody who is fleeing Russian aggression against Ukraine "regardless of their nationality and ethnicity". 6190 II 40 18 1.1% 818 10% 1.2% 1.33% 3%12% 57% 27% 510.4 62 10% 8844.4 Jupiter Lai 6% 6 810 15% 4% 62 Twitter 5% 8844.4 102 2.45 68.66% SOUTH SIOUX CITY -- Call it a three-peat. Tuesday morning, business representatives and elected officials from across Siouxland gathered at the Marriott Riverfront in South Sioux City to hear a speech from outgoing Nebraska Gov. Pete Ricketts and to learn that, for a third straight year and tenth time overall, the tri-state area has been named a top spot for economic development by "Site Selection" magazine. In sharing the news, Adam Bruns, the publication's managing editor, said: "The spike of projects (in Siouxland) is really tremendous." A press release for the event noted that one contributor to the designation was Ag Processing Inc.'s $71.5 million expansion of its soybean crushing plant at Port Neal near Sergeant Bluff. Multiple executives for the company, including CEO Chris Schaffer, were in attendance for the announcement. Bruns said Site Selection makes its designations by counting projects that include: new construction, have at least $1 million invested, add 20,000 new square feet of space and create 20 jobs or more. During his time at the podium, Ricketts, who was introduced by Siouxland Initiative Chair Mike Wells, shouted out AGP and said his state saw record years for corn and soybean production. While folks ate their muffins and rolls, Ricketts went on to note that Nebraska was in competition with South Dakota for highest workforce participation rates in the country. "When you have great job opportunities, kids are taken care of," Ricketts said. Because of Nebraska's current economic activity, Ricketts said it's an opportune time to give money back to people by: offering property tax and Social Security "relief" and by taking tax rates to below 6%. Of those plans, the governor said: "When we can be more competitive on taxes, it drives us to do better." Looking forward, Ricketts said the state would need to continue to find more people to participate in its workforce. To do that, Ricketts pitched the idea of further bolstering apprenticeship programs and working closely with community college students. At one point, Ricketts even singled out the work South Sioux City Community Schools had done in preparing their students for future work. The Sioux City metro area has ranked first in the nation for development in its population category (under 200,000) in 2007, 2008, 2012, 2013, 2015, 2016, 2017, 2019 and 2020. "This award is collective recognition of the collaboration and cooperation that our Siouxland tri-state area and The Siouxland Initiative have promoted for nearly three decades," Siouxland Chamber of Commerce President Chris McGowan said. Jared McNett is an online editor and reporter for the Sioux City Journal. You can reach him at 712-293-4234 and follow him on Twitter @TwoHeadedBoy98. Love 1 Funny 2 Wow 0 Sad 0 Angry 0 The business news you need Get the latest local business news delivered FREE to your inbox weekly. Sign up! * I understand and agree that registration on or use of this site constitutes agreement to its user agreement and privacy policy. SIOUX CITY In an attempt to attract more teachers and staff, the Sioux City Community School District is offering up to $5,000 in recruitment bonuses. We need new employees and doing what we were doing, and have been doing, probably is not going to work in this market, so we have to try something different, board president Dan Greenwell said. Doing nothing is not an option. Teachers who are hired since Jan. 1 will receive a $5,000 hiring bonus over two years, or $2,500 per year. Former Sioux City teachers and permanent substitute teachers who are hired will receive a $2,500 stipend; and certain SCESPA para educators, food service workers and bus drivers will receive $1,000 divided into three payments over one year. The school board unanimously approved the stipends Monday. Lisa Banks of the Sioux City Education Association, the union that represents the district's teachers, said she supports the new hires receiving the bonus, but added the district also needs to be focused on teacher retention. She said there are 583 teachers with 10 years or less experience in the district and 487 teachers with more than 11 years with the district, 93 of those have been with the district for more than 25 years. "We're not looking at a good balance there," she said. Brenda Zahner of the Iowa State Education Association asked for the topic to be placed in the ongoing collective bargaining with the district for a new contract. She also asked the board to consider rewarding current employees. New teachers receive their first paycheck at the end of September. Board member Bob Michaelson said if new teachers are moving to the area, the first $2,500 could help pay rent and buy food before their first paycheck. Greenwell said the board will work with human resources to determine the payment timing. The recruitment stipends will be paid from the district's share of the Education and Secondary School Relief funding, with $600,000 currently allocated. Love 1 Funny 0 Wow 1 Sad 0 Angry 0 Want to see more like this? Get our local education coverage delivered directly to your inbox. Sign up! * I understand and agree that registration on or use of this site constitutes agreement to its user agreement and privacy policy. SOUTH SIOUX CITY -- South Sioux City has received an Arbor Day Foundation grant to support a free tree giveaway for residents. The city said in a statement that the planting of these trees in city-owned right-of-ways will help to ensure shady, scenic and healthier neighborhoods, while conserving energy. Residents will be responsible for planting and watering their trees. Those interested in receiving a tree can send their name, address and phone number to SSCgrants@southsiouxcity.org or mail it to Gene Maffit, Parks Director, 1615 1st Ave., South Sioux City, NE 68776 or call the Rec Department at 402-494-7535. City staff will contact residents about picking up their trees in late spring. Love 2 Funny 0 Wow 0 Sad 0 Angry 0 Get local news delivered to your inbox! Subscribe to our Daily Headlines newsletter. Sign up! * I understand and agree that registration on or use of this site constitutes agreement to its user agreement and privacy policy. UNITED NATIONS, March 2 (Xinhua) -- The United Nations and partners are supporting the Madagascar government's response following the passage of Tropical Cyclone Emnati, said the UN Office for the Coordination of Humanitarian Affairs (OCHA) on Wednesday. Emnati, which hit Madagascar on Feb. 23, destroyed, damaged or flooded at least 23,400 houses and more than 5,400 classrooms. These figures could rise in the days ahead as further information becomes available from remote areas, said OCHA. More than 420,000 people have been affected by tropical cyclones Batsirai and Emnati in southeastern Madagascar, and over 322,000 are in urgent need of assistance, according to preliminary assessments, it said. Initial estimates indicate that 60,000 hectares of rice fields have been flooded twice -- first by Batsirai and then by Emnati -- raising concerns about the upcoming harvest and food security across affected areas, it said. The death toll from the storms and cyclones that have hit Madagascar in the past two months has now risen to 205, it said. The United Nations and partners are distributing food assistance, water and hygiene kits and emergency health supplies, and supporting the Ministry of Education to rehabilitate schools. They are also working on shelter solutions, said OCHA. Nongovernmental organization partners and the government plan to provide cash transfers to over 108,000 households to support essential needs and shelter repairs. Efforts are under way to deploy response teams and deliver assistance to hard-to-reach areas, supported by a UN Humanitarian Air Service helicopter and a helicopter provided by the Airbus Foundation, it said. Just over one hundred years ago in June 1919, the U.S. Congress passed a joint resolution in support of a 19th Amendment to the Constitution, which would give women the right to vote. The resolution was sent to the states and eventually was ratified in August 1920. In honor of March as Women's History Month, test your knowledge of this historical milestone with this quiz. How to Do It is Slates sex advice column. Have a question? Send it to Stoya and Rich here. Its anonymous! Dear How to Do It, Im a 28-year-old cis woman, and I am dating a wonderful trans woman. Im her first serious relationship since her transition. My question is about physical intimacy and lessening her distress afterwards. If I bring her to orgasm, it feels good to her in the moment, but sometimes afterwards it reduces her to tears. I dont know what to do. We have open, honest communication, and when I check in, she always assures me what Im doing is welcome and that it gives her pleasure. But invariably it ends with her crying. Sometimes its not bad, like shes a little teary-eyed and a few cuddles and lots of reassurance helps, but oftentimes it ends with her sobbing. I keep asking her if I should just not do it, but she says she enjoys the sensation of orgasm, she just has trouble afterwards. Do you have any other suggestions? I want to make her feel safe and loved, but I dont know how to be intimate without hurting her. Advertisement Advertisement Advertisement Advertisement Safe Words Arent Enough Dear Safe Words, Feelings of sadness after sex, often accompanied by tears, are generally attributed to a phenomenon called post-coital dysphoria (aka post-coital tristesse). Studies have suggested this phenomenon is common: This one from 2015 found that 46 percent of 230 women respondents had experienced it at some point in their lives, while this one found nearly 33 percent of a 222 women-university-student sample had. (Yet another study found 41 percent of 1,208 surveyed men had.) Suspected contributing factors include hormonal changes that occur after orgasm, feelings about the relationship with the sex partner, feelings about sex in general, trauma, attachment anxiety, and, interestingly (at least to me), difficulty with self-differentiation. Heres more on that last one, per the first cited study (that found 46 percent of its respondents had experienced PCD): Advertisement Advertisement In our study, individuals who have difficulty maintaining an I position and are more emotionally reactive were more likely to report symptoms of PCD. In the period following sexual intercourse, individuals who are emotionally reactive may be more sensitive or vulnerable to negative emotions, resulting in an acute period of depression or irritability. Those who have a tendency to become fused with others may perceive the resolution phase of sexual intercourse as a separation from their partner, which may be overwhelming. Advertisement So, your partners gender identity and recency of transition may not be a contributing factor, though thats possible. I didnt find examples of PCD studies on trans people, or existing studies suggesting that gender dysphoria could add to post-coital dysphoria, but there are some reddit threads from trans people discussing their experiences with PCD. Sex can exacerbate gender dysphoria, so I dont want to discount the possibility outright, but the simpler truth is many people experience PCD, and your partner is such a person. If she knows theres a possibility shell feel sad after having sex, but pushes ahead anyway, shes indicating that the pros outweigh the cons. The good feelings during sex are worth the negative ones after. You should keep up the aftercare and, perhaps in a nonsexual context, discuss whether theres anything more you can do in those instances. If this post-sex sadness is becoming too big a burden, she could talk to a counselor (perhaps she already has one, or is willing to pursue a sex therapist). One such counselor recommends journaling ones feelings (though I think inventory can be taken merely in ones head, no need to put pen to page). Here are five prompts Aviva Kamander recommended in a Well + Good piece on the topic: Advertisement Advertisement Advertisement Advertisement 1. Was it before, during, and/or after sex that you started feeling something distressing? 2. Is this feeling familiar to anything youve felt at another time in your life? 3. Did your behavior work in alignment with your values? 4. Are you satisfied with how you were treated? 5. Is there anything you regret about the experience? Post-coital dysphoria can be confusing, since many of us understand sex as something that makes us feel good, not bad. Its hard to help yourself if you dont understand yourself, so hopefully your partner already does or can start to via the questions above, some counseling, or both. For your part, keep being there for herthat you care enough to write this letter suggests youre already doing your job. Advertisement Advertisement Get the How to Do It Newsletter Sex advice from Rich and Stoya, plus exclusive letter follow-ups, delivered weekly. We encountered an issue signing you up. Please try again. Please enable javascript to use form. Email address: Send me updates about Slate special offers. By signing up, you agree to our Privacy Policy and Terms Sign Up Thanks for signing up! You can manage your newsletter subscriptions at any time. Dear How to Do It, How reasonable is it to expect a long-term partner to distinguish between a playful no, but actually yes and an actual lack of consent? My husband and I have been together for over a decade, and our sex life has frequently played with consentthink deliberate provocations to get punished, or pretending to be overpowered. Well, were now separated for a number of reasons (mainly infidelity and chronic unemployment on his part), and my enthusiasm for sex with him has taken a nose dive. On maybe four to five occasions now, we will be spending time together, Ill say Im not interested in being intimate, and hell persistently escalate the touching, etc., sometimes using guilt (But I miss you so much and just want to be close to you!), despite my stated wishes until eventually I just give in. These experiences left me feeling used and violated, and I have told him this. Honestly, this might be the final straw that tips me toward divorce. However, he argues that given our sexual history, its unreasonable for me to expect him to know the difference between a real no and a playful one, especially since I never truly tried to fight him off. I also find myself shutting down, and just ignoring remarks and actions that hurt me rather than making a good faith effort to explain why I feel violated. Am I sabotaging my relationship by not giving him enough of a chance to learn and improve? How much educating and explanation do I owe him, given our history and love for each other? I would truly like to repair this relationship, but dont want to spend the rest of my life feeling like I dont matter. Advertisement Advertisement Advertisement Advertisement Frustrated Dear Frustrated, I do not think youre being unreasonable. I think he is being coercive and selective with the information he chooses to believe. If you say sex is making you feel used and violated, theres no argument to be had. It makes you feel what it does. Your past play may contextualize his behavior, but it certainly doesnt excuse or justify it, especially now that youve clarified. Things have changed, youre separated, and overall, youre less responsive to him. That is far more logical of a trajectory than his refusal to accept your shifting dynamic and adamance that no means yes because it sometimes did in the past. It seems like you need a break from sex with himat least for now. I would make that absolutely clear upfront and moving forward. In a setting where sex could not be construed as an optionsay via phone, at a restaurant, or maybe during the beginning of a hang sessiontell him in no uncertain terms that you arent interested in sex, and that, in fact, your feelings of violation after recent encounters are only making you less interested. And then, dont give in. If he tries to push it, leave the room, leave the house, leave the city, leave the state. I dont think you are to blame for whats been happening, but I do think you could work at preventing it to send the clearest possible signal to someone who seems to need just that. Advertisement Advertisement Advertisement I dont believe that this constitutes sabotaging your relationship. Your issues with him are, it seems, distinct from sex, and you probably need to sort through them before you can connect sexually again. At the moment, things are muddled, and I think what youre actually sabotaging is your chance for repair. You owe him as much educating and explaining as youre willing to give, as long as he shows willingness to learn. Arguing with you about your own feelings of violation does not suggest such a willingness. Only you can decide when to pull the plughow much inertia can you put up with? If you two arent seeing a counselor, that might be a good last-ditch effort. Advertisement Advertisement Help us keep giving the advice you crave every week. Sign up for Slate Plus now. Dear How to Do It, Im a 40-year-old white American dude, so Im firmly (pun intended) ensconced in the age group where like 90 percent of us were circumcised at birth. Granted, a lot of the content is of European origin, but based on my Pornhub travels the last several years, it seems that stat has been reversed overall. I dont have any sensitivity issues, and I am glad to have been circumcised, but after seeing so much uncut sex lately, I find myself curious to know how it would feel different. What are some ways you could simulate it? Are there any, practically speaking? My internet searches have yielded some kooky results, and a lot of it is focused on trying to actually re-grow foreskin, which Im not interested in. I just want to know what it feels like. Advertisement Advertisement Uncut Curious Dear Uncut Curious, Lets not disparage those interested in restoring their foreskinstheyre a very sensitive bunch and, if they have any say in the matter, are getting more sensitive by the use of various contraptions like weights and grips. Theres far from a consensus on foreskin restoration in the medical community (voodoo is how one unnamed urologist categorized the practice to Vice in 2015), though there are doctors who perform surgical restorations. Wayne Griffiths, founder of National Organization of Restoring Men, has reported that his weight-assisted restoration increased sensitivity in the head of his penis. (The nerves in the foreskin lost during circumcision, however, cannot be regenerated.) Everyone needs a hobby and people love their penises, so if nothing else, the restoration movement, in all of its banner-waving glory, was inevitable. Advertisement Advertisement Advertisement What does having a foreskin feel like? Thats not unlike asking, What does purple look like? or, What do white truffles taste like? The answer is going to be subjective and at the mercy of spoken languages limitation. With foreskins, its hard to know what youre missing if you never had it. The best we can do is check in with those who have been circumcised as adults after experiencing sexual pleasure with a foreskin. Most anecdotal accounts report a loss of sensation. It was like having a decent car, then having to downgrade to a worse car. Youll take the worse car because its better than having to take the bus but still, one anonymous, recently snipped guy told Cosmopolitan in 2019. YouTuber Mario Adrion claimed that sex with a foreskin was more intense, included more friction, and was overall a lot more exciting. That said, getting cut alleviated his concerns of under-the-hood cleanliness, making him feel lighter. One study found that circumcision extended ejaculatory latency timeperhaps a bonus if youre going for stamina. Another study found minimal long-term implications for penile sensitivity after using quantitative sensory testing protocols on circumcised and uncircumcised men, while yet another, via online survey, found that circumcised men reported decreased sexual pleasure and lower orgasm intensity. So: mixed results. Finally, a study of men circumcised as adults found that 48 percent reported masturbatory pleasure reduced after circumcision, 63 percent said masturbatory difficulty increased, and 20 percent reported worse sex in the wake of adult circumcision. Advertisement Advertisement Advertisement In my research, it seems like the actual tactile differences are a matter of degree. Its very hard to accurately describe the taste of white truffles, but we can agree that theyre stronger in taste and smell than black truffles. And yet, black truffles are delicious too! In terms of simulating the sensation without resorting to restoration techniques, you could maybe try a sleeve-like masturbation aid, just for the sake of knowing what its like to have something surrounding your penis that can glide over top of it. But again, youre not going to generate nerves out of nothing. Its natural to wonder, What if?, but its probably best for your head (at least the one on your shoulders) to be grateful for what you have. Advertisement Advertisement Did you write this or another letter we answered? Tell us what happened at howtodoit@slate.com. Dear How to Do It, This girl and I began dating not long ago, and recently decided to start having sex. Were both grown adults (Im a guy), late 20s/early 30s, and its neither of our first times. Overall, things feel very compatible! Not just with sexuality but generallyIm optimistic about how things can go for us. But the reason Im emailing you is because what I worried would happen actually did during our first-time having sex together: I had a difficult time getting, let alone maintaining, an erection. I masturbate OK to porn, and while my libido is not what it was when I was a teenager, I still feel arousal and can get to climax on my own. But since I was in my early 20s, Ive had a hit-or-miss history of erections with partners, which is nerve-racking! With previous partners Ive had good sex (hopefully it was mutual), and sometimes it seemed like I was over the issue, only to have it return anew with a new partner. I can only think of one or two in the past 10 years where I didnt have this issue at all; its always on my mind when things start going physical, as much as I try not to think about it. I suppose having not had sex in several years is adding to that, too (the pandemic). Advertisement Advertisement For better or worse, this HAS made me a bit more attentive and interested in being good at stimulating my partner in other ways like fingers and oral. And when she touched/caressed my penis and testicles I reacted as youd expect, just not sustained in a way that might lead to intercourse, let alone putting on a condom then intercourse, this first time. Well have a second time soon, and I can only hope Im up to my game or shes OK repeating how we did things last time. Ive seen doctors, and they say its just nerves, not anything physical or testosterone-related, and theyre probably right. Doesnt help in the moment though, and I hate to feel like Im a disappointing partner. She doesnt seem bothered by this first-time flaccidity, but if you have any advice or suggestions for what might help a situation like this, Id be more than keen to be a more consistent partner for her in all the ways we might enjoy sex together. Advertisement Advertisement Hard Up Dear Hard Up, Im inclined to agree with your doctors that this is psychologically, not physically, rooted. Lets review the evidence you submitted: You worried about boner issues with this new partner, and sure enough, there they were. It is always on your mind when things get physical, and when things get physical is when you most often experience these issues. For, as you write, Sometimes it seemed like I was over the issue, only to have it return anew with a new partner. It seems like your brake is triggered when the opportunity to have sex with a new partner comes to pass, and time and comfort ease that formerly leaden foot, allowing you to accelerate. I think you are nonetheless a good candidate for a PDE5 inhibitor such as sildenafil or tadalafil. It may seem counterintuitive to treat a psychological issue with a drug that targets something as physical as your blood flow, but knowing you have the safety net of a boner med may actually ease your mind, thereby resolving the psychological issue. Advertisement Advertisement Advertisement Also, lean into your partners acceptance. She seems compassionate, and possibly has experience with this very issue. The worst thing a partner can do in the presence of a soft dick is to make a big deal about it and create added stress, particularly if the ED is a product of already present stress. Follow her lead, ease into her ease, have a good time within your capacity, and see if that doesnt help clear the way for your wood, as well. Rich More How to Do It I recently moved in with a guy friend of mine, and so far its gone pretty well. Hes clean, quiet, considerate, and we get along great. However, since Ive known him, Ive known hes a nudist. Our advice columnists have heard it all over the years. In this special edition, we dive into the Care and Feeding archives to share some of the best letters weve received about our furry friends. Join Slate Plus for even more advice columnsyour first month is only $1. Dear Care and Feeding, My 5-year-old daughter, Maya, loves rabbits. She loves books about rabbits. She loves movies about rabbits. When she sees an actual rabbit in the wild, its the highlight of her week. She desperately wants a pet rabbit, but our apartment building doesnt allow any pets other than fish. So this Christmas, my in-laws (who can best be described as eccentric but well-meaning) gave Maya a stuffed rabbit. I dont mean stuffed rabbit as in a plush toy. I mean stuffed as in THE TAXIDERMIED CORPSE OF AN ACTUAL DEAD RABBIT. Maya adores it. She talks to it, sings to it, reads to it, sleeps with it, and carries it with her everywhere. Advertisement Advertisement Advertisement Advertisement Words cannot express how much I hate this thing. I dont want to stare into the glassy eyes of a rabbit corpse while Im eating my dinner. I dont want a dead rabbit snuggled on the bed with us while I read my daughter a bedtime story. But I know that Maya would be heartbroken and confused if I took it away from her. She views it as a super-realistic toy and doesnt understand that its something that used to be alive and is now dead (she also doesnt quite grasp the meat is dead animals thing). I have tried switching it out with toy rabbits, which she has about 50 of, but she always demands her precious taxidermied monstrosity. Advertisement Complicating things is the fact that her school has been 100 percent remote since the start of the school year, but they will reassess whether they will resume in-person school after spring break (mid-March). Right now, the stuffed rabbit is by her side the entire time shes in Zoom class, and I know that if she starts in-person school, she will want to take it to school with her. Her school is K8, so if she gets labeled as the weirdo with the taxidermy rabbit now, that could follow her all the way until shes in high school. I want to wean her off of the rabbit before then, but I have no idea how when its the only toy she ever wants to play with and she has a meltdown if she doesnt have it with her. I know eventually she will move on to something else of her own accord, but the looming start of in-person school means this should ideally occur within the next two months. Do you have any suggestions on how to help this happen? Advertisement Advertisement Advertisement Advertisement Advertisement You have my sympathy. I would not enjoy snuggling with a dead rabbit either. But I really dont think you have to worry about Maya getting labeled as the taxidermy girl if she starts kindergarten in person with the rabbit along for the ride. (For one thing, shes unlikely to be allowed to bring it with her to school except on special occasions. But even on stuffed animal day, the other 5-year-olds wont know the difference between taxidermy-stuffed and toy-stuffed any more than Maya does; they wont think shes weird, even if her teacher does.) This is a problem that is entirely about your discomfort, not hers (not even future hers). And let me repeat that I feel for you. But she will move on to something else of her own accord. If I were you, Id try to get used to this passing fancy, just because its way easier for an adult (even a seriously grossed-out one) to do that than it is for a childespecially a child right now, when everything is so weirdto adjust to giving up a particularly beloved toy. Advertisement Advertisement If you are determined to try to nudge things along, I suppose you might see if a really big stuffed rabbit or one that moves or is creepily realistic (but was never alive) would entice her away from the stuffed dead one. But theres no guarantee that any of these will entice your daughter to abandon her beloved dead creature. Advertisement Advertisement Let me add one additional note of advice, while Im here. Since most kids that age cycle through obsessions, its possible your daughter will move on not just from this particular toy but from rabbits to, say, owls. Or, you know, horses. So you might want to have a little chat with her eccentric grandparents about future gifts, just to make sure theres no more taxidermy in your future. Michelle Herman Advertisement Advertisement From: My In-Laws Gifted My Daughter a Stuffed Dead Rabbit. She Loves It. (Jan. 17, 2021) Dear Care and Feeding, My Aunt Mildred has just passed. She was in her late 80s, it was in her sleep, were all at peace about it. Heres the problem: In her will, she left my 14-year-old daughter her horrible bird. I am biased, because I grew up in New York and see all birds as rats with wings, but I never imagined one would wind up living and pooping in my house. Its a monk parakeet, which the internet tells me can live from 15 to 20 years (Hawk is, as far as we can tell, about 5 years old.) I dont want it in my house, and I really dont want to inherit it when my daughter leaves for college. What do I do? Advertisement Advertisement As someone else who would never allow a bird to live in her home, I understand your aversion. Nor am I overly hung up on Aunt Mildreds wishes here, as she is dead. She shouldnt have bought a bird that lives for 20 years in her 80s if she wanted to control all possible outcomes. Does your daughter want the bird? Ifafter she has been brought up to speed on the amount of care she will have to provide the bird, minus any parental assistance, financial or otherwiseshe still wants the bird, then I think you have a bird now. Im very sorry. If your daughter does not want the bird or the responsibilities that come with it, take it to a bird sanctuary, where it can live with many, many other exotic birds that old people have willed to their squeamish children and grandchildren. Dont sell it to a pet store. Advertisement Advertisement Advertisement Please keep me posted. Please do not send me the bird. I do not want it. Nicole Cliffe From: I Dont Want Dead Aunt Mildreds Pet Parakeet. (Sept. 13, 2019) Dear Care and Feeding, My smart, fun, 3-year-old daughter loves her grandparents, my father, and my stepmother. (My mother died over a decade ago.) My stepmothers two adult children both have dogs they dote on, and their mother showers the dogs with affection and loves to talk about her grandpups. Nothing wrong with that! However, since my daughter was born, my stepmother has frequently made comparisons between my daughter and these dogs. For example, when my daughter jumps up for an offered cookie, shell say, Oh, thats just like [dogs name]! I have tended to grin and bear this, though it drives my daughters father a little crazy. Advertisement Advertisement Advertisement But my daughters getting older. The last time we visited, she was playing with something she shouldnt have been playing with, and I told her to stop, which she did. My stepmother then said, Good girl, [name] in a voice I can only describe as the sort of voice you use for a puppy. And then she confirmed this by turning to me and saying, Thats what I say to [dogs name]. I responded: Yes, I know. But I dont say that to her. Maybe we could just say thank you instead? We moved past it, but it ruffled my feathers because I could tell it ruffled hers. Was I too sensitive about this? And if not, at what point should I draw a line like the one I did, and what is the best way to do that? Let me say I understand completely that people love their dogs. And I know its not intentionally demeaning when she talks to my daughter this way, but I confess that I dont want anyone talking to her the way they talk to a dog, however loved that dog is. I dont think its insulting to dogs to say that people and dogs require different forms of communication. Advertisement Advertisement Advertisement I dont think its insulting to dogs either. But I also dont think this eccentricity on her part is whats really bothering you. Its bizarre for sure, but so what? As your daughter gets older, shell find it puzzling and probably also funny (or else your stepmother will quit talking to her as if she were a dog, which I think is likely once the two of them begin to have actual conversations). I think whats really ruffling your feathers is that your stepmother seems to love her grandpuppies more than she loves her stepgranddaughter. And who can blame you? Its only human to be hurt by this. But theres not a damn thing you can do about it. And I think that unless her stepgrandma is commanding that she sit and stayor hitting her with a rolled-up newspaperId let the puppy talk go. Its harmless. M.H. Advertisement From: My Stepmother Talks to My Daughter Like Shes a Pet. (Dec. 6, 2020) Dear Care and Feeding, My partners 4-year-old really loves my pet rabbit and Im worried he might, literally, love him to death. We have tried explaining that he needs to be gentle with the rabbit: Stroking is OK, but grabbing is not. Neither is chasing the rabbit around the house. And picking him up by the ears, which we found him doing again yesterday, is completely forbidden. I have tried explaining all this calmly. I have told him the rabbit will get scared and hurt. I have showed him how to stroke gently, and congratulated him for doing it properly. I have even tried making a song out of it. But he finds the rabbit so incredibly exciting that all the rules are soon forgotten. Advertisement Advertisement Advertisement Advertisement After we found him holding the poor dangling rabbit by the ears, we got angry and my partner tried to put him in timeout. This just resulted in a lot of very loud screaming. I do not know what else we can do to protect the poor rabbit. I am seriously considering finding him a new home, but I was hoping perhaps you might have some alternative suggestions. How can you teach a small, boisterous child to be gentle with pets? Aww, jeez, its so easy to hurt a bunny. Grown adults have seriously injured them by improper handling. You deserve an award for not actually screaming when you found him holding the bunny by his ears. My recommendation is that you need to make the bunnys cage kid-proof (get a padlock, whatever it takes!) and decree that henceforth, all bunny interaction will be completely supervised. He has lost his bunny privileges until he is older and more responsible. Advertisement Some little kids just lose their whole dang minds around pets, and its a lot easier to limit his access than to try to reason him into getting his act together. Protect the bun! N.C. From: I Am Worried My Pet Rabbit Is Going to Be Killed by an Enthusiastic 4-Year-Old (April 5, 2019) Dear Care and Feeding, Let me start by saying I think its great that other people have pets. I just dont want one in my house. Ive frankly never understood the appeal of having an animal who needs daily care throughout its life, especially if that care is going to involve shedding, excrement, and a smelly house. Ive always wanted children, but part of what excited me about them was that they grow, learn, and slowly begin to take care of themselves more and more. Now I have a child (a toddler), and I adore him. My husband seems to be of the opinion that every child needs a pet. I dont agree with that sentiment and have explained why. He seems mostly contented with that for now. But whats really bothering me is my husbands seeming insistence on the inevitability that our child will someday wear us (me) down on the issue. Is it really so unreasonable to maintain that we are going to have a pet-free household? Is it possible that this is just a version of people continually telling women that theyre going to change their minds about having kids? Advertisement Advertisement Advertisement Advertisement I chuckled when you said you dont want the responsibility of picking up an animals poop and dealing with a smelly house when that is literally what raising a tiny human is like. Sure, tiny humans grow into not-so-tiny humans eventually, but it certainly isnt clear sailing from that point. Also, people have been trying to convince other people to do things they arent interested in since the beginning of time. Hell, I think I received five calls in the past week from salespeople trying to get me to extend my cars warranty. Its nothing new, really. Not that this matters to you, but I also share the same belief that your husband has about pets, in that every child should grow up with one. There are plenty of animals that dont shed and make the house smell (my dog is one of them), and if pets were such horrifically annoying creatures, then 70 percent of Americans wouldnt own them as they currently do now. Thats because the pros far outweigh the cons in terms of pet ownership, and one of the pros is what pets can teach our children. Responsibility and empathy are two of the biggest ones. Advertisement Advertisement In your defense, my wife was very similar to you and offered the same concerns that you had. I kept pushing because I knew my kids wanted a puppy (especially during the pandemic when we were all stuck at home), and I knew it would benefit them. Then I finally struck a deal with her. I said that the kids and I would handle 100 percent of the walks, feedings, vet bills, poop cleanup, etc., and she could just enjoy the fun parts of dog ownership namely the snuggles and belly rubs. She ended up taking us up on it, and she completely loves our puppy and couldnt imagine her life without him in it. Advertisement You may believe that youll never do what my wife did, and thats finebut what will happen when your kid gets older, and he wants to have a dog or cat? It will be two votes against one so consider the feelings of everyone in your household. Like I said earlier, I think a fair deal would be to have your husband and son handle everything pet-related. The healthiest families I know are the ones who believe in compromise. Doyin Richards Advertisement Advertisement Advertisement From: I Think My Husbands Constant Demand to Get a Dog is Sexist (Dec. 22, 2021) More Advice From Care and Feeding For my youngest daughters 10th birthday, my husband and I finally caved and allowed her to get a cat. She did background research, found a reputable breeder, and then used five years worth of saved-up money from birthdays, Hanukkahs, and allowances (totaling $900) to get a very cute Persian kitten, whom she named Klaus. She absolutely adores him. But Klaus ended up preferring her 13-year-old sister. He sits only in the older sisters lap, wants to sleep in her bed, and hates it when hes taken out of her sight. This story was produced in partnership with The Garrison Project, an independent, nonpartisan organization addressing the crisis of mass incarceration and policing. On Tuesday, the ACLU filed a lawsuit asking for a temporary restraining order to prevent Texas from investigating families for providing gender-affirming care to trans children. The lawsuit came after Texas Attorney General Ken Paxton authored a legal opinion declaring that providing gender-affirming care to minors is child abuse according to existing state law. Governor Greg Abbott then directed the Department of Family and Protective Services (DFPS), the states child welfare agency, to comply by investigating any reports of parents providing gender-affirming care to their children. Advertisement Because no laws were changed to make explicit that gender affirming care is child abusea bill that would have done so passed the Texas Senate last year but stalled in the Houseadvocates and lawyers have said that the new directive is not legally binding. And district and county attorneys from nearly all of Texass major counties have said there will be no prosecutions of parents under this new directive. We want to be clear: We will enforce the Constitution and we will not irrationally and unjustifiably interfere with medical decisions made by children, their parents, and their medical physicians, a Feb. 24 statement from the DAs of five large Texas counties, including Dallas and Travis (Austin), stated. Advertisement Advertisement Advertisement Advertisement But as the ACLU lawsuit shows, investigations in Texas will take place whether or not the prosecutors will bring a case against a parent because DFPS is compelled to comply with Abbotts directive. Already, at least three reports of abuse have been made against parents of trans children. According to the ACLU lawsuit, a DFPS employee with a trans child was placed on leave and an investigator was sent to her home when she asked her supervisor for clarification on the new directive. Such investigationseven if they dont end in prosecutionscan be harmful. Investigations are really terrifyingthese are people who are coming into your house and have the power to remove your children at any time, says Kelley Fong, an assistant professor at Georgia Tech who has researched how fear of Child Protective Services leads poor mothers to avoid needed services. Theyre doing a full, comprehensive assessment of all aspects of your familys personal life, even if theyre not related to the issue at hand. Advertisement Advertisement And CPS investigationsand removalsof families with gender nonconforming children are already happening outside of Texas. In December, I reported on the case of Katee Churchill, a Michigan mom who had her children removed by CPS after she encouraged her middle childs gender exploration. CPS alleged that Churchill pressured her child to transition; her child, now 11, asserts he made his own choice. The fathers of her children now have primary custody, and Churchill gets visitation with her children every other weekend. Advertisement The child welfare systemdecried as family policing by criticsis a particularly potent tool for transphobic politicians because it was set up to surveil families that fall outside of the white, middle class norm. The system is actually a large web of state, county and city agencies, each with their own rules and procedures. The general public has only a vague understanding of this system, which in 2019 received 4.4 million reports of suspected abuse. The media often reports on only the most harrowing cases of child abuse, but these make up just a small fraction of the cases CPS investigates. Because the worst cases receive media attention, many people hold misconceptions about the parents and children that become entangled within it that can end up pushing more punitive policies towards families who need help. Advertisement Advertisement Advertisement Advertisement If a person calls into a child abuse hotline to anonymously report that they suspect another person has abused their child, that person will likely never know who made the report, as CPS has no duty to disclose it. CPS also doesnt have to alert a person suspected of abuse to their rights during an investigation, a stark contrast to bedrock rights afforded to people in criminal cases under Miranda. And people investigated in abuse cases often dont know their rights, like refusing to allow a CPS investigator into their home. If you say yes, the investigator will appreciate that you are cooperating, notes a Parents Resource Guide from the Supreme Court of Texas Childrens Commission. If you say no, the CPS caseworker may think you are trying to be difficult and could hold it against you. Advertisement Advertisement Advertisement CPS investigators have broad mandates in home searches: they can take pictures of food in a refrigerator and note the conditions of your home, including whether its messy that day and if a toilet is working. They might note bottles of alcohol, prescription medicines, any drugs or drug paraphernalia. This evidence, which is often based on a single caseworkers subjective ideas about adequate parenting, can be used as evidence of abuse. If a CPS caseworker thinks a child is in immediate danger, they can enter the home without parental consent, and remove the child right then. Remember that even if you choose NOT to consent, CPS can always ask the court to allow them to act anyway, the Parents Resource Guide notes. Most of the time, the Court will order the investigation to continue even without your consent, so keep this in mind when deciding what to do. Advertisement CPS might not even begin their investigation at the home. If CPS investigators go to a childs school, they can question them there without parental consent. They can search a childs body, including under their clothes. Parents will not even know this is taking place until afterward the search. If they find abuse is taking place, they can remove a child from school. Advertisement Advertisement Parents in Texas are entitled to an attorney in CPS cases, but not until it goes before a judge. But many investigations never reach that stage, says Mark Zuniga, the managing attorney at Travis County Office of Parental Representation. The attorneys in Zunigas office are appointed to parents who cant afford a private lawyer, and since the vast majority of CPS cases involve indigent families, nearly all parents have attorneys appointed to them. Zuniga said he was assigned virtually all of the cases currently on his desk after a child was removed from the home. Advertisement Because CPS cases are argued in civil, not criminal, courts, the legal protections afforded to parents are much weaker than those afforded to people charged with a crime. In criminal cases, for example, anyone accused of a crime is guaranteed a right to counsel. In the child welfare system, the consequences for caseworkers and investigators not following the law are also diminished. Say an investigator and a police officer go to a house and theres an allegation of abuse or neglect. The parent denies entry. The police officer and the caseworker go in anyway. And they see a criminal level of child abuse so that CPS gets involved and the police officer arrests the parent, Zuniga says. In the criminal case, you violated their constitutional rights. And so the exclusionary rule would applyanything that was obtained illegally in violation of their constitutional rights, thats inadmissible as evidence in a criminal case. In a CPS case, however, that evidence is admissible, Zuniga said. So in that scenario, you easily could see the criminal case getting dismissed and the CPS case going forward, he said. Advertisement Advertisement Advertisement Despite the constitutional right to parent ones children, and the fact that removing a child is one of the most serious consequences for parents imaginable, in a CPS case, theres always the protection of the child, which is really sacrosanct, Zuniga said. And so [the courts are] sitting there going, well, yes, the department did the wrong thing. But youve still got a hurt child. Advertisement Advertisement Like the criminal legal system, the child welfare system targets Black, Indigenous and LGBTQ families, and nearly all families involved in CPS cases are living in poverty. And CPS cases are not always about a childs safety. In 2019, 61 percent of CPS cases in 2019 involved neglect only, which could range from a child having too many absences from school or a family experiencing housing insecurity, problems advocates assert are often synonymous with poverty. The rates of CPS cases involving physical and sexual abuse were much lower, at 18 and 9 percent respectively. More than half of reports are found to be unsubstantiated. While some families are ensnared in the system for years for questionable reasons, cases of actual abuse often escape the attention of CPS until its too late. Advertisement Advertisement So advocates fear that Abbotts new directive will be unevenly enforced. Because CPS cases are handled at the county level, families of trans children in Dallas, whose DA signed the February statement saying he would not interfere with medical decisions between children and their parents, are likely safe from prosecution, but those in smaller or heavily Republican areas might not. It was Texas state representative Matt Krause who wrote Paxton to inquire if gender-affirming care could be considered abuseand Krause is running for district attorney in Tarrant County, the third most populous county in Texas that includes cities like Fort Worth. And while parents of trans children with means have likely already begun to explore their legal options, poor parents with trans children are particularly vulnerable to state intervention, even if they live in a county that has refused to prosecute these cases. It really opens a can of worms in some ways, Fong says. Once an investigation starts, its like turning over rocksyou never know what youre gonna find, and once you ring the bell, you cant unring it. Advertisement Advertisement Mical Raz, the author of Abusive Policies: How the American Child Welfare System Lost Its Way, said that since the 1960s, child abuse laws have steadily expanded, and that despite being well-intentioned, these vague laws are vulnerable to interpretations like Paxtonsand dont make children safer. Youre serving nobody by expanding the category of abuse beyond recognition, and just making abuse this giant amorphous thingand then it obviously becomes weaponized and politicized, Raz said, adding that everything from children wearing masks to being taught about race in schools has been characterized as child abuse. Raz said these new attacks on families of trans kids are a way to make it really obvious whats been happening up until now, which is how we criminalize families that we dont like. For decades, anti-gay activists have pushed their agenda by masking their homophobia in a concern for childrens innocence. But as gay Americans have demanded equal rights and gained greater visibility, these anti-gay sentiments have fallen out of favor in polite society. As a result, the bigots began cloaking their hatred of homosexuality in terms of religious liberty and natural law. Now, the anti-gay lobby has found a tantalizing new opportunity to continue their crusade: The rights war against critical race theory. Suddenly, Republican lawmakers are establishing speech codes for public schools, censoring students and teachers, and banning diverse educational materials. Homophobic activists have piggybacked off this campaign by reframing LGBTQ-related school speech as dangerous liberal propaganda. Advertisement In multiple states run by Republicans, the anti-gay crusaders are on the brink of success, reviving a pernicious strain of hate that seemed to be fading just a few years ago. Advertisement Advertisement Advertisement Whenever there is a moral panic involving children, homophobes see an opportunity. The most notorious of these anti-gay gag orders is Floridas Dont Say Gay measure. The bill, H.B. 1557, has already passed the state House of Representatives and is on the brink of passage in the state Senate; Republican Gov. Ron DeSantis has signaled that hell sign it. H.B. 1557 outlaws classroom instruction about sexual orientation or gender identity in kindergarten through third grade, then bans such instruction in grades 4-12 if it is not age-appropriate or developmentally appropriate. These terms are not clearly defined, and this ambiguity is by design. As my colleague Christina Cauterucci explained, their intent is to create a chilling effect, such that teachers and school administrators are too afraid to teach LGBTQ history, discuss relevant current events, or offer support to queer and trans students, lest they run afoul of a vaguely written law. H.B. 1557 empowers parents to file a lawsuit against schools that dont comply and win damagesthat is, a cash payoutas well as attorneys fees if they prevail. Like Texas abortion ban, it creates a vigilante enforcement scheme, relying on the threat of ruinous lawsuits to bring its targets into line. Advertisement Advertisement Advertisement Florida is not alone in silencing LGBTQ-related speech. There are at least 15 similar bills in eight states, and several go far beyond H.B. 1557. Oklahomas S.B. 1654 bans schools from using books that make as their primary subject the study of lesbian, gay, bisexual, or transgender issues. Tennessees H.B. 800 would proscribe classroom materials that promote, normalize, support, or address lesbian, gay, bisexual, or transgender (LGBT) issues or lifestyles. Kansas H.B. 2662 forbids any material that depicts homosexualitynot gay sex, but the mere existence of same-sex couples. Any teacher who violates the law could be fined and jailed. Advertisement Advertisement Many of these anti-LGBTQ bills are framed as parents rights or curriculum transparency measures. The reason is obvious. As PEN America has reported, such measures represent a convergence between two distinct but related sets of actors: First, anti-LGBTQ+ activists, well-established but with limited success in penetrating public schools; and second, the anti-Critical Race Theory movement. This anti-CRT campaign has primed the public to support sweeping censorship of classroom speech. For anti-LGBTQ+ activists, this is a once-in-a-generation opportunity, a chance to ram through bills that are far more restrictive than anything the public would normally accept. Advertisement Advertisement Advertisement The groups pushing these bills view speech about race and LGBTQ people as part of the same broader evil. Heritage Foundation, the conservative D.C. think tank, lobbies against both CRT (defined as virtually any discussion of race) and LGBTQ acceptance (which it labels sexual orientation and gender identity ideology) in schools. Family Policy Alliance, the lobbying arm of Focus on the Family, advocates against education about race and LGBTQ identities under the umbrella of protecting parental rights. So does its Florida chapter, which has mobilized in support of Floridas gag rule. One registered lobbyist for H.B. 1557, Moms for Liberty, formed just two years ago. The groups trajectory illustrates how these causes have melted together. Moms for Liberty first came on the scene to lobby against mask mandates in school in 2020. It quickly morphed into a parents rights organization and set its sights on educational censorship, demanding that schools ban books depicting interracial marriage, Martin Luther King, Jr., and civil rights protests (allegedly for depicting police in a negative light). Naturally, the group then took aim at LGBTQ-themed books, equating sensitive depictions of gay youth with pornography. It even objected to a book about seahorses because it explained that males carry the eggs. Advertisement Advertisement Advertisement Advertisement The interests of anti-LGBTQ activists and anti-CRT activists overlap where it matters: Both groups want to control what information their children are exposed to at school by gagging educators and students. Our current moral panic is rooted in the fearcarefully cultivated by Republican lawmakers and conservative mediathat schools are indoctrinating students with a dangerous, un-American ideology. They seize on ambient parental concerns that cultural currents are drawing their children further out to sea and away from the shores of traditional morality. Just as some parents dont want their kids to learn about same-sex marriage, others dont want them to discover structural racism, Jim Crow, and slavery. Already, this movement is shifting toward the censorship of all ideas that offend them, including the existence of communism, sexism, and atheism. (You can read an index of these bills here.) Advertisement On a podcast supporting H.B. 1557, Ben Shapiro declared that he would always passionately defend protecting small children from the predations of adults who wish to talk about controversial social issues with children. This wordpredations, which Shapiro deployed repeatedlyis the skeleton key to this entire debate. It reflects an angst that gay people who do not conceal their sexuality are attempting to brainwash and molest children. Advertisement Advertisement This outlandish and bigoted notion has deep roots. You see this assumption in the infamous 1961 short film Boys Beware, which warned schoolchildren against predatory homosexuals and was produced in part by (of course) a school district. You see it in the failed 1978 campaign to ban gay teachers from California schools. You see it in Board of Education v. National Gay Task Force, a 1985 case in which the Supreme Court struck down an Oklahoma law barring teachers from encouraging or promoting homosexuality. (The state cited a need to protect student morality and traditional cultural values, worrying about student imitation of gay teachers.) You see it in many ads supporting Proposition 8, which asserted that legal same-sex marriage would force educators to indoctrinate kids. (Tagline: It has everything to do with schools.) Now we see it in Florida, Tennessee, Kansas, Oklahomaits a safe bet that a Dont Say Gay bill will gain traction in every state legislature controlled by Republicans. Whenever there is a moral panic involving children, homophobes see an opportunity. The CRT fracas presented them with a chance to shoehorn their cause into a much larger and more successful movement, giving it a huge boost of attention, money, and political support. But there is nothing new about its underlying demands, or the bigotry that motivates them. We are still trapped in the same argument over the humanity of gay people. And as usual, it is the youngest and most vulnerable among us who will pay the greatest price. Vladimir Putin has been flaunting his nuclear arsenal since the invasion of Ukraine got underway. He has test-launched several cruise and ballistic missiles, ordered his underlings to up the alert level of Russias nuclear weapons, and even threatened to use them if the U.S. or NATO gets involved in the fighting. Is he serious? Might he really go nuclear in order to win this war? Probably not, with one big caveat: If the U.S. or NATO were to intervene in the Ukraine war directly, sending boots on the ground or dropping bombs from the sky, then Putin might really push a button. Advertisement Thats why President Joe Biden and other Western leaders have said they wouldnt go that far to defend Ukraine. Putin regards Ukraine as part of Russia. He is killing thousands of people, including many of his own soldiers, in an effort to keep it that way. If we fought back directly, we would be in a war with Russia. If Putin thought he couldnt win that war with conventional arms alone (hes having a hard enough time against just the Ukrainian army), he might very well escalate to nuclear war. Thats what nuclear weapons are fornot just to deter a nuclear attack by an adversary but also to deter (and, if necessary, tip the course of) a large-scale conventional war. Advertisement Advertisement Advertisement Advertisement Subscribe to the Slatest Newsletter A daily email update of the stories you need to read right now. We encountered an issue signing you up. Please try again. Please enable javascript to use form. Email address: Send me updates about Slate special offers. By signing up, you agree to our Privacy Policy and Terms Sign Up Thanks for signing up! You can manage your newsletter subscriptions at any time. This isnt discussed much in public, but it has been an aspect of nuclear war plansEast and Westsince the dawn of the Atomic Age. No American president has officially declared that the U.S. would never be the first to use nuclear weapons in a conflict (even though several have privately believed we wouldnt do so), in part because allies view the nuclear umbrellathe promise that we will, if necessary, use our nukes to protect them from attacks by common enemiesas part of Americas security guarantee. When Presidents Ronald Reagan and Mikhail Gorbachev almost agreed to dismantle all of their nuclear weapons at the Reykjavik summit in 1986, the most alarmed parties were Americas NATO allies, who feared that Reagan was folding up the umbrella. When President Barack Obama led a National Security Council meeting to discuss whether the U.S. should adopt a no-first-use nuclear policy, a Pentagon official leaked it to the media. Hours later, the Japanese foreign minister came calling to make sure it wasnt so. Advertisement Advertisement The parallel isnt precise; Russia doesnt have many allies in the world, and the allies it once had were really vassals (which is why many of them wanted to join NATO, once the Soviet Union fell apart). But the point is all nuclear powers have thought about actually using nuclear weapons under desperate circumstances. Such scenarios are ingrained in their war plans. Even if the policy is strictly deterrence, the deterrent has to be credible: Political leaders have to convince allies, adversaries, and themselves that they would actually use the weapons if some existential line were crossed. Advertisement So would Putin drop the bomb if he thought it was necessary to protect his vital interests? Maybe. If he thought that he was about to lose a war to NATO or the United States, unless he took drastic measures? Quite possibly. Advertisement Advertisement Advertisement Advertisement Putin didnt use the word nuclear in his Feb. 24 speech, announcing his invasion of Ukraine, but he did warn that whoever tries to hinder us will face consequences that you have never faced in your history. This seemed eerily similar to President Donald Trumps August 2017 warning to North Korea that further threats and missile tests would be met with fire and fury like the world has never seenwhich itself evoked President Harry Trumans description of the atom bomb, after it was dropped on Hiroshima, as a rain of ruin from the air, the like of which has never been seen on this earth. In the past few years, Russian military manuals have outlined a strategy of escalate to de-escalate. A possible scenario: NATO and Russia are fighting a conventional war; NATO is winning; Russia tries to tip the balance (escalate) by firing off a small number of low-yield nuclear weapons, probably against concentrations of NATO troops or munitions. (Low-yield is a relative term: The smallest nukes in the U.S. and Russian arsenals are about the same size as the A-bomb that leveled Hiroshima at the end of World War II; most of them are thousands of times more powerful.) The hope would be that the U.S. president would halt the war (de-escalate), fearing that if he responded by firing off nuclear weapons, Russia would fire off more. (The Pentagon cited this hypothetical several years ago to make the case for buying new low-yield nuclear weapons, so we could respond to this Russian tactic without escalating the fight too much. Some of these warheads are now loaded on the missiles in the Navys Trident submarines.) Advertisement Advertisement Advertisement Is this scenario a bit loony? Welcome to Nuclear Strategy 201. It all looks loony from a few steps backbut up close, it has a certain logic. And if someone with his finger on the button believes in the logic, well, thats all it takes to make it real. Advertisement Thankfully, its not obvious that Putin has done anything concrete since invading Ukraine to put this nuclear option on the table. On Feb. 27, Putin ordered his defense minister and chief of the Russian armys general staff to transfer the armys deterrence forcesmeaning its nuclear arsenalto a special mode of combat duty. It wasnt clear what he meant. The Russian nuclear arsenal has four levels of alert, just as the U.S. arsenal has five. But John Pike, director of GlobalSecurity.org, told me on Monday that Putins phrase didnt correspond to any of those levels. It could mean, he speculated, that Russia was sending more nuclear-missile-carrying submarines out to sea or placing more bombers on airborne alert or mobilizing its short-range nuclear weapons in western Russia. But U.S. officials say no such movements have been detected. Advertisement In any case, a senior defense official responded to Putins so-called nuclear alert just the way that an official should havecalmly, telling reporters, We remain confident in our ability to defend ourselves, and our allies, and our partners, and that includes in the strategic deterrent realm. U.S. nuclear forces remained on the same level of alert that they always are. On Tuesday, Russian Defense Minister Sergei Shoigu reported to Putin that he had carried out the order, elaborating that the duty shifts at all the nuclear command posts had begun to carry out combat duty with reinforced personnel. Thats it? More people have been sent to the nuclear command posts? Olga Oliker, a former Pentagon analyst who is now director of the International Crisis Groups Europe and Central Asia program, told me, It looks like Putin just made this thing up, and now Shoigu had to say he did that thing. In other words, Putin was engaging in theatrical saber rattling. Then again, its unnerving when a dictator in desperate straits engages in saber rattling, especially when the saber is nuclear-tipped. Feature: Afghan victims of U.S. "war on terror" still suffer Xinhua) 08:39, March 02, 2022 Photo taken on Feb. 27, 2022 shows a market destroyed in U.S. air strikes in Sangin district of Helmand Province, Afghanistan. The U.S.-led coalition forces may have run from Afghanistan last year, but the indiscriminate killing and widespread atrocities committed against the Afghan people during the occupation will haunt the victims and their families for years. (Photo by Arghand/Xinhua) SANGIN, Afghanistan, March 1 (Xinhua) -- The U.S.-led coalition forces may have run from Afghanistan last year, but the indiscriminate killing and widespread atrocities committed against the Afghan people during the occupation will haunt the victims and their families for years. Abdul Wajid witnessed wholescale slaughter in southern Helmand Province. "For 20 years, we watched killing, destruction and terror. Our business, trade, economy and agriculture were reduced to zero," Wajid, who is in his thirties, told Xinhua recently. Standing in front of a bombed-out building in Sangin district, Wajid recalled being under attack day and night, from all directions: "It was horrific. The bodies of our people were all over the streets." Rejecting U.S. claims of pursuing terrorists and reconstructing the country, Wajid pointed at the devastation everywhere. Houses, shops and markets were indiscriminately bombed. "There were troops busy killing us. People were blown to pieces. Their families could not find the bodies," Wajid said. "They targeted wedding parties from the air or by mortar from the ground. They had no mercy. They didn't spare our cattle, our chicken, or our children." Following the 9/11 attacks on New York and Washington D.C., the United States accused Afghanistan of harboring Osama Bin Laden, the leader of al-Qaeda, and invaded the country in October 2001. During the 20 years in Afghanistan, thousands of foreign troops, including more than 2,400 U.S. service members, lost their lives. Countless Afghans were killed, thousands in Sangin. Abdul Ghani was already old when the U.S. forces arrived in town many years ago. "They killed six of my family and drove me out of my house. I had to leave everything, including the children, behind," he said. Ghani, and many like him, need support just to get through his daily life, let alone rebuild the ruins of his home. "The Americans didn't come here to build the country, they came here to destroy it," he said. Photo taken on Feb. 27, 2022 shows a damaged building in Sangin district of Helmand Province, Afghanistan. The U.S.-led coalition forces may have run from Afghanistan last year, but the indiscriminate killing and widespread atrocities committed against the Afghan people during the occupation will haunt the victims and their families for years. (Photo by Arghand/Xinhua) Photo taken on Feb. 27, 2022 shows a bazaar destroyed in U.S. air strikes in Sangin district of Helmand Province, Afghanistan. The U.S.-led coalition forces may have run from Afghanistan last year, but the indiscriminate killing and widespread atrocities committed against the Afghan people during the occupation will haunt the victims and their families for years. (Photo by Arghand/Xinhua) Photo taken on Feb. 27, 2022 shows a road in Sangin district of Helmand Province, Afghanistan. The U.S.-led coalition forces may have run from Afghanistan last year, but the indiscriminate killing and widespread atrocities committed against the Afghan people during the occupation will haunt the victims and their families for years. (Photo by Arghand/Xinhua) People leave a mosque in Sangin district of Helmand Province, Afghanistan, on Feb. 27, 2022. The U.S.-led coalition forces may have run from Afghanistan last year, but the indiscriminate killing and widespread atrocities committed against the Afghan people during the occupation will haunt the victims and their families for years. (Photo by Arghand/Xinhua) Photo taken on Feb. 27, 2022 shows a bazaar destroyed in U.S. air strikes in Sangin district of Helmand Province, Afghanistan. The U.S.-led coalition forces may have run from Afghanistan last year, but the indiscriminate killing and widespread atrocities committed against the Afghan people during the occupation will haunt the victims and their families for years. (Photo by Arghand/Xinhua) (Web editor: Peng yukai, Liang Jun) Photo taken on March 2, 2022 show the scene of a Security Council meeting on Afghanistan at UN Headquarters in New York. The international community has no choice but to deal with the Taliban in Afghanistan, said Deborah Lyons, the top UN envoy for the war-torn country, on Wednesday. (Mark Garten/UN Photo/Handout via Xinhua) UNITED NATIONS, March 2 (Xinhua) -- The international community has no choice but to deal with the Taliban in Afghanistan, said Deborah Lyons, the top UN envoy for the war-torn country, on Wednesday. "Let me make clear that we do not believe that we can truly assist the Afghan people without working with the de facto authorities (of the Taliban)," she told the Security Council in a briefing. "This must be difficult for some to accept. But it is essential." There remains an enduring distrust between the Taliban and much of the international community, and even the regional countries and neighbors, said Lyons, the UN secretary-general's special representative and head of the UN Assistance Mission in Afghanistan (UNAMA). "The Taliban feel misunderstood and complain to us that our reports do not reflect the reality as they see it. They tell me that we underappreciate their achievements and that we exaggerate the problems -- problems which they acknowledge and which they claim they are trying to solve," she said. Above all, the Taliban believe that they should receive greater acknowledgment for the security that prevails in Afghanistan. In the six months since the Taliban takeover on Aug. 15, 2021, there has been a 78 percent decline in civilian casualties as a result of the reduction of the conflict. They also note that their amnesty declaration has been honored for the most part and that violations are not state-sanctioned and that those violators will be punished, she said. The Taliban also highlight progress on the economic front, including strong revenues despite decreased economic activity, reduced government corruption, and a budget that does not require donor resources. They also point to public universities being reopened and their desire to see Afghans, all boys and all girls, educated to a high international standard, she said. On Tuesday, on the anniversary of the signing of the Doha Agreement between the Taliban and the United States, the Taliban reiterated their declared commitment to ensure that Afghanistan does not become a threat to any country, and their desire for good relations with all states and international organizations, she noted. "This complements another important point made to me recently by the de facto foreign minister, namely that their diplomatic policy is to ensure that Afghanistan also does not become an arena of competition between other powers or countries," said Lyons. Most importantly, they complain that these positive achievements are being undermined by an undeclared economic war against them by the international community that has greatly affected and resulted in choking of the economy and they know also exacerbating the suffering of the population, she said. "This clash of perspectives forms the basis of a serious gap, gulf and distrust that must be addressed. And that is what UNAMA has been doing these past six months and what we hope you will be giving us the mandate to continue to do in the year ahead -- to bridge this gulf for the betterment of all Afghans," she said, referring to the planned renewal of UNAMA's mandate later this month. In response to the complaints, UNAMA has articulated to the Taliban the concerns of the international community and most notably, the instructions from the Security Council, said Lyons. "As UNAMA, we must continue to report on what we see, even as we continue to build an understanding and the working relationship with the de facto authorities. We are concerned by restrictions on women and girls' fundamental rights, on extrajudicial killings, on enforced disappearances, on arbitrary detention, on respect for minorities, and on freedoms of assembly and expression," she said. UNAMA's advocacy and collaboration with the Taliban have produced results, citing the release of the disappeared women protesters and their family members. Afghanistan presents a complicated situation, with positive and negative trends occurring simultaneously. UNAMA has so far been able to address many issues through constructive engagement and cooperation with the Taliban, both on the humanitarian delivery as well as on some of the sensitive issues, said Lyons. "We believe, as a political mission, that we can do much more to work with the de facto authorities on the main issues facing Afghan society." UNAMA's purpose is ultimately to see Afghanistan, one of the original members of the United Nations, rejoin the organization as a member in good standing, benefit from the resources of the international community, and contribute to the global discussion on issues of common concern, she said. "Naturally, working with the de facto authorities in no way means condoning everything that it does. But this will give us the opportunity, on behalf of all of you and the rest of the international community, to help shape a future for the people of Afghanistan, free of conflict and where they can peacefully pursue their quest for prosperity, participation, and respect for their rights," she said. The Security Council is scheduled to vote on the renewal of UNAMA's mandate on March 17. Lyons called on the council to design a proper mandate to fit the purpose of UNAMA. "The mandate you adopt for UNAMA will send a signal from the international community to the Afghan people that they have not been forgotten, and to the Taliban de facto authorities that the world does not desire future conflict in Afghanistan but that they will need to recognize basic standards of global citizenship in order to be accepted by the international community," she said. If UNAMA is appropriately equipped and empowered by the Security Council, a busy but worthwhile agenda awaits the UN mission: addressing the economic crisis; working with the Taliban to ensure education for all girls and boys to help the country move forward; promoting human rights; engaging in a discussion about political inclusion to ensure the concerns of all Afghans are reflected in decision-making; supporting a structured policy dialogue with the Taliban that supports the process of securing domestic legitimacy and addresses the key international concerns of narcotics, terrorism and regional security, she said. These elements combined will allow UNAMA to work with the Taliban and other Afghans and the Security Council to establish a pathway for the Afghan state to rejoin the larger international community, said Lyons. "Your deliberations and decisions on the mandate in the coming weeks have immense consequences. They will resonate across the region and the world, but more importantly, they will be felt in every village in Afghanistan." "I would be remiss if I did not remind you that you are about to approach a critical moment in your relationship with Afghanistan. You have the opportunity in the next two weeks to develop and design a much-needed, relevant and solid political mission that will help to build back the country, that will help to build the capacity, that will help to attract back the all-important development dollars and will avoid the constant collapse of Afghanistan into a humanitarian crisis," said Lyons. "I implore you to give us a strong, solid mandate that will be required. Without it, I fear for the future." Deborah Lyons (C), the UN secretary-general's special representative and head of the UN Assistance Mission in Afghanistan (UNAMA), speaks at a Security Council meeting on Afghanistan at UN Headquarters in New York on March 2, 2022. The international community has no choice but to deal with the Taliban in Afghanistan, said Deborah Lyons, the top UN envoy for the war-torn country, on Wednesday. (Mark Garten/UN Photo/Handout via Xinhua) On the orders of President Vladimir Putin, Russia launched an unprovoked air and ground attack against Ukraine last week. The latter country has (so far) resisted the attack more successfully than many interested parties expected, and the international backlash against Putin has been significant and largely unified. Early polling shows that large majorities of United States residents, including Republicans, believe that Russia should be punished with economic sanctions and isolation for its belligerence. Elected Republicans have for the most part taken this position as well. Advertisement This presents a challenge for partisan right-wing media figures whose highest priority remains the support and promotion of Donald Trump. The former president and Apprentice host has praised Putins approach to leadership many times, and while certain sensational theories about the pairs relationship have been debunked (or never proved), Russia did support Trumps candidacy by, among other things, releasing politically damaging emails that had been hacked from the Hillary Clinton campaign and the Democratic Party. (This was a rational choice from its perspective: Candidate Trump said that the U.S. should be friendlier with autocratic regimes and had a professional history of willingness to work with oligarchs and organized crime figures that persisted during his presidency). Thus, much right-wing rhetoric in recent years has echoed Trumps admiring claims about Putins toughness and nationalist orientation. Advertisement Advertisement Advertisement Advertisement Advertisement Subscribe to the Slatest Newsletter A daily email update of the stories you need to read right now. We encountered an issue signing you up. Please try again. Please enable javascript to use form. Email address: Send me updates about Slate special offers. By signing up, you agree to our Privacy Policy and Terms Sign Up Thanks for signing up! You can manage your newsletter subscriptions at any time. The situation is also a challenge to navigate for a tougher-to-categorize but increasingly popular type of writer often described as anti-anti-Trump. These journalists are exemplified by former Guardian and Intercept reporter Glenn Greenwald, whose stance one might define as contrarian anti-woke civil libertarianism? These commentators believe that elite circles in American society are dominated by a destructive conformity on questions of cultural politics (racial diversity, LGBTQ inclusion, etc.) as well as foreign policy. They view the American government and military as an engine for international oppression and exploitation that is fueled by surveillance and propaganda. They are sickened by the hypocrisy of the elites who operate this imperialist machine while purporting to believe in enlightened values of tolerance and freedom, and believe that much of the opposition to Trump is the result of cultural snobbery and groupthink rather than substantive consideration. Advertisement Because much of what they perceive as brainless anti-Trump tribalism revolves around overheated Russian asset conspiracy theories, Greenwald and others like former Rolling Stone staffer Matt Taibbi have found themselves purportedly carrying out a project of opposition to criminal imperialism by arguing that Russiathe worlds most brazenly criminal imperialist stateisnt as much of a problem as hysterical anti-Trump liberals claim it is. But now here (in March 2022) is Russia engaging in some transparently criminal imperialism. Advertisement A short-term immersion in this corner of the media shows that the run-up to Russias aggressive move was characterized by a few themes. Before the Invasion 1. Ukraine isnt a real country or, at the least, one that anyone should care about. This was Tucker Carlsons argument on his highly rated prime-time Fox News show: that the Ukraine crisis was a border dispute in an obscure part of the world (he specifically belittled the idea that Americans should care what happens to people in Moldova) and that the countrys government is a sham administration that only exists to perpetuate Biden family corruption. (Theres more in this Washington Post story about the impeachment-related background to the latter claim.) Advertisement Advertisement Advertisement Advertisement The main thing to know about Ukraine for our purposes is that its leaders once sent millions of dollars to Joe Bidens family. Not surprisingly, Ukraine is now one of Bidens favorite countries, Carlson said in a Feb. 22 monologue. The administration assures us that this has nothing at all to do with repaying Joe Bidens personal debts to Ukrainian oligarchs. Not at all. Its completely and totally unrelated. The point here is to defend democracy. Not that Ukraine is a democracy. It is not a democracy. (The country does have problems with corruption, but President Volodymyr Zelenskys election in 2019 was generally seen as legitimate.) Advertisement Advertisement 2. U.S. liberals are hostile toward Russia because it isnt woke. In one well-circulated clip, Trump adviser Steve Bannon and Blackwater founder Erik Prince bantered appreciatively on Bannons podcast about how the Russian people know which bathroom to use and dont put LGBTQ flags in their yards. For what its worth, the clip is misleadingly described in the linked viral tweetneither of the men says the U.S. should support Russia in the current conflict, only that they like the way Russia owns American libs. Advertisement On the other hand, Carlson said outright in a 2019 Fox appearance that he took Russias side in its dispute with Ukraine. (His exact words, a bit garbled because they were delivered midconversation, were Why do I care what is going on in the conflict between Ukraine and Russia? And Im serious. Why do I care? Why shouldnt I root for Russia? Which I am.) He also delivered a monologue last week in which he implied regular Americans should consider Putin a more sympathetic figure than elite leftist figures in their own country because the Russian leader had never called them racist, shipped their jobs overseas, or tried to eradicate Christianity. (The shipping jobs overseas part of that is included because Carlson is one of the ascendant figures on the right who believe that American corporations are too woke. This line of argument interprets vaguely progressive human resources policies and public statements as signs of a totalitarian interest in imposing leftist cultural norms rather than precautions being taken to avoid being sued for employment discrimination or losing younger and more liberal customers.) Advertisement Advertisement Advertisement 3. The threat of invasion was overstated by hysterical NATO imperialists. A conclusion that follows from beliefs 1 and 2 is that the idea that Russia would invade Ukraine was being hyped by liberals/the left/elites in order to advance their own agenda, which, to recapitulate, is to perpetuate a trans-friendly iteration of the military-industrial complex. In January, right-wing social media content farmer Candace Owens wrote that there is quite literally no Russian threat. Taibbi wrote on Feb. 20 that predictions of an imminent invasion had been proved baseless and embarrassingly incorrect. Last Wednesday, as military conflict appeared more likely, Greenwald retweeted a claim that the definition of the word invasion would be muddled in order to retroactively justify U.S. intelligence warnings. The problem is that the CIA told the US media to tell everyone that they knew exactly what Putin was saying and deciding, and that he had decided on a full invasion of Ukraine, Greenwald wrote in addition, so they have to call it an invasion otherwise this whole media/government act will seem like a fraud. (Update, March 16, 2022: Greenwald, contacted via direct message for another story, argues that his invasion claim was not in error because the tweet was sent Feb. 23, before Russia actually invaded on Feb. 24.) Advertisement Advertisement Advertisement In Taibbis and Greenwalds defense, the claims and predictions that the U.S. government and its intelligence agencies make are often extremely mega wrong. In this case, they werent. Russia has invaded Ukraine, in anyones sense of the word. What happened next? A few tactics emerged: After the Invasion 1. Admitting to having been wrong (only one guy did this). Taibbi conceded that he had not expected a Russian action of this magnitude. My mistake was more like reverse chauvinism, being so fixated on Western misbehavior that I didnt bother to take this possibility seriously enough, he wrote. He has since pointed out (fairly, IMO) that the media and national security establishment could stand to do some introspection of its own about how Putin got to power in the first place. (It happened after several years of shattering economic turmoil during the 1990s while centrist U.S. national security officials and think tank fellows of the sort who are now calling for regime change in Russia were going back and forth to Russia for the ostensible purpose of teaching Russians how to operate a free-market democracy.) Advertisement Advertisement Advertisement 2. Admitting that this is embarrassing for Joe Biden! Theres a case to be made that Biden has handled the crisis well by leading the North American and European effort to support Ukraines military and corner Russia diplomatically and economically without provoking World War III (knock on wood). Advertisement What Carlson and fellow Fox News prime-time host Laura Ingraham have gone with is that while they dont approve of what Putin is doing, the invasion would never have taken place at all if Biden hadnt been so weak. (Ingraham is further claiming that China is using Russia as a puppet and making it invade Ukraine so that China can assess whether the U.S. is strong enough to stop it from invading Taiwan. Interesting theory!) Advertisement The opposite of being weak, though, is being tough. Which means that the new Fox prime-time take on Biden is that he should have been much tougher on Russia even though, until four or five days ago, its hosts were arguing that the amount of diplomatic pressure he was putting on the state and its leader was a fraud, a distraction, and possibly even a corrupt renewable-energy conspiracy. Hell, Carlson was outraged a week ago that people were criticizing Putin, with words! This Monday, he played a clip of a Democratic congressman saying that Carlson was rooting for Russians, then asked, as if deeply wounded, why anyone would ever say such an awful thing about him, despite those being almost verbatim his words from 2019. Advertisement Advertisement Advertisement 3. Whatever Glenn Greenwald is doing. Greenwald is a Hall of Fame social media entrepreneur. He is always, always, posting a scorched-earth take in a state of excitement and outrage, whether or not its justified by the facts or contradicted by his own previous assertions. Over the weekend and on Monday morning, he tweeted multiple times about the mandated consensus, united trans-ideological consensus, and lockstep messaging that is purportedly being enforced by the U.S. political and media establishment regarding Ukraine policy. Anyone who disagrees with this consensus, he says, instantly gets smeared as a Russian agent or apologist. Advertisement But on Monday afternoon he posted a screenshot of former Obama administration official turned podcast host Tommy Vietor disagreeing vehemently with NBC foreign correspondent Richard Engel about the potential price of U.S. military involvement in the conflict. Greenwald called this a clear and full microcosm of the most bizarre aspect of US discourse, namely the purported disagreement between journalists and U.S. officials over whether to intervene on the ground, a prospect that Greenwald (and Vietor) believes would be (in Greenwalds words) insane. So is it unprecedented trans-ideological consensus or a gripping battle of opposed positions so high-stakes that the outcome could change the course of human history? Who knows! Check back in tomorrow for a just-as-passionate-and-accusatory take on something! Anyway, the point is that Greenwald has not addressed (so far as I can parselike I said, theres a lot going on on the timeline) his claim that there wouldnt be a real invasion of Ukraine. Neither is Carlson likely to explain how what he really meant when he belittled the idea of defending Ukraine from Putin was that Biden needed to crack down on Putin to protect Ukraine. The only thing that we can really say for certain is that whatever noises these guys make next, theyll be very loud. Ukrainian President Volodymyr Zelensky, a comedian turned statesman, has helped rally the world around his nations cause in the face of Vladimir Putins invasion. Prior to the war, though, many doubted that he would be able to mount any defense of his country in the face of Russian aggression, let alone a full-out attack. One common refrain about the Ukrainian leader was that he was in over his head, as editor-in-chief Olga Rudenko of the Kyiv Independent put it in an op-ed in the New York Times. But within hours of Russias invasion, Rudenko was among the many who had reassessed the 44-year-old vaudevillian actor turned world leader, stating on Twitter: President Volodymyr Zelensky has made many really bad mistakes, and Im sure will make many more, but today hes showing himself worthy of the nation hes leading. Advertisement Advertisement Advertisement Advertisement Sign Up for the Surge Keep up with whats going on in Washington with Slates weekly political ranking, written by Jim Newell. We encountered an issue signing you up. Please try again. Please enable javascript to use form. Email address: Send me updates about Slate special offers. By signing up, you agree to our Privacy Policy and Terms Sign Up Thanks for signing up! You can manage your newsletter subscriptions at any time. The original criticism of Zelenskylargely surrounding failures to crack down on corruption domesticallywas surely fair. But there should have been at least one indication that he would be able to step up to the moment: Zelenskys adept navigation, in 2019, of the impossible situation of being blackmailed by the president of the United States, as the president of Russia pointed its guns directly at his nations heart. Its worth revisiting Zelenskys central role in Donald Trumps first impeachment to understand howagainst the oddsUkraine came out of the episode with continued bipartisan support to receive U.S. military aid. Zelensky became president in May 2019, and almost immediately, Trumps personal attorney Rudy Giuliani began a pressure campaign to try to force him to announce an investigation of a Ukrainian gas company associated with Joe Bidens son Hunter, as part of an apparent effort to weaken Biden ahead of the Democratic presidential primaries. Giuliani also pushed Zelensky to announce an investigation into convoluted conspiracy theories that it was actually Ukraine that had meddled in the 2016 election, as a way to distract from Russias actual campaign to boost Trump. Advertisement Advertisement In a July 22, 2019, call, Giuliani told top aides to Zelensky: All we need from the president is to say, Im gonna put an honest prosecutor in charge, hes gonna investigate and dig up the evidence that presently exists and is there any other evidence about involvement of the 2016 election, and then the Biden thing has to be run out. Advertisement Giuliani went on to say that doing this would clear the air really well and make it possible, I think, for me to talk to the president to see what I can do about making sure that whatever misunderstandings are put aside. This would be a good thing for having a much better relationship, Giuliani said. Advertisement Advertisement Advertisement All of this was happening as Zelensky was desperate for some demonstration of support from the U.S. president, as 13,000 of Zelenskys people had been killed in the five-year conflict between Russian-backed separatists and government forces in Ukraine. Three days after Giulianis call, Zelensky was granted what turned out to be his infamous July 25 phone call with Trump. During that call, the president increased the pressure for Ukraine to do us a favor and do whatever you can do to look into Bidens son and Biden bragging that he stopped the prosecution of Burisma, the company associated with Hunter Biden. Trump brought this up in direct response to requests from Zelensky for a meeting and to buy more Javelins from the United States for defense purposes. Advertisement Advertisement While Zelensky spent most of the call sucking up to Trump and vaguely affirming the presidents statements, he notably showed true backbone in refusing to commit to any tangible action against Biden for Trump. The president left the call unsatisfied, which resulted in Trump withholding $400 million in military aid from Zelensky for months afterward. Advertisement Advertisement Aside from the corrupt nature of Trumps demand, there were strategic reasons that Zelensky could not acquiesce during that call. Zelensky could not risk being seen taking sides in a U.S. political food fight, for fear of alienating one party or another when his country needed united support from Americans. You need Trump to like you, and you need this visit, but you also need to retain bipartisan support for Ukraine. You cant get involved in a conflict between Democrats and Republicans, Volodymyr Fesenko, a veteran political analyst in Kyiv, told the New Yorker at the time. Advertisement If Zelensky had launched a corrupt political probe of Bidens son at Trumps request, he would have lost support among Democrats. Advertisement Keep in mind, during that call, Zelensky did do everything he could to get on Trumps good side, short of promising to actually give into Trumps corrupt demand. Zelensky spent most of the phone call stroking Trumps ego, saying that he was emulating Trump in his own approach to politics and even repeating his catchphrase drain the swamp. You are a great teacher for us and in that, Zelensky fawned. Once the rough transcript of the call was released following a whistleblower complaint, Zelensky was ridiculed for that obsequiousness and received further blowback for echoing Trumps criticisms of Europe, directly disparaging major allies at Trumps behest. The call, though, was perfect, in that Zelensky did everything he could to try to curry favor with the U.S. presidentwithout giving into corrupt demands that could doom his country down the road. Advertisement Advertisement Revelations surrounding a whistleblower complaint in September 2019 were the clear impetus for the scandal, as it played out in the U.S., as well as the ultimate release of the $400 million in aid. But it seems clear that Zelensky also played a key role in bringing the matter to light. The week before Democrats launched an investigation into the withheld aid, Zelensky told Democratic Sen. Chris Murphy that Giuliani had pressed him to investigate Biden and that the security aid was still being withheld. He essentially tattled on Trumps personal attorney as a last resort. At the same time, Zelenskys fingerprints were largely kept off of the exposure of the embarrassingpotentially criminalTrump blackmail scheme, which was largely credited to the whistleblower. Indirectly, Zelensky brought about Trumps impeachment and earned the release of the aid to his nation without appearing to do so in a way that would infuriate Trump. Advertisement Advertisement Advertisement And after the early details of the quid pro quo campaign were exposed, Zelensky went out of his way to continue to appease Trump and protect his own country. When Trump and Zelensky finally had their face-to-face meeting the day the rough transcript of their call was released, the Ukrainian president was asked if Trump had pressured him to investigate the Bidens. Advertisement Advertisement Zelensky played dumb and fudged the truth, but also gave Trump what he wanted this time. You heard that we had, I think, good phone call. It was normal. We spoke about many things and Iso I think, and you read it, that nobody push it, pushed me. Trump translated that as no pressure and said straight to Zelenskys face, I appreciate the answer. Advertisement Again, this broken-English half-denial was misleading, as testimony and phone recordings later demonstrated. But it didnt matter. Zelensky had done what he needed to do to alienate neither Republicans nor Democrats. He stuck to this line throughout the impeachment saga, saying at various times there was no pressure or blackmail from the U.S. and its not about quid pro quo. While these statements were incredibly misleading, they also did not directly address specifics of the situation about whether Trump had blackmailed him. At the same time, they gave Trump exactly what he wanted as part of his impeachment defense. Ultimately, Zelensky accomplished his overarching goal: He appeared to refrain from interfering in American domestic politics. Only lateronce Biden was in office and Trump was outdid top Ukrainian officials publicly acknowledge the full scope of the blackmail campaign and even, apparently, release recorded evidence of it. Advertisement Advertisement What was the result of Zelenskys adept handling of the episode that could have ended in greater disaster for him and his country? Bipartisan support in Washington for military aid to Ukraine that hadnt been there before. In 2020, the year after Trumps first impeachment, Congress approved $250 million in security aid to Ukraine and the sale of 150 Javelin anti-tank missiles, along bipartisan lines. Trump did not, apparently, try to block the move. Last year, President Joe Biden changed the posture of the Obama administration, which had been to not arm the Ukrainians, and approved the release of $125 million in military aid and a new round of Javelin sales. This was again achieved on a bipartisan basis. Advertisement Advertisement Finally, in the 2022 National Defense Authorization Act, Congress increased security aid to Ukraine from $250 million to $300 million, again on a bipartisan basis. Congress is currently considering sending more to Ukraine as it tries to fend off Putins invasion, while political support for arming Ukraine and sanctioning Russia has gone through the roof in the last week. Meanwhile, Zelenskys performance on the international stage has inspired players across Europeeven some famously neutral onesto pledge military assistance to the fighting Ukrainians. Maybe if Trump were still president, he would have held a grudge against Zelensky for not corruptly helping his campaign against Biden. Maybe the world would not have rallied around Ukraine, and maybe Putin would already be in Kyiv. Even with Biden in office, the Russians still seem likely to overtake the Ukrainian armed forces in the long run if Putin continues to escalate his already brutal military campaign. Still, against all expectations, Zelensky has helped give his country a fighting chance at survival. It shouldnt be surprisinghes done it before. This fall, Headspacethe trendy mediation appjoined with Ginger in one of the first megamergers in the digital health space. For Ginger, the merger was a long time coming. Over the course of a decade, it went from an MIT Media Lab mobile app designed to track user behaviors to a sleek virtual platform for mental health care with unicorn status (a valuation of over $1 billion). Under their new corporate banner, Headspace Health, the combined value of both companies rose to more than $3 billion. Advertisement Like many unicorn startups, Gingers road to success was paved with investments from traditional venture capital icons on Silicon Valleys vaunted Sand Hill Road. Its Series B funding, for example, included Khosla Ventures, which has previously backed companies like DoorDash and Impossible Foods (most famous for the Impossible Burger). Advertisement Advertisement Advertisement Ginger also earned investments from Cigna Ventures and Kaiser Permanente Ventures, the namesake venture capital arms of two health insurance giants. In venture capital, investors are expected to bring more than money to the table. Cigna and Kaiser Permanente undoubtedly brought industry expertise and a Rolodex that likely helped Ginger market itself to large employers as a corporate benefit to their employees. But Cigna in particular brought something else. Something that made us, a pair of physicians, question the financial relationships at play here: The insurance companies provided Ginger with access to millions of potential users. After its financial investments in Ginger, Cigna began offering no-cost access to Gingers behavioral health services alongside its other mental health offerings in order to improve customers overall health and well-being, according to leadership. Yes, it is possible that those customers will benefit from the platform. But given that Gingers valuation grew in multiples around the same timeat least in part because of the massive influx of customers from Cignaits reasonable to suggest that the insurance company was double dipping. By sending its customers to Ginger, Cigna was also boosting the platforms user numbers and maximizing its return on investment. It certainly bears the appearance of a conflict of interest, with the potential to influence the quality of care for patients. Seeing this play out, we began to ask ourselves: Is it ethical for health insurance companies to be investing in health care startupsand if its going to keep happening, what guardrails should be put in place? Advertisement Advertisement Advertisement These conflicts of interest are worth thinking about, as venture is no longer solely the domain of entrepreneurs and futurists in Silicon Valley. Instead, much of the growth in venture fundingreaching $621 billion in 2021has been fueled by nontraditional actors, like universities diversifying their endowment portfolios. (Full disclosure: One of us, Vishal Khetpal, advises as a venture scout for a firm called Necessary Ventures.) In health care, these nontraditional actors have included health insurance companies like Cigna and large hospital systems like the Mayo Clinic. Many of these funds were created in the early 2000s as parts of strategic initiatives to develop or acquire breakthrough technologies. In recent years, however, these funds have grown both in size and scope. In one analysis, researchers found that hospital-affiliated venture capital firms invested $2.1 billion in 105 companies over the past decade. No formal study of the venture arms of health insurance companies has been published, but using data from PitchBook (a private market database) we found that six of the largest health insurers with venture arms (Kaiser Permanente, Cigna, HCSC, UnitedHealth, Blue Cross Blue Shield, and CVS/Aetna) have invested in at least 201 companies to date. Together, their portfolios include startup patient payment platforms, specialized heart imaging software, and plant-based nutritional shakes. These investments have accelerated innovation in an industry ripe for change. But this particular collision of health services and products and profit can quickly become sticky. Advertisement Advertisement Advertisement Advertisement To illustrate this, heres a hypothetical scenario. Lets suppose youre a patient and your doctor recognizes an abnormal rhythm when listening to your heart. You both discuss exploring this issue further with heart monitoring. Your insurance company, however, only covers one type of heart monitor, and it happens to be made by a company that the insurance companys venture arm has invested a lot of money in. Maybe its not the best heart monitor for youand, too bad, its your only option. But even if the heart monitor works perfectly fine, this setup creates the perception of self-enrichment on the part of the insurance company. This is a practice that has been considered unethical, and even illegal, in medicine. Physicians, for example, are heavily regulated in their financial interests by Stark Law, two pieces of legislation passed in the early 1990s. Stark Law effectively bans doctors from referring Medicaid and Medicare patients to services in which they have a financial conflict of interest. For example, an orthopedic surgeon cant refer a Medicare patient they just performed an operation on to a physical therapy company that she herself owns. The Stark Law has exceptionsit is perfectly legitimate, for example, for a doctor to own public stocks in a drug company that makes medications they prescribe to patientsbut by and large, the law is designed to stamp out kickbacks. Hospitals, though not their venture capital funds necessarily, are similarly covered through the anti-kickback statute. No similar laws or regulations, however, currently exist for health insurance companies. Advertisement Advertisement Advertisement This open legal terrain has already led to ethical issues. In 2019, an investigation published on Healthcare Dive by reporter Andrew Dunn described the case of Gauss Surgical. The California-based startup had designed a new software platform to visually estimate blood loss in surgical procedures. It was financially backed by Providence St. Joseph Health, along with 10 other hospital systems. When one of the health systems hospitals mandated the use of the software in their operating rooms, physicians questioned the products utility and how much it would actually help patients. We suspect that use has been mandated by the health system due to investments made by the Providence Venture Capital Fund, 10 physicians wrote in a letter to the hospitals chief medical officer, and the insistence that they be used has more to do with ensuring a return on investments than with improving patient care. Advertisement Advertisement Advertisement In the cases of both Ginger and Gauss Surgical, its difficult to tell as outsiders how venture investments are influencing their clinical use among patients. Its possible in any given instance that an insurance company could be offering a truly useful tool to their customers that it just so happens to have a financial stake in. But as these kinds of investments continue to grow in number and size, their potential to adversely affect patients looms large. For example, what if a venture-backed product was harmful or did not meet the standard of care? What if insurance companies, say, required their members to use an A.I.-powered symptom checker theyve invested in as a screening tool before going to an emergency department? American health care is already afflicted by a power imbalance that favors health insurance companies and health systems over patients. Most patients have very limited options for buying affordable health insurance or are assigned plans by their employer, while most plans control care and costs through levers like tiered drug formularies and prior authorizations. Large hospital systems, meanwhile, increasingly exist as local monopolies. Venture investments may further exacerbate that imbalance, and patients have few means to advocate for themselves in these situations. Hospitals could compel physicians and patients to use vendors where they themselves have a financial conflict of interest, while health insurance companies could use venture-backed products to gatekeep care. When insurers and health systems corporations like Cigna and Providence St. Joseph Health choose to wear multiple hatsoperating as payers, providers, and now investorstheir motivations become murky. Advertisement Advertisement Advertisement We dont think that health insurance companies and hospitals should be excluded from venture investing. To startups, both offer resources that often cant be matched by traditional venture capital firms, which lack real-world experience in delivering health services. Hospitals and health insurance companies, with their expertise, can help startups like Ginger focus their service lines toward core patient needs, anticipate industry trends, and realize their potential. But unlike traditional firms, which operate solely in their own financial interests, these entities also have responsibilities to their patients. Advertisement Legislators can look to how conflicts of interests are handled for physicians, who treat patients but may have other income streams as well. The Sunshine Act mandates that data from drug and medical device makers track all compensation over $10 that it offers to physicians, which is then published in a public database by the federal government. Legislation like the Stark Law and the anti-kickback statute should be applied to health insurance companies, while more specific regulations around corporate venture investing, enforced by organizations like the Federal Trade Commission, are needed for both health systems and health insurers. Similar to what is mandated by the Sunshine Act for doctors, a central database, searchable by the public, that details their investment activity should be created. And finally, patients should be made aware of the potential conflicts of interest lurking behind products offered to them or applied to their care in the exam room. When offered a service venture-backed by a hospital or a health insurance company theyre using, patients should also be offered a competitive alternative without a financial conflict of interest. As health care innovation continues to rapidly evolve, health insurers and health systems are poised to help companies like Ginger reach their potential through venture investing. However, guardrails and transparency laws are urgently needed to ensure that patients receive high-quality care, not high-profit care. The images coming out of Ukraine after Russias invasion are striking: Ukrainian citizens huddled in subway stations, trying to get as far underground as possible to avoid the fighting. Individuals gathering in parks to make Molotov cocktails. And a Ukrainian soldier, with a small black cat perched on her shoulder. Alongside images of destruction and resistance, the visual story of Russias invasion of Ukraine has included a fair bit of cats and dogs. The Albanian Times shared a story of Ukrainian soldiers taking in a puppy left in the cold. Facebook posts tout soldiers cuddling cats and show families refusing to leave their pets behind as they flee. Famed Twitter Maine coon Lorenzo the Cat shared the story of Aleksandra Polischuk, a breeder of sphinx cats who was killed when her home was destroyed. And of course, Twitter couldnt help but go aww at the photos of Ukrainian President Volodymyr Zelensky and his dogs. Advertisement Advertisement Advertisement Advertisement It would be easy to position cat and dog content in a warzone as contradictory to conflict. But pet and animal content arent the opposite of wartheyre a part of it. Every pet image coming out of Ukraine right now shows a human impacted by the war in some way. In the above-listed examples, every story of a rescued dog or a cuddling cat was bookended by the actions of people. Animals remind us of our own humanity, and they can be stark reminders of the human face of geopolitical strife. These cat and dog images coming out of Ukraine remind us, paradoxically, that there are real, individual people on the frontlines. There are real, individual people whose lives are forever changed by this aggression. These arent just images of animals in conflict, but reminders of the humans who take care of them and fight on the ground. Advertisement Advertisement It is no accident that we flock to cat content online. It is also not a coincidence that these stories of pets and animal in war circulate widely on the internet. The internet is an ideal space for this type of sharing, as pet and animal images help keep digital spaces lighthearted and fun. Pet and animal images are often the opposite to doomscrolling, or the endless scrolling through negative, serious, and depressing news online. Right now, as we doomscroll through a war, cute pet and animal content provides relief, but in conjunction with the war photos themselves, reminds us of the human cost of conflict. There is, however, a careful tipping point to be aware of. Sometimes, theres prioritizing of animals over humans in warzones, and this is something that can fuel anger. For instance, reports that U.K. Prime Minister Boris Johnson authorized rescue dog evacuations out of Afghanistan over Afghan citizens who had worked for the British in the country sparked immense backlash. Advertisement Advertisement Advertisement Pets, and their images, are always embedded in human contexts, cares, and concerns. In this way, our treatment of pets and animals, and how we communicate with them, are funhouse mirrors. They reflect to us convoluted things we dont always want to see or grapple with. Rescue pet shelters tell stories of whats called Black Dog Syndrome, or the social phenomenon of individuals coming in to adopt any cat or dog but a black one. In the age of social media, shelters self-report that this trend has increased. This is the case, according to those coming in to adopt a pet, because black animals dont photograph well for social media. We can be a culture that projects racist, colorist beliefs onto pets. We can be a culture that authorizes pet evacuations out of a country over humans. Such actions reinforce human inequitable, hierarchical thinking of who matters, and what matters. Advertisement Advertisement Advertisement Advertisement By all means, enjoy the cat and soldier images and pictures of President Zelenskyys dogs. In this context, such visuals help remind us of the human face and toll of the conflict, as each animal shared is always tied to a person. But in sharing these images, and seeking relief from doomscrolling, its important to ground ourselves. We might enjoy the images of cats and soldiers because of the contrast of something so cute with the horrors of war. Sharing it might be a bright spot amid the doomscrolling. But in enjoying the pets, please remember the humans. Future Tense is a partnership of Slate, New America, and Arizona State University that examines emerging technologies, public policy, and society. Public opinion towards Russia seems to be shifting. Font size: A - | A + Comments disabled Eight years have now passed since history teacher Juraj Smatana published his list of dozens of mostly copycat Slovak and Czech websites that suddenly popped up and started spreading pro-Kremlin propaganda amid the 2013-14 Euromaidan protests in Ukraine. Skryt Remove ad Article continues after video advertisement Skryt Remove ad Article continues after video advertisement The narratives are the same: the corrupt, lame-duck West and fascist Ukraine again want to attack the strong and resource-rich Russia, run by the great leader [Vladimir] Putin; Slovakia is seriously threatened by the decaying West and its homosexuality, immigrants and terrorists, which may be prevented only by leaving Western structures; it is important to abolish sanctions against Russia, Smatana who is now an MP for OLaNO, the largest party in the governing coalition, told The Slovak Spectator back then. As these claims are in stark contrast to reality, the supporters of these opinions have drawn closer, sharpening the borders between them and other people. Despite warnings from activists and from the Slovak Information Service (SIS), the country's main intelligence service, Slovak governments led at that time by the Smer party did little or nothing to deal with these disinformation websites. The situation changed with outbreak of the pandemic in 2020, when the current government launched several projects to debunk Covid-related disinformation and the police started knocking on the doors of the people who were most active in spreading them. Now with the Russian invasion of Ukraine giving rise to yet more disinformation, the Slovak government is going even further. Last Friday, the cabinet and the parliament hastily passed an amendment to the Cyber Security Act allowing the National Security Authority (NBU) to shut down sources of malicious content. This means software or data that causes cyber security incidents, fraud, theft of data, serious misinformation and other forms of hybrid threats. This is a democratic country, there are some laws here, and if someone breaks them, they have to pay for it, Defence Minister Jaroslav Nad told the Sme daily. No matter that they label themselves 'journalists': we know that they are serving the interests of foreign powers. Disinformation on public-service television A case in point, illustrating the influence of Russian propaganda in Slovakia, is a recent incident involving the public-service television broadcaster, RTVS. Right after Russian forces moved into Donetsk on February 22, RTVS aired comments by former prime minister (1991-92) and justice minister (1998-2002) Jan Carnogursky, who is well-known for supporting Vladimir Putins regime and spreading Ukraine-related disinformation. At least 200 Ukrainian doctors work in hospitals in eastern Slovakia. Font size: A - | A + Comments disabled The war in Ukraine might seriously paralyse the Slovak health sector. This concerns particularly the hospitals where doctors from Ukraine work. If they receive military draft notices, some wards, such as trauma surgery, may not be able to operate properly. Skryt Remove ad Article continues after video advertisement Skryt Remove ad Article continues after video advertisement The Health Ministry has not said who would replace the Ukrainian doctors that join the army. Currently, there are at least 200 of them working in hospitals situated in eastern Slovakia. Slovak capital is one of the most prosperous regions in the EU, but local and regional authorities cite that statistics do not match life. The reconstruction of the Dubravsko-Karloveska tram track is one of projects co-financed from the EU funds in Bratislava. (Source: Courtesy of the Bratislava City Council) Font size: A - | A + Comments disabled The Bratislava region is statistically one of the richest regions in the European Union, but its prosperity remains on paper, not reflecting the real situation. As a direct consequence, Bratislava and its vicinity qualifies only for a small portion of the EU funds package allocated for Slovakia. Representatives of the capital and the Bratislava Self-Governing Region (BSK) have been fighting to change the methodology for the allocation of EU funds, but without any significant result for the upcoming programming period. Skryt Remove ad Article continues after video advertisement Skryt Remove ad Article continues after video advertisement Although the Bratislava Region is statistically one of the richest regions in the EU, due to under-funding and limited access to external resources, it suffers from a high modernisation debt. This is reflected in the unsatisfactory state of public infrastructure and public services, Lucia Forman, spokesperson of the BSK, told The Slovak Spectator. The weakness of the methodology The office says it does not need politicians to tell it how to react to the current situation in Ukraine. Font size: A - | A + Comments disabled General Prosecutor Maros Zilinka signed an agreement with his Russian counterpart in early January 2022. He travelled to Moscow to participate in celebrations related to the anniversary of the Russian prosecution service. Now, after the repeated calls of politicians to cancel the agreement, the General Prosecutors Office announced that it has already done so. Skryt Remove ad Article continues after video advertisement Skryt Remove ad Article continues after video advertisement GP does not need calls from politicians Spokesperson for the General Prosecutors Office Jana Tokolyova told the media that the office does not need politicians to call on it to tell it how to react to the attack on Ukraine by armed forces of the Russian Federation. The ministry has prepared materials advising Ukrainian parents on how to enrol children in Slovak schools. Font size: A - | A + Comments disabled The Education Ministry has prepared several measures to help children who have fled Ukraine and will attend school in Slovakia. It has organised webinars and lectures for teachers who will teach Ukrainian students soon. The ministry has also prepared documents that support these pupils and their admission to schools the materials are in both the Slovak and Ukrainian languages. Skryt Remove ad Article continues after video advertisement Skryt Remove ad Article continues after video advertisement Since the war outbroke in Ukraine, we have been trying to be as cooperative as possible and prepare schools to handle this situation, said Minister Branislav Grohling. The Dennik N daily reported that the first Ukrainian children have already been enrolled in schools 30 children were accepted into a school in Presov, the only one where they educate in the Ukrainian language, and three were accepted in kindergartens in Bratislava's Ruzinov. War is not on our minds, Ukrainian students in Presov say Read more He added that they are in contact with the director of schools in the border areas and the municipalities directly impacted by the arrival of Ukrainian families. But the ministry acknowledges that the situation could impact everyone, from the acceptance of pupils from Ukraine to how the pupils and their families are coping with the situation. Support for students A special tab related to Ukraine has been added to the Ministry of Education's website. It contains supporting materials, methodological materials and guidelines. Currently, the schools will find material on how to manage student support in the context of current events in Ukraine and guidance for principals on how to accept students from Ukraine and help them adapt. The Ministry of Education is also preparing material for Ukrainian parents in the Ukrainian language so that they know how to proceed when enrolling children in school. We are ready to help every pupil who arrives from Ukraine and enters our schools, the minister said. For them and also their parents, this is a hard situation and we want to help as much as possible so pupils can handle this change, the minister added. Slovakia provides temporary protection to Ukrainians. What does it mean? Read more The National Institute for Education has implemented an online webinar for teachers focused on communication about current events and is preparing a webinar on how to integrate students from Ukraine into Slovak schools. The Research Institute of Child Psychology and Pathopsychology has created a podcast for parents on "How to talk about the war in Ukraine in front of children" and is preparing a large-scale seminar for school psychologists to manage communication about the war in Ukraine and its consequences. The Ministry of Education has also set up a special e-mail address for questions from schools concerning the placement of pupils from Ukraine or to support pupils from this area: ukrajina@minedu.sk. State Secretary of the Ministry Ludovit Paulis mentioned that the department is discussing where to place small children fleeing the war in Ukraine in kindergartens or schools. The ministry has also set up a website in Ukrainian and has mobile advisory teams. Paulis said he appreciates the activity of universities. The embassy has provided shelter in the past few days for children and journalists. Font size: A - | A + Comments disabled The Slovak Embassy in Kyiv has been evacuated, said Foreign Affairs Minister Ivan Korcok (SaS nominee) before the cabinet session on March 2. A day before, he said that the embassy had provided shelter not only to Slovak nationals, but also children and Slovak and foreign journalists in hiding. Skryt Remove ad Article continues after video advertisement Skryt Remove ad Article continues after video advertisement After evaluating the security situation, we decided to take such a step, Korcok said. I believe that they will succeed in getting safely home. Currently, a diplomatic convoy with 26 people is heading from Ukraine towards Slovakia. The convoy consists of ten cars and when the minister reported on it around 10:30, they were about 100 kilometres away from Kyiv. On March 1, President Zuzana Caputova thanked Ambassador Marek Safin and his three colleagues who were still in Kyiv at that point. She added that they were one of the last embassies of the EU countries that were still present in the capital. Minister Korcok noted that he will submit to the governmental session together with Interior Minister Roman Mikulec (OLaNO) a proposal to cancel the visa-free agreement for holders of diplomatic passports of the Russian Federation. This would mean that Slovakia would not issue diplomats from Russian Federation visas. It is a coordinated step of the whole EU, Korcok added. Russian diplomats will have to arrange a new visa. UNITED NATIONS, March 2 (Xinhua) -- UN Secretary-General Antonio Guterres on Wednesday voiced concern over Tuesday's vote in the House of Representatives of Libya on the appointment of a new government, said his spokesman. The secretary-general continues to closely follow developments in Libya, including Tuesday's session of the House of Representatives, which held a vote of confidence on the appointment of a new government. The secretary-general is concerned over the reports that the vote fell short of the expected standards of transparency and procedures and included acts of intimidation prior to the session, said Stephane Dujarric, the spokesman, in a statement. "The secretary-general reiterates the importance of preserving the unity and hard-won stability achieved since the signing of the Libyan cease-fire agreement in October 2020. He stresses the need to fulfill the aspirations of more than 2.8 million Libyans who have registered to vote to choose their leaders through credible, transparent and inclusive elections on the basis of a sound constitutional and legal framework," said the statement. The secretary-general's special adviser on Libya, Stephanie Williams, intends to invite as soon as possible a joint committee from the House of Representatives and the High State Council in order to establish a consensual constitutional basis that would lead to national elections as soon as possible, it said. "The secretary-general calls on all actors to refrain from taking any actions that could undermine stability and deepen divisions in Libya." Font size: A - | A + Comments disabled Oksana and Tatiana have been best friends and neighbours since they were children. Oksanas 10-year-old son is leaning on her shoulder, her 13-year-old daughter is sitting next to her. Tatiana is holding her four-year-old son and has tears in her eyes. Skryt Remove ad Article continues after video advertisement Skryt Remove ad Article continues after video advertisement They came to Vysne Nemecke on Monday afternoon after a two-day journey. Before, they tried to cross the Polish border but found it overcrowded. They come from the city of Vinnytsia, 600 kilometres from the Slovak border. The region where they live was shaken by the massive explosion of the local ammunition store on the very first day of the Russian invasion of Ukraine. I took my children to save them, Oksana said. But my parents didnt want to leave. They had to stay to take care of my sisters children. She had to go to Turkey before the war started because of the treatment of her daughter who has lymph node cancer. She cant return home now. Tatiana adds the airstrikes did not stop. We left, she said while rocking her son, but then remains silent to hold back her tears. They do not reveal their surnames, because they are concerned about their men, who joined the fight for Ukraine, and other family members. Oksana and Tatiana with their children. (Source: Dana Freyerova for SME) The two women are now waiting for a sister-in-law from Poland to come and take them; they sit in a heated tent near the Vysne Nemecke border crossing which has been turned into an improvised refugee camp. Another woman in the tent, Anna, arrived after a four-day journey, accompanied by her three-year-old daughter and mother-in-law. They come from Dnipro, a city 1,200 kilometres from the Slovak border. They are also waiting for their family to take them to the Czech Republic. The largest refugee crisis in Europe About 660,000 people have fled Ukraine during the first six days of the war, according to the UN High Commissioner for Refugees (UNHCR). If this tempo continues, we may witness the largest refugee crisis in Europe in this century, the agency added. The majority of refugees have crossed into Poland. As for Slovakia, nearly 54,000 refugees crossed the border with Ukraine as of the morning of March 1. While during the first two days of the Russian invasion, there were 7,500 people in total fleeing Ukraine, the number rose to nearly 16,000 on February 27, and there were 12,000 refugees a day later. The answers given by the respondents of a recent poll differ based on their attitude to NATO membership. Protest against the war and in support of Ukraine in Bratislava. (Source: Sme) Font size: A - | A + Comments disabled Most people in Slovakia are satisfied with the official response of their country to the war in Ukraine. As many as 78.2 percent approve of the official Slovak reaction that condemned the Russian attack on Ukraine, as stems from an online poll titled How are You, Slovakia?, carried out between February 25 and March 1 on 1,000 respondents. Skryt Remove ad Article continues after video advertisement Skryt Remove ad Article continues after video advertisement While 42 percent of respondents said they fully approve of the response, 22.4 percent said they have few objections, 13.8 percent have greater objections and 21.8 percent disapprove of the reaction, the TASR newswire reported. Most Slovaks blame Russia for the war (poll) Read more Humanitarian aid received the most supportive response, with 77.8 percent picking this option. Up to 74.6 percent of respondents support the decision to accept refugees from the war-stricken territories. More respondents support than disapprove of the ban on circulating Russian propaganda about the war in Ukraine, as well as the introduction of tougher sanctions against Russia, the restrictions on issuing visas to Russian citizens and their presence in Slovakia. On the other hand, the supply of weapons and military technology to the Ukrainian army, the interruption of diplomatic relations with Russia and the decision to prevent Russian athletes from attending top sport events enjoys lower support. Slovakia won't give its fighter jets to Ukraine, but may ground them earlier than planned Read more The answers of the respondents differ significantly based on their attitude towards Slovakias membership in NATO, TASR wrote. The authors of the poll are the Slovak Academy of Sciences (SAV), the MNFORCE polling agency, and the Seesame communication agency. Slovak Embassy in Kyiv evacuated. One of the largest disinformation websites blocked. Font size: A - | A + Comments disabled Good evening. Welcome to the Wednesday, March 2, 2022 edition of Today in Slovakia, which brings the main news of the day in less than five minutes. Skryt Remove ad Article continues after video advertisement Skryt Remove ad Article continues after video advertisement EC president will come to discuss Ukraine President of the European Commission Ursula von der Leyen. (Source: AP/TASR) President of the European Commission Ursula von der Leyen will arrive to Slovakia on Thursday, March 3. She will meet with Slovak PM Eduard Heger (OLaNO) to discuss the current situation in Ukraine, as he confirmed to the press. Heger also said he is in touch with his Ukrainian counterpart Denys Shmyhal, adding the Ukrainians are grateful for Slovakias help and support. We need to realise that Ukraine has been defending itself, defending its own territory and freedom that has been breached by the Russian Federation and, unfortunately, affects innocent civilians, he said after the March 2 cabinet session, as quoted by the TASR newswire. He added they are communicating about further sanctions against Russia with EU member states, stressing that the countrys approach is clear in this respect. We need sanctions to show Vladimir Putin and Russia, as well as anybody who decides in the future to attack another democratic country with military, what awaits them, Heger said, as quoted by TASR, adding that it is important to send a signal that we want peace, not war. The prime minister also asked people not to panic, stressing that there is no reason for fear since we are both EU and NATO members. He called on people to show solidarity towards the Russian people, since it was Putin who started the conflict, and not ordinary people. Meanwhile, the cabinet approved further aid for Ukraine on Wednesday. The Economy Ministry will send 10 million litres of diesel and 2.4 million litres of aviation fuel. The Defence Ministry has already provided humanitarian aid in the form of 1,000 hygiene packages to Ukraine, plus blankets, sleeping bags and other materials. More on the war in Ukraine Protest against the war and in support of Ukraine in Bratislava. (Source: Sme) The Slovak Embassy in Kyiv has been evacuated , said Foreign Affairs Minister Ivan Korcok (SaS nominee) before the March 2 cabinet session. I believe that they will succeed in getting safely home, he added. Korcok also planned to propose, together with Interior Minister Roman Mikulec (OLaNO), the cancellation of the visa-free agreement for diplomatic passports holders coming from the Russian Federation. , said Foreign Affairs Minister Ivan Korcok (SaS nominee) before the March 2 cabinet session. I believe that they will succeed in getting safely home, he added. Korcok also planned to propose, together with Interior Minister Roman Mikulec (OLaNO), the cancellation of the visa-free agreement for diplomatic passports holders coming from the Russian Federation. Low-cost airline Wizz Air has offered Ukrainian refugees 100,000 free seats on its short-distance flights. The offer will be in place during March, and will concern flights from Slovakia, Poland, Hungary and Romania. on its short-distance flights. The offer will be in place during March, and will concern flights from Slovakia, Poland, Hungary and Romania. As much as 78 percent of respondents from Slovakia are satisfied with the official response of the countrys representatives who condemned the Russian invasion of Ukraine. This stems from a recent poll titled How are You, Slovakia?, according to which most Slovaks approve of humanitarian aid and the decision to accept refugees. who condemned the Russian invasion of Ukraine. This stems from a recent poll titled How are You, Slovakia?, according to which most Slovaks approve of humanitarian aid and the decision to accept refugees. Slovakia can still manage the monitoring of the Ukrainian border . Apart from Slovak forces, there are 50 police officers from the Czech Republic, and other countries have offered help as well. The country has also asked the European Border and Coast Guard Agency, also known as Frontex, for help. . Apart from Slovak forces, there are 50 police officers from the Czech Republic, and other countries have offered help as well. The country has also asked the European Border and Coast Guard Agency, also known as Frontex, for help. The General Prosecutors Office has cancelled an agreement on cooperation signed by General Prosecutor Maros Zilinka and his Russian counterpart in early January 2022 during the formers trip to Russia. signed by General Prosecutor Maros Zilinka and his Russian counterpart in early January 2022 during the formers trip to Russia. The Education Ministry has prepared several measures to help children who have fled Ukraine and will attend school in Slovakia . This includes webinars and lectures for teachers, but also various documents to help integrate Ukrainian children. . This includes webinars and lectures for teachers, but also various documents to help integrate Ukrainian children. Comenius University in Bratislava will suspend cooperation with its Russian partner institutions, including the Joint Institute for Nuclear Research in Dubna. The university will not send its employees and students there, nor will it accept any employees or students from Russian partner institutions. If you like what we are doing and want to support good journalism, buy our online subscription. Thank you. Until March 7, you can subscribe to spectator.sk for less than 10 cents a day (33.90)! Fight against disinformation has first victim The official police Facebook page battling misinformation (Source: Facebook/Slovak Police ) With the Russian invasion of Ukraine giving rise to disinformation, the Slovak cabinet and the parliament hastily passed an amendment to the Cyber Security Act, allowing the National Security Authority (NBU) to shut down sources of malicious content. This means software or data that leads to cyber security incidents, fraud, the theft of data, serious misinformation and other forms of hybrid threats. This is a democratic country, there are some laws here, and if someone breaks them, they have to pay for it, Defence Minister Jaroslav Nad (OLaNO) told the Sme daily. No matter that they label themselves journalists: we know that they are serving the interests of foreign powers. The NBU already used the new power: it blocked one of the largest disinformation websites circulating Russian propaganda on the internet, Hlavne Spravy. The authoritys spokesperson Peter Habara said that they had identified harmful activity on the website, as reported by the TASR newswire. Picture of the day Slovakia commemorates the tragic explosion in the VOP Novaky military maintenance company that happened on March 2, 2007 and claimed eight lives. Wreaths were laid to the memorial dedicated to the victims of the 2007 explosion in Novaky. (Source: TASR) Feature story for today The majority of refugees from Ukraine have crossed into Poland. As for Slovakia, nearly 54,000 refugees crossed the border with Ukraine as of the morning of March 1. While during the first two days of the Russian invasion there were 7,500 people fleeing Ukraine, the number rose to nearly 16,000 on February 27, and there were 12,000 refugees a day later. Vysne Nemecke is the most frequently used border crossing between Ukraine and Slovakia, with about 7,000 people a day crossing in the past few days. Yet, instead of the state, they are often helped by volunteers and non-governmental organisations, who say that there should also be some coordinated help from the state. Read more in a Sme daily report from the border. Mostly individuals help refugees; state's role less apparent on Ukrainian border Read more In other news 12,763 people were newly diagnosed as Covid positive out of 22,385 PCR tests performed on March 1. The number of people in hospitals is 2,652 ; and 37 more deaths were reported on Tuesday. The vaccination rate is at 51.23 percent , and 2,817,404 people have received the first dose of the vaccine. More stats on Covid-19 in Slovakia here. out of 22,385 PCR tests performed on March 1. The number of ; and were reported on Tuesday. The vaccination rate is at , and 2,817,404 people have received the first dose of the vaccine. More stats on Covid-19 in Slovakia here. Altogether 93,000 doses of the Covid vaccine by Novavax arrived in Slovakia ; it will start to be administered sometime next week, said Health Minister Vladimir Lengvarsky (OLaNO nominee). ; it will start to be administered sometime next week, said Health Minister Vladimir Lengvarsky (OLaNO nominee). The pandemic situation in Slovakia seems to be improving , as there are only 13,000 positive cases on average identified daily (down by 28 percent compared to the previous week). The number of the hospitalised patients dropped from 2,700 to some 2,600, and the number of those requiring mechanical ventilation is dropping as well, according to the Health Ministry data. , as there are only 13,000 positive cases on average identified daily (down by 28 percent compared to the previous week). The number of the hospitalised patients dropped from 2,700 to some 2,600, and the number of those requiring mechanical ventilation is dropping as well, according to the Health Ministry data. The Constitutional Court suspended the effectiveness of the law based on which the pensions of top communist officials should be cut, adopted in June 2021. It accepted the motion submitted by a group of opposition politicians for further proceeding, and will now decide on whether the law is in compliance with the Constitution. More on Spectator.sk: Bratislava Region says it is not as rich as it appears, wants a bigger portion of EU funds Read more Reality made the disinformation war temporarily irrelevant Read more Trencin Castle: Residence of the owner of 50 castles in Slovakia Read more If you have suggestions on how this news overview can be improved, you can reach us at editorial@spectator.sk. https://sputniknews.com/20220301/anti-vaccine-mandate-rally-flops-as-dc-bound-peoples-convoy-hits-roadbumps-ahead-of-bidens-sotu-1093500908.html Anti-Vaccine Mandate Rally Flops as DC-Bound 'People's Convoy' Hits Roadbumps Ahead of Biden's SOTU Anti-Vaccine Mandate Rally Flops as DC-Bound 'People's Convoy' Hits Roadbumps Ahead of Biden's SOTU Oklahoma's Will Rogers Turnpike was briefly shut down on Sunday due to a crash involving two pickup trucks linked to a US trucker convoy en route to... 01.03.2022, Sputnik International 2022-03-01T22:51+0000 2022-03-01T22:51+0000 2022-03-01T23:46+0000 joe biden oklahoma washington dc convoy protests public health national guard illinois state of the union sotu /html/head/meta[@name='og:title']/@content /html/head/meta[@name='og:description']/@content https://cdnn1.img.sputniknews.com/img/07e6/03/01/1093499530_0:92:3090:1830_1920x0_80_0_0_8c93a89b12eb27962bc1264fcbda7b6e.jpg Roadblocks and speedbumps are accompanying some American truckers hoping to protest US President Joe Biden's pandemic-era mandates by bringing a 'Freedom Convoy' that blocked roads in Canada to Washington, DC, on Tuesday, March 1the date of Biden's first State of the Union address.It appears a number of the convoy hopefuls have had their hopes dashed after learning that their employer is not along for the ride. Penske, a US-based trucking company, reportedly wants no part of the protest, according to Texas resident Jeff Sandberg, who claims he was left sidelined after Penske remotely shut down his rented big rig.Penske reportedly canceled the rental shortly after Sandberg was featured in the article, which noted that the truck was covered in banners emblazoned with slogans like, "We Will Not Comply!!" and the anti-Biden "Lets Go Brandon" meme. 'The People's Convoy,' the leading convoy, allegedly raised some $1.5 million by the time it began the trek from Adelanto, California, last week. The group notably used motorways in Missouri, Oklahoma, and Illinois, despite prior warnings from state authorities. While a number of stops were planned along the way, organizers of the smaller 'Freedom Convoy USA' had to reroute their jaunt and combine with the People's Convoy after only five big rigs showed up at the convoy's second stop in Las Vegas, Nevada.This particular group was attempting to make it to Washington, DC, by Biden's March 1 SOTU address to the US public. When it came time for a 'Stage of Freedom' rally staged for truckers and convoy-affiliated demonstrators, there was a noticeable lack of social media activity from organizer Kyle Sefcik.Federal and local authorities have been activated in the nation's capital in anticipation of any staged demonstration, but these possible events are not expected to occur within DC proper. US Capitol Police confirmed on Sunday that, out of an abundance of caution, security fencing erected around the US Capitol building ahead of the January 6 insurrection would be reinstalled prior to the SOTU address. Additionally, the Pentagon has authorized as many as 700 National Guard personnel to assist with Metropolitan Police and Capitol Police affairs in an unarmed capacity. The demonstrators believe that the US government should immediately cease the national emergency that provides Biden's government with powers to streamline a federal COVID-19 response. Some of the protesters have demanded congressional hearings into the origin of the pandemic.Vishal Singh, who documented the days-long inception of the US Freedom Convoy protest, noted American, Canadian, and Trump flags were among the banners flown by protesters. Far-right flags were also seen, including those associated with the Three Percenters, an American and Canadian anti-government militia. Three Percenters, or Threepers, tout gun rights and back the baseless claim that only 3% of American colonists fought against the British during the American Revolution. Supporters of the convoy were seen waving flags and cheering on truckers from an overpass in Oklahoma. Oklahoma authorities have linked at least one highway accident to the US trucker convoy. The original 'Freedom Convoy' demonstration in Ottawa, Canada, ended last month after Prime Minister Justin Trudeau invoked the Emergency Act granting the Canadian government a 30-day period of extraordinary powers, including the authority to prohibit public assembly and movement, as well as the use of identified property. The 1988 law was revoked by Trudeau shortly after riot gear-clad officers arrested nearly 200 people in the streets near the Parliament building. Some protest participants have also seen their bank accounts frozen. https://sputniknews.com/20220228/fence-around-us-capitol-building-is-being-reinstalled-ahead-of-bidens-state-of-the-union-address-1093464122.html oklahoma washington dc illinois Sputnik International feedback@sputniknews.com +74956456601 MIA Rosiya Segodnya 252 60 2022 Evan Craighead Evan Craighead News en_EN Sputnik International feedback@sputniknews.com +74956456601 MIA Rosiya Segodnya 252 60 1920 1080 true 1920 1440 true 1920 1920 true Sputnik International feedback@sputniknews.com +74956456601 MIA Rosiya Segodnya 252 60 Evan Craighead joe biden, oklahoma, washington dc, convoy, protests, public health, national guard, illinois, state of the union, sotu, biden administration, covid-19, california, us capitol https://sputniknews.com/20220302/anti-russia--anti-progressive-biden-praises-nato-counters-democrats-in-state-of-the-union-address-1093505818.html Anti-Russia & Anti-Progressive: Biden Praises NATO, Counters Democrats in State of the Union Address Anti-Russia & Anti-Progressive: Biden Praises NATO, Counters Democrats in State of the Union Address Amid uncertainty regarding the ongoing situation in Ukraine, US President Joe Biden's first State of the Union address focused less on domestic unity and... 02.03.2022, Sputnik International 2022-03-02T04:34+0000 2022-03-02T04:34+0000 2022-03-02T04:51+0000 joe biden state of the union us russia biden foreign policy biden administration voting rights pentagon airspace /html/head/meta[@name='og:title']/@content /html/head/meta[@name='og:description']/@content https://cdnn1.img.sputniknews.com/img/07e6/03/02/1093505262_0:0:3073:1728_1920x0_80_0_0_36e6d1e90265b4a7a056252645ac36f2.jpg Biden opened his address by recognising Oksana Markarova, Ukraine's ambassador to the US since February 2021. Audience members in the chamber gave the flag-bearing diplomat a standing ovation as she appeared to get emotional. First Lady Dr Jill Biden invited Markarova to the exclusive national address. The diplomat previously served as Ukraine's finance minister. While in Washington, DC, Markarova notably requested additional weapons and humanitarian aid for the country, noting that Kiev expects to run out of FIM-92 Stinger air defence missiles and FGM-148 Javelin anti-tank missiles. President Putin, Oligarchs, and the Kremlin Claiming that Russian military movements were "premeditated and unprovoked", the US president argued that Putin and the Kremlin "rejected" attempts at diplomacy, assuming the West and NATO would not react.On Saturday, the Kremlin noted that the Russian president had temporarily halted military forces operating in Ukraine on Friday due to expected negotiations between Moscow and Kiev. The pause lasted from Friday to Saturday afternoon, with the Ukrainian leadership failing to come to the table, according to Kremlin spokesperson Dmitry Peskov.Biden also announced that, beginning Wednesday night, Russian flights will no longer be permitted in American airspace. The move follows similar actions by the EU and Canada. The US Department of Defence has authorised as many as 700 National Guard personnel to assist with Metropolitan Police and Capitol Police affairs in an unarmed capacity. Federal, state, and local authorities were notably working on a "security plan to prevent any disruption to the important work of Congress" in the days leading up to the national address, per Capitol Police Chief Tom Manger.COVID-19 Biden's public health messaging may have sounded eerily familiar to the pandemic-era arguments of small-government conservatives and pro-Trump Republicans who opposed government overreach and federal mandates intended to mitigate the spread of the contagious disease."We've reached a new moment in the fight against COVID-19", he said, noting that the disease should not be a partisan dividing line. He went on to declare that children "need" to get back into public classrooms, despite US officials having yet to approve a COVID-19 vaccine for that particular age group. Furthermore, the push for in-person learning alongside a novel contagious disease that lacks longitudinal evidence could result in long-term respiratory health effects for children. In addition to the anticipated naming of the US Department of Justice's chief prosecutor for pandemic-related fraud claims, the US president touted to a maskless crowd that Americans can finally unite after "COVID-19 kept us apart".Voting Rights & 'Defund the Police' After lauding American allies for rallying against Russia, the US president appeared to then turn his sights to progressive members of his own Democratic Party, which controls both of Congress' legislative chambers. Since the police killing of George Floyd on 25 May 2020, many protesters organising against police brutality and the misdirection of community funds have rallied behind the so-called "Defund the Police" movement, which, in most cases, refers to the idea of redirecting a portion of exorbitant police budgets to local community-based solutions that function without armed individuals. While Biden and his administration are aware of the actual meaning behind the polarising protest slogan, he flat-out rejected the notion, and instead called for additional police funding. He did note that the American Rescue Plan includes $350 billion that "cities, states, and counties can use to hire more police and invest in more proven strategy".Meanwhile, the voting rights bill intended to expand access to the ballot box and make US elections both inclusive and safer was only briefly mentioned, despite the topic being a major issue ahead of a competitive midterm election season. https://sputniknews.com/20220226/putin-ordered-troops-to-stop-ukraine-op-but-it-resumed-after-kiev-refused-to-negotiate-peskov-says-1093394724.html https://sputniknews.com/20220302/biden-us-will-close-american-airspace-to-all-russian-flights-1093504382.html Sputnik International feedback@sputniknews.com +74956456601 MIA Rosiya Segodnya 252 60 2022 Evan Craighead Evan Craighead News en_EN Sputnik International feedback@sputniknews.com +74956456601 MIA Rosiya Segodnya 252 60 1920 1080 true 1920 1440 true 1920 1920 true Sputnik International feedback@sputniknews.com +74956456601 MIA Rosiya Segodnya 252 60 Evan Craighead joe biden, state of the union, us, russia, biden, foreign policy, biden administration, voting rights, pentagon, airspace https://sputniknews.com/20220302/apple-stores-in-moscow-closed-amid-sanctions-on-russia-over-op-in-ukraine--1093518187.html Apple Stores in Moscow Closed Amid Sanctions on Russia Over Op in Ukraine Apple Stores in Moscow Closed Amid Sanctions on Russia Over Op in Ukraine MOSCOW (Sputnik) - The Russian retailer of the American tech giant Apple, Re: Store, did not open its shops in Moscow on Wednesday apparently without warning... 02.03.2022, Sputnik International 2022-03-02T11:23+0000 2022-03-02T11:23+0000 2022-03-02T11:23+0000 apple russia ukraine sanctions /html/head/meta[@name='og:title']/@content /html/head/meta[@name='og:description']/@content https://cdnn1.img.sputniknews.com/img/07e5/08/06/1083546750_0:171:3073:1899_1920x0_80_0_0_748fd4954ce302fed6c4f45fd7d1375f.jpg On Tuesday, Apple announced the suspension of the sales of its products in Russia, as well as restrictions on other services in the country in light of Russia's military operation in Ukraine.Several people stood several hours in front of a re: Store shop at Moscows Prechistenka Street in anticipation of its opening but the store remained closed.Apple products have also not been available for sale in an M.Video electronic retailer store in Evropeysky mall. However, another M.Video store near the Preobrazhenskaya Ploshchad metro station said that Apple goods will be put on sale soon.Apple smartphones are still on sale from mobile operators and marketplaces. Besides, after the closure of Apple stores in Russia a number of announcements on the sale of MacBooks for 1.1 million rubles ($9,802) appeared on the Internet. ukraine Sputnik International feedback@sputniknews.com +74956456601 MIA Rosiya Segodnya 252 60 2022 Sputnik International feedback@sputniknews.com +74956456601 MIA Rosiya Segodnya 252 60 News en_EN Sputnik International feedback@sputniknews.com +74956456601 MIA Rosiya Segodnya 252 60 1920 1080 true 1920 1440 true 1920 1920 true Sputnik International feedback@sputniknews.com +74956456601 MIA Rosiya Segodnya 252 60 Sputnik International feedback@sputniknews.com +74956456601 MIA Rosiya Segodnya 252 60 apple, russia, ukraine, sanctions https://sputniknews.com/20220302/eu-decides-to-exclude-7-russian-banks-from-swift-1093519293.html EU Decides to Exclude 7 Russian Banks From SWIFT EU Decides to Exclude 7 Russian Banks From SWIFT The EU authorities earlier announced they will be cutting several Russian banks that had fallen under sanctions off from the SWIFT system, impeding their... 02.03.2022, Sputnik International 2022-03-02T11:46+0000 2022-03-02T11:46+0000 2022-03-02T13:14+0000 eu russia swift banks /html/head/meta[@name='og:title']/@content /html/head/meta[@name='og:description']/@content https://cdnn1.img.sputniknews.com/img/07e6/02/1a/1093405743_0:252:3193:2048_1920x0_80_0_0_0fc1e68a9a05a19c88947152eead71ba.jpg The European Union has announced the removal of seven Russian banks from the SWIFT interbank messaging network. The list includes VTB, Bank Otkritie, Novikombank, Promsvyazbank, Bank Rossiya, Sovcombank, and VEB. Several other Russian banks, slapped with western sanctions, were not affected by the move.The European Commission stated that it is ready to propose the exclusion of additional Russian banks from SWIFT on short notice if such a need arises.A spokesperson for VTB, the largest of the affected banks, said that the removal from SWIFT will not affect its operations on Russian territory. They are ensured by the Financial Message Transmission System of the Bank of Russia (SPFS) and the National Payment Card System (NSPK) launched in Russia following the 2014 sanctions by western nations against the country.The VTB spokesperson also said that it is not changing its recommendations for corporate clients regarding international transactions given to them following the implementation of the sanctions against the bank.While the sanctions slapped on VTB and other banks by the US, EU, Canada, and the UK ban them from operating in these countries, the removal from SWIFT does not entirely prevent them from making international transactions.SWIFT is a global interbank messaging network that allows transactions between banks across the globe to be conducted quickly one bank simply notifies the other of the operation. Banks removed from the SWIFT system can still wire money on behalf of their clients to other banks in countries that did not impose sanctions against them, but the process might take extended periods of time.The EU and other nations in the West imposed harsh economic sanctions on Russia over its decision to launch a special operation in Ukraine on 24 February, which they called an "invasion". Announcing the operation, Russian President Vladimir Putin described its goals as the demilitarisation and denazification of Ukraine. He insisted that it was the only way to protect the Donetsk and Lugansk People's Republics (DPR and LPR), which Russia recognised on 22 February. Sputnik International feedback@sputniknews.com +74956456601 MIA Rosiya Segodnya 252 60 2022 Tim Korso https://cdnn1.img.sputniknews.com/img/07e6/03/0d/1093831826_0:0:216:216_100x100_80_0_0_e3f43a960af0c6c99f7eb8ccbf5f812c.jpg Tim Korso https://cdnn1.img.sputniknews.com/img/07e6/03/0d/1093831826_0:0:216:216_100x100_80_0_0_e3f43a960af0c6c99f7eb8ccbf5f812c.jpg News en_EN Sputnik International feedback@sputniknews.com +74956456601 MIA Rosiya Segodnya 252 60 1920 1080 true 1920 1440 true 1920 1920 true Sputnik International feedback@sputniknews.com +74956456601 MIA Rosiya Segodnya 252 60 Tim Korso https://cdnn1.img.sputniknews.com/img/07e6/03/0d/1093831826_0:0:216:216_100x100_80_0_0_e3f43a960af0c6c99f7eb8ccbf5f812c.jpg eu, russia, swift, banks https://sputniknews.com/20220302/ex-dod-analyst-biden-team-risks-regional-war-energy-costs-for-sake-of-ukraine-escalation-1093531046.html Ex-DoD Analyst: Biden Team Risks Regional War, Energy Costs for Sake of Ukraine Escalation Ex-DoD Analyst: Biden Team Risks Regional War, Energy Costs for Sake of Ukraine Escalation WASHINGTON (Sputnik) - US President Joe Biden and his advisers seem "more than willing" to run the risk of a continuing regional war in Ukraine and... 02.03.2022, Sputnik International 2022-03-02T19:01+0000 2022-03-02T19:01+0000 2022-03-02T19:01+0000 us ukraine russia /html/head/meta[@name='og:title']/@content /html/head/meta[@name='og:description']/@content https://cdnn1.img.sputniknews.com/img/07e6/02/0a/1092913892_0:0:2759:1552_1920x0_80_0_0_b152ecd4e40d6852f1edccbbd37b759e.jpg Last week, Russia launched a special operation to demilitarize and "denazify" Ukraine after the Donetsk and Lugansk people's republics asked for help to defend from intensifying attacks from Ukrainian forces. The Russian Defense Ministry said it is targeting Ukrainian military assets only and civilians are safe. In response, the West has rolled out still more sanctions against Moscow and moved to boost military assistance to Ukraine, including lethal weapons.The United States has lobbied hard for Ukraine to join NATO since 2009, and US military aid and weapons to Ukraine have been sold and delivered several times under both Presidents Donald Trump and Joe Biden, Kwiatkowski noted."These actions have, as they were intended, escalated the conflict. This is US and NATO policy, and it was cited by Putin last week as a reason for Moscow's recognition of the two eastern republics, and his military attacks on Ukraine's military capabilities, chemical and biological laboratories, and political command and control," she said.A report published three years ago by a highly influential US think tank gave important insights into the goals and methodologies of Washington's policymaking on Ukraine, Kwiatkowski advised."The US playbook on Russia, put forth in a 2019 report by the Pentagon's RAND Corporation can help us understand that both Biden and Putin understand what is happening, and how it is happening," she said."The RAND study assessed the cost and risk of a variety of US and NATO actions, all geared towards destabilizing Russia," she said.The recent rebellion in Kazakhstan, with significant Western intelligence involvement, failed to cause much international concern, as Russian forces as part of the Collective Security Treaty Organization peacekeeping mission quickly restored order, and withdrew afterward, Kwiatkowski noted."The Kazakhstan initiative does support the idea that overextending and unbalancing Russia remains a US objective," she said.US policies continued to be quietly hostile to Russian interests in its own region rather than seeking compromise and accommodation with Moscow, Kwiatkowski observed.The United States was continuing to pursue conflict with Russia, beyond Cold War containment and into purposeful destabilization, Kwiatkowski commented."It most certainly is, and this effort may include an eventual regime change operation in Moscow," she said.Nor was US activity vis a vis Ukraine, the Black Sea, the Arctic and the other borders of Russia, being "carefully calibrated" as the 2019 RAND report had recommended, according to Kwiatkowski.Escalating the conflict was clearly in the publicized interest of the United States government, and its closest NATO allies like Britain, Kwiatkowski explained."On one hand, these are self-defense weapons, and without training and command and control, don't add a lot to the ability of the Ukrainian government to resist the Russian army. But it is very much in line with ensuring that the cost to Russia will be higher on the ground," she said.The continuing behavior and policy making decisions of Biden and his top advisers and political allies gave cause for concern about whether the current crisis would be brought under control, Kwiatkowski warned."[Given Biden's] past culpability in Ukrainian government corruption and machinations, his chicken hawk foreign policy team none of whom have worn a military uniform and the worry of the US Democratic Party about possible loss of Congressional majorities nine months from now, the world should be worried," she said.Ukraines own leaders should still seek a genuine neutrality solution to their security problems rather than try to join NATO, the expert advised."If Ukraine can withstand the destruction of its military capability, while maintaining its independence, all parties, including the US, ought to be seeking a Switzerland-esque solution -- a heavily armed population, trading with all and allying with none, and ultimately enriching the Ukrainian people, and not just their elites," Kwiatkowski said. ukraine Sputnik International feedback@sputniknews.com +74956456601 MIA Rosiya Segodnya 252 60 2022 Sputnik International feedback@sputniknews.com +74956456601 MIA Rosiya Segodnya 252 60 News en_EN Sputnik International feedback@sputniknews.com +74956456601 MIA Rosiya Segodnya 252 60 1920 1080 true 1920 1440 true 1920 1920 true Sputnik International feedback@sputniknews.com +74956456601 MIA Rosiya Segodnya 252 60 Sputnik International feedback@sputniknews.com +74956456601 MIA Rosiya Segodnya 252 60 us, ukraine, russia https://sputniknews.com/20220302/islamophobia-indian-mp-slams-ukrainian-envoy-for-comparing-russian-op-to-mughal-invasion-1093508477.html 'Islamophobia': Indian MP Slams Ukrainian Envoy for Comparing Russian Op to Mughal 'Invasion' 'Islamophobia': Indian MP Slams Ukrainian Envoy for Comparing Russian Op to Mughal 'Invasion' Kiev and its EU allies have stepped up efforts in India to persuade Delhi to abandon its "neutral" line on the Russian military operation in Ukraine, with the... 02.03.2022, Sputnik International 2022-03-02T10:58+0000 2022-03-02T10:58+0000 2022-03-02T10:58+0000 situation in ukraine ukraine russia india vladimir putin united nations eu nato /html/head/meta[@name='og:title']/@content /html/head/meta[@name='og:description']/@content https://cdnn1.img.sputniknews.com/img/07e6/03/02/1093516725_0:160:3073:1888_1920x0_80_0_0_cf5692ca8bd62a3664bb8927c16bd69a.jpg Prominent Indian Muslim parliamentarian Asaduddin Owaisi has criticised Ukraine's Ambassador to Delhi Igor Polikha after the diplomat compared the ongoing Russian "special military operation" in his country to the "massacre arranged against Rajputs by Mughals"."We are asking every time all influential world leaders, among them [Indian Prime Minister Narendra] Modi Ji, to use every resource against [Russian President Vladimir] Putin to stop the bombing and shelling", Polikha said during an interview with the news agency ANI on 1 March, after his meeting with Indian Foreign Secretary Harsh Vardhan Shringla.The appeal for Indian diplomatic support by the Ukrainian envoy has triggered outcry among many people in the South Asian country, with several social media users even accusing Polikha of "demonising Muslims".Several other prominent social media handles also criticised the Ukrainian diplomat for his "polarising appeal".The Mughal Legacy in IndiaThe Mughal Empire came into being in the 16th century (1526), after an Islamic-Turkic tribe from Central Asia invaded the Gangetic plains of northern India. By 1529, Babur, a descendant of Mongol chieftain Genghis Khan, declared himself the undisputed king of the subcontinent. Babur's descendants ruled India for more than 300 years.Some Indian historians credit the Mughals with bringing India together under a single rule for the first time in centuries as well as building world-renowned monuments such as the Taj Mahal and Red Fort. The legacy of the Mughal Empire in India has largely been seen as positive for most of the country's post-independence history, reflected in the naming of prominent Indian streets and thoroughfares after the Mughal emperors.Yet, many Hindu nationalists in India also consider the Mughals as "invaders" and accuse the Mughal kings of subverting Hinduism at the expense of promoting Islam on the subcontinent. The disputed legacy has been further accentuated since Prime Minister Narendra Modi's Bharatiya Janata Party (BJP) came to power in 2014, with many prominent backers of the government castigating the Mughal emperors for decimating Hindu kingdoms.Many Hindu nationalist supporters of the BJP have also called upon the authorities to revise academic texts taught at Indian schools and universities, so as not to glorify the Mughal Empire.The Rajputs, on the other hand, comprised a series of Hindu warrior kingdoms in the state of Rajasthan. During the Mughal expansion, the Rajput kings are said to have valiantly resisted their expansionary onslaught.India's Official Position Based on 'Careful Considerations': Foreign SecretaryMeanwhile, Indian Foreign Secretary Harsh Vardhan Shringla said at a media briefing on Tuesday evening that New Delhi's official position in the ongoing events in Ukraine was based on "very careful considerations".The Indian diplomat remarked that India's stance on all the UN-linked resolutions will be taken in New Delhi's "best interests". The remarks were made in the wake of the killing of a stranded Indian student in shelling in Kharkov on Tuesday, as fighting between Ukrainian and Russian forces intensifies.On Sunday, India abstained from a procedural vote on convening a special emergency session of the UN General Assembly over the security situation in Ukraine. The vote at the UN Security Council was backed by 11 member states, with the UAE and China also abstaining from casting their ballot. Russia voted against the proposal.At the time, New Delhi also backed the first round of peace talks between Russian and Ukrainian delegations at the Belarus border.Pursuant to the voting, the UN General Assembly will convene later on Wednesday to vote on a resolution on the Ukraine crisis. India's Permanent Representative to the UN T.S. Tirumurti called for an immediate cessation of hostilities and return to dialogue to solve the differences between Kiev and Moscow. India has also called for respecting the "legitimate security concerns" of all sides in the crisis.On 25 February, India, China, and the UAE abstained from voting on a US-backed resolution which deplored Russia's "aggression" in Ukraine.The Russian military operation in Ukraine entered its seventh day on Wednesday, with the Defence Ministry stating at a briefing that the city of Kherson has been taken. Russian forces have also launched strikes on critical enemy infrastructure in the capital Kiev, with a strike on Tuesday taking out a TV tower, which the Defence Ministry said was being employed by the Ukrainian regime for psychological operations. Moscow has maintained all through its campaign that its aim is to neutralise the military infrastructure of Kiev, without any intention of targeting civilians.On Wednesday, UK Defence Secretary Ben Wallace rejected Ukrainian calls to impose a "no-fly zone" over the country in order to check the rapidly advancing Russian forces, warning that any such action could pit the North Atlantic Treaty Organisation (NATO) directly against Moscow. https://sputniknews.com/20220301/hindu-nationalists-put-up-posters-in-delhi-blaming-west-for-escalation-in-ukraine--video-1093482045.html https://sputniknews.com/20220301/indian-student-killed-by-shelling-in-kharkov-says-foreign-ministry-1093480042.html ukraine india united nations Sputnik International feedback@sputniknews.com +74956456601 MIA Rosiya Segodnya 252 60 2022 Dhairya Maheshwari Dhairya Maheshwari News en_EN Sputnik International feedback@sputniknews.com +74956456601 MIA Rosiya Segodnya 252 60 1920 1080 true 1920 1440 true 1920 1920 true Sputnik International feedback@sputniknews.com +74956456601 MIA Rosiya Segodnya 252 60 Dhairya Maheshwari ukraine, russia, india, vladimir putin, united nations, eu, nato https://sputniknews.com/20220302/kremlin-offers-to-help-yad-vashem-officials-willing-to-visit-mass-graves-sites-in-donbass-1093517098.html Kremlin Offers to Help Yad Vashem Officials Willing to Visit Mass Graves Sites in Donbass Kremlin Offers to Help Yad Vashem Officials Willing to Visit Mass Graves Sites in Donbass MOSCOW (Sputnik) - Kremlin spokesman Dmitry Peskov responded on Wednesday to the Yad Vashem centre's criticism of Russia's special operation in Ukraine... 02.03.2022, Sputnik International 2022-03-02T11:03+0000 2022-03-02T11:03+0000 2022-03-02T11:03+0000 situation in ukraine kremlin ukraine yad vashem holocaust memorial donbass /html/head/meta[@name='og:title']/@content /html/head/meta[@name='og:description']/@content https://cdnn1.img.sputniknews.com/img/102095/55/1020955517_0:265:3298:2120_1920x0_80_0_0_448107b03af58c3ed270a601eb4d7b3c.jpg Last week, the Jerusalem-based Holocaust remembrance centre issued a statement condemning the operation as well as the alleged "propagandist discourse" regarding "completely inaccurate comparisons with Nazi ideology and actions."Last Thursday, Russia launched a special military operation in Ukraine, responding to calls for help from the breakaway republics of Donetsk and Lugansk. According to President Putin, the operation is aimed at "demilitarising and de-Nazifying" Ukraine. The decision to start the operation came following a breakdown of negotiations and continued Ukrainian artillery and mortar attacks on the Donbass republics. kremlin ukraine Sputnik International feedback@sputniknews.com +74956456601 MIA Rosiya Segodnya 252 60 2022 Sputnik International feedback@sputniknews.com +74956456601 MIA Rosiya Segodnya 252 60 News en_EN Sputnik International feedback@sputniknews.com +74956456601 MIA Rosiya Segodnya 252 60 1920 1080 true 1920 1440 true 1920 1920 true Sputnik International feedback@sputniknews.com +74956456601 MIA Rosiya Segodnya 252 60 Sputnik International feedback@sputniknews.com +74956456601 MIA Rosiya Segodnya 252 60 kremlin, ukraine, yad vashem holocaust memorial, donbass by Dames Alexander Sinaga JAKARTA, March 2 (Xinhua) -- Amid the spread of the Omicron variant in Indonesia, more eateries in "Glodok", the largest Chinatown in capital city Jakarta, have begun selling Chinese style herbal and medicinal foods. In a rented space in front of a storey house in Glodok on Monday morning, Cindy Tan was busy selling Chinese style chicken herbal soup, popularly known in Chinese-Indonesian communities as Cia Po Tim Ayam, to her customers. "Cia Po Tim Ayam can be consumed by anyone. It's to build or boost one's stamina. This is good for a woman who just gave birth," the 32-year-old woman told Xinhua recently. Cia Po Tim Ayam basically comes in the form of chicken stock that is infused with herbs such as goji berries, ginger and other herbal ingredients. Of Chinese descent, Tan has been on cloud nine for the past few months as she has been gaining a small fortune from her modest food business. The COVID-19 pandemic has increased the habit of consuming healthy foods as a method of building immunity. Noticing that, Tan decided to start her business last September. "I want to sell foods that can boost the human immune system. In my family, my mother often cooks herbal soups when her kids feel unwell or unhealthy," Tan said, adding that she learned how to make herbal soup from her mother. According to Tan, she usually has at least 100 customers in a day, with some of them being in the millennial age group. Tan is also selling Chinese dishes using food delivery service platforms such as GoFood, GrabFood and ShopeeFood. Graduating with a degree majoring in marketing management, Tan is thinking of having more food stalls selling herbal soups in other areas of the city in her belief that the business is in high consumer demands amid the COVID-19 pandemic. Glodok, situated in West Jakarta, is a spot for Indonesians to buy Chinese foods, traditional Chinese medicines and cheap electronic stuffs. In the past, the area was designated by colonials as a residential area for ethnic Chinese. Having been living there since he was born, Stanley Wijaya, a Chinese-Indonesian, is now running a food business that was started by his parents about 50 years ago. Months after the pandemic hit Indonesia, he decided to add new menus in the restaurant, including that of Cia Po Tim Ayam. "Since we want to adapt to the life under COVID-19, we want to put healthier meals on the list so that more customers would come to our restaurant," he told Xinhua. The demand for healthy foods is increasing amid the pandemic, Wijaya said, adding that selling Chinese herbal or medicinal foods is a great decision. "Our earnings increased significantly after we started selling Chinese medicinal foods," he added. Wijaya further said that he has not contracted COVID-19 until now, and he believed that consuming medicinal foods regularly is one of the factors why he has not tested positive for the virus. "It's not scientifically proven, but I think that maintaining our immune system by eating medicinal foods is very important to make us in good health," he added. https://sputniknews.com/20220302/kremlin-on-whether-nord-stream-2-is-dead-infrastructure-ready-to-operate-1093514525.html Kremlin on Whether Nord Stream 2 Is 'Dead': Infrastructure Ready to Operate Kremlin on Whether Nord Stream 2 Is 'Dead': Infrastructure Ready to Operate MOSCOW (Sputnik) - The infrastructure of the Nord Stream 2 gas pipeline is ready to operate, it will not disappear, Kremlin spokesman Dmitry Peskov said. 02.03.2022, Sputnik International 2022-03-02T10:03+0000 2022-03-02T10:03+0000 2022-03-02T10:11+0000 nord stream 2 russia gazprom /html/head/meta[@name='og:title']/@content /html/head/meta[@name='og:description']/@content https://cdnn1.img.sputniknews.com/img/07e5/07/14/1083426072_0:127:3189:1921_1920x0_80_0_0_f4d64aacf9d19223dcaf7caf15f9cc83.jpg On Monday, Anglo-Dutch petroleum giant Shell has decided to withdraw from joint ventures with Russian gas giant Gazprom, including the termination of its participation in the Nord Stream 2 gas pipeline project, amid the Russian special operation in Ukraine. On Tuesday, Austrian energy company OMV Group said it will review the involvement in the Nord Stream 2 project.Current hysteria makes it impossible to launch the pipeline, it is difficult to make forecasts now, the spokesman said but expressed hope that over time, a sober assessment of the situation will replace the hysteria.The Nord Stream 2 is a 1,200-km pipeline project under the Baltic Sea. It was completed last September and is designed to double the flow of Russian gas directly to Germany. The new 55 billion cubic meters-per-year capacity pipeline was expected to double the original Nord Stream capacity to a total of 110 bcm. Sputnik International feedback@sputniknews.com +74956456601 MIA Rosiya Segodnya 252 60 2022 Sputnik International feedback@sputniknews.com +74956456601 MIA Rosiya Segodnya 252 60 News en_EN Sputnik International feedback@sputniknews.com +74956456601 MIA Rosiya Segodnya 252 60 1920 1080 true 1920 1440 true 1920 1920 true Sputnik International feedback@sputniknews.com +74956456601 MIA Rosiya Segodnya 252 60 Sputnik International feedback@sputniknews.com +74956456601 MIA Rosiya Segodnya 252 60 nord stream 2, russia, gazprom https://sputniknews.com/20220302/mfa-berlins-decision-on-nord-stream-2-sets-precedent-of-using-business-project-for-political-gains-1093523506.html MFA: Berlin's Decision on Nord Stream 2 Sets Precedent of Using Business Project for Political Gains MFA: Berlin's Decision on Nord Stream 2 Sets Precedent of Using Business Project for Political Gains Berlin announced that the pipeline's certification was paused due to Russia's decision to recognise the Donetsk and Lugansk People's Republics (DPR and LPR)... 02.03.2022, Sputnik International 2022-03-02T13:43+0000 2022-03-02T13:43+0000 2022-03-02T14:40+0000 europe russia nord stream 2 /html/head/meta[@name='og:title']/@content /html/head/meta[@name='og:description']/@content https://cdnn1.img.sputniknews.com/img/07e5/07/15/1083432916_0:172:3028:1875_1920x0_80_0_0_04e3f852569ffe0ea95e0025967bf4d6.jpg The Russian Foreign Ministry has condemned the actions of the German government regarding the Nord Stream 2 project, saying it was "the logical culmination of the doctrine of the primacy of politics over economics".The foreign ministry's spokeswoman further slammed the "unworthy trickery" of Berlin, which decided to withdraw conclusion the government had issued about the fact that there was no threat to energy security from Nord Stream 2. Zakharova warned that the consequence of these actions will be for gas prices in Europe to rocket, which has already begun and which Nord Stream 2 was designed to prevent.The spokeswoman also suggested that investors in Nord Stream 2 would be within their rights to sue the German government for its decision to suspend the pipeline's certification, and demand compensation. She noted that this "illegitimate act" undermined Berlin's reputation as a reliable international business partner.Nord Stream 2 was built by Gazprom in collaboration with several European energy giants - Royal Dutch Shell, OMV, Engie, Uniper and Wintershall. The pipeline has the capacity to pump up to 55 million cubic metres of gas from Russia to Europe. Its construction was finished last year, but the German government was withholding its certification.Berlin then announced that it had frozen the project because of Russia's decision to recognise Donetsk and Lugansk People's republics (DPR and LPR), and launch a special operation in Ukraine, which the western nations labelled an "invasion". Russia rejected the idea that it was an invasion and insists that the operation was required to end the "genocide" that Kiev has been committing in Donbass for eight years with the West's acquiescence. President Vladimir Putin described the goals of the operation as demilitarisation and denazification of Ukraine. Sputnik International feedback@sputniknews.com +74956456601 MIA Rosiya Segodnya 252 60 2022 Tim Korso https://cdnn1.img.sputniknews.com/img/07e6/03/0d/1093831826_0:0:216:216_100x100_80_0_0_e3f43a960af0c6c99f7eb8ccbf5f812c.jpg Tim Korso https://cdnn1.img.sputniknews.com/img/07e6/03/0d/1093831826_0:0:216:216_100x100_80_0_0_e3f43a960af0c6c99f7eb8ccbf5f812c.jpg News en_EN Sputnik International feedback@sputniknews.com +74956456601 MIA Rosiya Segodnya 252 60 1920 1080 true 1920 1440 true 1920 1920 true Sputnik International feedback@sputniknews.com +74956456601 MIA Rosiya Segodnya 252 60 Tim Korso https://cdnn1.img.sputniknews.com/img/07e6/03/0d/1093831826_0:0:216:216_100x100_80_0_0_e3f43a960af0c6c99f7eb8ccbf5f812c.jpg europe, russia, nord stream 2 https://sputniknews.com/20220302/mfa-washington-refusal-to-negotiate-leaves-moscow-no-option-but-to-expel-us-ambassador-from-russia-1093529863.html MFA: Washington's Refusal to Negotiate Leaves Moscow No Option But to Expel US Diplomat From Russia MFA: Washington's Refusal to Negotiate Leaves Moscow No Option But to Expel US Diplomat From Russia Earlier on Tuesday, the spokesperson for the United Nations secretary-general said that the United States has expelled a Russian diplomat from the UN... 02.03.2022, Sputnik International 2022-03-02T17:54+0000 2022-03-02T17:54+0000 2022-03-02T20:02+0000 us russia john sullivan /html/head/meta[@name='og:title']/@content /html/head/meta[@name='og:description']/@content https://cdnn1.img.sputniknews.com/img/07e4/0c/18/1081564647_0:160:3073:1888_1920x0_80_0_0_a78086f2a36d90359ed291d7a06b306e.jpg The US' reluctance to negotiate leaves Russia no choice but to expel an American diplomat from Moscow, the Russian Foreign Ministry announced Wednesday.Moscow also urged Washington to be "reasonable" and refrain from futher escalation after the expulsion of a Russian employee from the UN Secretariat.Russia's response to the expulsion of its diplomat will affect the US quota for its diplomatic presence in Moscow, the ministry noted.Earlier, the United States has decided to expel a Russian employee working at the UN Secretariat in New York.I can confirm that the US mission to the United Nations informed the Secretariat on 28 February ... of its decision to take action under Section 13 (b) of the UN-US Headquarters Agreement with respect to a staff member in the Secretariat, Dujarric said when asked to confirm reports of the expulsion of a Russian staffer.We regret that we find ourselves in this situation but are engaging with the host country [US], he added.Dujarric declined to disclose the name and a position of the affected employee in deference to the privacy of the individual and the sensitivity of the matter.The spokesman said the staff member was scheduled to end his assignment with the United Nations on March 14.On Monday, the United States decided to expel another 12 Russian diplomats from the Permanent Mission to the United Nations for allegedly engaging in espionage.Commenting on situation, Russian Foreign Ministry spokeswoman Maria Zakharova said on Tuesday that Moscow will respond to the US expulsion of 12 diplomats from the Russian permanent mission to the UN, the measures will not necessarily be symmetrical."As for the expulsion of Russian diplomats, it will not remain without a proper reaction and an answer not necessarily symmetrical. We advise responsible persons in Washington to think about the consequences of their destructive line," Zakharova said in a statement.Moscow considers the expulsion of diplomats from the Russian permanent mission to the UN as a step to escalate Russian-US relations, the statement says. Sputnik International feedback@sputniknews.com +74956456601 MIA Rosiya Segodnya 252 60 2022 Sputnik International feedback@sputniknews.com +74956456601 MIA Rosiya Segodnya 252 60 News en_EN Sputnik International feedback@sputniknews.com +74956456601 MIA Rosiya Segodnya 252 60 1920 1080 true 1920 1440 true 1920 1920 true Sputnik International feedback@sputniknews.com +74956456601 MIA Rosiya Segodnya 252 60 Sputnik International feedback@sputniknews.com +74956456601 MIA Rosiya Segodnya 252 60 us, russia, john sullivan https://sputniknews.com/20220302/palestinian-leadership-may-be-supportive-of-russias-stance-on-ukraine-but-why-has-it-stayed-mum-1093508330.html Palestinian Leadership May Be Supportive of Russia's Stance on Ukraine, But Why Has It Stayed Mum? Palestinian Leadership May Be Supportive of Russia's Stance on Ukraine, But Why Has It Stayed Mum? Over the years, Russia has positioned itself as a fair mediator between Israel and the Palestinians. Although Moscow maintains stable relations with the Jewish... 02.03.2022, Sputnik International 2022-03-02T07:43+0000 2022-03-02T07:43+0000 2022-03-02T07:43+0000 israel palestinians russia /html/head/meta[@name='og:title']/@content /html/head/meta[@name='og:description']/@content https://cdnn1.img.sputniknews.com/img/07e6/02/15/1093248564_0:134:3167:1915_1920x0_80_0_0_1c8b41d941b256494d8ad0104c077676.jpg In Israel, it appears that local authorities have already chosen sides in the Russia-Ukraine conflict, after Moscow sent its troops into the country last Thursday.Officials in Jerusalem have condemned Moscow's move and supported a vote against it at the United Nations.Sticking to NeutralityYet, in the Palestinian territories, both in the West Bank and the Gaza Strip, the leadership there remains silent, and Najib Farraj, a Ramallah-based political analyst, says this neutrality is dictated by the authorities' desire to avoid any possible conflicts.Settling AccountsOn the one hand, the Palestinians have a score to settle with the Americans. Under the Trump administration they saw the US Embassy moved from Tel Aviv to Jerusalem. They witnessed the recognition of the legality of the West Bank settlements, and they personally felt the decrease in American donations.Under the Biden administration they have seen problems too. A consulate in East Jerusalem hasn't been opened yet, despite repeated promises, and nothing has been done to halt the construction of Jewish settlements in the disputed West Bank.On the other hand, the Palestinians realise that they do need American assistance. Shortly after assuming office in January 2021, Biden unlocked millions of dollars in American donations for the Palestinians and their leadership would not want to lose that cash, especially now amid a raging economic crisis that has been exacerbated by the coronavirus pandemic.Close TiesThat cash, however, is simply not enough for the Palestinian leadership to scrap their well-established ties with Moscow.Over the years, Moscow has been supportive of the Palestinians and their struggle. It has repeatedly stressed its commitment to the creation of a Palestinian state with a capital in East Jerusalem. It has also expressed its dissatisfaction with the Jewish settlements in the West Bank, and has supported multiple UN resolutions in favour of the Palestinians."Washington hasn't implemented any of their promises and this is why the Palestinians would not want to lose Moscow as a mediator in the regulation of the Israeli-Palestinian conflict", he notes.For now, the neutrality of the Palestinian leadership is not going to change. However, as the military operation in Ukraine continues and as the Palestinian public expresses its solidarity with the Ukrainian people, it might not have a choice but to make a statement on the matter."We need to wait and see what the goals of Russia are. Are they going to finish the operation quickly and leave or will they sink in the mud and occupy that land? Right now, it is just too early to tell". Sputnik International feedback@sputniknews.com +74956456601 MIA Rosiya Segodnya 252 60 2022 Elizabeth Blade Elizabeth Blade News en_EN Sputnik International feedback@sputniknews.com +74956456601 MIA Rosiya Segodnya 252 60 1920 1080 true 1920 1440 true 1920 1920 true Sputnik International feedback@sputniknews.com +74956456601 MIA Rosiya Segodnya 252 60 Elizabeth Blade israel, palestinians, russia https://sputniknews.com/20220302/rally-in-support-of-russias-op-in-ukraine-reflects-public-sentiment-in-lebanon-ambassador-says-1093526736.html Rally in Support of Russia's Op in Ukraine Reflects Public Sentiment in Lebanon, Ambassador Says Rally in Support of Russia's Op in Ukraine Reflects Public Sentiment in Lebanon, Ambassador Says BEIRUT (Sputnik) - A rally in support of Russia and its military operation in Ukraine organised by the Lebanese in Beirut reflects popular sentiment on the... 02.03.2022, Sputnik International 2022-03-02T15:49+0000 2022-03-02T15:49+0000 2022-03-02T15:53+0000 lebanon rally ukraine /html/head/meta[@name='og:title']/@content /html/head/meta[@name='og:description']/@content https://cdnn1.img.sputniknews.com/img/107732/30/1077323073_0:173:3027:1875_1920x0_80_0_0_f626ad5ca59767a8e343a8aa1c75d9ef.jpg Earlier in the day, Beirut saw a demonstration by the Lebanese and Russians living in Lebanon in front of the Russian embassy in support of the country and its endeavours to demilitarise and "denazify" Ukraine.Russia has always shown its support to the Lebanese people and provided assistance, and those who participated in the rally proved that the Lebanese remember and are grateful for it, the ambassador added.Russia launched its military operation in Ukraine last Thursday in response to calls from the breakaway republics of Donetsk and Lugansk. The Russian Defence Ministry said the special operation was targeting Ukrainian military infrastructure only and that the civilian population was not in danger.After that, the UK, the US, and European Union introduced sanctions targeting major Russian banks and high-ranking officials, including President Vladimir Putin, and closed their airspace to Russian aircraft. The sanctions have been joined by various countries across the world, which imposed targeted financial sanctions and travel bans against Russia's most influential political and military officials. lebanon ukraine Sputnik International feedback@sputniknews.com +74956456601 MIA Rosiya Segodnya 252 60 2022 Sputnik International feedback@sputniknews.com +74956456601 MIA Rosiya Segodnya 252 60 News en_EN Sputnik International feedback@sputniknews.com +74956456601 MIA Rosiya Segodnya 252 60 1920 1080 true 1920 1440 true 1920 1920 true Sputnik International feedback@sputniknews.com +74956456601 MIA Rosiya Segodnya 252 60 Sputnik International feedback@sputniknews.com +74956456601 MIA Rosiya Segodnya 252 60 lebanon, rally, ukraine https://sputniknews.com/20220302/roscosmos-chief-warns-cyberattacks-against-russian-satellites-are-casus-belli-1093513258.html Roscosmos Chief Warns Cyberattacks Against Russian Satellites Are 'Casus Belli' Roscosmos Chief Warns Cyberattacks Against Russian Satellites Are 'Casus Belli' It was earlier claimed that a hacker group called "NB65" had "shut down" the control centre of Russia's space agency Roscosmos. 02.03.2022, Sputnik International 2022-03-02T10:02+0000 2022-03-02T10:02+0000 2022-03-02T10:02+0000 russia satellites situation in ukraine roscosmos /html/head/meta[@name='og:title']/@content /html/head/meta[@name='og:description']/@content https://cdnn1.img.sputniknews.com/img/107163/04/1071630487_0:0:2997:1685_1920x0_80_0_0_fa3666ed89fd657bd4997e6e0481b35d.jpg Attempts by hackers to attack Russian satellites are "casus belli", said Roscosmos head Dmitry Rogozin.He also refuted claims that Russia has "lost control" of its satellites after a purported hacker attack. Earlier, an account dubbed Anonymous TV claimed that a hacker group named "NB65" and "affiliated" with the Anonymous hacking collective had "shut down" the control centre of Roscosmos."Russia has no more control over their own Spy-Satelites", the account earlier asserted.Yet, according to Rogozin, the security system of Roscosmos "automatically" shielded the space agency from the hacker attacks targeting the control centre. The claims that hackers have shut down the control centre emerged shortly after the hacker group Anonymous declared a cyberwar against the Russian government over the situation in Ukraine. The hacker collective has already taken credit for attacks on Russian government agencies, media outlets, and businesses.On Tuesday, however, Anonymous itself appeared to be targeted by another hacker group, Killnet, that claimed to have shut down Anonymous' website, along with the webpages of the Ukrainian president's office and the neo-Nazi group Right Sector. Sputnik International feedback@sputniknews.com +74956456601 MIA Rosiya Segodnya 252 60 2022 Sputnik International feedback@sputniknews.com +74956456601 MIA Rosiya Segodnya 252 60 News en_EN Sputnik International feedback@sputniknews.com +74956456601 MIA Rosiya Segodnya 252 60 1920 1080 true 1920 1440 true 1920 1920 true Sputnik International feedback@sputniknews.com +74956456601 MIA Rosiya Segodnya 252 60 Sputnik International feedback@sputniknews.com +74956456601 MIA Rosiya Segodnya 252 60 russia, satellites, roscosmos https://sputniknews.com/20220302/russian-ambassador-there-are-calls-in-british-parliament-to-expel-all-russians-from-uk-1093523250.html Russian Ambassador: There are Calls in British Parliament to Expel All Russians From UK Russian Ambassador: There are Calls in British Parliament to Expel All Russians From UK MOSCOW (Sputnik) - Russian nationals in the United Kingdom sometimes face discrimination in schools and institutions possibly in response to calls by... 02.03.2022, Sputnik International 2022-03-02T13:43+0000 2022-03-02T13:43+0000 2022-03-02T13:43+0000 situation in ukraine uk russia ukraine citizens /html/head/meta[@name='og:title']/@content /html/head/meta[@name='og:description']/@content https://cdnn1.img.sputniknews.com/img/107723/12/1077231225_0:0:3044:1713_1920x0_80_0_0_61db73ff69cd6b507d01bbe6b524867e.jpg "Regarding the [Russian] citizens, we note attempts of discrimination, they indeed occur in schools, institutions. I would not say that they are widespread," Kelin told the Russian Rossiya 24 broadcaster.According to the diplomat, the UK residents were not particularly interested in the Ukrainian crisis."After all, the Britons for the most part are not that interested in what is happening in Ukraine, compared to what they write about it in the newspapers," Kelin added.He also said that there have been calls in the UK parliament to deliberate on deporting all Russian nationals, which amount to approximately 66,000, from the UK territory."In the parliament there are the most exotic calls, for example, to expel all ethnic Russians or to expel all Russian citizens. I have heard that," Kelin said.Russia launched its military operation in Ukraine last Thursday in response to calls from the breakaway republics of Donetsk and Lugansk. The Russian Defence Ministry said the special operation was targeting Ukrainian military infrastructure only and that the civilian population was not in danger.In return, the UK, the United States and European Union introduced sanctions targeting major Russian banks and high-ranking officials, including President Vladimir Putin, and closed their airspace for Russian aircraft. The sanctions have been joined by various countries across the world, which imposed targeted financial sanctions and travel bans against Russia's most influential political and military officials. https://sputniknews.com/20220302/russian-mfa-no-guarantees-there-will-be-no-incidents-with-nato-in-light-of-arms-supplies-to-ukraine-1093521400.html ukraine Sputnik International feedback@sputniknews.com +74956456601 MIA Rosiya Segodnya 252 60 2022 Sputnik International feedback@sputniknews.com +74956456601 MIA Rosiya Segodnya 252 60 News en_EN Sputnik International feedback@sputniknews.com +74956456601 MIA Rosiya Segodnya 252 60 1920 1080 true 1920 1440 true 1920 1920 true Sputnik International feedback@sputniknews.com +74956456601 MIA Rosiya Segodnya 252 60 Sputnik International feedback@sputniknews.com +74956456601 MIA Rosiya Segodnya 252 60 uk, russia, ukraine, citizens https://sputniknews.com/20220302/russian-armed-forces-units-took-full-control-of-regional-centre-of-kherson---mod-1093509851.html Russian Armed Forces' Units Take Full Control of Regional Centre of Kherson - MoD Russian Armed Forces' Units Take Full Control of Regional Centre of Kherson - MoD On 24 February, Russia began a special military operation in Ukraine to demilitarise and "de-Nazify" the country. The Russian Defence Ministry said the special... 02.03.2022, Sputnik International 2022-03-02T07:04+0000 2022-03-02T07:04+0000 2022-03-02T09:00+0000 russia ukraine offensive lpr special operation situation in ukraine /html/head/meta[@name='og:title']/@content /html/head/meta[@name='og:description']/@content https://cdnn1.img.sputniknews.com/img/07e6/03/02/1093510083_0:0:3465:1950_1920x0_80_0_0_ab6d9ca06d244dba934d631decffd321.jpg Russia's Defence Ministry said on Wednesday that Russian military units have taken full control of the Ukrainian regional centre of Kherson.Ministry spokesman Igor Konashenkov said that Kherson's infrastructure, support facilities, and urban transport are operating on a daily basis.He also said that forces from the Donetsk and Lugansk People's Republics (DPR and LPR) are continuing their successful offensive on the Ukrainian Army.According to him, DPR forces have also expanded their offensive zone, establishing control over the settlements of Kalinovka, Lebedinskoye, Pionerskoye, Nikolayevka, and Osipenko. "Since the start of the operation, DPR forces have advanced by 58 kilometres", the Russian Defence Ministry spokesman pointed out.He added that the Russian military is now taking control of the settlements of Tokmak and Vasilyevka, where Ukrainian Army servicemen earlier gave up resistance and voluntarily laid down their arms.Russia-Ukraine Talks The remarks come a few days after Russian and Ukrainian officials wrapped up the first round of talks in Belarus, aimed at resolving the crisis between Moscow and Kiev.Vladimir Medinsky, special assistant to President Vladimir Putin and head of the Russian delegation, told reporters late last week that the sides had "found some common points on which we predict common positions can be found". He added the sides had agreed on the second round of negotiations, which are expected to take place in the coming days in Belarus.On 24 February, Russia began a special operation to demilitarise and "de-Nazify" Ukraine, responding to calls for help from the Donetsk and Lugansk People's Republics in countering intensifying attacks by the Ukrainian Army. Russia's Defence Ministry has repeatedly stressed that its forces have not launched any strikes on Ukrainian cities, only targeting the country's military infrastructure with high-precision weapons.This was followed by the US, the UK, as well as EU members and several other countries slapping packages of sanctions on Russia, which included closing their airspace to all Russian flights and sanctioning a number of Russian banks and officials. Additionally, the German government announced that all Russian banks already subjected to Western sanctions will be excluded from the SWIFT payment system.Russia responded by closing its airspace to air carriers from 36 countries, including Germany, Spain, and France, with President Putin signing a decree "On the application of special economic measures" against the US and its allies. ukraine Sputnik International feedback@sputniknews.com +74956456601 MIA Rosiya Segodnya 252 60 2022 Oleg Burunov https://cdnn1.img.sputniknews.com/img/07e4/09/0b/1080424846_0:0:2048:2048_100x100_80_0_0_3d7b461f8a98586fa3fe739930816aea.jpg Oleg Burunov https://cdnn1.img.sputniknews.com/img/07e4/09/0b/1080424846_0:0:2048:2048_100x100_80_0_0_3d7b461f8a98586fa3fe739930816aea.jpg News en_EN Sputnik International feedback@sputniknews.com +74956456601 MIA Rosiya Segodnya 252 60 1920 1080 true 1920 1440 true 1920 1920 true Sputnik International feedback@sputniknews.com +74956456601 MIA Rosiya Segodnya 252 60 Oleg Burunov https://cdnn1.img.sputniknews.com/img/07e4/09/0b/1080424846_0:0:2048:2048_100x100_80_0_0_3d7b461f8a98586fa3fe739930816aea.jpg russia, ukraine, offensive, lpr, special operation https://sputniknews.com/20220302/russian-direct-investment-fund-hopes-for-success-in-talks-between-russia-ukraine-1093525223.html Russian Direct Investment Fund Hopes for Success in Talks Between Russia, Ukraine Russian Direct Investment Fund Hopes for Success in Talks Between Russia, Ukraine MOSCOW (Sputnik) - The Russian Direct Investment Fund (RDIF) on Wednesday wished for successful talks between Russia and Ukraine. 02.03.2022, Sputnik International 2022-03-02T14:38+0000 2022-03-02T14:38+0000 2022-03-02T14:38+0000 russian direct investment fund (rdif) ukraine russia /html/head/meta[@name='og:title']/@content /html/head/meta[@name='og:description']/@content https://cdnn1.img.sputniknews.com/img/07e4/08/0b/1080132485_0:0:3319:1867_1920x0_80_0_0_7a4d84397a9595f97dd5569e0861ef55.jpg "RDIF supports restoration of peace and hopes negotiations between representatives of Russia and Ukraine are successful. RDIF and its international partners believe that only diplomacy can end this conflict and save human lives," the fund said in a statement ahead of the second round of negotiations between Moscow and Kiev.The RDIF also noted its efforts to improve people's quality of life, citing its contribution to the protection of "millions of people in over 70 countries through its humanitarian mission to fight coronavirus infection."Earlier in the day, the EU imposed a ban on participation in projects co-financed by the Russian Direct Investment Fund (RDIF) over Russia's special military operation in Ukraine. Prior to that, the UK imposed sanctions against RDIF and its CEO Kirill Dmitriev. ukraine Sputnik International feedback@sputniknews.com +74956456601 MIA Rosiya Segodnya 252 60 2022 Sputnik International feedback@sputniknews.com +74956456601 MIA Rosiya Segodnya 252 60 News en_EN Sputnik International feedback@sputniknews.com +74956456601 MIA Rosiya Segodnya 252 60 1920 1080 true 1920 1440 true 1920 1920 true Sputnik International feedback@sputniknews.com +74956456601 MIA Rosiya Segodnya 252 60 Sputnik International feedback@sputniknews.com +74956456601 MIA Rosiya Segodnya 252 60 russian direct investment fund (rdif), ukraine, russia https://sputniknews.com/20220302/selective-swift-sanctions-crypto-and-us-military-intervention-1093503360.html Selective Swift Sanctions, Crypto and US Military Intervention Selective Swift Sanctions, Crypto and US Military Intervention Ahead of the State of the Union Calls for US Backed Insurgency in Ukraine. 02.03.2022, Sputnik International 2022-03-02T06:41+0000 2022-03-02T06:41+0000 2022-03-02T06:41+0000 political misfits ukraine russia rt sputnik censorship sanctions swift eu nato /html/head/meta[@name='og:title']/@content /html/head/meta[@name='og:description']/@content https://cdnn1.img.sputniknews.com/img/07e6/03/02/1093503258_56:0:1300:700_1920x0_80_0_0_61c17dcaaf5209ff7c46bb4df0d6226c.png Selective Swift Sanctions, Crypto and US Military Intervention Ahead of the State of the Union Calls for US Backed Insurgency in Ukraine Mark Sleboda, foreign affairs and policy analyst joins at the top of the show to break down the strategy that is unfolding in Ukraine as attacks on infrastructure intensify near Kiev. They also talked about how much military aid is being supplied by NATO to the Ukrainian military. Weapons are going into west Ukraine to support an insurgency according to Sleboda.Dr. Jack Rasmus, economist, radio show host & author of 'The Scourge of Neoliberalism: US Economic Policy from Reagan to Trump, 2020 and Central Bankers at the End of Their Ropes: Monetary Policy and the Coming Depression joins the show to talk about how much sanctions slammed on Russia will impact its economy and economies beyond Russia's border. No one really knows if sanctions will turn around and take a bite out of the US and European economies, that remains to be seen, according to Dr, Rasmus. The real economy in Russia is connected to natural gas and oil sales, not the stock market. It will be difficult for the global economy to make up for the loss of Russias oil and natural gas. The Russian stock market remains closed since the beginning of the conflict and not slated to open until Monday. Russia is using Crypto to circumvent sanctions and using it in place of the banking systems that Russians do not have access to Dr. Rasmus said.Next, KJ Noh, a global justice activist, writer, teacher, and member of Veterans for Peace joins the conversation to talk about the misinformation media war while trying to navigate the fog of war. The Misfits talk about the role of censorship in media: the EU banned Sputnik News and RT what does this type of action portend for media that does not align with a Western ideology and bandwidth?The Misfits discuss Russias relationship with China. What is China anticipating following sanctions placed on one of their major trade partners? China wants peace and will lift all wheat- import restrictions on Russia. Then they talk about the kind of assistance China will offer to Russia. China declares a multipolar world and economy a drive toward centralized digital currencies. And, China supports Russias security interest. The root cause of this crisis is the US and the Western expansion of NATO just as China possesses similar security concerns in the Pacific according to Noh.For the last segment, John Kane, Mohawk activist and educator, producer and host of the Let's Talk Native Podcast, and co-host of Resistance Radio on WBAI Pacifica Radio NY joins the show to talk about the Supreme Court taking up a challenge to the Indian Child Welfare Act. The battleground is over child placement. Overturning the legislation could potentially remove large amounts of regulations protecting tribes and their members. Forceable moving children from native households to place them with a white family. Texas, Louisiana and Indiana are challenging the child protection law they claim the law is racist and violates the 14th Amendment. Kane says thats why the law is failing because it does not recognize the sovereignty and distinct cultural identities of native tribes. If SCOTUS overturns the legislation Indian casinos are at risk of loosing regulated gaming privileges which is important to native economies because there is no state income tax base on tribal lands.The Misfits sign off till tomorrow.We'd love to get your feedback at radio@sputniknews.com ukraine russia Sputnik International feedback@sputniknews.com +74956456601 MIA Rosiya Segodnya 252 60 2022 Michelle Witte https://cdnn1.img.sputniknews.com/img/07e5/02/11/1082103644_0:1:240:241_100x100_80_0_0_aa1e89cc3422c54bfdeb46decb112e73.jpg Michelle Witte https://cdnn1.img.sputniknews.com/img/07e5/02/11/1082103644_0:1:240:241_100x100_80_0_0_aa1e89cc3422c54bfdeb46decb112e73.jpg News en_EN Sputnik International feedback@sputniknews.com +74956456601 MIA Rosiya Segodnya 252 60 1920 1080 true 1920 1440 true 1920 1920 true Sputnik International feedback@sputniknews.com +74956456601 MIA Rosiya Segodnya 252 60 Michelle Witte https://cdnn1.img.sputniknews.com/img/07e5/02/11/1082103644_0:1:240:241_100x100_80_0_0_aa1e89cc3422c54bfdeb46decb112e73.jpg political misfits, ukraine, russia, rt, sputnik, censorship, sanctions, swift, eu, nato, , radio SYDNEY, March 2 (Xinhua) -- The death toll from the floodwaters in Australia's eastern states climbed to 11. Police of the state of New South Wales (NSW) confirmed the third flood-related death in the state on Wednesday. The woman's body was found in South Lismore, one of the worst-hit regions in the state. It took the death toll of this wild weather that is sweeping away the eastern part of the country to 11, among which eight victims are in the state of Queensland. The severe weather system, which has been ravaging Queensland and the northern NSW since last week, is expected to continue this week. NSW Bureau of Meteorology (BoM) warned that heavy rainfall, which may lead to flash flooding, is forecast to develop over parts of the Hunter and Metropolitan, Illawarra, South Coast and parts of Central Tablelands and Southern Tablelands Forecast Districts during Wednesday. Six-hourly rainfall that totals between 80 and 120 mm is likely in these areas. Meanwhile, the Warragamba Dam in southwest Sydney, the city's main water source, spilled overnight. Water NSW predicted the range of the spill would be less than the one in March 2021, however, related river systems are likely to experience an increase in water levels as a result. https://sputniknews.com/20220302/taiwans-president-seeking-closer-cooperation-on-security-with-us-1093510283.html Taiwan's President Seeking Closer Cooperation on Security With US Taiwan's President Seeking Closer Cooperation on Security With US BEIJING (Sputnik) - Taiwanese President Tsai Ing-wen said that Taiwan hopes to work more closely with the United States on security issues as "China's threat"... 02.03.2022, Sputnik International 2022-03-02T07:24+0000 2022-03-02T07:24+0000 2022-03-02T07:34+0000 taiwan china us /html/head/meta[@name='og:title']/@content /html/head/meta[@name='og:description']/@content https://cdnn1.img.sputniknews.com/img/07e6/03/02/1093510385_0:43:2048:1195_1920x0_80_0_0_0d105342ecd8112e2db9951640e4741e.jpg On Tuesday, an unofficial US delegation, headed by former US Joint Chiefs of Staff Chairman Michael Glenn Mullen, arrived in Taiwan for a two-day visit. The delegation also included former US Deputy National Security Adviser for Iraq and Afghanistan Meghan O'Sullivan and former US Defence Under Secretary Michele Angelique Flournoy.The president noted that Taiwanese nationals "will not give up their beliefs because of these actions". She added that Taiwan looks forward to "closer cooperation with the US and other countries on security issues in the region".Mullen said that Washington will continue to oppose any unilateral changes to the status quo in the Taiwan Strait, adding that maintaining peace and stability in the region is in the interest not only of the US but also of the entire world.Chinese Foreign Ministry spokesperson Wang Wenbin said on Tuesday that Beijing condemned the US for sending the delegation to Taiwan.Taiwan has been governed independently from mainland China since 1949. Beijing views the island as its province, while Taiwan maintains that it is an autonomous country but has stopped short of declaring independence. https://sputniknews.com/20220226/chinese-army-calls-us-destroyers-passage-through-taiwan-strait-hypocritical-1093399524.html china Sputnik International feedback@sputniknews.com +74956456601 MIA Rosiya Segodnya 252 60 2022 Sputnik International feedback@sputniknews.com +74956456601 MIA Rosiya Segodnya 252 60 News en_EN Sputnik International feedback@sputniknews.com +74956456601 MIA Rosiya Segodnya 252 60 1920 1080 true 1920 1440 true 1920 1920 true Sputnik International feedback@sputniknews.com +74956456601 MIA Rosiya Segodnya 252 60 Sputnik International feedback@sputniknews.com +74956456601 MIA Rosiya Segodnya 252 60 taiwan, china, us https://sputniknews.com/20220302/the-corporate-media-applaud-eu--american-censorship-1093501975.html The Corporate Media Applaud EU & American Censorship The Corporate Media Applaud EU & American Censorship On todays episode of The Backstory, host Lee Stranahan discussed current events including Mexico declining to join Russian sanctions, and Apple censoring RT... 02.03.2022, Sputnik International 2022-03-02T06:39+0000 2022-03-02T06:39+0000 2022-03-02T08:53+0000 us the backstory anonymous fifa gm vinyl dubai big tech odessa massacre rt /html/head/meta[@name='og:title']/@content /html/head/meta[@name='og:description']/@content https://cdnn1.img.sputniknews.com/img/07e6/03/01/1093502086_0:0:1920:1080_1920x0_80_0_0_1ce0c5431a867c54397543d51c66215a.jpg The Corporate Media Applaud E.U. & American Censorship On todays episode of The Backstory, host Lee Stranahan discussed current events including Mexico declining to join Russian sanctions, and Apple censoring RT in the app store. GUESTRobert Bridge - Author, Columnist | Putin's Approval Rating, Protests in Russia, andManila Chan - Veteran News Anchor and Host of RTs In Question | RT Labeled Dangerous, Mainstream Media Narratives Falling Apart, and Questions of Putin's Mental healthIn the first hour, Lee spoke with Robert Bridge about the culture in Moscow, the war in Ukraine, and the food supply in Russia. Robert spoke about the wealth in Moscow and the misconceptions of Russia. Robert discussed the war in Ukraine and the Russian people's approval of the military operation.In the second hour, Lee and Jason Goodman spoke with Manila Chan about the media narratives, people questioning President Putin's mental health, and Laos. Manila discussed her time in journalism and the way corporate media buys silence. Manila talked about censorship and how people always find ways around censorship.We'd love to get your feedback at radio@sputniknews.com us dubai Sputnik International feedback@sputniknews.com +74956456601 MIA Rosiya Segodnya 252 60 2022 Lee Stranahan https://cdnn1.img.sputniknews.com/img/07e5/02/13/1082125222_0:0:293:292_100x100_80_0_0_a8bc846f559660e5bf7574f8a9608a1d.png Lee Stranahan https://cdnn1.img.sputniknews.com/img/07e5/02/13/1082125222_0:0:293:292_100x100_80_0_0_a8bc846f559660e5bf7574f8a9608a1d.png News en_EN Sputnik International feedback@sputniknews.com +74956456601 MIA Rosiya Segodnya 252 60 1920 1080 true 1920 1440 true 1920 1920 true Sputnik International feedback@sputniknews.com +74956456601 MIA Rosiya Segodnya 252 60 Lee Stranahan https://cdnn1.img.sputniknews.com/img/07e5/02/13/1082125222_0:0:293:292_100x100_80_0_0_a8bc846f559660e5bf7574f8a9608a1d.png us, the backstory, anonymous, fifa, gm, vinyl, dubai, big tech, odessa massacre, rt, sanctions, , radio https://sputniknews.com/20220302/thinking-for-you-experts-denounce-eu-for-silencing-russian-media-with-disinformation-label-1093502375.html Thinking for You: Experts Denounce EU For Silencing Russian Media With Disinformation Label Thinking for You: Experts Denounce EU For Silencing Russian Media With Disinformation Label On Monday, Twitter added new labels to tweets by Russian journalists as well as a warning against posts linked to Russian media outlets. Sputnik denounced the... 02.03.2022, Sputnik International 2022-03-02T00:22+0000 2022-03-02T00:22+0000 2022-03-02T00:24+0000 sputnik rt censorship vanessa beeley daniel lazare european union /html/head/meta[@name='og:title']/@content /html/head/meta[@name='og:description']/@content https://cdnn1.img.sputniknews.com/img/103562/17/1035621714_0:65:2048:1217_1920x0_80_0_0_f7bed2b8782432fbc2fd494f5ff81943.jpg After European Commission President Ursula von der Leyen on Sunday called for Russian news outlets Sputnik and RT to be banned from the EU for spreading "toxic and harmful disinformation in Europe, Google and Facebook quickly moved to block the outlets from their platforms, including on Instagram and YouTube.[W]e will ban in the EU the Kremlin's media machine. The state-owned Russia Today and Sputnik, as well as their subsidiaries, will no longer be able to spread their lies to justify Putin's war and to sow division in our union," von der Leyen said.While Western crackdowns on Russian media outlets for reporting on events and perspectives in a different way are nothing new, the latest drive for an outright ban has come after Moscow launched its neutralization military operation in Ukraine on Thursday. The military action aims to stop an eight-year war in the Donbass, where Ukrainian military assets and reported neo-Nazi voluntary battalions integrated into its ranks have waged war since 2014 against two Russian-speaking regions that are now recognized as sovereign states. Moscow recognized the two republics for the first time, just last month.Sputnik spoke with several media experts about the censorship drive and what it means in the context of the Wests values of freedom of speech and of the press.Patronizing in the ExtremeI am, in principle, opposed to censorship, the only exceptions being when the media promote outright hatred and hostility against specific groups, Dr. Ellis Cashmore, a visiting professor of sociology at the UKs Aston University and a media analyst and independent commentator, told Sputnik on Tuesday.Adults should not be treated as children and should not be protected from information they do not agree with, or even find loathsome. They are able to reject it just as easily as they accept alternatives. I interpret the banning of RT and Sputnik websites in the EU (not in the UK, thankfully) as patronizing in the extreme: the unwritten message is, You are too immature to think for yourselves, so we are doing the thinking for you and preventing you from looking at and listening to material which provides an alternative perspective from the one you are probably receiving from other media.He noted that neither US or UK media has been silenced during many of their wars over the last 30 years, although suggesting that the ubiquitousness of social media in 2022 might be a mitigating factor. However, the downside to relying on social media instead of respected news organizations is that it lacks fact-checking, balance, and sophistication.Social media, by its nature, is under the control of its users, he said. So, while I understand the proprietors of social media organizations have promised restrictions, in practice, they will never succeed. Is this such a bad thing? Again, I return to my central concept: people should be allowed to learn as many different perspectives as they wish and then make critical decisions on who and what to believe for themselves. That includes social media - which, frankly, are full of bizarre and wholly implausible material, anyway. People do not, I suspect, depend on social media for truth: they seek raw material that they can process themselves.More Sources, Not LessThe EU move to block RT and Sputnik is a disgrace! It's proof that the defense of Ukraine is not progressive at all, but an effort that will lead to greater and greater coercion and authoritarianism throughout the democratic west, said independent journalist, author and writer Daniel Lazare. Now more than ever, people need free debate and a free exchange of ideas. Yet that is precisely what people like Ursula von der Leyen are trying to choke off.European Values Are Buried in the Rush to War With RussiaThe banning of RT and Sputnik websites by members of NATO in the EU is a concerted effort to ensure conformity of an anti-Russia narrative across all platforms and to deny the EU public the diverging views or context that may lead them to better understand Russian military action in Ukraine, said Vanessa Beeley, an independent investigative journalist who specializes on the Middle East and Syria.This is part and parcel of the rising fascism and totalitarianism in the EU, particularly in France and Germany so it is inevitable that they will come to the aid of Nazi, fascist elements in Ukraine that are under attack from Russia determined to denazify Ukraine. All this while laying claim to democracy [and] human rights while demonstrating an alarming white supremacism in their reporting on the Ukraine crisis, invoking our sympathy for Ukrainians because they are more like us than the brown people NATO member states have been bombing, invading, occupying, pillaging and ethnically cleansing for decades, Beeley noted.Of course no country that has been targeted by NATO member states has had the power to silence western media, one of the most powerful weapons of mass destruction in the imperialist arsenal. What these NATO states are doing to shut down effectively the Russian equivalent of the BBC is an act of war and they are well aware of that, Beeley asserted.Facebook - or rather META - is in full support of the fascist and Nazi complex operating inside Ukraine with support from the West and Israel since before 2012, coming to power in 2014, facilitated by another US-manufactured regime change. It is amplifying Ukrainian far-right propaganda while silencing what is described as pro-Russia discourse. The fact that Russia sits on the UN Security Council seems to have escaped their notice. european union Sputnik International feedback@sputniknews.com +74956456601 MIA Rosiya Segodnya 252 60 2022 Sputnik International feedback@sputniknews.com +74956456601 MIA Rosiya Segodnya 252 60 News en_EN Sputnik International feedback@sputniknews.com +74956456601 MIA Rosiya Segodnya 252 60 1920 1080 true 1920 1440 true 1920 1920 true Sputnik International feedback@sputniknews.com +74956456601 MIA Rosiya Segodnya 252 60 Sputnik International feedback@sputniknews.com +74956456601 MIA Rosiya Segodnya 252 60 sputnik, rt, censorship, vanessa beeley, daniel lazare, european union https://sputniknews.com/20220302/uk-prime-minister-johnson-answers-mps-questions-on-ukraine--1093509737.html UK Prime Minister Johnson Answers MPs Questions on Ukraine UK Prime Minister Johnson Answers MPs Questions on Ukraine Russia's special operation in Ukraine, which was launched to protect the population of the People's Republics of Donetsk and Lugansk and to demilitarise and... 02.03.2022, Sputnik International 2022-03-02T11:41+0000 2022-03-02T11:41+0000 2022-03-02T11:41+0000 situation in ukraine boris johnson ukraine sanctions russia /html/head/meta[@name='og:title']/@content /html/head/meta[@name='og:description']/@content https://cdnn1.img.sputniknews.com/img/07e6/03/02/1093518035_0:0:1920:1080_1920x0_80_0_0_319b0c4da315c0c8f0a8ef5b63746c2b.jpg Sputnik is live from the House of Commons in London where UK Prime Minister Boris Johnson is set to answer questions from members of Parliament concerning the situation in Ukraine.Last week, when Russian President Putin announced a special operation in the country after the authorities of the Donbass republics asked for Moscow's help amid continued shelling by Ukrainian forces, the UK joined its allies in the US and EU to strongly condemn the operation and impose sanctions against Russia. The restrictive measures mainly focus on Russian banks, including switching several of them off from SWIFT, as well as on bilateral trade.The UK has also joined the EU in a move to close its airspace to all Russian flights.*Follow Sputnik's live feed to find out more. ukraine Sputnik International feedback@sputniknews.com +74956456601 MIA Rosiya Segodnya 252 60 2022 Sputnik International feedback@sputniknews.com +74956456601 MIA Rosiya Segodnya 252 60 News en_EN Sputnik International feedback@sputniknews.com +74956456601 MIA Rosiya Segodnya 252 60 UK Prime Minister Johnson Answers MPs Questions on Ukraine UK Prime Minister Johnson Answers MPs Questions on Ukraine 2022-03-02T11:41+0000 true PT67M10S 1920 1080 true 1920 1440 true 1920 1920 true Sputnik International feedback@sputniknews.com +74956456601 MIA Rosiya Segodnya 252 60 Sputnik International feedback@sputniknews.com +74956456601 MIA Rosiya Segodnya 252 60 boris johnson, ukraine, sanctions, russia, https://sputniknews.com/20220302/ukraine-conflict-likely-to-drive-rise-in-terrorism-cyberterrorism-report-says-1093521456.html Ukraine Conflict Likely to Drive Rise in Terrorism, Cyberterrorism, Report Says Ukraine Conflict Likely to Drive Rise in Terrorism, Cyberterrorism, Report Says LONDON (Sputnik) The ongoing Russian military operation in Ukraine is likely to cause a rise in traditional and cyberterrorism, reversing previous... 02.03.2022, Sputnik International 2022-03-02T12:34+0000 2022-03-02T12:34+0000 2022-03-02T12:35+0000 situation in ukraine ukraine cyberterrorism /html/head/meta[@name='og:title']/@content /html/head/meta[@name='og:description']/@content https://cdnn1.img.sputniknews.com/img/105507/07/1055070712_0:70:2969:1740_1920x0_80_0_0_71ba06474fbfbf415a31fc51518e7138.jpg The Ukraine conflict is likely to reverse gains in Russia and Eurasia, which recorded the largest improvement on the GTI in 2021, the report produced by the Institute for Economics and Peace (IEP) said.IEP founder and chairman Steve Killelea warned, however, that there is a risk that the global fight against terrorism could be sidelined by the attention drawn by the crisis in Ukraine.Last Thursday, Russia launched a special operation to "denazify" Ukraine, responding to calls from the breakaway republics of Donetsk and Lugansk. The Russian Defence Ministry said the special operation was targeting Ukrainian military infrastructure only.The move has elicited condemnation from Western leaders and the start of more sanctions against Russia. https://sputniknews.com/20220301/hackers-become-the-hacked-anonymous-site-taken-down-following-declaration-of-cyberwar-on-russia-1093496604.html ukraine Sputnik International feedback@sputniknews.com +74956456601 MIA Rosiya Segodnya 252 60 2022 Sputnik International feedback@sputniknews.com +74956456601 MIA Rosiya Segodnya 252 60 News en_EN Sputnik International feedback@sputniknews.com +74956456601 MIA Rosiya Segodnya 252 60 1920 1080 true 1920 1440 true 1920 1920 true Sputnik International feedback@sputniknews.com +74956456601 MIA Rosiya Segodnya 252 60 Sputnik International feedback@sputniknews.com +74956456601 MIA Rosiya Segodnya 252 60 ukraine, cyberterrorism https://sputniknews.com/20220302/us-president-joe-biden-delivers-state-of-union-address-1093475510.html US President Joe Biden Delivers State of Union Address US President Joe Biden Delivers State of Union Address The first State of the Union address by US President Joe Biden is taking place before a full joint session of Congress after last year's was limited to 20... 02.03.2022, Sputnik International 2022-03-02T02:08+0000 2022-03-02T02:08+0000 2022-03-02T02:08+0000 us joe biden state of the union /html/head/meta[@name='og:title']/@content /html/head/meta[@name='og:description']/@content https://cdnn1.img.sputniknews.com/img/07e6/03/02/1093503285_0:161:3070:1888_1920x0_80_0_0_41a1497b5408463ac007ebbcbf0c8b3c.jpg Joe Biden delivers his first State of the Union address to Congress on Tuesday, 1 March in Washington, DC.The US president delivers the address annually before a joint session of the US Congress. Traditionally, the president outlines the US economic and security situation and discusses the administrations legislative agenda.According to US media, this year, President Biden will focus on the economy and Russia amid the ongoing Moscow's special operation in Ukraine to disarm and 'denazify' the country.Follow Sputnik's Live Feed to Find Out More! Sputnik International feedback@sputniknews.com +74956456601 MIA Rosiya Segodnya 252 60 2022 Sputnik International feedback@sputniknews.com +74956456601 MIA Rosiya Segodnya 252 60 News en_EN Sputnik International feedback@sputniknews.com +74956456601 MIA Rosiya Segodnya 252 60 1920 1080 true 1920 1440 true 1920 1920 true Sputnik International feedback@sputniknews.com +74956456601 MIA Rosiya Segodnya 252 60 Sputnik International feedback@sputniknews.com +74956456601 MIA Rosiya Segodnya 252 60 us, joe biden, state of the union After recovering from injury, trotter Totally Ripped thrilled his connections with his first top-three finish in more than a year. That good fortune is being paid forward to support those impacted by the ongoing conflict in Ukraine. Sent postward at odds of 21-1 on Sunday (Feb. 27) at Flamboro Downs, Totally Ripped finished second in the $6,000 sixth race. He was driven by Paul MacKenzie and is trained by Dolores Basilone. Don Leschied, the proud owner of 11-year-old gelding Totally Ripped and vice president of Lakeshore Raceway at Leamington, said he will be donating a portion of his trotter's second-place earnings from the Saturday race to the Canadian Red Cross in support of Ukraine. "Matched by Canadas federal government, together $1,000 will help fund the Canadian Red Cross directed to Ukraine and joining Prime Minister Justin Trudeau in denouncing the criminal invasion by Russia of the free and democratic Ukraine," Leschied told Trot Insider of his donation. The Government of Canada has pledged to match every donation made by individual Canadians to the Canadian Red Cross between February 24 and March 18, up to a maximum of $10 million (CAD). Donated funds will allow the Red Cross to support preparedness, immediate and ongoing relief efforts, recovery, and other critical humanitarian activities as needs arise, both in Ukraine and surrounding countries, including support to populations that have been displaced by the conflict. William Bill John Carroll of Flamborough, Ont. passed away on Monday, Feb. 28 peacefully at the age of 98 years at Joseph Brant Hospital in Burlington, Ont. Bill will be lovingly remembered by his daughters, Marina Joan Carroll and Debbie Carroll, and son, Raymond Carroll (Ed). His loving wife, Ferne Audrey Lorene Carroll predeceased him. Bill was a WW2 veteran, a volunteer firefighter and a Standardbred harness racing owner and enthusiast since the 1930s with notable horses including Carroll Direct and Irene Scott. Bill was self-employed throughout his life, from real estate to sales. He loved the Toronto Blue Jays and the Toronto Maple Leafs. He had many friends young and old and will be greatly missed by his family and friends. Cremation has taken place. Friends and relatives are invited to a Visitation on Friday, March 4 from 10-11 a.m., with a Memorial Service beginning at 11 a.m. at Kitching, Steepe & Ludwig Funeral Home, 146 Mill St. N., Waterdown. No RSVP required. Private Family Interment at Our Lady of Mt. Carmel Cemetery, Freelton. Donations appreciated to the Heart and Stroke Foundation. Please join Standardbred Canada in offering condolences to the family and friends of Bill Carroll. A man who was indicted on a murder charge earlier this month in Maryland was apprehended early Sunday in a Fredericksburg motel room. Daran M. Horton, 22, of Baltimore, was arrested on a charge of being a fugitive from justice, city police spokeswoman Sarah Morris said. He is being held without bond in the Rappahannock Regional Jail pending extradition to Maryland. According to court records and a news release from the Maryland Attorney Generals office, Horton and two other young men were indicted on charges that include first-degree murder, arson and various weapons offenses. The charges stem from the January 2020 slayings of two brothers in Baltimore. Authorities said the slayings were the result of a botched marijuana deal. Fredericksburg police went to the Super 8 motel near the Spotsylvania Towne Centre early Sunday following a traffic stop about 11 p.m. Saturday at the intersection of Mall Court and State Route 3. A 38-year-old Stafford County woman was stopped after running a red light. Morris said that during the traffic stop, Nicole White was caught with illegal drugs and paraphernalia. She was taken into custody and charged with possession of illegal drugs. Following the encounter with White, police went to the motel at 3002 Mall Court to serve warrants on Horton and another wanted man. Morris said several illegal substances were in plain sight, including suspected crack cocaine, marijuana and capsules containing white powder. Derek A. Toles, 35, of Locust Grove, was taken into custody on two drug-related charges and a probation violation charge in Stafford. He is also being held without bond in the regional jail. Morris said additional charges are pending against Horton and Morris, contingent on lab results. The Bureau of Alcohol, Tobacco, Firearms and Explosives in Baltimore had offered a $5,000 reward for information leading to Hortons arrest. Authorities continue to investigate a rollover crash late Wednesday in which the circumstances remain unclear. Scotts Bluff County deputies dispatched to the site of a rollover accident discovered an upturned car on Wednesday, Feb. 23 with the driver nowhere to be seen. According to a press release from Scotts Bluff County Sheriff Mark Overman, deputies were dispatched to the scene of a crash at around 10:48 p.m. on Feb. 23, following an OnStar report. They found a vehicle upside-down in a creek near the intersection of County Road G and County Road 19, northwest of Scottsbluff. They found no one inside. The only clue to the drivers whereabouts was a single set of footprints leaving the scene on County Road 19. Deputies got in contact with the vehicles registered owner, Jack Darnell of rural Scottsbluff. Overman said Darnell told deputies he had not been behind the wheel when the vehicle crashed, and Darnell alleged someone had stolen the vehicle from his residence while he was with friends. Agencies that assisted at the scene included the Scottsbluff Rural Fire Department, Mitchell Police Department, Scottsbluff Police Department, Nebraska State Patrol and Valley Ambulance. Overman said the incident is still under investigation. Anyone with information about the event can contact the sheriffs office, 308-436-6667. Submit Your News We're always interested in hearing about news in our community. Let us know what's going on! Go to form Get local news delivered to your inbox! Subscribe to our Daily Headlines newsletter. Sign up! * I understand and agree that registration on or use of this site constitutes agreement to its user agreement and privacy policy. BARCELONA, Spain, March 2 (Xinhua) -- Xie Junshi, executive vice president and chief operating officer (COO) of Chinese telecommunications company ZTE Corporation, discussed a wide range of issues related to 5G and suggested that it could be a "social vaccine" during the ongoing Mobile World Congress (MWC) 2022 in Barcelona. After two years of cancellations and changes brought on by the coronavirus pandemic, the MWC is back in full swing this year. "This is the biggest, most impactful event for the world ICT (information and communications technology) industry and as we see the world is gradually recovering from the pandemic," Xie said in an exclusive interview with Xinhua. The pandemic coincided with the 5G rollout and this new technology has helped many people remain in touch with family and friends, and enabled them to work from home during periods of lockdown experienced in many countries. "I think 5G will bring very big changes to the whole industry. First of all -- and I think this is felt more deeply after the events of the past years -- digitalization may become a kind of social vaccine in the post-pandemic era." "The digitalization of communication, whether it is telecommuting, online collaboration, online shopping, and the digitalization of manufacturing, should play an irreplaceable role in the healthy development of the whole world economy, and also gradually enhance the immunity of the whole society, which I think is very important," he explained. The return of MWC allows companies to once again hold formal presentations of their new products, and ZTE is no different. "We have launched our simplest, easy-to-use 5G network solution, and solutions for efficient, intelligent operation and network maintenance. This is also very much in line with our future dual carbon strategy, as we work towards a green, low-carbon and sustainable future," Xie said. He said that ZTE would also "focus on launching new 5G customer premises equipment (CPE) products this year, as well as our global Blade series of smartphones." China is currently the world leader in the 5G rollout with "1.425 million 5G base stations" and "518 million" people having a 5G phone thanks to a very high 5G coverage allowing for "more than 10,000 5G industry applications." "A major benefit of 5G in typical application scenarios currently is that it reduces costs, improves quality and increases efficiency," Xie said, highlighting ZTE's "5G cloud-based AGV (automated guided vehicle)" as well as "domestic" and "global 5G industry applications," such as "smart ports in Belgium, smart medical care in Colombia, smart ecological agriculture in Austria, and smart manufacturing in Thailand." "Through such 5G industry applications, we can significantly reduce costs and improve efficiency," he said. Xie said he was excited to see the new applications that could emerge in the 5G era: "For example, WeChat exploded in the 3G era and Douyin (TikTok) emerged in the 4G era, so what will the killer app be in the 5G era?" He said this is of interest to most everyone," predicting further advances in "ultra-high definition video, as well as augmented reality (AR) and virtual reality (VR) applications." "We can already see this trend in China, South Korea and some other countries with high 5G penetration," he explained, adding that "5G technology has brought us improved audio-visual experience, with 360-degree views and far-and-close telescopic free views," which allow "viewers to sit at home and have the feeling of being there." Nebraska Game and Parks Commission educators have scheduled interesting and engaging events for the curious in March. Here are several opportunities: Game and Parks to host The Science of Salamanders Salamanders often are confused with lizards. But these aquatic amphibians couldnt be more different from their reptile counterparts. Join the Nebraska Game and Parks Commission for the virtual webinar The Science of Salamanders at 3 p.m. Central time March 3. Salamanders are some of the most secretive animals on the planet, and most people never see them. Their long bodies and short limbs support their lifestyle in damp conditions, which helps them breathe. They often can breathe through their skin. Join this webinar to learn more. The webinar is free, but registration is required in the calendar event entry at calendar.outdoornebraska.gov. The webinar will be recorded and posted to the Nebraska Game and Parks YouTube Education Channel. Contact monica.macoubrie@nebraska.gov for more information. Nature Experience Learning Centers educator training: Birds and Beaks The Nature Experience Learning Center educator trainings are a series of short virtual educator workshops, each focusing on a different nature topic. The topic at 1 p.m. March 10 will be birds and their beaks. This workshop is for in-home and center childcare providers of children ages birth through 5. Learn the similarities and differences between different wildlife tracks as well as everything students can acquire from looking at animal tracks. Fun activities will be included. Visit the event listing at calendar.outdoornebraska.gov to register. For questions, email jamie.bachmann@nebraska.gov. Nature Nerd Night to feature Starlight Ecology on March 15 Nocturnal animals have adapted to the night life. In the Nebraska Nature Nerd Night virtual webinar Starlight Ecology, outdoor educators will discuss how the night sky helps some animals find resources to survive. The free event starts at 7 p.m. Central time March 15. Registration is required through the event listing at calendar.outdoornebraska.gov. Participants also may submit questions to be answered during the webinar while registering. For more information, contact monica.macoubrie@nebraska.gov or follow the Nebraska Game and Parks Commission or Nebraska Wildlife Education on Facebook. Those unable to attend can view the recorded webinar on the Nebraska Game and Parks YouTube Education Channel. The Nebraska Nature Nerd Night series, for curious adults, takes places on the third Tuesday of every month. Submit Your News We're always interested in hearing about news in our community. Let us know what's going on! Go to form Northfield fourth graders celebrated one giant birthday party for the state of Nebraska, which turned 155 years old this year, on Tuesday, March 1. With fourth grade being the year Nebraskan students learn about their state history, Northfield fourth grade teacher Allison Wagner thought it would only make sense to celebrate the states birthday with four mini sessions representing each century of its history. I figured it was a good time to celebrate and kind of incorporate all the different things that we have learned, she said. Weve all dressed in red to represent our state. The first station was a presentation from a former history teacher Jurene Chief Eagle, who taught on a reservation and married a Native American, along with her grandson, Northfield alum Preston Lenoir, who regularly attends and performs at the Sun Dance ceremony in the summer. Chief Eagle and Lenoir taught the students a few words in Lakota, showed various Native American items and artifacts and even let them play a drum that Lenoir personally made. Lenoir said he got into the drumming and singing part of his culture back in sixth grade right there in the Northfield Elementary building. It all started here at the school in sixth grade. In sixth grade, we were working on assignments on the Chromebooks, and so I went on YouTube to search up Sun Dance songs, he said. You could listen to music and stuff (during homework) because they gave us headphones or earbuds. So, I listened to it there, and one time I went home and I suddenly realized Im kind of humming along, so I was like, Oh, I know the song. So then I was like, Well, Im just going to start you know listening to more and more, and then here we are now. Students then traveled to the 1800s, in which they learned how to square dance and dosey doe with some help from Northfield music teacher Kathleen Rose. From there, they hit the Great Depression in the 1900s and did a stock market crash simulator activity. Each student was given a job, a house, so much money in savings and so much money invested in the stocks. Then, the students would go through the chain reaction of losing the stock market money, losing the savings, losing the job, etc. One student asked after losing her savings, How am I supposed to pay off my house? which was exactly the lesson Wagner was hoping the fourth grade students would take away from the activity. Finally, the 2000s session consisted of a little art project of making coasters with the state symbols, so they can take that home to remember it, Wagner said. As those dried, they played a game of trivia in which Students raced to answer questions like What do we have in Nebraska that looks like Stonehenge? and What is it called when a person waves at another with two fingers from behind the steering wheel? The birthday celebration was complete with snacks originating from Nebraska, like Kool-Aid and Dorothy Lynch with carrots and celery, of course. Wagner said the day was great, and she couldnt have pictured a better way for students to celebrate and learn about state history. Fourth grades just awesome getting to learn about their state, their home, she said. Submit Your News We're always interested in hearing about news in our community. Let us know what's going on! Go to form Want to see more like this? Get our local education coverage delivered directly to your inbox. Sign up! * I understand and agree that registration on or use of this site constitutes agreement to its user agreement and privacy policy. Judges Randy Raines of Gering, Austin Sailors of Mitchell, Michael Stephens of Chadron and Gary Hall of Loveland, Colorado were asked to offer encouragement and advice to help the young musicians improve as players. Students were judged on articulation, balance and blend, dynamics, interpretation and style, intonation, literature, note accuracy, phrasing, posture, rhythm, technique, tempo, tone quality, and stage presence. Judges award a rating of l - superior, ll - excellent, lll - good. The western part of Nebraska is fortunate to have many terrific young musicians, Michael Koch, director of bands at Bluffs Middle School said. Their work in and out of the rehearsal is always a source of pride in the Panhandle. On behalf of myself and everyone involved, I would like to thank you for supporting the Western Nebraska Middle-Level Music Contest. SCOTTSBLUFF Western Nebraska Community Colleges Career Pathways & Advising department will host a job and internship fair, Thursday, March 24, at Cougar Palace on the Scottsbluff Campus. The event is the last of three job and internship fairs the CP&A department will host, one in each campus community, in the spring semester. The Scottsbluff fair will be open to all students and community members from 2-5 p.m., and will include a variety of businesses from the Panhandle that are looking to fill open job and internship listings. Those in the community searching for employment or interested in a new career path are encouraged to attend. The Job & Internship Fair will also provide an opportunity for employers to meet with other businesses and network with a potential future workforce. This is a great opportunity for students and community members to learn about local businesses, practice networking skills and potentially find new or more meaningful work, Gail Bower, career pathways advisor, said. In addition to the fair, WNCC will host a Work in Progress event on Thursday, March 3, in the Learning Commons on the Scottsbluff Campus from 11 a.m. to 1 p.m. The workshop will cover interview techniques, cover letter and resume critiques, and other helpful resources to help navigate the job market and better prepare prospective employees for the fair. There is no charge for job seekers to attend either the Work in Progress event or the fair, and no RSVP is required. Businesses looking to reserve a booth at the Scottsbluff Job and Internship Fair will be charged a small fee. For more information, contact Bower at bowerg@wncc.edu or 308-635-6336. Submit Your News We're always interested in hearing about news in our community. Let us know what's going on! Go to form We Nebraskans will be casting our ballots for a new governor this year. On the Republican side of the ballot a number of candidates are battling to win the May primary and get their names on the November ballot. These candidates are trying to get their messages out as to why you should cast your vote for them. Their campaigns define the images and issues probably not entirely without polling data. But they are trying to tell us what they think we think matters (if you can follow that). We want to try something a little different. We want to find out what issues in the gubernatorial race matter most to you. So we're launching a statewide, unscientific poll to see what's on the minds of Nebraskans. We're not trying to figure out what Nebraskans think is the answer to tax reform, but how important is it. How important immigration is, rural-urban tension, and a number of other things. We want to know what Nebraskans care about, and then we want to help Nebraskans get answers to how, specifically, candidates prioritize and would solve issues. We hope to see how different issues matter differently depending on where and how folks live. If you're reading this in print, you can snap a photo of the QR code at the end of this column on your smartphone, and you'll be linked to the survey or you can go to https://nebraskapapers.survey.fm/nebraska-citizen-survey. Either way we hope to hear from you. The survey will be open through March 15. Your responses will help us have a more substantive discussion about what we need as we elect the top executive in this state in November. Submit Your News We're always interested in hearing about news in our community. Let us know what's going on! Go to form Get Government & Politics updates in your inbox! Stay up-to-date on the latest in local and national government and political topics with our newsletter. Sign up! * I understand and agree that registration on or use of this site constitutes agreement to its user agreement and privacy policy. Runza restaurants are coming to Wyoming, and Torrington will be one of the first places to get one. According to Jon Wurst, Runzas director of franchising and partnership development, Torrington is a natural fit. Were not as synonymous as the major QSR (quick-service restaurant) players are. Were not nationwide, he said. Were looking at expanding where we currently are. Since Torrington is so close to Scottsbluff and Gering, workers commuting between the cities could stop by a Runza in any of them for lunch, Wurst added. Additionally, Torrington residents who do travel to Nebraska already know what to expect at a Runza restaurant. The brand awareness is already there; we just have to find that great franchisee, Wurst said. ... Its not rocket science. It (Torrington) is right where you need it to be. At this stage, the company is looking for a suitable location and a franchisee. Wurst said he had reached out to Goshen Economic Development to help spread the word. Runza in Torrington would go over really well, Goshen Economic Development CEO Brayden Connour said. He said his group has been creating social media adds to encourage franchisee applications since at least the beginning of the year. Once Wurst has a suitable application, he estimated it would take around 250 days to open the restaurant. However, it might take longer due to supply chain issues. Torrington would be the companys second Wyoming location. The first Wyoming Runza will be located in northeast Cheyenne, situated between a Taco Johns to the east and a City Brew Coffee to the west. Wyoming wont be the only new state the company is expanding to. Wurst said the Lincoln-based company plans to add at least two South Dakota locations, including one in Rapid City. Currently, there are 85 Runza restaurants: 80 in Nebraska, two each in Colorado and Iowa, and one in Kansas. Wurst said the company will add additional Iowa, Kansas and Nebraska locations in the next two years. One such Nebraska location will be in Alliance. It will be owned by franchisees Neal and Lora Blomenkamp, who also own Runza restaurants in Scottsbluff, Gering and Chadron. Wurst said the Alliance location will open next month. Nebraska is pretty saturated right now with Runza stores, he said. Were getting to (cities with) the 2,000 4,000 population. Weve pretty much hit all the major population centers. The expansion into new states will only target areas close to the Nebraska state lines. Submit Your News We're always interested in hearing about news in our community. Let us know what's going on! Go to form Get local news delivered to your inbox! Subscribe to our Daily Headlines newsletter. Sign up! * I understand and agree that registration on or use of this site constitutes agreement to its user agreement and privacy policy. by Betty L. Martin HOUSTON, March 2 (Xinhua) -- Much more Republicans than Democrats across the second most populous U.S. state of Texas turned out in Tuesday's primary election, which ushered in the country's 2022 midterm cycle, votes counting showed on Wednesday. Voters sent Democrat Beto O'Rourke to challenge two-term Republican Governor Greg Abbott in November and Republican George P. Bush to face off against Republican incumbent Attorney General Ken Paxton during runoffs in May. With more than 75 percent of the votes counted, nearly 800,000 more Republicans than Democrats voted for a candidate for governor, a gap far larger than the last midterm primary election in Texas four years ago, The New York Times reported on Wednesday. Lawrence Jackson, a Navy Vietnam war veteran, retired oil and gas worker and lifelong Democrat, voted for a straight Democratic ticket and was disappointed that Texas's Lieutenant Governor Dan Patrick handily won reelection outright with at least 50 percent plus 1 vote, and therefore no runoff is needed with any Republican or Democrat challenger. "I didn't expect a large turnout because this was the first election since Gov. Abbott and Patrick spearheaded the Texas Legislature's vote to restrict voting by eliminating drive-through and late-night voting and reducing the number of polling places with heavy Democrat and minority populations," Jackson, 77, a resident of Houston, told Xinhua. Abbott and Patrick were also behind the state law allowing permitless carry of gun purchases and the law that criminalizes abortion and puts a bounty on any woman who seeks to have the procedure or anyone who helps her, including the Uber driver who drives her to the clinic. Jackson said he believes that despite the preponderance of Republican wins, Texas is going from a "red" conservative state to a "blue," more progressive state, though there are large swaths of Texas that are untouched by the more left-wing mind-set and are not yet even purple. Abbott is facing a November runoff with O'Rourke, seen as a progressive by many Texan voters, and it "is something that we would not have seen a year or more ago," Jackson said. The early primary is important to elect more progressive candidates who agree that the major issues facing Texas are fair housing, jobs and education, he said. "It's time to give everybody the right to vote and the right to responsible gun ownership. To elect more people who want to restrict guns, not votes." Houstonian Ronnye Cowell, 62, a retired Democrat, sees three important issues concerning Texan voters as curbing crime, boosting border security and containing taxes. The Texas primary is definitely a preview of the 2024 presidential election, "offering the motivation to vote," Cowell told Xinhua. A supporter of former Republican President Donald Trump, Robert Chase, 64, voted for a straight Republican ticket on Tuesday. Chase supervises a multinational pipefitting group for a Houston construction company. He told Xinhua that in his view, border security is the top issue in Texas and the whole country today. "We don't just have Mexican and South American drug cartels, but also people from the Middle Eas are just joining and blending in with the Hondurans, Mexicans and other people south of the border and coming here to get tax-free lives, free medical, free college and all the other free stuff that our government just gives them," Chase claimed. Though for most Americans, few, if not none, are free in the country. Chase also said he believes that an unchecked number of criminals come across the U.S.-Mexico every day, and Trump was cheated by Democrats in the 2020 election. While Chase is unhappy that Abbott has to contest against O'Rourke to serve his third term as governor, retired public relations specialist Rebecca Morgan told Xinhua that if Republicans like Abbott, Patrick and Paxton are all successful in their quest to remain in Texas's top spots, she might consider moving away from the state where she was born to a more progressive state. "I think Texas really is becoming more progressive, at least less crazy with the whole pro-Trump far right wing thing," she said. "But if that's true, it is happening at a snail's pace. I just don't think that I have the patience anymore." The Texas primary is also the first statewide election in which voters will cast their ballots following the redistricting based on the results of the 2020 national census, as well as the first statewide election after Texas enacted its controversial voting law in December. Democrats haven't won a statewide election in Texas since 1994. Iredell Countys leading hospice and palliative care provider announced that Erin Carnes, MD, has been promoted to chief medical officer. Carnes will provide leadership and medical oversight for both palliative and hospice care programs. We are excited to announce the promotion of Dr. Carnes to chief medical officer, as she has been an integral part of the organizations continued growth and achievement over the last several years. Since Dr. Carnes joined our team in 2019, the organization has grown with the addition of several palliative care clinics and this past September, the opening of the S. Mitchell Mack Hospice House. We know that with Dr. Carnes as our Chief Medical Officer, HPCIC will have the medical leadership necessary to continue to provide extraordinary care to patients and families, said Mike Smith, president/CEO of Hospice and Palliative Care of Iredell. Carnes is board-certified in emergency medicine and has received her Hospice Medical Director Certification (HMDC). She is a graduate of Wofford College and attended medical school at the University of South Carolina. She completed her residency at Wake Forest Baptist Hospital. Carnes joined HPCIC with several years of hospice and palliative care experience in both the home and inpatient settings. It has been an honor to serve as the medical director for HPCIC, and I am now thankful for this new opportunity to serve as the chief medical officer. I remain committed to providing the highest quality end-of-life care to patients and their families, Carnes said. For additional information about Hospice & Palliative Care of Iredell County, call 704-873-4719 or visit www.hoic.org. Five people were arrested last month on felony and misdemeanor charges stemming from a series of incidents investigated by the Iredell Countys Sheriffs Office. The investigations started Jan. 2 when deputies received a report about the theft of a 2019 Honda Rancher ATV and the attempted theft of a 2020 Honda ATV from the Olin Turf Farm in the area of Tomlin Mill Road, Sheriff Darren Campbell said. That case, along with those from thefts at other businesses in the area, was assigned to detectives who saw similarities in them, which led detectives to determine several suspects who lived near the crime scenes were involved, Campbell said. On Feb. 11, deputies went to the residence at 694 Turnersburg Highway after receiving information about the location of a stolen motor vehicle, Campbell said. There they found a 1982 Jeep Scrambler that matched the description of one stolen Jan. 17 at Doosan Portable Power. While there, deputies found Christopher Gage Handy, 24, of Statesville. Handy said he recently purchased the Jeep, Campbell said. But deputies seized the vehicle when they found that it had been recently spray-painted black and its original vehicle identification number had been removed and altered. In another incident, deputies responding Feb. 20 to a call about an occupied suspicious vehicle at a barn on Lundy Road found a 1992 Ford Explorer displaying a fictitious license plate, Campbell said. The occupants of the vehicle were identified as Lane Alexander Perry, 26, of Salisbury, and Chelsea Nicole Millsaps, 30, of Statesville. A records check showed that Perry had an outstanding order for arrest for failure to appear on a misdemeanor larceny charge in Rowan County. Deputies arrested him and Millsaps after a search of their vehicle yielded methamphetamine and drug paraphernalia, Campbell said. The final incident developed from information obtained from Millsaps about two people living at 340 Lundy Road. On Feb. 23, sheriffs detectives and deputies from the warrant squad went there to serve an order for arrest on Jonathan Ray Lowman, 36, of Statesville, the owner of the residence, for failure to appear on a violation of a domestic violence protective order, Campbell said. While traveling to 340 Lundy, deputies received information that Handy, who was wanted on larceny of a motor vehicle and altering a vehicle identification number charges, also was living there, Campbell said. Handy was found hiding in the homes attic near a loaded AK-47-style rifle, Campbell said. Lowman and Jody Randall Swaim, 37, of Statesville, were found hiding together in another area of the attic. Swaim had numerous felony arrest warrants for absconding from probation in January 2021, Campbell said. After the three men were arrested, Detectives J. Graves, and D.C. Wyatt saw several items matching stolen property descriptions from recent local larceny reports and numerous pieces of drug paraphernalia, Campbell said. The detectives secured the residence and applied for a search warrant. The stolen 2019 Honda Rancher ATV also was found there. It had been spray painted with different colors, Campbell said, and its identifying numbers had been ground off. Using surveillance photos, Wyatt identified Lowman and Swaim as the suspects in the ATV theft, Campbell said. The following charges were filed: Perry was charged with felony possession of methamphetamine and failure to appear. Bond was set at $11,000. Millsaps was charged with felony possession of methamphetamine and misdemeanor possession of drug paraphernalia. Bond was set at $10,000. Swaim was charged with felony larceny, felony attempted felony larceny and felony conspire to commit felony larceny. Bond was set at $75,000. Handy was charged with felony possession of a firearm by a convicted felon, felony larceny of motor vehicle parts, felony larceny of a motor vehicle, felony attempted felony larceny and felony alteration of a motor vehicle identification number. Bond was set at $45,000. Lowman was charged with felony possession of heroin, misdemeanor possession of drug paraphernalia and failure to appear in violation of a domestic violence protective order. Bond was set at $75,000. This investigation is ongoing, Campbell said. Perrys history includes felony larceny of a firearm, felony possession of a stolen firearm and felony possession of a firearm by a convicted felon and misdemeanor charges of possession of drug paraphernalia, consuming alcohol under 21 years of age, DWI, driving after consuming alcohol, driving while license is revoked, larceny and interference with an electronic monitoring device. Millsaps history includes felony fleeing to elude arrest with a motor vehicle and breaking or entering a motor vehicle and misdemeanor fictitious information to an officer, possession of drug paraphernalia, larceny and second-degree trespassing. Swaims history includes felony possession with intent to sell or deliver a Schedule IV substance, possession with intent to sell or deliver a Schedule II substance and possession of a methamphetamine precursor and misdemeanor charges of resisting a public officer, possession of drug paraphernalia, DWI, larceny, fictitious information to an officer and assault inflicting serious injury. Handys history includes felony larceny after breaking or entering, possession of controlled substance in jail or prison, possession of methamphetamine, sell or deliver of a Schedule II substance, interference with a jail or prison fire suppression system and larceny of a firearm and misdemeanor injury to personal property, larceny, carrying a concealed weapon and possession of marijuana. Lowmans history includes misdemeanor possession of an alcoholic beverage under 21 years of age and domestic violence protection order violation. Follow Ben Gibson on Facebook and Twitter at @BenGibsonSRL Get local news delivered to your inbox! Subscribe to our Daily Headlines newsletter. Sign up! * I understand and agree that registration on or use of this site constitutes agreement to its user agreement and privacy policy. Two Statesville men were sentenced to federal prison Tuesday for robbing two convenience stores at gunpoint. U.S. District Judge Kenneth D. Bell sentenced Anthony Dwayne Turner Jr., 23, of Statesville to 135 months in prison and three years of supervised release, Dena J. King, U.S. attorney for the Western District of North Carolina, announced. Turners co-defendant, Xavier Lamar Poteat, 21, also of Statesville, was sentenced to three years in prison and two years of supervised release for his role in the robbery. Robert R. Wells, special agent in charge of the FBIs Charlotte office, Mooresville police Chief Ron Campurciani and Troutman police Chief Josh Watson joined King in making the announcement. At about 2:30 a.m. Oct. 9, 2020, Turner and Poteat walked into a BP convenience store in Iredell County, according to court documents and the sentencing hearing. As Poteat waited by the door, Turner approached the store clerk, pointed a firearm at the clerk and demanded money. The clerk gave all of the money in both registers to Turner, and he and Poteat fled. About 3:40 a.m. that day, Turner and Poteat entered a Circle K convenience store in Iredell County and repeated the robbery, court documents say. Officers responding to the robbery found Turner and Poteats vehicle, and the two men were arrested shortly thereafter. The officers also found two firearms in the vehicle. Turner has previous felony convictions, and he is prohibited from possessing a firearm, court records say. On Oct. 21, 2021, he pleaded guilty to robbery of a business affecting interstate commerce under the Hobbs Act and use, carry and brandishing of a firearm in furtherance of a crime of violence. Poteat pleaded guilty to a Hobbs Act robbery. Here's a look at some of today's COVID-19 news. Revelers decked out in traditional purple, green and gold came out to party on Fat Tuesday in New Orleans first full-dress Mardi Gras since 2020. The fun includes back-to-back parades across the city and marches through the French Quarter and beyond, with masks against COVID-19 required only in indoor public spaces. Parade routes are shorter than usual, because there aren't enough police for the standard ones, even with officers working 12-hour shifts as they always do on Mardi Gras and the days leading up to the end of the Carnival season. But with COVID-19 hospitalizations and case numbers falling worldwide and 92% of the city's adults at least partly vaccinated, parades and other festivities are back on after a season without them. Hundreds of thousands of devotees crowded a revered Hindu temple in Nepals capital for a festival on Tuesday as coronavirus cases decline and life returns to normal. Around a million devotees were expected to visit the temple to Hindu god Shiva on Shivaratri, one of Nepal's most cherished festivals. Temples, schools and markets have begun to reopen in recent weeks as the number of COVID-19 cases declines. On Monday, just 180 new infections were reported, down from a peak of over 9,000 per day in January. Most adults in the United States are getting back to some degree of pre-pandemic normalcy, but they're divided over concerns and expectations for what's next. Three surveys conducted in February -- from the Kaiser Family Foundation, Axios/Ipsos and the Washington Post in collaboration with ABC News -- asked adults to assess the current state of the pandemic in the United States. Only a third of adults think the virus is "completely" or "mostly" under control, according to the Post/ABC survey. But most think the worst is behind them, the KFF survey found. As the United States emerges from the Omicron wave, Covid-19 testing has slowed to a fraction of what it was at the beginning of the year. In mid-January, as daily case counts reached their peak, about 2.5 million tests were processed each day in the United States. Now, there are about 670,000 tests coming through each day, according to data from the US Department of Health and Human Services. "Testing, especially as the Omicron wave goes down, does not lose its relevance," epidemiologist Dr. Michael Mina emphasized. "Testing is how we see the virus. We can't see it if we do not test." Read more of the day's COVID news here: White House will roll out next phase of Covid-19 response Wednesday The White House will roll out a new strategy laying out the next phase of its response to the coronavirus pandemic on Wednesday, two administration officials told CNN, outlining a vision that involves fewer disruptions to daily life while preparing for the unpredictable potential of another game-changing variant. *** Choteau, MT (59422) Today Partly cloudy this evening with more clouds for overnight. Low 47F. Winds WSW at 10 to 20 mph.. Tonight Partly cloudy this evening with more clouds for overnight. Low 47F. Winds WSW at 10 to 20 mph. Demonstrators gathered in Wytheville Feb 23 to call on Congress to finish work on the budget and fund health care. Holding signs urging passing motorists to Honk for Healthcare and calling for Healthcare for All, members of Virginia Organizings emerging Wytheville Chapter and leaders from the New River Valley chapter and other parts of Southwest Virginia gathered in front of the Brock Hughes Medical Center. Organizers said they are fighting for everyone and call quality, affordable and equitable healthcare for everyone. They want legislators to lower the price of prescription Medicaid, close the Medicaid coverage gap and make private insurance, child care and other services more affordable. Those demonstrating said they chose to stand in front of the Brock Hughes center because the clinic does its best to make sure everyone who wants healthcare gets it, and because its Monroe Street location is highly visible. Georgia Randall worked as a nurse for 34 years and said she knows first-hand how healthcare is not always equal and how the costs can devastate patients and families. Through her work as an ICU and emergency room nurse, and as an administrator, she said she has seen how people with good insurance and money have a different set of healthcare available to them. The continuity isnt there, she said. Healthcare is a right, not a privilege, and it needs to be equitable for everybody. For information on Virginia Organizing, visit the groups website at www.virginia-organizing.org or the groups Facebook page. To reach reporter Millie Rothrock, call 276-228-6611, ext. 573, or email mrothrock@wythenews.com. A Bristol, Tennessee, man has been charged after authorities said he helped three escapees in Johnson City, Tennessee, including one that faces charges in connection with a 2021 shooting in Bristol, Virginia. On Tuesday, the Johnson City Police Department arrested Nathan Adams, 28, and charged him with three counts of facilitating escape, according to a news release. At 5:35 p.m. Tuesday, officers with the JCPD were notified of three inmates of the Johnson City Detention Facility had walked away from a work detail at Freedom Hall Civic Center, the release states. It was discovered that Mr. Adams gave a ride to the three escapees and transported them to an undisclosed location, police said in the news release. Adams is being held on $30,000 bail at the Washington County Detention Center in Jonesborough. Hes scheduled to be arraigned Thursday in Washington County Sessions Court. Police continued to search Wednesday for Brianna Marie Fleenor, 30, and Kayla Danielle Pierson, 25, who both are serving sentences on meth charges, and Mary Elizabeth Dunn, who was sentenced for felony theft and evading arrest, the release states. On Wednesday, Sergeant Steve Crawford with the Bristol Virginia Police Department confirmed Fleenor is also wanted in connection with a 2021 shooting at Eastridge Apartments. She faces charges of malicious wounding and possession of a firearm by a felon. Fleenor is accused of shooting a man in the shoulder as he sat in his car at the apartment complex, according to police. The man has since recovered. Crawford said there appears to have been a verbal dispute. Fleenor was later arrested in Tennessee, where she has served time on various drug-related charges. All three women remained at large late Wednesday. Anyone with information relevant to the escape investigation or the whereabouts of the three women is asked to call 911, the Johnson City Police Departments Criminal Investigation Division at (423) 434-6166 or to remain anonymous, Crime Stoppers at (423) 434-6158, the release states. Messages can also be sent to the Johnson City Police Department Website to crimestopper@johnsoncitytn.org. Be the first to know Get local news delivered to your inbox! Sign up! * I understand and agree that registration on or use of this site constitutes agreement to its user agreement and privacy policy. ABINGDON, Va. The Abingdon Arts Depot is going to the dogs and cats, birds and other animals. The art gallery opened the new artist exhibit Animal Magnetism last week, featuring the original works of resident members as well as community artists. An opening reception to meet and greet the artists was held last Saturday at the gallery. The exhibit features 45 pieces of work by 34 artists, some of whom entered two pieces of work. According to Karen Moore, arts administrator for the gallery, the first-time animal-themed exhibit was left open for artists to interpret according to their own inspirations, using a variety of mediums including oil, acrylic, sculpture, stained glass, ceramic and photography. Entries were not limited to animals from a particular geographic area. The show may be the only exhibit at the Abingdon gallery this year that involves entries from the public at large. We need to reserve the Spotlight Gallery for juried artists and the upcoming juried fine arts exhibit during the Virginia Highlands Festival, said Moore. In this show, contributing artists have portrayed a broad range of species, both domesticated and wild. I think that topic alone will draw people, she said. Moore sees an uptick in visitors anytime the gallery can include community artists. Large group shows tend to attract family and friends, which helps our visitor pool increase a bit. Shows like this one demonstrate the inspiration human beings can feel for other species, she said. Personally, I think it has to do with compassion. Our connection to the larger world helps us identify with those who are different from ourselves yet share the same love of life. The artists The exhibit includes the work of several community artists. Kevin Burrill painted a red-bellied woodpecker and a red wolf on wood. Greg Howser created his rendition of a cat. The cat is one of my favorites in the exhibit, said Moore. His artwork is very popular. We usually cant keep one on the wall here before its sold. Artist Theresa McGrath made a ceramic piece entitled Working from Home that depicts a whimsical hen wearing an apron. A terracotta sculpture by Helen French portrays a ram mounted on a piece of wood that resembles a cliff. The exhibit also includes artwork by resident artists. Steven Reeves will melt the hearts of visitors when they see his cat portrait, Kitty Kitty. Joyce Samuel used watercolors to paint an elephant in its natural habitat. Carina Karlsson created a three-dimensional assemblage entitled, 3X Cooler Than a Unicorn. Rita Nabors painted a fawn, and Sara Reese created a ceramic butterfly perched on drift wood. Both of these works have sold. The exhibit closes April 9. Follow the Abingdon Arts Depot on Facebook, or by visiting www.abingdonartsdepot.org. Call the Arts Depot at 276-628-9091 for more information. Carolyn R. Wilson is a freelance writer in Glade Spring, Virginia. Contact her at news@washconews.com. CHILHOWIE, Va. A Chilhowie, Virginia, man has combined his Christian faith with his love of dogs to help serve frontline workers during the pandemic. Through his friendship ministry, Paws for Christ, Andy Overbay is putting smiles on the faces of staff and nurses at Smyth County Community Hospital every time he shows up for a visit with his therapy dog, Bear, an English springer spaniel. Before the pandemic, Overbay brought the tail-wagging, sociable therapy dog to the hospital to visit with patients, but until COVID restrictions are lifted, he enjoys the weekly visits with staff members only. Hospital security officer, Brandon Hamm, takes note when the therapy dog arrives. I know when I see Andy and Bear that automatically they will put smiles on team members faces in this stressful time, Hamm said. Overbay, a farmer and senior agriculture extension agent for Smyth County, has taken time from his schedule the past 10 years to make the hospital visits an accumulation of more than 400 visits. The mission of Paws for Christ is to spread faith and love and to be an encouragement for those people who simply need a friend. Weekly devotionals written by Overbay are posted every Sunday morning to the Paws for Christ Facebook page at www.facebook.com/pause4christ. Our motto is you dont have to have paws to participate. You just have to pause to be a friend to someone, Overbay said. The busiest person always can make time to be nice. Thats something weve lost as a society. Its pretty hard not to smile and just feel good all over when the frontline workers lay eyes on the therapy dog with the large floppy ears and expressive eyes. The nurses and staff, many of whom are feeling weary from the pandemic, take time out during their busy days to give the dog kisses and hugs during its regular visits to the hospital. Its just like Christmas for the staff when we show up, Overbay said. When the dog comes, its a good day. Judy Colley, executive assistant at the hospital, said Overbay has been devoted to bringing Bear for visits with team members throughout the pandemic. Oftentimes Andy has Bear dressed for the occasion, such as Halloween or Christmas. You can hear the joy in team members voices echo in the hallways as Andy and Bear come to visit. Its such a display of selflessness as Andy serves others by giving them a moment of happiness during their busy and often stressful day, Colley said. Cindy Becker, a registered nurse at the hospital, said she enjoys seeing Bear while she works, even if its only for a few moments. Their visits really help to lift the mood, she said. It is a nice break in the day to visit with Bear, Kelley Grey, who works as a physical therapist at the hospital, said. Paws for Christ Studies have shown that dogs produce feel-good vibes for most all of us, including people who are struggling with medical conditions, such as military veterans with post-traumatic stress, children with autism, the elderly with mobility issues and people with anxiety. There are all kinds of people who need someone to listen to them or to give them advice. There are all kinds of ways you can be a friend to someone, Overbay said. Bear is not the first dog belonging to the Overbay family who lifts the spirits of people. Earlier, Overbay owned two English springer spaniels, Bo and Ty, who were his pioneer therapy dogs. The dogs captured the familys hearts, and even after their deaths, there are remembered by photographs on walls and a license plate that bears their names. Over the past seven years, Overbay said he has written four picture story childrens books, each told from the dogs perspectives. The first one focused on the adventures of Bo and Ty; the second one is about the dogs visit to Overbays alma mater, Virginia Tech; the third one is a Christmas book. The last book, written by Ty, as told to his human owner, is dedicated to his canine companion Bo, who died in 2019. This book is about coping with grief and finding joy after experiencing death, Overbay said. If you wrote a dogs last will and testament, it would tell you that a dog that is loved is the richest being on earth. The only legacy they can leave behind is for you to give that same love to another dog. After learning that his English springer spaniels had a knack for making people feel better, Overbay created the friendship ministry in 2012 to help cheer people when they need it the most. Certified by the Alliance of Therapy Dogs in Cheyenne, Wyoming, and Canines for Christ based in Lutz, Florida, Overbay has taken his dogs on visits to sites like nursing homes, hospitals, 4-H camps and schools. Not only is he required to follow the rules set by the therapy dog organizations, but he also has to be mindful of hospital regulations. One of the requirements is the dog has to be on a 4-foot leash, he said. Hospital visits Overbay is a firm believer in the old adage that dogs are mans best friend. But the dog owner can vouch that dogs are mans best medicine, too. Bear, who came along after the loss of Bo and Ty, is just like a team member at the hospital, riding elevators and trotting into the rooms of patients. Before the pandemic, he made his rounds through the hospital, often spending time with patients who need a dose of good cheer. Overbay recalled when nurses were unsuccessful at getting an elderly stroke victim to use her left hand. My dog jumped on the left arm of the chair, and the patient moved her left hand to pet him. The nurses knew something special had happened, he said. Another case involved a woman who was being monitored for high blood pressure. When the patient began petting the dog, her blood pressure returned to normal. Another patient was recovering from heart surgery. The nurse had tried coaxing the patient to attend therapy services, but nothing was working. When the patient spotted the therapy dog, he agreed to get the help he needed if he could pet the animal. I still have a picture of my dog Ty with his ears hanging off the bed completely upside down and the man rubbing his belly. Two weeks later, the patient walked out of the hospital, he said. In addition, Overbay continues to bring Bear to visit with his 91-year-old mother, June Overbay, at her nearby home every day. Bear is good company for her. He lifts her spirits. Thats what those little guys do. They take your mind off your troubles. Carolyn R. Wilson is a freelance writer in Glade Spring, Virginia. Contact her at citydesk@bristolnews.com. ABINGDON, Va. Nine-year-old Eli Brooks had a special reason for wanting to compete in this years George Washington essay contest through his school. The assignment to write about the countrys first president was a little more personal for the High Point Elementary student because Elis father, David Brooks, is serving in the Army National Guard as chaplain for the 429th Brigade Support Battalion. During a phone interview last week, the father and son agreed that Brooks is fighting for the same country that George Washington helped start. Elis research essay, entitled George Washington: Americas Father, has won first place in the research essay competition, an annual event for fourth grade students in Washington County. As top winner in the school district, the student won an all-expense paid trip to Mount Vernon in Alexandria, Virginia, for himself and his family. The Washington essay award comes only a few weeks after Eli placed second in the Black Forts Chapter of the Daughters of the American Revolution essay contest, in which he shared his thoughts on what the American flag means to him. The school year has been full of stellar achievements for this young scholar, said Jennifer ONeill, principal at High Point Elementary. Kylie Griffith, who teaches Virginia studies at High Point Elementary, said, Eli provides valuable and meaningful input in our classroom discussions, I think that transitions to his writing. Second place in the Washington essay competition was awarded to Blake Wise of Abingdon Elementary, and third place went to Evan Pierce of Watauga Elementary. All three students read their winning essays in front of an audience of parents, students and school administrators during a ceremony in the ballroom of the Martha Washington Inn last week. The students were recognized for their exemplary skills at researching and preparing the essays. The school system resumed their tradition of holding the ceremony at the Abingdon inn after COVID-19 restrictions moved the ceremony to a shortened service at the Southwest Virginia Higher Education Center last year. Dressed in Colonial attire, retired educators David Winship and Katie Mitchell played the roles of George and Martha Washington during the event. The Muster Grounds Musick Fife and Drum Corps played historic period music. The top three district winners received monetary awards and George Washington Commemorative Coins. In addition, the 21 student finalists who represent the top three winners in each of the countys seven elementary schools received money and copies of the book George Washingtons Rules of Civility and Decent Behavior in Company and Conversation. Winning essay Eli wrote in his essay that George Washington was a wise, courageous leader with good character. He was not perfect, but he never gave up, and he made America come to life. We all owe him so much for this country and its freedoms that we enjoy today. Elis father said his son has a gift for sharing his feelings through his writing. My sons eyes are very open to the struggles we have to go through as a military family, said Brooks. We talk about the sacrifices military people have to make and the kind of support they need from us in order to do their jobs. During the phone interview, Eli said if he had the opportunity to meet George Washington today, hed talk to the former president about leading the American army to victory during the Revolutionary War. The student said he admires the presidents attitude of not giving up. The competition The competition, sponsored by the Washington County Educational Fund, Dr. John Lentz of Abingdon and Washington County Public Schools, requires participating students to write essays containing 300 to 500 words and to use at least three different sources for research. Lentz designed the voluntary writing essay contest nearly 10 years ago to stimulate the interest of all fourth grade students in Washington County. The contest encourages students to learn about George Washington as an individual and a leader. The students are encouraged to use both school and public libraries for their projects. Carolyn R. Wilson is a freelance writer in Glade Spring, Virginia. Contact her at news@washconews.com. Dave Campbell, a longtime public servant who worked as the city manager in Longview and Chehalis, died Feb. 23. He was 68 years old. Campbell was the son of a Methodist minister who lived in multiple cities growing up. He graduated from Camas High School and spent the majority of his career and life in Southwest Washington. Gregg Dohrn met Campbell when they were students at the University of Puget Sound and have remained friends for more than 40 years since then. Both men were pursuing degrees and work in municipal government, which Dohrn said helped reinforce their long friendship. I have a tremendous respect and admiration and love for Dave. Others have called him a true friend or a loyal friend, and that is an understatement, Dohrn said. Dave and his wife, Debbie Campbell, considered Chehalis to be their primary home. In 1988, he became the city manager for Chehalis and held that job for 17 years. During his lengthy stint, Campbell oversaw the creation and success of the Chehalis Industrial Park. In 2005 he was hired as the assistant city manager for Longview. Working under and with city manager Bob Gregory, Campbell held that role for nearly a decade while also serving for years as the citys parks and recreation director. Coming from Chehalis, he had a very diverse background. He was even-keeled and didnt get excited in the heat of the moment. He was always calm and collected, which I appreciated, Gregory said. The city held a nationwide search for its next city manager when Gregory announced his retirement in 2014. Campbell ended up as the City Councils unanimous choice, being appointed to the job in 2015 and becoming Longviews fourth-ever city manager since the position was created in 1968. Kurt Sacha, Longviews current city manager, was the citys finance director during the majority of Campbells time in Longview. Sacha said he learned a lot about his approach to the job from working with Campbell. He was always candid and courteous in his communications. Dave was very thoughtful and I thought he was an outstanding communicator, in terms of his written and verbal skills, Sacha said. During his three years leading Longview, Campbell oversaw the completion of the Washington Way bridge, the downtown beautification project and several other improvements. Campbells announcement that he was stepping down in late 2017 was a surprise. In his resignation letter, Campbell didnt have the time and energy to keep committing to Longview, and change the minds of dissatisfied Longview City Council members, while maintaining his health. The move also let him return to Chehalis to spend more time with Debbie and the rest of his family. For the last three years Campbell worked as the deputy chief assessor for Lewis County, where Dohrn said he walked to work and stayed involved as long as he was physically able to. He died of complications related to lung cancer. He was so close to retiring and being able to devote full time to his grandchildren. Its one of the many things that was unfair about this whole situation, Dohrn said. Campbells biggest passion outside of work were his three children and eight grandchildren. He was a big fan of the Seattle Mariners, a member and frequent volunteer for Rotary clubs, and a lay leader for the Chehalis United Methodist Church. A memorial service for Campbell will be held at 11 a.m. March 10 at the Chehalis United Methodist Church. The memorial also will be streamed online through the churchs Facebook page. Love 0 Funny 0 Wow 0 Sad 8 Angry 0 Get Government & Politics updates in your inbox! Stay up-to-date on the latest in local and national government and political topics with our newsletter. Sign up! * I understand and agree that registration on or use of this site constitutes agreement to its user agreement and privacy policy. COVID-19 cases and hospitalizations continue to decrease statewide and in Cowlitz County ahead of the end of the indoor mask mandate at the end of next week. Statewide, COVID-19 hospitalizations dropped 23% to 960 last week from 1,248 the week before, said Taya Briley, Washington State Hospital Association executive vice president, during a press briefing Tuesday. The average number of COVID patients on ventilators fell 31% from 91 to 62 last week, she said. We are thankful for these trends and that the downward trends are leading to decompression for hospitals, Briley said. Hospitals are working through a backlog of delayed procedures, taking urgent cases first but also considering how long a patient may need a bed, Briley said. Washington recorded 12.1 new COVID-19 hospitalizations per 100,000 people from Feb. 9 to Feb. 15, more than half the peak rate in mid-January. Cowlitz Countys COVID-19 hospitalization rate has remained steady for the last few weeks, with 21.7 admissions per 100,000 people from Feb. 9 to Feb. 15. The rate may begin to decrease, as PeaceHealth St. John Medical Centers COVID-19 patient census has fallen over the past two weeks. The countys COVID-19 cases continue to decline, with 249 new cases per 100,000 people from Feb. 8 to Feb. 15. Thats down from about 418 per 100,000 the previous week. Wahkiakum County reported five new confirmed COVID-19 cases Monday, bringing the total to 308, with seven potentially active. The county health department considers cases with a positive test result in the last 21 days to be potentially active. COVID-19 case rates are falling statewide, with 241 cases per 100,000 from Feb. 9 to Feb. 15. Despite the improvements, virus activity is not low enough or stable enough to consider COVID to be endemic or constantly present in a population said Dr. Santiago Neme, clinical associate professor of medicine and infectious diseases at the University of Washington Medicine. Washingtons seven-day case rate is more than seven times lower than it was at the omicron peak but is not much lower than previous peaks last fall and winter. Were still having a significant number of cases in the community, Neme said. Theyre much lower and very encouraging but were still not at a steady state where you can actually anticipate when cases will rise, when cases will drop. Hospital leaders have concerns about the upcoming end to the statewide mask mandate and recommend people continue wearing them inside. On Monday, Gov. Jay Inslee announced the requirement would end March 12. We understand the desire to resume a more normal way of living with COVID and have some concerns about what this could mean if COVID case trends being increasing again, Briley said. Concerned about COVID-19? Sign up now to get the most recent coronavirus headlines and other important local and national news sent to your email inbox daily. Sign up! * I understand and agree that registration on or use of this site constitutes agreement to its user agreement and privacy policy. WOODLAND A 15-unit apartment complex could be built at the corner of Bozarth Avenue and Fifth Street if an application to build is approved by the city. Woodland planning officials announced Tuesday they are accepting comments about the proposed project until 5 p.m. March 23. The new structure would be built just north of three existing apartment buildings off Bozarth Avenue, west of St. Philip Catholic Church, according to submitted plans. A shed and a gravel drive, accessible from Fifth Street, are located at the potential site today. The plan includes combining two neighboring lots at 560 Bozarth Avenue. The builder is asking for a boundary-line adjustment and a height variance. Woodland Planner David Lukaczer said the proposed building would be 8.5 feet taller than the height limit in such high-density residential zones for a total of 43.5 feet in height. Lukaczer said city staff can process these "minor variances." Public comment Phone: 360-225-7299. Email: lukaczerd@ci.woodland.wa.us. Mail: David Lukaczer, P.O. Box 9, Woodland, WA 98674. The project's plans also include adding 16 new parking stalls off Fifth Street, in addition to the 18 stalls already accessible from the Bozarth Avenue entrance. Blueprints show there are eight units in the two existing apartment buildings closest to Fifth Street. The existing apartment building closest to St. Philip church is not part of the updated plans. Woodland officials say a review concluded the proposed project would not significantly impact the environment. The owner of the project's land is a Vancouver-based company called Belcorp Inc., and the building permit applicant is the contractor Windsor Engineers, which also has a location in Vancouver. Review the project at www.ci.woodland.wa.us/commdev/project/bozarth-apartments. Love 0 Funny 0 Wow 0 Sad 0 Angry 0 Get local news delivered to your inbox! Subscribe to our Daily Headlines newsletter. Sign up! * I understand and agree that registration on or use of this site constitutes agreement to its user agreement and privacy policy. Garena Free Fire MAX Redeem Codes for March 2, 2022: Fresh set of redeem codes have been issued today that players can benefit from. Garena Free Fire MAX redeem codes for March 2, 2022: Garena Free Fire MAX is the upgraded and heavy version of Garena Free Fire. Though it has more advanced effects, animations and graphics to enhance the user experience, it is virtually identical in terms of gameplay. Just like PUBG Mobile India, the Indian Government had banned Garena Free Fire game in the country, but, players can still access Garena Free Fire MAX. Note that this game is restricted only to Android users, people with iPhones cannot play Garena Free Fire MAX as it has been removed from App Store. Garena Free Fire Max can be downloaded from Google Play Store. Just like Garena Free Fire, Max too offers exciting rewards, in-game items, and much more via a daily dose of redeem codes that it releases. One can redeem the codes and claim freebies by going to the same redemption website as that of Garena Free Fire - reward.ff.garena.com. To redeem these codes, players will need to log in to Free Fire MAX via their existing Free Fire account. Check out the Garena Free Fire MAX redeem codes for Mar 2, 2022 here Garena Free Fire MAX redeem codes for Mar 2, 2022 FM2I A7A9 RKPU FMPM ZIZO 8I2G FM5A GH2Q V9EC FMXR MF5A 1XVV FMP1 95T5 YNFR FM2U J4WM 4A23 FMPD PTKO WPDU FM2N MOHH I79P FMFI RS9K ZZDZ FM4S SXDM YEZD FMKV VRFU 4ZQR FMQ3 JMT7 CX2Y FMG1 N9UC 7W85 FM7I X0WG IVI2 FMOP 99AH SC5R FMXP PCJB LSXH FM4F 098P NK4G FM4N L00H QD4N FMCT 6PXE IYOU FMIK 7E8W L5N8 When China's President Xi Jinping issued his traditional Lunar New Year wishes from the country's coal heartland in January, the subtext was clear: Beijing is not ready to kick its coal addiction, despite promises to slash emissions. The ink had barely dried on the hard-fought climate change deal struck at last year's United Nations climate conference in Glasgow when Beijing's backslide on pledges began. The country's central economic planner has watered down a roadmap to slash emissions, greenlighted giant coal-fired power plants, and told mines to produce "as much coal as possible" after power shortages paralysed swathes of the economy last year. Looking for a smartphone? To check mobile finder click here. Also read: Environmentalists are concerned this would mean China would continue to pollute beyond the 2030 deadline by which it has promised to have reached peak emissions. Xi's trip to mining towns in Shanxi -- China's biggest coal producing province -- saw him making crispy noodle snacks with families "recently lifted out of poverty". "We are not pursuing carbon neutrality because others are forcing us, it's something we must do. But it can't be rushed," he said later, while inspecting a thermal power plant. "We can't delay action, but we must find the right rhythm." Days earlier, Xi told Communist Party officials in Beijing that low-carbon goals should not come at the expense of "normal life" -- a major change in rhetoric from his 2020 announcement at a UN assembly that China would be carbon neutral by 2060. - Dependent on coal - The Glasgow pact encourages countries to slash their emissions targets, with the aim of limiting warming to well below 2 degrees Celsius (36 degrees Fahrenheit) ideally to 1.5 degrees. Experts have warned that global emissions must be halved within a decade to have a chance of achieving that goal. A report issued by the UN's climate science advisors on Monday said that warming beyond 1.5C would wreak permanent damage to the planet and that nearly half the world's population is already "highly vulnerable" to the accelerating impacts of climate change. "The world's biggest polluters are guilty of arson of our only home," UN chief Antonio Guterres said in response to this most compelling scientific overview of climate change impacts to date. China generates an estimated 29 percent of the world's greenhouse gas emissions -- double the US share and three times that of the European Union. Environmentalists had hoped that post-Glasgow, Beijing might announce a maximum carbon cap for the whole country but Li Shuo, a campaigner for Greenpeace China, told AFP that is now "off the table". Policymakers in Beijing have long walked a tightrope balancing climate objectives with domestic growth. Beijing has pledged to curb coal consumption after 2025 -- but last year, half of China's economy was fuelled by it. Now as growth slows, authorities are resorting to an old formula of propping up smokestack industries to juice the economy. In late 2021 China began construction on 33 gigawatts of coal-fired power plants -- the most since 2016 -- that will emit as much carbon dioxide annually as Florida, according to data from Global Energy Monitor. Even more new plants are being built in the first few months of 2022 as well, all of which can operate for 40 years on average. - 'Ambition in jeopardy' - During the Glasgow talks the Chinese delegation -- like many others -- promised a detailed roadmap to peak emissions for different industries and regions over the next decade. Existing guidelines issued just before the talks only include vague targets for increasing energy efficiency and say renewables will supply a quarter of China's electricity by 2030. They have not yet been updated. This "suggests that the politics are tough, ambition is in jeopardy, and the regulators are reserving as much wiggle room (to pollute) as possible for the next few years," Greenpeace's Li said. Earlier last month, Beijing pushed back the deadline for slashing emissions from the steel sector -- China's biggest carbon emitter -- five years to 2030. "Steel and cement need to peak earlier than the country as a whole to ensure China's targets are on track," said Lauri Myllyvirta, lead analyst at the Centre for Research on Energy and Clean Air. Meanwhile, China's investments in overseas oil and gas projects tripled to $10.9 billion last year, according to a Fudan University report in January. - Renewable bottlenecks - Another of China's key pledges -- to increase wind and solar capacity to three times the current level over the next decade -- has been blown off-course as well by supply chain disruptions and soaring raw material costs. The price of polysilicon, used to make solar panels, jumped 174 percent in December from the previous year. Analysts fear more fossil fuels will be burnt to meet China's growing energy needs as the rollout of renewables slows. "The political signals are much more cautious (than before), saying the transition will be slow, and coal would remain a mainstay of China's energy supply for a long time," said Myllyvirta. TikTok on Monday began letting users upload videos as long as 10 minutes, ramping up the young platform's challenge to veteran titan YouTube. TikTok, owned by ByteDance in China, launched with a one-minute limit on uploaded videos, but bumped the cap to three minutes last year. "Today we are happy to start rolling out the ability to upload videos up to 10 minutes long," TikTok said in response to an AFP inquiry. Looking for a smartphone? To check mobile finder click here. Also read: "We hope this will further stimulate the creativity of our creators around the world." TikTok more than tripling the length of videos comes as YouTube and Facebook-parent Meta strive to counter the rival with short-form content options and incentives to creators whose posts draw audiences. "YouTube is still ahead of TikTok in terms of time spent, but its not immune to the 'TikTok effect'," Insider Intelligence analyst Jasmine Enberg told AFP. "The gap in time spent between the two platforms is narrow, and longer videos could help TikTok catch up in terms of both eyeballs and engagement." Longer videos could also enable TikTok creators make more money and boost the platforms advertising business, the analyst added. YouTube recently laid out goals for this year that included making the lives of creators easier and boosting a popular format that rivals TikTok. The video-sharing platform is investing in short-form and live video, along with tools to help creators make money and produce fresh content, according to chief product officer Neal Mohan. "YouTube creators are the heart and soul of the platform," Mohan said in a blog post. "To give them every opportunity possible, we'll continue to invest across our multiple formats." Short-form content like the video snippets that are a winning ingredient at TikTok are incredibly popular. YouTube's take on the concept, called "Shorts," has logged more than five trillion all-time views, according to Mohan. Short videos, typically made using smartphones, can be as long as 60 seconds, with music and comedy as popular themes. Facebook and Instagram parent Meta has its own spin on the offering called Reels, which chief executive Mark Zuckerberg has said is a priority for the tech firm and growing fast. Initially announced in mid-February, the realme 9 Pro series has finally arrived in the Malaysian market. Unsurprisingly, both the realme 9 Pro and realme 9 Pro+ are in the mid-tier price range starting from RM1199. However, realme Malaysia will have a special launching price for these two phones. With its first sale on 8 March 2022 at midnight sharp, the realme 9 Pro (8GB + 128GB) and 9 Pro+ (8GB + 256GB) are priced at RM1100 and RM1599 respectively. Only at Lazada, you can get the special launching price of RM1099 and RM1399 for the aforementioned models above. If you prefer to wait, the phones will be available at all authorised stores on 12 March 2022 but without a discount. That said, you can also get yourself a realme 9 Pro (6GB + 128GB) from RM949 (RRP RM1099) on 15 March at the realme Global Store Lazada. Then finally, the realme 9 Pro (8GB + 128GB) will arrive on the shelves of all realme authorised stores on 31 March at RM1399. To read the full details on the tech specs and features of the realme 9 Pro series, you may check out our full news coverage right over here. Stay tuned for more trending tech news at TechNave.com. In this photo made on Thursday, May 6, 2021, the badging logo is seen on a 2021 Ford Mustang Mach E at a Ford dealer in Wexford, Pa. Ford is spinning off its electric vehicles and internal combustion businesses into separate units. The automaker said Wednesday, March 2, 2022 that its plan includes two distinct, but strategically interdependent, auto businesses Ford Blue and Ford Model e. Credit: AP Photo/Keith Srakocic Ford will split its electric vehicle and internal combustion operations into two individual businesses to accelerate its adaptation of new technology and the Detroit automaker said Wednesday that its transformation into an EV company is accelerating. Ford plans a major restructuring with two distinct but strategically interdependent auto businesses Ford Blue focusing on traditional combustion engines and Ford Model e, which will develop electric vehicles. Jim Farley, the chief executive officer of Ford Motor Co., will lead the electric division. Speaking candidly last week at an investment conference, he said that Ford did not want to completely break off its electric division, but that changes were coming. "We are going all in, creating separate but complementary businesses that give us start-up speed and unbridled innovation in Ford Model e together with Ford Blue's industrial know-how, volume and iconic brands like Bronco, that start-ups can only dream about," Farley said. The transformation of the auto industry in just the past year in pursuit of EV technology has been astonishing even to advocates who have pushed for years to put gasoline-powered cars in the rearview window. A handful of start-ups have compiled billions in capital, including heavy funding from traditional automakers. But those upstarts have neither the funding of traditional automakers, which sell millions of cars each year, nor the ability to build at scale. Lucid Group and Lordstown Motors, newer arrivals, released disappointing production projections this week, highlighting how difficult it is to secure materials and produce vehicles in massive numbers. Farley said that the company recognized the need to become more nimble on the technology side with so many competitors entering the market. "Our legacy organization has been holding us back," Farley said. "We had to change," But Ford is also competing with EV heavyweight Tesla, which posted record profits last year, and another traditional automaker, General Motors, which is vowing an even faster transition to electric vehicles. GM went so far as to change its logo, with the 'm' in the logo underlined to look more like an electrical plug. In this photo made on Thursday, May 6, 2021, a 2021 Ford Mustang Mach E is seen as it is charging at a Ford dealer in Wexford, Pa. Ford is spinning off its electric vehicles and internal combustion businesses into separate units. The automaker said Wednesday, March 2, 2022 that its plan includes two distinct, but strategically interdependent, auto businesses Ford Blue and Ford Model e.Credit: AP Photo/Keith Srakocic "Is this about winning? 100%," Farley said. "We want to beat the old players. We want to beat the new players." Ford has already charged into the development of electric vehicles with the Ford GT, Mustang Mach-E SUV and F-150 Lightning pickup, and demand is high. The company has already taken orders for 150,000 electric versions of its F-150 pickup and full production of the vehicle is expected to begin early this year. It's building three battery plants, one that will also build electric trucks. In January, GM said it would make the largest investment in company history in its home state of Michigan, spending nearly $7 billion to convert a factory to make electric pickup trucks and to build a new battery cell plant. On Wednesday, Ford said that it now expects that half of its vehicles will be electric by 2030. Less than a year ago, the company announced a goal of going 40% electric by then. It also said that it will produce more than 2 million electric vehicles annually by 2026, which would represent about a third of its global fleet. Ford Blue will provide hardware engineering and manufacturing capabilities for the entire company. Ford Model e will develop software and connected vehicle technologies and services. Both divisions will be run out of Dearborn, Michigan, the automaker's longtime home. Each will book its profits and losses individually. Ford anticipates spending $5 billion on electric vehicles this year, including capital expenditures, expense and direct investments. Farley, in addition to heading Ford Model e, will continue as CEO of Ford Motor Co. The president of Ford's Americas & International Markets Group, Kumar Galhotra, will become president of Ford Blue. Galhotra said Ford Blue would be the economic engine that would power the electric division forward. Shares of Ford rose more than 4% before at the opening bell. 2022 The Associated Press. All rights reserved. This material may not be published, broadcast, rewritten or redistributed without permission. Credit: CC0 Public Domain Washington state is getting ready to roll out the ID.me facial recognition system dropped by the IRS last month over privacy and equity concerns. Human rights activists and some federal lawmakers are asking state government officials, including in Washington, to ban the system. Amid the outcry, Washington's Employment Security Department says it doesn't use ID.me to verify the identities of people claiming jobless benefitsbut plans to start doing so in June. "Recently, we launched a competitive procurement process to secure a tool claimants would use to verify their identity before applying for benefits," said Nick Demerice, director of public affairs. ID.me, Demerice said, was the winning vendor. Sold as a way to help stop scammers from accessing unemployment aid by adding an extra layer of security, ID.me offers government agencies and other customers a way to verify an individual's identity using information like a driver's license, Social Security number and a facial scan. The system prompts each user to take a "video selfie," holding the camera in front of their face to scan until they see a green check mark. ID.me's technology is already used in 27 states' unemployment systems, as well as several federal agencies, including the Social Security Administration and the Department of Veterans Affairs. Four states credited the system with preventing $210 billion in fraud, ID.me says. Washington launched a pilot project with ID.me in 2021, part of its efforts to combat a spike in fraud in spring 2020, Demerice said. Washington state officials found $1.6 million in fraudulent claims in March and April of that year, leading them to temporarily halt unemployment benefits. The state did not implement the ID.me system following the pilot. Recently, ID.me's facial recognition technology has come under fire for the amount of information it collects from applicants, which opponents of the system worry could be misused, resold or stolen. Critics also say the system creates barriers that prevent people from accessing unemployment aid. The tech is not accessible to people who don't have smartphones, computers or internet access. Facial recognition technology, they contend, also perpetuates racial biases. A study from the National Institute of Standards and Technology found this type of tech led to more false positives for Asian and African American faces, compared with white faces, meaning it could have a disproportionate impact on people from marginalized communities through things like wrongful arrests. Following backlash, the IRS in February backed off its plan to require anyone who wanted to access tax-related records online to record a video of their face with their computer or smartphone. Now, activists are turning their attention toward other government agencies relying on ID.me's system. Even as lawmakers pushed the IRS to drop ID.me for taxpayers, many were silent about the "tens of thousands of people" already impacted by the "discriminatory and harmful technology," said Caitlin Seeley George, a campaign director for digital rights nonprofit Fight for the Future. "Many of our communities filing for unemployment across the country have felt demoralized and dehumanized by the ID.me process since the start of the pandemic," Seeley George continued. "Some were forced to wait for months to receive the lifesaving benefits they earned and helped to pay for. For these people, the dangers and harms of ID.me aren't theoreticalthey're reality." By the end of February, more than 20,000 people had signed a petition from Fight for the Future and 20 other groups calling for the end of government contracts with ID.me and to launch an investigation into the federal government's use of facial recognition technology. Sens. Ron Wyden, D-Ore., Sherrod Brown, D-Ohio, and Elizabeth Warren, D-Mass., are pushing the U.S. Department of Labor to help state unemployment programs find a way to verify applicants' identities without relying on private contractors like ID.me. Nearly 50 organizations signed a letter making a similar call, saying facial recognition technology broadly has been found to be biased and have a disproportionate impact on people of color and other marginalized communities. The signing groups, which included the Consumer Federation of America, the Electronic Frontier Foundation and the NAACP Legal Defense and Education Fund, said there isn't enough data about ID.me's performance, including its face-verification failure rate and whether the system disproportionately fails to verify the identities of people of color. It may also cut off access to jobless benefits for individuals with disabilities, including blindness, or applicants who may not have access to the necessary technology. Blake Hall, founder and CEO of ID.me, said the system was created to increase access by offering more ways for individuals to verify their identity, particularly for people who do not have credit history, have little banking history, are without a home or who live overseas. "Tying access to digital services to affluence is fundamentally unjust, and that's been the reality for access to government services in this country for decades," Hall said. "ID.me is the first company that's moved access rates up by untethering it from credit history. That's why I started the company." Hall says ID.me follows the identity verification standards set by the federal government, and isn't in the business of collecting biometric data from individuals. In response to concerns over its technology, the software company announced it will now allow users to verify their identity without using automated facial recognition and let them delete some identifiable information, starting March 1. To safeguard against any bias with its facial recognition tech and speed up the identity verification process, ID.me also plans to introduce a new feature that allows a human to immediately review any individual's verification that failed. In Washington, Demerice from ESD said the department has "noted the significant concerns raised about using facial recognition technology by ID.me in its work with the IRS." "We take data security and data privacy very seriously," he said. "We will evaluate all information to ensure we implement this verification tool safely and responsibly. We understand the need to balance the competing priorities of claimant safety, ease of use and fraud prevention." Demerice said in February the state was still in the process of determining how it would use ID.me, leading to confusion from groups like Fight for the Future and Washington's chapter of the ACLU that believed ESD was already using the systemin part because it was listed on ID.me's website. ESD asked the company to remove the page that said Washington had "partnered with ID.me to verify claimants requesting benefits and services online," Demerice said. But the confusion over whether Washingtonians applying for jobless benefits are required to consent to using facial recognition technology is part of the problem with this kind of tech, said Jennifer Lee, the technology and liberty project manager with ACLU of Washington. "You can't outsource core government functions to a third-party vendor and not tell people how that system works, whether it has biases and even if it is using that system at all," Lee said. "We don't know the extent to which facial recognition technology is being used." Explore further US tax agency drops facial recognition plan after criticism 2022 The Seattle Times. Distributed by Tribune Content Agency, LLC. Credit: CC0 Public Domain Renewable energy that feeds into the main power grid could destabilize the system and potentially cause power failures according to a new study. Mathematicians from the University of Nottingham used data from smart meters to track how grid composition changes over time and found resilience varies over the course of a day and that a high uptake of solar panels can leave the grid more susceptible to failure. Their findings have been published today in Science Advances. Domestic renewable energy generation is growing rapidly with just over one million small-scale solar Photo-Voltaic(PV) systems in the UK. These small-scale, renewable generators are low- output and intermittent and often distributed across and embedded within power grids in large numbers. Household generation forms a key component of the integration of renewables and includes the 'feed in tariff' which pays the producer for supplying their stored power back upstream to the grid. This supply of power is unpredictable with generators coming on and off-line intermittently and households adopting the role of consumers or producers asdaily and seasonal usage, and meteorological conditions vary. These fluctuations can put the grid at risk of system failures. Oliver Smith, researcher at the University of Nottingham led the study, he explains: "The increasing proliferation of small, intermittent renewable power sources is causing a rapid change in the structure and composition of the power grid. Indeed, the grid's effective structure can change over the course of a day as consumers and small-scale generators come on- and off-line. Using data from smart meters in UK households we tracked how grid composition varies over time. We then used a dynamical model to assess how these changes impact the resilience of power grids to catastrophic failures. We found that resilience varies over the course of a day and that a high uptake of solar panels can leave the grid more susceptible to failure." The first part of the research investigated the theory around changing the proportion and size of generators by modeling a system using many small-scale generators and in all cases it showed that the grid should be more robust than if using one power source. However, when the real-world smart meter data was incorporated the researchers found that the reality for a network with many small-scale generators operating at different times means the grid doesn't reach optimum levels for this resilience to be achieved leaving it susceptible to failures. The researchers found that renewable energy stored in household batteries is used only to minimize household power costs and does little to minimize the risk of network failure. They recommend that the supply of power from these batteries should be scheduled to also optimize for power grid resilience. Oliver continues: "The main problem is the amount of fluctuation there is in small-scale renewable energy supply. A cost-effective way to overcome this would be to intelligently schedule the release of stored PV energy from household batteries at specified times. This would provide much greater control and reduce the risk of system failures." Explore further The case for a global energy grid based on 100% renewable energy More information: O. Smith, The effect of renewable energy incorporation on power grid stability and resilience, Science Advances (2022). www.science.org/doi/10.1126/sciadv.abj6734 Journal information: Science Advances O. Smith, The effect of renewable energy incorporation on power grid stability and resilience,(2022). DOI: 10.1126/sciadv.abj6734 Credit: Shutterstock Tasmanians yesterday suffered a six-hour digital blackout, with phone and internet services down across the state. Some radio and television broadcasts were also affected, as well as banking and electronic payment services. The impact was so severe that Tasmania's connectivity to the rest of the world was reportedly reduced by 70%, before services slowly began being restored around 6pm. The state is connected to the Australian mainland (and the rest of the world) by three fiber-optic cables. Two are deployed by Telstra, and the third is owned by the Tasmanian government and laid along the BassLink electricity cable into Victoria. By an astounding coincidence, different construction crews cut the two Telstra cables in two separate incidents: one was cut at around 11am in Victoria, near Frankston, and the other was cut at a remote location in Tasmania at around 1pm. It's not clear how this happened, given the perennial advice for construction crews to "dial before your dig". It could be the crews were working with inaccurate information, and didn't realize they were digging on the cables' routes. The breaks in the two cables led to a major disruption to all internet and telecommunication services in Tasmania. Priority services, such as triple zero calls, were kept alive using the third cable. A complicated setup Undersea fiber-optic cables are made of bundles of glass fibers, each one about as thick as a strand of human hair. Information is carried along these fiber strands at high speeds in the form of light pulses. The fibers are carefully arranged inside the cable, with each strand supported by a strengthening sheath. The entire cable is also protected by an outer waterproof sheath, making it suitable for undersea deployment. Undersea cables leave the shore via special landing sites and loosely sit on the ocean floor. They can suffer damage from anchors of passing ships, or natural disasterswhich happened during the recent volcanic eruption in Tonga. But these incidents are very rare. On the shore, the cables are laid underground and only accessible at key network exchange locations. Repair logistics Repairing damage to undersea cables requires specialist ships that draw the cable to the ocean's surface. One by one, the individual glass fiber strands are separated, cleaved with a diamond blade (to achieve clean polished ends on the strands), and then fused or welded back together to complete the repair. The repaired link is mechanically strengthened with a protective covering, after which the network engineers run a range of tests before the link can carry network traffic again. In yesterday's events, however, the damage to the two fiber-optic cables happened along their land routes, so repair crews could fix them relatively quickly. Had the cables been damaged at undersea locations, repairs could have taken days. Any delays yesterday would have mainly been a result of getting the right equipment and technical crews to the locationsespecially the more remote one on the Tasmanian side. What's the fix? The digital blackout highlighted Tasmania's over-reliance on the current fiber links. The Tasmanian government has in the past failed to be part of other undersea cable projects that could have provided a more diverse connection between Tasmania and the mainland. The state could run into more trouble in the future, should it fail to bolster its connective capabilities. As the distance between Tasmania and the mainland is about 200km, deploying wireless links (such as those used by radio towers) wouldn't be realistic. This would require very high antenna towers and multiple repeaters in the sea. And while NBN satellites could be used to provide some connectivity, undersea cables remain the best option. Ideally, there should be investment not only in establishing a potential fourth cable link, but also in upgrading the existing infrastructure to broaden its capacity. Cables would still be impacted during adverse events, but the entire system would become much more resilient overall. Diversity in the cable network is also critical, especially in terms of the physical cable routes. In situations where links are damaged, we need to be able to reconfigure the network quickly (and without human intervention). So even if a fault happens, signals can be automatically rerouted to bypass faulty links. With the world's increasing dependence on digital connectivity, and the emergence of 5G, operators like Telstra and newcomer HyperOne are planning to build new national fiber networks. In February Telstra announced plans to expand its current network in Australia, with roughly A$1.6 billion worth of upgrades expectedbut specifics about where and how the money will be spent aren't known. HyperOne also has plans to build additional undersea cables linking Perth, Adelaide, Melbourne, Launceston, Hobart and Sydney. This could provide more diversified connectivity to Tasmania. Explore further The Tonga volcanic eruption reveals the vulnerabilities in our global telecommunication system This article is republished from The Conversation under a Creative Commons license. Read the original article. remaining of Thank you for reading! On your next view you will be asked to log in to your subscriber account or create an account and subscribepurchase a subscription to continue reading. 1 event to mark on your calendar Still Creek Ranch will hold the Still Creek Stampede, a PRCA rodeo, on March 18 and 19 at the Brazos County Expo in Bryan. The event begins at 7:30 both nights and includes mutton bustin' for kids, along with bull riding, bareback and saddle bronc riding, tie-down roping, team roping, barrel racing and steer wresting. Tickets purchased in advance are $12 for adults and $10 for children ages 2 through 12. Tickets at the gate are $15 and $12. For more information, visit stillcreekranch.org/rodeo. WEDNESDAY EVENTS Tigers Be Still, 7 p.m. at the Black Box Theatre on the Texas A&M University campus, 349 Spence St. in College Station. Tickets are free, but reserving a ticket is recommended by going to blinn.edu/boxoffice. Performances also are scheduled for Thursday and Friday. Recommended for ages 13 and older. Beginner bike ride, starting at 5:45 p.m. at the Stella Hotel parking lot, 4100 Lake Atlas Drive in Bryan. Helmet and lights required. Salvation Army food distribution, beginning at 9 a.m. at 2506 Cavitt Ave. in Bryan. Food will be distributed to those in need until supplies run out. One Million Cups, 8:30 a.m. at Lake Walk Innovation Center, 3891 S. Traditions Drive in Bryan. A weekly meeting that brings entrepreneurs and community members together for coffee and conversation. Comedy night, 9 p.m. at 3rd Floor Cantina, 201B W. 26th St. in Downtown Bryan. No cover charge. Open mic starts at 8:30 p.m. Pool tournament, 8 p.m. at Bottlenecks, 1789 F.M. 60 in Deanville. $10 entry fee. Common Threads, 2 to 3 p.m. at Middleway Urban Monastery, 309 N. Tabor Ave. in Bryan. Bring a crochet, knitting, cross stitch or any thread project to work on during a spiritual gathering. Story time for Babies and Toddlers, 10 a.m. at Clara B. Mounce Public Library, 201 E. 26th St. in Bryan. A musical, puppet-filled story time for children ages 3 and under. Ready to Read story time, 10:30 a.m. at Clara B. Mounce Public Library, 201 E. 26th St. in Bryan. Longer stories geared toward children ages 4 to 6 years old. Teens Relax, 4 p.m. at Larry J. Ringer Library, 1818 Harvey Mitchell Parkway in College Station. Teens ages 13 to 18 are invited to visit the library for an hour after school to unwind. LIVE MUSIC Wayne Johnson, 6 p.m. at Casa Do Brasil, 1665 Greens Prairie Road in College Station. COVID-19 TESTING St. Teresa Catholic Church, 201 Hall St. in Bryan, 8 a.m. to 6 p.m. On-site registration accepted. curative.com. New Zion Missionary Baptist Church, 1505 Dansby St. in Bryan, 8 a.m. to 6 p.m. On-site registration accepted. curative.com. Kohls parking lot kiosk, 1509 Texas Ave. in College Station, 8 a.m. to 6 p.m. Rapid PCR testing. On-site registration accepted. curative.com. Blinn College, 651 Blinn Blvd. in Brenham, 8:30 a.m. to 6 p.m. On-site registration accepted. curative.com. Rudder Plaza kiosk, 275 Joe Routt Blvd. on the Texas A&M University campus in College Station, 8 a.m. to 6 p.m. For Texas A&M students, faculty and staff members. Appointments required. Mays Plaza kiosk, 210 Olsen Blvd. on the Texas A&M University campus in College Station, 8 a.m. to 5 p.m. For Texas A&M students, faculty and staff members. Appointments required. A.P. Beutel Health Center, 311 Houston St. on the Texas A&M University campus in College Station, 10 a.m. to 2 p.m. For Texas A&M students, faculty and staff members. Appointments required. EXHIBITS Oceans of Plastic at the George H.W. Bush Presidential Library and Museum in College Station. A collection of art made from plastic pollution acquired from beaches along the Texas coast. The museum is open Monday through Saturday from 9:30 a.m. to 5 p.m. and Sundays from noon to 5 p.m. Admission is $9 for adults, and tickets must be purchased at bush41.org/visit/admission. Unexpected Treasures on the Texas A&M campus, through April 22 at the Cushing Memorial Library and Archives. The exhibit includes rare and unique items from campus collections. It is open Monday through Friday from 9 a.m. to 4:30 p.m. Astrophotography: Exploring Celestial Mysteries, through March 19 at the Arts Council of Brazos Valley, 4180 Texas 6 in College Station. A collection of work by Randall Light, a photographer and member of the Brazos Valley Astronomy Club. The gallery is open Tuesday through Friday from 10 a.m. to 5 p.m. and Saturday from 1 to 4 p.m. Lovin That Lone Star Flag, through April 2 at the Arts Council of Brazos Valley, 4180 Texas 6 in College Station. A collection of work by E. Joe Deering. The gallery is open Tuesday through Friday from 10 a.m. to 5 p.m. and Saturday from 1 to 4 p.m. Taking Shape: Geometry in Art, through March 9 at the J. Wayne Stark Galleries in the Memorial Student Center on the Texas A&M University campus in College Station. The exhibit features works by artists who expressed themselves and the world around them through geometric forms, optical illusions and abstraction. The gallery is open Tuesday through Friday from 9 a.m. to 8 p.m. and Saturday and Sunday from noon to 6 p.m. tx.ag/geometry. Pulped Under Pressure: The Art of Handmade Paper, through March 20 at the J. Wayne Stark Galleries in the Memorial Student Center on the Texas A&M University campus in College Station. The exhibit features art with traditional papermaking at its core. The gallery is open Tuesday through Friday from 9 a.m. to 8 p.m. and Saturday and Sunday from noon to 6 p.m. tx.ag/pulped. Of course Vladimir Putin attacked in winter. Winter offensives have been a part of the Russian playbook since about the time Hernando de Soto enjoyed a bath at what is now Hot Springs, Arkansas. Russian winter attacks were also key in turning back invasions from Napoleon and Adolf Hitler. While Russian troops enjoy the practical advantage of tanks working better on frozen ground than in spring mud, there can be another reason to choose this time of year to war: Ivan the Terrible, the first tsar, would attack his enemies in winter so the survivors would starve or freeze to death. It is quite possible the current Russian president has the same thing in mind for the Ukrainians. This level of brutality toward Ukrainians has been done before. In the 1930s, Joseph Stalin confiscated all the Ukrainians food in order to break their resistance to his rule. Millions died. Since Ukraine was part of the Soviet Union for most of the 20th century and part of Russia before that, it is easy for Americans to think of Ukrainians as just another Russian subset. We would be wrong. I interviewed Ukrainian government officials visiting Texas to study local government structures. They were determinedly anti-Russian, vowing to fight if Russia attempted to crush them. They seem to be men of their word. Ukraine is a medley of cultural and ethnic groups. Granted those living in the eastern side of the country tend to lean toward Moscow, they are in the minority. While most Ukrainians share some DNA with Russians, those living in the western part of Ukraine orient themselves to the West, thinking of themselves as being European rather than Russian. Putin clearly finds such an independent attitude unacceptable. We easily can dismiss Putins claims that the Ukrainian leaders are Nazis or that he launched this attack to stop genocide, but a brief history of Russian-Ukrainian relations since the breakup of the Soviet Union about 30 years ago offers a sliver of justification. Daryl G. Kimball, executive director of the Arms Control Association, said, At the time of Ukraines independence from the Soviet Union in 1991, Ukraine held the third largest nuclear arsenal in the world, including an estimated 1,900 strategic warheads, 176 intercontinental ballistic missiles (ICBMs), and 44 strategic bombers. By 1996, Ukraine had returned all of its nuclear warheads to Russia in exchange for economic aid and security assurances. Those guarantees of Ukrainian independence were by both Russia and the West. After Russia seized the Crimean peninsula and backed rebels in Donetsk and Luhansk in 2014, Ukraine signed a treaty granting the breakaway provinces a degree of self rule. The ink had not dried on the pact before fighting resumed. Clearly, Putin believes might makes right. The legal niceties are sufficiently clouded to give him some credibility. Both sides have reneged on their deals. But Putin getting what he wants at the point of a gun has run into problems. The Ukrainian people are waging a valiant struggle to defend their homes. Russian people are taking to the streets to protest this unnecessary war. Russians apparently do not share Putins dreams of imperial glory at the cost of their ATM card. One may even wonder if the average soldier in the Russian army has much of a taste for this fight. If 190,000 men are not enough to get the job done, and Putin has to ask the Belarus national guard to step in, one must conclude these are not the same troops who defended Stalingrad or even subdued Hungary and the Check Republic. The problem with a might-makes-right policy is when you are not as mighty as you thought. One thing Putin made crystal clear is that he is not impressed with any of the five United States presidents he met or any of the Western European leaders. This is a common mistake dictators make about democratic leaders. Hitler was able to bully and lie to a succession of Allied leaders beginning with Neville Chamberlain who declared peace in our time to French premier Paul Renaud. All of them would rather appease Hitler than call his bluff, but the truth is that the populations of France and Britain then would rather give Hitler Austria than go to war. Hitler learned to his regret, however, that democracies can be much stronger than they appear. Putin read the affability of Bill Clinton, George W. Bush, Barack Obama and Joe Biden as weakness. He recognized Donald Trump as a craven cypher who could be bought and used as needed. One key to the invasion of Ukraine is that Biden will push forward with arms shipments to Ukraine that Trump had delayed. Even Germany is getting in on the act, sending anti-tank and anti-aircraft missiles to Ukraine. Ukraine will never be weaker than it is today. Also, the United States is distracted. The Biden administration is under attack over the pandemic and the economy. If he wanted war with Ukraine, Putin knew the time was now. Vladimir Putin continues to act like the worst tyrant Europe has seen since Hitler. With dreams of Russian expansion and glory, Putin started this war with much of the same rhetoric Hitler used in 1939 before invading Poland. Fortunately, Joe Biden has rallied the European alliance to present a unified front. NATO troops are now placed in forward positions and Ukrainians battle bravely. Ukrainian President Volodymyr Zelenskyy made a lot of friends when he refused a U.S. offer to evacuate, saying, I need ammunition, not a ride. The important lesson from this tragedy is that we can clearly see what kind of man calls the shots in Moscow. In the days to come with such a man with such an appetite, there can be no appeasement. Bob Palmer is a Texas A&M journalism graduate. He is a combat veteran. He lives in Dallas. Students are selected for the program in the eighth grade and continue through high school. If those students complete the four-year preparatory requirements, they are eligible for the financial promise that covers their full cost of attendance to the university Housing is badly needed in Grand Island. Build Grand Island is designed to help create housing for a new rural workforce, or missing middle class. The Grand Island Area Economic Development Corporation effort will use $1 million in funds from Nebraska Economic Development Corporation and $1 million in matching funds to support three major new housing projects. Gov. Pete Ricketts applauded the upcoming projects at a press conference Tuesday at downtown Grand Islands Hedde Building. This initiative is something that is going to help your community continue to grow, he said. Nebraskas population and its economy have both grown tremendously during the last 10 years, and the state is not only enjoying its lowest unemployment rate in history, but in the nations history, Ricketts said. State support through such project funds are helping to foster and support that growth, but it cannot be achieved without strong community leadership, he said. This is a great program that will help create not only these rental apartments, but you also have on tap to create some single-family homes as well as some owner-occupied duplexes, he said. Its a great opportunity to create that housing stock here in Grand Island. He added, This is a wonderful milestone and a great day for Grand Island. Build Grand Island prioritizes owner-occupancy units and market-rate rentals, emphasizing student and intern housing, said GIAEDC President Dave Taylor. GIAEDC received 10 project applications from developers for the first wave of the revolving loan funds. Three were chosen: - Matt Murray of Murray Custom Homes will build two new houses in existing Grand Island neighborhoods. - Mesner Development will undertake Phase 1 of a project adjacent to Grand Islands Five Points Super Saver and Blessed Sacrament Church, to include 16 owner-occupied duplexes. - Amos Anson and Tom Pirnie are undertaking a major remodel of the Hedde Building, to feature 16 new apartments on its second and third floor. It was not disclosed how much each project has received. Taylor said loans for the first round will be repaid in the first 24 months or as the homes sell, and those funds will be reused to support further projects in the future. As anybody whos tried to buy a house in Grand Island knows, with our current market, we can anticipate that it will be sooner that theyll be sold than later, he said. The communitys greatest asset is its workforce and their families, Taylor said. Grand Island, though, like the rest of the nation, has been underbuilding homes for decades. From 2019 to 2024, Grand Island should have been building 272 units annually, according to a GIAEDC housing study. To date, the Grand Island developers have averaged 184 units in 2019, 2020 and 2021, he said. In the past three years alone, we are 270 units short of our projected growth. This lack of housing has affected local industrys abilities to recruit a high-wage, high-skilled, high-demand workforce, Taylor reported. Without intervention, this shortage is going to compound for our housing and our workforce in the years to come, he said. Build Grand Island is not the solution, but it is the start, Taylor said. This serves as seed money to spur larger investments into Grand Island, he said. Mayor Roger Steele celebrated the upcoming housing projects Tuesday, and thanked Ricketts for promoting the need for rural workforce housing development. Grand Island is a community of doers, and the (EDC) board of trustees and staff are first in line to find opportunities for Grand Island, Steele said. Thank you to the Grand Island Area (EDC) for expanding your scope of work to meet the need for affordable housing. After the press conference, Ricketts took a virtual tour via headset of the Hedde Building, which allowed him to see the space as it will look once it is completed. Get local news delivered to your inbox! Subscribe to our Daily Headlines newsletter. Sign up! * I understand and agree that registration on or use of this site constitutes agreement to its user agreement and privacy policy. GENEVA Kurt D. Heckenliable, 50, of Geneva, has been indicted in federal court on a charge related to the delivery of methamphetamine. According to United States Attorney Jan W. Sharp, the federal grand jury for the District of Nebraska has returned the indictment charging Heckenliable. He is formally charged with possession with intent to distribute 500 grams or more of methamphetamine (mixture) and 50 grams or more of methamphetamine (actual). The maximum possible penalty, if convicted, is life in prison, a $200,000 fine, a 10-year term of supervised release and a $100 special assessment. Heckenliable earlier served a 10-15-year prison sentence, handed down in York County District Court. He was sentenced in May of 2005 and was discharged in April of 2012. That prison sentence was for convictions of possession of methamphetamine and delivery of methamphetamine. Virtual Spring Bible & Archaeology Fest Offers Global Audience New Insights, New Analysis, and Intriguing Debates NEWS PROVIDED BY Biblical Archaeology Society March 2, 2022 WASHINGTON, March 2, 2022 /Christian Newswire/ -- The Biblical Archaeology Society, publisher of Biblical Archaeology Review (BAR), a niche consumer magazine, will host the first-ever spring online edition of its annual signature event from the fall. The Spring Bible and Archaeology Fest on April 23 offers live talks from 18 leading Bible scholars and archaeologists via the Zoom computer application. Registered, paid participants can enjoy two days of online learning with experts in the fields from all over the world. The program features The Bible and Archaeology: A Love-Hate Relationship, a plenary session from renowned archaeologist Dr. Yosef Garfinkel, Hebrew University of Jerusalem. He specializes in the Protohistoric era of the Near East, the period of time when the world's earliest village communities were established and the beginning of agriculture took place. In the plenary, Garfinkel will analyze the history of the field of biblical archaeology, arguing for five different phases in the relationship between the Bible and archaeology, beginning in 1847 when the Lachish reliefs from Sennacherib's palace in Nineveh were unearthed. A new feature of this spring event is a virtual tour of Israel's ancient port city Caesarea Maritima, custom designed by host and Bible atlas author Carl Rasmussen, Bethel University in Minnesota. Other familiar names from Biblical Archaeology Review, plus rising stars will be presenting: JOHN AHN, Howard University GAY BYRON, Howard University ERIC CLINE, The George Washington University STEED DAVIDSON, McCormick Theological Seminary JP DESSEL, University of Tennessee-Knoxville DEBRA FORAN, Wilfrid Laurier University DEIRDRE FULTON, Baylor University JEFFREY GARCIA, Nyack College MARY JOAN LEITH, Stonehill College-Easton ANNETTE YOSHIKO REED, New York University JULIA RHYDER, Harvard University ALISON SCHOFIELD, University of Denver JUAN MANUEL TEBES, Catholic University of Argentina GYOZO VOROS, Archaeologist-Architect, Hungarian Academy of Arts BEN WITHERINGTON III, Asbury Theological Seminary SARAH YEOMANS, Archaeologist For more than two decades, numerous scholars and dedicated enthusiasts have come together at a Bible & Archaeology Fest for enjoying the latest finds, scholarship, and discussions of the Bible and archaeology. Registration for this virtual event and its recordings is $199. Early bird pricing of $179 is available until March 21, 2022. The student rate is $99. Sign up at www.biblicalarchaeology.org/fest. SOURCE Biblical Archaeology Society CONTACT: Alicia Bregon, 202-364-3300 ext. 216, travelstudy@bib-arch.org Related Links http://www.biblicalarchaeology.org/ YORK The York County Sheriffs Department needs your help! That was the lead sentence in a special written invitation from Sheriff Paul Vrbka to all the first, second and third graders in York County. They are being asked to submit ideas for names for the departments new canine. Earlier this month, a retired Marine in Omaha saw the news story about the tragic events in York in which Nitro II, the sheriffs departments newest K-9 deputy, was killed. Sheriff Vrbka said the U.S. Marine had worked with service dogs during his time with the military and he made the decision to donate a very special Belgian Malinois as the sheriffs departments new service dog. He just wanted to help, the sheriff said. And we are very, very grateful. Sheriff Vrbka said the dog is now here and is working with Sgt. Brad Melby and Deputy Chris Fifield. The two-year-old shows a lot of promise and talent, Sheriff Vrbka said. We are really excited about having her with us. Now we just need to give her a name! Thats where all the youngsters come in. The sheriffs department delivered the written invitations to all the schools in the county and they were handed out to those three grades. They are being asked to draw a picture of a police service dog and then give the dog a name. The kids are asked to draw on 11x8.5-inch paper and they can use pencil, magic marker, paint or crayon. Sheriff Vrbka said he also wanted to extend the same invitation to all the home-schooled kids in the county. If they want to participate, they can just mail theirs in to the sheriffs department at 510 Lincoln Avenue, York. All the kids have until March 7 to do their artwork and think up names. On March 8, deputies will visit the schools and pick up the drawings. Home-schooled kids just have to have their sent in by that date. Four judges will review all the drawings and pick a winner, the sheriff said. The dog will be given the winning name. The youngster coming up with the winning name will get to meet the new K-9 deputy and her handler, as well as have his or her photograph taken with them for the York News-Times. So kids, we need your help, Sheriff Vrbka said, as he wanted to address the first, second and third graders of this county. Draw your photos and tell us your name ideas! We so appreciate this incredible donation from the man in Omaha and we also appreciate the help of our youngsters in giving her a name. Expert Viewpoint Why Student Data is Vital for Schools to Address Inequities in 2022 and Beyond The COVID-19 pandemic has shined a spotlight on equity disparities in K12 education, with new attention on how factors such as internet access, home environments, and family dynamics can impact student success. Students with limited language or learning proficiency and students experiencing poverty face additional challenges that can put their learning opportunities at a greater disadvantage. As schools continue responding to pandemic disruptions, timely and comprehensive data in one spot remains critical to educators abilities to make informed decisions and create targeted interventions. Painting a Comprehensive Picture District leaders need a comprehensive picture to help guide decision-making in ways that best support students, educators, and schools, and seeing the full picture requires multiple data points. Insights regarding equity trends and other issues that may need attention often come from the ability to make comparisons or see relationships in data, and the ability to quickly aggregate and disaggregate data by subgroups (e.g., grade level, free/reduced lunch status). Often, insights can be derived from even basic data points. Students schedules, for instance, indicate who is participating in rigorous academic opportunities, such as Advanced Placement or International Baccalaureate programs, or who is participating in programs like extracurricular activities. The percentages of enrollment in these programs and opportunities by demographic subgroups should mirror those of the district or school as a whole, and discrepancies suggest inequitable opportunities. For example, a large district in Oklahoma as part of its larger strategic plan wanted to track equity in two specific areas for their high schoolers: Advanced Placement and concurrent college enrollment. Our team helped them create a dashboard to track not only participation in AP coursework, but also which students followed through and took and passed exams for college credit. These comparisons enabled the district to determine which students were taking steps toward college enrollment, and whether there were discrepancies in course participation, in test participation, or in test outcomes. In other words, using scheduling and test data, this district could see in a snapshot whether there were disparities, and roughly when those disparities started to take shape. School attendance data can also be very helpful when it comes to targeting students who need additional support. Evidence suggests that chronic absenteeism, which is missing 10 percent or more school days, is detrimental to student success. Essentially, students arent learning if theyre not attending school. Intervening before students meet the criteria of being chronically absent is critical. The multi-tiered system of support (MTSS) is designed to offer an early warning system designating whether a students attendance is on a positive course, sliding off track, already off track, or majorly off track and trending toward chronic. We recently supported a rural Mississippi school district that was interested in knowing whether there were differences in performance outcomes for students based on their MTSS attendance risk status. We used students performance level on the winter benchmark as the outcome variable of interest. The results showed a clear trend: 100% of students in the lowest performance level on the winter math assessment were considered off track or majorly off track according to the MTSS guidelines. Half of those students were already considered chronically absent by the winter term. In other words, 50% of the students performing at the lowest level on the math winter benchmark had already missed 10% or more of the school year. After seeing this information visualized, district leaders began discussing the need for an attendance intervention. While quantitative data like attendance numbers and the demographics of students taking advanced courses is essential to identifying opportunity gaps, qualitative data such as communication records between parents and teachers can also provide essential information. Qualitative data offers context, richness, and nuance that nicely complement more quantitative data points. Using both types of data together is often key to uncovering areas for improvement, persistent challenges, and even success stories. Putting Data Insights to Work Identifying data trends and gaining insights can be informative and often interesting. However, the value really comes from putting those insights to work. Putting insights to work means using information gleaned from analyses to develop an action plan to address weaknesses. For example, if you are analyzing participation in advanced coursework / exam participation and trends suggest discrepancies among certain groups, the next steps would be to determine potential root causes and create an intervention plan. As AP exams typically cost around $100 per exam, it could be that cost is a barrier. If additional data (e.g., qualitative data such as exit interviews from juniors or seniors, or anonymous surveys) supported this hypothesis, the information could provide supporting evidence in a grant proposal seeking funding for financially needy students to cover exam costs. Continuing to track trends after the removal of financial barriers would be helpful information for the school to determine whether they targeted the right barrier, and for sharing with the grantors as part of the post-award reporting process. It is also important that data is shared with key stakeholders. Sharing data with teachers and collaborating to provide solutions are important to implementing successful programs and interventions that support student success. Collaborating with families is also essential to re-engage disconnected students and provide assistance and support through familial involvement. As such, it is important that districts use communications tools that are easily accessible for families. Districts can immediately improve equity in communication by using communications platforms and tools that do not require parents to download apps or opt into messaging services. Students circumstances and needs vary widely and can impact student outcomes. Districts can gain a more complete understanding of these needs and help identify key inequities that need to be addressed by leveraging multiple forms of data. Paris, TX (75460) Today Thunderstorms - some may contain locally heavy rain, especially this evening. A few storms may be severe. Low 66F. Winds SE at 10 to 15 mph. Chance of rain 100%.. Tonight Thunderstorms - some may contain locally heavy rain, especially this evening. A few storms may be severe. Low 66F. Winds SE at 10 to 15 mph. Chance of rain 100%. It's interesting to consider music soundtracks that were composed for films. But it's also interesting when there's music composed as an artistic statement or in tribute to certain films. On Friday, March 4, local musician, composer and multimedia artist Stace England will release another one of his musical inspirations, "Roberta Stars in the Big Doll House, A Hollywood Story." The strides made by England can only be admired with his every artistic music release. We'll mention some of them later in this column. The new album is an 'A list' gem from England's band known as "Screen Syndicate." "All of my projects since 'Greetings From Cairo, Illinois,' in 2005, have included multimedia in our live shows," England said. "We use film clips, still photographs and sometimes audio clips. I've found these really enhance the story for audiences." An album from Stace England doesn't just compile a collection of songs that may or may not be interrelated. Each release is an artistic assemblage of poetry and music around a single topic or idea. "I would call this one a B-movie rock opera," he said. "The story has many interwoven compelling elements and it became very inspiring." The 'Hollywood Story' that is spun throughout "Roberta Stars in the Big Doll House" refers to Roberta Collins. She was a B-movie actress who appeared in 25 motion pictures some of them groundbreaking and nine television programs or series', such as "Adam-12," "The Rockford Files" and "B.J. and the Bear." With her blonde hair and attractive appearance compared to that of Marilyn Monroe, Collins was cast in low-budget outings like "The Big Doll House (1971)," "Women in Cages (1971)," "Unholy Rollers (1972)" and "Caged Heat (1974)." These were black-and-white flicks that many movie-goers first caught at the drive-in. They were groundbreaking stories of woman empowerment because several, such as the first two just mentioned, involve women escaping from prison and taking revenge. "One actress stood out in all those films," England said. "Roberta Collins. 'The Big Doll House' became a euphemism for Hollywood itself, a relentless jungle where very few survive and prosper." The effect was so profound, that England wrote all the songs for the album within a three-day period. The 11 tracks on 'Roberta Stars' are named after her films and arranged in chronological order of their theatrical releases. "The Big Doll House" features descriptive lyrics that provide a narrative to the film. "Bars on the windows and locked doors, emotional prisoners settling old scores. Will you be meek as a mouse, trapped inside the big doll house." From the 1974 Caged Heat: "Caged heat is rising, everyone's on fire. Something's got to give, the flames keep getting higher. Caged heat is boiling, everyone's covered in sweat. And ready for a fight, they're gonna get one you can bet." England said: "The lyrics for 'Sweet Kill' (1972), one of our favorite songs from the project, were done in a final draft in just three or four minutes. You're never sure where that stream is coming from, but you learn to stick with it and ride it out." "Cat fight in the jungle, you won but you lost. At the end of the day, all on display. Now all your dreams are gone, like the ending of a song, you can fade away." Following five albums at the beginning of his musical career, England blazed a new trail with "Greetings From Cairo, Illinois." The 2005 release was a concept album surrounding the historic Southern Illinois city and features a blistering 'Prosperity Train' belted out by Jason Ringenberg. With his band The Salt Kings, England began drawing international attention with his 2007 "Salt Sex Slaves" and "The Amazing Oscar Micheaux," in 2010, that wove tales of the Metropolis-born filmmaker and was featured on NPR's 'Weekend Edition.' After a 2019 album on the life of American songwriter Stephen Foster, England released another recording, reviewed in this column last May, as part of the Red Hills Music Collective, called "Greetings From Lawrence County, Illinois." "Roberta Stars in the Big Doll House, A Hollywood Story" is a streaming release that can be found on outlets like Apple Music, Soundcloud and others. The cover of the album has no words and is simply a photo of a drive-in movie screen. "We thought it was compelling on its own and captured the essence of what we were going for," England said. "Most of these films, especially one like Death Race 2000, hit U.S. drive-in movie screens during the period, and this is when I first became aware of them. And the drive-in was a rite of passage in the rural community where I grew up." As long as England continues being inspired by history, films and geographic locations, his music and lyrics will continue pouring forth and a grateful public will continue tuning in. For more information, go to staceengland.com. Gary Gibula is an SIU alum, musician, writer, editor and author of the Music Historicity columns. He can be reached at gary@gratefulgary.com. Love 0 Funny 0 Wow 0 Sad 0 Angry 0 DESOTO A home invasion call has prompted to a death investigation in Desoto. Jessica Trexler, 33, of Pulaski, was located dead inside a residence at 3:30 a.m. on Sunday, police said. After an initial investigation, it has been reported that Trexler did not have permission to enter the residence and may have done so by force, police said. A guest at the residence, 25-year-old Jessica Palmer, was arrested on various unlisted charges for her alleged involvement in the incident, according to police. The investigation is ongoing. The Jackson County Ambulance Service, Coroners Office and States Attorneys Office all assisted in the case. Love 0 Funny 1 Wow 0 Sad 0 Angry 0 Sign up for our Crime & Courts newsletter Get the latest in local public safety news with this weekly email. Sign up! * I understand and agree that registration on or use of this site constitutes agreement to its user agreement and privacy policy. SPRINGFIELD Gov. J.B. Pritzker has asked Illinois employee pension systems to review potential divestment in Russian assets after Russia's invasion of neighboring Ukraine. The Democrat wrote to the Illinois State Board of Investments, the Teachers' Retirement System and the State Universities' Retirement System asking them to explore the potential of divesting state pension assets from Russian-based companies and Russian assets. Pritzker's action follows similar overtures in other states to protest Russian President Vladimir Putin's decision to invade its neighbor last week. The state of Illinois stands with the people of Ukraine and nations around the world supporting peace in the country, Pritzker wrote. Divestment of Russian-related interests from the state's $100 billion portfolio likely wouldn't have the impact that economic sanctions imposed by the U.S. and much of the West. But it has precedent. State law prohibits investing in Iran, Sudan and companies that boycott Israel. The flag of Ukraine was also raised over the Illinois Statehouse in Springfield. Love 0 Funny 0 Wow 0 Sad 0 Angry 0 The 23-year-old man charged in Fridays deadly collision remains hospitalized, S.C. Department of Public Safety Director of Public Affairs Sherri Iacobelli said Wednesday. Meanwhile, the state trooper who pursued him is on administrative duty, she said. The crash claimed the lives of Zeleria Simpson of Charleston, an S.C. State University graduate, and Shemyia T. Riley of Greenville. Riley was a student at the university. Three other S.C. State University students were injured, including Fuquan Mekhi C. Hills of Greenville. Hills is facing two charges each of failure to stop for blue lights resulting in death and felony DUI resulting in death, according to S.C. Highway Patrol Sgt. Sonny Collins. Hes also charged with one count each of failure to stop for blue lights resulting in great bodily injury, felony DUI resulting in great bodily injury, possession with intent to distribute marijuana, unlawful possession of a firearm and open container of alcohol. Hills was allegedly driving a 2015 Hyundai Sonata at an estimated speed of 110 to 125 miles per hour, Lexington County Sheriffs Department Capt. Adam Myrick said. Iacobelli said SCDPS isnt charging anyone else in the crash. Collins alleged the crash occurred after a trooper noticed the Sonata traveling at a high rate of speed on U.S Highway 21 bypass in Orangeburg at 1 a.m. Friday. The trooper attempted a traffic stop for that offense. When the driver failed to stop for blue lights after making several turns in an attempt to elude law enforcement, the driver of that 2015 Hyundai Sonata collided with a 2009 Mercury Milan at the intersection of S.C. Highway 33 and S.C. Highway 178, Collins claimed. The Milan was driven by Simpson and she was the only occupant in the car, Myrick said. Highway Patrol Cpl. Leon C. Porter, of Troop Seven, was the trooper pursuing the Sonata, Iacobelli said. Hes currently on administrative duty. All pursuits and use of force incidents are reviewed by the departments Office of Professional Responsibility, and as such this case is being reviewed by OPR to determine if all policies and procedures were followed. While the case is under review by the department, the trooper has been placed on administrative duty, which is left to the discretion of the department following critical incidents and is not considered disciplinary action, Iacobelli explained. Porter has been working as a South Carolina trooper since July 2011, according to records obtained through the Freedom of Information Act from the S.C. Criminal Justice Academy. He also previously worked for the S.C. State University Police Department, the Columbia Police Department, the Orangeburg County Sheriffs Office and the Orangeburg Department of Public Safety. Orangeburg County Sheriff Leroy Ravenell asked the Lexington County Sheriffs Department to investigate the crash because of a state law involving agencies that work the same area. Contact the writer: mbrown@timesanddemocrat.com or 803-533-5545. Follow on Twitter: @MRBrownTandD Love 0 Funny 0 Wow 0 Sad 4 Angry 5 Sign up for our Crime & Courts newsletter Get the latest in local public safety news with this weekly email. Sign up! * I understand and agree that registration on or use of this site constitutes agreement to its user agreement and privacy policy. South Africa: Presidency receives Part 3 of State Capture Inquiry report The third part of the State Capture Commission report comprising of four volumes exclusively focusing on BOSASA has been handed over to the Presidency and released to the public on Tuesday. Director-General in The Presidency, Phindile Baleni, received the report on behalf of the President from the Secretary of the Commission, Professor Itumeleng Mosala at the Union Buildings. The first part of the report was presented and handed over by Acting Chief Justice and Commission Chairperson, Judge Raymond Zondo, to President Cyril Ramaphosa at the Union Buildings, in January. The second part was handed to the Presidency on 1 February 2022. Part 3 of the report, which consists of four volumes, has more than 1000 pages covering evidence heard by the Commission with regard to the BOSASA Group of Companies. In the report, Commission Chair Zondo said there will be Parts 4, 5 and 6 which will follow in March and April 2022. It was indicated in Part 1 that the reasons for the conclusion that state capture had been established would be given in Part 3. That was said because at that time the plan was that Part 3 was going to be the last Part of the Report. It does not contain those reasons. Those reasons will appear in one of the Parts that are to follow, the Commission Chair said in the report. In the first section, the Commission deals with allegations of State Capture, Corruption and Fraud which relates to the BOSASA group of companies. The evidence heard by the commission revealed that the BOSASA group of companies, its Chief Executive Officer, Gavin Watson, its Chief Operations Officer, Angelo Agrizzi, its Directors including Joe Gumede, Leshabane and others ran the entire BOSASA business operations on the basis of widespread corruption, bribery and fraud, the report stated. Meanwhile, the Gauteng High Court in Pretoria recently granted the Commission an additional two months to the end of April 2022 to complete its work. Commensurately, the High Court granted the President an extension of four months from receipt of the full report to present to Parliament an implementation plan in response to the report. SAnews.gov.za This story has been published on: 2022-03-02. To contact the author, please use the contact details within the article. We Are China China's space tracking ship sails for Indian Ocean missions Xinhua) 08:49, March 02, 2022 NANJING, March 1 (Xinhua) -- China's tracking vessel Yuanwang-6 departed Tuesday from its homeport in east China's Jiangsu Province for a new round of monitoring missions in the Indian Ocean. Yuanwang-6 returned to its homeport on Dec. 9 after completing three satellite monitoring missions. Before departure, the ship's personnel completed vessel examination and maintenance, ensuring all systems and facilities aboard Yuanwang-6 were in good working order. As China's third-generation space-tracking ship, Yuanwang-6 has taken part in 73 maritime monitoring and control missions, including China's Shenzhou manned spaceship missions. (Web editor: Peng yukai, Liang Jun) Public Advocate Religious Freedom Convoy Trailer NEWS PROVIDED BY Public Advocate March 2, 2022 HAGERSTOWN, Md., March 2, 2022 /Christian Newswire/ -- Eugene Delgaudio, president of a non-profit grass roots pro-family group Public Advocate of the U.S. released this statement online to his supporters today: Free Commemorative Convoy Hanger Procession Tag Public Advocate of the U.S. is supporting the American Truckers Freedom Convoy to arrive in Maryland March 4th, 2022. We plan on welcoming them in Hagerstown, Maryland with a giant THANK YOU TRUCKERS sign on Friday, March 4th with our own local convoy and special "Protect Religious Freedom" trailer float. We will also supply free snacks, American-Canadian Friendship flags, and free special commemorative Washington, D.C. "hanger procession convoy member" tags to place in car windows, said Delgaudio. Who: Public Advocate of the US Inc. What: Washington residents welcome Freedom Truck Convoy When: 1:30 p.m. - 5:30 p.m. Est. Friday, March 4, 2022 Where: Hagerstown, Maryland (Note: we will be on location in Hagerstown to thank truckers, exact location TBA) Public Advocate is standing with the Freedom Convoy Truckers to protect our Religious Freedom. Public Advocate has posted a "How To" design and build your own convoy trailer video online here at this link https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=v0p1DtdypdM We ask our supporters and members of the public to keep a look out for our LMNOP float which will display giant LMNOP letters and flags symbolizing the LMNOP community. Yes, the Lifestyle of Mainstream, Normal, Ordinary People has been under attack. The LMNOP community represents all of us, and we are standing up to protect our Religious Freedoms for the sake of the Lifestyle of Mainstream, Normal, Ordinary, People, (LMNOP). Americans are uniting together to protect the LMNOP community who have been bullied by the government to close their business, who were denied the right to worship, forced to mask and get the vaccine or lose their jobs. On the float you will also see some superheroes like Superman-Trump and Wonder Woman-Marjorie Taylor Greene, who have worked hard for the LMNOP community Denmark Technical College is partnering with Active Minds to bring Send Silence Packing, a mental health awareness and suicide prevention exhibit, to students and the greater Denmark community from 9 a.m. to 4 p.m. Thursday. For more than a decade, Active Minds acclaimed Send Silence Packing exhibit has traveled the country to end the silence that surrounds mental health and suicide and connect visitors with resources for support and action. The all-day exhibit includes personal stories from individuals who have lost a loved one to suicide and is designed to raise awareness about the impact of suicide, connect individuals to mental health resources, and inspire action for suicide prevention. We know from national statistics that there is a growing great need for and interest in mental health support for college students. The COVID-19 crisis just amplified the trends we had been seeing. We are excited to see how Send Silence Packing helps open the doors to deeper and more meaningful conversations surrounding mental health, said Lamar J. White, vice president for student affairs at Denmark Tech. Visitors are invited to walk among the Send Silence Packing backpacks to see the photographs and read the stories attached to them. Many of the backpacks were donated by families who lost a loved one to suicide. We're pleased to have the opportunity to bring the program to Denmark Technical College. Weve been very proactive in increasing mental health awareness and resources on campus. With the drastic increase in suicide rates among African American males, as an HBCU we are more on guard than ever, said Dr. Willie L. Todd Jr., president and CEO of Denmark Technical College. We want students to know that they are never alone and that we are here for them. The Send Silence Packing program is an extension of those efforts and we're excited to see the results," he said. More information about Send Silence Packing can be found at activeminds.org/sendsilencepacking. Love 1 Funny 0 Wow 0 Sad 0 Angry 0 DENMARK Denmark Clerk Barbara Williams stated over email on March 1 that a special meeting of Denmark City Council will be held Thursday, March 3, at 7 p.m. at Denmark City Hall and is open to the public. This meeting is being called, in part, because of months of inquiries by council members about the usage of American Rescue Act funds by the city, and the meeting may include an executive session, according to discussions held during the February council meeting last week. Councilwoman Bonnie Love, during the February teleconference meeting, after months of inquiries by Councilwoman Hope Long Weldon, also asked if the City of Denmark council had met to discuss the American Rescue Act funds and usage of them but was told by Mayor Gerald Wright that they had not. According to a report from City Accountant Rusty Munoz, as shared by City Administrator Heyward Robinson during the meeting, Denmark currently has $112,805.00 in American Rescue Act funds. Weldon inquired about the ARA funds during the February meeting as well. Weldon said, This is the sixth time I have asked council to have a meeting to discuss the American Rescue Act funds. Weldon also stated the minutes of the January meeting were incorrect and that she had not asked to meet to discuss just the American Rescue Act itself but the American Rescue Act funds (with an emphasis on funds). Mayor Pro Tem Jake Bookard made a motion to approve the minutes with proper correction, and the motion to approve the minutes with correction was approved. Weldon said other towns and cities in the region were discussing how to use their ARA funds and that citizens had told her this. Councilwoman Rosa James agreed that council needed to set a meeting to discuss the funds. In the last 10 months, we have not had a work session to discuss anything, Weldon added. Wright said, We will set a meeting within 10 days. We will inform you of a date within the next 10 days. Council met Tuesday, Feb. 22, for this meeting instead of Monday, Feb. 21, because of the Presidents Day holiday. Ten business days from that date will be Tuesday, March 8, which will be approximately two weeks before the next regular council meeting date of Monday, March 21, at 11 a.m. (if done via teleconference) or 7 p.m. If called as a live meeting. Denmark City Hall can be visited through the drive-thru window, visited to look at posted notices or called for more details. Wright, if he does as he stated, has until March 8 to set a work session meeting before the next regular council meeting. Police Chief Leroy Grimes, in another part of the meeting, said they recently hired Dontrey Terrell Staley who has 20 years of experience in law enforcement. Weldon asked, Is this officer coming from another municipality? Has his background been checked? Grimes said he did do a background check on the officer. Wright stated they should really go into executive session to discuss this because it is a personnel issue. Weldon, in summary, asked how they could go into executive session if they are not meeting live and continue to have teleconferences. Councilman Calvin Odom suggested they go into executive session during the work session meeting which is to be set within the next 10 days. Wright agreed and proposed that they do this. Grimes was also asked by Weldon how many officers the city should have. Grimes said, We would have to hire four to have the ideal number. We should have a total of 11 officers. Wright interjected that the chief should really discuss more details of this in the executive session they have planned for a future meeting. Weldon continued to ask how they could discuss these issues in an executive session if they were not having live meetings. Bookard said, We need to end this meeting. This is ridiculous. Wright said, We are in this situation because of the COVID situation. I think we will meet live with limited space and precautions (at the work session). Someone involved with work with the city, according to statements made during another recent teleconference, had exposure to COVID-19, so Denmark has continued its teleconferences for this reason. I do not want to continue with this (about the executive session and other city business) until we establish a live meeting and set an agenda, Wright added. Wright said if they start having live sessions again, they will space citizens apart from one another so that they will not have unnecessary risk. Wright stated, regarding the earlier statements from council members, I am going to attribute those to our not having the conventional style of meeting. Robinson, during another part of the meeting, gave his administrators report. He said, In June 2021, Denmark received $950,903 for a new well. The Department of Commerce is reviewing the engineering contract (for it). When Commerce completes the review, the environmental impact (study) can be completed, and the project can be bid out. The new well will have a 400 gallons per minute capacity. The well project will also include approximately 2,400 linear feet (almost a half mile) of 12-inch water main to connect to the existing system. The water main will run along U.S. 78 and connect the new well to the existing water system, Robinson added. Robinson also discussed the renovation of the old city hall to make it a police department building The drawings for the new police department renovation are 80% complete. He next discussed the Denmark water system modernization Work is underway on Plum Alley, Simms Street and Peterkin Street. Two-inch water lines are being installed to replace the smaller and older lines. Robinson continued, The modernization project includes the installation of approximately 15,700 linear feet of 2-inch water lines with associated appurtenances. The project also includes 12,200 linear feet of 6-inch water lines, the installation of 13 fire hydrants and 14 automatic flushing devices. In the mayor's report, Wright said, Recently, we seem to have a total disregard for the town. There are three or four places that are extremely trashy. Church Street, Frederick Street and Voorhees Road paint terrible pictures. I want to have a special project for those who can make a difference there. I want us to figure out how we can address this and not just have a one-time clean up. We want to have a special group to address litter, Wright added. No motions or decisions were made regarding this. Wright mentioned that citizens continue to put out items for Public Works to collect that are not garbage, such as furniture. Several council members mentioned this as well. Wright said, We have a service provided for the city for garbage pickup. Construction project debris or renovation refuse, old furniture and appliances are not part of our garbage pickup. In other business: In his report, Grimes said the police department created 46 new cases within the past month, including simple assault; aggravated assault; rape; kidnapping; burglary, domestic violence; vandalism of property; motor vehicle theft; trespass of real property; weapon law violation; runaway; disorderly conduct; driving under suspension; traffic collision and more. Robinson gave the water report and said there were 12 leaks for the month in the water system. He also gave the fire department report and stated there were 43 total calls. Love 0 Funny 0 Wow 1 Sad 0 Angry 0 Shortly after Joe Biden took office, a distinguished political science professor (whom I wont name) advised the new administration to engage with Russia in order to stop the Chinese threat. He said the U.S. should prevent China from dominating Asia by bringing Russia into a balancing coalition against China. No advice could have been more wrongheaded. U.S. policy should have been exactly the opposite: engage China in order to weaken Russia. I wonder what that political scientist is thinking now as he watches Russian troops and planes move into Ukraine proper, aiming to destroy Ukraines independence and turn it into a Soviet-era satellite, while folks in Beijing worry about what a war in Europe will mean for Chinas rise. My guess is that this political scientist will try to wriggle out of the matter by arguing just as Vladimir Putin has argued that if only the U.S. and NATO hadnt pushed close to Russias borders, we would face an entirely different, unthreatening situation. He would have a point, in that after the Soviet collapse, U.S. officials did take advantage of Russian weakness to establish a presence in the former Soviet satellites, including Ukraine and Poland. But its a small point, and one that cannot possibly justify the reckless, illegal and dangerous course Putin has embarked upon. If he were serious about the threat from NATO, he could have taken several off-ramps to avoiding a full-scale war. After all, neither Ukraine nor any other state that borders Russia presents a threat to Russian security. Its a smokescreen, another Big Lie, to cloak the real Russian objective of driving a wedge in the NATO alliance and remaking the European security map to reflect a Russian sphere of influence. Putin has made clear in recent speeches that Ukraine, far being a security threat, is a colony in Russian eyes a fictitious country that has always belonged to Mother Russia. No appeals to reason, such as President Zelensky has made, can move Putin. He is absolutely determined to bring Ukraine to its knees and make it another piece in the project of restoring Russias imperial greatness. Lets not forget that Russian interventionism has already been responsible for territorial aggrandizement in Chechnya, Georgia, Moldova, and of course Ukraine in 2014. Putin has a large appetite that is quite independent of what NATO does. To me, Putins theatrical moves to full-scale warmaking in Ukraine declaring that the two separatist enclaves in the east are peoples republics and that Russias troop deployments are in response to Ukrainian aggression are reminiscent of Hitlers seizure of Czechoslovakias Sudetenland in 1938 and his war on Poland the following year. The script is eerily familiar and must not end in appeasement as it did back then. Heavy sanctions on Russia will not deter Putin, but they will punish him for his crimes. He has succeeded in unifying democratic countries, not just NATO members, as never before just as Hitler did. Putin may be able to pacify Ukraine and impose a puppet regime, but it and Russia will be increasingly isolated, and the Russian people as well as Ukrainians will unfortunately feel great pain. But I do believe that Putins reach will exceed his grasp, and that he will fail. In this crisis, U.S. and European leaders must not forget that Russia still has a large nuclear weapon arsenal. As he said, Russia remains one of the most powerful nuclear states with a certain advantage in several cutting-edge weapons. Putins plans must be defeated, but he must not be cornered. That lesson came out of the Cuban Missile Crisis in 1962, when use of nuclear weapons was a distinct possibility, avoided because President Kennedy gave Nikita Khrushchev a way out. In the current war, use of nuclear weapons could also arise from the inevitable spillover of the fighting into NATO territory, or from a misperception in the fog of war. We are deep into an era of mutual assured destruction, so -- to use an old saying -- lets be careful out there. But lets not be bullied either. Mel Gurtov, syndicated by PeaceVoice, is professor emeritus of political science at Portland State University and blogs at In the Human Interest. Love 1 Funny 0 Wow 0 Sad 0 Angry 0 This past week, Russian President Vladimir Putin surprised many around the world by invading Ukraine from multiple points. In particular, from the southern border of Belarus straight toward the nearby Ukrainian capital, Kyiv. Additionally, there have been rocket and air attacks against various targets throughout Ukraine. A reason this invasion was such a surprise is that previously Putin had followed the Gerasimov Doctrine. This involved making strategic gains with non-military means ... supplemented by military means of a concealed character, according to Russian Chief of the General Staff Valery Gerasimov. The ground invasion was anything by concealed military means. In fact, the primary thrust was armored/mechanized. Having served in mechanized, light (including Ranger Tng) infantry, including operational deployments over a 30-year U.S. Infantry officer career, I offer the following observations and lessons. First, Putin has wanted to invade Ukraine to install a pro-Russian administration for many years. Since the 2014 Color Revolution in Ukraine, resulting in a Ukrainian administration much less aligned with Russian interests, Putin has signaled this desire. Shortly after the revolution, Russia bloodlessly seized Crimea from Ukraine and openly supported Russian separatists in the eastern Donbass region. Regardless, Putin perceived the costs of an actual invasion of Ukraine as outweighing the gains. Unfortunately, deterrence failed after the catastrophic U.S. withdrawal from Afghanistan. Deterrence comes with the perception that the gains of a certain course of action will not be worth the losses. On Oct. 13, 2021, Reuters reported the following about Putins perceptions of that failure: The United States' involvement in Afghanistan has led to tragedy, Russian President Vladimir Putin said on Wednesday, one week before Russia is due to host the Taliban in Moscow. Hosting the Taliban and making other such pronouncements showed the change in Putins thinking about us after Afghanistan. Putin clearly believed the United States would react similarly to what he saw with Afghanistan and the gains of invading Ukraine became worth the cost he foresaw from Biden. At the operational and tactical levels, the invasion has shown a number of problems with the Russian military. The terrain of Ukraine, particularly in winter, lends toward using primarily armored and mechanized as happened. A major challenge of using armored/mech forces is the substantial level of fuel required, along with ammunition, parts and other supplies. Among seasoned military leaders, theres an old refrain, Amateurs talk operations and professionals talk logistics. Logistics becomes the greatest challenge in planning, particularly as operations can only succeed with proper logistics. I found this quite true with mechanized infantry and armor. The planning for fueling and resupply must be thorough. It appears that the Russians may have failed at logistical planning at the tactical and operational levels. Based on the size of the respective militaries, Russian should have seized Kyiv and toppled the Ukrainian government within days of the start of the invasion. Russia is the second most powerful military in the world (in terms of capabilities of manning/equipment) and Ukraine is only ranked at 22, according to Global Firepower. Russia spent $61.7 billion on its military (2020), and has a military of 850,000, while Ukraine is only at 250,000. Russia dwarfs Ukraine in air power, with 4,100 aircraft to Ukraines 318. These same levels of imbalance exist with most weapons platforms, like tanks and fighting vehicles. Russia quickly fired over 250 ballistic and cruise missiles at targets throughout Ukraine. Seizing urban areas, like Kyiv, can be quite difficult, as cities require high numbers of troops and give an advantage of defensive locations. Still a quick Russian assault was meant to overwhelm and bring capitulation before becoming bogged down. Despite the overwhelming advantages, the Russian advance has stalled. Part of the answer appears to be stiff Ukrainian resistance, but logistics appears a primary factor. There are multiple reports about Russian armor stopped due to lack of fuel, not only the lack of resupply but vehicles moving out from Belarus without being topped off. As Philip G. Wasielewski and Seth Jones of The Center for Strategic and International Studies have reported, Russian army logistics forces are not designed for large-scale ground offensives far from railroads. Beyond that structural problem, logistics planning was substandard. According to the Jerusalem Post: After four days of heavy fighting and hundreds of kilometers of driving, Russian forces must resupply and refuel (but couldnt). An American official said on Saturday that Russian leaders are increasingly frustrated with how the invasion has gone so far and, according to the British Defense Ministry, the speed of the Russian advance has temporarily slowed likely as a result of acute logistical difficulties.' We praise Ukraines ability to hold off the Russian onslaught, but we have a duty to learn the lessons. After the horrendous withdrawal from Afghanistan, we held nobody accountable and that was wrong. Adversaries like Russia and China watched, and we pay for it now. We can never again allow that. Additionally, its time to take a closer look at adversary logistical capabilities and understand potential weaknesses. We should also look to our own ability to conduct large-scale conventional operations successfully, which we havent faced for many years. The world is a tough and dangerous place, and we must face it accordingly. Bill Connor, a retired Army Infantry colonel, author and Orangeburg attorney, has deployed multiple times to the Middle East. Connor was the senior U.S. military adviser to Afghan forces in Helmand Province, where he received the Bronze Star. A Citadel graduate with a JD from USC, he is also a Distinguished Graduate of the U.S. Army War College, earning his of strategic studies. He is the author of the book "Articles from War. Love 0 Funny 0 Wow 0 Sad 0 Angry 0 We're always interested in hearing about news in our community. Send us your news, photos, and videos and let us know what's going on! Submit Here (TBTCO) - Thi truong ket thuc thang 4 voi muc giam 8,4%, tro thanh thang giam sau nhat trong vong 2 nam. Hang loat co phieu chiet khau gia cuc sau tuy gay thiet hai rat lon cho nhieu nha au tu, nhung cung se tao co hoi cho cac nha au tu khac. The U.S. will release 30 million barrels of oil from the strategic petroleum reserve in an effort to bring down prices, the Biden administration said Tuesday. Another 30 million barrels will be contributed by the other member countries of the International Energy Agency. Global oil benchmark Brent crude, which last Wednesday passed $100 per barrel for the first time in more than seven years, has hovered well above that threshold this week amid tightening international restrictions on Russian energy exports. U.S. benchmark West Texas Intermediate has followed closely behind. Europe, heavily reliant on Russian oil and gas, initially appeared reluctant to cut itself off from a needed fuel source. The energy sector was shielded from the sanctions announced a week ago, shortly after Russia invaded Ukraine. But as much of the world rallied around Ukraine, sanctions intensified, and Russian energy became a major economic target. By shutting Russia out of the global financial system, including the banking network SWIFT, countries opposing the invasion hope to isolate Russia from one of its biggest sources of revenue. Nobody has literally turned off the spigot, or at least not too many of them, said Rob Godby, an economics professor at the University of Wyoming. The real problem right now is that they cant transact. They cant receive money for it very easily. Its become much more difficult to do that. Highest oil prices in nearly eight years could be here to stay In the hours after Russia invaded Ukraine, the price of crude oil passed $100 per barrel for the first time since 2014. Expected in the long run to make it harder for Russia to finance the war, those sanctions wont come cheap. The sanctions are really going to have effects on Russia, Godby said. And for that very reason, theyre also going to have real effects on consumers in Europe and the United States. The price of oil, a global commodity, is already reacting to the probable supply crunch. And as oil prices rise, gasoline prices will follow. Nobody can be sure how high prices might get before U.S. oil companies or international ones start upping production in response. Unlike many of its competitors, the U.S. cant order oil and gas producers to boost output. It has to wait for the companies to do it themselves. Wyoming hasnt seen much of a push toward new development. A large proportion of the states oil and gas leases are located on harder-to-permit federal lands; companies operating in Wyoming tend to respond more slowly to market shifts than operators in some other states. Its not yet clear what market conditions could prompt drilling to accelerate in Wyoming, which has already seen an especially sluggish return to pre-pandemic levels of oil and gas production. President Joe Biden angered U.S. oil companies this fall when he called on international producers, including Russia, to increase output in order to bring down high oil prices. When that didnt work, his administration released 50 million barrels roughly equivalent to two-and-a-half days of U.S. oil consumption from the strategic reserve. Industry responded more favorably to Tuesdays announcement. I think the release that President Biden did earlier was in response to political pressure over gas prices, and not an international security threat, said Ryan McConnaughey, communications director for the Petroleum Association of Wyoming. Global situations like this are the reason that the reserve was set up. But the release isnt expected to have a lasting impact. Thirty million barrels of oil would only supply the U.S. for about a day and a half. Just under 100 million barrels are consumed worldwide each day. Economists arent sure what events will spur new production, when markets will stabilize or how much prices will change in the meantime. Godby said the coordinated release, despite its limitations, is still a significant gesture. The reality is that any use of the strategic oil reserve is usually more symbolic than it is impactful, he said. But its uncommon to have this kind of a united front over serious economic sanctions. Love 0 Funny 0 Wow 0 Sad 0 Angry 0 The business news you need Get the latest local business news delivered FREE to your inbox weekly. Sign up! * I understand and agree that registration on or use of this site constitutes agreement to its user agreement and privacy policy. Tiffany Madrid, a 39-year-old woman, has been identified as a person of interest in an ongoing Natrona County homicide investigation into the death of Jay Carlos Montoya. A release from the Natrona County Sheriff's Office on Tuesday asked for the public's help in finding Madrid. She is described as a 5'6', 220-pound white woman with brown eyes and brown hair. Madrid has an active warrant out for her arrest for failing to appear in court on a methamphetamine possession charge, the release said. Those with information on Madrid can contact the sheriff's office at (307) 235-9282 or submit an anonymous tip through Crime Stoppers at (307) 577-8477 or crime-stoppers.com. Montoya's body was found near Hiland in September. A coroner said in October that the body appeared to have been there for "a couple of months." He was 36 at the time of his death. It was ruled a homicide. Because of the body's decomposition, the coroner sought help from the FBI's advanced labs to identify it. Follow city and crime reporter Ellen Gerst on Twitter at @ellengerst. Love 0 Funny 0 Wow 2 Sad 0 Angry 0 Sign up for our Crime & Courts newsletter Get the latest in local public safety news with this weekly email. Sign up! * I understand and agree that registration on or use of this site constitutes agreement to its user agreement and privacy policy. A bill that would ensure visitation rights for the loved ones of people in hospitals and long-term care facilities cleared the Wyoming House on Tuesday and is now moving onto the Senate. Before the measure passed, however, revisions removed much of its original intent. An amendment brought by Rep. Lloyd Larsen, R-Lander, would give nursing homes, long-term care centers and assisted living facilities the power to decide whether visitors are allowed. The bill had sought to bar these entities from prohibiting visitors. Another successful amendment would require facilities to follow Centers for Disease Control and Prevention guidelines as well as guidelines from the Centers for Medicare and Medicaid Services. But even with those changes, the bill would still leave hospitals in a lurch, said Eric Boley, president of the Wyoming Hospital Association and executive director of of LeadingAge Wyoming. [Hospitals] need the ability to follow the science and make educated decisions, and this bill doesnt let them do that, he said. Form a hospital perspective, you never know whats gonna walk thru the door and what symptoms they may have, so you have to be able to adapt. The bill, sponsored by Rep. Bill Fortner, R-Gillette, was born out of the COVID-19 pandemic. Concerns about disease spread prompted some medical facilities to bar many loved ones from visiting family members even when the patient was close to death. A Brigham Young University study that analyzed the impact of social isolation on mortality found that the risk for earlier death is increased 29% from consistent social isolation. The federal guidelines placed more restrictions on long-term care facilities than hospitals. Nursing homes were some of the hardest hit institutions during the first months of the pandemic. Implementing the bill could strike down important guidelines outside of communicable disease, Boley explained. Say, for instance, an abused wife was in the hospital and her abuser wanted to visit her. Well, the bill doesnt really protect her from that, Boley said. Proponents of the bill countered that it did not force a black or white situation where people are either allowed to visit or barred from the facility. Instead, they see this bill as a way to force facilities to come up with safe ways for loved ones to visit without spreading disease. People are not saying they dont want to take precautions and they dont want to look at all the science and all that, said Rep. Jeremy Haroldson, R-Wheatland. Theyre just saying, Lets figure out a way, instead of simply saying, You cant. Larsen said he did not think it was fair to force facilities to take that action, particularly because he believes they have the best interest of their patients in mind. Like many bills drafted in response to the pandemic, the issue of local control came up. During the pandemic we have seen frustration when public health orders were handed down by states and federal agencies in a one-sized-fits-all fashion, eliminating local control, said Tom Lacock, spokesman for the Wyoming AARP. We think local officials (medical directors, and nursing home administrators) are best positioned to determine visitation rules and processes, based on what they see in their local communities. Opponents in the House also warned against making a knee-jerk reaction to the pandemic. We are making a policy decision off of our feelings and off of potential anger and sorrow instead of rational fact, said Rep. Landon Brown, R-Cheyenne. Were giving free reign to allow the spread of a transmissible disease. What if its a worse disease? The prospect of the next, possibly more dangerous disease did not convince proponents. I dont have a crystal ball. None of us do. We have a heart. And some of us didnt get to spend time with our loved ones in their final days, said Rep. Kevin OHearn, R-Mills. Opponents are happier with the bill following the House amendments, but still see more work to be done. Proponents of the bill are far less pleased following the changes. To me this right now, this bills mush, Fortner said. Rep. Mike Yin, D-Jackson, has a personal experience with the issue. His father died from COVID-19 complications. Yin did get to see his dad one last time, but only after the hospital staff decided that his father had no likelihood of surviving. Yin ultimately voted against the bill. Was it hard? Yeah, it was hard, he said. It was really distressing, but did I have a right to catch something from someone in the hospital and spread it to someone else? Thats the question. Follow state politics reporter Victoria Eavis on Twitter @Victoria_Eavis Love 0 Funny 0 Wow 0 Sad 1 Angry 1 Get Government & Politics updates in your inbox! Stay up-to-date on the latest in local and national government and political topics with our newsletter. Sign up! * I understand and agree that registration on or use of this site constitutes agreement to its user agreement and privacy policy. After passing their own versions of the budget bill, the Wyoming House and Senate will need to iron out a $46-million difference in spending. A conference committee with five legislators from each chamber will now meet and negotiate a compromise for consideration. The House and Senate appointed legislators to the conference committee Tuesday morning. All appointees are also members of the Joint Appropriations Committee. Lawmakers must iron out differences on funding for teachers and juvenile justice, among other issues. The House and Senate passed identical amendments to add $90.2 million to the budget bill. Those amendments will not be subject to negotiation during the Joint Conference Committee process, a relief to lawmakers who were able to get their amendments passed during last weeks grueling budget discussions. The debate over budget amendments kept the House working past 9 p.m. Wednesday and 7 p.m. Friday. Between those two days, the House considered 104 budget amendments while the Senate considered 75 spending more than 25 hour combined last week considering budget amendments. Ultimately, the House and the Senate each passed 37 amendments. In total, 71 amendments failed and 34 were withdrawn by their sponsors. Spending differences The most glaring disagreement on spending between the chambers is whether to provide a cost-of-living increase for teachers. In October, the Joint Education Committee suggested a $25-million increase to help Wyomings rural schools attract and retain high-quality teachers. Ultimately, the Joint Appropriations Committee trimmed that down to $9.3 million. That proposal survived the House, while the Senate stripped the cost-of-living increase entirely. Republican members of the Senate Appropriations Committee said the amount of federal COVID-19 relief funding school districts have received makes a cost-of-living increase unnecessary this year. That position, however, will struggle to find the same level of support in the House, where lawmakers want to increase funding for teachers. Both chambers will also need to compromise on a difference of $1.8 million in spending on Community Juvenile Services Boards, which are designed to help communities provide programming to keep kids out of the criminal justice system. We dont want kids in the juvenile justice system, said Rep. Cathy Connolly (D-Laramie). Quite honestly, kids in the juvenile justice system often end up being adults in the prison system. The House also amended the budget bill to add $10 million for sidewalks and other pathways that promote active transportation. The Senate version does not include that funding. A Senate amendment to add $1.7 million in funding for three employees and other contracted work in the state treasurers office also survived. The additional funding, along with budget footnotes to increase oversight of the treasurers office, reflect legislators concerns about accounting issues since the election of State Treasurer Curt Meier. Love 0 Funny 0 Wow 0 Sad 0 Angry 1 SMALL business owners in three Caribbean countries will get the opportunity to showcase how their enterprises are transforming their communities, and themselves, due to support from the social enterprise, Nudge Caribbean. The opportunity comes tomorrow, at an event called Nudge Now, which is being organised by Nudge Caribbean, which was founded by Anya Ayoung-Chee, design strategist and social entrepreneur, and Julie Avey, Massy Groups senior vice president of People and Culture. A Barrackpore woman returned to her house in the early hours of last Saturday and found an i And so it has come to pass. One week after the island-wide blackout of February 16, we told you in this space that, from among the best authority available, there would be, there could be no one to blame for what happened. We told you that the determination had already been made as to what happened, how and why, and that nobody could have been held responsible for that. It was a warning against the natural national tendency to go for blood. Loud had been the shouts of sabotage, the result of worker discontentment, and a clamour for heads to roll. The following column is the opinion and analysis of the writer: It brings cold comfort to Mitt Romney, Im sure, to be reminded that he was right about Vladimir Putin in 2012. But it offers a cautionary note to anybody else who might think too quickly that ol Vlad has had it. During the 2012 presidential race, Republican Romney, now a Utah senator, was ridiculed for calling Russia our No. 1 geopolitical foe. President Barack Obama responded in their next debate with the 80s are calling; they want their foreign policy back. And Vice President Joe Biden in a later speech joined in the fun, saying Romney was mired in a Cold War mindset. Well, now that Russia under Putin has invaded Ukraine, Romneys observation sounds downright prophetic. But, in fairness to all, Romneys Democratic critics were hardly alone in their thinking at the time. The Berlin Wall had fallen. The Soviet Union had broken apart in 1991. Al-Qaida and other international terrorist groups were posing a much more clear and present danger in the conventional wisdom of those times. Then-Soviet leader Mikhail Gorbachev reportedly begged European leaders to include Moscow in their security institutions after the wall fell. But those calls were rebuffed. And the mindset that the West had bigger fish to fry continued even after Putin took control of two breakaway republics in Georgia in 2008, with little objection from the rest of the world. Then he took Crimea in 2014. Obama said there were costs and Russia was isolated, but Western sanctions had little impact. Europe continued with its commercial diplomacy, even to the point of making itself dependent, particularly in Germany, on Russian gas and oil. Even Russian cyber-meddling in this countrys 2016 elections led to more arguing in our own parties than with consequences for Putins government. But now that Putin has moved into Ukraine, the West faces a can of problems that we have kicked down the road for too long. Masha Gessen, the bestselling Putin critic and New Yorker writer, says Putin learned the seeds of his current strategy from watching how President Bill Clinton and NATO handled the 1999 war in Kosovo. NATO launched a 78-day campaign of airstrikes against Serbia to force President Slobodan Milosevic to end his military campaign of widespread killings of ethnic Albanians in Kosovo. Russia disapproved and refused to recognize Kosovo independence. But now Putin is back on the world stage with what Gessen in recent interview on PBS Amanpour & Company, called a cosplay of the Kosovo saga. He claims a humanitarian mission in Ukraine to protect people who have been abused by the genocide of the Kyiv regime for eight years, although neither he nor anyone else offered evidence of such abuses. He accused the Ukraine government of committing numerous bloody crimes against civilians, including citizens of the Russia. Again, without evidence. Autocrats cant be troubled by such details. More disturbing, he appeared to question the legitimacy of the other liberated republics who made up the Soviet bloc, sounding like his deadly game of rolling into independent countries is not over. Putin seems to have chosen an unusually opportune time for his misadventures. After pulling out of its longest war ever in Afghanistan, the United States has little appetite for new conflicts. And our politics are so polarized that conservative influencers such as Fox News Tucker Carlson keep beating their love drums for Putin, who former President Donald Trump praised as savvy after his would-be pal Vlad recognized the independence of two Russia-backed separatist-controlled areas in eastern Ukraine. President Biden had a more appropriate description. America stands up to bullies, he told reporters as Russian tanks rolled into Ukraine. We stand up for freedom. This is who we are. Yes, at least thats who we try to be. America stands for democracy, we like to say. But were still haggling about the price were willing to pay. E-mail Clarence Page at cpage@chicagotribune.com . Subscribe to stay connected to Tucson. A subscription helps you access more of the local stories that keep you connected to the community. SARSEF: Intel Corporation announced that Tucson nonprofit organization SARSEF was selected as one of the 20 members of the Equity in STEAM Initiative, an initiative co-sponsored by YWCA Metropolitan Phoenix. The Equity in STEAM Initiative cohort consists of educators from public or charter K-12 schools, or higher education, and representatives from 501 (3) organizations with a budget of less than $1 million in the last fiscal year within Arizona. Each one will get grant funding and leadership training to help them create and continue the implementation of programs which are focused on STEAM education. Grants will be administered by YWCA Metropolitan Phoenix. University of Arizona: The University of Arizona Eller College of Managements online programs have received multiple high billings via US News and World Reports 2022 rankings. Eller Colleges Online MBA Program tied for No. 7 overall (rising three spots from last year), was ranked No. 5 among publics and No. 5 for best online MBA programs for veterans. The program was also high-ranking in subspecialty categories including business analytics (tied for No. 6), marketing (tied for No. 10), general management (tied for No. 11) and finance (tied for No. 15). Ellers Online Master of Science in Management Information Systems Program ranked No. 5 overall, bumping it up one spot from last year into the Top 5 best online graduate information systems programs. The colleges undergraduate Online Bachelors program tied for No. 8, retaining its spot as a Top 10 best online Bachelors program. Pedego Electric Bikes: Pedego Electric Bikess Tucson store was honored with two of the companys top awards. For 2021 and 2022, Pedego Tucson earned a Founders Circle award, recognizing the top 10 stores for total sales income. It also earned a quality store award for 2021, which is given to the top 10 stores ranked in terms of total sales, quality service and aftermarket support. Submit items about charitable donations by businesses or nonprofits to business@tucson.com. Subscribe to stay connected to Tucson. A subscription helps you access more of the local stories that keep you connected to the community. In 1956, a huge tent was set up for the Tucson Winter Playhouse at Rillito Park. The ensemble featured a young, little-known actor named Harvey Korman. Korman broke into television in 1961, with guest appearances on several shows. It wasn't until he became a regular on the Carol Burnett Show in 1967 that he became a household name. He was also known for playing Hedley Lamar in Mel Brooks' "Blazing Saddles" in 1974. More of Pima Countys children and teens will be ditching masks in school following recent changes in county and federal guidelines. The Centers for Disease Control and Prevention suggested Friday that communities decide on easing masking requirements based on the following criteria: COVID-19 case rates below 200 per 100,000 residents, with fewer than 20 new COVID hospital admissions per 100,000 residents over a seven-day period, and less than 15% of hospital beds being used by COVID patients. Pima County, according to the CDC, was not meeting that threshold as of last week but is expected to reach it by the end of this week. The Board of Supervisors ended the countys mask mandate as of Monday. The mandate was originally put in place in late December during the omicron variant surge, requiring residents to wear masks indoors when social distancing wasnt possible. Masks are still required in county buildings when people have to be within 6 feet of one another. Masking in Amphitheater Public Schools became optional Tuesday after Superintendent Todd Jaeger sent a letter about the change to students and staff. Our district will continue to encourage those who choose to wear a mask to do so, and we will enforce our prohibition of disrespectful behavior toward anyone based upon their choice of whether or not to wear a mask, Jaeger wrote. The district will still apply certain masking and quarantine mandates for those who test positive for COVID-19, or for those who come in direct contact with an infected person. Other county school districts are still deciding what to do. Tucson Unified School District, as of Monday, was not changing its masking requirements. But governing board president Adelita Grijalva didnt rule out the possibility of discussing that at the boards March 8 meeting, if the transmission rate in the community continues to decrease. As of this point, we havent discussed it and its not on the agenda, Grijalva said on Monday. Im not opposed to talking about it. We just have to make sure that we are in low to moderate transmission. There are important factors to consider despite the CDCs new recommendations, she said, such as the efficacy of the vaccine for kids ages 5 to 11. Other factors to consider include how to continue to protect vulnerable members of a community or school, and deciding if waiting for higher vaccination rates might be wise, said Dr. Joe Gerald, a researcher with the University of Arizonas Zuckerman College of Public Health. The people who remain most vulnerable are those who are immunocompromised, a communitys oldest citizens, and people living with various disabilities. Its possible now for different communities to make different decisions (about masking) and for both communities to be right, Gerald said Tuesday. My guess is most will pull off their mask mandates when they are able to do so. I think some are much more willing to abandon masks than they were just a few weeks ago. Sunnyside Unified and Catalina Foothills districts both are continuing to monitor COVID-19 data, and have not yet made any decisions on lifting their mask mandates. Sunnysides governing board plans to discuss the topic at its March 8 meeting, said spokeswoman Marisela Feliz. The Flowing Wells School District still has a mask mandate, according to its website. School officials did not respond to Arizona Daily Star questions. The Vail, Marana and Sahuarita districts have not had mask mandates in recent months, while Tanque Verde School District ended its masking requirement for students in pre-kindergarten through sixth grade in mid-December. Keeping masking in place means transmission rates would fall faster but at this point, Gerald said, many of the people who were going to get infected with the omicron variant have done so already. For the week ending Feb. 20, roughly 12,378 Arizona residents were diagnosed with COVID-19, a 43% decrease from the 21,842 cases reported the week ending Feb. 13. Contact reporter Genesis Lara at glara@tucson.com Subscribe to stay connected to Tucson. A subscription helps you access more of the local stories that keep you connected to the community. Concerned about COVID-19? Sign up now to get the most recent coronavirus headlines and other important local and national news sent to your email inbox daily. Sign up! * I understand and agree that registration on or use of this site constitutes agreement to its user agreement and privacy policy. Patty Machelor Reporter Patty covers issues pertaining to children and families as well as people living with disabilities. She previously reported on court cases, with an emphasis on juvenile court. She has worked for the Arizona Daily Star since 2001. Various roads in Tucson will be affected by road work starting Thursday. On Thursday, March 3, from 7 a.m. to 4 p.m., crews from Next Generation Electrical are scheduled to convert the traffic signal heads to include flashing yellow arrows at 22nd Street and Country Club Road. During this work, the traffic signals will not be in operation, and lane restrictions will be in place at the intersection for all travel directions. Law enforcement officers will be on site to direct travel until the work is complete. Roads will also be affected this week by the three-day Tucson Bicycle Classic stage race. On Friday, March 4, the time trial course will be held on Marsh Station Road between Interstate 10 Exit 291 and the Pantano Ranch. This section of Marsh Station Road will be closed to traffic from around 8 a.m. to 4 p.m. On Saturday, March 5, northbound Mission Road will be closed to traffic from 6 a.m. to 4 p.m. Continental Road will also be closed from Duval Mine Road to the Green Valley Performing Arts Center. On Sunday, March 6, Greasewood Road will be closed. Anklam and Speedway will still be open to traffic. Course marshals wearing orange vests will be positioned around the racecourse along with police officers at major intersections. Subscribe to stay connected to Tucson. A subscription helps you access more of the local stories that keep you connected to the community. Nine Southern Arizona law enforcement agencies have teamed up to launch a countywide critical incident team, hoping to remove perceived conflicts of interest and improve transparency in incidents involving officers' use of force and in-custody deaths. Law enforcement leaders from Pima County, Tucson, Oro Valley, Marana, Sahuarita, the University of Arizona, Pima Community College, the Pascua Yaqui Nation and the South Tucson Police Department announced the formation Tuesday of the Pima Regional Critical Incident Team. Until now, each local agency has handled its own investigations into such incidents, with departments conducting separate criminal and investigative inquiries. Now, the criminal investigation into whether any laws were broken will be handled by one of the other departments, while each agency will still handle its own administrative investigation to determine if officers violated department rules or policies. The partnership, which Oro Valley Police Chief Kara Riley said was more than a year in the making, is an effort to get ahead of proposed statewide legislation that would require departments to hand off some investigations involving their own officers to other agencies. House Bill 2650 would create a "major incident division" within the Arizona Department of Public Safety which, beginning July 1, 2025, would investigate any critical force incidents involving police officers, including the use or intended use of deadly force. The proposed legislation, recently approved by a House committee, says departments wouldn't be required to use DPS' team if they instead turned over an investigation to a regional task force or another agency, such as the new Pima Regional Critical Incident Team. "Massive vote of confidence" While the Pima County Sheriff's Department took the lead in organizing the team, Sheriff Chris Nanos said credit for the idea belongs to Riley. "This is something being done across the nation, and we decided we're going to do it now," Nanos said at a news conference Tuesday. "Transparency is really just that. It talks about our openness and our willingness to be honest with not just those that work within our organizations, but those we serve, particularly our community." Under the partnership, the lead investigator in critical incidents will be from a separate agency from the involved agency. "The involved agency may still have investigators assisting with the investigation, but they will be assigned roles that are not determinative," said sheriff's Deputy James Allerton. The team will operate under a uniform set of processes and protocols, whereas in the past departments may have had different rules about handling such investigations. The single set of guidelines, which will be made available to the public, is designed to help ensure transparency, sheriff's officials said. Nanos said when he took the idea to the other chiefs, everyone was quick to sign on. "They said, 'We're part of the community and we want them to know not just how we work, but who we are and what we're about,'" he said. Tucson Police Chief Chad Kasmar said all the police leaders are interested in transparent investigations. But the collaboration isn't easy for the departments involved, he said. "It takes a lot of work for our criminal investigative staffs to figure out just how these things are going to work when they unfold," Kasmar said. "There's a lot of moving complexities to these investigations where we have to protect crime scenes" while also "protecting due process for staff that's involved and being transparent to the media." With 12 shootings involving TPD in 2021, that agency's volume will likely make up a large percentage of the cases, Kasmar said, which will give investigators at smaller agencies a chance to gain experience with high-profile investigations. "There's really no more significant event that we investigate as organizations, so it's a massive vote of confidence for me to hand over that responsibility to any of the leadership or organizations (involved,)" Kasmar said. Said Nanos, "There's going to be times where the sheriff is not going to be happy with Chief Riley's decision to do this or Chief Kasmar's decision to do that. But collectively we have decided to settle those differences and let the teams do their job." Cost savings are expected Another benefit of regionalization is the cost savings it provides to the community, Nanos said. "You don't need 10 bomb trucks or 10 SWAT teams, that's costly," he said. "By sharing resources, we not only benefit the community in a fiscal way, we also benefit in an investigative way that makes the community know that we collectively work well together and want to help each other help our communities." Riley agreed, saying, "We have Pima regional teams with our tactical teams, our K-9 units all working collaboratively together. It was just going to be a different tentacle that we were working on." Riley said getting elected leaders on board was an important part of the process, with all the paperwork required of the various town and city councils and the Pima County Board of Supervisors. Nanos said the team will work as quickly as possible to get information out to the public after a critical incident. "Expediency is important to us, but as important as that is, accuracy and the welfare of our officers and staff and the community has to take the forefront," he said. Inmate deaths The team's findings will be reviewed by the Pima County Attorney's Office, which supports the partnership and is looking into its own options for regionalizing prosecution efforts, Nanos said. All inmate deaths that are suspected of being the result of a use of force encounter by a corrections officer will fall under the team's purview. Any other inmate death will still be investigated by sheriff's detectives. When it comes to critical incidents involving TPD and the Sheriff's Department the two largest agencies on the team those two departments will take the lead in handling investigations of one another, Sheriff's Lt. Luis Cornidez, commander of the team, told the Star in a previous interview. For critical incidents involving the smaller departments, lead investigation duties will rotate, with TPD and PCSD assisting as needed, Cornidez said. Part of the Sheriff Department's role was to provide training coordination to the various agencies, bringing in officers from the Los Angeles Police Department last year to educate local agencies about their protocols and procedures when officers are involved in shootings. The behind-the-scenes legwork to make the team possible was extensive, including finding the correct software for sharing reports, establishing protocols for getting evidence from one place to another, and figuring out storage and access for footage from body-worn cameras. Contact Star reporter Caitlin Schmidt at 573-4191 or cschmidt@tucson.com. On Twitter: @caitlincschmidt Subscribe to stay connected to Tucson. A subscription helps you access more of the local stories that keep you connected to the community. Get local news delivered to your inbox! Subscribe to our Daily Headlines newsletter. Sign up! * I understand and agree that registration on or use of this site constitutes agreement to its user agreement and privacy policy. This reckoning has been coming for a long time. For years, white nationalists have been trying to leverage their way into the mainstream of American politics, especially in the GOP. Now Arizona has a state senator bold or crazy enough to say thats exactly what shes doing, so we cant avoid dealing with Sen. Wendy Rogers. The Senate did so by censuring her on Tuesday. But whats harder is to confront the tendencies she represents not just white nationalism, but also the dangerous demonization of the political opposition and the political cynicism that empowers them. Rogers hails from the Phoenix area, but after shopping for districts and losing elections for years, she now represents an area in north-central Arizona, Legislative District 6, and claims Flagstaff as her home. In the Tucson area, people may remember her as the Republican nominee who lost to Democrat Tom OHalloran in the 2018 general election in Congressional District 1. Since winning election to the state Senate in 2020, Rogers has been steadily ramping up her rhetoric and overtly trying to pull Republicans to the racist, anti-Semitic right. There is whats called the Overton Window of political acceptability. And we have to move it inch by inch, day by day, she said in an interview. Toward what? Rogers said in a Feb. 23 tweet shes simply pushing politics toward Christ, America First, Freedom and our Founding Documents. Dont believe her. 'Build more gallows' During her time in the Senate, Rogers has become a star to the emboldened white nationalist movement. She has embraced Nick Fuentes, who has repeatedly expressed white supremacist and antisemitic views. In June, the Anti-Defamation League reported, he tweeted, If you are a White male zoomer, remember that the people in power hate you and your unborn children and they will try to genocide you in your lifetime. His Twitter account has since been suspended. Fuentes also founded the America First Political Action Conference, a further right version of the Conservative Political Action Conference, or CPAC. Rogers spoke to Fuentes conference last week, praising him as the most persecuted man in America. Speaking at the same conference, Fuentes noted people are comparing Vladimir Putin to Hitler, adding and they say thats not a good thing. Wink, wink. Speaking by video feed to the conference, Rogers said: We need to build more gallows. If we try some of these high-level criminals, convict them, and use a newly built set of gallows, itll make an example of these traitors whove betrayed our country. What traitors? It hardly matters. This kind of demonization is typical in the ideological zone that Rogers inhabits. She and Rep. Mark Finchem, the Oro Valley Republican, regularly refer to anyone who opposes them as communists. U.S. Rep. Paul Gosar has also spoken to the America First conference and voiced much the same rhetoric. Rogers tweeted Tuesday morning, today is the day where we find out if the Communists in the GOP throw the sweet grandma under the bus for being white. She added in a steady flow of posts, Soros is a problem and anyone who sides with him over me is an enemy of the Republic. She said of the Ukrainian president, Volodymyr Zelenskyy, who is Jewish: Zelensky (sic) is a globalist puppet for Soros and the Clintons. 'Eliminationist' rhetoric spreads The thing is, it isnt just her resorting to this escalating rhetoric. Blake Masters, the candidate from Tucson for the GOP nomination for U.S. Senate, also has embodied this tendency in his campaign statements. The left hates white people, he tweeted last year. They want you to believe that violence in the name of Black Lives Matter should be excused. Whens the last time you heard a leftist say anything good at all about our country, Masters said in a recent video. If it were up to them, we wouldnt even exist. This sort of talk is close to whats sometimes called eliminationism the idea that ones political opponents pose an existential threat to the home country or culture and must be excised from the body politic or even killed. Its led to genocide elsewhere, and its worryingly common these days in the USA. But it flourishes because it keeps people in power. Gov. Doug Ducey acknowledged this last week in a frank response to a question by Jeremy Duda of the Arizona Mirror. Duda noted that an independent-expenditure group Ducey controls put nearly $500,000 toward helping Rogers win in 2020 and asked are you still happy with that investment and do you think that was a good decision? Duceys response was frighteningly pragmatic, to the point of amoral cynicism. What I need as a governor are governing majorities so I can pass dollars into our social safety net. So we can provide programs like this that will help children from around our state. The fact that we can put budgets that put $8.67 billion in K-12 education. Thats what I wanted is to move my agenda forward. Im proud of what weve been able to accomplish. And shes still better than her opponent, Felicia French. Incentives for extremism Certainly hes right that having a Republican majority makes it easier to pass his agenda, but its ridiculous to suggest that Rogers opponent, Felicia French, wouldnt have wanted as much or more social and education spending. When he says my agenda, the top priority has always been tax cuts, especially those helping the wealthy. And the way he specified the name of Rogers opponent was strange. He actually did it twice in his longer answer. French is a moderate Democrat who spent her career in the Army as a nurse and helicopter pilot, retiring as a colonel. Now she works on the Navajo reservation in Tuba City. During the campaign, Peter Aleshire reported in the White Mountain Independent that French has largely refrained from criticizing Rogers, instead focusing on a platform that calls for more spending on educational reforms, stronger action to slow the spread of COVID-19 and stronger environmental regulations. So, in fact, Ducey and the corporations who subsidized his independent expenditure campaign elevated a candidate renowned for her rhetorical extremism at the expense of a qualified, restrained candidate. They did it to help Ducey accomplish his agenda, though certainly not education spending and the social safety net. Rogers even got a favor from Republicans on the Arizona Redistricting Commission, it appears. Shereen Lerner, a Democrat on the commission, accused David Mehl, a commission Republican from Tucson, of proposing a last-minute shift of legislative borders to move Rogers out of a Dem-friendly district and into a Republican one. So censuring Rogers, as the Senate did Tuesday, perhaps sets some very loose guardrails for the most extreme rhetoric. But the incentives that put Rogers where she is remain in place. White supremacy, antisemitism, eliminationism will remain strong as long as the power structure and the voters reward it. Contact columnist Tim Steller at tsteller@tucson.com or 520-807-7789. On Twitter: @senyorreporter Subscribe to stay connected to Tucson. A subscription helps you access more of the local stories that keep you connected to the community. Be the first to know Get local news delivered to your inbox! Sign up! * I understand and agree that registration on or use of this site constitutes agreement to its user agreement and privacy policy. As Russian troops advance in Ukraine, bombing buildings and causing havoc, Tucsonans with relatives and friends there are nervous and worried for their loved ones. The realities of war are not easy, causing loss of appetite and sleep, said Irena Chausovskaya, 33, whose family came to Tucson 30 years ago from Kyiv, the capital of Ukraine. Irena was age 2 and came with her parents, siblings and grandparents as Ukrainian Jewish refugees and received aid from Jewish Family & Childrens Services refugee resettlement programs. Tucson nurse Bonnie Ledford worries about friends she made in 2014 when she lived in Okhtyrka for two months when she was adopting her daughter, Anya Ledford, from an orphanage there. Chausovskaya said she was working with a group of former military soldiers to try and get her relatives out of Kyiv, but they do not want to leave. They rather stay and die defending our country, she said during a break from her shift at the familys restaurant, European Market & Deli, in Tucsons midtown. The Chausovskaya family has about 40 relatives in Ukraine, some living in Kyiv and Odessa, and others throughout the country. The men are volunteering to fight and will be trained by groups of former soldiers. They are making Molotov cocktails right now, said Chausovskaya of the poor mans grenade in an interview Monday. Ukrainians have so much heart and soul, said Chausovskaya. They are salt of the earth people. What is going on now with the Russian invasion is hard to understand because a lot of Ukrainian women are married to Russian men, she said. I think people are hopeful about a quick ending to the war. They are hopeful for the best, but are prepared for the worst, she said. Right now all our cousins are staying in their basements with their small children, said Olga Chausovskaya, Irenas mother, who also took a break from her shift at the market and deli to share her thoughts about her relatives and the war. No one is sleeping because it is so cold. It is below 15 degrees and snowing, she said of the weather in Kyiv several days ago. Who is there to protect the families? she asked. Nobody, she answered. They do not have guns. You cant do anything with knives. Yet, one 17-year-old cousin did say, if I have to I will take a knife and fight, Irena recalled. Olga said her relatives can hear bomb blasts and shooting in the background. So many big apartments have been destroyed. Russian troops are around the city (Kyiv), she said, explaining that before the war her relatives had jobs in stores, one was a bookkeeper, another a high school principal, and another was a delivery driver of electronics equipment. Now, their normal work and daily routines have ended. There is nothing. They have little food. They go for water outside, said Olga. A cousin died Friday in his fifth-floor story apartment and he was not taken out of his home until days later to get cremated, said Olga. He was a retired police captain. He was 71 and had diabetes and heart problems. He was so stressed, said Olga, explaining that civilians were getting prepared for war and were not able to attend to her deceased cousin. A private company finally moved him from the apartment to a crematorium. I am glad my grandfather didnt live long enough to see this, said Irena of the Russian invasion of Ukraine. Her grandfather, Mikhail Rabinovich, 93, recently died of complications from diabetes. Bonnie Ledford is another Tucsonan who has friends in the Ukraine, where she lived while adopting her daughter from an orphanage in Okhtyrka, which is northeast of Kyiv and closer to the Russian border. The Russian military is attacking Okhtyrka now and has been for the last couple of days, she said Monday. Friends have left and are living in the countryside for protection from the bombings of apartment buildings. Orphanages are also being evacuated, Ledford said. I know a lot of people have stayed for the war to defend their country. Other people have traveled to Poland, but you have to have money to do that. Most people do not have the money to get to Poland unless they are wealthy, she said, adding that the Russian government has cyber attacked banks, making it difficult for people to withdraw funds from ATMs. Ukrainians are independent, fierce people. Their country is not an extension of Russia. They do share the Russian language when it was the Soviet Union, but they are an independent nation now since 1991. Ukrainian is their language. In 2014, Russia wanted Ukraine back and tried to take it over, but the people said no, said Ledford. It makes me angry that this is happening, she said. The world has seen it coming and Ukraine asked to be a part of NATO ..., but NATO has not accepted its membership, which would have alliances protecting Ukraine. What is happening now is horrifying, Ledford said. Contact reporter Carmen Duarte at cduarte@tucson.com or on Twitter: @cduartestar How to help Tucsonans who want to show their support and be photographed for photos to be sent to Ukrainians are welcomed at European Market & Deli, said Irena Chausovskaya. The business is in the Midway Business Park at 4500 E. Speedway, Suite 36, and is open Monday through Saturday from 9 a.m. to 7:30 p.m. Donations are being accepted and are being sent to organizations in Ukraine helping with supplies, food, medicine and other necessities, said Chausovskaya. An organization the Chausovskaya family is working with can be found at supportukrainenow.org Another organization is International Rescue Committee at https://help.rescue.org/donate/ukraine-acq?ms=gs_ppc_fy22_ukraine_mmus_feb&initialms=gs_ppc_fy22_ukraine_mmus_feb&gclid=CjwKCAiApfeQBhAUEiwA7K_UH_OiI6hos2--bB19seb6dUuYUxyDCgofi4B0DWRGc6MPD-oEoY3XMBoCWLwQAvD_BwE Subscribe to stay connected to Tucson. A subscription helps you access more of the local stories that keep you connected to the community. Be the first to know Get local news delivered to your inbox! Sign up! * I understand and agree that registration on or use of this site constitutes agreement to its user agreement and privacy policy. WASHINGTON (AP) As President Joe Biden was coming to the end of his State of the Union address Tuesday night, a somber moment about his son's death turned into a stunning outburst by one of the Republicans' most outspoken members. Delivering the loudest heckling of Biden during the speech, Rep. Lauren Boebert of Colorado blamed Biden for the 13 service members who were killed during the U.S. withdrawal in Afghanistan. It was just the latest breach of decorum for a presidential address, an annual event where unruly behavior by lawmakers has become almost expected. Republican Rep. Joe Wilson shouted "you lie!" at President Barack Obama during a joint speech to Congress in 2009. Eleven years later, Democratic House Speaker Nancy Pelosi ripped up a copy of President Donald Trump's speech while standing behind him. Boebert's moment came as Biden began to discuss how his son, who died of cancer, was among the many veterans who may have suffered from toxic exposure injuries from military burn pits, used extensively in Iraq and Afghanistan. "A cancer that put them in a flag-draped coffin" Biden started to say when Boebert yelled, "You put them in. Thirteen of them!" The comment drew an outpouring of boos from Democrats, adding a note of division to an address that received several moments of robust bipartisan applause. Democrats and Republicans from both chambers stood up and clapped as the president discussed the strength and resolute of the Ukrainian people in the face of Russian aggression. Members stood together as Biden called for an end to the opioid epidemic and when he declared that "defund the police" is not the answer to the crisis between law enforcement and the communities they serve. But it was when the mention of veterans and providing support for victims of burn pits, a normally bipartisan topic, that Boebert stood to make her case about what many in the GOP see as Biden's failed withdrawal of U.S. troops in Afghanistan last summer. "I couldn't stay silent," Boebert tweeted after the speech. "Our heroic servicemen and women deserve so much better." *** Subscribe to stay connected to Tucson. A subscription helps you access more of the local stories that keep you connected to the community. Thirty-seven states now allow adults to use marijuana medically, recreationally or both. But in most of those states, people can be fired or denied a job for using cannabis in their free time. Cannabis legalization advocates want states to do more to protect workers. They note that workplace drug tests don't measure whether someone is high at the time of the test, just whether they've used recently. And they say workplace drug testing is an equity issue as tests are more common in blue-collar jobs and disproportionately affect non-white workers. But certain employers are required to test for marijuana under federal law the federal government classifies marijuana as a dangerous drug akin to heroin and others want to make sure they don't employ drug users who could threaten workplace safety. So far, 14 states and Washington, D.C., have banned employers from discriminating against workers who use marijuana for medical reasons. New Jersey and New York ban employers from discriminating against workers who legally use marijuana medically or recreationally. And Nevada bans employers from refusing to hire someone solely because they fail a marijuana test. The laws generally make exceptions for certain employers and occupations. But bills have stumbled elsewhere because of opposition from business groups and disagreements over how to measure marijuana intoxication. A bill filed in Washington state this session already has been tabled. A California bill faces an uphill battle. In light of opposition, a Colorado bill will be softened to studying the issue. The initial version of the Colorado bill would have affirmed the right of medical marijuana patients to use cannabis products at work and would have prevented employers from firing or refusing to hire workers who use marijuana off the job. It was always going to be a heavy lift: The bill raised legal questions particularly about the medical marijuana provisions since Colorado's 2012 ballot measure that legalized pot sales affirmed employers' right to restrict worker marijuana use. Within two weeks of filing the bill in early February, state Rep. Edie Hooton, a Democrat, told Stateline she planned to scrap it. Instead, she'll propose that state officials convene employers, medical cannabis users and prescribers to study the workplace testing issue. "I knew it was going to change," Hooton said of her initial bill, which she said was modeled on draft legislation backed by medical cannabis advocates in other states. "I don't want to be in opposition with organized labor or employers, like the Chamber of Commerce or organized business interests." Several employer groups had opposed Hooton's initial bill, including the state Chamber of Commerce and the Colorado Mining Association. The Colorado Mining Association has consistently opposed bills that would prevent employers from maintaining a drug-free workplace, said association President Stan Dempsey. Drug use can create workplace safety issues, he said. "Going back many, many years, companies have had employees who have either been hurt or killed, unfortunately, with marijuana in their systems." Colorado state Sen. Chris Holbert, a Republican who last year backed a law that allows school personnel to administer medical cannabis to children while they're in school, said employers should be able to drug test workers for marijuana if they choose. He emphasized that when Colorado voters legalized pot, they wrote that authority into the state constitution. But employers should make an informed decision, he added. "What I really encourage employers to understand is, if they're testing for drug use, then what is the test or those tests looking for?" If employers are worried about someone coming to work high, he said, they should be asking whether workplace drug tests measure that and whether, for instance, they also penalize employees for using non-psychoactive cannabis products, such as a hemp extract. To test, or not to test? Federal contractors and businesses that employ certain regulated professionals such as airline pilots and school bus drivers must drug test workers for marijuana. Other employers have a choice. They might decide to drug test workers as part of a job application, randomly, after an accident, if they suspect a worker is intoxicated, or in all four situations. Today most of the nation's largest private-sector companies have some sort of drug testing program, said Barry Sample, senior science consultant for employer solutions at Quest Diagnostics, a global laboratory company that processes workplace drug tests for employers. Of the tests Quest Diagnostics processes that aren't federally required, Sample said, roughly three-quarters are part of job applications. Quest Diagnostics' data suggest that drug testing for marijuana is becoming less common, with the number of urine tests to screen for the drug declining by 5% between 2015 and 2020. Amazon, the nation's second-largest private employer after Walmart, announced plans last summer to stop requiring job candidates to pass a marijuana drug test (the company will still test at other times, such as after workplace accidents). Amazon executives have said that the growing number of states legalizing marijuana, equity concerns and the tight labor market all factored into their decision. "We've found that eliminating pre-employment testing for cannabis allows us to expand our applicant pool," Beth Galetti, Amazon's senior vice president of human resources, said in a January memo posted online. Dropping marijuana tests allows employers to consider hiring and retaining the small but growing share of applicants who use the drug. Nationwide, 4.4% of workers failed tests Quest Diagnostics processed in 2020, up from 3.5% in 2012. The rate was slightly higher, 4.8%, in states that allow adults to buy recreational marijuana. "It's not surprising that in our testing we're seeing year-over-year increases in marijuana positivity," Sample said. "Clearly, societal views on marijuana use are evolving." Companies' ongoing struggles to recruit and retain workers may encourage more of them to drop marijuana tests, said Melissa Moore, director of civil systems reform at the Drug Policy Alliance, a national nonprofit that advocates for ending punitive drug laws. "During the labor crunch right now, some employers are taking a look at: Is this something that's not actually accomplishing the goal of workplace safety?" she said. Employers may be unnecessarily blocking people from certain positions, Moore said. She also noted that a 2013 Yale School of Medicine study found that Black and Hispanic workers were more likely than white workers to be employed by a workplace that requires drug testing. "Let's make sure we're not putting up artificial roadblocks that end up impacting, especially, Black and Latinx employees," she said. Jobs that might not exist in 50 years Jobs that might not exist in 50 years Taxi driver Mail sorter, letter carrier, and clerks Pilot Bill, account collector Surveyors and mapping technicians Parking enforcement Meter reader Bus driver Engine and machine assembler Coal miner Switchboard operator Computer operator Prepress technician Fast-food worker Truck driver Print binding and finishing worker Wrangler and herder Referee Florist Photo processor Telemarketer Dispatchers Air traffic controller Farm worker Insurance underwriter Data entry keyer Sonographer Drilling and boring machine tool setters Restaurant servers Gaming cage workers Locomotive firer Interpreter or translator Purchasing agents Bank teller Cashier Disc jockey Financial adviser Jeweler Tech support Assemblers of processors and semiconductors Typist or word processor Tax preparers Loan officer Lumberjack Watch repair technician Toll taker Librarian Computer programmer Flight attendant Metal and plastic mold makers Subscribe to stay connected to Tucson. A subscription helps you access more of the local stories that keep you connected to the community. To hurt Putin, drive electric Feeling bummed out about the autocratic crimes-against-democracy Vladimir Putin and his unjust war on Ukraine? Then take heed in finding ways to help Ukraine. First, waging an economic war against Putin by undermining Russian dependence on exporting oil to the European Union and NATO allies. One key way is: go electric. And especially, drive electric. Lets use USA petroleum savings by going green in various solar, wind, geothermal and hydroelectric measures to support the EU and NATO being free from Russian oil and deprive Putin of the oil revenues that prop up his illicit violence against Ukraine. Furthermore, keep in mind finding more ways such as fundraising for and publicizing the suffering Ukrainian people. Jerry Asher, VP, Tucson Electric Vehicle Association Rising tax bills hurt renters We are owners of a couple of single-property homes that have long-term tenants in them. We do everything in our power not to unnecessarily increase rents. This is a challenge with increases in all services and repairs. Today we received valuations from the assessors, not tax bills. With the increased paper value of the homes, we will have no choice but to increase rents as tax bills arrive. Affordable housing in Tucson is becoming a thing of the past. For owners not planning on selling, increases in valuations only serve to hurt tenants and fixed-income owners. Vicki Dawson Midtown Living in fear of the unvaxxed Re: the Feb. 27 article Pandemic not over, experts warn. The article stated that the pandemic may not be over. In fact, it may go on for several years (even five). It also stated that a more severe form of a variant could render all of the current vaccines ineffective! My partner and I are in our 70s and 80s, respectively. We have both been treated for cancer, however successfully so far. Now we are afraid to go in crowds, especially indoors where there is poor ventilation. We have managed well so far by being vaccinated with all possible injections, even flu shots. Its so unfair at this stage in our lives with what should have been the glorious retirement years we both worked so hard for. Why should we now have to live in stark fear of those who choose to be unvaccinated and may infect us? Janice Campos Foothills Climate change a global issue Climate change is a global issue. Contrary to popular belief, President Joe Biden can only address climate issues in this country, not in the rest of the world. The rest of the world is still using coal and oil. It was reported that China just contracted with Russia for 100 million tons of coal. Besides being used for electric generation and heating, coal is also a primary ingredient of steel. Our federal government has all but shut down our fossil fuel industries in favor of green energy. What is better for our environment, refining coal and oil with no environmental oversight or refining with some if the strongest emission standards in the world? If the world still uses fossil fuels, it is our responsibility to provide the best fuel with fewest emissions. Thomas Wenzel East side Common sense on baptisms Re: the Feb. 18 article Thousands of invalid baptisms in Phoenix. It is time for Pope Francis to take charge of the baptism debate. He should approve the baptism that used we instead of I on the basis of valid intent. He should then state that the I is the correct letter for normal baptisms. It is common sense. The pope and the Roman Catholic hierarchy should work on important issues like the ordination of women and married persons. The early church had them. Even the first pope St. Peter was married. Mary and Joseph were the Holy Family. It is time to bring the church up to date with the world. They should also work on why there are so many clerical sexual abuse cases and why they were hidden for so long. Thomas Christian SaddleBrooke Black womens bench is deep Re: the Feb. 17 letter: Qualifications come second. Dear Editor, President Joe Bidens choice to fill the Supreme Court vacancy is a highly qualified selection. To assume there are no qualified Black women to sit on the bench is ridiculous. Several well-qualified Black women could do the job at least as well as Amy Coney Barrett, or better. Dan Beamer Northwest side Shocking state of our nation Editor, Nothing exemplifies the disgraceful state of our nation more than our inability and unwillingness to unite and stand together against the horrific invasion of Ukraine by Russia. Its shameful. Its disgusting. If this is making America great again, the word great needs redefinition! Gavin Kayner Northwest side America stands with Ukraine Ukrainians: The red, white and blue of the United States of America stands firmly alongside the blue and yellow of Ukraine. Except for those who, like former President Donald Trump, former Secretary of State Mike Pompeo and well-known No. 1 fabulist of Fox News Tucker Carlson, insanely praise madman Putins fall into complete madness by invading your sovereign and democratic country, we Americans applaud your courage and bravery for standing up to his brutal and senseless actions. Our thoughts and prayers are with each and every one of you. Gladys Lujan SaddleBrooke North side Subscribe to stay connected to Tucson. A subscription helps you access more of the local stories that keep you connected to the community. The following is the opinion and analysis of the writer: At a concert at Catalina Foothills High School Saturday night, the audience spontaneously rose to its feet for the Ukrainian national anthem. It was not on the program but was added at the last moment to open the concert, in a statement of solidarity with the Ukrainian people as they battle Russian tanks and missiles with rifles. It is a haunting and beautiful melody, and by its end some of the members of the audience and orchestra, none of whom spoke Ukrainian, were weeping. The orchestra then played Vivaldis Four Seasons, an artistic triumph of Western civilization the antithesis of the brutal Russian invasion of its peaceful neighbor at the behest of a gang of thugs and bullies in the Kremlin. What a remarkable world in which concertgoers in Tucson, Arizona, care about foreign peoples half a world away and rightly so. Shame on Putin and his cronies for betraying the Russian people. Shame on those countries around the world India, which as a democracy ought to know better; China, whose hypocrisy knows no bounds; Brazil, whose leader appears simply unbalanced who will not stand against this brutal and unwarranted aggression. But most of all, here at home, shame on those who purport to be Republicans, yet cozy up to the new Stalin in Moscow, indeed even see him as a role model. How repugnant. This is not who Republicans are. Nor do I think that Putin is savvy. I think he is a war criminal in a cheap suit. I am a Republican from the tip of my fingers to the end of my toes. Mine is the party of Abraham Lincoln, who freed the slaves, and Teddy Roosevelt, who broke the trusts. My first vote was for Richard Nixon, who was my parents congressman. I worked for Ronald Reagan, who would spin in his grave at what some in our party are saying. I served in the Naval Reserve and at the Defense Department. My family knew John McCain and Mitt Romney. I have never voted for a Democrat in my life and I never will. But I have no use I have contempt for those purporting to be Republicans who are serving as apologists for Putin and Russia, and who cozy up to evil. They should be ashamed for their abdication of Americas values of freedom, liberty and democracy, and for their embrace of bullies around the world. Americans of any party defend freedom. Americans on both sides of the aisle support democracy. Americans Republicans and Democrats stand up to bullies. If you will not, if you do not share those values, if you want to abdicate our moral responsibility to fight the Putins of this world get the heck out of my party. Richard Sybert is a resident of Tucson. He served as special assistant to the U.S. secretary of defense during the Reagan administration and as Californias director of planning and research in the 1990s. Subscribe to stay connected to Tucson. A subscription helps you access more of the local stories that keep you connected to the community. The head of a electric vehicle maker scheduled to build a plant at MidAmerica Industrial Park in Pryor acknowledged this week that the state has proposed hundreds of millions of dollars in incentives for the project. The state of Oklahoma has committed approximately 300 million (dollars) in non-diluted financial incentives to support our facility, Canoo CEO Tony Aquila said in an earnings call. Approximately one-third of the incentives are anticipated to come during the first 36 months. The $300 million figure is what Aquila shared with the Reuters news agency at the time of Canoos Oklahoma announcement in June. The Oklahoma Department of Commerce declined a request by Tulsa World for details of those incentives, citing an exemption in the states Open Records Act. A MAIP official has said Canoos $400 million investment in Oklahoma will be a mega microfactory for its pickup truck and multipurpose delivery vehicle. It will include a full commercialization facility with a paint, body shop and general assembly plant. The campus also will include a low-volume industrialization facility and vocational training center. The initial build-out begins this year, with the plant becoming operational within 12 to 13 months and fully completed by 2024. Canoo has chosen Netherlands-based VDL Nedcar as its contract manufacturing partner for its lifestyle vehicle. In this weeks earnings call, Aquila singled out the recruiting work of Oklahoma Gov. Kevin Stitt, Cherokee Nation Principal Chief Chuck Hoskin Jr., and Dave Stewart, head of MAIP. We are currently targeted to bring up to 2,000 high-paying jobs to our facility, with a goal of hiring at least 40% of the workforce from the local community, which consists of Native Americans and veterans, Aquila said. Brent Kisling, a trustee on the Oklahoma Ordnance Works Authority, which operates MAIP, has characterized Canoos average pay scale in Oklahoma to be well above $45,000 annually. Launching this facility in the U.S. is good for Oklahoma, good for America and its the right thing to do for Canoo, Aquila said. We are in the final process of selecting a construction manager, architect, engineering firm, and more. Multiple high-quality providers are bidding for these contracts, and there is a potential that we will select one in the coming quarter. For the second quarter, Canoo reported a net loss of $112.5 million, or 50 cents per diluted share, compared to a net loss of $23.2 million, or 28 cents per diluted share, for the same period a year ago. Featured video: Subscribe to Daily Headlines Sign up! * I understand and agree that registration on or use of this site constitutes agreement to its user agreement and privacy policy. The business news you need Get the latest local business news delivered FREE to your inbox weekly. Sign up! * I understand and agree that registration on or use of this site constitutes agreement to its user agreement and privacy policy. If youve never heard of Dutch Bros Coffee, youre not alone. But thats unlikely to be true for long. One of the fastest-rising coffee chains in the country, Dutch Bros is coming to Sand Springs, City Manager Mike Carter announced at Monday evenings City Council meeting. The store will be just south of Chick-fil-A on the west side of Oklahoma 97 at Main Street. I know our public sometimes thinks we dont tell them whats going on, and its because we cant because were normally under use agreements, Carter said, but tonight its my pleasure to announce the Dutch Bros Coffee deal. Building permits have been issued, and construction will commence immediately, he said. Construction will take three to four months, we believe. Carter said Dutch Bros Coffee approached the city about opening a location here. We get all sorts of solicitations from people who want to be in our city, and were pretty choosy about who we bring in, and Dutch Bros is one of those really sought-after places to join because of their product, he said. After looking into the company, we agreed that they would be a good fit for Sand Springs. Its important to the council that we bring in the brands that will be popular with our citizens, and we work hard to do that, Carter said. That being said, when people say we just need to call up their favorite business to bring to town, we hope people understand that it is much more complex than that. But were very happy to be chosen by them, and we think theyre going to fit in really well here in Sand Springs. Sand Springs will be home to the fourth Dutch Bros location in the Tulsa metro area. Stores are already open at 51st Street and Yale Avenue in Tulsa and at Elm Street and Veterans Drive in Jenks. A Broken Arrow store is set to open Friday at Kenosha Street and Lynn Lane Road. Elsewhere in Oklahoma, Dutch Bros has stores in Stillwater, Midwest City, Oklahoma City, Yukon and Norman, with locations opening soon in Claremore and Edmond. Dutch Bros Coffees online menu lists about 50 basic beverages, including coffees, teas, energy drinks, hot chocolate, smoothies and more, and a long list of flavor add-ons for drink customization makes for nearly endless options. Beyond drinks, the stores offer a small selection of muffin tops and granola bars. The company begun by brothers Travis and Dane Boersma in 1992 in Grants Pass, Oregon, as a pushcart espresso vendor is sweeping the country, having not only survived but thrived during the worst of the COVID-19 pandemic so far. Featured video: Subscribe to Daily Headlines Sign up! * I understand and agree that registration on or use of this site constitutes agreement to its user agreement and privacy policy. The business news you need Get the latest local business news delivered FREE to your inbox weekly. Sign up! * I understand and agree that registration on or use of this site constitutes agreement to its user agreement and privacy policy. Oklahoma Gov. Kevin Stitt plans to award electric vehicle start-up Canoo a state-record $15 million from the Quick Action Closing Fund to support the companys total investment of more than $560 million at facilities in Pryor, Tulsa and Oklahoma City, documents show. The state money will back Canoos commitment to provide 1,500 jobs at a mega-microfactory at MidAmerica Industrial Park in Pryor and a combined 700 jobs at a Tulsa technology hub and software development center and an Oklahoma City customer service and financial center, Oklahoma Department of Commerce contracts indicate. The average salary at the proposed automotive center in Mayes County will be $64,430, and pay at the planned Tulsa and Oklahoma City facilities will range from $85,000 to $125,000, documents show. More specifically, the averages are expected to be $85,000 at the software development center, $125,000 at the tech hub and $98,000 at the customer service and financial center. Canoo also plans to build a plant at its Bentonville, Arkansas, headquarters. We are grateful and proud that Oklahoma and Arkansas and the Cherokee Nation are where we will make our platforms and our new home, Canoo CEO Tony Aquila said Monday during the companys earnings call. These three coming together allows us an amazing workforce, people that understand what its like to do what we do. By bringing two states and a Nation together, we have greatly decreased our risks and accelerated our ability to grow. Canoo also announced during its earnings call that Oklahoma has finalized an agreement to purchase 1,000 vehicles from the company. Aquila last month attended Stitts State of the State address, where the executive was acknowledged by the governor. On Monday, Aquila gave nods to both Arkansas Gov. Asa Hutchinson and Stitt, praising his push to eliminating the income tax on military retirement benefits. Created in 2011, the closing fund is intended as a source of funds available to the governor to attract high-impact businesses when incentive payments are expected to be the deciding factor in a businesss location decision. Oklahomas closing fund award to Canoo is the largest in state history by a wide margin, records show. The previous high was $3 million on two occasions: to GE in 2013 for a $125 million research center in Oklahoma City and to Commercial Metals Co. in 2015 for a $322 million micro-mill in Durant. Closing fund contracts for the Pryor factory ($10 million) and Tulsa and Oklahoma centers ($5 million) contain various payment conditions centering on construction and jobs progress and capital expenditures by the company. Canoo must start construction on the $482.6 million factory at MidAmerica Industrial Park by Jan. 1, 2023, and complete it by July 1, 2026, according to the agreement. The head of MAIP said last week that Canoo had begun clearing land at the park. An additional $78 million in state money for the Tulsa and Oklahoma City centers is for economic and related infrastructure development, contracts show. Subscribe to Daily Headlines Sign up! * I understand and agree that registration on or use of this site constitutes agreement to its user agreement and privacy policy. The business news you need Get the latest local business news delivered FREE to your inbox weekly. Sign up! * I understand and agree that registration on or use of this site constitutes agreement to its user agreement and privacy policy. Tulsa city leaders officially broke ground Tuesday on a new trail system in southwest Tulsa. The 3.4 miles of trails at Bales Park, 5801 S. Union Ave., will be funded by a $190,000 donation from community partners, city officials said in a news release. The trails are within walking distance of Parkview Terrace Apartments and are meant to improve the quality of life in an isolated area of the city. This area is a high-needs community that is geographically cut off from many amenities and services, Mayor G.T. Bynum said. This regional trail will provide an outlet for physical wellness and will also be the focus of many recreational activities for kids who live in this neighborhood. The Sanford & Irene Burnstein Foundation said it invested in the project to show the importance of open spaces in urban area and create opportunities for recreation. The preservation of green spaces and trail systems serves as a point of connection for every Tulsan to explore Tulsas history, its unique environmental features, and to foster an appreciation for community development, a statement from the Burnstein Foundation says. Bike Club Tulsa, a partner in the project that selected the trail design group, and the Tulsa Housing Authority plan to co-host future events such as bike safety lessons and bike tune-up events. The project will take approximately four months to complete. The trail system will include contour flow trails for beginner cyclists and a downhill bike-only section for intermediate levels. There is something for every skill level at the Bales Park Trails, said Anna America, chief of culture and parks and recreation director. The multipurpose trail will be ideal for hiking and biking and features some of the most scenic views of downtown Tulsa from the south. Featured video: A former Oklahoma Bureau of Narcotics and Dangerous Drugs Control agent will receive probation after admitting to falsifying two search warrants if a plea agreement is accepted. Tommy McGlasson, 37, of Vinita pleaded guilty Tuesday in Tulsa federal court to submitting falsified search warrants to Facebook while he was an OBN agent in September 2020, according to court records. That is, I used my position and authority as a law enforcement officer with the Oklahoma Bureau of Narcotics to willfully and intentionally deprive two individuals (identified only by their initials) of the right to be free from unreasonable search and seizure as protected by our Constitution and laws of the United States, McGlasson wrote in his plea agreement with federal prosecutors. The plea agreement still would require judicial approval. The U.S. Attorneys Office for the Northern District of Oklahoma charged McGlasson on Jan. 19 with two counts of deprivation of rights under color of law. The misdemeanor carried a maximum penalty of one year of imprisonment and a fine of not more than $100,000. McGlasson worked for OBN from Sept. 20, 2018, to Sept. 22, 2020, when he was given the choice of resigning or being terminated, an agency spokesman said. Prosecutors and McGlasson agreed to the stipulated sentence after considering various factors, including the strength of the evidence, judicial economy, the interests of justice and his acceptance of responsibility, according to the plea agreement. McGlasson is scheduled to be sentenced May 31. Featured 2020 video: Medical cannabis lab under investigation amid allegations of falsified test results Sign up for our Crime & Courts newsletter Get the latest in local public safety news with this weekly email. Sign up! * I understand and agree that registration on or use of this site constitutes agreement to its user agreement and privacy policy. OKLAHOMA CITY A bill targeting school library books about sex advanced from a Senate panel Tuesday. The Senate Education Committee passed, by vote of 8-4, a committee substitute for Senate Bill 1142 by Sen. Rob Standridge, R-Norman. The bill would prohibit school libraries from having or promoting books that make as their primary subject the study of sex, sexual lifestyles, or sexual activity, or books that are of a controversial nature that a reasonable parent or legal guardian would want to know of or approve prior to their child being exposed to it, according to the measure. A Standridge amendment to remove the word controversial did not secure approval. Standridge said he would not move the bill on the floor unless that amendment was passed by the upper chamber. He said the amendment was needed because too many things can fall under controversial. The measure would provide a legal course of action for parents who object to a book whose request to remove the book is denied. The committee substitute removed sections of the original bill that contained provisions for firing of personnel and assessing damages of a minimum of $10,000 a day that the book remained on the shelf. Senate Education Committee Chairman Adam Pugh, R-Edmond, voted against the measure, saying he agreed with Standridges intent but that local districts and school boards are best suited to deal with the issue. In addition, I am concerned we will start banning things we do not like, Pugh said. That, to me, is a worrisome place to be as a free society. He also said he was worried that the measure would open up school boards to lawsuits from parents who just dont like something. Standridge said he sees inappropriate things placed in front of children. In addition, parents dont go into public school libraries while their children are looking at what is on the shelves, he said. He said he was not comfortable having a book on masturbation on a public school library shelf. The bill was not on the panels agenda but was brought up under other business. Judicial nominating: In other action, the Senate Judiciary Committee passed a measure that would let voters decide whether to dramatically alter how judges are picked. Senate Joint Resolution 43, by Senate President Pro Tem Greg Treat, R-Oklahoma City, passed by a vote of 8-3. The measure would let voters decide whether to abolish the Judicial Nominating Commission. The commission reviews judicial applications for an opening and forwards three names to the governor for selection. It was created by a vote of the people following an Oklahoma Supreme Court scandal involving bribery decades ago. The measure would require Senate confirmation of the governors picks. This reforms the court system in Oklahoma to more closely reflect the federal system, giving the governor more discretion on who he or she selects, Treat said. Treat said the Oklahoma Bar Association has historically controlled the process. The Judicial Nominating Commission has 15 members, nine of whom are not lawyers. Senate Minority Leader Kay Floyd, D-Oklahoma City, said the system has not been problematic and that there is no reason to change it now. Featured video: Get Government & Politics updates in your inbox! Stay up-to-date on the latest in local and national government and political topics with our newsletter. Sign up! * I understand and agree that registration on or use of this site constitutes agreement to its user agreement and privacy policy. The Republican-controlled Oklahoma House of Representatives on Tuesday advanced a slew of bills and proposed ballot measures that, taken as a whole, would tighten lawmakers grip on state government. If ultimately adopted, the measures could make registering and voting somewhat more difficult and complicated and would definitely make amending Oklahomas constitution and getting initiative petitions on the ballot and voted into law a bigger chore. Similar legislation has also been introduced in the Senate. Most of the more drastic measures are proposed as constitutional amendments that would require a vote of the people. Ironically, a simple majority on some of the proposals would raise the threshold for passage of future constitutional questions. The bills and joint resolutions passed in two batches through the House Elections and Ethics and Rules committees largely along party lines. The Rules Committee handled the proposed constitutional amendments. Those include measures that would require that constitutional amendments referred to the people by either the Legislature or initiative petition receive 55% of the vote for passage; requiring 60% for passage for anything that encumbers the state a slap at the expanded Medicaid measure that narrowly passed last year and one that would require initiative petitions to be signed by 8% of the voters in each county for statutory measures and 15% for constitutional amendments. When it was pointed out this method would give a lot more weight to voters in small counties, Rep. Tommy Hardin, R-Madill, said he was trying to protect rural voters who are often unfamiliar with petitions subject matter. One of the more difficult, expensive and complicated proposals was stripped out of House Bill 3677, by Rep. Sean Roberts, R-Hominy, by the House Elections and Ethics Committee. Roberts language would have required all of the states 2.2 million voters to reregister for state (but not federal) elections. Roberts said more than 100,000 people could be voting in Oklahoma illegally, although he acknowledged that he did not know of any who had and that its possible none did. The committee did keep alive a slimmed-down version of the bill so Roberts could pursue his goal of identifying those 100,000 people and confirming their identity. State Election Board Secretary Paul Ziriax said most of the 100,000 referred to by Roberts had registered before a drivers license or Social Security number was required to register. Federal law, however, prevents a state from refusing to register someone who does not have the required identification or refuses to produce it. Instead, they sign an affidavit affirming their identity, risking a felony conviction if they give a false statement. Last month the Oklahoma League of Women Voters released a study that found only 59 cases of potential voter fraud were referred to Oklahoma district attorneys after the 2020 election; only one was convicted, and that was for mailing in her dead fathers absentee ballot. The Election Committees other bills are not expected to have much, if any impact, and in some cases seem to overlap existing law. One would require district attorneys to investigate addresses at which more than 10 voters are registered; it exempts group living quarters such as senior citizen centers. Another would make doubly sure federal felons dont get on voter roles until theyre eligible. Featured video: Get Government & Politics updates in your inbox! Stay up-to-date on the latest in local and national government and political topics with our newsletter. Sign up! * I understand and agree that registration on or use of this site constitutes agreement to its user agreement and privacy policy. The Tulsa Health Department is discontinuing its COVID-19 ZIP code risk map in lieu of the federal governments county-level tool. Bruce Dart, the departments executive director, said Tuesday his agency is shifting to align with the Centers for Disease Control and Preventions new tool and masking recommendations, issued Friday. The Tulsa Health Department will still offer residents local information from its COVID data webpage by embedding the CDC map as a widget in place of its own ZIP code map. The CDCs county-level tool uses new cases reported, new hospital admissions and percent of staffed inpatient beds occupied by COVID-19 patients, whereas THDs risk map relied on active cases in each ZIP code. These more accurately reflect metrics to the current situation in Tulsa County, Dart said of the CDCs metrics. They show us current levels of population immunity and tools available for public health and clinical care. Dart said THDs map reflected the best science available at the time it was introduced in September 2020, providing Tulsa County residents with an accurate representation of risks in their areas. The CDC recommends that people in counties in its high-risk category like Tulsa County and most of northeastern Oklahoma still wear masks indoors. The medium category recommends that people at high risk for severe illness talk with their health care provider about whether to wear a mask and take other precautions. The low-level recommendations are that people stay up to date with COVID-19 vaccinations and get tested if symptoms are exhibited. Now the CDC updates their risk recommendations every Thursday, so well see on Thursday if (Tulsa Countys) risk changes from high to moderate or low, Dart said, later adding that he feels very strongly that the county is close to getting to a point where its generally OK to take masks off indoors. Dart said a person who is up to date on vaccinations either fully vaccinated or boosted if eligible is likely to be very, very safe in their workplace without a mask. An unvaccinated individual still poses a greater risk to themselves and others by not wearing a mask, he said. So if youre unvaccinated, just to be a caring human being and care for the people around you, I think its a great recommendation to continue to wear a mask especially until we transition away from that high community risk level, Dart said. Once we get to moderate or low, I think we can have some great conversations about not wearing masks, period, regardless of vaccination status. But were not there. Despite COVID-19s rapid decline, health experts are still warning the public that the highly infectious disease is still floating around the community which is especially important to know because some people are unable to be protected by vaccination. Dr. Mary Clarke, president of the Oklahoma State Medical Association, said some people have chosen not to be vaccinated. Immunocompromised individuals whose immune systems might not mount a robust immune response to vaccination and children younger than age 5 who arent yet eligible for vaccination are still susceptible. Clarke said the CDC is trying the best it can but that its new guidance doesnt take into account people who cant be vaccinated or arent as well protected by the vaccine. Even in a low-risk area, she said, it only takes one infected person to pass the disease on to someone who is immunocompromised because they are undergoing chemotherapy for cancer. So there is still some controversy around the current recommendations, Clarke said. She added that the CDCs algorithm will change over time, so the federal government is asking the public to be very aware of their county and state risk level. That (risk level) may change in any week, Clarke said. It isnt difficult to wear a mask, she said, so its probably still a good idea to mask up in public in most situations. It is not anything thats going to harm you, Clarke said. And if you happen to be in the store for 10 or 15 minutes, thats probably not going to be a particular burden to you. Concerned about COVID-19? Sign up now to get the most recent coronavirus headlines and other important local and national news sent to your email inbox daily. Sign up! * I understand and agree that registration on or use of this site constitutes agreement to its user agreement and privacy policy. During the pandemic, physicians got increasingly frustrated with misinformation and lack of government action; then they got involved with politics. Doctors took to social media, challenging the pandemic deniers and anti-vaxxers some of whom were elected officials. Hospitals held press conferences to inform the public about data. The nonprofit Oklahoma Alliance for Healthy Families formed in 2019 by physicians and health care workers with the purpose of education and vaccine advocacy, prompted by the COVID-19 information failures. Recently, the Oklahoma State Medical Association announced that it was launching a three-year initiative to get physicians and "pro-science advocates" to run for the Legislature. Until now, physicians have largely stayed away from elected state office. Among challenges in recruiting physicians into state office are a drop in pay or, for those remaining in practice, conflicts with scheduling. And they would be stepping into political conflicts. Dr. Ervin Yen was the first Asian American to serve in the Oklahoma Legislature when elected in 2014 and was the first physician in the state Senate in 40 years. He advocated for childhood immunizations, and anti-vaxx groups targeted him during his reelection bid. He lost in the primary in 2018. On the House side, Dr. Doug Cox of Grove served from 2004 to 2016 and Dr. Dale Derby of Owasso served from 2017 to 2019. The late Dr. Tom Coburn is the only physician to have served Oklahoma as a U.S. senator and congressman. Medical doctors historically have stepped up when politics meets public health on such things as fluoridating the water supply, tobacco-use warnings, vaccination drives and issues around healthy living, health care costs, end-of-life and reproductive rights. Physician activism started before Oklahoma statehood. Dr. Eliphalet Nott Wright, a Choctaw Nation citizen, returned home to Boggy Depot in Atoka County after graduating from Albany Medical College in 1884 and jumped into Choctaw Nation government affairs. Few trained physicians were available in the territory, which attracted untrained practitioners. Dr. Wright wrote legislation passed by the Choctaw Nation establishing a board of examiners. "As a result of the new medical law, these quack practitioners left the nation," wrote his daughter, noted Oklahoma historian Muriel H. Wright, in a June 1932 Chronicles of Oklahoma edition. "Within a few years, physicians came into the Choctaw country who not only complied with the requirements of the new law but also took an active part of strengthening the profession through the Territory." As president of the Indian Territory Medical Association, Dr. Wright pushed to merge with the Oklahoma Territory Medical Association in anticipation of statehood. In a 1904 speech, he mentioned Declaration of Independence signer Dr. Benjamin Rush as a model for activism. The groups united in 1906 to become the Oklahoma State Medical Association. As laws of both territories are inadequate, it will be well to take time by the forelock and draw up such laws as will be required for the new state, and urge the election of such legislators as will favor such laws, regardless of political party, Dr. Wright said at the time. The first action of the Oklahoma Association of Osteopathy after it was formed in 1902 was to seek regulatory legislation. After Oklahoma was admitted as a state in 1907, friction between osteopathic and allopathic doctors cropped up with both under a single medical board. The osteopathic physicians began questioning the pass rate of of osteopathic students. "The only solution for this situation seemed to be to begin another campaign for the new law giving us an independent board of examiners. It was a hard fight, but we finally succeeded in getting our present law. We were the first state to pass what the American Osteopathic Association had put out as the 'model bill,'" according to a history written by Dr. J.A. Ross. Despite that early activism, the first physician wasn't elected to the Oklahoma Legislature until 1933 with the election of Dr. Louis Ritzhaupt of Guthrie to the Senate. He served until 1963, with the exception of 1953-57. An exact number of Oklahoma physicians-turned-politicians isn't known, but it's only about a handful. The Legislature takes up issues annually directly affecting medical practices, from Medicaid funding to lawsuit liability to specific courses of treatment. With so much micromanaging of the exam room, the Legislature could use the voices and votes of more physicians. Featured video: Vietnam is a leading manufacturing base for investors from Germany and the European Union, Adidas CEO Kasper Rorsted said during phone talks with Vietnamese Prime Minister Pham Minh Chinh on Tuesday. The talks were aimed to discuss measures to promote the German sportswear firms operations in Vietnam, according to the Vietnam Government Portal. PM Chinh congratulated Adidas on its robust performance in 2021 despite challenges brought about by the COVID-19 pandemic. The firms sustained operations in Vietnam indicate its determination and efforts, as well as the effectiveness of the close cooperation between Vietnamese government agencies and foreign investors. The premier believed that Adidas will achieve greater successes and continue expanding its production in Vietnam, including creating conditions for Vietnamese firms to further engage in its global supply chain. He asked the firm to continue upholding its social responsibility and ensuring welfare and suitable working conditions for Vietnamese workers. The leader hoped that Adidas would further promote the economic, trade, and investment cooperation between Vietnam and Germany as well as the European Union. Rorsted extended his thanks to PM Chinh and the Vietnamese government for creating favorable conditions for foreign enterprises, including Adidas. Adidas praises the Vietnamese government's commitments to sustainable development, green growth, and emission reduction, the executive stated, stressing that Vietnam is a manufacturing base of leading importance and a destination for Germany and the European Union. Rorsted appreciated Vietnam's support for Adidas to successfully cope with the COVID-19 pandemic and resume production in the Southeast Asian country. He added he was impressed with Vietnams success in rolling out COVID-19 vaccination for its people, including workers, which helps ensure safety for production and business activities. Like us on Facebook or follow us on Twitter to get the latest news about Vietnam! Many airlines in Vietnam have accelerated recruiting pilots and other positions to feed their operation recovery plans as the country reopened all its international routes on February 15, after nearly two years of disruption due to COVID-19. Carriers such as Vietjet Air, Bamboo Airways, and Vietravel Airlines have recently published recruitment advertisements for captains, first officers, pilots, flight attendants and other staff to speed up their resumed services. Bamboo Airways has announced on its website a plan to enroll captains and first officers for B787 wide-body aircraft at monthly salaries of US$13,300 and $8,000, respectively. The corresponding salary rates for narrow-body aircraft such as Airbus and Embraer 190 are $10,450 and $6,300 per month. Vietjet Air has also unveiled its plan to recruit the same positions for Airbus A320F and A330 aircraft from now until the year-end. Meanwhile, Vietravel Airlines has yet to disclose salaries for pilots and flight attendants to be employed. The same aggressive recruitment has been taking place at ground service providers such as SAGS and VIAGS. The number of flights has been on the rise since Vietnam restored all international routes since mid-February with no frequency restrictions, and it will continue increasing as the country will fully reopen international tourism on March 15, a leader of a firm providing aviation services told Tuoi Tre (Youth) newspaper. We have received a lot of requests for reopening international flights to Vietnam from our foreign partners, especially in Europe, Russia and others, said Bui Minh Dang, deputy head of the Air Transport Department under the Civil Aviation Authority of Vietnam (CAAV). Due to the pandemic that hit the country in early 2020, the Vietnamese government closed borders in March that year, with an exception for Vietnamese repatriates, foreign experts, diplomats, investors, skilled workers, and students, who are allowed to enter the Southeast Asian country if they meet strict quarantine requirements. After COVID-19 social distancing periods at various levels, the government decided to ease restrictions and reopen the economy in a strategy of living safely with the coronavirus, while speeding up vaccination, since October 1 last year. The country later launched a pilot drive to resume regular commercial international flights from and to destinations with high COVID-19 safety levels on January 1. One month and a half later, the CAAV issued a Notice to Airmen (NOTAM) to all air carriers and operators worldwide announcing that Vietnam had lifted all restrictions on international flights so that airlines could restore pre-pandemic operations from February 15. So far, the Southeast Asian country has documented 3,557,629 COVID-19 cases, with 2,479,883 recoveries and 40,338 fatalities, the Ministry of Health reported. Like us on Facebook or follow us on Twitter to get the latest news about Vietnam! A doctorate holder from Quang Ngai Province, central Vietnam makes sure his never-say-die attitude and expertise from years of training and working in South Korea help keep his family trade of making nuoc mam (fish sauce) not only survive through the years but thrive further. After successfully defending his PhD dissertation at Gachon University, South Korea, 35-year-old Tran Anh Vy, from Tinh Khe Commune, was offered a teaching and research job at his alma mater. But his heart and mind are on his familys long-standing business of making fish sauce, a savory Vietnamese condiment. Together with his wife, Vy spent three years working on -Aminobutyric Acid (GABA) to improve the quality and highlight the flavor of the traditional fish sauce. Gamma aminobutyric acid (GABA) is a naturally occurring amino acid that works as a neurotransmitter in the brain. While neurotransmitters function as chemical messengers, GABA is considered an inhibitory neurotransmitter because it blocks, or inhibits, certain brain signals and decreases activity in the nervous system, according to healthcare websites. Vy has currently been on a break from his job at the South Korean university to get back to his hometown and dedicate fully to his project, which aims to convert protein in fish sauce into GABA by fermentation. Local impact, global appeal It was a busy day, as usual, at Son My Fish Sauce Plant, tucked away in Tinh Khe Commune. Seventy-year-old Tran Quoc Ca, the business owner and Vys father, was having his hands fulfilling orders alongside his son. With 30-year experience as a professional fish sauce maker under his belt, Ca has grown a name for his premium quality condiment, which provides an essential savory flavor found in much of Vietnamese cuisine. The professionals products and expertise have been showcased at local fairs and expositions. Ca, however, admitted that is the farthest he can go in ensuring the legacy left behind by his forefathers. All I can do is churn out the sauce from salted fish fresh pressed after fermentation in a not-so-secret formula that is passed down from predecessors and make improvements here and there, the veteran said. I used to dream of taking my sauce to a higher level, but not now." Ca has three children but none follow in his footsteps until now. Vy shares his fathers passion for excellence and the young man also aspires to break new ground and make a difference in his area of expertise. The academic believes he has found his true calling and began to do research while he was studying in South Korea. Koreans have done an exceptional job in promoting their cuisine to the world, he said. If they are proud of their kimchi [fermented cabbage], we Vietnamese always hold mam [salted fish] close to our hearts. Vy hopes one day fish sauce will be placed on a par with kimchi in the global arena and he will whip up a recipe for success with products that cater to homegrown cravings while also appealing to international tastes. But Vy knows it will be a long way before he tastes success. He graduated in fundamental materials science from the Ho Chi Minh City University of Science before moving on to obtain a masters degree in chemistry at the Ho Chi Minh City University of Technology. It was not long before the young man received a full scholarship at Gachon University, South Korea, researching nano materials in the science of biology and catalysts to develop new-generation cancer-fighting drugs and vaccines. As his research areas are basically chemical biology, Vy knows he must treat fish sauce as something more than food if he is to catapult the condiment to a new ground. He saw his chance and made his move with his research on generating medical properties for the salted fish. It was then that he met Vo Thi Thu Thao, his future wife, who was working on her masters degree in food microbiology at the same South Korean institution. Hooked on her husbands plan to yield a productive virus with medical properties, Thao signed up for the topic of classifying virus strains that potentially produce GABA in fermented fish found in Vietnam and South Korea. Vy said his wifes research topic aroused much interest in her instructor. He was really supportive and hopes we can bring out the new values in Vietnamese fish sauce, he recalled. Tran Anh Vy poses with his two new lines of fish sauce products, GABA Son My and fish sauce for children. Photo: Tran Mai / Tuoi Tre The academic couple are not disappointed. They were finally able to produce GABA following their three-year efforts and began to envision a brighter future for the countrys signature condiment. The study, also part of my wifes masters thesis, was published in a scientific journal, Vy added. Tasty success Vys laboratory success prompted him to put his research findings into actual operation without delay. The young PhD holder filed for temporary resignation at Gachon University and found himself working at his familys fish sauce facility from June last year. Ca, Vys father, has mixed feelings toward his sons decision to go home. Im so happy that my son picked up the family trade and is one step closer to my dream of catapulting fish sauce to new fame, Ca shared. But I sometimes cant help feeling sad. He has a doctorate degree, but now all he faces every day are the sauce barrels. Vy said he is pleased with how the actual production is going. The academic can now master the process to generate GABA for reservoirs containing up to several metric tons of fish. According to Vy, GABA helps maintain brain functions, especially neurons, keep hormone excretion in check, prevent obesity, and relieve stress. He noted the key phase is adding probiotics to the saline environment, producing enzymes and decarboxylase glutamate and converting glutamate into GABA in fish sauce. Vy named his new line of products GABA Son My. His extensive research also resulted in a new fish sauce for children that boosts their growth and improves their well-being by supplementing Vitamin B3, essential micronutrients, iron, and calcium. These two new product lines, which Vy hopes users find tasty and useful, are launched alongside his fathers signature traditional ones. With hopes to move his familys products from local markets to the world, Vy joins hands with online trading platforms, including giants Amazon and Alibaba, that connect his products with potential consumers. He proudly said he will launch his two new products globally after tests for micronutrients and GABA by international standards come back positive. The academic-turned-entrepreneur hopes his work will inspire many young scientists. Small steps can make big changes. I believe Vietnamese academics overseas always hold their home country close to their hearts, Vy noted. We will keep up the legacy in a novel way to benefit our home country. Willing to share Vy said he is more than willing to share with like-minded people how to produce GABA in fish sauce. He believes his clean fish sauce, as well as other organic Vietnamese products which meet stringent benchmarks, will fetch high prices, up to VND1-2 million (US$44-88) each liter instead of the current VND100,000 ($4.4) on global markets. In addition to local fairs, expositions and grocery stores, his familys products, One Commune One Product (OCOP), which means each locality comes up with a hallmark item, now hit the shelves at supermarkets, clean produce shops across the country and advance to online trading platforms. The doctorate holder plans to expand production so that his familys entire output will be enriched with GABA if the global launch proves a success. He also plans to put technological advances into more of his hometowns iconic items so his next homecomings will not only be personal triumphs. Like us on Facebook or follow us on Twitter to get the latest news about Vietnam! SYDNEY -- Australian Prime Minister Scott Morrison on Tuesday said he has tested positive for COVID-19 and was experiencing flu-like symptoms, including fever. "I am continuing to follow health guidelines and am isolating at home in Sydney," Morrison said in a statement issued late Tuesday night. Morrison said he would continue to discharge his duties as prime minister while in isolation and co-ordinate his government's response to the war in Ukraine and emergency support for the unprecedented floods in the country's east. After developing a fever on Tuesday evening, Morrison said he took a test that showed he had contracted the virus. He said he had been taking COVID-19 tests since Sunday, including on Tuesday morning, which gave negative results. Morrison did not attend an event at the Sydney Opera House on Tuesday evening that lit up the building's sails in yellow and blue showing Australia's support for Ukraine. Japan prepared on Wednesday to extend infection controls in some regions amid high numbers of hospital patients hit by the Omicron variant of COVID-19. The central government has received requests from five prefectures, including Osaka and Kyoto in western Japan, to extend measures set to expire on Sunday, Chief Cabinet Secretary Hirokazu Matsuno told reporters. Media said 10 prefectures, including Tokyo, the capital, were expected to seek an extension of two to three weeks for the curbs, which encompass shorter business hours and limits on the sale of alcohol. A panel of health experts will meet later on Wednesday to advise on the state of the coronavirus battle. Although new cases have trended down from last month's record, hospitals still struggle to treat a flood of patients with serious symptoms. February was the deadliest month with 4,856 fatalities, a tally by national broadcaster NHK showed. Most were elderly patients left vulnerable by a lagging vaccine booster effort that has covered just a fifth of the population. Almost two years after India went into the world's biggest lockdown to slow the spread of COVID-19, students headed back to school in Maharashtra state on Wednesday, a sign of normal life resuming as infection rates fall. India's daily coronavirus infections rose by less than 10,000 for a third straight day on Wednesday, a level last seen in late December before the rapid spread of the Omicron variant, data from the health ministry showed. Schoolchildren attend class after the majority of schools were reopened following their closure due to the coronavirus disease (COVID-19) pandemic, in Mumbai, India, February 24, 2022. Photo: Reuters Last week, Maharashtra state minister Aaditya Thackeray said schools in the state's largest city, Mumbai, would resume pre-COVID attendance, reinstating all activities in view of declining cases. "Essentially it is more to do with the kind of severity India has seen, both amongst adults and children infected with the Omicron variant," said Uma Chandra Mouli Natchu, a professor of infectious diseases at St John's Research Institute in Bengaluru. "It appears the disease is significantly milder for both vaccinated individuals as well as for children, even if they are unvaccinated," Natchu said. India has fully vaccinated more than 765 million of its 940 million adult population and about 28 million teenagers aged 15-18, but has not started vaccinating children younger than 15. Students leave school after a majority of schools were reopened following their closure due to the coronavirus disease (COVID-19) pandemic, in Ahmedabad, India, February 24, 2022. Photo: Reuters In Prime Minister Narendra Modi's home state of Gujarat, bazaars were back in full swing after a long hiatus. Patrons streamed in to enjoy dinner and late-night snacks following the lifting of a curfew last week at Ahmedabad's popular Manek Chowk, a market that transforms into a hawker centre after dusk. Similar signs of life resuming its normal pace abound across the country. Roads and trains are once again congested as people return to offices, movie theatres are reporting a surge in foot traffic, and in the city of Gurugram near the capital, New Delhi, restaurants and gaming parlours are packed. "There is hope that people will continue maintaining social distancing and wearing masks as much as possible," said Rijo John, a health economist at the Rajagiri College of Social Sciences in Kochi. "There is absolutely no reason to keep the economy under any kind of lockdown or restrictions - it is just the behavioural aspect of the people that needs to be observed and enforced as much as possible," he said. Students play during recess at a school after a majority of schools were reopened following their closure due to the coronavirus disease (COVID-19) pandemic, in Ahmedabad, India, February 25, 2022. Photo: Reuters Commuters travel in a packed train in Mumbai, India, February 25, 2022. Photo: Reuters Vietnam affirmed its consistent stance on settling international disputes by peaceful means and in accordance with international law during the United Nations General Assembly (UNGA)s emergency special session on Ukraine, the Vietnam News Agency reported. On Tuesday, the second day of the special session, more than 100 countries and organizations expressed their opinions and viewpoints on the important issue. Vietnam finds that wars and conflicts often arise from outdated doctrines of power politics and ambitions to dominate and use force to resolve international disputes, said Ambassador Dang Hoang Giang, head of Vietnam's Permanent Delegation to the UN. Giang affirmed Vietnam's consistent stance on settling international disputes by peaceful means on the basis of respect for international law, the United Nations Charter, independence, sovereignty, and territorial integrity of nations, non-interference in internal affairs, and non-use of force in international relations. Regarding the situation in Ukraine, the ambassador expressed deep concerns and called for restraint, an end to the use of force, the resumption of dialogue, and the search for a long-term solution to disagreements. He welcomed the dialogue between the delegations of Ukraine and Russia on Monday and hoped that relevant parties would carry out more dialogues toward a suitable solution. Giang stressed the importance of ensuring security and safety for the people, and protecting essential infrastructure in accordance with international humanitarian law. He asked the international community to promote humanitarian aid to civilians. Relevant parties must ensure security and safety for the expatriate communities in Ukraine, including the Vietnamese community, and create favorable conditions for the safe evacuation of Vietnamese citizens. Russia began attacking Ukraine on Feburary 24, saying it wanted to demilitarize and denazify the neighboring country. Like us on Facebook or follow us on Twitter to get the latest news about Vietnam! Read what is in the news today: Politics -- Vietnam had evacuated 200 citizens from military tension-affected zones in Ukraine as of Tuesday afternoon, the Vietnamese Ministry of Foreign Affairs spokesperson Le Thi Thu Hang said on the same day. There are about 7,000 Vietnamese people in Ukraine at present, and they are stilll safe. COVID-19 Updates -- Children aged between five and 11 in Vietnam will be injected with Pfizer-BioNTech COVID-19 vaccine with a dosage of 0.2 milliliters, according to the Ministry of Health. -- The United States has delivered 1.6 million more doses of Pfizer-BioNTech COVID-19 vaccine to Ho Chi Minh City on Tuesday, raising the total number of jabs it has donated to Vietnam through the COVAX Program to over 26 million, according to the U.S. Consulate General in Ho Chi Minh City. -- The Peoples Committee of Ho Chi Minh City has decided to dissolve COVID-19 treatment facilities at Phu Nhuan District Hospital and Childrens Hospital 1, as well as concentrated quarantine centers for coronavirus patients set up at a number of establishments under the management of the municipal Department of Labor, War Invalids, and Social Affairs. -- Authorities in Hanoi are mobilizing private hospitals and retired medical staff to aid the efforts of COVID-19 prevention and control amid the current surge of infections in the capital city. -- Police in northern Hai Phong City have seized 48,000 pills and 1,500 COVID-19 test kits of unknown origin in four different cases between February 25 and Monday. Society -- Medical staff at Childrens Hospital 2 in Ho Chi Minh City have saved a six-month-old baby, who was bitten by a dog kept in her house, with the animals teeth piercing her skull and touching the surface of the brain. -- The Vietnam Womens Union (VWU) has connected 1,458 children orphaned by COVID-19 with their benefactors via a program that has been implemented for five months, Truong Thi Thu Thuy, head of the Family and Social Affairs Department at the VWU Central Committee, told a press conference on Tuesday. Business -- Vietnamese automaker VinFast announced its signing of a memorandum of understanding (MoU) with LeasePlan, one of the worlds leading car-as-a-service companies, on Monday at the Mobile World Congress 2022 (MWC 2022) the most influential technology and mobile exhibition in the world that runs from Monday to Thursday in Barcelona, Spain. Lifestyle -- The eighth Ho Chi Minh City Ao Dai (traditional Vietnamese long dress) Festival will take place from March 5 to April 15, the municipal Department of Tourism announced at a press conference on Tuesday. Like us on Facebook or follow us on Twitter to get the latest news about Vietnam! Medical staff at Childrens Hospital 2 in Ho Chi Minh City have saved a six-month-old baby, who was bitten by a dog kept in her house, with the animals teeth piercing her skull and touching the surface of the brain. The mother of V.N.B.Q. said that while learning to crawl at their house in Binh Thanh District, the six-month-old pulled the dogs tail, prompting the pet to bite her in the head. The family immediately took Q. to Childrens Hospital 2 in District 1. Dr. Nguyen Ngoc Phi Doanh, who has treated many cases of head injuries caused by dog bites, assessed that the childs wound was so severe, to the extent that the animals teeth pierced her skull and touched the surface of her brain. Most of the previous cases had the scalp torn, but this is the first time I have encountered a case like this, Dr. Doanh said. After checking the injury, the doctor and his surgical team cleaned all the damaged tissues and restored the injured site for the patient. The doctor recommends that families carefully consider before choosing to keep a pet, especially families with young children, and create a safe environment for both the kids and the pet once they have decided to have one. Like us on Facebook or follow us on Twitter to get the latest news about Vietnam! The Vietnam Womens Union (VWU) has connected 1,458 children orphaned by COVID-19 with benefactors via a program over the last five months, Truong Thi Thu Thuy, head of the Family and Social Affairs Department at the VWU Central Committee, told a press conference on Tuesday. The beneficiaries in the Me Do Dau (Godmothers) program were children who lost their parents to COVID-19 and those who are experiencing difficulties for other reasons. The target of the program is not how much money is raised for the children, but finding them benefactors in a direct or indirect way, Thuy said. Weve also connected other local supporters to provide mental healthcare for children with daily life problems and vocational training in accordance with their wishes. Over the past five months, 1,458 children have been connected to their benefactors. There are cases where the benefactors living in the U.S. met their children online." Other charity programs organized by the VWU in north-central Thanh Hoa Province, southern Dong Thap Province, Can Tho City, and Ho Chi Minh City have also spread widely in the public. At Tuesdays press conference, vice-president of the VWU Central Committee Nguyen Thi Minh Huong also announced the organization of the 13th National Womens Congress from March 9 to 13 in Hanoi. The congress is expected to attract 1,000 delegates representing Vietnamese women from different social classes, ethnic groups, religions and sectors, along with about 200 guests. Various activities will be held within the events framework, including a photo exhibition, a texting campaign to raise funds to support at least 130 welfare programs worth VND13 billion (US$569,400) for women in border areas, and a dialogue on gender equality and women empowerment. Like us on Facebook or follow us on Twitter to get the latest news about Vietnam! The United States sent on Tuesday another batch of 1.6 million COVID-19 vaccine doses to Vietnam, raising the total donation to the Southeast Asian country to over 26 million shots. I am very pleased to announce that the United States has delivered 1.6 million more doses of Pfizer-BioNTech vaccine to Ho Chi Minh City today, the U.S. Embassy in Hanoi quoted U.S. Ambassador to Vietnam Marc Knapper as saying on its Facebook page on Tuesday. The United States has provided over 26 million doses of COVID-19 vaccine to Vietnam through the COVAX Program. We are proud to partner with Vietnam in the fight against COVID-19 and in building back better as we work toward recovery together. Last September, U.S. President Joe Biden announced that his country would donate more than one billion doses of vaccines to other nations in an effort to save lives and put an end to the pandemic. In addition to support from other countries, Vietnam has also signed contracts with pharmaceutical companies, including Pfizer, to ensure sufficient resources for its vaccination campaigns. Pfizer has finished the supply of 51 million vaccine shots to Vietnam and is expected to deliver 22 million jabs for children aged five to 11 in the near future. As of Tuesday, over 178 million doses have been administered to the adult demographic of the countrys 98 million people, according to the Ministry of Health. Nearly 16.8 million shots have been injected into children aged 12-17. Vietnam has documented 3,557,629 COVID-19 cases and 40,338 pathogen-related deaths since the pandemic first hit the country in early 2020. Like us on Facebook or follow us on Twitter to get the latest news about Vietnam! Good news everybody. US voice actor John DiMaggio is returning to the role of Bender for the revival of Futurama, coming to Disney+ in Australia. DiMaggio had previously voiced (!) his displeasure at the offer to cast and was not included in cast announcements. That led to a fan campaign on social media, dubbed #Bendergate. IM BACK, BABY! So damn grateful for the love and support of fans and colleagues alike during this whole time (especially my wife, Kate), and I cannot wait to get back to work with my Futurama family, DiMaggio said in a statement. #Bendergate is officially over, so put it on the back of a shelf behind Xmas decorations, or maybe in that kitchen drawer with all of the other crap you put in there like old unusable crazy glue, or maybe even put it in a jar you save farts in. Whatever floats your boat, I dont care, you get the picture. IM BACK, BABY! BITE MY SHINY METAL ASS! He joins returning cast Billy West, Katey Sagal, Tress MacNeille, Maurice LaMarche, Lauren Tom, Phil LaMarr and David Herman. But of course. Source: Variety Its becoming increasingly apparent that Neighbours will end production in June, and finish on air in August. That will be incredibly sad for fans, cast and crew after 37 years for a show which has been the backbone of the Victorian production sector. But if it really must end, it cannot conclude on UK screens before Australia. This is what is currently at stake if 10 Peach does not return the show to five nights a week as a matter of urgency. Late last year 10 Peach moved to four episodes a week in what was -as sources told me- due to be matched by Channel 5. But instead 5 made the announcement the show would end mid year and remained at five episodes a week. While 10 does not want the show to end at all its future depends on Fremantle securing another British broadcaster. Failing this production will indeed end in June. But with each passing week Australian fans are slipping more and more behind UK fans. With a 37 year history (36 of them on 10) it cannot be allowed to pass that the finale screens overseas ahead of locally. Ideally it should be same day. This is not a way to treat loyal viewers, nor respectful to those who have made the show. A 10 spokesperson recently told TV Tonight, While the extra day means the UK will push ahead of Australia in 2022, dont worry you can always watch your favourite Ramsay St friends and families Monday to Thursday 6.30pm on 10 Peach and 10 Play. TV historian Andrew Mercado told TV Tonight, It is crazy that 10 keeps falling farther and farther behind Channel 5 transmission. Neighbours used to screen at the same time in the UK and Australia, and it was great for fans in both countries to talk about the show on social media without having to worry about plot spoilers. 10 say they want to show to continue, but if they really cared, they would fix this programming anomaly ASAP. TV Critic Colin Vickery added, Aussie fans of Neighbours are devastated that their favourite program looks set to end. If the final episode was to screen in the UK before it did here that would totally rub salt into the wound. 10 needs to get local episodes back in sync so that this doesnt happen. Better still, 10 should be thinking of putting the final episode and perhaps the final week onto its main channel to give the iconic soapie the send-off it deserves. Make it an event. Go out with a bang and not a whimper. EXCLUSIVE: Bali 2002, a four part drama series, dramatising the tragedy and heroes of the Bali bombings has been co-commissioned by Stan and the Nine Network. Set to star Rachel Griffiths (Total Control), Richard Roxburgh (Rake) and Claudia Jessie (Bridgerton), the Screentime and Endemol Shine Australia series marks the first co-commission between the two Nine platforms. On October 12, 2002, Bali was shattered by a terrorist attack on two of Kuta Beachs busiest nightclubs. 202 people died including 88 Australians, 38 Indonesians and 23 Britons. Local Balinese and tourists scrambled to rescue the injured and comfort the dying. Australian and Indonesian authorities mobilised to evacuate survivors, identify victims and investigate what really took place. Amidst this chaos, heroes arose from the most unlikely places. The cast also includes Sean Keenan (Nitram), Ewen Leslie (The Gloaming) and Arka Das (The Portable Door), alongside Australian and Balinese actors, including Anthony Wong (The Commons, Family Law), Paul Ayre (Soul Mates), Maleeka Gasbari (The Heights), Gerwin Widjaja (The Code), Sri Ayu Jati Kartika and more. Developed in consultation with those directly impacted by the tragedy, the series is written by Justin Monjo (Storm Boy), Kris Wyld (Pulse), Marcia Gardner (Wentworth) and emerging screenwriter Michael Toisuta with Balinese writer, actor and musician Ketut Yuliarsa (Janggan) as story editor. Peter Andrikidis (Eden, Underbelly) and Katrina Irawati Graham (Siti Rubiyah) will direct. Produced by Kerrie Mainwaring (Wolf Creek, The Secret Daughter) and Peter Andrikidis, Tim Pye executive produces, alongside Sara Richardson for Endemol Shine Australia, Michael Healy and Andy Ryan for the 9Network and Amanda Duthie and Cailah Scobie for Stan. Stan Chief Content Officer Cailah Scobie said: Developed in collaboration with world class creatives from Australia and Indonesia, and in consultation with those directly impacted, Bali 2002 promises to be a powerful, inspiring and sensitively told drama series that pays respect to everyday heroes from Australia, Bali and beyond. We look forward to continuing our close collaboration with the teams at the 9Network, Screentime and Endemol Shine Australia on the project. Nine Director of Television Michael Healy said: It is a privilege for the 9Network and Stan to mark the 20th anniversary of the Bali bombings with this landmark drama. The Bali bombings were a turning point in Australian and Indonesian history and we are proud to have such an outstanding multinational cast and creative team on this project. Bali 2002 is first of many co-commissions between 9Network and Stan, and we look forward to making more announcements on these collaborations in the coming months. Screen Australia CEO Graeme Mason said, While the devastating impact from this tragedy is still felt by so many twenty years on, Bali 2002 is an opportunity to tell a version of the story that memorialises and honours victims, survivors and their families. Screen Australia is proud to support the diverse creative team from both Indonesia and Australia, who are set to bring us an emotional yet premium Australian drama that will showcase and remind us of peoples humanity and courage. Screen NSW Head Grainne Brunsdon said: Screen NSW is proud to partner with Screentime and Endemol Shine Australia on Bali 2002, a landmark drama series bringing together a collaborative team of authentic voices to tell this important story. Supported under the Made In NSW Fund, the production will film in Western Sydney, and is expected to generate up to 810 jobs in NSW. Endemol Shine Australia CEO Peter Newman said: ESA is incredibly proud to produce a series that means so much to so many. Triggered by an event that shocked the world, Bali 2002 is a story of resilience and heroism born from the darkest tragedy. This is a gripping 4-part series that is evocative, sensitive and reflective of the stories that have been told directly from those impacted by this event. We are genuinely delighted to be working with our extraordinary cast and amazing team of creatives to realise this landmark series for our partners at Stan and Nine. Producer and Screentime Head of Production Kerrie Mainwaring said: This is an important story for all Australians. We have worked hard to bring together this terrific cast and team of creatives to honour the story of all those Australians, Indonesians and others who experienced the terrible tragedy in Bali in 2002. Bali 2002 is currently in production and will premiere later this year on Stan. The Stan Original Series Bali 2002 is produced by Screentime and Endemol Shine Australia, with major production investment from Screen Australia, in association with Screen NSW. Banijay Rights is responsible for international distribution of Bali 2002. Tyler, TX (75702) Today Partly cloudy early with increasing clouds overnight. A stray shower or thunderstorm is possible. Low 71F. Winds SSE at 10 to 15 mph.. Tonight Partly cloudy early with increasing clouds overnight. A stray shower or thunderstorm is possible. Low 71F. Winds SSE at 10 to 15 mph. Stefanchuk asks colleagues from EU parliaments to promote introduction of no-fly zone over Ukraine Chairman of the Verkhovna Rada Ruslan Stefanchuk has asked his colleagues in the parliaments of the EU member states to help resolve the issue of establishing a no-fly zone over Ukraine. "Today, I am in constant contact with all the speakers of the parliaments of the EU member states... I ask my fellow speakers to help resolve the issue of establishing a no-fly zone over Ukraine and other defense and humanitarian issues," Stefanchuk wrote on Facebook on Wednesday. He also said that he had already talked online with representatives of the parliaments of Germany, Poland, Lithuania, Estonia, Croatia, the Netherlands, and Slovakia. "Today, I still have to talk with the parliamentarians of about 10 countries," Stefanchuk said. According to him, the issue of making the necessary decisions on granting Ukraine EU membership under a special procedure is on the agenda. He also assured that the Verkhovna Rada is doing everything possible for Ukraine's immediate membership in the EU. The Hub Powered by PNC has had an impactful first year energizing the local entrepreneurial spirit, revitalizing an important downtown landmark and creating unparalleled opportunities for students to gain hands-on experience in new ventures. Were marking the Hubs first anniversary March 4 by celebrating the partnerships that bring to life our vision for a space where entrepreneurs, students and community come together to learn, grow and positively impact the Dayton region, said Vince Lewis, the University of Daytons associate vice president for entrepreneurial initiatives and president of the Hub. The Hub is a joint venture of the University and the Entrepreneurs' Center. At 100,000 square feet, it is one of the largest university-anchored innovation hubs in the country. Its a place where more than 100 entrepreneurs and small businesses renting space can pop in on a class of students, like the Thursday morning Hub Talks in Eric Janz and Kevin Hallinans engineering design class. Where Black, woman, and other under-resourced and underrepresented entrepreneurs can connect to resources through a satellite office of the Greater West Dayton Incubator. Where community partners like Liberty High School and Sinclair Colleges Fast Forward program can collaborate in the Hubs GEM and explore new teaching models to bring resiliency and other microcredentials to the community. And where art and design students can display their typography visualizing the work of poet Sierra Leone. Having creative engaging space at the Hub has been a perfect way to connect UD and the community, said Darden Bradshaw, art and design associate professor. With a year of activity to its credit, the Hub is still growing. This semester, the University has 32 classes art and design, engineering, business and more hosted onsite with over 300 students. More events are planned, including Imagining Community in March and the Flyer Pitch final round in April. Private office space for businesses is almost full, with some reserved for underrepresented entrepreneurs through a new program with the Greater West Dayton Incubator. Future plans call for building out the third floor with the addition of more classrooms and offices. Entrepreneurs catalyze economic growth, they transform communities, and they create a culture all their own. At the Hub, all three are happening, said Scott Koorndyk, president of the Entrepreneurs Center and executive vice president of the Hub. Our regional startup ecosystem is in the midst of a renaissance, and the Hub is a huge part of our momentum. The Hub offers opportunities for students to build their skills, and helps entrepreneurs, like Kameron Elijah Seabrook, launch and grow their businesses. From the staff, to the mentors, the space itself, and endless amounts of resources, I can honestly say that being in such a synergy has changed the trajectory of where I was taking Open Bay, said Seabrook, founder of Open Bay Autos, a DIY community and mechanic shop providing the tools and space for car enthusiasts. From my time spent at The Hub, I am in the final stages of raising funding for a business model that will reinvent the automotive industry. Dayton has such a rich history of innovation and Im looking forward to continuing the trend he said. I couldnt be more thankful to the incredible community here that allows people like me to thrive. The partnerships benefit undergraduates too, like engineering student Grace Silverberg, who gained experience as a paid intern with UDs Stitt Scholars program by working with entrepreneur and Lunnie founder Sarah Kallile to conduct absorbency tests on a new, leak proof nursing bra for breastfeeding moms. Other students have redesigned space at the Old Salem Mall for indoor farming and co-share kitchen space; run the accounting and marketing functions for the Hubs Startup Grounds bistro through the student-run Flyer Enterprises; and started their own businesses in a sophomore class with $5,000 seed funds. It all happens, as entrepreneurship professor David Marshall says, in the creative and unique space that energizes everyone involved. In its first year, The Hub Powered by PNC Bank has brought together students, faculty and staff, regional entrepreneurs, local business leaders and global experts to form collaborative ideas and groundbreaking solutions to meet the needs of the Dayton area, said David Melin, PNC regional president for Dayton. With extensive programming and services for UD students and residents across the region, we aim to help advance the Dayton areas business community and strengthen the foundation for the citys future. (Boris Bethge/ESA) (PA Media) No 10 said it is monitoring the situation surrounding a Russian-linked satellite launch by a digital company which the UK Government has shares in. It comes after a senior MP questioned whether OneWebs collaboration with the Russian space agency to launch new broadband satellites is appropriate given Moscows invasion of Ukraine. The UK took a 400 million share in the failed digital firm to rescue it from bankruptcy almost two years ago in a move that allowed it to continue its part in the race to beam internet access across the globe from satellites in low Earth orbit. It's exciting to see 36 of our satellites arrive in Kazakhstan ahead of our launch with @Arianespace next month https://t.co/ohnDPxhM85 OneWeb (@OneWeb) February 16, 2022 Fridays planned launch of 36 satellites in Kazakhstan will use Russian rockets and be overseen by Russian space experts, according to Labour MP Darren Jones. The chairman of the Commons Business, Energy and Industrial Strategy Committee has questioned whether the collaboration is inappropriate given Russias attack on its neighbour. Downing Street said it was right that questions were being raised about space co-operation with Moscow, but that the UK Government was speaking to our partners involved with the project before saying anything further. The taxpayer-funded investment in OneWeb in July 2020 bought a significant equity stake in the firm, as part of a consortium with Indias Bharti Global, after a bidding war. In a letter to science minister George Freeman on March 1, Mr Jones said the communications outfit was set to launch the satellites from the Russian-owned Baikonur Cosmodrome on Russian Soyuz rockets in partnership with the Russian space agency Roscosmos. Story continues According to reports, the launch is scheduled for 10.41pm UK time on Friday. The British tax payer backed @OneWeb is due to launch satellites from the Russian-owned @C__Baikonur on Russian Soyuz rockets in partnership with the Russian Space Agency @roscosmos in Kazakhstan this week. My letter to Ministers pic.twitter.com/RkDbHHWgru Darren Jones MP (@darrenpjones) March 1, 2022 Mr Jones, MP for Bristol North West, asked Mr Freeman whether he considers this situation inappropriate given the current situation and whether the Department for Business, Energy and Industrial Strategy intends to intervene by engaging with the OneWeb board in its capacity as a major shareholder. He also asked whether the department was assisting the firm to find alternative rocket launch availability. On Wednesday, Downing Street faced questions about whether the UK Government approved of the launch going ahead. The Prime Ministers official spokesman told reporters: It is absolutely right that questions about space co-operation with Russia are being raised following their invasion. We are still monitoring that situation carefully in regards to OneWeb. We are speaking to our partners and will set out next steps, but I dont know any more than that at the moment. There's no negotiation on OneWeb: the UK Government is not selling its share. We are in touch with other shareholders to discuss next steps... Kwasi Kwarteng (@KwasiKwarteng) March 2, 2022 Business Secretary Kwasi Kwarteng tweeted: Theres no negotiation on OneWeb: the UK Government is not selling its share. We are in touch with other shareholders to discuss next steps Pressed on how the launch could credibly go ahead given the launch involved borrowing Putins rockets, the No 10 official said: I dont want to pre-empt any further decisions. The Prime Ministers former chief aide Dominic Cummings is thought to have been influential in the UKs decision to invest in OneWeb. With satellite internet services less simple to switch off than terrestrial signals, Mr Cummings suggested this week that situations such as that unfolding in Ukraine were behind the Governments thinking when making the purchase, as it would allow broadband services to continue in conflict areas. Responding to businessman Elon Musk making his Starlink satellite service available to Ukraine following the Russian advance, Ms Cummings tweeted: The capability to do this sort of thing was one of the reasons we discussed for doing OneWeb summer 2020 it could be a powerful new capability for UK. PRISTINA (Reuters) - Kosovo has called on its citizens both at home and abroad to donate money to boost its security forces as the country's prime minister urged the European Union and NATO to engage more in the Balkans after Russia's invasion of Ukraine. Prime Minister Albin Kurti said a fund was opened in "consultation with international partners", without giving further details, and government sources told Reuters the fund had been created in response to developments in Ukraine. Kosovo, which declared independence from Serbia in 2008, employs the lightly armed Kosovo Security Force (KSF), with 5000 regular soldiers and 3000 reservists. "The Balkans is not immune to the effects of the situation in Ukraine," Kosovos Prime Minister Albin Kurti said during an interview with Sky News in London on Wednesday, noting that Russia had supplied Serbia with fighter jets and heavy artillery in recent years. "The EU and NATO should engage more with the Western Balkans." NATO has 3770 troops on the ground in Kosovo to maintain a fragile peace, led by the United States which accounts for more than 600 of them. NATO has refused to help Kosovo's army because four of its members still do not recognise Kosovo as an independent state. However, the country of 1.8 million is already cooperating with individual NATO members including the U.S. and others. Defence Minister Armend Mehaj called on the United States on Sunday to establish a permanent military base in the country and speed up its integration into NATO following Russias invasion of Ukraine.. NATO's main role is keep the peace in the north of the country where some 50,000 local Serbs, backed by Belgrade, refuse to recognise Kosovo's authorities and are calling for partition among ethnic lines in order to unite with Serbia. Kosovo has joined other countries in introducing sanctions against Russia after its invasion of Ukraine but Serbia has not. Serbia and its traditional ally Russia do not recognise Kosovo's independence and Belgrade still claims the breakaway province as part of its territory. (Reporting by Fatos Bytyci; Editing by Kirsten Donovan) Russian President Vladimir Putin is now determined to ruthlessly crush Ukrainian resistance no matter what the cost to his country, and the Ukrainians fighting Russian forces will all die, says a former CIA station chief in Moscow. In an interview on the Yahoo News Skullduggery podcast, Daniel Hoffman for years one of the CIAs top experts on Russia said the Russian president is not the Vladimir Putin I was tracking back in the day at the CIA. Hes a different guy. He says that Putin has dug himself into such a deep hole with the Ukraine invasion that he now no longer believes he has any choice but to level the country. Ukrainian President Volodymyr Zelensky has inspired his country and much of the world, becoming the great 21st century communicator in resisting Putins invasion, Hoffman said. But, in the end, I think Ukraines darkest days are ahead of them, tragically, he said. So Vladimir Putin, hes going to burn down Ukraines house. What follows is an edited transcript of Hoffmans conversation with Michael Isikoff, Chief Investigative Correspondent for Yahoo News, Daniel Klaidman, Yahoo News Editor in Chief, and Victoria Bassetti, a fellow at the Brennan Center for Justice. Michael Isikoff: As we sit here today, the reports are of this Russian military convoy, 40 miles long, headed right to Kyiv. What do you expect over the next 24 to 48 hours from the Russians? How far is Vladimir Putin going to go? Daniel Hoffman: I think Ukraines darkest days are ahead of them, tragically. I will tell you that this isnt the Vladimir Putin I was tracking back in the day at CIA. Hes a different guy. He won a lot of wars a brutal war in Chechnya. He invaded Georgia in 2008, but didnt try to take Tbilisi. He invaded Ukraine in 14 and annexed Crimea, and invaded the Donbas, and kind of settled on a frozen conflict there. All those things were Vladimir Putin playing chess with limited but achievable objectives. This one, Vladimir Putin has altered his risk calculus. Hes playing poker where he might not have the strongest hand. But I am deeply fearful were going to see something like Grozny or Aleppo, where Russia goes scorched earth, because they have failed, utterly failed, thus far. Story continues A satellite image shows a military convoy near Ivankiv, Ukraine, on Monday. (Satellite image 2022 Maxar Technologies/Handout via Reuters) Daniel Klaidman: Weve seen this incredible resistance from the Ukrainians, very inspiring. How does [Putin] deal with that? And, ultimately, is he going to try to just break their spirit by going after civilians? Russia has a different view of collateral damage, and they have a different view of casualties for their own. In our rules of engagement in the U.S., we do the best we possibly can not to strike civilian targets. For the Russians, just look at the battle of Stalingrad. Thats kind of the way Vladimir Putin sees the world. Think about the poisoning of [Russian dissident Alexander] Litvinenko with radioactive polonium-210. He created a human dirty bomb. There just is an ends justify whatever means you want to use. Thats kind of the way that they do things. And Ill just tell you a quick story. I asked once, a long time ago, a Russian intelligence officer, I asked him, What is it about your neighbors and your tactics for dealing with them? And he said to me, Listen, lets just say you have a really nice house, and I dont. My house is a crappy house. Im just gonna go burn yours down. Thats kind of the way we think. So Vladimir Putin, hes going to burn down Ukraines house, and he feels like he cant exist on this planet if Ukraine is striving for freedom, liberty, and democracy and economic links to the West. That was where they were headed, and Vladimir Putin cant let that happen. And this is why I get back to the risk calculus for Vladimir Putin. He could have probably gotten autonomy for Donbas. He could have probably eliminated a bunch of sanctions, and he might have been able to extract other concessions from us. There was no way a week ago that France and Germany were going to admit Ukraine [to NATO]. Ursula von der Leyen, president of the European Commission, applauds after Ukrainian President Volodymyr Zelenskys address on Tuesday to the European Parliament. (Yves Herman/Reuters) And now, thanks to Zelensky, whos an extraordinary leader, its NATO joining Ukraine in a fight for freedom. Standing up for what matters. Its like Zelensky jolted Western democracies out of a post-Cold War slumber, and here they are, taking on a brutal dictator who is an anathema to everything that we believe in. Thats the story for me. Victoria Bassetti: So if Putin is no longer the man that youve been studying for the majority of your career, how are Western states today adapting to this new understanding? I can tell you, the No. 1 recurring question that President Biden is asking the intelligence community is, Give me the leadership profile on Vladimir Putin. No, no, no, no, no. Not the one from February 22. I need the one from today. Because hes not the same guy. There are all kinds of rumors about whatever might be wrong with him medically. Sen. Marco Rubio said that he had neuropsychological issues. Rubio sits on a Senate intel committee, wouldnt go into detail about sources and methods, wouldnt go into further detail about exactly what that means. But thats a very important statement that he made. And so what we might see are the Russian elites changing their assessment of Vladimir Putin. Those elites who are watching him and thinking, Holy shit, we thought this was brinkmanship. And hes taken us to a war that is destroying our economy. Isikoff: You say hes not the guy you tracked for many years. And yet many of the examples you cited about Putins brutality have been a matter of public record for decades the horrific leveling of Chechnya, the polonium poisoning of Litvinenko. That was 2006. Then the invasion of Georgia was 2008. And as you look back, did we not do enough to deter him much much earlier? So you have a good long list there. Ill add a few more. Downing a Malaysian airliner. Interfering in our elections. And European elections. He has gotten away with a lot. And its telling that after I remember this extremely well after Russia invaded Georgia, and whats the policy of the Obama administration? Reset. Excuse me, but at the time, I was thinking, like, What the f***, reset? Are you kidding me? With this guy, after what he just did? An Emergencies Ministry member walks amid debris from a Malaysia Airlines plane crash in Ukraines Donetsk region in 2014. (Maxim Zmeyev/Reuters) Isikoff: One quick follow up on U.S. policy over the years. In 1990, Saddam Hussein invaded Kuwait. And the United States and Western allies went to war to expel him. Now we have Vladimir Putin invading Ukraine, and President Biden has taken the use of U.S. troops off the table. How do you square the way we responded to Saddam Hussein in 1990 with how we are responding to Vladimir Putin in 2022? Im glad you asked that, because Ive thought so much about it. I had already begun serving in the government when Saddam invaded Kuwait. And President George Herbert Walker Bush built a global coalition. And we deployed in defense of Saudi Arabia, and then launched that invasion. But it was a global coalition. And we took the lead. The difference obviously is that Russia has nuclear weapons. And what this administration is trying to do is thread the needle. So were going to try to provide Ukraine with the military and humanitarian assistance that they need. Were going to use lots of economic pressure on Russia. But direct, kinetic conflict? No. And so I think, if it were me, I would have suggested that President Biden not rule anything out. I dont know why he said we arent going to put troops there. You dont need to tell the enemy what were doing or what were thinking about. He should have said, Look, everythings on the table. And the other thing I would just say is, in contrast to 1990-1991, the guy whos built the coalition? Its Zelensky. What has brought us all together has been this Ukrainian freedom fighter, a Jewish comedian is kicking the shit out of Vladimir Putin. He is a 21st century leader who understands social media and understands how to get the message out to his own people and to get the kind of support that he needs internationally. If you listen to his speech today to the European Parliament, I mean, just extraordinary ability that he has to communicate. He is the great 21st century communicator. Hes got the world at least those of us in the West who believe in freedom, liberty and democracy rising up in support of those sacred principles, enshrined in our Constitutions Bill of Rights, on the Ukrainian battlefield. Ukrainian President Volodymyr Zelensky during an interview with Reuters on Tuesday. (Umit Bektas/Reuters) Klaidman: So, Dan, when you were in the intelligence community, you were paid to understand the leaders of rival nations, including Putin. I know that you cant be inside his head, but you must have theories as to why he has evolved the way he has. I mean, you know, from being this calculating, cunning person who knows where the limits are, to what hes doing now. What is your theory? So my theory is hes a guy who likes to project strength. Hes a guy who likes to ride his horses half-naked and do judo throws and look like a tough guy. But time is not on Russias side, and hes weaker [than] before he attacked Ukraine. He is weaker than he was five years ago, 10 years ago. He is haunted by the Orange Revolution in Ukraine, the Arab Spring, neighbors that are prosperous, NATO members like the Baltic states that are prosperous economically. And hes haunted by the fact that his own country, men and women, are extremely disenchanted with his leadership. And so he sees this threat from Ukraine that is going to blow right back on his regimes security in a way that he just cant allow, because hes weaker. He cant withstand it anymore. You know, he killed Boris Nemtsov in 2015. I mean, good guy. I met him in Estonia. Smart guy. Why did he do that? Well, he did it cause hes gotta show hes the most ruthless guy. You know, thats the reason. Why did he try to kill [Alexei] Navalny with a banned chemical nerve agent thats got breadcrumbs leading all the way back to the Kremlin? Same thing with [Sergei] Skripal. Because youve gotta show that If you mess with me, if you betray me, I will kill you, and Im gonna do it in a way that youre not gonna like. You know, he could have taken a hammer to Skripals head and killed him. Same thing with Navalny. But they had to show, Putin had to show that he was still the most ruthless guy. Hes gotta show his own, his own guys, that hes that. And hes gotta show the population writ large. The last thing I wanna tell you is he lived through the KGB coup in 1991 against [Mikhail] Gorbachev when the population was up in arms about the failures, the expectations were rising with glasnost and perestroika. But then they realized, behind that is zero. Russian President Vladimir Putin at a meeting in Moscow on Wednesday. (Sputnik/Mikhail Klimentyev/Kremlin via Reuters) And so the KGB saw that Gorbachev just wasnt the guy. You had to be more ruthless, not less ruthless. And they removed him. And that is why Vladimir Putin ultimately perceiving himself as weaker than hes ever been, in my estimation lashes out at Ukraine. And that has ramifications for how this ends, which is only gonna get worse. And the ultimate question is whether the Russian military decides theyve had enough committing war crimes and they decide, You know what? This Vladimir Putin guy is gonna have to be thrown off to the side, cast aside, take the blame for all of this. We were just following orders, sir, and move on. Bassetti: Is there any off-ramp from this right now, aside from what you just described, which is either complete devastation to Ukraine or an internal coup? Vladimir Putin is superclose to not having an off-ramp. Could he have one today? He might. But hes also got to know that even if he goes and chooses the diplomatic off-ramp, his own inner circle is going to say, What the f*** did you just do to our economy and our standing in the world? And you made us look pretty bad too. And then the knives come out and he gets stabbed in the back and the face, and hes done. Isikoff: You have been a Fox News contributor for a number of years now. Id like to know what goes through your mind when you hear somebody like Tucker Carlson on Fox News defending Vladimir Putin, saying, Hes never done anything to you or me. Why should we support Ukraine over Russia? Which is a message that is resonating with some large segment of the Fox News audience. Ive never been on Tuckers show, but Ill leave my Fox News colleagues out of it. Ill just say that, probably like everybody, when I watch the news and I watch lots of different programs, and I am a faithful listener of the Skullduggery podcast theres things that I agree with, and there are things that I dont agree with. And at the end of the day, all I can do and I found this at CIA too all I can do is deliver my analysis with no predisposed ideological bias. A promo of Fox News host Tucker Carlson on the News Corp. building in New York City. (Brendan McDermid/Reuters) Isikoff: Let me just ask it another way, leaving aside your Fox News colleagues. Are you concerned that Russian propaganda is permeating the American political dialogue, and we have folks in this country who are effectively fifth columnists opposing U.S. policy, supporting Russian policies? I think theres a spectrum there. So in our domestic scene, there is a swath of people in this country who say, Im tired of the Iraq, Afghanistan wars. I want out. Very similar to the isolationism that we saw in the 20s and 30s. And thats a swath of our population [that] are susceptible to the Hey, Ukraines far away. Why should we care about Ukraine? What does that matter? What I always tell people is the lesson of the last century was that when we are not involved with the major issues of the world, then we pay the price. Klaidman: Before we wrap here, I just want to go back to Putins tactics against the Ukrainians. There was a lot of talk about how he was going to send in teams of saboteurs and assassins and either kidnap or assassinate Zelensky. That hasnt happened yet. Look, I think that would have been part of the plan, to send in mercenaries to conduct a non-attributable decapitation strike against Ukrainian government leadership. They would have sent them in weeks, months before the attack in order to be there to conduct surveillance and mount these attacks. The fact that Zelensky is still alive means they havent been successful. But I dont doubt that theyre there. I dont doubt that the FSB is there. I also think Ukraine knows their neighbor. And so theyve taken countermeasures, and good on em for doing it. Bassetti: I have a question for you. You said there are really dark days ahead for Ukraine. Now, how do you assess how long theyre gonna be able to hold out? Theyll all die. Theyll hold out to the end, until theyre all dead. Where are Russian forces attacking Ukraine? Check out this explainer from Yahoo Immersive to find out. GGPoker and FLIP Celebrate International Womens Day in Style March 02 2022 Matthew Pitt Editor The partnership between GGPoker and Fantastic Ladies In Poker (FLIP) continues throughout March with both parties coming together to celebrate International Womens Day. Every day for the first seven days of March, GGPoker is hosting a Flip International Womens Day Freeroll that have a $1,500 prize pool made up of ten tickets to the upcoming $5 million guaranteed GGMasters Overlay Edition! Each freeroll shuffles up and deals at 8:00 p.m. daily from March 1-7 and sees players sit down with 10,000 chips (200 big blinds) and play to a five-minute clock where the blinds start at 25/50/5a. The top ten finishers in each freeroll secures a $150 ticket to the GGMasters Overlay Edition. The freerolls are password-protected with those passwords made available via the FLIP community. March 8 is International Womens Day and both GGPoker and FLIP are celebrating with a $50,000 guaranteed tournament. The International Womens Day Celebration shuffles up and deals at 7:00 p.m. GMT on March 8, costs $25 to enter, and has $50,000 guaranteed to be won. In addition to the $50,000 cash, ten nominated women players are competing with a bounty on their heads. Eliminated any of the players highlighted in blue, purple, or yellow and receive a $150 ticket to the GGMasters Overlay Edition International Womens Day Celebration Schedule Date Time (GMT) Tournament Buy-in Guarantee Mon 1 Mar 8:00 p.m. Flip International Womens Day Freroll $0 $1,500 Tue 2 Mar 8:00 p.m. Flip International Womens Day Freroll $0 $1,500 Wed 3 Mar 8:00 p.m. Flip International Womens Day Freroll $0 $1,500 Thu 4 Mar 8:00 p.m. Flip International Womens Day Freroll $0 $1,500 Fri 5 Mar 8:00 p.m. Flip International Womens Day Freroll $0 $1,500 Sat 6 Mar 8:00 p.m. Flip International Womens Day Freroll $0 $1,500 Sun 7 Mar 8:00 p.m. Flip International Womens Day Freroll $0 $1,500 Mon 8 Mar 7:00 p.m. International Womens Day Celebration $25 $50,000 Special Ladies Event For Live UK Players It is not only the online poker world that is celebrating International Womens Day because there is a special live tournament scheduled to take place at 2:00 p.m. on March 13 at the Manchester235 Casino in the United Kingdom. The tournaments buy-in is an affordable 60 and GGPoker is adding a $2,500 package for the 2022 WSOP Ladies Event for the eventual champion! Get Involved in With Fantastic Ladies In Poker (FLIP) You need to be involved with the FLIP community to receive the passwords for the freeroll. However, the community is much more than some freeroll entries because it is a vibrant place for like-minded female players to celebrate all things women in poker. You can find FLIP on Twitter and Facebook. You are guaranteed a warm welcome from some of pokers most fantastic ladies. House Republicans futilely objected Wednesday to the confirmation of Dr. Manisha Juthani as commissioner of public health, re-litigating how Connecticut employed lockdowns, vaccinations and mask mandates to fight COVID-19. Knowing they had no chance at denying confirmation of an epidemiologist recruited from the Yale School of Medicine during the pandemic, the GOP minority used the debate to vent over restrictions, most no longer in force. Advertisement There is no question that the commissioner is very qualified, educated, experienced for the job to which she has been appointed, said Rep. Jason Perillo, R-Shelton. But he added, Its not just about talent. Its also about trust. Hartford, Ct. - 02/09/2022 - Connecticut Governor Ned Lamont speaks a joint session of the House and Senate on the first day of the 2022 legislative session. Photograph by Mark Mirko | mmirko@courant.com (Mark Mirko/The Hartford Courant) The House voted 96-53 to confirm Juthani, whom Gov. Ned Lamont named as the acting commissioner on July 26, 2021 long after Connecticut lifted most restrictions on retailers, restaurants and houses of worship. Advertisement Max Reiss, the governors communications director, said the administration was lucky to have Juthanis counsel before and after she took the job. Commissioner Juthani joined the administration at a critical time and provided valuable counsel as our state transitioned to the next phase of the pandemic, Reiss said. Her leadership has continued to be invaluable. The people of Connecticut are grateful for her confirmation. One of the two Republicans to vote for her confirmation was Rep. William Petit of Plainville, the only physician in the House. The other was Rep. Kathleen McCarty of Waterford. Rep. Minnie Gonzalez of Hartford was the only Democrat opposed. Perillo faulted Juthani for misleading the public about the availability of test kits, a purchase that fell through. He said she was less than forthright in how she eventually acknowledged the mistake. Others objected to the advice she gave, both as a Yale infectious disease expert consulted by Lamont and then as commissioner. State Rep. Dave Rutigliano, R-Trumbull, a restaurant owner, took issue with her suggestion in December 2020 that people avoid dining out during a surge, despite the state having allowed indoor dining with social distancing rules. Long after all the evidence came in that the lockdowns and the shutdowns werent working, this doctor continually called for the lockdowns of most businesses here in Connecticut, he said. She caused an immeasurable amount of damage to peoples livelihoods. Juthani was among the physicians who had urged against indoor dining and in favor of closing gyms, not widespread business closures. Advertisement Rep. Rosa Rebimbas, R-Naugatuck, faulted her for the states requirement that health-care workers be vaccinated, saying the dismissal of unvaccinated staff exacerbated staff shortages. The debate came on the first day the House had abandoned its requirement that masks be worn in the chamber. But Rep. Doug Dubitsky, R-Chaplin, said masks still are required in some schools, though not by state edict. And its been two years now. Two long, ugly years that weve been put through this stuff, Dubitsky said. Five Things You Need To Know Daily We're providing the latest coronavirus coverage in Connecticut each weekday morning. > Connecticut never closed manufacturing or retailers that sold food, but restaurants were hard hit both by the restrictions and, in the view of restaurant owners, fears of dining out before vaccinations were widely available. I have very little doubt that the people in my district who lost their jobs because of the decisions and the poor judgment of this nominee would want me to vote to ensure that this nominee also lost her job, Dubitsky said. Knowing that her confirmation was not in doubt, Democrats largely remained silent while Republicans attacked Juthani. Advertisement But Rep. Jonathan Steinberg, D-Westport, co-chair of the Public Health Committee, finally rose with a wry rebuttal, apologizing that his new hearing aids left him struggling to process the debate at times. And I just want to make sure that Ive heard what Ive heard with regard to some of the testimony today, with regard to the character and the testimony of Commissioner Juthani, Steinberg said. Steinberg said Juthani has been candid with lawmakers and the public, even when delivering an unpopular message. Im really kind of surprised that there seems to be a lack of consensus on somebody who is going to be, has already been and will continue to be such a strong proponent of looking out for the health of the people of the state of Connecticut, he said. We could not do better. PokerStars Team Pro Parker Talbot Excited Ahead of EPT Prague Return March 02 2022 Will Shillibier With EPT Prague just around the corner, poker players are preparing for the return of Europe's richest and most historic poker tour. Whether you're a professional poker player or an amateur looking to enter one of the smaller events, there's something for everyone and PokerNews will be right there bringing you all the action from Prague. Several players have already qualified for the Main Event, and one of them includes PokerStars Team Pros Parker Talbot. Having joined the team in April 2021, Talbot has been looking forward to the return of live poker, telling PokerNews in an interview last June that he "just wants to see [his] friends." Read More: PokerStars Team Pro Parker Talbot on Educating His Community and Missing Live Poker Talbot Feeling Great Ahead of EPT Main Event Nine months later, Talbot will get the chance to do exactly that in the Czech capital after satelliting into the Main Event, which gets underway in just over a week's time. "It always feels good to satellite into an EPT," said Talbot. "I dont shy away from firing bullets into the satellites, so this one actually cost me more than the entry, but it still feels great. And it guarantees Ill go!" The current EPT Prague situation is as follows: Players DO NOT need a covid-certificate like proof of vaccination or a test to attend the EPT Prague event. However, please keep an eye on the most up to date travel to the Czech Republic conditions. need a covid-certificate like proof of vaccination or a test to attend the EPT Prague event. However, please keep an eye on the most up to date travel to the Czech Republic conditions. All persons entering the Hilton Prague casino must undergo a temperature scan . . A respirator face mask (e.g. KN95) wearing is compulsory when in the casino and when playing at the tables. For players who have specific questions, they are advised to contact either [email protected] or [email protected]. The Importance of Satellites Satellites are a great opportunity for players to win their way into tournaments for less, whether they're at the live felt or on one of PokerStars' massive online festivals like SCOOP. Even an experienced player like Talbot recognizes how important satellites are and had one big piece of advice for anyone looking to try them out. "When playing satellites its important to remember it doesnt matter how many chips you make it with as long as you make it. Ive won so many satellites with under 1bb I cant even count. For this to be the case you need there to be at least more than 1 seat of course. "But in any satellite with 3+ seats its incredibly important just to play to survive instead of play to win." Excited for EPT Prague EPT Prague will be one of the biggest events returning to the poker calendar after the pandemic, and Talbot says that he is looking forward to getting back to Europe and the live poker scene. "Its been over two years now since Ive played an EPT or even been to Europe with the Covid-19 restrictions. Im insanely excited to get to one of my favorite stops for not only the cards but the beverages, city, and seeing my euro-friends!" Enjoy EPT Prague With a $600 Bonus New depositing PokerStars customers can claim a welcome bonus worth up to $600. Download PokerStars via PokerNews, create your free online poker account, and decide how much you want to deposit. Your deposit is matched 100% up to $600 in the form of a bonus. Your first three deposits in the first 60-days after making your first deposit are matched up to a combined total of $600. The bonus releases into your playable balance in $10 increments each time you generate 180 redemption points, which in turn are earned at a rate of five per $1 contributed to the cash game rake or spent on tournament fees (6.5 points per 1, 5.5 points per 1, and four points per CAD$). One of the books I brought back from my mother's library is The Bewitched Tailor by Sholom Aleikhem. That's how his name is spelled on the cover. Inside I see his name and another phrase in Cyrillic letters. There's no date of publication, and I don't know when or how the book became my mom's possession. In the back of the book, it says Printed in the Union of Soviet Socialist Republics. The publishing house -- Foreign Languages Publishing House, Moscow -- was a state-run publisher (of course it was), founded in the 1960s. That's probably when this edition, illustrated with woodcuts by Y. Krasny, saw print. Shalom Aleichem was his pen name. His given name was Solomon Naumovich Rabinovich. He was born in 1859 in a small town in what is now Ukraine. After witnessing the terrible pogroms that swept across the region in 1905, including Kyiv, he emigrated to New York in 1906, and died there in 1916. The last place I traveled before the COVID-19 pandemic began here was to see my niece in the national touring production of Fiddler on the Roof, the classic musical based in Aleichem's stories. It's set in Anatevka, a fictional village based on Aleichem's experience growing up as a Jew in shtetl Ukraine. I remember being nervous that day. I was slightly anxious about traveling to Boston given whisperings of the virus, though we didn't yet know that COVID was airborne, so I had no fear of sitting in a crowded theater! Mostly I was nervous that my son wouldn't like the play. I so wanted him to like the play. Fiddler on the Roof is a classic of Jewish American theater, of course. But more than that, it tells a real story about the real kinds of things that happened to real people, including my own forebears. My grandfather grew up in a shtetl in neighboring Belarus only a few years after Shalom Aleichem fled. My kid loved the play, though he recoiled in horror when the Russians smashed up the wedding. That kind of casual, callous antisemitism was completely foreign to him then. He's a few years older now, and has learned more about a lot of things. He knows who Putin is. He knows what Nazis were, and are. Aleichem left Ukraine after the 1905 Kyiv pogrom. Wikipedia says the perpetrators of those pogroms blamed Russia's problems on "the Jews and the socialists." Once I would have rejoiced that those kinds of views were history, and better yet, they were somewhere else's history. Lately I'm not so sure. When I picked up the book, it didn't evoke current events for me. Russia hadn't yet attacked Ukraine. I brought it home because I'm a rabbi, and a student of Jewish literature, and also it was my mom's and we are beginning to clear out their house. Now it might as well be bound in yellow and blue. A friend noted recently how many people seem to want to claim or find a connection with Ukraine now. I don't think that's a bad thing. The real work, I guess, is figuring out how to feel that connection across the globe, not just with people in the places that were home to my literal or literary forebears. Worth reading: Public safety commissioner James Rovella is seeking pay raises for top commanders in the state police to encourage them to avoid retiring before July 1. He is standing in 2021 with Gov. Ned Lamont, who said the state will be offering pay raises and bonuses in order to retain experienced employees. (Mark Mirko/The Hartford Courant) NEW BRITAIN Facing a potential wave of retirements, Gov. Ned Lamont said Tuesday that the state will be offering pay raises and bonuses in an attempt to keep veteran state employees. The move is being made because thousands of state employees are expected to retire before July 1 the key date when changes in pension and health benefits will begin as cost-saving measures for the state. Employees who retire before that date will keep their more-lucrative benefits that they currently have. Advertisement Im urging people to stay,' Lamont said when asked by the Courant. Were going to have a slight incentive to incent people to stay. Im not looking for people to wholesale retire.' He added, Were going to be raising wages under the labor agreement that well be announcing in the next couple of weeks, including some bonus incentives. Doing everything we can to keep people here or take a job in state government because we need you.' Advertisement Connecticut Gov. Ned Lamont delivers the State of the State address during opening session at the State Capitol, Wednesday, Feb. 9, 2022, in Hartford, Conn. (AP Photo/Jessica Hill) (Jessica Hill/AP) Lamont is also making moves so that employees have the proper expertise in important positions. Were training people in the skills we need, especially in IT and coding,' Lamont said. We have needs.' So far, 952 state employees have already retired this year, according to the latest statistics from the state comptrollers office, which oversees retirements. In addition, 2,140 state employees have filed a non-binding intent to retire' notice before June 30, but they must still file their actual retirement papers. [ Task force recommends plan to increase workforce diversity as state faces wave of state employee retirements ] The need is particularly acute in the Connecticut state police, where eight troopers and supervisors retired as of Tuesday in advance of the upcoming benefit changes. In addition, 52 troopers and supervisors have declared they will be retiring on April 1. When asked by The Courant if all departments across state government would be eligible for incentives rather than only those with the greatest needs Lamont responded, Ill let you know soon.' Public Safety Commissioner James Rovella, who oversees the state police, is looking for raises as a way to retain the command staff because nine of the top 10 officers are eligible to retire as of July 1. That includes one colonel, three lieutenant colonels, and six majors. Captains and lieutenants have their own union and are not included in the non-union total. James Rovella, Commissioner of the Department of Emergency Services and Public Protection, speaks at a 2021 event after Connecticut Gov. Ned Lamont signed two bills today at Hartford Communities That Care aimed at improving gun safety legislation. Photograph by Mark Mirko | mmirko@courant.com (Mark Mirko/The Hartford Courant) This is about experience, talent retention and compression of pay between the ranks,' said Brian J. Foley, a top aide to Rovella. The police pay raises require approval by various levels at the state Department of Administrative Services and the governors budget office, which oversees funding for the overall $24.2 billion state budget for the fiscal year that starts on July 1. Advertisement The retirements are prompted by an agreement that was negotiated by the State Employee Bargaining Agent Coalition, known as SEBAC, in 2017. Employees retiring before July 1 will receive their current benefits that include a guaranteed minimum 2% cost-of-living increase in their annual pensions, as well as free health care premiums for some retirees and spouses. After that date, there will be no guaranteed 2% minimum COLA and health care would cost roughly $80 per month or about $1,000 per year, officials said. The changes also include a longer wait for a cost-of-living adjustment for pension benefits, including waiting 30 months for their first COLA after retirement instead of nine months. The rules and nuances are highly complicated, and a summary of the highlights for state employees stretches for nine typewritten pages. The state has multiple tiers' that depend on when the employee was hired, and the various tiers have different rules and levels of benefits. The pay increase for police commanders could range from 3% to 5%, but the final amount has not yet been decided. Police described the proposal as a one-time pay compression adjustment, not a yearly increase' into the future. It separates captains pay from majors, lieutenant colonels and the colonel,' Foley said. It also affords CSP to retain some of experience and leadership of the department. The department has seen a huge hiring initiative and a huge promotion of over 100 sergeants and 17 lieutenants. This is a problem that has been developing over the past 10 years, and we are working to fix it.' Currently, state police have 140 sergeants, 17 lieutenants, and 11 captains. Advertisement The eight officers who retired Tuesday included four troopers, two sergeants, one lieutenant and one captain. Those who have declared they are retiring on April 1 include one lieutenant colonel, three majors, four captains, four lieutenants, 10 sergeants and 30 troopers. Five Things You Need To Know Daily We're providing the latest coronavirus coverage in Connecticut each weekday morning. > The state police department has been hiring troopers at a steady pace, simply to keep up with retirements. Since Lamont took office in January 2019, a total of 301 troopers of all ranks have retired, said Andrew Matthews, a retired sergeant who leads the troopers union. The SEBAC agreement of 2017 changed the eligibility for a hazardous duty pension to 25 years, up from the current 20 years, he said. Weve seen a significant increase of people leaving exactly at 20 years,' Matthews said in an interview. The job has changed so much. Morale is not that great.' Matthews is in favor of financial incentives, but he says it is getting late in the process as June 30 approaches. It would have been probably more productive for them to think of this a while ago,' Matthews said. Coming up with a solution to retain the institutional knowledge of our agency should have taken a priority a long time ago. Its positive that hes trying to fix it now because itll be for the future. We hope that he does get salary increases for his command staff because well be seeking the same thing for our guys.' Close to a quarter of the states total workforce roughly 13,000 employees will be eligible for retirement on July 1. Advertisement About 8,000 executive branch workers will be eligible for retirement, and some officials expect more than 5,000 to take it. Thousands of workers in the judicial branch and within the states higher education system are also expected to depart on July 1, but they were not included in a study by a legislative task force analyzing the issue. Christopher Keating can be reached at ckeating@courant.com Two appointed McLennan County judges won overwhelming support from the voters Tuesday, with each declaring victory to claim new four-year terms. Susan Kelly, whom Gov. Greg Abbott appointed judge of 54th State District Court in December 2020, and Ryan Luna, appointed by McLennan County commissioners in June as judge of the county's new County Court-at-Law No. 3, breezed by their respective opponents in the Republican primary. Neither has a Democratic opponent in November. Kelly, 59, who presides over one of the county's two felony criminal courts, won 15,358 votes, or 75% of the total, with 33 of 34 vote centers reporting. Her challenger, Christi Hunting Horse, a 47-year-old prosecutor and former Navy officer, won 5,124 votes or 25% of the total. Kelly said she worked hard to get the job and worked even harder to keep it. "And now I can go back to work hard at this job and not campaign anymore," she said. "I need to get back to work. The voters have spoken and it is a wonderful thing. I feel good. It was a team effort to get the appointment and it was a team effort to win this race. I am really blessed." Kelly was selected to fill the unexpired term of Judge Matt Johnson, who was elected to Waco's 10th Court of Appeals. She worked as staff attorney in the intermediate appellate court, is a former felony prosecutor, a former criminal defense attorney and is board certified in criminal law by the Texas Board of Legal Specialization. In the county court-at-law race, with 33 of 34 vote centers reporting, Luna had 13,451 votes or 63.5% of the total. Challenger Kristi DeCluitt had 7,717 votes or 36.5% of the total. Luna, 32, worked as a civil attorney for the Carlson Law Firm for five years and has already helped ease the backlog of civil cases in the county's courts-at-law. "I am thankful to the Lord for this result and am thankful for all my supporters who took the time and energy to support me," Luna said. "And I thank Mrs. DeCluitt for running a tough race. I am looking forward to continue serving and doing the work of the court." DeCluitt, who previously ran unsuccessfully for 19th State District Court, served two terms as justice of the peace in McLennan County and is a former assistant city attorney in Waco and College Station. She has applied to the governor's office for appointment as judge of the newly created 474th State District Court, which will come on board in McLennan County on Oct. 1. Hunting Horse spent four years in the Navy, where she worked as an assistant staff judge advocate and a trial defense attorney in the Judge Advocate Generals Corps. She also was a law clerk for a federal judge in North Carolina, was staff attorney for six years for the 4th U.S. Circuit Court of Appeals in Virginia and worked two years as an attorney and ethics and compliance adviser with top secret security clearance for the FBI in Washington, D.C. She said she advised admirals and their chiefs of staff while in the service and wrote 700 opinions during her work on the federal appellate court. She said she also has prosecuted some of the most serious felony offenses during her seven years as a McLennan County prosecutor. Get local news delivered to your inbox! Subscribe to our Daily Headlines newsletter. Sign up! * I understand and agree that registration on or use of this site constitutes agreement to its user agreement and privacy policy. 2nd round of Russia-Ukraine talks could happen Wednesday: TASS Xinhua) 08:49, March 02, 2022 MOSCOW, March 1 (Xinhua) -- The second round of peace talks between Russia and Ukraine could take place on Wednesday, the TASS news agency reported Tuesday citing sources. The first round of the negotiations, which lasted about five hours, concluded on Monday in Belarus' Gomel region, with no clear breakthrough. "Most importantly, we agreed to continue the negotiation process. The next meeting will be held in the coming days on the Polish-Belarusian border," Vladimir Medinsky, head of the Russian delegation, said after the talks. (Web editor: Peng yukai, Liang Jun) A 2015 study of gender pricing in found that women paid 13% more for personal-care products than men. (andresr/E+ via Getty Images) State lawmakers are proposing legislation that bans gender-based pricing on everything from razors to bike helmets, saying the practice is discriminatory and costs women an average of $1,500 a year. Women should not pay more for goods and services simply because they are women, said Sen. Derek Slap, a West Hartford Democrat and the bills chief sponsor, during a public hearing Tuesday before the legislatures general law committee. If we agree with that premise, then the question is how do we get there? Because theres been ample evidence that shows that women do pay this gender tax. Advertisement Its often called the pink tax, although its not really a tax but rather an up-charge that is placed on products and services used by women. A 2015 study by the New York Department of Consumer Affairs found that products marketed to women cost an average of 7% more than similar products for men, and that personal-care products, such as razors, cost an average of 13% more for women. Several states, including California and New York, have passed similar measures. And its not the first time Connecticut lawmakers have considered such a proposal; a bill barring gender-based pricing was proposed in 1996, Slap said. Advertisement We understand the impact of pay inequity and the gender wage gap more now, Slap said, noting that lawmakers in 2018 passed a bill to address pay inequity by barring employers from asking applicants about their past salaries. This is a continuation of saying women should not face discrimination in the workplace or in the marketplace, Slap said This years version of the Connecticut legislation, Senate Bill 189, would allow individuals who believe theyve been subject to discriminatory pricing to file a claim with the state Commission on Human Rights and Opportunities seeking damages. Republican lawmakers said the proposal would place a heavy burden on businesses. I agree no one wants to see discriminatory practices in any way shape or form, Rep. Holly Cheeseman, R- East Lyme. But Im very concerned by hearing repeated references to fines, to punitive action. I think weve seen businesses struggle so much during the pandemic. Dry cleaners, Cheeseman said, are a good example. Theyve seen business dry up because people arent going to the office... We are constantly making demands on our businesses, most of which are small and medium-sized and I am hesitant to do anything thats going to make their lives even harder. Supporters of the bill say it would allow businesses to charge more if the womens version of the product is more costly or the service provided is more complicated. For instance, dry cleaners could charge more to clean an intricately designed womens silk blouse than they would for a simple cotton mens shirt. Hair stylists could charge a lower rate for short hair than they do for long hair. But the price differential could not be based on gender or marketing alone. Advertisement It shouldnt be based on gender, Slap said. It should be based on cost. CHRO officials said the section of the bill allowing for damages should be removed. Instead they are proposing that the agency be granted the ability to levy a fine against businesses that violate the law and conduct a public relations campaign to educate the public about price parity law. We want to start with educating the public and working with companies to demonstrate that a single blade razor ... should not be priced substantially differently if its pink instead of blue, Tanya Hughes, executive director of the CHRO, told the committee. I think civil rights are good for business and I think companies should welcome the opportunity to make certain that the products theyre providing are not discriminating against anyone based on their gender, Hughes said. Advertisement Daniela Altimari can be reached at dalimari@courant.com. We must congratulate the Texas Legislature of 1975 for adopting the Texas Disaster Act, Texas Government Code, Chapter 418, that empowered Gov. Greg Abbott to issue multiple orders applicable to citizens and business entities during the first three surges of COVID-19, lasting from March 2020 till May 2021. The human carnage was simply horrible, but how bad would it have been had Abbott not taken the bull by the proverbial horns to protect innocent lives? Then Abbott threw in the towel. Hes not exactly saying why, but it very likely has to do with his re-election quest for a third term, including Tuesdays primary election. The citizens, it appears, includes some who slept through civics class in high school. They believe they have the freedom and liberty to do as they choose with their bodies/health no matter what the consequences are for others. If they had been awake, they might have learned the Supreme Court of the United States long ago held in Munn v. Illinois that when one is part of a democracy, one gives up certain liberties and freedoms that otherwise one would possess if living apart from others. Citizens forming a society, therefore, have a duty to others and must comply with laws or legal orders adopted to protect the public welfare. Thats why no one has asserted that the Texas Disaster Act is unconstitutional. As a longtime attorney and state attorney general, Abbott no doubt knew this was true. Yet in summer 2021, he issued executive orders 36 & 38 (GA-36 & GA-38), informing all citizens that he was wholly abdicating any role or responsibility in regulating businesses of any kind and that it was wholly up to each of us to determine if we would wear a mask or get vaccinated. He clearly implied that each citizen had a cavalier right to disregard the health and wellbeing of other citizens in order to preserve his or her own independence and freedom. We all know what this means. A mask is worn to protect others from your infection. It does not necessarily protect the masked person from inhaling the virus from unmasked persons in a room. And our schools? Studies were unanimous that during the pandemic of March 2020 till May 2021, when most schools were closed, remote learning proved an abysmal failure in educating students. Students must be physically present at school with a teacher in the front of the room for our next generation to flourish academically and economically. But if kids must be at school and masks are not required, then schooling may well infect children wearing masks if no one else wears one. This is also true for teachers and staffers. Four school districts Dallas, San Antonio, Houston and Austin sued the governor in district court. Since the law is so clear and unambiguous, they won and the courts enjoined the governors orders. The governor ran yelling and screaming on an emergency basis to the Texas Supreme Court saying how horrific it was that schools dare question his authority. He insisted his orders be reinstated immediately. Without justification, the Texas Supreme Court bowed to the governors demand. The court simply stated the orders needed to be reinstated to preserve the status quo as the four cases proceeded to the court of appeals. To do so, the high court allowed GA-36 & GA-38 to remain in legal effect. But lets debate status quo a moment. The schools, when open, continuously required masks since March 2020 till recently. The governor issued his two executive orders of abdication in May and July 2021. Status quo is legally defined as the last point in time BEFORE the controversy arose. And the controversy arose when the governor acted by issuing his orders and thus mandatory masks should have been allowed to remain in effect during the appeals process. The Texas Supreme Court gave no factual or legal justification for its order. Thanks to the lawyers, the cases regarding Dallas and San Antonio are now in the Supreme Court. At the pace the high court is moving, another few months may pass before it decides these cases ironically, as classes end for summer. So the court allowed illegal orders by the governor to remain effective for essentially an entire academic year, guaranteeing thousands of children, staffers and teachers would become ill, severely sicken and possibly die. This situation neatly ensured the gubernatorial orders survival till the primaries were over, conveniently allowing Abbott to appeal to conservative voters in a tight three-way Republican race. Something horribly wrong is afoot in the Office of the Governor and our supposedly independent chambers of the Texas Supreme Court. Was this a coordinated, partisan-motivated effort on their part? Theres no evidence to that effect but their actions clearly imply it is so. When 16 Houston judges sued the governor in April 2020 in Travis County district court challenging GA-13 (regarding detention in county and municipal jails during the COVID-19 disaster), it was immediately appealed on an emergency basis to the Texas Supreme Court. The court accepted legal briefs, heard oral arguments and issued a complicated opinion in 12 days! So why did the high court not act with the same expediency in August 2021 to prevent COVID-19 exposure to our children, school staff and teachers? Is anything more precious than our children? Is anything more precious than a human life? In late January, we learned an omicron variant is coming that is reportedly one and a half times more infectious than omicron. Will even one school be open when the court issues its opinion in May 2022? Without mandatory masking, schools are and will be a slaughterhouse. God bless our children, teachers and support staffs. We sure hope youre alive next school year. Ron Beal recently retired as a professor at Baylor Law School with an expertise in Texas administrative law. He has authored numerous law review articles that have been cited as authoritative by the Texas judiciary, taught training courses for administrative law judges and lectured in advanced courses for practicing lawyers. ASHLAND A group of area government officials, business owners, public citizens and representatives of industries that use chemicals gathered in Ashland last week to discuss forming a Local Emergency Planning Committee (LEPC). Saunders County Emergency Manager Terry Miller said the meeting was held in Ashland because leaders of the Ashland Area Chamber of Commerce expressed interest in the subject about three years ago. I knew then that I had a group of individuals that had a lot of interest in the four phases of emergency management response, planning, recovery and mitigation, Miller said. However, the 2019 floods followed by the COVID-19 pandemic, put the idea on hold for some time, Miller added. I have tried different times to get someone to lead this group but it really never took off, he said. The state Emergency Management Agency defines a LEPC as a public safety planning committee that is tasked with overseeing hazardous material safety. Their duties include identifying potential risks in the community and find ways to minimize the risk, prevent accidents and assist in developing emergency plans, as well as educate the public. The Feb. 23 meeting drew representatives from Lincoln Water Works, which is located in Ashland, along with two large ag chemical companies that are located outside of Ashland, Helena Agri-Enterprises, and Nutrien Ag Solutions, which both store fertilizers on their property. Officials with the City of Ashland, Ashland fire and rescue departments, Ashland-Greenwood Public Schools, Ashland Area Economic Development Corporation, Southeast Nebraska Development District and the Nebraska Department of Energy and Environment were also on hand. One of the most important reasons for the meeting and forming the LEPC is to get local representatives of government, business and citizens on the same page when it comes to hazardous materials. Were getting involvement with the general public and private entities, Miller said. Thats one of the main goals that we have going on here. Another goal is to keep the public informed of hazardous materials in the area. Its main function was to let the public know the function of facilities that store chemicals and the type of business they run, Miller said. Miller said the LEPCs responsibility is to review the countys hazardous materials emergency response plan, which is part of the Saunders County Local Emergency Operation Plan (LEOP). The plan provides basic guidelines in the event of a release of hazardous materials outside of the facility that is using, storing or producing it. The plan also prepares the county and the local political subdivisions to handle an incident involving an accidental or intentional spill of hazardous materials, by setting policies and regulations, Miller said. Miller said Saunders County is an agricultural county, so there are going to be chemicals stored in the area. But that is part of living in a rural county, he said. Nobody wants an airport in their back yard, but everybody likes to fly, he added. Miller went over the countys LEOP with the audience, explaining the role of the LEPC and the county emergency manager, the duties of first responders, how the public is informed, the procedures local businesses that deal with chemicals must use and other aspects. The ultimate goal of the LEPC is to get the local agencies and entities working together to obtain a common objective safety of the local citizens, according to Miller. The plan is a community effort that we have to have to do it correctly, he said. After the meeting, several members of the audience indicated they would be willing to serve on the LEPC. The final list of members has not been completed. Although the LEPC is starting in Ashland, Miller plans to include the rest of Saunders County. Eventually our goal is to grow county-wide, but I knew I had to start the snowball with an interested core group, he said. The LEPC will meet again in March, but the date had not been set before press deadline. Suzi Nelson is the managing editor of The Ashland Gazette. Reach her via email at suzi.nelson@ashland-gazette.com. ASHLAND The annual Young Authors Luncheon was held honoring 24 authors for their writing skills and creativity. Diane Starns, kindergarten teacher at Ashland-Greenwood Elementary School, oversees the competition each year, and praised the students for their work. One student from each of the classes in kindergarten through fifth grades were selected. Of those 23 students, the building winners were chosen. The building winner for kindergarten and first grade was Kylie Kopf, a student in Starns kindergarten class. Her sister, Kacey Kopf, was the building winner for second and third grade. She is in Christine Bradys second grade class. The top story among the fourth and fifth grade entries was written by Silvija Makaitis, who is a fifth grader in Colleen Lewins class. Suzi Nelson, managing editor of The Ashland Gazette, Wahoo Newspaper and Waverly News, was the featured speaker. She told the students that she, too, was a young author when she was an elementary student. Before I decided to become a journalist, I knew I liked to write stories, she said. Nelson said she has written many stories about people in Ashland and the other communities she covers, and she hopes one day she will write about some of the award-winning writers when they become famous authors. The following stories were written by the building winners. A Monster Popped Out of My Book By Kylie Kopf One day during Read to Self I was reading a book. The monster that was in my book popped out of my book. I was kind of scared. I didnt want anybody to see her so I hid her in my pocket. At lunch I fed her some salad and some carrots. At quiet time I played with her. At recess I played by myself because I wanted to play with my monster. We played with the animals. I did not want anybody to see her. At math I took her and put her back in my pocket. I had kept some food from lunch and I gave some of it to her. Then my monster got out of my pocket! I thought, What should I do? I tried to find her. I looked in the hallway. I looked in the classroom. I found her and put her back in my pocket. At the next recess, I played with my monster again. We played with the animals. Later at PE when it was almost time to go I put my hand in my pocket and my monster was gone. I did not know what to do! I thought about it for a little bit, but I still did not have an idea. Then I got an idea! My idea was to sneak out of the room and go look for her. I found her! She was in my classroom. My plan worked! Now it was time to go home. I tried to put her back in the book. When I thought she was back in the book, she jumped in my pocket. Then we went home. When I was at home I found her in my pocket again. I said, I thought you were back in the book. So I made her some pajamas. I brushed her big two teeth and I made her a bed. I sewed her a blanket, tucked her in, and she fell asleep. When I woke up the next morning my room was a mess! The Princess By Kacey Kopf Once upon a time there was a princess named Elli. Elli had unusual powers. Most of the people in California (where she lives) knew she had powers. Her parents thought that they should leave California. She knew shed miss her friends. But she said, I need to leave. So she started to pack up. Come down Elli said Mom. Okay said Elli. They headed to the car. As they drove out of town, Elli wished nobody knew she had powers. Her mom told her that they were moving to Ashland, NE. Elli was shocked, astonished, dazzled. Two of her friends lived there. YAY MOMMY YAY! YAY! she said. What? said her mom. My friends live there, member? Kenna and Collins. Oh really? she said. Elli smiled the rest of the car ride. When Elli looked out the window, she saw a sign that read: Welcome to Ashland. Wow! shouted Elli. Its tiny, said her mom. LOOK! she said, Roll down the window. I see Collins and Kenna. Dang it mom! Youve got to roll them down faster, she said. Dang, dang dang! she said again. Um ma where are we going to live? Let me guess in an apartment, said Elli. Yep. said mom. Ugh. said Elli, as she was frowning. Her mom said, Hey Elli guess who lives in an apartment next to us? Who? Your friends Kenna and Collins, said mom. Wahoooooooooooooooooo! said Elli. Wink wink whispered mom to dad. Once they got to the apartments, Elli saw Kenna and Collins. She quickly got out of the car. Hi Kenna. Hi Collins. I said. Elli? they said. Yep. They hug each other. I thought Id never see you guys again. Elli said. Hello girls, said Ellis mom. Hi, they said back. What brings you to Ashland, Elli? Oh nothing, Elli lied. Are you sure? Yes, Elli said. Well you always smile like that when you lie, so shes lying, said Kenna. Okay. Everyone in California knew I had powers. Dont laugh, said Elli, as she started to cry. Were not going to laugh at you Elli, they said. Youre not? Elli said. Elli, shouted Ellis mom. Coming! shouted Elli back. Bye, said Kenna and Collins. Bye, Elli said back. Wheres our apartment? Elli said, as they were walking up to the apartments. 687 mom said back (grunts). As they went up the elevator mom was on her phone. Elli was trying to see her moms phone. Stop jumping, Elli, said Dad. Fine, she said back. When they got to the apartment mom showed Elli her great-grandmas blue and gold necklace with shiny pearls (phone rings). Just a minute Elli, mom said. (Knocking at the door). Come in, said Elli. Its us, said Kenna and Collins. Elli quick showed them the necklace. Wow! they all said at once. Elli, Kenna, and Collins mouths came open. Elli put her hands over her mouth and accidentally made the necklace disappear. Woosh! Oh No! said Elli. Cant we just buy a new one? said Kenna. Right, said Collins. No, I should tell the truth. said Elli. So Elli told the truth. Her mom said, Thats the wrong one. The one thats your great grandmas is pink. Ow! said Elli, wiping off her tears. The End Wolf By Silvija Makaitis Why cant I have a dog? You let James and Lucas get cats so why cant I get a dog? Lizzie asked that every morning and her parents always replied, Dogs are too much responsible for a 10 year old. Why dont you get a cat like your brothers? Her parents replied. Also like every morning she ran out of the house yelling, I dont want a cat! As she was running toward the woods she almost tripped over Luna and her kittens Jellie, and Pumpkin. Jellie was the only cat that she didnt mind so she decided to take her into the woods so she didnt have to be alone. Come on, Jellie, Lizzie decided to carry her so she wouldnt get lost. Her parents would not be happy if she lost her. I need to tell mom that Luna isnt in the barn, she said to herself. A few minutes later when she entered the woods it started to rain. Of course it hasnt rained in a week, but it rains the only day I dont go straight to the library. She muttered Then she headed into a clearing she had found when she was eight years old, and headed into the cave. She went deeper into the cave and saw Jellie trying to catch fireflies. She laughed a little and said, Jellie, we better go home. She started out of the cave and got into the clearing when she and Jellie heard rustling in the bushes. Jellie leaped out of her arms and ran toward the farm. She got closer to the bushes, but then she heard whimpering. What if its a wolf and it attacks me. She thought. In the bushes wasnt a coyote, or a wolf but a puppy. Oh my, what am I going to do with you. She decides to just leave him there, but as soon as she leaves the puppy starts whimpering again. Im going to have to take you home, but my parents definitely wont allow that. Im going to have to hide you, but you need to be quiet so they dont find you. She whispered to him. The dog barked. Ill take that as a yes. She whispered to him. The next day she was riding home from the store with a bag of dog food, food bowls, treats, a collar, and a leash. She had decided to name him Wolf because when she found him she was worried that he was a wolf. She had asked her friend what breed she thought he was and she thought he was a German shepherd. Her friend was excited because she had always wanted a German shepherd. Before she went in she desperately told Lucas, Distract mom, because I found a puppy in the woods and kept it. You cant let her find Wolf! She started into the house and wondered if Lucas distracted mom. She thought I hope he did. Then she took a deep breath and entered the house. She looked in the kitchen and was surprised to see that her brother had distracted mom by dropping the litter box on the dinner table. She hurried up to her closet and started trying to teach Wolf not to bark when she said quiet. First she took a treat and entered. When he was quiet she said, Quiet. And gave him a treat, and after a few hours he was excellent at it. To teach him the second part she went to the woods at night and when he sat she said, Sit. And gave him a treat. After he learned that she took him back home and fell asleep. When she woke up she got into her closet and pet him a little. Bye, Wolf. Ill see you when I get home. She whispered. A few minutes later she got to school. Lizzie hurried through her math test, and finished her homework in the library. Then went to the store to pick up some more food for Wolf. She got the food, and treats, put the stuff in her backpack and hurried home. When she got home there was a big surprise. Wolf, what are you doing out here? She said. Her parents replied, We let him out, and what are you even doing with him in the first place? I found him in the woods. He was hurt. I couldnt leave him there. She said. She started to cry. Her mom said, Lizzie please dont cry. But, youre going to make me give him away, she wailed. Her dad said, No, were going to let you keep him, but youre going to have to take care of him. You also have to buy his food, and toys. Ok? Ill do it! Let me call Wolf over. She responded. Please do. If were going to live with him I want to meet him, Dad said. WOLF! She yelled, COME HERE! When Wolf came over she whispered to him, Are you excited? Were going to live with each other, and I wont have to hide you anymore! Wolf barked, and once again she decided that it was a yes. WAHOO Local, state and federal agencies are investigating an explosion last month that damaged a rural bridge, and a reward is now being offered for information. On Feb. 1, an explosive device was placed on a bridge rail at 3:23 p.m. on County Road 19 between County Road J and County Road K, west of Wahoo, Saunders County Sheriff Kevin Stukenholtz reported last month. County Public Works Director Andy Nordstrom said the damage to the bridge is estimated to be about $500. The Saunders County Sheriffs Office, the Bureau of Alcohol, Tobacco, Firearms and Explosives, the FBI, the State Fire Marshal and the Nebraska State Patrol are investigating the incident, according to the Saunders County Attorneys office. The sheriffs department and other law enforcement agencies in Saunders County also received reports of other explosions around the county in recent weeks and months, leading investigators to believe the incidents may be linked to the same suspects. Stukenholtz said the high-powered explosive being used in these incidents can put the suspects and others in danger. A cash reward of $3,500 is being offered by the Bureau of Alcohol, Tobacco, Firearms and Explosives for anyone who provides information that leads to the arrest of person(s) involved in the crime. To submit information, contact Saunders County Crime Stoppers at 402-443-9191 or go to www.saunderscountycrimestoppers.com and click on webtips. The identity of the tipster will remain anonymous. Suzi Nelson is the managing editor of the Wahoo Newspaper. Reach her via email at suzi.nelson@wahoonewspaper.com. WAVERLY Behind the counter at Waverlys post office, pop songs play faintly over a speaker as the HVAC system growls to life. Envelopes and paperwork are strewn across desks in what seems like disarray. But Heather Taylor said the scene is much more organized than when she took over as postmaster in December. Weve got a lot of cleanup to do, she said. But shes up for the task, and she said she knew what she was getting herself into when she left her job as postmaster in Hampton, Iowa. She had been the postmaster in Hampton since 2014, after a number of years as a mail carrier in her hometown of Waterloo, Iowa. The Hampton office was broken when she arrived, she said. And after a few years, it was fixed. I had nothing to do. It became boring, she said. I was told they needed some help (in Waverly), and I came here to clean up. In two months, Taylor said shes focused her efforts on promoting teamwork, addressing safety issues and making sure her customers needs are met. Thats one of the biggest things that I believe in, she said. Taylor began her career with the USPS after more than a decade in the Air Forces Security Forces, which took her to Germany, Saudi Arabia, Hungary and Bosnia from 1992 to 2004, when her sister was diagnosed with thyroid cancer. Family is more important, she said. But when I got out, I went home, and I needed a job. (The USPS) is very big on hiring veterans. She ended up working at the post office in Waterloo, Iowa, three blocks from the house where she grew up dirt poor. I never thought Id work there, though, she said. Her plan wasnt to return to Waterloo. Her goal as a kid was to do well in school so she could leave and find an opportunity elsewhere. That led to her military career. Her years in the service were eye-opening, she said, to the realities of people living in foreign and war-torn countries. She learned about the peaceful religion of Islam and acclimated herself to Islamic and Saudi customs, which were far off from the prejudices she said shed subconsciously learned from news broadcasts in the 1990s and 2000s. The things you see on TV arent necessarily how the world really is, she said. I was treated like a princess. I wore a full abaya; I am a firm believer that if I go to somebodys country, Im going to try to learn their language and Im going to respect their values. She tries to avoid watching television now because of the biases she said are often veiled in scripts. Now that her daughter and her nephew whom she raised from age 13 are out on their own, she spends most of her free time with her art. Shes a writer, a painter and an epoxy artist she coats coffee tumblers and other household items with epoxy and glitter, some of which she sells. But its primarily a hobby that gives her something gratifying outside of her job at the post office. Work used to be it, she said. I was told to get a hobby, and then I found the joys of glitter and epoxy I could do this for hours. It helps her not get too bogged down with her tasks at the post office, which she said can be overwhelming at times. But shes received positive feedback from what shes accomplished since she took over. I think Ive made great progress so far, she said. Aside from the organizational work in the office, she said shes taken steps to foster a community-first approach to delivering Waverly citizens their mail. She has coordinated outreach to local businesses, setting up streamlined shipping plans. Early on, she noticed an elderly woman whose mailbox was attached to her garage, down the front porch steps and across the driveway. I told her to move her mailbox to her house because I dont want her falling down the steps, she said. Youve got to have some heart in this job. And sometimes, if a carrier is out sick, she puts on her boots and delivers mail herself, which is typically beyond the duties of the postmaster. It goes back to my core value of taking care of the customer, she said. Im not going to have mail not delivered because were short. As Taylor continues settling into Waverly which she likes for its small-town feel and proximity to major cities she hopes people visit the post office knowing theyll receive service from a team thats laid back and willing to help. I want it to be an environment that people are happy coming here and enjoy coming in here, Taylor said. Thats the kind of place I want this to be. That people find that we go the extra mile. Sam Crisler is a reporter for The Waverly News. Reach him via email at samuel.crisler@wahoonewspaper.com. The Commemorative Air Forces Capital Wing, based in Culpeper, Virginia, is collaborating with the Delaware Aviation Museum Foundation of Georgetown, Delaware at a number of air shows this year, and has just announced their Warbird Showcase 2022 Tour Schedule. A variety of their well-known WWII-era aircraft will be performing in twelve cities spread across six states in tribute to the thousands of men and women who built, maintained, and flew these magnificent flying machines during their nations time of need. At each of these stops, members of the public will have the opportunity to purchase flight experience rides in any of the aircraft. Restored to pristine condition, the vintage military aircraft taking part in this tour will include the following aircraft: Grumman TBM-3E Avenger BuNo.91426 Doris Mae torpedo bomber North American B-25J Mitchell 44-30734 Panchito medium bomber Stinson L-5B Sentinel 42-98758 Gayle Ann FAC (Forward Air Controller) Boeing/Stearman N2S-4 Kaydet BuNo.30107 primary trainer A ride in any of these aircraft will allow the lucky person to sit in the very same seats which those of an earlier generation did 80 years ago when these aircraft help defend our nation. These flights are often deeply emotional experiences for participants, because the sensory connection to the past is so present the roar of the engines, the vibrations rumbling up through the seat, the distinctive scent which every aircraft from this era projects, the view, and the way an aircraft feels in flight it is impossible not to reflect upon what our forebears must have witnessed and endured within these aircraft during WWII. To find details about the full tour schedule or advance ticketing for any warbird ride, please click HERE; reservations for B-25 seats can also be made by calling +1 (443) 458-8926. Please visit the Delaware Aviation Museum Foundations link HERE for more information about the B-25 and the flight adventures available. Flight seats not sold in advance will be available for sale on-site at Warbird Showcase events. Rides are priced to fit almost any budget and range from $105 to $1,300 depending upon which aircraft and position you choose to experience. The scheduled warbirds will appear at each event subject to pilot and aircraft availability, maintenance, weather, and sufficient advance flight sales. This years Warbird Showcase tour will see several new programs added to the schedule. On Saturday, April 23rd, a low-key event at Culpeper Regional Airport in Culpeper, Virginia will offer the public a chance to meet and greet Capital Wing members and pilots as well as the opportunity to purchase warbird flight experience rides. Mothers Day weekend (May 7th/8th) in Warrenton, Virginia will see the debut of Women and Girls Can Fly!, an event where those attending can speak with three of our female pilots. One of these women flies the B-25 (and she is a retired Southwest Airlines Boeing 737 Captain), another flies a vintage Fairchild F24 (and a Dassault Falcon 7X bizjet during her day job), and the third is a student pilot who flies a Piper TriPacer. At the Mid-Atlantic Air Museums WWII Weekend (June 3-5) in Reading, Pennsylvania, riders in the TBM Avenger will be flying during the 80th anniversary of the Battle of Midway, the pivotal battle in the Pacific Theatre where TBM Avengers were heavily involved. And on July 3rd, those attending the Independence Day celebrations at Eastern West Virginia Regional Airport in Martinsburg, West Virginia will enjoy flybys from the TBM Avenger and Kaydet bi-plane, as well as fireworks at night. Other cities on the Warbird Showcase tour schedule include Cumberland Maryland, Ashland/Richmond Virginia, Frederick Maryland, Manteo North Carolina, Raleigh North Carolina, Hagerstown Maryland, Leesburg Virginia, and Georgetown Delaware. Click HERE to check the complete schedule. The Capital Wing and Delaware Aviation Museum Foundation are both non-profit 501(c)(3) organizations and staffed entirely with volunteers. For more information, please contact CapitalWingRides@gmail.com or Webmaster@DelawareAviationMuseum.org. CEDAR FALLS Providing context is an important element in preparing and performing a play based on a true story, said Margaret Kemp, visiting-artist-in-residence at the University of Northern Iowa in Cedar Falls. She is directing Theatre UNIs new drama, Blood on the Root, which opens at 7:30 p.m. Wednesday in the Bertha Martin Theatre, located in the Strayer-Wood Theatre on the UNI campus. Additional performances are at 7:30 p.m. Thursday, Friday and Saturday and March 9-11, and 2 p.m. Sunday. Audience response discussions will follow performances Thursday and Saturday and March 9. Written by Dominique Morisseau, Blood of the Root is based on the true story of the Jena Six, six Black students who were initially charged with attempted murder for a school fight after a provoking incident on a Louisiana campus in 2006. For Kemp, a professor at University of California-Davis, dramaturgical research was an important element for this production, including researching the historical, social, political and cultural context of Morisseaus play. Context helps to remind actors that when theyre doing a documentary piece, it can get kind of small. This is not documentary theater; its theater with a smaller lens and focus. It was part of my proposal that dramaturgy would be presented in layers, so every week a new subject was brought into the dialogue, she explained. An online archive was created, as well, with actors and crew members contributing what they learned through their research. Kemp said she was surprised that many students were unfamiliar with major events in Americas civil rights movement in the 1950s and 1960s, such as the march from Selma to Montgomery and the 1963 March on Washington, where Martin Luther King Jr. delivered his I Have a Dream speech at the Lincoln Memorial. I realized how much of the history they didnt know. There was a lot of stuff to learn. Dominique Morisseau cleverly brought the idea of using historical language from the civil rights era, not just what happened in Louisiana. This play is telling a much larger story, Kemp explained. Kemp is joined by Eric Lange, head of the UNI theater department, as artistic director and lighting designer. Lange said the script was selected to elevate the voice of a playwright of color and engage multiple communities in dialogue about the themes found in the play. In the production, a Black student decides to provoke change at her high school and sits under a tree where white students gather. In response echoing what happened in Jena nooses are hung from that tree and Black students erupt in protest. Morisseaus play examines the complexities of race, bias, justice and individual freedoms. The title, Blood at the Root, comes from the Strange Fruit song about the lynchings of African Americans in the South. Morisseau was commissioned to write the play for graduate students at Penn State University. Kemp said Theatre UNIs production is filled with poetry, music and choreography. The whole script is poetic, and there are certain monologues that are poems. There are 12 cast members. Choreography will be provided by Destiny (Tru) Cyrus and original composition will be provided by LYRIKALTMG. Scenic design is provided by UNI theater alumna Katrina Sandvik, with alumna Karle Meyers as costume designer. Theatre UNI issued the warning that the play contains topics related to the marginalization of specific groups, and the use of language and images that some audience members may find disturbing. Tickets start at $20 and are available at unitix.uni.edu. Love 0 Funny 0 Wow 0 Sad 0 Angry 0 Get local news delivered to your inbox! Subscribe to our Daily Headlines newsletter. Sign up! * I understand and agree that registration on or use of this site constitutes agreement to its user agreement and privacy policy. Cut Bank, MT (59427) Today Partly cloudy and windy this evening. Cloudy with diminishing winds late. Low 48F. SW winds at 20 to 30 mph, decreasing to 5 to 10 mph.. Tonight Partly cloudy and windy this evening. Cloudy with diminishing winds late. Low 48F. SW winds at 20 to 30 mph, decreasing to 5 to 10 mph. WATERLOO Doctors counted six gunshot wounds during the autopsy of Grant Sauls body after he was shot during a robbery at the Cedar Falls apartment where he was staying in 2019. Most of the bullets wounds were minor, striking arms and legs. But a single bullet entered his chest, State Medical Examiner Dennis Klein told jurors Tuesday as trial continued for the alleged gunman, 20-year-old Keyon Christian Roby. Roby faces charges of first degree murder and robbery. The projectile hit Sauls left lung and then struck his aorta, the main artery that carries blood from the heart. The wound caused internal bleeding and would have been almost immediately fatal. The prognosis would be very bad. The chances of survival would be very, very low even if they had immediate medical attention, Klein said. The damage done to that part of the body its the major blood vessel, your brain needs blood continuously, all your organs need blood. Damage like this, the survivability is very low. Klein said he also found a gunshot wound that passed through Sauls left forearm, breaking his watch and the radius bone, Another bullet passed through is left hip, a through-and-through shot to the back of his right thigh, a grazing wound to the front of his left thigh and a shot that entered the bottom of his right foot and exited near the instep. Earlier testimony from witnesses in the apartment was that three shots were fired, and police found three spent shell casings. With the six gunshot wounds, Klein said, its likely that some of the injuries came from one bullet. Its possible and probable that bullets that went through one part of the body then can re-enter another part of the body. Even though Im describing two different gunshot wounds, its possible that the same bullet caused both those wounds, Klein said. Witnesses had testified Saul was seated on a couch during the robbery and was shot when he attempted to grab his own gun. Also on Tuesday, jurors heard from another accomplice in the robbery. James Duane Wright-Buls, 23, told jurors Roby had been at the Cedar Falls apartment earlier in the night for a cocaine deal. He came back and said he had a stain a robbery, Wright-Buls said. He said he didnt know Saul or others at the apartment, and he didnt know what Roby intended to take. He recounted how Gafeney obtained a 9 mm SIG Sauer pistol with a laser sight for Roby in Waterloo before they returned to Cedar Falls. Wright-Buls said he himself wasnt armed, despite earlier testimony alleging he was carrying a small-caliber pistol. He said Roby led the way up the stairs and to the apartment, Gafeney was second, and he was last. According to Wright-Buls, Roby and Gafeney entered the living room and moments later he heard gunfire, and the trio retreated back outside. As they made their getaway, Wright-Buls said, he asked Roby what happened. He said I shot him I told him he was stupid and to drop me off, Wright-Buls said. He said he told police Roby told him he fired because Saul put a gun on him. Wright-Buls said he entered a plea agreement to robbery charges that would result in up to 25 years in prison and avoid charges of aiding and abetting murder. The gun was hidden in bushes next to Wright-Buls home on Chicago Street in Waterloo, he said. It was later picked up, and police recovered it after it was tossed from a vehicle during a traffic stop two days later in Waterloo. People in the vehicle testified Roby and Gafeney had been in the vehicle during the stop. Criminalist Michael Tate with the Iowa Division of Criminal Investigation testified that shell casings and bullet fragments from the apartment likely were fired by the pistol. Love 0 Funny 0 Wow 0 Sad 2 Angry 0 Sign up for our Crime & Courts newsletter Get the latest in local public safety news with this weekly email. Sign up! * I understand and agree that registration on or use of this site constitutes agreement to its user agreement and privacy policy. CEDAR FALLS Two Cedar Valley school districts are among 38 recipients across the state of STEM BEST grants that will be used to create or expand programs in high demand career fields. Grants of $40,000 for both Waterloo and Dike-New Hartford community schools were announced last week by the Governors STEM Advisory Council, based at the University of Northern Iowa. STEM aims to prepare students for careers that use science, technology, engineering and mathematics. BEST stands for Businesses Engaging Students and Teachers. The Waterloo Career Center sought the funds for its cyber security and computer science programs, the CyberPatriot after-school club, and the enhancement of hands-on learning provided by business partners. This will give us an opportunity to grow that program and grow opportunities for student engagement, (plus) a variety of curriculum software needs in that area, Amy Miehe, career center administrator, told the Board of Education Monday. Were very excited about this. Dike-New Hartford Schools will upgrade equipment in its industrial technology department and start a new class. The class will be called product development enterprise, Lane Stahlberg, a district industrial technology teacher, said in an interview. With the help of new and upgraded equipment, students will create made-to order products of metal, wood, glass and leather that are marketed to the community. Grants were awarded through the advisory councils STEM BEST H.D. (High Demand) Program. It is designed to prepare students for the workforce through curriculum focused on skills needed in job sectors such as computer science/information technology, healthcare professions and advanced manufacturing, according to a news release. The program is the result of a special appropriation from the Legislature in 2021 to expand STEM BEST with an emphasis on job sectors that are in high demand. The high demand program will help build partnerships between schools and businesses, allowing educators and industry professionals to work together to develop curriculum and projects that prepare students for careers in these high-demand fields. There is clearly a strong interest in building career-linked learning opportunities in these high-demand fields, Jeff Weld, executive director of the advisory council, said in the news release. This is the highest number of schools who will be named STEM BEST Program models in an application cycle since the programs launch in 2014. Were excited to see how these collaborations throughout the state bring attention to the opportunities and skills needed in these high-demand job sectors. The high demand program offers a larger grant amount and a lower cost-share requirement for applicants than other STEM BEST awards. Both the Waterloo and Dike-New Hartford grants require the districts to contribute $20,000 towards their costs. The awards can be used for facility upgrades, equipment, time for program planning with partners, travel needs or integrating curriculum into existing courses. Along with the new class, Dike-New Hartfords plan includes equipment improvements that will allow for advanced welding, computer numerical control machining and laser fabrication. Those purchases will bolster classes Stahlberg teaches, currently at Hawkeye Community Colleges Western Outreach Center near Holland, and be used in the new class. He said the product development enterprise class also has hidden goals of gettings students to work on marketing their products through a website or brochures and communicating with potential customers. Waterloo Superintendent Jane Lindaman said when the IT program was first started at the career center in 2016, coursework was in web and mobile and networking. Since then, careers in cyber security have grown, which is expected to continue. That has caused the career center to shift away from networking. Im really excited weve been able to respond to that need, she said. To secure this money is really a great thing. Its not the only way were funding our work around the cyber security program. This is just one piece. For more information on the STEM BEST H.D. Program, go online to iowastem.org/besthd. Love 0 Funny 0 Wow 0 Sad 0 Angry 0 Want to see more like this? Get our local education coverage delivered directly to your inbox. Sign up! * I understand and agree that registration on or use of this site constitutes agreement to its user agreement and privacy policy. CEDAR FALLS Residents might see a smaller hike in their city property taxes than was proposed in early February. City councilors were successful in chopping about 1.5% off the proposed tax increase after unanimously agreeing to some cuts and reallocations in the citys fiscal year 2023 budget at a special session Monday night in the Community Center. The proposed increase sat at 4.65% at the start of the meeting after factoring in state rollbacks and the county property re-evaluation. An hour later, that figure was an estimated 3.20%, a result of some $335,000 being removed with expenditures totaling north of $100 million. The budget will be revised to reflect funding changes to six capital improvement projects and a new part-time position. It comes before City Council for a public hearing and likely a final vote Monday. An owner of a residential property valued at $100,000 went from paying approximately $30 more for the year to $20. The city portion represents about a third of the local property tax bill. The Cedar Falls School district comes in at about 40%. Black Hawk County and other entities like Hawkeye Community College make up the remainder. Fewer seats, reservations needed as Maple Syrup Fest comes back for 2022 CEDAR FALLS The Maple Syrup Festival, held each year in early March, was as popular and we Changes Seven revisions, a majority of which were pitched by Councilor Susan deBuhr, brought the tax hike down about 1.5%. Funding for future zoning code updates and a program incentivizing conversion of rental homes into owner-occupied ones were not cut, rather reallocations were made to save taxpayers money. The city will move $90,000 and $70,000, respectively, of unspent funds for the two initiatives in fiscal year 2022 to next year. The full amount, $150,000, was removed by City Council earlier this year before it was eventually restored to appease College Hill stakeholders. What council approved Monday does not change the amount available to spend on the initiative. What theres left in the FY22 budget is $90,000, said Administrator Ron Gaines. What were suggesting is to carry that $90,000 over and there would still be the $150,000 available for FY23, but there will be a $90,000 savings in the particular item. The council also gave the green light to delay funding for three capital projects to at least the next fiscal year to save an additional $120,000. One is a housing needs assessment. A second is the implementation of the citys Resilience Plan, meant to prepare the city for disruptions like flooding or a public health crisis. The third initiative relates to cemetery columbariums, geared toward saving space in the citys three cemeteries and helping generate additional revenue. The council also cut $25,000 for removing trees infested by emerald ash borer on public property. Anticipating a new part-time human resources employee would be in place for just half of the new fiscal year, a final $30,160 was cut from the budget. That may have a slight impact on the workload of a new full-time human rights position, which falls under the umbrella of the Human Resources Division. We do still have the full-time position that was suggested by the Racial Equity Task Force, and it would aid the Human Rights Commission, Gaines said when council originally considered getting rid of the position. That position would be staffed under our Human Resources Division, so we would expect to use some of the capacity in that person to help make up for the removal of the part-time human resources position. Councilor Simon Harding dissented to tampering with the funding for the new position. He noted after the meeting how the city already has a low staff per capita and his belief the division is understaffed. I wanted the city to have the flexibility to hire the new employee when it needed it, he said and added that a workplace climate audit is also budgeted for the new fiscal year. While it would be a third party firm taking on the audit, he noted the Human Resources Division is responsible for work to make it happen. At the previous City Council meeting, some officials set a goal of not having any tax hike. Among them was Councilor Dave Sires, who didnt propose any additional cuts out of belief there would be no support for them. Love 0 Funny 0 Wow 0 Sad 0 Angry 0 Get Government & Politics updates in your inbox! Stay up-to-date on the latest in local and national government and political topics with our newsletter. Sign up! * I understand and agree that registration on or use of this site constitutes agreement to its user agreement and privacy policy. CEDAR FALLS -- The University of Northern Iowa will celebrate UNI Transfer Week this week through Friday. The Office of Admissions will sponsor several virtual events throughout the week and a Transfer Visit Day on Friday. Application fees are waived for all transfer students who apply to UNI during the week. UNI recently unveiled its new general education curriculum which adds additional flexibility for transfer students. An AA or AS degree from any regionally accredited community college will now satisfy the general education requirement at UNI. Opportunities for certificates are also built into the new general education curriculum. A third of new UNI students are transfers, and UNI has been recognized for cultivating a welcoming environment for them. International transfer student honor society Phi Theta Kappa has consistently named UNI a top school for transfer students. For more information on transferring to UNI or to sign up for a visit, see admissions.uni.edu/transfer. Love 0 Funny 0 Wow 0 Sad 0 Angry 0 DES MOINES Gov. Kim Reynolds was the perfect choice to tell Iowas story to the nation because she can talk about tax cuts and moving faster than most to reopen businesses and schools during the COVID-19 pandemic. Or she was the wrong choice because she has overseen a partisan, national political agenda that is unfriendly to Iowans. Its all in the eye of the beholder. Reynolds delivered the Republican Partys response to Democratic President Joe Bidens State of the Union address on Tuesday night. Shortly after Biden finished his remarks to a joint session of Congress, Reynolds offered the Republican perspective in a message broadcast from Des Moines. Reynolds is the second Iowa Republican chosen for the annual response by the party that is out of power in the White House. U.S. Sen. Joni Ernst delivered the response to President Barack Obamas address in 2015. Gov. Kim Reynolds is the perfect choice for the Republican response to (Tuesday) nights State of the Union address, and her record of success in Iowa is the ideal contrast to life in Joe Bidens America, Ernst said Tuesday during remarks on the U.S. Senate floor. Democrats were not as keen to the idea of Reynolds representing Iowa on the national stage. Jennifer Konfrst, the Democrats leader in the Iowa House, said Reynolds was chosen for Tuesday nights address because she has enacted policies that follow the wishes of national leaders in the Republican Party. Its not because shes done amazing things for the state of Iowa. Its because shes done amazing things for the Republican Party. And thats who shes answering to, and thats who she leads for, Konfrst said Tuesday during a news conference. During Tuesday nights response, Reynolds talked about the $1.9 billion in state income tax cuts that she signed into law earlier Tuesday, and how she worked during the pandemic to ensure that Iowa schools and businesses were among the first to reopen and return to pre-pandemic operations. She has led with Iowa common sense and compassion since Day 1, Ernst said of Reynolds. Democrats have been critical of Reynolds management of the states pandemic response. On Tuesday, Zach Wahls, the Democrats leader in the Iowa Senate, asserted Reynolds pandemic response initially followed public health advice, but eventually turned political. Rather than following the science and trying to keep things open (and) safe, she unfortunately decided to play politics with the pandemic. And her response failed, Wahls said. Just more than 9,000 Iowans have died of COVID-19, according to federal data. Over the course of the pandemic, Iowas rate of COVID-19 related deaths per capita is the nations 21st-lowest. Earlier this week, state Republican Party Chairman Jeff Kaufmann said he believes it is a good thing that, regardless of political affiliation, that Iowas governor has been chosen for remarks that will be seen by millions across the country. Doggone it, this is good for Iowa. This puts our state of a little over 3 million, this puts us on the map, Kaufmann said. Konfrst, again, had a different take. Certainly, the important work thats being done in this state should have a national stage, she said. I just dont trust that tonight the national stage will be used to honestly and accurately reflect whats happening in this state, and will instead be used for partisan political gain. Love 0 Funny 0 Wow 0 Sad 0 Angry 0 Weather Alert ...MORE WINDY DAYS ON THE WAY, WITH COLDER TEMPERATURES AND RAIN/SNOW SHOWERS FOR MOTHER'S DAY WEEKEND... --Thursday and Friday-- * A pair of systems brushing through the region will bring gusty winds both days, with even stronger winds possible on Friday. Winds will bring travel difficulties both in the air and on the ground. Travel restrictions for high profile vehicles are possible. Check with CalTrans/NDOT for the current road information. Please see the latest hazard text products for the latest information on anticipated wind speeds. * Area of blowing dust are possible both afternoons downwind of the Carson Sink, possibly affecting portions of I-80, US 50, and Highway 95. In addition, backcountry and ski recreation could be impacted along with choppy conditions on area lakes. * A few light showers with minimal liquid totals are possible in far northern Nevada and northeast California. --Mother's Day Weekend into Early Next Week-- * It will remain breezy throughout the weekend, with a secondary max in wind speeds on Sunday due to a strong cold front. This front will usher in a much colder air mass and high temperatures on Mother's Day will be 15-20 degrees below normal. * There will be rain and snow showers with the front, but again, liquid amounts will be minimal. There are solid chances for snow levels to fall to all valley floors by Sunday evening, which may catch many off guard, though it is hard to get snow to stick to roadways in lower elevation valleys this late in the spring. * Well below normal temperatures and chances for light showers will continue into Monday and Tuesday next week. While still some uncertainty due to winds and cloud cover, it's possible we could have frost and freeze concerns Sunday and Monday nights. ...WIND ADVISORY IN EFFECT FROM 11 AM TO 9 PM PDT THURSDAY... * WHAT...Southwest winds 20 to 35 mph with gusts up to 55 mph expected. Wind prone areas may experience gusts in excess of 60 mph. Southwest winds 15 to 25 mph with gusts to 45 mph and waves of 2 to 4 feet expected on Pyramid Lake. * WHERE...Greater Reno-Carson City-Minden Area and Western Nevada Basin and Range including Pyramid Lake. * WHEN...From 11 AM to 9 PM PDT Thursday. * IMPACTS...Gusty winds could blow around unsecured objects and high profile vehicles will be prone to tip over. Tree limbs could be blown down and a few power outages may result. Blowing dust may locally reduce visibility downwind of dry lake beds and sinks. Small boats, kayaks and paddle boards will be prone to capsizing. * ADDITIONAL DETAILS...Travel restrictions for high profile vehicles are possible. Check with NDOT for the latest on road conditions. PRECAUTIONARY/PREPAREDNESS ACTIONS... Now is the time to secure loose outdoor items such as patio furniture, holiday decorations, and trash cans before winds increase which could blow these items away. The best thing to do is prepare ahead of time by making sure you have extra food and water on hand, flashlights with spare batteries and/or candles in the event of a power outage. Check lake conditions before heading out on the water and be prepared for a sudden increase in winds and wave heights. Consider postponing boating activities on the lake until a day with less wind. && Spring and summer nights are for bonfires on the beach with some of our favorite stretches of local sand opening for burn season in March, April, and May. Here are a few of our favorite spots to have a legal bonfire on the beach in the Bay Area. Just make sure to check that it's not a Spare the Air day, and visit park sites for updated regulations, available dates, and group permits. Don't forget the s'mores! Ocean Beach, San Francisco Bonfires at Ocean Beach in San Francisco. (Tyler Drake, courtesy of The Outbound) Warm up around a bonfire with friends and family at San Francisco's favorite beach, which is open for fires March through October. There are 16 fire rings located between stairwells 15 and 20. This is an ideal spot for a group outing as there's ample space and lots of convenient parkingjust note that groups of 25 people or more are required a special use permit. Fires must be extinguished (with water only) by 9:30pm. For more details and regulations, visit nps.gov. Inside Tip: For those of you without a car, or who prefer public transportation, you can take the N Judah all the way to the beach. Learn more. Muir Beach, Marin County (Courtesy of The Outbound) Muir Beach is a little further away, but that usually translates to smaller crowds. If you're looking for an isolated spot to take in the sunset, build a bonfire, and hang out with some good friends, then this is the ticket. Just know that groups larger than 25 people are required a special permit. Muir Beach has six fire rings available May through November. Fires must be extinguished with one hour after sunset. For more information, visit nps.gov. Inside Tip: The beach closes one hour after sunset. From December through April, there are only three fire pits on the beach, located toward the south end of the parking lot. Learn more. Drakes Beach, Point Reyes National Seashore (@pointreyesnps) Named after the famed explorer, Sir Francis Drake, Drakes Beach is part of the scenic Point Reyes National Seashore and is an absolute stunner. If you're looking to spend an entire day in this neck of the woods, grab some snacks and firewood from a West Marin store (this is to prevent outside pests and diseases) and head out to the beach. Inside Tip: You'll need to pick up a free fire permit for the day of your outing. You can find the details by visiting nps.gov or by calling the Bear Valley Visitor Center at 415.464.5100 x2 x5. Learn more. Twin Lakes State Beach, Santa Cruz (@tuningout831) This one-mile stretch of beach is the perfect option for those seeking a peaceful Santa Cruz experience without the crowds. The beach features soft sand, playful surf, an awesome view of Walton Lighthouse, and a handful of fire pits to choose from. Inside Tip: Get there early, as fire pits go quickly. Parking during the summer months can be difficult and often requires a permit, which can be purchased at one of four nearby pay stations. Learn more. Seabright State Beach, Santa Cruz This wide, beautiful beach is an amazing spot to spend the day and enjoy a bonfire at night. Seabright is probably the most popular spot in Santa Cruz for a bonfire due to its convenient proximity to the Beach Boardwalk. There are 10 fire pits to choose from. Inside Tip: It's a popular spot, so plan on spending the day at the beach to ensure you get a fire pit. The beach closes at 10pm. Learn more. AARP is encouraged that President Biden continues to urge Congress to act on our nations skyrocketing prescription drug prices, AARP CEO Jo Ann Jenkins said after the address. We urge the Senate to keep their promises to voters and lower drug prices, reduce seniors drug costs and save taxpayers hundreds of billions of dollars. Nursing home reforms planned Biden also promised to crack down on poor quality in our nations nursing homes. As Wall Street firms take over more nursing homes, quality in those homes has gone down and costs have gone up, Biden said. That ends on my watch. Medicare is going to set higher standards for nursing homes and make sure your loved ones get the care they deserve and expect. The day before the State of the Union address, the administration announced a comprehensive plan to better regulate and oversee nursing homes and other long-term care facilities. For years, AARP and AARP Foundation have sounded the alarm about problems in Americas nursing homes, Jenkins said in her statement. The COVID-19 pandemic exposed the chronic, ongoing issues with our long-term care system and emphasized the need for reform. It is a national disgrace that more than 200,000 residents and staff in nursing homes and other long-term care facilities died. Bill Sweeney, AARP senior vice president for government affairs, said that the newly announced nursing home reforms go even further than what was included in the Build Back Better bill the U.S. House of Representatives passed in 2021. It really does reinforce the importance of family caregivers, who for years now have been raising their voices and making sure they were heard about the quality and safety in nursing homes. Bidens highlighting of the prescription drug and nursing home concerns is very important, Sweeney said. In both cases, the president is very focused on not only helping families save money and have better outcomes for their loved ones, but also saving taxpayers money and bringing fiscal responsibilities to the budget to make sure that were getting what we are paying for. Dena Bunis covers Medicare, health care, health policy and Congress. She also writes the Medicare Made Easy column for the AARP Bulletin. An award-winning journalist, Bunis spent decades working for metropolitan daily newspapers, including as Washington bureau chief for the Orange County Register and as a health policy and workplace writer for Newsday. You have permission to edit this article. Edit Close loading......... Malibu, CA, Mar 2, 2022 AEST (ABN Newswire) - Skyharbour Resources Ltd. ( CVE:SYH ) ( OTCMKTS:SYHBF ) ( FRA:SC1P ) is pleased to announce that the Company has begun its winter 2022 diamond drilling program at its 100% owned Moore Uranium Project. The project comprises 35,705 hectares approximately 15 kilometres east of Denison Mine's Wheeler River project and is proximal to regional infrastructure for Cameco's Key Lake and McArthur River operations in the Athabasca Basin, Saskatchewan. The program will consist of a minimum of 2,500 metres in seven to nine drill holes and is designed to follow up on the successes of the 2021 summer/fall drilling program in the Maverick East Zone and the Grid 19 target area, as well as to investigate new targets at the Viper area on the 4.7 km Maverick Structural Corridor. Substantial portions of the Maverick corridor remain to be systematically drill tested leaving robust discovery potential along strike as well as at depth in the basement rocks.Join Ellis Martin for a conversation with Jordan Trimble, the President and Chief Executive Officer of Skyharbour Resources. Skyharbour is a preeminent uranium and thorium exploration company with an extensive portfolio located in the prolific Athabasca Basin of Saskatchewan, Canada. The company holds 14 projects over a land package of nearly 950,000 acres with several joint venture partners involved. Skyharbour is well positioned to benefit from improving uranium market fundamentals. In July 2016, Skyharbour acquired an option from Denison Mines, a large strategic shareholder of the Company, to acquire 100% of the Moore Uranium Project which is located approximately 15 kilometres east of Denison's Wheeler River project and 39 kilometres south of Cameco's McArthur River uranium mine. Moore is an advanced stage uranium exploration project with high grade uranium mineralization at the Maverick Zone.*To view the press release, please visit:To listen to the Interview, please visit:About Skyharbour Resources Ltd. Skyharbour Resources (CVE:SYH) (OTCMKTS:SYHBF) holds an extensive portfolio of uranium and thorium exploration projects in Canada's Athabasca Basin and is well positioned to benefit from improving uranium market fundamentals with six drill-ready projects. In July 2016, Skyharbour acquired an option from Denison Mines, a large strategic shareholder of the Company, to acquire 100% of the Moore Uranium Project which is located approximately 15 kilometres east of Denison's Wheeler River project and 39 kilometres south of Cameco's McArthur River uranium mine. Moore is an advanced stage uranium exploration project with high grade uranium mineralization at the Maverick Zone. Drill results have returned up to 6.0% U3O8 over 5.9 metres, including 20.8% U3O8 over 1.5 metres at a vertical depth of 265 metres. Skyharbour has signed option agreements with Orano Canada Inc. and Azincourt Energy whereby Orano and Azincourt can earn in up to 70% of specific segments of the Preston Project through a combined $9,800,000 in total exploration expenditures, as well as $1,700,000 in total cash payments and Azincourt shares. Preston is a large, geologically prospective property proximal to Fission Uranium's Triple R deposit as well as NexGen Energy's Arrow deposit. The Company also owns a 100% interest in the Falcon Point Uranium Project which hosts a high-grade surface showing with up to 68% U3O8 in grab samples from a massive pitchblende vein, the source of which has yet to be discovered. The Company's 100% owned Mann Lake Uranium project on the east side of the Basin is strategically located adjacent to the Mann Lake Joint Venture operated by Cameco, where high-grade uranium mineralization has been identified. Skyharbour's goal is to maximize shareholder value through new mineral discoveries, committed long-term partnerships, and the advancement of exploration projects in geopolitically favourable jurisdictions. TUCSON, Ariz. A woman living in southern Arizona has been sentenced to 21 months in federal prison for conspiring to transport and harbor over a period of time more than 100 migrants who entered the U.S. illegally. U.S. Immigration and Customs Enforcements Homeland Security Investigations says 43-year-old Amalia Gonzalez-Lara pleaded guilty to the charge late last year. She was sentenced Tuesday. Authorities say she managed, supervised and coordinated smuggling operations for a stash house where migrants from Mexico and Guatemala stayed in Avondale, Arizona west of Phoenix after being smuggled across the U.S.-Mexico border. Sergio Vazquez-Flores helped operate the residence with Gonzalez-Lara. The 46-yearold will be sentenced March 15. The case was prosecuted by the U.S. Attorneys Office, District of Arizona in Tucson. Copyright 2022 Albuquerque Journal SANTA FE For New Mexico teachers like Laura Mayo-Rodriguez, being an educator during the COVID-19 pandemic has been about much more than math and reading. Mayo-Rodriguez, a sixth grade teacher at Nava Elementary School in Santa Fe, said teachers have filled the role of therapist, website developer and nurse for their students over the last several years, in addition to more traditional duties. During remotely hybrid learning, educators worked harder than ever, she said during a news conference at the school Tuesday. We carry our students around in our hearts and in our heads. Starting in the coming school year, New Mexico teachers will also carry larger salaries after Gov. Michelle Lujan Grisham signed into law a bill increasing starter teacher pay statewide from $40,000 to $50,000 per year. The legislation, Senate Bill 1, was approved without a single no vote during the just-ended 30-day legislative session and will also increase the pay levels of more experienced teachers under the states three-tier system for educator pay. This isnt guesswork we have to pay educators a salary that is commensurate with their experience, education and training, and the fact they work what amounts to more than a full-time job, said Lujan Grisham, who spent part of a day in January filling in as a substitute teacher at a Santa Fe elementary school. I know unequivocally that there arent better teachers anywhere around the globe, the Democratic governor added during Tuesdays bill-signing event. Amid a recent wave of retirements that pushed the number of statewide teacher vacancies to 1,000 or so, Lujan Grisham also signed three other education-related bills aimed at bolstering a teacher retirement fund and making it easier for retired educators to return to work. The governor is also expected to act in the next week on a $8.5 billion budget plan that includes average pay raises of 7% for education employees and state workers. Backers say the bills could help rejuvenate New Mexicos teacher pipeline and convince younger educators to remain in the profession. Randi Weingarten, the president of the American Federation of Teachers union, lauded Lujan Grisham during Tuesdays news conference outside Nava Elementary School. She also criticized the administration of Lujan Grishams predecessor, Republican ex-Gov. Susana Martinez, for enacting policies like a since-scrapped teacher evaluation system that critics argued unfairly tied teacher pay levels to student test scores. I remember what happened in this state before Gov. Lujan Grisham was elected, Weingarten said. This years increase in teacher salary levels teachers at districts that provide additional school days would get even larger pay raises under a separate budget bill still awaiting the governors signature was made possible by a state revenue windfall created by record-breaking oil production. While New Mexico has in past years sought to balance its budget by raiding school districts cash balances, Lujan Grisham vowed Tuesday her administration would not go back on the pay raises. When New Mexico makes a commitment to the classroom, we stand by that commitment, she said. The salary increases for teachers are not cheap, as adjusting the minimum educator pay levels will cost roughly $76.8 million in the fiscal year that starts in July. In addition to increasing starting teacher pay from $40,000 to $50,000 per year, the bill signed Tuesday will increase pay for level two and level three teachers to $60,000 and $70,000 per year, respectively. Thats up from $50,000 and $60,000 annually under current state statute. The increases will make teacher pay levels in New Mexico among the highest in the nation, though other states have also moved to increase educator salaries. As of last year, New York had the highest average teacher salary at $87,069 per year, according to National Education Association data. New Mexico came in 32nd with an average annual teacher pay rate of $54,256. Meanwhile, whether the increase in teacher pay leads to improved student outcomes will likely be scrutinized in the coming years. New Mexico has chronically ranked toward the bottom of states in national education rankings, and a legislative report released last fall found public school students had lost the equivalent of between 10 and 60 days of instruction due to the pandemic. The three other education-related bills signed Tuesday by the governor are: PHOENIX The family of a little girl who was killed when her mothers car was rear-ended by a Jeep on a Phoenix freeway can sue the SUVs manufacturer for wrongful death because it did not install automatic emergency braking devices that were available as optional equipment, the Arizona Supreme Court ruled Tuesday. The court rejected arguments from lawyers for Jeep parent company Fiat Chrysler Automobiles US that the National Highway Transportation Safety Administrations decision not to require the devices pre-empted the state lawsuit. The decision written by Justice Bill Montgomery also overturned a similar 2019 decision that said automakers were immune to such lawsuits because of the federal agencys decision not to require the technology. The crash on Aug. 15, 2015, killed 4-year-old Vivian Varela, who was riding in the back seat of her mothers Lexus sedan. Melissa Varela was preparing to take an exit from the Loop 101 freeway in north Phoenix when traffic stopped because an emergency vehicle was blocking the off-ramp, according to one of her lawyers, Brent Ghelfi. A nurse who had just ended her shift at a nearby hospital was also intending to take the exit but did not notice stopped traffic until it was too late. Her Jeep Grand Cherokee slammed into the back of the Lexus, killing Vivian and injuring her mother. Vivian was the only child of Melissa and her husband, Mitchell, who lived in metro Phoenix at the time but now live in Franklin, Wisconsin. Ghelfi said the 2014 Jeep could have been equipped with Fiat Chryslers version of automatic emergency braking but it was only included as an option with a package upgrade that added $10,000 to its price. What Chrysler did was they had a safety system that the Insurance Institute of America has studied that says it will prevent 60% of rear end collisions, Ghelfi said. Its a massive game changer in terms of automobile collisions. He said automakers have been incredibly slow to adopt the crash-prevention technology while noting how automakers have adopted airbags and other safety features to protect occupants. The item costs automakers about $100. And the real tragedy here is they option it, Ghelfi said. They take a safety feature and they bundle it together with moonroof and leather seats and non-safety features. So you can only get the safety feature if you buy the upgraded trim level. In a statement, Fiat Chrysler Automobiles extended their sympathies to the Varela family for their loss and other injuries stemming from this horrific, high-speed collision caused by an inattentive driver. While we disagree with the Arizona Supreme Courts ruling on the preemption defense, we look forward to presenting our other defenses to the trial court, the statement said. The company noted that the Jeep Grand Cherokee involved complied with all applicable federal safety standards and said that while automatic emergency braking, known as AEB, is a promising new technology, it cant prevent all crashes. Lawsuits attempting to impose an autonomous feature on all vehicles can inadvertently stymie the development of better versions as technology matures, the company said. Federal regulators have not mandated the equipment. The Supreme Courts decision noted that the federal safety agency opted to forego imposing a mandate for several reasons, including that it wanted to spur innovation and because automakers were adopting the technology on their own To the extent the administrative record reflects a federal policy about AEB technology, it is that the Agency encourages AEB innovation and desires it be deployed more broadly and sooner rather than later, Montgomery wrote. The case now goes back to a trial court, unless Fiat Chrysler files an appeal with the U.S. Supreme Court. Expert witnesses have been retained and depositions takes, so a trial could happen quickly. Ghelfi, the Varelas lawyer, called automakers failure to universally adopt automatic emergency braking a nationally important and fundamental issue. He said modeling done by experts determined that if Chryslers version of emergency braking had been installed on the Jeep, Vivian would not have died. It would have automatically braked that car, and this accident would have been a clean miss, Ghelfi said. At worst it would have been a fender bender, and most likely it would have been a clean miss. Copyright 2022 Albuquerque Journal A man is behind bars after an alleged monthslong crime spree that included carjacking a pregnant woman, shooting a neighbor and robbing multiple businesses at gunpoint around Albuquerque. Dairon Romero, 25, is charged with five counts of armed robbery but, according to Albuquerque police, is suspected of robbing 42 businesses including hotels, cellphone stores and gas stations across the city over a seven-month period. In the midst of the robberies, some apparent missteps by authorities left Romero on the streets. Prosecutors dismissed two cases against him the shooting of his neighbor and the burglary of a womans home, according to online court records. At one point, Romero was released by police following a thwarted gas station robbery due to an apparent miscommunication between a responding officer and an employee. Rebecca Atkins, a police spokeswoman, said it was challenging for detectives to identify Romero, who often wore a mask. She said federal authorities helped police take him into custody. Romeros family declined to comment. This individual was victimizing businesses and citizens in our city for months, eluding police, Police Chief Harold Medina said in a statement. Im grateful for our partnerships that helped apprehend this violent offender and get him off the streets. Prosecutors have filed a motion to keep Romero behind bars until trial, saying the violent crime spree that (Romero) went on directly made our community a more dangerous place. According to criminal complaints filed in Metropolitan Court: It started July 17, when a pregnant woman reported being carjacked at gunpoint by a man outside Walmart near Wyoming and Academy NE. In security footage, the detective noticed a tattoo of a square with a Zia symbol on the mans hand. A suspect matching the description with the same tattoo was reported to have robbed a Wendys at gunpoint on July 5, a Circle K on Sept. 10 and a JCPenney on Sept. 11. Then, on Sept. 14 a man told police that his neighbor who had carjacked a woman outside of a Walmart months earlier shot him during a confrontation. The detective investigating the ongoing robberies was able to confirm the alleged shooter, Romero, was the man involved in the carjacking and other incidents. Romero was arrested in the shooting Sept. 24 but the detective was not told that he had been taken into custody. The shooting case was dismissed Oct. 7, due to prosecutors not being able to locate witnesses, and Romero was released from jail. On Oct. 10, a man robbed a 7-Eleven at gunpoint and fingerprints found at the scene identified Romero as the suspect. Then, on Oct. 13, police responded to an assault at a Circle K and Romero, the suspect, told police he had pepper-sprayed an employee. A responding officer released Romero after evaluating the situation and determining the assault to be a misdemeanor crime. Following Romeros release, a clerk called the officer and said Romero had also tried to take money from the register. On Nov. 3, the detective investigating Romeros cases reviewed the security footage and saw Romero pepper-spray the clerk and take cash from the register before being tackled by another employee. While watching the footage I recognize Romero as the offender in multiple armed robberies to include a carjacking I was able to confirm the tattoo on his right hand, the detective wrote in the complaint. The detective wrote in the complaint that he was investigating Romeros involvement in at least 18 robberies but did not give more details on the other incidents. SANTA FE, N.M. New Mexico welfare agencies are coming under new pressure from a federal judge and state lawmakers to expand translation and oral interpretation services to minority households that dont speak English or Spanish. Gov. Michelle Lujan Grisham signed legislation Tuesday requiring that major state agencies study the need for additional language assistance services and report back to the governor and Legislature. A companion bill would dedicate about $110,000 to the effort. Advocacy groups for immigrants and Indigenous populations also are highlighting a federal court order to expand language services under the state Human Services Department. The agency oversees food stamp and Medicaid benefits and must change its automated phone system within 30 days to offer access to benefits in additional languages including Navajo, also known as Dine. Sovereign Hager, legal director of the New Mexico Center on Law and Poverty, said census data shows that there are large numbers of New Mexico residents who speak Vietnamese, languages from China, and Navajo that meet the threshold in federal law that requires the state to translate documents into those languages. U.S. District Court Judge Kenneth Gonzales, at a court hearing Friday, affirmed the obligation of state agencies to identify languages spoken by families trying to access food and medical assistance and provide oral interpretation services. The judge largely rejected arguments by the Human Services Department that the agency already provides meaningful language access to people with limited English proficiency beyond Spanish. Gonzales gave the agency 30 days to add short wording in various languages to Medicaid notices to note the availability of expanded language assistance. They just need that point of access, Hager said. Then they can complete an application like anyone else. Officials with the Human Service Department had no immediate comment on the court order. The court noted that the Human Services Department lacks adequate data to determine if more language services are needed to administer federal food benefits, ordering the agency to survey the state in coming months for small clusters of households that speak in Indigenous or foreign languages. Sachi Watase, executive director of the New Mexico Asian Family Center, said she expects to see expanded access to certified interpreters in a variety of languages. Were really proud and excited to see this happening now, she said. Its also really sad that it has taken so long and so many people have fallen through the gaps. ___ This version corrects a list of languages that appear to be spoken in large enough numbers to require translation documents to include Vietnamese, languages from China, and Navajo. The list from Hager did not specifically include Mandarin, Cantonese, Dari and Arabic. Copyright 2022 Albuquerque Journal SANTA FE About 60 people rallied Tuesday at the State Capitol to present Gov. Michelle Lujan Grisham with over 1,000 petition signatures asking her to stop the expansion of the U.S. Department of Energys Waste Isolation Pilot Plant in southeastern New Mexico. We strongly support our governor taking all necessary actions, including denying permits for the piecemeal expansion, the petition reads. Santa Fe County Commissioner Anna Hansen was joined by members of Stop Forever WIPP, 285ALL, Concerned Citizens for Nuclear Safety and Veterans for Peace who allege that transportation of nuclear waste to the nations only nuclear waste repository on New Mexico highways and through 10 other states is a threat to public health. This transportation route is deeply concerning to me, said Hansen. It does not protect us here in Santa Fe County, we are going to have waste transported twice through our communities. That is a very serious thing especially not knowing how its packaged. Hansen led off by asking for a moment of silence for the people of Ukraine who are fighting a deadly fight against a huge nuclear power. She noted that Ukraine gave up its nuclear weapons. The Governors Office in an email said she has been in contact with the Department of Energy and Secretary Jennifer Granholm on this topic and has relayed the concerns New Mexicans have. WIPP disposes of transuranic waste, the residue of the nations nuclear defense program. That can include protective clothing, rags, tools and soil that are mostly contaminated with plutonium. Drivers transporting waste must stop and check trucks and loads every 150 miles and the trucks can also be inspected at state ports of entry, according to the WIPP website. WIPP should be for nuclear waste generated in New Mexico not from other states, said Hansen. Other disposal sites need to be developed, the groups said. Ed Hughs and his wife, who own a small ranch in Quay County near Interstate 40, attended the rally. He said he was worried about the potential for accidental release of powdered plutonium waste. Cynthia Weehler, co-chair of 285ALL, a group that represents communities along U.S. 285 a primary route to WIPP said the groups have requested a response from the governor on the petitions by March 15. New Mexico agreed to host WIPP after carefully crafting agreements that limit what the federal government can do with it, said Weehler. New Mexico needs to insist (the agreements) are honored. Dave DeWitt really enjoys the heat. As the mastermind and creative force behind the National Fiery Foods & Barbecue Show, DeWitt is always trying to up the ante with each show. After a year away due to the pandemic, the show is back at Sandia Resort & Casino beginning Friday, March 4. It will run through Sunday, March 6. After missing a year due to the pandemic, people are ready to spice it up once again, DeWitt says. We look forward to this years show being hot, spicy and safe. Each year, DeWitt adds some flavor to event. When hes not planning for the show, he is a food historian and one of the foremost authorities in the world on chile peppers, spices and spicy foods. Hes also written more than 50 books on fiery food history, cooking and cultivation. But its the Fiery Foods & Barbecue Show that has his heart. Ive been doing shows for 40 years and Ive never missed one, he says. Weve put the events on in blizzards and all types of things that interfere with shows. Im lucky that the exhibitors this year stuck with us. We lost about 10 of them, but were going to put on a great show. DeWitt says hundreds of exhibitors are bringing their best fiery gourmet foods, sauces, spices, sweet-heat treats and rubs to the showcase. The event will feature more than 1,000 different products from the U.S. and around the world for tasting and purchase. This years event will be the 33rd time DeWitt has presented the show. We have a great track record, he says. This is a popular show for the whole state. People really like it and want it. The first National Fiery Foods Show was held in 1988 with 47 exhibitors and 500 attendees. In 2002, Barbecue was added to increase the depth and breadth of the show. As the show grew, Dave and Mary Jane DeWitt moved it from hotel venues to the Albuquerque Convention Center, where it eventually filled the 60,000 square foot Southeast Hall. In 2006, the show moved to a destination venue, Sandia Resort & Casino, and in 2008, Daves niece, Emily DeWitt-Cisneros, joined Sunbelt Shows as associate producer and sales director. The appeal of the show is so broad that its difficult to pinpoint demographics. Attendees come from all over the country, exhibitors from all over the world. It is estimated that at least a third of all exhibitors sell out of all the products they bring to the show. Today, the National Fiery Foods & Barbecue Show features 170 exhibitors and attendance of more than 20,000 people over the three days of the show. National and worldwide media, including the New York Times and National Geographic, have covered the show. DeWitt says audiences are drawn to the event foremost because of food. In this case, food is a universal thing that brings people together, he says. If you think about family and food, thats one reason we come together. That fact that we all like spicy food and its very unique to New Mexico, it helps bond people. While they are at the show, they like to try new stuff. DeWitt says his niece, DeWitt-Cisneros, now runs the day-to-day operations for the show. She does all the heavy lifting, he says. She came on board to keep the show running. Im not bowing out anytime soon, but its in good hands for the future. Per current New Mexico Department of Health directives, the mask mandate at Sandia Resort & Casino ended as of February 18, 2022. The National Fiery Foods & Barbecue Show will not require masks or proof of vaccination. However, all show attendees are welcome to wear masks if they so choose. WASHINGTON As Russian troops move deeper into Ukraine, President Joe Biden is taking steps to rein in rising energy costs even if those moves run counter to his agenda for addressing climate change. Biden announced on Tuesday that he is releasing 30 million barrels of oil from U.S. strategic reserves as part of a 31-nation effort to help ensure that supplies will not fall short after Russias invasion of its European neighbor. The release follows ones ordered in November that also were coordinated with U.S. allies. These steps will help blunt gas prices here at home, Biden said in his State of the Union address. The U.S. stands ready to do more if necessary to protect American businesses and consumers, he said. The focus on high gas prices and increased oil flow is a far cry from Bidens pledge to wean Americans off oil and other fossil fuels and cut planet-warming emissions in half by 2030. Still, it reflects political realities. Russias invasion of Ukraine has shaken markets worldwide. Oil prices have soared, with U.S. benchmark crude surpassing $110 per barrel the highest price in a decade. Bidens $2 trillion social and environmental policy bill, which includes about $550 billion for climate change efforts, has been stalled for months in the evenly divided Senate. It remains unclear when or if the bill will come up for a vote or what would be included in it. Bidens hourlong speech Tuesday night touched only lightly on climate and offered no new policy initiatives to address global warming. The omission was especially notable coming days after a new U.N. report warned that climate change is about to get significantly worse and will likely make the world sicker, hungrier, poorer, gloomier and far more dangerous. The White House says all tools remain on the table, but harsh U.S. sanctions against Russia do not target its energy sector, despite bipartisan calls to ban Russian oil imports, at least temporarily. Banning Russian imports could restrict global oil supplies and raise prices at the gas pump for Americans, White House spokeswoman Karine Jean-Pierre said Wednesday. Thats something that were very aware of. If there was ever a time to be energy independent, it is now, countered Sen. Joe Manchin, D-W.Va., chairman of the Senate Energy and Natural Resources Committee and a prominent supporter of fossil fuels such as coal and natural gas that are crucial to his energy-producing state. In 2021, the U.S. imported roughly 245 million barrels of crude oil and petroleum products from Russia a one-year increase of 24%, according to the U.S. Energy Information Administration. It makes no sense at all for us to rely on energy from a country that is actively engaging in acts of war against a freedom-seeking democracy Ukraine when we are blessed with abundant energy resources right here in America, Manchin said Tuesday in comments that were echoed across the political spectrum. Liberal Sen. Ed Markey, D-Mass., a longtime climate hawk, introduced legislation to ban imports of Russian oil and petroleum products. We cannot criticize Europe for its reliance on Russian energy as we pour dirty oil money into Russia, Markey said. Republicans, seizing the political advantage, clamored for Biden to immediately reverse policies that they said have slowed U.S. energy production including cancellation of the Keystone XL pipeline from Canada and a moratorium on new oil and gas leases on public lands and waters. Biden must end his war on American energy production so the United States and our allies can have access to affordable, secure energy, said Louisiana Rep. Steve Scalise, the second-ranking House Republican. He and other Republicans urged severe sanctions on Russian energy production to take away leverage and funding that Russian President Vladimir Putin used to attack Ukraine. Americas energy dominance is our strongest weapon against Putin, said Republican Reps. Bruce Westerman of Arkansas and Cathy McMorris Rodgers of Washington state. The pair introduced a bill Tuesday that would require Biden to make an energy security plan within 30 days and force him to unleash Americas oil and natural gas production to offset Russian imports that would be banned under the legislation. Westerman is the top Republican on House Natural Resources Committee while McMorris Rodgers is the senior GOP member on House Energy and Commerce Committee. Some Democrats, seeking ways to ease pain at the pump and nervous about a potential voter backlash in the November elections, are pushing Biden to temporarily suspend the federal gas tax. A bill to do that is co-sponsored by Democratic Sens. Mark Kelly of Arizona and Maggie Hassan of New Hampshire, both in tight races for reelection. The White House has yet to state a position on a gas tax holiday, but a spokesman said officials are coordinating actively with major energy consumers and producers, with the goal of providing relief at the gas pump for American households and businesses. Gas prices averaged nearly $3.65 a gallon on Wednesday, up 93 cents from a year ago, according to the AAA motor club. It was just last fall that Bidens boasted of historic progress on addressing global warming at a U.N. climate conference in Scotland. Now, the Ukraine war seems likely to consume bandwidth that administration officials might otherwise devote to energy transition, said Kevin Book, an energy analyst and managing director at ClearView Energy Partners. Regime change appears to be crowding out climate change, and for good reason, Book said in an email. The world is warming slowly, but (Ukraine) is boiling over. Jonathan Elkind, who served as assistant energy secretary for international affairs under President Barack Obama, said that while the war inevitably will dominate over everything in the short term, the climate crisis will remain a key focus for Biden and his administration. We dont have a choice of either/or. We need to do both. The climate doesnt fix itself in the meantime, said Elkind, now a senior research scholar at Columbia Universitys Center on Global Energy Policy. Republican Sen. Dan Sullivan of Alaska made no mention of climate when he called for Biden to end a holy war against American energy. Bidens policies are driving up the price of energy for working families, laying off workers in my state and empowering dictators like Putin, Sullivan told Fox News. Former Secretary of State Mike Pompeo ridiculed Bidens climate envoy, former Secretary of State John Kerry, who said before the invasion that a war in Ukraine could divert world attention from climate change. Youre going to lose peoples focus, youre going to lose big-country attention because they will be diverted, and I think it could have a damaging impact, Kerry told the BBC last week. Pompeo, who served under President Donald Trump, called Kerrys comment music to Vladimir Putins ears to think that America is focused on climate change while the Ukrainian people are dying in Europe. Environmental groups said Kerrys comments were being distorted. Even as the worlds attention remains focused on Ukraine, the climate crisis continues, they said. Concern over Russian oil and gas shows the importance of boosting renewable energy such as solar and wind power, said Tiernan Sittenfeld of the League of Conservation Voters. The conflict in Ukraine underscores the need to get off fossil fuels once and for all. We do need to do all these things at once. she said. The American Petroleum Institute, the industrys top lobbying group, said U.S. companies play a crucial role in supporting European allies with U.S. exports. Nearly 70 percent of U.S. liquefied natural gas exports went to Europe in January, a trend industry officials expect to continue. American energy leadership can serve as a stabilizing force while strengthening global energy security, said Mike Sommers, the groups president and CEO. DENVER A former Colorado police officer shown on body camera video roughly arresting a 73-year-old woman with dementia and later seen joking about it with colleagues pleaded guilty to assault Wednesday in a plea deal opposed by the womans family. Austin Hopp faces up to eight years in prison when hes sentenced in May for second-degree assault, although the judge also has the discretion to sentence him to probation or a halfway house. He had faced a mandatory prison sentence of between 10 and 32 years under an original, more serious assault count he was charged with. Hopp arrested Karen Garner in 2020 after she left a store without paying for about $14 worth of items in Loveland, about 50 miles (80 kilometers) north of Denver. Police body camera video shows that after she turned away from him, he grabbed her arm and pushed her to the ground, still holding the wildflowers she had been picking as she walked through a field. The footage shows that when Hopp had Garner pushed against the hood of his car, she tried to turn around and repeated that she was trying to go home. He then pushed her back against the car and moved her bent left arm up near her head, holding it, saying, Are you finished? Are you finished? We dont play this game. A federal lawsuit that Garner filed claimed he dislocated her shoulder. The city settled the lawsuit for $3 million, money which her family said will pay for the around-the-clock care she has needed after her condition deteriorated following her arrest. Speaking on behalf of Garners extended family, Garners daughter-in-law Shannon Steward told Judge Michelle Brinegar that the family never wanted a plea deal, which she said tend to be used when there is a lack of evidence or an inability to prove a case. She noted the entire arrest and its aftermath was captured on video, including police station surveillance video in which Hopp and others talk about the arrest as they watch the body camera footage, sometimes laughing or joking about it. At one point, she said Hopp told the others to listen for the pop during the part of footage when Garners shoulder was allegedly dislocated. Assistant District Attorney Matthew Maillaro said the plea deal had nothing to do with whether prosecutors could prove their case but was the result of multiple factors, including whether there should be a mandatory prison sentence or whether the court should decide the sentence. This is not sweeping this under the rug, he said. Brinegar said pleas are offered in most cases, and she accepted Hopps. Hopp had also been charged with attempting to influence a public servant, a felony, and official misconduct, a misdemeanor. Those charges were not included in the plea deal. Another officer who arrived to help Hopp after Garner was handcuffed was charged with failing to stop or report his actions and official misconduct, all misdemeanors. Daria Jalalis lawyer told a judge Tuesday that she was in discussions with prosecutors on a possible resolution to her case, the Loveland Reporter-Herald reported. SANTA FE, N.M. An attorney for a woman who alleges she was sexually harassed by a prominent New Mexico state legislator says an investigation by the Legislature is moving forward after an initial vetting of the complaint. Attorney Levi Monagle on Tuesday said he received confirmation that the harassment complaint is being forwarded to an investigative subcommittee and special counsel. Monagle is representing political lobbyist Marianna Anaya in her complaint against Democratic Sen. Daniel Ivey-Soto, chairman of a Senate committee that vets major legislative initiatives and political appointments. Monagle says the harassment complaint filed with the Legislature closely resembles accusations outlined by Anaya in a public letter. In that letter, Anaya accused Ivey-Soto of groping her at a hotel reception in 2015 and of recent aggressive and disrespectful behavior while discussing proposed legislation over drinks, calling on the lawmaker to resign. Ivey-Soto said he has no recollection of touching Anaya during the encounter and that his encounters with Anaya over the years were never sexual. Legislative Council Service Director Raul Burciaga, lead attorney to the Legislature, declined to confirm or deny Monagles statements. He said legislative staff are prohibited by law from publicly disclosing any information related to the filing of an ethics complaint unless a finding of probable cause is reached regarding misconduct allegations. So far in 2022, four complaints of misconduct have been filed against New Mexico legislators. It is unclear who is involved in addition to Anayas complaint. The Associated Press generally does not identify people alleging sexual assault, but Anaya has been openly public about her allegations and prior advocacy against harassment. Anaya in 2017 publicly accused Democratic gubernatorial contender Jeff Apodaca of trying to kiss her on the mouth at a whiffle ball game in Santa Fe that brought together staff from the Democratic Party and a labor union that employed her. Apodacas campaign said the accusations were false. There was no official vetting. Apodaca lost in a three-way Democratic primary. WENN/Mr. Blue TV In the court documents, the daytime diva's ex-husband and former executive producer of 'The Wendy Williams Show' claims that the termination from the show makes him suffer 'an economic loss' up to $10 million. Mar 2, 2022 AceShowbiz - Wendy Williams' ex-husband Kevin Hunter is dragging "The Wendy Williams Show" producers to federal court. The former executive producer of the talk show sued the program executives for wrongful termination. In new court documents obtained by The Shade Room, the daytime diva's former spouse sued the production company Debmar-Mercury along with its executives Ira Bernstein and Mort Marcus. The lawsuit was filed on Monday, February 28 in New York Court. In the petition, Kevin explained that the production company Debmar-Mercury, who was founded by Ira and Mort in 2004, began negotiations with Wendy and Kevin for a six-week trial for a talk show in 2007. Kevin further claimed that he represented his then-wife during the talks at the time. "[Kevin] was used to being behind the scenes of Williams' prior ventures," the suit read. It also noted that Kevin "used his business knowledge and street smarts to negotiate a significant financial increase from the initial contract being offered to [Wendy]." The talk show premiered in 2008 and was immediately a breakthrough hit. " 'The Wendy Williams Show' dominated the 10 AM daily morning time slot, and to date, no network has been able to beat the Show at this time slot," the petition stated. Kevin, who served as executive producer of "The Wendy Williams Show" from 2007-2019, further insisted that he played such a major role in the show's success and planned most of the concepts and branding behind the show. In 2019, he was asked to leave the show after Wendy filed for divorce due to him having an alleged affair with a woman named Sharina Hudson and having a love child. In the suit, Kevin pointed out that he was wrongfully fired. "The termination of [Kevin] was based strictly upon [his marital status and his impending divorce to the Show's host, ignoring all of the contributions that [Kevin] made to make the Show a success," the paperwork read. The filing claimed that many of the segments Kevin helped create on "The Wendy Williams Show", including popular segments like "Hot Topics" and "Shoe Cam", will be "part of Sherri Shepherd's new show." The petition also said that "the show never recovered from his firing" and "defendants underestimated Plaintiff's value to the show." Currently, Kevin is looking for $7 to $10 million in damages and "punitive damages, lost wages, commissions." He's also asking for "the costs and fees of this proceeding, including legal fees." Kevin's motion came after it's announced that "The Wendy Williams Show" time slot will be replaced by Sherri's new show. Following the bombshell announcement, it's reported that Wendy, who allegedly had fired her management team, would "consider legal action against her producers." "Wendy is on sick leave and has basically been fired. This isn't right and Wendy isn't going to take this," a source claimed last month. "She is considering legal action against her producers and is also deciding on what to do about Sherri Shepherd." Wendy reportedly would do things like Chris Cuomo and Megyn Kelly after their sudden firing. "Wendy has been reading the news where Chris Cuomo is suing CNN for $60 million and Megyn Kelly got $60 million when she was kicked out of NBC," said the insider. WENN/Mario Mitsis/Avalon Celebrity After allegedly moving back in with his partner, the 'Aquaman' star attends the world premiere of the new DC film with his daughter Lola and son Nakoa-Wolf to support his stepdaughter. Mar 2, 2022 AceShowbiz - Jason Momoa is proving that family is still his top priority. The "Aquaman" star made an extra effort to support Zoe Kravitz at "The Batman" premiere amid Lisa Bonet reconciliation rumors. On Tuesday, March 1, the 42-year-old actor attended the world premiere of "The Batman" in New York City to support his stepdaughter, who starred opposite Robert Pattinson's Batman as Catwoman/Selina Kyle in the film. A source close to the actor told PEOPLE that he "made an extra effort to be there" despite his busy travel schedule. "Family comes before anything for him," the source continued, "He's also close to Lenny. It's all very comfortable with Jason. That's who he is." The so-called insider went on to note that "he loves Zoe and always has. That hasn't changed." The informant added, "He believes in family. He's always said that, and him going [to the premiere] is to show support for the family." The insider continued, "That's what he does. And that's who he is. It's not more complicated than that." Jason was joined by his 14-year-old daughter Lola and his 13-year-old son Nakoa-Wolf at the premiere. Jason looked dapper on the red carpet in a burgundy corduroy suit, which he paired with a plunging green plaid vest that showed off his rugged chest. He matched his suit with burgundy velvet loafers. Lola, in the meantime, cut a stylish figure in a black-and-white checker-print dress, which she paired with black Cuban heels. For his part, Nakao-Wolf opted to go casually in a Bob Marley T-shirt under an unbuttoned white dress shirt and a black jacket. To complete his look, he added maroon boots. As for Zoe, she looked stunning in a black off-the-shoulder dress with a plunging neckline, crisscrossing stitching and cat-shaped cups over her bust. The "Divergent" actress added a pair of black velvet heels to compliment her look. Ahead of the premiere night, Jason shared a series of photos that saw him and Channing Tatum preparing to board a flight to New York. "CHEEEEHUUUUUUUU. SO EXCITED @channingtatum and I are on our way to see our ZOZO," the "Game of Thrones" alum captioned the pictures of him and Zoe's boyfriend posing together. "Finally @thebatman premiere," Jason continued, before gushing, "I'm so beyond proud of you @zoeisabellakravitz all my aloha to @adamweitsman and @daveophilly for making this happen at the last minute. mahalo @wbpictures for the invite." He then concluded his post as saying, "We are very grateful." In the comment section, Zoe replied, "I love youuuuuuuuuu @prideofgypsies." In January, Jason and Lisa revealed in a joint statement that they are "parting ways in marriage" though "the love between us carries on." The exes continued, "We have all felt the squeeze and changes of these transformational times A revolution is unfolding and our family is of no exception feeling and growing from the seismic shifts occurring. And so we share our Family news that we are parting ways in marriage." A few weeks after announcing their separation, Jason and Lisa reportedly got back together. "Jason moved back in with Lisa about two weeks ago and they are very much back together," a pal spilled to HollywoodLife late last month. "They decided to work on things rather than throw in the towel because they have so much invested in each other." WENN/Instar/Barbara Loschan Celebrity The radio host's comments arrive after the former U.S. president weighs in on the Russia-Ukraine conflict in an interview, in which he calls the Russian president 'genius.' Mar 2, 2022 AceShowbiz - Howard Stern had a few choice words for former U.S. President Donald Trump. The radio personality ripped Trump for supporting Russian President Vladimir Putin's moves to invade Ukraine. "The man [Putin] is a human stain. I don't care how much power he has. Don't praise him," Howard said in the Monday, February 28 episode of his SiriusXM radio show. "Don't say what a genius he is. He's not a genius. He's a thug. He's a bully." Stern went on to say, "I voted for many Republicans. I don't see how Ill ever get back to that." He added, "They've just totally disappointed me and their support of Vladimir Putin, the praise they heap on him. Trump's praise of Vladimir Putin. This guy's a f**king animal. I wish he was dead like I wish Hitler was dead." In the episode, he also expressed concern for the Ukrainian people following the invasion. "I can't imagine the horror of the life of the Ukrainian people. They're living in a country -they decided to have free elections and this scumbag who has more money than anybody, who has more power than anybody, who enslaves an entire country, who will kill you if you're a journalist, will kill you if you speak out against him, who's got everything a man could want if you're truly a megalomaniac, and he didn't have enough," he said. He also called Putin "an enemy of humanity" and "a worthless human being." Wishing that "Republicans and Democrats would get together with that message," he continued, "It's time for this country to at least have a unified message about democracy and freedom." "I'm sick and tired of the f**king nightmare that's going on with people defending Vladimir Putin. I never thought Id live long enough to see it," he concluded. Stern's comments arrived after Trump weighed in on the Russia-Ukraine conflict in an interview. "I went in yesterday and there was a television screen, and I said, 'This is genius.' Putin declares a big portion of the Ukraine - of Ukraine. Putin declares it as independent. Oh, that's wonderful," so he said. Never underestimate your own level of personal influence. Having had the good fortune to work with, and learn from, many outstanding people throughout my career, this simple yet powerful guidance has stayed with me for the past 25+ years. It was a phrase that a former leader and mentor of mine at DuPont, Bill Nau, was fond of saying. As someone who has a natural inclination to take on responsibility (which was confirmed in my StrengthsFinder 2.0 assessment), this phrase has resonated with me and has influenced how I tackle challenges, and address both issues and opportunities. It can be all too easy particularly in large organizations to simply shrug your shoulders at decisions or situations that are beyond your control. While there are clearly benefits to staying focused on what IS within your control, if all you do is keep your head down and stay in your lane, NOTHING will change. Im not implying that we should take on every issue as a personal crusade. Its essential to be selective in committing to personally drive what truly matters and would make the greatest, most lasting impact. As you develop and hone your personal influence skills, it will become more natural for you to expand your impact in a purposeful and effective way. Change is hard dont miss an opportunity to make a real difference! Ashneer Grover, the troubled co-founder of BharatPe, has resigned as the company's managing director and board director. Grover's action comes a day after the Singapore International Arbitration Centre (SIAC) denied his request to stop the board from investigating him. Grover's wife and the company's ex-head of controls, Madhuri Jain, had her employment terminated by BharatPe last week due to suspicions of financial irregularities and money syphoning. Grover has submitted a caustic resignation letter to the board of directors. He said that a few people were targeting him and that he was "vilified and treated in the most disgraceful manner." "I write this with a heavy heart as today I am being forced to bid adieu to a company of which I am a founder. I say with my head held high that today this company stands as a leader in the fintech world. Since the beginning of 2022, unfortunately, Ive been embroiled in baseless and targeted attacks on me and my family by a few individuals who are ready not only to harm me and my reputation but also harm the reputation of the company, which ostensibly they are trying to protect," he wrote in his resignation letter. There are various memes that are floating around on Twitter Grover's resignation. BYJUS, the worlds leading edtech company, today announced the appointment of Paroma Roy Chowdhury as SVP and Head - Corporate Communications. In this newly created role, Paroma will be a member of the leadership team and spearhead the development, advancement and execution of the companys communications strategy. She will be in charge of building an integrated corporate communications strategy that will successfully reinforce the companys goals, aspirations, business objectives and impact. She will work closely with the BYJUS founders as a strategic advisor. Pravin Prakash, Chief People Officer, BYJUS said, We are thrilled to welcome Paroma into the family as she spearheads BYJU'S communication strategy and the company's far-reaching impact on education. Her wealth of knowledge in the field of communications will help us further build brand equity. A transformational leader, Paromas rich experience, core values, and leadership capabilities make her uniquely suited for this role. Speaking on her appointment, Paroma said, BYJUS has redefined the way students learn and teachers teach. These are exciting times for the edtech sector and I am delighted to come on board and build BYJUS narrative going ahead. I am privileged to be a part of an organization that has been working to empower children and parents with access to quality and personalised education. An expert on reputation management, executive branding, crisis communication and advocacy, prior to joining BYJUS, Paroma was the Chief Communications & Public Affairs Officer at Dream 11. In the past, she led communications for SoftBank Group International and was the Director & Country Head, Corporate Communications & Public Affairs of Google India for 7+ years. She has worked at Bharti Airtel Limited, Hewlett-Packard, GE Capital India, and the Indian School of Business as well. With keen interest in diversity and inclusion, Paroma has been a strong advocate of equality and inclusion at work, women leaders and social responsibility. Before joining the field of corporate communications, she served as a business reporter and editor across Business Today, The Economic Times & Business Standard. She has a press fellowship from the University of Cambridge and is an alumnus of Presidency College with a major in Political Science & International Relations. Her interests include contemporary art, literature, and politics. She is an active participant in the Indian start-up ecosystem and an ardent champion of free expression. Since 1940, with its immersive storylines, the iconic cartoon duo, Tom and Jerry have managed to create gales of laughter in every home. To rekindle those memories, Cartoon Network, a WarnerMedia Kids channel, launched a social media campaign to celebrate the 82nd birthday of Tom and Jerry in India. The campaign was executed by Cartoon Networks recently appointed social media marketing agency Chimp&z Inc, an alliance of Merge Infinity Global. The shows birthday celebration was executed for brand and franchise amplification across Facebook and Instagram with multiple social media activations to engage with fans across the country. Tom and Jerrys birthday campaign included a mix of brand collaborations and UGC-led content to organically increase the overall digital footprint of Cartoon Network. The campaign was divided into three segments: pre-birthday, birthday, and after-party. The pre-birthday activity I see Tom and Jerry was a series of 3 stories where users were asked to share pictures of anything that reminded them of Tom & Jerry using the 'Add Yours' feature on Instagram Stories. For the birthday, on February 10, multiple brands from various sectors including Parle G, Tata Play, Vinod Cookware, MuscleXP, Man Arden, Curious Cat Company, Feline Club of India, Portronics India, Yellophant, and many more joined the celebration with #LetItSlide where they uploaded their version of things they would let slide to wish the duo. The campaign ended with an after-party themed Tom and Jerry Get The Cherry where users were given the opportunity to decorate Tom & Jerrys home with a single tap on their mobile screen. The story would display Tom & Jerrys room with text and decorative items. The social media campaign for Tom and Jerrys 82nd Birthday bash garnered a total of 2,14,100+ reach and 2,25,400+ impressions leading to an increase in Cartoon Network Indias Instagram follower base by 3000+ within a week. The official handle of Cartoon Network on Instagram posted a wrap-up Reel to showcase how the celebrations unfurled. Famous Innovations has just announced the appointment of two new Business Heads in Mumbai - Renjita Menon and Kaushal Kansara. Renjita comes with close to 18 years of experience across various agencies like Lowe Lintas, Leo Burnett, McCann, BBDO Sri Lanka and Enormous Brands. The brands she has steered include McDonalds, Uninor, Imagica and Marico (Saffola), which earned her Effie awards for the work done. In her last role, she was heading corporate business at Marching Ants, leading marketing for blockbuster movies like Dabangg3, Chichore and Chehre. Kaushal has spent over 14 years in the industry, working for leading agencies like such as DY Works, Lowe Lintas & Redfuse, where he was involved with brands like Colgate Palmolive, Videocon, General Mills on a strategic front. He then moved on to the marketing side at Soch Group, where he launched 4 brands from scratch. Raj Kamble, Founder & CCO, Famous Innovations, commented, "Kaushal and Renjita are among the sharpest minds I have met in the business and I couldn't be happier to have them steering the ship for us. They bring the perfect amalgamation of strategic rigour, creative enthusiasm, digital prowess and a business bent of mind to the table. With them, we see our brand relationships flourishing more than ever before." In a joint statement, Kaushal and Renjita, said, In a dramatically changing industry facing a lot of pressure post Covid, its becoming rare to see agencies that still value creativity, brand building and genuine talent over all else. Were excited about joining this culture at Famous, which has been a breath of fresh air. The energy of this vibrant team under Raj is infectious and we look forward to scaling new heights together. Famous Innovations is Indias most awarded independent agency 2020 and 2021, including Cannes Lions, D&AD and One Show. A division bench of the Kerala High Court has upheld the ban on Malayalam news channel Media One TV. The court also dismissed the appeals filed by the channel management and journalists challenging the single-bench order. A division bench comprising Chief Justice S Manikumar and Justice Shaji P Chali maintained that when some issues with regard to the security of the State are concerned, the government can refuse to renew the permission granted. The division bench maintained that some aspects affecting the security of the State based on the report of the IB and other investigating agencies were found in the files produced before the court. The division bench said: Certain aspects relating to the security of the State are mentioned to the effect that Madhyamam Broadcasting Limited has some linkages with certain undesirable forces, which is stated to be a security threat. Media One TV was banned by the Ministry of Information & Broadcasting after the Union Ministry of Home Affairs declined to give clearance to the channel due to security reasons. Magazine readers in India are far more aware, well off and brand conscious than any other media, including digital. This is revealed by the New Indian Consumer Survey 2021 published by Kantar, the leading data global analytics and brand consulting company. The analysis is of special significance as the fieldwork was carried post the pandemic impact, during August to October 2021. The NICS 2021 is a special edition study in place of TGI and covers a battery of 200 attitudinal statements. Affinity Scores are attitudinal endorsement scores for certain cohorts indexed to All India Urban universe. The special study, based on 25 select statements from this concludes that magazine readers are also the most likely to be influencers and innovators than any other medium, including digital, based on the Affinity Scores. Among the statements where magazines show the highest affinity are: People come to me for advice before buying new things, Shopping online makes my life easier and I do some form of sport or exercise at least once a week. Speaking on the new survey finding, B Srinivasan (Ananda Vikatan), President of the Association of Indian Magazines, remarked, The survey confirms what we have been always asserting, that magazines by their very nature, attract a very premium readership and one that places great trust in this medium. It is, therefore, not surprising that the engagement levels of magazines are far higher than that of other media entities. He further added, Our readers are more discerning than that of various other media domains. NICS 2021 is a stellar offering from Kantar and effectively studies all-important attitudinal trends. The findings are part of a campaign to be released by Dastaan Hub, the brand solutions studio of the Association of Indian Magazines. Shripad Kulkarni, veteran media agency professional and Advisor, Dastaan Hub studio, said, Attitude statements are a treasure of insights that can be used for sharp targeting. We have seen over various TGI survey rounds that magazine readers are clearly more upmarket and brand conscious influencers. Rajiv Dubey, Head of Media, Dabur India, commented, Magazine readers by definition are the more discerning and aware audiences who are looking at stories in depth, whether it is socio-political topics or special interest topics. It is heartening to know that research confirms that post pandemic, too, the profile remains so. Hopefully, on the back of this strength, circulation too will soon get back to pre-pandemic levels. The NICS 2021 is a pan-India study with 20,000 respondents from NCCS ABC, 18-55 years. Apart from media habits, the study measures the changes in the consumers mindset and attitudes, category and brand consumption and lifestyle. Brajesh Kumar Singh, currently the Managing Editor for Bihar, Jharkhand and Gujarat Channels at Network 18, has been elevated to the position of editor for Group Integration and Convergence. In his new role he will work closely with the editorial leadership across the network. The time has come to move away from incremental to exponential and create a truly integrated newsroom that is less organised around platforms and keeps the story at the centre. We are embarking on a big transformation of our operations, which over the next 15 months will alter the way we work, bring all arms of the network even closer and culminate in the creation of a new, state-of-the-art nimble newsroom in Noida that can quickly adapt to changes continuously reshaping the media landscape, Santosh Menon said This is a complex exercise and we have constituted an interdisciplinary team with representatives from multiple departments to work on this project. Brajesh will work very closely with Rahul and I for this project and report to me. Editors of the Bihar/Jharkhand and Gujarat channels will now report to Group Editor (Regional) Rajesh Raina, he added. I look forward to working with you all over again in what is, for me, the biggest project since I joined this company, added Rahul Joshi, MD and Group Editor-in-Chief of Network18. Singh has more than 23 years of experience in journalism - mostly in broadcasting but also with a strong pedigree in print and digital media. He was part of the first satellite TV news reporting teams in India and has held senior editorial positions with several media organisations - including ABP News Network, TV Today Network, Zee News Network and Amar Ujala Group. He is known for his impeccable sources across the political divide. Singh is an alumni of Indian Institute of Mass Communication and BHU, he also holds a PhD in Mass Communication. His last assignment was with ZEE Media as Group Editor- Political Affairs & Special Projects. He has successfully launched and previously been editor of two channels, ABP Asmita and Zee Hindustan. Publicis Sapient, the digital business transformation company, announced today the appointment of Abby Godee as Chief Experience Officer, effective March 1, 2022. She will join the Publicis Sapient Global Leadership Team and, as such, report to Global Chief Delivery Officer Bob Van Beber. Godee will be responsible for setting the vision for how customer, user and employee experiences contribute to the realization of Publicis Sapients clients digital business transformation ambitions. She will build on the companys long history of experience excellence to further elevate the capability and the quality of products, services and experiences Publicis Sapient creates with clients. In her role, she will lead, grow and empower the companys global Experience team, reinforcing her commitment to talent development, diversity and inclusion and interdisciplinary collaboration, to create and deliver integrated solutions that address the increasingly complex needs of people as the world digitally transforms. Godee is a global customer-focused, strategic experience design and innovation leader with more than 25 years of experience in both consulting and corporate management in Silicon Valley and Europe. Her work has spanned across many industries, including healthcare, telco and financial services. For years, she has supported companies facing disruptions, helping them transform from traditional product and service companies to become future-focused and customer-centric solution providers. She joins Publicis Sapient from Deloitte Consulting, where she was a Partner, driving growth of a human centric-innovation and design strategy practice. Previously, she was Chief Design Officer at Philips Consumer Lifestyle and later led the design of Philips healthcare software experiences. She also held leadership roles at frog design in the US and Europe and was a partner with Smart Design LLC in New York and San Francisco. Abby is an extraordinary design, innovation and strategic global leader. She combines her deep background in Silicon Valley, consulting and corporate management with expertise in leveraging technology, design and research to create powerful products, services and experiences, said Publicis Sapient CEO Nigel Vaz. With a mission to elevate customer-driven digital business transformation, she will lead how Experience connects across the companys SPEED capabilities strategy, product, experience, engineering and data to help clients reimagine their businesses for the digital age and solve some of the most important challenges facing customers, citizens and employees in a post-pandemic world. Its exciting to join a company that for over 30 years has embraced and integrated the disruptive powers of technology and design to help businesses transform digitally, said Abby Godee, Publicis Sapient Chief Experience Officer. Our goal is to meet people where they are in their daily lives to deliver experiences that address their needs, create human connection and solve for the increasing complexity and overabundance of choice present today. I look forward to partnering with our clients to drive their growth and collaborating across Publicis Sapients capabilities, further cementing our Experience and design leadership position in our industry. In November 2021, Publicis Sapient scored an overall client rating of 4.8 out of 5 for CRM and Customer Experience (CX) Implementation Services on Gartner Peer Insights. This achievement followed the companys recognition as a Leader in Gartner Magic QuadrantTMfor CRM and CX Implementation Services in May 2021. Publicis Sapient was also a top scorer for CRM and CX Implementation Services for the third consecutive year. Sid Shakdher, Disney+Hotstar's EVP and CMO, has resigned. Sources close to the development has confirmed the news to Adgully. Shakdher's responsibilities at Disney+Hotstar included overseeing direct-to-consumer growth, marketing and communications, and partnerships, as well as overseeing the full consumer experience from freemium users to subscribers. Shakdher has been a significant figure in the development of Hotstar, with extensive expertise leading growth and business mandates in the United States, India, and Southeast Asia. Prior to joining Disney+ Hotstar, he was the head of one of Amazon's largest retail categories in the United States. He had previously worked for Reckitt Benckiser in the United States, where he was responsible for some of the company's most successful new product launches as well as the development of Reckitt's digital business. Swiss Federal Pension Fund Bern, 02.03.2022 - The investment committee of the Swiss Federal Pension Fund PUBLICA has resolved not to purchase any further Russian securities and divest its existing holdings. On Monday, 28 February 2022, the Federal Council joined EU sanctions against Russia. As a result of these sanctions and its normative basis and in keeping with the concept of responsible investment, PUBLICA is excluding Russia from its market portfolio. The pension assets of the individuals who are insured with and receiving a pension from PUBLICA will not be invested in the Russian market. The EU and Swiss sanctions are a clear stand against Russias massive breach of international law. It goes without saying that PUBLICA supports this stance and has initiated the necessary measures, Matthias Weber, president of the PUBLICA investment committee, stated. PUBLICA has directly invested around CHF 170 million, less than 0.5 per cent of its total assets, in Russian securities. These holdings include shares in companies controlled by the Russian state and bonds denominated in US dollars and Russian roubles. At present, PUBLICA is not invested in any Ukrainian or Belarusian securities. Due to the sanctions imposed by the EU, the Central Bank of Russia has closed the countrys stock market. This complicates the sale of securities currently held by PUBLICA. The investment committee nevertheless seeks to divest its Russian holdings as soon as market liquidity permits. The Swiss Federal Pension Fund PUBLICA is an independent pension institution established under public law. It is organised as a collective institution currently comprising 19 pension plans. PUBLICA advises some 66,000 active members and around 42,000 pension recipients from the Federal Administration, the ETH Domain and other decentralised administrative units as well as around 70 other organisations that are closely associated with the Confederation or fulfil a public task on behalf of the Confederation, a canton or a commune. With total assets currently standing at approximately 43,7 billion Swiss francs as of 31 December 2021 it is one of the largest pension funds in Switzerland. Its highest management and strategic body is the PUBLICA Board of Directors. Address for enquiries Patrick Uelfeti, Deputy Director of Asset Management PUBLICA, patrick.uelfeti@publica.ch Beatrice Rychen, Director of Corporate Communications PUBLICA, beatrice.rychen@publica.ch Publisher Swiss Federal Pension Fund http://www.publica.ch Steven Croft is the senior pastor of Boyd Memorial First Church of God in Athens. Croft is a Monroe County native. Read this good news about several orphanages in Ukraine that my friend Dr. Theresa Cianciolo posted yesterday. No workers have left them and they have food. Praise be to God. What beautiful people. Below is the Amazon Wish List that Theresa has put together for her trip to Poland later this month. Many people have sent items - thank you. Using the Wish list feature seems to work best from a laptop. 1) Click Amazon Ukraine List 2)Sign into the list 3) Add items to cart 4) Check out 5) Ship to SCOTT CIANCIOLO'S GIFT REGISTRY Irasburg VT 6) Pay If you have issues, let me know at AutismAges@gmail.com. Thank you. AMAZON UKRAINE LIST Good morning. My dear friend Dr. Theresa Cianciolo (in photo) moved her family to Kyiv last year, to devote herself full time to helping the children of Ukraine - orphans with special needs and children with autism. She and her husband Scott, a Pastor, adopted orphaned twin toddlers with Down Syndrome & autism themselves. They had moved to Kyiv last year and returned to the safety of Vermont a few weeks ago, as the danger escalated. Theresa is going to Poland within the month, to bring much needed supplements, supplies and medications. We're using an Amazon Wish List - that Theresa's team has compiled. Items ship to Vermont. I realize not everyone is a fan of Amazon, but for expediency, this is our method of ordering. Thanks. This is something we can DO - so much more than being a keyboard cowboy or cowgirl. For a few bucks - we can help a child get a good night's sleep, daily vitamins. Set for groundbreaking in late May, the expansion will be fully operational by January 2025. It includes plans to increase cheese production capacity by 125 million pounds and create an additional daily milk processing capacity of 3 million pounds. Altadena Middle School in Ahwatukee has become ground zero in a local version of the national culture war that has rippled through many public school systems in the nation. Whitteney Gutton, CEO of We Buy The Block, wants to change the real estate development and investment scene in Hampton Roads. (Courtesy photo) Gloucester Whitteney Guyton refers to We Buy The Block, the real estate investment group she founded in 2021, as a movement. Powered by financial resources and a profound commitment to rebuild and restore diverse communities in Hampton Roads, the movement invested $1.8 million in Gloucester County. Advertisement Three properties at 3048, 3056 and 3057 Hickory Fork Road were recently added to its growing portfolio. I just fell in love with the property and all that it can and will be, Guyton said. Advertisement Located on 6 acres, all three structures will become a mental health residential facility for children and a charter school, The Creek Manor Academy. The property at 3048 Hickory Fork Road will open first while the other two require extensive renovations. Guyton said she hopes to open the school this summer. This property at 3048 Hickory Fork Road in Gloucester is one of three that We Buy The Block has purchased and will turn into a residential mental health facility for children and a charter school, The Creek Manor Academy. (Courtesy photo) She also said she would like to bring a bed-and-breakfast and brewery to Gloucester a county shes developed an admiration for. We Buy The Blocks first investment in November 2021 in the former Tidewater Community College visual arts building and an adjacent Dollar General in Portsmouth are what birthed the idea. There are a lot of people that are flipping houses one or two at a time, but with buying power and coming together as an investment group, we can buy bigger pieces of property and land to build either new communities or revitalize communities in need, Guyton said. We Buy The Blocks vision is to use the resources within the community so they can actually stay within the community, Guyton said. A lot of times with gentrification comes removing elements out of a community that were deeply rooted inside of that community, Guyton said. She said the movement is there to not only help first-time homebuyers and small business owners with an affordable investment, but also hire local workers to do the revitalization. Advertisement The organization works with franchises to bring them to areas they would not normally buy into. It also has a program to invest a percentage of We Buy The Blocks annual earnings to local nonprofits. Helping alongside Guyton is her wife, Darmeshia, owner of MeMe G Design Co. in downtown Portsmouth and a real estate agent with Victory Allegiance Realty. Originally from Chicago, Guyton earned a psychology degree in 2004 from Norfolk State University and has called Hampton Roads home ever since. In 2016, she opened Synergy Health Systems in Portsmouth. The business includes counseling, therapeutic treatment centers, an adult day care center and a pharmacy. As a businessperson and entrepreneur who was already doing rehabs for her business, Guyton said she saw the logic behind buying real estate instead of renting. Moving further into real estate development seemed even more logical for Guyton. Advertisement Inside Business Weekdays Business news for the Hampton Roads region > Guyton is also the principal owner of the investment group, 5 Elite Group, co-owner of the areas first Black-owned brewery, 1865 Brewing in Hampton, and Shew Velocity Sportsplex in Portsmouth. Were just not taking disadvantaged people and throwing them to the wolves, she said. Thats not fair, that is not right. As a Black person in America, that is whats happening to a lot of our urban areas. Motivated to provide for others and help others provide for their own, Guyton said shes shaking things up to bring about change. I want to change the whole entire face of what you think wealthy looks like, what you think successful looks like, and what you think an entrepreneur looks like, Guyton said. Its a new phase. Advertisement Sandra J. Pennecke, 757-652-5836, sandra.pennecke@insidebiz.com Walter R., 92, Slippery Rock. Calling hours: 4 to 7 p.m. Tuesday (4-26-22) in CUNNING-HAM FUNERAL HOME Inc., 306 Bessemer Ave., Grove City. Online condolences to cunninghamfhgc.com Service: 11 a.m. Wednesday (4-27-22) in the funeral home. Burial: Mount Irwin Cemetery with Military Honors. The best way to ensure that any bad actors within law enforcement are held accountable is to stand up for law enforcement, not tear them down or subject them to politically-motivated inquiries, Gov. Glenn Youngkin said in a news release. (Steve Helber/AP) RICHMOND Virginia Gov. Glenn Youngkin has issued his first veto, blocking a measure that would have allowed Arlington Countys governing board to hire an independent policing auditor. The Republican governor announced the move Tuesday. Advertisement The best way to ensure that any bad actors within law enforcement are held accountable is to stand up for law enforcement, not tear them down or subject them to politically-motivated inquiries, Youngkin said in a news release. The measure would have allowed the northern Virginia countys board, rather than its county manager, to hire the independent policing auditor. Advertisement The measures sponsor, Democratic Del. Patrick Hope, said in a statement that due to its charter, Arlington is the only locality whose governing Board needs express permission from the General Assembly to make any hire. The veto will not impact the managers ability to fill the job, nor will it impact the disciplinary powers of the policing oversight body, he said. In my 13 years of service, I dont ever recall seeing a Governor vetoing a local Charter bill, he said in a statement. To say that Im disappointed the Governor would use his veto pen on a Charter bill to make a misguided political statement is an understatement. An Arlington County Board spokesman said he would have a statement later Tuesday. The county voted in 2020 to create a civilian oversight board that will be able to request subpoenas of police and direct the auditor to launch investigations of individual officers, The Washington Post reported. Success! An email has been sent to with a link to confirm list signup. WICHITA, Kan. (AP) A community task force is calling for the U.S. Department of Justice to investigate the death of a Black teenager who was restrained facedown for more than 30 minutes at a Kansas juvenile detention center. Sedgwick County Commission Chairman David Dennis said last month that he was told by county Sheriff Jeff Easter that the FBI requested all information regarding the death of 17-year-old Cedric Lofton. The FBI is part of the Justice Department. But the task force wasn't certain about the status of the investigation because its members only knew about it secondhand an... KANSAS CITY, Mo. (AP) A Houston, Texas, man has been sentenced in Missouri to five years in federal prison for defrauding two brothers out of $1.6 million, which he used for trips to Las Vegas and other personal expenses. Duc Nguyen, 58, was also ordered Monday to pay $1.6 million in restitution. He pleaded guilty in July 2021 to one count of wire fraud. Prosecutors said Nguyen persuaded Phillip Hudnall of Lenexa, Kansas, and his brother, Brian Hudnall, of Kansas City, Missouri, to invest in a plan to buy, refurbish and sell used oil equipment. Between August 2018 and June 2019, the bro... Egypt is embroiled in a war of ideas as Egyptian President Abdel Fattah al-Sisi resists Islamists in a struggle for the future of Egypt and the Middle East. Currently, there are historic reforms taking place in the United Arab Emirates, Sudan, Bahrain, Morocco, Saudi Arabia, and Egypt. But the path to ideological and religious reform has been most difficult in Egypt. President Sisi has achieved numerous political, cultural, and economic reforms. In infrastructure and urban development alone, he has implemented 11 thousand projects. Sisi has transformed his government and become Egypts most moderate president. For example, for the first time in Egypts history, Sisi appointed a Coptic Christian, Judge Boules Fahmy, to head the Supreme Constitutional Court. Most Egyptian Muslims have supported this extraordinary precedent, but a faction of Islamists in the government has aggressively resisted reformation. Egypts largest Islamic institution, al-Azhar University in Cairo, has engaged Sisi in a cold war. Fundamentalists in the university have retaliated against him by targeting intellectuals and reformers who share his vision. For decades, Egypts draconian blasphemy law has been al-Azhars weapon used to initiate Islamic inquisition tribunals in Egypts courts. Since 1981, Egypt has persecuted and prosecuted dissidents and intellectuals for blasphemy, and al-Azhar has targeted them with assassination fatwas. Officially, the countrys main legislative bodies are the constitutional court and parliament, but al-Azhar has been the nations de facto theocratic legislative body due to the second article in the constitution that states, the principal source of legislation is Islamic Jurisprudence. Al-Azhar is almost fully controlled by the Muslim Brotherhood (MB), and the university is their last fortification in their war against Egypt and the world. Al-Azhar is the worlds most prolific terrorist manufacturer, and it even operates its own military apparatus, known as militiat al-azhar (al-Azhar militias). This paramilitary terror-indoctrinating institution and its affiliated madrassas receive over twenty billion Egyptian pounds (over $1.2 billion) in annual government funding. For decades, the institution has advocated for heinous crimes and psychosexual disorders and systemically militarized Islam. For example, al-Azhars celebrity sheikh, Abdallah Rushdy, has been a strong advocate for slavery. Rushdy said, slavery is not a crime. We dont agree [with seculars] that slavery is a crime nor that its bad why do atheists attempt to force us to agree with them that slavery is a crime? We [al-Azhar scholars] disagree and we believe that there are often advantages to slavery. In 2020, Rushdy also advocated for the fundamentalist theology known as sabiy, which legitimizes the kidnapping, sex trafficking, and rape of non-Muslim women. Rushdy doesnt define sexual intercourse with a sex slave as rape when its perpetrated by an Islamist against a non-Muslim female. He said that the relationship between the master and his slave resembles a love affair that sometimes even ended in marriage in Islamic history. Rushdy also advocated for the random sexual assault of women who dont observe Islamic dress codes. Al-Azhar even encourages pedophilia by theologically permitting men to marry underage girls. Moreover, in 2017, al-Azhar scholar and professor Sabri Abdul Raouf, issued a religious edict titled, mudaga`at al-wada` (farewell coitus) which permits a husband to have sexual intercourse with his wife one final time after her death. That edict was later condemned by al-Azhar after it created controversy across the Middle East. Other crimes propagated by al-Azhar include legitimizing cannibalism, maiming infidels, and torturing bad Muslims to death. Some of the most brutal terrorists in history received their jihadist indoctrination at al-Azhar. This authors upcoming book, The Secret Apparatus: The Muslim Brotherhoods Industry of Death, provides evidence suggesting al-Qaeda was most probably founded at al-Azhar University in 1971, and not the mid-1980s in Afghanistan, as is commonly believed. President Sisi has been trying to peacefully combat these radical ideas for years. Despite his many historic reforms, Sisi has yet to take firm action against al-Azhar. The university poses a security threat through its hundreds of thousands of students and their Muslim Brotherhood allies ensconced in the vital government organs. While Sisi has delayed a direct confrontation with al-Azhar, at some point he must slash their funding and remove its leaderships prosecutorial immunity. During the past few years, al-Azhar has engaged in a proxy warfare with Sisi by targeting those who adhere to his moderate Islamic philosophy. These victims included Muslim scholars such as Mohammed Abdallah Nasr, intellectuals such as attorney Ahmed Abdu Maher, reformers and public figures such as Islam Behery, and Ibrahim Issa. Islamists have even publicly contacted Abdallah Rushdy to seek his advice about murdering Ibrahim Issa and Islam Behery. A dark event in Western history was the Catholic churchs Inquisitions, during which the church punished heresy to counter dissent. While that tyrannical practice has long vanished in the West, blasphemy is prosecuted with impunity in Islamic-majority countries. The result of Egypts war against radical Islam will have profound implications for the Middle East and the world. The response in the West is critical, yet Sisi has been criticized and Islamists supported. This must change. Instead of siding with heroic Muslim leaders and intellectuals, most Western Middle East experts have taken a hypocritical stance toward this Islamic inquisition that victimizes both Muslim and non-Muslims. Their position stems from their broken epistemology and anti-western ideations which trend through far-left governmental and cultural institutions. While they rely on anti-racism rhetoric to advance their goals, they practice the bigotry of low expectations by assuming Middle Easterners dont deserve the same dignified existence and liberties enjoyed in the West. The racist and pathological fondness of primitivism and communism, combined with fetishizing intellectual variations of the noble savage, is deeply ingrained in leftists pro-jihadist policies. Instead of siding with historic reformers in the Middle East, they have chosen to ally with the Muslim Brotherhood, the incubator of most Sunni terrorist groups. There is an ideological war underway in the Middle East and Western leaders need to make a choice to join Muslim reformers across the Middle East or jihadist inquisitors of the MB and their ilk. Hiding behind nuanced positions is blatant cowardice. Cynthia Farahat is a Fellow at the Middle East Forum and author of The Secret Apparatus: The Muslim Brotherhoods Industry of Death. Image: White House Ever since Russias invasion of Ukraine, the western public has been carpet-bombed with the claim that Russian president Vladimir Putin is some sort of unhinged madman. This notion is being feverishly spread by the establishment and those in its pay: the political class, the media and the commentariat, career diplomats and technocrats as well as those connected to the security and intelligence communities. The most remarkable thing about the Mad Vlad claim is that it is obviously false. Whatever Vladimir Putin may be, he is certainly no irrational madman. This much should be obvious to everyone with the eyes to see. A former KGB operative, Vladimir Putin is a wily person of demonstrated ability. After all, he managed to bring control and order to a vast country that was largely in disarray when he took it over at the age of 48. He adroitly managed to keep himself in power for over two decades while navigating and overcoming a number of crises and challenges along the way. Through it all, he has shown himself to be intelligent, steel-willed, calculating, shrewd, self-controlled, determined, cunning, and patient. These are hardly the qualities of a lunatic. We have dealt with Putin for 22 years and, during that whole time, no one seriously suggested or maintained that he was crazy. Quite to the contrary, for almost a decade after his ascent, he was viewed as a capable man of considerable talents. For years the Western establishment considered Putin a man with whom we could do business. He was seen as liberal, humane, and decent European. He was described as a person of alert, controlled poise and well-briefed acuity, who was open to anything, even Russia joining NATO. And yet less than a week ago, on the day he invaded Ukraine, Vladimir Putin was nearly unanimously declared contrary to all evidence a madman by members of the Western establishment. The question is this: Why did they decide to suddenly gaslight and brainwash people with such a patent lie that so obviously contravenes reality? They did this to hide and conceal the gargantuan blunder they have committed over Ukraine. By convincing the public that Putin is a madman, they can portray his move on Ukraine as an irrational, unexpected, impulsive, and unjustifiable act of an unbalanced mind. Nothing could be further from the truth. Putins move was not irrational, impulsive, or unjustifiable. And it was certainly not unexpected. For years Putin had warned that including Ukraine in NATO was a red line for Russia. It should not be difficult to understand his position. It is not unreasonable for Russia to object to the presence of what it perceives to be a hostile military alliance on its border with a country that has historically been either part of Russia or within its sphere of influence. Russia does not want to allow such a threat to its security for similar reasons the United States would not allow Russia to build a military base in Cuba. In their drive to implement a New World Order, however, Western globalists have been dismissive of Russias security concerns. Russia continued its strenuous objections and warned that if they were not taken seriously, they would take the necessary action to keep Ukraine out of NATO. The last time Russia made this clear was in November of last year. This is how Wikipedia describes this occasion: On 30 November 2021, Russian President Vladimir Putin stated that an expansion of NATO's presence in Ukraine, especially the deployment of any long-range missiles capable of striking Russian cities or missile defence systems similar to those in Romania and Poland, would be a "red line" issue for Russia. Putin asked U.S. President Joe Biden for legal guarantees that NATO would not expand eastward or put "weapons systems that threaten us in close vicinity to Russian territory." Do you want to know what kind of response Putin received to his legitimate security concerns? It was given by NATO Secretary-General Jens Stoltenberg. This is what he told Putin: It's only Ukraine and 30 NATO allies that decide when Ukraine is ready to join NATO. Russia has no veto, Russia has no say, and Russia has no right to establish a sphere of influence to try to control their neighbors. Do you get the insult and the humiliation of this response? Not only did the pompous globalist Stoltenberg refuse to address Russian security fears, but he also implied that pip-squeak countries like North Macedonia, Portugal who happened to be members of NATO have a greater say than Russia in whether a large country on its border joins the alliance. Having ridden roughshod over their populations for nearly two years with their lockdown and vaccine regime, the Western globalists grew arrogant, overbearing, and overconfident. They lost touch with reality and assumed that everyone would submit to their chicanery in the same way that their own docile populations went along with their random edicts and mandates. Putin, however, would not bend to the globalist chicanery and did exactly what he had kept warning about for years if Russian concerns were not adequately addressed: He invaded Ukraine to stop NATOs expansion into the country with which he shares nearly 1000 kilometers of border, and which once hosted Russias capital. The invasion of Ukraine was a pre-announced, rational act of a strongman who felt increasingly encircled and threatened by what he deems to be an antagonistic military block. Putins move came as a great shock to the Western elites who could have not imagined someone standing up to them in such a bold way. They were completely unprepared for the obvious and went into panic mode as they realized how many innocent lives could be lost to their incompetence and pomposity. As the Russian tanks rolled into Ukraine, Putin exposed the globalists hubris and ineptitude. As the Russian military advanced speedily through the vast expanses of that land, the shocked elitists were nowhere to be seen. It was only the heart-breaking bravery of the Ukrainian people that saved them from complete exposure and humiliation. And it is at this junction that their patently absurd Putin is a madman misinformation play comes in. The Putin is a madman canard is meant to shift the blame in the eyes of the public for the Ukrainian tragedy on the allegedly irrational act of a crazy man rather than assigning it to the right people: the overbearing, domineering, arrogant Western globalists who treated the legitimate security concerns of a great nuclear power with contempt. In Putin, they encountered reality in the form of a wiley and cunning strongman who would not yield to their edicts and hollow pronouncements in the submissive way they were used to from their own badgered populations. They were in for a rude awakening. For two years the pompous globalists had been enriching themselves while tormenting peoples of the world with their useless and destructive lockdowns and dangerous and largely ineffective injections. If you think this is a harsh exaggeration, please read this from Yahoo News: Lockdowns during the first COVID-19 wave in the spring of 2020 only reduced COVID-19 mortality by 0.2% in the U.S. and Europe, according to a Johns Hopkins University meta-analysis of several studies. "While this meta-analysis concludes that lockdowns have had little to no public health effects, they have imposed enormous economic and social costs where they have been adopted," the researchers wrote. "In consequence, lockdown policies are ill-founded and should be rejected as a pandemic policy instrument." The researchers Johns Hopkins University economics professor Steve Hanke, Lund University economics professor Lars Jonung, and special advisor at Copenhagen's Center for Political Studies Jonas Herby analyzed the effects of lockdown measures such as school shutdowns, business closures, and mask mandates on COVID-19 deaths. While the people suffered under their nonsensical edicts, the globalists kept accumulating untold riches. Consider this headline from CNN: As millions fell into poverty during the pandemic, billionaires' wealth soared. Greedy for ever more money, the globalists sought to pull Ukraine into their World Order so they could suck out money from it to line up their own pockets even further. They have been shown the way by none other than Globalist-in-Chief Joe Biden whose family has already siphoned millions of dollars out of Ukraine through his son Hunter. It is fully in character that Biden is also a Covidista par excellence who forced millions of unwilling Americans to take the Covid injections by pressuring employers to institute illegal mandates. Now the globalists arrogance and ruthlessness got us into the Ukrainian crisis where we potentially face the threat of nuclear war. The clever guys that they always are, these wreckers have already managed to blame it all on the Mad Vlad. Photo credit: President of the Russian Federation Vasko Kohlmayer was born and grew up in former communist Czechoslovakia, from which he defected. You can follow his writings by subscribing to his Substack newsletter Notes from the Twilight Zone. Although national security decisions should not be driven by emotional events, we cannot help but be moved by what we are bearing witness to the slaughter of innocent Ukrainian civilians under the pretext that Ukraine is a puppet state of NATO threatening Russia and exterminating ethnic Russians in Eastern Ukraine. The answer to the question of whether to stand by and let things unfold or intervene is complicated and not something that nations throughout history have handled evenhandedly and consistently. I'm not even going to attempt to address that. But I think there is a middle ground that might provide NATO and Ukraine with some needed flexibility. The U.S. and NATO are avoiding any "involvement" because Ukraine is not a NATO member, only a partner. However, if Putin could concoct out of whole cloth claims that Luhansk and Donetsk were independent republics and use that as a pretext for invading Ukraine, then why can't NATO expedite admission of Ukraine as a full member, triggering Article 5 all for one and one for all? If anyone has any complaints, what of it? NATO makes its own rules as to whom it admits and when. Concern that this would escalate the conflict and push Russia to slaughter more innocents ignores the objective reality that Putin has already escalated the conflict from one protecting Russia's border and ethnic Russians in Ukraine to a full-scale invasion of Ukraine. Moreover, because he didn't get a quick surrender, he further escalated the conflict by attacking civilian targets including quite possibly having detonated a thermobaric bomb or FOAB (father of all bombs). He then escalated this dispute specific to Ukraine to one involving NATO by threatening to use nukes if Finland or Sweden becomes a full NATO member. Short of an abrupt retreat, we are going to be involved one way or the other. As things currently stand, NATO can only move military assets into NATO states bordering Ukraine, not Ukraine itself. But if it grants full membership to Ukraine now, those assets can be moved directly into Ukraine through its western flank before Russia gains control of the entire country. Once Ukraine falls to Russia, it will lose that capability. Either way, Russia will accuse NATO of escalation and aggression, but we cannot let that affect our resolve; it's really meaningless blather that Putin has used to justify his invasion of Ukraine in the first place. I am not aware of NATO having ever called an emergency meeting to expedite a membership that would immediately involve NATO in a bloody war, but this affects NATO whether Ukraine is a member or not. In addition to impacting NATO as Ukrainians seek refuge in NATO/EU border states of Hungary, Poland, and Romania, read Putin's speeches and take him at his word. He is intent on bringing all of the former Soviet satellite states back into an alliance with Russia. NATO and the U.S. are his enemies. Today, his goal is Ukraine, but his endgame is to pick off nation after nation, even if it takes time. Go ahead and laugh when I say "domino effect," but it's what he promises. We cannot predict what he'll achieve, but if he gets the band back together, he'll then work on Western Europe fomenting unrest and financing movements among the youth, the poor and labor, inculcating them with propaganda against their homelands and in favor of what he promises. Ignoring his saber-rattling won't make it go away. Dangerous times call for improvisation and flexibility, not rigidity regarding NATO rules for membership. Frankly, Ukraine has jumped through endless hoops proving its democracy bona fides, having nearly fully complied with all of the conditions required by NATO: demonstrating a commitment to democracy, the rule of law, and individual liberty; an ability to contribute to the collective defense of NATO; economic reform; and eradication of corruption. (Ironically, in 2014, in a bit of the pot calling the kettle black, then-V.P. Biden told the Ukrainians they "have to fight the cancer of corruption that is endemic in your system right now." Unlike Biden, Zelensky has made huge strides fighting corruption in his country.) Perhaps most significant is Ukraine's 2019 constitutional amendment reflecting its goal of attaining full NATO membership. Their troops fought alongside ours in Iraq and Afghanistan. Ukraine is a physical as well as ideological buffer against an aggressive Russia allied with China and Iran. And they turned decidedly westward and away from Russia after the Yanukovych government was ousted during the 2014 Maidan Revolution for failing to sign agreements with the E.U. much to Putin's chagrin. NATO openly welcomes any nation in Europe and has admitted nearly every former Soviet satellite state. Why hasn't Ukraine made the cut? Well, Russia wants Ukraine, and Ukraine wants NATO, but Germany and several other NATO members want good trade relations with Russia and access to Russian oil. Admitting Ukraine would not only isolate Putin from the West but also incur his wrath. As long as Putin was contained, NATO (and the E.U. as well) were willing to sacrifice Ukraine on the altar of Russian oil. But the appeasement days of treading carefully so as not to rile up the Russian Bear are over. The crazed Mama Bear will do as she sees fit to protect her cubs, no matter whom she hurts, what she does to herself, and what her perceived foes are doing. Still, I find it ironic that any NATO member would kowtow to Russia which couldn't meet any of NATO's conditions for membership while giving Ukraine the brush-off. Once otherwise responsible members of the world community allow one nation to illegally violate the territorial integrity of another, the dominoes begin to tumble, and not just as Putin tackles Europe, but as other nations mimic his behavior. The only things keeping our fragile international map glued together are the mutually agreed upon international norms that maintain a modicum of peace and security. An imperfect world order based on the rule of law is better than chaos. Worries that Ukraine's NATO membership would push Vlad into the arms of Xi or Iran's mullahs are nonsensical. He's already in their embrace. I understand being skeptical about war, but are we really OK waiting for Biden's sanctions to kick in while Ukraine is in an epic battle for its existence? I think we can do more to help Ukraine and position ourselves against further Russian aggression by granting Ukraine NATO membership we can even condition it on continued efforts when this is over against corruption. Even the E.U. has had a change of attitude and will consider admitting Ukraine under its fast-track procedure. All of the excuses used to justify withholding NATO (and E.U.) membership from Ukraine came to an abrupt end the minute Vlad invaded. Ukraine is the very reason NATO exists. Despite encouraging reports of Ukrainians holding off the Russians and problems with Russian logistics, unless something unexpected happens, Ukraine's days are likely numbered. Maybe young Russian troops will mutiny. Maybe Zelensky is a modern William Wallace. Maybe Gandalf will show up when all seems lost with 3,000 Rohirrim. Maybe a miracle will happen, and a day's worth of ammo will last for eight nights. But I'm not one to wait for miracles when there are concrete things we can do. Ukraine is looking to her family in the West nations she emulates. If we ignore her cries for help, when the hell of war has passed, and Putin rules Kyiv, will we have pushed Ukrainians clamoring for freedom, individuality, peace, and security right into the arms of their Russian overlords? Image via Public Domain Pictures. The Russian invasion of Ukraine has occupied all of the media's attention, leaving several other international priorities of the Biden administration to continue without much scrutiny. One of these is the effort to revive a version of the Obama-era Iran nuclear deal. From the outside, it would appear that Iran holds most of the cards when it comes to a new nuclear deal. Even though deadlines for reaching a new accord have come and gone, the U.S. has granted extensions of sanctions waivers and kept the negotiations alive. Whether this is driven by a dire need for a foreign policy victory or a sense that a new agreement is within reach remains an open question. As the director of the Center to Advance Security in America, I am following the issue closely. My organization is seeking records to help the public better understand whether a new deal is in America's interest and what this means for exposing the priorities of the current administration. On its face, the U.S. government's position is that the deal is the best chance we have to stop Iran from joining the nuclear club. But recent foreign policy debacles have raised concerns over the genuineness of this claim. The most notable defeat is the embarrassing withdrawal from Afghanistan despite internal analysis indicating that senior decision-makers were aware of the potential for disastrous consequences from their planned actions, which my organization is also looking into. History may be repeating itself in the Iran nuclear deal. For instance, it recently came out that Richard Nephew and two other American negotiators resigned from the negotiations because they wanted a tougher posture. Senior diplomats also appear to believe that the success of any deal relies on partnering with the Russians. While this may be true, it nevertheless presents an odd public posture while NATO and President Biden, in particular, are condemning Putin and the Russian government. In the midst of pressure to come up with a foreign policy victory, the public is right to ask whether advancing American interests in the Ukraine war has made the pursuit of a deal with Iran a close Russian ally a bad deal for America. Is there more to this deal than meets the eye? Is it driven by a prisoner swap? It might be even more tangential. Climate change is one of the express priorities of the Biden administration, with some of the most prominent and influential voices in the White House focused on achieving these policy goals. To this point, Tehran recently said it will consider ratifying the Paris Climate Agreement if a new nuclear deal is signed. Could it be that, in the midst of a Russian invasion into Ukraine, the U.S. is continuing to prioritize negotiations with a close Russian ally and relying on Russian participation, for the purpose of adding another signer to the Paris Climate Accord? Similar to the U.S. government's confusing approach to China, the continued effort to strike a deal with a hostile nation that poses a real danger to our closest ally in the region requires watchdog organizations such as CASA to ask the hard questions about our priorities. As we learn more, we will report back. Image: Chickenonline via Pixabay, Pixabay License. Humans are a tribal species. Perhaps that is why our knee-jerk reaction to conflict is to pick a side and dig in our heels, hoping to land on the winning side of history. This, unfortunately, has led to the great false dichotomies of the past 20 years. You're either with us or with the terrorists! Does this sound familiar? This is the reaction we've seen thus far since Russia launched an invasion of Ukraine. According to the left, any attempt to understand the conflict is an admission of Soviet sympathies. That is a bizarre accusation coming from actual Marxists. Russia's assault on Ukraine caught many by surprise. It's hard to know what is true and what is false when it comes to the American press. Since the Smith-Mundt Modernization Act of 2012, the American public has been subjected to what can only be described as an onslaught of domestic propaganda. The military build-up on Ukraine's border was covered in such a way as to suggest a distraction from tanking polls at best, diplomatic leverage at the worst. Both Ukraine's and Russia's governments downplayed the situation in the days preceding as well. Ultimately, what we have witnessed in the ensuing days following Russia's invasion is nothing new and reads like a replay of the Russo-Georgian War of 2008. In 2008 during the height of U.S. interventions in the Middle East, during a contentious election year, and sensing political turmoil in the West, Dmitry Medvedev and Vladimir Putin saw an opportunity to recognize pro-Russian separatist regions in the nation of Georgia. Consequently, they invaded and occupied them to bolster their independence. We have seen a carbon copy of this play out in Ukraine thus far. In Ukraine, Putin first recognized the pro-Russian separatist regions in the Donetsk People's Republic and the Luhansk People's Republic as independent states. He then proceeded to surround Ukraine, tightening the Kremlin's noose around Kyiv. Given the large military presence now surrounding the whole of Ukraine, it remains to be seen if this will be the extent of Russia's offensive. Vladimir Putin has stated his interest in reuniting the ethnic Russian regions of the former Soviet Union to join his defensive alliance, the CSTO (Collective Security Treaty Organization). He appears to be doing this one nation-state at a time. If you are a consumer of the Western press, you'd be led to believe it is the act of a maniacal man and unprovoked aggression. Since the end of the Cold War, it has been the policy of NATO (the North Atlantic Treaty Organization) to practice interventionism and offensive warfare where economic interests prevailed. With Iraq, Bosnia, Afghanistan, Libya, and Syria, the NATO alliance has aggressively sought to expand its influence around the world, while expanding its membership. This expansion has met with most of Eastern Europe and former Soviet Bloc nations bordering Russia. Since 1999, fourteen new nations have been admitted to NATO, largely in Eastern Europe. In many ways, Ukraine has been a NATO proxy despite not holding official membership. The United States and NATO have spent billions of dollars in an attempt to build a pro-Western ally on the border of Russia. In 2010, Ukraine elected a pro-Russian president in Viktor Yanukovych. In 2014, NATO fostered a pro-Western Ukrainian coup and replaced Yanukovych with hand-picked Arseniy Yatsinyuk. This was the last straw for Putin and the impetus for the 2014 Russian annexation of the Crimean Peninsula to prevent NATO from building a Ukrainian naval base in a strategic port on the Black Sea bordering Russia. Had you read only the Western press, you might be fooled into believing that this was purely the act of a madman. Of the stated reasons for the current invasion of Ukraine, targeting neo-fascists or Nazis sticks out as hyperbole. The way these terms are thrown around in the United States suggests cheap labels designed to evoke emotions and garner disfavor of opposition. Unbeknownst to the public, Putin uses these terms literally. It has been well covered in the press elsewhere that anti-Russian dissidents installed in Ukraine by the Obama administration include high-ranking members of the neo-Nazi Svoboda Party, such as Oleh Tyanhybok. This policy of "the enemy of my enemy is my friend" was also seen in U.S. interventions arming ISIS, al-Qaeda, and al-Nusra to depose Bashar al-Assad in Syria. Ultimately, Russian aggression seems targeted to a window of opportunity with U.S. leadership ill-equipped to counter, following the bungling of the U.S. pull-out of Afghanistan that saw tens of thousands of U.S. persons and $80 billion in arms abandoned. Additionally, though poorly publicized, the Biden family has a significant amount of exposure surrounding the role of Hunter Biden on the board of the Ukrainian energy company Burisma and the resulting financial kickbacks to the Biden family during the Obama administration. The accusations go farther, with one of Biden's business partners at his firm Rosemont Seneca being Chris Heinz, the stepson of thensecretary of state John Kerry. This affair was the impetus of the first partisan impeachment of then-president Donald Trump in 2019 and thus was dismissed by a leftist press. In his Blowback series of books, former CIA consultant and political scientist Chalmers Johnson identified the United States policy of foreign regime change as the impetus for many geopolitical consequences unforeseen by the American public. They are unforeseen because many of these actions are done covertly and with little public knowledge. This appears to be the case in the current Russian invasion of Ukraine. This is not to say that the United States is responsible for Vladimir Putin's decision to invade Ukraine. This is to say without covert regime change and NATO encroachment on Russian borders, an invasion is far less likely. Brian Parsons is a paleoconservative columnist in Idaho, a proud husband and father, and saved by Grace. You can follow him at WithdrawConsent.org or find his weekly opinion column in the Idaho State Journal. Gab, email. Image via Pexels. Modern American politics has been marked by the rise of the administrative state. For the past few decades, this unelected "shadow government" has slowly been seizing power from the Legislative and Judicial Branches. In the process, it has also created new powers for itself that previously never existed. Such an end-run around the Constitution is to the detriment of all Americans, who will suffer from the consequences of these encroachments upon their liberty. The recently overturned COVID-19 vaccine mandate for private employers may perhaps be the most visible and well known example of the executive overreach that has been a hallmark of President Biden's first year in office. But this is just one of many examples illustrating how the limits on government power that our Founding Fathers enshrined in the Constitution are at risk of being undermined. Another lawsuit, recently filed against the Department of Health and Human Services (HHS) for its misguided implementation of a federal surprise medical billing law, is another example of the blatant disregard of checks and balances that some unelected bureaucrats in Washington continue to display. Surprise medical bills have been an ongoing issue that all too many Americans have faced. They stem from the uncertainty that sometimes surrounds whether or not a health care provider is within an insurance plan's network of providers. In most cases, the treatment patients receive is from "in network" providers that offer medical services that are billed back to insurers at pre-negotiated discounted rates. But in some instances such as in-patient settings where care may be rendered from several physicians in a short period of time treatment may be provided by an "out of network" provider whose services are not covered by any pre-negotiated discounted rates, even if it is at an "in-network" facility. The ensuing result is a surprise medical bill that can be financially ruinous or can leave American families with debt that will take years to repay. It quickly became clear that a public policy solution was needed. But while there was broad agreement that patients should be taken out of the middle of such disputes between insurers and providers, Congress could not agree on how such disputes should be mediated. One solution was to default to the median in-network benchmark rate for such procedures when there was a billing dispute, providing insurers with an upper hand, and in effect allowing for government rate-setting that would put providers at a disadvantage and in the process could hamper patient access to doctors. Another proposal called for a broader Independent Dispute Review (IDR) process, where an outside mediator would be brought in to resolve billing disputes that could not otherwise be resolved. Median in-network rates would still be considered, but it would be as one of several factors in a mediation process that would provide a level playing field for insurers and providers while also preventing any steps towards socialized medicine through government rate-setting. After extensive deliberations between political parties in both chambers of Congress, the bipartisan No Surprises Act was passed in December 2020. The law in effect enacted the latter proposal, rejecting benchmark rates and laying the groundwork for an open negotiation process with a balanced IDR, should preliminary negotiations prove unsuccessful. Unfortunately, when the law was referred to the Biden administration to be implemented, the IDR provision ignored the dictates of the No Surprises Act. Instead of enacting the parameters set forth by Congress, the interim final rule (IFR) as issued on Sept. 30 defaulted to the benchmark rate, which Congress had previously rejected. Backlash to this decision has been swift. In November, a bipartisan group of 152 lawmakers sent a letter urging key Cabinet officials in the Biden administration to align the law's implementation with the legislation Congress passed. In December, meanwhile, several hospital and physician groups brought suit against key agencies in the Biden administration for their misguided implementation of the No Surprises Act. While the lawsuit leaves most of the patient protections of the bill intact, it challenges the narrow but critical IDR provision of the proposed rule, arguing that "the regulations are a clear deviation from the law as written." In late February, a federal court in Texas struck down the portions of the IFR that conflicted with what Congress outlined in the No Surprises Act. This was a significant win for separation of powers, but only time will tell how this lawsuit will ultimately resolve itself. It certainly is one to follow for those who are concerned about the unconstrained growth of government, as a loss on appeal, in this case, would not only be bad for patients, but set a dangerous legal precedent that could endorse the expansion of the administrative state. A.J. Ferate is an attorney licensed before the U.S. Supreme Court and is a regular commentator on Federalist Society programming. Image: Nick Youngson, CC BY-SA 3.0, Alpha Stock Images via R M Media Ltd. Picserver. Does Kamala Harris have a patronizing view of the intelligence of African Americans? Or does she not understand the meaning of "layman"? Perhaps she confuses that word with "child"? These are the first explanations that occur to me after listening to her description of the Russia-Ukraine War on a syndicated radio program called The Morning Hustle that appears to be directed at a Black listenership. The vice president was asked to explain the situation "in layman's terms" and came up with a cringe-worthy dissertation that would be appropriate for a third-grade classroom. Here are the 30 seconds of the interview that cause one to wonder if this is her opinion of the audience's sophistication or if this reveals the depthg of her thinking on the issue. Kamala Harris explains the Ukraine/Russia conflict: Ukraine is a country in Europe. It exists next to another country called Russia. Russia is a bigger country." pic.twitter.com/QYPLJ02mDy RNC Research (@RNCResearch) March 1, 2022 Photo credit: YouTube screen grab. The Felicity Ace sank about 250 miles off Portugals Azores Islands as it was being towed, MOL Ship Management in Singapore said in a statement. A salvage team had put out the fire. (AP) LISBON, Portugal A large cargo vessel carrying cars from Germany to the United States sank Tuesday in the mid-Atlantic, 13 days after a fire broke out on board, the ships manager and the Portuguese navy said. The Felicity Ace sank about 250 miles off Portugals Azores Islands as it was being towed, MOL Ship Management in Singapore said in a statement. A salvage team had put out the fire. Advertisement The 650-foot-long vessel listed to starboard before going under, the ships manager said. The Portuguese navy confirmed the sinking, saying it occurred outside Portuguese waters. A Portuguese Air Force helicopter evacuated the 22 crew members when the fire first broke out, setting the ship adrift. Advertisement Ocean-going tugboats with firefighting equipment had been hosing down the ships hull to cool it. Daywatch Weekdays Start your morning with today's local news > It wasnt clear how many cars were onboard the ship, but vessels of the Felicity Aces size can carry at least 4,000 vehicles. European carmakers declined to discuss how many vehicles and what models were on board, but Porsche customers in the United States were being contacted by their dealers, the company said. We are already working to replace every car affected by this incident and the first new cars will be built soon, Angus Fitton, vice president of PR at Porsche Cars North America, Inc., told The Associated Press in an email. The ship was transporting electric and non-electric vehicles, according to Portuguese authorities. Suspicion on what started the fire on Feb. 16 has fallen on lithium batteries used in electric vehicles, though authorities say they have no firm evidence about the cause. Authorities feared the ship could pollute the ocean. The ship was carrying 2,200 tons of fuel and 2,200 tons of oil. It can carry more than 18,700 tons of cargo. The Portuguese navy said in a statement that only a few pieces of wreckage and a small patch of oil was visible where the ship went down. The tugboats were breaking up the patch with hoses, it said. A Portuguese Air Force plane and a Portuguese navy vessel are to remain at the scene on the lookout for signs of pollution. The media were thrilled in late February 2022, when, immediately after Putin's invasion of Ukraine, Trump called Putin a "genius." On Feb. 23, 2022, MSNBC's Ja'Han Jones, attempting to revive the Russia hoax that gave leftist lives meaning until it became clear that it was a Hillary Clintonfunded hoax, claimed that it is "obvious" that "Donald Trump ... is acting like a Russian agent." Jones claims that Trump "praised Russian President Vladimir Putin's military aggression against Ukraine as fears of war in the region grow" and that Trump "continues to be open in his support for the Russian government and its goals." Both claims are transparently false. If one is going to discuss any issue seriously, one must be able to make distinctions, especially simple ones. This used to be taught in our universities, in the old days when they taught basic English language comprehension and critical reasoning, but that was before they became adolescent political organizations. Assuming that one can distinguish between a person and an invasion, which should be easy because the person at issue (Putin) weighs about 155 pounds, whereas an invasion involves lots of tanks and explosions, Trump praised Putin's intelligence, not his invasion. Trump explicitly says in the same discussion that if he were president, he would have successfully opposed Putin's government and goals. Hopefully, Jones can manage this taxing distinction in the future. Trump praised Putin for several reasons. First, Trump is a political realist; MSNBC and the Muppets (and what remains of most of the news media and Democrat party) are not. Since Putin's job as president of Russia is to defend Russian interests, Trump expects him to do so. Jones may hope Putin agrees to sing "We Are the World" with Biden and Mary Poppins, but it isn't going to happen and would have no consequence if it did. Second, there is a reason Trump flatters Putin (and Kim Jong-un and President Xi). These people are alpha males and narcissists. They are also all ruthless. If Trump were the president, he would have to deal with them as they are, not as he wishes them to be, in order to advance American interests. He must, therefore, convey to them that he respects them and their right and duty to advance their countries' interests. His message to Putin must be: "I respect your duty to defend Russia but I have a duty to defend the United States. Let's find a way that we can both do our duties and return home to report successful negotiations to our two peoples." Third, the ultimate reason Trump wanted some rapprochement with Russia is that he understands that as much of a problem as Russia is, China is, in the longer term, the bigger problem. Whereas Russia's economy is roughly 1/10 the size of the U.S. economy, China's economy is almost at parity now. Trump correctly wanted to bring Russia closer in order to create a more united front against a rapidly rising China. Fourth, it is entirely obvious that Trump's primary motivation in calling Putin a "genius" is to contrast Putin's ruthless intelligence with that of our own clueless Democrat leaders. Unlike the denizens of the faculty lounge, whose main preoccupation in life appears to be to make witty repartees against their peers, and members of the media, whose main aim appears to be to get attention by making outlandish claims, Donald Trump is a businessman. This means he must actually accomplish things, build things, whether it be a building or a relationship, not merely make witty remarks to impress academics, "journalists," or children. What is most peculiar about the Democrats' and media's continuing efforts to create a Trump-Russia collusion narrative out of nothing is that it has typically been the Democrats that have trusted Russia more, illustrated by Obama's mistaken assertion in the 2012 presidential debates that Romney was wrong that Russia is still a major threat. Going even farther back in time, the Democrats and the news media were not hyperventilating when Obama's secretary of state, Hillary Clinton, who was later in 2016 gifted by Obama with the amusing narrative that she was the most qualified person ever to run for U.S. president, met with Russian foreign minister Sergei Lavrov in order to present him with a "reset" button to put U.S.-Russia relations on a new more positive footing. Trying to establish a positive relationship with Russia, which is transparently a good thing to do, became a mortal sin only when Donald Trump tried to do it in 2016 and the Democrats and the media could not find a better dirty trick with which to damage him. YouTube screen grab. The Clinton-Lavrov meeting took place in March of 2009 in Geneva, when Secretary Clinton presented Lavrov with a red button that had both the word "reset" and the Roman alphabet translation of the Russian Cyrillic-script word "peregruzka," which was supposed to be the Russian word for "reset" but actually means "overcharged." The correct word for "reset" would have been "perezagruzka." In addition, the type of button used was the sort that is commonly used as an "emergency stop" button on industrial equipment. That is, in an attempt to reset new positive relations with Russia, Hillary the Great presented Lavrov with a button that indicated that the United States would overcharge Russia and symbolized not a new positive start, but the exact opposite: an emergency stop. It would have been easy enough for Hillary to discover the correct Russian word to put on the button by calling a 19-year-old sophomore Russian student at George Washington University, but "the most qualified person ever to run for president of the United States" was unable even to manage this simple undergraduate-level research. One might reply that Hillary's mistakes concern only symbolism, but one would think that one might muster the effort to be a tad more careful when dealing with a longstanding hostile nuclear power. However, what the story of Hillary's botched "reset button" really shows is that these narratives produced by the Democrat elites, that Obama is the smartest person in the world, that Hillary is the most qualified candidate ever to run for president, that Biden is has a vast record of international experience, etc., are just that: narratives cooked up in Democrat strategy session and, with the help of a subservient media, fed to gullible peasants, not actually to solve the people's problems, but to get power for themselves by winning elections. The consequences of this cynical manipulation of the voters illustrated by Jones, but certainly not limited to him, can be seen in the chaotic, dangerous world that emerged in the first year of the Biden administration. Picking a president is not a game between warring 9th-grade lunch tables, and it would be to the good if our elites and the "news" media would stop treating it as one. For despite the relentless Democrat/media spin machine, if one looks to actual real-world results, as opposed to empty words, the Trump administration is still the only one in the last 20 years during which Russia did not invade a foreign country. The Russia-Ukraine war will likely end in one of three ways: Russia will annex all of Ukraine and reincorporate it into Russia; Russia will install a puppet regime in Kyiv and exercise effective political control over Ukraine's foreign policy, or Russia will militarily occupy parts of Ukraine and suffer the resistance of an insurgency that may be armed and supported by outside powers. Regardless of which scenario plays out, this is and will be a tragic and unnecessary war entirely preventable, if only the Europeans and Americans had heeded the warnings of George F. Kennan about the likely unintended consequences of NATO expansion. Kennan spent much of his life studying Russia like his namesake, George Kennan (a cousin of Kennan's grandfather), whom historian John Lewis Gaddis called the late 19th century's "most prominent American expert on that country." George F. Kennan served in America's Moscow embassy from 1933 to 1937, again in 19441946 (from where he issued his famous "Long Telegram" that signaled the beginnings of the Cold War), and still later as U.S. ambassador to the Soviet Union in 1952. From 1947 to 1950, Kennan headed the State Department's Policy Planning Staff and anonymously wrote his famous "X" article in Foreign Affairs in 1947 entitled "The Sources of Soviet Conduct," in which he explained his perception of the motivations of Soviet foreign policy and recommended that the United States seek to "contain" Soviet/Russian expansionism. Kennan during his long career as a diplomat and historian (he died in March 2005 at the age of 101), wrote several books and numerous articles about Russia, including historical works on Russian diplomacy in the late 19th and early 20th centuries and Soviet foreign policy during the Cold War. He had perhaps the most important qualities of a diplomat, statesman, and historian: he was able to look at events through a Russian/Soviet lens, to see things from a Russian/Soviet perspective. He had what the great British geopolitical thinker Halford Mackinder believed was the greatest gift of a statesman "an insight into the minds of other nations than his own." Kennan used that insight in the late 1990s to warn his countrymen and Europe against expanding NATO in the wake of the West's victory in the Cold War and the collapse of the Soviet Union. The Clinton administration had made it known that NATO would be inviting Poland, Hungary, and the Czech Republic to join the alliance. Kennan's first public pronouncement on NATO expansion was made in October 1996 in an event held at Columbia University's Harriman Institute. He decried efforts to expand NATO as a "strategic blunder of potentially epic proportions." He then wrote an article in the New York Times on February 5, 1997. He wrote the piece, he explained, to caution American statesmen that "expanding NATO would be the most fateful error of American policy in the entire post-Cold War era." Kennan was blunt in describing the probable unintended but all too foreseeable consequences of NATO expansion: "Such a decision may be expected to inflame the nationalistic, anti-Western and militaristic tendencies in Russian opinion; to have an adverse effect on the development of Russian democracy; to restore the atmosphere of the cold war to East-West relations, and to impel Russian foreign policy in directions decidedly not to our liking." There was no necessity for this move, Kennan continued, and Russians would be "little impressed with American assurances that it reflects no hostile intentions." The Russians, he wrote, would "see their prestige (always uppermost in the Russian mind) and their security interests as adversely affected." And Kennan's article dealt with only Russia's likely reaction to the initial wave of NATO expansion. After Poland, Hungary, and the Czech Republic (admitted in 1999) came Romania, Slovakia, Slovenia, Bulgaria, Lithuania, Latvia, and Estonia in 2004; Albania and Croatia in 2009; Montenegro in 2017; and North Macedonia in 2020. And the Bush 43 and Obama administrations (and their European counterparts) openly discussed inviting Georgia and Ukraine to join the alliance. One can only imagine what Kennan would have thought about that. In his diary (The Kennan Diaries was published by Norton in 2014 and is a book of inestimable historical value), Kennan predicted that "the Russians will not react wisely and moderately to the decision of NATO to extend its boundaries to the Russian frontiers." He expected that this would produce "a strong militarization of their political life, to the tune of a great deal of hysterical exaggeration of the danger and of falling back into the time-honored vision of Russia as the innocent object of the aggressive lusts of a wicked and heretical world environment." He expected that the Russian leadership would attempt to coax the former Soviet republics into a "military alliance" and would "develop much closer relations with ... Iran and China, with a view to forming a strongly anti-Western military bloc as a counterweight to a NATO pressing for world domination." (The Russians have done precisely that.) He foresaw NATO expansion producing a "tragically unnecessary division between East & West and in effect a renewal of the Cold War." In another diary entry, Kennan expressed the concern that NATO expansion "is the greatest mistake of the entire postCold War period" and called it "senseless" and a "colossal blunder." And he noted that he told his wife that he foresaw "a new Cold War, probably ending in a hot one," and "a total, tragic, and wholly unnecessary end to an acceptable relationship of [Russia] to the remainder of Europe." The Russians with their initial invasion of Crimea in 2014, and now with the current invasion of Ukraine, have quite obviously reacted to NATO expansion just as Kennan said they would. Kennan saw that the West's victory in the Cold War led to hubris whose end would-be nemesis, as we are witnessing today in Ukraine. None of this excuses the naked and brutal aggression of Putin's Russia in Ukraine. But prudent and careful diplomacy could have averted this war and could avert a wider war in the future. A recent news report stated that Putin has threatened "military and political consequences" if Finland and Sweden try to join NATO. The U.S. and NATO ignored Kennan's warning before, and we are witnessing the tragic results. Let's not make the same mistake again and embroil the world in yet another full-scale European war. Image via Pixabay. Although the latest ABC News/Washington Post poll shows Joe Biden's approval at a dismal 37 percent, it still means millions of Americans think he's doing a good job. Who are they? A satirical look at a day in the life of a progressive. Dear Diary, The office finally reopened! I knew that Joe Biden would make the virus go away! To get there, I filled the car with gas at $6 a gallon ouch! Of course, it's Donald Trump's fault. Trump should have done some digging himself to finish the Keystone Pipeline. I mean, he's a builder, right? President Biden canceled the Keystone Pipeline to save the environment, so it doesn't really matter that it makes us dependent on Russian oil. Go, Joe! I like working in the office and being with people. Management said employees need to wear three masks and stand 20 feet apart. Started the day with a mandatory online training tutorial that all employees must watch. It's called "Providing Superb Customer Service While Embracing Black Lives Matter and Accepting Transgenders." It was fantastic, and I plan to watch it again tomorrow. The break room has new company posters. My favorite shows our CEO standing by an assembly line holding a finished piece of equipment. He says, "Our product might be crap, but at least it was built by a diverse group of employees." It's in English and Chinese because the manufacturing plant is in Xinjiang, where all those happy Uyghur Muslims live. What a great company to work for! Several coworkers had lunch at a nearby restaurant, but the service was very slow. The manager said he can't find enough employees, so servers must cover more tables. Obviously, if Donald Trump had worked with Bernie Sanders and AOC to raise the minimum wage to $45 an hour, we wouldn't have this problem. Can't you feel the "Bern"? Image: Crazy woman by wayhomestudio. Freepik license. On my way home, I stopped in the grocery store and found empty shelves. But that's okay because after buying gas for my car, I had only enough money for one package of hot dogs. It's Donald Trump's fault that I can't afford prime rib. Now that President Biden ended the virus, I am planning a party at my house. Everyone must show proof he's been vaccinated and boosted, wear a mask, use gloves when eating, stand 10 feet apart, and disinfect the bathroom every time he uses it. The party is going to be so much fun! After dinner, it was parent-teacher meetings at school. He/they said my son got an A+ on his/them essay about the United States being founded by a bunch of racists. My daughter's painting showing Black Lives Matter burning a church won first prize and is on display in the main hallway. I am so proud of my kids. Hubby said his car needs some repair work, but the parts are on backorder. If only Donald Trump had allowed manufacturing companies to build more plants in Communist China, we wouldn't have this supply chain problem. But what's important is that secretary of transportation Pete Buttigieg is home nursing his babies. I suggested hubby take public transportation, as that helps save the environment. Everyone must make sacrifices. Look at Barack and Michelle Obama. They sacrificed by having one of their palatial mansions built inland rather than overlooking the water. This way, if climate change makes the oceans rise 0.0001 percent, the Obamas have a safe house to live in with Valerie Jarrett. Finally, the long and busy day ended with us watching the latest news on MSNBC. Rachel Maddow did an expose about how Russia spelled backward is "aissur." If you say "aissur" fast, it sounds like "oh sure," which Trump once said during a press conference in 2017, so it's obvious that everything bad happening now is Donald Trump's fault. As my husband and I said goodnight, we closed our eyes, happy in the knowledge that Joe Biden is running the country from his Delaware basement. Whatever happens tomorrow, it will be Donald Trump's fault. You can reach Robin Itzler at PatriotNeighbors@yahoo.com. Is the needle finally moving? Seems the election takeover by Mark Zuckerberg's minions in Wisconsin has now been declared "bribery" by Wisconsin's special counsel, who was appointed to investigate the state's 2020 election. According to The Federalist: Nearly $9 million in Zuckerberg grant funds directed solely to five Democratic strongholds in Wisconsin violated the state's election code's prohibition on bribery. That conclusion represents but one of the many troubling findings detailed in the report submitted today by a state-appointed special counsel to the Wisconsin Assembly. Last August, Wisconsin Assembly Speaker Robin Vos authorized the Office of Special Counsel, headed by retired state Supreme Court justice Michael Gableman, to investigate concerns about election integrity and the 2020 election. Gableman delivered an interim report to the state assembly on November 10, 2021. Earlier today, the special counsel provided a second interim report to the state legislative body, noting the report "is final in the sense that it provides a list of recommendations with time for the Legislature to act before the close of its session in March." That's quite a different thing from what the Zuckerbucks NGO that was named in the damning report The Center for Tech and Civic Life claimed it was doing. Get a load of its great gaslight posted on its website about what it was doing. Every community depends on their local election office to lead a voting process that is trustworthy and inclusive. But too often election officials must spend their limited resources struggling against outdated technology, all while facing a steadily growing list of responsibilities, including: implementing election legislation educating voters equipping voting locations training poll workers tackling cybersecurity concerns Across many jurisdictions in the U.S., there are often only a handful of people responsible for all of this critical work. Where we come in We offer election officials affordable opportunities to expand their communication and technology skills through tools and trainings. As a result, they're able to: conduct more trustworthy, inclusive elections troubleshoot and prepare for problems in advance of Election Day better inform their community with the information they need in order to vote increase civic participation No word from them so far, and it's been a day, about what they think about the Wisconsin special counsel's report. Now let's look at how that nice-sounding activity looked on the ground to those who were under it. Here's a June 2021 report from John Solomon's Just The News: The now-retired elections clerk in a key Wisconsin county says political activists working for a group funded by Mark Zuckerberg money seized control of the November elections in Green Bay and other cities, sidelining career experts and making last-minute changes that may have violated state law. "They had no business doing that," ex-Brown County Clerk Sandy Juno told Just the News, recounting how funding from the Zuckerberg-backed Center for Tech and Civic Life injected chaos and unnecessary changes to how ballots were counted in Green Bay in November. ...and... Juno told Just the News editor-in-chief John Solomon on Tuesday night's "Securing our Elections: Protecting Your Vote" special on Real America's Voice that election management in Green Bay was turned on its head last year after a massive infusion of cash from CTCL. The group poured millions of dollars into multiple key Wisconsin Democratic strongholds in the months leading up to last year's presidential race, ostensibly in an effort to shore up voting systems and infrastructure amid the SARS-Cov-2 pandemic. The organization was ultimately funded with more than a third of a billion dollars by Zuckerberg and his wife Priscilla Chan; that money was funneled to additional election funding efforts across the country. Juno claimed that following the infusion of the CTCL cash into Green Bay "the mayor's office and chief of staff began to take over election functions." "And that is not something under state statutes they have the authority to do," she said, "because under Wisconsin law, municipal clerks, the county clerk and the Wisconsin Elections Commission are the individuals charged with running elections." Juno said the COVID-19 pandemic had already thrown the year into chaos prior to CTCL's involvement in Wisconsin's elections. "As we got closer to the November election," she said, "we found out that this outside group had come in and was basically trying to redo our forms and documents that we use statewide. And these people were from out of state and had no business doing that." "So they were beginning to get involved with things that they didn't have the expertise," she continued. "They were working primarily with our five major Democratic base cities. So they were breaking the consistency of documents and processes and procedures used statewide." This is exactly what the special counsel's investigation found. Can you imagine what that must have been like for those officials affected to see well heeled Zuckerbuck leftists from out of state waltz in and take over local election efforts, arbitrarily changing rules, redoing forms to manipulate results, telling elected officials to go to hell because they were in charge here? It would have been like a coup or terrorist attack, a clearly illegal takeover by outside dirtbags who otherwise belonged in jail. That was hardly all. The report focuses on the unequal treatment of voting districts, with urban districts getting virtually all the cash and the rest of the state getting nothing. Here's how bad it was: On pages nine and ten, the WSVP requires that the Zuckerberg 5, "[p]rovide assistance to help voters comply with absentee ballot request & [sic] certification requirements." App. 15-16. None of the private funding in this regard would benefit residents outside the Zuckerberg 5. Id. Instead, it targeted only the "Biden profile voter." In Green Bay, the City would use the private money to fund bilingual LTE "voter navigators" to help Green Bay residents properly upload a valid photo ID, complete their ballots, comply with certification requirements, offer witness signatures, and assist voters prior to the elections. "Vote navigators"? Really? The counsel, in fact, found that it was all a slimy bribery operation, which is an awfully strong charge that should require prosecution. The Zuckerbucks effort was horrific in Wisconsin, which inexplicably voted against President Trump despite all polls and patterns that suggested that the state would vote for him, plus some weird shifts in direction coming after midnight. Now we learn that these creeps' takeovers of five Wisconsin districts in the five biggest urban areas according to the special counsel report had something to do with it, and it wasn't just horrified county clerks who were targets. The report states that election officials were culpable as well as the Zuckerbuckers illegal drop boxes were put out; nursing homes were targeted for incapacitated elderly people and people not qualified to vote, taking in a 100% vote rate; voting rolls were not updated; and the gates were opened wide for illegals to cast ballots. All of this suggests that some kind of cabal was at work, with some kind of horrible conspiracy to turn America into the kind of place nobody would want to vote in, a Venezuela-style election setup where one party alone wins, and when the manipulations don't work, the outright fraud kicks in. And that brings us back to the story of the century: the open admission by huge numbers of oligarchs and far-left activists that they conspired together to "save democracy" by rigging the 2020 election. That story, published by Time magazine's Molly Ball in December 2020, let the cat out of the bag about the vile elite that will stop at nothing to steal elections and disenfranchise American voters under the rubric of "saving democracy," which they grotesquely crowed about. America is a shambles as a result, and it never would have happened were the 2020 election not stolen as it was by these elites. Mark Zuckerberg and his Zuckerbucks operation were front and center in this cabal, and it's a mystery that that front group has not been shut down. To date, the Zuckerbucks NGO has not made any statements about the bribery charge from the Wisconsin report and likely thinks that if it stays quiet, it will all blow over, and they can stay in business as usual. But the charges are really pretty strong and likely will require some kind of sanction or prosecution or de-certification or shutdown. Elections have consequences, and stolen elections have even bigger consequences. One can only hope Wisconsin and all other states whose election apparati have been corrupted by Zuckerbucks and other machinations enact enough reforms to save 2022 and 2024 from this crime and thievery to get these bounders out of America's system. If they want power, they can run for office and see if anyone wants to vote for them the same way other people do. Image: Anthony Quintano via Wikimedia Commons, CC BY-SA 2.0. (Image source from: Timesofindia.indiatimes.com) Indian government urged to ban Battlegrounds Mobile app:- PRAHAR is a non-profit organization and it is working on the socio-economic development and it has written to the Ministry of Home Affairs (MHA) along with the Ministry of Electronics and Information Technology (MEIT) to ban the Chinese app Battlegrounds Mobile India (BGMI) as per Section 69A of the Information Technology Act. PRAHAR says that the app poses a threat for the sovereignty and integrity of the country. The NGO urged the Indian government to add BGMI in the list of the banned Chinese apps on February 14th 2022. Krafton, a South Korean studio has named BGMI as the front company of Tencent Holdings. It was Tencent Holdings that launched PUBG in India that happens to be the most downloaded games in India and it was banned in 2020. PUBG was soon re-introduced in India as BGMI by Tencent-Krafton. Tencent is the second largest shareholder of Krafton with 15.5 percent stake told PRAHAR. Ashwani Mahajan, national co-convener, Swadeshi Jagaran Manch issued a statement saying "We congratulate the Indian government on their decision to ban another 54 Chinese apps in India last month. This is in line with the ongoing demand from people of the country to boycott all kinds of Chinese goods". PRAHAR asked the Indian government to thoroughly investigate and take immediate action if found BGMI is a violator. The Huawei MateBook X Pro is the companys brand new laptop. This device has been announced during the Mobile World Congress (MWC) in Barcelona. The Huawei MateBook X Pro is one of the winners of our MWC awards. This laptop manages to keep a really low profile, despite all the power it hides under the hood. The device looks very premium, and its specs are quite powerful. Huawei made sure that the device not only has a great SoC on the inside, and plenty of RAM, but also really thin bezels, and a great display. On top of that, the company paid some attention to the audio department as well, not to mention that the Huawei MateBook X Pros display is touch-sensitive. Lets talk more about this device, shall we? 3.1K display & high screen-to-body ratio The Huawei MateBook X Pro is made out of metal. It has really thin bezels around the display, as the screen-to-body ratio of the device is 92.5-percent. Speaking of the display, this is a 14.2-inch 3.1K Real Color FullView display. Huawei did its best to tune this display properly, and it is also TUV Rheinland certified. In other words, it offers pro-level dual color gamut color accuracy, and more true-to-life colors. That display is also touch-sensitive, by the way. Advertisement The MateBook X Pro weighs only 1.38 kg, and its quite thin. There are quite a few ports included on the device, so you wont want for almost anything else. Well, a microSD card reader is not one of those ports, but everything else is included, pretty much, despite the fact this thing is really thin. A powerful SoC, in combination with plenty of RAM & an SSD The MateBook X Pro is fueled by the Intel Core i7 SoC, the 11th-gen one. That is not the latest generation, as 12th-gen chips are already out, but its a proven SoC that can run pretty much anything. Huawei has experience with this chip already, so it should be really well optimized for this hardware. Windows 11 comes pre-installed here, out of the box, and youre getting 16GB of LPDDR4X RAM here. On top of that, Huawei also included up to a full terabyte of NVMe PCIe SSD. All that in collaboration with the OS should be able to offer outstanding performance. Advertisement Six speakers, and Free Touch Gesture This device comes with the Huawei Sound six-speaker system. This setup should be able to offer an immersive spatial sound experience. On top of that, the Free Touch Gesture feature allows you to take screenshots, start screen recording, and adjust the screen brightness, amongst other things. The MateBook X Pro is also a part of the Huawei Super Device setup, so it essentially connects with a bunch of other Huawei products seamlessly. Its not cheap, but its quite powerful Huawei mentioned a 1,899 price tag for this laptop, so its not cheap, not at all. Still, if you need a truly powerful laptop, a workhorse, this one may appeal to you. It combines great aesthetics with powerful hardware, to cover all bases. Disney+ has offered a catalog of Marvel shows and movies, but it hasnt offered all of them. According to Engadget, the streaming platform will offer the former Netflix exclusive Marvel shows. Because of this, however, parents will want to update their parental controls. Netflix Marvel shows are coming to Disney+ A few years ago, Netflix viewers got a handful of spectacular shows based on Marvel characters. These shows include Daredevil, Luke Cage, The Punisher, Iron Fist, and Jessica Jones. Most of these were well-received, but they came out at a weird time. This was the time that Disney was developing its own streaming service. This led the shows to be canceled in 2019. Even though they were canceled, Netflix still streamed them until March 1st, 2022. Now, the shows are no longer on Netflix, and theyre moving over to Disney+. One reason why these shows werent on the service, to begin with, was the darker and more adult nature of these shows. These Netflix Marvel shows definitely stray more into the adult side of things than, say, Infinity War; and that movie killed literally half of the universe. Advertisement However, these Marvel Netflix shows, along with Agents of SHIELD, will hop over onto Disney+ on March 16th. This will fill out the roster Marvel shows on the platform even more, which a lot of people will enjoy. These shows got some good ratings and a good fan base. Disney+ is suggesting you to update your parental controls, however While Disney is bringing these shows onto its streaming service, the company is still going to take some precautions. As stated, these shows are a bit darker and grittier than most of the content on Disney+, so Disney is suggesting people update their parental controls. Youll be able to set a rating limit for each profile so that kids wont accidentally stumble on something inappropriate. Along with that, youll be able to set PINs for mature content (shows like Daredevil are rated MA). If your child wants to exit their child profile, they will need to answer a question to do so. Advertisement This seems like a reasonable compromise for Disney. The company has to admit that, while its content appeals to children, theres an adult audience as well. The kids who grew up watching Toy Story on VHS are now watching Encanto and Onward. Theres a large base of adult watchers, and the company should be able to cater to them. On March 16, when these shows land, youll be prompted to update your parental settings. If you dont have any child settings, then you shouldnt have to worry about it. PLEASE NOTE: ALL ONLINE PURCHASES ARE AUTOMATIC RENEWALS UNLESS YOU EMAIL JPAYNE@ANNISTONSTAR.COM OR CONTACT CUSTOMER SERVICE @ 256-235-9253.... Purchase an online subscription to our website for $7.99 a month with automatic renewal. Each online subscription gives you full access to all of our newspaper websites and mobile applications. To cancel you may contact Customer Service @ 256-235-9253 or email JPAYNE@ANNISTONSTAR.COM *NEW SUBSCRIBERS ONLY join with a NEW ANNUAL SUBSCRIPTION is just $59.99 for the first year. Existing customers do not qualify for the specials! AMEX is not accepted through this site. After the first year, well automatically renew your subscription to continue your access at the regular price of $69.99 per year. Please note *Your Subscription will Automatically Renew unless you contact Customer Service To Cancel* Lubbock, TX (79409) Today Partly cloudy skies. A stray severe thunderstorm is possible. Low 51F. SSW winds shifting to NNW at 15 to 25 mph.. Tonight Partly cloudy skies. A stray severe thunderstorm is possible. Low 51F. SSW winds shifting to NNW at 15 to 25 mph. (ANSA) - ROME, MAR 1 - The EU will be held responsible for the lethal weaponry it is supplying to Ukraine, Russia's ambassador to Italy Sergey Razov said Tuesday. "The citizens and structures of the EU involved in supplying lethal weapons to the Ukrainian Armed Forces will be held responsible for any consequence of such action in the context of the ongoing special military operation," he said. "They cannot fail to grasp the degree of danger of the consequences". Razov also said EU sanctions on Russia would not "remain unanswered". (ANSA). Commentary: Human rights claims are the new costume of the U.S. Xinhua) 08:53, March 02, 2022 BEIJING, March 1 (Xinhua) -- The Chinese government on Monday issued the Report on Human Rights Violations in the United States in 2021, which sheds light on the reality of a country claiming to be a beacon of human rights and provides the world with a clear image of U.S. human rights violations. "All men are created equal," the Founding Fathers of the U.S. wrote in the Declaration of Independence. All men are "endowed by their Creator with certain unalienable Rights, that among these are Life, Liberty and the pursuit of Happiness." Americans are told that their right to life is inherent, yet a ravaging pandemic has served them a cold reminder that the U.S. government is reluctant to work for that right. As the U.S. purports to walk the high ground of human rights, its status quo is displaying a different reality. According to the report, the U.S. has seen the world's highest numbers of COVID-19 cases and deaths, with 34.51 million confirmed cases and 480,000 fatalities in 2021 -- figures that far surpassed those seen in 2020. When the virus landed as a threatening challenge, politicians in Washington did not treat it as an urgent priority. And many, in the name of human rights, continued to indulge in their hysteria and shifted the blame to other countries. The great loss of lives in the U.S. during the pandemic is just the tip of the iceberg when it comes to the country's accumulated human rights crimes over recent decades. When there is a flame in its backyard, the U.S. government flaunts its old trick: It makes no mention of itself and goes to great lengths to create something bigger and larger in significance to split the attention of the people. Beyond the pandemic, other U.S. realities, including racism, bipartisan conflict, wealth discrepancy, environmental issues and border issues, have brought great numbers of severe human rights violations in the U.S. But few cases -- extreme examples like the case of George Floyd -- have come to light. Some U.S. politicians know that "human rights" are merely used as propaganda utilized to manipulate the internal affairs of other countries. So when the phrase is accompanied by a question mark, it is not at all surprising to see the United States stumble. (Web editor: Peng yukai, Liang Jun) The judge observed that Gupta chose to file a quash petition instead of cooperating with the investigation, and this seemed to be an attempt to escape from his criminal liability, if any. (Representational Image/ DC) Hyderabad: Justice Shamim Akther of the Telangana High Court has dismissed a plea from director Sukesh Gupta of MBS Jewellers to quash the EICR case registered against him under the Prevention of Money Laundering Act. The case related to purchase of gold from MMTC, a public sector enterprise, and causing loss to the latter of the order of Rs 194 crore in connivance with MMTC officials. Sukesh Gupta requested the court to quash the case and to stay the further proceedings like issuing of summons on him. Justice Akther said the modus operandi adopted by the petitioner in causing wrongful loss to MMTC in active connivance with MMTC officials was specifically mentioned in the complaint as well as in the charge sheet filed by the CBI. Such economic frauds adversely affected the financial and economic wellbeing of the nation and have implications that are beyond the domain of a mere dispute between the petitioner and MMTC. The judge also observed that Gupta chose to file a quash petition instead of cooperating with the investigation, and this seemed to be an attempt to escape from his criminal liability, if any. Referring to the Supreme Court observations on inherent powers of high courts in quashing the cases, Justice Akther said that in a catena of judgments, the apex court had held that it was not proper for a high court to exercise its inherent powers under Section 482 of Cr.PC, in relation to economic offences. It said this was nothing but stalling an investigation or enquiry initiated by the authorized officer under the provisions of PMLA. At the initial stage of issuance of the process, it is not open to the courts to stifle the proceedings by entering into the merits of the case. Hence, an enquiry has to be held to find out the truth. Basing upon the complaint lodged by MMTC, the CBI registered a case against Sukesh Gupta in 2013 under Sections 120B r/w 409, 420, 465, 471, 477A of IPC and Section 13(2) r/w 13(1)(d) of the Prevention of Corruption Act, 1988, for allegedly causing wrongful loss to MMTC Ltd, a public sector enterprise, to the tune of Rs 194 crore. Based on the case registered by the CBI, the ED registered the subject ECIR in relation to the scheduled offences registered by the predicate agency. The details of the case are that, from the financial years 2005-06 to 2010-11, MBS purchased gold amounting to over Rs 20,000 crore from MMTC without any dispute. During July, 2011, a foreign exchange fluctuation occurred and the rupee value suddenly crashed by 27 per cent. Due to this, a liability arose. On 05 October 2012, the second MoU was signed between MBS and MMTC, whereby MMTC, after due diligence, fixed the total liability of MBS as Rs 181.39 crore as on 31 March 2012 and it stopped itself from altering the liability further. Thereafter, MMTC engaged M/s KPMG to conduct a forensic audit to ascertain liability of MBS. After the forensic audit report, the MMTC lodged a complaint with the CBI. (ANSA) - ROME, MAR 2 - The Ukrainian Ambassador to Italy Yaroslav Melnyk on Wednesday thanked Italy for its solidarity and support in the war launched by Russia. Speaking after meeting House Speaker Roberto Fico, Melnyk said "I voiced to the House Speaker our extremely great appreciation for yesterday's historic decision by the Italian parliament (to grant military and financial aid). "Thank you Italy for the huge support to our country: we will never forget this gesture of solidarity". (ANSA). (ANSA) - ROME, MAR 1 - Italy has started the procedure to strip Russians of titles and honours after the invasion of Ukraine, the foreign ministry said Tuesday. The move was recently announced by Foreign Minister Luigi Di Maio. Russian citizens who have been honoured will have their titles revoked, the ministry said. (ANSA). Migrants: 2,000 try to enter Melilla, 500 succeed Highest number trying to cross Morocco-Spain fence, media (ANSAmed) - MADRID, MARCH 2 - Some 2,000 people on Wednesday morning attempted to climb the barrier at the border between Morocco and Spain in the enclave of Melilla, including 500 who were able to cross into Spanish territory, the delegation of the central Spanish government told local media. The attempt to irregularly cross into Spain in Melilla is one of the most significant episodes reported due to the high number of people implicated, according to Spanish media. Initial estimates by Spanish authorities indicated that about 2,000 people tried to climb the fence, with only one-quarter succeeding. The numbers could reportedly change as the situation evolves. Spanish and Moroccan law enforcement officers intervened to try to stop the migrants' attempt, according to authorities. Local media said many of the people who crossed into Spain gathered in front of a migrant center.(ANSAmed). TEL AVIV - Israeli Premier Naftali Bennett said on Wednesday that the Holocaust, "the systematic destruction of Jews, is a wound at the basis of ties between Germany and Israel", welcoming German Chancellor Olaf Scholz at the Holocaust museum Yad Vashem. Bennett added: "on this wound, we have built strong and significant relations". "Germany feels responsibility towards the State of Israel. For this reason, it will always be part of Israel in a strong way", Scholz subsequently said at a press conference with Bennett. "We understand Israel's needs for security. We consider them seriously. We must prevent Iran's nuclear capacity which would represent a threat to peace", he added. BEIRUT - The US State Department has summoned for tomorrow a meeting of "coordination" with representatives of allied countries of the United States in the conflict in Syria to discuss possible "reflexes" of the Ukrainian crisis in the eastern Mediterranean, where Russia has been involved, together with other powers, for years with a massive presence of naval, air and land units. According to pan Arab daily Asharq al Awsat, which quoted State Department sources, the meeting was summoned and will be chaired by Ethan Goldrich, deputy assistant to the US Secretary of State for Near Eastern Affairs, appointed to this role in September. Among those invited, along with representatives of western countries, including Italy, will be officials from Washington's Arab allies and Turkey, which has been involved both in the Syrian conflict and in the Ukrainian crisis, in particular in the management of maritime spaces between the Mediterranean and the Black Sea. The conflict in Syria has been ongoing for over 10 years during which more than half a million people were killed and about 12 million abandoned their homes. In the war in Syria, which neighbors Turkey, a member of NATO, the countries directly involved are the US, Russia, Israel, Iran, as well as numerous local and foreign militias affiliated to regional and international powers. In order to scale up the ongoing evacuation efforts under Operational Ganga, PM Modi has called for the IAF to join the exercise. (Twitter) New Delhi: Prime Minister Narendra Modi has asked the Indian Air Force (IAF) to evacuate Indians stranded in Ukraine due to the Russian military offensive against that country, sources said on Tuesday. The IAF is likely to deploy several C-17 aircraft as part of Operation Ganga from Tuesday, they said. Till now, only private Indian carriers were evacuating Indians from Romania and Hungary, countries with land borders with Ukraine on the western side, as the Ukrainian airspace had been shut since February 24. India began evacuation of around 14,000 of its stranded citizens on February 26. In order to scale up the ongoing evacuation efforts under Operational Ganga, PM Modi has called for the IAF to join the exercise, the sources said. Leveraging the capacities of the IAF will ensure that more people can be evacuated in a shorter time frame, they noted. The large C-17 aircraft will also help deliver humanitarian aid to war-hit Ukraine more efficiently, they mentioned. Taking into account the humanitarian requirements in Ukraine, Ambassador of India to United Nations, T S Tirumurti, on Monday, had said that India has decided to provide urgent relief supplies, including medicines to Ukraine, which is expected to be despatched tomorrow. Tirumurti made these remarks at the UNSC meeting on the humanitarian situation in Ukraine. He said that there is an urgent and pressing humanitarian situation developing in Ukraine. PM Modi briefs President Kovind on Ukraine crisis Prime Minister Narendra Modi met President Ram Nath Kovind on Tuesday and briefed him on various issues, including the Ukraine crisis, official sources said. Sources said Modi briefed Kovind on the crisis and his government's efforts to bring back the Indian citizens stranded in the country. Meanwhile, An Air India Express flight carrying 182 Indians nationals from war-torn Ukraine landed in Mumbai from the Romanian capital Bucharest on Tuesday morning, an airline spokesperson said. The AI Express flight IX-1202 from Bucharest via Kuwait touched down the runway at 7.40 am, he said. This is the second evacuation flight operated to Mumbai from Bucharest to bring back Indians from war-hit Ukraine since February 27. Some care home residents gave up and died because they were unable to see loved ones during the pandemic, the outgoing chief executive of one of the UKs biggest care groups has said. Jeremy Richardson, who will leave his role at Four Seasons Health Care in the coming weeks, said the big scandal of the past two years has been depriving residents of their liberty. He said he hopes that denying care home residents access to their loved ones is the one lesson from the crisis that society will never repeat. He told delegates at LaingBuissons Innovation in Care conference in Birmingham: Ultimately, life in a care home should be a life well led, and that involves interactions not just with staff, or team members, but with loved ones and friends. And I think the big scandal of the last two years is that we chose to deprive people of their liberty because we defined essential carers as people who work in care homes, not people who are the loved ones of people who live in those care homes. And I know for a fact that there were a number of people in our homes who gave up and died because they didnt have social interaction. They gave up the will to live. So I think the future of care homes is about interaction, society, engaging with community, and if technology can help me deliver better outcomes to make sure that those things happen, then I will embrace the technology, but ultimately, its about community and I dont think we should ever forget that. Helen Wildore, director of the Relatives and Residents Association, said too many lives have been cut short by restrictions in place to manage Covid. She said: This message will be incredibly difficult to hear for families of those who passed away in a Four Seasons home, who might ask why more wasnt done to safeguard their legal rights. It will also be incredibly difficult for people living in care, still battling to get meaningful contact with their families, still living under restrictions while the rest of the country gets back to normal. Pop star Ed Sheeran has been granted permission to put a crypt under the floor of a private chapel within the grounds of his East Anglian estate. The 31-year-old singer-songwriter gained approval in 2019 to build the private place of retreat for contemplation and prayer at his home in the county of Suffolk, where he grew up. A further application submitted to East Suffolk Council, seeking permission for a crypt in the nave of the chapel, has now been given the green light. No official consultees objected but a member of the public suggested Sheeran was detached from reality. Anna Woods, who gave a Cambridge address, wrote: Are celebrities now so detached from reality that their every living breath and now even the act of dying be apart from the rest of us? In its decision to approve the application, East Suffolk Council said: It is noted that the revised plans include an area identified as burial zone. Ed Sheeran performs during the Brit Awards 2022 at the O2 Arena (Ian West/PA) Whilst this was not included within the original permission, it is considered that the creation of any void beneath the building could have been created through the formation of the foundations for the building, without resulting in a separate engineering operation, and any penetration through the existing slab floor after construction would not be considered development. The planned crypt will be 1.8 metres (5ft 10in) by 2.7 metres (8ft 10in). Guests from around the world visit Sheerans estate, according to the 2019 planning application for a chapel. Many of these people are from many countries, faiths and customs, including for example the USA, Ireland, Ghana, Nigeria, Asia and Australia, it said. Thus, the applicant seeks to provide a space in which, he, his family and these different people can retreat for contemplation, prayer and relaxation, to meet, celebrate and meditate in peace and safety from disturbance, when they visit. The chapel is to be lined with flint, with a spiral stair tower, a lead roof and stained as well as clear glass windows. Vladimir Putin knows no limit and will use indiscriminate carpet bombing against Ukrainian cities as his forces close in on the capital Kyiv, the UKs Defence Secretary warned. Ben Wallace said the leadership of the Russian military was ruthless and was prepared to lay siege to Ukraines population centres. Russian troops have entered Ukraines second city Kharkiv following days of intensive bombardment, but Mr Wallace said Mr Putins forces did not yet control it. The Ministry of Defence said the latest intelligence suggested Russian forces had reportedly moved into the centre of Kherson in south Ukraine. Artillery and air strikes have targeted built-up areas in Kyiv, Kharkiv, Mariupol and Chernihiv. Latest Intelligence update on the situation in Ukraine. pic.twitter.com/CeKxZDHRDk Ministry of Defence (@DefenceHQ) March 2, 2022 But Mr Wallace said the advance of Russian forces continued to be slowed by a combination of overstretched logistics, poor morale and brave resistance by Ukrainian fighters. The Russians are considerably behind their schedule, by days not hours, and that leads to stresses on their logistical supply chains, he told the BBC. Thats why you have seen some of these columns fairly grind to a halt. They have also been surprised by the strength of the Ukrainian resistance. (PA Graphics) He told BBC Breakfast that none of the major cities have been taken control of. There was huge amounts of low morale in the Russian forces, weve seen lots of surrenders. But that doesnt take away from the fact you have a very ruthless Russian armed forces leadership and a president who seems to know no limit to how much violence they will use to achieve their aims. The lack of progress in meeting the aims of the invasion had led to a change in tactics, focusing on aerial and artillery bombardment of cities rather than the kind of lightning mobilised armoured advances originally envisaged by the Kremlin, Western military experts believe. Mr Wallace told Sky News that meant a plan to carpet-bomb cities, indiscriminately in some cases and on BBC Radio 4s Today he warned they would pummel these cities with artillery and then hope to break the city. He told the BBC that siege tactics were in the Russian military doctrine, with forces surrounding a city before they bombard it indiscriminately and then eventually close in on a population that they hope to have broken, and indeed take over whats left of the city. Weve seen that in Chechnya before, he said. But Ukraine was a different proposition because of its size and population. (PA Graphics) He warned that an occupying force would face the kind of insurgency faced by the Soviets in Afghanistan or the UK and Western allies in Iraq. Invading a country with overwhelming force is one thing, occupying a people of 44 million who dont want you in it is a very different thing. There could be years of resistance to a Russian occupation, he said. The Defence Secretary again rejected calls for the UK and its allies to enforce a no-fly zone in the skies above Ukraine, because shooting down a Russian plane could trigger a Europe-wide conflict between Mr Putin and Nato. A family fleeing the war in Ukraine reunite after crossing the border in Medyka, south-eastern Poland (AP) A no-fly zone would also have to apply to Ukrainian jets, meaning they could not target Russian forces from the air, he added. If you had a no-fly zone in Ukraine, the overwhelming scale of the Russian army would be able to drive around with impunity, which it cant at the moment. But he said the UK had led the way in supplying surface-to-air weapons systems to Ukraine. There are two ways to achieve a no-fly zone. One is the way that Britain has led the way in, which is arming the Ukrainians with anti-air capabilities, from the ground to the air, and the reason they are doing the bombing at night is because they cant because of those weapon systems the Russians cannot fly much in the day, he told Today. In other developments: Boris Johnson will face Prime Ministers Questions after returning from a trip to show support to Nato allies Poland and Estonia. Foreign Secretary Liz Truss has announced further sanctions on Russian financial institutions. The UK has also imposed sanctions on Belarus over its role in the invasion. US President Joe Biden used his State of the Union address to announce the closure of US airspace to Russian flights. Russia said it would be ready for further peace talks with Ukraine later on Wednesday. A senior Western intelligence official estimated that more than 5,000 Russian soldiers had been captured or killed, while Ukraine has given no overall estimate of its military losses. Mr Wallace said: We have definitely seen cases of very quick surrenders by Russian forces, we have seen lots of abandonment of incredible pieces of equipment. The UN human rights office said on Tuesday it had recorded 136 civilian deaths including 13 children, but the real toll is believed to be far higher. In Washington, Mr Biden said: Putin is now isolated from the world more than he has ever been. Together with our allies, we are right now enforcing powerful economic sanctions: Were cutting off Russias largest bank to the international financial system (and) choking Russias access to technology that will sap its economic threat and weaken its military for years to come. Tonight, I say to the Russian oligarchs and the corrupt leaders who built billions of dollars off this violent regime Were coming for your ill-begotten gains. On Tuesday night the Foreign Office announced that sanctions were in force against Russias central bank and its sovereign wealth fund and its director. Sberbank, Russias largest bank, which accounts for 35% of the financial sector, has also been prohibited from clearing sterling payments through the UKs financial system. Foreign Secretary Liz Truss said: We said Putin and those around him would pay the price for their unprovoked and illegal invasion of Ukraine, and we are being true to our word. Earlier on Tuesday, Transport Secretary Grant Shapps had announced a ban on Russian-linked ships and oligarchs private yachts from British ports. Russian state-owned media outlet RT will no longer be available on Sky, the Culture Secretary has said. Nadine Dorries said the move would mean Putins polluting propaganda machine would be severely restricted in Britain. In a tweet, Ms Dorries said: Shortly, the French satellite which broadcasts Russia Today (RT) in both the EU and UK will be switched off. This means RT will no longer be available via Sky. Putins polluting propaganda machine will now have severely restricted access into British homes via our TV screens. Shortly, the French satellite which broadcasts Russia Today (RT) in both the EU and UK will be switched off. This means RT will no longer be available via Sky. Putins polluting propaganda machine will now have severely restricted access into British homes via our TV screens. Nadine Dorries (@NadineDorries) March 1, 2022 It comes after the video-sharing website YouTube blocked channels linked to RT and Sputnik across Europe, including the UK. The Google-owned platform said the ban was effective immediately though it may take some time for the block to become fully effective. The technology giant had previously limited the ability for RT and other Russian channels to make money from advertisements that appear on videos but has extended its sanctions. Due to the ongoing war in Ukraine, were blocking YouTube channels connected to RT and Sputnik across Europe, effective immediately. Itll take time for our systems to fully ramp up. Our teams continue to monitor the situation around the clock to take swift action. Google Europe (@googleeurope) March 1, 2022 Due to the ongoing war in Ukraine, were blocking YouTube channels connected to RT and Sputnik across Europe, effective immediately, a statement from Google Europe said. Itll take time for our systems to fully ramp up. Our teams continue to monitor the situation around the clock to take swift action. Fellow social media platform Facebook has also blocked access to RT and Sputnik on its platform having previously also limited those channels ability to make advertising revenue. The change means the pages of the organisations are not visible on Facebook or Instagram in the EU, but for now, they remain visible in the UK. We have received requests from a number of Governments and the EU to take further steps in relation to Russian state controlled media. Given the exceptional nature of the current situation, we will be restricting access to RT and Sputnik across the EU at this time. Nick Clegg (@nickclegg) February 28, 2022 Former UK deputy prime minister, Sir Nick Clegg, who is now vice president of global affairs at Facebooks parent company, Meta, said the firm had been asked by governments to take further action against Russian state-backed media. We have received requests from a number of Governments and the EU to take further steps in relation to Russian state-controlled media, he said on Twitter on Monday night. Given the exceptional nature of the current situation, we will be restricting access to RT and Sputnik across the EU at this time. Maksim Chmerkovskiy is on his way home to Los Angeles. The Ukrainian-American dancer, who was in Kyiv when Russia invaded, boarded a flight to the U.S. on Wednesday where he'll be reunited with his wife, Peta Murgatroyd, and their 5-year-old son, Shai. Before he got on the plane, he shared a video on Instagram showing a "patch of gray hairs that just came out," as a result of being in Ukraine amid the attack. Chmerkovskiy, who had been in his homeland working on the reality competition World of Dance UA, fled Kyiv on Monday taking a 23-hour packed train to the Poland border. From there, he got a ride to Warsaw and was awake for 36-hours by the time he arrived at a hotel. Maksim Chmerkovskiy admits to feeling "guilt" after fleeing Ukraine. (Photo: Michael Tran/FilmMagic) Chmerkovskiy started by telling a story about his manager, who lives outside of Kyiv, moving further south as an extra precaution amid the Russian strikes. Despite being seemingly out of the battleground, a rocket hit the manager's new property. "I don't even want to address the fact that Russians are denying it," he said of the civilian strikes which have resulted in more than 2,000 deaths. Speaking to Russians directly, he said, "I wanna address the fact that it is that place that is lying to you. Where you live. It's rotten." Chmerkovskiy said Russian President Vladimir Putin "didn't just lie to us and the entire world. He lied to his people for a very long time." However, Chmerkovskiy whose family immigrated to the U.S. in 1994 said Putin "doesn't represent all the Russians. I just want that to be very clear. I don't want there to be hate [against Russian citizens]. I don't want there to be disgust with them as a nation. They are our brothers and sisters. My mom's brother, with his family, lives in Russia. My grandpa lives in Russia." That said, "I'm also angry. I'm f***ing angry. I'm pissed. But [Putin] doesn't represent everybody. I came from that place," he said. "USSR didn't represent me and I think he doesn't represent the good ones [in Russia]. We just have to help them and open their eyes." Hours before, when Chmerkovskiy arrived at his Warsaw hotel, he recorded a 26-minute video captioned "Im in Warsaw. Im in hotel. Im not ok" touching on his journey. He said on the way, he witnessed Russian attacks on civilians, but he said he wasn't ready to speak about it. "I wont be able to express myself. Im already tearing up and choking, he said. "Im scared, Im confused. Im terrified. And Ive just lived through some [stuff] that I'm going to need a lot of therapy for." He continued, "But I know this it's us little guys against the big guy. I don't care how big [Putin] is. I don't care how mean he is. When we're together, I can see what can happen. We can have a little guy finally win and it will be a joint effort and after that, we can figure out how to make sure that there's never again one f***ing person, one man, who can do whatever he's doing." Chmerkovskiy didn't discuss how he was able to leave the country amid an order that reportedly prevents men between ages 18 and 60 from leaving. He does reside full time in the U.S., however. He did compare leaving to being "like out of a movie." He traveled on a packed train car, that typically holds 30 but was transporting about 135. "It kept getting more and more packed," he said. "I'm thinking to myself there's no air. There's no way that we can travel [like this]." He said he stood at the back of the train for the day long journey to give others in need a seat. Chmerkovskiy admitted to feeling "guilt" over leaving the war-torn area. "I thought about it, my guilt," he said. "I started to think about this and I came up with this analogy: In '94, I was put up for adoption and I got adopted by a beautiful, young, vibrant, exciting, forward-thinking country and I fell in love. And I left Ukraine in '94 [as] a sad, sad person because I felt like I was getting unrooted... I was in this new country. But I turned around and said, 'You know what? This is what I'm going to do.' The 14-year-old Maks, with his family and all the love and support that he had, did stuff and here we are." He talked about how he "reconnected" with Ukraine after leaving the country as a teen. He admitted to having "a very f***ing hard time leaving" amid the attack. "I'm having a horrible time. I'm having very mixed emotions. I have my friends there, my friends in [the] frontline... I can't hear from some of the people. I can't get in touch with them. I don't know if they're dead." He thanked his fans for following his journey. "I love you all tremendously," he said. "I love that people are paying attention... I love the fact that you get angry because you're like, 'This is wrong.' You get angry because something is wrong and you maybe even want to do something about it. And when everybody does something about it, then it becomes everybody against one person and that's what needs to happen right now." Meanwhile, Chmerkovskiy's wife Murgatroyd a pro dancer who also appeared on Dancing With the Stars is awaiting his return in Los Angeles. She shared on her social media that she's been burning candles over the last five days, alongside a family photo of them with their son, "and never let them blow out." Apple (AAPL) said Tuesday that it has stopped selling its products in Russia. The iPhone maker made the move after calls from Ukrainian officials for tech companies to either pull back their services or stop offering them entirely in Russia after its invasion of Ukraine. We have paused all product sales in Russia, an Apple spokesperson said in a statement. Last week, we stopped all exports into our sales channel in the country. Apple Pay and other services have been limited. RT News and Sputnik News are no longer available for download from the App Store outside Russia. And we have disabled both traffic and live incidents in Apple Maps in Ukraine as a safety and precautionary measure for Ukrainian citizens, the spokesperson added. Apple is the latest Big Tech company to punish Russia for invading Ukraine. Microsoft (MSFT), Facebook parent Meta (FB), and Alphabets (GOOG, GOOGL) YouTube have all blocked or limited the availability of Russian state media groups like RT and Sputnik in Europe. TikTok has also blocked the media groups accounts in Europe. On Friday Ukrainian Vice Prime Minister Mykhailo Fedorov called on Apple CEO Tim Cook to stop supplying its services to Russia and cut off access to the App Store. Apple has announced that it's cutting off all product sales to Russia. Sputnik/Alexei Druzhinin/Kremlin via REUTERS I appeal to you and I am sure that you will not hear, but also do everything possible to protect Ukraine, Europe, and finally, the entire democratic world from bloody authoritarian aggression to stop supplying Apple Services and products to the Russian Federation, including blocking access to the App Store! Fedorov wrote in a letter to the CEO. Facebook parent Meta also said its cracking down on Russian disinformation. On Monday, the social media giant revealed that it removed a coordinated campaign designed to spread Russia-friendly disinformation with some 5,000 followers. The company also warned users that a hacking group known as Ghostwriter is taking over user accounts to spread Russian propaganda. They were targeting and taking over, or attempting to take over, the accounts of prominent individuals in Ukraine, Nathaniel Gleicher, head of security policy at Meta, told Yahoo Finance. Think about journalists, military personnel, and prominent figures like politicians. First, they would compromise [users] devices and email and then use them to hack all of their social media accounts to try to spread false narratives and disinformation. As for Apple, the company says that it will continue to evaluate the situation in Ukraine to determine future steps. We join all those around the world who are calling for peace," an Apple spokesperson said. Sign up for Yahoo Finance Tech newsletter More from Dan Follow Yahoo Finance on Twitter, Facebook, Instagram, Flipboard, LinkedIn, YouTube, and reddit Got a tip? Email Daniel Howley at dhowley@yahoofinance.com. Follow him on Twitter at @DanielHowley. This article was first featured in Yahoo Finance Tech, a weekly newsletter highlighting our original content on the industry. Get it sent directly to your inbox every Wednesday by 4 p.m. ET. Subscribe Wednesday, March 2, 2022 Social media is exposing Putin's invasion of Ukraine in real time The week after Russias invasion, Ukrainian President Volodymyr Zelensky tweeted out, To the world: what is the point of saying never again for 80 years, if the world stays silent when a bomb drops on the same site of Babyn Yar? Zelensky was referring to the site of a Nazi massacre. The 44-year-old president has pleaded with the world every day via Twitter, as others document missiles striking on the short-form video platform TikTok. The images and videos of Russias attack have helped spur protests from Berlin to Mexico City. Activists have called for Western powers to punish Russia for its attack on Ukraine, a former member of the Soviet Union that has increasingly allied with NATO members. The pleas via social media likely helped propel the U.S. and its allies to hit Russia with tough economic sanctions to choke off its resources. To the world: what is the point of saying never again for 80 years, if the world stays silent when a bomb drops on the same site of Babyn Yar? At least 5 killed. History repeating (@ZelenskyyUa) March 1, 2022 Social media has had a significant effect on the prosecution and perception of this conflict, Emerson Brooking, a senior fellow at the Atlantic Councils Digital Forensic Research Lab, told Yahoo Finance. In particular, I think social media has been instrumental in showing Ukrainian resistance, and then rallying Western and global support for the Ukrainian cause. Zelenskys success in rallying Ukrainians Since the start of the conflict in Ukraine, Zelensky has used his Twitter account to rally everyday Ukrainians to defend their homes. Hes called on the U.S., NATO, E.U., and seemingly every friendly democracy to sanction Vladimir Putin and Russian oligarchs, as well. And its worked. Ukrainians of all stripes are lining up to fight Russians forces. And thanks to Zelenskys powerful displays, the U.S., E.U., and even famously neutral Switzerland have not only levied sanctions against Russia, but are determining which Russian banks to eject from the Society for Worldwide Interbank Financial Telecommunication. People take part in an anti-war protest, after Russia launched a massive military operation against Ukraine, in Lisbon, Portugal, February 27, 2022. REUTERS/Pedro Nunes Where [the social media reaction] has really manifested is the speed with which both the U.S. and European Union policymakers have agreed on extraordinary measures, the provision of arms to Ukraine and essentially the expulsion of Russia from the global economic system in five days, Brooking said. I think the act of invasion, coupled with the fact that it's so visceral and accessible, has really driven the Western response so far. Its not just Zelensky drumming up Western backing for Ukraine. Tweets show residents in the Ukranian village of Bakhmach blocking tanks with their bodies. Facebook photos display teenagers in Kyiv preparing molotov cocktails. Theres a decent chance you saw 13 Ukrainian soldiers tell a Russian warship Go F yourself, while defending critically important Snake Island. That incident unfolded on TikTok, Instagram, heck, seemingly every social media service. These are the images driving users to advocate for Ukraines defense and Russias withdrawal. Dangers of disinformation But Ukrainians arent the only ones using social media to build support at home and abroad. Russian-backed groups flood Facebook (FB), Instagram, Twitter (TWTR), YouTube (GOOG, GOOGL), and TikTok with propaganda, filling users feeds with conflicting reports of Ukrainians surrendering or falsely claiming Zelensky has fled Ukraine. The sheer volume of content from the conflict makes it difficult to decipher propaganda from reality. There's information coming from both sides in a steady stream and a torrent of information becomes a little bit overwhelming, explained Ari Lightman, professor of digital media and marketing at Carnegie Mellon Universitys Heinz College. We're seeing [Russian] propaganda being generated and highly opinionated calls for action, culture advocacy, and calls for help on the other side. To combat Russias propaganda, Facebook parent Meta on Monday said its taking action against a hacking group and an influence campaign pushing pro-Russian propaganda. Its also demonetizing pages run by Russian state media agencies like RT. Alphabets YouTube, Microsoft, and TikTok also either removed RT and another Russia channel called Sputnik from their services or blocked them in Europe. Social media attention is fleeting Despite the power of social media, users have short attention spans. Look no further than the initial support Western Twitter users threw behind protesters during the Arab Spring in the early 2010s before eventually losing interest and tuning out. Or the litany of causes users have supported by briefly changing their profile photos or user names over the years. Remember when you changed your profile photo to a French flag and then replaced it with a shot of you sipping beer at the pool? Attention has a half life, Brooking said. As the world becomes more and nearer to the tragedy that's unfolding in Ukraine, and as Ukrainian losses mount, as Kiev looks less like a European capital and more like a bombed out ... city. There may be a temptation for Western observers to turn away. If Western users do turn away from the conflict, support for Ukraine could dry up along with its chances of beating down Putin and staying independent of Russia. Still, its clear that Ukraine will not go down without exposing Putins brutality to the world, one TikTok at a time. By Daniel Howley, tech editor at Yahoo Finance. Follow him @DanielHowley Read the latest financial and business news from Yahoo Finance Follow Yahoo Finance on Twitter, Instagram, YouTube, Facebook, Flipboard, and LinkedIn By Jonathan Saul, Stine Jacobsen and Jacob Gronholt-Pedersen LONDON/COPENHAGEN (Reuters) -The world's three biggest container lines on Tuesday temporarily suspended cargo shipments to and from Russia in response to Western sanctions on Moscow following its invasion of Ukraine, in a further blow to trade with the country. Russia's assault on its neighbour, which Moscow says is a "special operation", is the biggest state-to-state invasion in Europe since World War Two. Swiss-headquartered MSC, the world's biggest container shipping company by capacity, said in a customer advisory that as of March 1 it had introduced "a temporary stoppage on all cargo bookings to/from Russia, covering all access areas including Baltics, Black Sea and Far East Russia. "MSC will continue to accept and screen bookings for delivery of essential goods such as food, medical equipment and humanitarian goods," it said. Denmark's Maersk , which is the second biggest carrier after MSC, said separately it would temporarily halt all container shipping to and from Russia, also adding that the suspension covering all Russian ports, would not include foodstuffs, medical and humanitarian supplies. "As the stability and safety of our operations is already being directly and indirectly impacted by sanctions, new Maersk bookings within ocean and inland to and from Russia will be temporarily suspended," the company said in a statement. France's CMA CGM, the world's third-biggest container line, later on Tuesday announced it had suspended all bookings to and from Russia until further notice, citing safety concerns. The moves follow similar decisions already taken by Singapore-headquartered Ocean Network Express and Germany's Hapag Lloyd - effectively cutting Russia off from the world's leading container shipping companies, adding to freight challenges ahead. For the past year the world has been struggling with supply chain bottlenecks caused by surging demand for retail goods transported on container ships and lockdowns related to the coronavirus pandemic. MSC said it would contact customers directly in respect of any Russia-related cargo that was already in transit. "MSC has been closely monitoring the advice from governments about new sanctions," the privately owned group added. In a coordinated response, the United States, European countries and others have made the unusual move of targeting Russia's central bank with financial sanctions and put limits on cross-border transactions by the country's largest lenders. Maersk owns 31% of Russian port operator Global Ports, which runs six terminals in Russia and two in Finland. Global Ports' shareholders also include Russian state nuclear company Rosatom and Russian businessman Sergey Shiskarev. "With Global Ports we are looking at how to comply with the ever evolving sanctions and restrictions and preparing possible next steps," Maersk said. Maersk operates container shipping routes to St Petersburg and Kaliningrad in the Baltic Sea, Novorossiysk in the Black Sea, and to Vladivostok and Vostochny on Russia's east coast. The Copenhagen-based company has around 500 employees in Russia. Last week, it temporarily halted all port calls in Ukraine, where it has some 60 employees in Odessa. (Reporting by Jonathan Saul in London, Nikolaj Skydsgaard, Stine Jacobsen and Jacob Gronholt-Pedersen in Copenhagen and Gus Trompiz in Paris; editing by Jason Neely, Louise Heavens, Tomasz Janowski and Paul Simao) Refugees arriving from Ukraine including African and Indian students of Kyiv University get off a train at the railway station in the Hungarian-Ukrainian border town of Zahony on March 1, 2022. (AFP) Vishakhapatanam: Most Indians, particularly those who have been stuck in the war-hit cities in eastern Ukraine, just 40km from Russia, are facing health problems and mental sickness with every passing day. Though the Indians in the unaffected western parts are able to get relief with the provision for safe passage back to their homeland, those hiding in bunkers and undergrounds in cities like Kharkiv and Sumy since February 24 are having a tough time. Fear of bombing, shortage of food items, non-availability of napkins for women, death of an Indian in Tuesday's airstrike in Kharkiv and Putin's nuclear bombing threats are also matters of worry for the Indian students. A girl student from Sumy Citysaid Sanitary napkins are facing a shortage now. We face stomach pain and gastric problems. We are afraid of going to stores, medical shops, or public places to buy things due to the missile airstrikes. Since we are medical students, we are able to take care of some health problems. Speaking to Deccan Chronicle from Kharkiv, a national medical university student Sanjana, said, We were able to pass all these days without much food, water. But, after Tuesdays incident, we are a lot worried. Some of our friends are facing health problems arising out of fear. We need some moral support at least. MBBS student Prasad said, The Tuesdays incident where college student Naveen from Karnataka died occurred nearly 3km from our location. We are safe so far. We hope for evacuation from this place at the earliest. Meanwhile, some of the students of East and West Godavari districts have appealed to the Union Government and state government through video calls to rescue them. They said food available with them only for a week. Two students, Shanmukha Sai Eswar of Mummidivaram of East Godavari district and Abhijna of Tanuku in West Godavari district appealed to the Union Government and the state government to rescue them. They said they were in bunkers at Kharkiv and heard of the Indian government promise they would be rescued free of cost. But there was no message from the Indian Embassy about the evacuation plans so far. They also said that thousands of Indian students were stranded at the Poland border and some of the officials were demanding money for the transport. But we have no money. Meanwhile, Rithisha of Penuguduru village of Karapa mandal along with 13 students started by 4pm on Tuesday in a train to an airport on way to India. The train will reach Lviv in Ukraine by 4 pm on Wednesday and then, they will cross the Ukraine border to catch some rescue flight from India, said Budhala Satyanarayana, the father of Ritisha. In his first State of the Union address on Tuesday, President Biden touted his historic Supreme Court nominee, Judge Ketanji Brown Jackson, who if confirmed would be the first Black woman ever to sit on the nations highest court. Last week, Biden formally announced Jackson as his pick to replace retiring Justice Stephen Breyer, who along with the other justices was in the audience for the presidents speech. Tonight, Id like to honor someone who has dedicated his life to serve this country: Justice Stephen Breyer, Biden said. An Army veteran, constitutional scholar and retiring justice of the United States Supreme Court. Justice Breyer, thank you for your service. President Biden delivers his first State of the Union address to a joint session of Congress on Tuesday. (Jim Lo Scalzo/Pool via AP) No matter your ideology, one of the most serious constitutional responsibilities a president has is nominating someone to serve on the United States Supreme Court, Biden continued. And I did that four days ago, when I nominated Circuit Court of Appeals Judge Ketanji Brown Jackson, one of our nations top legal minds, who will continue Justice Breyers legacy of excellence. Biden lauded Jacksons experience as a former federal public defender who hails from a family of public school educators and police officers. Judge Ketanji Brown Jackson speaks after President Biden announced her as his nominee to replace Justice Stephen Breyer on the Supreme Court. (Carolyn Kaster/AP) The president called her a consensus builder. He also touted several key endorsements shes already received, from the Fraternal Order of Police and J. Michael Luttig, a retired federal judge who advised former Vice President Mike Pence on his role in certifying Bidens 2020 presidential election victory. Jackson was confirmed to her current post by the Senate in a 53-44 vote, with Republican Sens. Susan Collins of Maine, Lisa Murkowski of Alaska and Lindsey Graham of South Carolina voting in her favor. But Graham said the nomination of Jackson to the Supreme Court means the radical Left has won President Biden over yet again. According to a Yahoo News poll earlier this month, 69 percent of Americans said Jackson was qualified to sit on the court, including 57 percent of Republicans. A burnt-out cargo ship carrying $400 million worth of Lamborghinis, Porsches and other luxury vehicles has sunk two weeks after it caught fire on a transatlantic journey to the United States. Despite efforts to save it, the Felicity Ace finally went down near the Azores Islands about 9 a.m. local time Tuesday, according to a press release from the Portuguese navy. This morning, during the towing process, which had begun on Feb. 24, the ship Felicity Ace lost stability and sank some 25 nautical miles outside of the limits of Portugals exclusive economic zone, in an area with a depth of about [9,842 feet], the navy said. The 650-foot-long vessel, operated by Japanese shipping line Mitsui O.S.K. Lines (MOL), initially caught fire on Feb. 16. It was hauling 4,000 Volkswagen Group cars including W, Porsche, Audi, Bentley and Lamborghini-branded models from Germany to Rhode Island at the time, The Washington Post reported. In this undated photo provided by the Portuguese Navy on Feb. 18, 2022, smoke billows from the burning Felicity Ace car transport ship as seen from the Portuguese Navy NPR Setubal ship southeast of the mid-Atlantic Portuguese Azores Islands. In this undated photo provided by the Portuguese Navy on Feb. 18, 2022, smoke billows from the burning Felicity Ace car transport ship as seen from the Portuguese Navy NPR Setubal ship southeast of the mid-Atlantic Portuguese Azores Islands. Authorities tried to extinguish the blaze, but to no avail it burned for more than a week after the crew was forced to abandon the ship, all of who were ultimately rescued. On Friday, the navy said no fires on the outside or inside, although there is a high temperature in the central area, with no smoke in its structure. The same day, MOL Ship Management said the vessel has started being towed by the large salvage craft Bear to a safe area off Azores. What exactly sparked the fire remains is still unknown. The Justice Department on Wednesday announced a task force to target the assets of Russian oligarchs after President Joe Biden previewed the move in his State of the Union address Tuesday night. "The United States Department of Justice is assembling a dedicated task force to go after the crimes of the Russian oligarchs," Biden said. "We are joining with European allies to find and seize their yachts, their luxury apartments, their private jets. We're coming for your ill-begotten gains." The U.S. says some of the oligarchs have ties to President Vladimir Putin and he uses them to launder or hide hundreds of millions of dollars obtained through corruption. MORE: DHS warns of Russian cyberattack on US if it responds to Ukraine invasion Dubbed Task Force KleptoCapture, the group will investigate and prosecute new sanctions, combat unlawful efforts to undermine restrictions taken against Russian financial institutions by Russians who flout the restrictions, go after oligarchs who use cryptocurrency to evade U.S. sanctions and seize the assets of Russian oligarchs. PHOTO: The mega-yacht 'Dilbar' is completely shrouded while docked in the harbor in Hamburg, Germany, Feb. 27, 2022. The 156-meter-long ship is said to belong to a Russian oligarch. (Markus Scholz/Picture Alliance/dpa via Getty Images) The department says it will bring "cutting edge" resources from the deputy attorney general's office and will be led by a career prosecutor out of the Southern District of New York. "The Justice Department will use all of its authorities to seize the assets of individuals and entities who violate these sanctions," said Attorney General Merrick Garland in a press release. "We will leave no stone unturned in our efforts to investigate, arrest, and prosecute those whose criminal acts enable the Russian government to continue this unjust war. Let me be clear: if you violate our laws, we will hold you accountable." PHOTO: Merrick Garland, U.S. attorney general, speaks during a news conference at the Department of Justice in Washington, D.C., Feb. 22, 2022. (Bloomberg via Getty Images) The Task Force is designed to ensure the "full effect" of sanctions leveled against the Russian government, "which have been designed to isolate Russia from global markets and impose serious costs for this unjustified act of war, by targeting the crimes of Russian officials, government-aligned elites, and those who aid or conceal their unlawful conduct," the Department says. MORE: DOJ official warns companies 'foolish' not to shore up cybersecurity amid Russia tensions Even if Russian oligarchs can't be prosecuted in the United States, DOJ will still seize assets including personal real estate, financial and commercial assets. DOJ says they will work with their European counterparts around the world to ensure these objectives are met. The move has bipartisan support. Last week, Sen. Lindsey Graham, R-S.C., floated the idea of a DOJ task force seizing Russian assets, calling it the "number one priority" of the supplemental funding bill. "It is now time for that crowd to lose their yachts loose their luxury apartments, and to pay a price for being part of a thuggish group," Graham said. ABC News' Allison Pecorin contributed to this report. DOJ announces task force to target Russian oligarchs' assets originally appeared on abcnews.go.com HONG KONG (Reuters) - Hong Kong's government said any decision to impose a COVID-19 lockdown would take into account the global financial hub's status and ensure basic needs such as food and urged anxious residents who raided supermarkets this week not to panic. The government said it was still planning and "refining" details for a compulsory mass COVID testing scheme and would announce details once they had been confirmed. The government statement, released late on Tuesday, comes amid widespread confusion and chaos with many residents fatigued and frustrated by the mixed messaging and almost daily tweaking of coronavirus rules. Leader Carrie Lam had previously said that a citywide lockdown and compulsory testing were not being considered. However Health Secretary Sophia Chan on Monday said that a lockdown had not been ruled out, fueling rumours and sparking a rush for groceries, pharmacy products and banking services. Hong Kong has stuck firmly to its "dynamic zero" coronavirus policy, like in mainland China, which seeks to curb all outbreaks. Some business leaders, medical experts and diplomats have questioned the sustainability of a zero COVID policy as cases surge. The government will "safeguard the status of Hong Kong as a financial centre when implementing the Compulsory Universal Testing scheme (CUT)", it said. "The experience of implementing a CUT initiative in other parts of the world shows that the basic needs of citizens such as food, necessities and the seeking of medical attention outside home should be addressed." Citizens should not "panic nor scramble or stockpile the relevant supplies". The former British colony has reported more than 230,000 coronavirus infections and more than 800 deaths since the pandemic began in 2020. Around 500 deaths have been in the past week, with the majority being unvaccinated residents. Daily reported infections have soared more than 30 times to over 30,000 since the start of February when there were around 100 daily cases. There have been more than 800 deaths, with around 500 deaths in the past week. Health experts from the University of Hong Kong said there were around 1.7 million people already infected as of Monday, with a peak of around 183,000 daily infections expected in the coming week. (Reporting by Farah Master; Editing by Michael Perry) MOSCOW A Kremlin spokesman says a Russian delegation will be ready on Wednesday evening to resume talks with Ukrainian officials about the war in Ukraine. Spokesman Dmitry Peskov told reporters that in the second half of the day, closer to evening, our delegation will be in place to await Ukrainian negotiators. He did not indicate where the talks could take place. There was no immediate word from Ukrainian authorities about their plans. The first round of talks on resolving the Russia-Ukraine war were held near the Belarus-Ukraine border last Sunday. They produced no breakthrough, though the two sides agreed to meet again. Ukrainian President Volodymyr Zelenskyy accused Russia of trying to force him into concessions by continuing to press its invasion. An armed man stands by the remains of a Russian military vehicle in Bucha, close to the capital Kyiv, Ukraine, Tuesday, March 1, 2022. (AP Photo/Serhii Nuzhnenko) In another development, Zelenskyy appealed to Jews around the world to protest the Russian invasion, in which significant Jewish sites have been hit. He made the appeal on Wednesday, a day after a Russian missile strike damaged the Babi Yar Holocaust Memorial on the outskirts of Kyiv, where Nazi occupiers killed more than 33,000 Jews over two days in 1941. Zelenskyy, who is Jewish, said: I appeal now to all the Jews of the world dont you see what is happening? Therefore, it is very important that millions of Jews around the world do not remain silent now. Earlier, shelling hit the town of Uman, a significant pilgrimage site for Hasidic Jews. Meanwhile, Russia claims its military has taken control of the area around Ukraines largest nuclear power plant. Thats according to the Vienna-based International Atomic Energy Agency, the U.N. nuclear watchdog. It said it had received a letter from Russia saying personnel at the Zaporizhzhia plant continued their work on providing nuclear safety and monitoring radiation in normal mode of operation. The letter added: The radiation levels remain normal. Zaporizhzhia is the largest of Ukraines nuclear sites, with six out of the countrys 15 reactors. Already, Russia has seized control of the decommissioned Chernobyl nuclear power plant, scene of the worlds worst nuclear disaster in 1986. The IAEA says that it has received a request from Ukraine to provide immediate assistance in coordinating activities in relation to the safety of Chernobyl and other sites. Relatives and friends gather at the residence of Naveen Shekharappa, a final year medical student, who was killed in Russian shelling in the Ukrainian city of Kharkiv, at Chalageri village, in Haveri (PTI Photo) Vishakhapatanam: The death of Karnataka native Naveen Shekharappa, a Kharkiv national medical university (KNMU) student in Ukraine in an airstrike by Russian troops has added to the worries of the parents whose children are stuck in the war-hit nation. Parents and friends started making Whatsapp calls to their kin in Kharkiv and elsewhere soon after the news of the airstrike at 8 am Ukraine time reached here. Speaking to Deccan Chronicle from Kharkiv, Prasad Nampally, an MBBS student of the KNMU, said the airstrike happened 3km away from his location. The situation is horrible here. Naveen was our colleague at the college. I immediately put alert messages in my Whatsapp status `I am safe, Plz don't call me and don't watch media channels after receiving continuous phone calls from India, Prasad said. Another student of the university, Navya Shetty from Karnataka said that on Tuesday morning, most of the students came out to board trains to reach Lviv, collect food or draw money. Unfortunately, the civilians including the fellow Kannadiga was killed in the horrendous bomb attack, she said. Student Amarnath said the Indians in the Sumy state in eastern Ukraine are waiting for evacuation. Shellings and shootings are panicking the students here, Amarnath said. S.Mani said, The bunkers here also not safe. They are more like basements. They would not protect us if another airstrike hits the building. Parent Satyanarayana from East Godavari said: I heard the news about our governments plans to send defense flights to rescue our children there. The government should act fast. My wife did not sleep for four days as my daughter Rishitha is stuck in Kharkiv. Responding to queries at Operation Ganga's Twitter handle, the India Embassy clarified that students evacuated from Ukraine need not worry about the visa requirements. We want to assure all that no visa is required to exit Romania by special flights," said the Embassy at Romania. WASHINGTON Invoking the memory of his late friend Sen. John McCain, Sen. Lindsey Graham, R-S.C., called on the international community to unite in its condemnation of Vladimir Putin, who sent Russian forces to invade Ukraine last week. The invasion has resulted in civilian casualties, a new refugee crisis and fears of a conflict that could engulf large parts of Europe. Graham used a press conference on Wednesday morning to call on the U.S. government to pursue war crimes allegations against Vladimir Putin and his military commanders through institutions like the International Criminal Court or the International Court of Justice. His proposed resolution also affirms that the United States stands with the people who have been affected by the brutality of the Putin regime. Sen. Lindsey Graham and Rep. Victoria Spartz speak to reporters at the U.S. Capitol on Wednesday. (Kevin Dietsch/Getty Images) Condemnation of Putin seems to be the only conviction uniting Washington today. In keeping with that trend, Graham described the Russian president as a war criminal who had committed war crimes against Syria while also enriching himself in the process of exploiting Russias oil and gas reserves. Graham also warned Russian military commanders that you can find yourself in the Hague where the ICC is based if they committed atrocities against Ukrainian civilians. The United States is not a member of the ICC, while the ICJ is a United Nations body with judges from Russia and China, who would be difficult to enlist in a meaningful prosecution of Putin. Those dynamics make the resolution Graham is introducing largely symbolic a show of solidarity with Ukraine more than, in all probability, a realistic means of bringing Putin and his top commanders to justice. Still, Graham took the opportunity to vehemently denounce Putin just hours after President Biden did the same in his State of the Union address, delivered on Tuesday evening. The world has let him get away with too much for too long, Graham said of Putin, who came to power in 2000 and has ruthlessly consolidated power since. Hes stolen the Russians blind. Hes murdered Russian citizens to maintain his iron grip on the country. Graham was joined at Wednesdays press conference by Rep. Victoria Spartz, R-Ind., the first and only Ukrainian-born member of Congress. Spartz read from harrowing accounts of Ukrainians fleeing the Russian onslaught, which appears to be intensifying after early setbacks. Theyre just killing us like we are animals, she said as Graham stood grimly beside her. Ukrainian American Rep. Victoria Spartz at a news conference at the Capitol on Wednesday. (Kevin Dietsch/Getty Images) The scene was somewhat reminiscent of a 2017 congressional hearing to which Graham and McCain invited the Russian dissident Vladimir Kara-Murza to testify about Putin. Kara-Murza revealed that he believed himself to have twice been a victim of poisoning, a favored Kremlin means of quelling dissent. Its very clear that Vladimir Putin has decided that he will eliminate his opponents and anyone who stands up for democracy and freedom, McCain said at the time. McCain, who died of brain cancer in 2018, was close friends with Graham and a strong supporter of the postwar international order that saw the West checking the Kremlin at every turn. McCain was an unstinting critic of former President Donald Trump, who he accused of undermining the prestige of the United States; Graham, on the other hand, emerged as one of Trumps closest allies, including during impeachment proceedings stemming from the presidents attempt to extort Ukrainian President Volodymyr Zelensky. Wednesday saw a glimpse of Graham familiar from the pre-Trump years. Putins not a genius; hes a war criminal, Graham said, a reference to Trumps praise of the Ukraine invasion. Graham called that praise a mistake, though he added that he thought he understood what Trump had been trying to say. Graham acknowledged that the relationship between the U.S. and the ICC had been rocky. Trump placed sanctions on the court, though Biden lifted that order. If you dont have a venue like this, there is no place to hold Putin accountable, Graham said, in recognition that the Kremlin is largely insulated from domestic consequences and, given widespread reliance on its energy reserves (including by the United States), international ones as well. Russian President Vladimir Putin at the Kremlin on Wednesday. (Mikhail Klimentyev/Sputnik/AFP via Getty Images) In response to a question from Yahoo News, Graham said that despite his tough image, Putin was in fact playing a weak hand. Im not Dr. Phil here. Ive never met the guy. I know he has a very big table, Graham joked, in reference to the photos of Putins unusual seating arrangement during meetings with advisers. Then things turned serious again. I think it is bluster, Graham said. I think the Russian people are losing their life savings. I think their economy is in a death spiral. Intensified international pressure, he predicted, could end Putins grip on Russia. Where are Russian forces attacking Ukraine? Check out this explainer from Yahoo Immersive to find out. FILE PHOTO: Iodine pills are seen in a classroom in Fessenheim during a nuclear accident drill near France's oldest nuclear power station By Jason Hovet and Anna Wlodarczak-Semczuk PRAGUE/WARSAW (Reuters) - Russia's invasion of Ukraine and Vladimir Putin's comments that Moscow's nuclear deterrent is on high alert have unleashed a wave of anxiety in Central Europe, with people rushing to buy iodine which they believe may protect them from radiation. From Poland to Bulgaria, people living in the former Soviet-era satellite states have also jammed passport offices, topped up their fuel tanks and prepared to leave at a moment's notice. Others enquired about joining the military. "In the past six days Bulgarian pharmacies have sold as much [iodine] as they sell for a year," said Nikolay Kostov, chair of the Pharmacies Union. "Some pharmacies are already out of stock. We have ordered new quantities but I am afraid they will not last very long." "It's been a bit mad," said Miroslava Stenkova, a representative of Dr. Max pharmacies in the Czech Republic, where some stores had run out of iodine after demand soared. Iodine - taken as pills or syrup - is considered a way of protecting the body against conditions such as thyroid cancer in case of radioactive exposure. In 2011, Japanese authorities recommended that people around the site of the damaged Fukushima nuclear power plant take iodine. Officials in the region have recognised the demand but cautioned iodine is not necessary in the current situation and would not help in case of nuclear war. Dana Drabova, head of the Czech State office for Nuclear Safety, wrote on Twitter: "You ask a lot about iodine tablets... as radiation protection when (God forbid) nuclear weapons are used, they are basically useless." News last week that Russian forces had gained control of the Chernobyl nuclear plant where an accident in 1986 contaminated a huge swathe of Ukraine and sent a radioactive cloud across Europe, unnerved people in a region where many remember being given iodine in the aftermath of that disaster. Radiation levels at Chernobyl have increased but are still low enough not to pose a hazard to the public despite the movement of Russia's military vehicles there, the U.N. nuclear watchdog IAEA said on Wednesday. In Poland, the number of pharmacies selling iodine more than doubled, according to gdziepolek.pl, a Polish website that helps patients find the nearest pharmacy with a drug they are seeking. "Internal data on our website shows that interest in iodine increased around 50 times since last Thursday," said Bartlomiej Owczarek, the website's co-founder. RUSH TO RENEW PASSPORTS Since the start of the fighting last Thursday, hundreds of thousands of refugees have crossed into the European Union, mainly entering through borders in Poland, Slovakia and Hungary to flee what Russian President Vladimir Putin calls a "special military operation" to disarm Ukraine and capture "neo-Nazis" he falsely says are running the country of 44 million people. Last Sunday Putin ordered his military command to put Russia's deterrence forces - which include nuclear arms - on high alert, citing what he called aggressive statements by NATO leaders and Western economic sanctions against Moscow. Washington and its NATO allies have rejected Ukraine's request to impose a no-fly zone over the country, arguing this would lead to direct confrontation with nuclear-armed Russia. Against this backdrop, some central Europeans have prepared to leave, clogging passport offices to ensure they had valid travel documents. Slovakia's interior minister called on citizens not to flood police with applications while long lines formed outside some passport offices in Warsaw. "I have a son who lives outside the EU and I am supposed to go visit him and I was afraid that later I would not be able to get a passport," said Maria, a pensioner standing in line who declined to give her full name. "All these people are not standing in this line on a whim, but because they want a safety net." In the Czech Republic - where Russian soldiers helped Communists crush the 1968 Prague Spring protests for reforms - authorities scrapped a regular monthly testing of emergency sirens on Wednesday to avoid alarming people. Some young central Europeans considered joining the military. Poland's defence minister Mariusz Blaszczak said more than 2,200 have declared their interest in joining the Polish Armed Forces, more than five times the number the previous week. At a recruiting station in Prague, an officer said interest had jumped and one student said he was there due to Ukraine. "The situation in Ukraine only convinced me it is probably the best decision I can take for my country," said Marek Jetmar, a 27-year-old psychology student. (additional reporting by Alicja Ptak and Anna Wlodarczak-Semczuk in Poland, Robert Mueller and Jan Lopatka in Prague, Tsvetelia Tsolova in Sofia and John Chalmers in Brussels, Writing by Michael Kahn, Editing by Alexandra Hudson) When Joe Biden ran for president against a diverse crowd of younger Democrats in 2020, the septuagenarian candidly acknowledged he was a transitional leader in a party itching for generational change. He was nominated mostly because Democrats saw him as their best bet against President Trump, so Bidens victory marked an interregnum rather than a turning point in the history of the Democratic Party. With that choice, Democrats postponed a needed debate about the future of the nations oldest party, which hasnt had a commanding grip on national power since the collapse of its New Deal coalition decades ago. For Democrats, the election of 2020 spelled relief instead of deliverance from the dilemma of how to build an enduring new majority, Georgetown historian Michael Kazin writes in his new book, What It Took to Win: A History of the Democratic Party. In his sweeping account, Kazin takes a big step back to see a way forward, searching for clues to Democrats successes and failures over the last 200 years. It is an illuminating shift of perspective for Democrats now transfixed by internal struggles and dispirited by their grim prospects in this years midterm elections. His conclusion: The partys most lasting periods of electoral success came when Democrats made a convincing appeal to the economic interests of ordinary working people an egalitarian ideology he calls moral capitalism. Only programs designed to make life more prosperous, or at least more secure, for ordinary people proved capable of uniting Democrats and winning over enough voters to enable the party to create a governing majority that could last for more than one or two election cycles, he declares. This is not a new line of argument, but Kazin provides rich historical context for a longstanding debate about Democratic priorities that today can often seem shortsighted and shallow: how to reconcile perceived tensions between populism and identity politics, between courting the white working class and securing equity for people of color. Kazin, who studies American politics and social movements, brings the care of a scholar to a big subject, but he also has a storytellers gift for making it accessible. He paints lively portraits of standout figures some well known, like Presidents Andrew Jackson and Martin Van Buren; others not so prominent, like 19th century banker August Belmont, the longest-serving Democratic National Committee chair. He is upfront about his own partisan leanings: Now editor emeritus of Dissent magazine, Kazin was active in Students for a Democratic Society as a youth. Beginning in 1960, when he was 12, he volunteeredfor Democratic presidential candidatesin every election but two. But this book is not a cheerleading history that air-brushes the partys dark side unlike the Democratic National Committee website, whose history page begins in 1920, when Democrats began to reach beyond their white male segregationist base. Kazin gives an unsparing account of the partys earlier history from Jacksons forced removal of Native Americans to Democrats opposition to rights for Black people and into the 20th century, when the party was slower than Republicans to support womens suffrage. And yet he finds a consistent theme as the party transformed itself over two centuries: The egalitarian tenets of moral capitalism even imperfectly applied were the key to electoral victory and drove the partys two major periods of durable majorities. The first began in 1829 with Jacksons two terms as president. The populists fight against rechartering the Second Bank of the U.S. helped cement Democrats reputation as the party of the people. The second was launched in 1933 when Franklin Delano Roosevelt delivered to a Depression-wracked nation a plan of government relief. He assembled a mighty political coalition of Southern Democrats, labor unions and big-city machines that held sway in American politics for a generation. That coalition unraveled as Southern Democrats deserted over civil rights laws, labor union clout dwindled and city machines became relics. The white working class became disenchanted in the 1960s, Kazin argues, in part because Great Society programs, unlike the New Deal, came to be seen as benefiting the poor and people of color rather than providingeconomic relief for struggling people of all races. President Obama has been faulted for not doing enough to cement his winning coalition for the future. Bidens victory also failed to be a breakthrough: Many of the swing voters who backed him over Trump did not embrace the rest of the Democratic Party, as its down-ballot losses made clear. Kazin tries to end on a hopeful note by spotlighting a Nevada union the Culinary Union Local 226 to illustrate the values he thinks Democrats need to rebuild. The local is a political powerhouse in Las Vegas, a multicultural machine of sorts that reaches beyond traditional workplace services to give members a sense of community and opportunities to participate in politics. Building that kind of multiracial working class coalition has proven harder on a national scale. Much of Bidens economic agenda has been geared to their interests, but Donald Trumps polarizing brand of populism has given the Republican Party new purchase among working class voters. Kazins engaging history is a welcome turn to broader questions about the Democratic Partys purpose and strategy, which have been overshadowed of late by Democrats legislative preoccupations how to get around holdout Senators Joe Manchin and Krysten Sinema; whether to abolish the Senate filibuster; how to salvage Bidens social policy agenda. Those are tactical questions about how to play a weak hand, not a searching inquiry Democrats need if they want to be dealt a stronger one any time soon. Hook is a former national political reporter for The Times. This story originally appeared in Los Angeles Times. MOSCOW (AP) Russian nuclear submarines sailed off for drills in the Barents Sea and mobile missile launchers roamed snow forests Tuesday in Siberia after President Vladimir Putin ordered his nation's nuclear forces put on high alert over tensions with the West over the invasion of Ukraine. Russia's Northern Fleet said in a statement that several of its nuclear submarines were involved in exercises designed to train maneuvering in stormy conditions. It said several warships tasked with protecting northwest Russia's Kola Peninsula, where several naval bases are located, would join the maneuvers. In the Irkutsk region of eastern Siberia, units of the Strategic Missile Forces dispersed Yars intercontinental ballistic missile launchers in forests to practice secret deployment, the Defense Ministry said in a statement. The military didn't say whether the drills were linked to Putin's order on Sunday to put the country's nuclear forces on high alert amid Russia's war in Ukraine. It also was unclear whether the exercises represented a change in the country's normal nuclear training activities or posture. Putin's decree applied to all parts of the Russian nuclear triad, which like in the U.S., consists of nuclear submarines armed with intercontinental ballistic missiles, nuclear-tipped land-based ICBMs and nuclear-capable strategic bombers. The United States and Russia have the two largest nuclear arsenals in the world, by far. The U.S. said Putin's move unnecessarily escalated an already dangerous conflict, but so far has announced no changes in its nuclear weapons alert level, perhaps in part because it was unclear what the Russian president's order meant in practical terms. Russia and the U.S. have the land- and submarine-based segments of their strategic nuclear forces on alert and prepared for combat at all times, but nuclear-capable bombers and other aircraft are not. One party raising the nuclear-combat readiness of bombers or ordering more ICBM-carrying submarines to sea would ring alarm bells for another. Compared to the U.S., Russia relies more heavily on nuclear-tipped intercontinental ballistic missiles, which are located in silos or mounted on mobile launchers. A change in their readiness status could be more difficult to spot and assess. Putin's order heightened already soaring tensions, drawing comparisons to the 1962 Cuban Missile Crisis that saw Moscow and Washington teetering on the brink of a nuclear conflict. In announcing his decision, Putin cited aggressive statements from NATO powers and new, crippling Western sanctions that froze Russia's hard currency reserves, an unprecedented move that threatened to have devastating consequences for the its economy and finances. The latest statements from Putin and other Russian officials indicated the Kremlin view of Western sanctions as a threat on par with military aggression. Dmitry Medvedev, a deputy head of Russias Security Council, responded Tuesday to French Finance Minister Bruno Le Maire commenting that the European Union would unleash an all-out economic and financial war against Russia. Today, some French minister has said that they declared an economic war on Russia, Medvedev, who served as Russia's placeholder president in 2008-2012 when Putin had to shift into the prime ministers post because of term limits. Watch your tongue, gentlemen! And dont forget that in human history, economic wars quite often turned into real ones. ___ Follow AP's coverage of the war in Ukraine at https://apnews.com/hub/russia-ukraine Refugees arrive at the Polish border town of Przemysl after fleeing from Ukraine due to the Russian invasion By Jennifer Rigby and Manojna Maddipatla (Reuters) -A first shipment of medical aid for Ukraine will arrive in Poland on Thursday, the World Health Organization (WHO) said, as the UN agency warned of an escalating health crisis in the country following Russia's invasion. The delivery includes 6 tons of trauma care and emergency surgery supplies to help 150,000 people, but how to get them to Ukrainians in need remains unclear, WHO Director General Tedros Adhanom Ghebreyesus told a media briefing in Geneva on Wednesday. He said WHO had supplied emergency supplies to 23 hospitals in Ukraine prior to the conflict, but its supplies in Kyiv were currently inaccessible. WHO said it also had reports of imminent shortages of cancer medications and insulin for patients with diabetes in the country, as well as oxygen tanks. "There is an urgent need to establish a corridor to ensure humanitarian workers and supplies have safe and continuous access to reach people in need," Tedros said, although he said that he had not yet spoken to the Russian or Ukrainian leadership about this. Ukraine country director Jarno Habicht said that negotiations were ongoing to ensure the supplies in Poland and elsewhere reached conflict zones. The kits being sent to Ukraine include sutures and skin grafts, as well as equipment for amputations and other major trauma operations. WHO said it was also prioritizing COVID-19 therapeutics, including the new antiviral pills, to Ukraine over the last 72 hours to mitigate a potential surge. WHO also condemned unconfirmed attacks on health workers in Ukraine, and stressed that medical needs remained acute. Three major oxygen plants in the country have also closed, threatening access for patients, the body said, with at least 2,000 people requiring medical oxygen even before the conflict. WHO emergencies director Mike Ryan said: "We call on all the parties and particularly the government of Russia to reconsider his position in the light of the suffering that's being generated in Ukraine." (Reporting by Jennifer Rigby in London and Manojna Maddipatla in Bengaluru; editing by John Stonestreet and Lisa Shumaker) FILE PHOTO: New Zealand police say talks not force best way to handle anti-vaccine protest By Lucy Craymer and Praveen Menon WELLINGTON (Reuters) -Clashes erupted between New Zealand police and anti-vaccine mandate protesters on Wednesday as officers, armed with riot shields, towed away vehicles and dismantled tents set up outside the country's parliament grounds. Taking inspiration from truckers' demonstrations in Canada, hundreds of protesters have been blocking streets near the parliament in capital Wellington with trucks, cars and motorcycles for more than three weeks. Police said 60 people were arrested and they had "gained significant ground" in efforts to clear the protesters. At least three officers were injured, police said. Protesters used fire extinguishers, paint-filled projectiles, homemade plywood shields and pitchforks as weapons and a cord was set up as a trip wire, police said. Social media footage showed protesters throwing full water bottles and shouting abuse at the police. Authorities used loudspeakers to warn protesters they face arrest for trespassing on parliament grounds if they refuse to leave. Pepper spray was used against some protesters. "We have from the start endeavoured to de-escalate the situation. However, the balance has tipped and now is the time to bring this to an end," Police Commissioner Andrew Coster said at a news conference later in the day. The protest began as a stand against COVID-19 vaccine mandates but was later joined by groups calling for an end to all pandemic restrictions. "We are fighting for our standard of life. We want our sovereign right to our bodies," said Kate Siegert, who is unvaccinated, as she watched protesters move forward to block police advances. Siegert, who has made several trips from her home in Auckland to join the protest, said she lost her IT job because of mandates requiring vaccination for those who work in the health industry. At least 10 children were seen within the protest area and police said they had concerns for their wellbeing. Lisa Suasua, 55, who has been part of the protests for weeks said she will stay until the end. "They (the police) have been pretty brutal. They don't talk, they ask us to move on," she said. "They came in about 6 in the morning and started pulling up the tents in the church (grounds) that has women and children in it and just started coming through with their riot gear," she said. A country of five million people, New Zealand imposed tough anti-virus curbs that restricted its cases to just over 118,000 and 56 deaths, far lower than in many developed countries. But fuelled by the Omicron variant, daily infections are currently hovering near record levels. About 95% of eligible people are vaccinated with two doses, with shots mandatory for some staff in front-line jobs. (Reporting by Praveen Menon and Lucy Craymer; editing by Richard Pullin) Scotland will send half a million items of medical supplies to Ukraine to help those fighting a battle for democracy and freedom against the Russian invasion, Nicola Sturgeon has said. The First Minister visited an NHS Scotland distribution centre in North Lanarkshire on Wednesday to see the medical equipment being packed before it is flown to Ukraine. Ms Sturgeon said the shipment will be an initial consignment of items requested by the Ukrainian Government from NHS Scotlands reserve stockpile, and she pledged to continue providing the maximum we possibly can for the duration of the conflict. Warning the war is likely to become grimmer and more deadly in the weeks and months to come, Ms Sturgeon also issued a plea to Boris Johnson to make it easier for Ukrainians fleeing the conflict to come to the UK. Describing the UK Governments reluctance to waive visa requirements as shameful, Ms Sturgeon said: The position of the UK Government has moved in the right direction in the last couple of days, but it hasnt gone nearly far enough. I would appeal to the Prime Minister to stop moving forward incrementally, stop having to be dragged into a better position. Follow the example of the European Union whos opened its doors and said people from Ukraine will get entry and the right to stay for three years, follow the example of Ireland as they drop visa requirements, open the doors of the UK to people fleeing this horror in Ukraine and sort the paperwork later. Thats the humanitarian thing to do, its what we need to do to give life to the words of support that everybody is articulating right now. But its also the practical and necessary thing to do. I dont think any of us has properly grasped the magnitude of the population displacement that is going to come from this war. Speaking about the supply of equipment from NHS National Services Scotland at the Eurocentral industrial estate being flown to Ukraine, Ms Sturgeon said it will not leave Scotlands health service short of equipment. She said: This is part of Scotlands response, it is one way relatively small in the context of the overall magnitude of this that Scotland can help people in Ukraine right now who are fighting so bravely for the freedom and independence of their own country, but actually fighting a battle for democracy and freedom on behalf of all of us. Weve all got a duty to do everything we can to support them and make sure they prevail. Called into @NHSNSS distribution hub earlier to thank teams working hard to package essential medical supplies for transport from to . Initially, around 500,000 items eg ventilators, bandages, needles will go & well continue to do all we can to help. #StandWithUkraine https://t.co/gwzNgZ7j2M Nicola Sturgeon (@NicolaSturgeon) March 2, 2022 Ms Sturgeon also revealed her Cabinet had discussions on Monday about co-ordinating donations, money and offers of help from people across Scotland and urged people to offer what they can to support Ukrainians affected by Vladimir Putins invasion. She added: From the president to men and women in the street, their courage and bravery is awe-inspiring. They are fighting a battle for freedom and the independence of their country, but they are fighting a battle right now on behalf of all of us. This is a moment in history where its democracy versus autocracy, its freedom versus oppression, its the Putin doctrine of might is right versus the rule of international law. Theyre fighting that battle right now for all of us, for freedom, for democracy, for international law. It matters to all of us that they prevail and therefore we have got to not just send them our solidarity in words, weve got to do everything we practically can to help them in this battle. ANANTAPUR: The Eighth Century historic Hemavathi shrine with Lord Shiva as the deity in human form, originated in the Nolamba Pallava period, is continuing with its exclusive traditions during the Maha Sivarathri annual Brahmotsavam. The temple located in Amarapuram mandal of this district has devotees across Karnataka. The traditions of making offerings to the deity are interesting. No other Shiva temples across the country followed such traditions. The devotees of Lord Siddeswara Swamy highlight these traditions during Maha Sivarathri. The agni gundam created on the day after Shivaratri attracts huge crowds of devotees who would come and offer sambrani sticks into it, set in front of the temple. Thousands of kilos of sambrani sticks are offered in the agni gundam. At least 200 shops selling sambrani packs sprang up in the streets of Hemavathi during the festival time. Nagendra Prasad, devotee from Madhugiri in Karnataka, said his family would attend the event and offer sambrani sticks every year. The Endowment department made necessary arrangements. Farmers offer groundnut and other seeds kept ready for sowing along with sambrani into the gundam, in an effort to appease the deity to bless them for good crops and protection against pests and seasonal complications. Also, the devotees believe their family members will be free of skin-related problems if they offered sambrani sticks at Hemavati. While the Sidimnanu culture is widespread in Srikakulam district, a similar tradition is evident at the Hemavati shrine during the annual festival. Bale Basava, one of the Nandi statues consecrated during the 8th Century, gains attention as devotees offer bananas to Nandi instead of the lord. The bananas are put at the mouth of Nandi, seeking its blessings. Narasaiah, a devotee and activist from Amarapuram, submitted a representation to the state government, urging it to develop the historic temple by adding it to the tourism circuit involving other temples. Historian Mynaswamy pleaded that the historic Hemavathi temple be recognised by the Centre under the Monument Mira scheme, to enable it get more facilities. The historic temple has been badly neglected for decades, he lamented. Ukrainian leaders and civilians have been imploring Britain and its western allies to implement a no-fly zone in a bid to stem the Russian invasion of their country. But Boris Johnson, US President Joe Biden and other Nato leaders have been adamant that they cannot actively get involved in the fighting. Here is a look at some of the reasons the West is against policing a no-fly zone. (PA Graphics) It could lead to the Third World War The Prime Minister made clear during his trip to Estonia on Tuesday that having British service personnel enforcing a no-fly zone would be likely to mean shooting down Russian planes. He said such a move would be an escalation of the conflict, and effectively mean the UK fighting Russian forces in Ukraine. The Nato alliance, including the UK, possesses nuclear weapons, as does Russia, meaning involvement by its members could lead to nuclear warfare, with devastating consequences. General Sir Adrian Bradshaw, Natos former deputy supreme allied commander, said Nato entering the struggle would amount to 30 countries against Russia. This is the Third World War in anybodys language. We cannot afford to let that happen, he told BBC Radio 4s Today programme. (PA Graphics) Ukrainian planes would not be able to take off either The restrictions on planes taking to the air would also have to apply to Kyivs aircraft, a policy that could help Russian forces on the ground, the UK Defence Secretary said. Ben Wallace told Sky News that without Ukrainian planes monitoring activity from the sky, the Russian army would be able to drive around with impunity. Much of the damage inflicted so far has come from land-based weapons There is a question about how much difference a no-fly zone would make to the destruction being wrought by Moscow on the Ukrainian people. Many of the rockets and missiles being fired on cities such as Kharkiv are being sent from ground weapons, rather than from the air. However, that could change as Russian troops advance and, as western intelligence suggests, start to besiege urban areas. Britain is already supplying anti-aircraft weapons to Ukraine The Defence Secretary confirmed thought to be for the first time that the UK has given anti-aircraft weapons to counter Russian jets. Mr Wallace said the arms were working to frustrate the Russian air force and preventing daytime bombing raids. He told BBC Radio 4s Today programme: The reason they are doing the bombing at night is because of those weapon systems the Russians cannot fly much in the day. The Ministry of Defence previously confirmed that the UK was supplying anti-tank weapons to the Ukrainians but officials had been reluctant to publicly state what other arms have been supplied. Ukrainians fighters are not trained to fly Nato warplanes Away from calls for a no-fly zone, there has been separate pressure for the West to send Kyiv warplanes to use against Moscow. However, Ukrainian pilots are not trained to fly the majority of Nato planes. With the defensive alliance not willing to send armed forces into the country, it would be difficult to provide training to allow Ukrainian pilots to learn how to operate such aircraft. The European Union had, according to Ukrainian officials, been looking to provide as many as 70 fighter planes from the Soviet-era that Kyiv pilots are trained on. But that plan appeared to have broken down, with Politico reporting that Poland, Bulgaria and Slovakia from where the MiG-29s were meant to come from were against the idea, for security and supply reasons. Not at all. It just seems like a lot of back-and-forth talk. Yes. I'm growing very worried over what might happen. If it keeps up, I might be a little more concerned. I think there are much larger things to concern us as a country. It's hard to tell; I can't take the leader of either country seriously. Vote View Results Marysville, CA (95901) Today Clear skies this evening will give way to mostly cloudy skies overnight. Low 57F. Winds SSE at 10 to 15 mph.. Tonight Clear skies this evening will give way to mostly cloudy skies overnight. Low 57F. Winds SSE at 10 to 15 mph. Feature Your News Online $25.00 / for 30 days Highlight your business' news for just $25! We'll feature your content on our News From Local Business section & our Marketplace front page to give it maximum exposure for the next 30 days. BJP state president Bandi Sanjay Kumar along with family participates in a puja at Sriraja Rajeswari swamy temple, Vemulawada on the occasion of Shivaratri. (Photo by arrangement) Hyderabad: BJP state president Bandi Sanjay Kumar on Tuesday demanded that the state government conduct an all-party meeting to discuss the problems being faced by tenant farmers, who are deprived of benefit from any welfare scheme being extended to the agriculture sector. In an open letter to Chief Minister K. Chandrashekar Rao, the state BJP president suggested that representatives of farmers organisations and intellectuals should also be invited to the meeting. Sanjay said there were around 14 lakh tenant farmers who were dependent on cultivation taken on lease from other farmers Though tenant farmers are also depending on agriculture like any other farmers, schemes like Rythu Bandhu, Rythu Bima, Yantra Lakshmi etc are not applicable to them. They dont get the subsidy on seeds and fertilisers and are not eligible to get crop loans from banks, he said. The TS BJP president said it was unfortunate that the tenant farmers were not able to get the benefits of the welfare schemes while big farmers who had never done cultivation in their lives were getting financial assistance. Sanjay said that the 11th Five Year Plan had clearly suggested that the states should make appropriate amendments in the Tenancy Act without taking away the rights of the land owners. The amendment to the Tenancy Act is meant for ensuring security to the tenant farmers and protection of interests of the land owner, he said. However, the state government has not been providing any rights to the tenant farmers and was even refusing to recognise them as farmers. This is highly deplorable, he said. Sanjay said the National Bank for Agriculture and Rural Development (Nabard) had suggested that tenant farmers could be given crop loans at 0.25 per cent interest. The AP government had been extending welfare schemes to tenant farmers, on the lines of landowning farmers. But the TRS government has been discriminating against small and marginal farmers who are depending on tenancy cultivation. This is unpardonable, he said. YEREVAN, MARCH 2, ARMENPRESS. Candidate for President of Armenia Vahagn Khachaturyan assures that if elected, he will be the President of all citizens of Armenia. During the parliamentary debate over his candidacy, Arsen Torosyan from the Civil Contract faction said that a fake agenda has been generated. Eventually, are you going to be only our president, or the president of all citizens of Armenia?, he asked. In response, Vahagn Khachaturyan said: I am convinced that you do not want me to be only your president. Be convinced also that I dont want me to be only your president. I ought to be the President of all citizens of Armenia by the Constitution. The President of Armenia is also an institute of solving national issues, and I am going to be like that, play that role. There is no obstacle for me in acting that role. Moreover, maybe you have chosen my candidacy taking into account this fact, I assume so. In any case, you have seen in me the person who can play that role. And for our separated public today, which is in a difficult socio-economic situation, its very important for the presidential institute, that is uniting, to work. He added that when that institute works, it will be revealed what major works he has to do. However, he noted that this institute cannot solve that problems alone if there is no cooperation with the parliament, the government, the society, political forces and NGOs. I just believe and know that we can work only in this way, he said. Arsen Torosyan expressed confidence that Khachaturyan will really be the president of all citizens of Armenia, for which they have nominated his candidacy. YEREVAN, MARCH 2, ARMENPRESS. Renowned journalist of ARMENPRESS News Agency Levon Azroyan passed away at the age of 84. He died on March 1 at a Yerevan hospital where he was being treated for COVID-19 complications. Levon Azroyan was born on August 28, 1937 in Tbilisi. His journalistic career began in the 1960s when he joined the Soviet Georgia newspaper. Azroyan moved to Yerevan in 1966 and continued his career at the Armenian Telegraph Agency the predecessor of ARMENPRESS. He covered a wide range of spheres for over 30 years with the agency, before being appointed Deputy Head of the Press Service of the Armenian Government in 1993, where he worked for 5 years. Then, after some time he again returned to ARMENPRESS and continued his journalistic career until his death. Levon Azroyan taught journalism at the Armenian-Russian University of Yerevan, in a number of other private universities as well as the Gavar State University. Azroyan is the only Armenian journalist to have covered one of the Congresses of the Soviet Unions Communist Party as part of the TASS News Agencys team. He also covered the sessions of the last parliament of the USSR. He is the author of 15 books. I was destined to become a journalist, Azroyan once said in an interview in 2019 on the occasion of his 82nd birthday. I must do journalism as long as I am breathing. ARMENPRESS News Agency is expressing condolences to Levon Azroyans family and friends. The funeral ceremony will take place on March 4 at the LyuAr funeral hall, and the burial will take place on March 5 at the Spandaryan Cemetery. YEREVAN, MARCH 2, ARMENPRESS. The new meeting between the Ukrainian and Russian delegations will take place Wednesday evening in the same membership as before, Alexey Arestovich, advisor to the head of the Ukrainian Presidential Office, said, TASS reported. The second round of talks with Russia will take place later on March 2, in the same membership as before, he said, according to Hromadske TV. According to TASS information, the new round will take place in Belovezhskaya Puscha in Belarus. The first round of the Russia-Ukraine talks was held on February 28 in the Gomel region of Belarus. YEREVAN, MARCH 2, ARMENPRESS. The Armed Forces of Armenia have entered an era of very serious reforms and it is high time to entrust numerous battle-hardened, capable and young officials with high positions, Minister of Defense Suren Papikyan said in parliament during Questions Time referring to the new appointments in the General Staff of the Armed Forces. Minister Papikyan said that taking into consideration the developments in the region and around the world the reforms in the military are a necessity and delaying is inadmissible. He said that the acting chief of staff has all legal grounds for decision-making and issuing orders. I think we didnt bring any threats with this and we arent planning to. Moreover, everything is aimed for swiftly having a more motivated command staff, and this is a signal to all officers under the authority of the ministry of defense. All worthy officers will have the opportunity of holding high positions regardless of their family connections or other ties, Papikyan said. On February 24, new top appointments were announced in the military. Days later an acting Chief of General Staff was appointed. YEREVAN, 2 MARCH, ARMENPRESS. The Central Bank of Armenia informs Armenpress that today, 2 March, USD exchange rate up by 4.50 drams to 489.36 drams. EUR exchange rate up by 2.51 drams to 651.93 drams. Russian Ruble exchange rate down by 0.20 drams to 4.57 drams. GBP exchange rate up by 2.51 drams to 651.93 drams. The Central Bank has set the following prices for precious metals. Gold price up by 467.47 drams to 30239.38 drams. Silver price up by 8.09 drams to 387.67 drams. India on Tuesday sent the first tranche of humanitarian assistance comprising medicines and other relief materials to Ukraine via Poland Two Indian Air Force aircraft take off for Romania and Hungary from the Hindon airbase to bring back Indians stranded in Ukraine (ANI) New Delhi: A C-17 Globemaster aircraft of the Indian Air Force left for Romania on Wednesday morning carrying humanitarian aid to Ukraine. The aircraft is expected to bring back Indians from Romania, who exited war-hit Ukraine through its border crossings. Officials said the aircraft left for Romania early morning. India on Tuesday sent the first tranche of humanitarian assistance comprising medicines and other relief materials to Ukraine via Poland. India had decided to send the relief supplies to Ukraine to help it deal with the humanitarian situation along its border areas with tens of thousands of people attempting to flee the Russian invasion. "The prime minister noted that the first consignment of relief supplies to Ukraine to deal with the humanitarian situation on Ukraine's borders would be despatched tomorrow," the Ministry of External Affairs said on Monday. 6 flights departed for India in last 24 hours under 'Op Ganga' Six flights under India's evacuation mission 'Operation Ganga' have departed for India in the last 24 hours, External Affairs Minister S Jaishankar said on Wednesday. India launched the evacuation mission under which the Indians from Hungary, Romania, Poland and Slovakia are being brought back home after they exited Ukraine through its land border crossings. Jaishankar said the flights that departed for India in the last 24 hours included the first one from Poland. In the last few days, Indian evacuation flights were operating from Romanian capital Bucharest and Hungarian capital Budapest. "#OperationGanga developments. Six flights have now departed for India in the last 24 hours. Includes the first flights from Poland. Carried back 1,377 more Indian nationals from Ukraine," Jaishankar tweeted this morning. All arrangements made for travel of evacuated Indians from Ukraine, says Union Minister Jitendra Singh Union Minister Jitendra Singh on Wednesday received the Indians who returned on a special flight from war-hit Ukraine on Wednesday. He said that state-wise help desks have been created at the Delhi airport to help the students who came from war-hit Ukraine reach their respective homes. "We have created help desks for every state. Students are approaching the respective help desks. They are being provided refreshments. We have made arrangements for the Volvo buses so that students of other states can travel to their respective home places by road. We have made arrangements for guest houses for the students who will be going by train," Singh told the mediapersons at the Delhi Airport. Singh also said that a few of the students will be travelling by flight, including three of them headed for Srinagar. "We will be making arrangements. All the ministers are involved in making arrangements for the evacuated students," he added. Prior to leaving for New Delhi on February 28, Chief Minister K. Chand-rashekar Rao convened a meeting with Harish Rao and finance officials to discuss Budget proposals. (Photo: Facebook) HYDERABAD: With just three more days to go for the presentation of Budget 2022-23 in the Legislative Assembly on March 7, finance minister T. Harish Rao and department officials are giving final touches to present a populist budget with more allocations to welfare schemes. Several welfare schemes are facing fund crunch and the state government wants to implement welfare schemes effectively in the run-up to the 2023 Assembly polls by increasing budget allocations. Prior to leaving for New Delhi on February 28, Chief Minister K. Chandrashekar Rao convened a meeting with Harish Rao and finance officials to discuss Budget proposals. The Chief Minister is understood to have sought more funds for welfare schemes in the budget. Irrigation and agriculture remained priority for the TRS government in the previous budgets. Sources said Dalit Bandhu would get lions share of allocations in the new budget at Rs 20,000 crore. Allocations to irrigation projects, Mission Bhagiratha and other infrastructure projects are likely to come down. Higher allocations are being made to Aasara pensions, Rs 1 per kg subsidy rice, Rythu Bandhu, Rythu Bima, Kalyana Laxmi, Shaadi Mubarak, Aarogyasri, fee reimbursement, scholarships, mess and cosmetic charges for students in welfare hostels, unemployment allowance, free power to agriculture, crop loan waiver scheme etc. Lakhs of applications seeking Aasara pensions, ration cards, subsidy loans from BC, SC, ST, MBC corporations etc are pending with the government due to paucity of funds. The pending promises of 2018 Assembly polls such as Rs 1 lakh crop loan waiver, Rs 5 lakh financial assistance to poor to build house if they own a plot, reduction of age limit for Aasara pensions and unemployment allowance could not be implemented even after three years and are expected to get higher allocations. India launched the evacuation mission under which the Indians from Hungary, Romania, Poland and Slovakia are being brought back home Indian nationals evacuated from war-torn Ukraine, on board a special Air India flight arrive at the Indira Gandhi International Airport, in New Delhi. (Photo: PTI) New Delhi: Six flights under India's evacuation mission 'Operation Ganga' have departed for India in the last 24 hours, External Affairs Minister S Jaishankar said on Wednesday. India launched the evacuation mission under which the Indians from Hungary, Romania, Poland and Slovakia are being brought back home after they exited Ukraine through its land border crossings. Jaishankar said the flights that departed for India in the last 24 hours included the first one from Poland. In the last few days, Indian evacuation flights were operating from Romanian capital Bucharest and Hungarian capital Budapest. "#OperationGanga developments. Six flights have now departed for India in the last 24 hours. Includes the first flights from Poland. Carried back 1,377 more Indian nationals from Ukraine," Jaishankar tweeted this morning. Following the closure of Ukrainian airspace, India is facilitating the evacuation of stranded Indians from Ukraine through its land border crossings. The first evacuation flight carrying 219 Indians from Bucharest landed in Mumbai on Saturday evening. At a media briefing on Tuesday night, Foreign Secretary Harsh Vardhan Shringla said 26 flights have been scheduled to bring out Indian citizens over the next three days. He said apart from Bucharest and Budapest, airports in Poland and the Slovak Republic will also be used to operate the flights. "I had mentioned that we had an estimated 20,000 Indian students in Ukraine at the time that we issued our first advisory," he said. "This is the general number of people who are Indian nationals in Ukraine and from that number, approximately 12,000 have since left Ukraine, which is 60 per cent of the total number of our citizens in Ukraine," Shringla said. He further added: "Of the remaining 40 per cent, roughly half remain in the conflict zone in the Kharkiv-Sumy area and other half have either reached the western borders of Ukraine or are heading towards the western borders of Ukraine. In other words, they are generally out of the conflict areas, out of harm's way." The Indian embassy in Ukraine issued a series of advisories earlier last month requesting the people to consider leaving the country after its tensions with Russia increased. At a high-level meeting on the Ukraine crisis, PM Modi expressed deep anguish over the loss of life of an Indian citizen in Kharkiv Indian nationals, evacuated from crisis-hit Ukraine, being welcomed by relatives upon their arrival at the airport in Mumbai, Tuesday, March 1, 2022. (PTI Photo/Kunal Patil) New Delhi: All Indian nationals have left Ukrainian capital Kyiv, Foreign Secretary Harsh Vardhan Shringla said on Tuesday. At a media briefing, Shringla said he has conveyed to envoys of Russia and Ukraine India's demand for "urgent safe passage" for all Indian nationals stuck in Kharkiv and other conflict zones. He said at a high-level meeting on the Ukraine crisis, PM Narendra Modi expressed deep anguish over the loss of life of an Indian citizen in Kharkiv. "We remain very concerned over the situation in Kharkiv, Sumy and other conflict zones," Shringla said. "Over the next three days, 26 flights have been scheduled to bring back Indian citizens," he said. Shringla said a C-17 IAF aircraft is expected to fly out at 4 AM on Wednesday to Romania to repatriate our citizens. India has been operating flights to bring back Indians from Romania and Hungary after they crossed over to these countries. Shringla also said that Prime Minister Modi received a call from President of France Emmanuel Macron. Modi also spoke to the President of Poland. Apart from Bucharest and Budapest, airports in Poland and the Slovak Republic will also be used to operate evacuation flights, he said. PM Modi chairs meet on Ukraine issue Prime Minister Narendra Modi chaired a high-level meeting Tuesday evening on the Ukraine crisis with focus on the evacuation of Indian citizens from the war-hit country, official sources said. This was his fourth meeting on the Ukraine situation since Sunday. External Affairs Minister S Jaishankar and another Union minister Piyush Goyal were among those who attended the meeting besides top bureaucrats. Moscow has placed its nuclear forces on alert, in an ominous signal of a possibly prolonged confrontation As I write this, Ukraine, a nation of 44 million people, is fighting valiantly to defend its freedom and territorial integrity against Vladimir Putins war of choice for all the wrong reasons. Caught between disbelief, despair and compulsions of realpolitik, the world at large seems helpless to help beyond an expression of outrage even as the Russian armed forces continue to penetrate deep inside Ukraine. Moscow has placed its nuclear forces on alert, in an ominous signal of a possibly prolonged confrontation. Russias exclusion from the SWIFT financial system and more pledges of military support from the United States and other countries, meanwhile, is of some comfort to those who stand on the right side of history. Mr Putins repeated misadventures starting with Georgia in 2008 and the annexation of Crimea in 2014 represent a brazen infraction of the first principles of the UN Charter. Russias ambition to redraw the territorial map of Central Europe and to forcibly reconfigure its geopolitics is a case without parallel in the 21st century. The possibility of a sovereign nation losing its identity within days by deployment of brute Russian force inspired by the fading memories of imperial grandeur and superpower status of the erstwhile Soviet Union tests the assumptions of a rules-based international order. Just as the world was beginning to limp back to a semblance of normality, having suffered the consequences of a devasting Covid-19 pandemic, Russias unprovoked assault on the territorial integrity of Ukraine has ramifications for global political stability. It raises once again the profoundly important question about the role and relevance of the UN and its instrumentalities as facilitators of global peace. The escalating armed hostilities in Ukraine underscore the urgency of reform of the UN system so that the aspirations of the numerical majority are not suborned by the mighty minority through an unconscionable exercise of the veto power, seen in the West-sponsored UNSC resolution against Russia. In a bizarre scenario, the aggressor, acting as a judge in its own cause, vetoed the critical UNSC resolution to shield itself against a formal international censure for its act of war in Ukraine. Moscows justification for Ukraines demilitarisation as a measure of self-defence, through what it describes as special military operations to prevent the former Soviet republic from moving into the US-led Natos orbit, is an orchestrated case of invented injury to reclaim lost territory and restore the dented Russian prestige following the dismemberment of the USSR. Mr Putins excursions in Georgia, Crimea, Moldova and Donbas are clearly part of a time driven strategy bolstered by the China-Russian entente and facilitated by divisions in Europe to reset the imperial table and reclaim Russias lost sphere of influence. Revelling in revanchism, Mr Putin longs for Moscows old glory and wishes to rewrite the past into the future. Though Mr Putins assertion that Ukraine cannot be treated as a state independent of Russia is a historical absurdity post-1991, his boastful challenge that any country attempting to interfere will create consequences you have never seen has introduced a chilling dimension to a grim situation. An extended war in Europe could de-freeze frozen conflicts in the region and challenge the received wisdom that economic interdependence between nations could alone safeguard international peace. The trajectory of the Ukrainian conflict could rekindle international interest in nuclear capability as the ultimate deterrent and defence against threats to territorial integrity, in a setback to the nuclear disarmament process. Throughout its evolution, international law has been repeatedly called upon to defend not only its efficacy but also its existence as an instrument of world peace. The debates in the UNGA and UNSC on several defining moments bear testimony to its impotence for securing peace in zones of conflict. This reminds us we live in a world of power untamed by legal constraints. Will the world find its voice to denounce Mr Putins war gambit or yield yet again to validate the ancient Greek wisdom that those who have the odds of power exact as much as they can and the weak yield to such conditions, as they get, is the question. A resolution of the Ukraine crisis consistent with its sovereignty and territorial integrity will indeed test the tenuous balance between power and principle. It will demonstrate whether the question of justice can be divorced from the equation of power and whether in civilising itself in the use of state power, the world has progressed from force to diplomacy, from diplomacy to law. For the moment, we must accept that the repeated triumph of force over freedom in times of conflict belies the claim that the present global order is designed to secure the triumph of freedom everywhere. Europes darkest hour today must spur the world to recognise the futility of evading hard choices to sustain principles that can ensure a just and humane world order. Indian diplomacy is challenged again to navigate, as best as possible, the balance between principle and pragmatism. In asserting the inviolability of the sovereignty and territorial integrity of nations, without explicitly endorsing Russias censure in the UNSC by its abstention, Indias has been a fine balancing act. While reinforcing the sacrosanct principles of the UN Charter, India has preserved its strategic neutrality in the service of its overarching and multidimensional national interests. Jawaharlal Nehru had cautioned that no government dare do anything, which in the short or long run is not manifestly to the advantage of the country.... Prime Minister Narendra Modis implicit message to Mr Putin in his telephonic conversation and through Indias UNSC statements is to step back from the red line and work towards a negotiated settlement. Despite the formidable, vastly superior war machine at his command, Mr Putin must know in todays wired world, any act of injustice or brutality will have global ramifications. He would know from history that the cry for freedom is an unending frenzy once it seizes popular imagination and that neither the aggressor nor the victim can escape the ravages of war. He should know that just as Iraq and Afghanistan have irretrievably diminished Americas credibility as the superpower arbitrator of global peace, the perception of Mr Putin as an aggressor in Ukraine has dented his standing both in the chanceries of the world and in the collective consciousness of the people as a whole. A collective global will to stand in solidarity with the Ukrainian people fighting for their freedom and dignity will be the test of civilisational progress anchored in empathy for the oppressed and resistance against injustice. The Maronite archbishop of Damascus assures prayers for an end to the attacks on Kiev. The Syrians, he underlines, "support Russia in words, but in their hearts they are close to the Ukrainian people". The value of sharing and helping poor families. In Iraq, fasting and prayer for those suffering from "conflicts and pandemics". In Jerusalem a Mass for reconciliation. Damascus (AsiaNews) - The consequences of going through an unending conflict lasting over 11 years already ..have left the whole population in desperate poverty and misery" and "broken up under the strain of a continuous exodus, the forced dispersal of peoples and successive hardships," writes Maronite Archbishop of Damascus, Msgr. Samir Nassar, in his Lenten message sent to AsiaNews, whose title is already emblematic of the situation in Syria and the region today: "The joy of being poor". The prelate, who is well acquainted with the drama of the war because he has experienced it first hand in recent years, does not hide his fears about the attack launched by Moscow on Kiev and the risks of escalation already expressed by Christian leaders in the region, stating "In these days of the beginning of Lent we will pray strongly for peace". The Maronite archbishop of Damascus continues that the Syrian people "support Russia in words [its entry alongside the Syrian army has proved fundamental to the fate of President Assad], but in their hearts they are close [to the suffering] of the Ukrainian people". In his message, Msgr Nassar recalls the events linked to the synodal path and the meeting scheduled for mid-month, a fundamental appointment to "heal the bloody wounds" of the Syrian Church, which "have helped us recover our identity". And the mission "of listening, love, forgiveness and unity" for a "small flock" that relies on "Marian devotion and the Eucharist" to break down barriers and support renewal. "Poor families," the prelate continues, "share what they have with even poorer families: bread, medicine, shelter, what they need for school, winter clothes. This testimony, he concludes, represents "a beautiful example of solidarity and sharing" because "the joys of one become the joys of all" through "a look, a gesture, a tear, a prayer". The Chaldean Patriarch of Baghdad, Card. Louis Raphael Sako, urges people to offer fasting and Lenten prayer to those who suffer from "conflict, corruption, the Covid-19 pandemic", inviting them to take care of those who are displaced, poor, sick and those who have no work. "I invite you," he writes, "to look at these brothers and think about how to help them in order to alleviate their suffering". Finally, the cardinal recalls the divisions in Iraqi society and among Christians, exhorting them as Christ and Pope Francis ask them to "walk together (synodality)" because this is what flows "from our faith, unity in diversity" and belonging "to a common destiny". For the beginning of Lent and to coincide with the day of prayer and fasting on 2 March for peace in Ukraine, the Latin Primate of Jerusalem Pierbattista Pizzaballa celebrates the Mass of the Ashes in the co-cathedral of the patriarchate. And throughout Lent on Saturday afternoons [with the exception of 26 March and 2 April] there will be a solemn entrance to the Holy Sepulchre at the end of a procession that starts from the patriarchal see. These are intense days of events and celebrations full of special intentions "for reconciliation between the Churches" and for "an end to conflicts" starting with that in Ukraine. by Mathias Hariyadi A memorial Mass was held in Wisaksanas honour last week. He funded several Catholic schools and initiatives for the blind and visually impaired. His father lost his sight working in a mine. For years, he promoted corporate and personal social responsibility. Jakarta (AsiaNews) Card Ignatius Suharyo led a memorial Mass last week in honour of Pandji Wisaksana, a well-known Indonesian philanthropist, who passed away on 24 February. "Throughout his life, from his early years in high school to his death, Wisaksana always showed compassion towards others, giving his wealth to marginalised people, said the prelate during the service. His kindness was seen through charity work and donations to humanitarian causes. in Indonesia he was known as the father of plastic and PVC after his company, Prakarsa Pralon, introduced plastic household items to local markets. In 1961, he donated two kilos of gold to then President Sukarno when the latter wanted to erect a national monument, the Monumen Nasional (Monas), topped by a flame covered with gold foil to commemorate the Indonesian War of Independence. I was about to be fired as CEO from my company when I donated two kg of pure gold for the national monument. It was really a huge amount of money at that time, Wisaksana told AsiaNews in 2016. He also made many donations to the Catholic Church of Indonesia, including to the minor seminary in Wacana Bhakti, Archdiocese of Jakarta, the Gonzaga College, the Jesuit-run ATMI Cikarang Polytechnic Institute, and the capitals St Carolus hospital. Pandji Wisaksanas life was marked by a number of events. His father, who came from China to Bangka Island at the turn of the 20th century, went blind from working in a mine. This prompted him to devote himself to charities for the blind and the visually impaired. In 2006, along with other Indonesian entrepreneurs, he sponsored the Gerakan MataHati (Eye Movement) to pay the cost of cataract operations for the countrys poorest. Between 2008 and 2009, the Movement it paid for more than 5,000 free cataract operations in 40 hospitals across the nation, reaching 25,000 in 10 years. For Wisaksana, giving sight is not only healing the sick, but also transforming their lives. As a result, healed patients "will become more independent and will be able to do their job and take care of their families. Then Health Minister of, Dr Nina Moeleok, an ophthalmologist, welcomed the initiative. Wisaksana was convinced that personal wealth should serve others. The philanthropist constantly spoke of the need for large companies to practice social responsibility. I believe that every individual should also take personal social responsibility, he said in 2018. "My Christian faith has allowed me to become who I am today, still physically healthy and financially and 'free', he added. According to 2017estimates, the richest Indonesians held assets worth 4,000 trillion Indonesian rupiahs or US$ 280 billion. If only peoples sense of personal social responsibility led them to offer, let's say 1 per cent of their wealth, this spirit of compassion would generate so many benefits for others," he said in 2018. At the Wednesday general audience, thanks to the Poles who are taking in Ukrainian refugees. "Our prayer and fasting remind us that peace always begins with our personal conversion". In the catechesis a reflection on longevity as a symbol and an opportunity: "The arrogance of the time of the clock must be converted into the beauty of the rhythms of life." Vatican City (AsiaNews) - "So many elderly people in Ukraine are in bunkers underground in order to defend themselves. We carry the memory of this people in our hearts," said Pope Francis again openly referring to the drama of the war in Ukraine today, at the end of the Wednesday general audience in the Paul VI Hall at the Vatican. In continuity with the theme of the new cycle of catechesis dedicated to the theme of old age, the Pontiff recalled the many elderly people in Kiev and other Ukrainian cities who are currently in the basements to escape the bombings. The occasion was the personal story of the friar who read the greetings in Polish at the audience: "This friar", Francis explained, "is Ukrainian and his parents are at this moment in shelters to defend themselves from the bombs in a place near Kiev. We accompany him and all the people who are suffering from the bombings". Shortly before, he had expressly thanked Poland for opening its borders and the doors of its homes to the Ukrainian refugees: "You are generously offering them everything they need to live in dignity, despite the drama of the moment. I am deeply grateful to you and I bless you from my heart". Then, recalling the day of fasting and prayer for peace convened for today, he recalled that "peace in the world always begins with our personal conversion, the following of Christ". In his catechesis - taking his cue from the passage in Genesis that speaks of the patriarchs who lived centuries after fathering their children (Gen 5:1-5) - he proposed a reflection on longevity as a symbol and an opportunity. "It is as if the transmission of human life, so new in the created universe, demands a slow and prolonged initiation," he commented. An experience in which "mutual support between generations is indispensable, in order to decipher experiences and confront the enigmas of life". "Eevery passing epoch in human history offers this feeling again: it is as if we had to start over calmly from the beginning with our questions on the meaning of life, when the scenario of the human condition appears crowded with new experiences and hitherto unasked questions". Assimilation requires patience, but today this clashes with "thThe excess of speed, which by now obsesses every stage of our life, makes every experience more superficial and less nourishing. Young people are unconscious victims of this split between the time on the clock, that needs to be rushed, and the times of life, that require a proper leavening. A long life enables these long times, and the damages of haste, to be experienced. Hence the importance of the alliance between the two extreme generations of life - children and the elderly - to which Pope Francis himself wanted to dedicate Grandparents' Day, which the Church celebrates on 25 July. But it is a theme that has to do with all dimensions of life, including the habitat in which we live. "The modern city tends to be hostile to the elderly (and not coincidentally also to children). Everyone clings to their own little piece, floating on the flows of the market-city, for which slow rhythms are losses and speed is money. Excessive speed pulverises life, not makes it more intense. The pandemic, the Pontiff recalled, has painfully imposed a halt "on the obtuse cult of speed. And in this period, grandparents have acted as a barrier to the affective 'dehydration' of the youngest children". The "meaning of life is all of it, from birth to death, and you should be able to interact with everyone, and also to have emotional relationships with everyone, so that your maturity will be richer and stronger. And it also offers us this meaning of life, which is everything. May the Spirit grant us the intelligence and strength for this reform: a reform is needed. The arrogance of the time of the clock must be converted into the beauty of the rhythms of life. The alliance of the generations is indispensable. A society in which the elderly do not speak with the young, the young do not speak with the elderly, is a sterile society, without a future, a society that does not look to the horizon but rather looks at itself. And it becomes lonely. May God help us to find the right music for this harmonization of the various ages: the little ones, the elderly, adults, everyone together: a beautiful symphony of dialogue". Today's headlines: dozens of priests and deacons from the Moscow Patriarchate sign an appeal for an end to the "fratricidal war"; Chinese companies operating in Russia have started asking for advance payments; Pyongyang hid the invasion of Ukraine for days and blamed the imperialist West; Hong Kong activist convicted under anti-sedition law; in India four Christians arrested on false conversion charges. TURKEY - SYRIA Fighters and militiamen from northern Syria and Turkey are attempting to get to Ukraine to fight against the Russians, in revenge on Moscow, whose support for President Assad has proved crucial in the conflict. For many it is also a way to continue their fight, because of the ceasefire in place in Syria and which seems to be holding. RUSSIA - UKRAINE The Russian siege of Kharkiv was carried out using tactics used in Chechnya in the 1990s, from multiple "Grad" rocket launchers and more powerful "Uragan" and "Smerc" rocket launchers, to "fougas" areobombs dropped from aircraft. Meanwhile, 26 priests and deacons of the Moscow Patriarchate have issued a public appeal for an end to the "fratricidal war" in Ukraine. GEORGIA - KYRGYZSTAN Ukrainian President Volodymyr Zelenskyj has summoned the ambassadors from Kyrgyzstan and Georgia for consultations. The talks focused on the positions taken by the governments of the two countries, which have refused to condemn the Russian invasion of Ukraine. CHINA - RUSSIA Chinese companies operating in Russia are demanding advance payments for products to be imported, especially in the Sverdlovsk region in the Urals. This was reported by the president of the Sverdlovsk industrialists Ilja Tyscenko. China is one of the main trade players in the area. NORTH KOREA Pyongyang, an ally of Moscow, waited days before informing the nation, starting with party leaders in a confidential form down to local officials, of the Russian invasion of Ukraine. The operation began on the 24th, but only two days later did the North Korean leadership release the first details. And they blamed the West for starting the war, for imperialist policies. HONG KONG Pro-democracy activist Tam Tak-chi, former vice-president of People Power, has been charged under the colonial-era Anti-Sedition Law. This morning, Judge Stanley Chan found him guilty on 11 counts and acquitted on three others. The hearing was adjourned until 31 May, when the court will hand down the sentence. INDIA Four Christians, including two pastors, were arrested on false conversion charges. The arrest took place on 19th February in the state of Madhya Pradesh. Police raided during a prayer ceremony and picked up seven people, releasing three of them in the following days. A believer who went to the police station to demand the release of all members was threatened with death. CAMBODIA None of the 10 Asean nations are classified as "free" in Freedom House's 2022 report on political rights and individual freedoms. Singapore, Malaysia, the Philippines and Indonesia are classified as "partly free". Myanmar, Laos and Vietnam received black jerseys, while Cambodia - the country's president - did little better, with its government protesting against the erroneous rating. by John Ai The deaths have raised concerns about internet censorship and the protection of workers' rights. China's high-tech giants face the double challenge of strict government regulation and stagnant economic growth. Rome (AsiaNews) - The deaths from overwork of two young Chinese men employed by two Chinese internet giants have drawn public attention to the protection of workers' rights in the face of the power of big-tech companies and the state. Despite state censorship, the two cases have inflamed the blogosphere. In early February, the head of the censorship unit in Wuhan (Hubei) of video-sharing giant Bilibili died of a brain haemorrhage. Guan (his nickname) died at his home after several days of overtime put in during the Lunar New Year holiday. A web post says that Guan worked 12 hours a day for five consecutive days, usually covering night shifts. In posts published anonymously, Bilibili workers complain that censorship control officers are forced to work up to 12 hours a day, with day and night shifts to ensure there are 24-hour checks. The comments accuse the company of censoring information about Guan's death: Bilibili prohibits its staff from publishing information that puts it in a bad light. The company denied that Guan worked more than eight hours a day. The worker's family revealed that Bilibili did not even offer condolences. In response to the criticism, the company later apologised and announced that it would hire 1,000 more censorship staff to ease the pressure of the job. In China, video-sharing services on the web are required by the authorities to check content before it can be viewed online. Chinese internet giants are developing artificial intelligence technology to automatically filter out politically sensitive content, as well as violence and pornography. In order to avoid misjudgements and omissions of artificial intelligence, most censorship tasks are however done by human workers. Typically, each censor worker has to watch thousands of videos or posts per day. Failure to recognise sensitive content can lead to dismissal. Newly hired controllers undergo rigorous training. They are also obliged to sign a non-disclosure agreement. Due to the relatively low salary and strict job requirements, the employee turnover rate is high. Most of the big Chinese web companies are concentrated in Beijing. In order to recruit examiners and lower costs, they usually outsource censorship or place the team of controllers in cities such as Jinan (Shandong) and Wuhan, where salaries are lower and there are universities. The other death from overwork involved a software engineer at ByteDance, the company that owns the popular socialTikTok. The 28-year-old died after more than 40 hours in hospital, leaving behind a wife who was two months pregnant. Wu collapsed in the company's gym on 21 February. His wife said he worked a lot of overtime and blamed the company for not helping rescue him. The widow has no income and no job, but a home loan to pay off; she wants to return the home to get a refund. At first, the rapid expansion of the internet industry attracted young graduates from the country's top universities. They were looking for a good income, seeing the heavy shifts and intense pressure as acceptable. An unwritten rule is that employees are fired before the age of 35. Chinese hi-tech companies pride themselves on the young average age of their workers, often under 30. However, the Chinese Communist Party is tightening its control and surveillance over the web giants. State-controlled companies or government agencies hold shares in these groups and make decisions. For example, as TikTok is going viral globally, the Chinese authorities disadvantage foreign companies that intend to launch public offers to buy it. The regime wants to ensure control over user data and above all the obedience of the hi-tech elite. Faced with increasing state regulation and shrinking domestic consumption due to the pandemic, web companies are laying off employees en masse to save costs. On the other hand, with a higher level of education, the protests of young people working for technology companies are more widely heard, and the '996' working hours (9am to 9pm, six days a week) are boycotted. The authorities and the official media say that the 996 shift is illegal, but the companies are rarely punished and many young people still choose to put up with this exploitative situation. The developments in Ukraine are keeping Indians glued to their TV sets. Even Hindi television channels abandoned their coverage of the last phases of the endless Uttar Pradesh polls to concentrate on the war in Ukraine. Informed sources indicate that the BJP is upset as its electoral strategy, to recover ground lost in the first few phases, is getting derailed. The Union governments concern, ever aware of public perceptions, has increased exponentially as some TV channels began carrying telephone interviews with students stuck in Ukrainian cities or border crossing-points, in western Ukraine, with Poland, Hungary and Romania. The news became grimmer when the death was reported of a student in Kharkiv, the second-largest city, which lies close to the Russian border. The Opposition, naturally, jumped on the government, alleging delayed responses, lack of preparation and poor anticipation of how the situation developed. The facts are that when the Indian embassy in Kyiv issued the advisory on February 15, its language was still recommendatory, not definitive. Nine days still remained for the Russians to launch the offensive. First, did the Indian government not take the warnings emanating from none less than US President Joe Biden seriously enough, that were repeated on the day of the advisory, that Russia was readying to attack? It was also known that on the pretext of a joint military exercise, Russia had moved a large number of its troops to Belarus, which nestles on Ukraines northern border. These continued to stay there even after the exercise ended. Second, the external affairs ministry needed to have got its embassy in Kyiv to develop detailed contingency plans for students in that country. An important point emerging now is that students in many places were restrained by their universities from leaving due to the likely educational impact. A threat from the embassy that the university may be blacklisted for future recruitment would have settled the matter. It is possible the Ukrainian government too may have discouraged an exodus of foreigners as it causes panic among their population. Thus, the initial step should have been to send extra hands to Kyiv to deal with a possible crisis later. Third, having sold Air India, the ticket tariff had to be settled at the very start. When the airline started scalping students with reportedly three times the normal charge, government was still in slumber. Many students would have ruled out travel to India as the amounts were beyond their budget. Belatedly, the government decided to pick up the ticket tab, but by then the crisis had turned into war. Finally, there is the diplomatic dimension. Seeing that India has sat on the fence and abstained on two UN Security Council resolutions, did South Block worry that strongly urging students to leave may upset the Russians as that would have appeared like accepting Western charges against Vladimir Putin as the likely aggressor? Linked to this is the delay in having a detailed contingency plan for the best and worst-case scenarios. Missions have earlier done this, but critical to success is time and imagination. As with the 9/11 attacks on America in 2001, which was not an intelligence failure but rather a failure of imagination as no one linked Arabs learning to fly, which the FBI knew, with Al Qaeda whispers and the assassination of Ahmad Shah Masood. The government was offering a rolling defence that evolves from day to day. It began with pro-BJP guests on television demonising Ukraine and the West as provoking Mr Putin with Natos expansion. But Ukraines application has been pending for years. Then came the charge that Ukraine was unhelpful to India after the 1998 nuclear tests. But the United States, Japan and Australia were even more scathing on that, even sanctioning India. Then why join the Quad with them? Most of the retired military officers had a pro-Russia tilt, many having spent their careers working with the Soviets and their equipment. Also, it was argued that Chanakya would be happy at Indias pragmatism by being equidistant and neutral. But is that not what Jawaharlal Nehrus non-alignment was all about? The last argument misses an important point. The cardinal principles on which the post-World War II security order and the United Nations was created. Article 2(4) of the UN Charter reads: All members shall refrain in their international relations from the threat or use of force against the territorial integrity or political independence of any state, etc. It is preceded by Article 2(3), which lays down that all international disputes shall be settled by peaceful means. Its not clear which part of this Russia, a permanent and veto-wielding UN member, does not understand. President Putins claims flow from paranoia, a desire to turn back the pages of history and an anachronistic desire to recreate the Soviet Union. This brings the issue of Indian votes. As the worlds largest democracy, albeit falling in global rankings of liberal democracies, how does failing to uphold the UN Charter square with Indias aspirations to be a UNSC permanent member? What was Indias quarrel with China over Doklam? Was it not that China was breaching Bhutanese sovereignty to access it? Is it not possible that China can use Russia-like pluck and revised history to lay claim to large parts of Nepal and march up to the Terai region? The Narendra Modi government must, as the Americans say, put their money where their mouth is. Attending Democracy Summits while appeasing autocratic rulers plunging the world into chaos over dubious claims does not raise Indias prestige. It compromises it. If Germany can abandon the Nord Stream-II gas pipeline, Western oil giants write off their Russian investments and Europe unite against aggression, India also needs to stop holding its nose and breathe with them. Athens, TX (75751) Today Considerable cloudiness. A stray shower or thunderstorm is possible. Low around 70F. Winds SSE at 10 to 15 mph.. Tonight Considerable cloudiness. A stray shower or thunderstorm is possible. Low around 70F. Winds SSE at 10 to 15 mph. kW Joining the brands subcompact crossover family, the 2022 Arkana R.S. Line brings a number of sporty design elements, like the specific front bumper with an aero blade, skid plates at both ends, and gun metal grey door trims. For the wheels, the French automaker chose a set of diamond-cut 18s, which contribute to the overall looks.Opening the door of the new Arkana R.S. Line will reveal the dedicated entry sills. Once inside, users will see the leather and perforated leather-wrapped steering wheel that has an R.S. Line badge, as well as the red and grey contrast stitching. Things such as the carbon-look trim, and alloy sport pedals are on deck too, as well as more R.S. logos.Further setting it apart from the rest of the family are the sunroof, 10.25-inch digital instrument cluster, and auto-dimming rearview mirror with a frameless design, offered at no extra cost. Active emergency braking, rear cross-traffic alert, and adaptive cruise control are standard too. Those interested in this model can specify it in a metallic paint finish, for an extra AU$750 (equal to US$545), and with a contrasting black roof that will set them back another AU$600 (US$435).Powering Renaults Arkana R.S. Line is the 1.3-liter TCe gasoline engine. Compliant with the Euro 6 emission standard, it develops 115(156 ps / 154 hp) at 5,500 rpm and 262 Nm (193 lb-ft) of torque at 2,250 rpm, returning 6 liters/100 km (39.2 mpg US) on average.Pricing kicks off at AU$42,090 (US$30,565), making it AU$3,500 (US$2,540) more expensive than the Intens and AU$7,500 (US$5,445) pricier than the Zen. Renewable energy sources such as solar power and wind power have been on the rise over the past years, and todays advanced technology can expand their potential even more. Solar heat can be used to convert CO2 into synthetic fuel for aircraft, and a Swiss company called Synhelion had developed the technology for taking this process to the next level.Placed on top of state-of-the-art solar towers, this system delivers solar heat at very high temperatures, turns it into syngas (a mix of hydrogen and carbon) with the help of a thermochemical reactor, and then converts the gas into fuel through standard gas-to-fuel technology. This solutions main innovation is that it converts sunlight into the highest process heat on the market, more than 1,500 degrees Celsius (2,700 Fahrenheit). Also, this unique solution provides thermal energy storage for 24/7 operations.Synhelion will build the first facility for solar fuel production in the world this year, in Julich, Germany. Also called solar kerosene, this innovative fuel will start to be used as soon as 2023, thanks to a recent partnership between the Swiss fuel company, Lufthansa Group, and the SWISS airline. SWISS will therefore become the first airline in the world to use solar fuel. The two aviation companies will also support Synhelion in expanding its production facilities to Spain as well.Solar kerosene is described as an alternative to fossil fuel thats both efficient and economically viable while also releasing only as much CO2 as it went into its production process. For SWISS and Lufthansa, the use of solar fuel is an important step on their path to carbon neutral operations, and for aviation itself, it could become a major breakthrough. But most of the drones weve seen so far in action are of the kind that still need human operators. Whenever a drone is flying, somewhere in a bunker a soldier is directing it to its target, telling it what to do and when to shoot.That will probably change in the not-so-distant future, as more and more defense contractors are looking into giving drones more decision-making capabilities . For now, these efforts seem to be contained to drones meant to support manned aircraft, but its not hard to imagine them spilling over to other areas.Several companies are currently engaged in efforts of teaching drones how to fly alongside piloted aircraft. BAE Systems , for instance, calls this Manned Unmanned Teaming (MUM-T) technology, and it recently demonstrated it at an undisclosed Department of Defense flight test range, with help from the Strategic Capabilities Office (SCO).According to the defense contractor, the test had multiple unmanned military platforms (unclear what platforms were used) in the air at the same time, flying with real mission sensors. Alongside them, an undisclosed manned military aircraft took to the sky, to execute a combat mission.According to BAE, the team of drones worked together to develop and execute autonomously the necessary tactics to complete the mission. The pilot in the fighter jet used a human-machine interface to monitor the mission of the drones. During the test, the pilot had the capability to interact with the drones as desired.The exact targets of the test are not public, but the parties involved claim they have achieved the primary goal of demonstrating collaborative mission execution in an operationally representative environment.The development of autonomous technology is crucial to protect our warfighters against emerging threats, said in a statement Ehtisham Siddiqui, vice president and general manager of Controls and Avionics Solutions at BAE Systems.This flight test demonstrates our teams commitment to accelerate the deployment of reliable and innovative manned-unmanned teaming solutions for mission success.When fully matured, the MUM-T concept should allow airborne fleets to rapidly add capabilities to quickly enhance mission effectiveness and counter adversary technology.In theory, the technology could be used for civilian applications as well. BAE envisions a world where swarms of collaborative drones could be deployed for firefighting, search and rescue operations, hazmat incidents, and even law enforcement.At the time of writing, there is no telling when the sight of drones flying alongside piloted aircraft would become a common one in the skies of our world. The Raptor was born in the hangars of Lockheed Martin at the end of the 1990s, and was introduced into service in 2005. Six years later, production for it stopped, and the world focused its attention on another Lockheed beast, the F-35 Lightning II.The short production life of the Raptor means that only a tad under 200 of them were ever made (183 are currently in service, and only America has them). Being so few, and having appeared at a time when major conflicts were already being taken care of by other airplanes, it didnt get to prove itself in combat all that much.That doesnt make it any less impressive, though. Meant to provide air dominance, the Raptor is powered by a pair of Pratt & Whitney turbofan engines with afterburners. Each can develop 35,000-pounds of thrust, pushing the aircraft to a top speed of Mach 2 (1,534 mph/2,469 kph), and making it one of the fastest military airplanes around.And its capable when it comes to weaponry, too. If push comes to shove, it can hit targets with the power of a 20-millimeter cannon, two AIM-9 heat-seeking air-to-air missiles, and six AIM-120 radar-guided air-to-air missiles.As it stands, the F-22 is for now just a great sight in the sky. The U.S. Air Force (USAF) knows this and misses no opportunity to advertise the beast, through constant releases of photos of it in action.Todays F-22 treat comes in the form of a Raptor assigned with the 1st Fighter Wing, captured as it was taking off from the Joint Base Langley-Eustis in Virginia, out on a mission to support a deployment to the United Arab Emirates.It was a nighttime takeoff, from a friendly base located in friendly neighborhoods, and that means the lights on both the airplane and the air base were shining bright. Or, sort of, as the angle from which the photo was taken shows the ground lights heavily distorted by the hot exhaust of the two turbofan engines, looking like fluffy balls of light coming out its rear.As for the 1st Fighter Wing (part of the Ninth Air Force), it is a unit set up right after the war, in 1947. Currently headquartered at Langley Air Force Base in Virginia, it is fielding one third of all the F-22 Raptor fleet.The Wing also fields Northrop T-38s, which it uses as adversaries in training missions. The Blue Oval is not a major presence in Russia. As per its own admission, it has significantly wound down its operations in the country in recent years, and at this time it was only running commercial van manufacturing and sales through a joint venture with a local partner, called Sollers Ford.In support of the measures taken against Russia , Ford announced on March 1 it is suspending operations until further notice.As part of the global community, Ford is deeply concerned about the invasion of Ukraine and the resultant threats to peace and stability. The situation has compelled us to reassess our operations in Russia, the carmaker said in a statement.In recent years, Ford has significantly wound down its Russian operations, which now focus exclusively on commercial van manufacturing and Russian sales through a minority interest in the Sollers Ford joint venture. Given the situation, we have today informed our JV partners that we are suspending our operations in Russia, effective immediately, until further notice.The Sollers joint venture, which makes and sells the Transit , employs around 3,700 workers, and its unclear how the halt of operations will affect them.Ford does not have significant assets in Ukraine either, but says it does have a strong contingent of Ukrainian nationals working at Ford around the world. The company plans to support the nation by giving a $100,000 donation to the Global Giving Ukraine Relief Fund for humanitarian aid to assist Ukrainian citizens and families who have been displaced during this crisis. The X-29 forward-swept wing prototype was never meant to be much more than a technological demonstrator of what must have seemed like a very forward-thinking design, pun obviously intended. In truth, the forward-swept wing concept had its origins, not with NASA, Grumman, or any American. Instead, it was the brainchild of German engineers just prior to the end of the Second World War.The Junkers Ju 287 and OKB-1 EF 131 prototypes attempted to judge the benefits of a slightly swept-forward wing system. It was hoped that such a design would have structural and performance advantages over conventional designs. It was thought that a swept-forward wing would lack the need for heavy wing-spar bracing, saving weight and fuel in the process.In the end, these tests were inconclusive before the end of the war brought the projects to a close. Nearly 40 years later, Grumman would once again test the metal of the forward-swept wing concept.The X-29, codenamed project G-172 initially would find components from other more standard fighter jets in its construction. The Northrop F-5 would provide the forward fuselage and front landing gear arrangement, for example.This would trick some in the press to believe that the X-29 was a direct descendant of the F-5, which isn't the case. Everything behind the forward fuselage was brand new and designed by Grumman's team of engineers. Dubbed X-29 just before flight testing began, the new aircraft was absolutely stunning to behold.Its 33-degree forward-swept wings were quite unlike any design almost anyone had ever seen before. There was fear before testing had even begun that the aircraft might never make it off the ground. This wasn't an unfounded fear, as the X-29 maintained a center of gravity aft of the aerodynamic center, making it hilariously unstable during flight.In fact, if not for the triple-redundant digital and analog computers making more than 40 adjustments to aircraft controls per second, the X-29 would simply fall out of the sky like a brick. Powering the craft was a single General Electric F404 afterburning turbojet engine.The very same is found in the F-117 Nighthawk stealth fighter and F/A-18 Super Hornet. As clunky and difficult as the design may have seemed, the X-29 became the first forward swept-winged aircraft to reach supersonic speeds in level flight.Even so, it was decided that the X-29's wing design didn't have enough of an advantage over contemporary delta-wing designs. The project was retired in 1991, ostensibly banishing it to the pages of history, never to be appreciated again. That was until a small team of game devs from Namco decided the X-29 would be the perfect platform for a new game asset.The X-29 would feature in full fighter jet configuration in the Ace Combat series of video games, beginning with Ace Combat 2 in 1997. It would appear again in Ace Combat 5: The Unsung War, and Ace Combat Zero: The Belkan War on Playstation consoles.The X-29 became a playable aircraft in the now-defunct Ace Combat Infinity for the Playstation 3 in 2014. Apart from less notable appearences in the Ace Combat: Joint Assault mobile game.It may be downright silly to see the prototype X-29 in our timeline duke it out with MiG-29s, F-18s and F-14s while armed to the teeth with missiles in Ace Combat. But one thing certainly isn't up for debate, the full-military skins Project Aces decided upon for this plane look certifiably gorgeous. It almost makes us wish the U.S Air Force had taken a chance on the design in our own timeline. In terms of motorcycle manufacturers, we now have Harley-Davidson, one of Americas most beloved brands, suspending its operations in Russia, as well as all shipments of new bikes.After the announcement, shares for the motorcycle giant fell 3% during afternoon trading, which was more or less in line with Wall Streets other indexes and how theyve responded to the war in Ukraine, reports Reuters Harley-Davidson has yet to provide the media with additional details on the suspension or the exact size of its operations in Russia.Whats interesting, and more than a little ironic, is that Russias president, Vladimir Putin, has been photographed in the past (2010) while riding a Harley-Davidson motorcycle and in Ukraine of all places, together with several other bikers. Meanwhile, Europe remains Harleys second-largest market for retail sales, after the United States.According to senior analyst and partner at Edgewater Research, Chris Hodson, the Milwaukee-based firm has about 10 dealerships in Russia, while their website states that they have no fewer than 369 dealerships across the European Union.Bikes that were originally scheduled to land in Russia will now likely get rerouted elsewhere, stated Hodson.Russia is not that significant of a market to begin with, he said. Any units that have been earmarked for Russia can be diverted elsewhere.As for other companies that are also pulling their resources out of Russia, Volvo announced just yesterday that it would stop any more shipments from going there, while the likes of General Motors, Ford and BMW have also idled their operations. Naturally, the Hemi cars are among the most sought-after and expensive, mainly because Dodge didn't make too many of them. On the flip side, many Chargers, especially those fitted with smaller engines, are rotting away in junkyards. What you see here is a non-Hemi 1970 hard-top that has soldiered on for 52 years in amazing condition.Tucked away in a shop somewhere in Texas, this fabulous survivor was discovered by YouTube's "Heart of Texas Barn Finds and Classic's" while visiting a junkyard to pick up a 1975 Ford Gran Torino "Starsky & Hutch" car. Far from being a barn find, this Charger likely spent many years in storage, but it was kept in pristine condition all this time.And I'm not talking about a classic that has been repainted or restored. This baby still flaunts its factory black paint. And the black vinyl top you're looking at is also original. The same goes for the interior, which hasn't been fixed or upgraded since the day it left the factory. Shockingly enough, the upholstery appears to be new.Of course, the long, vented hood hides a numbers-matching 383-cubic-inch (6.3-liter) V8 engine. Granted, it's not the mighty 426-cubic-inch (7.0-liter) Hemi or a 440-cubic-inch (7.2-liter) RB, but look how clean it is. In fact, you can hit the 13-minute mark of the video below to hear it roar like it's 1970 again.And even if it's not a Hemi, this Charger still has plenty of grunt spinning the rear wheels. Back in 1970, Dodge offered two versions of the mill, starting with a two-barrel carburetor good for 290 horsepower. The four-barrel version came with 330 horses on tap, only 60 below the 440 V8. This Charger comes with the latter.But none of that matters anyway. What matters here is that this 1970 Charger is one of the best survivors out there. It's a car that will win prizes when it hit auto shows and will likely sell for more than $200,000 as classic car prices continue to go up. As of this writing, this low-mileage muscle car (51,000 miles / 82,077 km) is valued at around $160,000.Check it out in the video below. The Charger shows up at the 12-minute mark. In the current automotive world, you wont find many CEOs as popular as these two blokes. Ones known for an insane amount of stubbornness regarding propulsion systems. At the same time, the other has gained fame by putting performance and next-level technology as top priorities. Theyre both amazing in their own way. Musk and von Koenigsegg did a lot for the car industry and its people.With this information in mind, its nice to hear what two greats think of one another, especially when its done in a friendly, laid-back environment. Christian von Koenigsegg talked with Jason Stein on his podcast about many things. However, one of the topics involved this perception that the media has about the CEOs. The host told the Swedish man that major newspapers are writing pieces about him and Elon Musk where they are praised as worth watching. When asked what it means to him to be put so close to Teslas boss, he said, its a great honor.Christian von Koenigsegg pointed out that he found Elon Musk to be interesting since his early days of worldwide celebrity as an accomplished businessman but admits he didnt quite catch Teslas man with the plan when he was at PayPal. He found out about him later when he read an article that said Musk was now getting into the rocket business. Its amazing what he has achieved, said Koenigseggs founder and CEO. Im a great fan.Ive been following him quite closely. Hes a guy with a similar mindset. Anything is possible. Maybe I wouldve gotten into rockets too if I sold something for a billion dollars. () I managed to buy some shares close to Tesla s IPO and it was an easy way to make money, followed up Christian von Koenigsegg.Hes also confident that electrification is needed and reaffirms his commitment to innovate in this sector. Exactly how this will happen remains a mystery, as he also underlines renewable fuels are something he focuses on. Koenigsegg will go fully electric, but not in the short term. The Swedish CEO doesnt want to pick between performance and enough range.If it were for us to guess, then we would say that a completely electric Koenigsegg would be something that might end up changing industry standards. Their push is not focused on speed only, but also on high-end technology. There's also a chance the Swedis carmaker will use hydrogen, but there's nothing that confirms this - yet. As it turns out, one of those lobbyists is a director of a company that produces such additives, The Guardian reported. Sources revealed that Howard Cox, who also runs the FairFuelUK campaign, is a key player with the APPG (All-Party Parliamentary Group).In 2021, the group requested ministers in the UK to urgently look at fuel additives since they can help reduce emissions by more than 50%. The group wanted the proposed 2030 ban on new gas and diesel-powered vehicles dropped.In the U.S., California faced a similar battle with sustainable renewable diesel. Still, it cut support after a study emerged that the fuel falls short on one measure of reducing pollution in diesel-powered engines.The UK is desperately working to shift from fossil fuels to electric power by 2030. The ride hasnt been rosy so far, with the most influential trade association SMMT (Society of Motor Manufacturers and Traders) citing infrastructural shortages, among other teething issues An investigation conducted by DeSmog, an environmental research group, found out that Cox is a director of a company that markets a fuel additive. His involvement in the company and firm standpoint on the 2030 ban raises concerns of conflict of interest. Concerned parties feel he did not make his commercial interests public opposing the ban, raising the question of whether he has anything to gain from it.In response to The Guardian, Cox rejected any conflict of interest, saying he only supports catalysts (a form of fuel additives), which wouldnt benefit him financially if accepted.Despite taking a dip last year, the UK auto industry is already experiencing a surge in electric vehicle production. According to the SMMT, EVs and hybrids account for nearly a quarter of cars produced in the UK in 2021.Despite opposition from various factions, microchip shortage, and a drop in vehicle production, the UK seems to be on the clear to achieve its gasoline and diesel-engine ban target by 2030. After just two years since Hyundai Motor Group launched its urban air mobility division, Supernal hits a milestone on the way to commercial eVTOL (electric vertical takeoff and landing) operations. The City of Miami wants to become an example when it comes to innovative transportation, and Supernal will help it implement an AAM (advanced air mobility) strategy. 7 photos Thanks to the collaborative effort of Lockheed Martin, NOAA, and NASA, the satellite took off on March 1 from Floridas Space Coast. Once it reaches geostationary orbit, its name will change from GOES-T to GOES-18 and it will take over the duties of GOES-17.Built by Lockheed Martin , the GOES-T satellite was designed to make life easier for meteorologists in the United States, being designed to collect and share critical weather data from over the West Coast of the U.S. In addition to monitoring the weather, the GOES-T will also identify volcanic eruptions, measure land and sea surface temperature, keep an eye for solar flares that could interfere with telecommunications on our planet, and more.The spacecraft is scheduled to enter operations only in January 2023 as it will first undergo an on-orbit checkout of its instruments and systems. And while were on the subject, the GOES-T features two high-tech instruments.One of them is a Geostationary Lightning Mapper (GLM) that Lockheed Martin says its a first-of-its-kind and can track lightning in real-time, helping meteorologists to identify threatening storms. The other instrument is a Solar Ultraviolet Imager (SUVI) that measures the sun in extreme ultraviolet wavelength range, helping specialists predict solar events that could disrupt navigation systems or power utilities on Earth.The GOES-T is the size of a small school bus and was assembled by Lockheed Martin in Colorado. It was transported to the Kennedy Space Center in Florida in November 2021, onboard Air Forces largest airlifter, the C-5 Galaxy. It has a payload of five helicopters and can transport cargo on longer distances than any other aircraft. kWh EV In a Form 8-K submitted to the U.S. SEC (Securities and Exchange Commission), the startup said that it recently signed an agreement with a fourth automotive original equipment manufacturer (OEM), a top-ten automaker by global revenues. It then provided the list that contains those automakers.Volkswagen tops the index, followed by Toyota, Daimler, Ford, Honda, General Motors, Mitsubishi, SAIC Motors, BMW, and Nissan. Stellantis would appear right behind Toyota if it was included in the list and not only received an honorable mention. Thankfully, the Form 8-K in question brings way more information to help us point to the right company. If only that were enoughApart from mentioning that QuantumScape and this new automaker will collaborate on the validation and testing of Companys solid-state battery cells, the form states that this mysterious OEM only decided to sign this agreement after testing QuantuScapes cells in its own labs.The solid-state platform startup will provide its A samples to this company for it to include them in pre-production vehicles. If they achieve satisfactory validation of certain milestones, QuantumScape commits to reserving at least five MWh of capacity from the QS-0 pre-pilot production line facility for this OEM.The QS-0 factory being in San Jose, California, shows that this automaker is either American or has a plant in the U.S. Apart from SAIC Motors, thats the case for all the top-ten OEMs on the list. Not even the last piece of information there helps us decide which company is now a QuantumScape potential customer.If everything goes as planned, QuantumScape and this new company will make a joint venture to produce solid-state cells. Such a factory will manufacture up to 50 GWh per year in batteries for the EVs this OEM intends to sell. Again, it could be anyone among the top-ten carmakers by revenue, but we can do an exercise.At first, solid-state cells should be installed on more expensive cars. Five MWh for vehicles with 100-battery packs corresponds to 50 units. In other words, QS-0 production will be for prototypes, possibly for developing a singleOn the other hand, the 50-GWh factory would allow this carmaker to produce 500,000 units of such an electric car. We could have even more if the battery packs were smaller than 100 kWh. Thats a massive volume. Ford, General Motors, and Stellantis could fit perfectly in the description.We will not know which carmakers QuantumScape is talking about until they are ok to comment on that. At this point, only Volkswagen came public about its investments in the startup. Ford and GM work with other battery startups, such as Solid Power and SES, but that does not mean they have any exclusivity agreement with them. After all, we are talking about battery suppliers: those offering the best solutions at lower prices will sell more, simple as that.QuantumScape believes its solid-state platform will be ready for production by 2025. The startup prefers to talk about a platform because it is not tied to any specific chemistry, meaning we could have an LFP cell with QuantumScapes solid electrolyte. It seems well have to wait quite a bit to learn which carmakers are associated with the startup. Royal Navy personnel and ships in the Gulf have been pushing the tech boundaries in the region's largest military workout, #IMX22 / #CutlassExpress Drones and autonomous craft were tested extensively aboard @RFALymeBay 1 of 5 UK vessels taking part. ????https://t.co/7gYVqF1yLb pic.twitter.com/9fnVb4qgnD Royal Navy (@RoyalNavy) March 2, 2022 More than 50 ships and 80 uncrewed systems from ten nations participated in the combined International Maritime Exercise. The exercise lasted two and a half weeks and it was carried out in the Red Sea, Gulf, Horn of Africa, and Africa's eastern coast, to strengthen relationships and put diverse systems and ways of working to the test.The Royal Nav y's presence in the Gulf was underlined by the minehunter command ship RFA Lyme Bay, which proved critical not just as a hub for the minehunters but also as a testing ground for several autonomous technologies.The 700X Naval Air Squadron launched the Puma drones from the vessel to test the machine's capabilities. The unmanned system weighs only 15 lbs (7 kg) and can be operated from vessels with or without a flight deck. The 700X has tested Pumas before in the UK, in the Mediterranean, and Arctic, but this was the first time they were operated in the Gulf.The hand-launched unmanned system was tasked with the surveillance and intelligence gathering, acting like the "eyes in the sky" for the ships.Speaking of the ships, the Royal Navy also came with the MAST-13 robot boat nicknamed Madfox (short for Maritime Demonstrator For Operational eXperimentation). Developed by aerospace and defense company L3Harris, the 41-foot (13-meter) long high-speed vehicle is capable of operating autonomously. It was given to the Royal Navy a year ago to be utilized for a variety of tasks, including surveillance and force protection.The crewless systems that took part in the exercise were coordinated under the banner of Task Force X. Its deputy commander was the Royal Navy's Commander Antony Crabb, who believes that the International Maritime Exercise 2022 showed the participants what might become regular sights in the Gulf in just five years.He predicted that "we will see ships embarking uncrewed systems for missions as easily and seamlessly as embarking a helicopter or seaboat today perhaps in addition to or perhaps instead of those crewed capabilities." EV One day later, Tesla reviewed the suppliers findings, including the conditions impact on airbag performance. Somewhat unexpected of thespecialist, which is known for dragging its feet when it comes to safety-related issues, Tesla decided on a recall that very same day. Happily for both parties, no warranty claims or injuries have been reported thus far.The recalled components are listed under two part numbers: 1608265-00-A/B for the left-hand curtain airbag assembly and 1608266-00-A/B for the right-hand curtain airbag assembly. According to documents filed with the federal watchdog, a delayed or otherwise improper deployment of the side curtain airbag in a collision could increase the risk of occupant injury.Not wanting to repeat the fiasco that brought Takata to its knees, Joyson Safety Systems has added an additional weight inspection to reject any inflator assembly that doesnt meet the specified value range. The recalled vehicles, namely nine Model S electric sedans, were produced between July 2021 and February 2022. The Texas-based automaker will replace the faulty curtain airbag assemblies with all-new units that meet specifications.Tesla service centers have been already informed of this recall campaign, yet owners have to wait until April 22th to be notified by snail mail.Manufactured in Fremont, California with subpar quality control, the Model S is currently going for $94,990 for the base spec that used to be known as the Long Range. This variant can be delivered as soon as July 2022. The performance-oriented Model S Plaid is $129,990, and customers are given a delivery window of four to eight weeks after submitting the order. And its all thanks to a mix of new-generation capabilities, including user reports and map edits made by volunteers from all over the world.But at the same time, Waze is also working together with authorities as part of an effort called Waze for Cities and whose purpose is to let them provide drivers with up-to-date traffic data right within the app.In other words, authorities themselves can update Waze with real-time reports and therefore help the app provide the best route for those driving in a specific region.In the United States, Sandy Springs officials have recently joined forces with Waze to enter this program and deal with a massive traffic nightmare happening on the Abernathy Road. Due to heavy construction in the region, people who drive on GA-400 or I-285 and want to go on Abernathy Road end up confused by an army of traffic signs warning of the road closures.This is why the local police department decided to update Waze with up-to-date traffic information on its own, hoping drivers would run the app and therefore figure out which way to go much more conveniently.The partnership only concerns Waze, so those running Google Maps wouldnt be provided with the updated road closures.Indeed, at the time of writing, Waze already marks the location of the heavy construction on the map (as you can see in the screenshot here), whereas Google Maps isnt aware of any traffic restriction in the region.Waze is available on both iPhone and Android, and at the same time, it can also run on Android Auto and CarPlay if the vehicle is equipped with a compatible head unit. The app receives updates regularly, so make sure you are running the latest version regardless of the platform you use. Back in January, one of the largest iron ore mining groups in the world announced its intention to acquire Williams Advanced Engineering (WAE), the U.K.-based engineering and battery manufacturing company founded by the F1 team. We are talking about the Australians at Fortescue Metals Group, who bought WAE for over $222 million. The transaction was recently closed and the parties involved are already announcing the first project on the agenda: the first Infinity Train in the world.To be more specific, it is a regenerating battery-electric iron ore train , which plans to use gravitational energy to fully recharge its battery on the downhill sections, as explained by Fortescue. The company announced it will invest around $50 million over the next two years, for studies and development costs for the Infinity Train.Boasting the vehicles capacity to be the worlds most efficient battery-electric locomotive, the Infinity Train will remove the need for the installation of renewable energy generation and recharging infrastructure. That will make it a capital-efficient solution for getting rid of diesel and emissions from Fortescues rail operations, as stated by CEO Elizabeth Gaines.WAE will continue to focus on making high-performance battery and electrification systems and will work side by side with Fortescue toward the common goal of tackling climate change by developing new, cleaner technologies. The Australian mining company announced that it aims to reach net-zero emissions by 2030.The Infinity Train will join Fortescues green fleet which is also under development. The companys green projects division, Fortescue Future Industries, is also working on the first vessel in the world to be powered by ammonia.We dont have a timeline yet for the Infinity Train, but well keep you posted. Mercy Ships has supported local medical care throughout West and Central Africa for decades and will now have two hospital ships operating in the area. Africa Mercy, already operating, will be joined by the Global Mercy , the NGOs first vessel to be built from scratch with the purpose of becoming a floating hospital.This unique ship has docked in the Port of Rotterdam earlier this week, where its being outfitted for the major journey ahead. But theres more Global Mercy is also open for the public, for free in-person and virtual tours, plus special events. Over the next two weeks, those who want to explore this unique vessel will have the opportunity to participate in free, interactive tours and webinars, with a simple online registration.Even those who cant make it to Rotterdam have a chance to find out more about life onboard the Global Mercy, thanks to a virtual tour thats available online, as well as several online activities related to the NGOs work in Africa.This ship with a noble purpose is certainly worth visiting. With a length of 570 feet (174 meters), its the worlds largest civilian hospital ship, equipped with six operating rooms, 200 beds, one laboratory, plus several clinics, including eye and dental ones. It has enough room for 950 people, when docked, and more than 600 of them are the crew members. All crew members are volunteer professionals from all over the world, and their main mission is to perform life-changing surgeries for those in need, while also providing medical training in Africa.Together, Africa Mercy and Global Mercy will help volunteers conduct more than 5,000 surgeries and 28,000 dental treatments per year.The new hospital ship will be open to the public until March 14. After that date, it will be headed towards Tenerife, for further outfitting, before arriving at its final destination in Senegal. FREIENBRINK, GERMANY - Vehicles wait to enter the new Tesla Giga factory near Gruenheide just outside of Berlin on December 02, 2021 at Freienbrink, Germany. (Photo : Sean Gallup/Getty Images) Tesla's operations in Europe got a major boost this week after a spokesperson for the environmental ministry in the German state of Brandenburg announced that the Tesla Giga Berlin facility is in the final phase of the approval process. Tesla has long been waiting for this license approval from German authorities to finally begin producing electric vehicles and batteries at its Giga Berlin facility. Tesla's factory in Germany has been in limbo for months after the automaker failed to secure the needed environmental permit to start producing electric vehicles for customer deliveries. Tesla CEO Elon Musk expressed his frustration on multiple occasions with the complexity of German bureaucracy as the opening of the Tesla Giga Berlin suffered many delays. Some members of the German population opposed the building of the site, pointing out its negative impact on the environment. Legal battles and hold-ups emerged with Tesla facing issues such as the facility affecting the region's water supply. Musk to attend Tesla Giga Berlin's delivery event later this month German news agency Tagesspiegel reported that with final approval set to be given on Friday, March 4, it is expected that Tesla will hold an official delivery event towards the end of this month to celebrate Giga Berlin's grand opening. Musk will be arriving in Germany in the middle of March to attend this event, which is expected to host 500 guests, including German chancellor Olaf Scholz and other top officials. Around 30 customers will take delivery of their brand new German-made Model Ys at Giga Berlin's opening ceremony. Preparation for the official production launch in Germany is already underway, with several finished Model Y units parked outside Giga Berlin's walls. Tesla is testing out new production methods that the company will utilize in Germany, one of which is giant casting machines called "Giga-Presses." Also Read: Audi Looking for e-tron Electric Vehicles to Spur Car Brand's Growth in India in 2022 Tesla Australia benefits with the opening of Giga Berlin Giga Berlin's opening is integral for Tesla Australia, and the company's other Pacific markets as the world's leading electric car maker is currently exporting its EVs mainly from China to Europe. That has forced the launch of Model Y to be delayed in Australia, while wait times for Tesla's popular Model 3 vehicles have been pushed back to July at the earliest. As soon as Tesla can ramp up its vehicle production in Germany, other key markets such as Australia stand to benefit as they could now be served with vehicles coming from Tesla's factory in Shanghai. With Tesla also announcing plans to build a second Gigafactory in Shanghai, more vehicle exports are expected to be made available to Australia and other neighboring markets in the Pacific region. According to the China Passenger Car Association(CPCA), Tesla made almost 60,000 electric vehicles in Shanghai in January, exporting two-thirds of those cars. Related Articles: SEC Investigates Elon Musk and Brother Kimbal Over Alleged Insider Trading of Tesla Shares Lucid Group Recalls 203 Air Dream Edition EV Sedans Due to Possible Safety Issue Over Suspension On Tuesday, March 1, Ford announced that it has decided to suspend its joint venture operations in Russia following President Vladimir Putin's invasion of Ukraine. The U.S. auto giant has already informed its joint venture partner Sollers of the decision to halt operations in Russia until further notice. Ford issued a statement, saying it is deeply concerned about Russia's invasion of Ukraine and the resultant threats to peace and stability. Ford added that the ongoing situation in Ukraine had compelled them to reassess their operations in Russia, which now focus exclusively on sales in the country through a minority stake in the Sollers Ford joint venture and commercial van manufacturing. The company also announced that it would be donating $100,000 to Global Giving Ukraine Relief Fund through its Ford Fund. That donation will be used as humanitarian aid to help assist Ukrainian families and citizens who have been displaced in the ongoing war. Global Giving is a non-profit organization based in the United States that helps provide a global crowdfunding platform for grassroots charitable projects. Ford's Russian operations take another huge hit Ford has a storied past in Russia. The Dearborn company was the first international automaker to launch vehicle assembly in the country, opening a plant in St. Petersburg back in 2002. Ford then bolstered its operations in Russia in 2011, setting up a joint venture with Sollers that year. It was not all smooth sailing for Ford in Russia, though, as it suffered huge economic losses during that decade. Ford sent shockwaves across the auto industry when it announced in March 2019 that it would close three Russian factories as part of its corporate restructuring plan. That decision by Ford to pull out of passenger vehicle manufacturing in Russia caused heavy job losses in the country. Ford opted to shut down its vehicle assembly plants in Naberezhnye Chelny and St. Petersburg and its engine plant in the town of Yelabuga. Ford Sollers employed around 3,700 people at that time, but the company did not specify how many job cuts were made. As part of the restructuring, Sollers assumed majority control of the partnership with Ford, with the Russian company grabbing a 51 percent stake. Also Read: GM Suspends Vehicle Exports to Russia as the U.S. Sanctions Take Effect Following Putin's Invasion of Ukraine Ford's Transit manufacturing in Russia on hold for now As per Detroit Free Press, Ford continued to have a presence in Russia, with the company shifting its focus to the more lucrative commercial Transit vans. Ford hailed the Transit during a 2019 announcement as the top-selling, non-domestic commercial vehicle nameplate with a segment market share of 15 percent in Russia. Ford Sollers CEO Adil Shirinov said at the time that the company's Transit lineup was the leader among foreign commercial vehicle brands in Russia. Shirinov added that the Ford Transit has tremendous potential for further profitable growth in Russia in the years ahead. Those plans are on hold now with Ford's decision to suspend its operations in the country. Related Articles: Volkswagen Halts Production at 2 German Plants as Russia's War in Ukraine Causes Parts Shortage Renault, Volkswagen and Stellantis Fear Sanctions for Auto Plants in Russia After War Erupts in Ukraine The world's most expensive Porsche 928 GTS is coming back home to the United States. (Photo : THOMAS KIENZLE/AFP via Getty Images) The world's most expensive Porsche 928 GTS is coming back home to the United States after spending some time in France. The returning Porsche holds a special value as this was the final 928 GTS to roll off the company's production line sold to the public. Also known as the Perlglanz car, this one-of-a-kind vehicle is the most heavily-optioned 928 GTS ever built by Porsche. The car was initially built for the United States market and sold in Florida by Champion Porsche. The Porsche 928 GTS was sold for $184,938, around $340,000 in today's valuation. What made this 928 GTS model immediately stand out was the Perlglanz paint that Porsche applied to it, which was a $2,664 option at that time. Porsche 928 GTS sold with extra 20 liters of Perlglanz paint Interestingly, this Porsche 928 GTS was sold with an additional 20 liters of the Perlglanz paint just in case the luxury car ever needed touching up with its exterior. The unique set of options in this 928 GTS was not exclusive to the car's exterior, as they can also be found inside this luxurious Porsche model. The World's Most Expensive Porsche 928 GTS Is Returning To The U.S. | Carscoops #carscoops https://t.co/ZcbX3r7hBp Carscoops (@Carscoop) March 1, 2022 Bright green leather seats were installed inside this Porsche 928 GTS, an option that cost the original buyer $24,817. The car's other interior components are draped in violet-colored leather, including the 928 GTS' door handles, steering wheel stalks, seat adjustment switches, instrument shroud, air vent surrounds, ashtray covers, and speaker trims. The carpets found inside this car are also plum-colored for consistency. Like the Perlglanz paint, the original owner was given an extra supply of plum carpet, with 20 more meters of that material sold with the vehicle. To help this Porsche 928 GTS capture even more attention, the car also features purple seatbelts. This option proved costly, with the original buyer paying $9,095 to have the Porsche 928 GTS have this particular feature. Porsche's seatbelt supplier needed to be creative to achieve this specific color design, dyeing an entire roll of webbing to create the purple seatbelts. Also Read: Major Boost as Tesla Giga Berlin facility in Final Phase of Approval Process; Delivery Event Set This Month VanDamme brothers land dream deal for Porsche 928 GTS in France Due to its unique features and the car being the last 928 GTS to roll off Porsche's production line, the Perlglanz car became the stuff of legends and was a dream acquisition for some collectors. Alexander VanDamme and his brother Sigmund VanDamme shared that dream, working tirelessly to bring this vehicle back to the U.S. The long wait is finally over for both of them, with the VanDamme brothers sealing the transaction in France after months of negotiations with the previous owner. In a Facebook post of Flussig magazine, Alexander VanDamme thanked Roland and Regis Perrin for facilitating the Porsche 928 GTS sale in France, as well as Andrew McCulley, who told the brothers of the car's whereabouts. Related Articles: SEC Investigates Elon Musk and Brother Kimbal Over Alleged Insider Trading of Tesla Shares 2022 Suzuki Baleno Finally Unveiled in India: What are the Specs and Features of this City Car? Jeep is well on its way towards achieving its electrification goal, revealing the design of its first fully-electric model. (Photo : FREDERIC J. BROWN/AFP via Getty Images) Stellantis boss Carlos Tavares claimed during Jeep's 2021 earnings presentation that electrification would amplify the brand's core attributes. Jeep is well on its way towards achieving that goal, with the automaker revealing on Tuesday, March 1, the design of its first fully-electric model. Jeep has high hopes for this electric vehicle, which it plans to launch in Europe in the first half of 2023. Releasing this EV early next year puts Stellantis' long-term strategy to sell only fully-electric vehicles in Europe by the year 2026 right on schedule. Jeep has been slower with its shift to electrification compared to many of its rival automakers. Jeep has managed to release already plug-in hybrid versions of its luxury Grand Cherokee and Wrangler SUVs. Jeep ramping up electrification plans as part of Stellantis' directive Jeep's upcoming SUV is a game-changer, as it is the car brand's first purely battery-electric vehicle. Jeep is ramping up its electrification plans, with the company announcing last year that it will have zero-emission SUVs in every category of its lineup by the year 2025. As part of the directive of parent group Stellantis, Jeep will release electric versions of the Wrangler, Cherokee, and Wagoneer in the coming years. The focus right now is on the yet unnamed Jeep. The automaker teased images of the electric SUV, sending Jeep fans into a frenzy. The company is keeping the vehicle under wraps as it refused to share any other details of the electric SUV apart from the images and its target launch date. This electric SUV is expected to sit below Jeep's Renegade model in terms of size. This electric model will be different from Jeep vehicles in the past because it will have a shallower, more aerodynamic windscreen. Also Read: Mercedes-AMG SL Goes Back to the Future with 410-HP Four-Cylinder Hybrid Engine for SL43 Possible range expansion on the way for Jeep In an interview recently, Mark Allen, who is Jeep's head of exterior design, told Auto Express that a possible range expansion is in the cards for the company with electrification plans already underway. He said that Jeep is looking at every segment possible, from extending beyond the Wagoneer at the top and the Renegade at the bottom end. According to Allen, the more probable scenario for Jeep is to expand its range of models below the Renegade, which he describes as a B-segment. The baby electric Jeep could be utilizing the Stellantis e-CMP platform, which the group uses in similarly sized cars like Vauxhall's Corsa and Corsa e models and the Peugeot 208/e-208 and 2008/e-2008 variants. With Jeep launching the new model next year, it is too early to suggest if the SUV will be using Stellantis's new electric technology that the company unveiled on its EV day last year. Stellantis' much-awaited all-electric STLA Small platform won't be ready until 2026. That platform's arrival cannot come soon enough as it can accommodate four-wheel drive with electric motors on both axles. Related Articles: Kia Recalls 2013-2014 Optima Models Again to Fix Fuel Hose Problem That May Result in Fire Fisker Pear EV Already Has 1,500 Reservations Ahead of 2024 Launch: Price Starts at $29,900 Copyright 2020 by Mountain Times Publications. Digital or printed dissemination of this content without prior written consent is a violation of federal law and may be subject to legal action. This cover image released by Pantheon shows "Maus" a graphic novel by Art Spiegelman. The wave of book bannings around the country has reached a level not seen for decades. A Tennessee school district has voted to ban the Pulitzer Prize winning graphic novel about the Holocaust due to "inappropriate language" and an illustration of a nude woman. (Pantheon via AP) Thank you for reading! Please purchase a subscription to read our premium content. If you have a subscription, please log in or sign up for an account on our website to continue. U.S. should face up to and solve its own human rights problems 09:01, March 02, 2022 By Zhong Sheng ( People's Daily The human rights situation in the U.S., which has notorious records, worsened in 2021, said the Report on Human Rights Violations in the U.S. in 2021 issued by China's State Council Information Office on Feb. 28. In 2021, the U.S. public persona of human rights defender was totally debunked, and the country has become the biggest destroyer of human rights in the world, the report said. According to the report, in the U.S., political manipulation led to a sharp surge in COVID-19 deaths; shooting deaths hit a new record; fake democracy trampled on peoples political rights; violent law enforcement made life harder for migrants and refugees; discrimination against ethnic minority groups, especially Asians, intensified. In the meantime, unilateral U.S. actions created new humanitarian crises across the globe. Despite having worlds most advanced medical equipment and technology, the U.S. has the biggest number of COVID-19 infections and deaths globally. Since the outbreak of COVID-19 in the U.S., the epidemic prevention and control has been highly politicized, which has become a tool and a bargaining chip for Republicans and Democrats to attack, reject and confront each other. The U.S. governments unscientific, unequal and irresponsible epidemic prevention and control conducts have seriously undermined its peoples rights to life and health. Peoples mental health deteriorated due to the uncontrolled outbreak. The number of the homeless is staggering. The elderly rights to life are flagrantly violated. According to statistics, the average life expectancy of U.S. citizens fell by 1.13 years, the biggest drop since the Second World War. In particular, the decline in life expectancy among African Americans and Latinos was much more than that among whites. Rather than promoting international cooperation on vaccines, the U.S. has repeatedly coerced the WHO and been keen on shifting the blame and political manipulation. As developing countries are in dire need of vaccines, Washington vigorously pursues America First and is engaged in vaccine nationalism," interfering and dragging down global anti-pandemic cooperation. What the U.S. has done is disregard for the rights to life and health that should be enjoyed by all the people in the world, including Americans. The U.S. has long been habitually touting itself as the "beacon of democracy." However, as a matter of fact, American people's political rights are trampled on by politicians who manipulate fake democracy. Money politics become increasingly rampant in the U.S., which makes politicians more neglectful of peoples interests and demands. Democrats and Republicans are doing everything to restrain and harm electors right to vote. The election chaos in the country has further intensified political polarization and continues to tear the society apart. Investigations indicated that the public trust in the government has fallen to almost historical low since 1958, and international confidence in the U.S. democratic system continues to decline. Though American democracy is rotting, the U.S. is still reluctant to face up to the reality. It is trying to politicize democracy and takes it as a tool to force other countries to pick sides and form cliques to divide the world. Under the disguise of protecting "democracy" and "human rights," the U.S. initiated the so-called Summit for Democracy. However, it only ended up as a farce that drew wide criticism from the international society. The U.S. has always pursued hegemonism, unilateralism and interventionism to maintain its global hegemony. The country frequently uses force, resulting in a large number of civilian casualties. Its abusive use of unilateral sanctions has caused humanitarian crises. According to the New York Times, investigation found that more than 50,000 U.S. airstrikes in Iraq, Syria and Afghanistan were reckless and poorly targeted, killing tens of thousands of civilians. A study by an American university indicated that the 20-year U.S. military operations in Afghanistan have killed 174,000 people, including more than 30,000 civilians, and injured more than 60,000 people. A total of 3.5 million Afghans have been displaced. The belligerent U.S. is challenging justice with hegemony, trampling on righteousness with self-interest, and wantonly violating human rights in other countries. It has become the biggest obstacle and destroyer of the sound development of the international human rights cause. The U.S. should face up to and solve its own human rights problems and stop politicizing human rights. It should also join other countries in obeying the principles and rules of the UN Charter and carrying out constructive dialogues and cooperation in the sphere of human rights, so as to jointly promote the healthy development of the international human rights cause. (Zhong Sheng is a pen name often used by People's Daily to express its views on foreign policy and international affairs.) (Web editor: Hongyu, Liang Jun) AMMAN, Jordan Public opinion in the Arab world is split on Russia's invasion of Ukraine, with many players taking positions according to their domestic or regional political divides. Driving the news: The majority of Arab countries kept silent or gave very careful responses after Russia began its assault on Ukraine, trying to balance their relations with the U.S., Russia and Ukraine. The Arab League, meanwhile, took a largely neutral position, with an emergency meeting on Sunday ending with a statement expressing concern regarding the events in Ukraine and stressing the importance of continued coordination to help Arab communities in Ukraine. The big picture: Russia and Ukraine provide nearly one-quarter of the world's exports of wheat, with a significant amount sent to the Middle East and North Africa. About 85% of Egypt's recent wheat imports, for example, came from Russia and Ukraine. What they're saying: There is no one Arab position on the war, according to Sen. Mustafa Hamarneh, a member of the Jordanian upper house of parliament. Those who support [Syrian President Bashar al-Assad] and Hezbollah are in favor of Russia, irrespective of everything else, while those who believe in human rights and freedom of speech support Ukraine," he tells Axios. Agyyad Abu Zayed, a Syrian journalist working in Jordan, said that by and large the Syrian opposition is with Ukraine, while those supporting Assad are with Putin. The Israeli-Palestinian conflict has also divided support for Ukraine. Hamarneh said Arab social media feeds are full of people sharing posts made by Ukrainian President Volodymyr Zelensky in support of Israel during the Gaza war. This will mobilize the anti-Zelensky coalition," he said. Dima Khatib, a Palestinian activist living in Doha, claimed it was hypocritical for the West to support Ukrainian resistance while often calling Palestinian resistance to the Israeli occupation terrorism. It's an argument echoed by other Palestinians and some of their supporters online. Meanwhile, opinion in Lebanon is mixed along long-standing divisions in the country. DirecTV plans to drop RT America from its lineup in light of Russia's invasion of Ukraine, a spokesperson said. Why it matters: TV distributors in the U.S. are facing increased pressure to remove Russian state media from their platforms. DirecTV rival Dish said in a statement earlier this week it's "closely monitoring the situation." Details: "In line with our previous agreement with RT America, we are accelerating this year's contract expiration timeline and will no longer offer their programming effective immediately," DirecTV said in a statement. DirecTV had been reviewing programmers in its lineup with contracts up for expiration this year and was already assessing the value of RT America for its customers, per a spokesperson. The satellite TV company thought it was necessary to move the timeline up from mid-year following the events in Ukraine. The big picture: Russia's brutal invasion of Ukraine has finally pushed Western institutions to crack down on Russian state-backed media outlets. The European Commission said it will ban "the Kremlin's media machine" in the EU. Several companies, including Google, Roku, TikTok, Facebook and Microsoft, are already carrying out that ban and are restricting access to Russian state-owned media within the EU. On Tuesday, the National Association of Broadcasters called on U.S. broadcasters to cease carrying any state-sponsored programming with ties to the Russian government or its agents, citing "the unprovoked aggression exhibited by Russia against the free and sovereign people of Ukraine." Go deeper: Walls closing in on Russia's propaganda machine Data: FactSet; Chart: Axios Visuals European natural gas prices have risen an astounding 60% this week, as investors panic about disruptions to supplies. Driving the news: Benchmark natural gas prices briefly touched a record high of 194 euros per megawatt-hour on Wednesday. Why it matters: Europe gets 40% of its natural gas from Russia. Gas is crucial for heating homes, power generation and industrial activity on the continent, and the surge could upend its economy. Last summer, the gas market became the first battlefield of what is rapidly becoming an economic war between Russia and the West. What they're saying: "Market participants have been contemplating the potential for supply disruptions," wrote natural gas analysts at JPMorgan yesterday. "And undoubtedly the probability of a supply disruption is increasing as we pen this publication." Yes, but: For now, Russian gas continues to flow west. But military destruction of pipelines in Ukraine, sanctions, or Russian political decisions to cut supplies are all at risk, analysts say. Go deeper: Putin's (natural) gaslighting of Europe. Russian military rocket attacks on Kharkiv killed at least 21 people and wounded 112 others on Wednesday, the mayor of Ukraine's second largest city said. The big picture: Ukrainian authorities said Russian airborne troops had landed in Kharkiv about 8:30pm Tuesday ET. The city has been the scene of some of the worst shelling by Russian troops since the invasion began. What they're saying: "A Russian landing party landed in Kharkiv," Ukraines State Special Communications agency said on Telegram, per a translation on the messaging service. "The occupiers attacked the hospital the Military Medical Clinical Center of the Northern Region. A battle broke out between the invaders and the Ukrainian defenders." Go deeper: Get the latest with the Ukraine-Russia dashboard Editor's note: This article has been updated with new details throughout. Officials from the U.S. and its European allies France, Germany and the U.K. say they won't comply with Irans demand that an investigation into its undeclared nuclear activity be shut down as a condition for a deal. Why it matters: Iran says the International Atomic Energy Agency (IAEA) probe is politically motivated, but its demand that it be shut down is a major remaining hurdle as the talks approach the finish line. The backstory: Over the past several years, evidence has surfaced suggesting Iran might have undeclared nuclear material in secret sites around the country. Samples taken by UN inspectors who visited the sites only raised more questions, but Iran has declined to answer them. Israel claims that's evidence that Iran continued to hide parts of its nuclear program after joining the 2015 deal. Driving the news: Iranian chief negotiator Ali Bagheri returned to Vienna earlier this week after consultations in Tehran for what may be the final days of negotiations. U.S. officials say that although the parties are close to a deal, differences remain, including the IAEA probe issue and Iran's demand that the U.S. remove the Islamic Revolutionary Guard Corps from its terror blacklist. Washington continues to insist that if a deal isn't reached within a matter of days, there will be no point in continuing negotiations. What they're saying: A senior Biden administration official told me that it was impossible for anyone other than IAEA Director-General Rafael Grossi to determine that open investigations had been resolved. Sen. Tim Scott (R-S.C.) during an Axios event Wednesday responded to former President Trump's praise of Russian President Vladimir Putin for invading Ukraine, saying "there is nothing smart" about invading another country. Yes, but: Scott stopped short of criticizing Trump for referring to Putin as "very savvy" and for referring to Putin's move to claim two breakaway "republics" in eastern Ukraine as "genius." What he's saying: "There is nothing smart about invading countries. Every single American should stand on the side of the freedom-loving, liberty-defending Ukrainians," Scott told Axios. Yes, but: Scott defended Trump's position that the invasion would not have happened under his watch. "This happened in 2014 under President Obama and it's happening now under President Biden," Scott said at the event. "What this reflects and reinforces is the importance of strong American leadership on a global stage," Scott said. "When we do not present ourselves strong, those leaders who want to present themselves as even stronger do so when we apparently have weaker leadership on the issues facing our nation and our country." Context: Sen. Lindsey Graham (R), who also represents South Carolina, on Thursday called Trump's comments a "mistake," according to CNN. "I think that was a mistake. I think I know what he was trying to say, you know, going into the Donbas. But, no. Let's just make it clear, Putin's not a genius, he's a war criminal," Graham said. Scott is reportedly in the mix to be Trump's running mate if Trump runs for president in 2024, but the senator told Axios he's focused on South Carolina. The UAE's decision to abstain last week from a U.S.-led resolution to condemn Russia's invasion of Ukraine at the UN Security Council was largely due to frustrations over the U.S. response to an attack on Abu Dhabi six weeks earlier, three Emirati, U.S. and Israeli sources tell me. The big picture: The UAE on Wednesday voted at the UN General Assembly to condemn the invasion, but tensions remain between the U.S. and UAE, who cooperate closely on security, intelligence and trade issues. Flashback: Three people were killed and six wounded in an unprecedented missile and drone attack on Abu Dhabi by Yemen's Houthi rebels on Jan. 17. The Biden administration quickly condemned the attack as an act of terrorism, sent a squadron of F-22 fighter jets and the USS Cole to Abu Dhabi, and helped to intercept at least one of the subsequent attacks. But the U.S. has not accepted the UAE's request to redesignate the Houthis as terrorists. Aid groups say that move would make it harder for them to operate in Yemen. Behind the scenes: While the Biden administration saw its response as quick and robust, the Emiratis had bigger expectations and felt abandoned, the three sources say. When CENTCOM commander Gen. Frank McKenzie visited Abu Dhabi on Feb. 7, Crown Prince Mohammed Bin Zayed (MBZ) refused to meet with him. That snub was intended to signal disappointment with the fact that it took McKenzie 22 days since the attack to visit, according to a U.S. source with direct knowledge. A senior Biden administration official said McKenzie couldnt visit sooner because he was overseeing and advising the president on the operation that killed ISIS leader Abu Ibrahim al-Hashimi al-Qurayshi. The official says U.S. officials had been in contact with their UAE counterparts several times per day after the attack. MBZ did agree to see White House Middle East coordinator Brett McGurk a week later in Abu Dhabi, but used the meeting to air his frustration at the U.S. The senior U.S. official said the meeting was nonetheless "constructive" in terms of future cooperation over Yemen. But when Russia invaded Ukraine, the Emiratis felt the U.S. response including the push for sanctions and Security Council resolutions at the UN was much stronger and faster than when they were attacked, the three sources say. The U.S. lobbied UN Security Council members hard on the resolution condemning Russia, but when it came up for a vote on Friday, the Emiratis abstained. That was intended as a signal of frustration with the U.S., all three sources say, and it deeply disappointed the U.S. side. State of play: The frustrations are still alive on both sides. The Emiratis want more access to U.S. intelligence and targeting capabilities to prevent further attacks in Yemen. U.S. officials say they acted fast even with their resources stretched and the Emiratis want capabilities that don't exist, like pinpoint intelligence for targeting in Yemen. What they're saying: Another senior Biden administration official said it was not clear whether the Emirati vote at the Security Council was completely tied to their grievances about U.S. policy on the Houthis. Oksana Markarova, Ukraine's ambassador to the U.S., will be one of first lady Jill Biden's guests at the State of the Union address on Tuesday, the White House announced. Driving the news: The first lady's guests were chosen "because they represent policies or themes to be addressed by the President in his speech," according to a statement. President Biden is expected to underscore the preparedness of the U.S. and NATO's response to Russian President Vladimir Putin's "premeditated and unprovoked" invasion of Ukraine in his first State of the Union address. Moscow's bombing campaign on Ukrainian cities intensified on Tuesday. An airstrike targeting a TV tower killed at least five civilians at a nearby Holocaust memorial. Of note: Facebook whistleblower Frances Haugen will also be in attendance Tuesday night. Data: United Nations; Map: Danielle Alberti/Axios 141 countries voted in favor of a UN General Assembly resolution "deploring" Russia's aggression against Ukraine and demanding the immediate and complete withdrawal of all Russian forces from Ukrainian territory. Why it matters: The resolution is non-binding, but reflects Russia's historic isolation on the world stage just one week into its unprovoked invasion of Ukraine. The full UNGA vote came after Russia vetoed a similar resolution in the 15-member UN Security Council. Four countries joined Russia in voting against the resolution Belarus, North Korea, Eritrea and Syria while 35 abstained. Between the lines: Serbia, which has close historical ties with Russia, surprised many observers by voting in favor of the resolution. The United Arab Emirates and Israel, two U.S. security partners that have been criticized for declined to speak out against Russia's aggression, also chose to vote for the resolution. India, however, abstained. The world's largest democracy has longstanding military ties with Russia from the Soviet era, causing headaches for the U.S. as it seeks to integrate India into an alliance to counter China in the Indo-Pacific. What they're saying: Ukrainian President Volodymyr Zelensky praised the outcome of the vote, tweeting, "Im grateful to everyone & every state that voted in favor. You have chosen the right side of history." The results "convincingly show that a global anti-Putin coalition has been formed and is functioning. The world is with us. The truth is on our side," he added. Editor's note: This post has been updated with additional details throughout. U.S. officials privately urged Israel to take a clearer stance on the Russian invasion of Ukraine, three U.S. and Israeli officials told me. Why it matters: That contrasts with the Israeli government's public claim that the Biden administration has no complaints about Israeli policy and understands Israel's need to calibrate its reaction to the Russian invasion in order to maintain its security coordination with Russia in Syria. A senior Biden administration official told me the U.S. understands Israels interests regarding Russia in Syria. But after Russia invaded Ukraine, U.S. officials urged Israel to take a clear stance and be on the right side of the issue, the official said. We told the Israelis this is a moment of right and wrong," the official said. Behind the scenes: Ahead of the UN Security Council vote last Friday on a resolution condemning Russia for the invasion, U.S. Ambassador to the UN Linda Thomas-Greenfield and other U.S. officials lobbied the Israelis to join dozens of co-sponsors of the resolution. Thomas-Greenfield even told her Israeli counterpart Gilad Erdan that President Biden expected Israel to co-sponsor the resolution, according to the Israeli officials. Erdan recommended that Israel co-sponsor it, but Israeli Foreign Minister Yair Lapid decided not to. Shortly after, Thomas-Greenfield protested to Erdan and expressed disappointment with Israel while mentioning Biden's expectation once again, an Israeli official told me. The messages from the White House were more nuanced, several Israeli officials said. A senior Israeli official told me the U.S. didnt push or press Israel hard, but urged and expressed its expectation that Israel would sound a moral voice. On Sunday, the Biden administration was initially concerned when it heard reports that Prime Minister Naftali Bennett told Cabinet ministers not to speak publicly about the Russian invasion and not to criticize Russia, a U.S. official said. According to the U.S. official, when the White House and State Department raised their concerns, the Israelis made clear the directive was given to ensure that only Lapid and Bennett spoke publicly about it. To reassure the Biden administration, Lapid gave a statement the next day stressing Israel is against the Russian invasion and would vote in favor of condemning Russia at the UN General Assembly. We feel good about the Israeli position heading into this historic vote. Their position has been positive and helpful, and we have an ongoing dialogue with Israel about the crisis," the U.S. official said. The big picture: Israel voted Wednesday at the UN General Assembly to condemn the invasion. What to watch: Israeli officials say they are concerned about the perception created in the U.S. that Israel wasnt supporting Ukraine. The West must "show Russia in painful terms the mistake it has made" by invading Ukraine by imposing even stricter sanctions on Moscow, Andriy Yermak, head of President Volodymyr Zelensky's office, wrote in a New York Times op-ed Wednesday. Why it matters: Numerous countries raised sanctions on Russian banks, assets and some oligarchs in response to the invasion. But Yermak said more needs to be done, specifically calling for a full embargo on Russian oil exports, cutting all of its banks from SWIFT and financial restrictions on all of Moscow's elite. U.S. Treasury Secretary Janet Yellen said Tuesday that G7 leaders plan to announce additional sanctions, including freezing and seizing assets of Russian elites and excluding more Russian banks from the SWIFT banking system, according to Reuters. What they're saying: "I am writing this appeal from a bunker in the capital, with President Volodymyr Zelensky by my side," Yermak wrote. "Despite the constant barrage of Russian fire, we stand firm and united in our resolve to defeat the invaders. We will fight to the last breath to protect our country." "We are thankful to our American and European friends, to democracies worldwide including Australia and Japan, for their quick decisions to help us, for their sanctions against the Russian economy, for the armaments and equipment to deter the aggressor," he added. "But its not enough. We need more and, please, stop telling us military aid is on the way. Nothing less than our freedom and yours is at stake." "Every Russian bank not just a select few must be cut off from the SWIFT banking system, and every Russian oligarch must be sanctioned. We are also calling for a full embargo on Russian oil and all Russian exports to the United States and Europe." The big picture: Yermak asked for more antitank and antiaircraft weapons and other ammunitions and the enforcement of a no-fly zone over the country. Zelensky recently urged President Biden to impose a no-fly zone over parts of the country, which would go against Biden's pledge to not send U.S. troops to directly counter Russia in Ukraine and could bring NATO into direct conflict with Russian forces. Yermak said he understands that it would be "a serious escalation in the war," but added Kyiv believes "that Russia wont stop at just Ukraine, which would potentially drag NATO into this conflict anyway." Yes, but: Russia has prepared for retaliatory sanctions from Western sanctions for several years, and it blunt their impact by deepening its growing alignment with China, which has not condemned Russia's invasion and has criticized the imposition of sanctions. Sanctions on Russia's oil and gas exports would also likely cause energy costs to spiral even higher, which could set off further economic turmoil in Europe that could strain the unity that the West has shown in its stance toward Russia so far. Yermak acknowledged that sanctioning Russia's energy exports would "not be without cost to the world economy" but said "the alternative is far worse." Bottom line: "But make no mistake: Other autocrats are watching, taking lessons. They can create a coalition of bad will just look at how once-peaceful Belarus is now serving as a staging ground for Russian troops," Yermak warned. He said that the "war is not just about Ukraine. The Kremlin wants to create a new Russian empire." Go deeper: The latest on the Russian invasion of Ukraine Ukrainian National Security and Defense Council chief Oleksiy Danilov announced during a briefing Tuesday that Ukrainian forces had foiled an assassination plot against President Volodymyr Zelensky, according to a Telegram post from Ukrainian authorities. Why it matters: Zelensky has said since the start of Russia's unprovoked invasion of Ukraine that he would be a prime target for assassination. Last Thursday, he warned that Russian "sabotage groups" had entered Kyiv and were hunting for him and his family. The big picture: According to the Telegram message, Danilov said that a unit of elite Chechen special forces, known as Kadyrovites, had been behind the plot and had subsequently been "eliminated." "We are well aware of the special operation that was to take place directly by the Kadyrovites to eliminate our president," Danilov said, per the post. Ukrainian authorities had been tipped off about the plot by members of Russia's Federal Security Service who do not support the war, he added. Danilov elaborated that the Kadyrovite group had been divided into two, with one being destroyed in Gostomel and the other "under fire." Go deeper: What to know about Ukraine's wartime president Davtian, one of his deputies as well as the commanders of the armys artillery and engineer units and the head of a General Staff division dealing with army morale were relieved of their duties on February 24 through presidential decrees requested by Prime Minister Nikol Pashinian. The chiefs of Armenias military intelligence and rear services were fired a few days earlier. All of them except Davtian were swiftly replaced by other senior officers. Pashinian has still not installed a new army chief of staff. An opposition lawmaker, Tigran Abrahamian, expressed concern about this fact during the Armenian governments question-and-answer session in the parliament. Abrahamian cited grave security challenges facing the country. Papikian assured him that the acting head of the General Staff, Kamo Kochunts, is in a position to properly lead the armed forces for now. The minister also indicated that he is the one who initiated the sweeping changes in the army top brass. We have entered a period of very important reforms, he said. I believe that its about time the military sphere was also entrusted to many of our capable and young cadres who went through war. I dont want to link this with individuals but at the same time cannot fail to say that everything depends on individuals. Everything is being done to make sure that we have a more motivated top brass, added Papikian. And this is a signal to all military officers. All worthy officers will be able to occupy high-level positions regardless of their personal connections. Pashinian promised a major reform of the military shortly after Armenias defeat in the 2020 war with Azerbaijan. He has replaced three defense ministers since a Russian-brokered ceasefire stopped the six-week war in November 2020. Papikian was appointed in November 2021. Davtian became Armenias top general in March 2021. The previous holder of the post, Onik Gasparian, was fired after he and four dozen other high-ranking officers accused Pashinians government of incompetence and misrule and demanded its resignation. They protested against deputy speaker Hakob Arshakians decision to expel several of their colleagues from the chamber because of their incorrect reactions to Pashinians latest diatribe against the Armenian opposition. The bitter altercation began after Hripsime Stambulian, a deputy from the main opposition Hayastan bloc, asked Pashinian to explain what his government will do in case of possible restrictions on Russias wheat exports which she said could result from the war in Ukraine. Armenia has become even more dependent on Russian wheat since Nagorno-Karabakh lost large swathes of territory in the 2020 war with Azerbaijan Since you surrendered about 75 percent of Artsakh (Nagorno-Karabakh) to the enemy and left many wheat fields [cultivated by Karabakh Armenians] in the enemys hands, what steps are you taking? Stambulian asked during the governments question-and-answer session in the National Assembly. Pashinian did not answer the question itself and instead raged at her claim about the surrender of lands. He again charged that former Presidents Robert Kocharian and Serzh Sarkisian, who now lead the countrys two parliamentary opposition forces, themselves were ready to make territorial concessions to Azerbaijan during their rule. He pointed to their broad support for compromise peace proposals made by the United States, Russia and France. Stop shedding crocodile tears here, Pashinian said, gesticulating angrily. I want to again warn you that every time you come here you should keep in mind that you are an executive official and have no right to answer our questions by waving your finger and yelling, responded Stambulian. To anyone who says I surrendered lands, I will talk with a finger Pashinian shot back. I always did. Look at what happened during your rule. Ill wave my finger. Ill also do other things, if necessary, he shouted while walking off the podium to the accompaniment of angry remarks from other opposition deputies. Arshakian, who chaired the tense session, accused some of them of making disrespectful and incorrect statements and banned them from speaking up on the parliament floor. He did not object when Pashinian branded his political opponents traitors and plunderers moments before. When your colleague speaks of surrendering lands, she creates a tense atmosphere. Please stop using such language, Arshakian told those oppositionists before ordering them out. The other deputies representing Hayastan and the second parliamentary opposition bloc, Pativ Unem, responded by walking out in protest. Sessions of the current National Assembly elected last June have been repeatedly marred by such arguments and even brawls. Alen Simonian, the parliament speaker and a leading member of Pashinians Civil Contract party, last year routinely interrupted opposition deputies strongly criticizing the prime minister on the parliament floor. He claimed that they insulted Pashinian. In August, Simonian ordered security officers to forcibly remove one of them from the chamber. Another oppositionist was hauled off the parliaments podium while delivering a speech in October. Hayastan and Pativ Unem accused the authorities of illegally restricting free speech on the parliament floor for the first time in Armenias post-Soviet history. The talks were held in Vienna last week. The Turkish and Armenian foreign ministries said special envoys representing the two sides discussed concrete steps that can be mutually taken to achieve full normalization between Turkey and Armenia. I regard the second meeting of Armenias and Turkeys representatives as positive, Mirzoyan told the Armenian parliament. He said they discussed more concrete issues but did not elaborate. At the same time, I think we all understand that its hard to expect very tangible results even from the second meeting. Its a process that should provide solutions to issues accumulated for decades and centuries, added Mirzoyan. He did not say when veteran Turkish diplomat Serdar Kilic and Ruben Rubinian, a deputy speaker of the Armenian parliament, will meet again. Mirzoyan last month voiced cautious optimism over the success of the Turkish-Armenian dialogue welcomed by the United States, the European Union and Russia. Ankara has for decades linked the establishment of diplomatic relations with Yerevan and the opening of the Turkish-Armenian border to a resolution of the Nagorno-Karabakh conflict acceptable to Azerbaijan. Turkish Foreign Minister Mevlut Cavusoglu has repeatedly made clear that his government will coordinate the Turkish-Armenian normalization talks with Baku. BERLIN, Germany, and CAIRO, Egypt, March 02, 2022 / B3C newswire / -- MiGenTra appoints highly distinguished international leaders in Science and Entrepreneurship to its Advisory Board: - Heidi Hunter, President Specialty Solutions Business at Cardinal Health, US - Petra Reinke, Professor of Medicine and founding director of the Berlin Center for Advanced Therapies (BeCAT), Germany - Shaheer Bardissi, Executive Board Member at Minapharm Pharmaceuticals, Egyp The international Advisory Board will advise and provide guidance in order to support future product development and regulatory, market excess and export strategies. MiGenTra, headquartered in Berlin, Germany and MiGenTra Egypt, located with its 'Facility of the Future' in Cairo, Egypt, announce the formation of an International Advisory Board with the purpose to complement in-house capabilities with external top notch expertise and knowledge in the field of Science and Entrepreneurship. MiGenTra's mission to enhance the accessibility to critical healthcare transforming medicines at affordable prices for Egypt, the Middle East and Africa (MEA) while simultaneously strengthening regional and local manufacturing capacities. In doing so the company responds to urgent unmet medical needs, in line with efforts by the World Health Organization (WHO) and the International Finance Corporation (IFC) as well as the European Commission and the European Investment Bank (EIB). The Advisory Board supports and will work closely with the MiGenTra management on all matters relating to the companies mission. "MiGenTra as part of the Minapharm group pledges to ensure equitable access to essential medicines on the African continent, thereby contributing to the Global Health initiative and transforming the lives of millions of people", says Dr. Lutz Hilbrich, Chief Executive Officer of MiGenTra. "We are delighted and proud to have internationally renowned individuals joining us as our advisors. It is an exciting endeavor with the chance to make a difference and we are looking forward to collaborating closely with them in the future on all aspects a start-up company like MiGenTra is facing, he concludes. About the members of MiGenTra's International Advisory Board: Heidi Hunter, President Specialty Solutions Business at Cardinal Health, US Heidi Hunter has over 25 years of experience in biotech across the pharmaceutical value chain, from clinical and commercial development through to launch execution. She is currently President at Cardinal Health, where she leads the Specialty Solutions Business. Prior to Cardinal Health, Ms. Hunter was Senior Vice President of the Global Immunology Business Unit at UCB in Brussels. She has also held leadership positions at Boehringer Ingelheim as Senior Vice President and General Manager in its Global Biosimilars Business, and at IQVIA as Vice President of Global Business Partnerships Commercial Solutions. Ms. Hunter also held senior leadership positions in commercial and strategic marketing for biologics and oncology at Centocor, a J&J company. She also led oncology business at Wyeth (today part of Pfizer) in the U.S. and women's health at Novo Nordisk in Denmark. Early in Ms. Hunter's career, she led sales and marketing at Ciba-Geigy in Switzerland (today part of Novartis). She is currently on the board of Vicore Pharma and Sutro Biopharma. Ms. Hunter earned B.A. from The University of Michigan and her M.B.A. from The University of Chicago. Petra Reinke, Professor of Medicine and founding director of the Berlin Center for Advanced Therapies (BeCAT), Germany Petra Reinke is Professor of Internal Medicine, Nephrology and Transplantation at Charite - Universitatsmedizin Berlin and was Medical Director of Nephrology and Transplantation and Head of the Kidney Transplant Outpatient Clinic. She is the founding director of the Berlin Center for Advanced Therapies (BeCAT) and head of the GMP Facility for developing new T-cell-based therapeutic strategies. She has developed several novel diagnostic and therapeutic approaches (e. g. immunobiomarkers, targeting of memory T cells, adoptive Teff/Treg cell therapies). She is one of the founding members of the (BIH)-Berlin-(Brandenburg) Centre for Regenerative Therapies (BCRT), was a member of the steering committee 2006 - 2021 and vice speaker in 2021. She is a member of the BIH research platform Multiscale Omics, Humanized Model Systems and Cell Engineering and Digital Medicine. She was 2019 - 2021 CART Coordinator (Charite) of the European University Hospital Alliance (EUHA). She is a program board member of the UK Regenerative Medicine Platform of the Medical Research Council (MRC, UKRMP) and a member of several editorial boards of various scientific journals and has published more than 300 peer reviewed articles. Shaheer Bardissi, Executive Board Member at Minapharm Pharmaceuticals, Egypt Shaheer Bardissi, with a doctorate in gene-based immunotherapy, is an executive board member at Minapharm pharmaceuticals, where he has been assigned the responsibility of aiding the steering of the scientific and business growth strategy of the Minapharm group in the field of immuno-oncology, vaccines for infectious diseases, and gene and cell-based therapies in collaboration with its global subsidiaries. He previously worked at BioNTech SE and contributed to the successful development of immunotherapeutic technologies in the field of cell and gene therapy. He obtained his PhD from Johannes Gutenberg University, Mainz, Germany, with a focus on gene-based immunotherapy. Prior to that, he completed his Masters of Science in Molecular Medicine at University College London, Bachelors of Science in Biomedical Sciences from King's college London, and also holds a Master's of Science in quantitative management sciences and healthcare data analytics from Duke University, North Carolina, USA. Caption: Lutz Hilbrich, CEO of MiGenTra and ProBioGen (top left), Heidi Hunter, President Specialty Solutions Business at Cardinal Health, US (top right), Petra Reinke, Professor of Medicine and founding director of the Berlin Center for Advanced Therapies (BeCAT), Germany (bottom left), Shaheer Bardissi, Executive Board Member at Minapharm Pharmaceuticals, Egypt (bottom right) For high resolution please click the image. About MiGenTra MiGenTra was founded in 2021. MiGenTra combines the scientific and manufacturing expertise from both contributing companies, ProBioGen and Minapharm Pharmaceuticals. It is established for product development and commercialization in the field of Biosimilars, Cell- and Gene Therapies (CGT) and Vaccines, capitalizing on the strong development and manufacturing capabilities of ProBioGen and Minapharm as well as on the excellent market position of Minapharm in the region. About Minapharm Group The Minapharm group led by Chairman and CEO Dr. Wafik Bardissi comprises currently 4 companies, two of which are headquartered in Cairo, Egypt: Minapharm Pharmaceuticals and MiGenTra Egypt, and two with Headquarters in Berlin, Germany: ProBioGen and MiGenTra. Contact Dr. Lutz Hilbrich, MD MBA Chief Executive Officer This email address is being protected from spambots. You need JavaScript enabled to view it. MiGenTra GmbH www.migentra.com Herbert-Bayer-Str. 4 13086 Berlin Germany +49 (0) 30 5771 4380 Keywords: ; Pharmaceutical Preparations; Drug Development; Manufacturing Industry; Cell- and Tissue-Based Therapy; Biosimilar Pharmaceuticals; Vaccines; Delivery of Health Care; Middle East; Egypt; Africa; Germany Published by B3C newswire You can reach Ishani Desai at 661-395-7417. You can also follow her at @idesai98 on Twitter. Modesty always looks better on heroes than boastfulness, and so it's to the credit of Bakersfield small-business counselor Kelly Bearden when Bluefield, WV (24701) Today Partly cloudy skies early will give way to cloudy skies late. Low near 50F. Winds NW at 5 to 10 mph.. Tonight Partly cloudy skies early will give way to cloudy skies late. Low near 50F. Winds NW at 5 to 10 mph. Oregon Coast's Florence Brings Back Hanging Flower Baskets for Season - You Can Be a Part Published 03/01/22 at 6:23 AM PST By Oregon Coast Beach Connection staff (Florence, Oregon) You may be from out of town and enjoy the central Oregon coast town as a visitor, but there's a way to become a part of Florence's outstanding beauty. The Florence Area Chamber of Commerce again brings back those lovely hanging flower baskets that have adorned Bay Street for years, staying up from spring through fall. In a partnership with the public works department of the City of Florence, the central Oregon coast town's chamber offers up the sight as another way of welcoming visitors. Yet those big fans who really care about the place living near or far can sponsor one of them. They can be done so to honor loved ones as well. Chamber president and CEO Bettina Hannigan said some 100 baskets are going up this year, adding even more to the vibes of the central Oregon coast town. They'll go up from the bridge to the intersection with Highway 126. By doing so were hoping to demonstrate optimism, good will, good weather, beauty, and our cautious steps toward the restoration of tourism, Hannigan said. Each year, the Chamber has flower basket sponsors from Eugene/Springfield, Corvallis/Albany, other coastal communities, and other locations. We suspect some of our out-of-town sponsors are inspired visitors who love Florence or have vacation places in Florence. Some people sponsor them as a dedication to a friend or loved one, added Hannigan. Many people take pictures with them to share online and remember their trip to Florence. That gives the program a lot of marketing milage in other communities. Many of our local sponsors sign up year after year for the pride it gives them in supporting and beautifying our community." Hannigan said it's another means to build upon the beauty of the town while also supporting local businesses. "By hanging them along the new streetscape, as well as in Old Town, with the new banners that are adorning light poles around town, locals and visitors will slow down and take in a very positive impression of our community, and that helps commerce in our area, Hannigan said. Hannigan said that under normal circumstances approximately 1900 people in Florence rely on tourism-based employment, and tourism pumps about $147 million into the local economy each year. For more information on sponsoring a flower basket, joining the Florence Area Chamber of Commerce, or how to volunteer, contact Hannigan at 541-997-3128. Hotels in Yachats - Where to eat - Upper Lane County Maps and Virtual Tours MORE PHOTOS BELOW More About Oregon Coast hotels, 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 The Great 1936 Fire at Yachats Threatened Two Towns, Oregon Coast History Published 03/01/22 at 12:22 AM PST By Oregon Coast Beach Connection staff (Yachats, Oregon) - Late September of 1936, and the Oregon coast was still smoldering. The great fires of Bandon and other parts of the south coast were now largely under control, as was the big conflagration at Depoe Bay. See The Decade the Oregon Coast Burned - 1930s (Above: Yachats in 1937) However, tiny Yachats which was quickly growing in popularity as a resort destination was about to get hit with its own major blaze. What apparently started north of Yachats at a small area called Camp 1 around Sunday, September 26 of 1936 rather suddenly grew into an enormous blaze that choked the little town of Yachats. In a scene that's truly out of something apocalyptic, cinders and ash were raining down on the little Oregon coast town for at least a couple of days, unfortunately something Oregonians are getting increasingly used to these days. Back then, almost 100 years ago, however, it was a rarity. According to the Eugene Guard at the time (the precursor to Eugene's current daily), rangers thought the fire could've originated in two places, actually. One (and the somewhat more favored theory) was Camp 1, but also farther north at Big Creek, a bit closer to Waldport. Whatever happened, it created a wall of flame in places, including around Cape Perpetua, with much of it crawling southward to the east of the highway. This was actually the second scare in two days, with another fire starting up on the 24th but luckily getting squelched. Meanwhile, some 1,000 acres were burning at Alsea, up the river in Benton County. Within a day or two, some 25 homes between Waldport and Yachats were burned to the ground. One extremely poignant moment is noted by the paper as a small child is documented picking her toy wagon out of the burned debris of her former home. Around Camp One, three auto parks (sort of the equivalent to cabins at the time) burned down, along with a small store. By some estimates, as many as 600 men were involved in putting out the fire, although more serious calculations by most officials seemed to put the number closer to 250 or so, while 100 men from Eugene were standing by at one point before being sent to Alsea. They were all volunteers and no recruitment had been done in the Emerald City, the paper reports. In fact, more than 200 showed up to volunteer but there was only equipment enough for 100. High winds from the east and dry conditions were some of the big culprits, just like Coos County and Depoe Bay. As the fire grew on Sunday, Monday suddenly saw a calm period, at least in terms of wind. In that short window, rangers, loggers and other firefighters took to dynamiting sections of and and creating burned out areas, creating barriers. They feared the flames might again jump Highway 101. Fire lines were extended, with some up at Big Creek and others as far south as Vingie Road (near the San Marine area now). That day, it had been beaten back to a point about three miles from the highway. Meanwhile, Waldport residents were starting to feel threatened. Yachats folks already felt the pain, and with great anxiousness had to pack their things, sometimes asked to leave their homes and the next hour or so let back in, an alternating process that went on for a good couple of days. Everyone feared the worst, but especially its burgeoning tourism industry. As the Eugene Guard put it: Recent years have brought an almost continuous development of the eight miles between Yachats and Waldport, and the region because of its scenic beauty has been a favorite resort and summer home country. The brushy land on the outskirts creates a fire hazard not unlike that which caused the disaster at Bandon. A heavy fog came in from the west over the next day after the initial fire, but it failed to stop the blaze. Residents and firefighters were worried just the slightest breath of wind would cause it to spread. A rather dramatic photo from the paper shows an area near Cape Perpetua completely aflame. On the Tuesday after the start of the blaze, many more reinforcements came what some estimated at 600. Later that day it was declared under control. In the aftermath, officials found four goats had burned. Three bears were killed in the wild and burned by the fire as well. Waldport residents breathed a major sigh of relief by Wednesday. Rangers in the area reported that section of central Oregon coast safe because of the fire lines at Camp One. It wasn't the last Yachats residents heard of the fire, however. On October 11, officials declared it mostly harmless by that time and generally well under control, but by October 17 it had flared up again and began threatening homes once more. Luckily, within a day or so that too was under control. Hotels in Yachats - Where to eat - Yachats Maps and Virtual Tours MORE PHOTOS BELOW More About Oregon Coast hotels, 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 Ryan Pelham/The Enterprise Lamar Institute of Technology President Lonnie Howard is stepping down as president in July, according to a news release. Dr. Howard has made a remarkable impact on Lamar Institute of Technology, achieving six consecutive years of enrollment growth, improving the institutes financial position, and finding new ways to positively impact lives and the economy in Southeast Texas," said Texas State University System Chancellor Brian McCall in the news release. "I am grateful for Dr. Howards service to LIT and the Texas State University System, and I wish him well in the next chapter of his career. Dreamstime, HO / TNS Authorities have released the name of a construction worker killed in a crash involving multiple vehicles on Tuesday. Andrew Mendez Lopez, 27 of Houston, was killed in the crash that occurred around 10:30 a.m. in an active construction zone in the 11000 block of Eastex Freeway near Tram Road, according to Beaumont police. This is a carousel. Use Next and Previous buttons to navigate 5 1 of 5 Nathan Lambrecht / Nathan Lambrecht/AP Show More Show Less 2 of 5 Courtesy, U.S. COAST GUARD DISTRICT 8 Show More Show Less 3 of 5 4 of 5 Photo submitted by David Quincy Sr. / Photo submitted by David Quincy Sr. Show More Show Less 5 of 5 A company working to dismantle a decommissioned oil rig that caught fire on Thursday has confirmed that all crew members are safe and uninjured. PH Steel General Counsel Jeff Lewis told The Enterprise on Thursday afternoon that the fire was under control. A U.S. Coast Guard helicopter assisted in rescuing the crew members, who were aboard the rig that he said stands at least 300 feet in the air, Lewis said. This is a carousel. Use Next and Previous buttons to navigate Joseph Trahan and Christian 'Manuel' Hayes are headed to a run off for the District 22 Texas House of Representatives seat. Trahan led the pack with 48.47%, or 5,023, of the votes. Hayes followed close behind with 42.71%, or 4,426, of the votes. Lisa Weber garnered 8.83%, or 915, of the votes. Original Story: With early votes counted, former Jefferson County Democratic Chair Joseph Trahan appears to be headed toward a November face-off with Republican Jacorion Randle for the District 22 Texas House of Representatives seat. But thousands of votes were still expected to be counted late into the night hours after The Enterprises print deadline. Trahan ran against Christian Manuel, chief of staff to current District 22 Rep. Joe Deshotel, and Lisa Weber for the position. Trahan received 50.79 % of the early votes, with Manuel and Weber receiving 40.53% and 8.68 % respectively. "I feel really good Trahan said early in the night. It feels like deja vu a little bit because I led in the early voting totals when I ran for county chair and then won and I'm praying that I can replicate that tonight." Related: Deshotel will not seek 12th term in Legislature (beaumontenterprise.com) Manuel weighed in on the results. "It's interesting, he said. It sucks a little bit, but I'm excited because I'm a first-time candidate, and I was glad that I was able to run and get so many people to vote for me." Lisa Weber could not be reached for comment. Trahan is ran on improving flood mitigation and drainage and public education by reevaluating standardized testing as well as making state healthcare more affordable and accessible. Similarly, Manuel ran on expanding state healthcare, updating infrastructure to mitigate flooding, and funding for educational resources. But Weber emphasized closing the digital divide for WiFi and broadband so that all students have access to the internet, bringing manufacturing to Southeast Texas and making sure there are enough jobs to draw and retain residents in the area. Related: Your primary results will take longer Tuesday rachel.kersey@beaumontenterprise.com twitter.com/ontheREKord Emporia, KS (66801) Today Rain, heavy at times early. Low 51F. Winds ENE at 10 to 15 mph. Chance of rain 100%. Rainfall near an inch.. Tonight Rain, heavy at times early. Low 51F. Winds ENE at 10 to 15 mph. Chance of rain 100%. Rainfall near an inch. A man wrapped in an Ukrainian national flag watches news on his mobile phone as he sits at Maidan Independence Square in Kyiv as Russia's ground forces invaded Ukraine from several directions, Feb. 24, 2022. The crisis in Ukraine has exposed how the Association of Southeast Asian Nations (ASEAN) once again is divided as it fails to confront a pressing security challenge head on and through a forceful and unified voice. Already riddled with divisions over Chinese aggression in the South China Sea, the damming of the Mekong, the ethnic cleansing of the Rohingya, and the 2021 coup detat in Myanmar, ASEAN, through its toothless response to the Russian invasion, yet again is proving inept in collectively addressing a security issue with potential implications for Southeast Asia. One would think that with the exception of Myanmar, whose junta totally relies on Moscow for arms and diplomatic support, that Southeast Asian condemnation of Russia would not be so fraught. At the member-state level, the responses to Ukraine have ranged from Myanmars unabashed endorsement of the invasion to more tepid ones from other ASEAN states, and to remarkably forceful ones issued by the city-state of Singapore. The response from Myanmar was beyond the pale, with the ruling generals stating that Russias invasion is an appropriate measure to preserve its sovereignty. In failing to condemn Russias invasion of Ukraine, most Southeast Asian states are acting in a way that ignores their long-term security interests and, for the most part, out of sheer diplomatic timidity. The stakes Southeast Asia is comprised of small and medium-sized states who rely on international law, the doctrine of sovereign equality and the principles on the United Nations that forbid the use of force to alter borders or interfere in the domestic politics of another sovereign state. Russias actions and justification for war have set a very dangerous precedent. Thats pretty cut and dry. And yet, the ASEAN states have largely equivocated, each for its own reason. Singapore has been far ahead of the rest of its partners in the bloc. It immediately condemned Russias attack on Ukraine. The Lion City has since announced a swath of sanctions, including banking, SWIFT correspondence, the freeze on high-tech exports and travel bans. It remains to be seen if Singapores sovereign wealth funds will follow the lead of Norway and divest themselves of Russian assets. Singaporean Foreign Minister Vivian Balakrishnan has made clear whats really at stake in the crisis on the other side of the globe. We cannot accept one country attacking another without justification, arguing that its independence was the result of historical errors and crazy decisions' Unless we as a country stand up for principles that are the very foundations for the independence and sovereignty of smaller nations, our own right to exist and prosper as a nation may similarly be called into question, he said. Brunei and the Philippines belatedly condemned the attack. Indonesia has done so in its own way without assigning blame to Russia, and making clear that it would not impose any sanctions on Moscow. A joint statement put out by the ASEAN foreign ministers on Feb. 28 made no mention of Russias invasion of a sovereign state, let alone its targeting of civilians and effort to capture Ukraines main cities. The statement called on both sides to exercise maximum restraint, ignoring that one side was fighting for its very existence as a sovereign state. This was an exercise in diplomatic cowardice. Russian President Vladimir Putin attends the virtual ASEAN-East Asia Summit, hosted by Brunei, via a video link at his residence outside Moscow, Oct. 27, 2021. [Sputnik/Evgeniy Paulin/Kremlin via Reuters] As with the coup in Myanmar, many governments in Southeast Asia expected the invasion of Ukraine to be over in a blink, too fast for them to be forced to make a stand. But that hasnt happened. President Vladimir Putin planned a blitzkrieg attack, the quick encirclement of cities and an immediate Ukrainian government surrender. The Russians never expected the Ukrainians to put up such stiff resistance or the international community to be galvanized in norm-shattering ways. While the Ukrainians have fared relatively well in the opening days of the war, the Russians have been changing their tactics: they are moving more deliberately and their supply lines are tighter. Theyre aware that the losses suffered thus far are unsustainable. More importantly, Russian forces and mercenaries are now targeting residential areas and other non-military targets in a much more systematic way, including government buildings, hospitals, and communications centers, according to news reports. Air power, which Moscow barely resorted to in the early days of the invasion, is being used more and more as the Russians deplete their supply of precision-guided munitions. The Russians are now using gravity bombs, cluster munitions and thermobaric bombs, greatly increasing the likelihood of civilian casualties. Putin has no shortage of men and equipment that he will throw at Ukraine to install a neutralized vassal state. Body bags returning home do not particularly affect him. This is going to be a long drawn-out conflict. Chinas response Of course, all of this has a bearing on China. Beijing continues to back Moscow, despite some apparent misgivings as the war threatens to be a bloody affair, and one that is roiling international energy markets. Beijing agrees that Ukraine is a sovereign state, but it also agrees that the European country has limited sovereignty because of choices it has made and Russias "legitimate security concerns." Beijing has clearly betrayed its oft-stated commitment to the inviolability of state sovereignty, something that all countries in Southeast Asia should note. Through speaking out of both sides of its mouth and through its actions, China has thoroughly embraced Russias doctrine of limited sovereignty. China also blames the war on Washington and Brussels with their Cold War mentality. It has promised to maintain normal trade with Russia and will not support international sanctions on Moscow. With Russia being forced out of the SWIFT financial network, Russia will become more dependent on the Chinese-run alternative, the Cross-Border Interbank Payment System, though it will force Russia to rapidly increase the amount of Chinese yuan that it uses in trade. The liberal international order The countries in Southeast Asia, meanwhile, must be prepared for a conflict in Ukraine that will last years. They need to understand that Russia is willing to raze entire cities so President Vladimir Putin does not have to humiliatingly seek a negotiated settlement. States have to be sober in their assessment that, having entered this conflict with maximalist aims, there is no off-ramp for Putin, who is far more likely to escalate the conflict than accept defeat. Which is why Southeast Asias equivocation is so baffling. The international response to Russias illegal invasion should remind everyone why President Vladimir Putin hated and feared the liberal international order so much, and reinforce why it is in the interest of Southeast Asian states to begin to act in ways that support their long-term security. Zachary Abuza is a professor at the National War College in Washington and an adjunct at Georgetown University. The views expressed here are his own and do not reflect the position of the U.S. Department of Defense, the National War College, Georgetown University or BenarNews. The Indonesian military and police pledged Wednesday to crack down on personnel who attend religious gatherings involving radical preachers, after President Joko Jokowi Widodo had warned the institutions to improve discipline in their ranks. Speaking at the annual leadership meeting of the military and police a day earlier, Jokowi also cited cases of soldiers and police discussing controversial government policies in online messaging groups as an example of poor discipline. The presidents directive is for the common good to curb the spread of radicalism, national police spokesman Dedi Prasetyo told reporters in Jakarta. If theres evidence of violations, the Professional Investigator and Safeguard Division [of the police] will take firm action against members. The army chief of staff, Gen. Dudung Abdurachman, also told reporters that the armed forces (TNI) would comply with the presidents order. Dont let us make the wrong choice by inviting a preacher who has been exposed to radicalism, Dudung said. Dont let our families be exposed to misguided teachings. Jokowi on Tuesday emphasized that members of the armed forces must follow orders of their superiors, noting it is necessary to be selective in choosing a preacher to speak at a religious study session to minimize the spread of radical ideas. The same goes for the ladies [wives of TNI and police members]. They cant just hold gatherings with others and invite preachers as they please in the name of democracy, Jokowi said. Be careful lest you invite radical preachers. In November, Ahmad Nurwakhid, a director at the National Counter-terrorism Agency (BNPT), said militants linked to the outlawed Jemaah Islamiyah (JI) radical group had tried to infiltrate the Indonesian military, police and government ministries for more than a decade. One month earlier, police said officers had arrested 876 JI members since the 2002 Bali bombings, which killed 202 people. But they warned that the number of members and sympathizers was estimated to be 10 times as many, with 67 JI-affiliated religious schools suspected to be breeding grounds for militants. JI, which was outlawed in 2008, has not staged a major attack since 2011. Still, police said they arrested 339 suspected militants belonging to JI and other groups in 2021, an increase of 56 percent from the previous year. Officers also killed 18 suspected militants last year. Indonesian President Joko Jokowi Widodo speaks at the annual leadership meeting of police and the military at the militarys headquarters in East Jakarta, March 1, 2022. [Courtesy of the Indonesia Presidential Secretariat] New capital Jokowi also warned soldiers and police against getting involved in debates about his governments plan to move the national capital from Jakarta to Borneo Island, saying that had been approved by the national parliament. He said he had seen WhatsApp postings where military and police members have expressed opposition to the move. There is no such thing as subordinates feeling they are free to go against their superiors. Theres no way, he said. In January, Indonesias parliament passed a law to relocate the national capital from traffic-clogged Jakarta to a forested region in East Kalimantan province, clearing the way for the construction of the new city called Nusantara. Slamet Maarif, a leader of a mass protest that led to the 2017 jailing of former Jakarta Gov. Basuki Ahok Tjahaja Purnama for blasphemy against Islam, urged Jokowi to clarify what he meant by radical. What is Jokowis version of radical? Is it the case that those who are critical [of the government] and the opposition are considered radical? Slamet told BenarNews. But Amirsyah Tambunan, the secretary general of the Indonesian Ulema Council (MUI), a semi-official group of Islamic scholars, backed Jokowis order. The definition is clear, he said, adding that radical preachers sermons lead to acts of extremism and terrorism. In an online discussion last month, Irfan Idris, head of the BNPTs deradicalization program, noted that militants had infiltrated state institutions, including the military and police. Im sorry, the TNI and the National Police are also vulnerable [to religious radicalism], Irfan said. Security analyst Anton Aliabbas said Jokowi was demanding full loyalty from the military and police. His message can be interpreted that Jokowi wants to ensure full support for government policies that are still controversial, especially the national capital project, he told BenarNews. Anton said conversations on messaging apps could potentially be leaked and misused to influence public opinion against the government, something the president wants to avoid. Jokowi wants to make sure that debates on WhatsApp groups wont affect the loyalty of the TNI and the police to the government, he said. In July 2016, when Pham Nhat Vuong, chairman of Vingroup and the richest man in Vietnam, was asked if he would recommend investing in Ukraine, his reply was candid: To be honest, I dont think you should invest in Ukraine. In the aftermath of Russias invasion of its neighbor last week, his comments seem prescient. Vuong, who went to Ukraine 30 years ago as a student and made his first dollars in the city of Kharkiv, gave his reason: They [Ukraine] are stuck in a conundrum that sees no solution in the near future unless they go with Russia. If they decided to go with the European Union, Russia would never leave them alone. But they cant lean towards Russia as long as this regime is still in power. In short, the situation in Ukraine at the moment is very complicated. Vietnams so-called red capitalists seemed highly aware of the precariousness in Ukraine yet officialdom, including senior diplomats, were caught off-guard when President Vladimir Putin ordered the full-scale offensive on Ukraine on Feb. 24 an action that has caused bloodshed, mass displacement and international outrage. Its also placed countries in Southeast Asia in a diplomatic bind. Individual governments, and the regional bloc, the Association of Southeast Asian Nations, or ASEAN, face a mounting challenge in balancing relations among the worlds superpowers. While Southeast Asias economic ties with Russia are comparatively small, how countries respond diplomatically to the Russian aggression could also have implications for their relations with China, which has steered clear of direct criticism of Moscow. Russia is also an important source of military hardware for a number of countries in the region. There already have been stark differences in how the 10 members of ASEAN have responded to the Russian invasion of its neighbor. With Singapores decision to impose economic sanctions against Russia and Indonesias condemnation of Russias military assaults in Ukraine, ASEAN may now find it difficult to come up with a clear and united framework when dealing with Russia, said Stephen Nagy, senior associate professor at the International Christian University in Tokyo. Then-Vietnamese Prime Minister Nguyen Xuan Phuc is seen at a wreath-laying ceremony at the Tomb of the Unknown Soldier by the Kremlin wall in central Moscow, May 23, 2019. Phuc is now president of Vietnam. [Reuters] Vietnams dilemma In ASEAN, Vietnam has the strongest historic ties with Russia and perhaps the most at stake in how the Ukraine conflict plays out. A Vietnamese government senior analyst said: We didnt believe it when there were clear warnings in Western media and in our talks with international partners about an imminent attack. Perhaps there was some denialism on our part, because this conflict would have put us in a very difficult position, said the analyst, who wished to stay anonymous as he was not authorized to speak to the foreign media. Vietnam joined other Southeast Asian countries in issuing a statement on the situation in Ukraine that not only did not condemn Russias aggression but also did not mention Russia. At the United Nations General Assembly special session on Ukraine on Tuesday, Vietnamese Ambassador Dang Hoang Giang stuck to well-rehearsed calls for restraint, dialogue, and long-term solutions to differences although some interpreted his reference to how wars and conflicts often stem from outdated doctrines as implicit criticism of Putin. The Vietnamese analyst, however, noted: We cant afford to offend Russia as there will be post-war dilemmas to consider. Tanks are seen at Russia-Belarus military drills at the Obuz-Lesnovsky training ground, in Belarus, Feb. 19, 2022, prior to the Russian invasion of Ukraine. [AP] Western Making Among ASEAN countries, Singapore and Indonesia have separately condemned the Russian invasion and on Monday the Philippines joined them in expressing explicit condemnation of the invasion of Ukraine a change of tack after the countrys Defense Secretary Delfin Lorenzana had said that it's none of our business to meddle in whatever they're doing in Europe. Others in Southeast Asia view the Ukraine conflict through a similar lens. Kasit Piromya, Thailands former foreign minister and former ambassador to Moscow, said: ASEAN should not be involved. It was European affairs and of Western making. All could have been prevented from the beginning if the U.S. did not keep on pushing NATO towards the Russian borders and took into consideration the Russian call for its security concern, he told RFA. Now Putin is being pushed into a corner and his eventual and final reaction will be unpredictable. The Russian nuclear forces being put on the alert cannot be taken lightly. Biden and Putin have to speak to one another as soon as possible, Kasit said. Cambodia, the current chair of ASEAN, says it is staying neutral and urging a negotiated settlement. But on Wednesday, Prime Minister Hun Sen also said he opposes Europe sending weapons to Ukraine. Sending weapons will worsen the war, he said. ASEAN reality One of the main arguments that the U.S. and its allies use to rally support from other countries in condemning Russia is that they should oppose great powers unilateral actions to invade or coerce relatively smaller states. Singapores Foreign Minister Vivian Balakrishnan said in his speech Monday when announcing sanctions against Russia: Unless we, as a country, stand up for principles that are the very foundation for the independence and sovereignty of smaller nations, our own right to exist and prosper as a nation may similarly be called into question. Nagy of Tokyos International Christian University said that comment reflected Singapores lack of strong and deep economic relations with China, and its need to work with like-minded countries to have a strong and coherent approach to secure the rules-based order. But for many smaller countries in Southeast Asia, the response to the Ukraine crisis may boil down to their own calculations of the regional reality where another super power China is looming large. Just a month ago, on the sidelines of the Beijing Winter Olympics, China and Russia issued a joint statement confirming their mutual support and the deepening of diplomatic ties between them. The response to the ongoing Ukrainian conflict depends on the economic relationship that each Southeast Asian country has, as well as how they view China's reaction if Southeast Asian countries take a strong stance vis-a-vis Russia, said Nagy. Many in Southeast Asia may not want to directly criticize Russia for fear that it may anger or promote China to be more aggressive towards its island positions in Southeast Asia, he added. Several ASEAN countries, including Brunei, Indonesia, Malaysia, the Philippines and Vietnam, have territorial disputes of various extents with China in the South China Sea. Future of relationship Russia and Ukraine both have weak economic relations with countries in ASEAN. Russia only accounted for 0.53 percent of ASEAN's overall goods trade by value in 2020, and Ukraine only 0.1 percent, according to ASEANstats, the bloc's data portal. The two countries direct investment into ASEAN is even smaller. The real value of Russias relations with some of ASEAN countries lies in the defense and security domain. Russia is the biggest arms supplier in Southeast Asia, according to the Stockholm International Peace Research Institute. But Nagy said that the future of Russia-ASEAN relations depends largely on the success or failure of Putin and his invasion of Ukraine. If the West is successful in pressuring the Putin regime to step back through economic statecraft and a much more consolidated and coherent approach, it may put Russia in a weaker position moving forward, he said. Some analysts believe that with Putin still in the presidency, the ASEAN-Russia relationship will turn sour. In the days to come, ASEAN, as a bloc in the United Nations, would have to reject Russia outright, said Phar Kim Beng, founder of Strategic Pan Indo-Pacific Arena (SPIPA), a think tank, adding: Otherwise, many Europeans, Americans, Japanese, and South Koreans would not find ASEAN a trustworthy place for foreign direct investment and tourism. Any countries that are still supportive of Russia, would not only have their reputation tarnished, but their citizens' lives trapped in Ukraine in serious peril, Phar said. For those ASEAN countries which choose to navigate between superpowers, the balancing act after the latest developments in Ukraine will be even more difficult to maintain, said Huynh Tam Sang, a lecturer at Ho Chi Minh City University of Social Sciences and Humanities in Vietnam. The Russia-ASEAN relationship will be put to the test following Russian President Vladimir Putins potential attendance at ASEAN-related summits scheduled to take place in December this year, Sang said. Philippine soldiers keep watch near bombed-out buildings in what had been the main battle area in Marawi, southern Philippines, Oct. 25, 2017. The Filipino military said Wednesday that it had identified the Islamic State extremist groups new emir for Southeast Asia as the leader of a local militant faction being targeted in an offensive underway in the southern Philippines. Abu Zacharia (also known as Jer Mimbantas and Faharudin Hadji Satar) is believed to have survived the military operation in Lanao del Sur province that was launched on Tuesday and involved air strikes and ground troops. We have information that Abu Zacaria was designated as (IS) emir for Southeast Asia, Brig. Gen. Jose Maria Cuerpo II told reporters on Wednesday. Cuerpo is the commanding officer of 103rd Infantry Brigade, which led the assault. The offensive overran Zacharias base in a hinterland village in Maguing town, the military said. It announced that another suspected militant had died, bringing the death toll to three militants and one soldier. Lanao del Sur is where hundreds of pro-IS militants laid siege to Marawi, the provincial capital, for five months in 2017. On Tuesday, the military launched pre-dawn airstrikes while sending ground troops to attack positions of Zacharia and his men. The military has been pursuing Zacharias group since January, Cuerpo said, adding that a recent intelligence report warned that his group might be preparing for a new round of hostilities. We have evidence, that is why we launched the offensive, Cuerpo said. Abu Zacharia succeeded Owaida Marohombsar (also known as Abu Dar), the leader of the Daulah Islamiyah-Maute Group who was killed in Lanao del Norte, a neighboring province, sometime in March 2019. Daulah Islamiyah means Islamic State in the local language. Cuerpo said Zacharia was part of the Maute group that seized Marawi in 2017 and engaged government forces in a five-month battle, during which as many as 1,200 people died and much of the city was destroyed. He escaped as troops retook Marawi while the regional leader of IS, Isnilon Hapilon, was killed in the fighting there. Hapilon was succeeded by Abu Dar. Marawi is about 37 km (33 miles) northwest of Maguing. Another IS faction based on Jolo Island, in the Philippines far-southern Sulu chain, meanwhile has been led by Hatib Hajan Sawadjaan, whose group was blamed for deadly bombings in 2019 and 2020. Sawadjaan has not been heard from since July 2020 and is believed to have been killed in a clash with government troops. A map of Lanao Del Sur released by the Philippine military on March 2, 2022, shows the area of an offensive against pro-Islamic State Filipino militants. [Handout from Armed Forces of the Philippines] Remote location The site of the military offensive is remote and not populated by civilians. Still, it rankled communities wary of government bombs that leveled most of Marawi in 2017, Army chief Lt. Gen. Romeo Brawner Jr. told reporters. What the Philippine Army encountered Tuesday was the same group that we were running after when we were in Marawi. This group is remnants of the IS-Maute. Recently they have been trying to recruit more members, said Brawner, who commanded troops in Marawi. He said he had received phone calls from local leaders expressing concern about the possibility of new siege and whether the offensives would lead to a new round of displacements. I told them not to panic because the conflict is very limited to that very specific area, one small village in Maguing and it is not close to the (civilian) population, he said. We are not going to see another Marawi siege. When asked, Brawner said Tuesdays aerial bombings were necessary to soften the enemy position, adding that militants take actions to slow troops from advancing. Just like what we learned during the Marawi siege, the enemy is known to lay land mines, Brawner said. In order to counter that, we had to use air strikes to clear the improvised explosive devices before our ground troops assaulted. Drieza Lininding, head of the civic organization Moro Consensus Group, questioned the military for launching air strikes without letting the people of Lanao know about the offensive. Many were afraid because of the powerful explosions. These are not test fires to test military hardware, he told BenarNews. Although the offensive was in a remote location, the explosions from it could be heard faintly in Marawi and other Lanao areas. Drieza, who is Muslim and lives in Marawi, said he would not venture to the region where the militants have encampments unless such a trip is necessary. Ahod Ebrahim, a former Muslim separatist leader who is known widely as Murad Ebrahim and heads the Bangsamoro Autonomous Region of Muslim Mindanao, said there were reports that the bombing runs had forced an undetermined number of villagers to flee over fears of getting caught in the middle of the raids. We are now closely working with our partners from the municipal government of Maguing, he said in a statement. Security forces and ministers are already on the ground to assist our internally displaced communities and assure that they get home safely as soon as possible. Meanwhile, Maj. Andrew Linao, spokesman of the Zamboanga City-based Western Mindanao Command (WestMinCom), said soldiers were continuing to pursue the militants. WestMinCom commander Lt. Gen. Alfredo Rosario Jr urged people in Lanao del Sur to remain calm and allow us to do our job. Your armed forces will not allow these terrorists to inflict harm on your respective communities. We will not stop until these lawless elements are completely crushed, Rosario said. Richel V. Umel and Froilan Gallardo in Cagayan de Oro, Philippines, contributed to this report. Sa-nguan Monlakhon, a retired soldier formerly stationed in the Thai Deep South, stands in line at the All Seasons Building, which houses the Ukrainian Embassy, in Bangkok, March 2, 2022. Sa-nguan Monlakhon, a former Thai soldier, despises bullies. That is why he wants to sign up to join the international brigade of Ukraines military, after the countrys president said he would welcome citizens from across the globe to join the Ukrainian peoples armed resistance against invading Russian forces. I want to join the force because of my democratic ideology. I hate bullying, the 44-year-old ex- soldier who was formerly stationed in Thailands troubled far-southern border region, told BenarNews, referring in this case to Russia as the bully. I have six years of experience fighting the [separatist] insurgency in the Deep South as a ranger lots of experience. To take over the former territory of the USSR is a declaration of war that no one agrees with. Sa-nguan is among scores of Thai citizens who have phoned the Ukrainian Embassy in Bangkok, including around 40 who have shown up there to express interest in volunteering to join the former Soviet republics armed resistance against the invasion, according to an embassy official. Sa-nguan, a native of Nong Bualampoo province in northeastern Thailand, quit his combat job 10 years ago because he had young children and his wife was worried for his safety. Now Im single again. So I came here to apply for a position, he said, referring to standing in line outside the Ukrainian embassy to sign up to fight alongside the Ukrainian army. However, the Thai government is perturbed by this kind of show of solidarity with Ukraine because it is concerned about its own citizens safety. There is a lot of concern if there will be Thai people traveling to fight in Ukraine. [We are] afraid they will be harmed, [in] which [case] we have to take care of them, Tanee Sangrat, spokesman for the Thai foreign ministry, told BenarNews. Hundreds of Thai citizens have also sent the embassy emails to apply to sign up for the international section of Ukraines territorial armed forces, according to a Facebook group created about the endeavor. This was after the Ukrainian Embassy here posted a notice on its premises appealing to foreign volunteers to enlist in the international legion of the territorial defense force. Before it was taken down, the sign said all volunteers with military experience who want to join the defense of Ukraine, Europe and world can come fight side by side with the Ukrainians . On Feb. 27, three days after Russia launched the invasion, Ukrainian President Volodymyr Zelenskyy said that any world citizen who wanted to join the fight against an unjustified criminal and cynical intrusion was welcome in Ukraine, according to a statement from the Ukraine Crisis Media Center that cited the countrys Ministry of Defense. A Thai official working at the Ukrainian Embassy in Thailand said there were many inquiries about the embassy notice. As many as a hundred called in about it Wednesday, the official at the embassy told BenarNews on the condition of anonymity as she was concerned for her safety. The embassy source said there were no details on how applicants should go about arranging their trip to Ukraine. The Embassy does not know the details about qualification, compensation, or schedule because no detailed directions are available yet, she said. Initially, we asked applicants to submit a passport copy and their CV [curriculum vitae]. If they could eventually go, they would have to pay about U.S. $1,000 for the journey. Not everyone wants to fight, though, because participating in a war is a dangerous proposition, and, some believe, morally wrong. For instance, in Ukraine, the Russian attack has killed more than 2,000 civilians and destroyed hospitals, kindergartens and homes, according to the countrys emergency service, news agencies reported. Among the casualties were 21 dead children and 55 wounded ones, according to Ukraines ombudswoman, Reuters reported. On the other side, Moscow says nearly 500 Russian troops have been killed during the invasion of Ukraine, Agence France-Presse reported. A Thai man who wished only to be identified as M. for security reasons, said he was applying to serve in Ukraine, but in a humanitarian capacity. He said he had had taken a few military training courses but had never enlisted and would never take up arms. I feel pity of the people there. Ukrainian people have to pay for the price of the governments, M. told BenarNews. They dont deserve this. I want to help them with humanitarian work. He acknowledged, though, that his family is worried about his plan and does not want him to take risks. If I make it [through the crisis] I will take it as a good change in my life, he said. If not, I take the risk of becoming a prisoner of war. Greg Sukiennik has worked at all three Vermont News & Media newspapers and was their managing editor from 2017-19. He previously worked for ESPN.com, for the AP in Boston, and at The Berkshire Eagle in Pittsfield, Mass. If you'd like to leave a comment (or a tip or a question) about this story with the editors, please email us We also welcome letters to the editor for publication; you can do that by filling out our letters form and submitting it to the newsroom. PITTSFIELD Isaac doesnt have a great deal to say in Genesis 22 as his father, Abraham, under Gods command, binds him to an altar at the top of a mountain and prepares to sacrifice him as a burnt offering before God intervenes and provides a substitute. Isaac does, however, have a great deal to say in An Awkward Conversation in the Shadow of Mount Moriah, playwright John Bavosos worthy contribution to Barrington Stage Companys generally undistinguished 11th annual 10X10 New Play Festival, which opened over the weekend at BSCs Boyd-Quinson Stage. Theater Review 11th Annual 10X10 New Play Festival. What: Ten new 10-minute plays by Ellen Abrams, Laurie Allen, Glen Alterman, Cynthia Faith Arsenault, John Bavaso, Steven Korbar, Mark Henry Levine, Chelsea Marcantel, Cary Pepper, Robert Weibezahl. Directed by Julianne Boyd and Matthew Penn With: Aziza Gharib, Doug Harris, Matt Neely, Kelsey Rainwater, Peggy Pharr Wilson, Robert Zukerman Who: Barrington Stage Company Where: Boyd-Quinson Stage, 30 Union St., Pittsfield When: Through March 13 Performances: 7:30 p.m. Thursday through Saturday; 3 p.m. Saturday and Sunday Running time: 1 hour, 55 minutes (including one intermission) Tickets: $25-$45 Streaming option: $35. Stream on-demand through your BSC account, 12:01 a.m., March 31 through 11:59 p.m., April 3. Reservations and information: 413-236-8888; barringtonstageco.org/10x10 COVID-19 safety protocols: Masks required. All performances will have socially distanced seating (two empty seats between every party). Proof of full vaccination including booster shot and ID required. Individuals not eligible to receive a booster until after Feb. 24, guests under 12, or those who need reasonable accommodations due to a medical condition that prevents vaccination must provide a negative COVID-19 antigen test taken within 12 hours of the performance start time. Complete information available online at berkshirestageco.org. Rabbinical tradition holds that Isaac was in his upper 30s at the time of the binding. As played by a winning Doug Harris, Isaac is a wonderfully articulate, self-possessed young man who is more than a bit confused by his fathers action. Hes not the only one. As the two begin their three-day journey home and begin discussing the implications of what nearly happened to Isaac on the mountaintop, it is evident that the 100-plus-years-old Abraham (played with touching conviction by Robert Zukerman), is still piecing together for himself not only his relationship with God but also his relationship with Isaac. Abraham is caught in the thicket of his responsibilities as a parent on the one hand and, on the other, his responsibility to God. Youre my son. Of course I didnt want to do that to you, Abraham says to Isaac. But when God commands you to do something, you do it. ... Nothing about this nothing at all about being a fatheris simple or easy. I had to show God that I trusted Him, and would do whatever He commands, Abraham says a bit later. But I had faith that He never really intended for me to kill you. Bavoso has written this anything but awkward Conversation with wry wit and insight and it is played by Zukerman and Harris with light-hearted skill and understanding. An Awkward Conversation not only is about faith and trust, it is about the difficulties of navigating a meaningful, complicated relationship several relationships, in fact with openness and honesty. By chance call it luck of the draw, if you will relationships how they begin; how they end; how they sustain themselves; reverberate through the more rewarding plays in this years Tens collection. Steven Korbars Honestly, for example, peeks in at a mid- to late-20s twosome: Bobby (an engaging Doug Harris) and Kaylene (Kelsey Rainwater in an exquisitely layered, nuanced performance), marking three months of dating by breaking up. Kaylene has made it a rule of her life never to date anyone beyond three months. And, of course, it is only now, at this moment of finality that Kaylene and Bobby find they have never been more open to each other; honest. For Kaylene, relationships built on lies, secrets, withholdings are par for the course. Im not sure that you really make it years and years without somebody lying, Kaylene tells Bobby at one point. I think that its kind of like kissing ... when youre that close up; maybe its really just better not to have your eyes open, you know? Breaking up turns out to be easy to do in Glenn Altermans acceptable Love Me, Love My Work in which a playwright named Jane (Peggy Pharr Wilson) ends a relationship delete is her word for it with a man named Ned (Matt Neely) whom she has known quite well for some time. Transition is at stake in Chelsea Marcantels far more successful Climax in which two best friends for years, Sam (Rainwater) and Teddy (Neely) reach a possible turning point in their relationship during a double date between Sam and her husband, Marcus, and Teddy and his girlfriend of two months, Laura. Sams dilemma is that she is trapped, she says in a boring marriage with a good man. And I I never considered that possibility, when I was single. I dont know what to do about it. Teddys dilemma is that he is deeply in love with Sam. And so, while Marcus is off getting the car, Sam and Teddy try to come to terms with the options, and consequences of those options, that now face them. Just as the play reaches what seems a sweet resolution, Marcantel goes just a step further in a moment that feels gratuitous and anti-climactic. Still, under Penns direction, the pacing and rhythm are solid and Rainwater and Neely handle Marcantels material with light hand and heart. Another kind of relationship mother and daughter is at the heart of Robert Weibezahls affecting, touchingly performed and authentically directed (by Julianne Boyd) Gown which Wilsons Lynn and her daughter, Annie (a bright and fresh Aziza Gharib) in a say-yes-to-the-dress bridal store visit with a very different nuance. Elsewhere: In Laurie Allens thin Stealing a Kiss, an unlikely relationship between an overly gregarious elderly widower named Harvey (Zukerman in a wildly overplayed performance even given Harveys natural ebullience) and a reticent widow named Sue (Wilson) begins under an umbrella at a bus stop. Honesty is at stake in Ellen Abrams strained Liars Anonymous, in which two members of an LA group, Max (Neely) and Charlotte (Gharib) outdo each other with supposed autobiographies that carry more than faint echoes of literature, film, and theater. In Cynthia Faith Arsenaults pointless Escape From Faux Pas, an elderly couple, Estelle (Wilson) and Harold (an overwrought Zukerman), newly arrived at a prestigious retirement community, wrestle with what to do with a package of eye-raising material meant for the next door neighbors, but delivered by Amazon by mistake to Estelle and Harold, who has compounded Amazons mistake by opening the box. Mark Harvey Levines intermittently funny Misfortune finds a husband (Harris) at the wrong end of a series of fortune cookie fortunes while dining out at a Chinese restaurant with his wife (Gharib), who is nothing but blessed by her fortune cookie fortunes. And what would a program like this be without a little politics thrown in for good measure? "10X10" ends with Cary Peppers obvious, unoriginal The Voice of the People in which a local television news anchor (played by Zukerman) and his partner Barbara Clark (Rainwater) try to gauge the voice of the people of HomeHaven, USA, a town of just under 500, on the day of and day before mayoral election day. The leading candidate appears to be John Smith, who has no political experience, no political record, no platform, no endorsement, no spokesperson, and refuses to make any public appearance. His opponent, Sean Tigon, is a thoughtful man with compassion, a heart, common sense, practical accomplishment. The Voice of the People feels considerably longer than its brief running time; like a two-minute, at best, Saturday Night Live sketch stretched well beyond endurance; an opportunity for the 10X10 cast to let off a little steam with some unapologetically broad comedic performances. Led by Wilson, who is wonderful to watch throughout, the company, with the exceptions of Zukermans self-indulgences, is able and appealing. The plays, for the most part, seem less inventive onstage as they must have seemed in the mind. Still, this is the 10X10. As Penn said in a recent interview with the Eagle, just dive in. READER QUESTIONS Q: We are somewhat new at feeding birds. This is our third year and the first winter it took a long time for the birds to find us and then begin coming in numbers and variety. Even now we do not have all that many. I do have one question, why do chickadees take only one seed at a time and fly off? Other birds like those blue jays, finches and black grackles just stay there eating. They appear greedy eating a lot at one sitting. Edward, Adams A: I have long wondered why myself. First the reason why: Black-capped chickadees do not have powerful bills and must hammer away at sunflower seeds, and other seeds as well. They could hammer away at the feeder but then they would be in the open where a hawk could swoop in and that would be the birds end. So, they take a seed and fly off to a safe place to open the seed and open it in a safe, or safer place. Birds like the chickadee are used to opening hard shelled seeds and even when offered ready-to-eat seeds, like shucked sunflower seed hearts, are so used to flying off they continue to do so. I just purchased a bag of sunflower chips (like being pre-chewed) and it will be interesting to see how they react. Q: We have bird feeders and wonder why first thing in the morning they are here feeding, sometimes in a frenzy, then all is quiet. A few individuals may come but not many, then later in the later part of the day there may be a feeding in numbers again. Why dont the just eat when the numbers are lower? Susan S., Pittsfield A: Like us, we have a breakfast and dinner and most of us have lunch. Some of us eat most all the time. This is somewhat like our feathered friends. In addition, the birds at your feeder have other sources for food. Maybe there are several other feeders in the neighborhood. So they have a routine, and while we make winter eating easier for them with ready food sources, they do rely on wild sources of food as well. Finding food is not always a guarantee, so searching for the next meal uses a great deal of energy. Q: I am so excited to have bluebirds at my suet feeder. I did not get to put out sunflower seeds this winter and was a little late putting out my beef suet and then suet blocks. For a couple of weeks at least, I have had two pair of bluebirds feeding on the suet feeders and the suet that drops on the ground. I have never had bluebirds at my feeders before. So, I was surprised and grateful to see them. Their colors are quite bright. Could these be the early migrants? Or do they keep their beautiful colors during the winter? Carol Ann P. Hinsdale A: For a while bluebirds began coming in March, as far back as the 1950s; some early birds arrive in February and there are now bluebirds that winter over, so these birds that are visiting your suet feeders could be early arrivers or winter birds (like many American robins so common now throughout the winter.) Their winter plumage is duller than the brilliant mating color of the male. And, by now, the males should have mating colors. Females appear (to me) to be closer to the same throughout the year. READER COMMENT: Nancy B. wrote: I was very surprised when you said you had never seen the mourning dove in the feeder. I have a large feeder with the suet slots on either side and place on the corner rail of the deck. This year I only have 13 doves compared to 30 last year and they fight to be in the feeder and the losers eat off the deck floor. I have never taken a picture of it for I thought it was common. NatureWatchs Answer: All of our feeders have been the hanging type. So I have made a plastic feeder made of reused clear plastic pastry containers for cracked corn with the roof from a larger round container and seed holder from a smaller piece, supported by a piece of broom handle and fastened to the deck railing. On and off and more so as the sun gets stronger the pair (sometimes three), have come accustomed to sunbathing on the deck railing so I thought it a good place. Sometimes sitting close to the feeder, they ignore it. I am sure soon they will try it, but it may take time. Within a day or two I saw a cardinal and a dark-eyed junco try it out. Neither are fans considering better foods like black oil sunflower seed (soon to graduate from sunflower hearts to chips) and a mix of white proso millet, canary grass and other seeds. I recently read that a variety of birds will eat this seed, including song, chipping and white-throated sparrows, nuthatches, goldfinches, house, and purple finches, blackbirds including the red-wings, (and pigeons, unfortunately). I recall many poultry eat it with vigor and recall many years back, when the wild turkey was first released on Mount Washington in South County, the released turkeys readily fed on it. LAST CALL! The Black (gray) Squirrel survey is ending Saturday and on Sunday I will finish tallying the numbers for the March 12-13 issue of The Berkshire Eagle. Any late readers have time to email naturewatch41@gmail.com with name, town, and number of black squirrels seen any time during the past few months. The Massachusetts Association of Enrolled Agents will hold a virtual information session March 17, for enrolled agents to discuss tax form issues. Business writer Tony Dobrowolski's main focus is on business reporting. He came to The Eagle in 1992 after previously working for newspapers in Connecticut and Montreal. He can be reached at tdobrowolski@berkshireeagle.com or 413-496-6224. Most patients at Berkshire Medical Center in Pittsfield and at other local health care facilities owned by Berkshire Health Systems will be allowed to have more visitors. The change comes as COVID-19 cases decline. PITTSFIELD A review board run by the Diocese of Springfield has upheld a new allegation of sexual abuse by a Catholic priest who served parishioners of a Pittsfield church in the mid-1980s. The diocese said Wednesday it updated its roster of credibly accused priests to now reflect multiple allegations that Charles J. Sullivan sexually abused minors. Sullivan, who served the diocese from 1965 to 1992, died in 2014. He was assigned to St. Mary the Morning Star Parish in Pittsfield from 1984 to 1986. The newly confirmed allegation of sexual abuse of a minor dates to 1994, the diocese said; the previously confirmed allegation concerns abuse in 1993. Sullivan was removed from public ministry in 2002, the diocese said, and assigned to a life of prayer and penance in 2005. This week, the diocese also updated its list of credibly accused priests to include, for the first time, confirmed allegations that the late Gerald A. Lafleur, who served as a priest in parishes in Hampden and Hampshire counties, abused a minor in 1974. Lafleur had been ordained in 1953 and died in 2011. According to the diocese, an allegation is deemed credible by its review board if there is a reasonable cause to believe that the sexual abuse occurred. While it is not a definitive finding of guilt, the public acknowledgement of those credible allegations is a critically important action that the diocese owes to those survivors who have so courageously stepped forward. Anyone who wants to report misconduct can contact the dioceses Office of Safe Environment and Victim Assistance at (413) 452-0624, call its hotline at 800-842-9055, or send an email to reportabuse@diospringfield.org. The diocese said it encourages people to also report abuse directly to law enforcement authorities. The diocese said that its list of credibly accused clergy will be updated four times a year, if new abuse cases warrant that. PITTSFIELD In the hours before the February break, Superintendent Joseph Curtis made an announcement to teachers, staff members and families that the districtwide mask mandate will end this month. In the days since students have returned to class, coronavirus cases have remained low as of late Tuesday there were 11 active cases giving every indication that the superintendent will likely announce Friday that the mask mandate will end March 7. Masks no longer required on school buses in Massachusetts A day after K-12 students returned to classrooms with a statewide mask mandate no longer in place, the Baker administration announced that children no longer need to mask up while riding in school buses or vans. Curtis said given the recent rule changes at the state and federal level around masking and transportation serves, the districts masking requirement on buses will likely end with the in-school mandate. That gives the district a handful of days to prepare the PPS community for the shift to optional masking. On Sunday, the superintendent sent out a guidance document to district staff with a kind of lesson plan for discussing the transition from a mask mandate to optional masking policy. We didnt really get into specifics of Dont say this, dont say that. It really revolved around the conversation and lesson itself and district rule No. 4, which is respect and value everyones individual and group identity, Curtis said. District lessons and conversations about making the transition to optional masking began Tuesday at Pittsfield High School with a video presentation during students homeroom time. Curtis said lessons will continue at each school over the course of the week. Some Berkshire County school districts will drop mask mandates as soon as March As the state hands authority on masking back to individual school districts, several in Berkshire County say they will end their mask mandates in March. Others have postponed the decision. Violations of the districts No. 4 rule like bullying a student for deciding to wear or not wear a mask come with consequences. In the letter to district families, Curtis said that a students first violation of the rule will be followed with a restorative conversation between the student and their teacher and a note home to the students family. A second violation will require a visit to a reset teacher, administrator or student support paraprofessional and a meeting with the students parents or caregiver. If a student has a third violation related to not respecting their peers masking decision, a bullying investigation will be launched and the student could receive in-school or out-of-school suspension. As governors across the county began rolling back coronavirus restrictions and mask requirements, Curtis said could feel that a shift in thinking was heading to Massachusetts. The superintendent said he began meeting with the districts school adjustment counselors and psychologists several weeks ago to discuss how to support students in the transition, even before the Baker Administration made a mid-February announcement ending their mask mandate. During those meetings staff formulated a plan. Over the next couple weeks counselors will be focusing on being present in the less structured areas of schools like the hallways and common spaces, according to Curtis. Being more visually present during this time [will allow staff to] hear conversations talking between and within student groups and really assess situations and provide help or intervention on the spot, Curtis said. He added that school leaders will be contacting families with the best way to get in contact with support staff. Though superintendent reinforced that the district will leave the conversations about whether or not masking is right for a student up to individual families. Two Pittsfield residents have been charged with multiple felony animal cruelty counts in the abandonment of cats in separate locations in the Berkshires in January. Arthur Raney and Kelly Hathaway are accused of abandoning 15 cats in advance of a winter storm in late January. Nine cats were left on a remote roadside in Richmond on Jan. 28; the next day, six more cats were left on Hunter Mountain Road in Lanesborough. The charges, announced during a news conference Wednesday morning at the Berkshire Humane Society in Pittsfield, were the result of a joint investigation between the law enforcement department of the Massachusetts Society for the Prevention of Cruelty to Animals and officers from the Lanesborough and state police departments. One of the cats was found dead the first night, and another died soon after being rescued, said John Perreault, executive director of the Berkshire Humane Society. Two others remain missing in Lanesborough; there are several people looking for them. The cats ranged in age from 5 months to about 7 years old, he said. Investigators were able to locate the suspects through video from doorbell cameras, which captured images of their vehicle, in the neighborhoods around the dump sites, according to Richard LeBlond, deputy chief of the MSPCA. A local motorist, Joshua Christman, was on the way to see the sunset with his 8-year-old daughter on the remote Richmond road the night of the first incident when he noticed the group of cats. He called police and posted a short video on Facebook with a plea for help. Animal lovers from around Berkshire County grabbed their pet crates, flashlights and blankets and responded to try to help round up the cats in a search that went on after darkness fell. I was surprised, and actually very thankful to see so many come to help, Christman said Wednesday. The Berkshire Humane Society offered a $1,000 reward to anyone who could provide information that leads to the arrest and conviction of anyone responsible. Perrault said it looks like someone might collect that reward. This did not have to happen, Perreault said. Anyone who is having pet issues can call us. Were here to work with pet owners to resolve issues, and sometimes the best option is to surrender the pets so they can be taken care of and find new homes. The surviving cats, which were brought to the Berkshire Humane Society for medical attention, are malnourished and suffering other ailments, according to Dr. Yoanna Maitre, a consulting veterinarian working with the shelter to treat the animals. They eventually will be put up for adoption, she said, but they have a long way to go before they are healthy enough. Raney and Hathaway were charged with 15 counts of felony animal cruelty, punishable by fines of up to $5,000 and seven years in jail on each count. They are due to be arraigned March 18 in Central Berkshire District Court in Pittsfield. Written by ACM *Strasbourg/Angelo Marcopolo/(Partly Updated)/- While it's obviously Hard Times for those who believe in De Gaule's Historic "Great Europe", nevertheless, the current tension in the Clash between USA and Russia over Ukraine, as a pretext to Divide ad downgrade Europeans, unveals some Key Insights on Our Continent's past and future : Despite a lot of "Condemnations" and more Economic "Sanctions", added to "War'-like talk, by most EU and particularly USA Establishments, French President Emmanuel Macron, who currently Chairs the EU for the Jan - June 2022 Period, Concluded the main Press-Conference of an extraordinary Brussels EU Heads of State/Government Summit overnight by stressing that : - "It's my Duty to leave the Door Open", (vis a vis Moscow), ...for when we find the Right Time to Cease Hotilities for the benefit of all People of Ukraine", (i.e. Both Sides, including Russian-Speaking Dissident Eastern Areas). Except some Vague Claims against Alleged "Inaccurate" or "Bad Excuses", (withOut specifying), EU Officials, curiously, did Not clearly challenge Denonciations about More than "50.000" Shellings allegedly Hitting suddenly the Pro-Russian Regions of Donetsk, Luhansk, etc., in Eastern Ukraine, Neither about Massive Refugee Displacements seeking Shelter at nearby Russia, etc., among a Civil Population which has Notoriously Suffered a lot, (including by Destroyed Family Homes, Wounded or Killed People, etc), already since 2014-2015+, (until 2 Victorious Offensives convinced Kiev's Putchists to Sign the "Minsk" Agreements, which Ask for a Regional Autonomy in pro-Russian areas, similar to those existing in Germany, Italy, Spain, or the UK, etc, that Kiev's Centralists have Notoriously Skiped, under various pretexts, during 7 Years, until now : 2015-2022). In consequence, Nowadays (2022) Russian move to, subsequently, Recognize the "Independence" of breakaway Regions Donetsk - Luhansk, (after several public Referenda and popular Elections in those Areas, with Huge Participation from the concerned People), was presented as the only peaceful remaining way to Prevent more Tragedies, Exclusion and Humiliations of the local Population. Turkey has Already done so, in Northern Territories of Cyprus, since 1983 (and even more Hurshly on 2021), withOut facing similar EU/USA Sanctions, but even being declared "Candidate" for EU Accession on 1999, and Paid more than 3 Billions each Year, in full Funds by the EU (since 2016+), under pretext of Exploiting economicaly and politicaly a lot of Massive Refugees from Syria and other Asian or African Countries... Despite also of the Fact that Ankara's Army has Invaded those Cypriot areas, and still Occupies them by its Military, adding even a Massive Usurpation of Most Family Homes, and the Economic Livelyhood of the Majority of local Greek-Cypriot People, obliged to Flee, as Refugees, often illegaly "Replaced" by Mass Imports of Turkish Anatolia Shetlers, (as repeatedly Denounced by CoE's Assembly and the ECHR, considered as a "War Crime" by the International Penal Court)... Something that Russia, on the Contrary, Never did. => Double Standards by some ?in Brussels ? The Innovation, Today, is Moscow's declared will to act for a kind of "De-Militarisation" in Ukraine, after Years of aggressive Arms purchaces, particularly sold by the USA, even Turkish Drones, NATO Military Expansion Threats, etc., by Kiev's current rulers, which has Notoriously wbich has fueled Russian Concerns on Security and Peace, around a Formerly Friendly and Safe Neighbouhring Country.... Moscovites stressed that they do not iontend to affect any Civilian People, neither to rule on any Civilian Area at all, but only to Oppose aggresive Militarisation, (f.ex. by Neutralizing Bombing Airplanes, Tanks, Killer Drones, etc). Indeed, this reminds the 1994 International Document with which Ukraine became an Independent State, for the 1st Time in History, (as it was, until then, a simple Region of ex-URSS), by acquiring a Peaceful, Neutral Status, far Away from any Military Organisation, almost as Finland. President Vladimir Poutin and MFA Lavrov nowadays Blamed the notorious "Kiev Putch" of 2014, when an EU-sponsored Peace Deal, Signed by All Sides in the conflict, (including Amnesty, Elections, National Unity Government, Cease Fire, etc., and negociated by German, French and Polish MFAs), had been suddenly Droped, by Deadly Violence, triggered by "Snipers" who, astonishingly, fired Both against Russian-Frendly, elected Ukranian President Janoucovic's Security Guards, and hostile Demonstrators, (according to Independent NGOs), provoking a Bloody Conflict. Those who,Usurpated Power were astonishingly Identic to whom had been Designatrd by USA State undersecretary Nulant, in a Leaked Phone famous for its "Fuck the EU" moto... Earlier, Merkel had tried, since 2013, to Overcome claims of alleged Obstacles, evoked by a "Socialist" EU Commissioner, against creating a PanEuropean Free Trade Area, ftom Porfugal to Vladivostok, including Ukraine, which was supported by Russia, Germany, Austria, Armenia, and others, vowing to visit, for that purpose, Moscow, at the beginning of 2014. But, Instead, she Surprisingly found herself, Excepptionaly ...Handicaped, with 2 Cranches, after an Unprecedented, Obscure Incident at an International resort in Swtzerland ! So, she witnessed, powerless, the Bloody Kiev "Putch", which soon Divided Ukraine and all Europe (Comp. Supra), - "Biden is Willing !", had Warned, on the contrary, USA"s Miss Nuland, in her leaked phone call about Intervining in Ukraine's internal affairs; (Comp. Supra), concerning Former VicePresident's early Interest, (which, curiouly, did not attract enouph public attention at the Controversial 2020 Election, despite the Notorious link with his Son's big Pocket Money from an Ukranian Company).. +And Biden's 2021-2022 Maniak Anti-Russian Focus on Ukraine obviously Confirms such suspicions of Conflict of Interest... Such Facts might explain why so Important and diverse Countries as China, India, UAE, etc, Refused to Condemn, i.e. Backed Russia inside UN SC at New York during the Vote of a Controversial Draft Resolution against it, nowadays, which was Clearly Droped by the International Community. + But the Real Motives Hidden behind a Recent Hostility versus Russia by some, appear to be Also of anOther, Different and Unmentionable kind, that only a Few realize and admit openly : Indeed, a transnational Technocratic Lobby has been Exploiting Homosexuals as pretext in order to obtain Access at a massive Artificial Fabrication of Children, exposed to Recent dangerous Genome Manipulation Trchnologies, threatening to impose a social "Appartheid", creation of Artificial "Races", Animal-Human "Chimeras", Machine-Human "Cyborgs', etc. "Gene Therapy" was already there when "Genome Editing" emerged on 2014-2015, and inntra-Generaton Transmissible Genome Manipulations became possible from 2018, (Despite remaining Problems). in this context, Obama imposed Genetic Manipulations of Human Embryos and "Same Sex Mariage" (even Abroad), while Biden added "Trans-Gender", and Fake "Vaccines" (mRNA: affecting Human Genome, of Short duration, Risking to be Infected and/or infect other People, "Blint" to Virus' Variants). - While Russia is a Big country, Permanent UN SC Member, has Technology and Nuclear Power, Historic Links with the developed West, Part of Europe, CoE + OSCE Member. On BioEthics, inter alia, Moscow Opposes Propaganda for Homosexuality particularly In front of Children, stands for Natural, Traditional Mariage and Bieths, between a Man and a Woman (that the European Human Rights Convention Protects: Art. 10), etc, with President Putin symbolicaly celebrating main Christian feasts, (in a Society Open also to Muslims, Boudists, and Other Religions). For this (and a consequent Fight against Deadly "Islamist" Terrorists Targeting Civilians) Putin was proclaimed as the Most Popular Head of Governement even among American People, and the Biggest International Organisation on Family (Based in USA's Illinois) chose Moscow for its Global Congress, (fanaticaly Undermined by LBGT and UKUISA Lobbies). On 2020 Natural Mariage was Voted by Popular Referendum into the Russian Constitiution. Meanwhile, a Growing Contradiction emerged, particularly Since 2013, fueled by UKUSA and French "Socialist" Technocratic Lobbies, Exploiting Homosexual activists in order to Control Massive Artificial Fabrications of Babies in Labos, exposed to Genetic Manipulations (Comp. Supra), as Russians actively participated in Criticism by CoE and other Human Rights/Democracy European/International Organisations on uinpredented Oppression, (mainly by former "Socialist" , French President Hollande) versus Dissident People, Demonstrating against Controversial and UnPopular "Sama Sex Marriage", Artificial Births, Genetic Manipulations; ;etc. The Provoked Ukranian Pretext, Since 2014. Ousted Russian MEPs from the CoE, until 2019. +Nowadays, on 3022, Russia prepares a new Vaccine against the Pandemic Virus, (due to be Ready in some Months), designed as "Classic" Vaccines, with Methods already Tested and Used during 2 Centuries based on the Principles Established by World famous French Professor of Strasboueg Louis Pasteur (1980-2022): Ie. Not Manipulating the Human Genome, But Durating Long Enouph, Excluding Infecting Other People or again the recipients, and Able to Recognize Variants. (Until Now, only 3 Vaccines Authorized by the World Health Organisation are of a "Classic" structure, made by China and India, Widely Spreading accross the World, while another 93 follow in Tests, But ...None was yet been recognized by EU-USA Bureaucracy ! On the Contrary, the UKUSA+ Establishment Restricts Peuple Only to a Few (5) Fake "Vaccines", Novel Tools Affecting the Human Genome, via mRNA or Virus Vector, of too Short Duration, Exposing Recipients to Infections, Transmisuble also to Other People, and "Blind" to many Variants, even with possible "Individualizations", concerning the mRNA)... in such a context, it's not surprizing that one of the most Hostile Adversaries to Moscw is pro-Big Pharma Lobbyist, current EU Commission Chair, Ursula von der Leyen, (wife of a Bio-Technocrat and Minority in her own CDU Party on Bio-Ethics about Births already since 2010 Congres at nearby Karlsrue (See: ), who Nowadays announced, on 2022 for the FIirst Time in History, (Immediately Following USA's "Socialist" POTUS Biden's relevant Decision) that the EU would Pay Half a Billion for ...Deadly Weapons to the Kiev Regime ! But such a Bloody-Thirst move in an already Dangerously Divided Europe, goes Opposite to Kiev President Zelensky's alleged readiness ro discuss on 2022 an eventualy "Neutral" Status for Ukraine, as Russians wish, according to the 1094 International Document which had declared the Independence of Ukraine, (Historically a simple Region of ex-URSS): a possible Basis for a Peaceful Deal Nowadays. + But, in Addition, Von der Leyen's further Decision to Even Hinder European People from having Access to Russian Medias, by Imposing Censorship throuhout the EU f.ex. against "Sputnik" Press Agency, and 'Russia Today" TV, together with Kiev Regime's parallel measure to impose everyday "Curfew", as Early as from 5pm, on Ukranian People, (800.000 of whom immediately Left the Country to seek Refugy Status in the EU, added to more than 1 Million Displaced inside Ukraine itself, notoriouly Cut between a Pro-Russian and a Pro-West Parts), as well as several Polls in Key Western Countries indicating a Large part of the Population Favorable to Good PanEuropean Relations with Russia; (fex. France, Italy, etc), obviously raise Questions vis a vis Citizens... And, at any case, Last, but not least, what wil say Europeans, when they wil Soon see Europe Excluded, for a 2nd Time in a row, from any Access to Planet Mars, (not to speak about the ISS...) An ESA(EU)-Russia 2010 plan to reach Mars for a New Project around 2014-2016 was already Postponed because of the 1st Ukrania Conflict. +Now it's anOther such Rendez-vous, Scheduled for This Year (2022), of the French EU Presidency, which Risks ro be Droped Again, due to rhis 2nd Ukranian Clash... Desperate Europeans may Try to use ...Australian Businesman Elun Musk's Space Dreams in the Future, or Web Shop-Keeper (Amazon) Jef Bezos' Caricatural plans, instead of Russia's efficient "Soyouz" Space Rockets, but withOut any guarantee... However, Meanwhile, China notoriously Succeeded to reach the "Dark Side of the Moon", and Planet Mars (on May 2021). => Who will be Next to Bypass such a Divided and Weakened Europe ? People made Dreams about Europe mainly for Big Projects, Unity and Peace, Historic Values and Identity, an Autonomous Role in the World. ...Not for a Machine of "Sanctions" (again and again), Division and Conflict, Disregard to History, Subordination to Foreign Interventions ! => Real Europeans must Take Over, Rectify, and Advance ahead. *** (../DraftNews/..) --------------------------------------------- Spearfish, SD (57783) Today Cloudy skies early, then partly cloudy after midnight. Low around 40F. Winds light and variable.. Tonight Cloudy skies early, then partly cloudy after midnight. Low around 40F. Winds light and variable. Ryker Audiss (Belle Fourche baseball): Audiss, a senior outfielder, was a force at the plate and a major contributor to the Broncs wins over Lead-Deadwood, St. Thomas More, and Chamberlain/Kimball/Lyman. His cumulative Stats for the week: three games, nine hits in 11 at bats, two doubles, nine RBIs, seven runs scored, two stolen bases. 0.818 batting average, 0.833 on base percentage, and a 1.000 slugging percentage. Garrett Winkler (Newell boys track and field): Last week Winkler competed at the Northern Hills Invite in Belle Fourche and finished second in the 3,200-meter run, and had a 16 second improvement from his previous best. He also anchored the boys Medley Relay to a sixth place finish. Vote View Results CALDWELL, ID - While visiting Sacajawea Elementary School in Caldwell, Governor Brad Little signed Senate Bill 1255 into law on Tuesday, putting $50 million toward the new Empowering Parents grants. The grants are a key part of Governor Littles Leading Idaho plan for record investments in families and education. The Empowering Parents grants reinforce this fact a persons education starts in the home," said Governor Little. "Parents are in the drivers seat, as they should be and always will be in Idaho. The Empowering Parents grants put families in control of their childs education and helps set them up for success." In 2020, Idaho served 18,000 Idaho families and 46,000 students with grants to help cover educational needs outside the classroom. Senate Bill 1255 builds on that success and will put new resources toward similar grants to cover things such as computers, tutoring, internet connectivity and other needs to ensure students have the best chance for success. The Empowering Parents grants will be available for both public and non-public students to address learning loss and provide support for our most at-risk students. The Empowering Parents grants were a key part of my Leading Idaho plan, and I appreciate my legislative partners for making it a priority, especially the bills sponsors, Senator Lori Den Hartog and Representative Wendy Horman, Governor Little added. The children today will become the workforce of tomorrow. We want our Idaho students to receive a strong foundation of learning now so they can stay here and make our state prosperous for future generations. OLYMPIA - Washington students in grades K-12 are being invited to participate in a contest that encourages them to learn more about the history of their community and state. Have you ever thought about the who or what your school is named after? What about the street you live on, or your favorite park or library? This contest is for those who ask these questions and like to look for answers! The Whats in a Place Name? contest offers students the opportunity to explore their neighborhoods and identify a sign or label on a public place named after a person, location, or landmark that is part of Washingtons history. Whats in a Place Name? asks participating students or teams of students to find out how that name fits into the states history and reflects their communitys values, and to present their findings in a creative way. The contest is sponsored by Legacy Washington, a division of the Office of the Secretary of State. Whats in a Place Name? is for young people who wonder who or what their school or street is named after, or their favorite park, library, or neighborhood building, said Secretary of State Steve Hobbs. With this contest we are offering students a fun and engaging way to learn about Washingtons rich, storied history and to make a deeper connection with their communities. More information, including contest rules, helpful resources, and how to enter, can be found on the Office of the Secretary of States Primarily Washington website. Entries may be submitted in multiple formats, including but not limited to written (essay, poetry, play, zine), visual (painting, photo essay, collage), audio (podcast, song), audiovisual (film, documentary), and interactive (app). A sample entry can be viewed HERE. The entry deadline is May 15, 2022. A panel of judges will choose and announce five winners on May 31, 2022. The winners will receive a $100 grant for their classroom, and winning entries will be posted in a virtual exhibit on the Primarily Washington website. EDEN A longtime resident in the east end of Jerome County plans to run for the Idaho House of Representatives on the Republican ticket. Lyle Johnstone of Eden is seeking to represent Seat B in District 26, which includes Lincoln, Jerome and Blaine counties. Johnstone grew up on a farm, has an accounting background, and worked in agricultural equipment sales. He also served on the North Side Soil Conservation District board. I study the Legislature a lot and I have a decent understanding of what is going on, the retired man told the Times-News on Monday. Basically, Im very unhappy with the lack of representation from our legislators, Johnstone said. They serve the global corporations; they dont serve the people. My intention is to be the peoples representative, not the corporate representative. Johnstone wants to drain the Republican swamp, his website, lyle4idaho.com, says. Johnstone said he knows he is not alone in his dissatisfaction with the Republican party, especially after speaking with whom he calls refugees from socialist states west of Idaho. They thought they were coming to a conservative, Republican Idaho, he said, but thats not what they found when they got here. Many southern Idaho natives agree with him, Johnstone said. We are tired of being lied to by legislators, he said. Johnstone says he is committed to supporting ideals listed by the Citizens Alliance of Idaho, which include the following: The right to self-defense Grocery tax repeal Property tax reform Election integrity Individual medical freedom The right to due process Property tax is out of hand, he said. People are being taxed to death. Johnstone has also vowed to stand against the suppression of free speech, against executive government lockdowns of businesses, churches and nonprofits, and against giving new power to the federal government. Malaysian-made ProDetect Rapid Test-Kit scores 100% accuracy in international assessment As the Omicron variant takes hold in Malaysia, the availability of high accuracy Antigen Test Kits is increasingly vital in the drive to identify infection early on and prevent further spread in the community. The ProDetect COVID-19 Antigen Rapid Test, manufactured in Malaysia by Medical Innovation Ventures Sdn Bhd (Mediven), recently obtained a 100% accuracy score in the well-regarded External Quality Assessment Programme (EQAP) conducted by the European Society for external quality assessment (EsFEQA). A total of 122 clinics and hospitals from 13 states and federal territories across West and East Malaysia who utilise the ProDetect brand took part in the EQAP. All of the participants are from public hospitals and health clinics under each State's Health Department. The ProDetect Test-Kit provides test results within 20 minutes and is able to screen for all variants of concern (VOC), including delta and omicron. Results from third party evaluation has shown high concordance (100%) with Real-Time PCR result. Mediven has two ranges of ProDetect test kits for the detection of COVID-19. The professional use range using either one of two types of samples; oral fluid and nasopharyngeal swab whereas self-test kits using either saliva or nasal sample. Mediven has partnered with MyDocLab to launch a healthcare app to enable schools, corporates, and individuals manage their employee and self-health status in an effective and simple manner and allows easy professional antigen rapid test reporting for international border crossing from the comfort of one's home. City Lodge Hotel Group has announced its interim results for the six months to 31 December 2021 and is pleased to report the numbers are moving in the right direction after two long years of pandemic-induced losses: Revenue: R436.0m (2021: R215.6m) Average group occupancies: 30% (2021: 17%) Loss per share: 6c (2021: 128c) Headline loss per share: 6c (2021: 60c) Average occupancies open hotels: Group34% (2021: 27%); SA 36% (2021: 29%) Andrew Widegger, CLHG CEO on the performance of the groups hotels during the six months from July to end-December 2021 and outlook for the coming year follows:The new financial year had a particularlystart due to the severe third wave of Covid-19 infections and hospitalisations caused by the Delta variant. This caused travel hesitancy, and the level 4 lockdown restrictions, which banned leisure travel to and from Gauteng during the key winter school holiday period. The violent civil unrest in South Africa in July increased the negative impact on trading operations over this period. Gratefully, the group suffered no property damage as a result of the protests in KwaZulu-Natal, however, the majority of the hotels in the area closed temporarily due to safety concerns and lack of fuel and food supplies, and resumed trading as soon as the situation stabilised.As infection rates steadily declined,. This positively impacted occupancies and pricing, and resulted in additional hotel re-openings. The gradual easing of restrictions, the accelerated roll-out of vaccinations across all adult groups including young adults, and the removal of South Africa from international no-fly and red lists, boosted business and leisure travel confidence.for the interim period at the groups South African operations, based on total hotel room inventory, was 32%, with the low of 16% in July and a high of 43% in November. The discovery of the Omicron variant in South Africa in late-November 2021, and the almost overnight shutdown of international travel routes to South Africa, resulted in a setback in demand, which was substantially picked up by the domestic leisure market. December 2021 occupancies for the South African open hotels averaged 43% with 53 hotels open, and five hotels open in the rest of Africa.measures applied since April 2020 continue to be enforced, where appropriate, to help preserve and improve liquidity. We are grateful that, even during these turbulent and challenging times, our employees remain dedicated to providing outstanding service to all our guests, as our Rate Us and other feedback forums have registered our highest scores.The steady improvement in occupancies and demand for hospitality services over the last few months has led to average group occupancies for all hotels in the group for the six months ended 31 December 2021 of 30% (December 2020: 17%) and open hotels 34% (December 2020: 27%). As at December, the group had 92% of the hotels in its portfolio of hotels open, compared to 74% in the prior period.for the period doubled to R436 million compared to R215.6 million for the prior period. Operating costs excluding depreciation and amortisation decreased by 11%, compared to the prior six months, however, excluding unrealised foreign exchange gains and losses on intercompany loans, increased by 40%. Increases were mainly due to the raising of reduced salaries paid in the early stages of the pandemic from 50% up to 70% from November 2020, and then further increased to 75% from November 2021. Operating costs per room sold, excluding unrealised foreign exchange gains and losses reduced by 22% compared to the prior year. The group supported and enabled the UIF TERS claims, which provided necessary support to employees to alleviate the financial burden of reduced salaries.As more hotels open and occupancy increases, the variableincrease to enable continued operations. The group generated profit from operating activities before interest, tax, depreciation and amortisation (EBITDA) for the six months to December 2021 of R122.6 million compared to an EBITDA loss in the prior period of R131.7 million. Depreciation and amortisation on owned assets decreased by 26%, mainly due to discontinuation of depreciation on held for sale assets and the impact of impairment losses recognised in prior periods.on right-of-use assets increased by 16%, mainly due to the opening of the leased Courtyard Hotel Waterfall City in March 2021. No impairments have been recognised during the period. Interest expense decreased by R10.9 million following settlement of the BEE debt in December 2020.The group incurred afor the six months ended 31 December 2021 of R33.7 million (2021: R550.4 million), a decrease of 94% from the prior year.decreased by 88% to R33.7 million. Diluted and undiluted headline loss per share improved by 90% to a loss of 6 cents compared to an adjusted loss of 60 cents in the prior period.The group has generatedfrom operating activities of R13.1 million, after taking into consideration the offsetting impact of the increase in working capital of R45.1 million from increased trading activity, and settlement of accruals associated with the Courtyard Hotel Waterfall City fit-out. This is compared to negative cashflows from operations of R68.9 million in the prior period.The results above include the operational performance of thegroups in Kenya and Tanzania. The disposals are subject to the fulfilment of customary conditions precedent, which includes approvals or consents from competition on anti-trust authorities to the extent legally required. By the end of January 2022, the transaction received the unconditional approval from the competition commissions in Kenya, and Tanzania respectively. Due to the delays in the competition commission approvals, the long stop dates have been extended to 31 May 2022. However, the remaining conditions precedent are in the process of execution, and it is anticipated that the sale will complete by the end of April 2022.R320 million of the total outstandingare due for repayment within the next 12 months. The proceeds from the disposal of the East African operations are planned to be utilised to settle the debt. All original debt covenants have been waived for all measurement periods up to and including September 2022. The new loan to value covenant has been met for all measurement periods during the reporting period. The group has engaged with funders to commence discussions to restructure its debt facilities following settlement of the loans due in September and December 2022.Over the last few months, the group has honed and rolled out itsoffers, which is bespoke to each hotel brand within the group. The enhanced offering has helped attract more leisure,, staycation and special holiday events business, and gives guests more reason to stay in their hotel rather than dine out. Guests have received the enhanced offering with enthusiasm and appetite. Food and beverage revenue has increased by 128% compared to the prior year.The group offers regularand seasonally themed promotions, often with a food and beverage element, designed to appeal to leisure travellers in particular. Business travellers are catered for with value-added benefits when booking boardrooms and making use of our facilities for meetings.Our(BAR) initiative, which went live in June 2021, considers market trends and demands for accommodation to calculate the best rates for our guests, rather than applying a single rate philosophy. This benefits our guests by providing them with more competitively priced accommodation at all times, while optimising revenue yields for the group. For this purpose, we are leveraging predictive analytics and machine learning to inform our pricing decisions. Our new BI tool helps to analyse key clients, track new business and personalise offerings for guests, corporate clients and agents.Despite the unwind and indirect repurchase of theshares, and the challenging financial conditions that focused all available resources on ensuring the sustainability of the group, we secured a B-BBEE level 5 rating. As the group recovers from the detrimental impact of the last two years of Covid, we are reinvesting in transformation initiatives, which should aid in securing an improved B-BBEE scorecard in the next reporting cycle.The group welcomesas a new member of the board, remuneration committee and audit committee following his appointment at the last Annual General Meeting (AGM) held on 25 November 2021.The group would also like to thankfor his many years of loyal service and valued contribution to the board and group, following his retirement at the last AGM.South Africa has remained onalert level 1 since 1 October 2021, and on 30 December 2021 government further removed all curfew and alcohol restrictions. Internationally, there has been a move by some countries in Europe towards removing almost all Covid-19 mandates and restrictions. These developments have been in response to the significantly reduced severity of infections, hospitalisations and deaths among fully vaccinated individuals during the fourth wave of infections.January occupancies had a slow start with total group occupancies at 30%, however demand has gained momentum as morereturn to their offices and travel schedules resume to re-ignite operational capacity which has lagged over the past two years. The group has re-opened all its 56 South African hotels, and has six of the seven hotels opened in the rest of Africa. To date, for the month of February, South African occupancies are running at 46%. We anticipate improved monthly occupancy and pricing recovery during the next two trading quarters.The group looks forward to completing the disposal of its East Africa operations before the end of April. The proceeds will be applied to strengthen our financial position and enable us to resume hotel refurbishment plans. Theremains committed to providing outstanding accommodation services andto tantalise their taste buds with our new food and beverage offerings. LexisNexis workplace officially goes hybrid in March 2022 Videsha Proothveerajh Legal technology company LexisNexis South Africa (LNSA) has adopted a hybrid working model designed to meet the needs of its workforce of the future, following the proven success of this style of working during the pandemic.Our purpose is to provide an ideal working environment to support both the business and our employees. We believe the hybrid model were implementing officially from 1 March 2022 aligns perfectly with our company culture based on trust, empowerment and innovation. These values have been key to our growth, which was sustained throughout the turbulent Covid-19 period when remote and hybrid working became the new normal, explains LNSA CEO and chairperson of the board, Videsha Proothveerajh.The flexible work arrangement will include a two- to three-day in-office work week that combines the benefits of remote work with the best use of office time. By providing more freedom over where and how our employees work some of the time and reducing the time they spend commuting, we believe this arrangement will promote better work-life balance for our people, she added.Proothveerajh says that while remote working enables employees to work on specific tasks, the days in the office will be used for face-to-face meetings and teamwork, to ensure the company maintains the human touch and enjoy the benefits of collaboration for both itself and its customers.As a tech company we will also continue to use technology to find fresh ways of collaborating with the best minds in the world to innovate and develop world-class products to meet the evolving needs of the professions we serve, she added.LNSAs official adoption of the hybrid model follows a Future of Work (FOW) survey completed by the organisations employees, who were in favour of this option.The decision to adopt this model is also in line with local trends, as reflected in a Microsoft survey of 610 leaders and employees in large enterprises within South Africa, which examined peoples experiences since the beginning of the pandemic, as remote ways of working became common practice. Almost nine out of ten leaders (88%) at large enterprises in South Africa expected to adopt a more hybrid way of working permanently.While remote work has been shown to increase employee productivity, it can also lead to isolation and burnout as the line blurs between work and home. Mental health and issues of gender-based violence have also emerged as serious challenges, coupled with financial and personal losses due to the pandemic.Remote working can be difficult for many, logistically and mentally, while infrequent interaction with co-workers could also stifle creativity and reduce team cohesion, acknowledges Proothveerajh.In this new hybrid model, companies need to work smarter if they wish to design a culture that prioritises safety, wellbeing, belonging and camaraderie regardless of physical location. We also need to ensure our new ways of working are as inclusive as possible due to the vast differences in circumstances among employees.LexisNexis has risen to the challenge with a range of initiatives to foster constant communication and engagement. Employee wellbeing and mental health are prioritised through programmes such as LexisNexis Wellness Week, Mute Hour which prohibits meetings before 9am, and Friday Connect, when no strategic meetings take place and the day is instead set aside for team building and nurturing relationships. Discovery supports LexisNexis with extensive wellbeing programmes and workshops, including focusing on working parents and gender-based violence.Extensive employee collaboration encourages the workforce to be engaged, work smart, be flexible, embrace digital, embody agile and succeed together.Weve also strived to ensure that our leaders are comfortable with reduced hierarchy and greater leadership accessibility which takes us albeit virtually closer to the field and all levels of the organisation, gleaning valuable feedback to be incorporated into our plan to continuously improve, says Proothveerajh.She adds, Weve introduced bots to automate our daily repetitive tasks that span from our editorial operations, customer excellence and even finance. This is an example of how we bring the human and technology element closer to work in tandem and not in siloes.Our employee engagement metrics have remained fairly high throughout. We saw a jump in employee engagement scores by over 20%, and by 30 points in our employee Net Promoter Score since October 2019, says Proothveerajh."These are exciting times for LNSA as we embrace a new normal that gives us more autonomy, freedom and flexibility, enabling us to truly enjoy the benefits of technology, while retaining the human touch and staying focused on our business priorities, Proothveerajh added.Campaigns to upskill employees in terms of technology, business continuity, health and safety and virtual working support are in progress before the LexisNexis hybrid model goes live on 1 March 2022. Mining companies in Limpopo are not fully complying with laws compelling them to uplift local communities. This is according to a recently released report based on research by the Centre for Applied Legal Studies, Amnesty International and Sekhukhune Combined Mining Affected Communities (SMAC). Sefateng Chrome Mine in Limpopo was one of three mining companies named in the scathing report which found that the companies were not complying with laws compelling them to uplift local communities. Source: Facebook Varying levels of non-compliance Companies respond to allegations in the report Shenilla Mohamed, executive director of Amnesty International South Africa, said mine owners had an obligation to the surrounding communities and to adhere to social plans. Mohamed added that the government needs to be held accountable too.The research was done between October 2020 and July 2021 in the mineral-rich but under-resourced Sekhukhune region, which has an unemployment rate of 47%. It focused on three companies, Twickenham Platinum Mine, Marula Platinum Mine and Sefateng Chrome Mine, and their compliance with legal obligations to submit and implement Social and Labour Plans (SLPs).Researchers say the obligation on companies to comply and report to the regulator on compliance with SLPs comes directly from the Mineral and Petroleum Resources Development Act, which makes SLPs a condition for the award and renewal of mining rights.SLPs must contain a number of measures to benefit communities and workers. They should also include basic services and infrastructure-type projects formulated in consultation with communities.According to the report, SLPs were introduced to offset the dark and sordid history of discrimination, exploitation and exclusion in the mining industry.The research finds that there were varying levels of non-compliance by the three companies.Researchers gave each of the companies an opportunity to respond to the allegations.The report found that Twickenham, a subsidiary of Anglo American Platinum Limited, failed to complete a project to provide water and toilets to local schools. Anglo American Platinum Limited is the worlds largest primary producer of platinum.Researchers said that when pressed for answers, the company acknowledged delays in implementation. They gave no reasons in some cases and in others blamed project procurement irregularities, the researchers said.Marula, another platinum mine, claimed in its most recent Environmental, Social and Governance (ESG) report that it had completed an SLP project to build and rehabilitate a road. But site visits by the research team and interviews with community members contradicted this, the report read. Researchers said that the lack of adequate roads has resulted in mobile clinics avoiding affected villages and community members facing great difficulty in accessing clinics and hospitals.The report found that Sefateng was only partially compliant with its community water support and schools support projects. Information received from the Department of Mineral Resources and Energy (DMRE) indicated that Sefateng was not submitting annual compliance reports. This would be in direct contravention of national mining legislation. However, in their response to the research team, Sefateng denied this and noted that they have been complying with this obligation, the report said.Researchers highlighted the failure by the department to properly monitor compliance, in part because of the lack of resources. They said the department had a poor record management system; had hindered access to information; and was unable to enforce compliance resulting in communities feeling abandoned and unable to enjoy human rights such as the rights to education, access to healthcare, livelihoods and water.The researchers said a direct link between mining and the challenges faced by the communities could not be established but that the failure of mines in general to implement SLPs was a compounding factor, warranting further investigation.Community members interviewed for the report also complained of polluted water sources and many suggested that they and their livestock suffered serious health complications. The overall picture painted by interviewees was a range of negative environmental, social and economic outcomes, gender inequality and a lack of adequate grievance mechanisms.The researchers recommended that the three mines urgently comply with their legally binding obligations. The report also recommended that the state develop and implement a plan that ensures proper monitoring, with penalties for companies in the event of non-compliance.We further recommend that, whether through regulations or legislative measures, that all company SLP reports to the DMRE are publicly disclosed and made available and accessible to employees, communities and other stakeholders.The researchers said they had attempted on numerous occasions to engage with the department but had not received responses.GroundUp also approached the department but did not hear back from officials by the time of publication.Anglo American Platinum told GroundUp that the Twickenham project was placed on care and maintenance in 2016, limiting employment and business opportunities at the operation. Currently, three of the 12 projects in its SLP between 2016 and 2020 remain incomplete due to various challenges.We take our SLP obligations seriously. Unfortunately, our efforts to meet our SLP obligations are sometimes affected by external factors beyond our control. These include, but are not limited to, delays at local government and DMRE level, difficulties in our engagements with the communities, community conflict and obstacles arising from the appointment of contractors.The company said it had already started work on its SLP for 2021 to 2025. We continue to study options to ensure a sustainable future for Twickenham that will benefit communities and the broader Limpopo province.Implats Marula Mine said it had grown community investment. The company said it engages in sustainable socioeconomic development to mitigate, where it can, adverse conditions. It said 7.5% of the mine was owned by the local community through a trust and employees also had a stake. The company said 74% of its workforce are local residents and total remuneration at Marula is approximately R1.6bn annually.While providing and maintaining roads fits within the ambit of government, we fully recognise the benefits of being able to travel safely to and from work and elsewhere. To the extent that this infrastructure is lacking or poorly maintained, we endeavour to assist, where possible.The company said it had built a 12.5km tarred road (the D4170) at a cost of over R200m, in partnership with Road Agency Limpopo over the past five years. Marula contributed R32m to this project. The company said it had also paid for maintenance on other roads and the construction of a bridge.Sefatengs CEO Gerard Blaawu said: It was a privilege for us to have been part of the sample group of mines in this study. There are various administrative shortcomings, communication gaps between national and local bodies, regulators, struggling municipalities as well as financial challenges.He said that of their projects that were reviewed, they were starting to get one compliant. The other two were partially compliant, with gaps mainly due to administrative processes and/or the municipality finding it hard to upkeep services built on their behalf.Since the research was finalised, the mine moved from 75% to 80% compliance. We take to heart the recommendations in the report. Regardless of the level of applicability, we are committed to work with the regulator and other parties to implement these recommendations. China, U.S. shall draw experience, wisdom from history to keep bilateral relations on right track 09:05, March 02, 2022 By Zhong Sheng ( People's Daily This year marks the 50th anniversary of the issuance of the Shanghai Communique between China and the U.S. The document was released on Feb. 28, 1972 when then U.S. President Richard Nixon paid a historic visit to China. It ended the prolonged estrangement between China and the U.S. and started the process toward normalization of China-U.S. relations. Late Chairman Mao Zedong meets with then U.S. President Richard Nixon at Zhongnanhai, the central leadership compound in downtown Beijing, Feb. 21, 1972. (File photo) As the first joint communique between the two countries, the Shanghai Communique affirmed the one-China principle. It was followed by the Joint Communique on the Establishment of Diplomatic Relations between China and the U.S. and the August 17 Joint Communique, which were issued in 1978 and 1982, respectively. The one-China principle and the three joint communiques remain the political foundation for China-U.S. relations. Over the past half century, the relationship between the two countries has made remarkable progress despite ups and downs, and they have both gained huge benefits from their cooperation. However, in recent years, with an aim to contain China, some people in the U.S. have been trying to deny history and hyping the assertion that the U.S. policy of engagement with China has failed. Such practice mirrors Cold War mentality. It negates the history of China-U.S. relations, the achievements made by the two countries in the past 50 years, and the efforts made by the two peoples to promote China-U.S. relations. Late Chairman Mao Zedong meets with then U.S. President Richard Nixon at Zhongnanhai, the central leadership compound in downtown Beijing, Feb. 21, 1972. (File photo) The recovery and development of China-U.S. relations was one of the most important event in the development of international relations during the past 50 years, which has benefited the both the two countries and the rest of the world. What's the most important for the development of international relations over the next 50 years to come is that China and the U.S. must find a right way to get along with each other. The commemoration of the 50th anniversary of the issuance of the Shanghai Communique offers an occasion for the two countries to draw experience and wisdom from history, and bring China-U.S. relations back to the right track as soon as possible. To continue upholding the spirit of the Shanghai Communique, the two countries must advance with history and keep their relations on the right track. Fifty years ago, the "historic handshake across the vastest ocean" astonished the world. However, China-U.S. relations have encountered adversity today. It is because some people in the U.S. are not willing to admit China's rapid development and take China as their major strategic competitor and even an imaginary enemy out of their biased understanding. Such perspective reflects their misjudgment in China's development philosophy, as well as their ignorance for the development of history. To bring China-U.S. relations back to the right track, the U.S. must act with political wisdom and courage, understand China and China's development correctly, and abandon the Cold War mentality and zero-sum games targeting at China. To continue upholding the spirit of the Shanghai Communique, the two countries must properly manage their differences according to the principle of seeking common ground while putting aside differences. In the Shanghai Communique, China and the U.S. admit that they have essential differences in social system, but it has not affected the development of their relations. The spirit of seeking common ground while putting aside differences reflected in the Shanghai Communique is especially of practical significance in today's situation. Some people in the U.S. have intentionally underlined the ideological differences between China and the U.S. to provoke confrontation. Such practice ignored the fact that the common interests shared by the two countries are way bigger than their differences. It is against the aspiration of the two peoples and the common interests of the world. It's not a big deal that China and the U.S. have differences and issues. What's important is that they must manage these differences and issues through sincere communication, so as to prevent strategic misjudgment and avoid confrontation. Photo shows the hall of the Jin Jiang Hotel, where the Shanghai Communique was issued. (Photo courtesy of the Jiang International (Holdings) Co., Ltd.) To continue upholding the spirit of the Shanghai Communique, the two countries must deal with the Taiwan question according to the one-China principle. The one-China principle, affirmed in the Shanghai Communique, was further confirmed and developed in the Joint Communique on the Establishment of Diplomatic Relations and the August 17 Joint Communique. At present, to contain China with the Taiwan question, the U.S. side has been trying to distort and hollow out the one-China principle, which has brought serious danger to both the stability in the Taiwan Strait and China-U.S. relations. The reunification of China is an unstoppable trend. It will never be changed by any individual, any force or any country. The U.S. must fully recognize that the Taiwan question is highly sensitive, abide by the one-China principle and the three joint communiques, and stop any practice that challenges the one-China principle or undermines the peace and stability in the Taiwan Strait. It must also resolutely and firmly oppose "Taiwan Independence," and stop sending wrong signals to Taiwan independence forces. (Zhong Sheng is a pen name often used by People's Daily to express its views on foreign policy and international affairs.) (Web editor: Hongyu, Liang Jun) An ancient zoo was discovered by archeologists in a prehistoric animal cemetery considered the first found in ancient Egypt's annals. A variety of discoveries have attracted attention from archaeologists worldwide, but animal remains were not expected. This find is the first known zoo in ancient times, which was not known until now. Animals Discovered Kept as Royal Pets in Ancient Egypt It could be called a breakthrough in the ancient civilization of Egypt. Finding such an animal graveyard would give a new dimension to what is known, reported the Express UK. Egyptian history has drawn interest from many archeologists globally. Still, Egypt was obscure until it came to western attention as the signs of an ancient civilization inhabited the banks of the Nile. In the 1880s, this magnificent time in the past was uncovered from the sand of millennia by the English Egyptologist William Matthew Flinders Petrie. His discovery of the sections of the colossal statue of Ramses II, an Egyptian pharaoh, opened up a wave of interest lasting till now, cited Head Topics. But locals were working on the ruins before Petrie sensationalized it, with his work getting him a knighthood. The span of the history of the ancient Nile kingdom of the Pharaohs would be way back to about 3000 BC when Upper and Lower Egypt would be one. By 343 BC, they were abolished but are called the Immortal Kings descended from Ra. Though it is the popular version of this civilization, scholars know that Egypt was much different from that version of pyramids and pharaohs. Read Also: Pharaoh Amenhotep's Mummy To Be Unwrapped After 3000-years Using Modern Tools for the First Time in Centuries Prehistoric Egypt would span from the first-time people settled and stayed along the River Nile, wherein in this early period, the kings ruled over people. In 2015, the ruins of Hierakonpolis, when it was the religious and political capital of Upper Egypt when archeologists excavating there discovered the rare found that would blow assumptions. What they found was seen in a documentary on the Smithsonian Channel. According to Renee Friedman, an archaeologist, she worked on the dig and found where the remains of animals that live in Africa were seen for the first time in such a place. World's First Zoo Discovered The team was amazed in their further examination to find that it was thought to be an old zoo where the animals were fed like someone's pets. The archeologist saw the world's oldest zoo and the least likely place to find the spectacular discovery, which dates far back 6,000 years old. It even predates the creation of writing and even the invention of the potter's wheel. The pyramid wasn't even prominent in the landscape yet. The ruler of Egypt would descend from this ancient zoo and the distinctive style of ancient Egypt it influenced. Friedman remarked that carbon dating had shown when animals ate the last time, and their death was nearly the exact dates. Like the people who would come with the king, they were slaughtered to accompany the ruler. There were structures built over the tombs at one time, and these animals were buried around the complex, accompanying the ruler for protection in his afterlife. Related Article: Stele Dating Back 2,600 Years Tells of a Pharaoh Who Was Murdered by His Subjects @ 2022 HNGN, All rights reserved. Do not reproduce without permission. With the Dubai Lynx Awards entries now closed and the shortlists to be announced in less than 10 days, some of the South African creatives who are jury members weigh in on their expectations. Tseliso Rangaka, chief creative officer, FCB/HC Johannesburg, is president of the print & publishing and radio & audio jury. Grant Sithole, chief product officer, Publicis Groupe sits on the social & influencer jury. Lisa Alexandra Bayliss, head of copy, FoxP2 is on the film jury. Nkanyezi Masango, group executive creative director, King James (Part of Accenture Interactive) is part of the direct outdoor jury. A unique perspective Source: FoxP2 https://www.foxp2co.za Lisa Alexandra Bayliss, head of copy, FoxP2 is on the film jury Nkanyezi Masango, group executive creative director, King James (Part of Accenture Interactive) is part of the direct outdoor jury Powerful storytelling and fundamentals Expert international juries This year there are four South Africans on four separate juries:Bayliss believes South Africans bring a unique perspective to the jury and awards.Our backgrounds and what weve been through as a country informs the way we think, the way we engage with the world, and the way we approach different pieces of work, she says.The fact that we dont have this homogeneous world view has made us more open to work that was created in contexts that are different from our own, she adds.Masango agrees that South African creatives bring a unique perspective. We come from a very multicultural background, so we have the ability to identify excellence that transcends races, income brackets and cultures.On top of that, our work contributes a lot to pushing the industry forward globally thats why we bring such a fresh perspective to the jury room, he says.Bayliss adds that having South Africans on international juries also helps raise the bar here at home. After all, the more great international work and global trends South African creatives are exposed to, the better for our local industry.She will be judging films and says she will be looking for films that are based on interesting and unique insights, powerful storytelling, and beautiful craft.Is the concept clear and simple? Have they made the best use of the medium? And then, am I moved by what Im looking at? Does it make me laugh? Smile? Cry? Does it make me think? Does it inspire me? Does it provoke or challenge me? Does it make me feel uncomfortable? Because if its not adding anything to my life even if its just a moment of pure entertainment - then its wasting my (and millions of consumers) time, she expands.Masango is part of the direct outdoor jury, an area he says has changed over the last couple of decades. But the fundamentals havent: the work needs to live at the intersection of relevance and originality, he comments.Philip Thomas, chairman, Dubai Lynx, says that their expert jury members play an integral role in raising the creative bar for the MENA region. Were delighted to be working with them and look forward to immersing ourselves in the outstanding body of Lynx-winning work to set the creative benchmark for the region.Its a real honour to be asked to judge an international show like the Dubai Lynx, says Bayliss.The work we award this year as a jury will impact on work made in years to come, so its not something to be taken lightly. And like with every show, a lot of work (and blood and sweat and late nights) went into the work, so its important to give every piece its due, says Bayliss.Masango adds: Its always a privilege to be part of a prestigious jury. I look forward to learning from the debates as much as from the work itself.The juries will help to benchmark work across 20 distinct Lynx Awards, including the refreshed Creative Effectiveness Lynx and PR Lynx, and the newly launched Social & Influencer Lynx, which celebrates creative social thinking and strategic influencer marketing solutions.The Awards celebrate creative excellence in the MENA region and are part of the Cannes Lion family and committed to a rigorous judging process.The 2022 award winners will be revealed and celebrated at the Dubai Lynx Awards Show, taking place at Dubai Opera House on 16 March 2022. Following the completion of Cabinet processes and consultation with social partners, Employment and Labour Minister, Thulas Nxesi, has officially tabled the National Labour Migration Policy (NLMP) for public comment and engagement. Protecting the rights of migrants and refugees New laws proposed only employ foreign nationals entitled to work in terms of the Immigration Act, the Refugees Act or any other provision; ascertain the foreign national is entitled to work in the Republic in the relevant position; satisfy themselves that there are no South Africans with the requisite skills to fill the vacancy; prepare a skills transfer plan, where appropriate; employ foreign nationals on the same terms as local workers; and retain copies of relevant documentation. The populations expectations regarding accessibility to work for South Africans, given worsening unemployment and a perception that undocumented foreigners are distorting labour market access; South Africas labour market needs, in particular the need for critical skills not locally available; The protection of migrant workers and their families, in accordance with international standards and guidelines; and Regional integration and cooperation imperatives. Nxesi called on all interested parties to engage with the policy and to provide their feedback.Addressing a media briefing on Monday, the Minister said for the first time in the history of South Africa, government has formulated a comprehensive NLMP.We have researched extensively and benchmarked internationally in search of policy based on best practice. It has become increasingly apparent, with the rapid expansion of international migration flows, that South Africa needs to develop appropriate policy effectively to manage this.Nxesi said South Africa is not immune to international migration trends, as well as attempts to exploit this for political gain.The proposed policy aims to achieve a balance across four areas. The first is to address South Africans expectations regarding access to work opportunities, given worsening unemployment and the perception that foreign nationals are distorting labour market access.The NLMP, together with proposed legislation, will introduce quotas on the total number of documented foreign nationals with work visas that can be employed in major economic sectors such as agriculture, hospitality and tourism, construction etc, Nxesi said.The NLMP will be complemented by small business intervention and enforcement of a list of sectors where foreign nationals cannot be allocated business visas. It also involves amendments to the Small Business Act to limit foreign nationals establishing SMMEs and trading in some sectors of the economy.The Department of Home Affairs (DHA) is also reviewing current legislation and strengthening the Border Management Authority to secure porous borders, and to allow for the orderly movement of people and other nationals through ports of entry only.From the side of my department, together with all relevant authorities, we are stepping up inspections to enforce existing labour and immigration legislation, Nxesi said.The DHA has released a list of scarce and critical skills in high demand to provide guidance to all institutions to prioritise education and training interventions in those areas.The list, Nxesi said, will be used as a last resort to allow foreign nationals in possession of the listed skills that the economy requires, and where job offers have been made, to be allocated work visas.Government will also impose various obligations on both the employer and the foreign national to transfer skills to locals, and permits will be limited to specific durations.South Africa is a signatory to international treaties and conventions governing the rights of migrants and refugees, the Minister said.All policies and interventions were developed within the ambit of the Constitution of the Republic of South Africa, and government will ensure the protection of migrant workers and their families, in accordance with international standards and guidelines, he said.Nxesi said South Africa will also implement these initiatives within the context of its regional integration and cooperation imperatives that have already been agreed to at the Southern African Development Community (SADC) and African Union level.Nxesi said the National Labour Migration Policy goes hand in hand with a proposed Employment Services Amendment Bill, providing a policy framework and the legal basis to regulate the extent to which employers can employ foreign nationals in their establishments, while protecting the rights of migrants.The proposed amendments to the Employment Services Act (of 2014) aim to limit the extent to which employers can employ foreign nationals in possession of a valid work visa, and codifies the obligations of an employer engaging foreign workers to, amongst others:The proposed Amendment Bill lays out a framework that will enable the Minister to set quotas for the employment of foreign nationals.A quota may apply in respect of a sector of the economy, an occupational category or a geographical area. The Minister will establish a quota in a sector after consultation with the Employment Services Board and after considering public comments, Nxesi said.In summary, National Labour Migration policy aims to achieve a balance between the following: Banks were the most valuable category in the 2021 Kantar BrandZ Most Valuable South African Brands ranking, comprising 28.6% of its total value. Capitec Bank was the bank with the least negative growth in 2020 and continued its success as the biggest winner in 2021, with an increase of 10% in brand value. Here's how the brand has been adding digital clients by ramping up its meaningful difference... Gerrie Fourie, CEO of Capitec Bank The brand must originally have been created in South Africa and be owned by an enterprise listed on JSE or a credible stock exchange. For private brands originated in South Africa, their complete financial statements must be available in the public domain. Analysis of the Kantar BrandZ Global brand valuations in 2021 shows that the most valuable brands start off with strong meaningful difference, then amplify that to grow.But Stina van Rooyen, head of Brand, South Africa, Insights Division, Kantar, reveals that theres more to it than that. In fact, the secret sauce to predisposing people to pick your brands over the competition lies in creating Meaningful Difference: Ultimately, predisposed consumers end up buying with less reminding, because you have succeeded in building up a bank of cumulative associations on which they have come to rely. As a result, they dont need to evaluate their options every time they make a decision because they have already created a mental shortcut, such as the Capitec Bank sound and distinctive logo . Of course, this predisposition isnt open-ended or infinite; rather, you need to keep reinforcing it through marketing and brand experience.Thats why in addition to claiming #11th place in the ranking with a brand value of $928m in the challenging socio-economic climate, Capitec Bank stood out for making a meaningful difference in consumers lives and setting trends while meeting both functional and emotional needs.Gerrie Fourie, CEO of Capitec Bank says it all boils down to agility, resilience and innovation. This focus on turning the economic crisis into an opportunity to bolster their digital offering while staying true to fundamentals of simplicity, affordability and personalised service has seen Capitec Banks active digital banking clients across the app, internet banking and USSD growing by 22% to 8.9 million to now comprise slightly more than half of its total 16.3 million customers.The retail banking apps remote onboarding feature allows customers to open a Global One account in real-time by scanning in their face and identity document, to use the free virtual card designed for safer online shopping, with no transaction fees. Clients can also use their app to scan and pay on Snapscan, Zapper or Masterpass making cashless banking easier and more convenient.Fourie confirms: We bolstered our digital offering while staying true to our fundamentals of simplicity, affordability and personalised service. This combined with our continued commitment to our branch network and call centres, resonated with South Africans from all walks of life. Were seeing rapid growth in South Africas digital economy as clients also adopt contactless card payments and online shopping.In a competitive category, ramping up that difference is critical. A recent study by Kantar BrandZ looked at price elasticity for 700 different brands relative to their category peers and found that brands with lower Difference lose roughly 50% more volume for the same change in price, across categories and markets. Thats because a brand that is perceived as Different is much harder to substitute with a competitive alternative.Difference therefore provides more than just a reason to choose at the time of purchase. It also helps justify the price asked, and offers strong justification post-purchase, as consumers perceive the brand as providing something distinct in the marketplace that they cant get from anyone else. Brands can create perceived difference through innovation as well as disruption, by shaking things up in your own business or the category overall.Thats why in addition to being most meaningfully different, Capitec Bank also tops the table for being both value- and difference-driven. That difference is linked to innovation and a strong drive towards positive disruption, with Capitec not only doubling down on all things digital but also having celebrated the opening of its futuristic new office in Stellenbosch in the heart of the industrys pandemic panic in July 2020.This physical flash reassured customers that the bank is not a digital flash in the pan. It has stable brick-and-mortar roots, giving more credence to Capitecs standing as the first in the country to position itself as a digital bank. It has maintained its innovative positioning through initiatives like its virtual bank cards, scan-to-pay capabilities, and even a partnership with Shell. Recently, Capitec Bank has reported strong results and a user base that is growing by roughly 180,000 clients per month.Theres also a focus on growing a strong savings culture in South Africa and fostering partnerships to create better value for clients, such as decreasing the cost of credit while creating bespoke purpose credit solutions that allow clients to access home loans with SA Home Loans, home improvements at CTM, vehicle finance at WeBuyCars, medical treatment at Mediclinic and education at Stadio. Capitec Bank has also partnered with Dis-Chem, Shell, Educate24, GetSmarter, Hello Doctor, JOOX, Rentalcars.com and Travelstart, ensuring clients receive cashback or discounts simply for activating a free Live Better savings account.Fourie explains: We are one of the few banks in the world that offers our clients interest on their main transactional account, and now that interest can work even harder for them in their Live Better Savings account. Were going to continue expanding our Live Better benefit programme by partnering with other leading SA brands to create further benefit to our clients.Fourie says Capitec will maintain its focus on digitalisation to enhance clients banking experience and help South Africans live better.We believe our human connection and service ethos remains our key competitive advantage. We will use advanced technology, data, and AI to help scale our personalised banking experience for our clients while helping them to simplify their banking further. This strategy will be assisted by our strategic partnerships with some of the worlds best technology providers. We will also partner with more leading South African consumer brands to offer our clients purpose-designed credit solutions and more Live Better benefits.We are committed to our purpose to help people improve their financial lives. We maintain our small company culture and entrepreneurial mindset and will continue to innovate in relevant ways that help South Africans simplify their banking so that they can live better.The acceleration of technology and digitisation has clearly changed the way we all do business. With technological advancements only set to accelerate in 2022, brands need to ensure theyre driving consumer demand in the digital-first era by providing superior experiences across all consumer touchpoints; communicating this through great advertising with memorable icons and messages; to promote their well-designed, innovative functionality thats convenient and fits seamlessly into the everyday lives of users. Learn more from South Africas most valuable brands, with a focus on how to build strong brands and engineer for growth in 2022 and beyond. Also reflect on SAs most valuable brands from 2018 to date and what the top brands have been up to in the last year. Download our comprehensive guide to brand equity and growth.Kantar BrandZ is the global currency when assessing brand value, quantifying the contribution of brands to business financial performance. Kantars annual global and local brand valuation rankings combine rigorously analysed financial data, with extensive brand equity research. Since 1998, BrandZ has shared brand-building insights with business leaders based on interviews with 4 million consumers, for 18,000 brands in 51 markets, including opinions from 31,335 South African consumers on 660 brands in 47 categories. The ability of any brand to power business growth relies on how it is perceived by customers. Grounded in consumer opinion, Kantar BrandZ analysis enables businesses to identify their brands strength in the market and provides clear strategic guidance on how to boost value for the long-term. The eligibility criteria are: Brussels does not get Hungary's support and is prohibited from passing the nation's territory if arms are onboard since the bloc member chooses neutrality. The Hungarians chose to stay out of the conflict with Russia, which gave the European Union a serious setback. Its government is unwilling to risk reprisals, unlike other bloc members that are openly against Russia. Hungary Choses Neutrality Hungary refused to call to send troops or arms to Kyiv, which has given the EU a blackeye in trying to involve it in the ongoing conflict, the Express UK reported. On a Kosovo visit last Monday, Foreign Minister Peter Szijjarto said there would be no troop deployment or arms to Ukraine. All lethal weapons cannot pass in the country's territory for security. Szijjarto made the statement after meeting with Kosovo Foreign Minister Donika Gervalla that the decision is to prevent becoming a military target of any hostile force, and keeping everyone safe is the priority. No way will the government allow any involvement. Prime Minister Viktor Orban posted a video of his decision on social media. He states that these are busy days, and he just met with the National Security Cabinet in the morning and had a brief about the latest reports of the Russian-Ukrainian war. It was clear that the Hungarian people should be less involved in the conflict. Any troops and arms will not send.Adding it is the government's right to decide if any arms could pass over the Hungarian-Ukrainian border. Brussels, the US cannot force Hungary to drop neutrality. Read Also: Vladimir Putin Has Hypersonic Missiles Storage To Use If the Provocative Western Alliance Does Not Thwart Full Blown Conflict Of concern are the Hungarians living in Transcarpathia, leading to the decision that any sort of shipment is dangerous to the well-being of everyone concerned. Their security is more important than anything else. But he clarified that help to fleeing refugees would be given without any questions. PM Orban added that relief supplies were given to Ukrainians for several days. Everyone leaving the conflict zone will be assisted in Hungary, per Financial Times. EU Decides To Fund War According to sources, the European Union had broken a vow not to participate in a conflict. By brokering a conflict to provide arms to a third party to help it fight aggression, the Foreign Policy Chief Josep Borrell remarked. Last Monday, European defense ministers had via video conference to discuss the coordination of arms shipments to Ukraine that will come in the weekend. Brussels will set up a special fund in March 2021, the European Peace Facility (EPF) will bankroll arms for those willing to use the arms. The entire facility is 5 billion euros which are taken from the share of EU members based on their GDP until 2027. But, it's not an official EU expense. This EPF replaced the Athena mechanism and African Peace Facility that was returned to the scope of coverage. With the EPF that can help globally, cited New York Times Post. The facility permits military equipment, and training could be contentious at times. Under the category of non-lethal are anything that is either personal equipment, both medical and non-medical supplies; lethal covers all arms and ammunition. Whatever Brussels feels about Hungary choosing neutrality, it is an alarming development that might happen to some members if they choose. It will make the US and NATO less credulous if more members beg off. Related Article: Russian, Ukrainian Air Force Jetfighters Seen in Tense Low Altitude Dogfight Over Kyiv While Missile Attack Rages @ 2022 HNGN, All rights reserved. Do not reproduce without permission. Ukraine has earned the nickname "breadbasket of Europe" for its rich dark soil, vast wheat fields, and other farm goods. The Russian invasion has cut off the world from cheap and abundant wheat supplies. Ukraine and Russia are vital to the global food supply, accounting for more than a quarter of global wheat trade, about a fifth of corn, and 12% of all calories traded globally, according to Bloomberg. Reuters reports Ukrainian ports will remain closed until the Russian invasion ends and maritime security is restored for commercial ships. This means all shipments of farm goods from Ukraine have ceased, and commodity traders will have to search elsewhere. Activity at Ukrainian ports has been halted since Russia invaded its neighbor last week, and grains trade from Russia is also effectively on pause. Sanctions have been ratcheted up to further isolate commodity-rich Russia from global finance by sanctioning its central bank and cutting off various leaders from the critical SWIFT financial messaging system. Restricting grain supplies from the Black Sea region threatens to further boost global food prices that are near a record high, at a time when supplies are already strained with adverse weather in many growing regions. - Bloomberg "If the conflict is prolonged -- three months, four months from now -- I feel the consequences could be really serious," Andree Defois, president of consultant Strategie Grains, told Bloomberg. "Wheat will need to be rationed." Michael Magdovitz, a senior analyst at Rabobank, said Ukraine and Russia had increased harvests and exports in the last decade at a far lower cost than western farmers, which helped keep wheat prices low. However, that's not the case today as the Russian invasion sends wheat futures trading in Chicago to a six-year high. "I'm not going to put a lid on what might happen," Arlan Suderman, chief commodities economist at StoneX, told Bloomberg. "We could easily be looking at record prices." Kyiv-based researcher UkrAgroConsult warned, "the chain of product creation, from cultivation to port shipments, is paralyzed." This brings us back to Goldman's Global Head of Commodities Research Jeffrey Currie, who told Bloomberg TV earlier this month that he's never seen commodity markets pricing in the shortages they are right now. "I've been doing this 30 years and I've never seen markets like this," Currie told Bloomberg TV in an interview on Monday. "This is a molecule crisis. We're out of everything, I don't care if it's oil, gas, coal, copper, aluminum, you name it we're out of it." As supplies tighen, the Bloomberg Agriculture Spot Index soars to new record highs. The disruption comes as global food prices are already nearing record-highs and could soon be catapulted into unknown territory. In recent years, Xi Jinping is known as a high-profile leader that drives China's rise as a superpower as its global influence continues to expand across continents of the world. As the President of China, Xi leads the world's most populous country and second-largest economy (GDP), controls the country's only political party. In 2018, he ranked number one in Forbes' list of Powerful People. He is the son of Xi Zhongxun, a deputy prime minister, Jinping is considered a "princeling" - descendant of prominent Communist Party officials. The 68-year-old leader took up Bachelor's and Doctor of Jurisprudence degrees at Tsinghua University. When he took office in 2012, he was quick to recognize the advantages of privatization-friendly change. It resulted in China's rise as a superpower in the world that challenges the United States and its allies. If the United States has the "American Dream," Xi coined the phrase "Chinese Dream," which refers to a set of personal and national objectives for the betterment of Chinese society. And he is widely recognized for that. Interestingly, per the Economist, President Xi Jinping has adopted the teachings of China's great philosopher, Confucius, more than any prior Communist leader. He had gone on a year-long journey to Qufu, where he visited Confucius's former residence. A Trailblazer According to Christopher K. Johnson, a former Central Intelligence Agency analyst of Chinese politics, Xi's "political genius" is his "strategic use of uncertainty." "He likes to keep everyone off-balance", he said Among his major accomplishments is China's biggest anti-corruption crack down, which he introduced as soon as he became Chairman of the Chinese Communist Party. Xi's pledge to crack down on high and low-level government officials has become China's most comprehensive anti-corruption crusade. Though, It has been both his powerful political weapon as well as tough challenge in his leadership, according to Dr. Ming Xia, professor of political science at the City University of New York, "He inherited a communist regime, and the Chinese Communist Party was facing a lot of challenges," the professor said. In March 2018, the Chinese parliament approved a controversial revision to the country's constitution that allowed Xi to remain in power indefinitely. He began his second term as president of China within that month, with an unlimited term. Read Also: Ryan Reynolds Admits Anxiety Battle That Makes Him Feel Like Dying; Actor, Wife Blake Lively Pledge Donations For Ukrainian Refugees How Much is Xi Jinping's Net Worth this 2022? According to reports, Xi Jinping's net worth in 2022 is around $1.2 billion. Though most of his finances are not declared in public, there is no means to validate the exact figure. Though, according to Finty,His family holds a large number of shares in a publicly listed Chinese business. The company's valuation is in the billions of dollars, suggesting that Xi Jinping may have at least $1 billion in personal money. Following the abolition of presidential term limits in 2018, the CCP passed a "historic resolution" in November of last year, upgrading Xi's authority to that of iconic leaders Mao Zedong and Deng Xiaoping. This also implies that he has the potential to become wealthy by means that the CCP's rules permit. Related Article: Volodymyr Zelensky Wife: Who Is Olena Zelenska, the First Lady of Ukraine? @ 2022 HNGN, All rights reserved. Do not reproduce without permission. The messenger RNA (mRNA) from Pfizers COVID-19 vaccine is able to enter human liver cells and is converted into DNA, according to Swedish researchers at Lund University. The researchers found that when the mRNA vaccine enters the human liver cells, it triggers the cells DNA, which is inside the nucleus, to increase the production of the LINE-1 gene expression to make mRNA. The mRNA then leaves the nucleus and enters the cells cytoplasm, where it translates into LINE-1 protein. A segment of the protein called the open reading frame-1, or ORF-1, then goes back into the nucleus, where it attaches to the vaccines mRNA and reverse transcribes into spike DNA. Reverse transcription is when DNA is made from RNA, whereas the normal transcription process involves a portion of the DNA serving as a template to make an mRNA molecule inside the nucleus. In this study we present evidence that COVID-19 mRNA vaccine BNT162b2 is able to enter the human liver cell line Huh7 in vitro, the researchers wrote in the study, published in Current Issues of Molecular Biology. BNT162b2 mRNA is reverse transcribed intracellularly into DNA as fast as 6 [hours] after BNT162b2 exposure. BNT162b2 is another name for the Pfizer-BioNTech COVID-19 vaccine that is marketed under the brand name Comirnaty. The whole process occurred rapidly within six hours. The vaccines mRNA converting into DNA and being found inside the cells nucleus is something that the Centers for Disease Control and Prevention (CDC) said would not happen. The genetic material delivered by mRNA vaccines never enters the nucleus of your cells, the CDC said on its web page titled Myths and Facts about COVID-19 Vaccines. This is the first time that researchers have shown in vitro or inside a petri dish how an mRNA vaccine is converted into DNA on a human liver cell line, and is what health experts and fact-checkers said for over a year couldnt occur. The CDC says that the COVID-19 vaccines do not change or interact with your DNA in any way, claiming that all of the ingredients in both mRNA and viral vector COVID-19 vaccines (administered in the United States) are discarded from the body once antibodies are produced. These vaccines deliver genetic material that instructs cells to begin making spike proteins found on the surface of SARS-CoV-2 that causes COVID-19 to produce an immune response. Pfizer didnt comment on the findings of the Swedish study and said only that its mRNA vaccine does not alter the human genome. Our COVID-19 vaccine does not alter the DNA sequence of a human cell, a Pfizer spokesperson told The Epoch Times in an email. It only presents the body with the instructions to build immunity. More than 215 million or 64.9 percent of Americans are fully vaccinated as of Feb. 28, with 94 million having received a booster dose. Autoimmune Disorders The Swedish study also found spike proteins expressed on the surface of the liver cells that researchers say may be targeted by the immune system and possibly cause autoimmune hepatitis, as there [have] been case reports on individuals who developed autoimmune hepatitis after BNT162b2 vaccination. The authors of the first reported case of a healthy 35-year-old female who developed autoimmune hepatitis a week after her first dose of the Pfizer COVID-19 vaccine said that there is a possibility that spike-directed antibodies induced by vaccination may also trigger autoimmune conditions in predisposed individuals as it has been shown that severe cases of SARS-CoV-2 infection are characterized by an autoinflammatory dysregulation that contributes to tissue damage, which the viruss spike protein appears to be responsible for. Spike proteins may circulate in the body after an infection or injection with a COVID-19 vaccine. It was assumed that the vaccines spike protein would remain mostly at the injection site and last up to several weeks like other proteins produced in the body. But studies are showing that is not the case. The Japanese regulatory agencys biodistribution study (pdf) of the Pfizer vaccine showed that some of the mRNAs moved from the injection site and through the bloodstream, and were found in various organs such as the liver, spleen, adrenal glands, and ovaries of rats 48 hours following injection. In a different study, the spike proteins made in the body after receiving a Pfizer COVID-19 shot have been found on tiny membrane vesicles called exosomesthat mediate cell-to-cell communication by transferring genetic materials to other cellsfor at least four months after the second vaccine dose. The persistence of the spike protein in the body raises the prospect of sustained inflammation within and damage to organs which express the spike protein, according to experts at Doctors for COVID Ethics, an organization consisting of physicians and scientists seeking to uphold medical ethics, patient safety, and human rights in response to COVID-19. As long as the spike protein can be detected on cell-derived membrane vesicles, the immune system will be attacking the cells that release these vesicles, they said. Dr. Peter McCullough, an internist, cardiologist, and epidemiologist, wrote on Twitter that the Swedish studys findings have enormous implications of permanent chromosomal change and long-term constitutive spike synthesis driving the pathogenesis of a whole new genre of chronic disease. Whether the findings of the study will occur in living organisms or if the DNA converted from the vaccines mRNA will integrate with the cells genome is unknown. The authors said more investigations are needed, including in whole living organisms such as animals, to better understand the potential effects of the mRNA vaccine. At this stage, we do not know if DNA reverse transcribed from BNT162b2 is integrated into the cell genome. Further studies are needed to demonstrate the effect of BNT162b2 on genomic integrity, including whole genome sequencing of cells exposed to BNT162b2, as well as tissues from human subjects who received BNT162b2 vaccination, the authors said. "The sanctions target Belarusian officials and military personnel that the EU says were involved with Russias aggression against Ukraine, according to a tweet from the French presidency of the EU," The Hill reports. Kremlin image via Reuters The French statement further specified the actions are against Certain sectors of the Belarusian economy, in particular the wood, steel and potash sectors." This follows the initial EU announcement Sunday that it would soon impose penalties on "Belarusians helping the Russian war effort." "Lukashenko's regime is complicit in this vicious attack against Ukraine. So we will hit Lukashenko's regime with a new package of sanctions," EU President Ursula von der Leyen had stated previously. The fresh sanctions correspond with the US Treasury also targeting some top Belarusian officials. Ukrainian officials themselves have widely alleged the presence of Belarusian forces assisting in the invasion. "Belarusian troops have entered Chernihiv region. The information was confirmed to the public by Vitaliy Kyrylov, spokesman for the North Territorial Defense Forces. More details later," Ukraine's parliament information service tweeted earlier. Belarus had been swift to reject the accusations, with President Lukashenko asserting, "No decisions were made by me." He added: "And without my decision, these units cannot even be withdrawn from the barracks." According to Politico, the Pentagon and US intelligence has yet to see evidence that Belarusian forces are directly involved inside Ukraine's territory: In Washington, a U.S. defense official briefing reporters said the U.S. had "no confirmation that the Belarusians are entering Ukraine, weve seen no indication of that." And Belarusian leader Alexander Lukashenko denied that his countrys military has joined Russias attack. At today's security council meeting, Lukashenko showed what looks like an actual invasion map. It shows Ukraine military facilities destroyed by missiles from Belarus, attacks directions (everything agrees except Odessa-Transnistria). Also, Ukraine is divided into 4 sectors. pic.twitter.com/ueqBIFUbyM Tadeusz Giczan (@TadeuszGiczan) March 1, 2022 Regardless, it's clear that on the level of intelligence and logistics, Belarus is coordinating with its Russian ally as part of the so-called 'Union State'. In recent months Lukashenko has raised eyebrows over his repeat invitations for Putin to station nuclear warheads at bases in Belarus. If you live in the West, you may have noticed in the post-COVID world a veritable deluge of creepy propaganda offering various explanations for surging heart attacks, strokes, and reproductive system damage. The now-established medical fact is that the COVID-19 gene therapies deceptively marketed as vaccines wreak havoc on the cardiovascular system. Straight from the (conspiracy theory blog??) American Heart Association: We conclude that the mRNA vacs dramatically increase inflammation on the endothelium and T cell infiltration of cardiac muscle and may account for the observations of increased thrombosis, cardiomyopathy, and other vascular events following vaccination. In response to facts, Twitter labeled the American Heart Associations evidence-based conclusions unsafe. The experts/priests who worship and respect the Science, and interpret it like Nostradamus reading tea leaves, want to assure the peasants that the unprecedented increase in heart attacks, even in young people who historically dont suffer from them has nothing to do with the vaccines produced by the same pharmaceutical entities that coincidentally fund their research work. (Obviously, no conflict of interest affects the Science overlords judgment because they exist in a moral class above the petty fallible humans they oversee). Instead of experimental gene therapies that increase inflammation in blood vessels, the Science ministers have divined alternative explanations (and dont dare contradict their decrees, or your blasphemous Twitter account will get memory-holed): Daylight savings time is deadly for the whole family kids have strokes too! The principle at play here is akin to a legal concept called plausible deniability. Most often, plausible deniability refers to members of high-ranking governments or similarly large, complex entities creating, through various machinations, a mirage of ignorance to protect themselves from liability for criminal or unethical behavior that they actually sanctioned. Similarly, if the corporate media can offer an array of alternative explanations for the precipitous spike in heart attacks, cancers, etc., then determining for certain that an individual owes their debilitating health condition to the vaccines becomes virtually impossible it couldve been almost literally anything else! Criminals under the burning heat of public scrutiny need plausible scapegoats the higher the stakes, the more elaborate lengths theyll go to manufacture them. And they dont get much higher than double-digit surges in all-cause mortality. - Even before the vaxxes, the social engineers introduced a parallel strategy to muddy the waters on the origin of the SARS-CoV-2 virus and stem public pressure to identify the actual cause. Eco-Health Alliance president Peter Daszak pressured a consortium of scientists under his direct and indirect influence to sign a letter in February 2020 ruling out the lab leak theory as a viable explanation for COVID-19s origins: We stand together to strongly condemn conspiracy theories suggesting that COVID-19 does not have a natural origin We support the call from the Director-General of WHO to promote scientific evidence and unity over misinformation. In ultra-thick irony, Daszaks narrative collapsed when the truth emerged that he himself engaged in a conspiracy to produce his above-quoted misinformation campaign: EcoHealth Alliance President Peter Daszak, the head of an organization involved in research that genetically manipulates coronaviruses, discussed hiding his role in a statement published last year in The Lancet that condemned as conspiracy theories concerns that the COVID-19 virus may have originated in a research lab. Likely with firsthand knowledge himself of where COVID-19 actually came from given his direct funding of the Wuhan lab (link), Daszak knew full well that the premises of his letter would later disintegrate into dust under scrutiny. Daszak also likely suspected, even, that The Lancet would later be forced to reverse its position (and in the process flush its credibility as an authority down the toilet) when the glaringly obvious conflict of interests at play surfaced in the public eye. (Among those many conflicts of interest were Eco-Healths funding of the Wuhan lab, Daszaks personal connections to the Chinese government, his close relationship with Anthony Fauci, etc.) The editor of @TheLancet today admitting to @UKParliament that US-China politics influenced their decision to publish a 2020 letter dismissing the lab leak theory as a conspiracy theory despite there being [no] evidence one way or the other. pic.twitter.com/cwEERXSfoi Ataraxis (@ataraxisfinch) December 15, 2021 The point of the letter, then, like the the four seasons cause heart attacks and definitely not vaxxes propaganda, wasnt the pipe dream of actually forever convincing the entire world that COVID jumped from a bat to humans. Rather, the aim was to successfully obscure the public debate to the point that, once real evidence emerged, arriving conclusively at the true origins of the virus, and achieving consensus, would be so time-consuming, and the seekers would have to wade through such a thick swamp of corporate-sponsored misinformation, that they simply throw up their hands, exasperated. The old drowning in paperwork, needle in a haystack dilemma. And, then, enough of the population becomes agnostic on the origin story that the parties guilty of creating the virus escape punishment. Just so, the media creates plausible deniability in terms of the vaccines triggering serious adverse effects by inundating their audience with volumes of competing explanations Yeah, it might be possible that the 11th booster gave your kid myocarditis, but it couldnt been the nippy weather or Netflix. One can never know! Respect the Science, peasant! Crafty lawyers, who predominately run the US government, employ this strategy constantly to defend their guilty clients. Despite overwhelming physical evidence connecting their client to the murders, OJ Simpsons lawyers, for example, attempted to bamboozle the jury with alternative explanations for Nicole Simpsons and Ron Goldmans killing like attempting to draw parallels to other unsolved murders in the area, or offering more exotic and sensational theories like a drug deal gone wrong. It worked, and OJ walked. The obvious takeaway is that none of the information the corporate media presents is intended to inform, but rather to craft and then insert into the public psyche a deliberate narrative to absolve powerful actors of guilt. Faced with hard evidence to contradict their preferred strategy of fully absolving their masters of wrongdoing, the corporate media will settle for obfuscation. Ben Bartee is a Bangkok-based American journalist with opposable thumbs. Follow his stuff via Armageddon Prose, Substack, Patreon, Gab, and Twitter. Please support his independent operations however you can. Bitcoin public address: 14gU3aHBXkNq8bDqmibfnubV7kSJqfx5LX (Support Free Thought) - In case you havent noticed, a line is being drawn in the sand: you either stand with Ukraine and unquestioningly parrot the establishment narrative or you are an agent of the Kremlin. The war propaganda is palpable and we havent seen anything like this since the immediate aftermath of 9/11. While the media and your leaders are demanding that you take a side, it is important to remember that it is entirely possible to stand against the Russian invasion in Ukraine as well as the folks who helped to instigate it. There is no question that NATO policy over the last 8 years has pushed Vladimir Putin into a corner, creating a direct threat to the national security of Russia. And, as Chris Hedges points out, Russia has every right to feel threatened, betrayed, and angry. However, he adds, But to understand is not to condone. The invasion of Ukraine, under post-Nuremberg laws, is a criminal war of aggression. It is also important to point out that those standing with the Ukraine now, are largely responsible for the quagmire currently unfolding in the region. As we listen to political voices talk about standing up for freedom and democracy in Ukraine, their words ring hollow to those who have been paying attention. For starters, Ukraine is not a democracy as democracies dont take down three TV stations for being critical of the president. Democracies dont kidnap and cage their political opposition, who happened to come in second in the election process. And, democracies dont bomb innocent civilians within their own countries for not being loyal to the party. Undoubtedly, the people of Ukraine desire freedom and democracy but their leaders have made it clear that this is not their end game. Whats more, those claiming to stand for freedom and democracy out here in the West, are not who they claim to be either. Just a few short weeks ago, they were carrying out incredible acts of tyranny against their own people. Today, as President Putin attempts to illegally and unjustifiably seize Ukraines territory, Canada continues to be inspired by Ukraine and its people, who remain strong, resilient, and determined as they defend their countrys sovereignty, Canadas Prime Minster Justin Trudeau said in a statement on Ukraine last week. In these dark hours, Canadas message to the people of Ukraine is this: You are not alone. We are standing with you. Our support for Ukraine, for democracy, and for human rights remains unwavering. Exactly how he said this through a straight face is anyones guess, as Trudeau has risen through the ranks of historys tyrants rather quickly over the last two years. Only weeks before claiming he stands for freedom and human rights, Trudeau began freezing the bank accounts of protesters who stood against tyrannical mandates. Citizens were beaten and arrested for protesting peacefully in front of the capitol. Not only did they go after the protesters, but the government went after the bank accounts of those who provided monetary support in the form of donations as well. For practicing their free speech, Canadians were persecuted and driven into financial ruin by the government who claims to stand with the Ukraine. This was all carried out with zero due process and without any democratic input at all completely voiding the statement that Trudeau stands for democracy. When the American political class who also claims to stand for democracy in Ukraine watched as the Canadian government began financially persecuting individuals for their freedom of speech, they not only remained silent but facilitated it. This was one of the most tyrannical moves in recent Western history and instead of standing against it, the establishment actually supported it. In fact, a poll by Trafalger Group for Convention of the States recently found that a super-majority of Democrats, 65%, actually thought Trudeaus authoritarian move to arrest people and confiscate their life savings for practicing their freedom of speech was a good thing. In a similar speech, like the one from Trudeau above, Biden talked out of the side of his mouth as well as he claimed America stands up to bullies. We stand up for freedom. This is who we are. Again, these words ring hollow given the fact that only months before he said this, he was removing peoples freedom forcing them to take a vaccine or face financial ruin. Instead of calling out the establishment for these unconstitutional and illegal mandates, ABC, CBS, NBC, WaPo, AP, MSNBC, and CNN, chose to support the unilateral decision to force Americans to undergo a medical procedure against their will and vehemently defended it claiming those that opposed it were the problem. It is no surprise that these were the same media who have been marching us into a conflict with Russia over Ukraine only this time, instead of stupid lies about horse paste, their disinformation has potentially catastrophic consequences. We cannot have such short memories. The same folks who lied to us for two years over covid are again manipulating us into a devastating conflict with Russia because they stand to reap massive profits from war. As Chris Hedges so accurately reminds us: Only the autocrats and politicians who dream of empire and global hegemony, of the god-like power that comes with wielding armies, warplanes, and fleets, along with the merchants of death, whose business floods countries with weapons, profit from war. The expansion of NATO into Eastern Europe has earned Lockheed Martin, Raytheon, General Dynamics, Boeing, Northrop Grumman, Analytic Services, Huntington Ingalls, Humana, BAE Systems, and L3Harris billions in profits. The stoking of conflict in Ukraine will earn them billions more. We must not let the purveyors of propaganda lead us into another Afghanistan or Iraq. We simply cannot afford it, and this time, the enemy is a far greater threat than an insurgency in caves. Kremlin-backed media outlets have been banned throughout the European Union, both on television and on apps and online platforms. RT has lost its Sky TV slot in the UK, where the outlet is also blocked on YouTube. Australian TV providers SBS and Foxtel have dropped RT, and the federal government is putting pressure on social media platforms to block Russian media in Australia. In the Czech Republic, Slovakia, and Latvia, speaking in support of the Russian invasion of Ukraine will get you years in prison. Twitter, historically the last of the major online platforms to jump on any new internet censorship escalation, is now actively minimizing the number of people who see Russian media content, saying that it is reducing the contents visibility and taking steps to significantly reduce the circulation of this content on Twitter. This censorship-by-algorithm tactic is exactly what I speculated might emerge after former Twitter CEO Jack Dorsey resigned back in November, due to previous comments supportive of that practice by his successor Parag Agrawal. Twitter is also placing warnings labels on all Russia-backed media and delivering a pop-up message informing you that you are committing wrongthink if you try to share or even like a post linking to such outlets on the platform. It has also placed the label Russia state-affiliated media on every tweet made by the personal accounts of employees of those platforms, baselessly giving the impression that the dissident opinions tweeted by those accounts are paid Kremlin content and not simply their own legitimate perspectives. Some are complaining that this new label has led to online harassment amid the post-9/11-like anti-Russia hysteria thats currently turning western brains into clam chowder. This is all on top of all the other drastic escalations in censorship which came roaring in at the beginning of the Ukraine war, and I personally find it a bit scary how fast its all happening, how fine people are with it, and how much worse it seems likely to get. Others agree. The purge of RT and other Russian media outlets in the US and Europe is 100% censorship, tweets journalist Michael Tracey. Go ahead and argue its justified, but at least dont be a coward and admit you are advocating censorship. The western world believes that it has a monopoly on what constitutes political truth and that their ideological worldview is the only correct, valid and authoritative one, writer and analyst Tom Fowdy observed. They preach freedom of speech and the press to other countries, but exempt themselves from it. And I cant help but find it odd that the fight for freedom and democracy should require such copious amounts of censorship. Youd think a free society would have no objection to people trying to learn the other side of the debate about a war which NATO powers very plainly had a hand in starting, rather than being forced to consume only western mass media narratives which tell us this is happening exclusively because Vladimir Putin is evil and Hitlery and hates freedom. Youd think a society devoted to truth and freedom, the kind of society western powers purport to be trying to defend in Ukraine, would not require a Ministry of Truth to protect us from disinformation about a government long targeted by the US-centralized empire, or from trying to seek out alternative perspectives beyond the homogeneous blanket of authorized mainstream narratives. Youd think the truth would be more robust than that. Youd think freedom would extend farther than that. Youd think democracy would be more tolerant of dissent than that. Almost like this has nothing to do with freedom, or truth, or democracy. Almost like it never has. Kind of makes you wonder if perhaps rallying behind the idea that its fine to censor people to preserve the establishment narrative about things, like Covid-19 and vaccines for example, was every bit the slippery slope that everyone warned it would be. If perhaps we have foolishly consented to a reality where the most powerful people in the world get to control the information people consume in order to shut down dissent against a murderous and oppressive globe-spanning oligarchic empire. And it kind of makes you wonder, as we watch the same empire that just destroyed Iraq, Libya, Syria and Yemen being entrusted to carefully navigate extremely delicate nuclear brinkmanship escalations without ending the world, if we might perhaps be better off with a lot more dissent, rather than a lot less. _________________________________ My work is entirely reader-supported, so if you enjoyed this piece please consider sharing it around, following me on Facebook, Twitter, Soundcloud or YouTube, or throwing some money into my tip jar on Ko-fi, Patreon or Paypal. If you want to read more you can buy my books. The best way to make sure you see the stuff I publish is to subscribe to the mailing list for at my website or on Substack, which will get you an email notification for everything I publish. Everyone, racist platforms excluded, has my permission to republish, use or translate any part of this work (or anything else Ive written) in any way they like free of charge. For more info on who I am, where I stand, and what Im trying to do with this platform, click here. Bitcoin donations:1Ac7PCQXoQoLA9Sh8fhAgiU3PHA2EX5Zm2 Bill Gates is not only owning the most farmland in America He has also taken control of the global production and warehousing of seeds Since the onset of the Neolithic Revolution some 10.000 years ago, farmers and communities have worked to improve yield, taste, nutritional and other qualities of seeds. They have expanded and passed on knowledge about health impacts and healing properties of plants as well as about the peculiar growing habits of plants and interaction with other plants and animals, soil and water. The free exchange of seed among farmers has been the basis to maintaining biodiversity and food security. A great seed and biodiversity piracy is underway, not just by corporations which through mergers are becoming fewer and larger but also by super rich billionaires whose wealth and power open doors to their every whim. Leading the way is Microsoft mogul, Bill Gates. When the Green Revolution was brought into India and Mexico, farmers seeds were rounded-up from their fields and locked in international institutions, to be used to breed green revolution varieties engineered to respond to chemical inputs. [1] The International Rice Research Institute (IRRI) in the Philippines and the International Maize and Wheat Improvement Centre (CIMMYT), were the first to roundup the diversity from farmers fields and replace it with chemical monocultures of rice, wheat, and corn. Others quickly followed. This hijacking of farmers seeds is best highlighted with the shameful removal of Indias pre-eminent rice research scientist Dr. R.H. Richaria, as the head of Indias Central Rice Research Institute (CRRI) in Cuttack, Orissa, which housed the largest collection of rice diversity in the world, for refusing to allow the IRRI in the Philippines to pirate the collection out of India. With his removal at the behest of the World Bank, Indian peasant intellectual property was hijacked to the IRRI in the Philippines which later became part of the newly created Consultative Group of International Agriculture Research (CGIAR). [2] Farmers seed heritage was held in the private seed banks of CGIAR, a consortium of 15 international agricultural research centers, controlled by the World Bank, the Rockefeller and Ford Foundations, as well as of course the Bill and Melinda Gates Foundation (BMGF), which since 2003, has poured more than $720 million into the CGIAR centres. CGIAR gene banks presently manage 768,576 accessions of farmer seeds. Taken together, CGIAR gene banks represent the largest and most widely used collections of crop diversity in the world.[3] The Bill & Melinda Gates Foundation operates a bit like the World Bank, using its financial power and prowess to take control of agriculture and influence government and institutional agricultural policies. By far the largest funder of the CGIAR, Gates has successfully accelerated the transfer of research and seeds from scientific research institutions to commodity-based corporations, centralizing and facilitating the pirating of intellectual property and seed monopolies through intellectual property laws and seed regulations. The urgency with which this restructuring of CGIAR and centralization of control is being done is reflected in the IPES Food open letter of 21 July 2020 as follows: The process now underway to reform the CGIAR is therefore imperative and of major public interest. The One CGIAR process seeks to merge the CGIARs 15 legally independent but cooperating centres, headquartered in 15 countries, into one legal entity. The impetus has come from some of its biggest funders, notably the Bill and Melinda Gates Foundation, the World Bank, and the US and UK governments. [4] The aim of One CGIAR, overseen by One CGIAR Common Board is to merge it to become part of One Agriculture, aka Gates Ag One Gates latest move in controlling the worlds seed supply. [5] Gates has indicated he will more than double the CGIAR present budget, from $850 million to $2 billion a year. Despite the long-recognized failure of the Green Revolution in India and Mexico, in 2006 Gates launched AGRA, the Alliance for a Green Revolution in Africa. The folly of imposing this failed technology in Africa is well documented in the two following articles by Nicoletta Dentico and Tim Wise. The Seed Freedom movement has been calling for the CGIAR gene banks to return these stolen farmers varieties back to the farmers. The lessons of the Green Revolution since the 1960s have shown us that the chemical path of monocultures has undermined Earths capacity to support life and food production by destroying biodiversity, soil and water [6, 7] as well as contributing to climate change. [8] It has dispossessed small farmers through debt for external inputs. And it has undermined food and nutritional security. [9] The experience of the last half century has made clear that Seed Sovereignty, Food Sovereignty and Knowledge Sovereignty is the only viable future of food and farming. Besides taking control of the seeds of farmers in the CGIAR seed banks, Gates (along with the Rockefeller Foundation) is investing heavily in collecting seeds from across the world and storing them in the Svalbard Global Seed Vault in the Arctic archipelago aka the Doomsday Vault created to collect and hold a global collection of the worlds seeds. It is in association with the Consultative Group on International Agricultural Research (CGIAR) and the Crop Trust. [10] The Crop Trust, based in Germany, funds and coordinates the Svalbard Seed Vault. In addition to the Bill and Melinda Gates Foundation, its funders include the Poison Cartel adherents CropLife Dupont/ Pioneer Hi-bred, KWS SAAT AG, and Syngent AG. The largest numbers of accessions stored in the Seed Vault are varieties of rice, wheat, and barley crops; more than 150,000 samples of wheat and rice, and close to 80,000 samples of Barley. Other well represented crops are sorghum, phaseolus bean species, maize, cowpea, soybean, kikuyu grass and chickpea. Crops such as potatoes, peanuts, cajanus beans, oats and rye, alfalfa, the cereal hybrid Triticosecale and Brassicas are represented by between 10,000 and 20,000 seed samples. [11] It should come as no surprise that Gates is also funding Diversity Seek (DivSeek), a global project launched in 2015 to map the genetic data of the peasant diversity of seeds held in gene banks to then take patents on these seeds through genomic mapping. [12] Seven million crop accessions are in public seed banks. Biopiracy is carried out through the convergence of information technology and biotechnology where patents are taken on seeds through mapping their genomes and genome sequences. While living seed needs to evolve in situ, patents on seed genomes can be taken from seed ex situ. DivSeek is designed to mine and extract the data in the seed to censor out the commons. In effect it robs the peasants of their seeds and knowledge, it robs the seed of its integrity and diversity, it erases evolutionary history and the seeds link to the soil, reducing it to a simple code. This genetic colonialism is an enclosure of the genetic commons. [13] The participating institutions in DivSeek are the CGIAR nodes and public universities like Cornell and Iowa State, which are being increasingly privatized by the biotechnology industry as well as the Gates Foundation. BMGF funds Cornells Alliance for Science, the corporate worlds pseudo-science propaganda outlet while Iowa State is the institution promoting the unethical human feeding trials of GMO bananas. Other Gates-funded DivSeek partners are the African Agricultural Technology Foundation and Africa-Brazil Agricultural Innovation Marketplace developed by the Brazilian Agricultural Research Corporation (Embrapa). [14] Through a new front corporation, Editas Medicine, [15] BMGF is investing in a one-year-old experimental genetic engineering tool for gene editing, CRISPR-Cas9. Though the technology itself is immature and inaccurate, it has become a gold rush for new patents. The language of gene editing and educated guesses is creeping into scientific discourse. Piracy of common genomic data of millions of plants bred by peasants is termed big data. Big data however is not knowledge, it is not even information. It is privateered data, pirated and privatised. Seeds are not just germplasm. They are living, self-organizing entities, subjects of evolution, history, culture, and relationships. In the 1980s, Monsanto led the push for GMOs and patents on seed and life. Today the flag bearer is Bill Gates. In a nutshell: one billionaire given free access to use his wealth to bypass all international treaties and multilateral governance structures to help global corporations highjack the biodiversity and wealth of peasants by financing unscientific and undemocratic processes such as DivSeek, and to unleash untested technologies such as the CRISPR technology on humanity. Over the last two decades, thousands of concerned citizens and organizations have taken action and written laws to protect the biodiversity of the planet and the rights of farmers to seed, and the rights of consumers to safety, among them, the Convention on Biological Diversity (CBD); the Cartagena Biosafety Protocol to the CBD; and the International Treaty on Plant Genetic Resources Treaty for Food and Agriculture (ITPGRFA). This article is extracted from Navdanya International Global Citizens Report Gates to a Global Empire, which was presented on October 14th, 2020, through an online event with the authors. The report gathers evidence and throws light on the dangers of philanthrocapitalism, which is boosting the corporate takeover of our seed, agriculture, food, knowledge and global health systems, manipulating information and eroding our democracies. Contributors to the Seed and Biopiracy sections outline how Bill Gates and his foundation routinely undermine international treaties created to protect biodiversity, farmers rights, and the sovereignty of countries and communities of their seed and biodiversity wealth. [RegenerationInternational] StrangeSounds.org has been banned from ADS NETWORKS! CLICK HERE TO DONATE AND SUPPORT ME, MY WORK AND MY WEBSITE! Borsa Italiana non ha responsabilita per il contenuto del sito a cui sta per accedere e non ha responsabilita per le informazioni contenute. Accedendo a questo link, Borsa Italiana non intende sollecitare acquisti o offerte in alcun paese da parte di nessuno. Sarai automaticamente diretto al link in cinque secondi. In an exclusive interview with CNN and Reuters from the Kyiv bunker where he is commanding his military's reaction, Ukrainian President Volodymyr Zelensky encouraged his US counterpart Joe Biden to give a forceful and "useful" message about the Russian invasion at his State of the Union speech on Tuesday. In a rare interview on Tuesday afternoon, Zelensky stated that as long as Moscow's attacks on Ukrainian cities continue, there would be little progress in bilateral negotiations. Volodymyr Zelensky Urges Joe Biden to Send Strong Message on Russia On Monday, officials from the two nations met for the first time since Russia started its invasion last week. Before President Biden's speech before Congress on Tuesday, Zelensky encouraged the President to make the seriousness and consequences of Russia's incursion clear to Americans. While putting harsh sanctions on Russia, the US and NATO partners have assisted Ukraine by exchanging armaments, military equipment, and intelligence. However, the alliance has made it plain that it has no intentions to send troops to Ukraine, which is not a member of NATO. Rockets were fired near a TV tower on Tuesday afternoon, hours after Russia warned of "high-precision" strikes on other facilities linked to Ukrainian security agencies. According to Ukraine's Ministry of Internal Affairs, the rocket strike destroyed broadcasting equipment, prompting suspicions that Russia is seeking to disable the city's communications infrastructure. On Tuesday, Zelensky told CNN that Russia was randomly assaulting Ukrainian individuals and historical sites. Around 5.30 pm local time, at least two massive explosions were witnessed near the foot of the Kyiv TV tower, roughly three miles from the city center. It was unclear if the tower was the focus of the missiles or whether they were aimed at neighboring structures. The tower was unharmed, but some state transmissions were lost. It occurred after Moscow's defense ministry announced that "precise bombs" would be used in attacks against Ukraine's security service and intelligence services in the city. After the cities of Kharkiv, Mariupol, and Kherson were attacked by indiscriminate shelling earlier in the day, this fueled worries that Kyiv might be next. The strikes, along with satellite photographs of a military convoy snaking its way towards the city, prompted commentators to warn that Russia was intending to encircle, besiege, and bomb the city into submission as Putin employs'medieval' tactics to compel victory. Other signals of Russian aggression were also seen. After President Vladimir Putin ordered his country's nuclear forces to be placed on high alert, nuclear submarines set sail for drills in the Barents Sea, while mobile missile launchers patrolled the snowy woods of Siberia, according to Daily Mail. Read Also: North Korea Says Russia-Ukraine War's Root Cause Is Not Territorial Dispute But US' Sanctions; More Than 520,000 Refugees Flee Kyiv Zelensky: Prove That You Are With Us On Tuesday, Ukrainian President Volodymyr Zelensky called with the West to do more to assist his nation in its war against Russia, as Ukrainians continue to fight for their freedom, rights, and survival. In an emotional speech to the European Parliament, Zelensky reaffirmed his government's desire to join the European Union and become full members of the continent, claiming that the bloc would be much stronger with them. One English translator was moved to tears and loudly choked up by the Ukrainian President's emotional speech. Zelensky emphasized the Russian Federation's damage, citing numerous missile explosions in Kharkiv, Ukraine's eastern metropolis. The lawmakers gave Zelensky a standing ovation that lasted almost a minute when he ended his speech. As they applauded the president, he lifted his fist and shook it before walking away from the camera. Diplomats walked out of a UN Human Rights Council meeting in Geneva on Tuesday as Russian Foreign Minister Sergey Lavrov began to offer remarks via video. In Poland, a Ukrainian journalist sobbed as she approached UK Prime Minister Boris Johnson, accusing him of being "afraid" of Russian atrocities on Ukrainian children. The invasion of Ukraine by Russian President Vladimir Putin is already on its sixth day. While Russian forces have gained control of cities and sites around the nation, including the historic Chernobyl nuclear power facility, Ukrainians have stayed firm in their defense of Kyiv, the country's capital. Russia's assault on the city has stopped in the last 24 hours, according to a US defense official, as their men may be running out of food and gasoline. Russian forces are "regrouping and attempting to react to the obstacles they have experienced," according to the official, as they approach the capital city at a considerably slower pace than predicted. The majority of Russian soldiers are estimated to be about 18 miles outside the city core, New York Post reported. Related Article: Joe Biden: US Should Not Fear Nuclear War Amid Russia-Ukraine Crisis @ 2022 HNGN, All rights reserved. Do not reproduce without permission. Anonymous, a mysterious online organization, appears to be entering the Ukraine-Russia crisis by declaring cyberwar on Russian President Vladimir Putin and the Russian government. Following Russia's invasion of Ukraine, a tweet from "Anonymous" - a Twitter account with 7.4 million followers and roughly 190,000 Tweets - called for hackers all around the world to attack Russia. On Feb. 24, a tweet from the account indicated that the loosely linked worldwide network was preparing to take action against the country, and that "we will be retweeting their attempts." Global Hacking Group Launches "Cyber War" Against Russia In the days that followed, the account claimed credit for deactivating the websites of Russian energy giant Gazprom, state-controlled Russian news network RT, and a slew of Russian and Belarusian government organizations, including the Kremlin's official website. Following tweets claimed responsibility for interrupting Russian internet service providers, releasing data and emails from Belarusian weapons firm Tetraedr, and cutting down a gas supply provided by Russian telecoms company Tvingo Telecom. Many of the websites that the organization claimed to have taken down are present - or were recent - disabled, according to a service that tracks server failures. A post on RT published on February 28 indicated that Anonymous had shut down its website, as well as the Kremlin's, last Friday. The organization had also targeted other Russian and Belarusian media outlets on Monday, by replacing their main pages with the message, "Stop the war," as per CNBC. Read Also: Volodymyr Zelensky Urges Every "Friend of Ukraine" To Help Defend The Country Against Russian Invasion Anonymous Takes Down Russia's State-Run News Services Since the invasion of Ukraine began last week, hackers have been ratcheting up their efforts to destroy Russian infrastructure, with electric vehicle owners becoming the newest target in an increasingly sophisticated cyber-war. Electric vehicle charging stations along Russia's M11 motorway, which runs from Moscow to Saint Petersburg, has been taken offline, according to a Facebook post by Russian energy company Rosseti, because the Ukrainian company that helped manufacture them allegedly hacked the control system to display anti-Putin messages. According to the report, the Ukrainian firm that supplied the components left a backdoor in its systems, and by exploiting this backdoor, the company - dubbed AutoEnterprise by Rosseti - caused the charging stations to show an error message. It's unclear how many electric car charging stations were hacked or disabled, or how long they'll be unavailable to EV drivers, but the Russian business claims the chargers are being separated from the rest of the grid network and will be operational again shortly. After the invasion of Ukraine, the famed hacker group Anonymous publicly declared war on Russian infrastructure, the event is only one of numerous massive cyber strikes that have hit Russia in recent days, as per LAD Bible. In what was expected to be the first round of tit-for-tat hacks, Russian government websites, including the official Kremlin and media regulator pages, went down over the weekend. The Kyiv Independent reported on Saturday afternoon that Ukraine's telecommunications agency had also declared that Russian TV networks had been hacked to play Ukrainian music. It happened only hours before Russia's dictator started his aggressive "demilitarize and de-Nazify "Ukraine after Kyiv was attacked by a massive hack targeting its government and banks. The Ministry of Foreign Affairs, Ministry of Defense, Ministry of Internal Affairs, Security Service, and Cabinet of Ministers all had their websites down on Wednesday afternoon. Several government buildings received bomb threats, which are assumed to be part of a psychological pressure operation by Moscow. Ukraine's Vice Prime Minister, Mykhailo Fedorov, stated on Saturday that the government was forming an "IT army" to "battle on the cyber front" in the face of tit-for-tat assaults. According to intelligence sources, the Russian president's campaign is not proceeding as planned owing to Kremlin "overconfidence," inadequate tactical planning, and "shock" at the ferocious opposition put up by patriotic Ukrainians fighting for national survival. The Ku Klux Klan and Islamic fanatics are two groups that Anonymous has previously attacked. "Anons" are members who wear Guy Fawkes masks. The group informed Elon Musk, the founder of Tesla, in July of last year that they planned to target him because he had too much control over the bitcoin markets, Daily Mail reported. Related Article: Cybersecurity Warning: Check Now If You're Using One of the 20 Most Common Passwords Found on the Dark Web @YouTube @ 2022 HNGN, All rights reserved. Do not reproduce without permission. Unlimited website access 24/7 Unlimited e-Edition access 24/7 The best local, regional and national news in sports, politics, business and more! With a Digital Only subscription, you'll receive unlimited access to our website and e-edition. Our digital products are available 24/7 and are accessible anywhere, anytime. United States President Joe Biden has approved the release of 30 million barrels of oil from the country's oil reserves in an attempt to mitigate the effect of Russia's invasion of Ukraine on gas prices, the White House and International Energy Agency (IEA) announced on Tuesday. The U.S. and its other ally countries agreed to release a total of 60 million barrels of oils from their reserves, with half of the total coming from the U.S. Strategic Petroleum Reserve. The remaining 30 million barrels will be taken from allies in Europe and Asia. The list of countries includes Germany, the United Kingdom, Italy, the Netherlands, and other major European countries and includes Japan and South Korea. Millions of Oil Barrels On Tuesday, the International Energy Agency announced that member countries have already agreed to the release of oil barrels from emergency reserves. Authorities wanted to send a "strong message to global oil markets that there will be no shortfall" as a result of Russia's aggression in Ukraine. The White House also released a statement saying that the release was just another example of partners around the world condemning Russia's actions. Authorities said that the recent release showed cooperation between nations to address the impact of Moscow's war of choice, as per CNN. The situation comes as Kansas Republican Sen. Roger Marshall introduced legislation on Tuesday that urges the White House to ban all Russian oil imports into the United States. The proposal aims to block the importation of petroleum and petroleum products from Russia. Read Also: Russia's News Agency Erroneously Declares Victory Over Ukraine War; Volodymyr Zelensky Sends List of Weapons to UK To Defeat Kremlin The Energy Committee GOP Leader, Sen. John Barrasso, and at least seven other Republicans in the upper chamber expressed their support of the bill. In an interview, Marshall said that United States President Joe Biden needed to prioritize restarting America's energy production and stop the funding of Russian President Vladimir Putin's war on Ukraine. According to Fox News, the Republican's proposal comes one day after Canadian authorities decided to block imports of crude oil in protest of Russia's actions against Ukraine. On Monday, Canadian Prime Minister Justine Trudeau said that despite the fact that the country only imported a small number of Russian petroleum products, the decision to block them was sending a "powerful message." Price of Oil The global catastrophe has caused gas prices in nations worldwide to shoot up, with the U.S. seeing a surge on Tuesday. The price of crude oil hit its highest level in the country since June 2014. The U.S. oil benchmark, West Texas Intermediate crude futures jumped 11.5% at the highs of the day to $106.78 per barrel. On the other hand, International benchmark Brent crude hit a high of $107.57 per barrel, a price only last seen in July 2014. On Thursday, when Russia decided to mobilize its military for a full-scale operation in Ukraine, prices topped the $100 mark. The situation prompted fears of supply disruptions from key exporter Russia in what many say is already a very tight market. The IEA's decision to release 60 million barrels of oil attempts to mitigate some of the current supply constraints. The agency's executive director, Faith Birol, released a statement saying that the situation in energy markets right now was very alarming, CNBC reported. Related Article: Joe Biden: US Should Not Fear Nuclear War Amid Russia-Ukraine Crisis @ 2022 HNGN, All rights reserved. Do not reproduce without permission. Manitoba will drop the self-isolation requirement for people who test positive for COVID-19 starting March 15, the same day the province is due to lift its mask mandate. Advertisement Advertise With Us Manitoba will drop the self-isolation requirement for people who test positive for COVID-19 starting March 15, the same day the province is due to lift its mask mandate. Dr. Jazz Atwal, acting deputy chief provincial public health officer, said Manitoba is transitioning to an endemic approach when dealing with COVID-19. People must learn to live with COVID-19 as a part of life. However, if self-isolation becomes only a recommendation, he asked the public to consider their health and the health of others. "No matter what your respiratory symptoms are, its still recommended to stay home when you are sick. To give your body time to recover and to reduce the likelihood of spreading that illness to someone else." He added the recommendation to stay home when sick is directed at all illnesses, not just COVID. Also on March 15, the province will end COVID-19 case investigations. This means officials will no longer investigate where COVID was originally transmitted for that specific case. This will not affect the ability for people to get tested or get their results. "We also need to adjust to the information we collect and share with Manitobans. Real-time data is less critical with endemic reporting. Instead, we would shift our focus to key pieces of information that will provide the most relevant epidemiological evidence and data for both the public and decision-makers," Atwal said. Among the hardest hit by the pandemic have been children, who have missed in-person learning and have suffered academically, as well as mentally without regular interaction with friends and classmates. School has also been a safe space for many, Atwal said, with some needing school for nutrition programs and in some cases, time away from stressful situations at home. Among adults, it has also taken a toll on mental health, with increases in substance abuse, restricted or no access to mental health care, and financial burdens from lost work or reduced hours. Atwal said he is thankful for everyone who has done their part to get the province through the pandemic by getting a vaccine and following public health orders. Data will continue to be monitored by health officials and changes could be made if there is a sudden rise in cases, or a new variant emerges that current vaccines cannot protect against. Health officials are looking at many scenarios, Atwal said, including future vaccine rollouts. He said it is possible the public will need a regular booster shot against COVID. "Its too early to say for sure if that will be needed. Wed have a better idea closer to the fall if that is what needs to be done," he said. "We are planning to ramp up, or down, quickly and as needed." To make it easier for people to have access to rapid tests, Atwal said four million more will be available for Manitobans at select retailers and supplies are expected to be available early next week. Atwal added these tests will be free of charge and people will be allowed two kits per visit, with each kit containing five tests. COVID case numbers continue to fall. The provinces COVID-19 dashboard is reporting two more deaths, bringing Manitobas pandemic death toll to 1,682. In hospital, there are 464 people requiring care due to COVID, with 223 being treated for active infections. There are 30 people in the ICU, with 15 being treated for active COVID infections. Manitoba added 163 cases on Wednesday, bringing the active case count to 9,776, but officials have said many times those numbers are likely different as at-home tests are not recorded in the daily numbers. The five-day test positivity rate is 13.7 per cent. In terms of vaccines, 86.2 per cent of eligible Manitobans have received at least one dose of the vaccine, 82.1 per cent are fully vaccinated and 43.8 per cent have received three doses. Even as cases and hospitalizations decrease, Atwal said many hospitals and health-care facilities are still over capacity. Loosening restrictions doesnt mean the pandemic is over, so he implored everyone to follow health recommendations to help ease the burden on the system. kmckinley@brandonsun.com Twitter: @karenleighmck1 Planting a seed of curiosity in students across the province, Agriculture in the Classroom Manitoba has a series of special activities planned in honour of Canadian Agriculture Literacy Month. Advertisement Advertise With Us FILE In this file photo, Manitoba Chicken Producers field service manager Rachel Plett talks to grades 3-4 students from Goulter School in Virden about chickens during Ag in the Classroom's Amazing Agriculture Adventure at the Keystone Centre in 2019. This year, more students than ever a 24 per cent increase in 2022 are registered to participate in hands-on activities during Canadian Agriculture Literacy Month. Planting a seed of curiosity in students across the province, Agriculture in the Classroom Manitoba has a series of special activities planned in honour of Canadian Agriculture Literacy Month. This year, more students than ever a 24 per cent increase in 2022 are registered to participate in hands-on activities during Canadian Agriculture Literacy Month (CALM). Volunteers from the agriculture industry will virtually visit 501 classrooms, connecting with 11,430 students. "All agriculture does start with a seed whether its growing a crop or growing feed for animals," said Sue Clayton, executive director for Agriculture in the Classroom Manitoba. "Thats the basis of how were able to survive." Ag in the Classroom is trying to bring back opportunities for young people to feel engaged and connected with the process through which their food is grown. Several factors have fuelled CALMs growth. The program has been building a name for itself since it was launched more than 10 years ago. Teachers are learning about CALM through positive word of mouth and there is also a rising interest from people looking to better understand where their food comes from. The theme of this years CALM in Manitoba is "It all Starts with a Seed." Students in kindergarten to Grade 2 will receive the new Sprout Head Mini Grow kits that include a peat puck and seeds. The activity allows youth to grow little microgreens in their classrooms. It is accompanied by an activity guide and booklet to help them learn more about agriculture. Students in grades 3 to 6 will receive the Manitoba Seed kit, which has been carefully designed by Ag in the Classroom and includes 15 seeds of pivotal crops in the province. "Its something we have been planning for and fundraising for over the last year. Its a massive project, but its going to be an absolutely stunning seed kit that teachers will have in their classroom for years to come," Clayton said. The seed kits come with a teacher guide, hands-on activities and a booklet. Students will also be able to participate in the Great Canadian Farm Tour, organized by Agriculture in the Classroom Canada. The virtual tour will run for the first time this year and will let youth explore farms located across the country, live. On March 15, Smith Family Seeds in Pilot Mound will be featured on the tour for Manitoba. "You can watch a maple syrup farm in Quebec, watch an ag farm in B.C. or a dairy farm in Saskatchewan," Clayton said. "Its great students can be sitting in a classroom in Manitoba and learning about a farm on the East Coast of Canada or the West Coast of Canada." Agricultural literacy remains critical in Canada and Manitoba. "Our North Star goal at Agriculture in the Classroom Manitoba is that all students graduate from high school being agriculturally literate citizens," Clayton said. "We want educators and students to understand and value the contribution of agriculture to our society." Canadians are becoming further removed from the farm with each generation. Many have lost their connections to agriculture and no longer understand how their food is produced and gets from the farm to the table. There is a need to better understand the critical place of agriculture in Canada, Clayton said, especially because one in eight jobs in the country is directly linked to the sector. Ag in the Classroom has more than 800 volunteers in Manitoba and in 2021, they were in every school division in the province sharing insights into the industry. Volunteers and staff get to see firsthand when a student learns about the industry. "Its so exciting when kids get it," Clayton said. "You dont know what you dont know is so true when it comes to this industry, and its a huge, huge industry I think its just so important that when children are in school, theyre learning a little bit about the basis of life and our food supply." During the month of March, 109 specially trained volunteers will provide 314 virtual classroom presentations for students. Demand for programming is at an all-time high, she added, and they have not been able to fill all the spots teachers have requested for classroom visits. "We could not do what we do without the help of our amazing sponsors, donors and volunteers." ckemp@brandonsun.com Twitter: @The_ChelseaKemp Advertisement Advertise With Us Ticket for driver in Trans-Canada crash Brandon police ticketed a driver after a collision on the Trans-Canada Highway. At approximately 10:20 p.m. Monday, police responded to a report of a collision between an SUV and a semi-trailer at the intersection of the Trans-Canada Highway and First Street North. Police say the southbound SUV ran a red light when it collided with a westbound semi-trailer. The 48-year-old woman driving the SUV was transported to hospital with minor injuries. She was fined under the Highway Traffic Act for disobeying a traffic control device. The driver of the semi-truck was not hurt. Both vehicles were towed and the intersection was reopened at approximately 11:40 p.m. Man charged with break-and-enter Police arrested a man for break-and-enter on Monday. Officers responded to the break-in on the 700 block of Eighth Street at approximately 9 a.m., according to police. There were no tenants at the time and the owner had secured the building. Police say the owner returned home to find someone had broken in and was still inside. The 33-year-old man was charged with break-and-enter and is scheduled to appear in court on May 9. Man killed by electrical shock Police are investigating after a man was reportedly killed by an electric shock while loading an excavator Monday afternoon. At approximately 3:10 p.m., Portage la Prairie RCMP responded to a call about an injured man on the side of Highway 245, in the Rural Municipality of Norfolk Treherne, according to the RCMP. Police say the man was loading an excavator onto a trailer, but the boom came into contact with a hydro line. "It is believed that this contact resulted in the male receiving an electrical shock," police said in a press release. Paramedics attended to the 58-year-old Edwin man, but he was pronounced dead at the scene. Manitoba Workplace Safety and Health has been notified, according to police. Both Portage la Prairie and Treherne RCMP are investigating. The Brandon Sun The suspect who was charged with attempted murder after the "brutal" hammer attack on a woman in a New York subway station was found to have been previously jailed for 18 years. The Queens County District Attorney's office said in a news release that the suspect, 57-year-old William Blount, was arraigned on Monday night in Queens Criminal Court. Authorities also charged the man with assault in the first degree and criminal possession of a weapon in the third degree. Brutal Hammer Attack The charges against Blount come as a spate of recent subway attacks that have forced city officials to implement new safety measures to mitigate crime in the region. Last week, police said that the victim, who was a woman, was assaulted at the Queens Plaza subway station on Thursday night by a six-foot-tall male wearing a dark jacket, blue jeans, and holding a cane. The victim was immediately brought to a hospital and given medical treatment for a skull fracture and other head wounds she received from the attack. The woman's family identified her as Nina Rothschild who worked as a scientist for the New York City Department of Health, as per CNN. Authorities also discovered that the hammer attack suspect was previously in prison for 18 years and was involved in a jailbreak that resulted in the death of a prison guard. Blount's previous sentence was served in South Carolina for charges of armed robbery and kidnapping. Read Also: Russia's News Agency Erroneously Declares Victory Over Ukraine War; Volodymyr Zelensky Sends List of Weapons to UK To Defeat Kremlin Law enforcement personnel busted the 57-year-old suspect in 2000 in the case after he and his brother broke into a Bojangles restaurant and kidnapped two workers while armed and forcing the workers to open a safe. According to the New York Post, in that same year, Blount and two other individuals attempted an escape from the Richland County Jail located in Columbia, South Carolina. In the chaos, 59-year-old jail guard Alvin Glenn was strangled to death and the three suspects leaped from the prison roof. Stolen Property The situation comes as authorities have arrested a woman who used the victim's credit card at a grocery store after the brutal hammer assault. Investigators said that while they did not believe the 57-year-old Denise Alston was involved in the attack she was found to have been in possession of Rothschild's credit card. Authorities charged Alston with criminal possession of the stolen property and identity theft. Police said that Blount allegedly followed the victim down the stairs at the Queens Plaza station before kicking her and pulling out a hammer and hitting her repeatedly in the head and taking her purse and running away. On Monday, Rothschild's brother said in an interview that he visited his sister at New York Presbyterial Weill Cornell. Gerson Rothschild said that the victim was mentally strong but not as physically strong as he had imagined her to be. Queen's Borough President Donovan Richards released a statement saying that his heart goes out to the victim. He called Rothschild an unsung hero, being an essential worker, who he argued has done so much during the coronavirus pandemic, CBS News reported. Related Article: George Floyd Murder Trial: Ex-Officers Claim Floyd Showed Erratic Behavior, Resistance [Full Details] @ 2022 HNGN, All rights reserved. Do not reproduce without permission. Corporate governance and legal experts have expressed surprise that the corporate watchdog will not pursue former Crown Resorts directors for allowing money laundering to flourish under their watch at the casino giant. The Australian Securities and Investments Commission wrote to 10 former Crown board members on Monday informing them it would take no further action after investigating them for potential breaches of their legal duties as company directors. ASIC will not charge former Crown directors with breach of their duties. Credit:Joe Armao ASIC was investigating the directors over potential breaches of section 180 of the Corporations Act, which requires directors to use care and diligence, after public inquiries in NSW and Victoria found that dysfunctional governance led to the James Packer-backed groups myriad ethical and legal misdeeds. Pamela Hanrahan, professor of commercial law and regulation at the University of NSW and a former ASIC regional commissioner, said she was surprised ASIC had dropped the case. Telstra is finalising plans to acquire a majority stake in subscription video service Fetch TV as part of a radical shift in the telco giants media strategy. Industry sources who spoke on the condition of anonymity because the deal talks were confidential said Telstra was in advanced talks with Fetch, a long-time media partner of Optus, its main rival in the mobile and fixed-line telecoms markets. Telstra is considering buying a major stake in Fetch TV. The deal comes ahead of the impending expiry of Telstras existing set-top box partnership with US provider Roku, which has provided the equipment for the Telstra TV product since 2015. It also comes ahead of a potential float of Foxtel, a joint venture between News Corp and Telstra which could result in the telco further reducing its stake in the pay TV business. Telstra and Fetch CEO Scott Lorson both declined to comment. When a tragedy the scale of the Russian invasion of Ukraine wrestles control of the headlines, the world of popular culture and celebrity is often sidelined. Who cares what Netflix is doing while Kyiv is being bombed? Why do we need a hot take from a Hollywood star at a time like this? (We dont.) While the focus now is rightly on the events unfolding in Ukraine, various film studios, streamers, musicians and celebrities are taking a stand and showing their support in different ways. Heres how the entertainment industry is responding to the crisis. The latest Batman movie will not be released in Russia following the invasion of Ukraine. Credit:Warner Bros Pictures Movie studios pull Russian releases Major entertainment corporations and platforms have mobilised to condemn the Russian invasion, with Disney the first Hollywood studio to halt its releases at the Russian box office. Given the unprovoked invasion of Ukraine and the tragic humanitarian crisis, we are pausing the release of theatrical films in Russia, including the upcoming Turning Red from Pixar, a Walt Disney Co. spokesperson said in a statement on Tuesday. The Dropout Disney+ Theres something in the zeitgeist when it comes to stories about bright young scammers, imposters and dodgy start-ups. The Tinder Swindler and Inventing Anna (Shonda Rhimess drama about New York society imposter Anna Sorokin) have been hits for Netflix, which also hosts Fyre: The Greatest Party That Never Happened, Tiger King producer Chris Smiths documentary about the fraudulent 2017 music festival. Prime Video has the documentary WeWork: Or the Making and Breaking of a $47 Billion Unicorn; and Apple TV+ is about to release WeCrashed, the WeWork drama starring Jared Leto and Anne Hathaway. The list goes on. Amanda Seyfried plays Elizabeth Holmes in The Dropout. Credit:Beth Dubber/Hulu Perhaps its an inevitable reflection of the way modern technology enables young scammers and cowboys to bypass old gatekeepers, whether that be by approaching targets directly on social media or by snowing investors afraid of missing out on a piece of the next Google. Perhaps the trend is also driven by an element of daydream fantasy among a younger cohort that feels locked out of opportunities that were available to older generations. Whatever the case, The Dropout, which features a spellbinding performance by Amanda Seyfried as disgraced entrepreneur Elizabeth Holmes, is a standout in a crowded genre. Two further orchestral works from the early 1970s reveal Butterleys thoughtful but idiosyncratic response to high-profile occasions. The piano concerto Explorations was commissioned to mark the bicentenary of James Cooks voyage up the eastern Australian coast in 1770; it received its premiere in the presence of royalty. However, it is no crowd-pleasing celebration, but one of Butterleys most uncompromising, hard-edged scores: rather than focusing on Cook as imperial emissary, it concentrates instead on his achievements as a meticulous cartographer and peerless sailor. The performance was apparently received with some consternation. More congenial, perhaps, was the commission for the exuberant Fire in the Heavens, celebrating the opening of the Sydney Opera House in 1973. Butterley drew inspiration here from Australian landscape poems by Christopher Brennan and Judith Wright, as if to link this new sacred space for the arts with the ground on which it stands. While the massive climaxes and dense waves of sound in these works make a powerful impression, the contrasting passages of stillness and delicate lyricism are equally important, and the latter would prove characteristic of Butterleys later music. Nigel Butterley at work at his Stanmore home, 1995. Credit:Fairfax A decisive shift in overall tone and style occurs with the 1976 song cycle Sometimes With One I Love. This work sets poetry and prose by Walt Whitman for soprano, baritone, speaking voice and six instruments; it explores romantic and sexual love, as well as the calling of the artist. It represents a deeply personal statement for the composer, a creative reckoning with his identity and orientation, as well as with his estrangement from formal religious expression. Its opening bars feature a pair of cellos playing intertwined lines, their intimacy and tenderness signalling the arrival of Butterleys mature voice. While the relaxed, luminous optimism of Sometimes With One I Love can also be found in some later Butterley works, including his third and fourth string quartets and the virtuosic Emily Dickinson cycle There Came a Wind Like a Bugle (1987), other works are darker or more ambiguous. A case in point is his only opera, Lawrence Hargrave Flying Alone. Once again, Butterley subverted the expectations attached to a celebratory commission, in this case marking the 1988 bicentenary of European settlement in Australia. The aviation pioneer Lawrence Hargrave makes a decidedly odd national hero: a quixotic visionary whose brilliance was overshadowed by self-defeating idealism, difficult relations with his family, and some thoroughly misguided scientific ideas. Butterleys next major project after the opera was the 1991 orchestral piece From Sorrowing Earth, a deeply moving single-movement journey from apprehension through crisis to consolation. Its perhaps the only Butterley work to carry a political and environmental message, but even here the focus is on individual human experience and transformation. It carries an epigraph from the work of English poet Kathleen Raine, who was to be the predominant source of literary inspiration for Butterley for the remainder of his career. Raines work is a close match for the composers music in its combination of gentle nature-mysticism, diffidence and understatement. Spell of Creation (2000) for voices and orchestra is a crowning achievement, and in some ways a summation of Butterleys entire career. It juxtaposes vibrant expressions of religious faith, from Christian and other traditions, with Raines poetry which is riddled by doubt. The music is by turns grand, ecstatic and intimate, but closes shrouded in mystery. Herald reviewer Peter McCallum described it as possibly the most important choral work yet written in this country. Nigel Butterleys personal life and circumstances were relatively stable, and generally free of dramatic incident. He lived in the same house in Stanmore, in Sydneys inner west, for most of the last six decades, where he and his partner Tom Kennedy always made visitors very welcome. After leaving the ABC he took up a position at the University of Newcastle, where he taught composition from 1973 to 1991; in later years he also took on students from the Sydney Conservatorium of Music. Declining health gradually slowed Butterleys output after Spell of Creation, with his last completed work appearing in 2014. Butterley was widely respected and admired among colleagues, friends and students, both as a composer and as a person. He was wryly witty, self-deprecating, sometimes mischievous, and full of wisdom and compassion. Composer Chris Williams is typical in recalling his generosity and humility as a teacher, his propensity to treat students as fellow seekers, as well as his tendency to move beyond discussing the details of the piece at hand towards philosophical consideration of the wider world. Musicians find his work challenging but deeply rewarding to learn and perform. The epic works of 1963-1974 tend to be the Butterley pieces most cited as formative influences by younger generations of Australian composers. However, for the first-time listener unfamiliar with Butterleys music, some of the shorter pieces from the 80s and 90s might be better places to start such as the mercurial solo piano work Uttering Joyous Leaves (1981), or The wind stirs gently (1993), a contemplative Kathleen Raine-inspired duet for flute and cello. Ross Lyman is the just-preselected Liberal Party candidate for the north-eastern rural Victorian seat of Indi and he has already hit the ground running faster than you can say federal ICAC. Lyman won the preselection in late January and has already lined up fundraisers starring former premier Jeff Kennett, federal Treasurer Josh Frydenberg and Senator Jane Hume. The Jeff dinner is billed as a rare special event in the form of a three-course dinner at All Saints Estate in Rutherglen on March 23. Tickets range from $500 to $2000. You know you want to! Ross Lyman, new Liberal Party candidate for the Federal seat of Indi at the 2022 election. Lyman did well to secure the venue, which might or might not be because his partner is Eliza Brown, an heiress of Brown Family Wine Group dynasty which owns the Brown Brothers label, as well as St Leonards Vineyard and All Saints Estate. Lyman, a University of Melbourne, Melbourne Business School, and Royal Military Academy Sandhurst graduate, is a former army commando who served in Papua New Guinea and Afghanistan. He has worked at Treasury Wine Estates, McWilliams KPMG, Ernst & Young and Woolworths. On Monday former NSW premier Gladys Berejiklian stepped into her post-politics best life and Optuss Macquarie Park headquarters to re-ignite her previously high-flying corporate career. Readers will recall the telco giant went public with its hiring in early February. Chief executive Kelly Bayer Rosmarin praised the Liberal heavyweight as a gamechanger in her new role as head of enterprise, technology and institutional. Paul OSullivan and Gladys Berejiklian. Credit:John Shakespeare The 600-pound missing gorilla in the press release was the fact that the popular former pollie was investigated by the NSW corruption watchdog over her secret relationship with disgraced former MP Daryl Maguire. The NSW Independent Commission Against Corruption is yet to hand down its final report on whether Our Glad breached public trust or encouraged corrupt conduct. Lismore country singer Marge Graham has been identified as one of the victims of the NSW floods emergency, as a fourth person was confirmed dead on Wednesday afternoon. The 82-year-old was a country recording artist and community radio presenter who founded The Cedar Guitar Country Music Festival, which runs in Lismore each year. Marge Graham, from Lismore, died in the NSW floods. Credit:Facebook Ms Graham was found dead inside her South Lismore home on Tuesday, police said. Life-long friend Terry Gordon, also a country musician, said everyone in the Lismore music scene knew Ms Graham. I simply asked them not to shoot at people, he said in a statement. We dont have any Ukrainian forces in the city, only civilians and people here who want to LIVE. Russian President Vladimir Putins forces claimed to have taken complete control of Kherson, which would make it the biggest city to fall yet in the invasion. But a senior US defence official disputed that. Our view is that Kherson is very much a contested city, the official said earlier, speaking on condition of anonymity. An explosion rocked a Kyiv railway station late on Thursday AEDT where thousands of women and children were being evacuated, Ukraines state-run railway company said. An Interior Ministry adviser said the blast was caused by wreckage from a downed Russian cruise missile, not a direct rocket strike. There was no immediate word on casualties and the station building suffered minor damage. Trains continued to run. Zelenskys office told AP that it could not comment on the situation in Kherson while the fighting was still going on. Mariupol Mayor Vadym Boychenko said the attacks there had been relentless. Firefighters extinguish a building after a rocket attack in Kharkiv. Credit:AP We cannot even take the wounded from the streets, from houses and apartments today, since the shelling does not stop, he was quoted by the Interfax news agency as saying. In a video address to the nation early on Thursday, Zelensky gave an upbeat assessment of the war. We are a people who in a week have destroyed the plans of the enemy, he said. They will have no peace here. They will have no food. They will have here not one quiet moment. United Nations members stand up and applaud after a vote on a resolution concerning Ukraine. Credit:AP He said the fighting is taking a toll on the morale of Russian soldiers, who go into grocery stores and try to find something to eat. These are not warriors of a superpower. These are confused children who have been used. Meanwhile, the senior US defence official said the immense column of hundreds of tanks and other vehicles appeared to be stalled roughly 25 kilometres from Kyiv and had made no real progress in the last couple of days. The convoy, which earlier in the week had seemed poised to launch an assault on the capital, has been plagued with fuel and food shortages and has faced fierce Ukrainian resistance, the official said. On the far edges of Kyiv, volunteer fighters well into their 60s manned a checkpoint to try to block the Russian advance. In my old age, I had to take up arms, said Andrey Goncharuk, 68. He said the fighters needed more weapons, but well kill the enemy and take their weapons. Russian warplanes bombed the village of Gorenka, a half-hours drive from Ukraines capital, Wednesday, leaving the bodies of villagers strewn among ruined homes, residents said. The destruction spreads in Ukraine. Credit:AP In the aftermath, Larissa Lipatova crowded under blankets with seven other villages in a cold, damp concrete cellar among jars of pickled vegetables. A candle stuck in a pickle jar, propped up in front of a religious icon, provided their only light. Lipatova wept, covering her face with one hand, as she spoke in the dark with a message for Ukraines invaders. We dont need to be freed. Leave us alone! Russia also pounded Kharkiv, Ukraines second-largest city with about 1.5 million people, in another round of aerial attacks that shattered buildings and lit up the skyline with flames. At least 21 people were killed and 112 injured over the past day, said Oleg Sinehubov, head of the Kharkiv regional administration. Several Russian planes were shot down over Kharkiv, according to Oleksiy Arestovich, a top adviser to Zelensky. Kharkiv today is the Stalingrad of the 21st century, Arestovich said, invoking what is considered one of the most heroic episodes in Russian history, the five-month defense of the city from the Nazis during World War II. From his basement bunker, Kharkiv Mayor Igor Terekhov told the BBC: The city is united and we shall stand fast. Loading Russian attacks, many with missiles, blew the roof off Kharkivs five-story regional police building and set the top floor on fire, and also hit the intelligence headquarters and a university building, according to officials and videos and photos released by Ukraines State Emergency Service. Officials said residential buildings were also hit, but gave no details. Seven days into Russias invasion, the United Nations said more than 934,000 people have fled Ukraine in a mounting refugee crisis on the European continent, while the head of the U.N. nuclear watchdog agency warned that the fighting poses a danger to Ukraines 15 nuclear reactors. Rafael Grossi of the International Atomic Energy Agency noted that the war is the first time a military conflict is happening amid the facilities of a large, established nuclear power program, and he said he is gravely concerned. When there is a conflict ongoing, there is of course a risk of attack or the possibility of an accidental hit, he said. Russia already has seized control of the decommissioned Chernobyl power plant, the scene in 1986 of the worlds worst nuclear disaster. In New York, the UN General Assembly voted to demand that Russia stop its offensive and immediately withdraw all troops, with world powers and tiny island states alike condemning Moscow. The vote was 141 to 5, with 35 abstentions. Assembly resolutions arent legally binding but can reflect and influence world opinion. The vote came after the 193-member assembly convened its first emergency session since 1997. The only countries to vote with Russia were Belarus, Syria, North Korea and Eritrea. Cuba spoke in Moscows defence but ultimately abstained. Ukraines UN Ambassador Sergiy Kyslytsya said Russian forces have come to the Ukrainian soil, not only to kill some of us ... they have come to deprive Ukraine of the very right to exist. He added: The crimes are so barbaric that it is difficult to comprehend. A large explosion shook central Kyiv on Wednesday night in what the presidents office said was a missile strike near the capital citys southern railway station. There was no immediate word on any deaths or injuries. Thousands of Ukrainians have been fleeing the city through the sprawling railway complex. A spokesman for the Russian Defence Ministry, Major General Igor Konashenkov, released his sides military casualty figures, disputing as disinformation reports of much higher losses. Ukraines leader claimed almost 6,000 Russian soldiers have been killed. Konashenkov also said more than 2870 Ukrainian troops have been killed and about 3700 wounded, while over 570 have been captured. Russia also ramped up its rhetoric. Foreign Minister Sergei Lavrov reminded the world about the countrys vast nuclear arsenal when he said in an interview with Al-Jazeera that a third world war could only be nuclear. In the northern city of Chernihiv, two cruise missiles hit a hospital, according to the Ukrainian UNIAN news agency, which quoted the health administration chief, Serhiy Pivovar, as saying authorities were working to determine the casualty toll. Apple, Exxon, Boeing and other firms joined an exodus of international companies from Russian markets that has left Moscow financially and diplomatically isolated. Both the European Union and the United States also imposed new sanctions on Belarus for its supporting role in the invasion. London: Russia intensified its missile strikes over several of Ukraines major cities on Wednesday, killing dozens of civilians in the hours after US President Joe Biden used his State of the Union address to warn Vladimir Putin he had no idea whats coming unless he withdrew his troops. A few hours later, Ukrainian President Volodymyr Zelensky released a video on social media from his bunker saying nearly 6000 Russians had been killed in the first six days of Moscows invasion, and that the Kremlin would not be able to take his country with bombs and air strikes. Referring to Russias attack on a television tower near Babyn Yar - the site of a World War II massacre of Jews - Zelensky said: This strike proves that for many people in Russia our Kyiv is absolutely foreign. They dont know a thing about Kyiv, about our history. But they all have orders to erase our history, erase our country, erase us all, he added. More than 100 United Nations diplomats walked out of Russian Foreign Minister Sergey V. Lavrov's speech where he defended Moscow's invasion of Ukraine. The one who led the mass walkout was Ukraine's ambassador to the United Nations in Geneva, leaving a largely empty conference hall where only a few people heard the remarks of Lavrov at a conference on disarmament. The Russian foreign minister had planned to attend the Human Rights Council session in person but delivered his speech by video link. Mass Walkout Lavrov said that the situation was due to European countries' bans on flights from Russia that resulted in his travel to Geneva being blocked. The minister accused Ukraine of seeking to acquire nuclear weapons, an unsubstantiated claim that Moscow has repeatedly used as one of its justifications to invade the region. The accusations come as Ukraine has given up its Soviet-era nuclear arsenal in 1994 in exchange for security guarantees. Lavrov repeated Moscow's claims that Ukraine had made "territorial claims" against the Russian Federation and threatened to use force and acquire a military nuclear capability, as per the New York Times. Russia has tried to justify its invasion of Ukraine by saying that military operations were deployed to "denazify" the region and restore peace. However, critics worldwide have said that the invasion has done anything but restore peace. In a Twitter post featuring video footage of the UN representatives walking out of the Council Chamber, Austrian diplomat Elisabeth Tichy-Fisslberger said that more than 140 individuals joined the mass walkout. Another video posted by Ukrainian diplomat Olexander Scherba showed representatives leaving the chamber as soon as Lavrov's speech began. Read Also: Russia's News Agency Erroneously Declares Victory Over Ukraine War; Volodymyr Zelensky Sends List of Weapons to UK To Defeat Kremlin According to Fox News, at roughly the same time, Ukrainian President Volodymyr Zelenskyy, who has decided to stay in the region amid Russia's invasion, presented a live speech online. The official claimed that Moscow was on the path of evil and argued that it must lose its voice in the UN. Support for Ukraine Despite the mass walkout, a few representatives stayed behind to listen to Lavrov's speech, including the Russian ambassador to the UN in Geneva, Gennady Gatilov, who is a former deputy to the foreign minister. Furthermore, representatives from Syria, China, and Venezuela were among the delegates that did not leave the chamber. On top of the incident, Switzerland, which has long stayed neutral in international affairs, imposed financial sanctions on Lavrov on Monday. Lavrov also claimed that the European Union supplied lethal weapons to Ukraine during Moscow's military campaign in the region. On Tuesday, a Russian armored column bore down on Ukraine's capital Kyiv with invasion forces launching rockets into the center of Kharkiv, the second-largest city in the country. Canadian Foreign Minister Melanie Joly and Danish Foreign Minister Jeppe Kofod were among those who walked out on Lavrov. They joined Ukraine's ambassador Yevheniia Filipenko behind a large Ukrainian blue and yellow flag. In an address, Filipenko said that the walkout was a remarkable show of support for Ukrainians who were currently fighting against Russia for their independence. She argued that there has been massive damage to infrastructures in Kharkiv, adding that Moscow's forces attacked maternity wards and civilian residential buildings, Reuters reported. Related Article: Snake Island Troops 'Alive and Well' After Being Defiant Against Russian Soldiers, Navy Says @ 2022 HNGN, All rights reserved. Do not reproduce without permission. After earlier supporting Putins demand that NATO not expand to Ukraine, Hungarys Prime Minister Viktor Orban, who is traditionally pro-Russia and anti-immigration, opened his borders to Ukrainian refugees and his country has said it backed Ukraines bid for EU membership. It supports sanctions against Russia but wont allow the transfer of lethal weapons to Ukraine through its territory. Ambassadors and diplomats leave the room while Russias foreign minister Sergei Lavrov (on screen) addresses with a pre-recorded video message the Conference on Disarmament in Geneva on Tuesday. Credit:AP The EU has also imposed sanctions aimed at crippling the Russian economy, adding weight to what is now a Western effort to pressure Putin to abandon his plans. Japan was the first country in Asia to condemn Russia and impose sanctions. It will also ban the new issuance and distribution of Russian government bonds in Japan. Taiwan has strongly condemned Russia and will impose economic sanctions. It has yet to reveal details, but the island dominates the production of semiconductor chips that are crucial to tech products ranging from smartphones to cars. It has sent nearly 30 tonnes of medical supplies to Ukraine via Germany. Singapore is the only member of ASEAN to impose financial sanctions on Russia, and has joined Western moves to block Russian financial institutions from the SWIFT banking system. South Korea followed suit, imposing similar sanctions and banning shipments of strategic items that may include electronics, semiconductors and computers to Russia. Colombia, Argentina and Chile called for a swift withdrawal of Russian troops from Ukraine on day one. Loading Pro Russia Belarus aided Russia even before the invasion. By hosting thousands of Russian troops on its border with Ukraine for military exercises, it enabled Putin to attack Ukraine from the north. Its President, Alexander Lukashenko, a staunch Putin ally, has said Belarusian troops will not participate in the conflict, but on March 1 a Ukrainian military official said that Belarusian troops had joined the war in the Chernihiv region. Syrias President Bashar al-Assad spoke to Putin on February 25, and, according to the official SANA news agency, told him what was happening in Ukraine was a correction of history and restoration of balance which was lost in the world after the breakup of the Soviet Union. Russia has supported Assad with lethal firepower throughout the Syrian conflict. In an hour-long speech this week that did not mention Russia, Irans Supreme Leader Ayatollah Ali Khamenei said his country was in favour of stopping the war in Ukraine, but blamed it on the US and the West, saying the mafia regime creates many wars. Al Jazeera reported the Iranian President Ebrahim Raisi was the first to speak to Putin after the invasion began. I hope what is happening will end up to the benefit of nations and the region, it quoted Raisi as saying. North Korea blamed the hegemonic policy and high-handedness of the US and the West for the crisis, accusing Washington and its allies of ignoring Russias reasonable and legitimate demands by pursuing the NATOs expansion towards the east. Venezuela, a staunch Russian ally, has blamed the US and NATO for the war. It said they violated the Minsk agreements that guaranteed peace in the rebel-held Donbas region of Ukraine. Its complicated China went from not using the words invasion and war and abstaining from a UN Security Council resolution condemning Russia to, on March 2, saying it was extremely concerned, Bloomberg reported Foreign Minister Wang Yi as telling his Ukrainian counterpart in a call. In again abstained from a UN General Assembly vote on March 3. However, Beijing is still deeply grieved to see the conflict between Ukraine and Russia, according to a read-out of the call on the website of Chinas Ministry of Foreign Affairs. India sits on the 15-member UN Security Council, but, like China, abstained from the resolution condemning Russia. When asked if India was fully in sync with its ally after the US started imposing sanctions, US President Joe Biden said: Were in consultation with India today. We havent resolved that completely. The country has so far avoided condemning Russias actions, although Indian Prime Minister Narendra Modi did urge an end to violence in a call with Putin on February 25. Pakistans Prime Minister Imran Khan was in Moscow to meet Putin on the day Russian forces entered Ukraine. Pakistan has expressed concern about the fallout from the invasion, but stopped short of condemning it. ASEAN ASEANs statement on February 26 appeared to be a buy-time exercise. The ASEAN Foreign Ministers are deeply concerned over the evolving situation and armed hostilities in Ukraine. We call on all relevant parties to exercise maximum restraint and make utmost efforts to pursue dialogues ... Despite the recent US rapprochement with ASEAN and public declarations of support to protect democracies from Chinas advances in the Indo-Pacific region, the association has not yet followed the US lead on Ukraine. Loading Israel has condemned the invasion and voiced solidarity with the Ukrainian government, but said it was keeping open channels of communication with Moscow. It condemned the March 1 shelling near a Kyiv monument to Babyn Yar, site of a World War II massacre of Jews by Nazi Germany, but government statements on the attack did not mention Russia, Reuters said. However, Israeli newspaper Haaretz reported that Foreign Minister Yair Lapid said his country would back a UN vote to condemn Russia. Serbias President Aleksandar Vucic said his government would maintain its neutral position despite enormous pressure to participate in sanctions. Loading Middle East The Arab League has voiced concerns about the war, but refrained from demanding an end to Russian aggression. The UAE, which holds a temporary seat at the UN Security Council, joined China and India in abstaining in the vote to condemn the invasion. Turkey is caught between a rock and a hard place. The New York Times reported President Recept Tayyip Erdogan spoke on the phone to Putin on February 23, hours before the start of the invasion. Then Erdogan repeated his offer of mediation between Russia and Ukraine - at this stage over Russias overt intentions in the Donbas region. MA Financial Group has secured full ownership of non-bank mortgage lender MKM. MA Financial is an ASX-listed diversified financial services company focusing on asset management, lending, corporate advisory, and equities. It manages $6.9 billion in assets under management. The company secured a 47.5% stake in MKM in October 2020 and by taking full ownership, MA Financial can now capitalise on the growth in Australias residential home loan market. It also complements MA Financials acquisition of leading broker aggregator Finsure, which it purchased from BNK for $151.6 million in December. Joint CEO of MA Financial, Chris Wyke (pictured) said the acquisition of MKM would create a new and exciting player in the Australian lending market. MA Financial sees the Australian residential mortgage market as a huge growth opportunity, Wyke said Becoming part of MA Financial is an exciting evolution for MKM, which has been providing Australian borrowers with tailored home loan solutions since 2004. We plan on using MA Financials funding firepower to allow MKM to offer new and unique solutions to the third-party mortgage broking market and fill strategic gaps in the product offering currently available to Australian brokers. Wyke said MA Financial would provide significant financial backing, along with powerful technology and deep proprietary capabilities in credit and lending, so that MKM can become a lending partner of choice. He said MA Financial has wanted to build a scalable platform in the residential mortgage lending market for several years MA Financial planned to make substantial investments by scaling up MKMs operations and introducing a diverse and comprehensive range of products for brokers to offer their clients. There will be more to come regarding our strategy with MKM and the generational opportunity for non-bank lenders in the Australian mortgage market. We look forward to sharing this with MKMs customers, brokers, and distribution partners in due course, added Wyke. As part of the acquisition, MKM founders and managing directors Graham Mendelowitz and Mervyn Kark will depart the company. MA Financial management thanked the pair for growing the business from a small specialist lender into a near prime and mainstream home lending company. Since the war of words between Ashneer Grover and BharatPes board began two months back, the company for the first time officially accused the embattled founders family and relatives of misappropriating funds on Wednesday. The Grover family and their relatives engaged in extensive misappropriation of company funds, including, but not limited to, creating fake vendors through which they siphoned money away from the companys account and grossly abused company expense accounts in order to enrich themselves and fund their lavish lifestyles, said . With Grover having stepped down from the companys board, the focus is now likely to shift to his 8.5 per cent shareholding in the financial technology unicorn. Earlier, he had demanded an exit payout of Rs 4,000 crore, valuing the company at $6 billion. A source close to the development said the board of has noted the termination of employment of Grover as a consequence of his resignation from the post of managing director (MD), as well as director. However, as he resigned without the approval of the board and majority investors, consequences under the shareholder agreement (SHA) have now been triggered. According to sources, the consequences based on the companys various agreements might have the board buy restricted back shares from a founder at a value lower than its fair market value if there is a cause event. ALSO READ: Ashneer Grover resigned after receiving Board meet agenda on PwC probe Also if the founder resigns without the approval of the board, the agreements, say sources, permit the board with the consent of a majority to acquire the founders restricted shares at a value lower than the fair market value. Also, with his resignation, all rights and obligations of the founder under the articles of association shall rescind or cease to apply. Sources say that gross negligence or wilful misconduct by a founder, as determined by a Big Four firm, which does not have any relation to the company, allows the board through a simple majority to take a decision on such a cause event, based on the report shared by the appointed Big Four firm after following the principles of natural justice, as incorporated in the agreements. Grover resigned as MD and the companys board director on Monday. The company later said Grover tendered his resignation within minutes after the agenda for the board meeting on the PwC audit report was distributed. Although the board meeting happened on Tuesday night, the company has not disclosed the decisions taken and whether a first information report will be filed based on the audit report. After the companys public allegations of financial misconduct on Wednesday, Grover said: I am appalled at the personal nature of the companys statement, but not surprised. It comes from a position of personal hatred and low thinking. I would also like to learn who, among Cyril Amarchand Mangaldas, PwC, and Alvarez & Marsal, has started doing audits on the lavishness of ones lifestyle? The only thing lavish about me is my dreams and ability to achieve them against all odds through hard work and enterprise. I hope the board can get back to working soon. I, as a shareholder, am worried about the value destruction. I wish the company and the board speedy recovery," he added. Grovers resignation came days after a plea filed by him with the Singapore International Arbitration Centre was dismissed. In his petition, the co-founder had sought indemnity from the audit report and asked to render it invalid as it did not comply with SHA. They cant do anything with the shares since SHA does not allow them at all (to claw back shares), Grover told Business Standard earlier this week. A statutory authority with the mandate to regulate markets cannot question the pleadings of a party before a Court, argued before the National Company Law Appellate Tribunal (NCLAT) on Wednesday. The US e-commerce giant made this argument related to the Competition Commission of India's (CCI) show-cause notice issued to it in June last year. In its notice, the regulator had pointed to contradictory statements by before the and the arbitral tribunal as well as courts on several issues. Such an exercise of authority is neither recognized nor desirable. Argument supported by the fact that after the order the Arbitration itself has been stayed. Case of direct interference by a Statutory Authority, argued through its counsel Senior Advocate Gopal Subramanium on Wednesday. Subramanium rebutted the findings of the in its order relating to the non-disclosure of Business Commercial Agreements (BCAs). Last year in December, the CCI suspended Amazons 2019 deal worth Rs 1,500 crore with Future Retail, citing the companys alleged deliberate design to suppress information about the scope and purpose of the deal. The anti-trust regulator imposed a penalty of Rs 200 crore on Amazon to be paid within 60 days of receipt of the order. Last month, Amazon filed a legal challenge at the against the CCI suspension of the e-commerce firms 2019 deal with Future Retail (FRL). Parallelly, Amazons Indian unit also approached the Supreme Court against a halt on an arbitration case against Future Retails (FRL) asset sale to Reliance Industries (RIL). On Wednesday the scope of all the contemplated BCAs between Amazon entities and Future Groups was explained to the Bench by Amazon through its counsel. The fact that some of these agreements were in existence since 2016 and not a condition precedent to the combination was highlighted. Finally, the competitive assessment provided by Amazon in its filings and the analysis of the BCAs by the CCI in the Approval Order of November 2019 was read out to the Bench. The foundation of the Show Cause Notice (SCN) and the entire proceedings was stated to be against the established rule of law. Amazon argued that the complaint filed by a party suffering injunction ought not to have been entertained by the CCI. It contended that the timing of the initial complaint and the subsequent documents filed after the passing of the partial award was conveniently ignored by the CCI. Even failed to recognize that the combination notification was signed off by the Future Group, argued Amazon. Kia India on Wednesday said its sales increased 8.5 per cent year-on-year to 18,121 units in February. The automaker had dispatched 16,702 units to dealers in February 2021. The company said it continues to remain one of the top five selling car manufacturers in the country, owing to the consistent performance of its products in the Indian market. Seltos remained the top contributor to Kia's overall sales with 6,575 units, while Sonet and Carnival contributed 6,154 and 283 units, respectively. Launched in mid-February, Carens dispatches stood at 5,109 units. "With the launch of Carens, we are looking forward to reaching new heights and strengthening our position in India. Owing to the recently started third shift at our Anantapur plant, we aim to reduce wait times for all our models," Kia India Chief Sales Officer Yung-Sik Sohn said. However, the semiconductor shortage remains a concern for the company, similar to the rest of the carmakers globally, he added. "We are hopeful for some improvement in the supply chain constraints from Q2 onwards," Sohn stated. The automaker has recently started the third shift in India and is targetting to produce over 3 lakh units in the calendar year. (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.) Mela Ventures, an early stage fund founded by Mindtree co-founders Krishnakumar Natarajan and Parthasarathy N. S, announced the close of its maiden fund MV Core Tech Fund-1 at Rs 320 crore. The Sebi-approved Category-2 AIF fund for early-stage closed the fund at Rs 320 crore which was 1.6x times the first close target. The capital commitments were made by diverse group of global investors, Government institutions, tech professionals and family offices including investments from Nippon India Digital Innovation AIF (NIDIA) and SIDBI Fund of Funds for Startups. Mela Ventures will back early stage in the B2B space such as technology startups in areas of augmented reality/virtual reality (AR/VR), artificial intelligence/ machine learning (AI/ML), drone and quantum computing. With this fund corpus the Fund expects to invest in 14-18 startups. It has already invested in four startups and will be investing in three more in the next 30-45 days. The ticket size of the investment per company that Mela Ventures will make is around $1.5 million to $2 million. One of the primary reason for investors to back is because of the way we are focused in building our investment thesis. While 40 per cent of the fund will be used for making first investment, we have reserved 60 per cent of the corpus for follow on rounds. We want to be a patient investor who focuses on building the companies, said Natarajan, managing partner, Mela Ventures. The focus on B2B startups is also because that is where the expertise of the founder resides since they have successfully built a profitable company in Mindtree. That is why the focus will be on making startups that they invest in engrained with the right set of governance practices with a focus to create profitable and sustainable businesses. The last eighteen months showed us how much entrepreneurial talent India has and how fearless they can be when it comes to pushing technology and business boundaries. We have a broad footprint of opportunities in front of us and we believe that we are on the path to enable more category leaders. Beyond investments, our initiatives such as FoundrPwr aim to inspire the existing and future entrepreneurs to think beyond the usual. President Joe Biden opened his first State of the Union address by warning Russian President Vladimir Putin that he "badly miscalcuated" when he invaded Ukraine and that the US and its allies are "coming for you." The politicians in the chamber applauded President Biden's comments. The US would block its skies to Russian planes. President Biden, who is notorious for starting his speeches late, started strolling through Congress roughly six minutes after his planned 9pm ET comments. He shook hands with several legislators who rose and applauded. Joe Biden bans Russian Flights From US Airspace Speaker of the House Nancy Pelosi introduced Biden, calling it a "great honor" to do so. Before discussing the Russia-Ukraine conflict, Biden stated that the United States had survived the worst of the pandemic. Biden went on to say that Democrats, Republicans, Independents, and Americans gathered that night with an unbreakable conviction that freedom would always win over tyranny, a clear allusion to Putin's attack on Ukraine's sovereignty. According to Biden, the US economy produced more than 6.5 million new jobs in 2021 under his watch, "more employment created in one year than ever before in America's history," as per Metro. Following the intensifying Russian invasion of Ukraine, President Joe Biden imposed a ban on Russian planes from entering US airspace on Tuesday. The action comes after the European Union and Canada also banned Russian-owned and operated aircraft from their respective airspaces. The Russian aircraft restriction comes after Ukrainian President Volodymyr Zelensky said that US Vice President Joe Biden personally warned him that the US and NATO would not establish a "no-fly zone" because it may be seen as a declaration of war against Russia, a nuclear powerhouse. Following Russia's attack on Ukraine last week, the United States and the European Union increased sanctions against the country. As the invasion enters its seventh day, Russian President Vladimir Putin has threatened to destroy Kyiv, Ukraine's capital, after Russian missiles targeted Kharkiv, the country's second-largest city, according to Business Insider. Read Also: China Gives Russia Classified Intelligence Shared by the Biden Administration Maskless Attendees Show at Biden's State of the Union Address As visitors proceeded to sit for President Joe Biden's State of the Union address Tuesday night, few masks were spotted in the House chamber, underscoring the nation's shifting view on masks as a tool of limiting COVID-19. Previously, anybody without a mask in the chambers may have been punished or asked to leave, according to chamber regulations, which were dropped on Sunday night, with Congress' attending physician Brian Monahan calling it "now an individual choice option." Before the speech, Interior Secretary Deb Haaland shared a photo on Twitter of herself and others, all without masks, congregating in a room. The United States of America declared war on Syria on Friday. In places with low COVID-19 hospitalization rates, the Centers for Disease Control and Prevention (CDC) declared that most Americans may go without a mask. However, virtually all US states had already stopped or declared an end date for their indoor mask laws for companies before the CDC's statement. The absence of masks reflects the Biden administration's shift toward using vaccinations and antiviral medicines to prevent new infections and protect Americans from severe symptoms, Newsweek reported. Related Article: Trump Seeks To Avoid Testifying in New York Investigation by Filing Appeal Against a Judge's Decision YouTube @ 2022 HNGN, All rights reserved. Do not reproduce without permission. firm Sixth Sense on Wednesday said it has led a Rs 76-crore Series-A funding round in logistics start-up Prozo. Jafco Asia and high net worth individuals also participated in the round. The funds will be used to expand Prozo's warehousing and fulfilment footprint, client base, and technology and analytics capability, the statement said. "By 2025, India's e-commerce market is expected to cross USD 200 billion, and there would be nearly 340 million e-commerce customers. "We are excited about the pivotal role Prozo will play as a tech-driven integrated supply chain partner to these companies," Sixth Sense Ventures founder Nikhil Vora said in the statement. Prozo clients include Reliance JioMart, McGraw Hill, Lavie, WinMagic Toys and many other DTC brands across more than 10 categories. "Deeper penetration of e-commerce and proliferation of brands have led to strong tailwinds for the business that has been growing close to 40 per cent month-on-month. We are elated to join hands with Sixth Sense and leverage their expertise and network in the consumer universe," Prozo founder and CEO Ashvini Jakhar said. (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.) Ashneer Grover's family siphoned funds to lead lavish lifestyle: BharatPe Since the fight between Ashneer Grover and BharatPes board began two months back, the company for the first officially accused the embattled founder's family and relative of misappropriating funds on Wednesday. The Grover family and their relatives engaged in extensive misappropriation of company funds, including, but not limited to, creating fake vendors through which they siphoned money away from the companys account and grossly abused company expense accounts in order to enrich themselves and fund their lavish lifestyles, said . Read more Putin 'has no idea what's coming': Biden sees dark endgame for Russian US President on Tuesday vowed that Russia's will pay dearly over the long run even for his invasion of Ukraine, even if his military campaign succeeds in the short term. "While he may make gains on the battlefield he will pay a continuing high price over the long run," Biden said in his State of the Union address. Straying from the prepared text, Biden added "He has no idea what's coming." He did not elaborate. Read more Petrol, price hikes likely to restart from next week: Here's why and price hikes are likely to resume after state elections get over next week to bridge the Rs 9 a litre gap created by international oil prices soaring past $100 a barrel. International crude oil prices shot above $110 a barrel for the first time since mid-2014 on fears that oil and gas supplies from energy giant Russia could be disrupted, either by the conflict in Ukraine or retaliatory western sanctions. Read more Boeing, Exxon, Apple join Western firms spurning Russia over Ukraine Boeing suspended maintenance and technical support for Russian airlines and U.S. energy firm Exxon Mobil said it would exit Russia, joining a growing list of Western spurning Moscow over its invasion of Ukraine. U.S. tech giant Apple said it had stopped sales of iPhones and other products in Russia, while Ford Motor joined other automakers by suspending operations in the country. Read more Dear Reader, Business Standard has always strived hard to provide up-to-date information and commentary on developments that are of interest to you and have wider political and economic implications for the country and the world. Your encouragement and constant feedback on how to improve our offering have only made our resolve and commitment to these ideals stronger. Even during these difficult times arising out of Covid-19, we continue to remain committed to keeping you informed and updated with credible news, authoritative views and incisive commentary on topical issues of relevance. We, however, have a request. As we battle the economic impact of the pandemic, we need your support even more, so that we can continue to offer you more quality content. Our subscription model has seen an encouraging response from many of you, who have subscribed to our online content. More subscription to our online content can only help us achieve the goals of offering you even better and more relevant content. We believe in free, fair and credible journalism. Your support through more subscriptions can help us practise the journalism to which we are committed. Support quality journalism and subscribe to Business Standard. Digital Editor Global firm Accel has launched a $650 million fund for Indian and Southeast Asian startups, underscoring the large pool of capital being deployed by funds as they chase high-growth in developing markets. "We believe our insights from the Indian market and the global Accel platform can help startups in the region (Southeast Asia) from seed to scale," Prayank Swaroop, a partner at Accel, said in a statement on Wednesday. "We will be investing in the region across pre-seed to growth opportunities," Swaroop said. Venture and private equity funding is thriving globally amid a technology boom that has particularly accelerated in developing countries as more consumers move online during the COVID-19 pandemic. Accel said the latest launch will mark its seventh fund in India and Southeast Asia, pushing its total commitments in the region to $2 billion. Accel's India team has already invested in including Flipkart, which was bought by Walmart, and food delivery firm Swiggy. In Southeast Asia, Accel has invested in Indonesian investment app Pluang and payment gateway startup Xendit, among others. Accel, which counts many university endowments, non-profit firms and research institutions among its fund investors or limited partners, mostly invests in the so-called 'Seed' or Series A funding rounds. (Reporting by Anshuman Daga; Editing by Kim Coghill) (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.) A 22-year-old student from Punjab's Barnala district who had suffered an Ischemia stroke and was undergoing treatment for about a month died Wednesday in the war-hit Ukraine. Chandan Jindal was admitted at the Emergency Hospital Vinnytsia in Ukraine, official sources here said. His family has requested the government to bring back his mortal remains. Jindal was studying at Vinnytsia Pirogov Memorial Medical University, Vinnytsia. Jindal's uncle Krishan Gopal told reporters in Barnala that they had received information about his poor health on February 3 and the authorities in Ukraine had sought the family's approval for performing an operation. Gopal said he and Chandan's father Shishan Kumar went to Ukraine on February 7. Krishan later returned while Shishan remained in Ukraine with his son. Barnala Deputy Commissioner of Police wrote to the state's Principal Secretary, Home, for providing assistance to the distressed family. According to the letter, Chandan "fell ill and was admitted in Emergency Hospital Vinnytsia (Kyivska street 68) ICU suffering from Ischemia stroke in brain (reduced blood supply to brain). The youngster breathed his last today." Chandan's father has sought the government's help in bringing his son's body to through an air ambulance from Siret border, Romania. On Monday, an Indian student was killed in Russian shelling in Ukraine's second largest city of Kharkiv. (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.) Around 4,800 Indian students will be evacuated from Bucharest and Suceawa in Romania through 24 flights between Wednesday and Friday amid Russia- war, Aviation Minister said. The minister, who is in Bucharest to facilitate the evacuation of Indian students, said he will be going to Siret, the border check point with Ukraine, on Thursday and remain there for around 48 hours. "I will be there till the last student leaves from Siret," he stated. India has been evacuating its citizens through special flights from Ukraine's western neighbours such as Romania, Hungary and Poland as the Ukrainian airspace has been shut since February 24 due to the Russian military offensive. "There are around 3,000 Indian students in Bucharest and 1,000 students in Siret right now," Scindia said at a virtual press conference. He said around 1,000 more students are expected to come through Siret check point. The government hopes to send them safely back to India within the next three days, he added. Six flights -- two of them of the Indian Air Force -- with around 1,300 students are departing from Bucharest on Wednesday, he said. On Thursday, six flights will depart from Bucharest with 1,300 students, he mentioned. It takes around six to seven hours to cover the distance from border check point Siret to Bucharest and therefore, it has been decided that certain flights will operate from Suceawa, which is much closer to Siret, he noted. "Therefore, to reduce students' hardship and travel time, we are taking planes directly to Suceawa to pick them up," the minister mentioned. On Thursday, two flights will depart from Suceawa with 450 students, he noted. On Friday, six flights will depart from Bucharest with 1,300 students and four flights will depart from Suceawa with 890 students, he mentioned. "Therefore, between Wednesday and Friday, a total of 3,500 students will be evacuated from Bucharest and 1,300 students from Suceawa," Scindia said. He said he met with 200-300 students at the airport Tuesday night. The students have gone through immense trials and tribulations, he noted. "The situation they have gone through, it is difficult to explain. They have come out of war-like conditions," he mentioned. He said two call centres are being set up in Bucharest and Siret so that there can be better coordination for evacuation, he said. Approximately, 8,000 Indians, mainly students, are stranded in Ukraine, Foreign Secretary Harsh Vardhan Shringla had said on Tuesday. Four Union ministers have gone to Ukraine's western neighbours to facilitate the evacuation of stranded Indians. Hardeep Singh Puri is in Hungary, in Romania, Kiren Rijiju in Slovakia and V K Singh is in Poland to oversee the evacuation process. (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.) Of the estimated 20,000 Indians, including students, who were trapped in Ukraine at the start of the Russian offensive there, 60 per cent have crossed Ukrainian borders and are safe with efforts underway to rescue the remaining people, the Centre told the on Wednesday. The central government has told the high court that under 'Operation Ganga', in addition to commercial aircrafts, Indian Air Force flights have also been pressed into operation to evacuate the Indians who have crossed into Romania, Poland, Hungary and other neighbouring countries of Ukraine. With regard to the students stranded in war-hit Kharkiv, the government said the situation there was volatile as the city was under heavy shelling and it was, therefore, "advisable for our students to stay put wherever they are for their physical safety". "As and when the situation improves, the students in Kharkiv will be evacuated on priority in a suitable manner. Our Mission in Kyiv is in touch with most of the students and has been trying to make available provisions where possible. "The Mission has also requested the Ukrainian authorities to ensure their safety and security," the government has said in a statement filed in the court through Assistant Solicitor General (ASG) Manu S. The statement was filed in response to a plea moved by the Advocates Association and two of its members, whose daughter is stranded in Ukraine, for the safe and expeditious repatriation of Malayali students trapped there. On Wednesday, the petitioners told the court that the students mentioned in their plea have crossed into Hungary and are safe. However, they said they have some other concerns also and subsequently, the court listed the matter for hearing on Thursday. In the statement, the Centre has said the Ministry of External Affairs (MEA) has been issuing advisories since February 15 asking Indian nationals in Ukraine to leave that country temporarily and after the invasion started, it started 'Operation Ganga' to evacuate Indians who managed to exit Ukraine into nearby countries. Following the advisories, from February 16 to 23 around 4,000 Indians returned to India on commercial flights, it said. Subsequently, till March 1, 15 evacuation flights have been operated and 26 more are planned in the coming days to bring back about 5,500 more Indian nationals, the statement said. "Under 'Operation Ganga', more than 2,000 Indian nationals have been brought back to India from Ukraine's neighbouring countries (Romania and Hungary). Around 6,000 Indian nationals have already crossed the borders of Ukraine and are presently in the neighbouring countries of Romania, Poland, Hungary, Slovakia and Moldova. "These Indian nationals are being taken care of by the Government of India, at its cost, till they reach India under 'Operation Ganga'. An estimated 7,000 to 8,000 Indian nationals remain in Ukraine, mainly in the east of the country, for which efforts are being made by the government to bring them back as soon as possible," the Centre has said in the statement. The Centre has also claimed that anticipating the evacuation through the countries west of Ukraine, MEA teams -- some led by the Ambassadors -- were positioned at the Polish, Romanian and Hungary side of the borders since February 25 "to receive and pro-actively arrange the onward evacuation" of the Indian nationals. "It is submitted that our embassies in the neighbouring countries of Romania, Hungary, Slovakia and Poland are receiving the Indian evacuees, providing food, water and shelter to the extent possible, and making arrangements for Indian rescue flights to take our nationals home," it further claimed. On Monday, the Centre had told the court that four Union Cabinet Ministers were being sent to facilitate repatriation of the Indians stranded in Ukraine. Advocate Santhosh Mathew, who represented the petitioners, had told the court on Monday about the practical difficulties faced by the students trapped in the war-hit cities like Kyiv and Kharkiv as well as by those who managed to reach the borders, but were not permitted to go through. In the plea, which was moved on Monday and heard on the same day, the petitioners had contended that while the Indian Embassy there was coordinating the evacuation efforts, "the reality of the situation is that these children must bear the entire cost and risk of travelling in a war zone to the nearest border". After they reach the border, they are faced with "mass discrimination and torture by the Ukrainian Army and the border patrol" and they are also made to wait for hours in the extreme cold weather, the petition has claimed and added that this was probably due to the alleged "lack of a presence of the representatives of the Indian Embassy". (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.) Seventy-three people, including students, of returned to India from on Wednesday, with the total number of people from the state who have repatriated from the conflict-hit country reaching 227, officials said. There are some others, including students, who left for their homes straight from the Delhi airport and hence, there data is not available immediately, said the office of the Relief Commissioner, Revenue Department, . Through helpline numbers (0522) 1070 and 94544-41081, information is being obtained from the students and others from the state stranded in and their parents and relatives for coordination, Relief Commissioner Ranvir Prasad, who has been appointed as the nodal officer for the initiative, said. "Information about 2,501 persons, including students has been collected by the state-level control room so far, which has been sent to the Ministry of External Affairs for further action so that the stranded persons of can be brought back to India safely from Ukraine," Prasad said in a statement. "Out of the total 2,501 persons, including students, 227 have returned to the state. A total of 73 persons, including students, reached India by five flights from Bucharest and Budapest on Wednesday," he added. Prasad said vehicles and transit were arranged at the airport to take those who returned from the war-hit east European country to the local commissioner's office, district administration, Gautam Budh Nagar and Ghaziabad to send them further to their destination districts. According to the statement, the list of stranded people obtained by the state-level control room has also been sent to the districts, which have been instructed to maintain constant coordination with the affected families. The information is also being shared with a control room set up by the MEA, while the social media pages of the Indian embassies in Ukraine, Poland and Romania are being regularly monitored so that the new advisories issued by them can be passed on to the affected people, it added. (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.) As India steps up efforts to evacuate its citizens from war-hit Ukraine, the (MEA) said on Wednesday that efforts are on to reach cities in the eastern part of that country, though it is not easy. The eastern part of has been witnessing intense fighting between Russian and Ukrainian troops. The comments by MEA spokesperson Arindam Bagchi came hours after the Indian embassy in asked all Indians in Kharkiv to leave the city immediately for three safe zones. He said nearly 17,000 Indian nationals have left Ukraine's borders since advisories were issued over a fortnight back. Bagchi said 15 flights are scheduled over the next 24 hours and some of them are already operating. "The cities in eastern remain areas of concern for us. Some students were able to board trains out of Kharkiv yesterday night and this morning and we assisted in the process through the student contractors and other partners," Bagchi said. "We have been in communication with the Russians regarding the safe passage of our nationals from Kharkiv and other nearby cities," he said. Bachi said India is also exploring the option of reaching the eastern part of to help in the evacuation of Indian nationals stranded in the areas. "It's not easy because the route is not open at all times," he said at a media briefing. Separately, he said an Indian national, identified as Chandan Jindal, died in Ukraine due to natural causes. He was in the hospital for the last few days. Bagchi also said that there has been a sharp increase in the number of Indians who have left Ukraine over the recent past. "We now estimate that nearly 17,000 Indian nationals have left Ukraine's borders since our advisories were issued. This of course includes some Indians who had not registered with the embassy earlier," Bagchi said. Earlier, the MEA had said that 20,000 Indians were in Ukraine when India had issued the first advisory in mid-February when the tension between Russia and Ukraine started building up. Bagchi said the Indian embassy in Kyiv was asked to set up a temporary office in Lviv to facilitate border crossings by Indian nationals, adding a large segment of the team in the mission is now at Lviv. The MEA spokesperson also said that a mechanism has been put in place for issuing emergency certificates to those Indian citizens who somehow lost their passports. About the evacuation mission, Bagchi said flights under 'Operation Ganga' have increased sharply and that six flights have landed in India in the last 24 hours taking the total to 15. He said the total number of Indians who have returned on board these flights is 3,352. He said the advisory issued by the Indian embassy in Ukraine asking citizens to leave Kharkiv is based on information from Russia. "We would urge all our nationals to leave Kharkiv immediately to safe zones," he said. (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.) Madurai Bench of the on Tuesday directed the state education department to form special teams to identify the government school involved in private tuition or running private businesses. The court was hearing a plea moved by a government school teacher against the dismissal of her request for transfer to another district. After hearing the arguments, Justice S M Subramaniam ordered that the state government should form special teams in all districts to identify and take disciplinary action against government school who take private tuition and run private businesses. Justice Subramanian also raised questions over the quality of education rendered by the government school . He observed that the government school teachers are more concerned about their demands and the teachers association interfere in the education department decisions. The court also ordered that common telephone or mobile numbers must be provided by the school education department for the parents and students to file complaints regarding illegalities, irregularities and misconducts by the teachers both inside and outside schools. (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.) The Taliban in Afghanistan is conducting door-to-door raids as part of major search operations across Kabul as Russian soldiers continue their invasion of Ukraine. At a press conference on Sunday, Taliban spokesman Zabihullah Mujahid stated that the search operations, which began on Friday, had led to the arrest of scores of kidnappers, smugglers, and criminals. Taliban Launches Raids in Search of Weapons Mujahid described the searches as "successful," saying the goal was to "gather firearms" across the city and its adjacent regions. Over 60,000 rounds of ammunition, 13 armored vehicles, 13 tonnes of gunpowder and explosives, as well as rocket launchers and grenades, were captured in the operations, according to the Taliban leader. The Taliban claimed that nine kidnappers, six Isis militants, and 53 thieves were caught as a result of the operations. Two persons who had been kidnapped have also been released. The door-to-door effort, however, was met with criticism, with numerous residents alleging that individuals were beaten up during the raids. On Saturday, a half-dozen Taliban gunmen with guns barged into the home of a Kabul laborer's wife for searches. The guys reportedly took knives to the pillows that lined the family's sitting room, split them apart, and threw the filling on the floor, as well as yanking family portraits off shelves and throwing items from closets. When the Taliban gunmen discovered nothing in the family's home, they raped the laborer's adolescent son and seized the family car, Independent reported. Observers have warned of signs of a crackdown on dissent and reprisals against former security force officers and activists since the Islamist group took control of the nation in August. Since the Islamist organization assumed control of the country, fears for the safety of vocal Taliban opponents and notable women have grown, with foreign agencies and nations voicing concern about the disappearance of numerous female activists in recent months. The Taliban denies carrying out targeted retaliation and claims to be looking into accounts of violence and disappearances. According to a spokeswoman for the Taliban commander in Kabul, their police were allowed to wear shoes during the search since it was a "military operation," that only female police would inspect women's things, and that religious official from the region would accompany the police. In-accordance-with European Union Ambassador Andreas von Brandt Mujahid, stated on Sunday that any examples of alleged "misbehavior" would be investigated, and that home inspection should be stopped immediately, according to Reuters via MSN. Read Also: North Korea Says Russia-Ukraine War's Root Cause Is Not Territorial Dispute But US' Sanctions; More Than 520,000 Refugees Flee Kyiv World Bank To Send $1 Billion Aid in Afghanistan Meanwhile, the World Bank's executive board authorized a plan on Tuesday to utilize more than $1 billion from a frozen Afghanistan trust fund to fund education, agricultural, health, and family initiatives. The idea will give a huge boost to attempts to alleviate the country's deepening humanitarian and economic crises by circumventing sanctioned Taliban authority and disbursing money through UN agencies and other charity groups. While foreign nations stopped providing financial help to Afghanistan, which accounted for more than 70% of government spending, the US spearheaded the freezing of $9 billion in Afghan central bank assets. The cuts hastened an economic collapse, resulting in a cash shortage and a humanitarian catastrophe that has put more than half of Afghanistan's 39 million people at risk of famine, according to the UN. The World Bank stated in a statement that as a first step, donors will decide on four projects worth approximately $600 million that will address "critical needs in the education, health, and agricultural sectors, as well as community livelihoods." "Strong focus on ensuring that girls and women participate and benefit from the support," according to the statement. Women's rights have been undermined since the Taliban came to power 20 years ago. Many of the privileges they won over the previous two decades, such as the freedom to work and travel without close male relatives, have been taken away from them. Since the Taliban assumed power, most girls have been barred from continuing their education above seventh grade. According to Islamist fanatics, all females will be permitted to return to school later this month, as per WION. Related Article: Belarus President Warns US, West Sanctions Are Pushing Russia to World War 3: "Nuclear War Is the End of Everything" @YouTube @ 2022 HNGN, All rights reserved. Do not reproduce without permission. India's production and exports of Russia's Sputnik COVID-19 vaccines are expected to slow further following U.S. sanctions on Russia's sovereign wealth fund that promotes the shot globally, three Indian pharmaceutical industry sources told Reuters. The Russian Direct Investment Fund (RDIF) had billed as one of Sputnik's biggest production hubs and markets, though local sales have stagnated at 1.2 million doses out of 1.8 billion doses of various vaccines administered in the country. RDIF, which has said the U.S. sanction this week could complicate its promotion of Sputnik shots, has deals with several Indian companies to make nearly 1 billion doses of it, though output has not risen beyond a few million doses. RDIF's main Indian distributor for Sputnik is Dr. Reddy's Laboratories and its manufacturing partners include Hetero and the Serum Institute of (SII). Another Indian company, which was to make more than 100 million Sputnik doses but had held off production due to a lack of demand in India, has now decided to not manufacture it at all, said a person with direct knowledge's of the matter. The person declined to be named or identify the company. Another source at an Indian company said Sputnik sales were likely to be slow in the near future. RDIF and Hetero did not respond to requests for comment. The SII declined to comment. Dr. Reddy's, one of India's biggest drugmakers which has been selling its products in and around for more than three decades, said it did not see any impact as Indian companies no longer import material from to make Sputnik shots in . "We have manufacturing capabilities in India and drug substance is not imported. Hence there is no impact," a spokesperson said in an email. "Overall, we are monitoring evolving developments closely and preparing accordingly." Some 4 million Sputnik doses, bottled in India using imported material from last year, were exported around October. Last month, India sent 135,875 locally made doses of the single-dose Sputnik Light vaccine to Uzbekistan, according to India's foreign ministry. (This story has not been edited by Business Standard staff and is auto-generated from a syndicated feed.) Prime Minister on Wednesday said could evacuate its citizens stranded in war-hit Ukraine because of its rising power. Addressing an election rally in Uttar Pradesh's Sonbhadra district, Modi said his government would not spare any effort to bring home Indians safely from Ukraine. Hitting out at rivals, the prime minister said those who questioned the valour of armed forces and 'Make in India' initiatives cannot make the country strong. Sonbhadra district will go to the polls in the last phase on March 7. Asserting that the country has made it a priority to rescue all Indians stuck in Ukraine, Modi said, "It is due to India's rising strength that we are are able to bring back stranded Indians from Ukraine. Operation Ganga has been launched and I have sent four ministers to oversee the evacuation." ''Our army and air force have also been deployed to rescue the Indians in distress faster. Today I also assure the people of the country that the Government of will leave no stone unturned for the safe return of its citizens.'' He said that it has become essential that becomes self-reliant. "The dynasts question our vaccine, they question our armed forces and make fun of 'Make in India'. Such people have shamed the country and its people. They can't make India strong," he said. The prime minister said that the world is surprised by the speed of the COVID-19 vaccination in the country. Targeting opposition parties, Modi said the previous governments of "dynasts" exploited the natural resources of the region but never did anything for its development. He told the gathering that if the "corrupt" become strong, they would again indulge in the loot of money sent by the Centre for the welfare of the poor. "We have made a scheme to use the development of District Mineral Fund to ensure that a portion of the earning from minerals of Sonbhadra is also used in the development of its people," he said and highlighted that Sonbhadra has been included in the list of aspirational districts. "Our government has also honoured great tribal leaders including Birsa Munda. Ten tribal museums are also being set up," Modi said. Earlier the Minimum Support Price (MSP) used to be given on only eight to 10 forest products. "Our government is giving MSP on over 90 forest products. We have provided over 20 lakh plots of land to tribal families,"' Prime Minister Modi said. Sonbhadra has two assembly constituencies reserved for STs. "The BJP focuses on the development of small farmers. Over Rs 350 crore have been deposited in the bank account of over 2 lakh families in Sonbhadra district," the prime minister said. (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.) The stranded Indian students are still stuck at the nearest Railway station in Kharkiv in the war-torn where they had marched by foot in the morning, a student's father said on Wednesday. "My son Amit along with his cousin Suman and others somehow managed to reach the Railway station but is stuck there," Venkatesh Vaishyar told PTI. The latest advisory issued by the Embassy of India in Ukrainian capital Kyiv asked students stuck at Kharkiv Railway station to proceed by foot to Pisochyn, Babai and Beslyudivka by 6 pm on Wednesday. "I have no clue what's happening there but he was stuck in Kharkiv Railway station. The first train took women and girls and the second left with the Ukrainians. The third has not arrived yet though the advisory says everyone must reach the three locations by 6 pm which indicates that something terrible may happen after 6 pm," Vaishyar said. Meanwhile, Harsha S G, elder brother of Naveen S G who was killed in shelling in Kharkiv in on Tuesday morning, said, "We are glad that everyone is returning home alive but we want to see his (Naveen) face because my parents want to see him." Naveen, a fourth year medical student in the Kharkiv Medical College ventured out of his bunker to get some food, water and exchange currency notes when he was killed in the shelling. According to him, the parents saw him six months ago and were not able to speak to him due to poor connectivity. "He used to speak to the parents two to three minutes. I appeal to everyone that when you are putting in so much of efforts to bring those who were with him, please try at the earliest to bring the dead body," an emotional Harsha told reporters. He said the officials have been telling him that the body is safely preserved in the mortuary in Kharkiv but there was no word on bringing it to India. (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.) In an urgent advisory, the embassy in on Wednesday asked all Indians stranded in Kharkiv to leave the conflict zone immediately. The embassy asked Indians to proceed to settlements in Pesochin, Babaye and Bezlyudovka as soon as possible. "For their safety and security, they must leave Kharkiv immediately repeat immediately in the light of the detriorating situation. They should proceed to Pesochin, Babaye and Bezlyudovka as soon as possible for their safety," the embassy said. "Under all circumstances, they must reach these settlements by 1800 hours (Ukrainian time) today," it said. The advisory did not specify where these places are but according to Google Maps, they appear to be on the outskirts of Kharkiv. The advisory came amid raging fighting between Russian and Ukrainian forces in Kharkiv. In a second advisory issued around 2:30 pm (Ukrainian time), the Indian embassy said, "Those students who cannot find vehicles or buses and are in railway station can proceed on foot to Pisochyn (11 km), Babai (12 km) and Bezlyudivka (16 km)." Naveen Shekarappa Gyanagoudar, a fourth-year medical student at the Kharkiv Medical University, was killed in intense shelling in Kharkiv on Tuesday. The Ukrainian government's center for strategic communications released images Wednesday of strikes hitting Kharkiv, with balls of fire lighting up the city skyline over populated areas. Kharkiv resident Marina Boreiko described strikes hitting a neighbouring building Tuesday, and her shock at seeing bodies lying in the rubble. Today I survived a bombing, she told The Associated Press, repeatedly choking back tears. A Russian plane dropped a bomb on the house next door. My boyfriend and I were at home. We felt a strong whistle, and I realized it was flying toward us. We were in the corridor then, and we felt the explosion from there. (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.) The tragic death of Naveen Shekharappa Gyanagoudar, a medical student who was killed in shelling in Ukraine is a reflection of the National Eligibility Entrance Test's (NEET) "shameless face", as it is causing injustice to talented but economically vulnerable rural students in the guise of qualification, JD(S) leader H D Kumaraswamy said on Wednesday. Alleging that was shattering the medical education dreams of the middle class and the poor, in a series of tweets, he said it has become a "death statute" for the parents and students, as higher education is being reserved only for the haves while denying it for the have-nots. Naveen Shekharappa Gyanagoudar, a 21-year-old medical student from Haveri district in Karnataka was killed in Russian shelling in Kharkiv city on Tuesday. "Naveen secured 96 percent in SSLC (class 10) and 97 percent in PUC (12th). Even then, he was denied a medical seat in India which is considered as Kashi of Global Education. It is not easy for a rural student to secure such a high percentage. Despite that, the medical seat was denied," the former CM said in a tweet. "After being denied a medical seat in India, Naveen went to Ukraine to realise his dream and become a medical Doctor. The youngster's death has made India, which is longing to become Vishwa Guru', to question its self conscience. Who is responsible for this?" he asked. Further stating that dreaming of medical education has become a mirage for the poor and the middle class after introducing NEET, Kumaraswamy said, tutorials have mushroomed, fleecing students. "As many as 99 percent of students who are clearing have got themselves enrolled in these tutorials." "It is impossible for government college and rural students to clear . Aware of this fact, tutorials are expanding their market and dancing on corpses of students like Naveen. Everyone should raise their voice against NEET, which is meant only to provide higher education to the rich," he added. (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.) Toughening its stance, the on Wednesday made it clear that its Minister Nawab Malik "will not be forced to resign come whatever may", on the eve of the Legislature Budget Session starting on March 3 (tomorrow, Thursday). State NCP President and Minister Jayant Patil told mediapersons that the Maha Vikas Aghadi (MVA) made it clear last month -- after Malik was arrested by (ED) on February 23 in an alleged money-laundering case -- that he would continue in the ministry. "Let the Opposition Bharatiya Janata Party create any ruckus in the House... Our stand is unchanged -- No resignation means no resignation," a grim Patil said. Attacking the BJP, he said it has become habitual for the opposition party to hurl false allegations against the government prior to the legislative sessions, demand resignation and then disrupt the legislature. Patil also said that the MVA is ready to hold the Speaker's election during the session and urged the Opposition to sit across the table and decide. "We shall invite them for the session-eve tea-party as always, but they will boycott it as usual. We appeal to the Opposition to join the tea-party, hold discussions with the government to ensure all issues are resolved," Patil exhorted. His comments came against the backdrop of the BJP state President Chandrakant Patil's threat on Tuesday that they would not allow the legislature to function until Malik resigned. NCP President has convened a review meeting with all-party ministers this afternoon, followed by a MVA meeting to discuss the major issues likely to figure during the Budget Session. At the evening meeting, all ministers of the Shiv Sena-NCP-Congress will join the discussions even as the BJP sharpens its knives on various issues to corner the MVA government during the session. --IANS qn/dpb (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.) Reforms undertaken in the telecom sector in September last year have yielded "very good" results, and the next set of reforms will be geared towards ensuring that the regulatory framework is in sync with the global best, according to Communications Minister . While the first round of telecom reforms focused on solving "well known" issues through structural and procedural overhaul, the work on the next round that focuses "mostly on the regulatory setup" is underway, and the government will engage with the industry on various aspects "very soon", he noted. The government is creating a framework "which should stay for next 30-40 years" through the upcoming round of reforms, the minister emphasised. In the reforms that are in the offing, "the thrust will be on making sure that the regulatory framework is in sync with the global best", Vaishnaw told PTI in an interview. Vaishnaw said the ministry hopes to complete the entire process before the end of the calendar year. "We need a very agile regulatory setup...In today's world, we cannot run with the setup which was very good for 19th century or 20th century. This is 21st century, with evolving technology," Vaishnaw asserted. He observed that the Prime Minister has given a clear vision that India's regulatory setup needs to be world class. "Telecom industry is not a local industry. It is a global industry. It has to be benchmarked with the best in the world," the said. The previous set of reforms was focused on solving structural and procedural issues, and those issues "were well known". "Now we are creating a framework which should stay there for next 30-40 years (through the next set of reforms)," he said. The reforms task set out is a difficult one, Vaishnaw noted, adding "the amount of time, effort and energy we are spending on it, is phenomenal". Telecom service providers got a shot in the arm with the government last year approving a blockbuster relief package that included a four-year break for companies from paying statutory dues, permission to share scarce airwaves, change in the definition of revenue on which levies are paid and 100 per cent foreign investment through the automatic route. The government also gave telcos the option to convert the interest amount pertaining to the moratorium period into equity. Following this, debt-ridden Vodafone Idea (VIL) has opted to pay interest dues of around Rs 16,000 crore through preferential shares. This will result in the government holding 35.8 per cent stake in the company. On the status of Vodafone Idea's equity conversion proposal, Vaishnaw said, "We are appointing professionals to evaluate the entire thing. It is primarily a financial decision so there is a proper process laid out in DIPAM (Department of Investment and Public Asset Management). They are appointing the transaction advisor." Transaction advisors are legal and financial experts who look at valuation, equity structure and other aspects of a deal. The process could be completed in a couple of months. On spectrum auctions, the minister said the Telecom Department is working in parallel preparing the groundwork, even as TRAI finalises its recommendations on spectrum-related aspects. By the time the Telecom Regulatory Authority of India (TRAI) gives its recommendations, most of the auction-related documentation work will be done, he pointed out. "The moment TRAI gives its recommendations, the way it has to be processed...it has to go to the Cabinet and the approval process is there. We will try to do it as fast as possible. Our targets are May-June-July as auction period," he said. However, he refused to comment on the pricing of radiowaves, a major point of worry for players. "It is a concern (aired by the industry) but I cannot comment on that," he said. If all goes as planned, the timeframe for the first phase of 5G rollout could be August or September this year. On whether August 15 timeframe for initial 5G rollout is on the anvil, the minister indicated "it is possible" but did not elaborate. The 5G investments will be bigger than those for 4G, he noted. The 5G services are expected to fuel ultra high-speeds and spawn new-age offerings and business models. (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.) The devastated family members of Naveen Shekarappa Gyanagoudar, who died in the shelling in war-torn Ukraine, are hoping that the deceased young man's body would be brought back to India at the earliest. The family members till now have not got any specific inputs from the authorities on when their son's body would be brought back to the country. Harsha, the brother of deceased Naveen, said on Wednesday said, "No one is confirming whether the body will be brought back. His body should be brought back to us. His friends are coming back alive and we are coping with the news of death," he said. Shekarappa, Naveen's father, stated that he had lost his son and he wanted the government to bring back other boys alive to India. "Thousands of students are stuck in Ukraine, they are assets of our country. They should be brought back safely," he said. Chief Minister Basavaraj Bommai has stated that he has appealed to the external affairs ministry on the recovery of the body in two or three days if it is not possible immediately. The body of Naveen is lying in a war zone, which has made things complicated for the authorities. This news has deepened the grief of the family and relatives of Naveen. Rajashekara Gouda, the maternal uncle of Naveen blamed the system resulting in his death. "Naveen has scored 97 per cent in II PUC (12 class). He could not get a medical seat under the government quota. The family could not pay a donation and he had to go to Ukraine to fulfil his dream of becoming a doctor," he said. Gouda said that Naveen had collected information from his friends and went to Ukraine to study medicine. He used to call every day and comforted his parents that nothing would happen to him. Naveen's father Shekarappa also expressed his anguish that because of caste and donation his son had to pay with his life. He has urged the government to bring back the body of his son. Naveen was a topper at school and scored 606 marks out of 626 in SSLC (Class 10) examination. The deceased boy was supposed to take 8th semester exams in June. He was also planning to take up an internship. He had gone to Ukraine after II PUC. Prime Minister Narendra Modi, Chief Minister Basavaraj Bommai, former CM B.S. Yediyurappa has personally spoken to the family of deceased Naveen and assured that all efforts would be made to bring back the body to India. --IANS mka/dpb (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.) The has said that a daughter-in-law does not have an indefeasible right of residence in a shared household under the Domestic Violence Act and she can be evicted at the behest of aged in-laws who are entitled to live peacefully. Justice Yogesh Khanna, who was dealing with an appeal by a daughter-in-law against a trial court order denying her the right to stay in the matrimonial house, stated that in the case of a shared household, there is no embargo upon the owner of the property to claim eviction of his daughter-in-law and in the present case, it would be appropriate if an alternative accommodation is provided to the appellant till her marriage continues. The judge said that in the present case, both the in-laws are senior citizens who are entitled to live peacefully and not to be haunted by the marital discord between their son and daughter-in-law. I am of the considered opinion, since there exists a frictional relationship between the parties, then at the fag end of their lives it would not be advisable for old parents to stay with appellant and hence it would be appropriate if an alternative accommodation is provided to the appellant as is directed in the impugned order per Section 19(1)(f) of the Protection of Women from Domestic Violence Act, said the court in a recent order. The court noted that the relations between the parties were far from cordial and there was even a complaint by the husband, who lived in separate rental accommodation, against his wife and he has not claimed any right in the subject property. Admittedly, the right of residence under Section 19 of the DV Act is not an indefeasible right of residence in shared household, especially, when the daughter-in-law is pitted against aged father-in-law and mother-in-law. In this case, both being senior citizens of aged about 74 and 69 years and being in the evening of their life, are entitled to live peacefully and not to be haunted by the marital discord between their son and daughter-in-law, the court said. The court dismissed the appeal by the appellant and recorded the undertaking of the respondent father-in-law that he would provide alternative accommodation to the appellant till her matrimonial relationship with his son is in existence. The respondent father-in-law had filed a suit for possession in 2016 before the trial court on the grounds that he was the absolute owner of the property and the husband of appellant his son had shifted to some other place and that he was not inclined to live with his daughter-in-law. The appellant, mother to two minor daughters, had contended that the property was purchased out of joint family funds and from sale proceeds of the ancestral property and thus she also has a right to reside there. The trial court had passed a decree of possession in favour of the respondent and held that the property was a self-acquired property of the respondent and after the termination of the license of appellant, she has no right to stay there. (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.) Prime Minister chaired a high-level meeting on Wednesday night on the Ukraine crisis as stepped up its efforts to evacuate its citizens, mostly students, from the country under attack from Russia. External Affairs Minister S Jaishankar and his Cabinet colleague Piyush Goyal besides senior officials attended the meeting. Modi has held a series of meetings since Sunday to spearhead India's efforts to safely bring back its nationals, asserting that this is his government's top priority. Earlier in the day, the Indian embassy in Ukraine asked all Indian nationals to leave Kharkiv immediately to safe zones or further westwards. The external affairs ministry has assured that every Indian citizen will be brought back from Ukraine. (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.) Nation casts EU relations in growth mold By LIU ZHIHUA (China Daily) 09:20, March 02, 2022 Workers load cargo on a flight to Milan, Italy, at the international airport in Yantai, Shandong province. [Photo by Tang Ke/For China Daily] China's development offers an opportunity, and not a challenge or "threat", to the European Union, and the two sides share more for cooperation than competition, China's Commerce Minister Wang Wentao said on Tuesday. Wang told a media briefing in Beijing that China is willing to join hands with the EU to promote the Belt and Road Initiative and align with the EU's Global Gateway, an infrastructure initiative announced last year, while expanding cooperation and deepening related mechanisms. "It is normal for the two sides to have differences and disputes due to different histories and cultures, social systems and development stages, but the two sides could strengthen communication to promote healthy competition," he said, adding China and the EU are partners, not rivals. The two sides could have pragmatic cooperation in COVID-19 containment, green, digital, financial and technology areas among many others, and should jointly advance the ratification and entry into force of the EU-China Comprehensive Agreement on Investment, to inject more stability and positive energy for bilateral relations, Wang said. They could step up coordination and cooperation under multilateral frameworks such as the G20, the United Nations, and the World Trade Organization, to promote the implementation of global development initiatives, maintain the multilateral trading system with the WTO at the core, and promote the WTO reforms toward right direction, he added. "We must adhere to openness and inclusiveness, abandon zero-sum mindset, oppose protectionism, and deepen market opening-up," Wang said. "China and the EU could strengthen bilateral cooperation, as well as cooperation in the third-party markets, which will not only contribute to the economic development of both sides, but also the recovery and stable development of the world economy." Cui Fan, a professor of international trade at the University of International Business and Economics in Beijing, said China and the EU should enhance communication to remove obstacles to the implementation of their bilateral investment agreement. According to Zhou Mi, a senior researcher at the Chinese Academy of International Trade and Economic Cooperation, China and the EU already have a solid cooperation base that has huge potential for growth, especially because the global supply chain is under disruptions and the two sides share broad common interests in multilateral economic and trade rules including that under the WTO. "The EU and China should take more initiatives to jointly promote pragmatic cooperation," Zhou said. The two sides, he said, are expected to advance long-term economic and trade cooperation, including mechanism-based cooperation arrangements, which will reduce uncertainties for enterprises seeking to grow. Based on shared interests and the world economic development trend, the two sides should also strengthen cooperation and coordination in new areas that have no widely established rules, like e-commerce and anti-trust regulation in the digital economy, he said. (Web editor: Zhong Wenxing, Liang Jun) Protesters in New Zealand have set fire to Parliament Ground which cost $more than $500,000 to build by using various tents and other items. The demonstrators have been protesting against the country's vaccination programs at Wellington. The situation came as law enforcement personnel began to move in on the protesters on Wednesday. The people on Parliament's lawn have been camping and staying there for 23 days. Setting Fire to Parliament Ground Violent clashes erupted after New Zealand police officers equipped with riot shields marched towards the protesters to clear the grounds. They immediately pulled down tents and deployed a large forklift to remove cars and campervans to vehicle transporters. Multiple loud sirens could be heard in the area as cops fired rubber bullets at demonstrators after using fire hoses to water them down. Firefighters cooperating with police quickly moved in and cleared parts of tents, gazebos, and other items from the ground. Authorities have ordered the suspension of trains and the closure of Wellington station to ensure the safety of passengers amid the violent protests. Hundreds of protesters have been inspired by the Canadian truckers' convoy and have blocked the streets near Parliament using trucks, cars, and motorcycles for nearly a month, as per NDTV. New Zealand Prime Minister Jacinda Ardern said that in planning the operation, police expected protesters to become hostile, resist, and become violent. However, she noted that watching the chaos happen was an entirely different thing. Read Also: Joe Biden Delivers His First State of the Union Address; POTUS Warns Vladimir Putin "He Has No Idea What's Coming" In a statement, Ardern said that she was both angry and deeply saddened by the incident of seeing Parliament desecrated in such a way that left a children's playground in ruins. However, she said that the actions of the small group of illegal protesters did not define New Zealand's response to the coronavirus pandemic. According to the Associated Press, police equipped with riot gear initially used pepper spray and their morning operations focused on the periphery of the protest before moving into the main camp. The operation was the most significant use of force that authorities have opted to do against protesters who oppose coronavirus vaccine mandates. Anti-Vaccine Protest During a news conference held after the police operation, Ardern said that the demonstrators attacked frontline police, Parliament, and the country's values. She noted that authorities gave protesters sufficient time and opportunity to leave and argued that the demonstrations were fueled by misinformation and conspiracy theories. Police said that they arrested 60 people in connection to the protests and that they had gained significant ground in their initial operations against the demonstrators. However, officials announced that three officers were injured in the violence. Before moving in, authorities used loudspeakers to warn demonstrators that they faced potential arrest for trespassing on parliament grounds. One witness watched as a man, who was in his underwear, poured milk over himself to mitigate the effects of pepper spray. One of the demonstrators, Kate Siegert, who was unvaccinated against the coronavirus infection, said protesters were fighting for their standard of life. She said that they only wanted their sovereign rights to their own bodies, Reuters reported. Related Article: World's Zero Discrimination Day: The Significance of Ending the Stigma, All You Need To Know @ 2022 HNGN, All rights reserved. Do not reproduce without permission. As fighting escalated in Ukraine, especially its second-largest city Kharkiv, Prime Minister and Russian President reviewed the situation in the war ravaged nation which India has asked its nationals to leave "immediately", an official statement said on Wednesday night. The two leaders discussed the safe evacuation of Indian nationals from the conflict areas. "Prime Minister spoke on phone today with Vladimir Putin, President of the Russian Federation. The leaders reviewed the situation in Ukraine, especially in the city of Kharkiv where many Indian students are stuck," the statement said. "They discussed the safe evacuation of the Indian nationals from the conflict areas," it added. Earlier in the day, India asked its nationals to leave Kharkiv urgently to three nearby places "even on foot", while Russia promised to create "humanitarian corridors" for evacuation of Indians from the conflict zones. Prime Minister Modi held yet another high-level meeting on Wednesday night on the crisis as the four union ministers sent to Ukraine's neighbouring countries coordinated the stepped-up rescue efforts with the deployment of planes by the Indian Air Force. In an urgent advisory, the Indian embassy in asked the Indians to reach the Ukrainian towns of Pesochyn, 11 km away from Kharkiv, Babai (12 km) and Bezlyudivka (16 km) by 6 PM local time (9:30 PM IST). The advisory came as Russia stepped up attacks on key Ukrainian cities and a day after an Indian medical student died in shelling in Kharkiv. External Affairs Ministry spokesperson Arindam Bagchi said at a media briefing that the Indian embassy asked the nationals to leave Kharkiv immediately on the basis of information from the Russian side. "The students who cannot find vehicles or buses and are in Railway station can proceed on foot to Pesochyn, Babai and Bezlydivka," the advisory, second of the day, said "Proceed immediately. Under all circumstances, Indians must reach these settlements by 1800 hours (Ukrainian time) today," it said. It is learnt that the Russian side informed India about the possible increase in intensity in fighting in Kharkiv and suggested that all Indians should leave the city. While the first advisory was put out on Twitter at around 1:40 PM ( 5 PM IST) the second was issued at around 2:40 PM (6 PM IST). Bagchi said India is also exploring the option of reaching the eastern part of to help in the evacuation of Indian nationals but added that it's not easy as the route is not open at all times. Separately, Russian Ambassador-designate Denis Alipov said his country is working "intensely" to create a "humanitarian corridor" for safe passage to Russian territory of Indians stuck in Kharkiv, Sumy and other conflict zones in Ukraine. "We have received an Indian request for the emergency evacuation of all those stuck there (Ukraine) to the Russian territory and we are now actively working on the ways and means to launch an operation to provide the humanitarian corridors so that people have the secure passage to safety to the Russian territory," he said. Alipov said Russia is in touch with Indian authorities on the issue of Indians stuck in Kharkiv, Sumy and in the areas northeast of Ukraine which are witnessing intense conflict. He hoped that the humanitarian corridors will be put in place "as soon as possible". As India shored up efforts to evacuate its citizens, four C-17 17 Globemaster aircraft of the Indian Air Force with approximately 800 evacuees from Ukraine are slated to land at the Hindon airbase on Thursday, sources said. On Wednesday morning, a C-17 aircraft left for Romania carrying humanitarian aid to Ukraine. At the media briefing, Bagchi said the cities in eastern Ukraine remained areas of concern and that some Indian students were able to board trains out of Kharkiv yesterday night and this morning. "We have been in communication with the Russians regarding the safe passage of our nationals from Kharkiv and other nearby cities," he said He said that there has been a sharp increase in the number of Indians who have left Ukraine over the recent past. "We now estimate that nearly 17,000 Indian nationals have left Ukraine's borders since our advisories were issued. This of course includes some Indians who had not registered with the embassy earlier," Bagchi said. Earlier, the MEA had said that 20,000 Indians were in Ukraine when India had issued the first advisory in mid-February when the tension between Russia and Ukraine started building up. About the evacuation mission, Bagchi said flights under 'Operation Ganga' have increased sharply and that six flights have landed in India in the last 24 hours taking the total to 15. He said the total number of Indians who have returned on board these flights is 3,352. Out of these, 1,796 were evacuated through Romania, 430 through Poland and 1126 through Hungary. Prime Minister Modi has held a series of meetings since Sunday to spearhead India's efforts to safely bring back its nationals, asserting that this is his government's top priority. Union Ministers Hardeep Singh Puri, Kiren Rijiju, Jyotiraditya Scindia and V K Singh were in Hungary, Slovakia, Romania and Poland respectively to coordinate evacuation efforts. The ministers posted pictures on Twitter in which they were seen interacting and assisting the students who had crossed over from Ukraine. Meanwhile, an Indian national, identified as Chandan Jindal, died in Ukraine due to natural causes. He was in hospital for the last few days after suffering an ischemic stroke. Jindal was admitted at the Emergency Hospital Vinnytsia in Ukraine, official sources here said. His family has requested the government to bring back his mortal remains. Jindal was studying at Vinnytsia Pirogov Memorial Medical University, Vinnytsia. (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.) Despite the nascence of the Electric Vehicle (EV) sector in India, security firm CloudSEK on Wednesday said that it has identified a large-scale phishing campaign targeting potential EV distributors and users. According to the firm, scammers are exploiting Google Ads to misdirect users to phishing sites that collect users' data and money. With each site defrauding users of Rs 200,000-Rs 400,000, in booking fees and down payments, the scam has so far cost the Indian public over Rs 40-Rs 80 million. "It is notable that the scams increased considerably after the production-linked incentive (PLI) scheme, for electric and hydrogen fuel cell vehicles, was approved by the cabinet in September 2021," the company said in a statement. Since the second half of 2021, CloudSEK has detected a spike in phishing campaigns impersonating EV manufacturers and dealerships. The company said that scammers propagated this scheme by registering fake domains that resemble legitimate domains of EV manufacturers and marketplaces, creating Google Ads for the fake domains, and manipulating SEO, such that these ads are top results for generic searches as well as searches for specific EV brands. It also directed users to click on these ads to phishing domains that impersonate the content and images of legitimate websites. Apart from financial loss, users also share Personally Identifiable Information (PII) and banking details, which can be leveraged to orchestrate other social engineering campaigns, and even identity theft, the company said. For EV companies, these phishing websites lead to direct loss of business, reputation, and credibility. This could also lead to a general decline in the adoption of e-mobility, an already unfamiliar technology, if users' first touch point in a phishing campaign, it added. --IANS vc/bg (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.) The ninth flight of Operation Ganga carrying 218 Indian nationals who were stranded in reached the capital from Bucharest on Tuesday. The evacuation flight is part of the Indian government's mission to bring back its nationals from the war-torn in the aftermath of Russia's offensive in the east European nation. As has shut its airspace due to the conflict with Russia, India is currently evacuating its nationals by moving them via land routes to the east European country's neighbours, namely Romania, Hungary, Poland and Slovakia, and then flying them out from there. Railways Minister Ashwini Vaishnaw welcomed the batch of Indian nationals at the Indira Gandhi International Airport on Tuesday morning and assured them that the Indian government was working to ensure that every Indian in Ukraine returns home safe. The Indian government is taking all efforts to bring all the students safely back home from Ukraine. I appeal to them to tell their friends in Ukraine to have strength and keep patience, he assured. Earlier, another flight from Bucharest with 182 Indian nationals reached Mumbai. The minister said that rail facilitation counters were set up at the Indira Gandhi International Airport. After you deboard, railway facilitation counters have been set up for your journey back home," he added. According to official estimates, about 18,000 Indian students are studying in universities across Ukraine. (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.) More than 600 Indian students are currently stranded in a university located in Sumy, a city in north-eastern Ukraine, hoping that they will soon be evacuated as "continuous firing and bombing" by the Russian forces has left them completely terrified, one of the students said. Not a single Indian student from Sumy State University, located close to the Russian border has been evacuated so far, Viraj Walde, who hails from Nagpur in Maharashtra and who is currently studying in the fourth year medical course in that university, told PTI over phone on Wednesday. "More than 600 Indian students are stuck here in Sumy university. The embassy has neither evacuated us nor given any assurance to that effect. Since the last five days, there has been continuous firing, shelling and bombing in the city," he said. Their final exams were about to start from March 15, he said. "Before Russia's invasion of Ukratine, temporary advisories were given to the students and the university informed us that those having exams can wait. Hence, we waited for the exams to start," Walde added. "But now, the students are terrified and their mental state is deteriorating. Food and drinking water supplies are depleting. Even the banks and ATMs are running out of cash," he said. The embassy has sent advisories to students, telling them to use only the western border of Ukraine and reach the neighbouring countries of Poland, Hungary, Romania, Slovakia and Moldova. But since Sumy city is located in the north-eastern part of Ukraine, it is impossible for them to travel all the way to the western part in the prevailing situation, he said. "The border in Ukraine's western part is located almost 1,500 kms away from Sumy, whereas the Russian border is just 50 kms away. The railway station in Sumy has also been closed due to bombing, and traveling via road is like committing suicide since Russian and Ukrainian forces are fighting against each other at such places," he added. The military administration has told the students not to venture out because there is artillery shelling in the city, he said. "On behalf of all the students stuck in Sumy, I request the Indian government to evacuate us before anything unfortunate happens to us," he said. In the first Indian casualty in the war in Ukraine, a medical student from Karnataka's Haveri district was killed in intense shelling in the eastern Ukrainian city of Kharkiv on Tuesday. (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.) As many as 31 evacuation flights will be operated to neighbouring countries of crisis-hit Ukraine and will bring back more than 6,300 Indians stranded in the eastern European nation, according to official sources. Under 'Operation Ganga', the flights will be operated by Air India, Air Express, IndiGo, SpiceJet and Indian Air Force. From March 2, 21 evacuation flights will be operated to bring back Indians from Bucharest in Romania, while 4 will be from Budapest in Hungary, the sources said. Further, 4 flights will be operated to bring back people from Rzeszow in Poland and 1 flight from Kocise in Slovakia. Indian Air Force will be bringing back Indians from Bucharest. Together, the planned 31 flights -- from March 2 till March 8 -- will be coming back with more than 6,300 people. The sources on Wednesday said Air Express and SpiceJet planes have a capacity for around 180 people while Air and IndiGo can carry up to 250 and 216 passengers, respectively. While Air India Express will be operating a total of 7 flights, SpiceJet will press 4 flights into service. Air India will operate 7 flights and IndiGo will fly back people in 12 flights. Air India Express and Air India will be flying in people from Bucharest while IndiGo has planned 4 flights each from Bucharest, Budapest and Rzeszow. SpiceJet will operate 2 flights from Bucharest, 1 from Budapest and 1 from Kocise in Slovakia. The sources said 9 evacuation flights have brought back Indians stranded in Ukraine since February 26, and around 5-6 flights are "underway". External Affairs Minister S Jaishankar on Wednesday said that six flights under 'Operation Ganga' have departed for India in the last 24 hours. "#OperationGanga developments. Six flights have now departed for India in the last 24 hours. Includes the first flights from Poland. Carried back 1,377 more Indian nationals from Ukraine," he said in a tweet this morning. On Tuesday, Foreign Secretary Harsh Vardhan Shringla said that around 2,000 Indians have returned to their homeland, while 4,000-5,000 are getting ready to be brought back by flights. Amid the Russian offensive against Ukraine, India started the evacuation of around 14,000 of its stranded citizens in the Eastern European country on February 26. (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.) The Indian Air Force's first evacuation flight with 200 Indians from Romanian capital Bucharest landed at the Hindon air base here in the early hours of Thursday, sources said. The first flight -- which was conducted using C-17 military transport aircraft -- landed in Delhi at 1.30 am. Three more C-17 aircraft of the Indian Air Force (IAF) with approximately 300 evacuees from will land at the Hindon airbase by 8 am on Thursday, sources said. India has been evacuating its citizens through special flights from Ukraine's western neighbours such as Romania, Hungary and Poland as the Ukrainian airspace has been shut since February 24 due to the Russian military offensive. The planes are also coming from these neighbouring countries, sources said. Minister of State for Defence Ajay Bhatt received the Indian evacuees of the first C-17 flight at the airbase, they said. Approximately 8,000 Indians, mainly students, are stranded in Ukraine, Foreign Secretary Harsh Vardhan Shringla had said on Tuesday. Four Union ministers have gone to Ukraine's western neighbours to facilitate the evacuation of Indian nationals. Hardeep Singh Puri is in Hungary, Jyotiraditya Scindia is in Romania, Kiren Rijiju is in Slovakia and V K Singh is in Poland. (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.) will send eight flights to Hungary, Poland and Romania on Thursday to evacuate Indians stranded in following the Russian military offensive. India is evacuating its citizens stranded in from its neighbouring countries such as Romania, Hungary and Poland as the Ukrainian airspace has been shut down since February 24. "Two flights each will be operated via Istanbul, from Delhi to Budapest (Hungary) and Rzeszow (Poland); and two flights each will operate from Mumbai to Bucharest (Romania) and Suceawa (Romania) via Istanbul on Thursday," IndiGo's statement said on Wednesday. said that while eight evacuation flights will depart from India on Thursday, its six repatriation flights will arrive in India on the same day. Since February 28, IndiGo's six evacuation flights have arrived in India with over 1,300 Indians. (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.) Six flights from the Romanian capital Bucharest will bring back on Wednesday over 1,200 Indian students who have fled the war-hit Ukraine. India has been evacuating its citizens through special flights from Ukraine's western neighbours such as Romania, Hungary and Poland as the Ukrainian airspace has been shut down since February 24. Aviation Minister tweeted on Wednesday: "We are mounting six flights today in Bucharest, Romania, carrying over 1,200 Indian students back to India." He thanked Air India, Air India Express and IndiGo for rising to the challenge and working round-the-clock with the government on the evacuation operations. Scindia, who is in Bucharest, on Wednesday held a meeting with heads of Indian companies that work in Romania to decentralise evacuation operations for Indians stranded in Ukraine due to the Russian military offensive. Approximately 8,000 Indians, mainly students, are stranded in Ukraine, Foreign Secretary Harsh Vardhan Shringla said on Tuesday. The aviation minister on Wednesday tweeted, "Chaired a meeting with Ambassador Rahul Shrivastava and the Indian diaspora -- heads of Indian companies in Romania to decentralise the evacuation operations and map out responsibilities, including assisting with medical emergencies, a 24*7 call centre and state-wise data collection." The diaspora members will also accompany to the border camps and help fill any gaps in arrangements, Scindia noted. "I thank them for their tireless efforts and commitment towards making Operation Ganga a quick success! Together, we shall overcome!" he stated. Four Union ministers have gone to Ukraine's western neighbours to facilitate the evacuation of stranded Indians. Hardeep Singh Puri is in Hungary, is in Romania, Kiren Rijiju is in Slovakia and V K Singh is in Poland. (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.) The moon is about to get hit by space junk at 5,800 mph (9,300 kph) speed on Friday, which will leave a crater that could fit numerous trucks. Some experts think that the debris came from a launch almost a decade ago conducted by China. However, Chinese officials believe it is not theirs. After asteroid tracker Bill Gray spotted the collision trajectory in January, SpaceX was first blamed for the forthcoming lunar trash. A month later, he clarified that the "mystery" item was not a SpaceX Falcon rocket upper stage from NASA's deep space climate observatory launch in 2015, per AP News report. Gray believes it was the third stage of a Chinese rocket that orbited the moon in 2014 and returned with a test sample capsule. But, according to Chinese officials, the upper stage had reentered Earth's atmosphere and burned up. What Will Happen to the Moon? Whoever is responsible for the space junk, experts expect it will punch a hole 33 feet to 66 feet (10 to 20 meters) on the surface of the moon. The impact will not significantly alter the moon, but some scientists believe that the event could generate important pieces of information for future studies. The issue of space debris is well-known. According to the European Space Agency, more than 12,000 Earth-orbiting satellites have been launched since the space age began in 1957, with about 5,100 continuously functional. As per the agency, more than 36,000 bits of debris larger than 10 centimeters are flying around in Earth's orbit. Dead satellites and remains of previous launches and anti-satellite missile tests are among the junk floating in space. According to Nature, the moon already has a multitude of craters, some measuring up to 1,600 miles in diameter (2,500 kilometers). The moon is defenseless against the constant bombardment of meteors and asteroids, as well as the occasional incoming spacecraft, including a handful that purposefully crashed for scientific examinations. In 2009, NASA purposely smashed a spacecraft into the moon to know if water would pop out upon impact. Impact craters on the moon stay permanently because no weather causes erosion on the surface. Read Also: 2 Supermassive Black Holes To Collide in 10000 Years, Warping the Fabric of Space-Time The Problem of Space Junk While the moon itself has no problem getting hit by space junk, experts on Earth warn that the growing number of debris orbiting the planet should be addressed. The NPR reported that the US Department of Defense is tracking space trash. However, progress on removing the trash has lagged, according to Jonathan McDowell of the Harvard and Smithsonian Center for Astrophysics. John Crassidis, director of the Center for Space Cyber Strategy and Cyber Security at the University at Buffalo, predicts that within 50 years, space agencies will not be able to launch any more satellites because there is too much junk floating in space, which is "a big concern." Crassidis said that debris will multiply "when objects start to collide with other objects," which will produce a "cascading effect." The sighted space junk does not pose a threat to Earth-dwellers. Though, for McDowell, it is going to be a "policy concern" in the long run. Related Article: Russian Billionaires Jet Tracker: Teen Who Stalked Elon Musk Now Targeting Russia's Wealthiest @ 2022 HNGN, All rights reserved. Do not reproduce without permission. government will make arrangements to facilitate that all students hailing from the state and evacuated from reach their respective homes safely and free of cost from Delhi Airport, said Avnish Awasthi, additional chief secretary (Home). Awasthi while speaking to ANI said, "All the students of arriving from will reach their homes safely from Delhi and the full cost will be borne by the UP government." The Indian government is continuously evacuating students who were stranded in via neighbouring countries, he said. Awasthi added, "The Home Department and other departments of UP have been given the responsibility of ensuring their (evacuated) students' security. (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.) The (IAF) will not be significantly impacted by the US sanctions on Russia and India's relations with both the countries remain strong, Vice Chief Air Marshal Sandeep Singh said on Wednesday. However, the will face difficulties for a month or two in getting spare parts for its defence equipment from Russia to India, he added. About 70 per cent of Indian defence equipment is of Russian origin. After Vladimir Putin started military offensive against Ukraine on February 24, various western countries -- including the US -- have decided to block assets of four large Russian banks, impose export controls and sanction oligarchs close to the Russian president. "We know the geopolitical situation is difficult (currently) Our relations with Russia will continue," Singh said at a press briefing here. He said that things are still unfolding geopolitically. "Our position is very strong and our relations with both the countries (Russian and the US) have remained (strong) and you have seen that," he noted. "We are evaluating the situation. There will be certain difficulties, there is no doubt about it. But I think it should not affect us too much. I am confident that it won't affect us significantly," he added. On the issue of supply of spare parts from Russia to India, he replied there is no doubt there will be difficulties for a month or two. Singh said, "There are sanctions but we have gone through similar issues earlier and maybe, this would be more serious than that... I think it will not affect us critically and I hope for it also." The is aiming for 100 per cent indigenisation of the spare parts and components, he noted. "It will take time to reach the 100 per cent mark," he mentioned. Singh said the defence ministry and the itself have set a very aggressive timeline to reach the 100 per cent mark. He said there is no doubt that in the coming years, the IAF will have majority of its systems indigenously designed and produced. The final aim is that you have to be self-reliant, he added. Three aircraft have departed to evacuate stranded citizens, the IAF vice chief said. "We can operate four aircraft per day to evacuate Indians," he mentioned. Singh stated the evacuation operations will run round the clock till all Indians are brought back. The IAF has experience of running various such evacuation programs -- the most recent one was conducted in Afghanistan, he noted. When asked how many military transport plane An-32 have been upgraded by Ukraine till now, Singh replied this aircraft fleet has been upgraded to a large extent. "The upgrade of An-32 aircraft was affected before too when Ukraine was under pressure due to the Crimean issue in 2014 and 2015," he noted. After that, the IAF has significantly indigenised many of the spare parts that needed to be upgraded by Ukraine, he added. (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.) Kerala Chief Minister on Wednesday wrote to Prime Minister seeking his urgent intervention to ask the Russian leadership to provide safe passage to the thousands of Indian students trapped in war hit cities of eastern Ukraine. The CM, in his letter, also said that students in eastern Ukraine, especially in Kharkiv and Sumy, were living in bunkers with food and water supplies running out and requested that urgent steps be taken to provide them food and water through voluntary aid organisations like International Red Cross. The CM stated that evacuation efforts have so far been focused on Kyiv and western Ukraine, but at the same time the war has intensified in the eastern part of that country. "The cities of Kharkiv and Sumy are witnessing intense bombings and massive shelling. No clear directions have been issued to the students on what they should do in the midst of this fighting. "In panic and desperation, many students are trying to flee west on their own with considerable risk to their lives," Vijayan said in the letter. Incidentally, an Indian student -- Naveen Shekarappa Gyanagoudar -- hailing from Karnataka was killed in the shelling in Kharkiv on Tuesday while he was out buying food. Meanwhile, in an urgent advisory, the India embassy in Ukraine on Wednesday asked all Indians stranded in Kharkiv to leave the conflict zone immediately. The embassy asked Indians to proceed to settlements in Pesochin, Babaye and Bezlyudovka as soon as possible. The Kerala CM, in his letter, also conveyed the state's gratitude for the Union Government's efforts through 'Operation Ganga' which resulted in repatriation of 244 Malayali students. (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.) In terse capital letters, an advisory from the Indian Embassy in Kyiv ordered Indians to leave Kharkiv immediately, on foot if necessary, as a student from Punjab died of a stroke, possibly brought on by anxiety, for which he was already under treatment. There has been a sharp increase in the number of Indians who have left . We now estimate that nearly 17,000 Indian nationals have left borders since our advisories were issued, Spokesman for the Ministry of External Affairs Arindam Bagchi said, even as Russia promised humanitarian corridors for the safe passage of Indians caught in the war. Around 2,500 Indian students are thought to be still stuck in the city. In the midst of all this, a throwaway remark by a Union minister about the qualifications of those who go abroad to study medicine because they lack the intellectual bandwidth for medical education in India, sparked off widespread outrage. Even Russia regretted the killing of Naveen Gyanagoudar in the shelling in Kharkiv with Russian ambassador-designate Denis Alipov promising there will be an investigation into the death of the Indian student. However, Parliamentary Affairs Minister Pralhad Joshi drew Opposition ire when he said Indian students resorted to going abroad to study because they were not good enough to become doctors in India. Gyanagoudars father responded with dignity, saying his son had gone to study in because despite very high grades, medical education was too expensive in India. He said his entire family had contributed to sending Naveen to Ukraine, so that he could become a doctor. Were not rich people, but my son was talented and we thought he deserved an opportunity, he said. Joshis remarks were assailed by Opposition leaders. Former Union minister Jairam Ramesh said on Twitter: Shockingly insensitive and atrocious statement by Minister Pralhad Joshi to cover up the Modi governments failures and its preoccupation with PR exercises. NaMos only mantra is NATO No Action Tamasha Only! Prime Minister Narendra Modi said Indias biggest priority at the moment was to ensure all Indians returned from the war zone safely. Speaking at public meetings in Robertsganj in Uttar Pradesh (UP), ahead of the last phase of polling in UP on March 7, the PM said he had spoken to many world leaders to stop the war but the immediate preoccupation was evacuation of Indians. The government said 15 flights are scheduled over the next 24 hours, some already en route. Indian Air Force (IAF) aircraft have joined Operation Ganga with the first C-17 flight from Bucharest (Romania) expected to return to Delhi later tonight. Three more IAF flights will be undertaken on Thursday from Budapest (Hungary), Bucharest (Romania), and Rzeszow (Poland). As ministers made a beeline to greet the returning students, Congress Member of Parliament Manish Tewari tore into the Centres PR photo-ops with Indians evacuated from Ukraine. Behaviour of some of these ministers is absolutely absurd and laughable... clamouring on to aircraft in order to do their own political public relations and propaganda. The government is not doing anybody a favour, its their job, he said. At the airport were Union ministers Smriti Irani, Jitendra Singh, and Gajendra Shekhawat. The Disaster Response Force has sent relief material, including blankets and sleeping mats, to Ukraine. This is the second tranche after medicines were sent in the first tranche. India has offered its assistance to students from neighbouring countries who are stranded there. West Bengal Chief Minister on Wednesday wondered why were students not brought back earlier from war-torn and said it is the Centre's responsibility to evacuate Indians stranded in the east European country. She also said the central government should realise that humanity is more important than politics and urged it to take a lead role in peace talks. "It is the Union government's responsibility to bring back Indians stuck in war-hit . I don't want to criticise the government on matters of external affairs. But sometimes I have seen that we are lagging behind on matters of external affairs because of some coordination gap and political businesses. "Our students are stuck there, and somebody died. Some are staying in bunkers, and some are in Romania, a neighbour of Ukraine," Banerjee said. Her comments came a day after a medical student from Karnataka's Haveri district was killed in intense shelling in the eastern Ukrainian city of Kharkiv on Tuesday, marking India's first casualty in the war. Banerjee spoke to reporters before leaving for Uttar Pradesh to campaign for the Samajwadi Party in the ongoing assembly polls there. "If the government was aware of the facts, why did not it bring back students earlier? This is a fault and negligence," she said. "Humanity is more important than politics, and the central government should realise this. Lives of students are more important than politics," Banerjee said. She also said India could take the lead in peace talks. "The COVID-19 outbreak has destroyed everything. Now, if there is war, everything will be ruined. I am in favour of peace, not war. The pandemic has already destroyed a lot. India can lead talks to maintain world peace," she said. Asked whether her request for an all-party meeting has received any response, Banerjee said, "I have done my duty. Now it is for them to decide. Maybe they are busy with elections." Banerjee had recently offered unconditional support to Prime Minister Narendra Modi during the crisis and requested him to consider calling an all-party meeting to take a united stand on the issue. (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.) on Wednesday said it is working "intensely" to create a "humanitarian corridor" for safe passage to Russian territory of Indians stuck in Kharkiv, Sumy and other conflict zones in Ukraine. At a media briefing, Russian Ambassador-designate Denis Alipov said is in touch with India on the issue of safety of Indians and that the safe passage will be put into place "as soon as possible. "We are working intensely on creating the corridor and secure safe passage for Indians stuck in various conflict zones in Ukraine," he said. He said is working on ways and means to provide safe passage to Indians for their secure passage to Russian territory from the conflict zones in Ukraine. To a question, Alipov said he does "see any hurdle" in the supply of the S-400 missile systems to India because of the Western sanctions against Russia following the Ukraine crisis. India has taken an "unbiased" position based on assessment of the situation in Ukraine and not because it is dependent on Russian arms, he added. "We do coordinate our positions at the UN and inform India about our approach," he said. Alipov further added: "We do everything possible to keep India up-to-date on what is happening. (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.) The government's recent policy initiatives to promote the manufacturing of solar power equipment in the country will put the industry on a strong footing and help achieve ambitious targets, industry body said on Wednesday. The government has set an ambitious target of 500 gigawatts of renewable capacity by 2030, which is about 5 times the current cumulative installations. The majority of this target is expected from solar installations, targeted to touch 280 GW by 2030, which would require India to install 29 GW each year for the next 8 years. "Though India has about 4 GW of cell and 13 GW of module manufacturing, Indian has been majorly dependent on imports from China. Modules import accounted for more than 65 per cent of total module demand in 2021," the Indian Solar Manufacturers Association (ISMA) said. Of the total modules manufactured in India, only one-third of them used Indian cells. These imports have historically led to low-capacity utilisation of cell and module manufacturing in India. "The recent steps by the Indian government have created a more positive environment for cell and module manufacturers in India and the solar manufacturing industry is ready to support the Government in achieving its vision," said Ashwani Sehgal, president, . The government's DCR (domestic content requirement) schemes -- CPSU, KUSUM and Rooftop -- have ensured that Indian cells find favour in the solar industry, leading to high-capacity utilisation rates for Indian solar cell manufacturers. These schemes have also helped hasten the movement to distributed solar power across the country, he said. The levy of basic customs duty (BCD) of 40 per cent on solar modules and 25 per cent on solar cells from April 1, 2022, will provide Indian solar manufacturers a level playing field. On top of it, increasing the kitty of incentives to be provided in the production linked incentives (PLI) scheme for solar manufacturing to Rs 24,000 crore will be a major boost. "The solar manufacturing industry is now confident of quickly enhancing its capacities to meet the burgeoning requirements of its stakeholders," he said, adding these steps will lead to a multi-fold increase in new and high-efficiency capacities with upstream and downstream integration, resulting in a significant decrease in dependence on imports in the coming years. The government has also introduced import tariffs on ancillaries like glass, EVA, backsheet and other components to encourage the development of local capacities for these materials which are an integral part of the solar manufacturing ecosystem. All these moves by the Government of India will have a significant impact on domestic manufacturing, leading the country onto the path of energy security while ensuring significant development and employment in the industry. "We appreciate the Indian Government for all its concerted efforts to grow solar power in India and make India one of the largest solar markets in the world. The fully commits itself to deliver to the nation a fully independent and self-sufficient solar manufacturing hub," he added. is a registered association of companies engaged in the manufacturing of solar cells, modules, and glass for modules in India. Its members represent 80 per cent of the manufacturing capacity in India with combined investments of Rs 10,000 crore. Indian solar manufacturers have an installed capacity of more than 3 GW for cells and 9 GW for modules annually. (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.) India has asked to increase shipments to the country to compensate for a loss of sunflower oil supplies from the Black Sea region due to the Ukraine crisis, several government and industry sources in India told Reuters. India, the world's biggest buyer of edible oil, relies on top producer for more than half of its imports, but has been worried by restrictions Jakarta put on its exports in January to calm local prices. Limited palm supplies, followed by the halt in exports of sunflower oil from the Black Sea region - which accounts for 60% of world sunoil output and 76% of exports - have sent global vegetable oil prices to record highs. In India, the landed cost of imported crude has risen 38% since announced export curbs on Jan. 27. The cost of soyoil, the second most consumed oil in India after palm, has surged 29% this year, while sunoil suppliers have stopped offering the oil after Russia invaded Ukraine. Ukraine and Russia accounted for nearly 13% of India's imports last year, supplying 1.6 million tonnes. Indian government officials held a virtual meeting with Indonesian authorities this week on stepping up palm exports to India, a "reliable big buyer", said two government sources with knowledge of the matter. New Delhi has also asked Jakarta to temporarily lower its biodiesel blending rules, which mandate that 30% of all biodiesel sold in the country be derived from palm oil. "For a short time Indonesia can give preference to food over fuel," said one of the sources. India's Ministry of Commerce and Industry did not immediately respond to a request for comment. Indonesia's trade ministry officials did not immediately respond to requests for comment. India fulfils more than two-thirds of its demand through imports, of which palm oil accounts for more than 60%. UNFORESEEN DISRUPTION India has slashed taxes on vegetable oil imports four times in the past eight months and even allowed overseas buying of refined palm oil instead of only crude oils, though prices have still stayed high. Russia's invasion of Ukraine and a drought in the biggest soyoil exporting region of South America have stymied New Delhi's efforts. Crude palm oil is now being offered at about $2,075 a tonne, including cost, insurance and freight (CIF), in India for March shipments. A year ago, CPO was available at $1,089. " prices have become a major challenge for us and we are reaching out to everyone," one of the government sources said. India is also exploring increasing soyoil imports from South America and the United States and rapeseed oil from Europe, but these destinations cannot increase supplies quickly because of the distance and limited availability, said a senior industry official who attended a government meeting on the matter last week. "The quickest way to increase edible oil supplies is to bring in more palm oil," said the industry official, who declined to be named. "Only Indonesia can fulfil Indian demand." India's own supplies of rapeseed oil from the new season crop could pick up from next month and help ease supplies, said B.V. Mehta, executive director of the Mumbai-based Solvent Extractors' Association of India. "There is no need to panic," he said. "Local oilseed crushing will pick up in the coming months, and edible oil supplies will improve." (This story has not been edited by Business Standard staff and is auto-generated from a syndicated feed.) The UN General Assembly has voted in favour of a resolution condemning Russia's invasion and calling for it immediately to pull all of its forces out of Ukraine. The resolution was supported by 141 of the body's 193 members at a rare emergency General Assembly session called by the UN Security Council. Ahead of the vote, Ukraine's UN ambassador Sergiy Kyslytsya said Russia had "come to deprive Ukraine of the very right to exist". Russian Ambassador Vassily Nebenzia said Russia wanted to stop a separatist conflict in eastern Ukraine and accused the West of using "open and cynical threats" to get countries to vote for the resolution. It is the assemblys first emergency meeting since 1997. The Department for Promotion of Industry and Internal Trade (DPIIT) on Wednesday said it is organising a post-budget webinar on ' for the World' on Thursday, which will be addressed by Prime Minister . Modi will deliver a special address on the vision of ' for the World' and its convergence with the Union Budget, it said. The objective of the webinar is to sustain the momentum of Budget and synergising the initiatives taken by various stakeholders to boost manufacturing, exports and strengthening the MSMEs. (This story has not been edited by Business Standard staff and is auto-generated from a syndicated feed.) Leading strategic marketing and communications institute MICA Ahmedabad has registered a 35 per cent rise in the average package to Rs 19 lakh per annum even as it concludes the final process for the 2022 batch. Placing the entire 27th batch of its PGDM-Communications programme, MICA Ahmedabad also posted a 16 per cent rise in the highest domestic package at Rs 57.51 lakh per annum. While the average CTC went up from Rs 14 lakh to Rs 19 lakh, the average CTC of the top 50 per cent of the students was Rs 24.15 lakh. A total of 77 companies partnered with MICA and recruited 208 students sitting for the campus placement process. Sector-wise, IT/ITeS made the highest number of offers at 94, followed by Analytics and Consulting (39), media and advertising (27), and FMCG (25). Regular recruiters at MICA Ahmedabad included the likes of Amazon, Amul, Atlassian, Deloitte, Tata Steel, Publicis, Flipkart, Google, Hero Motocorp, Ekanek, HT Media, Clevar Tap, ICICI Bank, ITC, Kotak Bank, Loreal, Royal Enfield, Tata Consumer Products, Titan, Viacom 18 and Xiaomi, among others. The institute also saw a rise in new recruiters including the likes of The Coca Cola Company, Microsoft, Bennett & Coleman Group, Accenture S&C, 4700 BC, Paytm, Schindler, Gartner, Gameberry Labs, Purplle.com, Bombay Shaving Company, FirstCry.com, Bennett Coleman & Co. Ltd., ABP Network, Dalmia Bharat Group, Wipro, Cognizant, AU Small Finance Bank Ltd., and many more. Commenting on the placements, Shailendra Raj Mehta, President & Director, MICA said that the were a mark of the recovery of the Indian economy after the second wave of the COVID-19 pandemic. Meanwhile, students were offered roles across functions like Content Designer, Sales Operations Program Manager, Digital Marketing Strategist, Product Manager, Corporate Communications, Digital Marketing Manager, Account Manager, Analyst - Research and Insights, Business Analyst, and Brand Strategist, among others. Prime Minister on Wednesday said that it is because of India's "rising strength" that the government was able to evacuate the Indian nationals stranded in Ukraine amid conflict with Russia. Addressing a public rally in Uttar Pradesh's Robertsganj, PM Modi said, "It is due to India's rising strength that we are able to safely evacuate our nationals stuck in Ukraine, for which we are running Operation Ganga." "We're making all efforts to evacuate people stuck in Ukraine under Operation Ganga. Thousands of citizens were brought back to India. To accelerate this mission, India has sent its four ministers there, and the government will leave no stone unturned for the safe evacuation of Indians," he added. Slamming the Opposition parties for mocking the 'Atmanirbhar Abhiyan' (self-reliance motion) initiative by the Centre, the Prime Minister said that they can never be a party to India's strength. "People who mock 'Atmanirbhar Abhiyan' insult our (defence) forces. Such dynasts can never strengthen India. They are the same people who spread rumours about the country's COVID vaccines," he said. Tomorrow, will go to the sixth phase of the polling in the ongoing state Assembly elections, determining the fate of 676 candidates, including Chief Minister Yogi Adityanath in 57 Assembly seats spread across 10 districts of the state. Of the total 57, the Bharatiya Janata Party (BJP) had domination in the last elections in 2017. The BJP had won 46 seats while Apna Dal had won one seat. The Samajwadi Party (SP) had won only two seats, while Bahujan Samaj Party (BSP) won five seats. Congress and Suheldev Bharatiya Samaj Party (SBSP) had won one seat each respectively. The 10 districts going to the polls in the sixth phase are Gorakhpur, Ambedkarnagar, Ballia, Balrampur, Basti, Deoria, Kushinagar, Maharajganj, Sant Kabir Nagar and Siddharthnagar. The 2022 to elect 403 members of the Legislative Assembly are being held in seven phases. The votes will be counted and the results will be declared on March 10, 2022. (This story has not been edited by Business Standard staff and is auto-generated from a syndicated feed.) UP's Azamgarh district had become a home of terror and criminals making its youths suffer from an identity crisis but the government gave the place a new identity by its development, Chief Minister said on Wednesday. Adityanath made the remark while addressing elections rallies at various places in Sadar and Sagadi assembly segments of Azamgarh which go to the polls on March 7 during the last phase of the seven-phase state assembly elections. The previous government only tarnished the image of this place. The youths of Azamgarh were turned away from hotels in other parts of the country. Azamgarh was facing an identity crisis, he said. It was following the sustained efforts of the government after 2017 that this place is witnessing remarkable transformation, he added. Intensifying his attack on SP president Akhilesh Yadav, the CM said, We had visited Azamgarh thrice during the corona period to inspect medical facilities here. But the Samajwadi MP was seen nowhere in the times of crisis. The chief minister said the SP supremo should have fought the MLA's election from Azamgarh itself but he did not because of the fear of defeat. "In Karhal also, Mulayam Singh (SP patriarch) said he does not know who the candidate is. It is a misfortune when the father does not know his son and the former president does not recognize the current president, Yogi said in a dig at the SP chief. He also criticised the law and order situation in Azamgarh during the previous governments. The only motivated and encouraged terrorism, gave protection to professional mafia and criminals and spread hooliganism, he said. Adityanath also accused the SP supremo of having a "connection" between his party and the kin of one of the Ahmedabad blast convicts. Our government's sentiments are with every section of society but SP's support base is with terrorists, he said. Mentioning a recent incident of Azamgarh in which many people died after consuming spurious liquor, the CM claimed without elaborating that an SP candidate is involved in the tragedy. There is no illegitimate work that SP does not do, he said. Targeting the alleged appeasement policy of the Samajwadi Party, said earlier electricity was only provided on the occasions of Eid-Bakrid while there were power cuts during Holi and Deepawali. For the first time, the government schemes are reaching every individual in the state, he said. Addressing public meetings at Madhuban, Ghosi, Mau Sadar and Muhammadabad-Gohna assembly constituencies in Mau district, he targeted the SP and asked, What was the condition of Mau five years back? The mafia and criminals used to harass the public and traders. He also added that after the formation of the government, the criminals have vanished from the state and are begging for their lives. Stating that the BJP under the leadership of Prime Minister Narendra Modi has given immense respect to Baba Saheb Bhimrao Ambedkar, Yogi said, The BJP has developed five pilgrimages associated with Baba Saheb. A grand cultural centre in the name of Baba Saheb is also being built in Lucknow," he added. (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.) Samajwadi Party president has questioned why top leaders are not talking about rising prices in their election speeches. He also questioned the BJP's claims that Chief Minister Yogi Adityanath worked 24 hours a day for the welfare of the poor and the youth. He said that if the claim was correct then why his government failed to fill up 11 lakh jobs lying vacant in various government departments for the last five years. "There senior leaders are addressing voters daily, but none of them talk about rising prices of essential commodities," he said in a statement. Akhilesh said the claimed to have provided free LPG cylinders to people. "But what their (BJP) leaders do not tell is the fact that when cylinders were given to the poor, their refill cost was Rs 400 and today, a cylinder refill costs about Rs 1,000." Akhilesh, while addressing meetings in Ballia on Tuesday evening, recalled how the district played an important role in every revolution that has taken place in India and said this election was no different. Accusing the ruling of having taken people of the state for a ride by promising the moon and then failing to deliver, he said, "The BJP practices 'chhal' (deceit) but this time, "the contest here is between 'chhalia' and Ballia". He said that in the sixth phase of polling on Thursday, the BJP will be cut to size by the voters. Akhilesh further said that the BJP excelled in making false promises, making people dream and telling lies. --IANS amita/dpb (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.) Prime Minister is likely to be in on March 4 and 5, the last two days of campaigning for the Assembly elections. The BJP's city president Vidyasagar Rai on Wednesday said on day one Modi will hold a roadshow in the city area and the next day he will address a public meeting in Khajuri village in Rajatalab. Polling for the last phase of the Assembly election will be held on March 7 and the results will be declared three days later. Rai said according to the programme, the roadshow of the prime minister will cover the Assembly segments of Cantonment, Varanasi North and Varanasi South. Modi will begin his roadshow by garlanding the statue of Sardar Vallabhbhai Patel at the Maldiha crossing. He will also visit the Kashi Vishwanath Temple and offer prayers, he said. On the second day of his stay in Varanasi, Modi will address a public meeting in Khajuri village in Rajatalab, Rai added. (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.) The on Wednesday cancelled the licence of Sarjeraodada Naik Shirala Sahakari Bank, Sangli, Maharashtra, as it did not have adequate capital and earning prospects. With cancellation of the licence, Sarjeraodada Naik Shirala Sahakari Bank Ltd has ceased to carry on banking business with effect from the close of business hours on Wednesday, the Reserve Bank said in a statement. The Commissioner for Cooperation and Registrar of Cooperative Societies, has also been requested to issue an order for winding up the bank and appoint a liquidator for the lender, it said. On liquidation, every depositor would be entitled to receive deposit insurance claim amount of his/her deposits up to a monetary ceiling of Rs 5 lakh from the Deposit Insurance and Credit Guarantee Corporation (DICGC). "As per the data submitted by the bank, more than 99 per cent of the depositors are entitled to receive full amount of their deposits from DICGC," the added. Giving details about the licence cancellation, the said Sarjeraodada Naik Shirala Sahakari Bank does not have adequate capital and earning prospects, and with its present financial position would be unable to pay its present depositors in full. "Public interest would be adversely affected if the bank is allowed to carry on its banking business any further," it said. As on January 27, 2022, DICGC had sanctioned Rs 64.70 crore of the total insured deposits based on the willingness received from the concerned depositors of the bank. (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.) Russian Foreign Minister Sergey Lavrov on Wednesday warned that a third World War, should it break out, will be "nuclear and devastating", amid spiralling tensions with the West over Moscow's ongoing massive military operation against Ukraine. "A third World War would be a devastating nuclear war, Russia's longtime top diplomat said in an interview to the Al Jazeera television channel, according to state-owned TASS news agency. Also, Lavrov stressed US President Joe Biden's remark that a third World War would be an alternative to Washington's tough sanctions against Moscow. Lavrov said that was ready for sanctions that were imposed against it but was surprised that the penalties affected athletes and journalists. "We were ready for sanctions but did not expect that they would affect athletes, intellectuals, actors and journalists, he said, referring to the ban and sanctions by Western countries. In his maiden State of the Union address, President Biden on Tuesday night accused his Russian counterpart of waging a "premeditated and unprovoked" war against Ukraine, asserting that "dictators" like Vladimir Putin would "pay a price" for "invading" a foreign country. The US has joined the European Union in banning Russian flights from its airspace in retaliation for the invasion of Ukraine. Lavrov said the special operation against Ukraine was launched with the aim preventing Kyiv from obtaining nuclear weapons, the Qatar-based news channel reported. "The military operation in Ukraine, including Kiev, is aimed at disarming the Ukraine. will not let Ukraine obtain nuclear weapons," he was quoted as saying by the channel. Ukrainian President Vladimir Zelensky has said that Kiev might revise its obligations under the Budapest Memorandum, by which Ukraine had agreed to give away nuclear weapons in exchange for security guarantees. Lavrov said that is ready for the second round of talks, but the Ukrainian side is delaying the the process under command from the Amercans. Earlier on Tuesday, Lavrov said that the West should not establish military facilities on the territory of former USSR states that are not members of NATO. In a video address to the Disarmament Conference in Geneva, he also emphasised that Moscow believes that obtaining legally binding security guarantees from North Atlantic Treaty Organisation (NATO) members is of paramount importance. Russia has long resisted Ukraine's move towards the European Union and the West's defensive military alliance, NATO. In a pre-dawn TV address on February 24, President Putin declared that Russia could not feel "safe, develop and exist" because of what he claimed was a constant threat from modern Ukraine. Putin claimed that his goal was to protect people subjected to bullying and genocide and aim for the "demilitarisation and de-Nazification" of Ukraine. (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.) Good News for Disney Plus subscribers! Several Marvel series including "Daredevil," "Jessica Jones" and more will be available on the streaming platform this month. These new titles will be a pleasant addition to the platform's already existing collection of MCU shows and films. Disney Plus Welcomes New Marvel Series This Month In a recent Twitter post by Disney Plus, the streaming platform revealed that the Marvel series "Daredevil," "Jessica Jones," "Luke Cage," "Iron Fist," "The Defenders," "The Punisher," and "Agents of S.H.I.E.L.D." can be streamed on the platform starting March 16. The countdown is on. Marvel's Daredevil, Jessica Jones, Luke Cage, Iron Fist, The Defenders, The Punisher, and Agents of S.H.I.E.L.D. start streaming March 16 on #DisneyPlus. pic.twitter.com/sfoT61XilS Disney+ (@disneyplus) March 1, 2022 The Twitter post also clarified that the series will be available in the U.S., Canada, U.K., Ireland, Australia, and New Zealand, with updated parental controls in the U.S. on March 16. These Marvel shows were previously removed from Netflix. Explaining the migration of the series titles, president of Disney Streaming Michael Paull said through Game Spot, "Disney+ has served as the home for some of the most beloved brands in the industry, and the addition of these live-action shows brings more from the Marvel brand together, all in one place." Paull also added that they have experienced great success offering subscribers massive content across their global markets. Read Also: 'What If' Episode 7 Reviews, Memes, Reactions: Party Thor, Jotun Loki, Ultron Teaser and More Easter Eggs! Other Marvel Series On Disney Plus For those unfamiliar, there are numerous Marvel shows and movies that fans could watch on Disney Plus. Additionally, Tech Advisor listed several Marvel content to watch on Disney Plus while waiting for the upcoming movies. The said MCU movies to watch are "Captain America: The First Avenger," "Captain Marvel," "Iron Man," "Iron Man 2," "Iron Man 3," "Thor," "The Avengers," "Thor: The Dark World," "Captain American: The Winter Soldier," "Guardians of The Galaxy," "Guardians of The Galaxy Vol. 2," "Avengers: Age of Ultron," and "Ant-Man." Aside from these, Disney Plus also provides MCU fans the pleasure to watch "Captain America: Civil War," "Doctor Strange, "Black Panther," "Thor Ragnarok," "Avengers: Infinity War," "Ant-Man & The Wasp," "Avengers: Endgame," "Black Widow," "Shang-Chi and the Legend of the Ten Rings," and "Eternals." Furthermore, the streaming platform also offers popular shows like "Agent Carter," "Agents of S.H.I.E.L.D," "Runaways," "Inhumans," "WandaVision," "The Falcon and The Winter Soldier," "Loki," "What If...?" and "Hawkeye." How To Sign Up For Disney Plus Account Interested Disney Plus members must keep in mind that this streaming platform is a paid membership, which means subscribers will have to pay a fee to watch and enjoy Marvel content on the platform. According to Disney Plus, subscribers have three options to choose from such as monthly or annual membership from Disney Plus, Disney Plus Bundle with Hulu (Ad-supported), and Disney Bundle with Hulu (No Ads). The streaming platform also noted that members can switch their subscriptions or cancel at any time. Aside from the subscription offers, people can also sign up for an account through the mobile, website, and TV-connected devices. The following steps will be able to help users to sign up for a Disney Plus account using a mobile device: 1. Head to App Store or Google Play Store and search for the "Disney Plus" app. 2. Once the Disney Plus app was located, download the application. 3. After downloading, tap the "Sign-Up Now" button then provide an email address and a password. 4. Lastly, choose a subscription type then make an in-app purchase. For the list of Disney Plus supported devices, head to this link to know more. Related Article: Is Amazon Web Services Down? Disney Plus, Alexa, and More Affected Nearly 4,000 luxury cars like Porsches, Lamborghinis, Bentleys and -- along with several high-end electric vehicles -- have sunk aboard a cargo ship in the Atlantic that caught fire last month. Felicity Ace ship was carrying both electric and non-electric vehicles, and a fire broke out on the ship as it was travelling from Germany to the US, reports Insider. While it's unclear exactly what started the fire, captain Joao Mendes Cabecas of the port of Hortas said lithium-ion batteries in EVs aboard the ship caught fire. A salvage team was able to board the ship over the last weekend but to no avail. The ship management company, MOL Ship Management Singapore, said the ship sank about 253 miles off the coast of the Azores, an archipelago in the mid-Atlantic that's an autonomous region of Portugal. All 22 crew members were evacuated from the ship and were safe. "The 22 crew members did not need medical assistance on arrival, having been taken to a local hotel. The owner of the ship 'Felicity Ace' is in contact with the logistic agent in order to draw up a plan for the towing of the ship," the navy had said. The Felicity Ace ship was heading from Germany to a port in Rhode Island, the US, when it issued distress signals this week. According to Importinfo.com, the electric vehicles may have been Audi E-tron Sportbacks. --IANS na/dpb (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.) The UN refugee agency says more than 874,000 people have fled Ukraine since Russia's invasion last week and the figure is rising exponentially, putting it on track to cross the 1 million mark possibly within hours. spokeswoman Shabia Mantoo said Wednesday that people are continuing to stream into Ukraine's neighbouring countries to the west, with more than 200,000 fleeing since Tuesday. A day earlier, Mantoo had cautioned that the outflows from Ukraine could make it the source of the biggest refugee crisis this century eclipsing the one from Syria's war over the last decade. She noted that had previously projected that as many as 4 million people might flee Ukraine, but noted that the agency will be re-evaluating its forecast. The latest figures show that more than half or nearly 454,000 have gone to Poland, more than 116,300 to Hungary and over 79,300 to Moldova. Another 69,000 have gone to other European countries and 67,000 have fled to Slovakia. Mantoo noted that the figure of 874,000 was an increase from more than 660,000 only a day earlier and some 116,000 on Saturday, in the wake of Russia's invasion of Ukraine on Feb. 24. (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.) Some of America's best-known including Apple, Google, Ford, Harley-Davidson and Exxon Mobil rebuked and rejected Russia for its invasion of Ukraine, under steady pressure from investors and consumers decrying the violence. Inc late on Tuesday said it had stopped sales of iPhones and other products in Russia, adding that it was making changes to its Maps app to protect civilians in Ukraine. Tech firms including Alphabet Inc's Google dropped Russian state publishers from their news, and - with three joint venture factories in Russia - told its Russian manufacturing partner it was suspending operations in the country. Motor cycle maker Harley-Davidson Inc suspended shipments of its bikes. Exxon Mobil Corp said would discontinue operations in Russia and was taking steps to exit the Sakhalin-1 venture, following in the steps of British energy giants Shell Plc and BP, Russia's biggest foreign investor. Many corporations have been unusually clear in their condemnation of Russia. "We are deeply concerned about the Russian invasion of Ukraine and stand with all of the people who are suffering as a result of the violence," said in a statement. The steady drum beat of taking a stance increased later in the day as rockets struck major cities in Ukraine. "Ford is deeply concerned about the invasion of Ukraine and the resultant threats to peace and stability. The situation has compelled us to reassess our operations in Russia," Ford said, adding to several days of announcements by global car . "We deplore Russia's military action that violates the territorial integrity of Ukraine and endangers its people," said Exxon, adding it will not invest in new developments in Russia. Boeing suspended parts, maintenance and technical support services for Russian airlines, a Politico reporter tweeted. The U.S. plane maker suspended major operations in Moscow and will also temporarily closed office in Kyiv, the tweet said. Boeing did not immediately respond to a request for comment. Restrictions from the West have hit the Russian economy hard, with the rouble currency falling as much as a third to a record low. Financial isolation is rising as shipping companies say they will not serve Russian ports. The U.S. government is expected to ban Russian flights from American airspace as soon as Wednesday, government and industry officials told Reuters. And a boom of investor interest in environmental, social and governance (ESG) factors, is making it more difficult for those companies that sit on the sidelines. Russian companies are in particular peril with such Western investors, since they often are not open to talks to change their behavior, said TJ Kistner, vice president at Segal Marco Advisors, a large U.S. pension consultant. Western investors may respond by pulling out. "The only course of action for many is simply divestment," Kistner said. Moscow has responded by temporarily curbing foreign investors from selling Russian assets. Big Tech companies also are continuing efforts to stop Russian forces from taking advantage of their products. said it had blocked app downloads of some state-backed news services outside of Russia. Microsoft earlier said it would remove Russian state-owned media outlet RT's mobile apps from its Windows App store and ban ads on Russian state-sponsored media. Google barred RT and other Russian channels from receiving money for ads on websites, apps and YouTube videos, similar to a move by Facebook. (Reporting by Paresh Dave in Oakland; Ross Kerber in New York; Dawn Chmielewski in Los Angeles; Writing by Peter Henderson and Sayantani Ghosh; Editing by Stephen Coates and Lincoln Feast.) (This story has not been edited by Business Standard staff and is auto-generated from a syndicated feed.) The Australian hit a one-year high on the euro on Wednesday as investors were attracted by Australia's status as a net energy exporter and distance from Europe's troubles. The euro breached lows from last October to hit a trough at A$1.5274, having shed five cents in the past month. A break of the 2021 low at $1.5244 would see the euro down at depths last visited in mid-2018. The Aussie also firmed to $0.7280, having touched a six-week peak of $0.7289 overnight. It was now nearing the January top of $0.7314 and the 200-day moving average at $0.7328, and a break would be bullish for a run to $0.7370 and $0.7480. The kiwi edged up to $0.6780, and a breach of its recent top at $0.6808 could open the way to $0.6890. The war in Ukraine, and the resulting spike in energy prices, has darkened the outlook for European growth and seen drastically scale back expectations on when the European Central Bank may tighten policy. Indeed, futures suggest some are even wagering on a renewed bout of stimulus through ECB asset buying. have also removed almost 50 basis points of tightening by the U.S. Federal Reserve for this year, and trimmed expectations for the Bank of England and Bank of Canada. Futures have pushed out the likely timing of a first hike by the (RBA) to July, from June, and now see rates at 1.0% by year end rather than 1.25%. Yields on three-year bonds are also down 20 basis points on the week at 1.36%. At its policy meeting on Tuesday the RBA left rates at 0.1% and reiterated it would be patient on policy even as it remained upbeat on the economic outlook. Data out Wednesday showed the economy rebounded by a strong 3.4% in the December quarter as consumers spent with abandon, and signs are that continued this quarter. Su-Lin Ong, chief economist for at RBC Capital Markets, noted the data suggested households had now built up excess savings of around A$280 billion, or 13% of GDP. "A strong household balance sheet with scope for consumption to move back to its pre-COVID path, backlog of dwelling activity, and recovering confidence underpins our expectation for a strong 2022 and above trend growth," she added. "But the uncertainty from Ukraine/Russia provides added cover for the RBA's patient approach." (This story has not been edited by Business Standard staff and is auto-generated from a syndicated feed.) has decided to refer the situation in Ukraine to the Criminal Court (ICC) to probe alleged war crimes and crimes against humanity by Russian forces in Ukraine, its government said on Tuesday. The office of the prosecutor on Monday said it will seek court approval to open an investigation into alleged war crimes in Ukraine, just days after Russia's invasion of its neighbour. "We are working with other member states to take this significant action as a result of numerous allegations of the commission of serious crimes in Ukraine by Russian forces," Canada's foreign minister Melanie Joly, said in a statement. "The has our full support and confidence. We call on Russia to cooperate with the court." Russia calls its actions in Ukraine a "special operation". The referral by a member state will fast-track an investigation by allowing the prosecutor to skip having to seek court approval, and according to a diplomatic source will shave months off the process of starting an investigation. Joly earlier spoke to reporters in Geneva after taking part in a walk-out of a virtual speech by Russian Foreign Minister Sergei Lavrov to the U.N. Human Rights Council, and had said that the country would petition the ICC against Russia. (This story has not been edited by Business Standard staff and is auto-generated from a syndicated feed.) will maintain sanctions against until the latter withdraws its troops from Ukraine, Prime Minister Justin Trudeau said on Tuesday. "We will keep the sanctions in place right up until recognizes and admits they made a huge mistake and withdraws its soldiers from Ukrainian soil," Trudeau told the House of Commons during the day's Question Period session. has imposed multiple rounds of sanctions against following President Vladimir Putin's approval of a military operation in Ukraine, including a ban on all engagements with the Russian central bank, a freeze on Russian sovereign fund assets and personal sanctions against top Russian officials. Last Thursday, Russia launched a military operation in Ukraine, responding to calls for help from the Donetsk and Luhansk people's republics in countering the aggression of Ukrainian forces. The Russian Defense Ministry said the operation is targeting Ukrainian military infrastructure only, stressing that the civilian population is not in danger. (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.) will not join in sanctions on Russia that have been led by the West, the country's banking regulator said on Wednesday, adding that he believed the impact of the measures on would be limited. China, which has refused to condemn Russia's invasion of Ukraine, has repeatedly criticised what it calls illegal and unilateral sanctions. As far as financial sanctions are concerned, we do not approve of these, especially the unilaterally launched sanctions because they do not work well and have no legal grounds," Guo Shuqing, chairman of the Banking and Insurance Regulatory Commission, told a news conference. Hackers target Russian power grid & railways A Ukrainian cyber guerrilla warfare group plans to launch digital sabotage attacks against critical Russian infrastructure such as railways and the electricity grid, to strike back at Moscow over its invasion, a hacker team coordinator told Reuters. On Monday, Ukrainian businessman and local cybersecurity expert Yegor Aushev said he planned to organise hacking attacks that would disrupt any infrastructure that helps bring Russian troops and weapons to his country. Everything that might stop war, he told Reuters. The goal is to make it impossible to bring these weapons to our country. (This story has not been edited by Business Standard staff and is auto-generated from a syndicated feed.) Conflict should end before Ukraine's application to join the (EU) is discussed, European Commission President Ursula von der Leyen said here. "Today, the and are already closer than ever before. There is still a long path ahead. We have to end this war. And we should talk about the next steps," von der Leyen said while addressing the European Parliament plenary on Tuesday. Ukrainian President Volodymyr Zelensky on Monday signed an official appeal for the EU, asking for an accession of via a new special procedure, Xinhua news agency reported. During the plenary on Tuesday, Zelensky, who was invited to make a speech from Kiev via video link, expressed his gratitude that the EU countries were unified in supporting but regretted that it came after a high price was paid. European Council President Charles Michel responded by pledging to look at the "symbolic, political and legitimate request" seriously, while admitting the process will be difficult. Members of the European Parliament on Tuesday adopted a resolution that called on the EU institutions to work toward granting Ukraine EU candidate status, and stated that such procedure should be in line with proper EU terms. The resolution was approved by 637 votes in favour, 13 against with 26 abstentions. --IANS int/sks/dpb (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.) German Chancellor Olaf Scholz landed in on Tuesday night for a snap visit as the conflict between Russia and continues. The Hebrew-language Ynet news site reported that Scholz landed at the Ben Gurion Airport outside Tel Aviv for a trip that was planned to span three days and shortened to one day amid the Russia- crisis, Xinhua news agency reported. On Wednesday morning, Scholz and Israeli Prime Minister Naftali Bennett will visit Yad Vashem, Israel's official Holocaust memorial in Jerusalem, and then hold a private meeting, Bennett's office said in a statement. Scholz is also scheduled to meet with Knesset (parliament) Speaker Mickey Levy, according to a statement issued by the Knesset. "The unshakable friendship with is a matter close to my heart," Scholz wrote on Twitter after his arrival, saying he is "really looking forward to tomorrow's meeting with Prime Minister Naftali Bennett." "Even if the situation in will keep us very busy," he added. --IANS int/pgh (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.) By Satoshi Sugiyama TOKYO (Reuters) - Motor said on Wednesday it has suspended exports of cars and motorcycles to Russia, signalling the likelihood more Japanese would join the global swell of halting business with after the invasion of Ukraine. Western have spurned Moscow following the invasion, stopping sales in and even saying they would exit investments there. Ford Motor and other global have already said they would suspend operations. But the response of many Japanese firms has been more muted so far. had suspended exports to as of Wednesday, a spokesperson said, without elaborating when the suspension took effect. The spokesperson said difficulty in shipping vehicles and making payments was the reason for the suspension. The automaker does not have factories in Russia, where it sold 1,406 cars in the 2020 financial year. Mazda Motor Corp also plans to halt exports of auto parts to Russia, the Nikkei newspaper said. A Mazda spokesperson declined to comment. Nissan Motor Co Ltd is continuing operations in Russia and is closely monitoring the situation there, a spokesperson said. Its dealerships and offices in Ukraine are closed, the spokesperson said. Nissan sold 53,000 vehicles in Russia in 2021, the spokesperson said. Toyota Motor Corp's business in Russia was continuing as normal, although there had been partial disruption to shipments to the country, a spokesperson said. Mitsubishi Motor Corp said on Tuesday it may suspend production and sale of its cars in Russia citing potential supply chain disruptions as a result of sanctions on Russia. Autos and auto parts made up more than half of Japan's exports to Russia in 2020, according to the finance ministry. (Reporting by Satoshi Sugiyama; Additional reporting by Sakura Murakami, David Dolan and Nobuhiro Kubo; Editing by Louise Heavens, Jason Neely and Kim Coghill) (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.) Apple has confirmed that it has discontinued selling its products in the largest country in the world. This suspension means that customers in Russia will be unable to purchase iPhones, iPads, Macs and other Apple products online. Apple consumers in the country normally purchase their devices through third-party retail stores and orders online because no Apple Store was ever established in Russia. Nevertheless, Apple enjoyed high sales numbers in the said country, having an estimated $2.5 billion of yearly revenue. However, both the tech giant and its customers will have to endure for now. Any attempt to make a purchase through Apple's website will be met with the words "delivery unavailable". Apple Halts Product Sales in Russia Apple has decided to officially put a stop to selling their products in Russia due to the continuing political turmoil. This halt was brought by Apple in its effort to participate in the decision of the U.S. government to sanction the country. Apple also had RT News and Sputnik News pulled out in the Apple Play Store around the world except in Russia. These two news outlets are also known to be controlled by the Russian government. As one of the leading tech companies in the world, Apple has been vocal with its deep concern about this modern-day invasion. The company stated that it will continue to monitor the situation closely. Apple Ukraine Support According to The Verge, Apple stated that: "We have paused all product sales in Russia. Last week, we stopped all exports into our sales channel in the country. Apple Pay and other services have been limited. RT News and Sputnik News are no longer available for download from the App Store outside Russia." In addition, they stated that they, "have disabled both traffic and live incidents in Apple Maps in Ukraine as a safety and precautionary measure for Ukrainian citizens." An evaluation of the situation will also be underway. Apple is in communication with the relevant government agencies regarding the actions to be taken. Apple ends its statement by calling for world peace. Read Also: Apple Pay and Google Pay Discontinue Services to Russians as Part of US Sanctions Imposed U.S. Sanctions This halt has been implemented due to the plea of the Ukrainian Vice Prime Minister Mykhailo Fedorov. As reported by MacRumors, Fedorov wrote a plea directly to Apple CEO Tim Cook to help Ukraine. In his letter to Tim Cook, the Vice Prime Minister wrote: "I appeal to you and I am sure you will not only hear, but also do everything possible to protect Ukraine, Europe, and finally, the entire democratic world from bloody authoritarian aggression - to stop supplying Apple services and products to the Russian Federation, including blocking access to App Store! We are sure that such actions will motivate youth and active population of Russia to proactively stop the disgraceful military aggression." Apple thereafter fully cooperated. The decision to halt the sales came a little later after several countries imposed sanctions on Russia. These sanctions were triggered by the ongoing political onslaught between Russia and Ukraine. The European Union, Australia, Canada, United Kingdom, and United States, all have agreed to the imposed economic and political sanctions. Aside from Apple, Dell and Nike also stated that they suspended their sales in the two countries subjected to turmoil. Furthermore, the car company Ford, also suspended joint venture operations in Russia. Related Article: Facebook Security: 4 Steps to Follow to Lock FB Profile and Prevent Hacking, Manipulation One option the U. S. and other nations have for ratcheting up pressure on Russia in response to its invasion of Ukraine is reducing their Russian energy purchases. U. K. Foreign Minister Liz Truss has proposed that the G7 nations the U. S., U. K., Canada, France, Germany, Italy and Japan impose limits on their Russian oil and gas imports. Global energy policy expert Amy Myers Jaffe explains how this strategy might work and how it could affect oil markets, which have already been roiled by the conflict. How important is Russia as a global oil supplier? Russia produces close to 11 million barrels per day of crude oil. It uses roughly half of this output for its own internal demand, which presumably has increased due to higher military fuel requirements, and exports 5 million to 6 million barrels per day. Today Russia is the second-largest crude oil producer in the world, behind the U. S. and ahead of Saudi Arabia, but sometimes that order shifts. About half of Russias exported oil roughly 2.5 million barrels per day is shipped to European countries, including Germany, Italy, the Netherlands, Poland, Finland, Lithuania, Greece, Romania and Bulgaria. Nearly one-third of it arrives in Europe via the Druzhba Pipeline through Belarus. These 700,000 barrels per day in pipeline shipments would be an obvious target for some kind of sanctions, either by banning financial payments or refusing deliveries via spur lines at the Belarus border. In 2019, European stopped accepting deliveries for several months from the Druzhba line when crude oil flowing through it became contaminated with organic chlorides that could have damaged oil refineries during processing. Russias oil shipments fell noticeably as it redirected flows to avoid the Druzhba line. The remaining export shipments of Russian crude oil to Europe come mainly by ship from various ports. China is another large buyer: It imports 1.6 million barrels per day of Russian crude oil. Half comes via a special direct pipeline, the Eastern Siberia Pacific Ocean pipeline, which also services other customers via a port at its end point, including Japan and South Korea. How would Russia be affected if other nations reduce imports of its oil? Sanctions against Russias oil industry would have a greater impact than limiting natural gas flows because Russias oil receipts are higher and more critical to its state budget. Russia earned over US$110 billion in 2021 from oil exports, twice as much as its earnings from natural gas sales abroad. Since oil is a relatively fungible global commodity, much of Russias crude exports to Europe and other participating G-7 countries might wind up being sent somewhere else. That would free up other supplies from sources such as Norway and Saudi Arabia to be redirected back to Europe. Russias oil has high sulfur and other impurities, so refining it requires specialized equipment it cant be sold just anywhere. But other Asian buyers can take it, including India and Thailand. And Russia has special supply arrangements with countries like Cuba and Venezuela. Its already clear, though, that Russia is having trouble redirecting its crude oil sales. At the start of the invasion of Ukraine, European refiners began shunning spot cargoes for fears that sanctions might be forthcoming. India bought Russian crude cargoes that were already at sea, at a sharp discount. Markets would likely respond to a G-7 oil ceiling by further discounting Russian crude. We saw the same pattern in the past when countries sanctioned Venezuelan and Iranian oil: Those nations still found buyers, but at reduced prices. Can European nations get oil from other sources? Oil shipments are arguably easier to reroute than natural gas, which has to be super-chilled to liquefy it for ship transport, then converted back to gas at its destination port. That means Russias crude oil may potentially be easier for European countries to replace and reroute than its natural gas, which relies more heavily on pipeline delivery, depending on market conditions. To ensure replacement barrels are available, Europe and the U. S. could simultaneously increase crude oil sales from their national strategic stocks to lessen the blow of any restrictions on Russian crude oil imports to the G-7. The U. S. is already selling 1.3 million barrels per day from its Strategic Petroleum Reserve, and it could increase these flows. China has also released oil from its national strategic stocks to help ease oil prices. The U. S. and other G-7 members would also likely ask Middle East countries to relax destination restrictions on their crude oil shipments and press countries like China and India to redirect other oils of similar quality to Russian oil back to Europe if and when they increase their purchases from Moscow. Such steps would lower the chances of G-7 restrictions on Russian oil imports raising global prices. Its not certain that China and India would cooperate, but it would be in their interests to do so. They are major oil importers and would not want to see higher crude oil prices. How would global oil prices be affected if G-7 nations buy less Russian oil? It would depend on what other steps governments take in response to rerouting of Russian oil exports. Nations are already acting to prepare global markets for shifts in liquefied natural gas flows in case of reduced purchases from Russia. G-7 energy diplomacy is likely to involve other oil capitals that might be willing to export more oil to alleviate disruption of crude oil sales from Russia. Most exporters are maxed out in terms of crude oil production, but a few of the largest Middle East producers could surge their output in the short term to put an extra 1 million barrels per day or more onto the market. U. S.-Saudi relations could face a test. Riyadh has access to large stores of crude oil in its vast global tank system and its tankers that float at sea. In 2014, when Russia invaded Crimea, U. S. allies in the Persian Gulf held over 70 million barrels in storage near Fujairah in the United Arab Emirates. They did this as a threat to Russia that a price war would ensue if Russian troops moved beyond that peninsula. Russia stayed in Crimea, so the oil was not released. [Over 150,000 readers rely on The Conversations newsletters to understand the world. Sign up today.] Saudi Arabia has instituted price wars that hurt Russias in 1986, 1998, 2009 and again briefly in 2020. But todays oil market conditions make a price war an unlikely outcome, given the existing tight balance between supply and demand. The only scenario that could trigger a price war now would be if global demand were to contract suddenly because of a recession. Amy Myers Jaffe, Research professor, Fletcher School of Law and Diplomacy, Tufts University This article is republished from The Conversation under a Creative Commons license. Read the original article. US President has said that he has told his Chinese counterpart that it is never a good bet to bet against the American people. The Biden administration has already made it clear that the most effective way for America to out-compete a more assertive and authoritarian over the long-term is to invest in its people, its economy and its democracy. "I've told Xi Jinping, it is never a good bet to bet against the American people. We'll create good jobs for millions of Americans, modernising roads, airports, ports, and waterways all across America. We will do it all to withstand the devastating effects of the climate crisis and promote environmental justice, Biden said in his first State of the Union Address on Tuesday night. Biden announced plans to build a national network of 500,000 electric vehicle charging stations, begin to replace poisonous lead pipesso every child - and every American - has clean water to drink at home and at school, and provide affordable high-speed internet for every Americanurban, suburban, rural, and tribal communities. "4,000 projects have already been announced, he said and announced that this year the US will start fixing over 65,000 miles of highway and 1,500 bridges in disrepair. 'When we use taxpayer dollars to rebuild America we are going to Buy American: buy American products to support American jobs, he said. Announcing to have an infrastructure decade, he said it is going to transform America and put us on a path to win the economic competition of the 21st Century that the country faces with the rest of the world - particularly with . Biden asserted that his administration will buy American equipment to make sure everything from the deck of an aircraft carrier to the steel on highway guardrails are made in America. But to compete for the best jobs of the future, we also need to level the playing field with and other competitors, he said. "That's why it is so important to pass the Bipartisan Innovation Act sitting in Congress that will make record investments in emerging technologies and American manufacturing, he added. (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.) Japan's prime minister says his country will accept refugees from Ukraine, as Russia invades its eastern European neighbour. Prime Minister Fumio Kishida told reporters on Wednesday that the offer includes Ukrainians who have fled to Poland. We plan to start first with those with family and friends in Japan, but we will not stop there and will respond from a humanitarian viewpoint, Kishida told reporters. The Japanese offer is unusual, though has accepted refugees before, from various nations, albeit in very small numbers. has often been criticised for providing a relatively narrow door for migrants wanting to get in. Those immigration policies have become even tighter due to the coronavirus pandemic. (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.) A federal jury is scheduled to hear attorneys' opening statements Wednesday for the first trial stemming from the riot at the last year. Twelve jurors and four alternates were selected Tuesday for the trial of Guy Wesley Reffitt. The resident of Wylie, Texas, is charged with bringing a gun onto Capitol grounds and interfering with police officers who were guarding the building on Jan. 6, 2021. Reffitt also is charged with threatening his teenage children if they reported him to authorities. US District Judge Dabney Friedrich individually questioned dozens of prospective jurors on Monday and Tuesday. She disqualified several members of the jury pool who said they have strong opinions or emotions about the riot that would make it difficult for them to be impartial. A man employed by the Architect of the Capitol was among those disqualified from serving as a juror. The man, who manages construction projects for the Library of Congress, said he knows one of the Capitol police officers who was assaulted during the Jan. 6 attack. He also said it also was upsetting to see the damage to the Capitol, which has cost more than $1 million to repair. You do get kind of emotionally invested in your work, he told the judge. Reffitt's trial could be a bellwether for many other Capitol riot cases. A conviction would give prosecutors more leverage in plea talks with . An acquittal could inspire other defendants to either push for a more favourable plea deal or gamble a trial of their own. More than 750 people have been charged with federal crimes related to the riot following then-President Donald Trump's Stop the Steal rally. Over 200 of them have pleaded guilty, more than 100 have been sentenced and at least 90 have trial dates. A prosecutor said a Capitol police officer will be the first government witness at Reffitt's trial after opening statements. The trial is expected to stretch into next week. Reffitt is a member of a militia-style group called the Texas Three Percenters, according to prosecutors. The Three Percenters militia movement refers to the myth that only 3% of Americans fought in the Revolutionary War against the British. Reffitt was armed with a holstered handgun and wearing body armour when he and charged at police officers on the west side of the Capitol, according to prosecutors. Reffitt retreated only after an officer pepper sprayed him in the face, prosecutors said. Defense attorney William Welch has said there is no evidence that Reffitt damaged property, used force or physically harmed anybody. Reffitt faces five counts: obstruction of an official proceeding, being unlawfully present on Capitol grounds while armed with a firearm, transporting firearms during a civil disorder, interfering with law enforcement officers during a civil disorder, and obstruction of justice. The obstructing justice charge stems from threats that he allegedly made against his son, then 18, and daughter, then 16. Reffett told his children to choose a side or die and said they would be traitors if they reported him to law enforcement, prosecutors said. (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.) A spokesman says a Russian delegation will be ready on Wednesday evening to resume talks with Ukrainian officials about the war in Ukraine. Spokesman Dmitry Peskov told reporters Wednesday that in the second half of the day, closer to evening, our delegation will be in place to await Ukrainian negotiators. He did not indicate where the talks could take place. There was no immediate word from Ukrainian authorities about their plans. The first round of talks on resolving the Russia-Ukraine war were held near the Belarus-Ukraine border last Sunday. They produced no breakthrough, though the two sides agreed to meet again. Ukrainian President Volodymyr Zelenskyy accused Russia of trying to force him into concessions by continuing to press its invasion. (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.) As Russia's top diplomat during the invasion of Ukraine, Foreign Minister Sergey Lavrov is embodying the Kremlin's defiant posture with a mixture of toughness and sarcasm. While President Vladimir Putin single-handedly shapes the country's foreign policy, Lavrov delivers Moscow's message with a bluntness uncharacteristic of a diplomat. In the role for nearly 18 years, the 71-year-old Lavrov has seen relations with the West shift from near-friendly to openly hostile, plummeting to a catastrophic new low with Russia's war against Ukraine. The invasion prompted the European Union to freeze the assets of both Putin and Lavrov, among an unprecedented blow to Moscow's pride. Lavrov's tenure as foreign minister is second only to that of Soviet Foreign Minister Andrei Gromyko, who was in office for 28 years. Like Gromyko, who was nicknamed Mr. Nyet (Mr. No), Lavrov has come to represent the uncompromising face of foreign policy vis a vis the West. He doesn't mince words when defending what he sees as Moscow's interests, and that style must appeal to the tough-talking Russian president. In 2008, Lavrov famously responded to a reprimand from then British Foreign Secretary David Miliband by snapping: Who are you to (expletive) lecture me? Like his boss, Lavrov has tapped into broad public nostalgia for the country's Soviet-era clout. He has vented anger at the West, depicting the U.S. as arrogant, conceited, treacherous and determined to dominate the world. He has contemptuously dismissed Western allies as stooges obediently toeing Washington's line to deter . Standing next to British Foreign Secretary Liz Truss after their meeting last month, a grim-faced Lavrov snapped that their talks were like a conversation between deaf and dumb. After a lifelong diplomatic career, Lavrov looks visibly bored by daily routine. When he appears before the media, he doesn't bother to hide his irritation at a naive or provocative question, often responding with an air of contempt or plain mockery. When a CNN reporter in a video call from the Ukrainian capital asked Lavrov whether Moscow wants to topple the Ukrainian leadership, the aide who managed Friday's briefing interrupted and said it wasn't his turn to put a question. The reporter continued, and an angry Lavrov weighed in: He's discourteous. He's working in Ukraine now. He's got infected with discourtesy. Lavrov has particular distaste for photographers, showing annoyance at the clacking of camera shutters. At one news conference, he muttered an expletive into the microphone in apparent anger at disorderly reporters; the expression became a meme, widely adopted in T-shirt designs for the patriotic audience. Lavrov has weathered endless waves of speculation that he was on the verge of retirement. Instead, he has become one of the longest-lasting members of Putin's Cabinet and a perennial figure among a changing kaleidoscope of foreign counterparts. Before becoming foreign minister, he served as Russia's ambassador to the United Nations for 10 years and liked to have informal chats with journalists, trading news and jokes over a cigarette in the U.N. corridors. He writes poetry, sings songs on guitar with friends, and eagerly took part in skits with other diplomats at events when Russia's ties with the West were less rancorous. But his smiles and easy ways are a thing of the past now that Lavrov launches daily, angry diatribes against the West over Ukraine, the largest ground conflict Europe has seen since World War II. On Tuesday, he was barred from flying to Geneva to attend a U.N. conference after European Union members banned Russian planes from their skies as part of bruising sanctions against Moscow. Lavrov denounced what he called the outrageous move in a video address to the U.N. session, charging that the EU countries are trying to avoid a candid face-to-face dialogue or direct contacts designed to help identify political solutions to pressing issues. The West clearly has lost self-control in venting anger against and has destroyed its own rules and institutions, including respect for private property, Lavrov said. It's necessary to put an end to the arrogant Western philosophy of self-superiority, exclusivity and total permissiveness. (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.) Prime Minister has spoken with President of the European Council, Charles Michel and expressed his anguish over the deteriorating situation and humanitarian crisis in . He reiterated India's appeal for cessation of hostilities and a return to dialogue. The Prime Minister stressed that the contemporary global order was anchored on law, UN Charter and respect for territorial integrity and sovereignty of all states. Modi welcomed the talks between the two parties and stressed upon the importance of ensuring free and uninterrupted humanitarian access and smooth movement of all people. He also spoke about efforts being made by India to send urgent relief supplies, including medicines, to the affected areas. Meanwhile, India is sending Air Force C-17 transport aircraft to Romania on Wednesday to bring Indian citizens from stranded in Ukraine, said Foreign Secretary Harsh Vardhan Shringla on Tuesday. The aircraft will take off from its home base in Hindon Air Force Station near Delhi. The war has reached to capital city Kiev and second largest city Kharkiv. Further, countries embassies, including Indian Embassy, based in Kiev are moving Lviv amid intensified bombing. Over next three days, 26 flights have been scheduled to operate. "Tomorrow morning at 4am, C-17 will fly to Romania to evacuate the students," Shringla said. Expressing deep concerns, Shringla said that so far 12,000 Indians have been brought out of which is 60 per cent of total Indians in Ukraine. He also confirmed that no one is left in Kiev as of now. The Foreign Secretary said that Indian nationals had been advised in Kiev to head to western parts and exit from there whenever they can. They can go towards Hungary, Slovakia, Romania, Poland and Moldova. 7700 nationals have exited through these routes, he informed. Modi has expressed deep anguish over killing of Indian student and we have not just reiterated and demanded in Delhi, envoys of and Ukraine but also in those countries through diplomatic and military channels for safe passage of Indians, said Foreign Secretary. --IANS sk/pgh (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.) Visiting Secretary General of the North Atlantic Treaty Organisation (NATO) Jens Stoltenberg has stressed diplomatic efforts to solve the ongoing crisis. Stoltenberg made the remarks at a joint press conference on Tuesday with Estonian Prime Minister Kaja Kallas and visiting British Prime Minister Boris Johnson at the Tapa Army Base in northern Estonia. He called for an immediate stop of the war in Ukraine, pullout of Russian forces and the engaging of diplomatic efforts, Xinhua news agency reported. "Over the last weeks, in response to Russia's attacks on Ukraine, we have increased our defensive presence in the air, on land, and at sea," he noted. There are "over 100 jets at high alert operating from 30 different locations and over 120 ships from the Baltic Sea to the Mediterranean," Stoltenberg said, adding that Britain, the US and other allies are deploying thousands more troops to the eastern part of the alliance. "For the first time in our history, we are deploying the response force," said the chief, who termed as a defensive alliance that does not seek conflict with . The second round of peace talks between and could take place on Wednesday, the TASS news agency reported Tuesday citing sources. The first round of the negotiations, which lasted about five hours, concluded on Monday in Belarus' Gomel region, with no clear breakthrough. For his part, Johnson said that he wanted to be "crystal clear" that "we will not fight Russian forces in Ukraine" and "our reinforcements, like the reinforcements here in Tapa, are firmly within the borders of NATO members." On the number of reinforced troops, the British prime minister said "we will always keep things under review." He also termed the "no-fly zone" on Russian aircraft over as a very big step that "simply is not on the agenda of any NATO country." More than 900 members of the Royal Welsh infantry regiment of the British Army and nearly 200 Danish troops together with their vehicles and equipment will be joining NATO Battlegroup Estonia at Tapa Army Base, the Estonian Public Broadcasting reported on Tuesday. Estonian President Alar Karis met with Stoltenberg at Tallinn airport earlier on the day. Stoltenberg also made a trip to Poland with a visit to Lask airbase on Tuesday. --IANS int/sks/dpb (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.) surged over 7% on Tuesday to their highest since 2014, as a global agreement to release crude reserves failed to calm fears about supply disruptions from Russia's invasion of . Members of the Energy Agency (IEA), which includes the United States and Japan, agreed to release 60 million barrels of crude from their reserves to try to quell the sharp increase in prices that pushed major benchmarks past $100 a barrel. However, news of that release - equivalent to less than one day of worldwide oil consumption - only magnified the market's fear that supply will be inadequate to cover growing disruptions. Brent futures rose $7.00, or 7.1%, to settle at $104.97 a barrel, their highest close since August 2014. U.S. West Texas Intermediate (WTI) crude rose $7.69, or 8.0%, to settle at $103.41. That was its highest close since July 2014 and its biggest daily percentage gain since November 2020. Markets rallied further in thin post-close trading, with Brent surpassing $107 and U.S. crude above $106 per barrel after the American Petroleum Institute, an industry group, said U.S. crude stocks fell by more than 6 million barrels in the most recent week. In intraday trade, Brent hit its highest since July 2014 and WTI its highest since June 2014. In addition to crude, U.S. heating oil and gasoline futures also hit their highest since 2014. U.S.-led sanctions on exempted the energy sector, but traders are shying away from trading Russian barrels, leading to big discounts on that oil and tightening supply for other kinds of crude. Across various markets, different grades of oil in the Middle East and elsewhere surged. Russia's military move on Kyiv, Ukraine's capital, has stalled as its forces struggle with food and fuel shortages, with some units apparently gripped by low morale, a senior U.S. defense official said on Tuesday. "Oil's climbing the war wall of worry," said John Kilduff, partner at Again Capital in New York. He said traders were disappointed in the size of the release of strategic reserves. The world's biggest shipping firm, AP Moeller-Maersk A/S, was halting container movement to and from Russia, while Britain has banned all ships with any Russian connection from entering its ports. Major oil and gas companies, including BP and Shell PLC, have announced plans to exit Russian operations and joint ventures. TotalEnergies SA said it would not invest further capital in its Russian operations. The largest supplier of global oil, the Organization of the Petroleum Exporting Countries (OPEC) and allies including Russia, known as OPEC+, have not signaled a desire to boost production beyond their expected 400,000 barrels per day (bpd) increase in April, despite entreaties from the United States and others. The group is due to meet on Wednesday for a monthly meeting. "The pledge from OPEC+ to increase supply is so far a paper promise," said Louise Dickson, senior oil market analyst at Rystad Energy, noting that participating OPEC+ deal members are producing about 800,000 bpd below stated target levels, further squeezing global supplies. Futures for Brent and WTI through October were in what Robert Yawger, executive director of energy futures at Mizuho, has called "super-backwardation" with each month trading at least $1 a barrel below the prior month. Backwardation, a market structure where prompt contracts are more expensive than those for later dates, indicates fear of being able to find cargoes in the near-term, as global oil demand has largely recovered from the worst of the coronavirus pandemic while production has not kept pace. Libya's parliament approved a new government on Tuesday, but the incumbent administration rejected the vote and vowed not to cede power. Libya, an OPEC member, produced about 1.2 million bpd of crude in 2021, according to U.S. energy data. The API figures showed an unexpected drop in U.S. stocks. Government figures will be released Wednesday, when analysts expect the latest U.S. data will show a 2.7 million-barrel increase in crude stocks. [EIA/S] [API/S] [ENERGYUSA] [ENERGYAPI] (Additional reporting by Laura Sanicola in New York, Julia Payne in London and Muyu Xu in Beijing; Editing by Jason Neely, David Goodman, David Gregorio and Jonathan Oatis) (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.) The leaders of OPEC and its oil-producing allies are deciding Wednesday how much oil to release while Russia's invasion of Ukraine rattles markets, reshapes alliances, kills civilians and sends the price of crude skyrocketing. The OPEC+ coalition of oil producers made up of OPEC members led by Saudi Arabia and non-cartel members led by Russia is weighing whether to increase by 400,000 barrels per day in April. Since July, the coalition has been adding that amount of oil each month to gradually restore deep cuts to production made early in the coronavirus pandemic when demand for fuel plummeted. People have been driving and flying more as COVID-19 restrictions have eased in parts of the world, but the amount of oil on the market hasn't kept up with demand. Both U.S. and benchmark crude oil pushed past USD 100 a barrel again Wednesday as investors worried about the invasion by Russia, one of the world's largest energy suppliers. While the coalition of oil-producing nations can benefit from high prices, the decision-makers will be walking a fine line, because high energy prices can backfire and push oil-consuming economies their customers into recession. The fallout from Russia's invasion of Ukraine will have a huge impact on the OPEC+ meeting, being held online. Participating nations must keep in mind that the situation could cause a global recession, as could high oil prices, said Amy Myers Jaffe, research professor and managing director of the Climate Policy Lab at Tufts University. That would send demand for crude plummeting again. It changes the outlook of uncertainty under which OPEC normally makes its decisions, Jaffe said. You can't do it based on your oil and gas supply and demand forecast. You also have to forecast geopolitical risk, you have to think about whether there's going to be sanctions, so you have to consider a wider range of issues." Before Russia's invasion of Ukraine, the Energy Agency asked OPEC+ to boost production beyond its planned increase, due to tight global oil supplies. The IEA took its own action to ease climbing prices Tuesday when the Paris-based organisation, which counts the U.S., Germany, France, the United Kingdom, Japan and Canada among its members, agreed to release 60 million barrels of oil from strategic reserves to send the message that oil supplies won't fall short due to the war. Adding to supply constraints, some oil buyers in recent days have shunned Russian crude, fearing that if sanctions were applied to Russian oil or gas, their purchased oil could be rendered unusable. Cargoes have already been rejected by European refiners in the market, because people are afraid sanctions might be coming, and so they don't want to be caught with some cargo they can't resell, Jaffe said. Russia's actions in Ukraine have made its crude oil one of the most toxic barrels on the market, said Louise Dickson, senior oil market analyst at Rystad Energy. Also, Russia may end up reducing its oil exports because it's using more fuel. Doing an invasion of the scale Russians are doing in Ukraine requires a lot of fuel, so their domestic use is going to go up, Jaffe said. So presumably, we're going to see less exports of Russian oil, unless they increase production because their demand's going up. Some OPEC+ nations have spare production capacity and theoretically could boost their own output for a while if Russia supplies less oil to the market or more buyers reject Russian crude. But those other nations may be reluctant to turn up the pumps. They've always kind of fallen back on the idea that they don't want to move into anybody else's space, said Jacques Rousseau, managing director at Clearview Energy Partners. If it does get to the point where Russian oil is pushed away, then the question becomes, where does the replacement oil come from? Saudi Arabia has the most spare capacity, followed by Iran and then the United Arab Emirates, according to Clearview. Other OPEC+ nations, including Angola and Nigeria, have been producing below their target levels. (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.) NVIDIA finally confirms the data breach after a ransomware gang claimed responsibility last Saturday. The breach includes confidential data about the tech company's software and hardware. The threat actors that carried out the breach are called Lapsus$. The group of hackers stated that they were able to seize 1TB of data from the company. The company is being held in ransom over an Ethereum hash rate limiter that was installed on its most recent graphics card release. NVIDIA's Data Breach NVIDIA stated that they are aware that the threat actors took sensitive information such as employee credentials and proprietary information from the company's system. The breach occurred just one day before the political turmoil and aggression started between two countries in Eastern Europe. This led numerous people in the community to assume that the hack NVIDIA experienced is part of the work of Russian state-sponsored hackers. However, NVIDIA clarified the rumor and stated that there is no evidence that the hacking in their systems is related to the onslaught in Eastern Europe. In addition, the threat actors Lapsus$ also denied their involvement in the political conflict. According to the GPU manufacturer, after becoming aware of the intrusion on Wednesday (Feb. 23), NVIDIA notified law enforcement and enlisted the assistance of cyber-security professionals in response to the attack. LAPSUS$ Hacking Motivation During the hacking, NVIDIA was aware throughout and made efforts to stop the breach from infiltrating their systems. During this period, they "quickly escalated to the level of system administrator for a large number of systems." NVIDIA attempted to retaliate by encrypting a machine the hackers were using to retrieve data from the company. However, the effort was unsuccessful due to the quick work of LAPSUS$. The group swiftly possessed all of the information it required. Furthermore, they also revealed that they had been successful in obtaining data they described as being of critical importance. The threat actors behind the hacking revealed that they had been in NVIDIA's systems for about a week. Read Also: iPhone 14 Pro and Pro Max Design Leak Shows Apple Pill-Shaped Display Replaces the Notch The group also stated that it has "decided to help [the] mining and gaming community" by demanding NVIDIA to push an update for all GeForce RTX 30 Series Firmware, which will remove any restrictions placed by the company on the cards. If NVIDIA refuses to comply with the group's demands, they will release a folder containing instructions on how to remove the tech giant from the market. According to the group, if they remove the LHR, "we will forget about [the] hw folder." LASPSUS$ also stated that they are aware of the negative impact of LHR on mining and gaming. Leaked Next-Generation GeForce GPU According to the leak, there will be six GPUs based on the AD100 architecture, which will be named after Ada Lovelace. The PC Gamer observed that the next-generation lineup will look good next to the graphics chips that came out of the Ampere generation. The company is going to use AD102, AD103, AD104, AD106, AD107, and AD10B chips to make the next generation of GeForce GPUs. However, official information about the new graphics cards still remains unknown. It is also not yet confirmed where the chips are going to be made, how big they are, or when users can expect to see them in stores. Related Also: GeForce RTX 3080 Ti Hashrate Trick Boosts Performance to 110 MH/s! Is It Safe? Amid the ongoing Russia- conflict, more than 2000 Pakistani nationals including 600 students are still stranded in Kyiv and other cities of . Ironically for stranded Pakistani nationals and students, the Russian mounted an attack the day Pakistani Prime Minister Imran Khan landed in Moscow on a 2-day visit. The government, Foreign Office and Embassy have miserably failed in meeting the challenge of evacuations of its nationals, according to media reports. The reports said that by February 26, the government could manage only 116 Pakistanis including 21 family members of the embassy staff and 35 students. Pak students in large numbers are stuck in Kharkiv. Stranded Pakistani workers and students accused Pakistani Embassy and Ambassador Major General (retired) Noel Israel Khokhar of cheating them and alleged that they are moving towards the borders of Romania, Poland and Hungary on their own without any assistance from the Pak Embassy. Pakistanis have been asked to gather at Ternopil for their transportation to Poland. Embassy has temporarily shifted to Ternopil. Family members of stranded students alleged that Pak authorities and the embassy are apathetic to their increasing concern, the report said. Except for the Pakistani elite including rulers, senior civil and military officers and top businessmen and industrialists, Pakistanis as well as overseas Pakistanis in general view Pak diplomatic missions abroad in a scornful way. Commenting on the state of affairs in Pak missions, a Pakistani media personality, having deep access to foreign office hierarchy suggested that the performance audit of Pak embassies and diplomatic missions spreading all over the world is urgently required to be carried out to find the service they are providing to the Pakistanis and overseas Pakistanis. This audit result will definitely be not above 5- 6 per cent if it is not a big zero. In connection with the situation in war-hit Ukraine, he said that the staff and diplomats in the Pak embassy in are still indifferent to tackling aggravating conditions of Pakistani students studying there. Despite hue and cry by Pakistanis and media after the Russian invasion of Ukraine, Pak embassy staff appears unmoved. All Pakistani students complain that the Pak embassy is not providing any help or assistance to them. People of Pakistan who had bitter memories of Pak diplomats and staff in China in tackling the same kind of crisis during the breakout of the COVID-19 pandemic have urged the Pak government to suspend all officers and staffers of the embassy and call them back to Pakistan as soon as Pakistani students return home. It will set an example for Pak embassies in other countries to take their diplomatic obligations sincerely, the report said. A political observer of Pakistan informed that whenever he visited the US, UK, Europe, Japan, Saudi Arabia, Turkey, UAE etc., Pakistanis always expressed their grievances about the arrogant treatment meted out to them by their embassies and diplomats. He also visited some embassies and diplomatic missions, where he found the same situation, which generally prevails in all government departments of Pakistan. There is no one to address their grievances. Those who visit Pak embassies are treated in such a way as if they are being obliged. Overseas Pakistanis generally complain that Pak diplomats and staff members misbehave with them. They blatantly misuse their official power and display arrogance and stubbornness, instead of carrying out their required duties. Educated and ambitious segments of Pakistani society consider postings abroad as highly lucrative and for making money, spending vacations and ensuring citizenship of the countries they will be posted as diplomats, for their children. On the other hand, diplomats of other countries hold meetings and establish contacts with government functionaries and business companies of the countries they are posted to for bringing business and investment from the host countries, said the report. Contrary to it, diplomats and staff members of Pak embassies enjoy western-styled parties and consider it as their insult to meet the business class of the country they are posted to. As far as overseas Pakistanis are concerned, they don't want to see their faces. Diplomats and other staff members are appointed in Pak embassies abroad on the basis of recommendations and nepotism, the report added. It further reported that foreign postings are considered a great source of income, instead of serving the people. Pakistanis, who have been victims of Pak embassies' insensitive attitude, regretted that Pakistani diplomats are never asked as to what they have done for Pakistan and overseas Pakistanis. Pak embassies are not subjected to a performance audit. It has also been a major complaint of Overseas Pakistanis that Pak diplomats instead of doing their actual work continue to extend protocol and services to their rulers, elite class, ministers, advisors, MPs and government officers, said the report. Their performance is judged on this parameter. It is also a tradition that every government appoints their favourites as ambassadors for rewarding them. It doesn't matter that they don't know anything about diplomacy. Likewise, a quota is allocated for retired generals with the objective of rewarding favourite people. There is no such system through which the work and performance of Pak embassies are monitored on regular basis. A poor country like Pakistan spends trillions of rupees annually on its embassies and diplomats and if this system cannot provide any help to Pakistanis living abroad in difficult times, what are the need for such embassies and diplomatic missions? It is totally unprofitable deal that these embassies are kept intact only for this purpose that favourite diplomats and staff continue getting lucrative postings and minting money. Their children get an education and citizenship of the countries they are living in. In exchange, they continue providing the best protocols to the Pakistani elite with the hard-earned money of Pakistani taxpayers, the report added. (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.) allowed its turn to pass as the UN General Assembly continued to debate a resolution demanding immediate withdrawal of Russian troops from Ukraine, according to a media report on Wednesday. The 193-member UN General Assembly convened the rare and unprecedented emergency special session on Russia's aggression against on Monday after the 15-nation Security Council voted on Sunday on a resolution to refer the crisis to the most representative body of the world organisation. The statement noted that launched an unprovoked action against that posed no threat to it. "This constitutes a clear violation of the Charter of the and presents a serious risk to global peace and security," it said. According to a UN statement, some 100 countries are expected to address the General Assembly, which is scheduled to vote on a draft resolution on Ukraine, tentatively expected on Wednesday. As a UN member, can participate in the UNGA debate, which entered its second day on Tuesday, but it has avoided doing so, the Dawn newspaper reported. Indications are that wants to avoid getting involved in the dispute which places it in an uncomfortable position. Pakistan is a traditional US ally, which once provided Washington a corridor to reach out to China. Pakistan, which is trying not to take sides on this, stayed away from debate on the issue of Ukraine, the report said. It said the US State Department urged journalists not to focus on individual specific countries when they asked questions about India's abstentions. India had abstained on the resolution, along with China and the UAE, while voted against and 11 Council members in favour. China is Pakistan's closest ally which supports Islamabad on key issues on various fora, such as the and the FATF. Diplomatic observers in Washington claim that China also played a key role in arranging Prime Minister Imran Khan's visit to last week. The observers argue that Pakistan is gradually orbiting out of the American influence and getting closer to both China and Russia, a claim Islamabad rejects as incorrect. Pakistan says it wants to maintain close ties with both China and the United States and apparently that is why it does not want to get involved in the Ukrainian dispute, the report said. Pakistan became conspicuous in the crisis as Prime Minister Khan was visiting Moscow when the attack was ordered by Russian President Vladimir Putin. Foreign Minister Shah Mahmood Qureshi said at a press briefing that it was a bilateral visit planned well ahead of the eruption of the conflict. He also said that Islamabad would not take sides and later on he held a telephonic conversation with his Ukrainian counterpart. While a UNSC resolution condemning the Russian invasion of Ukraine would have been legally binding and General Assembly resolutions are not, voting in the 193-member UN body is symbolic of world opinion on the crisis and carries political weight as they represent the will of the entire UN membership. (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.) Russian President signed a decree introducing temporary economic measures to ensure the country's financial stability, the Kremlin announced. These measures will be taken in response to anti-Russian sanctions by the US, other countries and organisations, according to the decree. Among the measures, will ban the outflow of foreign currencies in an amount exceeding the equivalent of $10,000 starting Wednesday, Xinhua news agency reported. Effective since Wednesday, restrictions regarding transactions of securities, real estate and loans will be imposed on foreigners associated with countries that have taken anti-Russian actions. On Monday, Putin inked a decree introducing "special economic measures" to cushion the impact of a new wave of Western sanctions amid Russia's special military operation in . --IANS int/sks/dpb (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.) Russia renewed its assault on Wednesday on Ukraine's second-largest city in a pounding that lit up the skyline with balls of fire over populated areas, even as both sides said they were ready to resume talks aimed at stopping the new devastating war in Europe. The escalation of attacks on crowded cities followed an initial round of talks between outgunned Ukraine and nuclear power Russia on Monday that resulted in only a promise to meet again. It was not clear when new talks might take place or what they would yield. Ukraine's leader earlier said Russia must stop bombing before another meeting. Ukrainian President Volodymyr Zelenskyy has decried Russia's bombardment as a blatant terror campaign, while US President Joe Biden warned on Tuesday that if the Russian leader didn't pay a price for the invasion, the aggression wouldn't stop with one country. The bombardment continued Wednesday. Ukrainian UNIAN news agency quoted the health administration chief of the northern city of Chernihiv as saying two cruise missiles hit a hospital there. The hospital's main building suffered damage, Serhiy Pivovar said, and authorities were working to determine the casualty toll. No other information was immediately available. A Russian strike also hit the regional police and intelligence headquarters in Kharkiv, Ukraine's second-largest city with a population of about 1.5 million, killing four people and wounding several, the state emergency service of Ukraine said. It added that residential buildings were also hit, but did not provide further details. A blast blew the roof off of the five-story police building and set the top floor alight, according to videos and photos released by the service. Pieces of the building were strewn across adjacent streets. The attack followed a day after one in Kharkiv's central square that killed at least six people and shocked many Ukrainians for hitting at the center of life in a major city. A Russian strike also targeted a TV tower in the capital of Kyiv. Roughly 874,000 people have fled Ukraine and the UN refugee agency warned the number could cross the 1 million mark soon. Countless others have taken shelter underground. The overall death toll from the seven-day war is not clear, with neither Russia nor Ukraine releasing the number of troops lost. Ukraine's State Emergency Service said more than 2,000 civilians have died, though it was impossible to verify that claim. The UN human rights office has tallied 136 civilian deaths, while acknowledging the actual toll is surely far higher. Ukrainian authorities said five people were killed in the TV tower strike, which also hit the site of the Babi Yar Holocaust memorial. A spokesman for the memorial said a Jewish cemetery at the site, where Nazi occupiers killed more than 33,000 Jews over two days in 1941, was damaged. Russia previously told people living near transmission facilities used by Ukraine's intelligence agency to leave their homes. But Russian Defense Ministry spokesman Igor Konashenkov claimed Wednesday that the airstrike on the TV tower did not hit any residential buildings. He did not address the reported deaths or the damage to Babi Yar. Zelenskyy, who called the strike on the square in Kharkiv a war crime that the world would never forget, expressed outrage Wednesday at the attack on Babi Yar and concern that other historically significant and religious sites, such as St. Sophia's Cathedral, could be targeted. Shelling earlier hit the town of Uman, a significant pilgrimage site for Hasidic Jews. This is beyond humanity, Zelenskyy said in a speech posted on Facebook. They have orders to erase our history, our country and all of us. Zelenskyy, who is Jewish, called on Jews around the world to protest the invasion. Even as Russia pressed its assault, Kremlin spokesman Dmitry Peskov said Wednesday that a delegation would be ready later in the day to meet Ukrainian officials. Ukrainian Foreign Minister Dmytro Kuleba also said his country was ready but noted that Russia's demands have not changed and that he wouldn't accept any ultimatums. Neither side said where the talks might take place. As the war wears on, Russia finds itself increasingly isolated, beset by the sanctions that have thrown its economy into turmoil and left the country practically friendless, apart from a few nations like China, Belarus and North Korea. Leading Russian bank Sberbank announced on Wednesday that it is pulling out of European markets amid the tightening Western sanctions. In Washington, Biden used his first State of the Union address on Tuesday to highlight the resolve of a reinvigorated Western alliance that has worked to rearm the Ukrainian military and adopt those tough sanctions. Throughout our history we've learned this lesson when dictators do not pay a price for their aggression, they cause more chaos, Biden said. They keep moving. And the costs and threats to America and the world keep rising. As Biden spoke, a 40-mile (64-kilometer) convoy of hundreds of Russian tanks and other vehicles advanced slowly on Kyiv, the capital city of nearly 3 million people, in what the West feared was a bid by Russian President to topple the government and install a Kremlin-friendly regime. The invading forces also pressed their assault on other towns and cities. Britain's Defense Ministry said Kharkiv and the strategic port of Mariupol were encircled by Russian forces and that troops had reportedly moved into the center of a third city, Kherson. Russia's Defense Ministry said it had seized Kherson, although the city's mayor denied Russia had taken full control. The Vienna-based Atomic Energy Agency, the United Nations' nuclear watchdog, said it had received a letter from Russia saying its military had taken control around Ukraine's largest nuclear power plant. According to the letter, personnel at the plant continued their work on providing nuclear safety and monitoring radiation in normal mode of operation, and it said the "radiation levels remain normal. Russia has already seized control of the decommissioned Chernobyl nuclear power plant, scene of the world's worst nuclear disaster in 1986. The IAEA says that it has received a request from Ukraine to provide immediate assistance in coordinating activities in relation to the safety of Chernobyl and other sites. Many military experts worry that Russia may be shifting tactics. Moscow's strategy in Chechnya and Syria was to use artillery and air bombardments to pulverize cities and crush fighters' resolve. Britain's Defense Ministry said it had seen an increase in Russian air and artillery strikes on populated urban areas over the past two days. Human Rights Watch said it documented a cluster bomb attack outside a hospital in Ukraine's east in recent days. Residents also reported the use of such weapons in Kharkiv and Kiyanka village. The Kremlin denied using cluster bombs. Cluster bombs shoot smaller bomblets over a large area, many of which fail to explode until long after they've been dropped. If their use is confirmed, that would represent a new level of brutality in the war. In the southern port city of Mariupol, the mayor said Wednesday morning that the attacks had been relentless. We cannot even take the wounded from the streets, from houses and apartments today, since the shelling does not stop," Mariupol Mayor Vadym Boychenko was quoted by the Interfax news agency as saying. Boychenko referred to Russia's actions as a genocide using the same word Putin has used to justify the invasion. On Tuesday, Moscow made new threats of escalation, days after raising the specter of nuclear war. A top Kremlin official warned that the West's economic war against Russia could turn into a real one. Russia has blamed the conflict on Western threats to Russia's security, and Peskov, the Kremlin spokesman, said Moscow was weighing counter-sanctions against unfriendly countries. He didn't elaborate on what they could target. Peskov acknowledged the global economic punishment hitting Russia and Russians now is unprecedented but said Moscow had been prepared for all manner of sanctions, and the potential damage had been taken into account before launching the invasion. We have experience with this. We have been through several crises, he said. Ukraine's Defense Ministry said it had evidence that Belarus, a Russian ally, is preparing to send troops into Ukraine. A ministry statement posted early on Wednesday on Facebook said Belarusian troops have been brought into combat readiness and are concentrated close to Ukraine's northern border. Belarusian President Alexander Lukashenko has said his country has no plans to join the fight. (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.) Russian Foreign Minister Sergei Lavrov said on Wednesday that if a third World War were to take place, it would involve nuclear weapons and be destructive, the RIA news agency reported. This followed his speech to a Geneva disarmament meeting on Tuesday that had been seeking to acquire nuclear weapons, a real danger that needed a Russian response. still has Soviet nuclear technologies and the means of delivery of such weapons. We cannot fail to respond to this real danger, he said, also calling for Washington to rebase its nuclear weapons from Europe. The day saw claiming its forces had taken control of the first sizable city on Wednesday, seizing Kherson, in the south, as fighting raged around the country with Russian paratroopers landing in Kharkiv, Ukraines second-biggest city, and Western nations tightened an economic noose around . More than half a million Ukrainians have fled the fighting since Russian President ordered a full-scale invasion of his southern neighbour nearly a week ago. said over 2,000 civilians had died since the start of the hostilities, while its forces had killed 6,000 of Russian troops. The gutted remains of Russian military vehicles on a road in the town of Bucha, close to the capital Kyiv, Ukraine Russian bombardments of Ukrainian cities continued, with video posted on social media showing heavily damaged buildings around the second city of Kharkiv. While he may make gains on the battlefield, he will pay a continuing high price over the long run, US President Joe Biden said at his State of the Union address. Straying from the prepared text, Biden added He has no idea whats coming., but did not elaborate, after calling Putin a dictator. badly miscalculated with his invasion of Ukraine, Biden said, while banning Russian flights from American airspace. He thought he could roll into Ukraine and the world would roll over. Instead he met a wall of strength he never imagined. He met the Ukrainian people, Biden said. People who fled from Ukraine rest at a shelter, amid Russias invasion on Ukraine, in Ubla, Slovakia Meanwhile, Ukrainian President Volodymyr Zelenskyy had a simple message for the Russians just stop the bombing. He said on Tuesday that must stop bombing Ukrainian cities before meaningful talks on a ceasefire could start, as a first round of negotiations this week had yielded scant progress. A civilian trains to throw Molotov cocktails to defend the city, in Zhytomyr, Ukraine Setting out his conditions for further talks with Russia, Zelenskyy told Reuters and CNN in a joint interview: Its necessary to at least stop bombing people, just stop the bombing and then sit down at the negotiating table. Just as he was speaking, news emerged that a Russian missile had struck a TV tower near a Holocaust memorial site in the Ukrainian capital, killing at least five people. Earlier on Tuesday, missiles struck the heart of the eastern city of Kharkiv. Later on Wednesday, after a call with European Union President Charles Michel, Zelenskyy said he was expecting positive news on his countrys membership bid. The World Bank also said it was preparing $3 billion in funding for Ukraine as it worked with the Monetary Fund work to support the country following its invasion by Russia. The World Banks board will consider a fast-disbursing budget support operation for at least $350 million that will be submitted this week, followed by $200 million in support for health and education, the two institutions said in a joint statement on Tuesday. Police detain demonstrators in St. Petersburg, Russia during a protest against Russias attack on Ukraine The Russian central bank banned coupon payments to foreign owners of rouble bonds known as OFZs in what it called a temporary step to shore up markets in the wake of sanctions. Prime Minister Mikhail Mishustin announced on Wednesday that all information technology companies in Russia will be exempt from paying income tax and free from inspections for three years. Amid top global firms moving out of Russia, the leader of the biggest cryptocurrency exchange said Russians seeking ways around financial sanctions was not a crypto-specific issue. Binance Holdingss chief executive refuted calls to restrict all Russians from using the worlds largest cryptocurrency exchange. Changpeng CZ Zhao said Binance has complied with government mandates to restrict sanctioned individuals, but that to expand that further would be unethical for us to do. The crypto industry follows the same rules as banks, he said. will investigate the death of the 21-year-old Indian medical student in the Ukrainian city of Kharkiv, Russian Ambassador-designate Denis Alipov said on Wednesday. Naveen Shekarappa Gyanagoudar, a fourth-year medical student at the Kharkiv National Medical University, was killed in intense shelling in Kharkiv on Tuesday. Following the incident, asked the envoys of both and Ukraine to ensure "urgent safe passage" to Indian nationals who are still in Kharkiv and other conflict zones. "I want to express our sympathy to the family of Naveen Shekarappa Gyanagoudar and to the entire Indian nation over the tragedy," Alipov said at a media briefing. " will do everything it possibly can to ensure the safety of Indian citizens in the areas of intense conflict...and a proper investigation of this unfortunate incident," he said. Naveen hailed from Chalageri in the Haveri district of Karnataka. On Tuesday night, Foreign Secretary Harsh Vardhan Shringla said Naveen's body has been identified and taken to a morgue in the university and that Indian authorities are in touch with the local administration in Kharkiv to bring back the mortal remains. According to Naveen's friends, he had gone out to buy some groceries and was on a line at a shop when he was hit, Shringla said, adding the circumstances are not absolutely clear. is carrying out a massive evacuation mission to bring back the Indians stranded in Ukraine. (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.) Export cargoes to CIS (Commonwealth of Independent States) countries are impacted due to ongoing war between and as no shipping line is willing to take consignments there, exporters' body FIEO said on Wednesday. CIS countries include Azerbaijan, Armenia, Belarus, Kazakhstan, Kyrgyzstan, Moldova, Russia, Tajikistan, Turkmenistan, Uzbekistan and . Federation of Indian Export Organisations (FIEO) Director-General Ajay Sahai said shipments to these nations are stopped because no shipping line is willing to take cargoes as there is no movement of ships through the Black Sea. To these countries, Indian goods move from the Suez Canal and the Black Sea. "Banks are also reluctant to accept the documents for shipments which are already at the Russian ports," he said. are suggesting the government to consider the possibility of trading in local currencies with . The commerce ministry is also holding meetings to discuss ways to minimise the impact of the war on trade. Finance Minister Nirmala Sitharaman recently stated that India is more worried about the impact caused by the standoff between and Russia, particularly on its exports. Bilateral trade between India and stood at USD 9.4 billion (USD 2.55 billion exports and USD 6.9 billion imports) so far this fiscal, against USD 8.1 billion in 2020-21. India's main imports from Russia include fuels, mineral oils, pearls, precious or semi-precious stones, nuclear reactors, boilers, machinery and mechanical appliances; electrical machinery and equipment and fertilisers. While major export items from India to Russia include pharmaceutical products, electrical machinery and equipment, organic chemicals and vehicles. India's bilateral trade with Ukraine stood at USD 2.3 billion (USD 372 million exports and about USD 2 billion imports) so far this fiscal, as against USD 2.5 billion in the last fiscal. The main items of Indian import from Ukraine are agriculture products, metallurgical products, plastics and polymers, etc., while pharmaceuticals, machinery, chemicals and food products, etc., are the major Indian exports to Ukraine. (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.) The mayor of Kiev has warned the residents that Russian forces are moving in on Ukraine's capital and has urged people to stay indoors and prepare to defend the city, BBC reported. "The enemy is massing forces closer and closer," said mayor Vitaliy Klitschko, adding that there was now fighting on the capital's outskirts. "We are preparing and will defend Kyiv (Kiev)! I call on all Kyivans not to lose their fortitude". So far Kiev has resisted Russian incursion attempts. An armoured Russian convoy stretching 40 miles is approaching from the city's north, and analysts believe it could be there to provide support for an invasion attempt from the west, BBC reported. Military expert Dr Jack Watling says the timing and manner of the Russian attack on Kiev is critical. "If the Russians commit to a major assault [in Kiev] and they haven't broken the back of the resistance, it will be very bloody and their troops might break," says Watling, a research fellow in land warfare and military Sciences at the Royal United Services Institute, BBC reported. He says Russians will want to "whittle down" the resistance before they commit their forces. Watling says there is evidence of low morale among Russian troops, citing lost and confused advance units - and their initial surprise at coming under fire from Ukrainians. "We have heard reports of them damaging their own equipment because they don't want to go in to fight," he said. But he says the effect of low morale will diminish as Russian troops come together to fight in larger formations, as their mission becomes clearer and as Ukrainians begin to run out of ammunition, BBC reported. --IANS san/shs (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.) Top oil exporter may sharply hike prices of crude for in April, trade sources said on Wednesday, with differentials for most grades hitting all-time highs as global supplies tighten over financing and shipping issues from sanctions on Russia. The official selling price (OSP) for Saudi's flagship Arab Light crude may rise to a record of $4.50 a barrel, up $1.70, three of five refining sources told Reuters in a survey. Another two respondents said the OSP could rise by $1.50 and $2.20 a barrel. The sharp price hikes are tracking strong gains in Middle East benchmark Dubai last month which reached record levels as buyers faced limited options amid tight supplies. Benchmark grades Dubai, Oman and Murban continued to surge hitting fresh all-time highs on Tuesday, the first day of trading this month. Global oil price Brent jumped more than 4% on Wednesday to its highest since July 2014. [O/R] "It's very hard to forecast especially with so much uncertainty ahead," one respondent said. Light crude grades continued to be underpinned by robust margins for middle distillates although some respondents expect smaller price hikes for heavier grades. Even then, the OSPs for Arab Medium and Arab Heavy crude may still hit record levels in April, the survey showed. Despite record prices, some refiners including India's Bharat Petroleum Corp are seeking extra oil from Middle Eastern producers for April.Saudi crude OSPs are usually released around the fifth of each month, and set the trend for Iranian, Kuwaiti and Iraqi prices, affecting about 9 million barrels per day (bpd) of crude bound for . State oil giant Saudi Aramco sets its crude prices based on recommendations from customers and after calculating the change in the value of its oil over the past month, based on yields and product prices. Saudi Aramco officials as a matter of policy do not comment on the kingdom's monthly OSPs. Below are expected Saudi prices for April (in $/bbl against the Oman/Dubai average):MARCH Change est.APRIL OSP Arab Extra Light +3.60 +1.70/+2.35 +5.30/+5.95 Arab Light +2.80 +1.50/+2.20 +4.30/+5.00 Arab Medium +2.75 +1.15/+2.10 +3.90/+4.85 Arab Heavy +1.40 +0.70/+2.10 +2.10/+3.50 Source: Reuters, trade (Reporting by Florence Tan; editing by Richard Pullin) (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.) (Reuters) - Singapore's ministry of trade and industry (MTI) said on Wednesday it hoped the issue of India's ban of popular gaming app "Free Fire", owned by technology group Sea Ltd, could be resolved expeditiously. "'Free Fire' is a gaming app owned by Sea Ltd, a leading technology company founded and headquartered in . We hope that this matter can be resolved expeditiously," the MTI said in response to a Reuters request for comment. Reuters reported last week that has raised concerns with India about the ban, citing four sources. (Reporting by Aradhana Aravindan; Editing by Martin Petty) (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.) The Russian-Ukraine conflict has affected several industries in the world, including some notable car companies are poised to cease operations in Russia. Ford, Volvo, Boeing, GM Cars, and More Suspend Business Operations Following the sanctions given by the President of the United States, Joe Biden, to Russia, several car manufacturers have been suspending their operations in the said country. According to the Financial Times, American car manufacturer Ford announced that it is ceasing operations in the region with its Russian joint venture partner Sollers. "The situation has compelled us to reassess our operations in Russia," Ford explained as the suspension of their operations in Russia began immediately until further notice. The company's primary motivation for the move was the numerous Ukrainian nationals working for Ford around the world. With regards to the car manufacturer's operation in Russia, the company is focusing on commercial van manufacturing and Russian sales through the Sollers Ford joint venture. Financial Times emphasized that Ford and Sollers collaborated last 2011 to manage the Elabuga Assembly Plant in the Republic of Tatarstan. Before Ford's move, the Swedish automaker Volvo Cars is also ceasing its operation in the largest country in the world. Read Also: Felicity Ace Cargo Ship Carrying Volkswagen, Porsche, and Lamborghini Cars Sinks After Burning for 2 Weeks Reuters reported that the car manufacturer announced on Monday, Feb. 28 that it will halt car shipments to Russia until further notice. Through this initiative, Volvo became the first worldwide automaker to cease operations as the sanctions against Moscow for its invasion of Ukraine continue to progress. To emphasize the decision made behind its halting, the Swedish car company stated in a press release acquired by Reuters that there are "potential risks associated with trading material with Russia, including the sanctions imposed by the EU and US." For this matter, Volvo also clarified that they will not deliver any vehicles to the Russian market until further notice. Volvo previously regularly exported vehicles to Russia from their Sweden, China and US plants. Similar to other car manufacturers, General Motors (GM) also announced on Monday that all vehicle exports to Russia would be halted until further notice, per another Reuters report. The Detroit automaker sells approximately 3,000 vehicles in Russia each year and has limited supply-chain exposure. The flurry of operation stoppages does not end with car manufacturers. Financial Times also noted that the aerospace company and leading manufacturer of commercial jetliners and defense, Boeing, also announced on Tuesday, March 1 that it will be suspending its major operations in Russia. In addition to the suspension, the aerospace giant will also be halting parts, maintenance, and technical support services for Russian airlines. Other Goods Affected by Ukraine War Aside from the car manufacturers, other industries are also affected by the Russia-Ukraine conflict. Business Standard noted that several European countries are relying on Russian energy, notably gas, which is transported through numerous critical pipelines, and this may have influenced their response to the crisis. In addition to the affected goods, the wheat exports will also be affected by the ongoing conflict. Russia and Ukraine export a massive number of the world's wheat, while Ukraine alone exports nearly half of the world's sunflower oil. For those unfamiliar, both wheat and sunflower oil are important ingredients in a variety of food. Related Article: Ukraine Raises $10 Million in Crypto Donations: European Country Accepts Bitcoin, Ethereum, and USDT Another special flight carrying 218 Indian nationals from - evacuated via Bucharest - under the 'Operation Ganga' landed at Delhi airport on Wednesday morning. This is the ninth flight of 'Operation Ganga' that evacuated stranded Indian citizens from . Union Minister Dr Jitendra Singh received the Indian nationals at the airport. While interacting with media, he said: "About 220 students arrived via Istanbul. I asked a girl where she is from, like state-wise, but she replied, "I'm from India." They still can't believe that they are back in India due to stress. We ensured they spoke with their parents". Another flight carrying the Indian nationals is also expected to land soon at the airport. Meanwhile, two Indian Air Force aircraft took off for Romania and Hungary from the Hindon airbase this morning to bring back stranded Indians. According to an estimate, a total of 18,000 students were stranded in the war-torn . However, Foreign Secretary Harsh Vardhan Shringla said on Tuesday that of them 12,000 have been brought back. --IANS avr/shb/ (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.) Italy's government is studying ways to reduce the country's reliance on gas imports from Russia, Prime Minister Mario Draghi has told Parliament. Draghi sought to reassure Italians concerned about the rising security risks and spiraling energy prices stemming from the Russia- military conflict that "the government is working non-stop to counter the possible repercussions." Energy prices have been surging in since before the crisis. According to the country's National Institute of Statistics (ISTAT), energy prices surged 29.1 per cent in December 2021 and a further 38.6 per cent in January, Xinhua news agency reported. Preliminary data show that prices will continue to increase as a result of the crisis. Draghi noted that imports 95 per cent of the natural gas it uses, and more than 40 per cent of its total imports come from . He said that gas imports from are not expected to be suspended, but "it is important to assess all eventualities." With spring approaching, the rising temperatures will reduce the need for gas for heating. The country has 2.5 billion cubic metres of gas in storage, which should allow it to absorb disturbances in supply, he said. The "situation risks being more complex for the next winter period and also for the more immediate future," he acknowledged. --IANS int/sks/dpb (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.) A rally involving thousands of Georgians took place in front of the Georgian parliament in Tbilisi on Tuesday, with protesters demanding that Prime Minister Irakli Garibashvili step down after refusing to join the West's sanctions against Russia, as broadcast on Georgian television. The Rustaveli Avenue adjacent to the parliament building was blocked. Opposition figures, NGO members, and ordinary people gave speeches to the protesters following Garibashvili's unwillingness to join new sanctions against over its military operation in . "Our first demand is for Garibashvili and his government to leave. He brought disgrace on Georgia, our history and our future; he must go, he must no longer represent our decent people. We must move to actions and concrete steps to help and show solidarity with them. It is necessary to close the sky for Russia, and open the sky for Ukraine," Elene Khoshtaria, a Georgian lawmaker and the leader of the opposition Droa party, said. Another requirement of the demonstrators is to apply for Georgia's membership in the European Union after the government resigns, according to Khoshtaria. Last Friday, Garibashvili said that his country will not join financial and economic sanctions against Russia, as it will damage national interests and interests of the Georgian people. responded by recalling its ambassador from Tbilisi on Tuesday. Last Thursday, began a special operation to demilitarize and "denazify" Ukraine, responding to calls for help from the Donetsk and Luhansk people's republics in countering the aggression of Ukrainian troops. In response, the United States, the United Kingdom, members of the European Union, and some other countries imposed comprehensive sanctions against . Some closed their airspace to all Russian flights, sanctioned a number of Russian banks and officials. They are also seeking to disconnect Russia from SWIFT, and the payment system confirmed on Tuesday that it will obey the law on sanctions once it gets the legal order. (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.) A Japanese court will on Thursday deliver its verdict on former Motor director Greg Kelly who is accused of helping the automaker's ousted chairman, Carlos Ghosn, hide $80 million of income from financial regulators. The judgement, which comes after an 18-month trial and more than three years since Kelly's arrest alongside Ghosn, may be the closest a Japanese court gets to ruling on the culpability of Nissan's ex-chairman in alleged financial crimes. Kelly has taken centre stage in the District Court because Ghosn is beyond the reach of Japanese prosecutors after fleeing to Lebanon in 2019 hidden in a box on a private jet. Kelly has sat through months of testimony from ex- colleagues including former CEO Hiroto Saikawa, and senior legal affairs executive Hari Nada, with prosecutors submitting emails and stacks of documents they say show Kelly illegally devised ways to defer payments to his boss. The charges spring from a financial regulation change in 2010 that required executives earning more than 1 billion yen ($8.71 million) to disclose their pay. Kelly has denied breaking the law and testified that his only intent was to give Ghosn, who was also the chief executive at Renault, a compensation package that would dissuade him from defecting to a rival automaker. Both Kelly and Ghosn also allege they are victims of a boardroom coup by former colleagues worried that Ghosn wanted to merge with alliance partner and largest shareholder Renault SA. The Nissan company, which was charged alongside Kelly and Ghosn, pleaded guilty at the start of the trial to allowing Ghosn to hide earnings from Japanese authorities. It is awaiting a court ruling. Prosecutors are seeking a 200 million yen ($1.74 million) fine for the carmaker. WATCHING Released on Christmas day in 2018 after a month in jail, Kelly has had to remain in under conditions set in his $600,000 bail. He wife Dee joined him and has attended most court sessions The case has captivated a country astonished by Ghosn's transformation from feted auto executive to fugitive. It is also being watched closely by the new U.S. ambassador to Japan, Rahm Emanuel, amid concern about the American's treatment by a justice system that some western observers view as overly harsh. Suspects in are not allowed to have a lawyer present during interrogations and can be detained for up to three weeks without charge. And 99% of cases that go to trial end with a conviction. "Mr Kelly is a citizen of the United States and this comes with an obligation as ambassador of the United States to advocate on his behalf," Emanuel said during a press briefing in last week. The former mayor of Chicago and one-time chief of staff to U.S. President Barack Obama said he had called Kelly and his wife soon after arriving in in January. Prosecutors have asked the three judges to convict Kelly and send him to jail for two years. That would make him the third American connected to Ghosn to be locked up. A Japanese court in July sentenced U.S. Army Special Forces veteran Michael Taylor to two years in prison and his son Peter to one year and eight months for their part in helping him escape Japan. For now the once globe-trotting Ghosn is stuck in Lebanon, unable to travel overseas without risking arrest and a return to Japan. In addition to the charge of hiding $80 million of earnings over eight years, Ghosn is also accused of enriching himself at his employer's expense through $5 million of payments to a Middle East car dealership, and for temporarily transferring personal investment losses to his former employer's books. Ghosn has denied all the accusations against him. ($1 = 115.0100 yen) ($1 = 114.9800 yen) (This story has not been edited by Business Standard staff and is auto-generated from a syndicated feed.) The in Polish capital Warsaw on Wednesday advised Indians stuck in Lviv and Ternopil and other places in western to travel at the earliest to the Budomierz border check-point for a relatively quick entry into . In an advisory, the embassy asked the Indians to consider avoiding the Shehyni-Medyka border crossing which has been witnessing very long queues and massive gatherings of people. India has launched an evacuation mission under which its nationals from Hungary, Romania, and Slovakia are being brought back home after their exit from through its land border crossings. "Indians presently in Lviv and Ternopil and other places in western may travel at the earliest to Budomierz border check-point for a relatively quick entry into Poland," the embassy said. "Alternatively, they are advised to travel south to transit via Hungary or Romania. They may avoid Shehyni-Medyka border crossing which continues to be congested," it said. It said the embassy has deployed officials in Medyka and Budomierz border check-points who will receive all evacuees and facilitate their travel to India. "Those who enter from any other border crossing where Indian officials are not deployed may kindly travel directly to Hotel Prezydencki, ul. Podwislocze 48 in Rzeszow where all arrangements have been made for their stay and from where Operation Ganga flights to India are being operated regularly," it said. The embassy said the transportation charges will be paid at the hotel by the embassy, in case Indian students do not have funds for it. At a media briefing on Tuesday night, Foreign Secretary Harsh Vardhan Shringla said 26 flights have been scheduled to bring Indian citizens over the next three days. He said apart from Bucharest and Budapest, airports in Poland and the Slovak Republic will also be used to operate the flights. "I had mentioned that we had an estimated 20,000 Indian students in Ukraine at the time that we issued our first advisory," he said. "This is the general number of people who are Indian nationals in Ukraine and from that number 12,000, approximately have since left Ukraine, which is 60 per cent of the total number of our citizens in Ukraine," Shringla said. He further added: "Of the remaining 40 per cent, roughly half remain in the conflict zone in the Kharkiv-Sumy area and other half have either reached the western borders of Ukraine or are heading towards the western borders of Ukraine. In other words, they are generally out of the conflict areas, out of harm's way." The in Ukraine issued a series of advisories earlier last month requesting people to consider leaving the country after its tensions with Russia increased. (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.) Canadian Prime Minister Justin Trudeau on Tuesday (local time) spoke with South African President about Russia-Ukraine and other global issues. Trudeau strongly condemned the large-scale military aggression by Russia against the territorial integrity, sovereignty, and independence of Ukraine. According to Trudeau's statement, they both expressed their profound concern for the human cost of armed conflict and agreed on the importance of humanitarian law and the Charter of the United Nations. The leaders discussed efforts to bring an end to this unnecessary conflict that will have far-reaching global impacts, including for developing countries emerging from the pandemic. Both leaders also discussed how they could work together to help ensure a strong and rapid global response to the situation in Ukraine, the statement said. The two leaders reaffirmed their shared commitment to maintaining and strengthening the deep relationship between and South Africa, including pandemic recovery and climate change. They expressed their strong commitment to continue working closely together at the G20, within the Commonwealth, and at the United Nations to promote global peace, security, and stability for greater shared prosperity, the statement added. Earlier, Ukraine Foreign Affairs Minister Dmytro Kuleba assures efforts to help Africans seeking evacuation. "Russia's invasion of Ukraine has affected Ukrainians and non-citizens in many devastating ways. Africans seeking evacuation are our friends and need to have equal opportunities to return to their home countries safely. Ukraine's government spares no effort to solve the problem," Kuleba tweeted. (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.) The UK on Wednesday called for the "broadest possible coalition" against Russian President Vladimir Putin's actions in Ukraine, which includes India. Boris Johnson's spokesperson at 10 Downing Street told PTI that a phone call with Prime Minister Narendra Modi can be expected in the coming days, as the British Prime Minister reaches out to world leaders to seek universal condemnation of Putin's attacks on Ukrainian cities. We want to secure the broadest possible coalition against the actions that Putin is taking, the spokesperson said, in response to a question about the UK's message for India over the ongoing crisis in Ukraine. The Prime Minister has been speaking to a lot of world leaders to that end We expect him to be doing a lot of leaders calls in the coming days. We haven't locked down timings for each of those, the spokesperson said. Referring to a United Nations General Assembly resolution condemning Russia's actions to be voted upon by all member countries later on Wednesday, the UK PM's spokesperson said Britain's aim was that all countries unite in sending the clearest possible message to the Russian President. We would hope and expect that all countries could agree that invading a democratically elected country, with no provocation, bombing innocent men, women and children is something to be abhorred and condemned. We will continue to petition everyone to that end, the spokesperson said. The draft of the UN General Assembly resolution demands that the Russian Federation immediately, completely, and unconditionally withdraw all of its military forces from the territory of Ukraine within its internationally recognised borders. While such resolutions are non-binding, they are used to mount political pressure on countries. At a similar UN Security Council resolution vote vetoed by last week, India had abstained and called for a return to the path of diplomacy and cessation of violence. Meanwhile, Downing Street confirmed that the timetable for the India-UK free trade agreement (FTA) talks scheduled for a second round of negotiations between officials from both sides next week remains on track. (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.) YouTube, Facebook, Instagram and TikTok are restricting state-owned Russian media channels ahead of a likely European Union ban, aiming to curtail propaganda during Russias invasion of . The EU announced a ban Sunday, which countries are expected to sign off on today after a formal proposal. In the meantime, YouTube owner Alphabet, Facebook owner Meta Platforms Inc. and TikTok owner Bytedance Ltd. have already restricted access to accounts run by Sputnik and Today in the EU. We have received requests from a number of governments and the EU to take further steps in relation to Russian state controlled media, Nick Clegg, Metas president of global affairs, wrote in a tweet. Given the exceptional nature of the current situation, we will be restricting access to RT and Sputnik across the EU at this time. We will continue to work closely with governments on this issue. YouTube announced Tuesday morning that it would also block videos on the site, after previously restricting ads on the content. The ban is effective immediately but the company wrote that Itll take time for our systems to fully ramp up. Snap Inc., which owns Snapchat, said it has stopped all advertising running in Russia, Belarus and . We are halting advertising sales to all Russian and Belarusian entities and are complying with all sanctions targeting Russian businesses and individuals, the company said. We do not accept revenue from Russian state-owned entities. Roku Inc., the streaming-video platform, said Tuesday that it was removing RT from its channel store everywhere, including the U.S. Satellite service DirecTV announced a similar move earlier in the day. Russias invasion of Ukraine, which began Thursday, has prompted a growing number of governments to ask large technology companies to reduce or restrict their services in . Poland and the Baltic states asked companies on Sunday to take a stand against . Companies will soon be forced to take down the content, after Thierry Breton, the EUs internal market commissioner, said the EUs ban on the state-backed media will include broadcasting or platforms sharing RT and Sputnik content. Poland and the Baltic states asked companies on Sunday to take a stand against Russia by removing accounts from Russian and Belarusian governments and their leaders. As the government pressure mounted, Twitter Inc. added warning labels to links from Russian state media, Microsoft also said it would take steps to reduce users exposure to Russian propaganda, including on MSN.com. We are removing RT news apps from our Windows app store and further de-ranking these sites search results on Bing so that it will only return RT and Sputnik links when a user clearly intends to navigate to those pages, the company said in a statement. The company will also be banning ads from RT and Sputnik. Britain has piled on further sanctions against Russia and also imposed a first wave of punitive measures against for its role in the invasion of Ukraine. Russian ships have been banned from British ports in a fresh raft of sanctions against Moscow announced on Tuesday.The ban includes any vessels owned or operated by anyone connected to Russia, with authorities given new powers to detain Russian vessels. And, in what was termed as the "first tranche" of sanctions against Belarus, four senior defence officials and two military enterprises have been sanctioned with immediate effect under the UK's Russia sanctions regime. "We are inflicting economic pain on Putin and those closest to him. We will not rest until Ukraine's sovereignty and territorial integrity is restored," said Foreign Secretary Liz Truss. "The Lukashenko regime actively aids and abets Russia's illegal invasion and will be made to feel the economic consequences for its support for Putin. There will be nowhere to hide. Nothing and no one is off the table," she said, with reference to Kremlin-supporting President Alexander Lukashenko. Those sanctioned include the Chief of the General Staff and First Deputy Minister of Defence, Major General Victor Gulevich. The UK Foreign, Commonwealth and Development Office (FCDO) said Gulevich is responsible for directing the actions of the Belarusian armed forces, which have supported and enabled the Russian invasion of Ukraine. He has directed joint military exercises with Russia, and consented to the deployment of Russian troops along the border of Belarus with Ukraine, which has directly contributed to Russia's ability to attack Ukraine, including from positions in Belarus, the FCDO said. Also sanctioned are state enterprises JSC 558 Aircraft Repair Plant and JSC Integral, a military semi-conductor manufacturer. JSC 558 provides maintenance and servicing to military aircraft at Baranovichi air base, from which Russian aircraft operated as part of the invasion. As a result, sanctioned individuals will be unable to travel to the UK and any of their UK-based assets will be frozen. Meanwhile, additional economic measures against the Russian Central Bank and the state's sovereign wealth fund mean the "majority" of Russia's financial system is now covered by UK sanctions. The latest set of measures prohibit UK individuals and entities from providing financial services to the Central Bank of the Russian Federation, as well as the Ministry of Finance and National Wealth Fund. "The ban on Russian ships from UK ports, and new economic sanctions against key Russian financial institutions including its central bank, in close coordination with our allies, will degrade Russia's economy and help make sure Putin loses, added Truss. The Russian Direct Investment Fund (RDIF) the country's sovereign wealth fund and its chief executive, Kirill Dmitriev, have also been sanctioned, with their assets frozen and a travel ban in place for Dmitriev. The FCDO said RDIF funds projects of strategic significance to Russia and the sanction is aimed at banning UK individuals or companies dealing with the fund. It came as the British government committed another GBP 80 million in aid to Ukraine to tackle the growing humanitarian crisis as a result of Russian attacks, taking the UK's overall aid support for Ukraine to GBP 220 million. "With every hour, the passionate desire of the people of Ukraine to defend their country has become more apparent and millions of people around the world have been stirred and moved by their courage, said Prime Minister Boris Johnson. "The reality is that whatever happens in the coming days or weeks, the Ukrainian people have shown already that their spirit will not be broken, and they will not be subdued. We as the community have a responsibility to do everything we can to help the Ukrainians, he said. This latest round of support comes as the Red Cross Movement launched appeals for global support to deal with the unfolding humanitarian emergency that could see up to 7 million people displaced as a result of the Russian invasion of Ukraine. (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.) will not impose any economic sanctions on for invading Ukraine, Mexican President Andres Manuel Lopez Obrador said on Tuesday. He also criticized what he called censorship of Russian state-sponsored media by social media companies. "We are not going to take any sort of economic reprisal because we want to have good relations with all the governments in the world," Lopez Obrador told a news conference. Lopez Obrador's position stands in contrast to the broad sanctions imposed on for President Vladimir Putin's actions. has built strong links to various governments in Latin America, especially authoritarian administrations in Cuba, Venezuela and Nicaragua, but its ties with are seen to be limited due to the strong U.S.- relations. The Mexican and U.S. economies are deeply intertwined. But leftist leader Lopez Obrador has at times had testy relations with the United States and has criticized U.S. foreign policy. Late on Tuesday, U.S. Secretary of State Antony Blinken said he spoke with Mexican Foreign Minister Marcelo Ebrard by phone, "reiterating the worldwide call for the withdrawal of Russia's troops from Ukraine," he said in a tweet. Ebrard in a separate tweet said he shared Mexico's perspective on during the call, which he described as friendly. Ebrard last week condemned the invasion and demanded Russia end its military operations in Ukraine, marking a tougher stance than Lopez Obrador's call for dialogue. Russia calls its actions in a "special operation." Lopez Obrador's comments on Tuesday morning came in response to a question about the interest in Mexico of Russia's second-largest oil producer Lukoil and Russian airline Aeroflot. Lukoil said on Friday it has completed its acquisition of a 50% operator interest in an offshore oil project in Mexico, part of its drive to expand its global reach. The Mexican president also criticized what he characterized as the censorship of Russian state media. "I don't agree with the fact that media from Russia or any country is censored," Lopez Obrador said. Alphabet Inc's Google barred Russia's state-owned media outlet RT and other channels from receiving money for ads on their websites, apps and YouTube videos, similar to a move by Facebook after the invasion of . (Reporting by Anthony Esposito, Ana Isabel Martinez and Daina Beth Solomon; Editing by Will Dunham, Drazen Jorgic, Angus MacSwan and Kenneth Maxwell) (This story has not been edited by Business Standard staff and is auto-generated from a syndicated feed.) Apple's Tim Cook recently sent an email to its employees saying that Apple is donating to humanitarian relief efforts and supplementing employees' donations to eligible organizations even those made on Feb. 25. Cook's email also stated that Apple is also assisting its Ukrainian employees and their families "in any way [they] can," including those outside Ukraine. The email comes as the war between Ukraine and Russia rages on in the European continent. Details on Apple's Donation Efforts According to The Verge's article, Cook stated in his email that Apple is donating to humanitarian relief efforts and supplementing employees' donations to eligible organizations at a 2:1 rate. Cook added that the company would retroactively do the same to donations made on February 25. February 25 was the day after Russian armed forces entered Ukraine. Read More: Uber Introduces Uber Explore: Which Cities Can Book Restaurants, Live Events Tickers Via the App? Cook's email also stated that Apple has been in contact with its Ukrainian employees and their respective families "in any way [they] can," including those outside Ukraine. The email also included how its Ukrainian team members currently outside the country can ask for assistance and support. "This moment calls for unity, it calls for courage, and it reminds us that we must never lose sight of the humanity we all share," Cook said. "In these difficult times, I take comfort in knowing that we are united in our commitment to each other, to our users, and to being a force for good in the world." Apple's Other Contributions Apple's donations to Ukraine is part of its ongoing efforts to address the ongoing situation in the country. It recently discontinued selling its products to Russia due to the continuing political turmoil in the region, meaning that customers in Russia will be unable to purchase Apple products such as iPhones, iPads, and Macs online , per a previous iTech Post article. This suspension means any person in Russia attempting to purchase Apple products on its website would be met with the words "delivery unavailable" when trying to add a product to the online cart. The company has also pulled out RT News and Sputnik News from the App Store worldwide except in Russia, as these news outlets are known to be part of the Russian state media, per a Business Insider article. Apple has also disabled Apple Pay and its other services in Russia, affecting the country's financial institutions such as VTB Group, Sovcombank, Novikombank, Promsvyazbank, and Otkritie FC Bank, per a separate article from The Verge. Additionally, while customers can still use bank cards from these banks within Russia, they can no longer use them to pay for purchases made to stores and services belonging to countries that placed sanctions on Russia online. This also includes card payments through Apple Pay, although Russia's Central Bank says contactless payments will still be available should the banks that offer them support such a feature. Related Article: Apple Stops Product Sales in Russia Ukrainian President Volodymyr Zelenskyy has expressed concern that Russian attacks could threaten holy religious sites and said Russian troops are trying to erase our history. In a speech posted on Facebook, Zelenskyy on Wednesday denounced a Russian strike that hit Holocaust memorial site Babi Yar in Kyiv. He said: This is beyond humanity. Such missile strike means that for many Russians our Kyiv is absolute foreign. They know nothing about our capital, about our history. They have orders to erase our history, our country and all of us. What will be next if even Babi Yar (is hit), what other military' objects, NATO bases' are threatening Russia? St. Sophia's Cathedral, Lavra, Andrew's Church? he asked, referring to sites in Kyiv held sacred by Ukrainian and Russian Orthodox believers around the world. Zelenskyy also claimed almost 6,000 Russian soldiers have been killed since the invasion began last Thursday. Russia has not released overall casualty numbers and the figure could not be confirmed. (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.) Refugees from Ukraine do not need to go through the asylum procedure, and will receive immediate protection for up to three years in the European Union, German Minister of the Interior, Building and Community Nancy Faeser said on Wednesday. "We provide help quickly and without bureaucracy. Refugees from Ukraine do not need to go through the asylum procedure. They receive immediate protection in the EU for up to three years," Faeser tweeted. The minister went on to say that the refugees are provided with immediate access to health insurance and the labor market. Last Thursday, Russia launched a special operation to "denazify" Ukraine, responding to calls for help from the breakaway republics of Donetsk and Luhansk. The Russian Defense Ministry said that the special operation was targeting Ukrainian military infrastructure only. More than half a million refugees have left Ukraine already, according to the UNHRC. (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.) The 193-member condemned Russia's invasion of Ukraine and demanded that Moscow completely and unconditionally withdraw all of its military forces from the territory of Ukraine, adopting a resolution on which India abstained. The resolution titled Aggression against Ukraine' was co-sponsored by 96 UN Member States and received 141 votes in favour, 34 abstentions and five nations voting against. The adoption of the General Assembly resolution is symbolic of the opinion of the larger UN membership on Russia's actions against Ukraine. The resolution condemns the February 24 declaration by of a special military operation in Ukraine and reaffirms that no territorial acquisition resulting from the threat or use of force shall be recognized as legal. It also condemned Moscow's decision to increase the readiness of its nuclear forces. The resolution reaffirms the commitment of the General Assembly to the sovereignty, independence, unity and territorial integrity of Ukraine within its internationally recognised borders, extending to its territorial waters. It deplores in the strongest terms the aggression by the Russian Federation against Ukraine and demands that immediately cease its use of force against Ukraine and to refrain from any further unlawful threat or use of force against any Member State. The UNGA resolution also demands that the Russian Federation immediately, completely and unconditionally withdraw all of its military forces from the territory of Ukraine within its internationally recognised borders. It demands all parties to allow safe and unfettered passage to destinations outside of Ukraine and to facilitate the rapid, safe and unhindered access to humanitarian assistance for those in need in Ukraine, to protect civilians, including humanitarian personnel and persons in vulnerable situations, including women, older persons, persons with disabilities, indigenous peoples, migrants and children, and to respect human rights. Nearly 100 nations co-sponsored the resolution including Afghanistan, Albania, Australia, Canada, France, Germany, Israel, Italy, Japan, Kuwait, Myanmar, Singapore, Switzerland, Ukraine, United Kingdom and the US. Belarus, Eritrea, North Korea, and Syria voted against the resolution. Among those abstaining were Algeria, Bangladesh, China, Cuba, Iran, Iraq, Pakistan, South Africa, Sri Lanka and Vietnam. UN Secretary General Antonio Guterres said that the General Assembly has spoken and as the UN Chief it's "my duty to stand by this resolution and be guided by its call. The message of the General Assembly is loud and clear: End hostilities in Ukraine now. Silence the guns now. Open the door to dialogue and diplomacy now. The territorial integrity and sovereignty of Ukraine must be respected in line with the UN Charter. We don't have a moment to lose. The brutal effects of the conflict are plain to see. After the adoption of the resolution, US Ambassador to the UN Linda Thomas-Greenfield said the world has spoken with a clear, united voice. Together, the vast majority of the world has condemned Russia's unprovoked, unjustified, unconscionable war. We have deplored Belarus for allowing its territory to be used to facilitate this aggression. We have affirmed Ukraine's sovereignty and territorial integrity. We have demonstrated that Russia is isolated and alone, and that the costs will keep rising until Russia relents. We have affirmed the UN Charter, pledged to address the horrific human rights and humanitarian crisis in Ukraine, and stood together in the battle for the soul of the world, she said. The resolution urges the immediate peaceful resolution of the conflict between Russia and Ukraine through political dialogue, negotiations, mediation and other peaceful means. It also deplores the February 21 decision by Russia related to the status of certain areas of the Donetsk and Luhansk regions of Ukraine as a violation of the territorial integrity and sovereignty of Ukraine and inconsistent with the principles of the Charter. It demanded that Russia immediately and unconditionally reverse the decision related to the status of certain areas of the Donetsk and Luhansk regions of Ukraine. (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.) The United States will follow the European Union and Canada in banning Russian flights from its airspace, President said on Tuesday evening, in a move likely to trigger Russian retaliation. United Airlines and United Parcel Service (UPS) said on Tuesday they had suspended flying over Russian airspace, joining other major U.S. carriers Delta Air Lines and American Airlines. "I am announcing that we will join our allies in closing off American airspace to all Russian flights, further isolating Russia and adding an additional squeeze on their economy," Biden said in his State of the Union address. The White House had held extensive talks with U.S. airlines about the issue in recent days. The ban will take effect by the end of Wednesday. Russian flights were already effectively barred from U.S.destinations for the most part in recent days because of bans on the use of Canadian and European airspace. Some foreign governments had privately questioned why the United States did not move faster to ban Russian planes, as had some U.S. lawmakers. The European Union had said on Tuesday that it was speaking to U.S. counterparts about extending the ban as it gave more details of the EU's closure of airspace to Russian aircraft imposed after Moscow's invasion of Ukraine. Airlines already face potentially lengthy blockages of key east-west flight corridors after the EU and Moscow issued tit-for-tat airspace bans. A senior EU official said Russian oligarchs, even those with dual nationalities, would not be able to get around the EU airspace ban. "It doesn't matter whether they are EU residents, if they are Russian nationals, they will be covered," the official said. "Russian nationals or a Russian company cannot charter, own or control a plane that will be flying into the EU, out of the EU or overflying the EU. So that's the rule." SUPPLY-CHAIN PAIN Global supply chains, already hit hard by the pandemic, will face increasing disruption and cost pressure from the closure of the skies which will affect over a fifth of air freight. Hardest hit are likely to be Russian carriers, which make up approximately 70% of the flights between Russia and the EU. Transport between Europe and North Asian destinations like Japan, South Korea and China is in the front line of disruption after reciprocal bans barred European carriers from flying over Siberia and prevented Russian airlines from flying to Europe. Airlines responsible for moving around 20% of the world's air cargo are affected by those bans, Frederic Horst, managing director of Cargo Facts Consulting, told Reuters on Tuesday. Germany's Lufthansa, Air France KLM, Finnair and Virgin Atlantic have already cancelled North Asian cargo flights over closed access to airspace. Scandinavian airline SAS said it would re-route its once-weekly Copenhagen-Shanghai service to avoid Russian airspace, and had also paused its Copenhagen-Tokyo service. Major Asian carriers like Korean Air Lines and Japan's ANA Holdings are still using Russian airspace, however, as are Middle Eastern airlines. RUSSIAN CARRIERS Russian airlines are also feeling the pinch with airline Pobeda, state airline Aeroflot's low-cost carrier, facing requests from a number of leasing companies to return their planes, the Interfax news agency reported. Pure cargo carriers like Russia's AirBridgeCargo Airlines and Luxembourg's Cargolux are subject to the bans in a move that could send air freight rates - already elevated due to a lack of passenger capacity during the pandemic - soaring further. "The flights become more expensive due to the longer routes," said Stefan Maichl, analyst at Germany's Landesbank Baden-Wuerttemberg." In December, air cargo rates were 150% above 2019 levels, according to the International Air Transport Association. Sanctions imposed on Russia in the wake of its Ukraine invasion are expected to further disrupt global supply chains. Russia's AirBridgeCargo alone moves just under 4% of global international air cargo, with most of that between Europe and Asia, Horst said. "All up you could be looking at perhaps a quarter of air cargo between Asia and Europe needing to find alternate means of transportation," Horst said. "Yields are high enough that flying a longer route via Southeast Asia, South Asia or the Middle East is an option, but it will still pull capacity out of the market." AIR CARGO SURGE Shipping container shortages and port bottlenecks mean more products are being flown by air. Demand for air cargo last year was 6.9% above 2019 levels, according to IATA. Taiwan's EVA Airways said on Tuesday its cargo flights to and from Europe were operating normally and it would consider adding more services to meet market demand. Asia-North America cargo routes are expected to be less affected than European routes, analysts say, because many carriers already use Anchorage, Alaska, as a cargo hub and stopover point. UPS and FedEx Corp had earlier stopped deliveries to Russia. Deutsche Post said its DHL unit was halting inbound shipments to Russia. (Reporting by David Shephardson in Washington, Jamie Freed in Sydney, Matthias Inverardi and Ilona Wissenbach in Berlin, and Foo Yun Chee in Brussels; Additional reporting by Satoshi Sugiyama in Tokyo and Ben Blanchard in Taipei; Editing by Matthew Lewis, Stephen Coates and Richard Pullin) (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.) and seek to expand their military influence both regionally and globally, with having invaded and seeking to wrest control of Taiwan, US Department of Defence said in a statement on Tuesday (local time). "Officials discussed the United States', allies' and partners' efforts to counter those ambitions during a House Armed Services Committee today," the statement said. "The is at a pivotal moment with our allies and partners in meeting the challenges of today and tomorrow," Mara Karlin, assistant secretary of defense for strategy, plans and capabilities, said, referencing and . She said, "Security cooperation is an important tool that helps key allies and partners strengthen their defense and enhances our ability to rely on one another in a time of need." The forthcoming National Defense Strategy will emphasize how the department will strengthen these alliances and partnerships to advance national security through integrated deterrence, Karlin said. Karlin noted that in Asia, the US has been strengthening its partnerships with India, Australia, Japan and nations in Southeast Asia. "Our support for is rock solid," she said, referencing the Relations Act. The U.S. has provided USD 18 billion to them in security assistance and will continue to ensure they have the appropriate asymmetric defense capabilities, she added. Meanwhile, a delegation of former US defense and security officials will arrive in on Tuesday for a two-day visit, which is likely to evoke a strong reaction from . (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.) Sweden and Finland ought to join as early as tomorrow if they are ready and willing, US Senate Republican Minority Leader Mitch McConnell said on Tuesday. "Sweden and Finland, two countries tIhat have never belonged to NATO, are thinking about joining, and I think we ought to sign them up tomorrow if they're ready to join," McConnell said during a new conference. Secretary General Jens Stoltenberg on Thursday invited Sweden and Finland to attend a virtual summit on the situation in and around on Friday. On the same day, Finnish Prime Minister Sanna Marin said that Finland will be ready to join NATO "if the issue of national security becomes acute." The countries' interest in NATO membership emerged as a result of Russian military operations in Ukraine, which Russian President Vladimir Putin said aims to demilitarize and de-nazify the country in defense of the self-declared republics in the Donbas region. Russian Foreign Ministry spokeswoman Maria Zakharova said on Friday that Moscow will have to respond if Sweden and Finland become NATO members. (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.) The closed its airspace to Russian planes as the Russian military attempted to encircle and subdue Ukrainian cities with intensifying bombardments on Wednesday, almost a week into an invasion that has sparked massive sanctions. Already shunned by the West over its invasion of Ukraine, has shown no sign of stopping an assault that has included strikes on Kyiv and rocket attacks in the second city of Kharkiv. Dozens have been killed. has failed to capture a single city since its full-scale invasion began nearly a week ago, and Western analysts say Moscow has fallen back on tactics which call for devastating shelling of built-up areas before entering them. Hundreds of thousands of Ukrainians have fled the fighting as a miles-long Russian military convoy north of Kyiv advances toward the city. West of Kyiv, in the city of Zhytomyr, four people, including a child, were killed on Tuesday by a Russian cruise missile, a Ukrainian official said. Ukrainian President Volodymyr Zelenskiy called on to stop bombarding civilians and resume talks. "It's necessary to at least stop bombing people, just stop the bombing and then sit down at the negotiating table," he told Reuters and CNN in a joint interview in a heavily guarded government compound in Kyiv. Zelenskiy later thanked Western leaders for their support. "Today, more than ever, it is important for us to feel that we are not alone," he wrote on Twitter. Russian President Vladimir Putin has drawn global condemnation and sanctions that have sent the rouble to historic lows and forced Russians to queue outside banks for their savings. Putin ordered the "special military operation" last Thursday in a bid to disarm Ukraine, capture the "neo-Nazis" he says are running the country and crush its hopes of closer ties to the West. In his first State of the Union address, U.S. President Joe Biden said the would ban Russian planes from its airspace, joining the European Union and Canada, and vowed Putin would pay a heavy price for his decision to invade . "He has no idea what's coming," he said in the chamber of the House of Representatives. "Let each of us if you're able to stand, stand and send an unmistakable signal to and to the world." The lawmakers stood, applauded and roared, many of them waving Ukrainian flags. 'FREEZE AND SEIZE' Ukraine, which is not a member of NATO, has called on the U.S.-led military alliance to implement a no-fly zone - a request rejected by Washington, which fears stoking a direct conflict between the world's two biggest nuclear powers. Washington and its allies have instead sent weapons to Kyiv, and Treasury Secretary Janet Yellen said the had agreed with partners to convene a task force "to freeze and seize the assets of key Russian elites". The move "will inflict financial pain on the powerful individuals surrounding Putin and make clear that no one is beyond our collective reach," Yellen said in a statement following a Tuesday call with Group of Seven officials. The West is shutting off Russia's economy from the global financial system, pushing companies to halt sales, cut ties, and dump tens of billions of dollars' worth of investments. Exxon Mobil joined other major Western energy companies including British BP PLC and Shell in announcing it would quit oil-rich Russia over the invasion. Apple Inc stopped sales of iPhones and other products in Russia, and was making changes to its Maps app to protect civilians in . Alphabet Inc's Google dropped Russian state publishers from its news, and Ford Motor suspended operations in the country. Russia on Tuesday placed temporary restrictions on foreigners seeking to exit Russia assets, meaning that billions of dollars worth of securities held by foreigners are at risk of being trapped. CIVILIANS KILLED The heaviest Russian bombardment so far appeared to be around Ukraine's second-largest city Kharkiv, near the border with Russia. Dozens of residents including children were killed when a Russian strategic bomber fired 16 guided missiles toward a residential area on Monday, Ukraine's defence ministry said. In Ukraine's largely Russian-speaking city of Donetsk, in territory controlled by Russian-backed separatists, authorities said three civilians had been killed by Ukrainian shelling. Reuters was not able to confirm any of the incidents of reports of casualties. The United Nations says at least 136 civilians have been killed in the invasion, but that the real number of people is likely much higher. Russia has not published any precise casualty figures for its own military, but says its losses have been far lower than those of Ukrainian forces. Ukraine's air force continued to defy expectations that Russia would achieve swift dominance of the air. "The airspace is actively contested every day," a senior U.S. defense official said, speaking on condition of anonymity. (This story has not been edited by Business Standard staff and is auto-generated from a syndicated feed.) The stands firm behind its commitments to and allies in the region, a delegation of former senior U.S. defence and security officials sent by President said on Wednesday. Collaboration between the and is stronger and more expansive than ever before, former chairman of the U.S. Joint Chiefs of Staff Mike Mullen said during his visit to the democratic island. Mullen is in leading a delegation of former top officials sent by U.S. President . The trip is happening against the backdrop of Russia's invasion of Ukraine, which is being closely followed in Taiwan. "The will continue to oppose any unilateral changes to the status quo and will continue to support a peaceful resolution of cross-strait issues, consistent with the wishes and best interests of the people of Taiwan," Mullen told Taiwan President Tsai Ing-wen in a meeting broadcast live on Facebook. "I do hope by being here with you, we can reassure you and your people, as well as our allies and partners in the region, that the United States stands firm behind its commitments." Taiwan, claimed by as its own territory, is on alert in case tries to use the opportunity to make a move on the island, though the government has reported no unusual Chinese manoeuvres. has vowed to bring it under Chinese control, by force if necessary, and has increased its military and political pressure against Taiwan to try and force the island to accept China's sovereignty. Taiwan has vowed to defend itself if attacked. The delegation will also meet Taiwan Defence Minister Chiu Kuo-cheng. Mullen's delegation marks the first public visit of a group of former officials to Taiwan at Biden's behest since April 2021, when former U.S. Senator Chris Dodd and former Deputy Secretaries of State Richard Armitage and James Steinberg travelled there and met with Tsai. (This story has not been edited by Business Standard staff and is auto-generated from a syndicated feed.) The US is set to launch a new programme that will enable Americans who test positive for Covid-19 to receive antiviral pills for free at local pharmacies and community centers. "We're launching the 'Test to Treat' initiative so people can get tested at a pharmacy, and if they're positive, receive antiviral pills on the spot at no cost," CNBC quoted President Joe Biden as saying during his State of the Union speech Tuesday. Besides antivirals, Biden said that Americans can also order more free Covid tests at the government's website, covidtests.gov, next week. Households are eligible for four free Covid tests per order. Families are limited to two orders starting next week based on residential address, the report said. Although antiviral Paxlovid, made by Pfizer, have been relatively scarce since the Food and Drug Administration approved them late last year, Biden said that "Pfizer is working overtime to get us one million pills this month and more than double that next month." Biden said the US has reached a new moment in the pandemic, with cases of severe illness down to their lowest level since July. In line with the new guidance issued by the Centers for Disease Control and Prevention last week, the president said that most Americans are now safe to live a mask free life. "With 75 per cent of adult Americans fully vaccinated and hospitalisations down by 77 per cent, most Americans can remove their masks, return to work, stay in the classroom, and move forward safely," Biden said. He added that the US is prepared for new Covid variants, with the ability to deploy new vaccines within 100 days if needed. "I cannot promise a new variant won't come. But I can promise you we'll do everything within our power to be ready if it does," he said. --IANS rvt/dpb (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.) The U.S. nuclear power industry is lobbying the to allow imports from to continue despite the escalating conflict in Ukraine, with cheap supplies of the fuel seen as key to keeping American electricity prices low, according to two sources familiar with the matter. The relies on and its allies Kazakhstan and Uzbekistan for roughly half of the powering its nuclear plants - about 22.8 million pounds (10.3 million kg) in 2020 - which in turn produce about 20% of U.S. electricity, according to the U.S. Energy Information Administration and the World Nuclear Association. Washington and its allies have imposed a series of sanctions on Moscow in the past week as Russian forces pushed deeper into neighboring Ukraine, though the sanctions exempt sales and related financial transactions. The National Energy Institute (NEI), a trade group of U.S.nuclear power generation companies including Duke Energy Corp and Exelon Corp, is lobbying the to keep the exemption on uranium imports from Russia, the sources said. The NEI lobbying aims to ensure that uranium is not caught up in any future energy-related sanctions, especially as calls intensify to sanction Russian crude oil sales, the sources said. "The (U.S. nuclear power) industry is just addicted to cheap Russian uranium," said one of the sources, who declined to be named, citing the sensitivity of the situation. Duke and Exelon, two of the largest U.S. utilities, could not immediately be reached for comment. Washington-based NEI said that it supports a diversity of uranium supply, including the development of U.S. facilities to produce and process the fuel. "While is a significant global supplier of commercial nuclear fuel, U.S. utilities contract with a worldwide network of companies and countries for their fuel requirements to mitigate the risks of potential disruption," said Nima Ashkeboussi, NEI's senior director of fuel and radiation safety. The Biden administration has said it is working to keep American energy costs low. "We are listening to all inquiries from industry and will continue to do so as we take measures to hold Russia accountable," a official said when asked about the uranium lobbying. Uranium is used as a fuel inside reactors to achieve nuclear fission to boil water and generate steam that spins turbines to generate electricity. There is no uranium production or processing in the currently, though several companies have said they would like to resume domestic production if they can sign long-term supply contracts with nuclear power producers. Texas and Wyoming have large uranium reserves. Australia and Canada also have large reserves of uranium and there is ample processing capability there and in Europe. But Russia and its satellites are the cheapest producers. The U.S. nuclear power industry's use of Russian uranium is likely to spark further questions about where and how the procures the materials needed to supply high-tech and renewable-energy products, a dependency that President Joe Biden singled out last week as a national security threat. Russia's uranium production is controlled by Rosatom, a state-run company formed by Russian President Vladimir Putin in 2007. The company is an important source of revenue for the country. Former U.S. President Donald Trump in 2020 proposed spending $150 million to create a strategic uranium reserve, and Biden administration officials have expressed support for the idea. Other utilities around the globe have already begun looking beyond Russia for supply. Swedish power company Vattenfall AB said last week it would stop buying Russian uranium for its nuclear reactors until further notice, citing the Ukrainian conflict. (This story has not been edited by Business Standard staff and is auto-generated from a syndicated feed.) "Pachinko" is scheduled for release on March 25. Courtesy of Apple TV+ By Lee Gyu-lee A string of new series are expected to hit both TV and streaming platforms this month, including the much-anticipated Apple original series, "Pachinko," and top actress Kim Hee-sun's new fantasy series, "Tomorrow." "Pachinko," based on the best-selling novel of the same name by Min Jin Lee, is finally set to launch on Apple TV+, March 25. The eight-part series, which stars Oscar-winning actress Youn Yuh-jung and actor Lee Min-ho, follows the life of a Korean immigrant family through poverty, tragedy and survival in Japan during and after the Japanese occupation of Korea (1910-45). Actress Kim is taking on another fantasy series, following her last fantasy action series, "Alice," in 2020. Based on the webtoon of the same name, MBC's upcoming action fantasy series, "Tomorrow," is about an otherworldly crisis management team of Grim Reaper-like beings that help suicidal people to get a second chance in life. A jobseeker, Choi Joon-woong (Rowoon), accidentally bumps into the team's leader, Gu Ryeon (Kim), one night, which leads him to join the team and help them carry out their work to save people. The series is co-directed by filmmaker Kim Tae-yoon, who led the comedy film, "Mr. Zoo: The Missing VIP" (2020), and Sung Chi-wook, who led the 2020 fantasy series, "Kairos." It is scheduled to air on March 25. Posters for Disney's music romance series, "Soundtrack #1," left, and KBS' romantic comedy series, "Crazy Love" / Courtesy of Disney+, KBS While extending support to Kyiv in the ongoing Ukraine-Russia conflict, US President has reiterated that his country will not deploy troops in against the Russian forces. Biden's remarks came during the first State of Union address delivered by him to a joint session of Congress at the Capitol on Tuesday (local time). Condemning Russia's "premeditated attack" in Ukraine, Biden said that Russian President Vladimir Putin sought to shake the very foundation of the free world. He further said that the NATO alliance was created to secure peace and stability in Europe after World War II and the US stands with in the ongoing conflict. However, Biden added that the US will not have boots on the ground in the ongoing war. "Let me be clear -- our forces are not engaged and will not engage in the conflict with Russian forces in Ukraine," he said. Biden clarified that the US troops were deployed to Europe not to fight in Ukraine, "but to defend our NATO allies in the event that Putin decides to keep moving west." "For that purpose, we have mobilized American ground forces, air squadrons, ship deployments to protect NATO countries, including Poland, Romania, Latvia, Lithuania, and Estonia," he added. Biden also announced that the US has banned Russian aircraft from its airspace. Meanwhile, Russia on Tuesday intensified the shelling on the sixth day of its military operations in by targeting the capital city Kyiv as well as the second-largest city Kharkiv. (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.) U.S. payment card firms and Inc have blocked multiple Russian financial institutions from their network, complying with government sanctions imposed over Moscow's invasion of Ukraine. Visa said on Monday it was taking prompt action to ensure compliance with applicable sanctions, adding that it will donate $2 million for humanitarian aid. also promised to contribute $2 million. "We will continue to work with regulators in the days ahead to abide fully by our compliance obligations as they evolve," said in a separate statement late on Monday. In 2021, about 4% of Mastercard's net revenues were derived from business conducted within, into and out of . Meanwhile, business conducted within, into and out of Ukraine accounted for 2% of its net revenues, according to a filing on Tuesday. The government sanctions require Visa to suspend access to its network for entities listed as Specially Designated Nationals, a source familiar with the matter told Reuters. The has added various Russian financial firms to the list, including the country's central bank and second-largest lender VTB. On Saturday, the U.S., Britain, Europe and Canada announced new sanctions on - including blocking certain lenders' access to the SWIFT payment system. Russians rushed to ATMs and waited in long queues on Sunday and Monday amid concerns that bank cards may cease to function, or that banks would limit cash withdrawals. calls its actions in Ukraine a "special operation". Many Western banks, airlines and more have cut ties with Russia, calling the country's actions unacceptable. European nations and Canada have shut their airspace to Russian aircraft. (This story has not been edited by Business Standard staff and is auto-generated from a syndicated feed.) Singapore-based fintech firm Volopay will invest USD 15 million (about Rs 113 crore) over the next 12 months to start operations in India, a senior startup official said on Wednesday. The company has raised USD 29 million from Winklevoss twins - Cameron and Tyler, a global decacorn and others to expand business overseas. "We are currently active in Singapore and Australia. In the next six months, we are expanding our presence to four countries - India, Indonesia, the Philippines and Vietnam. In India, in the next 12 months time frame, we will be allocating USD 15 million worth of equity," Volopay founding member Rohit Bhageria told PTI. After expansion in six countries, Volopay plans to venture into the Middle East. The fintech firm provides payment management technology to having a headcount in the range of 20-700 employees. The company is planning to have a 100 member team in place by the end of March in its Bengaluru office for technology development, customer support and sales in India. "We have already started hiring for the last 6-8 months. India will be our state-of-art technology development centre. It will deliver a scalable platform for our global operation. It will help us in customer support and back-end customer success function," Bhageria said. He said that 40 people will be part of the product and engineering team. "India and Indonesia will be contributing 60 per cent of our total revenue in the next 5-7 years. Since our seed round in September 2020, our revenue has grown 42 per cent month-on-month. Another matrix on which we gauge our performance is transactions that take place on our platform. It has been growing at the rate of 91 per cent month-on-month in the last 12 months," Bhageria said. (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.) Ten gram of 24-carat is selling at Rs 50,950 on Wednesday, down Rs 330 since the last trade as demand dipped for the safe-haven bullion. Ten gram of 22 carat is selling at Rs 46,700, down Rs 300 from Tuesday according to the Goodreturns website. One kg of is selling at Rs 65,000, down Rs 200 from the last trade. In Delhi, Kolkata and Mumbai, 24-carat is selling at Rs 50,950. The price of 22-carat gold in these cities is Rs 46,700. In Chennai, 24-carat gold is selling at Rs 52,230. The price of 22-carat gold is Rs 47,880 in Chennai. The prices of gold and vary across the country due to excise duty, state taxes, and making charges. In Chennai, the price of 1 kg of is at Rs 70,000. In Delhi, Kolkata and Mumbai, the price is at Rs 65,000. Gold prices edged lower after Russian and Ukrainian officials held the first round of ceasefire talks, dampening demand for the safe-haven bullion, a report in Reuters said. Madhabi Puri Buch took over as the Chairperson of capital regulator on Wednesday, succeeding who completed his five-year term. Buch, the first woman to head the important financial regulator and also the first non-bureaucrat to lead it in many years, was appointed by the government for a three-year term this week. Thanking Tyagi for his leadership and building the right foundations, Buch said, "looking forward to building on the strong foundation that you have given us". She was speaking at an event organised by for her taking over as the chief. Tyagi was also felicitated at the event. Buch, who has worked with the ICICI Bank group for the longest time, earlier served as a Whole Time Member of the regulator till October last year. She handled important functions like the Market Regulation Department, Market Intermediaries Regulation and Supervision Department, Integrated Surveillance Department, Investment Management Department and Department of Economic and Policy Analysis in her earlier stint with . The veteran finance sector professional has also served as a consultant to the New Development Bank in Shanghai, and also headed private equity fund Greater Pacific Capital's Singapore office. She has served as the Chief Executive of ICICI Securities, the brokerage arm of the ICICI Group, and also as an Executive Director on board of ICICI Bank, as per an official statement. Buch holds a degree in management from the prestigious Indian Institute of Management, Ahmedabad and is a graduate in Mathematics from St Stephen's College, New Delhi. (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.) Shares of Corporation moved higher by 12 per cent to Rs 387 on the National Stock Exchange (NSE) in Wednesday's intra-day trade, extending their rally into third straight day. Since last Thursday, the stock has rallied 30 per cent after one of the promoters bought over 50,000 shares of the company via open . On February 25, 2022, Niyogi Enterprise Private Limited, one of the promoters of Nuvoco Vistas, purchased 68,222 equity shares of the company via purchase, according to company's disclosure on the stock exchanges. Post acquisition, it's holding has increased to 59.18 per cent from 59.17 per cent, data shows. BofA Securities Europe SA had sold 3.06 million equity shares, representing 0.86 per cent stake, at Rs 303 per share, making the sale proceeds worth around Rs 93 crore. The names of the other buyers could not be ascertained immediately. Corporation is a leading building materials company and the fifth largest cement player, in terms of capacity, in India. The stock had hit a record low of Rs 294.55 on February 24, 2022. Moreover, it has corrected 49 per cent from its 52-week high level of Rs 577.50 hit on September 6, 2021. The company debuted on the stock on August 23, 2021 by issuing shares at a price of Rs 570 per share. It reported consolidated loss of Rs 86 crore in third quarter of FY22 (Q3FY22) due to lower revenue as against a consolidated profit of Rs 44 crore in Q3FY21. Revenue from operations declined 3 per cent year-on-year (YoY) to Rs 2,165 crore as against Rs 2,231 crore in the corresponding quarter of the previous fiscal year. Earnings before interest, taxes, depreciation, and amortization (EBITDA) margins also contracted 1,000 bps to 11 per cent from 21 per cent in Q3FY21. However, the company expects Q4FY22 to witness strong demand recovery amid potential clinker shortage resulting in opportunity to correct prices. It also expects to exploit market growth as Q4 is seasonally stronger quarter with robust demand drivers. The aggressive price hikes in key are expected to offset input cost increase and see higher incentive from Jojobera volumes. Nuvoco has been working on multiple projects for a sustainable growth with an aspiration to diversify its market base and reduce the business risk. The ongoing debottlenecking projects to increase the clinker capacity at Risda and Nimbol Cement Plants are on track. "Furthermore, the Blending Unit at Bhiwani, Haryana will be upgraded to a Grinding Unit to leverage on the successful launch of Double Bull cement brand in North and the Companys existing channel in the region. This will provide key impetus to serve high growth North India markets," the company said. Shares of Insurance Company and Insurance Company rose sharply on reports of a possible delay in the much-awaited initial public offering (IPO) of of India. shares settled 5.7 per cent higher at Rs 1,120, whereas 7.0 per cent up at Rs 560. In an interview with Hindu BusinessLine, Union Finance Minister Nirmala Sitharaman said if "global considerations" warrant any delay, she wouldn't mind looking at it again. had on February 13 filed the Draft Red Herring Prospectus (DRHP) with capital regulator SEBI, looking to sell the Centre's 5 per cent equity stake in the company via IPO route. The Centre aims to offload a total of 316 million equity shares to investors through the public offering of the 6.32 billion outstanding shares, the DRHP document showed. The Centre wishes to conclude the IPO by the end of FY22, and it would like to cash in on the IPO to meet its revised divestment estimate. The current fiscal's divestment target was revised to Rs 78,000 crore from the Budget estimates of Rs 1.75 lakh crore. --IANS ad/arm (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.) The key benchmark indices are likely to start trade on Wednesday with losses in excess of a per cent each taking cues from the global turmoil amidst the ongoing Russia- Ukraine conflict and record high oil prices. As of 07:55 AM, the SGX Nifty March futures quoted at 16,488 indicating a gap down of nearly 300 points when compared with Mondays close. Meanwhile, here are the stocks to focus in trade today. Banks: In the backdrop of the ongoing Russian invasion of Ukraine and the West imposing tough sanctions on Russia, the Reserve Bank of India (RBI) is also gauging the extent of damage to the Indian banking sector due to the worsening geopolitical situation. The Indian Banks Association (IBA) called a meeting with top banks of the country on Monday, and asked them to submit detailed information on their exposure to both Russia and Ukraine by Wednesday. READ MORE Car makers: Maruti Suzuki India (MSI) said its domestic sales slipped 8.46 per cent to 1,40,035 units as against 1,52,983 units in February 2021. Meanwhile, and Mahindra & Mahindra reported an increase in wholesales in February. The former reported a 47 per cent increase in passenger vehicle sales, while the latter sales soared by 80 per cent on a YoY basis last month. READ MORE Hero MotoCorp: The two-wheeler major reported 29.1 per cent YoY drop in sales to 358,254 units, even as exports jumped 27.4 per cent to 26,792 units in February. TVS Motors: The companys vehicle sales declined by 5.4 per cent in February 2022 at 281,714 units when compared with 297,747 units in February 2021. Exports were up 6 per cent YoY at 101,789 units. Eicher Motors: Motors: Total monthly sales dropped 15 per cent on a YoY basis in February 2022 to 59,160, while exports jumped 55 per cent YoY to 7,025 units. Hindustan Unilever (HUL): The FMCG major hiked prices across its portfolio of products by 3-13 per cent in multiple tranches in February, with the sharpest increase of 13 per cent seen in the 100 gm Lux soap pack, the price of which increased to Rs 35 from Rs 31 earlier. READ MORE L&T Finance Holding (LTFH): The groundwork for making L&T Finance Holding (LTFH) a retail credit-driven entity had begun before Larsen & Toubro (L&T), its parent, said its subsidiary would get out of wholesale and real estate funding. The company has articulated a roadmap to grow the share of retail loans from 50 per cent to 80 per cent by March 2026. READ MORE Eveready: The Burman family promoters of Dabur India will look at appointing Key Management People in the countrys largest dry cell battery maker, Industries India, post completion of the open offer. Amritanshu Khaitan term as the managing director ends in May 2022. On Monday, Dabur India announced an open offer for acquiring 26 per cent stake in . The open offer was priced at Rs 320 per share aggregating to a total consideration of up to Rs 605 crore. The stock last traded at Rs 376.35 on the Bombay Stock Exchange on Monday. Adani Group: The Group announced its foray into media business, on entering into a binding term sheet to acquire a minority stake in Quintillion Business Media Private Limited. With this move, Adani is set to face off with Reliance which owns India's Network18 that runs several business TV channels and online platforms. READ MORE Tata Steel: The steel major is looking to set up a 'world class' facility to produce medical material and as a step towards it, Tata Steel Advanced Materials (TSAML), an indirect wholly-owned subsidiary, has invested in a bio-ceramics startup for acquiring 90 per cent stakte in Ceramat Private Limited. READ MORE Piramal Enterprises: The companys board approved a proposal to raise up to Rs 500 crore through issue of non-convertible debentures on a private placement basis. Tribhovandas Bhimji Zaveri: The company informed BSE that, CRISIL Ratings had reaffirmed its CRISIL BBB+/ Stable rating on the companys bank facilities of Rs 625 crore. Maruti Suzuki India: The company recorded a total sales of 1,64,056 units in February 2022, down 0.25% as against 1,64,469 units sold in February 2021. Tata Motors: Tata Motors' sales in the domestic & international market for February 2022 stood at 77,733 vehicles as compared to 61,258 units during February 2021, recording a growth of 26.89%. Ashok Leyland: The Hinduja Group company's sales grew 7% to 14,657 units in February 2022 from 13,703 units sold in February 2021. Eicher Motors: Eicher Motors' unlisted subsidiary, VE Commercial Vehicles (VECV) sold 5,856 units of commercial vehicles in February 2022, registering a rise of 7.3% year on year from 5,457 units in February 2021. Escorts: The company's total tractor sales declined by 45.6% YoY to 6,114 units in February 2022 from 11,230 units sold in February 2021. Tata Steel: Tata Steel Advanced Materials (TSMAL), an indirect wholly owned subsidiary of Tata Steel, has executed a share purchase cum shareholders' agreement for acquisition of 90% equity stake in Ceramat (CPL). Adani Green Energy: Adani Green Energy on Tuesday announced that it received the Letter of Award (LoA) to set-up 150 MW solar power project from Punjab State Power Corporation. Coal India: The state-run coal major's offtake stood at 57.4 million tonnes (MT) in February 2022, growing 12% as compared with 51.3 MT recorded in the same month last year. Panacea Biotec: Panacea Biotec and its wholly-owned subsidiary Panacea Biotec Pharma (PBPL) have entered into definitive agreements for sale of pharmaceutical formulations brands of PBPL for India and Nepal, to Mankind Pharma. Page Industries: Page Industries said Sunder Genomal has submitted his resignation from the position of managing director and will continue as non-executive director. Brightcom Group: Hyderabad-based Brightcom Group on Monday said the Securities and Exchange Board of India (Sebi) ordered a forensic audit of books of accounts of the company on 16 September 2021. Varun Beverages: Varun Beverages on Monday announced that the company's board approved the proposal to enter into an agreement to manufacture 'Kurkure Puffcorn' for PepsiCo India Holdings Private Limited as a part of their network of co-packers. Powered by Capital Market - Live News (This story has not been edited by Business Standard staff and is auto-generated from a syndicated feed.) U.S. Ambassador to the U.N. for Special Political Affairs Jeff DeLaurentis, center, reads a joint statement of 11 U.N. member countries on North Korea's ballistic missile launch at the U.N. headquarters in New York, Monday (EST). On the right is South Korea's permanent representative to the U.N., Ambassador Cho Hyun. Screenshot from the U.N.'s YouTube channel By Nam Hyun-woo South Korea is taking a hawkish stance on North Korea, joining 10 other countries to condemn the Kim Jong-un regime's recent ballistic missile launch, while President Moon Jae-in is stressing the need for the South to gain more power to decide its future. Some interpret the two related moves as the Moon government's decision to mitigate growing international concerns that South Korea remains passive about joining the coalition of the U.S. and other democracies to counter the aggressive tones of China, Russia and North Korea. On Monday, 11 United Nations members, including South Korea and the U.S., released a joint statement condemning North Korea's medium-range ballistic missile launch on Sunday, after the U.N. Security Council held a meeting to discuss countermeasures. The statement was read by U.S. Ambassador to the U.N. for Special Political Affairs Jeff DeLaurentis with Ambassador Cho Hyun, standing beside him on the podium. It was South Korea's first participation in an international condemnation of North Korea's missile launches this year. Pyongyang has conducted eight rounds of missile tests so far this year, but Seoul had previously not joined international condemnation of the acts, in apparent consideration of President Moon's efforts to revive the peace mood between the two Koreas. Seoul's participation in this joint statement bears more significance because it urges the North to abandon its weapons of mass destruction and ballistic missile programs in "a complete, verifiable and irreversible manner." The South Korean government had been refraining from using such phrases. An official at Seoul's Ministry of Foreign Affairs said Tuesday that South Korea joined the statement after "a comprehensive consideration of the seriousness of North Korea's repeated missile launches," which is similar to its previous explanation of Seoul's absence in previous U.N. members' condemnations. President Moon Jae-in speaks during a ceremony to commemorate the 103rd anniversary of the March 1 Independence Movement at the National Memorial for the Provisional Korean Government in Seodaemun District, Seoul, Tuesday. Yonhap The two-wheeler major sold 3,58,254 units of motorcycles and scooters in February 2022, which is lower by 29.12% compared with 5,05,467 units sold in February 2021. While domestic sales declined 31.58% YoY to 3,31,462 units, exports increased by 27.37% YoY to 26,792 in February 2022. "With a sharp decline in the number of Covid-19 cases and the economy gradually opening up with several other positive indicators, such as easing of the lockdown restrictions, as well as the measures announced in the FY'23 Union Budget, a swift revival in sales is expected in the coming months," Hero MotoCorp said in a statement. In the month of February 2022, Hero MotoCorp became the first automotive OEM to tie up with a leading Public Sector Undertaking (PSU) to set up charging infrastructure across the length and breadth of the country. The company has collaborated with Bharat Petroleum Corporation Limited (BPCL), to establish charging infrastructure for two-wheeled electric vehicles (EVs) across the country in its endeavor to electrify India. Hero MotoCorp is the world's largest manufacturer of motorcycles and scooters. On a consolidated basis, its net profit declined 30.95% to Rs 703.74 crore on 18.46% fall in net sales to Rs 8,013.08 crore in Q3 December 2021 over Q3 December 2020. Shares of Hero MotoCorp were down 2.80% at Rs 2465.30 on the BSE. Powered by Capital Market - Live News (This story has not been edited by Business Standard staff and is auto-generated from a syndicated feed.) Hindustan Zinc Ltd is quoting at Rs 331.65, up 6.32% on the day as on 12:54 IST on the NSE. The stock is up 4.28% in last one year as compared to a 8.17% gain in NIFTY and a 50.93% gain in the Nifty Metal index. Hindustan Zinc Ltd rose for a third straight session today. The stock is quoting at Rs 331.65, up 6.32% on the day as on 12:54 IST on the NSE. The benchmark NIFTY is down around 1.8% on the day, quoting at 16490.9. The Sensex is at 55087.9, down 2.06%. Hindustan Zinc Ltd has added around 2.58% in last one month. Meanwhile, Nifty Metal index of which Hindustan Zinc Ltd is a constituent, has added around 6.32% in last one month and is currently quoting at 5896.85, up 3.88% on the day. The volume in the stock stood at 17.81 lakh shares today, compared to the daily average of 5.33 lakh shares in last one month. The PE of the stock is 14.21 based on TTM earnings ending December 21. Powered by Capital Market - Live News (This story has not been edited by Business Standard staff and is auto-generated from a syndicated feed.) Mindspace Business Parks REIT has partnered with eVidyaloka, a not-for-profit organization, encouraging employees to invest time in designing education modules and assessment papers, virtually, for children based in rural India. This alliance is an extension of the 'Time off for Volunteering' policy that the entity already has in place, which encourages employees to engage in community service. The policy enables employees to take 6 working days off in a financial year as paid time off, for volunteering with an NGO for their choice. The pandemic has been tough on everyone, especially so for the marginalised, and this move is aimed at encouraging acts of kindness towards those in need. With this, Mindspace REIT continues to focus on building an ecosystem that prioritizes on environmental impact, social responsibility, and governance (ESG). Health & safety, sustainable development and mainstreaming the principles of rightful business conduct continue to be the primary drivers of business ethics and social initiatives. Called 'The Hope Project, the partnership enables passionate employee volunteers to develop educational content, study material and assessment papers, which will be utilized by teachers to host lectures to students, remotely. The volunteer only needs a computer, the right intent and investment of time, to enrich the lives of those in need of quality education. Employees also have the freedom to choose any other community service covering education, animal welfare or any other initiative close to their heart. Mindspace REIT takes cognisance of the fact that employees have a lot to offer even outside their workplace, including valuable experience from their corporate trainings, and can positively impact communities. Powered by Capital Market - Live News (This story has not been edited by Business Standard staff and is auto-generated from a syndicated feed.) The domestic equity barometers ended with deep cuts on Wednesday. The Nifty closed a tad above the 16,600 mark, after hitting the day's low at 16,478.65. While banks, financials and autos declined, metals, oil & gas and energy stocks edged higher. As per provisional closing, the barometer index, the S&P BSE Sensex, tumbled 778.38 points or 1.38% to 55,468.90. The Nifty 50 index lost 187.95 points or 1.12% to 16,605.95. Global investors continued to grapple with the economic fallout from the escalating Russia-Ukraine conflict. In the broader market, the S&P BSE Mid-Cap index fell 0.17% while the S&P BSE Small-Cap index slipped 0.12%. The market breadth was negative. On the BSE, 1,716 shares rose and 1,625 shares fell. A total of 117 shares were unchanged. Global Markets: Shares in Europe and Asia traded in the red on Wednesday as the ongoing Russia-Ukraine conflict continued to lead to a surge in oil prices. Brent crude futures climbed above $111 a barrel, scaling highs not seen since July 2014. That's despite the International Energy Agency saying on Tuesday it will release 60 million barrels of oil from global reserves, in a bid to ease the current supply constraint. Sanctions on Russian banks following Moscow's invasion of Ukraine hampered trade finance for crude shipments and some traders opted to avoid Russian supplies in an already tight market. A Russian airstrike hit Kyiv's main television tower on Monday afternoon, killing five people. Meanwhile, Russian forces continue to attack Kharkiv, Ukraine's second-largest city. Wall Street ended sharply lower on Tuesday, with financial stocks bearing much of the damage for a second straight day as the Russia-Ukraine crisis deepened and stirred anxiety among investors. Investors are also gearing up to hear from Federal Reserve Chair Jerome Powell in his semiannual hearing at House Committee on Financial Services, which begins on Wednesday. Investors will be watching closely for his comments on potential rate hikes, as market expectations for hikes this year has eased slightly since Russia's invasion. Economy: India's manufacturing sector saw an expansion in output and new orders in February as per the IHS Markit Purchasing Managers' Index (PMI) which rose to 54.9 for the month of February 2022, from 54 in January 2022. A reading of 50 on the PMI indicates no change in activity levels. India's GDP growth slowed down to 5.4% in October-December 2021 from 8.5% in the previous quarter, data released on February 28 by the Ministry of Statistics and Programme Implementation showed. The statistics ministry also said India's GDP will likely grow by 8.9% in FY22, down from its first advance estimate of 9.2%, released in early January 2022. The gross Goods and Services Tax (GST) revenue collected in the month of February 2022 is Rs 1,33,026 crore of which CGST is Rs 24,435 crore, SGST is Rs 30,779 crore, IGST is Rs 67,471crore (including Rs 33,837 crore collected on import of goods) and cess is Rs 10,340 crore (including Rs 638 crore collected on import of goods). The revenues for the month of February 2022 are 18% higher than the GST revenues in the same month last year and 26% higher than the GST revenues in February 2020. February Auto sales: Maruti Suzuki India slumped 6.01% to Rs 7,814.20. The company recorded total sales of 1,64,056 units in February 2022, down 0.25% as against 1,64,469 units sold in February 2021. Tata Motors fell 1.42% to Rs 447.60. The company's sales in the domestic & international market for February 2022 stood at 77,733 vehicles as compared to 61,258 units during February 2021, recording a growth of 26.89%. Ashok Leyland declined 0.63% to Rs 117.90. The Hinduja Group company's sales grew 7% to 14,657 units in February 2022 from 13,703 units sold in February 2021. Eicher Motors slipped 3.15% to Rs 2,508.10. VE Commercial Vehicles (VECV), Eicher's unlisted subsidiary, sold 5,856 units of commercial vehicles in February 2022, registering a rise of 7.3% year on year from 5,457 units in February 2021. Eicher Motors' total motorcycles (Royal Enfield) sales dropped 15% to 59,160 units in February 2022 as against 69,659 units sold in the same period last year. Escorts added 0.91% to Rs 1869. The company's total tractor sales declined by 45.6% YoY to 6,114 units in February 2022 from 11,230 units sold in February 2021. Hero MotoCorp tumbled 4.30% at Rs 2,426.30. The two-wheeler major sold 3,58,254 units of motorcycles and scooters in February 2022, which is lower by 29.12% compared with 5,05,467 units sold in February 2021. Bajaj Auto slumped 4.62% to Rs 3,367.15. The two-wheeler maker's total vehicle sales declined 16% to 3,16,020 units in February 2022 over February 2021. TVS Motor Company fell 3.18% to Rs 597.95. The company's monthly sales stood at 2,81,714 units in February 2022 as against sales of 2,97,747 units in the month of February 2021, registering a sales de-growth of 5.38% Y-o-Y (year-on-year). Mahindra & Mahindra (M&M) declined 1.58% to Rs 778.35. M&M's overall auto sales jumped 89% year on year in the month of February 2022 to 54,455 vehicles as compared to February 2021. M&M's Farm Equipment Sector (FES) sold 20,437 tractors in February 2022, down by 27% compared with 28,146 tractors sold in February 2021. Stocks in Spotlight: Varun Beverages added 2.75% to Rs 971, bucking weak market trend after the company announced that its board approved the proposal to enter into an agreement to manufacture 'Kurkure Puffcorn' for PepsiCo India Holdings. Quint Digital Media hit an upper circuit limit of 20% at Rs 483.40 after the company said it will divest minority stake in its digital business news platform to Adani Media Ventures. Panacea Biotec was locked in 5% upper circuit at Rs 198.50. The company and its wholly-owned subsidiary Panacea Biotec Pharma (PBPL) have entered into definitive agreements for sale of pharmaceutical formulations brands of PBPL for India and Nepal, to Mankind Pharma. Brightcom Group was locked in 5% lower circuit at Rs 113.10. The company said the Securities and Exchange Board of India (Sebi) ordered a forensic audit of books of accounts of the company on 16 September 2021. Coal India jumped 9.40% to Rs 184.50. The state-run coal major's offtake stood at 57.4 million tonnes (MT) in February 2022, growing 12% as compared with 51.3 MT recorded in the same month last year. The company's coal production rose 3.9% to 64.3 million tonnes (MT) in February 2022 from 61.9 MT in February 2021. NMDC jumped 5.76% to Rs 151.40. The PSU miner's iron ore production jumped 11.66% YoY to 4.31 MT in February 2022The company's iron ore sales aggregated to 3.97 MT in February 2022 as against 3.25 MT in February 2021, rising 22.15%. Shares of dairy stocks gained after Amul and Prag Milk hike prices by Rs 2 a litre citing rising costs. Heritage Foods (up 3.26%), Dodla Dairy (up 2.76%), Hatsun Agro Products (up 1.4%) and Umang Diaries (up 1.22%) advanced. Powered by Capital Market - Live News (This story has not been edited by Business Standard staff and is auto-generated from a syndicated feed.) Quint Digital Media hit an upper circuit limit of 20% at Rs 483.40 after the company said it will divest minority stake in its digital business news platform to Adani Media Ventures. Quint Digital Media has, via its wholly owned subsidiary, entered into a binding term sheet with the Adani Group. Adani Group will acquire a minority stake in Quintillion Business Media Private Limited ("QBM"), an indirect subsidiary of Quint Digital. The proposed transaction with the Adani Group is only for QBM which is a digital business news platform and not in relation to other digital media/media tech properties owned by Quint Digital viz. The Quint, Quintype Technologies, thenewsminute and Youthkiawaaz. QBM is a business and financial news company and operates a leading business news digital platform in India. QBM's main content is based on the Indian economy, international finance, corporate law & governance and business news, amongst others through its platform Bloomberg (This story has not been edited by Business Standard staff and is auto-generated from a syndicated feed.) Tanla Platforms announced an exclusive partnership with Truecaller at Mobile World Congress (MWC) 2022, Barcelona. Truecaller Business Messaging will be exclusively powered by Tanla Platforms' Wisely CPaaS platform. Wisely is one of the world's largest blockchain-enabled CPaaS platforms, secured by e2e cryptographic encryption. Truecaller, as the leading global platform for verifying contacts and blocking unwanted communication, brings with it a wide array of advanced messaging capabilities and a strong base of 300 million monthly active users. The partnership between these two best-in-class technology innovators will provide distinctive digital experiences for customers via a secure, reliable and user-friendly platform. The aim is to help businesses reach out to their customers with relevant messages that include rich media and engaging content. Business messages can include images, video, location pins and even documents while at the same time offering benefits for businesses like lower costs, faster deliveries and better analytics unlike traditional SMS services. The IT software company posted a 68.9% increase in net profit to Rs 158 crore on a 35.3% rise in net sales to Rs 884.92 crore in Q3 FY22 over Q3 FY21. Tanla Platforms, one of the world's largest CPaaS players, processes more than 800 billion interactions annually and about 62% of India's A2P SMS traffic is processed through its distributed ledger platform. Shares of Tanla Platforms slipped 1.52% to Rs 1,541 on BSE. Powered by Capital Market - Live News (This story has not been edited by Business Standard staff and is auto-generated from a syndicated feed.) Tata Steel Ltd is quoting at Rs 1290.5, up 5.71% on the day as on 12:54 IST on the NSE. The stock is up 66.06% in last one year as compared to a 8.17% spurt in NIFTY and a 50.93% spurt in the Nifty Metal index. Tata Steel Ltd is up for a third straight session in a row. The stock is quoting at Rs 1290.5, up 5.71% on the day as on 12:54 IST on the NSE. The benchmark NIFTY is down around 1.8% on the day, quoting at 16490.9. The Sensex is at 55087.9, down 2.06%. Tata Steel Ltd has risen around 10.62% in last one month. Meanwhile, Nifty Metal index of which Tata Steel Ltd is a constituent, has risen around 6.32% in last one month and is currently quoting at 5896.85, up 3.88% on the day. The volume in the stock stood at 152.42 lakh shares today, compared to the daily average of 91.29 lakh shares in last one month. The benchmark March futures contract for the stock is quoting at Rs 1292.6, up 5.99% on the day. Tata Steel Ltd is up 66.06% in last one year as compared to a 8.17% spurt in NIFTY and a 50.93% spurt in the Nifty Metal index. The PE of the stock is 4.79 based on TTM earnings ending December 21. Powered by Capital Market - Live News (This story has not been edited by Business Standard staff and is auto-generated from a syndicated feed.) Thousands of young Indians caught in the war between Russia and Ukraine have brought to the forefront an important debate on why overseas medical education is so popular and what India could do to contain the exodus of its students. Prime Minister (PM) Narendra Modi added to the narrative recently by urging corporate India to pitch in much more actively so that Indian students do not feel the need to go abroad, especially to smaller countries, for medical studies. The PMs suggestion could work only if private players offer affordable medical courses in India. Also, the number of ... Disabled people enjoy better job prospects By CHENG SI (China Daily) 09:21, March 02, 2022 Blue book says employment rose in 2020, with many running businesses Disabled people have benefited from a fairer Chinese job market in recent years, with more high-quality employment opportunities, according to a blue book released on Tuesday. Produced by the China Commission on Promotion of Publicity for the Undertakings of Chinese Disabled Persons, Social Sciences Academic Press, and Renmin University of China, it said about 8.62 million people with disabilities had jobs in 2020, up from 8.55 million in 2019. Among them, around 634,000 ran their own businesses and nearly 2.4 million were in flexible employment. Many found jobs after attending work-skills training programs. The report said about 382,000 people with disabilities received such training in 2020, with 621 getting professional certification as blind masseurs. However, the large number of disabled people in Chinaaround 85 millionand prejudices and lower social security coverage had hampered their efforts to live better lives with dignity. Li Ge, human resources manager at the Beijing office of Sinopec Capital, said recently that it's important to offer job seekers with disabilities suitable vacancies that allow them to play to their strengths. "Offering them suitable jobs can not only help them realize their value but create value for the companies," she said. "It's a win-win situation." Li said companies face some problems when planning to hire people with disabilities, such as the need to provide suitable facilities and psychological counseling. "Take our company as an example," she said. "Though we did hire people with disabilities, they still make up a small proportion of our total employees. So it's hard for them to have their own social circles." She added that investment in barrier-free facilities and higher work-related injury costs were the main concerns when hiring people with disabilities. The government has encouraged companies to hire disabled people by providing financial incentives and has released guidelines to help protect their working rights. Tianjin municipality said in 2018 that any company hiring a college graduate with disabilities could apply for an allowance of 6,000 yuan ($950). The municipal government also offered 4,000 yuan allowances to encourage the employment of highly skilled disabled people and 3,000 yuan for hiring those with lesser abilities. Guo Liqun, executive vice-president of the China Commission on Promotion of Publicity for the Undertakings of Chinese Disabled Persons, said that people with disabilities need not only a rich material life but a sense of happiness and security with dignity, fairness and safety. He said the comprehensive development of the group needs to be promoted to meet their needs for a better life and let them share in the benefits of common prosperity. (Web editor: Zhong Wenxing, Liang Jun) Students sanitize their hands as they enter Jiphyeon Elementary School, Sejong City, on the first day of the spring semester, Wednesday. Yonhap By Lee Hae-rin The nation's daily COVID-19 case numbers have set a new record again, reporting an all-time high of over 200,000 new infection cases, Wednesday. The figure soared 80,248 over the previous day's number. The spread of the Omicron variant is proving to be faster and more dramatic than the public health authorities had originally predicted. According to the Korea Disease Control and Prevention Agency (KDCA), the country saw 219,241 new daily cases, Tuesday, and 138,993, Monday. The country's total caseload has now surpassed 3 million. The KDCA said that 15.1 percent (33,005) of the new cases are high-risk patients over the age of 60, while 23.8 percent (52,092) are under 18. The number of critically ill COVID-19 patients rose to 762, greater than the previous day's 727, and has jumped nearly 50 percent from last week's numbers. On Tuesday, 96 deaths were reported, less than Monday's 112. The accumulated death toll has mounted to 8,226, with a fatality rate of 0.24 percent. The government's decision to lift the vaccine pass system from March 1 came under fire as the number of infections skyrocketed. Initially, the government was expected to lift the system once infection case numbers had peaked, which was estimated to occur in mid-March. The early suspension of the vaccine pass has sparked a torrent of debate as it was announced ahead of the March 9 presidential election. Some speculate that political considerations, rather than public health and safety, may have been at play in the government's decision. With the pandemic-induced social distancing measures, which have been in place for over two years, causing financial damage to self-employed people, some say the government could be attempting to cater to those affected. Coming out in defence of Maharashtra minister Nawab Malik, who has been arrested by the ED in connection with a money laundering case, NCP's state unit president Jayant Patil has said that it is not mandatory to seek the resignation of any minister until the crime is proven. Apparently targeting the opposition BJP, Patil said there are efforts to put the Maha Vikas Aghadi (MVA) ministers in trouble. He was speaking to reporters on the sidelines of a party event here on Tuesday. When asked about BJP state unit president Chandrakant Patil's statement that his party will not allow the upcoming budget session of the state legislature to function if Malik continues to remain a cabinet minister despite his arrest, the leader said, "Let the BJP put forth its stand on Malik during the session and an appropriate answer will be given." "If everyday some kind of action is being taken against ministers, it is not mandatory to seek their resignation. If the crime against them is not yet proved, why would the person give his resignation?" he said. "In the case of (former home minister) Anil Deshmukh, we took his resignation innocently when he was arrested, but it was later understood that the allegations against him were frail. There are efforts to put our ministers in trouble. We have taken one resignation, but now we think that there is no need of seeking the resignation of others," Patil, who is Water Resources Minister, said. Malik, state Minority Affairs Minister and ruling NCP's spokesperson, was arrested by the (ED) last week in connection with a money laundering probe linked to the activities of fugitive gangster Dawood Ibrahim and his aides. Deshmukh, who had resigned as a minister in April last year after allegations of corruption were levelled against him by former Mumbai police commissioner Param Bir Singh. The ED had arrested him November last year. The BJP has been aggressively demanding Malik's resignation, saying that he has no moral right to remain a minister. The upcoming budget session of the Maharashtra legislature will be held from March 3 to 25 in Mumbai. Meanwhile, speaking about the Indian students stranded in war-torn Ukraine, Patil said extra efforts need to be taken by the Union government to evacuate them and bring them back to the country. "Around two-and-a-half weeks ago, an appeal was made by me and several others to evacuate the stranded students from Ukraine, but it seems that we woke up a little late. No issues. I am hearing from the news channels that extra efforts are being taken by the government to bring back the students," he said. The minister added that he has been getting several videos of students currently stranded in Ukraine who have expressed disappointment for not being evacuated. "Therefore, the Centre should take extra efforts," he said. When asked whether the efforts taken by the Union government are sufficient or not, Patil said, "The way students are not feeling confident about their evacuation, the way students facing difficulties, it means we are lacking somewhere. (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.) American tech giant on Tuesday (local time) paused all product sales in and has limited Pay and other services in the country due to the military operation in . "We have paused all product sales in Russia," the Russian News Agency Sputnik reported citing Apple's statement. "Last week, we stopped all exports into our sales channel in the country. Pay and other services have been limited. RT News and Sputnik News are no longer available for download from the App Store outside Russia," read the statement. Earlier, Meta, Google, TikTok and YouTube have blocked Russian state-owned media outlets RT and Sputnik in Europe, Euronews reported. This comes as Russian forces launched military operations in on February 24, three days after Moscow recognized Ukraine's breakaway regions - Donetsk and Luhansk - as independent entities. Several countries including the UK, the US, Canada, and the European Union have condemned Russia's military operations in and imposed sanctions on Moscow. These countries have also promised Ukraine to help with military aid to fight . The US, Canada and European allies agreed to remove key Russian banks from the interbank messaging system, SWIFT which means Russian banks won't be able to communicate securely with banks beyond Russia's borders. Russian President Vladimir Putin has also signed a decree on special economic measures against the US and its allies. Fighting in Ukraine has so far pushed more than 500,000 people across the country's borders, according to the UN refugee agency. Speaking at an emergency session of the UN General Assembly on February 28, Russia's Permanent Representative to the United Nations, Vasily Nebenzya, had said that has no plans to occupy Ukraine. On February 28, negotiations between delegations of Russia and Ukraine were held in the Gomel Region of Belarus and another round of talks is scheduled for March 2. (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.) will comply with the European Union's sanctions on Russian state-affiliated media RT and Sputnik when the EU order takes effect, the social network said on Tuesday. "The (EU) sanctions will likely legally require us to withhold certain content in EU member states," a spokesperson said in an emailed statement to Reuters. "We intend to comply with the order when it goes into effect." EU industry chief Thierry Breton has said the European Commission expected approval by late on Tuesday from member nations for the ban on the Kremlin-backed outlets. Outside the EU, said it would continue to focus on reducing the visibility of content from these outlets as well as labelling it. Facebook owner Meta, Alphabet Inc's Google, YouTube and TikTok have said they are blocking access to RT and Sputnik in the EU. On Tuesday, Meta said it was globally demoting posts from Russian state media. (This story has not been edited by Business Standard staff and is auto-generated from a syndicated feed.) New Delhi [India], March 2 (ANI/PNN): Founded in 2014 by Ankur Chauhan, Ads On Cabs India (A Brand by Jpson Group) is now working towards revolutionizing the traditional ways of marketing brands in India. The key to this revolution is the idea of marketing brands using digital hoardings as the center piece. The most common ways in which marketing agencies advertise a brand is through hoardings, posters, many more ways. But some years back, an entrepreneur and innovator named Ankur Chauhan found saw some inefficiency in it. He found that these hoardings were unable to make the maximum gains for businesses. The biggest reason for this inefficiency was the static nature of hoardings. This founding laid the foundation for digital hoardings. Being fixed in a single place means that people who only pass around that hoarding will see the advertisement. This seemed like a limiting factor. But also quite stressful as well, because the efforts of great marketing were not reaching their highest potential. Therefore, Ankur Chauhan came across the revolutionary idea of 'Movable Digital Hoardings'. This was a ripple that created a wave. This idea became the ideology on which JPSON GROUP established their brand "Ads On Cabs India" with Ankur Chauhan as the founding member. Aim of 'Ads On Cabs India' with Movable Digital Hoardings Now, Ads On Cabs India understood the importance of Digital Hoardings and aimed to utilize them in the best way possible. But to do so, it had to make sure that The digital hoardings that are to be used for advertising are big enough for attracting the eyes of the audience: - Making sure that the ads reaches the eyes of the audience is the key aim of Ads On Cabs India. * The height at which the digital hoardings are kept should be enough for its light to reach the audience's eyes: -Therefore, Ads On Cabs India thought of including the vehicle part came in the whole equation. * That the speed at which the vehicle moved should not be too much: - An advertisement going at a vehicle at top speed will definitely decrease the ad views. So, Ads On Cabs India will not use the vehicle for the purpose of passenger's riding. All the vehicle's carrying Digital Hoarding will be dedicatedly use for advertising purpose only. That will attain maximum connectivity of audience with brands. * The vehicle stays mostly in the busy marketplaces and not open roads: - By doing so, Ads On Cabs India achieves more audience attraction and your digital hoarding can reach anywhere anytime across the city with the coverage of prime and non-prime locations without any price effect. * The vehicle transitions between moving and static states: - The whole motive of Ads On Cabs India's digital hoarding was to make it maximize the efficiency, which was not the case in it being static. But that does not mean that sometimes static hoardings are not a great option. Hence, Ads On Cabs India uses its digital hoarding and makes it change between static and moving states at different times at different locations. Advertising at its Best With Ads On Cabs India: Ads On Cabs India is currently working toward its goal of advertising with 50 movable digital hoardings and then eventually moving up to 100 of them. As of now, Ads On Cabs India provides two phases of advertising with the use of movable digital hoardings. In the first phase, the digital hoardings reach the metro cities. Whereas, in the second phase, the digital hoardings cover all the remaining tier-1 and tier-2 cities across India. Ads On Cabs India (A Brand by Jpson Group) Important Features of Ads On Cabs India include Movable Digital Hoardings, Cab Advertisement, Outdoor Advertising/OOH, Vehicle Advertising, Marketing & Promotions, Online Digital Marketing, Franchise Opportunity with Ads On Cabs India, 100+ Serviced Cities. Visit (https://adsoncabs.com/) This story is provided by PNN. ANI will not be responsible in any way for the content of this article. (ANI/PNN) DISCLAIMER (This story has not been edited by Business Standard staff and is auto-generated from a syndicated feed.) New Delhi [India], March 2 (ANI/Oswaal Books): CBSE is all set to conduct the Term 2 examination 2022. Students are feeling worried about somewhere because they have no clue where to start. As we all know, this year the exams are a bit late, which means students have enough time to prepare for them. But there is still confusion among students considering the syllabus they need to cover. Well, how can we forget that great learning always leads to the best outcomes? For students that belong to PCM, it is integral to prepare accordingly. If they are preparing well, they will be able to secure good marks, which means that their position in some reputed college is fixed. Techniques to cover PCM in a month with sample Paper: - Understand the question paper: A student needs to understand the question paper in order to secure good marks. Until and unless the question paper is cleared, securing good marks will not be easy. In the sample paper, you will see the question paper is divided according to the actual paper. Analyze it and prepare accordingly. If you are facing any difficulty in any particular section of the question paper, ask the respective teachers to clarify it. After the complete analysis of the question paper in the sample paper, you will be able to understand where you need to focus more. Make targets: For students from PCM, it is important to make targets. As we all know, the syllabus is quite vast, and students need to cover it accordingly. Set up targets that are achievable. Also, according to the targets planned, Set the same goal if you have the courage to complete entire syllabus in one night. But if you are ready to cover half of the syllabus in one night, you can go for it. Don't overburden yourself with the syllabus. Revision is important: Revision plays an integral role. After checking out the sample paper and answering all the questions, you need to do the revision. The sample paper is a bunch of all the important questions, and you need to focus on all of them. You will see in the bracket that the year is mentioned when the same question is asked on the first of the year mansion. The bracket indicates that this question is important, and one needs to remember it. During the revision station, mark the important questions so that you can also analyze them at the last minute. Focus on concepts: Do not try to cram the concepts; instead, understand them. When you focus on the concept, it will be easier to retain them for a longer duration. Undoubtedly, students focusing on concepts are more efficient in solving the questions. They do not face any sort of difficulty in solving the questions because they are aware of all the concepts that need to be applied to them.Students can also plan their exams with Oswaal CBSE Term 2 Sample Paper Class 10 & 12 For Board Exams 2022. Students will get different ways of learning: * Self-Assessment Papers for Term 2 Board Exams March-April 2022 * Oswaal CBSE Term 2 Sample Paper Class 10 & 12 For Board Exams 2022 include all latest typologies of Questions as specified in the latest CBSE Sample Papers Released On 14th Jan 2022 * On-Tips Notes & Revision Notes for Quick Revision * The CBSE Term 2 Sample Paper Class 10 & 12 For Board Exams 2022 include Mind Maps for Better Learning * The Book provides (https://oswaalbooks.com/collections/cbse/products/oswaal-cbse-sample-question-paper-for-term-2-class-10-set-of-4-books-english-science-social-science-mathstandard-for-2022-exam-free-access-code-for-oswaal360?variant=41195503222964) Free Oswaal 360 E-Assessments based on the latest Typologies of Questions as per CBSE Term 2 Board Exams 2022 Here is the recommended link for CBSE Term 2 Sample Paper Class 10 for Board Exams 2022, click here (https://bit.ly/3vxSZNs) Here is the recommended link for CBSE Term 2 Sample Paper Class 12 for Board Exams 2022, click here (https://bit.ly/3htZ8Ss) Be sure of the formulas: The formula is also very important to understand. If you come from a PCM background, make sure you understand the formula and know how to apply it. The physics and chemistry papers are in some way numerical-based, and in that case, only the formulas can help you. Along with that, there are some conceptual questions that also need the knowledge of basic formulas. If you have knowledge of formulas, you can solve every question mentioned in the paper. Final verdict: A sample paper is important for students in the last month before an examination. The sample paper is designed by keeping all the basic aspects into consideration so that students will be able to get a good score and will not face any sort of problem. For sure, after checking out the sample paper, there will be no problem in preparing for exams. This story is provided by Oswaal Books. ANI will not be responsible in any way for the content of this article. (ANI/Oswaal Books) DISCLAIMER (This story has not been edited by Business Standard staff and is auto-generated from a syndicated feed.) Gurugram (Haryana) [India], March 2 (ANI/PNN): CREEK is a social networking platform that offers multiple growth opportunities for entrepreneurs, learners, mentors, and other professionals. With a mission to increase the access of entrepreneurship in India and grow together in the startup ecosystem, CREEK has helped several explorers, creators, professionals, and founders build strong and influential circles. CREEK believes in empowering every individual who dreams of starting their venture. Backed by Nasscom and Y combinator Alumni's who are also in the advisory board of the company, the company takes pride in being India's 1st Community-led Start-up Networking App. Whether it's about idea validation, hiring core team members, onboarding advisors, or connecting with like-minded individuals, CREEK offers them all. Currently, there are around 3000 members growing 220 per cent on an average MoM user Growth. The Members made around 14k connections and exchanged 6k+ Messages. Deepanshu Sharma, Aman Bharti, and Aman Kharb co-founded CREEK to strengthen the Indian startup networking system. Deepanshu believes in the power of innovation and technology and optimizes it to benefit mankind. Aman Bharti is a competent professional with over 4 years of experience in Mobile Application Development and Team management. He believes in developing, implementing, managing, and adopting new technologies to maximize development efficiency and produce innovative applications. Aman Kharb is a visionary who aims to create 5x more entrepreneurs in India by 2025. The trio had a common vision of creating a platform that connects hustlers and gives them the courage to pursue their entrepreneurial dreams. He says, "We solely chose this idea to work on this model because we don't want anyone to give up on their ideas just because they lack the power of networking. It should be accessible to everyone everywhere." As a value-driven and customer-centric company, CREEK values all its members and takes their feedback seriously. CREEK is playing a crucial role to support people who are choosing entrepreneurship as a serious career choice. Backed up by a team of supportive professionals, CREEK is planning to expand in Bangalore, Mumbai, Chennai and Delhi. The management is planning to penetrate into Indian Startup Space in the next 2 years, helping entrepreneurs at the idea stage to connect with like-minded people and launch their startups across the globe. To download the application, click: Appstore:(https://apps.apple.com/us/app/creek-startup-community/id1577355594) Playstore:(https://play.google.com/store/apps/details?id=com.online.unicat) This story is provided by PNN. ANI will not be responsible in any way for the content of this article. (ANI/PNN) DISCLAIMER (This story has not been edited by Business Standard staff and is auto-generated from a syndicated feed.) Pune (Maharashtra) [India], March 2 (ANI/PRNewswire): ElasticRun, India's leading B2B eCommerce platform enabling access to millions of rural Indian kirana shops, announced the expansion of its leadership team with three key new hires. The new team-members include Pankaj Roongta who has joined as the CFO, Sashi Gumma joining as CBO - Networks , and Dheeraj Arora who has come on board as CBO - Supply. The Company recently closed Series E funding of US$330 million. ElasticRun's focus now is on further expanding its rural reach into 30+ states, enabling over a million kirana (neighbourhood retail) shops to conveniently access big consumer brands and food brands. Commenting on the new additions to the team, Sandeep Deshmukh, ElasticRun co-founder and CEO, said, "In the last few years, ElasticRun has grown thanks to a very high speed of execution. Hustle and agility is a core part of our DNA. For the next phase of growth, we are looking to build a formidable team led by seasoned business leaders who exemplify the innovation mindset along with robust scaling experience. We are a fast-growing 'Network of Possibilities' and these leaders will help us create distinctive capabilities and build a future-fit organization. We are delighted to welcome Pankaj, Sashi and Dheeraj to ElasticRun and look forward to unlocking the market opportunity and achieving milestones together." India has over 12 million kirana shops across the country of which 10 million are in rural markets. ElasticRun is democratising physical and digital access to Indian consumers by helping businesses reach traditionally unserved consumers through neighbourhood retail stores across the deepest rural pockets of India. These rural stores remain underserved by consumer brands due to the high-cost structures of traditional distribution networks, rural kirana store's long distances from the cities and small order sizes. Pankaj Roongta joins ElasticRun as the Chief Financial Officer from Westlife Development Ltd (McDonalds), where he held the position of Chief Financial Officer for the Indian listed entity. Pankaj comes with over 20 years of leadership experience in the full spectrum of Finance, P & L, Investor Relations, M & A, Corporate Governance, and Business Transformation along with functional leadership experience in Supply Chain/Logistics, Legal and Information Technology. He has previously worked with L'Oreal as Finance Director for Asia Pacific based out of Hong Kong, as well as Johnson & Johnson and Abbot India as Financial Controller. Sashi Gumma who has joined ElasticRun as CBO - Networks, was previously the CEO-Supermarkets at More Retail, and responsible for building the brand's national footprint, improving their margins and driving business growth. He is an alumni of IIT Kharagpur and IIM Ahmedabad, with over 22 years of experience in food and grocery-retail. Dheeraj has joined as CBO, responsible for the supply side growth of the ElasticRun platform. Dheeraj is a Business leader credited with building businesses and business solutions from scratch. He has over two decades of experience in blue chip CPG companies like Unilever and Britannia. He held key roles in Unilever across India and international markets, where his last role was Vice President, Modern Trade & eCom at HUL. ElasticRun is the B2B eCommerce Platform, enabling businesses to reach small Kirana stores in the deep rural parts of India. The company acts as an extended arm of FMCG companies' direct distribution networks in the rural area to provide a set of net new customers to the FMCG companies. ElasticRun also helps eCommerce companies reach customers in far-flung areas through its network of rural Kirana stores. It brings banks and financial institutions closer to a set of new underserved SME customers from its rural Kirana network. ElasticRun was founded by Sandeep Deshmukh, Shitiz Bansal and Saurabh Nigam in 2016. The company's existing investors include Softbank, Prosus Ventures (formerly Naspers Ventures), Goldman Sachs, Kalaari Capital and Avataar Ventures. This story is provided by PRNewswire. ANI will not be responsible in any way for the content of this article. (ANI/PRNewswire) DISCLAIMER (This story has not been edited by Business Standard staff and is auto-generated from a syndicated feed.) New Delhi [India], March 2 (ANI/PRNewswire): Breakthrough India's Pan-Asia Summit 'Reframe' kick-started today with an insightful discussion on what it will entail to end Gender-Based Violence in the next 10 years. The 3-day Pan-Asia summit 'Reframe' has brought together non-profit organizations, industry experts, thought leaders and media to discuss ways to create a future without Gender-based Violence. The summit aims to develop specific areas of advocacy for concrete guidance on prevention and redressal of Gender-based Violence and Gender Based Discrimination (GBD). Breakthrough has been working on addressing violence & discrimination against women and girls for over 2 decades by focusing on transformation of patriarchal norms and narratives across India. The organization enables young change makers to transform themselves and others by building their leadership in making violence unacceptable. Sohini Bhattacharya, in her welcome address, said, "The aim of this regional summit is to co-create a future agenda in the Asian context, including setting priorities, sharing of strategies for achieving and measuring progress on preventing Gender-Based Violence and Discrimination. Leveraging the opportunity provided to us with the launch of Generation Equality Forum, in 2020, advancing a shared agenda on Gender-based Violence specifically for Asia is important for two reasons. While national level advocacy is important to move national level commitments aligned to SDG goal 5, regional coalitions and partnerships play a central role to align efforts and resources at a regional level. It also enables strengthening the roll-out and implementation of a multi-sectoral response to urgently address gender-based violence; with a particular focus on women and girls in all their diversities across this vast and diverse region." The surge of violence has disproportionately affected those who were already most likely to experience GBV - those facing intersecting and compounding oppressions on the basis of gender, race, class, ability, sexual orientation and other characteristics. Adolescent girls, in particular, have faced a range of issues that are likely to increase their risk of facing GBV across their lifetimes, including being pulled out of school, being refused access to sexual and reproductive health information and services, and being forced to marry early, which are all risk factors for later GBV. Ten million more girls are at risk of becoming child brides by 2030. Wangshu Lian, an LGBTI activist with Common Language and Chinese Lala Alliance, said, "Building agency and leadership are two critical components at the heart of combatting Gender-Based Violence. Feminist civil society organizations supporting marginalized communities should be empowered with agency and technical know-how to tackle Gender-Based Violence. Additionally, funding needs to be prioritized for these organizations to drive social change." "The experiences of the last two years during the pandemic have worsened long-standing gender discriminations. But I think there is recognition that gender-based violence is a pandemic too - even though they keep referring to it as the shadow pandemic. But there is recognition that COVID-19 has increased the vulnerability of women, girls and LBTQ+ people to violence and abuse. Some violence has moved out of physical spaces into online ones, with increased reported in cyberstalking, bullying and sexual harassment. Equally, the GBV that women, including transgender persons and girls are facing appears to be more severe and sustained, perhaps reflecting the intensity of lockdowns and increased difficulty in escaping abuse," added Ms. Bhattacharya. Sarah Knibbs, Deputy Regional Director, UN Women Regional Office for Asia and the Pacific, in her address remarked, "We really need bold actions to make progress towards gender equality and to see those gains in everyone's life. Globally, data suggests that 1 in 3 women experiences violence. The best way to end Gender-Based Violence is to prevent it from happening by addressing the root and structural causes of it." Working with youth is the best path for sustained progress towards gender equality in eradicating gender-based violence." An Oxfam International analysis in 70 countries over 40 years has found that the most vital and consistent factor driving policy change has been feminist activism. Feminist movements and organizations have changed the way we think about GBV, drawing attention to the issue and stirring hearts and minds globally, while also deepening our understanding of its root causes and the interventions that are most effective in addressing it. Such organizations has been facing tremendous pressures from authoritarian regimes and regulations world over." Zharin Zhafrael - Co Director - Musawah, said, "Organizing a structural movement is key to addressing Gender-Based Violence. GBV needs to be tackled at all levels to build a gender-equal society. Egalitarian law and favourable family conditions are critical for economic empowerment of women in the Arab world." World Health Organization's (WHO) regional estimates suggest that South Asia and South-East Asia regions have the highest rate of intimate partner violence (IPV) in the world, at 43 percent and 33 percent respectively. Four South Asian countries (Bangladesh, India, Pakistan and Nepal in order of prevalence) feature among the top fifteen countries with the highest national prevalence of physical intimate partner violence as reported by the Demographic and Health Surveys. The summit is particularly significant in this context and will pave way for a gender-equal world. Meera Devi - Bureau Chief, Khabar Lahariya - Chambal Media, said, "The voices of women and those from marginalized communities should reach the government. More often than not, their voices are silenced and they are left without any help. Making their voices heard is one way of empowering them. And this will help us significantly in addressing Gender-Based Violence." This story is provided by PRNewswire. ANI will not be responsible in any way for the content of this article. (ANI/PRNewswire) DISCLAIMER (This story has not been edited by Business Standard staff and is auto-generated from a syndicated feed.) Gujarat [India], March 2 (ANI/ATK): The Mental Wellbeing of the global population has suffered during the pandemic. Our young minds have borne the brunt of school closures, a sudden shift to online learning and strict social distancing protocols. Against this background, the Adolescent Health Academy, UNICEF, Gujarat Youth Forum and Elixir Foundation organized '#MentalHealthMatters: Understanding Mindfulness and Wellbeing' a daylong session on February 20 with experts from across Gujarat to facilitate critical dialogue on the wellbeing of adolescents. Speaking during the programme, Dr Sravan Chenji, Health Officer, UNICEF stressed upon the impact of the pandemic on children as well as teenagers. He said, "The COVID-19 pandemic has impacted the economic status of families, particularly those belonging to the working class. The brief period of financial insecurity has had a significant impact on the mental health of parents and consequently their children, especially children belonging to vulnerable groups." His address was followed by an insightful talk from Sharmila Ray, Child Protection Specialist, UNICEF. She said, "The first step in improving the mental health realities of India - is acceptance. Acceptance without any fear, shame or taboo. It is important for parents, students, young people, doctors, practitioners, NGOs and government departments to come together as a community to collectively further improve acceptance and awareness around mental health alongside bettering both service access and quality in the state. UNICEF is committed to facilitate dialogue between all concerned stakeholders in this respect." Dr Nishchal Bhatt, Chairperson of AHAA said, "Adolescence is a formative time, characterized by great opportunity and vulnerability. As a society, we need to ensure that we are working hard towards ensuring psychological, social and emotional wellbeing of our children during this time." The session concluded with a poignant address from Nishra Sejpal, a youth mental health advocate who poignantly addressed the need to have more open dialogue about mental health. She highlighted that "Young people and adolescents make up our nation and thus it is of utmost importance to prioritize their wellbeing in the journey towards sustainable development." As a part of the programme, three workshops were organized convening experts from the Mental Health fraternity of Gujarat. The first workshop was titled: 'Hum-Tum Dialogue: Challenges faced by parents and teenagers. The workshop was facilitated by Dr Nishchal Bhatt, Chairperson, AHAA who was accompanied by Dr Hiral Naik, Secretary AHAA and Dr Deepika Jain, A Developmental Pediatrician. Dr Bhatt began the workshop by shedding light on the psychological, social and physical changes that occur during the period of adolescence. Dr Hiral Naik stressed upon changing parental styles and parenting dynamics and its impact on the mental wellbeing of adolescents. Dr Deepika Jain shared insights on how parenting styles can be changed to accommodate changes during adolescence. The second workshop on 'Mental Health and Adolescence' was moderated by Dr Satish Pandya, a Senior Pediatrician and Adolescent Experts from Vadodara and hosted experts - Dr Punita Grover,Psychiatrist; Dr Preeti Hemani, Pediatrician; Dr Amole Patel, Developmental Pediatrician; and Dr Deepika Jain, Developmental Pediatrician. The different experts shed light on the common mental health issues faced by adolescents during the pandemic and how the adolescent, the parents and the teachers can come together to seek the right help. There was an extensive discussion on the various counselling and therapy opportunities that exist and their benefits for teenagers. The session ended with some interactive audience Q & A as many participants asked for advice regarding their mental wellbeing. A fruitful discussion on the factors that impact the wellbeing of adolescents was also held and moderated by Dr Neema Sitapara, Pediatrician. The experts on the panel for this discussion included Dr Nehal Shah, Psychiatrist; Dr Hiral Naik, Secretary, AHAA; Dr Amola Patel, Developmental Pediatrician; and Dr Unmesh Upadhyay, Pediatrician. Valuable insights emerged from the discussion focusing on the detrimental impact that screen time and digital media exposure is having on the mental wellbeing of young minds. In his concluding remarks, Dr Nishchal Bhatt stressed on the importance of collaborating and taking action for the mental wellbeing of adolescents. # Link to inaugural session: (https://www.facebook.com/GujaratYouthOrg/videos/378083666989097) # Link to Hum-Tum Dialogue: (https://www.facebook.com/GujaratYouthOrg/videos/698123878234316) # Link to Mental Health and Adolescence: (https://www.facebook.com/GujaratYouthOrg/videos/212520847705181/?extid=NS-UNK-UNK-UNK-IOS_GK0T-GK1C & ref=sharing) # Link to Digital Media, Addiction and Obesity on the Health of Adolescents: (https://www.facebook.com/GujaratYouthOrg/videos/2213954135423472) This story is provided by ATK. ANI will not be responsible in any way for the content of this article. (ANI/ATK) DISCLAIMER (This story has not been edited by Business Standard staff and is auto-generated from a syndicated feed.) New Delhi [India], March 2 (ANI/PRNewswire): Bidding adieu to virtual tours, IIHM students once again took to the streets of India, to taste, experience and learn about the culinary history of Indian cuisine. The IIHM Culinary Educational Tour 2022 kicked off on February 28, 2022 in which 17 students from Food Production department of various IIHM campuses will be touring Lucknow, Jaipur, Delhi and Goa through two weeks; visiting the Old bylane Food Prodigies, Organic Farms, Food Processing Units, Food Packaging Units, Experience Commercial Fishing in Arabian Sea and much more. The students will be accompanied by Chef Sanjay Kak, Culinary Director of IIHM on their tour. The IIHM Culinary Educational Tour 2022 was flagged off from the Hyatt Regency Lucknow by Dr Suborno Bose, Chairman and Chief Mentor of IIHM. He said, "This is a great opportunity for the students to learn hands-on from the people and places itself. Lucknow is a place rich in heritage and its cuisine is historic among Indian cuisines. This history is the base of all culinary journeys. So, its important for students to learn the history and evolution of the food and this tour is meant to do that. Whatever this group of students will learn, will be passed on to others at their respective campuses" The tour has been curated by Dr Suborno Bose, Chef Ranveer Brar and Chef Sanjay Kak. The other guests who were present virtually at the inauguration were Diwan Gautam Anand, distinguished hotelier, Ashish Kumar, GM, Hyatt Regency Kathmandu, Chef Sharad Dewan, Chef Shaun Kenworthy among others. Day 3 of the Tour, March 1, the students explored Makhan Malai at Gol Darwaza, Khasta & Kachori at Rattilal - Latouche Road followed by Bun Maska at Hazratganj. Students proceeded to the food workshop with Chef Mohsin Quereshi at Lebua Hotel, Lucknow followed by a city culinary walk covering Ram Ashray ki Mithai, Mubeens ke Pasande with Kulche Nahari, Idrees Ki Biryani and ending the day with Prakash Ki Kulfi. Day 4 of the tour will comprise a Contemporary Food Walk in the New City of Lucknow and towards the day end, they will proceed to Jaipur. Day 5 will be in Jaipur which will start with a visit to a Hydroponic Farm. Lunch will be at Mahaveer Bhandar enjoying 'bijar ka rotla'. A short tour of Jantar Mantar and City Palace and a tour of Blue Pottery. The day will end with dinner and authentic Rajasthani experience at Chokhi Dhani. Day 6 will still be at Jaipur where students will visit Salt Farms and the Salt Museum at Sambar. The group will depart from Jaipur on Day 7 after a brief tour of the lanes and bylanes of the city to taste and experience pickles, spices and choorans of the city. The Jaipur leg will end with a demonstration of making Laal Maas at Kebabs and Curries Company. The next two legs will be in Delhi and Goa. In Delhi, the group will visit ITC Grand Bharat's organic farm, organic duck farm in Manesar, rice factory, cold storages, Azadpur Fruits and Vegetable Market and several other interesting sites. The final leg being at Goa, students will learn important insights on Goan cuisine from Chef Rego. The tour will include a visit to a Goan bakery, an organic farm, Tanshidar Spice farm and they will also get to learn how to do commercial fishing; where they will leave at 3 am in the morning in the deep sea on a trawler learning the art of fishing and selling in the local market. The tour will end after some local sight-seeing and a mini food fest on campus. The 15-Day Culinary tour will be focusing on building a student relationship with food and not just cooking. Chef Ranveer Brar in the morning briefing said, "Food is not a recipe but a confluence of culture, people and history. The people you see making these specialities have devoted their lives doing these things and so you should come back knowing that so much you did not know," - he says "Chhote hoke aana" Live updates of the Tour are available at (https://www.facebook.com/iihmhotelschool) IIHM (International Institute of Hotel Management) is the largest chain of premier hospitality and hotel management schools across India that started its journey in 1994 at Kolkata. IIHM is a part of Indismart Group, the conglomerate that operates the Indismart Hotels. IIHM campuses are located across eleven National and International cities with the associate institute IAM-IHM located in Kolkata, and Guwahati. Students passing out of IIHM are armed with an international degree from the University of West London and equipped with global hospitality skills that enable easy placements in any hospitality brand across the world. IIHM is dedicated to its pursuit of excellence in teaching and placements. Real time experience is the key to success in hospitality and that makes the institute popular. In recent years, IIHM has been instrumental in organizing the Worlds biggest Culinary Olympiad Young Chef Olympiad, with participation of over 50 countries, a unique idea and initiative inviting young culinary talents across the world. It has MOU's with over 50 countries for student and faculty exchange bringing the best of education for its students from around the World. The institute has bagged several prestigious awards in the past 24 years. The list includes the Best Education Brand Award from Economic Times consecutively in 2017, 2018, 2019 and 2020. It was also featured in Forbes Magazine as Great Indian Institute and Great Place to Study consecutively in the year 2018 - 2019 and 2019 - 2020. IIHM was also awarded as one among the World's Greatest Brands & Leaders 2015-16 by URS International (IMEA - Process Reviewer PriceWaterhouseCoopers PL) and also received the Best Institute in Hospitality Education 2017 Award by Assocham from Dr. Mahendra Nath Pandey, Hon'ble Minister of State for HRD (Higher Education), Govt. of India. Please visit for more information: (https://www.iihm.ac.in) This story is provided by PRNewswire. ANI will not be responsible in any way for the content of this article. (ANI/PRNewswire) DISCLAIMER (This story has not been edited by Business Standard staff and is auto-generated from a syndicated feed.) gettyimagesbank Korea has won the exclusive right to push ahead with a $700 million power infrastructure project in Bangladesh, the transport ministry said Wednesday. The country will be in a primary position to plan the project to build a smart grid system in Purbachal aimed at assuring a stable power supply in the newly developed city, some 15 kilometers northeast of Dhaka, Bangladesh's capital, the Ministry of Land, Infrastructure and Transport said in a statement. Korea will conduct a feasibility study on the project first, before discussing the conditions and other details of the project with the Bangladeshi government. The decision was announced at a meeting earlier in the day between the Korea Overseas Infrastructure and Urban Development Corp. (KIND) and Bangladesh's Public Private Partnership Authority. Launched in 2018, KIND is the state agency that supports Korean companies in "project planning, feasibility studies, project information and bankability," its website said. KIND and Bangladesh's Public Private Partnership Authority signed a memorandum of understanding in April 2019 for cooperation in developing infrastructure in Bangladesh, according to the ministry. Under the MOU, Korea has so far won exclusive rights to proceed with four separate infrastructure projects worth $10.2 billion. "Based on intergovernmental cooperation, the government will continue to expand this investment business model for more infrastructure projects overseas," Kwon Hyuk-jin, director general for urban policy at the ministry, said. (Yonhap) New Delhi [India], March 2 (ANI/PNN): CloudSEK today released (https://cloudsek.com/whitepapers_reports/unearthing-the-million-dollar-scams-targeting-the-indian-electric-vehicle-industry-scams) Unearthing the Million Dollar Scams Targeting the Indian Electric Vehicle Industry, highlighting a large-scale phishing campaign targeting Electric Vehicle (EV) consumers and businesses. It is notable that the scams increased considerably after the production-linked incentive (PLI) scheme, for electric and hydrogen fuel cell vehicles, was approved by the cabinet in September 2021. CloudSEK's in-depth investigation has revealed that scammers are exploiting Google Ads to misdirect users to phishing sites that collect users' data and money. With each site defrauding users of INR 200,000--400,000, in booking fees and down payments, the scam has so far cost the Indian public over INR 40-- 80 Million. Overview of the Phishing Campaign Since the second half of 2021, CloudSEK's flagship digital risk monitoring platform (https://cloudsek.com/campaigns/xvigil) XVigil has detected a spike in phishing campaigns impersonating EV manufacturers and dealerships. Scammers propagate this scheme by: * Registering fake domains that resemble legitimate domains of EV manufacturers and marketplaces. * Creating Google Ads for the fake domains, and manipulating SEO, such that these ads are top results for generic searches as well as searches for specific EV brands . * Directing users clicking on these ads to phishing domains that impersonate the content and images of legitimate websites. * Collecting users' information and money in the guise of reservation/ booking fees for a vehicle or a security deposit, through phishing websites, to become an EV dealer. Impact on Consumers and EV Companies The phishing campaign has already cost the Indian public over INR 40-- 80 million, and this value is expected to increase significantly in the future. Apart from financial loss, users also share Personally Identifiable Information (PII) and banking details, which can be leveraged to orchestrate other social engineering campaigns, and even identity theft. For EV companies, these phishing websites lead to direct loss of business, reputation, and credibility. This could also lead to a general decline in the adoption of e-mobility, an already unfamiliar technology, if users' first touch point in a phishing campaign. Addressing Threats to the Growing EV Sector in India EV companies can mitigate the threats posed by these phishing scams by running awareness campaigns to educate users/ customers about the ongoing scams. They can also report the campaigns to the Cyber Crime Cell. In addition, businesses that are part of the EV sector can implement real-time monitoring of phishing domains with (https://cloudsek.com/campaigns/xvigil) XVigil to identify and suspend phishing websites spoofing their business. CloudSEK is an AI-driven Digital Risk Monitoring Enterprise. CloudSEK's XVigil platform helps clients assess their security posture in real-time from the perspective of an attacker. XVigil scours thousands of sources (across the surface, deep and dark web), to detect cyber threats, data leaks, brand threats, identity thefts, etc. To learn more about CloudSEK XVigil, visit (https://cloudsek.com). This story is provided by PNN. ANI will not be responsible in any way for the content of this article. (ANI/PNN) DISCLAIMER (This story has not been edited by Business Standard staff and is auto-generated from a syndicated feed.) Bengaluru (Karnataka) [India], March 2 (ANI/PRNewswire): Sonata Software, a global IT Services and Technology Solutions Company, today announced that it has been named a Microsoft Azure Expert Managed Service Provider (MSP), in recognition of its demonstrated expertise in providing world-class solutions on Microsoft Azure. The Azure Expert MSP recognition is awarded after a rigorous audit which evaluates the partner's IT service management capabilities (across people, processes, technology), their ability to deliver consistent, repeatable and high-fidelity managed services on Azure. Sonata provides its customers digital transformation services using Azure and built using Sonata's proprietary Platformation framework to create innovative, platform-based, business solutions. The company has delivered high-quality solutions based on Azure worldwide over the years, using its deep understanding of technology and architecture as well as a clear understanding of the business problems and issues faced by customers. "The audit reinforces what our customers already know that Sonata provides best-of-breed business solutions, where we leverage our knowledge of Azure, data, AI and machine learning, our world-class engineering services, all underpinned by our Platformation methodology, to help business unlock their potential," says Srinivas Vuppala, Head of ISV and Cloud at Sonata. "Sonata is the market leader in Azure in India and customers all around the world are benefitting from our expertise. The Azure Expert MSP audit recognizes the quality and consistency of our capabilities and solutions, as well as our skillsets across DevOps/Sysops, architecting cloud solutions and technical professional consulting," says Gyana Bardhan Pattnaik, Senior VP, Client Services & Head of Digital Competencies. "The Microsoft Azure Expert MSP program recognizes partners that have invested in building and delivering next-generation managed service capabilities. Sonata has demonstrated the necessary expertise, and we welcome Sonata to the Azure Expert MSP program," said Rodney Clark, Corporate Vice President, Global Channel Sales and Channel Chief at Microsoft. Sonata Software is a Microsoft Gold Partner, recognized for its expertise in delivering the highest quality of service on the Microsoft stack and a member of the Microsoft Inner Circle for Business Applications. Sonata is named Microsoft Partner of the Year for Biz Apps in the India region in 2021 and is a market leader in Azure services. Sonata holds a range of advanced specializations from Microsoft. (https://www.sonata-software.com/) Sonata Software This story is provided by PRNewswire. ANI will not be responsible in any way for the content of this article. (ANI/PRNewswire) DISCLAIMER (This story has not been edited by Business Standard staff and is auto-generated from a syndicated feed.) Hosur (Tamil Nadu) [India], March 2 (ANI/NewsVoir): TVS Motor Company registered sales of 281,714 units in February 2022 as against sales of 297,747 units in the month of February 2021. Two-Wheeler Total two-wheelers registered sales of 267,625 units in February 2022 as against sales of 284,581 units in February 2021. Domestic two-wheeler registered sales of 173,198 units in February 2022 as against sales of 195,145 units in February 2021. Motorcycle sales grew by 5 per cent increasing from 137,259 units in February 2021 to 143,523 units in February 2022. Scooter sales of the Company registered 86,616 units in February 2022 as against sales of 95,525 units in February 2021. The shortage in supply of semiconductors has impacted the production and sales of premium two-wheelers. We are cautiously optimistic that the supply of semiconductors will improve in the coming months. International Business The Company's total exports grew by 6 per cent from 101,789 units in the month of February 2021 to 107,574 units in February 2022. Two-wheeler exports grew by 6 per cent from 89,436 units in February 2021 to 94,427 units in February 2022. Three-Wheeler Three-wheeler sales of the Company grew by 7 per cent from 13,166 units in February 2021 to 14,089 units in February 2022. TVS Motor Company is a reputed two and three-wheeler manufacturer globally, championing progress through Mobility with a focus on sustainability. Rooted in our 100-year legacy of Trust, Value, and Passion for Customers and Exactness, we take pride in making internationally aspirational products of the highest quality through innovative and sustainable processes. We are the only two-wheeler company to have received the prestigious Deming Prize. Our products lead in their respective categories in the J.D. Power IQS and APEAL surveys for five years. We have been ranked No. 1 Company in the J.D. Power Customer Service Satisfaction Survey for consecutive four years. Our group company Norton Motorcycles, based in the United Kingdom, is one of the most emotive motorcycle brands in the world. Our subsidiaries in the personal e-mobility space, Swiss E-Mobility Group (SEMG) and EGO Movement have a leading position in the e-bike market in Switzerland. TVS Motor Company endeavours to deliver the most superior customer experience across 80 countries in which we operate. For more information, please visit (https://www.tvsmotor.com/#_blank). This story is provided by NewsVoir. ANI will not be responsible in any way for the content of this article. (ANI/NewsVoir) DISCLAIMER (This story has not been edited by Business Standard staff and is auto-generated from a syndicated feed.) Bengaluru (Karnataka) [India], March 2 (ANI/PR Newswire): UST, a leading digital transformation solutions company, today announced its qualification to offer services in support of the RISE with SAP solution. RISE with SAP brings together what businesses need to pursue their digital transformation objectives and accelerate their move to the cloud while benefitting from the ability to begin their journey from their unique starting point. UST partners with SAP to help customers transform their businesses with the software and services they need to achieve greater speed, agility, and integration. "At UST, we focus on helping our customers adopt standard best practices and reduce technical debt while leveraging the latest digital technologies," said Chris Botha, Senior Vice President and Global SAP Leader, UST. "UST is well-positioned to support its clients accelerate their digital business transformation and take their business-critical elements into the cloud with flexibility and innovation with RISE with SAP." UST developed a portfolio of industry-leading tools, platforms, apps, and accelerators to drive value and differentiation for businesses adopting RISE with SAP. These include: -UST Rapid Readiness: A proven eight-stage, a pre-preparation framework for SAP S/4HANA that enhances the SAP Activate methodology and ensures that business drivers and pain points are mapped to capabilities for SAP S/4HANA Cloud. This also helps align landscape and cloud strategy while leveraging UST's happiness approach to human-centric digital development, all of which results in a clear roadmap for standardization, innovation, and a transformation business case. -UST Fast Start: An upgrade and cloud migration trial offering which enables enterprises to reduce risk in their migration to SAP S/4HANA Cloud. The offering allows UST to upgrade and migrate businesses to our cloud as a trial, accelerating the ultimate journey to SAP S/4HANA Cloud. -UST Evolve: Rapid migration of SAP ERP Central Component environments to SAP S/4HANA Cloud has become an essential component to most transformation journeys. UST Evolve is a hybrid migration framework leveraging UST accelerators and IP to accelerate the transformation. As a partner qualified to provide services for RISE with SAP, UST works with SAP from the start to address a customer's unique needs to help ensure its success. UST Global is a partner in the SAP PartnerEdge program. The SAP PartnerEdge program provides the enablement tools, benefits and support to facilitate building high-quality, disruptive applications focused on specific business needs - quickly and cost-effectively. For more than 22 years, UST has worked side by side with the world's best companies to make a real impact through transformation. Powered by technology, inspired by people, and led by our purpose, we partner with our clients from design to operation. We identify their core challenges and craft disruptive solutions that bring their vision to life through our agile approach. With deep domain expertise and a future-proof philosophy, we embed innovation and agility into our clients' organizations--delivering measurable value and lasting change across industries and worldwide. Together, with over 29,000 employees in 30 countries, we build for boundless impact--touching billions of lives in the process. Visit us at (https://www.ust.com). SAP and other SAP products and services mentioned herein as well as their respective logos are trademarks or registered trademarks of SAP SE in Germany and other countries. Please see (https://www.sap.com/corporate/en/legal/copyright.html) for additional trademark information and notices. All other product and service names mentioned are the trademarks of their respective companies. Logo: (https://mma.prnewswire.com/media/1422658/UST_Logo.jpg) This story is provided by PRNewswire. ANI will not be responsible in any way for the content of this article. (ANI/PR Newswire) DISCLAIMER (This story has not been edited by Business Standard staff and is auto-generated from a syndicated feed.) New Delhi [India], March 2 (ANI/NewsVoir): The Abdul Latif Jameel Poverty Action Lab (J-PAL) South Asia and Veddis Foundation announced the launch of the Alliance for Scaling Policy Impact through Research and Evidence (ASPIRE) today. ASPIRE aims to spur the adoption of anti-poverty policies rooted in scientific evidence and data. Veddis Foundation is anchoring ASPIRE with an investment of USD 6.3M. (https://www.povertyactionlab.org/aspire) ASPIRE is designed to bring together governments, donors and nonprofits to solve some of the most pressing challenges Indians living in poverty are facing today, building on J-PAL South Asia's 15 years of work in poverty reduction in the country. Over 100 million people across 20 Indian states have been reached by programmes and policies that have been informed by studies done by researchers who are part of J-PAL's global network. J-PAL is well recognized worldwide for its work in using rigorous scientific evidence to help policymakers. The Co-founders of J-PAL Abhijit Banerjee and Esther Duflo were awarded the Nobel Prize for Economics in 2019 for their pioneering work done in using Randomised Control Trials (RCTs) in alleviating global poverty. ASPIRE will help J-PAL South Asia to respond even more effectively to the policy priorities of governments, with the goal of rolling out innovative policy solutions that have been tested for effectiveness with randomised controlled trials. J-PAL South Asia will enter into long-term partnerships with governments and do a thorough examination of the policy challenges hindering poverty eradication. The alliance also plans to run pilot studies on prospective solutions and to scale up the most promising ones. An initiative like ASPIRE is more urgent now than ever. The economic crisis triggered by the COVID-19 pandemic threatens to undo the gains India has made over the years in poverty alleviation. It is vital for governments to implement policies with proven effectiveness to support the people whose lives have been upended by the pandemic. In October 2021, Veddis Foundation had announced an Rs. 100 crore commitment to accelerate large-scale social impact. Shobhini Mukerji, Executive Director, J-PAL South Asia said, "ASPIRE has been conceived to make scientific evidence and data the bedrock of policymaking in India. It is only by advancing policies that are backed by solid evidence of effectiveness can governments succeed in improving the lives of the poor and the vulnerable in a timely, holistic and effective manner. The grant from the Veddis Foundation opens up exciting new possibilities for us to establish new, long-term partnerships with multiple state governments and central agencies." (https://veddis.org/our-team) Murugan Vasudevan, CEO of Veddis Foundation said, "Philanthropy can drive transformational positive impact by building stronger state capacity. We are glad to be partnering with J-PAL in setting up ASPIRE. J-PAL brings a rare combination of rigor, innovation, and demonstrated results in shaping data-driven policies that form the bedrock of good governance. We look forward to seeing ASPIRE become a trusted partner to governments and philanthropists looking to drive impact at scale." ASPIRE draws on one of J-PAL's greatest strengths: the combination of ground-breaking research produced by its network of the world's top development economists and the expertise of its local research staff and policy specialists. This model has enabled J-PAL South Asia to streamline the process of translating cutting-edge academic research insights into actionable policies for its government partners. As a first step under ASPIRE, J-PAL South Asia will roll out the Taaron ki Toli programme across 23,000 state-run schools in Odisha. J-PAL South Asia will also assist the Government of Odisha in evaluating the efficacy of potential solutions to the biggest policy challenges in the areas of livelihoods and labour welfare, education, gender, distress migration, and early childhood development. These have been identified by the government as its top priority areas for poverty reduction. The Abdul Latif Jameel Poverty Action Lab (J-PAL) is a global research centre working to reduce poverty by ensuring that policy is informed by scientific evidence. Anchored by a network of 262 affiliated professors at universities around the world, J-PAL conducts randomised impact evaluations to answer critical questions in the fight against poverty. J-PAL was launched at the Massachusetts Institute of Technology in 2003 and has 7 regional offices around the world. J-PAL South Asia, hosted by the Institute for Financial Management and Research (IFMR), Chennai, has formal partnerships with governments across 20 Indian states and union territories for the generation of new research and advancement of evidence-informed policymaking, as well as training partnerships with the governments of Nepal, Bhutan, Bangladesh, and Pakistan. For more information, please visit (https://www.povertyactionlab.org/south-asia) povertyactionlab.org/south-asia. (https://veddis.org) Veddis Foundation supports organisations working at the intersection of technology and policy to create lasting impact at scale. With a mission to create deep and irreversible social change, the Foundation also works directly with governments on effective public service delivery. The Foundation takes an evidence-based approach to supporting institutions doing radical work. It hopes to bring analytical rigour and a collaborative spirit to philanthropic investments with a goal to achieve measurable outsized impact. Founded by Vikrant Bhargava, a successful tech entrepreneur and alumnus of IIT Delhi and IIM Calcutta, Veddis Foundation has worked directly (and indirectly) with multiple state governments and supported over 100 organisations, representing some of the most credible and innovative initiatives in the social sector. It also incubated LetzChange.org, which is now the tech platform powering GiveIndia's retail fundraising platform. This story is provided by NewsVoir. ANI will not be responsible in any way for the content of this article. (ANI/NewsVoir) DISCLAIMER (This story has not been edited by Business Standard staff and is auto-generated from a syndicated feed.) As Ukraine closed its airspace for civilian flights after Russia began it invasion, about 16,000-strong Indian diaspora, mostly students, were left stranded in the war-torn country. As students made appeals for evacuation from bomb shelters, New Delhi launched a multi-pronged evacuation plan named Operation Ganga to bring home its citizens. Accordingly, Indian missions in Poland, Romania, Slovakia and Hungary have been making arrangements to receive Indian nationals from Ukraine and fly them out of their respective countries under Operation Ganga flights. The cost will be borne by the Centre. The cost of operating a two-way evacuation flight is reportedly more than Rs 1.10 crore. The amount is likely to go up depending on the duration of the flights. 24x7 Control Centres have been set up under the mission to assist in the evacuation of Indian nationals through Ukraines border crossing points with the four countries. The government announced that four Union Ministers will travel to Ukraines neighbouring countries to coordinate the evacuation. Petroleum minister Hardeep Puri would go to Hungary, aviation minister Jyotiraditya Scindia to Romania and Moldova; law minister Kiran Rijiju to Slovakia and Minister of State for Civil Aviation VK Singh to Poland. The government also created a dedicated Twitter account named OpGanga Helpline to assist in the evacuation by sharing important advisories and instructions. The Union Health Ministry has revised the mandatory international travel guidelines for all Indians being evacuated from Ukraine, allowing them to board flights without a negative RT-PCR report or vaccination certificate. The travel guidelines have been revised on humanitarian grounds. Till Monday, Tata Groups Air India reportedly evacuated 1,396 Indian nationals in six evacuation flights that were chartered by the government. The airline used Boeing 787 Dreamliners for the services. The first flight under Operation Ganga brought home 219 Indians from Romanias capital Bucharest to Mumbai on Saturday evening. Other flights carried up to 250 Indians each from Bucharest as well as Hungarys Budapest back to India. Operation Ganga gained speed after SpiceJet, Air India Express and IndiGo joined the mission operating special flights to Bucharest and Budapest from Monday. Indians who have been able to flee Ukraine and enter its bordering countries have been leaving on the evacuation flights. IndiGo operated the flights using its Airbus A321 aircraft, whereas SpiceJet deployed Boeing 737 MAX 8 planes. The United Nations Intergovernmental Panel on (IPCC) released the second part of its sixth assessment report on Monday. Vetted and approved by 270 authors and 195 governments, it tells the world how may spell disaster for humanity. The third and final part of this report is likely to come out in April this year. The first assessment report telling about the effects of was released way back in 1990. The four subsequent reports were published in 1995, 2001, 2007, and 2015. The latest report has for the first time assessed the regional effect of climate change. According to the assessment, several big cities of the world are at risk. The report warned that Mumbai could face flooding due to sea-level rise while Ahmedabad was at risk of facing a serious heatwave. The panel also warned that the ability of humans and that of nature to adapt to climate change was at risk. And they may not be able to adapt anymore if there is further rise in global warming. It noted that over 3.5 billion people or 45% of the global population was living in highly-vulnerable areas now. UN secretary-general Antonio Guterres went on to dub the report as an atlas of human suffering. He also said that fossil fuels are choking humanity. The report described India as one of the most vulnerable countries. It said that about 35 million people could face annual coastal flooding by 2050. While 45-50 million are at risk by the end of the century. The IPCC also warned that the damage to Mumbai from the sea-level rise could be up to $162 billion a year by 2050. According to Down to Earth, Indias country-level social cost of carbon emission was estimated to be the highest at $86 per tonne of CO2. It means the Indian economy will lose $86 by emitting each additional tonne of CO2. India is followed by the US, where the economic damages would be $48 per tonne of CO2 emission. Saudi Arabia is close behind at $47 per tonne of CO2 emission. The report also flagged that the world will see a rise in vector-borne diseases like dengue and malaria. And it also claimed that climate change will lead to an increase in mental health issues. The first part of this report, which was released in August last year, had said that global average temperature will see 1. 5 degree celsius of warming in next 20 years from the pre-industrial (1850-1900) level. The panel had called it a code red for humanity. The panel said that rising sea levels and ground water scarcity will have a direct impact on the Indian agriculture sector. Production of wheat, pulses, coarse and cereal yields could fall almost 9 per by 2050 in the country. In the southern part of the country, maize production could fall by 17% if emissions are high. And these fall in production could cause price spikes in India, threatening food affordability, food security and economic growth, the report went on to say. It is also estimated that both the Ganga and Brahmaputra river basins will witness increased flooding due to climate change. And continued climate change will also cause decline in fisheries. Countries build policy responses to tackle climate change on the basis of finding of IPCC reports. The panel has now clearly said that if the temperature rise soared past the 1.5C threshold from the pre-industrial times, several changes could be irreversible. The panel has said that the 2C-target could be disastrous. So the governments world over should ensure that lack of funds and political commitment should not come in the way of keeping the global mercury in check. On Tuesday, Madhabi Puri Buch took over as the new chairperson of the Securities and Exchange Board of India, which regulates Indias $3.3 trillion stock market ecosystem. She has been appointed for an initial period of three years by the government and replaces Ajay Tyagi, whose five year term ended on Monday. She joins at a time when the markets are volatile due to the Russia-Ukraine conflict and Indias largest-ever Initial Public Offering by Life Insurance Corporation of India is about to be launched. She brings many firsts to . Buch is the first woman to head Indias stock market regulator. And at 56, she is the youngest chairperson. She is also the first non-IAS individual since 2002 as well as the first person from the private sector to lead the markets watchdog. However, she has had a more than 4.5 year stint as a Whole-Time Member of Sebi, a post just below the chairperson, till October 4, 2021. Puri Buch has more than three decades of experience in the financial sector. An alumna of Delhs St Stephens College and IIM Ahmedabad, she joined ICICI Bank as a Project Finance Analyst in 1989 and was there until 1992. She re-joined the private lender in 1997 and rose through the ranks to become an Executive Director in 2006. Buch then served as the CEO of ICICI Securities, the broking and investment banking arm of the ICICI Group, between 2009 and 2011. During her stint at ICICI, she held different positions including the Head of Marketing and Sales, Head of Product Development, Head of Operations and the Head of Brand Marketing. She was among the handful of executives who were groomed by veteran banker KV Kamath, the founder and former CEO of ICICI Bank. Before taking charge as the only female Whole Time Member at in April 2017, Buch served as the Head of Business Development at private equity firm Greater Pacific Capital in Singapore and acted as a consultant for New Development Bank in Shanghai. Besides, she has held non-executive director roles in several organisations, including Max Healthcare, Zensar Technologies and Innoven Capital. She is also the founder of Agora Advisory, a consulting and incubation firm.As a Whole-Time Director, she was part of many committees and handled the Market Regulation Department, Integrated Surveillance Department, Department of Economic & Policy Analysis, the National Institute of Securities Markets and IT Department among others. After the five-year term ended in October 2021, she was named the head of Sebis secondary market committee in December. During her previous stint at the regulator, she tried to inculcate a culture among her junior staffers to extensively use modern technology and data. In fact, she headed a technology panel that explored solutions for early detection of market anomalies. She had once said that turning Sebi into a tech savvy regulator was her single biggest achievement. Buch is known for her data-driven approach to decision making. She was instrumental in bringing important changes to mutual fund regulations that benefited investors. These include a further reduction in the cost of investing, scheme classification and disclosures and introducing more safeguards for debt schemes. In her new role, she has to hit the ground running and perhaps the most urgent task is to review the internal governance mechanisms at the exchanges after the yogi scandal at the NSE highlighted the gaping holes in their governance systems. Commander of U.S. Forces Korea General Walter Sharp speaks during a press conference at the Seoul Foreign Correspondents Club in Seoul, South Korea, Monday, Feb. 9, 2009. AP-Yonhap External pressure alone will not be enough to convince North Korean leader Kim Jong-un to give up his nuclear ambitions, a former head of U.S. Forces Korea (USFK) said Tuesday, stressing the need for what he called internal pressure to change. Retired Gen. Walter Sharp also pointed to the need for South Korea and the U.S. to work with China to rid North Korea of its nuclear weapons. "I personally believe that there's no amount of external pressure that is going to force Kim Jong-un to get rid of his nuclear weapons," the former USFK commander said in a webinar hosted by the Washington Times Foundation. Sharp served as USFK commander from 2008 to 2011. "I think the only way that has any potential is to create both external pressure and internal pressure, and that will require information getting into North Korea," he added. The U.S. says it will seek a calibrated, practical approach toward North Korea, which many believe will include a willingness to make incremental concessions to North Korea, such as sanctions relief, in exchange for North Korean steps toward denuclearization. Pyongyang, however, remains unresponsive to U.S. outreach for dialogue. Denuclearization talks between the U.S. and North Korea were last held in late 2019. Washington sought to impose additional U.N. Security Council sanctions on North Korea after the recalcitrant state staged seven missile tests in January, the largest number it has conducted in a single month. The U.S. move at the U.N. Security Council was blocked by China and Russia both veto-power wielding permanent members of the council and close partners of North Korea. The former USFK commander stressed the importance of China's cooperation to denuclearize the Korean Peninsula. "It will require discussions with China about how reunified, denuclearized (Korean) peninsula is in China's national interest, much more so than where it is right now," said Sharp. He also noted the North, even without its nuclear weapons, would pose a great threat to South Korea, adding it has the "largest artillery force in the world, many of them positioned within range of Seoul." Sharp said that U.S.-South Korean combined forces would still be able to stop North Korea should the North ever invade the South. "I am very confident that the South Korean military and the U.S. and all those that would come to fight, we would be able to stop North Korea from taking Seoul. I'm confident in that," he said. "But I also unfortunately believe that if a full scale attack like that took place, the number of casualties in the city of 28 million, which the greater Seoul metropolitan area is, would be horrific," added Sharp. (Yonhap) Medical staff take nucleic acid samples at a community testing site in Hohhot, Inner Mongolia, on Feb. 28. Photo: VCG China has been assessing whether to adopt a strategy of coexistence with Covid-19 that best suits its own circumstances, as it looks toward possibly reopening the country in the near future, according to top infectious disease experts. Zeng Guang, a member of the high-ranking expert group at the National Health Commission (NHC), said in an article posted on his Weibo account Monday that: In the near future, at an appropriate time, [China] will release its roadmap for a China-style coexistence plan with the virus. Short-distance rural tourism grew more popular in Chinas capital during this years Labor Day holiday amid curbs on travel to control the pandemic. Bookings for hotels and homestays outside urban areas started earlier than usual for this years five-day national holiday, with volumes climbing since April 10. Despite Covid control measures, most scenic spots in suburban areas remain open, though visitors are required to present negative Covid-19 test results to enter May 04, 2022 03:50 PM gettyimagesbank A Nigerian national has been given a prison sentence for smuggling cannabis into South Korea from Thailand and smoking the banned substance, a court announced Wednesday. The Incheon District Court said it imposed a jail term of six years on the 44-year-old Nigerian, whose name was withheld, on charges of violating the Narcotics Control Act. The Nigerian was indicted for smuggling 6.7 kilograms of cannabis in three separate international express mail packages from Thailand through Incheon International Airport between February and August last year. The Nigerian was also accused of smoking cannabis at a bar in the central Seoul district of Yongsan in August last year. The suspect has denied the charges in court trials, saying he had received a request from an acquaintance to pick up some luggage. But the court rejected his claim, noting that all contact information written on the imported cargo was the mobile phone number used by him. (Yonhap) Presidential candidates Lee Jae-myung of the liberal ruling Democratic Party of Korea, left, and Yoon Suk-yeol of the conservative main opposition People Power Party are seen during the final TV debate hosted by the National Election Commission, held at local broadcaster KBS' studio in Seoul's Yeouido, Wednesday. Joint Press Corps By Jung Da-min The two leading presidential candidates, Lee Jae-myung of the ruling liberal Democratic Party of Korea (DPK) and Yoon Suk-yeol of the main opposition conservative People Power Party (PPP) clashed over the issue of cash handouts during the third and final TV debate held at KBS studio in Seoul, Wednesday. Yoon criticized Lee for his basic income proposal, claiming it would increase taxpayers' burden and worsen the government's fiscal health. "A policy mix that is based on social services and job creation would better contribute to a virtuous and sustainable circle (of economic growth and social welfare). A cash-based welfare system, on the other hand, requires more financial resources without yielding much economic effect," Yoon said. Lee defended his basic income pledge, saying it would guarantee a minimum income for everyone and ultimately help vitalize the country's stagnating economy. "Yoon often criticizes the basic income policy, but I want to ask if you know that the PPP also acknowledges the need for basic income in its own party platform," Lee said. Yoon responded he was aware of it, but added that the PPP has a different concept of that term. The two candidates are divided over the size of emergency relief funds. The PPP candidate advocated the use of cash handouts only to help the self-employed and small business owners who have been hit hard by COVID-19 pandemic restrictions, whereas the DPK candidate called for cash handouts for everyone. Yoon criticized Lee and his party for shifting their policy stance ahead of the election, saying Lee had called initially for cash handouts for all, without mentioning the self-employed or small business owners specifically, but changed his stance and promised to provide financial support for them as the election neared. Lee vowed to provide financial support that is generous enough to cover all their losses incurred during the pandemic, if he gets elected. Neither Lee nor Yoon mentioned raising taxes. Justice Party candidate Sim Sang-jung criticized the two leading candidates for staying mum on the tax increase which she said will be inevitable, noting they were silent about it because it is unpopular among the public. Glen, NH (03838) Today Cloudy with light rain early...then becoming partly cloudy. Low 44F. Winds WNW at 10 to 20 mph. Chance of rain 90%.. Tonight Cloudy with light rain early...then becoming partly cloudy. Low 44F. Winds WNW at 10 to 20 mph. Chance of rain 90%. Carroll, IA (51401) Today Cloudy with occasional showers overnight. Low 46F. Winds E at 10 to 15 mph. Chance of rain 60%.. Tonight Cloudy with occasional showers overnight. Low 46F. Winds E at 10 to 15 mph. Chance of rain 60%. Yoon Suk-yeol, left, presidential candidate of the main opposition People Power Party, shakes hands with Ahn Cheol-soo, presidential candidate of the opposition People's Party before a televised debate for the upcoming March 9 presidential election at KBS studio in Seoul, March 2. Joint Press Corps Main opposition presidential candidate Yoon Suk-yeol and Ahn Cheol-soo of the minor People's Party agreed to merge candidacies, sources said Thursday, less than a week before the March 9 election. The two will hold a joint press conference at 8 a.m. to announce the agreement, the sources said. Under the deal, Ahn will drop out of the race and declare his support for Yoon of the conservative People Power Party. The two parties will also merge after the election. The agreement was reached when the two held a surprise meeting in the early hours Thursday. Thank you for reading! Please log in, or sign up for a new account and consider subscribing for only $7 per month to get access to more articles and news as it happens. The Walt Disney Company announced today that it will withhold Pixars Turning Red from release in Russia due to the countrys invasion of Ukraine. A Disney spokesperson offered the following statement on the companys decision to pause theatrical releases in Russia: Given the unprovoked invasion of Ukraine and the tragic humanitarian crisis, we are pausing the release of theatrical films in Russia, including the upcoming Turning Red from Pixar. We will make future business decisions based on the evolving situation. In the meantime, given the scale of the emerging refugee crisis, we are working with our NGO partners to provide urgent aid and other humanitarian assistance to refugees. Disney became the first U.S. studio to pause its theatrical releases in Russia, but Warner Bros. and Sony quickly followed suit this evening and announced that they would halt the Russian releases of The Batman and Morbius, respectively. Where to start: Hen, His Wife (1989). The film that put Kovalyov on the international animation map. A troubled but apparently normal household is shattered when a masked stranger arrives without warning and alerts the husband that his wife is actually a hen. With its almost grotesque character design, rough lines, and fluid camera movement, Kovalyov creates a masterful surrealist parable about a family in a state of collapse (though feel free to interpret this film anyway you see fit!). When Gabor Csupo saw the film at the 1990 Ottawa International Animation Festival (where it was the controversial grand prize winner), he invited Kovalyov to work at Klasky-Csupo studios in Hollywood. Kovalyov would go on to make key contributions to the studio on series like Rugrats and Aaahh!!! Real Monsters. He also directed The Rugrats Movie (1998). What to watch next: Flying Nansen (2000). A snowy hallucination (inspired by the Norwegian explorer, Fridtiof Nansen) about an explorer who travels to the North Pole where danger, adventure, and a woman await him. Other key works: Andrey Svislotsky (1992), Bird in The Window (1996), Milch (2005), Before Love (2016) Influences: Robert Bresson, Priit Parn, Andrei Tarkovsky, Jia Zhangke Says: I dont really want my viewers to feel something particular. At least I dont want my artworks to tell them what to feel. The most important thing that Ive always appreciated in art/movies/design is probably ambiguity. Currently working on: Kovalyov is developing a new short that he expects to be around 20 minutes in length. Image at top: Hen, His Wife Virtual Animation Dingle (VAD) 2022, presented by Jam Media, builds on its enormously successful virtual platform with two days of animation through a vibrant and interactive conference, screenings, awards and workshops program. Its all happening next week from March 11-12. Best of all, one pass offers entry to all the events across one platform. Over 100 Short Films With Industry Partner Fis Eireann/Screen Ireland, VAD 2022, has some amazing offerings this year. Celebrating its 10th edition, VAD is now a qualifying festival for both the Academy Awards and Student Academy Awards festival. Over 100 shorts, representing 20 countries, will compete for a shot at winning festival prizes and will be available to view throughout the month of March. The annual Animation Dingle Awards will be hosted by Aoife Dooley, an Irish writer, illustrator, comedian, and graphic designer. The very special Murakami Award, sponsored by Brown Bag Films, will go to Eileen Bell, Senior Business Development Adviser with Enterprise Ireland a passionate supporter of the Irish screen industries with an affinity towards the animation sector and community, globally recognized for its unique innovation, creativity, and storytelling. A promise of a world-class event Here is what sponsors and organizers are saying about this years event. First, a word from Jam Media CEO John Rice: Were excited and delighted to continue on the success of last years virtual festival by offering a Jam packed two days of conferences, screenings, workshops, awards and networking opportunities for both students and professionals. Animation Dingle has continued to attract world class contributors that see the festival not only as a content rich destination but also as a celebration of the strength of the Animation Sector in both colleges and in the companies. The sector has grown almost 30% over the pandemic and is crying out for new and emerging voices. Its a place where students can get employed and studios can build their crews while learning about the forces shaping the ever changing media landscape. Im very much looking forward to welcoming the animation tribes once again to Virtual Animation Dingle. Maurice Galway, Festival Director/Co-Founder Animation Dingle: This years festival is an extraordinary display of creativity from the animation sector, both professionals and students. I urge all decision makers to view the incredible animation on offer and I wish all nominees the best of luck at our awards! Im thrilled at the wealth of knowledge we bring you this year at our conference and workshops, have a wonderful festival and I cant wait to welcome you all to Dingle next year. Flee, a creative discussion at the festival Flee is unprecedented with its nominations for Best Animated Feature Film, Best International Feature Film, and Best Documentary (Feature) at the 2022 Academy Awards. The French Embassy of Ireland, and the festival will present a creative discussion with the animation team: animation director Kenneth Ladekjr and art director Jess Nicholls chatting with Irish illustrator Ben Hennessy. Key highlights at this years festival Opening keynote (supported by Enterprise Ireland) presented by Patricia Hidalgo, Director of Childrens and Education BBC and Tony Reed, Head of Animation for BBC Childrens productions, on the topic of Future ways of working with the BBC an animated discussion. AR/VR/MR/XR/Meta WTF? Lines between animation, film and games are increasingly blurred. Game engines used to make animated and live action content; games with animation and narrative; content being consumed through virtual, augmented and mixed reality. Its a lot to keep track of. Panelists from EA, Story Toys, Simvirtua, Piranha Bar, and RTE have all of the answers. A popular returning event is the Big Pitcher where top broadcasting executives from Disney, Dreamworks, WarnerMedia, BBC, and RTE will again call out the Best Pitch, offering the winner a placement with Jam Media and the opportunity to pitch at Cartoon Springboard. With support from Animation Ireland and The National Talent Academy of Animation, VAD looks back over 10 years, bringing forward the Animation Dingle Alumni. Once students, now professionals, sharing their journeys from the beginning as past winners, showing us just how life changing festivals can be. Animation Skillnet presents Unreal Engine: This panel from Cornish studio Engine House will answer the question, How do you create animations in a game engine without it looking like a game? Engine House Animation Studio will talk through their real-time pipeline and how this has boosted their storytelling and creative approach. King of Cartoons: How a young boys real-life space quest inspired a trailblazing animated show. Six-year-old Adam King has inspired and stars in a new cartoon, Adam Loves Adventure! in which the hero travels the galaxy helping aliens with their everyday problems, using his big heart and space-smarts. Now poised to go universal, Adam, and his Dad David, speak to RTEjrs Suzanne Kelly and Kavaleers Andrew Kavanagh about the cartoon. Women in Animation (supported by The French Embassy of Ireland) returns to explore the positive changes over the past decade. This vibrant panel of women includes Oscar and BAFTA-nominated director Joanna Quinn, (her film Affairs of The Art will also screen at the festival), Merhnaz Abdollahinia (whose multi-award winning film The Soloists will screen), Ellen Grant, Associate Lead Cinematic Artist in Larian Studios (Baldurs Gate 3), Lorraine Morgan, Director of Production, Brown Bag Films, and Deirdre Barry from the National Talent Academy of Animation. The panel will be chaired by Cecile Blondel, Director of International Development, Gobelins. Ready for my Close-Up: Making Charlotte: A look at this new animated biopic of painter Charlotte Salomon, starring Keira Knightley, and how making animated films for adult audiences draws on and differs from making comedy and family fare. Cuphead: For the Love of 2d Animation Presented by Animation Skillnet, Tina Nawrocki will speak about her work as an animator on this glorious indie run-and-gunner game, which was inspired by classic 1930s rubber hose cartoons. Blowing up since launching on PC and Xbox One, Cuphead was painstakingly created with traditional hand-drawn animation, watercolor backgrounds, and original jazz recordings. But thats NOT all folks Ten years old, Animation Dingle is now the cornerstone of animation in Ireland, and continues to work hard to support upcoming young animators to connect with industry experts, whilst allowing industry experts direct access to the next generation of animators and their work. This synergy is a hallmark of Animation Dingle. VAD 2022 brings together a conference, screenings, awards, and workshops across one single platform with the support of The Broadcasting Authority of Ireland, allowing passholders full entry and access to everything, without the need to buy any add-on tickets. One pass, all in at Virtual Animation Dingle. Grab that VAD 2022 Pass HERE. Heres a video celebrating 10 editions of Animation Dingle: Photo: Bryson Woolsey Bryson Woolsey is preparing to fight in Ukraine with help from veterans on Reddit. A few days ago, Bryson Woolsey was a cook at Powell River General Hospital now, hes preparing to go to war. The 33-year-old Canadian is among hundreds of young men and women around the world answering a call to join a newly formed Ukraine International Legion of Territorial Defence to fight a Russian invasion. When I saw that, I was like OK, I want to get over there and help, he told Glacier Media Tuesday. Woolsey has no formal military training and no family in Ukraine to defend or avenge. But when he saw rockets landing on the cities of the Eastern European country, he says his mind turned to the German invasion of Poland at the start of the Second World War. Sitting here and just kind of living in the cushy life that I live, I felt like it was my responsibility to give those people a chance as well to have the life that we have here. And if it takes me being over there to help them get that, I'm more than willing to do that, he said. VOLUNTEERS MOBILIZE THROUGH SOCIAL MEDIA Over the weekend, Ukraine Minister of Foreign Affairs Dmytro Kuleba said on Twitter that all foreigners willing to defend Ukraine should contact the country's diplomatic missions overseas. Together, we defeated Hitler, and we will defeat Putin, too, he wrote on Feb. 26. Since then, Woolsey said its been nearly impossible to get through to the Ukrainian embassy in Ottawa. One embassy official told Glacier Media Tuesday its website and email accounts were down due to cyberattacks. Embassy officials have not yet responded to Glacier Medias questions over how many Canadians have applied to fight in Ukraine. But some Canadians have already made it to the Ukrainian border. Ontario comedian Anthony Walker made headlines around the world in recent days after he took to social media to document his trip from Port Hope, Ont., to Poland, where he has been working as a medic since last week. Micheal Schok, a 33-year-old former English teacher from Surrey, B.C., said he saw a BBC story about how Walker had travelled over 5,000 kilometres to fight and called up the embassy. It took him six calls to finally get through. When he did, Schok was given an alternative email and told to respond with his name, age and any combat experience or special training he has. That was two days ago. Hes still waiting for a response. Schok says he has a background in cybersecurity, and speaks four languages, including German, French and some Russian. I know what to do with most gunshot wounds or with physical trauma, he said. Im a student of history as well. I spent four years learning about the perils of war, what it does, and just the culture that's built up in Europe, that this can never happen again. A gay man with Ukrainian roots on his mothers side, Schok said he fears a repeat of the violence against gay people after the German take-over of Europe in the Second World War, and how today, Russias authoritarian government has taken aggressive steps to suppress its own LGBTQ community. He says hes prepared to help defend Ukraine doing literally anything, from carrying bodies to hauling sandbags to working in a field hospital. And while he says his strongest points are his language skills, hes steeling himself for the possibility of being handed a gun and getting posted at an airfield. The possibility of shooting or killing someone weighs more heavily on me than getting injured myself, said Schok. Photo: Michael Schok Michael Schok stands with friends next to a fragment of the Berlin Wall emblazoned with 'he who wants the world to remain as it is doesn't want it to remain at all.' With Ukrainian heritage on his mother's side, Schok is looking to fight the Russian invasion as a foreign national. Like thousands of other foreign nationals looking to fight in Ukraine, Woolsey and Schok turned to Reddit to navigate a complicated trip. There they found forums filled with veterans offering tips to people who had never fought in a conflict zone, and people willing to sponsor people looking to hop on a plane to Poland. A former resident of Victoria, Woolsey was about to start school in Vancouver to become an addictions councillor. Now, hes finding a way to postpone his student loan and enrolment. He spends his days wrapping up his life in Powell River while buying combat boots, first-aid supplies and headlamps from Amazon all part of a long list of gear veterans are recommending volunteers pick up before they fly to Europe. Through the social media platform, Woolsey has already received an offer from a U.S. citizen to pay for his flight to Poland. On Tuesday, he started a GoFundMe campaign to help raise $2,000 to pay for gear. The fastest way as of right now is to just fly to Poland and there are Polish citizens offering rides to volunteers. You go to the border, show your passport. Border guards will point you to get some training, some supplies and theyll send you wherever they need you, he said, citing advice from other volunteers who have already made the journey. Now, he says, he just has to get all his ducks lined up in a row. GRIM SITUATION ON THE GROUND Woolsey said he has received calls and Facebook messages from other would-be volunteers from across the U.S. and Europe. Many, he says, are racing to the Polish-Ukrainian border hoping to make it across before Russian forces capture the countrys major cities. Tens of thousands of Ukrainian civilians have answered a call from Ukrainian President Volodymyr Zelenskyy to take up arms and attack Russian forces with whatever they have. Videos of Molotov cocktail workshops and ambushes against Russian convoys have filled social media channels in recent days. But military experts warn its only a matter of time before Russias technologically superior force overwhelms Ukrainian defences. On Tuesday, Russian forces once again pounded civilian targets in Ukraines second-largest city, Kharkiv, as a 65-kilometre long convoy of tanks and other military vehicles threatened the capital Kyiv. The situation on the ground is grim. The reality always was the prospects for Ukrainian military victory were very low, said Allen Sens, an international security expert at the University of British Columbia. Sens says it appears Russian forces are preparing to encircle some key elements of the Ukrainian army. The next stage, he predicts, will be a siege and bombardment of cities and troop concentrations in an effort to eventually either starve out the defences inside the cities or to soften them up in preparation for an assault. We're seeing them activate the next stage of planning, which is a much more lengthy campaign, said Sens, estimating formal operations could last another week to 10 days. He expects people who have left or are on their way now have a reasonable prospect of entering the country while formal military hostilities are underway. After that, Sens says theres a good chance the war could evolve into a resistance movement, with elements of the Ukrainian army and informal militias conducting a campaign of guerrilla war. In other words, we could see an insurgency. We could see a countryside partisan kind of style warfare, which the history of Ukraine is filled with. We may see sort of a Northern Ireland kind of scenario where there are urban acts of resistance and violence, he said. The actual fighting might continue well past the point where large scale military combat is over. VOLUNTEER WITH BOTH EYES OPEN What kind of fight volunteers walk into will depend on whether the Ukrainian government can maintain command and control over its armed forces, said Sens. In that unpredictable situation, its not clear how much training will be available when volunteers arrive in Ukraine. If you have military training, or you have some other kind of training, like you're a trained paramedic, or something of that nature, or you have a technical skill that can be very useful aircraft mechanic, heavy machinery, mechanics, that sort of thing these can be very important contributions, he said. Ask yourself, added Sens, will you be useful? Will you put yourself in a position that is dangerous? Not only to yourself, but potentially, to others as well? Then ask yourself if you are ready to accept the risk of getting killed or seriously injured in combat. Whatever the answer, Sens cautions people looking to join the war in Ukraine do so with both eyes open to the consequences. Woolsey, the former cook, says its hard to have expectations before heading into a war zone, though he's ready to be thrown in with the infantry. They'll know where they'll want me, he said. I'm not gonna go in there and say I want to do this. Photo: Bryson Woolsey Bryson Woolsey (right) says his brother (left) is worried about his plan to travel to Ukraine and fight Russian forces as part of an international brigade of volunteers. RISK OF BEING LABELLED A TERRORIST Canadian Foreign Affairs Minister Melanie Joly said Sunday the choice to go and fight in Ukraine is an individual decision. But even a green light from ones own country doesnt eliminate the legal risk of entering a battle zone as a foreign national. Sens warns that Russian forces may not recognize the newly formed Ukrainian legion as a legitimate fighting force, and that if captured, foreign fighters might get treated as an enemy combatant or worse, a terrorist. One could be accused, for example, of being a mercenary, and mercenaries do not receive the same coverage and protections of international humanitarian law, he said. People are going out of passion, out of anger and frustration, wanting to do something. Its perhaps something that they're not giving the full attention to. WORRIED HELL BE TOO LATE Schoks reasons for going off to fight in Ukraine are complicated. Part of his motivation comes from his Ukrainian heritage; part of it comes from wanting to make a difference in what he sees as a critical juncture in world history. But he also says hes likely one of thousands, if not millions, of young people filled with angst and uncertainty. Just feeling the frustration at being ravaged by something you cannot control, he said. I'm frustrated enough, I am disillusioned enough, I am pissed off enough with the way the world has changed over the last few years [during the pandemic] and the way that society has become. This is something I can fight back on. As for Woolsey, he hopes to leave by next week. His biggest worry is he might be too late, that the growing Russian offensive will crush Ukrainian forces before he arrives. But even if regular military operations do end, he says hell be ready to take part in whatever insurgency or growing refugee crisis comes next. Its just a total chaotic mess. There are lots of refugees that need help, he said. He pointed to roughly 660,000 refugees who, as of Tuesday, had fled the country into neighbouring Poland, Moldova, Romania, Slovakia and Hungary. I would like to do what I can to help them really fight for their freedom. Photo: Ukrainian Gov Ukrainian President Volodymyr Zelensky UPDATE 5:05 p.m. In a video address to the nation early Thursday, Ukrainian President Volodymyr Zelenskyy gave an upbeat assessment of the war and called on Ukrainians to keep up the resistance. We are a people who in a week have destroyed the plans of the enemy, he said. They will have no peace here. They will have no food. They will have here not one quiet moment. Zelenskyy didnt comment on whether the Russians have seized several cities, including Kherson. If they went somewhere, then only temporarily. Well drive them out, he said. He said the fighting is taking a toll on the morale of Russian soldiers, who go into grocery stores and try to find something to eat. These are not warriors of a superpower, he said. These are confused children who have been used. He said the Russian death toll has reached about 9,000. Ukraine doesnt want to be covered in bodies of soldiers, he said. Go home. The U.N. refugee agency says 1 million people have fled Ukraine since Russias invasion less than a week ago, an exodus without precedent in this century for its speed. The tally from UNHCR amounts to more than 2 percent of Ukraines population on the move in under a week. The World Bank counted the population at 44 million at the end of 2020. The U.N. agency has predicted that up to 4 million people could eventually leave Ukraine but cautioned that even that projection could be revised upward. A video shows firefighters tackling the blaze caused by a Russian strike on a regional police department building in Ukraine's Kharkiv pic.twitter.com/rpZ9b4HRS2 Reuters (@Reuters) March 2, 2022 UPDATE 11:50 a.m. A senior U.S. defense official says the Russian convoy still appears to be stalled outside the city center of Kyiv, and has made no real progress in the last couple days. The official on Wednesday said the convoy is still plagued with fuel and food shortages and logistical problems, as well as facing continued fierce resistance from Ukrainians. He said there has been an increase in the number of missiles and artillery targeting the city, suggesting the Russians are trying to make a more aggressive move to try and take the city. The official, who spoke on condition of anonymity to discuss military assessments, said Russians have not been able to achieve air superiority and Ukrainian air defenses remain operable and their aircraft continue to fly. The official said that about 82% of the Russian troops that had been arrayed around Ukraine are now inside the country just a slight uptick over the last 24 hours, and that Russia has launched more than 450 missiles at various targets in the country. In other areas of the country, the U.S. official said that the U.S. is seeing preliminary indications that Russian forces are going to try to move south towards Mariupol from Donetsk, in what appears to be an effort to encircle the city. ORIGINAL 6:50 a.m. On Day 7 of the Russia-Ukraine conflict, Russia continued its attacks on crowded Ukrainian cities and a lengthy convoy of Russian tanks and other vehicles advanced slowly toward the capital of Kyiv. Russias escalation Wednesday came as President Joe Biden, in his State of the Union speech to Americans, warned that if the Russian leader didnt pay a price for the invasion, the aggression wouldnt stop with one country. POSSIBLE TALKS A Kremlin spokesman said a Russian delegation will be ready Wednesday evening to resume talks with Ukrainian officials about the war in Ukraine Spokesman Dmitry Peskov told reporters that in the second half of the day, closer to evening, our delegation will be in place to await Ukrainian negotiators. Ukrainian Foreign Minister Dmytro Kuleba also said his country was ready. CONVOY TO KYIEV A 64-kilometre convoy of hundreds of Russian tanks and other vehicles advanced slowly on Kyiv, a city of nearly 3 million people. The West feared it was part of a bid by Putin to topple the government and install a Kremlin-friendly regime. The Russians also pressed their assault on other towns and cities, including the strategic ports of Odesa and Mariupol in the south. A senior U.S. defense official said Russias military progress has slowed, plagued by logistical and supply problems. Some Russian military columns have run out of gas and food, the official said, and morale has suffered as a result. The Russian military has also been stalled by fierce resistance on the ground and a surprising inability to completely dominate Ukraines airspace. RELENTLESS ASSAULT ON KHARKIV Russias assault on Kharkiv, Ukraines second largest city, continued Wednesday, with a Russian strike hitting the regional police and intelligence headquarters, according to the Ukrainian state emergency service. It said three people were wounded. The strike blew off the roof of the police building and set the top floor on fire, and pieces of the five-story building were strewn across adjacent streets, according to videos and photos released by the emergency service. In Wednesdays strikes, four people died, nine were wounded and rescuers pulled 10 people out of the rubble, according to the service. Ukraines President Volodymyr Zelenskyy called the attack on Kharkiv undisguised terror. TV TOWER ATTACK On Tuesday, a deadly bombing targeted a TV tower in the capital. Ukrainian authorities said five people were killed in the attack. A TV control room and power substation were hit, and at least some Ukrainian channels briefly stopped broadcasting, officials said. Russias Defense Ministry claimed Wednesday that Russia disabled the main TV tower in an airstrike, but said the attack did not hit any residential buildings. Ministry spokesman Igor Konashenkov did not address the deaths from Tuesdays strike. He said the attack was aimed at disabling Ukraines ability to stage information attacks. VIOLENCE ELSEWHERE The Ukrainian UNIAN news agency quoted the health administration chief of the northern city of Chernihiv as saying two cruise missiles hit a hospital there. The hospitals main building suffered damage, Serhiy Pivovar said, and authorities were working to determine the casualty toll. No other information was immediately available Britains Defense Ministry said it had seen an increase in Russian air and artillery strikes on populated urban areas over the past two days. It also said three cities Kharkiv, Kherson and Mariupol were encircled by Russian forces. RUSSIA INCREASINGLY ISOLATED Russia found itself increasingly isolated, hit by sanctions that have thrown its economy into turmoil and left the country practically friendless, apart from a few nations like China, Belarus and North Korea. Biden said the sanctions have left Russian President Vladimir Putin isolated in the world more than he has ever been. Leading Russian bank Sberbank announced Wednesday that it is pulling out of European markets amid tightening Western sanctions. The bank said its subsidiaries in Europe were facing an abnormal outflow of funds and a threat to the safety of employees and branches, according to Russian news agencies. They did not provide details of the threats. The U.S. and EU have levied sanctions on Russias biggest banks and its elite, frozen the assets of the countrys Central Bank located outside the country, and excluded its financial institutions from the SWIFT bank messaging system. The harsh sanctions and the resulting crash of the ruble have the Kremlin scrambling to keep the countrys economy running. For Putin, that means finding workarounds to the Western economic blockade. Former Treasury Department officials and sanctions experts expect Russia to try to mitigate the impact of the financial penalties by relying on energy sales and leaning on the countrys reserves in gold and Chinese currency. Putin also is expected to move funds through smaller banks and accounts of elite families not covered by the sanction s, deal in cryptocurrency and rely on Russias relationship with China. HUMANITARIAN SITUATION Its worsening. Roughly 874,000 people have fled Ukraine and the U.N. refugee agency warned the number could cross the 1 million mark soon. Countless others have taken shelter underground. Ukraines State Emergency Service said more than 2,000 civilians have died, though it was impossible to verify that claim. The U.N. human rights office says it has recorded the deaths of 136 civilians, including 13 children, in Ukraine since the start of Russias invasion on Feb. 24. The European Union is stepping up aid for Ukraine and is moving toward granting temporary protection to those fleeing Russias invasion. The EU Commission announced Wednesday it will give temporary residence permits to the refugees and allow them rights to education and work in the 27-nation bloc. The move still has to be approved by the member states, but they already expressed broad support over the weekend. Human Rights Watch said it documented a cluster bomb attack outside a hospital in Ukraines east in recent days. Residents also reported the use of the weapons in Kharkiv and Kiyanka village. The Kremlin denied using cluster bombs. DEVELOPMENTS AT UNITED NATIONS The U.N. General Assembly will vote Wednesday on a resolution demanding that Russia immediately stop using force against Ukraine and withdraw its military from the country, and condemning Moscows decision to increase the readiness of its nuclear forces. The 193-nation General Assembly met Tuesday for a second day of speeches about the war, with more than 110 member states signed up to speak. Unlike the U.N. Security Council, the General Assembly doesnt allow vetoes. And unlike Security Council resolutions, General Assembly resolutions arent legally binding, though they have clout in reflecting international opinion. Photo: File photo UPDATE: 12:50 p.m One of the 47 Canadians arrested in a recent international child sexual exploitation investigation was living in East Vancouver. The Vancouver Police Department says the 22-month investigation, dubbed Operation H, led to the arrest of 40-year-old Kristjon Olson. As a result of the massive investigation that began in New Zealand, Olson is now facing 26 charges, including including making, distributing, and possessing child pornography, exposing, extortion, communicating with a person under age 16 for a sexual purpose, invitation to sexual touching, and breaching court orders. The VPD says the allegations occurred between January 2019 and June 2020. Online child exploitation cases are some of the most complex and disturbing for police, in part due to their digital nature and because the victims are often located around the world, said Sgt. Steve Addison of the Kelowna RCMP. Detectives from the Vancouver Police Departments Internet Child Exploitation Unit worked for nearly two years to gather evidence and secure criminal charges in this case, which involved child sexual abuse material. The VPD says the investigation began in April 2020, when New Zealand's Department of Internal Affairs identified a thousands of accounts on an international cloud storage platform linked to dozens of people who were allegedly viewing and sharing child pornography. Earlier Wednesday, the RCMP said 186 charges have been laid in Canada against 47 people, while 12 children have been removed from abusive situations following the investigation. Olson was already facing separate sex charges, including possessing, importing and distributing child pornography and exposing his genitals to a person under 16. He's scheduled to be sentenced on those charges on March 15, but it's not clear how the new charges may impact that scheduled date. ORIGINAL: 9:40 a.m. RCMP say 47 Canadians have been arrested and 12 children have been removed from abusive situations as part of a global investigation into online child sexual exploitation. Police say 186 charges have been laid in Canada so far during the investigation, dubbed Operation H. They say arrests have been made in eight provinces over the past two years, but note the investigation is still underway. The RCMP say the probe began in New Zealand in the fall of 2019, after law enforcement officials were alerted by an electronic service provider who had discovered a large number of subscribers sharing "some of the most graphic and violent child sexual abuse material online." They say some 90,000 accounts were identified as possessing or sharing child sexual abuse material. Toronto police, who were contacted as part of the probe, say they have arrested and charged six men with a total of 18 offences, including some related to possessing, accessing and distributing child sex abuse material. Toronto police Insp. Justin Vander Heyden of the sex crimes unit says one of the accused has since been convicted and jailed, one has died, and the other four are still going through the justice system. Photo: The Canadian Press Prime Minster Justin Trudeau says he thinks Russia's Vladimir Putin is surprised by the strength and unity of Western sanctions in retaliation for his invasion of Ukraine. Trudeau says Putin likely never imagined that Germany would freeze its lucrative Nord Stream 2 pipeline project with Russia or decide to send anti-tank weapons and surface to air missiles to Ukraine. The decision to provide weapons marked a historic shift in German military policy that has its roots in consigning its Second World War aggression against Europe to the dustbin of history. Trudeau echoed what Finance Minister Chrystia Freeland said Tuesday that future sanctions against Russian business interests in Canada could cause some economic "collateral damage" domestically. He says he may look at compensating some businesses but added that allies in Europe will feel the economic effects of sanctions much more than Canada. Trudeau spoke as the Russian aerial bombardment of Ukrainian cities continued today, killing scores of civilians and forcing an estimated 870,000 people to flood into other European countries as refugees. An employee of a district office at the National Election Commission checks ballots for the March 9 presidential election in Seoul, Wednesday. Yonhap By Kang Seung-woo With less than a week left before the March 9 presidential election, leading presidential candidates are seeking to form a coalition with minor candidates and encourage more of their supporters to go to the polls in a bid to tip the balance in their favor. Lee Jae-myung of the ruling Democratic Party of Korea (DPK) hailed former Finance Minister Kim Dong-yeon's decision to endorse him as Korea's next president after exiting the presidential race. "I am taking Kim's decision seriously and will mix my pledges with his will to provide plentiful and meaningful policies," Lee wrote on his Facebook account. "We will make the utmost efforts to form a coalition government so as to fulfill the public's desire for political reform," he added. Kim, President Moon Jae-in's first finance minister who had been running for president on the ticket of the minor New Wave Party, announced his withdrawal earlier in the day. Kim and Lee reached an agreement to pursue various political reform measures together, including a revision of the constitution and electoral system, Tuesday. "It was not an easy decision for me," Kim said during a press conference in Seoul. "Please understand this was a difficult decision aimed at realizing the philosophy and values that we are looking to pursue." Kim's withdrawal came as Lee and his rival Yoon Suk-yeol of the main opposition People Power Party (PPP) were in a tight race, with each enjoying around a 40 percent support rate in opinion polls. Recent surveys have shown that Kim has less than 1 percent support. "We are once again promising to create politics of unity and waiting for replies from other opposition candidates," said Rep. Kang Hoon-sik, the chief of Lee's strategic planning committee. Rival candidates clash over cash handouts, tax increase DPK's Lee lectures rival candidate on feminism Presidential candidates exchange jabs over Japan Lee on course to merge campaigns with minor presidential candidate Kim Yoon leads Lee 46.3% to 43.1%, 44.6% to 43.7%: polls Late last month, the ruling party announced its plan to pursue political reform to shift the single five-year presidential term to a renewable four-year term in a bid to forge a coalition with minor opposition presidential candidates ahead of the election. Lee later held a virtual meeting with Ukrainian Ambassador-designate to Seoul Dmytro Ponomarenko and discussed the crisis in Ukraine, according to the DPK. Lee Jae-myung, left, the presidential candidate of the ruling Democratic Party Korea, and Kim Dong-yeon, the presidential nominee of the New Wave Party, hold hands following their meeting at a cafe in Seoul, Tuesday. Yonhap Meanwhile, prosecutor-turned-presidential candidate Yoon encouraged his supporters to turn out on Election Day and added that those who cannot make it should cast their ballots in early voting, scheduled to start Friday for two days across the nation. Overseas voting was also held from Feb. 23 to 28. "I will cast my ballot through early voting. Amid concerns that the COVID-19 pandemic could interfere with the people's right to vote on Election Day, I am asking you to aggressively participate in early voting," Yoon wrote on Facebook. "The nation's daily coronavirus cases have topped 200,000 and at this rate, those who are infected with the virus or are quarantined may not vote, which could affect the result of the election," he added. Taking issue with the short period of early voting, Yoon urged the government to come up with additional measures to guarantee that as many people as possible participate in the voting. Yoon also met with Ponomarenko in an abruptly arranged meeting ahead of the debate. The meeting took place as Yoon took heavy flak for posting a photo of an angry face drawn on a tangerine along with a message supporting Ukraine. It was posted on Yoon's Twitter account, Tuesday, but deleted three hours later following criticism that it appears to make fun of the Ukraine crisis. Meanwhile, public polls released Wednesday showed Yoon maintaining a slight lead over Lee. In a Realmeter survey of 1,007 adults Monday and Tuesday for Newsis, Yoon earned 46.3 percent support against Lee's 43.1 percent. The 3.2 percentage point gap was in line with the margin of error of plus or minus 3.1 percentage points at a 95 percent confidence level. Another poll by Ace Research and Consulting Group on Sunday and Monday for the Local Korea Press Association found that Yoon led Lee 44.6 percent to 43.7 percent. It interviewed 1,004 people and had a margin of error of plus or minus 3.1 percentage points at a 95 percent confidence level. By law, polls conducted within six days of the election cannot be published until after voting closes. Photo: VPD Vancouver Police have released footage of a "person of interest" in the murder of Justis Daniel. Daniel is believed to have been killed on Dec. 9, 2021, in his Kitsilano home near West 3rd Avenue and MacDonald Street. Police are hoping security footage released today will help identify a person of interest in the case. "The man shown in the video can be seen walking on the south side of Point Grey Road on the afternoon of December 9, 2021, the day we believe Justis was killed, says Const. Tania Visintin in a press release. Investigators believe this man, could have information that may assist the investigation. No arrests have been made in the case at this point, but Visintin says the case is still very much active. "Our homicide detectives continue to make progress with the investigation through various investigative avenues, including forensic analysis, witness interviews, and the review of neighbourhood surveillance footage, she adds. Anyone with information can call the VPD's major crime unit at 1-604-717-2500. Condemning Russia's "premeditated and unprovoked" attack on Ukraine, US President Joe Biden on Tuesday (local time) said that Russian President Vladimir Putin is isolated from the world more than ever. Biden's remarks came during the first State of Union address delivered by him to a joint session of Congress at the Capitol on Tuesday (local time). The US President said that Putin rejected repeated efforts at diplomacy and thought that the West and NATO wouldnt respond. "We prepared extensively and carefully. We spent months building a coalition of other freedom-loving nations from Europe and the Americas to Asia and Africa to confront Putin. I spent countless hours unifying our European allies. We shared with the world in advance what we knew Putin was planning and precisely how he would try to falsely justify his aggression," said Biden. "We are inflicting pain on Russia and supporting the people of Ukraine. Putin is now isolated from the world more than ever," he said, adding that the US, along with its allies, is now enforcing powerful economic sanctions against Russia. Biden further said that they are cutting off Russias largest banks from the international financial system and preventing Russias central bank from defending the Russian Ruble making Putins USD 630 Billion war fund worthless. "We are choking off Russias access to technology that will sap its economic strength and weaken its military for years to come," he said. He further announced that American airspace will be closed for Russian flights, which will further isolate Russia. "The Ruble has lost 30 per cent of its value. The Russian stock market has lost 40 per cent of its value and trading remains suspended. Russias economy is reeling and Putin alone is to blame," he stated. Biden clarified that American forces are not going to Europe to fight in Ukraine, but to defend its NATO Allies in the event that Putin decides to keep moving west. "For that purpose, weve mobilized American ground forces, air squadrons, and ship deployments to protect NATO countries including Poland, Romania, Latvia, Lithuania, and Estonia," he said, adding that the US will not engage in conflict with Russian forces with Ukraine. "Putin has unleashed violence and chaos. But while he may make gains on the battlefield he will pay a continuing high price over the long run," he added. Calling Putin a "dictator" invading a foreign country, US President announced that the US, along with 30 other countries, will release 60 million barrels of oil from reserves around the world "to help blunt gas prices here at home" that rose as a consequence to Ukraine-Russia conflict. (ANI) Also Read: Russia-Ukraine War: US will not engage in conflict with Russian forces in Ukraine, POTUS Biden 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 Senator Bill Hagerty (R-TN) has joined Senator Josh Hawley (R-MO) in introducing the American Energy Independence Act of 2022, which they said "reverses President Joe Bidens shutdown of the American energy sector and returns American energy to full production." The senators said, "Immediately following Russias invasion of Ukraine, the price of oil rose to over $100 a barrel for the first time since 2014. Gas and energy prices for working Americans are quickly rising to new highs. The Biden Administration has been reluctant to sanction the Russian energy sector, due no doubt to the United States dangerous dependence on foreign energy. At the same time, European countries, particularly Germany, are heavily dependent on Russian natural gas." Senator Hagerty said, The Biden Administrations war on American energy has placed severe burdens on the shoulders of American citizens and led to disastrous national security ramifications across the globe. For the sake of our national and economic security, we must immediately reverse course and re-establish the energy independence created by the previous Administrations policies, which is exactly what this legislation would do. Senator Hawley said, To be strong and free as a nation, we must be energy independent. My bill will reverse Joe Bidens disastrous energy surrender that has allowed Russian energy dominance and instead open up American production full-throttle. To stand up to aggressors like Vladimir Putin, we can and we must work to power our nation and the world. Four presidential candidates hold hands with each other before their third and last TV debate held at KBS studio in Seoul, Wednesday. From left are Sim Sang-jung of the Justice Party, Yoon Suk-yeol of the main opposition People Power Party, Ahn Cheol-soo of the People's Party and Lee Jae-myung of the ruling Democratic Party of Korea. Yonhap By Kang Hyun-kyung An unexpected debate on feminism erupted during a TV debate among four presidential candidates held at KBS studio in Seoul, Wednesday. The four are ruling Democratic Party of Korea's (DPK) Lee Jae-myung, the main opposition People Power Party's (PPP) Yoon Suk-yeol, the minor center-right People's Party's Ahn Cheol-soo and Justice Party candidate Sim Sang-jung. In the third and last TV debate before the March 9 presidential election, the candidates presented their visions regarding a range of social policies, including welfare, birthrates and ageing society and pressed each other to clarify their stances on certain issues. The DPK's Lee initiated the debate on feminism when he took the floor. Mentioning Yoon's past remarks about feminism, Lee accused the rival candidate of his remarks blaming feminism as one of the main causes of Korea's falling birthrate. Yoon made the remarks in August 2021 during a lecture for several first-term PPP lawmakers. Back then, Yoon was critical of some politicians who tried to use feminism to get elected. "When we say feminism, we are supposed to be engaged in a healthy debate about the topic. But there are some who tried to use it for their own political careers and reelection. As a result of this, what happens is that the feminism discourse stands in the way of relationships between men and women," Yoon said. Veterans and military service members will take to the streets of Chattanooga on April 23 for the annual Irreverent Warriors Silkies Hike. During the 2022 season, over 90 events will bring thousands of veterans together across the United States. Veteran and military participants hike anywhere from eight to 14 miles, some carrying heavy packs, some in wheelchairs, but all in a spirit of support and camaraderie with a singular mission to eliminate veteran suicide. Veterans normally hike wearing only their combat boots and Silkies, traditional military physical training shorts full of nostalgia that help promote an environment of humor and camaraderie. Irreverent Warriors, Inc. is a 501(c)(3) non-profit organization whose mission is to "bring veterans together using humor and camaraderie to improve mental health and prevent veteran suicide." According to numerous studies, including a commonly referenced VA Suicide Data Report conducted in 2012, at least 22 veterans and military service members commit suicide daily," officials said. "Although this statistic has become very well-known, it is often considered a gross underestimation of reality. Irreverent Warriors has stood up to fit an unmet demand by introducing its members and participants to a life-saving network of support through their events and community. Everyone fights their battles and heals from trauma differently, but one thing is consistent; no one should have to do it alone. "We ask all of our veterans and military service members to hike with us in this event. We also ask family members, friends and the community for their support and invite them to register as a volunteer or join us at the stops. Please cheer and/or honk if you pass our hikers on the route as they deeply appreciate your support." Who: Veterans and Military Service Members (Active Duty, Reservists, and National Guard) What: Irreverent Warriors Silkies Hike Chattanooga When: Saturday April 23, 2022, Registration is from 7-8 a. m. on Saturday, April 23. The hike step off will be at 8:45 a.m. from the lawn in front of Cold Stone Creamery, 140 Riverfront Pkwy. Hikers will be stopping at multiple locations throughout the hike for food, drinks and camaraderie, including many of the scenic city parks. Register on Eventbrite here. A Pennsylvania man who was an administrator of an Internet site where members were required to submit images and videos of child pornography has pleaded guilty to conspiracy to possess child pornography. Alexander Vanar Berisha appeared before Federal Magistrate Susan K. Lee. He faces up to 10 years in federal prison. Prosecutors said an FBI agent intercepted child pornography images sent by Berisha. Agents subsequently confiscated his Samsung Galaxy and found some 200 pornographic images on it. Those included one video and 12 images that Berisha had supplied to the group known as Wicked Boners. Authorities said the group focuses on young boys. At one point Berisha urged others in the group, "Hey guys, plz post and keep this group active." It was found that Berisha posted pornographic images of young boys on three consecutive days in April 2020. The IBMA Foundation announces the launch of the Fletcher Bright Memorial Grant for Young Musicians. The Bright family of Chattanooga, Thomas J. Brown of Dalton and Barbara Martin Stephens of Madison, Tn. have made combined gifts of $24,000 to create and endow the fund that will benefit young people interested in learning to play bluegrass music for decades to come.Fletcher Bright Memorial Grants will be awarded in various amounts to cover expenses for lessons, educational materials, instrument rental or purchase, workshops and camps. Young bluegrass musicians at all levels may apply for assistance. Financial need will be considered, but is not required to receive a Bright grant.Applications for Bright grants may be made starting April 1 and throughout the year through the IBMA Foundation website at https://bluegrassfoundation.org.The grant honors Fletcher White Bright (1931-2017), a lifelong resident of Lookout Mountain, who led a residential and commercial development company with offices in Chattanooga and Atlanta. One of the worlds great traditional old time and bluegrass fiddlers, Mr. Fletcher was a lover and supporter of all things bluegrass, and his vast repertoire of fiddle tunes is legendary. While a student at McCallie School in the 1940s, Mr. Bright formed the band that would later become the Dismembered Tennesseans, kickstarting a 70-year journey of music, entertaining, travel and just plain fun. The band performed regionally and nationally, and was featured on ABC-TVs Peter Jennings Nightly News and the NBC Sunday Today Show.In addition to recording a number of albums, Mr. Bright was honored with the Distinguished Achievement Award from the International Bluegrass Music Association in 2017. He served on the board of trustees of the Bluegrass Hall of Fame and Museum in Owensboro, Ky., chairing the board for several years. In 2008 Mr. Bright himself endowed a scholarship for students playing and studying roots music at Berklee College of Music. Each year the scholarship recipient is invited to perform at the Three Sisters Bluegrass Music Festival, a free event Mr. Bright founded and named for his daughters, presented each fall in Chattanooga.IBMA Foundation Board Chair Fred Bartenstein said, We are so pleased about the establishment of a grant to help with educational expenses for young bluegrass musicians, named for Fletcher Bright. His colleagues know that Fletcher loved teaching as much as he loved playing the fiddle. We thank the Bright family, Tom Brown and Barbara Martin Stephens for their generous donations to found the Fletcher Bright Memorial Grant for Young Musicians, and it is our hope that friends and fans of Fletcher will also support the grant program.The IBMA Foundation supports programs and initiatives that foster the growth of bluegrass music. The Foundation helps donors create a bluegrass legacy through charitable donations and planned giving, and through the support of programs focused on bluegrass-related arts and culture, education, literary work and historic preservation. Chattanooga Police Department Special Ops/Traffic Division on Tuesday held a press conference regarding an increase in traffic enforcement. Lt. Danny Jones highlighted the fact that Chattanooga is on pace for a record fatality year. While other parts of the state are seeing increases in crashes, Hamilton County, particularly Chattanooga, is experiencing a higher than normal pace for fatal crashes. There have been seven fatal crashes in 2022, as compared to two at this time in 2021. Lt. Jones said speed has been the main factor in most of the fatal crashes this year. Lt. Jones said there will be an increase of traffic enforcement in the Chattanooga area, particularly focusing on speeders. Senator Bill Hagerty on Tuesday secured re-opening of the U.S. Capitol and Senate office buildings to the public after he spoke on the Senate floor and called for unanimous consent to pass his resolution - a victory, he said, "for access to American democracy and a return to normal life." The resolution, which was introduced last month and is co-sponsored by more than half of the Senate Republican Conference, calls for reopening the U.S. Capitol and Senate office buildings to the American people and supports returning to the pre-COVID visitor policies for areas within Senate jurisdiction after nearly two years of closure. Here are his full remarks: Madam President, I rose in this chamber two weeks ago to again urge the Senate re-open the U.S. Capitol; re-open Senate office buildings. At that time, Democrats objected to my resolution in support of reopening. Two weeks later, it has become even more clear that the American public is tired of government mandates, of COVID shutdowns. Democrats have exploited the pandemic to execute a power grab over American life. A power grab that allows Democrats to dictate whether children can attend schools, whether Americans can keep their jobs and operate their businesses, and how elections are conducted. These big-government lockdowns and mandates have caused irreparable damage that will be felt for generations to come. As we move ahead, we must not lose sight of this lesson. On the bright side, even the Biden Administration is seeing the poll numbersand theyre adjusting the science accordingly. On Friday, the CDC changed its guidance once again. Now, indoor masks are not recommended for most Americans. Masks are no longer required on either side of the Capitol Building. Even Washington, D.C. has opened up and lifted its mask mandate! Amazingly, all of this happened just in time for the State of the Union. The only science thats being followed hereis the political science. But thankfully, America is returning to normal. Americans everywhere are safely living their lives, going to work and school, visiting stores, attending events, and gathering with their family and their friends. They shouldnt have to know somebody in order to visit their representative, to take a tour of the Capitol, to get into this building. Its time for the lockdown on democracy to come to an end. Today, Im once again asking my colleagues to rejoin reality and to reopen the Capitol to those whom it belongsthe American people. So, Madam President, I ask unanimous consent that the committee on Rules and Administration be discharged from further consideration, and the Senate now proceed to Senate Resolution 512. I ask unanimous consent that the resolution be agreed to, that the preamble be agreed to, and that the motions to reconsider be considered made and laid upon the table. *** No objection was made to the motion. *** Senator Hagerty: Madam President, Im glad that the Senate has agreed to my resolution to re-open the Capitol. And I urge the House of Representatives to pass the very similar resolution that was introduced in that body, so that all parts of the Capitol Complex are open to the American people. I also stand ready to work with my colleagues and with the Capitol Police to implement this resolution, so that we can welcome the American people back into their Capitol as soon as possible. I yield the floor. The Hamilton County Health Department on Tuesday reported 39 new positive COVID-19 cases, down from 62 on Monday. The total number of cases in the county now stands at 97,211.There was one more death from the virus in Hamilton County reported on Tuesday, for a total of 1,074. The death was reported to be a white female, age 71-80.The number of COVID-19 hospitalizations is 88 in Hamilton County, down from 95 on Monday. One more is hospitalized with suspected COVID.There are 17 Hamilton County inpatients and 18 patients are in ICU, down from 20 on Monday.The number of those who have recovered from coronavirus in Hamilton County is 95,552, which is 98 percent. There are 615 active cases, compared to 686 on Monday. The City Council on Tuesday unveiled its new nine-member redistricting plan that officials said has been worked on for the past six months between members of the council and Chris Anderson of the Kelly administration. Mr. Anderson said the plan "contains no surprises. It is what everyone expected. There are no radical, wholesale changes to the current districts." The new configuration keeps three districts that have a majority black population by at least 50 percent plus one. Chairman Chip Henderson said that is not a "requirement" and was not mandated by Federal Judge Alan Edgar in his decision on the case that led to the current form of government. However, Judge Edgar asked the city to come up with a plan to deal with racial disparities and the plan included the three majority black districts. Councilwoman Demetrus Coonrod expressed concerns about the council "continuing to group blacks together," saying that was not in keeping with the Kelly administrations "One Chattanooga" approach. She said she "works just as hard for my white citizens as my black ones" and she said he would be happy with a 50/50 district. Mr. Anderson said afterward that it was decided to work out the plan in-house without public participation, then have the various council members to hold neighborhood meetings. He said all nine council members were satisfied with the final plan. The County Commission got public input while drafting its new districts. It shifted from nine to 11 districts. Mr. Anderson said with the new census figures that District 4 had the most growth, and it is giving up part of its territory. He said under the new figures that without the changes there would be just two majority black districts. Mr. Anderson said Districts 1, 2 and 3 shifted together in a clockwise direction with Pinehill and Northmont Estates moving to District 1, neighborhoods north of Ely Road moving to District 3 and Hill City, City Greene and the Pinnacle building moving to District 2. District 5 continues all the way to the river and now contains all of Highway 58. It also shifts into the Austin Farm neighborhood. District 6 shifts more into District 4. Summit moves into District 6 as well as everything north of Standifer Gap Road. A small neighborhood near Airport Road also moves into District 6. Part of East Lake moves to District 8. East of Georgia Avenue and Battery Heights are now in District 8. District 7 now includes the north part of E. Main Street "making the neighborhood whole." District 9 makes some shift to the east and now includes all of Highland Park. Officials said the changes will not affect an election until three years from now. The election in August for a new District 8 council member will use the existing district boundaries. The council will vote on the new map on April 5. An investigation by special agents and fire investigators with the Tennessee Bureau of Investigation has resulted in the indictment and arrest of a Riceville man on a charge of insurance fraud. On July 21, 2020, TBI agents joined deputies with the McMinn County Sheriffs Department in investigating a structure fire on Highway 163 in Riceville. During the course of the investigation, agents determined the incident to be an incendiary fire. The investigation further revealed that the property owner, Hughie Hughes III, 66, still had in his possession items that were reported to his insurance company as being destroyed in the fire. On Feb. 15, the McMinn County Grand Jury returned indictments charging Hughes with one count of insurance fraud over $60,000. He was arrested on Monday and booked into the McMinn County Jail on a $40,000 bond. For nearly the past century states have been referred to as the "laboratories of democracy", meaning states can independently pass laws that affect only their constituents and issues that may be unique to their circumstance. If a particular law proves to be strong and successful, other states and even the federal government may then, and often do, adopt similar laws to affect more states or, at the federal level, the entire country. It is one of the strengths of a federalist structure. Over the past couple of decades a number of laboratory states embarked on experiments of legislative term limits as a means to address "corruption", real or perceived, among legislative members. We now have fifteen states with some level of enacted legislative term limits. What has been the result? Have these states produced a better product of governing than states with without? Has corruption been reduced? Do everyday citizens have more of a say in the governmental process than before the legislation? Has the power of government somehow shifted back to the people? Having worked in a number of these state legislatures, I will argue the answer is a resounding no to all of these questions. While turnover among legislators is higher than other states, the balance of power has not shifted. Matter of fact, it has arguably galvanized. Institutional knowledge, and the resulting power, on critical issues has moved to bureaucratic staffers and agencies, making them more powerful and less accountable. Outside influencers in the form of lobbyists remain and has been enhanced by former members, who were forced out of office, joining their ranks to influence their former colleagues. When a member is facing his/her last year or two in office by term limits, oftentimes they are more concerned about their next political or lobbying gig so that they can support their family than they are about impacting state policy for the betterment of all. These are the true effects of legislative term limits. Is term limits now the answer to the problems in Washington? I will argue that we already have the answer produced by our laboratories in the states. And the answer is no. So, how could the U.S. Congress be improved with better representation and create a better work product? Consider this. The U.S. House of Representatives was last increased in size by Congress to its current membership in 1913. That year the population of the United States was roughly 95 million people. Each member of the U.S. House represented roughly 220,000 constituents. Today each member represents over 700,000 people on average, a threefold increase, corresponding with a threefold increase in the population of the country. This is contrary to the spirit of a representative republic. Today, constituents are more "represented" by bureaucratic agencies and legislative staff members than their elected representative in the U.S. House. If a citizen has a grievance and would like to talk with their representative, seldom does that happen. Non elected staff members intervene. Furthermore, in 1929 when Congress failed to reapportion itself after the 1920 census, they passed the Permanent Reapportionment Act of 1929, locking in the number of House members at 435, a completely arbitrary number. Why? Simply because they didn't want to have to deal with the issue of reapportionment and expanding elected representation ever again. They abdicated their responsibility as outlined by the framers of the Constitution who never dreamed that one member of Congress could effectively represent three quarters of a million people. The founders envisioned districts of 30,000 people, not 700,000. Over the last 100 years of 435 House Members, the population of the United States has more than tripled. Why hasn't the size of the House of "Representatives" also tripled? In addition, over the same period of time, while elected representation has not increased, the number of non elected congressional staff has increased dramatically, arguably exponentially, along with every federal agency, wielding their will and power over what should be constituents. While "conservatives" may bristle at the idea of "expanding" the size of government, I will argue that it would/should actually reduce the size of federal government by reducing the terribly bloated non elected staff structure and partially replace with elected members serving a smaller number of constituents. These districts would then be more similar in size to state senate districts in many states. The benefits of expanding the size of the United States House of Representatives would be far greater than implementing term limits on representation, which is also counter to the concept of elected representation by arbitrarily disqualifying candidates because of time served. Why should voters in a Congressional district be deprived of quality representation if that is who they choose? Expanding the size of the U.S House would produce many tangible benefits. Just to name a few: Representation closer to the people. Smaller districts would allow, even force, elected members to interact more directly with constituents by eliminating some level of bureaucracy. Smaller district size would allow an easier pathway to challenge non performing or corrupt incumbents by reducing cost of campaigning creating more turnover in the legislative ranks. Gerrymandering would become less of an issue as the number of districts would increase to better reflect the population as a whole. Specific communities would be better represented. There are many other tangible and intangible benefits to Congressional expansion, but in my opinion Congressional term limits is not the answer. Ken Meyer Chancellor Jeff Atherton has recused himself from a case in which a Chattanooga attorney is suing the two daughters of Chattanooga Choo Choo founder B. Allen Casey Jr. in connection with his estate. He did so after attorney James L. Henry Jr. said he felt the judge might be biased in favor of the daughters. The suit says the wife of Mr. Casey, Emma Patten "Emmy" Casey, died May 15, 2020 and left an estate of about $15 million. The suit says Mr. Casey died six weeks later and left no real estate and almost no personal property. He did have a number of creditors, including attorney Henry. Total claims of the creditors against Mr. Casey's estate exceed $4 million. Attorney Henry said as a surviving spouse of over nine years of marriage, Mr. Casey had the right under Tennessee law to "an elective share" of Emmy Patten's estate equal to 40 percent of the net estate. He said that would have been about $6 million. The Caseys had been married since 1963. Attorney Henry said if Allen Casey had gotten his share of his wife's estate there would be more than enough to pay off all the creditors, including himself. Chancellor Atherton earlier had appointed attorney Jennifer Kent Exum to represent the Allen Casey estate and she declined to seek the elective share. The suit said she did so at the last minute, not giving attorney Henry and other creditors time to respond. Attorney Henry said in his motion to recuse that he had learned that Chancellor Atherton had an ex parte phone call with Ms. Exum and gave her instructions upon her appointment to the case. Attorney Henry said he only learned of that because attorney Kent listed it on her time sheet seeking payment for her services. He said she later withdrew the payment request on the call with the judge. Criminal Court Judge Barry Steelman, who is currently the presiding judge here, has been asked to find a new judge to handle the case. The complaint is against Elizabeth and Lynn Casey (daughters of the Caseys), Cartter Patten III, attorney Exum and the Chambliss Bahner and Stophel law firm. The suit says last Jan. 15, Elizabeth Casey was named to oversee the estate of her father. Attorney Henry said she had a conflict in that if Mr. Casey got his elective share of the estate then that money would go to creditors and not to her and her sister. The suit asks for compensatory damages of at least $6 million as well as punitive damages. Cartter Patten III, brother of Emmy Patten Casey, was named due to his being a representative of her estate. With the new development in the case, the legal question remains concerning the elective share. By Alex Gratzek Watching the Russian invasion of Ukraine a few things became quite evident. For one, the rot in Putin's Russia has been unmistakably exposed. Everything which has unfolded so far has been botched and frankly I don't see a way for him to recover. I suspect his days as czar are numbered as the people realize the emperor has no clothes. Let's dive in. First, the vaunted Russian Army has shown itself to be a paper tiger. Previous successes in Georgia (2008), Crimea (2014) and Syria (2015) had given credence to the idea that the lumbering Soviet Army Putin had inherited had become a modernized, professional, motivated force. Keep in mind Saddam Hussein remained in power after the First Gulf War because his elite units remained intact. The paratroopers were anticipating supporting columns from Belarus. However, they were composed of conscripts who made limited headway due to stiff resistance and logistical issues. Many of these columns have been destroyed and some appear to have been abandoned intact. The takeaway? The average Russian soldier's morale is abysmally low while the paratroopers and 5th columnists have found themselves destroyed when they make an appearance. Recently, Russian forces had been used to put down unrest against pro-Kremlin leaders in Belarus and Kazakhstan. Maybe Putin was delusional enough to think Ukraine would be a similar cakewalk with welcoming crowds. Even if the Russian soldiers bought into the propaganda emanating from the Kremlin, their reception on the ground has quickly revealed such deceptions. Ukrainian civilians have been taking down road signs, cursing Russians and trying to block tanks a la Tankman at Tiananmen Square in 1989. You can't mistake their displeasure. Fifth columnists and saboteurs traditional assets Russia had used to maintain plausible deniability have had their activities negated by a vigilant Ukrainian society. That leads into one of Putin's gravest misreads. Ukrainian President Volodymyr Zelenskyy was elected in 2019 with nearly 73 percent of the vote. That was an astounding number considering previous elections had been bitterly divided between candidates representing Western and Eastern Ukraine. It's not hard to fathom that Putin truly believed Zelenskyy could only have achieved such a high percentage of the vote as an installed Western puppet. Russia always liked to think of Ukraine as a brother nation but the crucible of war will create a sense of national identity that Moscow has always pushed back against. The idea of medieval Kievan Rus' looms large in the minds of Kremlin leaders in the terms of political legitimacy and its symbolism as the capital of the first Rus state. If today's Kyiv can pivot to a Western orientation, it puts tremendous pressure on Moscow. Internationally, Putin has found Russia isolated like never before. Kazakhstan refused his request for troops. Only Belarus, North Korea, Syria and Myanmar have voiced their open support while most of the rest of the world has voiced their undivided support for Ukraine in the face of naked aggression. This support has manifested itself in numerous ways. Foreign volunteers are seeping in, drawn by the classic cause of David vs. Goliath. Meanwhile, NATO has been plowing supplies, intelligence and weapons into Ukraine. Putin had some success in sowing doubt into the continued purpose of NATO over the years but all his efforts were undone by his choice to invade. NATO membership has been catapulted to the forefront of Finland and Sweden's domestic political scene. Financially, Russia has been cut off from the Society for Worldwide Interbank Financial Telecommunications (SWIFT) while the stock market and ruble had dropped dramatically in value. Europe's airspace has been closed to Russian planes. Within Fortress Russia, it has found itself under cyberattack from the collective Anonymous while nightly protests have been breaking out in Russia and Belarus. Russian resources are stretched thin. I think Putin's ability to make others wield the lash on his behalf and the average citizen's fear of the lash are dissipating. Putin, the supposed mastermind of geopolitics, went all in with his two high cards while his opponents were accurately calling his hand by broadcasting the date of the invasion to the world. I don't see a viable way out of this for him. Dictators and tyrants must always have success and the minute setbacks are suffered, the knives begin to come out. At this point, Russia will remain a pariah until the end of Putin's life. He either doubles down on levels of terror and repression unseen since Stalin's times to retain his throne or certain political players dispose of him if he's lucky or hand him over to face war crimes. The latter option gives Russia the ability to save some face and say it was all the workings of a mad man. Sadly, Russian history is all too filled with such men. Hopefully, a prosperous Ukraine will arise in the aftermath. If Ukraine survives its trial by fire, it will undoubtedly be poised to gain membership to the EU and NATO as it continues its quest towards democracy, rule of law and economic freedom. It's a path it should encourage its brother nation to the east to follow. What's paramount here is that when it's all said and done- the Russian people aren't held responsible. America won the Cold War but failed to consolidate that victory the way it did in Germany and Japan. The average Russian citizen underwent years of hardship in the 90's- and many- not without reason, felt they were kicked while they were down. This helped pave way for the rise of Putin. When it's all said and done, the hand of friendship should be extended to the Russian people for the small price of pulling back from lands seized by force under Putin's Empire. Putin's New Empire was built on even ricketier foundations than Soviet Russia so it's imploding even faster. At this point, what other option does Russia have? Alex Gratzek (ajgratzek@gmail.com) is an American who has lived, studied and worked in South Korea. Check his website at alexfromabroad.com. The views expressed in the above article are the author's own and do not reflect the editorial direction of The Korea Times. In 2022 it is anticipated that in the contested elections in the city, county, state, etc. races for public service there will be many hot topics to be aired in the media primarily for the benefit of the radio, television, cable stations, etc. bank accounts. However, the origin of the term burning question of the day (as expected) arose during a time when the church and the state were equal in government. The punishment for anyone that failed to follow the recognized state religion were considered heretic. The thousands of citizens who were caught publicly discussing the issue often suffered the unfortunate fate of being tied to a pole and buried alive. As a result, whenever there was a secret debate on religious freedom the subject was referred to as the burning question. The campaigns to convince the prospective voters of their electability are already warming up in February and the next ninety (90) days (or more) probably will create a real bonfire of charges and counter charges by the candidates and their announced and anonymous backers! (Which ones that may get scorched are yet to be determined?) * * * Jerry Summers (If you have additional information about one of Mr. Summers' articles or have suggestions or ideas about a future Chattanooga area historical piece, please contact Mr. Summers at jsummers@summersfirm.com) An employee at Volkswagen, 8001 Volkswagen Dr., told police that another employee stole her phone. She said the phone was in her backpack and she placed it on a table near her workstation. She said she is not sure which employee stole her phone, but she needs a report for insurance purposes. She said the phone number was changed and they texted her saying "nice try notifying the phone company." She said if she finds out who took it she will call police. * * * An anonymous caller reported finding a black suitcase in their driveway on Ballard Drive. The suitcase was collected and turned into the CPD Property Division. * * * A man on Read Avenue told police that someone stole his 2019 GMC bicycle. He said the rear wheel was locked to a tree when the bicycle was stolen. An antique bicycle was also stolen, but no description for it was available. * * * A man told police that people at a residence on Oak Street have been attempting to open banking and other financial accounts in his name since 2020. In late 2021 the person succeeded in opening an EPB Internet account ending in 75 and a SunTrust account. He said the current balance is $572 owed to EPB and $311 owed to SunTrust. He said he is not aware of any recent hacks where his SSN could have been taken. All the previous attempted banking accounts came back to the same address as well. Capitol One and Chase bank denied the accounts from the start. Police will attempt to make contact with the residents at the address on Oak Street and forward this information to Fraud Division for further investigation. * * * A woman on North Hawthorne Street told police that someone stole the muffler off her vehicle between 1-2 a.m. She said she believes it is one of the residents in the area, but cannot confirm it. * * * Police initiated a traffic stop at Gadd Road/Dayton Boulevard at the Circle K on a dark green Acura bearing a TN tag. Police previously observed the vehicle going approximately 30 mph southbound in the 5400 block of Dayton Boulevard. As police approached the vehicle on foot, the vehicle took off at a high rate of speed southbound on Dayton Boulevard into Red Bank. The vehicle had very dark tint, however police believed they observed at least two occupants in the vehicle. Police did not pursue the fleeing vehicle per CPD policy. * * * While on patrol, police observed a possible stolen vehicle in the area of 502 North Orchard Knob. The vehicle evaded police and fled at a high rate of speed, without regard for traffic signals, north on North Orchard Knob Ave. Vehicle was BOLO'd countywide after police lost visual. * * * A woman on Holly Oak Lane told police that she had forgotten to lock her 2019 Chevrolet Colorado parked in her driveway, and had accidentally left her wallet in it also. She said that sometime during the night someone entered her vehicle, rummaged through it and stole her wallet and its contents. She said she has frozen her debit and credit cards. Police suggested that she go to the website identitytheft.gov, read it and follow the suggestions found there. Police also suggested that she put a freeze on her credit report as well. * * * An employee of Les' Used Cars, 6221 Hwy. 58, told police that sometime overnight a vehicle was stolen from the business. She said someone was able to steal a 1996 GMC Sonoma from the car lot. She said the vehicle did not have a tag. The business was still in possession of the keys, and they were unsure of how it was stolen. They were unable to provide any suspect information. Police checked the area, but were unable to locate the stolen vehicle. Police contacted NCIC and entered the vehicle as stolen. * * * Police were checking the area of Granite Heights Apartment Homes, 1400 N. Chamberlain Ave., for stolen vehicles and found a Honda Accord in the parking lot at the rear of the complex backed up to the center building. The vehicle had been reported stolen from a residence on Dudley Road. The vehicle was locked, with no apparent damage, and no keys were located. The owner came and recovered their vehicle and it was removed from NCIC. Some property was recovered from the vehicle and turned into Property. * * * The manager of Techniques Surfaces USA, 1031 Windtower Dr., told police he found a loaded Glock magazine, holster and ammo at the time clock inside the facility. He said he wished to turn the magazine and ammo over to police as found property. Police transported the magazine, holster and ammo to Property. The manager later called with the rightful owner contacted them and wished to retrieve his property. The man filled out a release form and it was emailed to Property to be released. * * * A woman who works at Pioneer Consulting, 651 E 4th St., told police that while she was there around 7:01 p.m. the day before while at work, she started receiving e-mail notices that a bank account had been opened online in her name with Wells Fargo. She said later someone changed the contact info and the notices stopped. She then contacted Wells Fargo to notify them and they gave her an Identity Theft Case #. She said the account was actually opened under her maiden name. The only info she had on the changed contact info was the last four digits of the phone number and a partial email address- C.3@yahoo.com. * * * A man on Campbell Street called police and said about two hours earlier he believes his dog (female) was stolen. He said she was in an open yard next to the road and she never runs away and always stays close to the house. He said he heard a car door open and slam and then the car sped away and he immediately came outside and discovered the dog was gone. * * * A woman on South Seminole Dr. told police that she and her husband were not at home much this past weekend. She said while they were away someone stole a Craftsman toolbox with various tools worth $450. The tool box was on the porch of the residence when taken. * * * A disorder was reported on Berry Patch Lane. A woman told police that her husband of 40 years was drunk and being mean to her and that she didn't want to put up with it anymore. She said that she was intoxicated as well. Police spoke to the husband, who said that they both were arguing, but had no intentions of harming each other. After speaking with both of them, police allowed the woman to vent and eventually they both reconciled and apologized for calling the police out. * * * A shoplifting was reported at the Speedway, 3956 Brainerd Road. The store manager told police that a black male was in the store around 1 a.m. and appeared to be cleaning the floor, but he was not an employee of Speedway. On camera, the man was observed taking lottery tickets from behind the counter and sticking them into the trash can that he was using to sweep the floor. The man was then observed taking the trash can out to his car, a white four door sedan, and placing the bags in his car parked in front of the store. It is unknown the name of the man, but he is known to frequent the gas station. Police are working to identify him. Navy Captain Raymond Gene Hunt was remembered Tuesday as a man who loved his country and community. Mr. Hunt was a devoted member of the Anglican Church of the Redeemer where over 100 friends packed the Brainerd Chapel for a stirring memorial service. The McCallie School and University of Chattanooga graduate was active in the Episcopal Church for several decades forming FORWARD, a support group for widows and widowers. Mr. Hunt served as administration assistant to Congressmen Bill Brock and Lamar Baker and later Senator Bill Brock. The late Senator Brock once said that Mr. Hunt knew how to cut through government red tape in helping veterans and seniors while assisting hundreds in Tennessee. In 1975 he started Gene Hunt and associates with emphasis on insurance and financial planning. His son Ted said Dad loved to run; you would see him on the Walnut Street Bridge and all over the North Shore. It was his passion and how he kept in shape. Fellow Navy Captain Billy Hewitt praised his friend for his love of country. Cpt. Hewitt said Mr. Hunt was a master student of military and political science and enjoyed a lively discussion. Father Phil Hanner delivered the Homily, the congregation sang the Navy Hymn and the service closed with Martin Luthers A mighty fortress is our God. Mr. Hunts family said their dad planned the service and the hymns were his favorites. CPT. Hunts committal service was held at the VA National Cemetery in Chattanooga. Vietnam Veterans of America Chapter 203 provided the Honor Guard. The American Flag was raised over the casket while TAPS played. Gene Hunt retired as a captain after serving his country for 37 years in the Naval Reserve. Red Bank City Manager Martin Granum and Finance Director John Alexander, with the help of some department heads, have been working on a plan for using ARPA funds from the federal government. The city will be receiving $3,513,087 in American Rescue Plan money that will be divided over a two-year period. The proposal presented to the city commissioners on Tuesday night include spending for stormwater infrastructure, Internet technologies, facilities improvement, equipment for the fire and police departments, money for 911, road design for Ashmore Terrace, bonuses for employees and for contributions to non-profit organizations in the city. The commissioners for the most part agreed with the plan with the exception of $300,000 that would be designated as grants for non-profit organizations in the city. Commissioners Ruth Jeno, Ed Lecompte and Pete Phillips are in favor of using that money to benefit the citys employees, and proposed designating $150,000 for donations and $150,000 for the citys use. All are in agreement that Red Bank employees are in need of pay increases. The city is in the process of doing a pay scale study to determine salaries and this money could be used for employees in addition to any increases they receive after the study is complete. Citizens and a public works employee who all spoke at the meeting also had opinions, with just one in favor of using the entire amount of $300,000 for funding donations. The discussion will continue at the next commission meeting. Patricia Swope Baker and Becky Browder, representing the Red Bank Soddy Daisy Charitable Foundation, presented the city with a check for $23,000, the foundations gift to the city for 2022. In the late 1980s the Red Bank Hospital was sold to Erlanger. The proceeds from that sale were invested and interest from the investment is divided between the two cities each year. Use of the money is designated for projects that will benefit the entire community. This year the gift to Red Bank will be used to buy two mobile traffic message signs that will promote safety. This is the 31st year the grants have been made. The money that Red Bank received from the foundation in 2021 was specified to be used for building a new playground at the Red Bank Community Center. At the meeting Tuesday night, the commissioners authorized a contract with Hammer Down Outdoor Creations in the amount of $12,746, which had been budgeted for the installation of the playground equipment that has already been bought and is being put in now. Finance Director Alexander informed the council that the city will be buying four new vehicles for the police department with a loan for $137,600. And on Tuesday, the council declared as surplus, a variety of unclaimed items that have accumulated at the police department. This will allow the department to sell or dispose of them. In the city managers report, Mr. Granum announced the citys first open house. He and Police Chief Dan Seymour, Fire Chief Brent Sylar and the directors of each department will be present to meet people and will be available for questions. It will be held on Friday, March 18, at city hall from 9 a.m. until 2 p.m. He encourages the community to come and get to know the citys officials. Mr. Granum also encourages anyone who is interested to come to a Board of Zoning Appeals meeting on March 17 when a variance request will be heard for property at 167,169, 171 and 173 Lynda Circle. The owner has requested a reduction of the front yard set-backs from the required 25 feet to 15 feet. In Mayor Hollie Berrys report, she commended Captain John Wright for rescuing a dog who was found disoriented in Stringers Branch. He was reunited with his owner within an hour of being saved. The next Food Pantry will be Thursday from 4:30 until 6 p.m. at the Red Bank United Methodist Church. The Red Bank weed wrangle will be Saturday from 11 until 4 p.m. Volunteers will meet at city hall. The mayor thanked EPB for becoming a gold sponsor for the Red Bank Jubilee on May 7. Commissioner Pete Phillips gave a reminder that volunteers and other sponsors are still needed for the event. Vice Mayor Dalton announced that the opening Red Bank Neighbors Market will be held on Saturday, March 26, from 11 a.m. until 4 p.m. at 3512 Dayton Blvd. The next commission meeting scheduled for March 15,, has been rescheduled for the following week. It will be held on Tuesday, March 22, at 6 p.m. Siskin Hospital is honored to have Travis Mills as the guest speaker at the 19th Annual Possibilities: Siskin Hospital Celebrates Life Beyond Disability event on Tuesday, March 8. The event is virtual and will be livestreamed at 11:30 a.m. It will be available to view until March 15. U.S. Army Staff Sergeant Travis Mills of the 82nd Airborne was critically injured by an IED (Improvised Explosive Device) on his third tour of duty in Afghanistan. Travis suffered the loss of both arms and legs, making him one of only five quadruple amputees from the wars in Iraq an Afghanistan. Enduring a grueling rehabilitation program, Travis committed himself not only to recovery, but also to fatherhood and to giving back to the veteran community any way he could. Travis will share his inspirational message of enduring hope: never give up never quit. Possibilities will also feature inspirational videos highlighting the daily miracles that take place at Siskin Hospital as patients learn to overcome disability. All money raised at Possibilities will go toward the Charity Care funds that provides financial assistance to those without insurance. Tickets are available for purchase here. U.S. Senators Marsha Blackburn and Dan Sullivan (R-Alaska) sent a letter to President Joe Biden outlining 12 specific actions the president can take "to unleash domestic energy production, lower skyrocketing energy prices, and help Americas European allies and partners become less dependent on Vladimir Putins regime for their energy supply." Joe Biden has given up the best defense we had against Putins evil vision for the world energy independence, said Senator Blackburn. We need to make America energy independent again. Its time to divest from Russian energy and stop funding Putins war, and reauthorize the Keystone Pipeline. Leader Mitch McConnell (R-Ky.), along with Senators James Lankford (R-Okla.), John Cornyn (R-Texas), John Thune (R-S.D.), Kevin Cramer (R-N.D.), Joni Ernst (R-Iowa), John Hoeven (R-N.D.), Bill Cassidy (R-La.), Roger Wicker (R-Miss.), Steve Daines (R-Mont.), Ron Johnson (R-Wis.), Tommy Tuberville (R-Ala.), Mike Braun (R-Ind.), Cindy Hyde-Smith (R-Miss.), Shelley Moore Capito (R-W.Va.), Jim Risch (R-Idaho), Ted Cruz (R-Texas), Mike Rounds (R-S.D.), Pat Toomey (R-Pa.), John Kennedy (R-La.), and Deb Fischer (R-Neb.) also joined the letter. Below is the full text of the letter. President Joseph R. Biden The White House 1600 Pennsylvania Avenue, NW Washington, DC 20500 Dear Mr. President, We appreciate your call for Americans to come together in light of Russias brutal, unprovoked invasion of Ukraine. We strongly support working with our allies and partnersone of our nations most important strategic advantagesas well as sending U.S. troops to support and defend NATO allies in Eastern Europe during these challenging and dangerous times. Yet, as our nation prepares for this new era of authoritarian aggression led by the dictators in Russia and China, we have serious concerns that we encourage you to address in tonights State of the Union and thereafter act upon immediately. First, you must submit a robust military budget that significantly increases defense spending to reflect the realities of our geostrategic competition with China and Russia. Your Fiscal Year (FY) 2022 budget proposed significant real cuts to the Department of Defense when, at the same time, you proposed massive increases to almost every other federal agency and department. Putin and Xi were undoubtedly encouraged that the President of the United States proposed significant budget cuts to his own armed services. We implore you not to make the same strategic mistake again. The FY 2022 National Defense Authorization Act (NDAA) was a clear bipartisan rebuke of your misguided defense budget cuts. You must put forward a robust, real increase in defense spending focused on the current and future readiness and lethality of our force. You should also continue to press our NATO allies to meet their two percent of Gross Domestic Product (GDP) goal for defense spending. Second, your Administrations energy policieswhich focus on restricting, delaying, and killing the production of American energyhave had the predictable but catastrophic effect of driving up energy prices for American working families, increasing pink slips for American energy workers, and significantly empowering our adversaries, especially Putin, who has used energy as a weapon for decades. You recently told the American people in a press conference that your Administration was using every tool at our disposal to protect American families and businesses from rising prices at the gas pump and taking active steps to bring down the cost. Mr. President, respectfully, that is not true and the facts show it. Time and time again, your administration has taken steps to unilaterally disarm the American energy sector. We hope that in your address tonight, you make a strategic course correction on your misguided energy policies that properly reflects your recent promises to reduce energy prices for American families, protect the national security of the United States, and provide meaningful support to our allies who are struggling to meet their energy needs. You can do this through the following actions. 1. Rescind your decision to cancel the Keystone XL Pipeline and fast-track other similar energy infrastructure projects across the country. 2. Work to rescind the recent decision by the Federal Energy Regulatory Commission (FERC) that makes it much more difficult to approve natural gas pipelines. 3. Commit to fast tracking and producing American energy on federal lands, including the 1002 Area of the Arctic National Wildlife Refuge (ANWR), the National Petroleum Reserve of Alaska (NPR-A), and the Gulf of Mexico, all of which have decades of abundant proven reserves of oil and gas. 4. Expedite the permitting of critical minerals mining and processing, particularly Alaskas Ambler Road project, and reinstate the leases issued to Twin Metals Minnesota LLC for the northeastern Minnesota mining project. 5. Reinstate the January 2021 proposed rule from the U.S. Office of the Comptroller of the Currency that would prevent Americas large financial institutions from black-listing whole sectors of the economy and ensure the energy sector has fair access to capital and banking service to advance critically needed energy projects. 6. Direct the Department of Justice to appeal the U.S. District Courts decision invalidating the Department of the Interiors Lease Sale 257. Appealing the Courts decision to block this sale will demonstrate the administrations commitment to continuing critical offshore development. 7. Direct the Department of the Interior to finalize a new 5-year offshore lease plan by June 30, 2022. 8. Use your bully pulpit to encouragenot discourageAmericas financial institutions to support American energy independence by investing in American oil and gas. 9. Sanction Russian oil and gas exports to America and our allies. We have seen a spike in American imports of Russian energy during your Administration. We would replace such imports, which only empower Putin, with increased production of American energy for our citizens. 10. Issue all pending export licenses and announce an initiative to surge American liquefied natural gas (LNG) exports to our allies and partners in Europe who are being blackmailed and are trapped by the whims of tyrant Vladimir Putin. 11. Terminate the positions of White House Climate Czar Gina McCarthy and Special Presidential Envoy for Climate John Kerry, who have aggressively pushed an all-out assault on Americas energy sectorat home and abroadand whose actions are dramatically weakening Americas geostrategic advantages. John Kerrys statements just days ago clearly portray someone who does not care about the lives lost in the crisis in Ukraine but rather protecting the climate agenda no matter the cost. In his own words, he said, Massive emissions consequences to the war, but equally importantly you're going to lose people's focus. You're going to lose, certainly, big country attention because they will be diverted, and I think it could have a damaging impact," and I hope President Putin will help us to stay on track with respect to what we need to do for the climate." 12. Withdraw your nomination of Sarah Bloom Raskin based on her commitment to reduce American energy projects that would provide energy to our allies and reduce Americas dependence on Russian oil. It is our sincere hope that you announce these changes in your address this evening. Only then will your promise to use every tool at our disposal to protect American families and businesses from rising prices at the gas pump be fulfilled and our national security appropriately protected. The American people are looking to their President to rise to this critical moment. Our national security, global stability for ourselves and our allies, as well as the prosperity of every American family are on the line. We await your response in tonights address. Governor Bill Lee announced his proposed budget will fund 20 additional Tennessee Highway Patrol troopers for Shelby County as the administration focuses on "proven crime prevention" methods and addressing law enforcement staff shortages. Governor Lee will be in Memphis on Thursday, March 3, to do a ride-along with the Tennessee Highway Patrol and Memphis Police Department with a brief media avail to follow. Violent crime has no place in Tennessee, period. To immediately strengthen public safety, we have to invest in evidence-based crime prevention methods and continue efforts to recruit and retain qualified law enforcement officers, said Governor Lee. I commend the Memphis Police Department for their work to protect neighborhoods across the city and look forward to our continued partnership. Governor Lees Fiscal Year 22-33 budget proposes key public safety investments, including proven crime prevention methods to directly support Memphis and Shelby County: 20 additional Tennessee Highway Patrol troopers for Shelby County funded 100% by the state Creation of a $150 million Violent Crime Intervention Fund for law enforcement agencies across the state to invest in evidence-based programming and resources $30 million to support relocation bonuses for out-of-state police officers seeking to move to Tennessee Expansion of state funding for law enforcement basic training and increasing the frequency of training for new recruits Access to a statewide hiring portal that includes qualified law enforcement recruits from outside of Tennessee who are looking to relocate Read more about Governor Lees statewide public safety agenda here. Authorities were searching for a murder suspect believed to be hiding out at a Soddy Daisy trailer park. He got away, but Delandus Pruitt and Andrika McConnell are facing several charges. Police said they had information that Marquise "C-Banger" Burress was traveling in a black Dodge Charger with Georgia tags and was hiding out at 469 Clift Road, Lot #4. Burress is charged in the shooting death of 29-year-old Robert Gill. The victim's body, with multiple bullet wounds, was found on a driveway on South Street in the early morning of June 19, 2019. First-degree murder charges were bound to the Grand Jury against Burress, but he later made bond. Officers watched the Charger leave the trailer park, then travel at a high rate of speed on Highway 27 south. It changed lanes multiple times and exited on Signal Mountain Road. The vehicle later got back on Highway 27 and traveled to Market Street. Police were able to box it in nearby. Police said the driver, Pruitt, had a very similar description to Burress and it was determined they are in the same gang, "Hoover Crips." Pruitt told police he is a convicted felon and said he had just got out of prison on a 10-year sentence for armed robbery when he was 18 years old. He denied knowing Burress, who is on Hamilton County's Most Wanted List. Police went back to the trailer where they found a woman who said she is the aunt of four children that were in the trailer. The eldest is 10. Police said after all the children exited, they could hear thumping inside as if someone was hiding. They said they got a search warrant and called out the SWAT Team, but Burress was not found. They did find a loaded Ruger 9mm pistol, ammunition, cut lines of cocaine, a marijuana grinder and digital scales. Pruitt and Ms. McConnell were charged with unlawful possession of a weapon, possession of drugs for resale, aggravated child abuse and reckless endangerment. Food Network star Giada De Laurentiis stars in the second season of the female-led docu-series titled One of Us. This series highlights the Giada at Home stars contributions to Italian food and culture over the past 20 years alongside other extraordinary women of Italian descent. The series debuts on March 8, 2022, also known as International Womens Day. Giada De Laurentiis | We do it Together/Yelizaveta Sergei What is One of Us about? The second season of One of Us tells the stories of the unique journeys of extraordinary Italian women who have distinguished themselves in their respective fields of excellence. There is an installment for both the East and West Coast. De Laurentiis is a star of the West Coast episode. De Laurentiis and her fellow One of Us stars have broken the glass ceiling toward equality in their male-dominated fields. The purpose of honoring stars such as celebrity chef De Laurentiis is to subsequently encourage all women to overcome any barriers they face to conquer their dreams. The Italian women chosen to represent their heritage have achieved greatness in the following fields: food, cinema, STEM, publishing, finance, the arts, philanthropy, diplomacy, and science, among others. Each episode will take viewers into the life of each of these fascinating females. Subsequently, their backgrounds are featured as well as the personal stories that shaped them into the leaders they are today. De Laurentiis shares her story in the second installment of the docu-series. The first season starred talented Italian women on the West Coast and kicked off in Los Angeles in 2021. Giada De Laurentiis stands alongside other fascinating Italian women in this docu-series Chiara Tilesi and Giada De Laurentiis | We Do It Together/Yelizaveta Sergei The One of Us episode featuring De Laurentiis also stars boundaries-transcending scientist Federica Raia, actor and producer Gabriella Pession, and innovator Raffaella Camera. The star of Giada at Home is one of the most recognizable faces on The Food Network. She has successfully parlayed her love of Italian food culture into a series of successful shows for the network. These include Everyday Italian, Giadas Weekend Getaways, Giada Entertains, Giadas Holiday Handbook, and Giada in Italy. Born in Rome, De Laurentiis is the granddaughter of film producer Dino De Laurentiis. She learned about the restaurant business at her grandfathers restaurant DDL Food Show. However, after graduating from the University of California with a degree in anthropology, De Laurentiis retained her passion for cooking. She subsequently pursued a career in the culinary world and trained at Le Cordon Bleu in Paris. Moreover, upon returning to LA, De Laurentiis worked at Ritz-Carlton Fine Dining Room and Wolfgang Pucks Spago in Beverly Hills. She later founded GDL Foods. How can you watch the Food Network star in One of Us? Giada De Laurentiis | We Do It Together/Yelizaveta Sergei One of Us streams on the social media platform TaTaTu in the cinema section as well as the Consulate General YouTube Channel: https://www.youtube.com/user/ConsLosAngeles. The docu-series is presented by the Embassy of Italy to the U.S., the Consulate General of Italy, and Frequency Productions. RELATED: Giada De Laurentiis Pasta with Marsala Mushrooms Is a Vegetarian Delight HBOs Somebody Somewhere may be a scripted series, but the main character, Sam has many similarities to comedian and series creator Bridget Everett including her love of raunchy (hilarious) comedy. Set in Manhattan, Kansas, Somebody Somewhere follows Sam (played by Everett) after the painful death of her sister Holly. Sam had returned to Kansas to care for Holly, who had cancer. Once Holly dies, Sam feels lost but at the same time found when she reconnects with an old friend from high school. The tearfully funny show blends heartbreak with comedy, plus Everetts magical singing voice. Everett recently discussed how she blended her personality into her character. Bridget Everett is like her character Sam when it comes to music in Somebody Somewhere Everett, who is known for her raunchy and hilarious cabaret shows she sees herself in her Somebody Somewhere character. I hate to be hyperbolic, but it was cathartic, she told Vogue about filming the show. Bridget Everett | Charley Gallay/Getty Images for HBO Max Ive honestly been really depressed without it, she confessed. I am kinda like my character Sam in that waywithout music, I feel a little lost. I love singing and having that intimate connection to a crowd of people. Also, Joes Pub has the best french fries in the world, and everyone was so warm and welcoming when I came back. For a week, I felt like I was a part of something again. The last episode was a Bridget-ization of Sam Toward the end of Somebody Somewhere Season 1, Sam launches into a song that mirrors her cabaret. Shes on a Fred Roccos (Murray Hill) party bus with her friends and lets a hilarious tune rip. She said integrating some of what mirrors her cabaret into the show was something she and the writers considered. We constantly talked about the Bridget-ization of Sam, she told Vulture. Anybody familiar with my stage work, when theyre sitting down to watch the series, is probably like, What the f*** is this?' But it was important to give Sam a little bit of spice and show the sides of her that she shut down because maybe they were too much for a conservative town, she continued. I love that we get to see a little bit of Put Your D*** Away and stuff, because that s*** makes me laugh! Its nice to be around people who let you be the person you want to be, and thats exactly the group she has found. The lyrics were definitely Everetts. I gave the props department lyrics to a lot of songs I already have with my band, the Tender Moments, she said. I just sort of flipped through them and sang what I saw, because the lyrics of a lot of our original songs are ridiculous but they make you laugh. If somebody were to sit down and read a book full of the lyrics Ive written in my life, what the f*** might they think? She endured many similiarites as her character Everett said about half of her Somebody Somewhere character mirrors her real life. The question from the beginning was always how much we wanted to Bridget-ize Sam, she told Vogue. Shes certainly closer to the real Bridget that my stage persona is. I waited tables into my 40s and didnt have an artistic expression for a long time, so I certainly relate to Sam feeling sorta rudderless, she added. I also lost my sister like Sam, and even though I moved to New York and made a lot of emo friends who helped me tap into some of my feelings, Im still a Midwesterner at heart. Grief has been a tough road for me. Making this show has been a really healing process because Sam has to deal with her grief and Bridget never did! But I would say 50% of the show is drawn from my life. RELATED: Amy Schumer Shares Her Hilarious Tip for Getting Through the Pandemic POSCO Group Chairman Choi Jeong-woo waves the flag of POSCO Holdings during a launching ceremony for the group's holding company at POSCO Center in Seoul, Wednesday. Courtesy of POSCO Uncertainty remains over holding firm's relocation to Pohang By Park Jae-hyuk POSCO Group held a launching ceremony for POSCO Holdings in Seoul as planned on Wednesday, five days after the group promised last Friday to relocate its holding company to its hometown of Pohang, North Gyeongsang Province, by March 2023. "Today is the day POSCO marks the second founding in its history," POSCO Group Chairman Choi Jeong-woo said in his speech. "From a group-wide perspective, the holding firm should pursue flexibility that meets the demands of the era, and subsidiaries should develop expertise in each of their fields to maintain competitive advantages." The new holding firm will serve as the parent of the spun-off steelmaking unit, named POSCO, as well as several other subsidiaries, including POSCO Chemical, POSCO International, POSCO E&C, POSCO ICT and POSCO Energy. Comprised of around 200 employees in charge of management strategies and R&D, it will focus on upgrading the group's competitiveness in seven core sectors steelmaking, battery materials, nickel-lithium, hydrogen, energy, construction and agriculture to triple its enterprise value by 2030, according to the group. POSCO Holdings is also supposed to move to Pohang from the country's wealthiest district of Gangnam, Seoul, as the company signed an agreement with the southeastern port city's politicians and residents, who had protested fiercely against the steelmaker's plan to establish its holding company in Seoul. "We will convince our board members and shareholders to relocate our holding company to Pohang by March 2023," a POSCO Group official said, without disclosing how the company will persuade them or what will happen if it fails to convince them. Some market observers expect POSCO Holdings to face difficulties especially in convincing foreign shareholders, including Citibank and BlackRock, although most are optimistic about the possibility of the National Pension Service, the largest shareholder with a 9.7 percent stake, approving the plan. One of POSCO's unions under the Korean Confederation of Trade Unions pointed out last Sunday that the POSCO Group chairman was not among the signatories to the company's agreement with Pohang's politicians and residents. The unionized workers were thus concerned that the company might only change its address, without redeploying its employees in Seoul. Main opposition People Power Party lawmaker Rep. Kim Byong-wook, who represents Pohang, also said it is too early to make any conclusions about POSCO Group's de facto headquarters returning to the city. "The agreement only specifies that POSCO will 'pursue' the relocation of its holding company to Pohang by next year," the lawmaker said. "In addition, there is no confirmation about sending the 1,600 employees of POSCO Holdings and POSCO to Pohang from the POSCO Center building in Seoul." Pohang Mayor Lee Kang-deok dismissed the concerns, saying that the POSCO Group chairman will visit the city after the presidential election on March 9 to discuss follow-up measures. "The agreement is meaningful as people in other regions began paying attention to POSCO Holdings, after its establishment in Seoul came to the fore on a nationwide scale," the mayor said. Another task facing POSCO Holdings is to dispel worries about the so-called "holding company discount," which refers to the possibility of a sharp fall in the holding firm's stock price when its key subsidiary goes public. Kiwoom Securities analyst Lee Jong-hyung said in a report released Wednesday that POSCO Holdings differs from other holding firms, as it will continue to own an entire stake in POSCO, which will remain an unlisted company. In contrast, local proxy adviser Sustinvest warned previously of possible losses that POSCO's shareholders could suffer after the spinoff, considering the stock price drops of other spun-off companies. Jersey Shore: Family Vacation fans have spoken regarding their feelings about the original MTV series, which aired on the network from 2009 to 2012. Now that Jersey Shore is available to stream on Paramount+, fans can rewatch the entire six seasons of the reality television series. Some have found several things, in retrospect, they didnt like about the show and called two beloved cast members actions problematic. The cast of Jersey Shore: Family Vacation | Lou Rocco/Disney General Entertainment Content via Getty Images Jersey Shore ran on MTV for six seasons The original premise of Jersey Shore was to capture the everyday lives of eight housemates who lived together during the summer at a home located on the shoreline of Seaside Heights, New Jersey. The castmates included Nicole Snooki Polizzi, Mike The Situation Sorrentino, Jenni JWoww Farley, Paul Pauly D DelVecchio, Vinny Guadagnino, Sammi Sweetheart Giancola, Ronnie Ortiz-Magro, and Angelina Pivarnick. The cast had to work in the homes attached Shore Store, where they sold t-shirts and assorted items relevant to a vacation at the Jersey Shore. For six seasons, the cast, which would later include Deena Cortese, traveled to Miami and Italy, fought, fell in love, and fell apart. However, they always remained bonded to one another and kept their friendships top priority. Some fans felt these 2 beloved Jersey Shore cast members were in retrospect, problematic Paul Pauly D DelVecchio and Vinny Guadagnino | MTV Press/MTV In a Reddit thread titled Watching Jersey Shore as an adult, I notice a lot of things I didnt see as a kid, some fans spoke out against two beloved castmates, calling them problematic after rewatching the series. I noticed how problematic Vinny and Pauly actually could be. They poured gas on the fire all the time. Then just laughed it off and thought it was OK because they were joking. They were also hardcore bullies a lot of times, but because it was a joke then it was somehow OK, one fan explained. This was my first thought to reply to this post. Pauly had the rep as the nice guy that stayed out of the drama, but he actually started s**t all the time and then stepped back & watched everyone else get worked up, a second wrote. The thing that stood out to me to most in my first adult rewatch was how much of a double standard there was for hooking up. The boys gave Deena SUCH a hard time in Italy for literally doing the same thing they all constantly did, claimed a third Reddit user. How toxic Ronnie and Sam were, penned the fourth fan. Fans admit the cast has changed dramatically from their younger years The cast of MTVs Jersey Shore in 2010 | Craig Barritt/WireImage Fans also realized that the castmates had changed dramatically from their younger years in the same thread. However, they retain some of the snarky behavior that fans have come to expect from their interpersonal relationships. Today, many castmates are parents, married, or in committed relationships. Only one is still living a single life. Instead of highlighting lousy behavior, the shows attempted to shift its focus on how the cast has evolved. One viewer claimed they would rather rewatch old episodes of Jersey Shore rather than its new incarnation. I tried watching Vacation and gave up and went back to the old seasons. Way less scripted and not boring. They all matured and didnt party like they used to, which is understandable, they claimed. Jersey Shore: Family Vacation airs Thursdays at 8 p.m. EST on MTV. RELATED: Jersey Shore Star Mike The Situation Sorrentino Is a Force of Positivity As He Wins Showbiz Cheat Sheets First-Ever Social Media Award King Edward VIIIs place in British history will always be tied to having one of the shortest reigns as monarch when he abdicated less than a year after taking the throne to marry a divorced American socialite named Wallis Simpson. While the couple was cast out of the U.K., they still lived public lives and gave the illusion that they had found their happily ever after outside of the royal world. However, there were constant murmurs that Simpson wasnt faithful to her husband and that Edward wasnt at peace with his decision to give up the crown. Now, an unearthed letter is backing up the claims that there was some trouble in paradise years after Edward abdicated. Photo of King Edward VIII and Wallis Simpson sitting down with their two dogs | Bettmann via Getty Images King Edward VIII chose his love over his royal birthright Queen Elizabeth IIs grandfather, King George V, died in 1936 and at that time his eldest son, Edward, became King Edward VIII. However, Edward was in love with Simpson and had every intention to marry her but as the head of the Church of England, he was prohibited from marrying a two-time divorcee. Edward VIII chose love over the crown and decided he would abdicate. You must believe me when I tell you that I have found it impossible to carry the heavy burden of responsibility and to discharge my duties as king as I would wish to do without the help and support of the woman I love, he stated in his public address (per Biography). Simpson gets much of the blame for Edwards decision but author Anna Pasternak claims that his lover tried to stop him from abdicating and revealed that Simpson said she would leave him but Edward threatened suicide if she did. The couple was exiled to France and thereafter became known as the Duke and Duchess of Windsor. Unearthed letter suggest Edward and Wallis Simpson werent living happily ever after The Duke and Duchess of Windsor in the back of a car ahead of a ceremony at Marlborough House in London | Keystone/Hulton Archive/Getty Images The Express noted that a previously unearthed document found in the papers of the writer Rebecca West suggests that the duke and duchess were not living happily ever after. A letter was discovered at the University of Tulsa by historian Andrew Lownie while updating his book Traitor King: The Scandalous Exile of the Duke and Duchess of Windsor. West had been asked to be a ghostwriter for Simpsons memoirs but according to her letter, declined because of what she knew. Her letter was sent to Ewart Robertson, who was close with former Daily Express owner Lord Beaverbrook. She wrote: I have been thinking very seriously over your letter, and I have come to the conclusion that if what you predict comes to pass and the Duke and Duchess of Windsor part, I would not care to have anything to do with her memoirs. West also included what she believed Simpson should do in the event that she and Edward separated writing: I feel that in those conditions her wisest course would be to keep quiet and hold her head up and publish nothing. If I encouraged her to write her memoirs, I should be unhappily conscious that I was encouraging her to do something against her own interests, for my amusement and profit. I could not do a good piece of work in such circumstances, particularly as the duchess has been very pleasant to me. In 1971 Edward became ill and was diagnosed with throat cancer. His nurses claimed that instead of staying at his bedside before his death in 1972, Simpson was running around with another man. The Duchess of Windsor died in 1986 of bronchial pneumonia. RELATED: Is Meghan Markle More Like Wallis Simpson or Is Prince Harry More Like King Edward VIII? In the 1940s, Frank Sinatra began to rise as a teen music idol, drawing hoards of young fans to his shows. At the same time, however, some members of the American public grew resentful of the fact that Sinatra did not go to war. Though he gave reasons for not fighting, rumors swirled that Sinatra had bribed his way out of the draft. Frank Sinatra | Herbert Dorfman/Corbis via Getty Images Frank Sinatras birth left him with injuries and scarring On Dec. 12, 1915, Sinatra was born in his familys Hoboken home. The birth was difficult for his mother as Sinatra weighed 13.5 pounds. As a result, the attending doctor used forceps to ease the delivery. Per Sinatras official website, he was not breathing when he was first born. His grandmother, acting fast, ran the infant under cold water until he began to breathe and cry. While he was alive and healthy, the forceps left significant scarring on his ear, cheek, and neck. They also punctured his eardrum. A rare photograph of an artist painting a portrait of Frank Sinatra pic.twitter.com/jWkmqfnSsU Frank Sinatra (@franksinatra) January 24, 2022 As a result of the scarring, Sinatra picked up the nickname Scarface in his adolescence. He reportedly wore makeup to cover the scars and avoided being photographed on the left side of his face. US citizens didnt like that he avoided war In the 1940s, Sinatra rose to prominence among young audiences. Some resented him for avoiding war, however. Per The New York Times, historian William Manchester once described Sinatra as the most hated man of World War II for not fighting. Throughout his life, Sinatra maintained that he wanted to fight but could not because of his ruptured eardrum. While he did write on a draft form that he had no physical or mental defects or diseases, Sinatra told Army doctors that he still had running ear and head noises from the injury. Sinatra also described himself as neurotic, afraid to be in crowds, afraid to go in elevator, [wants] to run when surrounded by people. He also said that he had been very nervous for four or five years. Ultimately, though, doctors declared him unfit for service primarily because of his ear. Despite the legitimate exemption, some believed that Sinatra bribed his way out of service. On one occasion, sailors on leave threw tomatoes at an image of Sinatra outside the Paramount Theater in 1942. Sinatra did his best to support American troops throughout his life. He performed for soldiers in Italy at the end of WWII and recorded special albums for them to listen to on the front lines. Several years later, he attempted to perform for American troops in Korea, though the Army did not grant him security clearance, worried he was a Communist. The FBI tracked Frank Sinatra Despite his efforts to support the American military, Sinatras alleged draft dodging sparked the attention of the FBI. For much of his life, the agency tracked Sinatra, building a 2,000-page file about him. The investigation primarily focused on his alleged mob ties and left-leaning politics. They did investigate an anonymous tip about Sinatra bribing Army doctors, however. Ultimately, FBI agents found no evidence that this occurred. RELATED: Frank Sinatra and Judy Garlands Love Letter Sold for Over $5,000 Owen Wilson and Wes Anderson can thank each other for their long careers. Both the actor and director broke into the film industry with Andersons first movie, Bottle Rocket, and they continue their friendship to this day. While the longtime collaborators have worked together several times, one film sticks out as Wilsons all-time favorite movie directed by his friend. Owen Wilson answers the most-searched questions about his acting career and personal life Wilson sat down with Wired to answer some of the most Googled questions about himself and his acting career. From his ongoing professional partnership with Vince Vaughn to whether he was born in Australia, the video was an entertaining look at the candid 53-year-old. Owen explained, I guess my favorite. I mean, I always have a soft spot for Bottle Rocket the first one but then Darjeeling Limited. I think the story kind of about three brothers was something that, of course, I can relate to. And, I just love being in India. Darjeeling Limited was Andersons 2007 film starring Wilson, Adrien Brody, and Jason Schwartzman. It tells the story of Francis, Peter, and Jack as they travel across India and bond over as brothers. While the film was a hit, it might not be the first people think of when considering Anderson and Wilsons collaborations. While Wilson did not write Darjeeling Limited, the personal connection with the plot makes sense. Wilsons brothers, Luke and Andrew, also work in the industry. All three have worked with one another many times. However, while the other brothers are successful in their own right, Wilsons relationship with Anderson is quite brotherly, too. Owen Wilson and Wed Andersons friendship Owen Wilson and Wes Anderson in 2015 | Mark Davis/Getty Images for Fox Searchlight Pictures Screen Rant recently ranked all seven Wes Anderson and Owen Wilson collaborations. Starting with Bottle Rocket, Wes Andersons quirk and Owen Wilsons everyman charm make them the perfect duo. The Royal Tenenbaums and The Life Aquatic let Wilson show his dramatic chops on top of his signature comedy, while The Fantastic Mr. Fox put him behind a microphone. Anderson and Wilson are now Hollywood royalty. They recently got back together for The French Dispatch, a well-received movie about a travel writer played by Wilson. Wilson and Anderson maintain their creative collaboration Wilson and Andersons friendship goes dates long before Bottle Rocket. According to Interview, the pair met at the University of Texas at Austin in a playwriting class. They eventually moved to LA together. There, Wilson and Anderson planted the seeds of a friendship thats still going strong more than three decades later. They became part of the same social circles and eventually met other collaborators like Schwartzman and Roman Coppola. Anderson and Wilsons early friendship remains strong to this day. The 52-year-old director spoke about it with Film Independent. Ive worked with Roman Coppola and Jason Schwartzman and we have in some ways more similar American backgrounds, quite different kinds of American backgrounds, but we still spur each others ideas, Anderson said. Owen Wilson and I have a very similar background. Were from Texas and weve known each other since we were teenagers. Each of these collaborations reflects the friendships between the people and their individual personalities. This helps to explain the natural cohesion of a Wes Anderson movie. Few modern directors have such consistent and unique styles. He and Wilson broke into Hollywood together. Now, the two men and the rest of Andersons regular cast are the next generations aspirational goal. One can only assume Anderson and Wilson will collaborate again in the future. After all, their careers run a parallel path with some diversions. They might not be blood-related like Wilsons famous brothers, but their names are just as synonymous. RELATED: Meet the Parents 20 Years Later: How Much is the Cast Worth Today? Oklahoma lawmakers and Gov. Kevin Stitt have $1.87 billion to spend from the federal government on infrastructure needs and addressing the health and economic fallout of the ongoing coronavirus pandemic. The state has received almost $12 billion in funding requests, including those from state agencies, but the details remain a secret. Randy Watson, Kansas commissioner of education, speaks at a state board of education meeting on June 6, 2021, in Topeka, Kan. The Kansas' state school board has scheduled a special meeting for Friday, Feb. 25, 2022, to discuss personnel issues after Watson made what one board member called an inappropriate remark during a conference last week. Chickasha, OK (73018) Today Strong thunderstorms likely. Damaging winds, large hail and possibly a tornado with some storms. Low 57F. Winds ESE at 10 to 15 mph. Chance of rain 80%. Rainfall may reach one inch.. Tonight Strong thunderstorms likely. Damaging winds, large hail and possibly a tornado with some storms. Low 57F. Winds ESE at 10 to 15 mph. Chance of rain 80%. Rainfall may reach one inch. Interview: Beijing Paralympic Winter Games send message of peace, unity and friendship to the world: Chinese Ambassador to Britain Xinhua) 09:29, March 02, 2022 LONDON, March 1 (Xinhua) -- The Heritage Flame for the Beijing 2022 Paralympic Winter Games was lit at Stoke Mandeville, UK on Monday. Zheng Zeguang, Chinese Ambassador to Britain, said the upcoming Beijing Winter Paralympics will send a message of peace, unity and friendship to the world. "The flame of the Winter Paralympic Games symbolizes the idea of equality, tolerance and self-improvement," Zheng told Xinhua in an interview at the flame lighting ceremony at Stoke Mandeville, the birthplace of the Paralympic movement. The flame from Stoke Mandeville will then join eight other flames ignited in China to become the official flame of the Beijing Paralympic Winter Games. "It will ignite confidence and courage for the friends with disabilities from around the world and send the message of peace, unity and friendship," Zheng said. Zheng noted that by hosting the just concluded successful Beijing Olympic Winter Games, China has fulfilled its promise to the international community to host a "streamlined, safe and splendid" Games. China has demonstrated the integrity and strong ability of the Chinese people, and injected new hope to the world affected by COVID-19 and geopolitical turbulence, and sent the message of peace, solidarity, friendship and cooperation, Zheng said. Zheng said that through the Beijing Olympics Winter Games, the international community and the British people once again witnessed China's strength and self-confidence, and once again experienced the hospitality of the Chinese people. The ardent expectation of British Paralympians and enthusiastic support by people from all walks of life in Britain for the Beijing Paralympic Winter Games can be felt at the scene of the flame lighting ceremony. Noting that preparation work for the Beijing Paralympic Winter Games has been going on smoothly, Zheng said that "We are confident that the two Olympic Games will be equally wonderful". "We expect athletes from all countries to fully demonstrate their spirit and perseverance and achieve excellent results on the field. We believe that the Beijing Winter Paralympic Games will once again bring hope for peace, friendship, unity and cooperation to the world," Zheng said. After the 2008 Paralympics, Beijing will once again become the center stage of the Paralympic movement with the Winter Games set to be held from March 4 to 13. (Web editor: Peng yukai, Liang Jun) Science and ICT Minister Lim Hye-sook delivers a keynote speech at Mobile World Congress (MWC) 2022 in Barcelona, Spain, March 1 (local time). Courtesy of Ministry of Science and ICT By Lee Kyung-min Korea will lead the global advancement of high-tech telecommunication technologies, underpinned by continued efforts to take the initiative in innovation-led technologies such as the metaverse, blockchain, artificial intelligence (AI) and cloud computing, the country's ICT minister said Wednesday. Her reiteration of the overarching policy drive coincides with a growing number of requests from around the world for strengthened technology cooperation to establish high-speed internet service in remote and underdeveloped regions and wireless connections in trains and subways. Greater personnel and technology exchanges will be in store for 6G, the next generation of enhanced telecommunication standards following 5G. "I was able to confirm the global standing of Korea, especially in the sectors of 5G and metaverse, key ICT technologies," she said after attending Mobile World Congress (MWC) 2022 in Barcelona, Spain. The annual event is the world's largest mobile communication exhibition. Lim delivered a keynote speech during a ministerial session on the global outlook for mobile communications, March 1 (local time), the first day of the four-day event, to share Korea's achievements in 5G. Examples included case studies whereby 5G services were available for residents in sparsely populated remote and rural areas, after the government and three local telecommunication operators agreed to grant the shared use of 5G network infrastructure. "Korea was the first in the world to commercialize 5G services in April 2019, and has since earned meaningful results in evaluations by global research institutes," she said. "This has led to an opportunity for major Korean firms to expand 5G services with their global peers." The government will facilitate the development of 6G technologies, defined as internet speeds 50 times faster and expanded maximum altitude for service coverage to 10 kilometers. Its full commercialization is expected between 2028 and 2030. Lim had an interview with Jessica Rosenworcel, the chairwoman of the U.S. Federal Communications Commission (FCC), and made a suggestion for cooperation between Korean firms and their U.S. counterparts to advance high-speed internet connections in the U.S. She also met with Finnish Minister of Transport and Communications Timo Harakka to bolster cooperation in 6G technologies. During a meeting with Indonesian Minister of Communication and Information Technology Johnny Gerard Plate, Lim recommended that Indonesia share with the world its success in establishing 28GHz wireless service in subways with the help of Korea. Lim will meet with Mats Granryd, director-general of the Groupe Speciale Mobile Association (GSMA), a worldwide association of mobile operators and the mobile industry, to sign an agreement for cooperation in metaverse technologies. American missionary returns home after fleeing Russian invasion of Ukraine After being startled from his sleep by the rattling and shaking of his apartment as explosions erupted, Alabama Pastor Mark Posey said that he knew he had a choice to make last Friday: flee from Ukraine or face potential death. As a minister of the Winfield Church of Christ, Posey had been in Ukraine for nearly a month doing mission work. For the last 30 years, he has traveled back and forth from the U.S. to Ukraine. He was scheduled to return home on a flight out of Kyiv, but Russias invasion of its neighboring country caused plans to change. Upon hearing the erupting noises of warfare stemming from Russias invasion of its neighboring country, Posey said during a press conference Tuesday upon his return to the United States that he knew he had no other option but to take the full-day journey west from the southeast of Kyiv to the Polish border on that frigid morning. As Posey traveled by bus, he was the only American on board. He remembers the bus passed by thousands of Ukrainian men, women and children who were walking to the border in an attempt to escape the devastation of war-stricken areas. After making it to the Polish border, Posey said he could leave the country on Tuesday because he had his American passport. After a long international journey, Posey said he is grateful to be reunited with his loved ones. However, his heart remains with the Ukrainian people. After traveling most of the day across the breadth of Ukraine, it did not prepare me for what I saw: thousands and thousands of Ukrainians walking to the boarder. Many had abandoned their vehicles; older men and women, mothers and their children, and it was cold, described Posey in a Facebook post. Not far outside of Lviv, the bus stopped. And I purchased all the water, pirozhki, and vareniki I could carry. It could take days to cross, I didnt know and I needed to be prepared. However, at the border when the bus stopped because of heavy traffic, I asked to exit the bus. Reluctantly, the driver allowed, Posey continued in his post. After leaving the bus, Posey said he gave away all his water and food to Ukrainian mothers, children and the elderly. As they responded (Thank You!), I was reminded once again: countries and borders must not divide us. We must promote mankind; a vitally important word. We cannot be consumed by petty differences, Posey wrote. We must be united on the common ground of faith, hope and love. We must be Christlike. So, not only should we sing, but we must live the words of the old song - And theyll know we are Christians by our love, by our love, he added. Around 5 p.m. on Tuesday, when Posey arrived at the Birmingham Shuttlesworth International Airport, he was seen engaging in a group hug with his wife and other loved ones. When asked by reporters how it feels to be back in the U.S., Posey said: Better than anything. Its great to go anywhere, but the best part about going somewhere is coming home, and thats the best feeling right now, Posey said. My heart is still in Ukraine. The people are hurting, theyre suffering, theyre scared, and were going to continue to help them. We love them and we want to emphasize humanity, mankind, and were going to continue to do that, he added. The pastor urges people to pray for Ukraine. Theyre great people, and they need our help, and so we are just going to keep on reaching out to them as they would do for us if we were in their shoes, Posey said. Thank God for the good old U.S.A. Its a wonderful thing, he added. Posey said his interactions with Ukrainians during his escape from the Eastern European country were life-changing. The Ukrainians that rode with him on the bus, he said, helped him along the way when all of the men were pulled off of the bus to check passports and ages. It has been fantastic to live in the hearts and the minds. And the hugs of the Ukrainian people is something that [Ill] always remember, Posey said. They rallied around me, helped me, communicated, made sure that I understood what was being said, [and] they were very adamant about protecting me. The pastor said he would be telling a lie if he said he didnt experience fear on his journey. I have been scared for the last month. ... Especially when you wake up early in the morning to explosions in the city, and you know that there are bombs going off and people are in harms way, he said. So that really sobers your mind to considering you might need to be heading home. He said his life changed on a dime. I went the breadth of the country all the way to the Polish border, and thank God I was able to get in because so many people did not, he recalled. Posey is grateful for his American passport, which he said played a significant role in his ability to leave Ukraine before many others. A U.S. passport is a very powerful tool, and I was so proud to have it, but there were many who spent many nights in the cold without food or water, and they wanted to do the same thing that I was able to do with that wonderful tool of a U.S. passport, he said. I will always be thankful for that. But, to see the thousands of people trying to escape, knowing that I had a free ticket out was a very good feeling for me, but I shed a lot of tears because I could go, but they couldnt. And that made me resolve more in my heart to help my fellow human beings, and Im going to continue to do that. Posey said his experience in Ukraine was sobering and tugged at my heartstrings. And he said some of what he witnessed such as families being separated are things he hopes he will never have to see again in his lifetime. Well, [my faith] has been tested to the limits. And I pray, and I feel as though it has been strengthened. The best way to strengthen something is to put it to the test, put it in fire, Posey said. I felt like I have gone through the fire. And understanding that He has provided specifically for me and all of this has just lifted me so high, encouraged me, and I want to make sure that other people feel and experience that same thing. 3 Christian sisters and chaperone killed by father in sanctuary were all members, church says Three sisters and their father, who fatally shot them and their chaperone before killing himself inside the sanctuary of The Church in Sacramento during a supervised visit in California on Monday, were all members of the church, officials have confirmed. The Sacramento coroners office identified the father as David Mora Rojas, 39. His daughters were identified as: Samarah Mora Gutierrez, 9; Samantha Mora Gutierrez, 10; and Samia Mora Gutierrez, 13. The late chaperone was identified as Nathaniel Kong, 59. Business records show that he was an executive of the church. In a statement published on the churchs website Tuesday, officials said the congregation was devastated and heartbroken by the tragedy. The leadership of The Church in Sacramento is shocked and saddened by the tragic shooting that occurred in our church meeting hall late Monday, February 28, resulting in the deaths of five of our members, including three young girls from one of our families, the church said. Our church body is devastated and heartbroken by this senseless tragedy and we ask for continued prayer for the victims, their family and our faith community as we grapple with this unexpected loss and trust the Lord for His strength in our grief, they continued. We continue to cooperate with the Sacramento County Sheriffs Department in their investigation, are committed to ministering to anyone in need during this difficult time and are doing everything possible to provide comfort to our congregation as we come together as a church family. Police received a call about the deadly shootings from a church employee who reported hearing gunfire at about 5:07 p.m. Its just horrific, and unfortunately, it does happen in the county. Domestic violence is all too common. This obviously rising to the level of killing innocent children is obviously beyond anyones rational comprehension, Sacramento County Sheriff Scott Jones said in a televised interview after the shootings. Court documents cited by ABC News show that Rojas was out on bail at the time of the killings after an arrest last week for multiple charges, including assaulting a police officer. He was drunk and while they were arresting him or trying to he decided he wanted to fight and ended up with felony charges because he assaulted a CHP officer, causing injuries, Deputy Daryl Allen, a spokesman for the Merced County Sheriffs Office, told The Sacramento Bee. Rojas was arrested on Feb. 23, but he posted bail and was released after spending one night in jail. The mother of his late daughters describes him as a jealous person. She sought and obtained a temporary restraining order against him last year after he threatened to kill her. The temporary restraining order issued in April 2021 had also prohibited Rojas from possessing a firearm or ammunition. Police are still trying to find out how he acquired a gun. He threatened to kill me if he ever caught me cheating, the mother said in court documents. The only reason why he hadnt killed her at the time of that threat, she said, is because he would not know where to go with the children. She also raised concern at the time that Rojas could flee to Mexico where he has family. I am scared and nervous. I am afraid (Rojas) is going to hurt me. I do not want to return home, she wrote. Before the five-year temporary restraining order was granted against Rojas he was taken into custody for a mental health evaluation. The order granted on May 19 limited Rojas to four hours weekly of supervised visits with his daughters with a mutually agreed-upon chaperone. He was also ordered to take anger management courses. On Tuesday, Jovana Venegas, an aunt of the sisters, launched a GoFundMe Campaign to raise $30,000 to cover funeral expenses. Venegas described the sisters as beautiful and said they were loved endlessly by everyone who surrounded them. We wish to seek as much help needed toward this fundraiser, Venegas said. We know they deserve more than anything to at last rest in peace. Ed Litton says he wont seek reelection as SBC president, prompts mixed reactions Southern Baptist Convention President Ed Litton departed from decades of tradition Tuesday to announce he will not seek reelection this summer, prompting reactions ranging from relief to disappointment eight months into his one-year term. Litton, who is also the senior pastor of Redemption Church in Alabama, said in a short video posted on YouTube that he felt God was calling him to continue his work in racial reconciliation, which he started in the days after a white police officer in Ferguson, Missouri, shot dead Michael Brown, an 18-year-old African American youth, in August 2014. For me, this is bittersweet news, he said. The truth is that I believe this work is something that God is calling me to do and to devote myself to for the next five to 10 years of my life. But I also believe that [at] this important moment in the life of our convention, it is best for me to do so as a pastor and not from the office of President of the Southern Baptist Convention. Litton was elected SBC president last June after narrowly defeating Georgia Pastor Mike Stone in a testy runoff vote. He vowed to build bridges, not walls. Since his election, however, Americas largest Protestant denomination has continued to battle over issues of race, sexual abuse and accusations of plagiarism. Less than two weeks into his presidency, Litton was forced to apologize after a video posted on YouTube highlighted similarities between separate sermons delivered by the SBC leader and his predecessor, J.D. Greear of The Summit Church in Raleigh-Durham, North Carolina. Both men suggested in the video that God appears to whisper about sexual sin in the Bible, but Litton did not give credit to Greear, from whom he borrowed the idea. Its no secret that this has been a difficult year as we fought to emerge from two years of pandemic, many of our pastors and churches are struggling. Weve also navigated some painful conflicts and intense discussions right now, he said. I want to speak as plainly as I can. As Ive previously stated, I take responsibility for my own failures and shortcomings for mistakes Ive made in the preparation and delivery of particular sermons. But we are in a critical moment, and I believe that nothing should distract us from what lies ahead. Litton, who recently called on the SBC to remove the stains of racism and sexual abuse from the denomination, also noted that he will present his grassroots plan to promote racial reconciliation in Southern Baptist churches across the country at the annual SBC meeting and pastors conference scheduled for Anaheim, California, in June. A report on sexual abuse in the denomination will also be presented by a sexual abuse task force appointed by Litton. The messengers from our churches must be prepared to act upon the recommendations they bring forth. We are also at a time of increased division and polarization, and I earnestly believe that we must be united in our pursuit of that one sacred effort to reach the nations for Christ, Litton said. We must keep working to eradicate the stains of sexual abuse and racism from our convention. We must not fail to reckon with our past mistakes, but we must commit to seeking for a better future where racism and prejudice are relics of the past. His resignation comes as critics called on Litton to resign after being accused of plagiarizing Greears sermon on Romans last summer. At the time, Greear said that Litton had asked for permission to use some of the content from the popular sermon series at his own preaching at Redemption Church. Some Southern Baptists stated on social media after Littons announcement that they believe the SBC president should have resigned immediately after the video surfaced. Im thankful Ed Litton will not be running for office again, Tom Buck, the senior pastor of First Baptist Church in Lindale, Texas, said on Twitter. As I listened to Littons video, I immediately thought that stepping down now and letting the 1st VP, Lee Brand, assume the role of President would be a great first gesture toward his own stated goal, would it not? Southeastern Baptist Theological Seminary Ph.D. student Corey Smith agreed. Sermon plagiarism is not a mistake, shortcoming, or failure. It is a sin. We must call sin what it is, sin. Ed Litton should have repented publicly of sin and resigned immediately as a result. However, I am glad he will not be the SBC president next year, he said. Others were more supportive of Litton. Adam W. Greenway, president of Southwestern Baptist Theological Seminary and one of six members of the Southern Baptist Conventions Council of Seminary Presidents, insisted in a statement that Litton deserves the prayerful support of the convention as he finishes his term. Whatever one may think about the circumstances surrounding @EdLittons election and tenure as SBC president, and regardless of ones thoughts about whether or not he should have run for reelection, he deserves our continued prayers as he finishes his term and fulfills his duties, Greenway wrote. Former Southern Baptist Convention President James Merritt, the senior pastor of Cross Pointe Church in Georgia, said he has the deepest love and respect for Litton. Merritt said, regardless of any other narrative, Litton is a true man of God who loves his Lord, his church and his denomination. This was a selfless decision that God will honor and I commend and admire and thank him for his service to the SBC, Merritt tweeted. Dwight McKissic Sr., leader of Cornerstone Baptist Church in Arlington, Texas, and one of the Southern Baptist Conventions most outspoken black pastors, praised Littons commitment to racial reconciliation. Ed Litton has the track record, trust, & set forth the trajectory to address race issues in the SBC & America in a constructive & redeeming manner, he tweeted. Grateful for his leadership as president. Praying & believing God will bless this well timed & needed initiative to heal the land. Dan Darling, the director of the Land Center for Cultural Engagement at Southwestern Baptist Theological Seminary and former vice president of communications for the SBC's Ethics & Religious Liberty Commission, called Litton a good man and a great pastor. Jimmy Evans says imperfect Christians will be raptured, calls evolution 'satanic' Pastor Jimmy Evans, the founder of the multi-campus Trinity Fellowship Church in Texas, preached a guest sermon on the End Times at Ed Youngs Fellowship Church on Sunday. He touched on the rapture and issued strong words against the teaching of evolution. Evans Feb. 27 sermon is titled The Right Side of the Levee. The author and spiritual leader, who co-founded the organization MarriageToday and led the television ministry program The Overcoming Life, told an audience that salvation is a gift from God for people who accept Jesus in their lives. Accepting Christ, he said, is the only qualification that is needed to be saved when the period of tribulation begins on earth. Jesus came to redeem us. When we were dead in our trespasses, He loved us. Isnt that wonderful? Even when we were against Him, He was for us. And [the Bible] says: By grace, you have been saved through faith, he said. Its a free gift. You cant earn salvation. We all have issues, and when Jesus comes, well all be imperfect, he added. If you know Jesus, youre going to get raptured. If you know Jesus, youre going to Heaven, the 67-year-old pastor said halfway through his sermon. Earlier in his sermon, Evans said that Christians cant fully understand the implications of what is happening in the world today and its relation to the End Times until they know who [they] are in God. He warned against teachings on evolution, which he argues goes against what is written in the Bible. Evolution this hideous satanic teaching teaches us and our children that we came from an accident, we came from nowhere, were going nowhere, our lives are just meaningless [and] were just animals, Evans explained. There was the goo, and then the zoo and then me and you. And were teaching an entire generation those lies. I heard someone say one time, Its no surprise that children act like animals when theyre taught thats all they are, Evans continued. You were made in the image of God, and you are Gods family. You came from God, He lives inside of you and youre going to God, he added. Evans said that the first two chapters and the last two chapters of the Bible say that God created mankind in His image to live with Him in paradise. Were going to live in the presence of God. ... Were His eternal family. The only thing that God gets out of all the pain Hes been through, Evans proclaimed. No ones been through as much pain as God. The death of Jesus proves that. The only thing He gets is you, and Hes good with that. Thats how valuable you are to God, he said. The pastor said that Christians often struggle with the idea that God loves them despite their flaws. Its hard to process because we know ourselves. We know of all the dumb things that we do, he said. Let me give you an example here. Toddlers, theyre precious. Theyre incredible. But when you get right down to it, theyre pretty disgusting little creatures. [Toddlers] produce hideous odors. Their hands are sticky and greasy, and they put them on you, and you know theyre ill-mannered and disobedient. And they jump up in your lap, and in spite of all of their issues, you just adore them. ... And the question is: how can you love someone like that? The reason why parents can love their toddlers is because theyre yours, Evans said. Its not whats on them; its whats in them, he said. Its not what they do; its who they are. Well, how can God love us so much in spite of our issues? Its because we came from Him. Evans said that Psalm 139 describes how God created humans by knitting them in their mothers wombs. You werent a blob. You were a child of God. You are a divine product of a divine process. Youre not an accident. Youre not an afterthought. You are the creation of almighty God, he said. God adores you more than any human parent has ever loved a child. He cited Matthew 7:11: If you then, being evil, know how to give good gifts to your children, how much more will your Father who is in Heaven give good things to those who ask Him. God could have made us robots. We could have been programmed by God to worship Him and serve Him and love Him. But, theres no value in the love of a robot, Evans stated. They have no choice. You dont praise your washer because it washes. ... You dont praise your vacuum because it sucks. They have to. Theres no value in that. During the final days, the earth will go through a seven-year tribulation period which will be Hell on earth and the worst seven years in human history, Evans said. Before the tribulation, he said those who know Jesus will be taken up in the clouds to be with Jesus. He warned that there are about 8 billion people in the world today, but only 2 billion identify as Christians. However, he stressed that he thinks hundreds of millions of people will be saved during the tribulation. The rapture of the Church when we disappear it will be the greatest evangelistic event in the history of the world. And a lot of people will get saved, Evans said. And most of them will get killed by the Antichrist or die in the judgments. Three-fourths of the earths population dies during the tribulation. And so, you say, why would anyone reject Jesus? Evans asked. He said Jesus answered the question in John 3: For God so loved the world that He gave His only begotten son, that whoever believes in Him shall not perish but have everlasting life. ... He who believes in Him is not condemned, but he who does not believe is condemned already because he has not believed in the name of the only begotten son of God. He said humans have a choice to make. Either come into the light where morals and behaviors can be scrutinized by the King of Kings, or to stay in darkness. The kingdom of Satan is a kingdom of rebellion, lawlessness and darkness, where men dont want their behaviors scrutinized. They dont want a higher authority, he said. One day, every knee will bow and every tongue will confess that Jesus is Lord. ... But for some, it will be too late because they rejected Him and are going to Hell. As the sermon concluded, Evans said that Christians should not be afraid of the End Times but should be careful not to let Satan make them question their salvation. Dont stop living your life. If you believe that Jesus is coming back soon, build a house, get a degree [and] get your education. Plan like Jesus isnt coming back for 100 years, but live like Hes coming back today, the preacher advised. The worst thing you can do is just get paralyzed and start [saying], Jesus come, and just be worthless. We have a lot to do until Jesus comes. Live your life, pray for direction from God, and do what you believe God is telling you to do with life, he added. But, Ill tell you this: Jesus is going to be on time. And the main thing is for us to be ready. Ukraine and the freedom to breathe All I ask is room to breathe. It wasnt merely a lone individual speaking those words on that day in 1993. It seemed to be a whole nation voicing the cry as we drove from Boryspil International Airport toward newly freed Kyiv. I was part of a team going to teach in an evangelical seminary, one of those institutions that had flashed into existence throughout the former Soviet Union after the collapse of Communism. My assignment was to teach a course on ethics, a topic that had been swept away in the era dominated by atheistic Marxism. For three-quarters of a century, that grim movement had shrouded Ukraine and its people, stifling the liberties the God-created human spirit and soul must have like the physical body craves air to breathe. With the lifting of communist restrictions, ethics and other biblically-based topics could be freely proclaimed, and Ukrainian men and women wanted to shout it from the housetops. The school was located in an old factory building, stark and cold. Its walls were covered with murals depicting the mythologies of Marxism, like happy workers laboring in lush fields. It was not just the seminary students who had an eagerness to come out from under the Marxist blanket, but it seemed the passion of a nation that had just discovered oxygen. What inspired the students men and women, young and old was the new liberty to preach the Lordship of Christ without the presence of KGB-installed Red Pastors planted in their congregations to spy on them, intimidating and squelching any utterance that they believed to be a criticism of the Communist regime. The streets of Kyiv were buzzing with excited people. Department stores thrived. Yet the remnants of the old times of enslavement were still here and there. Our apartment was on the 15th floor of a Soviet-era building, and the ride up was usually in darkness because the moment a fresh bulb was installed it was stolen. Grocery stores had the outward appearance of supermarkets but were characterized by long lines with little at the end. Yet there was humor. Part of the freedoms was the ability to joke about the former regimes. One day as I walked in Kyiv with our translator, a high-ranking military man approached us. Our interpreter told him we were from America and that I had worked in the White House. The man replied with gusto and friendliness. We laughed that once we were enemies but now, we could shake hands in the open. On another day we ate a happy Sunday lunch with a group of Russian soldiers. What made it special was that we were dining post-service in a Pentecostal church where in the times just ended the soldiers might have been there to shut it down and imprison its leaders. I rejoiced that former enemies could joke about our proximity to the power that could obliterate entire cities. And now, with Putins power-grab on the Ukraine, we are back in those dicey times. There are differences in this present moment. In the Cold War, the combatants warred over ideology: Communism vs. Capitalism. Yet it was much more nuanced than that. It was the struggle between regimes of despotic, enforced power vs. a system that sought to protect essential liberties, like freedom of speech and belief. The Cold War was also a religious war: Marxist atheism vs. the Judeo-Christian theistic worldview and its implications for individuals and their society. What we face now is more like World War One than the Cold War. in the First World War, there was the clash between titans mighty rulers of European states who battled for dominance over Europe. So, Putins anger is aroused by Ukraines desire to attach itself to the West, away from his control. The men in the trenches in 1917-18 would understand the dynamics. And so can we now. I wrote in these pages recently that when authority-holders sense it slipping away from them they will grab for raw power. Hence, Putins assault on Ukraine. Some analysts say he is attempting to build a new order under totalitarians like himself, Chinas Xi Jinping, and North Koreas Kim. Whether a dictatorial movement or individual tyrants, the blanket once more tries to stifle liberties. So, as I watch the assault on beautiful Kyiv, and bombs ripping it apart, I grieve over the dear people who so cherish the fresh air of freedom. As with those decades ago, all they ask is the freedom to breathe. A blast is seen at the TV tower in Kyiv amid Russia's invasion of Ukraine, Mar. 1. Reuters-Yonhap Russian forces escalated their attacks on crowded urban areas Tuesday, bombarding the central square in Ukraine's second-biggest city and Kyiv's main TV tower in what the country's president called a blatant campaign of terror. ''Nobody will forgive. Nobody will forget,'' President Volodymyr Zelenskyy vowed after the bloodshed on the square in Kharkiv. Ukrainian authorities said five people were killed in the attack on the TV tower, which is a couple of miles from central Kyiv and a short walk from numerous apartment buildings. A TV control room and power substation were hit, and at least some Ukrainian channels briefly stopped broadcasting, officials said. Zelenskyy's office also reported a powerful missile attack on the site of the Babi Yar Holocaust memorial, near the tower. A spokesman for the memorial said a Jewish cemetery at the site, where Nazi occupiers killed more than 33,000 Jews over two days in 1941, was damaged, but the extent would not be clear until daylight. At the same time, a 40-mile (64-kilometer) convoy of hundreds of Russian tanks and other vehicles advanced slowly on Kyiv, the capital city of nearly 3 million people, in what the West feared was a bid by Russian President Vladimir Putin to topple the government and install a Kremlin-friendly regime. The invading forces also pressed their assault on other towns and cities, including the strategic ports of Odesa and Mariupol in the south. Day 6 of the biggest ground war in Europe since World War II found Russia increasingly isolated, beset by tough sanctions that have thrown its economy into turmoil and left the country practically friendless, apart from a few nations such as China, Belarus and North Korea. President Joe Biden speaks about the Russian invasion of Ukraine in the East Room of the White House, in Washington, Feb. 24. AP-Yonhap U.S. President Joe Biden planned to use his first State of the Union address Tuesday evening to vow to make Putin ''pay a price'' for the invasion. Biden was to highlight the resolve of a reinvigorated Western alliance that has worked to rearm the Ukrainian military and adopt sanctions. ''Throughout our history we've learned this lesson when dictators do not pay a price for their aggression, they cause more chaos,'' Biden was to say, according to advance excerpts released by the White House. ''They keep moving. And the costs and threats to America and the world keep rising.'' As the fighting in Ukraine raged, the death toll remained unclear. One senior Western intelligence official estimated that more than 5,000 Russian soldiers had been captured or killed. Ukraine gave no overall estimate of troop losses. Britain's Defense Ministry said it had seen an increase in Russian air and artillery strikes on populated urban areas over the past two days. It also said three cities Kharkiv, Kherson and Mariupol were encircled by Russian forces. Many military experts worry that Russia may be shifting tactics. Moscow's strategy in Chechnya and Syria was to use artillery and air bombardments to pulverize cities and crush fighters' resolve. The bombing of the TV tower came after Russia announced it would target transmission facilities in the capital used by Ukraine's intelligence agency. It urged people living near such places to leave their homes. A local resident looks at the remains of a Russian military vehicle in Bucha, close to the capital Kyiv, Ukraine, March 1. AP-Yonhap In Kharkiv, with a population of about 1.5 million, at least six people were killed when the region's Soviet-era administrative building on Freedom Square was hit with what was believed to be a missile. The attack on Freedom Square Ukraine's largest plaza, and the nucleus of public life in the city was seen by many Ukrainians as brazen evidence that the Russian invasion wasn't just about hitting military targets but also about breaking their spirit. The bombardment blew out windows and walls of buildings that ring the massive square, which was piled high with debris and dust. Inside one building, chunks of plaster were scattered, and doors, ripped from their hinges, lay across hallways. UN General Assembly to vote on demand for Russia to withdraw from Ukraine Biden vows to halt Russia, hit inflation: State of the Union Biden remains silent on North Korea amid Russian invasion of Ukraine ''People are under the ruins. We have pulled out bodies,'' said Yevhen Vasylenko, an emergency official. Zelenskyy pronounced the attack on the square ''frank, undisguised terror'' and a war crime. ''This is state terrorism of the Russian Federation,'' he said. In an emotional appeal to the European Parliament later, Zelenskyy said: ''We are fighting also to be equal members of Europe. I believe that today we are showing everybody that is what we are.'' He said 16 children had been killed around Ukraine Monday, and he mocked Russia's claim that it is going after only military targets. ''Where are the children? What kind of military factories do they work at? What tanks are they going at?'' Zelenskyy said. Human Rights Watch said it documented a cluster bomb attack outside a hospital in Ukraine's east in recent days. Local residents also reported the use of such weapons in Kharkiv and the village of Kiyanka, The Kremlin denied using cluster bombs. Cluster bombs shoot smaller ''bomblets'' over a large area, many of which fail to explode until long after they've been dropped. If their use in Ukraine is confirmed, that would represent a new level of brutality in the war and could lead to even further isolation of Russia. The first talks between Russia and Ukraine since the invasion were held Monday, but ended with only an agreement to talk again. On Tuesday, though, Zelenskyy said Russia should stop bombing first. ''As for dialogue, I think yes, but stop bombarding people first and start negotiating afterwards,'' he told CNN. Moscow made new threats of escalation, days after raising the specter of nuclear war. A top Kremlin official warned that the West's ''economic war'' against Russia could turn into a ''real one.'' Inside Russia, a top radio station critical of the Kremlin was taken off the air after authorities threatened to shut it down over its coverage of the invasion. Among other things, the Kremlin is not allowing the fighting to be referred to as an ''invasion'' or ''war.'' Roughly 660,000 people have fled Ukraine, and countless others have taken shelter underground. Bomb damage has left hundreds of thousands of families without drinking water, U.N. humanitarian coordinator Martin Griffiths said. ''It is a nightmare, and it seizes you from the inside very strongly. This cannot be explained with words,'' said Kharkiv resident Ekaterina Babenko, taking shelter in a basement with neighbors for a fifth straight day. ''We have small children, elderly people, and frankly speaking it is very frightening.'' People look at a damaged residential building at Koshytsa Street, a suburb of the Ukrainian capital Kyiv, where a military shell allegedly hit, Feb. 25. AFP-Yonhap The U.N. human rights office said it has recorded 136 civilian deaths. The real toll is believed to be far higher. A Ukrainian military official said Belarusian troops joined the war Tuesday in the Chernihiv region in the north, without providing details. But just before that, Belarusian President Alexander Lukashenko said his country had no plans to join the fight. In Kharkiv, explosions burst one after another through a residential area in a video verified by The Associated Press. Hospital workers moved a maternity ward to a bomb shelter. Amid mattresses piled up against the walls, pregnant women paced the crowded space, as dozens of newborns cried. As for the Russians' advance on the capital, the leading edge of the convoy was 17 miles (25 kilometers) from the center of the city, according to satellite imagery from Maxar Technologies. A senior U.S. defense official said that Russia's military progress including by the massive convoy has slowed, plagued by logistical and supply problems. Some Russian military columns have run out of gas and food, the official said, and morale has suffered as a result. Overall, the Russian military has been stalled by fierce resistance on the ground and a surprising inability to completely dominate Ukraine's airspace. The immense convoy, with vehicles packed together along narrow roads, would seemingly be ''a big fat target'' for Ukrainian forces, the senior Western intelligence official said on condition of anonymity. ''But it also shows you that the Russians feel pretty comfortable being out in the open in these concentrations because they feel that they're not going to come under air attack or rocket or missile attack,'' the official said. This week in Christian history: Billy Graham honor, Rowan Williams becomes Archbishop of Canterbury Correction Appended Throughout the extensive history of the Church, there have been numerous events of lasting significance. Each week brings anniversaries of impressive milestones, unforgettable tragedies, amazing triumphs, memorable births, notable deaths and everything in between. Some of the events drawn from over 2,000 years of history might be familiar, while other happenings might be previously unknown by most people. The following pages highlight anniversaries of memorable events that occurred this week Feb. 27 to Mar. 5 in Christian history. They include the enthroning of a new archbishop of Canterbury, the Rev. Billy Graham being lain in honor, and the birth of a British missionary. Correction: An earlier version of this article mistakenly referred to the date span as being between Feb. 20 to Feb. 26. 1 2 3 4 Next 'God answered our prayers': Jill Duggar, Derick Dillard expecting baby after miscarriage Duggar sister Jill Dillard of "19 Kids and Counting" fame revealed she and her husband, Derrick, are expecting another baby after her recent miscarriage. Weve been keeping a little secret! the couple said in a blog post shared Sunday. The Dillards suffered a devastating loss last fall due to the miscarriage of their baby they named River Bliss. We have prayed that, if it was Gods will, He would bless us with another baby," they said. We are excited to announce that God has answered our prayers and we are expecting our rainbow baby due July 2022! We are so thankful for a healthy baby and pregnancy so far and we look forward to finding out the gender soon! Rainbow baby is a term used for a baby born after a miscarriage or stillbirth. Dillard was a main figure in her familys popular TLC series, 19 Kids and Counting, which followed her Christian parents, Jim Bob and Michelle Duggar, and their ultra-conservative household. After seven years on air, she starred in the spinoff series, "Counting On," along with her sisters. She decided to quit the show in 2017. The couple, who married in 2014, have two sons, Israel David and Samuel Scott. They first revealed in 2021 that Dillard had suffered a miscarriage. We recently found out we were expecting our third baby, the Duggar sister captioned an Instagram video at the time. We were thrilled! However, a few days later we started miscarrying. We love and miss you, River Bliss! The Arkansas native disclosed that the name of their unborn child was intentional. One meaning for River is tranquil, and here in Arkansas, rivers are often a serene, beautiful escape in nature, they explained in the blog post at the time. We also like how the River talked about in the Bible (Rev. 22:1-5) represents Gods life-giving presence. The river of life (Holy Spirit), flows from the throne of God, and with the tree of life is for the healing of the nations. They added, Our baby doesnt get to live here with us on earth, but is forever with the source of the river of life, in the presence of the Lord! The Dillard family's announcement comes as the eldest Duggar sibling, Josh Duggar, is facing up to 20 years in prison for allegedly having over 200 images of child porn on his devices of children ranging from about 18 months of age to 12 years of age. After Josh Duggar was found guilty of receiving and possessing child pornography in December, the Dillards shared a lengthy statement on their family website. Joshs actions have rippled far beyond the epicenter of the offense itself, they said. Children have scars, but his family is also suffering the fallout of his actions. Our hearts are sensitive to the pains Joshs wife, Anna, and their seven children have already endured and will continue to process in the future. This trial has felt more like a funeral than anything else. Joshs family has a long road ahead. We stand with them, we are praying for them, and we will seek to support them however we can during this dark time. Russias war on Ukraine: Are we living in the End Times? Is Russias war on Ukraine a significant event in terms of prophecies recorded in the Bible? As many Christians debate this question, Southern California Pastor Greg Laurie explains why he believes we are living in the End Times. This is war at a scale we have not seen in a long time, Laurie, senior pastor and founder of the multi-campus Harvest Christian Fellowship in California, says in a video message posted on his churchs website, referring to Matthew 24:6, which reads, And you will hear of wars and rumors of wars. The following verse, he adds, talks about plagues being around us in the last days. If the coronavirus is not a plague, I dont know what it is. Its a global plague. Many Bible scholars believe that the mention of Magog attacking Israel in Ezekiel 38 is modern-day Russia, he continues. According to another prophecy in Ezekiel, Jewish people will be scattered and regathered in their land again, which has been fulfilled, Laurie continues, explaining that during World War II and after the Holocaust, Jewish people from around the world began to return to their land. And Israel officially became a nation on May 14, 1948. But Scripture also says that a nation from the extreme north of Israel, called Gog and Magog, will march on her, he says, adding that Ukraine used to be a part of the Russian Empire until 1991. If you look on any map, youll see that is the geographical area of Russia. Are they going to be part of Russia again? Could be. But the one thing that I think of is that when I see the aggression of Russia or Magog, if you will, its a reminder that thats what were going to see when Magog attacks Israel. And if we believe that the prophecies are coming true, we should look up, and we should remember that God is in control, Laurie concludes. Joel Rosenberg, an American-Israeli communications strategist, author and nonprofit executive, also wrote a few years ago that: The Hebrew prophet Ezekiel wrote 2,500 years ago that in the last days of history, Russia and Iran will form a military alliance to attack Israel from the north. Bible scholars refer to this eschatological conflict, described in Ezekiel 3839, as the War of Gog & Magog. He quotes Ezekiel 38:14-16, which reads: Therefore, son of man, prophesy and say to Gog: This is what the Sovereign Lord says: In that day, when my people Israel are living in safety, will you not take notice of it? You will come from your place in the far north, you and many nations with you, all of them riding on horses, a great horde, a mighty army. You will advance against my people Israel like a cloud that covers the land. In days to come, Gog, I will bring you against my land, so that the nations may know me when I am proved holy through you before their eyes. The Christian apologist website Got Questions also talks about Russia in biblical prophecy. Gog is a person. Whoever Gog is, he is from the land of Magog and is the leader of Tubal and Meshek (some translations add Rosh to the list) and a confederacy of other nations: Persia, Cush, Put, Gomer, and Beth Togarmah (Ezekiel 38:56). And, whoever he is, he will have plans to attack a peaceful and unsuspecting people, viz., Israel (verses 11, 14, and 18). But, regardless of Gogs plans, the Lord God is against him and will defeat him soundly (Ezekiel 38:4, 1923; 39:35). Persia, a nation listed as being in alliance with Magog, is modern-day Iran. Alabama megachurch votes to leave The United Methodist Church A megachurch in Alabama has voted to disaffiliate from The United Methodist Church several months before the denomination will hold a legislative meeting that might lead to a schism over theological differences. Frazer United Methodist Church, a congregation of about 4,000 members in Montgomery, voted on Jan. 30 to disaffiliate from the mainline Protestant denomination. Their decision to depart the UMC will be voted on in June at a scheduled session of The UMC Alabama-West Florida Conference, which is the regional body that Frazer Church belongs to. It is not without sadness that we contemplate departing from our denominational ties with the UMC. The Alabama-West Florida Annual Conference of the UMC has been our home for many years, and we honor the connection we have shared and the work we have accomplished together, said Frazer Church in an emailed statement to The Christian Post from its Director of Communications Kym Klass. The church said in its statement to CP that the congregation intends to join the Free Methodist Church: "[W]e believe that the Free Methodist Church is a better fit for our present identity and future fruitfulness. It further explained that they look forward to this new chapter in our history once this decision is ratified by the Annual Conference in June. We pray for continued blessings on our Bishop, our Conference, and all UMC churches around the world, knowing that Gods Kingdom transcends all denominational lines, they added. In response to the church's decision, the Alabama-West Florida Conference expressed its praise for Frazer Church in an emailed statement to CP. Frazer Church is a remarkable witness for Jesus Christ. For many years they have been a leader in the United Methodist Church and in the Alabama-West Florida Conference, stated the conference. While we are saddened that they are exploring denominational options, it is our strong desire and prayer that each church and clergyperson honor what God is genuinely calling them to do. The conference added that it will follow all guidelines outlined in our United Methodist Book of Discipline regarding the June process of confirming the disaffiliation. We mourn their potential departure, yet we know that Kingdom work knows no denominational bounds, and we pray they continue to make positive changes in their corner of the world, the conference added. Frazer Churchs decision to disaffiliate from the UMC comes as the denomination prepares to hold its General Assembly meeting Aug. 29 Sept. 6 in Minneapolis, Minnesota. Originally scheduled for 2020 but postponed due to the COVID-19 pandemic, delegates at the UMC General Assembly will consider measures aimed at ending its decadeslong debate over whether to consider homosexuality a sin and to ban the blessing of same-sex unions. Many believe that the churchwide legislative meeting will result in a splitting of the UMC along theological lines, with large numbers of traditionalists possibly leaving to form their own denomination while most progressives will remain to change the stance of the UMC on LGBT issues. Biden talks Equality Act, American Families Plan, white supremacist threat in Congress speech In his first speech before a joint session of U.S. Congress Wednesday night, President Joe Biden urged the legislative branch to support his progressive agenda, unveiled his American Families Plan and warned of the threat posed by white supremacy. Biden addressed the 117th Congress in the U.S. House of Representatives chamber one day before his 100th day in office. While Biden spent his speech attempting to portray his proposals as popular among Americans of all political persuasions, the president also made overtures to the progressive base of the Democratic Party. He specifically expressed a desire to see federal lawmakers send the Equality Act to his desk, which he described as a bill to protect LGBT Americans. Biden delivered a specific message to the transgender community, one of the intended beneficiaries of the legislation that would codify discrimination protections based on sexual orientation and gender identity into federal law. All transgender Americans watching at home, especially young people, who are so brave, I want you to know your president has your back, the 78-year-old declared. The Equality Act has already passed the House but has stalled in the Senate. Championed by Democrats, the Equality Act has come under frequent criticism by conservatives, who have expressed concerns about its implications for religious liberty and womens sports. Throughout his speech, Biden discussed a wide variety of topics, including the coronavirus stimulus package, the progress in distributing the coronavirus vaccine, efforts to fight climate change and foreign policy. The president promoted the American Jobs Plan, his infrastructure plan, in addition to unveiling his American Families Plan. American Families Plan The plan seeks to expand access to education, reduce the cost of child care and support women in the workforce while providing upwards of $1.8 trillion in investments and tax credits for American families and children over ten years, according to the White House. The plan will be financed by raising taxes on high earners. Discussing the need to compete with other countries, specifically China, Biden stressed that the United States needs to make a once-in-a-generation investment in our families and our children. According to Biden, the American Families Plan addresses four of the biggest challenges facing American families and in turn America. Biden identified the lack of access to a good education as one of the biggest challenges facing American families. Arguing that 12 years of free public education was no longer sufficient as the U.S. seeks to compete on the world stage, he explained that the American Families Plan guarantees four additional years of public education for every person in America. The great universities in this country have conducted studies over the last 10 years that shows that adding two years of universal, high-quality preschool for every 3-year-old and 4-year-old no matter what background they come from puts them in a position to be able to compete all the way through 12 years, he said. It increases exponentially their prospect of graduating and going on beyond graduation. The research shows when a young child goes to school not daycare theyre far more likely to graduate from high school and go to college or something after high school, he added. When you add two years of free community college on top of that, you begin to change the dynamic. Additionally, Biden explained, the American Families Plan will increase Pell Grants and invest in historically black college[s] and universities, tribal colleges [and] minority-serving institutions. The American Families Plan will provide access to quality affordable child care, he announced. It would guarantee that low and middle-income families will pay no more than 7% of their income for high-quality care for children up to the age of five while the most hard-pressed working families wont have to spend a dime. He said the plan would provide up to 12 weeks of paid leave and family and medical leave. He lamented that the U.S. is one of the few industrial countries in the world without such a policy. No one should have to choose between a job and a paycheck for taking care of themselves and their loved ones or parent or spouse or child, the president said. The former senator from Delaware maintained that extending a $3,000 child care tax credit for children over the age of 6 and a $3,600 child care tax credit for children younger than 6 years old through 2025 will help more than 65 million children and help cut child care poverty in half. The president vowed that to pay for his proposals, he would not impose any tax increase on people making less than $400,000. Instead, the cost would fall on corporate America and the wealthiest 1% of Americans, whom he argued needed to pay their fair share. He proposed increasing the top income tax rate to 39.6% and getting rid of the loopholes that allow Americans to make more than $1 million a year and pay a lower tax rate on their capital gains than Americans who receive a paycheck. As he addressed foreign policy, Biden warned that terrorism has metastasized to the point where the threat has evolved way beyond Afghanistan. He vowed that its time to bring our troops home. Racism and policing While stating that Al Qaeda and ISIS are still in the Middle East and Africa, he cited the intelligence agencies analysis when characterizing white supremacy as the most lethal terrorist threat to the homeland today. We have to come together to heal the soul of this nation, Biden stressed as he pivoted to discussing the death of George Floyd and race in America. Weve all seen the knee of injustice on the neck of black Americans. Nows our opportunity to make some real progress. The vast majority of men and women wearing a uniform and a badge serve our communities, and they serve them honorably, he continued. We have to come together to rebuild trust between law enforcement and the people they serve to root out systemic racism in our criminal justice system and to enact police reform in George Floyds name that passed the House already. While he praised Republicans for having very productive discussions with Democrats in the Senate, Biden reiterated the need to work together to find a consensus, urging Congress to pass criminal justice reform by May 25, the first anniversary of Floyds death. Immigration Describing immigration as essential to America, the president asked Congress to support a comprehensive immigration bill that includes a pathway to citizenship for 11 million undocumented folks as well as high tech border security. He specifically highlighted protection for Dreamers, illegal immigrants brought to the country as children. He called for permanent protection for immigrants who are here on temporary protective status and a pathway to citizenship for farmworkers who put food on our tables as the most important immigration-related priorities that Congress must address. H.R. 1 In addition, Biden asked Congress to pass H.R. 1, also known as the For the People Act. Democrats, including Biden, have portrayed the bill as necessary to expand Americans access to the ballot box. But conservatives allege that H.R. 1, which they characterize as a federal takeover of the administration of elections, will make it easier to cheat and make it easier to manipulate election results because it loosens voter ID requirements and signature verification requirements for mail-in ballots. As his speech concluded, Biden declared, I have never been more confident or optimistic about America because weve stared into the abyss of insurrection and autocracy, pandemic and pain and we the people did not flinch. While it is not customary for newly elected presidents to give State of the Union addresses, they have given speeches to joint sessions Congress soon after assuming office. The audience in the Hosue chamber did not include most of the 535 members of Congress as is customary for State of the Union addresses or similar addresses given by presidents shortly after taking office. To maintain social distancing as the U.S. continues to grapple with the coronavirus pandemic, only a handful of members of Congress were physically present in the chamber. Father fatally shoots 3 daughters, chaperone inside church then kills himself A father fatally shot his three daughters and their chaperone inside the sanctuary of a California church before killing himself during a supervised visit with them Monday night, police said. Officials did not immediately identify the church where the killings took place shortly after 5 p.m. on Wyda Way in Sacramento, but Michael Baginski, identified as a district leader on the website of The Church in Sacramento, suggested to the Los Angeles Times that the father was mentally ill. The father, who has not yet been publicly identified, was only described as a 39-year-old man, while the ages of his daughters are listed as 9, 10 and 13. Authorities say the father was estranged from the mother of his children and she had an active restraining order against him. Police say it was an employee of the church where the shooting took place who called 911 after hearing gunfire around 5:07 p.m. In a televised interview, Sacramento County Sheriff Scott Jones said the church is used by a number of denominations for their services so it was unclear what the relationship was between the family and the church. Its just horrific and unfortunately it does happen in the county. Domestic violence is all too common. This obviously rising to the level of killing innocent children is obviously beyond anyones rational comprehension, Jones said. He explained that even though domestic murder-suicides are rare, they do happen all over the country and they encourage individuals who are in crisis to seek help before its too late. Its hard to really understand what goes through a persons mind to do that, the sheriff said. While we are no stranger in this county to domestic violence, a crime of this magnitude, where there is so much death and destruction and deliberation and violence that is, fortunately, very rare, but nonetheless it does happen. Not just in this county but all over the country, he explained. Id just encourage anybody in a situation like this thinking that would never happen, he would never do that it could happen. You just dont know what people are capable of. So Id just encourage people to use whatever resources they have to get out of a situation like that, he added. California Gov. Gavin Newsom called the murders senseless and absolutely devastating. Another senseless act of gun violence in America this time in our backyard. In a church with kids inside. Absolutely devastating, he tweeted Monday night. Our hearts go out to the victims, their families and their communities. We are working closely with local law enforcement. When asked why the father was allowed a supervised visit with the children despite the restraining order the mother of the children had against him, Sheriff Jones said parental rights are very strong. Thats not uncommon, parent rights are very strong. Family court, their main goal is reunification so they want to see that if there is a pathway to reunification of the family they are looking at the best interest of the child, not necessarily the best interest of each individual adult, he explained. You look at this [as], such an outlier, such an extreme example of what could happen. As authorities continued their investigation Monday night, Rep. Doris Matsui, D-Calif., in whose district the church is located, offered prayers for the victims. Tonights senseless shooting is a tragedy beyond words. My prayers are with the victims family, loved ones and the entire Sacramento community, she tweeted. In memory of all those we have lost, we must renew our resolve to build a world free from gun violence. Biden's judicial nominees prove 'liberal dark money groups' control his administration: legal expert A former law clerk for Justice Clarence Thomas has alleged that President Joe Bidens newly released list of judicial nominees proves that he's letting liberal dark money groups control his administration. Carrie Severino, president of the think-tank Judicial Crisis Network, which advocates for the appointment of originalist U.S. Supreme Court justices, expressed concern about Bidens first list of judicial nominees. The nominees on the list, released Tuesday, would fill 11 vacancies on the federal courts. Severino wrote about Judge Katenji Brown Jackson, Bidens pick to serve on the U.S. Court of Appeals for the District of Columbia Circuit, in an op-ed for National Review. Jackson has been on the Supreme Court shortlist of Demand Justice, to which prospects do not make the cut unless they are far to the left, she said. Others on the liberal groups shortlist include employees of the ACLU Reproductive Freedom Project and the National Center for Lesbian Rights, as well as a visiting professor of social justice at Union Theological Seminary and a former Planned Parenthood attorney. Severino noted that prior to becoming a federal judge, Jackson represented indigent criminal appellants before the D.C. Circuit and submitted amicus briefs on behalf of accused enemy combatants in military detention. In a Twitter thread Tuesday, Severino explained that the context in which the judicial nominations are occurring should concern conservatives: As Politico playbook noted this morning, President Biden has been working overtime to appease the far left, and we can expect his judges to rubber-stamp their extreme radical agenda. One of these appeasement tactics is paying back the liberal dark-money groups that spent hundreds of millions of dollars to elect him and Senate Democrats. This includes myriad dark money groups propped up by the vast Arabella Advisors Network, she continued. Severino mentioned in her op-ed that Demand Justice, which has included Jackson on their list of favored Supreme Court candidates, is part of the Arabella Advisors Network. Severino elaborated on the implications of dark money groups support for Bidens nominees in an interview with The Christian Post: I think what we can see are the groups that are very happy with these nominees, which again is the same laundry list of the dark money organizations we know that they are very satisfied by that list of nominees and I think thats enough to raise my concern. According to Severino, the list of judicial nominees is the latest example of how Bidens priorities and agenda are largely dictated at this point by the liberal dark money forces that helped put him in office, and were seeing that play out in the administration appointments, and now were seeing that play out in the judicial appointments as well. In addition to Demand Justice, Severino cited the Alliance for Justice, People for the American Way, and the American Constitution Society as examples of liberal dark money groups. We have seen those groups on the left insisting on some of the most radical positions on both abortion, on religious freedom, etc. And the fact that they are all very happy with these nominees tells you all you need to know about their positions on those cases. Because when these groups talk about judges and the importance of nominating judges, they dont talk about the importance of their judicial philosophy, for example, they talk about (judges) in terms of the policy goals that those judges are going to help them achieve, she added. And so, if you wonder how theyre going to be deciding cases, it is pretty clear because of the support theyre getting from groups who do view judges just as a means to achieve policy ends, they obviously consider them completely reliable to deliver those policy goals. As Severino told CP, a lot of Bidens judicial picks arent even judges yet, making it difficult to determine what their judicial philosophy would be. Bidens nominees include attorneys working in the private sector: Tiffany Cunningham, the presidents nominee to serve on the U.S. Court of Appeals for the Federal Circuit, Candace Jackson-Akiwumi, his nominee to serve on the U.S. Court of Appeals for the Seventh Circuit and Margaret Strickland, who he nominated to serve on the U.S. District Court for the District of New Mexico. One of Bidens picks to serve on the U.S. District Court for the District of New Jersey, Julien Neals, works as a county counsel in Bergen County. Biden also nominated Judges Deborah Boardman and Lydia Griggsby to serve on the U.S. District Court for the District of Maryland, Judge Zahid Quraishi to serve on the U.S. District Court for the District of New Jersey, as well as Judges Florence Pan and Rupa Ranga Puttagunta to serve on the Superior Court of the District of Columbia. For his part, Biden seemed enthusiastic about his candidates, whom he described as trailblazing and the very best and brightest minds of the American legal profession. He maintained that Each is deeply qualified and prepared to deliver justice faithfully under our Constitution and impartially to the American people and together they represent the broad diversity of background, experience, and perspective that makes our nation strong. The White House announcement about Bidens nominees touted the groundbreaking racial diversity of the picks, which include: three African American women chosen for Circuit Court vacancies, as well as candidates who, if confirmed, would be the first Muslim American federal judge in U.S. history, the first (Asian American Pacific Islander) woman to ever serve on the U.S. District Court for the District of D.C., and the first woman of color to ever serve as a federal judge for the District of Maryland. While the list of judicial nominees provides information about the candidates experience and education, it doesn't include information about their philosophies and past rulings, if applicable. Overall, liberal groups, including Demand Justice, have praised Bidens list of judicial nominees. In a statement, Demand Justice Executive Director Brian Fallon highlighted the public defenders and civil rights lawyers in this group as exactly the kind of judges we need to rebalance our courts. However, he also took a veiled swipe at the nomination of corporate attorney Regina Rodriguez, who the president has nominated to serve on the U.S. District Court for the District of Colorado. Subtly referring to the recommendation by Colorados two Democratic senators that Rodriguez serve on the bench, which Demand Justice criticized, Fallon lamented that old habits die hard for some senators who are used to recommending corporate lawyers and prosecutors for federal judgeships. Fallon expressed a preference for public defenders and civil rights lawyers, whom he described as underrepresented professional backgrounds. Current Senate rules allow judicial nominees to be confirmed with a simple majority, as opposed to the 60 votes required to pass most legislation. With a 50-50 split in the Senate and Vice President Kamala Harris casting the tie-breaking vote for the Democrats, Biden should be able to get all of his candidates confirmed without Republican support if all Democrats vote in favor of them. Severino acknowledged that opponents of Bidens judicial nominees will have a difficult time blocking their confirmations, but she contended that a Senate Democrat representing a very red state, Sen. Joe Manchin of West Virginia, and another Senate Democrat representing a purple state, Sen. Kyrsten Sinema of Arizona, could be open to persuasion. Are they going to stand with the citizens of their states, the many Americans who dont want the courts turned into politics by other means, or are they going to go along with the demands of the Democratic Party and just toe the line? she asked. President Trump rebukes late-term abortion in SOTU, draws praise from pro-life groups President Donald Trump rebuked supporters of late term abortion and urged Congress to ban the practice in his State of the Union speech Tuesday night as conservatives and pro-life activists cheered the move. Calling out recent decisions by lawmakers in New York and a proposal in Virginia, supported by the states embattled Gov. Ralph Northam, to allow abortions up to birth, Trump stressed the importance of protecting the life of all children born and unborn who are expressions of the holy image of God. There could be no greater contrast to the beautiful image of a mother holding her infant child than the chilling displays our nation saw in recent days. Lawmakers in New York cheered with delight upon the passage of legislation that would allow a baby to be ripped from the mother's womb moments before birth, the president said to much applause. These are living, feeling, beautiful babies who will never get the chance to share their love and dreams with the world. And then, we had the case of the governor of Virginia where he stated he would execute a baby after birth. To defend the dignity of every person, I am asking Congress to pass legislation to prohibit the late-term abortion of children who can feel pain in the mother's womb, he continued. Let us work together to build a culture that cherishes innocent life. And let us reaffirm a fundamental truth all children born and unborn are made in the holy image of God. The presidents remarks came as Dr. Leana Wen, president of abortion giant Planned Parenthood, sat in the audience as a guest of House Speaker Nancy Pelosi. Responding to the president calling out his state, New Yorks Democrat Gov. Andrew Cuomo dismissed Trump as a liar, pointing to a report in The Washington Post arguing that New York legislation would not have allowed a baby to be ripped from the mothers womb moments before birth. The lies that we heard tonight are nothing new. The only thing new is that it is the President pushing these falsehoods, Cuomo tweeted. Pro-life organizations such as March for Life, which seeks to end abortion by uniting, educating, and mobilizing pro-life people in the public square, applauded the president for condemning extreme abortion. We applaud the President for condemning the extremist abortion propositions out of New York and Virginia and for calling on Congress to ban late-term abortion during his State of the Union Address. The American consensus opposes abortion after the first trimester, yet some politicians continue to embrace and perpetuate an unprecedentedly radical pro-abortion agenda, said March for Life Action President Tom McClusky. He then named Northam and Pelosi for her support of Planned Parenthood and said they were out of touch with Americas current view of abortion. While politicians like these are in step with a powerful abortion lobby, they are out of touch with the American people. We ask Congress to heed President Trumps call to pass legislation prohibiting late-term abortion as well for a quick floor vote in the Senate on the Born-Alive bill so that Governor Northams infanticide fantasy may never be reality. It is time for politicians, regardless of party, to stand up in favor of protecting innocent life, he added. On Monday, a bill meant to preserve the life of babies who survive an abortion attempt was rejected by Senate Democrats after Nebraska Republican Sen. Ben Sasse pleaded with them to unanimously pass the measure. The bill sought to require "any health care practitioner present" at the time of a birth to "exercise the same degree of professional skill, care, and diligence to preserve the life and health of the child as a reasonably diligent and conscientious health care practitioner would render to any other child born alive at the same gestational age." It exempted mothers involved from prosecution, and proposed requiring practitioners to "ensure that the child born alive is immediately transported and admitted to a hospital." A possible term of imprisonment of up to five years for violations, not including penalties for first-degree murder that could also apply was also proposed. The U.S. House passed a similar bill in January, 2018. A similar bill, the Born-Alive Infants Protection Act, was signed into law by President George W. Bush in 2002, but that legislation didn't contain any penalties or enforcement mechanisms. This isnt about Republicans or Democrats. We're way beyond that. Everyone in the Senate ought to be able to say unequivocally that the little baby deserves life. That she has rights, and that killing her is wrong, Sasse declared in remarks seeking unanimous consent on the rejected Born-Alive Abortion Survivors Protection Act. Ukrainian bishop says Putin is the 'Antichrist of our current time': 'Against Gods law' An Orthodox bishop in Ukraine has likened Russian President Vladimir Putin to the Antichrist as tensions between the two countries continue nearly a week after Russia began its invasion of Ukraine. On BBCs Global News Podcast Sunday, religion and ethics producer Harry Farley spoke with Ukrainian Bishop Yevstratiy Zoria, a spokesperson for the Orthodox Church of Ukraine, about Putins belief that Russia and Ukraine had a shared spiritual space. What hes referring to is the arrival of the Eastern Orthodox Church to the region in the ninth century, Farley said. He along with many other Russians see Russias history dating back to that empire that existed at the time. Moscow and the Russian Orthodox Church developed, became this huge power within the Orthodox Church. But in 2019, the Ukrainian Orthodox Church split off from Russia and was recognized as independent, Farley added. Religion is hugely important for Putins identity, for his psyche, he immerses himself in icy water to mark the festival of Epiphany, he wears his baptismal cross. Farley surmised that Putin sees himself as a kind of messianic figure, a savior, to reunite Eastern Orthodox churches under Moscow. After noting that the Ukrainian Orthodox Church is fiercely independent and rejects Moscows authority, Farley shared a soundbite from his interview with Zoria, who vehemently pushed back on the characterization of Putin as a messianic figure. Zoria described the Russian President as really not messianic, but really [the] Antichrist of our current time. Zoria told Farley that he is [the] Antichrist because everything [that] he does is totally against [the] Gospel, against Gods law. Farley elaborated on the religious background underlying the ongoing conflict between Russia and Ukraine. Religion is very important to Russians, Farley said. Seventy-one percent identify as Orthodox Christians and added into that, more than half of Russians say it is important for a person to be Orthodox Christian in order to be truly Russian. The BBC producer cited a combination of [a] strong religious identity linked to strong national identity and the fact that the Russian Orthodox Church is very close to Vladimir Putin as important factors influencing the geopolitics surrounding the invasion of Ukraine. The head of the Russian Orthodox Church praised Putin just this week after the invasion, he said. In an op-ed published by The Gospel Coalition last week, Perry Glanzer, professor of educational foundations at Baylor University, asserted that former communists largely control the Russian Orthodox Church, and they use this power to support a Russian version of Christian nationalism. Glanzer stressed that this makes the church an instrument of the state. The professor wrote that Russian politicians undermine burgeoning efforts to rebuild civil society, improve religious liberty, or expand religious education. The dominant Russian Orthodox Church makes things worse, Glanzer stated. Glanzer, who lived in Russia for two years and spent extended periods doing research in Ukraine, also outlined how the Russian government has persistently made it difficult, and sometimes impossible, for Russian Christians to build institutions to further Christianity. He noted that Russia has outlawed evangelism and persecutes Protestants as well as Russian Orthodox who press for moral reform. He argued that the Russian government killed Russian American Christian University. Glanzer recalled how Russian efforts to stamp out Christianity extended beyond its borders when Russian mercenaries marched into Ukraine in 2017 and set up their headquarters in Donetsk Theological Seminary to expand Putins maniacal and deadly dreams. He contrasted the state of Christianity in Russia with the attitude towards Christianity in Ukraine, a former Soviet state where Catholicism was once outlawed. In contrast to Russian political leadership, prior to Russian interference Christian institutions had been thriving in Ukraine, a land that promoted religious freedom, he proclaimed. Glanzer pointed to the positive influence of Ukrainian Catholic University, the countrys first Catholic institution of higher education, as evidence that civil society was beginning again in Ukraine despite bearing the scars of leadership under morally corrupt communists. Glanzer lamented that Russians are on the hunt to kill signs of civil society and hope beyond their border. In a Zoom webinar hosted by the Philos Project Monday, Assistant Professor of Conflict Management Kristina Hook of Kennesaw State University elaborated on the recent religious history of Ukraine and how it plays a role in what is unfolding on the ground there. Prior to 2018, there were three types of Orthodox churches in Ukraine, she said. There was the Autocephalous Orthodox Church, there was the Kyiv Patriarchate Orthodox Church and there was the Moscow Patriarchate Orthodox Church. When this split happened, the majority of those congregations moved into the Ukrainian Orthodox Church, she added. In previous conversations with priests affiliated with the aforementioned Ukrainian church branches, Hook discovered that their merger with the Ukrainian Orthodox Church was because of things like accusations of the Russian government using monasteries in the Donbas region to smuggle weapons. Additionally, she cited really personal reasons about priests not being allowed to do funeral rights for soldiers who were killed because the Moscow patriarchates received its direction from the church in Russia. Hook praised the new leader of the Ukrainian Orthodox Church, who has been calling very publicly for Ukrainians to be strong while reminding people not to do any property damage to any churches they associate with the Moscow tradition. U.S. Secretary of State, Antony Blinken, appears on a screen as he delivers a remote speech, during the 49th session of the U.N. Human Rights Council at the European headquarters of the United Nations in Geneva, Switzerland, Mar. 1. AP-Yonhap If Russian President Vladimir Putin achieves his goal of ousting the government in Kyiv, the humanitarian and rights crises in Ukraine "will only get worse," the top U.S. diplomat warned Tuesday. U.S. Secretary of State Antony Blinken warned the U.N. Human Rights Council that Russia's "premeditated, unprovoked and unjustified attack on Ukraine" was creating a dire human rights and humanitarian crisis there. In a pre-recorded video, he also questioned whether Russia should be allowed to hold onto its seat on the Geneva-based council after launching its full-scale invasion of Ukraine, Feb. 24. He said Moscow's "violations of international humanitarian law mount by the hour," with Russian strikes "hitting schools, hospitals and residential buildings," and destroying critical infrastructure. "Civilian buses, cars, and even ambulances have been shelled," he said, slamming the "monstrous rocket strike that hit an apartment complex" in Ukraine's second city Kharkiv, Monday. More than 350 civilians have been killed since the Russian invasion began, including 16 children, according to Ukrainian authorities. Nearly 680,000 people have already fled abroad, the U.N. refugee agency said, estimating that a million people are displaced within Ukraine. Blinken warned that "if President Putin succeeds in his stated goal of toppling Ukraine's democratically-elected government, the human rights and humanitarian crises will only get worse." U.S. Secretary of State Antony Blinken arrives for President Joe Biden's State of the Union address during a joint session of Congress in the U.S. Capitol's House Chamber in Washington, March 1. AFP-Yonhap He pointed to the situation on the Crimean peninsula, which Moscow annexed in 2014. There, he charged, "Russia's occupation has come with extrajudicial killings, enforced disappearances, torture, arbitrary detention, the persecution of ethnic and religious minorities, and the brutal repression of dissent." "The Kremlin is also ramping up its repression within Russia," Blinken warned. He said that "even before the invasion, it was shuttering human rights organizations and harassing, poisoning, and imprisoning anti-corruption activists and political opponents." And since the invasion began just six days ago, "authorities reportedly have detained thousands of Russians peacefully protesting the invasions, as well as journalists covering the demonstrations," he added. The top U.S. diplomat called on the council to "send a united message that President Putin should unconditionally stop this unprovoked attack... and immediately withdraw Russian forces from Ukraine." He also demanded "steps to hold the perpetrators accountable." Blinken voiced outrage that a member of the top U.N. rights body would carry out such a "flagrant assault on Ukraine's sovereignty. "One can reasonably ask whether a U.N. member state that tries to take over another U.N. member state, while committing horrific human rights abuses and causing massive humanitarian suffering, should be allowed to remain on this council," he said. Suspending one of the council's 47 members requires a majority vote in the U.N. General Assembly in New York, something that has only happened once before, with Libya in 2011. Earlier Tuesday, diplomats from a wide range of countries staged a walkout from the rights council as a video statement by Russian Foreign Minister Sergei Lavrov played. They followed Ukrainian Ambassador Yevheniia Filipenko out of the room and gathered around a large Ukrainian flag to show their support for the Ukrainian people. In his speech before a nearly empty room, Lavrov meanwhile blamed Kyiv for the crisis, accusing Ukraine's government of pursuing "a course of aggressive derusification" and increasing "criminal actions." He also slammed the West for the "unilateral illegitimate sanctions" imposed on his country, blaming them for preventing him from travelling to Geneva in person as planned and thus "evading the direct honest face-to-face dialogue they clearly fear." The broad and massive sanctions, he said, show that "the West has clearly lost control of itself in its desire to vent its anger on Russia and has gone to the extent of destroying all the institutions and rules it has created." (AFP) Trump bashes Bidens handling of Russia, says Putin didnt invade Ukraine on his watch Former President Donald Trump denounced President Joe Bidens response to Russias invasion of Ukraine, saying it would not have happened on his watch. After a couple of months of tensions between the two countries, Russian President Vladimir Putin ordered Russian troops to invade Ukraine Thursday, in part under the pretext of defending the declared independence of the eastern Ukrainian provinces of Donetsk and Luhansk. Speaking at the Conservative Political Action Conference on Saturday night for nearly 90 minutes, Trump expressed his support for the people of Ukraine and denounced Bidens handling of the conflict. The Russian attack on Ukraine is appalling. Its an outrage and an atrocity that should never have been allowed to occur, said Trump. We are praying for the proud people of Ukraine. God bless them all. This horrific disaster would never have happened if our election was not rigged and if I was the president. Very simple, it wouldnt have happened. Despite Trump claiming election fraud, a 136-page report written by the conservative Wisconsin Institute for Law and Liberty (WILL) shows "no evidence of widespread voter fraud." The WILL hand recounted 20,000 votes from 20 wards with "no evidence of fraudulent ballots," and also reviewed 29,000 ballot certificates in 29 wards. The report from WILL, which supports many of Trump's policies, concluded, "We do not believe the election was 'stolen.' But it was not adequately secure." Trump went on to point out that Russia invaded the nation of Georgia under former President George W. Bush and that Russia annexed the Crimean Peninsula under former President Barack Obama. Under Biden, Russia invaded Ukraine, he continued. I stand as the only president of the 21st century on whose watch Russia did not invade another country. I gave Ukraine the [Javelin antitank missiles] that everyone is now talking about, and millions of dollars of other military equipment. The Obama administration gave them blankets. Trump went on to say that when he was president, the world was a peaceful place because America was strong and the perception of our country was perhaps like it had never been before: powerful, cunning, and smart. Trump spoke about warning the North Atlantic Treaty Organization about the danger of Russia before the current invasion of Ukraine and contrasted his record on overseas conflict with the claims made against him by political opponents. You remember, though, when so many people in the Democrat Party and during the debates said, hes going to get us into the Third World War, continued Trump. Im the one that didnt have any wars. Im the one that got us out of wars. Both before and after being elected president in 2016, Trump faced allegations that he was a staunch supporter and an alleged puppet of Putin. According to a Harvard Center for American Political Studies-Harris Poll released earlier this week, 62% of surveyed Americans believe that Putin would not have invaded Ukraine if Trump was still president. Trump also talked about a host of issues, including illegal immigration, unsubstantiated claims of 2020 election fraud, the danger of fake news, and expressed support for the Canadian truckers convoy. Trump said that the Biden administration has failed to secure the borders of the United States, claiming that the southern border was the safest it had ever been while he was president. The CPAC audience was passionate, often cheering Trump as he spoke and booing progressive groups and public figures named by the former president during his lengthy speech. When talking about his time as president, the crowd chanted, Four more years! And when Trump criticized his 2016 election opponent Hillary Clinton, they chanted, Lock her up! He also spoke of the sleeping giant of conservative activists, who he believed would help to propel Republicans to victory later this year and in the 2024 presidential election. When we win, we will defeat this corrupt political establishment, we will save our Republic, and we will restore constitutional government of, by, and for the people, added Trump. The Washington swamp knows we are coming to break their grip on power forever. That is why they are so desperate to stop us. They will go to any lengths. Trumps remarks came as part of CPAC, the large annual gathering of conservatives that, while normally held in the Washington, D.C. area, took place in Orlando, Florida, this year. In addition to Trump, prominent speakers at CPAC included: Sen. Ted Cruz, R-Texas; former Secretary of State Mike Pompeo; former Rep. Tulsi Gabbard, D-Hawaii; former leader of UKIP and British MEP Nigel Farage; former head of the Department of Housing and Urban Development Dr. Ben Carson; actor Kevin Sorbo and his wife, Sam; conservative commentator Todd Starnes; and Florida Gov. Ron DeSantis, among others. DeSantis, who spoke at CPAC on Thursday, focused on domestic issues, claiming that Democrats want to marginalize the conservative half of the country so they will be powerless to resist their ideological aims. The woke is the new religion of the Left, and this is what they have in mind, DeSantis told those gathered. Thats why they want CRT [critical race theory] because they want to divide the country. Thats why they remove statues of Thomas Jefferson, and Abraham Lincoln, and Teddy Roosevelt, take George Washingtons name off schools. They want to delegitimize our founding institutions, and they want to replace that with their left-wing ideology as the foundational principles of our modern-day society. Believe in the Real Gospel, Not a Stripped-Down Version, Says Michael Youssef In his brand-new book Never Give Up: Holding Fast to Biblical Truth in Times of Danger and Despair, pastor and bestselling author Dr. Michael Youssef exhorts believers to be unashamed for the Gospel at a time when many are compromising biblical truth. Have you ever wondered why nonbelievers display such an intense hatred for Jesus and His followers? What is it about our faith in God's infallible Word that triggers such hostility among the unsaved? The answer may be simpler than you think. The gospel tells us that we are lost in our sin, and there is no way we can save ourselves through good works. Salvation is by grace through faith, not of works (Eph. 1:89). The moment we recognize the awfulness of our sin and cast ourselves upon God's mercy and grace, He forgives, transforms and justifies us. That is the gospel message. That message is a problem for nonbelievers because the natural human mind cannot admit the gravity and horror of sin. The natural mind says, "I admit I'm not perfect, but I'm a good person. If there is a God, He will accept me. I don't need a Savior. So keep your 'sin' talk to yourself. Don't bother me with your gospel." The natural mind refuses to admit to having sinned so grievously that Jesus would have to die. "You're telling me that Jesus died to save me? Me? Are you calling me a hopeless, helpless sinner? How dare you!" That's why, in church after church, preachers have stopped preaching the gospel of redemption from sin, and now preach a message of human virtue. They have stopped preaching the cross and the empty tomb and instead preach positive thinking. They have stopped preaching justification by grace through faith, and instead preach social justice propaganda. These preachers want to be liked and admired by nonbelievers. They want to have a popular ministry that rakes in big donations from people who only attend church to have their egos flattered. What did Paul tell Timothy to do in a world that is hostile to the gospel of salvation? And what are we do to? Answer: Guard the truth! "What you heard from me, keep as the pattern of sound teaching, with faith and love in Christ Jesus. Guard the good deposit that was entrusted to youguard it with the help of the Holy Spirit who lives in us" (2 Tim. 1:13-14, NIV). The "pattern of sound teaching" Paul writes of is God's blueprint. The word translated "pattern" is the same word used for an architectural design. What happens if a builder decides to ignore the architectural blueprint? What if the builder decides he doesn't want to bother putting up the pillars, crossbeams and archways that are specified by the architect? The building will collapse. And that is why the apostle Paul, in the closing days of his life, pleads with Timothyand with you and meto please, please, please follow the blueprint of sound teaching. Please, please, please guard the deposit of truth that was entrusted to you. Don't try to improve on it. Don't deviate from it. Don't modify it. Above all, don't ever grow weary of upholding God's truth. Regardless of opposition, persecution, suffering or personal cost, follow the blueprint, guard the truth. Never be ashamed of the gospel. False Teachers in the Church As you read through Paul's second and final letter to Timothy, it becomes clear that he carries a great emotional burden in the closing days of his life. What is this burden? False teachers had infiltrated the church. False teachers are widespread in the 21st-century church, and they were already widespread in the first-century church. Some false teachers pervert the gospel for their own enrichment. They have greedy, selfish motives and their god is the almighty dollar. Other false teachers have "good intentions." Their "gospel" is one of improving society and treating people fairly and making sure that no one's feelings are hurt by talk of sin or judgment. But whether their motive is greed or good intentions, they have corrupted the gospel. They are robbing the church of the priceless treasure of truth which the Lord has entrusted to his church. Though Paul is burdened by the subversion of the church, he is able to say, "That is why I am suffering as I am. Yet this is no cause for shame, because I know whom I have believed, and am convinced that he is able to guard what I have entrusted to him until that day" (2 Tim. 1:12). What day? The day of the Lord's return! As Paul faces death, he knows that Timothy will be an instrument for preserving the truth of the gospel. At the same time, Paul is aware of Timothy's tendency to discouragement, fear and timidity. So Paul tells Timothy he does not have to carry this burden alone. Though the church has been infiltrated by false teachers, Timothy can rely on God to guard his truth until the Lord's return. In the closing lines of this chapter, we see that many in the first-century church have defected from the truth. Paul names two individuals in particular: Phygelus and Hermogenes. They couldn't stand up to persecution, so they fell away (2 Tim. 1:15). Paul also expresses gratitude for those who stood firm for the truth, especially a faithful Christian named Onesiphorus (2 Tim. 1:1618). The Bible tells us little about Onesiphorus (who is not to be confused with Onesimus, the slave mentioned in Paul's letter to Philemon). Ancient tradition suggests that Onesiphorus may have been one of the 70 disciples sent out by Jesus to preach (see Luke 10). Though Phygelus and Hermogenes defected, Onesiphorus remained faithful. Today, Christians around the world suffer persecution, torture and death for the sake of Jesus Christ. Christians in America are not persecuted to that extentnot yet. But many who call themselves Christians are abandoning the gospel out of mere embarrassment and shame. They don't want to face ridicule from their worldly friends, so they sell out the gospel and conform to this fallen world. Others, trying to live in peaceful coexistence with this fallen world, have "deconstructed" their faith (yes, that's the buzzword they use). They toss out the parts of the gospel they consider offensive, and try to retain some semblance of Jesus and His teachingsthough, of course, everything he said about sin, judgment, hell, His death and resurrection, and His Second Coming must go. Once they have finished "deconstructing" the Christian faith, what do they have left? The Lord Is Trustworthy One popular evangelical author and leader went through this process a few years ago. His name is Joshua Harris. Beginning in the late 1990s, he wrote a series of best-selling books on the Christian view of dating and relationships. By age thirty, he was the pastor of a megachurch in Maryland. In 2018, while in his mid-forties, he publicly disavowed his earlier books. In 2019 he announced he was going through a divorce. He soon followed that announcement with a statement on Instagram, which included these sad words: I have undergone a massive shift in regard to my faith in Jesus. The popular phrase for this is deconstruction, the biblical phrase is falling away. By all the measurements that I have for defining a Christian, I am not a Christian. Many people tell me that there is a different way to practice faith and I want to remain open to this, but Im not there now. I fear for this man. I sincerely pray he will find his way to a biblically grounded faith in Jesus Christ. He diagnosed his own condition with devastating accuracy. He has fallen away from the faith. His story is a sobering lesson to us all. Like Phygelus and Hermogenes, we all risk falling away from the faith when we become embarrassed by the gospel. We risk falling away when, instead of guarding Gods truth, we begin to deconstruct it. We risk falling away when we seek friendship with the world instead of faithfulness to the Lord. Pauls message to Timothy and to us is keep the pattern of sound teaching and guard the good deposit of truth that was entrusted to you. The Lord is faithful to His Word. He will never allow the light of the gospel to be extinguished. God has entrusted the gospel to us, but He has not abdicated. He is watching over His Word. He will preserve it, with or without us. Whether or not we remain faithful, He will always be faithful. He is trustworthy. He will accomplish all things according to the counsel of His will. Whatever you are going through, whatever trials and obstacles you face in life, you can trust Jesus, the faithful and true. All He asks is that you be faithful to His Word. Never Give Up is available now through Leading The Way and wherever books are sold. Get your copy today. Dr. Michael Youssef is a pastor, bestselling author, and internationally respected Bible teacher. He was born in Egypt and lived in Lebanon and Australia before coming to the United States and fulfilling a childhood dream of becoming an American citizen. He holds degrees from Moore College in Sydney, Australia, and Fuller Theological Seminary in California, and has a Ph.D. in social anthropology from Emory University. Dr. Youssef is the host of the popular TV and radio broadcast Leading The Way with Dr. Michael Youssef, which airs more than 13,000 times every week, reaching audiences in nearly every major city in the world. He has authored more than 50 books, including his bestselling book Saving Christianity? and his new book Never Give Up, published by Charisma House. Does a childs choice matter? Were all made in the image of a gracious God, who chooses to love each one of us and empowers us with the ability to choose, too. Its an ability that makes us uniquely human. And what we do with it can be world changing. Yet all around the world, poverty is stealing choices from kids. World Vision wonders what it would look like to give those choices back. Introducing Chosen, World Visions new invitation to sponsorship. Instead of you choosing a child to sponsor from a set of photos, like child sponsorship has been done for decades, your photo gets sent to a community in need. This means that the power to choose is in a childs hands. Some of these kids have been waiting a long time to be chosen. Now the choice is theirs. The choice to take hold of their future, to pursue their God-given gifts, to become change makers in their families and communities and even the choice to step into a life-changing relationship with you. And this relationship is a two-way street, inspired by Thessalonians 5:11 (NLT), So encourage each other and build each other up, just as you are already doing. This choice is one that can empower the child and their entire community to stand confidently on their own, free from poverty, all thanks to essentials like clean water, nutrition, basic healthcare, education, and more. Even better? Getting to choose their sponsor doesnt just change a childs life it can change their sponsors too. The simple statement of I choose you is a powerful message of Gods love that has far-reaching effects on both sides. God has placed a universal need deep within each of us. The desire we to feel to be seen and known. The longing we feel to be chosen and to know that we matter. Pastor Dae Kim at CrossPoint church in Chino, California said it best, Almost 100 Ecuadorian children happily chose [our CrossPoint church families] to be their friends. Good friends encourage and help each other. Good friends pray for each other. And through good friends, we grow. I know my family will grow spiritually as we pray for our new friend, Ronaldo, and I know all of us will grow through our new Ecuadorian friends. Chosen is truly amazing ministry. Thousands of sponsors like Pastor Kim have already been chosen by kids. Will you be next? Learn more about being chosen at worldvision.org/Chosen World Vision is a Christian humanitarian organization dedicated to working with children, families, and their communities worldwide to reach their full potential by tackling the causes of poverty and injustice. We serve all people, regardless of religion, race, ethnicity, or gender. 6 Evangelical reactions to Russias Ukraine invasion: Potentially major prophetic fulfillment Global Evangelical figures and organizations are calling for peace and prayer as top U.S. leaders fear Russias full-scale invasion of neighboring Ukraine is just the beginning of an attempt to reestablish the former Soviet Union. Russia began its attacks early Thursday, targeting Ukrainian military assets in several key cities nationwide. Reports indicate that Russian forces have also descended on the capital, Kyiv, with shelling impacting civilian locations such as bridges, schools and an apartment building. The death toll continues to rise. On Friday, Ukraine President Volodymyr Zelensky said that at least 137 Ukrainians had died so far, including 10 military officers. Additionally, he reported that at least 316 people had been wounded. Zelensky has accused Moscow of targeting civilians. Many fear the invasion will trigger another refugee crisis. The United Nations High Commissioner for Refugees said Thursday that more than 100,000 people have moved within Ukraine to flee violence. Russias invasion of Ukraine has drawn strong condemnation from the international community. U.S. President Joe Biden vowed Thursday that in 30 days his administration will re-impose sanctions he previously lifted. He said the U.S. would also work with allies to enact additional sanctions, including possibly cutting Russia off from Western financing (Swift payments system) and tech imports to thwart President Vladimir Putins plans for expansion. Biden, however, added that the U.S. will continue paying Russia for its oil imports, saying, "You know, in our sanctions package, we specifically designed to allow energy payments to continue." The president also addressed Putin's longterm strategy during Thursday's press conference, adding: He has much larger ambitions in Ukraine. He wants to, in fact, reestablish the former Soviet Union. Thats what this is about." In an interview with CBS News, Secretary of State Antony Blinken agreed. "You don't need intelligence to tell you that that's exactly what President Putin wants," Blinken said. "He's made clear that he'd like to reconstitute the Soviet empire. Short of that, he'd like to reassert a sphere of influence around neighboring countries that were once part of the Soviet bloc. And short of that, he'd like to make sure that all of these countries are somehow neutral." Among the many voices speaking out, Evangelical leaders across the globe have called on supporters to pray for Ukraine. Additionally, some Evangelical organizations have campaigns active to help those in need. The following pages highlight the reactions of five Evangelical leaders and organizations to Russia's invasion of Ukraine. Chinese court jails Christian pastor for 8 years: Fraud for preaching the Gospel A court in Chinas Hubei province has sentenced a female Christian pastor to eight years in prison on charges of fraud for preaching the Gospel after her house church refused to join the state-controlled body that regulates Protestant churches, according to reports. The Ezhou Echeng District Peoples Court sentenced Pastor Hao Zhiwei of Egangqiao Church in Ezhou city to eight years in prison earlier this month, UCA News reported. The 51-year-old pastor had been charged with fraud for preaching the Gospel and receiving donations from church members without approval from the state-run Committee of the Three-Self Patriotic Movement of the Protestant Churches and the Christian Council, her lawyer, Si Weijiang, was quoted as saying. The lawyer added that Hao, who was arrested in July 2019, is the first pastor of a house church in the country who has been implicated in a fraud case, and added that she will appeal her sentencing, watchdog group Church in Chains said. Haos church building had been demolished in August 2019 and was facing ongoing persecution, the group said, adding that after the pastors arrest, the authorities arrested several more house church pastors on the same charge, including Elder Zhang Chunlei of Guiyang Renai Reformed Church and Elders Hao Ming and Wu Jiannan of Deyang Early Rain Qingcaodi Church. The Chinese Communist Party uses the new Regulation on Religious Affairs, which took effect in 2018, to persecute house churches in various ways, Elder Li Yingqiang of Chengdu Early Rain Covenant Church wrote in an article last November. Those ways include "Sinicization," or seeking to align Christianity to Chinas culture, religious and political ideology; removing crosses, sealing up and demolishing church buildings; and banning church offerings. Other charges include: illegal business operations, inciting subversion of state power, picking quarrels and provoking trouble, and so on. These charges are thorns on loyal preachers head and Gods crown for His loyal servants, Li added. Pastor Haos youngest son, Moses, who goes to a middle school, suffers from severe depression, the U.S.-based persecution watchdog International Christian Concern said. Her husband passed away a few years ago, and her oldest son started college in 2020, so he can no longer take care of his younger brother. Moses dropped out this semester and began locking himself in a room. He refuses to interact with people and only has one meal per day, ICC said. Pastor Haos health is deteriorating in prison and she has lost a significant amount of weight, the group added. After being detained for more than two years, she has developed acute pancreatitis four times and was sent to the emergency room. She nearly lost her life. Hao has strong faith that she can be released without charge. With Beijing hosting the 2022 Winter Olympics, many have expressed outrage about Chinas treatment of religious minority communities. While China is being accused of genocide for its detainment of Uyghur and other ethnic Muslims in western China, human rights activists have voiced concern for years about the Chinese governments yearslong crackdown on unregistered churches and house church movements. Open Doors USA, a watchdog organization that monitors persecution in over 60 countries, warns that the monitoring of unregistered house churches in China increased over the last year as more house churches have experienced harassment and obstruction once their activities have been discovered. Open Doors warns that many unregistered churches have been forced to split up into small groups and gather in different locations, keeping a low-profile so as not to be detected by the sub-district officer or neighborhood committee. Russias invasion of Ukraine: Christian groups Samaritan's Purse, World Help send relief to war victims International Christian relief groups Samaritans Purse and World Help are standing alongside the Ukrainian Church to provide aid to victims as Russias full-scale military invasion of Ukraine enters into the third day Saturday with Russian troops storming toward Ukraines capital. Explosions and artillery fire could be heard in the streets of the Ukrainian capital Kyiv Friday night and street fighting with Russian forces was going on early Saturday, The Guardian reported, adding that residents had been urged to seek shelter, avoid going near windows or on balconies. Saturday morning, a residential apartment building near the international airport in Kyiv was struck by a Russian missile attack, Kyiv Independent reported, adding that no deaths had been reported and that people across the country were taking shelter underground and in subway stations. The street clashes in Ukraine have resulted in hundreds of casualties, The Associated Press reported. Amid the suffering and chaos, Evangelical humanitarian organization Samaritans Purse said it had deployed disaster response specialists to Poland and Romania, where Ukrainian refugees were arriving in large numbers. More than 50,000 Ukrainians had fled the country as of Friday night, many more are moving toward its borders, United Nations High Commissioner for Refugees Filippo Grandi was quoted as saying. Another 50,000 Ukrainians had left the country in anticipation of the war, Reuters reported earlier. Grandi said Thursday that more than 100,000 people had moved within Ukraine to flee violence. Experts have warned that a prolonged war could displace millions of Ukrainians, leading to large-scale humanitarian crisis. We have deployed members of our Disaster Assistance Response Team to surrounding countries and are standing ready to help meet emergency needs resulting from the crisis, said evangelist Franklin Graham. Please join me in praying for the people of Ukraine and for this conflict to end quickly. The specialists, which include medical staff, are assessing needs in Ukraines neighboring countries as a result of Russias invasion, which began Thursday. The group, led by Graham, is also speaking to partner churches and organizations in Ukraine to prepare and implement a strategic disaster response. The group, which works with more than 3,000 churches across Ukraine, has also prepared an Emergency Field Hospital for overseas shipment in the event that it is needed. The organization will also distribute over 600,000 gift-filled Operation Christmas Child shoeboxes for children through those churches and ministry partners. Christian group World Help, through local churches and Christian nonprofits, is also providing emergency essentials for over 1,000 displaced Ukrainians. Our hearts are breaking for the people of Ukraine, said Kraig Cole, director of International Partnerships for World Help, which serves the physical and spiritual needs of people in impoverished communities around the world. We are called to be the hands and feet of Jesus, and we want to get people the help they need as soon as possible, Cole explained. Weve been preparing for a Russian invasion, but I dont think anyone predicted an attack like this. We have no idea how the situation in Ukraine will escalate. Were just getting started. Cole also urged the Christian community in America to provide help. No one is powerless to help. Even a small gift can go a long way toward helping a person survive as they flee what is quickly becoming a full-scale warzone. This is our chance to follow the example of the Good Samaritan and to go out of our way to help someone who is hurting. Meanwhile, President Joe Biden Friday night signed an order to provide up to $600 million to Ukraine up to $350 million in military aid, and $250 million for overall assistance. Also on Friday night, Ukrainian President Volodymyr Zelenskyy spoke to his fellow European leaders in a video call, telling them it might be the last time they saw him alive, according to Chronicle Live. The United States had offered to evacuate Zelenskyy, but he rejected it, saying he would stay in the country as the fight is here, according to The Associated Press, which cited a source in U.S. intelligence. The Biden administration also wants to divert Customs and Border Protection agents from the U.S. southern border crisis to facilitate evacuations from Ukraine. In a memo sent to field operations executives Thursday, CBPs office of field operations sought volunteers who would immediately go to Poland for Operation Ukraine Support, Just the News reported. The Office of Field Operations is seeking volunteers to assist with the possible evacuation of U.S. citizens, lawful permanent residents, and their immediate family members from Ukraine, the memo read. Eligible employees who volunteer for this situation may be selected to serve a temporary duty assignment in Poland to facilitate travelers for entry into the U.S., to include providing guidance and problems resolution to other government agencies. The Biden administration had made a similar move for Afghan evacuees after the U.S. pull-out from the South Asian country. Russias invasion of Ukraine, the largest ground war in Europe since World War II, has drawn strong condemnation from the international community. On Thursday, Biden said he would re-impose sanctions he had earlier lifted, but these sanctions won't begin for 30 days. He added that the U.S. would also work with allies to enact additional sanctions, including possibly cutting Russia off from Western financing (Swift payments system) and tech imports. Biden and European nations will, however, continue paying Russia for its oil and gas imports. The president added: "in our sanctions package, we specifically designed to allow energy payments to continue." We have purposefully designed these sanctions to maximize the longterm impact on Russia and to minimize the impact on the United States and our allies, he said. Putin is the aggressor. Putin chose this war. And now he and his country will bear the consequences, Biden said. On Friday, Russia, a permanent member of the United Nations Security Council, used its veto power to block a resolution condemning its invasion. The vote at the U.N.'s headquarters in New York City was 11 in favor, one against, and three abstentions, including China and India. In Russia, authorities have arrested at least 1,800 people for holding demonstrations against the war on Ukraine, said the local arrest watchdog group OVD-Info. Russian pop stars, television show hosts and journalists have also voiced their opposition to the invasion. Russia began its attacks early Thursday, targeting Ukrainian military assets in several key cities nationwide. Ukraine President Zelensky thanks Pope Francis for praying for peace amid Putins invasion Ukrainian President Volodymyr Zelensky said he is thankful to Pope Francis for a phone call in which the leader of the Catholic Church told him he is praying for peace as Russian troops continue to attack the former Soviet nation. Four days of fighting has led to hundreds of civilian deaths and displaced thousands of Ukrainians. President Zelensky wrote on Twitter Saturday that he thanked Pope Francis @Pontifex for praying for peace in Ukraine and a ceasefire. The Ukrainian people feel the spiritual support of His Holiness, The Catholic Telegraph reported. The Ukrainian Embassy to the Holy See said Francis spoke to Zelensky on the phone on Saturday. The Holy Father expressed his deepest sorrow for the tragic events taking place in our country, the embassy wrote on Twitter. Ukraines health minister announced Saturday that at least 198 civilians, including three children, had been killed by Russian forces. The U.N. Office for the Coordination of Humanitarian Affairs believes the real figures are considerably higher as officials assessing the situation have yet to confirm other reports. More than 120,000 people have fled Ukraine since Russias invasion of Ukraine, the largest ground war in Europe since World War II. In a departure from diplomatic protocol, the pontiff on Friday paid a surprise visit to the Russian embassy to the Vatican to express his concern over Russias invasion of Ukraine, Reuters reported. Vatican spokesman Matteo Bruni was quoted as saying that Francis spent more than a half-hour at the embassy. He went to express his concern over the war. The Russian ambassador was quoted as saying that the pope called for the protection of children, the protection of the sick and suffering, and the protection of people. As missile attacks and gunfights between invading Russian troops and Ukrainian soldiers and civilians carry on in the Ukrainian capital of Kyiv, local churches are helping people take shelter in their buildings. Fr. Vyacheslav S.A.C., a pallottine priest, has posted videos on social media of his church providing shelter to families in an underground bunker surrounded by wooden furniture and minimal personal belongings, according to Reuters. Vyacheslav said the church has space to provide temporary shelter for up to 50 people, and 27 children are among those taking refuge. Meanwhile, Russia said Sunday that Israeli Prime Minister Naftali Bennett offered to mediate to end the fighting in Ukraine. The Kremlin said Bennett spoke to Russian President Vladimir Putin on the phone telling him that Israel was ready to help, The Associated Press reported, adding that it was not known whether the Russian leader had accepted the offer. US-based Christian group sends emergency supplies to Ukrainian churches as civilian death toll rises President Vladimir Putin has ordered Russia's nuclear deterrent forces to be on high alert in response to financial sanctions imposed on Russian banks by European nations following his invasion of Ukraine. In a meeting with his top officials on Sunday, Putin ordered his defense minister and the chief of the military's general staff to put the nuclear deterrent forces in a "special regime of combat duty" in response to what he claimed were "aggressive statements" by NATO members and financial sanctions that block some Russian banks from the Swift global payments system, according to The Telegraph. This comes as Ukrainian forces continued to fiercely resist invading Russian troops on the fourth day of fighting. Ukraines health minister announced Saturday that at least 198 civilians, including three children, had been killed by Russian soldiers. Among the hundreds of civilian casualties were a 6-year-old boy and a 7-year-old girl. The real figures are considerably higher as officials assessing the situation have yet to confirm other reports, the U.N. Office for the Coordination of Humanitarian Affairs said, according to Axios. As the war rages, a U.S.-based Christian group is leading efforts to support churches in Ukraine, some of which are housing displaced women and children who sought shelter after the shelling began. We have a very urgent situation, I beg you to understand, we are again sitting in the basement with children under the howl of sirens. I dont know how it will be tomorrow, we got groceries and we are distributing them, the U.S.-based group Slavic Gospel Association quoted an allied pastor in Ukraine as saying on Twitter late Saturday. While others are fleeing, local churches are engaging, said Eric Mock, SGAs vice president of ministry operations, in a statement about the ministrys support for the church-driven emergency response in Ukraine to provide food, winter clothes, blankets and medicines for thousands of at-risk people, including orphans, abandoned children with special needs, the elderly, those uprooted by the conflict, and marginalized ethnic groups. Churches in Ukraine, Mock added, are bravely rushing to help those in need right now. Theyre unstoppable in the face of this crisis. On Saturday, at least six people, including a 7-year-old girl, were killed in the shelling of Okhtyrka in the northeastern administrative division of Sumy Oblast, Governor Dmitry Zhivitsky said, according to Kyiv Independent. A woman was killed by Russian artillery in the eastern Ukrainian city of Kharkiv, and a 6-year-old boy was killed by gunfire in Kyiv, the local media outlet added. Illinois-based SGA said it was prepared to provide 175,000 meals through its partnering with a network of more than 2,300 Ukrainian and Russian pastors, including more than 40 churches in eastern Ukraine where the fighting is most intense. The need is only growing. More than 120,000 people have fled Ukraine since Russias invasion of Ukraine, the largest ground war in Europe since World War II. Experts have warned that a prolonged war could displace millions of Ukrainians, leading to large-scale humanitarian crisis. A nine-story residential building in the eastern city of Kharkiv was also hit by enemy artillery Saturday night, killing one woman. The building was extensively damaged and about 80 people were rescued, as most of them had been sheltering in the basement, according to Ukraines State Emergency Service. International Christian relief groups Samaritan's Purse and World Help are also standing alongside the Ukrainian Church to provide aid to victims. A senior U.S. defense official said Russia has at least 50% of its estimated 150,000-strong force inside Ukraine, according to U.S. estimates, Military Times reported. However, reports indicate that Ukrainian forces are putting up strong resistance to Russian troops. Ukraines U.N. Ambassador Sergiy Kyslytsya tweeted Saturday that he had appealed to the International Committee of the Red Cross to facilitate repatriation of thousands of bodies of Russian soldiers killed during its invasion of Ukraine, with an accompanying chart claiming 3,500 Russian troops had been killed, The Associated Press reported. Russia is clearly facing setbacks that it did not expect. Its taking casualties and Ukraine is taking prisoners, including some quite senior, at least one, possibly two, brigade commanders, Al Jazeera quoted Nigel Gould-Davies from the International Institute for Strategic Studies as saying. Its quite clear that Russia has a very significant advantage. But the really impressive aspect of Ukraines resistance so far is how strong and how wide it has been, Gould-Davis, a former U.K. ambassador to Belarus, told the Qatari-government run news agency. Ukraine has said it will be closing its borders with Russia and Belarus beginning Monday. Meanwhile, Ukraines Western allies are preparing more sanctions against Russia, including blocking its key banks from the main global payments system. We are resolved to continue imposing costs on Russia that will further isolate Russia from the international financial system and our economies, said a joint statement from the U.S., France, Germany, Canada, Italy, Britain and the European Commission. We will implement these measures within the coming days. Estonia, Romania, Lithuania and Latvia announced Saturday they were banning Russian airlines from their airspace. The German government has gone a step further to announce Saturday it would send weapons and other supplies directly to Ukraine, The AP reported, saying Germany is moving away from its long-held policy of not exporting deadly weapons to conflict zones. Germanys chancellery will send 1,000 anti-tank weapons and 500 Stinger surface-to-air missiles to Ukraine as quickly as possible. The Russian invasion of Ukraine marks a turning point. It threatens our entire post-war order, German Chancellor Olaf Scholz said in a statement. In this situation, it is our duty to help Ukraine, to the best of our ability, to defend itself against Vladimir Putins invading army. In Russia, street protests against Putin resumed in Moscow and St. Petersburg among other cities with people taking to the streets despite mass detentions on Thursday and Friday. OVD-Info, a rights group that tracks political arrests, reported Saturday that at least 460 protesters had been detained in 34 cities, including over 200 in Moscow. Russia said Sunday that Israeli Prime Minister Naftali Bennett offered to mediate to end the fighting in Ukraine. The Kremlin said Bennett spoke to Russian President Vladimir Putin on the phone telling him that Israel was ready to help, the AP reported, adding that it was not known whether the Russian leader had accepted the offer. President Joe Biden on Friday night signed an order to provide up to $600 million to Ukraine up to $350 million in military aid, and $250 million for overall assistance. Earlier on Friday, Russia, a permanent member of the U.N. Security Council, used its veto power to block a resolution condemning its invasion. The vote at the U.N.s headquarters in New York City was 11 in favor, one against, and three abstentions, including China and India. Franz Marc leads historic 20th/21st Century Art auction series of modern and contemporary masterpieces In a market first, Christies historic Shanghai to London sale series tops 249 million; Franz Marcs The Foxes makes top price at 42,654,500; new records set for 10 artists including Mario Schifano, Gabriele Munter and Eugene Boudin On 1 March, Christies launched the inaugural 20th/21st Century: Shanghai to London sale series, a pioneering cultural dialogue between two major international art hubs, live-streamed from Christies in Shanghai and London and incorporating salerooms in Hong Kong and New York. The historic series coincides with the opening of Christies new gallery at Shanghais Bund One and marks the first time an auction house has offered pre-1949 artworks in mainland China. The relay auction marks an extraordinary start for our Shanghai gallery, says Evelyn Lin, co-head of 20th and 21st Century Art, Christies Asia Pacific. We hope to continue to share the vibrant creativity as we deepen our connections with collectors in China. The series of three evening sales, which showcased exceptional artworks by 20th-century artists alongside contemporary names, realised a combined total of 249,070,155 // CNY 2,087,955,108 // $344,003,078 // 297,389,765 (including buyers premium). The series sold 90 per cent by lot and 93 per cent by value, demonstrating the sustained global appetite for art from the 20th and 21st centuries. The series opened in Shanghai with the 20th/21st Century: Shanghai Evening Sale, which realised CNY 222,030,200. Later, in London, the 20th/21st Century: London Evening Sale achieved 182,696,006. The evening drew to a close with the 21st edition of The Art of the Surreal Evening Sale, the only global auction dedicated to Surrealism and Dada, which totalled 39,888,380. In Shanghai, auctioneer Caroline Liang took bids from clients in the saleroom, through phone banks and via Christies LIVE online bidding channel. In London, the Evening Sale was conducted by Jussi Pylkkanen and Veronica Scarpati, who also helmed The Art of the Surreal sale. Across the three sales, registered bidders from 34 countries and five continents reflected the strength of global demand, with 21 per cent of buyers from the Americas, 31 per cent from Asia Pacific and 49 per cent from Europe and the Middle East. Collectors under the age of 40 accounted for 28 per cent of registrants. The 20th/21st Century: Shanghai Evening Sale Shanghais inaugural sale in Bund One sold 95 per cent by lot and 90 per cent by value, and represented a 50 per cent increase since Christies last auction in mainland China, in 2019. Jean-Michel Basquiat (1960-1988), Il Duce, 1982. Sold for CNY 94,160,000 on 1 March 2022 at Christies in Shanghai Leading the sale of 20 lots was Jean-Michel Basquiats Il Duce (1982), which achieved CNY 94,160,000. Painted during a pivotal year in his short but explosive career, it depicts one of the artists iconic heads against a gleaming golden background. With its frenetic painterly gestures, a network of enigmatic signs and symbols and dramatic use of colour, it exemplifies Basquiats revolutionary approach to portraiture. The work represents Basquiats auction debut in mainland China. The second highest price was for Zao Wou-Kis Le soir a lHotel du Palais (Palace Hotel by Night), which reached CNY 24,360,000. Inspired by the Atlantic Ocean around Biarritz in the southwest of France, it conveys Zaos emotional connection with the sea during his travels in the summer of 2004, the year he completed the work. Kees van Dongens La femme au collier, painted in Paris in 1908, sold for CNY 23,160,000. Depicting a model wearing a hat, with heavily kohled eyes and rouged lips, it exemplifies the artists ability to capture the vitality and modernity of the French capital in the first decade of the 20th century. There was also strong interest in contemporary artists. After a spirited international bidding battle, Amoako Boafos Orange Shirt (2019) achieved CNY 8,760,000, nearly triple the low estimate. Joel Meslers Untitled (You Deserve Great Things), from 2020, soared past its high estimate, achieving CNY 5,670,000, as did Scott Kahns 2016 work Into the Woods. Ewa Juszkiewiczs 2014 Untitled also attracted international competition. Estimated at CNY 220,000-500,000, it finally sold for CNY 3,276,000 to a bidder in Shanghai. Emmanuel Takus Ripped (2021) fetched CNY 1,638,000, more than eight times the pre-sale estimate, and a world auction record for the artist; while Ye Linghans Lucy-C-006 (2017-18) was pursued by bidders in Shanghai and Hong Kong before selling for CNY 529,200 to Hong Kong. The final lot of the sale, Colors (2020) by Edgar Plans, saw competition from London, Hong Kong and Shanghai before achieving CNY 4,410,000, more than five times the high estimate. The 20th/21st Century: London Evening Sale Following the Shanghai leg was the 20th/21st Century: London Evening Sale, which sold 86 per cent by lot and 93 per cent by value. The star of the sale was Franz Marcs 1913 masterpiece The Foxes, which sold for 42,654,500, more than triple the previous auction record for the artist. Franz Marc (1880-1916), The Foxes (Die Fuchse), 1913. Restituted by the city of Dusseldorf to the heirs of Kurt & Else Grawi. Sold for 42,654,500 on 1 March 2022 at Christies in London Restituted in 2021 by the city of Dusseldorf to the heirs of the Jewish banker and businessman Kurt Grawi and his wife Else, the work signifies a key moment in the artists career following the formation of Der Blaue Reiter in 1911. The year 1913 is a key one for Marc, said Keith Gill, head of Impressionist and Modern Art at Christies in London. He is experimenting with a new dynamic visual language, inspired by Orphism and Futurism, which would become his leaping-off point into abstraction. Francis Bacon (1909-1992), Triptych 1986-7. Sold for 38,459,206 on 1 March 2022 at Christies in London The second highest price was paid for Francis Bacons Triptych 1986-7, one of the artists last great paintings, which achieved 38,459,206. Exhibited widely and offered at auction for the first time, it encapsulates Bacons contemplation of pain, isolation and mortality in the face of historys ruthless advance, and coincides with the Royal Academy of Arts exhibition Francis Bacon: Man and Beast. Lucian Freuds Girl with Closed Eyes (1986-87), a tender portrait of his muse and fellow artist Janey Longman, achieved 15,174,500 at its auction debut. Also offered was Freuds Lobster (1944), which sold for 1,962,000. Later, Pablo Picassos Le repas frugal, from The Berggruen Family Collection, sold to New York and a round of applause for 6,014,500, a world record for any print at auction. Peter Doigs Some Houses on Iron Hill saw competitive bidding across Christies global salesrooms before selling for 2,442,000, more than triple its high estimate. There were robust results for a group of contemporary artists whose work continues to gather strength on the market. Flora Yukhnovichs 2017 painting Tu vas me faire rougir (Youre going to make me blush) realised 1,902,000; while Amoako Boafos Yellow Blanket, from 2008, more than doubled its high estimate at 1,242,000. Acquainted Intruder (2018) by Jade Fadojutimi, whose work was included in the 2021 exhibition Mixing It Up at Londons Hayward Gallery, more than tripled its low estimate at 942,000. The sale closed on a high as Woman #5672, a rare NFT from the highly sought-after World of Women portrait series, sold for 567,000 to a bidder in London on the first day of Womens History Month. The work was created and selected for sale by an artist and an online community on a mission to rebalance gender representation in the digital realm. The Art of the Surreal Evening Sale Sold 100 per cent by lot, The Art of the Surreal Evening Sale was led by Picassos 1929 La fenetre ouverte, a coded double-portrait of the artist and his muse, Marie-Therese Walter. The arrival of Marie-Therese in Picassos life not only invigorated every area of his work, it was also a pivotal moment that completely changed his style and focus from then on, said Christies deputy chairman Olivier Camu. Dating from the high point of Picassos Surrealist period, La fenetre ouverte represents a brilliant fusion of the different passions and inspirations that defined the artists life at the end of the 1920s. Held in the same European collection for half a century and offered at auction for the first time, it sold for 16,319,500. The second highest price was realised by Rene Magrittes La lumiere du pole (1926-27), which features a pair of cracked and partially broken mannequins in a desert-like landscape of steep-sided sand dunes. Infused with an inscrutable sense of mystery, it sold for 5,993,500. Later, Joan Miros 1978 work Personnage, oiseau, etoile dans un paysage attracted bids across the global salerooms before selling for 3,042,000. There was also competitive bidding for Paul Delvauxs Le soir tombe (1970), a large, enigmatic canvas featuring a number of the artists signature tropes: ethereal female nudes, deserted trains and abandoned classical temples. Consigned to auction for the first time since it was painted more than 50 years ago, it realised 1,902,000. People spat on our works: how the German Expressionists crossed boundaries to confront a society in need of salvation Fuelled by a desire to convey the truth of the rapidly changing world around them, two groups of artists Die Brucke and Der Blaue Reiter agitated the viewing public to the very depth of its soul In 1920 the artist Max Pechstein was asked, What is German Expressionism? His response was as evocative of a riot as it was an art movement: Work! Intoxication! Brain-racking! Chewing, eating, gorging, rooting up! Rapturous birth pangs! Jabbing of the brush, preferably right through the canvas. Trampling on paint tubes. Pechstein was a member of Die Brucke (The Bridge), an association of avant-garde artists that flourished for a short period in Germany before and after the First World War. They wanted to convey the truth about the rapidly changing world around them. An Expressionist does not look, he sees! declared the writer Kasimir Edschmid. Open a larger version of this image Alexej von Jawlensky (1864-1941), Stilleben mit Tasse, 1908. Oil on board. 15 x 19 in (38 x 48.3 cm). Sold for 176,400 on 4 March 2022 at Christies in London In the decades following unification in 1871, Germany experienced an economic boom. By 1900 the country was making more steel than any other European nation and becoming a world leader in electrical goods. As workers flooded into the cities to toil in the many chemical and electrical plants, poverty and disease followed. This deprivation was powerfully conveyed by Kathe Kollwitz, one of the most influential avant-garde artists of the pre-war era. Her work is often seen in tandem with that of Die Brucke and another group that emerged in the early 1900s, Der Blaue Reiter (The Blue Rider). Together they are known as the German Expressionists. Inspired by the philosophy of Friedrich Nietzsche, they strove to project their inner psyches onto canvas, shocking the public in the process. Open a larger version of this image Erich Heckel (1883-1970), Knaben am Strand (Zwei Knaben am Meer), 1919. Oil on canvas. 31 x 27 in (80 x 69.8 cm). Open a larger version of this image Heinrich Campendonk (1889-1957), Angler und Akt in Landschaft, 1919. Tempera on canvas laid down on card. 11 x 13 in (29.7 x 35 cm). Sold for 126,000 on 4 March 2022 at Christies in London In their manifesto they declared that art knows no boundaries and that frontiers are there to be crossed: Art, literature, even exact science are in various stages of change in this new era; they will all be overcome by it. The vibrant images they created were not embraced by everyone, however. Kaiser Wilhelm II described German Expressionism as gutter art, declaring it a sin against the people. Kandinsky recalled how the public was agitated to the very depth of its soul by the paintings: People felt reviled, better still, they spat on our works. Kirchner remembered those early Die Brucke days as some of the loneliest in his life, during which an agonising restlessness drove me out onto the streets day and night. There he saw the dehumanising effects of industrialisation on the people of Berlin. His subjects appear pensive, almost on the verge of a nervous breakdown, waiting for something terrible to happen. It did, in 1914, when war broke out. Many of the artists joined up. Marc had hoped that the conflict might destroy the old order, ushering in a new era in politics, art and life, as the Futurists had predicted. However, this idealism was quickly shattered. Open a larger version of this image Otto Mueller (1874-1930), Drei Akte, 1917. Tempera on burlap. 39 x 33 in (99.6 x 84.5 cm). Sold for 529,200 on 4 March 2022 at Christies in London Macke was killed in September 1914, Marc 18 months later at Verdun. The emotionally fragile Kirchner suffered a full-blown breakdown and was discharged from the army into a sanatorium. Kandinsky and Klee, disillusioned by the horrors they had seen, abandoned Expressionism and moved to Weimar in 1921 to teach at the newly formed Bauhaus school, where they advocated for a synthesis of art and design. After the war, a new group of German Expressionists emerged. Unlike Die Brucke and Der Blaue Reiter, these artists were less concerned with the self than with social satire. Otto Dix, George Grosz, Jeanne Mammen, Georg Tappert and Max Beckmann anatomised the Weimar Republic, revealing through their caustic pictures of fat industrialists, corrupt lawyers, war veterans and destitute women a country in dire need of reconstruction and salvation. This confrontational approach was echoed in German Expressionist films by F.W. Murnau, Robert Wiene and Fritz Lang. With their long shadows, visions of aberrant creatures and brooding sense of alienation, films such as Nosferatu, The Cabinet of Dr Caligari and M evoked the memory of the First World War and of unnatural death invading the security of home. Such visions of a broken society were reviled by Adolf Hitler, who wrote in Mein Kampf that modern art was a plague sent by Russian Communists, using Jewish art dealers to infect Germany with Cubism and other forms of Bolshevist visual madness. Open a larger version of this image Emil Nolde (1867-1956), Figurliche Szene mit zwei Frauen (Phantasien), 1931-1934/35. Watercolour, brush and india ink on japan paper. 8 x 12 in (21.8 x 30.4 cm). Sold for 113,400 on 4 March 2022 at Christies in London On taking power in 1933, the Nazis condemned German Expressionism as morally degenerate, and many of the artists associated with the movement, including Dix, Kandinsky and Klee, were sacked from their teaching posts. The end of German Expressionism came with the Degenerate Exhibition of 1937, where the movements paintings were mocked and vilified. By then Grosz, Klee and Kandinsky had emigrated and Pechstein had gone into hiding. Dix was to be conscripted into the Volkssturm. Kirchner, already burnt out, shot himself in 1938. Sign up today Christies Online Magazine delivers our best features, videos, and auction news to your inbox every week Subscribe President Joe Biden delivers his first state of the Union Address to a joint session of Congress at the U.S. Capitol in Washington, D.C., March 1. UPI-Yonhap President Joe Biden declared Tuesday that ''it's time for Americans to get back to work'' as he announced new efforts to allow people to return to normal activities safely after two years of pandemic disruptions. Biden used his State of the Union address to announce that his administration was launching a ''test-to-treat'' initiative to provide free antiviral pills at pharmacies to those who test positive for the virus. He also highlighted the progress made on the pandemic since last year, with a dramatic reduction in cases, readily-available vaccines and tests, and new therapeutics soon becoming more accessible. ''Tonight, I can say we are moving forward safely, back to more normal routines,'' Biden said. ''It's time for Americans to get back to work and fill our great downtowns again.'' His comments come ahead of the White House release of a new ''National COVID-19 Preparedness Plan,'' Wednesday. The White House said it would be ''a roadmap that will enable us to move forward safely, and sustain and build on the progress we've made over the past 13 months.'' In his remarks Tuesday, Biden said that in addition to starting the new antiviral initiative, his administration would allow people in the U.S. to order another round of free tests from the government. An antiviral pill from Pfizer has been shown to reduce the risk of hospitalization from COVID-19 by 90 percent. By the end of the month, the administration says, 1 million pills will be available, with double that ready for use in April. A White House official said the ''test-to-treat'' plan will initially roll out in hundreds of pharmacies across the country, including CVS, Walgreens, and Kroger locations. Those who test positive at the sites will be able to obtain the antiviral pills on the spot for immediate use. Biden said that starting next week, the administration would make available four more free tests to U.S. households through COVIDTests.gov, which has sent more than 270 million free tests to nearly 70 million households since it launched in mid-January. Patrons stand on line to order at Philippe the Original restaurant in Los Angeles, Calif., Feb. 25. AP-Yonhap COVID-19 cases have fallen to their lowest level since last summer in recent weeks, after a winter spike from the highly-transmissible Omicron variant. Deaths, though, which lag cases by weeks, are still elevated, with an average of nearly 1,700 people dying in the U.S. each day. U.S. officials emphasize that most instances of serious illnesses and death in the U.S. occur among those who are unvaccinated or who have not received a booster dose of the vaccines. Earlier Tuesday, Biden extended the federal government's 100 percent reimbursement of COVID-19 emergency response costs to states, tribes and territories through July 1, the White House announced Tuesday. White House COVID-19 coordinator Jeff Zients informed governors on a conference call that Biden is approving the extension of Federal Emergency Management Agency support to help continue FEMA-backed efforts like vaccination clinics, mass testing sites and surging hospital deal with local case spikes. ''FEMA's priority throughout the response to COVID-19 has been to coordinate and provide the necessary resources and personnel states, tribes and territories need to adequately respond to the pandemic,'' FEMA Administrator Deanne Criswell said. ''Today's extension of the 100 percent cost-share through July 1, 2022, builds on our efforts to assist impacted communities across state and federal levels.'' resources to The extension through the first half of the year is a sign that the White House continues to see a need for federal resources in combating COVID-19 even as Biden tries to guide the country to live with the coronavirus while case counts recede. Recent examples of FEMA funding include $1.2 million given to Ball State University in Indiana last month to cover on-campus testing and $91.8 million to Wisconsin to reimburse for COVID-19 testing costs and surge staffing in treatment centers. Biden, a Democrat, first signed an order directing FEMA to cover 100 percent of state emergency costs related to the coronavirus on his second day in office through September 2021. He subsequently extended it to the end of 2021 and again through April 1. (AP) Bay Area product Thomas Knapp, 55, has lived in Ukraine for less than a year. But he's ready to die for his new home. As an air raid siren echoed in the background, Knapp told SFGATE that he has spent most of the last few days indoors under a strict curfew in downtown Kyiv. Such restrictions have been common since Russian President Vladimir Putin launched an invasion on Ukraine on Feb. 24. Those who venture outside without military attire or the yellow armband of a civilian volunteer risk arrest or even being shot on sight. Hearing the bombs fall in a place hes come to love has devastated Knapp. "Im emotionally spent, Im physically spent, I'm spiritually spent. Im so angry words cant even describe, said Knapp, who was born in San Francisco and worked in Silicon Valley for years. That fury has driven him to take up arms in defense of his new community: This week, he joined a civilian territorial defense battalion, a voluntary military unit. Because he doesn't speak Ukrainian and can't understand orders when his battalion is in a fire fight, Knapp has been paired with an English-speaking veteran of the 2014 annexation of Crimea by Russia. Now armed with an AK-47, Knapp and his group are preparing for the incoming Russian forces. I'm learning as I go here, actually, because I'm just an entrepreneur, he said. Knapp briefly stopped in the middle of the call when he heard a bomb. Its loud, one just went off, its like a sonic boom, you can feel it. These are huge bombs. You hear them, even if its 3 to 4 kilometers away. The sound is becoming familiar, but no less terrible. It gets in your head, and you start to have nightmares, he said. We need more ammunition, we need more guns, we need lethal and nonlethal supplies, medical supplies. With the bombs falling on the outskirts of the city, Knapp said he was safe for now, as Russian forces had yet to reach the city center where his flat is. While he hasnt been in a firefight, he and the rest of his battalion are bracing for violence. From what his new comrades have told him, there are fates worse than death. I'm not afraid of dying, he told SFGATE. I'm afraid of ending up in a Russian gulag. I'm afraid of being caught. God's truth. Knapp, an American citizen, grew up in the Bay Area, moved to West Germany for part of his childhood, then moved back to attend San Jose State. Five months ago, he sold his home of 15 years in San Joses Willow Glen neighborhood and moved to Ukraine to found a global marketing company. Hes the father of four daughters who live in the United States. After relocating to Ukraine on a three-year residency card, he's fallen in love with the country, where he's found a higher quality of life for less money than in the Bay Area. He has a girlfriend and many friends he said he hopes to keep for life. Staying in Ukraine when the invasion began was a wrenching decision, knowing he was leaving his daughters behind. As we spoke, Knapp got a text: Dad, please be safe. Please come home. I miss you so much. I hope to see you soon. Dad, I need to be in your arms again, not through a screen, please. But he cant bring himself to abandon the country hes so quickly come to see as his home. When you make a friend in Ukraine, you make friends for life, he said. The Russian invasion of Ukraine began Thursday, Feb. 24, with massive air and missile strikes and ground troops moving in from the north, east and south. Read "What to know as Russian forces target Kyiv" on SFGATE. Editor's note: This story was updated at 9:55 a.m., March 2, to clarify in a photo caption that Ukraine was part of the former USSR. This is a carousel. Use Next and Previous buttons to navigate (Bloomberg) -- Oil extended its relentless rally above $110 a barrel before an OPEC+ meeting as the severity of disruption to Russian supplies showed signs of growing. Futures in London and New York both jumped above the threshold intraday, with West Texas Intermediate hitting the highest since 2013. The markets structure has moved into super-backwardation, indicating extreme scarcity, while prices have also surged through major option strikes, exacerbating price swings. Russias flagship Urals crude oil was offered for sale at a record discount but got no bidders, the latest indication that trading of oil from the countrys western ports is grinding to a halt. Consultant Energy Aspects said about 70% of Russian crude trade is currently frozen amid banking sanctions, spiking freight rates and wider political risks. The global oil market had already tightened significantly prior to the invasion, after economies rebounded strongly from the pandemic. The disruption to Russian exports has the potential to drive crude prices even higher. Traders are paying the most in years betting that will happen, while banks including Morgan Stanley have boosted near-term forecasts. In a bid to cool prices, the International Energy Agency announced a strategic oil reserve release, but so far it has done little to tame a rampant market. The situation across the energy sector is very serious, IEA Executive Director Fatih Birol said Tuesday. The next frontier of oil prices will be defined by prices in search of demand destruction, RBC Capital Markets analysts including Michael Tran wrote in a note to clients. Two weeks ago, our call for $115 a barrel by summer seemed aggressive, in light of the ongoing tightening fundamental framework, infused by geopolitics, there may be further risk to the upside. Brent remains in deep backwardation, a bullish structure where prompt barrels are more expensive than later-dated cargoes, indicating nervousness over tightening supply. The benchmarks prompt spread was $5.02 a barrel, a level not previously seen this century. Russias invasion is entering a deadly new phase, which could result in more sanctions. President Joe Biden is facing pressure from lawmakers in both parties to cut off U.S. imports of Russian oil and gas to escalate the cost to Russia, which would likely provide another boost to global prices. The impact of Russias invasion of Ukraine has reverberated far and wide. Oil majors such as BP Plc, Shell Plc and Exxon Mobil Corp are exiting Russia, while banks across the globe including in Singapore are restricting trade financing for raw materials. Separately, the American Petroleum Institute reported U.S. crude inventories fell by 6.1 million barrels last week, according to people familiar with the data. Stockpiles at the key storage hub in Cushing also declined, the API said. Energy Information Administration figures are due later Wednesday. 2022 Bloomberg L.P. The General Assembly emergency special session in New York is seen March 1. After more than 100 countries spoke during two days of extraordinary debate, the U.N. General Assembly was poised to vote Wednesday on whether it will vigorously deplore Russia's invasion of Ukraine and demand Moscow withdraw its troops immediately. AFP-Yonhap After more than 100 countries spoke during two days of extraordinary debate, the U.N. General Assembly was poised to vote Wednesday on whether it will vigorously deplore Russia's invasion of Ukraine and demand Moscow withdraw its troops immediately. The vote on the draft resolution is being touted by diplomats as a bellwether of democracy in a world where autocracy is on the rise in countries from Myanmar to Venezuela, and comes as Russian President Vladimir Putin's forces bear down on Kyiv while terrified Ukrainians flee. The resolution is non-binding, but if it passes will serve as a powerful rebuke to Russia on the world stage and a marker of its isolation. The vote must reach a two-thirds threshold to pass. Putin launched the full-scale invasion of Ukraine Feb. 24, with Moscow pleading "self-defense" under Article 51 of the U.N. Charter. But that has been roundly rejected by Western countries who accuse Moscow of violating Article 2 of the Charter, requiring U.N. members to refrain from the threat or use of force to resolve a crisis. The text of the resolution led by European countries in coordination with Ukraine has undergone numerous changes in recent days. It no longer "condemns" the invasion as initially expected, but instead "deplores in the strongest terms the Russian Federation's aggression against Ukraine." It also makes clear the United Nations is "condemning" Putin's decision to put his nuclear forces on alert, a move that ignited an immediate outcry from the West. Permanent Representative of the Republic of Korea to the United Nations Ambassador Cho Hyun speaks on the Russia-Ukraine conflict at the General Assembly emergency special session in New York on March 1. AFP-Yonhap 'Empire' Nearly every General Assembly speaker Monday and Tuesday unreservedly condemned the war and the risks of military escalation. Amid fears of a domino effect should Ukraine fall to Russia, Colombia rejected any return to "empire," while Albania wondered: "Who will be next?" From the Arab world it was Kuwait, itself the victim of an invasion by Iraq in 1990, whose denunciation of Moscow was the most explicit, with the rest of the Middle East remaining in the background. Japan and New Zealand led condemnation from Asia, while India close to Moscow militarily remained cautious and China stressed the world had "nothing to gain" from a new Cold War. But Russia was not entirely friendless, as Syria, Nicaragua, Cuba and North Korea all sided with Moscow and blasted what they saw as the double standards of Western nations who have invaded countries including Libya, Iraq and Afghanistan in recent years. President Joe Biden delivers his first State of the Union address to a joint session of Congress at the Capitol, in Washington, Mar. 1. AP-Yonhap Dr. Sarah Stabenfeldt, an associate professor at Arizona State University (ASU), was elected to the American Institute for Medical and Biological Engineering (AIMBE) College of Fellows for her contributions to neural tissue engineering, regenerative medicine, nanoparticle therapeutics and discovering biomarkers in injured brains. Stabenfeldt is also a 1998 graduate of Collinsville High School. This work has led Stabenfeldt to be named among the top two percent of medical and biological engineers in the country through her election to the College of Fellows of the American Institute for Medical and Biological Engineering, or AIMBE. I am very humbled to be included in this prestigious society, Stabenfeldt said to ASU's Full Circle Magazine. Many of my mentors and role models are Fellows. To be recognized as their peer is beyond any achievement I thought I would accomplish. Stabenfeldts multidisciplinary approach to the discovery and development of novel biomarkers and therapeutics for traumatic brain injury particularly stood out to her AIMBE peers as did her accomplishments and recognition from local and national organizations. AIMBE Fellows also give back to their fields and contribute to public policy through advocacy efforts and initiatives. She leads a team of postdoctoral students, doctoral candidates and graduate and undergraduate student research trainees in her laboratory, the Stabenfeldt Lab, to develop regenerative strategies for neural injuries. She has earned multiple new investigator awards, including the National Institutes of Health Innovator Award, the National Science Foundation CAREER Award and the Arizona Biomedical Research Commission Early Stage Investigator Award. Stabenfeldts early career success has been sustained by her pursuit of impactful research questions and continued funding by the National Institutes of Health and Arizona Biomedical Research Commission. Stabenfeldt advocates for addressing systemic inequalities and disparities in science, technology, engineering and math, or STEM fields. At ASU, she works with multiple diversity, equity and inclusion groups, and participates nationally in biomedical engineering community diversity groups, such as the Biomedical Engineering Societys Diversity Committee and the Underrepresented Needs in Technology and Engineering series, and the Society for Biomaterials Diversity Taskforce. Her newest distinction with the AIMBE College of Fellows, she says, provides energy and motivation to keep pursuing impactful research problems in the lab and cultivating an inclusive environment for the next generation of biomedical engineers. AIMBE is a nonprofit organization that brings together academia, government, industry and scientific societies in a community that advances medical and biomedical engineering to benefit peoples lives. It advocates for research support from government entities, communication about public policy and career development training. Stabenfeldt will be honored alongside 152 colleagues in the AIMBE Fellow Class of 2022 at a formal induction ceremony held during AIMBEs 2022 Annual Event on March 25. The following is compiled by Jerry Heiman with the Benzie Area Historical Society and includes excerpts from the Benzie Banner 100 years ago. EARLY DAYS OF RADIO Have you ever listened to wireless music? If not, you have missed much, if you have, you may or may not experience some freaks such as I have often. For instance, Saturday evening while listening in for Pittsburgh or Detroit, I heard a wireless message telling of stolen autos, and the end of the message was stand by please for telephone W.R.R. and then W.R.R. came in on the telephone and stated he was The Fire And Police Protection Dept. of Dallas, Texas, and again he gave out information about stolen autos, and at the end he said that the usual music would follow in an hour. So as not to miss this music from 1,200 miles away, I left my set as it was and came back in an hour, but could not get Dallas again. But along came W.J.Z. at Newark, N.J. with a lot of up-to-date dance music which we enjoyed till near midnight. Now why should I hear Dallas, 1,200 miles from here, and miss Pittsburgh, Detroit, Chicago and all within 500 miles of me, and then get Newark at 1,000 miles? Freaks yes, a common occurrence in wireless, and the solving of such problems is what keeps the radio experimenter interested. Just two counties in Michigan do not have the county road system. Benzie is one of them. Theres a reason for this, as there is for all things. The many counties of the state have found that the county system of caring for highways is the most satisfactory, the way to have real roads. The days of the old fashioned township system have gone by the boards, we are in a modern era. Grand Rapids may elect a woman sheriff so that her efficient husband can retain his office as peace officer of the county. Benzie county took the first step in a similar case involving the Gatess. It has panned out well. Good officers are entitled to re-election. If wives must run for office to hold the job for their good husbands, lets vote for em. Benzie is rapidly recovering from the effects of last weeks sleet and ice storm. Railroad service was resumed Monday, no trains having been through with the exception of work train and crew since last Wednesday, the first train from the south ,due here at 5:47, reached here about six hours late. After a week of fussing with candles, oil lamps and even storage battery lights, the people were glad to see the current turned on again Thursday afternoon. A.G. Vermett, proprietor of the Beulah Inn for the past two seasons, has sold the property to J.C. Mosier, a traveling salesman of Grand Rapids, who expects to take possession next week. Mr. and Mrs. Vermett will leave Wednesday for Hammond, Ind., their former home. If you already subscribe to our eEdition edition, sign up for FREE access to our online edition. Thanks for reading the El Campo Leader News. BIG RAPIDS U.S. Rep. John Moolenaar has been visiting with constituents to discuss important issues that impact residents of West Central Michigan. Currently representing the 4th Congressional District in Michigan, Moolenaar is running for election in 2022 to represent the newly drawn 2nd Congressional District, which includes Mecosta, Osceola and Lake counties. Also running in MI-2, along with Moolenaar, are Jericho Gonzales (R), Tom Norton (R), and Ray Johnson (D). U.S. Rep. Bill Huizenga (R), who has represented the old MI-2 district since his election in 2010, will now be running in the MI-4 district. Moolenaar recently spoke with reporters for the Herald Review to talk about issues important to the local communities. THE BOOST ACT One important issue throughout Osceola County, as well as most rural areas in Michigan, is limited internet access, which Moolenaar said is a priority for him. We have all been dealing with COVID-19 the last couple of years and, if anything, it has shown us the importance of internet access, from students learning online to people accessing medical telehealth and people working remotely, he said. Agriculture benefits a lot from access to the internet, and so do small businesses. If you can access the internet, it really adds a lot to your quality of life. If you cannot, then that can become very frustrating. So that has been a big priority for me. I had a chance to see how the electric cooperatives are building out fiber here in the area, he said. I am on the (House) Appropriations Committee, and we are providing more financial resources for building out fiber optic networks, but that takes time. While that is being built out, we wanted to have other options for people to access the internet, so I have sponsored the Boost Act, which will provide a tax credit that enables individuals to purchase internet boosters or hot spots. The Boost Act will allow a one-time $300 tax credit to offset the cost of equipment to capture an internet signal, he said. The technology to capture the signal can be pretty costly, and with the Boost Act, we are trying to help the homeowners who are getting the message from the internet companies that it may take some time to get service to them, Moolenaar said. In addition to the funding provided in the previous Farm Bill, Moolenaar said they will be working on a new Farm Bill in the next legislative session that will hopefully be able to further support rural broadband expansion efforts and provide incentives for internet companies to expand. It takes resources, and it takes time, Moolenaar said. The companies putting in the fiber are experience a worker shortage and supply chain issues, as well. I realize if someone is telling you it may be five or ten years until they get fiber to your area, that is not very helpful, so we are trying to help incentivize different technologies and innovations as well. VACCINE MANDATES Another important issue for Moolenaar is the vaccine mandates, which he considers an ineffective one-size-fits-all policy. I just dont think the federal government should be in the business of telling people what to do for their own health care, Moolenaar said. That should be up to the individual and their health care provider. I introduced legislation that would withhold funding from OSHA if they enforce a vaccine mandate. Fortunately, the Supreme Court agreed with that. When asked how he reconciled eliminating the vaccine mandate with the need for workers to feel like they have a safe work environment, he said his goal is to make the vaccine, along with treatment options and safety equipment (PPE) widely available. I think we need to focus more on the treatment side and having access to treatments, because, ultimately, these viruses are going to be with us in different mutations, Moolenaar said. I also think it is important to recognize that there is a natural immunity that occurs, and that is something the federal government has not been good about recognizing and understanding. I think where we are right now is that we need to find better medicines to treat the disease, he continued. We need to be researching the effectiveness of different treatments and make that information available to healthcare providers. These are the things we need to have a better understanding of, and we need to be updating our protocols based on that information. ROBEN-HOOD AIRPORT EXPANSION A major project Moolenaar sees as important to the local communities is the Roben-Hood Airport runway expansion. In May, he met with Big Rapids city officials and airport representatives to discuss the project and pledged to do what he could to help get it funded. We were able to successfully put some funding in an appropriations bill that went through the House, unfortunately we are in a process where there has to be agreement with the Senate and the White House, he said. Right now, we are under a continuing resolution from the previous years appropriation rather than the appropriation that was recently passed in the House. He went on to explain that the House is looking at a policy that will allow members of Congress to specify certain community projects for funding, which will make it easier to get the funding where it is most needed. Because the House (previously) adopted a policy of no earmarks, members cannot specify funding for a particular pet project, Moolenaar explained. What we have decided to look at is a policy that will say if it is a nonprofit or a government institution, and if it is posted and disclosed and it is transparent, you can have community projects funded specifically in an appropriations bill. The House has adopted the policy, but the Senate has not yet. When it came down to the importance of this airport infrastructure, that is a perfect example of congressionally directed spending that would support a project where the benefits are widely dispersed, he said. The way it works now, the executive branch determines everything. Congress doesnt have a role. This would be an example of Congress exerting its Constitutional role of the power of the purse to direct spending. If, and when, it passes the Senate, my goal is to specify this project as something to support. He added that if the policy does not pass the Senate, the airport officials will have to apply for a grant, and it would be at the discretion of the executive branch whether or not to approve the grant. It is up to the FFA and the people that oversee airport funding as to how to set those grant criteria and what they are going to use the funding for, so that is why it makes sense to me for Congress to have some say, he said. You have a bureaucrat in Washington DC that doesnt know anything about Big Rapids, so that is why I think Congress should have a stronger role in those decisions. FAILING DAMS Moolenaar said that as they go through the appropriations process, they will be asking for recommendations from communities for projects they want funded, and they will look at those recommendations to get a better understanding of what the project is so that they can be an effective advocate for them. To me, infrastructure is right at the top, and an important area of that is the dams that failed," he said, referring to the Edenville and Sanford dams that failed in May 2020, flooding communities in Midland County. He said the rebuilding of the dams would be difficult to sell as a federal project for funding, but stabilizing them so that there is not more erosion might be possible, and they are working with the USDA Rural Development program to advocate for additional funding to support that. Going forward, that is something we will be putting in requests for, to make sure further damage is not being done, he said. The USDA Rural Development grant program is a separate entity that is helping communities get funding for things like new fire trucks and equipment, as well as infrastructure funding for water and sewer. USDA grants typically fund police and fire departments and there are specific criteria as to what the funds can be used for, but they also offer low-interest loans for infrastructure related projects and those loans can be very beneficial to smaller communities, he said. Where our office works with it is, we will have a community tell us they are interested in a grant from the USDA, and we will write a letter of support and advocate for that project, Moolenaar said. That is where we will do whatever we can to help a local community with its priorities. For rural communities, it is a huge shot in the arm, so when we take up the next Farm Bill, I want to make sure that the USDA Rural Development program is a strong priority. LINE 5 TUNNEL Moolenaar said he supports the Line 5 tunnel construction and believes it is the safest way to transport the needed propane and other energy sources. The question is, Is the tunnel safe? and I believe it will be, Moolenaar said. We have a responsibility to ensure that it is, and as it has been proposed, with all the safeguards, I think it is absolutely the best approach. I love the Great Lakes and am a supporter of the Great Lakes Restoration Initiative, he continued, but when you consider all the different ways to transport oil and gas, I believe these pipelines, especially with this tunnel, is by far the most cost effective, as well as the safest way to protect our natural resources. We need propane and other energy, and we want to make sure it is transported in a safe and effective way. My understanding is that this is innovative with the goal of making it as safe and efficient as possible. The Great Lakes Tunnel is a $500-million private investment by Enbridge in Michigan, which will be built deep under the Straits to house Line 5. While Line 5 has operated safely and reliably in the Straits for more than 65 years, the Great Lakes Tunnel will be bored through rock, as much as 100 feet below the lake bed virtually eliminating the chance of a pipeline incident in the Straits, information on the Embridge website said. Lined with thick, reinforced concrete, a tunnel would protect the aquatic environmentand reduce the likelihood of environmental impact to near zero. The tunnel would eliminate the possibility of an anchor strike, and it may also provide access for ongoing inspection and maintenance work. Once this tunnel is complete, the existing dual pipelines at the Straits, which have operated safely since 1953, would permanently deactivate. This is a carousel. Use Next and Previous buttons to navigate Webb County has decided who is representing the Republican Party in the State Board of Education District 1 race, while a pair of Democrats will first take a detour with a runoff election. Michael Travis Stevens won the Republican nomination on Tuesday following Election Day with 63.7% of the vote, collecting 39,848 in total. He defeated Lani Popp who had 36.3%, or 22,686 votes. Stevens also had a considerable lead at the Webb County level. He picked up 76.87% of the vote, getting 1,861 in total, while Popp had 23.13% with 560 votes. "I'm extremely grateful for everyone who voted for me and it means a lot to have their trust and confidence," Stevens said. "Today has been exciting, but exhausting. I spent the majority of the day visiting various polling sites to greet voters. Even though it was a lot of work, meeting voters and having the chance to speak with them was so rewarding." At the Democratic level, Melissa N. Ortega and Laura Marquez are heading to a runoff election to figure out who gets their party's nomination. Ortega collected 46.1% of the vote, picking up 42,212 overall votes, while Marquez was behind her with 35.5% off of 32,523 votes. Omar Yanar took third place in the election with 18.4%, collecting 16,817 votes. Webb County saw similar results as Ortega led the way with 46.75% on 7,181 votes, ahead of Marquez (38.18%, 5,865 votes) and Yanar (15.08%, 2,316). "Im feeling really positive," Ortega said late Tuesday night prior to the final results being released. "If I do go into a runoff, it will give me more opportunity to engage with the community and reach more educators. My day has been encouraging, and Ive had really great interactions with voters at the polls." The runoff election will take place on May 24. The general election will be Nov. 8. The current representative for the State Board of Education District 1 is Georgina Cecilia Perez. She will remain in her position through January 2023. Perez represents 40 counties in west Texas along 900 miles of the Texas-Mexico border. Brent Stirton, Staff / TNS AUSTIN, Texas (AP) A 37-year-old Austin man was arrested Tuesday after federal agents accused him of civil disorder and related offenses in last years riot at the U.S. Capitol, officials said. Geoffrey Samuel Shough, 37, was arrested in Austin, according to a Justice Department statement. Cody Hooks A bull ride lasts eight seconds, but a lot can go wrong in those eight seconds. A father is being praised on social media after a viral video shows him saving his son from a charging bull at a Texas rodeo show earlier this month. His son, Cody Hooks, was thrown from his bull while participating in a rodeo event in Belton, according to the San Antonio Express-News. The video showed Hooks getting knocked unconscious right out the gate. The bull prepares to charge Hooks, however, his father Landis Hooks, jumped into the arena and drapes himself over his son's body to protect him. Some of the best years of my life I miss those people. Good times and memories, but I have moved on. Not my best days, but I have made peace with them. Glad to be away from those people I dont miss the high school experience. Vote View Results Polls closed at 7 p.m. Tuesday, March 1, and although Texas is reporting 95% of precincts as of this morning, it's safe to say who will be on the ballot for the midterm elections and who won't. Here are some of the key winners, losers, and close races that aren't quite finished. RELATED: Texas primaries: Race results for San Antonio and Bexar County Beto O'Rourke vs. Gov. Greg Abbott Beto O'Rourke claimed victory in the Texas Democratic primary race for governor Tuesday night, with a current count of 936,003 votes, according to the Secretary of State's office. His victory sets him up for a contentious race against Trump-endorsed incumbent Gov. Greg Abbott in the midterm elections in November. Abbott pulled an easy win in the Republican primary with 1,257,589 votes. Stephen Spillman / Stephen Spillman Paxton comes up short Current Texas Attorney General Ken Paxton only came out with a little over 42% of the Republican primary vote, sending him into a runoff against incumbent land commissioner George P. Bush. Bush took 427,743 votes, compared to Paxton's 799,203. There is a little over 640,000 votes between the other two candidates, U.S. Rep. Louie Gohmert and attorney Eva Guzman. The runoff could swing more heavily in Paxton's favor if Bush doesn't win over those votes. Alma E. Hernandez /Alma E. Hernandez / For the San Antonio Express News Bexar County Judge race heats up On the Republican side of the Bexar County judge race, former commissioner Trish DeBerry came out as the clear winner with 49,342 votes. But the Democratic ballot for the local midterm election remains undecided as neither former district judge Peter Sakai or former state representative Ina Minjarez breached over 50% of the vote. The result sets them up for a runoff election on May 24. Josie Norris / San Antonio Express-News Casar claims victory Greg Casar, former Austin city councilman, won the Democratic spot for a shot at the U.S. Rep., District 35 seat with 25,306 votes as of this morning. The Republican opponent for District 35 is still undecided. Progressive candidate Dan McQueen will face Michael Rodriguez in a runoff. Casar is expected to win the seat, having already pulled out a Democratic turnout of 41,312 votes in comparison to the Republican turnout of 13,543 votes. Jerry Lara / San Antonio Express-News Cuellar still not safe Another progressive candidate, Jessica Cisneros, pulled in enough votes to send the race for the U.S. Rep., District 28 seat into a runoff against incumbent Rep. Henry Cuellar. Cuellar, who was raided by the FBI and is under investigation, couldn't pull enough votes to breach 50%, coming in with 49.98% of the vote. Other takeaways Bexar County had a primary turnout of 15% out of 1,194,360 total registered voters. That number surpasses the 2018 primary turnout of 14% out of 1,073,655 registered voters. For comparison, that's 183,432 voters in 2022 over 156,456 voters in 2018. Marc LaHood, former district attorney Nico LaHood's brother, will face incumbent Joe Gonzales in the midterm race for Bexar County district attorney. Click here to see the results of the primary election. The March 1 Texas primary has already been afflicted with sky-high ballot application and ballot rejections rates. It appears election night Tuesday also did not go without a hitch, and local officials now themselves at odds with the Secretary of State's office over accusations of tardy ballot counts exceeding mandated deadlines. As the polls closed Tuesday in the largest county in Texas, Secretary of State John Scott issued a statement declaring Harris County election officials would not meet the state's 7 p.m. Wednesday cutoff for counting results due to damaged ballots. State law requires all counties to report results from early voting and Election Day within 24 hours of polls closing on election night, Scott wrote. We are closely monitoring the progress of ballot tabulation in Harris County to ensure all relevant election laws are followed and that legitimately cast ballots by Harris County voters in both the Democratic and Republican Primary Elections are counted accurately and timely, Scott wrote. Harris County election officials have indicated to our office that the delay in ballot tabulation is due only to damaged ballot sheets that must be duplicated before they can be scanned by ballot tabulators at the central count location." Scott said his office would work with the county to comply with the election code. We want to ensure that all Texans who have cast a ballot in this years Primary Elections can have confidence in the accuracy of results, Scott wrote. Harris County elections officials are pushing back on Scott's claim that the county is not following state law and said the election results will be tabulated by the deadline. "Harris County has never said that we're not counting the results tonight," said County Elections Administrator Isabel Longoria in a statement. "Harris County has never said that we're not able to return results over tomorrow night." Leah Shah, Harris County Elections Administrators Office spokeswoman, said the issue arose after Republican and Democratic count committees reached out to the Secretary of State for clarification about new penalties under Senate Bill 1, the state's strict new election law. "As with many election laws, counties from time to time have questions about the interpretation of those laws," Shah said. "This basically brought up a conversation to say how are we interpreting the law and what does it mean if we don't meet these requirements because there are new laws in place." According to Shah, the SOS recommended that if there were any concerns, the county could request a court order to have an extension. In the process of discussing this, the SOS released the press release about potential delays, Shah said "It kind of took us aback," Shah said. "It took what is best practice of using the secretary of state office as a resource to help answer questions and took that conversation out of context and aired it in an unusual way." Shah added that damaged paper ballots are not uncommon occurrences during elections. "We knew that with two paper ballots, there is a greater number of papers we will process and that means more hand-counting at the end of the night. There wasn't a concern, however, that there was an unusual amount of damaged paper." The elections office Wednesday morning announced staff worked through the night to process ballots from hundreds of polling locations. Meanwhile, the allegation of past-due ballot counts has drawn strong criticism from state Republican leaders. Lt. Gov. Dan Patrick released a statement accusing Harris County of trying to crash elections in Texas. As the polls close across much of Texas, Harris County, the states largest and the nations third-largest county, responsible for over 10% of the statewide GOP primary turnout announced they have train-wrecked the counting of votes during todays election," Patrick wrote. "Lina Hidalgo and the Democrats are responsible for this botched job." Despite an endorsement from former President Donald Trump, Texas Attorney General Ken Paxton failed to garner enough Republican support in Tuesday's GOP primary to avoid a runoff. The embattled incumbent, under indictment since 2015 and facing an FBI probe into how he runs his office, will face Land Commissioner George P. Bush, scion of a political dynasty, in a May 24 runoff, according to Decision Desk HQ. Paxton, the two-term incumbent, boasted the largest campaign war chest. But in a field of four candidates, he was unable to secure more than 50% of the vote, setting him up on the defensive in the biggest fight of his political life. Former Texas Supreme Court Justice Eva Guzman and Bush were neck and neck throughout Tuesday evening, but Bush was able to pull ahead as election day results were tallied. U.S. Rep. Louie Gohmert of Tyler trailed them for much of the night. Neither Guzman nor Gohmert had conceded late Tuesday night. With legal clouds hanging over his candidacy, Paxton is a prime target for Democrats in the general election. His intraparty challengers have said if Paxton wins, the Republicans would essentially hand the general election to Democrats. Bush hammered that point after news outlets determined he would be Paxton's challenger in a runoff. "That's what's at stake in this race," he said. "That's what this campaign is about. It's not about one individual. It's about preserving conservative values in our state." At an election night watch party in McKinney on Tuesday night, Paxton acknowledged he was heading toward a runoff race and pitched himself as the candidate against the "establishment." Late in the campaign, Paxton had also labeled Guzman as the "establishment" candidate. "May 24 is not that far away. Tomorrow we start 0-0," Paxton told the crowd. "If you want to keep winning for Texas, if you want to be part of saving Texas and saving this country, we're going to have to fight the fight for the next two and a half months, get our vote back out, unite the conservatives." For months, Paxtons opponents have blasted him for his legal troubles, which they have flagged as a knock on his integrity and a distraction in his ability to effectively carry out his duties. Eight of Paxtons former top deputies accused him of bribery and abuse of office, which the FBI is now investigating. Paxton also has been under indictment since 2015 on securities fraud charges. He has repeatedly denied wrongdoing. Bush said he would continue to educate voters about Paxton's legal troubles and the FBI investigation into him for bribery and abuse of office, citing that only 1 in 3 Republican voters knew about those troubles during the campaign. "He is going to divert attention away from his legal problems and personal challenges," Bush said of Paxton. "Im going to be the most effective to secure the border, back law enforcement and take on issues that we've been talking about on this campaign. So he can talk all he wants, but we're going to have three months to have this debate if he dares leave his basement." At the Bush campaign's watch party in Austin, supporters were cautiously celebratory once the state had counted more than 70% of the votes and Bush's lead over Guzman continued to expand. After speaking with reporters without declaring victory around 10:30 p.m., Bush walked into a room full of supporters who loudly cheered for him. "We knew it was going to be a long night," said Jay Zeidman, one of Bush's supporters, who said election night was a roller coaster of emotions. "As a friend, just watching him go through the emotions over the last few months, being away from his family a lot, putting in the time and the miles. I just couldn't be prouder of the race he's run. ... Tonight is a culmination of what we've experienced. Bush challenged Paxton to five televised debates across Texas but said, "I suspect that he won't show up to anything." Bush said he would hit the ground running Wednesday "as if we're starting a new campaign." He also said he'd reach out to Guzman and Gohmert, as well as their supporters, to ask them to join his effort to "restore honesty and integrity" to the attorney general's office. "This is a cause greater than self," Bush said. "This isn't about me. It's about making sure that we lock arms and make this change." Get the data and visuals that accompany this story Bush pitched himself as the best candidate because of his track record in the private sector, serving in the U.S. military and running a large state agency with 800 employees. Guzman touted her 22 years of legal experience in state courts and questioned Bushs legal chops, criticizing him for suspending his law license over the last decade. Gohmert offered voters a candidate whose conservative politics were similar to Paxtons but without the legal baggage. Both candidates are dedicated acolytes of Trump, though Paxton was the one to win his endorsement. As election day neared, Paxton started taking his opponents more seriously as polls revealed uncertainty that Paxton could win outright. He recognized Gohmerts threat and began running negative TV ads against him in Gohmerts home region of East Texas. A week before the election, Paxton ran TV ads that blasted Gohmert for missing hundreds of votes in Congress during his 17 years in office. Gohmert said that criticism showed Paxtons desperation and aired his own ad accusing Paxton of dishonesty. Paxton also took out ads against Guzman, painting her as the most liberal justice on the Texas Supreme Court and a supporter of critical race theory. While all four candidates were well funded, Paxton had the biggest war chest, with $7.5 million on hand at the end of January. Bush, the runner-up in the money race at that time, had $2.6 million. Gohmert had less than $1 million in the bank during the same period. Guzman also raked in a lot of cash, raising $1 million in 10 days to kick off her campaign. She attracted the support of major political groups like Texans for Lawsuit Reform, which endorsed her in a rare move against an incumbent. On the Democratic side, Rochelle Garza, a former American Civil Liberties Union lawyer from Brownsville, was the top vote-getter and is headed into a May runoff. But it is still unclear whom she will face as Joe Jaworski, an attorney and former Galveston mayor, and Lee Merritt, a high-profile civil rights lawyer, were in a tight battle for second place early Wednesday. "I am incredibly honored for every vote our campaign received in this election and the broad movement we were able to build in only four short months," Garza said. "This campaign expanded overnight with people from all across the state and country who saw themselves in this campaign and who believed in the future of Texas enough to invest in it." "I got in this race to fight for Texas families, protect voting and reproductive rights, and hold corporations and bad actors to account when they take advantage of Texans," she added. "Indicted Ken Paxton is the most corrupt attorney general in the country, and our campaign is ready to defeat him this November. Jaworski said in a tweet that his team was reviewing the results as they came in and expected a "late night." Merritt said he was confident he would make it into the runoff but would not have final vote results Tuesday night because of technical issues in Harris County's reporting of the vote counts. Garza ran on protecting the right to vote and to have an abortion in the state. Jaworski ran on taking on corruption in state government. Merritt ran on changing the criminal justice system, protecting the right to vote and defending abortion rights. Mike Fields, a former Republican Harris County judge, ran in the Democratic primary on providing a centrist candidate who contrasted with the polarization presented by candidates from both parties. Disclosure: Texans for Lawsuit Reform has been a financial supporter of The Texas Tribune, a nonprofit, nonpartisan news organization that is funded in part by donations from members, foundations and corporate sponsors. Financial supporters play no role in the Tribune's journalism. Find a complete list of them here. The Texas Tribune is a member-supported, nonpartisan newsroom informing and engaging Texans on state politics and policy. Learn more at texastribune.org. A 28-year-old liberal immigration lawyer appears headed for a runoff in May with Rep. Henry Cuellar, South Texas 17-year incumbent, after neither candidate Tuesday seemed capable of mustering 50% of the vote in the states most closely watched House primary. The first primaries in what promises to be a grueling midterm season gave indications of battles to come. For Republican leaders eager to win control of the House, the congressional results were a promising sign that the party establishment can still beat back challenges from the far right. For Democrats, another lesson emerged progressive activists could pull the party leftward next year, whether or not Democrats still control the House. In Texass 28th district, which stretches from San Antonio to the border region around Laredo, Jessica Cisneros, the immigration lawyer, was narrowly outpacing Cuellar, one of the most conservative Democrats left in the House, after losing to him by 3.6 percentage points in the primaries in 2020. Were probably not going to know the full results tonight, she told supporters in Laredo late Tuesday night. But she added that her team was holding out hope for victory. We dont let that hope die, because we know we deserve so much better. Cisneros was backed by the faces of progressive activism, Sen. Bernie Sanders and Rep. Alexandria Ocasio-Cortez, as well as Justice Democrats, the insurgent group that has pressed liberals to challenge established House incumbents. It appeared that she would be held below 50% because another liberal in the race, Tannya Benavides, had just under 5% of the vote. Greg Casar, another progressive activist, easily won the Democratic primary in a strongly liberal district that stretches from Austin to San Antonio, all but guaranteeing his election to the House in November. Tonights results show voters want elected officials who will take on corporate interests and deliver bold progressive policies for the American people, said the leaders of the Congressional Progressive Caucus political action committee, Reps. Pramila Jayapal of Washington, Mark Pocan of Wisconsin and Jamie Raskin of Maryland. The Republican story was about the establishment. In the race to replace retiring Rep. Kevin Brady in Texas 8th district, former Navy SEAL Morgan Luttrell, who was backed by House Republican leadership, had a wide lead over Christian Collins, the hard-right candidate backed by Reps. Marjorie Taylor Greene of Georgia and Madison Cawthorn of North Carolina. And a newly drawn, heavily Republican district south of Houston will send to Congress Wesley Hunt, an Army veteran with degrees from West Point and Cornell, and the backing of Rep. Kevin McCarthy of California, the House Republican leader who aspires to be speaker. Hunt will fortify the House Republicans small but growing number of Black members. Rep. Dan Crenshaw won three quarters of the vote in his redrawn district in the suburbs of Houston, despite far-right opposition. Crenshaw, an outspoken conservative, had nonetheless drawn a right-wing challenger, Jameson Ellis, after Crenshaw denounced the lie that the 2020 election was stolen from former President Donald Trump. Ellis tried to label Crenshaw, a combat veteran who lost an eye in Afghanistan, a Republican in name only, or RINO, but mustered only about 15% of the vote. In Texas third district, north of Dallas, Rep. Van Taylor remained at risk of being forced into a runoff by challengers on his right flank early Wednesday. Those opponents castigated him for his vote to create an independent commission to examine the Jan. 6, 2021, attack on the Capitol. For Democrats, a victory by Cisneros would have real repercussions. Cuellar was perhaps the last remaining House Democrat who opposes abortion and has run to the right of his party on immigration and border security. But rather than run the issues-focused campaign she ran in 2020, Cisneros struck a narrative that after 17 years in Washington, the incumbent had become corrupt and captive to special interests, losing touch with the poor community that she personified. Her story was bolstered in January when the FBI launched a still-unexplained raid on Cuellars campaign headquarters and Laredo home. The 28th district shocked both parties in 2020 when it swung dramatically toward Trump. Hillary Clinton won heavily Latino Zapata County in the districts south by more than 30 points in 2016. Then it went to Trump by about five points. Clintons 60-point margin in Starr County, which is 96% Latino, shriveled to a five-point advantage for Joe Biden in 2020. Cisneros has said the Trump swing was an indication that South Texas voters were open to an outside voice after so many years with Cuellars machine. But with a young liberal as the Democratic nominee, Republicans will no doubt make a play for the district in November. Republicans were also facing a runoff to decide their standard-bearer in the district, but the top vote-getter Tuesday, Cassy Garcia, was considered one of the best candidates available to face Cisneros. She was the deputy state director for Republican Sen. Ted Cruz, and a regional field representative for the Texas agriculture commissioner. This article originally appeared in The New York Times. In the first primary election after lawmakers redrew their political maps, the makeup of the Texas Legislature is on track to almost perfectly match the design of its top leaders. Almost all of the preferred candidates of Republican Lt. Gov. Dan Patrick and House Speaker Dade Phelan nabbed enough votes to avoid runoffs and head into the November general election. And nearly all sitting House and Senate members seeking to return to the Texas Capitol kept their seats. Those winners will head to a general election season that is expected to feature fewer competitive races than in recent years, because the districts have been reshaped to preserve a Republican majority and protect incumbents. The people of Texas have spoken with one conservative voice, confirming what we already know. Texans are committed to keeping our state on its conservative path, Patrick, who presides over the Senate, said Tuesday night in a statement. There have been great victories across the state, and many great senators have been re-nominated for their seats, and we have many great new Republican candidates for Texas Senate who are well on their way to joining the Texas Senate for the 88th Legislative Session. In the Senate, Patrick scored his biggest victory of the night with Kevin Sparks winning the Republican candidacy for the Panhandle region, Senate District 31. Because no Democrat is running in the election, Sparks win Tuesday will grant him a seat in 2023. Patrick threw his weight behind Sparks in the race to replace state Sen. Kel Seliger, a retiring Amarillo Republican who has long been a thorn in the Senate leaders side and was known for being a key swing vote. Last year, Seliger suspected Patrick was attempting to manipulate the drawing of the states new political maps to favor Sparks over him. In the lower chamber, Phelan saw several people on his leadership team in position to bat away challenges. The primaries were the first to happen since Phelan took over as speaker, and his campaign spent hundreds of thousands of dollars assisting Republican members who had primary opposition. The speaker had a lot riding on the campaign of state Rep. Ryan Guillen, a veteran Rio Grande Valley lawmaker and committee chair who joined the GOP in November after nearly two decades as a House Democrat. Guillen narrowly avoided a runoff with Michael Monreal, who calls himself a Republican by conviction, not by convenience. During the campaign, Monreal hit Guillen for opposing legislation last year while he was still a Democrat to restrict the teaching of so-called critical race theory, among other GOP priorities over the years. Guillen is the House Resolutions Calendars Committee chair. Phelan fought hard for Guillen during the primary, seeking to send the message that newcomers and crossovers to the party would be welcomed by voters. Three Texas House representatives endorsed by Patrick in their attempts to move to the Senate also emerged victorious. State Rep. Phil King, R-Weatherford, handily won his race to challenge Democratic state Sen. Beverly Powell in November to represent Senate District 10 in North Texas. A legal challenge to the newly drawn SD-10 argued Texas lawmakers intentionally discriminated against voters of color in the redistricting process last year, but a federal three-judge panel denied a request to block the new map from being used in the primary election. The district has been heavily reconfigured to favor Republican candidates. For the heavily Republican Senate District 12, which stretches from north Dallas County to the northwest, state Rep. Tan Parker, R-Flower Mound, also easily won his partys nomination. Current state Sen. Jane Nelson, R-Flower Mound, is retiring. And state Rep. Mayes Middleton, R-Wallisville, won Senate District 11 on the Gulf Coast, which is represented by outgoing state Sen. Larry Taylor of Friendswood. With no Democrat running for the seat, Middletons primary win cements his seat in the Senate chamber in 2023. The only one of Patricks top choices not on course to win the Republican candidacy outright was Pete Flores, a former state senator who was ousted from South Texas Senate District 19 by a Democrat, state Sen. Roland Gutierrez, in 2020. Flores decided to throw his hat back into the ring after lawmakers redrew his hometown of Pleasanton into a more Republican-friendly district, the new Senate District 24. By early Wednesday, Flores was the top vote-getter in SD-24, but didnt get more than 50%. He is set to go up against fellow Republican Raul Reyes in a runoff election. There will also be a runoff to fill retiring state Sen. Eddie Lucio Jr.s seat in the Rio Grande Valley. Morgan LaMantia and Sara Stapleton-Barrera, who each received about a third of the primary election votes with nearly 90% of precincts reporting, will vie to replace the chambers most conservative Democrat. State Rep. Alex Dominguez had received the third-most votes, which would eliminate him from the runoff. On the House side, several committee chairs facing challengers were expected to keep their seats. State Rep. Stephanie Klick, a Fort Worth Republican who helmed the House Public Health Committee throughout the pandemic, was leading the early vote over opponents who attempted to capitalize on her failure to advance legislation to restrict what they call gender modification, or gender-affirming care for transgender kids. Election day returns in Tarrant County were delayed due to technical issues. House chairs Richard Pena Raymond of Laredo and Harold Dutton of Houston, both Democrats, also held leads in their primary races. Voters also let incumbents who were not part of Phelans leadership team stay another term, largely ignoring spirited attempts by opponents to unseat them. State Rep. Reggie Smith, a Sherman Republican, easily fended off challenger Shelley Luther, the salon owner who became famous for refusing to shut down her business under COVID-19 restrictions. Luther, who unsuccessfully ran for state Senate in 2020, has become one of the loudest detractors of state Republican leadership both Phelan and Gov. Greg Abbott and her defeat would be especially satisfying to them. State Rep. John Raney of College Station, whose district includes Texas A&M University, defeated a closely watched GOP primary challenge from John Harvey Slocum, the son of RC Slocum, the beloved former football coach at A&M. Incumbent state Rep. David Spiller, R-Jacksboro, handily defeated three challengers in his North Texas district. They included Mark Middleton, who was among at least 63 Texans charged with various crimes during the Capitol insurrection on Jan. 6, 2021. There were no Democrats in the primary, which means Spiller, who took office after a special election last February, will be returning to Austin for his first full term. The Republican primary for the GOP-heavy Weatherford district left open by King was likely headed for a runoff between Dallas police union head Frederick Frazier and Paul Chabot. Frazier won endorsements from both Abbott and former President Donald Trump. Although several sitting House members left their seats voluntarily to retire or run for other offices, a few appeared to be in danger of losing their posts or headed for runoffs. Democratic state Rep. Art Fierro in El Paso lost his seat to fellow state Rep. Claudia Ordaz Perez after the two were pitted against each other through redistricting. Denton Republican state Rep. Lynn Stucky held a tiny lead against challenger Andy Hopper in a race that was too close to call early Wednesday. Meanwhile, state Rep. Glenn Rogers, R-Graford, is headed to a runoff against Mike Olcott in the House District 60 race. State Rep. Phil Stephenson, R-Wharton, will face Stan Kitzman in the House District 85 runoff. State Rep. Kyle Kacal, R-College Station, appeared headed for a runoff, even though he received the most votes in the first round of voting. Disclosure: Texas A&M University has been a financial supporter of The Texas Tribune, a nonprofit, nonpartisan news organization that is funded in part by donations from members, foundations and corporate sponsors. Financial supporters play no role in the Tribune's journalism. Find a complete list of them here. The Texas Tribune is a member-supported, nonpartisan newsroom informing and engaging Texans on state politics and policy. Learn more at texastribune.org. Florida, US (34429) Today Rain showers early, then clear overnight. Thunder possible. Low 66F. Winds light and variable. Chance of rain 40%.. Tonight Rain showers early, then clear overnight. Thunder possible. Low 66F. Winds light and variable. Chance of rain 40%. Canada has held its fifth PNP-only Express Entry draw of the year. Express Entry: Canada invites 1,047 in new PNP draw Canada has held its fifth PNP-only Express Entry draw of the year. Express Entry: Canada invites 1,047 in new PNP draw Canada has held its fifth PNP-only Express Entry draw of the year. Express Entry: Canada invites 1,047 in new PNP draw Canada has held its fifth PNP-only Express Entry draw of the year. Shelby Thevenot Alexandra Miekus Aa Accessibility Font Style Serif Sans Font Size A A Canada invited 1,047 Express Entry candidates to apply for Canadian immigration on March 2. Immigration, Refugees and Citizenship Canada (IRCC) only invited Provincial Nominee Program (PNP) candidates in the new invitation round. The Comprehensive Ranking System (CRS) cut off was 761. The minimum score was relatively high because PNP candidates get an automatic 600 points added to their score when they receive their nomination. Without the nomination, the lowest-scoring candidates would have had 161 base points. Invited candidates now have 60 days to apply for Canadian permanent residence. In the previous round of invitations, IRCC invited a total of 1,082 PNP candidates to apply for Canadian immigration. It was a record for the number of Express Entry candidates invited in a single round of invitations. Get a Free Express Entry Assessment Minister says draws for skilled workers to resume in near future Canada has not held an Express Entry draw for Federal Skilled Worker Program (FSWP) candidates since December 2020, and since September 2021 for Canadian Experience Class (CEC) candidates. Canadian Immigration Minister Sean Fraser told business leaders in a webinar that IRCC would resume draws for skilled workers in the near future. Although the immigration minister said there was no announcement on when skilled worker draws would resume, he said that Express Entry would start to look more normal in the coming years. According to the 2022-2024 Immigration Levels Plan, Express Entry targets will be cut in half for skilled workers this year, but will return to normal by 2024. These targets may change when Canada releases Immigration Levels Plan 2023-2025 in the fall. Under the current levels plan, Canada is expecting to bring in 83,500 immigrants through both Express Entry-aligned and base PNP categories in 2022. The new targets are greater than what the government projected in the previous levels plan, which was 81,500 PNP immigrants for 2022, and 83,000 for 2023. Despite the pause in FSWP and CEC draws, PNP draws continue in record numbers every two weeks. In February alone, IRCC issued 2,145 Invitations to Apply to provincial nominees, almost twice as much as the previous month when 1,428 PNP candidates were invited. Fraser also said he was looking to add more flexibility to the Express Entry system. He suggested that Express Entry could be used to respond to short-term needs such as the needs of smaller communities, and certain in-demand sectors. The minister had previously hinted that occupation-specific Express Entry draws could be a possibility in the future. What is Express Entry? Express Entry is the application management system for three Canadian immigration programs: the Canadian Experience Class, the Federal Skilled Worker Program, and the Federal Skilled Trades Program. PNP candidates in the Express Entry pool have already qualified for one of these programs. Express Entry uses a points-based system, the Comprehensive Ranking System (CRS), to rank candidates profiles. The top-scoring candidates receive an Invitation to Apply (ITA), and can then apply for permanent residency. After the candidate applies, an IRCC officer reviews the application and makes a decision. The officer will ask for biometrics and may set up an interview or request more documents. If the application is approved, IRCC issues a Confirmation of Permanent Residence (COPR). Approved permanent residents can then complete the landing process. If they are outside Canada, they can access pre-arrival services to help them with the first steps for settling in Canada. Who was invited? The following is a hypothetical example of someone who may have received an ITA in the new Express Entry draw. Naveen is 39, holds a bachelors degree and has been working as an information system manager for six years. Naveen has an advanced English language proficiency and has never worked or studied in Canada. He entered the Express Entry pool with a CRS score of 386. He recently received a provincial nomination through Albertas Express Entry stream. His new CRS score of 986 would have been high enough to get an ITA in the new Express Entry draw. Get a Free Express Entry Assessment CIC News All Rights Reserved. Visit CanadaVisa.com to discover your Canadian immigration options. You must be logged in to react. Click any reaction to login. Love 0 Funny 0 Wow 0 Sad 0 Angry 0 U.S. "show of support" for Taiwan futile: Chinese spokesperson Xinhua) 09:37, March 02, 2022 BEIJING, March 1 (Xinhua) -- China on Tuesday urged the United States to handle Taiwan-related issues prudently to avoid further undermining China-U.S. relations as well as peace and stability across the Taiwan Strait. Foreign Ministry spokesperson Wang Wenbin made the remarks at a daily press briefing, in response to recent media reports that the United States will send five former high-level officials to visit Taiwan in a show of U.S. support to the island. Wang said the Chinese people are firmly committed to safeguarding their national sovereignty and territorial integrity. "The U.S. demonstration of so-called support for Taiwan is futile, whoever it sends." He urged the United States to abide by the one-China principle and the provisions of the three China-U.S. joint communiques, stop all official exchanges with Taiwan, and handle Taiwan-related issues prudently to avoid further undermining China-U.S. relations as well as peace and stability across the Taiwan Strait. When asked to comment on the U.S. recent act to hype up the passage of the guided-missile destroyer USS Ralph Johnson through the Taiwan Strait, Wang said if the U.S. side intends to embolden the secessionists seeking "Taiwan independence" via such a move, "this will only expedite the collapse of the 'Taiwan independence' forces, and the United States will pay a heavy price for its risky behavior." "If the U.S. side attempts to intimidate or pressure China via such a move, we'd like to warn the United States that any military deterrence is as weak as scrap iron in front of the Great Wall of steel constituted by the 1.4 billion Chinese people," Wang said. (Web editor: Peng yukai, Liang Jun) Wilkes Barre, PA (18701) Today Cloudy skies this evening will become partly cloudy after midnight. Slight chance of a rain shower. Low around 50F. Winds N at 5 to 10 mph.. Tonight Cloudy skies this evening will become partly cloudy after midnight. Slight chance of a rain shower. Low around 50F. Winds N at 5 to 10 mph. Oklahoma City, OK (73106) Today Variable clouds with strong thunderstorms. Damaging winds, large hail and possibly a tornado with some storms. Low 59F. Winds SE at 10 to 15 mph. Chance of rain 90%. 1 to 2 inches of rain expected.. Tonight Variable clouds with strong thunderstorms. Damaging winds, large hail and possibly a tornado with some storms. Low 59F. Winds SE at 10 to 15 mph. Chance of rain 90%. 1 to 2 inches of rain expected. On June 11, 2020, Audrey Cooper, the former editor of the San Francisco Chronicle, was made editor in chief of WNYC, New Yorks public radio station. Among the sparse decorations she installed in her office, on the eighth floor of WNYCs SoHo headquarters, was a signed photograph of Colin Powell. She moved in to a multimillion-dollar brownstone in Park Slope, which prompted speculation among her staff about her salary. (Laura Walker, the former chief executive, made almost $2 million in 2019.) When one colleague asked about her new neighborhood, she said that it was very dirty, contributing to a sense that she had committed a cardinal sinshe was not very New York. Staffers whispered that she might be a Republican, heresy in a newsroom so closely affiliated with the identity of progressive New Yorkers. (She is, according to her New York registration, a Democrat and is unaffiliated in California.) WNYC is a particular culture. Its staff take the fact they receive public funding seriously. They consider it their mission to repay New Yorkers with compelling and independent journalism. Theyre passionate about their work. They are idealists. And their devotion is reciprocated by listeners. During the most recent mayoral election, five New Yorkers wrote in WNYC host Brian Lehrer. Cooper herself, according to the New York Times, didnt get Lehrer. Her focus seemed to be elsewhere. Early in her tenure she sent around a 185-page academic report on merging radio and internet newsrooms. Much of the advice was bland. But to journalists at the radio station, many of whom had planned to make entire careers at a place they loved, one line stood out. Leadership and turnover, it read, are key ingredients in making acquisitions work over time. She followed up by mailing her editors a book called The First 90 Days: Proven Strategies for Getting Up to Speed Faster and Smarter by Michael D. Watkins, a Canadian author of business books. A long career at a single company, it says in the first few pages, is increasingly a thing of the past. Cooper says the aim is to turn WNYC into New York Citys newsroom of record. But her staff are not all sure what that means. In the eighteen months or so since she started, at least five newsroom members have been fired or laid off, and at least eighteen more have left of their own volition. (A PR representative disputes the number and pointed out that they have hired eighteen people in the same period.) Some of those who left had been at the station for decades. And a few departed without other jobs lined up, a daring proposition in the narrowing world of public radio, where WNYC is at the top of the field. Former employees have cited burnout, a lost sense of purpose, or a difficult work environment. In interviews with eighteen current and former WNYC staffers, a picture emerges of Cooper as an energetic and ambitious leader, but also one who is occasionally vengeful and inspires fear rather than trust. Journalists worry that any comment that she perceives negatively will doom their careers. The station has battled legal action from their union, sag-aftra, which alleged that WNYC was undermining its work, and from at least one former employee who alleged unlawful termination. (These matters were recently settled.) Web traffic is falling back to pre-pandemic levels (though this is happening across the industry). Slower, more thoughtfully produced radio is disappearing in favor of cheaper and quicker stories. For WNYCs management, this is simply the cost of change. In mid-December I spoke with Cooper; Goli Sheikholeslami, WNYCs president and chief executive; and Jennifer Houlihan Roussel, a PR representative. I was mostly met with charming but empty talking points that were repeated when I spoke to any of the stations executives. No editor in this country is going to be successful if they think they have all of the answers, and I certainly dont have them, Cooper said. Change is really hard, she added. Were getting there. I think the proof is in the pudding when we continue to do great work. We are going through a period of transition, Sheikholeslami said. And periods of transition bring uncertainty and anxiety, and we all understand that. Shortly after an interview, Sheikholeslami left the station to run Politico. WNYCs story is echoed in newsrooms throughout the nation, which have seen an increase in resignations since the start of the pandemic. Journalists are now just another voice in the endless open-mic night that is the internet. They compete not just with rival newsrooms, but with everything published on earth. Even audio journalism, a once sacred space, is competing with amateur podcasters armed only with their phones. Dreams that the industry might pull together in the face of these threats have been replaced by a reality in which newsrooms have to do more with fewer resources, unpopular and uninspiring bosses abound, capricious owners can pull the plug at a moments notice, social media algorithms spring new horrors daily, analytics are both determinative and debilitatingly opaque, and job security is increasingly elusive. The industry is grappling with difficult questions of what the future should look like, and its workers all have different answers. These problems are particularly acute for WNYC, which has always been a different kind of outlet. Grover A. Whalen first conceived of a radio station for the people of New York City in 1922. But city ownership came with a number of obvious problems. In March of 1995, Mayor Rudy Giuliani agreed to sell the station to the WNYC Foundation for $20 million. The board stood up to Giuliani, who wanted to sell to the highest bidder, said Laura Walker, the stations former chief executive, and said, Were going to buy this station and were going to make it even stronger. We were in a position to really cover the city, said Beth Fertig, a former senior reporter who had been with the station for twenty-six years before leaving in October. In 2001, after WNYCs transmittersformerly located at the World Trade Centerwere destroyed, the station raised funds from more than twenty-seven thousand listeners. And we grew and grew after that, Fertig said. Shortly after the privatization, Walker, a former NPR producer who had worked in the nonprofit arts world, became president and chief executive. She remained in her position until 2019 and oversaw a period of growth: from one to twenty-six million listeners, the launch of a successful podcast arm, dozens of awards, exponential growth in the budget, and several acquisitions, according to the station. The mission, Walker said, was to make the mind more curious, the heart more open, and the soul more joyful through peerless radio programming rooted in New York. The station was a podcasting pioneer. Sure, why not was the mantra, in a way, Walker said. Years later, in 2012, when Hurricane Sandy struck, WNYC covered the story around the clock. It remains a source of pride for staffers. Hosts answered listener questions; producers developed poignant features about hurricane victims; other teams made a map of evacuation and flood zones and a transit tracker and posted constant social media updates. The station stayed on the story for years, publishing follow-ups well after the rest of the world had moved on. Their coverage won awards, and spoke to a whole city. But even as the station seemed to be thriving, new problems were emerging. At the end of 2017, a report in The Cut alleged that John Hockenberry, the host of The Takeaway, had sexually harassed several women. Another article in The Cut, published a couple of months later, alleged more instances of sexual harassment and bullying by more hosts, and reported that Walker, the HR department, and chief content officer and Takeaway founder Dean Cappellohad known about much of Hockenberrys behavior for years. Three peopleHockenberry and two hostslost their jobs, while Cappello was demoted, in a period that the staff refers to as The Troubles. Amid that turmoil, the station was attempting to integrate the Web and the radiotwo distinct and specialized forms, according to staffers who were asked to do both. The goal was one unified newsroom with a shared mission of covering New York City. But radio and the Web had different priorities, different storytelling modes. In 2018, in part to help solve this issue, WNYC acquired Gothamist, a punchy New York City news site, after its billionaire owner shut it down following a staff unionization effort. But there was immediate tension. Where Gothamist covered, for example, the progressives who won statewide elections in 2018 with headlines including Payback Time, a WNYC broadcast told a straightforward story about how a handful of newcomers topple[d] the incumbents. Walkers departure, in 2019, was followed quickly by that of Jim Schachter, vice president of news. Sheikholeslami, who came from Chicago Public Media, became the chief executive of New York Public Radio, WNYCs parent company. She was faced not only with earning the newsrooms trust after a tumultuous period, but also balancing a dire budget. My initial focus, she said in an interview, was the financial situation in the organization. Sheikholeslami, along with Andrew Golis, the chief content officer, began the process of hiring someone to lead WNYCs newsroom. The newsroom made its list of priorities clear: they wanted someone local, and a person of color, with experience in public media and in radio, as Ginia Bellafante reported in the Times. In June the staff was told that the search was finished. The next editor in chief of WNYC would be Cooper, a white woman who had a long career in corporate-owned newspapers, had never worked in radio, and had no experience in New York. At the San Francisco Chronicle she worked her way from assistant city editor to editor in chief, in about nine years. Under her leadership, which began in 2015, the paper launched an investigative team, bolstered its metro reporting, and developed a number of substantive projects on complex topics. One of those topics, homelessness, was personal, according to an account Cooper gave the Times: she once walked past a homeless couple having sex in their tent and shouted at them, prompting them to loose their pit bull on her. It was this run at the Chronicle that convinced Sheikholeslami and Golis that Cooper was the right pick for WNYC. Over and over, Bellafante wrote, they heard that Ms. Cooper was beloved by reporters. For her part, Cooper told me, what appealed to her about WNYC was to really supercharge all these amazing people and assets that we have here, and make it into a bigger organization. But the WNYC search team seemed to have missed the accounts of others who had worked with Cooper at the Chronicle, who said she was vindictive, mercurial, and difficult to work for. Many people working for her find her engaging, disarming, witty, spontaneous, unfiltered, fun, you know, inspiring, said Caroline Grannan, who is the papers unit chair for the Pacific Media Workers Guild and a copy editor at the Chronicle. And subordinates who fall out of favor and cross her see a whole different side of her. Cooper built a reputation for fostering an environment, in the words of Eve Batey, who used to work with Cooper at the Chronicle, that was very middle school. (Others said, in fairness, that it was more like high school.) Easily once a week, someone would be like, Audrey said this about you, Batey said. Cooper moved to New York City as its grim first wave of covid began to subside. At WNYC, staffers were grappling with the fact that making radio from home is particularly hard. And they were coping with the loss of Richard Hake, a beloved host of Morning Edition who died near the end of last April at the age of fifty-one. Leading at this moment would have been hard for the deftest of editors. Staff members say they wanted to show Cooper goodwill. No one could blame her for accepting the position. And at first, things seemed to be going fine. That column, Cooper said, referring to the Bellafante piece, I dont really feel like it was about me, to be honest with you. Cooper seemed interested in learning the ins and outs of radio, and she was holding meetings with staff members to learn about their goals at the station. But eventually, she stopped sitting in on radio training sessions. In fact, staffers said that she didnt seem to listen to her own radio station. (Cooper called this notion silly.) The organizational charts she spoke about felt useless to them. No one really understood what it meant to be the newsroom of record. (I asked Sheikholeslami if she could offer specifics about what it entails; she said, Our vision is that we really want to approach this very holistically.) In practice, to the staff, it meant fewer longer radio pieceswhich take a long time to producein favor of interviews and banter between hosts and reporters. (Cooper pointed out that she created a narrative audio editor position.) Radio people now write Web stories, and Web people are being asked to learn audio editing, with little training. Gothamist has toned down, and lost much of its readershipits audience size peaked in April 2020 at 4.5 million unique visitors; in December of 2021, that number was 2 million. And then fresh scandal struck. Plagiarism in American journalism simply used to mean passing published work off as ones own without attribution. In the Web era, on sites like Gothamist that specialize in voice and have few qualms about aggregating, that line is fuzzier. And radio has its own rules. It commonly uses stories from wire servicesstandard news stories that subscribers are welcome to publish as they cometo build its pieces. In late January of 2021, Fred Mogul, a reporter who had been with the station since 2002, was asked to cover a story. The Miami Heat, according to one of those wire servicesthe Associated Press, which the radio side of WNYC subscribes towas using dogs to detect covid; Mogul was asked to write about a similar program that was to be introduced in New York. His story included a paragraph from the APs original story, which he says he attributed at the bottom of the piece. He considered this to be a standard practice, particularly on the radio side of WNYC. But his editor told him, according to a lawsuit he later filed, that he should not copy-paste text (outside of quotes) from AP stories. Mogul responded, Weve been told thats kosher, Im pretty sure, since were paying membersas long as theyre bylined at the top or bottom. Want me to rewrite or just omit? The story ran without the AP paragraph or attribution. But the issue was elevated by his editor. On February 5, nine days after Mogul originally filed his story to his editor, Cooper told Mogul, via Zoom, that she had decided to terminate his employment. He started to respond. But, according to the suit, Cooper left immediately, in the middle of his sentence. The same day, Cooper called all-staff meetings to inform the rest of the newsroom about her decision to fire Mogul. Stunned staff members asked for specifics of the incidentdid he not cite the AP at all? Are you saying you think he intentionally plagiarized? Weve all done exactly what youre describing, so are you going to fire us all, too? The fact thatvery few of us knew that Gothamist didnt have an AP subscription, to me, speaks directly to the failures of the integration of Web and radio, Nancy Solomon, a reporter whos been with the station for ten years, said, according to a recording of the meeting. I fully am behind you and your commitment to improve the integration, but it looks like Fred has become a victim to a lack of change, communication, integration, knowledge, traininga unified understanding of how we do this. Rebeca Ibarra, a host who left in October, echoed the thought. I understand that you think thats wrong, which, you know what, maybe it is wrong, but we havent even had a conversation about this. And this is how were all learning what we have been doing for years is not acceptable, she said. Cooper responded that she found this misunderstanding truly astounding because its exceedingly clear in the editorial standards. Ibarra responded, But Audrey, you literally came in and said that most of our practices are terrible and youre here trying to fix them all. A misunderstanding, staff members implored her, does not warrant a firing. More than sixty staffers also signed a letter in support of Mogul. This was the moment, many of her staff have said, that Cooper lost her newsroom. Cooper said she would conduct an internal audit. Since then, five other articles posted on Gothamist from the past year or so have been retracted and replaced with an editors note reading: After publishing this story, WNYC found it contained unattributed words or phrases. We have decided to retract this article and are investigating the editing process that led to this mistake. (These stories, four of which were written about in the Times, were apparently not uncovered by the stations audit.) Four of those articles were written by Jami Floydwho was a legal editor and show host before she was named the senior editor of WNYCs Race and Justice Unitand Floyd co-bylined a fifth. Floyd was on a two-week vacation as these articles came to managements attention in the fall. As of the beginning of November, she was back to work overseeing the Race and Justice desk. Floyds colleagues are unsure whether she was suspended or what disciplinary action was taken; Cooper and Sheikholeslami told me they would not comment on personnel matters. It posed a stark contrast to Coopers rhetoric after she fired Mogul, where she repeatedly described a zero-tolerance policy for using language from work by other news outlets without attribution. In November, after the Times reported on the stories by Floyd and her subsequent reassignment, Floyd posted a 1,464-word rebuttal on a website called Reputation Doctor. A Twitter account associated with Reputation Doctor also tweeted a suggestion that the Times story was influenced by a relationship (of which there is no evidence) between the reporter and a Gothamist editor. Plagiarism is a fraught word, Floyd wrote to me in an email. Let me be perfectly clear: I have never stolen anyones work. I have never taken someones idea and passed it off as my own. I have never defrauded readers or made myself out to be something that Im not. She said that she still holds her position at WNYC but has been consulting with a PR representative, an employment lawyer, and defamation counsel to be certain my reputation and livelihood remain intact, despite the misstatements reported about me. She told me that she requested a correction and went through the Times story with the papers business editor line by line. No correction has been made. Floyds reassignment seems a matter of semantics. She has been retitled as director of the unit, a noneditorial role, but takes part in editorial meetings. When editors pressed Cooper for more information, she insisted she was enforcing her rules consistently. She told me, They are very different cases, and they were handled differently. But CJR came across at least five more WNYC articles with Floyds byline that include strikingly similar wording to specific articles from SCOTUSBlog, Constitution Blog, Business Insider, the Times, and more, that remained posted in full on wnyc.org and were not highlighted in the newsrooms audit or subsequent investigations. When CJR reached Floyd with the examples, she vehemently denied any wrongdoing and characterized them as industry-standard patchwriting. When I raised this with Cooper, she caveated the instances by saying they were five and eleven years old and that Floyd was not an official employee at that time. Nonetheless, she said, We take this very seriously. Plagiarism has no place in this newsroom. She did not offer specifics when I asked why they had not found these instances after Floyds reassignment. A few days after Cooper and I spoke, WNYC retracted two of the articles while it investigates what occurred. In April, WNYC laid off fourteen people, four of whom worked in the newsroom. Their number included Christopher Robbins, who was the union shop steward; John Del Signore, the former editor in chief of Gothamist; Matthew Schuerman, a widely respected editor; and Richard Yeh, who, among other things, ran a renowned internship program that many credit for diversifying the newsrooms staffone of Coopers stated goals. Yeh was also the only person to go on the record in Bellafantes 2020 column. After staffers criticized the decision in an all-staff meetinga place where, when Walker was leading the company, staffers could lob difficult questions to management and expect answerstwo reporters were contacted by human resources. Though they were not officially disciplined, staffers felt punished for airing their views. sag-aftra, the staffers union, filed an unfair labor practice charge in May, alleging retaliatory firing, surveilling union members, issuing unwarranted discipline, and enforcing unlawful work rules. They also sued on behalf of Mogul. The station retained Jones Day, a notoriously anti-labor law firm, to fight the allegations. Some staffers argue it was an inappropriate use of listener-supported WNYC funds. I asked Sheikholeslami whether any of these layoffs constituted retaliation. There is no retaliation, she said. I would not permit that. Cooper said, in a different interview, I dont retaliate against anyone. Nobody has been pushed out. Leaders have sought to attribute WNYC staffs low morale to the pandemic and the difficulty of changenotions many staffers find, at best, condescending. But many of those who left, as the Daily Beast also reported, described a climate of fear, an environment in which leadership exhibits a vindictiveness toward those who dare to question decisions. Many are emotionally drainedin part because WNYC is a place they once loved. Their mental health, some have told me, has never been worse. Ultimately, readers and listeners may not care about any of this. Internal warfare that seems urgent and all-encompassing comes off as petty office politics outside of the newsroom. But, journalists say, the infighting and instability has fundamentally affected the (listener supported) journalism. When Hurricane Ida hit, or a fire in the Bronx killed seventeen people, they said, their coverage did not come close to matching the valuable, timely information the station generated in breaking news events of past years. In the stations office there is a plaque of twelve framed photographs honoring those who embodied New York Public Radio values. Two of those have gone to producers: Richard Yeh in 2019 and Alice Wilder in 2020. Both are now gone. Has America ever needed a media watchdog more than now? Help us by joining CJR today Savannah Jacobson is a contributor to CJR. On Saturday evening local time, Fahad Shah, a thirty-three-year-old independent journalist and the editor in chief of the Kashmir Walla, was arrested by the police of Shopian, Kashmir. This arrest came just hours after Shah had been released on bail in the nations capital, Srinagar; he had previously been arrested on February 4, on charges of frequently glorifying terrorism, spreading fake news, and instigating people under the Unlawful Activities Prevention Act (UAPA), a notoriously draconian anti-terrorism law. The Kashmir Walla reports that the Shopian charges are connected to reporting from January 2021, for which Shah faces charges of provocation with intent to cause riot and statements conducive to public mischief under the same law. He remains in police custody at the Imamsahib police station in Shopian. It is just devastating, said a local colleague, who declined to be named. We thought we were so close and got him homeand then it happened. The February 4 charges of posting antinational content concerned the Kashmir Wallas evenhanded coverage of a gunfight between government forces and alleged militants. Shah published a report quoting the family of Inayat Ahmad Mir, seventeen, who was killed in the gunfight; Mirs family denied the polices claim that Mir had been a hybrid terrorist, or camouflaged militant. Despite the Kashmir Wallas inclusion of a police statement contradicting the familys claims, Shah was charged with sedition under the UAPA. In a statement, Delhis Peoples Union for Democratic Rights, a civil rights organization, criticized the definitional vagueness of the UAPA and demanded the laws repeal. If the police are able to discern intention in social media posts and in journalistic pieces, then fundamental freedoms have no meaning outside of what the police feels and believes, the statement read. It added that presenting both sides of the story, as Shah does, [is] not tantamount to glorification of terrorism. It is a part of objective reportage. The Editorial Guild of India argued that Shahs arrest took place on specious grounds, and suggested that authorities real motive is to question and detain journalists as punishment for criticizing the establishment. The region of Jammu and Kashmir has been in contention between Pakistan and India for decades. It enjoyed relative autonomy during the British colonial occupation, and retained a degree of self-rule after Partition in 1947. But in August 2019, the Modi government revoked the special constitutional status of Jammu and Kashmir, putting it effectively under the control of the Indian government. Shahs arrest is the latest in a series of punitive efforts by police to target journalists in Kashmir with detention and harassment since then. Shah, who has been the target of harassment on several previous occasions, was in poor health at the time of his February 4 arrest, and was held in a cell without heat or electricity for twenty-two days. A group of fifty-eight publications, press freedom groups, and human rights organizations is calling for the release of Shah and all other jailed journalists in Kashmir. Sign up for CJR 's daily email Shahs coverage of anti-Muslim violence in Delhi for The Nation was awarded the 2021 Human Rights Press Award for Explanatory Feature Writing. He has been a brave and honest champion of independent journalism in a place where such work comes with enormous risksa sentiment echoed by Don Guttenplan, editor in chief of The Nation. Those of us who write from comfortable offices can only try to appreciate the courage it takes to do the work he and his colleagues do every day, Guttenplan tells CJR. But it is essential work, not just for Fahad, or the readers of the Kashmir Walla, but for all of us who claim the title of journalists and reporters, rather than mere stenographers to power. ICYMI: The Kashmiri narrative Has America ever needed a media watchdog more than now? Help us by joining CJR today Maria Bustillos is the founding editor of Popula, an alternative news and culture magazine. Her work has appeared in the New York Times, The New Yorker, Harpers, and The Guardian. BRISBANE, Australia (AP) Tens of thousands of people were ordered to evacuate their homes by Tuesday and hundreds of thousands more were told to prepare to flee as parts of Australias southeast coast were inundated by the worst flooding in more than a decade. At least 10 people have died. New South Wales Premier Dominic Perrottet said there had been 1,000 rescues in the state by Tuesday and more than 6,000 calls for authorities to help. Scores of residents, some with pets, spent hours trapped on their roofs by a fast-rising river in the town of Lismore in the states north. The body of a woman in her 80s was found by a neighbor in her Lismore home on Tuesday, a police statement said. There were no details of how she died. Dozens of cars were trapped on a bridge in the nearby town of Woodburn over Monday night with both the bridges approaches submerged. Up to 50 people were rescued from the bridge early Tuesday, officials said. We had no capabilities to get them off in the dark so we just had to make sure that they bunkered down and we went in this morning and got them all out, Woodburn State Emergency Services Commander Ashley Slapp said. The floodwaters were moving south into New South Wales from Queensland state in the worst disaster in the region since what was described as a once-in-a-century event in 2011. Perrottet said 40,000 people had been ordered to evacuate, while 300,000 others had been placed under evacuation warnings. Government meteorologist Jonathan Howe described the recent rainfall in northern New South Wales and southern Queensland as astronomical. Nine of the 10 deaths reported so far were in Queensland. A 76-year-old man who disappeared with his vehicle in floodwaters northwest of Brisbane on Sunday has since been confirmed dead. Queensland Police Commissioner Katarina Carroll said another man in his 70s remained missing after falling from his moored yacht in the state capital Brisbane into a swollen river on Saturday. The cleanup was underway in Brisbane, Australias third most populous city, despite more storms forecast for later in the week. Brisbane Lord Mayor Adrian Schrinner urged people to register for the Mud Army, as the thousands of volunteers who mobilized to help out after the 2011 floods were dubbed. Thousands of homes in Brisbane were inundated Sunday, many by swollen creeks in suburbs such as Ashgrove, where Kelvin Barfoot had to evacuate with members of his family, including his 99-year-old mother-in-law, Mina Baker, in a State Emergency Service rescue boat. The family moved back into the top floor of their two-story home and started removing damaged furniture and electrical appliances that had been covered by almost 1.5 meters (5 feet) of water. We thought we were pretty well prepared for it, said Barfoot, who leads a volunteer bush care group which has tallied more than 4,000 hours of planting and weeding along Enoggera Creek over the past six years. Just unbelievable. When it did start coming in, it went up very quick. Barfoot said his daughter and her husband swam to the house to help with the rescue after notifying emergency services that her grandmother _ who moved to Australia from Christchurch, New Zealand, after earthquakes there in 2011 killed 185 people _ needed to get out. We were pretty much stuck upstairs at that point, Barfoot said. That was quite traumatic for my mother-in-law _ we got her out (of New Zealand) after the earthquakes, so it was all a bit reminiscent of that for her. Now shes back home. She wanted to come home. She was a bit traumatized, but shes tough. She came down and asked me if there was anything to do to help! Schrinner said the six-day rainfall in downtown Brisbane 792.8 millimeters (31.2 inches) through Monday morning was significantly higher than the previous record of 655.8 millimeters (25.8 inches) set when flooding devastated the city in 1974. Rick Threlfall and Steve Hadley, meteorologists who moved from England to Australia and have been living in Newmarket, Brisbane, for almost a decade, were in the process of sandbagging the ground floor of their home but couldnt finish in time to beat the rapidly rising flood. Back in the U.K., we do weather warnings for 20 millimeters (1 inch) of rain, Threlfall said. My weather gauge here has recorded 950 millimeters (37 inches) in three days. Brisbanes average is about 1,200 millimeters (47 inches) for the year, so weve pretty much had 80% of annual rainfall in three days. No real escaping the water, I guess. The extraordinary rainfall comes as the United Nations Intergovernmental Panel on Climate Change reported this week that vast swathes of Australia have already lost 20% of its rainfall and the countrys fire risk has gone beyond worst-case scenarios developed just a few years ago. Australias hottest and driest year on record was 2019, which ended with devastating wildfires across southeast Australia. The fires directly killed 33 people and another 400 people were killed by the smoke. The fires also destroyed more than 3,000 homes and razed 19 million hectares (47 million acres) of farmland and forests. But two La Nina weather patterns have since brought above-average rainfall to the same regions. Lesley Hughes, an Australian academic and lead author of the U.N. IPCC assessment reports in 2007 and 2015, said climate change was expected to overwhelm government systems such as flood responses. We can see that our emergency services are struggling already to cope with the floods in northern New South Wales with people stranded on roofs without food for more than 24 hours, Hughes said. McGuirk reported from Canberra. Copyright 2022 Associated Press. All rights reserved. This material may not be published, broadcast, rewritten or redistributed. Claremore, OK (74018) Today Thunderstorms likely. Rainfall will be locally heavy at times. A few storms may be severe. Low around 60F. Winds SE at 10 to 15 mph. Chance of rain 100%. 3 to 5 inches of rain expected.. Tonight Thunderstorms likely. Rainfall will be locally heavy at times. A few storms may be severe. Low around 60F. Winds SE at 10 to 15 mph. Chance of rain 100%. 3 to 5 inches of rain expected. The Clark County Commission today unanimously approved a plan to help fund seven affordable housing developments that altogether would add 602 apartments for low-income seniors or families. Since January 2020, more than 1,100 affordable housing units supported by the County have been constructed or are under construction. In addition, the County is working with a developer to build more than 100 for-sale affordable homes in the southwest valley. These developments will provide much-needed affordable housing for our older neighbors and families struggling to make ends meet, Commission Chairman Jim Gibson said. It is important that we continue to support the construction of new affordable homes in Southern Nevada so residents of all income levels have safe and decent places to live. The specific projects and funding amounts supported today were: Nevada H.A.N.D., $1 million to assist with construction of an affordable family community with 80 units on the northeast corner of South Decatur Boulevard and West Pyle Avenue. Nevada H.A.N.D., $1 million for construction of a 125-unit community for seniors located at the southwest corner of South Buffalo Drive and West Cactus Avenue. Community Development Program Center of Nevada, $500,000 for 1501 LLC Apartments Phase 2, a 40-unit apartment development for families at 1501 Decatur Boulevard. Community Development Program Center of Nevada, $500,000 to assist with Donna Louise Phase 2 a 48-unit development for families at 6275 Donna Street in North Las Vegas. Coordinated Living of Southern Nevada, $1.3 million to assist with the planned fourth phase of the Tempo Senior Apartments development, which will add 208-units on the northeast corner of Russell Road and Boulder Highway. Silver State Housing, $860,000 for the West Sahara Senior Housing II development, which will have 65-units for residents 55 and over, and be at 8007 W. Sahara Avenue. Nevada Rural Housing Authority, $500,000 to assist with Hafen Village Phase II a 36-unit family development located at 850 West Hafen Lane in Mesquite. The developments would have income limits and other requirements for potential tenants. The projects will need additional government approvals. County officials believe there is currently a shortage of more than 80,000 homes for residents considered extremely low-income and very low-income, which means they earn less than 50 percent of area median income. (For example, a very low-income family of four would earn less than $37,500 a year.) The lack of affordable housing in Southern Nevada greatly affects those working to escape homelessness and those at risk of becoming homeless. To address these issues, the commissioners have provided additional funding to homeless outreach, shelter services and affordable housing opportunities in Southern Nevada. ### Clark County is a dynamic and innovative organization dedicated to providing top-quality service with integrity, respect and accountability. With jurisdiction over the world-famous Las Vegas Strip and covering an area the size of New Jersey, Clark is the nations 11th-largest county and provides extensive regional services to 2.3 million citizens and 45.6 million visitors a year (2019). Included are the nations 7th-busiest airport, air quality compliance, social services and the states largest public hospital, University Medical Center. The County also provides municipal services that are traditionally provided by cities to 1 million residents in the unincorporated area. Those include fire protection, roads and other public works, parks and recreation, and planning and development. Thank you for reading! On your next view you will be asked to log in to your subscriber account or create an account and subscribepurchase a subscription to continue reading. If a visitor to Israel had the time to take a month to really get to know the country, I would recommend the period that has just concluded from Passover through Israeli Independence Day. Its Israel in a nutshell. And it also happens to be a time of year when most of the days are picture- In Defence of Marxism is committed to safeguarding your privacy. At all times we aim to respect any personal data you share with us, or that we receive from other organisations, and keep it safe. This Privacy Policy (Policy) sets out our data collection and processing practices and your options regarding the ways in which your personal information is used. This Policy contains important information about your personal rights to privacy. Please read it carefully to understand how we use your personal data. We may update this Policy from time to time without notice to you, so please check it regularly. The provision of your personal data to us is voluntary. 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If you have not already registered (created a username and password) then click on the link below to register. If you have already registered (you already have a username and password), please click on the Get Started below. Your account number is located in the upper left hand corner on your address label on the Enterprise you receive in the mail or on the renewal form you received. The last name must read exactly as it is printed on your label. Enter the account number WITHOUT the leading zeros on the label. The EFFs recent campaign of labour inspections at restaurants in Gauteng is a reactionary descent into the xenophobic politics of the right-wing parties like ActionSA and the Patriotic Alliance. These right-wing outfits are very small on a national scale, but their message has been amplified by opportunist elements in the bigger parties such as the DA and the ANC. Now, scandalously, the EFF has joined in the fray. According to the EFF, the aim of the campaign is to seek a 60 to 40 percent ratio between the employment of migrant workers and South African workers in the hospitality sector. This is a dangerous way of posing the issue, particularly in the context of anti-immigrant sentiment whipped up by right-wing politicians across the board. Instead of standing up to this, the EFF is pandering to this right-wing demagogy in a very public way. Pandering to the right wing The very public and theatrical way the EFF had carried out its antics will embolden those who already blame migrants for their suffering in a country where youth unemployment is over 60 percent. In the context of mass impoverishment and desperation, this creates a dangerous situation. Instead of promoting the unity of the workers, it will create more barriers between them. Unscrupulous politicians, such as Herman Mashaba who split away from the Democratic Alliance to form Action SA, have all used xenophobia tactics to dress their chauvinism in the language of legality and restoring order / Image: public domain It also legitimises the stance of reactionary parties such as ActionSA and the Patriotic Alliance on this question. To illustrate this point, following the EFFs campaign, the Patriotic Alliance upped the ante on their xenophobia by conducting inspections of their own at migrant-owned small businesses in Eldorado Park in Johannesburg. Not to be outdone, the Inkatha Freedom Party, a reactionary party espousing Zulu nationalism, announced that it had submitted a Private Members bill to parliament calling for strict regulation of migrant labour across the entire economy. The EFFs actions take place in a context in which political parties are taking dangerous right-wing positions on migration, with ActionSA and the Patriotic Alliance being among the most crude. Small but vociferous xenophobic organisations, such as the self-proclaimed Umkhonto weSizwe veterans [Note: Umkhonto weSizwe was the armed wing of the ANC], who trashed migrant stalls in Durban, and the All Truck Drivers Foundation, engage in xenophobic violence with impunity. These elements are used to divert attention away from the real cause of the crisis of unemployment, namely the capitalist system. It is used by the agents of the ruling class to cut across the rising anger in society. Consciously or unconsciously, the EFF is facilitating this. Stoking the flames As the crisis of capitalism deepens, politicians across the spectrum have stoked the flames of xenophobia in South Africa. Unscrupulous politicians, such as Herman Mashaba who split away from the Democratic Alliance to form Action SA; the Patriotic Alliances Gayton McKenzie, and the ANC government minister, Aaron Motsoaledi, have all used this tactic to dress their chauvinism in the language of legality and restoring order. It was during Mashabas term as Johannesburg mayor for the Democratic Alliance, that he openly displayed his xenophobia on a national level. Mashaba, a former chairman of the Free Market Foundation, infamously staged a publicity stunt by making a citizens arrest of a street trader pushing a trolley of cow heads in Johannesburg in 2018, claiming he did so for health and safety reasons, but added he is not going to sit back and allow people like you to bring us Ebola in the name of small business. Despite his xenophobia and the fact that he is a capitalist, the EFF saw nothing wrong with having friendly relations with Mashaba during his term as mayor of Johannesburg. After the EFFs recent campaign, Mashaba could not contain his glee when he stated: First they ignore you, then they laugh at you, then they fight you and then they copy you. Some politicians in this country! But this is not all. The EFF made Vusi Khoza its provincial chairman of Kwazulu-Natal, despite his conviction for participating in anti-migrant attacks while he was a councillor of the ANC in 2009. These are the kind of reactionaries the EFF has associated themselves with! The cynicism of the ANC government, and specifically of Minister of Home Affairs, Motsoaledi, is particularly appalling. Motsoaledi made it impossible for asylum seekers to apply for asylum or renew their permits for nearly two years because of lockdown restrictions. Only in recent months has the department made online renewals available but many asylum seekers still struggle to renew their permits. There is also a link between the increased use of xenophobic language and stereotypes by bourgeois politicians and the organised vigilante groups taking to the streets, threatening and intimidating migrants. Vigilante group Operation Dudula took to the streets of Soweto, confiscating street traders goods and evicting them from the taxi rank across from Chris Hani Baragwanath hospital. The group then released a letter telling migrants in low-skilled jobs, and working as hawkers and artisans to cease trading. Operation Dudula is just the latest in a string of such groups. One of Operation Dudulas leaders, Nhlanhla Lux posted a video on his Instagram page wearing a camouflage uniform and declaring We are the people of South Africa. We are here with no spirit of negotiating anything. We are here to take back our country and thats it. We are going to come and we are going to clean South Africa because this cant be normalised, he said. He added that he and those around him were willing to die for this country to rid it of the illegal foreigners who continue to participate in crime. The Sisonke Peoples Forum was one of the groups behind the 2019 xenophobic attacks in Johannesburg, in which at least 10 people were killed. The forum said it was angered by young people losing their lives to the drugs migrants allegedly sold them, and because migrants were given preference for certain jobs ahead of South Africans.The reactionary All Truck Drivers Foundation (ADTF) has made similar claims. Despite them denying any involvement in violence, links have been made between the ADTF and the more than 200 truck drivers who have been killed in attacks on the freight industry in South Africa. The hypocrisy of the largest bourgeois party, the Democratic Alliance, was on full display, as it claimed to speak out against the EFFs recent intimidation of restaurant workers. The DA spokesperson for labour, Michael Cardo, labelled it workplace terrorism. This is the same party which ran a racist and xenophobic secure our borders campaign during the last national elections. Instead of dealing with corruption and the inefficiencies at home affairs to process and issue asylum and refugee permits, politicians have scapegoated impoverished Black migrants, turning them into targets for hostile groups. Even before the pandemic, organised gangs harassed, attacked, and evicted migrants from their houses in Johannesburgs Alexandra township and the suburb of Orange Grove. None of these groups has been brought to book, with few perpetrators of xenophobic violence arrested and convicted over the years. In fact, state agencies such as the Johannesburg Metro Police Department have been actively complicit in further marginalising migrants with its Buya Mthetho campaign. Launched ostensibly to create safe communities for our residents in the inner city, the campaign mostly victimised migrants. The metro police tweeted a picture of two officers arresting an undocumented person on 25 January. A devil emoji was placed over the migrants face. It is in this context that the EFF is conducting a reckless campaign of inspection stunts in restaurants to expose the use of migrant labour and demand the employment of more South African-born workers. Instead of helping to organise the workers into trade unions and demanding better conditions for workers across the board and opposing the anti-immigrant politics with the revolutionary mobilisation of the working class, the party is pouring petrol into the flames by pandering to the right. Violence is increasingly organised and, in some parts of the country, steadily more institutionalised in party politics. In many wards in Durban local ANC structures now include business forums, usually openly armed organisations that, in classic Mafia style, demand access to tenders and private business, often under open threats of violence. The EFFs conduct could hardly be more reckless and unprincipled. Intimidatory visits to restaurants to demand quotas on the employment of migrants is the politics of right-wing reactionaries. This has nothing in common with revolutionary politics. It is a means to divide the workers along national lines; something that only benefits the bosses. Restaurant workers are among the most exploited. They are also among the least unionised. It is now imperative that restaurant workers across South Africa are unionised, without regard for country of origin, to improve their working conditions and, in the great tradition of trade unionism, affirm that an injury to one is an injury to all. It is necessary for every worker and all trade unionists to take a clear stand against this and condemn this xenophobia. During the 2008 attacks on migrants, it was trade union and working-class activists who put an end to the violence. However, it is not enough to merely march against these reactionary developments. The unions need to organise all migrant workers into fighting unions to improve the conditions of all workers across the board. The answer to the divisive politics of the right should be answered with the unity of the working class! Disillusionment with the political establishment There is a deep sense of anger, frustration and disillusionment in general in South African society. This is particularly true of traditional ANC voters. In the last local government election the party went below the 50 percent mark for the first time. If this is repeated in the national election in 2024, the party will lose its majority in parliament. However, this disillusionment with the ANC does not correlate in the rise of any of the major opposition parties. The second biggest party, the Democratic Alliance, also lost ground compared to the last local government election. In fact, despite the deep crisis, the ANC is still twice as big as the DA. And the third largest party, the EFF, only made moderate gains by increasing its vote from 8 percent to 10.3 percent. The votes were spread over a much larger share of small opposition parties. There is a deep sense of anger, frustration and disillusionment in general in South African society / Image: Marcopieterse The biggest feature of the last election is the abstention rate. Just one-third of the voters turned up. Not only are they staying away from polls, but fewer voters are registered now than in 2019. But in the suburbs, where opposition voters tend to live, the drop was small compared to the townships where working-class and poor people live. In other words the lower turnout and registration rate was not a statement by all voters it was a message from ANC supporters. Instead of switching their votes to the main bourgeois party or to the EFF, millions are simply staying away. Neither the DA on the right nor the EFF on the left are seen as a real alternative. In the last few years, the growth of the EFF has slowed in comparison to the first five years of its existence, when it succeeded in attracting a layer of radicalising workers and youth. This mass abstention from the electoral process is not political apathy as some commentators suggest. It is a sign of disillusionment. It is also a sign that the workers have been blocked on the electoral field and could once again turn to the industrial field. In the next period, we could therefore once again see a sharp rise in strikes and industrial action similar to the period between 2009 and 2013. The problem is capitalism! The root causes of this barbaric violence lies in the deep crisis of capitalism. A certain layer of the leadership of the ANC now live lives which are completely different and disconnected to the majority of the people.The xenophobia we see is the direct product of the criminal capitalist policies imposed on society by the government and the capitalists. In a country with immense wealth, many people live in appalling conditions. Unemployment, poverty, homelessness and racism form a crushing weight on the shoulders of most working people. The gap between rich and poor is higher than it was in the dark days of Apartheid and it is widening by the day. In South Africa, the richest 10% of the population own more than 85% of household wealth. The richest 0.01% owns more wealth than 32 million people. A tiny minority, which owns and controls the immense wealth of the country, is driving down the living standards even further because of the crisis of capitalism. Discontent is growing among the majority whose economic prospects are becoming bleaker. The rate of unemployment is now more than 30%. For the majority of people, life has been reduced to a daily battle for survival. Their dreams have been crushed by this exploitative capitalist system, which is daily rolling back the gains which were won through sacrifices in the past. In this context, some sections of society have not found an outlet for their anger and frustration. These are mainly small shopkeepers, lower middle-class and unemployed people, lumpen elements, and dispossessed and disgruntled youth who have lost all hope in the future. After decades of deepening poverty, unemployment and worsening conditions, driven by desperation and anger, and with no prospect of any improvements, it is easy for these layers to fall under the influence of reactionaries. The poorest layers of South African society are being incited against people who are equally poor, while the rich and powerful who are responsible for the mess are unaffected. What we are seeing are reactionary outbursts of disgruntled and dissatisfied elements in society who have been discarded and who have temporarily found a way of expressing their rage. In the end, it is only the fight for the overthrow of this monstrous capitalist system which can solve the questions of poverty and misery and the reactionary tendencies they spawn. We're always interested in hearing about news in our community. Let us know what's going on! Go to form Penn State's chapter of Pi Sigma Alpha, the National Political Honor Society, hosted a discussion panel on the conflict between Russia and Ukraine on Wednesday in the Katz Building with the Ukrainian Society and the political science department present. According to the Associated Press, the Russian military launched an attack on Ukraine on Feb. 24, and throughout the event, panelists discussed the ongoing conflict between Ukraine and Russia, as well as the developments made over the past week. Panelists included Donna Bahry, professor emerita of political science, Roseanne McManus, associate professor of political science, Robert Packer, assistant teaching professor of political science, Catherine Wanner, professor of history, anthropology and religious studies, Larisa Lombardo, treasurer of Pi Sigma Alpha and Igor Latsanych, a member of the Ukrainian Society. McManus spoke first and said though [Russian President Vladimir] Putin has been on the scene for a long time, this time seems to be different in that this invasion was greater in size and scope. It seems like Russia will take heavy losses, and it is not clear what [its] endgame will be, McManus said. Many panelists referred to Putins actions as miscalculated. McManus said the timing of the invasion doesn't make sense, given Putin has been tolerating this situation for years," and she said his recent behavior has been unpredictable. Many panelists discussed Putins mental capacity and if this has had an effect on his recent political decisiveness. This has caused people to speculate that Putin may be losing his marbles, McManus said. Then, Bahry said Putin often puts on a performance," and the question about his mental capacity is an open one. However, Packer said in his eyes, Putin is not acting particularly crazy, and there have been signals toward this behavior and Putins determination and impatience. Many people thought he was bluffing, Packer said. These signals include past Russian invasions that the panelists discussed, and according to Bahry, there has been constant pressure on former Soviet countries. Packer said something else of concern is the possibility of nuclear disaster from nuclear power plants that are operating near the sites of combat in Ukraine. The panelists then discussed reasons as to why the Russian invasion of Ukraine came at this time. Were talking about military organized violence its a war, and we should call it a war, Wanner said. I think if we had called all the other wars wars we would be a little less surprised now. Bahry said Russia is facing two domestic problems right now, which may be a part of Putins motivations. First, Bahry said Russia has been facing depopulation, and the Russian government has been trying to attract people from post-Soviet countries by offering money and jobs, but takers have been minimal. The second problem Bahry said Russia is facing is economic stagnation, as Russia has a problem of producing competitive manufactured goods to sell. Bahry also said the Russian government is [spinning] a story of victimization by the West in regard to the Ukrainian languages growing popularity in Eastern Europe. Mr. Putin makes the case that language equals identity, Wanner said, adding that Putins logic is contorted. Wanner discussed the effects of social media on the conflict. Exposure via travel, internet, social media and popular culture has opened Ukranians to a whole nother world, spurring them to join Europe, Wanner said. She said the stirring, troubling images of the events in Ukraine that are shared online are causing the world to focus on the conflict, and people have begun to boycott Russia and its citizens as a whole. I dont think we should punish an entire nation of people, Wanner said. I think Putin has shaken the foundation of Russia. Even when this war ends, I believe we will simply embark upon another chapter. Some audience members asked panelists what they thought about the American governments response to the invasion. Sanctions can be ramped up, but there is a reason to do it slowly, McManus said. Packer agreed and said what the U.S. can do is somewhat limited. Latsanych, a student, said he lived in Ukraine for the first eight years of his life and visits multiple times per year. Part of the problem, according to Latsanych, is that Putin is still supported by some despite all the terrible things hes done in his country, but also many soldiers are simply following Putins orders. He said America hasn't done enough, and what can be done by students is reaching out to their congressmen to propose bills to help Ukraine. If Putin wins in Ukraine, as we have seen in several countries, who knows whats next, Latsanych said. Which is why we need to work even harder to prevent this. He said manpower will run out one day, and Ukraines supplies are limited. Not just Ukraine is in danger, its Europe, democracy just being civil is in danger, Latsanych said. Who knows where Putin is going to stop. MORE CAMPUS COVERAGE Angel stands on a path of brush that she built up to her tent to help keep mud and debris from being tracked in after she and friend Sleepy, not pictured, collected debris between thier site and a neighboring site on Monday, Feb. 28, 2022, near I-225 and East Mississippi Avenue in Aurora, Colo. Angel has also built up a wall of debris around the tent to help insulate it from wind. (Timothy Hurst/The Denver Gazette) Would you like to receive our news updates? Signup today! Sign up to receive notifications when a new Columbia Gorge News e-Edition is published. Error! There was an error processing your request. Success! An email has been sent to with a link to confirm list signup. News and Info from our Community Partners Information from the News and our advertisers (Want to add your business to this to this feed?) Are you a current print subscriber to Columbia Gorge News? If so, you qualify for free access to all content on columbiagorgenews.com. Simply verify with your subscriber id to receive free access. Your subscriber id may be found on your bill or mailing label. Consortium of nine development partners to support Biovacs expansion of its existing vaccine manufacturing plant capacity, and enable the production of Pfizer-BioNTechs COVID-19 vaccine and other vaccines; Biovac to raise around $150 million (ZAR2.3 billion) to boost increased local vaccine manufacturing capacity across the African continent; Partners include AfDB (www.AfDB.org), CDC Group, DEG, DFC, EIB, IFC, Proparco, the European Union Delegation to South Africa, and the Industrial Development Corporation of South Africa (IDC). To support South Africa and the African continent increase vaccine manufacturing capacity and reduce reliance on imports, a consortium of nine development and finance institutions have today announced a partnership with Biovac in Cape Town, South Africa to support Biovacs vaccine manufacturing expansion. Biovac, a bio-pharmaceutical company and established vaccine manufacturer based in South Africa, is part of a consortium (https://bit.ly/3Izu6EK) of organizations that has partnered with the World Health Organization (WHO) and its COVAX partners to establish the first COVID-19 mRNA vaccine technology transfer hub in South Africa. Biovac has also entered into an agreement with Pfizer in July 2021 with the goal to manufacture up to 100 million doses of the Pfizer-BioNTech COVID-19 vaccine for use exclusively in Africa. Biovac aims to expand its vaccine manufacturing capacity in Africa initially through its current activities related to the production of Pfizer-BioNTechs COVID-19 vaccine and subsequently for much needed routine vaccines as well. This will bolster the global response to COVID-19 and advance long-term health security throughout the African continent. This expansion is aligned with the UN Sustainable Development (SDG) Goal 3 on Good Health and Well-being by improving access to safe, effective, quality and affordable essential medicines and vaccines; and UN SDGs 8 and 9 on improving economic opportunities and upgrading technological capabilities of the pharmaceutical manufacturing sector in Africa. To realize the expansion and increased local vaccine manufacturing capacity on the African continent, Biovac will need to raise around $150 million (ZAR2.3 billion). The consortium partners will aim to support Biovac in this future manufacturing plant capacity and vaccine pipeline expansion. The consortium partners include the African Development Bank (AfDB), CDC Group UKs development finance institution which is soon to be renamed British International Investment, the German development finance institution DEG, the U.S. International Development Finance Corporation (DFC), European Investment Bank (EIB), the European Union Delegation to South Africa, International Finance Corporation (IFC), the Industrial Development Corporation of South Africa (IDC), and the French development finance institution Proparco. COVID-19 has proven that a more geographical spread of vaccine manufacturing is much needed globally, with the African continent having the least number of vaccine manufacturers. We are pleased that the consortium of funders is willing to work with Biovac to create sustainable African vaccine manufacturing, not only to respond to the current pandemic, but also to much needed routine vaccines and future pandemic vaccines as well, said Biovac CFO Craig Mitchell. We have developed a 2030 Pharmaceutical Action Plan/Continental Vision for Africa. We aim to increase the local production of pharmaceuticals to 70% by 2030, and of vaccines to 60% by 2040. Todays announcement with Biovac is a strong testament to our pledge to make direct investments in manufacturers and provide leadership to support the development of the pharmaceutical industry on our continent. Africa must become self-sufficient. Health security is fundamental to economic security, said African Development Bank Group President Dr. Akinwumi A. Adesina, adding the COVID-19 pandemic was a wake-up call that Africa could not outsource the health of its people to other continents or rely on global supply chains. Accelerating vaccine delivery to countries that need them the most must become a global priority, and this requires collective effort. CDC is thrilled to be a part of this consortium that brings together DFI expertise and capital to support Biovac in contributing to scaling vaccine production across Africa, and bolster the continents response and self-reliance on this and other health crises, said Tenbite Ermias, the CDC Groups Managing Director for Africa. It is essential to join forces to address medical care in Africa. This is why we welcome Biovacs initiative to expand its vaccine manufacturing capacity in Africa. Besides strengthening vaccine production on site, it has a positive signaling effect for South Africa as a medical hub. We are happy to support the development of this project and look forward to strengthening the cooperation, said Roland Siller, CEO of DEG. The United States is proud to collaborate on this effort to expand manufacturing capacity for COVID-19 and other critical vaccines in Africa in order to improve healthcare on the continent, said DFC CEO Scott Nathan. Supporting the global communitys continued response to the COVID-19 pandemic and strengthening health systems in developing countries are top priorities for DFC. This project advances President Bidens Build Back Better World (B3W) Initiative by bolstering global health infrastructure. Scaling up vaccine production in South Africa is crucial to accelerating global immunization and beating COVID-19. EIB Global is working with African and international partners in supporting vaccine manufacturing, improving public health and enhancing economic resilience to the pandemic across Africa. As part of Team Europe, the EIB is pleased to join financial partners to support Biovacs plans to produce vaccines in South Africa for Africa, said Ambroise Fayolle, European Investment Bank Vice President responsible for development. Our differentiated approach to find the best way to assist partner countries fight the COVID-19 pandemic has made possible EU funding to help unlock significant Development Finance Institution loans in support of South Africas own vaccine manufacturing capacity. The EU grant is an expression of Team Europes unwavering commitment to the global fight to overcome the Covid-19 pandemic, said Dr Riina Kionka, the EUs Ambassador to South Africa. The IDC has a long-standing partnership with Biovac. From the onset, the Corporation appreciated the companys long-term objectives to establish a world-class commercial vaccine production facility. Recent development in vaccines access has reinforced the need to scale up and ensure capacity to manufacture vaccines locally, for our country and our continent, said Hilton Lazarus, IDCs Head of its Chemicals, Medical and Industrial Mineral Products Business Unit. This unique partnership will help boost the production and manufacturing capacity of a range of vaccines, including the COVID-19 vaccine, in Africa. With strong partnerships and increased investment, manufacturers in Africa, such as Biovac, can ramp up domestic vaccine production to build a more resilient health sector and strengthen regional value chains, said Makhtar Diop, IFC Managing Director. France is strongly committed to increasing vaccine production and access in Africa, as illustrated by its support to the creation of the continents first mRNA vaccine technology transfer hub announced by President Emmanuel Macron in June last year. Through this partnership with Biovac and our DFI partners, Proparco will build on its experience working with local pharmaceutical companies and further contribute to scaling up vaccine manufacturing capacities in South Africa, said Gregory Clemente, CEO of Proparco. Partager et informez vous aussi...... 0 shares Share Tweet LinkedIn Articles similaires The Missourians Opinion section is a public forum for the discussion of ideas. The views presented in this piece are those of the author and do not necessarily reflect the views of the Missourian or the University of Missouri. If you would like to contribute to the Opinion page with a response or an original topic of your own, visit our submission form As the Cubs were beating the Braves 6-3 Wednesday night Steve left to see the game with his mom and dad, Reva and Harold, brother Ron and baby niece Elizabeth Henney. He left behind to run the store his wife Kathleen (Knight), Amelia (27), Nathan (24) and his beloved cat Lewis Black. His sis A new culinary concept is popping up in Allentowns West End. Jays Local, a two-year-old neighborhood eatery that prioritizes sourcing ingredients locally, has launched a Pop-Up Restaurant and Ghost Kitchen Program to help new and established culinary entrepreneurs grow their brand. Advertisement Jays Local, a two-year-old neighborhood eatery that prioritizes sourcing ingredients locally in Allentown's West End, has launched a Pop-Up Restaurant and Ghost Kitchen Program to help new and established culinary entrepreneurs grow their brand. (RYAN KNELLER / The Morning Call) Local businesses can utilize the fast-casual eaterys commercial kitchen and restaurant facility at 2301 W. Liberty St. in order to experiment, test, and grow without the long-term financial commitment. Both programs will help local food businesses attract new customers and attention, Jays Local owner Lyell Scherline said. Advertisement Jennys Kuali, a Bethehem-based Malaysian restaurant, is kicking off the program with a pop-up event, 11 a.m. to 3 p.m. Sunday, at the Allentown eatery. A popular eatery among the Bethlehem locals and especially the Lehigh University student population, Jennys Kuali is aiming to introduce their authentic Malaysian eats to the West End of Allentown and the student population at Muhlenberg College, said Scherline, noting that Jays Local is right across the street from Muhlenbergs campus. Jays Local, a two-year-old neighborhood eatery that prioritizes sourcing ingredients locally in Allentown's West End, has launched a Pop-Up Restaurant and Ghost Kitchen Program to help new and established culinary entrepreneurs grow their brand. (Jay's Local/Contributed photo) Jennys Kuali, which opened in 2012 at 102 E. Fourth St. on Bethlehems South Side, will be selling its vegan cookbooks, sauces and popular menu items at the pop-up event. Food selections will include roti paratha (Indian-style bread served with a curry dipping sauce; chicken, vegetarian or vegan); nasi goreng (Malaysian-style fried rice with chicken or vegetables and touch of curry powder; can be made vegan); nasi nenas (pineapple fried rice with chicken or vegetables and chili sauce); and Singapore rice noodles (rice noodles with chicken or vegetables in a curry sauce; can be made vegan). Other pop-up menu highlights will include ginger garlic cream cheese fried wontons, Thai tea and bubble tea (mango or Thai). Short-term and long-term ghost kitchen and pop-up options are available in order to provide flexibility and opportunities for culinary entrepreneurs. Participants can utilize a wide array of equipment, including six gas burners, a 36-inch gas flat griddle, 36-inch gas grill, 6-foot bain marie, two-tier pastry and beverage display, microwave, conveyor belt toaster oven, full-size electric convection oven, two prep tables, commercial baking mixer, deli slicer, sheet pans, commercial dishwasher, food processor, commercial blender and laundered aprons and towels. Pop-up shops operate during the same hours as Jays Local (serving their products side by side with Jays Locals menu items), while ghost kitchen participants have the option to operate during or after Jays Locals regular hours (the latter offering space to work alone). Advertisement Jay's Local owner Lyell Scherline, center, poses with staff members at the restaurant in Allentown's West End in February 2020. The two-year-old neighborhood eatery, which prioritizes sourcing ingredients locally, has launched a Pop-Up Restaurant and Ghost Kitchen Program to help new and established culinary entrepreneurs grow their brand. (April Gamiz/The Morning Call ) With ghost kitchens, users could also prep food here and cook it, and then they could offer just takeout or pickup, Scherline said. Pricing for pop-up shop vendors is $100 for a full day (9 a.m. to 3 p.m.) or $50 for a half day. Ghost kitchen pricing options include $145 per day (minimum of three hours and maximum of 14 hours) or $20 per hour. First-time users receive a discounted rate of $125 per day or $15 per a la carte hour. This is a new concept that expanded a lot during COVID, Scherline said. So, we just wanted to reach out to the community and really give people the opportunity to do something and utilize our space. Jennys Kuali also is planning to host vegan cooking courses at Jays Local, with the first event scheduled for 6 p.m. March 16 already being sold out. Another vegan cooking course will be held 5 p.m. May 7. Advertisement The courses are $35 each (plus tax) and include a three-course meal from Jennys Kuali Vegan Cookbooks. Info: jennyskuali.com. What's Included With a Digital Only subscription, you'll receive unlimited access to our website and e-edition. Our digital products are available 24/7 and are accessible anywhere, anytime. If you have any questions or need further assistance, please call our customer service team at 319-283-2144 or email circ@oelweindailyregister.com. Apple kept us waiting a little longer than expected, but has now confirmed its spring launch event will take place March 8 at 10 a.m. PT/ 1 p.m. ET. The company is expected to introduce an improved iPad Air, new Macs, and the iPhone SE with 5G at what will be the first of a wild array of coming product introductions. What is Peek performance? Apples event invitation is titled Peek performance." The image features a six-color Apple logo, consisting of six small to large logos superimposed above each other within one apple shape. Apple Apple's invitation for the March 8 event. Its hard to imagine what this might represent: it could be as simple as a hint at different colors in some of its new products but may also indicate a move to new display technologies. Im certain the Apple mythology industry is already on the case with a range of speculations (and I suspect there will be plenty of discussion at Mobile World Congress.) Apples Greg Joswiak, senior vice president for marketing, has published a Tweet containing a short video featuring the same design as the invitation. What do we expect? An iPhone SE with 5G, a brand-new iPad Air, and new Macs. We begin the road to M2 For Apple professionals, the introduction of new Macs may be the most interesting news. We think the company will introduce a higher-end Mac mini with faster M1 Pro or M1 Max chips and a slimmed-down design. The company is also expected to introduce a 13-in. MacBook Pro equipped with the first M2 chip to emerge from Apples silicon development labs. This will become the entry-level model to the M1 Pro and M1 Max-powered MacBook Pro systems Apple now offers. When Apple introduces the M2 chip, well have a much better insight into how the company plans to iterate Apple silicon processors in Macs in future. After all, the M2 will likely appear in higher-end MacBook Pro models, probably under the M2 Pro and M2 Max brands. It will be informative, then, to find out how the M2 processor compares to the M1 Pro and M1 Max chips in terms of computational power and performance. Will Apple focus on performance? Or will it choose to focus on graphics performance in the second iteration of its chips? The "Peek performance" title matters here, I think. This also matters as we inevitably accelerate toward introduction of 3nm Mac chips, potentially in 2023 or 2024. Current speculation anticipates the M2 chip will boast an 8-core CPU, but with up to 10-core GPU for speed, efficiency and graphics performance. The lowest-cost 5G iPhone SE Apple is also expected to introduce the new iPhone SE as the most affordable 5G-enabled smartphone in its range. There has been plenty of speculation regarding price, but whatever the cost turns out to be, its reasonable to anticipate carriers will already be preparing to introduce the new hardware with a variety of deals as they seek to boost 5G adoption. They want to turn their new 5G networks into profit centers, after all. No significant design changes are expected, which means thicker bezels and a Touch ID/Home button. One thing that will change, however, should be the introduction of a faster A-series chip. Most currently expect an A15 processor in the device, which is the same as in the current iPhone 13 range. The device should help Apple expand its market and will almost certainly be of interest to consumers seeking inexpensive access to 5G. Enterprise customers will also take an interest in this, as it becomes a low-cost way to equip staff with reliable 5G devices. The product should also push into sections of the smartphone market currently occupied by Oppo, Samsung, Huawei, and others. The powerful iPad Air improves I recently discussed the iPad Air. To reprise some of the anticipated changes on the still-fantastic 2020 model, expect: A faster A15 Bionic chip. The introduction of 5G as an option. A higher-resolution 12MP FaceTime camera with Center Stage. New colors (possibly reflected in the event invite). The latter should be of use to any remote enterprise professional spending lots of time in video collaboration sessions. Center Stage now works with most leading video services and helps ensure you are in the frame of the meeting as you move around the room. Apples event will be streamed on its events website and made available via the Apple TV app on March 8. Ill be Tweeting the news as it comes through and bringing a more in-depth post-event piece here. Please follow me on Twitter, or join me in the AppleHolics bar & grill and Apple Discussions groups on MeWe. 03/02/2022 Photo (c) Images By Tang Ming Tung - Getty Images COVID-19 tally as compiled by Johns Hopkins University. (Previous numbers in parentheses.) Total U.S. confirmed cases: 79,099,412 (79,048,702) Total U.S. deaths: 952,759 (950,684) Total global cases: 439,214,303 (437,422,661) Total global deaths: 5,968,316 (5,959,306) Government offers more free tests Learning to live with COVID-19 may mean more frequent tests to confirm whether those sniffles are a common cold or the virus. President Biden used last nights State of the Union Address to announce that Americans can order more free tests starting next week. "Even if you already ordered free tests, tonight, I am announcing that you can order more from covidtests.gov starting next week," Biden said. He reported that the government has already made hundreds of millions of tests available for free. When distribution began in January, households were limited to four free tests. Under the expansion, households will be able to order four additional tests. Many hospitals still struggle despite declining cases New cases of COVID-19 are declining in nearly every part of the country, but that hasnt let hospitals off the hook; many still struggle under large caseloads. I think people are under the misconception that because COVID has peaked and its on the downturn that staffing issues will go away, Louise Dobbins, director of capacity management for Allegheny Health Network in Pittsburgh, told the Wall Street Journal. I dont think thats going to happen. Much of the problem is caused by staff shortages. A third or more of hospitals in 15 states reported a critical staffing shortage last month, according to the American Hospital Association. CDC estimates 140 million infections in the U.S. The Centers for Disease Control and Prevention (CDC) has issued an estimate stating that it believes there have been 140 million COVID-19 infections in the U.S. since the start of the pandemic. Thats considerably higher than the unofficial count maintained by Johns Hopkins University. The estimate stems from an analysis of blood samples that track coronavirus antibodies produced by an infection rather than a vaccination. It says the higher number is not a surprise since many mild and asymptomatic cases go unreported. By the CDCs estimate, about 43% of the U.S. population has had the virus as of late January, including almost 60% of children up to age 18. The largest percentage of cases likely occurred among Americans between the ages of 18 and 49. Around the nation Diageo-my.sharepoint.com scored 40 Social Media Impact. Social Media Impact score is a measure of how much a site is popular on social networks. 2/5.0 Stars by Social Team This CoolSocial report was updated on 14 Aug 2014, you can refresh this analysis whenever you want. The total number of people who shared the diageo-my.sharepoint homepage on StumbleUpon. This is the sum of two values: the total number of people who shared, liked or recommended the diageo-my.sharepoint homepage on Facebook + the total number of page likes (if diageo-my.sharepoint has a Facebook fan page). This is the sum of two values: the total number of people who shared the diageo-my.sharepoint homepage on Twitter + the total number of diageo-my.sharepoint followers (if diageo-my.sharepoint has a Twitter account). The total number of people who shared the diageo-my.sharepoint homepage on Google Plus by a google +1 button. The total number of people who shared the diageo-my.sharepoint homepage on Delicious. Basic Information PAGE TITLE Sign in to Office 365 DESCRIPTION KEYWORDS OTHER KEYWORDS account, sign in, make sure you typed, sign in with, make sure you, sure you typed, looks like The title found in the head section of the homepage. The URL (Uniform Resource Locator) is the address of the site. The keywords meta-tag found in the head section of the homepage. CoolSocial advanced keyword analysis tool is able to detect and analyze every keyword on each page of a site. The description meta-tag found in the head section of the homepage. Domain and Server DOCTYPE HTML 4.01 Strict CHARSET AND LANGUAGE UTF-8 DETECTED LANGUAGE English English SERVER Microsoft-IIS/7.5 OPERATIVE SYSTEM Windows Server 2008 R2 Windows Server 2008 R2 Character set and language of the site. Represents HTML declared type (e.g.: XHTML 1.1, HTML 4.0, the new HTML 5.0) Operative System running on the server. The language of diageo-my.sharepoint.com as detected by CoolSocial algorithms. Type of server and offered services. Site Traffic trend during the last year. Only available for sites ranked <= 100000 in the world. Referring domains for diageo-my.sharepoint.com by MajesticSeo. High values are a sign of site importance over the web and on web engines. Facebook link FACEBOOK PAGE LINK NOT FOUND The URL of the found Facebook page. The description of the Facebook page describes website and its services to the social media users. The type of Facebook page. Facebook Timeline is the new layout of Facebook pages. The total number of people who like website Facebook page. The total number of people who tagged or talked about website Facebook page in the last 7-10 days. A Facebook page link can be found in the homepage or in the robots.txt file. Twitter account link TWITTER PAGE LINK NOT FOUND Congratulations, mobilestore.pk got a very good Social Media Impact Score! Show it by adding this HTML code on your site: Mobilestore.pk scored 100 Social Media Impact. Social Media Impact score is a measure of how much a site is popular on social networks. 5/5.0 Stars by Social Team This CoolSocial report was updated on 28 Jan 2017, you can refresh this analysis whenever you want. mobilestore.pk is very popular in Facebook, Twitter, Google Plus and Stumble Upon. It has 435 twitter followers and it has 433 google+ shares. Furthermore its facebook page has 190422 likes. Add a widget like this on your site: click here The total number of people who shared the mobilestore homepage on Google Plus by a google +1 button. The total number of people who shared the mobilestore homepage on Delicious. This is the sum of two values: the total number of people who shared, liked or recommended the mobilestore homepage on Facebook + the total number of page likes (if mobilestore has a Facebook fan page). The total number of people who shared the mobilestore homepage on StumbleUpon. This is the sum of two values: the total number of people who shared the mobilestore homepage on Twitter + the total number of mobilestore followers (if mobilestore has a Twitter account). Basic Information PAGE TITLE Mobile App Store Downloads, Mobile Apps, Mobile Phones Daily Prices DESCRIPTION Mobile Apps Store for ultimate FREE mobile phone softwares, Games, Wallpapers and much more. Free Mobile Phone Downloads Store in Pakistan KEYWORDS mobile store, mobile app store, mobile software store, app store downloads, new & used mobile phone prices OTHER KEYWORDS mobile, mobiles, mobile apps, nokia, price, mobile sms, price nokia CoolSocial advanced keyword analysis tool is able to detect and analyze every keyword on each page of a site. The description meta-tag found in the head section of the homepage. The URL (Uniform Resource Locator) is the address of the site. The title found in the head section of the homepage. The keywords meta-tag found in the head section of the homepage. Domain and Server DOCTYPE HTML 5.0 CHARSET AND LANGUAGE English UTF-8English DETECTED LANGUAGE English English SERVER nginx admin (PHP/5.5.36) OPERATIVE SYSTEM The language of mobilestore.pk as detected by CoolSocial algorithms. Type of server and offered services. Represents HTML declared type (e.g.: XHTML 1.1, HTML 4.0, the new HTML 5.0) Character set and language of the site. Operative System running on the server. Site Traffic trend during the last year. Only available for sites ranked <= 100000 in the world. Referring domains for mobilestore.pk by MajesticSeo. High values are a sign of site importance over the web and on web engines. Facebook link FACEBOOK PAGE LINK FOUND FACEBOOK PAGE www.facebook.com/mobilestorepk DESCRIPTION This page provides wide range of information about http://www.mobilestore.pk LIKES 190422 PEOPLE TALKING ABOUT 264 PAGE TYPE Local Business TIMELINE PAGE TIMELINE The type of Facebook page. The total number of people who like website Facebook page. A Facebook page link can be found in the homepage or in the robots.txt file. The URL of the found Facebook page. The description of the Facebook page describes website and its services to the social media users. The total number of people who tagged or talked about website Facebook page in the last 7-10 days. Facebook Timeline is the new layout of Facebook pages. Twitter account link TWITTER PAGE LINK FOUND TWITTER PAGE twitter.com/#!/rimtiaz DESCRIPTION We enrich your mobile phone with latest java mobile games ACCOUNT CREATED ON 27 May 2009 LOCATION New Delhi TWEETS 112256 FOLLOWERS 435 LISTED 1 This is my song, O God of all the nations, a song of peace for lands afar and mine; this is my home, the country where my heart is; here are my hopes, my dreams, my holy shrine: but other hearts in other lands are beating with hopes and dreams as true and high as mine. At times of national or international crisis, I always seem to find myself inspired, or at least comforted, by church. Advertisement So it was last Sunday. Emotions raw over days of horror and heroism from Ukraine, we closed the service by singing This is My Song, drawn from Sibelius patriotic symphonic work Finlandia, a turn-of-the-century gesture of Finnish defiance against Russian czarist oppression. The hopeful accompanying words of peace were written decades later, between world wars, by American Lloyd Stone. It has become a beloved hymn whose message never fails to move me. Advertisement We closed the service, many of us standing, while our organist played the Ukrainian national anthem. Throughout both songs, my eyes were damp over my mask, and I paused singing more than once to regain my composure. For those few moments, I felt very close to our brothers and sisters in Ukraine, bravely defending their freedom against Russian invaders as we watch safely from our living rooms. Certainly weve had our share of harrowing domestic drama in recent years. But to find the equivalent of what is happening in Ukraine, with a power-crazed dictator trying to redraw the map of Europe by force, you have to go back to Hitler and World War II. Bill White (MONICA CABRERA / THE MORNING CALL) Ukrainian soldiers in Kharkiv, Ukraine, on Friday, Feb. 25, 2022. (Tyler Hicks/The New York Times) Its been heartening to see the way the United States and our European allies have united in response, with increasingly powerful sanctions against Russia and with growing attempts to help arm the Ukrainians for their fight. NATO is likely to emerge from this stronger than its been in years. I would love to also be able to praise the way this dire threat to global peace has at least temporarily healed our nations partisan divisions as we unite behind NATO and our commander in chief. But Id be lying. Fact is, the pro-Putin/anti-Ukrainian rhetoric emanating from our former president, Fox News and others has been so effusive that some of it has been used on Russian state TV, with Russian subtitles, to bolster the dictators actions. Even after most of Donald Trumps sniveling supporters in Congress and the media had figured out that they were on the wrong side of this and needed to start praising the Ukrainians albeit while improbably blaming Joe Biden Trump was doubling down in defense of his Russian overlord. Advertisement Ive seen it argued that Putin never would have invaded Ukraine if Trump were still in office. That may well be true, given the way Trump so reliably advanced Putins interests. Trump did his best to weaken NATO, blackmailed Ukrainian President Volodymyr Zelenskyy and made it abundantly clear that he embraced totalitarian dictatorships in Moscow and around the world. Claims that Trump would have been better suited to address this international crisis are preposterous, unless youre arguing from the Russian point of view. One of the ironies in all this is that Zelenskyy, whose quest for weapons to defend against Russia was greeted by Trumps impeachable attempt to strong-arm him into providing reelection ammunition, has become such a hero that hes likely to join Nathan Hale, John Paul Jones, Winston Churchill and others who have uttered immortal words of fighting spirit and patriotism. I only regret that I have but one life to give for my country. I have not yet begun to fight! We shall fight on the beaches, we shall fight on the landing grounds, we shall fight in the fields and in the streets, we shall fight in the hills; we shall never surrender. Advertisement And now: I need ammunition, not a ride. However all this turns out, those words and Zelenskyys leadership will continue to resonate. As I teared up in church Sunday, my thoughts were with the fighting forces of Ukraine, with frightened families huddled in subway stations, with Ukrainian natives in the Lehigh Valley and around the country who are praying for their homeland and their loved ones. I know our country isnt united in empathy, either. If youre inclined to conclude that all this has nothing to do with us, thats nothing new. America First was a popular philosophy as Hitler ravaged Europe, too. But if your idea of fighting for liberty is arguing with flight attendants because you dont want to wear a mask, pay closer attention to whats happening on the other side of the world. Advertisement And what it really means to be the land of the free and the home of the brave. Bill White can be reached at whitebil1974@gmail.com. His Twitter handle is whitebil. The memorial service for Judith McFerran Robertson will be held at Algiers United Methodist Church, 637 Opelousas Avenue, New Orleans, LA 70114 at 2PM on Sunday, May 22, 2022 with Reverend JoAnne Pounds officiating. The obituary for Judi can be viewed and online condolences made at www.shule Welcome to ComedyNerd, Cracked's daily comedy Superstation. For more ComedyNerd content, and ongoing coverage of the Iran/Contra Affair, please sign up for the ComedyNerd newsletter below. SIGN ME UP Most people want to have a good time at a live comedy show, but there can be a select few hecklers that are out for chaos. Sometimes comedians have a sharp, witty response, but sometimes their jokes were far from great. As youll see in these 15 moments, a perfect mix of heckling and bombing can cause things to spiral into downright madness. He screamed, I don't want to be in the teen mags, remembers Berlin. He had told me he considered himself an adult, not a teen idol. He threw the album hard at me and it hit me on the cheek. Yikes. But lets be fair. After all, Berlin is Cruises ex-agent. Perhaps this is just an example of a talent rep scorned, belly-aching about a failed relationship after a bad breakup? Continue Reading Below Advertisement Or maybe its just another in a series of furious incidents over decades of production. Just last year, Cruise went bananas on his crew after COVID-19 protocol screw-ups on the set of Mission: Impossible 7. Hey, we get it -- the pandemic has us all on edge, as does the prospect of sitting through another Mission: Impossible. But this edgy? Heres a sample of what happened on-set: Take it away, Tom: "We want the gold standard. Theyre back there in Hollywood making movies right now because of us! Because they believe in us and what were doing! Im on the phone with every f***ing studio at night, insurance companies, producers, and theyre looking at us and using us to make their movies. We are creating thousands of jobs you motherf***ers. I dont ever want to see it again, ever! And if you dont do it youre fired, if I see you do it again youre f***ing gone. And if anyone on this crew does it - thats it, and you too and you too. And you, dont you ever f***ing do it again. Thats it! No apologies. You can tell it to the people that are losing their f***ing homes because our industry is shut down. Its not going to put food on their table or pay for their college education. Thats what I sleep with every night. The future of this f***ing industry! So Im sorry I am beyond your apologies. I have told you and now I want it and if you dont do it youre out. We are not shutting this f***ing movie down! Its a rant Les Grossman would be proud of. For more ComedyNerd, be sure to check out: 5 Things You Learn Working In A Comedy Club Comedy: Can Online Gurus Teach Anyone How To Write It? Why Is 'Spider-Man: No Way Home' Obsessed With Spider-Memes Top image: Shutterstock/Dreamworks Pictures, Paramount Pictures Pennsylvanias politicians are putting partisanship aside to take a stand against Russia. Republicans and Democrats are calling for the state to sever all ties with the Evil Empire that is slaughtering innocent civilians in Ukraine and raising global fears of World War III. Advertisement Some politicos still cant help jabbing at each other, of course. On Sunday, Democratic Gov. Tom Wolf asked the Liquor Control Board to stop selling Russian vodka. Republican Senate President Pro Tempore Jake Cormans office promptly issued a statement pointing out that Wolf had followed Cormans lead, as he had made the same request earlier that day. Advertisement But they are working together to do the right thing. We must speak with one voice against this attack and the chaos it will create on the international stage, Corman said in a statement Saturday. My thoughts and prayers will remain with the people of Ukraine, and I am in communication with my colleagues on both sides of the aisle to do whatever we can to support a quick end to this invasion to restore the autonomy of Ukraine and the safety of its citizens. [ How to avoid forthcoming Russian cyberattacks ] State Sen. Lisa Boscola said she will be introducing a resolution calling for state government, municipalities and businesses to divest Russian holdings and cease commercial trade. The unprovoked attack and invasion must be met with international economic repercussions and this resolution justifies that endeavor by urging all Pennsylvanians to stand in solidarity, Boscola, a Democrat from Bethlehem Township, said in a statement Monday. Both parties are calling for legislation that would require the state to sell any investments, including pension funds and state Treasury holdings, connected to the Russian government. House Majority Leader Kerry Benninghoff (R-Centre) and Sen. Sharif Street (D-Philadelphia) said they would be introducing bills. If the nations of freedom across the world allow Vladimir Putin to get away with the persecution and murder of the people of the Ukraine, he will only be emboldened to attack others, Street said in a statement Monday. Advertisement We must send a message, not only with economic sanctions at the federal level but at every level of government. Treasurer Stacy Garrity, a Republican, announced Monday on Twitter that the Treasury had started to divest its minimal holdings in Russian-based companies. The state school employees retirement system is gathering details about its exposure to Russian-related investments and could take action in a few weeks, The Associated Press reported. Its heartening that our public officials are uniting against a common threat. This is wishful thinking, but I hope the spirit of cooperation extends to addressing other problems that are hitting closer to home. Gun violence, climate change and an unfair school funding process hurt people of every party. Its time to unite on solutions to those crises, too. Advertisement Morning Call columnist Paul Muschick can be reached at 610-820-6582 or paul.muschick@mcall.com Local Local bus lines trying to get ahead of driver shortage SUBMITTED PHOTO Hicks Bus Line buses line up in the loading area at Lake Ripley Elementary School. Submitted photo Local bus drivers like Jessica Jensrud are often the first and last school-associated person students see each day. Submitted photo Larry Nelson and other local drivers have worked through unusual times these past few years, adjusting to pandemic rules and sometimes making deliveries they might not have expected. Submitted photos Bus drivers Julie Stern, Mark Manthel and Tammy Renee pose in front of one of the Hicks Bus Line No. 12. Everything had been running smoothly for school bus drivers until about March 2020. Since then, the pandemic has brought new duties, regulations, challenges and fears for this key component of any citys infrastructure. I think very few people realized that our bus drivers were delivering meals and learning packets to kids homes, Paul Meyer, general manager of Hutchinson Bus Line, said of the first half of 2020 when local students learned from home. That ran into, I think 17 buses running through the summer months delivering food to everybody. Hicks Bus Line of Litchfield, which owns Hutchinson Bus Line, also kept busy helping deliver meals to students, and others for the Nutrition Assistance Programs for Seniors. Students returned to school in the later part of 2020, and on into 2021. All of our drivers came back ready to go, Meyer said, even though there was still a lot of COVID. It was pretty rampant at the time. Drivers with symptoms stayed home 10 days. Field trips faded off due to the pandemic, and a team of 50 drivers kept working. But as the pandemic continued on into the 2021-22 school year, things changed. Right now, were down to 40, Meyer said. We are so short-handed almost every driver drives every day. While every member of a team working daily would seem normal in many workplaces, it is unusual for bus drivers, many of whom are only looking for a way to stay busy or pitch in. That means drivers are driving more than they intended, office staff are driving as well, and everyone is having to be a little more creative. Our average age is 68-79, Meyer said. A lot of our drivers are retired, said Roxanne Godejahn, bus manager at Hicks Bus Line. We have a stay-at-home mom. We have drivers that the spouse has a good job. While regular bus routes and a diminished count of field trips have all been covered, sports and after school activities can be more challenging. Meyer recalled combining a middle school and high school wrestling team onto one bus, which meant each time had to wait around an extra hour, one before their event, one after. Hutchinson Public Schools Superintendent Daron VanderHeiden said there have been a couple of times the school was concerned it would have to combine routes to cover the entire district, mostly due to drivers being out for a variety of reasons. But it hasnt had to happen yet, and hes aware Meyer drives almost daily to help make sure of it. He praised the company for raising salaries and proactively seeking new drivers. This has been a concern across the state, he said. I think well be OK for this year, Meyer said. However, were not getting anyone coming in the door looking for work. Thats part of the problem. We place ads, use the radio, use social media and no one is coming. ... We have no applicants at all. Hutchinson Public Schools is working with the bus line to consider reforms to its bus routes. Service may be delivered differently next year, and routes could change, but as of now a plan has not been put into place. Hicks Bus Line has taken to Facebook ads, and even added a billboard outside Walmart to try and find drivers. For now, Godejahn said, the bus line is maintaining. It has 40 drivers now, with six more that can be pulled from other jobs. Ideally there would be 50 drivers. We are very short, she said. There are times there is no one in the office to answer phone because all of us licensed in the office are out driving. Hicks Bus Line hasnt had to decline any requests for transportation, but its been close, Godejahn said. Because Hutchinson is our sister company, weve been able to pull drivers from there, and theyve pulled from us, she said. Licensing is part of the issue, but both Hutchinson Bus Line and Hicks Bus Line offer in-house training, and pay to train, ahead of the states test. People also worry about the responsibility of driving such a large vehicle and keeping students safe. Ive heard, I cant handle that many kids, Godejahn said. To me, its not the kids that are the issue. I love driving and interacting with the students. there are challenging times, but we have a support system from the schools. The pandemic, Meyer said, factors in. He described it as nerve-wracking. Students are required by federal mandate to wear masks on the bus, but a rule on the books hasnt assuaged all fears, especially not with so many drivers in the most vulnerable age groups. Theyre not required to wear masks anywhere else, not at school, not at home ... not doing anything, Meyer said. But they have to on the bus, so there is pushback from the kids and the parents of us forcing our kids to wear masks. Its tough for drivers to be the mask police. Weve handed out thousands and thousands of masks, Godejahn said. Some drivers do get nervous. Ive had two drivers not return this school year because they knew with the school not doing the mask mandate, they would have a heck of a time on the bus. Most of our drivers are older. They dont want to get sick. Two Hutchinson Bus Line drivers have died from COVID-19 one in December 2020 and another in November 2021. They contracted it and went downhill so fast there was no recovery, Meyer said. That hurt a lot. We have one driver out right now. Shes been out since a week before Christmas. Shes finally getting her strength back. COVID is hitting. People in their 70s have a tougher time recovering. BUS DRIVER APPRECIATION A declaration from Gov. Tim Walz marks Wednesday, Feb. 23 as School Bus Driver Appreciation Day in Minnesota. The Interstate 35 West bridge in Minneapolis will be lit yellow in recognition of school busd rivers. But the celebration goes back six years, with the Minnesota School Bus Operators Association celebrating the event annually. Over the past two years of unrelenting challenges spurred by the pandemic, Minnesota school bus drivers have remained resilient and selfless because they are fiercely committed to the families they serve, said MSBOA President Garrett Regan. VanderHeiden said bus drivers are a key component of public education. We certainly appreciate everything they do, and the impact they have on our students, he said. Typically, many of our kids, the first person they see in the morning from the school district is the bus driver, and the last person they see. That relationship is very important. It impacts their school life. VanderHeiden called local bus drivers dedicated. We have veteran drivers who had been driving for us for a long time, he said. Weve had a stable work force. Hicks Bus Line and Hutchinson Bus Line will spend the week offering drivers treats, meals and rewards to celebrate Bus Driver Appreciation Day more as Bus Driver Appreciation Week. Godejahn said if families want to help with the celebration, the best way is to thank their bus driver. Thats the biggest thing, she said. Some of them are scared to come to work but they do it anyway because they love the kids, Meyer said. They see them grow up, kindergarten through high school. A lot of our drivers are invited to high school graduations. ... It makes them feel part of the family. I've already been to some live sporting events. Yes, I plan on attending several events. I may go to one or two. I like sports but I doubt it. I'm not into sports. Vote View Results The debate has started at our state Capitol on HB 2272, a bill proposing an amendment to the Pennsylvania Constitution privatizing liquor sales. As the statewide political voice for family-owned taverns, bars and licensed restaurants, it has raised a question within our membership. What would the new liquor world look like in the Lehigh Valley and throughout the Keystone State if HB 2272 were to be successful? Advertisement For these small business establishments that supply tens of thousands of jobs supporting our state and local economies, it is a question without many definite answers. The states liquor business is a web that mixes sales, codes and politics. When you make change in one area, it impacts others. Advertisement Does a change in distribution methods put our mom-and-pop bars at the back of the delivery line? Will privatization bring savings, or cost more? Will distributors treat the small businesses the same as the bigger players who can order considerably more? Will big players try to tilt the playing field to benefit them? Tom Tyler (CONTRIBUTED PHOTO) Pennsylvania House Bill 2272 proposes a state constitutional amendment to privatize liquor sales in the commonwealth. (April Gamiz) In philosophy, the Pennsylvania Licensed Beverage and Tavern Association agrees the state should not serve as a wholesaler or retailer of liquor. We also realize there are problems within the states liquor system that need to be fixed, particularly antiquated liquor codes. Unfortunately, HB 2272 is written in a manner that makes the issue look like a simple change, when in reality Pennsylvanias liquor business is much more complicated. Furthermore, HB 2272 doesnt look to fix outdated liquor codes that worry us and could provide better customer conveniences. It doesnt even promise family-owned establishments that theyll be better off when purchasing their liquor to run their businesses. For the taverns, bars and licensed restaurants we represent, supporting HB 2272 is like taking a leap of faith, not knowing if our members will be protected from unintended consequences. As such, we cant take a position on HB 2272, but instead would like to offer suggestions to improve it. In coming to our position, the board of directors at the Pennsylvania Licensed Beverage and Tavern Association received input from our membership from every corner of the state. We looked at the positions of other associations and studied the politics of the issue. Our board had a thoughtful conversation about liquor privatization after reviewing all the data we collected. Because of Pennsylvanias very complicated liquor business, it is critical that if the state exits the liquor sales business it is does so in a way to show its support of small business establishments. Our mom-and-pop taverns, bars and licensed restaurants should not have to worry that theyll be destroyed. Meaningful protections and liquor code changes are necessary. Our industry has already taken it on the chin in recent years thanks to Acts 39 and 166, which made major changes in where, when and who may sell certain alcoholic beverages in the state. The industry was also hit recently by COVID restrictions, supply shortages and workforce issues. We dont need another punch to the face. Advertisement With politics involved in this complicated business, there is a legitimate concern that large, well-funded players, including those from out of state, will have an advantage in a new liquor world. Major players would view HB 2272 passage as an opportunity to rework the liquor code, turning it in their favor at the expense of smaller players. Its not far-fetched to believe HB 2272, as it stands today, could set off a series of political actions impacting all phases of liquor control, licensing and enforcement. Wed rather see the glass half full by improving upon HB 2272 or another vehicle. Lets make this a win-win so that everyone walks away without a fear of losing out. But now, with the potential for unintended consequences happening, this glass is looking half empty to Pennsylvanias family-owned taverns, bars and licensed restaurants. Tom Tyler is president of the Pennsylvania Licensed Beverage and Tavern Association and the owner of McStews Irish Sports Pub in Bucks County. The PLBTA, based in Harrisburg, is the statewide political voice for small business taverns and licensed restaurants. Videos Sorry, there are no recent results for popular videos. Since Russia launched a full-scale military invasion into Ukraine on February 23, a series of cyberattacks have been detected targeting Ukrainian businesses, websites and government agencies amid the ongoing conflict. Meanwhile, organizations in the cybersecurity sector have begun taking action to provide help and support to those directly and subsequently impacted by cyber incidents relating to the Ukraine-Russia crisis. Here is a list of the cybersecurity vendors currently known to be offering aid. Vectra AI: Threat detection and response vendor Vectra AI is offering a slate of free cybersecurity tools and services to organizations who believe they may be targeted by cyberattacks in the Ukraine-Russia conflict. For immediate assistance in the current emergency, Vectra AI is offering several services on a complimentary basis. These include scanning of Microsoft Azure Active Directory (AD), Microsoft 365 and AWS environments for signs of attack, surveillance of network infrastructure both in the cloud and on-premises and supporting the retention of historical metadata to aid incident response investigations based on indicators of compromise for specific attack variants. It is also offering technology from Siriux to immediately discover malicious Microsoft Azure AD activity that could lead to the compromise of Exchange Online mailboxes. SentinelOne: SentinelOne is offering its singularity XDR platform free of charge for 90 days to Ukrainian companies as its teams look to provide support for those in need by sharing research, recommendations, indicators, and tools to stay on top of the evolving threat landscape. Avast: Cybersecurity software provider Avast has released a decryptor for HermeticRansom, a new ransomware strain accompanying the data wiper HermeticWiper malware circulating in the Ukraine, which was discovered by ESET on February 23. The tool can be used to decrypt devices infected with HermeticRansom and allows users to recover files. Bitdefender: Global cybersecurity firm Bitdefender has expanded its collaboration with Romanias National Cyber Security Directorate (DNSC) to provide technical consulting, threat intelligence and, free of charge, cybersecurity technology to any business, government institution, or private citizen of Ukraine for as long as it is necessary. Additionally, the Directorate, in partnership with Bitdefender, will provide free cybersecurity technologies for one year to any company or public entity from NATO or European Union space who seeks to enhance their cybersecurity posture by replacing cybersecurity solutions which present trust concerns from a technical or geopolitical perspective. CrowdStrike: Endpoint protection, threat intelligence, and response company CrowdStrike has released a new tool to decrypt PartyTicket ransomware targeting Ukrainian entities since February 23. The firm stated that the ransomware contains implementation errors, making its encryption breakable and slow. Microsoft: In a blog post on February 28, Microsoft President Brad Smith outlined steps the company has taken to help protect Ukrainian systems. This includes threat detection and remediation, most notably the discovery of a new wiper malware package, and limiting the success of Russian disinformation campaigns. Cloudflare: On February 24, Cloudflare announced that it had removed all customer cryptographic data from its servers in Ukraine. The move was intended to protect people and data should those servers fall into Russias hands. The company continues to serve traffic via its Keyless SSL service. Google: Technology giant Google has expanded its security protections to help safeguard the Ukrainian government, civilians, and websites. Project Shield, which provides free protection against DDoS attacks, is now available for government websites and Google has increased account security protections (including more frequent authentication challenges) for people in the region. Its Advanced Protection Program, which delivers Googles highest level of security, is currently protecting the accounts of hundreds of high-risk users in Ukraine, Google said. Lookout: Integrated endpoint-to-cloud security firm Lookout has upgraded all its users in Ukraine to the Premium Plus version of its application for free. This ensures that Ukrainian users are protected against mobile phishing, device compromise, malicious network connections, and identity theft. SafeBreach: Breach and attack simulation platform SafeBreach has prioritized three "Cert Alerts" that use its platform to help customers plan their response to threats related to the situation in Ukraine and the associated cyber fallout. It can be used to test the robustness of systems in the face of threats such as CERT AA22-047A and CERT AA22-057A. A blog post, Resources for Securing Organizational Posture During Geopolitical Uncertainty, describes resources organizations should be aware of when responding to CISA warnings of cyberattacks on the U.S. DomainTools: Threat intelligence firm DomainTools has released a free feed of newly observed or registered Ukraine-related domain names to help prevent users falling victim to bad actors that create forgeries of existing charities raising funds for those impacted by the conflict. The feed is updated daily and contains domains observed either through the DomainTools domain name discovery process or Farsights passive DNS data feeds. DNSFilter: DNS security provider DNSFilter has started a coalition of technology vendors to drive donations to Ukraine. It is also providing its DNS security solution to those in the country that have been impacted by the invasion free of charge. Outpost24: Risk management solution provider Outpost24 has become a United Nations Global Compact participant in response to the Russia-Ukraine crisis. It has donated 10,000 to the United Nations refugee agency and provided local goods and volunteering in Barcelona, Copenhagen, London, Sophia Antipolis, Naperville, and Karlskrona. It is also providing remote working opportunities for displaced Ukrainian nationals, offering a free vulnerability scan to government and private organizations at risk of cyberattack, and complimentary access to real-time threat intelligence on Russian APT groups. SOC Prime: Threat detection marketplace SOC Prime has urged the security community to sign a petition to help prevent the spreading of misinformation, fake news, lies, and propaganda relating to the Ukraine-Russia conflict. SOC Prime users who support it in its appeal will receive free access to curated detections to combat Russian-backed cyberthreats. Hornetsecurity: Security and backup solution provider for Microsoft 365 Hornetsecurity is offering a year of its managed cloud security services for free to Ukrainian businesses. The offer is for all of Hornetsecurity's services with a focus on its 365 Total Protection Suite. The company asks Ukrainian businesses interested in the offer to contact them by email. This is a carousel. Use Next and Previous buttons to navigate As some consumers boycott Russian imports as a show of support for Ukraine, anyone avoiding Smirnoff would be hurting a brand that found an adopted home in Connecticut and continues to be distilled in the United States. While Smirnoff was started in Russia in the 19th century, an immigrant carried to Connecticut the North American rights to the brand and began bottling vodka in Bethel during the Great Depression. After a company called Heublein acquired Smirnoff, production was moved to Hartford and continued under subsequent ownership by R.J. Reynolds, before being sold again in 1987 to a Diageo predecessor company. Smirnoff is now distilled in Illinois. In response to a Hearst Connecticut Media Group inquiry, a Diageo spokesperson did not say whether the company anticipates any backlash against Smirnoff. After Russia invaded Ukraine last week, some consumers, groups and even state governors have organized boycotts of Russian products. On Monday, Stew Leonards Wines & Spirits confirmed it has ceased sales of Russian imports. After witnessing last weeks events, my family and I spoke about how we could best show our support for Ukraine, said Blake Leonard, vice president of the retailer, which has several locations in Connecticut, New York and New Jersey. All Russian-made products specifically vodka are no longer carried at Stew Leonards Wines & Spirits. Speaking Monday in New Haven, Gov. Ned Lamont expressed support for sanctions against Russia, specifically related to oil. But we need America speaking loudly with one voice, that this is evil and will not stand, Lamont said. I am shocked that former President Trump is all over Russian TV. It sounds like hes rooting for Putin. And its really important that the United States stands and speakers with one voice that this shall not stand. Lamont said he doubts state government has any significant business dealings with Russian companies. I cant imagine what it would be buy paper clips from St. Petersburg? Lamont quipped. I dont think so. We dont buy vodka. Even as peace talks picked up Monday, some expect an extended hangover for Russias exporters whether by businesses that have already been looking to expand their list of suppliers during the COVID-19 pandemic, or consumers taking a stance in a show of support for Ukraine. On Saturday, New Hampshire Gov. Chris Sununu ordered state-owned liquor stores to stop selling Russian-made and Russian-branded vodka, with his Utah counterpart adopting a similar stance. A Sununu aide told Hearst Connecticut on Monday that the governors order does not include Smirnoff, given its U.S. production. The Connecticut Package Stores Association issued a statement, cautioning consumers to do their research and expressing support for the people of Ukraine. Although we are subject to anti-trust laws in organizing any boycott of Russian-produced spirits, we encourage our member package stores to use their discretion and to follow their conscience in making individual decisions to remove Russian spirits in solidarity with the people of Ukraine, the Connecticut Package Stores Association said in the statement. Most popular vodka brands are not affiliated with Russia, and are either produced in the United States or in countries that are outspoken supporters of Ukraine. We encourage our members to exercise due diligence when making their decisions. Diageo was based in Norwalk until two years ago when it moved its headquarters to New York City while establishing a satellite office in Stamford. In a nod to Smirnoffs perch in its history, Diageo included a sculpture wall of more than 400 bottles of the vodka in an innovation center it created at its new office in Stamford. Texas-based Titos Handmade Vodka was the top-selling U.S. liquor brand in 2020, according to BeverageDynamics, well ahead of Diageos whiskey brand Crown Royal, which ranked second. Among brands seeing sales growth, the only other vodka brands to crack the top 10 were New Amsterdam Vodka sold by E&J Gallo Winery and Svedka imported from Sweden by Constellation Brands. While Smirnoff has seen its U.S. growth eclipsed in the past decade by fellow Diageo brands Ketel One and Ciroc, the companys CEO told investors last week to expect new initiatives under the Smirnoff label, and noted the brand has been performing well in emerging markets. We've got good marketing and innovation coming behind Smirnoff, Diageo CEO Ivan Menezes said in a January conference call. We just need them to be stable to slight growth, and we do see that happening. Ken Dixon contributed to this report. Includes prior reporting by Erik Ofgang and Paul Schott. Alex.Soule@scni.com; 203-842-2545; @casoulman This is a carousel. Use Next and Previous buttons to navigate The McDonalds sign beckoned as Rosa Franco and Mario Franco stood at the food court in the Darien service plaza on Interstate 95, ready to start their work shifts. They each hugged two union organizers before heading behind the counter. Rosa and Mario, who are not related, have worked at McDonalds a long time, including as shift supervisors 15 years for her, 25 for him but Monday night was not just another stint on the job. This was their triumphant return after a Dec. 30 order by a federal administrative law judge who ruled the McDonalds franchise owner, Michell Enterprises, had violated labor laws by failing to rehire them and two others after the coronavirus shutdown in March, 2020 because of their union organizing activity. Two years out of jobs they wanted back. Two years in which they started near the bottom of the American Dream ladder and fell further, making ends meet with irregular cleaning and laborer jobs, borrowing from friends, relying on family members with work and eating into what little savings they had. Now they return with an order for back pay, more than $100,000 in total for Franco, Franco and the two others in the case at the Darien northbound I-95 McDs. Rosa Franco laughed out loud describing the long, painful wait for justice. Thats life, she explained with the voice of someone who has seen tough times as an immigrant from Mexico with three children, now ages 16 to 22. This victory...is for everybody Buenas noches! Buenas noches! she chimed as she crossed into the restaurant a step ahead of Mario, four minutes early at 7:56 p.m., herself with a blue medical mask, him donning a black cloth version. Behind the COVID-protective glass, back in the kitchen where Mario works, he and an older woman in white latex gloves embraced. The return for Rosa Franco and Mario Franco and Milagros Vasquez an hour earlier, and Pilar Mestanza, whose first shift is Thursday was part of a long organizing effort launched in the summer of 2018 by SEIU 32BJ, the multi-state building services union. If it succeeds, they will make history as the first McDonalds workers in the United States to form a recognized union. Mestanza and Vasquez told me through a interpreter, spokesman Franklin Soults of Local 32BJ of the Service Employees International Union, that they were anxious about returning to a job where management might not welcome them. I dont feel good, Mestanza said. Im nervous, its frightening to go back, maybe they dont want me, Vasquez said just before her five-hour shift began at 7 p.m. Monday, as she described being out of work while her mother, a cancer patient, was stuck for months in Stamford after visiting from Peru at the start of the pandemic. No such trepidation for Franco and Franco. They have been the most outspoken McDonalds workers in rallies, petitions and appearances in the media. My column of December 2019, featuring them and a few others, was cited heavily in the 47-page order by federal Administrative Law Judge Donna Dawson and in the three-week trial last winter. The nine days of testimony showed media accounts emailed to Michell managers who claimed they didnt see the emails. For Franco and Franco, their first work shift since March, 2020 marked a hoped for return to normalcy, perhaps a bookend to a brutal two pandemic years but also part of a mission. Thats why there was no question they would return if given the chance. Many workers stay inside waiting for us. Because this victory is not just for us, its for everybody, Rosa Franco said. Everybody waiting for us, said Mario Franco, who also immigrated from Mexico. Its all the sweeter a victory because, in a separate series of hearings and complaints, 32BJ SEIU appears to have won the right for all the McDonalds workers at the service plazas to receive higher wages. The service plazas, run under a master contract, are on state property and so most of the McDonalds franchise owners have agreed to settlements in which they pay standard wages. That means the workers should be paid between $16.90 and $17.55 an hour, a number that rises with the minimum wage, which is $13 an hour and heading to $15 in mid-2023. In all, the union said it has recovered more than $1 million in back wages for the service plaza workers. Evasive, equivocal, inconsistent testimony Mario Franco said he went a year and a half unable to find work in Connecticut. Employers would check his name and find he was active in the union effort, he said. The discrimination, he said, came about just because we tried to get better treatment for ourselves and our co-workers. The case of the four workers, all Stamford residents, began with a complaint by 32BJ SEIU to the National Labor Relations Board, which agreed with the contention and tried to settle with Michell before gong to trial. The issue was, in part, whether Michell managers knew about the workers union activities, and acted on that knowledge. Respondent argues that it recalled many employees who also engaged in protected activity, which is true. However, as shown, no other employees level of Union and other protected activity reached the levels of the four discriminatees, Judge Dawson wrote, referring to non-union-related complaints lodged by at least one of the four workers that also may have led to retribution. Dawson wrote that she said she found a key Michell managers evasive, equivocal, inconsistent testimony unbelievable. Michell Enterprises insisted union discrimination had nothing to do with its reason for not rehiring the four in the case. The company, based in Windsor Locks, owns about 20 McDonalds locations in Connecticut and surrounding states, three at I-95 plazas. Michell did not return a call seeking comment and a lawyer for the company said Tuesday he was not authorized to comment. For the workers and the union, its a step, but just a step, toward the ultimate, first-of-its-kind victory of a collective bargaining unit at a U.S. McDonalds. It started in 2018 after unionized building cleaners at the plazas reported what they called ill-treatment of restaurant workers, said Neil Diaz, Connecticut state district leader for the union. Organizing is extremely hard when people are threatened, Diaz told me, describing efforts to unionize food workers at all 23 service plazas on I-95, I-395 and the Merritt/Wilbur Cross Parkway. Were on the right track. The judges ruling came as a surprise to Rosa Franco. The owner has money, she said, and we have nothing. dhaar@hearstmediact.com This is a carousel. Use Next and Previous buttons to navigate ELMSFORD, N.Y. "Law & Order: Special Victims Unit" began filming for an episode of its 23rd season in Westchester County, N.Y. on Thursday. Universal Television crews filmed a scene in the parking lot of the Days Inn hotel in Elmsford. During the scene, actors in an unmarked police van met up with an actor playing a suspect before driving to another car, then a group of left the van. The location was chosen because of the aesthetic of the older buildings in town, according to Elmsford Mayor Bobby Williams. We get a few [filming requests] every year; its nice they choose us, Williams said. They like the old motels and stuff because you cant find them anymore. Filming continued at Motel 6 in Elmsford on Friday and featured scenes including main characters Sergeant Fin (played by Ice-T) and Olivia Benson (played by Mariska Hargitay.) The scenes filmed in Elmsford will be included in episode 17, according to the permit. Episode 17 is set to air on April 7, according to epguides.com. Williams said that the filming has great financial benefits for the town since Universal Television hires Elmsford police for traffic control and its team comes into town and spends money at local businesses. RELATED: These movies filmed in CT are set to debut on Disney+, Netflix, Hallmark [The film crew] will buy lunch here, they will buy breakfast here, they will buy dinner. Believe it or not they even stop at the hardware store a lot, Williams said. Its a win-win for everybody; its a nice feeling. The film crew ordered food from Dom's Deli and Grille House and Capri Pizza. Doms Deli was delicious, everyone enjoyed their sandwiches, crew member Jenna De Jesus said. Westchester County is a popular location to film for several other shows including "City on a Hill," "Ray Donovan," "The Blacklist," "Billions, "FBI" and "FBI: Most Wanted," according to Director of Westchester County Tourism & Film Natasha Caputo. What keeps productions coming back is our hands-on support and the variety of looks we offer from small-town scenes and rural landscapes to urban and industrial settings, beautiful parks and beaches, hotels and historic destinations, Caputo said. In order to encourage production, Westchester has a proactive film office and outreach program whose staff offers hands-on support with location ideas, technical site visits and facilitation of the permit process, according to the Westchester County Tourism & Film's website. Litchfield Jazz Presents, a free online series from Telefunken Soundstage, will hold the third concert of its 2021-22 season on March 25, featuring vocalist Melinda Rodriguez. Rodriguez will tip her hat to two of the greatest jazz vocalists of all time Ella Fitzgerald and Nancy Wilson, according to a statement. Her band includes Matt Wilson on drums, Matt Dwonszyk on bass, Albert Rivera on saxophones and up-and-coming pianist Will Evans. Based in Miami, Florida, Rodriguez is a member of the Litchfield Jazz Camp teaching staff and has served as an adjunct professor at Illinois Wesleyan University, where she recently received her masters degree. She is the winner of the 2019 Ella Fitzgerald Jazz Vocal Competition and was selected as one of the finalists on the popular television program The Voice, season 17, according to the statement. Matt Wilson is one of the most in demand drummers working today and has been honored by the Jazz Journalists Association as Drummer of the Year. He is a regular in critics and readers polls annually. Albert Rivera is a busy musician/educator and an ASCAP and Chamber Music America award winner, whose groups can be heard in New York, New Jersey and Connecticut clubs and at many East Coast Festivals on almost any weekend of the year. He is Director of Operations at the Litchfield Jazz Camp and adjunct professor of Jazz at Purchase College. Brooklyn-based Matt Dwonsyk appears at major NYC jazz clubs, tours internationally and has performed with the late, great Harold Mabern, Bennie Williams, Herlin Riley, Eddie Henderson, and many more. Will Evans is the new kid on the block. He received the George Wein Jazz Ambassador award in 2016 and graduated with highest honors from Brown University in 2020. Having decided on a life jazz, he is working on a Masters degree at Manhattan School of Music and gigging professionally. We met Will at Litchfield Jazz Camp where he was a student. This show is free and available to the public, and can be seen live at www.LitchfieldJazzFest.com, Facebook and YouTube pages at 7:30 p.m. March 25. This is a carousel. Use Next and Previous buttons to navigate Editor's note: This story has been updated. Hector Ludena, Macarena Ludena's father, was originally listed as the nominee. Two Connecticut chefs and a top Peruvian restaurant have been nominated for James Beard Foundation awards, known as one of the most prominent honors in the culinary industry. Brian Lewis, chef-owner of The Cottage and OKO restaurants in Westport and Rye, N.Y., and Macarena Ludena of Cora Cora in West Hartford were nominated as semifinalists for the "Best Chef: Northeast" award. Lewis was also nominated for Best Chef: Northeast in 2018. In an email, Lewis said he was "truly honored" to receive the nomination. "My heartfelt thanks to my incredible team at The Cottage for all their hard work and dedication," he said. "Ralph and Chef Christian, I am so grateful for all of your talents and to have you lead the team with me. Cora Cora, a top-rated Peruvian restaurant in Hartford County, was also nominated in the "Outstanding Restaurant" category, alongside restaurants in New Orleans, Los Angeles, Chicago and Seattle. Head chef Macarena Ludena is the daughter of Cora Cora's founders Hector Ludena and Luisa Jimenez, who opened the restaurant in 2011. Courtesy of Cora Cora I am truly honored by the James Beard Award Semifinalist nomination and am grateful to the Cora Cora team for always bringing their best to our customers and to each other, Ludena said in a statement. "We prepare every dish seeking to show respect to our Peruvian heritage and gratitude to our American Dream, and we are humbled by our customers who have supported us over the last 11 years." "Cooking Peruvian food is art, a way to transmit love. It's something that takes me to places of my hometown and special childhood memories, and through these flavors, I can share it with our customers," she said. James Beard awards have been called "the Oscars of the food world" for their prestige. The James Beard Foundations Restaurant and Chef Awards were established in 1991, and honor chefs, restaurateurs, pastry chefs and bakers. Awards are also given for outstanding hospitality, wine and bar programs and emerging chefs. The awards "recognize exceptional talent in the culinary and food media industries, as well as a demonstrated commitment to racial and gender equity, community, sustainability, and a culture where all can thrive," according to a press release from the foundation. The 2022 James Beard Awards will be the first in two years, after a hiatus "during which the awards underwent a full audit of its policies and procedures, continuing the work to remove bias, increase transparency and accessibility, and making the program more aligned with the foundations mission and values." Restaurant and Chef Awards finalists will be announced March 16. Winners will be celebrated at an awards ceremony June 13 at the Lyric Opera of Chicago. This is a carousel. Use Next and Previous buttons to navigate Ever wanted to eat a dozen donuts at once? That dream is now a reality at the Mohegan Suns recently opened Crafty Stir Cafe. The cafe is offering a colossal one-pound donut along with other boozy and Instagrammable indulgent treats. The donut concept started with a picture of a little boy at Walt Disney World with a giant pink-frosted, sprinkled donut. That little boy is the son of the Mohegan Suns Director of Fine Dining Chris Greaney, and the picture was from a recent trip the Greaney family took to Orlando. When Greany began to think of concepts for The Crafty Stir, that massive pink Disney World donut kept poking at the back of his mind. How can we make something that is differentiating the guests' experience? Greaney said. A couple of answers to that is to make an iconic... beverage offering as well as iconic food. With that idea in mind, Greaney challenged Executive Patry Chef Lynn Mansel to make this donut, and after several recipe testing endeavors, they landed on the current iteration. (The donut) is a statement piece. Its like where did you get that? and it bring people right back to The Crafty Stir, Greaney said. Anyone can walk around with a coffee cup, not everyone is walking around with a one-pound donut and lugging it around. The donut isnt the cafes only statement piece. The Crafty Stir offers massive cupcakes with seasonal flavors. All of the cafes pastries can also include a barista bomb for $5, which is an infusion of alcohol to make any pastry boozy. Greany mentioned infusing Gran Marnier into an orange chocolate cupcake or vanilla vodka inside the enormous donut. The cafe also serves boozy coffee drinks like the Kentucky Coffee with Jim Beam Honey, The Cafe Caribbean with Bacardi Spiced Rum and Amaretto or the Caramel Irish with Jameson and Caramel Schnapps. The Crafty Stir is open 6 a.m.-9 p.m. Sunday through Thursday and 6 a.m.-midnight Friday and Saturday at The Mohegan Sun, 1 Mohegan Sun Blvd., Uncasville. Japanese DM refutes ex-PM Abe's nuclear weapons sharing idea Xinhua) 09:39, March 02, 2022 TOKYO, March 1 (Xinhua) -- Japanese Defense Minister Nobuo Kishi on Tuesday refuted former Prime Minister Shinzo Abe's controversial notion that Japan should discuss the possibility of a nuclear sharing arrangement with the United States amid Russia's military operation in Ukraine. During his remarks on a news conference, Kishi advocated for the continued need for Japan to adhere to its three nonnuclear principles of not producing, possessing or allowing nuclear arms on its territory, which were inspired by the devastating atomic bombings of the Japanese cities of Hiroshima and Nagasaki in World War II. If there is a framework assuming that "U.S. nuclear weapons are deployed in our territory, even in peacetime, and they are ready to be carried by our fighter jets in an emergency, that would never be allowed," Kishi said. "There are no changes to our adherence to the three non-nuclear principles," he stated. On a TV program on Sunday about Japan's security environment as it relates to Russia's military moves in Ukraine, Abe said that "it is necessary to understand how the world's security is maintained. We should not put a taboo on discussions about the reality we face." The former prime minister, who heads the largest faction of the ruling Liberal Democratic Party, suggested that Japan should start discussions on seeking a nuclear sharing arrangement with the United States similar to the North Atlantic Treaty Organization's nuclear deterrence policy, after Russia launched a military operation against Ukraine. On Monday, Japanese Prime Minister Fumio Kishida also condemned Abe's remarks, saying it is "completely unacceptable" for Japan to make a nuclear sharing deal with the United States, spurning Abe's notion of Japan hosting U.S. nuclear weapons amid tensions between Russia and Ukraine. (Web editor: Peng yukai, Liang Jun) A highly pathogenic avian influenza has been detected in wild ducks in Connecticut during routine surveillance, according to officials. The state Department of Energy and Environmental Protection said its biologists and United States Department of Agriculture staff detected the presence of the bird flu in mallards and continue to monitor the situation. The routine wild bird surveillance program helps serve as the states early-warning system, reducing the risks of spread to poultry producers, DEEP said. DEEP said wild bird can be infected with the virus and show no signs of illness. As they migrate, they can then spread the disease to new areas. A backyard flock of pet chickens in New Yorks Suffolk County were detected with the flu on Feb. 19. Following that discovery, some health experts in Connecticut expressed concerns with the strain being found so close to the state. In the past five years, low pathogenic avian influenza has been found in Connecticut three times, according to the state Department of Agriculture website. The state agency urged any residents who own chicken or other game birds to be aware of the situation and report anything out of the ordinary, DEEP said. Among the signs of avian flu are depression, decreased food and water consumption, decreased egg production, soft or misshapen eggs and any respiratory signs like coughing or sneezing. Anyone who suspects poultry might have died from unknown causes is asked to contact the state veterinarian at 860-713-2505 or ctstate.vet@ct.gov. As Connecticuts treasurer on Tuesday announced he is cutting the state pensions ties to Russian financial assets, the governors office says its reviewing all potential connections with the country following last weeks invasion of Ukraine. In a statement calling Russias invasion an unjustified and unprovoked attack on Ukraine, Connecticut Treasurer Shawn Wooden said he was directing the state pension fund to divest public funds from Russian-owned assets. Eliminating our holdings of Russian assets is not only a moral imperative, but the current crisis also constitutes a substantial risk for Connecticuts investments, our national policy and economic security, Wooden said in his statement. Connecticuts action today will apply further economic pain on a dangerous autocrat who needs to know that the free world stands in solidarity with the Ukrainian people and that Putins abhorrent actions will have enduring, harrowing economic consequences in the days, months and years ahead. The move comes amid wide-scale sanctions against Russia by the United States and Europe following last weeks invasion, which has so far left hundreds dead or wounded. Gov. Ned Lamonts office has initiated a review of all state purchasing and had not found any Russian or Russian-backed suppliers as of midday Tuesday. The governors office was also looking into state investments through the Department of Economic and Community Development or Connecticut Innovations, the states quasi-public technology investment arm. Were checking with all of our state agencies, which have contracting authority, Lamonts spokesperson Max Reiss said. Is there any technology were paying for, is there any product were paying for, is there any service were paying for that is being provided by a Russian company? As for economic aid or investments, Reiss said Tuesday, as of now, were not aware of any Russian company that were backing. Connecticut Innovations was not aware of any Russian-owned companies in its portfolio. We dont have any direct investment in companies that have emanated from there, CEO Matthew McCooe said Monday. We do, however, have a company called Intelliboard where the CEO is from Kyiv. Hes based in Monroe and hes got employees in Kyiv and hes got employees in Russia. And headquarters are here. Its a fast-growing ed-tech company here and weve had many conversations over the last few days about what the implications are and what we might do to support them. Reiss said the governors office has asked McCooe to check on investments in companies that also have investments by Russian entities. Woodens office said the more than $47 billion pension funds Russian investments total some $219 million, which includes nearly $151 million in equities in companies based in Russia, and just over $68 million in Russian-backed debt. The office said the sanctions issued by the Biden administration only freeze new investments, meaning divesting the fund is not directly the result of U.S. sanctions against the Kremlin. But eliminating our holdings of Russian-owned assets is a necessary step toward minimizing harm to our investment portfolio and is consistent with the treasurers mandate, codified in state statute, to consider U.S. foreign policy, Michelle Woods Matthews, a spokesperson for the office, said in an email. This action is consistent with U.S. foreign policy and national interests of the United States, including the sanctions currently imposed by the Biden administration. The treasurers office noted the funds Russian investments including in companies located in Russia and in sovereign debt issued by the Kremlin have declined since 2014. That coincided with wider U.S. sanctions in the wake of Russias annexing of the Crimean peninsula and fomenting a separatist conflict in the Donbas region of eastern Ukraine. Reiss said Lamont is also checking with refugee settlement agencies about their ability to help emergency immigrants from Ukraine. We want to welcome with open arms any Ukrainian refugees that could find their way to Connecticut, Reiss said, understanding that Afghan refugee resettlement is ongoing. Lamont said he believes encouraging boycotts of products, other than oil and gas, may be less effective than direct measures the state can take. The governor wants to take steps, which are tangible and real, Reiss said. Attorney General William Tong announced Wednesday Connecticut is joining other states in a nationwide investigation into TikTok to see if the popular social media application violated consumer protection laws that put the public at risk. Tong and other officials allege the application promotes its platform to children and young adults while use is associated with physical and mental health harms, he said in a statement. I have had multiple conversations with TikTok leaders where I have made it clear that the reckless viral challenges that proliferate on their platform are dangerous and need to stop, Tong said. Tong said he appreciates that the platform has made efforts to remove some of the harmful content from their site, but whatever they have been doing just is not enough to protect our kids. Our investigation will look at what TikTok knew about the risks to our children, and precisely what they have been doing to keep our kids online, Tong continued. In coordination with attorneys general across the country, we are prepared to use the full weight of our consumer protection authority to hold TikTok and other social media giants accountable. The investigation will also focus, among other things, on what techniques TikTok used to boost engagement from young users, including increasing how much time they spend on the platform and their frequency of engagement, Tong said. Attorneys general from California, Florida, Kentucky, Massachusetts, Nebraska, New Jersey, Tennessee and Vermont are leading the investigation, according to Massachusetts Attorney General Maura Healey. As children and teens already grapple with issues of anxiety, social pressure and depression, we cannot allow social media to further harm their physical health and mental well-being, Healey said in a statement. State attorneys general have an imperative to protect young people and seek more information about how companies like TikTok are influencing their daily lives. This isnt Tongs first time criticizing social media platforms and their negative effects on young residents. Tong first wrote to TikTok executives in October 2021. In the letter, he demanded a meeting in Connecticut to give educators and parents the opportunity to discuss the harmful impact the viral app has had on the mental and physical safety of young people and educators. Tong said plans for that meeting are ongoing, and he expects it will take place this spring. TikTok has been a means of sharing delinquent to nefarious content in the past. At the start of the school year, a viral trend encouraged students to vandalize or steal equipment from their schools. Another trend, which authorities said originated on TikTok, went viral at the end of 2021 alleging threats of school violence. In December, an Ohio man was sentenced to 10 years in prison for posting a naked video of a 12-year-old New Canaan girl on TikTok. The judge who sentenced the man called the incident a parents worst social media nightmare. In an effort to minimize harm, the platform has also taken steps to protect the LGBTQ community and women from harassment in hate speech. TikTok also announced recently it will crack down on content that promotes disordered eating. TikTok isnt the only social media platform under scrutiny. In May 2021, a bipartisan coalition of 44 attorneys general urged Facebook to abandon its plans to launch a version of Instagram for children under 13. Attorneys general across the country, including Tong, also announced an investigation in November 2021 into Instagrams parent company Meta Platforms Inc., formerly known as Facebook, for providing and promoting Instagram to kids. Snapchat and Metas Facebook and Instagram were recently the subject of a wrongful death lawsuit. A Connecticut mother claimed the social media giants did not do enough to protect her daughter from harmful and exploitative content before her suicide. Before her death, the lawsuit claims the 11-year-old had an extreme addiction to Instagram and Snapchat. FAIRFIELD In her state of the town address, First Selectwoman Brenda Kupchick said she wanted to focus on the future, but did take time to look to the past. Kupchick said she wanted to continue the work she had been doing over her term, emphasizing government transparency and public accessibility. She said she has worked to restore public trust, hire new talent and reorganize town government after coming into office after the fill pile scandal. Change is often difficult, and usually the first reaction is resistance, she said Monday. Change is necessary for progress. The Democrats response to the state of the town address made by Representative Town Meeting Majority Leader Elizabeth Zezima called for continued improvement, and took shots at the administration on a variety of topics. She said taxpayers have saved millions of dollars through Democrats due diligence and fiscal stewardship. We did so in response to this administrations fiscal initiatives that neither spent tax dollars wisely, invested appropriately, nor provided for long term benefits, she said. Zezima said the Democrats have also worked with Republicans to either approve or improve on Kupchicks initiatives. She said it is that kind of bipartisan efforts, that do not aim to obstruct, but to create a collaborative, working government that serves all by functioning democratically and transparently. Kupchick said significant progress has been made on cleaning up the fill pile sites, but millions of tax dollars will be needed to finish the job. The fill pile scandal has plagued the town for years and led to the arrests of both town officials and private business owners. Julian Enterprises is accused of dumping contaminated material into the fill pile on the towns property and then selling the contaminated fill for other construction projects around town. The pile was shut down in 2016 when lead and polychlorinated biphenyls, or PCBs, were found. We have cleaned up a large majority of contaminated sites around town, Kupchick said. We are making progress on the fill pile itself, and this year, we will tackle the big question of (Federal Emergency Management Agency) violations and remediation at Penfield Pavilion. Kupchick noted her newsletter has been keeping residents informed, as have joint meetings of the towns three major bodies on large issues, such as paving or the fill pile. She said American Rescue Plan Act funds will be used to buy equipment to allow for hybrid participation in town meetings. Never in the history of Fairfield has government been more open and accessible, she said. Kupchick also said modernizing town government and services, finding inefficiencies, and restructuring departments for increased accountability and productivity will continue to be main goals of her administration. We have eliminated positions that are no longer relevant, and have created new positions that bolster the department so they can better meet the needs of our changing community, she said. Kupchick said her budget, which was approved by the Board of Selectmen on Monday, will help further those goals, adding it only increases the mill rate 0.98 percent all while investing in schools, funding long-term liabilities and maintaining a longstanding AAA bond rating. Zezima said the last budget had a 6 percent increase increase, while not funding the Board of Educations full request. This is not fiscal responsibility or good fiscal strategy, she said. The administration mislead Fairfield residents by describing this huge increase as a small change in the mill rate. The only reason the mill rate is so little is because the property tax assessments last year. Zezima said the cuts to the BOEs request will impact what happens in the classroom. She also said Democrats demand every effort is made to maintain high standard of fiscal conduct and preventing lapses in due process, improving procedures and correctly implementing town policies. She also challenged proposed changes within the charter commission, including the possibility of getting rid of the RTM. Looking forward, Kupchick said she is looking to implement a bonding cap while a bipartisan working group puts together a five-year capital plan to prioritize major town needs. While the town has a long list of infrastructure needs, our sewer system needs significant funding, she said. At the same time, our senior center is aging. Old Town Hall is in need of major repairs, and our recently completed life-safety report shows significant deficiencies on the town hall campus that needs to be addressed. A number of projects and plans are also in the works in town, Kupchick said, including the Stratfield beautification and road safety project, the parks and recreation master plan, the plan of conservation and development, the towns affordable housing plan and charter revision commission. The paving plan will also be a boon to the town, Kupchick said, noting it immediately improves roads as well as creates a necessary blueprint for future road maintenance. Kupchick said the pending sale of the Fairfield Metro train center property is also of note with plans for a mixed-used development that would include residential units, a hotel, a commercial office and retail space. She said it would connect the metro corridor to downtown, and is expected to start later this year. Fairfield has been waiting a really long time for this site to be developed, and I look forward to seeing shovels in the ground, she said. Kupchick said the town needs to work to ensure smart growth in targeted areas to lessen the burden on tax payers. She said she cares deeply about the community and feedback from officials and residents. I am just as committed as the day I raised my hand and swore an oath to serve our community, and I am looking forward to a new year filled with hope and promise for Fairfield, she said. joshua.labella@hearstmediact.com NEW HAVEN Reflecting on his recent trip to Israel, in which the goal was to promote business expansion and partnerships with Connecticut, Gov. Ned Lamont said Monday that the laboratory-grown chicken tasted like...chicken. So maybe Connecticuts future includes producing beef and chicken from stem cells in a high-tech, low methane-generating way to satisfy consumer demand for meat in the 21st Century, he said. This cultured meat and chicken is fascinating to me, Lamont told told reporters during a morning news conference in the offices of the quasi-public Connecticut Innovations Inc. You were growing 10 pounds of prime beef or chicken starting out in a petri dish. Necessity is the mother of invention. Israel doesnt have a lot of land. They dont have a lot of water, but they like meat and chicken, so heres your opportunity to develop 10 pounds of prime beef without water, without acres of land, without any of that environmental devastation. Theyve got some preliminary approvals about it and they are very interested in Connecticut. That was one highlight in the flurry of activity where the governors delegation met with venture capitalists, government officials, start-ups, accelerators, and thought leaders. Lamont said the week-long excursion gave his team, including interim University of Connecticut President Radenka Maric, Matt McCooe, CEO of Connecticut Innovations Inc., and Commissioner of the state Department of Economic and Community Development David Lehman a chance to tout Connecticuts position on the East Coast, its proximity to New York airports, its Jewish population and its interest in providing companies with 50 to 75 employees a chance to grow in the state. We now have the relationships with the folks that know all the entrepreneurs, the folks that know all the small businesses, the folks that are funding them, the venture capital firms, he said. We met with each and every one of them. It could be that Connecticut Innovations is going to co-invest in some of these. Its not a guarantee that they come to Connecticut, but Connecticut is on the radar screen. I think thats a new way of doing it and its incredibly important. Aerospace and defense industries were also part of the conversation, along with health care, cryptocurrency and UConns relationship with Technion Univerity in Israel. The group from Connecticut included personnel from Raytheon, Hartford HealthCare, and the Digital Currency Group, the Jewish Federation Association of Connecticut. Lehman said at least two firms Future Meat and Aleph Farms are contemplating imminent $75 and $150 million capital investments within the next six months. In Israel, theres a fast-moving economic atmosphere where the government is transitioning away from the authoritarian regime of Benjamin Netanyahu, thanks to a more-diverse government that is including more of a voice for Palestinians. Lamont said Connecticuts support of diversity includes more opportunities for woman as well. I can tell you that Prime Minister (Naftali) Bennett was proud that they have such a diverse coalition, said Lamont, who became the first Connecticut governor to visit Israel since the 1990s. Ironically, hes proud of the fact that its representative of the Arab-Muslim party is the deciding vote only because the margins are so thin. The next thing to do is follow-up. Were not leading with incentives, but if you want to come to the great state of Connecticut, come, Lamont said. Were going to roll out the red carpet for you just like you rolled-out the red carpet for us. Lehman said Connecticut Innovations has made direct investments in Israel, while another tool is to help invest. The state is selling its proximity to New York airports and Northeast markets, the cost of doing business, the 3.3 percent Jewish population here and its family-friend lifestyle. This year well probably invest between $45 and $50 million into 100-plus investment opportunities and companies, of which a very small percentage are Israeli, McCooe said. The three-pronged goal is to bring companies to Connecticut, help companies already here and returns. If we invest $1 million in an entrepreneur, we want to get back two, three, four, five million dollars, McCooe said. And that allows us to invest in the next five entrepreneurs. The governor said the most-moving hour of my life occurred at Yad Vashem, Israels Holocaust memorial, where he joined in a lighting ceremony of the Eternal Flame. The various trips in the nation of 9 million people included meetings with Bennett, Foreign Minister Yair Lapid, President Isaac Herzog, and Dr. Salman Zarka, Israels chief COVID-19 officer . The issue of diversity came up during the meeting with Bennett, who Lamont said agreed with the current moment in which people who might not have had much workplace opportunities in the past, can now reap the fruits of the openings in the workforce both in Israel and the United States, where skilled employees are needed. We compared notes about how this is an extraordinary opportunity to lift up people whove never had that opportunity before, Lamont said, adding that Palestinians, Israeli-Arabs, Muslims and Orthodox Jews now have more opportunities in Israel. When asked what the lab-grown meat tasted like, Lamont laughed and recalled the company officials who accompanied the Connecticut delegation on their tour of the laboratory. I had the chicken and theyre all watching. I said it was really good. I thought it was tasty. I pretended to gag for a minute to get their attention, but its really good. I think, believe it or not, its got a future. kdixon@ctpost.com Twitter: @KenDixonCT WESTPORT Gov. Ned Lamont announced plans for a $55 million investment in state parks on Monday as part of an effort to reduce the backlog of repairs that are due on Connecticuts aging cabins, bathhouses, trails and other park facilities. The outlay for parks, which includes both new and already-approved sources of funding, is part of the governors $24 billion budget that he presented to lawmakers last week at the start of a short legislative session. Lamont announced the planned investment Monday at Sherwood Island State Park in Westport, where he and Department of Energy and Environmental Protection Commissioner Katie Dykes said overdue maintenance needs were evident in some of the parks most utilized facilities: its bathrooms and the open-air pavilion overlooking Long Island Sound. Were taking care of the basics right now, Lamont said. Its not flashy, but fixing up our old infrastructure which is 80 to 100 years old, including bathrooms, which is one way people take a look at the community, is important. Dykes said the park system, which is managed by DEEP, also faces mounting maintenance costs on its collection of over 1,000 buildings, including several historic structures such as the century-old Harkness Mansion in Waterford, The park system is also home to a network of New Deal-era public works projects that are beginning to show their age. For example, the pavilion at Rocky Neck State Park in East Lyme, built by the Works Project Administration in 1936, is in need of a new roof, Dykes said. Eric Hammerling, the executive director of the Connecticut Forest and Park Association, said that backlog has built up over decades of deferred maintenance and staffing cuts. Its not something that any one administration is responsible for, Hammerling said. Its a death by a thousand cuts. Now they are giving the resources to start healing those old wounds. Connecticuts state parks experienced surging popularity during the pandemic, setting visitation records and prompting officials to close gates at some of the more popular parks, such as Hammonassett, on busy days when they reached capacity. Connecticut made admissions to its state parks free for residents in 2018 through a passport program funded through a new $15 surcharge on vehicle registrations. Now, Dykes said the parks draw roughly 13 million visitors a year. Those crowds placed even more strain on park facilities, Dykes said. In preparation for the upcoming season, she said DEEP is preparing to launch a new parks website and encourage visitors to travel to the states lesser-known parks. In some cases, our parks are getting loved to death, Dykes said. We want to make sure that these beautiful spaces are ready to welcome visitors and give them the experiences that they enjoy. Support for parks funding, including the Passport to Parks program, has typically attracted bi-partisan support in the legislature due to the popularity of parks and their importance to every corner of the state, lawmakers said. A lot of legislators have parks in their districts and a lot of their constituents visit them, said state Rep. Joe Gresko, D- Stratford, the co-chair of the Environment Committee. Republicans, however, may take issue with the governors $55 million park investment as part of their larger concerns over the budget, said House Minority Leader Vincent Candelora, R- North Branford. Candelora did not point to any specific concerns within the park proposal announced Monday. Weve always found that our parks system is an important capital investment, Candelora said, adding I do take issue with some of the continued handouts our governor is proposing. Neither Lamonts administration nor DEEP provided a complete list Monday of repairs and maintenance projects that would be funded under the spending plan. However, DEEP spokesperson Will Healey said some of the more well-known structures in need of repair include the Heublein Tower at Talcott Mountain State Park and and the Chase Cottage at Topsmead State Forest. Just about all of our buildings are in need of some kind of repair (as is the case with most buildings, generally), but there are several dozen buildings that are in need of major repair or replacement, Healey said in an email. These facilities range from large, historic structures, to the more basic, but necessary, bathroom building and campground shower buildings. Funding for Lamonts proposed park investment will come from three sources, his administration said. The largest source is $25 million the state received from the federal government through the American Rescue Plan. Another $15 million will come from bonding measures that have already been approved, plus another $15 million in bonds the administration will seek approval for this year. NEW MILFORD The newly formed Housatonic Valley Health District has made two new hires an added sanitarian and public health inspector to serve the health departments five member towns. Lisa Yu has been hired as a new sanitarian and Xavier Bennett as the public health inspector. The health district began official operation this month, integrating health services from Pomperaug District Department of Health and New Milfords health department. The district includes the towns of New Milford, Oxford, Southbury, Washington, and Woodbury and has its own new website. The merger promised savings for New Milford, as well as expanded staffing health services for all member towns. We are very excited to welcome Ms. Lisa Yu and Mr. Xavier Bennett to our team. Their experience and knowledge complement our growing team and help us better serve our community, said HVHD health director Lisa Morrissey. Joe Kmetz, who served as Pomperaugs sanitarian since June of 1993, will serve as chief sanitarian supervising the environmental health division. Everyone already knows and loves Joe Kmetz, who was the only sanitarian for such a long time, Morrissey said. The two new additions will work under Kmetz. Yu, who will work alongside current sanitarian AJ Cresci, has worked with the Brookfield Health Department since 2015. She holds a public health bachelors degree as well as a masters in health administration, and has experience with food establishment, salon and septic system inspections, the press release states. Bennett also holds a bachelors in public health and has worked in the field since 2017 with experience in food and housing inspections, septic systems, and nuisance complaints. Since 2020, new businesses and construction projects have continued to crop up in the five towns, warranting various health inspections from local health departments. Morrissey said that the addition of these two new roles will help the health district be more responsive and adaptive to the changing needs of businesses and residents. The district continues to seek larger office space in Southbury to accommodate its larger work force, the release said. Another office is expected to be set up in New Milford, as well. The health districts board hopes to have the new locations secured by summertime. This is a carousel. Use Next and Previous buttons to navigate Connecticuts congressional delegation on Thursday condemned the Russian attacks on the Ukraine and supported President Joe Bidens initial sanctions to force the invaders to face strict economic consequences. The courage of Ukrainians fighting for their homeland should be matched by even stronger, crippling sanctions by America and its allies, U.S. Sen. Richard Blumenthal, D-Conn., said after the presidents afternoon announcement and brief news conference. Blumenthal said the United States should now be persuading allies to deny Russia access to the SWIFT world financial system. Vladimir Putin has violated core principles that uphold global peace and security, seeking to change the borders of a sovereign country by force and attacking the post-World War II global order, Blumenthal said in a statement. This attack on Ukraine, a western democracy, is a direct threat to the national and economic security of the United States. We have already seen a jump in gas prices and turmoil in the stock market due to Putins actions. If he is succeeds, we can expect the United States to face not only a pacing threat from China, but also an expansionist Russia that once again desires to dominate the former Soviet Republics along with wide swaths of Europe and the Middle East. The Associated Press reported that the multi-front invasion began in the predawn hours Thursday with Russian troops and war planes hitting cities and bases with airstrikes or shelling. Civilians piled into trains and cars to flee the country. Ukraines government said Russian tanks and troops rolled across the border in a full-scale war that could rewrite the geopolitical order and whose fallout already reverberated around the world. In unleashing Moscows most aggressive action since the Soviet invasion of Afghanistan in 1979, Russian President Vladimir Putin deflected global condemnation and cascading new sanctions and chillingly referred to his countrys nuclear arsenal. He threatened any foreign country attempting to interfere with consequences you have never seen. Putin will come to regret the panicked decision he made to invade Ukraine, said U.S. Sen. Chris Murphy, D-Conn., who called the decision a defining mistake for Putin in a tweet Thursday morning. I applaud the president's decision to exact a heavy price on the Russian government and economy, and the fact that he did this together with our allies makes the blow more impactful. I will be working with my colleagues in Congress in a bipartisan way to provide continued assistance to Ukraine in its hour of need as well as taking steps to reassure our vulnerable eastern flank NATO allies. U.S. Rep. Jim Himes, D-4, said Putins decision will bring terrible consequences for him and his supporters. By invading Ukraine, Vladimir Putin has chosen to violate international law and ignore the warnings of the United States, NATO, and the community of free nations, Himes said. This decision will bring terrible consequences for him and his supporters in the form of sanctions and other crippling measures. He should immediately withdraw all troops or risk an escalation in consequences that will not end well for him or his regime. More than 21,000 Connecticut residents claim Ukrainian ancestry or were born there, according to a recent estimate by The Ukrainian Weekly, a publication of The Ukrainian National Association, a fraternal organization. About 1.1 million people nationwide claim Ukrainian ancestry. Gov. Ned Lamont, back from a weeklong trip to Israel promoting Connecticut business and economic development, called the invasion abhorrent. I condemn the unjustified, unprovoked Russian invasion of Ukraine, Lamont said after President Biden announced sweeping sanctions, including the freezing of Russian bank accounts. The people of Connecticut stand in solidarity with the citizens of Ukraine and pray for their safety as they endure this assault on their freedom. I commend President Biden for leading the free world in sanctioning and punishing Russia for their aggression against a sovereign, democratic, and peaceful nation. kdixon@ctpost.com Twitter: @KenDixonCT WEST HARTFORD The town has introduced a new program to residents that could help them cut their energy costs and reduce greenhouse gas emissions. More than 80 homeowners and renters have already expressed interest in HeatSmart West Hartford, a program that was launched a few weeks ago in collaboration with its creators, the nonprofit Peoples Action for Clean Energy. Were not used to a town being this responsive, said Bernard Pelletier, a West Hartford resident who is also vice president of the nonprofit. The program, he said, is meant to assist residents access the various programs and incentives available to them through Energize Connecticut. Its also an educational crash course in all things heating and cooling. Its a program that would say to a resident that say you have options to take advantage of to make your house much more efficient, Pelletier said. Pelletier said they also want people who are considering replacing their heating and cooling systems to realize there might be alternatives. Were an environmental group. Most people, when its time to get a new furnace they see what they had before and they replace it with the new version of what they had before, Pelletier said. There are more heating and cooling options, so we wanted to do an educational effort. You can make your home to be more efficient and we wanted to put into peoples minds that there are alternatives to replacing. Catherine Diviney, West Hartfords energy specialist, said bringing the program to town is connected to the energy-saving methods the town itself is implementing. West Hartford is seeking to use 100 percent clean energy by 2050. The municipal energy use is 5 percent of the towns total energy use, Diviney said. 95 percent of energy is out there in the community, businesses and residential. This program brings such value to our residents in terms of education and outreach and we have very knowledgeable residents who want to encourage their fellow residents to do the right thing to save money and save energy. Deborah Roe, the program manager for Peoples Action for Clean Energy, said West Hartford is a good target for HeatSmart because its residents underutilize Energize Connecticut programs and benefits. West Hartford is a little below of state average in these state programs, Roe said. The state is starting to look at those issues more and the program has an energy consultant. Were hoping to get some of those folks over that hurdle and make the process easier for people. Diviney said by expressing interest in the program, residents open themselves up to an easier process for receiving a Home Energy Solution, which costs $50 or can be done at no cost for income-eligible residents. Pelletier, referencing the hundreds of homes that use electric heat in West Hartford, said a heat pump could become a good solution for them. That doesnt apply to everyone, though. The operating cost of a heat pump is just going to be lower, Pelletier said about those homes. Were not pushing heat pumps on everybody. There are cases and circumstances where its a logical and good step. Its not a hard sell. Its an educated push. Diviney said the other avenue is learning about new technologies or even adding more insulation to the right places in a home or choosing solar power that other participating residents will benefit from. There is this new evolution of technologies and a move toward electrification for a variety of reasons, like efficiency and emissions reductions, Diviney said. Were also utilizing this program to also try and educate people a little bit more and maybe hopefully get some momentum behind heat pump installations. New technologies are emerging. Pelletier said he knows that efficiency isnt the most glitzy word out there, but if you think about it the other way that people are burning money through inefficient heating and cooling options it might matter more to some. Theyre also encouraged by the number of people interested in the program so far. What were trying to bring to the residents of West Hartford, is were trying to make it super easy and customer friendly to go through the home energy program, with help and assistance behind it in case our residents have questions, Diviney said. Its a more streamlined and user-friendly process that will result in superior outcomes. The program is open to homeowners, but also renters who have their landlords approval. The group is also available to give presentations to civic groups who are interested in learning more about HeatSmart. China has always supported and encouraged all diplomatic efforts that are conducive to the peaceful settlement of the Ukraine crisis, and welcomes the launch of peace talks between Russia and Ukraine, a foreign ministry spokesperson said Tuesday. Produced by Xinhua Global Service WEST HARTFORD The town will use funds received from the state to help purchase its first electric vehicle and add a new charging station at the town hall. The state awarded $24 million to 10 Connecticut communities for a variety of projects. The funding comes through the Department of Transportation and from the Federal Highway Administration's Congestion Mitigation and Air Quality Improvement Program. West Hartford is slated to receive $20,952. The town said the purchase of the vehicle falls in line with a climate change resolution the town council recently approved. West Hartford recently adopted a climate change resolution that will impact all future town actions in an effort to achieve net-zero carbon emissions as quickly as practicable, said Mayor Shari Cantor in a statement. We are thankful for Governor Lamonts investment in West Hartfords goals to improve our air quality by helping us fund our first EV vehicle and expand our public charging stations. The electric vehicle charging station - which will be for public use - isnt the towns first. Renee McCue, the towns public relations specialist, said they already have electric vehicle charging stations at the town hall, in parking garages at Blue Back Square and in municipal lots. Acting Town Manager Rick Ledwith also said the timing of the funding lines up well with recent action taken by the town council. We appreciate the governors support to help further our work in improving air quality through the use of EV vehicles and charging stations, Ledwith said in a statement. The timing is perfectly aligned with the Town Councils recent action to improve air quality through the implementation of projects, practices and policies that eliminate or counteract the emission of greenhouse gases. State Sen. Derek Slap said hes encouraged by the funding. It's encouraging that West Hartford will receive support benefitting electric vehicles and reducing local air pollution, Slap said in a statement. This investment in local services will help the town acquire its first electric vehicles and make it easier for any resident with an electric vehicle to charge and go in the center of town. I'm grateful to the Department of Transportation and the governor for supporting our community. DEAR ABBY: I'm a teen girl having some trouble right now. I was in an abusive family. Most of my life, I was bullied because I separated from them because they were doing drugs. I have serious depression, and my foster family hasn't noticed. I have given them plenty of signs (I have trouble talking about my feelings), but they ignore them. I had a best friend who helped me through the pain, but she started showing her true colors and turned out to be a jerk. I am also having trouble finding someone who will love me, because I want to be in love. Everyone treats me like a little kid, even though I'm the oldest. Sorry for dumping all my problems on you, but I really need help. It's not fun crying myself to sleep every night. DEPRESSED GIRL IN IOWA DEAR DEPRESSED GIRL: I am sure it's not fun. You have had some hurdles to climb, but you are in your teens and not a "little kid." You should not be keeping your sadness bottled up inside. That's why it's important you find a trusted adult you can talk with about your feelings. If you are in school, a counselor or teacher you trust may be able to provide the support and understanding you are looking for. While most people want to find someone to love who will love them back, I think you would be wise to put that on the back burner until you are stronger emotionally. If you can do that, you will make better choices in the future. DEAR ABBY: I committed a sin with my husband's brother many years ago that I have regretted ever since. I have confessed to God, but I need to tell someone. (I know you cannot absolve my mistake.) My husband was not very affectionate, but we went on to have a family and many good years together. I guess I don't feel I deserved all those blessings. How can I get rid of this feeling of guilt for what I did? EVIL LADY IN THE SOUTH DEAR LADY: Because you won't allow me to absolve you from the "one sin you committed many years ago," please discuss it with a religious adviser. If you are afraid to do that with your own priest, pastor, rabbi, etc., make an appointment to talk with one in a different community. While you may be racked with guilt, believe me, nothing you confess is something they haven't heard before. I hope it helps you to stop flogging yourself. DEAR ABBY: Please clear this up for me. My mother recently passed away. My family and I miss her every day. Her funeral was prepaid, so there were no additional expenses for my family. In the funeral notice, we asked that people give memorials of money to the charity listed, or a charity of the donor's choice. My co-workers collected money and gave it to me. Was the money intended to be a charitable donation from them in my mother's honor, or was it meant for me personally? I'm confused. CONFUSED IN MINNESOTA DEAR CONFUSED: Please accept my sympathy for the loss of your mother. Because your co-workers didn't specify otherwise, assume they followed the guidelines in the obituary and the money is for charity. Thank them for their generosity and leave it at that. There are no good wars, but there are necessary wars. The Russian invasion of Ukraine is a necessary war for the United States and NATO. Some will question the reasoning and wisdom of standing up to Vladimir Putins aggression: They will say the U.S. should stop acting as the world policeman; a war against Russia could spill out into other parts of Europe; Putin might use nuclear weapons. These are valid concerns, but none of them should stop U.S.-led NATO action. The U.S. as world policeman is largely a post-World War II concept, one that developed in stride with the Cold War, the great geopolitical struggle against the Soviet Union that dominated the second half of the 20th century. America utilized its economic, military and covert power to stop the spread of communism and support the expansion of democracy across the globe. This was not simply about freedom. The twin of American democracy is capitalism, and the Cold War was also about economic advantage. Freedom and capitalism are inextricably entwined, and the worst, greediest elements of the latter often overshadow the noble sentiments of the former. Fighting on behalf of Ukraine would fall far more into the noble category. This is a nation that has done nothing to incite Russian aggression. A war against Russia might spill into other parts of Europe or push Putin to use nuclear weapons. Once fighting begins, there is always a possibility of escalation, but it is unlikely Putin would launch attacks against Western European targets or utilize nuclear weapons. Putin is a chess player; tactical, patient, forward thinking. His expansion of Russian power has been careful. He moves, then watches to see the Wests reaction. In the Syrian crisis, President Obama warned of a red line if Syria used chemical weapons. Syria did anyway, and the U.S. did nothing. Putin then increased support for the Syrian regime, sending soldiers and air power. A year later, he invaded Crimea, a part of Ukraine. Again, the U.S. and NATO did nothing but impose sanctions, the age-old punishment/containment strategy. Putin has launched a wave of cyberattacks and interfered in U.S. elections, with little consequence. Always patient and calculating, Putin has now invaded Ukraine, firm in the belief that the U.S. and NATO will do nothing except impose more economic sanctions, which clearly doesnt faze the Russian oligarch. Vladimir Putin understands only one thing: power and its opposite, weakness. Yet Putins singlemindedness is also his Achilles heel. If he is wrong about the Wests willingness to act, his entire plan falls apart. The boxer Mike Tyson once said, Everyone has a plan until they get punched in the face. Its time for Vladimir Putin to take a swift shot to the nose, one that forces him to pull Russian troops out of Ukraine, including Crimea. He wont expand military action into Europe or launch a nuclear weapon. Hes a chess player, not a madman. Doing either will mean the total destruction of Russia, and no one wants that. Standing up to Putin now is the right thing to do. Not because there is economic value or some other narrow interest for the U.S., but simply because the Ukrainian people deserve Western help. Its also not the only reason for the U.S. to act. Doing so sends two other important messages. One is to China: Dont invade Taiwan. Two, defending Ukraine simply because its the right thing may in some way make amends for Americas poor leadership and go-it-alone attitude following 9/11. We never should have invaded Iraq. If helping Ukraine now can in any way erase that stain and place America on the side of good, we should do it. Matthew Warshauer is a professor of history at Central Connecticut State University. The Affordable Care Act (also known as the ACA or Obamacare) is distinguished by many small wins and one big loss, like a kid that does all the homework and yet fails the final exam. Since it was signed into law in 2010, it has expanded Medicaid, created health insurance exchanges and allowed more than 23 million people to have health insurance in 2019 that would have otherwise gone without. Despite these wins, among others, 41 percent of Americans still view the ACA in an unfavorable light, according to a survey done by Statista. This continued disapproval of a law that was signed in 2010 indicate that there are real problems with the ACA beyond the partisan views of it. Where is the major failure in the ACA? Simply in being affordable. According to the Kaiser Family Foundation, in 2017, 45 percent of uninsured individuals stated that cost was the primary reason they did not enroll in health care insurance. Most of these individuals come from either a low-income family, are immigrants or are young adults without parents that have insurance. This high cost of health insurance can partially be attributed to the increased risk pool health insurance companies are experiencing. By eliminating the individual mandate penalty, health insurance companies have had to raise their premiums and deductibles to cover the increased financial risk they were made to experience. Without this penalty, in effect eliminating the individual mandate completely, there is little reason for young and healthy adults to purchase health insurance. This results in a larger proportion of insured individuals that are older and have chronic health conditions, requiring more expenditures to cover. Another reason for the increase in the cost of health insurance is the end of cost-sharing reduction subsidies the federal government was paying to health insurers in 2017. This resulted in an average increase in health insurance premiums of 28 percent to 40 percent on the health care exchange. Not only did the ACA fail to control the rising cost of insurance, but it also failed to make health care and prescribed medicines affordable. According to a West Health and Gallup, 30 percent of surveyed individuals did not seek needed medical treatment due to the cost from September to October 2021. During this time, 14 percent of respondents were unable to pay for prescribed medication and one in 10 Americans reported that they skipped doses to save medicine and, therefore, money. For those that could afford their needed health care, 71 percent did not feel they pay too much for the quality of health care they receive. These factors in turn contribute to an overall worsening of the health of Americans and increased dissatisfaction with our health care system as it stands. The next question is: What do Americans want our political leaders to do about this problem? Pew Research Center found that the top three priorities Americans want the president and Congress to address in 2022 are: strengthening the economy, reducing health care costs and dealing with the coronavirus outbreak. One clear way to do this is to increase the responsibility of the federal government to provide health care coverage for Americans. In 2020, 63 percent of Americans already believed that this was the responsibility of the federal government, either by a single national government health care program or by a mix of that and private programs. Americans may want the federal government to take more responsibility for the health of its people, but 66 percent believe they have no power to change the health care system for the better, according to Gallup. These feelings of helplessness and apathy are the result of decades of politicians ignoring the will of the majority in favor of the vocal minority. Average Americans need to be empowered to share their view to their local representatives. These representatives are obligated to then bring these views forward, regardless of their personal opinions or donations received. I call on everyone that is dissatisfied with the state of health care in America to bring their view forward to their congresspeople. I call on those elected officials to drop partisan politics and come together to make the American health care system affordable, as promised. Overall, I would give the ACA a grade of C as it did provide some significant benefits to Americans but failed to understand the assignment. As we (hopefully) approach the endemic stage of the COVID-19 pandemic, it is time to reevaluate the ACA and create a robust and sustainable health care system that meets its promise of being affordable. Jonna Thomas, of Monroe, is a Master of Public Health student at the University of Vermont. Growing up in the 1980s, my early impression of international affairs was formed through the lens of the Cold War. Films such as The Day After Testament and War Games portended the potential for a cataclysmic end to the struggle between Western Democracy and Soviet Communism. The specter of nuclear war was real and the implausibility of MAD (Mutual Assured Destruction) was a powerful incentive to avoid conflict. The Cold War also had an important corollary effect acting as a ballast for our national political parties. It provided a common ground on which Republicans and Democrats could stand together, no matter their other political differences. From Harry Truman to George H.W. Bush, whatever differences Republicans and Democrats had (and there were many), they were united when it came to prosecuting the strategy of containment and fighting the Cold War. The existence of a powerful and dangerous adversary, prevented both political parties from drifting too far apart, because each had a shared stake in ensuring we prevailed in this epic struggle. For 45 years the Cold War was a common thread of red and blue, woven through the fabric of our democracy. The vacuum created by the absence of this shared sense of purpose is a contributing factor to the divisiveness we see in our national government today. Perhaps with the actions of Russia in Ukraine, that may now change for the better. Russias brazen assault on Ukraine has captured the focus of the world. For perspective, the last time Ukraine was invaded was by Germany in 1941. How did we get here? One can make a cogent argument that since the end of the Cold War, American foreign policy has suffered from a lack of focus, which has led it adrift. Following the Cold War, the absence of an common adversary led to a sense of complacency that the western, democratic model that had prevailed would continue to do so. In the 1990s, the West invested heavily in the former Soviet satellite states, hoping to provide assistance to the fledgling democracies. However, in the first decade of the new century, our foreign policy became driven by the events of 9/11, with mostly questionable long-term results. Since then, we have seen a feckless foreign policy during the Obama years followed by the chaotic impulsiveness of the Trump administration. Now, on the heels of a mismanaged withdrawal from Afghanistan, our potential adversaries feel emboldened and view Western democracies (led by America) as being in precipitous decline. From a U.S. perspective, what makes the current state of the world so daunting is that while we deal with an emboldened Russia, lurching to expand and recapture its former empire, China looms in the distance. Alas, all hope is not lost. The silver lining to all of this is that perhaps this realization will provide Republicans and Democrats with a reason around which to coalesce and find sustainable common ground. Party politics certainly continued throughout the Cold War, but the bipartisan consensus with regard to its prosecution was something that both sides could agree on. In its absence, our political discourse broke down. In 1940, when Winston Churchill was named prime minister, as Great Britain stood on the precipice of facing Hitlers war machine alone, he saw the wisdom in forming a coalition government. Churchill, a Conservative Tory, brought liberal leaders from the Labour Party such as Clement Attlee into his government, and also included members of his own party who had supported appeasement with Germany (Chamberlain and Lord Halifax). These were men with whom Churchill had had great political disagreements, but, when faced with an implacable foe they worked together with the best interests of their country, not their political party at heart. Although the threat to America is not as acute as what Churchill and his coalition government faced in 1940, we can hope that the events in Ukraine, and the growing geopolitical uncertainty of the moment will act as a wakeup call to both of our national political parties. Now is the time for our leaders to make their best effort to put national interests above party politics. Let us hope that if anything good is to come from the present autocratic threats to Western democracy it serves as a unifying moment for Republicans and Democrats. Our own history teaches us there is no better motivation for finding common ground than that of a shared existential threat to our and our allies way of life. Dan Quigley is a Greenwich resident. 99 cent introductory offer Includes everything we offer online for 24-7 news. This option allows you to read unlimited stories at ctnewsonline.com, and access our e-Edition (digital replicate of the daily newspaper). $7.99 per month after the introductory offer. This service comes with a complimentary CT Select Card allowing for local discounts. Rates are subject to change. This is a carousel. Use Next and Previous buttons to navigate This week, Wegmans, the popular New York-based supermarket chain, announced that it is opening its first Connecticut store in Norwalk. Each year we receive hundreds of requests from residents for a store in Connecticut, so were excited to bring Wegmans to Norwalk and to get to know our new neighbors, Colleen Wegman, president and CEO of Wegmans Food Markets, said in a statement. No opening date has been listed but a press release states that the new store will be located off Connecticut Avenue, adjacent to I-95. Additionally, the current occupant of the space, MBI Inc., will move to a new location in Norwalk before construction begins on the new Wegmans. For those unfamiliar with Wegmans, here are five facts to know about the supermarket chain. Wegmans branded foods are popular Similar to other boutique grocery stores such as Stew Leonard's and Trader Joe's, Wegmans has its own line of self-branded foods that range from bean-based pastas and cereals to sparkling water. The popularity of Wegmans-branded products has skyrocketed in recent years, leading to news organizations such as Business Insider and thrillest to make lists on what they think are the best Wegmans products. Tyler Sizemore / Hearst Connecticut Media They're all over the East Coast Despite Connecticut only now getting its first Wegmans location, the grocery chain has a large presence across the East Coast, with over 100 locations stretching from Massachusetts to North Carolina. In nearby New York, where the company originated, there are more than 40 stores alone. The new Norwalk store will be approximately 95,000 square feet and include a multi-level parking garage, according to a press release. Wegmans has a signature look Wegmans stores are modeled after the look and feel of open-air markets in Europe, according to a press release. A typical Wegmans almost doubles the average supermarket size of 48,466 square feet, according to the Food Marketing Institute. The grocery store chain also boasts its own Market Cafe in stores, which can include seating for up to 300 people at some locations. Some stores also have their own coffee shop, floral shop, pharmacy and pizza shop. Tyler Sizemore / Hearst Connecticut Media Prepare for a variety of prepared foods From California rolls to chicken parmesan, Wegmans boasts a wide helping of prepared foods for anyone looking to skip cooking dinner for the night. Wegmans also boasts gluten-free options for prepared foods. Currently, other Wegmans locations allow for any prepared food orders to be delivered, carried out or picked up curbside. If you're hosting a party, Wegmans also provides catering. Tyler Sizemore / Hearst Connecticut Media Low prices Wegmans prides itself on consistent low prices, and compared with national averages, some of wegmans price tags do tend to be more affordable. For example, shoppers can expect to pay $1.69 for a 5lbs bag of flour (U.S. average: $2.10), $6.09 for a pound of ground beef (U.S. average: $6.519) and $2.59 for a bag of mozzerella cheese (U.S. average: $3.94). This is a carousel. Use Next and Previous buttons to navigate DANBURY The health care system that runs Danbury and Norwalk hospitals stopped delivering babies at Putnam Hospital in nearby New York on Tuesday, with hopes to reopen the maternity ward as a smaller birthing center for low-risk pregnancies. The reason: the OB-GYNs affiliated with CareMount the only medical group providing deliveries at Putnam Hospital Center have either taken their patients to larger hospitals in neighboring New York counties or are phasing out of practice, an executive told Hearst Connecticut Media on Tuesday. We received notice in early January that their group, which has been with us for past 30 years, made the decision to deliver babies (at Vassar Brothers Medical Center) in Poughkeepsie and at Northern Westchester Hospital, said Dr. Mark Hirko, president of Putnam Hospital part of the seven-hospital health care system in Connecticut and New York known as Nuvance. Yes, it is a temporary setback, but we are looking at the silver lining that we have the opportunity to do something different. CareMounts OB-GYNs switched hospitals because of greater birth volumes and the support of neonatal intensive care units, the group said in a release. Putnam Hospital, which does not have a NICU, has averaged one birth daily for the last two years, Nuvance said. Northern Westchester Hospital in Mount Kisco, N.Y., which belongs to a competing network called Norwell Health, has a NICU and averages five births a day, CareMount said. It was too soon on Tuesday to say what impact the maternity ward suspension at Putnam Hospital would have on Danbury Hospital 17 miles to the east, except that Nuvance would encourage women in Carmel, Southeast and other nearby New York towns to consider giving birth at Danbury Hospital. Putnam Hospital is the only hospital in a county of 100,000 people which stretches from the Connecticut border to the Hudson River. Our job is to keep the people as local as possible by temporarily splitting them with Danbury and Northern Westchester and Vassar, Hirko said. Were not going to put a NICU (in Putnam Hospital) but we do have the ability to do low-risk births. It was not clear on Tuesday how long it would take for Putnam Hospital to reinvent its maternity ward, or what model a smaller center might take. Such a center could include midwives and OB-GYNs on staff who handle births. Nationally we know that its difficult to recruit high-end physicians, so we know this is not going to be easy, Hirko said. But its encouraging that we have people that are reaching out to us. Putnam is the second Nuvance hospital in six months to announce changes to its maternity ward. Late last year, Nuvance said it would phase out its maternity wing at Sharon Hospital, where births are averaging 200 annually. Sharons maternity ward will close as soon as it is approved by the state Office of Health Strategy, which is backlogged in approval requests by hospitals. So why does Sharon with low birth volume have to close while Putnam with low birth volume is being reimagined as a smaller niche center? The short answer is that if something goes wrong during labor at Putnam Hospital, there are NICUs to the north, south and east. There are fewer emergency options for Sharon Hospital. Sharon is more isolated, and because of the low volume of births, it is difficult to recruit and keep the full gamut of maternity services, Hirko said. Putnam is surrounded by multiple tertiary care centers with NICUs, so its possible to maintain a unit with a lower number of births. Meanwhile, CareMount OB-GYNs will continue to practice at Putnam Hospital. They are keeping their offices and (gynecology) practices on site, so there is no change in that that category, Hirko said. The demographic changes in the U.S. mean that hospitals have to look at regionalization of care. You dont do liver transplants in every hospital, and you dont have NICUs at every hospital. rryser@newstimes.com 203-731-3342 As most Connecticut schools lift mask mandates this week, two studies suggest the efficacy from two doses of Pfizers COVID vaccine waned in children during the omicron spike. In one study, researchers from the New York State Department of Health and the State University of New York at Albany School of Public Health found that protection from Pfizers vaccine waned faster among children aged 5-11 than among their older peers. In the omicron era, the effectiveness against cases of [Pfizers vaccine] declined rapidly for children, particularly those 5-11 years, the study said. These results highlight the potential need to study alternative vaccine dosing for children and the continued importance [of] layered protections, including mask wearing, to prevent infection and transmission. Chris Boyle, spokesperson for the state Department of Public Health, said the study highlights the importance of the continued monitoring of vaccine effectiveness of our recommended COVID-19 vaccines. Should the findings be supported in subsequent analyses, there may be adjustments to the timing and schedule of vaccination doses, such as we have seen already occur with the immune compromised, Boyle said. We know from experience that this virus continues to emerge in waves that impact a large number of people, and that vaccination has provided important protection for those that want to reduce their risk of becoming seriously ill with COVID-19. A separate multi-state study, released Tuesday by the Centers for Disease Control and Prevention, found that the efficacy of Pfizers vaccine waned among adolescents. Two doses protect against COVID-19-associated emergency department and urgent care encounters among children and adolescents, the CDC wrote. However, vaccine effectiveness was lower during omicron predominance and decreased with time since vaccination. Pfizers vaccine is the only COVID vaccine approved for use in those under 18 years old. Though both studies showed more susceptibility over time after vaccination, neither showed a substantial increase in hospitalizations from COVID among younger people. The two studies come after Connecticuts statewide school mask mandate ended Monday and local officials can now decide whether to continue the requirement. Gov. Ned Lamont said about 85 percent of Connecticut school districts have elected to lift mask mandates. The New York State Department of Health study attributed decreased efficacy to the lower vaccine dosage used for younger children. The CDC study suggested that lower efficacy was the result of the more infectious omicron variant. Dr. Rahul Gupta, division chief for geriatrics and chair of the Health Information Committee at St. Vincents Medical Center, noted the studies were performed during and after the holidays, and said it was probably an amalgamation of all of these. Its probably a combination of infection rate, increased travel and omicron being around, and maybe the decreased dose of vaccine, Gupta said. When asked if she thought the studies suggested that mask mandates were lifted too soon in Connecticut schools, Fran Rabinowitz said, Im not a doctor, Im an educator. Rabinowitz, executive director of the Connecticut Association of Public School Superintendents, said she had initially asked for a two-month extension of mask mandates because I thought that was warranted. But since speaking with public health experts, Rabinowitz said she believes lifting mask mandates made sense as COVID cases have declined in recent weeks. On Wednesday, the state reported 253 new cases and a daily positivity rate of 2.31 percent. There was one additional COVID hospitalization since Tuesday for a statewide total of 192. They felt that this was a good time to off-ramp from the masks, that the numbers would be low enough at the end of February to make that happen, she said. I take my direction from the Department of Public Health and I think we all do as educators because they're the ones that know this component of safety. If, in fact, the medical people that are leaders in our country both at the federal and state level are telling us that it is relatively safe to take the masks off, then I have to believe what they say, Rabinowitz said. I dont know better than they do. Gupta, though, said he would have extended mask requirements, at least for the time being. I think we should continue to wear masks in indoor settings, he said. If I had to pick a side, I would go to the side of keeping the masks on. Gupta said he expects to see an increase in COVID cases as a result of change in behavior, but that it should not be a significant spike. Whats the rush? You will see a spike in the number of cases as people take the masks off. Within a month or two weeks from now, we will see the results from this, he said. Initially, youll see a small spike, but then it should putter out. Dr. Ulysses Wu, chief epidemiologist at Hartford HealthCare, said it might be the time to allow students to remove their masks, and noted that COVID transmission was very high when both studies were conducted. The numbers are in a pretty good place, he said. Were in a good place. If we lived in West Virginia, I think we would be having a different conversation. The state said last week that 513 students in Connecticut were testing positive for the coronavirus, of whom 230 were fully vaccinated. Thats down from a high of 16,388 cases on Jan. 12. Wu said he believes that mandates will probably come back, depending on the numbers. But he said it will become more difficult to encourage people to revert back to wearing masks and change their behavior, saying the metaphorical horse could be tough to get back in the barn. With each successive wave, less and less of that horse will get back in the barn, he said. by Xinhua writers Lyu Qiuping, Liu Zhoupeng LHASA, March 2 (Xinhua) -- Confronted by the demon-faced wind, a woman, with a terrified expression, tries to stop the wind with her twisting arms. This is what is depicted in "Ghostly Wind," one of Yungdrung Drolma's paintings displayed in her first solo exhibition. The exhibition, which will run through mid-March in Lhasa, capital of southwest China's Tibet Autonomous Region, has put on display 88 of her works that include sketches, oil paintings and Thangka artworks. The painting "Ghostly Wind" was inspired by Yungdrung Drolma's personal experience. "I was afraid of the wind, as people would notice my empty sleeve swaying," said the 33-year-old artist. Yungdrung Drolma lost her right arm in her childhood but that didn't deter her from pursuing her dreams. With perseverance and a passion for art, she has created a raft of works with her left hand. CHILDHOOD TRAGEDY Yungdrung Drolma was born into a herders' family in Aba Tibetan and Qiang Autonomous Prefecture, Sichuan Province. As a child, she was intrigued by the Thangka paintings hanging in her grandfather's house. "I tried to replicate those paintings with a pencil, and have been fascinated by the art since then," she recalled. At the age of 10, when she went to pick wild strawberries with her playmates, she accidentally touched a high-voltage wire, leading to the amputation of her right arm. Her parents thought she may no longer go to school. "When I told them I wanted to continue my study, my father was so happy that he immediately bought a pen and paper for me, asking me to try to write with my left hand," she said. On the hospital bed, Yungdrung Drolma completed her first drawing using her left hand -- a portrait of her father. "The drawing was not that good, but doctors all praised me, which instilled confidence in me." Yungdrung Drolma had to overcome many more difficulties in life. "The most difficult thing was tying my hair. I did not learn to tie my hair by myself until senior high school," she said. She spent a long summer vacation in 2008 when a massive earthquake hit her hometown. Her father then put her in touch with a Thangka art center in Gansu Province so she could learn Thangka painting. Since then, she would go to Gansu or Qinghai provinces every vacation to learn the art. Three years later, Yungdrung Drolma was enrolled in the Sichuan Fine Arts Institute, where she received professional training in painting. PURSUING DREAM Despite opposition from her parents, who hoped she could find a job near her home after graduation, Yungdrung Drolma headed to Lhasa to learn Thangka painting upon graduation in 2014. "Compared with the bright and colorful painting style I learned in Gansu and Qinghai, those created in Lhasa adopt a more subdued hue, with pigments made from natural substances," she said, adding that she could afford the trip to Lhasa because of a man named Lai Zhijian whom she called "uncle," although they are not related. Yungdrung Drolma met Lai, of the Han ethnic group, while accompanying her teacher to Guangzhou to hold an art exhibition. "He wanted to help me but was cautious not to hurt my feelings. So, he bought all my works with 10,000 yuan (about 1,600 U.S. dollars), rather than giving me money directly," she said. While studying in Lhasa, Yungdrung Drolma worked very hard. "I often painted until midnight and my legs would feel numb while trying to stand up," she said. She struggled to make a living by selling her works, each sold at 2,000 yuan to 3,000 yuan. Her boyfriend is a Thangka painter as well. They met while Yungdrung Drolma was studying in Qinghai, and felt that they always had something common to talk about. The two plan to open an art studio and teach painting. Tenzin, who is engaged in the sales of cultural products in Tibet, came to visit Yungdrung Drolma's ongoing art exhibition. "I admire her very much, for she always knew she wanted to draw since childhood and has continued to work hard to pursue her dream," Tenzin said. Enditem (Intern Degya Wangmo contributed to the story.) SHELTON A Bridgeport-based firm is relocating to space on Parrott Drive. Identification Products Corp., a creative solutions company known as ID Products, will be moving into 40,000 square feet of space at 1 Parrott Drive, according to Sean Cahill, Avison Young principal and managing director of the firms Fairfield/Westchester office. ID Products relocation and expansion at 1 Parrott Drive is a strong indication of the emergence of high-tech manufacturing tenants in the Connecticut market, said Cahill. Having also arranged the sale of the property, we were very familiar with its offerings and how they aligned with ID Products requirements. ID Products will relocate and expand to the property from its two Bridgeport locations in June. Tim McCann, Vice President at Identification Products, said the company chose Shelton since there was no available space in Bridgeport that suited its needs and desire to consolidate its two locations into one larger manufacturing facility. After looking in several towns, Shelton seems like the best fit, especially when considering lower property taxes and a convenient commute for most of our employees, McCann said. Management also likes the corporate and professional environment that the new location provides to showcase our company. Avison Young represented ID Products in its negotiations with the landlord, DG One Parrott Shelton LLC. Founded in 1968, ID Products specializes in the development of creative solutions for its customers most challenging product identification and packaging requirements. ID Products manufactures custom labels, graphics, overlays, panels, insulators and gaskets for a diverse range of industries that includes medical device and pharmaceuticals, kitchen and food, telecommunications and recreation. The property at 1 Parrott Drive which was the subject of a 2020 apartment proposal that was later withdrawn from the Planning and Zoning Commission agenda was sold earlier this year for $9 million. Avison Youngs Fairfield/Westchester office announced in January that it arranged the sale from Cambridge Hanover, Inc., to DG One Parrott Shelton, LLC, which is managed by David A. Waldman, president and founder of David Adam Realty, Inc. The Parrott Drive site includes a 102,000-square-foot flex/industrial property that presently houses Keno Graphics, EAO Corp (a manufacturer of industrial switches and interface systems), Vanguard Medical, and online watch retailer Zhu Enterprises, Inc. brian.gioiele@hearstmediact.com BRIDGEPORT After stepping up to the podium outside of the downtown government center, an emotional Craig Lennon admitted, I dont have the words. I dont really know what to say. Lennon, the dean of students at the University of Bridgeport, was among the small crowd gathered Tuesday to raise the Ukrainian flag to show support for the residents of that country as they face an invasion from Russia. COVID rules are loosening at the state Capitol. The public, which had been restricted to the first floor of the building, will now be allowed up to second floor, where the House Chamber is located. Masks will still be required to be worn in public spaces. In the adjacent Legislative Office Building, public access will remain limited to the first floor. The 2022 legislative session started on Feb. 9 and except for opening day when Gov. Ned Lamont addressed a joint session of the House and Senate, lawmakers have continued to operate remotely per rules laid out by majority Democrats in the General Assembly. Masks will now be optional for members, legislative staff and the press when in the House chamber. The third floor of the Capitol, where the Senate Chamber is located, will remain closed to the public. There are no changes to the Senate rules, which require members to wear masks unless addressing the chamber. Under new House rules, the chairs and ranking members of the various legislative commitees will decide whether meetings in which members debate and vote on bills will be held remotely, in-person, or some combination of the two, according to Todd Murphy, spokesman for House Speaker Matt Ritter, D-Hartford. Currently, the committees are holding public hearings and meetings virtually. Members will continue to have the option to vote from their officers in the LOB throughout the session. House Minority Leader Vincent J. Candelora, R-North Branford, welcomed the changes and said he would be encouraging members to go to the Capitol when conducting business. Its a long time coming, Candelora said. Im pleased were beginning to reopen this building because I think theres a lot lost in this process when were not interacting in-person. julia.bergman@hearstmediact.com The campaign over the states need for affordable housing and the power of mostly white suburban enclaves in one of the countrys most-segregated states was renewed in the General Assembly on Tuesday, when lawmakers heard public testimony on a variety of bills, including legislation that would allow housing authorities to purchase properties in adjacent towns. During an afternoon-long virtual hearing of the legislative Housing Committee, property owners and managers said that state regulations are hurting them and costing them money, while tenants warned that they are becoming victims at a time when landlords can force out those who pay lower rents because the owners can bring in new tenants wholl pay sharply higher amounts. And in reviving last years battle over persuading suburbs to site more-affordable dwellings, Alexis Harrison of Fairfield, who won election last year to the Fairfield Town Plan and Zoning Commission, warned lawmakers to leave alone towns that want to maintain their local character. Our zoning commission has been very committed to creating affordable housing and has consistently worked to encourage more diversity of housing stock, said Harrison, who as a member of the group CT169 Strong successfully defeated legislative attempts last year to force towns to build more-dense, affordable housing units. Basically, we want to avoid using a blunt instrument in order to achieve a laudable goal, Harrison said. Helping seniors, the disadvantaged and the disabled state residents is a very good thing. But unduly burdening landlords could result in decreased rental stock, which would diminish the goal: providing a diverse housing stock to all. Harrison spoke against legislation that would force towns of more than 14,000 residents to create fair rent commissions. Generally rent control in cities has not been successful at providing lower rents to the broader community, Harrison said during the virtual hearing. On the expansion of housing authorities to develop affordable dwellings outside their local boundaries, Harrison said This would further erode the local control of each zoning commission in making permanent decisions in the best interests of individual towns. It would end up both regionalizing and politicizing what is inherently a local job, making permanent decisions in governing the land use within each municipality. But Karen Dubois-Walton, president of the Elm City Communities/The Housing Authority of New Haven, said that allowing agencies like hers to purchase and develop affordable properties in neighboring towns would be an important way to allow more people to live in high-quality, affordable and market-rate dwellings. Housing authorities, as originally contemplated, were not in the business of development, and the laws on the books, currently, in Connecticut reflect the original housing authorities, not necessarily the housing authorities of today, Dubois-Walton said. Out of necessity, we have moved away from your old-style public housing into becoming much-more developers of mixed-income, mixed-finance type of communities. She said current laws limit housing authorities to work only within the borders of their municipalities. At the same time, we all know, and this committee has been really great at looking at the issues of the lack of affordable housing in our community and trying to find pathways to expand that, she said. I believe this bill is a no-nonsense, easy opportunity to add another tool to our box about how we can create affordable housing. Kathy Flaherty, executive director of the Connecticut Legal Rights Project, a non-profit agency that offers representation to low-income adults with serious mental health conditions, said in submitted testimony that while state law allows for towns and cities to create fair rent commissions, only 25 municipalities have them. We have observed significant rent increases that has made finding new housing extraordinarily difficult for tenants who need to relocate, even tenants who are fortunate enough to have a rental subsidy; many landlords are asking for rents above the fair market rents set by HUD or the Department of Housing, Flaherty wrote. Increasing the number of fair rent commissions around the state would enable more tenants in more towns to have a way to challenge unfair rent increases. The committee deadline is March 17. State Sen. Rick Lopes, D-New Britain, co-chairman, said the goal this session is to assure housing stability. A persons ability to work, go to school, or provide for their loved ones is all at risk if they are facing the possibility of losing their home or are unable to find long-term housing, Lopes said in a statement before the hearing. We have a chance to take a bold step forward in addressing housing loss and homelessness, which impacts cities and towns across Connecticut. Even more, we can affirm that every person should be afforded the security and stability that comes from having a home. State Sen. Saud Anwar, D-South Windsor, vice chairman of the committee, said combating homelessness in particular is a laudable goal for the panel. I have championed this cause for years because I know it will have a transformative effect on how we experience and consider housing in Connecticut and beyond, Anwar, a physician, said in a joint statement with Lopes. Homelessness is not a personal issue but a societal one, and we must respond to it the same way we respond to other crises, with a targeted and thorough response. kdixon@ctpost.com Twitter: @KenDixonCT FAIRFIELD The Board of Selectmen recently approved the 2023 budget in a divided vote, where education funding became a main point of contention. The approximately $342.7 million dollar budget, created by First Selectwoman Brenda Kupchicks administration, would increase the mill rate by 0.98 percent. The board approved $272,000 in cuts and added $50,000 in revenue before adopting it. Selectwoman Nancy Lefkowitz made various motions throughout the meeting to restore different amounts to the Board of Education budget. The final budget, which she voted against, increased school district spending by $7.9 million the amount Kupchick originally proposed but $2.5 million less than the BOEs request. Lefkowitz, the boards only Democrat, moved to restore $2 million, then $330,000 and lastly $122,000 to the Board of Education budget, none of which passed. She said she was trying to lessen the school districts funding burden. She said there was a lot of really good in the overall town budget, but there wasnt enough money for the schools. Im ultimately not supportive of the budget, Lefkowitz said. I think that the budget that (the Board of Education) presented is what they need to effectively care and educate, and for the health and safety of our kids. Kupchick said there are a lot of competing needs in Fairfield, but argued that the increase in school funding the budget calls for shows we are investing in our students. Selectman Thomas Flynn said the $2 million Lefkowitz requested represented about 1 percent of the approximately $200 million school district budget. While he said everyone has the students best interests in mind, it comes down to giving them the best education the town can afford. I do have faith that that reduction can be done with minimal to no impact to the classroom, he said. The selectmen also moved money around in the budget, including $159,000 in crossing guard spending from the town to the school system budget, cutting payroll at Penfield Pavilion and reducing unemployment compensation. The board also unanimously voted to add $200,000 to cover road paving costs and lower bonding. Flynn and Kupchick, the boards Republicans, voted to increase contingency funding by $122,000, citing upcoming union contract negotiations and the towns firefighters seeking arbitration. The budget now goes to the Board of Finance and then the Representative Town Meeting, where it will likely see further changes before final approval. A village volunteer shows olive ridley sea turtle hatchlings to be released into the sea at the Sea Turtle Hatchery Facility in Cavite Province, the Philippines, on March 1, 2022. (Xinhua/Rouelle Umali) MANILA, March 2 (Xinhua) -- In Cavite Province, the Philippines, turtle conservation advocates consisting of village volunteers release 4,000 to 5,000 turtle hatchlings yearly in the shorelines of the town of Naic, which serves as the nesting site of female olive ridley sea turtles. "Recovering key species for ecosystem restoration" is this year's theme for World Wildlife Day, which is observed every March 3 and aims to celebrate and raise awareness of the world's wild fauna and flora. Olive ridley sea turtle hatchlings are seen before their release at the Sea Turtle Hatchery Facility in Cavite Province, the Philippines, on March 1, 2022. (Xinhua/Rouelle Umali) A village volunteer releases olive ridley sea turtle hatchlings at the Sea Turtle Hatchery Facility in Cavite Province, the Philippines, on March 1, 2022. (Xinhua/Rouelle Umali) An olive ridley sea turtle hatchling crawls to the water during sunrise at the Sea Turtle Hatchery Facility in Cavite Province, the Philippines, on March 1, 2022. (Xinhua/Rouelle Umali) Olive ridley sea turtle hatchlings crawl their way to the water during sunrise at the Sea Turtle Hatchery Facility in Cavite Province, the Philippines, on March 1, 2022. (Xinhua/Rouelle Umali) An olive ridley sea turtle hatchling crawls to the water during sunrise at the Sea Turtle Hatchery Facility in Cavite Province, the Philippines, on March 1, 2022. (Xinhua/Rouelle Umali) An olive ridley sea turtle hatchling crawls to the water during sunrise at the Sea Turtle Hatchery Facility in Cavite Province, the Philippines, on March 1, 2022. (Xinhua/Rouelle Umali) Gov. Ned Lamont on Tuesday announced a proposal to create a grant program that would help local school districts fund upgrades for heating, ventilation and cooling systems. The governors proposal would seed the program with $90 million in federal funding the state received through the American Rescue Plan, President Joe Bidens COVID-19 recovery act. In a statement, the governors office said that money would be an initial allocation, with additional funding as needed. One thing the COVID-19 pandemic exposed is that many school buildings in our state, particularly those that are of a certain age, are in serious need of air quality improvements, Lamont said in a statement. Some people may erroneously think that heating and cooling systems are only about temperature control, but modernized ventilation systems provide an important public health function that filtrate the air and reduce airborne contaminants, including particles containing viruses. I strongly urge lawmakers to approve this proposal so that we can begin releasing funds to school districts and make these much-needed HVAC upgrades, he continued. Under the proposed legislation, which is now being considered by the legislatures education committee, municipalities would match grants to fund the total project cost of an upgrade. The Connecticut Council of Municipalities offered its support for the governors proposal shortly after it was announced. Governor Lamonts proposal to upgrade school HAVC systems in dire need of repair would provide real and essential funding assistance to local governments, their school districts and hard-pressed property taxpayers, Joe DeLong, CCMs executive director and CEO, said in a statement. The cost for needed HVAC repairs in schools across the state would overwhelm municipal resources, and the impact of adequate air filtration on student learning, especially during a pandemic, is crystal clear; as is the health fallout for teachers and students as a result of bad air quality in schools, DeLong added. BRIDGEPORT A Stratford school bus driver was charged Wednesday with putting 26 middle school children at risk when he crashed his bus into a FedEx van earlier this year. Police said 65-year-old Harold Bolling, who has a prior drug conviction, was found to have cocaine and alcohol in his blood following the crash. Bolling was charged with 26 counts of risk of injury to a child, second-degree reckless endangerment and operation of a motor vehicle while under the influence of alcohol or drugs. We can confirm that the driver named below was involved in an accident on January 12 and was transported from the scene of the accident to the hospital. He has not driven for us since the accident occurred on January 12, 2022, said Edward Flavin, spokesman for the bus company, Durham Student Services. We were not aware of the arrest until you brought it to our attention. We have reached out to the local authorities and will work with them pertaining to their investigation. The schools administration did not return calls for comment. During Bollings arraignment Wednesday afternoon, Assistant States Attorney Justina Moore urged Superior Court Judge Peter McShane to ensure that Bolling no longer has the opportunity to drive a school bus. Bollings lawyer, Assistant Public Defender Kim Mendola, asked the judge for leniency for her client, pointing out that he has only one previous criminal conviction and is a lifelong resident of the area. The judge ordered Bolling held in lieu of $50,000 bond. He added that if Bolling makes the bond he is ordered not to drive a school bus in the state. He continued the case to April 11. According to police, at 8 a.m. Jan. 12, they were called to a crash scene involving a school bus in front of the Rosati and Rosati Law Firm on Main Street. When officers got to the scene they found a school bus full of students up on the lawn, with a FedEx van next to it. Police said the 26 students on the bus were evaluated for injures at the scene and then transferred to another bus to be transported to Wooster Middle School. Police said the FedEx driver told them he had been traveling southbound on Main Street when the school bus, heading northbound, crossed the double yellow line and hit his van. Bolling told officers he had been driving the bus when he felt faint and lightheaded, police said. He told them he might have passed out and only remembered waking up and being on the lawn of the law firm, police said. Police said a witness told them he had seen the crash and immediately ran over to the school bus, forced the door open and turned off the buss ignition. The witness said Bolling smelled of alcohol and appeared dazed, police said. A 20-year-old man and a 16-year-old boy were charged with the kidnapping of a 64-year-old woman that occurred in Marlborough last September, according to Connecticut State Police. Kenneth Gordon, 20, and the juvenile were taken into custody by Eastern District Major Crimes detectives Tuesday. Both were each charged with first-degree kidnapping, first-degree robbery, first-degree conspiracy to commit robbery, first-degree assault, second-degree arson and second-degree larceny, state police said in a news release. Gordon was held on a court set $1 million bond, and the juvenile is being held in a juvenile detention center. Both are scheduled to appear in court Wednesday morning, Sgt. Dawn Pagan said in a news conference in front of Connecticut State Police headquarters in Middletown Tuesday night. The incident took place on Sept. 11. A 64-year-old woman was putting her groceries in her car outside of the Big Y supermarket on East Hampton Road around 7 p.m. that night when two young men wearing masks approached her and demanded money, state police said. The two men then threw the woman in the backseat of her car, displayed a handgun, placed a bag over her head and hit her in the face with an object several times, state police said in September. The suspects drove to an ATM in East Hartford to take money from the womans bank account. They then threw the woman out of the vehicle in Berlin and drove behind a building to light the vehicle on fire. Police said the suspects fled the scene in an Acura TL from 1999 to 2003. The Berlin Police Department then notified state police of the incident around 10 p.m. that night, Pagan said. The 64-year-old woman was taken to an area hospital for treatment of serious, but not life-threatening, injuries, Pagan said. Both Gordon and the juvenile were already in custody before police served the arrest warrants Tuesday. Pagan said Gordon was in custody for felony charges. Gordons criminal history includes larceny, third-degree assault, tampering with a motor vehicle and other offenses from October 2020 to August 2021, according to state court records. He has pleaded not guilty to a second-degree larceny from Manchester. Court records show the offense date as August 9 and that he was arrested Oct. 29. Pagan said the incident really shook the community. Police believe there was no connection between the victim and the suspects. Pagan reminded residents to be aware of their surroundings and if they see anything suspicious or unusual to call the police. Housing is always on the agenda of local governments, but recently, it has become an unnecessarily controversial and partisan issue across the country. The affordable housing crisis does not care whether you have an I, R or D listed as your partisan affiliation. With the Connecticut state Legislature recently passing zoning reform and likely to revisit it again this session, there should be a recognition that housing is a crucial social determinant of health. Serving as a social worker, in addition to extensive academic research, has clearly demonstrated that more affordable housing results in improved community health and better economic outcomes. As a recent Stratford Town Council candidate, I saw firsthand the heavy burden that a lack of affordable housing placed on many older adults trying to meet their basic needs and age in place. As I knocked doors, I heard from people who had hoped to remain in town after retirement but are considering other options due to the cost of living and limited transportation options. Some told me they would be moving closer to children who couldnt afford to return after college. Sadly, my work has presented evidence where elderly residents throughout Fairfield County have echoed these sentiments. The state needs to take action on housing to fix these issues. Stratfords elders have high rates of home ownership and financial insecurity resulting in limited choices and potential tragedy for individuals and families. The situation for many of our neighbors is very distressing. In Bridgeport and Stratford, respectively, 52 percent and 40 percent of adults indicate they are just getting by with respect to their financial situation. Though were on the Gold Coast, you would be surprised to hear of the financial plight of so many families and seniors in Stratford and Fairfield County at large that I have encountered as a social worker. Despite all of this, Stratfords town government recently opted out of HB 6107, which legalized accessory dwelling units statewide. Nestled within larger single-family homes, ADUs enable elderly residents of Fairfield County to remain in their communities, perhaps living with an adult son or daughter or with a caregiver. I have personally seen the power of these living units to alleviate the financial problems of Fairfield Countys elderly population. However, because the living units are now inaccessible in much of our community, we need further action on housing. Transit-oriented communities, a proposal to zone for multifamily homes around Connecticuts transit centers, ranging from CTfastrak to CTrail stations, offers a solution. By building affordable and accessible homes near public transit, we can make it more affordable for elderly residents of Fairfield County to remain in their communities. We can also create housing for them near public transportation, so they do not have to rely on cars to access essential services. We dont need to separate or remove elderly residents from our communities. This can cause psychological harm to them, and it removes decades of wisdom and knowledge from our towns and cities. Transit-oriented communities will make Stratford and Fairfield County more affordable for elderly residents and enrich our culture, too. While social workers are ethically bound to respect the inherent dignity and worth of the person, I believe that we all have a moral responsibility to secure the rights and quality of life of Connecticuts elderly. That starts with making sure that those who have spent their whole lives in their community and our state have an affordable place to call home. Together, with state and local governments acting cooperatively, we must strive to fulfill our moral obligations by creating more affordable housing through zoning reform. Kathleen Callahan, of Stratford, is education and legislative action network chair of the Connecticut chapter of the National Association of Social Workers. This is a carousel. Use Next and Previous buttons to navigate In a sit-down interview with Rep. Rosa DeLauro last week, the topics ranged from her pending chairmanship of an important House Appropriations subcommittee to her ardent support of Rep. Nancy Pelosi for House Speaker. But I also asked the question long on the minds of close DeLauro watchers: Whats with the purple streaks in your hair? I wanted to do it, I love it and its fun, DeLauro responded, not missing a beat. DeLauro, 75, insisted it is not some latent 60s thing, a release of her inner flower child. You are who you are; its your personality, she said. Im always of the point of view that you have to be who you are. DeLauro has color-streaked her hair for a decade or more. Im hardly a fashion critic but it certainly complements her colorful outfits and abundant rings. The onrush of the mid-term election season prevented DeLauro from a refresher at the hair stylist. But once the election passed, the purple re-appeared arguably a fitting metaphor to the mixed results that included enough flips to give back the House to DeLauros Democrats. Among others, her granddaughter was ecstatic. Bubby, I love the purple, I love the purple! DeLauro quoted her as saying. Bubby, of course, is the traditional Jewish-Yiddish term for grandmother. DeLauro is a proud Italian-American dont get her started on New Haven pizza. But as the wife of pollster Stan Greenberg, she forsook the Italian Nonna for the Jewish Bubby. And, yes, Stan is Zayde (pronounced like Zay-dee). Fully on board The U.S. Navy must have laced Sen. Chris Murphys drinking water with Kool-Aid back in 2016 when he hitched a ride aboard the USS Hartford attack submarine for an underwater ride to the Arctic Circle. Murphy has been a Senate Appropriations Committee stalwart for larger and larger submarine construction budgets, all to the good of Electric Boat and the U.S. Navy sub base along the Thames River in the Groton-New London area. So I have to admit to a slight eye-roll when I saw a Murphy press release calling for a stepped-up maintenance schedule for submarines at Electric Boat in Groton. Of course, Murphy is only doing what any senator would do. Support of a major home-state defense contractor is Capitol Hill bread-and-butter, Democrat or Republican. In this case, there was an underlying Government Accountability Report that sparked Murphys call. The report detailed extra-long waits for repairs and routine maintenance, with some submarines tied up at wharves for up to two years. Since 2008, the Navy has spent $1.5 billion on attack submarines essentially waiting in line, the GAO report found. Some of the work is done at Navy-owned shipyards but the report said it could be expanded at private shipyards as well. Enter Murphy. The men and women who work at Electric Boat are the best at what they do, he said in the release. Trained workers like those at Electric Boat can help address the backlog of maintenance work. So despite all the unnecessary bridges to nowhere, government spending priorities and bringing home the bacon actually do sometimes meet in perfect harmony. This may or may not be such a case. But I can say this: I wouldnt want to take my car in for an oil change only to be told itll take two years. dan@hearstdc.com Student loans continue to plague our youngest generations. This debt is keeping us from buying cars, buying houses, having kids, and generally moving on with our lives. Need proof? When the U.S. Department of Education offered to freeze student loan payments during the COVID-19 pandemic borrowers collectively agreed wholeheartedly. So much so that more than 88% stopped making payments entirely. Which, let me mention, doesnt make a lot of financial sense, long term. The federal government also put a freeze on interest, meaning this has been the best chance many of us have ever had to make solid progress on paying off those student loan balances. So why arent more people taking this golden opportunity? Student loan debt is overwhelming. I wasnt kidding about how this debt has affected multiple generations of young people. The numbers around student loan debt are truly astonishing. As of last year there was $1.58 trillion of outstanding student loan debt nationwide. Around 30% of college students are relying on loans to attend college and the average amount of student loans per borrower is sitting at just under $40k. I dont think its overstating to say that student loans are the financial anchor weighing down at least two generations. Photo-Illustration: Curbed; Photo: Dreet Production/Getty Images/Cavan Images RF In New York City, luxury real estate is as much a vehicle to hide ones wealth as it is to flaunt it. Recently, such properties have come under new scrutiny as city officials call for seizing the apartments of known Russian oligarchs. For years, Manhattan has been one of the most popular safe harbors for Russian oligarchs to park their cash, especially via ultra-high-end apartments, Manhattan Borough President Mark Levine tweeted on Monday. And with the ultra-high-end market comes a corresponding phenomenon: the ultra-high-end renovation. These projects, like the owners or owning entities are often shrouded in secrecy. The architects, contractors, and carpenters sign NDAs and build out homes that may never house an actual tenant. But when it comes to service, what do these clients ask for? Do you even meet your boss? Curbed spoke to a contractor who does luxury wood and metal architectural work to get a sense of the job (Sometimes youve got to shut down Fifth Avenue and hire a crane) and the clientele (bad taste but tons of money). This interview has been edited and condensed. The privacy On crazy-big projects, you sign NDAs, and theyre really restrictive about access. Ive worked on two or three penthouses and big skyscrapers, and there are crazy security protocols. If youre a subcontractor of a subcontractor, you dont ever get anywhere near anyone, and you only see construction people. Ive worked on job sites where part of the NDA is that you cant take photos Ive seen a carpenter get caught taking pictures and then immediately get escorted out of the building by security. With celebrities, you might know its their place its rumored but you dont ever see them. But for oligarchs owning real estate done through shell companies, you would never know who it is. These types of build-outs or investments are just parking money somewhere. Maybe the developers themselves will have a relationship with the end client, but I dont know. Ive been in homes and worked on projects that are worth tens of millions of dollars, and if I really wanted to find out who they belonged to in the end, Im not even sure who Id talk to. For a smaller $7 million project we did not get, I had to sign an NDA just to look at the architectural drawings. The actual clients came to my shop, which was incredibly unusual. But if you Google them or Google that property to figure out who youre actually working for, you dont know. There were no last names, and that property is in a holding company. How it gets done Its really wildly demanding. People with that sort of money skirt building codes and get around things like city ordinances on how much you can work and how much noise you can make. If they decide they really want to go fast, theyll put it in the contract, and youll work until shit gets done. There are insane deadlines where you get 130-page contracts and its like, If you fuck this up, a team of lawyers will litigate you out of existence. A not unusual practice is building stuff that will pass inspection only to be removed after its given a certificate of occupancy. For example, theres lots of rules about stairs, like code around open gaps between balusters on railings. Frequently, they want a big wide-open railing, so well build a railing that is filled in, and after inspection, it comes out. Sometimes youve got to shut down Fifth Avenue and hire a crane to haul all this stuff into a building, which is crazy. Just so they can get all their furniture into their apartment! When Im working on smaller-scale projects directly with the client, theres the general shit that happens with wealthy people: They wanna be over your shoulder and change their mind all the time. Theyll want to make changes and not pay for them, and theres a type of service they expect to be given. What they ask for It would actually be more fun if they wanted crazier things, but what ends up happening is that architects design these really interesting things and a lot of that gets pushed out in the process. The client will see some shit they want in a magazine and know that other people like it, so instead of doing something interesting, they spend insane piles of money on materials and hiding the workmanship. Since they dont want to see how its made or held together, you get really clinical spaces that are worth tens or hundreds of thousands of dollars for a finished product that is rather bland most of the time. It always sticks out how much money they spend for the stuff to come out so normal. One project I worked on had an 1,800-pound door, and they just wanted it to work a certain way. So we had to order custom-made $6,000 hinges to make it go. Theres a lot of effort, time, and money thats put into coming up with customized solutions to solving logistical and engineering problems that ultimately suit a pretty boring aesthetic. Or its really weird stuff, like a normal McMansion but everything is gold plated or imported stone from weird quarries in Spain. They have bad taste but tons of money and buy all this really expensive stuff that ends up looking like shit. CHONGQING, March 2 (Xinhua) -- The internet is brimming with amusing videos of Turkish ice cream vendors displaying their playful tricks, as they flip the ice cream cones before giving them to customers. Such entertaining scenes are perhaps an everyday affair in the ancient town of Ciqikou in southwest China's Chongqing municipality, where Ali Buyuksakalli from Turkey's Istanbul City has been serving this exotic delicacy to customers for about a decade. The 36-year-old ice cream vendor currently runs more than 50 ice cream parlors across China, sharing the delicious Turkish treat and the culture associated with it. Turkish ice cream, which has a history of more than 300 years, is a hallmark Turkish delicacy and one of the most preferred summertime desserts. The unique food is so thick that sometimes it needs to be eaten with a knife and fork. And it is believed to be one of the chewiest ice creams in the world, Buyuksakalli said. The delicacy is often prepared and sold in a highly amusing way, engaging customers in humorous interactions. Buyuksakalli enjoys entertaining his customers by pulling the scoop back just before they are tricked into thinking they are going to have it. Buyuksakalli brought this one-of-a-kind ice cream to China for the first time in 2010 as an exhibitor at the Shanghai World Expo. "I met my wife in China, a beautiful girl from Suzhou in the eastern province of Jiangsu. After we got married, we opened our first Turkish Taksim ice cream shop in Shanghai," he said. "I am very happy to work in China, and I am often praised and thanked by my customers when I make ice cream and perform for them," Buyuksakalli added. After visiting Chongqing in 2009, he and his wife fell in love with the city's tranquil pace of life and decided to settle down there in 2011. In recent years, China's continued opening-up has made life easier for foreigners living in the country. "Foreign cheese and bread used to be hard to get, but are now easily accessible. Authentic Turkish food and goods from all over the world can be bought here, and I even buy some items online in China and then send them back to Turkey," Buyuksakalli said. As an important partner under the Belt and Road Initiative, Turkey has witnessed increasing trade, cultural and personnel exchanges with China over the years. "China is the first choice for many in Turkey to travel abroad, and I have recruited many people from my hometown to work in China," Buyuksakalli added. Turkish employees can work in his ice cream shops after completing a year of professional training, and now all his shops have Turkish employees. He said he is particularly grateful to China for its rapid and effective containment of the COVID-19 outbreak, which would have otherwise seriously affected his business. "Many of my shops are in scenic areas, and the number of tourists picked up quickly after the epidemic was brought under control. Now, some of my shops can rake in a daily turnover of about 10,000 yuan (about 1,584 U.S. dollars), or 30,000 yuan during the peak summer season," Buyuksakalli said. The Turkish businessman's family in Istanbul has been involved in making ice cream for more than four decades, and he and his brother have expanded the business to France and China. Buyuksakalli believes that the centuries-old delicacy has a prosperous future. "I hope my children can continue the sweet business in China in the future." A Cessna 525A CitationJet 2 Plus takes off from the Barcelona airport in January. Photo: Urbanandsport/NurPhoto via Getty Images During last nights State of the Union address, President Biden said the United States was going after Russian oligarchs by joining with our European allies to locate and seize yachts, luxury apartments, and private jets. On that last point, the president could also just talk to the 19-year-old in Florida whos already tracking them. Since Sunday, Jack Sweeney has been monitoring the airborne movement of these oligarchs including one who took off moments ago from Teterboro, New Jersey and publicizing them on an automated Twitter account. Now hes adding emissions information to each new trip. Roman Abramovich's Jet LX-RAY ~ 2,291 gallons (8,671 liters). ~ 15,351 pds (6,963 kg) of jet fuel used. ~ $11,819 cost of fuel. ~ 24 tons of CO2 emissions. Russian Oligarch Jets (@RUOligarchJets) March 1, 2022 Russian billionaires who are enriched by fossil-fuel extraction happen to love private jets, and their fates are ultimately linked. (As Alex Pareene wrote today, Defeating Russia, by necessity, requires defeating fossil capital.) While Sweeneys most recent project is narrowly targeted at Russia, a vast majority of the worlds private jets are owned by oligarchs who live right here in the U.S.: over 13,700 private jets, the largest fleet of any nation. Sweeney tracks some of those as well: He previously created dedicated accounts to follow the planet-destroying private trips of Bill Gates, Jeff Bezos, and Elon Musk. Maybe Biden should think about seizing those, too? Zhang Bidi makes coconut carvings with his students in his studio in Qionghai, south China's Hainan Province, Feb. 18, 2022. (Xinhua/Yang Guanyu) HAIKOU, March 2 (Xinhua) -- Wearing masks and overalls, two villagers skillfully drilled holes into coconut shells and used machines to cut them into circular and square pieces. They are residents of Yushu Village in the city of Wenchang, in the tropical island province of Hainan. In the early years, local people made ends meet by planting vegetables like peppers or by working in big cities. Thanks to the development of the burgeoning coconut carving industry, villagers do not need to work outside their hometowns any longer. Coconut processing has become a new way to make a living, bringing job opportunities with handsome profits. The change of Yushu Village is an example of China's efforts to push forward rural vitalization. China unveiled its "No. 1 central document" for 2022 last week, calling for efforts to be made to develop county-level industries and commerce systems, as well as to encourage rural residents to obtain employment or start businesses locally. FROM GAMEPADS TO COCONUT LOUDSPEAKERS In Yushu Village, processed coconut shells are sent to factories that design and make coconut carvings. Zhang Bidi owns one of the factories. Zhang, 53, was born in the city of Qionghai in Hainan. When he was a kid, his neighbor was a carpenter that was good at coconut carving. "I developed a deep affection for coconut carvings when I was a child," he recalled. In 1991, after graduation from high school, Zhang went to the city of Shenzhen, south China's Guangdong Province, and worked in a company making gamepads. Zhang worked years there until 2010 when an idea suddenly crossed his mind. "Out of nowhere, I had an idea to make a blue-tooth loudspeaker in the shape of a coconut carving," he said. "It proved to be the best idea ever." Zhang believed that blue-tooth loudspeakers would be popular with the public, and he continued to dig into the industry. "Coconut shells have high density and have high resonance, so I thought it would be a good business opportunity," he said. In 2015, Zhang returned to his hometown and launched a coconut carving company with his wife. CARVING OUT A BRIGHT FUTURE Zhang said that coconut carvings are a highlight of Hainan's handicrafts and are intangible cultural heritage. "The problem is that few people know about coconut carvings and the industry scale is still small," said Zhang. To solve the problem, Zhang set up a research and development studio for coconut carving in 2018. "I teach 60 students every semester. They can learn coconut carving skills and design, as well as work as interns in my company," he said. Chen Bolin, 20, graduated from college last year. She works in Zhang's company. "I joined the company because I was attracted by the coconut carving culture, and I want more people to know about it," said Chen. Chen and her friends registered a new company several months ago that takes on the design and marketing for the coconut carvings. Fu Yanzhen, 35, married her husband in Yushu Village. She used to do some part-time jobs in big cities far away from home to make ends meet. Thanks to the coconut carving industry, she does not need to leave home for work anymore. Instead, she is in charge of coconut shell cutting in her village. "The job brings me about 3,500 yuan (about 555 U.S. dollars) per month. It is much better than my job before and is closer to my family," Fu said. Zhang Bidi carves on a coconut shell in his studio in Qionghai, south China's Hainan Province, Feb. 18, 2022. (Xinhua/Yang Guanyu) Zhang Bidi chooses coconut shells for carvings in Yushu Village of Wenchang, south China's Hainan Province, Feb. 18, 2022. (Xinhua/Yang Guanyu) Photo taken on Feb. 18, 2022 shows coconut carvings made by students of Zhang Bidi in Qionghai, south China's Hainan Province. (Xinhua/Yang Guanyu) Zhang Bidi (1st R) makes coconut carvings with his students in his studio in Qionghai, south China's Hainan Province, Feb. 18, 2022. (Xinhua/Yang Guanyu) Zhang Bidi carves on a coconut shell in his studio in Qionghai, south China's Hainan Province, Feb. 18, 2022. (Xinhua/Yang Guanyu) Stay up to date on COVID-19 Get Breaking News Sign up now to get our FREE breaking news coverage delivered right to your inbox. The well renowned and beloved murder mystery writer Agatha Christie penned Death on the Nile in 1937. The story follows the twists and turns of a wedding party, a murdered bride and a scorned best friend in a plot that is anything but predictable. With over 180,000 ratings from readers on Goodreads the book has a 4.12 star rating, a particularly high score, with lots of positive reviews. This movie adaptation of Death on the Nile follows Hercule Poirot, who was also the sleuth in Murder on the Orient Express, another book by Christie. While I dont doubt the glowing reviews left for the novel Death on the Nile, I cannot offer the same sweet sentiments about the movie adaptation. Lets get this out of the way so we can focus on the more positive aspects of the movie. Death on the Nile is a CGI (or computer-generated imagery) nightmare with special effects so boorish it could have been filmed in 2005. The temple and pyramid scenes were particularly jarring, probably because Egypt in Death on the Nile was built and filmed entirely in England. Death on the Nile craves the title of a period piece but nonsensically mixes 2022 social norms with its old money aesthetics, placing the film in a timeless void. Its riddled with plot holes and sad attempts to modernize the conservative plot that clearly dates the film. Death on the Nile was filmed from September to December in 2019, and the film was supposed to be released in October of 2020 but was pushed back due to production issues and the COVID-19 pandemic. Although it hasnt been confirmed, it can be concluded that the films release was pushed back further because of the controversy surrounding Armie Hammer, who plays the groom in Death on the Nile. In January and February of 2020, sexual and physical assault allegations surfaced from a number of Hammers exes. Hammer was dropped from his next project Shotgun Wedding and let go by his agent and publicist company. Theres no question as to why Hammer is practically invisible from all of the prerelease Death on the Nile propaganda. Hes given scarcely a second of screen time in the trailer, and I assume 20th Century Studios chose to use an image of the boat for the poster for a reason. For the large role he plays in the film hes barely on screen, leading me to believe some of his scenes were cut in post-production and rightly so. Theres no blame to assign to 20th Century Studios for casting him years before the allegations, but knowing what a creep Hammer is makes the film difficult to watch. Other than these setbacks, the film is easy enough to watch. Emma Mackey, who is a fan-favorite from the hit show Sex Education, tackles the role of Jackie with ease. She and Gal Gadot make Death on the Nile worth watching, and Kenneth Branagh holds the film together like glue with his sleuthing escapades. The plot twist was slightly predictable, but still fun to watch as an audience member. If you live and die for murder mysteries or loved Murder on the Orient Express, this movie is for you. For those with a lower tolerance for whodunnit tactics and kind of corny lines, Id advise you to stay away. Death on the Nile is perfect for murder mystery fans nothing more and nothing less. Never in history has celebrity status been so attainable for the everyday individual. Most of us will live our lives in relative obscurity. However, post the right video at the right time, and your average Joe is now a TikTok microcelebrity with thousands of followers. Yet his 15 minutes of fame may come at a price. One misstep and he could become the subject of internet discourse and pile ons. The internet can and should be used as a platform to call out problematic behavior. However, as the rich and powerful remain practically invulnerable to criticism, its everyday people who suffer the most when faced with an onslaught of abuse. Most of us are tired of talking about cancel culture. But for those who prefer to stay off TikTok, Twitter and Reddit, cancel culture is a social phenomenon in which individuals call out, ostracize or withdraw support from a person for perceived wrongdoing. The term canceling gained popularity in 2017 with the rise of the #MeToo movement, operating as a mechanism for victims of sexual assault to call out their abusers. Marginalized people have also used social media to call out people for problematic behavior such as racism, misogyny, homophobia or transphobia. In 2022, the phenomenon is a frequent talking point of Republican politicians who rant about the liberal media or comedians who whine about audiences who dont find their jokes funny anymore. It may be tempting to roll our eyes at any critique of cancel culture or deny its existence entirely. The rich and the powerful are rarely held accountable for their behavior and generally maintain their platforms even after backlash. Its hard to feel bad for a celebrity when his racist tweets are forgiven after he makes an Instagram post of a notes app apology his publicist wrote. Its clear that cancel culture doesnt affect celebrities. Instead, those facing the brunt of social ostracization and hate tend to be everyday people. While some may be active users of social media platforms, others never consented to be discussed in the first place. Recently, dozens of women on TikTok have shared their stories dating a man nicknamed West Elm Caleb who is now infamous online. The women describe similar experiences of having been strung along and ultimately ghosted by him. As the story gained traction and more and more women shared their stories, the allegations against West Elm Caleb have intensified. No longer does Caleb string women along. Instead, they describe these actions as love bombing, a term associated with the cycle of abuse. While it may feel hurtful for someone to display interest in you only to later ghost, it is not an example of love bombing or abuse. Now, the hashtag #WestElmCaleb has over 4.1 million views, and Calebs Hinge profile is plastered all over the internet. His personal social media accounts are flooded with negative comments. There are multiple petitions trying to get him fired and his full name and job title have been published on the internet. This online abuse toward West Elm Caleb is only justifiable when we use words like love bombing or frame the discourse around him as having its basis in social justice. West Elm Caleb is an example of how cancel culture morphs into surveillance culture. Step out of line, even if its well within the realm of normal human behavior, and you risk punishment. Internet users cloak the human desire to gossip and humiliate under the guise of morality and social justice. This is an extreme example of cancel culture in action. Harassment can happen even to people with a few thousand followers. I spoke with Allison Akiyama, a Eugene community member who experienced online hate after making a TikTok in which she joked about hating women. As a woman who is also a lesbian, I thought it was a funny and ironic take on the hardships that come with being attracted to women, Akiyama said. Her TikTok account had about 8000 followers, but her follower count dropped by about 500 during the week following her post, with the video garnering over a hundred comments. Akiyama recounted a comment that stood out to her, calling her a misogynistic pig and accusing her of having made the TikTok for male attention. This whole situation made me realize how much of an echo chamber TikTok and other social media platforms are, she said. Its all just a bunch of people majority teens that have taken reasonable and logical concepts from ideologies like feminism and twisted them into something so far removed from reality that nobody can take them seriously anymore. Online spaces can be a useful venue to discuss social justice. It is because of Twitter, TikTok and Reddit that so many college students are informed on issues relating to activism and leftism. But we need to make sure not to use social justice to recreate the same systems we aim to critique. Cancel culture mimics a police state when we decide to punish those we believe have done wrong rather than help them to grow. We hurt the working class when we weaponize social media to try to get them fired from their jobs. Social media can be a mechanism through which we hold people accountable. Kindness is generally more effective than anger. Bigots and abusers should be taken down. But for minor infractions? Lets not throw everyday people to the wolves. Barbara Faye Boyles, 75, of Raceland, Kentucky passed away Tuesday, May 3, 2022, at her residence. Barbara was born August 1, 1946, in Load, Kentucky a daughter of the late Homer and Gladys Johnson Boyles. In addition to her parents, she was preceded in death by one nephew Robert Boyles. Bar SANAA, March 2 (Xinhua) -- International medical charity Doctors Without Borders (Medecins Sans Frontieres/MSF) announced on Wednesday that it had suspended operations in Yemen's northwestern province of Hajjah, citing safety and security concerns. "MSF took the decision to withdraw its staff and temporarily suspend its activities in the Abs hospital, in Hajjah Governorate as of March 1, 2022, while we are negotiating with the authorities to ensure the safety and security of our staff and patients," MSF said in a post on Twitter, without providing further details. The MSF-run Abs hospital is located in the northern district of Abs, which is under the control of the Houthi militia. Fighting has recently escalated between the Houthi militia and the government army in the area of Bani Hasan in Abs, as well as in the neighboring city of Harad. Last week, the MSF tweeted that it had dispatched additional medical supplies from Yemen's capital Sanaa to Abs hospital in response to "significant influx of war-wounded arriving in the hospital." Yemen has been mired in a civil war since 2014 when the Iran-backed Houthi militia seized control of several northern provinces and forced the Saudi-backed Yemeni government of President Abd-Rabbu Mansour Hadi out of Sanaa. Kyrgyz Parliament Speaker Talant Mamytov (R) shakes hands with Chinese Ambassador to Kyrgyzstan Du Dewen in Bishkek, Kyrgyzstan, March 1, 2022. During the meeting, the two sides exchanged views on strengthening China-Kyrgyzstan relations and cooperation between the legislative bodies of the two countries. (Chinese Embassy to Kyrgyzstan/Handout via Xinhua) BISHKEK, March 2 (Xinhua) -- Kyrgyz Parliament Speaker Talant Mamytov on Tuesday held a meeting with Chinese Ambassador Du Dewen, in which the two sides exchanged views on strengthening China-Kyrgyzstan relations and cooperation between the legislative bodies of the two countries. During the meeting, Mamytov congratulated China on its successful hosting of the Beijing Winter Olympics and the 30th anniversary of the establishment of diplomatic relations between the two countries. "Kyrgyzstan and China are friendly neighbors and comprehensive strategic partners. Kyrgyzstan has always valued its good neighborly and friendly relations with China," he said, expressing gratitude to China for it all-round assistance to Kyrgyzstan. Kyrgyzstan is ready to work closely with China to implement the agreements reached by the two heads of state, Mamytov noted. The Kyrgyz parliament is ready to strengthen and raise the level of cooperation with the National People's Congress of China, as well as make a positive contribution to the strengthening and development of Kyrgyzstan-China friendly relations, Mamytov added. For her part, Du congratulated Mamytov on his election as speaker of the parliament of Kyrgyzstan, and spoke highly of the development of bilateral relations over the past 30 years and the achievements in the joint construction of the Belt and Road Initiative. Du noted that the exchange of experience and cooperation between the legislative bodies of the two countries is an important part of China-Kyrgyzstan relations, adding that the National People's Congress of China maintains a long-standing relationship of friendly cooperation with the Kyrgyz parliament, which plays an important role in the development of bilateral relations. The Chinese diplomat expressed her hope that the legislatures of the two countries will continue to strengthen exchanges and the traditional friendship between the peoples, and jointly advance bilateral relations to new levels. When Britain left the EU, the Great and the Good almost universally predicted Britain would find itself marginalised and lose power in the world. Hard core Remainers believed and probably still believe that this country could wield much more influence as a member of the EU than by its solitary self. In particular, it was suggested that America would take us less seriously once we no longer played a part in the councils of Brussels. Such was the prevailing wisdom in the Foreign Office. Its favourite publications, the Financial Times and The Economist, wrung their hands in despair at what they regarded as the inevitability of British decline, and the certain prospect of enfeebled relevance. In 2019, a report by the UK branch of the United Nations Association gave voice to this gloomy view. A typical contribution came from Sir Simon Fraser, a former Permanent Under-Secretary the most senior diplomat at the Foreign Office. This is what he said: Fundamentally and structurally, I think our position, and our leverage in international institutions, will be weaker once we have left the European Union. Well, it hasnt worked out like that over the past few weeks. Almost no one other than the most addled Remainer could deny that Britain has independently pursued a policy in respect of Ukraine that has been both distinct and effective. Moreover, it seems most unlikely, if not inconceivable, that the Government would have been able to strike out in this fashion if the UK had still been part of the EU, and constrained by the blocs collective foreign policy. The first example of independent action was Britains arming of Ukraine back in January, while other large European countries were still anxious not to offend Vladimir Putin. Prime Minister Boris Johnson and Prime Minister of Estonia Kaja Kallas meet NATO troops after a joint press conference at an airbase in Tallinn on Tuesday Some 2,000 anti-tank missile launchers were despatched to Kyiv, along with other weapons and ammunition. The UK was also at the forefront of nations pressing for tough sanctions, though it is true that the Government has been slow in the past to crack down on crooked Russian oligarchs basking in the fleshpots of London, and still needs to do more. After Russias shocking invasion of Ukraine a week ago (it seems so much longer!), Germany and Italy were at first reluctant to exclude Russia from the crucial international bank transfer system Swift. But the Government, in the form of the increasingly impressive Defence Secretary Ben Wallace, declared that the UK was ready to work all day to secure Russias exclusion. This removal duly happened, at least in part as a consequence of British exhortation. Some will contend that Britain might have been equally effective if it were still a member of the European Union. I doubt it. What is surely undeniable is that the Government has succeeded in exercising considerable influence outside the EU which is more or less the opposite of the doomsters prediction. Such influence is complementary to the EU. It is often a question of urging our former partners in the EU, who are among our existing partners in Nato, to get a move on. There have been differences of opinion in recent weeks, but no fundamental conflict. And this brings me to the second way in which the prognostications of the Great and the Good have been confounded. They prophesied a near permanent post- Brexit rift between London and the Continent. In the event, the catastrophe in Ukraine has helped bring us closer together. This is especially true of East European EU members such as Poland and the Baltic States, which appreciate Britains vigorous response to Russias invasion. The Prime Minister was welcomed as a cherished ally when he visited Warsaw, and Tallinn in Estonia, on Tuesday. Britain has 900 troops in Estonia, a number that is set to double. EU Commission President Ursula von Der Leyen claps as Ukrainian President Volodymyr Zelensky appears on large screens via video conference to address members of the European Parliamen on Tuesday Incidentally, we should concede in a spirit of fairness that Boris Johnson has looked the part of a proper statesman in recent days. The idiocies of Partygate seem suddenly trivial when Ukraine is fighting for its survival and the world may be heading for an even more horrendous conflagration. The PM has been tough but measured. As the invasion of Ukraine has served to turn the former comic actor President Volodymyr Zelensky of Ukraine into an heroic and inspirational defender of his homeland, so it may have helped transform the erstwhile jokey presenter of the BBCs Have I Got News For You, namely Boris Johnson, into a formidable figure. To return to our improved relations with the EU: it is not just Britains allies in Eastern Europe that apparently regard us with a fresh respect. The new Chancellor of Germany, Olaf Scholz, seems friendly. Frances President Emmanuel Macron no longer dares treat Mr Johnson as the clown he once reportedly called him. The explanation is not hard to fathom. When confronted by Putins formidable armed forces, its a good idea to be four-square with Europes leading military power, which happens to also have a nuclear capacity at a time when Mad Vlad has nuclear thoughts swirling around in his unstable and vengeful brain. So, in short, theories about Britains supposedly inevitable marginalisation after Brexit, and forecasts of a prolonged and bitter post-divorce estrangement, have been exploded by the crisis in Ukraine. Am I guilty of naivety? Some claim that Mr Scholzs announcement last Sunday that Germany will increase its military spending by up to a whopping 100 billion this year implies the eventual creation of a new European Defence Force, from which Britain might be excluded. A Ukrainian service member holds a next generation light anti-tank weapon (NLAW), supplied by Britain to help fight off the invasion If it does spend the extra money, Germany will emerge as a considerable military power after years of under-investment in its armed forces. Euro-enthusiasts like to see this as a triumph for the EU. It would be more appropriate to view it as a triumph for the Nato alliance, of which Germany is of course a leading member. Nato, which Macron absurdly described as brain dead in 2019, has been revitalised by Putins aggression. It is more united under American leadership than it has been at any time since the end of the Cold War, and is likely to remain so for as long as Russia presents an existential threat. If Britain wishes to defend its interests, and to go on being regarded as a significant player in what has become a far more dangerous world since the invasion of Ukraine, it too will have to spend much more on defence, as I argued last week. In all kinds of ways, in fact, we will have to learn, now that we are a proper nation again outside the EU, to be a serious and grown-up country for example, in our energy strategy, which is a hopeless mess, and in producing enough food to feed ourselves. This is a new age of seriousness in which our very existence may be threatened by the two terrifying and potentially deadly autocratic powers of Russia and China. The frivolous, easy times have passed, and wont return for many years. In what is by far the gravest crisis since 1945, we can at least say that an independent United Kingdom has shown that it exerts more influence on international affairs outside the European Union than it did inside, and is a force for good in the world. Taste is a subjective thing, and we all have our own preferences when it comes to decor, as these images show. Hilarious images, taken by people from around the world and collated into a gallery by Bored Panda, reveal some of the terrible planning and design choices out there. Among some of the biggest faux pas are a pavement with a checkerboard design which will make you feel queasy, while another shows a tiny square of grass - with a stern warning to passers-by to keep off the patch. Here, FEMAIL shares the worst planning and design fails... The poor planning design on this US building, resulting in this pillar blocking the building door, is even worse when you realise the office houses a real estate agent! Among some of the biggest faux pas are a pavement with a checkerbox design which will leave you feeling queasy Whoever designed this UK street clearly wanted to introduce greenery. It may be tiny, but you have to respect their commitment to protecting the patch from footfall This unusual home in the US, believed to be in the North West, offers inhabitants a whole range of different windows - all the better for looking at your neighbour's properties Talk about a staircase to nowhere. There isn't an official name for this design abomination, which is thought to be in the UK, but some think it may be a miniature skate ramp If this European building looks grim from the outside, just imagine how grey and dingy it must be for the people in there This pyramid in a UK square has been charmingly branded 'AzTesco Temple' in homage to supermarket, where the trolley came from Surely that's a mistake! This flowerbed, believed to be in the UK, was positioned in a slightly off-centre position from the footpath Someone actually saw the plans for this estate in the UK, and must have liked the rat maze look of the fencing. Either way, they gave it the go-ahead Who wants to waste time with pesky things like tape measures, or checking distances? Clearly not the person who drew up this porch design! The front door of this UK home seems designed to keep people out, or at least require people to use a ladder to get in Ukrainian models, designers and editors that left their hometowns for Milan Fashion Week have spoke of their difficulty at being away from their friends, families and employees as their country descended into a war zone within hours of their departure. Many who expected a week of glamour in the Italian fashion capital have spoken of bizarre parallel worlds as they walk the runway in front of A-listers in designer clothes, while their friends and family hide out in bomb shelters at home. They described how the 'tone deaf' fashion community has failed to properly acknowledge the Russian invasion and spoke of their heartache at trying to helped loved ones still trapped. Some are desperately trying to get back to their families in Ukraine while others are heading for Poland in the hope of being reunited with loved ones across the border. Together with Russian models, they are using their platforms to raise awareness and money - with one even going so far as to launch an OnlyFans account. Ukrainian models, designers and editors that left their hometowns for Milan Fashion Week have been stranded in western Europe after their country descended into a war zone just hours after they left. Among them is Anna Mazzhyk who is creating an OnlyFans Model Kristy Ponomar, 21, walked in Prada's show in front of the likes of Taika Waititi, Rita Ora and Kim Kardashian. She said it was 'so hard' as she put her middle finger up to Putin Sharing a teary image, she wrote: 'F**k war, F**k Putin'. She's one of the many Ukrainian and Russian models posting anti-Putin sentiment - and sharing ways people outside of Ukraine can help. Kristy walks the runway at the Prada fashion show during the Milan Fashion Week Fall/Winter 2022/2023. She says it was the 'hardest show of her life' Ukrainian model Kristy Ponomar, 21, walked in Prada's show in front of the likes of Taika Waititi, Rita Ora and Kim Kardashian. But said that it was the 'hardest show of her life' and that she was 'walking for Ukraine'. Sharing a teary picture of herself to Instagram, still dressed for the show, she wrote: 'F*** war! F*** Putin! I wanna come back home and stay safe! I just did @prada its was the hardest show in my life. I walking for you my Ukraine. Thank you amazing @prada team for support me'. It's not known where Kristy currently is, but she has shared dozens of posts in support of Ukraine, and shared photos of her family in make-shift bomb shelters and sleeping bags. She's one of the many Ukrainian and Russian models posting anti-Putin sentiment - and sharing ways people outside of Ukraine can help. Model Kateryna Zub, is also stuck in western Europe, unable to reach her parents in Kharkiv, Ukraine. She flew to Milan last Monday - just days before Putin invaded. The 21-year-old who has walked for the likes of Hermes, Gucci, and Dolce & Gabbana, told the Evening Standard she was on her way to a casting when she heard that Putin had invaded. Model Kateryna Zub, is also stuck in western Europe, unable to reach her parents in Kharkiv, Ukraine. She flew to Milan last Monday - just days before Putin invaded. Kateryna (pictured) said that some brands offered to help but overall Fashion Week was lacking in acknowledgement and still 'talking about Prada and Gucci'. Kateryna Zub walks the runway during the Giambattista Valli Spring Summer 2018 show as part of Paris Fashion Week 'I was crying so much I couldnt do castings. Its horrible, its a nightmare. I cant believe its happening in my country,' she said. 'I call [my parents] and they are trying to tell me everything is fine, but I can hear the sounds of guns. Can you imagine? Its too late. They cant go anywhere. Russians are everywhere. Tanks are everywhere. Oh my god, its a nightmare. Its worse than anything Ive seen in the movies.' Kateryna said that some brands offered to help but overall Fashion Week was lacking in acknowledgement and still 'talking about Prada and Gucci'. Noting she can't go home, she's now in Germany and trying to make her way to Poland. Elsewhere, Ukrainian stylist Anna Mazzhyk told AFP she was awoken by her parents at 7am before a show, only to hear that 'Russia is invading Ukraine'. 'I was crying before the first show because it's difficult for me,' said the 22-year-old Kyiv native, outfitted in a puffy Prada vest and surrounded by her equally spruced-up friends, told the news agency. 'We're all wearing sunglasses to cover up our puffy eyes,' she said. Elsewhere, Ukrainian stylist Anna Mazzhyk (pictured) told AFP she was awoken by her parents at 7am before a show, only to hear that 'Russia is invading Ukraine'. Anna has manage to get to Warsaw. While she isn't able do join the war effort in Ukraine, she has decided to start an Only Fans page and will donate all proceeds to help. She is pictured Anna has managed to get to Warsaw. While she isn't able do join the war effort in Ukraine, she has decided to start an Only Fans page and will donate all proceeds to help. Sharing a photo to Instagram in her underwear and holding a Kalashnikov, she wrote: 'Photo to attract attention, Ukraine, I love you. 'Ok guys, here is something for you. I'm not in Ukraine, but I'll give my body for that, if i have to. Subscribe to my OnlyFans account, all money I will donate to Ukraine. 'Deed and body. For your people and country. I didnt think that I would ever do it, but already f*** for everything, I will help in every way that I can.' She's also shared snaps of her outside the Prada Foundation in Milan, looking typically stylish as you would expect. She then zoomed in on her bloodshot and teary eyes, explaining: 'The first two photos are what you see. The rest is what actually happens. Now my morning begins like this and I am infinitely happy that I see "so far calmly". 'The first photos are what you see, the rest are what is really happening.' Belgian model Louise Robert also told AFP that Ukrainian bookers backstage at Prada were 'visibly upset, trying to figure out when and how they could go home'. 'It was like a bomb, an emotional bomb,' she said. Kristy shared pictures of her home in Ukraine - showing it stripped bare as her family rested Dima Ievenko, the designer of outerwear brand Ienki Ienki, is also stuck in western Europe. Speaking to GQ he explained how he presented his collection, then on Thursday work up at 5.20am in his hotel room to see messages from his family, friends and employees telling him Russia had invaded. He said his primary concern was to protect his 120-employees, some have fled Kyiv trying to get to Poland, while others are fighting. He says he's ignored the shows and spent 'every waking minute' getting them a safe place to stay. 'My parents are in Kyiv, they cannot leave. I have a team of 120 people, all of them are young people, young girls and boys, and there are bombs flying straight at Kyiv. We never expected anything like this,' he explained. Speaking about the reaction of others at Fashion Week he added: 'Nobody cares. Im here with some other Ukrainian people, and were meeting with each other, and when we go out in the middle of fashion week its like were in a capsule. 'Here in Milan there are tons of people, the weather is beautiful, the COVID restrictions are not that high, and people are dressed up for the street style. And we are going in between them in a completely different reality. Because my reality now is in Ukraine.' Anna also shared snaps of her outside the Prada Foundation in Milan, looking typically stylish as you would expect. She then zoomed in on her bloodshot and teary eyes, explaining: 'The first two photos are what you see. The rest is what actually happens. Now my morning begins like this and I am infinitely happy that I see "so far calmly". Dima Ievenko, the designer of outerwear brand Ienki Ienki, is also stuck in western Europe. Speaking to GQ he explained how he presented his collection, then on Thursday work up at 5.20am in his hotel room to see messages from his family, friends and employees telling him Russia had invaded. Elsewhere, Vogue Ukraine's Vena Brykalin added that Milan Fashion Week has proved that the industry is 'tone deaf'. Speaking to the Evening Standard, the journalist said that he flew out to fashion week from Kyiv a day early which 'might have saved his life' because hours later airspace was shut down. Brykalin has skipped many of the shows in Milan Fashion Week and has not posted about fashion on social media - saying that he's 'grateful to be safe' but most of his team are 'hiding in basements'. 'Being a male, there's a pressure to return and sign up to the military effort. 'I have female friends even looking for rifles and guns because they are that committed to helping the defence,' he added. Taking to Instagram, he said that Giorgio Armani is the only designer that has even acknowledged the Ukraine crisis, by putting his show in complete silence. Vogue Ukraine has since called on an embargo for fashion and luxury goods to Russia. Brykalin added that 'turning your music off isn't the most radical thing in the world' and that he doesn't think designers should scrap their hard work and 'just stop'. 'But I do think this industry is really tone deaf and Milan has shown that this week,' he added. 'I don't expect models walking out wearing Ukrainian national flags or burning a portrait of Vladimir Putin on the runway The lamest thing you can do is to throw in Ukrainian dress into your collection just to show your support. But there are things you can do.' He added he doesn't know if it's 'laziness, insensitivity or the fear of alienating certain customers' as Russia is a huge market for high-end designers. Vogue Ukraine has since called on an embargo for fashion and luxury goods to Russia. Other designers have made nods to Ukraine at Milan, as Marni sent out model in the Ukrainian national colours of yellow and blue. Katya Kulyzhka, a Ukrainian model who lives in New York, has posted ways the international community can help and asked her 113,000 followers where she can buy bullet proof vests. Sasha Pivovarova, a Russian model who is known for being the longest appearing fashion model for Prada also shared a picture showing Ukraine's flag with a yellow and blue heart. Ukrainian designers that didn't leave Kyiv - including Alina Kachorovska - has taken shelter underground, according to WWD. Ivan Frolov, designer of Frolov, wanted to go Poland, but cannot due to rules preventing men between the ages of 18 and 60 leaving the country. Jen Sidary, a global fashion brand strategist who is showing six Ukrainian brands in New York this week, told WWD she has been in 'constant contact' with Frolov. Elsewhere, Russian and Ukraine models have used their mammoth Instagram followings to draw up support. Katya Kulyzhka, a Ukrainian model who lives in New York, has posted ways the international community can help and asked her 113,000 followers where she can buy bullet proof vests. Irina Kravchenko, another Ukrainian in New York, has also used her platform to promote defending Kyiv. Meanwhile, Russian supermodel Vlada Roslyakova shared a video urging peace, while Natalia Vodianova, who is also Russian, said she was going to donate to Ukraine. Sasha Pivovarova, a Russian model who is known for being the longest appearing fashion model for Prada also shared a picture showing Ukraine's flag with a yellow and blue heart. A lawyer and travel expert has revealed why you should never pay in dollars on your credit card while abroad - explaining that it's a 'trick' which allows stores to take more money from you. Erika Kullberg, an attorney who studied at Georgetown Law, explained that when buying things overseas, it's important to purchase them in the local currency and not U.S. dollars - because stores will often charge an extra fee to pay in USD, and give you a bad conversion rate. Erika warned her followers about the 'trick' in a TikTok video, which has now gone viral - gaining more than three million views in a matter of days - and many people were thankful for her advice. A lawyer and travel expert has revealed why you should never pay in dollars on your credit card while abroad - explaining that it's a 'trick' which allows stores to take more money from you When buying things overseas, attorney Erika Kullberg said it's important to purchase them in local currency and not U.S. dollars - since stores will often charge an extra fee to pay in USD In a TikTok video, which has now been watched more than three million times, she acted out a fake moment between a customer and a cashier at a store in a foreign country After the customer told the cashier that she wanted to pay in euros, she said, 'I know that if I choose dollars, you'll charge me an extra fee for that and you'll give me a bad conversion rate' 'Ugh, I was hoping you'd pick dollars so we'd make more money from you. Most tourists fall for this trick,' Erika concluded, acting as the annoyed clerk 'Don't fall for this trick when you're traveling,' she began in the clip. 'I'd like to pay with my credit card please,' she said, while pretending to be a customer in a store located in a foreign country. 'Do you want to pay for that in U.S. dollars or the local currency, euros?' she then asked, now acting as the cashier. After the customer told the cashier that she wanted to pay in euros, Erika responded as the store clerk, 'Are you sure? It's your credit card from the U.S., wouldn't you want to pay in dollars?' Then, Erika said (while pretending to be the customer again), 'No, I've read the terms and I know that if I choose dollars, you'll charge me an extra fee for that and you'll give me a bad conversion rate.' 'Ugh, I was hoping you'd pick dollars so we'd make more money from you. Most tourists fall for this trick,' she concluded, acting as the annoyed clerk. Fare Compare reiterated Erika's claim, writing that you may be charged up to 12 per cent more on foreign transactions when you pay in USD. The outlet reported that the reason is because merchants often charge a Dynamic Currency Conversion fee, in addition to any other foreign transaction fees that your credit card may charge you. 'Not to mention, the exchange rate that you usually are charged at a point of sale is typically less advantageous than the one your credit card company will use,' it wrote. 'Visa, Mastercard, and other large credit card networks can negotiate better exchange rates; save yourself the trouble and let them do the heavy lifting for you.' Many people took to the comment section of Erika's video on TikTok (and on Instagram, where she reposted it) to share their gratitude And some opened up about their own experiences of being charged more after paying in USD while overseas Many people took to the comment section of Erika's video on TikTok (and on Instagram, where she reposted it) to share their gratitude - and some opened up about their own experiences of being charged more after paying in USD while overseas. Erika's travel tips Pay in the local currency and not USD while travelling, because stores tend to charge an extra fee and give you a bad conversion rate If you have a flight credit that is expiring soon, you can book a new flight and cancel it within 24-hours to receive a new voucher If an American Airlines flight gets delayed past 11:59 P.M., the airline has to rebook you on a flight for the next day and pay for a hotel for you to stay in If your bag gets delayed, Delta Airlines will reimburse customers for anything they have to buy due to the baggage delay up to $3,800 If an airline overbooks a flight and you are forced to take a different one, you can get thousands of dollars for the mistake something called 'involuntary denied boarding' Advertisement 'Been living overseas for the last 12 years and it's all facts,' wrote on person. Another added: 'I was made to pay an extra 1.25 at an Amsterdam airport. The Starbucks was worth it.' 'Did this in Mexico and saved so much money,' agreed someone else. 'Exactly! Just the other day I saved $3 on a snack at an airport. Might not sound like much but it adds up,' a fourth comment read. A different user commented, 'True. It happened to me in Jamaica, and different stores had different conversion rates.' Erika previously gained popularity on TikTok for sharing a bunch of other travel tips - including how to land free tickets, upgrades, and thousands of dollars in rewards if your flight or baggage gets delayed. She claimed she has read through every airline's terms and conditions, and along the way, she discovered a lot of loopholes hidden in the contracts that people most likely don't know about including a lot of ways to get compensated. Erika shared her knowledge online and has received a lot of attention for her savvy tricks, gaining more than seven million followers and 42 million likes on the video streaming app. In another video, she explained how you can avoid losing out if your travel voucher is going to expire. 'According to the Department of Transportation, if I book a flight for a few months from now and then cancel it within 24 hours of booking, I'm entitled for a full refund,' she said in the clip. Erika has gained popularity on TikTok for sharing a bunch of other travel tips. She read through every airline's terms and conditions, and discovered a lot of loopholes hidden in the contracts In another video, she revealed how you can avoid losing out if you have a travel voucher that is going to expire She explained that if you book a flight for a few months from now and then cancel it within 24 hours of booking, you are entitled for a full refund 'If I use my travel voucher to book a flight but then cancel it within 24 hours of booking it, then [you] would have to refund [me] with a new travel voucher that has a new expiration date.' Per the Department of Transportation's website, 'For airline tickets that are purchased at least seven days before a flights scheduled departure date and time, airlines are required to either allow consumers to cancel their reservation and receive a full refund without a penalty for 24 hours, or allow consumers to reserve a ticket (place it on hold) at the quoted prices without paying for the ticket for 24 hours.' In one TikTok, which been viewed more than a million times, Erika also revealed that if an American Airlines flight gets delayed past 11:59 P.M., the airline has to rebook you on a flight for the next day and pay for a hotel for you to stay in. 'If the disruption is our fault or you're diverted to another city, and we don't board before 11:59 P.M. local time on your scheduled arrival day, we'll arrange an overnight stay or cover the cost of an approved hotel, if available,' American Airlines' condition of carriage states. In another viral video, which got three million views, Erika explained that you can also get paid by Delta Airlines if your bag gets delayed. She said Delta will reimburse customers for anything they have to buy due to the baggage delay up to $3,800. In one TikTok, Erika explained that if an American Airlines flight gets delayed past 11:59 P.M., the airline has to rebook you on a flight for the next day and pay for a hotel for you to stay in In another viral video, Erika explained that you can also get paid by Delta Airlines if your bag gets delayed She said Delta will reimburse customers for anything they have to buy due to the baggage delay - up to $3,800 'Because my bag is delayed, I now need to go buy new shoes from Nike, clothes from Nordstrom, and skincare from Sephora to tie me over until my bag arrives,' she said in the TikTok, pretending to be a customer whose bag was delayed. 'That will probably cost close to $1,000.' Then, a Delta employee (who was also played by Erika) responded, 'Ugh fine, make sure you save the receipts for the $1,000 you spend and submit them for reimbursement. Who taught you this?' 'Erika did, she's a lawyer and reads the fine print so I don't have to,' she concluded. According to Delta's contract of carriage, 'Delta is not liable for any loss, damage, or delay in the delivery of baggage arising out of or in connection with transportation of, or failure to transport any baggage unless notice of a claim is presented to a Delta office within 24 hours after the alleged occurrence of the events causing the claim, and unless the action is commenced within one year after such alleged occurrence.' That means that as long as you alert Delta of the situation within 24 hours, they will reimburse you for anything you have to buy due to the problem. According to Erika, United Airlines will also reimburse customers whose baggage got delayed up to $3,500. In a fifth TikTok, which has 47 million views, Erika claimed that if an airline overbooks a flight and you are forced to take a different one, you can get thousands of dollars for the mistake something called 'involuntary denied boarding.' According to Delta's contract of carriage, you must alert them of the situation within 24 hours to get reimbursed In a different TikTok, Erika revealed that if an airline overbooks a flight and you are forced to take a different one, you can get thousands of dollars for their mistake According to the Department of Transportation, you are eligible for compensation if you have a confirmed reservation and the airline cannot get you to your destination in time\ 'Occasionally, airlines may bump passengers and have them give up their seats. Bumping, also known as denied boarding, happens when there are more passengers scheduled to fly on an airplane than available seats,' the Department of Transportation wrote on its website. You are eligible for compensation if you have a confirmed reservation, checked-in to your flight on time, arrived at the departure gate on time, and the airline cannot get you to your destination within one hour of your flights original arrival time. If the next flight they book you on is one to two hours later, you can get reimbursed with 200 per cent of one-way fare (up to $775). And if it's over two hours, you can get 400 per cent of one-way fare (up to $1,550). However, there are a few situations that prevent you from getting any money from the airline, including operational or safety reasons, weight or balance restrictions, and passenger downgrades. Besides her travel secrets, Erika has also shared advice on how to get discounts at major stores like Nike, Kendra Scott, Apple, and Nordstrom. According to Erika, Apple offers a $400 discount to college students and their parents, plus faculty, staff, and homeschool teachers of all grades. She also revealed you can get a 15 per cent discount at any Nike store if you download their app. Two Oklahoma women were rocked by the discovery that the mothers and father who raised them were not their biological parents but rather, that 55 years ago, they were switched at birth at a local hospital. Tina Ennis and Jill Lopez, now 57, first opened up about the shocking revelation last month, when they filed suit against Duncan Regional Hospital for 1964 mixup which they only discovered in 2019 thanks to an Ancestry.com DNA test. In an interview with Today, the two women spoke candidly about learning the truth and what it has meant for them. Meanwhile, Katherine Jones Lopez's biological mother, but the mother who raised Ennis said she was 'totally devastated' by the discovery, describing it as if 'somebody took a hatchet' to her heart. 'There's so many people involved,' Ennis added. 'It's not just me and Jill. It's two entire families.' Two women who learned from an Ancestry.com DNA test that they were switched at birth in 1964 are suing an Oklahoma hospital for the damaging mixup (Tina Ennis pictured left, Jill Lopez pictured right) Ennis (right) and the mother who raised her, Kathryn Jones (left), spoke about the devastating mixup on the Today show Jones recalls thinking Ennis was a beautiful baby when she arrived at Duncan Physicians and Surgeons Hospital on May 18, 1964 Jill Lopez and Tina Ennis were born on the same day in 1964 and grew up about two hours away from one another as total strangers. At the age of 55, they discovered they had been switched when they were babies in the hospital. @tvkatesnow shares their story. pic.twitter.com/8G6PAYbYur TODAY (@TODAYshow) March 1, 2022 Jones recalls thinking Ennis was a beautiful baby when she arrived at Duncan Physicians and Surgeons Hospital on May 18, 1964. Ennis remembers a happy childhood, but also said she noticed that she didn't look quite like the rest of her family. 'I looked at a picture one day, and it was my two sisters and my mom and me and I couldn't find anything on any of those faces that looked like me,' she said. 'There was like no resemblance.' But Jones insisted she looked just like the man they believed was her biological dad, who had left when she was two. Jones' father had also left when she was a child, and in 2019, Ennis took a DNA test to try to learn more about her grandfather. But she was confused when the results came back, and her list of DNA relatives had names she didn't know including Brister. Jones didn't know the names either, so Ennis got her to take a DNA test as well. Ennis remembers a happy childhood, but also said she noticed that she didn't look quite like the rest of her family 'I looked at a picture one day, and it was my two sisters and my mom and me and I couldn't find anything on any of those faces that looked like me,' she said. 'There was like no resemblance' Ennis took a DNA test in 2019 and found a bunch of relatives on Ancestry.com with names she did not recognize She convinced her mom to take a test and they learned they weren't biologically related 'Ours didn't match up,' Ennis said. Ennis' 26-year-old daughter floated the idea that she was switched at birth and began digging online, looking up the names that did come up in Ennis' Ancestry.com relationships. She managed to find a woman nearby who was born on the same day and, remarkably, looked a lot like Jones. 'I thought it looked just like my mother,' Ennis said. That woman was Lopez, whom Ennis soon sent her a message, convincing her to take a DNA test as well. It came back with Jones as a match for her mother. 'All I could think about was how I was going to tell my mom,' Ennis said, tearing up. 'I just thought she's not going to be able to handle it. That's what I thought about.' Jones was heartbroken. 'It just devastated me. Totally devastated me,' she said. Ennis' 26-year-old daughter found a woman nearby who was born on the same day - and, remarkably, looked a lot like Jones (Lopez pictured as a child) 'It's a hard thing to know what to do, you know, because there's no books to buy [to] get you through it,' Lopez said Unfortunately, Ennis' biological parents, Joyce and John Brister, have died 'She was afraid she was going to lose me,' Ennis said. 'And she wasn't going to. I wasn't going to leave her.' 'I could not lose Tina. She'll always be my daughter,' Jones added. 'I have loved her from the second they laid her in my arms.' Since they learned of the switch, Lopez and Jones have gotten to know each other, learning they have a shared love of purple, shopping, and estate sales. Unfortunately, Ennis' biological parents, Joyce and John Brister, have died. 'It's a hard thing to know what to do, you know, because there's no books to buy [to] get you through it,' Lopez said. Now Ennis, Lopez, and Jones are suing Duncan Regional Hospital (which merged with Duncan Physicians and Surgeons Hospital in 1975) for recklessness and negligent infliction of emotional distress. The hospital is fighting back, claiming that though it merged with the hospital where the two women were born, it is not the same one and is therefore not responsible. Jones - Lopez's biological mother, but the mother who raised Ennis - said she was 'totally devastated' by the discovery, describing it as if 'somebody took a hatchet' to her heart Ennis (back left) has not gotten to meet her biological parents, but Jones (bottom left) has had a chance to get to know Lopez Ennis, Lopez (left), and Jones (right) are suing Duncan Regional Hospital (which merged with Duncan Physicians and Surgeons Hospital in 1975) for recklessness and negligent infliction of emotional distress The women previously spoke to the Daily Beast about the ordeal, with Ennis describing the terrible moment she realized the truth. 'My heart just sank [in that moment] because I was just like, "This is for real,"' she said. Jones didn't want to believe it at first, but when she saw a photo of Lopez, who works selling real estate, she initially thought it was an old photo of herself. 'Because she actually looked just like me,' Jones said. 'And it devastated me.' Jones said one of the worst parts of the discovery was realizing that her grandchildren were not biologically hers, either. 'It was like somebody had ripped out a part of my heart,' Jones said. 'I just couldn't deal with it.' Foodies are marvelling over what has been described as the 'fanciest' Aldi store in Australia. The Aldi 'Corner Store' in Sydney is half the size of a standard Aldi store but offers additional features not found elsewhere, providing shoppers with a 'convenience-driven' experience. Inside the store customers will find a cafe serving barista-made coffee, an artisan bakery and self-serve checkouts along with a first-of-its-kind robotic pizza vending machine dubbed a 'Pizzabot'. The new North Sydney Aldi Corner Store is located on Mount Street in North Sydney. Opening hours are 7am to 9pm from Monday to Friday, with weekend hours from 8am to 8pm. Scroll down for video The Aldi 'Corner Store' in Sydney is half the size of a standard Aldi store but offers additional features not found elsewhere There's a huge range of convenient grab-and-go meals tailored to the busy city office workers and time-poor commuters Sydney foodie Adrian Widjy shared a now-viral TikTok video after visiting the store himself and was left gobsmacked. 'This has got to be the bougee-est Aldi I've ever been in!' he said in the short clip. 'Firstly they have Sonoma by the entrance, [then] there is a bakery section and a whole fruit and veggie area unlike the usual aisle format.' Adrian also seemed surprised to find a huge frozen section and a 'pet corner' filled with a variety of pet food. After 15 hours the video was viewed more than 30,000 times and others said they hope Aldi plan to roll out similar stores across the country, as many approved of the self-serve checkouts and pizza vending machine. Foodies will be excited to try the snazzy new robotic Pizzabot machine, which serves restaurant-grade gourmet pizza in just two minutes. The machine is designed with a glass front, giving pizza-lovers a front row seat to the theatre of their pizza being cooked and packaged by the robotic machine. The mechanism was created in collaboration with Bondi start-up Placer Robotics. Pizzabot is the first pizza vending machine to be designed and manufactured in Australia, and will debut exclusively at Aldi Corner Store in North Sydney. Foodies will be excited to try the snazzy new robotic Pizzabot machine (pictured), which serves restaurant-grade gourmet pizza in just two minutes The small format convenient store under a new concept name is about half the size of a standard Aldi, which typically measures 1,200sqm - and features a new store layout to maximise efficiency, a modern interior design complemented by simple navigation, and extended trading hours. Customers are greeted with a vibrant mural upon entry, fresh fruits and vegetables, a cheese stall and a huge range of convenient grab-and-go meals tailored to the busy city office workers and time-poor commuters. The Corner Store has a coffee kiosk with locally roasted, barista-made coffee, an artisan bakery section, a collection of the retailer's famous Special Buys range and even a 'pup parking' for pet owners to easily tether their dog on a leash while they do their grocery shop. The new state-of-the-art store features an in-house artisan bakery and a coffee kiosk serving roasted, barista-made coffee6 The small format convenient store will feature its famous Special Buys range so shoppers won't miss out on seasonal items The store will also feature an OzHarvest 'Juice For Good' vending machine, offering shoppers a fresh cup of orange juice, squeezed in front of their eyes from fresh, rescued oranges, ensuring that good quality produce does not go to waste The new Corner Store could rival major supermarkets such as Woolworths Metro and Coles Local, which are smaller format outlets mostly located in densely populated urban areas. Aldi chief executive Tom Daunt said the new store will offer city shoppers a slightly different range of grocery items - including smaller pack sizes, convenience food ranges and fresh products. 'There will be some range changes, so some of the products that don't typically really appeal to inner-city urban dwellers, like 10kg dog food, we have removed and that has given us space back and allowed us to squeeze a traditional Aldi store into a smaller format,' Mr Daunt told The Australian. 'The corner store is about developing a format to allow us to bring the Aldi offer to those customers in high-density urban locations.' He said the German supermarket is looking at trialling as many as four Corner Stores over the next year. Designed to offer shoppers a convenience-driven experience, store features self-serve checkouts to make shopping a breeze With a modern new layout, the store features popular pantry staples - including nut snacks and a range of pastas The new artisan 'Wild Origins' bakery range will also tempt shoppers with a wide variety of sweet and savoury goods, including 12 types of sourdough bread, vegan burger buns, chocolate croissants, pretzels, and multi-pack cookies The new North Sydney store features ready-to-eat lunch and dinner options including a variety of sushi, salad pots, sandwiches and wraps from as little as $3.29, as well as prepared fruit and snack combo packs from $2.99. The new artisan 'Wild Origins' bakery range will also tempt shoppers with a wide variety of sweet and savoury goods, including 12 types of sourdough bread, vegan burger buns, chocolate croissants, pretzels, and multi-pack cookies. The store will also feature an OzHarvest 'Juice For Good' vending machine, offering shoppers a fresh cup of orange juice, squeezed in front of their eyes from fresh, rescued oranges, ensuring that good quality produce does not go to waste. Supporting Australian farmers by using blemished oranges, with all profits of the juice sales going to OzHarvest, with every juice sold being an equivalent to one meal being donated. The re-energised interior transformation has been complemented by talented street artist and muralist Joel Moore, aka Mulga, who's known for his unique Australian creations and signature style of intricate line work and bright colours There's even a 'pup parking' for pet owners to easily tether their dog on a leash while they do their grocery shop Sandra Lee has revealed she is undergoing a hysterectomy after her gynecologist noticed a change in her cells following her battle with breast cancer nearly seven years ago. The Food Network star, 55, was due to have the surgery in Los Angeles on Tuesday with her fiance, Ben Youcef, by her side, Page Six reported. That same day, she opened up about the operation on Instagram, admitting she has been putting it off for years. 'Soooooo this is happening! Several years ago I was supposed to have quite an intense surgery. It was a follow up to my breast cancer surgery, but I had repeatedly put it off and then COVID hit,' she explained. Sandra Lee, 55, revealed on Instagram that she is undergoing a hysterectomy, saying a gynecologist noticed a 'noticed a change in some of my cells' The Food Network star was due to have the surgery in Los Angeles on Tuesday with her fiance, Ben Youcef, by her side, Page Six reported 'Fast forward to now, during a routine appointment with my gynecologist, she noticed a change in some of my cells. I went for a second and third opinion and they all confirmed the same.' A change in the cells covering the cervix, the lower part of the womb, can lead to an abnormal cervical screening test result. 'These change are not cancer,' according to Cancer Research UK. 'The cells often go back to normal by themselves. But in some women, if not treated, these changes could develop into cancer in the future.' Lee said she immediately thought of a conversation she had with a friend who told her years ago that she could consider getting a complete hysterectomy. 'But after all of the issues I had experienced with my breast cancer surgery, the last thing I wanted to do was have another major operation so I didnt!' she shared. 'Over the last few years I have watched and admired the grace of other women who went public with their own health decision while I sat on the sidelines in awe and with a bit of fear. Brave women, like my friends mother who sadly had lost her battle with breast cancer after it had spread to her ovaries.' Lee, pictured with her ex, former New York Governor Andrew Cuomo in 2012, was diagnosed with breast cancer in 2015 Cuomo was by her side when she underwent a double mastectomy in 2015 and started reconstructive surgery a year later Sources told Page Six that reading about Amy Schumer and Angelina Jolie's medical issues gave Lee the strength to move forward with the surgery. Schumer, 40, had a hysterectomy and an appendectomy last year to treat endometriosis, a painful uterine condition. Meanwhile, Jolie, 46, underwent a double mastectomy in 2013 after she tested positive for the BRCA1 gene, which dramatically increased her risk of cancer. Two years later, she had her ovaries and fallopian tubes removed. Jolie's mother, Marcheline Bertrand, died in 2007 at age 56 after a nearly eight-year battle with ovarian and breast cancer. 'I admit, I am a little embarrassed that I hadnt had the courage to get this final stage done until now,' Lee wrote in her candid post. 'So while youre reading this post I am undergoing hysterectomy surgery. A surgery that so many brave women before me have had to do. Lee, pictured in January, admitted had been putting off having a hysterectomy for years 'and then COVID hit' Sources said reading about Amy Schumer (left) and Angelina Jolie (right) having similar procedures gave Lee the strength to move forward with the surgery 'I admit, I am a little embarrassed that I hadnt had the courage to get this final stage done until now,' Lee wrote in her candid post 'Itll be an everything out procedure and after that, there wont be any more halo of worry hanging over my head. My sweet Ben is with me and will be taking a little time off work to stay home.' Lee noted that she is grateful for everyone's support, saying her 'friends and family have been incredible.' 'I am filled with all sorts of emotions. I am scared but also happy to be getting this done strength and courage!' she said 'We must always remember to have strength and courage.' 'Hopefully this will encourage anyone who needs to get a concerning procedure done to take the opportunity now so you can live as happy and healthy as possible,' she concluded her post. 'We must all live our best lives every day and in every way. 'With that I send you all the love in the world, your well wishes and prayers are appreciated more than you know.' Lee moved to Malibu after she and Cuomo split in September 2019, and she met Youcef nearly two years later in March 2021 Youcef proposed to Lee in August during their whirlwind trip to France Lee's ex, former New York Governor Andrew Cuomo, was by her side when she was diagnosed with early-stage breast cancer and underwent a double mastectomy in 2015. She praised him for being incredibly supportive during her cancer battle and subsequent reconstructive surgeries. Lee developed an infection from her double mastectomy and was rushed to the hospital in August 215. 'I did my very best to avoid this (when I tell you I did everything, I mean everything modern, Eastern and holistic) but infection is an incredible monster,' she wrote in a Facebook message to fans at the time. 'I am a long way from where I was and a long way from where I need to be, but at this point I understand that right now I just need to complete this unexpected phase of a tough journey.' Lee praised Youcef in a gushing Valentine's Day post last month She shared a carousel of photos of them together, including snapshots of them kissing 'So this happened! Ben happened! Love happened! Happiness happened!' she wrote. 'I was certain it never would again. I was shocked when it did. Lee started her reconstructive surgeries in 2016, and it took four years for them to be completed due to complications. 'Its a really intense thing, having that operation,' she told People in June 2016. 'Being put out, its lights out. You go, "Oh God, please sweet Lord, take care of me while Im here."' WHAT IS A HYSTERECTOMY? A hysterectomy is a surgical procedure to remove a woman's uterus. There are three kinds: PARTIAL HYSTERECTOMY: Removes two-thirds of the uterus. Removes two-thirds of the uterus. TOTAL HYSTERECTOMY: Removes uterus and cervix. Removes uterus and cervix. RADICAL HYSTERECTOMY: Removes uterus, cervix and ovaries. The operation is most commonly performed on women between the ages of 40 and 49. More than 20 million American women have had a hysterectomy, according to data from the Centers for Disease Control and Prevention. As women approach menopause, the odds that they will develop one of several serious uterine health conditions increases. Doctors may recommend a hysterectomy as a treatment for: fibroids endometriosis uterine (endometrial) cancer chronic uterine pain or bleeding collapsed uterus In some cases, doctors may suggest a hysterectomy as a preventative measure if a woman has significant warning or early signs of developing one or more of these conditions. When necessary, surgeons may also remove the ovaries and fallopian tubes, if these have also been damaged or are at serious risk of damage. The removal of reproductive organs sends a woman's body into menopause, no matter how old she is. This comes with unpleasant side effects like hot flashes, and many women have to start hormone therapy, taking estrogen to balance out their own hormones. Advertisement Lee who was dubbed 'First Girlfriend' while she was with Cuomo kept a low profile during most of his first two terms as governor, but she emerged as an advocate for cancer screening after her own diagnosis. 'Early diagnosis just gives you the opportunity to be the most aggressive that you can be,' she told People in 2018. 'Its the best treatment.' Lee also opened up about her cancer diagnosis in the 2018 HBO documentary 'RX: Early Detection, A Cancer Journey with Sandra Lee.' She moved to Malibu after she and Cuomo split in September 2019. They dated for 14 years and lived together, but they never got engaged in their decade and a half as a couple. Lee and Youcef are believed to have met at a charity event in Santa Monica back in March 2021, with him making the first move. He is a father to five-year-old twins with his soon-to-be ex-wife, California-based realtor Apryl Stephenson. Though the pair are still legally married, they separated in 2019 and they filed for divorce in January 2020. Youcef proposed to Lee in August during their whirlwind trip to France that coincided with the sexual harassment scandal surrounding Cuomo. 'Ben really wanted to distract Sandra from all the news, so he whisked her away to Paris,' an unnamed source close to Youcef told the New York Post. 'He knows how hard this has been on her and he wants to make sure she feels loved and supported.' The source added: 'Ben is incredibly protective of Sandra. They're soulmates and head-over-heels in love.' Cuomo, 64, resigned from office in August after investigators working for New York Attorney General Letitia James authored a report concluding he had sexually harassed 11 women. The disgraced governor has denied the allegations and some are speculating he could challenge James in the upcoming election. He released an ad on Monday that depicts him as the victim of a 'political attack' launched by James, who later launched a failed bid for governor. Lee, meanwhile, couldn't be happier with Youcef, whom she praised in a gushing Valentine's Day post last month. She shared a carousel of photos of them together, including snapshots of them kissing. 'So this happened! Ben happened! Love happened! Happiness happened!' she wrote. 'I was certain it never would again. I was shocked when it did. I swore I would never fall again, trust again, love again or open myself up again. 'On our one year anniversary I shall share the story of how we met but until then, my wish for you is that no matter where you are, how old you are or what has happened, you can welcome hope back into your life again.' Fitness star Chontel Duncan hurt her foot on February 15 and started experiencing awful cramps, but didn't expect any 'real damage' had been done. The 32-year-old trainer from Brisbane continued to go about her busy lifestyle, attending appointments for her kids and tending to her newborn twins. 'The pain and swelling was concerning, but as we mothers do, we put our own needs aside to be there for our babies,' she wrote on Instagram. It wasn't until she started limping for five days that she managed to see a physiotherapist who confirmed she had an oblique fracture - a type of broken bone that breaks on an angle. Australian fitness star Chontel Duncan (pictured) had been walking around for five days not knowing her right foot was fractured The 32-year-old trainer from Brisbane experienced cramping after hurting her foot in February 15 but didn't expect she had done any 'real damage' But after going to the physiotherapist, X-rays confirmed she had an oblique fracture (pictured) 'I had a physio appointment booked that Friday when the twins both were rushed to hospital separately (two hours apart) with apneas and bradycardias from a reaction to their six-week needles,' Chontel wrote. 'After five days limping around the hospital, I managed to get my foot seen by a physio on Wednesday and Friday, where we treated the area with heat and massaging, assuming it was soft tissue or ligament damage. 'Then today (5 days later), the X-ray results came in confirming I had an oblique fracture through the distal shaft of the third metatarsal.' Chontel now has to wear a moon boot 24/7 and in four weeks doctors will take more x-rays and 'reassess the situation' Experts told Chontel oblique fractures are a 'type of broken bone' that occurs when one of the bones breaks at an angle. She now has to wear a moon boot 24/7 and in four weeks doctors will take more x-rays and 'reassess the situation'. 'At this point, all I can do is laugh and book in with my GP to get my bone density checked,' Chontel said, adding this is the first time she had ever broken a bone. Chontel recently shared pictures of her newborn twins who came in January at 31-week gestation after what she described as a difficult pregnancy. She now has four sons and a daughter and opened up about her recent difficulty coping with the 'exhausting fear' of a 'threatened miscarriage' during the pregnancy. Thankfully both babies were delivered safely by caesarean; the baby girl is named Havana Quinn Duncan and her twin brother is named Justice Quinn Duncan. Chontel and her high school sweetheart Sam are now the proud parents of five young children all under the age of six. Chontel recently shared pictures of her newborn twins who came in January at 31-week gestation after what she described as a difficult pregnancy Chontel and her high school sweetheart Sam are now the proud parents of five young children all under the age of six Chontel shared the happy family news on Instagram with her one million followers along with images of the twins. 'We all had our suspicions that these two would make an early appearance being a high-risk (threatened miscarriage) pregnancy. We just weren't expecting them to arrive at 31weeks gestation,' she wrote. 'But here they are, thriving, kicking goals and winning the hearts of all the wonderful neonatal nurses and neonatologists. 'We are absolutely smitten over these two angels, and the boys are VERY eager to meet them when they're ready to come home sometime over the next eight weeks.' Prince Harry is unlikely to come back to the UK this year - despite the Queen celebrating her 70th year on the throne - because he'll find it hard to face his family ahead of his upcoming memoirs, a royal biographer has claimed. Tom Bower, who is currently penning a biography of Meghan Markle, told Closer the Duke of Sussex, 37, faces the 'ultimate dilemma' this year, as he must decide whether to make the trip to visit his beloved Grandmother knowing that he's being paid to bare his soul for the much-anticipated book. Harry's explosive 14.7million ($20million) memoir is due to be published in the autumn. Bower says that Prince Harry, whose daughter Lilibet, born in June, is yet to meet the Queen in person, will find it hard to be 'pleasant' to his family 'knowing what hes written about them in that book'. Scroll down for video Royal biographer Tom Bower said the Duke of Sussex, 37, who lives in California with his wife Meghan Markle, 40 and their two young children, will find it hard to 'face' his family and be 'pleasant' to them knowing what he has written about them in his upcoming memoirs (pictured with Meghan at the 53rd NAACP Image Awards Show) Harry's book, to be published by Random House, is likely to tackle the brothers' frosty relationship with the Duchess of Cornwall, who was confirmed as the future Queen Consort in February. Prince Harry is currently bringing a legal challenge against the Home Office after being told he would no longer be given the 'same degree' of personal protective security when visiting from the US, despite offering to pay for it himself. The royal, who is living in Montecito, California, with Meghan Markle, 40, and their son Archie, two, and Lilibet, nine months, wants to bring his children to visit from across the Atlantic, but 'does not feel safe' when visiting under the current security arrangements, the court was previously told. Bower claims the Duke of Sussex is using worries over his security as 'an excuse' and says he knows that it's likely to be difficult to maintain friendly relations with the royal family following the release of the book. The author said he does not believe Harry will come back this year, in spite of Prince Philip's thanksgiving ceremony on April 29 and the Queen's Platinum Jubilee in early June. 'I think Harry wont come back because he knows he cannot face his family, and be pleasant with them, knowing what hes written about them in that book,' Bower said. 'That book will have a lot of casualties and cause a lot of hurt. It will really deliver, as Harry knows it has to, to justify the money hes been paid to do it. How can Harry come back and pretend its all fine? The worst of what he will say is yet to come,' he added. The Duke of Sussex was meant to come to the UK for his grandmother's Platinum Jubilee in June and a memorial service for his late grandfather in April, but an argument with the Metropolitan Police over his security detail has apparently put the trip in jeopardy (pictured with the Queen, 95, right and Meghan, left, in 2018) The author added not coming back would be a clear show of where Harry's loyalties lie, and that the Duke of Sussex could regret not introducing his daughter Lilibet to the Monarch before it's too late. He's added that the Duke of Sussex has had plenty of opportunities already to come back to the UK, and the fact he and his family have not visited the Queen since settling in the US shows where Harry and Meghan's mindsets are. Harry has visited the UK twice on solo trips since moving to North America, once for the funeral of his grandfather the Duke of Edinburgh on April 17 and on July 1 to unveil a statue of his mother Princess Diana at Kensington Palace with Prince William, 39. Tom also recently told the Sun that Meghan has no intention to coming back to the UK and 'simply doesn't care' what the British public think. Harry faces the 'ultimate dilemma' this year, as he must decide whether he wants to see his beloved grandmother or stay away ahead of his potentially explosive memoirs being released, Bower said The commentator said the royal viewed the UK as a 'lost cause.' 'Meghan's ultimate destination is unclear, but she certainly has the backing to make a bid to star as an American politician,' he said. 'In parallel, Britain is a lost cause for the Sussexes. In truth, I suspect Meghan no longer cares whether she is welcome in London. She has no intention of returning.' He added that while her popularity has fallen in the UK since getting married, her three day visit to New York in September was a 'remarkable success' and she clearly enjoys support among 'Democrats, minorities and the young.' It's the latest revelation released from the tell-all book and comes after he said Meghan was branded 'that minx' by the Duchess of Cornwall, who thought she was 'a self-seeking troublemaker'. Prince Harry's account of life as a Windsor could shake the royal family to its core, friends have warned (pictured: Duke and Duchess of Cambridge, the Queen, the Prince of Wales, and the Duchess of Cornwall with Harry and Meghan in 2019) The royal biographer suggested the Duke and Duchess' silence over the Queen's declaration that Camilla would one day by Queen Consort was 'Meghans way of declaring war.' Prince Harry is believed to have 'reached out to his father' to have 'friendly video calls' ahead of the Queen's Jubilee and is likely to return for celebrations this summer. However, sources close to the matter have suggested that the royal no-holds barred book will lay bare his true feelings towards his step-mother Camilla and is likely to 'shake the monarchy to its core'. The Royal Family has been left deeply concerned by Harry's decision to secretly collaborate with Pulitzer-winning ghostwriter JR Moehringer on what his publishers described as 'the definitive account of the experiences, adventures, losses, and life lessons that have helped shape him'. The Queen, Prince Charles and Prince William are said to have been completely blindsided by Harry's shock announcement that he has been secretly working on his as yet untitled memoirs for more than a year now. Meghan Markle may never come back to the UK as she 'simply doesn't care' what the British public think, Bower has also claimed. (The couple are pictured at Global Citizen in New York in September 2021) Royal experts had previously warned that the potentially explosive book could burn further bridges with the distant Duke and The Firm. And sources close to the Duke of Sussex fired a warning shot on that is likely to send chills through the Royal Family as news of Harry's potentially explosive memoirs reappeared. His friends told the Mirror: 'If they think he's gone soft, they are mistaken. Just wait for the book to come out because that will shake the monarchy to the core.' Friends of the Duke explained to the Mirror: 'Although tensions have eased between the two of them over the years, it was more for a show of unity than a close relationship. 'There were big problems at the start but as Harry and his brother William aged and matured, things got better and they can now co-exist as adults. They were never close with her and they still aren't.' It comes as The Mail on Sunday revealed Camilla would be crowned side-by-side with Charles in a slimmed-down Coronation celebration when the time comes. The Prince of Wales has already let it be known that he favours a leaner monarchy and his Coronation service whenever it comes is expected to set the tone for his reign. Advertisement This family are cruising through life on their 65ft decommissioned tugboat. Jason Loger, 35, bought the former military vessel for $35,000 in early 2019, while on his second date with his girlfriend Taryn Collins. After a year of dating, the couple moved into the boat and spent $20,000 on basic maintenance and another $30,000 refurbishing it to turn it into their dream home, which is moored in Benicia, California. The vessel is now home to Taryn and Jason, their two dogs and their eight-month-old son, Russell. The couple converted the crew's quarters into the master room and the officer in charges' room into the nursery for Russell. While they are sure the boat is safe for Russell, after posting their incredible life on TikTok, Taryn has had to defend their boat life from trolls who comment on the safety of their son. The couple fitted the research room of the tugboat with sofas and carpet and can lounge as well as a play chair for their son Russel The thrifty parents have created a little nursery space for Russell, including a changing table dubbed 'the poop deck' and insist this is safe for their son Taryn and Jason also turned the decommissioned military boat's sleeping quarters into a master bedroom with a comfortable bed for them The couple enjoying a pleasure ride with their two dogs on their refurbished tugboat while Taryn was pregnant with Russell in 2021 Jason bought the boat for $35,000 in 2019 on his and Taryn's second date. The couple moved in a year later and they welcomed their son Russell in 2021 Taryn, a stay-at-home mother said: 'When I first saw the boat in pictures I thought it was a floating tetanus shot. But once I got in there and saw Jason's love and his passion for it and saw the ability to move on water, I fell in love with the whole idea of it. 'We wanted to do this fun twist like it's a home and it's something cool on the water for people to enjoy. We are able to untie our lines and change our scenery at any given moment and that's so nice, especially with the pandemic. 'When we weren't able to go to the bar or do any of those things, we would just go anchor out in the San Francisco bay and it would just be us and it would be safe. 'When I met Jason, I was living in an apartment and had just moved to the area, so he kind of started to show me the boat life. We get a view that people pay millions for, for a fraction of the cost.' She said: 'After posting to TikTok I'm hearing comments saying that it delusional and not safe. What part of it isn't safe? Everything I'm doing is safe and it's just as safe as what you would be in a house. 'I would say about 95 per cent of the people would say that they wish they could do this and that I'm a good mom to give my son this awesome adventure. 'The comments are all mostly positive but then I'd get the random comment telling me it's delusional. Or somebody will say that my son will fall in the water. The boat came with a research lab that overlooked the deck before the renovations, which the couple have turned into their living-room Before the renovations, pictured, the master bedroom consisted of a sleeping quarter with several hanging camp beds for the boat's staff The couple's two dogs, Bella and Skipper, live on the boat with the family-of-three. Russell has his own playing pen under a bunk bed in one of the rooms Before the renovation, left, the boat's floors were red and did not make for a very homely setting. The couple fitted it with white and blue linoleum, right The couple turned this research lab, which had a rudimentary wooden worktop and several boating accessories, into a lounge area for the whole family 'No matter if you live in a boat or a house, you need to supervise your children, we have doors and we have brains.' Taryn and Jason have spent upwards of $50,000 on routine maintenance, materials, and equipment but maintain they're saving hundreds of thousands of dollars by living on a boat instead of in a house. She said: 'The haul out, dry docking and launch, inspection, sanding and painting of the underwater portion of the boat for routine maintenance was about $20,000 'Another $30,000 was spent on materials and equipment for things like shore power transformers to be able to plug into a regular marina, paint, steelwork, a full-sized washer and dryer, flooring, HVAC repairs and equipment. Jason at the wheel, boating his home away from the marina and onto their next adventures. The couple share glimpses of their life on social media All aboard! Adorable sailor Russell has his very own life jacket, but his parents are sure that the boat is safe for him. Jason and Taryn already lived on the boat when they welcomed Russell 'Jason did most of the work on his own which kept our costs low. We call it "sweat equity". I wanted to show people that they can do this. It's not super expensive if you're not afraid of water. 'There are so many people who live on boats, and they do with their kids, and they sail around the world. The pandemic threw me into this cool idea that to be stationary is so silly. 'Now we can go out and see the world and meet people and be as secluded as you want or not as secluded. A lot of people think that we're doing something crazy and extravagant and we're not.' Taryn with Russell and the couple's two dogs, proudly posing in front of the refurbished tugboat, which she spent three years refurbishing with Jason The boat in the marina at sunset. The couple, who can work the boat, can take off whenever they like, which is a major plus of boat life ADDIS ABABA, March 2 (Xinhua) -- China-proposed Belt and Road Initiative (BRI) is gaining momentum in Africa through its infrastructure footprints such as the Addis Ababa-Djibouti Standard Gauge Railway, an Ethiopian official has said. Tilahun Sarka, the general manager of Ethiopia-Djibouti Standard Gauge Railway Share Company (EDR), said in a recent interview with Xinhua that the Addis Ababa-Djibouti railway is "a living example of China's Belt and Road Initiative in Africa, set to linking Djibouti in the east to Senegalese capital, Dakar in the west of Africa through railway." "This line goes to West Africa, usually, they name it Djibouti-Dakar route. Addis Ababa-Djibouti railway is exactly the starting point of Djibouti-Dakar line," Sarka said in the interview. The 752-km Chinese-built transnational railway, which was launched in October 2016, is a flagship project of China-Africa cooperation under the BRI, bringing Ethiopia, Djibouti and China together for a common goal, Sarka said, underscoring the need for African governments along the intended east-west railway line to work together with China toward the realization of Africa's integrated high-speed railway network. "Respective governments are supposed to work closely with the Chinese government and fill the gap and if that is realized, it (will be) very simple to take a train from here and go to Dakar. This is really a big vision," he said. According to the EDR chief, the BRI coincides with Africa's 2063 vision of establishing an integrated railway network, connecting the continent also from Egypt in the north to South Africa in the South. "The good thing with the Chinese investment is that they are coming with financial resources; they are coming with the technology transfer to the local people. They also believe in a win-win kind of partnership," he said. The Ethiopia-Djibouti railway company has reported increasing revenue during its four years of operation while driving economic growth and industrialization along the route. Figures from the EDR show that Africa's first fully electrified transboundary railway earned 86.1 million U.S. dollars in 2021, up 37.4 percent from the previous year, with some 449 passenger and 1,469 freight trains running along the route, and fertilizers, wheat and commodities such as cooking oil, small cars and chilled fruits and vegetables transported. The electrified railway has cut the transportation time for freight goods from more than three days to less than 20 hours and reduced the cost by at least one-third. "Our report showed that we moved about 2 million metric tons of cargo in 2021. We transported 1 million metric tons of cargo during the first year of freight operation. So there is a significant increase in the volume of cargo of about 25 percent per year," Sarka said. The Addis Ababa-Djibouti electrified railway, also known as the Ethiopia-Djibouti railway, was contracted by China Rail Engineering Corporation (CREC) and China Civil Engineering Construction Corporation (CCECC). It is the first transboundary railway on the African continent. The CREC-CCECC joint venture is a management contractor of the Addis Ababa-Djibouti Railway, which presently provides both passenger and freight services between Ethiopia and Djibouti. The management contractor is in charge of operating the line, maintaining the whole infrastructure along the route and transferring knowledge to the local staff. According to Sarka, the railway has enjoyed relatively safe operations and reported no accidents during four years of operation. He commended the Chinese management contractor for the safe operation of the railway while emphasizing the ongoing knowledge transfer endeavor. "We have 3,000 newly recruited railway staff, among whom 1,000 are already certified by the Chinese side, we are also waiting for the rest to be certified in the coming two years," Sarka said. An enormous cat has become a global online celebrity thanks to his size and unusual shaggy coat. Richie the Maine Coon has masses of fur, which some fans have said makes him look 'more like a lemur than a cat', and constantly needs to be groomed by his owner Adriana. As well as impressive fur style, the cat is also extremely large and measures almost a metre long. Adriana, from France, got Richie during the early stages of the Covid pandemic and after sharing pictures of him social media the cat has become an internet star with over 125,000 followers on Instagram. Richie the Maine Coon has become a global online celebrity thanks to his massive size and unusual shaggy coat As well as impressive fur style, the moggy has also grown massively since he was a kitten, with Main Coon breeds weighing more than 9kg and growing to almost a metre long. Richie has masses of fur, which some fans have said makes him look 'more like a lemur than a cat', and constantly needs to be constantly groomed by his owner Adriana Richie's high-maintenance fur constantly needs to be groomed by his owner Adriana, who says he enjoys his coat being brushed 'After sharing just one video of Richie on Instagram it went everywhere in one fell swoop on and I counted more than one million views [on the video]', she said. 'The internet is really crazy. I even found Richie on the Chinese social network, he is everywhere in the world I think. I think Richie is really unique and I haven't found a Maine Coon that looks like him. 'Today I have an incredible online community and a lot of people who are loyal and love to see Richie every day. Some people tell me that Richie brings them a lot of happiness.' Adriana said despite his global success her goal is to care for her pet, which everyone should realise is a big responsibility. Richie, pictured out for a walk, loves meeting people out and about but can be a little intimidating for some due to his large size Adriana got Richie as a kitten (pictured L-R) during the early stages of the Covid pandemic and his coat started off as grey all over Adriana said despite his global success her goal is to care for her pet, pictured lounging at home, which everyone should realise is a big responsibility Adriana says Richie is incredibly friendly and loves meeting new people - but that sometimes his large size can be a little intimidating 'He needs a lot of care', she said. 'If he goes outside for example I have to clean his fur which catches all the dirt. 'I brush him whenever he needs it and he enjoys it. This type of cat requires a lot of time and attention.' Adriana says Richie is incredibly friendly and loves meeting new people - but that sometimes his large size can be a little intimidating. 'He loves meeting new people, especially children and he seems passionate about them, but some children are afraid of him', she said. 'He likes to play and he has his own playroom. He sleeps a lot and isolates himself when he wants to rest himself. Otherwise he spends his time in our kitchen. Richie is a high maintenance cat and requires lots of grooming of his fur and attention from his owner Maine coon cats are one of the largest breeds of domestic cat and named after the US state of Maine where they originate from After sharing pictures and videos of Richie on social media, his owner revealed the cat has become an internet star with over 125K followers on Instagram Maine Coon Richie has his own playroom - but when not playing the cat likes to leave his owner to get some sleep Riche's owner says the cat requires a lot of time and attention, however she's more than happy to 'This is his territory and he also stretches out on the dining table and sits next to us when we eat.' Maine coon cats are one of the largest breeds of domestic cat and named after the US state of Maine where they originate from. It's not known when Maine coons first appeared in the United States but they are thought to be related to the equally large Siberian and Norwegian forest cat. Another legend has it the breed developed after arriving on a ship from France which was the carrying Siberian cats for French queen Marie Antoinette. A man who is registered blind says he was asked to leave branches of Sainsbury's and Wagamama with his guide dog - because neither venue allow dogs on the premises. Scott Bailey, 33, from Crewe, was visiting London with his wife Amanda and daughters Grace, 15, and Darcey, nine, when he was approached in a Sainsbury's store and later in Wagamamas, both in Paddington, on Tuesday and asked to leave. Bailey has diabetic retinopathy, a complication of diabetes that causes damage to the blood vessels in the back of the eye, meaning he has only light perception and the ability to see shapes. The father-of-two, who's had ten surgeries to help his sight, told Femail that his three-year-old Golden Retriever guide dog Milo is his constant companion and he was shocked that staff in both the supermarket branch and the restaurant chain were unaware that it's illegal to deny someone entry with a guide dog. Scott Bailey, 33, from Crewe has diabetic retinopathy, a complication of diabetes that causes damage to the blood vessels in the back of the eye. He relies on his Golden Retriever guide dog Milo to safely get around Bailey told FEMAIL that staff members at both Wagamamas and Sainsbury's in Paddington, London, asked the family to leave because they didn't allow dogs - despite Milo being 'a typical guide dog with bright yellow harness' Representatives for Wagamama and Sainsbury's have apologised to Bailey over the separate incidents (Pictured: Wagamama and Sainsbury's exterior - not in Paddington) The family were in the capital to visit The Kennel Club in Mayfair, after Milo had been announced as a finalist for the Hero Dog award at Crufts. He explained: 'It's the first time it's happened to us and it's very upsetting. 'In Sainsbury's, we were browsing in the store when a staff member walked up to us and said: "We don't allow dogs in here". It threw me because Milo is a typical Golden Retriever guide dog with a bright yellow harness.' He says that after explaining it was illegal to refuse entry to a guide dog, the Sainsbury's staff member repeated that dogs weren't allowed. After reiterating for a second time that he needed Milo to help guide him around the store, he says the employee walked off and the family then left the store. Bailey says: 'We paid and left, there was no apology; if we knew the area, we'd have probably left the goods but we needed them. It baffled us and knocked my confidence.' He said the family have a Guide Dogs passport explaining it's illegal to refuse entry to Milo but they've never had to use it before. A short time later they visited a branch of Wagamama, also in Paddington, and had a near identical experience, with two members of staff telling the family that they couldn't eat at the restaurant. UK organisation Guide Dogs says research shows that around 75 per cent of assistance dog owners have been refused access to a restaurant, shop or taxi Bailey said it was difficult for his family, including daughter Darcey, nine (pictured), to see him asked to leave both venues because of Milo The family were in the capital to visit The Kennel Club in Mayfair, after Milo had been announced as a finalist for the Hero Dog award at Crufts WHAT IS DIABETIC RETINOPATHY? Diabetic retinopathy is the most common form of eye disease affecting sufferers of the blood-sugar condition. It causes around 1,280 new cases of blindness every year in the UK. Nearly 7.7 million people in the US are affected by the condition. Diabetic retinopathy usually impacts people who have had type 1 or 2 diabetes for several years. It occurs when changes in blood-glucose levels result in alternations to the blood vessels in the retina. This can cause the vessels to swell and leak fluid into the back of the eye. Abnormal blood vessels can also grow on the retina's surface, which can affect vision and cause blindness. Early stage diabetic retinopathy can be painless. In advanced cases, symptoms may include: Sudden vision changes Eye floaters and spots Double vision Eye pain At-risk people include those with poor blood-glucose control, protein in their urine, high blood pressure, prolonged diabetes and raised fats in their blood. Diabetic retinopathy can be prevented through regular eye examinations and proper diabetes management. Its main treatment is laser surgery. Source: Diabetes.co.uk Advertisement Bailey says it was 'humiliating' with a queue forming as they tried to explain that they were legally allowed to be seated with Milo in the Asian restaurant. Eventually, a manager was called and the family were seated but Bailey says it was impossible to enjoy their food after the incident. UK organisation Guide Dogs says research shows that around 75 per cent of assistance dog owners have been refused access to a restaurant, shop or taxi. In England, Scotland and Wales, the Equality Act means guide dog and other assistance dog owners have the right to enter most services, premises and vehicles with their dog. Chris Theobald, Senior Policy, Public Affairs and Campaign Manager from Guide Dogs said: 'Its completely unacceptable that Scott and his family were put in this position. Ignorance of the law is not an excuse. 'All blind and partially sighted people deserve to be able to live their lives the way they want, and feel confident, independent and supported in the world. It is illegal for a business or service to refuse entry to a customer with a guide dog, yet, sadly, it happens all too often. 'Our research shows that three-quarters of guide dog owners have experienced access refusals and this is a clear form of discrimination.' Femail contacted Sainsbury's and Wagamama for comment. A spokesperson for Sainsbury's said: 'We have apologised to Scott. We have a clear policy which welcomes guide dogs into our stores and we are investigating his experience.' A spokesperson for Wagamama told FEMAIL: 'Wagamama welcomes guide dogs into all of its restaurants. On this particular occasion a junior employee was unsure and checked with the duty manager who quickly made the policy clear. 'The staff member and the manager sincerely apologised to the guest on the night for the misunderstanding and subsequently have been in touch to invite them back in the near future.' After posting about his experiences on social media, Bailey received supportive messages on Twitter. @JanetSt61924420 wrote: 'I'm sorry this happened to you. Ignorance is rife by design. Being a less prevalent and visible disability, the barriers are huge but easily overcome with understanding.' @LoveLippy wrote: 'Absolutely appalling and makes me so angry that people in general don't seem to realise that this is illegal under the 2010 equality act. Apologies, gift vouchers aren't enough either your staff need educating.' @Grymma agreed, saying: 'This is the third such story Ive read in as many days. Retailers! As we come out of Covid restrictions, yall need to get a handle on staff disability rights training to ensure this isnt happening to your customers! Or can you afford to lose the business?' Advertisement Prince Charles praised the 'brave' Ukrainian people in an impromptu speech as a tearful Camilla comforted the ambassador's wife and met with schoolchildren during an emotional visit to the Ukrainian Catholic Cathedral in London today. The royal couple were greeted by Bishop Kenneth Nowakowski, Ukraine's Ambassador to the UK Vadym Prystaiko, and his wife, Inna Prystaiko, at the site near Bond Street. In an unscripted speech during the visit, Prince Charles said: 'I must say my wife and I have been deeply moved by everything we've heard today during our visit. Above all, by the extraordinary bravery, generosity and fortitude of the Ukrainian community in the face of such truly terrible aggression. 'Our thoughts and prayers, however inadequate they may be, are with all of you at this most difficult time.' Breaking from royal protocol, Camilla, 74, who frequently wept throughout the visit, hugged Mrs Prystaiko, as the diplomat's wife clearly looked emotional, telling her: 'We are praying for you.' Inside the Cathedral, Their Royal Highnesses met children from the associated Ukrainian school in Holland Park, London and received a traditional offering of bread and salt. In a small community room, the future King and Queen also met a group of Ukrainian school children, their mothers, leaders within the Ukrainian community, representatives across faith communities, volunteers helping the humanitarian effort, and leaders of His Royal Highness's charities working to support the relief effort in Ukraine. It comes just a day after Prince Charles said he 'stood in solidary' with Ukraine, in a rare political statement. The trip comes as The Prince of Wales said values of democracy are 'under attack' in Ukraine in the 'most unconscionable way' - as he blasted Vladimir Putin's 'path of violence' for causing 'appalling suffering and devastation'. The Duchess of Cornwall tenderly embraced the teary wife of the Ukrainian ambassador this afternoon as she joined Prince Charles on a visit to the Ukrainian Catholic Cathedral in London. Breaking from royal protocol, Camilla, 74, hugged Mrs Prystaiko, as the diplomat's wife clearly looked emotional. The Prince of Wales gave an unscripted speech in which he praised Ukranian people's 'fortitude' in the face of 'truly terrible aggression' The Duchess of Cornwall, who was emotional throughout the engagement, sat down on stage to speak to children from a British Ukrainian school Meanwhile Prince Charles accepted the children cards, including one with the message Stop Putin Yesterday, the Prince of Wales said values of democracy are 'under attack' in Ukraine in the 'most unconscionable way' - as he blasted Vladimir Putin's 'path of violence' for causing 'appalling suffering and devastation' During the visit today, Charles took along five charities of which he is patron to help the British Ukrainian community with their relief effort. Meanwhile Prince Charles accepted the children cards, including one with the message Stop Putin. Yesterday, the Prince of Wales said values of democracy are 'under attack' in Ukraine in the 'most unconscionable way' - as he blasted Vladimir Putin's 'path of violence' for causing 'appalling suffering and devastation'. In 2014, the Queen's first-born son allegedly compared Putin to Adolf Hitler during an official visit to Canada. He reportedly made the comments while speaking to a former Polish war refugee about Russia's actions in Ukraine - which saw Crimea annexed. The Russian president said that if the prince had made such comments they were 'wrong' and 'not royal behaviour'. The royal could be seen leaning in as he exchanged a few quiet words with bishop Kenneth Nowakowski during a visit at the Ukrainian Catholic Cathedral, in London During the visit today, Charles took along five charities of which he is patron to help the British Ukrainian community with their relief effort Inside the Cathedral, Their Royal Highnesses lit a candle for under attack in Ukraine The royal couple appeared sombre after lighting candles during the engagement as they joined Bishop Kenneth Nowakowski, Ukraine's Ambassador to the UK Vadym Prystaiko, and his wife, Inna Prystaiko Inside the Cathedral, Their Royal Highnesses met children from the associated Ukrainian school in Holland Park, London and received a traditional offering of bread and salt Charles and Camilla met with Bishop Kenneth Nowakowski (centre) and Vadym Prystaiko, and his wife, Inna Prystaiko (behind Charles and Camilla) The Duchess of Cornwall was clearly emotional throughout her visit to the cathedral earlier today (pictured) Camilla shakes hands with Bishop Kenneth Nowakowski as the couple visit the Ukrainian Cathedral in London The royal couple were greeted by Bishop Kenneth Nowakowski (pictured) Ukraine's Ambassador to the UK Vadym Prystaiko, and his wife, Inna Prystaiko, at the site near Bond Street Charles and Camilla arrive at the Ukrainian Catholic Church in London today Clarence House did not comment at the time. It comes hours after Charles put on a dapper display as he attended the opening of a new cancer and surgery building at a London hospital. The Prince of Wales, 73, showcased his charming style in a navy pinstripe suit and a polka dot tie when visiting the University College Hospital in Britain's capital. He officially opened the Grafton Way Building, which houses eight new theatres, a surgical ward, an imaging centre and a critical care unit. Prince Charles (left) put on a dapper display as he attended the opening of a new cancer and surgery building at a London hospital The Prince of Wales (left), 73, showcased his charming style in a navy pinstripe suit and a polka dot tie when visiting the University College Hospital in Britain's capital The royal (pictured left) officially opened the Grafton Way Building, which houses eight new theatres, a surgical ward, an imaging centre and a critical care unit Mostly wearing a mask when walking around the hospital, Prince Charles spoke to hospital staff and unveiled a plaque to recognise the opening. Elsewhere, consultant oncologist Dr Yen-Ching Chang, clinical lead for the Proton Beam Therapy service, showed the Prince of Wales equipment used in the treatment during the visit. The royal also sat with Karen Dawson and her daughter, 12 year-old patient Louise Dawson, who is receiving Proton Beam Therapy (PBT) treatment (a type of radiotherapy) at the hospital. On Tuesday the Prince of Wales commented on the Ukraine crisis as he officially made Southend-on-Sea a city following a years-long campaign by the late MP Sir David Amess - who was stabbed to death by a terrorist last year. During his speech, the future King said he 'stands in solidarity' with the citizens of Ukraine as he praised Sir David for his dedication to the 'values which underpin the society we share'. Mostly wearing a mask when walking around the hospital, Prince Charles (left) spoke to hospital staff and unveiled a plaque to recognise the opening. The royal also sat with Karen Dawson and her daughter, 12 year-old patient Louise Dawson, who is receiving Proton Beam Therapy (PBT) treatment (a type of radiotherapy) at the hospital The Prince of Wales meets 12 year-old patient Louise Dawson, who is receiving Proton Beam Therapy treatment The Prince of Wales unveils a plaque during a visit to open University College Hospital's new flagship cancer and surgery building in London He said: 'We can only hope that those who are too often cynically dismissive of those in public life will look at his example of service. 'No one could have given more for the values which underpin the society we share, values which appear all the more precious, at this present time, when we see more starkly than for many years, the appalling suffering and devastation caused when the path of violence is chosen. 'What we saw in the terrible tragedy in Southend was an attack on democracy, on an open society, on freedom itself. 'We are seeing those same values under attack today, in Ukraine, in the most unconscionable way. On Tuesday the Prince of Wales (left) commented on the Ukraine crisis as he officially made Southend-on-Sea a city following a years-long campaign by the late MP Sir David Amess - who was stabbed to death by a terrorist last year During his speech, the future King (above) said he 'stands in solidarity' with the citizens of Ukraine as he praised Sir David for his dedication to the 'values which underpin the society we share' Elsewhere, consultant oncologist Dr Yen-Ching Chang, clinical lead for the Proton Beam Therapy service, showed the Prince of Wales equipment used in the treatment during the visit 'In the stand we take here, we are in solidarity with all those who are resisting brutal aggression.' He added: 'In the aftermath of Sir David's brutal murder, the people of Southend-on-Sea came together in a remarkable and inspiring way to bring good out of evil. 'In doing so, they demonstrated a deep truth: that what matters more than any name, whether of a person or a place, is the spirit. 'Today, Southend becomes a city. As we celebrate and honour that fact, we remember that it is always, and crucially, a community.' Charles is the first working royal to condemn Putin's actions, which have seen hundreds of civilians killed - and thousands of soldiers slain. A leading London theatre has said it has begun training staff in anti-Semitism after it included a character in a play that was accused of perpetuating Jewish stereotypes and 'causing ideological harm'. The Royal Court theatre issued an apology and said employees would undergo 'unconscious bias' training following the controversy late last year, which saw a character named Hershel Fink, a Silicon Valley billionaire, feature in the new play Rare Earth Mettle by Al Smith. A review carried out by the theatre said the 'name and aspects of the characters personality could be seen as an antisemitic trope'. Before launching the investigation, the theatre changed the name of he character from Hershel Fink to Henry Finn. The Sloane Square theatre's Chair, Anthony Burton, said this week: 'The Royal Court Theatre apologises unreservedly for the pain that has been caused around the production of its play Rare Earth Mettle. Sloane Square's Royal Court Theatre revealed this week that staff will undertake training in anti-Semitism and 'unconscious bias' after the controversy in November that saw the theatre accused of perpetuating Jewish stereotypes The character of Hershel Fink (played by actor Arthur Darvill), who featured as a Silicon Valley billionaire in the play Rare Earth Mettle, 'could be seen as an antisemitic trope', admitted the theatre The character's name was changed to Henry Finn at the time the play was shown late last year, and this week, the theatre's Chair, Anthony Burton, said it apologised 'unreservedly for the pain that has been caused' (a scene in the play featuring the character of Fink, far right) 'This incident fell short of the Royal Courts own high ambitions in terms of inclusivity and anti-racism. It is committed to learning from it and clear actions have been put in place including specialist training on antisemitism.' The play centres around a leading doctor who travels to Bolivia to solve the British mental health crisis and advance her career. She is joined there by Finn, a Silicon Valley billionaire who believes he can save the world building affordable electric cars. The character is not Jewish and there is no reference to him being Jewish in the play, the theatre said at the time. However, the Royal Court admitted the original naming of the character was an example of 'unconscious bias' and launched an internal review. Artistic Director Vicky Featherstone said yesterday that the theatre 'will now look to action the recommendations included within it alongside the ongoing work we have been doing internally and with members of the Jewish community, including our antisemitism training for staff and trustees which began last week.' Comedian, author and screenwriter David Baddiel criticised the Royal Court at the time the play was shown, writing on Twitter: 'Apparently @royalcourt claim they didn't realise 'Hershel Fink' was a Jewish name. Hmm. Somehow it just sounded so right for a world conquering billionaire.' The theatre in London's West End admitted in November last year that the naming of the character was an example of 'unconscious bias' David Baddiel said 'everything - particularly now and particularly about ethnicity - gets relentlessly discussed' during the creation of play The comedian, screenwriter and author took to Twitter to share this thoughts on the move He added: 'I've written a play. Everything - particularly now and particularly about ethnicity - gets relentlessly discussed. Except as regards one ethnicity apparently. 'Anyway. To be fair @royalcourt have acknowledged their unconscious bias here and changed the name. It's still a very instructive Jews Don't Count episode.' And theatre director Adam Lenson said: 'So, Al Smith at The Royal Court has taken a character clearly based on Elon Musk and when fictionalising him has given him an obviously Jewish name. 'Casually making a Silicon Valley billionaire Jewish perpetuates anti-Semitic stereotypes and will cause ideological harm.' The Duke and Duchess of Cambridge were seen sharing a rare moment of public affection as they greeted a group of babies during their visit to Wales to celebrate St David's Day. Mother-of-three Kate Middleton, 40, joined Prince William, 39, as they visited Abergavenny Market to learn how important local suppliers are to rural communities before meeting royal fans. In a video posted on Twitter, the couple shared a sweet exchange as they met a group of mothers and babies, with Kate, 40, beaming as she rubbed William's back and told him to 'look at the lovely babies'. It comes days after the royal confessed she felt 'broody' and joked husband William, 39, worries about her working with under one-year-olds because she returns home wanting 'another one'. The couple shared a sweet moment as they met a group of mothers and babies, with Kate, 40, beaming as she rubbed William's back and told him to 'look at the lovely babies' Mother-of-three Kate Middleton, 40, joined Prince William, 39, as they visited Abergavenny Market to learn how important local suppliers are to rural communities yesterday The couple, who share children Prince George, eight, Princess Charlotte, six and Prince Louis, three, were seen stopping to chat with the mothers as they left the market. Kate and William both donned daffodils to celebrate the traditional Welsh holiday as they embarked on one of their first joint walkabouts since the beginning of the pandemic. Kate opted to wear her 940 longline forest green Sportmax coat with a matching polo neck, as well as black skinny jeans, for the occasion. In a touching nod to her decade of duty in the royal family, Kate also finished her outfit with her Aquatalia Rouge boots, which she first wore for her first official engagement in 2011. The Duke of Cambridge at Abergavenny Market meeting royal fans as he joined Kate Middleton on a trip to Wales to celebrate St David's Day The Duchess at Abergavenny Market meeting a young royal fan during her visit to Wales to mark St David's Day It's not the first time in recent months Kate has spoken about feeling broody, joking that meeting babies always makes her want another one while chatting to parents at Copenhagen's Children's Museum. At the Children's Museum, Kate heard about the Understanding Your Baby research project which trains health visitors to help new parents as they begin to notice and interpret their babies' behavioural cues. After meeting with two eight-month-old baby boys and their parents, she joked: 'It makes me very broody. 'William always worries about me meeting under one-year-olds. I come home saying, 'let's have another one'.' The royal couple visited Wales to learn about the importance of the agricultural industry to rural populations and how community organisations are providing support to young people while also celebrating the history of the region. The Duchess cut an elegant figure in the forest green jacket with a matching polo neck as she stepped out in Wales yesterday Following their visit to the market, the couple visited a a community-focused youth centre at Blaenavon Hwb in Blaenavon, and played a game of pool before baking some Welsh cakes. The Duchess was seen going over to the oven and effortlessly begin assisting with cooking and flipping the cakes on the stove, while chatting with Libby, 16. After William began rolling the dough and cutting it out, he told the group gathered around him: 'I'm under a lot of pressure here. 'Do not judge my cooking, this could go horribly wrong. It's not Bake Off. Where's Mary (Berry) when you need her?' The Duke and Duchess had a rare moment of PDA as she placed a hand on his back while encouraging him to try out making a pancake Flipping it up! Kate shared a laugh with team members at the youth centre as she grabbed the utensils to help make pancakes for the group When the duchess asked to see her husband's efforts, she pointed out the thinness of his cakes. 'That one is a little bit skinny,' William conceded, before looking at them again and adding: 'They are probably all a little bit skinny.' Earlier on Tuesday the coupe visited a goat farm in Llanvetherine, near Abergavenny, and shared how Prince George, Princess Charlotte and Prince Louis had helped with their animals during half term. It is thought the couple were referring to their Norfolk residence, where the Prince of Wales has been working to turn the Queen's Sandringham estate into a fully organic operation. Covent Garden is a bustling spot but if you're looking for a tucked away dining spot where you can hear yourself think and revel in a more sedate atmosphere, be sure to plot Warehouse on your map. This gem of a place in a grade-II listed building transports you to somewhere in the Mediterranean, with bright blue interiors and potted plants scattered about. The kitchen is headed up by Brendan Eades, one of London's most pioneering zero-waste chefs. His innovative menu centres around seasonal produce with must-try dishes including the homemade kimchi, the beef tartare, the juicy halibut and the 100% pasteurised beef. If not for dinner, the bar is also worth a visit with our favourite concoctions being the Oyster Martini and the delicate Shades of Orange. The battle of the births, summer 2018. I sat with a group of other new mothers in a cafe after a baby music group, eating carrot cake and commiserating about our infants rude refusal to sleep through the night. Inevitably, talk turned to births. One forthright lady Id not met before told us about her long labour, endured with only gas and air. When I mentioned the caesarean Id had without labouring beforehand I felt her zeroing in on me. So it wasnt an emergency C-section? she inquired. No, I replied. Was your baby breech? Again, no. UK-based writer Clare Foges argues that we need to rethink the way we view women choosing to have C-sections (file image) After further probing, I told her that a long-running health issue a damaged coccyx had been behind my decision. Do you know how much more expensive a C-section is than a natural birth? she asked, continuing: I suppose, in a way, my natural birth subsidised your operation! In the cafe, you could hear a teaspoon drop. Such views arent uncommon. For a long time, having a baby by caesarean has been seen as one of the following: a poor alternative to the real thing, an avoid-at-all-costs error or an easy way out. For years, too many women have been put off having C-sections, even while enduring excruciating and dangerous labours, because of an archaic obsession with natural birth at all costs. There was even a target for NHS trusts to stick to a caesarean rate of around 20 per cent, including in cases where something had gone wrong, meaning maternity units were actually penalised for doing what they thought was best for mother and baby. It was madness so thank heavens for the news that NHS England has seen sense and axed its targets for limiting the ops. My hope is that this change makes it easier for more women to choose to have a C-section if thats the right choice for them and their baby and not only if they are in the midst of a labour that is clearly not going to plan, but beforehand, too. The great stigma attached to elective C-sections caught the popular imagination back in 1999 with news that Victoria Beckham had chosen a caesarean delivery for her first son, Brooklyn. Her choice was widely criticised and she was lambasted as too posh to push. With these words, a clear image was formed: of yummy mummies who scheduled in the birth of their child between blow-dries and manicures. Clare (pictured) says that she feels no shame or embarrassment about having a caesarean Too posh to push how this little phrase seethes at the women who have the nerve to ignore millennia of tradition, who stick two fingers up to biology, who avoid the labour pains others endure. Well, I had C-sections and I feel no scintilla of embarrassment or shame about it. Long before I had my children (now three, two and 11 months), I knew that if I ever had a baby it would have to be through the sun roof. An injury to my coccyx in my 20s meant months of serious pelvic floor issues and years of physio to sort them out. There was no way I was putting my body through the wringer again, risking a lifetime of problems. It was a decision that was rational, sensible, personal and yet it provoked a host of curious reactions. A midwife, winking at me, said we should wait and see how I felt, as though maternal instinct would kick in and Id do the right thing eventually. A doctor cocked his head to one side and wondered if I would like some counselling, while quietly ticking the box on his form marked high-maintenance fruit loop. Victoria Beckham was criticised as too posh to push after a caesarean Friends urged me to reconsider; though theyd never had a caesarean themselves, they warned darkly about mothers failing to bond with their babies. A girl at my parenting class told me I would regret it as I wouldnt feel that post-delivery rush of love for my child. Their words hit home. As the day drew near, I fretted that by skipping labour I was getting this life-long relationship off to the wrong start. In the event, I couldnt have been more besotted with my daughter and all those worries melted away. It is often said that caesareans are riskier for all involved. But the statistics can be misleading because they mix in emergency C-sections with planned ones. To compare apples with apples, you need to set planned, unhurried operations against planned, uncomplicated vaginal deliveries and once you strip the emergency, life-or-death caesareans out of the data many argue that, for babies at least, elective C-sections come out as the safest option of all. A recent study by medical experts found that when you factor in the cost of compensation, a planned caesarean is in fact 400 cheaper on average than a natural birth (file image) What of the cost implications, so starkly pointed out to me at the battle of the births? While its true the average C-section costs more than the average vaginal birth, this doesnt take account of the enormous cost of litigation when things go wrong. Over the past 15 years, negligent maternity care has cost 8.2billion enough to pay for more than a dozen new hospitals. Indeed, one recent study by medical experts found that when you factor in the cost of compensation, a planned caesarean is in fact 400 cheaper on average than a natural birth. This is not to denigrate the power some women draw from natural childbirth. Many rhapsodise about their perfect home birth: scented candles, a warm pool, baby popping out while Adele wailed away in the background: Hello from the other siiiiiiiide. If you can give birth naturally and with few complications and be up walking around half an hour later that, surely, is the ideal scenario. But I also know many whose natural labour has scarred them in more ways than one. They suffer debilitating tears. They are incontinent immediately, or years later. A survey by Parents.com found that five years after delivery, 10 to 20 per cent of women report having leakage that they consider 'socially bothersome.' One woman told me grimly she would never be the same after her brutal birth experience. I feel no shame that Ive had three through the sun roof' This is the indelicate truth about vaginal birth it comes with serious risks attached. Yet pregnant women arent informed about those risks in the way they are about the risks of a caesarean. When you choose to have one, you are cautioned repeatedly that this is a major operation, that the scar will be significant, that you will be unable to do much for weeks. But there is simply not the same amount of information about what can and does go wrong during natural labour. One specialist womens therapist I spoke to said that if she had a pound for every woman who had said I never knew it could do this to me, shed have a villa in Barbados by now. Of course, having a caesarean is no walk in the park either; having something approaching a shark bite across your abdomen takes weeks of painful recovery, and the scar is unlovely. But for some women, it will be the right choice to make and lets hope this NHS decision makes it easier to have their voices heard. Most importantly, the axing of the C-section target should clarify what matters. Not keeping trusts numbers down, not vaginal birth at any cost, but mothers holding a healthy new baby in their arms, however they came into the world. For the past 11 years, Diana Parkes has dedicated her life to making her two grandchildren feel loved and, crucially, safe. I was always there for them, even at night, says Diana, now 82. When, in the first few years, they woke up feeling sad, they knew they could come to my bed and get a cuddle. My husband moved into another room because he knew I had to be there for them. Her constant, loving presence was a vital lifeline for the children who had experienced terrible trauma: they had witnessed the brutal killing of their mother Joanna Dianas daughter at the hands of her estranged husband Robert Brown in October 2010. In those painful early days, they gave each other mutual comfort. While Katie, then eight, and Alex, ten, looked to their grandmother for warmth and security, she gained a profound sense of purpose from them. They gave me such joy, because through them I felt I was with Jo, she says now. I would have felt traumatised if it had not been for the children. Diana Parkes, 82, who lives in the Isle of Man, is worried about the early release of Robert Brown, who killed her daughter Joanna. Pictured: Joanna, with children Katie and Alex The facts of Jos death are almost beyond comprehension. After three years of bitter rowing over their divorce settlement, former BA pilot Brown struck his wife 14 times on the head with a claw hammer within earshot of their children playing in the TV room nearby. He then dumped her lifeless body in a grave he had spent months digging in Windsor Great Park. The killing, all the more sensational for being carried out in the quiet, leafy Home Counties the Browns lived in Ascot, Berkshire horrified the nation. And the trial that followed only deepened the nightmare for Diana and her family. The prosecution argued that it was a premeditated attack, but the jury found that Brown had battered his wife to death in what his psychologist told the court room was a rare incidence of adjustment disorder; a momentary lapse of judgment. He was acquitted of murder and given a 26-year sentence for manslaughter. But next year, the childrens father will be released after serving only half his sentence. We live in fear, Diana tells me from her home in the Isle of Man. I worry that when he comes out he will get on the island. He and Jo used to come here, so he knows the island well and our home. I am terrified that he will come and seek revenge. When he comes out, I dont know how I am going to sleep. Yet Diana remains defiant, unbowed. She speaks calmly about unimaginable horrors her strength fuelled by her determination to keep Katie and Alex safe. With her pleasant smile and gentle voice, Diana could be anyones grandmother. When Camilla, Duchess of Cornwall, met Diana in 2016 and heard her story, she imagined herself in Dianas place: That could have been me, that could have been my friends, the royal grandmother told her. Inspired by Dianas story, the duchess has made tackling domestic abuse her passion, appearing with Diana on Radio 4 Womans Hour last week. Former BA pilot Brown (pictured) struck his wife 14 times on the head with a claw hammer, then dumped her lifeless body in Windsor Great Park Diana is effusive about Camilla: I first met her at a SafeLives event and then she invited me to a domestic abuse survivors lunch she hosted in 2019. She was so warm, and friendly, instantly putting me at ease . . . I think she is an extraordinarily compassionate, caring woman. Diana set up the Joanna Simpson Foundation in her daughters memory to help children affected by domestic abuse. About 100 children a year lose a parent to this crime. She says navigating the judicial system can be deeply painful for victims like her grandchildren. We dont know who will be monitoring Rob when he is released and how, says Diana. Will he be medically assessed? After all, he claimed he was suffering from a mental disorder . . . although we all believe he is a psychopath. (This view was supported at the time of the trial by the prosecutions psychiatrist.) The law is an ass. It will be a challenge to us all wondering where he will be, and how we will cope with rebuilding our lives. When Katie and Alex come home at Easter, we shall meet with the Probation Service to make sure that, as part of the licence conditions of his release, they make the Isle of Man an exclusion zone. This would ban Robert from the island, on penalty of being sent back to prison. Diana says: The Probation Service just kept saying that once he was free, Robert would be monitored. But I wanted to know how they proposed to do this. Inspired by Dianas story, the duchess of Cornwall (pictured left) has made tackling domestic abuse her passion, appearing with Diana (pictured right) on Radio 4 Womans Hour last week When no one offered me an answer, I decided I would go to the very top so I googled Justin Russell, HM Chief Inspector of Probation, and found an office number for him on the HM Inspectorate of Probation website. I got a voicemail and left a message to ring me back urgently please as I was about to do an interview with Camilla, Duchess of Cornwall, about the probation services. I made two more calls that were never returned. When I rang the second number suggested on the website, it was constantly busy. It was only when Diana appealed to Nicole Jacobs, the Domestic Abuse Commissioner, that she was able to set up a meeting. Katie and Alex could so easily have floundered, never recovering from the trauma. Thanks to Diana, however, both are thriving. Today, in their early 20s, they are flourishing at university, enjoying their studies and coming home to granny every holiday. Diana has spent the years since Jos death providing them with a stable home environment where they know they are loved and they feel safe . . . until now. They we are terrified of what he will do when he comes out, because we know what he is capable of. Her life now is very far from the relaxed retirement she was looking forward to on November 1, 2010.That morning, Diana and her second husband Fred Parkes were having their vaccinations ahead of a fortnights cruise to South America when the phone rang. It was a friend of Jos. He asked me whether I had heard from her, says Diana. I said no and he told me the police had called him and asked some odd questions. I knew immediately something was wrong. Diana said Alex asked his father if they were 'taking Mummy to the hospital?', when he saw her leg dangling from the plastic her body had been wrapped in. Pictured: Jo with Alex as a baby Diana recalls the horror of that moment. She turned to Fred and said: I know he has killed her. She was right. With their divorce within a week of being finalised, Jos husband had attacked and killed her at their home. Afterwards, Brown removed the CCTV recorder and pulled out the telephone cable, then put her body in the boot of his Volvo 4x4. Alex watched their father carrying his mothers body into the car, Diana says. He saw her leg dangling from the plastic Robert had wrapped the body in. Brown bundled the children into the car, with their mothers body in the back. Alex repeatedly asked his father, Are we taking Mummy to the hospital? but, instead, Robert drove them to his girlfriends home and left them there while he continued on to Windsor Great Park. Here, he buried Jo in the 6 ft-deep grave he had dug in advance. Over the next five days, questioned by police, Robert refused to disclose the whereabouts of the body causing further distress to the family. Diana rushed to be with Jos young children. She says: Later, when the police had found Jos body, I asked whether the children would like to see where their mother was buried. I brought them there and they both recognised the place This is near the den we built, they said. I felt incredibly upset that, while they were playing in a den he had helped them build, this man could be contemplating their mothers murder. It was deplorable, just horrendous, that he could be so callous and calculating and to think that he was ready to leave the children without a mother. I told the children that I would move in with them, so they could stay in their school. But they both said they wanted to come home with me. Diana said Katie would whisper to her about hearing her father battering her mother (pictured) after the tragedy, while Alex never spoke about the incident or his loss Her smile is bittersweet at the memory of how, in her 70s, she became a parent again. I was back doing the school run . . . I was tucking the children up in bed at 9pm. I would give them a cuddle and read a story. I got them a puppy, Benjie, a golden retriever, who proved a marvellous therapy dog. We have always been close-knit. The tragedy has made us even more so. I know we could not have helped the children overcome their trauma without relying on family. James, the childrens uncle, moved to the Isle of Man with his wife Sarah to form a loving extended circle. Jos father, successful property developer Christopher Simpson, had died eight years earlier of cancer. But Dianas second husband, Fred, proved a stalwart support. When she decided to bring her grandchildren to live with them, Diana says: Fred didnt hesitate for a moment. He felt it was the right thing to do. He is an incredibly sweet man and, even if it did of course upset some of our routine, he never said a word. He felt, he later told me, that this man had affected so many innocent peoples lives Fred would not let him affect ours, too. In the immediate aftermath of the tragedy, her two grandchildren reacted very differently: Katie would climb on to my lap and whisper to me about hearing the thump, thump of her father battering her mother. She could express her feelings much more easily than Alex, who was much more contained. He never spoke about the incident or his loss. They were different characters, and processed the trauma differently. Diana (pictured) has done everything she could to raise Katie and Alex to be the happy and well-adjusted young people they have become The childrens school proved incredibly supportive: They never treated the children as if they were different, whereas the counsellor provided by childrens social services would ask Katie and Alex to stay after lessons and speak to her which made them feel singled out. They disliked that, as all children do. She is convinced her grandchildren knew that the relationship between their parents had grown toxic and that Jo had suffered for years. They may not have the words to express this, but children know when things are not right, says Diana. In 2012, the Crown Prosecution Service issued the first ever legal guidance to prosecutors on supporting child victims of domestic abuse and attributed it directly to the work of the Joanna Simpson Foundation. The new Domestic Abuse Act (2021) recognises that children are not only witnesses but victims of domestic abuse. Sarah Burrows, whose charity Children Heard And Seen is collaborating with the Joanna Simpson Foundation, says this is crucial: There needs to be more support for children who have witnessed their parents hurting each other to process conflicting emotions and thoughts, including guilt, fear, sadness, shame, anger and worrying about being unable to protect Mother. Diana recalls she prevented these feelings from taking hold in her grandchildren by repeating to them that there was nothing they could have done to help their mother not when their father was so consumed with hatred, there was no stopping him. She had, she says, long seen troubling aspects of Browns behaviour. He was arrogant, aloof. Jo felt so alone in her marriage. He didnt love Jo the way she deserved to be loved. Soon, Jo was telling her mother: I realise Ive made a mistake. Following the killing, neither Katie nor Alex ever expressed a desire to see their father. Although his parents tried to stay in touch with a fortnightly phone call, even this contact soon dwindled. Diana has done everything she could to raise Katie and Alex to be the happy and well-adjusted young people they have become. Now, the safe haven she worked so hard to build could be put in jeopardy by their fathers release from prison. It is an outcome she dreads. As long as I am breathing, I will do my best to protect the family, she says. Today, astonishingly, is the anniversary of the abduction, rape and murder by a serving police officer of Sarah Everard. It seems like only yesterday we were grieving for Sarah, holding vigils in her memory and trembling with fear and fury at the revelation that she had been duped into getting into a car with Wayne Couzens, thinking she was being accused of the crime of breaching lockdown rules by walking home alone near Londons Clapham Common. The questions flowed thick and fast. How did the Metropolitan Police not know Couzens was a danger to women? Why had he been dubbed the rapist by his equally misogynist colleagues who seemed to find his reputation for exposing himself highly amusing? All of us knew that what happened to Sarah and to Sabina Nessa, who was murdered in South-East London six months after Sarah could so easily have happened to us. Wed all taken detours to avoid dangerous spaces, wed all carried keys as a potential weapon, wed all worn flat shoes in case we needed to run. Jenni Murray said it seems like only yesterday we were grieving for Sarah (pictured), and trembling with fear that she had been duped into getting into a car with Wayne Couzens We also knew that being out alone at night was our right, and that harassment or abuse was not our fault. It should not be up to us to keep ourselves safe by living limited, fearful lives. But in the months after Sarahs killing, the only advice the police had to offer to a woman who felt fear of lurking danger, whether from a police officer or any man, was to flag down a bus! Where was the acknowledgement that it was not our responsibility to be safe? Where were the promises that only trustworthy police officers would be employed? Evidence of more appalling police behaviour was soon exposed, and the revelations keep coming. Inappropriate photos were taken of the bodies of the sisters Nicole Smallman and Bibaa Henry in a Wembley park by two Met police officers in June 2020. Last month, it emerged disgusting messages joking about rape and domestic violence were exchanged by officers at Charing Cross police station. In the weeks after Sarahs death, Boris Johnson promised the Government would do everything it could to ensure the streets were safe, providing better lighting and greater use of CCTV in parks and other areas. But CCTV was no help to Sarah. Pieced-together footage of Sarahs last journey and encounter with Couzens is available online for all to see, and there was no lack of street lighting as she walked on the pavement. Why has there not been a police force-wide re-vetting process to root out the wrong uns? Why has every officers mobile phone and computer not been checked, as has happened to so many innocent women complaining of rape or sexual assault? Tweets and texts might well reveal who is fit to be a police officer and who is not. One year on, do any of us feel any safer on the streets or any more trusting of the police meant to protect us? No, we dont! Jenni (pictured) claims we will all feel safer if we know complaints of abuse will be believed and speedily investigated Its incredible that it has taken a year for the Government to acknowledge that women enjoying their independence is not the problem. That the danger lies with predatory, dangerous men. A campaign, dubbed Enough, was launched this week by the Home Secretary Priti Patel, who admitted that for too long, the responsibility of keeping safe has been placed on the shoulders of women and girls. It will consist of adverts on TV, radio, social media and billboards, encouraging men to call out their friends who send naked pictures, harass women in the street, submit their partners to coercive control or engage in unwanted touching. We know not all men and boys are bad, and a campaign of this nature may well persuade some lads to break away from banter culture and tell a less enlightened mate hes wrong to post naked pictures of his girlfriend as revenge porn. But its not nearly Enough. Theres only one way to make women feel safer on the streets and thats to target the bad guys and bang them up. Every woman I know has either suffered some form of sexual violence herself, or knows a friend or colleague who has. It happened to me many years ago when I was raped while still a student. Its estimated there are 128,000 victims of rape and attempted rape each year. In the 12 months to September 2021, 63,136 rape offences were recorded by the police. Of those, only 1.3 per cent resulted in a suspect being charged, leading to prosecution. Dame Vera Baird, Victims Commissioner for England and Wales, has long maintained that rape convictions are so low, the offence has been virtually decriminalised. A review published after a joint inspection by the police and courts watchdogs found an average 706day wait for cases to get to court, perpetrators walking free because cases were poorly handled and a collapse of public trust in the ability of police and prosecutors. The report also detailed brutal cross-examinations of rape complainants and a failure to protect them from intimidation by suspects and their families. No wonder 40 per cent of victims drop out of such a scary, lengthy process. The watchdogs have proposed creating specialist rape courts within the next three months to help clear a backlog of thousands of cases. This is incredibly welcome news because we need a new way to prosecute rape and must eradicate the myths surrounding it. Fact: False allegations are very rare (only around 3 per cent). Fact: Very few rapes are committed by a stranger; 86 per cent of women know their attacker. Fact: Women do not say no when they mean yes. We will all feel safer if we know complaints of abuse will be believed and speedily investigated, and those dangerous myths put aside. Too many men think they can get away with rape and do it again. We cannot wait yet another year for something to finally be done. Why dress high-powered women in girlie pink? Jenni Murray questions ITV's decision to display their daytime presenters (pictured) in various shades of pink as they celebrate International Women's Day Grand to see the bevy of smart, clever women employed as ITV Daytime presenters brought together in celebration of next Tuesdays International Womens Day. But why display them in various shades of pink a stereotypical girlie colour, for goodness sake? Were so many accomplished women really happy to look like they belonged in the little girls section of a toy shop? Jenni said it's heartbreaking to see all those poor women carrying their children and pets to escape Ukraine How heartbreaking to see all those poor women, clamouring to escape Ukraine, carrying their children, dogs and cats to safety. Everyone will understand their desperation to protect their children, but their pets? Honestly, Id have been with them. I couldnt have left Frieda, Madge and Suu my two chihuahuas and a Burmese to burn in Putins conflagration. Jenni questions the point of making the new Batman movie almost three hours long, when the target audience has a short attention span The new Batman movie, starring Robert Pattinson, is almost three hours long. Whats the point when the attention span of the target audience is barely longer than the opening credits? Jenni Murray believes it's wrong that women will lost their right to early and easier abortions at the end of August (file image) Early medical abortion usually involves taking two medications, mifepristone and misoprostol, over a couple of days. During the pandemic, the pills were sent home and women who were up to ten weeks pregnant were able to take responsibility for their own care, while still having the option to visit a clinic to talk to someone in person. Last week, it was confirmed that women would lose this right to early and easier abortions at the end of August. I strongly believe this is wrong. A woman has the right to control her own body. If it was safe under lockdown, why not now? Two heavily pregnant mums from Queensland have given birth hours after their dramatic rescues in rising floodwaters as Australia's east coast battles a once-in-a-lifetime natural disaster. Brisbane mum Krystle Henry had to be kayaked to dry land from her home in Taringa on Sunday afternoon by a quick-thinking neighbour after water surrounded the home she shares with partner Matt Bridges. An incredible photo from the rescue sees Krystle holding onto the vessel, carefully lowering herself down with an anguished look on her face and a volunteer by her side. Brisbane mum Krystle Henry (pictured) had to be kayaked to dry land from her home in Taringa on Sunday afternoon by a quick-thinking neighbour after water surrounded the home she shares with partner Matt Bridges Krystle went into labour hours later and gave birth to their son Angus at Brisbane's Mater Mothers' Hospital on Tuesday morning. 'I'm so glad I got to the delivery room in time. We've got a pandemic baby with Olive being born in 2020 and now a flood baby,' Matt said from the hospital. But the couple weren't the only ones grabbling parenthood and labour while floodwaters rose, as Felicity and Alex Jacques can attest. The couple were rescued by an SES team of responders who transported them to safety mere hours before their baby boy Andrew arrived on Tuesday. Unbeknownst to baby Andrew, water had risen close to the top of the traffic lights near the Toowong home his parents were staying at. Krystle went into labour hours later and gave birth to their son Angus at Brisbane's Mater Mothers' Hospital on Tuesday morning 'I'm so relived here's here, he definitely is a little miracle,' Felicity said. Half a million NSW residents have now been ordered to evacuate their homes as the city is pummelled by a huge rain bomb with another 150mm set to soak the city today. More than 250 schools were closed on Thursday morning and road users told to take 'extreme care' due to dangerous conditions and fallen trees as wild weather continues to smash the state. Severe weather warnings are in place for a huge area - spanning the NSW Mid-North Coast to the South Coast covering Newcastle, Gosford, Wollongong, Sydney and the Blue Mountains. Meanwhile, south-east Queensland is once again in the firing line with huge 6cm hail pummelling flood-affected regions overnight. South Africa: Post office suspends mail service to Russia, Ukraine, Belarus The South African Post Office (Sapo) has suspended the mail service to Russia, the Ukraine and Belarus. In a statement on Wednesday, the Post Office said airmail remains available to 33 countries and surface mail to 51 countries. Customers who order items from other countries should include their cell phone number with their address details so that the Post Office is able to send them an SMS when the item is ready for collection. Customers who send items to other countries must make sure they do not send anything that is not allowed in the mail, which includes any arms, ammunition, explosives, liquids or items that could break and leak. No plant or animal material may be sent to other countries. For more information, please visit the website of the postal administration in the receiving country, Sapo said. The Post Office has encouraged customers to take care when packing items for dispatch abroad, as mail is transported in bulk. International items are delivered within an average of 10 workdays. For a quicker service, the post office offers the EMS service, which delivers items within 24 hours of arrival in the destination country. Customers can easily access the electronic customs declaration form on the Post Office website for quick clearance of parcels. The form is under 'tools' on the website www.postoffice.co.za, Sapo said. South Africans are entitled to two tax-free gifts from abroad per year, provided the value of each gift is below R1 400. More information is on the SARS website at https://www.sars.gov.za/customs-and-excise/sending-or-receiving-goods-in-the-post/. - SAnews.gov.za This story has been published on: 2022-03-02. To contact the author, please use the contact details within the article. China launches one of the largest Chinese citizens evacuations in Ukraine By Chen Qingqing and Fan Anqi (Global Times) 10:10, March 02, 2022 Buses wait in front of the Chinese Consulate-General in Odessa, Ukraine on March 1 to evacuate Chinese nationals. Inset: Chinese nationals wait outside the Chinese Consulate-General in Odessa to be evacuated. Photos: Courtesy of Chinese Consulate-General in Odessa In one of the largest Chinese citizen evacuations in history, the Chinese embassy in Ukraine has already arranged the departure of some 2,300 fellow citizens from the country in just two days. The vast majority of the evacuees, about 2,200, traveled in buses escorted by embassy staff and local police forces to ensure a safe and quick exit to neighboring countries, with the rest going by train, still one of the safest ways out apart from by road. However, some Western media outlets such as CNN and The New York Times have been hyping that China's response to the Ukraine crisis "could be putting its citizens in danger" and some even hyped that China "leaves citizens stranded in Ukraine", exaggerating and distorting a very small-scale of online comments on Chinese social media and claiming they are "cheering Russia's invasion," which led to some negative sentiment among Ukrainians. Analysts said China and Ukraine have been keeping diplomatic communication open including coordinating the evacuation. As the massive evacuation plan started, Chinese State Councilor and Foreign Minister Wang Yi spoke with Ukraine Foreign Minister Dmytro Kuleba on Tuesday at the invitation of the Ukraine side. During the phone call, Wang said China feels pity about the escalating clash between Russia and Ukraine, and is paying special attention to civilian casualties. The Chinese official also urged Ukraine to take all the necessary measures to ensure the safety of Chinese citizens and continue providing assistance and convenience to them during the evacuation. China's stance on the Ukraine crisis is fair, transparent and consistent, said Wang. "We always propose sovereignty and territorial integrity of every country to be respected, and China calls for negotiation between two side to find a solution to current crisis, and supports all constructive efforts from international society that helps political solution of the crisis," he said. However, as the military operation continued, AFP reported on Tuesday that the central square of Ukraine's second city, Kharkiv was shelled with civilians casualties. When asked about China's view on the reported death toll in Ukraine, Wang Wenbin, spokesperson of the Chinese Foreign Ministry said on Tuesday China regrets the reported casualties and it is not a situation China wants to see. China hopes all relevant parties show restraint to prevent the situation from further deteriorating. Local help Some 1,700 Chinese nationals in Ukraine were scheduled to be evacuated to neighboring countries on Tuesday, including about 900 from Kiev and 800 from Odessa. The majority will be escorted by embassy staff and local police forces on 32 buses heading for Moldova and Poland, with the rest taking designated trains. After arriving in the neighboring countries, they will board charter flights to return to China, the Global Times learned from the Chinese Embassy in Kiev and the Consulate General in Odessa. The 800 Chinese nationals will set off in two directions - to Moldova and Poland - on Tuesday from Kiev, the embassy said. Some 18 buses have been arranged, with diplomats escorting them throughout the journey. The embassy has also provided food and water for the evacuees. Apart from buses, the embassy has dispatched high-level diplomats to the railway station in Kiev to assist Chinese nationals leaving the country by train. According to onsite observations, the station in Kiev is in good order, with no phobia attitude toward foreign citizens, nor overcrowding, confusion or failure to get on the train, the Global Times has learned. About 700 to 800 Chinese nationals will be escorted by embassy staff and local police forces via 14 buses to neighboring Moldova on Tuesday, the Chinese Consulate General in Odessa told the Global Times. After arriving in Moldova, they will be transferred to Romania, where charter flights will pick them up and bring them back to China. "Three local police cars will also accompany them. They have been a big help in escorting the Chinese nationals, as there are many local armed militias along the way who could rob people. With buses being such an obvious target, the police escort will play a big role in ensuring safety," a consular staffer said. The consulate has coordinated with Ukrainian departments to provide quicker routes for the Chinese evacuees. As westbound roads out of the country are heavily congested for some 20 kilometers before border crossings due to the large number of fleeing refugees, it will take about 40 hours to cross the border. With local police cars leading the way, it may take about one and a half hours to arrive at the border. China evacuated the first batch of its citizens from Ukraine on Monday, including over 400 Chinese students from Odessa and 200 from Kiev. There are some 6,000 Chinese nationals in Ukraine, according to the Chinese Embassy in Kiev. Apart from evacuations arranged by the embassy, some Chinese nationals have chosen to depart by themselves given the deteriorating situation. A Chinese student surnamed Li in Kharkiv, a city close to the border of Ukraine and Russia, told the Global Times on Tuesday that he was not among the group arranged by the embassy but given the severe situation, he decided to leave by himself. "We have to leave as soon as possible to save our lives, we need to rescue ourselves," he said, noting that he is planning to take the train to leave without giving more details. The Chinese embassy told the Global Times they are paying close attention to the chaos and great uncertainty over the situation in Kharkov, and has issued information about westbound trains from Kharkov to other countries. The embassy has also verified with the train station that Chinese nationals can get on the train without buying a ticket and only need a valid passport. Once on the trains, the embassy will help them clear immigration, and has liaised with the relevant security departments to protect the safety of Chinese citizens. Chinese student Zhang Xinxin, who is studying for a PhD in the Ukraine-Poland border city of Lviv, entered Poland in the early hours of Saturday. She told the Global Times that she departed the country by train under the protection of her Ukrainian teacher. "The road from Lviv to Poland on Friday was already very congested, and it would take at least 20 hours to get there by car. So my teacher came to pick me up regardless of the air raid sirens and took me to the train station," Zhang said, adding that although some Ukrainians were suspicious and even aggressive toward Chinese people because of the close relationship between China and Russia, she still received selfless help from Ukrainians like her teacher during the difficult time. Zhang said there are currently some 300 Chinese nationals taking her route, according to her knowledge, and she hoped to return to the motherland in the near future. The role of China The evacuation took place amid the first negotiation between Ukraine and Russia, which, in the eyes of some observers, yielded little. As the situation is changing rapidly, Chinese officials have called for all parties to exercise necessary restraint, prevent further worsening of the situation and step up diplomatic efforts for a political solution. Zhang Jun, Chinese Ambassador to the UN, said at the latest the Emergency Special Session of the UN General Assembly on Ukraine that China welcomes the start of direct dialogue and negotiations between Russia and Ukraine, calling for efforts to create an enabling atmosphere and conditions for direct negotiations between the parties concerned, as this is the fundamental way to resolve the issue. "The first round of negotiation is about expressing the stance and adding the leverage in order to find out whether there's room for more talks, and it also depends on the situation of the military operations to see whether Russia would make any adjustment," Cui Hongjian, director of the Department of European Studies at the China Institute of International Studies, told the Global Times on Tuesday. Russian's current military moves are dragging it into a protracted conflict, which could not help it reaching its political goals of "de-Nazification" of Ukraine, Cui said, noting that a prolonged military operation would do no good for both sides. There are also uncertainties for Ukraine as it seeks external support, and both sides would continue talks if there is a balancing status quo. Western media has been smearing China with reports saying that the tensions in Ukraine have left Chinese citizens "stranded," while calling the evacuation plan "pale." In the latest CNN report, it said that Chinese citizens in Ukraine "find themselves in a tense situation as plans for an evacuation from the war-torn country - set in motion weeks after Western nations urged their citizens to leave - have stalled." Responding to the remarks, Cui said the topic itself is set up on purpose to hype so-called "difficult position" of China. Cui noted that China should not get caught up in these Western-led rhetoric trap but focus on the facts, which is what China has done, is doing, and plans to do. Some Western media like The New York Times also amplified a small amount of comments on Chinese social media, claiming that Chinese "cheered for Russia's invasions," and such biased and untrue reports had a certain impact on some Ukrainians' attitude toward Chinese nationals, the Global Times learned from some students in Ukraine. Such tactics of stirring up conflicts between China and Ukraine are seen as common practice of using inflammatory reports to turn China into a target of this crisis, Li Haidong, a professor from the Institute of International Relations of China Foreign Affairs University, told the Global Times on Tuesday. "Like how the US-led Western politicians are trying to use this crisis to target China and slander China's image in Europe by echoing their geopolitical purposes of containing China, they provoke China-Ukraine relations too," Li said, noting that such tactics would further escalate the current tensions. "There's no conflict between China and Ukraine, and it's out of their ulterior motive to depict China as a disrupting force in this crisis," he said. (Web editor: Zhong Wenxing, Liang Jun) by Tichaona Chifamba, Zhang Yuliang HARARE, March 2 (Xinhua) -- African countries have been exhorted to pursue the Chinese model of modernization as opposed to models followed by former colonial powers whose interests were largely based on the plunder of resources during their time on the continent. Donald Rushambwa, researcher at the Harare-based China-Africa Economic and Culture Exchange Research Center said in an interview with Xinhua that one of the advantages of China's modernization drive was that it was recent while that of the West predated World War II. "We would like to take an approach whereby we know that this place (China) 44 years ago was just like us, but now they are different. So, at least there is a track record of how they did it as opposed to Britain and America which were modernized by even World War II," said Rushambwa. "So we cannot take a leaf from them because we didn't see their industrialization drive and also because they had also been taking resources from us," he said. Rushambwa, who also studied in China and saw the positive work ethic of the Chinese, said it was not feasible to copy the West's modernization model because of its exploitative nature. "We cannot take an approach whereby they were the colonizers and we want to copy from them. We cannot do that because it's not feasible," he said. "Their industrialization was centuries ago, but China's is just a few years, like not more than a century, just like us. So I think we can copy something from China which shares something in common with us," he said. Relating to his experiences in China, Rushambwa said he had been impressed by Chinese freshmen at university who adorned military fatigue as they underwent orientation on the Chinese vision and way of doing things. He said this was a good practice because it kept society closely knitted together. "There is a vision that is there. So the people are trained in a vision that way. When you want to implement something, everyone will understand as opposed to when they don't understand the vision," he said. "During my time (in China), the economic development aspect that I witnessed was the devolution aspect of things whereby each province caters for its own GDP and it (the GDP) should contribute to the central GDP of the country," he said. He said Zimbabwe could also emulate the devolution drive taken by the Chinese because it was practical and had helped to boost the national economy. "In Zimbabwe, we have been trying to do it, but it's been taking long. And we really don't know what devolution is. But the Chinese have actually implemented it and it has helped the economical aspects of things. "So I think those are the two main impressions that I have, one of building patriotism for development and the other of devolution, devolutionizing for development as well," he said. He also urged African leaders to shun corruption because it hindered development. "The first thing I would want to give to our politicians is they should, like China, have zero-tolerance on corruption. That's the first port of call," he said. He said corruption was a scourge that needed to be dealt with if Africa was to modernize without hindrance. On youths and national development, Rushambwa said Africa should allow them to be innovative and make their own creations. "In Africa, the youth should be given a platform to be innovative. In China, when I was still there they would have entrepreneurship competitions and funds for start-ups," he added. "For start-up businesses, they set up technological zones whereby people and business people can come in with their business ideas and then the state funds them," he said. Rushambwa also touched on the different models of democracy between China and the West. "The West also sees tradition as an obstacle to development whereas in China tradition is actually an added effect to development. Because once you have your culture embedded in you, you create a sense of patriotism, which will be very influential in bringing development as the people drive that," he said. "So I think that Chinese approach boosts advantages because it teaches the developing countries to have a sense of patriotism to build their own countries," said Rushambwa, who re-emphasized the need for patriotism among citizens if the continent was to develop further. "The country is built by its own citizens. Let it be known that even if we are getting funding and investors from other countries, we need to have domestic investors. We need to have patriotic people who are willing to invest in their own country and to also promote brands from their own country," he said. He urged citizens to emancipate themselves from their colonial mentality which dictated that goods which were manufactured in the West were superior to local products. "We need to be proud of our culture. We need to be patriotic about our country. When we go outside to learn, we come back here to Zimbabwe to actually make it a better place. I think those are some of the lessons that African countries can learn from China's modernization," he said. Rushambwa also commended China's development stages since the ruling Communist Party of China (CPC) introduced the Reform and Opening-up Policy in 1978, through which it has undergone profound changes including a contemporary period of rapid modernization. This has resulted in dramatic social, cultural, and economic shifts impacting the daily lives of Chinese people, with the current thrust being socialism with Chinese characteristics. "So socialist modernization has been from the reform and opening-up. China has been consistent with that modernization drive because the past, present and future are all interconnected," he said. He touched on the two centenary goals for China, which he said had either been achieved or were on course to be. "That is the eradication of poverty by the centenary of the CPC, that is 2021, whereby we can now see that many people were eradicated from poverty and China reached a threshold of modernization by eradicating poverty and is now moving on to helping other countries to eradicate poverty," he said. "And then the other centenary goal will be the centenary for the independence of the People's Republic of China. That will be in 2049, whereby they would want to reach a moderately prosperous society for all," he said. "In Zimbabwe, we have that, whereby we have Vision 2030, reaching a middle-income economy by 2030," he said. China's modernization drive had been consistent and had benefited its people as the government looked into their welfare, he said. "Modernization is all about the policies that the government is implementing for its people. China moved from an economic drive whereby they wanted to grow the economy, but now they are looking into the livelihoods of the people," he said. "That's a more different approach to modernization. That's a drive that is different from capitalism, whereby people are more focused on the business aspect of things, the economic outlook," he said. It was therefore important for Africa to emulate China, which it had seen grow than to try and seek salvation from the West. "The modernization drive in China is one which developing countries can learn from because China is still developing. For us in Africa, we cannot take a model of modernization from the West because they are already developed and were once our colonizers and oppressors," he said. "So eventually we cannot modernize from there if they still are coming in as the oppressors. We need a partner more than an oppressor or a former colonizer," he said. Millions of adults have switched to private healthcare during the Covid pandemic because of difficulty accessing the NHS, a report has claimed. Polling by the Institute for Public Policy Research thinktank suggests that 16million struggled getting health service appointments. The survey of nearly 3,500 adults suggested one in eight of those the equivalent of 2million adults opted to go private instead. Long waiting times waiting times exacerbated by the pandemic were one of the key drivers behind the switch, the report said. The thinktank warned the UK risks embedding a two-tier health system where those who can afford to will pay for private insurance, health tourism, direct payments and 'waiting list fast passes'. It means that millions of others will be left to 'put up or shut up'. Currently 6.1million people in England are on NHS waiting lists for routine treatment such as hip and knee replacements. Official health service forecasts estimate the queue, already at a record-high, could peak as high as 10.7million by March 2024. Sajid Javid last month unveiled his plan to tackle NHS backlogs as Britain moves out the pandemic, although it was slammed by MPs on either side of the Commons for 'not being ambitious enough'. The Health Secretary has promised to make 'greater use' in the coming years of the private sector in the coming years despite the industry publicly criticising the NHS for failing to take advantage of its willingness to help. Polling by the Institute for Public Policy Research thinktank suggests that 31 per cent of the UK population the equivalent of 16million adults struggled to get NHS appointments during the pandemic Graph shows: Three times as many people believed private care was now better than NHS services because of the pandemic. More than a third (36 per cent) said private care was superior, compared to 12 per cent who preferred the NHS. A third said both were equally good, while 19 per cent did not know Data from NHS England shows one in nine people in the country were waiting for routine treatment such as joint replacement and cataract surgery or diagnostic tests at the end of December More than HALF of patients find it harder to talk to their GP during the pandemic More than half of British adults found it harder to access their GP during the Covid pandemic, a survey has claimed. Polling by the Institute for Public Policy Research thinktank found 54 per cent of adults believe it is now harder to talk to their GP whether by phone or in-person because of the pandemic. The survey of 3,446 adults in England, Wales and Northern Ireland in November found the majority were dissatisfied with their local service. Greater demand during the pandemic led to many waiting for their symptoms to settle, leading to more people in A&E, the IPPR said. MPs last week told GPs to make offering more face-to-face appointments an 'essential mission' now all Covid restrictions have been axed. Just 60 per cent of appointments in January were made in-person, compared to more than 80 per cent before March 2020. Conservative Joy Morrissey told MailOnline returning to pre-pandemic levels of appointments must be a 'key objective of learning to live with Covid'. Advertisement The IPPR poll organised with data analytics firm YouGov surveyed 3,466 adults in England, Wales and Scotland in November last year. It found three times as many people believed private care was now better than NHS services because of the pandemic. A third said they were as good as each other. Thirty-one per cent complained they found it difficult to access healthcare during the pandemic the equivalent of 16million British adults. Of those who ran into trouble getting an appointment, 12 per cent admitted using private healthcare instead. Eighteen per cent of Londoners used private healthcare and 15 per cent of people aged 65 'opted out' of the NHS for care. More than a quarter (26 per cent) said they thought about private healthcare but decided against it, while 59 per cent didn't consider it because they couldn't afford to. Seventeen per cent the equivalent of nearly nine million adults said they would go private if they had to wait more than 18 weeks for treatment after referral. More than two million have waited more than 18 weeks, according to NHS England's most recent statistics. The findings suggested more people who can afford it are opting-out of NHS care because of the pandemic, the IPPR said. Despite the shift away from using NHS treatment, the poll found the overwhelming majority of Brits (88 per cent) still support the NHS as being free at the point of delivery. However, only 79 per cent of respondents said the health service should be primarily funded through taxes. IPPR researchers said the survey suggested the public want to see the NHS continue to be the main source of healthcare for most Britons, despite falling standards. The left-wing thinktank called for greater funding for the health service to bring it in line with the public sector. This is despite the NHS already receiving 192billion last year more than 50billion more than the previous year because of the pandemic. It will also be given access to an extra 12billion being raised though a National Insurance hike in April. The IPPR authors wrote: 'As access to, and quality of, care declines, more people are supplementing their entitlement to public health and care with paid-for products private insurance, health tourism, direct payments and "waiting list fast passes". Queues for routine operations are expected to peak in 2024 at around 10.7million in the most pessimistic scenario, modelling from the NHS shows. It is because the health service expects many patients who missed operations to now come forward for care NHS Digital data shows just 60 per cent of appointments in January were in-person, compared to 61 per cent in December NHS hospitals told not to perform routine ops on Covid patients for seven weeks NHS hospitals should not perform routine operations on Covid patients within two months of them getting the virus, experts have advised. Despite warnings that the pandemic-fuelled backlog will double by 2024, surgeons say that only urgent surgery should be carried out within seven weeks of someone catching the virus. No infected patient should be treated within 10 days of a positive test unless it's a matter of life-or-death, under the new guidance. This is because studies suggest patients are three times more likely to die after an operation in the seven weeks after catching Covid. The advice was drawn up by a consortium of leading medical bodies including the Royal College of Surgeons and Royal College of Anaesthetists. NHS trusts do not have to follow their guidance, which covers elective care such as hip and knee replacements. Thousands of 'Covid' patients are currently in hospitals across England despite not being primarily ill with the virus. Advertisement 'The risk is less a sudden privatisation, and more an emergence of something resembling the English education system where the very best education is so often conditional on ability to pay. 'If this were to become the new normal after the pandemic (as it has in social care and dentistry), it would worsen overall health and widen inequality.' Chris Thomas, IPPR principal research fellow, said: 'People aren't opting-out the NHS because they've stopped believing in it as the best and fairest model of healthcare. 'Rather, those who can afford it are being forced to go private by the consequences of austerity and the pandemic on NHS access and quality and those without the funds are left to "put up or shut up". 'The risk is that, in the future, the idea you have to pay to get the best healthcare becomes normalised.' The IPPR poll also found 54 per cent of adults believe it is now harder to talk to their GP whether by phone or in-person because of the pandemic. MPs last week told family doctors to make offering more face-to-face appointments an 'essential mission' now all Covid restrictions have been axed. Just 60 per cent of appointments in January were made in-person, compared to more than 80 per cent before March 2020. Conservative Joy Morrissey told MailOnline returning to pre-pandemic levels of appointments must be a 'key objective of learning to live with Covid'. Mr Javid last month unveiled a 12billion-a-year blueprint designed to tackle the Covid backlog. He claimed the Government was 'absolutely committed to tackling the Covid backlog and building a health and social care system for the long term'. But the headline promise to scrap one-year waiting lists won't come into effect until 2025 and the revised July 2022 deadline to scrap two-year queues is four months later than was previously promised by the Government. The Health Secretary also admitted the queues for routine care will continue to rise for another two years. All of the targets in the report are predicated on 'maintaining low levels of Covid', meaning they could be abandoned in the event of another serious outbreak. There are also no concrete recruitment targets over the next three years. And despite promising to 'go to war on cancer', the commitment to diagnose suspected patients in 28 days is a target first set in 2019. Labour said the plan fell 'seriously short of the scale of the challenge facing the NHS and the misery affecting millions of people stuck on' waiting lists and criticised the lack of a plan to address staff shortages. Advertisement Biden reveals 'Test to Treat' plan During Tuesday night's State of the Union Address, President Joe Biden revealed plans for an upcoming 'Test to Treat' plan to help combat Covid Once it is in place, Americans who test positive for COVID-19 at a pharmacy will be offered free courses of Pfizer's antiviral COVID-19 pill, Paxlovid The drug can reduce hospitalization risk of Covid by 90 percent, trials found America has doubled its order of Paxlovid from 10 million to 20 million courses of the drug, and some supply issues have been fixed as well The drug is believed to be the most effective available for someone after Covid infection Advertisement President Joe Biden said Tuesday night that Americans' access to highly effective antiviral Covid pills will be increased under a new 'Test to Treat' plan being rolled out by the federal government, and that the pills that were once in short supply should soon be readily available in the U.S., as officials make a strong push to put the pandemic in the rear view. Speaking to congress at the State of the Union address, the President announced that the country had increased its purchase order of Pfizer's Paxlovid from 10 million to 20 million courses. The drug, which received authorization from the Food and Drug Administration (FDA) late last year, has been deemed as the most effective treatment post-infection but the company has reportedly had issues with production. 'If you get COVID-19, the Pfizer pill reduces your chances of ending up in the hospital by 90 percent,' Biden said. 'I've ordered more pills than anyone in the world has. Pfizer is working overtime to get us a million pills this month and more than double that next month.' With production issues somewhat quelled, and the U.S. soon to have more access to the drug, Biden announced a 'Test to Treat' program. Under the new system, any Americans can receive a Covid test at a pharmacy, and if they test positive they will be offered courses of Paxlovid for free. Only pharmacy clinics will be allowed to distribute the drug, though, as the White House clarified Wednesday afternoon that a prescription would still be required. Pharmacists are not authorized to prescribe the drug. The White House also announced Wednesday morning that it would create a 'one stop' website where Americans could find information about the pandemic, along with putting more resources into the vaccine rollout, and increasing the nation's Covid test manufacturing capacity. The effort can also lesson the brunt of the pandemic faced by hospitals. Paxlovid is highly effective at reducing hospitalizations caused by the virus if the medication schedule is started early enough in infection. Massive distribution of these pills could free up hospital resources and leave them to only be used on those most at risk from Covid. President Joe Biden (pictured) said at his State of the Union address Tuesday night that Covid could 'no longer control our lives' as he announced initiatives that would assist in moving on from the pandemic It also matches a change by the Centers for Disease Control and Prevention (CDC) last week, where the agency has shifted focus from preventing overall case transmission to reducing hospitalizations. The CDC revised how it calculates Covid risk in each county - and how it recommends mask orders based on those risks - as the agency will now heavily weigh hospitalization rate and hospital capacity. This all comes as a larger effort to move beyond the pandemic in America. Cases have plummeted over the past month in a half and Americans are eager to move back to 'normal' life. The nation is currently recording 63,881 new cases per day, a 26 percent drop over the past seven days and a 90 percent fall from the mid-January peak of 800,000 per day. Americans are highly protected from the virus as well, with official CDC data showing that 88 percent of adults have received at least on shot of a COVID-19 vaccine, and 75 percent are fully vaccinated. The agency also reports that 94.4 million Americans have received a booster. An AP-NORC survey conducted last month found that only 24 percent of Americans are still very concerned about themselves or someone in their family catching the virus. 'Thanks to the progress we have made this past year, COVID-19 need no longer control our lives,' Biden told legislators. 'We will continue to combat the virus as we do other diseases. And because this is a virus that mutates and spreads, we will stay on guard.' Biden also promised that the federal government would work towards getting variant-specific vaccines out the door faster in case another highly infectious variant, like Omicron, emerges. The strain, which accounts for virtually every single case in the U.S. according to CDC data, erupted in December, sending vaccine manufacturers to work on developing an Omicron-specific jab. The variant worked faster than scientists could, though, rampaging through the population before the new vaccines became available. While both Pfizer and Moderna are expected to rollout Omicron-tailored shots late this month, cases will likely be so low by then that there will be little demand. 'I cannot promise a new variant won't come, but I can promise you we'll do everything within our power to be ready if it does,' Biden said 'If necessary, we'll be able to deploy new vaccines within 100 days instead of many more months or years.' There are questions whether this would even be necessary, though. The U.S. managed to weather the Omicron surge - which will likely be the worst ever - without tailored jabs and instead was carried by natural immunity and the widely available booster shots. In the present, more and more American cities and states are rolling back Covid restrictions and allowing their citizens to live as normal. Hawaii remains the only state that either still has a mask mandate, or does not have a day scheduled to lift it in the coming weeks. The island state may soon join its peers, though, as officials lifted quarantine requirements for visitors on Tuesday. New York City, which has had some of the strictest Covid guidelines throughout the pandemic, will even lift vaccine checks and mask mandates starting March 7. The city's mandate for private employers will still apply, though. The Johnson & Johnson (J&J) COVID-19 vaccine was not nearly as effective as its peers at preventing hospitalization from the virus, a new study of elderly patients finds. A French research team found that 28 days after administration of the single-dose J&J shot, and the second dose of the Pfizer-BioNTech vaccine, the J&J recipients were 5.2 times more likely to be hospitalized with Covid than those who got the Pfizer shot. Overall hospitalizations in the study were low, though, with basically zero percent of Pfizer recipients and less than 0.5 percent of J&J recipients recording hospitalizations. The J&J shot quickly fell out of favor in the U.S. after receiving authorization in spring of 2020, often regarded as less effective that the Pfizer or Moderna shots. Some vaccine providers have stopped offering it, and it is far and away the least popular of the three shots available to Americans. Researchers found that elderly people who received the J&J COVID-19 vaccine were at a significantly higher risk of hospitalization than those who received the Pfizer shot Overall hospitalization rates among people who received either the Pfizer or J&J vaccines in the study were still very low, even though the elderly are at more risk. Pictured: An older woman in Strasbourg, France, receives a shot of a COVID-19 vaccine on September 24 Researchers, who published their findings Wednesday in JAMA Network Open, gathered data from nearly 700,00 Pfizer recipients and nearly 700,000 people who received the J&J shot for the study. Data was gathered from the French National Health Data System, from April to July 2021. The data proceeds the Omicron variant, but does include the early portions of the nation's Delta variant fueled surge last summer. Each study subject who received the J&J shot was matched with a Pfizer recipient based of age, sex and area of residence. Recipients were followed up with around 28 days after receiving the final shot in the vaccine sequence to see if they had been hospitalized with the virus at some point after getting the shot. Data was normalized around the Pfizer vaccine to determine the risk level of the J&J shot in particular. The vaccine generally take around 14 days to fully activate in a person's body and give someone a full slate of antibodies. Demand for the J&J vaccine has largely dropped off in the U.S., but it is still a key part of the vaccine rollout in the developing world (file photo) Researchers found that in the time between the shot receipt and follow up, J&J recipients were 5.51 times more likely to have been hospitalized with the virus. From 14 days after receiving the vaccine to the follow up date, J&J recipients were 6.7 times more likely to be admitted with Covid. Over the long-term - the period from 28 days after receiving the jab to the follow up date - J&J recipients were 5.2 times as likely to be hospitalized. The findings have grave implications. The J&J vaccine was widely available in many nations, and attracted some people due to its one-dose nature. Health experts have learned in recent months that the main value provided by the COVID-19 vaccines are not their ability to prevent infection, but instead the ability to prevent hospitalization and death from Covid. J&J's shot seems to have failed at its main purpose when compared to its peers, especially among the highly vulnerable 55 and older population. Many people likely received the J&J shot, thinking it made them safe from severe Covid, when had they know how much less effective it was would have opted for the Pfizer or Moderna shot instead. The one dose shot has been administered 18.4 million times in the U.S., to fully vaccinate 16.7 million people and boost around 1.3 million others. Those figures are dwarfed by the Moderna and Pfizer shots, which have fully vaccinated 75.3 million and 123.4 million Americans respectively. Demand for the shots in the U.S. has been limited as well, with the J&J shot growing a poor reputation stateside due to its lower efficacy, production issues early on and the shot even having its FDA authorization paused in April over potentially deadly blood clotting issues found in some women. It is still being used in much of the developing world, though, as its one shot nature makes it easier to administer in countries where supplies may be limited. War in Ukraine has piled pressure on ministers to stop the hollowing out of the UKs cutting-edge defence and aerospace industry. As the Russian assault continued, experts said the crisis underscores the need for a strong domestic sector and has exposed decades of lax policies. For years successive governments have allowed major companies to be sold to foreign buyers with little scrutiny. American firm, Viasat, has targeted the satellite and telecommunications giant Inmarsat (pictured), in a 5.4bn deal Several blockbuster takeovers of strategically important and sensitive firms all by overseas buyers are still in the works. Ultra Electronics, which makes high-tech kit that can detect enemy submarines, has been swooped on by private equity vulture Advent International, in a 2.6billion bid. Fellow FTSE 250 defence contractor Meggitt is being sold to US group Parker-Hannifin for 6.3billion. And another American firm, Viasat, has targeted the satellite and telecommunications giant Inmarsat, in a 5.4billion deal. Inmarsat is the largest provider of in-flight wifi for airlines, the top provider of internet connections for ships and has 14 satellites in orbit. Critics argue that the defence industry has been hollowed out by years of underfunding, a laissez-faire approach to takeovers and a keenness to buy equipment from overseas suppliers rather than build up UK businesses. New laws have been brought in to beef up the Governments scrutiny and ability to block deals in 17 important industries after a string of sell-offs. The proposed takeovers of Meggitt and Ultra are being analysed by ministers. And the Business Secretary, Kwasi Kwarteng, is in discussions with Viasat about what commitments it could make to seal the deal. But experts remain worried the relentless raid is putting British jobs, intellectual property and cutting-edge technology at risk of disappearing to other countries. Admiral Lord West, the former head of the Royal Navy, said: It is absolutely crucial that we have our own sovereign capability in all areas of defence. We cant just go and rely on somebody else. I think the Government has to be much more pro-active about takeovers and make sure that companies dont get sold to the wrong buyers and broken up. Weve got some amazingly clever people here. Lord Heseltine, who served as a defence secretary under Margaret Thatchers government, said: Im extremely concerned about the lax way in which we allow British companies to be taken over. But he added: I dont think this is an issue that is only specific to the Ukraine crisis this is about Britains lack of industrial strategy for decades. The sale of Cobham to Ultras suitor Advent in 2019 for 4billion threw the issue of UK defence takeovers into sharp focus. Advent promised to be a long-term investor in the firm, which was set up in 1934 by Sir Alan Cobham and pioneered air-to-air refuelling technology. But within 18 months Advent had chopped Cobham up and sold off more than half of the business. Independent analyst Francis Tusa echoed Heseltine, describing a lack of focus and commitment to the UKs defence sector as endemic. Tusa said: There have to be much tighter rules for selling defence companies. At this point weve hardly got any left. Ukraine will put even more of a spotlight on this as a wider issue but unfortunately it is endemic. All of the forces are guilty of this. Boris Johnson has said Europe needs to wean itself off gas. Britain also needs to wean itself off foreign, mostly American, defence procurement. Defence analyst Howard Wheeldon added: What Ukraine demonstrates is that governments of all colours have failed to prioritise defence, thats the real issue. Now we need a complete overhaul and rethink of how we approach our industry. Two Russian firms will be booted off the FTSE 100 after the invasion of Ukraine sparked a collapse in their share price. As questions mount over the presence of Russian stocks on the London market, steelmaker Evraz and gold miner Polymetal International are expected to drop out of the blue chip index in todays quarterly reshuffle. Evraz shares have fallen 83 per cent this year, costing biggest shareholder Roman Abramovich more than 2.1billion. Polymetal is down 78per cent. Out: Russian-owned steelmaker Evraz and gold miner Polymetal International are expected to drop out of the blue chip index in todays quarterly reshuffle The rout continued yesterday as the FTSE 100 index fell 1.7 per cent while the main benchmark in Frankfurt was down 3.9 per cent, Paris dropped 3.9 per cent and Milan sank 4 per cent. Oil hit a fresh seven-and-a-half year high of $107.57 a barrel, gas prices rose more than 50 per cent and the rouble crashed 8 per cent to a fresh all-time low. It comes amid calls for Russian companies listed in London with close ties to the Kremlin to be removed from the stock market altogether. Every Western measure taken to date has been to put financial and economic pressure on Moscow to change its course, said Sam Ashworth-Hayes, director of studies at the Henry Jackson Society, a foreign policy think-tank. Former Conservative Party leader Iain Duncan Smith MP said companies should be delisted immediately if any suspicions were raised about possible links to Putin, his associates, or their sources of income. It is important that all these entities are investigated properly, he said. The stock market in Moscow remained closed for a second day. But Russian firms with secondary listings overseas were hammered once again. In London, Russias biggest bank Sberbank plunged more than 80 per cent while gas giant Gazprom was down over 70 per cent. With the corporate world increasingly freezing out Russias financial sector, investors are fleeing, said Hargreaves Lansdown analyst Susannah Streeter. The invasion of Ukraine has thrust London-listed Russian companies, as well as their owners and bosses, into the spotlight. Chelsea FC owner Abramovich owns a near-29 per cent stake in Evraz while founder and chairman Alexander Abramov is the second-largest shareholder with 19 per cent. Both are on the US Treasury list of oligarchs deemed close to Vladimir Putin. Polymetal founder Alexander Nesis, its biggest shareholder with a stake of almost 24 per cent, is also on the list. Polymetal is run by his brother, chief executive Vitaly Nesis. The fortunes of Evraz and Polymetal have reversed dramatically, said Streeter. Firms expected to replace Evraz and Polymetal in the FTSE 100 are Africa-focused miner Endeavour and kitchen as well as bathroom fitter Howden Joinery. Russian businesses have been branded 'uninvestable' as the country's stock market remained closed for a second day. Companies such as Gazprom and Sberbank, face being removed from top market indexes. Stephen Bird, the chief executive of British investment firm Abrdn, said Russia already commanded low scores on ESG environmental, social and governance criteria, and its fund managers were no longer allowed to invest in it. Shunned: Companies such as Gazprom and Sberbank, which are listed in Moscow, even face being removed from top market indexes Abrdn has been reducing its exposure for months Luke Ellis, the chief executive of hedge fund Man Group, also dubbed Russia 'uninvestable'. He said his firm did not hold any Russian clients' money, and had sold out of Russian and Ukrainian bonds. Speaking to Bloomberg, he added: 'I don't like doing business in places where you need a bodyguard.' British Gas owner Centrica will end its gas supply agreements with Russian counterparts, including Gazprom. It comes after UK energy companies, including BP and Shell, moved to sever their ties to Russia. Centrica has a medium-term contract with Gazprom Marketing and Trading, the energy giants UK entity, which is not affected by current sanctions, but has still launched talks to quit the deal. Centrica has a medium-term contract with Gazproms UK entity, which is not affected by current sanctions, but the British Gas owner has still launched talks to quit the deal Chris OShea, chief executive at Centrica, said: We are shocked by the events unfolding in Ukraine and the needless loss of lives. We intend to exit our gas supply agreements with Russian counterparts, principally Gazprom, as a matter of urgency. We are working through the details of how best to do this. Additionally we will ensure we are compliant with all relevant sanctions. Pressure is mounting on the London Stock Exchange (LSE) to cast out Russian companies as the corporate and financial world turns against the Kremlin. Politicians and experts said it has a responsibility to join other businesses and institutions who have severed ties with the country following the invasion of Ukraine. Dozens of Russian firms are listed in London, from Roman Abramovich-backed steel company Evraz to energy giants Rosneft and Gazprom, and the countrys biggest bank Sberbank. Pressure: Politicians and experts said the London Stock Exchange has a 'responsibility' to join other businesses and institutions who have already severed ties with Russia Their value has nosedived, with an index tracking London-traded Russian stocks plunging by 428billion or 98 per cent in the last two weeks. Russian lender VTB Banks shares have been suspended after UK and US authorities blacklisted its parent company. But no firms have yet been removed from the Official List of stocks overseen by City regulator the Financial Conduct Authority (FCA) despite many being run by, or having close ties with, oligarchs close to President Putin. Chris Bryant, an MP on Parliaments foreign affairs committee, said: There is a war of aggression being waged against the people of Ukraine and anything that is directly, indirectly, tangentially or slightly connected with the Russian state regime should be rooted out of British political, economic and cultural life. Anybody who isnt doing that now is letting down the people of Ukraine. And obviously that applies to the stock exchange, the financial institutions of the UK and to every glass-fronted, plush-carpeted, multi-layered office in the City of London. Former Conservative Party leader Iain Duncan Smith MP said companies should be delisted immediately if any suspicions were raised about possible links to Putin, his associates, or their sources of income. Western nations have rolled out sanctions against Russia, targeting individuals, its central bank and banning certain lenders from the Swift payments system. Companies taking a stand range from BP, Shell and Exxon Mobil, who have severed their ties with major energy companies, to Airbus, Boeing and JCB. Others include Apple, Sony, Disney and Warner Bros, car firm Ford, payments groups Mastercard and Visa, and shipping line Maersk. More sanctions are expected if the warmongering ramps up. There are two possible avenues one is to suspend shares, which stops a company being able to trade its stock, the other is to be delisted entirely. The LSE can suspend shares for a range of reasons and delist stocks on the junior Alternative Investment Market (AIM). But it cannot unilaterally eject a group from the main market that is also included on the FCAs Official List. It is likely that the LSE and FCA would need to reach a joint decision to eject a firm. City sources said the Treasury may also be able to intervene, but there is no precedent for the current situation. Bill Browder, a long-time campaigner on Russia who championed anti-corruption law the Magnitsky Act, said: I think there should be total isolation of the Russian government, Russian oligarchs and Russian companies until Russia withdraws from Ukraine and compensates Ukraine for the atrocities and damage it has inflicted. Sam Armstrong, of foreign affairs thinktank the Henry Jackson Society, said: The trading of their shares while the war rages on increasingly feels immoral and ethically wrong. The LSE and FCA declined to comment. Families who have paid thousands of pounds for funeral plans are desperately seeking reassurance that they will not be left out of pocket. Last week we reported how a major industry clampdown this summer could mean that many providers are unable to deliver the funerals they have sold. Since then we have been inundated with emails and letters from worried readers asking what they should do now and if their money is safe. In the dark: Families who have paid thousands of pounds for funeral plans don't know if the policies will turn out to be worthless Many have purchased plans from Safe Hands which has withdrawn its application for authorisation from the Financial Conduct Authority (FCA) watchdog and will be forced to cease trading from July 29. Here consumer expert James Daley, managing director at Fairer Finance, helps answer your questions... How do I know if my provider is safe? Larger firms such as Dignity, Co-Op and Golden Charter should be fine. Ecclesiastical, which also goes by Perfect Choice, is another established insurance company, and Golden Leaves is a mid-sized provider that has been in business for many years. However, we won't know for sure which plan providers will be approved by the watchdog until nearer July as it is still assessing applications. Has my provider applied for authorisation? You can check to see your provider has applied to be authorised on the City watchdog's website. Visit fca.org.uk/consumers/funeral-plans/providers-list and search for the name of your firm. What if my firm hasn't done this? Contact the firm and ask them about it. It may be that it is transferring its plans to another provider. If you cannot get a response, keep an eye out for more updates. The City watchdog hopes Dignity or one of the other large funeral providers will come forward to ensure customers still get the funeral they paid for if other firms stop trading. Security: If your funeral plan provider was behaving properly then your money should have been invested in a trust and overseen by independent trustees Am I protected by a regulator? Currently, the Funeral Planning Authority is a voluntary regulator so does not have any real power and there is currently no compensation scheme if firms fail. In theory, companies were only allowed into the FPA if they were willing to disclose their financial position and make commitments to repair any deficits in their trusts. But it doesn't mean they will be approved to continue trading when they come under the FCA's remit as we have seen with Safe Hands. I saved with Safe Hands but now face a 3,795 loss Out of pocket: Linda Lowe, 69, paid 3,795 for a Safe Hands funeral plan in 2017 Linda Lowe, 69, paid 3,795 for a Safe Hands funeral plan in 2017 so her only daughter wouldn't have to worry about money when the time came. The retired grandmother-of-two wants to be cremated, with her ashes placed next to her late husband Joseph's plot in Reigate, Surrey. She found Safe Hands after searching for funeral plans on Google and called to make sure her cash would be safe before sending a cheque. Linda, who lives in Haywards Heath, West Sussex, says: 'I asked several times and was assured it would be safe. 'On the back of the brochure it said the money was 'invested securely' in a trust fund and I assumed that meant I would be fine if the company went bust.' But when she rang again last week after learning the firm had withdrawn its application for authorisation by the City watchdog, she could not get a clear answer. 'I feel betrayed. I would have never taken the plan out if I didn't think my money would be safe,' she says. Isn't the money in an independent trust? If your funeral plan provider was behaving properly then yes, your money should have been invested in a trust and been overseen by independent trustees. However, as there was no formal regulation, no one was checking that firms were following the law. We suspect that some firms may have told people their money was safe while not necessarily following the rules. But we won't know for sure how bad the situation is until regulation comes in. What should Safe Hands customers do? Sit tight. Safe Hands is talking to a number of funeral plan providers to ensure plans are delivered even if there's not enough money in its trust. One of the largest funeral providers, Dignity, has also pledged to deliver every underfunded plan if necessary so it is unlikely that you will lose all your money. We hope more details will be announced soon. Hundreds lose out as company shuts down Hundreds of customers who have paid for a funeral plan with Heavenly Services Ltd are out of pocket after the firm collapsed last month. Among them are Linda Smith, who paid 1,700 for a funeral plan in September after being diagnosed with terminal cancer. The former carer purchased the plan after finding out she had just two to five years to live. Linda, 53, says: 'I had shopped around but the bigger firms were more expensive. I was told my plan was 'guaranteed' and that made me feel secure.' The Grimsby Town FC fan wanted a simple ceremony and to be cremated in her Dr Martens and team shirt. However, in January she and her husband Roy received a letter from Heavenly Services' liquidators, Auker Rhodes, informing them the Hull-based company was to be liquidated. She is one of at least 370 customers. With no compensation scheme in place, it is unlikely they will get their money back. Linda says: 'It never crossed my mind a funeral plan company might behave like this. 'The Government should step in and get customers at least 10 per cent of their cash back.' Should I cancel my plan? If there is no cost to cancel and you are worried your provider may fail, it may be worth asking if you can get your money back. But most customers will have to pay a cancellation fee, which can range from a couple of hundred pounds to thousands if your plan is older which would mean locking in a loss. So if you are past the 30-day cooling off period, wait and see how things pan out. What if I am making monthly payments? If you stop your monthly payments, then you are effectively cancelling your plan and your provider would be within its rights to deduct a termination fee from any refund you receive. It's probably best to continue paying for now. Can my credit card provider refund me? If your funeral plan provider goes bust and you paid by credit card, you should be able to reclaim your money under section 75 of the Consumer Credit Act. Alternatively, if you paid by debit card there is a similar chargeback scheme, but there may be time limits on refunds. And you cannot claim until your provider ceases trading. Should I wait to buy a plan until after July? You don't necessarily need to wait until then. Good funeral plans are still good products and there are still plenty of reputable firms. But for now, stick to larger companies such as Co-op, Dignity and Golden Charter. v.bischoff@dailymail.co.uk Thirty years ago suburban housewife Mary Jo Buttafuoco was shot in the face by her husband's 16-year-old lover on the front porch of their home in Massapequa, New York - a story that made headlines worldwide. The bullet, from a .25 caliber semiautomatic pistol, lodged in the base of her brain above the spinal column. But the strong-willed Mary Jo survived, and then endured multiple surgeries and facial reconstruction along with the emotional trauma of an unfaithful husband and his underage mistress. Now, speaking to DailyMail.com in an exclusive interview on the eve of the anniversary of that fateful day, Mary Jo, 66, says, 'I don't want a ''poor me'' story.' 'I'm content, I'm happy, I'm very grateful. This is the most peaceful time of my life, but it's been a hard-earned peace.' It was a scandal the media couldn't get enough of, and Mary Jo, who is still paralyzed on one side of her face and deaf in one ear, says she was mocked over her tragedy. 'It turned into this big joke,' she said. But she's finally found peace living in the laid back San Fernando Valley area of Los Angeles. And though she's lived there for 26 years, Mary Joe has retained some of her Long Island forthrightness. When asked if there were any misconceptions about her that she wanted to set straight, she replied, 'Ah no. There's been so much, honestly, I don't troll myself.' Thirty years ago suburban housewife Mary Jo Buttafuoco was shot in the side of her head by then-husband Joey's teenaged lover on the front porch of their home in Massapequa, New York Mary Jo's compassion led her to be on the board of the Facial Paralysis Institute with the doctor who helped reconstruct her face in 2005 Mary Jo said she was mocked over her tragedy at the time. 'It turned into this big joke,' she said. She's seen in a 1992 press conference after the shooting Mary Jo's husband, Joey, was carrying on an affair with Amy Fisher, who was just 16 years old at the time. The couple is seen in the above file photo with their two children Mary Jo tells DailyMail.com the family was forced to leave their home and move to the West Coast when life there became unbearable. 'These days when I'm recognized it's a positive thing. But back then it was me at the grocery store being stared at, yelled at, ''What's wrong with you? Why are ya staying with that idiot?'' and worse. 'I'm a housewife, not a movie star, I wasn't used to it. I had two young children still in school, I had to think about them.' Mary Jo stuck by Joey's side through it all before calling it quits in 2003 The family packed up and initially settled in Agoura Hills, California, about 35 miles north of L.A. 'Moving here was not because I wanted to. I left my family, my friends, my support group, my doctors. Life had become impossible. My husband was a lunatic and had lost his job. I was out of it. 'I was on Percocet and Xanax on a daily basis since '92, and I wasn't in my right mind. I couldn't have found Agoura Hills on a map. What brought us out here in 1996 was the school system.' She estimates she's moved 20 times since then. 'I've lived all over the valley in a big circle, West Hills, Woodland Hills, Oak Park, I've lived in downtown Newport/Laguna beach area, and in Las Vegas. 'I just sort of trudged along, sick, defeated. I just thought no one will recognize me here and that's what I wanted. Back then I didn't have my own voice like I do now.' She finally divorced high school sweetheart Joey in 2003, but stayed in the area. Year round sunny days means she can drive 15 minutes and be on the beach in Malibu. 'Mom is so cute,' her daughter Jessie, 38, said as she headed out the door to work. 'She'll tell me, ''I'm going to the beach.'' She packs her lunch, grabs her little chair and a book, and off she goes a couple times a week.' It's something she did in Long Island as well. 'I'm a beach person, I grew up near it, went all the time, I just assumed back then that everyone has an ocean to go to.' Her perspective has broadened since then. Joey Buttafuoco served six months for statutory rape and Mary Jo stuck by his side for a decade after the shooting. She no longer speaks to Joey Mary Jo was shot in the head in 1992 by teenager Amy Fisher, 17, (pictured with her lawyer) who had been having an affair with her husband Joey Amy ended up serving seven years in prison for assault with a deadly weapon This is the family's home in Massapequa, New York where their lives were turned upside down in 1992 'I'm a different person now. I'm much more compassionate. I have so much empathy, I feel what other people are feeling,' says Mary Jo, who now goes by her maiden name, Connery. 'Mom is so cute,' her daughter Jessie, 38, says as she heads out the door to work. Mother and daughter are pictured together 'I remember when the Nicole Brown Simpson [murder] happened, two years after me, I was like, that was me, but I lived. 'I was a young blonde mother-of-two, lying in a pool of blood on my front doorstep. I used to wonder why I lived and she didn't? You know you turn on the news and you see something that's happened and instantly you're right there with them, you feel what they're feeling and know how their life will change.' Her compassion led her to be on the board of the Facial Paralysis Institute with Dr. Babak Azizzadeh, the doctor who helped reconstruct her face in 2005. 'They do such great work. Now with Bell's Palsy and other things that can cause the facial drooping it's so important to let people know there's help out there. 'Now when I'm recognized it's a positive thing, people say that I helped them, inspired them in some way. That became my motivation to write a book. Mary Jo penned the 2009 NY Times best seller Getting It Through My Thick Skull: Why I Stayed, What I've learned, And What Millions Of People Involved With Sociopaths Need To Know. Because of the assault her face is still partially paralyzed, she's deaf in her right ear and the bullet is still lodged in her neck. 'I have a lot of the usual old lady aches and pains, the hip hurts, the back hurts, you know the body says you 'Oh, you wanna do that?' But I was just telling Jessie, this is the most peaceful time of my life. Mentally I'm in a good place.' Sober for more than two decades, she lives just minutes away from her son Paul, 42, and granddaughter, and lives with her daughter Sober for more than two decades, she lives just minutes away from her son Paul, 42, and granddaughter, and lives with her daughter. She no longer speaks to ex Joey. Mary Jo's second marriage to businessman Stu Tendler ended in divorce but they remained friends until his passing in 2018. As for dating in her future, the question remains open. 'Can you imagine me on Match.com, and having to sit across from someone and explain all of this? No way! If something happens organically, fine. If not, I'm perfectly happy. I hang out with my kids and granddaughter, I read, I paint, I'm content,' she said. The Covid-19 pandemic put a hold on her speaking engagements for the last two years but she plans on starting them back up again. Mary Jo's manager Melody Storm tells the DailyMail.com there is a project in the works on her tumultuous but now peaceful life. BEIJING, March 2 (Xinhua) -- China conditionally approved the registration application of a self-developed recombinant protein subunit vaccine against COVID-19, the National Medical Products Administration said Wednesday. The vaccine, developed by Anhui Zhifei Longcom Biopharmaceutical Co., Ltd., was allowed to enter the market on a conditional basis, said the administration. It marked the first approved COVID-19 recombinant protein subunit vaccine in China. U.S. Customs and Border Protection agents foiled a Mexican criminal organization's attempt to smuggle a $2.9 million of methamphetamines disguised as onions into California. Customs agents encountered the massive shipment while conducting a routine examination of a tractor trailer that crossed from Mexico through the Otay Mesa Port of Entry in Otay Mesa on February 20. CBP officers referred the truck's 46-year-old Mexican driver to an intrusive inspection and used a sniffer dog to screen the truck and the trailer when the dog picked up a strange smell. U.S. Customs and Border Protection agents at the Otay Mesa Port of Entry in Otay Mesa, California, seized a $2.9 million shipment of methamphetamine off a tractor trailer that crossed from Mexico on February 20 CBP said a sniffer dog led agents to 1,197 packages of methamphetamine that were mixed with thousands of pounds of onions that were shipped from Mexico In among the tens of thousands of regular onions, border agents found 1,197 packages of methamphetamine that were shaped into small globes with a white covering and apparently intended to look like the vegetable. 'This was not only a clever attempt to try and smuggle in narcotics, one I haven't seen before, but also time consuming to wrap narcotics into these small packages, designed to look like onions,' said Sidney Aki of US Customs and Border Protection (CBP) in San Diego. 'These efforts show how effective our officers are, and as a response, the lengths drug trafficking organizations are willing to go as they try to smuggle narcotics into the U.S. While we have certainly seen narcotics in produce before, it's unusual for us to see this level of detail in the concealment,' he added. The driver was apprehended on an attempted drug smuggling charge and then turned over to U.S. Immigration and Customs Enforcement for further processing. According to CBP, smugglers divided 1,336 pounds of methamphetamine into 1,197 small packages which they attempted to pass off as onions in a shipment that was intercepted by border agents on February 20 at the Otay Mesa Port of Entry in Otay Mesa, California On February 24, CBP agents in Louisville, Kentucky, intercepted cereal boxes that were loaded with marijuana bound for a private residence in Great Britain News of the 1,336-pound methamphetamine bust came as CBP revealed they had intercepted four pounds of marijuana hidden inside boxes of Lucky Charms cereals that were headed from Kentucky to the United Kingdom. On February 24, border agents in Louisville, Kentucky, were searching freight that was headed to a private residence in Great Britain when they noticed that the cereal boxes contained vacuum sealed bags. According to CBP's recent monthly report, border agents confiscated 234,513 pounds of narcotics, including 107,014 along the southwestern border region through the first four months of fiscal year 2022. Officers recovered 64,919 pounds of methamphetamine, 62,396 pounds of khat 55,540 pounds of marijuana and 19,265 pounds of cocaine between October 2021 and January 2021. Data for February hasn't been released yet. At least 913,326 pounds of drugs were seized in all of fiscal year 2021. A devastating Russian nuclear missile nicknamed 'Satan' could flatten every major Australian city if it's unleashed in the very unlikely event of all-out nuclear war, experts have warned. Ruthless Russian President Vladimir Putin has put his nuclear arms on high alert after Ukraine troops held off his invading forces, sending a chill through the West. Putin is now threatening the ultimate response in a bid to force Ukraine into surrender after growing frustrated by the lack of progress in his invasion plan. 'I'm ordering the Defence Minister and chief of the general staff to switch the Russian army's deterrent forces onto a high alert mode of combat standby duty,' he said on Monday. Fears are growing that if Ukraine continues to repel the invaders, Putin may resort to using small scale battlefield nuclear weapons to force them into submission. A devastating Russian nuclear missile nicknamed 'Satan' could flatten every major Australian city if it's unleashed in the unlikely event of all-out nuclear war (pictured, the potential effect on Sydney of Russia's biggest ever nuclear bomb, a Tsar Bomba) Ruthless Russian President Vladimir Putin (pictured) has put his nuclear arms on high alert after Ukraine forces held off his invading forces, sending a chill through the West Curtin University nuclear expert Victor Abramowicz insisted: 'Unless Putin is literally crazy, which is possible - he's already done things which are very unusual... 'But unless he's frothing at the mouth, he's not going to start a nuclear war. 'Using battlefield nuclear weapons would be an unmitigated disaster for Ukraine, but you'd need multiple steps for that to lead to missiles flying at Washington and Moscow. 'Never underestimate the possibility of unintended escalation, but there are decades and decades of experience in trying to avoid and manage nuclear escalation. 'A very, very great deal would need to go very wrong for it to end up in a position where this sort of stuff is happening.' Russia's R-36M2 missile (pictured) - dubbed the SS-18 Mod5 Satan by NATO - has an 11,000km range, carrying 10 warheads, each with a 1megaton payload Russia also has a fleet of nuclear-armed Typhoon-class submarines (pictured) patrolling oceans unseen and able to launch nukes without warning at targets anywhere in the world Bizarrely though, Perth in Western Australia could be the first place in the world to be targeted if Putin tries to prove a point and frighten the west into thinking a bigger city could be on the cards next. NATO generals have war-gamed various situations to pinpoint where Russia may target if it was ever to lash out in a bid to get the West to buckle to its demands. WHY PERTH WAS AT TOP OF NUCLEAR HITLIST IN 1980s At the height of the Cold War in the 1980s, Western generals would play out doomsday scenarios to anticipate nuclear attack possibilities. One nightmare they came up with was Soviet Russia wanting to play hardball without starting an all-out nuclear war. 'It would be a way of not attacking the US directly, which might prompt retaliation and destruction,' revealed Curtin University academic Victor Abramowicz. 'But you might drop a nuclear missile on Perth in particular because it was so isolated to show, "Look, we've just gone and wiped out a million people ...so come to the negotiating table if you want to make sure the next one isn't on Los Angeles." 'It was very hypothetical but back then the fear was that this was the sort of thing Moscow might do. 'There was paranoia on all sides.' Advertisement And bombing Perth - because of its remoteness from nearby civilisation - emerged as a terrifying possibility. They feared Russia may nuke Perth as a show of power and determination while still avoiding engaging the US in mutually-assured nuclear Armageddon. Despite potentially killing up to half a million in the nuclear bombing, future effects would be limited, with the radiation fallout confined to the vast desert outback. And now as the Ukraine invasion continues to stagnate in a frustrating stalemate for Russia, many are worried Putin will reach for his nuclear arsenal of 5977 warheads, the biggest in the world. It dwarfs even the US nuclear stockpile of 5,428 warheads, while France has 290 and the UK has just 225. Around 1600 of those Russian warheads are strategic and can be loaded onto intercontinental ballistic missiles which can reach almost anywhere in the world, including almost all of Australia. Russia's R-36M2 missile - dubbed the SS-18 Mod5 Satan by NATO - has an 11,000km range, carrying 10 warheads, each with a 1megaton payload. Even if launched from within Russia's borders, they are capable of reaching as far south as Melbourne before unleashing hell. Russia also has a fleet of nuclear-armed Typhoon-class submarines patrolling oceans unseen and able to launch nukes without warning at targets anywhere in the world. If Perth was specifically targeted by one of the Satan missiles, the effects would be devastating. If the Satan warheads explode in a 10MT airburst over Perth (pictured), modelling predicts 505,000 fatalities instantly, with another 575,000 injured. The central yellow sphere shows the area hit by the nuclear fireball. The darker grey ring is the serious damage blast radius. The larger orange circle is the radiation burn area, while the outer ring is the lighter damage area, with blown out windows and glass maiming injuries A surface blast would restrict casualties to 327,000 dead and another 420,000 casualties, but it would taint the land for centuries to come with fallout spreading 1000km inland (pictured) If the Satan warheads explode in a 10MT airburst over Perth, modelling by Nukemap predicts 505,000 fatalities instantly, with another 575,000 injured. A surface blast would restrict casualties to 327,000 dead and another 420,000 casualties, but it would taint the land for centuries to come with fallout spreading 1000km inland. But if the attack was to target Sydney or Melbourne, the carnage would be almost unimaginable. Almost a million would die instantly in a 5km fireball which would engulf Sydney city centre, turning the inner-west, CBD and Eastern Suburbs to ash. Buildings would be crushed to dust from Homebush to Collaroy to Cronulla. If the airburst happened over Parramatta, the devastation would be even greater. The entire greater Sydney area from Penrith to Richmond to Palm Beach to Camden and the Royal National Park would be ablaze. If a nuclear attack targeted Sydney or Melbourne, the carnage would be almost unimaginable Almost a million would die instantly in a 5km fireball which would engulf Sydney city centre, turning the inner-west, CBD and Eastern Suburbs to ash (pictured) A surface blast could cause a fifth or so less deaths and injuries, but create a radiation cloud that would stretch up the coast to Newcastle and beyond, blowing out to sea as far up as the Gold Coast (pictured) DECODING PUTIN'S NUCLEAR THREAT Putin's warning putting his nuclear forces on 'high alert mode of combat stand-by duty' is seen as only step two of four on the way to a nuclear war, says Victor Abramowicz. Expert Pavel Podvig adds that it probably puts them on a 'preliminary command' that would allow missiles to be fired to order. But he considered at this stage that they would only be fired if the president suddenly vanished and enemy nukes hit Russian territory first. David Cullen, of the Nuclear Information Service, compared it to UK nuclear submarine commanders being given letters of authority by the British PM for permission to launch missiles if London came under nuclear attack. Advertisement Anyone in the city left alive after the nuclear fireball and initial blast would be suffering third degree radiation burns all over their body, with many losing limbs. The only saving grace might be that all their nerve-endings would probably be burnt away and they'd feel little to no pain. Further out and windows in the Illawarra and Central Coast would be blown out by the blast, inflicting maiming injuries on locals, many of whom would be standing by a window to watch the distant explosion. A surface blast could cause a fifth or so fewer deaths and injuries, but create a radiation cloud that would stretch up the coast to Newcastle and beyond, blowing out to sea as far up as the Gold Coast. 'Theres no doubt that any large-scale nuclear weapons use would be quite catastrophic,' Australian National University Professor Stephan Fruehling told the I've Got News For You podcast. 'If you have a nuclear weapon thats exploded on the ground, youre looking at a very significant fallout plume and local contamination, which is essentially dangerous because of the radiotoxicity and contaminating water supplies and food chains.' In Melbourne, a similar airburst explosion would instantly destroy everywhere around the CBD including Docklands, South and East Melbourne and Carlton in a deadly fireball. In Melbourne, a similar airburst explosion would instantly destroy everywhere around the CBD including Docklands, South and East Melbourne and Carlton in a near 3km fireball (pictured) HOW CONVENTIONAL WAR COULD BLOW UP TO BECOME NUCLEAR ARMAGEDDON The underlying fear of nuclear weapons has rarely been an immediate leap to suddenly launching strategic intercontinental ballistic missiles at Washington or Moscow. The biggest fear was one side using much smaller, tactical nuclear weapons to end a military deadlock in a localised battle - like Russia is now facing in Ukraine. They could be used as a warning shot to the other side - and the rest of the world - of the need to surrender or face the might of a full nuclear attack. Australian National University, Professor Stephan Fruehling told the I've Got News For You podcast tactical weapons may be used as a show of power to 'flatten a few trees'. 'Its quite feasible to imagine a credible and deliberate use of nuclear weapons in a way that deliberately doesnt kill anybody,' he said. 'In many ways, that would actually make a lot of sense.' But it could provoke a response from other nuclear-equipped nations, keen to deliver their own message to the rival superpower. And without intervention, that could then dramatically escalate into a full-on nuclear Armageddon. Nuclear warfare expert Victor Abramowicz insisted though: 'It's a really pretty damn unlikely set of set of contingencies. It's definitely possible - but extremely unlikely.' Advertisement More than 900,000 would die in a blink of an eye with another 1.3 million injured. Everything from Sunshine West to Box Hill and north to Broadmeadows would be flattened in a 30km-wide blast range. Everyone from Orangefields to Boronia to Whalan would be burnt to a crisp, with windows blown out and property damaged 85km from the epicentre, stretching from Frankston to Bacchus Marsh to Wallan. A surface explosion would reduce the death total by a couple of hundred thousand, but the radiation cloud would stretch across Victoria, over Albany and Canberra and reach Sydney and Newcastle. But nuclear expert Victor Abramowicz believes Putin is simply sabre-rattling at the west, for the moment. 'It's just signalling to America and the rest of the Western world who have been imposing sanctions,' the Darwin-based Ostoya Consulting principal told Daily Mail Australia. 'It's trying to put a bit of the fear of God into them, in the sense that if you push too hard, you know, look what we might do... it's just posturing.' He added: 'Sanctions may make life very unpleasant - but they're not going to ruin Russia forever. Nuclear war would be the end of Russia and the world as we know it. 'If it does, it would be catastrophic. If Melbourne has 40 per cent of its population instantly wiped out, the city ceases to exist.' But Russian expert Dr Leonid Petrov insisted Australia would be very low on Putin's list of target priorities. 'When you have a limited supply of missiles, why would you launch one at Australia when it could be aimed at a target in the US?' he said. Mr Abramowicz said Russian warpower will ultimately overcome Ukraine in conventional warfare, without ever having to even consider using tactical battlefield nuclear weapons. 'If the Russians do decide they actually want to fight properly - for want of a better phrase - they effectively can't lose,' he added. Professor Fruelhing agreed and said Russia had restrained its military action so far to reinforce the idea that the invasion is somehow bringing the nation back into the Russian fold. He added: 'They are fighting, if you like, with one hand behind their back.' Putin is said to be frustrated at the lack of progress in his Ukraine invasion (pictured) and is now threatening the ultimate response in a bid to force the nation to surrender Russia simply cannot lose even a conventional war against Ukraine, without having to resort to even battlefield nuclear weapons (pictured, Kyiv in flames as Russia attacks) Mr Abramowicz added: 'Their army is bigger and better and has more artillery and more rockets and more aircraft and more everything. 'But once you start fighting properly, the war turns into more of a meat grinder, particularly to the Ukrainians. 'This is when you start blowing up apartment blocks and launching huge artillery strikes and aircraft dropping bombs left, right and centre. 'Tens of thousands of people will die and it's terribly ugly. 'The only way to avoid that is a negotiated settlement - but that could see insurgency attacks and a civil war that rolls on for years.' A mother was so drunk she repeatedly tipped her pram over on a Tube escalator in front of shocked passengers, a court heard. Deirdre O'Riordan, 35, repeatedly tried to put the buggy on the moving staircase at Canada Water station in central London but it toppled over and the baby fell out at around 1:10am on February 26. O'Riordan, from Stratford-upon-Avon, had spent the evening drinking with a friend while her partner attended a work do, Westminster Magistrates' Court heard yesterday. She admitted being drunk in charge of her child and spent the weekend in custody. Judge Daniel Sternberg gave the woman a conditional discharge because she had spent the weekend in custody, and said punishment from the court 'is nothing compared to knowing that was the way you behaved'. O'Riordan sat with her head bowed in the dock wearing a black cardigan. Dierdre O'Riordan, 35, repeatedly tried to put the buggy on the moving staircase at Canada Water station in central London but it toppled over and the baby fell out at around 1:10am on February 26 Malcolm Duxbury, defending, had told the court: 'The lady's husband sits at the back of the court, the baby is with him now. 'The parties had driven down to London because this lady's husband had a work function. They booked into a hotel in Cricklewood. 'The husband would go to the work function and Mrs O'Riordan would visit a friend. She did consume some alcohol. She has no recollection of the night but she does remember the incident with the escalator. 'She is not working at the moment. She is signed off sick because a few years back she had a brain tumour.' Judge Sternberg told O'Riordan: 'At approximately 1:10 in the morning you were at Canada Water station with your child and you were behaving in such a way as to cause other people in the station to be concerned for your child' Judge Sternberg told O'Riordan: 'At approximately 1:10 in the morning you were at Canada Water station with your child and you were behaving in such a way as to cause other people in the station to be concerned for your child. 'On at least one occasion you tried to put the pram on an escalator which resulted in the pram falling over and the child falling out. 'You were so drunk the paramedics had to attend and assess you and your child who was taken to hospital before being released. 'You pleaded guilty but the punishment from this court is nothing compared to knowing that was the way you behaved.' O'Riordan, of Stratford-upon-Avon, Warwickshire, admitted being drunk in charge of a child. Exxon Mobil said it will pull its $4billion Russian oil and gas operations and halt new investments as a result of Russia's invasion of Ukraine. The decision, which was made on Tuesday, will see Exxon pull out of managing its large oil and gas production facilities on Sakhalin Island in Russia's Far East. This decision puts the fate of a proposed multi-billion dollar liquefied natural gas (LNG) facility there in doubt. 'We deplore Russia's military action that violates the territorial integrity of Ukraine and endangers its people,' the company said in a statement critical of the intensifying military attacks. 'ExxonMobil supports the people of Ukraine as they seek to defend their freedom and determine their own future as a nation.' Its planned exit follows dozens of other Western companies ranging from Apple and Boeing to other oil investors BP PLC and Shell - which also announced they would be pulling out investments from Russia - and energy company Norway's Equinor ASA that have halted business or announced plans to abandon their Russia operations. 'We are fully complying with all sanctions,' the company said in a statement. Exxon Mobil showed its support for Ukraine by pulling out of the Sakhalin-1 project in Russia. The company said it 'deplored' Russian's actions The company has a 30 per cent stake in the Sahkalin-1 project and have produced 1billion barrels of oil since the project started in 2005 The project is located on Sakhalin Island, off the coast of Russia Exxon, which is scheduled to meet with Wall Street analysts on Wednesday, did not provide a timetable for its exit, nor comment on potential asset write-downs. Its Russia assets were valued at $4.055 billion in its latest annual report, filed in February. Earlier, Exxon began removing US employees from Russia, two people familiar with the matter said. The number of staff being evacuated is said to be around 1,000, the Wall Street Journal reported. The company sent a plane to Sakhalin Island to retrieve staff, a source said. Exxon operates three large offshore oil and gas fields with operations based on Sakhalin Island on behalf of a consortium of Japanese, Indian and Russian companies that included Russia's Rosneft. The group had been advancing plans to add a LNG export terminal at the site. 'Exxon's Russian business is relatively small in the context of its wider enterprise, so it does not have the same significance as it has to BP or TotalEnergies, if it were to abandon its Russian assets,' Anish Kapadia, a director at energy and mining researcher Pallissy Advisors told Reuters. The project only represents around three per cent of Exxon's overall oil production, the Wall Street Journal reported. However, the company owns 30 percent of the Sakhalin-1 project and is responsible for keeping production and essential functions running, the Wall Street Journal said. Selling its stake in the project could also prove difficult, as well, as the market for Russian goods has minimized since last week. This isn't the first time Exxon has pulled projects out of Russia and has pull 10 ventures out the last decade following previous rounds of sanctions on Russia, the Wall Street Journal reported. The company, which has been developing its Russian oil and gas fields since 1995 and it one of the biggest foreign investments in the country, had come under pressure to cut its ties with Russia over the country's invasion of Ukraine. Russia calls its actions in Ukraine a 'special operation.' The company has been developing its Russian oil and gas fields since 1995 The Sakhalin facilities, which Exxon has operated since production began in 2005 and the company has been developing it for decades. The operation recently has pumped about 220,000 barrels per day of oil and about 1billion barrels of oil and 1billion cubic feet in gas since the beginning. Japan's Sakhalin Oil and Gas Development (SODECO), which also owns a 30 per cent stake in the Sakhalin-1 project, is trying to confirm details of Exxon's announcement, a spokesperson said, adding that it will keep an eye on the Russia-Ukraine situation and decide what to do in the future. Exxon will also be evacuated its 1,000 employees from the island (pictured) Exxon operates three large offshore oil and gas fields with operations based on Sakhalin Island on behalf of a consortium of Japanese, Indian and Russian companies that included Russia's Rosneft. The group had been advancing plans to add a LNG export terminal at the site State-backed oil producer Japan Petroleum Exploration Co (Japex), which owns 15.285 per cent in SODECO, is also checking details of the Exxon's announcement and will talk to its partners to decide a future plan, a Japex spokesperson said. BP also recently announced it would cut nearly 20 per cent of its ties with Rosneft - which also has ties to the Sakhalin-1 project - which is projected to lose the company billions. In addition, the current and former CEO have left the Rosneft board and quit several Russian ventures. Shell also said it would pull out of it's ventures with Gazprom PJSC, another Russian energy giant, and quit the Nord Stream 2 natural-gas pipeline project. Equinor ASA also said it would halt new investments and start leaving its Russian ventures. TotalEnergies said it would stop providing capital to new Russian projects, but did not say it would pull out completely. It has significant stakes with Russian producer Novatek. French Finance Minister Bruno Le Maire said it would discuss the company's presence in Russia. Advertisement The fire-ravaged US-bound cargo ship that was transporting thousands of supercars including Porsches has sunk in the middle of the Atlantic. The Felicity Ace sank about 250 miles off Portugal's Azores Islands as it was being towed, just 13 days after a fire broke out on board, according to the Portuguese navy. The 650ft vessel listed to starboard before going under, the ship's manager said. The Portuguese navy confirmed the sinking, saying it occurred outside Portuguese waters. A Portuguese Air Force helicopter evacuated the 22 crew members when the fire first broke out, setting the ship adrift. Ocean-going tugboats with firefighting equipment had been hosing down the ship's hull to cool it. The Felicity Ace sank about 250 miles off Portugal's Azores Islands as it was being towed, just 13 days after a fire broke out on board, according to the Portuguese navy The Felicity Ace ship carrying luxury cars, is seen as it is adrift in the middle of the Atlantic Ocean after it caught fire, near Portugal on February 18 The ship, Felicity Ace, which was traveling from Emden, Germany, where Volkswagen has a factory, to Davisville, in the U.S. state of Rhode Island, burns more than 100 km from the Azores islands, Portugal Felicity Ace adrift after a fire broke out on board on February 16 off the Portuguese coast. - A freighter carrying thousands of luxury vehicles which caught fire almost two weeks ago off the Azores archipelago, got shipwrecked on March 1 It wasn't clear how many cars were onboard the ship, but vessels of the Felicity Ace's size can carry at least 4,000 vehicles. European carmakers declined to discuss how many vehicles and what models were on board, but Porsche customers in the United States were being contacted by their dealers, the company said. 'We are already working to replace every car affected by this incident and the first new cars will be built soon,' Angus Fitton, vice president of PR at Porsche Cars North America, Inc., told The Associated Press in an email. The ship was transporting electric and non-electric vehicles, according to Portuguese authorities. Suspicion on what started the fire on February 16 has fallen on lithium batteries used in electric vehicles, though authorities say they have no firm evidence about the cause. Authorities feared the ship, which was carrying 2,200 tons of fuel and 2,200 tons of oil, could pollute the ocean. It can carry more than 17,000 metric tons (18,700 tons) of cargo. The Portuguese navy said in a statement that only a few pieces of wreckage and a small patch of oil was visible where the ship went down. The tugboats were breaking up the patch with hoses, it said. The ship, Felicity Ace, which was traveling from Emden, Germany, where Volkswagen has a factory, to Davisville, in the U.S. state of Rhode Island, burns more than 100 km from the Azores islands, Portugal The Portuguese navy said in a statement that only a few pieces of wreckage and a small patch of oil was visible where the ship went down It wasn't clear how many cars were onboard the ship, but vessels of the Felicity Ace's size can carry at least 4,000 vehicles The 650-feet-long ship was sailing from Emden in Germany and had left on February 10 and was heading to the port of Davisville in the U.S. state of Rhode Island , according to online vessel trackers A Portuguese Air Force plane and a Portuguese navy vessel are to remain at the scene on the lookout for signs of pollution. The 650-feet-long ship was sailing from Emden in Germany and had left on February 10 and was heading to the port of Davisville in the U.S. state of Rhode Island, according to online vessel trackers. The ship, which can carry up to 4,000 vehicles, was originally expected to arrive at Davisville on February 23. The ship regularly transports cars for Volkswagen, Lamborghini, Audi and Porsche. Eager Porsche buyers logging into the Track Your Dream service, which details the progress of the car's delivery, stated how the company was 'aware of an incident on the Felicity Ace carrying certain Porsche vehicles.' Matt Farah, the man behind The Smoking Tire YouTube channel, posted Wednesday regarding his own Porsche that was apparently onboard the ship. Eager Porsche buyers logging into the Track Your Dream service, which details the progress of the car's delivery, stated how the company was 'aware of an incident on the Felicity Ace carrying certain Porsche vehicles The ship was transporting electric and non-electric vehicles, according to Portuguese authorities. Suspicion on what started the fire on Feb. 16 has fallen on lithium batteries used in electric vehicles, though authorities say they have no firm evidence about the cause Authorities feared the ship, which was carrying 2,200 tons of fuel and 2,200 tons of oil, could pollute the ocean. It can carry more than 17,000 metric tons (18,700 tons) of cargo The Portuguese navy said in a statement that only a few pieces of wreckage and a small patch of oil was visible where the ship went down. The tugboats were breaking up the patch with hoses, it said 'I ordered a Boxster Spyder in August, and I was very excited to get it at the end of this month, and now it seems like it might become an artificial reef,' said Matt Farah who runs the Smoking Tire YouTube channel, which has more than 1 million subscribers. 'I'm only saying this because I know no one was hurt, which is obviously more important.' On Wednesday, Porsche released a statement over the stricken ship. 'Our immediate thoughts are of the 22 crew of the merchant ship Felicity Ace, all of whom we understand are safe and well as a result of their rescue by the Portuguese Navy following reports of a fire on board. 'We believe a number of our cars are among the cargo on board the ship. No further details of the specific cars affected are available at this time we are in close contact with the shipping company and will share more information in due course.' Volkswagen also released a statement: 'We are aware of an incident today involving a cargo ship transporting Volkswagen Group vehicles across the Atlantic. At this time, we are not aware of any injuries. We are working with local authorities and the shipping company to investigate the cause of the incident.' A Portuguese Navy spokesperson said there were no more details about the ongoing operation. Bob Baffert has sued Churchill Downs and track leadership in federal court, seeking to overturn the embattled Hall of Fame trainer's two-year doping suspension on grounds it violated his due process rights. The historic track suspended Baffert last spring through 2023 and cited a recent spate of failed drug tests by his horses including now-deceased colt Medina Spirit after he won the Kentucky Derby. A postrace drug test revealed the corticosteroid betamethasone in his system, which is allowed in Kentucky but prohibited on race day. Medina Spirit died on December 6 from what Baffert said was a heart attack following a workout at Santa Anita race track in California. The suit filed Tuesday in US District Court and obtained by DailyMail.com names Churchill Downs Inc., CEO William C. Carstanjen and board chair R. Alex Rankin. Kentucky racing stewards last week disqualified Medina Spirit and handed Baffert a 90-day suspension and $7,500 fine. Churchill Downs recognized runner-up Mandaloun as winner soon after. Kentucky Horse Racing Commission director Marc A. Guilfoil on Friday denied the trainer's request to stay the suspension that is scheduled to begin on March 8. Baffert and his representatives have argued that the steroid in Medina Spirit came from the topical ointment Otomax, rather than an injection that is banned. Attorney Clark Brewster stated in a release Tuesday that Churchill Downs is not tasked with relegating horse racing in Kentucky but 'could unilaterally ban' a trainer without having facts or any semblance of due process. 'Churchill Downs and Mr. Carstanjen knew full well that imposing its suspension, based on zero factual or legal support, would give illegitimate credibility to a false narrative about Bob,' Brewster added, 'creating pressure on the Kentucky Race Horsing Commission stewards to take action against him, too.' Churchill Downs called Baffert's lawsuit disappointing but not surprising in a statement and said it would fight the suit and defend the company's rights. Jockey John Velazquez, front left, stands with Jill Baffert as they watch as Jill's husband, trainer Bob Baffert, holds up the winner's trophy after their victory with Medina Spirit in the 147th running of the Kentucky Derby at Churchill Downs in Louisville. Medina Spirit was stripped of the victory in last year's Kentucky Derby and Mandaloun was declared the winner in a ruling by state racing stewards on Monday, February 21 Medina Spirit (pictured) was stripped of the victory in last year's Kentucky Derby and Mandaloun was declared the winner after a ruling by state racing stewards on Monday 'His claims are meritless and consistent with his pattern of failed drug tests, denials, excuses and attempts to blame others and identify loopholes in order to avoid taking responsibility for his actions,' it added. Baffert has claimed that Medina Spirit died of a heart attack, but a necropsy failed to reveal any definitive cause of death. The report said no other drugs, heavy metals or toxicants were detected. The necropsy included gross examination of the body and internal organs, and specimen collection for microscopic examination, toxicology, drug testing, and genetic testing, with specimens also stored for possible future testing. Any potential rule violations uncovered in the review process will be investigated by the CHRB and would result in a complaint and possible disciplinary action. The horse's ashes will be interred at a retirement farm for thoroughbred horses in Kentucky. Baffert initially denied wrongdoing after a post-race drug test revealed 21 picograms of betamethasone in the horse's system following the Kentucky Derby win. He later acknowledged treating the horse with a topical ointment containing the corticosteroid for a skin inflammation. Churchill Downs subsequently suspended Baffert, citing a recent spate of failed drug tests by his horses. Baffert sued the racing commission last June, seeking custody of remnant samples of Medina Spirit's blood and urine for subsequent testing to prove that the steroid did not come from an injection. Craig Robertson, an attorney for Baffert, said in December that a urine test from a split sample showed the steroid came from an ointment. On February 21, Robertson vowed to appeal the Kentucky Horse Racing Commission's decision. 'We have 10 days to file an appeal, we'll do it right away. We won't wait the 10 days,' Robertson said in a statement to TVG. 'The matter will then go before the commission and they'll have to appoint a hearing officer to hear the case and there will be time given to take some discover, documents, depositions. It's a several months process.' Medina Spirit #8, ridden by jockey John Velazquez, (R) crosses the finish line to win the 147th running of the Kentucky Derby ahead of Mandaloun #7, ridden by Florent Geroux, and Hot Rod Charlie #9 ridden by Flavien Prat at Churchill Downs The February 21 decision by the Kentucky Horse Racing Commission made Medina Sprit the second horse in the 146-year history of the race to be disqualified for a banned substance; the first was Dancer's Image in 1968, a decision that gave Forward Pass the victory. The only other disqualification was in 2019 when Maximum Security was penalized because of interference. Following the announcement by the racing stewards, Churchill Downs issued a statement declaring Mandaloun the Kentucky Derby winner and congratulating owner and breeder Juddmonte Farms, trainer Brad Cox and jockey Florent Geroux. Cox became the first Louisville native to win the most famous race in the sport, and Mandaloun's owners received the $1.8 million winner's purse. 'We look forward to celebrating Mandaloun on a future date in a way that is fitting of this rare distinction,' the statement said. Baffert originally blamed 'cancel culture' for the colt's positive test in May of 2021. 'Well I haven't heard anything officially,' Baffert told Fox News at the time. 'They haven't told me anything. 'I know when Churchill Downs came out with that statement, that was pretty harsh,' Baffert continued, referring to the Kentucky race track's decision to suspend him on after one of Medina Spirit's blood samples was found to contain a prohibited amount of the anti-inflammatory drug, betamethasone. 'With all the noise going out, we live in a different world now. This America is different. It was like a cancel culture kind of a thing. Medina Spirit was Baffert's fifth horse known to have failed a drug test in just over a year, but the California-based trainer insisted that he and the colt were the victims of an 'injustice.' 'How do I move forward from this, knowing that something can happen?' Baffert asked. 'It's a complete injustice, but I'm going to fight it tooth and nail, because I owe it to the horse, I owe it to the owner, and to our industry. 'We're going to do a complete investigation, our own investigation, we're going to be transparent with the racing commission, like we've always been.' Betamethasone is the same drug that was found in the system of Gamine, another Baffert-trained horse who finished third in the Kentucky Oaks in September of 2020. Gamine was eventually disqualified from that finish because of that test and Baffert was fined $1,500. Betamethasone is legal under Kentucky racing rules, though it must be cleared 14 days before a horse races. The failed drug test was just another in a long series of events shadowing the sport and the Derby, its best known and most prestigious race in recent years. Maximum Security crossed the line first in the 2019 Kentucky Derby before being disqualified by Churchill Downs stewards for interference in what was an unprecedented move. Country House, which crossed the line second in that race, is now considered the winner. In March 2020, Jason Servis who was Maximum Security's trainer was part of a sweeping indictment that involved trainers, veterinarians and pharmacists in a horse doping ring. Baffert faced the doping allegations in Arkansas and Kentucky in 2020 with Gamine, and now this. 'I'm worried about our sport,' Baffert said. 'Our sport, we've taken a lot of hits as a sport. These are pretty serious accusations here, but we're going to get to the bottom of it and find out. We know we didn't do it.' Putin later accused of bombing hospitals and schools in Syrian Civil War Tactics targeting civilians and infrastructure have been deployed by Putin before Fears are rife that Vladimir Putin is turning to previous barbaric tactics of targeting civilians and levelling cities as the war in Ukraine continues to intensify. Amid a sixth day of violence in the country, missiles hit capital Kyiv's TV station tower, knocking out some broadcasters, and destroyed a nearby holocaust memorial. Over the weekend, yet more rockets rained down on apartment buildings in the east and banned cluster bomb munitions were reportedly being used against civilians. Speaking of the horrific scenes created by Russia, Former US Defense Secretary William Cohen told CNN that Putin was planning to 'lay siege to Kyiv' and 'unleash holy hell in terms of hitting civilian areas, killing hundreds if not thousands of civilians'. Prime Minister Boris Johnson was among the first to condemn the attacks as he urged Putin not to 'Grozny-fy' Kyiv as Russian forces faced fierce resistance from brave Ukrainian fighters. Fears are rife that Vladimir Putin is turning to previous barbaric tactics of targeting civilians and levelling cities as the war in Ukraine continues to intensify. Pictured: Shelling on Ukrainian streets by Russia takes its toll Smoke rises around Kyiv's main television tower after several explosions near the base of it on Tuesday afternoon. Prime Minister Boris Johnson was among the first to condemn the attacks as he urged Putin not to 'Grozny-fy' Kyiv as Russian forces faced fierce resistance from brave Ukrainian fighters His 'Grozny-fy' comment refers to the capital city of the Chechen Republic in Russia's south which was almost completely decimated in the Second Chechen War in 2000 - at a cost of many thousands of lives. The city was the site of chemical weapons attacks, indiscriminate bombing, and cluster bombs. These are the tactics of President Putin's war playbook. If things do not go to plan or there are setbacks, then he will double down with even harder force. Chechnya, the first major conflict of his time in power, gave the first glimpse into his unrelenting approach that was repeated in Syria, Georgia, and to a lesser extent in Crimea. And now the threat of themobaric 'vacuum' bombs on the battlefields of Ukraine show Putin is serious. Russian forces had already spent years suppressing the independence movement in Chechnya when, in 1999, Putin took control of Russia as Boris Yeltsin resigned. Mr Johnson's 'Grozny-fy' comment refers to the capital city of the Chechen Republic in Russia's south which was almost completely decimated in the Second Chechen War in 2000 - at a cost of many thousands of lives Putin and his commanders were relentless: Grozny was first blockaded, with no ammunition, food or other supplies able to enter; artillery bombardment stretched on for weeks, killing thousands; and later both sides were accused of using chemical weapons against each other Grozny was eventually lost on February 6, 2000 - between 5,000 and 8,000 civilians had been killed, and every single building was damaged He immediately faced the issue of the Chechen republic, where fighters had invaded neighbouring Dagestan and claimed an independent Islamic caliphate. Putin went on the offensive, using intensive heavy artillery and aerial bombardment campaigns to wear down their forces. Key to victory however would be the Battle of Grozny, Chechnya's capital city and fighters with an innate knowledge of the area were bedded down to defend. In a chilling echo of Ukraine today, Russia was at first met with fierce heavy resistance, with the Chechens using trench systems and even the sewers to expertly defend against an advance. Whole buildings could be booby-trapped or boarded up, sprung to create a deadly ambush. But Putin and his commanders were relentless: Grozny was first blockaded, with no ammunition, food or other supplies able to enter; artillery bombardment stretched on for weeks, killing thousands; and later both sides were accused of using chemical weapons against each other. Grozny was eventually lost on February 6, 2000 - between 5,000 and 8,000 civilians had been killed, and every single building was damaged. The horrors of the Russia war machine did not reach their peak however until the Syrian Civil War - which Russia joined in 2015 and for which it was found to have committed war crimes by the UN One human rights group found that between 17 September and 13 October, 2015, 36 Russian strikes hit only two ISIS targets and 22 civilian targets including hospitals, a fire hall, at least one school. There were 70 civilian deaths The UK-based pro-opposition Syrian Observatory for Human Rights (SOHR) said that between the initiation of the intervention in September 2015 and February 2016, Russian air strikes killed at least 1,700 civilians, including more than 200 children The bombardment had been so brutal that by 2003, the United Nations was still calling Grozny the most destroyed city on earth. But importantly for Putin the war would be the first in a string of wins during his Presidency - and he is yet to 'lose' a conflict that he has been involved in. 'When it comes to waging war, he [Putin] is not bound by any sense of propriety or concern about how many or who are killed,' former Secretary Cohen said of Putin's tactics. The horrors of the Russia war machine did not reach their peak however until the Syrian Civil War - which Russia joined in 2015 and for which it was found to have committed war crimes by the UN. Putin came in on the side of President Bashar al-Assad following a request for air support. But rather than taking on just Islamic State terrorists, Russian officials at the time said they would help the Syrian government retake territory from various anti-government and rebel groups. Employing the same scorched-earth policy as in Chechnya to find and kill rebel groups, Putin's forces began a series of airstrikes and bombing campaigns that would kill thousands. Amnesty International and other human rights groups reported Syria and Russia targeting and destroying several hospitals and schools. One group found that between 17 September and 13 October, 2015, 36 Russian strikes hit only two ISIS targets and 22 civilian targets including hospitals, a fire hall, at least one school. There were 70 civilian deaths. The UK-based pro-opposition Syrian Observatory for Human Rights (SOHR) said that between the initiation of the intervention in September 2015 and February 2016, Russian air strikes killed at least 1,700 civilians, including more than 200 children. Ukraine is now the latest country to face a Russian invading force - and the full cost of life and physical destruction will not be known for months. Yesterday, in one of their strikes on Ukrainian targets, Russia hit the Babyn Yar holocaust memorial in Kyiv - the site of one of the biggest single massacres of Jews during the Holocaust. The memorial had been built by the ravine where nearly 34,000 Jews were killed by SS troops in two days in 1941 during Adolf Hitler's campaign against the Soviet Union. After the latest attack, Volodymyr Zelensky tweeted: 'To the world: what is the point of saying 'never again' for 80 years, if the world stays silent when a bomb drops on the same site of Babyn Yar? At least 5 killed.' Much like with Putin's use of tactics, Zelensky ended by warning of 'history repeating' itself. Australian shoppers have urged Coles and Woolworths to change the name of their chicken Kiev to Kyiv in recognition of an independent Ukraine. The Ukrainian capital was known as Kiev (pronounced key-ev) under Soviet rule but Ukrainians call the city Kyiv (pronounced kee-yeev). 'Hey Coles, I know it's not much but could you please rename your products to chicken Kyiv in solidarity with Ukraine,' one customer wrote. 'So it's now chicken Kyiv, can someone tell Woolies and Coles,' another added. Australian shoppers have demanded Coles and Woolworths change the name of their chicken Kiev to Kyiv in recognition of an independent Ukraine Shoppers said the spelling should be changed in recognition of an independent Ukraine 'What better time to change the name of these,' a third added. Coles said it 'doesn't intend to make any changes to product names at this point', with the cost being too expensive. Woolworths has been contacted for comment. The dish became widely popular in Western countries in the 1970s and was even served at a May 1990 dinner at the Soviet embassy in Washington DC to then leader Mikhail Gorbachev as Soviet Union collapsed. But the origin of the dish, and therefore whether it should be called chicken Kiev, with the Russian name, or Kyiv, with the Ukrainian spelling, is disputed. Russians claim it was invented in the Muscovy region of the old Russian Empire, while some Ukrainians chefs insist they have the only authentic recipe due to small tweaks made by a chef in Kyiv. However, the origin can be traced back to France in the 1800s. Viacheslav Gribov, who worked as head chef for Kyiv's Hotel Dnipro, said Russian royalty sent chefs to Paris to learn from the best in the 1840s and they returned with a recipe called Mikhailovska cutlet. 'The dish was made in Paris with veal but in Moscow, it was made with chicken. At that time, chicken was more expensive and considered more of a delicacy,' Gribov told US National Public Radio. The dish (pictured) was originally made by Russian chefs who travelled to France to learn their techniques but later perfected in Ukraine Ukraine's capital city (pictured) is called Kyiv by Ukrainians with the Russian spelling Kiev associated with Soviet rule Originally served only in high-end dining rooms such as the Merchant Club in Russia, the dish eventually became more common appearing in the Russian Tea Room in New York in the 1950s to cater for new immigrants where the name 'Chicken Kiev' was coined. Gribov claimed Ukrainian chefs then perfected the modern day recipe - which does not include garlic or cheese, has a bone sticking out to stop the butter leaking, and, if done properly, some of the butter remains un-melted. 'This began as a dish for dignitaries meeting one another. You would never serve them garlic,' he said. 'We don't just learn how to make the dish; we also learn a special way of serving and cutting it to avoid butter splashing out.' Other Ukrainian oral traditions claim the Continental Hotel in central Kyiv invented the modern version of the dish in the early 20th Century. The name Kyiv for the Ukrainian capital city itself stems from recognition of Ukraine's independence in 1991 after the fall of the Soviet Union. The name did not gain widespread recognition until after the Maidan Revolution of 2014 in which pro-Russian leader Viktor Yanukovych, widely accused of being corrupt, was ousted and the country sought closer ties with the West. Young Ukrainians see 'Kiev' as a relic of the Soviet era (Pictured: the country's president Volodymyr Zelenskyy) As Ukrainians defend themselves from a Russian invasion, Ukrainian language teacher Andrii Smytsniuk of Cambridge University said the name carries a lot of meaning. 'Many Ukrainians see this as a sign of respect for their language and identity,' Mr Smytsniuk told The Guardian. 'I think it's right to pronounce it 'Kyiv' - as close to the Ukrainian as possible,' he said. The Ukrainian government even launched an awareness campaign four years ago and there is a Twitter hashtag #KyivNotKiev. Amid Putin's unprovoked aggression companies are seeing increased pressure to distance themselves from Russia. Big brands including Apple, Google, Ford and Harley-Davidson on Tuesday stopped sales in the country joining a growing list of businesses. This, along with heavy economic sanctions from western governments and major commodity players such as BP and Shell withdrawing from Russian deals, has already caused the country's share market to tank and the value of the Russian ruble to plunge. A former special forces soldier who revealed he suffers memory loss due to medications for mental illness will continue giving evidence at the Ben Roberts-Smith defamation trial. The witness codenamed Person Four alleged that he watched Mr Roberts-Smith kick an unarmed and handcuffed Afghan prisoner off a 'steep slope' in the village of Darwan, Uruzgan province in September 2012. Mr Roberts-Smith vehemently disputes the allegation and testified in the Federal Court that the man was a Taliban spotter shot in a cornfield. Witness said he was approached by another soldier wanting to discredit Ben Roberts-Smith. After rising through the elite soldiers' ranks to sergeant, Person Four was medically discharged from the Australian Defence Force in 2021. Details of his mental health disorders and the medications he takes were also suppressed by the court. As a result he suffers from some 'mental impairment,' and 'memory loss' on occasion, 'ruminating thoughts' and 'flashbacks' about his time serving in the defence force. At times he has trouble sleeping, difficulty concentrating and recalling specifics. 'I think the minutia of things was fading away, small details, large details definitely not,' he said on Tuesday. While he does experience 'flashbacks,' at times, he denied having 'hallucinations' or 'hearing things that are not real'. Person Four said he was approached by another soldier he said wanted to 'discredit' Mr Roberts-Smith to a journalist. He was asked if it was fair to say there were rumours this soldier codenamed Person Six wanted to bring Mr Roberts-Smith down. 'That's correct,' Person Four said. Mr Roberts-Smith, 43, is suing The Age, The Sydney Morning Herald and The Canberra Times over reports that he committed war crimes and murders in Afghanistan between 2006 and 2012. The embattled Victoria Cross recipient suggested accusations stem from jealousy in the ranks One of a handful of Australian recipients of the Victoria Cross since 1970, he has suggested some claims stem from jealous associates spiteful of his achievements. Person Four's evidence that began on Monday also focuses on an earlier contested mission in 2009 at a Taliban compound nicknamed Whiskey 108. The fresh trooper on his first deployment 'outside the wire' was allegedly ordered to execute an older prisoner while his superior Mr Roberts-Smith did nothing to dissuade the command, nor stop him. This makes him complicit in and 'responsible for murder,' according to the defence file, while another soldier has accused the decorated soldier of ordering the killing. Following Person Four's objections answering questions could 'self-incriminate,' on Tuesday Justice Anthony Besanko excused the soldier from having to give evidence on the topic. The trial continues. A model was reduced to tears after she was roasted online for posing in a bikini to raise money for the Australian flood crisis. Phoebe Thompson, 31, shared a racy photo of herself to Instagram on Monday and asked her followers to subscribe to her adult website so she could donate money towards the floods disaster, which has devastated both Queensland and NSW. The former Love Island star shared another video on Tuesday. responding to the outrage she received for the post, which many labelled 'tone-deaf'. 'That made me so upset, that made me cry,' Thompson said in the clip. A model has been left in tears after she was roasted online for posing in a bikini to raise money for the Australian flood crisis 'I was literally trying to do the right thing,' she continued. 'I've got friends and family that are in Queensland who are suffering from these floods.' Thompson then revealed to her followers that she was able to avoid the floods crisis after she 'escaped from up north' and added that it 'could've been me stuck in one of those situations'. She responded to the backlash she copped from social users by saying the bikini picture was 'f**king amazing' and that she felt 'really good' when she took it. On Tuesday, Phoebe Thompson, 31, released a video to her Instagram responding to the outrage she received for the post, with many labelling it 'tone-death' 'I was literally trying to do the right thing,' she continued. 'I've got friends and family that are in Queensland who are suffering from these floods' 'You can't bloody win.. Damned if you do, damned if you don't... I'm emotionally exhausted from social media.' Thompson later compared the backlash to when American model Kaylen Ward copped criticism after offering nude photos to raise funds for the 2020 Australian bushfires. Ward eventually raised $500,000 for the disaster. 'I just think like, if someone's trying to do something nice then why be mean to them? She obviously had such a pure heart and loved animals, it was really sweet,' she added. Fellow Queensland influencer Tammy Hembrow also faced online outrage after trying to raise money for the 2020 bushfires fundraiser by posting a saucy bikini picture. 'You can't bloody win.. Damned if you do, damned if you don't... I'm emotionally exhausted from social media,' Phoebe said The former Love Island star told her followers that 'you can't bloody win... damned if you do, damned if you don't' Ms Thompson later compared the backlash to when American model Kaylen Ward copped criticism after offering nude photos to raise funds for the 2020 Australian bushfires In the original post, Thompson wrote that she was 'going to make a donation from my website to flood disaster in Qld... so get subscribed'. But not everyone was impressed, with some suggesting her pledge was self-serving - a claim she strenuously denied. 'So in other words you want to help but u also want to [be] taken note of and make money through it too,' one follower complained in a direct message. 'Just donate the money if you f**king have it,' they said. Ms Thompson came under fire for asking people to subscribe to her adult website so she can donate money to Queenslanders affected by the floods Eight people died and hundreds were rescued from floodwaters that damaged at least 19,000 homes and won't fully recede for days in Queensland and NSW. Major flooding is under way on the Brisbane, Logan, Bremer and Mary rivers, and Warrill Creek after the torrential downpours of the past week. More than 1.77m of rain fell on Mount Glorious, 1.55m at Pomona on the Sunshine Coast and 1.23m at Upper Springbrook on the Gold Coast in seven days. Brisbane copped 795mm - the city's wettest week since records began in 1840 - with Premier Annastacia Palaszczuk saying much of the wider region is devastated. Extreme rain bomb finally EXPLODES over Sydney causing the city's largest dam to spill, flash flooding in some suburbs and a warning from police to avoid travel By Kylie Stevens A massive deluge of rain has dumped on Sydney and surrounding regions with the arrival of the much-anticipated 'rain bomb'. An east coast low is crawling down the coast of New South Wales after causing widespread devastation in far northern NSW and south-east Queensland. Flood warnings have been issued for at least 11 river systems across the state, including Sydney. Sydney's outskirts will cop the full brunt of the drenching with a major flood warning issued for the Hawkesbury and Nepean rivers in the city's west and north-west, where residents are on high alert. Eight people have died and hundreds have been rescued from floodwaters which have so far damaged at least 19,000 homes and won't fully recede for days in Queensland and New South Wales Up to 250mm of rain is expected over the ranges and Sydney's outskirts over the next two days with lighter falls near the coast. Meteorologist Jackson Browne said rainfall was expected in such volumes - 120mm over a six hour period - that flash flooding was a possibility between from Sydney down to Bega, on the state's south coast. Sydney's Warragamba Dam has already started to spill, which could continue for up to two weeks. The intense rain has already hit Sydney's west (pictured a partially flooded road in Silverwater) The wild weather system has already caused widespread flooding in Lismore (pictured) Large swathes of the NSW coast are bracing for a drenching on Wednesday (pictured Sydneysiders battling the rain on Tuesday) Residents in Sydney's north-west are bracing for possible floods with a major flood warning issued for the Hawkesbury River (pictured SES crews in the Hills getting sandbags ready) An east coast low is crawling down the coast of NSW (pictured), bringing intense rainfall 'There is a severe weather warning which is current, so that's for rainfall of 80-120mm in a six-hour period so flash flooding is definitely on the cards, through Sydney down to about Bega,' Mr Browne said. 'We have flood warnings from the Hunter right down towards the Victorian border,' he said. BOM forecaster Helen Kirkup told Daily Mail Australia: 'There is a significant amount of rain at the moment with most of it in Sydney's west.' 'The coastal areas may miss out on the worst of it. But there is still quite a lot of rain which will continue through to tomorrow morning.' The worst of the rain is expected to fall between lunchtime and 6pm Wednesday night. 'The wettest areas will be away from the coast,' Weatherzone's Brett Dutschke told Daily Mail Australia. 'The rain will ease overnight with the potential of heavy bursts inland.' The warning comes after the body of a second elderly woman was found in Lismore overnight. Police confirmed on Wednesday the body of a woman aged in her 80s was found inside her South Lismore home, hours after another woman's body was found in her home nearby. There are fears the bodies of more trapped residents will be found on Wednesday as the massive clean up effort begins. SES volunteers from Sydney's Hills district (pictured) are getting ready for a long night ahead BEIJING, March 2 (Xinhua) -- Some Western media outlets are misreading China's efforts to be tech self-reliant, claiming that the aim is prompting fear that the world might decouple or split into markets with incompatible standards and products. Such worries are entirely unwarranted and unnecessary. Treating China's independent sci-tech innovation as a threat is a kind of hegemony mindset. The United States has not stopped deliberately slandering China's high-tech development and using all sorts of pretexts to sanction and suppress Chinese enterprises. Not only has the United States banned products of Chinese tech company Huawei from its own networks, but also pressured other countries to do the same. It has also barred its companies from supplying software and components to Chinese tech companies. Bullying and suppression cannot stop the development of China's high-tech enterprises or maintain the U.S. monopoly. China has learned from experience that it cannot ask for, buy or beg for core technologies in key fields from other countries. It seeks to surpass itself and serve high-quality growth without any intention of beating others. Self-reliance has enabled China to stand firmly among the world's nations, and innovation is the only path leading to new heights in science and technology. China adheres to the strategy of innovation-driven development and takes self-reliance in science and technology as the strategic support for national development. Self-reliance and self-improvement in science and technology are inevitable requirements for the country to realize the advanced industrial structure and the key to constructing a new development pattern. As the world is experiencing a pandemic and other changes unseen in a century, China's economy witnessed a good start during the 14th Five-Year Plan period (2021-2025). This benefits from the growth of the national sci-tech advances. Sci-tech innovation will continue to be a powerful engine for the steady and sustainable development of China's economy, which is shifting from rapid growth to high-quality development. From the macro perspective, one country can continue improving its position in the international industrial division by promoting independent innovation. The latter can also beef up economic efficiency. From the micro view, enterprises can scrap reliance on low-level competitiveness by improving independent innovation and gradually cultivating their core competitiveness. The country's total expenditure on research and development amounted to about 2.79 trillion yuan (about 441.13 billion U.S. dollars) last year, up 14.2 percent year on year, according to a report released by the National Bureau of Statistics. Enterprises spent about 76 percent of the total investment. The absolute majority of the research and development investment went to enterprises. It is necessary to note that the independent path of scientific innovation should not exclude international cooperation. China's Five-hundred-meter Aperture Spherical Radio Telescope has been available for scientists worldwide since April 1, 2021. It shows China's determination to increase its openness to international collaboration. The country collaborated with many countries in COVID-19 vaccine research, development, and production. Besides, more extensive cooperation in astronaut selection and training, joint flights, and other fields will take place between China and foreign countries, said a white paper released on Jan. 28, titled "China's Space Program: A 2021 Perspective". There is no doubt that China has made remarkable contributions to the sci-tech innovation of humankind. The country is fully aware that independent innovation should happen in an open environment. Michael Madsen's wife is cleaning up his mess days after the actor was arrested for trespassing at a $5.3million Malibu mansion from which he was recently evicted. DeAnna Madsen, who has been married to the Reservoir Dogs star since 1996, was seen collecting his belongings over the weekend at the luxury home he had been living in up until February 17. A disheveled-looking Madsen, 64, was taken into custody last Wednesday after he was found hanging around the property without permission six days after he was given the boot. According to booking documents obtained by DailyMail.com at the time, the actor was given a $500 citation for a misdemeanor and released shortly before 7am the following day. Since his arrest, Madsen and the owner of the property reached an agreement which would allow him to retrieve his belongings. DeAnna Madsen was seen collecting husband Michael Madsen's belongings from the a $5.3million Malibu mansion from which he was recently evicted Saturday The 61-year-old returned to the property days after her husband was arrested for trespassing at the home Madsen is said to have been booted out of the house in mid-February but still had a lot of personal belongings stored at the home This is the $5.8million Malibu home Madsen was evicted from on February 17. He was arrested on the property six days later The property owner attempted to make a citizens arrest after Madsen was allegedly seen trespassing last Wednesday evening On Saturday, wife DeAnna was seen in exclusive DailyMail.com photos packing up her husband's remaining items at the house and loading them in the back of a moving van. The 61-year-old, who has previously starred alongside her spouse in some of his films, was assisted with the heavy lifting by some helping hands, but Madsen was nowhere to be seen. Madsen and wife DeAnna have been married since 1996 While the actor was reported to have been evicted in mid-February, photos appear to show he still had quite a few personal possessions left at the home. DeAnna, the mother of Madsen's late son Hudson, appeared wiped out as she hauled furniture, boxes, and other items from the home's garage to the moving van outside. The actress at one point seemed overwhelmed with the amount of items that needed to be removed from the property. Madsen is believed to have had been living at the home since last year. Photos show DeAnna and the moving crew packing up everything from his clothes, shoes, decorative furniture to house plants in black garbage bags, crates, and boxes. A source exclusively told DailyMail.com last week: 'Michael had been living at the house since last year, but the lease was in another person's name.' Exclusive DailyMail.com photos show DeAnna packing up clothes, boots, and furniture into bags and boxes during Saturday's move Madsens's belongings appeared to have been moved into the garage after his eviction The actress at one point seemed overwhelmed with the amount of items that needed to be removed from the property Sources told DailyMail.com the house had been leased out to Madsen by another person and several thousand dollars were owed in back rent Several thousand dollars were owed in back rent, DailyMail.com learned. The owner had tried for the past two years to get the tenants evicted, but because of the moratorium on evictions on account of Covid, it took several months to go through the legal process. 'The person who leased the house was taken to court and all the parties were evicted including Madsen on February 17,' added the source. Last Wednesday at about 8:30pm, the owner received a phone call from his rental house's security company saying that someone was trying to break into the house. The owner who lives a few miles away from the house drove over and found Madsen, 64, out on the front porch. The owner quickly called 911 and a Los Angeles County Sheriff Deputy came out and arrested disheveled looking Madsen for trespassing. Wearing baggy jeans, a denim jacket and a partially unbuttoned Hawaiian shirt, the Kill Bill star was first taken to the West Hills hospital before the police station. The 61-year-old, who has previously starred alongside her spouse in some of his films, was assisted with the heavy lifting by some helping hands The mother-of-one appeared out of breath and wiped out from all the heavy lifting Sources said the owner of the property had tried for the past two years to get the tenants evicted, but because of the moratorium on evictions on account of Covid, it took several months to go through the legal process Since his arrest, the owner of the property had reached an agreement that would allow Madsen to collect his things The 3,400 square foot property hasn't been sold in more than 30 years. The home was built in 1974 and purchased for $725,000 in 1991. It is now estimated to be worth around $5.3million, according to real estate website Redfin. When it was last offered for rent at $10,500 a month, it was advertised as 'your chance to live the true Malibu life style!!!' The real estate agents added: 'Great open floor plan encompasses a high ceiling living room, dining room and kitchen. Beautiful ocean view from living room, master bedroom, loft and wraparound front decks.' Madsen has had a terrible start to 2022. His arrest came just a month after his son, US Army Sgt. Hudson Madsen shot himself dead on the Hawaiian island of Oahu, where he was stationed with the 25th Infantry Division. Hudson was an Afghan War vet. At one point DeAnna had to remove her hoodie as she hauled heavy items out of the home and into the van DeAnna Madsen loads a crate of houseplants into the moving truck A moving crew is seen carrying a large piece of furniture out of the home and on to a truck Hudson's death came a week after his wife Carlie underwent surgery to remove a tumor from her breast. 'I am in shock as my son, whom I just spoke with a few days ago, said he was happy - my last text from him was 'I love you dad,'' he told the Los Angeles Times. 'I didn't see any signs of depression. It's so tragic and sad. I'm just trying to make sense of everything and understand what happened.' Madsen said his son's marriage was 'going strong' and he had recently completed his first tour in the U.S. Army. 'He had typical life challenges that people have with finances, but he wanted a family. He was looking towards his future, so its mind-blowing. I just can't grasp what happened.' Madsen has requested a full military investigation into his son's death. The actor thinks 'the officers and rank and file were shaming' Hudson for wanting therapy. He believes this stopped him from seeking help for mental health issues he had been keeping to himself. The 4-bed, 4-bath house, across from Malibu's La Costa Beach, is now estimated to be worth around $5.3 million Tragedy: Madsen's arrest comes just a month after his 26-year-old son Hudson died from a self-inflicted gunshot wound (pictured together in 2011) Hudson Madsen's shot himself to death a week after wife Carlie had a tumor removed from her breast. She called him 'so patient throughout this whole process' On screen: A frequent collaborator of Quentin Tarantino, Madsen has starred in films including 1993's Reservoir Dogs (left) and 2003's Kill Bill (right) This recent arrest wasn't Madsen's first brush with the law, in 2019, the actor was axed from a $100,000 role in movie Confessions of a Serial Killer after crashing his Land Rover into a pole and subsequently being arrested for DUI. He was later sentenced to four days in jail. In 2012 he was also arrested for DUI after driving erratically but struck a plea deal that involved attending AA meetings in lieu of more severe punishment. However, after Madsen failed to attend his court ordered Alcoholics Anonymous meetings his probation was revoked. A New York City man with 90 prior arrests appeared in court Tuesday on hate crime charges after he allegedly slashed a subway commuter's face while hurling racist and homophobic slurs. Ramon Castro, 55, appeared Tuesday morning before Queens Supreme Court Justice Toni Cimino on charges of assaults in the first and second degree as a hate crime, criminal possession of a weapon, aggravated harassment and possession of drugs. The incident took place at around 3.10am on July 6 between Castro - who has more than 90 arrests on his record - and a 34-year-old victim who has not been identified. It came weeks after Castro was freed over a double burglary he is said to have carried out. According to a press release from the district attorney's office Ramon allegedly yelled: 'I hate Latinos and f****t people' at a man who was standing near a Subway station at the corner of 77th Street and Roosevelt Avenue in Flushing, Queens. Castro was being held on $250,000 bail. He's scheduled to appear in court again on March 7. Ramon Castro, 56, charged with seven counts for hate crimes, including assault, and for slashing victim with a wooden knife on July 6, 2021, sits in Queens County Criminal Court for hearing Castro (pictured), then 55, has been charged for hate crimes after slashing a man in the face on a NYC Subway platform while using racial and homophobic slurs Castro was arraigned in August before Supreme Court Justice Toni Cimino on a seven-count indictment charging him with assaults in the first and second degree as a hate crime, criminal possession of a weapon, aggravated harassment and possession of drugs Castro then allegedly attacked the innocent victim, cutting the man on his left cheek using a wooden stake. Images of him taken in the wake of the alleged attack were shared by the New York Police Department afterwards. The defendant then ran away from the scene and the victim was taken to Elmhurst Hospital Center where he had to get sixteen stitches to close the wound on his face - eight on the outside of his cheek and eight on the inside. Castro faces up to 15 years in prison if found guilty. According to the NY Post Castro is homeless and was last released from custody in June after two alleged burglaries thanks to bail-reform laws. Police busted him for allegedly breaking into a nightclub where he stole an ATM machine and then again when he robbed a bar, as reported by the Post. He is being held on a $250,000 bail, city corrections records show. The incident took place at around 3.10am on July 6 between Castro - who has more than 90 arrests on his record - and a 34-year-old victim who has not been identified near a subway station at the corner of 77th Street and Roosevelt Avenue in Flushing, Queens Queens District Attorney Melinda Katz (pictured) said of the hate crimes in a statement: 'Attacking others because of their ethnicity or who they love is never acceptable' When cops interviewed the suspect he allegedly said: 'Homosexuals are OK but not when you're an adult.' Queens District Attorney Melinda Katz said of the hate crimes in a statement: 'In Queens, we value our diversity. Attacking others because of their ethnicity or who they love is never acceptable. 'It will not be tolerated here. We will now seek to bring this defendant to justice for his alleged hate crimes.' Chicago Mayor Lori Lightfoot announced the Windy City will temporarily suspend its sister city program with Moscow to show support for Ukrainians. Lightfoot, 59, announced on Tuesday that she asked World Business Chicago - an economic development agency - 'to suspend Chicagos sister city relationship with Moscow' in light of Vladimir Putin's invasion of Ukraine last week. 'While this is not a decision I enter into lightly, we must send an unambiguous message: we strongly condemn all actions by the Putin regime,' she said on Tuesday. 'This suspension will be upheld until the end of hostilities against Ukraine and the Putin regime is held accountable for its crimes. We must continue to support freedom-loving people everywhere and ordinary Russians in their desire to be free.' Moscow's current mayor Sergey Sobyanin, 63, has not publicly commented on Chicago's suspension of the program. Chicago has been a sister city with Moscow since 1997. The Windy City is also a sister city with Kyiv, the capital of Ukraine, since 1991 and 27 others. Lori Lightfoot, 59, announced on Tuesday that she asked World Business Chicago - an economic development agency - 'to suspend Chicagos sister city relationship with Moscow' in light of Vladimir Putin's invasion of Ukraine last week Moscow's current mayor Sergey Sobyanin, 63, has not publicly commented on Chicago's suspension of the program. Moscow is one of 29 cities that is partnered with Chicago - including Kyiv 'While this is not a decision I enter into lightly, we must send an unambiguous message: we strongly condemn all actions by the Putin regime,' she said on Tuesday Lightfoot's announcement came after 33 members of city council proposed revoking the agreement and urged other American cities to follow suit. The proposal was led by Raymond Lopez, of the 15th Ward. Writing on Twitter: 'Today I join 32 of my City Council colleagues in calling to revoke Moscows Sister Cities status because of Russias aggression against Ukraine. 'We stand united with those working to protect liberty & democracy. Other American cities should follow our lead now!' The TV Tower in Kyiv, the capital city of Ukraine, is hit by a Russia strike on Tuesday A burnt-out car is seen on the street after a missile launched by Russian invaders hit near the Kharkiv Regional State Administration building in Freedom Square on Tuesday Hundreds of people gather at the Kyiv train station to try to catch a ride out of town with news of the Russian convoys approaching Kyiv The proposal also called to 'revoke' the program from any partnering city that supported Russia. Chicago Sister Cities International issued a statement, stating: 'Chicago is home to a large and proud Ukrainian American community. We stand in solidarity with Ukrainians here and across the world in support of the independence, sovereignty and territorial integrity of Ukraine. 'Chicago and Kyiv have been sister cities since 1991, the same year that Ukraine gained its independence. Since then, Chicago and Kyiv have shared a long history of friendship and cooperation. Today, Chicago is home to a large and proud Ukrainian American community. 'Since 1997, Chicago and Moscow have also been sister cities. The Kyiv and Moscow Committees of CSCI are saddened by current events, condemn the acts of aggression against Ukraine, and are committed to promoting understanding through citizen-to-citizen diplomacy,' it said in the statement. The Sister City Program began in 1991 when then-Mayor Richard M. Daley signed the executive order. Other cities include Athens, Greece; Paris, France; Birmingham, UK; Mexico City, Mexico; Milan, Italy; and more. Chicago Sister Cities International also issued a statement, writing: 'Chicago is home to a large and proud Ukrainian American community. We stand in solidarity with Ukrainians here and across the world in support of the independence, sovereignty and territorial integrity of Ukraine' City Council member Raymond Lopez - who first proposed revoking the program - encouraged other 'Americans cities' to follow suit In addition, both cities are facing rising crime, with Chicago counting total figures of 206,000 in the city in 2021. That was the deadliest year in decades for the Windy City with almost 800 homicides - the most since 1996. Moscow only reported 143,000 total crimes last year, in comparison, according to Statistica. Chicago isn't the only one to pull support from Russia. States like New Hampshire, Utah, Pennsylvania, Virginia, and Ohio have all pulled the sale of Russian vodka from the shelves of state-run liquor stores. Texas has also called chief executives at interest groups representing restaurants, package companies and retailers to remove Russian products. And New York signed an executive order to pull any money out of Russian investments. Tech giant Apple has paused all product sales in Russia in response to the Russian invasion. The move comes after Mykhailo Fedorov, Ukraine's digital minister, sent a letter to Apple CEO Tim Cook, pleading with him to suspend all sales and services in Russia, including the App Store. Chicago's sister cities Accra, Greece Amman, Jordan Athens, Greece Belgrade, Serbia Birmingham, United Kingdom Bogota, Colombia Busan, Republic of Korea Casablanca, Morocco Delhi, India Durban, South Africa Galway, Ireland Gothenburg, Sweden Hamburg, Germany Kyiv, Ukraine Lahore, Pakistan Lucerne, Switzerland Mexico City, Mexico Milan, Italy Moscow, Russia (suspended) Osaka, Japan Paris, France Petach Tikva, Israel Prague, Czech Republic Shanghai, China Shenyang, China Sydney, Australia Toronto, Canada Vilnius, Lithunania Warsaw, Poland Source: Chicago Sister City Advertisement Apple confirmed on Tuesday that it was moving to halt Russian sales, which Fedorov said he hopes will infuriate younger Russians and motivate them to protest against the ongoing invasion of Ukraine. Apple said in a statement: 'We are deeply concerned about the Russian invasion of Ukraine and stand with all of the people who are suffering as a result of the violence.' 'We are supporting humanitarian efforts, providing aid for the unfolding refugee crisis, and doing all we can to support our teams in the region,' Apple's statement added. The company outlined a number of actions in response to the invasion, including stopping all exports into its sales channels in the country. Apple Pay and other services have been limited, the company said. The Russian state media, RT News and Sputnik News, are no longer available for download from the Apple Store outside Russia. On Tuesday, users in Russia were still able to access Apple's online store but attempts to buy an iPhone showed that they were not available for delivery. Apple, which already had a somewhat fraught relationship with Russia, does not maintain any physical Apple Stores in the country, distributing iPhones there through an online store and licensed retailers. Nevertheless, Russia accounts for a small but growing segment of Apple revenue. According to Russian technology news portal TAdviser, Apples Russia revenues in 2020 reached 266billion rubles, or about $2.5billion - about one per cent of the company's annual sales. A South Carolina judge has been accused of allowing disgraced lawyer Alex Murdaugh to hide the $4.3million payout from a wrongful death lawsuit for his housekeeper- which was supposed to go to her grieving family. Judge Carmen Mullen of Beaufort County had signed off on a death settlement for his housekeeper Gloria Satterfield who died after a fall at Murdaugh's home, according to a complaint filed this week. Insurance agreed to pay out $4.3 million to the family of Satterfield, who helped raise Murdaugh's two sons. But the family never received the full payout - or were even told of the settlement. Solicitor David Pascoe has now filed an official complaint saying that Mullen signed off on the settlement, knowing that it would be kept from public view. He has based the complaint off testimony given last month by Chad Westendorf, the vice-president at Hampton County-based Palmetto State Bank and alleged co-conspirator in the scheme to steal $4.3 million from the family of the Murdaugh's housekeeper. Westendorf testified that Mullen signed the order 'knowing it would not be filed' in the public record, according to the complaint. 'There is now sworn testimony establishing that Judge Mullen signed the Satterfield order on May 13, 2019, knowing it would not be filed to prevent the litigants in the Mallory Beach matter from learning about Mr. Murdaugh's insurance coverage and his settlement with the Satterfield estate,' Pascoe's complaint states. By keeping the settlement private, Murdaugh was able to keep the insurance payout from his housekeeper's family, and keep it from the family of 19-year-old Mallory Beach who was killed when his son, who has since been murdered, crashed his boat near Parris Island on February 24, 2019. Alex Murdaugh, 53, is being investigated by the FBI and South Carolina Law Enforcement Division (SLED) for numerous alleged financial crimes Judge Carmen Mullen of Beaufort County signed off on a court settlement worth millions involving the children of Murdaugh's deceased housekeeper Gloria Satterfield, knowing it would be kept from public view, a state solicitor stated in the complaint An official complaint has been filed against a South Carolina judge after recent testimony revealed she used her position to help disgraced lawyer Alex Murdaugh Westendorf sat for the deposition that raised questions about Mullen's conduct on February 22 by the Satterfield family's attorneys Eric Bland, Ronnie Richter and Scott Mongillo. Pascoe's complaint and the sworn transcript, obtained by McClatchy newspapers, are the first public allegations about Mullen and that she did not plan to immediately file the order approving a $3.8 million settlement for the Satterfield family in court 'because of the publicity over the boating accident.' Westendorf stated that Mullen knew the settlement order for the Satterfield family was not going to be filed in court because of the 'public scrutiny' attached to the 'Mallory Beach case,' according to the complaint. Mullen had recused herself from the fatal boat crash lawsuit in 2019 about a month before she signed off on the Satterfield settlement, Pascoe stated in his letter of complaint. 'Judge Mullen's pattern of alleged conduct threatens to erode public trust in our judiciary,' Pascoe said in his complaint. 'Impropriety and dishonesty by members of our State's judiciary cause real harm to all South Carolinians. 'When wealthy and politically connected individuals are treated as a privileged class by members of the judiciary, it erodes public trust in government and the fair administration of law.' According to The State newspaper, lawyers asked Westendorf whether Mullen was also aware that Alex Murdaugh's name was removed from the caption of the settlement order. 'Ever hear that discussion that the reason Alec's name was being taken off that caption was he didn't want Mark Tinsley, who was suing him ... for the Mallory Beach boating accident, he didn't want anybody to find out in public record that this kind of money was being paid from his homeowners insurance carrier?' Bland asked. Murdaugh is being investigated by the FBI and South Carolina Law Enforcement Division (SLED) for numerous alleged financial crimes. Murdaugh's career began to unravel after his 52-year-old wife, Maggie, and 22-year-old son, Paul, were killed in a shooting at the family's home last year. He also faces accusations of attempting to arrange his own death after he allegedly ordered his former client Curtis Smith to shoot him in the head so his son could collect a $10 million life insurance policy. Murdaugh is currently behind bars at the Alvin S. Glenn Detention Center in Richland County, South Carolina, on a $7 million bond. He faces 74 criminal charges. This week, Murdaugh's attorneys filed a lawsuit in federal court asking a judge to block the release of his jailhouse phone calls to media outlets after excerpts of Murdaugh's phone conversations were published February 24 on the FITSNews site. He faces 74 criminal charges after being hit with four new indictments in January accusing him of stealing another $2.6 million, bringing the total amount he's accused of swindling to nearly $8.8 million. The disgraced lawyer diverted millions of dollars to a fake bank account from a wrongful-death settlement meant for the sons of the back-then family housekeeper, Gloria Satterfield Maggie and Alex Murdaugh with their son Paul (center) and surviving son Buster (left) Earlier this month, the family of the teen killed in the boat incident claimed in an amended lawsuit that Murdaugh and his deceased wife Maggie 'knew about their son Paul's underage drinking before a fatal boat crash and did nothing about it.' The lawsuit filed by the parents of Mallory Beach, who was killed aboard a boat helmed by Paul Murdaugh in 2019, depicts his parents as willful contributors to their son's underage drinking. 'Paul Murdaugh's consumption of alcohol was condoned, encouraged and facilitated by Richard Alexander Murdaugh and Margaret Kennedy Branstetter Murdaugh,' the lawsuit said. Paul, 22, and his mother, 52, were found gunned down on their hunting estate in Islandton last June in a murder that remains unsolved. The lawsuit by Beach's family was filed one day before the three-year anniversary of the wreck, which added the estates of Maggie and Paul Murdaugh as defendants. The suit claims that a drunk Paul Murdaugh, who was only 19 years old at the time of the fatal crash, had spoken with his mother on the phone around two hours prior to the crash, and that she 'failed to stop' him from driving the boat despite being him being clearly intoxicated. The amended complaint, filed by Allendale attorney Mark Tinsley, accuses the mother and son of negligence. The boat smashed into Archer's Creek Bridge in Beaufort County in February 2019, killing Beach and injuring five others aboard. Beach, 19, died when she was thrown from the vessel. Her body was found on in the water by a fisherman a week later. Paul Murdaugh was charged with three felony counts, including causing Beach's death. He was awaiting trial when he and his mother were killed. Paul was 'highly intoxicated,' 'drunk', and 'belligerent,' after spending an evening drinking before he and his friends got on the boat, according to legal documents seen by DailyMail.com. Pictured: Paul Murdaugh's mugshot, taken after a drunken 2019 boat crash that left Mallory Beach, right, dead Murdaugh's professional career began to unravel after his 52-year-old wife, Maggie, and 22-year-old son, Paul, were killed in a shooting at the family's home in June. Murdaugh's lawyers have adamantly said he had nothing to do with it and repeatedly said they hope investigators are working as hard to find their killers as they are untangling Alex Murdaugh's finances. He also faces accusations of attempting to arrange his own death after he allegedly ordered his former client Curtis Smith to shoot him in the head so his son could collect a $10 million life insurance policy. Murdaugh is the fourth generation of a prominent legal family in tiny Hampton County. His great-grandfather, grandfather and father were all elected prosecutors and his family helped run the biggest law firm in the county for a century. His other alleged victims have ranged from family friends and a state trooper, to an immigrant living in the country illegally and a person injured in a car crash, prosecutors have said. In June 2016, prosecutors allege that 'while relying on his prestige and reputation as a lawyer,' Murdaugh reportedly told one of his clients, Johnny Bush, that he allocated $100,00 of his settlement money on 'accident reconstruction' for his case. However, an indictment obtained by DailyMail.com shows that Murdaugh transferred $95,000 to his fraudulent bank account for his personal gain. Murdaugh began grabbing national attention after his wife Maggie, 52, and son Paul, 22, were killed at a shooting in the family's home in June 2021 The Murdaugh family on the same boat used by Paul, pictured in green shirt and blue shorts, in the fatal accident that left Mallory Beach dead in a 2019 crash 'Murdaugh had created this bank account for the purpose of misappropriating funds belonging to others with the illusion that the money was being paid 'to a legitimate business, the indictment read, noting the lawyer used the money stolen from his clients to pay for his own credit card bills, cash, and checks to associates. Two months later, Murdaugh allegedly rerouted a $90,000 trust account check that 'was supposed to be compensated to Jamian Risher for his injuries' into his secret bank account. Another indictment reads that Murdaugh had another of his clients, Randy Drawdy, 'sign a settlement disbursement form which reflected the withholding of $8,819.30 for medical bills and $750.00 for private investigator services' in November 2017. But instead of using Drawdy's settlement fees to pay the other clients he had stolen from, Murdaugh allegedly put the $9,569.30 into his fake bank account. Nine months later, in August 2018, prosecutors allegedly found records of Murdaugh stealing $85,000 from Jordan Jinks, portrayed as a 'longtime friend of the family who had come to Murdaugh for help.' Murdaugh allegedly told Jinks he needed to hold the settlement proceeds to 'satisfy a medical insurance lien', according to the Daily Beast. The indictment reads that two months later, Murdaugh then sent a $65,000 check to his personal, hidden bank account. Prosecutors further allege Murdaugh stealing $112,500 in April 2019 from the personal representative for the estate of Blondell Gary for his own gain. Nine months later, between February and July 2020, Murdaugh scammed another client who came to him for help. In time, Murdaugh moved a $750,000 check meant for the client and his injuries to his fraudulent account, according to the indictment. Between November and December 2020, prosecutors claim Murdaugh assured a client representing the estate of Sandra Taylor that 'the total wrongful death recovery would only be $30,000' and that he was not even going to charge a fee because the recovery was so 'low.' However, the indictment alleges, Murdaugh managed to recoup 'over $180,000' in the wrongful death settlementbefore eventually wiring more than $150,000 to his fraudulent bank account. Murdaugh's lawyers have tried several times to get his bail reduced. An attempt to get the state Supreme Court involved earlier this month also failed. Murdaugh previously told Judge Lee he was in 'the throes of withdrawal' from an opioid addiction when he arranged to have himself shot on September 4, and also apologized for swindling $4.3 million from the relatives of his housekeeper. 'I understand there may be concern I may be a danger to myself,' Murdaugh told the court at the bail hearing. 'I made a terrible decision that I regret and frankly I'm embarrassed about. I'm not in that place now.' Through his lawyers, Murdaugh gave a statement to the court in which he confessed to taking $4.3 million from the family of his housekeeper, Gloria Satterfield, which was meant as settlement funds in a wrongful death case. Alex and Maggie Murdaugh, pictured, on the boat used by son Paul during the 2019 fatal boat crash that left Beach dead Alex Murdaugh was shot in the head and injured on September 4, 2021, while he had car trouble on a road in Hampton County, South Carolina Murdaugh said he tried to arrange his own death while he was in 'the throes of withdrawal' from a 20-year opioid addiction. He added that he was grieving over the loss of his murdered wife and son. Murdaugh said that while in treatment for his addiction he had realized the severity of his actions and now suffered 'crushing' humiliation. He said he was 98 days free of drug addiction and wants to take responsibility for what he has done. 'I want to deal with these charges appropriately and head-on,' he added, according to Count on 2. 'I want to repair the damage I have done. I want to repeat as many relationships as I can.' Murdaugh also faces several lawsuits, all related to allegations concerning his plans to influence an investigation in a 2019 boat incident, when his now-deceased son Paul killed 19-year-old Mallory Beach. He faces further claims of stealing millions from his former law firm PMPED, which fired him earlier this year when the scandal began to snowball. His law license has been suspended since his arrest in September after state agents said he tried to arrange his own death so his surviving son could collect a $10 million life insurance policy. The family of a man who died after paying someone to cut his leg off with a battery-powered circular saw have revealed he had an obsession with becoming an amputee. Kalman Tal died of a cardiac arrest due to extreme blood loss outside a seafood takeaway shop after his lower left leg was sawn off in a park in the Far North Queensland town of Innisfail in the early hours of February 19. Police allege Vanuatuan man and banana picker John Yalu, 36, used the power tool to perform the DIY amputation, before helping him back to his car and leaving the area. He has since been charged with murder. Detectives originally told Daily Mail Australia Mr Tal may have suffered from a psychotic condition called 'major self mutilation', but Mr Tal's ex-wife Eva Tal and daughter Carline Farrugia now believe he had 'body integrity dysphoria'. People who remove limbs as a result of major self mutilation often have schizophrenia, but body integrity dysphoria is not associated with psychosis. It occurs when the sufferer does not feel a psychological connection with a body part, and feels an obsessive desire to remove it. Kalman Tal, 66, died from extreme blood loss after his leg was amputated with a circular saw 'He hasnt been diagnosed with [body integrity dysphoria] but were just assuming it was that,' Ms Farrugia told 7 News. She said her family researched the condition following his death, adding: 'It was always the left side, and below the knee.' Ms Tal told the network she 'can't fathom' the situation and said it's 'beyond my human comprehension'. When asked if she has forgiven his alleged killer Mr Yalu, she said her family haven't started processing the details of his gruesome death. The mother described her former husband as a loveable person who was adored by his six grandchildren. 'He had the biggest heart of anyone I knew, and that's what drew me to him,' she said. His ex wife Eva Tal (pictured left) and daughter Caroline Farrugia (pictured right) researched the rare mental illness after his death Mr Tal (pictured with family members) was described as a loving dad and grandfather Daily Mail Australia previously spoke with several people in Innisfail who said Mr Tal had asked two fisherman and a doctor if they would carry out the task, and had requested the same from Mr Yalu on at least one occasion prior to last week. It is believed that Mr Tal met with Mr Yalu on February 18, and then teamed up with him again after the 36-year-old banana picker has been out drinking at Innisfail's Nite Rumours bar around 2.30am that morning. Detectives are yet to determine if a reported $5,000 was paid by Mr Tal to carry out the alleged amputation. Mr Yalu allegedly travelled with Mr Tal in the retiree's blue late model Holden down to Fitzgerald Park on the town's riverfront esplanade, possibly with a battery operated circular saw in the vehicle. The task force headed by Cairns detective, Acting Inspector Gary Hunter, and comprising police from four North Queensland towns and Brisbane's Homicide Squad, consulted mental health professionals about Mr Tal's possible condition. Migrant fruit picker John Yalu (above) was reportedly asked by Mr Tal to sever the leg at least once before he allegedly did so on February 19 John Yalu, 36, is in custody a murder charge after police allege he amputated retiree Kalman Tal's lower left leg with a battery operated power saw The men are believed to have laid out a blue tarpaulin on a grassy area where Mr Tal injected himself with a sedative. Police allege Mr Yalu then amputated Mr Tal's leg with the saw, then helped him back to the blue Holden before leaving the area. About 3.48am, two brothers out walking found Mr Tal bleeding to death near the Innisfail Seafood shop which is between Fitzgerald Esplanade and a fishing jetty on the banks of the crocodile-infested Johnston River. Police arrived very quickly on the scene on Fitzgerald Esplanade followed by paramedics who could not revive Mr Tal. Kalman Tal's (pictured) family believe he had a rare mental illness called body integrity dysphoria Two brothers out walking found Kalman Tal in a pool of blood in a gutter near Innisfail's fish and chip shop early last Saturday morning, but the 66-year-old could not be revived An autopsy has been conducted, and his cause of death is believed to be cardiac arrest due to major blood loss. After charging Mr Yalu, the task force has interviewed witnesses and Mr Tal's family who bought a house with him two years ago in southeastern Innsifail. John Yalu has been remanded in custody and was taken from the Innisfail police cells during the week to a Queensland correctional centre where he will remain on remand until his next appearance in Innisfail Magistrates Court on June 6. The father of three had been working in one of the banana plantations which ring Innisfail, and which employ hundreds of Vanuatans, since mid-2020 and sending home money to his young family via an Innisfail newsagency. A four-year-old boy fatally shot himself after his mother left him in her car with a gun while she went shopping inside a Georgia grocery store. Dekalb County police said Miyell Hernandez found his mom's unsecured gun and 'accidentally shot himself' in a Publix store parking lot at around 5 p.m. on Sunday. Miyell's 13-year-old cousin and his eight-month-old sister were inside the vehicle with him at the time of the shooting, authorities said. The teenager, who was in the passenger seat, ran inside the grocery store for help after the gun went off but it was too late. 'When she turned, she saw my nephew... she went for help and that's it,' Maria Hernandez, one of Miyell's aunts, told WXIA-TV. 'Two bystanders called 911 and by then he was already gone.' The boy was rushed to a local hospital but is believed to have died from his wounds at the scene. Miyell Hernandez (pictured), four, was in his mother's car with two others minors when he found a loaded gun and accidentally shot himself on Sunday evenning Miyell's father, Jose Hernandez (left) with his eight-month-old daughter (center) and Miyell (right), in a picture together shared on Facebook DeKalb County police said four-year-old Miyell Hernandez's mother parked her car outside a Publix at a shopping mall (pictured) and left him, an infant and 13-year-old relative in her car No charges or arrests linked to the incident have been filed as of Tuesday, according to police. 'Our hearts and thoughts go out to the Hernandez family,' said DeKalb County Police Chief Mirtha Ramos. 'We're imploring gun owners to always keep their guns safe and secure.' The three children had been told to stay in the car while Miyell's mom went shopping for a birthday cake, according to Miyell's other aunt - Guadalupe Woods. 'This moment will forever be remembered as my dad's birthday with the death of our only boy that we have besides my brother in our family,' Woods said. The gun was insecurely stored inside his mother's car, police told Fox 5 Atlanta. It's not clear exactly where the weapon was. No one else was injured in the incident, which remains under investigation. Miyell's grandmother, April Griffin, told local outlets that she didn't know how the boy got his hands on the gun since her daughter isn't a gunowner. 'He's innocent and he's so pure,' Griffin told the Atlanta Journal-Constitution. 'Even though he's not here, we know he went to heaven. We know it.' Miyell is the sixth child to have died from a gun shooting in the greater Atlanta area this year A GoFundMe has been created to help pay for the costs of Miyell's funeral. As of Tuesday, more than $3,000 was raised. 'Keep us in your prayer,' the description on the website reads. 'We are asking for love and support to fund a tragic moment for our family Thank you for your love and support.' Miyell is the sixth child to have been a victim of a gunfire shooting in greater Atlanta this year, according to the Atlanta Journal-Constitution. Earlier the same day, a 16-year-old suspect was charged in the death of nine-year-old Kemoni Mack, who was shot at an apartment complex in southeast Atlanta, police said. A Detroit school board has settled with a Michigan mom who claimed they got her fired from her job in retaliation for demanding in-person learning for her children. Elena Dinverno sued Rochester Community Schools in federal court last spring over claims that Deputy Superintendent Debi Fragomeni contacted her bosses at Blake's Hard Cider, a family owned craft cidery where she worked as a marketing director, and got her fired. She said her free speech rights were violated when Fragomeni claimed she was making threats against the school district after she complained about it offering online-only classes. A settlement was reached on Tuesday for an undisclosed sum, ClickonDetroit reports. Scroll down for video Rochester Community Schools settled with Elena Dinverno after she sued when higher ups contacted her employer and claimed she was making threats Dinverno said her free speech rights were violated when Deputy Superintendent Debi Fragomeni contacted her bosses at Blake's Hard Cider (pictured) and got her fired In a court filing, the Rochester district acknowledged that a deputy superintendent made a call, but denied any wrongdoing. Dinverno claims she never made any threats, but instead 'passionately' advocated for the reopening of schools and in-person instruction in 2020 on the RCS Parents for In-Person Education and Conservative Parents for Rochester Facebook groups, FOX 2 reported. A complaint from depositions also shows that Dinverno was not the the only parent who had the district call their employer. The district allegedly directed staff to monitor parents Facebook groups and single out anyone who vocally opposed the district and compile reports on them for school board members, according to her suit. Dinverno's attorney Deborah Gordon slammed the school saying they have 'zero business policing her speech.' Dinverno's attorney Deborah Gordon (pictured) confirmed that the suit is being resolved, but did not release any details regarding the settlement Following the suit there have been calls from parents for Superintendent Bob Shaner (pictured) to resign Following the suit there have been calls from parents for Superintendent Bob Shaner to resign. On February 28, outraged parents showed up at a school board work session and called for the resignations across the board. 'We have to address ... the abusive and bullying behavior by our district that has been condoned by our board of education,' Andrew Weaver told the school board. In response to the controversy Rochester school board member Joe Pittel has proposed an anti-retaliation policy that would ban district officials from retaliating against people who make a 'good-faith complaint' or question policies. An enraged koala had to be dragged off a small child after it pounced on the youngster and refused to let go. The marsupial charged at the boy at the Kennett River Walk near the Great Ocean Road in Victoria before latching on to his leg. Video that resurfaced online shows the koala climb up the child's leg and grab hold of his jumper as he fell to the ground. The malevolent marsupial charged at the boy at the Kennett River Walk near the Great Ocean Road in Victoria before latching on to his leg A man standing next to the boy springs into action and tries to pry the marsupial off by pulling on one of its arms. After a considerable struggle, the animal is pulled off but refuses to let go with its left paw despite the rest of its body dangling in the air. The young child, who is heard weeping once the animal is extracted, is consoled by a woman nearby. 'Holy s**t that kid is so lucky he didn't get ripped apart!!' a user wrote in the comments of the 2019 video that resurfaced on Reddit this week. The koala climbed up the child's leg and grabbed hold of his jumper as he fell to the ground A man standing next to the boy springs into action and tries to pry the marsupial off by pulling on one of its arms One commenter said Australians have 'warned the world about drop bears for decades', referring to fictitious koala-like animals invented to scare tourists. 'This is a good training video for what happens when you don't have a good smear of Vegemite behind your ears,' another joked in reference to a supposed drop bear repellant. Some social media users on both the Reddit page and the original YouTube video warned that Koalas are 'wild animals' and not to be played with. The distressing scene took place at the Kennett River Koala Walk, which is near the Great Ocean Road. Some social media users on both the Reddit page and the original YouTube video warned that koalas are 'wild animals' and not to be played with The walk is famous for having a large population of wild koalas residing in the area, along with other animals such as wallabies, king parrots and kookaburras. It is often visited by tourists, usually as a ideal rest stop when travelling along the Great Ocean Road. The Kennett River Walk is one of the few spots in Australia designed for tourists and local residents to see a huge population of koalas in their natural habitat. It is recommended on the Great Ocean Road Australia website that visitors do not feed or touch the animals on the walk. An animal rescue organisation has shared an extraordinary photo of a woman saving a koala from rising flood waters as it revealed the service had been inundated with emergency calls. The woman's heroic effort came as animal rescue organisations including the RSPCA responded to multiple calls to help animals stranded by the surging waters. In a social media post, The Rescue Collective in Brisbane, Queensland, said the woman had rescued a total of six koalas on her own on Sunday night. The organisation used the post of the koala being rescued in the Brisbane suburb of Mount Gravatt, to also ask for donations to support its ongoing large-scale rescue of animals trapped in flood water. The Rescue Collective responds to animal rescue calls in Queensland, northern NSW, and South Australia, and has been on the front line of Queensland's worst flood since 2011. The Rescue Collective - an animal rescue charity - shared a photo on Sunday of a member rescuing her sixth koala in one night from Mount Gravatt floodwater Animal rescue services have reported being overwhelmed by calls to help flood-stricken animals RSPCA Queensland has rescued and cared for hundred of animals from dangerous floodwater 'This is after our local koala rescuer had already saved 5 other koalas in the area in the hours before,' the post said. 'The rain has slowed finally over our area but a high tide is on its way. Rescues can hopefully begin today.' The charity has also asked for donations to help repair farms and animal sanctuaries damaged in the flood. RSPCA Queensland workers look after a koala rescued from dangerous floodwater in Brisbane RSPCA has rescued hundreds of animals in southeast Queensland from the worst flood the state has seen since 2011 A wet and tired koala was thoroughly spoilt with fresh greenery after being rescued from Queensland flood water RSPCA Queensland has also been busy and said it had received 510 animal rescue calls from Brisbane, Logan, Scenic Rim, Toowoomba, Somerset, Gold Coast, Sunshine Coast and Gympie council areas since Wednesday last week. From those calls 323 animals have entered the RSPCA's rescue hospital but spokesperson Emma Lagoon said due to limited resources, the RSPCA wasn't able to respond to all calls for help. 'It's been a tough time for our rescue teams. Like many others, we've been limited with our ability to get to every call for help due to flooded roads and staff and volunteers also stranded. Our Rescue Units can only get to places the roads will let us,' she said. RSPCA Queensland said they have received over 500 animal rescue calls since Wednesday last week RSPCA staff and volunteers have rescued and cared for flood-stricken animals since Wednesday last week An RSPCA Queensland worker nurses a wet joey who was rescued from south-east Queensland's floods RSPCA have received calls from Brisbane, Logan, Scenic Rim, Toowoomba, Somerset, Gold Coast, Sunshine Coast and Gympie council areas 'Sadly we are now seeing more deceased animals that couldn't survive the weather event, it's just devastating.' Ms Lagoon said Queensland and New South Wales wildlife will still feel the effects of the flood long after waters clear. Some RSPCA shelters have been forced to close due to power outages and road damage but Ms Lagoon confirmed all sheltered animals are safe. South-east Queensland and north-east NSW are now recovering from a massive flooding event that inundated the region late last week. More than 323 animals have entered the RSPCA's rescue hospital over the past week A koala being nursed back to health by an RSPCA worker after being rescued from floodwater Some RSPCA shelters have been forced to close due to power outages and road damage but sheltered animals remain safe Most of the Northern Rivers region - the area around the flooded city of Lismore - is still underwater, however rainfall has eased. Lismore locals were evacuated from their homes Monday morning after the town's levee collapsed. Locals shared harrowing stories of hearing neighbours screaming from inside their homes as floodwater trapped them. RSPCA Queensland have received hundreds of calls to help animals injured in recent floods Two Lismore deaths have been confirmed however reports of a number of people missing have been spread on social media by concerned loved ones. Eight Queenslanders have lost their lives to the vicious floods and some 18,000 homes have been damaged by floods. Large scale clean-up operations have began in Brisbane after the Brisbane River peaked at 3.85m on Monday. RSPCA: 1300 ANIMAL Australia has copped massive backlash from international tourists and airline staff after being shut off from the rest of the world for almost two years due to the Covid pandemic. The country welcomed back returning Australians and international tourists last week for the first time in 704 days. But not everyone has celebrated the news. For many, it was too little, too late and Australia has lost their tourist dollars forever. The country welcomed back returning Australians and international tourists last week for the first time in 704 days (pictured, a message on the tarmac at Sydney Airport last month) Australia has copped massive backlash from international tourists and airline staff after being shut off from the rest of the world for almost two years due to the Covid pandemic Some of the complainants are opponents of vaccine mandates who have vowed never to visit 'Fortress Australia' even after the country reopened to jabbed tourists. Australia had some of the longest lockdowns anywhere in the world over the course of the pandemic, with Melbourne being the world's longest locked down city. Even now, with the rest of the country open, Western Australia is about to introduce a string of restrictions around vaccines and mask wearing. But the reasons behind why Australia locked down so hard meant little on the Fly Guys Lounge website, which has more than one million followers, where people vented their anger against the country. 'Australia has lost me as a future tourist because of what they did to their people,' a woman said. 'If Australia thinks the world will flock back to their shores after what people have witnessed there over the past two years they are dreaming,' another man added. 'This place here is famous for two things lockdowns and toilet paper wars,' another wrote. Another man claimed Australians are living under fascism, saying: 'I will never go there nor will most people who thought about it. 'Dictatorship! It's embarrassed itself more than ever.' Others claimed Australia was off their bucket list. But it wasn't just potential tourists lambasting Australia, flight crew and even Australians themselves did so too. 'How they treated us as a crew, I wish never to come back there. Like we were virus ourselves 'Nowhere were meals for us left on the floor except in Australia. Well, no, thank you.' Uluru (pictured) in the Northern Territory, is one of the great Australian sights a lot of people on a tourism webpage say they no longer want to see A woman called Amanda said: 'I am Australian and am so embarrassed by the way my people have and still continue to act, it's shameful.' Though the general tone was negative against the precautions Australia had taken to deal with the Covid-19 pandemic, there were some small pockets of support. 'Can't wait to get there in the fall,' one woman said. 'Supported their decisions. Ready and willing to protect their citizens. The advantage of being an island.' Another also put things in a health perspective. 'All these people saying how Australia treated their own people? Pictured is a kangaroo on a beach. What could be more Australian than that? The roo is on Lucky Bay in Cape Le Grand National Park in Western Australia Not even the beauty of Sydney's Bondi Beach (pictured) is enough to make some people want to visit Australia 'Can I ask though, how many more deaths has other countries had compared to us? Just book a bloody ticket and come and have a beer.' Taken aback by the mostly negative comments, an editor of the Fly Guy's Lounge page felt the need to intervene with a comment of their own. 'While I do agree with many points here, I think we forget this is a page about aviation and airlines, and knowing how strict the Australian government was on their lockdowns and rules, we can appreciate how hard it's been for our colleagues and their airlines. And Bondi doesn't just have a world famous beach, it also has open air swimming pools (pictured) Sydney International Airport (pictured) has been welcoming back tourists for more than a week after an almost two year break due to Covid-19 'I for one am happy that so many great airline employees will start getting called back to the jobs they love. I hope we can focus on that and try to be positive for them.' The Australian tourism industry has suffered enormous losses due to the pandemic and lockdowns, with experts saying things are still a long way from normal. 'Recovery is going to be two to three years, if not longer,' the Victorian Tourism Industry Council's Felicia Mariana told News Corp. 'It probably is going to be three, four, five years before we really start to see figures to what we had pre-pandemic.' HONG KONG, March 2 (Xinhua) -- Hong Kong has reported a rapid increase in COVID-19 infections since the fifth wave of the epidemic began. On Tuesday, it registered 32,597 new cases and 117 more deaths. During the week from Feb. 23 to March 1, Hong Kong reported a daily average of 23,961 cases, compared with 6,227 cases in the previous week. Why are the cases rising so rapidly? What are Hong Kong's anti-epidemic measures? And how is the Chinese mainland beefing up Hong Kong's defense in this critical stage? Here is what you need to know. WHY ARE CASES JUMPING RECENTLY? An important factor is that the Hong Kong Special Administrative Region (HKSAR) government changed the procedure for confirming cases. Before the change, a preliminarily confirmed case required a positive retest before it would be recorded as a confirmed case, and the process would take three to four days. After the change, re-testing is no longer needed. Besides, the conditions for confirmation have been simplified, the results of residents' rapid self-tests are recognized by the HKSAR government. "The current surge in the number of confirmed cases is also related to the fact that the number of cases was not fully reflected in the previous tally," said Ming Wai-kit, an assistant professor at the Department of Infectious Diseases and Public Health, City University of Hong Kong. Before the simplification of procedures, many asymptomatic and mildly ill patients failed to be tested because they could only be sampled at a medical facility, and such cases were not included in the statistics, he told Xinhua. There is still some doubt as to whether the number of confirmed cases are all true positives, which will ultimately need to be determined after Hong Kong's mass mandatory testing, Ming said. WHAT MAKES THE FIFTH WAVE MORE CHALLENGING? The fifth wave of coronavirus infections in Hong Kong is led by the highly transmissible Omicron variant of COVID-19. David Lam, a member of HKSAR's Legislative Council, said the strain has outrun Hong Kong's inefficient case tracking system. Omicron can fuel a surge in infections in a matter of days, and without the help of big data tools, Hong Kong's virus sleuths are overwhelmed by sprawling transmission chains that are hardly traceable. Hong Kong has a high population density and many residents live in overcrowded rooms. Revamped sewage and ventilation pipes and poor air circulation in some houses have also sped up the transmission, he said in an interview with Xinhua. A low vaccination rate among the elderly is also to blame. As of early February this year, the vaccination rate in elderly people over 80 years old in Hong Kong is only about 20 percent. According to official data, up to 91 percent of the recent COVID-19 fatalities had not completed their vaccination, and the mortality rate for the elderly aged 80 or above without completed vaccination was 16 times higher than that for those who had done so. WHAT'S NEW IN MAINLAND SUPPORT? Ming Wai-kit said the fifth wave is believed to peak in mid- to late March, and that the HKSAR government needs to prepare the medical facilities in advance. He forecast the daily tally of new cases in Hong Kong may exceed 100,000 in the coming days. A newly built community isolation facility (CIF) started admitting its first batch of COVID-19 patients in Hong Kong in Tuesday evening. The facility located in Tsing Yi, which is capable of accommodating about 3,900 patients, was completed within just one week on Monday with the support from the mainland. Also on Monday, the third team of mainland health experts and personnel arrived in Hong Kong to work with the HKSAR government in fighting the latest COVID-19 outbreak. The team leader is Liang Wannian, head of the COVID-19 response expert panel under China's National Health Commission (NHC). The team said it will exchange views fully with the HKSAR government, and make every effort to help Hong Kong to put the epidemic situation under control. The mainland experts have offered suggestions, such as how to further tighten social distancing rules and make better use of Hong Kong's strained medical resources, in order to contain the outbreak and cut the chain of transmission as soon as possible. "We are still confident (in winning)," said Liang. "With firm support from the central government and strong leadership of the HKSAR government, we, in solid unity and with the power of science, will be able to defeat this outbreak of the virus." A Ukrainian grandmother and retired economist has told how she is making Molotov cocktails after searching for the recipe on Google, vowing to defend her Kyiv suburb and declaring: 'Let those Russian s**** come here.' Raisa Smatko showed CNN's Clarissa Ward on Monday around her front yard, in what Ward said was an eastern suburb of Kyiv. The yard had been turned into an impromptu staging point for the city's defenders, with supplies of donated sleeping bags, roll matts, pickles and food piled high. Smatko then took Ward to see where the Molotov cocktails were manufactured. 'We are ready to greet them,' she said. Asked how she knew to make the munition, she replied: 'Google helped.' You Googled it, she was asked? 'Of course.' Raisa Smatko, a retired economist, told CNN on Monday that she was busy making Molotov cocktails from her Kyiv home Smatko showed CNN's Clarissa Ward where her stash of Molotov cocktails was kept "Google helped." A Ukrainian woman shows CNN's chief international correspondent @ClarissaWard her homemade Molotov cocktails. She is just one of many Kyiv residents who are improvising weapons in an effort to defend the capital city against Russian armed forces. pic.twitter.com/zgSTUku6s6 CNN (@CNN) March 1, 2022 Russian troops were advancing from the north on Tuesday, controlling the area shaded red. A television tower in the center of the capital was shelled. CNN spoke to Smatko in her home in the east of the city Smatko was asked what she though would happen if Russian forces came to her neighborhood and attempted to take control. A convoy of Russian military vehicles 40 miles long has since Sunday been approaching Kyiv from Belarus, heading south towards the city with many hundreds of tanks and personnel carriers. 'We will beat them,' said Smatko. 'They won't come. I believe in our Ukraine. I believe in Ukrainian people.' Russian forces escalated their attacks on crowded urban areas on Tuesday, bombarding the central square in Ukraine's second-biggest city and Kyiv's main TV tower in what the country's president called a blatant campaign of terror. 'Nobody will forgive. Nobody will forget,' President Volodymyr Zelensky vowed after the bloodshed on the square in Kharkiv. Ukrainian authorities said five people were killed in the attack on the TV tower, which is a couple of miles from central Kyiv and a short walk from numerous apartment buildings. Smatko showed Ward how she had made her Molotov cocktails, to defend her home and her country Smatko's front yard has become a valuable resource for local troops in eastern Kyiv Smatko's home is now a hive of activity, with piles of blankets, sleeping bags and food Piles of sleeping matts are rolled up in Smatko's front yard, ready for the Ukrainian defense forces A TV control room and power substation were hit, and at least some Ukrainian channels briefly stopped broadcasting, officials said. Zelensky's office also reported a powerful missile attack on the site of the Babi Yar Holocaust memorial, near the tower. A spokesman for the memorial said a Jewish cemetery at the site, where Nazi occupiers killed more than 33,000 Jews over two days in 1941, was damaged, but the extent would not be clear until daylight. At the same time, invading forces also pressed their assault on other towns and cities, including the strategic ports of Odessa and Mariupol in the south. Day Six of the biggest ground war in Europe since World War II found Russia increasingly isolated - beset by tough sanctions that have thrown its economy into turmoil and left the country practically friendless, apart from a few nations like China, Belarus and North Korea. U.S. President Joe Biden planned to use his first State of the Union address on Tuesday evening to vow to make Putin 'pay a price' for the invasion. Biden was to highlight the resolve of a reinvigorated Western alliance that has worked to rearm the Ukrainian military and adopt the sanctions. 'Throughout our history we've learned this lesson - when dictators do not pay a price for their aggression, they cause more chaos,' Biden was to say, according to advance excerpts released by the White House. 'They keep moving. And the costs and threats to America and the world keep rising.' As the fighting in Ukraine raged, the death toll remained unclear. A civilian trains to throw Molotov cocktails to defend the city, as Russia's invasion of Ukraine continues, in Zhytomyr, Ukraine, on Tuesday Civilians are seen training to throw Molotov cocktails on Tuesday in Zhytomyr Kyiv's TV tower is seen in smoke on Tuesday after Russian attacks One senior Western intelligence official estimated that more than 5,000 Russian soldiers had been captured or killed. Ukraine gave no overall estimate of troop losses. Britain's Defense Ministry said it had seen an increase in Russian air and artillery strikes on populated urban areas over the past two days. It also said three cities - Kharkiv, Kherson and Mariupol - were encircled by Russian forces. Many military experts worry that Russia may be shifting tactics. Moscow's strategy in Chechnya and Syria was to use artillery and air bombardments to pulverize cities and crush fighters resolve. In an emotional appeal to the European Parliament later, Zelensky said: 'We are fighting also to be equal members of Europe. I believe that today we are showing everybody that is what we are.' He said 16 children had been killed around Ukraine on Monday, and he mocked Russia's claim that it is going after only military targets. 'Where are the children? What kind of military factories do they work at? What tanks are they going at?' Zelensky said. A Russian military convoy, 40 miles long, is shown heading towards Kyiv on Tuesday Local citizen are seen making Molotov cocktails for the protection of Kramatorsk, in an image from February 28 Human Rights Watch said it documented a cluster bomb attack outside a hospital in Ukraine's east in recent days. Local residents also reported the use of such weapons in Kharkiv and the village of Kiyanka, The Kremlin denied using cluster bombs. The first talks between Russia and Ukraine since the invasion were held Monday, but ended with only an agreement to talk again. On Tuesday, though, Zelensky said Russia should stop bombing first. 'As for dialogue, I think yes, but stop bombarding people first and start negotiating afterwards,' he told CNN. Moscow made new threats of escalation, days after raising the specter of nuclear war. A top Kremlin official warned that the West's 'economic war' against Russia could turn into a 'real one.' Inside Russia, a top radio station critical of the Kremlin was taken off the air after authorities threatened to shut it down over its coverage of the invasion. Roughly 660,000 people have fled Ukraine, and countless others have taken shelter underground. Bomb damage has left hundreds of thousands of families without drinking water, U.N. humanitarian coordinator Martin Griffiths said. The U.N. human rights office said it has recorded 136 civilian deaths. The real toll is believed to be far higher. Advertisement A Russian opposition politician has shared heart-rending images of children detained in the back of a police van after taking part in anti-war protests. Despite the Kremlin having no tolerance for dissent, protesters have defied Moscow and taken to the streets against President Vladimir Putin's illegal war in Ukraine, risking jail and even treason charges. Almost 7,000 people have so-far been detained by Russian police in as many as 50 cities, according to OVD-Info - an organisation that tracks protests in the country. According to photographs shared on Tuesday by opposition politician Ilya Yashin, children are among those that have been snatched by officers. The pictures show at least three children - no older than Primary School age - sitting in the back of what is reportedly a Moscow police van holding flowers and banners. One reporter said they went to lay flowers at the city's Ukrainian embassy. One girl is shown holding a sign that says 'No War' in Russian. Small Russian and Ukrainian flags have been painted around the words. To the right, the two flags are drawn followed by a small pink heart, to says 'Russia plus Ukraine equals love'. A Russian opposition politician has shared heart-rending images of children (pictured) detained in the back of a police van after taking part in anti-war protests The girl is shown sitting on a chair in the back of a police van with a blank expression, with two children sat either side of her, who also both appear calm despite the circumstances. A girl to her left is shown in a pink puffer jacket and mittens holding a bunch of flowers and another banner, while a boy to her left has his backpack at his feet. Another photo shows the girl in the pink jacket standing up against metal bars that are keeping them inside the van. Her face appears red, as if she had been crying. The other children can be seen behind her, as can what appear to be at least two Russian police officers dressed in black uniforms. Officers in the same uniforms have been seen in Russian cities cracking down on protesters and bundling them into vans. A third picture, again showing the girl in the pink jacket, suggest the children were taken to a police station. She can be seen sitting on a chair next to a desk, where a woman in police uniform and a mask is working on a computer. The 'no war' banners they were holding are laid out on the desk behind the girl, as is one of her flowers. It appears to be dark outside. Ilya Yashin is a former politician who was banned from running for office in 2021 because he branded an 'extremist' for, be believes, his support of Russian opposition leader Alexi Navalny. According to photographs shared on Tuesday by opposition politician Ilya Yashin, children are among those that have been snatched by officers. The pictures show at least three children - no older than Primary School age - sitting in the back of what is reportedly a Moscow police van holding flowers and banners People gather to stage anti-war protest in Saint-Petersburg, Russia on March 1, 2022. Police officers detain a demonstrator during a protest against Russia's invasion of Ukraine in central Saint Petersburg on March 1, 2022 He posted the pictures to social media on Tuesday night, writing on Facebook: 'Nothing out of the ordinary: just kids in paddy wagons behind an anti-war poster. This is Putin's Russia, folks. You live here.' He continued to predict that the 'Kremlin propaganda machine' would blame the children's parents, telling people not to involve their kids in politics. But Yashin said that was irrelevant. 'Many generations in our country (are) taught from the school bench that the worst thing is war, and the main value is the peaceful sky above the head,' he wrote. He recalled his own time as at school, saying he and his classmates would draw anti-war posters. 'And that's ok!' he added. 'Children against war is damn normal!' The images were picked up and shared by reporters. One said that the children were taken by their mothers to lay flowers at the Ukrainian embassy in Moscow. However, the women - along with their children - were arrested and thrown in the police van, the reporter said, adding they would all be held by police overnight. The journalist claimed that there was a fourth child who was detained that was not pictured in the photographs. Meanwhile in Saint Petersburg, another night of protests saw police cracking down on anti-war demonstrations on Tuesday. On Sunday alone, police arrested 1,700 protesters across 46 Russian cities, OVD-Info reported. Pictures from Moscow and Saint Petersburg showed officer grabbing protesters and carrying them to police vans. Nearly 7,000 people have now been detained in antiwar protests across Russia since Thursday Pictured: A protester is dragged away by Omon paramilitary members during a demonstration in Moscow on Sunday Russia's feared Omon paramilitary thugs have been seen on the streets to stamp out any opposition to Putin's invasion of Ukraine. The helmeted cosmonauts in camouflaged riot gear have been seen regularly dragging away demonstrators. Protests against the invasion started Thursday in Russia and have continued daily ever since, despite the Omon and police moving swiftly to crack down on the rallies. The Kremlin has sought to downplay the protests, insisting that a much broader share of Russians support the assault on Ukraine. But younger tech-savvy Russians with access to independent media have been voicing their opposition to the Kremlin's invasion, risking jail and even treason charges. On Tuesday, US Secretary of State Antony Blinken called on the U.N.'s top human rights body to hold Russia accountable for its invasion of Ukraine. The top U.S. diplomat also singled out Russia in recorded remarks delivered to the Human Rights Council for repression within the country, citing reports that thousands of protesters in Russia who were opposed to the invasion had been detained. Blinken urged the council Tuesday to send a message that Russian President Vladimir Putin should unconditionally stop the 'unprovoked attack' and withdraw its forces from Ukraine. 'We must condemn firmly and unequivocally Russia's attempt to topple a democratically elected government and its gross human rights abuses and violations of international humanitarian law, and we must take steps to hold the perpetrators accountable,' he said. Australia's most infamous rapper claims he's turned over a new leaf since being released from jail after serving two years for a vicious attack on a man in the pokies room of a pub. Pio Misa, or YP as he's known, is one of the founding members of Mount Druit hiphop group OneFour, which popularised 'drill' rap in Australia. In 2019 he was jailed for two years after being convicted of reckless grievous bodily harm after hitting Anthony Hayward twice in the back of the head in the pokies room of Rooty Hill's Carousel Inn, in Sydney's west. But since leaving prison on December 3, the 22-year-old said he's changed - and he attributes his new attitude to his time behind bars where he focused on his fitness. 'I hope I can help other people wanting to change their life...because that's what I did,' ' he told Men's Health. 'Real s***, we weren't doing the most positive things for our community and sending the right message. 'But with my mindset now, I just hope I can inspire kids who are in the same shoes.' Pio 'YP' Misa (pictured) wearing the chain he was gifted upon his parole release from prison Parole Paradise Late last year, Misa celebrated his parole by drinking a champagne tower and wearing his new chain. His chain features the letters YP and a 1 and 4 engraved on it, he wore it while filling up a tower of glasses with champagne at the party celebrating his parole. He's also reportedly begun seeing influencer and law student Chaye Connelly. Pio 'YP' Misa was filmed in bed with Chay Connelly the former partner of an ex-bikie who she has a child with In footage posted to Instagram Misa is seen showing off his new jewelry which has been engraved with 'YP' and the number 14 and pouring champagne (pictured). Since being released in December, Misa has also worked on and released a single of his own. His debut solo track 'Out of Sight' was released in February, is more vulnerable than OneFour's previous material. On it, YP raps ruminative lyrics over a synth strings and piano beat 'I don't understand why grown men don't cry, that's a damn lie.' '23 hours in a cell, one hour yard time, that shit gave me plenty time to reflect,' he raps. Misa said that his new song is a result of his changed mentality and that his fans need to understand that he and his music have changed. 'If they can't understand, it's on them, bro. If they don't wanna accept it and don't wanna accept me growing as an artist, then that's something they gotta deal with.' 'If I want to grow, I've got to take different routes. 'I can't stay that same person I was before I went inside.' he said. 'Temptations the street has to offer' At sentencing the Sydney District Court was told: 'They (OneFour) have the capacity to succeed if they remove themselves from any temptations the street has to offer'. In 2019, on-off OneFour member Dahcell 'Celly' Ramos was sentenced to 10 years in prison for his involvement in the same Carousel Inn brawl. The court heard that Ramos had used a hammer from within his jacket to hit another man in the head multiple times. Chilling CCTV footage of the incident shows the man's head getting stomped on straight after. Two of Misa's fellow group members 'Celly' and 'Lekks' were also jailed for their involvement in the brawl Front-man Salec 'Lekks' Sua was also imprisoned for four-and-a-half years over the incident. The melee victims sustained multiple fractures around their heads, one suffering two wounded ears after the earrings were pulled out of them. Justice James Bennett in sentencing, had described the earlier interaction between the groups in the Rooty Hill pub as 'racial comments, perhaps extending to slurs.' In 2019, OneFour had to cancel their tour after multiple venues pulled out, the drill group's managers say that was because police pressured them to do so There have been calls in the past for drill music to be banned. The genre originated in London and heavily draws upon themes of socioeconomic struggle, pride and violence. OneFour had to cancel their 2019 tour due to venues pulling out. Police have maintained that they didn't pressure the venues to cancel their events with OneFour, though the rap group's management insist that is the case. Donald Trump lashed out at the media and Republican 'warmongers' in an angry statement on Tuesday for 'misrepresenting' his comments calling Russian President Vladimir Putin a 'genius' for invading Ukraine. The former president blamed 'Biden, NATO, and the West' for Moscow's unprovoked attack on its neighbor and accused them of doing nothing while Putin declared two breakaway separatist regions of Ukraine to be independent republics, which then allowed their pro-Russia leaders to invite the Kremlin's troops. It comes as reports indicate President Joe Biden will close United States airspace to Russian planes as the latest punitive measure against Putin during his State of the Union speech Tuesday night. 'The RINOs, Warmongers, and Fake News continue to blatantly lie and misrepresent my remarks on Putin because they know this terrible war being waged against Ukraine would have never happened under my watch,' Trump said. 'They did absolutely nothing as Putin declared much of Ukraine an independent territory. There should be no war waging now in Ukraine, and it is terrible for humanity that Biden, NATO, and the West have failed so terribly in allowing it to start.' Trump claimed Biden's environmental measures over the last year were to blame for Russia's decades-old position as a top oil and gas exporter. Trump took aim at 'Biden, NATO and the West' and blamed the US and its allies for allowing Putin's invasion of Ukraine Civilians train to throw Molotov cocktails to defend the city, as Russia's invasion of Ukraine continues, in Zhytomyr, Ukraine March 1. Putin personally gave Kremlin troops the order to invade late last week Pro-Russian separatists, in uniforms without insignia, gather in the separatist region of Donetsk region Russian forces shelled Ukraine's second-largest city of Kharkiv on Monday, which reportedly killed three children among others Fire engines are pictured during the response effort to the shelling of Russian invaders outside the Kharkiv Regional State Administration building in Freedom Square on March 1 He also appeared to reference the president's June 2021 comments in which Biden claimed the Pentagon told him in 2009 that climate change is 'the greatest threat facing America,' which he still believed. 'Instead of showing strength and toughness, they declared the Global Warming Hoax as the #1 threat to global security, killed American Energy Independence, and then made Europe, the U.S., and the rest of the World dependent on Russian oil,' Trump said. 'They laid down the welcome mat and gave Russia the opening, now Putin may be getting everything he wanted, with Ukraine and the rest of the World suffering the consequences. 'Its terrible, but this is what you get with Biden, the Democrats, and RINO warmongers!' 'RINO' refers to Republican In Name Only, a nickname Trump frequently invokes for his right-wing critics. The former president stirred outrage across the political spectrum late last week when he praised Russia's authoritarian leader's unprovoked attack on Ukraine as 'genius' and said his plan of designating two separatist breakaway areas as 'independent' was 'pretty savvy.' 'Putin is now saying, "Its independent," a large section of Ukraine. I said, "How smart is that?"' Trump said on The Clay Travis & Buck Sexton Show. Trump claims he deterred Putin from invading a neighboring country when he was president but his critics say he emboldened the Russian leader to further meddle in global affairs He had gone on to parrot the Kremlin's lie that Putin was sending 'peacekeepers' in. 'Thats the strongest peace force Ive ever seen. There were more army tanks than Ive ever seen. Theyre gonna keep peace all right,' Trump said. 'Heres a guy whos very savvy I know him very well. Very, very well.' During his big speech headlining CPAC on Saturday evening, Trump walked his comments on Ukraine back but continued to speak glowingly of Putin. He instead blamed the Biden administration for Russian forces' invasion. 'The Russian attack on Ukraine is appalling. Its an outrage, and an atrocity that should never have been allowed to occur,' Trump told his audience in Florida last night. However, he also said: 'Yesterday reporters asked me if I thought President Putin is smart. I said of course hes smart. The problem isnt Putin is smart -- which of course he is smart -- its that our leaders are dumb.' Allies of the former president point out that Russia invaded the nation of Georgia in 2008 and annexed Crimea from Ukraine in 2014, both when Barack Obama was president. They claim the fact that Putin ceased his land grabs for four years under Trump and resumed now is a testament to the former president's foreign policy. However, others argue Trump's warm embrace of the Russian autocrat while in office and anti-NATO posturing only served to embolden him. Utah GOP Senator Mitt Romney, who ran for president against Obama in 2012, took aim at both the Democrat and Republican leaders' policies as the crisis in Eastern Europe unfolded. 'Putin's impunity predictably follows our tepid response to his previous horrors in Georgia and Crimea, our naive efforts at a one-sided "reset," and the shortsightedness of America First,' Romney said in a statement on Thursday. Chris Christie, the former New Jersey governor who was once a supporter of Trump's, said on Monday that anyone who would make such a comment has no 'understanding of the world.' Since Putin personally gave the order for his troops to invade Ukraine in the early hours of Thursday morning, the US has issued a series of sanctions in conjunction with western allies to punish Moscow and make it more difficult to continue its invasion. Biden is expected to close US airspace to Russian planes as the West's latest punitive measure against Putin's attack Targeted sanctions have largely avoided the energy sector so far, so as to minimize the economic blockades' impact on the global community. In addition to punishing Russia's core financial institutions, sanctions also target top Kremlin officials including Putin himself. Biden is expected to take it a step further and join the European Union and Canada in restricting their sovereign airspace to Russian planes, Reuters reported. He's also set to condemn Putin's 'premeditated and unprovoked' war in his State of the Union address, according to excerpts provided by the White House. 'Throughout our history weve learned this lesson when dictators do not pay a price for their aggression, they cause more chaos. They keep moving. And, the costs and threats to America and the world keep rising,' the president will say. 'Thats why the NATO Alliance was created to secure peace and stability in Europe after World War 2. The United States is a member along with 29 other nations. It matters. American diplomacy matters. 'Putins war was premeditated and unprovoked. He rejected efforts at diplomacy. He thought the West and NATO wouldnt respond. And, he thought he could divide us here at home. Putin was wrong. We were ready.' President Joe Biden announced a ban on Russian flights from American airspace during the State of the Union on Tuesday due to their invasion of Ukraine. This came after the late Tuesday announcement that United Airlines said it has temporarily suspended flying over Russian airspace, joining other major U.S. carriers who have taken the step after Russia's invasion of Ukraine. The White House, which declined to comment on Tuesday, held extensive talks with U.S. airlines in recent days on the issue. United had been continuing to fly over Russian airspace to operate some flights to and from India in recent days. Delta Air Lines, American Airlines and United Parcel Service all confirmed this week they had halted flights over Russia as the White House considers following Canada and the European Union in banning overflights of U.S. airspace by Russian carriers. The logo of Russia's flagship airline Aeroflot is seen on an Airbus. Airlines like Aeroflot face a ban from American airspace President Joe Biden has been increasing sanctions on Russia as the invasion continues The European Union had been speaking to their American counterparts about extending a ban on Russian flights, it said on Tuesday, as it gave more details of the EU's closure of airspace to Russian aircraft imposed after Moscow's invasion of Ukraine. Airlines already face potentially lengthy blockages of key east-west flight corridors after the EU and Moscow issued tit-for-tat airspace bans. Washington has not ruled out similar action. A senior EU official, when asked if they were talking to the United States about it following the European ban, told reporters: 'Yes, there are discussions with the U.S. on what measures they will adopt.' The EU official said Russian oligarchs, even those with dual nationalities, would not be able to get around the EU airspace ban. 'It doesn't matter whether they are EU residents, if they are Russian nationals, they will be covered,' the official said. Ukrainian President Volodymyr Zelensky has been pressuring allied nations for assistance 'Russian nationals or a Russian company cannot charter, own or control a plane that will be flying into the EU, out of the EU or overflying the EU. So that's the rule.' Global supply chains, already hit hard by the pandemic, will face increasing disruption and cost pressure from the closure of the skies which will affect over a fifth of air freight. Hardest hit are likely to be Russian carriers, which make up approximately 70% of the flights between Russia and the EU. Transport between Europe and North Asian destinations like Japan, South Korea and China is in the front line of disruption after reciprocal bans barred European carriers from flying over Siberia and prevented Russian airlines from flying to Europe. Airlines responsible for moving around 20% of the world's air cargo are affected by those bans, Frederic Horst, managing director of Cargo Facts Consulting, told Reuters on Tuesday. Russian President Vladimir Putin has continued undeterred with his nation's invasion of its neighbors Germany's Lufthansa, Air France KLM, Finnair and Virgin Atlantic have already cancelled North Asian cargo flights over closed access to airspace. Lufthansa Cargo will cut also some flights in the coming weeks after Russia's airspace was closed off, a spokesperson for the German company said on Tuesday. Scandinavian airline SAS said it would re-route its once-weekly Copenhagen-Shanghai service to avoid Russian airspace, and had also paused its Copenhagen-Tokyo service. Major Asian carriers like Korean Air Lines and Japan's ANA Holdings are still using Russian airspace, however, as are Middle Eastern airlines. Alaska Airlines said it would temporarily suspend its partnership with Russia's S7 Airlines due to its concerns over the humanitarian crisis in Ukraine. United Airlines is among the many that have halted all flights into Russian airspace Shipping container shortages and port bottlenecks mean more products are being flown by air. Demand for air cargo last year was 6.9% above 2019 levels, according to IATA. Taiwan's EVA Airways said on Tuesday its cargo flights to and from Europe were operating normally and it would consider adding more services to meet market demand. China Airlines, also based in Taiwan, said it would adjust its cargo capacity depending on the situation. Asia-North America cargo routes are expected to be less affected than European routes, analysts say, because many carriers already use Anchorage, Alaska, as a cargo hub and stopover point. UPS and FedEx Corp had earlier stopped deliveries to Russia. Deutsche Post said its DHL unit was halting inbound shipments to Russia. Toyota Motor Corp and Nissan Motor Co said on Tuesday they were keeping an eye on any disruption to supply chains as a result of what Russia calls its "special operation" in Ukraine. Russian soldiers taking part in the invasion of Ukraine are in 'complete disarray', according to voice recordings obtained by a British intelligence company. The intercepted radio messages indicate that troops are refusing to obey central command orders to shell Ukrainian towns and are complaining about running out of supplies of food and fuel. The recordings are among around 24 hours of material obtained by intelligence firm ShadowBreak since the invasion of Ukraine began last week. In one of the eavesdropped conversations, listened to by The Telegraph, a soldier reportedly sounds as though he is crying. In another, a soldier is heard losing his temper when asking when food or fuel will arrive. He says: 'We've been here for three days! When the hell is it going to be ready?' Russian soldiers taking part in the invasion of Ukraine are in 'complete disarray', according to voice recordings obtained by a British intelligence company. Above: Images of captured Russian troops A third message reveals a tense exchange in which the same soldier has to remind a colleague speaking from a command centre that they cannot use artillery on an area until civilians - who are labelled 'the goods' - have left. ShadowBreak's founder Samuel Cardillo, 26, told The Telegraph he had been sent the messages by amateurs listening in with antennas. He said: 'What we have found is that the Russian operatives are operating in complete disarray. 'They have no clue where they are going and how to really communicate with each other properly.' He added: 'There were periods where we heard them [Russian soldiers] crying in combat, a period where they were insulting each other obviously not a sign of great morale.' Mr Cardillo said the some of the messages were also 'proof of war crimes' because they revealed ordered to fire missiles into urban areas. Other video recordings are said to show Russian soldiers retreating back into Russia after becoming frustrated, whilst a text message sent by a soldier to his mother is alleged to have said: 'The only thing I want right now is to kill myself.' The intercepted radio messages indicate that troops are refusing to obey central command orders to shell Ukrainian towns and are complaining about running out of supplies of food and fuel. Above: Another captured Russian soldier The body of a soldier, without insignia, who the Ukrainian military claim is a Russian army serviceman killed in fighting in Kharkiv, eastern Ukraine In a further sign that morale may be poor, a senior US defence official told the New York Times on Tuesday that some troops have 'deliberately punched holes' in their vehicles' petrol tanks in the hope of avoiding combat. Parts of the Russian military are also still using analogue 'walkie talkie' two-way radios, making them more vulnerable to interception. Ukrainian forces are also said to have had no problem jamming Russian communications and interrupting them with the sound of their national anthem. Another recording obtained by ShadowBreak is said to reveal a soldier in tears, pleading with his command: '...it's slow, it's slow.' The communications are also said to show that soldiers were told they would meet little resistance upon entering Ukraine. Instead, Ukrainian forces are now in the ninth day of resistance to the Russian attack and multiple videos reveal civilians confronting the invading troops and convoys. Two Russian troops - believed to be Rafik Rakhmankulov, 19 (left) and Mgomd Mgomdov, 26, from Kizilyurt (right) who were captured by Ukrainian forces in the country's east The new recordings come after Ukraine on Monday paraded captured Russian soldiers in dozens of online videos. Footage posted online show tied up 'demoralised and exhausted' Russian prisoners of war captured after they failed to break through Ukrainian defences in Kyiv and Kharkiv over the weekend. Several of the videos were posted on a Telegram channel set up on Saturday by Ukraine's Interior Ministry called 'Find Your Own'. Many Russian troops claimed that they believed they were conducting training exercises in the border regions and did not know they were being sent to invade Ukraine. Meanwhile Russia's defence ministry for the first time acknowledged suffering losses in the conflict after several bodies of the Kremlin's servicemen emerged. Ministry spokesman Major General Igor Konashenkov gave no figures on Russia's dead and wounded but said Sunday his country's losses were 'many times' lower than Ukraine's. Meanwhile Ukraine's defence ministry put the total number of Russian casualties at 5,300, though that number could not be independently verified and the number of casualties from Europe's largest land conflict since World War II remained unclear amid the confusion. They first began appearing two days after the invasion dozens of luminous red and green crosses daubed on the roofs of buildings. Not without justification, the people of Lviv, the largest city in western Ukraine, feared the worst. They were painted to help Russian bombers pinpoint targets, or so the rumour went. But having now discovered red crosses on treetops near the 13th-century castle and elsewhere, police and council officials have come up with another explanation. One that is only marginally less worrying. It is believed they were painted weeks in advance of the conflict to guide not missiles, but Putins paratroopers. Green, it seems, means good, and red denotes danger, such as maples and sycamores on a hill near the centre. Covering them up is the work of volunteers who scour the streets at night when the crosses are most visible. On Sunday another 40 were discovered, including one on the roof of a large apartment block in the suburb of Levandivka. Since the conflict began six days ago, stylish Lviv a Unesco World Heritage city whose churches, coffee houses and trams recall Vienna and where people still dress for the opera has been a haven for those fleeing the fighting in western Ukraine. Two large red crosses painted on the roof of a large apartment building in the Levandivka of Ukraine It is believed the crosses were painted weeks in advance of the conflict to guide Putins paratroopers Ukrainian security forces pictured inspecting a car as a man lies on the ground with his arms spread on Monday But its million citizens have still felt the same terrible dread as the rest of the country. Crosses aside, what seems to be troubling them most at the moment is Belarus. Or rather its president, Alexander Lukashenko, known as Europes last dictator, who is hosting tens of thousands of Russian troops and is all too willing to do Putins bidding. In a bizarre rant, Lukashenko warned that the war in Ukraine will become a meat grinder. There have been reports that he is poised to declare war on his neighbour. And this week the EU warned that Belarus could start hosting Russian nuclear weapons after a very dangerous decision to drop the countrys non-nuclear status. EU foreign policy chief Josep Borrell said: We know what it means for Belarus to be nuclear. It means that Russia will put nuclear weapons in Belarus and this is a very dangerous path. Little wonder then that Lviv, less than 150 miles from the Belarusian border, grows ever more anxious. There is a widespread feeling here that he [Lukashenko] might come for us, said Krystian, a teacher, who was assisting refugees outside the main station in Lviv yesterday. I know that 90 per cent of the people of Belarus are against attacking Ukraine but Lukashenko is a madman who says one thing and does another, like the way wind changes. I rang my friend in Minsk [Belaruss capital] yesterday and he sounded very nervous and said he would call me back. 'This he did using an unregistered sim card because calls are bugged in Belarus and he was worried that he would get into trouble for talking to a Ukrainian. It is crazy. Only last week we would talk together freely, but now this. Fearful they might be but Lvivs people are no less determined than the rest of the country to repel the enemy invaders. After all, it isnt called the City of Lions for nothing. President Zelensky pictured signing an application for Ukraine to to become a member of the EU President Zelensky poses after signing a form requesting immediate membership to the European Union A form signed by President Zelensky as he implored the EU to make good on its support and grant his Ukraine membership At a military enlistment office in the centre, men hoping to join the army of 18 to 60-year-old volunteers yesterday morning were turned away. I was told there had been a massive response thousands and that they now have more than enough men, said 29-year-old Anton. They took my details and said they would call me if they needed me. It is disappointing but I should have been quicker. For now he will heed mayor Andriy Sadovyis advice that everyone must be ready to defend every inch of the city, with weapons if they own them, and Molotov cocktails or Bandera smoothies as they have been renamed since the start of the war. Vyacheslav Molotov was the Soviet foreign minister under Stalin. The new homemade explosives are named instead after Stepan Bandera, a Ukrainian resistance hero who fought the onset of Soviet rule. Police captain Dmytro Mikhalets said: Residents are especially asked to be vigilant and inspect their homes. In addition to balconies, they [crosses] have been placed on roofs, especially old high-rise buildings where access is easy. The mayor told Lvivs citizens in a video address: If you see incomprehensible signs in an accessible place cover them with sand, boards, resin. If you notice such marks on the roof, report them to the hotline. 'District administrations are instructed to promptly paint over any obscure marks on buildings. A cow that washed up on a popular NSW beach after surviving the relentless floodwaters in Queensland has been shot dead by police. The brown cow was seen at popular surfing spot Duranbah Beach on the Queensland-NSW border on Tuesday - but hours later was enthanised after it was spotted near the Boyds Bay Bridge at Tweed Heads. According to multiple social media reports, police were unable to catch the cow and it and was reportedly shot five times. 'Cops just shot this poor k***t FIVE F**'N TIMES,' one Tweed local posted on Facebook. Police are permitted to use lethal force on an animal if it is causing a traffic hazard or poses as a danger to the community. Farm Animal Rescue at Dayboro, which worked for 13 hours to save the cow, said it was 'beyond distraught'. NSW Police had no choice but to shoot the cow (pictured) after it was spotted near Boyds Bay Bridge on Tuesday night at Tweed Heads Farm Animal Rescue at Dayboro, which worked tirelessly to save the cow, said it was 'beyond distraught' at the news the cow was dead A cow that washed up on a popular NSW beach after surviving the relentless floodwaters in Queensland was among a number of livestock. Some that perished (pictured) An emotional Facebook post from Farm Animal Rescue, who revealed they were 'overridden' by NSW Police when it came to the welfare of the cow 'We are sorry to report that the cow who got caught up in the floods and lost her baby before ending up on the beach in Tweed Shire, has been shot by the police department,' the shelter posted online. 'Our team spent 11 hours trying to bring her to safety and are beyond distraught. 'Rest In Peace sweet lady. Nobody can hurt you now.' NSW Police confirmed they had 'euthanised' the cow - after consulting the owner. 'Following significant flooding, police received multiple reports of a cow in distress in the Tweed Heads area yesterday,' a spokesman told the Gold Coast Bulletin. 'Numerous attempts by police and members of the public to safely contain it were unsuccessful, and the cow was subsequently humanely euthanised.' Gold Coast locals spotted a cow roaming Duranbah beach on Tuesday morning and assumed it floated down from a flooded Tweed Heads paddock On Tuesday morning, locals at Duranbah Beach were stunned to see a cow roaming on the sand and began exploring. The adventurous cow first took a walk along the beach before venturing into headlands and crossing roads. Authorities believe the bovine was swept away from the Murwillumbah area by floodwater. The adventurous cow first took a walk along the beach before venturing into headlands and crossing roads A front end loader was used to clear away a dead cow that washed up on a Gold Coast beach over the weekend However the cows are far from the only animals affected by the floods. As of Tuesday, RSPCA Queensland said they have received 510 animal rescue calls from Brisbane, Logan, Scenic Rim, Toowoomba, Somerset, Gold Coast, Sunshine Coast and Gympie council areas since Wednesday last week. A total of 323 animals have entered RSPCA's hospitals since then, 84 of which were brought in on Monday. 323 animals have entered RSPCA's hospitals since then, 84 of which were brought in on Monday RSPCA Queensland said they have received 510 animal rescue calls since Wednesday last week RSPCA staff and volunteers have rescued and cared for flood-stricken animals since Wednesday last week Spokesperson Emma Lagoon said due to limited resources the RSPCA wasn't able to respond to all calls for help. 'It's been a tough time for our rescue teams. Like many others, we've been limited with our ability to get to every call for help due to flooded roads and staff and volunteers also stranded. Our Rescue Units can only get to places the roads will let us,' she said. An RSPCA Queensland worker nurses a wet joey who was rescued from southeast Queensland's floods RSPCA have received calls from Brisbane, Logan, Scenic Rim, Toowoomba, Somerset, Gold Coast, Sunshine Coast and Gympie council areas An RSPCA spokeswoman said staff and volunteers were working hard to care for injured animals 'Sadly we are now seeing more deceased animals that couldn't survive the weather event, it's just devastating.' Some RSPCA shelters have been forced to close due to power outages and road damage but Ms Lagoon confirmed all sheltered animals are safe. Southeast Queensland is currently in the grips of the worst flooding event the state as seen since 2011 with eight lives lost so far. A koala being nursed back to health by an RSPCA worker after being rescued from floodwater Some RSPCA shelters have been forced to close due to power outages and road damage but Ms Lagoon confirmed all sheltered animals are safe Staff and volunteers at RSPCA Queensland are working hard to rescue animals - big and small - from southeast Queensland's floods All Gold Coast beaches have been closed due to debris and dangerous conditions. 80 roads have also been closed in the Coast/Tweed Heads region with estimates of flood damage costs nearing that of Cyclone Debbie in 2017. Hundreds of motorists are stranded on the M1 highway south of Queensland's border in the Tweed region due to the road closures. RSPCA Queensland have received hundreds of calls to help animals injured in recent floods An RSPCA worker cares for a wet koala after it was rescued from southeast Queensland's floodwater RSPCA Queensland said flood damage and limited resources had prevented them from answering every animal distress call Sunshine Coast man Dene Smedley told the ABC he and other motorists have been trapped since 2pm Monday. 'There's kids and elderly people and we're just sitting around waiting for somebody to tell us what's going on,' he said. 'We've got water behind us and water in front of us.' Residents in the Tweed Region have been stranded due to flood damaged roads in the area Tweed Council has warned residents to ration water as the town only has access to a two-day supply while water treatment facilities are repaired Road damage caused by floodwater have also trapped residents in the Tweed area. Tweed Shire Council Mayor Chris Cherry has urged locals to be considerate of their water usage as they only have a two-day supply left. 'We can't treat water at the moment and so although the most tempting thing for everybody to do is hose everything down, we've only got two days' supply of water,' she said. 'It's going to take two days to repair our water treatment.' Tweed Shire Council Mayor Chris Cherry has urged locals to be considerate of their water usage as they only have a two-day supply left President Joe Biden sought to unify COVID-weary Americans during Tuesday's State of the Union speech - despite his party being accused of overreach with the very virus rules that have caused so much tension. Speaking as his poll ratings tanked just months ahead of the November midtermns, Biden said: 'Last year COVID-19 kept us apart. This year we are finally together again.' He spoke after entering the House chamber maskless for a State of the Union speech that was a reunion for cheering and maskless lawmakers. The president has come under fire for wearing a mask even when outside, despite being fully vaccinated and boosted. It was Biden's first applause line of the night where he cited 'progress' against the virus, and called for Americans to resume some of their routines. On Tuesday, Biden also spoke to the angry confrontations that have broken out over schools, masks, and vaccines as well as furious clashes in Congress, on a night when he touted a 'unity agenda.' 'Last year COVID-19 kept us apart. This year we are finally together again,' President Joe Biden said at the top of his State of the Union speech 'Let's use this moment to reset. Let's stop looking at COVID-19 as a partisan dividing line and see it for what it is: A God-awful disease,' Biden said. 'Let's stop seeing each other as enemies, and start seeing each other for who we really are: Fellow Americans,' he added. Then he spoke about ending some of the measures health and political officials ordered to contain the virus drawing political backlash in some communities. 'We can end the shutdown of schools and businesses. We have the tools we need. Its time for Americans to get back to work and fill our great downtowns again,' said Biden. 'People working from home can feel safe to begin to return to the office. We're doing that here in the federal government. The vast majority of federal workers will once again work in person. Our schools are open. Let's keep it that way. Our kids need to be in school,' said Biden. 'And with 75 percent of adult Americans fully vaccinated and hospitalizations down by 77 percent, most Americans can remove their masks, return to work, stay in the classroom and move forward safely,' he said. His comments come after most states have already taken steps to loosen mask requirements and other rules meant to curb the spread of COVID. Democratic leaders have been criticized for being overly cautious, with almost all COVID-related restrictions triggering bipartisan arguments, and tensions across the United States between friends and family members split on whether to take a cautious or laissez-faire approach to the virus. Cynics have also suggested Biden's sudden relaxation has been prompted at least in part by tanking poll ratings, with just eight months to go until the midterm elections. Biden, facing an average approval rating of just 41.1 percent, seems to be changing his tone ahead of this year's midterm elections, which are expected to deliver a blow to a Democratic Party already hanging on to a vulnerable majority in Congress. The president continued: 'For more than two years, COVID-19 has impacted every decision in our lives and the life of the nation. And I know you're tired, frustrated and exhausted. But I also know this: Because of the progress we've made, because of your resilience and the tools we have, tonight I can say we are moving forward safely, back to more normal routines,' Biden said. He pointed to recent improvements in coronavirus cases, after a devastating two years. Almost all lawmakers who attended the speech eschewed masks on Tuesday as Biden delivered a new vision for how the country tackles the COVID pandemic 'We've reached a new moment in the fight against COVID-19, with severe cases down to a level not seen since last July,' he noted, pointing to the Centers for Disease Control and Prevention's latest mask guidance. COVID upended life in the US since it was declared a pandemic on March 13, 2020. Uncertainty during that first wave led to tough restrictions as hospitals became overwhelmed with cases and deaths soared. Face masks became a requirement in public settings, and children missed months of in-person instruction, relying instead on a patchwork of virtual learning options that has left parents worried about their children's education. Three vaccines became widely available starting early 2021, but the spread of more infectious variants like Delta and Omicron created a revolving door of restrictions that added to the confusion. Cases, hospitalizations and deaths are currently down in all states after an early winter surge. His comments come as he faces a low approval rating of 41.1 percent ahead of this year's midterm elections, which are expected to deliver a blow to the Democratic Party They also come as COVID case counts continue to fall after an early winter surge due to the Omicron variant All states except Hawaii have ended, or announced an end date, to indoor mask mandates. California, Washington and Oregon will stop requiring masks in schools after March 11 Hawaii is the only state that hasn't announced an end to indoor mask mandates. Gov. David Ige has said that he'll make a decision in the coming month. 'The pandemic is not over,' Ige said at a news conference with Hawaii's four mayors on Tuesday, according to Hawaii News Now. 'Tragically, we continue to see those we know and love suffer from COVID-19. Each one is a tragic loss.' California, Oregon and Washington - three Democrat-led states that have had some of the country's strongest restrictions - will stop requiring masks in schools after March 11. California lifted its indoor mask mandate for unvaccinated people on Tuesday. The pandemic has upended life in the US, with masks becoming a regular sight and children foregoing in-class instruction in favor of online learning. Some parents worry about what that means for their children, according to recent surveys Biden's announcement also follows updated CDC guidelines that will lift mask recommendations for 70 percent of Americans. The revised calculations weigh hospitalization rates and hospital capacity rates higher than case numbers. Under the new metrics, only 28.2 percent of the American population - living in 37 percent of counties - is still recommended to mask up in indoor public settings. Biden acknowledged Americans were 'frustrated' with the pandemic amid a series of polls showing Americans say they think the country is on the wrong track. The pandemic has also led to fierce divisions within the Congress where lawmakers clashed over mask mandates, lockdowns, school policies, and figures including Biden's coronavirus advisor Dr. Anthony Fauci. According to a recent survey by the Keiser Family Foundation found that a majority of Americans, or 62 percent, agree that the worst of the pandemic is behind us. About 65 percent are worried that kids' and teens' mental health will suffer if restrictions aren't lifted, and 63 percent are worried that local businesses would suffer, the survey found. 'Under these new guidelines, most Americans in most of the country can now be mask free. And based on the projections, more of the country will reach that point across the next couple of weeks. Thanks to the progress we have made this past year, COVID-19 need no longer control our lives. I know some are talking about living with COVID-19. Tonight I say that we will never just accept living with COVID-19,' he said. 'We will continue to combat the virus as we do other diseases. And because this is a virus that mutates and spreads, we will stay on guard,' he said. Conservatives have complained that Democrats have overreached in their fight to 'stop the spread,' issuing mask mandates for populations that aren't statistically vulnerable, like young children in schools, while being photographed without masks in their personal time. Some political observers see Biden's softer rhetoric on restrictions as a way to prevent major losses for his party in November's midterm elections. The president's party has lost seats in Congress in all but three midterm elections since 1910, according to US News and World Report. Adding to that historical precedent, a president's approval rating is also a good indicator of how many seats his party will lose. The more unpopular he is, the more seats his party tends to cede to the opposing party. Biden's current approval rating is 41.1 percent, according to an average of multiple polls calculated by FiveThirtyEight, with 53.6 percent of people disapproving of his job so far. Some reputable polls, including ones from Quinnipiac and ABC News and the Washington Post, have his approval rating as low as 37 percent. President Obama's approval rating stood at around 42 percent in 2010, when Republicans picked up a historic 63 seats in the House and Senate. Biden touted vaccines and boosters, anti-viral drugs, and testing after millions of Americans were caught without tests when the Omicron variant hit this past fall. He warned: 'We must prepare for new variants. Over the past year, weve gotten much better at detecting new variants. If necessary, well be able to deploy new vaccines within 100 days instead of many more months or years.' 'And, if Congress provides the funds we need, well have new stockpiles of tests, masks, and pills ready if needed. I cannot promise a new variant wont come. But I can promise you well do everything within our power to be ready if it does,' Biden said. Maskless lawmakers glad-handed inside the House chamber for the first time in months as they gathered to hear Biden deliver his speech. Biden and his team of speechwriters faced a delicate task Tuesday. The nation has been climbing out of the Omicron surge, but the toll of the pandemic continues to mount. The U.S. has already experienced more than 900,000 deaths due to COVID-19. Although the omicron surge that ripped through the country late last year appears to be fating, total cases remain about 70,000 in a rolling seven-day average, and daily deaths are still above 1,500. The Centers for Disease Control relaxed its mask guidance on Friday for areas that aren't experiencing high levels of infection or burden on hospitals, and Washington DC rolled back some of its restrictions on Monday. Pelosi and Vice President Kamala Harris were seated behind the president Speaker Nancy Pelosi first ordered a mask mandate in 2020 His speech came in a House chamber that contained many unmasked lawmakers for the first time in months. It had the feeling of a more traditional state of the union, with members of the Supreme Court, the president's cabinet, and lawmakers all going mask-less following a weekend letter from Capitol Physician Brian Monahan, who wrote that lawmakers could decide whether to mask. There has not been a mask mandate in the Senate. House Speaker Nancy Pelosi first imposed mask mandate for House floor in July 2020. There have been angry episodes involving a series of lawmakers who were fined by the House Sergeant at Arms for refusing to comply. KABUL, March 2 (Xinhua) -The U.S.-led coalition forces may have run from Afghanistan last year, but the indiscriminate killing and widespread atrocities committed against the Afghan people during the occupation will haunt the victims and their families for years. Abdul Wajid witnessed whole-scale slaughter in southern Helmand Province. "For 20 years, we watched killing, destruction and terror. Our business, trade, economy and agriculture were reduced to zero," Wajid, who is in his thirties, told Xinhua recently. Following the 9/11 attacks on New York and Washington D.C., the United States accused Afghanistan of harboring Osama Bin Laden, the leader of al-Qaeda, and invaded the country in October 2001. During the Afghan war started by the U.S., more than 30,000 innocent civilians were killed and about 11 million people have become refugees. Countless Afghans were killed, thousands in Sangin. Abdul Ghani was already old when the U.S. forces arrived in town many years ago. "They killed six of my family and drove me out of my house. I had to leave everything, including the children, behind," he said. Ghani, and many like him, need support just to get through his daily life, let alone rebuild the ruins of his home. "The Americans didn't come here to build the country, they came here to destroy it," he said. Produced by Xinhua Global Service Lachlan Foote, 21, died in 2018 after accidentally adding a fatal amount of pure caffeine to a protein shake Australians who add pure caffeine to their protein shake or 'dry scoop' their pre-workout protein mix and eat it raw are putting their lives at risk, a top toxicologist has warned. The sale of pure caffeine for personal use was banned in Australia in 2019 after a report found a single teaspoon of the powder - equivalent to 50 cups of coffee - contained 5,000 milligrams of the drug and could cause cardiac arrest. A year earlier, healthy musician Lachlan Foote, 21, was found dead in his family home in the Blue Mountains west of Sydney after inadvertently overloading his protein shake with too much pure caffeine powder. While it is now illegal to buy the substance for personal use, Daily Mail Australia found one online retailer selling 500g (500,000 milligrams) of the powder to the public for $200. Emergency medicine physician Professor Kelly Johnson-Arbor said adults should consume no more than 400 milligrams a day of caffeine. Toxicologist Professor Kelly Johnson-Arbor said even normal protein shakes made from pre-workout mix can contain dangerous levels of caffeine and other similar substances which have the same effects on the human body Before the ban in Australia for private use, caffeine powder could be easily bought online (pictured). Daily Mail Australia still found one online retailer in 2022 selling 500g of the powder to the public for $200 'Caffeine even in normal doses [about 100 milligrams per cup of coffee] can cause symptoms such as jitteriness or nervousness,' the medical director at the US National Capital Poison Center told Daily Mail Australia. 'But in high doses it can cause high seizures and even cause death.' She added even the pre-workout mix by itself, without the pure power added, often contained dangerous amounts of caffeine and other substances which have a similar effect on the human body. 'One hundred milligrams is the normal amount of caffeine in a cup of coffee but these pre-workout supplements can contain much more that,' she said. A recent online trend called dry scooping involves gymgoers consuming the protein powder without diluting it with water, which compounds the issue. 'These powders are meant to be mixed with water but when people eat them raw, that can be very dangerous,' Professor Johnson-Arbor said. 'These workout supplements often have other ingredients similar to caffeine. They're energy-boosting stimulants but they can also cause an overdose. 'You're not just dry scooping caffeine, you're scooping stimulants such as gurana and ephedra.' While both are generally safe in low quantities, high doses can cause nausea, insomnia, rapid breathing and a spike in heart rate and blood pressure. Lachlan Foote was found dead in his family's home in the Blue Mountains west of Sydney in 2018 At the time of Mr Foote's death, his father said it was 'scandalous' pure caffeine powder had not yet been banned in Australia. In a chilling final message posted to a Facebook group on the night he died, the usually healthy 21-year-old revealed his bedtime protein shake had tasted bitter. 'I think my protein powder has gone off. Just made an anti hangover / workout shake and it tasted awful,' Lachlan wrote at 2.07am. 'Anyway night lads. Cya in the morning.' Lethal: A mere 1/16th of a teaspoon of powdered caffeine can be deadly, according to health officials According to a Cornell University fact sheet, two teaspoons of pure caffeine is equivalent to drinking 70 Red Bulls at once - which is enough to kill an adult. Multiple reports of fatal caffeine overdoses have been reported globally. In a chilling final message posted to a Facebook group on the night he died, Lachlan Foote revealed his bedtime protein shake had tasted bitter (recreated message) An inquest in the UK this week heard how a fit and healthy father died after accidentally making and downing a caffeine powder mixture as strong as 200 cups of coffee. Personal trainer Thomas Mansfield ordered a 100g packet of caffeine powder to make supplement drinks at his family home. Using the packet, the 29-year-old, from Colwyn Bay, North Wales, accidentally made a mixture containing seven times the recommended dose before 'necking' it. Average digital scales generally have a starting weight of only 1g, but the recommended serving of the powder is just 0.1g. In the US, two healthy men aged 18 and 24 died from caffeine overdoses in 2014. The country's Federal Drug Agency has banned the sale of some bulk-sold pure caffeine products, but lawmakers want the powders banned altogether. The 'rain bomb' that has only now hit Sydney took so long to arrive because it is a slow moving but more damaging storm. The huge weather system is a classic example of an east coast low, which moves slower than normal storms - and carries more rain. Forecasters said the devastating downpour completely saturated the ground with major flood alerts issued and thousands of Sydney's residents forced to evacuate. But many locals were frustrated by forecasters repeatedly pushing back the time when the storm would strike. It was originally predicted to hit at 6pm on Tuesday, but didn't arrive until about 12pm on Wednesday. Forecasters say the devastating downpour from the 'rain bomb' on Wednesday has completely saturated the ground with major flood alerts issued and thousands of the city's residents forced to evacuate The huge weather system has seen huge swathes of New South Wales and southern Queensland battered by days of relentless rain Experts said that is a feature of this type of storm, which is an intense low pressure system that can produce gale-force winds, massive rainfall, huge waves, flooding, and coastal erosion. Helen Kirkup from the Bureau of Meteorology told Daily Mail Australia the slow-moving system is the result of a 'complex' interplay of troughs in the atmosphere. 'It's do with how fast these upper level troughs are moving and how it's interacting with the surface [the ground],' she explained. East coast lows can vary in their overall impact on weather systems. Dr Acacia Pepler from the Bureau of Meterology said in a scientific article that 'deeper' lows are more likely to generate heavier rainfall. 'Intense east coast lows often cause injury, loss of life, large insurance losses and infrastructure damage,' Dr Pepler told the Sydney Morning Herald. These systems take in moisture and 'gather pace' as they track over the ocean. Wind speeds for east coast lows are generally slower when compared to cyclones. When these lows move slowly they suck up and carry more moisture, which causes a heavier downpour and possible flooding. When these lows move slowly they suck up and carry more moisture, which causes a heavier downpour and possible flooding (pictured, flooding in Richmond on Wednesday) Major storms of this kind of note include one in 2007 which led to an enormous cargo tanker, named the Pasha Bulker, to crash into Nobbys Beach, near Newcastle (pictured) These lows are usually 'initiated by cold air in the upper atmosphere' which move 'across the continent from the Southern Ocean before crashing into warm air from the Coral Sea. Major storms of this kind of note include one in 2007 which led to an enormous cargo tanker, named the Pasha Bulker, to crash into Nobbys Beach, near Newcastle. Residents were ordered to evacuate as the storm arrived in Sydney, with a major flood warning issued on Wednesday afternoon for the Hawkesbury and Nepean rivers. The first evacuations have begun in the city's south-west with parts of Milperra, Chipping Norton, and Lansvale ordered to leave immediately as the Georges River rises and threatens to burst its banks. The river is expected to reach moderate flood levels in Milperra and Liverpool by Thursday morning with the State Emergency Service advising rising waters from the Georges River 'may isolate the area'. 'You may be trapped without power, water and other essential services and it may be too dangerous to rescue you,' the alert read. Residents in Picton, south-west of Sydney, were also urged to get ready to leave. BoM forecaster Dean Narramore said about 50mm to 150mm would hit some parts of Sydney, where the ground was already saturated. 'The water has nowhere to go except for creeks, rivers, streams, eventually dams and major river systems through eastern parts of NSW,' he said. Emergency Services Minister Steph Cooke added: 'While we're all hoping for the very best, we must be prepared for the worst.' Penrith City Council workers load sandbags into residents' cars in the rain at Jamison Park on Wednesday Businesses prepare for flooding in Marrickville in the city's inner west by piling sand bags out the front Residents in the low-lying areas of Penrith and the Hawkesbury are also on high alert and preparing to leave, just a year after floods devastated the region. Major flooding 'similar to March 2021' is predicted for both catchments. 'If you have been impacted by flooding in the past from the Hawkesbury and Nepean Rivers, the NSW SES advises that you should prepare now to evacuate,' it said. The first warnings are expected to be issued either Wednesday night or Thursday morning. Streets are already underwater in Richmond while in nearby Penrith, residents are sandbagging their homes in preparation for the dangerous floods. The Yarramundi Bridge is closed with the North Richmond Bridge expected to close on Wednesday night or Thursday morning, Hawkesbury Mayor Patrick Connoly warned. Windsor Bridge could also close in the coming days. Some Sydneysiders took the risk and made the commute to work on Wednesday, despite being warned to stay home South-west of Sydney, residents in the Picton CBD are preparing to evacuate. 'Once floodwaters begin to rise in Stonequarry Creek, you will see flooding of roads, sewerage lines and power may be lost, and properties may be inundated,' SES warned. 'If you remain in the area you may become trapped and it may be too dangerous for SES to rescue you.' Authorities have declared the next 24 hours 'absolutely critical' as NSW Premier Dominic Perrottet described the evolving emergency as an unprecedented situation. He urged residents issued with evacuation orders to act immediately. FLOOD WARNING FOR HAWKESBURY-NEPEAN RIVERS North Richmond The Hawkesbury River at North Richmond is likely to exceed the moderate flood level (7.9m) late Wednesday afternoon. The river level may exceed the major flood level (10.5m) Wednesday evening and may reach around 14m during Thursday, with major flooding. Further rises possible. Windsor The Hawkesbury River at Windsor is likely to exceed the minor flood level (5.8m) late Wednesday afternoon. The Hawkesbury River at Windsor may exceed the moderate flood level (7m) Wednesday evening and may reach the major flood level (12.2m) during Thursday. Further rises possible. Sackville The Hawkesbury River at Sackville is likely to exceed the minor flood level (4.6m) Thursday morning. The river level may reach the moderate flood level (7.3m) during Thursday. Further rises are possible. Lower Portland The Hawkesbury River at Lower Portland may exceed the moderate flood level (6.1m) Thursday morning. Further rises above the major flood level (7.6m) are possible with forecast rainfall. Wisemans Ferry The Hawkesbury River at Wisemans Ferry may reach the moderate flood level (3.5m) Thursday morning. Further rises possible. Colo River Minor flooding is occurring along the Colo River at Putty Road. Moderate flooding is possible. The Colo River at Putty Road may reach around 3.5m on Wednesday evening with minor flooding. Further rises above the moderate flood level (5.7m) are possible. Advertisement 'We have volunteers on the frontline putting their lives at risk to keep people safe,' he said. 'So please everyone as these floods move through from the north to the south, we follow those instructions, those evacuation warnings if they are in place, prepare, please get ready to leave.' 'Don't have your past experience with floods inform your current position when those orders are made. 'Those orders are there to keep you and your family safe. Please follow those instructions and that will ensure we all get through this together.' Ms Cooke added: 'Sydney as we know, is on high alert right now and to everyone in that Sydney region, we ask you please, keep an eye on the BOM warnings, keep an eye on the evacuation warnings if they are issued which may escalate into evacuation orders.' Minor flooding is occurring at Penrith and North Richmond while major flooding is possible along the Hawkesbury and Lower Nepean River at Penrith, North Richmond, and Windsor. 'The river heights may affect the bridges later this afternoon,' Hawkesbury SES posted. 'Residents and businesses, in low-lying areas along these river systems and adjoining creeks, should be ready to evacuate, if requested. Ensure you take pets and valuables with you. 'Horses and livestock should be relocated to higher ground.' Closer to the city, business owners are also relying on sandbags to protect their premises from potential flash flooding in Marrickville. Sydney's Warragamba Dam began spilling early Wednesday morning, and could continue to do so for up to two weeks. Localised storms could result in life-threatening flooding. 'Recent rainfall over the Nepean and Hawkesbury River catchments and a deepening east coast low is bringing heavy rainfall from Wednesday with the potential to cause major flooding along the Nepean and and Hawkesbury Rivers,' BoM warnings read. 'River level rises are occurring along the Nepean River where major flooding is possible from Wednesday afternoon. 'Along the Hawkesbury major flooding is possible from overnight Wednesday into Thursday at Penrith, North Richmond and Windsor based on forecast rainfall.' There are fears the flooding could be as bad as last year's disaster. 'We are expecting this might be as bad as we saw last year,' NSW State Emergency Service Commissioner Carlene York said. 'We know the devastation that caused in the community. And what we don't want to do is lose any more lives. The best way to save lives is to be prepared and listen to warnings.' Dozens of roads have been closed across city's north-west and south-west, including Pitt Town Road near Glebe Road in Pitt Town, Cattai Ridge Road in Glenorie, and Joadja Road in Cartwright near Liverpool. Up to 250mm of rain is expected over the ranges and Sydney's outskirts over the next two days with lighter falls near the coast. Up to 120mm was expected over six hours with flash flooding a possibility from Sydney down to Bega, on the state's south coast. The intense rain has already hit Sydney's west (pictured a partially flooded road in Silverwater) The dangerous surf conditions didn't deter this adventurous surfer at Bondi on Wednesday Cars are seen driving through a partially flooded road near Warragamba Dam, which spilled on Wednesday morning Parramatta Wharf has been inundated with water for the second time within days Police have announced a clear-out effort to disperse anti-vaccination protesters in front of New Zealand's Parliament. Police Commissioner Andrew Coster announced Wednesday morning a de-escalation effort had begun to break up anti-vax protesters that have been camped in front of New Zealand's Parliament House since early February. 'Police are today undertaking a major operation to clear the roads and restore order to the Wellington area affected by protest activity,' he said. Police Commissioner Andrew Coster announced Wednesday morning a de-escalation effort had begun to break up anti-vax protesters that have been camped in front of New Zealand's Parliament House since early February Police held riot shields during an operation to break up anti-vax protesters camped in front of New Zealand's Parliament House Protesters comforted each other during the ongoing dispersal operation in front of the New Zealand parliament Demonstrators held up a sign protesting for 'freedom' during a dispersal operation on an anti-vax camp out Key Points Anti-vaccination mandate protesters have been occupying the space in front of New Zealand Parliament House in Wellington for 23 days. Protesters have pelted stones and used makeshift weapons to attack officers as a dispersal operation continues. Weapons include pitchforks, homemade plywood shields, and fire extinguishers. A Covid cluster has grown in the protest campsite with 20 confirmed cases. Police have used pepper spray on violent protesters. Three officers were injured as of midday Wednesday. Roughly 38 arrests have been made. Advertisement 'The operation is the result of significant planning and the commitment of several hundred staff from around the country. 'Our intent is to reclaim public roads and restore order.' Police warned protesters on Wednesday morning to end the occupation or they would be removed. 'This morning you will have seen we have urged protesters who have not already departed, to leave now,' Mr Coster said. 'Our message to those who do not wish to be caught up in our operation is, please go home.' Mr Coster said protesters were informed police were happy to assist people that wanted to make a peaceful departure but the offer was largely rejected. 'During a period of engagement with protest leaders we were able to get in place tactics that de-escalated both the number of people and vehicles at the site,' he said. 'However, we reached the stage where protest leaders were either unwilling, or unable, to affect meaningful change to the behaviour and the impact of the protest on Wellington.' By 2pm - NZDT - most demonstrators vehicles were cleared from lower Molesworth St and officers say they have made 'significant ground'. Mr Coster said an escalation in protest behaviour over the last week had concerned police that it could turn violent, leading to the dispersal order. Police warned protesters Wednesday morning to stop the occupation or they would be removed An escalation in protest behaviour over the last week had concerned police it could turn violent, leading to the dispersal order Police made 38 arrests during Wednesday's morning operation and seized 15 vehicles Police Commissioner Andrew Coster said protesters were informed police were happy to assist people that wanted to make a peaceful departure but the offer was largely rejected 'We became concerned that those with good intentions were outnumbered by those with a willingness to use violence to effect their means,' he said. 'This has never been about preventing lawful protest, but this particular protest has reached a stage where the harm being done far outweighs any legitimate protest.' As of midday Wednesday police had made 38 arrests for a range of offences and seized 15 vehicles. An angry protester screams at police during Wednesday's dispersal operation in front of the New Zealand parliament As of midday Wednesday police had made 38 arrests for a range of offences and seized 15 vehicles An anti-vax protester receives medical attention from a police officer during Wednesday's dispersal operation Charges included wilful trespass, obstruction, wilful damage, assaulting police, possession of a weapon, and refusing to provide identifying details. About 3.30pm protesters were seen using metal barriers to create blockades as police continued to dismantle campsites while other protesters fled. One protester was spotted with blood covering their face. At midday, two officers suffered abrasions during the dispersal and one had paint thrown into his face. Reports have since emerged of escalated violence towards officers from protesters. The New Zealand Herald reported protesters used makeshift weapons against police officers including pitchforks, homemade plywood shield, and fire extinguishers. Police have allegedly used pepper spray on violent demonstrators. Anti-vax protesters constructed a makeshift campsite where they occupied the space in front of New Zealand Parliament house for almost a month Police surround an anti-vax protester during Wednesday's dispersal operation in front of New Zealand's Parliament House Mr Coster said the operation would continue into Wednesday afternoon. 'We will continue to arrest and charge people where necessary and will continue seizing vehicles through the day,' he said. Charges against protesters included wilful trespass, obstruction, wilful damage, assaulting police, possession of a weapon, and refusing to provide identifying details Two officers suffered abrasions during the dispersal and one had paint thrown into his face Wellington City Council, Corrections, Oranga Tamariki, Fire and Emergency NZ, NZDF, and Wellington Free Ambulance also assisted in the protest dispersal 'However, public safety is our priority and where possible we are helping people to leave the area safely.' Protesters reportedly hurled stones, chairs, and camping equipment at officers during the dispersal operation. Wellington City Council, Corrections, Oranga Tamariki, Fire and Emergency NZ, NZDF, and Wellington Free Ambulance also assisted in the protest dispersal. Mr Coster said he appreciated the hard work the staff put into the operation. 'I would like to close by extending my thanks to all the staff involved in todays operation,' he said. 'This is challenging and difficult work and they have been professional and measured through out.' Alan Moher, 57, has pleaded guilty to engaging in 'coercive or controlling behaviour' in a 'landmark' court case after he denied his wife a Jewish religious divorce. Pictured: Mr Moher at a previous hearing in 2019 A property millionaire who denied his wife a Jewish religious divorce has pleaded guilty to engaging in 'coercive or controlling behaviour' in a 'landmark' court case. Alan Moher, 57, of Salford, Manchester, separated from his ex-wife Caroline in 2016 after 21 years together and the couple later divorced in the Family Court in 2019. The couple, who wed in 1995 and have three children together, had a decree nisi granted by the Family Court in 2016 - but the civil divorce proceedings were not completed until 2019. Despite their marriage being dissolved legally, Jewish law requires a 'Get' - a document that effectuates a divorce between a couple in the orthodox Jewish faith. The court heard that Moher did not give Ms Moher a 'Get', meaning she was unable to enter into a relationship with another man, remarry or have more children. The text of the Get states 'You are hereby permitted to all men', which means that the woman is no longer married and that the laws of adultery no longer apply. It also returns to the wife the legal rights that a husband holds in regard to her in a Jewish marriage. Ms Moher brought a private prosecution for a charge of controlling or coercive behaviour between January 2016 and January last year at Southwark Crown Court on Monday - with her lawyers describing it as a 'landmark case'. Moher, who first pleaded not guilty, changed his plea to guilty and his barrister, Jeffrey Israel, explained his basis of plea did not 'reflect the particulars' on the indictment Judge Martin Beddoe granted Moher bail on conditions not to contact Ms Moher and ordered him to return to court for sentencing on April 1 - warning that he could face a custodial sentence. Caroline Moher, who has three children with her ex-husband, brought a private prosecution for a charge of controlling or coercive behaviour between January 2016 and January last year at Southwark Crown Court on Monday - with her lawyers describing it as a 'landmark case'. Pictured: Ms Moher at a previous hearing in 2019 Moher, who first pleaded not guilty, changed his plea to guilty and his barrister, Jeffrey Israel, explained his basis of plea did not 'reflect the particulars' on the indictment. Pictured: Southwark Crown Court, London What is a Get? A Get is a divorce document in Jewish religious law, which must be presented by a husband to his wife to give effect to their divorce. The text of the Get states 'You are hereby permitted to all men', which means that the woman is no longer married and that the laws of adultery no longer apply. It also returns to the wife the legal rights that a husband holds in regard to her in a Jewish marriage. Jewish law dictates the Get must be given of the husband's free-will and be physically accepted by the wife. It must be specific and cannot include blanks to be filled in later, while it cannot be written on any surface which could be erased. A wife can sue for divorce in rabbinical court, which can compel a husband to grant the separation through financial penalties and even forcing the husband to spend a night in an unmarked grave. Jewish law states that coercion will invalidate a Get except in 'extreme circumstances'. Advertisement The charge states he 'used or threatened her with violence causing her to fear for her own personal safety on two or more occasions; exercised unreasonable financial control, including by obstructing any financial settlements ordered by the Family Court; agreed to a civil divorce but prevented her from obtaining a Get (Jewish religious divorce) enabling her to remarry in accordance with Jewish law and practice', according to Jewish News. In the document, agreed between prosecution and defence, he admitted his behaviour 'was controlling in a number of ways which made it more difficult for her to regain control of her life'. It also states the case did not involve 'an outright refusal' to give a Get but 'did involve conduct which was likely to have been interpreted as using unreasonable manipulation of the inherent control a Jewish man has to give his wife a divorce, and thereby release her from the marriage. 'Specifically, at various times, financial discussion was raised with the complainant to induce her to take less money than had been ordered by the Family Court proceedings in order to facilitate the giving of a Get.' Ms Moher's solicitor, Gary Lesin-Davis, said, 'Prosecution can provide a powerful remedy to protect vulnerable women whose treatment by recalcitrant husbands strays into criminal offending. 'Get refusal involves a serious restriction on the liberty of the victim and is behaviour designed to control and undermine a victim, keeping her in an intimate relationship against her will and preventing her from remarrying.' In 2019, the family court ruled that Moher must pay 1.6 million and 1,850 per month in maintenance payments until he grants her a 'Get'. However, at the time he claimed a Get must be granted 'freely' and only when financial ties between a couple are ended, adding the maintenance payments would therefore invalidate the religious divorce. A 'depraved' and 'inhumane' child sex monster who tricked and tormented young girls into sending him nude photos will spend more than eight years behind bars. Ranpati Amarasinghe, 24, was arrested by Australian Federal Police at his home in Melbourne in September 2020, after two years of his cruel sextortion scheme. The student convinced multiple young girls as young as 11 to send him nude photos or videos after striking up conversations online. Ranpati Amarasinghe, 24, will likely be shipped back to Kandy in Sri Lanka after serving years behind bars for his 'inhumane' crimes Ranpati Amarasinghe, 24, (right) was arrested by Australian Federal Police at his home in Melbourne in September 2020, after two years of his cruel sextortion scheme Amarasinghe would then threaten to send the photos to the women's friends, family or boyfriends if they didn't submit to more of his depraved requests. In some instances even when his victims complied, the vile grub would send the images anyway because 'whores deserve to be exposed'. On Wednesday, Amarasinghe was sentenced in the County Court of Victoria to 13 and a half years behind bars. The court heard he will likely be deported back to his homeland of Sri Lanka in disgrace upon serving his non-parole period. In sentencing, Judge Douglas Trapnell labelled the child sex offender a 'brutal coward'. 'Your offending was protracted, planned, organised, prolific and involved threats,' he said. Amarasinghe, of Hastings, south east of Melbourne, had come to Australia on a student visa and had been working at Woolworths while offending. He pleaded guilty in January to 25 charges of obtaining, publishing, possessing, or transmitting child porn or abuse material. Eight of those counts were using a carriage service to transmit child abuse material and one count of publishing child pornography material online. Officers who busted Amarasinghe seized his iPhone and hard drive and demanded he hand over passwords to his social media accounts. Police found 42 pictures and two videos considered child abuse material on his hard drive and nine images and one video on his phone. Judge Trapnell described Amarasinghe's crimes as 'cruel' and 'inhumane'. 'During this nearly 20-month period you cowardly threatened your victims, callously, brutally and cruelly,' he said. 'Your depravity knew no bounds. It was bad enough causing these young, innocent girls to sexually compromise themselves in this way, but to threaten them in the way you did and to carry through with the threats was nothing short of brutal.' Judge Trapnell said Amarasinghe had presented one face to the real world while hiding behind a cloak of anonymity. The student (right) used multiple fake personas to trick his victims into sending nude photos including the pseudonyms 'Emma Law' and 'John' 'By objectifying these girls you dehumatised them and in the process you lost your own humanity,' he said. The student had used multiple fake personas to trick his victims into sending lewd photos including the pseudonyms 'Emma Law' and 'John'. One child was just 13 when she first sent naked images and videos of herself to 'John' on Snapchat in November 2018. After she declined to send Amarasinghe more lewd content he threatened to send the nude photos to her family and friends. He also messaged a few of the girl's social media contacts and asked them to inform her 'this was just the start'. Another victim's mother took screenshots of a conversation Amarasinghe had with her daughter to the police after she complied with his demands for nude photos. He threatened to send the images to her Instagram followers if she didn't send more material, even after she begged him not to. 'Get ready to be ruined,' he told his young victim and 'want me to send these vids to ur friends or no?' Amarasinghe promised the girl that if she sent photos once more he would leave her alone and get rid of the compromising images. 'I am ruining your life and don't give a s**t. You are a f**king whore,' he said. A recipient of one of the lewd videos in Amarasinghe's possession told him he could get in 'serious trouble' for circulating the child abuse material. 'If they wanna hoe around let them. You need to chill,' they said. 'They don't know what they are doing, and you could ruin the rest of their life if you spread this s**t. You can get in serious trouble too. I have close friends doing years for this s**t.' A 17-year-old girl from the US made a statement to police that a user named 'John' had threatened her over Snapchat. After the pair exchanged photos he said he would tell her boyfriend they were speaking and demanded photos of her face, breasts, and vagina. 'I'm not feeling very nice today so you're going to send me nude body pics or I'm going to send these to your boyfriend and he'll break up with you,' he said. He uploaded a photo of one of his 19-year-old victims to an adult pornography website with their full name and social media accounts. The student labelled the photo 'hot teen' and sent a chilling message to the woman he had demanded it from, saying: 'you are going to be on porn'. Going off a tip from jurisdictions in the US and the UK, the Australian Federal Police searched Amarasinghe's home in June 2020 and found the child abuse material. He will spend his first night behind bars on Wednesday. Advertisement Better safe than sorry! A Texas-based doomsday bunker company has seen a huge spike in sales since Russia declared war and invaded Ukraine last week. The owner of Rising S Bunkers, which sells survival shelters ranging from a $39,500 'mini bunker' to an $8.35million 'aristocrat' bunker that fit up to 44 people, said sales have 'increased astronomically over the last few days.' General Manager Gary Lynch told The Sun that demand is up 1,000 per cent since Thursday. 'Typically, I'll sell between two and six shelters a month - and usually winter is a quiet time for us.' Lynch sold five units alone on Thursday, the first day of the invasion, and has resorted to buying more supplies from a hardware store to keep up with the rapidly increasing demand. 'The phone hasn't stopped ringing and we've been sending out so many quotes,' he told the Sun. The Texas-based company has received inquires from all the world, including Italy, the United Kingdom, Denmark, Japan, and Canada, as well as across the US. 'The interest isnt just isolated to the US, its everywhere,' he said. Lynch also said that most of the interest in doomsday bunkers are coming from customers who are afraid Russia will expand its invasion to other countries outside of Ukraine that could prompt another World War. A Texas-based doomsday bunker company has seen a huge spike in sales since Russia declared war and invaded Ukraine last week and have products that feature living rooms and laundry rooms It can also feature different styles and setups. General Manager Gary Lynch sold five units alone on Thursday, the first day of the invasion and has resorted to buying more supplies from a hardware store to keep up with the rapidly increasing demand from across the world The bunkers can be customizable to fit all types of aesthetics Bunkers don't have to be plain steel and can feature comfortable furniture and painted walls Many bunkers come with bunk bed style housing to fit a maximum amount of people Some bunkers come equipped with a life of luxury and feature different sized pools The more expensive bunkers can also come equipped with a theater The bunkers can feature benches and security doors to all types of needs Lynch said their fears are justified, saying: 'Just look at whats going on. [Vladimir Putin] is threatening nuclear war, saying it would be something the world has never seen. 'The world has seen Hiroshima. And if what they are threatening is worse than that then, by all means, we should all be worried,' he told the Sun. This isn't the first time the company has seen an increase in demand for their all-steel underground bunkers, storm rooms, and bomb shelters as the threat of nuclear war has increased in the previous years, but Lynch said the Ukraine situation is unprecedented and fears are high. 'Dont make fun of or criticize people that have valid fears,' Lynch said. 'They want nothing more than to protect their loved ones in a terrible, terrible time. The only way you can prepare yourself to fail is by not preparing.' The company's bunkers are buried 11 feet under the ground and can be outfitted with grow rooms for food, fitness centers, elevators, swimming pools, sauna, theaters, firing ranges, bowling allies, laundry rooms, and more. Customers have ranged from professional athletes to celebrities to politicians to tech companies, according to the Sun. Rising S Bunkers has also sent safety shelters to Ukraine for the nation's military since 2019. The shelters could be easily taken down, according to the website. The cheapest model is a $39,500 'mini bunker' that features double bunk beds, a shower, and a composting toilet An $85,500 model features four bunk beds and a queen-size bed, as well as a TV/DVD combo and food storage This 288,000 bunker has two double beds and two queens, as well as closets, a composting toilet, and a painted interior A $1million bunker called the 'Fortress' can fit up to 42 bunk-style beds and 15 queen-sized beds and has 15 private bedrooms Rising S Bunkers most expensive bunker retails for $8.35million and can fit up to 44 people and has a gym, swimming pool, bowling, laundry room, and more 'Since late 2019, Rising S Company was contracted to create multiple quick-up shelters that can be built, then taken down and moved quickly, the site read. 'These shelters not only protect the Ukrainian forces from the Russian attack led by Putin but can also help when positioning and strength is needed quickly and efficiently.' New blasts rocked Kyiv tonight after Russia was slammed as 'barbaric' for bombing a TV tower near the Babyn Yar holocaust memorial in Kyiv on the site of one of the biggest single massacres of Jews during the Holocaust. Several of the city's neighborhoods are currently under attack, according to local reports. The Kyiv Independent reported at 11.29 local time that Russian bombs have struck Vyshneve, a town outside the capital. It also said the residential neighborhoods of Rusanivka, Kurenivka and Boiarka - as well as the area near Kyiv International Airport - were coming under attack. Rusanivka in particular is very central. It also reported a loud explosion was heard at Bila Tserkva, a city in Kyiv Oblast, when a duel depot was attacked, according to the UNIAN news agency. The locations of the reported attacks suggest Russian forces are tonight closing in from multiple sides of the capital, particularly from the west. They come as a 40-mile long Russian military convoy inches closer to Kyiv. The bunkers are buried 11 feet under the ground to protect ultimate safety The bunkers are also made of steel and can be shipped anywhere in the world According to a British correspondent in the city, a new round of explosions were heard at around 10.50 local time. 'Sounds of heavy explosions in #Kyiv just now,' journalist Sara Firth tweeted. Elsewhere, at least three people were killed and 10 houses destroyed in an airstrike in the city of Zhytomyr - around 85 miles west of Kyiv - at 10.16pm, according to Ukraine's emergency services. More might still be trapped in the rubble, the state emergency services said in a Tweet. Earlier, explosions erupted around the capital's 1,300 foot TV tower, built by the ravine where nearly 34,000 Jews were killed by SS troops in two days in 1941 during Adolf Hitler's campaign against the Soviet Union. At least two large blasts were seen near the foot of the tower, around three miles from central Kyiv, around 5.30pm local time. The first missile struck the TV tower but the second hit the memorial. At least five people were killed in the latest onslaught which came just hours after Russia told Ukrainian civilians to evacuate because it was about to begin bombarding 'strategic' targets. Footage of the immediate aftermath of the explosions showed bodies in the streets below. It was not immediately clear whether the tower had been the target of the strikes, or whether they had been targeting nearby buildings. The tower remained standing, but several state broadcasts went off air. Smoke rises around Kyiv's main television tower after several explosions near the base of it on Tuesday afternoon A judge issued a gag order Tuesday at the Travis Scott concert hearing so the case can be 'tried in the courtroom and not on social media' as dozens of lawyers representing hundreds of victims and their families met in court for the first time. The November 2021 tragedy at the Astroworld Festival left 10 dead and many more injured. 'This case should be tried in the courtroom and not on social media or with press releases or other statements to the media,' Judge Kristen Hawkins said. Hawkins clarified her order, saying lawyers could tell the media about factual issues that happen in court, but she didn't want attorneys to make their cases in the court of public opinion and possibly influence the jury pool. At the hearing Tuesday, dozens of attorneys were in court to represent the ten Scott fans who were killed and thousands more who were injured. It was the first time the lawyers, handling the nearly 500 lawsuits, had met in court after the cases were consolidated before one judge. Most of Tuesday's court hearing was spent discussing how the cases would proceed, the creation of a leadership structure that would speak on behalf of attorneys for each side, how disputes over evidence or other matters would be handled. Civil rights attorney Ben Crump, who is representing Ezra Blount, the youngest victim, pointed out that most of the victims killed or injured were black but the majority of attorneys representing them are white. Ezra Blount, 9, was reportedly a big fan of rapper Travis Scott's music, and was sitting on his father's shoulders when Scott's performance began at NRG Park on November 5. He was the youngest of the 10 people who died in the massive crowd surge. 'There seems to be not much representation in the court of those African American voices,' Crump said. 'We really grapple with it. We are concerned about them not having a voice.' Attorneys Ben Crump, left, representing the father of victim, Ezra Blount, left, Neal Manne, representing Live Nation, right, and others are shown leaving from a status conference about Astroworld litigation before Judge Kristen Hawkins Tuesday Judge Kristen Hawkins issued a gag order Tuesday at the Travis Scott concert hearing so the case can be 'tried in the courtroom and not on social media' as dozens of lawyers representing hundreds of victims and their families met in court for the first time. Ezra Blount, 9, of Dallas, Texas, became the latest fatality in a deadly crowd surge during a Travis Scott performance at the Astroworld music festival in Houston on Sunday - 10 days after he was put in a medically-induced coma In recent years, Crump has represented victims of police brutality and vigilante violence and has been the lawyer for the families of Trayvon Martin, Breonna Taylor and George Floyd. Hawkins told Crump this issue is something 'that has not gone unnoticed by the court ... I would like that to be considered going forward.' But Hawkins said she was 'not going to choose someone's counsel for them. I do know we have excellent attorneys in this room and those attorneys come from all aspects of Harris County.' Neal Manne, who represents Astroworld festival promoter Live Nation, thanked Crump for highlighting this issue, saying, 'I agree with him.' Brent Coon, an attorney who is representing about 1,500 concertgoers and is asking for $10 billion in damages, said after the hearing he understands the judge's goal of 'let's keep who's pointing the finger at who, let that be courtroom issues and jury issues ultimately.' 'But this is a case of public import for all the reasons that are obvious,' Coon said. Hawkins said she planned to have monthly hearings. She requested that by the next hearing, lawyers give her a breakdown of the various lawsuits by four categories: deaths, bodily injuries, brain injuries and post traumatic stress disorder. Coon said it could be years before any trials or settlements in the case take place. At least two Houston Police Department cops were spotted holding their phones up and filming at Travis Scott's deadly Astroworld gig 30 minutes after it was declared a mass-casualty event The U.S. House Oversight and Reform Committee in December announced it was investigating Live Nation's role in the deadly concert. Last month, Houston officials announced the creation of a new task force that will look at improving the safety at large Houston-area events. Those who died in the concert ranged in age from 9 to 27 years old. Roughly 300 people were injured and treated at the scene, and 25 were taken to hospitals. Those killed died from compression asphyxia. Ezra was reportedly a big fan of rapper Travis Scott's music, and was sitting on his father's shoulders when the countdown to Scott's performance began at NRG Park on November 5. The pair stayed near the back of the crowd because his father, Treston Blount, thought it would be calmer, he previously told ABC 13. But as soon as Scott took the stage, Treston said, people started pushing. He lost consciousness and Ezra fell to the ground, and was soon trampled on by eager concert-goers. When Treston regained consciousness, he said, he could not find Ezra anywhere, and rushed to the on-site medic tents and several hospitals. Eventually, he said, he filed a police report, and received a message from an officer with a picture of his boy. When he got to the hospital, he discovered his son incurred severe damage to his brain, kidney, and liver after being 'kicked, stepped on, and trampled, and nearly crushed to death,' according to a lawsuit his family has filed against Scott and the events organizer, Live Nation. The Blount family is seeking at least $1 million in damages. In a statement, the family's lawyer, Ben Crump, said that he was 'committed to seeking answers and justice' on behalf of the family. 'The Blount family tonight is grieving the incomprehensible loss of their precious young son,' Crump said. 'This should not have been the outcome of taking their son to a concert, what should have been a joyful celebration. Ezra's death is absolutely heartbreaking.' An ambulance is seen in the crowd during the Astroworld music festival as Scott's performance reportedly continued Scott has been widely criticized for continuing to play on for 38 minutes after Houston PD declared a mass casualty incident Video and photos obtained by TMZ shows members of the Houston Police Department calmly walking around and even pulling out their cellphones to record Scott's performance after the Fire Chief declared a 'mass casualty event' at 9:38 pm. A set of photos with the time stamps 9:57 pm shows police officers recording the rappers performance, 19 minutes after the chief's declaration, TMZ reported. TMZ also obtained video of officers casually strolling past the stage shot at 10:02 pm, 25 minutes after the mass casualty declaration. When asked about how the concert came to an end, and why Scott was able to complete his set, the chief said investigators are still looking into the specifics during a press conference Wednesday. 'I don't know, and that's part of the investigation,' he told reporters, adding 'We've been looking and the timelines have moved and that's why we shouldn't jump ahead of things, let's just wait. that's part of the investigation.' Finner, who said he did not have a close relationship with Scott and had only met him twice, said whether or not the show went on was not up to the police department. 'Authorities ability to end the show - we don't hold the plug, okay? But it's always in a plan, there's always discussion of how that would happen and we had those discussions with the promoters,' Finner said. 'The ultimate authority to end the show is with production and the entertainer,' he added. A Houston police officer pictured helping the crowd at last Friday's deadly Astroworld concert Scott has been widely criticized for continuing to play on for 38 minutes after Houston PD declared a mass casualty incident and for attending a party with fellow rapper Drake in the hours after the tragedy. But Scott's lawyer Ed McPherson told DailyMail.com that the rapper did pause the show when he spotted fans in trouble and was wearing an earpiece during the gig which limited what he could hear. McPherson also revealed Scott was not allowed to stop the show himself due to a security protocol that put the decision in the hands of the producers. He said that when told to stop, he did. McPherson said: 'There's very little that you can see [from the stage]. You're up there to perform. Your job is to entertain the crowd and get the crowd going. 'You can't see these things [crowd trouble]. You certainly can't hear anything. This was in the middle of the night and that compounds things on stage. All you see is black in front of you.' Scott released a statement in the aftermath of the tragedy in which he said he was 'absolutely devastated' by the loss of life. The Houston native went on: 'My prayers go out to the families and all those impacted by what happened at the Astroworld Festival. 'Houston PD has my total support as they continue to look into the tragic loss of life. 'I am committed to working together with the Houston community to heal and support the families in need.' Hundreds of thousands of disaster support payment claims have already been requested in Queensland and northern NSW, as heavy rain heads south. Government Services Minister Linda Reynolds said there have been 145,000 claims for government support so far, 90,000 of which were filed on Tuesday. The emergency federal support is a one-off payment of $1,000 for adults and $400 for children affected by floodwaters. Senator Reynolds said the number of claims is 'of a magnitude beyond' anything the government has seen before in a flooding event. Residents begin the cleanup in Lismore in Northern NSW on Wednesday (pictured) Locals are busy empty their houses of soggy items and washing away mud after the floodwaters reached roof level (pictured) But she would not be drawn on whether the payment, which has been at the same rate since 2006, should increase. 'At the moment, that's what it is,' she told ABC Radio National on Wednesday. 'This is a payment for people who need to buy food and emergency supplies... it is a payment for people to get through the next few days. 'At the moment, our sole focus is on evacuations and these early stages of the disaster that's making sure people are safe.' The minister confirmed 35,000 people have already received the emergency payment in their bank accounts, as Services Australia works to keep up with demand. On Wednesday, there was still high water in some parts of the city (pictured) On Tuesday the floodwater was still at about roof height, submerging this service station (pictured) Opposition Leader Anthony Albanese says more needs to be done to help people on the ground who have lost everything in the floods. 'People have struggled to get the support they need and aren't in a position to get a MyGov account and go through the bureaucracy,' he said in Brisbane on Wednesday. 'We encourage the federal government to have Services Australia representatives on the ground to make sure Queenslanders and those in northern NSW can access emergency relief they're entitled to.' Senator Reynolds confirmed Services Australia teams would be sent to evacuation centres 'as soon as it is safe to do so' and will help people who are without internet or paperwork to make claims. Business were also inundated int he deluge with the cost of the damage not yet determined (pictured) Residents in Lismore can be seen on their second storey as floodwaters remain high on Tuesday (pictured) Meanwhile, Emergency Management Minister Bridget McKenzie has defended the government for not yet using its $4.8 billion emergency response fund. She says it is a 'future fund' for catastrophic events expected in coming years. 'We haven't had to draw on (the emergency response fund) yet because we haven't exhausted our other funding,' she told Nine. 'Under the legislation, we can use $50 million of the interest (from the fund) to partner with states around mitigation projects - which we've done - and we've put $150 million towards flood mitigation and coastal erosion.' The Government said there have been more then 145,000 claims for financial assistance (pictured: Lismore) This car dealership in Lismore was completely flooded, it is not known if the cars were moved beforehand (pictured) But Labor senator Murray Watt says none of the mitigation projects given funding by the government has started construction, and nor has any funding gone to disaster recovery. 'We're now in our third disaster season since this fund was first established,' he told ABC radio. 'There's not a single disaster mitigation project where construction has actually begun - let alone completed under this fund - which is just a shocking lack of preparation for the kind of floods that we're seeing right now.' The Government is offering $1,000 for adults and $400 for kids as a one-off assistance payment for those affected by the floods (pictured) The Clarence River was one of many in northern NSW which overflowed (pictured) Senator Watt said the government is also misrepresenting the amount of money spent on disasters in the past three years by including $13 billion in support spent during the pandemic. 'Certainly (Covid) is a disaster, but the fact that the government has to roll in Covid support payments to bump up their disaster support figures shows they haven't done enough to support people recovering from natural disasters,' he said. Storms are expected to hit Sydney on Wednesday and the NSW south coast later in the week. East Gippsland in Victoria and northern Tasmania are also expected to be hit in the coming days. TV personality Larry Emdur has scolded looters targeting Australia's flood victims. Following reports of heartless thieves targeting devastated parts of Queensland, the Morning Show presenter took to Instagram to voice his frustrations on Wednesday. 'Dear absolute ****ing arseholes looting houses and businesses in devastated flood zones,' Emdur wrote. '...know this, every single person in Australia hates you right now! Looters in Queensland have targeted empty businesses and home in already devastated communities 'You are beyond pathetic' Emdur has a stern message for thieves in the nation's flooded areas 'Stealing from people who have lost everything.... You are beyond pathetic !!' Some communities on Australia's eastern coast are still inundated with floodwater in the wake of huge downpours from an east coast low. While most volunteer to help in rescue and clean up efforts, police have slammed thieves who have looted empty homes and businesses in Queensland. Commenters on Emdur's post also rushed to condemn the looters. 'Looting shouldn't even be a word let alone a thing to cross peoples awful minds.' one wrote. 'I hate people but then you look on the other side , all the people who are coming out and volunteering help. You have to think there are far more decent people in the world ' wrote another. Police Minister Mark Ryan told looters: 'What you are doing is not just illegal, but you are also grubs. 'You are preying on the most vulnerable Queenslanders, at the time they are most vulnerable.' The record-breaking weather has left towns like Gympie (pictured) submerged in floodwater Queensland flood victims targeted by looters Reports of looting in flood-ravaged Queensland have infuriated a community still reeling from devastating floods that have so far claimed nine lives and left a trail of devastation expected to cost billions of dollars. The state's 'mud army' is out in force, it has not stopped opportunistic looters picking through the devastation, with police stepping up patrols in response. Queensland Premier Annastacia Palaszczuk said the behaviour was 'absolutely outrageous'. 'The police commissioner was telling me that some people in the Ipswich area were going in and looting while people were homeless,' the premier told reporters. 'I don't know where it stops. Queensland Premier Anastasia Palaszczuk labelled looting behaviour as 'absolutely outrageous' 'These people have got to have a good hard look at themselves ... I cannot believe it in this day and age people would do that.' Police Commissioner Katarina Carroll confirmed reports of looting at Bundamba, Goodna and Blackstone, west of Brisbane. 'I cannot overstate how disappointed and disgusted I am that this has occurred in areas where people have had to leave their houses,' Commissioner Carroll said. 'Through this operation, we will ensure there is a strong police presence in flood-affected areas to protect our community against heartless thieves. 'Our message to anyone thinking about stealing from homes or businesses is that you can expect police to track you down and ensure you are held responsible for your actions.' Towns like Bundamba, Blackstone and Ipswich have reported cases of looting as people have returned to inspect homes and stores A 21-year-old man has been arrested and charged with burglary as detectives investigate at least two other matters. Police allege he used a canoe to navigate through floodwater before allegedly breaking into the freezer of a Brisbane Road convenience store and stealing several items. A flooded charity store on Coal Street in Bundamba was also targeted on Monday night, with jewellery and cash stolen. In Blackstone, one evacuated resident returned to find their property had been broken into, with a door damaged and several items of value stolen. Police have launched Operation Uniform Nash in a bid to stop looters in their tracks. Around the clock local patrols are underway in flood zone areas using water police and Polair. Advertisement A video has shown people's desperate bid to flee Kyiv overnight on Tuesday as explosions struck residential areas and as many as 15,000 troops - an entire Russian army division - bore down on Ukraine's capital. Footage from Kyiv station showed hundreds of civilians, some with young children, trying to cram onto an already packed train amid fears that the city could soon be turned into a war zone. Air strikes rocked residential suburbs of the capital on Tuesday night as a 40-mile long convoy of Russian military vehicles inched closer, with fears that President Vladimir Putin's troops will soon lay siege to the city. Another convoy was reported to be moving towards Kyiv from the south-east, with plans to encircle it. On Tuesday afternoon, outrage followed an eruption of explosions around the capital's 1,300ft TV tower, built by a ravine where as many as 150,000 people were killed by the Nazis - including 34,000 Jews in two horrific days in 1941 - during Adolf Hitler's campaign against the Soviet Union. Five people, reportedly a single family walking together, were burned alive in the blasts. After the attack, Volodymyr Zelensky tweeted: 'To the world: what is the point of saying 'never again' for 80 years, if the world stays silent when a bomb drops on the same site of Babyn Yar? At least 5 killed. History repeating' Russia also shelled the country's second-largest city Kharkiv, killing at least 11 people and wounding dozens of others, Ukrainian officials said. Kharkiv's central square was hit with what was believed to be a missile, leaving the massive area piled high with debris. Hospitals raced to treat victims of the bombardment even as mothers and children sheltered in their basements. While the fighting in Ukraine raged, the death toll remained unclear. 'According to preliminary data, dozens of Kharkiv residents, including children, died from these airstrikes,' the ministry said on its Facebook page. An airstrike also hit a residential area near a hospital late Tuesday in Zhytomyr, a city about 85 miles west of Kyiv, Mayor Serih Sukhomlin said in a Facebook video. Ukraine's emergency services said the strike killed at least two people, set three homes on fire and broke the windows in the hospital. Zhytomyr is the home of the elite 95th Air Assault Brigade, which may have been the intended target. Ukrainian President Volodymyr Zelenskyy said Tuesday that Russia should stop its bombardment of Ukraine before more talks on ending the war are held. Ukrainian and Russian officials have held one round of talks since the six-day-long war began and reportedly are planning more. 'As for dialogue, I think yes, but stop bombarding people first and start negotiating afterwards,' Zelenskyy said in a joint interview Tuesday with CNN and the Reuters news agency. At the border, anguished families said goodbye as women and children fled while many men returned to fight. More than 675,000 people have escaped to neighbouring countries since the Russian invasion began - a number that will only grow, according to the UN refugee agency. A UN agency also said at least 136 civilians have been killed in the war so far, including 13 children, and 400 have been injured. 'The real toll is likely to be much higher,' Liz Throssell, a spokesperson for the U.N. human rights office (OHCHR) said. Other reports have said far more civilians have been killed. A video has shown people's desperate bid to flee Kyiv overnight on Tuesday as explosions struck residential areas and as many as 15,000 troops - an entire Russian army division - bore down on Ukraine's capital People wait to board an evacuation train from Kyiv to Lviv at Kyiv central train station following Russia's invasion of Ukraine, in Kyiv, Ukraine March 1, 2022 Pictured: Crowds gather at Kyiv train station as they try to flee the city before it is turned into a war zone by Russian forces People arrive to the West Train Station from Zahony after border crossing at Zahony-Csap as they flee Ukraine on March 01, 2022 in Budapest, Hungary Pictured: Flames are seen in Zhytomyr following an air strike on Tuesday night, that officials said destroyed houses and killed at least three people. More, they said, could still be trapped in the rubble Pictured: Ukrainian emergency service personnel, along with civilians, search through the rubble of houses in Zhytomyr, a city about 85 miles west of Kyiv, after air strikes hit the city on Tuesday A blast is seen in the TV tower, amid Russia's invasion of Ukraine, in Kiev, Ukraine March 1, 2022 Footage shows the missile hitting the TV tower during the airstrike which has killed at least five people in the latest Russian attack Although Ukrainian forces have slowed Russia's advance and still control Kharkiv and the coastal cities of Kherson and Mariupol, all three are encircled, according to the U.K. Ministry of Defence. Russian strikes on Mariupol, a key southern port on the Azov Sea, seriously wounded several people. Separatist forces in Donetsk said they have established two corridors for the evacuation of civilians from Mariupol, which suggests that a large attack on the city could be imminent. US defence officials have said Moscow has so far moved 80 percent of its forces - believed to number 190,000 in total - across borders into Ukraine, but so far only a fraction have engaged in combat. The presence of a huge convoy rolling towards Kiev has been tracked by satellites, raising fears that the worst is yet to be seen from Putin's forces. According to The Times, experts have said as many as 15,000 soldiers could be moving with the convoy. Blasts rocked Kyiv on Tuesday night. The Kyiv Independent reported at 23:29 local time (21:29GMT) that Russian bombs had struck Vyshneve, a town outside the capital. It also said the residential neighbourhoods of Rusanivka, Kurenivka and Boiarka - as well as the area near Kyiv International Airport - were coming under attack. Rusanivka in particular is very central. It also reported a loud explosion was heard at Bila Tserkva, a city in Kyiv Oblast, when a fuel depot was attacked, according to the UNIAN news agency. The locations of the reported attacks suggest Russian forces were closing in from multiple sides of the capital, particularly from the south-west, while also striking deep into the city. Powerful blasts could be heard Tuesday night in central Kyiv. People on the ground reported car alarms were set off by the blasts, a first in the central part of the capital city where Russian forces are encroaching. To add to Ukraine's woes, the country's Defense Ministry said it has evidence that Belarus, a Russian ally, is preparing to send troops into Ukraine. The ministry statement, posted on Facebook at midnight, said the Belarussian troops have been brought into combat readiness and are concentrated close to Ukraine's northern border. 'During the past 24 hours, according to intelligence findings, there has been significant aircraft activity. In addition, there has been movement of a column of vehicles with food and ammunition' approaching the border,' the statement said. The reports came after Belarussian President Alexander Lukashenko appeared on Tuesday to have indicated Vladimir Putin's forces have plans to invade Moldova. Putin's war-mongering sidekick addressed security officials today while standing in front of a battle map that seems to show a planned operation from southern Ukraine into its tiny neighbour. The map also showed proposed battle plans for Russian troops across the country. It detailed Russian lines of attack heading into Ukraine, some of which have materialised in the first few days of the invasion - such as forces storming towards Kyiv from the north, and towards Kherson from Crimea. Alexander Lukashenko has appeared in front of a battle map during a state TV broadcast which appears to detail Russia's attack plans in Ukraine The map seems to suggest that a force will be sent from the Ukrainian city of Odessa to attack neighbouring Moldova, where Russia already has troops A convoy of Russian tanks, artillery pieces, fighting vehicles and support trucks now stretches all the way from Hostomel, on the outskirts of Kyiv, to the village of Prybirs'k some 40 miles away (part of the convoy is seen, right) There are fears the purpose of the convoy (pictured) is to surround Kyiv, besiege it and bomb it into submission - mirroring tactics Russia used in Syria while fighting alongside the forces of Basahar al-Assad Russian vehicles are seen to the southeast of Invankiv and heading towards Kyiv in this satellite image taken on Monday But they also showed off several attacks that have yet to come to pass - with one even appearing to point from the port city of Odessa into Moldova, suggesting Russia plans to march troops into Ukraine's neighbour. The map displayed by Lukashenko is split into four sections which align with the command districts of Ukraine's military, showing Russian attacks from Belarus, along Ukraine's eastern border, and from occupied Crimea. A two-pronged pincer movement is shown targeting Kyiv - an attack that is currently playing out - which forces are also shown heading out of occupied Donetsk and Crimea before linking up at Melitopol, which Russia has captured. But attacks are also shown hitting the city of Dnipro, which has yet to take place - possibly because the forces assigned to attack it have been held up by fierce resistance in Kharkiv, which is along the route. Another attack appears to be heading for the city of Cherkasy via the city of Sumy, where Russian forces have also been held up, while a third appears to break off from the Kyiv assault towards Zhytomyr. Perhaps the most baffling shows troops attacking from the Ukrainian port city of Odessa towards Transnistria, a breakaway region of Moldova that Russia occupies. Nicu Popescu, Moldova's deputy prime minister, admitted today that his country is in a 'very risky zone' with the population feeling 'anxiety and fear'. But, he added, he does not expect to be invaded and instead sees the biggest challenge as handling an influx of refugees. A Ukrainian military official said Belarusian troops joined the war Tuesday in the Chernihiv region in the north, without providing details. But just before that, Lukashenko said his country had no plans to join the fight. The map also pinpoints what appear to be Ukrainian military infrastructure and missile batteries in locations that were struck by Russian missile strikes on the first day of the invasion. People arrive at a train station as they try to leave Kyiv, Ukraine, Tuesday, March 1, 2022 People wait to board an evacuation train from Kyiv to Lviv at Kyiv central train station following Russia's invasion of Ukraine, in Kyiv, Ukraine March 1, 2022 People fleeing from the conflict drive cars heading to the Ukrainian and Romania border near Cernivtsi, in Ukraine, Tuesday, March 1, 2022 Hundreds of people gather at the Kyiv train station to try to catch a ride out of town with news of the Russian convoys approaching the city of Kyiv, Ukraine, Tuesday, March 1, 2022 People walk along an empty road during curfew, in Kyiv, Ukraine, Tuesday, March 1, 2022 Ukrainian President Volodymyr Zelenskiy talks during an interview with Reuters in Kyiv, Ukraine, March 1, 2022 People look at the gutted remains of Russian military vehicles on a road in the town of Bucha, close to the capital Kyiv, Ukraine, Tuesday, March 1, 2022 Russian forces have advanced to the outskirts of Kyiv from two sides, with a huge column of armour and artillery heading for the city as diplomats warned Putin may soon resort to 'medieval' siege tactics Putin has drawn global condemnation and sanctions that have sent the rouble to historic lows and forced Russians to queue outside banks for their savings. The Russian dictator ordered the 'special military operation' last Thursday in a bid to disarm Ukraine, capture the 'neo-Nazis' he says are running the country and crush its hopes of closer ties to the West. Ukraine, which is not a member of NATO, has called on the US-led military alliance to implement a no-fly zone - a request rejected by Washington, which fears stoking a direct conflict between the world's two biggest nuclear powers and where such an act may lead. Washington and its allies have instead sent weapons to Kyiv, and Treasury Secretary Janet Yellen said the United States had agreed with partners to convene a task force 'to freeze and seize the assets of key Russian elites'. The move 'will inflict financial pain on the powerful individuals surrounding Putin and make clear that no one is beyond our collective reach,' Yellen said in a statement following a Tuesday call with Group of Seven officials. The West has imposed heavy sanctions on Russia to shut off its economy from the global financial system, pushing international companies to halt sales, cut ties, and dump tens of billions of dollars' worth of investments. The sanctions have had an immediate impact on Russia's economy, with queues forming outside banks as Russians rush to salvage their savings. Exxon Mobil joined other major Western energy companies including British BP PLC and Shell in announcing it would quit oil-rich Russia over the invasion. Several countries have moved to ban Russian planes from their airspace, and U.S. President Joe Biden, in his first State of the Union address, said Tuesday that the United States is closing its airspace to all Russian flights and is working to seize yachts and apartments of Russian oligarchs. In Ukraine's largely Russian-speaking city of Donetsk, in territory controlled by Russian-backed separatists, authorities said three civilians had been killed by Ukrainian shelling. Reuters was not able to confirm any of the incidents of reports of casualties. The United Nations says at least 136 civilians have been killed in the invasion, but that the real number of people is likely much higher. Russia has not published any precise casualty figures for its own military, but says its losses have been far lower than those of Ukrainian forces. Russian and Ukrainian negotiators met over a ceasefire on Monday but talks broke down with no further rounds yet announced. Ukrainian President Volodymyr Zelenskiy said on Monday that Russia must 'first stop bombing people' before talks could make any headway. Zelenskiy, who has been staying in a heavily guarded government compound in Kyiv, warns that the capital remains Russia's main target. Residents have been sheltering in underground metro stations at night for fear of attacks. 'We resist the invasive aggression,' Zelenskiy wrote on Twitter late on Tuesday, after thanking Western leaders for their support. 'Today, more than ever, it is important for us to feel that we are not alone.' BEIJING, March 2 (Xinhua) -- Chinese State Councilor and Foreign Minister Wang Yi held a phone conversation at request with Iranian Foreign Minister Hossein Amir Abdollahian on Wednesday. Iran has been firmly committed to promoting the Iran-China comprehensive strategic partnership, said Abdollahian, adding that the two sides should further consolidate political mutual trust, deepen pragmatic cooperation and implement the comprehensive cooperation plan between the two countries. Iran stands ready to work closely with the Chinese side and fully supports China in hosting a successful third meeting of foreign ministers of Afghanistan's neighboring countries, Abdollahian said. For his part, Wang said China is willing to work with Iran to promote pragmatic cooperation in various sectors and deepen the China-Iran comprehensive strategic partnership in accordance with the important consensus reached by the two heads of state. China will host the third meeting of foreign ministers of Afghanistan's neighboring countries when the time is appropriate, so as to give full play to the strengths of Afghanistan's neighbors, highlight their characteristics and play a positive role in Afghanistan's enduring peace and stability, Wang said. Abdollahian briefed on the latest progress of the resumption of negotiations on the implementation of the Joint Comprehensive Plan of Action (JCPOA) on the Iranian nuclear issue, noting that relevant parties have reached consensuses on most issues, saying that Iran has made active efforts to this end and hopes that all parties will attach great importance to and address Iran's legitimate concerns. Iran appreciates the constructive role China has played in the Iranian nuclear issue, and is willing to maintain communication and coordination with China to jointly achieve results in the negotiations, Abdollahian said. Noting that Iran's nuclear talks have reached their final hurdle, Wang said all parties should attach great importance to the settlement of the remaining issues, show flexibility to each other, seek reasonable solutions, make political decisions and bring the negotiations to a successful conclusion. China will continue to uphold justice and firmly advance the political and diplomatic settlement process of the Iranian nuclear issue, the Chinese foreign minister noted. The two foreign ministers also exchanged views on the Ukraine issue. Advertisement President Joe Biden directly took aim at progressives calls to defund the police during his State of the Union remarks on Tuesday, earning a standing ovation from Republicans and sour looks from the progressive Squad. He followed it by urging Congress to pass more gun control measures to 'save lives.' We should all agree: The answer is not to Defund the police. The answer is to FUND the police with the resources and training they need to protect our communities, the president said. The House chamber erupted in bipartisan applause, including standing ovations from top Republicans like House Minority Leader Kevin McCarthy and Minority Whip Steve Scalise. Biden then touted his administrations efforts to provide resources to both hire new police officers and equip them with body cameras and other measures that provide more accountability. The president also acknowledged the toll of the violent crime wave gripping US cities by taking a moment to remember the two young NYPD officers who were slain when responding to a domestic violence call earlier this year. I recently visited the New York City Police Department days after the funerals of Officer Wilbert Mora and his partner, Officer Jason Rivera. They were responding to a 9-1-1 call when a man shot and killed them with a stolen gun. Officer Mora was 27 years old. Officer Rivera was 22, Biden said. 'Both Dominican Americans whod grown up on the same streets they later chose to patrol as police officers.I spoke with their families and told them that we are forever in debt for their sacrifice, and we will carry on their mission to restore the trust and safety every community deserves. 'Ive worked on these issues a long time. I know what works: Investing in crime prevention and community policing, cops wholl walk the beat, wholl know the neighborhood, and who can restore trust and safety. So lets not abandon our streets, or choose between safety and equal justice. Republicans gave Biden a standing ovation when he vowed to fund the police during his speech Lets come together to protect our communities, restore trust, and hold law enforcement accountable. Thats why the Justice Department has required body cameras, banned chokeholds, and restricted no-knock warrants for its officers. He also highlighted the $350 billion allocated for state and local governments in his American Rescue Plan to hire more police and invest in proven strategies like community violence interruption. Biden then addressed the gathered lawmakers directly when he called on them to pass a series of measures aimed at reducing gun violence in the US. 'I ask Congress to pass proven measures to reduce gun violence. Pass universal background checks. Why should anyone on a terrorist list be able to purchase a weapon?' the president posed. 'Ban assault weapons and high-capacity magazines.' He briefly went off-script, adding: 'You think the deer are wearing a kevlar vest?' 'Repeal the liability shield that makes gun manufacturers the only industry in America that cant be sued,' Biden continued. 'These laws dont infringe on the Second Amendment. They save lives.' Meanwhile as Biden discussed his measures to better equip officers, progressive Rep. Rashida Tlaib of Michigan was seen grim-faced staring downwards. Tlaib is meant to deliver the progressive response to the State of the Union after the president speaks. Biden opened his first State of the Union on Tuesday evening by saying President Vladimir Putin is 'more isolated than ever' and told Russian oligarchs 'we're coming for you' as Moscow continues its attack on Kyiv. Pictured behind the president are Vice President Kamala Harris and Speaker of the House Nancy Pelosi Biden also announced during his remarks that the U.S. would be closing its airspace to all Russian flights and air craft A violent crime wave has gripped the nations largest cities over the last year, as Democrats from blue strongholds continue to fuel calls to defund the police. Crimes in San Francisco like larceny theft and rape have surged in the week leading to February 27 compared to the same period last year. Overall crime has spiked by 0.5 percent in the same time frame. In New York City, overall major crimes spiked nearly 40 percent in January compared to the same time last year, according to the NYPD. The Big Apple reported 9,566 such incidents last month, nearly double the 6,905 major crimes at the beginning of 2021. Grand larceny surged by 58.1 percent within that time frame. City-wide shootings increased by nearly a third. The city has also recently been gripped by a slew of attacks by homeless people, particularly within its subway system -- where many had been residing during the COVID-19 pandemic. Los Angeles, California saw overall violent crime including robberies go up 3.5 percent during that period, though homicides dropped nearly 17 percent, according to statistics reported by Fox 11 LA. A recent Politico/Morning Consult poll found that 75 percent of Americans blamed the defunding of police departments for violent crime increasing in the United States. Mora (left and right) was taken off life support a week ago. Being an organ donor, in his death the 27-year-old helped save five lives The attack is the latest in a string of stabbings and robberies that have occurred in the past week in New York City's subway system, which serves more than 3 million people daily Crimes in San Francisco like larceny theft and rape have surged this year in the week leading to February 27, the SFPD's most recent data, as compared to last year. Overall crime has spiked by 0.5% in the same period Nearly half 49 percent said defunding the police was a major reason for the crime spike and 26 percent called it a minor reason. Just a quarter said it was not a reason at all. Earlier on Tuesday, a White House official touted Bidens commitment to reducing violent crime when previewing the presidents speech, with an emphasis on his five-part strategy to combat gun violence. The plan, rolled out in June of last year, involves stemming the flow of firearms used to commit violence, investing more funds in community violence interventions, expanding employment and other opportunities for young adults and teens, and breaking the cycle of re-offending by giving more support to formerly incarcerated Americans. It also calls for more support to local law enforcement, including federal tools and resources to address violent crime and put more cops on the beat, the White House official said. During his Tuesday evening speech Biden also expressed US support for Ukraine as it's invaded by Russia, announcing the country would close its airspace to Russian planes. A suspect gets arrested at the 33rd St. subway station in New York City. Biden acknowledged violent crime in US cities when he took a moment during the State of the Union to highlight two slain NYPD officers A father-of-two was fatally shot in broad daylight in Chicago after getting himself involved in road rage incident with another driver. The shooting took place on Sunday in Streamwood, a northwestern suburb of the Windy City, at just before 5:20 p.m. in the area of Bartlett and Oltendorf roads. Dashcam footage showed Scott Mattison, 46, who was driving a blue Ford pickup truck on Bartlett Road, getting out of his truck and approaching a white Ford sedan. He was seen arguing with the sedan driver and reaching into the car's open window when he was shot. Moments later, he is seen taking a couple of steps back after realizing that he had been hit. Mattison, of Glendale Height, was rushed to AMITA Health St. Alexius Medical Center, where he was later pronounced dead. Scott Mattison, 46, pulled over and exited from his blue Ford pickup truck on Bartlett Road in Chicago on Sunday to resolve a heated argument with the driver of a white Ford sedan before he was shot several times Scott Mattison (left and right), 46, had attempted to talk to the other driver with whom he had been involved in a dispute with, before being shot several times, according to Streamwood police Mattison (right) worked as a Heating, Ventilation, and Air Conditioning (HVAC) installer prior to his death over the weekend The driver of the white Ford, whose name hasn't yet been shared by police to the public, was arrested on Monday. As of Tuesday evening, no charges have been announced 'pending further investigation', according to Streamwood Police. Authorities also declined to provide more details on the nature of the traffic dispute. Those closest to Mattison have said that their friend did not deserve to be suddenly shot and killed on the side of a busy road, no matter what both men were arguing about. 'He didn't deserve to die; to be gunned down the way he was,' Kevin Polka, who was Mattison's boss and one of his closest friend, told CBS Chicago. 'He always was about his daughters,' he added. The pair worked together at Polka's small business, called Paragon Mechanic Inc. Mattison worked as a Heating, Ventilation, and Air Conditioning installer (HVAC). When asked if he was stunned by Mattison's involvement in the quarrel, Polka said: 'I don't know if it surprised me, of if I just I know if he didn't, he would be here today. Scott made mistakes, he did. He wasn't perfect by any means.' Police declined to provide specifics on the nature of the dispute. Pictured: Mattison with his girlfriend Jennifer Roa The 46-year-old leaves both of his daughters behind, while friends and family are shocked by the sudden announcement regarding his death. Pictured: Mattison with one of his daughters Arick Lopez, who was walking nearby with his dogs during the incident, recorded parts of it on his cellphone. 'I heard a couple shots,' Lopez said. 'There was arguing, one thing led to another, and consequences came.' The argument now leaves two young girls without a father and a friend with many unanswered questions. 'If every time someone screws up, if that's the consequence, where are we at?' Polka said. 'What are we left with?' Since his passing, Mattisons co-workers have set up a fundraiser on GoFundMe to help his daughters and to cover funeral costs. As of Tuesday evening, nearly $13,000 has been raised of a $30,000 goal. The parents of a 15-year-old who took her own life following years of bullying have issued a dire warning to young people - asking them to consider whether something is 'true, kind or necessary' before posting it online. Matilda 'Tilly' Rosewarne died on February 16 after enduring more than seven years' of relentless abuse at the hands of children and teenagers in Bathurst, west of Sydney. At her farewell at Bathurst Harness Racing Club, the schoolgirl's parents Murray and Emma Mason told friends and family that their daughter decided to end her life as a result of catastrophic events that 'cut into Tilly's soul'. 'Every post you write, every image you share, every word you say has an impact,' they wrote in her funeral booklet. Matilda 'Tilly' Rosewarne (pictured) was 15 when she took her own life on February 16 'We beg you, before you post, share or speak - ask yourself, is it true? Is it kind? It is necessary?' 'If the answer is "no" to any of these questions, do not post, do not share, do not speak.' The parents explained that the father of one of their daughter's classmates died when she was eight years' old, but her classmates responded by holding a vote and deciding that Tilly's father should have died instead. When she wasn't invited to birthday parties with the rest of her grade, her peers would call and text her all night to tease her because she wasn't there. Her classmates would also use Snapchat and a European porn site to spread 'fake nudes', which her cousin later explained on Facebook sparked an unsuccessful suicide attempt. Ms Mason told the Daily Telegraph that they lodged a complaint with police, but there were difficulties identifying the person who owned the Snapchat account and the investigation was dropped. By that point, Tilly was so unwell that she didn't want to do more police interviews. Tilly went to meet up with 'friends' at shopping centres, 'only to have them harass and abuse her on public,' her parents said. Her parents said she loved to dance and was a star debater at school, but that she developed depression after being bullied Her parents explained that they do not believe educational institutions manage bullying properly, and that some bullies are excused because 'they come from a good family'. 'We share these examples not to cast blame at any one person, or any one school, but to plead with all our educators and parents that something has to change,' the family said. 'If anything can come from the loss of Tilly, we wish that our education system moves past the security of having a policy, or observing "R U OK" day to ensuring that real, hard conversations are had and that bullying behaviour is stopped.' They remembered the schoolgirl as someone who loved to dance and paint, and was a great debater, but bullying led her to develop depression, anxiety and symptoms of borderline personality disorder - a condition that affects self-image and creates a pattern of unstable relationships. Tilly's best friend Grace told Daily Mail Australia that the schoolgirl would send her messages when she was in extreme distress. Tilly's parents Emma and Murray Mason wrote a tribute to their daughter and detailed some of the things she endured (pictured) 'There were so many times Tilly messaged me and called me because she was scared other people would hurt her,' she said. 'She would be so upset and in tears because she thought she was going to die being beaten up.' 'I just hope she's not in pain anymore.' In a Facebook post, a cousin who attended the funeral said 'no amount of police intervention could stop the bullies'. 'No amount of family support or assistance from psychologists and psychiatrists who were involved in her treatment could prevent Tilly from choosing for herself - the only way out she knew would give her peace.' She encouraged parents to have 'real, hard conversations' with their children and schools to 'help them understand the impact of words and actions'. 'My family and I wont get to see Tilly grow any older now,' the woman wrote. 'She will live on in our hearts forever but it just didn't have to be this way. If only people were kind.' Police will conduct an investigation into Tilly's death on behalf of the Coroner. Lifeline 13 11 14 Beyond Blue 1300 224 636 A federal appeals court delivered a blow to Pentagon's vaccine mandate and denied the Biden Administration's attempt to reinstate the U.S. Navy's COVID-19 vaccine requirement. On Monday the 5th U.S. Circuit Court of Appeals denied the Navy's request to reinstate the U.S. Navy's COVID-19 vaccine requirement a month after a federal judge in Fort Worth halted the mandate. '[Evidence] suggests that the Navy has effectively stacked the deck against even those exemptions supported by Plaintiffs' immediate commanding officers and military chaplains,' the three-judge panel said. While the percentage of vaccinated active duty personnel in each service is at 95 percent or higher, the number of unvaccinated personnel is close to 30,000 More than 1.62 million US military service members are vaccinated, according to the DoD In November, dozens of U.S. Navy SEALs claimed they were wrongfully denied COVID vaccination exemptions on religious grounds, and that the Defense Department's mandate violates their First Amendment rights. The troops sued the Department of Defense - along with President Joe Biden and top military officials. The suit, which lists 35 unnamed service members, argues that the Pentagon is overstepping its bounds as a federal body and is infringing upon their constitutional rights, with the Navy requiring them to be fully vaccinated by November 28 - after they have been denied a religious exemption. In some cases, the lawsuit argues, SEALs are reportedly being threatened and, in a few instances, harassed into complying with the demand - and have also been flat-out denied a religious exemption. According to the filing, the SEALs behind the suit are all Christian and are pushing back against the mandate because it contradicts 'their sincerely held religious beliefs.' The plaintiffs include members of the Navy SEALs and the Navy Special Warfare Combatant Craft Crewmen, a US Navy Explosive Ordnance Disposal Technician and US Navy Divers, according to court documents. They filed their lawsuit with the help of the First Liberty Institute, a Texas-based Christian legal group that regularly takes on religious liberty cases. The Navy itself has previously said that it has not granted an exemption to any vaccine in the past seven years The Army, the US military's largest service with 478,000 active duty soldiers, reported the lowest number of service members seeking a religious exemption - just over 1,700 soldiers - compared with the other three smaller services 'Events around the world remind us daily that there are those who seek to harm America. Our military should be welcoming service members, not forcing them out because of their religious beliefs,' Mike Berry, director of military affairs for First Liberty Institute, said in a statement following Monday's ruling. 'The purge of religious servicemembers is not just devastating to morale, but it harms America's national security,' Berry added. 'It's time for our military to honor its constitutional obligations and grant religious accommodations for service members with sincere religious objections to the vaccine. We're grateful the Fifth Circuit denied the Navy's motion.' Military branches and the COVID-19 vaccine mandate US Army Deadline: Dec. 15 Percent vaccinated: 97% Members dismissed: 3,300 at risk of being fired US Navy Deadline: Nov. 28 Percent vaccinated: 97% Members dismissed: 45 as of last week US Air Force Deadline: Nov. 2 Percent vaccinated: 97.5% Members dismissed: 64, including members in basic training US Coast Guard Deadline: Nov. 22 Percent vaccinated: 95.3%, including partially vaccinated Members dismissed: Unknown Marine Corps Deadline: Nov. 28 Percent vaccinated: 96%, including partially vaccinated Members dismissed: 334 Sources: Individual branches, Washington Post, US Naval Institute Advertisement Each military branch set its own deadline after Defense Secretary Lloyd Austin issued a memo in August requiring all service members to be vaccinated. While the percentage of vaccinated active duty personnel in each service is at 95 percent or higher, the number of unvaccinated personnel is close to 30,000. The Army, the US military's largest service with 478,000 active duty soldiers, reported the lowest number of service members seeking a religious exemption - just over 1,700 soldiers - compared with the other three smaller services. In comparison, there are more than 4,700 in the Air Force, 3,000 in the Marine Corps and 2,700 in the Navy who are requesting the rarely given religious exemptions, according to data released by the branches in the past week. None of the requests have yet to be approved. On December 16, the Marines announced they had fired 103 service members for not getting vaccinated. The Army said it fired six people, including two commanding officers. In January, US District Judge Reed O'Connor of the Northern District of Texas issued a preliminary injunction in the suit saying there is 'no COVID-19 exception to the First Amendment' and that the pandemic doesn't give the government the license to 'abrogate those freedoms.' O'Connor sided with the troops, pointing out that 29 of the 35 service members had their requests for religious exemptions denied, calling the process of obtaining one 'theater.' The Navy itself has previously said that it has not granted an exemption to any vaccine in the past seven years. 'Religious exemptions to the vaccine requirement are virtually non-existent. In the past seven years, the Navy has not granted a religious exemption to any vaccine requirement,' O'Connor wrote. The first firings from the military's COVID-19 mandate began in December. The Marines fired 103 members and the Army fired six, including two commanding officers. The two Army officers commanded active-duty battalions. Navy Cmdr. Lucian Kins, the executive officer of the destroyer USS Winston S. Churchill, became the first naval officer to be fired over vaccine refusal in December. He reportedly requested a religious exemption to the military's vaccine requirement, but was denied and appealed the decision. Navy spokesman Lt. Cmdr. Jason Fischer declined to give the precise reason why Kins was relieved of command, citing privacy concerns. He did, however, state the reason for the firing was that Anderson lost confidence in Kins' ability to perform his duties after he failed to obey a lawful order. It would take a heart of stone to have not been moved yesterday by Ukrainian journalist Daria Kaleniuk's impassioned plea to Boris Johnson for Nato to take military action against Russia. Tearful and fretting for friends and relatives under bombardment in Kyiv and elsewhere, she urged the West to keep Vladimir Putin's bombers at bay by setting up a no-fly zone. 'Ukrainian women and children are in deep fear because of bombs and missiles which are going from the sky,' she said. 'Nato is afraid of World War Three, but it's already started.' It would be easy for Mr Johnson and his fellow leaders to be swept up in the emotion and fury of the moment. With each passing day, Putin's savagery becomes worse. As a 40-mile armoured column closes on Kyiv, there are reports of banned cluster bombs being used against civilians and so-called 'vacuum' devices which cause a blast wave capable of vaporising human beings. Ukrainian journalist Daria Kaleniuk makes an impassioned plea for the world to help Ukraine after Prime Minister Boris Johnson's speech at the British embassy in Warsaw, Poland Schools, shopping centres and a hospital have been mercilessly pummelled, leading to a spiralling casualty list and hundreds of thousands of refugees. It's enough to send anyone into a boiling rage. But hearts must not rule heads. As Mr Johnson said, a no-fly zone would involve Nato shooting down Russian planes an act of all-out war against a nuclear power, led by an unpredictable dictator. History warns us that such an escalation could quickly spiral out of control, making Ukraine even less safe and pushing the world towards the abyss. For now, the tactic of supplying Ukraine with arms, helping refugees to safety and crippling the Russian economy with brutal sanctions feels right. As we see from the collapse of the rouble, the West's strategy of freezing Russia and its oligarchs out of the international financial system is working. The Kremlin has been bullish so far, but how will they fare in a few weeks when their cash reserves have dried up and the essentials of everyday life are in short supply? As Mail readers have shown by helping to raise an astonishing 2million in just 72 hours to provide food, warmth and shelter for refugees, the plight of Ukraine has touched all our hearts. But we must remain calm. Escalating this crisis into a global conflagration would be a disaster for all concerned. The generation game Germany's decision to recommission three mothballed nuclear power plants signals a welcome recalibration of its approach to energy security. The Ukraine crisis has made the Germans rue their addiction to Russian gas. They have realised the folly of being in thrall to a vicious tyrant. Britain must now make a similar reset. The dash to net zero has led us to shun North Sea fossil fuels far too soon and our nuclear programme is a shambles. We need a proper energy strategy which, while promoting the rise of renewables, recognises the fact that we will need power from other sources for decades to come. Green posturing plays into Putin's hands. And it won't keep the lights on. Rail union wreckers At the worst possible moment, the hard-line RMT union calls a Tube strike over deliberately exaggerated threats to jobs and pensions that will bring London to a standstill for four days. The crippling walkout prevents people getting to offices, restaurants, shops, theatres and more, and is an act of militancy that undermines our post-Covid economic recovery. These dinosaurs perceive themselves as champions of the workers. The rest of the country sees them for the arrogant wreckers they really are. A health technology business is offering staff a $10,000 bonus towards paying for IVF if they need help to conceive. Harrison.ai also designated special leave entitlements for new grandparents, and couples who had a miscarriage starting this week. The work policy was steered by human resources executive Nicole Karagiannis, who had her own miscarriage six years ago. Some miscarriage sufferers will get 16 weeks' paid bereavement leave at tech health company 'I've since had two daughters. Balancing the pain and the happiness you feel through both of those experiences was front of mind as I was designing these programs,' she told The Australian. There is two weeks' paid bereavement leave for those who suffer an early miscarriage, and 16 weeks for losing a child after 16 weeks pregnancy. 'Our understanding is that we are the first Australian company offering a program so holistic, including IVF support, miscarriage and bereavement leave as well as the leave when you are preparing your children for school,' Ms Karagiannis said. The IVF package includes funding for sperm and egg freezing and up to $1,000 in ultrasounds. Grandparent employees also have a week's leave for them be with their loved ones after the birth of a baby. Sydney tech health company gave $1000 to employee IVF users to pay for ultrasounds Entitlements are for both primary and secondary carers, which already include parental leave of 16 weeks including paid school readiness leave. 'The aim is to ensure workers, male or female, don't feel like they have to make a choice between having a family and having a career,' Ms Karagiannis said. She suggested employers could use such generous entitlements to attract and retain quality employees in a competitive job market. Australian HR Institute chief executive Sarah McCann-Bartlett said that employers were realising they must provide benefits to staff that were focused on wellbeing. 'In terms of some of the big trends we're seeing, flexibility is definitely one, whether that be hours worked and when, and also when leave is taken,' she said. 'There's a heavy emphasis on being more family-friendly, and on overall wellbeing and mental health.' Only China can save Ukraine from the brutal Russian regime now, defence minister Peter Dutton warned on Wednesday. He said the inspiring leadership of Ukraine President Volodymyr Zelensky had rallied the world to defend his nation against the Russian might. But he said the ruthless power of Russian President Vladimir Putin was unstoppable. 'There is tragically a sense of inevitability because of the sheer weight of force that Russia is bringing to bear,' Mr Dutton told Sky News Australia. 'It's more and more worrying as the days go by. The Russian soldiers as we've known through history are a very brutal force. 'And the carnage that we're seeing right across the Ukraine at the moment, is very confronting, and I think it's going to intensify.' Only China can save Ukraine from the brutal Russian regime now, defence minister Peter Dutton warned on Wednesday (pictured, Chinese President Xi Jinping and Russian President Vladimir Putin) Russian commanders have stepped up their infiltration of Ukrainian urban areas, warning Kyiv residents to flee their homes and deploying rockets on the city of Kharkiv. Mr Dutton said the Russian forces were getting more and more frustrated by the resistance of the Ukraine forces and local population. 'It's clear that there is an enormous amount of nationalistic sentiment and that's felt not just within the Ukraine as we're seeing, but from around the world,' he said. But despite the support for Ukraine from Australia and other international partners, only China's President Xi Jinping can now stop the war, he said. 'It's only China really now that can stop Putin from progressing the way he is,' said Mr Dutton. Defence minister Peter Dutton (pictured) said the ruthless power of Russian President Vladimir Putin was unstoppable Russian commanders have intensified their infiltration of Ukrainian urban areas, warning residents to flee their homes and deploying rockets on the city of Kharkiv and Kyiv (pictured) 'The pressure really should be on President Xi to pick up that phone and instead of offering comfort, offering words of direction to President Putin that he should withdraw from the Ukraine as quickly as possible.' Mr Dutton said he hoped 'common sense prevails'. 'Hopefully (Russia's) force is repelled eventually - but at the moment, when you see capital cities being encircled, it is difficult to see a different outcome,' he said. His comments came as the head of Australia's defence force pledged to stand united with other nations in support of Ukraine following the Russian invasion. In his first public comments since forces invaded Ukraine, Australian Defence Force chief General Angus Campbell said Russia's actions were illegal. 'Your ADF stands with our allies and partners in condemning the unprovoked attack on the people of Ukraine,' he said on Twitter. 'Australia will provide military assistance and medical supplies to support Ukraine's defence following Russia's illegal invasion.' In his first public comments since forces invaded Ukraine, Australian Defence Force chief General Angus Campbell (pictured) said Russia's actions were illegal Mr Dutton said the Russian forces were getting more and more frustrated by the resistance of the Ukraine forces and local population (pictured, Ukraine armed forces mass in Kharkiv) It comes after Prime Minister Scott Morrison on Tuesday announced Australia would provide $105 million of support to Ukraine in the wake of the invasion. Of that, $70 million will be used for military support, the bulk of which will be in the form of missiles and ammunition. However, the prime minister did not specify what weapons would be supplied due to national security concerns. The remaining $35 million will be spent on humanitarian aid, including food, water, medicine and shelter. Mr Morrison indicated he would continue to monitor the situation in Ukraine from home, after he contracted COVID-19. Why the West CAN'T stop Russia rolling through Ukraine and Eastern Europe: Australian expert warns 'unstable' warmonger Putin is hellbent on restoring the Soviet Union and CHINA is our only hope By Kevin Airs for Daily Mail Australia The West can't stop Russia from rolling into Ukraine - and it may just be the first step in a much bigger invasion plan, an Australian expert has warned. Dr Leonid Petrov fears the attack on Ukraine could be the start of a rolling Russian expansion into neighbouring states like Estonia, Latvia, Lithuania, and even Poland. He believes renegade President Vladimir Putin is hellbent on restoring Russia's Soviet-era territories, and may target its Central Asian neighbours too. Dr Petrov spoke out after Prime Minister Scott Morrison branded Putin a thug and a bully and imposed initial sanctions on Russia over its Ukraine incursion. But Dr Petrov said Australia and the West were powerless to stop the Russian leader as sanctions were meaningless and a military response was out of the question. The West can't stop Russia from rolling into Ukraine - and it may just be the first step in a much bigger invasion plan for President Vladimir Putin (pictured), an Australian expert has warned Dr Leonid Petrov fears the attack on Ukraine could be the start of a rolling Russian expansion into neighbouring states like Estonia, Latvia, Lithuania, and even Poland 'Putin has nuclear weapons and nobody would really dare to confront a nuclear-armed Russia,' he warned. 'Putin is not in a stable state of mind. 'Putin cannot be stopped by the West. I believe the world is now on the brink of a new major conflict.' But there is one country that could yet halt Russia in its tracks, he said. Russia still fears China - and even the once-mighty Soviet Union was terrified about a Chinese invasion during the 1970s and 80s, he said. If the West was to make peace with China - and especially if the US ends its Sino trade war - he believes it could be enough to make Putin and Russia hesitate. Russia still fears China - and even the once-mighty Soviet Union was terrified about a Chinese invasion during the 1970s and 80s (pictured, President Putin and Chinese President Xi Jinping) Prime Minister Scott Morrison (pictured right) branded Putin a thug and a bully and imposed initial sanctions on Russia over its Ukraine incursion but Dr Petrov said the West led by US President Joe Biden (pictured left) were powerless to stop Putin as sanctions were meaningless and a military option was out of the question 'To be more friendly with China would perhaps be the clever move for the West,' he said. 'China is more prone to a rules-based world order than Russia. 'China is a much likelier ally and friend to the West than Russia. It would be sensible to end this senseless trade war and China would be a great ally to the West. 'They would probably play the part of the local sheriff.' The Australian National University academic says Putin wants to turn back the clock on Russia's borders to what they were before the collapse of the USSR in 1991. In the wake of the Cold War ending following the fall of the Berlin Wall and break up of the Eastern Bloc, former Soviet states like Ukraine regained their independence. Dr Petrov believes renegade President Vladimir Putin is hellbent on restoring Russia's Soviet-era territories, and may target its Central Asian neighbours too (pictured, Russian troops mass the Ukraine border) Dr Petrov said Putin was using the tried and tested war plan he previously used against Georgia in 2008 (pictured) to identify rebel enclaves and use them as cover for an invasion But Russian nationalists like Putin have continued to lay claim to the territories - and his powerbase relies on it. 'Putin's masterplan is to stay in power as long as possible,' Dr Petrov, who is also with the International College of Management in Sydney, said. 'He needs to create crises which are going to be popular - and popular sentiment in Russia these days is the restoration of the borders of the former Soviet Union. 'Nobody can guarantee the integrity of European Union states like the Baltic republics which were formerly part of the Soviet Union. 'Russia will have the power to annex them as well. He wants to expand Russia's territory and exploit the populations of the newly acquired territory. 'We might see in the near future expansion into former Soviet republics.' Putin wants to turn back the clock on Russia's borders to what they were before the collapse of the USSR in 1991 by ret-taking territories like Ukraine (pictured in 2014) Russian nationalists like Putin have continued to lay claim to territories like Ukraine (seen here when Russia invaded Crimea in 2014) and his powerbase relies on it He said attempts by the West to isolate Putin through threats and sanctions were doomed to failure. Dr Leonid Petrov(pictured) warns attempts by the West to isolate Putin through threats and sanctions were doomed to failure 'Russia will be subject to more aggressive sanctions and I believe Moscow is going to be diplomatically ostracised by the international community.' Dr Petrov said. 'But I think that's what President Putin wants. He wants isolation, he wants to rule Russia indefinitely. 'He does not need to be integrated with the world economy or community.' Dr Petrov said Putin was using the tried and tested war plan he previously used against Georgia to identify rebel enclaves and use them as cover for an invasion. He said the Ukraine invasion was literally a cut and paste of the Georgia plan, using identical documents with identical serial numbers to justify the invasion. Dr Petrov said the Ukraine invasion was literally a cut and paste of the Georgia invasion plan (pictured), using identical documents with identical serial numbers to justify the incursion Russia's plan relied on identifying areas close to the border with high percentages of Russian-speaking locals and supporting local uprisings, then moving in to support them as 'peacekeepers' (pictured, a Georgian peace rally against Russia in 2008) 'It's a really sloppy job,' Dr Petrov said. 'The Kremlin does not really bother following procedures or looking into details.' Dr Petrov said the plan simply relied on identifying areas close to the border with high percentages of Russian-speaking locals and supporting local uprisings, then moving in to support them as 'peacekeepers'. 'It will be easy for Putin to destabilise the situation in those neighbouring countries like the Baltics or Central Asian republics,' he said. 'It's important to destabilise the neighbours to send the message to the domestic constituents that Russia is not doing too badly.' Even with Russia hit by sanctions, the countries being invaded would provide enough cash, fuel, and mineral deposits to replace anything lost by trade barriers to the West. Even with Russia hit by sanctions, the countries being invaded would provide enough cash, fuel, and mineral deposits to replace anything lost by trade barriers to the West (pictured, smoke behind a Ukraine power plant) Subjugated countries would become part of the Russian Customs Union, use a common currency, and be brought into the Collective Security Treaty Organisation, which is a Russian version of NATO (pictured, infantry troops in Crimea in 2014) The subjugated countries would then start to become part of the Russian Customs Union, use a common currency, and be brought into the Collective Security Treaty Organisation, which is a Russian version of NATO. 'We will see how the Ukraine gambit unfolds,' he added. 'It could be they only go so far into the country as they did in Crimea in 2014 and then stop for a while. 'It could take years for the invasion to be complete. 'But if he pushes on and takes the country then the Baltic states could be next - and then Asian neighbours like Kazakhstan and Azerbaijan. Dr Petrov fears Russia will push on to take over other neighbouring states (pictured Georgia in 2008) Putin's bid to restore Russia's Soviet borders could lead them to invade Poland (pictured, Georgian troops come under fire from Russian rockets in 2008) 'I hope he does not need Poland. I know he has a real problem with Ukraine... but he has an even stronger negative sentiment towards Poland for some reason. 'Even Poland - at the heart of Europe - is not safe.' A murder-accused policeman who fatally shot an Aboriginal teenager during an outback arrest attempt says he was trained to pull the trigger until an offender is incapacitated. Constable Zachary Rolfe, 30, contradicted other officers' evidence by saying he was sent to Yuendumu, 290km northwest of Alice Springs, to arrest Kumanjayi Walker, 19. Rolfe has pleaded not guilty to murdering the teen on November 9, 2019 after he was stabbed with a pair of scissors. Constable Zachary Rolfe, 30, (pictured, centre, departing the Supreme Court on Wednesday) who fatally shot an Aboriginal teenager during an arrest in 2019 says he was trained to pull the trigger until an offender is incapacitated The constable fired three shots into Mr Walker's back and torso as he resisted arrest in a dark room at his grandmother's home. Defence lawyer David Edwardson QC called Rolfe to give evidence at his trial in the Northern Territory Supreme Court on Wednesday. The former soldier described Mr Walker as a 'high-risk offender, extremely violent, who was willing to use potentially lethal weapons against police'. He also said he was told by a superior twice that his 'mission' in the remote community was to arrest the teen after he violently threatened two other officers with an axe. The evidence contradicts testimony by Sergeant Julie Frost that she ordered Rolfe and three other officers to arrest Mr Walker the next morning, when he was likely to be sleeping and could be taken into custody easily. Asked about his NT police force training, Rolfe said he was instructed to shoot when an offender in close proximity was attacking with an edged weapon. Kumanjayi Walker, 19, (pictured) died after he was shot three times in the back and torso as he resisted arrest in a dark room at his grandmother's home in Alice Springs 'If someone is threatening us with an edged weapon our first response was to go for our firearm unless that was impossible,' he said. 'You shoot until the offender is incapacitated no matter how many rounds that takes.' He said the edged weapon attack exercise was called a 'shove and shoot drill'. Rolfe (pictured, centre) contradicted other officers' evidence by saying he was sent to Yuendumu, 290km northwest of Alice Springs, to arrest Kumanjayi Walker 'Only draw your firearm if you are prepared to pull the trigger,' he said, when asked what the training entailed. He said police were also taught that if an offender is 6.4 metres or closer they could attack before an officer had time pull out their firearm. 'If the offender is on top of you cannot assess the situation,' he said. Rolfe has pleaded not guilty to murdering Walker (pictured) on November 9, 2019 after he was stabbed with a pair of scissors Asked what incapacitated meant, Rolfe said: 'The way I was taught it is that a person no longer has the ability to do what they were doing before'. Rolfe was composed in the witness box, speaking calmly and often addressing the jury directly as he explained his job as a constable. Mr Walker died about an hour after Rolfe's second fatal shot ripped through his spleen, lung, liver and a kidney. The Crown has conceded the first shot, fired while Mr Walker was standing and wrestling with Sergeant Adam Eberl, was justified. But it says the second and third shots, which are the subject of the murder charge, went 'too far'. Prosecutor Philip Strickland SC says Rolfe and his team were 'intent' on finding Mr Walker after watching a video of the so called 'axe incident' on November 6. They found the teen about 15 minutes after leaving the local police station where Sgt Frost has said she handed the men a printed page outlining the approved arrest plan for November 10. Rolfe shot Mr Walker about a minute later during a scuffle as he and Sgt Eberl attempted to handcuff the teen. Mr Walker first became an arrest target after breaching a court order by removing an electronic monitoring bracelet and fleeing an alcohol rehabilitation clinic in Alice Springs to attend an uncle's funeral. The court has also heard Yuendumu community leaders had given an undertaking to bring Mr Walker to police after the funeral on November 9. The trial continues. Queenslanders are being warned to brace for more extreme weather with a giant hail bomb, intense rainfall and destructive winds set to hit flood-affected areas. The Bureau of Meteorology warned severe storms are likely across south east Queensland on Thursday, issuing a warning covering coastal areas from Bundaberg to the Gold Coast. 'Heavy to intense rainfall, large to giant hail and damaging to destructive wind gusts are possible. Flash flooding and renewed river rises possible with any heavy rain,' it posted on Twitter. Brisbane resident Jane Knox is seen cleaning up her flood damaged property in the suburb of Auchenflower The Bureau of Meteorology warned severe storms are likely across south east Queensland on Thursday with severe thunderstorms likely for regions marked in red Premier Annastacia Palaszczuk urged residents to listen to the weather bureau's current warnings as major rivers continue to rise. 'There is some concern about these very dangerous thunderstorms,' she said at a press conference on Wednesday. 'We're not out of the woods.' A major flood warning has been issued for Mary River and lower Logan River, while moderate flood warnings have been issued for Noosa River and the Brisbane River on Wednesday. Flood affected residents in Logan, south of Brisbane have started a mammoth cleanup on Wednesday (pictured) The Bureau warned thunderstorm activity may cause river levels to rise and continued flooding in some parts of the catchment. The latest forecast offers no sign of relief for Queenslanders who are now grappling with the threat of looters taking advantage of flood victims. Police confirmed on Tuesday morning that homes in the south-west Brisbane suburbs of Bundamba, Goodna and Blackstone had been hit by thieves. A 21-year-old man has been arrested over one incident. Queensland Police Minister Mark Ryan, who appeared visibly angry at a press conference, slammed the burglars as 'grubs'. Queenslanders are being warned to brace for more extreme weather with a giant hail bomb, intense rainfall and destructive winds set to hit flood affected areas (pictured, residents look for their flooded home in Logan, south of Brisbane on Tuesday) Heartless looters preying on flood victims are slammed as 'grubs' as 21-year-old is arrested and top cop delivers a scathing message Police Commissioner Katarina Carroll confirmed at a press conference on Tuesday morning that evacuated properties in the south-west Brisbane suburbs of Bundamba, Goodna and Blackstone were targeted (pictured, a man delivers a canoe to stranded residents in Fairfield in Brisbane) 'Let me put this as politely as I can to those people who are engaged in this behaviour. What you are doing is not just illegal, but you are also grubs,' he said. 'You are preying on the most vulnerable Queenslanders at a time of their most vulnerable.' The Minister then disowned the thieves as fellow Queenslanders. 'You're not even Queenslanders when you engage in this behaviour because Queenslanders help their mates and Queenslanders support their mates, and if you're thieving from them, you are not a Queenslander, you are a grub,' he added. Queensland Premier Annastacia Palaszczuk was also left astonished by the thieving in flood-affected areas and addressed the low act on Tuesday. 'I cannot believe that people would go to such depths,' she said. Premier Annastacia Palaszczuk (pictured) urged residents to listen to the weather bureau's current warnings as major rivers continue to rise The Premier said the looting was 'unbelievable' and demanded that the burglars stop their actions immediately (pictured, a man makes his way through floodwaters in Brisbane on Tuesday) 'These are people that are going through the hardships of their lives. The last thing they need to worry about is someone climbing into their house or going through their front door, going through their possessions.' One man has been arrested for ransacking properties, while investigations are ongoing for two other incidences of theft. Eight people have died and hundreds have been rescued from floodwaters which have so far damaged at least 19,000 homes and won't fully recede for days in Queensland and New South Wales. Major flooding is under way on the Brisbane, Logan, Bremer and Mary rivers, and Warrill Creek, after the torrential downpours of the past week. More than 1.77m of rain fell on Mount Glorious, 1.55m at Pomona on the Sunshine Coast and 1.23m at Upper Springbrook on the Gold Coast in seven days. Brisbane copped 795mm - the city's wettest week since records began in 1840 - with Premier Annastacia Palaszczuk saying much of the wider region is devastated. Probuild owes $14million to its workers and unknown amounts to more than 2300 creditors as the Federal Court was told the embattled building construction giant is in a 'nightmarish' situation. More than 1000 directly employed workers' livelihoods are in jeopardy - along with contractors and sub-contractors across a long supply chain - after the firm was placed into administration by its South African parent company last week. Barrister Hamish Austin, acting for Probuild administrator Deloitte, on Wednesday told the Federal Court that 786 workers across 19 different projects were out of pocket. He said the best-case scenario was to maintain operations while a buyer was sought. Brisbane's Queen St project (pictured) was one of Probuild major construction sites But he said administrators needed more time to identify who owned all sorts of things from tools and scaffolding to leases. 'The mind boggles at the amount of work the administrators are required to get across,' Mr Austin told the court. 'And you've got the nightmarish prospect of construction projects ongoing in real time, (with) any disruption likely to be extremely costly.' Mr Austin added that about 300 more creditors had been identified this week who appeared unaware of a planned meeting on Friday relating to the administration. 'We don't want a meeting where we have a significant body of creditors who aren't present,' he said. Probuild owes $14million to its workers (pictured) and unknown amounts to more than 2300 creditors as the Federal Court was told the embattled building construction giant is in a 'nightmarish' situation Justice Jonathan Beach granted an extension for the administrators to locate all relevant property and creditors. Probuild's parent company, Johannesburg-listed builder Wilson Bayly Holmes-Ovcon (WBHO), last week said it was pursuing 'several options' to raise the capital needed for Probuild to continue, with Deloitte appointed as administrator. Two other businesses under WBHO Australia - Monaco Hickey and WBHO Infrastructure - were also placed into administration. Deloitte is planning a sale and recapitalisation process to secure a new owner for the businesses. Prouild's dministrators told the Federal Court they need more time to identify who owns all sorts of things from tools and scaffolding to leases at worksites (pictured) WBHO has blamed Australia's 'hardline' COVID-19 border closures, lockdowns and months of enforced working from home rules that emptied city office blocks and shopping malls. 'The protracted effect of COVID-19 has delayed any meaningful economic recovery and procurement activity in Australia,' the firm said. TRIPOLI, March 2 (Xinhua) -- A group of 130 illegal Nigerian immigrants, including women and children, were voluntarily repatriated from Libya on Tuesday, a local official said. The repatriation was carried out as part of the Voluntary Humanitarian Return program of the International Organization for Migration (IOM), Hussain al-Amin, head of the Deportation Section of the Illegal Immigration Control Department of Misurata International Airport, told Xinhua. The IOM's program arranges the return of illegal immigrants stranded in Libya to their homeland. Libya has become a preferred point of departure for thousands of migrants who attempt to cross the Mediterranean Sea to European shores, amid the insecurity and chaos that have plagued Libya since the downfall of its former leader Muammar Gaddafi in 2011. So far this year, about 2,500 illegal immigrants have been rescued at sea and returned to Libya, including women and children, according to IOM. A man charged with kidnapping after allegedly stealing a car with an 11-month-old boy inside in Melbourne repeatedly called emergency services operators asking for help to free him from jail. Dean Robertson, 46, of Frankston was due to appear in the Melbourne Magistrates' Court on Wednesday, but did not appear via phone or video link due to his 'mischief'. In a bizarre court hearing, watch house staff from a jail cell in Dandenong, in Melbourne's south east, appeared via videolink from the jail cell Robertson ought to have appeared from. A mother and son have been miraculously reunited (pictured) after an opportunistic thief took off with the woman's car with her 11-month-old still sitting inside A custody supervisor told the court Robertson had continually dialled triple-0 each time a phone was handed to him. 'He had had a phone call earlier, whilst he had the phone he made numerous calls to triple-0. He created problems there and also he's acting in an aggressive manner as well,' the officer said. 'He's just refusing to engage and due to the Covid we can't remove him from the cell due to isolation purposes and the phone, not being able to give him that, was due to his inappropriate behaviour.' Robertson further refused to co-operate with medical health workers, who had hoped to ascertain what kind of medical assistance the alleged kidnapper might require in custody. His lawyer, Jack Rabl, denied his client had been troublesome, but jail staff refuted those assertions. Robertson had told the health worker his jail cell had 'been his home and she was to leave', the officer said. The court heard Robertson was also suspected to be suffering from Covid-19, which meant he needed to be kept in isolation. Mr Rabl told the court he believed Robertson had a history of psychiatric illness and would be vulnerable while kept behind bars. The lawyer said he hoped to make an application for bail on Robertson's behalf should he appear in court on Thursday as expected. A man has been charged with kidnapping after a car with an 11-month-old boy inside was stolen Police allege Robertson was behind the wheel when the white 2013 Toyota RAV 4 was stolen in Keysborough at about 2.10pm on Tuesday. The boy's mother had stepped out of the still-running car on Putt Grove when a man jumped into the driver's seat and drove away with the baby inside. A witness later claimed the mother was looking at a neighbours hard rubbish when the alleged offender stole the car. Police quickly released CCTV images of the incident, showing the terrified mum screaming as her car was driven off. A search involving helicopters and several police units began and the baby and the car were found in Cranbourne about three-and-a-half hours later. 'He's in the process of being returned to mum and dad,' Victoria Police Inspector Fiona Halford said on Tuesday evening. 'It was a member of the general public who had identified ... the location and subsequently police attended that location and found the child safe and well.' Robertson has been charged with kidnapping, theft of a motor vehicle, committing an indictable offence while on bail and unlicensed driving. The Frankston man has been remanded in custody to appear before court on Thursday. President Biden used his State of the Union to send a message to Vladimir Putin, praise the bravery of the Ukrainian people and try and kickstart his stalled agenda. He also told America it is time to 'get back to work' after COVID, called for unity and took a swipe at Donald Trump for his tax cuts and his 'infrastructure week remarks'. Below is his speech, which ran for just over one hour, in full. Madam Speaker, Madam Vice President, our First Lady and Second Gentleman. Members of Congress and the Cabinet. Justices of the Supreme Court. My fellow Americans. Last year COVID-19 kept us apart. This year we are finally together again. Tonight, we meet as Democrats Republicans and Independents. But most importantly as Americans. With a duty to one another to the American people to the Constitution. And with an unwavering resolve that freedom will always triumph over tyranny. UKRAINE: Putin was wrong. We were ready. Six days ago, Russias Vladimir Putin sought to shake the foundations of the free world thinking he could make it bend to his menacing ways. But he badly miscalculated. He thought he could roll into Ukraine and the world would roll over. Instead he met a wall of strength he never imagined. He met the Ukrainian people. From President Zelenskyy to every Ukrainian, their fearlessness, their courage, their determination, inspires the world. Groups of citizens blocking tanks with their bodies. Everyone from students to retirees teachers turned soldiers defending their homeland. President Biden used his State of the Union to send a message to Vladimir Putin, praise the bravery of the Ukrainian people and try and kickstart his stalled agenda In this struggle as President Zelenskyy said in his speech to the European Parliament 'Light will win over darkness.' The Ukrainian Ambassador to the United States is here tonight. Let each of us here tonight in this Chamber send an unmistakable signal to Ukraine and to the world. Please rise if you are able and show that, yes, we the United States of America stand with the Ukrainian people. Throughout our history weve learned this lesson when dictators do not pay a price for their aggression they cause more chaos. They keep moving. And the costs and the threats to America and the world keep rising. Thats why the NATO Alliance was created to secure peace and stability in Europe after World War 2. The United States is a member along with 29 other nations. It matters. American diplomacy matters. American resolve matters. Putins latest attack on Ukraine was premeditated and unprovoked. He rejected repeated efforts at diplomacy. He thought the West and NATO wouldnt respond. And he thought he could divide us at home. Putin was wrong. We were ready. Here is what we did. We prepared extensively and carefully. We spent months building a coalition of other freedom-loving nations from Europe and the Americas to Asia and Africa to confront Putin. I spent countless hours unifying our European allies. We shared with the world in advance what we knew Putin was planning and precisely how he would try to falsely justify his aggression. We countered Russias lies with truth. And now that he has acted the free world is holding him accountable. Along with twenty-seven members of the European Union including France, Germany, Italy, as well as countries like the United Kingdom, Canada, Japan, Korea, Australia, New Zealand, and many others, even Switzerland. We are inflicting pain on Russia and supporting the people of Ukraine. Putin is now isolated from the world more than ever. Together with our allies - we are right now enforcing powerful economic sanctions. We are cutting off Russias largest banks from the international financial system. Preventing Russias central bank from defending the Russian Ruble making Putins $630 Billion 'war fund' worthless. We are choking off Russias access to technology that will sap its economic strength and weaken its military for years to come. Tonight I say to the Russian oligarchs and corrupt leaders who have bilked billions of dollars off this violent regime no more. The U.S. Department of Justice is assembling a dedicated task force to go after the crimes of Russian oligarchs. We are joining with our European allies to find and seize your yachts your luxury apartments your private jets. We are coming for your ill-begotten gains. And tonight I am announcing that we will join our allies in closing off American air space to all Russian flights - further isolating Russia - and adding an additional squeeze -on their economy. The Ruble has lost 30% of its value. The Russian stock market has lost 40 per cent of its value and trading remains suspended. Russias economy is reeling and Putin alone is to blame. Together with our allies we are providing support to the Ukrainians in their fight for freedom. Military assistance. Economic assistance. Humanitarian assistance. We are giving more than $1 Billion in direct assistance to Ukraine. And we will continue to aid the Ukrainian people as they defend their country and to help ease their suffering. BIDEN DOUBLES DOWN ON NOT SENDING IN AMERICAN FORCES Let me be clear, our forces are not engaged and will not engage in conflict with Russian forces in Ukraine. Our forces are not going to Europe to fight in Ukraine, but to defend our NATO Allies - in the event that Putin decides to keep moving west. For that purpose weve mobilized American ground forces, air squadrons, and ship deployments to protect NATO countries including Poland, Romania, Latvia, Lithuania, and Estonia. As I have made crystal clear the United States and our Allies will defend every inch of territory of NATO countries with the full force of our collective power. And we remain clear-eyed. The Ukrainians are fighting back with pure courage. But the next few days weeks, months, will be hard on them. Putin has unleashed violence and chaos. But while he may make gains on the battlefield - he will pay a continuing high price over the long run. And a proud Ukrainian people, who have known 30 years of independence, have repeatedly shown that they will not tolerate anyone who tries to take their country backwards. To all Americans, I will be honest with you, as Ive always promised. A Russian dictator, invading a foreign country, has costs around the world. And Im taking robust action to make sure the pain of our sanctions is targeted at Russias economy. And I will use every tool at our disposal to protect American businesses and consumers. Tonight, I can announce that the United States has worked with 30 other countries to release 60 million barrels of oil from reserves around the world. America will lead that effort, releasing 30 Million barrels from our own Strategic Petroleum Reserve. And we stand ready to do more if necessary, unified with our allies. These steps will help blunt gas prices here at home. And I know the news about whats happening can seem alarming. But I want you to know that we are going to be okay. When the history of this era is written Putins war on Ukraine will have left Russia weaker and the rest of the world stronger. While it shouldnt have taken something so terrible for people around the world to see whats at stake now everyone sees it clearly. We see the unity among leaders of nations and a more unified Europe a more unified West. And we see unity among the people who are gathering in cities in large crowds around the world even in Russia to demonstrate their support for Ukraine. In the battle between democracy and autocracy, democracies are rising to the moment, and the world is clearly choosing the side of peace and security. This is a real test. Its going to take time. So let us continue to draw inspiration from the iron will of the Ukrainian people. To our fellow Ukrainian Americans who forge a deep bond that connects our two nations we stand with you. Putin may circle Kyiv with tanks, but he will never gain the hearts and souls of the Ukrainian people. He will never extinguish their love of freedom. He will never weaken the resolve of the free world. PANDEMIC, THE AMERICAN RESCUE PLAN AND TAXES We meet tonight in an America that has lived through two of the hardest years this nation has ever faced. The pandemic has been punishing. And so many families are living paycheck to paycheck, struggling to keep up with the rising cost of food, gas, housing, and so much more. I understand. I remember when my Dad had to leave our home in Scranton, Pennsylvania to find work. I grew up in a family where if the price of food went up, you felt it. Thats why one of the first things I did as President was fight to pass the American Rescue Plan. Because people were hurting. We needed to act, and we did. Few pieces of legislation have done more in a critical moment in our history to lift us out of crisis. It fueled our efforts to vaccinate the nation and combat COVID-19. It delivered immediate economic relief for tens of millions of Americans. Helped put food on their table, keep a roof over their heads, and cut the cost of health insurance. And as my Dad used to say, it gave people a little breathing room. And unlike the $2 Trillion tax cut passed in the previous administration that benefitted the top 1% of Americans, the American Rescue Plan helped working people - and left no one behind. And it worked. It created jobs. Lots of jobs. In fact - our economy created over 6.5 Million new jobs just last year, more jobs created in one year than ever before in the history of America. Our economy grew at a rate of 5.7% last year, the strongest growth in nearly 40 years, the first step in bringing fundamental change to an economy that hasnt worked for the working people of this nation for too long. For the past 40 years we were told that if we gave tax breaks to those at the very top, the benefits would trickle down to everyone else. But that trickle-down theory led to weaker economic growth, lower wages, bigger deficits, and the widest gap between those at the top and everyone else in nearly a century. Vice President Harris and I ran for office with a new economic vision for America. Invest in America. Educate Americans. Grow the workforce. Build the economy from the bottom up and the middle out, not from the top down. Because we know that when the middle class grows, the poor have a ladder up and the wealthy do very well. PLEDGE TO BUILD MORE ROADS AND BRIDGES America used to have the best roads, bridges, and airports on Earth. Now our infrastructure is ranked 13th in the world. We wont be able to compete for the jobs of the 21st Century if we dont fix that. Thats why it was so important to pass the Bipartisan Infrastructure Law-the most sweeping investment to rebuild America in history. This was a bipartisan effort, and I want to thank the members of both parties who worked to make it happen. Were done talking about infrastructure weeks. Were going to have an infrastructure decade. It is going to transform America and put us on a path to win the economic competition of the 21st Century that we face with the rest of the world-particularly with China. As Ive told Xi Jinping, it is never a good bet to bet against the American people. Well create good jobs for millions of Americans, modernizing roads, airports, ports, and waterways all across America. And well do it all to withstand the devastating effects of the climate crisis and promote environmental justice. Well build a national network of 500,000 electric vehicle charging stations, begin to replace poisonous lead pipes-so every child-and every American-has clean water to drink at home and at school, provide affordable high-speed internet for every American-urban, suburban, rural, and tribal communities. 4,000 projects have already been announced. And tonight, Im announcing that this year we will start fixing over 65,000 miles of highway and 1,500 bridges in disrepair. When we use taxpayer dollars to rebuild America - we are going to Buy American: buy American products to support American jobs. The federal government spends about $600 Billion a year to keep the country safe and secure. Theres been a law on the books for almost a century to make sure taxpayers dollars support American jobs and businesses. Every Administration says theyll do it, but we are actually doing it. We will buy American to make sure everything from the deck of an aircraft carrier to the steel on highway guardrails are made in America. But to compete for the best jobs of the future, we also need to level the playing field with China and other competitors. Thats why it is so important to pass the Bipartisan Innovation Act sitting in Congress that will make record investments in emerging technologies and American manufacturing. Let me give you one example of why its so important to pass it. If you travel 20 miles east of Columbus, Ohio, youll find 1,000 empty acres of land. It wont look like much, but if you stop and look closely, youll see a 'Field of dreams,' the ground on which Americas future will be built. This is where Intel, the American company that helped build Silicon Valley, is going to build its $20 billion semiconductor 'mega site'. Up to eight state-of-the-art factories in one place. 10,000 new good-paying jobs. Some of the most sophisticated manufacturing in the world to make computer chips the size of a fingertip that power the world and our everyday lives. Smartphones. The Internet. Technology we have yet to invent. But thats just the beginning. Intels CEO, Pat Gelsinger, who is here tonight, told me they are ready to increase their investment from $20 billion to $100 billion. That would be one of the biggest investments in manufacturing in American history. And all theyre waiting for is for you to pass this bill. So lets not wait any longer. Send it to my desk. Ill sign it. And we will really take off. And Intel is not alone. Theres something happening in America. Just look around and youll see an amazing story. The rebirth of the pride that comes from stamping products 'Made In America.' The revitalization of American manufacturing. Companies are choosing to build new factories here, when just a few years ago, they would have built them overseas. Thats what is happening. Ford is investing $11 billion to build electric vehicles, creating 11,000 jobs across the country. GM is making the largest investment in its history-$7 billion to build electric vehicles, creating 4,000 jobs in Michigan. All told, we created 369,000 new manufacturing jobs in America just last year. Powered by people Ive met like JoJo Burgess, from generations of union steelworkers from Pittsburgh, whos here with us tonight. As Ohio Senator Sherrod Brown says, 'Its time to bury the label 'Rust Belt.' Its time. But with all the bright spots in our economy, record job growth and higher wages, too many families are struggling to keep up with the bills. Inflation is robbing them of the gains they might otherwise feel. I get it. Thats why my top priority is getting prices under control. Look, our economy roared back faster than most predicted, but the pandemic meant that businesses had a hard time hiring enough workers to keep up production in their factories. The pandemic also disrupted global supply chains. When factories close, it takes longer to make goods and get them from the warehouse to the store, and prices go up. Look at cars. Last year, there werent enough semiconductors to make all the cars that people wanted to buy. And guess what, prices of automobiles went up. 'I HAVE A BETTER PLAN TO FIGHT INFLATION' So-we have a choice. One way to fight inflation is to drive down wages and make Americans poorer. I have a better plan to fight inflation. Lower your costs, not your wages. Make more cars and semiconductors in America. More infrastructure and innovation in America. More goods moving faster and cheaper in America. More jobs where you can earn a good living in America. And instead of relying on foreign supply chains, lets make it in America. Economists call it 'increasing the productive capacity of our economy.' I call it building a better America. My plan to fight inflation will lower your costs and lower the deficit. 17 Nobel laureates in economics say my plan will ease long-term inflationary pressures. Top business leaders and most Americans support my plan. CUTTING THE COST OF PRESCRIPTION DRUGS AND ENERGY BILLS And heres the plan: First - cut the cost of prescription drugs. Just look at insulin. One in ten Americans has diabetes. In Virginia, I met a 13-year-old boy named Joshua Davis. He and his Dad both have Type 1 diabetes, which means they need insulin every day. Insulin costs about $10 a vial to make. But drug companies charge families like Joshua and his Dad up to 30 times more. I spoke with Joshuas mom. Imagine what its like to look at your child who needs insulin and have no idea how youre going to pay for it. What it does to your dignity, your ability to look your child in the eye, to be the parent you expect to be. Joshua is here with us tonight. Yesterday was his birthday. Happy birthday, buddy. For Joshua, and for the 200,000 other young people with Type 1 diabetes, lets cap the cost of insulin at $35 a month so everyone can afford it. Drug companies will still do very well. And while were at it let Medicare negotiate lower prices for prescription drugs, like the VA already does. Look, the American Rescue Plan is helping millions of families on Affordable Care Act plans save $2,400 a year on their health care premiums. Lets close the coverage gap and make those savings permanent. Second: cut energy costs for families an average of $500 a year by combatting climate change. Lets provide investments and tax credits to weatherize your homes and businesses to be energy efficient and you get a tax credit; double Americas clean energy production in solar, wind, and so much more; lower the price of electric vehicles, saving you another $80 a month because youll never have to pay at the gas pump again. Third: cut the cost of child care. Many families pay up to $14,000 a year for child care per child. Middle-class and working families shouldnt have to pay more than 7% of their income for care of young children. My plan will cut the cost in half for most families and help parents, including millions of women, who left the workforce during the pandemic because they couldnt afford child care, to be able to get back to work. My plan doesnt stop there. It also includes home and long-term care. More affordable housing. And Pre-K for every 3- and 4-year-old. All of these will lower costs. And under my plan, nobody earning less than $400,000 a year will pay an additional penny in new taxes. Nobody. The one thing all Americans agree on is that the tax system is not fair. We have to fix it. Im not looking to punish anyone. But lets make sure corporations and the wealthiest Americans start paying their fair share. Just last year, 55 Fortune 500 corporations earned $40 billion in profits and paid zero dollars in federal income tax. Thats simply not fair. Thats why Ive proposed a 15% minimum tax rate for corporations. We got more than 130 countries to agree on a global minimum tax rate so companies cant get out of paying their taxes at home by shipping jobs and factories overseas. Thats why Ive proposed closing loopholes so the very wealthy dont pay a lower tax rate than a teacher or a firefighter. So thats my plan. It will grow the economy and lower costs for families. So what are we waiting for? Lets get this done. And while youre at it, confirm my nominees to the Federal Reserve, which plays a critical role in fighting inflation. My plan will not only lower costs to give families a fair shot, it will lower the deficit. The previous Administration not only ballooned the deficit with tax cuts for the very wealthy and corporations, it undermined the watchdogs whose job was to keep pandemic relief funds from being wasted. But in my administration, the watchdogs have been welcomed back. Were going after the criminals who stole billions in relief money meant for small businesses and millions of Americans. And tonight, Im announcing that the Justice Department will name a chief prosecutor for pandemic fraud. By the end of this year, the deficit will be down to less than half what it was before I took office. The only president ever to cut the deficit by more than one trillion dollars in a single year. Lowering your costs also means demanding more competition. Im a capitalist, but capitalism without competition isnt capitalism. Its exploitation-and it drives up prices. When corporations dont have to compete, their profits go up, your prices go up, and small businesses and family farmers and ranchers go under. We see it happening with ocean carriers moving goods in and out of America. During the pandemic, these foreign-owned companies raised prices by as much as 1,000% and made record profits. BIDEN ANNOUNCES HIS CRACKDOWN ON WALL STREET Tonight, Im announcing a crackdown on these companies overcharging American businesses and consumers. And as Wall Street firms take over more nursing homes, quality in those homes has gone down and costs have gone up. That ends on my watch. Medicare is going to set higher standards for nursing homes and make sure your loved ones get the care they deserve and expect. Well also cut costs and keep the economy going strong by giving workers a fair shot, provide more training and apprenticeships, hire them based on their skills not degrees. Lets pass the Paycheck Fairness Act and paid leave. Raise the minimum wage to $15 an hour and extend the Child Tax Credit, so no one has to raise a family in poverty. Lets increase Pell Grants and increase our historic support of HBCUs, and invest in what Jill-our First Lady who teaches full-time-calls Americas best-kept secret: community colleges. And lets pass the PRO Act when a majority of workers want to form a union-they shouldnt be stopped. When we invest in our workers, when we build the economy from the bottom up and the middle out together, we can do something we havent done in a long time: build a better America. For more than two years, COVID-19 has impacted every decision in our lives and the life of the nation. And I know youre tired, frustrated, and exhausted. But I also know this. Because of the progress weve made, because of your resilience and the tools we have, tonight I can say we are moving forward safely, back to more normal routines. Weve reached a new moment in the fight against COVID-19, with severe cases down to a level not seen since last July. Just a few days ago, the Centers for Disease Control and Prevention-the CDC-issued new mask guidelines. Under these new guidelines, most Americans in most of the country can now be mask free. And based on the projections, more of the country will reach that point across the next couple of weeks. Thanks to the progress we have made this past year, COVID-19 need no longer control our lives. I know some are talking about 'living with COVID-19'. Tonight - I say that we will never just accept living with COVID-19. We will continue to combat the virus as we do other diseases. And because this is a virus that mutates and spreads, we will stay on guard. Here are four common sense steps as we move forward safely. First, stay protected with vaccines and treatments. We know how incredibly effective vaccines are. If youre vaccinated and boosted you have the highest degree of protection. We will never give up on vaccinating more Americans. Now, I know parents with kids under 5 are eager to see a vaccine authorized for their children. The scientists are working hard to get that done and well be ready with plenty of vaccines when they do. Were also ready with anti-viral treatments. If you get COVID-19, the Pfizer pill reduces your chances of ending up in the hospital by 90%. Weve ordered more of these pills than anyone in the world. And Pfizer is working overtime to get us 1 Million pills this month and more than double that next month. And were launching the 'Test to Treat' initiative so people can get tested at a pharmacy, and if theyre positive, receive antiviral pills on the spot at no cost. If youre immunocompromised or have some other vulnerability, we have treatments and free high-quality masks. Were leaving no one behind or ignoring anyones needs as we move forward. And on testing, we have made hundreds of millions of tests available for you to order for free. Even if you already ordered free tests tonight, I am announcing that you can order more from covidtests.gov starting next week. Second - we must prepare for new variants. Over the past year, weve gotten much better at detecting new variants. If necessary, well be able to deploy new vaccines within 100 days instead of many more months or years. And, if Congress provides the funds we need, well have new stockpiles of tests, masks, and pills ready if needed. I cannot promise a new variant wont come. But I can promise you well do everything within our power to be ready if it does. Third - we can end the shutdown of schools and businesses. We have the tools we need. Its time for Americans to get back to work and fill our great downtowns again. People working from home can feel safe to begin to return to the office. Were doing that here in the federal government. The vast majority of federal workers will once again work in person. Our schools are open. Lets keep it that way. Our kids need to be in school. And with 75% of adult Americans fully vaccinated and hospitalizations down by 77%, most Americans can remove their masks, return to work, stay in the classroom, and move forward safely. We achieved this because we provided free vaccines, treatments, tests, and masks. Of course, continuing this costs money. I will soon send Congress a request. The vast majority of Americans have used these tools and may want to again, so I expect Congress to pass it quickly. Fourth, we will continue vaccinating the world. Weve sent 475 Million vaccine doses to 112 countries, more than any other nation. And we wont stop. We have lost so much to COVID-19. Time with one another. And worst of all, so much loss of life. Lets use this moment to reset. Lets stop looking at COVID-19 as a partisan dividing line and see it for what it is: A God-awful disease. Lets stop seeing each other as enemies, and start seeing each other for who we really are: Fellow Americans. We cant change how divided weve been. But we can change how we move forward-on COVID-19 and other issues we must face together. I recently visited the New York City Police Department days after the funerals of Officer Wilbert Mora and his partner, Officer Jason Rivera. They were responding to a 9-1-1 call when a man shot and killed them with a stolen gun. Officer Mora was 27 years old. Officer Rivera was 22. Both Dominican Americans whod grown up on the same streets they later chose to patrol as police officers. I spoke with their families and told them that we are forever in debt for their sacrifice, and we will carry on their mission to restore the trust and safety every community deserves. Ive worked on these issues a long time. I know what works: Investing in crime prevention and community police officers wholl walk the beat, wholl know the neighborhood, and who can restore trust and safety. So lets not abandon our streets. Or choose between safety and equal justice. Lets come together to protect our communities, restore trust, and hold law enforcement accountable. Thats why the Justice Department required body cameras, banned chokeholds, and restricted no-knock warrants for its officers. Thats why the American Rescue Plan provided $350 Billion that cities, states, and counties can use to hire more police and invest in proven strategies like community violence interruption-trusted messengers breaking the cycle of violence and trauma and giving young people hope. We should all agree: The answer is not to Defund the police. The answer is to FUND the police with the resources and training they need to protect our communities. I ask Democrats and Republicans alike: Pass my budget and keep our neighborhoods safe. And I will keep doing everything in my power to crack down on gun trafficking and ghost guns you can buy online and make at home-they have no serial numbers and cant be traced. And I ask Congress to pass proven measures to reduce gun violence. Pass universal background checks. Why should anyone on a terrorist list be able to purchase a weapon? Ban assault weapons and high-capacity magazines. Repeal the liability shield that makes gun manufacturers the only industry in America that cant be sued. These laws dont infringe on the Second Amendment. They save lives. The most fundamental right in America is the right to vote - and to have it counted. And its under assault. In state after state, new laws have been passed, not only to suppress the vote, but to subvert entire elections. We cannot let this happen. Tonight. I call on the Senate to: Pass the Freedom to Vote Act. Pass the John Lewis Voting Rights Act. And while youre at it, pass the Disclose Act so Americans can know who is funding our elections. Tonight, Id like to honor someone who has dedicated his life to serve this country: Justice Stephen Breyer-an Army veteran, Constitutional scholar, and retiring Justice of the United States Supreme Court. Justice Breyer, thank you for your service. One of the most serious constitutional responsibilities a President has is nominating someone to serve on the United States Supreme Court. And I did that 4 days ago, when I nominated Circuit Court of Appeals Judge Ketanji Brown Jackson. One of our nations top legal minds, who will continue Justice Breyers legacy of excellence. A former top litigator in private practice. A former federal public defender. And from a family of public school educators and police officers. A consensus builder. Since shes been nominated, shes received a broad range of support-from the Fraternal Order of Police to former judges appointed by Democrats and Republicans. And if we are to advance liberty and justice, we need to secure the Border and fix the immigration system. We can do both. At our border, weve installed new technology like cutting-edge scanners to better detect drug smuggling. Weve set up joint patrols with Mexico and Guatemala to catch more human traffickers. Were putting in place dedicated immigration judges so families fleeing persecution and violence can have their cases heard faster. Were securing commitments and supporting partners in South and Central America to host more refugees and secure their own borders. We can do all this while keeping lit the torch of liberty that has led generations of immigrants to this land-my forefathers and so many of yours. Provide a pathway to citizenship for Dreamers, those on temporary status, farm workers, and essential workers. Revise our laws so businesses have the workers they need and families dont wait decades to reunite. Its not only the right thing to do-its the economically smart thing to do. Thats why immigration reform is supported by everyone from labor unions to religious leaders to the U.S. Chamber of Commerce. Lets get it done once and for all. Advancing liberty and justice also requires protecting the rights of women. The constitutional right affirmed in Roe v. Wade-standing precedent for half a century-is under attack as never before. If we want to go forward-not backward-we must protect access to health care. Preserve a womans right to choose. And lets continue to advance maternal health care in America. And for our LGBTQ+ Americans, lets finally get the bipartisan Equality Act to my desk. The onslaught of state laws targeting transgender Americans and their families is wrong. As I said last year, especially to our younger transgender Americans, I will always have your back as your President, so you can be yourself and reach your God-given potential. While it often appears that we never agree, that isnt true. I signed 80 bipartisan bills into law last year. From preventing government shutdowns to protecting Asian-Americans from still-too-common hate crimes to reforming military justice. And soon, well strengthen the Violence Against Women Act that I first wrote three decades ago. It is important for us to show the nation that we can come together and do big things. THE UNITY AGENDA: HELPING THE MENTAL HEALTH CRISES AND VETERANS So tonight Im offering a Unity Agenda for the Nation. Four big things we can do together. First, beat the opioid epidemic. There is so much we can do. Increase funding for prevention, treatment, harm reduction, and recovery. Get rid of outdated rules that stop doctors from prescribing treatments. And stop the flow of illicit drugs by working with state and local law enforcement to go after traffickers. If youre suffering from addiction, know you are not alone. I believe in recovery, and I celebrate the 23 million Americans in recovery. Second, lets take on mental health. Especially among our children, whose lives and education have been turned upside down. The American Rescue Plan gave schools money to hire teachers and help students make up for lost learning. I urge every parent to make sure your school does just that. And we can all play a part-sign up to be a tutor or a mentor. Children were also struggling before the pandemic. Bullying, violence, trauma, and the harms of social media. As Frances Haugen, who is here with us tonight, has shown, we must hold social media platforms accountable for the national experiment theyre conducting on our children for profit. Its time to strengthen privacy protections, ban targeted advertising to children, demand tech companies stop collecting personal data on our children. And lets get all Americans the mental health services they need. More people they can turn to for help, and full parity between physical and mental health care. Third, support our veterans. Veterans are the best of us. Ive always believed that we have a sacred obligation to equip all those we send to war and care for them and their families when they come home. My administration is providing assistance with job training and housing, and now helping lower-income veterans get VA care debt-free. Our troops in Iraq and Afghanistan faced many dangers. One was stationed at bases and breathing in toxic smoke from 'burn pits' that incinerated wastes of war-medical and hazard material, jet fuel, and more. When they came home, many of the worlds fittest and best trained warriors were never the same. Headaches. Numbness. Dizziness. A cancer that would put them in a flag-draped coffin. I know. One of those soldiers was my son Major Beau Biden. We dont know for sure if a burn pit was the cause of his brain cancer, or the diseases of so many of our troops. But Im committed to finding out everything we can. Committed to military families like Danielle Robinson from Ohio. The widow of Sergeant First Class Heath Robinson. He was born a soldier. Army National Guard. Combat medic in Kosovo and Iraq. Stationed near Baghdad, just yards from burn pits the size of football fields. Heaths widow Danielle is here with us tonight. They loved going to Ohio State football games. He loved building Legos with their daughter. But cancer from prolonged exposure to burn pits ravaged Heaths lungs and body. Danielle says Heath was a fighter to the very end. He didnt know how to stop fighting, and neither did she. Through her pain she found purpose to demand we do better. Tonight, Danielle-we are. The VA is pioneering new ways of linking toxic exposures to diseases, already helping more veterans get benefits. And tonight, Im announcing were expanding eligibility to veterans suffering from nine respiratory cancers. Im also calling on Congress: pass a law to make sure veterans devastated by toxic exposures in Iraq and Afghanistan finally get the benefits and comprehensive health care they deserve. And fourth, lets end cancer as we know it. This is personal to me and Jill, to Kamala, and to so many of you. Cancer is the #2 cause of death in America-second only to heart disease. Last month, I announced our plan to supercharge the Cancer Moonshot that President Obama asked me to lead six years ago. Our goal is to cut the cancer death rate by at least 50% over the next 25 years, turn more cancers from death sentences into treatable diseases. More support for patients and families. To get there, I call on Congress to fund ARPA-H, the Advanced Research Projects Agency for Health. Its based on DARPA-the Defense Department project that led to the Internet, GPS, and so much more. ARPA-H will have a singular purpose-to drive breakthroughs in cancer, Alzheimers, diabetes, and more. A unity agenda for the nation. We can do this. My fellow Americans-tonight , we have gathered in a sacred space-the citadel of our democracy. In this Capitol, generation after generation, Americans have debated great questions amid great strife, and have done great things. We have fought for freedom, expanded liberty, defeated totalitarianism and terror. And built the strongest, freest, and most prosperous nation the world has ever known. Now is the hour. Our moment of responsibility. Our test of resolve and conscience, of history itself. It is in this moment that our character is formed. Our purpose is found. Our future is forged. He also told America it is time to 'get back to work' after COVID, called for unity and took a swipe at Donald Trump for his tax cuts and his 'infrastructure week remarks' Well I know this nation. We will meet the test. To protect freedom and liberty, to expand fairness and opportunity. We will save democracy. As hard as these times have been, I am more optimistic about America today than I have been my whole life. Because I see the future that is within our grasp. Because I know there is simply nothing beyond our capacity. We are the only nation on Earth that has always turned every crisis we have faced into an opportunity. The only nation that can be defined by a single word: possibilities. So on this night, in our 245th year as a nation, I have come to report on the State of the Union. And my report is this: the State of the Union is strong-because you, the American people, are strong. We are stronger today than we were a year ago. And we will be stronger a year from now than we are today. Now is our moment to meet and overcome the challenges of our time. And we will, as one people. One America. The United States of America. May God bless you all. May God protect our troops. One woman decided to spread the love amid Queensland's flooding disaster by giving an eel a quick kiss. Channel Nine Queensland journalist Peter Fegan filmed the Brisbane woman on Wednesday as she gave an eel three kisses on Logan Street. 'On the lips?,' Mr Fegan asks the woman, in the video posted to Twitter. Scroll down for the video. Journalist Peter Fegan from Nine filmed a Brisbane woman on Wednesday as she gave an eel three kisses on Logan Street ONLY IN QUEENSLAND: This woman found an Eel in a Logan street- gave it a kiss- and let it go!! @9NewsQueensland @9NewsAUS pic.twitter.com/xu8Dwg2Xoa Peter Fegan (@PeterFegan9) March 2, 2022 She then kissed the eel twice on its back and head before planting a peck on its mouth. 'Happy flood day!' she said. The woman then put the eel back into the flood water visible behind her. The woman then put the eel back into floodwater shown behind her after the love display Some commenters on the video were less than impressed by the woman's display of love while others applauded her positivity. 'Yes lets go pick up the eel from the contaminated water and kiss and cuddle it,' one commenter wrote. 'Lucky to be chucked back in the water not onto the barbie AND got a few kisses for its trouble,' another said. The widespread flood disaster still claiming homes and livelihoods. While metro Brisbane areas get in to clean up, this is Waterford West, pockets here have been isolated since the weekend, many homes still under. @10NewsFirstQLD pic.twitter.com/ofIFGbZ0u6 Chris Campey (@Chris_Campey) March 2, 2022 Homeowners have started cleaning their flood-damaged properties in south-east Queensland Flood waters in several towns and suburbs in south-east Queensland will take days to clear out As floodwater begins to recede, residents in southeast Queensland have swapped their boats and kayaks for bikes and cars While floodwater is beginning to drain out of metropolitan Brisbane, several outer suburbs have remained inundated following the state's worst flood since 2011. 19,000 homes were damaged by flood water and it is expected water will take several days to drain from some areas. On Wednesday a major flood warning was issued for Mary River and lower Logan River, while moderate flood warnings were issued for Noosa River and the Brisbane River. A service station in Waterford, Brisbane, remained surrounded by floodwater after rain eased on Wednesday Some 24,000 Queenslanders were still without power on Wednesday afternoon and Premier Annastacia Palaszczuk announced damage costs could reach $1 billion. However south-east Queenslanders have been told to brace for more poor weather, with a hail bomb predicted. The Bureau of Meteorology warned severe storms are likely across south-east Queensland on Thursday, issuing a warning covering coastal areas from Bundaberg to the Gold Coast. Logan in Brisbane is one of several south-east Queensland suburbs that remains inundated as of Wednesday Residents on Wednesday began large-scale cleaning efforts after Premier Annastacia Palaszczuk announced damage costs could reach $1 billion The forecast predicts hail, intense rainfall and destructive winds will hit areas already damaged by floods. Ms Palaszczuk urged Queenslanders to heed warnings and prepare for the severe weather. 'There is some concern about these very dangerous thunderstorms,' she said at a press conference on Wednesday. 'We're not out of the woods.' Australia's leading vaccine advisory body has recommended Novavax be used as a COVID-19 booster. The Australian Technical Advisory Group on Immunisation recommended Novavax be used as a booster for those 18 and over where an mRNA vaccine such as Pfizer is not suitable. Health Minister Greg Hunt said since Novavax was first approved by the country's medical regulator, more than 25,000 doses of the vaccine have been administered as a first dose. 'The Therapeutic Goods Administration is currently considering an application for whole of population use of the Novavax COVID-19 vaccine as a booster,' Mr Hunt said. 'The TGA and ATAGI continue to review emerging evidence on all COVID-19 vaccines.' Australia's leading vaccine advisory body has recommended Novavax be used as a COVID-19 booster - welcome news for the country's anti-vaxxers Novavax was the first protein-based COVID vaccine to have been approved in Australia. The federal government has acquired 51 million doses of Novavax as part of the vaccine rollout. So far, 11.6 million boosters have been administered. Health Minister Greg Hunt said since Novavax was first approved by the country's medical regulator, more than 25,000 doses of the vaccine have been administered as a first dose The Novavax jab has been lauded by health experts in recent months due to its safety and effectiveness in clinical trials. While it is universally agreed upon by experts and officials that the Moderna and Pfizer shots are safe and effective, there is still room for them to be upgraded upon. The Novavax is a protein based shot, unlike previous shots. Moderna and Pfizer's shots use mRNA technology that uses nucleic acid to generate a spike protein that imitates that of what the virus uses to infect a person's cells. Like the mRNA jabs, it is a two-dose vaccine with the shots to be administered around three weeks apart from each other. The federal government has acquired 51 million doses of Novavax as part of the vaccine rollout The less-novel nature of the jab could spur some hesitant people to finally go get the shots. It's pure protein, there is no nucleic acid that is injected into your body. That protein stimulates protected antibody and T-cell response,' Dr Cody Meissner is the chief of pediatrics at Tufts Children's Hospital in Boston Massachusetts told the Daily Mail. Were much more familiar with protein vaccines.' A U.S. Capitol Police (USCP) officer has been suspended over allegations of fighting and being intoxicated in public during an official trip in Israel last month to scout out the area ahead of House Speaker Nancy Pelosi's visit to the Middle East. The agent was detained last month ahead of a planned congressional delegation in Israel, where they were accused of 'having a physical altercation' while believed to be under the influence of alcohol, the Capitol Police said. The officer was not identified by name; no gender was given. They weren't charged with a crime in the encounter. Usually, before an official state visit, agents are sent to the location well ahead of time to detect and tailor secure locations for the protectee, especially in a foreign country. Pelosi, as well as seven other Democratic lawmakers, traveled to Israel on February 15 while the House was out of session. The officer was reportedly taken to a hospital before being released and called to travel back to the United States, according to two sources briefed on the incident. An officer within the US Capitol Police (USCP) was reprimanded after an alleged intoxicated physical altercation in Israel ahead of a visit by leading U.S. lawmakers U.S. Majority House Speaker Nancy Pelosi is seen attending a joint meeting with speaker of the Knesset Mickey Levy at the Knesset, the Israeli Parliament, in Jerusalem, Israel, Wednesday, February 16, 2022. Pelosi was on a two days official visit to Israel and the Palestinians Authority after the physical altercation involving an intoxicated USCP agent within the foreign country Capitol police told news outlets in a statement that it would not be sharing the agent's name due to no one being charged in the case. Instead, the incident is being handled as a 'discipline/personnel matter.' However, the agency disclosed that the officer has been with the USCP since April 2018 and had worked three details for members of Congress. 'On February 14, a United States Capitol Police Dignitary Protection special agent was doing advance work for a Congressional Delegation in Israel when the agent was accused of having a physical altercation while the agent was believed to be under the influence of alcohol,' Capitol police said in the statement. 'The agent was not charged by the Israeli National Police, however U.S. Capitol Police Chief Tom Manger immediately sent the agent home, revoked the agent's police powers and suspended the agent pending the outcome of an internal investigation by the USCP's Office of Professional Responsibility.' Dailymail.com has contacted House Speaker Nancy Pelosis office for comment. U.S. Capitol Police have been under fire since the January 6, 2021, insurrection when a report from the Senate concluded that Capitol police were underprepared for the riot. Since the agency has gone through drastic changes, including hiring John Thomas Manger as its new police chief. At this time, it remains unclear if the officer will face further repercussions. A 24-year-old Wisconsin woman is behind bars after she allegedly killed a man and dismembered him before taunting police that they were 'going to have fun trying to find all of the organs.' Taylor Schabusiness, 24, was charged Tuesday with first-degree intentional homicide, mutilating a corpse and third-degree sexual assault. She's accused of choking the man to death during sex and then allegedly used a bread knife to dismember his body. Schabusiness then placed his head and penis in a bucket, while she dumped other body parts in a large crockpot box, according to a criminal complaint. The grisly scene was discovered by the victim's own mother when she returned home. Schabusiness told investigators she did not mean to kill the victim but as she was choking him, she liked it and kept doing it, the complaint alleges. The victim's identity has not been released. Taylor Schabusiness, 24, was charged Tuesday with killing and decapitating a Green Bay man at a home after smoking methamphetamine with him Schabusiness appeared in Brown County Court on Tuesday. Her bail was set at $2 million and she remains in custody at the Brown County Jail Police were called to the home on Stony Brook Lane in Green Bay around 3:25 a.m. on February 23 after the mother of the victim stumbled upon the gruesome scene. The victim's mother told police she heard the door slam between 2am and 3am, and when she went to check it out, she found her son's severed head in a bucket and dried blood on a nearby mattress. A search of the home led police to also find several other body parts, including a 'male organ' in the bucket and an upper torso in a tote bag. Schabusiness, who was 'a known associate of the victim,' was believed to be the last person to be seen with the victim, the complaint alleges. Police were called to the home on Stony Brook Lane in Green Bay around 3:25 a.m. on February 23 after the mother of the victim stumbled upon the gruesome scene When police searched her van parked on Eastman Avenue, they found a crock pot box with 'additional human body parts including legs,' according to the criminal complaint. Schabusiness was taken into custody and when police asked her what happened, she replied, 'That is a good question,' according to the complaint. In the complaint, prosecutors say Schabusiness told police that she and the victim were together all day Tuesday and had been smoking methamphetamine while having sex. Schabusiness said she blacked out at one point and just went 'crazy' and started strangling the victim with a chain, and then with her hands. She stated she could feel the victim's heart beating as she was choking him, so she kept pulling and choking him harder. She told police she knew the victim was dead when his face turned purple and blood came out of his mouth, but she kept choking him. It is unclear from the complaint when the victim stopped breathing. A search of the home led police to also find several other body parts, including a 'male organ' in the bucket and an upper torso in a tote bag The complaint also contains graphic details of sexual acts Schabusiness said she did to the victim's body after he died, admitting she played with his body for 'two to three hours' after his death. The complaint alleges that she also made comments to detectives, asking if they knew what it was like to 'love something so much that you kill it.' Schabusiness stated she used knives that she obtained from the kitchen of the residence and that a bread knife worked the best because of the serrated blade, according to the complaint. She also stated that the plan was for her to bring all of the body parts with her but she got lazy and only ended up putting the leg/foot in the van and she forgot the head. 'I can't believe I left the head though,' she added, referring to the victim's head in the basement. Schabusiness appeared in Brown County Court on Tuesday. Her bail was set at $2 million and she remains in custody at the Brown County Jail. She is scheduled to be back in court in three weeks. President Joe Biden had a gaffe during his State of the Union speech amid the crisis in Ukraine, confusing the nation facing invasion with Iran. Biden, 79, the oldest man ever elected to the presidency in the United States, was speaking about the ongoing Russian invasion when he erred. 'Putin may circle Kiev with tanks, but he'll never gain the hearts and souls of the Iranian people,' Biden said. Just after he finishes saying 'Iranian,' Vice President Kamala Harris can be seen behind Biden mouthing the correct word, 'Ukrainian.' Social media was afire with reaction at the blunder, with 'Iranians' trending after the speech. Florida Representative Matt Gaetz wrote that everyone must have thought it was from a popular conservative satire site: 'BREAKING: Biden announces unconventional plan to win the hearts and souls of Iranian people in KyivNot from @TheBabylonBee.' President Joe Biden delivers the State of the Union address during a joint session of Congress. Social media was afire when Biden accidentally said the hearts and souls of the 'Iranian' people will never be gotten by Russian President Vladimir Putin, when he meant to say 'Ukrainian' Biden confused Ukraine (President Volodymyr Zelensky, pictured right) with Iran (President Ebrahim Raisi, pictured left) Vice President Kamala Harris and Speaker of the House Nancy Pelosi watch as Biden gives his speech. Harris could be seen mouthing the correct 'Ukrainian' when Biden made the error Former Trump advisor Sebastian Gorka wrote: 'Biden just said 'Kiev and the Iranian people' and added '#SenilePresident.' Another user added: 'Biden: 'Putin will never gain the hearts and minds of the Iranian people!' What the hell is he talking about ?!' Washington Post columnist Josh Rogin wrote: 'Yes, Biden said Iranian when he met Ukrainian. Let's not make a thing of it.' Biden warned Russia that President Vladimir Putin 'has no idea what's coming' as he opened his first State of the Union address by accusing the Russian leader of 'underestimating' western allies and Ukrainian people and announced the closure of U.S. air space to all Russian flights. 'Six days ago, Russia's Vlaidmir Putin sought to shake the very foundation of the free world, thinking he could make it bend to his menacing ways. But he badly miscalculated,' Biden said with Vice President Kamala Harris sitting behind his right shoulder and House Speaker Nancy Pelosi on his left. 'He thought he could roll into Ukraine and the world would roll over,' Biden continued of Putin. 'Instead, he [was] met with a wall of strength he never anticipated or expected he met the Ukrainian people.' Biden spent the first 12 minutes of his address to the nation from Congress speaking about Russia and their invasion of Ukraine as well as the U.S. response. 'He has no idea what's coming,' Biden warned in a deviation from the prepared script that was sent out ahead of the remarks. The remarks came as new blasts rocked Kyiv Tuesday night after Russia was slammed as 'barbaric' for bombing a TV tower near the Babyn Yar Holocaust Memorial in Ukraine's capital on the site of one of the biggest single massacres of Jews during the Holocaust. 'We in the United States of America stand with the Ukrainian people. Throughout our history, we've learned this lesson When dictators do not pay a price for their aggression, they cause more chaos, they keep moving.' Several lawmakers showed their solidarity with Ukraine by wearing the colors of their flag blue and yellow while others wore brightly colored pins and scarfs as Ukraine continues to face a full-scale attack from Russia. 'Along with twenty-seven members of the European Union including France, Germany, Italy, as well as countries like the United Kingdom, Canada, Japan, Korea, Australia, New Zealand, and many others, even Switzerland are inflicting pain on Russia and supporting the people of Ukraine,' Biden listed. 'Putin is now isolated from the world more than he has ever been,' the president added. President Joe Biden said during his first State of the Union on Tuesday evening that President Vladimir Putin is 'more isolated than ever' and told Russian oligarchs 'we're coming for you' as Moscow continues its attack on Kyiv. Pictured behind the president are Vice President Kamala Harris and Speaker of the House Nancy Pelosi 'She's bright, she's strong, she's resolved,' Biden said in the midst of several seconds of standing ovation for Markarova. Pictured: Jill Biden embraces Markarova on Tuesday evening Many lawmakers wore bright yellow and blue to show their solidarity with Ukraine. Pictured Center: Ukrainian-born Representative Victoria Spartz speaks with Steve Scalise (left) and Rep. Marcy Kaptur (right) The Ukrainian Ambassador to the U.S. Oksana Markarova attended as guest to first lady Jill Biden and received a several-seconds standing ovation from members of Congress and all others in attendance. 'She's bright, she's strong, she's resolved,' Biden said in the midst of the clapping. Many in the first lady's visitor box were wielding mini Ukrainian flags. The White House said: 'In a sign of support for the Ukrainian people, the FLOTUS has an embroidered applique of a sunflower, the national flower of Ukraine, sewn to the sleeve of her dress near her wrist.' Forgetting numbers, confusing Libya and Syria, calling Kamala 'president' and hot mic blunders: Biden's gaffes that have raised health concerns As the oldest person ever sworn in to the White House, President Joe Biden has faced questions and concerns over his mental as well as physical acuity since taking one one of the most stressful jobs in the world. But aside from his advanced age, Biden, 79, has worried even supporters with numerous gaffes over the year he's been in office. Most recently, Rep. Ronny Jackson pointed out in a letter demanding Biden take a cognitive test that one of the first signs of Alzheimer's Disease is erratic changes in mood or personality. January 24, 2022 - Biden calls Peter Doocy a 'stupid son of a b*****' 'You displayed this type of mood change during a cabinet meeting on when you apparently did not know your microphone was on after finishing your opening remarks, and you called a White House reporter a stupid son of a b****in response to a question asked on inflation,' Jackson claimed. He was referring to a hot mic moment in late January during which Biden criticized Fox News reporter Peter Doocy, after which the president personally apologized to the journalist. Biden has also been known to have trouble with the names of his most senior officials, foreign leaders and even countries. At last year's G7 in June, the president bungled the names of Syria and Libya multiple times when discussing security efforts with Russia. The White House was later forced to issue a clarification. Another embarrassing foreign policy faux pas occurred in September 2021, when Biden appeared to forget the name of Australia's prime minister -- who was appearing via video link right beside him. While announcing a historic security deal between the UK, US and Australia, Biden told Britain's Boris Johnson, 'Thank you, Boris,' before turning to Australia's Scott Morrison and saying: 'And I want to thank that fella down under. Thank you very much pal.' Biden has seemingly even struggled with names of people he speaks to more regularly. He gave a speech marking International Women's Day in March of last year, during which he was promoting two female officers to four-star generals. March 8, 2022 - Slipping and forgetting Lloyd Austin's name The president slipped up during the March 8 speech while trying to remember Defense Secretary Lloyd Austin's name. 'I want to thank Sec-, the former general, I keep calling him "General." My - the guy who runs that outfit over there,' Biden said, before quickly adding, 'I want to make sure we thank the secretary for all he's done.' A trip to Texas that same month to visit a Houston-area vaccination center saw Biden apparently lose his train of thought and become confused. He even asked, 'What am I doing here?' while trying to get himself back on track. On multiple occasions Biden has also appeared to refer to Vice President Kamala Harris as the 'president.' During a commencement speech at South Carolina State University in late December, Biden remarked: 'Of course, President Harris is a proud Howard alum.' He made the mistake again more recently, declaring during a voting rights speech in Georgia on January 11 that 'President Harris and I stood on the United States Capitol.' Biden has been known to get dates confused as well -- in May 2021 he recalled traveling via Amtrak to see his mother while he was vice president in 2013. But his mother had died in 2010. The apparent issues began long before Biden took the White House. When he was on the campaign trail in September 2020, then-candidate Biden was widely mocked for saying '200 million people have died' from COVID-19 under Donald Trump's watch. The number was around 200,000 at the time. And while president, Biden had to be corrected on a statistic regarding COVID-19 vaccinations. During a COVID-19 White House press conference, Biden attempted to say, '57 excuse me 570 I dont want to read it, Im not sure I got the right number' Chief Medical Adviser Dr. Anthony Fauci aided him to say the figure was '57 million.' Confusing Libya and Syria 'I'm hopeful that we can find an accommodation where we can save the lives of people in for example, in in Libya,' the president said, mentioning the north African country for the third time instead of Syria, in the Middle East. Biden is pictured in Cornwall, United Kingdom on June 13 The White House later brushed the confusion off, confirming that it was indeed, Syria, the country where Russia and the US have been involved in a decade-long civil war, which the president was referring to Biden repeatedly confused Syria with Libya while discussing ways of working with Russia during a press conference at the G7 on June 13. The 78-year-old gaffe machine spoke of working with Russian President Vladimir Putin to provide economic assistance to the people of Libya, prompting some confused glances from the press pack at the G7 summit in Cornwall, England. 'I'm hopeful that we can find an accommodation where we can save the lives of people in for example, in in Libya,' the president said, mentioning the north African country for the third time instead of Syria, which is in the Middle East. The White House later brushed the confusion off, confirming that the president was indeed referring to Syria, the country where Russia and the US have been involved in a decade-long civil war. Tripping while climbing the Air Force One stairs Over the years, President Joe Biden has made numerous gaffes and mix-ups and has even been caught falling. Pictured: Biden falling while walking up the stairs of Air Force One on March 19 On March 19, he was caught tripping up the stairs as he boarded Air Force One at Joint Base Andrews Advertisement On March 19, video captured Biden tripping up the stairs as he boarded Air Force One at Joint Base Andrews. In the clip, Biden stumbles as he walks up the airstairs. He grabs the hand railing to catch his balance, but then loses his footing two additional times. During the third stumble, he falls to his knees. However, after brushing off his leg, he reaches the top of the plane and gives a salute before disappearing inside. White House Deputy Press Secretary Karine Jean-Pierre later told reporters that Biden was '100 percent fine' and preparing for his trip in Atlanta. 'It's pretty windy outside. It's very windy. I almost fell coming up the steps myself,' she said. Just one day earlier, during a press conference on March 18 (pictured), he referred to Vice President Kamala Harris as 'President Harris' Just one day earlier, Biden accidentally referred to Vice President Kamala Harris as 'President Harris.' The gaffe occurred during a press conference on March 18, during which he lauded his administration for being close to meeting their goal of 100 million COVID-19 vaccine doses in his first 100 days in office. 'Now when President Harris and I took a virtual tour of a vaccination center in Arizona not long ago, one of the nurses on that, on that tour injecting people, giving vaccinations, said that each shot was like administering a dose of hope,' Biden said. Harris was standing behind Biden as the president carried on with his speech, but did not correct himself. Later that day, when the White House released the transcript of his speech, Harris's proper title was inserted with brackets. On March 9, while making a speech, Biden seemed to forget the name of Secretary of Defense Lloyd Austin (above) In a speech on March 9, Biden seemed to fumble with his words and forget the name of his Secretary of Defense Lloyd Austin. 'I want to thank Sec - the former general - I keep calling him "General,"' Biden said. 'My - the guy who runs that outfit over there. I want to make sure we thank the Secretary for all he's done to try to implement what we've just talked about, and for recommending these two women for promotion.' The slip-occurred despite the fact that just a few minutes earlier, he had mentioned Austin's name in the speech without an issue. On Election Day, in November, Biden introduced a crowd to his granddaughter, but referred to her as his son During an Election Day speech in Philadelphia, Biden stumbled over his words and confused his granddaughter with his late son, Beau Biden. Biden told the crowd: 'I want to introduce you to two of my granddaughters...this is my son, Beau Biden who a lot of you helped elect to the Senate in Delaware.' The commander-in-chief had meant to introduce the crowed to Natalie, Beau's daughter, but hadn't just mixed up the name but the person - he also put his arm around Finnegan Biden, Hunter's daughter. He finally corrected himself as he draped his arm around Natalie's shoulder and said: 'This is Natalie, this is Beau's daughter.' Beau Biden passed away in 2015 after a months-long battle with glioblastoma, one of the deadliest types of brain cancer. TOLD STATE SENATOR IN WHEELCHAIR TO STAND UP In 2008, Biden told then-Missouri state senator Chuck Graham to stand up for the crowd at a rally, before realizing he was in a wheelchair Not all of Biden's gaffes occurred in the 2020s or even the 2010s. In fact, some happened in the early aughts. In September 2008, after Biden had been named former President Barack Obama's running mate, he attended a campaign rally in Missouri. It was there that he called on then-Missouri state senator Chuck Graham, who passed away last year. to stand up for the crowd. 'I'm told Chuck Graham, state senator, is here. Stand up Chuck, let 'em see you,' Biden said. It was at that moment he realized Graham was in a wheelchair due to muscular dystrophy. 'Oh, God love you. What am I talking about. I'll tell you what, you're making everybody else stand up, though, pal.' According to the Columbia Tribune, Graham said he was never offended by the mistake. Prime Minister Jacinda Ardern says New Zealand is sending humanitarian aid to Ukraine rather than weapons as there is a 'gap' there in the international response. New Zealand has joined with the international community to condemn the Russian invasion of Ukraine, but it is not supporting Ukraine's military resistance. Rather than sending financial support to the military - or lethal or non-lethal arms - New Zealand is focusing elsewhere. 'We've stepped into the humanitarian space because we see a gap and a need there,' Ms Ardern said in Wellington on Wednesday. New Zealand PM Jacinda Ardern has opted not to send weapons to support Ukraine in their fight to repel Russia but will instead send humanitarian aid as there 'is a gap there' New Zealand is also lagging other countries in the sanctions it places on Russia, as it is hamstrung by its own legislation which requires sign-off by the United Nations Security Council. Given Russia has veto power on the UN body, New Zealand has been limited to implementing travel bans on the movement of Russian government officials. Ms Ardern said she was working on a bespoke piece of legislation that would enable New Zealand to join the international sanctions effort. Ukrainian President Volodymyr Zelenskyy has asked Western countries for support in the form of military aid and heavy sanctions against Russia (pictured: in Kyiv, Ukraine) Russia launched a full-scale assault on Ukraine on February 24 with several Ukrainian cities suffering regular shelling (pictured: Ukrainian service members ride in tanks towards the front line) 'My expectation is we'll have something ready to go next week. We will also talk to other political parties about support for their package as well,' she said. 'This will very much focus on the gaps that exist through the potential movement of assets and investment out of Russia.' Ms Ardern said the expulsion of the Russian ambassador in Wellington remained 'on the table'. A driver has saved a platypus' life by performing CPR on the lifeless creature after finding it unconscious on the side of the road. Sunshine Coast local Penelope went for a drive in the Noosa Hinterland on Tuesday when she spotted what she thought was a dead baby duck. The animal lover's instincts kicked in as she rushed to perform CPR on the lifeless lump to try and save his life. The platypus 'coughed and spluttered' to life after the passerby salvaged the beloved creature Social media users cheered and thanked the kind animal lover after the platypus happily swam off (pictured) 'I just panicked and I didn't know what to do so I started doing those two finger compressions like we're taught to do on babies that aren't breathing,' Penelope told the ABC. 'It coughed and spluttered and started breathing again, which was just amazing. 'It looked at me and blinked its little eyes and very slowly walked back towards the water and eventually swam off.' Social media lit up with comments commending her kind actions, and thanking her for the good news story. One animal lover said it was the 'best news today'. Another added: 'That would be the greatest moment of my life, to help an animal near extinction. All people care about today are dogs and cats, God bless you'. The platypus was nearly a victim of the wild weather which saw areas of the Sunshine Coast (pictured) suffer intense flooding New York Assemblywoman Pat Fahy announced her son, 25, died from a rare cancer after battling the disease for 20 months. Manhattan-based photographer and cinematographer, Brendan Fahy Bequette, was diagnosed with a mediastinal choriocarcinoma tumor in June 2020. He underwent multiple surgeries and treatments, including stem cell transplants, but sadly on February 28, this year, he lost his battle with the disease. Bequette 'was the light of our lives and we will miss him for the rest of our lives,' the assemblywoman wrote on Twitter. New York Assemblywoman Pat Fahy's son Brendan Fahy Bequette, 25, (pictured) died on February 28 after suffering from a mediastinal choriocarcinoma tumor, which he was diagnosed with on his 24th birthday He announced in December 2020 that he would have to undergo an 'extensive surgery to remove the mediastinal mass' and was undergoing stem cell transplants Fahy posted old photos of Beguette (far left) and the family when she announced his death Many politicians and family friends posted their condolences on Fahy's posts. 'Pat- your love for Brendan was so obviously effusive every time we spoke. Words cannot even begin to express how heartbroken I am for you,' James Skoufis, a New York Senator wrote. 'Truly sorry to hear this. Sending my deepest condolences to your family,' Gothamist journalist Jon Campbell wrote. Former New York representative Aravella Simotas wrote: 'Pat, wishing you and your family peace, comfort, and courage during this time of great sorrow. I am truly heartbroken for your loss but know that Brendans beautiful soul will always live in your heart. May his memory be eternal.' Publisher of Adirondack Explorer Tracy Ormsbee wrote: 'Im so very sorry for your loss. We were fortunate to have the chance to know Brendan as a bright intern at the Times Union doing what he loved.' New York State Senator Julia Salazar wrote: 'I am deeply sorry to hear this, Pat. Brendan was clearly a brilliant and talented and beloved person. I hope you and your family are surrounded by love and support.' Bequette' worked as a camera operator for the US Open and the Nathan's Hot Dog Eating Contest in 2019, interned at the Albany Times Union during his college days, and did a photoshoot with Stranger Things star Millie Bobby Brown in his short career, also in 2019. The assemblywoman announced on Tuesday that her son lost his 20-month battle with cancer The family (L-R: Wayne, Eileen, Pat, and Brenden) said they were grateful for all the support Fahy said he 'was the light of our lives and we will miss him for the rest of our lives' He shared on his Facebook page in December 2020 that the disease only affects around 500 people per year He was diagnosed with the disease in June 2020 and he found out in December 2020 that the cancer had spread to his brain Bequette's wake and funeral will be held at St. Vincent De Paul in Albany on Friday from 3pm to 4pm, with the burial to follow on Saturday. The 25-year-old revealed he was battling cancer in December 2020. 'I have a large primary tumor in my mediastinum (chest), as well as nodules dotted around my lungs,' he wrote on Facebook. 'I was lucky that I was able to start chemotherapy within a week of my diagnosis and the four cycles of chemo I did initially proved to be successful.' He announced at the time that he would have to undergo an 'extensive surgery to remove the mediastinal mass' and was undergoing stem cell transplants. 'It was discovered that quite a few lesions had spread into my brain,' he wrote at the time. 'Many doctors have said that I was lucky to catch this disease as early as I did and although theres no concrete evidence about what caused the pain to put me in the emergency room, I think it was my on-again-off-again relationship with running. Just before my diagnosis, I was running up to six miles a day and I believe that aggravated my lung enough to cause the pain.' He was treated at Memorial Sloan Kettering in New York City. THE late Genius Ginimbi Kadungures two sisters, Nelia and Juliet, have been jointly appointed as executors to his estate. The family convened a meeting at the Master of High Court yesterday, following a recent High Court ruling, which declared his unsigned will, and appointment of its executor, as null and void. Ginimbis father, Anderson Kadungure, and his uncle Kenny Mubaiwa, also attended the meeting. Prior to the High Court challenge, a questionable will had appointed Patricia Darangwa to be the executor while Ginimbis Lamborghini was given to his friend Kit Kat. As it now stands Ginimbi died intestate (without a will). The family yesterday convened an edict meeting in compliance with what was ordered by the court, in order to restart the whole process and register the late Genius Kadungures estate. His father, two sisters and uncle attended the meeting and it was agreed that the siblings jointly perform duties of executor, said the family lawyer, Shingi Ushewekunze. Ushewekunze said the family will now start a fresh process. Now, the family, through the two sisters, will begin the normal administration of the estate and share the wealth as they wish. The court ruled in their favour and it is now on record that Ginimbi died without a will, said Ushewekunze. The socialite died on November 8, 2020, after his Rolls Royce collided with a Honda Fit, along Liberation Legacy Way. Three other occupants including Moana, and two foreigners Alishia and Karim, were burnt beyond recognition, after the doors of the Rolls Royce jammed. Days after the incident, Darangwa presented an unsigned and undated will, purported to belong to Ginimbi. Darangwa became an executor to the estate. The family approached the High Court, seeking a review of the Master of High Courts decision to accept the will, when Darangwa was keen to dispose of the Lamborghini to Kit Kat. According to the family, Ginimbi owned various properties, including a mansion in Domboshava and a company called Infinity Gas, which operates in Zimbabwe, South Africa and Botswana. The late socialite also owned an undisclosed number of vehicles. H Metro US President Joe Biden has thanked Australia for banding together with the free world to hold Russia accountable for its invasion of Ukraine. In his first State of the Union address, Mr Biden said Russian president Vladimir Putin is more isolated from the world than ever before due to the range of sanctions imposed by Western nations and blocs. 'The free world is holding him (Putin) accountable along with 27 members of the European Union ... as well as countries like the United Kingdom, Canada, Japan, Korea, Australia, New Zealand,' he said. He said military, economic and humanitarian assistance would help Ukraine in its 'fight for freedom'. US President Joe Biden has thanked Australia for banding together with the free world to hold Russia accountable for its invasion of Ukraine in his first State of the Union address 'Putin has unleashed violence and chaos. But while he may make gains on the battlefield he will pay a continuing high price over the long run.' The first 12 minutes of the address focused on the conflict in Ukraine, with Mr Biden announcing the closure of US airspace to all Russian aircraft. Thirty million barrels of oil from the US strategic reserve will also be released, as will a further 30 million from the reserves of 30 countries around the world, Mr Biden said. The first 12 minutes of the address focused on the conflict in Ukraine, with Mr Biden announcing the closure of US airspace to all Russian aircraft. Pictured: The city of Kharkiv and Kyiv, which is being attacked by the Russian military Mr Biden said Russian president Vladimir Putin is more isolated from the world than ever before due to the range of sanctions imposed by Western nations Earlier in the day, the head of Australia's defence force pledged to stand united with other nations in support of Ukraine following the Russian invasion. In his first public comments since forces invaded Ukraine, Australian Defence Force chief General Angus Campbell said Russia's actions were illegal. 'Your ADF stands with our allies and partners in condemning the unprovoked attack on the people of Ukraine,' he said on Twitter. 'Australia will provide military assistance and medical supplies to support Ukraine's defence following Russia's illegal invasion.' In his first public comments since forces invaded Ukraine, Australian Defence Force chief General Angus Campbell said Russia's actions were illegal. 'Your ADF stands with our allies and partners in condemning the unprovoked attack on the people of Ukraine,' he said on Twitter It followed Defence Secretary Greg Moriarty meeting with US Deputy Secretary of Defence Kathleen Hicks to discuss the bolstering of information sharing through the new trilateral AUKUS security partnership, which includes the United Kingdom. Australia's provision of $70 million worth of lethal and non-lethal military aid to Ukraine was also discussed. The bulk of the package will be used to fund missiles and ammunition, Prime Minister Scott Morrison announced on Tuesday. However, the prime minister did not specify what weapons would be supplied due to national security concerns. Prime Minister Scott Morrison announced on Tuesday that Australia's provision of $70 million worth of military aid to Ukraine will be largely used to fund missiles and ammunition. Pictured: A Ukrainian reservist taking part in military training The prime minister did not specify what weapons would be supplied due to national security concerns A further $35 million will be spent on humanitarian aid, including food, water, medicine and shelter. The $35 million was described as an 'opening contribution' as the conflict continues, with Defence Minister Peter Dutton labelling a Russian take over of Ukraine all but inevitable. Mr Dutton said although Russia's mission had so far been frustrated by the 'heroic' resistance shown by Ukrainians, the sheer weight of force wielded by Moscow cannot be ignored. 'Hopefully (Russia's) force is repelled eventually - but at the moment, when you see capital cities being encircled, it is difficult to see a different outcome,' he told Sky News on Wednesday. Defence Minister Peter Dutton has labelled a Russian take over of Ukraine all but inevitable Satellite imagery has also revealed a Russian convoy of vehicles and tanks stretching over 64 kilometres transiting through Ukraine. 'Russian soldiers - as we know through history - are a very brutal force, and the carnage we're seeing right across the Ukraine is very confronting and it's going to intensify,' Mr Dutton said. Russian commanders have intensified their infiltration of Ukrainian urban areas, warning Kyiv residents to flee their homes and deploying rockets on the city of Kharkiv. Mr Dutton said China's President Xi Jinping could stop the progress of Mr Putin's troops. 'The pressure really should be on President Xi to pick up that phone and, instead of offering comfort, offering words of direction to President Putin that he should withdraw from the Ukraine as quickly as possible,' he said. Advertisement Russia has today stepped up its attacks on Ukraine's major cities as officials in Mariupol said a 'full-scale genocide' was underway as Putin's men unleashed a 15-hour artillery barrage while Kharkiv also came under heavy bombardment in a dark sign of what could be to come in the capital Kyiv. Mariupol, located in the south of Ukraine on the Black Sea, has been surrounded by Russian forces and struck by artillery in an apparent attempt to bomb the city into submission as Putin's men resort to 'medieval' tactics. Sergiy Orlov, the deputy mayor, said entire districts had been levelled with such heavy barrages that medics cannot get in to retrieve the dead. 'We are near to a humanitarian catastrophe,' he said. 'Russian forces are several kilometers away on all sides,' he added. 'The Ukrainian army is brave and they will continue to defend the city, but Russia does not fight with their army, they just destroy districts... We are in a terrible situation.' Meanwhile Kharkiv, Ukraine's second city, came under heavy barrage in the early hours as Russian troops try to surround and seize it after days of fighting - with a rocket slamming into a university building and police station in the early hours before the city council was also struck, with one of the explosions caught in a dramatic video. The bombardment gives a dark taste of what is likely to come for other cities such as Kyiv after analysts warned Russia's military - having suffered heavy losses trying to pull off ambitious precision strikes - was likely to resort to surrounding cities and bombing them into submission to force a bloody victory. Ukraine war: The latest Russian paratroopers land in Ukraine's second city amid heavy fighting 'There are practically no areas left in Kharkiv where an artillery shell has not yet hit': Interior Ministry official Joe Biden brands Vladimir Putin a 'dictator' in his annual State of the Union address as he bans Russian aircraft from US airspace Russia steps up its bombing campaign and missile strikes, hitting Kyiv's main television tower, two residential buildings in a town west of the city and the city of Bila Tserkva to the south of the capital Russian forces push into the besieged Black Sea city of Kherson in the south Russian attacks leave Mariupol, another Black Sea port further to the west without electricity More than 677,000 people have fled Ukraine since the Russian invasion, the UN's refugee agency says The UN's International Court of Justice says it will hold public hearings on March 7 and 8 over Ukraine's allegations of 'genocide' by Russia Russia blocks an independent television channel and a liberal radio station, tightening a virtual media blackout A string of Western companies announce they are freezing or scaling back business with Russia Russians race to withdraw cash after the introduction of capital controls and as the ruble hits record lows Russian-owned Nord Stream 2 goes insolvent after Germany halts the pipeline following Moscow's invasion Oil prices soar past $110 a barrel, despite agreements to release 60 million barrels from stockpiles The World Bank prepares a $3-billion aid package for Ukraine, including $350 million in immediate funds Advertisement Ukraine's emergency services estimate that 2,000 civilians have been killed so-far during Russia's invasion, though that figure is likely to be an under-count once Wednesday's figures are tallied. If Mariupol falls, then thousands of Ukrainian troops dug into trenches along the old frontline in Donetsk are at risk of being surrounded next. Chernihiv, in the north east, and Sumy, in the east, face similar fates - as does the town of Konotop with residents today given the ultimatum of 'surrender or be destroyed'. Against that backdrop, the two sides are expected to meet on the Belarus border today for more peace talks, with a ceasefire on the table - Russia says - provided its goals of banning Ukraine from NATO and the total demilitarisation of the country are achieved. Kherson, a strategic port city in the south of Ukraine, has also been surrounded but appeared to have fallen to Russian forces on Wednesday without being heavily bombed. Russian troops and tanks were seen going street-to-street in the city centre, though the mayor suggested some key buildings were still under government control. Russian forces had also surrounded Zaporizhzhia, home to Europe's largest nuclear power plant, amid reports that soldiers had attacked civilian checkpoints set up around the facility to try and keep it safe. Ukraine's interior ministry had warned of a 'nuclear catastrophe' if it was hit. 'An accident can happen like at the Chernobyl nuclear power plant or the Fukushima nuclear power plant. Russian generals - think again! Radiation does not know nationalities, does not spare anyone,' an adviser to the country's interior minister said. In Zhytomyr, a city to the west of Kyiv, airstrikes hit the headquarters of the 95th Ukrainian armed forces brigade while also damaging a hospital, leaving two people dead. The city of Bila Tserkva, some 50 miles south of Kyiv, was also hit overnight. Meanwhile Sergey Lavrov, the Russian foreign minister, warned that - if a Third World War were to begin in Europe - it would be 'nuclear and destructive' in a thinly veiled threat for NATO not to get involved in Ukraine. Ukraine's armed forces said Wednesday morning that Russia is 'trying to advance in all directions' but are 'being resisted everywhere and suffering losses'. It estimates that 5,840 Russian troops have been killed so far - though that figure cannot be verified. Despite the near-universal condemnation of the war internationally, a new state poll in Russia taken over the weekend showed support for Putin has risen from around 60 per cent to 70 per cent since the week before. Russia also launched a recruitment drive for more mercenary soldiers in state media, with newspaper Novaya Gazeta running adverts offering soldiers-for-hire 1,760 a month in a drive for the 'recruitment of people for protection in the near abroad'. As the fighting continued today, both sides said they are ready to resume talks aimed at stopping the new devastating war in Europe. It was not clear when new talks might take place - or what they would yield. Ukraine's leader earlier said Russia must stop bombing before another meeting. Seven days into the war, roughly 874,000 people have fled Ukraine and the UN refugee agency warned the number could cross the one million mark soon. The overall death toll was not clear, but Ukraine's State Emergency Service said more than 2,000 civilians have died. It was impossible to verify that claim. Countless others have taken shelter underground as Russia continues its bombardment. Another attack came on Wednesday on Kharkiv, a city with a population of about 1.5 million, and a reported strike on a hospital in the country's north. A 40-mile convoy of hundreds of Russian tanks and other vehicles advanced slowly on the capital of Kyiv, while Russian forces pressed their assault on the strategic southern city of Kherson. A Ukrainian man narrowly cheated death when a Russian airstrike destroyed a building in Kharkiv today, as the city came under heavy bombardment by Russian forces Part of the Karazin National University campus in the city of Kharkiv is destroyed after being struck by a Russian missile which was seemingly intended for a nearby police or interior ministry building Sergyi Badylevych, 41, hugs his wife Natalia, 42, and child in an underground metro station used as bomb shelter in Kyiv Firefighters work to contain a fire in the complex of buildings housing the Kharkiv regional SBU security service and the regional police after a Russian airstrike Rubble is seen littering the streets of Kharkiv after a Russian missile struck the city in the early hours of Wednesday Firefighters battle to put out a blaze in Kharkiv as the city came under renewed airstrikes today, with an official saying there is almost no area of the city left that has not been hit Firefighters attempt to put out the burning sociology department of Karazin National University which was hit by a strike seemingly intended for nearby government buildings Rubble litters the streets of the Ukrainian city of Kharkiv after an early-morning missile strike by Russia A damaged military vehicle is seen in the street after shelling in the city of Kharkiv, Ukraine A damaged armored vehicle is abandoned on the street after shelling in the city of Kharkiv, Ukraine Ukrainian soldiers were this morning setting up defensive positions around Europe's largest nuclear plant, at Zaporizhzhia, as Russian forces prepared to attack the city - warning of 'catastrophe' if the plant is hit Civilians help construct makeshift barricades around the nuclear power plant at Zaporizhzhia to stop Russia capturing it Ukraine's military said Russia today renewed its assault 'on all fronts', with paratroopers landing in Kharkiv, tanks and trucks rolling into the centre of Kherson, and strikes in Mariupol and Zhytomyr Ukraine war: Latest updates from cities under attack Mariupol Mayor reports full-scale genocide with 15-hour Russian shelling killing hundreds of people. Russia says it has surrounded the port city. Three boys wounded by apparent Russian shelling while they were playing football Wednesday were rushed into a hospital. One lost his leg, and died soon after Kherson - Ukrainians said they were battling in the port, the first sizeable city Russia claimed to have seized Kharkiv - Bombing of Kharkiv, a city of 1.5 million people, has left its centre a wasteland of ruined buildings and debris according to eyewitnesses Kyiv - Powerful blasts heard overnight, with people on the ground reporting car alarms being set off. 40-mile column of military vehicles is outside the city Gorenka - Ukrainian reservists have set up checkpoints to stop Russian advance outside of Kyiv Irpin - Mayor of town 15 miles west of Kyiv reported a rocket strike on a multi-storey residential building Odessa - Ukrainian deputy defence minister Hanna Malyar said on Wednesday said reports suggested Russian artillery struck the city's airport this morning Kyiv, Zhytomyr, Kharkiv and Chernihiv - Russians used Iskander missile systems to bombard cities Donetsk and Luhansk - UNHCR said today 96,000 people had crossed into Russia from the separatist regions between February 18 and 23- days before Russia's invasion began Advertisement Putin's goals are not clear, but the West has warned he may be seeking to topple the government and install a Kremlin-friendly regime. Others think he may seek to annex or declare independence over large parts of Ukraine to ensure that NATO will never gain control over them. President Volodymyr Zelensky has decried Russia's attacks on civilian targets as a blatant terror campaign, while US President Joe Biden warned on Tuesday that if the Russian leader didn't 'pay a price' for the invasion, the aggression wouldn't stop with one country. Russia, too, ramped up its rhetoric, with Foreign Minister Sergei Lavrov reminding the world about the country's vast nuclear arsenal. In an interview with Al-Jazeera, he said: 'A third world war will be nuclear, and devastating,' according to Russian news sites. A Russian strike hit the regional police and intelligence headquarters in Kharkiv, killing four people and wounding several, the state emergency service of Ukraine said. It added that residential buildings were also hit but did not provide further details. A blast blew the roof off of the five-floor police building and set the top floor alight, according to videos and photos released by the service. Pieces of the building were strewn across adjacent streets. In the northern city of Chernihiv, two cruise missiles hit a hospital, according to the Ukrainian UNIAN news agency, which quoted the health administration chief. Serhiy Pivovar said authorities were working to determine the casualty toll. In the besieged port city of Mariupol, at least one teenager died and two more were wounded by apparent Russian shelling. The attacks followed a day after one in Kharkiv's central square that shocked many Ukrainians for hitting at the centre of life in a major city. A Russian strike also targeted a TV tower in the capital of Kyiv on Tuesday - and caused damage at the nearby site of the Babi Yar Holocaust memorial. A spokesman for the nearby memorial said a Jewish cemetery at the site was damaged but that the extent was not clear. An AP photographer who visited the scene Wednesday said the main monument itself wasn't damaged. Mr Zelensky, who called the strike on the square in Kharkiv a war crime that the world would never forget, expressed outrage on Wednesday at the attack on Babi Yar, where Nazi occupiers killed more than 33,000 Jews over two days in 1941. He expressed concern that other historically significant and religious sites could be targeted and called on Jews around the world to protest the invasion. 'This is beyond humanity,' Mr Zelensky, who is Jewish, said in a speech posted on Facebook. 'They have orders to erase our history, our country and all of us.' A convoy of Russian vehicles is seen parked along a residential street in an unknown area of Ukraine, in footage released by Russia's armed forces on Wednesday Russian trucks are pictured parked up in the centre of Kherson, in Ukraine's south, after Moscow's forces rolled into the city Russian armoured vehicles and trucks are pictured rolling through the centre of Kherson, as Moscow claimed to be in control of the city but Ukraine said it still holds key government buildings Ukrainian emergency service personnel carry a body of a victim out of the damaged City Hall building following shelling in Kharkiv, Ukraine This photograph taken on February 26, 2022 shows a Russian Armoured personnel carrier (APC) burning during fight with the Ukrainian armed forces in Kharkiv Damaged residential buildings are pictured in Irpin, to the west of Kyiv, after an overnight bombardment by Russian forces Even as Russia pressed its assault, Kremlin spokesman Dmitry Peskov said on Wednesday that a delegation would be ready later in the day to meet Ukrainian officials. Ukrainian Foreign Minister Dmytro Kuleba also said his country was ready - but noted that Russia's demands have not changed and that he wouldn't accept any ultimatums. Neither side said where the talks might take place. As the war wears on, Russia finds itself increasingly isolated, beset by the sanctions that have thrown its economy into turmoil and left the country practically friendless, apart from a few nations like China, Belarus and North Korea. There have been some reports that Belarus is preparing to send troops into Ukraine, but Belarusian President Alexander Lukashenko has said his country has no such plans. Mr Peskov, the Kremlin spokesman, acknowledged the global economic punishment hitting Russia and Russians now is 'unprecedented' but said Moscow had been prepared for all manner of sanctions, and the potential damage had been taken into account before launching the invasion. 'We have experience with this. We have been through several crises,' he said. The invading forces also pressed their assault on other towns and cities. Britain's Ministry of Defence (MOD) said Kharkiv and Mariupol were encircled. A third city, Kherson, is under pressure, but there were conflicting reports of who controlled it. The Vienna-based International Atomic Energy Agency (IAEA), the United Nations' nuclear watchdog, said it had received a letter from Russia saying its military had taken control around Ukraine's largest nuclear power plant. According to the letter, personnel at the plant continued their 'work on providing nuclear safety and monitoring radiation in normal mode of operation,' and it said the 'radiation levels remain normal'. Russia already seized control of the decommissioned Chernobyl nuclear power plant, scene of the world's worst nuclear disaster in 1986. The IAEA says that it has received a request from Ukraine to 'provide immediate assistance in coordinating activities in relation to the safety' of Chernobyl and other sites. Many military experts worry that Russia may be shifting tactics. Moscow's strategy in Chechnya and Syria was to use artillery and air bombardments to pulverise cities and crush fighters' resolve. Britain's MOD said it had seen an increase in Russian air and artillery strikes on populated urban areas over the past two days. Human Rights Watch said it documented a cluster bomb attack outside a hospital in Ukraine's east in recent days. Residents also reported the use of such weapons in Kharkiv and Kiyanka village. The Kremlin denied using cluster bombs. In Mariupol, the mayor said on Wednesday morning that the attacks had been relentless. 'We cannot even take the wounded from the streets, from houses and apartments today, since the shelling does not stop,' Vadym Boychenko was quoted by the Interfax news agency as saying. Mr Boychenko referred to Russia's actions as a 'genocide' - using the same word Mr Putin has used to justify the invasion. US President Joe Biden branded Vladimir Putin a 'dictator', warning the sanction campaign to cripple Russia's economy would escalate and its oligarchs were being targeted. In Biden's first State of the Union address, he hailed the resolve of the Western alliance and voiced solidarity with Ukraine as lawmakers in the US Congress gave a standing ovation to the Ukrainian people. 'A Russian dictator, invading a foreign country, has costs around the world,' Biden told lawmakers in his annual State of the Union address, promising 'robust action to make sure the pain of our sanctions is targeted at Russia's economy.' Biden, who had earlier spoken with Zelensky on the phone, announced new measures against Russia and its wealthy elite with a new task force to go after the 'crimes' of Russian oligarchs. 'We are coming for your ill-begotten gains,' he said, prompting the rare sight of members of both parties standing to applaud. 'And tonight I am announcing that we will join our allies in closing off American air space to all Russian flights - further isolating Russia and adding an additional squeeze on their economy.' The US leader said Putin's aggression was 'premeditated and totally unprovoked' - but hailed the resolve of the Western alliance in responding with brutal sanctions. '(Putin) thought he could divide us here at home,' Biden said. 'But Putin was wrong. We are ready.' He repeated his commitment that no American troops would be sent to Ukraine to confront the invading forces. A lack of will to send foreign troops into battle has given Russia space to press on with its assault on Ukrainian cities. A strike on the main TV tower in Kyiv killed five people Tuesday and knocked out some state broadcasting, Ukrainian officials said, but left the structure intact. Fresh explosions were heard late Tuesday in Kyiv and Bila Tserkva, 50 miles (80 kilometres) to the south, according to local media. News outlets also reported Russian missiles damaging residential buildings and a hospital in Zhytomyr, citing the major transport hub's mayor Sergei Sukhomline. The remains of a destroyed Russian military convoy are seen on a street in Bucha, to the south of Kyiv, on Wednesday morning An armed man stands by the remains of a Russian military vehicle in Bucha, close to the capital Kyiv, Ukraine A civilian trains to throw Molotov cocktails in the city of Zhytomyr, 80 miles to the west of Kyiv, as Russian forces advance Civilians train to throw Molotov cocktails to defend the city, as Russia's invasion of Ukraine continues, in Zhytomyr A Ukrainian soldier trains civilians to use Molotov cocktails in the city of Zhytomyr on Tuesday Soldiers are seen around piles of sand used for blocking a road in Ukrainian capital, Kyiv Ukrainian forces are pictured on the streets of Kyiv as the population prepares for an assault by Russian forces Soldiers are seen around piles of sand used for blocking a road in Ukrainian capital, Kyiv Police officers remove the body of a passerby killed in yesterday's airstrike that hit Kyiv's main television tower olice officers examine the bodies of passersby killed in yesterday's airstrike that hit Kyiv's main television tower Police officers stand guard at the site of yesterday's airstrike that hit Kyiv's main television tower A fighter of the Ukrainian Territorial Defence Forces, the military reserve of the Ukrainian Armed Forces, stands guard at the underground crossing and subway entrance in the center of Kyiv The International Criminal Court has opened a war crimes investigation against Russia. Ukraine says more than 350 civilians, including 14 children, have been killed in the conflict. The Ukrainian Ministry of Defence also said overnight that it feared an attack from Belarus over its northern border. 'Belarusian troops have been put on high alert and are concentrated in areas closest to the border with Ukraine,' the ministry said Tuesday in a statement on Facebook. Ukrainian intelligence noted 'significant activity' of aircraft in the border area, it said. Belarusian President Alexander Lukashenko said Tuesday he had ordered more troops to the south of the country, the Belta news agency reported. But forces of Belarus, a close ally of Russia, would not be taking part in the attack on Ukraine, he added. In southern Ukraine, the city of Mariupol on the Azov Sea was left without electricity after Russian bombardment, while Kherson on the Black Sea reported Russian checkpoints encircling the city. In a key victory for Moscow, Russia's defence ministry said its troops had linked up with pro-Moscow rebel forces from eastern Ukraine along the Azov Sea coast. Russia has defied international bans, boycotts and sanctions to press ahead with an offensive it says is aimed at defending Ukraine's Russian speakers and toppling the leadership. In response, more Western companies have withdrawn from projects in Russia, deepening the economic toll on Moscow that saw the ruble collapse this week. Apple, ExxonMobil and Boeing announced Tuesday in rapid succession steps to withdraw or freeze business in Russia. The moves followed earlier announcements by Disney, Ford and Mastercard among others. The invasion has sent global markets into a spiral, with crude surging past $110 a barrel Wednesday and equities sinking. On top of sanctions, Germany has promised arms for Ukraine, while the EU said, in a first, that it will buy and supply arms to the country. Zelensky has reiterated an urgent appeal for Ukraine to be admitted to the European Union. More than 660,000 people have fled abroad, the UN refugee agency said, and as battles rage for control of major cities many more are expected to follow. Residents of capital Kyiv are crammed into makeshift bomb shelters awaiting their own fight, with a massive Russian military convoy stationed just north of the city. Teacher Irina Butyak, 38, has spent two days in the basement of her apartment block sheltering with some 20 people. 'We have train tickets for western Ukraine for tomorrow,' she told AFP as air raid sirens blared directly overhead. 'I don't think we will make the train.' A view of smoke from inside a damaged gym following shelling in Kyiv, Ukraine A local resident stands on a destroyed armoured vehicle, as Russia's invasion of Ukraine continues, in the town of Bucha A view shows a destroyed building in a residential area, as Russia's invasion of Ukraine continues, in the city of Zhytomyr A destroyed armoured vehicle, with the letter 'V' painted on its turret, is seen on a street, as Russia's invasion of Ukraine continues, in the town of Bucha Ukraine's president Volodymyr Zelensky accused Russia of war crimes on Monday after Vladimir Putin's forces launched what were believed to be cluster and vacuum bomb attacks on the fifth day of their invasion. Above: Kharkiv, Ukraine's second city, coming under heavy attack on Monday Kharkiv and Ukraine flags are pictured hanging from a blown out window of the administrative building after the Russian rocket attack in a symbol of defiance The bombardment of Kharkiv continued Tuesday morning with a rocket landing just in front of the civilian public administration building, destroying the road outside and blowing the windows out of the building itself. Footage from inside shows the building was heavily damaged, with ceilings collapsing and rubble strewn around Rescue workers and medics are pictured close to the regional administration building in central Kharkiv, picking their way through the debris following the explosion This image, posted by the State Emergency Service of Ukraine, shows the square outside the administrative building covered in rubble following the rocket attack A view shows the regional administration building following the Russian rocket attack in central Kharkiv, Ukraine, March 1, 2022 People help a wounded woman in the aftermath of a Russian shelling in Kharkiv, Ukraine, on Tuesday morning after Ukrainian President Zelensky declared Russia a 'terrorist state' over the attack The faces of Putin's victims: A 19-year-old biathlete, an anesthesiologist and two girls aged six and 10 are among the 352 civilians - including at least 13 children - killed during Russia's invasion of Ukraine As Russia continues its invasion of Ukraine, the stories and photos of those killed have started to show the human toll taken by war. Ukraine's interior minister reported 352 civilians dead and over 1,600 injured this past Sunday, a mere four days after the invasion began. UN High Commissioner for Human Rights Liz Throssell said they've only been able to 'cross-check' 136 dead, including 13 children, but acknowledged the toll 'is likely to be much higher.' Throssell added that another 400 people - including 26 children - have been wounded from the fighting. Yevgeny Malyshev, a 19-year-old Ukrainian biathlete, was reported dead from a battle in the city of Kharkov Marina Kalabina, an anesthesiologist in the Kyiv region, died under the kind of shelling of Russian troops that Throssell mentioned 10-year-old Polina was put on display as one of the first victims of the invasion. She and her parents were shot dead by a Russian sabotage and reconnaissance group which opened fire on their family car, Kyiv's deputy mayor Volodymyr Bondarenko said. She blames the use of explosives with wide impact areas and shellings from heavy artillery for much of the death, as well as multiple launch rocket systems and airstrikes. Reports are starting to surface identifying some of those killed as the invasion heads into its second week. Yevgeny Malyshev, a 19-year-old Ukrainian biathlete, was reported dead from a battle in the city of Kharkov. He reportedly quit the national team two years ago to join the armed forced. Marina Kalabina, an anesthesiologist in the Kyiv region, died under the kind of shelling of Russian troops that Throssell mentioned. A Ukrainian policeman named Oleg Fedko lost five members of his own family amid Russian movement from Crimea, according to Sky News. Fedko's family - including a 6-year-old daughter named Sofia, a baby named Ivan, his wife Irina, father Oleg and mother Anna - all were killed. The family was trying to escape in a pair of cars when the attacks came on them on the outskirts of Kherson, according to a Ukrainian news outlet. Israeli DJ Roman Brodsky was killed in a case of mistaken identity at a Ukrainian check point, believing him to be Chechen. His father still blames 'dictator' Putin Medics perform CPR on a girl at the city hospital of Mariupol, who was injured during shelling A woman reacts as paramedics perform CPR on a girl who was injured during shelling, at city hospital of Mariupol, eastern Ukraine, Sunday, Feb. 27, 2022. The girl did not survive Medical workers prepare to operate on people injured by shelling in a residential area, at a maternity hospital converted into a medical ward in Mariupol A girl around the age of 10 named Polina was shot dead trying to flee with her family, according to iNews, with her younger brother and sister so badly injured they had to be taken to an intensive care. She and her parents were fatally shot by a Russian reconnaissance group which opened fire on their car, according to Kyiv deputy mayor Volodymyr Bondarenko, who shared her photo as one of the first victims of the invasion. Among the children dead include a 6-year-old found in her unicorn pajamas with her mother covered in blood. In Okhtyrka, 7-year-old Alisa Hlans was one of six kindergartners who were killed in an attack on her school last Friday. Roman Brodsky, an Israeli DJ, was killed by Ukrainian troops in a case of mistaken identity, however, his family still blames Putin, a man they call 'Dictator.' Brodsky, a father of two, was attempting to drive to Moldova to escape back to Israel. His father said: 'They thought he was Chechen or something' and opened fire by mistake. Russia's escalating attacks on populated urban areas of Ukraine left rubble and wreckage in streets and plazas as the invasion claimed new victims across the country. The central square in Ukraines second-biggest city was hit with what was believed to be a missile, leaving the massive area piled high with debris. Hospitals raced to treat victims of the bombardment even as mothers and children sheltered in their basements. While the fighting in Ukraine raged, the death toll remained unclear. At the border, anguished families said goodbye as women and children fled while many men returned to fight. More than 675,000 people have escaped to neighboring countries since the Russian invasion began - a number that will only grow, according to the U.N. refugee agency. Oncology patients hold up sheets of paper with the words 'Stop War' at a basement used as a bomb shelter at the Okhmadet children's hospital in central Kyiv An oncology patient rests on a coach next to his mother Senator Ted Cruz on Tuesday questioned the timing of the lifting of Congress's mask mandate - noting that it coincided with Joe Biden's first State of the Union address, and describing it mockingly as a 'miracle'. On Sunday, the Congressional physician said that it was safe to be maskless in Congress. 'Individuals may choose to mask at any time, but it is no longer a requirement,' said Capitol physician Brian Monahan in a memo. He said masks in the House chamber and elsewhere on the Capitol grounds are now optional after about two years of being required. Tuesday also saw the lifting of the city's mask mandate, which meant that Congress was packed with maskless politicians for the first time in two years. The lifting of the mandate was announced by the mayor of Washington DC, Muriel Bowser, on February 14. Cruz, however, thought it was more than a coincidence. 'It's a State of the Union miracle!' he tweeted on Monday. The mask mandate in Washington DC was lifted on Tuesday, just in time for the State of the Union address Jim Jordan, the staunchly conservative Ohio congressman, agreed, claiming: 'The 'science' didn't change. Just the politics.' On Tuesday, White House press secretary Jen Psaki denied that the lifting of the ban had been coordinated with the State of the Union. 'The president is very powerful, but he couldn't make us be in the green zone that we're in right now in D.C.,' she said at a press briefing on Tuesday. 'That's why we're not going to be required to wear a masks. 'It had nothing to do with the timing around the State of the Union.' Washington DC currently has a weekly case rate of 73.1 per 100,000 - down from 324 per 100,000 a month ago. Monahan noted in his letter that the 'Washington DC region is now in the 'green level' or low level under new CDC guidance. He added that positive COVID-19 test rates at the Capitol are down to 2.7 percent in the last two weeks, below the current rate for the D.C. Metropolitan area of 4.7 percent. A White House official confirmed to ABC News that masks are no longer required for fully vaccinated individuals on the White House campus, starting Tuesday. The damage bill from Queensland's floods could top $1billion as thousands of shattered homeowners have demanded to know why they weren't warned sooner of the looming disaster. Some angry Brisbane residents revealed they received no flood warnings until they were already inundated and their complaints were backed by a climatology statistician. Tens of thousands of Brisbane residents were evacuated as the floods, which have so far claimed 10 lives in south east Queensland and north-eastern NSW. The Insurance Council of Australia says more than 37,800 claims have been lodged to date, but it is still far too early to pinpoint the exact bill. More than 80,000 claims for disaster support have been made. Thousands of volunteers are beginning the huge task of cleaning up flood affected areas around Brisbane after belongings and waste were strewn across the city by floodwaters (pictured, Jane Knox is seen cleaning up her flood damaged property in the suburb of Auchenflower) Angry Brisbane residents revealed they received no flood warnings until they were already inundated and their complaints were backed by a climatology statistician (pictured, a man delivers a canoe to stranded residents in Fairfield, Brisbane) Thousands of people were evacuated by floodwaters in Brisbane as floodwaters also destroyed and damaged expensive boats moored on the Brisbane River The massive clean-up is underway as the state's 'mud army' of volunteers collects tonnes of flood-damaged items that continue to pile up outside homes and businesses. However, the massive clean-up is underway as the state's 'mud army' of volunteers collects tonnes of flood-damaged items that continue to pile up outside homes and businesses. 'It's clear that the flooding disaster emergency here in the southeast is not over yet, but the recovery process has begun,' Deputy Premier Steven Miles said on Wednesday. 'Early estimates suggest that the damage bill for this disaster could be up to a billion dollars.' There was growing anger from flood-stricken residents over official warnings and advise - some of which arrived when they were already flooded, the Courier Mail reported. There were chaotic scenes on the Brisbane River which swamped homes along the Brisbane Corso forcing widespread evacuations (pictured, a damaged pontoon on the Brisbane River) As floodwaters slowly begin to recede, volunteers are racing against mother nature with potentially severe storms forecast to batter the southeast in coming days Tens of thousands of Brisbane residents were evacuated as the floods, which have so far claimed a national death toll of 10, devastated south east Queensland and north-eastern NSW Brisbane Corso resident Nigel Bean said the first flood warnings came through to his area at 9.30pm on Saturday - when some homes were already underwater - including his 96 year old neighbour's house. Mr Bean feared had she not already gone by the time the warning arrived, she may have died. 'The water was waist deep, she was still sat in her house waiting for someone to come and rescue her She had called the police earlier, she waited nearly 12 hours to be rescued.' Mr Bean said officials need 'to be put on the spot' and explain why the warnings were so late. Criticism of official advice was supported by Dr Kate Saunders from the Queensland University of Technology. She said a basic flood map PDF given to residents showed where flooding might reach but gave no indication of how deep waters might get, she said. A man removes debris from his flooded home during a break in the weather in Brisbane, Australia, Wednesday Early estimates are that the damage bill for the catastrophic floods could top $1billion (pictured, The Carmel, Yamba' hotel is seen flooded in the town of Yamba, in northern NSW) 'A house going under floor to ceiling is very different from having some water on your front lawn,' Dr Saunders said. If they had live information available online about how floodwaters might change residents could have made 'better decisions' about when to evacuate. Urgent repairs are already underway on Queensland's public transport network which effectively ground to a halt as the water rose. From Thursday, train services will resume at reduced capacity, transport Minister Mark Bailey said. 'There have been some really severe impacts across every line,' Mr Bailey said. Wreckage and debris litters a jetty on the Brisbane River on Wednesday More than 8,000 volunteers have signed on to help with the massive relief and recovery effort underway across the southeast 'But what we'll be doing tomorrow is reopening the train system in a reduced format ... it's the best we can do at this point.' Public transport will also be free and tolls scrapped until Sunday night. As floodwaters slowly begin to recede, volunteers are racing against mother nature with potentially severe storms forecast to batter the southeast in coming days. Initially two teams of 100 volunteers are racing to assist residents in the 21-worst hit Brisbane suburbs. More than 8,000 volunteers have signed on to help with the massive relief and recovery effort underway across the southeast. Claim numbers at insurer Suncorp have already topped 13,000 with the figure expected to continue to rise. 'That's an extraordinary number of claims in a very short period of time,' Suncorp CEO Steve Johnston said. Mr Johnston said it was already clear the state would be dealing with 'large losses' and urged the recovery to 'build it back better'. 'The inevitability here is that we are going to be repairing homes that have been repaired three or four times.' While Gympie is still focused on its clean up, mayor Glen Hartwig said there will need to be a shift toward longer-term recovery for local businesses. 'There's a desperate need to show some care and compassion to these individuals who often will mortgage a kidney just to get involved and have a bit of an entrepreneurial go at life,' he said on Wednesday. 'It's quite likely that a lot won't get back into Mary street, so in the coming time, we'll be talking with all the relevant people to see what can be done to assist them. 'They're good people, they're hardworking people, they love the region and they love the community and we want to see them thrive.' Brisbane City Council has launched a citywide clean-up while counting the cost but warns it will take time. 'It is still too early to determine the damage figure - there's a lot of assets that we haven't been able to get onto yet,' Brisbane Mayor Adrian Schrinner said. 'Ferry terminals, river walks - there're a lot of parks that have had significant damage so this will take some time to get the figures together.' Cr Schrinner said the cost is not expected to exceed 2011 figures. 'I don't expect that it will be at that level. I think it will be less than 2011 but we still don't have a figure at this point. This will be something that takes time.' Roman Abramovich puts Chelsea up for sale through a US bank and wants 3BILLION, with focus on finding an American tycoon buyer, after Swiss medical magnate confirmed he's among those in talks Kyiv holds its breath as Putin prepares to lay siege: Defiant mayor Vitali Klitschko vows 'we will fight' after Russian airstrikes battered the capital and other cities come under attack Russia's foreign minister warns: 'A third world war will be NUCLEAR and destructive' 'Russia wants to erase us all': Zelensky offers grim warning as paratroopers attack Kharkiv and officials warn 'Putin's madness' risks 'nuclear catastrophe' as Ukrainians defend Europe's biggest atomic plant 'We were sent as cannon fodder. We're killing peaceful people': Weeping Russian POWs say they had no idea they were being sent to war and were made to attack people defending their territory Kyivs mayor Vitali Klitschko today warned Russian forces were 'getting closer' to Ukraines capital after a rocket strike on a TV tower killed five people. Fears are growing Russia could intensify bombing on the Ukrainian capital with a 40-mile convoy of tanks and other military vehicles amassed on its outskirts. Russia has also renewed its assault on Ukraine's second-largest city Kharkiv in a pounding that lit up the skyline with balls of fire over populated areas. Both sides have said they are ready to resume talks aimed at stopping the war in eastern Europe, with China appearing to offer to mediate ceasefire negotiations. Seven days in, roughly 874,000 people have fled Ukraine according to the UN and Ukraine's State Emergency Service said more than 2,000 civilians have died. About 80 per cent of Russia's invasion force are now said to be in Ukraine, with as many as 15,000 troops - an entire Russian army division - bearing down on Kyiv. Britain has ruled out Nato policing a no-fly zone over Ukraine, while the Foreign Office is expected to announce further financial sanctions on Moscow banks. And Joe Biden warned Russia that Vladimir Putin 'has no idea what's coming' as he accused the country of 'underestimating' western allies and Ukrainian people. Here is what happened yesterday on the crisis in Ukraine. This liveblog has now finished. Australians who have lost their homes during devastating floods in NSW are now facing major food and water shortages. Lismore in northern NSW has been ravaged by flood waters in recent days, with four out of the seven major supermarkets now completely destroyed. Residents desperate for supplies have now cleared out the shelves at the remaining stores. Making matters worse, due to the amount of water still receding, access to food and fuel from other towns via roads has also been cut off. Harrowing photos have shown the true extent of the flood crisis in Lismore this week Locals are seen wading through floodwaters in Lismore on Wednesday Many local business owners have now started the lengthy process of cleaning up their stores Supermarkets were completely destroyed in the floods with items strewn across the floor Lismore in northern NSW has been ravaged by flood waters in recent days, with four out of the seven major supermarkets now completely destroyed Lismore Mayor Steve Kreig, who lost his house and business during the floods, told A Current Affair the town currently doesn't have any sewage facilities, and was quickly running out of water. He said there were plans for supplies to be delivered to Casino from Sydney and then airlifted into affected areas, but access to fuel was proving to be another problem. 'We've got all of this support. Unfortunately, we're fast running out of aviation fuel, so (we) can't sort of take a trick at the moment,' Mr Kreig said. Lismore local Luke Krane filmed the scenes outside his local supermarket on Wednesday. Business owners look with disbelief at the shear destruction the floods have caused Furniture is seen wrecked in one Lismore store The shocking weather has destroyed most stores in Lismore Inside a clothing store a few pieces are still hanging on the racks while the ceiling caved in Workers are now trying to restore what's left of local businesses The Spar Supermarket was forced to throw out all of its groceries that had become spoiled in the floods. For any canned goods that survived, they were sent to evacuation centres. 'Just to see all that food, like enough to feed you know a thousand people probably for a couple of days, like it's just everything, there's nothing they can save,' Mr Krane said. 'We'd drink bottled water if we could get it - we can't get any.' The water has began receding in Lismore but the true extent of the floods is only just showing A dirty teddy bear is seen washed up on the floor of a community centre Residents are running out of supplies after many stores were destroyed Helicopters and SES boats have been working tirelessly to drop off supplies but for many in the Northern Rivers it could be a lengthy wait. Woolworths and Coles have put limits on products like meat and toilet paper in stores in affected regions. An evacuation centre in Coraki, south of Lismore, ran out of food and bottled water on Wednesday morning before a boat full of supplies arrived in the afternoon, the Sydney Morning Herald reported. One man staying at the facility said there were no beds of blankets and some people were sleeping on church pews. In Ballina, supermarket shelves were also stripped and electronic payment systems down, meaning residents needed to use cash. It comes after harrowing photos showed the true extent of the flood crisis in Lismore. The residents of Lismore have been devastated by the raging flood waters The shopfront of one store is seen completely ripped apart after floods in Lismore Murky brown water still remains in many buildings around Lismore The water is seen nearly level with the road along a bridge in Lismore The streets of Lismore have also been littered with various items while a dinghy was seen washed up next to a funeral home Local business owners looked defeated as they tried to salvage what was left of their stores. Others started the lengthy clean up process, with many buildings still submerged in water. Pieces of furniture, groceries and other items were seen strewn across muddy floors while a dirty teddy bear was seen left behind on the floor of a community centre. The streets of Lismore have also been littered with various items while a dinghy was seen washed up next to a funeral home. A row of drenched women's clothes were the only things left standing in one clothing store. Cars parked outside a Bunnings Warehouse had also been pushed together while what appeared to be a used car yard was completely ruined. The remains of a home is seen near a bridge in Lismore Vintage cars at a car yard have been destroyed An investigation has been launched after an elderly man allegedly sexually assaulted a teenage girl at a train station. Victoria police have appealed for witnesses who saw a man allegedly hug a 15 year-old-girl before removing her face mask and kissing her at Melbourne train station. The alleged incident began at 1.45pm on Friday, February 4 at North Melbourne station and continued for nine minutes on a train before commuters ended it. 'The man started a conversation with the victim before he grabbed her hand and forcefully pulled her into a hug,' police said in an earlier statement. An alleged sexual assault of a teenage girl by an elderly Australian man at a train station is under investigation (pictured: Image of man police believe can help with their investigation) The alleged sexual sexual involved the teenager (pictured: Image of man police believe can help with their investigation) 'He then pulled her face mask down and kissed her face.' Police alleged the frightened girl ran from the man and boarded a train, but he allegedly boarded the same carriage and continued his pursuit. The man grabbed the teenager's hand while attempting to talk to her, police said. Commuters noticing the man's alleged harassment of the girl confronted him, forcing him to get off the train at Footscray, police said. Police released images of a man they believe can help with their investigation. 'The investigation remains ongoing and police would still like to hear from commuters who witnessed the incident,' the latest statement said. 'More information will be provided once appropriate to do so.' Anyone with information is asked to call Crime Stoppers on 1800 333 000. Advertisement Vladimir Putin's first prime minister today declared Russia's rouble now cannot be supported as the currency careered towards junk status with citizens still rushing to pull their cash from ATMs and the country's biggest bank shut down its European arm. Mikhail Kasyanov, who served Putin between 2000 and 2004, has said that the economic damage inflicted by the West on Russia since the invasion of Ukraine has already been 'catastrophic'. Russia's currency has plunged even further against the pound and dollar today as its biggest lender Sberbank shut down its European arm after 'abnormal' amounts of money started pouring out when war broke out. Ukraine war: The latest Russian paratroopers land in Ukraine's second city amid heavy fighting 'There are practically no areas left in Kharkiv where an artillery shell has not yet hit': Interior Ministry official Joe Biden brands Vladimir Putin a 'dictator' in his annual State of the Union address as he bans Russian aircraft from US airspace Russia steps up its bombing campaign and missile strikes, hitting Kyiv's main television tower, two residential buildings in a town west of the city and the city of Bila Tserkva to the south of the capital Russian forces push into the besieged Black Sea city of Kherson in the south Russian attacks leave Mariupol, another Black Sea port further to the west without electricity More than 677,000 people have fled Ukraine since the Russian invasion, the UN's refugee agency says The UN's International Court of Justice says it will hold public hearings on March 7 and 8 over Ukraine's allegations of 'genocide' by Russia Russia blocks an independent television channel and a liberal radio station, tightening a virtual media blackout A string of Western companies announce they are freezing or scaling back business with Russia Russians race to withdraw cash after the introduction of capital controls and as the ruble hits record lows Russian-owned Nord Stream 2 goes insolvent after Germany halts the pipeline following Moscow's invasion Oil prices soar past $110 a barrel, despite agreements to release 60 million barrels from stockpiles The World Bank prepares a $3-billion aid package for Ukraine, including $350 million in immediate funds Advertisement Mr Kasyanov said the rouble 'cannot be supported' any longer amid misery for the country's 145million citizens, whose savings and investments are being battered. He added: 'They will turn on the printing press. Hyperinflation and catastrophe for the economy is not far away'. But the rising cost of oil and gas is good news for Putin as it was revealed the West is still paying Russia more than $1billion-a-day for fossil fuels, an amount that is only going to rise when Europe is so reliant on their supplies. However, Germany, the Kremlin's best customer, has declared that it is ready to stop buying gas, relying on what it has in storage and ramping up output from its coal and nuclear power plants in the short term. Mr Kasyanov says this would be another 'disaster' for Russia. In a landmark speech on Sunday, German Chancellor Olaf Scholz spelled out a more radical path to ensure Germany will be able to meet rising energy supply and diversify away from Russian gas, which accounts for half of Germany's energy needs. 'The events of the past few days have shown us that responsible, forward-looking energy policy is decisive not only for our economy and the environment. It is also decisive for our security,' Scholz told lawmakers in a special Bundestag session called to address the Ukraine crisis. Sberbank has lost 97% of its value on its London listing in the past fortnight and has told shareholders that significant 'cash outflows' have damaged the business outside Russia. On February 16 it was $15 a share but today it is worth 1.5 cents. Its bosses in Moscow said its subsidiaries in Europe were also facing an 'a threat to the safety of employees and branches', according to Russian news agencies. Last night the rouble plunged to a record low against the dollar - before rallying slightly this morning before dropping again as sanctions batter the economy. It was down around 3.5% on the day versus the dollar today, at 108.6, having weakened to a record low of 117 per dollar yesterday evening. The Russian stock exchange will not open for the third day running today as Russia's central bank was forced to sharply hike its key interest rate in a desperate attempt to shore up the plummeting currency market - now at record low levels against the pound and dollar - and prevent the run of banks after being hit by a slew of crippling Western sanctions. The rouble continues to tank, hitting a record low against the dollar yesterday evening, rallying slightly before dropping again today Former Russian Prime Minister Mikhail Kasyanov said the rouble 'cannot be supported' after the sanctions on Putin's Russia Customers wait in queue to withdraw money at an ATM in Moscow last night. Russian authorities introduced some temporary economic measures to ensure the country's financial stability Citizens wait in front of the entrance of a branch of the Russian Sbertbank in the center of Zagreb, Croatia, as people try to get their cash out. The lender will shut its European arm as cash flooded out Sberbank's shares on the London Stock Exchange have fallen off a cliff and are largely worthless have lost 97% of their value in the past fortnight as Russia threatened and then invaded Ukraine Russia has a tight grip on Europe's gas market, with major nations including Germany buying up to 30% of their supply from Putin. Germany, however, is said to be close to be stopping buying Average UK energy bills could hit 3,000 a year as cost of oil and natural gas SOARS to record levels... with desperate Putin set to cash-in on price hikes Gas prices peaked last year and are flying upwards again with Putin's hand on Europe's gas and oil pumps. One therm did reach 450p today - more than ten times the level a year ago Russia's invasion of Ukraine has catapulted the price of gas and oil upwards to record levels with British households warned that they could soon be paying more than 3,000-a-year to heat their homes. Today UK wholesale gas prices - the price paid by energy companies - briefly topped 4.50 per therm - up from 2.50 yesterday morning. It then settled at around 4 - more than ten times the level a year ago when it was around 35p. Britain imports around four per cent of our gas from Russia in liquid form. Market analysts say that the spike is in part due to uncertainty caused by the Government's decision to ban Russian ships from UK ports. Around 33 shipments from Russia arrive in the UK per year. Experts say that if it remains at this price, household gas bills for millions of Britons already squeezed by the cost of living crisis will be in excess of 280-a-month or through 3,000-a-year by the autumn. The Government's price cap will go up by 693 on April 1 to 1,970 - but analysts from Cornwall Insight are forecasting an Autumn price cap at 2,497 a year versus - a further rise of 500 in October - even before today's record price. Joe Malinowski, founder of TheEnergyShop, has said: 'Depending upon how the situation unfolds, gas prices could literally go anywhere. 'We are not as reliant on Russia for security of gas supply as Europe, but the price we pay is linked to gas prices on the Continent. 'The best we can hope for is that wholesale gas prices don't go up much more. All other scenarios are varying degrees of bad.' Advertisement It came as the world's largest cryptocurrency exchanges, including Binance and Kraken, said they will not 'unilaterally' freeze the accounts of all Russian users despite pleas from the Ukraine government. Binance founder and CEO Changpeng Zhao said 'we don't view it as our power' to block everyone in the country from using the exchange in the wake of the war. But he warned oligarchs and politicians sanctioned by the West over the invasion are now having their accounts frozen. He said he has deployed thousands of experts to root out the 'few hundred people' being punished by Europe and the US. Mr Zhao, who has a $96billion fortune and is the 14th richest person in the world, said today there was no place for sanctioned Russians on his platform. But he warned his company 'differentiates' between those responsible for invading Ukraine and the general population, who he said would not be banned. He told the Today programme: 'They cannot use our platform. If their money comes to us we will freeze it. 'I personally don't keep a track on the number of accounts frozen, but we have a team that specialises in sanctions.' He continued: 'I personally don't need to know I just know those guys are not using our platform. 'We have a team of 5,000 people, experts, and I am told we do not have sanctioned people using the platform. 'I don't think the CEO needs to know that but I know we are following the process 100 per cent strictly.' Mr Zhao said his firm was following the West's sanctions list 'very strictly' but added he would not cede to Ukraine's demands to block all Russians. 'We follow that very strictly but we are not in a position to sanction populations of people. We are not political, we are against war, but we are here to protect people.' Authorities in Austria and Czech Republic had taken action in recent days against Sberbank's activities in Europe. The big firms turning their backs on Russia BP Shell Maersk Equinor ASA France's Total Exxon Mobil Corp Norway's sovereign wealth fund (freezing assets) Daimler Truck Volvo General Motors Co Mitsubishi Mastercard Visa Warner Bros Disney Nike Apple Ford Google Advertisement The move was the latest consequence of Russia's invasion last week, which has led to warfare across Ukraine and unprecedented Western sanctions aimed at isolating Russia's economy. This morning it reported record annual net profit for 2021 of 1.25trillion roubles ($12.40 billion), a jump of 64% year-on-year, before unprecedented western sanctions forced the bank to exit the European market. The bank's return on equity for the year was 24.2% and its net interest income stood at 1.8 trillion roubles. Earlier on Wednesday Sberbank said it was leaving the European market as its subsidiaries there face large cash outflows and threats to the safety of employees and property. The European Union and United States have responded to Russia's invasion of Ukraine with a battery of sanctions including moving to ban big Russian banks from SWIFT, the main global payments system. As a result, Sberbank Europe said on Monday that several of its banks had 'experienced a significant outflow of customer deposits within a very short period of time'. The SRB ordered the moratorium so that it could determine whether the case should be handled under European bank resolution rules and decided it should not, the FMA said. The FMA said it had appointed an administrator who is tasked with determining whether and when the criteria of an insolvency are met. In the meantime, the closure triggers Austria's deposit guarantee scheme, which covers deposits up to 100,000 euros ($111,240) per customer, the FMA said. Separately, it was announced that two of Sberbank Europe's units in the Balkans would be taken over. Croatian Prime Minister Andrej Plenkovic said on Twitter that Hrvatska Postanska Bank would take over Sberbank in Croatia, while Slovenia's central bank said in a statement that the country's largest banking group NLB would take on Sberbank's Slovenian business. Putin yesterday moved to block foreign companies pulling out of Russia and trap their cash to prop up their imploding war economy after BP and Shell pledged to sell up 15billion ($20bn) of joint ventures following the invasion of Ukraine. Prime Minister Mikhail Mishustin announced a presidential order had been signed as Western countries stepped up sanctions, the rouble crashed to an all-time low and Russians queued night and day to pull cash from ATMs amid a run on the banks. Mishutin has told a governmental meeting in Moscow that Russia will impose temporary curbs on foreign investors seeking to exit Russian assets to ensure they take a 'considered decision not one driven by political pressure'. But Mishustin did not provide details about how it would be imposed, as Shell and BP both told MailOnline their plans to sever ties with Russia will continue as planned. The Russian PM said: 'In the current sanction situation foreign entrepreneurs are forced to be guided, not by economic factors, but to make decisions under political pressure. In order to give business a chance to make a considered decision, a presidential order was prepared to impose temporary curbs on exit from Russian assets'. Oil reached $112 and briefly $113 per barrel today as the war panicked the markets, generating more income for Putin Vice Prime Minister of Ukraine and Minister of Digital Transformation of Ukraine, Mykhailo Fedorov, has begged for cryptocurrency trading platforms to ban all Russians in case it is being used to aid the war costing Putin $15bn-a-day A currency exchange information board in Moscow yesterday as the rouble collapsed in value The Daily Mail and Mail on Sunday UKRAINE REFUGEE APPEAL Readers of Mail Newspapers have always shown immense generosity at times of crisis. Calling upon that human spirit, we are now launching an appeal to raise money for refugees from Ukraine. For, surely, no one can fail to be moved by the heartbreaking images and stories of families mostly women, children, the infirm and elderly fleeing from Russia's invading armed forces. As this tally of misery increases over the coming days and months, these innocent victims of a tyrant will require accommodation, schools and medical support. All donations to the Mail Ukraine Appeal will be distributed to charities and aid organisations providing such essential services. In the name of charity and compassion, we urge all our readers to give swiftly and generously. TO MAKE A DONATION BY TEXT To donate 10, text HELP to 70115 To donate 20, text AID to 70115 Texts cost either 10 or 20 plus a standard network rate message. 100% of the donation goes to charity. TO MAKE A DONATION BY PHONE Call 0300 12345 77 and follow the instructions to make your donation. A small fee will be deducted by the payment processing platforms when you pay by debit or credit card. TO MAKE A DONATION ONLINE Via bank transfer, please use these details: Account name: Associated Newspapers Account number: 20769512 Sort code: 50-00-00 TO MAKE A DONATION VIA CHEQUE Make your cheque payable to 'Mail Newspapers Ukraine Appeal' and post it to: Mail Newspapers Ukraine Appeal, GFM, 42 Phoenix Court, Hawkins Road, Colchester, Essex CO2 8JY Advertisement It came as it was revealed the West is still paying Russia more than $1billion-a-day for oil and gas that Putin can use to subsidise his $15billion-a-day invasion of Ukraine as his troops remain bogged down after hitting fierce resistance from Volodymyr Zelensky's heroes. Shell has said it will ditch its work with Gazprom and pull out of the controversial Nord Stream 2 pipeline as Western powers reel from President Putin's warmongering in Eastern Europe. Shell is said to have offered 600m of finance for the project. Shell warned that it could take a 2.2billion hit as it laid out a plan to exit a series of projects. These include its 27.5pc stake in Sakhalin 2 a flagship facility in the Russian Far East that is majority-owned by Gazprom and produces around 4pc of the world's liquefied natural gas. But it did not announce who they would sell their stakes to. It isn't quitting Russia altogether, however. It has a network of around 400 petrol stations and a lubricants business in the country which it said it intends to keep. Shell's announcement came a day after BP said that it was cutting ties with Kremlin-backed oil company Rosneft, valued at around 13billion last year. BP is now looking to offload its 19.75pc stake in Rosneft and current boss Bernard Looney has stepped down from the board. But Putin's grip on the world's oil and gas taps means that Europe and the US are still buying almost $1billion-a-day from Russia. The UK also imports smaller amounts from Russia. However, despite the huge daily cash injection from the West, the Kremlin is facing unprecedented liquidity problems. Its central bank, which raised interest rates to 20% yesterday, is expected to turn to its ally China to try to sell off Chinese assets worth up to $77billion back to Beijing. Britain, the EU and the US will be watching to see just how far President Xi is willing to support Putin and his war. In a sign the Russian people are paying the price for Vladimir Putin's invasion of Ukraine, the country's currency dropped 30 per cent against the US dollar. It has stabilised this morning after hitting rock bottom yesterday. And after days of turmoil on financial markets, regulators in Russia refused to open the Moscow stock exchange, while long queues formed outside banks as panicked families tried to withdraw cash. A Moscovite called Anton said: 'There are no dollars, no roubles - nothing. Well, there are roubles but I am not interested in them. I don't know what to do next. I am afraid we are turning into North Korea or Iran right now'. One designer called Andrey told the BBC that rising interests rates mean he can't pay his mortgage. He said: 'If I could leave Russia right now, I would. But I can't quit my job'. 'I am planning to find new customers abroad asap and move out of Russia with the money I was saving for the first instalment. I am scared here - people have been arrested for speaking against 'the party line'. I feel ashamed and I didn't even vote for those in power.' Prime Minister Mikhail Mishustin announced Vladimir Putin has signed an order to stop Western investors pulling out of Russia as the US, UK and EU stepped up sanctions, the rouble crashed to an all-time low and Russians queued night and day to pull cash from ATMs amid a run on the banks. A Russian walks in front of a digital board showing Russian rouble exchange rates against the euro and the US dollar outside a currency exchange office in Moscow, as the price slides The rouble and major Russian companies, owned by Putin's oligarchs, have seen unprecedented falls in value after the Ukrainian invasion and sanctions from the West How Russia is paying the price for Vladimir Putin's 15billion-a-day war 1) Economic sanctions: Russia faces a raft of sanctions from Western countries, including the US, the EU, the UK and their allies. They include a freeze of assets for major Russian banks, the removal of Russia from the SWIFT payment system, used by banks across the world, and an EU and UK wide ban on flights by Russian private and commercial aircraft. There are also bans on exports of certain good and technology to Russia, impacting on businesses who rely on these imports to function. 2) Russian economy plummets: As a result of Western sanctions and fears from investors about the economic impact of a protracted war with Ukraine, the value of the Russian rouble against the dollar plummeted by 30 per cent yesterday making imports significantly more expensive 3) A run on the rouble: With Russia's economic future uncertain, citizens have turned to withdrawing their money from banks and cash machines. But this could cause major issues for the banks if too much money is withdrawn in a short period and could even cause banks to collapse. 4) Spiralling interest rates: In a bid to encourage Russians to keep their money in the banks, Russia's central bank has more than doubled interest rates to 20 per cent. But while this will be good for savers, it will have a significant impact on those with debts or loans. 5) The cost of war: Russia also faces a huge war bill, which will only grow the longer its invasion of Ukraine continues. Some experts believe the invasion will be costing Russia as much as 15billion-a-day. For example, some precision guided missiles cost as much as 30,000 each. An average Russian tank costs around 2million. Ukraine claims it has captured or destroyed more than 200 so far. Advertisement Russia's central bank raised interest rates from 9.5 per cent to 20 per cent to counter the violent slump in the rouble and soaring inflation. It also ordered companies to sell 80 per cent of their foreign currency. Despite the devastating financial damage in just 24 hours, a smirking Vladimir Putin yesterday ranted about the West's 'empire of lies' and banned Russians from sending their money abroad from midnight as worldwide sanctions caused the rouble to tumble and sparked a nationwide rush to withdraw cash. European stocks sagged and oil jumped back above $100 a barrel on Tuesday as markets struggled with massive uncertainty caused by Russia's invasion of Ukraine, although the rouble steadied as Moscow scrambled support for its beleaguered markets. Russia's stock markets remained suspended and some bond trading platforms were no longer showing prices, but dealing in the major financial centres both in Europe and in Asia overnight was orderly, albeit jittery. Losses for the pan-European STOXX 600 were starting to mount again, with the index down nearly 2% by midsession and Wall Street expected to open around 1% lower in New York later. There had initially been gains for mining and oil & gas stocks but even those had soured and there was a heavy 4% slump in bank stocks with investors now sensing that interest rate hikes might now get delayed. Paul Jackson, Global Head of Asset Allocation Research, Invesco said: 'Assuming no rapid resolution to this conflict, we fear that global GDP could be reduced by 0.5%-1.0%.' 'That's enough to aggravate the ongoing slowdown but not enough to produce recession,' although he cautioned that some parts of Europe could see a recession and that inflation was also likely to stay higher for longer. Russian assets went into freefall on Tuesday with London-listed ishares MSCI Russia ETF falling 50% to hit a fresh record low and Russia's biggest lender, Sberbank slumping 21% as investors raced for the exit. Major money managers, including hedge fund Man Group and British asset manager abrdn, have been cutting their positions in Russia even as the rouble slumped to a record low and trading froze on its bonds. 'There is certainly a willingness from asset managers and benchmark providers to get rid of Russia exposure in their portfolios and indexes,' said Kaspar Hense, a senior portfolio manager at Bluebay Asset Management in London. The big question is where do buyers turn up?' Average UK energy bills could hit 3,000 a year as cost of oil and natural gas SOARS to record levels... with desperate Putin set to cash-in on price hikes Russia's invasion of Ukraine has catapulted the price of gas and oil upwards to record levels with households warned that they could soon be paying more than 3,000-a-year to heat their homes. Today UK wholesale gas prices - the price paid by energy companies who serve British households - briefly topped 4.50 per therm - up from 2.50 yesterday morning. It then settled at around 4 - more than ten times the level a year ago. Britain imports around four per cent of our gas from Russia in liquid form. Market analysts say that the spike is in part due to uncertainty caused by the Government's decision to ban Russian ships from UK ports. Around 33 shipments from Russia arrive in the UK per year. Experts say that if it remains at this price, household gas bills for millions of Britons already squeezed by the cost of living crisis will be in excess of 280-a-month or through 3,000-a-year by the autumn. The Government's price cap will go up by 693 on April 1 to 1,970 - but analysts from Cornwall Insight are forecasting an Autumn price cap at 2,497 a year versus - a further rise of 500 in October - even before today's record price. Joe Malinowski, founder of TheEnergyShop, has said: 'Depending upon how the situation unfolds, gas prices could literally go anywhere. 'We are not as reliant on Russia for security of gas supply as Europe, but the price we pay is linked to gas prices on the Continent. 'The best we can hope for is that wholesale gas prices don't go up much more. All other scenarios are varying degrees of bad.' The cost of a barrel of oil briefly hit $113-a-barrel today before settling at $111 this morning, the highest price for more than seven years that is expected to force the price of petrol and diesel over 2-a-litre. Fuel prices have hit a new record high as the cost of oil soars due to Russia's invasion of Ukraine. Figures show the average cost of a litre of petrol at UK forecourts was 151.67p on Tuesday, up from 151.16p on Monday. Meanwhile, the average cost of a litre of diesel is also at a record high, reaching 155.23p, according to data firm Experian Catalist. It means an average 55 litre petrol tank - used in cars such as a Ford Focus of VW Golf - will now cost 83 to fill up. Motoring groups fear prices could increase further, with some even warning of 180p litre prices 'within months'. RAC fuel spokesman Simon Williams warned said: 'The sudden 10 US dollars (7.50) jump in the oil price on Tuesday to 113 US dollars (85) a barrel is likely to take the average price of petrol towards 155p a litre and diesel to 160p, particularly as it's looking like this price isn't just a market blip caused by the US and allies deciding to dip into the strategic oil reserve. 'If oil does stay at this level, the journey to an average unleaded price of 155p may be far too quick.' The rising cost of buying oil and gas is good news for Putin as it was revealed the West is still paying Russia more than $1billion-a-day for fossil fuels, an amount that is only going to rise when Europe is so reliant on their supplies. Russia can use this daily cash injection to subsidise the $15billion-a-day invasion of Ukraine as his troops remain bogged down after hitting fierce resistance from Volodymyr Zelensky's heroes. Gas prices peaked last year and are flying upwards again with Putin's hand on Europe's gas and oil pumps. One therm did reach 450p per therm Oil reached $112 and briefly $113 per barrel today as the war panicked the markets The rouble continues to tank, hitting a record low against the dollar yesterday evening, rallying slightly before dropping again today The M74 Hamilton Services is South Lanarkshire is where fuel prices are now at 176.9p per litre for diesel Fuel price hits ANOTHER new record: The cost of a litre of petrol soars to 151.67p after Ukraine invasion meaning it now takes 83 to fill up the average family car Fuel prices have hit a new record high as the cost of oil soars due to Russia's invasion of Ukraine. Pictured: Fuel prices displayed at an Esso petrol station near Kettering in Northamptonshire Fuel prices have hit a new record high as the cost of oil soars due to Russia's invasion of Ukraine. Figures show the average cost of a litre of petrol at UK forecourts was 151.67p on Tuesday, up from 151.16p on Monday. Meanwhile, the average cost of a litre of diesel is also at a record high, reaching 155.23p, according to data firm Experian Catalist. It means an average 55 litre petrol tank - used in cars such as a Ford Focus of VW Golf - will now cost 83 to fill up. Motoring groups fear prices could increase further, with some even warning of 180p litre prices 'within months'. RAC fuel spokesman Simon Williams warned said: 'The sudden 10 US dollars (7.50) jump in the oil price on Tuesday to 113 US dollars (85) a barrel is likely to take the average price of petrol towards 155p a litre and diesel to 160p, particularly as it's looking like this price isn't just a market blip caused by the US and allies deciding to dip into the strategic oil reserve. 'If oil does stay at this level, the journey to an average unleaded price of 155p may be far too quick.' Advertisement Millions of households have this week received details of eye-watering energy bill hikes as suppliers prepare to raise charges next month. Experts are urging customers to keep an eye out for competitive fixed deals amid fears the Russian invasion of Ukraine could drive prices higher. Last month, energy watchdog Ofgem revealed plans to hike its price cap by 54 per cent for 22 million families on standard tariffs from April 1. This will push up the cost of the average household bill by 693 to 1,977 a year. But emails and letters detailing exactly how much more customers will have to pay are arriving thick and fast. Amber Sjollema, 39, discovered last Thursday that her monthly bills will rise from 181 to 250 an extra 790 a year. Russia and Ukraine export more than a quarter of world wheat and 80 per cent of sunflower seeds, used for cooking oil. Analysts Capital Economics said: 'Most of these exports leave from Black Sea ports, at the heart of where conflict might occur.' Fighting could also wreck crops and it is estimated that rising agricultural prices would add 0.2 to 0.4 percentage points to the rise in the cost of living, which is already expected to hit 7.25 per cent in April. Savings and pensions will also suffer. After the invasion 89.7billion was wiped off stocks in London as the FTSE 100 index of Britain's biggest companies fell by 3.9 per cent. That will squeeze the investments of anyone with shares in their pensions and ISAs. In London, traders were already worried about rising inflation caused by the pandemic, and concerns that central banks could put up interest rates to keep a lid on prices, making it more expensive to borrow money. Russ Mould, of AJ Bell, an investment company, said that war would see 'markets go through a difficult period for longer than people might have previously expected'. Wholesale gas prices have spiked 40 per cent in recent days, fuelling fears that millions face two massive increases in energy bills. Martin Young, an analyst at Investec, expects 'a significant jump in the cap in October. This could be devastating for UK households'. Europe is reliant on gas from Russia and any interruption to supplies as the result of conflict or sanctions is expected to drive up global prices. Britain gets less than 3 per cent of its gas from Russia, but any rise in the global price will push up the figure UK homes and businesses have to pay. The price of a barrel of oil soared again on Wednesday as the conflict in Ukraine raged on. A barrel of Brent Crude hit 111.36 dollars, a new seven-year high, as hard-hitting sanctions on the Russian economy took hold. The Road Haulage Association said that delivery costs will spiral, sending prices in the shops higher still. Last week, with the Queen incapacitated because of Covid, Charles and Camilla on holiday, and disgraced Prince Andrew in hiding, the Royal Family gave us a tantalising glimpse into their future strategy of how to secure the future of the monarchy. The answer is a young lady from the Home Counties who remains so painfully shy she still turns down requests to attend meetings with many senior officials and high profile figures alongside her future king husband. The Duchess of Cambridge Kate's first solo tour in five years to Copenhagen while largely overshadowed by the horrendous news out of Ukraine was a test case for how her star power will be harnessed over the next decade. And she passed with flying colours, with royal courtiers hailing the visit a rare triumph in what is fast shaping up as a second annus horribilis for the British monarchy. In fact, those on tour with Kate believe she performed even stronger on tour, including an impromptu moment where she joyfully went down a children's slide, because her husband wasn't alongside her. Today I can disclose details of a bold, but quietly implemented, new strategy, which will see Kate become the most publicly prominent female in the Royal Family. Kate slid down a metal slide in high heels while visiting the Lego Foundation PlayLab at University College Copenhagen on Tuesday last week With her three children growing up and a glaring shortage of senior royals to deploy, Kate, who recently turned 40, has accepted she will start making semi-regular appearances at home and abroad without William by her side. Crucially, her husband has agreed that, gradually over the next few years, when the couple set out on tour, Kate will step up to conduct more solo engagements. My royal source revealed: 'What will happen is that when the couple go on visits abroad it will be more like what Charles and Diana did, where they each branch out and do more engagements on their own. They'll go to the same country, but she'll go her way and he'll go his.' Courtiers acknowledge this could put some strain on William, just like it did his father Charles, when the cameras naturally gravitate towards his more glamorous wife. However, William is far more assured than his father was in the 1980s. The source added: 'That can have its difficulties because then you see the Press will only be following her jobs. And that's what happened with Charles and Diana. The Duke and Duchess of Cambridge visited Abergavenny and Blaenavon in Wales yesterday 'William will be seen as the boring bloke in the blue suit. The blood royals always make out they don't want the attention, but of course they do. However, William is fully accepting of his wife's popularity. Their marriage is strong. He understands this is an important moment.' Intriguingly, it's been Kate who has been reluctant for years to conduct formal business either behind-the-scenes or during visits without her husband. While she has developed her own fashion prowess, personally Kate remains cripplingly shy and humble, and acutely aware that she is there to support her husband during most occasions. That's why the Copenhagen visit was a perfect benchmark because it was a fact-finding mission for her Centre for Early Childhood, which has become her passion project. 'She's painfully shy,' another royal source explained. 'She's so much better at speaking now. When she's interacting with kids, she's very good and very natural because she's got three of her own.' The most striking and memorable part of the trip was when Kate squealed with delight as she slid down a metal slide in high heels while visiting the Lego Foundation PlayLab at University College Copenhagen. My royal sources insist it was a genuinely impromptu moment that probably wouldn't have happened on a more formal visit with William. The source said: 'Kate was definitely freer. That slide looked like it was set out and that was always going to happen. But that absolutely wasn't the case. If William had been with her, I doubt it would have happened.' The Cambridge's team at Kensington Palace have also decided to limit the number of photographers allowed in each position, so that Kate avoided having to face a 'wall of cameras', allowing her interaction to be more natural. Kate is also said to have been inspired on the visit by Crown Princess Mary, an Australian commoner who met the future king at a pub in Sydney but has become a beloved member of the Danish Royal Family. Diana carried out engagements by herself, including meeting Aids patients in London in 1991 My source said: 'Princess Mary is very polished and sharp but she's ten years further down the line than Kate. She's 50 now and you can see a Queen in her. But originally she was a girl from Tasmania. It's very obvious that Kate has been struck by that.' 'Kate is growing into the role. She's juggling it with three kids. There is a confidence in the marriage and a confidence in her personality.' The Royal Family and the so-called grey suits behind-the-scenes need to nurture that confidence without pushing Kate to do too much too soon. It's obvious that, within years, Kate will be seen as the monarchy's most popular figure and she's ready to step out on her own, as long as it doesn't overshadow her husband to whom she remains so devoted. Russia's support for Putin has seemingly soared amid the invasion of Ukraine as a poll revealed the number of Russians who trust President Vladimir Putin increased from 60 per cent to 71 per cent in less than a fortnight. Eighteen per cent said they did not trust Putin, down from 29 per cent on February 20, while 11 per cent 'found it difficult' to answer the question, according to a poll conducted by the Public Opinion Foundation (FOM). FOM is a Russian state-owned sociological and market research company. It comes as the widow of Putin's political mentor blasted the propaganda being pushed on Russian state television, describing the information about the war in Ukraine as 'shameless lies'. Lyudmila Narusova, 69, was married to politician and professor Anatoly Sobchak, the former mayor of St Petersburg who made Putin - his former law student - his deputy when the now president left the KGB. In a recent interview with TV Rain, which has since been blocked, Narusova hit out at the Moscow media crackdown which has blocked key independent news outlets and accused military leaders of lying about the scale of their losses in Ukraine. 'Why are we supposed to trust only state channels which - we all know - shamelessly lie?', Narusova asked. And though FOM's poll suggests the Russian President is enjoying renewed support amid the occupation of his neighbour, Russian cities have in recent days seen huge anti-war protests as citizens piled into the streets to demonstrate despite facing arrest and brutal treatment. Similar protests have continued across Europe and beyond as people call on politicians to put a stop to the war. Russia's support for Putin has seemingly soared amid the invasion of Ukraine as a poll revealed the number of Russians who trust President Vladimir Putin increased from 60 per cent to 71 per cent in less than a fortnight It comes as the widow of Putin's political mentor, Lyudmila Narusova (R) blasted the propaganda being pushed on Russian state television, describing the information about the war in Ukraine as 'shameless lies' (Narusova pictured in an undated photo with Putin and her daughter, Ksenia Sobchak (L) who is herself a TV presenter) Lyudmila Narusova, 69 (C) was married to politician and professor Anatoly Sobchak, the former mayor of St Petersburg who made Putin (L) - his former law student - his deputy when the now president left the KGB (Ksenia Sobchak pictured right with Putin and Lyudmila at a memorial for Anatoly Sobchak) In a recent interview with TV Rain, which has since been blocked, Narusova hit out at the Moscow media crackdown which has blocked key independent news outlets and accused military leaders of lying about the scale of their losses in Ukraine (burning Russian armoured vehicle in Kharkiv) Though FOM's poll suggests the Russian President is enjoying renewed support amid the occupation of his neighbour, Russian cities have in recent days seen huge anti-war protests as citizens piled into the streets to demonstrate despite facing arrest and brutal treatment (protestors pictured in St Petersburg, Feb 27) Police intervene in anti-war protests in Saint-Petersburg, Russia on February 27, 2022 A separate poll conducted by the Russian Levada Centre, which claims to be independent, found that a third of Russians don't support Putin's decision to take 'military operations' in Ukraine, a figure which increases to roughly 50 per cent in major cities. Russian state authorities exert great power over the nation's media output, and Putin has spent two decades consolidating his control over the information his citizens are fed. Two of Russia's main news agencies - TASS and RIA Novosti - are wholly state-owned, while all three of Russia's largest television news channels - Channel One, Russia One and NTV - are either wholly or partially state-owned. The same is true for international television and news agencies RT and Sputnik, which represent Russia's primary method of distributing news throughout Europe and have been blocked by the EU, Facebook and YouTube. Russian channels have been instructed not to refer to the invasion of Ukraine as such, rather to describe it as a 'special operation', while the publishers' offices of Russian newspaper group VK-Media have been raided after its publications printed an anti-war message on the front page. Meanwhile, the Kremlin has refused to broadcast any details about Russian losses in the fighting in an attempt to paint the ongoing occupation of their neighbour as a success. Russian channels have been instructed not to refer to the invasion of Ukraine as such, rather to describe it as a 'special operation', while the publishers' offices of Russian newspaper group VK-Media have been raided after its publications printed an anti-war message on the front page Narusova slammed the Russian propaganda machine in her TV Rain interview, accusing channels and military leaders of illegally restricting information from the front lines. 'This situation is only possible in a state of emergency or martial law, and this has not yet been declared,' she said. 'Therefore, military censorship, or limiting journalists in sources of information, is impossible under federal media law.' Recalling a story broadcast about a 'heartbroken woman' who told of a young Russian who had been crucified in Ukraine, Narusova declared: 'This was supposed to trigger a huge wave of hatred towards Ukraine, and raise the combat spirit. 'But we all remember that this was a horrendous fake, an awful lie. It didn't happen. 'So why are we supposed to trust only state channels which - we all know - shamelessly lie?' 'People realise it is impossible not to have casualties after so many days of intense fights,' she added, highlighting the Kremlin's refusal to give a death toll. Narusova (pictured centre with Putin and her daughter Ksenia) slammed the Russian propaganda machine in her TV Rain interview, accusing channels and military leaders of illegally restricting information from the front lines Anti-war and anti-Putin protests have raged across Europe and beyond in recent days as people call on politicians to put a stop to the war Protestors gather outside the Russian-owned international investment bank to demonstrate against Russian President Vladimir Putin and the Russian-owned bank on March 1, 2022, in Budapest, Hungary Ukrainians living in Istanbul and other nationalities gathered on Tuesday to protest Russia's invasion of Ukraine on March 1, 2022 in Istanbul, Turkey Narusova also said that the Russian Soldiers' Mothers Committee is 'awash with calls, messages and letters from women who cannot get through to their sons in the army'. 'These mothers have nothing to lose, so they browse Ukrainian sites, and find information about their boys there. They find that they were either taken captive, or killed,' she said, pointing out that no information about troops is being broadcast in Russia. But it appears the Kremlin is set to step up its propaganda efforts, amid a feeling in Moscow that it is losing the information war. Russian state TV channels are to be relayed 'free' to Ukrainian viewers, despite troops yesterday destroying the main TV mast in Kyiv, while the Kremlin is launching a new online portal offering Russians 'official and verified information' to counter 'fakes and rumours' about the current situation in Ukraine, according to Interfax,. 'We see that in the current situation, a colossal flow of information is posted on social networks and the media, among which, unfortunately, there are many fakes and rumours,' said deputy prime minister Dmitry Chernyshenko. 'The new portal will become a source of verified, official and, what is very important, information, which will be updated in real time.' Meta head of security policy Nathaniel Gleicher (pictured) said the tech giant had taken steps to secure accounts they believe had been hacked by pro-Russian actors It comes as YouTube and Facebook banned Russian state-owned media outlets RT and Sputnik's channels across Europe It comes after Facebook parent company Meta this weekend said it had blocked a series of fake profiles and hacked accounts, which it said were being controlled by pro-Russian actors, used to disseminate Russian propaganda in Ukraine. Meta head of security policy Nathaniel Gleicher said that the propaganda campaign aimed to 'seed stories across the internet that Ukraine isn't doing well' by 'pretending to be journalists based in Kyiv.' 'The good news is that neither of these campaigns have been that effective, but we do see these actors trying to target Ukraine at this point,' he said. Russian communications regulator Roskomnadzor has in recent days implemented partial restrictions on Facebook and Twitter, and called on the tech behemoths to remove posts it said were giving false information about the extent of Russian losses amid the invasion. The regulator also accused foreign internet services of discriminating against Russian media in Europe, while refusing to acknowledge that Russian forces were conducting an invasion. Police and other security agents yesterday raided three houses in Harare, including that of Prophetic Healing and Deliverance (PHD) Ministries leader Prophet Walter Magaya, and arrested a foreigner and recovered four guns, following information on alleged reports of unlicensed guns being kept a at the premises. Sources close to the investigations said police had targeted the three premises in search of drugs, guns and criminals being harboured following information that had been supplied to them. They then conducted the raids after obtaining warrants of search and seizure. Police have since arrested one suspect in Avondale West, identified as Ashref Kara, who was found in possession of four guns and several rounds of ammunition. No arrests or recoveries were recorded on the other two premises in Mt Pleasant belonging to PHD Ministries leader Prophet Magaya, and in Sandton, where they also raided. At Prophet Magayas house, police were looking for one Frank Mudimu, who is believed to have supplied a wrong address to the police, according to a search warrant seen by The Herald. In an interview, national police spokesperson Assistant Commissioner Paul Nyathi confirmed the development. The Zimbabwe Republic Police confirms that acting on credible information and ongoing investigations on suspicious criminal movements, the police obtained warrants of search and seizure leading to raids at three premises in Harare today (yesterday). As a result, one suspect, Ashref Kara of number 66 Argyle Road, Avondale West, Harare, has been arrested for possession of unlicenced firearms and ammunition, he said. The firearms recovered are one Plainsman pistol, a Gabilondoy CIA Victoria Pistol with four rounds, an Auto pistol 6.35mm with three rounds of ammunition, a Brevete Autoque pistol, a CZ magazine with one round and a pistol holster. The suspect is facing charges of contravening the provisions of the Firearms Act, Chapter 10:09. The police also conducted raids at number 18 Cuba Road, Mt Pleasant and 261 Phase 1, Sandton, Goodhope in Harare. These raids were not targeting specific individuals or personalities but criminal activities based on information given to the police. The police takes this opportunity to thank the public for cooperating and continuous supply of information on possible criminal acts in the country, Asst Comm Nyathi said. When contacted for comment, PHD Ministries chief spokesperson and senior overseer, Mr Admire Mango, confirmed the developments saying from information he had gathered the police were looking for one Mudimu, and not Prophet Magaya. Mr Mango, who was on his way from Chinhoyi, said he was still gathering more information over the matter and would provide more details soon. The yet to be identified Mudimu is believed to have supplied a false address which resulted in the police raiding Prophet Magayas house. Mudimu is believed to be in possession of unlicenced firearms. Herald Professor Peter Sasieni, a cancer expert at King's College London, said women given the HPV jab only need one smear for the disease in their lifetime Women vaccinated against HPV may only need one smear test for cervical cancer in their lifetime, a leading scientist has said. Women aged 25 to 49 are currently tested for the disease every three years, then every five years from age 50 to 64, as part of the NHS' multi-million pound screening programme. But Professor Peter Sasieni a top cancer prevention expert at King's College London said routine testing can be significantly relaxed in the future because of the 'success' of the vaccine rollout that began a decade ago. The jab, offered to girls from Year 8, has slashed cervical cancer rates by nearly 90 per cent in the first generation of women to receive the vaccine. It prevents infection from human papillomavirus, a common group of viruses that are behind nine in 10 cervical cancer cases. Asked whether women who are vaccinated still need to be swabbed routinely, Professor Sasieni told BBC Radio 4's Inside Health radio programme:'I don't think they do. 'I think with that probably one screen will be enough, maybe two screens, over a lifetime.' He added: 'We've now seen that cancers of the cervix have been reduced by over 80 per cent in (women in their 20s) regardless of whether they were vaccinated or not. 'Amongst those who are vaccinated it is going to be an even greater reduction. A new vaccine will be used in the UK from September which protects against even more types of the virus.' British girls aged 12 to 13 were first offered the two-dose vaccine in 2008, with jabs given at least six months apart. Cervical cancer rates were 87 per cent lower in British women who offered the vaccine in year 8 (red), landmark research published in The Lancet showed last year. For women who had the vaccine in years 10 or 11, rates of cervical cancer were 62 per cent lower and they were one third lower in women who had it in years 12 and 13 It provides the first proof the NHS vaccination programme launched for teenage girls in 2008 is saving lives. A new HPV vaccine, Gardasil which offers an even higher level of protection is to be used for the HPV programme in schools from September And from 2019 was also made available to teenage boys. Men can get cancer from HPV and can also put women at increased risk by passing the virus through sexual contact. Around 3,200 cases of cervical cancer are diagnosed every year in Britain, leading to more than two deaths a day. The NHS spends around 21million a year treating and screening for the disease. WHAT IS HPV? THE INFECTION LINKED TO 90% OF CERVICAL CANCER CASES Human papilloma virus (HPV) is the name for a group of viruses that affect your skin and the moist membranes lining your body. Spread through vaginal, anal and oral sex and skin-to-skin contact between genitals, it is extremely common. Up to eight out of 10 people will be infected with the virus at some point in their lives. There are more than 100 types of HPV. Around 30 of which can affect the genital area. Genital HPV infections are common and highly contagious. Many people never show symptoms, as they can arise years after infection, and the majority of cases go away without treatment. It can lead to genital warts, and is also known to cause cervical cancer by creating an abnormal tissue growth. Annually, an average of 38,000 cases of HPV-related cancers are diagnosed in the US, 3,100 cases of cervical cancer in the UK and around 2,000 other cancers in men. What others cancers does it cause? Throat Neck Tongue Tonsils Vulva Vagina Penis Anus Advertisement More than 80 per cent of eligible women in the UK, or 10million, have received the vaccine. Among women now in their twenties the first generation to get the jab cases have now dropped from about 50 per year to just five. From September, a new jab called Gardasil 9 and made by pharmaceutical giant Merck, will be offered to protect against even more strains of HPV. Professor Sasieni who is the director of KCL's clinical trial unit said the impact of the current vaccine on cancer rates was 'really exciting'. Asked whether the number of screenings done could be reduced, he said women could instead be screened just three times at 30, 40 and 55 years old. But he added even this would be in an abundance of caution because of the enormous success of the jabs. 'It is a big change and the policymakers will want to make sure that's a good thing,' he said. 'And that the public won't see it as some sort of saving money and taking screening away from us. It's not. The vaccine has been so successful that this makes perfect sense. ' He also raised the prospect that booster jabs may be needed, saying: 'We don't know for certain that vaccinating someone aged 12 is going to protect them when they're 45 years old. 'We believe it will be but it may be necessary to have a booster. 'Women who were vaccinated 12 to 13 are coming through and being invited for cervical screening now so we really want to make those changes over the next couple of years.' Professor Sasieni said there are disadvantages about screening too often. 'It's more inconvenient for women, it's expensive and the more screening we do the more women who will be treated. 'The majority of women who get treated need that treatment but some of them would have recovered spontaneously without that treatment. 'So there's a balance. If you're going to use the HPV test, they don't think you need to screen more than once every five years.' It comes amid calls for millions of young men to be offered 'catch-up' HPV vaccines. Boys aged 12 to 13 have only been able to get the jab in England and Wales since September 2019. They get indirection from immunisation among girls they may grow up to have sex with. But amid a growing body of research showing the vaccine is highly effective and safe, experts have called for more to be inoculated to help fully eradicate the disease. Second homeowners in Wales face a 300 per cent tax hike next year in a bid to stop locals being priced out of the countrys property market. Mark Drakefords government has declared it is increasing the maximum level that local authorities can set council tax premiums on second homes and long-term empty properties by up to four times. It means that, from April 2023, councils will be able set the premium at any level up to the maximum, depending what is appropriate for their local circumstances. Some may choose to apply different rates for second homes and long-term empty dwellings. Currently, the maximum premium councils can charge is 100 per cent so the new policy constitutes a possible tax rise of 200 per cent. Ministers claimed the change is intended to provide a clearer demonstration that the properties concerned are being let regularly as part of genuine holiday accommodation businesses that are making a substantial contribution to the local economy. However, one homeowners group has furiously branded the move morally indefensible. Jonathan Martin, a spokesman for the Home Owners of Wales Group, told BBC Radio Wales Breakfast: Where do they think we're going to get this 300 per cent from? I cant afford it, thats for sure and Im quite sure a lot of other people cant afford it. Its just astounding. Pictured: Coloured houses overlooking the harbour in Tenby, Pembrokeshire, Wales Pictured: A row of coloured houses along the coast in Beaumaris on the Isle of Anglesey Campaigners against second homes marching in Caernarfon, Gwynedd What are the new measures set to come into effect next year? The maximum level at which local authorities can set council tax premiums on second homes and long-term empty properties will be increased to 300 per cent, effective from April 2023. This will allow councils to decide the level that is appropriate for their individual local circumstances. Councils will be able to set the premium at any level up to the maximum, and they will be able to apply different premiums to second homes and long-term empty dwellings. Premiums are currently set at a maximum level of 100 per cent and were paid on more than 23,000 properties in Wales this year. Local authorities opting to apply premiums have access to additional funding, and the Welsh Government has encouraged councils to use these resources to improve the supply of affordable housing. The criteria for self-catering accommodation being liable for business rates instead of council tax will also change from next April. Currently, properties that are available to let for at least 140 days, and that are actually let for at least 70 days, will pay rates rather than council tax. The change will increase these thresholds to being available to let for at least 252 days and actually let for at least 182 days in any 12-month period. Advertisement The measures are part of a wider move to address the issue of second homes and lack of affordable housing facing many communities in Wales, as set out in the Co-operation Agreement between the Welsh Government and Plaid Cymru in 2021. Official figures show there were 24,873 second homes in Wales registered for council tax purposes in January 2021. But the number could be much higher, depending on the exact definition of a second home, officials warned. This is because this number does not include holiday units, like AirBnbs and holiday lets, which are registered for businesses rates rather than those under second homes. Gwynedd has the highest number of second homes at 5,098 20 per cent of all second homes in Wales. This is followed by Pembrokeshire with 4,072, Anglesey with 2,112 and Ceredigion with 1,735, according to council and Welsh government figures for 2020. In Llanengan, near Abersoch in Gwynedd, nearly 40 per cent of all homes were second homes, according to figures from 2016. Under the broader definition of second homes to include holiday lets, these made up 46 per cent of homes in Abersoch, 43 per cent in Aberdyfi and 34 per cent in Beddgelert. And the coastal village of Abersoch sees its population of 600 skyrocket to 30,000 in the summer. Campaigners are concerned that second homes are causing a rise in house prices in seaside and rural communities which is pricing out locals. The Welsh Housing Justice Charter campaign group said it receives calls from nurses, teachers, firefighters and those working on lifeboats who could not afford to live near where they work and volunteer. But some second homeowners said they feel discriminated against and called on councils to halt tax increases on second homes. Others said they feel like they are being scapegoated for what they branded Welsh government failures on affordable homes. In the 2022-23 tax year, nine authorities will charge a premium from 25 per cent in Conwy and Ceredigion, 50 per cent in Anglesey, Flintshire, Denbighshire and Powys, and 100 per cent in Gwynedd, Pembrokeshire and Swansea. Both Pembrokeshire and Gwynedd have the largest number of second homes that are subject to a premium, at 3,746 and 3,794 respectively. Mr Martin, who lives in Altrincham and has a second home in Gwynedd, said most of the group visit their homes regularly. Pictured: A row of white seaside cottages in Moelfre, Anglesey, Wales Pictured: A view of coloured houses overlooking Tenby harbour in Pembrokeshire Mark Drakefords government has declared it is increasing the maximum level that local authorities can set council tax premiums on second homes and long-term empty properties by up to four times next year, potentially up to 300 per cent Second homes in Wales: Explained How many second homes are there? And which part of Wales has the most second homes? Official figures show there were 24,873 second homes in Wales registered for council tax purposes in January 2021. But the number could be much higher, depending on the exact definition of a second home, officials warned. This is because this number does not include holiday units, like AirBnbs and holiday lets, which are registered for businesses rates rather than those under second homes. Gwynedd has the highest number of second homes at 5,098 20 per cent of all second homes in Wales. This is followed by Pembrokeshire with 4,072, Anglesey with 2,112 and Ceredigion with 1,735, according to council and Welsh government figures for 2020. In Llanengan, near Abersoch in Gwynedd, nearly 40 per cent of all homes were second homes, according to figures from 2016. Under the broader definition of second homes to include holiday lets, these made up 46 per cent of homes in Abersoch, 43 per cent in Aberdyfi and 34 per cent in Beddgelert. And the coastal village of Abersoch sees its population of 600 skyrocket to 30,000 in the summer months. Why are people angry about second homes? Campaigners are concerned that second homes are causing a rise in house prices in seaside and rural communities which is pricing out locals. The Welsh Housing Justice Charter campaign group said it receives calls from nurses, teachers, firefighters and those working on lifeboats who could not afford to live near where they work and volunteer. But some second homeowners said they feel discriminated against and called on councils to halt tax increases on second homes. Others said they feel like they are being scapegoated for what they branded Welsh government failures on affordable homes. Advertisement He added: They love Wales, they love Welsh people, they love the Welsh language, they love the Welsh culture. Thats why they have a home there. He also criticised the timing following the pandemic and amid the rising cost of living. I think the biggest threat to the Welsh government will be that weve been advised its absolutely unlawful, he claimed. So I dont know where we go from that but well have to have a big discussion as a group. Were financially able to take on the Welsh government if they forced this through without further acquiescence with us. Welsh Tories accused Drakefords ministers of punishing aspiration and investment. Janet Finch-Saunders, who speaks for the Welsh Conservatives on housing, accused Labour of pandering to their nationalist coalition partners and punishing aspiration and investment in Wales. She raged: The housing crisis is a direct result of years of successive Labour-led governments failing to provide opportunities and build enough houses, with housebuilding falling below levels before devolution. Finch-Saunders added there were more empty homes in Wales than there are second homes and this was not being addressed by ministers. She called on the administration to get a grip and address the housing shortage in Wales. Climate change minister Julie James said: We want people to be able to live and work in their local communities, but we know rising house prices are putting them out of reach of many people, exacerbated by the cost-of-living crisis we are facing. There is no easy answer or quick-fix solution. This is a complex problem that requires a wide range of actions. We continue to carefully consider further measures that could be introduced, and these changes are the latest steps we are taking to increase the availability of homes and ensure a fair contribution is made. Finance minister Rebecca Evans added: These changes will give more flexibility to local authorities and provide more support to local communities in addressing the negative impacts that second homes and long-term empty properties can have. They are some of the levers we have available to us as we seek to create a fairer system. The criteria for self-catering accommodation being liable for business rates instead of council tax will also change. At the moment, properties that are available to let for at least 140 days and that are actually let for at least 70 days will pay rates rather than council tax. But from next April, the threshold will increase for properties available to let for at least 252 days and actually let for at least 182 days in any 12-month period. Sian Gwenllian MS said: It is clear that we as a country are facing a housing crisis. So many people cannot afford to live in their local areas, and the situation has worsened during the pandemic. These changes will make a difference, enabling councils to respond to their local circumstances and start to close the loophole in the current law. Its a first but important step on a journey towards a new housing system that ensures that people have the right to live in their community. Thousands of Russian scientists and journalist have condemned Vladimir Putin's 'senseless' invasion of Ukraine, risking fines or even prison sentences. In an open letter to the increasingly isolated dictator, they said there was no 'rational justification for this war' and warned the country was 'doomed to isolation'. Russian science and medicine could be left behind because of a lack of international funding as the world turns the country into a 'pariah' state, they claimed. More than 6,100 academics, scientific journalists and medics have put their name to the document despite Russia's strict anti-freedom of speech laws. Any public criticism of the Russian state can result in fines of up to 6,200 or jail sentences, under laws introduced in 2012. The coalition has demanded 'an immediate halt to all military operations directed against Ukraine'. The US has already cut ties with Russia's space industry as part of its package of sanctions, while Germany's biggest research funder has frozen all scientific cooperation with the country. The letter was published last Tuesday and has been translated into English using Google. It reads: 'We, Russian scientists and scientific journalists, declare a strong protest against the hostilities launched by the armed forces of our country on the territory of Ukraine. Russian scientists have begged Vladimir Putin (pictured in 2017 at an exhibition by Russia's small and medium businesses at the office of ER Telecom in Perm) to end his 'senseless' invasion of Ukraine Writing in the letter (pictured) translated by Google the scientists said: 'There is no rational justification for this war. Attempts to use the situation in Donbass as a pretext for launching a military operation does not inspire any confidence. It is clear that Ukraine does not pose a threat to the security of our country. The war against her is unfair and frankly senseless.' 'This fatal step leads to huge human losses and undermines the foundations of the established system of international security. The responsibility for unleashing a new war in Europe lies entirely with Russia. 'There is no rational justification for this war. Attempts to use the situation in Donbass as a pretext for launching a military operation do not inspire any confidence. NASA exploring ways to keep the ISS in space if Russia pulls out NASA is exploring ways to keep the International Space Station operational in low Earth orbit without Russian help to maintain the spacecraft's propulsion. It comes after Russia invaded Ukraine on February 24, prompting a spate of sanctions from the US, including restricting cooperation with its space industry. Last week, the head of the Russian space agency, Dmitry Rogozin, warned the US against introducing sanctions against its space program, threatening to stop maintenance that could see the 500 ton ISS fall out of orbit on to the US. Russian cargo spaceships manage propulsion on the station, and keep it in orbit 253 miles above the Earth. Without their regular adjustments, it would fall back to Earth. NASA says it is exploring ways to keep it in orbit without Russian help, including using commercial cargo vehicles from SpaceX and Northrup Grumman. However, the US space agency says it doesn't see any immediate signs of Moscow withdrawing from the international orbital collaboration. Advertisement 'It is clear that Ukraine does not pose a threat to the security of our country. The war against her is unfair and frankly senseless.' The signatories said Ukraine's statehood rests on democratic institutions and all problems between Russia and its European neighbours can be resolved peacefully. The letter added: 'Having unleashed the war, Russia doomed itself to international isolation, to the position of a pariah country. 'This means that we, scientists, will no longer be able to do our job normally: after all, conducting scientific research is unthinkable without full cooperation with colleagues from other countries. 'The isolation of Russia from the world means further cultural and technological degradation of our country in the complete absence of positive prospects. 'War with Ukraine is a step to nowhere.' They have called for the war to end. 'immediately'. The scientists said: 'We demand respect for the sovereignty and territorial integrity of the Ukrainian state. We demand peace for our countries.' Their letter could land them in trouble in their homeland, with Russia cracking down on freedom of speech and any dissent against Government from 2012. Any criticism of the Russian state online can result in fines of up to 6,200 or even prison terms, according to laws introduced that year. Six thousand protestors demonstrating against the invasion of Ukraine have already been arrested in Russia. The international scientific community has condemned Russia's attack on Ukraine, with some calling for all ties to Russian scientists to be cut. NASA is now exploring ways to keep the International Space Station operational in low Earth orbit without Russian help to maintain the spacecraft's propulsion. Meanwhile, more than 130 people have signed an open letter to the European Commission and member states of the European Union calling for an urgent suspension of all funding to Russian institutions. What are Putin's rules against free speech? Russia began cracking down heavily on free speech in 2012 with a host of new measures to prevent people expressing dissent against Putin. Laws introduced that year classified criticism of the government as 'threats to state security and public stability'. They were introduced when Putin returned to the presidency in May 2012 after a series of protests in the country. Any criticism of the Russian state online can result in fines of up to 6,200 or even prison terms, according to laws introduced that year. From September 2015 to February 2017, the number of people who went to prison for 'extremist speech' spiked from 54 to 94. Russian authorities also used the laws to combat criticism of the country's invasion of Crimea in 2014. Putin has silenced his critics using the power of the law and state. Anti-corruption campaigner Alexei Navalny was famously poisoned with novichok in 2020 in Siberia in what is widely thought to have been a government-organised attack. He is currently behind bars for an old conviction in 2014 which the European Court of Human Rights ruled in 2017 that Navalny claims was the result of an unfair trial. Advertisement Maksym Strikha, a physicist at the Taras Shevchenko National University of Kyiv, told the scientific journal Nature Russian scientists should be frozen out of funding. He said: 'There should be a complete boycott of the Russian academic community. No cooperation. 'The Russian academic community should also pay its own price for supporting Putin.' Russia has been trailing behind Europe and the US in science and health since the collapse of the Soviet Union in 1991. The country's economy plummeted at the time and tens of thousands of scientists moved abroad to further their careers. Despite Putin promising a new research strategy in 2018 including 900 new laboratories and extra support for early-career scientists funding on the ground for most Russian research remains poor. The country denied it stole vaccine data from AstraZeneca, after it was accused of stealing the blueprints for the Oxford-made jab to develop its own Sputnik V vaccine. It comes amid a row around Russia's involvement in the international space station, with the country threatening to pull out of maintaining the spacecraft's propulsion. Last week, the head of the Russian space agency, Dmitry Rogozin, warned the US against introducing sanctions against its space program, threatening to stop maintenance that could see the 500 ton ISS fall out of orbit on to the US. Russian cargo spaceships manage propulsion on the station, and keep it in orbit 253 miles above the Earth. Without their regular adjustments, it would fall back to Earth. NASA says it is exploring ways to keep it in orbit without Russian help, including using commercial cargo vehicles from SpaceX and Northrup Grumman. However, the US space agency says it doesn't see any immediate signs of Moscow withdrawing from the international orbital collaboration. Russia last year banned journalists in the country from reporting on its Roscosmos space agency. Writers who report on Roscosmos are now considered 'foreign agents' according to Russian law, in a move to draw attention away from its declining space industry. Imposing a no-fly zone over Ukraine would help Russian forces, Ben Wallace insisted today. In a round of interviews, the Defence Secretary flatly rejected suggestions that NATO should close down airspace - saying it would risk a direct conflict with Moscow. But he also argued that it would benefit Vladimir Putin's military because it would be able to move around 'with impunity', rather than facing strikes from Kyiv's planes. Ukraine war: The latest Russian paratroopers land in Ukraine's second city amid heavy fighting 'There are practically no areas left in Kharkiv where an artillery shell has not yet hit': Interior Ministry official Joe Biden brands Vladimir Putin a 'dictator' in his annual State of the Union address as he bans Russian aircraft from US airspace Russia steps up its bombing campaign and missile strikes, hitting Kyiv's main television tower, two residential buildings in a town west of the city and the city of Bila Tserkva to the south of the capital Russian forces push into the besieged Black Sea city of Kherson in the south Russian attacks leave Mariupol, another Black Sea port further to the west without electricity More than 677,000 people have fled Ukraine since the Russian invasion, the UN's refugee agency says The UN's International Court of Justice says it will hold public hearings on March 7 and 8 over Ukraine's allegations of 'genocide' by Russia Russia blocks an independent television channel and a liberal radio station, tightening a virtual media blackout A string of Western companies announce they are freezing or scaling back business with Russia Russians race to withdraw cash after the introduction of capital controls and as the ruble hits record lows Russian-owned Nord Stream 2 goes insolvent after Germany halts the pipeline following Moscow's invasion Oil prices soar past $110 a barrel, despite agreements to release 60 million barrels from stockpiles The World Bank prepares a $3-billion aid package for Ukraine, including $350 million in immediate funds Advertisement As fierce fighting continued in Ukraine on the seventh day of the invasion, Mr Wallace warned that the struggle is set to continue for years. He said Putin had expected to be welcomed as a 'Great Tsar' by the population, and deployed the wrong tactics and 'ill-prepared young junior soldiers'. The Russian leader also blundered by failing to predict the strength of the Western sanctions response - and could now face a revolt from ordinary Russians as the country's economy crumbles. 'I think he's about to be shocked because this is the 21st century and Russian people just like European people don't want to go through what they are about to go through,' he told Sky News. Russian troops have entered Ukraine's second city Kharkiv following days of intensive bombardment, but Mr Wallace said Mr Putin's forces did not yet control it. The Ministry of Defence said the latest intelligence suggested Russian forces had reportedly moved into the centre of Kherson in south Ukraine. Artillery and air strikes have targeted built-up areas in Kyiv, Kharkiv, Mariupol and Chernihiv. But Mr Wallace said the advance of Russian forces continued to be slowed by a combination of overstretched logistics, poor morale and brave resistance by Ukrainian fighters. 'The Russians are considerably behind their schedule, by days not hours, and that leads to stresses on their logistical supply chains,' he told the BBC. 'That's why you have seen some of these columns fairly grind to a halt. 'They have also been surprised by the strength of the Ukrainian resistance.' He told BBC Breakfast that 'none of the major cities have been taken control of'. There was 'huge amounts of low morale in the Russian forces, we've seen lots of surrenders'. 'But that doesn't take away from the fact you have a very ruthless Russian armed forces leadership and a president who seems to know no limit to how much violence they will use to achieve their aims.' The lack of progress in meeting the aims of the invasion had led to a change in tactics, focusing on aerial and artillery bombardment of cities rather than the kind of lightning mobilised armoured advances originally envisaged by the Kremlin, Western military experts believe. The aftermath of a strike in Kharkiv today as fierce fighting continues in Ukraine on the seventh day of the invasion In a round of interviews, Ben Wallace flatly rejected suggestions that NATO should close down airspace - saying it would risk a direct conflict with Moscow Mr Wallace said Vladimir Putin (pictured) could now face a revolt from ordinary Russians as the country's economy crumbles Mr Wallace told Sky News that meant a plan to 'carpet-bomb cities, indiscriminately in some cases'. He told the BBC that siege tactics were in the Russian military doctrine, with forces surrounding a city before they 'bombard it indiscriminately and then eventually close in on a population that they hope to have broken, and indeed take over what's left of the city'. 'We've seen that in Chechnya before,' he said. But Ukraine was a different proposition because of its size and population. He warned that an occupying force would face the kind of insurgency faced by the Soviets in Afghanistan or the UK and Western allies in Iraq. 'Invading a country with overwhelming force is one thing, occupying a people of 44 million who don't want you in it is a very different thing.' After Boris Johnson was berated by a Ukrainian activist that he was 'afraid' to protect civilians by imposing a no-fly zone, Mr Wallace said a no-fly zone would also have to apply to Ukrainian jets, meaning they could not target Russian forces from the air. 'If you had a no-fly zone in Ukraine, the overwhelming scale of the Russian army would be able to drive around with impunity, which it can't at the moment,' he said. Volodymyr Zelensky has said that Russia is trying to erase Ukraine with renewed attacks on all fronts including an expected assault on the city which houses Europe's largest nuclear power plant. Zelensky, who has become a symbol of Ukrainian defiance and courage since the war began, told his people today that Russians 'know nothing about our capital. About our history. But they have an order to erase our history. Erase our country. Erase us all.' Russian armoured vehicles and trucks are pictured rolling through the centre of Kherson, as Moscow claimed to be in control of the city but Ukraine said it still holds key government buildings The president, unshaven and wearing a military-style khaki T-shirt, said the West's response was not enough, calling for more international support, including backing Ukraine's bid to join the European Union. 'This is no time to be neutral,' he added. As he spoke, troops were preparing barricades to defend the city of Zaporizhzhia - including setting up defences around the reactors of Energodar power plant. Anton Gerashchenko, adviser to Ukraine's interior ministry, called on generals to bypass the city while warning they could create a 'new Chernobyl' if the plant is damaged. 'Because of Putin's madness, Europe is again on the brink of a nuclear catastrophe,' he wrote on Facebook. 'The city where the largest nuclear power plant in Europe is located is preparing for a battle with the invaders. 'An accident can happen like at the Chernobyl nuclear power plant or the Fukushima nuclear power plant. Russian generals - think again! Radiation does not know nationalities, does not spare anyone!' Fighting was also underway in Ukraine's second city of Kharkiv after Russian paratroopers dropped in and attacked a military hospital before airstrikes targeting police, state agencies and the security service. Part of Karazin National University was on fire early Wednesday after a missile - seemingly intended for the neighbouring police headquarters or interior ministry - struck the college's department of sociology instead. At least 21 people have been killed an 112 wounded in shelling on Kharkiv in the last 24 hours, governor Oleg Synegubov said, as an interior ministry official added: 'There are practically no areas left in Kharkiv where an artillery shell has not yet hit.' Putin's forces also claimed to have captured Kherson, a major industrial centre in the south, overnight though the mayor remained defiant - posting on Facebook: 'We are still Ukraine. Still firm.' Mariupol, also in the south, came under renewed shelling as Russian forces try to surround it. In Zhytomyr, a city to the west of Kyiv, airstrikes hit the headquarters of the 95th Ukrainian armed forces brigade while also damaging a hospital, leaving two people dead. The city of Bila Tserkva, some 50 miles south of Kyiv, was also hit overnight. Ukraine's armed forces said Wednesday morning that Russia is 'trying to advance in all directions' but are 'being resisted everywhere and suffering losses'. It estimates that 5,840 Russian troops have been killed so far - though that figure cannot be verified. Despite the near-universal condemnation of the war internationally, a new state poll in Russia taken over the weekend showed support for Putin has risen from around 60 per cent to 70 per cent since the week before. Russia also launched a recruitment drive for more mercenary soldiers in state media, with newspaper Novaya Gazeta running adverts offering soldiers-for-hire 1,760 a month in a drive for the 'recruitment of people for protection in the near abroad'. Since Russian troops rolled into Ukraine last week to achieve Putin's mission of overthrowing Zelensky's pro-Western government, hundreds of civilians have been reported killed. Russian forces have carried out a massive bombing campaign and encircled urban centres, but Ukraine insists no major city has yet been overtaken. 'Russian airborne troops landed in Kharkiv... and attacked a local hospital,' the Ukrainian army said in a statement on messaging app Telegram. 'There is an ongoing fight between the invaders and the Ukrainians.' Russia hit a residential building in the city on Tuesday killing eight people, drawing comparisons to the massacres of civilians in Sarajevo in the 1990s and condemnation for what Zelensky called a 'war crime'. A fire broke out on Wednesday in the barracks of a flight school in Kharkiv following an airstrike, according to Anton Gerashchenko, adviser to the Ukrainian Interior Minister. 'Practically there are no areas left in Kharkiv where an artillery shell has not yet hit,' he was quoted as saying in a statement on Telegram. A British teacher has vowed to take up arms and defend his wife's Ukrainian home city from Vladimir Putin's Russian army after travelling more than 500-mile to be with her and their toddler son. Ian Umney, 28, only reunited with wife Nelia, 26, and two-year-old Jonathan yesterday after quitting his job and making a 48-hour journey from Manchester to the southern Ukrainian city of Nikopol. Currently the city is in relative safety, tucked away on the northern side of the winding Dneiper River and more than 100 miles from intense fighting in nearby southern cities such as Melitpol. But with Russian military officials today claiming control of Kherson, a key crossing point of the Dneiper and just 120miles to the south-west of Nikopol, his wife's home city could soon come under seige. Despite the threat of a Russian attack, Mr Umney, from St Helens, Merseyside, insists he will remain in the city and fight if his Ukrainian wife wishes to stay. If Mr Umney does fight, he will be among dozens of Britons - dubbed the 'Lads' Army' - who have already volunteered to join the Ukrainian resistance. 'One hundred per cent, I would bear arms and fight the Russians,' he said. 'I think Nelia will want to stay in Nikopol. If she wants to stay, then I will arm myself and defend her city.' British teacher Ian Umney has vowed to take up arms and defend his wife's Ukrainian home city after travelling more than 500-mile to be reunited with her and their toddler son Mr Umney, 28, only reunited with wife Nelia, 26, and their two-year-old son Jonathan yesterday after quitting his job and making the 48-hour journey from Manchester to the southern Ukrainian city of Nikopol Despite the threat of a Russian attack (pictured: A Russian strike on Kyiv's TV tower), Mr Umney, from St Helens, Merseyside insists he will remain in the city and fight if his wife wishes to stay Ukraine war: The latest Russian paratroopers land in Ukraine's second city amid heavy fighting 'There are practically no areas left in Kharkiv where an artillery shell has not yet hit': Interior Ministry official Joe Biden brands Vladimir Putin a 'dictator' in his annual State of the Union address as he bans Russian aircraft from US airspace Russia steps up its bombing campaign and missile strikes, hitting Kyiv's main television tower, two residential buildings in a town west of the city and the city of Bila Tserkva to the south of the capital Russian forces push into the besieged Black Sea city of Kherson in the south Russian attacks leave Mariupol, another Black Sea port further to the west without electricity More than 677,000 people have fled Ukraine since the Russian invasion, the UN's refugee agency says The UN's International Court of Justice says it will hold public hearings on March 7 and 8 over Ukraine's allegations of 'genocide' by Russia Russia blocks an independent television channel and a liberal radio station, tightening a virtual media blackout A string of Western companies announce they are freezing or scaling back business with Russia Russians race to withdraw cash after the introduction of capital controls and as the ruble hits record lows Russian-owned Nord Stream 2 goes insolvent after Germany halts the pipeline following Moscow's invasion Oil prices soar past $110 a barrel, despite agreements to release 60 million barrels from stockpiles The World Bank prepares a $3-billion aid package for Ukraine, including $350 million in immediate funds Advertisement Yesterday Mr Umney, who quit his job as an English teacher to make the journey, posed for a heart-warming photo with Nelia and Jonathan in her parent's apartment in the southern city of Nikopol. The cute toddler, wearing a Paw Patrol jumper, was cradled in his father's arms after his emotional journey. Mr Umney beamed and could not hide his excitement at being with them again after a month apart. Today he added: 'It was a very emotionally charged moment when I saw them. My son held out his arms for me and I wept into my wife's shoulder. 'It was such a relief and more than worth the risk and stress of travelling. It's been a long time. I'm finally here.' He made the decision to travel from the UK to Nikopol after Russian soldiers moved in last Friday. He jetted from Manchester to Krakow in Poland on Sunday before catching a train to Lviv in his wife's homeland on Monday. Following heavy delays and cancellations on the railways he then caught another overnight train to Nikopol. Exhausted, he finally got to his wife's home city at lunchtime yesterday where he saw her and their little boy. 'It's been heartbreaking being without my family,' he said. 'But it's quite exhilarating to be on a journey to see them. I feel like I've achieved something.' He added: 'We are going to spend some time together. We have been apart for a month. I last saw them on February 5. 'We need to make a sensible decision about what we are going to do next for the three of us. My family back home said it's too dangerous and it's too risky.' Before the Russian invasion, the couple and their son had been planning to live together in Britain. But he said he has no hesitations about taking on the Russian army. The pair had a whirlwind romance after meeting while he was on holiday in the Ukraine. 'I came here in 2016 and I met my now wife on my fourth day,' he added. 'We got married in January 2017. We had our son Jonathon in October 2019. I lived in the Ukraine for nearly six years, but before the invasion we had decided we would all move to the UK. 'We spent Christmas together in the UK, then they went back to Ukraine for a bit.' The 28-year-old from St Helens in Merseyside was travelling the 500 miles overnight through the war-torn country as Vladimir Putin's bombs rained down The former cybersecurity worker (pictured with his wife) vowed he was 'on the way to reunite with my family by whatever means' Before setting off to Ukraine, Mr Umney said: 'I cannot sit here, while my wife and son are in Ukraine, and watch the freedom and safety of Ukraine be threatened by Putin. 'I took four days of stress, upset, hurt, and anger but now I have packed my bag, planned, written my letters. 'I'm now on the way to reunite with my family by whatever means. Please continue to support Ukraine and those who are in need. 'I love you all. I will be safe. Stand strong, Ukraine.' Mr Umney will not be the only Briton fighting against Russians in Ukraine. Yesterday groups of men gathered outside the Ukrainian embassy in west London to answer Ukraine's President Volodymyr Zelensky call to arms for foreign fighters to join his country's defence against Russia. Foreign Secretary Liz Truss appeared to encourage Britons saying she would 'absolutely support' those who wished to sign up to fight as part of the Ukrainian armed forces. But lawyers later warned that Britons who fight in Ukraine could be prosecuted under UK terror laws - much like those who took arms for Kurdish militia forces against ISIS in Syria. Do you know someone going to fight in Ukraine? Email: james.robinson@mailonline.co.uk Advertisement Yesterday Prime Minister Boris Johnson waded into the debate, warning members of the so-called 'Lads Army' that they could be breaking British law by going over to Ukraine to fight. Giving a speech in Estonia, Mr Johnson said: 'I can understand why people feel as they do but we have laws in our country about international conflicts and how they should be conducted.' Asked if, in the wake of Ms Truss's comments, that the Government was encouraging Britons to fight, he replied: 'The UK is not actively doing any such thing.' Yesterday a London banker became the latest to arrive at the Ukrainian embassy in London to volunteer to fight against Russia. Sam Ottaway, 38, works at a bank in the City and has no combat experience, but volunteered in his lunch break. Mr Ottaway, who described British writer George Orwell as one of his heroes and an inspiration for his decision to join the fight, said: 'It's the right thing to do, can't see that happen. History has taught us that this stuff doesn't just stop does it?' Gym owner Leon Dawson, 37, earlier this week told reporters he was prepared to lose his life fighting to defend Ukraine as a volunteer in the country's newly formed Foreign Legion. Standing outside the Ukrainian embassy with other would-be-fighters, including his friend Tom Konarzewski, who is originally from Poland and who runs a dog care business, he told reporters from Sky News: 'We're young, strong, fit men and we can help, so why not?' 'We don't want to die. We're obviously scared. But if we're scared, we can imagine how the innocent women and children feel. I can't sit here and just let that happen.' Asked if his family were aware, Mr Dawson, who has no military experience, said: 'My family are upset. Obviously it is a hard time.' British 'Lads Army' volunteers eager to take on Vladimir Putin's Russian forces could be prosecuted under UK law if they go out to fight in Ukraine, Boris Johnson (pictured) has hinted today. Leon Dawson, 37, is seen telling journalists he is prepared to lose his life fighting to defend Ukraine as a volunteer in the country's newly announced foreign legion Standing outside the Ukrainian embassy in west London with other would-be-fighters, including his friend Tom Konarzewski (pictured left), he tells reporters from Sky News: 'We're young, strong, fit men and we can help, so why not? Brian Grove, a 60-year-old former Territorial Army (TA) member from Kent, told reporters he had 'decided to do something' to help under siege Ukrainians Mr Dawson and Mr Konarzewski were mong a number of people seen outside the Ukrainian embassy yesterday responding to calls by Ukraine's President Volodymyr Zelensky for foreign fighters to join their defence against Russia. Pictured: Governor Dmitry Zhivitsky posts photos of damage done by Russia to Okhtyrka Among those attending the Ukrainian embassy earlier this week was Brian Grove, a 60-year-old former Territorial Army (TA) member from Kent. He told Sky News reporters he had 'decided to do something' to help under siege Ukrainians. 'I used to be in the TA, I've also got a lot of first aid training so I've decided to come and do something,' he said. Asked if he's prepared to fight, Mr Grove replies: 'Yes, I can get on a flight tomorrow.' The 'Lads Army' volunteering to fight in Ukraine Leon Dawson A 37-year-old gym boss from Surrey, Leon Dawson has no prior military experience. But speaking outside the Ukrainian embassy in London yesterday, where he volunteered for the country's newly established foreign legion, he said: 'We're young, strong, fit men and we can help, so why not?' Leon runs The Physique Warehouse Gym in Moseley, on the outskirts of west London. Tom Konarzewski Originally from Poland, and friends with Leon Dawson, Tom Konarzewski runs a dog care business in Surrey. His business is called Walk-Me. Founded in 2007, it is a dog-walking business aimed at high-flying professionals. It also offers daycare and overnight services. On signing up to join Ukrain's Foreign Legion, he said: ' 'What we've seen on the TV, in my opinion, is wrong,' he said. 'We'd like to get over there as soon as possible.' Brian Grove Brian Grove is a 60-year-old former Territorial Army (TA) member from Kent. He told Sky News reporters he had 'decided to do something' to help under siege Ukrainians. 'I used to be in the TA, I've also got a lot of first aid training so I've decided to come and do something,' he said. Asked if he's prepared to fight, Mr Grove, from Sittingbourne in Kent, replies: 'Yes, I can get on a flight tomorrow.' Roger Conway The 34-year-old from Newcastle went to the Ukrainian Embassy, where he collected an email address to volunteer his services, that he immediately wrote. Speaking to the PA news agency near the embassy in West London, he said: 'We've convinced ourselves that we're stepping in and we're helping by having Facebook photos and tweeting solidarity but it doesn't really make a difference to anyone. 'Solidarity doesn't look real if you don't do anything'. Mr Conway, who works as a contractor in finance, said he had never been in the army. 'I've never been in but I've not got kids, I'm 34, feel fit'. Asked if he was scared, he said: 'Possibly a little but that's no reason not to do anything in life. I'm ready, I think'. Sam Ottaway Sam Ottaway, 38, works at a bank in the City and has no combat experience, but came down to volunteer in his lunch break. Sam said: 'It's the right thing to do, can't see that happen. History has taught us that this stuff doesn't just stop does it? 'George Orwell is one of my heroes. Homage to Catalonia. 'People have done this before in history, volunteering for good causes. And if this isn't a good cause, I don't know what is.' Jason Luck Jason Luck has family in Mykolaiv, a city near the Black Sea in southern Ukraine. He served for 12 years in the British Army and feels he has something to offer in the fight. He is due to fly out on Wednesday. Jason said: 'My family are in Ukraine. Fighting isn't my priority. My family is my priority. I live in Surrey but go back and forwards. First it was the pandemic, now this idiot [Putin].' Shaun Pinner A 48-year-old ex-soldier with a Ukrainian wife. He is already on the front lines. He is married to a Ukrainian woman and has been in Donbas for the past four years. Mr Pinner previously served in the Royal Anglian Regiment and said he fought with the Ukrainian army as a 'contract soldier'. Matthew Green A 47-year-old from London, who retired as a Staff Sergeant six months ago. He said: 'I want to fight for diplomacy. 'I think the British military are stuck and I'm sure we would send our men if we could. It's the perfect timing for me as I was discharged six months ago. 'I have no connection with Ukraine or Russia, but I want to do my part.' Alex Pickett A 32-year-old from Andover, Hants, who works in private security. He said: 'I will do whatever I can in whatever way I can. 'I'm just slowly getting my affairs in order so that I can go when they tell me. I'm non-military, but I'm an Englishman. 'I'm a free man who is fighting for a free world and is willing to do his part. 'All it takes for evil to prevail is for good men to do nothing.' Antony Zamparelli A father-of-seven who served in the Army but has never been in a conflict. Mr Zamparelli told GB News he was willing to die for the Ukrainian cause and urged other Brits to 'go to Ukraine if you're willing to fight for freedom'. Akos Horvadh A 28-year-old Hungarian man living in the UK. He says he is nervous about telling his parents but is adamant about going to fight. Akos said: 'I'm Hungarian. Ukraine is my neighbour. I can't stand to see what goes on there. 'As I see it, what they really need is people to go there and fight. I have a little experience. I know how to use a gun. 'If I go there there is a chance I could die. But that's the truth of war. I could die, lose my limbs, I'm aware. But someone needs to go.' Advertisement Others to arrive at the embassy to volunteer included Akos Horvadh. The 28-year-old says he is nervous about telling his parents but is adamant about going to fight. Akos said: 'I'm Hungarian. Ukraine is my neighbour. I can't stand to see what goes on there. 'As I see it, what they really need is people to go there and fight. I have a little experience. I know how to use a gun. 'If I go there there is a chance I could die. But that's the truth of war. I could die, lose my limbs, I'm aware. But someone needs to go.' Though many who have arrived at the embassy have no previous combat experience, one man to volunteer, Jason Luck, does. Jason Luck, who has family in Mykolaiv, a city near the Black Sea in southern Ukraine, served for 12 years in the British Army. He is due to fly out on Wednesday. He said: 'My family are in Ukraine. They're in the east of the country. I've got my partner, her boy, my daughter. 'Fighting isn't my priority. My family is my priority. I live in Surrey but go back and forwards. First it was the pandemic, now this idiot [Putin].' Jason, who is in his late 40s, refused the offer from Ukrainian authorities to pay for his flights. 'I'm going out Wednesday. I need to. I'm really worried. I've got a twisted feeling in my stomach,' he said. 'I want to go out there to protect my city. I don't want to end up in Kyiv. I want to be near my family. That's why I'm here. 'I don't want to join Ukrainian regular forces. This is why I'm here to explain to them. I'm happy to fight but I want to be there for my family.' Matthew Green, 47, from London, who retired as a Staff Sergeant six months ago, said: 'I want to fight for diplomacy. 'I think the British military are stuck and I'm sure we would send our men if we could. It's the perfect timing for me as I was discharged six months ago. 'I have no connection with Ukraine or Russia, but I want to do my part. Alex Pickett, 32, from Andover, Hants, who works in private security, said: 'I will do whatever I can in whatever way I can. 'I'm just slowly getting my affairs in order so that I can go when they tell me. I'm non-military, but I'm an Englishman. 'I'm a free man who is fighting for a free world and is willing to do his part. 'All it takes for evil to prevail is for good men to do nothing. 'I'm just a normal Englishman, I've got a basic firearm skill and I'm reasonably fit. 'My heart is in the right place and that is the only reason why I'm doing this.' If the 'Lads' Army' are given the green light to fight in Ukraine, they will be joined by more than 150 British ex-paratroopers who fought in Afghanistan are now on their way to Ukraine to battle Putin's forces. Dozens of former Special Forces soldiers from Britain are also said to be heading out there to fight for Ukraine, including a crack team of retired SAS fighters who are on their way to join the war on the side of the Ukrainians. Ukrainian expats living in Britain are also heading back to their home country to fight against Putin's invaders. Meanwhile, military supply stores in the UK are said to be kitting out volunteers - with some even offering 50 per cent discounts for those heading out to Ukraine. Yesterday, as the fighting raged on in cities such as Kyiv and Kharkiv, Defence Secretary Ben Wallace and a No 10 spokesman both appeared to contradict Liz Truss, who gave her backing to Britons who wanted to join the resistance movement. In a surprising comment, the Foreign Secretary said she 'won't oppose' British nationals who travel to Ukraine to fight the Russian invasion. But Mr Wallace urged Britons not to join the fighting, particularly those without military experience, saying that the 'very dangerous' situation could lead to them being killed. The comments came as a former defence minister today said the Government should issue clear advice that Britons should not go to Ukraine to fight. The British Army meanwhile are warning UK soldiers 'on or off leave' not to take up arms against Russia over fears that the sight of British insignias could spark a major escalation in the conflict. Hundreds of troops have expressed interest in answering a request from Kyiv for international volunteers, it is believed, but commanders have told them not to sign up. They cannot stop retired personnel from travelling to eastern Europe, but full-time and reserve troops have received a stern warning not to take part in the conflict. One brigadier said he heard talk that some soldiers were considering going Awol to join the fight, The Times reports. But a post on the Army's internal messaging service read: 'There has been some recent media coverage relating to foreigners being welcomed into Ukraine to help fight against Russia. 'To be clear, as members of the British Army, you are not authorised to travel to Ukraine to support the ongoing conflict against Russia in any form, whether you are on leave or not. 'Please remain professional and focused on your duty and your team.' Despite the warning, a military source has said that 150 of former paratroopers were on their way to Poland. Shane, 34, a former sniper with the Princess of Wales's Royal Regiment, said Ms Truss' comments on Sunday were 'the green light' Ukraine's president Volodomyr Zelensky said he was forming his country's own foreign legion to fight Russia. Several thousand people have volunteered to join the force, deputy defence minister Hanna Malyar said. Among them are reportedly a group of SAS veterans eager to defend Ukraine. According to The Mirror, the retired UK special forces soldiers have volunteered for missions deep inside Ukraine to back up the country's defence. The veterans, aged between 40 and 60, have had meetings to discuss signing up for the dangerous mission, backing up Ukrainians in combat. Key to their operation is among them there are highly-trained snipers and experts in the use of anti-aircraft and anti-tank missiles. It comes as lawyers warned that Britons leaving to fight in Ukraine could face legal action on their return under UK terror laws. However they said prosecutions would likely be a 'non-starter' - pointing to those who avoided legal action for fighting against for Kurdish militias against ISIS. Under the UK's Terrorism Act 2000, terrorism is described as the use or threat of violence, to influence a government or the public, 'for the purpose of advancing a political, religious, racial or ideological cause'. Jonathan Hall QC, the Independent Reviewer of Terrorism Legislation, said fighting in Ukraine would be captured by the definition. He told The Independent: 'Russia's aggression against the international legal order, and the importance of supporting Ukraine, makes any support for foreign fighters who want to travel to Ukraine at first glance attractive. 'Given the government's apparent support, prosecution of foreign fighters against Russia under terrorism legislation appears to be a non-starter even if the broad statutory definition of terrorism is satisfied in these cases. 'But there is always the possibility of less desirable cases at the edges - individuals who travel to Ukraine under false pretence either to support Russia or fight with an ideological group such as the [neo-Nazi] Azov battalion.' British authorities have previously tried to prosecute British fighters who took up arms against ISIS in Syria. Ex-paratrooper Daniel Burke originally fought against ISIS with the Kurdish People's Protection Units (YPG) between late 2017 and June 2018. No action was taken at the time. But he was later prosecuted for 'preparing acts of terrorism' after allegedly attempting to return to support the YPG against an invasion by Turkish-led forces in 2019. Defence Secretary Ben Wallace (pictured left) said he didn't 'want to see British people killed any more than I want to see Ukrainians' and asked people who were not properly trained or an 'experienced member of an armed forced' not to join the war in Ukraine. Foreign Secretary Liz Truss (pictured right) said the UK will back Britons going to fight in Ukraine Volodymyr Zelensky has warned that Ukraine faces a 'crucial' 24 hours as Russia throws even more ground forces at Kyiv More than 150 former British paratroopers who fought in Afghanistan are now on their way to Ukraine to battle Putin's forces More than 150 British ex paratroopers who fought in Afghanistan are now on their way to Ukraine to battle Putin's forces - after Army chiefs banned serving UK soldiers from the warzone. Whitehall officials are scrambling to determine the Government's policy after Foreign Secretary Liz Truss said she would support British nationals who chose to fight alongside Ukrainian forces against the Russian invasion on Sunday. Her comments went against Foreign Office travel advice, while Defence Secretary Ben Wallace and a No 10 spokesman also both appeared to contradict Ms Truss yesterday. Hundreds of troops have expressed interest in answering a request from Kyiv for international volunteers, it is believed, but commanders have told them not to sign up. They cannot stop retired personnel from travelling to eastern Europe, but full-time and reserve troops have received a stern warning not to take part in the conflict. One brigadier said he heard talk that some soldiers were considering going Awol to join the fight, The Times reports. But a post on the Army's internal messaging service read: 'There has been some recent media coverage relating to foreigners being welcomed into Ukraine to help fight against Russia. 'To be clear, as members of the British Army, you are not authorised to travel to Ukraine to support the ongoing conflict against Russia in any form, whether you are on leave or not. 'Please remain professional and focused on your duty and your team.' Despite this, a military source has said that 150 of former paratroopers were on their way to Poland. Shane, 34, a former sniper with the Princess of Wales's Royal Regiment, said Ms Truss' comments on Sunday were 'the green light' Ukraine's president Volodomyr Zelensky said he was forming his country's own foreign legion to fight Russia. Several thousand people have volunteered to join the force, deputy defence minister Hanna Malyar said yesterday. Advertisement However the charges were later dropped against Burke and two other men following a review by the Crown Prosecution Service. Yesterday Defence Secretary Ben Wallace and a No 10 spokesman both appeared to contradict Foreign Secretary Liz Truss, who yesterday gave her backing to Britons who wanted to join the resistance movement. Mr Wallace said he didn't 'want to see British people killed any more than I want to see Ukrainians' and asked people who were not properly trained or an 'experienced member of an armed forced' not to join the war in Ukraine. The Russian invasion of Ukraine was 'very dangerous', Mr Wallace told Sky News, and there were 'better ways' to support the country. Asked if the Prime Minister supported Ms Truss's remarks, a No 10 spokesman said yesterday the travel advice was not to go to Ukraine. He added: 'We think the best way of helping now is ensuring Putin fails.' As the debate continued, today former defence minister Kevan Jones told MailOnline that the Government needs to issue clear advice that Britons should not go to Ukraine to fight. The Labour MP flagged the risk that people could either get captured by Russian forces, or hamper the Ukrainian resistance because they are not properly trained. 'Following the Foreign Secretary's comments the government needs urgently to clarify the position,' he said. 'Not only in terms of the legal position but also whether it could endanger the individuals and hamper the resistance rather than help it no matter how well intentioned.' Meanwhile, one British military store is reportedly giving discounts to Britons wishing to join Ukraine in its fight against Russia. Damon Warren, a 52-year-old ex-soldier who owns Folkestone's G4 Echelon Military Supplies in Kent, is said to be giving 50 per cent discount to both Ukrainians and any British veterans seeking to help them. However Mr Warren said he had been turning away Britons who were not veterans because those with neither military experience nor the ability to speak Ukrainian would be 'more of a liability than a help'. One person visiting his store yesterday was Andrew Lester, a 25-year-old electrician from Kent who served in the Parachute Regiment till last July. He told the Telegraph: 'The Ukrainians are really doing quite well, I think. 'They're holding out. If they need a few more blokes to push them back, then that's what we're here for.' Yesterday, as the fighting raged on, nine Ukrainians left England heading off to war in three equipment-laden SUVs. They left from Kensington's Ukrainian Social Club, where Britons had been appearing throughout the day to volunteer to fight against Putin. The cars were laden with body armour, rucksacks and piles of Boots bags packed with bandages, nappies, medicine and toothbrushes. Yesterday nine Ukrainians left England heading off to war in three equipment-laden SUVs They left from Kensington's Ukrainian Social Club, where Britons had been appearing throughout the day to volunteer to fight against Putin The cars were laden with body armour, rucksacks and piles of Boots bags packed with bandages, nappies, medicine and toothbrushes Lawyer warns Britons could face prosecution under terror laws for joining Ukraine's fight against Russia - but says legal action is likely a 'non-starter' Lawyers have warnet Britons leaving to fight in Ukraine that they could face legal action on their return under terror laws. However they say prosecutions would likely be a 'non-starter' - pointing to those who avoided legal action for fighting against for Kurdish militias against ISIS. Under the UK's Terrorism Act 2000, terrorism is described as the use or threat of violence, to influence a government or the public, 'for the purpose of advancing a political, religious, racial or ideological cause'. Jonathan Hall QC, the Independent Reviewer of Terrorism Legislation, said fighting in Ukraine would be captured by the definition. He told The Independent: 'Russia's aggression against the international legal order, and the importance of supporting Ukraine, makes any support for foreign fighters who want to travel to Ukraine at first glance attractive. 'Given the government's apparent support, prosecution of foreign fighters against Russia under terrorism legislation appears to be a non-starter even if the broad statutory definition of terrorism is satisfied in these cases. 'But there is always the possibility of less desirable cases at the edges - individuals who travel to Ukraine under false pretence either to support Russia or fight with an ideological group such as the [neo-Nazi] Azov battalion.' British authorities have previously tried to prosecute British fighters who took up arms against ISIS in Syria. Ex-paratrooper Daniel Burke originally fought against ISIS with the Kurdish People's Protection Units (YPG) between late 2017 and June 2018. No action was taken at the time. But he was later prosecuted for 'preparing acts of terrorism' after allegedly attempting to return to support the YPG against an invasion by Turkish-led forces in 2019. However the charges were later dropped against Burke and two other men following a review by the Crown Prosecution Service. He was one of a string of fighters to face unsuccessful prosecutions for fighting against ISIS. Almost all terror charges were dropped before trial or ended in acquittals. Advertisement One - called Vladimir - 44, said: 'I am going to fight for Ukraine, to protect Ukraine, to defend Ukraine.' Another in their party, a Russian called Denis, 33, who worked with the fighters, was helping to ferry equipment to Ukraine. He said: 'They have families here, they know what they have to do. They are just going to their home. If they support it they will fight. 'They just want to go to their home and help their families. They just want to go to their home.' He said he would stop at the border and not fight, but would help them take equipment across. Cars carried provisions alongside helmets, sleeping mats, armoured vests and binoculars. Angela, 47, said: 'I don't know if I will fight but I will try to help the innocents. 'It's very important. When you see people who die you think we can help here with the money from England, but we don't have the people.' In a touching scene, they were helped by 28 year old engineer Harry Wright from Dagenham, east London, before he volunteered himself. Father-of-two Harry, who has three-and-four-year old girls, said: 'I want to stop it from spreading. Stop letting Putin get that power.' Jimmy Butt, a forklift driver from Wolverhampton, has relatives who are 'cut off' in Ukraine. He said: 'My friends are not really taking me seriously with it. Think I'm blowing off steam. 'I want to try and do something worthwhile, something beyond myself while I'm still able to do it. 'This is bigger than anything. I'm willing to sacrifice for something I see as greater.' As their passports were checked and the Ukrainians tried to force more equipment into the boots of their cars, onlookers said it felt like a First World War spirit as they watched them go off to war. They are getting a ferry and then driving across Europe to the Polish border. It comes as MailOnline reported on Britons already in Ukraine joining the fight against Russia. Shaun Pinner, 48, an ex-soldier with a Ukrainian wife who is already on the front lines, and Antony Zamparelli, a father-of-seven who served in the Army but has never been in a conflict, are among those from the UK to have said they will fight. Others include Aiden Aslin, 28, an ex-carer who previously fought ISIS in Syria, as well as a team of 60 British former Army and Special Forces soldiers that have been gathered by Mamuka Mamulashvili, 43, commander of the Georgian National Legion. Advertisement Body modification enthusiasts have spent hundreds of thousands of dollars in a bid to change their entire appearance with extreme tattoos and piercings. From a non-binary 'human dragon' who spent more than $83,500 on modification surgeries including ear removal and tongue splitting to a tattoo artist who has had his nose widened and huge tusks implants in his mouth in order to look like an Orc from Lord of the Rings. Another enthusiast, a father, is nicknamed the 'skull of two faces' for his large swathes of facial tattoos and implants in his forehead. And another, known as 'human satan' has had his nose removed and even had surgery to get rid of one of his middle fingers in a bid to look more devil-like. One 20-year-old woman has had more than 40 more modifications including over 20 facial piercings, 12 scarifications, two brandings, six subdermal implants and tattooed eyeballs, in her quest to change her appearance. Scarifications involve cutting the skin with designs or words in order to create a permanent scar resembling a tattoo and subdermal implants are an implant which is placed just underneath the skin so the shape of it can be seen protruding. The Human Dragon Pictured: Tiamat Legion Medusa, 60, from Texas, who was born Richard Hernandez, had a dream about a snake bite in the 1980s, which they believe turned them into a 'reptoid', leading to the dramatic physical transformation Pictured: Tiamat Legion Medusa before and after their various modifications. Legion has since spent more than $83,500 (61,000) on modification surgeries including ear removal, tongue splitting, castration and countless tattoos and are nowhere near finished They have since spent more than $83,500 (61,000) on modification surgeries including ear removal, tongue splitting, castration and countless tattoos and are nowhere near finished Tiamat Legion Medusa, 60, from Texas, who was born Richard Hernandez, had a dream about a snake bite in the 1980s, which they believe turned them into a 'reptoid', leading to the dramatic physical transformation. They have since spent more than $83,500 (61,000) on modification surgeries including ear removal, tongue splitting, castration and countless tattoos and are nowhere near finished. They hope to add 'horns' to their head and plan to have their remaining six teeth removed in order to get a full set of dental implants designed to look like dragon's teeth something they described as an 'immediate priority.' They are also planning to have a penectomy removing their penis entirely in a bid to become 'the world's first and only genderless dragon.' For Legion, it all began back in the 1980s when they were in their 20s, when they had a dream that had a 'very profound' effect on their life. Legion said: '[In the dream] I found myself surrounded by snakes, of all colors and the snakes were all biting me and I was very much afraid, but as the dream went on and they kept on biting me, I could see that I was not being hurt by them or their bites' Legion believes they are 'a real and true life reptoid, a half-human/half-reptilian creature'. For Legion, it all began back in the 1980s when they were in their 20s, when they had a dream that had a 'very profound' effect on their life. Legion said: '[In the dream] I found myself surrounded by snakes, of all colors and the snakes were all biting me and I was very much afraid, but as the dream went on and they kept on biting me, I could see that I was not being hurt by them or their bites. 'It was when I realized this that my fear began to subside and I felt safe and at peace and I was not afraid of the snakes, then I woke up. Legion believes they will finally be finished with their transformation by 2025, at which time they hope to be fully happy with their appearance 'I can still recall the dream so vividly as if it happened last night, and it was then that I knew there was an important message for me in my dream it was an omen that I was one of them, a sign of things to come in my life. 'Today I believe that when those snakes were biting me in my dream that they were in effect injecting me with their venom as a way to give me that venom making me like them, which is why today I am a venom-spitting dragon, as opposed to being a fire-breathing dragon like many people incorrectly assume.' Legion believes they will finally be finished with their transformation by 2025, at which time they hope to be fully happy with their appearance. Orc Pictured: Rico Ledesma, 41, who lives in Brazil with his wife Krishna Insomnia, 25, and their daughter has spent year on his look which is complete with 400 fake fanged teeth which he admits makes it difficult for him to chew Pictured: 3D illustration of a mythical Orc creature often found in fantasy literature and games Rico Ledesma, 41, who lives in Brazil with his wife Krishna Insomnia, 25, and their daughter has spent year on his look which is complete with 400 fake fanged teeth which he admits makes it difficult for him to chew. Tattoos cover 85 per cent of Rico's body, while he also has eight subdermal piercings (those placed under the skin), as well as a tongue split and his eyeballs tattooed. And although the large number of modifications he has undergone would usually cost thousands, they have actually cost him almost nothing as his wife does the majority of them. 'I started to change seven years ago in order to look different but the project to look like an Orc is less than a year old,' Rico said. 'I got six false teeth placed in August 2020 and I'm going to put two bigger ones in, even though I'm having trouble eating and drinking. Tattoos cover 85 per cent of Rico's body, while he also has eight subdermal piercings (those placed under the skin), as well as a tongue split and his eyeballs tattooed And although the large number of modifications he has undergone would usually cost thousands, they have actually cost him almost nothing as his wife does the majority of them 'The new Orc modification project consisted of the implantation of two more tusks (two large teeth), body paintings which are almost all in black with some grey spots and some burns and modifications. 'Today I have 85 percent of my body tattooed. 'The teeth were the final touch to the Orc project and came after a lot of study and sleepless nights.' Rico had his teeth done by a dental professional who 'embraced' the project and the pair figured out how to make it viable. 'She did a perfect job and I've already scheduled in with her again for the next mission,' he said. At the start of April, Rico widened his nasal septum to 'perfect' the image of the Orc, which was done with the help of a scalpel. 'I started to change seven years ago in order to look different but the project to look like an Orc is less than a year old,' Rico said. Pictured: Rico with his wife and daughter The couple are now expecting their second child together and Rico says his family and friends love his new look - even his daughter He's also had a black tattoo done to complement his Orc look, which he says was 'the most time-consuming and one of the painful parts' of his transformation He said: 'She loves and supports me in all my transformations. 'If one day in the very distant future she wants to make some changes to her appearance too, I will be proud of her' He met his wife, body-piercing professional Krishna who also goes by the name of Bat on the internet He's also had a black tattoo done to complement his Orc look, which he says was 'the most time-consuming and one of the painful parts' of his transformation. He met body-piercing professional Krishna who also goes by the name of Bat on the internet. The couple are now expecting their second child together and Rico says his family and friends love his new look - even his daughter. He said: 'She loves and supports me in all my transformations. 'If one day in the very distant future she wants to make some changes to her appearance too, I will be proud of her.' Human Satan Michel Faro do Prado, 44, from Praia Grande coast near Sao Paulo, is known as the 'human satan' thanks to his extensive body modifications and devilish appearance The tattoo artist has been practising his trade for 25 years but has gone one step further to undergo several procedures and completely transform his aesthetic Michel Faro do Prado, 44, from Praia Grande coast near Sao Paulo, is known as the 'human satan' thanks to his extensive body modifications and devilish appearance. The tattoo artist has been practising his trade for 25 years but has gone one step further to undergo several procedures and completely transform his aesthetic. The removal of one of his middle fingers is not the first experience Michel has of cutting off body parts. Last year, he claimed to have been the third person in the world to have the end of his nose removed, in a procedure which is highly dangerous and for which the long-term health risks are unknown. He also has four horns on either side of his head and several implants under the skin of his forehead. The removal of one of his middle fingers is not the first experience Michel has of cutting off body parts Last year, he claimed to have been the third person in the world to have the end of his nose removed, in a procedure which is highly dangerous and for which the long-term health risks are unknown Pictured: Michel Faro do Prado also known as Diabao Praddo before and after his body modifications Most of his body is also covered in tattoos, including his eyeballs. His wife specialises in body modifications and has also helped him achieve his unique look. 'I have been a tattoo artist for 25 years, most of my tattoos I get from tattoo artists and professionals who I have paid,' he told Jam Press. 'I focus on blackwork and brutal tattoos, which are types of tattoos where you ink a large part of your body. 'But my wife has specialised in the area of modifications and the idea is for me to become her masterpiece when it comes to tattooing!' He also has four horns on either side of his head and several implants under the skin of his forehead He said: 'Actually I have a good resistance to pain, I don't think anything is so painful, I suffer a lot more in the post-procedures than at the time' Michel claims to have a high pain tolerance and doesn't mind enduring more pain to achieve the body he desires. He said: 'Actually I have a good resistance to pain, I don't think anything is so painful, I suffer a lot more in the post-procedures than at the time. 'And the truth is that there are changes that without anaesthesia would be almost impossible to be done, I would love not to feel any pain. 'But if I have to feel pain, to achieve what I want, for sure I will face it!' The skull of two faces Colombian Raiden Dos Caras had his first tattoo when he was just 12 years old and has since undergone 20 body modifications Pictured: 'The skull of two faces' before and after his 20 body modifications. The enthusiast revealed that because he has now undergone so many procedures that anaesthesia doesn't have the same effect so he feels an immense about of pain while going through them Colombian Raiden Dos Caras had his first tattoo when he was just 12 years old and has since undergone 20 body modifications. Nicknamed the 'skull of two faces' Raiden has lost count of how much all of the modifications, including tongue splitting and ear removal, has cost him. The father aims to become the most modified person in Latin America. But the enthusiast revealed that because he has now undergone so many procedures that anaesthesia doesn't have the same effect so he feels an immense about of pain while going through them. He told Blesk: 'I have undergone so many procedures that anesthesia no longer has the same strength, so I feel great pain'. He and his wife Angie Katherin have a three-year-old daughter, Alice. In addition, the Colombian has a stepdaughter, Mariana, who is eight years old. Although the couple is now happy in the relationship, they admit that they faced problems when they first got together because of Raiden's unique appearance. He and his wife Angie Katherin have a three-year-old daughter, Alice. In addition, the Colombian has a stepdaughter, Mariana, who is eight years old He told Blesk : 'I have undergone so many procedures that anesthesia no longer has the same strength, so I feel great pain Pictured: Raiden Dos Caras with his wife, Angie and daughter, Alice The woman with tattooed eyeballs Chiara, 18, also known as Aydin Mod, is from Rome and got her first piercing when she was 11 years old Since then she has had a further 40 modifications including 20 facial piercings, 12 scarifications, two brandings, six subdermal implants andn tattooed eyeballs Chiara, 18, also known as Aydin Mod, is from Rome and got her first piercing when she was 11 years old. Since then she has had a further 40 modifications including 20 facial piercings, 12 scarifications, two brandings, six subdermal implants andn tattooed eyeballs. She told the Metro: 'My need for modification is not dictated by the need for attention or to be seen at all costs. It's a personal need. 'If I didn't feel at peace with myself I wouldn't keep doing this. This is all very natural to me, I don't have regrets.' Most of the piercings Chiara has undergone were done either by herself or her boyfriend Michele. And Michele even tattooed her eyeballs - the first time he had ever done such a procedure. Most of the piercings Chiara has undergone were done either by herself or her boyfriend Michele. And Michele even tattooed her eyeballs - the first time he had ever done such a procedure Pictured: Chiara before and after her various body modifications Chiara has even undergone labia stretching - lengthening the inner lips of the vagina through manual pulling Her boyfriend Michele said: 'My favourite modification that I've done on her is a project that we had for quite a while. A little, intimate project' Her mother Samantha says she is supportive of her daughter's choices but just worries how others will perceive her Chiara has even undergone labia stretching - lengthening the inner lips of the vagina through manual pulling. Michele told the publication: 'My favourite modification that I've done on her is a project that we had for quite a while. A little, intimate project. 'We stretched her labia minora and later we put some implants on her labia majora. But I think in the end, after some ups and downs, she's happy with it.' Chiara added: 'I have a bit of a limp, but whatever.' Her mother Samantha says she is supportive of her daughter's choices but just worries how others will perceive her. A former soldier is suing the Ministry of Defence claiming his career was ended after he sustained a 'non-impact cold injury' and was told to 'man the f**** up' after complaining about the temperature during a combat training exercise. Benard Iyegudu says he was left permanently disabled after being made to lie on wet and cold ground during a 'command leadership course' at Longmoor, in Hampshire, in November 2018. But he claims that when he complained about feeling severe cold after his 'non-waterproof' combat smock 'wetted out', he was simply told to 'man the f*** up' by a corporal helping to run the course. Hours after he complained a second time, Mr Iyegudu, who served with the Royal Logistical Corps, was given medical treatment after insisting he could not continue with the training course. Mr Iyegudu, 40, says he suffered a 'non-freezing cold injury' which has left him more vulnerable to chilly temperatures in both his hands and feet, leading to him having to leave the Army. His barrister told London's High Court that the claimant's 'African ethnicity' led to him being at a 'greater risk' of developing such an injury. He is suing the Ministry of Defence for more than 1.5m in compensation, but the MoD is contesting his claim, denying negligence and questioning the size of the payout he could be due. Benard Iyegudu, 40, who served with the Royal Logistics Corps, says he was left permanently disabled after being made to lie on wet and cold ground during a 'command leadership course' at Longmoor, in Hampshire, in November 2018 It is claimed that this was the site of the 'command leadership course' at the MoD base in Longmoor, Hampshire, that saw Mr Iyegudu sustain his alleged cold-related injury According to court documents, Mr Iyegudu was taking part in a gruelling leadership course, during which he had to lie 'prone on the ground' in wet and cold conditions, when he claims he was injured. He claims his clothing quickly became soaked through, but his complaints fell on deaf ears. 'He complained to a female corporal who was a member of the directing staff and head of his team,' says his barrister, Christopher Barnes. 'She advised him to hold his rifle with both hands and told him to "man the f**** up".' Later on, his symptoms worsened as he took turns doing guard duty overnight, but when he complained to another NCO he was told to 'carry on.' Study claims a soldier's ethnicity CAN affect the chance of developing and the severity of 'cold-related injuries' Due to his Nigerian heritage, Mr Iyegudu was more vulnerable than others to developing a cold-related injury, said his barrister, Christopher Barnes. 'As a man of black African ethnicity, he would have been at a greater risk of developing a non-freezing cold injury than others serving in the Army,' he explained. And research published in 2009 in the National Library for Medicine supports this claim. A study comparing the impact and severity of peripheral cold injuries on different ethnic origins of male British Army soldiers stated those of an African-American background were more severely affected by cold injury. Its conclusion read: 'Young male African Americans in the British Army are at 30 times greater chance of developing peripheral cold injury and are more severely affected than their Caucasian counterparts following similar climatic exposure, using similar clothing and equipment.' Advertisement However, a few hours later he had to be taken for medical treatment as he couldn't continue. Even after he was medically 'downgraded' due to his injury, he 'continued to be exposed to cold conditions,' Mr Barnes continued. A year later, he was ordered to work in a warehouse with a broken heating system, and he also took part in another gruelling winter exercise where he had to stand guard at night, campaign in the field for five days, and sleep out under a poncho, he says. Mr Barnes said his condition has made him extra vulnerable to the cold, while any prolonged extreme weather exposure can make his symptoms far worse. It has also led to 'significant psychological problems' and has hampered his ability to work. Mr Iyegudu, who was in the Royal Logistical Corps when he was injured, had enlisted in February 2013, serving for seven years before he was slated for medical discharge in October 2020. Due to his Nigerian heritage, Mr Iyegudu was more vulnerable than others to developing a cold-related injury, said his barrister. 'As a man of black African ethnicity, he would have been at a greater risk of developing a non-freezing cold injury than others serving in the Army,' he explained. This increased risk had been logged by military medics since the 1982 Falklands Islands war, he added, and Army chiefs were well aware of the need for educating soldiers about the risks. His lawyers say those in command failed to warn him about those potential hazards, provide the right cold weather gear, monitor his condition, or even lay on 'adequate and sufficient hot food and drinks on a regular basis'. They allege negligence by the MOD, which is disputing both liability and the level of compensation claimed. In its written defence to the action, the MOD says a risk assessment would have been carried out to ensure the weather was suitable for the exercise. Mr Iyegudu is suing the Ministry of Defence for more than 1.5m in compensation, but the MoD is contesting his claim at London's High Court (above), denying negligence and questioning the size of the payout he could be due He was issued with standard Army kit, which was 'suitable and sufficient' for the environment, with adequately insulated boots. He also would have had foot care explained to him during basic training and given a leaflet detailing the dangers of non-freezing cold injury. MoD barrister Andrew Ward also says it is disputed whether he had actually complained of the cold during the exercise or was spoken to in the way he claims. 'It is not admitted that the chain of command spoke to him in the terms alleged and he is required to prove the matter,' he says. Mr Iyegudu's case reached London's High Court as lawyers on both sides discussed how the trial - fixed for spring next year - should best be managed. The case is one of many currently before the High Court, with the MoD potentially facing a compensation bill running to many millions for former servicemen who claim to have sustained cold-related injuries. Advertisement The Met Office has warned that temperatures across the UK will plummet from 12C to -2C with icy conditions predicted for next week and up to 25mm of rain expected in some parts of the country. As the weekend approaches, the mild and cloudy conditions seen across much of the UK over the past few days will be replaced by clear and colder conditions, bringing about wide set frost. The Met Office said temperatures will drop from the current height of 12C on Wednesday and Thursday to as low as -2C on Friday night into Saturday morning. The colder conditions are set to continue into early next week with a few wintry showers expected in the east while frost has been predicted for much of the country. The Met Office said it was too early to predict snow for next week, and no warnings are currently in place, but forecasters said there was a chance showers - expected to bring about 25mm of rain to certain parts of the country - will come in behind the colder temperatures, creating icy conditions. It was a cloudy and wet start across many parts of the UK today and those conditions will spready slowly north before fine conditions come in later, according to the Met Office. Temperatures will remain mild but are not predicted to go above 12C. It was a frosty but clear start for most in Scotland this morning but it is expected to slowly cloud over from the south later as rain arrives, before turning milder and breezier. Tonight, most parts of the UK are expected to remain cloudy with a chance of rain, drizzle and extensive hill fog, according to the Met Office. Temperatures are not predicted to get above 5C. Rain is expected to arrive across west Wales during the second half of the night. This follows a yellow warning for fog which was in place across the whole of the South West and the southern coast of Wales, including Cardiff, between 5am and 11am. The Met Office said the conditions would create 'difficult' driving conditions and potentially lead to flight delays. Commuters in London walk through the rain after experiencing disruption on the underground due to industrial action The Met Office issued a yellow weather warning for the South West and south Wales on Wednesday morning between 5am and 11am Many parts of the UK experienced a wet start to Thursday, including in Dunsden, Oxfordshire, where a car is driven through a flooded country lane Commuters walk through the rain in London on Wednesday morning. Drier, but colder, conditions are expected as the week goes on A cyclist rides with an umbrella outside Parliament buildings on a rainy day in London. Rain is predicted today and tomorrow but is expected to make way for colder conditions later this week Pedestrians shelter from the wind as they walk close to Parliament buildings in London on Wednesday afternoon Heading into Thursday, a slow moving band of cloud and rain is due to sweep over the UK, from Scotland to central southern England. Forecasters say conditions will be dry with sunny spells and light winds through the day, while the windy conditions in the north are expected to ease. On Friday, a slow moving band of cloud and rain is expected in the east, with the best of the brightness predicted in the west. Into the weekend, much of the UK is set for drier, colder conditions while some showers are forecast in the east. From Friday, temperatures are expected to drop as low as -2C for most areas during the night, and are not expected to get much above 12C during day time. Yesterday, the Met Office said the UK was set for a damp and dull start to spring, with rain and cloud cover set to spread across the country this week - but the month of March is set to be drier than normal with some sun and above average temperatures predicted. Tuesday marked the first day of meteorological spring which every year starts on March 1 and ends on May 31. Some parts of the UK are still recovering from the effects of three named storms in the space of three weeks which brought heavy rain and localised flooding As the week goes on, temperatures are set to drop while a cold weekend has been predicted by the Met Office Forecasters say temperatures this weekend could drop to as low as 28F (-2C) on Friday night for certain parts of the country London commuters were forced to find alternative transport this morning due to industrial action on the underground network Moving through the weekend, conditions are expected to be cold and dry for many areas, although it will get cloudier with a chance of patchy rain in the south and west. The Met Office said a few wintry showers are likely in the east, and with conditions expected to be colder for most with 'brisk winds', there is a chance of some icy conditions. Looking further forward, high pressure over the south is likely to bring settled and dry weather, with the northwest at the greatest risk of 'unsettled spells', the Met Office said. Forecasters say temperatures are expected to be around or just above average for many parts of the UK. The Met Office said March is likely to remain mild but some brief colder spells have been predicted. Despite the improved weather predicted for much of the country, the Environment Agency has issued nine flood warnings after recent weeks of high winds and heavy rain, with many parts of the UK still under water. These warnings are in place at Chertsey Bourne, the River Pang from East Ilsley to Pangbourne and Sulham Brook, the River Severn in Gloucestershire, the Rive Thame and Chalgrove Brook, the Severn estuary from Gloucester to Sharpness, south east Somerset rivers and upper reaches, Tern and Perry catchments, Tidal Thames riverside from Putney Bridge to Teddington Weir and Upper River Wey. Police are growing increasingly concerned for the welfare of two teenage schoolgirl who have been missing since yesterday. Alicia, aged 15, and Miley, aged 13, both from Broxbourne, were last seen on Tuesday morning. The are known to frequent the Romford area. Alicia is described as mixed race, 5ft 10ins tall, of medium build, with black curly hair. Schoolgirls Alicia (left), aged 15, and Miley (right), aged 13, both from Broxbourne, were last seen on Tuesday morning She was last seen wearing a red top, black trousers and dark brown Ugg boots. Miley is described as mixed race, 5ft 4ins tall, of slim build and with shoulder length dark brown hair. She was last seen wearing a black Champion tracksuit. Miley sometimes wears glasses. The police said: 'If you believe you are with either of the girls now, have seen them in the last few moments, or have information about where they have been, please call 999 immediately quoting ISR 30 of 2 March.' Cocaine kingpins codenamed Golden Harbour and Amused Penguin have been jailed after secret phone network EncroChat was compromised by investigators. Niall Chinnock, 49, Zoe Hutson, 35, and Kirt Hutson, 37, were today serving combined sentences of 18 years behind bars after their drug business was exposed. Chinnock - from Wellingborough - used the Golden Harbour identity, to plot with two other profiles named Butch Hippo and Amused Penguin on EncroChat. Until 2020 and its dismantling, the Europe-based message network and service provider used primarily by organized crime members to plan criminal activities. Chinnock bought wholesale amounts of drugs which he supplied onward to other suppliers in Northamptonshire. Between March 31, and May 27, 2020, he bought 6kg of cocaine using EncroChat to arrange the deals. Niall Chinnock, 49, called himself Golden Harbour as he bought drugs in large scale to sell Zoe Hutson, 35, and Kirt Hutson, 37, let Chinnock use their house as his drugs stockroom A block of cocaine worth 80,000 found inside with three further bags of cocaine worth 6k There was 34,000 in cash discovered in the search of the Northamptonshire property He stored his stash at the Hutsons' home and even had his own key to come and go as he pleased. But after the phone network was compromised by the NCA and partner agencies the high-value business was brought to an end. On May 27, 2020, at 11.30am, Chinnock was stopped in a white Peugeot Partner Van off the A45 near Stanwick. Inside were four bags of high-purity cocaine, believed to be samples for his onward suppliers. The National Crime Agency released texts sent by criminals on the EncroChat system which showed how worried they were about facing justice What is the 'EncroChat' smartphone system used by the mafia to move money, drugs and order murders EncroChat was a secret platform where users were able to communicate privately between specially-designed handsets - often to run drugs, traffick people and even order murders. These devices, costing 1,500, are usually Android-based smartphones that had their GPS sensors, microphones, and cameras stripped out, encrypted chat apps installed by default to allow people to sent private messages. It is now emerging that criminal syndicates across the world had one - with one in six of the 60,000 users in the UK. Marketed as the electronic equivalent of two people having a conversation in an empty room, it enabled users to send written messages or make voice calls through an encrypted system. There were thought to be 60,000 users internationally, including 10,000 in the UK, with prices at 1,500 for a six-month contract. The National Crime Agency said the handset could also be wiped remotely. Advertisement Police also seized two mobile phones, one of which was an encrypted device with the ability to use EncroChat. The Hutsons address' was then searched and two rucksacks and a cash counting machine were found on top of a wardrobe in the spare room. Each rucksack contained a safe, one with a kilo block of cocaine worth 80,000 found inside. Also in the rucksacks were three further bags of cocaine worth 6,000, 34,000 in cash, disposable gloves and elastic bands. Found elsewhere in the house were scales, re-sealable 'dealer' bags and smaller amounts of cocaine. Chinnock and both Hutsons pleaded guilty to a conspiracy to supply cocaine at a court hearing in November last year. On Monday at Northampton Crown Court this week (February 28), Chinnock was handed ten years in prison with the other two getting four years apiece. Lead Investigator Hazel Score from the East Midlands Special Operations Unit, said: 'Niall Chinnock used sophisticated means to run his drugs business. 'In a ten-week period he spent over 240,000 on bringing drugs into Northamptonshire to be supplied in the county for profit. 'The Hutsons were important to his operation, allowing him to store his drugs and cash float away from his own address to help him facilitate the sale of this cocaine. 'I hope all three of them use their time inside to reflect on the poor choices they have each made, in order to make better ones when they are eventually released. 'Tackling the supply of drugs will always be a priority for the police and I am pleased that this operation was able to disrupt a persistent and high-volume drug supply network.' ACTRESS and socialite, Lorraine Guyo, who survived a car accident last Friday, has praised God for giving her another chance. The accident occurred in Braeside on her way back from Robert Gabriel Mugabe International Airport. In an interview with H-Metro, she said being alive, after such a terrible accident, was the most precious gift she could ever imagine. I just feel like God gave me another chance to show my talent and to fulfil all the desires of my heart, said Lorraine. I have minor injuries, but I am fine. I didnt seek any psychological help because its unnecessary right now I just need to praise God. I am able to do all my chores and everything on my own. Lorraine said a lot of people didnt expect to see her happy, so soon after the accident. People were surprised to see me at the NAMAs, maybe, they expected me to be down but I know I had genuine reasons to attend the awards. I was given an opportunity to present at the NAMAs, and it was my first time, can anyone skip that golden opportunity? Obviously, I couldnt let that opportunity go. God blessed me with talent and I have to embrace it. I dont think I owe anyone any explanation of what I have to do or not. She added: Right now, I am not even worried about my car that was damaged. I am just grateful that I cheated death and I am here to witness my future. I got time to celebrate with other celebrities and friends at the NAMAs and thats the best thing I could do to ease stress. She also urged people to love one another. I just urge people not to hold grudges, life is too short. We should just learn to love one another and support each other while praising the Lord for the gift of life, she said. H Metro A viral video of Volodymyr Zelensky discussing Ukraine's membership of the EU with a fictional Angela Merkel has resurfaced days after the President issued a call for global leaders to accelerate his country's ascension into the European Union. In the clip from a satire series in 2017, Zelensky is called by the then-German Chancellor who congratulates the country on officially becoming part of the bloc. 'My congratulations,' the actress portraying Merkel says. 'We have decided to take your country to the European Union.' Zelensky, who plays Ukrainian President Vasyl Petrovych Holoborodko in the hit show Servant of the People, jubilantly shouts 'Oh f***!' and expresses his gratitude as triumphant music blares in the background. A viral video of Volodymyr Zelensky discussing Ukraine's membership of the EU with a fictional Angela Merkel has resurfaced days after the President issued a call for global leaders to accelerate his country's ascension into the European Union The joke from Zelensky's own political satire series Servant of the People in 2017 is a pointed reference to the country's long-running ambition to join the EU27 member states But the scenes of delight are quickly cut short as 'Merkel' informs him she had actually meant to call the Montenegrin delegation instead. A visibly furious Zelensky marches off into the distance and even screams 'f*** Putin' as the clip concludes. The joke is a pointed reference to the country's long-running ambition to join the EU27 member states. The clip's resurfacing comes as Zelensky, who was later elected President, continues to push for his country's urgent induction into the European Union. The Ukrainian premier said now was a 'crucial moment to close the long-standing discussion once and for all and decide on Ukraine's members in the EU'. 'My congratulations,' the actress portraying former German Chancellor Angela Merkel (above) says in the viral clip. 'We have decided to take your country to the European Union.' Ukraine's leader Volodymyr Zelensky (above) has pushed for his country's urgent ascension to the European Union and says he has discussed the prospect with the bloc's leaders. He is pictured signing the application for Ukraine's membership of the European Union on Monday Servant of the People is a Ukrainian political comedy and satire series in which Volodymyr Zelensky plays history teacher Vasyl Petrovych Holoborodko who is unexpectedly elected President of Ukraine. After his students share his profane rant about government corruption and launch a viral crowdfunding campaign for his presidential candidacy, Holoborodko (Zelensky) is unwittingly crowned President. The show, created by actor-turned politician Zelensky, ran for three seasons from October 2015 until March 2019. It aired on Netflix and on local and Belarusian television network channels. Just two months later and Zelensky himself won 73.2 per cent of votes and would be elected as the President of Ukraine after running on an anti-corruption ticket. Taking to Twitter to describe a 'new page in the history of our states', President Zelensky pointed to a surge in support from EU leaders in recent days as the Russian invasion of his country stalled. Taking to Twitter to describe a 'new page in the history of our states', President Zelensky pointed to a surge in support from EU leaders in recent days as the Russian invasion of his country stalled. 'This is the beginning of a new page in the history of our states... Ukraine must become part of the EU,' the Ukrainian leader said last week. He later added: 'Ukraine is fighting the invader with weapons in hands, defending its freedom and European future'. Zelenskiys appeal came after a round of calls with senior EU figures, including Italian PM Mario Draghi, French President Emmanuel Macron, European Council President Charles Michel and President of the EU Commission, Ursula von der Leyen. EU officials had dampened Ukraine's hopes that suddenly becoming part of the EU could help it better weather the Russian onslaught and speed up military, financial and political support. This comes after the European Commission chief Ursula von der Leyen's comments appeared to hold out the prospect of Ukraine being admitted. 'They are one of us and we want them in,' she told Euronews in an interview on Sunday, after emphasising existing EU-Ukraine cooperation. After this development on Monday, Volodymyr Zelensky appealed to the European Union 'for the immediate accession of Ukraine via a new special procedure'. But Ms von der Leyen's spokesman walked back her earlier statement and said she had meant Europe 'in general' and there was already a process for joining the bloc. This sentiment was reiterated by the president of the European Council, Charles Michel, who said there were already longstanding disagreements among EU countries on new members joining. Former minister Lord Frost has demanded the Government takes a 'fresh look' at plans to regulate online material over fears it will stifle freedom of speech. He is at the head of Tory opposition to the Online Safety Bill over a section that demands platforms tackle 'legal but harmful' content. They claim that the clause will allow websites to use 'woke' bias in their algorithms and moderation processes to remove points of view that are legitimate. His intervention comes after MPs warned that the bill will not protect the media's freedom of speech because it could allow tech giants to use algorithms to remove journalistic reporting in error. The Bill will compel platforms to material including terrorist promotion and child porn as 'priority' illegal content, meaning they will be forced to protect users from exposure rather than waiting for it to be flagged. The Tory politicians do not oppose this but fear that parts of the bill need revising to avoid possible over-reach. Lord Frost told the Telegraph: 'The Government would be wise to take a fresh look at the Online Safety Bill before beginning discussion in Parliament. Aspects of it present a real risk to freedom of expression in this country.' Lord Frost is at the head of Tory opposition to the Online Safety Bill over a section that demands platforms tackle 'legal but harmful' content. They claim that the clause will allow websites to use 'woke' bias in their algorithms and moderation processes to remove points of view that are legitimate. Steve Baker, another former Brexit minister, added: 'Some people will take offence at more or less anything. Does that make it harmful? Again we see a lack of clarity that could be dangerous.' A government spokesman said: 'This Bill has been subject to pre-legislative scrutiny via a joint committee of both houses. Delaying its introduction will only hold back putting accountability on tech platforms to keep children and the vulnerable safe online.' The legislation is dubbed the Nick Clegg law, as the former deputy prime minister is now vice president for global affairs and communications at Facebook. Children's charities and worried families have long campaigned for social media firms to be prosecuted if they fail to crack down on self-harm material. The calls grew louder after the death of Molly Russell, the 14-year-old who took her own life in 2017 after looking at graphic self-harm images on Instagram. However defenders of free speech are concerned the threat of criminal prosecution could cause tech companies to censor legitimate content, thus stifling public debate on important issues. Introducing criminal liability for tech bosses will increase pressure on the Government to accept recommendations from the Joint Parliamentary Committee which scrutinised the Bill to strengthen the exemption for news publishers. The move is a huge shift in policy by the Government, which had up until now defied calls to make bosses criminally liable for their sites. One Whitehall insider said: 'It had been the sword of Damocles hanging over them. But now it will come into force.' Last month the Commons' Digital, Culture, Media and Sport Committee said the draft legislation was a 'missed opportunity' to properly address a variety of online issues also including abuse faced by journalists. The Bill is neither 'clear nor robust' enough to tackle some forms of illegal content - and would also fail to prevent the sharing of the most 'insidious' images of child abuse and violence against women and girls, it is claimed. Dawn Alford, executive director of the Society of Editors, which represents the UK media, said the draft Bill is 'insufficient to protect freedom of expression' and had to take account of the 'fast nature of today's news process'. The group is concerned that the bill creates a duty of care for major US tech firms such as Google, Facebook and Twitter that could prompt them to bring in new algorithms for removing harmful content from their platforms. This would mean the companies could accidentally remove trusted journalistic content alongside posts that really are harmful unless an exemption for reputable news providers is included in the Bill. Ministers have no 'reliable' estimate for how much it will cost families, firms and the Government itself to hit Net Zero emissions by 2050, MPs have warned in a damning new report. The influential Public Accounts Committee said the Government has 'no clear plan for how the transition to Net Zero will be funded'. The PAC said the Government cannot say with any degree of certainty what the cost of slashing emissions will be amid fears the push to go green will hit consumers in the pocket. MPs also expressed major concerns about the impact the move to Net Zero will have on tax revenues. The committee said Chancellor Rishi Sunak had so far failed to set out how he intends to replace income from taxes like Fuel Duty and Vehicle Excise Duty which will be lost as more people buy electric vehicles. The two taxes generated 37billion for the Treasury in 2019/20 but the PAC said if the current tax system remains the same, those receipts 'will decline towards zero over the next 20 years'. Ministers have no 'reliable' estimate for how much it will cost families, firms and the Government itself to hit Net Zero emissions by 2050, MPs have warned in a damning new report The Public Accounts Committee, chaired by Labour MP Meg Hillier, said the Government has 'no clear plan for how the transition to Net Zero will be funded' The Government has set a legally binding goal to cut greenhouse gases to zero by 2050. The target was enshrined in law in June 2019 and the Government unveiled its Net Zero roadmap in October 2021. However, major questions remain over how much the drive to Net Zero will cost. Hitting the target will mean making massive changes across a variety of areas, from phasing out gas boilers in favour of low-carbon technology like heat pumps to rolling out more electric vehicles and boosting renewable energy production. The Government has committed more than 25billion of funding for Net Zero initiatives up to 2024/25 but the funding situation beyond that remains unclear. Dame Meg Hillier, chairman of the PAC, said: 'Government is relying heavily on rapidly changing consumer behaviours and technological innovations to drive down the costs of green options, but it is not clear how it will support and encourage consumers to purchase greener products or incentivise businesses and drive change. 'Every Government department has a responsibility for delivering policies towards the target of net zero but two years after enshrining the 'Net Zero' by 2050 target in law, the Government has unveiled a plan without answers to the key questions of how it will fund the transition to net zero - including how it replace significant income from taxes such as fuel duty.' The PAC report concluded that the Government has 'no clear plan for how the transition to Net Zero will be funded'. It said the Government's ability to 'track its performance against the 2050 target is hampered by vague performance measures, a lack of overall budget or plans to collate and report what it is spending'. The PAC is demanding a commitment from the Treasury to set out in detail how it will keep track of Net Zero progress. The report expressed concerns about the potential impact on consumers, warning: 'At a time when people are worried about their energy bills, government must be clearer about the costs facing consumers, households and business of achieving its net zero objectives.' MPs also warned there does not appear to be a 'clear plan' from the Treasury on what the push to slash emissions will mean for tax revenues. The Government has a goal of increasing ownership of electric vehicles but the PAC said Mr Sunak had not yet set out what he intends to do about the impact on Fuel Duty and Vehicle Excise Duty. The Government has a goal of increasing ownership of electric vehicles but the PAC said Rishi Sunak had not yet set out what he intends to do about the impact on Fuel Duty and Vehicle Excise Duty The Government has set a legally binding goal to cut greenhouse gases to zero by 2050. The target was enshrined in law in June 2019 and the Government unveiled its Net Zero roadmap in October 2021. The report said: 'Revenues from Fuel Duty and Vehicle Excise Duty amounted to 37billion in 201920, and if the current tax system were to remain unchanged receipts from these taxes will decline towards zero over the next 20 years.' It added: 'We previously reported in 2021 that HM Treasury cannot explain how it will manage declining revenues from consumption of fossil fuels and that it should set out a timetable for how it will consult on options for replacing these. 'Despite committing to write to the Committee in November 2021 with such a roadmap, HM Treasurys response did not provide one.' The PAC also said 'significant uncertainty remains as to whether consumers will rapidly change their behaviours' in the way the Government would like. For example, the Government wants to install 600,000 heat pumps a year by 2028 but the PAC said ministers have a 'poor track record of engaging consumers, including over-estimating buy-in to its policies'. Pope Francis on Wednesday asked Italian Army officers to remove their Covid masks while they posed for a photograph at the Vatican. Pictures show the Pope turning slightly behind him to speak to the Italian Army and telling them to take their masks off. Once the masks had been removed the group then faced forward and had their pictures taken during a meeting at the Vatican. The officers had arrived at the Vatican for the Pope's weekly general audience at the Paul VI Hall on Wednesday. Pope Francis on Wednesday asked Italian Army officers to remove their Covid masks while they posed for a photograph at the Vatican Once the masks had been removed the group then faced forward and had their pictures taken during a meeting at the Vatican The officers had arrived at the Vatican for the Pope's weekly general audience at the Paul VI Hall on Wednesday It comes after the Pope was criticised back in 2020 for rarely wearing a face mask and only wearing one for the first time in October - seven months after the coronavirus outbreak. Previously he wore masks only in a car taking him to his weekly audiences in the Vatican. The pope took off his mask while he read his address, as did other leaders when they spoke, but put it back on when he finished speaking. During the Wednesday audience Pope Francis asked people around the world to remember Ukrainians in underground shelters seeking protection from bombardments and thanked Poland for taking in the bulk of refugees from the war. It comes after the Pope was criticised back in 2020 for rarely wearing a face mask and only wearing one for the first time in October - seven months after the coronavirus outbreak Francis spoke at his weekly general audience on Ash Wednesday, which he has declared a day of prayer and fasting for peace in Ukraine Pope Francis poses with Italian Army officers during the weekly general audience on Ash Wednesday in Paolo VI Hall at Vatican Francis spoke at his weekly general audience on Ash Wednesday, which he has declared a day of prayer and fasting for peace in Ukraine. After addressing Poles, the pope went off script to say that the Polish translator on the stage with him, Father Marek Viktor Gongalo, is Ukrainian. 'His parents are now in underground shelters to protect themselves from the bombs in a place near Kyiv,' the pope said. 'By accompanying him, we accompany all the people who are suffering from the bombings, including his elderly parents and so many other elderly who are in underground shelters defending themselves. Let us remember these people in our hearts.' Kyiv residents have been sheltering in metro stations and other underground sites at night, there are long lines for fuel, and some products are running out in shops. A child makes the sign of the cross on Pope Francis' forehead as the pontiff touches his head during the weekly general audience at the Vatican Pope Francis signs a piece paper for a child during his weekly general audience at the Vatican Italian Army members take pictures of Pope Francis at the weekly general audience at the Paul VI Hall at the Vatican More than half a million Ukrainians have fled the fighting since the invasion, which Russia calls a special military operation, began, most crossing into Poland and Romania. The European Commission proposed granting temporary residence to Ukrainian refugees. 'You were the first to support Ukraine, opening your borders, your hearts and the doors of your homes to Ukrainians fleeing war,' the pope said, addressing Poles through the translator. 'You are generously offering them everything they need to live in dignity, despite the drama of the moment. I am deeply grateful to you and I bless you from my heart!' he said. Francis has called for humanitarian corridors to help refugees leave and said those who make war should not be deluded into thinking that God is on their side. The Kremlin says its campaign is not designed to occupy territory but to destroy its neighbour's military capabilities and capture what it regards as dangerous nationalists. The Vatican has called for an immediate stop to the attack and said it is ready to 'facilitate dialogue' between Russia and Ukraine. Russia's Foreign Minister Sergei Lavrov has warned that a third world war 'will be nuclear and destructive' as the fallout of his nation's invasion of neighbour Ukraine intensifies. In a thinly veiled threat for NATO not to get involved in Ukraine, Lavrov said that any future world war would be fought with nuclear weapons - a statement that comes just days after President Vladimir Putin warned that any country sending troops to Ukraine would be met with severe consequences. The foreign minister went on to claim that Moscow was ready to enter a second round of negotiations aimed at achieving peace in Ukraine, and accused Kyiv of deliberately delaying the process at the request of the United States. 'We are ready for the second round of negotiations, but the Ukrainian side is delaying [the process] at the behest of the Americans,' said Lavrov, according to Russian news agency TASS. His statement came after US President Joe Biden yesterday used his State of the Union address to brand Putin a 'Russian dictator' and declare that Moscow is 'more isolated than ever' as he added to already strict Western sanctions with the closure of US air space to all Russian flights. A Russian source close to the negotiations said that the second round of talks was supposed to take place later today close to the Belarusian-Polish border after an initial attempt at diplomacy concluded on Monday. Lavrov this morning also sought to justify the invasion of Ukraine by saying Russia's forces 'will not allow Ukraine to obtain nuclear weapons', TASS reported. There is no evidence that Ukraine has nuclear weapons or plans to acquire them, though Lavrov yesterday questioned why the United States continued to maintain nuclear weapons in European countries in spite of the Non-Proliferation Treaty (NPT). As the conflict in Ukraine rumbled into its seventh day today, Russian paratroopers landed in second city Kharkiv after it endured three days of sustained shelling and missile strikes which have caused massive damage. Zhytomyr and Kyiv also saw further missile strikes - one of which knocked out the capital's 1,500ft-tall television mast, while Russian forces pushed into the besieged Black Sea city of Kherson in the south. In a thinly veiled threat for NATO not to get involved in Ukraine, Lavrov (right) said that any future world war would be fought with nuclear weapons - a statement that comes just days after President Vladimir Putin (left) warned that any country sending troops to Ukraine would be met with severe consequences Ambassadors and diplomats walk out while Russia's foreign minister Sergei Lavrov (on screen) speaks during a pre-recorded video message at the 49th session of the UN Human Rights Council at the European headquarters of the United Nations in Geneva, Switzerland, 01 March 2022 As the conflict in Ukraine rumbled into its seventh day today, Russian paratroopers landed in second city Kharkiv after it endured three days of sustained shelling and missile strikes which have caused massive damage (Russian airstrike hits police department in Kharkiv) A view of the square outside the damaged local city hall of Kharkiv on March 1, 2022, destroyed as a result of Russian troop shelling This image appears to show the base of the 95th Ukrainian Armed Forces Brigade in Zhytomyr which was hit by Russian missiles A view shows a destroyed building in a residential area, as Russia's invasion of Ukraine continues, in the city of Zhytomyr, Ukraine, in this picture released March 02, 2022 Lavrov's statement came after US President Joe Biden yesterday used his State of the Union address to brand Putin a 'Russian dictator' and declare that Moscow is 'more isolated than ever' as he added to already strict Western sanctions with the closure of US air space to all Russian flights (Biden is applauded by Kamala Harris (L) and Nancy Pelosi (R) during his speech) Lavrov's thinly-veiled threat of a potential nuclear conflict comes just one day after he denounced the presence of American nukes in Europe. 'It is unacceptable for us that US nuclear weapons still remain in a number of European states in contradiction to the basic points of the NPT,' Russia's foreign minister told a Geneva conference on disarmament in a pre-recorded message yesterday. 'The bad practice of joint nuclear missions with the participation of non-nuclear NATO states continues. During such missions, the use of nuclear weapons against Russia is being practiced,' Lavrov continued. 'US nuclear weapons should have returned home long ago, and the corresponding infrastructure in Europe should have long been eliminated.' But his words fell on deaf ears as delegates from around the world walked out of the conference amid Lavrov's remonstrations. The US President meanwhile was met with applause during his national address yesterday as he spent the first 12 minutes lambasting Putin over the invasion and announced the creation of a new task force to go after the 'crimes' of Russian oligarchs. 'We are coming for your ill-begotten gains,' Biden said, to the rare sight of applause from both sides of the floor. The State of the Union address was supposed to focus on domestic policy, but the raging conflict in Ukraine and a plea from Ukrainian President Volodymyr Zelensky for Biden to make Americans understand it is a 'war for the values of democracy and freedom' saw Biden take a different tack. The president said Russia had 'underestimated' the Western allies and the Ukrainian people after Russian troops met a 'wall of strength he had never imagined'. Russia's forces are racking up considerable losses amid bitter urban fighting in the streets of several Ukrainian cities. Ukraine's armed forces reported this morning that they had killed 5,840 Russian troops since the beginning of the invasion. In a Facebook post this morning, the general staff claimed Ukrainian soldiers had also destroyed 61 aircraft, over 200 tanks, 862 armoured vehicles, 85 artillery systems, nine anti-aircraft systems, 60 fuel tanks and had seized 40 Russian rocket launchers. These statistics could not be independently verified. The Kremlin meanwhile has refused to release a death toll for its soldiers as it engages in a propaganda campaign designed to favourably mould the narrative through state-owned media channels, but has insisted its losses are considerably lower than the figures offered by Ukraine. Moscow is launching a new online portal offering Russian citizens 'official and verified information' which will provide a counter to 'fakes and rumours' about the current situation in the country, Deputy Prime Minister Dmitry Chernyshenko said. The US President was met with applause during his national address yesterday as he spent the first 12 minutes lambasting Putin over the invasion and announced the creation of a new task force to go after the 'crimes' of Russian oligarchs. 'We are coming for your ill-begotten gains,' Biden said, to the rare sight of applause from both sides of the floor This photograph taken on February 26, 2022 shows a Russian Armoured personnel carrier (APC) burning during fight with the Ukrainian armed forces in Kharkiv In a Facebook post this morning, the general staff claimed Ukrainian soldiers had destroyed 61 aircraft, over 200 tanks, 862 armoured vehicles, 85 artillery systems, nine anti-aircraft systems, 60 fuel tanks and had seized 40 Russian rocket launchers since the start of the invasion A Ukrainian Territorial Defence fighter examines a destroyed Russian infantry mobility vehicle GAZ Tigr after the fight in Kharkiv on February 27, 2022 Ukrainian Territorial Defence fighter takes the automatic grenade launcher from a destroyed Russian infantry mobility vehicle GAZ Tigr after the fight in Kharkiv on February 27, 2022 Russian pundit and former member of parliament Alexander Sherin meanwhile dismissed claims of a Russian death toll running into thousands. 'Over 10 years of war in Afghanistan, we unfortunately lost 14,000 soldiers and officers. This was over 10 years. 'When they say that in four days we've lost 2,000 or even 5,000 men, it's complete nonsense. It's an attempt to demoralise our army and people.' Russian paratroopers landed in Ukraine's second city amid heavy fighting early this morning in the seventh day of their invasion. Kharkiv has for three days been under seige as Russian troops were repelled from the city by Ukrainian defence forces, only for Putin to begin a sustained bombing campaign which has destroyed many administrative and residential structures. 'There are practically no areas left in Kharkiv where an artillery shell has not yet hit,' a Ukrainian Interior Ministry official said. Russia also stepped up its bombing campaigns and missile strikes in other locations, hitting Kyiv's main television tower, two residential buildings in a town west of the city and the city of Bila Tserkva to the south of the capital. The bombing of the television tower sparked particular outrage as the missile strikes hit Babyn Yar, a ravine located close to the structure where as many as 150,000 people were killed by the Nazis - including 34,000 Jews in two horrific days in 1941 - during Adolf Hitler's campaign against the Soviet Union. After the attack, Volodymyr Zelensky tweeted: 'To the world: what is the point of saying 'never again' for 80 years, if the world stays silent when a bomb drops on the same site of Babyn Yar? At least 5 killed. History repeating' After months of escalating tensions and desperate diplomacy, Russia last week launched its invasion of Ukraine. Putin ignored international condemnation and sanctions to press ahead with the invasion with simultaneous attacks coming from the south, east and north, by both land and air. The president gave an extraordinary address to the Russian nation, in which he declared he had decided to launch a 'special military operation' to 'de-militarise' and 'de-Nazify' Ukraine. Putin also issued a chilling warning to any country thinking of coming to Ukraine's aid, vowing 'consequences greater than any you have faced in history'. Ben Wallace gave a grim prediction of Russian tactics in Ukraine today warning that the war is about to 'get worse'. The Defence Secretary highlighted Moscow's military 'doctrine' as he said Vladimir Putin's forces are likely to surround cities and 'bombard indiscriminately' - before seizing 'what's left'. However, he painted the invasion so far as a shambles despite the overwhelming numbers, with inexperienced troops crumbling in the face of stronger-than-anticipated Ukrainian resistance. Mr Wallace said that Putin would face 'years' of struggle even if he manages to occupy territory. The assessment came as fierce fighting continued in Ukraine on the seventh day of the invasion. Russian paratroopers were dropped in to Kharkiv and attacked a military hospital before airstrikes targeting police, state agencies and the security service. Part of Karazin National University has been on fire after a missile - seemingly intended for the neighbouring police headquarters or interior ministry - struck the college's sociology department instead. The smoking ruins of a gym following shelling in Kyiv, Ukraine, today Ben Wallace highlighted Moscow's military 'doctrine' as he said Vladimir Putin's forces are likely to surround cities and 'bombard indiscriminately' - before seizing 'what's left' At least 21 people have been killed an 112 wounded in shelling on Kharkiv in the last 24 hours, governor Oleg Synegubov said. The city of Konotop, 150 miles to the north of Kharkiv, was sent an ultimatum by Russian forces surrounding it on Wednesday - surrender or be destroyed by artillery - as Putin's men resort to siege tactics. Putin's forces also claimed to have captured Kherson, a major industrial centre in the south, overnight although this was denied by the local mayor. In Zhytomyr, a city to the west of Kyiv, airstrikes hit the headquarters of the 95th Ukrainian armed forces brigade while also damaging a hospital, leaving two people dead. The city of Bila Tserkva, some 50 miles south of Kyiv, was also hit overnight. In a round of interviews, Mr Wallace said Russian forces could lay siege to Ukraine's major cities. 'That's one of the Russian doctrines, which is effectively surround a city, bombard it indiscriminately and then eventually close in on a population that they hope to have broken, and indeed take over what's left of the city,' he told BBC Breakfast. 'We've seen that in Chechnya before. 'The problem with that is Ukraine is a very, very large country, it is the size of France and Germany put together, it has a population of 44 million.' Mr Wallace warned that an occupying force would face the kind of insurgency faced by the Soviets in Afghanistan or the West in Iraq. Mr Wallace said that Putin (pictured) would face 'years' of struggle even if he manages to occupy territory 'Invading a country with overwhelming force is one thing, occupying a people of 44 million who don't want you in it is a very different thing.' Mr Wallace told BBC Radio 4's Today programme that he thought Russian forces would 'ruthlessly pummel' cities. 'What you have seen is the Russian pause on the outskirts and then ruthlessly pummel these cities with artillery and then hope to break the city,' he said. However, he said Russia would face 'years of resistance' if it sought to occupy Ukraine. Mr Wallace said Moscow's troops had been deceived by their leaders and were low on supplies and food due to logistical failures. 'We have definitely seen cases of very quick surrenders by Russian forces, we have seen lots of abandonment of incredible pieces of equipment,' he said. 'That is what happens when your military leaders don't prepare you, lie to you or deceive you and also you base a military plan based on an arrogant assumption that you are the liberator.' He rejected a suggestion that Russian deserters should be offered asylum in the West, saying: 'I take the view that the best thing that Russian deserters can do is go back to Russia, tell the Russian people they are being deceived, tell the Russian people that their military leaders are causing huge amounts of unnecessary suffering and losses because of either incompetence or arrogance, and they can go back and tell the mothers, who are wondering where their thousands of disappeared sons are.' Advertisement Weeping Russian prisoners of war have said they had no idea they were being sent to invade Ukraine and were used like 'cannon fodder' by commanders who threw them into battle against 'peaceful people defending their territory' after Vladimir Putin's forces took heavy losses in the opening days of the conflict. Ukraine war: The latest Russian paratroopers land in Ukraine's second city amid heavy fighting 'There are practically no areas left in Kharkiv where an artillery shell has not yet hit': Interior Ministry official Joe Biden brands Vladimir Putin a 'dictator' in his annual State of the Union address as he bans Russian aircraft from US airspace Russia steps up its bombing campaign and missile strikes, hitting Kyiv's main television tower, two residential buildings in a town west of the city and the city of Bila Tserkva to the south of the capital Russian forces push into the besieged Black Sea city of Kherson in the south Russian attacks leave Mariupol, another Black Sea port further to the west without electricity More than 677,000 people have fled Ukraine since the Russian invasion, the UN's refugee agency says The UN's International Court of Justice says it will hold public hearings on March 7 and 8 over Ukraine's allegations of 'genocide' by Russia Russia blocks an independent television channel and a liberal radio station, tightening a virtual media blackout A string of Western companies announce they are freezing or scaling back business with Russia Russians race to withdraw cash after the introduction of capital controls and as the ruble hits record lows Russian-owned Nord Stream 2 goes insolvent after Germany halts the pipeline following Moscow's invasion Oil prices soar past $110 a barrel, despite agreements to release 60 million barrels from stockpiles The World Bank prepares a $3-billion aid package for Ukraine, including $350 million in immediate funds Advertisement 'This is not our war. Mothers and wives, collect your husbands. There is no need to be here,' an injured soldier sat in front of a Ukrainian flag was filmed saying. Other footage showed handcuffed Russian prisoner crying, while saying: 'They don't even pick up the corpses, there are no funerals'. Ukraine on Wednesday invited the worried mothers of Russian troops captured on the battlefield to come and collect their sons, in Kyiv's latest apparent attempt to embarrass Moscow after opening a telephone hotline for Russian parents to find out if their sons are among the dead or captured. Ukraine says Russia has lost 5,840 soldiers in the opening days of the conflict - some of its fastest losses since the Second World War, if the figure proves accurate - with Putin's men suffering a series of embarrassing defeats as they tried to pull off a quick victory but instead met with stiff resistance from Ukrainian forces. Russia's advance has since slowed to a crawl as commanders regroup, change strategy, and renew their assault in what is now expected to become an increasingly bloody war of resources with Kyiv's men facing overwhelming odds. The Ministry of Defence said Russia had renewed the fight on 'all fronts' Wednesday and 'suffered losses'. Kherson, an important port city in Ukraine's south, appeared to be an early casualty as Russian tanks occupied the city centre overnight and then began arriving in numbers. Kharkiv, Ukraine's second-largest city, also came under heavy bombardment in the early hours as paratroopers dropped in, sparking gunfights near a military hospital. Mariupol, another key port city in Ukraine's south, is also reported to be under heavy bombardment as Russian forces attempt to encircle it. If the city falls then Putin's men are expected to push northwards, trying to encircle Ukrainian forces fighting near Donetsk and force them to surrender. While both US and Ukrainian intelligence believes morale within the Russian ranks is low, Putin and his commanders have showed no sign they are about to give up the fight - and have instead vowed to press even harder to try and capture key objectives. Sergey Shoigu, the country's defence minister, said on Tuesday that they offensive would keep going until all objectives had been completed - which he said was the removal of threats to Russia by the West. Volodymyr Zelensky has said that Russia is trying to erase Ukraine and its people as Vladimir Putin's invasion entered its seventh day today with renewed attacks on all fronts including an expected assault on the city which houses Europe's largest nuclear power plant. Zelensky, who has become a symbol of Ukrainian defiance and courage since the war began, told his people today that Russians 'know nothing about our capital. About our history. But they have an order to erase our history. Erase our country. Erase us all.' Captured Russian soldiers have been filmed describing themselves as 'cannon fodder' and warning 'everyone is going in columns and they all die' Captured Russian soldiers (left and right), speaking in video posted to the Ukraine security services' Facebook page, claimed they were 'deceived' and did not realise they were going to invade Ukraine Footage shows captured a handcuffed Russian prisoner crying over the death and destruction wrought by the war, saying: 'They don't even pick up the corpses, there are no funerals' In separate video posted on Telegram showed soldiers saying they were 'demoralised' when they realised they were being sent to fight in Ukraine. 'We were told we would be enemies of the state and because it's wartime, we might even be shot if we refused. We were thrown in as cannon fodder' Russian soldiers taking part in the invasion of Ukraine are in 'complete disarray', according to voice recordings obtained by a British intelligence company. Above: Images of captured Russian troops Ukraine's military said Russia today renewed its assault 'on all fronts', with paratroopers landing in Kharkiv, tanks and trucks rolling into the centre of Kherson, and strikes in Mariupol and Zhytomyr The president, unshaven and wearing a military-style khaki T-shirt, said the West's response was not enough, calling for more international support, including backing Ukraine's bid to join the European Union. 'This is no time to be neutral,' he added. But Russian foreign minister Sergei Lavrov sought to warn western powers away from the conflict today, saying that a Third World War in Europe - should it start - would be 'nuclear' and 'destructive'. As Russian forces readied themselves to push on with the assault, those wounded and captured by Ukraine in the opening stages were left to reflect on their decisions behind enemy lines. 'No one has attacked us and what Russia wants from the war, I cannot understand. Mum, Dad, I love you,' one said. At least one of the soldiers urged Kyiv and Moscow to evacuate children from the warzone while another warned 'no-one wants war'. Meanwhile a handcuffed prisoner of war burst into tears and was filmed wiping his eyes after what sounded like a female relative told him 'I love you' down the phone. The intercepted radio messages indicate that troops are refusing to obey central command orders to shell Ukrainian towns and are complaining about running out of supplies of food and fuel. Above: Another captured Russian soldier He went on to urge the person to call for the end to the war because 'to these b****es it's just a case of killing everyone'. The young soldier also appeared to shed tears for those who die on the battlefield because 'they have no funeral'. 'You don't touch the corpses because otherwise the FSB (Russian federal security service) will arrest you,' he said. Another soldier, injured during the fighting, was positioned in front of a Ukrainian flag as he spoke to the camera. He maintained the claim his troops did not know they were about the invade Ukraine and urged Moscow to end the conflict. 'We are killing peaceful people,' he said. 'This is not our war. Mothers and wives, collect your husbands. There is no need to be here.' In separate video posted on Telegram showed soldiers saying they were 'demoralised' when they realised they were being sent to fight in Ukraine. 'We were told we would be enemies of the state and because it's wartime, we might even be shot if we refused. We were thrown in as cannon fodder.' He also claimed that Russian soldiers 'in our unit at least, don't want this war. We want to go home, we want peace.' A week into Russia's invasion of Ukraine, Kyiv claims to have captured dozens of Russian servicemen, and cellphone videos are circling online of bewildered and disarmed young men in uniform. Kyiv has sought to undermine Russian public support for the invasion by opening a telephone hotline for Russian parents to find out if their sons are among the dead or captured. The defence ministry has published telephone numbers and and an email address to provide information about captured Russians, and mothers will be invited to Kyiv to collect their missing sons. 'You will be received and taken to Kyiv where your son will be returned to you,' the ministry statement said. 'Unlike Putin's fascists, we Ukrainians are not waging war against mothers and their captured children.' A convoy of Russian vehicles is seen parked along a residential street in an unknown area of Ukraine, in footage released by Russia's armed forces on Wednesday The remains of a destroyed Russian military convoy are seen on a street in Bucha, to the south of Kyiv, on Wednesday morning An armed man stands by the remains of a Russian military vehicle in Bucha, close to the capital Kyiv, Ukraine Police officers remove the body of a passerby killed in yesterday's airstrike that hit Kyiv's main television tower olice officers examine the bodies of passersby killed in yesterday's airstrike that hit Kyiv's main television tower Police officers stand guard at the site of yesterday's airstrike that hit Kyiv's main television tower The body of a soldier, without insignia, who the Ukrainian military claim is a Russian army serviceman killed in fighting in Kharkiv, eastern Ukraine Recordings obtained by British intelligence company ShadowBreak revealed Russian soldiers retreating after becoming frustrated with the war, indicating that Moscow's forces are in 'complete disarray'. In one of the eavesdropped conversations, listened to by The Telegraph, a soldier reportedly sounds as though he is crying. In another, a soldier is heard losing his temper when asking when food or fuel will arrive. He says: 'We've been here for three days! When the hell is it going to be ready?' A third message reviewed by ShadowBreak reveals a tense exchange in which the same soldier has to remind a colleague speaking from a command centre that they cannot use artillery on an area until civilians - who are labelled 'the goods' - have left. ShadowBreak's founder Samuel Cardillo, 26, told The Telegraph he had been sent the messages by amateurs listening in with antennas. He said: 'What we have found is that the Russian operatives are operating in complete disarray. They have no clue where they are going and how to really communicate with each other properly. 'There were periods where we heard them [Russian soldiers] crying in combat, a period where they were insulting each other obviously not a sign of great morale.' Mr Cardillo said the some of the messages were also 'proof of war crimes' because they revealed ordered to fire missiles into urban areas. They were among around 24 hours of material obtained by intelligence firm ShadowBreak since the invasion of Ukraine began last week. In a further sign that morale may be poor, a senior US defence official told the New York Times on Tuesday that some troops have 'deliberately punched holes' in their vehicles' petrol tanks in the hope of avoiding combat. Parts of the Russian military are also still using analogue 'walkie talkie' two-way radios, making them more vulnerable to interception. Ukrainian forces are also said to have had no problem jamming Russian communications and interrupting them with the sound of their national anthem. Another recording obtained by ShadowBreak is said to reveal a soldier in tears, pleading with his command: '...it's slow, it's slow.' The communications are also said to show that soldiers were told they would meet little resistance upon entering Ukraine. Instead, Ukrainian forces are now in the seventh day of resistance to the Russian attack and multiple videos reveal civilians confronting the invading troops and convoys. The new recordings come after Ukraine on Monday paraded captured Russian soldiers in dozens of online videos. Footage posted online show tied up 'demoralised and exhausted' Russian prisoners of war captured after they failed to break through Ukrainian defences in Kyiv and Kharkiv over the weekend. Several of the videos were posted on a Telegram channel set up on Saturday by Ukraine's Interior Ministry called 'Find Your Own'. Many Russian troops claimed that they believed they were conducting training exercises in the border regions and did not know they were being sent to invade Ukraine. Part of the Karazin National University campus in the city of Kharkiv is destroyed after being struck by a Russian missile which was seemingly intended for a nearby police or interior ministry building Firefighters battle to put out a blaze in Kharkiv as the city came under renewed airstrikes today, with an official saying there is almost no area of the city left that has not been hit Firefighters attempt to put out the burning sociology department of Karazin National University which was hit by a strike seemingly intended for nearby government buildings Rubble litters the streets of the Ukrainian city of Kharkiv after an early-morning missile strike by Russia Russian armoured vehicles and trucks are pictured rolling through the centre of Kherson, as Moscow claimed to be in control of the city but Ukraine said it still holds key government buildings Advertisement Extraordinary images from Ukraine show before and after Russian forces indiscriminately bombarded and obliterated populated areas. Pictures show the centre of Ukraine's second largest city Kharkiv after a rocket attack in front of a civilian public administration building that destroyed the road outside and blew the windows out of the building itself on Tuesday morning. Ukrainian President Vlodymyr Zelensky, speaking in a video posted on Facebook, said the attack on Kharkiv's Freedom Square was 'open, undisguised terror' and branded Russia a 'terrorist state' for indiscriminately shelling Kharkiv - even as Moscow maintained its forces are only targeting military infrastructure. A day earlier Zelensky accused Russia's President Vladimir Putin of war crimes after Moscow's forces launched what were believed to be cluster and vacuum bomb attacks in an attempt to turn the tide of a conflict that they have so-far been losing. Footage from inside the the civilian public administration building in Kharkiv on Tuesday showed it was heavily damaged, with ceilings collapsing and rubble strewn around. People stranded in cities across Ukraine were today bracing for a resumption of shelling and artillery fire - after a 40-mile-long death convoy arrived on the outskirts of the capital Kyiv overnight and as Russian forces encircled Kharkiv and Mariupol after reaching the centre of Kherson. Slide me City Hall in the eastern Ukrainian city of Kharkiv before and after it was bombed in a Russian rocket attack that destroyed the road outside and blew the windows out of the building itself on Tuesday morning, killing at least ten people Slide me Freedom Square in Kharkiv, eastern Ukraine, before and after it was destroyed in indiscriminate shelling by Russian forces on Tuesday, March 1 Slide me A residential building in the small town of Irpin, north west of Kyiv before and after it was hit in a Russian missile attack after Moscow's forces invaded Ukraine Since Russian troops rolled into Ukraine last week to achieve Putin's mission of overthrowing Zelensky's pro-Western government, hundreds of civilians have been reported killed. Russian forces have carried out a massive bombing campaign and encircled urban centres including that of Kharkiv, a a largely Russian-speaking city near the Russian border, with a population of around 1.4 million, but Ukraine insists no major city has yet been overtaken. 'Russian airborne troops landed in Kharkiv... and attacked a local hospital,' the Ukrainian army said in a statement on messaging app Telegram. 'There is an ongoing fight between the invaders and the Ukrainians.' Russia hit a residential building in the city on Tuesday killing eight people, drawing comparisons to the massacres of civilians in Sarajevo in the 1990s and condemnation for what Zelensky called a 'war crime'. A fire broke out on Wednesday in the barracks of a flight school in Kharkiv following an airstrike, according to Anton Gerashchenko, adviser to the Ukrainian Interior Minister. Fighting was on Wednesday underway in Kharkiv after Russian paratroopers dropped in and attacked a military hospital before airstrikes targeting police, state agencies and the security service. Part of Karazin National University was on fire early Wednesday after a missile - seemingly intended for the neighbouring police headquarters or interior ministry - struck the college's department of sociology instead. At least 21 people have been killed an 112 wounded in shelling on Kharkiv in the last 24 hours, governor Oleg Synegubov said, as an interior ministry official added: 'There are practically no areas left in Kharkiv where an artillery shell has not yet hit.' Slide me A police building in Kharkiv, eastern Ukraine, before and after it was hit by a Russian rocket, blowing out the windows and sparking a massive fire Slide me The road outside a police building in Ukraine's second largest city, Kharkiv, on Tuesday after it was hit in shelling, leaving debris strewn across the streets outside The city of Konotop, 150 miles to the north of Kharkiv, was sent an ultimatum by Russian forces surrounding it on Wednesday - surrender or be destroyed by artillery - as Putin's men resort to siege tactics. Putin's forces also claimed to have captured Kherson, a major industrial centre in the south, overnight though the mayor remained defiant - posting on Facebook: 'We are still Ukraine. Still firm.' Mariupol, also in the south, came under renewed shelling as Russian forces try to surround it. In Zhytomyr, a city to the west of Kyiv, airstrikes hit the headquarters of the 95th Ukrainian armed forces brigade while also damaging a hospital, leaving two people dead. The city of Bila Tserkva, some 50 miles south of Kyiv, was also hit overnight. Ukraine's armed forces said Wednesday morning that Russia is 'trying to advance in all directions' but are 'being resisted everywhere and suffering losses'. It estimates that 5,840 Russian troops have been killed so far - though that figure cannot be verified. Kharkiv was struck by more Russian rockets on Tuesday morning, with one striking outside the civilian public administration building which was heavily damaged in the blast. The rocket can be seen a split second before it slams into the building, triggering a massive blast The rocket caused huge damage to the building and threw up a huge plume of smoke in the aftermath of the explosion Ukraine's president Volodymyr Zelensky accused Russia of war crimes on Monday after Vladimir Putin's forces launched what were believed to be cluster and vacuum bomb attacks on the fifth day of their invasion. Above: Kharkiv, Ukraine's second city, coming under heavy attack on Monday Firefighters battle to put out a blaze in Kharkiv as the city came under renewed airstrikes today, with an official saying there is almost no area of the city left that has not been hit Rescue workers and medics are pictured close to the regional administration building in central Kharkiv, picking their way through the debris following the explosion Kharkiv and Ukraine flags are pictured hanging from a blown out window of the administrative building after the Russian rocket attack in a symbol of defiance The bombardment of Kharkiv continued Tuesday morning with a rocket landing just in front of the civilian public administration building, destroying the road outside and blowing the windows out of the building itself. Footage from inside shows the building was heavily damaged, with ceilings collapsing and rubble strewn around Ukrainian emergency service personnel carry a body of a victim out of the damaged City Hall building following shelling in Kharkiv, Ukraine Firefighters attempt to put out the burning sociology department of Karazin National University which was hit by a strike seemingly intended for nearby government buildings Advertisement Bodies of the five victims of a rocket strike on Kyiv's television tower were on Wednesday morning piled into a van and removed from the site by police - as the capital's mayor Vitali Klitschko warned that Russian forces were 'getting closer'. Klitschko also today defiantly vowed 'we will fight' to defend the city, amid fears it could soon be battered by artillery fire from a 40-mile long death convoy parked nearby. An opening salvo on Tuesday night struck the Ukrainian capital's largest TV tower and damaged a nearby Holocaust memorial, killing five bystanders in the process. Hours later, US intelligence said the huge Russian convoy appears to have stalled near Kyiv though it could just be regrouping for a more-determined attack. Klitschko said that fighting is still ongoing in the cities of Bucha and Hostomel, on the outskirts of Kyiv, where a large number of destroyed Russian vehicles were pictured on Wednesday. He implored people in the city 'not to lose endurance', saying all critical infrastructure is still running and humanitarian supplies are being handed out. 'I ask everyone, for security reasons, not to go outside unnecessarily. At the alarm - go to the shelters,' he said. 'The enemy is gathering forces closer to the capital... We are preparing and will defend Kyiv!' Images showed areas of the city damaged in overnight strikes, as attacks resumed on Ukrainian cities elsewhere in the country - with paratroopers dropping into Kharkiv on Wednesday morning as missiles struck a university in the city having apparently missed a nearby police headquarters. Police officers prepare to remove the bodies of passersby killed in yesterday's airstrike that hit Kyiv's main television tower Ukrainian police forces remove the bodies of people killed during a Russian rocket attack on Kyiv's main TV tower on Tuesday, ahead of an expected assault on the capital Kyiv is preparing to come under fresh bombardment today after Moscow warned civilians to flee or else face being killed (pictured, bodies of people killed in last night's strike are covered by police) Five people were killed yesterday in a Russian missile strike which wiped out several TV stations in Kyiv, thought to be preparation for a larger follow-up attack Smoke and flames rise up the side of Kyiv's 1,300ft TV tower after Russia bombed it on Tuesday. The tower remained standing but buildings around it were damaged, with some broadcasts knocked off air Smoke rises around Kyiv's main television tower after several explosions near the base of it on Tuesday afternoon A woman cries outside houses damaged by a Russian airstrike, according to locals, in Gorenka, outside the capital Kyiv Biden used his first State of the Union address to highlight the resolve of a reinvigorated Western alliance that has worked to rearm the Ukrainian military and adopt tough sanctions, which he said have left Russian President Vladimir Putin 'isolated in the world more than he has ever been.' 'Throughout our history we've learned this lesson - when dictators do not pay a price for their aggression, they cause more chaos,' Biden said. 'They keep moving. And the costs and threats to America and the world keep rising.' As the seventh day of the war dawned Wednesday, Russia found itself increasingly isolated, beset by the sanctions that have thrown its economy into turmoil and left the country practically friendless, apart from a few nations like China, Belarus and North Korea. Leading Russian bank Sberbank announced Wednesday that it is pulling out of European markets amid the tightening Western sanctions. As fighting raged, the humanitarian situation worsened. Roughly 660,000 people have fled Ukraine, and countless others have taken shelter underground. The death toll was less clear, with neither Russia nor Ukraine releasing the number of troops lost. The U.N. human rights office said it has recorded 136 civilian deaths, though the actual toll is surely far higher. One senior Western intelligence official estimated that 5,000 Russian soldiers had been captured or killed in the biggest ground war in Europe since World War II. Many military experts worry that Russia may be shifting tactics. Moscow's strategy in Chechnya and Syria was to use artillery and air bombardments to pulverize cities and crush fighters' resolve. Soldiers are seen around piles of sand used for blocking a road in Ukrainian capital, Kyiv A view of smoke from inside a damaged gym following shelling in Kyiv which partially destroyed a gym A destroyed apartment building in Irpin, a city on the outskirts of Kyiv, was struck by Russian missiles early on Wednesday Soldiers are seen around piles of sand used for blocking a road in Ukrainian capital, Kyiv A fighter of the Ukrainian Territorial Defence Forces, the military reserve of the Ukrainian Armed Forces, stands guard at the underground crossing and subway entrance in the center of Kyiv Britain's Defense Ministry said it had seen an increase in Russian air and artillery strikes on populated urban areas over the past two days. It also said Kharkiv and Mariupol were encircled by Russian forces and that troops had reportedly moved into the center of a third city, Kherson. Russia's Defense Ministry said it had seized Kherson, though the claim could not be confirmed. Ukrainian authorities said five people were killed in the attack on the TV tower near central Kyiv. A TV control room and power substation were hit, and at least some Ukrainian channels briefly stopped broadcasting, officials said. Zelenskyy's office reported that the site of the Babi Yar Holocaust memorial, which is adjacent to the TV tower, was also hit. A spokesman for the memorial said a Jewish cemetery at the site, where Nazi occupiers killed more than 33,000 Jews over two days in 1941, was damaged, but the extent would not be clear until daylight. Zelenskyy expressed outrage Wednesday at the attack on Babi Yar and concern that other historically significant and religious sites, such as St. Sophia's Cathedral, could be targeted. 'This is beyond humanity. Such missile strike means that for many Russians our Kyiv is absolutely foreign,' Zelenskyy said in a speech posted on Facebook. 'They have orders to erase our history, our country and all of us.' Russia previously told people living near transmission facilities used by Ukraine's intelligence agency to leave their homes. But Russian Defense Ministry spokesman Igor Konashenkov claimed Wednesday that the airstrike on the TV tower did not hit any residential buildings. He did not address the reported deaths or the damage to Babi Yar. In Kharkiv, with a population of about 1.5 million, at least six people were killed when the region's administrative building on Freedom Square was hit with what was believed to be a missile. The Slovenian Foreign Ministry said its consulate in Kharkiv, located in another large building on the square, was destroyed. The attack on the square - the nucleus of public life in the city - was seen by many Ukrainians as brazen evidence that the Russian invasion wasn't just about hitting military targets but also about breaking their spirit. The gutted remains of Russian military vehicles on a road in the town of Bucha, close to the capital Kyiv A local resident stands on a destroyed armoured vehicle, as Russia's invasion of Ukraine continues, in the town of Bucha A destroyed armoured vehicle, with the letter "V" painted on its turret, is seen on a street, as Russia's invasion of Ukraine continues, in the town of Bucha Police officers stand guard at the site of yesterday's airstrike that hit Kyiv's main television tower in Kyiv The bombardment blew out windows and walls of buildings that ring the square, which was piled high with debris and dust. Inside one building, chunks of plaster were scattered, and doors lay across hallways. Another Russian airstrike hit a residential area in the city of Zhytomyr. Ukraine's emergency services said Tuesday's strike killed at least two people, burned three homes and broke the windows in a nearby hospital. About 85 miles west of Kyiv, Zhytomyr is the home of the elite 95th Air Assault Brigade, which may have been the intended target. In the southern port city of Mariupol, the mayor said the attacks were relentless. 'They have been flattening us non-stop for 12 hours now,' Mariupol Mayor Vadym Boychenko was quoted by the Interfax news agency as saying. 'We cannot even take the wounded from the streets, from houses and apartments today, since the shelling does not stop.' Boychenko referred to Russia's actions as a 'genocide' - using the same word that Putin has used to justify the invasion. Zelenskyy has mocked Russia's claim that it is going after only military targets, noting that 16 children were killed on Monday. 'Where are the children? What kind of military factories do they work at?' Zelenskyy said. Human Rights Watch said it documented a cluster bomb attack outside a hospital in Ukraine's east in recent days. Residents also reported the use of such weapons in Kharkiv and Kiyanka village. The Kremlin denied using cluster bombs. An elderly woman comforts a child as they take shelter inside of an underground metro station in Kyiv A woman gives water to her dog as other people gather in the Kyiv subway, using it as a bomb shelter A woman holds her dog as other people gather in the Kyiv subway, using it as a bomb shelter People gather in the Kyiv subway, using it as a bomb shelter in Kyiv as Russian forces escalated their attacks on the city People line up in front of a pharmacy, as Russia's invasion of Ukraine continues, in central Kyiv Cluster bombs shoot smaller 'bomblets' over a large area, many of which fail to explode until long after they've been dropped. If their use is confirmed, that would represent a new level of brutality in the war. As the fighting raged, Kremlin spokesman Dmitry Peskov said that a Russian would be ready to resume talks Wednesday evening with Ukrainian officials, a day after Zelenskyy said Russia should stop bombing first. The first talks between Russia and Ukraine since the invasion were held Monday, but ended with only an agreement to talk again. Moscow made new threats of escalation Tuesday, days after raising the specter of nuclear war. A top Kremlin official warned that the West's 'economic war' against Russia could turn into a 'real one.' Inside Russia, a top radio station critical of the Kremlin was taken off the air after authorities threatened to shut it down over its coverage of the invasion. Among other things, the Kremlin is not allowing the fighting to be referred to as an 'invasion' or 'war.' Ukraine's Defense Ministry said it had evidence that Belarus, a Russian ally, is preparing to send troops into Ukraine. A ministry statement posted early Wednesday on Facebook said the Belarusian troops have been brought into combat readiness and are concentrated close to Ukraine's northern border. Belarusian President Alexander Lukashenko has said his country has no plans to join the fight. A senior U.S. defense official said that Russia's military progress - including by the massive convoy - has slowed, plagued by logistical and supply problems. Some Russian military columns have run out of gas and food, the official said, and morale has suffered as a result. Overall, the Russian military has been stalled by fierce resistance on the ground and a surprising inability to completely dominate Ukraine's airspace. The immense convoy, with vehicles packed together along narrow roads, would seemingly be 'a big fat target' for Ukrainian forces, the senior Western intelligence official said on condition of anonymity. But it also showed Russia was comfortable that they wouldn't come attack by air, rocket or missile, the official said. People wait at a train station to board trains in an attempt to flee the fighting in Kyiv Trains have been evacuating people from Kyiv to western Ukraine with many hoping to leave the country, though men are legally forbidden from going so they can stay and fight John McDonnell backed out of plans to address a Ukraine war demo tonight after Keir Starmer threatened to strip him of the Labour whip. The hard-Left former shadow chancellor was expected to speak alongside ally Jeremy Corbyn at a Stop the War Coalition (StWC) event this evening accusing the UK of 'provoking' Russia. The organisation has been criticised for attacks on Nato and British support for the country before it was brutally invaded by Vladimir Putin's Russian army. However, Mr McDonnell has apparently now withdrawn from the event in London. LabourList reported the Hayes and Harlington MP will be at an online meeting with local residents instead. 'This not the time to be distracted by political arguments here,' he said. The advert for the rally says: 'We oppose Russian military intervention in Ukraine. We also recognise this is a conflict thirty years in the making, a conflict in which Britain is playing a provocative role - talking up war, decrying diplomacy and supplying arms to Ukraine as well as supporting increased military deployments to neighbouring countries.' Among the others speakers listed are Mr Corbyn and Chris Hazzard, a Sinn Fein MP, plus Jess Barnard, the chairwoman of Young Labour who has attacked Keir Starmer over his support for Nato. Under Sir Keir, Labour has taken an increasingly hard line on dissent over the invasion by Russia. A source told the Huffington Post: 'If he goes, he'll lose the whip. Any Labour MPs who speak at anything that is anti-Nato from now on are likely to be out.' The hard-Left former shadow chancellor is due to speak alongside Mr Corbyn at a Stop the War Coalition (StWC) event in London this evening. Among the others speakers listed are Mr Corbyn (above) and Chris Hazzard, a Sinn Fein MP. Last week, Sir Keir attacked Mr Corbyn directly over his opposition to Nato, in the wake of the Russian invasion of Ukraine. Sir Keir said that Mr Corbyn was 'wrong' to oppose expansion of the defensive organisation to take in former Soviet states in Eastern Europe. Mr Corbyn, who has sat as an independent since October 2020 after having the Labour whip removed, joined 11 party MPs including Mr McDonnell to blast Nato and UK 'aggression' ahead of Vladimir Putin's brutal assault. The Labour MPs, all supporters of the former leader, were later forced to disown the Stop the War Coalition campaign after Mr Starmer threatened to also boot them out of the parliamentary party. They all capitulated quickly, with a source saying: 'An hour after being told to, all these grandstanders have withdrawn their signatures. Let there be no doubt whose party this is now.' The letter was signed by Diane Abbott, John McDonnell, Richard Burgon, Ian Lavery, Beth Winter, Zarah Sultana, Bell Ribeiro-Addy, Apsana Begum, Mick Whitley, Tahir Ali, and Ian Mearns. Mr Corbyn also signed the letter, as did MP Claudia Webbe, who also now sit as an independent. Asked on Sky News about the former Labour leader's stance on stopping the expansion of Nato, Sir Keir said: 'Jeremy Corbyn was wrong about that but the Labour Party's policy never shifted under his leadership and I've been very clear.' Mr McDonnell has been approached to comment. HK Chief Executive Carrie Lam inspected first community isolation facility in Tsing Yi (People's Daily App) 10:57, March 02, 2022 Hong Kong Chief Executive Carrie Lam inspected the first community isolation facility in Tsing Yi on Monday. Lam also welcomed the third group of mainland COVID-19 experts at the Shenzhen Bay Port on the same day. (Web editor: Peng Yukai, Liang Jun) One million doses of the Sputnik COVID-19 vaccine have expired in Guatemala. Health authorities in Guatemala City said on Monday that the doses of the Russian-made vaccine expired because of a lack of demand costing the government about $11 million. Advertisement An empty box that once held Russian Sputnik vaccines for COVID-19 sits with other empty boxes at a vaccination center in Guatemala City, on Tuesday. (Moises Castillo/AP) Authorities said another 1.7 million doses earmarked for second doses will expire later this month. Francisco Coma, the countrys health minister, described the publics attitude toward the vaccine as a rejection. Only about 43% of Guatemalas 12.6 million residents over age 11 are fully vaccinated, with a total population of 17 million. Advertisement Coma added that it was not the Sputnik vaccine being dismissed, either. A medical worker holds a dose of Russia's Sputnik M (Gam-COVID-Vac-M) COVID-19 vaccine in Krasnodar, Russia. (Vitaliy Timkiv/AP) We have tried to make available all the vaccines of different brands, to the public, Coma said. Unfortunately, there has been a rejection among the public to vaccination. Comas rejection comments come several months after a group of villagers north of Guatemala City took a team of nurses that had brought vaccine doses hostage and destroyed their equipment and medicine. This was bound to happen, Gabriel Sandoval, the director of the local health department, said in October. A lot of people dont believe in the illness. There is a clash of cultures. Guatemala has recorded more than 777,000 cases and nearly 17,000 deaths. With News Wire Services A British Army Gurkha has been convicted of sexual assault after he repeatedly pestered a cleaner for a kiss and then tried to drag drag her into a toilet cubicle for sex. Rifleman Tarahang Rai waited in the toilet block and begged the woman for a kiss each time she returned to do her job, a court martial heard. When she rejected his advances, the 26-year-old soldier hid in a cubicle before grabbing her by the wrists, asking her for sex and trying to drag her inside. He made the unwanted advances on two occasions before she went to try to clean the toilets for a third time, thinking he had left when he was actually hiding in the cubicle. Rifleman Tarahang Rai, pictured here outside the court, has been found guilty of sexually assaulting a cleaner at Tuker Lines base in Brunei Rfn Rai denied the charge but was found guilty by a military court, which did not believe his defence that the victim was lying because he had rejected her advances She told the court Rfn Rai did not let go of her hands until she threatened to shout for help. Rfn Rai denied assaulting the cleaner, claiming she came onto him and made up the allegation after he turned down her advances. But he was found guilty following a trial at Bulford Military Court in Wiltshire. The court heard the woman was cleaning on the Tuker Lines base in Brunei at the time. Prosecuting, William Peters said: 'The female cleaner encountered Rfn Rai on three occasions within the men's toilet that it was her job to clean. 'On the first two occasions he made suggestive comments to her and asked for a kiss and on the third and final occasion he actually grabbed hold of her and tried to pull her into the cubicle having again asked her for a kiss.' Mr Peters told the court the female cleaner first went to the men's toilet block to wash some mugs and was met with silence after calling out to check there was no one inside. After entering the block, she found Rfn Rai who asked her to kiss him. The cleaner left to carry out other cleaning duties and returned to the toilets later only to find Rfn Rai still waiting inside. On the third occasion, the woman called out again to no response but was shocked when Rfn Rai appeared from behind a partially closed cubicle door, the court heard. The woman said Rfn Rai grabbed her hands and dragged her into a cubicle in the toilet, before asking her for sex Mr Peters said: 'He emerged and and continued where he left off, harassing her, but took it a stage further and grabbed hold of her forcefully and tried to pull her to the toilet. After a relatively short time, she was able to push him off.' The cleaner said it was 'painful' when Rfn Rai grabbed her wrists and she was 'scared' of losing her job if she made a fuss. She said: 'He asked me to kiss him and then wanted to do a bad thing. 'I wanted to scream but I did not want to create any trouble at the time because I was scared of losing my job. 'I rejected him politely because I know the Army is more powerful than a weak woman. 'I said 'please leave me alone'... he said 'just a couple of minutes, just for a few minutes'. 'I tried to get out but he wouldn't let me go. 'I said 'just let me go, just let me go', he said 'no'. 'He asked for sex... I told him I wasn't really interested. A hearing at Bulford Military Court in Wiltshire (pictured) was told Rfn Rai only let go of the woman when she threatened to shout and alert others 'I was very scared. I tried to calm down myself [and tried] not to panic. He was forcing me to kiss him, I told him let me go or I would shout. 'Once I told him I would shout he [let go of] my hands.' After breaking free from Rfn Rai's 'rough' grip and leaving the toilets, the woman reported the incident to her boss. The court dismissed Rfn Rai's defence that the cleaner had come on to him by calling him 'cute' and that she filed the complaint because she was upset at how he had rejected her. He had claimed she made advances to him while he was urinating and that he blocked her on Facebook after she messaged him. She denied this, saying she had never messaged Rfn Rai on Facebook. Rfn Rai, of the 2 Royal Gurkha Rifles, will be sentenced for one charge of sexual assault at a later date. A doctor has been handed a year-long ban for lying on her CV about working as a GP when she was actually on maternity leave and doing ad hoc work. Monica Barron, 44, qualified as a doctor in Romania in 2002 and moved to Britain with her husband in 2012 before landing a clinical research physician job for MediNova - a UK-based clinical research company - in February 2018. Dr Barron, originally from Hungary, said on her CV that she was a GP at the practice MRK Medical Services in Wokingham from April 2012 to March 2015, the Medical Practitioners Tribunal Service (MPTS) heard. But her work was 'strictly limited to giving advice, and she was not prescribing any medication', and Dr Barron had also been on maternity leave between November 1 2012 and June 28 2013, the panel was told. Dr Barron accepted that the impression given on her CV was of a more established role as a GP, and the tribunal concluded that although she had been the director, 'it could not be said that she worked as a GP for MRK Medical Services'. The tribunal concluded that Dr Barron's conduct fell so far short of the standards of conduct expected of a doctor that she had committed misconduct, and she was suspended from registration for 12 months. But Dr Barron, who continued to travel regularly to Romania after moving, had resigned from her post on 13 January 2020 and she has not practiced medicine since then. She has not lived or worked in the UK since May 2021, and had relinquished her license to practise in September 2021. Dr Monica Barron has been handed a year-long ban for lying on her CV about working as a GP when she was actually on maternity leave and doing ad hoc work (stock image) A letter written on Dr Barron's behalf, shown to the tribunal, reads: 'Dr Barron is cognisant of the impression her CV gave that her role was that of an established private GP. 'Dr Barron regrets the confusion that has been caused as a result of the fact she was working between Romania and the UK over the time period in question.' The General Medical Council (GMC) looked into Dr Barron following a local investigation which started when a senior researcher who had worked with her in 2019 raised suspicions about her CV. If someone wants to practise medicine in the UK, they need a licence which is granted through registration with the GMC. A witness statement from a doctor who reviewed the CV for the MediNova role told of how Dr Barron's husband had called them on their personal mobile regarding the job. He said his wife was currently a GP and was interested in the role, and sent her CV over to them following the discussion. A letter submitted by Dr Barron's legal representatives said that MRK Medical Services was a limited company set up by Dr Barron and her husband as a means through which she could work and provide private medical services to UK-based patients. Following her move to the UK, Dr Barron was unable to gain entry to the NHS Performers List for GPs in England but wished to work in a flexible way so that she could take care of her young family, the letter added. Monica Barron, 44, qualified as a doctor in Romania in 2002 and moved to Britain with her husband in 2012 before landing a clinical research physician job for MediNova (offices pictured) - a UK-based clinical research company - in February 2018 Her initial intention was to provide medical services to Romanian and Hungarian nationals resident in the UK and these patients were undertaking seasonal or contract work and did not speak English. The tribunal heard that she did not carry out 'ordinary' GP services through MRK Medical Services, and she 'did advise patients, but almost entirely on a pro-bono basis and over the telephone'. The number of such consultations were small, being perhaps 4 or 5 in any given month, the panel heard. The economic circumstances of the patients meant that they rarely had money to pay for private medical services, and Dr Barron soon realised that the advantages of setting up a private practice could not outweigh the reality of what she was able to do, the tribunal was told. Dr Barron therefore did not carry out 'ordinary' GP services through MRK Medical Services Ltd 'in the ordinary sense', the panel heard. A further allegation was also made that she had misled employers by writing on her CV that she had been an SA Team volunteer between September 2016 and February 2018, but this was found not to be proved as the information was 'vague' and did not refer to it being a medical post. Up to 80 more migrants arrived in the UK today as the total for the year climbed above 1,750 a day after 230 people made the perilous boat crossing. Dozens of people, wrapped in emergency foil blankets, hats and scarves, were seen being escorted to the port of Dover by UK officials shortly after midday. As they disembarked from a Border Force boat, the group of mostly men were spotted clutching their belongings in clear plastic bags at around 12.20pm. Today's arrivals comes a day after 230 people - including small children - were intercepted by UK authorities in the Channel on Tuesday. Yesterday's single day total was more than the total stopped throughout the whole month of February - 143 people. On Tuesday, UK authorities intercepted 230 people - including small children spotted at the Port of Dover - who had battled wet and windy conditions on board at least seven boats Yesterday's migrant crossings were the first since 132 people were picked up in the Channel during freezing conditions on February 26 Yesterday's migrant crossings were the first since 132 people were picked up in the Channel during freezing conditions on February 26 - the second of two incidents reported for the whole month of February. Including yesterday's incident, a total of 1,714 people have so far this year made the treacherous crossing in 58 boats. Today's tally will take the total above 1,750. The first of yesterday's arrivals - the first migrants attempting to cross the Channel in March - were escorted to the Port of Dover by the RNLI before sunrise, amid heavy fog and rain. A second group arrived in the UK on board Border Force cutter Searcher after 8am, with more migrants arriving in HMC Hunter a short while later. All were transferred to Border Force at Dover. A further two groups - which included a toddler and a young child - were accompanied to the port by UK officials before midday via Border Force ship Hurricane and lifeboats. Later in the afternoon more migrants were brought to shore on board Border Force cutter Searcher, while another group was escorted into the UK by lifeboat shortly afterwards. The final arrivals of the day came into Dover at around 5pm on Border Force vessel Hurricane - wrapped in coats and woolly hats. All of the arrivals appeared to be suffering as a result of the choppy conditions at sea and could be seen clutching emergency foil blankets around their shoulders and heads. This morning, flimsy rubber dinghies could be seen floating at sea and drifting ashore at Dover - one of which was punctured and partially deflated. UK authorities intercepted 230 people - including small children spotted at the Port of Dover Groups including a toddler and a young child were accompanied to the UK before midday on Tuesday French authorities said they also intercepted 105 people from reaching the UK across three boats. Between Monday and Tuesday, the French regional operational surveillance and rescue centre (CROSS) at Gris-Nez identified several boats in difficulty in the Pas-de-Calais Strait. The CROSS worked alongside the French Navy public service patrol boat, Pluvier, to rescue 16 people. They were recovered from the water before being taken to Calais. A short while later, a second operation recovered 41 people who were handed over to French border police and the departmental fire and rescue service. Due to recent strong winds, yesterday's migrant crossings were the first since 132 people were picked up in the Channel during freezing conditions on January 26. They were thought to have set off in clear skies and calm conditions on the Friday night but, as they reached the Kent coast, the weather changed making the sea much choppier. One group, mainly men, were brought in on Border Force cutter Seeker while a second group were picked up by the Border Force vessel Hurricane. A total of 1,741 have so far crossed the Channel this year, compared to the 28,381 who crossed the Dover Strait last year - dwarfing the 8,410 who arrived in 2020. All of the arrivals appeared to be suffering as a result of the choppy conditions at sea and could be seen clutching emergency foil blankets around their shoulders and heads The Home Office has said more than 65,000 people could arrive in the UK by small boat this year But Home Office officials have warned that this year could see more than 65,000 people arrive in the UK by small boat. More migrants are predicted to reach the Port of Dover later today. Minister for Justice and Tackling Illegal Migration, Tom Pursglove MP, said: 'The rise in dangerous Channel crossings is unacceptable. 'Not only are they an overt abuse of our immigration laws but they also impact on the UK taxpayer and they risk lives. 'Rightly, the British public has had enough. 'Through our Nationality and Borders Bill, were cracking down on people smugglers and fixing the broken system by making it a criminal offence to knowingly arrive in the UK illegally and introducing a maximum sentence of life imprisonment for those who facilitate illegal entry into the country.' British holidaymakers will not be required to wear masks on Ryanair flights by Spring, the airlines boss has predicted. Michael OLeary said he would like to see the end of face coverings on planes by the end of April, and declared Gatwick Airport would see a strong recovery following a tough two years during the Covid pandemic. It comes as Jet2 became the first UK airline to drop the requirement for travellers to wear masks onboard their planes. However, easyJet, which also only operates across Europe, British Airways (BA), Virgin Atlantic, domestic airline Loganair and tour operator TUI all said masks would remain mandatory. As the travel industry recovers from repeated lockdowns to battle the spread of the virus, Ryanair has revealed its largest summer schedule from its three London airports Gatwick, Luton and Stansted. The low-budget airline has also announced 14 new routes from the airports to destinations including Naples, Madeira and Stockholm. Boris Johnson last week ditched all Covid regulations, with masks no longer legally compulsory on public transport anywhere in England. However, most airlines still insist on them as a condition of carriage, making them the last bastions of mandatory face coverings. We are pleased to announce 14 new routes from our three London airports, Stansted, Luton and Gatwick, OLeary said. As all Covid-19 travel restrictions have now been lifted, UK citizens and visitors can book a well-deserved summer getaway to exciting destinations such as Helsinki, Madeira and Naples. A flight attendant wearing a mask and gloves inside a Sichuan Airlines plane, June 16, 2020 British holidaymakers will not be required to wear masks on Ryanair flights by Spring, the airlines boss has predicted (stock image) Michael OLeary said he would like to see the end of masks on planes by the end of April Airline Jet2 has become the first major British carrier to scrap the requirement for passengers to wear face masks on its flights Mask policy of major UK airlines Jet2 NO MASKS A Jet2 spokesman said: It is no longer a legal requirement to wear a face mask in England and Northern Ireland, including at our airports or on board our aircraft. However, as per UK Government guidance, we recommend that customers continue to wear a face mask in these spaces, and we remind customers that they will need to wear one when they get to their overseas destination. Ryanair MASKS TO BE SCRAPPED Michael OLeary said he would like to see the end of face coverings on planes by the end of April. British Airways MASKS NEEDED A BA spokesman said: We have no immediate plans to change our mask policy, but keep our policies under review and continue to take advice and guidance from all the appropriate authorities. In addition, a number of the airports and destinations we operate between have requirements or legal mandates in place for the wearing of masks and there are significant implications for customers who do not comply. We therefore have a consistent mask policy on board and in the terminal to protect travellers, avoid customer confusion and ensure everybody is prepared for their journey. EasyJet MASKS NEEDED EasyJet passengers are still required to wear masks onboard planes. An easyJet spokesman said at present there are no changes to easyJets mask policy, however we continue to keep this under regular review in conjunction with our in-house medical adviser and key industry bodies. TUI MASKS NEEDED TUI said masks are still required for passengers onboard their planes. But a spokesman said our mask policy is currently under review and will hope to be able to update in the coming days. Virgin Atlantic MASKS NEEDED A Virgin Atlantic spokesperson said: The health and safety of our customers and crew remains Virgin Atlantics number one priority and we continuously review all our Covid health measures, while we adhere to guidance and requirements of international and local aviation regulators and governments. It continues to be CDC & FAA guidance to wear face masks on flights operating to and from the USA. Whilst we continue to work together across industry to see when changes can be made, we will require all customers and crew to continue to wear face masks for the duration of their flights, as well as at the airport, until further notice. Loganair MASKS NEEDED A Loganair spokesman said Loganair hasnt made any changes to its policy as of yet however, as with all aspects of its Covid-19 response, it remains under continual review. If and when changes are made, we will announce it publicly. As it stands, face masks are mandatory unless conditions for a medical exemption exist. Advertisement Ryanair is driving Londons post-Covid recovery as we grow across Europe, with new aircraft and new routes. A Jet2 spokesman said: It is no longer a legal requirement to wear a face mask in England and Northern Ireland, including at our airports or on board our aircraft. However, as per UK Government guidance, we recommend that customers continue to wear a face mask in these spaces, and we remind customers that they will need to wear one when they get to their overseas destination. Jet2 passengers aged six and over will still have to wear masks on flights travelling from Scotland and Wales. The airline operates only within Europe, which potentially makes it easier for it to drop mandatory masks than for long-haul carriers travelling to continents where the Covid picture is more uncertain. A BA spokesman said: We have no immediate plans to change our mask policy, but keep our policies under review and continue to take advice and guidance from all the appropriate authorities. In addition, a number of the airports and destinations we operate between have requirements or legal mandates in place for the wearing of masks and there are significant implications for customers who do not comply. We therefore have a consistent mask policy on board and in the terminal to protect travellers, avoid customer confusion and ensure everybody is prepared for their journey. An easyJet spokesman said at present there are no changes to easyJets mask policy, however we continue to keep this under regular review in conjunction with our in-house medical adviser and key industry bodies. A Virgin Atlantic spokesperson said: The health and safety of our customers and crew remains Virgin Atlantics number one priority and we continuously review all our Covid health measures, while we adhere to guidance and requirements of international and local aviation regulators and governments. It continues to be CDC & FAA guidance to wear face masks on flights operating to and from the USA. Whilst we continue to work together across industry to see when changes can be made, we will require all customers and crew to continue to wear face masks for the duration of their flights, as well as at the airport, until further notice. A TUI spokesman said our mask policy is currently under review and will hope to be able to update in the coming days. A Loganair spokesman said Loganair hasnt made any changes to its policy as of yet however, as with all aspects of its Covid-19 response, it remains under continual review. If and when changes are made, we will announce it publicly. As it stands, face masks are mandatory unless conditions for a medical exemption exist. The UKs Omicron outbreak may no longer be receding as quickly as it was, official data revealed on Tuesday. Another 39,000 positive cases and 194 Covid fatalities have been recorded across Britain, dropping just five per cent on last week. And the number of infected people admitted to hospital each day is flattening out, with 1,015 admissions logged on Friday just 2.6 per cent fewer than seven days earlier. It coincides with the rise of the even more transmissible Omicron subvariant BA.2, which health chiefs say is now dominant. Experts told MailOnline cases are likely still falling across the UK but warned they may not be for much longer now that BA.2s share of infections is continuing to rise. However, scientists have insisted there is no reason to panic. The strain is behind nearly all cases in Denmark but has had no impact on Covid hospitalisation and death rates. Plummeting testing numbers, which have dropped by a fifth in a week, also make it difficult to decipher the true infection rate. Government scientists told MPs that No10 did not ask for any modelling on how the end of all legal Covid curbs in the country would impact infection rates but warned it was inevitable that cases would trend upwards. It comes as a new study suggests that cloth masks do little to prevent the spread of Covid-19 or other airborne diseases. Researchers from the University of Bristol found that 90 percent of particles could get through cloth masks, making them effectively useless during the pandemic. Cloth masks have been popular in the US, as they are easily reusable after washing and at some points were the most accessible due to shortages and high prices for surgical or N95 masks. Now, though, experts have discovered that these masks were doing little if anything to actually stop the spread of the virus, and likely contributed to spread as people who believed they were acting safely were not doing so. So, what WAS the point? Cloth masks allow 90% of particles to filter through giving them little ability to prevent COVID transmission, study finds Researchers found that cloth masks only block an estimated 10 percent of all particles from getting through. Because cloth masks are made of tightly woven yarn (top) unlike surgical and other kind of masks that are made to filter particles (bottom) they are not as protective against Covid Cloth masks do little to prevent the spread of COVID-19, or other airborne diseases, a new study finds. Researchers from the University of Bristol in the United Kingdom found that 90 percent of particles could get through cloth masks, making them effectively useless during the pandemic. Cloth masks have been popular in the U.S., as they are easily reusable after washing and at some points were the most accessible due to shortages and high prices for surgical or N95 masks. Now, though, experts have discovered that these masks were doing little if anything to actually stop the spread of the virus, and likely contributed to spread as people who believed they were acting safely were not doing so. Researchers, who published their findings Tuesday in Physics of Fluids, built an airflow simulation using 3d imaging to gauge how well different masks used during the pandemic filtered particles. They note that unlike N95 or surgical masks, cloth masks are not built using material made to filter out particles. Cloth masks are made out of tightly woven fabrics. While not visible to the eye, small gaps in the fabric are enough to allow for a vast majority of particles to get through. Advertisement Two women wearing masks in Leeds, England, February 9, 2022 Data from the UK Health Security Agency (UKHSA) shows 39,000 Britons tested positive, down 5.2 per cent on the 41,130 cases detected last Tuesday Lockdowns, school closures and limiting gatherings only reduced COVID mortality by 0.2% at 'enormous economic and social costs', study finds A graph comparing curbs with deaths The original coronavirus lockdowns had 'little to no' effect on pandemic death tolls in the US, UK and Europe, a controversial report suggests. Economists who carried out a meta-analysis found draconian restrictions imposed in spring 2020 including stay-at-home orders, compulsory masks and social distancing only reduced Covid mortality by 0.2 per cent. They warned that lockdowns caused 'enormous economic and social costs' and concluded they were 'ill-founded and should be rejected as a pandemic policy instrument' going forward. The review, led by a Johns Hopkins University professor, argued that border closures had virtually zero effect on Covid mortality, reducing deaths by just 0.1 per cent. However, closing nonessential shops was found to be the most effective intervention, leading to a 10.6 per cent drop in virus fatalities. Their report, which has not been peer-reviewed, said that this was probably due to shutting pubs and restaurants where alcohol is consumed. School closures were linked to a smaller 4.4 per cent decrease. The researchers who deal in the field of economics, rather than medicine or public health originally identified 18,590 global studies into lockdowns, which they claim had to be whittled down to just 24 to answer their research question. Critics have accused them of 'cherry-picking' studies to suit their narrative and have raised doubts about the biases of its authors, who have been vocal about lockdowns and vaccine mandates on social media. Most scientists believe that, before the arrival of vaccines and antivirals, lockdowns had a significant effect on cutting transmission and therefore reducing the number of hospital admissions and deaths caused by Covid. Advertisement Researchers, who published their findings on Tuesday in Physics of Fluids, built an airflow simulation using 3d imaging to gauge how well different masks used during the pandemic filtered particles. They note that unlike N95 or surgical masks, cloth masks are not built using material made to filter out particles. Cloth masks are made out of tightly woven fabrics. While not visible to the eye, small gaps in the fabric are enough to allow for a vast majority of particles to get through. Masks are air filters, and woven fabrics, such as cotton, make for good jeans, shirts, and other apparel, but they are lousy air filters, Richard Sear, co-author of the study and physicist at Surrey University, said. KN95 masks are built to filter out particles, and have a standard filtration of 95 percent. The filtering layer of an N95 mask is made from much smaller, 5-micrometer fibers with gaps that are 10 times smaller, making it much better for filtering nasty particles from the air, such as those containing virus, Sear said. KF-94 masks are considered to be very effective as well, with the ability to filter out 94 percent of particles. Filtration efficiency is not the only two benefits of those masks, though. Fit is very important as well. A mark should fit tightly around a persons face, almost hugging their nose, cheeks and chin. This is to avoid leaving gaps above or below the mouth and the nose where air can escape. Even if a person does have a mask that can filter up to 95 percent of particles, if the mask isnt well fitting then the particles could just escape out of the side anyways. This is why Sear also does not recommend the use of surgical masks. Surgical masks fit badly, so a lot of air goes unfiltered past the edges of the mask by the cheeks and nose, he said. Data from the UK Health Security Agency (UKHSA) shows 39,000 Britons tested positive, down 5.2 per cent on the 41,130 cases detected last Tuesday. The vast majority of the cases, 26,711, were registered in England, while 2,225 were logged in Wales and 2,567 were detected in Northern Ireland. Another 2,567 people tested positive in Scotland. The true scale of infections is hard to interpret, experts warn. Some 643,136 Covid test results were logged yesterday, compared to more than 2million at the height of the Omicron wave. But the positivity rate in England the proportion of Covid tests that turn out to be positive increased to 10.9 per cent last Tuesday, the latest date figures are available for, compared to 10.4 per cent one week earlier. Meanwhile, 1,015 infected people were admitted to hospitals across the UK on Friday. The figure is just 2.6 per cent lower than the week earlier. And 10,551 Covid-infected people were in hospitals across the UK by 8am on Sunday, down 6.8 per cent in a week. Another 194 deaths within 28 days of a positive test were registered, bringing the total since the start of the pandemic to 161,630. Vaccination data shows 91.5 per cent of over-12s in the UK have now had at least one Covid vaccine, while 85.2 per cent are double-jabbed and 66.5 per cent are boosted. Professor Paul Hunter, an infectious disease expert at the University of East Anglia (UEA), told MailOnline it is challenging to interpret daily infection data because the proportion of cases being picked up through testing is dropping. Comparing daily case data with estimates from the Office for National Statistics on the true infection rate, Covid tests picked up 45 per cent of infections in early January, Prof Hunter said. But this dropped to 25 per cent by the second week of February, he noted. Although infection numbers are probably still falling, BA.2 infections were still increasing at least a week ago when the latest Covid-19 Genomics UK Consortium data is available, he said. So overall I think cases are still probably falling but maybe not for much longer now that BA.2 is dominant and probably still increasing. However, I doubt BA.2 could continue to increase for much longer. It is already increasing much more slowly than a few weeks ago. The UKHSA revealed BA.2 was behind 52 per cent of all cases in the seven days up to February 20. The sub-variant has completed its rapid rise to dominance just a month after it was first spotted in the UK. A British human rights lawyer who has been labelled 'anti-China' for criticising Hong Kong's national security laws has fled the city after being summoned for a police interview. The Hong Kong-based Wen Wei Po reported that Paul Harris had been summoned to a police station in the city's Wanchai district, with Harris shown walking into the police station in a video posted on its website. The report on Wednesday also carried a second video of Harris at Hong Kong International Airport pushing a trolley with suitcases. In the video, Harris was asked by a reporter whether he was afraid of being arrested, but he didn't comment. The Hong Kong-based Wen Wei Po reported that Paul Harris (pictured) had been summoned to a police station in the city's Wanchai district, with Harris shown walking into the police station in a video posted on its website The report on Wednesday also carried a second video of Harris at Hong Kong International Airport pushing a trolley with suitcases Reuters could not confirm when either video was filmed. Another state-backed newspaper, Ta Kung Pao, said in a separate report on Wednesday that Harris had 'fled' Hong Kong after being called in to meet police for an 'alleged violation' of the national security law. Harris confirmed to Reuters in a phone message that he had left the city, but gave no further details. 'Yes, on way to see my mother in England,' he said. Harris declined to answer any further questions from Reuters. Harris stood down in January from the Bar Association, a professional body representing Hong Kong's 1,500 barristers, without seeking re-election. Harris' year-long term was marked by criticism from Hong Kong and Beijing officials who described him as 'anti-China', and repeated attacks in state-backed media. Another state-backed newspaper, Ta Kung Pao, said in a separate report on Wednesday that Harris had 'fled' Hong Kong after being called in to meet police for an 'alleged violation' of the national security law Harris, a senior counsel, had commented on jail terms for several democracy activists last year and the sweeping national security law that China imposed on the city in June 2020. Two of Harris' fellow barristers said he had been planning for some time to leave Hong Kong in March, but it was not known for how long. At the Bar's in-house election in January, Harris was replaced by fellow barrister Victor Dawes. Some lawyers see Dawes as a pro-establishment selection after several years of strong stances by the association in the former British colony, whose robust legal system helped make it an attractive international financial centre. Harris stood down in January from the Bar Association, a professional body representing Hong Kong's 1,500 barristers, without seeking re-election Dawes said at the time his team would work to keep the Bar's independence and defend human rights if needed as prosecutions moved through courts under the national security law, which came after months of anti-government protests. The law expands police powers of search and surveillance and punishes acts of subversion, terrorism, collusion with foreign forces and secession with up to life imprisonment. Harris had been involved in several cases related to the law. A Bar Association spokesperson said the group was 'ascertaining the situation and has no comment at this stage'. A dark-clothed and masked gang on electric bikes tried to murder an innocent schoolgirl, 15, who was 'just waiting at the bus stop on her own'. Merseyside Police were today hunting a group of at least four people after the attack just after 5.10pm last night in Toxteth, Liverpool. Detectives now think believe the girl was not deliberately singled out and just an innocent bystander. A 21-year-old man who later presented himself at hospital with a gun wound to his hand was subsequently arrested on suspicion of attempted murder. Police - who are appealing for witnesses and any dashcam or phone footage - said they are also currently holding a 60-year-old on suspicion of assisting an offender. The case has haunting echoes with the murder of Rhys Jones in 2007 when the seven-year-old was shot dead walking home from football. The innocent little lad was caught in the crossfire of a gang war. Last night's victim, who cannot be named for legal reasons, suffered 'devastating injuries' as she was hit in the lower body after a number of shots. A neighbour told MailOnline: 'The poor girl was just waiting at the bus stop. 'I've been told that she was on her own when she was shot. 'Why would you shoot a girl waiting at a bus stop? It's a terrible thing to happen.' Police are probing the theory there may have been more than one shooter amid the four-bike gang. The girl - who was rushed to hospital in a critical condition - had this lunchtime improved to serious, but stable. Detective Chief Superintendent Mark Kameen called it a 'callous and cowardly attack' and added: 'Unfortunately I find myself before you here today to talk about a shooting that took place in Toxteth last night, which resulted in an innocent 15-year-old schoolgirl being shot as she waited for a bus home from school with her friend. Detective Chief Superintendent Mark Kameen of Merseyside Police during a press conference Police forensic tape marks a bullet hole in a bus stop in Toxteth, Liverpool, earlier today Police community support officers at the scene in Upper Warwick Street in Toxteth, Liverpool, after a teenage girl was seriously injured in a shooting incident late Tuesday afternoon 'It is an absolute miracle and a credit to the NHS that this young woman has survived. 'We were called at about 5.20pm yesterday evening to a person having been shot at a bus stop as a result of a number of individuals on up to four bikes. We believe those could have been electric bikes. 'At this moment in time we think shots were fired from one or more people in those bikes. 'All of the people on those bikes were wearing dark clothing, were wearing facemasks or some sort of face covering like a balaclava. 'Once the shooting had taken place we believe the bikes made off towards the north hill street and princess road area of the city which is very close to where the attack took place. 'When the ambulance crew arrived following calls from members of the public they found a young girl who suffered a gunshot wound to her upper body and some devastating injuries. 'A short time later we received a further report of another shooting where a 21-year-old turned up to hospital with a gunshot room to his arm. One of the lines of enquiry is that these two incidents are connected. 'The actions of those people responsible for this attack on a 15-year-old schoolgirl who is waiting at a bus stop to go home from school are utterly appalling and shocking Police have arrested a 21-year-old man after a teenage girl was shot in her school uniform in Liverpool and 'seriously injured' Merseyside Police (pictured) were contacted this evening at 5.10pm following reports that shots had been fired on Upper Warwick Street in the city of Toxteth and a 15-year-old girl had been injured The young girl has been taken to hospital where she is being treated and is in stable condition 'It shows a total disregard and contempt that they have for the decent honest law abiding people who live work and visit this city.' House-to-house enquiries have been carried out and officers will also be checking CCTV in a bid to establish the circumstances of the incident. Forensic examinations have also been carried out at the bus stop, which has a shattered screen. In a statement yesterday, Merseyside Police said: 'We can confirm that officers are this evening, Tuesday 1st March, at the scene of an injury shooting in Toxteth. 'We were contacted at 5.10pm following reports that shots had been fired on Upper Warwick Street and that a teenage girl had been injured. The girl has been taken to hospital where she is currently in a serious condition. 'A short time later a man, in his 20s, turned up at hospital with a gunshot injury to his hand, which is not life threatening. Enquiries are being carried out to establish if the two injuries are linked. 'An investigation is underway and house-to-house, forensic and CCTV enquiries are being carried out in the local area. A number of roads in the area have been sealed off as enquiries continue.' A short time later a man, who is in his 20s, turned up at hospital with a gunshot injury to his hand, which is not believed to be life-threatening Police have launched an investigation and are appealing for any witnesses to come forward. Enquiries are currently being carried out to establish if the two injuries are linked Merseyside's Police Commissioner Emily Spurrell tweeted: 'Deeply shocking and upsetting to learn a teenage girl has been injured during a shooting on the streets of Toxteth. 'My thoughts are with her and her family. I wish her a very speedy nd full recovery. If you have any info, please come forward & help bring those responsible to justice.' Chief Inspector Col Rooney added: 'The investigation is in the very early stages as we seek to establish what has taken place and who was involved. 'While I understand this is a shocking incident for the local community we have a large police presence in the area carrying out a number of lines of enquiry and I would encourage people to come forward and tell us what they know. 'I would ask anyone who was in the area of Upper Warwick Street around 5.10pm this evening who saw or heard anything suspicious or thinks they have captured anything significant on their mobile phone, dashcam or Ring doorbell to contact us as a matter of urgency. 'There is no room for guns on the streets of Merseyside and we will do everything we can to find the person or people responsible for this incident and bring them to justice.' Anyone with information is asked to DM @MerPolCC or @CrimestoppersUK on 0800 555 111 anonymously quoting log 647 of 1st March. High-end businesses are now offering customers Chicken 'Kyivs' in solidarity with the Ukrainian people - amid a campaign to change the Russian spelling of the breaded poultry dish. James Chiavarini, owner of Il Portico and Pino in west London's Kensington High Street, revealed yesterday that the popular poultry classic was 'back in the menu' and 5 from every order would be donated to help out victims of the Russian invasion. His idea appears to have proven popular with Kensington diners, as he wrote this morning that the dish sold out within two hours on Tuesday, adding: 'Let's see if we can beat that today.' Mr Chiavarini had revealed yesterday afternoon that 'Chicken Kyiv will be back in the menu at Portico for the first time in over 40 years', and with every order they would donate 5 to the Red Cross in Ukraine. Ognisko Polskie, The Polish Hearth Club in nearby Chelsea, will also be offering Chicken Kyivs along with Ukrainian Barszcz (Borscht) and even a Volodymyr Zelenskyy-themed cocktail - with proceeds going to a relief fund. The cocktail, featuring the colours of the Ukrainian flag, is made up of Polish vodka, apricot brandy, lemon juice, and blue curacao. The club is also organising a fundraising dinner for Saturday, with tickets going on sale this week. A spokesman told MailOnline the Polish and Ukrainian ambassadors would be in attendance. James Chiavarini, owner of Il Portico and Pino in west London's Kensington High Street, revealed yesterday that the popular poultry dish was 'back in the menu' and 5 from every order would be donated to help out victims of the Russian invasion (pictured: A Chicken Kyiv from their restaurant) Ognisko Polskie, The Polish Hearth Club in nearby Chelsea, will also be offering Chicken Kyivs along with Ukrainian Barszcz (Borscht) and even a Zelenskyy cocktail - with proceeds going to the relief fund Pictured: Il Portico, High Street Kensington. James Chiavarini, owner of Il Portico and Pino revealed yesterday that the popular poultry dish was 'back in the menu' and 5 from every order would be donated to help out victims of the Russian invasion His idea appears to have proven popular with Kensington diners, as he wrote this morning that the dish sold out within two hours on Tuesday, adding: 'Let's see if we can beat that today' The high-end Dublin-based hamper, picnic and wine shop Fallon & Byrne also revealed that they were renaming their Food Hall item to 'Chicken Kyiv' with March sales going to the Irish Red Cross. They said in a statement: 'Like everyone, we are horrified by the appalling events unfolding in Ukraine. We all feel very powerless watching from afar. 'To show our solidarity with the people of Ukraine, who are demonstrating such incredible bravery and fortitude, we will be donating all sales of our newly renamed Chicken Kyiv in the Food Hall to The Irish Red Cross for the month of March. 'This will include both in-store and online sales, and we will also be putting a donation button on the checkout page of our online shop if anyone would like to make an additional contribution.' And the Chelmsford business, Our Local Butcher, also said they would be altering the spelling. The high-end Dublin-based hamper, picnic and wine shop Fallon & Byrne also revealed that they were renaming their Food Hall item to 'Chicken Kyiv' with March sales going to the Irish Red Cross And the Chelmsford business, Our Local Butcher, also said they would be altering the spelling A Facebook group, simply named 'Chicken Kyiv', has been created to advance the cause of renaming the beloved breaded dish The butchers' shop said in a statement: 'We are changing our chicken Kievs to the Ukrainian spelling Kyiv going forward. 'Also for this month we will be donating 25p from every garlic butter and mild chilli chicken Kyiv to Ukrainian Red Cross. 'We hope you understand and support us in this but if you wish to opt out of a donation for personal reasons just let us know.' A Facebook group, simply named 'Chicken Kyiv', has been created to advance the cause of renaming the beloved breaded dish. The group's administrator wrote: 'It seems to me that a good passive protest would be to lobby supermarkets and food manufacturers to rebrand the humble Chicken Kiev in honour of the valiant city whose soviet-era name is still used. 'We should start calling the dish Chicken Kyiv, out of respect, or even Kyiv Supreme. And we should start eating it and posting pictures as another sign of support. 'Anyone working in restaurants and food retail get lobbying.' Russian tycoons have called in private security to guard their super-yachts and luxury villas in Mallorca over fears they may be targeted in 'revenge' attacks following the invasion of Ukraine. Police have also stepped up their patrols of the Spanish island's ports to provide a 24-hour watch to head off would-be vandals. It comes as a home owned by Russian President Vladimir Putin's ex-wife in Anglet, south-west France, has been covered in graffiti, with scores of messages reading: 'F**k' and 'F**k Poutine'. The Russian oligarchs with boats, businesses and villas in Mallorca voiced their concerns after the attempted sinking of the 157ft mega yacht 'Lady Anastasia' by its Ukrainian chief engineer on Saturday. Taras Ostapchuk, 55, had opened valves to allow water to rush in while the mega yacht - owned by Alexander Mijeev - was moored in Port Adriano on the holiday island. Taras said he acted out of revenge after seeing the Russian army destroying civilian targets in Kyiv. His boss and owner of the yacht Mr Mijeev is the former head of the Russian Helicopter Corporation who took over state-owned weapons supplier Rostec six years ago. Alexander Mikheev (pictured) is a former head of the Russian Helicopter Corporation who took over state-owned weapons supplier Rostec six years ago The Lady Anastasia (pictured) was the subject of a 'revenge' attack in a Mallorca port on Saturday The outer walls of the home of Vladimir Putin's ex-wife (pictured) in Anglet, south-west France, was spray-painted repeatedly with the word 'f**k', with one post reading: 'f**k Poutine' Artur Ocheretny and Lyudmila Putin's wooden gates are seen spray-painted with Ukrainian flags and 'f**k Poutine' Two other Ukrainian employees on the boat managed to close the valves, preventing the 4.2 million vessel from sinking. Spanish newspaper Ultima Hora said many tycoons have since 'activated preventive protection mechanisms' to avoid being victims of possible attacks on their properties. Most are aware that the island is a quiet, privileged place but they do not rule out that there may be a domino effect, the paper reported. Over the last few days, Russian tycoons have hired 24-hour private security services to guard establishments, residences and luxury boats. Mr Mijeev, owner of the targeted Lady Anastasia, is reported to be maintaining an active security contract authorised by the Ministry of the Interior to protect his other properties. Another unnamed Russian oligarch, who has a luxurious boat moored in the port of Palma, has taken the same step. The Russian community has also been reinforcing their security with maintenance, kitchen and cleaning staff staying in their villas in Mallorca for days at a time to prevent them from being empty. The idea is that they can alert the National Police or Civil Guard in case of an incident. Mr Ostapchuk was arrested by Civil Guard officers on Saturday and later released on bail. He said he tried to scuttle Mr Mikheev's yacht after watching news reports from Ukraine on the television. 'There was a video of a helicopter attack on a building in Kyiv,' he was quoted as saying by local media. 'They were attacking innocents.' He had worked as a mechanic on the yacht for ten years. Speaking exclusively to MailOnline, Mr Ostapchuk today shared a picture of himself as he crossed into Ukraine from Poland at the Rawa Ruska border point, heading to his home in Kyiv where he plans to sign up. He said: 'Politics is a thing that changes quickly and so when last week I saw the video of the Russian helicopter shooting missiles at a civilian house in Kyiv I knew I had to do something. 'I know that Mijeev is the person responsible for making these helicopters and after I saw that video, I thought I have a house like that and it may be hit by a missile so I wanted to take action. 'What I do want to say is that Mijeev was a good employer and I have no complaints about working for him it was just the situation with Russia that wound me up.' The Villa 'Suzanna' (pictured) was bought by the Russian businessman Artur Ocheretny, the husband of Lyudmila Putin (ex-wife of Russian President Putin) The Villa 'Suzanna', owned by Russian businessman Artur Ocheretny, the husband of Lyudmila Putin He previously told Ultima Hora: 'I have never picked up a gun but if necessary I will.' He added: 'As soon as I arrive in the first city in Ukraine, I will look for a military commander and ask him if they need me. I said to myself: why do I need a job if I don't have my country? 'Yes, it's true, I had a good job as chief mechanic on the ship and a good salary, but I'm going to fight for my country. 'I've lost my job but that's not a problem. I will not lose my country. I am not a hero, I am an old man, but I have a lot of experience in mechanics.' The Spanish government, through the Ministry of Transport, has reportedly required the Balearic ports to identify Russian yachts that exceed 24 metres in length. The request, according to the Nautical Gazette, is due to the possibility of immobilising or confiscating them as part of the ongoing sanctions regime against Russia. The State Maritime Rescue Society has sent a statement to all the marinas and port authorities of the islands so that they can provide them with the requested information. Mechanical engineer Taras Ostapchuk, 55, the Ukrainian sailor who tried to sink a Russian military supplier's 5million-plus yacht in Mallorca after war broke out has returned home to take on Vladimir Putin's army The 156ft luxury yacht, named Lady Anastasia, was moored at Pord Adriano when it was scuppered Taras explained how he asked for his salary to be paid in advance and then decided to sink the yacht (pictured) by releasing valves which allowed water to rush in as it was moored at Port Adriano The Lady Anastasia has five luxury cabins (including the one pictured) Meanwhile in Anglet, southwestern France, the outer walls and columns of Putin's ex-wife's Villa 'Suzanna' have been adorned with the words 'f**k', with several posts carrying the message: 'F**k Poutine' - the French spelling of the Russian president's surname. The spray painters used yellow and blue to inscribe the expletives in a clear reference to the colours of the Ukrainian flag - which was also emblazoned on the property's gates. The expansive hilltop mansion was bought by the Russian businessman Artur Ocheretny, the current husband of Lyudmila Putin - Vladimir's ex-wife. It comes as anger among European populations continues to soar amid the onslaught of Russia's invasion - which has seen hundreds of innocent civilians killed and thousands of soldiers slain. Politicians and business leaders are facing mounting pressure to cut any ties with Putin's regime, as more and more citizens begin to scrutinise the influence of Russian money in their societies. Advertisement A haunting video shows a Russian mother trying to explain to her tearful daughter why they have been detained by armed police for opposing Vladimir Putins war. They went to put flowers at the Ukrainian embassy in Moscow, and the children handed in No to War posters they had drawn. But the mothers and children were all detained. Sociologist Alexandra Arkhipova told of her horror when mothers Ekaterina Zavizion and Olga Alter and their children Sofya Gladkova, seven, Liza Gladkova, 11, Gosha Petrov, 11, Matvey Petrov, nine and David Petrov, seven, were held by Russian officers. 'All of them were detained by the police,' she said. Russian children were arrested while carrying flowers and No to War posters to the Ukrainian embassy in Moscow The heart breaking moment a mother tries to calm her child who has been arrested and detained Russian mother Ekaterina Zavizion (pictured) was arrested along with her children. She works as a sociologist The police were keeping them first in a police vehicle, and brought them to the Presnenskoye police station. 'Phones were taken away from parents, and the policemen are shouting at the parents threatening these brave mums and their children, that the kids could be put into care right now, and these mothers would lose their parental rights.' The video shows one of the mothers Ekaterina Zavizion and her daughter Sofya, seven, talking through the metal cage of a cell. The girl clutches her mothers hand through the metal grill. The daughter is plainly deeply distraught . 'They dont want many people gathering in one space,' explained her mother. 'Why are you sitting there?' Demand her daughter. 'Everything is going to be good, do you trust me?' The children were taken by their mothers to lay flowers at the Ukrainian embassy in Moscow. However, the women - along with their children - were arrested and thrown in the police van, to be held by police overnight. Mother Ekaterina told of the 'hell' she suffered as her children screamed and wept when they were detained. 'I had watched videos showing the horrible inhumane bombing in Kharkiv - and realised I could no longer sit under a bush shaking and pretend nothing was happening,' she said. 'My heart is tearing with sorrow and pain. 'I had the most peaceful intentions - to lay flowers in the memory of civilians and children who had perished in Ukraine.' She wanted to show 'we are not indifferent' and that 'we are dying here too from sorrow and pain.' On being detained with her children, she said: 'It was surreal, I was not prepared for it. 'The children started screaming, it was hell. 'God, I will never forget those minutes.' She said: 'Perhaps it would have been safer for my family to stay silent and not go anywhere.' Photos first emerged when a Russian opposition politician shared heart-rending images of children detained in the back of a police van after taking part in anti-war protests. Despite the Kremlin having no tolerance for dissent, protesters have defied Moscow and taken to the streets against President Vladimir Putin's illegal war in Ukraine, risking jail and even treason charges. Almost 7,000 people have so-far been detained by Russian police in as many as 50 cities, according to OVD-Info - an organization that tracks protests in the country. The pictures show at least three children - no older than Primary School age - sitting in the back of a Moscow police van holding flowers and banners. One girl is shown holding a sign that says 'No War' in Russian. Small Russian and Ukrainian flags have been painted around the words. To the right, the two flags are drawn followed by a small pink heart, to says 'Russia plus Ukraine equals love'. A Russian opposition politician has shared heart-rending images of children (pictured) detained in the back of a police van after taking part in anti-war protests The girl is shown sitting on a chair in the back of a police van with a blank expression, with two children sat either side of her, who also both appear calm despite the circumstances. A girl to her left is shown in a pink puffer jacket and mittens holding a bunch of flowers and another banner, while a boy to her left has his backpack at his feet. Another photo shows the girl in the pink jacket standing up against metal bars that are keeping them inside the van. Her face is red, as if she had been crying. The other children can be seen behind her, as can what appear to be at least two Russian police officers dressed in black uniforms. Officers in the same uniforms have been seen in Russian cities cracking down on protesters and bundling them into vans. The children were taken to a police station. She can be seen sitting on a chair next to a desk, where a woman in police uniform and a mask is working on a computer. The 'no war' banners they were holding are laid out on the desk behind the girl, as is one of her flowers. It's already dark outside, as the children are being detained overnight. According to photographs shared on Tuesday by opposition politician Ilya Yashin, children are among those that have been snatched by officers. The pictures show at least three children - no older than Primary School age - sitting in the back of what is reportedly a Moscow police van holding flowers and banners People gather to stage anti-war protest in Saint-Petersburg, Russia on March 1, 2022. Police officers detain a demonstrator during a protest against Russia's invasion of Ukraine in central Saint Petersburg on March 1, 2022 Ilya Yashin is a former politician who was banned from running for office in 2021 because he branded an 'extremist' for, be believes, his support of Russian opposition leader Alexi Navalny. He posted the pictures to social media on Tuesday night, writing on Facebook: 'Nothing out of the ordinary: just kids in paddy wagons behind an anti-war poster. This is Putin's Russia, folks. You live here.' He continued to predict that the 'Kremlin propaganda machine' would blame the children's parents, telling people not to involve their kids in politics. But Yashin said that was irrelevant. 'Many generations in our country (are) taught from the school bench that the worst thing is war, and the main value is the peaceful sky above the head,' he wrote. He recalled his own time as at school, saying he and his classmates would draw anti-war posters. 'And that's ok!' he added. 'Children against war is damn normal!' Meanwhile in Saint Petersburg, another night of protests saw police cracking down on anti-war demonstrations on Tuesday. On Sunday alone, police arrested 1,700 protesters across 46 Russian cities, OVD-Info reported. Pictures from Moscow and Saint Petersburg showed officer grabbing protesters and carrying them to police vans. Nearly 7,000 people have now been detained in antiwar protests across Russia since Thursday Pictured: A protester is dragged away by Omon paramilitary members during a demonstration in Moscow on Sunday Russia's feared Omon paramilitary thugs have been seen on the streets to stamp out any opposition to Putin's invasion of Ukraine. The helmeted cosmonauts in camouflaged riot gear have been seen regularly dragging away demonstrators. Protests against the invasion started Thursday in Russia and have continued daily ever since, despite the Omon and police moving swiftly to crack down on the rallies. The Kremlin has sought to downplay the protests, insisting that a much broader share of Russians support the assault on Ukraine. But younger tech-savvy Russians with access to independent media have been voicing their opposition to the Kremlin's invasion, risking jail and even treason charges. On Tuesday, US Secretary of State Antony Blinken called on the UN's top human rights body to hold Russia accountable for its invasion of Ukraine. The top US diplomat also singled out Russia in recorded remarks delivered to the Human Rights Council for repression within the country, citing reports that thousands of protesters in Russia who were opposed to the invasion had been detained. Blinken urged the council Tuesday to send a message that Russian President Vladimir Putin should unconditionally stop the 'unprovoked attack' and withdraw its forces from Ukraine. 'We must condemn firmly and unequivocally Russia's attempt to topple a democratically elected government and its gross human rights abuses and violations of international humanitarian law, and we must take steps to hold the perpetrators accountable,' he said. A knife-wielding Florida man was arrested last week after threatening his brother's life and telling him he was 'going to cut the gay out of him'. David Martinez, 40, of Miami, was sharpening a large kitchen knife at his home Thursday morning when he allegedly told his brother he was going to kill him. The victim, who managed to flee the residence, told police his brother had been 'acting strangely' since the night before. Martinez was taken into custody at the home after becoming 'irate' and struggling with Miami-Dade police officers. He faces three felony charges of assault with a deadly weapon, kidnapping and false imprisonment, as well as two misdemeanor counts for resisting an officer. He is currently jailed in lieu of a $22,000 bond. David Martinez, 40, of Miami, was arrested last week after threatening his brother's life and telling him he was 'going to cut the gay out of him' Police responded the Martinez's Miami residence around 6am on February 24 for reports of a violent dispute. The suspect's brother told police he tried to leave the home after Martinez threatened him but was followed, grabbed and ordered back inside. Fearful, the victim obeyed Martinez's orders and returned to the residence. He eventually managed to exit the home and had a friend call 911. When police arrived on scene, Martinez was uncooperative with the officers. He was ultimately taken to the group and placed in handcuffs before being taken to county jail. Police also seized the weapon. The prime minister of Australia is feeling (down) under the weather after testing positive for COVID-19. I am experiencing flu-like symptoms and will be recovering over the next week, Scott Morrison said in a statement. Advertisement The prime minister said he would continue his official duties while isolating at his official Sydney residence. Australian Prime Minister Scott Morrison talks about the situation in Ukraine at a news conference in Sydney on Feb. 23. (Rick Rycroft/AP) Australia is currently experiencing heavy rains and deadly flooding on its east coast. Advertisement Before his positive test, he also promised $50 million of weapons aid to Ukraine during a press conference. Defense minister Peter Dutton, who contracted COVID-19 during a visit to the U.S. in March 2020, was with Morrison at the presser and will also isolate. With News Wire Services The Ukrainian sailor who tried to sink a Russian military supplier's 5million-plus yacht in Mallorca after war broke out has returned home to take on Vladimir Putin's army. Mechanical engineer Taras Ostapchuk, 55, said he attempted to scuttle the 156ft Lady Anastasia owned by millionaire Alexander Mijeev, after seeing pictures of missiles hitting apartment blocks. Mijeev, is a former head of the Russian Helicopter Corporation who took over state-owned weapons supplier Rostec six years ago and Taras told cops he had tried to sink the Mallorca moored yacht out of revenge. Speaking exclusively to MailOnline, Taras shared a picture of himself as he crossed into Ukraine from Poland at the Rawa Ruska border point, heading to his home in Kyiv where he plans to sign up. He said: 'Politics is a thing that changes quickly and so when last week I saw the video of the Russian helicopter shooting missiles at a civilian house in Kyiv I knew I had to do something. 'I know that Mijeev is the person responsible for making these helicopters and after I saw that video, I thought I have a house like that and it may be hit by a missile so I wanted to take action. 'What I do want to say is that Mijeev was a good employer and I have no complaints about working for him it was just the situation with Russia that wound me up.' Mechanical engineer Taras Ostapchuk, 55, the Ukrainian sailor who tried to sink a Russian military supplier's 5million-plus yacht in Mallorca after war broke out has returned home to take on Vladimir Putin's army The Ukrainian mechanical engineer sank the Lady Anastasia in Mallorca's Port Adriano following Moscow's invasion of his homeland because he claims his Russian boss Alexander Mijeev sells weapons to Putin The yacht (pictured), called the Lady Anastasia, is worth at least 5million and is currently in the Mediterranean Taras was Mijeev's member of staff and had worked for him for several years - but told police who turned up to arrest him: 'I don't regret anything I've done and I would do it again', adding: 'My boss is a criminal who sells weapons that kill the Ukrainian people.' Taras explained how he asked for his salary to be paid in advance and then decided to sink the yacht by releasing valves which allowed water to rush in as it was moored at Port Adriano. The yacht was left partially submerged but still tied to its moorings. When the police arrived Taras is said to have been waiting next to the boat as it went down and reportedly told a Civil Guard: 'My boss is a criminal who sells weapons that kill the Ukrainian people.' He told MailOnline: 'I knew the water wasn't very deep there maybe six metres so the yacht would maybe sink only 2.5 metres, enough for water to go into the main rooms but it would not sink to the bottom because it is too shallow. 'I'm a sailor and I knew those onboard would have time to collect their possessions and try and save the yacht. They did their duty, as any good sailor would do and then they raised the alarm which is when the police arrived. 'They asked who sank the ship and I said it was me and that it was a political act against Putin's regime. They put me in jail and I spent the night there and they took my laces and possessions away but I was fed well and I have no complaints against the Spanish authorities.' Ostapchuk scuppered the vessel belonging to Alexander Mijeev (pictured), a former head of the Russian Helicopter Corporation who took over state-owned weapons supplier Rostec six years ago, in Mallorca The 156ft luxury yacht, named Lady Anastasia, was moored at Pord Adriano when it was scuppered Following the incident last Saturday, Taras appeared in court on Monday but was bailed by a judge pending a further investigation and he flew out of Mallorca via Zurich and Warsaw. He added: 'The judge said she didn't see any reason for me to stay in jail and that as far as she was concerned no crime had been committed and let me go. I decided to fly straight back to Ukraine so I could join in the defence of my country. 'It's the least I can do in the face of what Putin and Russia is doing but if I have to go back to Spain to face a civil case because I sank the yacht I will go back and fight it. 'I am a man of respectable age, but I am full of strength and my mind is still not weakened. I hope to get a position in the Ukrainian navy, any in fact. I have experience in managing various ships, including American ones.' The three other crew members had no idea of the plot until Taras is alleged to have rushed in and told them to abandon ship saying: 'Don't worry because I will take all the blame'. Taras said: 'When I landed in Warsaw some other Ukrainian guys on the plane recognised me and they said they would give me a lift to the border and when I crossed one of the guards wanted to have his picture taken with me because he recognised my name as well.' Taras explained how he asked for his salary to be paid in advance and then decided to sink the yacht (pictured) by releasing valves which allowed water to rush in as it was moored at Port Adriano The ship, which is worth more than 5million, has five luxury cabins (pictured). The yacht was left partially submerged but still tied to its moorings The unrepentant sailor on Saturday told island paper Ultima Hora he would catch a flight to Poland from Mallorca immediately before getting on a train or bus to the Ukrainian capital. He told the paper: 'I'm going to fight. As soon as I reach the first Ukrainian city I will look for a military commander and ask him if they need me. 'I told myself: 'Why do I need a job if I have my country. I had a good job as a head mechanic on the boat and a good salary but I am going to fight for my nation. 'I am not going to lose my country. I am not a hero, I'm a middle-aged man, but I have a lot of experience as a mechanic. I've never held a weapon but if necessary I will. Why not'. Speaking of the TV footage he was watching on a Spanish news channel that led to him allegedly carrying out the attack on Lady Anastasia, he added: 'I live in a very similar building. 'From my window I can see the Ukrainian parliament. I was wondering what's had happened to my house when I saw the footage because its in a very similar position.' Advertisement Moscow has admitted that nearly 500 of its troops have been killed and 1,600 more have been injured in its first report of casualties from fighting since President Vladimir Putin ordered Russia's savage invasion of Ukraine. The figures, released on Wednesday, come days after Russia claimed it had not suffered any casualties in the war. The Kremlin has engaged in a propaganda campaign designed to favourably mould the narrative through state-owned media channels, but has insisted its losses are considerably lower than the figures offered by Ukraine. Ukrainian authorities have said more than 5,800 Russian soldiers have been killed in the last week as the country mounts a fierce resistance against Putin's forces. Speaking today, spokesman of the Russian Defense Ministry Maj. Gen. Igor Konashenkov said 498 Russian troops have been killed and 1,597 more sustained wounds. Konashenkov rejected reports about 'incalculable losses' of the Russians as 'disinformation' and revealed Russia's military casualties in Ukraine for the first time since the start of the attack last Thursday. He assured that families of those killed are receiving all necessary assistance. The Russian general also claimed that neither conscripts, nor cadets have been involved in the operation in Ukraine, dismissing media reports alleging otherwise. The is despite a number of prisoners of war being captured by Ukraine's forces and shown to be young men - some barely into adulthood. The report came after Ukraine's armed forces announced that they have killed 5,840 Russian troops since the beginning of the invasion - updating its tally that has been consistently published since the war began. The general staff claimed Ukrainian soldiers had also destroyed 61 aircraft, over 200 tanks, 862 armoured vehicles, 85 artillery systems, nine anti-aircraft systems, 60 fuel tanks and had seized 40 Russian rocket launchers via a Facebook post. These statistics could not be independently verified. Earlier today, pictures emerged from the streets of Ukraine showing the smouldering wrecks of Russian tanks destroyed amid brutal urban fighting as Putin's invasion of his neighbour continues. Huge convoys of Russian armour have rumbled into several Ukrainian cities, only to be met with defiance and well-armed troops using a mixture of their own and NATO-supplied anti-tank weapons to wreak havoc on the invaders. Huge convoys of Russian armour have rumbled into several Ukrainian cities, only to be met with fierce resistance as well-armed troops used a mixture of their own and NATO-supplied anti-tank weapons to wreak havoc on the invaders A destroyed tank is seen blocking a street with damaged houses in the background in the town of Bucha, near Kyiv, as Russia's invasion of Ukraine continues, March 1, 2022 Some of the most shocking images of the devastation inflicted on Russian armour come from the town of Bucha on outskirts of Kyiv, where an entire column of tanks and armoured vehicles were obliterated Local residents pick up ammunition from a destroyed armoured vehicle, as Russia's invasion of Ukraine continues, in the town of Bucha in the Kyiv region A local resident walks past a destroyed military vehicle, as Russia's invasion of Ukraine continues, in the town of Bucha in the Kyiv region, Ukraine March 1, 2022 Taken yesterday, the pictures show how the burnt-out husks and charred debris from the vehicles had completely blocked one of Bucha's main roads, a mere 20 miles from the centre of the capital, while others showed Ukrainian civilians picking through the destroyed or abandoned tanks for supplies Ukrainian forces have inflicted heavy losses on advancing Russian forces as bitter fighting in Ukraine enters its seventh day, according to a spokesperson for the nation's general staff (picture: Russian armoured vehicles stand destroyed or abandoned in the streets of Kharkiv) An armed man stands by the remains of a Russian military vehicle in Bucha, close to the capital Kyiv, Ukraine Speaking today, spokesman of the Russian Defense Ministry Maj. Gen. Igor Konashenkov (pictured) said 498 Russian troops have been killed and 1,597 more sustained wounds. Figures reported by Ukraine officials are much higher Some of the most shocking images of the devastation inflicted on Russian armour came from the town of Bucha on the outskirts of Kyiv, where an entire column of tanks and armoured vehicles were obliterated. Taken yesterday, the pictures show how the burnt-out husks and charred debris from the vehicles had completely blocked one of Bucha's main roads, a mere 20 miles from the centre of the capital. Images from Ukraine's second city Kharkiv also show a litany of scuttled Russian vehicles - though a sustained bombing campaign over the past three days has since laid waste to the city with many administrative and residential buildings turned to rubble. Russian paratroopers landed in Kharkiv, while Zhytomyr and Kyiv saw further missile strikes, as the conflict in Ukraine rumbled into its seventh day today, but Russia's forces are racking up considerable losses amid bitter urban fighting. Konashenkov said Russian forces had dealt significant damage to Ukrainian defences in kind. 'A total of 311 tanks and other armoured military vehicles, 42 airplanes and helicopters, 51 multiple launch rocket systems, 147 field artillery weapons and mortars, and 263 specialised military vehicles have been destroyed,' he claimed yesterday. In a Facebook post this morning, the general staff claimed Ukrainian soldiers had destroyed 61 aircraft, over 200 tanks, 862 armoured vehicles, 85 artillery systems, nine anti-aircraft systems, 60 fuel tanks and had seized 40 Russian rocket launchers since the start of the invasion Ukraine claimed that Russia has lost 5,840 troops since the beginning of the invasion, though these figures cannot be verified (pictured: a Ukrainian territorial defence fighter examines a destroyed Russian armoured vehicle) A Ukrainian Territorial Defence fighter takes the automatic grenade launcher from a destroyed Russian infantry mobility vehicle GAZ Tigr amid conflict in Kharkiv Russia's invasion - which met with heavy defeat in its initial plan to seize key targets and infrastructure in precision strikes - entered a new phase on Monday, with the aim seemingly to surround and bombard cities such as Kharkiv, Kyiv, Mariupol, Sumy and Kherson. Kherson has been overrun by Russian forces according to the Kremlin, but Ukrainian army units and civilian defence forces have otherwise put up fierce resistance and largely stalled the Russian onslaught on the ground, prompting Putin to launch an indiscriminate bombing campaign of Ukraine's two largest cities - Kyiv and Kharkiv. The civilian death toll has increased significantly in the past three days since Russia began its bombardment, with Ukrainian authorities yesterday reporting 352 civilian deaths since the start of the invasion, including 14 children. Roughly 874,000 people have fled the country, with the UN refugee agency warning the number will likely cross the 1 million mark soon. Countless others have taken shelter underground in metro stations, basements and makeshift shelters. The overall death toll from the seven-day war is not clear, with neither Russia nor Ukraine releasing an official number of troops they have lost. Ukraine's State Emergency Service said more than 2,000 civilians have died, though it was impossible to verify that claim. The UN human rights office on Monday had tallied 136 civilian deaths, but acknowledged the actual toll was surely far higher. The civilian death toll is likely to have increased dramatically since then in the wake of sustained bombing campaigns of several cities, with missiles slamming in to several administrative and civilian targets including schools and hospitals. Part of the Karazin National University campus in the city of Kharkiv is destroyed after being struck by a Russian missile which was seemingly intended for a nearby police or interior ministry building Police officers remove the body of a passerby killed in yesterday's airstrike that hit Kyiv's main television tower Firefighters battle to put out a blaze in Kharkiv as the city came under renewed airstrikes today, with an official saying there is almost no area of the city left that has not been hit Ukraine's military said Russia today renewed its assault 'on all fronts', with paratroopers landing in Kharkiv, tanks and trucks rolling into the centre of Kherson, and strikes in Mariupol and Zhytomyr This image, posted by the State Emergency Service of Ukraine, shows the square outside the main administrative building in Kharkiv covered in rubble following the rocket attack The move has seen Putin accused of war crimes, after multiple reports of the use of cluster bombs on residential high-rises and non-military structures. International Criminal Court prosecutor Karim Khan confirmed Monday that a probe will be launched into Russia's bombing campaign: 'I wish to announce that I have decided to proceed with opening an investigation into the situation in Ukraine, as rapidly as possible'. 'I am satisfied that there is a reasonable basis to believe that both alleged war crimes and crimes against humanity have been committed in Ukraine,' he added. This morning, Ukrainian President Volodymyr Zelensky, who has become a symbol of Ukrainian defiance and courage since the war began, told his people that Russians 'know nothing about our capital. About our history. But they have an order to erase our history. Erase our country. Erase us all.' The president, unshaven and wearing a military-style khaki T-shirt, said the West's response was not enough, calling for more international support, including backing Ukraine's bid to join the European Union. 'This is no time to be neutral,' he added. As he spoke, troops were preparing barricades to defend the city of Zaporizhzhia - including setting up defences around the reactors of Energodar power plant. Anton Gerashchenko, adviser to Ukraine's interior ministry, called on generals to bypass the city while warning they could create a 'new Chernobyl' if the plant is damaged. 'Because of Putin's madness, Europe is again on the brink of a nuclear catastrophe,' he wrote on Facebook. 'The city where the largest nuclear power plant in Europe is located is preparing for a battle with the invaders. Civilians help construct makeshift barricades around the nuclear power plant at Zaporizhzhia to stop Russia capturing it The comments came after Zelensky's statement in the early hours of Tuesday morning in which he said there would 'definitely be an international tribunal' for what he described as a 'violation of all conventions' and added that 'no one in the world will forgive [Putin] for killing peaceful Ukrainian people.' The Kremlin though has denied that the Russian military used cluster munitions in Ukraine and insisted that the Russian forces have only struck military targets. Kremlin spokesman Dmitry Peskov said Monday that 'the Russian troops don't conduct any strikes against civilian infrastructure and residential areas.' But Peskov's claim contradicts abundant evidence of indiscriminate shelling of homes, schools, and hospitals across Ukraine. Speaking in a conference call with reporters, he wouldn't respond to questions about whether the Kremlin is happy with the pace of the offensive and wouldn't comment on Russian military casualties. Russia's foreign minister Sergei Lavrov also declared Monday that Russia 'did not and does not have any land-based, short or medium-range missiles', though he did not explicitly deny the widespread reports of Russian missile attacks on Ukrainian cities. Harrowing images show the brutality of the Russian attacks in Ukraine. This citizen was caught in a rocket blast in Kharkiv on Monday and lost a leg Kharkiv was struck by more Russian rockets on Tuesday morning, with one striking outside the civilian public administration building which was heavily damaged in the blast. The rocket can be seen a split second before it slams into the building, triggering a massive blast The blast blew debris across the square outside the administrative building and demolished several parked cars Rescue workers and medics are pictured close to the regional administration building in central Kharkiv, picking their way through the debris following the explosion A military source told MailOnline that videos of the onslaught showed 'cluster' munitions had been used. 'The BM-21 Grad is a multiple launch rocket system used for 'area denial', dropping cluster bombs on a concentrated area,' the expert said. 'It's mainly used on enemy troops before an offensive. Used against civilians, it's not only a war crime, but has only one purpose to spread terror and alarm among the civilian population.' But despite Russia's ruthless bombing campaign and sustained ground assault, the Ukrainian army and its territorial defence forces have remained resolute. Dozens of images and videos published on Monday showed Ukrainian forces parading defeated Russian soldiers who were captured as the remainder of their units retreated or were killed. Ukraine has paraded captured Russian soldiers in dozens of online videos. Footage appeared on Facebook that showed a captured Russian soldier saying he did not come to the country 'wanting to kill' The body of a Russian serviceman is coated in snow next to a destroyed Russian military vehicle on the outskirts of Kharkiv Servicemen from the self-proclaimed Luhansk People's Republic were captured by the Ukrainian military on Thursday, hours after Russia launched an invasion of the country Footage posted online show tied up 'demoralised and exhausted' prisoners of war captured after they failed to break through defences in Kyiv and Kharkiv over the weekend. Several of the videos were posted on a Telegram channel set up on Saturday by Ukraine's Interior Ministry called 'Find Your Own'. Many Russian troops claimed that they believed they were conducting training exercises in the border regions and did not know they were being sent to invade Ukraine. The Russian onslaught seems to have been slowed considerably, but there are fears that this lack of success on the ground will give rise to a prolonged bombing campaign designed to inflict maximum damage and beat Ukraine's cities into submission. Nicola Sturgeon today slapped down the SNP President after he was accused of an 'utterly crass' attempt to compare the push for Scottish independence to Ukraine's battle for survival against Russia. Mike Russell wrote in a blog on the SNP website that all people have the right to 'choose how they are governed' and this must be 'universally applied'. He argued that right cannot be 'circumscribed by history' and 'just because something was, doesn't mean it will always continue to be so whether that be rule from Moscow, or the result of an eight-year-old referendum'. The Scottish Liberal Democrats accused Mr Russell of an 'astounding' attempt to 'draw parallels' between Ukraine and Scotland. Meanwhile, SNP MSP Michelle Thomson yesterday apologised after tweeting about Ukraine's application to join the European Union accompanied by the message: 'Just goes to show what political will can achieve. Remember this Scotland!' Ms Sturgeon today insisted there is 'no connection' between the war in Ukraine and the campaign for Scottish independence. Nicolas Sturgeon today slapped down the SNP President after he was accused of an 'utterly crass' attempt to compare the push for Scottish independence to Ukraine's battle for survival against Russia Mike Russell wrote in a blog on the SNP website that all people have the right to 'choose how they are governed' and this must be 'universally applied' Mr Russell published a blog on the SNP website on February 28, entitled 'three things Scotland must consider in its response to the Ukraine invasion'. He wrote: 'The right of people to choose how they are governed and by whom is an absolute and must be universally applied, respecting each and every democratic mandate. 'Nor can that right be circumscribed by history just because something was, doesn't mean it will always continue to be so whether that be rule from Moscow, or the result of an eight-year-old referendum.' Scottish Liberal Democrat MSP Willie Rennie blasted Mr Russell over the comments. He told The Herald: 'There's enough hot air coming off Mike Russell to end dependence on Russian oil and gas. 'Likening the longevity of the 2014 referendum result in any way to rule from Moscow is one of the stupider things I have heard from a senior SNP figure. 'It is utterly crass to draw any parallels between what is going on in Ukraine to Scotland's situation, when people in Ukraine are fighting and dying to avoid falling under the yolk of the Kremlin.' Mr Rennie said he was 'astounded' by the comments and called on the SNP and Mr Russell to apologise. Asked about the remarks this morning, Ms Sturgeon said it would be 'overstating things' to suggest that a comparison had been made. But she added: 'There is no connection between a war in Ukraine and the support and campaign for independence in Scotland. 'What I think should unite all of us right now are some fundamental values, the values that underpin I think much of our democracy in Scotland and certainly underpin my party and the independence movement the commitment to democracy, freedom, the rule of international law and the value of the world coming together in solidarity. 'These are the values that we hold dear and these are the values that people bravely in Ukraine are standing up for in the toughest imaginable circumstances. The SNP's Michelle Thomson drew a link between Kyiv's emergency attempt to join the European Union and her party's hopes of rejoining the bloc if Scotland splits from the UK Later, Ms Thomson deleted her tweet and wrote: 'I noted and then tweeted something earlier that was insensitive regarding Ukraine. Like everyone, my first thoughts are sympathy for the people there. Apologies if I offended anyone.' 'But we should all remember right now this is about Ukraine fighting for these values and our responsibility is to do everything we can to support them.' The 2014 referendum on Scottish independence saw people vote by 55 per cent to 45 per cent against splitting from the UK. Ms Sturgeon has said she wants to hold a re-run of the vote by the end of next year. But Boris Johnson has long insisted the 2014 result should be respected and has so far refused to grant permission for another vote. Do you know a British person fighting or going to fight in Ukraine?: Contact me: james.robinson@mailonline.co.uk A former British soldier fighting alongside Ukrainians in their war with Russia has given a hard-hitting dispatch from near the front line, describing the situation as 'chaos'. Ex-infantryman Shaun Pinner, who is fighting as a 'contract soldier' alongside the Ukrainian armed forces, says he has endured a 'week of intense fighting'. The 48-year-old, who previously served in the Royal Anglian Regiment, also confirms a number of his squad have died saying: 'We've lost a couple of guys today'. Mr Pinner filmed the dispatch two days ago as Vladimir Putin's men laid siege to Kyiv and other major Ukranian cities. In the video he does not reveal his location for security reasons. 'I can't tell you where we are, because of op sec (operations security),' he says. 'But this is a school that the Russians have just bombed. It's about 7km off the frontline. We're just taking a bit of respite, we've just had a week of intense fighting. 'We've lost a couple of guys today. It's chaos to be honest. This was a thriving little town. Until obviously the Red Army decided to show up. 'So we are till ongoing, we're putting up a resistance. Thanks for all the support you've given us.' Ex-infantryman Shaun Pinner is seen in the video describing the situation as 'chaos' and confirming his squad had lost fighters The 48-year-old, who previously served in the Royal Anglian Regiment, filmed the dispatch two days ago as Vladimir Putin's men laid siege to Kyiv and other major cities It comes as yesterday men were seen gathering outside the Ukrainian embassy in west London to answer Ukraine's President Volodymyr Zelensky call to arms for foreign fighters to join his country's defence against Russia. Foreign Secretary Liz Truss appeared to encourage Britons saying she would 'absolutely support' those who wished to sign up to fight as part of the Ukrainian armed forces. Do you know someone going to fight in Ukraine? Email: james.robinson@mailonline.co.uk Advertisement But lawyers later warned that Britons who fight in Ukraine could be prosecuted under UK terror laws - much like those who took arms for Kurdish militia forces against ISIS in Syria. Yesterday Prime Minister Boris Johnson waded into the debate, warning members of the so-called 'Lads Army' that they could be breaking British law by going over to Ukraine to fight. Giving a speech in Estonia, Mr Johnson said: 'I can understand why people feel as they do but we have laws in our country about international conflicts and how they should be conducted.' Asked if, in the wake of Ms Truss's comments, that the Government was encouraging Britons to fight, he replied: 'The UK is not actively doing any such thing.' Yesterday a London banker became the latest to arrive at the Ukrainian embassy in London to volunteer to fight against Russia. Sam Ottaway, 38, works at a bank in the City and has no combat experience, but volunteered in his lunch break. Mr Ottaway, who described British writer George Orwell as one of his heroes and an inspiration for his decision to join the fight, said: 'It's the right thing to do, can't see that happen. History has taught us that this stuff doesn't just stop does it?' Gym owner Leon Dawson, 37, earlier this week told reporters he was prepared to lose his life fighting to defend Ukraine as a volunteer in the country's newly formed Foreign Legion. British 'Lads Army' volunteers eager to take on Vladimir Putin's Russian forces could be prosecuted under UK law if they go out to fight in Ukraine, Boris Johnson (pictured) has hinted today. Leon Dawson, 37, is seen telling journalists he is prepared to lose his life fighting to defend Ukraine as a volunteer in the country's newly announced foreign legion Standing outside the Ukrainian embassy in west London with other would-be-fighters, including his friend Tom Konarzewski (pictured left), he tells reporters from Sky News: 'We're young, strong, fit men and we can help, so why not? Brian Grove, a 60-year-old former Territorial Army (TA) member from Kent, told reporters he had 'decided to do something' to help under siege Ukrainians Mr Dawson and Mr Konarzewski were mong a number of people seen outside the Ukrainian embassy yesterday responding to calls by Ukraine's President Volodymyr Zelensky for foreign fighters to join their defence against Russia. Pictured: Governor Dmitry Zhivitsky posts photos of damage done by Russia to Okhtyrka Standing outside the Ukrainian embassy with other would-be-fighters, including his friend Tom Konarzewski, who is originally from Poland and who runs a dog care business, he told reporters from Sky News: 'We're young, strong, fit men and we can help, so why not?' 'We don't want to die. We're obviously scared. But if we're scared, we can imagine how the innocent women and children feel. I can't sit here and just let that happen.' The 'Lads Army' volunteering to fight in Ukraine Leon Dawson A 37-year-old gym boss from Surrey, Leon Dawson has no prior military experience. But speaking outside the Ukrainian embassy in London yesterday, where he volunteered for the country's newly established foreign legion, he said: 'We're young, strong, fit men and we can help, so why not?' Leon runs The Physique Warehouse Gym in Moseley, on the outskirts of west London. Tom Konarzewski Originally from Poland, and friends with Leon Dawson, Tom Konarzewski runs a dog care business in Surrey. His business is called Walk-Me. Founded in 2007, it is a dog-walking business aimed at high-flying professionals. It also offers daycare and overnight services. On signing up to join Ukrain's Foreign Legion, he said: ' 'What we've seen on the TV, in my opinion, is wrong,' he said. 'We'd like to get over there as soon as possible.' Brian Grove Brian Grove is a 60-year-old former Territorial Army (TA) member from Kent. He told Sky News reporters he had 'decided to do something' to help under siege Ukrainians. 'I used to be in the TA, I've also got a lot of first aid training so I've decided to come and do something,' he said. Asked if he's prepared to fight, Mr Grove, from Sittingbourne in Kent, replies: 'Yes, I can get on a flight tomorrow.' Roger Conway The 34-year-old from Newcastle went to the Ukrainian Embassy, where he collected an email address to volunteer his services, that he immediately wrote. Speaking to the PA news agency near the embassy in West London, he said: 'We've convinced ourselves that we're stepping in and we're helping by having Facebook photos and tweeting solidarity but it doesn't really make a difference to anyone. 'Solidarity doesn't look real if you don't do anything'. Mr Conway, who works as a contractor in finance, said he had never been in the army. 'I've never been in but I've not got kids, I'm 34, feel fit'. Asked if he was scared, he said: 'Possibly a little but that's no reason not to do anything in life. I'm ready, I think'. Sam Ottaway Sam Ottaway, 38, works at a bank in the City and has no combat experience, but came down to volunteer in his lunch break. Sam said: 'It's the right thing to do, can't see that happen. History has taught us that this stuff doesn't just stop does it? 'George Orwell is one of my heroes. Homage to Catalonia. 'People have done this before in history, volunteering for good causes. And if this isn't a good cause, I don't know what is.' Jason Luck Jason Luck has family in Mykolaiv, a city near the Black Sea in southern Ukraine. He served for 12 years in the British Army and feels he has something to offer in the fight. He is due to fly out on Wednesday. Jason said: 'My family are in Ukraine. Fighting isn't my priority. My family is my priority. I live in Surrey but go back and forwards. First it was the pandemic, now this idiot [Putin].' Shaun Pinner A 48-year-old ex-soldier with a Ukrainian wife. He is already on the front lines. He is married to a Ukrainian woman and has been in Donbas for the past four years. Mr Pinner previously served in the Royal Anglian Regiment and said he fought with the Ukrainian army as a 'contract soldier'. Liam Hawkins A 30-year-old father with no military experience. He drove to the Ukrainian embassy from Deptford, south-east London, to sign up to help refugees stuck at the border in a humanitarian capacity. 'I havent slept since this invasion and I just cant stay at home with my babies and my missus and do nothing. 'I know its dangerous, people are trying to talk me out of it, but I believe I can make a difference.' Matthew Green A 47-year-old from London, who retired as a Staff Sergeant six months ago. He said: 'I want to fight for diplomacy. 'I think the British military are stuck and I'm sure we would send our men if we could. It's the perfect timing for me as I was discharged six months ago. 'I have no connection with Ukraine or Russia, but I want to do my part.' Alex Pickett A 32-year-old from Andover, Hants, who works in private security. He said: 'I will do whatever I can in whatever way I can. 'I'm just slowly getting my affairs in order so that I can go when they tell me. I'm non-military, but I'm an Englishman. 'I'm a free man who is fighting for a free world and is willing to do his part. 'All it takes for evil to prevail is for good men to do nothing.' Antony Zamparelli A father-of-seven who served in the Army but has never been in a conflict. Mr Zamparelli told GB News he was willing to die for the Ukrainian cause and urged other Brits to 'go to Ukraine if you're willing to fight for freedom'. Akos Horvadh A 28-year-old Hungarian man living in the UK. He says he is nervous about telling his parents but is adamant about going to fight. Akos said: 'I'm Hungarian. Ukraine is my neighbour. I can't stand to see what goes on there. 'As I see it, what they really need is people to go there and fight. I have a little experience. I know how to use a gun. 'If I go there there is a chance I could die. But that's the truth of war. I could die, lose my limbs, I'm aware. But someone needs to go.' Douglas Lambourne Douglas Lambourne is a 25-year-old from west London. He said: My mums Polish and Ive got family out in Ukraine. Im 25 and sitting at home, and my time is better spent going over there doing whats right.' Advertisement Asked if his family were aware, Mr Dawson, who has no military experience, said: 'My family are upset. Obviously it is a hard time.' Among those attending the Ukrainian embassy earlier this week was Brian Grove, a 60-year-old former Territorial Army (TA) member from Kent. He told Sky News reporters he had 'decided to do something' to help under siege Ukrainians. 'I used to be in the TA, I've also got a lot of first aid training so I've decided to come and do something,' he said. Asked if he's prepared to fight, Mr Grove replies: 'Yes, I can get on a flight tomorrow.' Others to arrive at the embassy to volunteer included Akos Horvadh. The 28-year-old says he is nervous about telling his parents but is adamant about going to fight. Akos said: 'I'm Hungarian. Ukraine is my neighbour. I can't stand to see what goes on there. 'As I see it, what they really need is people to go there and fight. I have a little experience. I know how to use a gun. 'If I go there there is a chance I could die. But that's the truth of war. I could die, lose my limbs, I'm aware. But someone needs to go.' Though many who have arrived at the embassy have no previous combat experience, one man to volunteer, Jason Luck, does. Jason Luck, who has family in Mykolaiv, a city near the Black Sea in southern Ukraine, served for 12 years in the British Army. He is due to fly out on Wednesday. He said: 'My family are in Ukraine. They're in the east of the country. I've got my partner, her boy, my daughter. 'Fighting isn't my priority. My family is my priority. I live in Surrey but go back and forwards. First it was the pandemic, now this idiot [Putin].' Jason, who is in his late 40s, refused the offer from Ukrainian authorities to pay for his flights. 'I'm going out Wednesday. I need to. I'm really worried. I've got a twisted feeling in my stomach,' he said. 'I want to go out there to protect my city. I don't want to end up in Kyiv. I want to be near my family. That's why I'm here. 'I don't want to join Ukrainian regular forces. This is why I'm here to explain to them. I'm happy to fight but I want to be there for my family.' Matthew Green, 47, from London, who retired as a Staff Sergeant six months ago, said: 'I want to fight for diplomacy. 'I think the British military are stuck and I'm sure we would send our men if we could. It's the perfect timing for me as I was discharged six months ago. 'I have no connection with Ukraine or Russia, but I want to do my part. Alex Pickett, 32, from Andover, Hants, who works in private security, said: 'I will do whatever I can in whatever way I can. 'I'm just slowly getting my affairs in order so that I can go when they tell me. I'm non-military, but I'm an Englishman. 'I'm a free man who is fighting for a free world and is willing to do his part. 'All it takes for evil to prevail is for good men to do nothing. 'I'm just a normal Englishman, I've got a basic firearm skill and I'm reasonably fit. 'My heart is in the right place and that is the only reason why I'm doing this.' If the 'Lads' Army' are given the green light to fight in Ukraine, they will be joined by more than 150 British ex-paratroopers who fought in Afghanistan are now on their way to Ukraine to battle Putin's forces. Dozens of former Special Forces soldiers from Britain are also said to be heading out there to fight for Ukraine, including a crack team of retired SAS fighters who are on their way to join the war on the side of the Ukrainians. Ukrainian expats living in Britain are also heading back to their home country to fight against Putin's invaders. Meanwhile, military supply stores in the UK are said to be kitting out volunteers - with some even offering 50 per cent discounts for those heading out to Ukraine. Yesterday, as the fighting raged on in cities such as Kyiv and Kharkiv, Defence Secretary Ben Wallace and a No 10 spokesman both appeared to contradict Liz Truss, who gave her backing to Britons who wanted to join the resistance movement. In a surprising comment, the Foreign Secretary said she 'won't oppose' British nationals who travel to Ukraine to fight the Russian invasion. But Mr Wallace urged Britons not to join the fighting, particularly those without military experience, saying that the 'very dangerous' situation could lead to them being killed. The comments came as a former defence minister today said the Government should issue clear advice that Britons should not go to Ukraine to fight. The British Army meanwhile are warning UK soldiers 'on or off leave' not to take up arms against Russia over fears that the sight of British insignias could spark a major escalation in the conflict. Hundreds of troops have expressed interest in answering a request from Kyiv for international volunteers, it is believed, but commanders have told them not to sign up. They cannot stop retired personnel from travelling to eastern Europe, but full-time and reserve troops have received a stern warning not to take part in the conflict. One brigadier said he heard talk that some soldiers were considering going Awol to join the fight, The Times reports. But a post on the Army's internal messaging service read: 'There has been some recent media coverage relating to foreigners being welcomed into Ukraine to help fight against Russia. 'To be clear, as members of the British Army, you are not authorised to travel to Ukraine to support the ongoing conflict against Russia in any form, whether you are on leave or not. 'Please remain professional and focused on your duty and your team.' Despite the warning, a military source has said that 150 of former paratroopers were on their way to Poland. Shane, 34, a former sniper with the Princess of Wales's Royal Regiment, said Ms Truss' comments on Sunday were 'the green light' Ukraine's president Volodomyr Zelensky said he was forming his country's own foreign legion to fight Russia. Several thousand people have volunteered to join the force, deputy defence minister Hanna Malyar said. Among them are reportedly a group of SAS veterans eager to defend Ukraine. According to The Mirror, the retired UK special forces soldiers have volunteered for missions deep inside Ukraine to back up the country's defence. The veterans, aged between 40 and 60, have had meetings to discuss signing up for the dangerous mission, backing up Ukrainians in combat. Key to their operation is among them there are highly-trained snipers and experts in the use of anti-aircraft and anti-tank missiles. It comes as lawyers warned that Britons leaving to fight in Ukraine could face legal action on their return under UK terror laws. However they said prosecutions would likely be a 'non-starter' - pointing to those who avoided legal action for fighting against for Kurdish militias against ISIS. Under the UK's Terrorism Act 2000, terrorism is described as the use or threat of violence, to influence a government or the public, 'for the purpose of advancing a political, religious, racial or ideological cause'. Jonathan Hall QC, the Independent Reviewer of Terrorism Legislation, said fighting in Ukraine would be captured by the definition. He told The Independent: 'Russia's aggression against the international legal order, and the importance of supporting Ukraine, makes any support for foreign fighters who want to travel to Ukraine at first glance attractive. 'Given the government's apparent support, prosecution of foreign fighters against Russia under terrorism legislation appears to be a non-starter even if the broad statutory definition of terrorism is satisfied in these cases. 'But there is always the possibility of less desirable cases at the edges - individuals who travel to Ukraine under false pretence either to support Russia or fight with an ideological group such as the [neo-Nazi] Azov battalion.' British authorities have previously tried to prosecute British fighters who took up arms against ISIS in Syria. Ex-paratrooper Daniel Burke originally fought against ISIS with the Kurdish People's Protection Units (YPG) between late 2017 and June 2018. No action was taken at the time. But he was later prosecuted for 'preparing acts of terrorism' after allegedly attempting to return to support the YPG against an invasion by Turkish-led forces in 2019. Defence Secretary Ben Wallace (pictured left) said he didn't 'want to see British people killed any more than I want to see Ukrainians' and asked people who were not properly trained or an 'experienced member of an armed forced' not to join the war in Ukraine. Foreign Secretary Liz Truss (pictured right) said the UK will back Britons going to fight in Ukraine Volodymyr Zelensky has warned that Ukraine faces a 'crucial' 24 hours as Russia throws even more ground forces at Kyiv More than 150 former British paratroopers who fought in Afghanistan are now on their way to Ukraine to battle Putin's forces More than 150 British ex paratroopers who fought in Afghanistan are now on their way to Ukraine to battle Putin's forces - after Army chiefs banned serving UK soldiers from the warzone. Whitehall officials are scrambling to determine the Government's policy after Foreign Secretary Liz Truss said she would support British nationals who chose to fight alongside Ukrainian forces against the Russian invasion on Sunday. Her comments went against Foreign Office travel advice, while Defence Secretary Ben Wallace and a No 10 spokesman also both appeared to contradict Ms Truss yesterday. Hundreds of troops have expressed interest in answering a request from Kyiv for international volunteers, it is believed, but commanders have told them not to sign up. They cannot stop retired personnel from travelling to eastern Europe, but full-time and reserve troops have received a stern warning not to take part in the conflict. One brigadier said he heard talk that some soldiers were considering going Awol to join the fight, The Times reports. But a post on the Army's internal messaging service read: 'There has been some recent media coverage relating to foreigners being welcomed into Ukraine to help fight against Russia. 'To be clear, as members of the British Army, you are not authorised to travel to Ukraine to support the ongoing conflict against Russia in any form, whether you are on leave or not. 'Please remain professional and focused on your duty and your team.' Despite this, a military source has said that 150 of former paratroopers were on their way to Poland. Shane, 34, a former sniper with the Princess of Wales's Royal Regiment, said Ms Truss' comments on Sunday were 'the green light' Ukraine's president Volodomyr Zelensky said he was forming his country's own foreign legion to fight Russia. Several thousand people have volunteered to join the force, deputy defence minister Hanna Malyar said yesterday. Advertisement However the charges were later dropped against Burke and two other men following a review by the Crown Prosecution Service. Yesterday Defence Secretary Ben Wallace and a No 10 spokesman both appeared to contradict Foreign Secretary Liz Truss, who yesterday gave her backing to Britons who wanted to join the resistance movement. Mr Wallace said he didn't 'want to see British people killed any more than I want to see Ukrainians' and asked people who were not properly trained or an 'experienced member of an armed forced' not to join the war in Ukraine. The Russian invasion of Ukraine was 'very dangerous', Mr Wallace told Sky News, and there were 'better ways' to support the country. Asked if the Prime Minister supported Ms Truss's remarks, a No 10 spokesman said yesterday the travel advice was not to go to Ukraine. He added: 'We think the best way of helping now is ensuring Putin fails.' As the debate continued, today former defence minister Kevan Jones told MailOnline that the Government needs to issue clear advice that Britons should not go to Ukraine to fight. The Labour MP flagged the risk that people could either get captured by Russian forces, or hamper the Ukrainian resistance because they are not properly trained. 'Following the Foreign Secretary's comments the government needs urgently to clarify the position,' he said. 'Not only in terms of the legal position but also whether it could endanger the individuals and hamper the resistance rather than help it no matter how well intentioned.' Meanwhile, one British military store is reportedly giving discounts to Britons wishing to join Ukraine in its fight against Russia. Damon Warren, a 52-year-old ex-soldier who owns Folkestone's G4 Echelon Military Supplies in Kent, is said to be giving 50 per cent discount to both Ukrainians and any British veterans seeking to help them. However Mr Warren said he had been turning away Britons who were not veterans because those with neither military experience nor the ability to speak Ukrainian would be 'more of a liability than a help'. One person visiting his store yesterday was Andrew Lester, a 25-year-old electrician from Kent who served in the Parachute Regiment till last July. He told the Telegraph: 'The Ukrainians are really doing quite well, I think. 'They're holding out. If they need a few more blokes to push them back, then that's what we're here for.' Yesterday, as the fighting raged on, nine Ukrainians left England heading off to war in three equipment-laden SUVs. They left from Kensington's Ukrainian Social Club, where Britons had been appearing throughout the day to volunteer to fight against Putin. The cars were laden with body armour, rucksacks and piles of Boots bags packed with bandages, nappies, medicine and toothbrushes. Yesterday nine Ukrainians left England heading off to war in three equipment-laden SUVs They left from Kensington's Ukrainian Social Club, where Britons had been appearing throughout the day to volunteer to fight against Putin The cars were laden with body armour, rucksacks and piles of Boots bags packed with bandages, nappies, medicine and toothbrushes British teacher, 28, who went on 500-mile mission to be reunited with his wife and their toddler son in war-torn Ukraine says he is prepared to arm himself and fight Putin's troops A British teacher has vowed to take up arms and defend his wife's Ukrainian home city from Vladimir Putin's Russian army after travelling more than 500-mile to be with her and their toddler son. Ian Umney, 28, only reunited with wife Nelia, 26, and two-year-old Jonathan yesterday after quitting his job and making a 48-hour journey from Manchester to the southern Ukrainian city of Nikopol. Currently the city is in relative safety, tucked away on the northern side of the winding Dneiper River and more than 100 miles from intense fighting in nearby southern cities such as Melitpol. But with Russian military officials today claiming control of Kherson, a key crossing point of the Dneiper and just 120miles to the south-west of Nikopol, his wife's home city could soon come under seige. Despite the threat of a Russian attack, Mr Umney, from St Helens, Merseyside, insists he will remain in the city and fight if his Ukrainian wife wishes to stay. If Mr Umney does fight, he will be among dozens of Britons - dubbed the 'Lads' Army' - who have already volunteered to join the Ukrainian resistance. 'One hundred per cent, I would bear arms and fight the Russians,' he said. 'I think Nelia will want to stay in Nikopol. If she wants to stay, then I will arm myself and defend her city.' Advertisement One - called Vladimir - 44, said: 'I am going to fight for Ukraine, to protect Ukraine, to defend Ukraine.' Another in their party, a Russian called Denis, 33, who worked with the fighters, was helping to ferry equipment to Ukraine. He said: 'They have families here, they know what they have to do. They are just going to their home. If they support it they will fight. 'They just want to go to their home and help their families. They just want to go to their home.' He said he would stop at the border and not fight, but would help them take equipment across. Cars carried provisions alongside helmets, sleeping mats, armoured vests and binoculars. Angela, 47, said: 'I don't know if I will fight but I will try to help the innocents. 'It's very important. When you see people who die you think we can help here with the money from England, but we don't have the people.' In a touching scene, they were helped by 28 year old engineer Harry Wright from Dagenham, east London, before he volunteered himself. Father-of-two Harry, who has three-and-four-year old girls, said: 'I want to stop it from spreading. Stop letting Putin get that power.' Jimmy Butt, a forklift driver from Wolverhampton, has relatives who are 'cut off' in Ukraine. He said: 'My friends are not really taking me seriously with it. Think I'm blowing off steam. 'I want to try and do something worthwhile, something beyond myself while I'm still able to do it. 'This is bigger than anything. I'm willing to sacrifice for something I see as greater.' As their passports were checked and the Ukrainians tried to force more equipment into the boots of their cars, onlookers said it felt like a First World War spirit as they watched them go off to war. They are getting a ferry and then driving across Europe to the Polish border. Do you know someone going to fight? Email james.robinson@mailonline.co.uk This is the terrifying moment a massive explosion rocks Ukraine, sending a firebombs and mushroom cloud into the sky. The blast struck an airfield in Chuguev, near the country's second largest city of Kharkiv, where a weapons depot is believed to be held. The force from the shockwave caused those filming in a nearby apartment block to jump back. A massive explosion has rocked Ukraine, sending a firebombs and mushroom cloud into the sky Witnesses suggested the airfield was bombed from the air after seeing planes nearby at the time of the attack. The devastating attack comes amid fears Vladimir Putin is launching vacuum and cluster bombs, which would constitute a war crime if used on a civilian population. Oksana Markarova, Ukraine's ambassador to the United States, has accused Russia of using the deadly weapons but this has not been confirmed. Vacuum bombs also known as thermobaric weapons are among the most powerful non-nuclear weapons ever developed, and are banned under the Geneva Conventions. The high-powered explosive weapons, which use the atmosphere itself as part of the explosion, are capable of vaporising bodies, crushing internal organs and reducing cities to rubble, causing huge loss of life. The blast struck an airfield in Chuguev, near the country's second largest city of Kharkiv, where a weapons depot is believed to be held Witnesses suggested the airfield was bombed from the air after seeing planes nearby at the time of the attack The force from the shockwave caused those filming in a nearby apartment block to jump back It comes as Kherson, an important port city in Ukraine's south, appeared to be an early casualty today as Russian tanks occupied the city centre overnight and then began arriving in numbers. Kharkiv also came under more heavy bombardment in the early hours as paratroopers dropped in, sparking gunfights near a military hospital. Mariupol, another key port city in Ukraine's south, is also reported to be under heavy bombardment as Russian forces attempt to encircle it. If the city falls then Putin's men are expected to push northwards, trying to encircle Ukrainian forces fighting near Donetsk and force them to surrender. Volodymyr Zelensky says Russia is trying to erase Ukraine with renewed attacks on all fronts including an expected assault on the city which houses Europe's largest nuclear power plant. Ukraine's military said Russia today renewed its assault 'on all fronts', with paratroopers landing in Kharkiv, tanks and trucks rolling into the centre of Kherson, and strikes in Mariupol and Zhytomyr Part of the Karazin National University campus in the city of Kharkiv is destroyed after being struck by a Russian missile which was seemingly intended for a nearby police or interior ministry building Firefighters battle to put out a blaze in Kharkiv as the city came under renewed airstrikes today, with an official saying there is almost no area of the city left that has not been hit Rubble litters the streets of the Ukrainian city of Kharkiv after an early-morning missile strike by Russia Civilians help construct makeshift barricades around the nuclear power plant at Zaporizhzhia to stop Russia capturing it Ukrainian troops are preparing barricades to defend the city of Zaporizhzhia - including setting up defences around the reactors of Energodar power plant. Anton Gerashchenko, adviser to Ukraine's interior ministry, called on generals to bypass the city while warning they could create a 'new Chernobyl' if the plant is damaged. Meanwhile Sergey Lavrov, the Russian foreign minister, warned that - if a Third World War were to begin in Europe - it would be 'nuclear and destructive' in a thinly veiled threat for NATO not to get involved in Ukraine. A desperate search has been launched for a five-year-old girl who is missing south of Brisbane. The girl went missing from Wilde Street at Kingston around 5.15pm on Wednesday. An amber alert was issued later that night over fears she may be at sigificant risk. She is described as caucasian in appearance, brown hair, and of a slim build. The girl went missing from Wilde Street at Kingston around 5.15pm on Wednesday She was last seen being put in a black Toyota Aurion with Queensland registration 982DA3 by a man who is known to her. The car was being driven by another person and left the street. The man left the area on foot and has been assisting police with their inquiries. The child is believed to be in the company of Kaitlyn Compton, who is known to her. The child is believed to be in the company of Kaitlyn Compton (pictured), who is known to her She was last seen being put in a black Toyota Aurion with Queensland registration 982DA3 by a man who is known to her Kaitlyn Compton is described as being of slim build, caucasian, 163cm tall, with brown hair and brown eyes. The car was last seen on Alice Street at Kingston. The child's current whereabouts are unknown, and police are appealing for anyone who has seen the girl, the car or has any further information to contact police. Investigators are also appealing to Kaitlyn Compton to contact police. Bill Roggio is a senior fellow at the Foundation for Defense of Democracies and editor of FDD's Long war Journal. From 1991 to 1997, Roggio served as a signalman and infantryman in the U.S. Army and New Jersey National Guard Wishful thinking has the upper hand in the battle to shape Western perceptions of the war in Ukraine. Sympathy for the outnumbered and outgunned defenders of Kyiv has led to the exaggeration of Russian setbacks, misunderstanding of Russian strategy, and even baseless claims from amateur psychoanalysts that Putin has lost his mind. A more sober analysis shows that Russia may have sought a knockout blow, but always had well-laid plans for follow-on assaults if its initial moves proved insufficient. The world has underestimated Putin before and those mistakes have led, in part, to this tragedy in Ukraine. We must be clear-eyed now that the war is underway. Yet even the professionals at the Pentagon are letting sympathy cloud their judgement. Just two days into Russia's invasion of Ukraine, U.S. Department of Defense briefers were quick to claim that failing to take Kyiv in the opening days of the war amounted to a serious setback. DoD briefers implied that Russia's offensive was well behind schedule or had even failed because the capital had not fallen. But U.S. leaders should have learned to restrain their hopes after their catastrophic withdrawal from Afghanistan. Once again, U.S. and Western officials are falling into the trap of failing to understand the enemy and his objectives. A look at the Russian military offensive demonstrates there was a plan for a full-scale invasion, which Russia is now executing. Allegedly, Putin believed that the Ukrainian government would collapse once Russian troops crossed the frontier and pushed to Kyiv, and that the operation has failed because the Ukrainian government remains in place. Putin certainly hoped for a swift victory, but he clearly was not relying on his opening salvo as the only plan for success. Rather, the Russian military was prepared to take the country by force if a swift decapitation strike fell short. This kind of plan should be familiar to Americans who remember the 2003 invasion of Iraq. In the first hours of the war, the U.S. Air Force launched its 'shock and awe' campaign in an attempt to kill Saddam Hussein and other key leaders and bring down the government. Saddam survived, but the U.S. military was fully prepared to follow up with a ground assault. A look at the Russian military offensive demonstrates there was a plan for a full-scale invasion, which Russia is now executing. Conventional, mechanized warfare is a time and resource consuming enterprise, and an operation of this scope isn't cobbled together in days. The Russian offensive is taking place on four separate fronts. On a fifth front, in eastern Ukraine, which Putin declared independent last week, Russian forces are tying down Ukrainian troops that are needed elsewhere. The bulk of the Russian forces are advancing southward from Belarus to Kyiv. Russian advance forces, including air, mobile and reconnaissance troops, have been engaged with Ukrainian troops outside of Kyiv since the start of the war. A massive column of Russian troops, estimated at over 40 miles long, is just 20 miles north of Kyiv, and is likely assembling to surround the capital. If Russian forces can take Kyiv and push southward to link up with forces on the Crimean front, thus splitting Ukraine in two, it would be a major blow to the Zelensky government. What matters more than a handful of setbacks is that Russian forces have pushed 70 miles into contested terrain in less than a week and are on the outskirts of the capital. A massive column of Russian troops, estimated at over 40 miles long, is just 20 miles north of Kyiv, and is likely assembling to surround the capital. This is not a sign of a disorganized, poorly assembled, and failed offensive. The southward push from Belarus to Kyiv is supported by another Russian column, launched from the east in the vicinity of Kursk. If this column can link up with Russian troops near Kyiv, it will envelop Ukrainian forces in most of Chernihiv and Sumy provinces, depriving the Ukrainian military of much needed soldiers and war material needed elsewhere, and cutting off the government from two northern provinces. Further east, Russian forces have launched a broad offensive aimed at Kharkiv, Ukraine's second largest city, which is now under siege. In the south, Russian forces, supported by amphibious assaults from the Sea of Azov, have poured into Ukraine from Crimea. On this front, Russian forces have branched out along two main axes, one northwest along the Pivdennyi Buh River, and another northeast along the coast and inland towards the Donbas region, which Russia declared independent shortly before the invasion. If Russian columns from either southern front can link up with forces further north, they would cut off many Ukrainian troops from reinforcementone of the two columns has already advanced roughly 160 miles. Russian generals have often chosen to bypass towns and cities that are putting up stiff opposition and isolating them to deal with later. There are reports that Russian forces have escalated attacks on civilians, particularly in Kharkiv. At the moment, the artillery and rocket attacks there have been limited, perhaps to send a message to the citizens as a warning of what may come. Putin appears to want to take Ukraine intact, but will not hesitate to increase the level of brutality if needed. The systematic nature of the Russian assault is at odds with speculation that Putin has lost control of his senses. Nobody knows for sure, but Putin's actions appear to be that of a cold and calculating adversary. Dismissing his decision to invade Ukraine as a form of madness is effectively an excuse to ignore Putin's likely motivations and future actions. Strategically, Putin's advance on Ukraine began well over a decade ago, when he invaded and Balkanized Georgia by recognizing the Kremlin's puppet regimes in the regions of Abkhazia and South Ossetia. Believing Russia's assault is going poorly may make us feel better but is at odds with the facts. In 2014, Putin occupied and annexed the strategic Ukrainian region of Crimea, which served as a launchpad for the current invasion. Putin paid little price for either action. The United States and Europe imposed limited sanctions but continued to engage with him on the Iranian nuclear deal and other top issues. Today, Putin has calculated that taking Ukraine by force is in his and Russia's interest. He no doubt anticipated that the West would impose diplomatic and economic sanctions, which U.S. and European leaders threatened beforehand. Putin may have miscalculated Ukrainian resistance and the intensity of the West's opposition, but it doesn't mean he is crazy, or didn't consider the possibilities and chose to invade regardless. It remains to be seen if Putin's plan will succeed or fail, but what is clear is that there was a plan to invade Ukraine in force, and that plan has been executed since day one. Ukrainian troops are putting up a valiant fight facing long odds and difficult conditions. Russia holds most if not all of the advantages. It can, and has, attacked Ukraine from three different directions. The Russian military holds a decided advantage in manpower, as well as air, naval and armor superiority. It has vast resources to draw on. While Ukraine has the support of much of the international community, which is providing weapons, Ukraine is fighting alone. Believing Russia's assault is going poorly may make us feel better but is at odds with the facts. We cannot help Ukraine if we cannot be honest about its predicament. Professor Graham Medley warned the UK would take longer to spot variants New Covid variants will take weeks longer to detect when mass testing is scrapped, one of the Government's chief pandemic advisers warned today. Professor Graham Medley, chair of No10's coronavirus modelling group, said he expects a 'one to two week delay' in picking up new mutants when the final part of England's 'living with Covid' plan comes into force on April 1. From that point the country will rely solely on the Office for National Statistics' weekly Covid survey to monitor community spread of the virus, with only severely vulnerable people eligible for free tests. Professor Medley said that while the UK was alerted to Omicron by South Africa, and Delta by India, it was Britain's mass testing programme that helped to pick up the Alpha variant in South East England and warned the world. And he pointed out the super-transmissible Omicron became dominant in just weeks, a crucial period which may have been missed if it were not for the scheme. Professor Medley, an infectious disease modeller at the London School of Hygiene and Tropical Medicine, was speaking to MPs on the Commons Science and Technology Committee today. He is the latest Government adviser to warn against the potential dangers of scrapping mass testing, after two SAGE members - Professor John Edmunds and Professor Matt Keeling - also expressed concern yesterday. They told MPs that no modelling had been done on the trajectory of the pandemic when all rules are lifted. But axing mass testing has been welcomed by many scientists and Tory MPs, with the entire testing and tracing scheme thought to cost the taxpayer 2billion a month. The above graph shows that BA.2 - a sub-variant of Omicron - is now behind 52.3 per cent of all Covid cases in England, the UK Health Security Agency said. The data is based on S-gene testing, and shows the new version is now more prevalent than old Omicron The above graph from the Sanger Institute shows the proportion of cases down to different Covid variants. It reveals that a more infectious version of Omicron BA.2 (light blue) is now dominant over Omicron (yellow and pink). Other variants including Delta (light green), Alpha (purple) and the old virus (green and red) have now disappeared. The data is up to the week ending February 19 and based on surveillance of genomes Asked about the impact of relying on the ONS Covid survey, Professor Medley told the Commons committee: 'For the Omicron wave we knew it was coming because we had an alert from South Africa, for Delta wave we knew it was coming because we had an alert from India. 'The Alpha wave we didn't know was coming. That was first detected in Kent and that was seen because of changes in patterns in community testing. 'There would have been a one or two week delay before (the ONS survey) picked up that variant.' Free lateral flow and PCR tests will end across the UK from next month, which some medics warns risks outbreaks going undetected. The ONS survey involves randomly swabbing 100,000 people every fortnight to track the virus and is considered the gold-standard of Covid surveillance. Government should make case numbers for other diseases 'more accessible', statistics expert says The Government should make case numbers for diseases besides Covid more accessible, a statistics expert has said. Dr Sarah Scobie, the deputy director of research for the Nuffield Trust, told MPs: 'We've seen with Covid a huge increase in the accessibility of this data. 'What it would be great to see is that going through for surveillance of other diseases. 'It would be great for what's happened with Covid to be carried forward to how other public health is published.' Experts have already called on ministers to add data for other diseases such as flu and cancer to the dashboard to put the figures 'in context'. But so far there has been no suggestion this will be added. Advertisement Professor Medley told the committee the ONS survey was a 'critical source' of information, but that its reporting delays could lead to a variant being missed. The chair of the Scientific Pandemic Influenza Group on Modelling (SPI-M), which feeds into SAGE, said: 'We've seen with the Omicron wave that you measure the time period from beginning to end in days almost as it develops. 'So it is unlikely I suspect that the ONS will give us the same level of awareness both in terms of this variant but also we have to worry about future pandemics. He added: 'If we cant stand up a response to the next Covid variant then we wont be able to stand up a response to a future pandemic.' A more infectious version of Omicron, named BA.2, is currently behind the majority of cases in Britain. It is not more deadly than its predecessor. But SAGE says there is no guarantee the next variant will be less severe, highlighting the importance of staying vigilant of new mutants. Professor Medley was also asked in the committee about Covid modelling produced to help advise policymakers. The committee's modelling has been subject to criticism, with scientists accused of overegging numerous waves of the pandemic. Most recently it warned there could be 10,000 hospitalisations and 6,000 deaths every 24 hours from Omicron. In reality, there were never more than 2,000 admissions and 300 fatalities linked to the virus a day. Professor Medley insisted that while the group produced several different scenarios, the committee never told ministers which one they thought was most likely. 'We have in the past being asked by the Cabinet Office to say which is going to happen and our immediate response has been we don't know, and we can't say. 'I think that is the right response that we have.' He said that on one occasion in September 2020 they had suggested a scenario would happen, but were incorrect. Boris Johnson was given the confidence to abandon mass testing amid weeks of falling cases, hospitalisations and deaths. He has said the ONS survey considered as world-leading will also be reduced when its funding is renewed in April, although is yet to give details. Medical unions railed against the 'living with Covid' plan, warning ministers that 'now is not the time to take risks' and saying restrictions should be gradually eased on the basis of evidence. But the Government pushed ahead amid a cost cutting spree from the Treasury aiming to shave more than 2billion off the budgets. Covid testing for vaccinated arrivals, which initially helped catch cases entering the country, has also been dropped. The UK will still offer Covid tests to the over-80s, patients in hospitals and the most vulnerable next month. It comes as figures showed the UK's Omicron outbreak may no longer be receding as quickly as it was. Another 39,000 positive cases and 194 Covid fatalities were recorded across Britain yesterday, dropping just five per cent on last week. And the number of infected people admitted to hospital each day is flattening out, with 1,015 admissions logged on Friday just 2.6 per cent fewer than seven days earlier. A young mother described as a mini-Beyonce by friends was strangled to death with a skipping rope in her bed by her boyfriend in a brutal, merciless and sustained attack, a court has heard. Police found the body of childrens nursery nurse NTaya Elliott-Cleverley, 20, in a flat she shared with her partner Nigel Diakite in Prince Alfred Road, Wavertree, Liverpool on January 29 last year. Diakite, also known as Mohammed Diakite, was charged with her murder the following day. A preliminary post-mortem examination stated the cause of Miss Elliott-Cleverleys death was mechanical asphyxiation. Diakite, 19, denies her murder and the trial at Liverpool Crown Court is estimated to last two weeks. Ian Unsworth QC, prosecuting, told the jury that Miss Elliott-Cleverley had planned to move out of their flat as their relationship deteriorated before she was allegedly killed by her boyfriend. In the early hours of the last Friday of January last year, NTaya Elliott-Cleverley, a 20-year-old young mother from Liverpool, was killed in her bed in her Wavertree home, the prosecutor alleged. Police found the body of childrens nursery nurse NTaya Elliott-Cleverley (left) in her flat in Prince Alfred Road, Wavertree, Liverpool on January 29 last year. Nigel Diakite (right) of Prince Alfred Road was charged with her murder the following day Police at a house on Prince Alfred Road, Wavertree, in a murder probe, January 29, 2021 Her young life came to an end in the most violent manner. NTaya was the victim of a brutal, merciless and sustained attack. She was restrained, suffered multiple blows to her face, and was strangled not only by a hand or hands, but also by a ligature such as a rope. It is also likely that the perpetrator obstructed her airways, perhaps using a hand or pillow. The perpetrator was the defendant, who was the partner to NTaya Cleverley. There is overwhelming evidence that he killed her. Mr Unsworth said Diakite and Miss Elliott-Cleverley met in Liverpool sometime in 2019. The prosecutor alleged that the defendant told her how he had fled from the Ivory Coast in Africa, and that she and others knew him as Nigel. At the time of the incident, Diakite was receiving assistance from a support worker in relation to his immigration application. Mr Unsworth says their relationship was not always a smooth one. Police at a house on Prince Alfred Road, Wavertree, in a murder probe, January 29, 2021 In early 2020, Miss Elliott-Cleverley fell pregnant by the defendant and gave birth to their daughter at Liverpool Womens Hospital on September 22 that year. At the time of her death, the child was just four months old. As you will hear she [the baby] was in the very room at the time when her father killed her mother, the prosecutor told the court. Mr Unsworth went on: During the course of the police search of the property, a blood-stained skipping rope was found concealed beneath a bin bag. Showing the jury the skipping rope, he said: The skipping rope had a handle missing. It had one on. The other was missing. The missing handle was found on the floor behind the couch. That was examined and that was found to contain the DNA of the defendant and NTaya. He added: We understand members of the jury, that it will be suggested by the defendant, that he had been skipping immediately prior to the events that bring us here. Thus it will be suggested that he can remember that but not how it came to have NTayas blood upon it, or how it came to be where it was. The trial continues. Colorado GOP Rep. Lauren Boebert is digging her heels in on Wednesday amid an onslaught of bipartisan criticism for heckling President Joe Biden's State of the Union address while he mentioned his dead son Beau. 'The left is p***ed because I called out Biden's botched withdrawal from Afghanistan that left 13 of Americas finest in a flag-draped coffin,' Boebert wrote on Twitter. 'They are mad because a speech was interrupted. Ask the the families who lost their loved ones how interrupted their lives are now.' She previously defended herself late Tuesday evening, writing on the platform that 'When Biden said flag draped coffins I couldn't stay silent.' Boebert earned 'boos' from the House chamber on Tuesday night when called out Biden's Afghanistan withdrawal while he was talking about cancer-causing burn pits affecting military service members. He believes such pits led to his late son's early death at age 46. The roughly hour-long address was notably punctuated by both bipartisan applause, as well as loud jeering from Boebert and her fellow GOP Rep. Marjorie Taylor Greene of Georgia. White House Press Secretary Jen Psaki on Wednesday said Boebert and Georgia Rep. Marjorie Taylor Greene heckling Biden's State of the Union address 'says a lot more about them' than the president's agenda. The Colorado Republican doubled down on her controversial commentary during Biden's State of the Union address in a new tweet on Wednesday morning Boebert (left) and Rep. Marjorie Taylor Greene (right) heckled the president at several points during his big address on Tuesday night Senate Minority Whip John Thune, the number two Senate Republican behind Leader Mitch McConnell, condemned the pair's 'antics' during a CBS Mornings interview the day after Biden's speech. 'I dont think theres any place for that. Its inappropriate. A State of the Union speech, whether you agree with the president or not, is an opportunity to show the American people the respect that the office deserves,' Thune said. The South Dakota Republican was cryptic when asked whether his fellow GOP lawmakers would issue a public condemnation. 'You know, typically the House, you know, will -- if there were steps to be taken, the House leadership would probably do that. But I think that there'll be plenty of condemnation from people, colleagues and whatnot, and just a recognition that those types of antics in a setting like that are inappropriate,' he said. 'And I think anybody would agree with that.' Democrat Rep. Eric Swalwell blasted Boebert and Greene as a 'disgrace' and called on House GOP Leader Kevin McCarthy to condemn them. 'The president was talking about his dead soldier son. You and [Greene] were a national disgrace tonight. But worse because you are irrelevant Kevin McCarthy owns all of this. He wont condemn you because he is a colossal coward,' Swalwell wrote on Twitter Tuesday. White House Press Secretary Jen Psaki brushed off their behavior and said it says 'a lot more about them' than about Biden's agenda WH Press Sec. Jen Psaki on Reps. Greene and Boebert heckling Biden all night on serious issues: That says a lot more about them than it does about how important these priorities are. pic.twitter.com/SNts6uJco0 The Recount (@therecount) March 2, 2022 The Colorado Republican said on Tuesday night that she 'couldn't stay silent' when Biden mentioned flag-draped coffins She appeared to look sour when fellow GOP Rep. Byron Donalds applauded a portion of Biden's speech Rep. Eric Swalwell called on House GOP Leader Kevin McCarthy to punish Boebert McCarthy has so far been silent on the matter, though he did give Biden a standing ovation at one point during his speech when he called for betting police funding. Psaki brushed off Boebert's protest when asked about it on MSNBC early Tuesday morning. 'I have to tell you that during that heckling, which, I was watching that on TV with a group of my team, team members and colleagues, and we were all excited and cheering,' the press secretary said in an early Wednesday morning television interview. 'And that was the moment in the speech where the president was talking about his unity agenda, and talking about priorities that we should all be able to agree on.' The president's four-pronged unity agenda, which he laid out on Tuesday night, includes efforts to do more for veterans who fall ill after inhaling smoke from toxic burn pits that troops stationed overseas have commonly used to dispose of waste. 'They come home, many of the world's fittest and best-trained warriors in the world, never the same,' Biden grieved before alluding to his own personal experience witnessing the effects. 'Headaches. Numbness. Dizziness. A cancer that would put them in a flag-draped coffin. I know.' South Dakota Senator John Thune, the number two Senate Republican, blasted the freshman lawmakers' 'antics' Everything short of putting boots on the ground, we should be doing: @SenJohnThune says he gives the Biden administration credit for rallying our allies in support of Ukraine. pic.twitter.com/edUTHCmQbk CBS Mornings (@CBSMornings) March 2, 2022 California Democrat Rep. Eric Swalwell also jumped into the fray, calling Boebert out as a 'national disgrace' It was at that moment Boebert yelled: 'A cancer that put them in a flag-draped coffin.' 'You put them in. Thirteen of them!' she shouted in reference to the 13 US service members who were killed while guarding Kabul airport in Afghanistan last year. Psaki said on Wednesday morning, 'Theres no question we should do more to help our nations veterans, people who have been hurt by the impacts of burn pits. Of course, we need to do more to work together to cure cancer.' 'And they were heckling around that time and that moment. I think that says a lot more about them than it does about how important these priorities are, and how much the vast majority of people who are sitting there watching in that chamber last night could work together to solve exactly those problems,' the press secretary added. Democratic National Committee Chair Jaime Harrison compared it to when GOP Rep. Joe Wilson shouted 'You lie!' at then-President Barack Obama's speech before a joint session of Congress in 2009. 'After Joe Wilsons You Lie embarrassment a few years ago you would have thought the GOP would have potty trained their unruly toddlers but I guess after last nights disrespectful antics some of the toddlers have become juvenile delinquents,' Harrison wrote on Twitter. Unlike other points of Biden's speech, which earned bipartisan applause, Boebert's outburst elicited only boos from Democrats. Both Boebert and Georgia Rep. Greene turned their backs on Biden as he entered the House chamber for his State of the Union address. At another point during the speech, when the president called for comprehensive reform to solve the southwest border crisis and the American immigration system, the firebrand conservatives could be heard chanting 'Build the wall,' one of Donald Trump's signature promises. Psaki says Biden 'didn't have time' to mention everything in his hour-long speech The White House insisted Wednesday that President Joe Biden didn't have enough time to address issues like the 13 U.S. service members that died in the withdrawal from Afghanistan and the January 6 attack on the Capitol. 'Look, a speech like the State of the Union is largely important. It doesn't touch on it doesn't have the time to touch on everything that is a priority,' Psaki told MSNBC Wednesday morning when asked why Biden never mentioned the Capitol riot. Republican House Minority Leader Kevin McCarthy said Biden's speech was void of giving any solutions. 'I didn't hear one solution for all the problems they started,' he told Fox News on Wednesday. 'They didn't give you a solution to the inflation that they created by their $2 trillion bill, they didn't give a solution to the border,' McCarthy continued in the GOP backlash against Biden's remarks. Biden also did not address at any point in his hour-long speech Tuesday evening his bungled withdrawal from Afghanistan. Colorado GOP Representative Lauren Boebert is digging her heels in on Wednesday amid an onslaught of bipartisan criticism for heckling Biden 's State of the Union address while he mentioned his late son Beau. 'The left is p***ed because I called out Biden's botched withdrawal from Afghanistan that left 13 of America's finest in a flag-draped coffin,' Boebert wrote on Twitter . 'They are mad because a speech was 'interrupted'. Ask the families who lost their loved ones how interrupted their lives are now,' she added. Florida GOP Representative Michael Walz told Fox Business Wednesday morning that Bidne's lack of mention of the troops who died was a 'slap in the face' to the families of the dead and to those who currently are serving. 'I just want to go back to what you just mentioned about, zero mention- nothing- on Afghanistan,' Waltz told Fox's Maria Bartiromo. 'I mean, just frankly, what a slap in the face to those 13 gold star moms, to our allies that we left behind and to the service members that at some point are going to have to go back over to deal with this terrorism problem and barely any mention of China, either.' 'But on Russia, look once again, others are leading. The EU is moving towards more and more restrictions on Russian oil and gas. Canada has put in a ban,' he continued in criticizing Biden's remarks. 'But Biden knows and Putin knows that he's boxed in a corner on this. The price is shooting through the roof that's affecting Americans at the pump. It's a big driver of inflation.' 'There were over 100 progressives in the room at the State of the Union,' Waltz said. 'He wouldn't dare talk about unleashing American energy just incredibly, another disappointment. What was, at the start, seen as a win for the administration in ending the 20-year war, in Afghanistan turned into disaster for Biden when the Taliban immediately seized Kabul and forced U.S. troops out by their deadline and resulted in the death of 13 American service members. The State Department was also unable to help get allies out of Afghanistan, leaving many who helped the U.S. over the years in harm's way as terrorist organizations swiftly overtook the country. Biden was further lambasted after the withdrawal as the troops' remains were transferred home and the president appeared to repeatedly check his watch during the ceremony bringing their flag-draped coffins back onto U.S. soil. A Manhattan judge rejected Tekashi69s request Wednesday to end his supervised release early, writing that the rapper-turned-cooperators security concerns were not an excuse for avoiding community service. Federal Judge Paul Engelmayer said the 25-year-old trash-talking rapper, whose real name is Daniel Hernandez, could not shorten at all his five-year term of court supervision. Advertisement Particularly in light of Mr. Hernandezs alarming, violent and diverse history of crimes and other anti-social conduct, his history of surrounding himself with criminal elements, his youth, his tendency to impulsive action, and other aspects of his personal history, the court judged these interests as weighty, the judge wrote. Rapper Tekashi69, born Daniel Hernandez, has lost a bid to end his supervised release early. (Alec Tabak/New York Daily News) Assistant U.S. Attorney Michael Longyear wrote in a heavily redacted letter that security concerns had resulted in Tekashi performing only 10 of the required 300 hours of community service. Advertisement The rappers lawyer, meanwhile, wrote that Tekashi spends all of his time with his mother, family members and girlfriend. The truth is, even without supervised release, Mr. Hernandez seems to be monitored by the media and the public every time he ventures out into public, lawyer Lance Lazzaro wrote in a letter that was partially redacted. While I do not believe it will happen, if Mr. Hernandez were to commit a crime in the future, it seems safe to say that his illegal act would be caught in some way by the media or someone in public with a camera on his phone. Lazzaro added that its not Tekashi whos worried about his safety, but the Probation Department, which deemed his participation in community service too dangerous. Tekashis decision to testify against his former pals in the Nine Trey Bloods in a sensational 2019 trial resulted in a widespread belief among law enforcement, fans and critics that he is a marked man. He even taunted his adversaries on social media after completing a two-year sentence. FILE- In this Sept. 21, 2018, file photo rapper Daniel Hernandez, known as Tekashi 6ix9ine, performs during the Philipp Plein women's 2019 Spring-Summer collection during the Fashion Week in Milan, Italy. (Luca Bruno/AP) Although security concerns arising from Mr. Hernandezs celebrity and well-publicized cooperation with law enforcement assuredly closed off some avenues of potential community service, the court is unpersuaded that no such avenues remain open as reflected in the fact that Mr. Hernandez has already performed some such service, Engelmayer wrote. Breaking News As it happens Get updates on the coronavirus pandemic and other news as it happens with our free breaking news email alerts. > The Bushwick, Brooklyn, native earned his light sentence on drug and gun charges, which carried a minimum 47-year sentence, thanks to his cooperation. His testimony helped secure guilty verdicts against two high-ranking Nine Trey gangsters. Other gang members pleaded guilty upon learning Tekashi had flipped. Advertisement Federal prosecutors praised the rapper for providing them an insiders view of the violent street gang and acknowledged his life will never be the same after flipping. Tekashi got out of prison four months early in April 2020 because of the threat COVID-19 posed to his asthma. Engelmayer credited Tekashi with leading a law-abiding life in the 23 months since his release from prison. However, the judge noted it cannot be divorced from the fact that he has been under judicial supervision. Although the court is hopeful that Mr. Hernandezs choice since his release to abide by the law reflects a durably matured internal compass, the court cannot be fully confident that, freed of judicial supervision, he would not lapse, the judge wrote. Tekashis lawyers did not immediately respond to a request for comment. A 280lb, 6ft, drunken New York man got into a tussle with police at Orlando International Airport Thursday, in an encounter where he was Tasered seven times and still refused to go down. The altercation served as the climax of a chaotic meltdown by 34-year-old Ryan Austin Martin, who police said got into a physical fight with his wife and daughter, 6, at the airport prior to the encounter, and had been separated from them by security. Orlando police said the man also attacked an airline employee before he was Tased. The chaotic incident was recorded in full by a bystander. 'You want to see a show?' a looming Martin asks a group of people awaiting flights in the footage, many with their phones trained on him. 'I'm gonna f***ing put on a show,' he asserts, taking an aggressive stance as sirens blare. 'Who wants to fight? Let's go!' the man shouts in the nail-biting footage, egging on scared-stiff staffers. Scroll down for video: Massive Yonkers man Ryan Austin Martin, 34, was arrested Thursday after going on a curse-laden tirade at Orlando International Airport that resulted in him being Tasered seven times 'You want to see a show?' a looming Martin asks a group of people awaiting flights in the footage, many with their phones trained on him. 'I'm gonna f***ing put on a show!' According to a arrest affidavit, the incident began when Martin, who hails from Yonkers, grew agitated at his wife and attacked her while waiting for a flight to New Jersey. The redacted report revealed that during the struggle, Martin also pushed his six-year-old daughter and tried to pull the neck of someone else in his group and gab someone by the hair. During that time, he left twice and returned with drinks, the report, filed by the Orlando police department, says. The footage shows a belligerent Martin daring staffers to fight upon being separated him from his family, after a fellow flyer reported the alleged abuse. 'Why am I being arrested?' Martin shouts to a female staffer at the start of the clip, after being told to walk away from the locked jet bridge door separating the man from his family. 'For doing nothing.' Martin shouted at scared-stiff staffers and fellow fliers before the encounter with police. Cops said he also attacked an airline employee, which was not captured in the recording 'Why am I being arrested?' Martin repeats, before laying into a curse-laden tirade. 'F**k you!' F**k you!'' the New Yorker shouts, standing in the center of the gate's waiting area, progressively raising his voice and moving into an aggressive stance. 'F***ing a**hole!' he yells at an unseen staffer. 'Don't touch me! Nobody touch me!' he then declares, while still daring staffers to act. 'Hurry up motherf***ers. I'm gonna put on a motherf***ing show!' Marin screams at the top of his lungs, striking a fighting pose. He then concedes, 'I had a couple drinks before the go**amn flight.' The footage shows Martin repeatedly banging and punching the door in a vain effort to bring it down, screaming at staffers on the other side. '[Shut the] f**k up! motherf***er. You couldn't let me in? F***ing wanna come out now?' Martin can be heard saying as he attempts to break down the locked door. The footage then shows Martin threatening an unidentified person that they would 'end up dead' if they came near him. 'Yo pal! Don't even think of coming over here,' Martin warns his off-screen adversary. 'You're going to end up dead.' Staffers can be seen ignoring the man and frantically making phone calls to report the mayhem to airport officers. As Martin continues to lean against the door, he issues another threat to an unseen staffer. 'I'm gonna kill you,' he asserts, slurring his words as he shouts. 'I'll never want to fly on this f***ing plane!' Martin's meltdown grew agitated at his wife and attacked her and their six-year-old daughter while waiting for a flight to New Jersey, spurring staffers to separate the family. Martin can be seen here attempting to force open the jetway door where they were being held for their safety The footage shows Martin repeatedly banging and punching the door in a vain effort to bring it down, screaming at staffers on the other side Tuckered out: Crouched awaiting the confrontation, Martin warns an Orlando officer before the altercation, 'What, are you f***ing dumb? Get the f**k away! Get the f**k away!' In the footage, a father can be heard trying to calm his child amid the commotion. 'It's OK, it's OK,' the concerned parent says. 'Stay calm,' the child's mother then adds. 'Police are coming.' Other fliers can be seen moving away from the massive man. 'Stay behind me,' a mother can be heard saying again to her kid in the clip, as Martin continues his rampage. Eventually, one Orlando police officer arrives on the scene. Crouched awaiting the confrontation, Martin says to the officer, 'What, are you f***ing dumb? Get the f**k away! Get the f**k away!' 'If you're f**king smart, get the f**k away.' Martin then turns back to the door and punches it repeatedly, before someone on the other side seemingly unlocks it and lets him in. The footage shows Martin hurling insults and threats at staffers and fliers alike, with the man threatening an unidentified person that they would 'end up dead' if they came near him 'Don't touch me! Nobody touch me!' he yelled, daring staffers and the responding officer to act Martin enters the other room for about a minute, during which point two staffers attempt to follow him in the room, which again sets the man off. 'Back the f**k up,' he says, ordering the staffers to exit the room. 'I don't want to hurt you.' Martin's family is then escorted outside of the room, where at which point Martin attempts to follow them. The officer then sneaks up behind Martin with a Taser and pulls the trigger. The Orlando Officer and an off-duty New Jersey sheriff are pictured restraining Martin, after the Orlando cop Tasered him several times and stuck him behind the head 'Ow!' Martin can be heard saying in the recording, which spans about eight minutes, reacting to the 50,000 Volts coursing through his veins. He managed to stay on his feet for more than minute after several charges from the Taser, until the officer brought him down with a punch 'Ow!' Martin can be heard saying in the recording, which spans about eight minutes, reacting to the 50,000 Volts coursing through his veins. Still Tasering him , the officer commands a still-standing Martin to get on the ground. 'Get on the ground! Get on the ground!' the officer yells at the man, who seems only slightly discomforted by the voltage. The officer then sends another charge into Martin after the first pulse is up, who then proceeds to approach the officer, who responds by issuing a third burst. Seemingly unaffected by the electrical onslaught, Martin then turns away from the officer, spurring the cop to wing a full-force punch at the back of Martin's head to finally bring him down. With the Taser still going, the officer attempts to restrain a still resisting Martin, ordering him to cooperate. 'Put your hands behind your back,' the officer says as he cuffs, Martin, Tasering him repeatedly, five, six, and eventually seven times, as an off-duty sheriff from New Jersey who happened to be at gate assisted with the arrest. A child thought to be Martin's six-year-old daughter is escorted with another unidentified child away from Martin as the commotion commences Martin was booked on one count each of child abuse, battery involving domestic violence, battery, resisting an officer with violence, and disorderly intoxication. It took four officers to hoist the behemoth man to his feet At that point, more officers arrive one the scene and successfully detain Martin. 'Listen man,' Martin can be heard pleading with officers while on the ground. 'I just had too much to drink.' It then takes four officers to hoist the behemoth man to his feet. Martin was then booked on one count each of child abuse, battery involving domestic violence, battery, resisting an officer with violence, and disorderly intoxication. He was admitted to Orange County Jail and released Friday night on a $2,950 bond, police said. He was admitted to Orange County Jail and released Friday night on a $2,950 bond, police said 'He was very aggressive towards that uniformed officer, who did a phenomenal job,' the off-duty sheriff who assisted with the arrest, James Gannon of Morris County, said of the incident 'He was very aggressive towards that uniformed officer, who did a phenomenal job,' the off-duty sheriff who assisted with the arrest, James Gannon of Morris County, said Saturday of the incident. 'There was a taser deployment and then we went to the ground and I assisted in handcuffing the individual.' According to the arrest report, the altercation occurred just before noon the morning of February 24. 'That's why I don't live in Florida,' a voice can be remarking of the chaos in the clip, which has since garnered more than a quarter-million views on YouTube. Billionaire Elon Musk has once again taken a dig at Joe Biden after the President lauded his competitors General Motors and Ford during the State of the Union Address on Tuesday night, but didn't mention Tesla. 'Nobody is watching the State of the Union,' Musk told CNBC in an e-mail after the president said that Ford is investing $11 billion and creating 11,000 jobs in the electric vehicle market, while GM is investing $7 billion and created 4,000 jobs. Musk, 50, said in response that his company has created over 50,000 jobs and has invested more than double of both General Motors and Ford combined. 'Ford is investing $11B to build electric vehiclescreating 11,000 jobs across the country. GM is making the largest investment in its history$7B to build electric vehicles, creating 4,000 jobs in Michigan,' the president's Twitter account reiterated on Tuesday night following his address. 'Tesla has created over 50,000 US jobs building electric vehicles & is investing more than double GM + Ford combined. [fyi to person controlling this twitter],' Elon Musk tweeted in response. Elon Musk fired back at President Joe Biden on Twitter after Biden lauded General Motors and Ford during his State of the Union address, yet failed to mention Tesla The president said that Ford has invested $11 billion and created 11,000 jobs, while GM is investing $7 billion and created 4,000 jobs Musk replied by touting Tesla, saying his company has created over 50,000 jobs and has invested more than double of both General Motors and Ford combined 'Nobody is watching the State of the Union,' Musk told CNBC in an email, declining to comment further on his reaction to Biden's comments. He previously told the news outlet that the 'Biden has pointedly ignored Tesla.' The Tesla CEO, who also founded SpaceX, and Biden, 79, have been at each other's throats in the past, most recently in January when Musk calling the president a 'damp sock puppet in human form.' Musk tweeted the insult after he wasn't invited to president's Build Back Better meeting, focusing on electric vehicles, with GM CEO Mary Barra and Ford Motor CEO Jim Farley on January 26. Biden praised General Motors and Ford in a tweet the same day for 'building more electric vehicles here at home than ever before.' 'I meant it when I said the future was going to be made right here in America,' Biden wrote on Twitter. 'Companies like GM and Ford are building more electric vehicles here at home than ever before.' Musk, whose billion-dollar company makes its vehicles in California and is now headquartered in Austin, Texas, didn't take the snub lightly, replying to the tweet: 'Starts with a T, Ends with an A, ESL in the middle.' He later replied again: 'Biden is a wet [sock] puppet in human form.' The Tesla CEO, who also founded SpaceX, and Biden, 79, have been at each other's throats in the past Musk has yet to be invited to a meeting with other corporate leaders in the electric vehicle industry Musk was also snubbed in August when he was omitted as an attendee to the electric vehicle summit. At that summit, Biden stood by the CEOs of Ford, GM and Stellantis when he announced his executive order that half the US cars sales will be zero emissions by 2030. Press secretary Jen Psaki later said the three companies that were invited to the summit were 'the three largest employers of the United Auto Workers.' Tesla's auto workers are not unionized. Musk criticized the Biden administration for seemingly being 'controlled by the unions.' 'Does that sound maybe a little biased or something?' Musk said at the time. 'It's not the friendliest administration.' Musk has yet to be invited to a meeting with other corporate leaders in the electric vehicle industry and Biden allegedly has no plans to invite him any time soon, over half a dozen sources close to the matter told CNBC. Biden's advisors privately pushed back against inviting Musk to White House events because they worry the eccentric executive will say something that might embarrass the president or administration, the sources told CNBC. Musk, who's company is produced in California, shot back at Biden for commending GM and Ford for 'building more electric vehicles here at home than ever before' Should he ever be invited to a White House event, however, Musk told CNBC that Biden has 'nothing to worry about. I would do the right thing.' Tesla's factory in Fremont, California, is the most productive vehicle manufacturing plant in all of North America, producing an average of 8,550 cars a week, according to Bloomberg. Tesla also plans to expand its production this year by building a new factory in Texas, another in Berlin, and expanding its existing operations in Shanghai. Tesla's competitor GM recently faced a major loss after selling $75 million shares it bought in electric vehicle manufacturer Lordstown Motors just 16 months ago for roughly $18.75 million. The company announced Tuesday that it had sold the 7.5 million shares it bought in October 2020, but failed to disclose how much for. However, at Tuesday's value of $2.50 per share - versus $20 they were purchased at, GM would have recouped just $18.5 million. It comes as Lordstown Motors announced on Monday that it expected to only produce 500 of its Endurance electric pickup trucks this year as opposed to the 32,000 vehicles it previously forecast. Biden's advisors privately pushed back against inviting Musk to White House events because they worry the eccentric executive will say something that might embarrass the president or administration, the sources told CNBC 'Biden has pointedly ignored Tesla at every turn and falsely stated to the public that GM leads the electric car industry,' Musk told CNBC last week. 'Tesla produced over 300,000 electric vehicles last quarter, and GM produced 26.' Other examples of times Musk has lashed out at the president include when he trashed Biden's Build Back Better plan in December over its regulatory framework even as the plan prepares to provide big subsidies for electric cars. Musk, who has gone after Democratic tax policies in the past, slammed the proposal in an interview with the Wall Street Journal and said: 'Honestly, I would just can this whole bill.' And in September, Musk referenced Donald Trump's 'Sleepy Joe' nickname for Biden when the president failed to congratulate him on the first ever all-civilian flight to orbit after the crew landed safely back on Earth on Saturday. When the billionaire and SpaceX founder was asked on Twitter why he thought Biden hadn't commended him, he responded: 'He's still sleeping.' Nevertheless, Biden finally mentioned Tesla last month, which also came after a group of Musk supporters created an online petition with 60,000 signatures calling on Biden to recognize Tesla's work. 'Since 2021, companies have announced investments totaling more than $200 billion in domestic manufacturing here in America, from iconic companies like GM and Ford building out new electric vehicle production; to Tesla, our nation's largest electric vehicle manufacturer,' Biden said at a White House event on lowering energy costs on February 8. President Joe Biden did not only draw the fury of Musk during his State of the Union speech, but he also had a gaffe amid the crisis in Ukraine by confusing the nation facing invasion with Iran. Biden, 79, the oldest man ever elected to the presidency in the United States, was speaking about the ongoing Russian invasion when he erred. 'Putin may circle Kiev with tanks, but he'll never gain the hearts and souls of the Iranian people,' Biden said. Biden warned Russia that President Vladimir Putin 'has no idea what's coming' as he opened his first State of the Union address by accusing the Russian leader of 'underestimating' western allies and Ukrainian people and announced the closure of U.S. air space to all Russian flights. Biden spent the first 12 minutes of his address to the nation from Congress speaking about Russia and their invasion of Ukraine as well as the U.S. response. 'Six days ago, Russia's Vlaidmir Putin sought to shake the very foundation of the free world, thinking he could make it bend to his menacing ways. But he badly miscalculated,' Biden said. Mr Cruel's victims never saw his face. He always wore a distinctive black balaclava New details about the masked child killer known only as Mr Cruel could lead to a breakthrough in the unsolved case that sparked terror in the homes of Melbourne families. Mr Cruel, whose identity is still unknown, assaulted at least four young girls in Melbourne in the late 1980s and early 1990s, abducting three and killing one. Karmein Chan, a 13-year-old private schoolgirl snatched from her home after her sisters were forced into a wardrobe, was shot three times in the head. The mystery clean freak's brazen attacks were so meticulously planned and committed in such a calculated fashion he was initially known as 'Mr Cool'. None of his surviving victims ever saw Mr Cruel's face, which was hidden by a chilling black balaclava with white stitching around the eyes and mouth. Now cutting edge technology has created a possible link between the attacker and the electricity industry in Melbourne. During Channel Nine's Under Investigation on Wednesday night, a world-first software system known as GIS was used by experts to create a map linking similarities between the three abductions. Mr Cruel's first victim was not removed from her house and was instead assaulted just metres away from her parents, who'd been bound and gagged. But the next three were all abducted, two would return home but Karmein would never be seen again. His second victim was dropped off near the Bayswater electrical substation 18 hours after being abducted. Pictured is a sketch of what Mr Cruel may look like as experts weigh in on the case His third victim was released near a substation in Kew, just ten minutes from her house. Both victims also lived near substations just 20 minutes apart in East Camberwell and Ringwood, while the first victim lived near one in Lower Plenty. His fourth victim, Karmein's remains were found near a substation known as the Thomastown Terminal Station, also in close proximity to the other electrical substations. Karmein and one of Mr Cruel's other victims also both attended the Presbyterian Ladies College - which was across the road from a substation. The connections suggest Mr Cruel may have worked or posed as a substation employee, or lived closeby. 'The fact that it's all in about a 20 minute drive from each other, in that area the offender has to feel comfortable in order to function,' senior law enforcement investigator, Mike King told presenter Liz Hayes. 'From a geographic perspective we just have to keep thinking, why is he comfortable in this area? Why is he selecting the victims where he is? And why is he disposing of them where he is?'. Mr King said he didn't believe in coincidences and that there was a definite reason behind Mr Cruel's movements. 'There are reasons why he selected those locations to drop off those victims, there are absolute reasons why he selected the victims he did,' he said. Shockingly, a witness told the program that in 1988 her brothers saw a strange man filming one of his victim's homes six weeks before she was taken. The house backed onto a block of electrical towers. Cutting edge technology has revealed Mr Cruel's victims were abducted or released near electrical substations, suggesting he may have worked or pretended to work in the electrical industry The woman, who was friends and neighbours with the victim said someone would have had to know the area to be there. 'He didn't come across this by accident,' she said. "Only someone who knew those power lines and the access it had to the houses on the back fence, because you can see over the fence without anyone noticing what you're doing.' She said she expected Mr Cruel worked so hard to hide his identity because he knew he had been seen by the two boys. The witness too believes he may have worked in the electrical industry. During his reign of terror, Mr Cruel broke into suburban Melbourne homes at night armed with a knife and handgun, tied up parents and siblings then abducted girls as young as 11 who he held for up to 50 hours. He forced the girls he assaulted to wash and carefully brush their teeth and fed some of them meals even while they were being abused. No useful forensic evidence was recovered from any of his crime scenes. There were no fingerprints to compare or any trace of DNA. The child killer dubbed Mr Cruel who terrified Australia three decades ago previously committed sex crimes against adults, including raping an elderly nun. Mr Cruel abducted at least three girls in Melbourne and is believed to have murdered Karmein Chan (pictured) Karmein Chan's mother visited the site where her daughter Karmein's body was found a year after she was abducted from her home. Mrs Chan and her husband had made tearful public appeals for Karmein's safe return. Police believe the girl may have seen her abductor's face Forensic anthropologist and criminologist Dr Xanthe Millett had earlier given her perspective on Mr Cruel's offending in her book, Cold Case Investigations. Mallett, who is also a television presenter and social commentator, uses her own expertise and the assistance of other experts to revisit and analyse these infamous crimes. She concluded Mr Cruel was an 'intelligent, meticulous and callous' offender likely to have been actively involved in his community and considered by his neighbours as a 'nice guy'. Mallett revealed in an exclusive extract of Cold Case Investigations seen by Daily Mail Australia that Mr Cruel had a more complicated pattern of offending than previously supposed. Forensic psychologist Tim Watson-Munro, who worked on the Mr Cruel case, told Mallett he did not believe the offender had a specific attraction to prepubescent children. Watson-Munro said investigators had asked him to profile Mr Cruel's offending, which included previous sexual assaults of adult women not known to the public. In one of those attacks Mr Cruel had raped an elderly nun then driven her car to a bank where he used her ATM card to steal her savings. 'There were a number of other crimes involving the detention and rape of adult women,' Watson-Munro told Mallett. This sketch of Mr Cruel's bedroom was made with the help of one of his child victims. Mr Cruel kept the first child he abducted for 18 hours and the second for 50. The last child he snatched, Karmein Chan, was found dead a year after her disappearance. She had been shot in the head The 10-year old (left) was the second girl abducted by Mr Cruel. The 13-year-old (right) was the third He suggested Mr Cruel had become desensitised to the 'extreme sadism and brutality' he inflicted upon those adult victims and turned to children to satisfy his perverted desires. Mr Cruel came to the attention of police on August 22, 1987 when he broke into a family home at Lower Plenty, in Melbourne's north-eastern suburbs. Once inside he tied up the parents in their bedroom, covered their eyes with surgical tape and forced them into a wardrobe. He then blindfolded and gagged their six-year-old son, tied him to his bed and went after his 11-year-old sister. After making the girl brush her teeth he assaulted her. He cut the phone lines and told the girl she could free her parents after she counted slowly to 100. All up he spent about two hours in the house, even making himself a meal. Mr Cruel next struck on December 27, 1988 when he broke into a family home where he found four girls at Ringwood. This map from Cold Case Investigations shows the sites where Mr Cruel attacked and abducted children, where he released them and where Karmein Chan's body was dumped Having threatened the parents with a gun and tying them up with copper wire he bound their ten-year-old daughter, covered her mouth and eyes with tape and abducted her. The next night, 18 hours after she had been snatched, the firl was dropped from a car at nearby Bayswater High School wearing a man's shirt and green garbage bags. THE TERRIBLE REIGN OF RAPIST 'MR CRUEL' The rapist known in the media as 'Mr Cruel' attacked girls as young as 11 in Melbourne in the 1980s and 1990s. August 22, 1987, Lower Plenty: Mr Cruel broke into a house in the night, locked the parents in a wardrobe and attacked their 11-year-old daughter. December 27, 1988, Ringwood: Broke into a house, tied up the parents and abducted their 10-year-old daughter, releasing her at a school 18 hours later. July 3, 1990, Canterbury: Broke into a house, abducted a 13-year-old girl and drove her to another house where he kept her for 50 hours before release. April 13, 1991 Templestowe: Broke into a house and abducted Karmein Chan, 13. Her body was found a year later. Mr Cruel has never been identified. Advertisement She told police her attacker had made her shower and brush and floss her teeth. He had kept her blindfolded throughout the ordeal and given her food while she was being assaulted. 'We can only dread what the man would have done if the girl had pulled off the blindfold and seen his face,' Detective Chief Inspector Des Johnson said at the time. 'It is that close to being a homicide.' The next attack came 18 months later on July 3, 1990 at Canterbury. Both parents were out for dinner with friends but their daughters a 13-year-old and 15-year-old were home. Mr Cruel broke into the house armed with a gun and a knife and threatened the sisters before bundling 13-year-old into a stolen rental car. He made her bring her Presbyterian Ladies College uniform. Fifty hours after her abduction Mr Cruel dropped her, blindfolded and wrapped in a blanket, at a power substation in Kew. She reported she had been made to brush her teeth and wash herself thoroughly. She had been given food and water regularly while held captive. Her abductor had watched a press conference in which her father pleaded for the return of his daughter and had spoken to the girl about it. By now police had this description of the offender: Caucasian, aged between 30 and 50, from 173 to 180 centimetres tall, of medium build with a small pot belly. Nine months after Nicola's abduction Mr Cruel appeared again on April 13, 1991 at Templestowe. John and Phyllis Chan were at work in their Chinese restaurant leaving daughters Karmein, 13, Karlie, nine, and Karen, seven, at home. Armed with a knife Mr Cruel forced Karlie and Karen into a wardrobe and disappeared into the night with Karmein. This time there would be no family reunion. A year later, on April 9, 1992 a dog walker found Karmein's decomposing remains near a landfill site at Thomastown. She had been shot three times in the head. Detectives believe Karmein may have seen Mr Cruel's face or recognised him in some other way, leading to him killing her. Karmein Chan's parents John and Phyllis Chan (pictured) appeared on national television appealing for their daughter to be returned. They had been working at their Chinese restaurant when the 13-year-old girl was abducted while babysitting her younger sisters Karlie and Karen The body of Karmein Chan (left) was found a year after she was abducted from her parents' home. She had been shot three times in the head. One of the girls who was released from Mr Cruel's clutches helped police draw this sketch (right) of the inside of her abductor's car Karmein's murder, 28 years ago, was the last attack attributed to Mr Cruel. Over the next couple of years Taskforce Spectrum would examine 30,000 houses and eliminate 27,000 persons of interest from their inquiries. A poster featuring the faces of Sharon, Nicola and Karmein and the details of their abductions was distributed to 1.4million homes. The FBI also provided a profile. From 2010 to 2013 police brought together under Taskforce Apollo re-examined the crimes attributed to Mr Cruel but still the identity of the offender eluded them. Not all investigators were convinced Karmein's murder was committed by Mr Cruel. Even the name given to the offender by a Melbourne newspaper has caused police problems - they say he is unlikely to seem cruel to those around him. It is possible Mr Cruel stopped abducting children after Karmein's murder. He may also be dead, in prison or have moved onto a new killing field. Anyone with information is urged to call crime stoppers on 1800 333 000. The juror on the Ghislaine Maxwell case who did not disclose his history of sexual abuse during jury selection will plead the Fifth when he testifies next week. A lawyer for Scotty David said that he would invoke his right not to respond to questions when he appears before Judge Alison Nathan in a New York court on March 8th. Todd Spodek, the attorney for David, said he wanted to exercise his 'privilege against self-incrimination at the hearing'. After the bombshell filing, prosecutors immediately requested an order forcing David to testify. The filings raise the stakes significantly ahead of David's appearance, which could lead to a new trial for Maxwell. Scotty David, the juror on the Ghislaine Maxwell case who did not disclose his history of sexual abuse during jury selection, will plead the Fifth when he testifies next week. A lawyer for Scotty David said that he would invoke his right not to respond to questions when he appears before Judge Alison Nathan in a New York court on March 8th The British socialite was convicted in December of recruiting and trafficking underage girls for the late pedophile Jeffrey Epstein and is facing up to 65 years in jail at her sentencing in June. Maxwell's lawyers have demanded a new trial based on the fact that David misrepresented himself on his jury questionnaire. He ticked 'no' on two boxes which related to being a victim of crime and sexual abuse. David has said in media interviews that he 'flew through' the questionnaire and that he thought he answered everything honestly. In the filing, Spodek told Judge Nathan that he was the lawyer representing David, who is also known as Juror no.50. Spodek wrote: 'I am writing in response to Your Honor's February 24, 2022 Order directing Juror 50 to appear for a hearing on March 8, 2022. 'I write to inform the Court that Juror 50 will invoke his Fifth Amendment privilege against self-incrimination at the hearing. Thank you for your consideration'. In their letter, prosecutors from the Southern District of New York said that they were 'in the process of seeking internal approval to seek an order compelling Juror 50's testimony at the hearing'. The letter said: 'The Government will, subject to internal approval, submit a proposed order to the Court in advance of the hearing'. Ghislaine Maxwell on Epstein's private jet airplane. Maxwell was convicted on December 29 on five counts of sex trafficking and other crimes Scotty recalled looking directly at Maxwell, 'I could literally see her [all the time]. There were times when it felt like she was staring right at me and we would lock eyesit didn't feel real' David would have to give evidence under oath during the hearing on March 8th when Judge Nathan will interrogate him about his responses on the jury questionnaire. Judge Nathan has said in a ruling that David's post-trial statements are 'clear, strong, substantial and incontrovertible evidence that a specific, nonspeculative impropriety' had occurred, meaning a false statement. The hearing will be to determine whether or not it was deliberate, which means that David's intention to plead the Fifth raises significant questions. Crucially, David ticked 'no' to question 48 which asked if he had ever been the 'victim of sexual harassment, sexual abuse, or sexual assault, including actual or attempted sexual assault or other unwanted sexual advance, including by a stranger, acquaintance, supervisor, teacher, or family member'. In interviews after the trial, including with DailyMail.com, David said that telling the other jury members about his own abuse was a turning point in their deliberations and the room fell 'silent'. The 35-year-old executive assistant in the financial sector explained to them that in his own case he could remember some details but not everything - a key point of contention in the case. David said: 'I know what happened when I was sexually abused. I remember the (color) of the carpet, the walls. Some of it can be replayed like a video.' During the trial Scotty, who works in finance, was seated in the third row of the jury box, in the back corner. From his vantage point, he said, he had a vista of the entire court and the 'perfect view' of Maxwell herself Mark Bederow, a New York lawyer who is not involved in the Maxwell case said that from David's point of view it was very good legal advice not to talk. He said: From his perspective its probably the safest thing to do, though it will have a significant impact on the courts ruling. His criminal exposure is that he lied to the court, theoretically, if he did indeed lie. If he represented in a federal court proceeding he was not the victim of a sexual crime and in fact there is substantial evidence he was bragging about his oversized influence on other jurors because of that experience he would be in legal peril if he were to testify under oath in front of Judge Nathan. The best thing for him to do is say nothing, notwithstanding the fact it will throw the verdict into complete peril. A new trial appears more likely today than yesterday:. If he takes the witness stand and is asked to answer about whether he was untruthful and his response to each of those questions is I refuse to answer on the grounds it may incriminate myself, what is the court supposed to conclude? In his interviews, David also described how in vivid detail serving on the jury of six men and six women which took 40 hours to convict Maxwell. David said that at one point he 'locked eyes' with Maxwell, 60, from his third row seat in the jury box. He said: 'There were times when it felt like she was staring right at me and we would lock eyesit didn't feel real'. David said that after hearing all the evidence he was convinced of Maxwell's guilt. He said: 'After all I've learned, she's just as guilty as Epstein. I don't want to call her a monster, but a predator is the right word. 'She knew what was happening. She knew what Epstein was doing and she allowed it to happen. She participated in getting these girls comfortable so that he could have his way with them'. In their request for a new trial, Maxwell's lawyers claimed that David was 'not telling the truth' about his history of abuse. That has violated her right to a fair trial and her constitutional rights, they argued. Advertisement A member of Ukraine's parliament blasted President Joe Biden's State of the Union address as a 'total disappointment' and criticized the international community for failing to protect Ukrainians. 'To be honest, it was a total disappointment,' Oleksandra Ustinova told NBC's Today Show of Biden's speech on Wednesday morning. 'Today the whole world is watching Ukrainians being executed.' Biden kicked off his address to the nation with a 12-minute discussion on the situation in the Ukraine. He vowed to go after Putin, praised the Ukrainian people for their resistance to Russia, and asked members of Congress to stand in a show of support for the Ukraine. As part of the administration's show of support, Ukraine's ambassador to the United States Oksana Markarova sat in Jill Biden's box during the president's remarks, a guest of the White House. And several members of Congress wore blue and yellow scarves or pins - the colors of Ukraine's flag - to show support for Ukraine. Ustinova spoke on Wednesday morning as Russia stepped up its attacks on Ukraine's major cities and officials in Mariupol said a 'full-scale genocide' was underway. Putin's men unleashed a 15-hour artillery barrage while Kharkiv also came under heavy bombardment in a dark sign of what could be to come in the capital Kyiv. Oleksandra Ustinova, a member of the Ukraine's parliament, blasted President Joe Biden's State of the Union address as a 'total disappointment' The scene of a fire at the Economy Department building of Karazin Kharkiv National University, allegedly hit during recent shelling by Russia During the State of the Union address, many lawmakers wore bright yellow and blue to show their solidarity with Ukraine. Pictured Center: Ukrainian-born Representative Victoria Spartz speaks with Steve Scalise (left) and Rep. Marcy Kaptur (right) To be honest, it was a total disappointment. - Oleksandra Ustinova, a member of the Ukrainian Parliament, on President Bidens State of the Union address pic.twitter.com/fLhShKuSWF TODAY (@TODAYshow) March 2, 2022 But Ustinova heavily criticized Biden in her interview with NBC, arguing the U.S. and the international community failed to live up to its promise to protect Ukraine, particularly after the country gave up its nuclear weapons in exchange for such support. Ukraine war: The latest Russian paratroopers land in Ukraine's second city amid heavy fighting 'There are practically no areas left in Kharkiv where an artillery shell has not yet hit': Interior Ministry official Biden brands Vladimir Putin a 'dictator' in his annual State of the Union address as he bans Russian aircraft from US airspace Russia steps up its bombing campaign and missile strikes, hitting Kyiv's main television tower, two residential buildings in a town west of the city and the city of Bila Tserkva to the south of the capital Russian forces push into the besieged Black Sea city of Kherson in the south Russian attacks leave Mariupol, another Black Sea port further to the west without electricity More than 677,000 people have fled Ukraine since the Russian invasion, the UN's refugee agency says The UN's International Court of Justice says it will hold public hearings on March 7 and 8 over Ukraine's allegations of 'genocide' by Russia Russia blocks an independent television channel and a liberal radio station, tightening a virtual media blackout A string of Western companies announce they are freezing or scaling back business with Russia Russians race to withdraw cash after the introduction of capital controls and as the ruble hits record lows Russian-owned Nord Stream 2 goes insolvent after Germany halts the pipeline following Moscow's invasion Oil prices soar past $110 a barrel, despite agreements to release 60 million barrels from stockpiles The World Bank prepares a $3-billion aid package for Ukraine, including $350 million in immediate funds Advertisement 'We see children dying every day on the streets and in their houses and they didn't make it to the bomb shelter. We see bombs come into the orphanages, to the schools. And we had been promised a protection by the international community. We gave up our nuclear weapons,' Usinova said. At least 136 people, including 13 children, have been killed during the Russian invasion of the Ukraine and another 400 civilians have been injured, according to the United Nations, but the real death toll is likely much higher and expected to grow even more as Russian President Vladimir Putin shows no sign of backing down from his invasion. 'And today when I see President Biden saying that we are going to protect every inch of NATO territory, excuse me. You have been promised the same thing when we gave up our nuclear weapons,' she added. After the Soviet Union broke up in 1991, Ukraine held about one third of the Soviet nuclear arsenal, the third largest in the world at the time. In 1994 Ukraine agreed to destroy the weapons but wanted security guarantees in return. To faciliate Ukraine's disarmament, Russia, Ukraine, Britain, and the United States signed the Budapest Memorandum, which promised that none of the nations would use force or threats against Ukraine. The agreement also notes that if aggression took place, the nations would seek immediate action from the United Nations Security Council to aid Ukraine. But the memo is not as legally binding as a treaty, which would have required ratification by the U.S. Senate. Ustinova said she 'was not asking for troops' or U.S. boots on the ground but a no-fly zone enforced over Ukraine. 'What is the red line that Putin has to cross for the NATO and the U.S. to step in? We're not asking for boots on the ground. We're asking for the iron dome or a no fly zone. We need the protection of the sky so the bombs and missiles do not hit our children,' she said. The White House has ruled out a no-fly zone, arguing it would need it be reinforced by the American military and U.S. plans would have to shoot down Russian air craft that violated the zone - a move that would escalate tensions and possibly lead to war. White House Press Secretary Jen Psaki a no-fly zone is 'not a good idea,' adding that Biden does not want to risk putting the United States military in conflict with Russia. 'What that'd require is implementation by the U.S. military,' Psaki said. 'It would essentially mean the U.S. military would be shooting down planes, Russian planes. That is definitely escalatory.' Oleksandra Ustinova, a member of the Ukraine's parliament, called for a no-fly zone to be put in place above Ukraine President Joe Biden spent the first 12 minutes of his State of the Union address talking about the situation in the Ukraine Rubble is seen littering the streets of Kharkiv after a Russian missile struck the city in the early hours of Wednesday Firefighters work to contain a fire in the complex of buildings housing the Kharkiv regional SBU security service and the regional police after a Russian airstrike Sergyi Badylevych, 41, hugs his wife Natalia, 42, and child in an underground metro station used as bomb shelter in Kyiv First Lady Jill Biden (right) hugged Ukrainian Amb. Oksana Markarova (left) as President Joe Biden asked his audience to rise in support of the Ukrainian people during Tuesday night's State of the Union address The United States and its European allies have, instead, levied heavy economic sanctions on Putin, his wealthy friends, his powerful inner circle and Russia's top banks. But Ustinova also argued the sanctions imposed on Putin and Russia aren't enough. 'Sanctions is a long-term tool that will bring the economy down. If we need it fast, we need basic protection of the sky now. And again if we want to do sanctions, those have to be real sanctions with no exemptions,' she said. Ustinova's comments came as Ukrainian President Volodymyr Zelensky asked for more help as a 40-mile Russian convoy of tanks, armored vehicles and towed artillery continues to edge towards Kyiv. Meanwhile, key cities in Ukraine are being attacked from all sides with Kyiv, the second-largest city Kharkiv, and the southern city of Kherson being battered. In his speech on Tuesday night, Biden vowed that Putin would 'pay a price' for invading Ukraine. 'Six days ago, Russia's Vladimir Putin sought to shake the very foundations of the free world, thinking he could make it bend to his menacing ways,' Biden said. 'But he badly miscalculated. He thought he could roll into Ukraine and the world would roll over. Instead, he met with a wall of strength he never anticipated or imagined. He met the Ukrainian people.' He also acknowledged Markarova, the Ukrainian ambassador who received a standing ovation from lawmakers and a hug from Jill Biden. 'Historic honor to accept rounds of applauds at US Presidents #SOTU,' she Markarova tweeted after the remarks. 'I am deeply grateful to @POTUS, @FLOTUS and all Americans for strong support. Ukraine stood up to evil and the whole civilized world needs to #StopPutin now.' Stephen Fry has said that those who oppose tearing down statues of historical figures with a racist past are 'ignorant of history'. Speaking on the Distraction Pieces podcast hosted by actor Scroobius Pip, Mr Fry said protestors who topple monuments - like the one dedicated to slave trader Edward Colston in Bristol - are trying to 'highlight' history, not 'airbrush' it. Mr Fry, 64, suggested it was ignorant to get upset at such actions and blame it on 'wokeness', and those who do take issue with bringing down monuments are 'the ones who are most ignorant of history'. He made the comments as he agreed with the podcast's host Scroobius Pip, whose real name is David Peter Meads, who said that 'so many cultures' have had more than two genders 'for the entirety of their history', and '[the idea of] two genders is a modern thing'. Mr Fry replied: 'So right, it is one of the ironies of this kind of culture war, exchange, that it is those who are upset by and regard it as just wokeness or cultural Marxism or whatever else they want to call it - they're the ones who are most ignorant of history. 'They say ''oh, they're trying to airbrush history by pulling down this statue'' - no, we are trying to highlight history, trying to show what the true history of the thing is, what it bears, what language bears, what icons and statuary and images bear. Stephen Fry, 64, said it was ignorant to get upset at such actions and blame it on 'wokeness', and those who do take issue with bringing down monuments are 'the ones who are most ignorant of history' The toppling of the Colston statue (pictured) came amid a wider context of Black Lives Matter protests which spread across the world following the killing of George Floyd in Minneapolis, Minnesota by white police officer Derek Chauvin in May 2020 Mr Fry, 64, said it was ignorant to get upset at such actions and blame it on 'wokeness', and those who do take issue with bringing down monuments are 'the ones who are most ignorant of history' 'And what our kind of story on humanity, what it really has as a history, and how recent so much of what we take to be absolute, in fact is.' Mr Fry added that gender was a very good example, adding that the Greeks had a 'very open sense of a third gender' and they created the character of Hermaphroditus - the two-sexed child of Aphrodite and Hermes - which was a 'very holy and sacred thing'. Podcast host Scroobius Pip (David Meads) He added: 'It was really the Romans who didn't like that. The Romans had a virile, militaristic - they were fascists, literally fascists, I mean the word fascist comes from the Roman symbol for power - the fasces, which was an ax with a bundle of rods tied in it which they would carry in their parades, their marches.' The toppling of the Colston statue came amid a wider context of Black Lives Matter protests which spread across the world following the killing of George Floyd in Minneapolis, Minnesota by white police officer Derek Chauvin in May 2020. Demonstrations reached the UK, and people marched in Bristol in June and toppled the bronze statue of 17th-century transatlantic slave trader Colston. He had played a major role in the Royal African Company when it shipped 84,000 Africans into slavery, including 12,000 children, but had a statue in Bristol as one of the city's biggest benefactors. In January of this year, the four protestors who toppled the statue were found not guilty of an act of public dissent following a nine day trial, in which they argued their actions were justified because the statue was so offensive. In December, Fry called for the Elgin Marbles to be returned to Greece and replaced in the British Museum with an Artificial Reality 'experience'. The original Parthenon sculptures - which date back almost 2,500 years - could then be shipped back to Athens in a 'classy' gesture by the UK, he said. He said: 'I have this passion that we will return the Parthenon marbles to Athens... where they belong.' Boris Johnson explicitly accused Vladimir Putin's forces of committing war crimes in Ukraine today, and said more are happening 'almost hourly'. The PM told the Commons there were already incidents in the first week of the conflict that 'fully qualify' as breaches of international law. And Downing Street pointed to strikes on the Babi Yar Holocaust memorial in Kyiv and targeting of apartment blocks. The government has previously warned that evidence is being collated, with the International Criminal Court investigating. Defence Secretary Ben Wallace raised fears this morning that Russia will switch tactics to 'indiscriminate bombing' after the invasion failed to make swift progress. The ruins of buildings in Kharkiv today after the latest shelling by Russian forces Boris Johnson (right) explicitly accused Vladimir Putin's (left) forces of committing war crimes in Ukraine today, and said more are happening 'almost hourly' Mr Johnson spoke to Ukraine's President Volodymyr Zelensky on Wednesday morning, promising further support and weapons for the forces resisting Russia's military. At PMQs, he said: 'Putin has gravely miscalculated; in his abhorrent assault on a sovereign nation, he has underestimated the extraordinary fortitude of the Ukrainian people and the unity and resolve of the free world in standing up to his barbarism.' The chief prosecutor of the International Criminal Court, Karim Khan, has said he plans to open an investigation into events in Ukraine and Mr Johnson told MPs: 'What we have seen already from Vladimir Putin's regime in the use of the munitions that they have already been dropping on innocent civilians, in my view, already fully qualifies as a war crime.' The PM's spokesman said after the session: 'Obviously, formally it will be for a criminal court to make that ruling but I think no one can be in any doubt that what we're seeing daily, almost hourly now, are horrific acts that would certainly appear to be war crimes.' Mr Johnson said 'the vice is tightening on the Putin regime' as he was urged by Labour leader Sir Keir Starmer to ramp up sanctions against oligarch allies of the Russian leader. Russian troops have entered Ukraine's second city Kharkiv following days of intensive bombardment. The Ministry of Defence said the latest intelligence suggested Russian forces had reportedly also moved into the centre of Kherson in south Ukraine. Artillery and air strikes have targeted built-up areas in Kyiv, Kharkiv, Mariupol and Chernihiv. But Mr Wallace said the advance of Russian forces continued to be slowed by a combination of overstretched logistics, poor morale and brave resistance by Ukrainian fighters. He told BBC Breakfast that despite the presence of Russian troops, 'none of the major cities have been taken control of'. There was 'huge amounts of low morale in the Russian forces, we've seen lots of surrenders'. However, he added: 'But that doesn't take away from the fact you have a very ruthless Russian armed forces leadership and a president who seems to know no limit to how much violence they will use to achieve their aims.' The lack of progress in meeting the aims of the invasion had led to a change in tactics, focusing on aerial and artillery bombardment of cities rather than the kind of lightning mobilised armoured advances originally envisaged by the Kremlin, Western military experts believe. The smoking ruins of a gym following shelling in Kyiv, Ukraine, today Ben Wallace highlighted Moscow's military 'doctrine' as he said Vladimir Putin's forces are likely to surround cities and 'bombard indiscriminately' - before seizing 'what's left' Mr Wallace told Sky News that meant a plan to 'carpet-bomb cities, indiscriminately in some cases' and on BBC Radio 4's Today he warned Russian forces would 'pummel these cities with artillery and then hope to break the city'. The tactics had been used in Chechnya but Ukraine is a different proposition because of its size and population. Mr Wallace warned that an occupying force would face the kind of insurgency faced by the Soviets in Afghanistan or the UK and Western allies in Iraq. There could be 'years of resistance' to a Russian occupation, he said. The Defence Secretary again rejected calls for the UK and its allies to enforce a no-fly zone in the skies above Ukraine, because shooting down a Russian plane could trigger a Europe-wide conflict between Mr Putin and Nato. A no-fly zone would also have to apply to Ukrainian jets, meaning they could not target Russian forces from the air, he added. 'If you had a no-fly zone in Ukraine, the overwhelming scale of the Russian army would be able to drive around with impunity, which it can't at the moment.' But he said the UK had 'led the way' in supplying surface-to-air weapons systems to Ukraine. Rep. Marjorie Taylor Greene claimed in a speech after President Biden's State of the Union that the commander-in-chief is 'totally compromised' because world leaders are using his son Hunter's laptop to blackmail him. The Georgia Republican's remarks came after she and Rep. Lauren Boebert heckled Biden during his speech when he started talking about reforming the immigration system. 'The president of the United States is totally compromised because every world leader has contents of Hunter Biden's laptop and much more to blackmail him,' Greene said after the speech. 'So it's no wonder America is weak,' Greene continued. 'We have a president who puts America last because he is literally serving China, Russia and the world. He is a globalist.' The far-right congresswoman said that Biden is 'for the interest of China, for the interest of Russia and for anyone anywhere that has blackmail evidence on his sexually deviant, drug-addled, dead-beat dad, pathetic, sorry excuse of a son.' 'The president of the United States is totally compromised because every world leader has contents of Hunter Biden's laptop and much more to blackmail him,' Greene said after the speech Boebert (left) and Rep. Marjorie Taylor Greene (right) heckled the president at several points during his big address on Tuesday night The far-right congresswoman said that Biden is 'for the interest of China, for the interest of Russia and for anyone anywhere that has blackmail evidence on his sexually deviant, drug-addled, dead-beat dad, pathetic, sorry excuse of a son,' referring to Huner, pictured above In January, Greene said the opposite: that Biden was 'willing to take our military to war' against Russia because Ukraine has dirt on Hunter. 'I am blown away with what we're seeing. The president of the United States Joe Biden is willing to take our military to war ... against nuclear Russia because of Ukraine,' she said during an appearance on Steve Bannon's podcast on Jan. 26. 'You cannot deny this, it's because Ukraine has the dirt on Hunter Biden. Ukraine has the dirt on Joe Biden, our president,' she continued. 'This is why we can have many of our troops get killed in this war that Joe Biden wants to have happened.' Greene also said that Biden has sent 'thousands of American troops over to eastern Europe to defend another country's border,' referring to Ukraine. The U.S. has about 9,000 troops stationed in Poland and 2,000 stationed in Romania, but Biden has repeatedly said he will not put boots on the ground in Ukraine. During the State of the Union, Greene and Rep. Lauren Boebert, R-Colo., tried to start a chant of 'build the wall, build the wall.' 'Folks, if we're going to advance liberty and justice, we need to secure our border and fix the immigration system,' Biden said, as the two Republicans interjected. Hitting Biden for the Russian invasion of Ukraine, Greene said in her speech: 'Under President Trump, this [war] would have never happened. For four years our country had a real leader that led America and the entire world to peace for strength.' 'But now we have a mentally incompetent, feckless, dementia-ridden piece of crap,' she added, referencing a similar description of the president offered by Kathy McCollum, whose son Rylee was one of the 13 U.S. service members killed in Afghanistan during the U.S. evacuation. Greene's remarks came after she drew the ire of leadership within her own party for appearing at a white nationalist rally. The America First Political Action Conference (AFPAC) was organized by alt-right figure Nick Fuentes, who gained infamy for making many anti-Semitic comments, denying the Holocaust happened and opposing women's right to vote. Fuentes was also apart of the deadly white nationalist rally in Charlottesville in 2017. Before introducing Greene, Fuentes said: 'Can we get a round of applause for Russia?' and the crowd started chanting, 'Putin! Putin! Putin!' 'Now they're going on about Russia and Vladimir Putin is Hitler they say that's not a good thing,' he said, before calling Greene up to the stage. Former President Donald Trump famously asked Ukrainian President Volodymyr Zelensky if he would 'if you can look into' information on the president's son, in a call that became a subject of his first impeachment. Emails found on Hunter Biden's laptop pointed to an effort by Hunter to set up a meeting in 2015 between Vadym Pozharskyi, an adviser at a Ukrainian energy firm, and his father, then vice president. The FBI had since seized the laptop from the Delaware computer repair shop owner, who says Hunter dropped it off to him in 2019 and never came to retrieve it. A serious of compromising pictures of Democratic candidate Joe Biden's son Hunter, 50, (above) have been released just weeks ahead of the US election on November 3 in a shocking move that some have suggested may prompt distrust in Joe Biden In some of the images, Hunter Biden is seen with a crack pipe hanging out of his mouth. His struggles with drug addiction have been well documented in the past The Biden campaign at the time denied the meeting between the then-candidate and Ukrainian officials ever took place, saying it was not on his official calendar. Emails, texts and photos obtained by both DailyMail.com and the New York Post, which first broke the story were salacious and damning: they also detailed the president's drug-fueled benders, sexual escapades and repeated use of the 'n-word.' One text exchange obtained by DailyMail.com revealed that Hunter had allegedly overpaid an escort by $25,000 during a drug-filled bender at the Chateau Marmont in Los Angeles, from which texts show he was later banned for drug use after the hotel found a whole in the wall of a room where he had stayed. Secret Service agents showed up at his door to tell him the card he'd used was linked to his father, according to the texts. Advertisement Pregnant Ukrainian women in Kyiv were today nervously waiting to give birth in the basement of a perinatal hospital which has been converted into an emergency bomb shelter - as Vladimir Putin's forces surrounded the capital city. Nearly a dozen heavily pregnant women and their families sheltered in the basement, where beds were made up on the floor of what appeared to be locker rooms and corridors while their families hunkered down in the dark as they waited for the day's bombardment to end. Groups of up to six women were sharing rooms, and in some cases beds, as they waited to give birth or rested after delivering their babies. At least one room held IV drips and machines to monitor the mothers and newborns' vital signs. Newborns peppered the shelter, many being held tenderly for the first time by parents who must now try to shield them from the war being fought above the ground for the seventh day after Moscow ordered an all out invasion of its neighbour Ukraine. Several women seemed on the verge of giving birth today even as Kyiv's mayor Vitali Klitschko warned that Russian forces were 'getting closer' to the Ukrainian capital and vowed 'we will fight', amid fears it could soon be battered by artillery fire from a 40-mile long death convoy parked nearby. By Wednesday morning the convoy's advance had slowed to a crawl as commanders regrouped and prepared to renew their assault in what is now expected to become an increasingly bloody war of resources with Kyiv's men facing overwhelming odds. Pregnant women lie on the floor of a the basement of a prenatal hospital in Kyiv which has been converted into an emergency bomb shelter following the Russian invasion of Ukraine last week A man talks to his newborn boy Ivan as they take shelter in the basement of a perinatal centre as air raid siren sounds over Kyiv as the Russian invasion of the country enters its seventh day Yuri holds his pregnant wife Anna's hand in the basement of a maternity hospital converted into a medical ward as she goes into labour while air raid sirens sound in Kyiv, Ukraine, on Wednesday A woman holds her newborn child in the basement of a maternity hospital converted into a medical ward and used as a bomb shelter during air raid alerts, in Kyiv, Ukraine Two heavily pregnant women shelter in the corridor of a basement of a perinatal centre in Kyiv as air raid sirens sound over the capital on Wednesday as Russian troops encircled the city A heavily pregnant woman holds her bump while resting on a mattress on the floor of a perinatal centre in Kyiv while air raid sirens warn of incoming shelling in the city Pregnant women and their families take shelter in the basement of a perinatal centre as air raid siren sounds are heard amid Russia's invasion of Ukraine Nurses help a pregnant woman to take shelter in the basement of a perinatal centre as air raid sirens sound over the capital, Kyiv, on Wednesday Newborns peppered the shelter, many being held tenderly for the first time by parents who must now try to shield them from the war being fought above the ground for the seventh day after Moscow ordered an all out invasion of its neighbour Ukraine Doctors and nurses wearing gloves and dressed in medical scrubs seemed to continue to work through the air raid sirens, helping pregnant women and their families into the shelter and onto makeshift beds and benches. A male healthcare worker was pictured tearing up, his face in his hands, as he sat down as the air raid sirens sounded over Kyiv on Wednesday as others stoically carried on assisting patients despite the threat. Images this morning showed areas of the city damaged in overnight strikes, as attacks resumed on Ukrainian cities elsewhere in the country. The Kyiv hospital is one of several across the country that have moved their practice underground and continued to provide car through the invasion, despite the threat of bombs from Russian forces. Among them is a hospital in Mariupol, a city on Ukraine's south coast, which has become a bomb shelter and maternity ward. Britain's Defense Ministry said on Wednesday that the city had been encircled by Russian forces - as it warned that intelligence showed an increase in Russian air and artillery strikes on populated urban areas over the past two days. As fighting raged, the humanitarian situation worsened. Roughly 660,000 people have fled Ukraine, and countless others have taken shelter underground. The death toll was less clear, with neither Russia nor Ukraine releasing the number of troops lost. The UN human rights office said it has recorded 136 civilian deaths, though the actual toll is surely far higher. One senior Western intelligence official estimated that 5,000 Russian soldiers had been captured or killed in the biggest ground war in Europe since World War II. Many military experts worry that Russia may be shifting tactics. Moscow's strategy in Chechnya and Syria was to use artillery and air bombardments to pulverize cities and crush fighters' resolve. A pregnant women is seen in the hallways of basement floor of a maternity hospital converted to medical ward and used as a shelter in Kyiv, Ukraine, on Wednesday Medical staff and patients, including a boy draped in a Ukrainian flag, take shelter in the basement of a perinatal hospital in Kyiv after air raid sirens sounded on Wednesday A man with his newborn child takes shelter in the basement of a perinatal centre in Kyiv, hours after the city's mayor Vitali Klitschko warned that Russian forces were 'getting closer' to the Ukrainian capital and vowed 'we will fight' A male healthcare worker pictured tearing up, his face in his hands, as he sat down as the air raid sirens sounded over Kyiv on Wednesday A man helps his pregnant wife as they take shelter in the basement of a perinatal centre in Kyiv as air raid sirens sound denoting incoming shelling from Russian forces which are stationed outside the city Patients take shelter in the basement of a perinatal centre in Kyiv as air raid siren sounds are heard , amid fears it could soon be battered by artillery fire from a 40-mile long death convoy parked nearby A female healthcare worker checks on one of her patients who has recently given birth in the basement of a perinatal hospital in the Ukrainian capital, Kyiv A baby and its mother sleep through air raid sirens in the basement of a perinatal hospital in Kyiv where they have taken refuge after Russian forces invaded Ukraine last week Pregnant women whose treatment are underway stay in basement floor of a maternity hospital converted to medical ward as air raid sirens sound over Kyiv on Wednesday A woman holds her newborn child in the basement of a maternity hospital converted into a medical ward and used as a bomb shelter during air raid alerts, in Kyiv, Ukraine Newborns peppered the shelter, many being held tenderly for the first time by parents who must now try to shield them from the war being fought above the ground for the seventh day after Moscow ordered an all out invasion of its neighbour Ukraine Doctors and nurses wearing gloves and dressed in medical scrubs seemed to continue to work through the air raid sirens, helping pregnant women and their families into the shelter and onto makeshift beds and benches Medical staff, women patients whose treatment are underway, stay in basement floor of a maternity hospital converted to medical ward and used as a shelter amid Russian attacks on Kyiv A man with his newborn child takes shelter in the basement of a perinatal centre in Kyiv, hours after the city's mayor Vitali Klitschko warned that Russian forces were 'getting closer' to the Ukrainian capital and vowed 'we will fight' Pregnant women lie on the floor of a the basement of a prenatal hospital in Kyiv which has been converted into an emergency bomb shelter following the Russian invasion of Ukraine last week A heavily pregnant woman holds her bump while resting on a mattress on the floor of a perinatal centre in Kyiv while air raid sirens warn of incoming shelling in the city Two heavily pregnant women shelter in the corridor of a basement of a perinatal centre in Kyiv as air raid sirens sound over the capital on Wednesday as Russian troops encircled the city Children take shelter in the basement of a perinatal centre as air raid siren sounds are heard amid Russia's invasion of Ukraine on Wednesday As the seventh day of the war dawned Wednesday, Russia found itself increasingly isolated, beset by the sanctions that have thrown its economy into turmoil and left the country practically friendless, apart from a few nations like China, Belarus and North Korea. Ukrainian President Volodymyr Zelensky has said that Russia is trying to erase Ukraine and its people as Vladimir Putin's invasion entered its seventh day today with renewed attacks on all fronts including an expected assault on the city which houses Europe's largest nuclear power plant. Zelensky, who has become a symbol of Ukrainian defiance and courage since the war began, told his people today that Russians 'know nothing about our capital. About our history. But they have an order to erase our history. Erase our country. Erase us all.' The president, unshaven and wearing a military-style khaki T-shirt, said the West's response was not enough, calling for more international support, including backing Ukraine's bid to join the European Union. 'This is no time to be neutral,' he added. As he spoke, Ukrainians were barricades to defend the city of Zaporizhzhia - including setting up defences around the reactors of Energodar power plant. Anton Gerashchenko, adviser to Ukraine's interior ministry, called on generals to bypass the city while warning they could create a 'new Chernobyl' if the plant is damaged. 'Because of Putin's madness, Europe is again on the brink of a nuclear catastrophe,' he wrote on Facebook. 'The city where the largest nuclear power plant in Europe is located is preparing for a battle with the invaders. 'An accident can happen like at the Chernobyl nuclear power plant or the Fukushima nuclear power plant. Russian generals - think again! Radiation does not know nationalities, does not spare anyone!' Advertisement Two American space engineers are currently locked in a capsule in Moscow taking part in an eight-month NASA space experiment despite the ongoing war in Ukraine and the race for US citizens to get out of Russia. William Brown and Ashley Kowalski are currently living in the capsule along with three Russians and an Emirati for a NASA-experiment known as SIRIUS 21, which involves isolating for eight months as part of a space mission simulation. They went into the capsule in November and are not due to emerge until July this year. The only contact the group has with the outside world are letters that are uploaded to a secure server operated by a coordinator involved in the experiment. NASA says they also receive daily 'news drops' and are 'well aware' of the war in Ukraine. The last time Brown's friends heard from him was before Putin launched his invasion into Ukraine on February 24, and they are now concerned about how much the group knows. They also can't be sure that letters written since the invasion are making it to the team or who is in charge of controlling the server, despite NASA claiming communications have not been interrupted. The US has now closed its airspace to Russia, meaning no Russian commercial planes can fly to America. It remains unclear whether Putin will retaliate by closing his airspace to American airlines too but if he does, it makes it even more difficult for any Americans who are in Russia to get out. A NASA spokesperson told DailyMail.com that they plan to continue with the mission despite State Department advice for Americans to leave Russia 'immediately'. It remains unclear if the crew know about the advisory that was issued on February 27. Scroll down for video William Brown (front left) and Ashley Kowalski (back center) are currently living in the capsule along with three Russians and an Emirati for a NASA-experiment known as SIRIUS 21, which involves isolating for eight months as part of a space mission simulation. It is not known how much they know about the war going on in Ukraine, or the worsening relations between Russia and the rest of the world. They are joined in the capsule by Russians Oleg Blinov (front center), Victoria Kirichenko (back left), Ekaterina Kariakina (back right) and Emirati Saleh Al Ameri (front right) Ashley Kowalski, 32, and William Brown, 36, are both American citizens with extensive experience in engineering. They signed up for the NASA experiment last year and entered the capsule in November after being physically vetted The group entered the capsule on November 3rd and since then, their only contact has been through letters loaded onto a server The crew are shown inside the capsule enjoying a Thanksgiving meal that was prepared for them by a chef. Their friends say they cannot be sure how much they all know about the ongoing war On Sunday, the State Department issued a warning to all Americans left in Russia that they should seek to leave immediately. Photographer Nathan Crane, who is friends with Brown, said he has not heard from him since before the invasion last week. 'I was in contact with him last week about it and he is aware of it likely happening though I am unsure about how extensive his knowledge of it is at this point. 'I haven't heard back from him since the last letter which makes me wonder if the Russian side is holding letters from them so they don't find out more about the atrocities happening in Ukraine. 'That's my personal opinion but I have no idea,' he told DailyMail.com on Wednesday. He is among those who hopes NASA will suspend the program and get the crew out of Russia while they can still catch flights. 'I know NASA and the program try to stay apolitical but I think (and hope) the program will be suspended. I don't know what is going to happen,' he said. Kowalski, right, with Russian Victoria Kirichenko, right, and Emirati Saleh Al Ameri, left. All of their social media accounts are being run by friends who can access the information on the server and share it with the outside world The crew inside the capsule on New Year's Eve. Friends of Brown say his last letter was before Putin launched his invasion A NASA mock-up of the simulation capsule shows where the group are spending their time in the eight-month challenge The point of the experiment is to track as closely as possible what the long-term effects are on astronauts' health of going into space Close ups from a NASA brochure shows the gym area where the group take part in physical tests to monitor their health Another of the spaces inside the NASA capsule. NASA will not comment on how much the group knows, or if the experiment is going to continue Kowlaski, 32, previously worked at the Aerospace Corporation in California and Brown, 36, has experience in 'military, defense contracting, healthcare consulting, software engineering, and logistics.' They are joined in the capsule by Russians Oleg Blinov, the commander, Victoria Kirichenko, Ekaterina Kariakina and Saleh Al Ameri, from the United Arab Emirates. All were selected after a vetting process by NASA, in coordination with IMBP - Russia's State Scientific Research center. Until last week, when Putin invaded Ukraine, the IMBP social media pages were constantly refreshed with photos of the international crew inside the capsule. The crew enjoyed Thanksgiving, Christmas and New Year celebrations together with specially prepared meals by international chefs. Photos were uploaded to the server then blasted to the world. The State Department is now advising all US citizens who are still in Russia to get out 'immediately via commercial options still available' The crewmembers' social media accounts are now being run by their close family and friends. Russian President Vladimir Putin launched an all-out invasion into Ukraine last week The capsule is inside a Soviet-era building 'on the outskirts of Moscow' and according to a profile in Foreign Policy last year, the point of the experiment is to mimic as closely as possible what the real space experience is like for astronauts. The group will undergo daily tests to measure how their bodies and minds are coping with the isolation and the physical constraints. Putin launched his assault on Ukraine on February 24 and shows no signs of slowing down. As the fighting in Ukraine continues, relations between Russia and the rest of the world are worsening. On Wednesday night, President Biden used his State of the Union address to slam Putin and his war-mongering. He has now joined the EU in closing off airspace to Russian planes. Flights out of Russia are dwindling as a result. Biden has also imposed strict sanctions on Russia to economically cut it off, and American businesses with interest in Russia are pulling their money out of the country. On Tuesday, it was reported that Biden administration officials had also warned American companies that any of their staff in Russia could also be taken hostage. The four men accused of supplying the beloved actor Michael K. Williams with a fatal dose of fentanyl-laced heroin pleaded not guilty to narcotics conspiracy charges on Wednesday. Irvin Green Eyes Cartegena, is accused of handing Williams the lethal drugs last September in a caught-on-video transaction. Advertisement The feds say Hector Robles, 57, Luis Cruz, 56, and Carlos Macci were members of the drug crew that continued to deal heroin laced with fentanyl throughout Brooklyn selling it in broad daylight despite knowing that Williams had died after consuming their product. The four appeared in Manhattan Federal Court to enter their pleas of not guilty to narcotics conspiracy resulting in death. Advertisement Michael K. Williams poses for the 2021 Critics Choice Awards on March 7, 2021 in the Brooklyn borough of New York City. (Arturo Holmes/Getty Images for ABA) Williams was found dead by his nephew inside his Kent Ave. penthouse in Williamsburg on Sept. 6. Police later found a glassine envelope containing drugs in the apartment. The East Flatbush native developed a devoted following after his breakout role as a cerebral hitman named Omar on HBOs series set in Baltimore, The Wire. Williams spoke candidly about his struggles with addiction while working as a grassroots advocate for criminal justice reform in Brooklyn. Cartegena, Robles, Cruz, and Macci face a mandatory minimum sentence of 20 years in prison and a maximum of life in prison if convicted. Boris Johnson today dismissed calls to waive visa rules for Ukrainian refugees to make it easier for them to come to Britain as he said strict identity checks must be kept in place because of security concerns. The Prime Minister has faced repeated calls in recent days from the SNP to waive the requirements, with the party's Westminster leader, Ian Blackford, urging the premier at lunchtime to 'bring down the barriers'. But Mr Johnson said the Government will not 'simply abandon all checks' as he insisted the UK will be 'as generous as we possibly can to the people of Ukraine'. Mr Johnson said he did not believe it would be 'sensible' to do away with biometric checks, which are part of the visa application security process, given that people are coming from a 'theatre of war'. Senior Tory MP Mark Harper yesterday warned against ditching the checks as he claimed Vladimir Putin could try to disguise Russian agents as Ukrainian refugees to gain entry to the UK and carry out a repeat of the Salisbury spy attack. Boris Johnson today dismissed calls to waive visa rules for Ukrainian refugees to make it easier for them to come to Britain as he said strict identity checks must be kept in place because of security concerns The Prime Minister has faced repeated calls in recent days from the SNP to waive the requirements, with the party's Westminster leader, Ian Blackford, urging the premier at lunchtime to 'bring down the barriers' How does the visa process work and why do people have to provide biometric data? The Government's refugee scheme means British nationals with family in Ukraine are now allowed to bring their relatives to Britain while Ukrainians living in the UK can do the same. People in Ukraine who are eligible to come to the UK must apply for a visa online. This process requires people to provide a wealth of information about themselves and formal evidence to back up their application. They must provide their full name, date of birth, their current passport and details of any criminal convictions. They must also prove their link to the UK. For example, someone who is looking to join their partner in Britain must prove that they are married or have been living together for at least two years. They must provide evidence to show this is the case in the form of a marriage certificate, a tenancy agreement, utility bill or bank statement. Once they have submitted their application with supporting documentation they must attend an in-person appointment at a Visa Application Centre (VAC). When they attend their appointment they are asked to give biometric data in the form of fingerprints. This data is then used by the UK to conduct security checks which then informs the decision on whether someone is granted a visa. The UK has faced criticism for sticking to this system because the situation on the ground in Ukraine makes it difficult for people to attend a VAC. The VAC in Kyiv has closed and a temporary facility has been opened in the city of Lviv in the west of Ukraine. Ukrainians who cannot make it to Lviv are being encouraged to visit a VAC in a nearby country like Poland, Moldova or Romania. However, the Government is adamant that the strict checks must remain in place because of security concerns. The same security screening process, including capturing biometrics, applied during the withdrawal from Afghanistan last year. Advertisement People who want to come to the UK must attend an appointment at a visa application centre (VAC) where they are asked to provide biometric information, including fingerprints, which is then used to carry out security checks. However, the VAC in Kyiv is closed, with a temporary facility having been opened in the city of Lviv, in the west of Ukraine. Ukrainians who cannot make it to Lviv are being encouraged to visit a VAC in a nearby country like Poland, Moldova or Romania. The Government has set up a refugee scheme to allow Ukrainians living in the UK to bring their relatives here. Ministers are also setting up a 'humanitarian sponsorship pathway' which will allow individuals, charities and business groups to offer to sponsor Ukrainian citizens with no family ties to the UK so they can come to Britain. Mr Blackford raised the visa waiver issue at Prime Minister's Questions as he told Mr Johnson the UK must 'help the Ukrainian people right now'. He said: This is a moment for Europe to stand united in the face of Putins war. The European Union have acted and waived all visa requirements for Ukrainian refugees. The UK Government stands alone in our continent in so far refusing to do the same. Nicola Sturgeon, Scotlands First Minister, has made clear our country stands ready to open our borders and our hearts to the people of Ukraine, but the UK Government must bring down the barriers. Will the Prime Minister join with our European partners and waive all visa requirements for the people of Ukraine who are fleeing war? Mr Johnson replied: The EU already, because of its Schengen border-free zone, has its own arrangements with Ukraine, they have differed for a long time from those of the UK. But what we do have is a plan to be as generous as we possibly can to the people of Ukraine and the numbers that will come just under our family reunion scheme could be in the hundreds of thousands, to say nothing of the special new path that we are opening up for those coming, the humanitarian path, that is also uncapped. I think that is the right thing to do. What we wont do is simply abandon all checks. We dont think that that is sensible, particularly in view of the security concerns, the reasonable security concerns, about people coming from that theatre of war. Mr Harper, a former immigration minister, told the House of Commons yesterday that it is 'really important that we continue to keep the biometric checks in place'. Ukrainian nationals fleeing the conflict in their country follow the directions for a "Ukrainians Welcome Center" after their arrival at the Paris-Beauvais Airport in Tille, north of Paris, on March 2 He said: 'I can still remember what happened in Salisbury. The Putin regime is a regime that will not hesitate to send agents here to kill British citizens and it is the Home Secretary's job to make sure we keep people safe.' The former chief whip today told the BBC's Politics Live programme that 'Vladimir Putin is someone who has used chemical weapons in Britain to murder British people and we know he will not hesitate to use the opportunity of refugees to get Russian agents coming to Britain'. He added: I think the Home Secretary has to do two things, she has to maintain security but she also has to have a generous scheme for refugees. She can do both of those things at the same time. Ralph Lauren forced its executive vice president and chief commercial officer to resign after learning of allegations regarding the director's 'personal conduct'. Howard Smith, 50, will resign from the company, effective April 2, and will step down from his roles effectively immediately, according to a Wednesday filing with the Securities and Exchange Commission. The retailer alleges an independent investigation utilizing outside counsel determined Smith engaged in conduct that violated the company's code of ethics, business conduct and other policies. Ralph Lauren did not specify what the allegations against Smith are. Ralph Lauren's Board of Directors concluded Smiths resignation was 'necessary'. The filing notes the termination of employment is 'unrelated to the companys financial reporting and business performance'. Smith has been with the company for nearly 20 years and served in a variety of roles, according to his LinkedIn account. He owns 65,895 shares of the company, InsiderTrades.com reported, worth approximately $8.22million. Smith earned an estimated $8,110,759 in total compensation in 2020, according to InsiderTrades. His salary was $1,050,00, but he also received more than $7million in stock awards, non-equity compensation and other compensation. He has not actively traded any shared of Ralph Lauren within the last 90 days, but did sell 6,212 shares on May 27, 2021 for $776,500, leaving him with 65,895 shares. The Ralph Lauren Corporation declined to comment and Smith did not immediately respond to DailyMail.com's request for comment. Ralph Lauren has forced Executive Vice President and Chief Commercial Officer Howard Smith to resign after learning of allegations about his 'personal conduct' Smith will resign from the company, effective April 2, and will step down from his roles effectively immediately. The retailer alleged in an SEC filing that an independent investigation determined Smith engaged in conduct that violated the company's code of ethics, business conduct and other policies. The filing did not specify what the allegations against Smith are Ralph Lauren, Executive Chairman and Chief Creative Officer at the Ralph Lauren Corporation, and Patrice Louvet, President and CEO, notified employees of Smith's resignation in an internal memo Wednesday. 'We are saddened by this situation and recognize that this news will come as a surprise. Howard has contributed significantly to the evolution of our Company for the past 20 years, and we are grateful for that,' Lauren and Louvet penned in the memo obtained by DailyMail.com. 'However, upon recently learning about allegations related to Howard's personal conduct, our Board of Directors launched an independent investigation, which is its responsibility whenever such allegations are raised. Because the investigation revealed conduct that violated our Code of Conduct and other policies, it was decided that Howard would resign. You should know that these issues do not concern the Company's financials or performance.' The pair added that they have 'great confidence' in the leaders who have been tasked with managing his roles and 'together, we will continue to build on our momentum and realize the many opportunities ahead for our iconic brand.' Regional leaders who already oversee day-to-day operations will fulfill his duties in the interim and report directly to the company's president and CEO. Ralph Lauren (left) issued a joint statement with President and CEO Patrice Louvet (right) to employees saying they are 'saddened by this situation' and have 'great confidence' in the leaders who have been tasked with managing his roles in the interim DailyMail.com has obtained a copy of the internal memo sent to Ralph Lauren employees Wednesday that announced the resignation of Howard Smith Smith joined the Ralph Lauren team in 2002 and worked at the company for nearly two decades in several different global locations . He held positions including VP of Logistics and Operations and SVP of Supply Chain. He served as the company's President Asia Pacific from 2015 to 2017 and Group President International from 2017 to 2019. He most recently worked in the New York City as Ralph Lauren's Executive Vice President and Chief Commercial Officer. According to his now-deleted company biography, Smith was tasked with overseeing the company's global go-to-market strategies for all Ralph Lauren brands and channels. He was also responsible for all of the company's business management teams and was involved with the buying, planning and allocation of merchandise worldwide. Ukrainians able to obtain a UK visa will now be able to travel across the English Channel without charge, after Eurostar announced free travel for all Ukrainian passport holders fleeing Russia's barbaric invasion. Anyone fleeing the destruction brought about by Putin will be able to collect free tickets from any Eurostar station to London St. Pancras International, the transport operator has announced. 'If you are a Ukrainian national travelling to the UK with a valid visa, we can offer a free Eurostar ticket to London,' said Eurostar on Twitter. Ukrainians must have a valid visa to enter the UK, in line with government policy on immigration, along with their Ukrainian passport. Eurostar is majority owned by SNCF, the national railway of France. The UK government sold its share of Eurostar in 2015. People wait to board an evacuation train from Kyiv to Lviv at Kyiv central train station following Russia's invasion of Ukraine Eurostar has announced Ukrainians able to obtain a UK visa will now be able to travel on board any of its trains heading to London St. Pancras free of charge With the announcement, Eurostar has become one of many high-speed rail operators offering free service on its trains. Dutch railway company NS announced it would offer free travel to Ukrainians on Monday. Deutsche Bahn, the Germany's railway national rand largest train operator in Europe, also announced it would offer free travel to those fleeing the conflict with Russia, alongside French-Belgian highspeed operator Thalys. Several other national train operators have also waved payment, allowing Ukrainians to travel free of charge in Poland, Germany, Austria, the Czech Republic, Slovakia, Hungary, France, Belgium, and Denmark. Low-fare Hungarian carrier Wizz Air is also offering Ukrainian refugees 100,000 free seats on flights in continental Europe departing from Hungary, Poland, Slovakia or Romania in March. People fleeing Ukraine arrive by train at Western Railway Station in Budapest, Hungary Ukrainians arrive to board trains at the train station in Przemysl, Poland after Russian attacks Fighting in Ukraine has so far pushed around a half million people across the border, the UN refugee agency, UNHCR, reported on Monday. But Ukraine held a population of roughly 43 million people when the war with Russia began, with more people likely to be displaced as the conflict worsens. British Home Secretary Priti Patel ruled out visa-free entry for Ukrainians fleeing the conflict with Russia on Monday. Senior conservative party members George Osborne and Rory Stewart urged the Home Secretary to guarantee all Ukrainian refugees the right to live in the UK, but Ms Patel told MPs that security fears prevented her from loosening the rules further, citing reports that Russian troops were infiltrating Ukraine and merging with Ukrainian forces. Her talk harkened back to the 2018 Salisbury attack, in which former Russian military officer and double agent Sergei Skripal was poisoned along with his daughter. Prime Minister Boris Johnson however announced on Tuesday that the UK could take in 200,000 or more Ukrainian refugees as the government extends its help to more people fleeing the war. Only five days after the military attack, the Polish immigration authorities announced that 280,000 Ukrainian refugees had entered the country. Pope Francis expressed gratitude to the Polish people on Wednesday for their generosity in welcoming Ukrainian refugees fleeing the war with Russia. 'You were the first to support Ukraine by opening your borders, your hearts and the doors of your homes to Ukrainians fleeing the war,' Pope Francis said in the Vaticans Paul VI Hall on March 2. Hungary has also seen refugees arriving. Al Jazera reported that more than 85,000 people have crossed into the country since the crisis began on February 24. On the border, refugees are met with hot tea, local sandwiches and additional help. Germany has vowed to take in all Ukrainian refugees who flee from a Russian invasion of their country, a move which mirrors former Chancellor Angela Merkel's refusal to set an upper limit for asylum seekers entering the country during the 2015 European Migrant Crisis. A woman and her daughter embrace their father at Lviv train station after he arrived from Kharkiv, a city shelled since the start of the war which has displaced roughly half a million People wait at a train station to board trains in an attempt to flee the fighting in Kyiv People arrive to the West Train Station in Budapest from Zahony after crossing the border Hundreds of people gather at the Kyiv train station to try to catch a ride out of town with news of the Russian convoys approaching the city of Kyiv Ukrainian authorities have reported dozens of deaths in a shell attack by the Russian army on the city of Kharkov, the country's second most populous city Advertisement Congress has reportedly been briefed that although Russian forces could seize Ukraine within a matter of weeks, the dogged resistance of Ukrainian fighters could see the war drag on for as long as 20 years. Western powers continue to send arms to Ukraine while Russia stepped up its attacks on Wednesday, the seventh day of the invasion. Vice President Kamala Harris said more economic sanctions were likely, as the US and allies work to further tighten the economic noose on Moscow. US officials believe it could be another week before the Ukrainian capital is surrounded and a further month before Kyiv falls to Russian forces. That could involve street-to-street fighting or the gradual strangulation of the besieged city, according to an official who spoke to CBS News and who said that members of Congress were briefed on these scenarios on Monday. But the war would not end with the fall of Kyiv. A long, drawn-out resistance will likely follow, given Ukraine's long history of pushing on Russia. Lawmakers were told the war will likely last years - maybe even as long as 20 years - and that Russia will ultimately lose. A woman inspects debris inside an apartment of a residential building, which locals said was damaged by recent shelling, in the separatist-controlled town of Horlivka (Gorlovka) in the Donetsk region, Ukraine 'Everything is on the table for consideration, frankly,' said Vice President Kamala Harris as she discussed further sanctions The United Kingdom has made its assessment public. 'I fear this this will be a long haul,' said British Foreign Secretary Liz Truss at the weekend. 'This could be a number of years. 'What we do know is Russia has strong forces, but we know the Ukrainians are brave, they are determined to stand up for their sovereignty.' A diplomatic source said the public messaging was more about preparing domestic publics for a long, drawn-out conflict than it was about sending a message to Vladimir Putin of Russia. In the meantime, more US sanctions will take effect on Wednesday evening. A ban on Russian-owned and operated aircraft entering US airspace will go into effect at 9pm Eastern. And Harris on Wednesday promised that more could follow. 'What we are going to continue to do is stand firm with our allies in terms of reassessing what we are doing with sanctions,' Harris told NBCs TODAY Show. 'Everything is on the table for consideration, frankly.' Meanwhile, weapons continue to flow in to Ukraine. Ukrainian Defence Minister Oleksii Reznikov said his country was set to receive Stinger and Javelin missiles from abroad, as well as another shipment of Turkish drones. Kyiv sees Javelin armor-piercing missiles as critical to halting Russian tanks, and officials have been crying out for Stingers to defend against Moscow's air power. Pentagon officials have briefed journalists that fierce resistance has stalled the Russian offense and that a massive military column has stalled amid fuel and food shortages. On Tuesday, an official said some soldiers were surrendering without a fight. 'A lot of these soldiers are conscripts who have never been in combat before,' the official told reporters, according to CNN. 'Some of them, we believe, weren't even told they were gonna be in combat.' Meanwhile, Moscow is warning NATO not to get involved. Russian Foreign Minister Sergei Lavrov said a third world war 'will be nuclear and destructive - a warning delivered days after Putin told nations sending troops they would be met with severe consequences. The foreign minister went on to claim that Moscow was ready to enter a second round of negotiations aimed at achieving peace in Ukraine, and accused Kyiv of deliberately delaying the process at the request of the United States. 'We are ready for the second round of negotiations, but the Ukrainian side is delaying [the process] at the behest of the Americans,' said Lavrov, according to Russian news agency TASS. Russia's Foreign Minister, the gruff and sarcastic Sergey Lavrov, has become a notorious figure in recent weeks amid the invasion of Ukraine. For many, Russia's top diplomat likely represents Putin's harbinger of doom, remarking today that World War III will be 'nuclear and destructive' in a thinly-veiled threat to NATO and the West. But although Lavrov is tasked with delivering his President's messages to the world with a brutal, no-nonsense style seldom associated with a negotiator, he is much more than just Putin's mouthpiece. The 71-year-old's diplomatic career has spanned half a century, meaning the straight-talking senior has lived and worked through the Cold War and the collapse of the Soviet Union - watching as his country's relations with the West went from near-friendly to the brink of nuclear war and back again. Like many top Russian officials and oligarchs, Lavrov became the target of personal sanctions implemented by the EU when relations plummeted to a new low as Russian tanks rolled across the Ukrainian border. But he is thought to own hundreds of millions of dollars' worth of property and other assets, and a report published last year revealed that Russia's No1 diplomat has bankrolled the careers and personal lives of a secret mistress and her friends and family to boot. Russia's Foreign Minister, the gruff and sarcastic Sergey Lavrov, has become a notorious figure in recent weeks amid the invasion of Ukraine For many, Russia's top diplomat likely represents Putin's harbinger of doom, delivering the President's messages to the world with a brutal, no-nonsense style seldom associated with a negotiator. But at age 71, Lavrov is more than just Putin's mouthpiece (Lavrov (L) pictured with Putin (R) in 2019) His diplomatic career has spanned half a century, meaning the straight-talking senior has lived and worked through the Cold War and the collapse of the Soviet Union - watching as his country's relations with the West went from near-friendly to the brink of nuclear war and back again (Lavrov pictured in 2000 as Russian ambassador to the UN) US President Joe Biden and Secretary of State Antony Blinken, left, meets with Russian President Vladimir Putin and Foreign Minister Sergey Lavrov, at the 'Villa la Grange', Wednesday, June 16, 2021, in Geneva, Switzerland. Amid Russia's invasion of Ukraine, Sergey Lavrov embodies the Kremlin's defiant posture as the country's top diplomat with a mixture of toughness and sarcasm Lavrov has for years weathered endless waves of speculation that he was on the verge of retirement, instead becoming one of the longest-lasting members of Putin's Cabinet and a perennial figure among a constantly churning cauldron of foreign counterparts. The diplomat became Russia's foreign minister in 2004, making the length of his tenure in the position second only to that of Dr. No - the infamous Soviet Foreign Minister Andrei Gromyko - and prior to that served as Russia's chief ambassador to the UN for 10 years. Born in Moscow to a Russian mother and Armenian father in 1950, he began his diplomatic career back in 1972 after graduating from the Moscow State Institute of International Relations (MGIMO), when he was dispatched to serve as lowly Soviet advisor in Sri Lanka. But Lavrov excelled and by 1981 had been made a senior advisor at the Soviet mission to the UN in New York during one of the most intense periods in the Cold War. A younger Lavrov was a far less serious character - he was among one of MGIMO's keenest amateur dramatics enthusiasts, performing in various plays and sketches put on by the university, and was known for his love of chatting to journalists and putting on skits with fellow diplomats during his time as UN ambassador. Those days are long gone, though. Since becoming foreign minister, Lavrov's demeanour has steadily hardened and he now paints the picture of an impatient and irritable man who no longer enjoys his work and does not suffer fools easily. In recent years his remarks directed at foreign counterparts have been derisive and laced with aggression, and he has developed a reputation for his angry diatribes at Western governments. In 2008, Lavrov famously responded to a reprimand from then British Foreign Secretary David Miliband by snarling: 'Who are you to (expletive) lecture me?', and just last month snapped that talks with Liz Truss were like a 'conversation between the deaf and the dumb' before abandoning her at the dias. Like his boss, Lavrov has tapped into broad public nostalgia for the country's Soviet-era clout, and has often depicted the US as arrogant, conceited and bent on world domination, while dismissing the UK and European leaders as yes men obediently toeing Washington's line. And at age 71, Lavrov looks visibly bored by the daily routine of diplomacy. He no longer bothers to hide his irritation at a naive or provocative question when sat in front of the media, often responding with an air of contempt or plain mockery, and harbours a particular distaste for photographers, showing clear annoyance at the clacking of camera shutters. Russian Federation Ambassador Sergey Lavrov smokes while walking to a UN Security Council meeting about Iraq in November 1998. Before becoming the foreign minister, he served as Russia's ambassador to the United Nations for 10 years and was known for his enjoyment of chatting to the media and putting on skits with other diplomats Lavrov became Russia's foreign minister in 2004, making the length of his tenure in the position second only to that of infamous Soviet Foreign Minister Andrei Gromyko - known as Dr. No - and prior to that served as Russia's chief ambassador to the UN for 10 years (pictured in 2010) Like his boss, Lavrov has tapped into broad public nostalgia for the country's Soviet-era clout, and has often depicted the US as arrogant, conceited and bent on world domination, while contemptuously dismissing the UK and European leaders as yes men obediently toeing Washington's line Lavrov just last month snapped that talks with UK Foreign Secretary Liz Truss (L) were like a 'conversation between the deaf and the dumb' before abandoning her at the dias Outside of diplomacy, Lavrov has followed the example set by his boss and gone to great lengths to keep his personal life private. But Russia's top diplomat has been embroiled in a controversy surrounding a woman believed to be his longtime mistress, Svetlana Polyakova. A report published last year by anti-corruption publication iStories and the official website of jailed Kremlin critic Alexei Navalny alleged that Lavrov, who has been married since 1971 with a child and a pair of grandchildren, took Polyakova abroad more than 60 times on 'diplomatic missions' and bankrolled her luxury lifestyle. Polyakova, who has held a position in the Russian Foreign Ministry since 2014, has travelled with Lavrov to France, Italy, Switzerland, Japan, Singapore, Portugal, Azerbaijan and Greece to name a few destinations, and used the foreign ministry's plane frequently in the last eight years. Some of the trips included luxury holidays and visits to opulent houses and yachts - among them a ship owned by oligarch Oleg Deripaska - with the couple, in some instances, joined by Polyakova's mother, daughters, and niece. Lavrov's mistress has also engineered senior appointments for friends and family within the foreign ministry, appeared publicly alongside President Vladimir Putin and has been named among his elite entourage. The report found that Polyakova was so close to the foreign minister that her contact information was often listed as 'Svetlana Lavrova' - with some government officials believing she was Lavrov's wife. The investigation also uncovered Polyakova's extraordinary wealth and family properties across Russia and the UK worth $13.6billion. The mistress also owns at least $545,000 in luxury cars, including a Mercedes worth around $250,000. Though this is likely a paltry sum for Lavrov, who is thought to own hundreds of millions of dollars' worth of property and other assets. Russia's Foreign Minister Sergey Lavrov (centre) reportedly took his millionaire mistress Svetlana Polyakova (right) abroad more than 60 times on 'diplomatic missions' and bankrolled her luxury lifestyle Polyakova appeared alongside Lavrov at St Sergius of Radonezh Russian orthodox church in December 2014 and has since shared an opulent lifestyle with the foreign minister Little is known about Russian Foreign Minister Sergey Lavrov's wife Maria (left) and daughter Ekaterina (centre) The controversy surrounding Russia's top diplomat was revealed by anti-corruption publication iStories and the official website of Alexei Navalny, one of the Kremlin's most prominent critics who is currently in jail near Moscow In the present day, Lavrov is one of Russia's most recognisable figures amid the conflict in Ukraine, delivering statements and justifications for Russia's 'special military operation' while denouncing the actions of Western powers. Yesterday, he was barred from flying to Geneva to attend a UN conference after European Union members banned Russian planes from their skies as part of bruising sanctions against Moscow. Lavrov denounced what he called the 'outrageous' move in a video address to the UN session, accusing EU member states of 'avoiding a candid face-to-face dialogue or direct contacts designed to help identify political solutions to pressing international issues.' 'The West clearly has lost self-control in venting anger against Russia and has destroyed its own rules and institutions, including respect for private property,' Lavrov raged. 'It's necessary to put an end to the arrogant Western philosophy of self-superiority, exclusivity and total permissiveness.' But Western diplomats from dozens of nations walked out of the conference room as Lavrov's message began to play, in effect saying 'nyet' to him and Russian diplomacy. In the present day, Lavrov is one of Russia's most recognisable figures amid the conflict in Ukraine, delivering statements and justifications for Russia's 'special military operation' while denouncing the reactions of Western powers While both allies and adversaries may respect his professionalism, Lavrov has been criticised by some for toeing the Kremlin line rather than directing his own foreign policy. Rex Tillerson reportedly said in 2017, while US secretary of state: 'You cannot tango with Lavrov because he is not allowed to dance.' Recent events have shown this to be the case, as Lavrov's speeches and media addresses appear resemble more and more the echoes of Putin's rhetoric. Asked once what it takes to be a diplomat, Lavrov said the key qualities were being 'erudite' and having a good knowledge of history, adding that was important to understand the psychology and the positions of fellow negotiators across the table. As the 50-year veteran of diplomacy moves into the final stages of his career, his counterparts are likely questioning whether Lavrov still subscribes to these ideas. A migrant toddler was rescued by U.S. Border Patrol agents after he was seen wandering alone near the border with Mexico. A spokesperson with the agencys Del Rio Sector confirmed to DailyMail.com that the boy was spotted at a boat ramp around midnight Tuesday near the Eagle Pass Port of Entry in Eagle Pass, Texas. The child, who is said to be around two years old, was found in good health condition despite encountering temperatures that hovered near freezing. The spokesperson added that the boy was not carrying identification documents or contact information that could have been used to contact his family in the United States. A spokesperson for U.S. Border Patrol's Del Rio Sector told DailyMail.com that the migrant boy found alone at a boat ramp near the border with Mexico in Eagle Pass, Texas, on Tuesday is believed to be two years old. Efforts are ongoing to determine his identity U.S. Border Patrol agents have reported 47,383 encounters with unaccompanied migrant children who have unlawfully crossed the Mexico-United States border during the first four months of fiscal year 2022 The boy was among more than 120 unaccompanied children who were encountered by Del Rio Sector over the weekend. The sector is responsible for providing protection to 47 counties and 242 miles of border along the Rio Grande in the southwest Texas region. In addition, sector agents found five minors a two-year-old boy from El Salvador; a two-year-old boy from Guatemala; a six-year-old girl from Guatemala; a six-year-old boy from El Salvador; and a 12-year-old girl from Honduras at shore of the Rio Grande after they had been crossed over from Mexico on February 23. Its unknown if the children are all related. On February 8, Del Rio Sector agents encountered a five-year-old girl from Guatemala who admitted crossing the Rio Grande waterway by herself. U.S. Customs and Border Protections last monthly report for the southwestern border showed 47,383 interdictions of unaccompanied children reported during the first four months of fiscal year 2022 (October 2021 to January 2022). In comparison, 20,186 minors were stopped for crossing the border alone in the same period in fiscal year 2021. Unaccompanied migrant children are shielded by the administration of President Joe Biden from being expelled to Mexico under Title 42 when they are found to have unlawfully crossed the United States-Mexico border. Del Rio Sector agents found five migrant minor children alone near the Rio Grande shore in Texas last Thursday. It's unknown if the children are related A five-year-old girl was stopped at the border in Texas on February 8 and told Del Rio Sector agents she had cross the Rio Grande waterway by herself More than 120 unaccompanied children who were encountered by Del Rio Sector over the weekend A Honduran five-year-old girl was found by border patrol agents on February 10 in Texas. The child was among four children who were encountered together by officers assigned to US Border Patrol's Del Rio Sector A policy passed during former Republican president Donald Trump's administration in March 2020, Title 42 permits CBP to expel migrants under a Centers for Disease Control and Prevention public health order that deems them a health risk during the COVID-19 pandemic. President Joe Biden's administration has continued enforcing the law, returning 78,486 migrants to Mexico in January. Under Trump, starting in March 2020, nearly 400,000 migrants were denied asylum and refuge at the border, and sent back to Mexico. The Biden administration has expelled over 1.2 million since he took office. A civil servant who was convicted of stalking an ex-colleague after camping out in Whitehall with a Waiting for my Wilko placard hoping to meet him has refused to attend her sentence hearing for the second time. Economist Ray Israel-Wilkinson, 33, obsessively declared her love for Alex Wilkinson on social media and in public after working with him at the Department for Culture, Media, and Sport. A court heard that the stalker dedicated 104 love songs to her victim on Twitter, and even changed her surname from Sultan to Israel-Wilkinson to give the impression that they are married. Mr Wilkinson said she began to contact him shortly after leaving the department and insisted on meeting with him face-to-face. When the violated public servant looked her up on social media, he found a Twitter page with 5,000 followers where she claimed GCHQ was trying to stop them from being together. The bio on the account reads: Please help my @alexwilko85 contact me. He is forced by evil souls to ostracise me. He loves me as much as I love him. My Wilko is unhappy. Please. Israel-Wilkinson, who was convicted in her absence and is currently detained in HMP Bronzefield, has now refused to attend the sentencing at Westminster Magistrates Court via video-link. A letter from prison official said: She flat out refused she didnt give a reason just that she didnt want to. She had also refused to attend the hearing on the link from prison on Monday. Ray Israel-Wilkinson (pictured) declared her love for Alex Wilkinson after working with him at the Department for Culture, Media, and Sport When Mr Wilkinson (pictured) looked her up on social media, he found a Twitter page with 5,000 followers where she claimed GCHQ was trying to stop them from being together Jennifer Gatland, prosecuting, said Israel-Wilkinson (pictured) sat outside the department's Parliament Street office with a homemade placard which said: 'Waiting for my Wilko' 100 Parliament Street, where the Department for Digital, Culture, Media and Sport is based A member of the court mental health team said: Shes been seen by a psychiatrist in the prison and in a conversation between court psychiatrists here and psychiatrist based in custody, its basically looking like she is quite unwell and potentially not well enough to take part in proceedings. She has refused the last couple of times to take part in the court process.... Jennifer Gatland, prosecuting, had said Israel-Wilkinson sat outside the departments Parliament Street office on 27 May last year with a homemade placard which said: Waiting for my Wilko. This caused significant distress for Mr Wilkinson who had to change his routine, entrances and so forth, Miss Gatland said. The defendant has also created social media pages claiming they are married and declaring her love for him. It seems she has also changed her name from Rayner Sultan to Ray-Israel-Wilkinson to give the impression they are married. Israel-Wilkinson refers to herself as Wilkos Ray on her Twitter profile and calls him her king. Mr Wilkinson told the court last month that Israel-Wilkinson began to contact him shortly after leaving the Department for Media, and insisted on meeting with him face-to-face. I wasnt comfortable because we didnt have any meaningful relationship, said Mr Wilkinson. She is a former colleague. Israel-Wilkinson (pictured) has a second Twitter account with a pinned tweet of 104 love songs dedicated to Mr Wilkinson, the court heard Israel-Wilkinson's Twitter account is titled 'Alexander Wilkinson is my King' and begs followers to help her get in touch with Mr Wilkinson It also features a pinned video message where she asks Mr Wilkinson to get in touch with her I felt quite violated. She was writing about how she was in love with me and insinuating that wed had some romantic connection when we hadnt. When Mr Wilkinson looked her up, he found Twitter, LinkedIn, Facebook and Instagram accounts obsessing over him. The LinkedIn account was a professional account but at some point she changed it to talk about me, said Mr Wilkinson. She set up Twitter to talk about her conversion from Islam to Judaism. Facebook and Instagram I believe were set up solely to talk about me. At the time she began turning up at the Whitehall office she was also sending Mr Wilkinson emails saying that she was homeless and describing her experiences. She talked about being assaulted in train stations, she talked about gangs that had been pursuing her doing weird stuff, said Mr Wilkinson. There was a gang trying to turn people into cute dogs. I was increasingly worried. In August 2021 Wilkinson (pictured) was sectioned and taken to hospital It was quite difficult because you could see she was clearly in a bad mental state. Its difficult to see someone who is suffering and associating that with you and you cant really do anything to help them. Israel-Wilkinson was arrested for harassing Mr Wilkinson but continued to sit outside the office despite bail conditions prohibiting her with banners and placards saying: This is not a protest. Waiting for my Wilko. In August 2021 she was sectioned and taken to hospital where she continued to email Mr Wilkinson. Israel-Wilkinsons LinkedIn profile states: Alex Wilkinson is my King (Mrs... Wilkinson). Wife of Alex Wilkinson. Economist. The spooks spy on me as a person of intelligence value so Ive stopped being intelligent until they return my husband to me. Until then, Im offline so I will NOT READ your messages. Israel-Wilkinson, of Milton Keynes, denied stalking Mr Wilkinson, between June 16, 2021 and October 20, 2021. She did not attend her trial last month and was convicted in her absence by District Judge Timothy Godfrey, who issued a warrant for her arrest. Sentencing was adjourned until March 10 when a psychiatrist is likely to attend amid concerns that jail is not the right place for her. An alleged stalker who flew 10,000 miles from Australia to track down his former girlfriend in Scotland as part a 13-month campaign of harassment has pleaded with a judge to let him withdraw his guilty plea. It is alleged that Jordan McKenzie, 27, bombarded the woman with messages and sent her flowers and other gifts from his home in Brisbane, Australia, after they met through online gaming. She ended their romance after a few weeks and he returned home only to begin bombarding her with flowers and gifts. But when the care home worker refused to have further contact with him, he made a malicious allegation against her to the Nursery and Midwifery Council (NMC). Jordan McKenzie, 27, is accused of bombarding the woman with messages and sent her flowers and other gifts from his home in Brisbane, Australia, after they met through online gaming McKenzie threatened to fly back to Scotland and ultimately did arrive on her doorstep. The woman phoned police and he was arrested. After his arrest McKenzie continued to send her letters from his cell in HMP Barlinnie, Glasgow. McKenzie appeared at Airdrie Sheriff Court in January and admitted a 13-month harassment campaign against the woman and two others between March 2020 and April last year. He was due to be sentenced today. But appearing via video link from HMP Barlinnie said he wanted to change his plea. Robert Mitchell, his former solicitor, said: 'Mr McKenzie wishes to withdraw his plea of guilty previously tendered. 'He has made some serious allegations on how he made that plea of guilty. 'In my discussions with him, I have come to the conclusion that I withdraw from acting because he feels he has been misled and that is something which leaves me uncomfortable.' Sheriff Fergus Thomson continued the case until later this month for McKenzie to find a new lawyer. McKenzie appeared at Airdrie Sheriff Court (pictured) In January and admitted a 13-month harassment campaign against the woman and two others between March 2020 and April last year. He was due to be sentenced today. But appearing via video link from HMP Barlinnie said he wanted to change his plea He added: 'If you wish to withdraw your plea of guilty which was made on legal advice, I'm going to give you one last chance but the court needs to make progress. 'I'm not being told by Mr Mitchell that the motion to withdraw can't be made only that he doesn't feel comfortable making it. 'I wouldn't be minded to give you another extension after this and you will be given a short time frame to find new representation.' McKenzie was remanded in custody. Advertisement Donald Trump condemned Russia's invasion of Ukraine as a 'holocaust' but shied away from criticizing Vladimir Putin directly during a Wednesday morning interview. The former president instead blamed his successor President Joe Biden for giving Moscow the confidence to launch its attack, telling Fox Business that 'Putin never would have done it with me.' Trump faced criticism late last week for praising the Russian autocrat's illegal and unprovoked invasion as 'genius' and calling him 'savvy.' He's been forced to walk back the comments several times since then, most recently during a phone interview with Fox host Maria Bartiromo the day after Biden's State of the Union address. 'I want to get your take on how Joe Biden needs to respond, to people like Vladimir Putin and [Chinese President] Xi Jinping, I mean, given the atrocious actions taken by Putin in the last seven days -- possible crimes against humanity,' Bartiromo prompted, referencing British Prime Minister Boris Johnson's severe accusations against the Russian president. Ukrainian President Volodymyr Zelensky said Wednesday that 6,000 Russian troops have been killed so far. More than 2,000 civilians are dead, Kyiv officials said, including nearly two dozen children. The International Criminal Court at the Hague said Tuesday it would investigate possible war crimes in Ukraine amid reports that Moscow's troops are targeting and killing civilians. A woman is overwhelmed by emotion in the backyard of a house damaged by a Russian airstrike, according to locals, in Gorenka, outside the capital, on March 2 A view to a shelled gym building near the TV Tower on March 2, 2022 in Kyiv Part of the Karazin National University campus in the city of Kharkiv is destroyed after being struck by a Russian missile which was seemingly intended for a nearby police or interior ministry building Firefighters work to contain a fire in the complex of buildings housing the Kharkiv regional SBU security service and the regional police after a Russian airstrike Given that, Bartiromo asked, 'Would you still afford Putin respect at this time?' 'The biggest problem we have is that our president and our country is no longer respected. Now Russia is gotten in deeper than they ever thought possible,' Trump replied. Ukraine war: The latest Russian paratroopers land in Ukraine's second city amid heavy fighting 'There are practically no areas left in Kharkiv where an artillery shell has not yet hit': Interior Ministry official Joe Biden brands Vladimir Putin a 'dictator' in his annual State of the Union address as he bans Russian aircraft from US airspace Russia steps up its bombing campaign and missile strikes, hitting Kyiv's main television tower, two residential buildings in a town west of the city and the city of Bila Tserkva to the south of the capital Russian forces push into the besieged Black Sea city of Kherson in the south Russian attacks leave Mariupol, another Black Sea port further to the west without electricity More than 677,000 people have fled Ukraine since the Russian invasion, the UN's refugee agency says The UN's International Court of Justice says it will hold public hearings on March 7 and 8 over Ukraine's allegations of 'genocide' by Russia Russia blocks an independent television channel and a liberal radio station, tightening a virtual media blackout A string of Western companies announce they are freezing or scaling back business with Russia Russians race to withdraw cash after the introduction of capital controls and as the ruble hits record lows Russian-owned Nord Stream 2 goes insolvent after Germany halts the pipeline following Moscow's invasion Oil prices soar past $110 a barrel, despite agreements to release 60 million barrels from stockpiles The World Bank prepares a $3-billion aid package for Ukraine, including $350 million in immediate funds Advertisement The ex-president called on Kremlin soldiers to 'stop killing people' but would not mention Putin by name -- instead claiming his lack of 'respect' for Biden was behind the attack. 'They have to stop killing these people. Theyre killing all these people, and they have to stop it. And they have to stop it now. But they dont respect the United States. So the United States is, I dont know, theyre not doing anything about it,' Trump said. 'This is a holocaust. This is a horrible thing thats happening, youre witnessing. I mean, youre seeing it on television every night.' He did however share praise for Ukraine's president. Trump's July 2019 phone call with Zelensky, in which he leveraged defense funding in return for Kyiv opening an investigation into Biden and his son Hunter's business dealings there, was at the center of Trump's first impeachment trial. Zelensky has been applauded on the world stage for his leadership even as Russian troops close in on the capital with what he claims is a goal to kill him and his family. Trump told Fox Business that he got to see an 'early version' of Zelensky's wartime heroism when he denied the then-American president was pressuring him. 'Zelensky was very brave in that, because he could have very easily made up a story that he felt threatened. And he said, "No, that was a perfect call. He did nothing wrong." So you know, in that way, you know, I got to see an early version of him,' Trump said. 'And I was very impressed by him. I've told that to a lot of people. I was very impressed. He told the truth, but it could have been better for him or easier not to do that.' Biden, who has been far more assertive in his condemnation of Putin's actions, told reporters on Wednesday that Russia is deliberately targeting civilians. During his State of the Union address on Tuesday he branded Putin a 'dictator' and closed US airspace to Russian planes. Meanwhile Russian troops at the front lines have reportedly been flabbergasted to have been sent to war in Ukraine. Weeping Russian prisoners of war have said they had no idea they were being sent to invade and were used like 'cannon fodder' by commanders who threw them into battle against 'peaceful people defending their territory' after Vladimir Putin's forces took heavy losses in the opening days of the conflict. 'This is not our war. Mothers and wives, collect your husbands. There is no need to be here,' an injured soldier sat in front of a Ukrainian flag was filmed saying. Other footage showed handcuffed Russian prisoner crying, while saying: 'They don't even pick up the corpses, there are no funerals'. Russia's advance has since slowed to a crawl as commanders regroup, change strategy, and renew their assault in what is now expected to become an increasingly bloody war of resources with Kyiv's men facing overwhelming odds. The Ministry of Defense said Russia had renewed the fight on 'all fronts' Wednesday and 'suffered losses'. Kherson, an important port city in Ukraine's south, appeared to be an early casualty as Russian tanks occupied the city centre overnight and then began arriving in numbers. Kharkiv, Ukraine's second-largest city, also came under heavy bombardment in the early hours as paratroopers dropped in, sparking gunfights near a military hospital. Trump was widely criticized last week when he called Putin's plan to invade Ukraine 'savvy' Sergyi Badylevych, 41, hugs his wife Natalia, 42, and child in an underground metro station used as bomb shelter in Kyiv A damaged military vehicle is seen in the street after shelling in the city of Kharkiv, Ukraine A convoy of Russian vehicles is seen parked along a residential street in an unknown area of Ukraine, in footage released by Russia's armed forces on Wednesday Trump called on Russians to 'stop killing people' in Ukraine but would not address Vladimir Putin directly (pictured: residential town of Irpin, outside of Kyiv, after shelling) Mariupol, another key port city in Ukraine's south, is also reported to be under heavy bombardment as Russian forces attempt to encircle it. If the city falls then Putin's men are expected to push northwards, trying to encircle Ukrainian forces fighting near Donetsk and force them to surrender. While both US and Ukrainian intelligence believes morale within the Russian ranks is low, Putin and his commanders have showed no sign they are about to give up the fight - and have instead vowed to press even harder to try and capture key objectives. Meanwhile, Russian Ambassador to the United Nations Vassily Nebenzia parroted Trump's false election fraud claims at Wednesday's Security Council meeting. As Nebenzia accused the West of ganging up on Russia, he said it was done 'with the support of the United States, where the legitimately elected president of the country was overthrown.' Last week Trump praised Putin for declaring two Russian-backed separatist regions of Ukraine to be independent, which allowed their leaders to invite Moscow into the country from the east. ''Putin is now saying, "Its independent," a large section of Ukraine. I said, "How smart is that?"' Trump said on The Clay Travis & Buck Sexton Show. He had gone on to parrot the Kremlin's lie that Putin was sending 'peacekeepers' in. 'Thats the strongest peace force Ive ever seen. There were more army tanks than Ive ever seen. Theyre gonna keep peace all right,' Trump said. 'Heres a guy whos very savvy I know him very well. Very, very well.' During his big speech headlining CPAC on Saturday evening, Trump walked his comments on Ukraine back but continued to speak glowingly of Putin. He instead blamed the Biden administration for Russian forces' invasion. 'The Russian attack on Ukraine is appalling. Its an outrage, and an atrocity that should never have been allowed to occur,' Trump told his audience in Florida last night. However, he also said: 'Yesterday reporters asked me if I thought President Putin is smart. I said of course hes smart. The problem isnt Putin is smart -- which of course he is smart -- its that our leaders are dumb.' The Senate Judiciary Committee will begin confirmation hearings for President Joe Biden's Supreme Court nominee Ketanji Brown Jackson on March 21. And Republicans are promising fair and thorough hearings that will not resemble the the one held for Brett Kavanaugh, Donald Trump's controversial nominee to the Supreme Court, whom Democrats heavily questioned about allegations of sexual assault. Senator Chuck Grassley, at the top of his meeting with Jackson on Wednesday, said as top Republican on the judiciary panel, he would 'make sure that we have a fair process, a dignified process, and that we will make sure that we don't repeat some of the mistakes that were made by other people in the Kavanaugh hearing.' 'We're going to meet our constitutional responsibility of the Senate with dignity and fairness and most importantly, thoroughness. Everybody expects us to do our job,' he added. Jackson was on Capitol Hill Wednesday to begin her first day of meetings with senators, officially kicking off her confirmation process. She arrived with former Senator Doug Jones, who will act as her sherpa, at her side and a coffee cup in hand. Her first meeting was with Senate Majority Leader Chuck Schumer and was followed by a sitdown with Senate Minority Leader Mitch McConnell. She rounded out her day with afternoon meetings with the top Democrat and Republican on the Senate Judiciary Committee - Senators Dick Durbin and Chuck Grassley. Jackson's confirmation hearings will begin on March 21 and go through March 24, Durbin announced on Wednesday. They will include Jackson's opening statement introducing herself to the panel, the senators time to question her, and a closed-door session so senators can go through her FBI background check. Democrats hope to confirm her before the Easter recess starts on April 11. Durbin said all members of Senate Judiciary Committee will have an opportunity to meet with Jackson one-on-one before her confirmation hearing. He said public attendance at her hearing will be determined by covid restrictions. Other senators will meet with her after the hearings. President Joe Biden's Supreme Court nominee Ketanji Brown Jackson arrived on Capitol Hill Wednesday morning to start meeting with senators - formally starting the confirmation process Supreme Court Nominee Judge Ketanji Brown Jackson's first meeting was with Senate Majority Leader Chuck Schumer; Schumer said afterward 'she belongs on the court' Judge Jackson also met with Senate Republican Leader Mitch McConnell Supreme Court nominee Judge Ketanji Brown Jackson met with Senator Dick Durbin, the chair of Senate Judiciary Committee, on Wednesday; Durbin announced her confirmation hearing will begin on March 21 Senator Chuck Grassley said, as top Republican on the Senate Judiciary Committee, said he would ensure a fair hearing for Ketanji Brown Jackson Schumer raved about Jackson after his sitdown. 'She belongs on the court,' the Democratic senator from New York said. 'She is so thoughtful and even handed and tries to look at both sides. And another amazing thing about her she's had such a breadth of experience, you know, working in a law firm working as a public defender working on the Sentencing Commission and then being a judge for 10 years. Very few nominees to the Supreme Court have had that breadth of experience.' McConnell did not make remarks when he greeted Jackson and declined to answer a question on what he wanted to hear from her. The two shook hands and then spoke behind closed doors. Republicans, meanwhile, are promising an exhaustive review of Jackson's record ahead of her confirmation hearings. 'I don't care what Judge Jackson's friends wrote in her high school yearbook,' McConnell said on the Sneate floor Tuesday. 'I care that American families are facing major crises that bear directly on federal courts and our legal system from surging violent crime and systematically weak prosecutors, to open borders, to campaigns to shrink religious freedom and the rights of conscience,' he said. And Grassley said the review would be 'rigorous.' 'It's critical that any such nominee, including Judge Jackson, receive the most thorough and rigorous vetting,' he said in a statement. 'Our review will be as fair and respectful as it is complete and comprehensive.' Dubrin has said he wants to see Jackson confirmed by the entire Senate April 9th. It takes a simple majority vote of the 50-50 Senate to confirm her. If confirmed, Jackson would be the first black woman to sit on the Supreme Court and would be its third black justice. Biden vowed during his presidential campaign to name a black woman to the high court. The confirmation process begins with a nominee holding one-on-one meetings with senators so the lawmakers may question her in private. The nominee is usually accompanied by a 'sherpa' - someone with experience to walk them through the confirmation process. Jones is a former senator that Biden considered for the role of attorney general. Jackson was also accompanied by White House legislative affairs director Louisa Terrell, White House's top Senate legislative affairs aide Reema Dodin, White House counsel Dana Remus, and Andrew Bates of the White House press office. Supreme Court Nominee Judge Ketanji Brown Jackson was accompanied by former Senator Doug Jones (to her left), who will act as her sherpa during the confirmation process Senate Republican Leader Mitch McConnell waves goodbye to the press ahead of his closed-door meeting with Supreme Court nominee Ketanji Brown Jackson Senate Democratic Leader Chuck Schumer praised Jackson's qualifications to sit on the Supreme Court Biden nominated Jackson to replace retiring Justice Stephen Breyer. During his State of the Union address on Tuesday night, he praised Breyer's tenure on the high court and touted Jackson's qualifications. 'The former top litigator in private practice, a former federal public defender, from a family of public school educators and police officers. She is a consensus builder,' Biden said. 'One of our nations top legal minds, who will continue Justice Breyers legacy of excellence,' he said of Jackson, 51. Jackson's nomination is part of Biden's push to diversify the judicial branch. His pick is not expected to change the tilt of the consevative-leaning court but his focus on younger nominees will ensure his pick will have a long influence on its decisions. She once worked as one of Breyers law clerks and served on the U.S. Sentencing Commission, the agency that develops federal sentencing policy. The White House is also pointing out the Senate has confirmed Jackson before - last year to the D.C. circuit court. The Senate confirmed her to the D.C. Circuit in June on a vote of 53-44, with support from all 50 members of the Democratic caucus and Republican Sens. Lindsey Graham of South Carolina, Susan Collins of Maine and Lisa Murkowski of Alaska. Graham, however, took a negative tone about Jackson's nomination. He was an advocate for Michelle Childs, a federal judge in his home state of South Carolina. The Republican senator, who sits on the Senate Judiciary Committee, said Jackson's nomination 'means the radical Left has won President Biden over yet again. The attacks by the Left on Judge Childs from South Carolina apparently worked.' 'I expect a respectful but interesting hearing in the Senate Judiciary Committee. The Harvard-Yale train to the Supreme Court continues to run unabated,' he wrote on Twitter the day Biden nominated Jackson. And while Collins has appeared open to voting for Jackson again, Murkowski said in a statement last week that her previous vote did not mean she would be supportive this time. In a 149-page questionnaire Jackson returned to the Senate Judiciary Committee this week, she revealed that she was first contacted by the White House Jan. 30, three days after Breyer announced his retirement, the Associated Press reported. Jackson has long been seen on the short list of possible Supreme Court nominees. She met with Vice President Kamala Harris in a video call on Feb. 11 and then interviewed with Biden at the White House on Feb. 14. Biden called and offered her the nomination on Feb. 24, the day before he publicly announced his choice. 'For too long our government, our courts haven't looked like America,' Biden said when he formally announced her nomination last week. Democrats want to see Judge Ketanji Brown Jackso confirmed to the Supreme Courtby mid-April The questionnaire also provides the Judiciary committee with a record of every job Jackson has held and the decisions she has made in her nine years as a federal judge, as well as any recusals and potential conflicts of interest. She should be able to be quickly vetted since she answered a similar questionnaire last year when the panel considered her for the D.C. court. Jackson's list of her most significant cases contains only one new entry from the appeals court, describing an opinion she wrote for a unanimous three-judge panel that came out in favor of labor unions. A Ghislaine Maxwell juror who will face a public grilling next week about his failure to disclose he was a victim of sexual abuse before trial will plead the Fifth, according to new court papers filed Wednesday. Juror 50 will invoke his Fifth Amendment privilege against self-incrimination at the hearing, wrote lawyer Todd Spodek, who represents the juror, Scotty David. Advertisement The feds say they may request an order compelling Davids testimony. An intentionally false statement on a juror questionnaire could rise to the level of perjury. Maxwell argues she deserves a new trial based on the jurors stunning disclosure after the guilty verdict. Advertisement The main jury panel sits in the jury box waiting to be dismissed after deliberating during Ghislaine Maxwell's sex trafficking trial, Tuesday, Dec. 21, 2021 in New York. (Elizabeth Williams/AP) The court inquiry will examine why David indicated on a questionnaire during jury selection that he had not been a victim of sexual assault. After the trial, he gave interviews to news outlets saying that he shared his experience with sexual abuse to fellow jurors during deliberations. I know what happened when I was sexually abused. I remember the [color] of the carpet, the walls. Some of it can be replayed like a video, David told The Independent. Breaking News As it happens Get updates on the coronavirus pandemic and other news as it happens with our free breaking news email alerts. > David later told Reuters he flew through the questionnaire and did not recall the question about sexual abuse. Maxwell was convicted on Dec. 29 of aiding Jeffrey Epsteins sex trafficking scheme for a decade. In this courtroom sketch, Ghislaine Maxwell enters the courtroom escorted by U.S. Marshalls at the start of her trial, Nov. 29, 2021, in New York. (Elizabeth Williams/AP) In an order last week, Judge Alison Nathan said the issue was not that a juror on the Maxwell trial had a history of sexual abuse. Instead, it was the potential failure to respond truthfully to questions during the jury selection process that asked for that material information so that any potential bias could be explored. Nathan rejected Maxwells motion for a new trial based solely on the interviews, which werent made under oath. But they will be if David is forced to testify. Advertisement Maxwell, 60, remains in federal lockup at the Metropolitan Detention Complex in Brooklyn. She faces up to 65 years in prison. Air Force One's little-known sister aircraft the 'Doomsday Plane' - designed to protect high-ranking government officials from a nuclear attack - was sent on a four-hour training flight after Vladimir Putin placed Russia's nuclear forces on high alert. Military flight tracking sites showed the modified Boeing 747 had departed from the US Air Force base in Lincoln, Nebraska, on Monday evening. The E-4B carried out a training flight with other specialist military aircraft, reports the i newspaper. The planes are outfitted as complete command centers for the president and his top officials including the Secretary of Defense and the Joint Chiefs of Staff in the case of nuclear war or national emergency. These aircraft have unique capabilities that cannot be duplicated by any other aircraft that the Air Force uses. The US Air Force Boeing 747 Doomsday plane parked on the apron in Brussels, Belgium, in 2010 The planes are outfitted as complete command centers for the president and his top officials including the Secretary of Defense and the Joint Chiefs of Staff in the case of nuclear war or national emergency Monday's training flight, which lasted four-and-a-half hours, headed towards Chicago before returning to the Nebraska base. It appeared to be an unusual training flight as it was joined by two 'Cobra Ball' jets, which can track the trajectory of a ballistic missile, as well as other military aircraft. The Pentagon did not respond for a request for comment on the purpose of the exercise. But the Doomsday flight came just a day after Putin said he had placed Moscow's nuclear forces on a 'special regime of combat duty' in response to 'aggressive statements' from members of the NATO defence alliance. Putin's spokesman Dmitry Peskov went further on Monday and blamed the escalation on UK Foreign Secretary Liz Truss. E-4B Doomsday planes follow the President of the United States during his travels, whether domestic or international. The aircraft, slated to have reached their service life by 2039, have been in operation since 1980. The craft carry special equipment and have the capability to communicate with anyone, anywhere in the world, and support analysts and strategists in-flight. The planes can also be refuelled in the air and have remained airborne and operational for as long as 35.4 hours in one stint. The Doomsday planes can also be refuelled in the air (as pictured) and are able to remain airborne and operational for as long as 35.4 hours However, the craft were designed to be able to operate in-flight for a full week without needing to land. The planes, also called 'National Airborne Operation Centers' when they are in-flight, have special equipment and have the capability to communicate with anyone from anywhere in the world and support analysts and strategists on the flight. The E-4Bs are operated by the First Airborne Command and Control Squadron of the 595th Command and Control Group, are coordinated by the United States Strategic Command and are stationed near Omaha, Nebraska, at the Offutt Air Force Base. When the president is in the US, a Doomsday plane is kept with its engine running at all times and ready at the Offutt base 24 hours a day. If the President goes abroad, the E-4Bs follow and are known to the crews as 'Air Force One When It Counts', according to Politico. Should an emergency occur, one of the four craft is thus able to rendezvous with Air Force One almost immediately. The design of the plane is meant to survive an electromagnetic pulse with all the systems intact, even down to the fact that they still use traditional analog flight instruments because they are less vulnerable. A Doomsday Plane is capable of operating with the largest crew of any aircraft in US Air Force history, at 112 people, both flight and mission personnel. The planes all have three decks Four specially modified Boeing 747s dubbed the E-4Bs or 'Doomsday planes' (pictured) carry high-ranking members of the US Government around the world. This image shows an E-4B aircraft is towed out of its hangar June 17, 2009, at Offutt Air Force Base, Nebraska The planes also have in-flight refueling and has been able to remain airborne and operational up to 35.4 hours. Though it has been designed to be able to operate in-flight for a full week. The planes are outfitted with special equipment including a wire antenna that can keep the president in communication with the nuclear submarine fleet, even if ground-based communications had been destroyed. The E-4 fleet were first operated in the 1970s during the Cold War. Through to the end of the war, one of the flying war rooms were kept constantly on alert at Andrew's Air Force Base, ready to lift off with the president on board in just 15 minutes. It was believed that these planes were the best way to keep the president safe in the case of nuclear attack. In 2006, there was talk that the E-4B fleet would be retired in 2009 under then-Secretary of Defense Donald Rumsfeld. Instead, just one of the fleet was retired in the February of 2007. When Robert Gates took over as Secretary of Defense in May 2007, he reversed the decision and the plane, with its unique capabilities, returned to the fleet. A rescued former circus bear due to travel from Ukraine to a Romanian sanctuary has been left stranded by Putin's invasion. Masha the Eurasian brown bear is being cared for at a temporary shelter in Sambir, South of Lviv, in Western Ukraine. This week she was set to be transported 140 miles south to the Romanian border and to a new life at the country's Libearty Bear Sanctuary. But Russian troop build ups shut the borders before the invasion began on Thursday. And now Masha, who spent 19 years of her life in a tiny cage and performing in circuses, is unable to reach her well-deserved retirement. Despite the mounting threat of war animal charity director Lionel de Lange, from Warriors of Wildlife, flew into Ukraine from his native South Africa on Tuesday last week to oversee Masha's rescue. Lionel has lived in Ukraine for the past 11 years rescuing bears and big cats from captivity and transporting them to better lives in sanctuaries in Europe and South Africa. As war broke out Lionel was forced to evacuate from his home in Kherson in the south of Ukraine close to the Russian-occupied Crimea border. He managed to drive 100 miles to Odessa and cross the border into Moldova. Masha the bear when she arrived at her temporary rescue home in Ukraine back in 2018 Masha the bear in a cage she used to be kept in when she was made to perform at a circus Masha the bear when she was forced to perform in a circus and ride a tricycle on stage But incredibly despite the danger Lionel says he will go back into Ukraine as soon as the borders are open to bring Masha, now 22, to her new home. Speaking from a hotel in Romania Lionel, 56, said Masha had plenty of food and was being well cared for. He said: 'Putin's insane invasion of Ukraine has stopped Masha starting her new life in a sanctuary. 'But that little tinpot dictator has another thing coming if he thinks we will leave her behind. 'The brave Ukrainian people who are caring for her will keep her safe and she has plenty of food and shelter. 'Masha is a Ukrainian bear and she's been through a lot and if Putin thinks the Russian bear is tough, he should see the life she has had. 'Like the Ukrainian people she won't give up and we won't give up getting her to a sanctuary where she can enjoy her final years. 'Monday was her birthday and she was due to be relocated to start her new life but because of Putin everything is gone.' Masha the bear on Monday at a temporary shelter in Sambir, South of Lviv, in Western Ukraine Bear Masha was set to be transported 140 miles south to the Romanian border and to a new life Lionel, whose wife Anya is Ukrainian, said he didn't think Russia would be so stupid as to invade Ukraine and that Masha's relocation would go ahead as normal this week. He said: 'Everybody was ready to go, all her documents were ready and we were going to start moving her. 'By EU law the vehicle to transport Masha had to come from the European side but the borders are closed now so they can't come in. 'Refugees can escape but Masha cannot go with them without a transport being allowed to cross over. 'She is 140 miles north of the Romanian border but only 24 miles east of Poland and if we could get her into Poland we might be able to take her south. 'We have travel permits valid until May 20 and as soon as the borders open I will travel back and get her onto a European Union registered vehicle and get her across.' After arriving in Ukraine on Tuesday last week Lionel said he feels guilty now leaving his home behind. He said: 'I lay in bed last night in my hotel and I felt guilty because I had left, I had left friends behind in a place that has been my home for the past 11 years. 'When war started I thought, do I go fight for Ukraine? What can I do? They wouldn't give me a weapon but I felt so guilty leaving. 'Anya's grandmother and grandfather are still there but they wouldn't leave. 'Putin doesn't realise even if he topples the Ukrainian government and he puts in a puppet regime he's still going to have a hell of a fight on his hands. 'The Ukrainian people's patriotism and love for their country and the hate they have for Putin means there are going to be battles every step of the way, there will be fighting in the streets and the Ukrainians will never ever give up. 'The people of Ukraine will be biting at the Russian heels all day every day for as long as this insane war carries on.' Warriors of Wildlife (WoW) has rescued dozens of bears and big cats and other animals from private captivity and circuses in Ukraine. The charity takes the lions and other big cats rescued to their Simbonga Sanctuary close to Port Elizabeth in South Africa. Bears are relocated elsewhere to sanctuaries in Europe. To donate towards Masha's rescue and others visit the charity's website:https://www.wowukraine.org/ A woman who faked her own death in a bid to avoid driving convictions has been jailed for eight months. Zoe Bernard, 38, was already banned from the roads when she was arrested for driving carelessly and failing to stop in Kilburn, north London, in November 2020, Southwark Crown Court heard. Posing as her sister Shanice in calls to police between December 15, 2020 and January 27 last year, she said Zoe was ill then dead, before applying for a death certificate to try to bolster her lie. Judge Martin Beddoe jailed Bernard, from Kensington, west London, for eight months, of which she will serve half after she previously pleaded guilty to perverting the course of justice. This offence was clearly the result of some degree of thought and planning by you, the judge said on Wednesday. I am quite satisfied this was an effort on your part to deceive the police. You already had a very bad record for driving matters and you knew full well the trouble you were in. You set out to pervert the course of justice. You attempted to convince the police you were dying and had died. To reinforce that lie you tried to get hold of a death certificate. Zoe Bernard, 38, faked her own death in a bid to avoid driving convictions The court heard that Bernard has a string of previous convictions and was jailed in October 2019 for drink-driving and driving while disqualified. When stopped by police in November 2020, she gave her name as Kyesha Bernard, then during the investigation Shanice called police claiming Zoe had been ill and then died. An online request was made for a death certificate but it was not issued because no death was on the register. Prosecutor Gregor McKinley said: It is our case the defendant was contacting police pretending to be her sister and making this application to the registration office. Bernard was prosecuted in the magistrates court in December last year and handed a six-month curfew after being found guilty of driving without insurance, failing to stop, driving while disqualified and careless driving. Her barrister Margo Munro Kerr said her client has physical and mental health problems and has suffered a string of tragedies, including losing her uncle and eldest daughter in the Grenfell Tower fire. These are the actions of a very unwell person in a way that is going to harm herself more than anyone else, she said. She was already banned from the roads when she was arrested for driving carelessly and failing to stop in Kilburn, north London, in November 2020, Southwark Crown Court heard This is such a strange way to act. It was so obvious the police would find out this was a lie. It was not rational. But Judge Beddoe said: There is no reference to that in the psychological report. You told me before that her child had died in a car accident. I should not have spoken before taking full instructions, said Miss Munro Kerr. She added that Bernard was a survivor of sexual violence from a police officer and was suffering from sickle cell disease, so any prison time would be extremely traumatic for her. Bernard had requested the death certificate is because she was feeling suicidal and was making preparations, Miss Munro Kerr suggested. This is a case where so many things have conspired to make it exceptional, she said. A custodial sentence would have such a harmful impact on her that it would not be justified. How can you say that? Judge Beddoe replied. Had she managed to get hold of the death certificate the police might have thought it was genuine. Sentencing, Judge Beddoe told Bernard: You are someone that has very little respect for the operation for the law. I do not accept that this was as a result of any suicidal tendencies. This offence was clearly the result of some degree of planning by you. From what I have read it is clear that you exaggerate events in your life in order to suit your interests. Neither the psychiatric report nor the letter shown to me today has convinced me that justice should not take its proper course. You have disregard for the law and you need to learn to do so. Advertisement A sobbing former St. Louis police officer charged for wanton endangerment in the Breonna Taylor raid told her family that the chaotic shootout that left her dead and a fellow officer injured was a 'tragedy' that 'didn't have to happen.' Ex-Louisville Metro Police Officer Brett Hankison, 45, testified on Wednesday as he outlined the events of the botched March 13, 2020, no-knock warrant raid, saying officers were told Taylors boyfriend, Kenneth Walker, was alone in the apartment at the time of the raid as they were trying to bust him for a drug crime. Hankison added that he was shocked to learn the 26-year-old woman was in the apartment after the gunfire had broken out. 'He was supposed to be alone. There wasn't supposed to be a girl inside,' Hankison said as he started to cry. 'Ms. Taylor's family, she didn't need to die that night' he said, addressing her mother, Tamika Palmer, who was in court today, before the prosecution cut him off. Hankison also broke down in tears as he testified that he believed Walker was armed with an AR-15 rifle when he fired at police officers, thinking they were introducers. Walker was not armed with a rifle but instead fired at officers with a 9mm handgun. Hankison said that because of the poor visibility, Walker's pose and the bright flash of the gun, he believed the officers were being shot at with an rifle. 'It appeared to me like they're being executed with this rifle,' Hankison said as he started crying recalling the moment Walker shot Sgt. Jon Mattingly in the leg. When asked how he responded, Hankison said he ran to the side of the house and returned fire through sliding glass doors. 'I felt helpless that I had a handgun fighting against a rifle.' He said that due to the darkness and the fact that the sliding glass doors had blinders on them, he fired his weapon at where he believed Walker was in order to assist his fellow officers. He said the chaotic shootout, where six stray bullets fired by Mattingly and Officer Myles Cosgrove struck and killed Taylor, lasted between five to ten seconds. Hankison added that the incident was the first time he ever fired his weapon while in the line of duty since joining the police department in 2003. Although the former officer fired 10 shots near the side door of the Louisville apartment complex, prosecutors said the bullets endangered Taylor's neighbors, including a couple and their unborn child. Hankison is charged with three counts of wanton endangerment, a low-level felony that could yield up to five years in prison. Hankison outlines the chaotic shootout during trial on Wednesday: Ex-Louisville Metro Police Officer Brett Hankison said a raid team had approached Breonna Taylor's apartment on March 13,2020 to bust her boyfriend, Kenneth Walker for a drug crime He claimed they were told Walker was alone when they rammed into the apartment, which was pitch black Hankison told the court Walker had fired at police and that with the darkness, stance, and bright flash of gunfire, he believed the man was armed with an Ar-15 rifle Hankison ran to the side of the building and watched flashes through blinds on a sliding glass door as his fellow officers exchanged fire with Walker He said he fired at where he believed Walker was shooting from despite his obscured vision Hankison added that he did not feel guilty about running and leaving the other officers behind at the door He called it a tactical decision to stop the threat at the officers, who he believed were being killed He broke down crying as he recalled the moment Sgt. Jon Mattingly was shoot in the leg Hankison said that when Walker surrendered, the man claimed it was Taylor who was shooting at police He called the whole incident a 'tragedy' and that it 'didn't need to happen' Former Louisville Metro Police Officer Brett Hankison (above) called the shooting of Breonna Taylor a 'tragedy' that 'didn't have to happen' as he took the stand on Wednesday Hankison testified that he believed Breonna Taylor's boyfriend was armed with a rifle when he fired at police during the chaotic raid at Taylor's apartment on March 13, 2020 He started to break down as he recalled the hectic shooting that killed Breonna and left a fellow officer injured Hankison said the incident was the first time he ever fired his weapon while in the line of duty Tamika Palmer, Taylor's mother, was pictured attending the trial on Tuesday Hankison explained that he was at the doorway (beneath the stairs) when the raid began. He quickly ran to the side by the sliding glass doors as the shootout began and he fired at where he believed the gunman was QUESTION: During defendant Brett Hankisons testimony he apologized to #BreonnaTaylors family, did you believe him? WATCH #CourtTV LIVE - https://t.co/Ps5kNht0Fn pic.twitter.com/WuiqdBIeQp Court TV (@CourtTV) March 2, 2022 Hankison said the officers at the door quickly helped Mattingly out of the apartment complex and he informed incoming officers of the situation inside. Asked by the prosecution if he felt guilty about leaving his fellow officers behind, Hankison said: 'Absolutely not.' He explained that officers are trained to get out tight spots during shootings, known as a 'fatal funnel,' in order to secure their safety and put them in a better position to remove a threat. Hankison also denied the possibility that he could have shot fellow officers when he was firing at the location of the gunfire he saw inside the apartment. He added that as the situation calmed, Walker stepped out of the apartment with his hands up and Hankison instructed him to come closer as he questioned the man about the police shooting. Hankison claimed Walker denied firing at police and instead blamed Taylor, saying she was the one to fire at the officers. 'That kind of shook me,' Hankison said as he explained that the raid was suppose to take place when Walker was alone to bust him on drug selling charges. Closing arguments for the case are set for Thursday morning. Assistant Kentucky Attorney General Barbara Maines Whaley, in her opening statement last week, told jurors that the case is not about the killing of Taylor, for which the city of Louisville paid a settlement to the slain womans family. She said the charges are focused on Hankinsons decision to fire blindly through Taylors apartment, endangering her neighbors. Before Taylor's door was breached, Hankison had argued with a neighbor, telling him to get back inside. 'This escalated the situation,' Whaley said. Then, once the shooting started, 'Hes shooting in a different direction than the other two detectives,' she said. Defense attorney Stewart Mathews countered that Hankison was justified in what he did during a chaotic scene that lasted about 10 to 15 seconds from when Taylor's door was breached to when the shooting stopped. 'This case is not about the death of Breonna Taylor, but in a sense it's totally about that, because that's what started this whole situation,' Mathews said. 'Breonna Taylor was a peripheral part of this whole deal, but she was tied into it,' and their no-knock warrant meant officers had been approved to go inside. Kenneth Walker (left) is shown in an undated photo with Breonna Taylor. Hankison said that because of Walker's stance, poor visibility, and intense flash from his gun, he thought the man was armed with an AR-15 rifle and 'executing' raiding officers Hankison testified that Walker had told him Taylor was the one to fire at police during the shootout He added that he was in shock that Taylor was in the room since the raiding squad was told Kenneth was alone Judge Ann Bailey Smith (center) addressed the prosecution and defense as Hankison prepared to testify on Tuesday Walker (left) is pictured attending the trial on Tuesday. He had fired at officers who he thought were intruders Hankison's defense attorney Stewart Mathews said Hankison was justified in what he did during a chaotic scene. Pictured: in the Louisville courthouse Wednesday Chelsey Napper, who is pregnant, recalled the moment bullets went through her room as officers shot through Taylor's apartment. She and boyfriend Cody Etherton filed a $12 million civil suit against the police and city Kenneth had shot Sgt. Jon Mattingly (above) in the leg amid the chaos. Hankison said he was in shock when the officer went down and returned fire at Walker Once Walker fired at the people breaking down her door and other officers fired back, Hankison 'was attempting to defend and save the lives of his fellow officers who he thought were still caught in that fatal funnel inside that doorway,' Mathews said, 'as he was taught to do -- he was taught to shoot until the threat is stopped.' On cross-examination, witness Cody Etherton acknowledged that 'the whole thing was chaotic.' 'From the time I got woke up, hearing boom, to the gunfire coming through my apartment, nearly killing my girlfriend, yeah it was chaotic,' he said. Etheron added: 'Another one or two inches and I woulda gotten shot. I would have never gotten to meet my son.' Mathews also raised the $12 million civil suit Etherton and expectant girlfriend Chelsey Napper have filed against the city and its police department, among others. 'Thats not influencing your testimony, the fact that you want to get some money out of this?' Mathews asked. 'Of course we want to be compensated, but Chelsey and I have never talked about how much money we want out of this,' Etherton said. Kenneth Walker, Breonna Taylor's boyfriend, fired at officers conducting the raid Judge Ann Bailey Smith swore in ten men and five women as jurors and alternates to hear the case. The court declined to release information about their races or ethnicities. Hankison's jury was selected from a larger-than-normal pool because of the the national publicity Taylor's case has attracted since the deadly raid on March 13, 2020. Taylors name, along with George Floyd and Ahmaud Arbery - black men who died in encounters with police and white pursuers - became rallying cries during racial justice protests seen worldwide in 2020. The 12 jurors and three alternates are expected to tour Taylor's apartment and hear testimony from Hankison during the trial that's expected to take two weeks. Several other current and former police officers are expected to testify. The 26-year-old Black woman worked as an emergency medical tech and was settling down for bed when Louisville officers with a narcotics warrant kicked in her door. They drew fire from Taylors boyfriend, who said he thought an intruder was breaking in. Two officers at the door returned fire, killing Taylor. Neither one was charged in her death, though one of the officers was struck by a bullet in the leg. The city of Louisville settled her family's wrongful death lawsuit in September 2020 for $12 million. Walker had been armed with a Glock when he fired at the police, who he believed were intruders. The weapon is pictured at the scene in 2020 WATCH: Former Louisville Metro police officer Brett Hankison became emotional when talking about the moment Sgt. Jonathan Mattingly was shot during the raid at Breonna Taylor's apartment. @LawCrimeNetwork pic.twitter.com/kBguDQ2URS Law&Crime Network (@LawCrimeNetwork) March 2, 2022 Body camera footage from police shows Walker on the night of the shooting. Hankison said Walker blamed the shooting of the officers on Taylor Shortly before she was shot, Taylor was preparing to settle in for the night and head to bed. Her bedroom is pictured in this file handout Police in New York City on Wednesday apprehended a Florida man who they say barricaded himself inside a public library after he was recognized as a possible suspect in a crime spree targeting seven Asian women. The person of interest, so-far identified only as a 29-year-old man with a Florida address, was taken into custody following a standoff at a New York Public Library in Midtown Manhattan. The NYPD on Tuesday released surveillance video showing the suspect in Sunday's unprovoked attacks, and this morning, a library goer was said to have recognized him and called the police, reported ABC 7 NY. The unnamed man sought shelter in a library bathroom and refused to come out, but eventually he was removed from the building and transported to the 7th Precinct, which is home to the NYPD's Hate Crimes Task Force. A police spokesperson confirmed to DailyMail.com that the man is currently being questioned by detectives about his alleged involvement in the violent incidents, in which seven Asian women were punched, elbowed and shoved in a span of just two hours. The Florida man was arrested after barricading himself inside an area of the New York Public Library, pictured So far, no charges have been announced against him. Police asked for the public's help in identifying the blond-haired suspect, who they say has left his unsuspecting victims - all of them Asian women between the ages of 19-57 - injured and bloodied. The first attack took place at Madison Avenue and East 30th Street at around 6.30pm, when a 57-year-old woman was punched in the face. She suffered a cut on her lip and swelling on the left side of her face, which required hospitalization. Just 10 minutes later, police said the suspect hit a 25-year-old woman in the arm at Fifth Avenue and East 30th Street. The NYPD on Wednesday apprehended a suspect in connection with a series of violent attacks against seven Asian women in Manhattan. The thug was caught on video walking in the city on Sunday night (pictured) This map shows the times and locations of the attacks, from Midtown Manhattan to Nolita and Greenwich Village, on Sunday The blonde, white perpetrator is accused of punching, elbowing and shoving women between ages of 19-57 without any provocation in a span of just two hours A $3,500 reward is being offered for information leading to the racist attacker's capture Five minutes after that, at around 6.45pm, the same man struck a 21-year-old woman in the face in the area of Park Avenue South and East 23th Street, followed by a similar attack targeting a 25-year-old woman at Irving Place and East 17th Street at 6.50pm. Both victims in the back-to-back assaults sustained injuries to the mouth. At 7.05pm, the pugnacious goon elbowed a 19-year-old woman in the face on Union Square East and East 17th Street, and did the same thing to a 25-year-old woman at East Houston Street and Mott Street five minutes later, leaving both women with a split lip. After an hour-long lull in violence, the suspect resurfaced at Broadway and East Eighth Street, where he pushed a 20-year-old woman to the ground, according to the NYPD. Asian Americans have experienced a 343 percent increase in hate crimes in 2021 with 133 attacks. Hispanics are also seeing a rise in attacks with eight attacks happening in 2021, compared to one in 2020 Only 219 people were arrested for hate crimes last year, though there were 524 such complaints. In 2020, there were 265 complaints and 93 arrests Police described the suspect as a white male with light complexion and blonde hair. He was last seen wearing a light blue T-shirt, dark colored pants and shoes, and was carrying a multicolored backpack. CrimeStoppers was offering a $3,500 reward for information leading to his arrest. Anti-Asian hate crimes rose an astonishing 343 percent during the coronavirus pandemic in 2021, with some criminals targeting Asian-Americans because the virus originated in China. As of February 27, hate crimes targeting all minorities, not just Asian-Americans, were up more than 142 percent, compared with the same period last year. Adams reassigned Inspector Jessica Corey, who led the Hate Crime Task Force, last month. His office has not clarified where she was placed or who would replace her Sunday's crime spree came just two weeks after Christina Yuna Lee, a 35-year-old Korean-American, was followed by a homeless criminal to her apartment on the Lower East Side and stabbed to death in the bathtub. In January, Michelle Alyssa Go, 40, was shoved to her death in front of a train at the West 42nd Street subway station. On Monday, New York City Mayor ousted Jessica Corey, the head of the NYPD's hate crimes unit, which has made arrests in fewer than half of all reported incidents. 'We were too slow in investigating [crimes] as possible hate crimes,' Adams said Monday as he commented on Corey's ouster. 'I wanted a new face there, a new vision.' Lee was reassigned to the firearms and tactics unit, after Adams learned that she had allegedly berated Esther Lee, a hate crime victim, for filming the man who she said spat on her and called her a 'carrier' aboard an A train last fall. Manhattan District Attorney Alvin Bragg said that his office 'tragically' currently has 33 open hate crime cases involving anti-Asian hate crimes - the most since the establishment of the office's Hate Crime Unit in 2010. In 2021, the Manhattan DA's Office prosecuted nearly four times more anti-Asian hate crimes than in the previous year. A 15 year-old school shooter charged with killing four people is too dangerous to be moved from an adult to juvenile facility, a judge ruled, as a court was told about the bragging emails the teen has sent fans from behind bars. Ethan Crumbley, 15, was told Tuesday that he must stay at the Oakland County Jail, an adult prison facility in Michigan, since he was arrested on November 30 for allegedly opening fire at Oxford High School and killing four people. Oakland County Circuit Judge Kwame Rowe said he had 'grave concerns' about moving Crumbley to the Children's Village youth detention facility in Pontiac, given the severity of his alleged crimes. He also cited Crumbley's boasts about prison life - and said they stood in marked contrasts to claims being incarcerated had driven the teen killer to the verge of suicide. Rowe explained in his 12-page decision that Crumbley has been receiving letters from supporters all over the world since his arrest, including one on January 16 when Crumbley said 'I got a cell to myself, three meals a day, a TV to watch and the guards are pretty nice,' according to the Detroit Free Press. In another, Crumbley reportedly tells a supporter that their mail 'brightens' his day, and that the 'photos of New York are what he imagined. 'There is nothing in the email exchanges that causes this court concern regarding Ethan's current mental health,' Rowe wrote. 'He is eating, reading books, playing video games and talking to others.' Ethan Crumbley, pictured in court on February 22, will remain at the Oakland County Jail Crumbley is facing 24 felony charges, including terrorism and first-degree murder charges, which carry a maximum penalty of life in prison. He has pleaded not guilty, and his lawyers are moving towards an insanity defense - meaning they accept that he carried out the killings, but that they'll claim he wasn't of sound mind when he did so. But in his decision not to move the teenager to a juvenile facility, Rowe said he placed 'great weight' on text messages and journal entries showing that Crumbley had made Molotov cocktails, which he contemplated using during the school shooting. Rowe also noted that Crumbley had once started a small fire in the woods, and that he killed eight baby birds 'by slowly torturing them,' saying he watched a video of Crumbley torturing one of the baby birds to death. Judge Kwame Rowe wrote in a decision Tuesday that Crumbley does not actually appear to be suffering from isolation at the prison and has been 'actively communicating with members of the public - several times a day' Crumbley, 15, has been detained at the Oakland County Jail, an adult prison facility, since he was arrested on November 30 He said that these 'prior delinquent acts are of grave concerns to this court. 'This court cannot find that the juvenile would be safely detained at Children's Village,' Rowe wrote of the juvenile detention facility Crumbley's lawyers petitioned him to be transferred to. 'It is clear that Children's Village is incapable of safely housing the defendant because of the unique circumstances this case presents,' he continued, saying the details of Crumbley's alleged crimes are especially noteworthy. 'The nature and circumstances of the alleged offense are extremely troubling and disturbing. The [prosecution] alleged that defendant planned and executed a mass murder at Oxford High School. 'Allegedly, he killed four students and injured seven others. 'The alleged facts speak for themselves.' Crumbley is accused of opening fire on November 30 at Oxford High School in Oxford, Michigan, and killing four people while injuring seven others Parents were pictured walking home with their children following the shooting Among those who died in the shooting were Justin Shilling, left, who succumbed to his wounds at a local hospital, and Tate Myre, who died at the school while trying to protect others Madisyn Baldwin, 17, (left) and Hana St Juliana, 14, (right) also died in the shooting rampage at Oxford High School in suburban Detroit Rowe's decision comes just one week after Crumbley's defense attorneys had argued that an adult jail is no place for a teenager, and his mental health is suffering as he is locked up in isolation. 'This extreme isolation is actually not beneficial whatsoever and actually harms Mr. Crumbley,' they argued, according to Click on Detroit. 'It is essentially a cement cell with a glass door, and because the rule is that he has to be out of sight and sound from adults, he has very little interaction with anyone.' But prosecutors argued Crumbley would be a 'menace' to the other juveniles at the Children's Village, pointing to a text between Crumbley and one of his friends in which he 'outlined a plan to stalk, rape, torture and ultimately kill a female classmate. 'He expressed delight in torturing a family of baby birds, and he wrote about the joy he received in listening to them squeal as he killed them,' assistant prosecutor Marc Keast said. 'He spoke of his admiration of Adolf Hitler and Jeffrey Dahmer specifically stating: "When you die you need to be remembered for a long time, doing something that will make people think of you until the time ends."' 'To place this defendant with other at-risk juveniles who are presumably the same age as his victim would be contradictory to the rehabilitation of those at Children's Village and pose a potential risk of harm to their safety,' he argued. Inmate caseworker Christine Belling also testified that she visited Crumbley for five to 10 minutes a day to assess his mental health concerns, and found none. She said she continues to see Crumbley twice a week, brought him Harry Potter books to read, and makes sure he has access to a psychiatrist, according to the Detroit News. Crumbley is now due back in court on March 24 for a review hearing on his placement. Ethan's parents, Jennifer and James Crumbley were ordered last week to stand trial on involuntary manslaughter charges as prosecutors claim they were aware of their son's mental health problems but failed to address them Timeline of the Crumbley's time on the run: Ethan Crumbley's parents drained his bank account NOVEMBER 30 12:51 pm: Ethan allegedly shoots and kills four students 1:22 pm: Jennifer texts Ethan 'don't do it.' The shooting had already taken place. 1:37 pm: James calls 911 to report the gun missing and said he thinks his son might have it. DECEMBER 1 Ethan is charged as an adult with two dozen crimes, including murder, attempted murder and terrorism. DECEMBER 3 McDonald announces that Jennifer and James are charged with four counts each of involuntary manslaughter. 2-3 pm: The couple were last seen near Rochester Hills before leading authorities on a manhunt for several hours. They withdraw $4,000 from an ATM in the area before leaving the motel they had been staying at since Tuesday after the shooting. 4 pm: The couple were scheduled to be arraigned at 4pm but stopped communicating with their attorneys, prompting state and federal officials to launch a manhunt. Crumbleys' lawyers said their clients had left for their own safety and were not on the run. Later in the day: Oakland County sheriff complained after the charges were announced that he did not get an advance warning of the charges being filed against the pair and learned of them from media reports. Jennifer and James did not show up to court, but their lawyer said they 'are returning' and 'would be turning themselves in to be arraigned.' 10 pm: A tipster reports the Crumbleys' abandoned Kia in a neighborhood on the east side of Detroit. DECEMBER 4 A massive manhunt of the area leads to their capture in the basement of a nearby building - less than a mile from the Canadian border. 2:45 am: James and Jennifer are booked at the Oakland County Jail. 9:30 am: The Crumbleys appear for their video conference arraignment from separate rooms in the jail. They each pleaded not guilty to all four counts of involuntary manslaughter. Judge Julie Nicholson set each parent's bond at $500,000, which must be paid in full. They remain at Oakland County Jail after the virtual meeting, which is also where their son Ethan is being held. Advertisement His parents, meanwhile, were ordered last week to stand trial on involuntary manslaughter charges. Rochester Hills District Court Judge Julie Nicholson announced on Thursday that following a two-day preliminary examination for Jennifer and James Crumbley, she found enough evidence to send their case to circuit court. 'If they had exercised reasonable care for their son, Hana, Tate, Madison, and Justin would still be here,' Oakland County Prosecutor Karen McDonald said, referring to the four slain Oxford High School students. 'It was a direct result of this gross negligence.' The Crumbleys attorneys insisted the couple didnt know their son was planning the fatal attack at Oxford High School on November 30 that left four dead. They added that the couple didnt make the gun easy to find in their home. But prosecutors told the court how the Crumbleys ignored their son's pleas for help when he told them he was seeing demons and hearing voices. And when the teen asked his father to take him to a therapist, James told him to 'suck it up' and gave him some pills, while Jennifer laughed at him, prosecutors said. The Crumbleys are also accused of failing to intervene when Ethan showed signs of mental distress at home and at school, including talking about seeing ghosts, torturing birds and detailing a plan in his journal to rape and kill a female classmate. In one text, Keast pointed out, Ethan wrote that Jennifer thought he was taking drugs, "Like she thinks the reason why I'm so mad and sad all the time is because I take drugs, and she doesn't worry about my mental health. 'And then he writes: "they make me feel like I'm the problem. "My mom makes everyone feel like a piece of s***. I actually asked my dad to take me to the doctor the other day, and he just gave me some pills and said to "suck it up." My mom laughed when I told her,"' Keast read in court. Prosecutors also pointed out that just one day before the fatal shooting, Oxford High School officials left Jennifer a voicemail informing her that a teacher was concerned that Ethan had searched for ammunition online using his phone. A sheriff's office computer crimes investigator testified during the first day of the couple's preliminary examination on February 8 that Jennifer later asked her son in a text if he 'at least' showed school officials a photo of the gun the parents gave Ethan as an early Christmas gift. Then, on the morning of the shooting, Ethan's parents were summoned to the school and confronted with his drawings, which included a handgun, a bullet, a bloodied human figure and the words: 'the thoughts won't stop. Help me.' Authorities said the parents refused to take him home after the 13-minute meeting and were told to get him counseling. The Crumbleys are jailed on $500,000 bond. The case against them is highly unusual because parents are rarely held criminally responsible for teens accused in mass school shootings. The Crumbleys' attorneys have insisted the couple didn't know their son was homicidal and might be planning an attack, and didn't make the gun easy to find in their home. Last month, Ethan's attorneys filed a notice of an insanity defense, and are now reportedly planning to attack his parents in their defense - alleging that they knew Ethan was suffering with mental illness, but did nothing about it. Advertisement Britain's daily Covid cases rose for the first time in a month today in a sign the outbreak may be growing again, while hospitalisations also ticked upwards. Government dashboard data shows another 44,017 infections were detected over the last 24 hours, up 11 per cent on the tally last Wednesday. It brings an end to more than four weeks of tumbling daily cases, with about 33,700 cases now being recorded every day on average. Latest hospital data shows 1,040 people were admitted to hospital with the virus on February 26, up seven per cent on the 970 from the previous week. But the seven-day average number of daily admissions is still falling, meaning today's rise could be a blip. Daily Covid deaths, however, have continued to fall, with the 74 victims announced today down 54 per cent in a week. The rise in infections coincides with a more infectious version of Omicron, scientifically named BA.2, becoming dominant in England last week. Experts warned it may cause some fluctuations in case rates, but called for calm saying there is no evidence that it is more severe than the original strain. Plummeting testing numbers, which have dropped by a tenth in a week, also make it more difficult to track trends in infections. It comes less than a week after Boris Johnson ditched all of England's remaining restrictions, with requirements to wear face masks on public transport and isolate when infected coming to an end. Mass testing is also set to be dumped from April 1, with the country instead set to rely on the Office for National Statistics' Covid infection survey. But experts today warned this could take two weeks longer to pick up new potentially dangerous variants. The above shows the proportion of PCR tests that are positive pick up the virus in England. It reveals the rate has started to tick back up, in a sign the outbreak is now growing in the country UK Health Security Agency figures showed 649,000 swabs for the virus were carried out yesterday, compared to the 734,000 from a week ago. The positivity rate for PCR tests the proportion that pick up the virus is also rising in England, in another sign cases are starting to tick back up. GPs want extra cash to work Saturdays and evenings GPs could resign over new NHS rules that require practices to stay open later and on weekends unless they are given more cash, it was claimed today. The British Medical Association (BMA) said doctors were 'bitterly disappointed' at the changes to their NHS England contract imposed without their support. Union bosses have tried to negotiate terms with the NHS over the past year, amid an ongoing row about access to face-to-face appointments but talks hit a stalemate. Family doctors wanted extra funding to cover the rising national insurance costs and inflation. But the final contract, given to the BMA just hours before being made public, made no mention of the additional cash it had demanded. The BMA says GPs were already working weekends and weeknights and that the deal basically amounted to 'lesser funding for the same service'. Without an 'emergency rescue package', the BMA warned practices 'will lose staff'. It has not disclosed how much cash it wants or who would receive it. Commentators have warned the move could trigger a wave of retirements and force practices to ration regular weekday appointments to cover the overtime. From October, each local hub of GP surgeries, known as Primary Care Networks, will have to offer appointments until 8pm Monday-Friday and between 9am-5pm on Saturdays. Practices must offer a full service during the extended hours, with access to nurses, pharmacists and physiotherapists. Overnight, The Times newspaper claimed PCNs could be stung by financial penalties if they failed to see patients on evenings and weekends. Advertisement Breaking cases down by UK nation, revealed they rose in Scotland (up 30 per cent in a week), England (up eight per cent) and Northern Ireland (up five per cent) compared to seven days ago. Only Wales recorded a downturn in cases, falling 10 per cent compared to the same time the previous week. UKHSA experts warned last week that BA.2 was now dominant in England, making up 52 per cent of all Covid cases in the week to February 20. But scientists said there was no reason to panic. They pointed to Denmark where the variant already makes up almost every case but is barely having an effect on hospitalisations or deaths. The Government there deemed the strain such a non-threat that it has ended virtually all Covid restrictions like England did last week. Professor Paul Hunter, an infectious disease expert at the University of East Anglia (UEA), told MailOnline yesterday that BA.2 cases were still increasing at least a week ago even as infections with the older Omicron strain began to fall. He warned cases could soon tick up because of the sub-variant, but that they would not 'continue to increase for much longer'. Professor Hunter added: 'It is already increasing much more slowly than a few weeks ago.' It comes after one of the Government's chief pandemic advisers today warned that new Covid variants could take weeks longer to be detected when mass testing is scrapped. Professor Graham Medley, chair of No10's coronavirus modelling group, said he expects a 'one to two week delay' in picking up new mutants when the final part of England's 'living with Covid' plan comes into force on April 1. From that point the country will rely solely on the Office for National Statistics' weekly Covid survey to monitor the spread of the virus, with only severely vulnerable people eligible for free tests. Professor Medley said that while the UK was alerted to Omicron by South Africa, and Delta by India, it was Britain's mass testing programme that first picked up the Alpha variant in South East England and warned the world. And he pointed out the super-transmissible Omicron became dominant in just weeks, a crucial period which may have been missed if it were not for the scheme. Professor Medley, an infectious disease modeller at the London School of Hygiene and Tropical Medicine, was speaking to MPs on the Commons Science and Technology Committee today. He is the latest Government adviser to warn against the potential dangers of scrapping mass testing, after two SAGE members - Professor John Edmunds and Professor Matt Keeling - also expressed concern yesterday. They told MPs that no modelling had been done on the trajectory of the pandemic when all rules are lifted. But axing mass testing has been welcomed by many scientists and Tory MPs, with the entire testing and tracing scheme thought to cost the taxpayer 2billion a month. The above graph shows that BA.2 - a sub-variant of Omicron - is now behind 52.3 per cent of all Covid cases in England, the UK Health Security Agency said. The data is based on S-gene testing, and shows the new version is now more prevalent than old Omicron The above graph from the Sanger Institute shows the proportion of cases down to different Covid variants. It reveals that a more infectious version of Omicron BA.2 (light blue) is now dominant over Omicron (yellow and pink). Other variants including Delta (light green), Alpha (purple) and the old virus (green and red) have now disappeared. The data is up to the week ending February 19 and based on surveillance of genomes Lateral flows should be kept because most of testing regime cash was spent on PCRs, SAGE adviser says No10's scientific advisors have cast doubt over the wisdom of scrapping free Covid lateral flow tests, arguing they take up a tiny fraction of the heavily-publicised 2billion per month figure. The comments, made to MPs in a meeting of the All-Party Parliamentary Group on Coronavirus yesterday, came as Labour accused Health Secretary Sajid Javid of 'pulling a fast one' on patients over Covid funding. Free Covid testing is reportedly costing the country 2bn per month, and the price tag was cited by Boris Johnson as a factor in moving to people having to buy their own if they wanted them. From April 1, most Brits will have to buy lateral flow tests from high street pharmacies for as much a 3 per test, three times what people in France will pay. The tests, which can cost pennies to produce, were a crucial component of how the UK battled through the Omicron wave, with experts and minsters urging people to take them before going out to meet other people. On Tuesday two SAGE scientists told MPs that the heavily quoted 2bn per month cost for test is actually driven by the more expensive PCR tests, which require lab analysis. Advertisement Asked about the impact of relying on the ONS Covid survey, Professor Medley told the Commons committee: For the Omicron wave we knew it was coming because we had an alert from South Africa, for Delta wave we knew it was coming because we had an alert from India. The Alpha wave we didnt know was coming. That was first detected in Kent and that was seen because of changes in patterns in community testing. There would have been a one or two week delay before (the ONS survey) picked up that variant. Free lateral flow and PCR tests will end across the UK from next month, which some medics warns risks outbreaks going undetected. The ONS survey involves randomly swabbing 100,000 people a week to track the virus and is considered the gold-standard of Covid surveillance - but it is delayed. Professor Medley told the committee the ONS survey was a 'critical source' of information, but that delays could lead to a variant being missed. The chair of the Scientific Pandemic Influenza Group on Modelling (SPI-M), which feeds into SAGE, said: 'Weve seen with the Omicron wave that you measure the time period from beginning to end in days almost as it develops. So it is unlikely I suspect that the ONS will give us the same level of awareness both in terms of this variant but also we have to worry about future pandemics. He added: 'If we cant stand up a response to the next Covid variant then we wont be able to stand up a response to a future pandemic.' A more infectious version of Omicron, named BA.2, is currently behind the majority of cases in Britain. It is not more deadly than its predecessor. But SAGE says there is no guarantee the next variant will be less severe, highlighting the importance of staying vigilant of new mutants. Professor Medley was also asked in the committee about Covid modelling produced to help advise policymakers. His team's modelling has been subject to criticism, with scientists accused of overegging numerous waves of the pandemic. Most recently it warned there could be 10,000 hospitalisations and 6,000 deaths every 24 hours from Omicron. In reality, there were never more than 2,000 admissions and 300 fatalities linked to the virus a day. Professor Medley insisted that while the group produced several different scenarios, the committee never told ministers which one they thought was most likely. 'We have in the past being asked by the Cabinet Office to say which is going to happen and our immediate response has been we don't know, and we can't say. I think that is the right response that we have.' He said that on one occasion they had suggested which scenario would happen in September 2020 they had been incorrect. Boris Johnson was given the confidence to abandon mass testing amid weeks of falling cases, hospitalisations and deaths. He has said the ONS survey considered as world-leading will also be reduced when its funding is renewed in April, although is yet to give details. Medical unions railed against the 'living with Covid' plan, warning ministers that 'now is not the time to take risks' and saying restrictions should be gradually eased on the basis of evidence. But the Government pushed ahead amid a cost cutting spree from the Treasury aiming to shave more than 2billion off the budgets. Covid testing for vaccinated arrivals, which initially helped catch cases entering the country, has also been dropped. Colorado Gov. Jay Polis says his state will allow residents to pay their taxes with cryptocurrencies like Bitcoin starting this summer, as cities and states throughout the country vie to become the nation's 'crypto capital.' Polis says the payments would go through an intermediary, who will convert the rapidly fluctuating digital currencies to US dollars that can be deposited into the state's treasury and actually be used to pay for things. One Bitcoin is currently worth $43,802.80, down from more than $67,000 in November. 'It is kind of like credit card payments, with the bonus that there are no returned payments!' the governor tweeted on February 23. In an interview with CNBC last month, he said he hopes to 'roll that out for all of state government,' accepting the digital coins for things like driver's and hunting licenses, later this year. Polis, 46, is a former tech entrepreneur who founded an internet access company, an online florist website and a greeting card website in the 1990s. His net worth was estimated at $313 million in 2015. Colorado is among a handful of municipalities in the country hoping to turn themselves into hubs for the $3.3 trillion cryptocurrency market. The mayors of Miami and New York announced that they would take their first checks in Bitcoin last year, even as the technology has come under fire for its toll on the environment. Colorado Gov. Jay Polis says his state will allow residents to pay their taxes with cryptocurrencies like Bitcoin starting this summer The digital currencies will go through an intermediary, who will convert them to US dollars that the state can actually use to pay for things, Polis clarified A spokesman for Gov. Polis of Colorado called the move the 'next logical step on the path to digital statehood' in a statement to the Guardian. 'Governor Polis is proud to lead efforts to create a strong and dynamic crypto ecosystem that puts Colorado at the forefront of digital innovation,' said spokesman Conor Cahill. The state has even hired a chief 'blockchain' architect, Thaddeus Batt, who works under the office of information technology. Crypto transactions are recorded on a blockchain, a public ledger of transactions and balances that keeps users' identity anonymous. Denver, the state's capital, hosts an annual conference named ETHDenver, a two-week long hack-a-thon that drew 13,000 people this year, according to CNBC. Polis has spoken to Wired about his crypto ambitions for Colorado. 'It's symbolic in sending a message that, yes, this is a form of payment we accept that is validated by the state of Colorado, just as we accept credit card payments for many purposes,' he said. Polis has even suggested moving the state's cattle brand system onto a public blockchain. He noted that the current system that keeps track of what brands belong to what ranch 'lends itself to ledgerization with a distributed ledger with tracking info, with recording access and transactions. 'A distributed ledger method is one that can reduce transaction costs, improve security, and empower people with the information they need when they need it - including law enforcement, who would no longer have to check with somebody at the Colorado Department of Agriculture but would have access to what they needed when they needed it, and nothing more, nothing less,' he told Wired. The governor's ambitions for cryptocurrency mirror those of Miami Mayor Francis Suarez, who called crypto 'incredibly important to the future of the city' in an interview with NPR. The city unveiled its own MiamiCoin last year, with 30 percent of the revenue going to city initiatives, according to the Miami Herald. Last year, the leading crypto website Blockchain.com moved its headquarters there from New York City. 'It's the gateway to Latin America,' Peter Smith, the website's founder and CEO, told NPR. 'It's on the East Coast time zone. And more importantly, it's probably the most excited city in the world about crypto right now.' Polis, 46, is a former tech entrepreneur whose net worth was estimated at $313 million in 2015 Pictured: A graph showing the amount of energy in terawatt hours (TWh) consumed by tech giants, electric vehicles and Bitcoin mining (lower, central and upper bounds). The bar second from right shows the current annual bitcoin consumption, that on March 3 was at a rate of 130.9 terawatt hours (TWh), roughly the same as New Zealand and Argentina But the process of earning cryptocurrencies has come under scrutiny from environmentalists for its tremendous use of energy. New units of digital currency are created by a process called 'mining,' in which computers must solve complex mathematical equations to update the 'blocks' on the blockchain and verify transactions. The 'miners' are then rewarded with cryptocurrency themselves. The most successful miners use multiple high-end graphics cards to process more equations at once, according to PCMag, which requires a lot of electricity and cooling power, since the machines tend to heat up. A study by UK financial site MoneySuperMarket found that each Bitcoin transaction consumes 1,173 kilowatt hours of electricity, or the amount of energy that could 'power the typical American home for six weeks.' Each transaction costs about $173 in electricity, the study found. Gov. Polis founded American Information Systems while at Princeton University in 1993. The company provided internet service to college students who wanted to keep their access after they graduated, back when the internet wasn't a widespread consumer service. It sold for more than $22 million, according to the Denver Post. He and his father later started a separate e-card business, which sold for $780 million in 1999. In 2005, he sold another business, the parent company of his online florist ProFlowers, for $477 million. Polis became America's first openly gay governor when he assumed office in 2019. Disaffected Russian FSB agents have been accused of tipping off Ukraine about a Chechen hit squad sent to kill President Volodymyr Zelensky before the assassins were 'neutralised'. Oleksiy Danilov, Ukraine's Secretary of the National Security and Defence Council, said during a televised address today that the unit 'which came to kill our President, was eliminated'. He added that the government 'received the information' from representatives of Russia's Federal Security Service. Earlier today, Ramzan Kadyrov - the strongman leader of Chechnya - said that Chechens have been killed in Moscow's invasion of Ukraine. The unit was sent into Ukraine by Kadyrov, who is a staunch ally of Russian President Vladimir Putin. 'We are already aware of the special operation that was to be carried out by Kadyrov forces unit,' Danilov said on Ukraine 24 TV channel, The Mirror reported. 'We received the information from representatives of Russia's Federal Security Service who do not want to take part in this bloody war. 'The Kadyrov forces unit, which came to kill our President, was eliminated.' Ukraine has claimed it has destroyed an elite group of Chechen fighters that were plotting to assassinate Ukrainian President Zelensky, according to a Kyiv official. Pictured: Servicemen take part in a review of the Chechen Republic's troops and military hardware at the residence of Ramzan Kadyrov, February 25. Since the Russian invasion began on February 24, there have been fears that president Volodymyr Zelensky (pictured: could be killed by Russian forces. In an address, he even said that he was target number-one for the Kremlin's assassins. Danilov said the unit had been split into two groups and its movements were being closely tracked. He said that one of the two groups came under fire from Ukraine's forces in Hostomel - a north-west suburb of Ukraine's Kyiv capital. The other unit was 'in our sights', he said. 'They were divided in two groups, we were tracking them,' Danilov said on television. 'One group was handled near Hostomel, the other one is in our sights.' Danilov continued: 'We will not give our President or our country to anyone. This is our land, get out of here.' Oleksiy Danilov (left), Ukraine's Secretary of the National Security and Defence Council said during a televised address today that the unit 'which came to kill our President, was eliminated'. The unit was sent into Ukraine by Ramzan Kadyrov - the strongman leader of Chechnya, who is staunch ally of Russian President Vladimir Putin Since the Russian invasion began on February 24, there have been fears that president Zelensky could be killed by Russian forces. In an address, he even said that he was target number-one for the Kremlin's assassins. 'I am target number one, my wife and children are number two,' he said last week. However, despite the threat to his life, he has continued to project defiance in the face of danger and become the face of Ukraine's resistance. The 44-year-old has used his eye for modern image management and the skills honed on stage to deliver stirring messages on social media. On February 25, the day after the outbreak of war, he filmed himself standing in the dark near the presidency building with his advisors, saying 'we are all here' in an attempt to counter disinformation that he had abandoned his post. 'Our military is here. Citizens in society are here. We're all here defending our independence, our country, and it will stay this way,' he said. Smoke rises around Kyiv's main television tower after several explosions near the base of it on Tuesday afternoon Kadyrov meanwhile, a former rebel-turned-Kremlin-ally, has given his backing for President Vladimir Putin's attack on Ukraine, sending his notorious fighters to the country. Earlier, he confirmed some of his fighters had been killed. 'Unfortunately, there are already losses among the natives of the Chechen Republic. Two died, six more were injured to varying degrees,' Kadyrov said on Telegram. Kadyrov, in charge of Russia's Chechnya Republic which he governs de-facto by his own set of rules, has posted videos of Chechen fighters in Ukraine. On Tuesday, he posted one of a Chechen fighter with Russian tanks rolling by. Russia has not said how many of its forces have been killed in the invasion, but also admitted losses last week. Kadyrov said the killed Chechen fighters 'chose to become heroes.' 'Yes, they kill in war and that was their choice of profession,' he said. He claimed that 'they had an order to minimise losses among the civilian population of Ukraine.' Russia denies targeting civilian areas, but residential areas are being shelled. Ukraine says more than 350 civilians have been killed since Putin launched the attack last Thursday. Moscow has invaded from several directions, including from Belarus, Moscow-annexed Crimea and from territory controlled by east Ukraine's separatists. It was reported on February 25 that a squad of Chechen special forces 'hunters' had been unleashed in Ukraine to detain or kill a set of specific Ukrainian officials. Chechen soldiers of the south battalion of the Federal Guard Service are reportedly in a Ukrainian forest with orders to detain or kill Ukrainian officials Each soldier was reportedly given a special 'deck of cards' with Ukrainian officials' photos and descriptions on them, a Moscow Telegram channel with links to the security establishment reported. The list is of officials and security officers suspected of 'crimes' by the Russian Investigative Committee, the report added. The Chechen squad was allegedly given an 'order to kill' if those on the wanted list could not be detained. Jill Biden on Wednesday gave her husband Joe Biden a nudge to stop talking to reporters and board Marine One for their trip to Wisconsin. President Biden was taking questions from the press on the South Lawn of the White House as the first lady stood to the side, patiently waiting for him. But after a few minutes she walked over to get the chatty president, nudging him to stop talk and to board the presidential helicopter. Jill, wearing a pink coat, smiled as she fetched the president. She didn't speak but gestured with her head to the waiting helicopter. The president wrapped up his remarks and walked over to his wife, taking her hand to traverse the lawn and board Marine One with her. Jill Biden gave her husband Joe Biden a nudge to stop talking to reporters and board Marine One for their trip to Wisconsin At the first lady's signal, President Biden cut his conversation short and walked over to her to board Marine One Jill Biden had been standing to the side, waiting patiently while President Biden took questions from reporters Biden, whose forehead was marked with ashes for the Catholic holiday Ash Wednesday, was answering a question about abortion policy in America when his wife interrupted him that it was time to go. 'I don't want to get into a debate with you on theology,' Biden said as Jill came over to fetch him. 'Well, anyway, I'm not going to make a judgment for other people,' he added. Biden, a practicing Catholic, has described his position on abortion as 'middle of the road' in the past but he has defended abortion policy during his tenure in the White House, keeping him in lockstep with most Democrats. Biden also said he privately received ashes from a cardinal Wednesday morning before his trip and that he prayed for the people of the Ukraine. Ash Wednesday is a holy day of obligation in the Catholic Church and marks the beginning of Lent, a time of fasting and prayer leading up to the Easter holiday. 'I was with the cardinal this morning. He came over and he gave me ashes. We both prayed for that, for the people of Ukraine,' Biden said. He also said he gave up sweets for Lent, including his beloved ice cream. 'All sweets and you know me, I start off with dessert. No ice cream, nothing,' he said. The first couple were only five minutes behind schedule leaving the White House for their day trip to Wisconsin where the two will promote the benefits of the bipartisan infrastructure law. The trip comes the day after President Biden's State of the Union address. Jill Biden and Joe Biden greet visitors and guests who were watching the Marine One departure The first couple holds hands as they walk to Marine One for their trip to Wisconsin They will speak at the at Yellowjacket Union at University of Wisconsin-Superior. Biden will speficially mention the Blatnik Bridge that stretches across St. Louis Bay to connect Superior to Duluth, Minnesota. That bridge will receive some of more than $5 billion for roads and bridges that Wisconsin is receiving under the infrastructure bill. The bridge was built in 1961 and needs to be replaced in the next decade or so. Wisconsin will also be a key state for Democrats in the 2022 midterm election and in the 2024 presidential contest. A Jewish man attacked on a Brooklyn street by a hate-fueled madman busted five months later for smearing feces on a subway rider recalled the exact instant when things turned terrifying. I saw the evil in his eyes, said victim Menachem Minkowitz, speaking Wednesday to the Daily News. I love people, but I saw the evil in his eyes. It was bad. Advertisement Minkowitz, 46, said he was departing a local deli and holding a cup of coffee on Sept. 9, 2021, when suspect Frank Abrokwa on the street despite 44 prior arrests appeared from nowhere on Utica Ave. near Prospect Place in Crown Heights. He singled me out because he noticed Im Jewish, said Minkowitz. Its not even like I said something to him. I was minding my business and looking at my phone. Everything happened so quick. ... A person comes up and spits on me. I said, What the f--k is wrong with you? And he said, F---ing Jew. Advertisement I got spit on for being a Jew. Just because Im wearing a yarmulke, I should be treated like this? Frank Abrokwa, a homeless defendant with a double-digit rap sheet, was accused of smearing his own feces on a woman inside a Bronx subway station. He's pictured smiling after leaving a courtroom in handcuffs on Tuesday, March 1, 2022. (Kerry Burke/New York Daily News) Minkowitz, his shirt covered in spit, recalled dropping his coffee as he fled the assailant. Police said the suspect announced Im going to kill you! before taking a swing at the Brooklyn man. The victim said he remains shaken by the anti-Semitic incident just a block from his office. You just cant forget something like this, said Minkowitz. It was disgusting, like a big glob of spit. We both picked up our hands as if we were going to fight but it wasnt a fair fight. He was much bigger than me. He recalled the younger attacker raising his fists in a boxers stance before the confrontation ended. Surveillance photos of the suspect were released to the media six days later, but the case remained unsolved until Abrokwa, 37, was busted this week for allegedly smearing his own feces in the face of a 43-year-old woman sitting on a bench at a Bronx subway station. Police released additional images of Frank Abrokwa. (NYPD) According to Minkowitz, police took more than two hours to show up after the attack and the NYPD hate crime unit rarely followed up with him on the investigation. He even provided police with surveillance photos and video of the incident, but no arrest was made until the suspect appeared Tuesday for his hearing in the Bronx attack. They made it a lawless city, said Minkowitz. Theres no law in this city. Im glad hes caught. I feel terrible for that woman. Im very disappointed with how the city is handling these situations. Advertisement A source said that a hate crimes detective had identified Abrokwa as a suspect in the Crown Heights attack, but did not have enough evidence for an arrest until the fecal ambush. When Abrokwa was arrested he was wearing the same durag and carrying the same bag captured in surveillance images released by the NYPD after the anti-Semitic attack, the source said. The suspect was released without bail Tuesday night for the vile excrement attack after a Bronx Criminal Court judge said she didnt yet have the evidence from his three other recent arrests. But Brooklyn NYPD detectives immediately took Abrokwa into custody and charged him with harassment and menacing, both as a hate crime. The Daily News Flash Weekdays Catch up on the days top five stories every weekday afternoon. > Abrokwa was back on the streets again Wednesday evening, released because the new charges against him dont qualify for bail under the states bail reform laws What is wrong with these people? Minkowitz said. Thats crazy. Its literally ridiculous.... This is happening over and over again. Nobodys doing anything and nobodys listening. Madness. He also blames the judge and prosecutors, and says he hopes the next time Abrokwa commits a crime, it happens to someone they love. Im sick of this system. Theyre failing everybody. Advertisement Abrokwas attorney declined comment. Hes a criminal, said Minkowitz. And if hes mentally ill, they should keep him off the streets and get him help. With John Annese Liz Truss once told a former Cabinet colleague she found foreign affairs politics 'really boring' and being Foreign Secretary was bottom of her wish list, it was claimed today, Ex-minister Rory Stewart, who was international development secretary for a period in 2019 but quit the Cabinet after Boris Johnson became party leader, made the comments in the first episode of the new podcast, The Rest Is Politics. The former Penrith and the Border Tory MP, who also sat as an independent after losing the whip over Brexit said there is a sense that 'nobody really prioritises foreign affairs, or haven't for a long time in British politics'. Hosting the podcast, he said: 'I remember when I was running for the Foreign Affairs Committee, as I started, and then later to be chair of (the) Defence Committee, Liz Truss saying to me ''I can't understand why you're obsessed with foreign affairs, I find it really boring the last thing I want to do is to be Foreign Secretary''. 'Actually she was speaking for a whole generation. All these people wanted to get on the Treasury Committee nobody wanted to do foreign affairs and defence. Britain was already beginning to turn very, very inward.' Ex-minister Rory Stewart that she found, who was international development secretary for a period in 2019 but quit the Cabinet after Boris Johnson became party leader, made the comments in the first episode of the new podcast, The Rest Is Politics. Hosting the podcast, he said: 'I remember when I was running for the Foreign Affairs Committee, as I started, and then later to be chair of (the) Defence Committee, Liz Truss saying to me ''I can't understand why you're obsessed with foreign affairs, I find it really boring the last thing I want to do is to be Foreign Secretary''.' Ms Truss, who has held the senior cabinet role since September 2021, was also accused of seemingly thinking the job is 'about Instagram', by former Downing Street director of communications, Alastair Campbell, who co-hosts the broadcast. Campbell accused the Foreign Secretary of focusing too much on social media, saying: 'Honestly, Liz Truss she really does seem to think it's about Instagram. She does seem to think the job is about Instagram.' Tony Blair's former advisor added: 'You're the Foreign Secretary, for God's sake.' Mr Stewart, who was a member of the Foreign Affairs Committee from July 2010 to June 2014, and chaired the Defence Committee from May 2014 to March 2015, also said he thought the current Defence Secretary, Ben Wallace, was doing a 'good job'. 'I think he actually has surprised people. I think he's been one of the real performers,' he said. Ms Truss has been approached for comment. Advertisement The US Air Force flexed its military muscles at one of its airbases in Japan Tuesday, showcasing a fleet of more than two dozen warplanes in an apparent effort to deter Chinese forces from invading the self-governing island of Taiwan. The display of military might at Kadena Air Base, which officials called a 'routine wing readiness exercise,' comes two days after President Biden dispatched several former senior defense staffers to the island nation in a show of support, as many wonder whether Russia's invasion of Ukraine could trigger a Chinese invasion of the country. The so-called 'Elephant Walk' - a term referring to the taxiing of large numbers of military aircraft before takeoff, when they are in close formation - saw a grouping of two dozen F-15 fighter aircraft and an HH-60 Pave Hawk helicopter, collectively valued at just over a billion dollars. The fleet of jets are assigned to the 44th and 67th Fighter Squadrons, better known by their colloquial epithets, the Vampires and the Fighting Cocks, respectively. The chopper belongs to the 33rd Rescue Squadron, which boasts the motto 'That Others May Live.' The formation also featured a $50million KC-135 Stratotanker refueling plane, assigned to the 909th Air Refueling Squadron, as well as a $270million E-3 Sentry aerial command and control craft, assigned to the 961st Airborne Air Control Squadron. The show of force comes after months of mounting and increased Chinese aggression directed at Taiwan, including nine Chinese aircraft entering the nation's air space Thursday - the day Russian troops invaded Ukraine. The US Air Force flexed its military muscles at one of its airbases in Japan Tuesday, showcasing a fleet of more than two dozen warplanes in an apparent effort to deter Chinese forces from invading the self-governing island of Taiwan The display of military might at Kadena Air Base, which officials called a 'routine wing readiness exercise,' comes two days after President Biden dispatched several former senior defense staffers to the island nation in a show of support, as many wonder whether Russia's invasion of Ukraine could trigger a Chinese invasion of the country China has long claimed the island nation - situated at the junction of the East and South China Seas between China and Japan - as part of their republic, despite the country being self-ruling for decades. In recent months, however, Republic of China officials have ramped up their threats to engage in military conflict if Taiwan continues to assert its independence, warning that the two superpowers could go to war if the US encouraged the island's independence. On Wednesday, Chinese officials slammed Biden's decision to send a team of former White House staffers, led by former chairman of the Joint Chiefs of Staff Mike Mullen, to show support for the nation amid the burgeoning conflict. Biden had dispatched the previously unannounced delegation to Taipei following Russia's invasion of Ukraine, which China is yet to condemn. 'The attempt by the US to show support to Taiwan will be in vain, no matter who the US sends,' Chinese foreign ministry spokesperson Wang Wenbin said in a statement. 'The Chinese people are firmly determined and resolved to defend national sovereignty and territorial integrity.' Wang Wednesday refused to say whether China considered Russia's actions an 'invasion.' Other big names in attendance at the surprise meeting were Meghan O'Sullivan, a deputy national security advisor under President Bush; Michele Flournoy, an undersecretary of defense under President Obama; and former National Security Council senior directors for Asia Mike Green and Evan Medeiros. The so-called 'Elephant Walk' - a term referring to the taxiing of large numbers of military aircraft before takeoff, when they are in close formation - saw a grouping of two dozen F-15 fighter aircraft and an HH-60 Pave Hawk helicopter, collectively valued at just over a billion dollars The show of force comes after months of mounting and increased Chinese aggression directed at Taiwan, including nine Chinese aircraft entering the nation's air space Thursday - the day Russian troops invaded Ukraine The show of force comes after months of mounting and increased Chinese aggression directed at Taiwan, including nine Chinese aircraft entering the nation's air space Thursday - the day Russian troops invaded Ukraine Taiwanese President Tsai Ing-wen has responded to China's threats by setting the country's military and intelligence security apparatus onto high alert, amid warnings that China could sense Western weakness after failing to prevent Russia's attack. White House National Security Council Coordinator for the Indo-Pacific Kurt Campbell described the delegation as 'unofficial' Monday during an online discussion with Washington, DC-based think tank the German Marshall Fund. During the virtual event, Campbell asserted that the delegation emphasizes Washington's desire for peace and stability between the two nations. He also stated the US will maintain close contact with the Indo-Pacific region while continuing to work closely with its European partners. 'The selection of these five individuals sends an important signal about the bipartisan US commitment to Taiwan and its democracy, and demonstrates that the Biden administration's broader commitment to Taiwan remains rock solid,' the senior administration official said. The exhibition of the large fighter fleet, which is valued at more than $1.3billion, was likely meant to ward any prospective Chinese moves on Taiwan The fleet of jets are assigned to the 44th and 67th Fighter Squadrons, better known by their colloquial epithets, the Vampires and the Fighting Cocks, respectively. The chopper belongs to the 33rd Rescue Squadron, which boasts the motto 'That Others May Live' Campbell also said that in addition to the delegation to Taiwan, in the coming months, the world will see the US' resolve to maintain contact with countries in the region, citing a planned visit to China by the head of the US Mission to the. Association of Southeast Asian, slated for March. However, on Wednesday, Chinese state-run media outlet the Global Times, a frequent critic of the US, cast doubt on Campbell's claim in an op-ed piece that slammed the Biden-led nation as 'frail' and unable to defend Europe - let alone both Europe and Taiwan. 'Against this backdrop, fighting two wars will only be a suicide mission for the U.S.,' the piece sniped, in what looked to be an apparent challenge to the US president, in an attempt to provoke him into sending troops to the Ukraine. The formation also featured a $50million KC-135 Stratotanker refueling plane (at front), as well as a $270million E-3 Sentry aerial command and control craft US officials called the display a 'routine wing readiness exercise' despite the size of the fleet The communist-run paper's editorial board wrote that Biden's refusal to deploy troops in Ukraine serves as 'proof' the White House isn't 'confident it can win even one regional war.' The outlet also cited America's failures after lengthy military operations in Vietnam and Afghanistan. The criticism echoed gormer Secretary of State Mike Pompeo's statements last week that suggested Biden was to blame for the invasion, during a Friday morning appearance at the Conservative Political Action Conference. F15 E STRIKE EAGLE First flight: 1984 Top speed: 1,874 mph Use: USA, Israel, Japan, Saudi Arabia Wingspan: 42.8ft (13.05m) Wing area: 608ft (56.5m) Length: 63.8ft (19.4m) Height: 18.5ft (5.63m) Advertisement 'We've seen a Russian dictator now terrorize the Ukrainian people because America didn't demonstrate the resolve that we did for the four years prior,' said Pompeo, who was former President Donald Trump's CIA Director before heading State. On Wednesday, Biden's administration announced the postponement of an intercontinental ballistic missile test slated for this weekend, to show restraint and to avoid any possible misunderstanding with Russia, who put its nuclear forces on alert Monday. One of the missiles, from a weapon system called the Minuteman III, is capable of devastating a city overseas less than 30 minutes after launch. The attack on Ukraine has added another dimension at a time when relations between Beijing and Moscow were reported to be at a historic high. China, a longtime ally of Russia, has largely appeared to be distancing itself from Eastern European nation amid the conflict, which began Thursday, and has avoided condemning Putin for the invasion. On Monday, Wang told reporters that China and Russia were 'comprehensive strategic partners of coordination' - a marked about-face from the Chinese foreign ministry's assertion last year that the two nations were 'better than allies.' Last week China appeared to throw Russia a sanctions-busting lifeline, by lifting wheat import restrictions. Taiwan, meanwhile, has been warily watching the fallout from Ukraine. 'The principle of self-determination cannot be erased by brute force,' Taiwan's Vice President Lai Ching-te said last week following Russia's full-scale invasion Ukraine. Taipei diplomats said the delegation was evidence that Russian actions had prompted Washington, which under Biden has increased its focus on the Indo-Pacific region, to bolster relationships. 'The overall sense is that the Russian invasion of Ukraine has precipitated seismic shift in geopolitics. It doesn't undermine Indo-Pacific efforts - it reinforces them,' said a senior Western diplomat. 'We'll see the US doubling down on relationships in and beyond the region.' Taiwanese army soldiers during a Readiness Enhancement Drill, amid escalating Taiwan-China tensions in January. The government in Taipei is watching the fallout from Ukraine Beijing claims the self-governing island of Taiwan as its own territory, and has promised to take it by force if necessary. It has stepped up aggressive flights by warplanes in recent months The remains of Russian Army all-terrain infantry mobility vehicles Tigr-M (Tiger) on a road in Kharkiv, Ukraine, on Monday. The invasion has heightened fears China could move on Taiwan Soldiers in Kyiv, Ukraine, on Monday as forces battle Russian invaders who have closed on the Ukrainian capital but have not achieved the rapid victory that Moscow expected Advertisement President Biden said Wednesday that it is clear Vladimir Putin is targeting civilians in Ukraine and insisted that 'nothing is off the table' with banning Russian gas imports, a drastic move that would send energy prices soaring further. 'Its clear they are,' Biden said, when asked by a reporter if Russia is targeting civilians as he left the White House for Wisconsin. Ukraine estimates that 2,000 civilians have been killed so far. However Biden said it was too early to say whether Russia had committed war crimes. 'We are following it very closely. Its early to say that.' Sen. Marco Rubio, R-Fla., shot back on Twitter: 'I dont understand why Biden says its too early to say #Putin is committing war crimes If he says #Russia is using banned weapons, intentionally killing civilians & unnecessarily destroying civilian property then its clear he is committing war crimes.' 'Are you considering banning Russian oil imports?' Biden was also asked. 'Nothing is off the table,' he said. Republicans have long called for Biden to start pumping more oil in America and stop buying Russian gas, and now Democrats have joined in on the call - Sen. Ed Markey introduced legislation to ban Russian oil imports on Tuesday. Biden on Wednesday announced further sanctions on both Russia and Belarus's defense sector, after Ukraine announced Belarus had joined the fight on Putin's side. Linda Thomas-Greenfield, U.S. ambassador to the United Nations, said Wednesday that Russia has deployed cluster munitions and vacuum bombs in Ukraine, and the worst is yet to come. 'Its clear they are,' Biden said, when asked by a reporter if Russia is targeting civilians as he left the White House for Wisconsin Houses destroyed as a result of shelling by the Russian army in Bucha, Kyiv Region Bodies are piled into a van after an explosion on Kyiv's main television tower Police officers remove the body of a passerby killed in yesterday's airstrike that hit Kyiv's main television tower in Kyiv on March 2 Biden adds Belarus, Russian defense and targets Kremlin oil manufacturing in latest list of sanctions President Biden announced his latest crackdown on Russia, which included sanctioning both the Kremlin's and Belarus's military capabilities and restrictions on energy manufacturing: - Will expand tech export controls so that software and technologies cannot be shipped to Belarus to be handed off to Russia - Will target 22 defense firms that make weapons and supplies for Russia's military - Will impose export controls on oil and gas extraction equipment to cut off a 'key revenue source' for Russian military - Will add firms that have supported Russian/Belarussian security services and defense to the 'Entity List,' where they need to get a certain license to export their products - Banning all Russian-operated aircraft from entering U.S. airspace Advertisement Thermobaric weapons - also known as vacuum bombs - are high-powered explosive that use the atmosphere itself as part of the explosion. They are among the most powerful non-nuclear weapons ever developed. Cluster munitions explode in mid-air to rain down dozens or even hundreds of mini-bombs, which can kill indiscriminantly. 'Russia is preparing to increase the brutality of its campaign against Ukraine,' she said before the UN. 'We have seen videos of Russian forces moving exceptionally lethal weaponry into Ukraine.' The Pentagon said Wednesday that Russia has now deployed about 70% of the troops it had amassed on the Ukraine border, about 100,000. Explosions burst through residential neighborhoods in Kharkiv and Kyiv Tuesday night. On Tuesday afternoon Russia's defense ministry announced it would target Ukrainian intelligence and communications facilities in residential areas and warned civilians to flee for their own safety. Bodies of the five victims of a rocket strike on Kyiv's television tower were on Wednesday morning piled into a van and removed from the site by police - as the capital's mayor Vitali Klitschko warned that Russian forces were 'getting closer'. Klitschko also today defiantly vowed 'we will fight' to defend the city, amid fears it could soon be battered by artillery fire from a 40-mile long death convoy parked nearby. An opening salvo on Tuesday night struck the Ukrainian capital's largest TV tower and damaged a nearby Holocaust memorial, killing five bystanders in the process. Hours later, US intelligence said the huge Russian convoy appears to have stalled near Kyiv though it could just be regrouping for a more-determined attack. Klitschko said that fighting is still ongoing in the cities of Bucha and Hostomel, on the outskirts of Kyiv, where a large number of destroyed Russian vehicles were pictured on Wednesday. He implored people in the city 'not to lose endurance', saying all critical infrastructure is still running and humanitarian supplies are being handed out. 'I ask everyone, for security reasons, not to go outside unnecessarily. At the alarm - go to the shelters,' he said. 'The enemy is gathering forces closer to the capital... We are preparing and will defend Kyiv!' As fighting raged, the humanitarian situation worsened. Roughly 660,000 people have fled Ukraine, and countless others have taken shelter underground. And as Russia showed now signs of relenting in its attacks officials said Mariupol was under 'full-scale genocide' as Putin's men unleashed a 15-hour artillery barrage while Kharkiv also came under heavy bombardment in a dark sign of what could be to come in the capital Kyiv. Thermobaric weapons were developed by both the U.S. and the Soviet Union in the 1960s A thermobaric bomb explosion during the Caucasus 2016 strategic drills at Opuk range of Russia's Southern Military District Ukraine war: The latest Russian paratroopers land in Ukraine's second city amid heavy fighting 'There are practically no areas left in Kharkiv where an artillery shell has not yet hit': Interior Ministry official Joe Biden brands Vladimir Putin a 'dictator' in his annual State of the Union address as he bans Russian aircraft from US airspace Biden preparing more sanctions on Russia and Belarus military, after Ukraine confirmed Belaryus had entered the fight Russia steps up its bombing campaign and missile strikes, hitting Kyiv's main television tower, two residential buildings in a town west of the city and the city of Bila Tserkva to the south of the capital Russian forces push into the besieged Black Sea city of Kherson in the south Russian attacks leave Mariupol, another Black Sea port further to the west without electricity More than 677,000 people have fled Ukraine since the Russian invasion, the UN's refugee agency says The UN's International Court of Justice says it will hold public hearings on March 7 and 8 over Ukraine's allegations of 'genocide' by Russia Russia blocks an independent television channel and a liberal radio station, tightening a virtual media blackout A string of Western companies announce they are freezing or scaling back business with Russia Russians race to withdraw cash after the introduction of capital controls and as the ruble hits record lows Russian-owned Nord Stream 2 goes insolvent after Germany halts the pipeline following Moscow's invasion Oil prices soar past $110 a barrel, despite agreements to release 60 million barrels from stockpiles The World Bank prepares a $3-billion aid package for Ukraine, including $350 million in immediate funds Advertisement Mariupol, located in the south of Ukraine on the Black Sea, has been surrounded by Russian forces and struck by artillery in an apparent attempt to bomb the city into submission as Putin's men resort to 'medieval' tactics. Sergiy Orlov, the deputy mayor, said entire districts had been levelled with such heavy barrages that medics cannot get in to retrieve the dead. 'We are near to a humanitarian catastrophe,' he said. 'Russian forces are several kilometers away on all sides,' he added. 'The Ukrainian army is brave and they will continue to defend the city, but Russia does not fight with their army, they just destroy districts... We are in a terrible situation.' Meanwhile Kharkiv, Ukraine's second city, came under heavy barrage in the early hours as Russian troops try to surround and seize it after days of fighting - with a rocket slamming into a university building and police station in the early hours before the city council was also struck, with one of the explosions caught in a dramatic video. The bombardment gives a dark taste of what is likely to come for other cities such as Kyiv after analysts warned Russia's military - having suffered heavy losses trying to pull off ambitious precision strikes - was likely to resort to surrounding cities and bombing them into submission to force a bloody victory. Ukraine's emergency services estimate that 2,000 civilians have been killed so-far during Russia's invasion, though that figure is likely to be an under-count once Wednesday's figures are tallied. Ukraine's armed forces said Wednesday morning that Russia is 'trying to advance in all directions' but are 'being resisted everywhere and suffering losses'. It estimates that 5,840 Russian troops have been killed so far - though that figure cannot be verified. Biden touted American strength against the Russian regime during his State of the Union address on Tuesday, while again reiterating that U.S. troops would not deploy to Ukraine. 'We are inflicting pain on Russia and supporting the people of Ukraine. Putin is now isolated from the world more than ever. Together with our allies - we are right now enforcing powerful economic sanctions. We are cutting off Russias largest banks from the international financial system. Preventing Russias central bank from defending the Russian Ruble making Putins $630 Billion 'war fund' worthless. We are choking off Russias access to technology that will sap its economic strength and weaken its military for years to come,' he said. The president announced a new task force to target oligarchs tied to Putin who have assets in the U.S. 'We are joining with our European allies to find and seize your yachts your luxury apartments your private jets,' he said. Spain has shelved all three of its financial investigations into former king Juan Carlos which prompted him to flee the country in 2020. Juan Carlos, 83, who abdicated in 2014 in favour of his son Felipe VI, 53, has been living in Abu Dhabi since summer 2020 after becoming the target of several probes in Spain over his financial dealings. The Spanish national prosecutor's office said: 'The investigation.. does not, in the Prosecutor's opinion, allow for any criminal action to be brought against His Majesty Juan Carlos.' Following the investigation, Spain recovered 5.1 million (4.24 million) in fines and taxes for income that Juan Carlos had failed to declare to Spain's tax authorities, the prosecutors said in their conclusions. A separate investigation by Swiss prosecutors had already been dropped into allegations that the 83-year-old laundered money. Spain has shelved all three of its financial investigations into former king Juan Carlos which prompted him to flee the country in 2020. Juan Carlos, 83, who abdicated in 2014 in favour of his son Felipe VI, 53, has been living in Abu Dhabi since summer 2020 after becoming the target of several probes in Spain over his financial dealings Juan Carlos had been hailed as a key figure that allowed the transition to democracy in Spain after fascist dictator Francisco Franco's death in 1975. The Spanish prosecutors also said they could not find a link between a payment received by the former king and a Saudi Arabian company receiving a contract. The probes have especially been focused on whether there was any illegal dealings after the former king abdicated in 2004 and lost his immunity from prosecution. It has tainted his reputation and that of the monarchy, and though Juan Carlos has reportedly wished to return home, many Spanish citizens are said not to welcome the move. Swiss prosecutors also dropped their investgations into allegations that the 83-year-old laundered money The Geneva prosecutors had said that the complexity of his transactions, using a foundation and various companies, 'showed a will to dissimulation', but said there was not enough evidence to proceed. A Spanish consortium was awarded a lucrative contract in 2011 to build the high-speed rail link between Medina and Mecca and a $100 million was said to be desposited by Saudi Arabia's late King Abdullah in 2008 into a Swiss bank account to which Juan Carlos had access. The Geneva prosecutors said their investigation had established that the money had indeed been deposited into an account with Geneva bank Mirabaud & Cie belonging to the Lucum foundation, for which Juan Carlos held the economic rights. They also determined that there was evidence the ex-king transferred the bulk of this money in 2012 to an account in the Bahamas belonging to a company held by his former mistress, German businesswoman Corinna Zu Zein-Wittgenstein. Juan Carlos abdicated in favor of his son Felipe VI in 2014 following a series of scandals in the royal family. Since becoming king, Felipe has tried to distance himself from his father and rebuild the Spanish crown's image. Advertisement Most of the world lined up against Russia at the United Nations General Assembly on Wednesday to pass a resolution that rebuked Moscow for its invasion of Ukraine and demanded the withdrawal of Russian forces. Although it comes with no teeth, such resolutions are often a powerful political tool. Wednesday's resolution, which passed with the support of 141 members of the 193-nation body, came at the end of a rare emergency session and signals the growing international isolation of Russia. It came as Moscow's troops pounded Ukrainian cities with air strikes and bombardments. Thirty-five members including China and India abstained while five countries - Russia, Syria, Belarus, Eritrea and North Korea - voted against the resolution. US Ambassador to the UN Linda Thomas-Greenfield, said was was 'proud' to witness the 'historic, overwhelming vote in defense of Ukraine' and to 'hold Russia accountable.' Earlier she spelled out exactly what was at stake. She said Russian forces appeared poised to step up their assault. 'We have seen videos of Russian forces moving exceptionally lethal weaponry into Ukraine, which has no place on the battlefield,' said Thomas-Greenfield. 'That includes cluster munitions and vacuum bombs which are banned under the Geneva Convention. We have seen the 40-mile-long lethal convoy charging toward Kyiv. President Putin continues to escalate putting Russia's nuclear forces on high alert, threatening to invade Finland and Sweden. 'At every step of the way, Russia has betrayed the United Nations. Russia's actions go against everything this body stands for.' A UN General Assembly resolution demanding the withdrawal of Russian forces from Ukraine passed by 141 votes to five on Wednesday. Belarus, Eritrea, North Korea and Syria voted with Russia against the resolution Delegates clapped as the resolution passed. It is non-binding but delivers a powerful political signal that Russia is isolated Huge convoys of Russian armor have rumbled into several Ukrainian cities, only to be met with fierce resistance as well-armed troops used a mixture of their own and NATO-supplied anti-tank weapons to wreak havoc on the invaders A destroyed tank is seen blocking a street with damaged houses in the background in the town of Bucha, near Kyiv, as Russia's invasion of Ukraine continues, March 1, 2022 As he left the White House on Wednesday morning, President Joe Biden accused Russia of targeting civilians. The UN General Assembly resolution condemned Vladimir Putin's actions in Ukraine and leaves the Russian leader even more isolated The US ambassador to the UN hailed the vote as 'historic' President Joe Biden also weighed in as he left the White House for a trip to Wisconsin. He accused Russia of targeting civilians. 'It's clear they are,' he told reporters. Ukraine estimates that 2,000 civilians have been killed so far. However, Biden said it was too early to say whether Russia had committed war crimes. 'We are following it very closely,' he added. Wednesday marked the seventh day of fighting in Ukraine. An intense battle continued for the eastern city of Kharkiv. Its mayor said he believed its defenses would hold, despite shelling inflicting heavy casualties on the civilian population of the besieged city. And Moscow said it had taken control of the port of Kherson, a claim denied by city authorities who said Ukrainian troops still controlled most of its territory. Russia has yet to achieve a breakthrough against Ukrainian forces and faces an unprecedented backlash from the West. Moscow's defence ministry issued its first casualty figure, saying 498 Russian soldiers had been killed and 1,597 wounded, according to Russian media reports. That is far fewer than Kyiv's claim its fighters have killed 5,840 Russian troops. The general assembly session began on Monday, when it heard an impassioned plea from the Ukrainian ambassador. Ukrainian forces have inflicted heavy losses on advancing Russian forces as bitter fighting in Ukraine enters its seventh day, according to a spokesperson for the nation's general staff (picture: Russian armoured vehicles stand destroyed or abandoned in the streets of Kharkiv) Ukraine claimed that Russia has lost 5,840 troops since the beginning of the invasion, though these figures cannot be verified (pictured: a Ukrainian territorial defence fighter examines a destroyed Russian armoured vehicle) Russian Ambassador Vassily Nebenzia insisted his country had launched what he called a 'special military operation' merely to defend two breakaway regions in the east of Ukraine, and said the truth was being distorted Sergiy Kyslytsya read out what he said were the final text messages from a Russian soldier to his mother - describing his horror at the unfolding war before he was killed. 'Mom I'm no longer in Crimea,' they began. 'I'm not in training sessions.' His mother asks: 'Where are you then? Papa is asking whether I can send you a parcel.' 'What kind of a parcel mama can you send me,' he responds 'What are you talking about? What happened?' 'Mama, I'm in Ukraine,' he responds, before describing the horror unfolding. 'There is a real war raging here. I'm afraid. We are bombing all of the cities together, even targeting civilians. 'We were told that they would welcome us and they are falling under our armored vehicles, throwing themselves under the wheels and not allowing us to pass. 'They call us fascists. Mama. This is so hard.' In response, Russian Ambassador Vassily Nebenzia insisted his country had launched what he called a 'special military operation' merely to defend two breakaway regions in the east of Ukraine. 'Russian actions are being distorted and thwarted,' he claimed. A libel claim brought by a Kazakh mining giant over passages in a journalist's book about 'dirty money' has been dismissed by a High Court judge. Eurasian Natural Resources Corporation (ENRC) sued Financial Times journalist Tom Burgis over his book Kleptopia: How Dirty Money is Conquering the World, first published by HarperCollins in September 2020. ENRC's lawyers had argued that parts of two chapters of the book would be understood as claiming that the corporation had three men murdered to protect its business interests, or there was a reasonable ground for suspicion, as well as a further suspected poisoning. However, on Wednesday Mr Justice Nicklin ruled at the High Court in London that those parts of the book did not refer to the corporation, and dismissed the claim. He said: 'Only individuals can carry out acts of murder or poisoning, only individuals can be motivated to do so to protect their business interests.' Speaking outside the Royal Courts of Justice, Mr Burgis said: 'I'm very pleased that this attempt to censor this book has failed.' Asked if he had any second thoughts over writing any further books, he added: 'I'm just a reporter, I'm going to keep on trying to report the stories.' A libel claim brought by a Kazakh mining giant over passages in a journalist's book about 'dirty money' has been dismissed by a High Court judge. Eurasian Natural Resources Corporation (ENRC) sued the Financial Times's Tom Burgis over his book Kleptopia: How Dirty Money is Conquering the World. Above: Mr Burgis today with his book outside the Royal Courts of Justice The judge also added that the book does not allege the three men were murdered, but says their deaths were suspicious. The High Court in London was told that the bodies of former ENRC employees James Bethel and Gerrit Strydom were found in separate motel rooms during a joint motorbike trip in Missouri in May 2015, with their causes of death later recorded as malaria. Andre Bekker's body was found inside his burned-out Audi in Johannesburg, South Africa, the following year. Adrienne Page QC, for ENRC, said that 'the many very serious allegations contained in the book which refer to the claimant or its owners, shareholders or officers are highly disputed'. The barrister had argued the book would be understood to mean that ENRC had the three men murdered to protect the corporation's business interests or secrets. She told the court: 'The deaths and the suspected poisoning are located in that part of the narrative where the secrets of the corporation are spilling, mouths are opening.' 'Protecting the secrets of the corporation was the raison d'etre for the murders.' Ms Page disputed that the book did not refer to the company itself, telling the court: 'It is always the corporation that is in the firing line. ' Tom Burgis outside of the Royal Courts of Justice in London after a high court judge dismissed a libel claim against him over his book The barrister continued in her written arguments: 'It may be accepted that killing a person, like every other action, cannot physically be carried out by a corporation; it must be carried out by individuals. 'The reader would understand that the murders were carried out at the behest of the claimant in order to protect its dirty secrets.' 'The claimant was intimately bound up in the murders,' she added. However, lawyers for Mr Burgis and HarperCollins had argued that the parts of the book in the claim did not refer to ENRC. Their barrister Andrew Caldecott QC told the High Court: 'The question is whether the suspicious nature of the deaths would be linked by the ordinary reader to individuals, rather than a company. 'If it is only individuals, then the claim fails.' Mr Caldecott said the focus of the book was not on the company or its board but on suspect individuals. 'Murder is, if I may say so, not a way of generally doing business,' he added. The barrister later added: 'We say that, in fact, in relation to the three murders, a person would come away thinking they need investigation. The High Court in London was told that the bodies of former ENRC employees James Bethel (left) and Gerrit Strydom (right) were found in separate motel rooms during a joint motorbike trip in Missouri in May 2015, with their causes of death later recorded as malaria 'We say it would be wrong in fact to point a finger of reasonable suspicion at any one individual.' Giving his ruling, Mr Justice Nicklin found the allegations were not directed at any ENRC corporations. The judge said the book repeatedly refers to a 'trio' of businessmen from the former Soviet Union who founded ENRC, who Mr Caldecott said had links to Russian criminal organisations. Giving his ruling, a copy of Mr Burgis' book could be seen on Mr Justice Nicklin's desk with several paper tabs sticking out of pages. Mr Justice Nicklin said: 'The book presents the claimants as little more than a front for the operations of the trio. 'If a reader pauses to consider the role played ENRC in these events, it was being used as a vehicle for those criminal acts... or was sometimes the target. It was not the organiser of it. 'Only individuals can carry out acts of murder or poisoning, only individuals can be motivated to do so to protect their business interests.' As the claim was brought by ENRC the company, this ruling meant the case could not continue. He continued: 'It would appear to me that the consequence of this ruling is that this claim must be dismissed and judgment must be entered for the defendant.' ENRC was ordered to pay 50,000 in legal costs to Mr Burgis and HarperCollins. Georgia has applied to join the European Union 'immediately', days after Ukraine also demanded membership of the bloc after Russia launched its brutal invasion. Georgia's application also came a day after the European Parliament backed Ukraine's bid to apply for EU membership. The ruling Georgian Dream party chairman, Irakli Kobakhidze, announced the party's 'decision today to immediately apply for the EU membership'. Georgia calls on the EU 'to review our application in an urgent manner and to make the decision to grant Georgia the status of an EU membership candidate,' he told a press conference. Georgia will 'immediately' apply for EU membership, the Black Sea nation's ruling party said Wednesday. Pictured: President of Georgia Salome Zourabichvili and European Council President Charles Michel speak after their meeting in Brussels, Belgium on March 1, 2022 Russian troops take position at the entrance of the flashpoint city of Gori, Georgia during Russia's invasion of regions of the country in 2008 Georgia's decision followed a similar move by Ukraine's President Volodymyr Zelensky, who won backing from MEPs in a non-binding resolution recommending that EU bodies grant Ukraine the status of candidate country. Russian President Vladimir Putin last week ordered a full-scale invasion of Ukraine. The vote was largely seen in Georgia as a window of opportunity to advance its own EU aspirations - a goal enshrined in the country's constitution. However, Kobakhidze also slammed Ukraine's decision to recall their ambassador to the country over what Zelensky called Gerogia's government's 'immoral stance' on sanction on Russia, as well as blocking a flight to bring in volunteers to the country. This decision is not just unjustified, it is completely illogical for many reasons, Kobakhidze said, according to Open Caucasus Media. If the reason for recalling the ambassador was the non-imposition of sanctions, we would like to remind you that a number of countries have refused to impose sanctions, including Moldova, Turkey, Armenia, Azerbaijan, Israel and others. 'However, the Ukrainian authorities have not recalled their an ambassador from any of these countries,' he said. Last year, the Georgian government announced its intention to apply for EU membership in 2024. Georgia's and Ukraine's efforts to forge closer ties with the West has long angered former imperial master Russia. Tensions with Moscow culminated in Russia's invasion of Georgia in 2008. Both Georgia and Ukraine have signed association agreements with the EU 'on economic integration and political approximation,' and free trade, which give no guarantee for an eventual membership. Russia and Georgia fought a war in August 2008 over the breakaway Georgian region of South Ossetia, which saw hundreds of deaths. Moscow continues to garrison troops there and to support another breakaway region, Abkhazia, after recognising both regions as independent states. Russia and Georgia fought a war in August 2008 over the breakaway Georgian region of South Ossetia. Moscow continues to garrison troops there and to support another breakaway region, Abkhazia, after recognising both regions as independent states President Zelensky signed a request for Ukraine to join the EU 'immediately' on Monday On Monday, Ukraine's President Zelensky signed a request for Ukraine to join the EU 'immediately' as Putin's brutal invasion continued. However, Brussels' officials warned the process to join the block takes years, and that there is no fast-track procedure for membership. Joining the bloc can be a long and complex process that often requires major reforms to reach EU standards. A country also has to prove that their finances are heading in a direction that will allow them to adopt the euro. Speaking on Ukraine's chances, EU foreign policy chief Josep Borrell said that any bid for membership could take 'a lot of years'. The European Commission said that, in any case, it can only negotiate with hopeful candidate countries on the basis of a mandate from the EU's 27 member states - something it has not received for Ukraine. 'At the end of the day, this is a debate at the highest political level, for the (European) Council,' where the member states take decisions, said a commission spokeswoman, Ana Pisonero. Advertisement Police in Moscow and Saint Petersburg were today pictured dragging away people who had gathered to protest against Vladimir Putin's invasion of Ukraine. Dramatic images showed riot officers manhandling both men and women on Wednesday - after the Russian president stepped up his forces' attacks on cities in Ukraine. Two women were seen sobbing as they were dragged away in Saint Petersburg, whilst one man in Moscow was carried by three officers, all of whom were wearing balaclavas. The scenes came after jailed Kremlin critic Alexei Navalny had urged Russians to stage daily protests against their country's invasion of Ukraine, saying the country should not be a 'nation of frightened cowards' and calling Putin 'an insane little tsar.' 'I am urging everyone to take to the streets and fight for peace,' he said in a statement posted on Facebook, calling on Russians not to be afraid of going to prison. 'If, to prevent war, we need to fill up the jails and police vans, we will fill up the jails and police vans.' 'Everything has a price and now, in the spring of 2022, we should pay that price.' Russian police were today pictured dragging away people who had gathered in Saint Petersburg to protest against Vladimir Putin's invasion of Ukraine Dramatic images showed riot officers manhandling both men and women on Wednesday - after the Russian president stepped up his forces' attacks on cities in Ukraine A Russian law enforcement officer detains a demonstrator during an anti-war protest against Russia's invasion of Ukraine, in Saint Petersburg, Russia The scenes came after jailed Kremlin critic Alexei Navalny had urged Russians to stage daily protests against their country's invasion of Ukraine, saying the country should not be a 'nation of frightened cowards' and calling Putin 'an insane little tsar'. Above: Navalny seen during a court hearing last month The 45-year-old, who led the biggest protests in Russia against Putin in recent years and survived a poisoning with Novichok nerve agent in 2020, is now serving a prison sentence on old fraud charges outside Moscow. Thousands of Russians have taken to the streets to protest the invasion since it began, and more than 6,800 demonstrators have been arrested, according to OVD-Info, an independent monitor. Navalny urged the people of Russia and Belarus - which allowed Russian troops passage to attack Ukraine - to demonstrate in main squares at 7:00 pm every weekday and at 2:00 pm on weekends and during holidays. 'You cannot wait another day,' he said, adding that Russia should not become a 'nation of frightened cowards' who are pretending not to see an 'aggressive war unleashed by our clearly insane little tsar.' Earlier, a haunting video showed a Russian mother in Moscow trying to explain to her tearful daughter why they had been detained by armed police for opposing Putin's war. They went to put flowers at the Ukrainian embassy in Moscow, and the children handed in 'No to War' posters they had drawn. But the mothers and children were all detained. Sociologist Alexandra Arkhipova told of her horror when mothers Ekaterina Zavizion and Olga Alter and their children Sofya Gladkova, seven, Liza Gladkova, 11, Gosha Petrov, 11, Matvey Petrov, nine and David Petrov, seven, were held by Russian officers. 'All of them were detained by the police,' she said. The police were keeping them first in a police vehicle, and brought them to the Presnenskoye police station. 'Phones were taken away from parents, and the policemen are shouting at the parents threatening these brave mums and their children, that the kids could be put into care right now, and these mothers would lose their parental rights.' Putin last Thursday ordered troops to invade pro-Western Ukraine to 'de-militarise' and 'denazify' the country. Ukraine says more than 350 civilians, including 14 children, have been killed in the conflict and the International Criminal Court has opened a war crimes investigation against Russia. Police officers detain women during a protest against Russia's invasion of Ukraine in central Moscow on March 2, 2022 This man was seen being forced forwards by two Russian riot officers in Saint Petersburg as a crackdown on protests continued Thousands of Russians have taken to the streets to protest the invasion since it began, and more than 6,800 demonstrators have been arrested, according to OVD-Info, an independent monitor This protester was seen with a peace symbol drawn on her hand as she took to the streets in Saint Petersburg on Wednesday A riot police officer stands by barriers in Manezhnaya Square in central Moscow during an unauthorized rally against the Russian military operation in Ukraine Today, Russia stepped up its attacks on Ukraine's major cities. Officials in Mariupol said a 'full-scale genocide' was underway as Putin's men unleashed a 15-hour artillery barrage. Kharkiv also came under heavy bombardment in a dark sign of what could be to come in the capital Kyiv. Mariupol, located in the south of Ukraine on the Black Sea, has been surrounded by Russian forces and struck by artillery in an apparent attempt to bomb the city into submission as Putin's men resort to 'medieval' tactics. Sergiy Orlov, the deputy mayor, said entire districts had been levelled with such heavy barrages that medics cannot get in to retrieve the dead. 'We are near to a humanitarian catastrophe,' he said. 'Russian forces are several kilometers away on all sides,' he added. 'The Ukrainian army is brave and they will continue to defend the city, but Russia does not fight with their army, they just destroy districts... We are in a terrible situation.' Law enforcement officers are seen in Moscow city center on the day of an unauthorized rally against the Russian military operation in Ukraine A demonstrator reacts as she is detained by a law enforcement officer during an anti-war protest against Russia's invasion of Ukraine, in Saint Petersburg These two riot officers marched a protester away, but he held his thumb aloft defiantly after taking to the streets Russian law enforcement officers detain a person wearing a press symbol during an anti-war protest against Russia's invasion of Ukraine, in Saint Petersburg People sit at a bus stop as law enforcement officers line up during an anti-war protest against Russia's invasion of Ukraine, in Saint Petersburg Meanwhile Kharkiv, Ukraine's second city, came under heavy barrage in the early hours as Russian troops try to surround and seize it after days of fighting - with a rocket slamming into a university building and police station in the early hours before the city council was also struck, with one of the explosions caught in a dramatic video. The bombardment gives a dark taste of what is likely to come for other cities such as Kyiv after analysts warned Russia's military - having suffered heavy losses trying to pull off ambitious precision strikes - was likely to resort to surrounding cities and bombing them into submission to force a bloody victory. Putin invaded Ukraine amid a historic crackdown on opposition at home, with Navalny's political organisations banned. Navalny accused Putin of using 'pseudo-historic nonsense' to justify the invasion of Ukraine. 'I cannot, do not want and will not remain silent, watching how pseudo-historical nonsense about the events from 100 years ago has become an excuse for Russians to kill Ukrainians, and those, defending themselves, kill Russians,' he said. 'Putin is not Russia.' Former President George W. Bush recalled some of his memorable interactions with Russian President Vladimir Putin, while discussing how the Russian president miscalculated the invasion of Ukraine at an event Tuesday night in Chicago. 'I introduced Vladimir Putin to Barney, our Scottish terrier, and [Putin] dissed him. A year later, Laura and I go visit Vladimir and his wife - this was before he decided to be with a gymnast 30 years younger - and he says, "I want you to meet my dog,"' Bush recalled, according to Politico. Bush said 'out runs a huge Russian hound,' with Putin telling the American president, 'Bigger, stronger, and faster than Barney.' The former Republican president also floated that while Russia and China seem to be operating in tandem, there might be an opening for the United States to form 'an alliance of convenience' with the Asian nation. Former President George W. Bush (left) spoke Tuesday night in Chicago and brought up how Russian President Vladimir Putin 'dissed' his Scottish terrier Barney (right) Bush recalled meeting Putin (left) and his wife - noting this was before 'he decided to be with a gymnast 30 years younger,' a reference to Putin's 'secret first lady' Alina Kabaeva (right) Putin (left) with his Akita dog Yume (right) in December 2016 'I don't think they want to be too cozy with Putin at this moment,' Bush surmised. 'So this might be an opportunity to conduct some diplomacy that [creates] an alliance of convenience,' he said. 'The president's foreign policy team has an opportunity to deal with China in a way that will surprise the country.' Bush said that Putin 'loves the idea' of isolating China against the United States. 'The idea of China needing Putin's energy gives Putin a chance to say to the world: " The United States is no longer as significant as it used to be. It's now Russia and China." And that's just not going to hold given his actions in Ukraine,' Bush said. He said that Putin believed the demise of the Soviet Union was bad for the Russian people. 'So we're watching him try to reinstate Soviet hegemony,' Bush said. But he miscalculated by going into Ukraine, the ex-president said. 'He picks weak people to do that,' Bush said. 'He thought Ukraine was weak, but it's not. Ukraine is showing a backbone and a spine that this world sorely needs to see.' Additionally, Bush reacted to how Germany stepped up. Last week in the run-up to Putin's assault on Ukraine, the German government pulled the plug on the Nord Stream 2 pipeline deal, which would have flowed more Russian gas into Germany. New German Chancellor Olaf Scholz also announced he would be sending missiles and anti-tank weapons to Ukraine to help them fight off the Russians. 'The Germans attitude has shifted completely from becoming guilt-ridden pacifists to people who understand that liberty is under attack and we have to do something about it,' Bush said. Bush spoke at a benefit fundraiser for the Illinois Holocaust Museum and Education Center. During Bush's time in office, Putin was married to Lyudmila Aleksandrovna Ocheretnaya, who he divorced in 2014. Putin, 69, has been romantically linked to Russian gymnast Alina Kabaeva, 38, since 2008. The couple are reported to have several children together. Kabaeva disappeared from public for more than two and a half years and then reappeared in August to criticize judges at the Tokyo Olympics for not giving a Russian gymnast a gold medal. These are the three young sisters who were shot dead by their drug addict father at the California church where he was living before he turned the gun on himself. The Sacramento County Coroner's Office on Tuesday identified David Mora-Rojas' victims as Samantha Mora Gutierrez, 10; Samarah Mora Gutierrez, 9; Samia Mora Gutierrez, 13. Also shot and killed was Nathaniel Kong, 59, who was an executive at The Church in Sacramento, and who was chaperoning the three sisters to the visit because the girls' mom - Mora-Rojas' ex-girlfriend - had obtained a restraining order against him. Samantha would have celebrated her 11th birthday on Wednesday. Officials said Mora-Rojas, 39, was under a restraining order from his longtime girlfriend and not supposed to have a gun, which he used to shoot his three daughters, their chaperone and himself at 5pm on Monday. Three sisters killed by their father at a Sacramento church have been identified as (L to R) Samarah Mora Gutierrez, 9; Samantha Mora Gutierrez, 10, and Samia Mora Gutierrez, 13 David Fidel Mora-Rojas, 39, was not supposed to have a gun because of the restraining order against him from his girlfriend and was on a supervised visit with his three children at the church on Monday afternoon A memorial for the three Gutierrez sisters is seen outside The Church in Sacramento on Tuesday. Mora also killed his daughters' chaperone before committing suicide Kong was an executive with the nondenominational Christian church who had served Mora with that restraining order in May. At the time of the killings, Mora was out on bail after being arrested last week on several charges, including assaulting a police officer. On Tuesday night, neighbors organized a candlelight vigil at the church to mourn the three Gutierrez sisters, reported ABC10. Samarah, the youngest of the slain sisters, was described as kind and loyal. 'If I didnt have anyone to play with, she would be there for me, and if I got sad or hurt, she would be the one to help me,' her friend Estella Hernandez said through tears. Samantha (center) would have celebrated her 11th birthday on Wednesday Samantha, pictured as a younger girl, was described as a keen reader by those who knew her Samantha, the middle child, was said to be an eager reader who always had a book in her hand, and Samia, was described by a friend on Facebook as being 'full of light.' A GoFundMe campaign that has been launched by the girls' aunt has drawn more than $31,000 in donations as of Wednesday. Sgt. Rod Grassmann, spokesperson for the Sacramento County Sheriff's Office, called Mora's decision to shoot and kill his children 'unfathomable.' Oscar Maldonado, a friend of the family, told CBS Sacramento that Mora was a hard-working but aggressive man who was battling drug abuse and mental health issues. 'He was very emotional, like really emotional,' Maldonado said. Court documents paint a disturbing picture of verbal and physical abuse inflicted by Mora on his estranged girlfriend, who is the mother of their three daughters. Mora 'is a very jealous person,' the woman wrote in her request for the restraining order. 'He threatened to kill me if he ever caught me cheating... He has choked me in the past.' She said he told her he hadn't killed her 'because he would not know where to go with the children.' In the filing, she said he might flee to Mexico, where he had family. 'I am scared and nervous. I am afraid (Mora) is going to hurt me. I do not want to return home,' wrote the woman, whose name was withheld because she is an abuse victim. The woman also said he was hospitalized for a week in April after 'expressing a desire to commit suicide.' The horrific attack started at around 5.10pm on Monday when officers were called to the 'The Church in Sacramento' in the Arden Mall area of the city, reported ABC10. The shooting happened in the main room of the small church. Emergency services were alerted after an employee at the church who was upstairs heard gunshots and called 911. A huge police presence built up outside the church where the shooting took place Multiple people were killed in a shooting on Monday at a church near the California capital of Sacramento, CBS13 television reported, citing the Sacramento Metro Fire department A large police presence could be seen gathered outside the church in the Arden-Arcade area Police vehicle could be seen positioned outside of the church early on Monday evening Residents watch police activity following a shooting at a church in Sacramento, California People look over a fence towards a church following a shooting in Sacramento Police block off Ethan Way and Wyda Way after a shooting at the Church in Sacramento A father killed four, shooting three of his children before killing himself at the church in Sacramento A sheriff's deputy puts up crime scene tape following the shooting A police officer can be seen putting up crime scene tape following the shooting on Monday A five-year order was imposed May 19. It stipulated Mora only have supervised visits with his daughters for up to four hours per week with a mutually agreed-upon chaperone. He also was required to take anger management courses. Authorities have not disclosed what type of weapon was used. Mora, who also was identified as David Fidel Mora Rojas in court papers, was taken into custody for a mental health evaluation last April 17, and nine days later a temporary restraining order was granted. His legal troubles continued recently, as Mora-Rojas was arrested in Merced County on DUI charges by CHP Los Banos on Feb. 22, 2022. He was booked into the Merced County Jail on charges of DUI Alcohol, Driving Under the Influence with a Blood Alcohol over .08, Battery Against a Peace Officer, Obstructing / Resists Public Officer, and Battery on a Peace Officer with Injury. 'He was drunk and while they were arresting him or trying to he decided he wanted to fight and ended up with felony charges because he assaulted a CHP officer, causing injuries,' Deputy Daryl Allen, a spokesman for the Merced County Sheriffs Office, told The Sacramento Bee. He was bailed out on February 24. Sgt. Grassman from the city's sheriff's office said he did not know if the family members belonged to the the church, which sits on a mostly residential block near a commercial area east of downtown Sacramento, CBS13 reported. It wasn't immediately known how many people were at the church or if there were any services or activities at the time of the shooting. Investigators believe the shooting happened during a supervised visit for the father inside the church with the children and a chaperone who also was killed. The church is known to hold Bible study classes for children and teens, although none were scheduled for Monday. The three girls went to Bannon Creek Elementary School and Leroy Greene Academy in the Natomas Unified School District, which issued a statement. 'There are very few words that can give comfort right now for this unspeakable tragedy,' the district said Tuesday. 'There will be a range of emotions from our students and staff, particularly at the schools where the students attended.' So far, a possible motive for the shooting had not been released but the sheriff's office said it was a case of domestic violence. Police officers investigate the scene of a shooting at the church Police investigate a shooting at the Church in Sacramento near Wyda Way and Ethan Way in Sacramento on Monday Sacramento County Sheriff's deputies stand by police tape that blocks the street leading to a church where a shooting occurred with multiple victims, in Sacramento on Monday Neighbors Samantha Sanchez and Nick Martinez watch as police officers investigate the scene of a shooting at The Church in Sacramento Sgt. Rod Grassman from the city's police force also confirmed there was a fifth person killed, however it is unclear if that person was also a family member 'Another senseless act of gun violence in America this time in our backyard. In a church with kids inside. Absolutely devastating,' said California Governor Gavin Newsom said in a statement. 'Our hearts go out to the victims, their families and their communities. We are working closely with local law enforcement. 'Our thoughts are with the community, parishioners, and all those impacted by this horrific event.' The Mayor of Sacramento, Darrell Steinberg, also tweeted about the incident on Monday night. 'This is an unspeakable tragedy. It happens too often, and tonight it happened in our backyard. First thoughts are with the victims and their families. Same to the first responders who have to confront such a horrible scene.' The shooting took place at a church on the outskirts of the California state capital in the Arden Mall area of the city (pictured, file photo) 'Another senseless act of gun violence in America this time in our backyard. In a church with kids inside. Absolutely devastating,' said California Governor Gavin Newsom said in a statement The Mayor of Sacramento, Darrell Steinberg, also tweeted about the tragedy on Monday night BREAKING NEWS: @sacsheriff deputies responding to a shooting a church on Wyda Way in the Arden-Arcade neighborhood. There is a massive sheriff and police presence there right now. @van_tieu is on the scene and photojournalist Miguel Cano pic.twitter.com/VFBCNfe76z Madison Wade (@madisoncwade) March 1, 2022 It wasn't known what connection Mora might have had to the church, which is in a residential area. Neighbors said the shooting occurred quickly and police swarmed the area. Sandi Davis said she was taking her dog outside when she heard a gunshot. She immediately let go of the leash and dropped to the ground to protect herself. Yadira Ortega, who lives across the street from the church, said she heard gunfire while sitting in her car after returning home from picking up takeout dinner for her family. She was with her 9-year-old daughter and 6-year-old son. Ortega said there were multiple shots, then a pause before a final shot. Ortega said she knows little about The Church in Sacramento other than it's busy on Sundays but mostly quiet during the week. A man who emerged from the church several times to talk to reporters outside said the church is made up of multiple buildings, including a living space where he and several other members live. The man, who only gave his name as Alfredo, said he was in the churchs main building when the shooting happened and that neighbors called police because he did not have a phone. Ana DeJesus, right, is comforted by her daughter, Lizbeth DeJesus after placing a teddy bear and flowers on a memorial Ana DeJesus, right, places a teddy bear on a growing memorial at The Church in Sacramento, Calif. Flowers are seen outside the The Church in Sacramento Tuesday The entrance to the parking lot at The Church in Sacramento, Calif., is shown on Tuesday, March 1 A teddy bear, balloons and flowers are among the items left at growing memorial at The Church He declined to provide more details, saying church elders planned to issue a statement later. On Tuesday morning, a small memorial with flowers, balloons, stuffed animals, a candle and a piece of paper that read 'Prayers for peace, may your souls rest' was set up outside the church. Faith Whitmore, chief executive of the Sacramento Regional Family Justice Center that provides services to victims of domestic abuse, said the girls' mother sought help through the agency last April. A case manager and an attorney worked with her to obtain the restraining order. 'She came in, she needed crisis intervention, she needed resources, she needed help,' said Whitmore, who did not work directly with the woman. Whitmore said their organization will now push for their other clients to have visits supervised by professionals, and they plan to seek out funding to cover the costs. Joyce Bilyeu, deputy director of the center, also did not work directly with the woman. She spoke generally about supervised visitations, saying the specifics can vary widely. Sometimes, a victim will request that a pastor or grandparent be the chaperone in their home or church, she said. Other victims seek professional supervision with a trained mediator in a safe location close to law enforcement, but that option can be costly, Bilyeu said. Bilyeu said visits in places like churches can give victims a false sense of security. 'Generally a lot of people think a church is a safe place,' she said. But 'theres no metal detectors in a church.' A restraining order, while a typical part of the process in domestic violence cases, should not be considered a solution or deterrent to abuse, she said. 'It is not a shield of armor,' Bilyeu said. Three teenage boys and an adult were stabbed during a knife fight in a Brooklyn subway station Tuesday, police said. The melee erupted about 3:15 p.m. on the J and Z platform of the Flushing Ave. subway station, on the border of Williamsburg and Bedford-Stuyvesant. Advertisement When the dust settled, three 16-year-old boys and a 21-year-old man all staggered into nearby Woodhull Hospital with stab wounds. Police respond to a stabbing at the Flushing Avenue J subway station in Brooklyn on Tuesday. (Gardiner Anderson/for New York Daily News) One of the teens was stabbed in the arm, while the other two were knifed in the chest. The 21-year-old man was stabbed in the arm and chest, cops said. All were expected to recover. Advertisement Alberto Rodriguez, father of one of the victims, said he rushed from work to the hospitals emergency room after he learned what happened. Ive got to wait until the doctors come outside and speak to me. He was stabbed in the side of his stomach, he said. Today is his birthday. ... I left my job and I drove over here quick. Hes stable, but his other friends got it worse. Police have made no arrests in the case, and the investigation continued Tuesday night. It is hard to fully process what is happening in Ukraine. It is a hellscape, as all war is, but as is now common in modern conflicts that hell is being broadcast in nearly real-time on social media. It is a literal live Twitter feed of the worst atrocities that mankind is capable of committing against one another. It adds an extra layer of anxiety and terror every time we click refresh. What Putin is doing very well may prove to be one of the worst modern examples of war crimes. The Hagues chief prosecutor at the International Criminal Court has announced that he plans to open an probe into possible crimes against humanity as rapidly as possible. Since the war between Russia and Ukraine started a week ago we have seen footage of children's hospitals, orphanages and schools being bombed. Huge sections of beautiful, extravagant cities have been reduced to rubble, death, destruction and worse. Russian troops have reportedly killed hundreds of civilians, including more than a dozen children. We have also seen great displays of heroism from Ukrainian President Zelensky -- a man who will go down in world history for his extreme bravery for his refusal to abandon his people. The actor-turned-president has chosen to stay and fight despite having the opportunity to flee and the offer of a ride out of his country by our own President Biden. We have also seen the world champion boxer and Mayor of Kyiv, Vitali Klitschko, as well as his brother Wladimir (also an ex-superstar boxer) take up arms and join the rest of the Ukrainian forces to defend their country. As another country goes to war remember what we have to be appreciative of and why it is worth fighting for. (Above) Ukrainian family hugs in an underground metro station used as bomb shelter in Kyiv on March 2, 2022 These men are internationally famous athletes and millionaires several times over, they do not need to do this. It is also reported they are on Putin's top kill list. Maybe even more impressive, we have seen exemplary profiles in courage from average Ukrainian people, who are joining up to fight. Social media is filled with videos of people making Molotov cocktails on street corners. In another viral video, a women appears to throw a flaming bottle from her car at Russian military vehicle. All of it is extraordinary and gut wrenching to watch unfold on the world's stage. I have found myself, like so many others, having a hard time focusing on anything else in the news or in my personal life. All of it feels completely overwhelming because there is little the general American public can do other than show support on social media and in our communities at protests and rallies. We can also donate to humanitarian and refugee aid for the Ukrainian people. We can call our representatives in Congress and demand action, but overall, the situation feels simultaneously dire and completely out of control. I have found myself fielding calls and text messages from friends and family only half-jokingly discussing where this escalation could lead. At the top of concerns from my friend group are worries about this being the beginning moments of World War III and the potential of a nuclear bomb being dropped. Russian troops have reportedly killed hundreds of civilians, including more than a dozen children. (Above) Premature babies in Ohmadyt children's hospital basement used as a shelter for protection against airstrikes, in Kyiv on March 1, 2022 People are justifiably very, very nervous as to what comes next. If there is one thing the horror in Ukraine and the tyrannical oppression from Putin can teach us though, it is that America, our democracy and liberty, are truly unique and special and worth fighting for. I have found myself this past week -- even more so than normal feeling extremely grateful to live in a country that is truly free. We have autonomy as a sovereign democracy. We vote in free and fair elections. We have freedom of speech, freedom of the press and we dont live under the immediate existential threat of a looming fascist dictatorship threatening to invade us at any moment. We are not thrown in jail for speaking out against our president, as they are in Russia. We are not handed state-mandated propaganda. We have freedom on the internet with social media, and so many other blessings that come with the liberty of the West that I can't possibly list them all here. But we must remember that these freedoms are not guaranteed. We must always remember President Ronald Reagans warning: Freedom is never more than one generation away from extinction. Our elections are free, but forces in our society from both the left and the right seek to undermine our faith in the integrity of the ballot box. Social media censors ban and block opinions and convenient facts that they dont like. In Canada, truckers protesting the Ottawa were dragged off the streets after the government declared unprecedented emergency measures. In America, some of the most liberal among us cheered them on. The rising threat of Communist China is an obvious challenge to our futures, but America and the West have not fully come to grips with the danger. Seeing so many Ukrainians willingly take up arms for a cause greater than themselves has been heart-wrenching, but also inspiring. See these images up close, no matter how hard it is to look at them. (Above) Sick children and women with their newborn babies stand at a basement used as a bomb shelter at the Okhmadet children's hospital in central Kyiv, Ukraine on March 1. 2022 That said -- it has also been hard to see so many here in the West take a callous and disconnected view of the atrocities being committed against innocent Ukrainians. Quite a few notable people in the commentary class keep echoing that this shouldn't be our problem. But this is an opportunity for Americans to put themselves in the shoes of a Ukrainian mother huddled with her infant daughter in a subway that has been turned into a bomb shelter. Imagine themselves as the parent whose premature baby is being tended to in an underground ad hoc ICU. As another country goes to war remember what we have to be appreciative of and why it is worth fighting for. Censorship, dislike for political opponents, intolerance for one anothers ideas is too rampant in our society. Remember how lucky we are and how precious and fragile freedom really is. See these images up close, no matter how hard it is to look at them. Realize what we have and how many billions of people on the other side of the world are willing to die for what we so easily take for granted. Hold your kids a little tighter. Speak more kindly to your neighbor. Take time to appreciate that while Americans may not always agree the cultivation of a strong and vibrant democracy is in all our best interests. And pray for Ukraine. A 60-year-old woman who admitted smothering her dementia-stricken mother to death after she struggled to look after the 89-year-old who was 'in need of constant care' is acquitted of murder. Winifred Grover, 89, was cared for by her daughter Cheryl Banks, 60, at the home they shared together in Essex before Banks told her family that she had killed Winifred by smothering her. Mrs Grover, who was found unresponsive on June 21, had dementia and Alzheimer's while Banks was her sole carer for the past three years. Banks admitted manslaughter via diminished responsibility and was acquitted of murder at Basildon Crown Court. Winifred Grover, 89, was cared for by her daughter Cheryl Banks, 60, at the home they shared together in Essex before Banks smothered her to death. Pictured: Police at the home in Lenmore Avenue, Grays, Banks admitted manslaughter via diminished responsibility and was acquitted of murder at Basildon Crown Court. Mrs Grover was found unresponsive on June 21 last year at the home in Lenmore Avenue, Grays after Banks disclosed to members of her family that she had killed Winifred by smothering her Banks had been her mother's carer while her husband and son continued to work. She killed Mrs Grover after both men left the house in Lenmore Avenue, Grays on June 21, 2021. Basildon Crown Court heard that Banks had smothered her mother to death - which would have taken several minutes - before attempting to take her own life. However, Banks survived and was treated in hospital before being sent to police custody and charged with murder. She stood trial at Basildon Crown Court where, on Tuesday she was acquitted of murder, but had already admitted manslaughter via diminished responsibility. Prosecuting, Christopher Paxton QC told the jury that Banks had confessed to her mother's killing and accepted that it was unlawful Prosecuting, Christopher Paxton QC told the jury that Banks admitted her mother's death was unlawful and claimed she was suffering from an abnormality of mental function caused by a severe depressive episode. He said: 'The defendant gave her mother patient and loving care, effectively 24/7, and no doubt that placed a great burden upon the defendant Mrs Banks. 'On the 16th-17th June she spoke on the phone to her friend and spoke about her mother but gave no indication of any difficulty and certainly said or did nothing at all to raise any concerns. 'Her husband and son left for work that morning like any other day. Again Mrs Banks had raised no concerns then about her state of mind, she didn't tell them in any way and they didn't have any fears. 'That's not to say the situation was not difficult for them all but no concerns were raised on that Monday morning.' Detective inspector Kevin Hughes, from the Kent and Essex Serious Crime Directorate, said: 'This is a truly tragic case and one that has really saddened me and my team' Mr Paxton said Banks had told psychiatric experts whilst in custody that she had killed her mother after 8am, and that she knew she had to do that because her husband had left for work. In a prepared statement to officers at the time, Banks stated that she had experienced mental health problems for some time and that she loved her mother very much. Mr Paxton continued: 'Mrs Banks was in the sitting room next to the bedroom. She was lying on the sofa and told her son she had not taken enough tablets to kill herself. 'She then confessed to killing her mother saying she smothered his grandmother.' Banks' husband called paramedics and police but sadly Mrs Grover could not be saved Banks' husband called paramedics and police but sadly Mrs Grover could not be saved. Banks then confessed to an attending police officer that she had killed her mother and was arrested on suspicion of murder. The defence argued in the trial that Banks at the time had been suffering from depression which included psychotic symptoms. Detective inspector Kevin Hughes, from the Kent and Essex Serious Crime Directorate, said: 'This is a truly tragic case and one that has really saddened me and my team. 'Winifred Grover was an elderly woman in need of constant care. 'I want to extend my condolences, and those of my team, to her family.' For confidential support call Samaritans on 116123 or visit a Samaritans branch. The adoptive parents of two small California boys who vanished in December have been charged with murdering them and prosecutors say they killed them three months before reporting them missing. Trezell West, 35, and Jacqueline West, 32, were arrested Tuesday night on murder and other charges in an indictment returned by a grand jury, Kern County District Attorney Cynthia Zimmer told a news conference in Bakersfield. The couple have four other kids who are now believed to be in protective custody. Orrin West, 4, and his brother Orson, 3, were reported missing from their family's backyard in the desert town of California City on Dec. 21, 2020. A huge search by law enforcement agencies and community members failed to find them. 'This morning, I'm saddened to announce that the investigation has revealed that Orrin and Orson West are deceased,' Zimmer said. 'The investigation has also revealed that they died three months before their adoptive parents reported them missing.' The district attorney said she was not permitted to reveal any facts of the case until the trial so it remains unclear how the boys died. Trezell West, 35, and Jacqueline West, 32, were arrested Tuesday night on murder and other charges. Orrin West, 4, (front) and his brother Orson, 3, (front) were reported missing from their family's backyard in the desert town of California City on December 21, 2020 Three-year-old Orson (right) and Orrin (left) West, four, were reported missing after playing outside their home in the 10700 block of Aspen Avenue, California City on Monday Trezell and Jaqueline West (shown last year after reporting the boys missing) have now been charged with murdering them. They have another four kids The grand jury heard testimony from 50 witnesses over three months. Zimmer said that a combination of direct and circumstantial evidence was presented, and the grand jury was convinced that the boys were dead. 'I would like to emphasize that the fact that law enforcement has not found their bodies does not preclude a murder prosecution,' Zimmer said. 'As a matter of fact, there have been many, hundreds, of what we call no-body homicides prosecuted across the United States successfully.' Both parents were being held without bail on two counts of second-degree murder, two counts of willful cruelty to a child and a count of false report of an emergency. Arraignment was scheduled for Thursday in Kern County Superior Court. Zimmer said it won't be known who the couple's attorneys will be until the court appearance. Parents-of-six Trezol and Jaqueline West, who fostered the boys in 2018 and adopted them the year after, said the back gate had been left open when they vanished Orson, left, and Orrin West (right) were reported missing on December 21 in California City. Police believe they had been dead for three months Adoptive grandmother, Wanda West, right, said: 'I just know they were really good parents as far as I'm concerned. 'Right now there are people outside the home, talking about where are the boys. 'It's like people don't realize we are grieving we are hurting just like they are' The family has four other children, two of them also adopted, and all are in protective custody, Zimmer said. Zimmer said that a week after the boys were reported missing 'crucial information came to light' that brought in the involvement of police in Bakersfield, about 60 miles west of California City. The district attorney did not reveal anything about that information. But it is known that the family lived in Bakersfield before moving to California City in September 2020. Asked if Orrin and Orson had actually ever been in California City, Zimmer said 'that's something we're going to answer during the trial.' Police and FBI agents searched a field in Bakersfield in March 2021, but the results of that effort were not revealed. 'We now realize that the search for the boys began after the real tragedy had already occurred. 'This is not a resolution in this case and there will not be a resolution completely in this case until these boys are brought home,' Bakersfield Police Chief Greg Terry said. A mother accused of murdering her five-year-old son Logan Mwangi was 'sarcastic' with detectives questioning her in the hospital about the tragedy, a court has heard. Logan was found dead in the River Ogmore in Pandy Park, around 250 metres from the flat where he lived with his family in Lower Llansantffraid, Sarn, Bridgend on the morning of July 31, 2021. His mother Angharad Williamson, 30, is on trial at Cardiff Crown Court with her partner John Cole, 40, and a 14-year-old boy accused of killing him. All three deny murdering the five-year-old, who jury members were told was found dumped like fly-tipped rubbish beside the river having suffered 56 injuries to his head, face, torso, arms and legs. Cardiff Crown Court heard today that Williamson attended hospital with police to see Logan's body after his death along with her mum and a friend. She was speaking with investigators just hours after son was pulled from a river near his home. The court heard detectives were trying to find out how Logan had died when Williamson was 'distressed' but not tearful. Detective constable Clair Griffiths said Williamson said the family had problems locking the back door at the family home in Sarn, Bridgend, but when pressed for more detail she became confrontational. DC Griffiths said Williamson told her: 'At one point she was quite sarcastic and said if she knew she had to remember all this detail she would have taken notes.' Logan Mwangi's mother Angharad Williamson, 30, (left) is on trial at Cardiff Crown Court with her partner John Cole (right), 40, and a 14-year-old boy accused of killing him Logan (pictured) was found dead in the River Ogmore in Pandy Park, around 250 metres from the flat where he lived with his family in Lower Llansantffraid, Sarn, Bridgend on the morning of July 31, 2021 Police and forensic officers at the scene of the alleged murder last year DC Griffiths said Williamson told her Logan had a bath the night before his alleged murder and watched Pokemon in her bedroom. She said Williamson told her: 'He would never leave the house alone. He's a very good boy.' The officer said she asked Williamson if Logan had any injuries on his body the night before he disappeared but was only told of a graze on his elbow. Asked if she saw any injuries, DC Griffiths said she saw a bruise above Logan's eye and a 'large circular bruise' to his stomach. Cardiff Crown Court previously heard Logan was found to have 56 external injuries as well as having suffered trauma to the brain and internal injuries to his liver, small intestine and bowel. Another police officer said that although Williamson made 'crying and sobbing sounds' at the hospital she never saw the mother cry. Detective constable Clare Edwards said: 'She made sounds of crying or sobbing but there were no tears. Williamson (pictured with her son Logan) denies murdering the five-year-old Cardiff Crown Court heard today that Williamson attended hospital with police to see Logan's (pictured) body after his death along with her mum and a friend. She was speaking with investigators just hours after son was pulled from a river near his home 'Her mother and friend has tears streaming down her face but we didn't see that with Angharad.' The court also heard how Williamson became 'aggressive' in the room where Logan lay dead, according to a hospital nurse. Nurse Rosie O'Neill said she spent around nine hours with Williamson to comfort her following her son's death. Miss O'Neill said Williamson had initially been friendly with health workers but after being questioned by detectives her demeanour changed. She said: 'It was almost like something changed. She was quite aggressive with a nasty streak about her.' The nurse told the jury Williamson didn't touch her son throughout until she later gave him a kiss on his forehead. She said: 'She seemed frightened to touch him. Her hands were hovering above his body never touching him. 'She went to kiss his forehead but she was looking at me - but I felt she made sure I was watching and I could see that she was being affectionate to Logan.' Police and forensic officers at the scene of the alleged murder last year Miss O'Neill said that while in the room Williamson said: 'Why didn't I teach him to swim' before being told by another nurse that he was found dead in the river and exclaiming: "You're the first person to tell me that." Williamson denies any involvement in her son's death saying she slept the whole night through and woke to find him missing. Cole and the youth are accused of moving Logan's body to the river while Williamson allegedly tried to remove incriminating evidence from the house and wash bloodstained bedsheets. Williamson and Cole appeared in the dock at Cardiff Crown Court while the youngster appeared via videolink from another room inside the court building. Williamson and the youth deny murder and perverting the course of justice. Cole denies murder but admits perverting the course of justice. Williamson and Cole deny causing or allowing the death of a child. The trial, in front of Mrs Justice Jefford which is expected to last six to eight weeks, continues. The White House on Wednesday unveiled a new $30 billion Covid-19 plan that is meant to leave the nation prepared for future outbreaks so that 'Americans no longer fear lockdowns.' The new blueprint focuses on four pillars: protecting against current infections, preparing for new variants, preventing shutdowns and doling out vaccines abroad. It comes one day after the White House rolled back its mask requirement on the heels of new CDC guidelines that say those in areas of low to medium transmission can go maskless. The plan, which will require additional funding from Congress includes steps to vaccinate children under 5 once the FDA approves a jab for them, to increase manufacturing capacity of vaccines to 1 billion per year, build up the supply of treatments like anti-viral pills and launch a 'test to treat' program. The test to treat program would allow those who believe they have been infected to get a free Covid-19 test at clinics and pharmacies and if it is positive be offered free treatments on the spot. It also calls for the U.S. to spend $5 billion to finish off its commitment to donate 1.2 billion vaccine doses to foreign nations. So far the U.S. has doled out 475 million doses around the world. And in a section on preparedness for new variants, the plan proposes a stockpile of masks in addition to at-home tests, vaccines and treatments. The plan also calls for Congress to enact a paid sick leave program. It calls for funding for schools to improve their ventilation systems and giving schools testing kits and other supplies. It includes a new EPA checklist to to improve ventilation for clean air in all buildings, White House coronavirus coordinator Jeff Zients said. Biden during his State of the Union address on Tuesday struck a message of hope in moving beyond Covid-19 precautions, as he underscored the importance of keeping kids in schools Health and Human Services Sec. Xavier Becerra said that so far the U.S. has distributed 690 million doses of vaccines, 4 million treatments, more than 270 million free N95s and free COVID-19 tests to 70 million households. Zients also said that those who placed an order for free at-home Covid-19 tests through Covidtests.gov will be able to place another order next week for a second round of tests. The Biden administration faced backlash over its slow rollout of free at-home tests at the height of the Omicron variant. Many received their free tests from the government weeks after their community had passed the variant's peak. So far, only half of the 500 million tests available have been claimed. And in addition funding the development of new anti-viral medications, Becerra said a key part of the plan seeks to address the symptoms of 'long Covid' reported by many across the country. Efforts to fight new variants will include greater data collection capability and expedited review of variant-specific vaccines and treatments. The Biden administration said that next week Americans will be able to order their second round of free Covid-19 tests The Biden administration has requested $5 billion to dole out vaccines abroad The administration last month requested $30 billion from Congress to fight Covid-19 here at home and an additional $5 billion to fight the virus abroad by doling out vaccines and PPE. Biden during his State of the Union address on Tuesday struck a message of hope in moving beyond Covid-19 precautions, as he underscored the importance of keeping kids in schools. 'We can end the shutdown of schools and businesses. We have the tools we need. Its time for Americans to get back to work and fill our great downtowns again,' said Biden. 'People working from home can feel safe to begin to return to the office. We're doing that here in the federal government. The vast majority of federal workers will once again work in person. Our schools are open. Let's keep it that way. Our kids need to be in school,' he added. Advertisement A top Chicago police officer has come under fire over footage of her DJing at a casino while she was on sick leave recovering from shoulder surgery. The 28-second video posted shows Saadia Carter - a captain in the youth division unit, whose husband Eric is the city's second most-powerful cop - turning the dials at the Horseshoe casino in Indiana, just minutes from downtown Chicago, on January 15. She took to the wheels of steel as part of a $30-a-ticket event to celebrate MLK Jr Day weekend, and appeared front-and-center on a flyer advertising the evening. Chicago PD told DailyMail.com that Carter wasn't paid for her appearance, and that she received permission to appear - but the party has nonetheless generated controversy. The incident was publicized by Paul Vallas, a Democrat running for mayor. He claims Carter, whose musical alter-ego is DJ Chyna, was raising her arms during the set, although that moment was not caught on camera. The Chicago Sun-Times followed-up DailyMail.com's exclusive by reporting that Carter had been subject to an internal affairs investigation over the incident thanks to a tip-off. It is unclear what the outcome was, but a CPD spokesman told DailyMail.com that Carter had not done anything wrong, suggesting that she'd been cleared. In a Facebook post last month, Vallas criticized Carter for 'moonlighting' as a DJ and 'holding her hand in the air.' He called it an example of the police department 'promoting unqualified and undeserving personnel into positions of leadership and affording them preferential treatment.' Carter is the wife of Chicago PD First Deputy Superintendent Eric Carter, who is the second most powerful police officer in the Windy City. The cop also shared a Facebook photo of herself raising her arm and DJing in December, although its unclear which arm she had the surgery on - and whether the snap was taken before or after her operation. Video posted to social media allegedly shows Chicago Police captain Saadia Carter performing a DJ set at the Horseshoe casino in Indiana while on medical leave in January Carter even appeared front-and-center on the poster for the $30-a-ticket event Carter (right) works in the youth division unit, which looks into child sex abuse claims. Her husband is Eric Carter (left), the department's First Deputy Superintendent A photo posted to her Facebook account in December shows Carter waving her arm in front of DJ equipment. In a lengthy response, Carter called Vallas' comments 'political games' and said she followed 'all rules regarding my recovery from a work related injury.' She insisted she had done nothing wrong, only DJs as a hobby, and that the past-time sees her 'basically push buttons,' meaning it doesn't strain any injuries. Carter leads the Special Investigations Unit, which investigates allegations of the sexual assault against children under 13 along with family related sexual abuse cases involving underage victims, according to Chicago police. In the video, Carter wears a red wig as she bops energetically to the music while standing in front of a laptop onstage. She doesn't appear to raise one of her arms, which remains by her side at all times. Carter defended herself in a lengthy Facebook post on February 18, calling Paul Vallas' comments 'political games' and saying she has never been employed by the Horseshoe 'Deejaying is my hobby and I absolutely love love love it! Music is life!!!' Carter said She plays near a banner that reads 'Horseshoe' while her image is projected onto a large screen for the crowd surrounding the stage. In her post defending her behavior, she said she started a group of Chicago police DJs 'when officers nationwide were being targeted for the actions of the few back in late 2020,' referring to months-long nationwide protests against police use of force. 'Deejaying is my hobby and I absolutely love love love it! Music is life!!!' she said. She denied ever having been employed by Horseshoe and said that she puts together 'free music sessions online to spread love through music, but most importantly, to show police in a different light. 'Please note that I am smart enough to know that everything I do will be played out for the benefit of those incompetent politicians that have nothing substantial to say, other than target innocent individuals in hopes of getting their moment in the media based on fabricated BS,' she added. Carter didn't address directly whether or not she'd been paid to DJ. Carter noted that DJing is relatively easy compared to everyday tasks like driving. 'I did have shoulder surgery and to be honest with you, it takes more strength and effort to turn a steering wheel than it does to Deejay. Chicago mayoral candidate Paul Vallas, a Democrat, suggested that Carter's DJ set was another example of 'promoting unqualified and undeserving personnel into positions of leadership and affording them preferential treatment' His February 18 Facebook post prompted a response from Carter on the same day 'Current equipment requires you basically punch buttons. My hobby brings me much needed peace and happiness while I struggle to recover and as I watch my husband work his AZZ off daily for this great City, and still be targeted for the benefit of politics,' she said. She went further by promoting her Twitch channel, where she streams some of her sets. 'By the way, please follow me on Twitch. I will be doing a set dedicated to all of you this Saturday. Make sure you activate the notification button so you will know when I am live. Please make sure that you pass this information along to all of your friends,' she wrote. Back in August, Carter's husband Eric faced criticism after he became impatient when the Emerald Society of cops arrived at the parking lot of the medical examiner's office to honor late officer Ella French, 29, who was killed during a traffic stop. Eric Carter, Saadia's husband, was criticized last year after he chose to skip a ritual honoring an officer who was killed in a traffic stop Ella French, 29, was killed during a traffic stop in West Englewood on August 7. When the Emerald Society showed up to the medical examiner's office to honor her, Eric Carter said, 'We don't have 20 minutes for this s***' Former police Superintendent Garry McCarthy said the tradition was 'sacred' and that it was 'inexcusable' that Carter chose to skip it 'We don't have 20 minutes for this s***,' Carter said in a recording, according to the Chicago Sun-Times. 'We're not waiting on the bagpipes. Go ahead and get the vehicle inside. Take it all the way inside. Do not stop.' Former police Superintendent Garry McCarthy said the tradition was 'sacred' and that it was 'inexcusable' that Carter chose to skip it. 'There's always enough time. Let's put it that way. If we had to wait two or three days, I would have done it,' McCarthy told the Sun-Times. Mayor Lori Lightfoot later defended Eric, who is second-in-command of the police department. 'There was no official honor guard that night. There was, let me choose my words carefully, [a] well-meaning but not well-organized group that wanted to hijack the procession. Which would have meant that the family would have been delayed exponentially in getting to the morgue,' the mayor said. 'Given the new restrictions that the new coroner has put in place, that wouldnt have been fair to them. So, a call was made under those circumstances to focus on the family. Eric Carter made the right call. I support what he did.' Emonte Morgan, 21, was charged with first-degree murder, attempted murder and other charges in French's death. His brother Eric Morgan, 22, was charged with aggravated unlawful use of a weapon, unlawful use of a weapon by a felon and obstruction of justice. Vallas, who posted about Saadia Carter's hobby and prompted her rant, was the CEO of Chicago Public Schools from 1995 to 2001. He also headed up school districts in Philadelphia, Louisiana and Bridgeport, Connecticut. He ran for governor of Illinois in 2002, losing the Democratic primary to former Gov. Rod Blagojevich. In 2019, he ran for mayor of Chicago, losing that primary to Lightfoot, whom he later endorsed. Crime and police accountability is a hotter topic in Chicago than ever before. Overall crime in Chicago is up 34 percent compared to the same time last year. Crime is up eight percent from 2020 and six percent from 2019. Overall crime in Chicago is up 34 percent compared to the same time last year. Crime is up eight percent from 2020 and six percent from 2019 Theft has gone up by 61 percent and car theft by 45 percent compared to last year, according to the latest statistics from the Chicago Police Department. There have been 87 murders in the city this year alone, up 85 percent from 2019, before the COVID-19 pandemic. Late last month, an elderly Chicago couple were brutally attacked by a stranger as they walked home from a subway stop in yet another instance of the city's spiraling crime wave. Bob Tataryn and his wife, Kathryn, were walking home last week from the Chicago Transit Authority Blue Line stop in the city's upscale Irving Park neighborhood, where houses go for $550,000 to $750,000, when a man started following them. As the suspect, who has not yet been identified, continued to stalk the couple, Bob confronted him and asked why he was following them. The man started punching them. It was only when Bob yelled that his wife was battling cancer, that the assailant left. Bob Tataryn and his wife, Kathryn, were walking home from the Chicago Transit Authority Blue Line stop on February 17 when they were brutally attacked Following the attack, Bob took to Facebook to share this photo of himself with a swollen nose and gauze taped to his face Bob was left with a broken nose and severe bruises to his face in the aftermath of the attack, and Kathryn needed two surgeries to deal with broken wrists and a broken jaw. She is now unable to open her mouth, Bob told CBS 2, and can only eat liquid food. 'My wife and I are not doing well,' Bob told DailyMail.com, adding that they are 'mentally weak' and 'physically improving.' Bob clarified that his wife does not suffer from cancer but he had yelled it in a desperate move to try and get the attacker to stop. At the CPAC conservative conference last month, Donald Trump lashed out against liberal cities for their 'soft-on-crime' policies that he claimed had left America's streets 'drenched with blood.' Donald Trump said 'Democrat-run cities are drenched in blood,' during his speech at CPAC on Firday as he blamed 'soft-on-crime' policies for a rise in violence across the nation Trump said Democratic leaders were to blame for the recent rise in homicides across the country, which saw an uptick in 2021 of 5 per cent last year after a 44 per cent rise the previous year, according to the Council on Criminal Justice's last report. 'Murders are setting records in our cities,' he said. 'The streets of our Democrat-run cities are drenched in blood.' Trump's comments are the latest rebuke against Democrats like Chicago Mayor Lori Lightfoot and New York Mayor Eric Adams, who vowed to curb a continuing rise in violent crimes but have little to show for it. Ukraine President Volodymyr Zelensky's top aide pleaded for more support from the West to fend off Russia's attacks and warned that Vladimir Putin would 'go for blood beyond Ukraine' if its allies don't do more to stop him. 'This war could be a prologue to a greater European or even global massacre,' Andriy Yermak, the head of the Ukrainian presidential office, wrote in a New York Times guest essay that he penned from a bunker in the capitol beside President Zelensky. He wrote as officials in Mariupol said a 'full-scale genocide' was underway after Putin's men unleashed a 15-hour artillery barrage, and a day after Russian strike targeted a TV tower in Kyiv and damaged the nearby Babi Yar Holocaust memorial. 'Not since the end of World War II has Europe seen violence and naked territorial ambition at such a scale,' Yermak wrote, begging Ukraine's Western allies to pay attention to the 'existential challenge' Putin 'poses to the world order.' Yermak said that Ukraine has precipitated the severity of his aggression since it began in 2014. 'That's because we know this war is not just about Ukraine. The Kremlin wants to create a new Russian empire,' he added. 'Again, make no mistake: Mr. Putin aims to advance this ideology by going for blood beyond Ukraine. He must be stopped.' Yermak pleaded for Ukraine's allies to send it more firepower, including antitank and antiaircraft weapons, and called on NATO to impose a no-fly zone over Ukraine. He also begged for tougher sanctions in the form of a full embargo on all Russian exports, including oil, to the U.S. and Europe. Andriy Yermak (left), the top aide of Ukraine President Volodymyr Zelensky (right), pleaded for more support from the West to fend off Russia's attacks Ukraine's military said Russia today renewed its assault 'on all fronts', with paratroopers landing in Kharkiv, tanks and trucks rolling into the center of Kherson, and strikes in Mariupol and Zhytomyr The president's top aide expressed gratitude for the weapons and equipment its allies have already provided and the sanctions they have imposed against Russia, but said Ukraine needs more support and wrote: 'our state's future and survival largely depend on the West.' 'This war could be a prologue to a greater European or even global massacre,' Yermak added. Zelensky and President Joe Biden spoke on Tuesday, during which the Ukrainian president appealed for more security, military and humanitarian assistance. Yermak outlined what his country needs to fend off Putin's invasion, as a convoy of Russian troops 40 miles long encroaches on Kyiv. 'Ukraine is not asking for its allies to put boots on the ground,' he wrote. 'But we need the West to back us up in order to keep defending our families and our land. We need to show Russia in painful terms the mistake it has made.' Yermak asked for more ammunition, antitank and antiaircraft weapons, and called on NATO to impose a no-fly zone over Ukraine. 'We recognize that this would be a serious escalation in the war and that it could bring NATO into direct conflict with Russia,' he wrote. 'But we firmly believe that Russia won't stop at just Ukraine, which would potentially drag NATO into this conflict anyway.' When it comes to sanctions, Yermak called for every Russian bank to be cut off from the SWIFT banking system and for every Russian oligarch to be sanctioned. He also called for a full embargo on all Russian exports, including oil, to the U.S. and Europe. 'These measures would not be without cost to the world economy, but the alternative is far worse,' he wrote. Finally, he made a plea for the international community to expel Russia from the United Nations or, 'at the very least,' excluded from the U.N. Security Council, where it has authority to veto. Yermak invoked Article 4 of the 1994 Budapest Memorandum on Security Assurances, in which the U.S., U.K. and Russia agreed to respect the sovereignty of Ukraine and demand 'immediate' assistance from the U.N. Security Council should the country face a nuclear threat. 'Just because the aggressor Russia vetoes U.N. Security Council action does not relieve the other parties of the promises they made to Ukraine,' Yermak said. 'The Kremlin wants to create a new Russian empire,' Yermak wrote the same day the Karazin National University campus (above) in the city of Kharkiv was destroyed after being struck by a Russian missile Yermak made his plea the day after a Russian strike targeted a TV tower in Kyiv and damaged the nearby Babi Yar Holocaust memorial (above) Despite the grim outlook, Yermak lauded the resilience of the Ukrainian people in defending their county and community. 'Russian forces are experiencing fierce resistance from both the Armed Forces of Ukraine and from Ukrainian citizens hurling homemade Molotov cocktails that Ukraine's government is encouraging them to make,' he wrote. Yermak also cited the U.S. Pentagon's reports that Russian soldiers have been surrendering or sabotaging their own vehicles and efforts to avoid fighting. 'They must know this war is unjust,' he wrote. Yermak echoed a tweet President Zelensky posted on Tuesday following the attack on Babi Yar, where Nazi occupiers killed more than 33,000 Jews over two days in 1941. 'To the world: what is the point of saying never again for 80 years, if the world stays silent when a bomb drops on the same site of Babyn Yar? At least 5 killed. History repeating,' President Zelensky tweeted. Yermak concluded his essay with a final plea. 'Standing with us today and helping us is the only way to achieve peace for all and ensure that history does not repeat itself so that our future does not echo Europe's darkest time,' he wrote. Meanwhile, the Pentagon announced Wednesday it will delay its test of intercontinental Minuteman III ballistic missiles scheduled for this weekend in the midst of Russian President Vladimir Putin's attack on Ukraine so he does not 'misunderstand' the move. Defense Department Spokesperson John Kirby said the move is a show of 'restraint' after the Russian leader put his country's nuclear forces on high alert and continues his assault on Ukraine. 'This is not a step backwards in our readiness,' he assured during his press briefing Wednesday. Kirby said at the top of the event: 'I often come out here and tell you what we have done both in terms of exercises and operations. Today, I want to talk a little bit about something that we're not going to do, and I want to explain why.' Despite the grim outlook, Yermak lauded the resilience of the Ukrainian people in defending their county and community. Above, civilians helped construct makeshift barricades around the nuclear power plant at Zaporizhzhia to stop Russia capturing it A civilian trained to throw Molotov cocktails in the city of Zhytomyr, 80 miles to the west of Kyiv, as Russian forces advance Civilians trained to throw Molotov cocktails to defend the city, as Russia's invasion of Ukraine continues, in Zhytomyr 'Last weekend, as you saw, President Putin directed a special alert of Russian nuclear forces. Now, in this time of heightened tensions, the United States and other members of the international community rightly saw this as a dangerous and irresponsible and, as I said before, an unnecessary step.' 'In an effort to demonstrate that we have no intention in engaging in any actions that can be misunderstood or misconstrued, the Secretary of Defense has directed that our Minuteman III intercontinental ballistic missiles test launch scheduled for this week to be postponed,' he announced. 'We did not take this decision lightly but instead to demonstrate that we are a responsible nuclear power,' Kirby added. Russia stepped up its attacks on Ukraine's major cities on Wednesday as officials in Mariupol said a 'full-scale genocide' was underway as Putin's men unleashed a 15-hour artillery barrage while Kharkiv also came under heavy bombardment in a dark sign of what could come to be in the capital of Kyiv. Ukraine's emergency services estimate that 2,000 civilians have been killed so far during Russia's invasion, though that figure is likely to be an under-count considering it does not take into account Wednesday's figures. Biden said matter-of-factly on Monday that Americans should not be concerned about nuclear war with Russia. Meanwhile Kharkiv, Ukraine's second city, came under heavy barrage in the early hours as Russian troops try to surround and seize it after days of fighting - with a rocket slamming into a university building and police station in the early hours before the city council was also struck, with one of the explosions caught in a dramatic video. The bombardment gives a dark taste of what is likely to come for other cities such as Kyiv after analysts warned Russia's military - having suffered heavy losses trying to pull off ambitious precision strikes - was likely to resort to surrounding cities and bombing them into submission to force a bloody victory. Advertisement Ukrainian President Volodymyr Zelensky last night claimed the morale of Vladimir Putin's Russian forces is 'constantly deteriorating' in a powerful address, and added that his forces have so-far killed 9,000 invaders. The leader of the besieged nation also said that his country had thwarted Russia's 'sneaky' plans, saying he was proud of the 'heroic' resistance to Moscow's shocking invasion. 'We are a nation that broke the enemy's plans in a week. Plans written for years: sneaky, full of hatred for our country, our people,' Zelensky said in a video posted across multiple social media channels. The president said he 'sincerely admired the heroic residents' of cities who have resisted the advance of Russian forces. He added that around 9,000 Russian soldiers had been killed since the invasion began, a claim disputed by Moscow who released contesting figures for the first time earlier on Wednesday. 'Our military, our border guards, our territorial defence, even ordinary farmers capture the Russian military every day,' he said in the video, similar to several others he has previously recorded during the war. 'All the captives say only one thing: they do not know why they are here. Despite the fact that there are dozens of times more than them, the morale of the enemy is constantly deteriorating.' Zelensky, who has drawn praise from Ukrainians and the international community alike for his leadership since the invasion began, also accused Russian troops of looting out of desperation for food and supplies. He said Ukrainian civilians had driven Putin's soldiers out of grocery stores as they searched for food. 'These are not warriors of the superpower, these are confused children who were used,' he said. 'They will not have peace here, they will not have food here, they will not have a single quiet moment here,' he warned. 'The occupiers will receive only one thing from Ukraine - a rebuff, a worth rebuff. They will remember that we do not give up.' Zelensky's comments was posted before Ukraine's capital Kyiv and many other cities around the country came under heavy fire from Putin's forces. Videos in Kyiv showed at least two huge explosions light up the night sky at around 2am local time, while Kherson city in the south was reportedly brought under Russia's complete control. Meanwhile, the command of Ukraine's Special Operations Forces warned that it would no longer take Russian artillerymen as prisoner of war in response to their 'brutal shelling' of cities. 'Each and every gun crew will be slaughtered like pigs,' a statement on Wednesday evening said. The United Nations Refugee Agency reported Thursday morning that over 1 million refugees have fled Ukraine since the beginning of the war, which has so far claimed thousands of lives in its first week. Pictures and videos from Kyiv have shown thousands crowding railways stations in a desperate bid to get a ride out of the city. Ukraine's State Emergency Service said Wednesday more than 2,000 civilians have died, though it was impossible to verify that claim. There are fears that the number could be higher. Earlier on Wednesday, a video of a Russian soldier breaking down in tears as he spoke to his mother on the phone after surrendering to Ukrainians went viral. The footage showed a young fighter from Putin's forces being comforted by a group of women after throwing down his weapon. One of the women tells him 'everything his OK' while patting him on the back. He is then seen drinking tea and eating a pasty as another woman offers him a phone. The young prisoner of war blows kisses as his mother answers, and bursts into tears as soon as he sees her. One of the other women is heard speaking to her down the phone, saying: 'Natasha, God be with you. We will call you later. He is alive and healthy.' Ukrainian President Volodymyr Zelensky last night claimed the morale of Vladimir Putin's Russian forces is crumbling in a powerful address (pictured), and added that his country's forces has so-far killed 9,000 invaders. Footage shows a young surrendered soldier from Putin's forces breaking down in tears as he speaks to his mother on the phone after being comforted and fed by Ukrainian women A male voice off camera is heard saying in Ukrainian: 'These young men, it's not their fault. They don't know why they are here. They are using old maps, they are lost.' The emotional clip shared on Twitter shows local Ukrainians welcoming the soldier with food after his reported surrender. It was captioned: 'Russian soldiers, surrender, Ukrainian people will feed you, just surrender.' The video has since gone viral in both Ukraine and Russia, with people praising the compassion shown by the Ukrainian women towards the man who has been ordered to invade their country. Others have noted how young the man is - like many Russian soldiers that have been captured by Ukraine's forces. The footage emerged as the Ukrainian Ministry of Defence said Russian mothers could could come to Kyiv and collect their sons who had been taken prisoner. In a verified post on social media, officials claimed mothers could make the arduous journey to the Ukrainian capital from Russia if they had found that their child was in captivity. 'It was decided to give the captured Russian soldiers to their mothers if they come to Ukraine, to Kyiv for them,' it read. The ministry provide an email address and phone numbers that could be used to find out if a soldier was 'in captivity or had died'. If they wanted to collect the child they would have to get to Kaliningrad or Minsk in Belarus before taking a taxi to the Polish border where they could then be escorted to a handover point. The young prisoner of war is seen drinking tea and eating a pasty as another woman offers him a phone An official wrote: 'We Ukrainians, unlike Putin's fascists, do not fight mothers and their captive children. We are waiting for you in Kyiv!' Reports suggest that many tired and demoralised Russian forces are either fleeing battle or surrendering to Ukraine. It is believed Putin's forces are starting to run out of food and fuel, with some resorting to looting, while others are even reportedly sabotaging their own military equipment in a bid to get out of the war. Intercepted radio messages indicate troops are disobeying orders from Moscow to shell Ukrainian towns, and complaining about running out of food and fuel. The video came after other footage showed Russian prisoners of war weeping and claiming they had no idea they were being sent into a warzone rather than to act as peacekeepers. Captured men said they had no idea they were being sent to invade Ukraine and were used like 'cannon fodder' by commanders who threw them into battle against 'peaceful people defending their territory' after Vladimir Putin's forces took heavy losses in the opening days of the conflict. 'This is not our war. Mothers and wives, collect your husbands. There is no need to be here,' an injured soldier sat in front of a Ukrainian flag was filmed saying. Other footage showed handcuffed Russian prisoner crying, while saying: 'They don't even pick up the corpses, there are no funerals'. Ukraine on Wednesday invited the worried mothers of Russian troops captured on the battlefield to come and collect their sons, in Kyiv's latest apparent attempt to embarrass Moscow after opening a telephone hotline for Russian parents to find out if their sons are among the dead or captured. Ukraine says Russia has lost 5,840 soldiers in the opening days of the conflict - some of its fastest losses since the Second World War, if the figure proves accurate - with Putin's men suffering a series of embarrassing defeats as they tried to pull off a quick victory but instead met with stiff resistance from Ukrainian forces. Russia's advance has since slowed to a crawl as commanders regroup, change strategy, and renew their assault in what is now expected to become an increasingly bloody war of resources with Kyiv's men facing overwhelming odds. The Ministry of Defence said Russia had renewed the fight on 'all fronts' Wednesday and 'suffered losses'. Kherson, an important port city in Ukraine's south, appeared to be an early casualty as Russian tanks occupied the city centre overnight and then began arriving in numbers. Kharkiv, Ukraine's second-largest city, also came under heavy bombardment in the early hours as paratroopers dropped in, sparking gunfights near a military hospital. Mariupol, another key port city in Ukraine's south, is also reported to be under heavy bombardment as Russian forces attempt to encircle it. If the city falls then Putin's men are expected to push northwards, trying to encircle Ukrainian forces fighting near Donetsk and force them to surrender. While both US and Ukrainian intelligence believes morale within the Russian ranks is low, Putin and his commanders have showed no sign they are about to give up the fight - and have instead vowed to press even harder to try and capture key objectives. Sergey Shoigu, the country's defence minister, said on Tuesday that they offensive would keep going until all objectives had been completed - which he said was the removal of threats to Russia by the West. Volodymyr Zelensky has said that Russia is trying to erase Ukraine and its people as Vladimir Putin's invasion entered its seventh day today with renewed attacks on all fronts including an expected assault on the city which houses Europe's largest nuclear power plant. Zelensky, who has become a symbol of Ukrainian defiance and courage since the war began, told his people today that Russians 'know nothing about our capital. About our history. But they have an order to erase our history. Erase our country. Erase us all.' Captured Russian soldiers have been filmed describing themselves as 'cannon fodder' and warning 'everyone is going in columns and they all die' Captured Russian soldiers (left and right), speaking in video posted to the Ukraine security services' Facebook page, claimed they were 'deceived' and did not realise they were going to invade Ukraine Footage shows captured a handcuffed Russian prisoner crying over the death and destruction wrought by the war, saying: 'They don't even pick up the corpses, there are no funerals' In separate video posted on Telegram showed soldiers saying they were 'demoralised' when they realised they were being sent to fight in Ukraine. 'We were told we would be enemies of the state and because it's wartime, we might even be shot if we refused. We were thrown in as cannon fodder' Russian soldiers taking part in the invasion of Ukraine are in 'complete disarray', according to voice recordings obtained by a British intelligence company. Above: Images of captured Russian troops Ukraine's military said Russia today renewed its assault 'on all fronts', with paratroopers landing in Kharkiv, tanks and trucks rolling into the centre of Kherson, and strikes in Mariupol and Zhytomyr The president, unshaven and wearing a military-style khaki T-shirt, said the West's response was not enough, calling for more international support, including backing Ukraine's bid to join the European Union. 'This is no time to be neutral,' he added. But Russian foreign minister Sergei Lavrov sought to warn western powers away from the conflict today, saying that a Third World War in Europe - should it start - would be 'nuclear' and 'destructive'. As Russian forces readied themselves to push on with the assault, those wounded and captured by Ukraine in the opening stages were left to reflect on their decisions behind enemy lines. 'No one has attacked us and what Russia wants from the war, I cannot understand. Mum, Dad, I love you,' one said. At least one of the soldiers urged Kyiv and Moscow to evacuate children from the warzone while another warned 'no-one wants war'. Meanwhile a handcuffed prisoner of war burst into tears and was filmed wiping his eyes after what sounded like a female relative told him 'I love you' down the phone. The intercepted radio messages indicate that troops are refusing to obey central command orders to shell Ukrainian towns and are complaining about running out of supplies of food and fuel. Above: Another captured Russian soldier He went on to urge the person to call for the end to the war because 'to these b****es it's just a case of killing everyone'. The young soldier also appeared to shed tears for those who die on the battlefield because 'they have no funeral'. 'You don't touch the corpses because otherwise the FSB (Russian federal security service) will arrest you,' he said. Another soldier, injured during the fighting, was positioned in front of a Ukrainian flag as he spoke to the camera. He maintained the claim his troops did not know they were about the invade Ukraine and urged Moscow to end the conflict. 'We are killing peaceful people,' he said. 'This is not our war. Mothers and wives, collect your husbands. There is no need to be here.' In separate video posted on Telegram showed soldiers saying they were 'demoralised' when they realised they were being sent to fight in Ukraine. 'We were told we would be enemies of the state and because it's wartime, we might even be shot if we refused. We were thrown in as cannon fodder.' He also claimed that Russian soldiers 'in our unit at least, don't want this war. We want to go home, we want peace.' A week into Russia's invasion of Ukraine, Kyiv claims to have captured dozens of Russian servicemen, and cellphone videos are circling online of bewildered and disarmed young men in uniform. Kyiv has sought to undermine Russian public support for the invasion by opening a telephone hotline for Russian parents to find out if their sons are among the dead or captured. The defence ministry has published telephone numbers and and an email address to provide information about captured Russians, and mothers will be invited to Kyiv to collect their missing sons. 'You will be received and taken to Kyiv where your son will be returned to you,' the ministry statement said. 'Unlike Putin's fascists, we Ukrainians are not waging war against mothers and their captured children.' A convoy of Russian vehicles is seen parked along a residential street in an unknown area of Ukraine, in footage released by Russia's armed forces on Wednesday The remains of a destroyed Russian military convoy are seen on a street in Bucha, to the south of Kyiv, on Wednesday morning An armed man stands by the remains of a Russian military vehicle in Bucha, close to the capital Kyiv, Ukraine Police officers remove the body of a passerby killed in yesterday's airstrike that hit Kyiv's main television tower olice officers examine the bodies of passersby killed in yesterday's airstrike that hit Kyiv's main television tower Police officers stand guard at the site of yesterday's airstrike that hit Kyiv's main television tower The body of a soldier, without insignia, who the Ukrainian military claim is a Russian army serviceman killed in fighting in Kharkiv, eastern Ukraine Recordings obtained by British intelligence company ShadowBreak revealed Russian soldiers retreating after becoming frustrated with the war, indicating that Moscow's forces are in 'complete disarray'. In one of the eavesdropped conversations, listened to by The Telegraph, a soldier reportedly sounds as though he is crying. In another, a soldier is heard losing his temper when asking when food or fuel will arrive. He says: 'We've been here for three days! When the hell is it going to be ready?' A third message reviewed by ShadowBreak reveals a tense exchange in which the same soldier has to remind a colleague speaking from a command centre that they cannot use artillery on an area until civilians - who are labelled 'the goods' - have left. ShadowBreak's founder Samuel Cardillo, 26, told The Telegraph he had been sent the messages by amateurs listening in with antennas. He said: 'What we have found is that the Russian operatives are operating in complete disarray. They have no clue where they are going and how to really communicate with each other properly. 'There were periods where we heard them [Russian soldiers] crying in combat, a period where they were insulting each other obviously not a sign of great morale.' Mr Cardillo said the some of the messages were also 'proof of war crimes' because they revealed ordered to fire missiles into urban areas. They were among around 24 hours of material obtained by intelligence firm ShadowBreak since the invasion of Ukraine began last week. In a further sign that morale may be poor, a senior US defence official told the New York Times on Tuesday that some troops have 'deliberately punched holes' in their vehicles' petrol tanks in the hope of avoiding combat. Parts of the Russian military are also still using analogue 'walkie talkie' two-way radios, making them more vulnerable to interception. Ukrainian forces are also said to have had no problem jamming Russian communications and interrupting them with the sound of their national anthem. Another recording obtained by ShadowBreak is said to reveal a soldier in tears, pleading with his command: '...it's slow, it's slow.' The communications are also said to show that soldiers were told they would meet little resistance upon entering Ukraine. Instead, Ukrainian forces are now in the seventh day of resistance to the Russian attack and multiple videos reveal civilians confronting the invading troops and convoys. The new recordings come after Ukraine on Monday paraded captured Russian soldiers in dozens of online videos. Footage posted online show tied up 'demoralised and exhausted' Russian prisoners of war captured after they failed to break through Ukrainian defences in Kyiv and Kharkiv over the weekend. Several of the videos were posted on a Telegram channel set up on Saturday by Ukraine's Interior Ministry called 'Find Your Own'. Many Russian troops claimed that they believed they were conducting training exercises in the border regions and did not know they were being sent to invade Ukraine. NBC anchor Chuck Todd was slammed by one of his own colleagues on Tuesday night after he asked what Ukrainian locals thought of American President Joe Biden's first State of the Union speech. As the network's coverage of the speech continued an hour after Biden gave his final remarks, DC-based Todd said he thought Ukraine's growing refugee crisis was 'a very important missed point by the president' in his national address. 'It's yet another part of this story that I think a lot of us thought he'd use this time with the American public to speak more about,' Todd said, before turning the coverage over to Tom Llamas, who was reporting from Ukraine, asking: 'What are you seeing in Lviv?' 'I don't know if that speech is going to resonate that much with the Ukrainian people for a number of reasons - one, they're preoccupied right now,' a seemingly flabbergasted Llamas replied. 'Right, they have Russian troops in their country right now trying to take over their land,' he said. 'That's number one.' He also noted that it was 6am in Lviv, meaning that Biden's speech would have begun at 5am, when many Ukrainians would have been sleeping - or sheltering from Russian attacks. During NBC News' coverage of President Joe Biden's first State of the Union address on Tuesday night, host Chuck Todd, right, asked how Ukrainians felt about the speech Tom Llamas, reporting from Lviv, responded by saying the residents are 'preoccupied' with 'Russians trying to take over their land' to watch the speech Biden spent the first 12 minutes of his speech speaking about the crisis in Ukraine But Llamas used the opportunity to talk about the things Ukrainians likely would have liked to hear from Biden. Ukrainians, he said, want NATO to enforce a no-fly one around Ukraine and want the United States and its allies to put boots on the ground, both of which Biden said he will not do out of fear of escalating the matter into a potential nuclear war with Russia. 'Ukrainians have kind of accepted the fact that they're going to go at this alone, they're seeing that every single day,' Llamas said. Still, he argued, Biden could have 'extended more inspiration' and speak about the refugees fleeing the country. 'It's tough for them to kind of square this for them that everyone loves them, everyone's singing their songs and raising their flag, but no one's helping them.' Ukrainians are using subway stations as bomb shelters as the Russian onslaught continues One residential building was completely destroyed by the most recent shelling in Kyiv Biden spent the first 12 minutes of his inaugural State of the Union address to speak about Russia's invasion of Ukraine and announced 'strict' new measures against Moscow and its wealthy elite with a new task force to go after the 'crimes' of Russian oligarchs, while reaffirming that he would not send American forces into Kyiv. The president called Russian President Vladimir Putin's attack on Ukraine 'premeditated and unprovoked,' noting that Putin 'rejected efforts at diplomacy.' 'He thought the West and NATO wouldnt respond. And he thought he could divide us at home,' Biden said. 'Putin was wrong. We were ready.' He then announced that the U.S. is closing its airspace to Russian aircraft in response to Russia's invasion of Ukraine and will be going after Russian oligarchs, as he listed how the American government has helped out with the Ukrainian efforts. 'Together with our allies we are providing support to the Ukrainians in their fight for freedom. Military assistance. Economic assistance. Humanitarian assistance. We are giving more than $1 billion in direct assistance to Ukraine,' the president said. 'And we will continue to aid the Ukrainian people as they defend their country and to help ease their suffering,' he vowed. Rockstar Marilyn Manson is suing his ex-fiancee, actress Evan Rachel Wood, over the 'malicious falsehood' of the abuse allegations she made against him and alleges she 'derailed his successful music, TV and film career'. Manson, whose real name is Brian Warner, filed the complaint in Los Angeles Superior Court Wednesday morning, which was obtained by DailyMail.com. The suit accuses Wood and her 'on-again, off-again romantic partner' artist Illma Gore, real name Ashley Gore, of impersonating an FBI agent to distribute a forged letter to 'create the false appearance' that Manson's alleged victims and their families were in danger. The performer also claims Wood and Gore created a fake email address to make it look as if Manson, 53, sent her 'illicit pornography' and that the pair orchestrated a swatting incident at his LA home last month. The complaint also states that Wood - who has accused of Manson of abuse and sexual assault - and Gore provided checklists and scripts listing specific acts of abuse for prospective accusers to claim against Manson, including that he filmed the sexual assault of a minor. Representatives for Wood did not immediately respond to DailyMail.com's request for comment. Wood, 34, has previously said Manson 'brainwashed and manipulated into submission' and that he 'started grooming me when I was a teenager and horrifically abused me for years.' She also claimed the musician 'coerced [her] into a commercial sex act under false pretenses' and 'essentially raped [her] on-camera'. She is expected to outline the allegations of abuse an upcoming two-part HBO documentary called Phoenix Rising set to air next month. Marilyn Manson (left) is suing his ex-fiancee, Evan Rachel Wood (right), for defamation, emotional distress and 'impersonation over the internet,' among other charges over the abuse allegations she made against him Manson claims Wood and her romantic partner, Illma Gore (pictured in Nov. 2017) of orchestrating numerous schemes targeting him, including recruiting women to accuse him of assault Manson is suing Wood for defamation, emotional distress and 'impersonation over the internet,' among other charges and seeks damages of an unspecified amount 'to be determined at trial,' as well as 'an order enjoining Wood and Gore from engaging in further wrongful conduct' towards him. The suit claims Wood, with the help of Gore, fabricated her allegations against Manson in effort to 'provide more manufactured content' for Phoenix Rising, which both women worked on. Wood and Gore are accused of recruiting, coordinating and pressuring women into making false accusations against Manson. In addition to alleging the women provided Manson accusers with scripted responses and a 'checklist of 21 fabricated acts of abuse,' the complaint also states that Gore solicited prospective accusers by phone, text message, email, and/or social media, with the following message: 'Hey! I know this is a strange way to reach out but my name is Illma, I work with the Phoenix Act I run it alongside Evan Rachel Wood. We were organizing a group of people to meet up in Los Angeles and Zoom/Skype in to talk about experience they had that might be similar to yours. Im not sure that you would be interested in participating you arent obligated to speak but if you wanted to listen in that would be fine. Its a small group and you are personally invited. If you wanted to know more first. I would be happy to jump on the phone or email more details. Best, Illma.' Manson has also accused the pair of distributing fictitious letters (pictured) 'attributed to a real-life federal agent and included a forged signature and fake phone number for that agent' warning his accusers of being endangered Manson's counsel claims a text exchange between Gore and Wood, using the nickname Alabama, confirms they penned the fake FBI letter together. The text exchange is pictured above Manson has accused Wood and Gore of providing other women with a 'checklist of 21 fabricated acts of abuse' to accuse him of. The alleged checklist is pictured Manson has also accused the pair of distributing fictitious letters 'attributed to a real-life federal agent and included a forged signature and fake phone number for that agent' warning his accusers of being endangered. The complaint states the FBI agent listed on the letter confirmed she did not author or approve the note and claimed she had no knowledge of its existence. Manson's counsel claims a text exchange between Gore and Wood, using the nickname Alabama, confirms they penned the letter together. It also alleges Wood submitted the forged letter in a California custody proceeding as supposed evidence for why she should be able to move her son, Jack Matfin Bell, now 8, to Tennessee. Wood has testified that Manson threatened that he would 'f**k' Bell. Furthermore, the suit accuses Gore of using the internet to create correspondences that she believed would be harmful to Manson. According to the document, Gore created a fake email address, claiming to be Manson, in September 2019 and used the account to send pornography. She also allegedly used the accounts to create false documents appearing to be correspondences between Manson and attorneys about an alleged criminal investigation. The complaint accuses Gore of soliciting prospective accusers by phone, text message, email, and/or social media, with the above message The complaint also claims the pair issued out scripted responses (above) for Manson's accusers to utilize Manson also claims Gore orchestrated a swatting incident against him on February 3, 2021 by sending police to look into him under false pretenses. LAPD is pictured at his residence on the aforementioned date On that date, Los Angeles police were allegedly notified by the FBI that Gore, identifying as a friend of Manson, had expressed concern for the musician's safety after she had reportedly been unable to reach him Police responded to the alleged 'emergency' and, when Manson did not answer the door, additional officers were called to the scene, the suit argues, noting a LAPD helicopter circled his home and shone a spotlight into his windows. Officers reportedly returned to the property multiple times before entering the residence and 'determin[ing] there was no evidence of any trouble.' Marilyn Manson's accusations against Evan Rachel Wood and Illma Gore Marilyn Manson filed a lawsuit against Evan Rachel Wood and her partner Illma Gore in Los Angeles Superior Court on Wednesday. He is suing Wood and Gore for defamation, emotional distress and 'impersonation over the internet,' among other charges. The rockstar's suit accuses the pair of recruiting, coordinating and pressuring women into making false accusations of abuse against Manson. He claims Wood and Gore impersonated a FBI agent and forged a letter warning his accusers that they were in danger. They allegedly distributed the letter to his accusers. Manson claims Gore orchestrated a police swatting incident at his home in February 2021. The musician accused Gore of creating a fake email account under his name and using it to distribute porn to others, including Wood. Similarly, he says Gore hacked into his computer, phone and email account, obtaining his passwords and social security number. He claims she used the information she obtained from his accounts to 'orchestrate and promulgate false accusations' against him. Manson has also accused Gore of slander. Advertisement 'In one such email dated February 8, 2021, just days after Wood and several others made fictitious claims of abuse against Warner in a coordinated attack, Bhwarner1969 received an email from a person purporting to be writing on behalf of [Manson's] attorney. However, the emails purported sender did not work for, or ever work for, that attorney,' the complaint reads. Manson first learned of the alleged accounts and emails in November 2021. The complaint also accused Gore of hacking into Manson's computer, phone and email account, obtaining his passwords and social security number. The artist is accused of using information she obtained as part of her alleged hacking scheme to 'orchestrate and promulgate false accusations against Warner'. Manson also claims Gore orchestrated a swatting incident against him on February 3, 2021 by sending police to look into him under false pretenses. This was shortly after Wood came forward with her abuse allegations. On that date, Los Angeles police were notified by the FBI that Gore, identifying as a friend of Manson, had expressed concern for the musician's safety after she had reportedly been unable to reach him. Police responded to the alleged 'emergency' and, when Manson did not answer the door, additional officers were called to the scene, the suit argues, noting a LAPD helicopter circled his home and shone a spotlight into his windows. Officers reportedly returned to the property multiple times before entering the residence and 'determin[ing] there was no evidence of any trouble.' '[Gore's] report was false. [Manson] was at home with his wife and a guest and not in any danger. Gore knew her report was falseshe and Warner have never even met. She has never been Warners friend, and had no basis to believe Warner posed any risk of danger to himself,' the complaint states. Additionally, the rockstar has accused Gore of slander. Manson's attorney, Howard King, told DailyMail.com in a statement Wednesday he and his client are filing the suit now 'because we have been able to gather an overwhelming trove of evidence including both documents and witness statements which proves that the stories that Evan Rachel Wood and her co-conspirator Illma Gore have been falsifying and spreading are both vindictive and demonstrably untrue.' 'It's incredibly important to differentiate between the character of "Marilyn Manson" and the man Brian Warner,' King said. 'Wood's claims may resonate because of the intentionally "shocking" character of "Marilyn Manson" but they simply do not reflect the truth. The manufactured facts these conspirators scripted a decade after the event never happened. Wood in 2018 appeared in front of Congress in support of the nationwide implementation of the Sexual Assault Survivors' Bill of Rights Acts, delivering testimony about past sexual abuse she had suffered without naming Manson at the time. She later publicly identified him as her alleged abuser. The Westworld star was linked with Manson from 2006 until 2011. In the first installment of Phoenix Rising, which premiered at the Sundance Film Festival in January, she said that the Beautiful People artist had violated her in 2007 during the filming of his music video Heart-Shaped Glasses. Wood (left) and Manson (right) were linked together from 2006 until 2011. The actress has previously said Manson 'brainwashed and manipulated into submission' and that he 'started grooming me when I was a teenager and horrifically abused me for years.' She also claimed the musician 'coerced [her] into a commercial sex act under false pretenses' and 'essentially raped [her] on-camera'. The former couple is pictured together in September 2007 'It's nothing like I thought it was going to be,' Wood said in a preview for the documentary. 'We're doing things that were not what was pitched to me ... we had discussed a simulated sex scene, but once the cameras were rolling, he started penetrating me for real. I had never agreed to that. I'm a professional actress, I've been doing this my whole life; I've never been on a set that unprofessional in my life up until this day.' She added: 'It was complete chaos. I did not feel safe. No one was looking after me. It was a really traumatizing experience filming the video. I didn't know how to advocate for myself or know how to say no because I had been conditioned and trained to never talk back, to just soldier through.' Wood also said she was 'scared' to expose Manson's alleged wrongdoings, and that it had taken her a 'really long time' to cease blaming herself for what had happened. King, last month, issued a statement denying Wood's accusations about the video shoot. 'Evan was not only fully coherent and engaged during the three-day shoot but also heavily involved in weeks of pre-production planning and days of post-production editing of the final cut. The simulated sex scene took several hours to shoot with multiple takes using different angles and several long breaks in between camera setups.' Manson has been accused by at least 15 women of sexual assault, and has denied all claims, saying they are 'horrible distortions of reality.' Just hours before their death in a fiery plunge off the Henry Hudson Parkway, a Manhattan dad and his two passengers were celebrating Dominican Independence Day, the victims devastated friends told the Daily News. Thats what people do, go out and enjoy themselves and have little drinks, said Junior Martinez, who was friends with the driver, Edgar Valette, and one of his passengers, Michael Santos. Its a tragedy. You try to live each day like its your last. Advertisement Edgar Valette, 39, (right) and life-long friend Michael Santos, 30. (Obtained by Daily News) Valette, 39, was speeding south on the parkway when he lost control near W. 178th St. in Washington Heights and struck a concrete barrier, police said Monday. He crashed his BMW through a railing near 181st St. about 1:40 a.m., and soared off the parkway, landing on the Amtrak tracks about 500 feet below. He was ejected, and his car burst into flames. Investigators at the site where a BMW on the Henry Hudson Parkway vaulted a concrete barrier, dropping to the Amtrak train tracks beneath the George Washington Bridge Monday. (Theodore Parisienne/for New York Daily News) One passenger, Kimberly Martinez, 28, died inside the burning car, while the other, Michael Santos, 30, was found dead under the vehicle. Advertisement Kimberly Martinez (Instagram) All three were partying at the Inwood Bar and Grill, just a few blocks away from the nail salon where Kimberly Martinez worked, friends said. Video shows some of her last happy moments, smiling and dancing with two friends at the bar. Its hard. She was a really happy girl, said Karen Casado, 40, her manager at the Le Creme Nail Spa in Inwood. They were at the Inwood bar celebrating my countrys independence day. All three of them were close friends. The guys were clients, too. Santos and Valette regularly came in for manicures, she said. They were friends from a long time ago, she added. Martinezs co-worker, Yane Diaz, 32, described her as generous and talented. She was the best co-worker ever. She was a very good person. She taught me how to paint elaborate things on nails, Diaz said. She did that with all of us. She was a very generous person. She was a beautiful girl. Mourners put up a memorial with hundreds of candles honoring Santos and Valette outside his apartment building on W. 141st St., where he lived with his family. They were just good guys. Just trying to make it in life like everybody else, Junior Martinez said. The Daily News Flash Weekdays Catch up on the days top five stories every weekday afternoon. > You know, everyone who grows up around here is like family. Were very close, he said, adding that Santos and Valette were like cousins because they also grew up right here near each other. Advertisement Valette had four children, and was expecting another son, said his wife, Gina Alegria, 35, whos nine months pregnant. She has two boys with him, ages 4 and 2. I dont know how Im going to tell them. Daddy always came home, and this time he didnt, Alegria told the Daily News Monday. Santos uncle had recently died, which his mother took particularly hard, said another of his neighbors, who didnt give his name. They were a big family, and they all lived in that apartment, he said. Its only her left with the youngest son. The owner of the bodega on the corner at W. 141st St. and Broadway said Santos and Valette used to come in at least twice a day to buy sandwiches, or to relax and joke. Very good people, said the owner, who gave his name as Sam Sam. Nighttime, Sunday, I saw them right here. We were joking A former radio executive allegedly flew to the Philippines to have sex with a 13-year-old girl and sent graphic messages about sex acts he wanted performed, a court has heard. Mark Page, 63, of Ingleby Barwick, Teesside, denies five counts of arranging the commission of a child sex offence. Three of the offences were said to have occurred in 2016 on webcams, when he was in the UK and the children were in the Philippines, Teesside Crown Court was told. The remaining two offences were said to have happened in person after Page, who was also a DJ, travelled to the Philippines. On the second day of his trial on Tuesday, the court heard that Page visited the Philippines in October 2019. It is alleged that Page was an active member on the dating site FilipinoCupid.com - where he is said to have shaved 9 years off his real age - claiming to be 52 back in 2019. Prosecutor Jo Kidd told the jury he set up a Facebook profile in the name of Thai G and used it to contact a 13-year-old girl whilst in the Philippines in March 2019, before promising her 1,000 pesos. The prosecution claimed Page was trying to arrange to meet a girl in a shopping centre during his 2019 trip and is said to have messaged a girl How old is she? She come alone before agreeing to send 1,000 pesos via Western Union. Page was also accused of trying to meet a 13-year-old girl and a boy, whilst he was staying at the Prince Plaza II Condotel in the city of Makati. The court heard that Page sent graphic messages about sex acts he wanted the school children to perform. Former radio executive, Mark Page (pictured), 63, of Ingleby Barwick, Teesside, allegedly flew to the Philippines to have sex with a 13-year-old girl and sent graphic messages about sex acts he wanted performed, a court has heard Several hours later, the prosecution said that after Page met a girl he texted Thanks babe before transferring 2,000 pesos. Other alleged chats involved a Filipino woman asking for money for tuition fees and other users requesting a load - which is said to mean sending credit for a mobile phone. Page is alleged to have used his Skype account from his former Ingleby Barwick home to carry out explicit video calls with children online. He is alleged to have asked a 14-year-old girl to carry out sex acts on a 12-year old, but the prosecution say the older girl refused. In another chat, Page is accused of sending 1,500 Pesos to a girl after she allegedly performed sex acts over a webcam before messaging: 'I hope to visit you late October babe, and will you bring her to babe?' The court heard further evidence from PC Stephen Rookes, who told the court that Page had left his computer on and his cloud account signed in, when he and his colleagues raided his home in January last year. Police investigator Paul Ripley also took to the witness stand and talked about the different personas Page is alleged to have used online, including Pete124 and Pancho and Garrison1287. Page (pictured) has denied five counts of arranging the commission of a child sex offence Three of the offences were said to have occurred in 2016 on webcams, when he was in the UK and the children were in the Philippines, Teesside Crown Court (pictured) was told But Pages defence barrister Trevor Burke QC told the court that his clients dating profile stated that he wanted to meet a single woman, who did not have children and was between the ages of 25 and 34. Mr Burke said that users of the Filipino cupid site have to be over 18; as does anyone collecting money from a Western Union account. Page sat at the back of the court listening to the evidence throughout the day and denied all allegations. The court heard that he has been divorced since 2007 and has cared for his three children since then. The trial, expected to continue till the end of the week, continues. Florida Gov. Ron DeSantis hassled a group of college students for wearing masks and said he snoozed through President Joe Biden's State of the Union during an appearance in Tampa Wednesday. Video footage shows the Republican governor instructing University of South Florida students to take off their masks as he walked toward the podium. 'You do not have to wear those masks. I mean, please take them off,' DeSantis said. 'Honestly it's not doing anything and we've gotta stop with this COVID theater.' 'So if you want to wear it, fine,' he added. 'But this is, this is ridiculous.' Several students took their masks off, while at least three kept theirs in place. Florida Gov. Ron DeSantis hassled a group of college students for wearing masks and said he snoozed through President Joe Biden's State of the Union during an appearance in Tampa Wednesday Video footage shows the Republican governor instructing University of South Florida students to take off their masks as he walked toward the podium, calling it 'COVID theater.' Some students took their masks off, while others left them on DeSantis was at the Tampa college to announce a $20 million investment to create cybersecurity and information technology workforce education opportunities. But the event was also a press conference. DeSantis, who is up for re-election this year in Florida, is being closely watched as a viable 2024 presidential candidate. Over the weekend at the Conservative Political Action Conference in Orlando, the Florida governor came in second after former President Donald Trump in the event's annual presidential straw poll. Trump received 59.1 per cent of the vote, while DeSantis received 28.4 per cent. All the other Republicans got 1.5 per cent or less. When Trump was removed from the equation, DeSantis was the clear winner, garnering 61.4 per cent support. Florida Gov. Ron DeSantis looked like presidential material to 28.4 per cent of Conservative Political Action Conference attendees who participated in the annual presidential straw poll. Without President Donald Trump (right), DeSantis' number jumped to 61.4 per cent support NEW: @GovRonDeSantis annoyed with USF students "You do not have to wear those masks. Please take them off. Honestly, it's not doing anything. We've gotta stop with this Covid theater. So if you wanna wear it, fine, but this is ridiculous."https://t.co/7j1Pb2hV53 @WFLA pic.twitter.com/ZIOyTHLOh3 Evan Donovan (@EvanDonovan) March 2, 2022 'I watched most of the State of the Union, I did fall asleep during it, I confess,' DeSantis said. He blamed the sleepiness not on Biden, but on his kids. 'I've got three kids five and under, so a lot of times by the time it gets past 9, we're a little tired,' he said. The State of the Union didn't start until a little after 9 p.m. 'The striking thing is is we have a lot of problems in this country. And that's obviously something you've gotta deal with. But it's striking that so many of these problems have been created by Biden and his administration since he's become president,' the Republican governor said, pointing to high gas prices as one example. He blasted Biden for shutting down the Keystone pipeline and suspending drilling licenses in the Arctic National Wildlife Refuge and certain other federal lands. 'So consequently you're importing more from countries like Russia - so that's bad for consumers ... but that's also bad for our national security,' DeSantis said, claiming the U.S. 'would be energy independent,' had it not been for Biden. DeSantis also hammered Biden for saying 'we need to secure the border and fix the immigration system.' 'Well, he's the one who opened the border. Are you kidding me?' DeSantis said. And despite Biden saying he didn't support the 'defund the police' movement, DeSantis said that 'many of these cities have defunded or cut police budgets and that's why you see crime skyrocketing.' He also lashed out at the administration's support for eliminating cash bail. 'Yeah there's a lot of problems, it just seems to me that a lot of these problems are Joe Biden's own creation,' DeSantis said. DeSantis was later asked if he heard anything in Biden's State of the Union that he agreed with. 'I'd have to think about some of the stuff. I agree - if you think about what they've done - Fauci is in the witness protection program now,' DeSantis said. 'If you listen to them, they never supported all these policies that were so destructive.' DeSantis was referring to the lifting of COVID restrictions since the Omicron surge has passed. Biden and his State of the Union guests interacted maskless Tuesday night on Capitol Hill. 'We all want to be like Florida,' DeSantis said. Dr. Anthony Fauci, Biden's top medical adviser, hasn't been put in hiding, as he appeared at the White House's COVID briefing Wednesday morning. The White House is encouraging Americans to heed existing travel warnings against going to Ukraine even after Ukrainian President Volodymr Zelenskys call for people from around the world to join his countrys fight against Russias invasion. White House deputy press secretary Karine Jean-Pierre invoked the travel warnings when asked by DailyMail.com aboard Air Force one for the governments position on the matter. It came on Day 7 of the invasion, hours after President Joe Biden said Russia was deliberately targeting civilians, following Russian shelling of Ukrainian urban centers. They are, Biden said. Ukrainians have shown their courage, Jean-Pierre said, noting they were calling on every resource to defend themselves. We applaud their bravery. However, our travel advisory remains that U.S. citizens should not travel to Ukraine, she said. President Joe Biden visits workers near the John A. Blatnik Memorial Bridge in Superior, Wisconsin, on March 2, 2022. The White House said a travel advisory that Americans should not go to Ukraine, when asked about Ukrainian President Zelensky's call for foreigners come and join the fight to defend against the Russian invasion She said those advisories are 'to help Americans make the most informed decisions about their safety.' Pressed on whether the guidance specifically related to those who might choose to go in fight, Jean-Pierre referenced a State Department advisory on traveling to Ukraine. That advisory, issued before the Russian invasion, referenced both the dangers of potential conflict and risks of COVID-19. Join the defense of Ukraine, Europe and the world, Zelensky said as he urged foreigners to join the defense of his country with the US and allies supplying aid. We applaud their bravery. However, our travel advisory remains that U.S. citizens should not travel to Ukraine, said the White House deputy press secretary Karine Jean-Pierre People take part in a basic military training on March 1, 2022 in Ivano-Frankivsk, Ukraine. Ukrainians from the eastern and central parts of the country have increasingly fled to western cities as Russian forces advance toward Kyiv from three sides The Ukrainian President Zelensky said he is creating a new International Legion of Territorial Defense 'All the friends of Ukraine who want to come join us, come here toowe will give you weapons,' he said last weekend. The Ukrainian leader said he is creating a new International Legion of Territorial Defense, even as his country is rushing to enlist ordinary Ukrainians to join the fight, where they are outnumbered against a Russian Army contingent estimated at more than 200,000. British Foreign Secretary Liz Truss has said she supports UK citizens who want to go and answer Zelensky's call. Jean-Pierre's comment follows reports that six American special ops veterans are on the Polish border waiting to join the fight. Two US infantry officers are also planning to fly to the region to give 'leadership' to the volunteer fighters, Buzzfeed reported. The U.S. has previously rejected other steps that might risk an escalation between the U.S. and nuclear Russia, turning back Zelensky's call to establish a no-fly zone. Jean-Pierre also commented about the latest incendiary comments by Russian Foreign Minister Sergei Lavrov, who said that World War III would be destructive and nuclear. Asked about the nuclear saber-rattling by DailyMail.com, she responded: this was a war of choice by President Putin. This is his decision that he has made, she said. This is President Putins war, she added. President Joe Biden suggested the Capitol riot inspired Putin to invade Ukraine and divide the West and then falsely claimed rioters killed five cops on January 6. 'Vladimir Putin was counting on being able to split up the United States,' Biden said in a speech in Superior, Wisconsin. 'Look, how would you feel if you saw crowds storm and break down the doors of the British Parliament and kill five cops, injure 145? Or the German Bundestag or the Italian Parliament?' he asked. One Capitol cop died of a stroke a day after January 6 and four killed themselves in the aftermath of the riot. 'I think youd wonder. Well thats what the rest of the world saw. Its not who we are. And now, were proving under pressure, that we are not that country. Were united. And folks, thats how we were able to make sure we kept Europe united and the free world united.' Biden appeared to be speaking extemporaneously at the end of his remarks, having already slammed Putin earlier. President Joe Biden once again tore into Russian President Vladimir Putin in a speech Wednesday where he invoked Jan. 6 He did so after failing to mention Jan. 6th during his State of the Union address, even though the topic hovered over his last address to Congress. It came at the end of a speech in the heartland where he touted the diversity of his administration, which he fashioned to 'look like America.' He also said it has more women than men though he neglected to mention his historic Supreme Court nominee, Ketanji Brown Jackson. It was his second swipe at Putin Wednesday, after devoting the top of his State of the Union speech to Ukraine. Biden made the comments in Wisconsin, after using his State of the Union speech to praise Ukraine's resistance to the Russian invasion and earned rare plaudits from both Republicans and Democrats. 'We, the United States of America, stand with the Ukrainian people. We stand with them,' Biden said in a speech at the University of Wisconsin-Superior, just across the water from Duluth. 'Vladimir Putin's latest attack on Ukraine was premeditated and unprovoked,' said Biden. Biden and first lady Jill Biden masked up as they approached the podium. The White House said it was he was in an area with a high prevalence of covid. He took the mask off for his remarks a night after glad-handing with unmasked lawmakers who passed a covid test in the Capitol 'Hes rejected repeated efforts at diplomacy,' said Biden. 'He thought the west and NATO wouldnt respond. He thought they could divide us at home, and he was wrong,' said Biden, echoing comments from his Tuesday night prime time speech. 'Putin is now isolated from the world more than ever and well continue to aid the Ukrainian people,' Biden pledged, on a day when the UN General Assembly held a lopsided vote to condemn Russia's actions. 'When this is over, Ukraine will have left Russia weaker and the rest of the world stronger,' Biden said. Biden and first lady Jill Biden masked up as they approached the podium for the event. The White House said it was he was in an area with a high prevalence of covid. The president took the mask off for his remarks a night after glad-handing with unmasked lawmakers who passed a covid test in the Capitol. Before Biden spoke, Wisconsin Gov. Tony Evers (D) made the case for the bridge, which he said could compete for infrastructure funds to avoid delay. 'I hope the president might be able to put in a good word for us,' he quipped. Sen. Amy Klobuchar (D-Minn.), who joined Biden on the trip, used her introductory remarks to try to span the dialogue to foreign policy. 'The bridges that our country has built with the rest of the world to stand up with the democracy of Ukraine.' He spoke in a state that was critical to his win over President Donald Trump in 2020. Biden headed back to the industrial Midwest Wednesday hours after delivering his first State of the Union speech, where he said it should lose its rust belt moniker. Biden boarded Air Force One along with first lady Jill Biden, after meeting and praying with the cardinal of Washington, D.C., Donald Wuerl, on Ash Wednesday. He could be seen with ashes on his forehead as he headed to the heavily Catholic state Wednesday morning. Biden took just a few questions at the White House, saying it was obviously for NATO to decide whether Ukraine should join NATO. He said Russia was deliberately targeting civilians in its shelling campaign of Ukrainian cities. Biden was heading to Superior, Wisconsin, in politically crucial state that he pried from former President Donald Trump in 2020, after Trump secured a narrow victory there in 2016. After delivering a speech with heavy emphasis on Russian President Vladimir Putins brutal invasion of Ukraine, Biden was set to pivot back to domestic politics, with plans to visit the Blatnik Bridge, which connects the state to Duluth, Minn. He brought along two Midwestern senators, Amy Klobuchar (D-Minn.) and Tammy Baldwin (D-Wisc.). Biden focused remarks on tech investments in the Midwest during his speech to the Congress. As Ohio Senator Sherrod Brown says, Its time to bury the label Rust Belt. Its time, Biden said. According to the White House, the bridge, built in 1961 and which crosses the St. Louis Bay, has deteriorated and is nearing the end of its usable life. Due to the bridges condition, load restrictions have been instituted, setting the maximum weight of vehicles passing the bridge at 40 tons and prohibiting the passage of large trucks and other heavy-weight vehicles from travelling across the bridge, according to background materials. The pitch is part of Bidens Better America agenda, which he touted in his speech after ditching the Build Back Better mantra, amid his inability to get a $1.8 trillion package through the Senate. Advertisement A huge explosion that looked like a small nuke hit Kyiv in the early hours of the morning as a series of blasts rocked the Ukrainian capital, while terrified residents were urged to go to their nearest shelters. The quiet was broken first by the blaring of air raid sirens at around 2am local time in multiple districts across the city, before its buildings were lit up by a huge blast from a bomb fired by Vladimir Putin's invading forces. According to local media, Kyiv was not the only city to come under fire. The Kyiv Independent reported that air raid alerts were issued in multiple regions included Kyiv Oblast, Lviv, Zhytomyr, Frankivsk, Chernihiv and Odesa. Footage from the capital, filmed from windows overlooking the city, showed at least one massive explosion that lit up the night sky, and appeared to cause a shock-wave. In another video, captured by CBS News reporters moments after signing off a report, two bursts of light could be seen over Kyiv. While the explosions were not filmed directly, the intensity of them was enough to shock the reporter and his film crew, who were some distance away from the blasts. Earlier in the night, a Russian missile struck near Kyiv's southern main rail station on Wednesday night where thousands of women and children are being evacuated, Ukraine's state-run railway company Ukrzaliznytsya said in a statement. The station building suffered minor damage and the number of any casualties was not yet known, it said, adding trains were still operating despite the blast and fears of another night of brutal attacks by Vladimir Putin's forces. Ukraine's interior ministry adviser Anton Herashchenko said the blast was caused by wreckage from a downed Russian cruise missile, not a direct rocket strike. Trains continued to run. Herashchenko added the strike may have cut off central heating supply to parts of the Ukrainian capital amid freezing winter temperatures. A Reuters witness said the explosion made the earth shake. In recent days, thousands of civilians have been queuing at railway stations to flee the city, which has come under bombardment from invading Russian forces. Many fear the worst is yet to come. The office of Ukrainian President Volodymyr Zelenskyy's reported the powerful explosion was also near the country's Defence Ministry. Zelenskyy's office said it was a missile strike and that it wasn't immediately clear how damaging the strike was or precisely where the missile hit. Unverified reports said two missiles were launched towards the headquarters of Ukraine's Ministry of Defence, with one being shot down. The HQ and the railway station sit across a road from one-another in Kiyv. The Southern Railway station is one of two stations that make up the main passenger rail complex that thousands have used to flee the war over the past week. The two stations are connected by an overhead corridor that crosses over about a dozen tracks. 'Russian terrorists launched an air strike on the South Railway Station in Kyiv, where thousands of Ukrainian women and children are being evacuated,' the national railway company said. The stations are about 3 kilometers (2 miles) from Maidan Nezalezhnosti, the square that was the site of huge protests in 2014 and 2004. CCTV footage in the area posted to social media appeared to show the strike, with the video's timestamp saying one of the blasts came at 20:50 local time (18:50GMT). As Ukraine prepared to mark a week since Putin launched his invasion in the early hours of Thursday morning, a thick fog fell over Kiev - conditions that are challenging when it comes to air defence. Meanwhile, the command of Ukraine's Special Operations Forces warned that it would no longer take Russian artillerymen as prisoner of war in response to their 'brutal shelling' of cities. 'Each and every gun crew will be slaughtered like pigs,' a statement on Wednesday evening said. The United Nations Refugee Agency reported Thursday morning that over 1 million refugees have fled Ukraine since the beginning of the war, which has so far claimed thousands of lives in its first week. Pictures and videos from Kyiv have shown thousands crowding railways stations in a desperate bid to get a ride out of the city. Ukraine's State Emergency Service said Wednesday more than 2,000 civilians have died, though it was impossible to verify that claim. Ukraine has claimed to have killed almost 9,000 Russian soldiers, although Russia has contested the figures being released by officials in the country, as it tried to control the narrative of its illegal war. Pictured: Footage from Kiyv overnight showed a huge explosion light up the night sky. Reports said at least two huge blasts were heard in the city air raid sirens warned residents to urgently seek shelter A Russian air strike hit near Kyiv's southern rail station on Wednesday where thousands of women and children are being evacuated, Ukraine's state-run railway company Ukrzaliznytsya said in a statement. Pictured: Footage purportedly showing a blast in Kyiv on Wednesday night near a southern train station and Ukraine's Ministry of Defence Ukraine's interior ministry adviser Anton Herashchenko said the strike may have e cut off central heating supply to parts of the Ukrainian capital amid freezing winter temperatures A woman cries outside houses damaged by a Russian airstrike, according to locals, in Gorenka, outside the capital Kyiv A woman says goodbye as a train with evacuees is about to leave Kyiv's railway station on March 2, 2022 People stay inside Dorohozhychi subway station which is used as a bomb shelter, in Kyiv (Kiev), Ukraine Civilians are seen at the train station attempting to head west from Kyiv, Ukraine on March 2, 2022 amid Russian attacks Civilians are seen at the train station attempting to head west from Kyiv, Ukraine on March 2, 2022 A view shows damaged buildings following recent shelling, as Russia's invasion of Ukraine continues, in the settlement of Borodyanka in the Kyiv region, Ukraine March 2, 2022 Paramedics walk at the residential area following recent shelling, as Russia's invasion of Ukraine continues, in the settlement of Borodyanka in the Kyiv region, Ukraine March 2, 2022 On Wednesday morning, the bodies of the five victims of a rocket strike on Kyiv's television tower were piled into a van and removed from the site by police - as the capital's mayor Vitali Klitschko warned that Russian forces were 'getting closer'. Klitschko also today defiantly vowed 'we will fight' to defend the city, amid fears it could soon be battered by artillery fire from a 40-mile long death convoy parked nearby. Along with his brother and fellow former boxer Wladimir, the mayor called for more support from the west in an interview on Wednesday. Ukrainian police said Wednesday they arrested a man who brought explosives hidden in a children's toy to one of the Kyiv subway stations where thousands of people have been sheltering. The police also said four other suspected saboteurs were arrested, including two who were carrying weapons. An opening salvo on Tuesday night struck the Ukrainian capital's largest TV tower and damaged a nearby Holocaust memorial, killing five bystanders in the process. Hours later, US intelligence said the huge Russian convoy appears to have stalled near Kyiv though it could just be regrouping for a more-determined attack. Klitschko said that fighting is still ongoing in the cities of Bucha and Hostomel, on the outskirts of Kyiv, where a large number of destroyed Russian vehicles were pictured on Wednesday. He implored people in the city 'not to lose endurance', saying all critical infrastructure is still running and humanitarian supplies are being handed out. 'I ask everyone, for security reasons, not to go outside unnecessarily. At the alarm - go to the shelters,' he said. 'The enemy is gathering forces closer to the capital... We are preparing and will defend Kyiv!' Images showed areas of the city damaged in overnight strikes, as attacks resumed on Ukrainian cities elsewhere in the country - with paratroopers dropping into Kharkiv on Wednesday morning as missiles struck a university in the city having apparently missed a nearby police headquarters. Police officers prepare to remove the bodies of passersby killed in yesterday's airstrike that hit Kyiv's main television tower Ukrainian police forces remove the bodies of people killed during a Russian rocket attack on Kyiv's main TV tower on Tuesday, ahead of an expected assault on the capital Kyiv is preparing to come under fresh bombardment today after Moscow warned civilians to flee or else face being killed (pictured, bodies of people killed in last night's strike are covered by police) Five people were killed yesterday in a Russian missile strike which wiped out several TV stations in Kyiv, thought to be preparation for a larger follow-up attack Smoke and flames rise up the side of Kyiv's 1,300ft TV tower after Russia bombed it on Tuesday. The tower remained standing but buildings around it were damaged, with some broadcasts knocked off air Smoke rises around Kyiv's main television tower after several explosions near the base of it on Tuesday afternoon 'We need support!': Ukrainian former heavyweight boxing champions Vitali and Wladimir Klitschko demand more help from allies against Russia By Pa Sport Staff and Sam Brookes For MailOnline Kyiv's mayor Vitali Klitschko and his brother Wladimir both former world heavyweight boxing champions have appeared together calling for more support from allies to defend Ukraine against the Russian invasion. Wladimir said there were 'never enough' resources as the country's infrastructure has been partially crippled by shelling during a 'terrible advance' over the past few days. The mayor and his brother thanked governments which had provided international help but said basic supplies like food and water were needed as well as more weapons. In a joint interview on BBC News, Wladimir said: 'It's never enough. There's huge demand because infrastructure is partially destroyed by the shelling that is happening all over the country in the different cities. 'It's absolutely not enough and we definitely need to support and help financial support, military equipment support, medical support.' His brother added: 'Everyone has to be involved. It's war not against Ukraine, it's war against (all) civilians and it's war against democracy. 'We need support support from the whole world.' Russian President Vladimir Putin is trying to rebuild the 'Soviet or Russian Empire' but the future of Ukraine should be as a modern democracy within the 'European family', Vitali added. Vitali Klitschko, Kyiv Mayor and former heavyweight champion, right, and his brother Wladimir Klitschko, a Ukrainian former professional boxer look at a smart phone in the City Hall in Kyiv, Ukraine, Sunday, Feb. 27, 2022 Advertisement Ukraine's second biggest city, Kharkiv, also suffered heavy bombardment on the seventh day of the war but Ukrainians denied Russia's claim that its forces had taken the Black Sea port of Kherson. A U.S. official also said control of Kherson remained contested and said Russian forces appeared to be getting more aggressive in targeting infrastructure inside Kyiv as its advances slow in the face of fierce Ukrainian resistance. The invasion has yet to achieve Russian President Vladimir Putin's aim of overthrowing Ukraine's government but it has sent more than 870,000 people fleeing to neighbouring countries and jolted the global economy as governments and companies line up to isolate Moscow. The United Nations General Assembly voted overwhelmingly to deplore the invasion 'in the strongest terms'. It demanded that Russia withdraw its forces in a resolution backed by 141 of the assembly's 193 members. While General Assembly resolutions are non-binding, they carry political weight, with Wednesday's vote representing a symbolic victory for Ukraine and increasing Moscow's international isolation. Before the vote, Ukraine's ambassador Sergiy Kyslytsya said: 'They have come to deprive Ukraine of the very right to exist. 'It's already clear that the goal of Russia is not an occupation only. It is genocide.' French President Emmanuel Macron hailed the courage of Ukrainians faced with a war he said was Putin's responsibility alone. 'The days ahead are likely to be increasingly difficult,' Macron said in a televised national address. After failing to swiftly take major cities and to subdue Ukraine's military, U.S. officials have said for days that they believe Russia will instead seek to encircle cities, cutting off supply and escape routes, then attacking with a combined force of armour, ground troops and engineers. A top Ukrainian diplomat received a standing ovation from diplomats after a heartfelt speech Wednesday to the U.N.'s top human rights body, calling on the Human Rights Council to help hold Russia's government accountable by creating a panel of experts to scrutinize the invasion of Ukraine. Speaking by video from Kyiv, Emine Dzhaparova, Ukraine's first deputy minister of foreign affairs, described being awoken by the sound of an explosion on Feb. 24 as the invasion began. She said her government was 'fully operational' and lashed out at 'false claims' by Russian President Vladimir Putin that Ukraine was committing 'genocide.' 'Do you know how Russia treats and deals with genocide in Ukraine? By airstrikes using cruise and operational tactical missiles, tanks and artillery, reconnaissance groups and sabotage groups,' she said. 'Ukrainian babies are born in the bomb shelters in bunkers . As we speak here today, Russian armed forces keep attacking maternity wards, kindergartens, orphanages, hospitals.' Dzhaparova noted an 'urgent debate' at the council about the situation in Ukraine, calling for countries in the 47-member-state body's to set up a Commission of Inquiry - the council's most powerful tool to scrutinize human rights violations and abuses. US President Joe Biden used his first State of the Union address to highlight the resolve of a reinvigorated Western alliance that has worked to rearm the Ukrainian military and adopt tough sanctions, which he said have left Russian President Vladimir Putin 'isolated in the world more than he has ever been.' 'Throughout our history we've learned this lesson - when dictators do not pay a price for their aggression, they cause more chaos,' Biden said. 'They keep moving. And the costs and threats to America and the world keep rising.' As the seventh day of the war dawned Wednesday, Russia found itself increasingly isolated, beset by the sanctions that have thrown its economy into turmoil and left the country practically friendless, apart from a few nations like China, Belarus and North Korea. Leading Russian bank Sberbank announced Wednesday that it is pulling out of European markets amid the tightening Western sanctions. As fighting raged, the humanitarian situation worsened. Roughly 660,000 people have fled Ukraine, and countless others have taken shelter underground. The death toll was less clear, with neither Russia nor Ukraine releasing the number of troops lost. The U.N. human rights office said it has recorded 136 civilian deaths, though the actual toll is surely far higher. One senior Western intelligence official estimated that 5,000 Russian soldiers had been captured or killed in the biggest ground war in Europe since World War II. Many military experts worry that Russia may be shifting tactics. Moscow's strategy in Chechnya and Syria was to use artillery and air bombardments to pulverize cities and crush fighters' resolve. Soldiers are seen around piles of sand used for blocking a road in Ukrainian capital, Kyiv A view of smoke from inside a damaged gym following shelling in Kyiv which partially destroyed a gym A destroyed apartment building in Irpin, a city on the outskirts of Kyiv, was struck by Russian missiles early on Wednesday Soldiers are seen around piles of sand used for blocking a road in Ukrainian capital, Kyiv A fighter of the Ukrainian Territorial Defence Forces, the military reserve of the Ukrainian Armed Forces, stands guard at the underground crossing and subway entrance in the center of Kyiv UK considers seizing property of sanctioned Russian oligarchs British cabinet minister Michael Gove is drawing up plans to seize property in the United Kingdom owned by Russian oligarchs who have links to President Vladimir Putin without paying them compensation, the Financial Times reported on Wednesday. Gove's plans would apply to nine oligarchs who have been sanctioned by Britain, including Kirill Shamalov, Russia's youngest billionaire and Putin's former son-in-law, it said. The government has proposed these people will have their UK assets frozen and be unable to travel to Britain, the report added. However, the proposals are likely to require legislation, and government lawyers have concerns that the plans would face legal challenges, the report said, adding that no final government decision has been reached on whether to proceed. The United Kingdom's department of Levelling Up, Housing & Communities did not respond to a Reuters request for comment outside office hours. British Foreign Secretary Liz Truss has said she has drawn up a 'hit list' of Russian oligarchs, and said the government would impose new sanctions on them every few weeks. Advertisement Britain's Defense Ministry said it had seen an increase in Russian air and artillery strikes on populated urban areas over the past two days. It also said Kharkiv and Mariupol were encircled by Russian forces and that troops had reportedly moved into the center of a third city, Kherson. Russia's Defense Ministry said it had seized Kherson, though the claim could not be confirmed. Ukrainian authorities said five people were killed in the attack on the TV tower near central Kyiv. A TV control room and power substation were hit, and at least some Ukrainian channels briefly stopped broadcasting, officials said. Zelenskyy's office reported that the site of the Babi Yar Holocaust memorial, which is adjacent to the TV tower, was also hit. A spokesman for the memorial said a Jewish cemetery at the site, where Nazi occupiers killed more than 33,000 Jews over two days in 1941, was damaged, but the extent would not be clear until daylight. Zelenskyy expressed outrage Wednesday at the attack on Babi Yar and concern that other historically significant and religious sites, such as St. Sophia's Cathedral, could be targeted. 'This is beyond humanity. Such missile strike means that for many Russians our Kyiv is absolutely foreign,' Zelenskyy said in a speech posted on Facebook. 'They have orders to erase our history, our country and all of us.' Russia previously told people living near transmission facilities used by Ukraine's intelligence agency to leave their homes. But Russian Defense Ministry spokesman Igor Konashenkov claimed Wednesday that the airstrike on the TV tower did not hit any residential buildings. He did not address the reported deaths or the damage to Babi Yar. At least 25 people have been killed by shelling and air strikes in Kharkiv in the past 24 hours, authorities said. Pavel Dorogoy, 36, a photographer who lives near the city centre, said Russian forces had targeted the council building, which was empty at the time, a telephone exchange, and a television tower. 'Most people hid in the basements for most of the day today and last night... The Russians cannot enter the town so they're just attacking us from afar, they just want to destroy what they can,' he said. Moscow denies targeting civilians and says it aims to disarm Ukraine in a 'special military operation'. An attack on a square - the nucleus of public life in the city - was seen by many Ukrainians as brazen evidence that the Russian invasion wasn't just about hitting military targets but also about breaking their spirit. The gutted remains of Russian military vehicles on a road in the town of Bucha, close to the capital Kyiv A local resident stands on a destroyed armoured vehicle, as Russia's invasion of Ukraine continues, in the town of Bucha A destroyed armoured vehicle, with the letter 'V' painted on its turret, is seen on a street, as Russia's invasion of Ukraine continues, in the town of Bucha Police officers stand guard at the site of yesterday's airstrike that hit Kyiv's main television tower in Kyiv The bombardment blew out windows and walls of buildings that ring the square, which was piled high with debris and dust. Inside one building, chunks of plaster were scattered, and doors lay across hallways. Another Russian airstrike hit a residential area in the city of Zhytomyr. Ukraine's emergency services said Tuesday's strike killed at least two people, burned three homes and broke the windows in a nearby hospital. About 85 miles west of Kyiv, Zhytomyr is the home of the elite 95th Air Assault Brigade, which may have been the intended target. In the southern port city of Mariupol, the mayor said the attacks were relentless. 'They have been flattening us non-stop for 12 hours now,' Mariupol Mayor Vadym Boychenko was quoted by the Interfax news agency as saying. 'We cannot even take the wounded from the streets, from houses and apartments today, since the shelling does not stop.' Boychenko referred to Russia's actions as a 'genocide' - using the same word that Putin has used to justify the invasion. Zelenskyy has mocked Russia's claim that it is going after only military targets, noting that 16 children were killed on Monday. 'Where are the children? What kind of military factories do they work at?' Zelenskyy said. Human Rights Watch said it documented a cluster bomb attack outside a hospital in Ukraine's east in recent days. Residents also reported the use of such weapons in Kharkiv and Kiyanka village. The Kremlin denied using cluster bombs. An elderly woman comforts a child as they take shelter inside of an underground metro station in Kyiv A woman gives water to her dog as other people gather in the Kyiv subway, using it as a bomb shelter A woman holds her dog as other people gather in the Kyiv subway, using it as a bomb shelter People gather in the Kyiv subway, using it as a bomb shelter in Kyiv as Russian forces escalated their attacks on the city People line up in front of a pharmacy, as Russia's invasion of Ukraine continues, in central Kyiv Cluster bombs shoot smaller 'bomblets' over a large area, many of which fail to explode until long after they've been dropped. If their use is confirmed, that would represent a new level of brutality in the war. As the fighting raged, Kremlin spokesman Dmitry Peskov said that a Russian would be ready to resume talks Wednesday evening with Ukrainian officials, a day after Zelenskyy said Russia should stop bombing first. The first talks between Russia and Ukraine since the invasion were held Monday, but ended with only an agreement to talk again. Moscow made new threats of escalation Tuesday, days after raising the specter of nuclear war. A top Kremlin official warned that the West's 'economic war' against Russia could turn into a 'real one.' Inside Russia, a top radio station critical of the Kremlin was taken off the air after authorities threatened to shut it down over its coverage of the invasion. Among other things, the Kremlin is not allowing the fighting to be referred to as an 'invasion' or 'war.' Ukraine's Defense Ministry said it had evidence that Belarus, a Russian ally, is preparing to send troops into Ukraine. A ministry statement posted early Wednesday on Facebook said the Belarusian troops have been brought into combat readiness and are concentrated close to Ukraine's northern border. Belarusian President Alexander Lukashenko has said his country has no plans to join the fight. A senior U.S. defense official said that Russia's military progress - including by the massive convoy - has slowed, plagued by logistical and supply problems. Some Russian military columns have run out of gas and food, the official said, and morale has suffered as a result. Overall, the Russian military has been stalled by fierce resistance on the ground and a surprising inability to completely dominate Ukraine's airspace. The immense convoy, with vehicles packed together along narrow roads, would seemingly be 'a big fat target' for Ukrainian forces, the senior Western intelligence official said on condition of anonymity. But it also showed Russia was comfortable that they wouldn't come attack by air, rocket or missile, the official said. People wait at a train station to board trains in an attempt to flee the fighting in Kyiv Trains have been evacuating people from Kyiv to western Ukraine with many hoping to leave the country, though men are legally forbidden from going so they can stay and fight A federal judge has tossed out a lawsuit of a a proposed class-action lawsuit claiming Kellogg Company's Strawberry Pop-Tarts do not contain enough strawberries. U.S. District Judge Marvin Aspen in Chicago said no reasonable consumer could believe from Kellogg's packaging that the breakfast staple contained only strawberries, or more strawberries than other ingredients such as pears and apples. 'The word 'Strawberry,' combined with a picture of half of a strawberry and a Pop-Tart oozing red filling, does not guarantee that there will be a certain amount of strawberries in the product's filling,' Aspen wrote in his decision on Tuesday. The judge added: 'no reasonable consumer could conclude that the filling contains a certain amount of strawberries based on the package's images and its use of the term 'Strawberry.'' A federal judge has tossed out a lawsuit of a a proposed class-action lawsuit claiming Kellogg Company's Strawberry Pop-Tarts do not contain enough strawberries The complaint alleged that the 'Strawberry' label is misleading, because the treats also contain other fruits, possibly in higher proportions Stacy Chiappetta, the plaintiff, said Kellogg defrauded shoppers with deceptive packaging for its Unfrosted Strawberry Pop-Tarts, which contain red food dye that she said makes the filling 'brighter and more appealing' on grocery store shelves. The lawsuit pointed out that the Pop-Tarts contain less than 2 percent of dried strawberries, in addition to dried apples and pears. The complaint alleged that the 'Strawberry' label is misleading, because the treats also contain other fruits, possibly in higher proportions. Chiappetta accused the Battle Creek, Michigan-based company of violating federal and state consumer protection laws. But Judge Aspen ruled that 'Chiappetta has not identified any untruths on the packaging or a plausible deception,' 'The front of the Product packaging does not state or suggest anything about the amount of strawberries in the Products filling or guarantee that the filling contains only strawberries, and Chiappetta concedes that the filling contains some strawberries,' the judge noted. The lawsuit pointed out that the Pop-Tarts contain less than 2 percent of dried strawberries, in addition to dried apples and pears The suit compared the prices of different fruits over time, noting strawberries are costlier 'Accordingly, Chiappettas interpretation of the label is unreasonable and unactionable,' the judge wrote in the ruling. 'I expect that many of these types of cases may be dismissed,' Chiappettas lawyer Spencer Sheehan said in an email on Wednesday. 'That does not mean the labeling is not misleading.' Sheehan, who works in Great Neck, New York, has filed at least three similar lawsuits against Kellogg in Illinois and New York over its Frosted Strawberry, Whole Grain Frosted Strawberry and Frosted Chocolate Fudge Pop-Tarts. He said different courts could reach opposite conclusions based on 'almost identical' facts. Kellogg and its lawyers did not immediately respond to requests for comment on Wednesday. Pop-Tarts are seen in a stock image. First introduced in 1964, the toaster pastries are wildly popular, but a new lawsuit alleges that they don't contain enough strawberries Lawsuits over false labeling are common. The law firm Perkins Coie, which defends companies against such claims, said 325 proposed class actions were filed in 2021 against the food and beverage industry, up from 221 a year earlier, marking the fourth straight annual increase. Pop-Tarts were first introduced in 1964, months after Kellogg's competitor Post introduced its rival toaster pastry known as 'Country Squares'. First promoted in commercials featuring an animated toaster named Milton, Pop-Tops skyrocketed in popularity and quickly dominated the market. Currently, Pop-Tarts are produced in dozens of flavors, as well as various seasonal and 'limited edition' flavors. Advertisement South Carolina Senator Lindsey Graham called for Russian President Vladimir Putin to be tried for war crimes at the International Criminal Court during a Wednesday press conference. Speaking at a press conference alongside Ukrainian-American Rep. Victoria Spartz, also a Republican, Graham said he would be introducing a resolution aimed at supporting Ukraine's request for Putin to stand trial at The Hague. Earlier Spartz had said Putin was not waging a 'war' but a 'genocide of the Ukrainian people.' 'It's been hard to sleep at night, watching war crimes unfold on television and just feeling frustrated that you can't do more. So I'm going to take that frustration and channel it into action,' Graham said. Graham accused Russia's autocratic ruler of murdering opponents and stealing from his own country over his more than two decades in power. He also took aim at his ally former President Donald Trump's comments from late last week praising Putin as 'savvy' and a 'genius' for ordering a brutal and unprovoked invasion of Ukraine. 'I think I know what he was trying to say,' Graham offered when asked about Trump's praise. 'But no, I'm -- let's just make it clear. Putin's not a genius, he's a war criminal.' It comes as a barrage of Russian airstrikes and other explosions continue to batter Ukraine's cities. Kyiv's forces have put up an impressive resistance to Moscow's troops, but they continue to close in on the capital as foreign officials and intelligence reports share concerns that Putin may only ramp up his brutal tactics. As of Wednesday afternoon the Ukrainian Ministry of Defense denied reports that the city of Kherson became the first to fall to Russian soldiers. Lindsey Graham (left) and Ukrainian-born Indiana GOP Rep. Victoria Spartz (right) said they would be introducing resolutions in the House and Senate to support Kyiv's calls for a war crimes trial against Vladimir Putin A woman stands in front of a residential building destroyed by recent shelling, as Russia's invasion of Ukraine continues, in the city of Irpin in the Kyiv region on March 2. Spartz said Wednesday that Putin's actions amounted to a 'genocide' A woman inspects debris inside an apartment of a residential building, which locals said was damaged by recent shelling, in the separatist-run Donetsk region on March 2 Ukrainian President Volodymyr Zelensky posted a video on Facebook on Wednesday, as fighting entered its seventh day, delivering a chilling warning that Putin gave his soldiers an order to 'erase' Ukraine and its people. Days earlier he called for Putin to stand trial at the International Criminal Court. Since then UK Prime Minister Boris Johnson has accused Putin of committing war crimes and earlier on Wednesday the US ambassador to the United Nations claims Russia was using weapons outlawed by the Geneva convention. 'There is no rule of law in Russia. There is no other place to take this complaint to other than the International Criminal Court,' Graham said. 'So I'm hoping that Republicans and Democrats will speak with one voice when it comes to the rule of law, that what Putin is doing is a war crime.' Graham added that he hoped to send a message to Putin's cronies and top officials that they too could 'end up in the Hague' if they continue to follow the authoritarian's orders. After the press conference Graham said he would be placing calls to elected officials around the world to try and gin up support for such a resolution. 'I'm trying to get parliaments throughout the world to follow our lead here, to send a clear signal to the Russian military: What will happen if you go down the road of committing atrocities against Ukrainian people,' he said. Spartz, who represents Indiana in the House but was born and raised in Ukraine, introduced a measure in Congress' lower chamber aimed at providing more support for Ukraine in conjunction with Graham's. House GOP Leader Kevin McCarthy backed the measure in a statement. 'Vladimir Putin has invaded a sovereign nation and terrorized its civilians. His aggression will not stop with Ukraine. The gravity of this moment calls for Congress to speak with one voice. Today, the House voted overwhelmingly to support stronger sanctions against Russia, immediate and more military aid to Ukraine, and energy independence for America. Now, the Biden administration must take immediate action to keep military aid flowing to Ukraine, displace Russian oil and gas, and regain global energy leadership,' McCarthy said. The International Criminal Court's top prosecutor said late last month that he would open an investigation into possible war crimes committed in Ukraine. Zelensky said Wednesday that 6,000 Russian troops have been killed so far. More than 2,000 civilians are dead, Kyiv officials said, including nearly two dozen children. President Joe Biden said the same day that it is clear Putin is targeting civilians in Ukraine and insisted that 'nothing is off the table' with banning Russian gas imports, a drastic move that would send energy prices soaring further. 'Its clear they are,' Biden said, when asked by a reporter if Russia is targeting civilians as he left the White House for Wisconsin. However Biden said it was too early to say whether Russia had committed war crimes. 'We are following it very closely. Its early to say that,' he told reporters. The president announced another round of sanctions on both Russia and Belarus's defense sector, after Ukraine announced Belarus had joined the fight on Putin's side. The Pentagon said Wednesday that Russia has now deployed about 70 percent of the troops it had amassed on the Ukraine border, about 100,000. US Ambassador to the United Nations Linda Thomas-Greenfield spoke at the General Assembly in New York City shortly before member nations voted overwhelmingly to demand Putin draw back his troops. Andrey Goncharuk, 68, right, a member of the territorial defense speaks to a man in the backyard of a house damaged by a Russian airstrike, according to locals A woman is overwhelmed by emotion in the backyard of a house damaged by a reported Russian airstrike. Putin's troops have been battering Ukraine for seven straight days A girl walks as she is fleeing with her family across a destroyed bridge, on the outskirts of Kyiv on March 2. Hundreds of thousands of Ukrainians have been displaced by the war so far The US and 140 other countries voted to condemn Russia's attack. Russia, Syria, Belarus, Eritrea and North Korea voted against. In a marked departure from Biden's more hesitant tone, the diplomat did not shy away from accusing Russian forces of committing 'war crimes' within their neighbor's borders. Ukraine war: The latest Russian paratroopers land in Ukraine's second city amid heavy fighting 'There are practically no areas left in Kharkiv where an artillery shell has not yet hit': Interior Ministry official Joe Biden brands Vladimir Putin a 'dictator' in his annual State of the Union address as he bans Russian aircraft from US airspace Russia steps up its bombing campaign and missile strikes, hitting Kyiv's main television tower, two residential buildings in a town west of the city and the city of Bila Tserkva to the south of the capital Russian forces push into the besieged Black Sea city of Kherson in the south Russian attacks leave Mariupol, another Black Sea port further to the west without electricity More than 677,000 people have fled Ukraine since the Russian invasion, the UN's refugee agency says The UN's International Court of Justice says it will hold public hearings on March 7 and 8 over Ukraine's allegations of 'genocide' by Russia Russia blocks an independent television channel and a liberal radio station, tightening a virtual media blackout A string of Western companies announce they are freezing or scaling back business with Russia Russians race to withdraw cash after the introduction of capital controls and as the ruble hits record lows Russian-owned Nord Stream 2 goes insolvent after Germany halts the pipeline following Moscow's invasion Oil prices soar past $110 a barrel, despite agreements to release 60 million barrels from stockpiles The World Bank prepares a $3-billion aid package for Ukraine, including $350 million in immediate funds Advertisement Wearing a blue and yellow scarf as a show of solidarity with Ukraine, Thomas-Greenfield made an emotional plea to Russian soldiers on the front lines. 'To the Russian soldiers sent to the front lines of an unjust, unnecessary war, I say your leaders are lying to you. Do not commit war crimes,' Thomas-Greenfield said. 'Do everything you can to put down your weapons and leave Ukraine.' After accusing Russia of human rights abuses, she continued: 'Putin declared war, Ukraine has defended itself with great courage and vigor.' 'Russia has bombed residential apartment buildings, it has bombed sacred burial grounds, it has shelled kindergartens and orphanages and hospitals. But the US ambassador said it's now apparent that 'Russia is preparing to increase the brutality of its campaign against Ukraine.' 'We've seen videos of Russian forces moving exceptionally lethal weaponry into Ukraine, which has no place on the battlefield. That includes cluster munitions and vacuum bombs, which are banned under the Geneva Convention,' Thomas-Greenfield said. 'We all have seen the 40-mile long, lethal convoy charging toward Kyiv. President Putin continues to escalate, putting Russia's nuclear forces on high alert, threatening to invade Finland and Sweden.' Cluster munitions explode in mid-air to rain down dozens or even hundreds of mini-bombs, which can kill indiscriminately, and are banned by international law. A vacuum bomb works by sucking in oxygen from the surrounding air to generate a high-temperature explosion, and is capable of vaporizing human bodies. Ukraine officials have already claimed Russians are using such weapons. Russia has today stepped up its attacks on Ukraine's major cities as officials in Mariupol said a 'full-scale genocide' was underway as Putin's men unleashed a 15-hour artillery barrage while Kharkiv also came under heavy bombardment in a dark sign of what could be to come in the capital Kyiv. Mariupol, located in the south of Ukraine on the Black Sea, has been surrounded by Russian forces and struck by artillery in an apparent attempt to bomb the city into submission as Putin's men resort to 'medieval' tactics. Sergiy Orlov, the deputy mayor, said entire districts had been leveled with such heavy barrages that medics cannot get in to retrieve the dead. 'We are near to a humanitarian catastrophe,' he said. 'Russian forces are several kilometers away on all sides,' he added. 'The Ukrainian army is brave and they will continue to defend the city, but Russia does not fight with their army, they just destroy districts... We are in a terrible situation.' Meanwhile Kharkiv, Ukraine's second city, came under heavy barrage in the early hours as Russian troops try to surround and seize it after days of fighting - with a rocket slamming into a university building and police station in the early hours before the city council was also struck, with one of the explosions caught in a dramatic video. The bombardment gives a dark taste of what is likely to come for other cities such as Kyiv after analysts warned Russia's military - having suffered heavy losses trying to pull off ambitious precision strikes - was likely to resort to surrounding cities and bombing them into submission to force a bloody victory. Authorities have warned paedophiles in Australia are becoming increasingly depraved after discovering some shocking instances of infants being sexually tortured. On Tuesday, the Australian Federal Police announced they had finalised a three-year covert operation which led to the arrests of 121 men nationwide. A total of 51 children were also rescued, with the international paedophile ring shut down following a tip from New Zealand authorities. In Queensland alone, 58 men were charged with 423 offences and 23 children were rescued from potential harm. Hilda Sirec, the AFP Commander for the Australian Centre to Counter Child Exploitation, said Operation Molto commenced after authorities were informed about a dropbox-style online file sharing platform called Mega NZ. Authorities have chillingly warned paedophiles in Australia are becoming increasingly depraved after discovering some shocking instances of infants being tortured sexually (pictured, a man arrested this week in Queensland) On Tuesday, the Australian Federal Police announced they had finalised a three-year covert operation which led to the arrests of 121 men nationwide Police take one of the alleged offenders (pictured middle) away for further questioning in Queensland this week OPERATION MOLTO: STATE-BY-STATE Queensland - 55 alleged offenders facing 466 charges. Sixteen children have been removed from harm in that state. Victoria - 18 alleged offenders facing 370 charges. Eight children have been removed from harm in that state. New South Wales - 17 alleged offenders facing 96 offences. Three children have been removed from harm in that state. South Australia - 12 alleged offenders facing 232 charges. Ten children have been removed from harm in that state. Western Australia - eight alleged offenders facing nine charges, with no children having to be removed from harm in that state. Tasmania - three alleged offenders in facing 54 charges. Two children have been removed from harm in that state. Northern Territory - two alleged offenders facing 16 charges, with no children having to be removed from harm in that jurisdiction. ACT - Three alleged offenders facing 48 charges, with five children removed from harm in that jurisdiction. Advertisement 'It's used for legitimate purposes but they (offenders) were using it for illegitimate purposes,' she said. 'Mega NZ has been really great in coming forward and letting us knowthey worked with NZ authorities really well on this.' Ms Sirec said the confronting material even stunned many veteran investigators. 'There was everything from the different categories, but also some horrendous violent, sadistic, sexual torture of infants,' she told the Courier Mail. 'Some of the images were just horrid. Some of it was on the scale of torture and offending that even our experienced investigators were surprised to see.' She added some of the material saw children being abused from perceived healthy living environments. Other offenders are producing explicit material as they are 'bored' by current content, which is typically accessed on the dark web. In October last year, former Adelaide logistics manager Jadd William Brooker, 39, admitted to more than 180 charges in court involving the sexual abuse of children. A magistrate heard Brooker, dubbed Australia's 'worst' paedophile, threatened to infect children with HIV. Some of the charges included sexual exploitation of a child, maintaining an unlawful sexual relationship with a child and disseminating child exploitation material. Prosecutors alleged Brooker had illegal sexual relationships with two teenagers and recorded one of them performing a sex act. Police discovered buckets of toys at the homes of some of the accused child molesters Police will forensically examine countless devices for traces of child abuse material following the closing of an international paedophile ring on Tuesday Jadd William Brooker (pictured) is now regarded as Australia's 'worst' paedophile after he admitted to 189 offences in an Adelaide Court last year One victim has since taken his own life while the other has been tested for HIV. A detective investigating the case described Brooker's offending as the 'worst and most degrading in his 14 years as an investigator.' Brooker is due to be sentenced this year, with prosecutors pushing for a life sentence without the possibility of parole. Anyone with information about child exploitation should call Crime Stoppers on 1800 333 000. The Biden administration is weighing whether to remove the feared Islamic Revolutionary Guard Corps from terror lists and to lift other sanctions as he tries to deliver a new nuclear deal. It is one of the most controversial concessions offered by Rob Malley, the State Department's special envoy to Iran, at a time when talks are in a critical phase. The Trump administration declared the IRGC to be a terrorist organization in 2019, accusing it of providing funding, training and equipment to other groups worth one billion dollars each year. Less than a year later, General Qasem Soleimani, the commander of its Quds force, was killed in a US drone strike. Details of the plan to delist the group emerged in a lengthy Twitter thread posted by former State Department appointee Gabriel Noronha, who said he had been authorized to reveal details of discussions by disgruntled former colleagues. 'This is a long and technical thread, but heres what you should know: the deal being negotiated in Vienna is dangerous to our national security, it is illegal, it is illegitimate, and it in no way serves U.S. interests in either the short or long term,' he wrote. 'Heres why: Led by Rob Malley, the U.S. has promised to lift sanctions on some of the regimes worst terrorists and torturers, leading officials in the regime's WMD infrastructure, and is currently trying to lift sanctions on the IRGC itself.' In particular he revealed that Malley had been pushing to remove sanctions on the Revolutionary Guards. He received pushback from other officials. 'That hasn't stopped him,' continued Noronha. Iran's Islamic Revolutionary Guard Corps was classified as a terrorist organisation by the Trump administration in 2019 after the US withdrew from the 2015 nuclear deal Robert Malley, US Special Representative for Iran, is pushing the Biden administration to drop the terrorist designation for the Islamic Revolutionary Guard so secure a nuclear deal with Iran Details of the potential deal were revealed by Gabriel Noronha, former special adviser on Iran at the State Department during the Trump administration 'Malley has proposed to the Iranians that the U.S. will remove the IRGC from the Foreign Terrorist Organization list & sanctions if the Iranians simply promise to talk to the United States in new negotiations about their "regional activity" (aka terrorism).' The result, he said, was anger among some officials. 'Whats happening in Vienna is a total disaster,' one warned. A senior Western diplomat, familiar with the state of talks in Vienna, confirmed that Iran initially asked Malley for the concession and that he had been pushing Washington to accept. With the world now distracted by Ukraine, some analysts worry that the Biden administration could agree to weaker terms. At stake is a return to a deal that would limit Iran's nuclear program in return for a lifting of sanctions. A 2015 agreement, known as the Joint Comprehensive Plan of Action, or JCPOA, imposed limits on the production of enriched uranium. But the US withdrew in 2018 after Trump called it the 'worst deal ever.' Conservatives said Iran was not respecting the spirit of the agreement by fomenting unrest in the Middle East and developing missile technology. Mourners gather to remember Gen. Qasem Soleimani at Imam Khomeini Grand Mosque in Tehran, Iran, Friday, Jan. 17, 2020, after he was killed in a US drone strike Soleimani headed the Quds Force of the IRGC, and was considering the second most powerful man in Iran until he was killed during a visit to Baghdad, Iraq Talks on reviving the deal resumed in Vienna at the end of last year and have now reached what all sides agree is a critical moment. However, the US negotiating team has been buffeted by resignations over Malley's stance. Richard Nephew, the Deputy Special Envoy for the State Department's negotiations with Iran, left his role after urging the administration to adopt a tougher position in January. Noronha, a political appointee at the State Department who was later fired by Trump for criticizing the former president over the Jan. 6 violence, said his former colleagues were worried that Iran was gaining the upper hand. He claimed that an executive order, sanctioning members of the Iranian Supreme Leader's Office was also on the table, and could by rescinded as soon as Monday. The White House National Security Council did not respond to a request for comment. A spokesman for the State Department said it was not prepared to negotiate in public. 'We are prepared to make difficult decisions to undo the previous administrations failed "maximum pressure" policy, which has led to an escalating nuclear crisis and to greatly increased threats to U.S. citizens, interests, and partners in the region,' he said. This handout photo provided by the IRGC shows an underground base for anti-ship missiles at an undisclosed Gulf location in January 2021 The IRGC was accused of being an 'active and enthusiastic participant in acts of terror,' when it was designated a terrorist group - including the 1983 bombing of the U.S. Marine barracks in Beirut, which killed 241 US personnel, and the 1996 bombing of the Khobar Towers complex in Saudi Arabia, which killed 19 US Air Force service members. Today it is accused of arming rebel groups or other terrorist organizations in the Middle East. In December, two huge shipments of arms - including 171 surface-to-air missile and eight anti-tank missiles - were seized from vessels en route to supply Houthi rebels in Yemen. The idea of lifting the terrorism designation has infuriated Washington's ally Israel. Israeli Prime Minister Naftali Bennett recently said there remained a huge distance between the US and Iran in talks. 'And to cap the Chutzpa Iran is demanding to delist The IRGC,' he said according to Axios. 'Do you understand? They are now asking to let the biggest terror organization on earth off the hook.' However, supporters of the deal say that it was always the case that Trump-era sanctions would be lifted. And Barbara Slavin, director of the Future of Iran Initiative at the Atlantic Council, said many of the individuals and organizations would remain sanctioned under other authorizations anyway. 'Do we want Iran to slow down their nuclear program or not? This deal is worth having,' she said. French President Emmanuel Macron tonight insisted that the world was not at war with Russia or its people, but only with Vladimir Putin. In a hard-hitting national TV address on Wednesday evening, the head of state addressed the ongoing conflict in Ukraine. There are no NATO troops or bases in Ukraine, and Russia has not been attacked, said Mr Macron, as multiple cities in Ukraine came under brutal attack. French President Emmanuel Macron tonight (pictured giving a television address) insisted that the world was not at war with Russia or its people, but only with Vladimir Putin Mr Macron held multiple meetings with Mr Putin (pictured), including one in Moscow, before Russia invaded Ukraine last Thursday. Portraying Russian president Vladimir Putin as the aggressor' while standing in front of the flags of France, Ukraine and the European Union, Mr Macron said: This war is the fruit of a spirit of revenge born of a revisionist reading of the history of Europe. Russian forces are besieging the most important Ukrainian cities. The days to come will probably be harder and harder. Hundreds of thousands of refugees are fleeing to neighbouring countries. Mr Macron held multiple meetings with Mr Putin, including one in Moscow, before Russia invaded Ukraine last Thursday. Referring to the Ukrainian leader, Mr Macron said: I address to President Volodymyr Zelensky the fraternal support of France. This very afternoon, the United Nations General Assembly condemned, in an overwhelming vote, this aggression. 'The international community has thus shown its unity. Confirming that several hundred French soldiers had arrived in Romannia, Mr Macron highlighted the distinction between Russia and its leader. We are not at war with Russia, said Mr Macron. We know what binds us to this great European people that is to say the Russian people. Pictured: A blaze is seen at a Kharkiv University faculty building caused by a Russian missile strike just after 8.10am local time on March 2, 2022 Despite this, Mr Macron added: I have chosen to stay in contact, and will stay in contact as much as I can and as much as necessary, with President Putin. Mr Macron said this was to prevent the widening and contagion of the war. These events are the signal of a change of era. Democracy is being challenged before our eyes. Our freedom, that of our children, is no longer a given, it is a time to be courageous, a constant fight. Our country will therefore increase investment in its defence. We can no longer depend on others, especially Russian gas. I will defend a strategy of European energy independence. To this end, Mr Macron said he would be organising an EU summit next week at Versailles to discuss energy independence. The former treasurer at the union representing NYPD sergeants has been ousted from the board in another shakeup following the indictment of the ex-president on federal corruption charges, the Daily News has learned. Paul Capotosto had been treasurer from 2017 to 2021 before switching to citywide secretary after the FBI raided the home of President Ed Mullins and the SBA headquarters in October. Advertisement NYPD Sgt. Paul Capotosto of the Sergeants Benevolent Association is no longer on the union board as fallout continues from the indictment of Ed Mullins. (Jeff Bachner/for New York Daily News) Last week, Mullins was indicted on one count of wire fraud for allegedly overcharging the union for roughly $1 million in expenses during that four-year period. According to the federal indictment, Capotosto rubber-stamped Mullins alleged inflated expenses, often approving them without even requiring receipts, The News reported. Money was spent on meals costing hundreds of dollars, clothing, jewelry, appliances and even a relatives tuition, the feds said. Advertisement As of Feb. 23, Paul Capotosto is no longer a board officer of the SBA, union President Vincent Vallelong said in a written statement to members. The Daily News Flash Weekdays Catch up on the days top five stories every weekday afternoon. > The revelations had sergeants in the 12,600-member union wondering whether other board members were involved in the same alleged conduct as Mullins, The News reported. Former SBA President Ed Mullins is accused of misspending union money. (GREGG VIGLIOTTI/for New York Daily News) The alleged misspent money came from the so-called contingent fund, which is typically used for unforeseen costs. In the SBA, the fund, which used money from union dues, paid for expenses like meals, travel and lodging. Vallelong also appointed three new board members, all of whom have ties to the upper reaches of the current board, sources said. They include new citywide secretary Joseph Ricotta; William Morrissey, the new sergeant at arms, and John Christie, the 60th Precinct delegate who is now Brooklyn South trustee. The union has not had an election since 2014, a period of nearly eight years. Andrew Quinn, a lawyer for the union, declined to comment. Vallelong and Capotosto did not respond to emails. Mullins has pleaded not guilty. The feds said that Robert Ganley, who served as vice president and handled expenses before Capotosto assumed the role, held Mullins and other officials accountable for spending. But that check on spending allegedly fell away when Ganley retired from the union in 2017, the feds said. The treasurer did not scrutinize the expense reports in the same manner the prior vice president had and did not regularly require receipts for Mullins reimbursements, the federal indictment said. The treasurer approved hundreds of expense reports for Mullins. Mullins rarely included receipts. Advertisement The Pentagon announced Wednesday it will delay its nuclear missile test scheduled for this weekend to avoid angering Russian President Vladimir Putin as he continued shelling Ukrainian cities and civilian and military casualties continued to climb. Defense Department Spokesperson John Kirby said the move is a show of 'restraint' after the Russian leader put his country's nuclear forces on high alert and amid warnings from the U.S. he is deploying vacuum bombs and cluster munitions across the border. 'This is not a step backwards in our readiness,' he assured during his press briefing Wednesday announcing the testing of the $7,000,000 intercontinental Minuteman III ballistic missiles - that can travel up to 6,000 miles at 15,000 mph - would be scrapped at Vandenberg Air Force Base in southern California. Ukraine war: The latest The Pentagon cancelled a test of the Minuteman III nuclear missiles as a show of 'restraint' The U.S. insisted the scrapping of the test was not a 'backwards step' Putin's forces continued their shelling of Ukraine and struck an area near Kyiv's southern main station US warned that Moscow could be deploying vacuum bombs and cluster munitions Russian attacks leave Mariupol, another Black Sea port further to the west without electricity More than 677,000 people have fled Ukraine since the Russian invasion, the UN's refugee agency says The UN's International Court of Justice says it will hold public hearings on March 7 and 8 over Ukraine's allegations of 'genocide' by Russia Russia blocks an independent television channel and a liberal radio station, tightening a virtual media blackout A string of Western companies announce they are freezing or scaling back business with Russia Russians race to withdraw cash after the introduction of capital controls and as the ruble hits record lows Russian-owned Nord Stream 2 goes insolvent after Germany halts the pipeline following Moscow's invasion Oil prices soar past $110 a barrel, despite agreements to release 60 million barrels from stockpiles The World Bank prepares a $3-billion aid package for Ukraine, including $350 million in immediate funds Advertisement Kirby said the U.S. has not followed Putrin in putting its nuclear forces on heightened alert in a briefing conducted as a missile struck near Kyiv's southern main rail station - where thousands of women and children were being evacuated. The scrapping of the test flight is the first show of restraint from the U.S. after hitting Putin with a slew of sanctions as the world continued pushing him into international exile. Countries from across the world lined up against Russia at the United Nations General Assembly on Wednesday to overwhelmingly pass a resolution that rebuked Moscow for its invasion of Ukraine and demanded the withdrawal of Russian forces. The delay of missile testing comes after the U.S. Air Force flexed its military muscles Tuesday at one of its airbases in Japan, showcasing a fleet of more than two dozen warplanes in an apparent effort to deter Chinese forces from invading the self-governing island of Taiwan. The display of military might at Kadena Air Base, which officials called a 'routine wing readiness exercise,' comes two days after President Joe Biden dispatched several former senior defense staffers to the island nation in a show of support, as many wonder whether Russia's invasion of Ukraine could trigger a Chinese invasion of the country. Kirby claimed the Defense Department Secretary Lloyd Austin is 'comfortable that the strategic deterrence posture that we have in place is up to the task of defending the homeland and our allies.' At the top of the briefing Wednesday, Kirby detailed: 'I often come out here and tell you what we have done both in terms of exercises and operations. Today, I want to talk a little bit about something that we're not going to do, and I want to explain why.' 'Last weekend, as you saw, President Putin directed a special alert of Russian nuclear forces. Now, in this time of heightened tensions, the United States and other members of the international community rightly saw this as a dangerous and irresponsible and, as I said before, an unnecessary step.' 'In an effort to demonstrate that we have no intention in engaging in any actions that can be misunderstood or misconstrued, the Secretary of Defense has directed that our Minuteman III intercontinental ballistic missiles test launch scheduled for this week to be postponed,' he announced. 'We did not take this decision lightly but instead to demonstrate that we are a responsible nuclear power,' Kirby added. Russia stepped up its attacks on Ukraine's major cities on Wednesday as officials in Mariupol said a 'full-scale genocide' was underway as Putin's men unleashed a 15-hour artillery barrage while Kharkiv also came under heavy bombardment in a dark sign of what could come to be in the capital of Kyiv. In recent days, thousands of civilians have been queuing at railway stations to flee the city, which has come under bombardment from invading Russian forces. Many fear the worst is yet to come. The office of Ukrainian President Volodymyr Zelenskyy's reported the powerful explosion was also near the country's Defence Ministry. Zelenskyy's office said it was a missile strike and that it wasn't immediately clear how damaging the strike was or precisely where the missile hit. Ukraine's emergency services estimate that 2,000 civilians have been killed so far during Russia's invasion, though that figure is likely to be an under-count considering it does not take into account Wednesday's figures. The Pentagon canceled an intercontinental ballistic missile test to show 'restraint' and avoid 'misunderstanding' with Russia. Pictured: The Air Force flexed its military muscles at and airbase in Japan Tuesday by showcasing a fleet of more than two dozen warplanes in an apparent effort to deter Chinese forces from invading Taiwan A Russian air strike hit near Kyiv's southern rail station on Wednesday where thousands of women and children are being evacuated, Ukraine's state-run railway company Ukrzaliznytsya said in a statement. Pictured: Footage purportedly showing a blast in Kyiv on Wednesday night near a southern train station and Ukraine's Ministry of Defence Ukraine's interior ministry adviser Anton Herashchenko said the strike may have e cut off central heating supply to parts of the Ukrainian capital amid freezing winter temperatures A woman cries outside houses damaged by a Russian airstrike, according to locals, in Gorenka, outside the capital Kyiv Ukraine's military said Russia today renewed its assault 'on all fronts', with paratroopers landing in Kharkiv, tanks and trucks rolling into the centre of Kherson, and strikes in Mariupol and Zhytomyr Despite Biden insisting shows of strength toward Russia during his State of the Union address on Tuesday evening, the move on Wednesday is an apparent ploy to appease Putin. The president warned Putin he 'has no idea what's coming' as he opened his national address Tuesday, declaring that invading a foreign country has 'costs around the world'. Biden declared Putin a 'Russian dictator' and said Moscow is 'more isolated than ever' as he added to already strict Western sanctions against Russia with the closure of U.S. air space to all Russian flights. He was met with applause after accusing Putin of 'underestimating' Western allies and the Ukrainian people. The president spent the first 12 minutes of his State of the Union speaking about Russia's invasion of Ukraine and announced 'strict' new measures against Moscow and its wealthy elite with a new task force to go after the 'crimes' of Russian oligarchs, while reaffirming that he would not send American forces into Kyiv. This included closing U.S. air space to all Russian aircraft and flight. 'We are coming for your ill-begotten gains,' Biden said Tuesday night, prompting the rare sight of members of both parties standing to applaud. Biden also said matter-of-factly on Monday that Americans should not be concerned about nuclear war with Russia. White House Press Secretary Jen Psaki later said the White House sees 'no reason' to change its nuclear posture. 'We think provocative rhetoric like this is dangerous adds to the risk of miscalculation, should be avoided, and we'll not indulge in it.' Psaki said. Putin explained that 'aggressive statements' by the North Atlantic Treaty Organization (NATO) led him to ratchet up his nuclear defenses. 'We are assessing President Putin's directive and at this time we see no reason to change our own alert levels.' The move raised concerns that the invasion of Ukraine could intentionally or mistakenly lead to a global nuclear war. Kirby said Monday that Putin now has three quarters of his resources, 120,000 of the 160,0000 troops amassed at the border deployed to Ukraine. Mariupol, located in the south of Ukraine on the Black Sea, has been surrounded by Russian forces and struck by artillery in an apparent attempt to bomb the city into submission as Putin's men resort to 'medieval' tactics. Sergiy Orlov, the deputy mayor, said entire districts had been leveled with such heavy barrages that medics cannot get in to retrieve the dead. 'We are near to a humanitarian catastrophe,' he said. 'Russian forces are several kilometers away on all sides,' he added. 'The Ukrainian army is brave and they will continue to defend the city, but Russia does not fight with their army, they just destroy districts... We are in a terrible situation.' Minuteman III nuclear missile: The $7million warhead that can travel 6,000 miles at 15,000 mph The Minuteman III makes up the Unites States' land-based ICBM of the nation's nuclear triad, along with the Trident submarine-launched ballistic missile (SLBM) and nuclear weapons carried by long-range strategic bombers. It is a strategic weapon system using a ballistic missile of intercontinental range. Missiles are dispersed in hardened silos to protect against attack and connected to an underground launch control center through a system of hardened cables. The $7,000,000 Minuteman III weighs 79,432 pounds and can travel 6,000 miles at 15,000mph. Development of the missile began in the 1950s, and was named after the Colonial Minutemen of the American Revolutionary War, who could be ready to fight on short notice. The Minuteman entered service in 1962 as a deterrence weapon that could hit Soviet cities, with the Minuteman-II entering service in 1965 with a number of upgrades to its accuracy and survivability in the face of anti-ballistic missile (AMB) systems. In 1970, the Minuteman-III became the first deployed ICBM with multiple independently targetable reentry vehicles (MIRV): three smaller warheads that improved the missile's ability to strike targets defended by AMBs. By 1970 during the Cold War, 1,000 Minuteman missiles were deployed, but by 2017, the number had shrunk to 400, deployed in missile silos around Malmstrom AFB, Montana; Minot AFB, North Dakota; and F.E. Warren AFB, Wyoming. From 2027 onwards, Minuteman will be progressively replaced by the new Ground Based Strategic Deterrent (GBSD) ICBM from 2027 onwards to be built by Northrop Grumman. The $7,000,000 Minuteman III weighs 79,432 pounds and can travel 6,000 miles at 15,000mph. Above is a test launch from Vandenberg Air Force Base in California in October 2019 Advertisement Rubble is seen littering the streets of Kharkiv after a Russian missile struck the city in the early hours of Wednesday A view shows damaged buildings following recent shelling, as Russia's invasion of Ukraine continues, in the settlement of Borodyanka in the Kyiv region, Ukraine on Wednesday Meanwhile, the Russian missile struck near Kyiv's southern main rail station on Wednesday night where thousands of women and children are being evacuated, Ukraine's state-run railway company Ukrzaliznytsya said in a statement. The station building suffered minor damage and the number of any casualties was not yet known, it said, adding trains were still operating despite the blast and fears of another night of brutal attacks by Vladimir Putin 's forces. Ukraine's interior ministry adviser Anton Herashchenko said the blast was caused by wreckage from a downed Russian cruise missile, not a direct rocket strike. Trains continued to run. Herashchenko added the strike may have cut off central heating supply to parts of the Ukrainian capital amid freezing winter temperatures. A Reuters witness said the explosion made the earth shake. In recent days, thousands of civilians have been queuing at railway stations to flee the city, which has come under bombardment from invading Russian forces. Many fear the worst is yet to come. Ukrainian President Volodymyr Zelensky's office reported the powerful explosion was also near the country's Defense Ministry. Unverified reports said two missiles were launched towards the headquarters of Ukraine's Ministry of Defence, with one being shot down. The HQ and the railway station sit across a road from one-another in Kyiv. The Southern Railway station is one of two stations that make up the main passenger rail complex that thousands have used to flee the war over the past week. The two stations are connected by an overhead corridor that crosses over about a dozen tracks. 'Russian terrorists launched an air strike on the South Railway Station in Kyiv, where thousands of Ukrainian women and children are being evacuated,' the national railway company said. A Russian air strike hit near Kyiv's southern rail station on Wednesday where thousands of women and children are being evacuated, Pictured: Civilians are seen at the train station attempting to head west from Kyiv on March 2, 2022 People stay inside Dorohozhychi subway station, which is used as a bomb shelter in Kyiv, Ukraine on Wednesday, March 2 Kharkiv, Ukraine's second city, also came under heavy barrage in the early hours of Wednesday as Russian troops try to surround and seize it after days of fighting - with a rocket slamming into a university building and police station in the early hours before the city council was also struck, with one of the explosions caught in a dramatic video. The bombardment gives a dark taste of what is likely to come for other cities such as Kyiv after analysts warned Russia's military - having suffered heavy losses trying to pull off ambitious precision strikes - was likely to resort to surrounding cities and bombing them into submission to force a bloody victory. Despite the missile testing delay, the U.S. is still showing its military force in other ways. Air Force craft participated in a so-called 'Elephant Walk' Tuesday at an air base in Japan in an apparent move to deter China from taking Russia's lead and invading Taiwan The so-called 'Elephant Walk' a term referring to the taxiing of large numbers of military aircraft before takeoff, when they are in close formation saw a grouping of two dozen F-15 fighter aircraft and an HH-60 Pave Hawk helicopter, collectively valued at just over a billion dollars. The fleet of jets are assigned to the 44th and 67th Fighter Squadrons, better known by their colloquial epithets, the Vampires and the Fighting Cocks, respectively. The chopper belongs to the 33rd Rescue Squadron, which boasts the motto 'That Others May Live.' The formation also featured a $50 million KC-135 Stratotanker refueling plane, assigned to the 909th Air Refueling Squadron, as well as a $270million E-3 Sentry aerial command and control craft, assigned to the 961st Airborne Air Control Squadron. The show of force comes after months of mounting and increased Chinese aggression directed at Taiwan, including nine Chinese aircraft entering the nation's airspace Thursday - the day Russian troops invaded Ukraine . A woman says goodbye as a train with evacuees is about to leave Kyiv's railway station on March 2, 2022 Paramedics walk at the residential area following recent shelling, as Russia's invasion of Ukraine continues, in the settlement of Borodyanka in the Kyiv region, Ukraine March 2, 2022 Kyiv's mayor Vitali Klitschko defiantly vowed 'we will fight' to defend the city, amid fears it could soon be battered by artillery fire from a 40-mile long death convoy parked nearby. Along with his brother and fellow former boxer Wladimir, the mayor called for more support from the west in an interview on Wednesday. Ukrainian police said Wednesday they arrested a man who brought explosives hidden in a children's toy to one of the Kyiv subway stations where thousands of people have been sheltering. The police also said four other suspected saboteurs were arrested, including two who were carrying weapons. An opening salvo on Tuesday night struck the Ukrainian capital's largest TV tower and damaged a nearby Holocaust memorial, killing five bystanders in the process. Hours later, US intelligence said the huge Russian convoy appears to have stalled near Kyiv though it could just be regrouping for a more-determined attack. Klitschko said that fighting is still ongoing in the cities of Bucha and Hostomel, on the outskirts of Kyiv, where a large number of destroyed Russian vehicles were pictured on Wednesday. He implored people in the city 'not to lose endurance', saying all critical infrastructure is still running and humanitarian supplies are being handed out. 'I ask everyone, for security reasons, not to go outside unnecessarily. At the alarm - go to the shelters,' he said. 'The enemy is gathering forces closer to the capital... We are preparing and will defend Kyiv!' Images showed areas of the city damaged in overnight strikes, as attacks resumed on Ukrainian cities elsewhere in the country - with paratroopers dropping into Kharkiv on Wednesday morning as missiles struck a university in the city having apparently missed a nearby police headquarters. Police officers prepare to remove the bodies of passersby killed in yesterday's airstrike that hit Kyiv's main television tower Conservative Democrat Rep. Henry Cuellar narrowly edged out over progressive challenger Jessica Cisneros in the Texas primary Tuesday, and the pair will now go head-to-head in a run-off election in May. Cuellar, who was hit with an FBI Raid on his home just ahead of the race, was ahead of the 28-year-old immigration attorney by less than 1,000 votes in the South Texas district. Cuellar won 48.5% of the vote and Cisneros 46.8%, but since neither broke 50% the race heads to a runoff under Texas election law. Texas's primaries were the first of the midterm season. For the left, it was a test between progressives and establishment Democrats, and for the right it was a test of former President Trump's hold on the party. And while Democrats cried out last year that a new GOP-led election security law would suppress voters, midterm turnout increased from 2.56 million votes in 2018 to 2.93 million votes in 2022. Cuellar narrowly beat Cisneros in 2020, by less than 2,700 votes, and this time she came back for his seat with the backing of Rep. Alexandria Ocasio-Cortez, who traveled to the Lonestar State for a rally on her behalf, and Sens. Bernie Sanders and Elizabeth Warren. Cuellar is one of the last pro-choice Democrats in Congress and has been critical of President Biden's handling of the southern border. Cisneros received a political blessing with an FBI raid on Cuellar's home in the month leading up to the primary. The raid was tied to a criminal investigation with business people from the former Soviet state of Azerbaijan. It's still not clear whether Cuellar himself is a subject or target of the probe, and he has vowed to cooperate with any investigation. Cuellar is one of the last pro-choice Democrats in Congress and has been critical of President Biden's handling of the southern border Cuellar narrowly beat Cisneros in 2020, by less than 2,700 votes, and this time she came back for his seat with the backing of Rep. Alexandria Ocasio-Cortez, who traveled to the Lonestar State for a rally on her behalf The nine-term Democrat is co-chair of the Congressional Azerbaijan Caucus, an obscure group dedicated to furthering relations with the oil-rich nation on the Caspian Sea. In that role, Cuellar is known to have met repeatedly with Azerbaijan officials, including the country's ambassador to the US, Elin Suleymanov. Azerbaijan has been harshly criticized in the past for bribing foreign officials and diplomats to secure its foreign policy aims and legitimize dubious election results. The practice is so common in the country that it is known there as 'caviar diplomacy,' but it is unclear whether the FBI is investigating any similar allegations in relation to Cuellar. Still, Cuellar outspent Cisneros 2:1 and attacked her for being too liberal to hold down the district. Meanwhile, attorney general Ken Paxton was hoping an endorsement from Trump would help him fend off three aggressive primary challengers, but the incumbent will now be forced to battle for the nomination for two more months in a run-off against Texas land commissioner George P. Bush, the nephew of one president and grandson of another. Paxton has been mired in a 2015 securities fraud indictment that he is still fighting. The charges stemmed from his time in the state House when prosecutors said he directed investments to a firm without disclosing he would be compensated for doing so Paxton also faced off against U.S. Rep. Louie Gohmert, whose Trump-aligned base overlapped with his own, and Eva Guzman, a former justice on the Texas Supreme Court who had won the support of establishment and pro-business conservatives. 'I guess what I'd say is, clearly, to the establishment: they got what they wanted,' Paxton said in a speech to supporters Tuesday night. 'They got me in a runoff.' Still, the attorney general garnered 42.7% of the vote to Bush's 22.8%. Greg Abbott fended off challengers and will now take on Democrat Beto O'Rourke, though the Texas governor is favored to hold on to his seat, due in part to the fact that he has got nearly 10 times the cash on hand as O'Rourke does. And the establishment and activist wings of the Republican Party went toe to toe in the primary for the seat of Rep. Kevin Brady, who is retiring, where Navy SEAL veteran Morgan Luttrell beat out former aide to Ted Cruz Christian Collins with 52% of the vote. A super PAC aligned with Minority Leader Rep. Kevin McCarthy had thrown its weight behind Luttrell, while a PAC aligned with the House Freedom Caucus had gone all-in for Collins. Reps. Madison Cawthorn, R-N.C., and Marjorie Taylor Greene, R-Ga., appeared at an event for Collins last month. Texas Gov. Greg Abbott, with his wife Cecilia and daughter Audrey, arrives for a primary election night event on Tuesday in Corpus Christi, Texas Texas Democrat gubernatorial candidate Beto O'Rourke speaks at a primary election gathering in Fort Worth, Texas Tuesday night after securing the Democratic nomination for Texas governor In the 2nd Congressional District, Rep. Dan Crenshaw breezed past three GOP challengers. His recent feud with the House Freedom Caucus, whose members he called out as 'grifters' and 'performance artists,' gave fodder to his challengers from the right to hit him with. Meanwhile, GOP Rep. Van Taylor, a two-term House member who has drawn criticism from other Republicans for accepting the results of the 2020 election, got pulled into a primary runoff but abruptly dropped out after details of his affair came to light. Far-right websites leaked audio of an interview with Texas resident Tania Joya, an ex-jihadist, who said she met Taylor through her work helping to reprogram extremists and the affair lasted from October 2020 to June 2021, just ahead of the primary. A subpostmaster who was suspended for shortfalls in accounts caused by the Horizon IT scandal has said Post Office executives should be forced to apologise and pay back their bonuses, an inquiry has heard. Close to 700 victims were incorrectly accused of crimes such as fraud and theft between 2000 and 2015 when glitches in the computer system, called Horizon, were to blame. Former postmasters Sarah Osolinski, 65, and John Bowman, 73, today gave evidence to an inquiry into the failings of the system. Mrs Osolinski, who ran the Gaer Park Post Office in Newport, South Wales, from October 1996 to June 2010, told the inquiry 'the whole experience has been a living nightmare'. She estimates she spent more than 25,000 to cover the constant shortfalls that were triggered by the flawed computer system. The inquiry session heard paid out between 90 and 1,000 almost every week for two years to make up the shortfalls - all while living under constant fear that the Post Office would close down her branch. A helpline also made it seems she was the only postmaster who was enduring the issue, too. John and Christine Bowman pictured outside a post office in Somerset. Mr Bowman gave evidence at an inquiry today An alleged shortfall of more than 1,872 arose in March 2010, with subsequent audits in June showing up further alleged debts. She was immediately suspended, before the Post Office contract terminated later that month. Mrs Osolinski told the inquiry she felt 'badgered and pummelled' by Post Office bosses, who accused her of false accounting. Her losses included 89,000 for the leasehold of the premises, quarterly rent, approximately 7,500 in stock, and she also paid for signage. She was not paid any notice period and losing the role she had dreamed of doing until retirement also meant her family retail business took a hit. Mrs Osolinski was forced to walk away from the business and sell her family home to help pay the debts. She now lives in a housing association bungalow and split up with her husband for a period due to the stress of the IT issue. Mrs Osolinski was also diagnosed with fibromyalgia, a condition that causes widespread pain and extreme tiredness, a year after her husband suffered a heart attack. Amid the fraud allegations, her symptoms 'just went into freefall', but she noted that she had some support from the community. She told the inquiry: 'For 12 years we have watched the Post Office and Government prevaricate and thrown money at preventing us from achieving justice. I know many of us has suffered for much longer. 'No-one at the top of the Post Office has properly apologised or faced prosecution for the lies they have told. Former post office workers celebrating outside the Royal Courts of Justice, London, after their convictions were overturned by the Court of Appeal. 'They have all received large bonuses when they moved on, whilst we were left to survive on benefits or low-paid jobs, our characters ruined and confidence crushed. 'How long can the Post Office hide from the responsibility of paying proper compensation to us all?' Mr Bowman, who lives in Brynna, Pontyclun, also in South Wales, ran a post office from May 1998 to December 2004. He said: 'The Post Office managed to destroy in two years all that I had tried to achieve in the previous 40 years - my reputation, financial security, mental health, wellbeing. They nearly destroyed my marriage and family life.' Mr Bowman gave up his many activities in the local community as depression took hold during the scandal and he became a 'bit of a bully' to his family. He had always been a financially responsible man, but was left having to take money from his daughter in order to get by. The former subpostmaster was no longer able to pay for family holidays with his grandchildren, adding that 'our lives just collapsed'. He told the hearing: 'All of this was ripped away from me by a dishonest management team who could not find it within their conscience to admit their mistakes and instead ruined the lives of hundreds of hardworking people such as myself.; Mr Bowman returned to work earlier than medically advised after being diagnosed with kidney cancer and having surgery because he could not afford to continue paying for a subpostmaster. He also endured regular small shortfalls but feared a massive loss that he would not be able to pay was waiting around the corner. Mr Bowman said: 'I realised not only am I putting in all this money from the shop but I am also declaring to the tax people and the VAT that I am taking this money - and they are charging me VAT and tax on money that I am giving to the Post Office. 'I didnt even have that money. It was a ridiculous situation. I think that is what brought on the depression.' He later sold the post office, his retail business and home because he was not earning enough to make a living and pay the alleged shortfalls in the branch. The inquiry heard him urge people to explain on oath what went wrong, who instructed them to behave in that way, and why 'they continued to knowingly pursue innocent people'. The UK and 37 other countries have referred Russia to the International Criminal Court over its devastating and illegal invasion of Ukraine. Britain's Foreign, Commonwealth and Development Office said Wednesday's referral was the largest in the court's history. The countries include all EU member states, as well as Australia, Britain, Canada, New Zealand, Switzerland and several Latin American countries. The ICC investigates and, where warranted, tries individuals charged with the most serious crimes of concern to the international community. Such crimes include genocide, war crimes, crimes against humanity and the crime of aggression. ICC prosecutor Karim Khan said he has actively begun an investigation into the war in Ukraine after a referral from the UK and allies. In a statement, he said: 'I have notified the ICC Presidency a few moments ago of my decision to immediately proceed with active investigations in the situation. Our work in the collection of evidence has now commenced.' Ukraine's State Emergency Service said Wednesday more than 2,000 civilians have died, though it was impossible to verify that claim. Reports also say thousands of soldiers - on both sides, but particularly those in Russia's forces - have been killed after President Vladimir Putin gave the order to invade his neighbouring country last week. The United Nations' refugee agency also believes around 874,000 people have fled Ukraine but that figure is soon expected to reach a million. Ukrainian police forces remove the bodies of people killed during a Russian rocket attack on Kyiv's main TV tower on Tuesday, ahead of an expected assault on the capital. The UK and 37 other countries have referred Russia to the International Criminal Court over its invasion Britain's Foreign, Commonwealth and Development Office said the Wednesday referral was the largest in the court's history. Pictured: The International Criminal Court in The Hague, Netherlands, Wednesday, March 31, 2021 (file photo) Several of Ukraine's cities have come under attack from Russian forces. Despite claiming otherwise, missile strikes have hit civilian locations and have resulted in thousands of deaths, including at least 16 children. Russia's invasion, which began in the early hours of the morning on February 24, came despite the Kremlin insisting it had no such plan. In the months prior, an estimated 190,000 Russian troops gathered on Ukraine's borders with both Russia and ally Belarus. They have since invaded from the north, south and east, encircling cities, destroying buildings, and killing civilians. Mariupol, located in the south of Ukraine on the Black Sea, has been surrounded by Russian forces and struck by artillery in an apparent attempt to bomb the city into submission as Putin's men resort to 'medieval' tactics. Sergiy Orlov, the deputy mayor, said today entire districts had been levelled with such heavy barrages that medics cannot get in to retrieve the dead. 'We are near to a humanitarian catastrophe,' he said. 'Russian forces are several kilometers away on all sides,' he added. 'The Ukrainian army is brave and they will continue to defend the city, but Russia does not fight with their army, they just destroy districts... We are in a terrible situation.' However, Russia - and many observers around the world - have been surprised by Ukraine's resistance. Experts say Putin expected a quick victory, but the progress of his forces has been slowed by fierce Ukrainians who have no interest in living under Moscow's rule. Groups have spoken about how they are already working to preserve evidence that could go on to be used at a criminal trial against Russia's actions in Ukraine. One such group is Bellingcat, a British-based investigative journalism group that has previously worked to prove that Russia was behind the downing of flight MH17, that was shot down in 2014 over eastern Ukraine. Speaking to The Guardian, Bellingcat's founder Elliot Higgins said: 'We've been working on issues related to accountability using open source evidence for a long time, so we're very familiar with the needs of stakeholders like the ICC. 'Our goal would then be to make that data available to any accountability process that wants to use it. We aim to have, at a minimum, date and geolocation data, and then work to add other data, such as the type of violation documented, munitions featured in videos, etc.' The gutted remains of Russian military vehicles on a road in the town of Bucha, close to the capital Kyiv Part of the Karazin National University campus in the city of Kharkiv is destroyed after being struck by a Russian missile which was seemingly intended for a nearby police or interior ministry building Sergyi Badylevych, 41, hugs his wife Natalia, 42, and child in an underground metro station used as bomb shelter in Kyiv At Prime Minister's Questions, Mr Johnson said: 'Putin has gravely miscalculated; in his abhorrent assault on a sovereign nation, he has underestimated the extraordinary fortitude of the Ukrainian people and the unity and resolve of the free world in standing up to his barbarism' British Prime Minister Boris Johnson spoke to Ukraine's President Volodymyr Zelensky on Wednesday morning, promising further support and weapons for the forces resisting Russia's military. Strikes that damaged the Babi Yar Holocaust memorial in Kyiv and the central square in Kharkiv have caused revulsion, and Western allies fear it is a sign of a shift in Russian tactics further towards the indiscriminate targeting of urban areas. For the first time the UK explicitly accused Mr Putin of war crimes, with Downing Street claiming 'horrific acts' were occurring on an almost hourly basis as population centres are targeted. At Prime Minister's Questions, Mr Johnson said: 'Putin has gravely miscalculated; in his abhorrent assault on a sovereign nation, he has underestimated the extraordinary fortitude of the Ukrainian people and the unity and resolve of the free world in standing up to his barbarism.' He added: 'What we have seen already from Vladimir Putin's regime in the use of the munitions that they have already been dropping on innocent civilians, in my view, already fully qualifies as a war crime.' Foreign Secretary Liz Truss said: 'Putin's military machine is targeting civilians indiscriminately and tearing through towns across Ukraine. Smoke and flames rise up the side of Kyiv's 1,300ft TV tower after Russia bombed it on Tuesday. The tower remained standing but buildings around it were damaged, with some broadcasts knocked off air A view shows a residential building destroyed by recent shelling, as Russia's invasion of Ukraine continues, in the city of Irpin in the Kyiv region, Ukraine March 2, 2022 A woman cries outside houses damaged by a Russian airstrike, according to locals, in Gorenka, outside the capital Kyiv UK considers seizing property of sanctioned Russian oligarchs British cabinet minister Michael Gove is drawing up plans to seize property in the United Kingdom owned by Russian oligarchs who have links to President Vladimir Putin without paying them compensation, the Financial Times reported on Wednesday. Gove's plans would apply to nine oligarchs who have been sanctioned by Britain, including Kirill Shamalov, Russia's youngest billionaire and Putin's former son-in-law, it said. The government has proposed these people will have their UK assets frozen and be unable to travel to Britain, the report added. However, the proposals are likely to require legislation, and government lawyers have concerns that the plans would face legal challenges, the report said, adding that no final government decision has been reached on whether to proceed. The United Kingdom's department of Levelling Up, Housing & Communities did not respond to a Reuters request for comment outside office hours. British Foreign Secretary Liz Truss has said she has drawn up a 'hit list' of Russian oligarchs, and said the government would impose new sanctions on them every few weeks. Advertisement 'An investigation by the International Criminal Court into Russia's barbaric acts is urgently needed and it is right that those responsible are held to account. The UK will work closely with allies to ensure justice is done.' Deputy Prime Minister and Justice Secretary Dominic Raab added: 'The critical task now is to preserve properly all evidence of war crimes. 'Any Russian leader or officer carrying out orders that amount to war crimes should know they face ending up in the dock of a court and ultimately in prison.' The move, allowing the ICC's prosecutor to proceed straight to investigation without the need for judicial approval, came as Ukraine's capital Kyiv braced for a siege and second city Kharkiv suffered a further pounding. Also on Wednesday, a top Ukrainian diplomat received a standing ovation from diplomats after a heartfelt speech to the U.N.'s top human rights body Emine Dzhaparova, Ukraine's first deputy minister of foreign affairs, called on the Human Rights Council to help hold Russia's government accountable by creating a panel of experts to scrutinise the invasion of Ukraine. Dzhaparova described being awoken by the sound of an explosion on Feb. 24 as the invasion began. She said her government was 'fully operational' and lashed out at 'false claims' by Russian President Vladimir Putin that Ukraine was committing 'genocide.' 'Do you know how Russia treats and deals with genocide in Ukraine? By airstrikes using cruise and operational tactical missiles, tanks and artillery, reconnaissance groups and sabotage groups,' she said. 'Ukrainian babies are born in the bomb shelters in bunkers . As we speak here today, Russian armed forces keep attacking maternity wards, kindergartens, orphanages, hospitals.' Rubble is seen littering the streets of Kharkiv after a Russian missile struck the city in the early hours of Wednesday A damaged military vehicle is seen in the street after shelling in the city of Kharkiv, Ukraine A damaged armored vehicle is abandoned on the street after shelling in the city of Kharkiv, Ukraine Dzhaparova noted an 'urgent debate' at the council about the situation in Ukraine, calling for countries in the 47-member-state body's to set up a Commission of Inquiry - the council's most powerful tool to scrutinise violations and abuses. Earlier this week, scores of diplomats from the Human Rights Council walked out just as Russian representative Sergey Lavrov, addressed the U.N. human rights body in recorded video remarks. 'Minister Lavrov was being broadcasted and giving his version, which is false about what is happening in Ukraine. And so that's why we wanted to show a very strong stance together today,' said Canadian Foreign Minister Melanie Joly, flanked by Ukraine's ambassador and standing behind that country's blue-and-yellow flag. On Monday, the ICC's chief prosecutor, Karim Khan, announced that he plans to open an investigation 'as rapidly as possible' into war crimes and crimes against humanity in Ukraine. Khan told his team to explore how to preserve evidence of crimes and said the next step is to seek authorization from the court's judges to open an investigation. However, he added that the process would be accelerated if a member nation of the court were to ask for an investigation in what is known as a referral. Ukrainian emergency service personnel carry a body of a victim out of the damaged City Hall building following shelling in Kharkiv, Ukraine Civilians help construct makeshift barricades around the nuclear power plant at Zaporizhzhia to stop Russia capturing it This photograph taken on February 26, 2022 shows a Russian Armoured personnel carrier (APC) burning during fight with the Ukrainian armed forces in Kharkiv Earlier at PMQs on Wednesday, Mr Johnson promised to publish a list of people associated with Mr Putin who could be liable for sanctions, as he said 'the vice is tightening on the Putin regime' through the restrictions imposed by the West. But he was urged by Labour leader Sir Keir Starmer to immediately ramp up the measures against allies of the Russian leader. Sir Keir, who called for Chelsea owner Roman Abramovich to face sanctions, said: 'Now is the time to sanction every oligarch and crack open every shell company so we can prove Putin wrong.' The Russian-Israeli billionaire later announced he will sell the club, with the 'net proceeds' going to a charity supporting victims of the war in Ukraine. UK officials have said more sanctions are coming, against oligarchs, Russian National Security Council members and banks, and that they believe the economic shock of the moves has been more significant than Mr Putin was expecting. They said they wanted sanctions to go further, including the banning from the Swift payment system to apply to all Russian banks. In other developments: Mr Johnson announced the Government would match donations to the Disasters Emergency Committee's Ukraine appeal, starting with 20 million. The European Union announced that seven Russian banks were being excluded from the Swift system which allows fast and efficient interbank transactions. The UN General Assembly voted overwhelmingly to demand that Russia immediately stops using force against Ukraine and withdraws its military from the country, with 141 nations backing the motion and only five, including alleged co-aggressor Belarus, opposing it. Russia said it would be ready for further peace talks with Ukraine later on Wednesday. Ukrainian ambassador to the UK Vadym Prystaiko was given a standing ovation by MPs in the Commons. The lack of progress in meeting the aims of the invasion had led to a change in tactics, focusing on aerial and artillery bombardment of cities rather than the kind of lightning military advances originally envisaged by the Kremlin, Western analysts believe. Defence Secretary Ben Wallace said Russian forces will seek to 'pummel' Ukraine's cities in tactics reminiscent of medieval siege warfare. A strike hit the regional police and intelligence headquarters in Kharkiv, killing four people and wounding several, with residential buildings also hit according to the Ukrainian authorities. The Ukrainian Unian news agency reported that two cruise missiles hit a hospital in Chernihiv, north Ukraine. Mr Wallace said the advance of Russian forces continued to be slowed by a combination of overstretched logistics, poor morale and brave resistance by Ukrainian fighters. There was 'low morale in the Russian forces, we've seen lots of surrenders'. However, he told the BBC: 'That doesn't take away from the fact you have a very ruthless Russian armed forces leadership and a president who seems to know no limit to how much violence they will use to achieve their aims.' The use of overwhelming firepower against cities had been used in Chechnya but Ukraine is a different proposition because of its size and population. Australia's leading vaccine advisory body has recommended Novavax be used as a Covid-19 booster - but only in limited circumstances when no other brand is suitable. The Australian Technical Advisory Group on Immunisation this week recommended Novavax be used as a booster for those 18 or over. However, it was accompanied by the vague proviso that it can be used only when an mRNA vaccine such as Pfizer is not suitable. Medical conditions that may prevent a person using mRNA vaccines include anaphylaxis and myocarditis where the heart becomes inflamed. A woman is seen receiving a vaccination at a Cohealth pop-up vaccination clinic at the State Library Victoria in Melbourne Health Minister Greg Hunt said since Novavax was first approved by the country's medical regulator in mid February, more than 25,000 doses of the vaccine have been administered as a first dose. 'The Therapeutic Goods Administration is currently considering an application for whole of population use of the Novavax COVID-19 vaccine as a booster,' Mr Hunt said. 'The TGA and ATAGI continue to review emerging evidence on all COVID-19 vaccines.' Novavax was the first protein-based COVID vaccine to have been approved in Australia. The federal government has acquired 51 million doses of Novavax as part of the vaccine rollout. So far, 11.6 million boosters have been administered. Australia's leading vaccine advisory body has recommended Novavax be used as a COVID-19 booster The Novavax is a protein based shot, unlike previous shots. Moderna and Pfizer's shots use mRNA technology that uses nucleic acid to generate a spike protein that imitates that of what the virus uses to infect a person's cells. Like the mRNA jabs, it is a two-dose vaccine with the shots to be administered around three weeks apart from each other. The more traditional nature of the jab could spur some hesitant people to finally go get the shots. It's pure protein, there is no nucleic acid that is injected into your body. That protein stimulates protected antibody and T-cell response,' Dr Cody Meissner is the chief of pediatrics at Tufts Children's Hospital in Boston Massachusetts told the Daily Mail. Were much more familiar with protein vaccines.' A Ukrainian-born tycoon who made his fortune in oil and gas has been found dead at his Surrey mansion. Police are treating father-of-three Mikhail Watfords death as unexplained, but it is not thought to be suspicious. The 66-year-olds body was discovered in the garage of his luxury property on the exclusive Wentworth estate in Virginia Water, Surrey, where homes fetch up to 20 million. News of Mr Watfords death emerged on the day Boris Johnson told the Commons that he will publish a full list of people associated with Vladimir Putins regime, a significant proportion of whom will face sanctions. Police were called after the property magnate, who is not among those oligarchs already sanctioned, was found dead at midday on Monday. Yesterday his Estonian wife Jane, 41, posted a photo on social media showing her kissing her husband in the grounds of their mansion. It comes after the 2012 death of millionaire Russian businessman Alexander Perepilichnyy, 44, who lived in the exclusive St Georges Hill area of Weybridge. Surrey Police were accused of incompetence over their investigation. There were claims he was poisoned, perhaps with a plant toxin known as heartbreak grass although a coroner concluded in 2018 that he died from natural causes. Mikhail Watford, 66, (left) was discovered in the garage of his luxury property on the exclusive Wentworth estate in Virginia Water, Surrey, , where homes fetch up to 20 million Yesterday his Estonian wife Mr Watford, 41, (left) posted a photo on social media showing her kissing her husband in the grounds of their mansion According to The Sun, a family friend said that Watford's state of mind could have been rattled over the war in Ukraine, launched by Russia last week. 'The timing of his death and the invasion of Ukraine was surely not coincidental,' the source told the newspaper. Another associate told The Sun Watford's death 'raises questions' after other suspicious deaths of Russian nationals. Born Mikhail Tolstosheya in 1955 in Ukraine when it was part of the Soviet Union, Mr Watford made his fortune in oil and gas before building a property empire in Britain. He changed his name to Watford when he moved to the UK, where he snapped up homes in Eaton Square in Belgravia, central London; a 18 million mansion in Virginia Water, Surrey, and, most recently, a series of properties on the Wentworth estate. In 2015, he complained about how difficult it was to find a superyacht-perfect mansion outside of London. Unable to find a house to meet his exacting standards, Mr Watford commissioned his own 9,640 sq ft sprawling property, boasting that the wrought-iron gates were made by the company that supplied Kensington Palace, and the 56,000 driveway was modelled on the circular stone piazzas outside Kings College, Cambridge. I want perfection, nothing less, he said. In London Mayfair, Knightsbridge, Belgravia its possible to find top quality. But outside London, no. Not even near. It wouldnt be right for me to say the houses are cheap. I dont want to be rude, but theyre wrong style, wrong finishes, not high-end quality. Not for us. The 66-year-olds body was discovered in the garage of his luxury property on the exclusive Wentworth estate in Virginia Water, Surrey, where homes fetch up to 20 million (pictured) Mr Watford claimed his weakness for top, top quality came from building superyachts. In 2007, the twice-married tycoon hit the headlines when he sued two women from his Chelsea property development and design firm, High Life Developments, after they claimed he had made improper advances at an office party. In a High Court writ, he said the two women defamed him. Yesterday friends reacted with shock and sadness to his death. Gazolina Di Pitim wrote a message on Facebook to Mrs Watford, saying: He had such a beautiful life because he met you. To me your story is one of the greatest love stories. This is love for ever. A Surrey Police spokesman said: We were called around midday on February 28 following reports of the discovery of a mans body. An ambulance was called but the man, who was in his 60s, was sadly pronounced dead at the scene. An investigation into the circumstances of the death is under way but it is not believed there any suspicious circumstances. A five-year-old girl who was missing south of Brisbane has been located by police. The girl went missing from Wilde Street at Kingston around 5.15pm on Wednesday evening. An urgent amber alert was then issued over fears she may be at significant risk. On Thursday morning, Queensland Police confirmed the youngster is now safe and well. 'The Queensland Police Service have located the 5-year-old girl who was missing from Kingston overnight and subject to an Amber Alert,' a statement read. 'Police would like to thank the media and the public for their assistance.' The girl went missing from Wilde Street at Kingston in Brisbane's south around 5.15pm on Wednesday - she has since been located and is safe and well On Wednesday just after 5pm, the young girl was seen being placed in a black Toyota Aurion with Queensland registration 982DA3 by a man known to her. The car was being driven by another person and left the street. The man left the area on foot and soon after assisted police with their inquiries. The child was believed to be in the company of Kaitlyn Compton, who was also known to her. The child was believed to be in the company of Kaitlyn Compton (pictured), who is known to her Advertisement Vladimir Putin's Kremlin goons have continued their crackdown on anti-war demonstrators across Russia - even arresting elderly pensioners in the quest to stamp out dissent. Hundreds of Russians have taken to streets of Moscow, St Petersburg and other cities to protest against the illegal invasion on Ukraine. But as Putin's forces bear down on capital Kyiv, armoured riot police tonight moved in to stop a peaceful protest in the centre of St Petersburg. Shocking video footage shows eight officers swooping in to arrest a pensioner named as Yelena Osipova while others in the crowd shout at officers to stop. Osipova, who is a survivor of the Nazi's Siege of Leningrad - since renamed St Petersburg - carried a sign that read: 'Soldier, drop your weapon and you will be a true hero!' According to independent Russian human rights group Ovd-Info, 7603 people have been detained at anti-war demonstrations in Russia since February 24 - the day Russia invaded Ukraine. The violent crackdown on dissent in Putin's Russia has been indiscriminate, with both the elderly and children among those being detained and taken away. Vladimir Putin's Kremlin goons have continued their crackdown on anti-war demonstrators across Russia - even arresting elderly pensioners in the quest to stamp out dissent The heart breaking moment a mother tries to calm her child who has been arrested and detained It comes after a haunting video shows a Russian mother trying to explain to her tearful daughter why they have been detained by armed police. The mother and daughter and gone to put flowers at the Ukrainian embassy in Moscow and hand in No to War posters they had drawn - but they were quickly all detained. Sociologist Alexandra Arkhipova told of her horror when mothers Ekaterina Zavizion and Olga Alter and their children Sofya Gladkova, seven, Liza Gladkova, 11, Gosha Petrov, 11, Matvey Petrov, nine and David Petrov, seven, were held by Russian officers. 'All of them were detained by the police,' she said. Russian children were arrested while carrying flowers and No to War posters to the Ukrainian embassy in Moscow Russian mother Ekaterina Zavizion (pictured) was arrested along with her children. She works as a sociologist The police were keeping them first in a police vehicle, and brought them to the Presnenskoye police station. 'Phones were taken away from parents, and the policemen are shouting at the parents threatening these brave mums and their children, that the kids could be put into care right now, and these mothers would lose their parental rights.' The video shows one of the mothers Ekaterina Zavizion and her daughter Sofya, seven, talking through the metal cage of a cell. The girl clutches her mothers hand through the metal grill. The daughter is plainly deeply distraught . 'They dont want many people gathering in one space,' explained her mother. 'Why are you sitting there?' Demand her daughter. 'Everything is going to be good, do you trust me?' The children were taken by their mothers to lay flowers at the Ukrainian embassy in Moscow. However, the women - along with their children - were arrested and thrown in the police van, to be held by police overnight. Mother Ekaterina told of the 'hell' she suffered as her children screamed and wept when they were detained. 'I had watched videos showing the horrible inhumane bombing in Kharkiv - and realised I could no longer sit under a bush shaking and pretend nothing was happening,' she said. 'My heart is tearing with sorrow and pain. 'I had the most peaceful intentions - to lay flowers in the memory of civilians and children who had perished in Ukraine.' She wanted to show 'we are not indifferent' and that 'we are dying here too from sorrow and pain.' On being detained with her children, she said: 'It was surreal, I was not prepared for it. 'The children started screaming, it was hell. 'God, I will never forget those minutes.' She said: 'Perhaps it would have been safer for my family to stay silent and not go anywhere.' Photos first emerged when a Russian opposition politician shared heart-rending images of children detained in the back of a police van after taking part in anti-war protests. Despite the Kremlin having no tolerance for dissent, protesters have defied Moscow and taken to the streets against President Vladimir Putin's illegal war in Ukraine, risking jail and even treason charges. Almost 7,000 people have so-far been detained by Russian police in as many as 50 cities, according to OVD-Info - an organization that tracks protests in the country. The pictures show at least three children - no older than Primary School age - sitting in the back of a Moscow police van holding flowers and banners. One girl is shown holding a sign that says 'No War' in Russian. Small Russian and Ukrainian flags have been painted around the words. To the right, the two flags are drawn followed by a small pink heart, to says 'Russia plus Ukraine equals love'. A Russian opposition politician has shared heart-rending images of children (pictured) detained in the back of a police van after taking part in anti-war protests The girl is shown sitting on a chair in the back of a police van with a blank expression, with two children sat either side of her, who also both appear calm despite the circumstances. A girl to her left is shown in a pink puffer jacket and mittens holding a bunch of flowers and another banner, while a boy to her left has his backpack at his feet. Another photo shows the girl in the pink jacket standing up against metal bars that are keeping them inside the van. Her face is red, as if she had been crying. The other children can be seen behind her, as can what appear to be at least two Russian police officers dressed in black uniforms. Officers in the same uniforms have been seen in Russian cities cracking down on protesters and bundling them into vans. The children were taken to a police station. She can be seen sitting on a chair next to a desk, where a woman in police uniform and a mask is working on a computer. The 'no war' banners they were holding are laid out on the desk behind the girl, as is one of her flowers. It's already dark outside, as the children are being detained overnight. According to photographs shared on Tuesday by opposition politician Ilya Yashin, children are among those that have been snatched by officers. The pictures show at least three children - no older than Primary School age - sitting in the back of what is reportedly a Moscow police van holding flowers and banners People gather to stage anti-war protest in Saint-Petersburg, Russia on March 1, 2022. Police officers detain a demonstrator during a protest against Russia's invasion of Ukraine in central Saint Petersburg on March 1, 2022 Ilya Yashin is a former politician who was banned from running for office in 2021 because he branded an 'extremist' for, be believes, his support of Russian opposition leader Alexi Navalny. He posted the pictures to social media on Tuesday night, writing on Facebook: 'Nothing out of the ordinary: just kids in paddy wagons behind an anti-war poster. This is Putin's Russia, folks. You live here.' He continued to predict that the 'Kremlin propaganda machine' would blame the children's parents, telling people not to involve their kids in politics. But Yashin said that was irrelevant. 'Many generations in our country (are) taught from the school bench that the worst thing is war, and the main value is the peaceful sky above the head,' he wrote. He recalled his own time as at school, saying he and his classmates would draw anti-war posters. 'And that's ok!' he added. 'Children against war is damn normal!' Meanwhile in Saint Petersburg, another night of protests saw police cracking down on anti-war demonstrations on Tuesday. On Sunday alone, police arrested 1,700 protesters across 46 Russian cities, OVD-Info reported. Pictures from Moscow and Saint Petersburg showed officer grabbing protesters and carrying them to police vans. Nearly 7,000 people have now been detained in antiwar protests across Russia since Thursday Pictured: A protester is dragged away by Omon paramilitary members during a demonstration in Moscow on Sunday Russia's feared Omon paramilitary thugs have been seen on the streets to stamp out any opposition to Putin's invasion of Ukraine. The helmeted cosmonauts in camouflaged riot gear have been seen regularly dragging away demonstrators. Protests against the invasion started Thursday in Russia and have continued daily ever since, despite the Omon and police moving swiftly to crack down on the rallies. The Kremlin has sought to downplay the protests, insisting that a much broader share of Russians support the assault on Ukraine. But younger tech-savvy Russians with access to independent media have been voicing their opposition to the Kremlin's invasion, risking jail and even treason charges. On Tuesday, US Secretary of State Antony Blinken called on the UN's top human rights body to hold Russia accountable for its invasion of Ukraine. The top US diplomat also singled out Russia in recorded remarks delivered to the Human Rights Council for repression within the country, citing reports that thousands of protesters in Russia who were opposed to the invasion had been detained. Blinken urged the council Tuesday to send a message that Russian President Vladimir Putin should unconditionally stop the 'unprovoked attack' and withdraw its forces from Ukraine. 'We must condemn firmly and unequivocally Russia's attempt to topple a democratically elected government and its gross human rights abuses and violations of international humanitarian law, and we must take steps to hold the perpetrators accountable,' he said. Advertisement Hundreds of Ukrainian civilians defied Russian troops yesterday in a bid to protect Europes largest nuclear plant. They built makeshift roadblocks with lorries and piles of tyres on the main route to the Zaporizhzhia site in eastern Ukraine. Brandishing Ukrainian flags, the army of volunteers created a human barricade near the city of Enerhodar to stop advancing Russian troops. Footage posted on social media showed the blockade, reportedly a kilometre long and comprising scrap cars, garbage trucks and sandbags. This is how Enerhodar its civilians women and men, protect their city, said the mayor, Dmitri Orlov. They will continue to protect it. Now, more than ever, we need to mobilise our forces, to be together, so that the enemy does not enter the city, which is the largest nuclear power plant in Europe! Lets be ready, friends! Hundreds of Ukrainian civilians defied Russian troops yesterday in a bid to protect Europes largest nuclear plant Zaporizhzhia Brandishing Ukrainian flags, the army of volunteers created a human barricade near the city of Enerhodar to stop advancing Russian troops Footage posted on social media showed the blockade, reportedly a kilometre long and comprising scrap cars, garbage trucks and sandbags Locals of Zaporizhzhia prepare and carry sand bags inside and outside of the hospital so that it is less affected by the Russian attack A man carries a sandbag to seal the entrance to the Emergency Care Hospital in Zaporizhzhia, the site of the Europes largest nuclear plant Anton Gerashchenko, an adviser to Ukraines interior ministry, warned the Russians could create a new Chernobyl if the plant was damaged. Because of Vladimir Putins madness, Europe is again on the brink of a nuclear catastrophe, he wrote on Facebook. The city where the largest nucleur power plant in Europe is located is preparing for a battle with the invaders. An accident can happen like at the Chernobyl nuclear power plant or the Fukushima nuclear power plant. Russian generals think again! Radiation does not know nationalities, does not spare anyone! Russia has written to the International Atomic Energy Agency saying its forces have taken control of the area around the plant. The UN nuclear watchdog said Moscow claimed technicians at Zaporizhzhia were continuing their work on providing nuclear safety and monitoring radiation in normal mode of operation. The letter added: The radiation levels remain normal. IAEA chief Rafael Grossi warned that any accident involving the nuclear facilities in Ukraine could have severe consequences for public health and the environment. He said it was imperative to ensure that the brave people who operate, regulate, inspect and assess the nuclear facilities in Ukraine can continue to do their indispensable jobs safely, unimpeded and without undue pressure. Footage posted on social media showed the blockade, reportedly a kilometre long and comprising scrap cars, garbage trucks and sandbags Women join attempts to seal the entrance to the Emergency Care Hospital in Zaporizhzhia as Russian troops approach Ukraine's largest nuclear site, with six out of the countrys 15 reactors People move sandbags outside the Emergency Care Hospital in Zaporizhzhia to reinforce the building as Russian troops advance on the site of Europe's largest nuclear plant on Wednesday Locals of Zaporizhzhia prepare and carry sand bags inside and outside of the hospital so that it is less affected by the Russian attack Zaporizhzhia is the largest of Ukraines nuclear sites, with six out of the countrys 15 reactors. Russia has already seized control of the decommissioned Chernobyl nuclear plant, scene of the worlds worst nuclear disaster in 1986. Research by specialists for Greenpeace International found that, in a worst-case scenario where explosions destroy the reactor containment and cooling systems at Zaporizhzhia, it could create a disaster far worse even than Fukushima in Japan in 2011. Jan Vande Putte, co-author of the risk analysis, said: So long as this war continues the military threat to Ukraines nuclear plants will remain. This is one further reason, amongst so many, why Putin needs to immediately cease his war on Ukraine. The fight to protect Zaporizhzhia is symbolic of the everyday heroism shown by the Ukrainian people. Vitali Klitschko, the mayor of Kyiv, told the BBC he had seen a line hours long of civilians queuing up to get weapons. Right now, people are proud, the former world champion boxer said. His brother Wladimir, who was also a top fighter, said: This is our home. Our parents are buried here, our children go to school here. Why should we flee? What would you do if someone gets in to your house? You defend it. Russian troops are advancing on Zaporizhzhia, the largest of Ukraines nuclear sites with six out of the countrys 15 reactors. Russia has already seized control of the decommissioned Chernobyl nuclear plant, scene of the worlds worst nuclear disaster in 1986 Locals of Zaporizhzhia prepare and carry sand bags inside and outside of the hospital to protect it from Russian attacks as Vladimir Putin's men advance on the nuclear power plant People fill the bags with sand outside the Emergency Care Hospital in Zaporizhzhia to reinforce the building as Russian troops advance on the site of Europe's largest nuclear plant on Wednesday Zaporizhzhia is the largest of Ukraines nuclear sites, with six out of the countrys 15 reactors. Russia has already seized control of the decommissioned Chernobyl nuclear plant, scene of the worlds worst nuclear disaster in 1986 Central Kyiv, a little before 8am yesterday. It should have been the start of the morning rush hour in this once vibrant city of almost three million people. Yet the streets were empty, and an eerie calm prevailed. This owed little to the deadening effect of a steady snowfall. Rather, it was the expression of a growing sense of dread; the fear of impending onslaught from a military behemoth that lurks only a few miles north of the city limit and is poised to strike at its heart. Those Kyivans who had not yet fled were warned to shelter at home. Ukraine stands on the edge of the precipice. The Russian bombs and rockets are currently falling most on Kharkiv, Kherson and Mariupol. But it is here, the capital, where this nations fate will be decided. The questions are how and when. For many it is a time for prayer. The Byzantine cathedral of St Sophia has stood beside the Dnieper river for more than 1,000 years an often tempestuous millennium. With its golden cupolas, fabulous mosaics and frescos, the cathedral is Ukraines most iconic and beloved structure. A rallying point and inspiration when danger threatens the common good. And so it was, once again, this morning. I was one of a handful of observers permitted to witness a powerful and moving expression of faith. Ukraine's Minister of Internal Affairs Denys Monastyrsky is pictured being blessed at St Sophia's Cathedral, in Kyiv As the warning sirens wailed, the leaders of Ukraines religious faiths came together, privately, in the heart of the great church to demonstrate solidarity and pray for the deliverance of their country in its hour of need. Among them were the most senior Orthodox clerics, the heads of the Greek and Roman Catholic faiths, Protestant denominations, the Jewish community and the Mufti of Ukraine, the most senior Muslim in the country. In two lines, face to face along St Sophias chancel, the holy men took turns to recite prayers for peace and for Ukraine. Those in attendance included several senior figures in the Ukrainian government. Interior minister Denys Monastyrsky is a marked man as far as the Kremlin is concerned, and he had come to church wearing a bulletproof vest, accompanied by a bodyguard carrying an assault rifle. There followed an extraordinary vignette in which Bishop Vitalii Kryvytskyi, head of the Roman Catholic diocese of Kyiv-Zhytomyr, stepped forward and placed his right hand flat on the chest of Mr Monastyrskys body armour. Eyes closed, the prelate began to pray for him, in the manner of the benediction of a medieval warrior before battle. All church and religious leaders understand that our power lies not only in weapons and military forces, the bishop told me afterwards. All of us here are believers. We know that the last word is that of God. We know we are called to support our nation in this crucial moment. We cannot be anywhere else. Ukrainian civilians at Kyiv's main railway station flee the advance of the invading Russian military Standing beside the bishop, Sheikh Ahmed Tamim, the Mufti of Ukraine, added: What you see here is so important. Would you see this kind of brotherhood among different faiths in any other country? In recent years, there has been a schism in the Orthodox Church between the Moscow Patriarchate seen as being close to Putin and the newly independent Ukrainian branch. But on Tuesday, more than 150 Russian Orthodox clerics put their names to an open letter calling for an immediate stop to the war in Ukraine. The clerics were quoted as saying they respect the freedom of any person given to him or her by God, adding that the people of Ukraine must make their own choices by themselves, not at the point of assault rifles and without pressure from either West or East. Oleksii Dniprov, deputy head of President Volodymyr Zelenskys office, was also present at St Sophias yesterday. It is a very strange time, very difficult, but I am sure we will win, he said. We have the support of the whole of the world. That is very important to us as we face this huge threat to our existence. He said of the church: St Sophias is not just a cathedral... it is the most important building in the culture of our country. When St Sophia is here, Ukraine exists. He continued: We are fighting and we are strong. Every hour I receive messages of support from all over the world. It is an awful situation, but we will prevail. These are unnerving times but surely, I thought, the Russians wont hit St Sophias? A view of smoke from inside a damaged gym following shelling in Kyiv The Ukrainian authorities are not so sure. They have sent a letter to UNESCO, asking the body which compiles the list of World Heritage sites St Sophias is one to speak out now to save the cathedral from the threat of destruction. Ukraines minister of culture, Oleksandr Tkachenko, has warned on social media that the Russians are going to destroy St Sophia... they seek to destroy the entire Ukrainian history, trying to appropriate it for themselves. I spoke to his colleague Mr Monastyrsky as he was leaving the church. You are facing a grave threat, I told the interior minister. We are ready, he replied in English. And out he strode, back into the existential struggle for his countrys future. Last night a large explosion shook central Kyiv. The interior ministry said a Russian rocket strike near the main railway station had destroyed a large heating main, and could leave portions of the city without heat. With temperatures at night hovering around freezing, the people of Kyiv face more difficult hours before the dawn. A homeless man has been charged with multiple hate crimes for waging a two-hour anti-Asian assault spree that targeted seven women in Manhattan, cops said Wednesday. Officers picked up Steven Zajonc, 29, on Wednesday in the New York Public Librarys branch on 40th St. and Fifth Ave. He was wearing the same clothes as a suspect caught on video in Sundays disturbing spree, police sources said. Advertisement A veteran security guard at the library saw him in the building and called police, who grabbed him inside a seventh-floor bathroom, where security staff had isolated him, sources said. Advertisement Zajonc, whose address is listed as a Midtown homeless shelter, previously lived in Sarasota, Fla., police said. Hes charged with seven counts each of assault and attempted assault as a hate crime, as well as seven counts of aggravated harassment and harassment. Police sources said Zajonc acted erratically after his arrest. He was screaming and shouting in the cells, one police source said. Several victims and witnesses to the spree picked Zajonc out of a line-up, cops sources said. Steven Zajonc is led away from the Midtown South Precinct in Manhattan on Wednesday. (Sam Costanza/for New York Daily News) Zajonc punched, elbowed and shoved seven Asian women as he made his way from Midtown down to Nolita, then back up to Greenwich Village, between roughly 6:30 p.m. and 8:30 p.m. on Sunday, cops said. He first struck a 57-year-old woman at Madison Ave. and E. 30th St. about 6:30 p.m., punching her in the face, then attacked a 25-year-old woman in the face and arm at Fifth Ave. and E. 30th St., cops said. The Daily News Flash Weekdays Catch up on the days top five stories every weekday afternoon. > At 6:45 p.m., he punched a third woman, 21, in the face at Park Ave. South and E. 23rd St., and did the same to a 25-year-old at Irving Place and E. 17th St. a few minutes later. He then elbowed two victims in the face, a 19-year-old woman at Union Square East and E. 17th St. at 7:05 p.m., and a 25-year-old at E. Houston and Mott Sts. at 7:25 p.m., cops said. Advertisement Finally, he shoved a 20-year-old woman to the ground at Broadway and E. Eighth St., just after 8:30 p.m. Steven Zajonc is led away from the Midtown South Precinct stationhouse in Manhattan, New York, on March 2, 2022. (Sam Costanza/for New York Daily News) Police on Tuesday released video footage of the suspect, described as a blond man with a light complexion, wearing a light blue T-shirt, dark-colored pants, dark-colored shoes and a multicolored backpack. Even before the spree, anti-Asian attacks were on the rise in the city this year, with seven as of Feb. 23 compared with three in the same time frame last year. The city saw 131 anti-Asian hate crimes in all of 2021, up from 27 the year before, according to NYPD data. With Kerry Burke Prince Charles paid tribute yesterday to the extraordinary bravery and fortitude of the Ukrainian people in the face of such truly terrible aggression. On a visit to the Ukrainian Catholic Cathedral in central London with his wife Camilla, the future king accepted home-made posters from children, including one which read Stop Putin. He told distraught members of its congregation that he could not believe what he was seeing in this day and age. And he even gave the rallying cry, Slava Ukraine! (Glory to Ukraine!), to which the assembled guests responded with a passionate, Heroyam slava (Glory to the heroes!). For the prince who was at the centre of a diplomatic row in 2014 when he likened Vladimir Putin to Hitler in his stance over Ukraine it was the instinctive reaction of a man sickened by Russias naked imperialism and needless civilian bloodshed. In talks with his staff over the weekend, Charles conveyed his desperate and heartfelt desire to do something practical to help. Yesterday he was accompanied not just by Camilla but representatives from five charities of which he is patron, which he has brought together to help co-ordinate the relief efforts of UK-based Ukrainians. The couple spent more than an hour comforting those in need, the Duchess of Cornwall frequently weeping as she spoke to members of the community who are desperately worried about family and friends back home. Prince Charles (pictured) paid tribute yesterday to the extraordinary bravery and fortitude of the Ukrainian people On several occasions she hugged the sobbing wife of the Ukrainian ambassador, telling her: We are praying for you. A source said: [Charles] has been deeply moved and just wanted to do something to help. He wanted to listen to people to find out what they need and how he can help facilitate that. The couple were met at the Cathedral of the Holy Family by bishop Kenneth Nowakowski, ambassador Vadym Prystaiko and his wife, Inna. A member of the congregation greeted them saying, vitayemo (welcome), and offered them bread and salt, often given to dignitaries. Bread is a symbol of what gives us life and salt what sustains it. In a back room, representatives of the Ukrainian community in the UK had gathered and Sunday school children sang a mournful traditional song, Chervona Kalyna (which is often translated as Red Guelder Rose), about their passion for the country and what it means to fight for Ukraine. Camilla, biting her lip repeatedly, could not hide her tears. Afterwards the royal couple moved around the room talking to as many people as possible. On a visit to the Ukrainian Catholic Cathedral in central London with his wife Camilla, the future king accepted home-made posters from children, including one which read Stop Putin Sunday school teacher Lesya Klovak spoke to the prince at length and said he openly expressed his horror at the Russian invasion. The Daily Mail, Mail on Sunday and MailOnline UKRAINE REFUGEE APPEAL Readers of Mail Newspapers and MailOnline have always shown immense generosity at times of crisis. Calling upon that human spirit, we are now launching an appeal to raise money for refugees from Ukraine. For, surely, no one can fail to be moved by the heartbreaking images and stories of families mostly women, children, the infirm and elderly fleeing from Russia's invading armed forces. As this tally of misery increases over the coming days and months, these innocent victims of a tyrant will require accommodation, schools and medical support. All donations to the Mail Ukraine Appeal will be distributed to charities and aid organisations providing such essential services. In the name of charity and compassion, we urge all our readers to give swiftly and generously. TO MAKE A DONATION ONLINE Via bank transfer, please use these details: Account name: Mail Force Charity Account number: 48867365 Sort code: 60-00-01 TO MAKE A DONATION VIA CHEQUE Make your cheque payable to 'Mail Force' and post it to: Mail Newspapers Ukraine Appeal, GFM, 42 Phoenix Court, Hawkins Road, Colchester, Essex CO2 8JY TO MAKE A DONATION FROM THE US US readers can donate to the appeal via a bank transfer to Associated Newspapers or by sending checks to dailymail.com HQ at 51 Astor Place (9th floor), New York, NY 10003 Advertisement She said: He asked about the song and what it means. He described the war as horrible and said he couldnt believe that it was happening in this period, in this day and age. He also asked about my family and I told him that my father is 72 and delivers food for people. He and my mother refuse to run away. He says he will deliver for as long as he can. My mother runs a restaurant and she has given it to families who have lost their homes. She added: He [Charles] said no one can understand what is going on. He was expressing his sympathy. He said he couldnt believe it. He said he is with us, supporting us and we are together. Vira Vitiv, who spoke to the duchess, said: She expressed her shock and her sympathy. She feels the same level of helplessness that many do and just wanted to listen to us about what she could do to help. That listening was so important. It meant a great deal. Charles also spoke to children from the cathedrals Sunday school who were sat on a stage. Each child in the front row held a home-made poster bearing the Ukrainian flag and messages such as Save Ukraine, No War Needed, Putin Go Away, Stop Putin and Stop The War. He either accepted them personally or was given them in the case of the Stop Putin poster by their teacher. They were then given to aides. Camilla stopped several times to speak to the wife of the Ukrainian ambassador, who could not hide her emotion. On each occasion she hugged her and rubbed her arms. The room was packed with leaders from the Ukrainian community, faith leaders and volunteers helping with the humanitarian effort. In an off-the-cuff speech, Charles told them: Thank you so much for welcoming us to this very special cathedral. I must say my wife and I have been deeply moved by everything we have heard today during our visit and above all by the extraordinary bravery, generosity and fortitude of the Ukrainian community in the face of such truly terrible aggression. So if I may say so, our thoughts and prayers, however inadequate they may be, are with all of you at this most critical time. The five charities that Charles has brought together and connected with the community are World Jewish Relief, the British Red Cross, International Health Partners, In Kind Direct and the International Rescue Committee. Before they left the couple went to the altar where they lit candles and laid two sunflowers the national flower of Ukraine. The cathedral has become a rallying point for the British Ukrainian community in recent days. The couple spent more than an hour comforting those in need, the Duchess of Cornwall frequently weeping as she spoke to members of the community who are desperately worried about family and friends back home Cathedral staff reported Ukrainian men have been seeking blessings before travelling back to their homeland to join the fight against Putins army. Ukrainian ambassador Mr Prystaiko said he was touched by the duchess hugging his wife and said he would convey the message this symbolised back to his homeland. Asked about Charless comments, he disagreed with the suggestion they were political. He said: Its not political any more, were past political, were in survival mode. Were now, as the prince mentioned, were trying to find a way [to see] how a nation of 40 million people can survive the aggressor. The appeal to help Ukrainian refugees was given a huge boost tonight by the Mail Force charity. Readers who want to use Gift Aid can now boost their donations by 25p for every 1 they give. Mail Force is a registered charity that was initially set up by the Daily Mail during the pandemic to get personal protective equipment (PPE) to brave NHS workers. Now it is turning its help to a different front line the one Ukrainian families are fleeing. A woman carries a child after fleeing from Russia's invasion of Ukraine, at the border crossing in Siret, Romania A woman is consoled by a volunteer after fleeing from Russia's invasion of Ukraine, at the border crossing in Siret So far, an astonishing 2.55million has been raised in just four days to help provide shelter, food and clothing to desperate refugees escaping Vladimir Putins bombs and bullets. The Daily Mail, Mail on Sunday and MailOnline UKRAINE REFUGEE APPEAL Readers of Mail Newspapers and MailOnline have always shown immense generosity at times of crisis. Calling upon that human spirit, we are supporting a huge push to raise money for refugees from Ukraine. For, surely, no one can fail to be moved by the heartbreaking images and stories of families mostly women, children, the infirm and elderly fleeing from the bombs and guns. As this tally of misery increases over the coming days and months, these innocent victims of this conflict will require accommodation, schools and medical support. Donations to the Mail Force Ukraine Appeal will be used to help charities and aid organisations providing such essential services. In the name of charity and compassion, we urge all our readers to give swiftly and generously. TO MAKE A DONATION ONLINE Donate at www.mailforcecharity.co.uk/donate To add Gift Aid to a donation even one already made complete an online form found here: mymail.co.uk/ukraine Via bank transfer, please use these details: Account name: Mail Force Charity Account number: 48867365 Sort code: 60-00-01 TO MAKE A DONATION VIA CHEQUE Make your cheque payable to 'Mail Force' and post it to: Mail Newspapers Ukraine Appeal, GFM, 42 Phoenix Court, Hawkins Road, Colchester, Essex CO2 8JY TO MAKE A DONATION FROM THE US US readers can donate to the appeal via a bank transfer to Associated Newspapers or by sending checks to dailymail.com HQ at 51 Astor Place (9th floor), New York, NY 10003 Advertisement Today, best-selling novelist Barbara Taylor Bradford offered a stunning 20,000 donation and issued a heart-rending warning from history. The 88-year-old author, whose books have sold more than 92million copies worldwide, said: I am very proud to be an Englishwoman, born and bred in a country I consider to be unique, where freedom, free speech, justice and compassion reign supreme. My heart goes out to the heroic and brave Ukrainians who are battling Vladimir Putin, a monstrous tyrant. 'My late husband Bob Bradford, born into a Jewish family, was taken out of Berlin as a child to escape the horrors of Hitlers Third Reich. 'He often remarked that we should always believe tyrants, because they were actually telling us what they were going to do. Putin proves Bobs point. He wont stop unless we defeat him. I am making a contribution to the Daily Mails fund to help Ukrainian refugees. Please join me, even if you can only give a small amount. Freedom has no price. Readers of the Daily Mail, Mail on Sunday and MailOnline have responded in their droves to the urgent request for aid. The vast majority of those crossing the borders are women, clutching all the belongings they can carry, and their children. Ukrainian men have to stay behind and fight the Red Army. Every penny of the appeal money now being collected by the Mail Force charity is being passed to aid organisations already operating inside Ukraine and on the borders with Poland, Romania and Hungary where more than half a million people have so far crossed to safety. In 2020, Mail Force helped procure 42million items of life-saving personal protective equipment for frontline health and care staff. Then last year, when it became clear that one in five under- privileged children were missing out on home-schooling during lockdown due to a lack of essential computer kit, it provided more than 26,000 laptops. The appeal for Ukrainian refugees has become the fastest newspaper fundraising appeal in world history and it has been backed by celebrities and leading politicians. At the request of Lord and Lady Rothermere, the Mails parent company DMGT has donated 500,000. Readers have sent in cheques big and small, and every pound counts. Catherine Lindsay, from Blaydon-on-Tyne, sent 20 with a note saying: Thank you to all at the Mail newspapers. You have done it again, appealing to your readers for a traumatic cause. Thank you. No one is entirely sure why, or even how, the mighty Stonehenge was built around 5,000 years ago. Now, a new study argues the world-famous Wilshire monument served as an ancient solar calendar, helping people track the days of the year. Professor Timothy Darvill, an archaeologist at Bournemouth University, has analysed the numbers and positioning of Stonehenge's great sandstone slabs, called sarsens. Sarsens form all 15 stones of Stonehenge's central horseshoe, the uprights and lintels of the outer circle, as well as outlying stones such as the Heel Stone, the Slaughter Stone and the Station Stones. Stonehenge, Professor Darvill says, was a 'simple and elegant' perpetual calendar based on a tropical solar year of 365.25 days. He says the entire site was the physical representation of one month (lasting 30 days) and that the 30 stones in the sarsen circle each represented one day within the month. It's thought that people at Stonehenge simply marked the days of the month each represented by a stone, perhaps using a small stone or a wooden peg. New analysis suggests the design of Stonehenge may have represented a calendar, which enabled people to track a solar year of 365.25 days based on the alignment of the sun on the solstices. The large sarsens at the site appear to reflect a calendar with 12 months of 30 days It had long been thought that the famous site of Stonehenge served as an ancient calendar, given its alignment with the solstices. Now, research has identified how it may have worked The entire site was the physical representation of one month (lasting 30 days) and the 30 stones in the sarsen circle each represented one day within the month. This illustration shows the ring of 30 upright sarsen stones, numbered S1 to S30 in clockwise fashion. They each represented one day within the month, according to Professor Darvill WE STILL DON'T KNOW WHY STONEHENGE WAS BUILT No one is exactly sure why, or even how, Stonehenge was built. Experts have suggested it was a temple, parliament and even a graveyard. Some people think the stones have healing powers, while others think they have musical properties when struck with a stone. They could have acted as a giant musical instrument to call ancient people to the monument. There is evidence the stones were aligned with phases of the sun and some have proposed it was used as a giant observatory to monitor the stars. People were buried there and skeletal evidence shows that people travelled hundreds of miles to visit Stonehenge - for unknown reasons. Recently, experts said the route was a busy one and that Stonehenge could be viewed differently from different positions. It seems that instead of being a complete barrier, the Neolithic structure acted as a gateway to guide visitors to the stone circle. Advertisement Although no one can be certain why Stonehenge was built, a school of thought that it served as an ancient calendar has long existed. Other theories include that it was a cult centre for healing, a temple, a place where ancestors were worshipped or even a graveyard. 'Stonehenge has long been thought to incorporate some kind of calendar, although its specific purpose and exactly how it worked remain far from clear,' says Professor Darvill in his paper. 'Understanding the sarsen elements as a unified group and recognising the numerical significance of the elements in each component opens up the possibility that they represent the building blocks of a simple and elegant perpetual calendar based on the 365.25 solar days in a mean tropical year.' It's already known that the whole layout of Stonehenge is positioned in relation to the solstices, or the extreme limits of the suns movement. English Heritage explains: 'At Stonehenge on the summer solstice, the sun rises behind the Heel Stone in the north-east part of the horizon and its first rays shine into the heart of Stonehenge. 'Observers at Stonehenge at the winter solstice, standing in the enclosure entrance and facing the centre of the stones, can watch the sun set in the south-west part of the horizon.' With this new study, it seems like dwellers at the famous henge not only used to track times of the year, but days of the month too. 'What they did I think was simply to mark the days represented by the stone,' Professor Darvill told MailOnline. 'We have some later prehistoric calendars where they list the days and have a hole next to each so they could mark them with a peg. 'I think something similar would have happened at Stonehenge, perhaps using a small stone or a wooden peg.' It's already known that the whole layout of Stonehenge is positioned in relation to the solstices, or the extreme limits of the suns movement Aerial view of Stonehenge (pictured) - one of the worlds most famous prehistoric monuments Recent research had shown that Stonehenge's sarsens were added during the same phase of construction around 2500 BC. They were sourced from the same area and subsequently remained in the same formation indicating they worked as a single unit. As such, Professor Darvill analysed these stones, examining their numerology and comparing them to other known calendars from this period. He identified a solar calendar in their layout, suggesting they served as a physical representation to allow the ancient inhabitants of Wiltshire keep track of the days. This bird's-eye view of the 5,000-year-old monument in Salisbury, Wiltshire shows the trilithons in the centre of the site Stone 21 (S21, pictured) in the western sector of Stonehenge appears complete but is narrower, at 1.5m wide, and thinner than average A trilithon or trilith is a structure consisting of two large vertical stones (posts) supporting a third stone set horizontally across the top (lintel). Here is Trilithon S53 and S54, with lintel S154. View looking outwards from the inside of the Trilithon Horseshoe STONEHENGE 4,500-YEAR-OLD PITS 'ARE MAN-MADE' A series of deep pits which were discovered near Stonehenge have been confirmed as having been made by ancient Britons - after some experts dismissed them as mere natural features. The 20 pits, which are more than 30 feet across and 16 feet deep, were found in June 2020 by a team of archaeologists. They were arranged in a circle shape around the Durrington Walls Henge, which is just two miles from its more famous man-made neighbour on Salisbury Plain, in Wiltshire. Initial data had suggested that the features dated from the Neolithic period and had been excavated by humans around 4,500 years ago - around the time that the Durrington Walls were built. Soon after the discovery, one archaeologist called the pits 'blobs on the ground' whilst another said they were not man-made, adding they could be 'trusted to recognise a natural feature when they encounter one'. But scientists have confirmed that the pits were definitely made by early Brits. Read more: Stonehenge 4,500-year-old pits 'are man-made' Advertisement When Stonehenge was built, one month consisted of three weeks. Each of these weeks consisted of 10 days. Professor Darvill said there are distinctive stones in the circle that mark the start of each of these three weeks in the month. The 10 day week was a key part of the Egyptian civil calendar from about 2600 BC, he added. 'Such a solar calendar was developed in the eastern Mediterranean in the centuries after 3000 BC and was adopted in Egypt as the Civil Calendar around 2700 and was widely used at the start of the Old Kingdom about 2600 BC.' This raises the possibility that the calendar tracked by Stonehenge may stem from the influence of one of these other cultures. Nearby finds hint at such cultural connections the nearby Amesbury archer, buried nearby around the same period, was born in the Alps and moved to Britain as a teenager. Additionally, an intercalary month of five days and a leap day every four years were needed to match the solar year. 'The intercalary month, probably dedicated to the deities of the site, is represented by the five trilithons in the centre of the site,' said Professor Darvill. 'The four Station Stones outside the Sarsen Circle provide markers to notch-up until a leap day.' As such, the winter and summer solstices would be framed by the same pairs of stones every year. One of the trilithons also frames the winter solstice, indicating it may have been the new year. This solstitial alignment also helps calibrate the calendar any errors in counting the days would be easily detectable as the sun would be in the wrong place on the solstices. The Station Stones are elements of the prehistoric monument of Stonehenge. Originally there were four stones, resembling the four corners of a rectangle. Pictured is Station Stone 'S93' at the south-west corner of the Station Stone Rectangle Pictured here is Station Stone 'S91' at the north-east corner of the Station Stone Rectangle Sarsen stone S10 (left) in the Sarsen Circle, with the small-sized S11 to the right. View looking outwards from inside the circle This graph shows the pattern of stone widths and gaps around the circumference of the Sarsen Circle According to Professor Darvill, the identification of a solar calendar at Stonehenge should transform how we see it. 'Finding a solar calendar represented in the architecture of Stonehenge opens up a whole new way of seeing the monument as a place for the living,' he said. 'A place where the timing of ceremonies and festivals was connected to the very fabric of the universe and celestial movements in the heavens.' The study has been published today in the journal Antiquity. TikTok is to ditch its three minute limit on videos and will soon allow all users to upload clips up to 10 minutes long, the Chinese social network has confirmed. It brought in the existing limit in July 2021, upping it from 60 seconds, having initially expanded it from the original 15 seconds. The app has long been seen as a short-form video platform but is now manoeuvring itself to rival the likes of YouTube, Instagram and Facebook even more. The expanded video length will allow TikTok users more flexibility when filming clips such as beauty tutorials, cooking demos and comedic sketches. Currently anyone creating clips has to encourage viewers to follow them for a 'Part 2' or longer video. Update: TikTok is to ditch its three minute limit on videos and will soon allow all users to upload clips up to 10 minutes long, the Chinese social network has confirmed HOW TIK TOK HAS GROWN INTO THE MOST POPULAR ONLINE DESTINATION TikTok is a Chinese social media app where users can live stream, create short videos and music videos and Gifs with a host of functions. TikTok's tagline is 'Make every second count'. It is known in China as Douyin where it was launched in 2016 and then made more widely available around the world in 2017. Douyin is still the version of the app used in China, available to download separately to TikTok. The app was merged with popular music video lip-syncing app Musical.ly, also with headquarters in China. Most children use the app to film themselves lip-syncing to chart hits. It offers users a raft if colourful modification and editing tools including overlaying music, sound, animated stickers, filters and augmented reality (AR) for creating short videos. The Beijing based social network has more than 500 million active users and the company is now worth more than $75 billion (58 billion). Last year TikTok was revealed to be the world's most popular online destination, surpassing even the American search engine giant Google. Advertisement The problem with this is that users often have to scroll through a creator's feed to find the right video in a series. 'We're always thinking about new ways to bring value to our community and enrich the TikTok experience,' a TikTok spokesperson told MailOnline. 'Last year, we introduced longer videos, giving our community more time to create and be entertained on TikTok. 'Today, we're excited to start rolling out the ability to upload videos that are up to 10 minutes, which we hope would unleash even more creative possibilities for our creators around the world.' Users have been notified of the update with an in-app message that reads: 'Upload videos up to 10 minutes long from your device. 'Make sure you're using the latest version of TikTok before trying out the feature on your app tiktok.com.' YouTube, which raked in $28.8 billion (21.5 billion) in ad revenue in 2021, responded to TikTok's growth by launching its own short-form video rival, YouTube Shorts, in 2020 while Instagram also released its own clone called Instagram Reels. Snapchat offers what it calls Spotlight. However, experts say longer-form content is generally 'easier to monetise and keeps people on the platform longer.' Last year TikTok was revealed to be the world's most popular online destination, surpassing even the American search engine giant Google. Rankings by the IT security company Cloudfare revealed that TikTok knocked Google off the top spot in February, March and June 2021, and held the number one position from August to the end of the year. In 2020, Google was first ahead of Amazon, TikTok, Apple, Facebook, Netflix and Microsoft, all of whom were in the top 10. The new 10-minute limit has received mixed reviews on Twitter, with many saying they'd refuse to watch a 10 minute video on the platform. One user tweeted: 'I'm blocking anyone that makes a 10 minute tiktok. I already can't pay attention to the 3 minute ones.' Another added: 'Just make a youtube channel. why do we need 10 minute videos on tiktok.' And one joked: 'If someone sends me a 10 minute tiktok, that person is outta my life forever.' The app has long been seen as a short-form video platform but is now manoeuvring itself to rival the likes of YouTube, Instagram and Facebook even more The latest TikTok announcement comes three months after it emerged the social network is to take on Deliveroo with a new food delivery service called TikTok Kitchen that has menu items based on viral videos. Set to launch in the US this month, it will allow customers to order dishes that were originally created by TikTok users in their short video posts. These include baked feta pasta, corn ribs and 'pasta chips' cooked pasta shapes coated in cheese and air-fried, perfect for dipping. TikTok Kitchen will be a 'virtual restaurant' that serves customers exclusively by delivery and pick-up from orders placed online and over the phone, the app said. NASA has launched a new satellite that will monitor extreme weather including dust storms, landslides and hurricanes over Earth's western hemisphere. The GOES-T spacecraft will also provide round-the-clock tracking of lightning, coastal fog and climate change, and may even be able to spot wildfires before they are reported on the ground. It blasted into orbit on an Atlas V rocket at 16:38 ET (21:38 GMT) on Tuesday from Cape Canaveral Space Force Station in Florida. The first images should come next year, following months of testing. The satellite, which was designed by the National Oceanic and Atmospheric Administration (NOAA), is the third in a nearly $11.7 billion (8.7 billion) series of four weather satellites that are among the most advanced ever built Blast off: An Atlas V rocket, carrying America's newest weather satellite, lifted off from Cape Canaveral in Florida on Tuesday (pictured). The satellite will be designated GOES-18 and will improve wildfire and flood forecasting across Earth's western hemisphere They are credited with revolutionising real-time weather forecasting, environmental monitoring and hazard detections from space. The first soared in 2016 to track Atlantic hurricanes and other East Coast weather, while the second lifted off March 1, 2018. The fourth is set to launch in 2024. The NASA-supported GOES satellites 'provide the only continuous coverage of weather and hazardous environmental conditions in the Western Hemisphere,' said NOAA program director Pam Sullivan. 'These observations are even more critical now in a time when the US is experiencing a record number of billion-dollar disasters.' Besides observing conditions here on Earth, the satellites also monitor solar flares and the resulting space weather. The GOES program short for Geostationary Operational Environmental Satellites is a collaboration between NOAA and NASA. The latest satellite will be renamed GOES-18 once it reaches operational orbit some 22,000 miles (35,000 km) over the equator, joining predecessors GOES-16 and GOES-17. The GOES-T spacecraft will also provide round-the-clock tracking of lightning, coastal fog and climate change, and may even be able to spot wildfires before they're reported on the ground The satellite is the third in a nearly $11.7 billion (8.7 billion) series of four weather satellites that are among the most advanced ever built The geosynchronous orbits of the GOES satellites match the rotational speed of the Earth, keeping them in a constant position relative to the planet's surface. GOES-18 will replace GOES-17 in the western position, to keep watch over the western contiguous United States, Alaska, Hawaii, Mexico, Central America and the Pacific Ocean, according to NASA. Once in final position, GOES-18 will be used to track not just weather but wildfires one of its most important capabilities for the western United States as well as flash floods, dust storms, fog and landslides. The satellite also is equipped to monitor geomagnetic storms triggered by bursts of solar activity, as well as oceanography and climate change. GOES-17's operations were stunted by a faulty cooling system on its main imaging instrument, but it is still partly functional, while GOES-16 will remain stationed over the eastern portion of the hemisphere. An out-of-control spent rocket believed to belong to China is expected to leave a 66ft-wide crater in the moon when it smashes into the lunar surface on Friday. The space junk was originally identified as the upper stage of a SpaceX booster that was launched to space in 2015, but now experts think it is a Chinese rocket which blasted into orbit eight years ago. China has since cast doubt on this theory by denying that the spent rocket booster was debris from its Chang'e 5-T1 mission launched in 2014. No matter whose it is, the rocket will smash into the far side of the moon at 5,800 mph (9,300 kph) on Friday, away from telescopes' prying eyes. Scientists expect the object to carve out a hole 33 feet to 66 feet (10 to 20 meters) across and send moon dust flying hundreds of miles (kilometers) across the barren, pockmarked surface. An out-of-control spent rocket believed to belong to China is expected to leave a 66ft-wide crater in the moon when it smashes into the lunar surface on Friday THE CHANG'E 5-T1 MISSION Chang'e 5-T1 is an experimental robotic spacecraft that was launched to the moon on October 23, 2014. Its purpose was to conduct atmospheric re-entry tests on the capsule design planned to be used in the Chang'e 5 mission (eventually launched in 2020). Chang'e 5-T1 rocket booster has been implicated in a collision with the moon that's set for March 4, 2022. Advertisement But experts say it may take weeks, even months, to confirm the impact through satellite images. Low-orbiting space junk is relatively easy to track but because objects launching deeper into space are unlikely to hit anything, they are usually forgotten about by everybody but a handful of observers. The leftover booster was originally thought to belong to SpaceX after asteroid tracker Bill Gray identified the collision course in January. But he corrected himself a month later, saying the 'mystery' object was not a Falcon rocket upper stage from the 2015 launch of a deep space climate observatory for NASA. Gray said it was likely the third stage of a Chinese rocket that sent a test sample capsule to the moon and back in 2014, but Chinese ministry officials said the upper stage had re-entered Earth's atmosphere and burned up. However, there were two Chinese missions with similar designations the test flight and 2020's lunar sample return mission and US observers believe the two have been confused. The US Space Command, which tracks lower space junk, confirmed Tuesday that the Chinese upper stage from the 2014 lunar mission never deorbited, as previously indicated in its database. But it could not confirm the country of origin for the object about to strike the moon. 'We focus on objects closer to the Earth,' a spokesperson said in a statement. Gray, a mathematician and physicist, said he is now confident that it is China's rocket. 'I've become a little bit more cautious of such matters,' he said. 'But I really just don't see any way it could be anything else.' This image shows Chang'e 5-T1's re-entry module after vacuum thermal tests prior to its launch on a Long March 3C rocket from Xichang Satellite Launch Center in October 2014 Jonathan McDowell, of the Harvard and Smithsonian Center for Astrophysics, supported Gray's revised assessment, but added: 'The effect will be the same. It'll leave yet another small crater on the moon.' The moon already bears countless craters, ranging up to 1,600 miles (2,500 kilometers). With little to no real atmosphere, the moon is defenseless against the constant barrage of meteors and asteroids, and the occasional incoming spacecraft, including a few intentionally crashed for science's sake. With no weather, there's no erosion and so impact craters last forever. China has a lunar lander on the moon's far side, but it will be too far away to detect Friday's impact just north of the equator. NASA's Lunar Reconnaissance Orbiter will also be out of range, while it is unlikely that India's moon-orbiting Chandrayaan-2 will be passing by then, either. 'I had been hoping for something (significant) to hit the moon for a long time. Ideally, it would have hit on the near side of the moon at some point where we could actually see it,' Gray said. After initially pinning the upcoming strike on Elon Musks SpaceX, Gray took another look after an engineer at NASA's Jet Propulsion Laboratory questioned his claim. Now, he is 'pretty thoroughly persuaded' it is a Chinese rocket part, based not only on orbital tracking back to its 2014 liftoff, but also data received from its short-lived ham radio experiment. When the rocket was identified as hurtling towards the moon last month, it was mistakenly identified as originally belonging to SpaceX, owned by Elon Musk (pictured) JPL's Center for Near Earth Object Studies endorses Gray's reassessment. A University of Arizona team also recently identified the Chinese Long March rocket segment from the light reflected off its paint, during telescope observations of the careening cylinder. It is about 40 feet (12 meters) long and 10 feet (3 meters) in diameter. Gray said SpaceX never contacted him to challenge his original claim and neither have the Chinese. 'It's not a SpaceX problem, nor is it a China problem. Nobody is particularly careful about what they do with junk at this sort of orbit,' Gray said. Tracking deep space mission leftovers like this is hard, according to McDowell. The moon's gravity can alter an object's path during flybys, creating uncertainty. And there's no readily available database, McDowell noted, aside from the ones 'cobbled together' by himself, Gray and a couple others. 'We are now in an era where many countries and private companies are putting stuff in deep space, so it's time to start to keep track of it,' McDowell said. 'Right now there's no one, just a few fans in their spare time.' Tonga's volcanic eruption will not plunge Earth into another 'Year Without a Summer' and will have a smaller cooling impact than first thought, a new study reveals. Hunga Tonga-Hunga Ha'apai, an underwater volcano in the South Pacific, spewed debris as high as 25 miles into the atmosphere when it erupted on January 15. Some researchers had thought resulting particles in the Earth's atmosphere could trigger global cooling, leading to 'a Year Without a Summer' in 2023 much like the one experienced in 1816. But now, a Chinese team of researchers say January's event was 'not strong enough to have significant impacts on the global climate'. There will be a rather insignificant global temperature decrease by only 0.0072F (0.004C) in the first year after the Tonga eruption, they say. Overall, results suggest the Tonga eruption will not be strong enough to overwhelm the longer term global warming patterns. The January 15 eruption was so powerful it was heard as far away as Alaska and caused a tsunami that flooded coastlines around the Pacific It triggered a 7.4 magnitude earthquake, sending tsunami waves crashing into the island, leaving it covered in ash and cut off from outside help TONGA'S DESTRUCTIVE VOLCANIC ERUPTION Hunga Tonga-Hunga Ha'apai, an underwater volcano in the South Pacific, spewed debris as high as 25 miles into the atmosphere when it erupted on January 15. It triggered a 7.4 magnitude earthquake, sending tsunami waves crashing into the island, leaving it covered in ash and cut off from outside help. It also released somewhere between 5 to 30 megatons (5 million to 30 million tonnes) of TNT equivalent, according to NASA Earth Observatory. Ash sent spewing into the air from the massive underwater volcanic eruption in Tonga was photographed by International Space Station astronauts. Advertisement The new study has been led by researchers at the Institute of Atmospheric Physics, Chinese Academy of Sciences, Beijing. Potential climate impact of the HTHH [Hunga Tonga-Hunga Ha'apai] volcanic eruption is of great concern to the public,' they say in their new paper. 'Here, we intend to size up the impact of the HTHH eruption from a historical perspective.' When the undersea volcano erupted violently on January 15, some public concern was raised about its potential impact on global climate in the near future. This is because sulfur dioxide (SO2) injected into the stratosphere after volcanic eruptions is oxidized and converted to sulfate aerosols a mass of particles that form hazy air masses that can be tracked by satellites. These aerosols linger for one or two years and reduce incoming solar radiation, resulting in a short period of global cooling. The surface temperature returns to normal as the volcanic aerosols dissipate, and so a single volcanic eruption is not enough to alter the long-term global warming trend. The exception to this is if there are clusters of volcanic eruption that persist for hundreds of years, as thought to have happened during the Little Ice Age from around the early 14th century through to the mid-19th century, when rivers froze over and crops were decimated. Around the 17th century, Earth experienced a prolonged cooling period dubbed the Little Ice Age that brought chillier-than-average temperatures to much of the Northern Hemisphere The largest volcanic eruption of the last 500 years, the eruption of Mount Tambora in Indonesia in April 1815, caused the so-called 'Year Without a summer' in the following year in many parts of the world. Here, 1816 summer temperature anomaly (C) is shown with respect to 1971-2000 climatology THE 1815 ERUPTION OF MOUNT TAMBORA - AND THE 'YEAR WITHOUT A SUMNMER' The cataclysmic eruption of Indonesia's Mount Tambora in April 1815 is thought to have triggered the 'year without a summer' in 1816. When Mount Tambora erupted, the volcano spewed a huge amount of sulphur dioxide into the upper atmosphere, where it turned sulphate particles into aerosols. The layer of light-reflecting aerosols cooled Earth, and led to an extremely cold summer in 1816, especially across Europe and the northeast of North America. The 'year without a summer' is blamed for widespread crop failure and disease, causing more than 100,000 deaths globally. Advertisement The largest volcanic eruption of the last 500 years, the eruption of Mount Tambora in Indonesia in April 1815 caused the so-called 'Year Without a Summer' in the following year in many parts of the world. In 1816, there was a reduction in annual mean surface temperature over the tropics and northern hemisphere by 0.7 to 1F (0.4 to 0.7C). However, the the eruption of Mount Tambora in 1815 emitted 53-58 terrograms (Tg) of SO2. Satellite measurements of the eruption at Tonga which has erupted multiple times over the past century showed that its volcanic ash has reached an altitude of 18.6 miles deep into the stratosphere, with a total mass of only about 0.4 Tg. One previously reported initial estimate placed the reduction in global surface air temperature at between 0.05F and 0.18F (0.03C and 0.1C) over the next one to two years as a result of the eruption but the researchers say this is inaccurate. 'This reported initial estimate may have overestimated the impact as it did not take into account the location where the eruption occurred, which alters the spatial distribution of stratospheric sulfate aerosols a variable that can alter results substantially,' said study author Tianjun Zhou. 'This is because southern hemisphere volcanic eruption emissions are largely confined to circulating in the same hemisphere and the tropics, with less of an impact on the northern hemisphere. 'This in turn leads to a weaker global cooling than those of northern hemispheric and tropical volcanoes.' FY-4B Satellite captured the eruption of Hunga Tonga-Hunga Haapai volcano and monitored the diffusion of volcanic ash clouds Sulfur dioxide (SO2) injected into the stratosphere after volcanic eruptions is oxidized and converted to sulfate aerosols. These aerosols linger there for one or two years and while there, work to reduce incoming solar radiation, resulting in a short period of global cooling To arrive at a more accurate assessment, the team used computer modelling to take into account the latitude of the release of sulfate aerosols. TONGA ERUPTION 'EQUIVALENT TO HUNDREDS OF HIROSHIMAS' Tonga's volcanic eruption unleashed explosive forces equivalent to up to 30 million tonnes of TNT hundreds of times more than Hiroshima's atomic bomb, NASA has said. It released somewhere between 5 to 30 megatons (5 million to 30 million tonnes) of TNT equivalent, according to NASA Earth Observatory. 'That number is based on how much was removed, how resistant the rock was, and how high the eruption cloud was blown into the atmosphere at a range of velocities,' said Jim Garvin, chief scientist at NASA's Goddard Space Flight Center. Advertisement Climate-model simulations that use large southern volcanic eruptions in the last millennium showed a significant correlation between the intensity of 70 selected volcanic eruptions over the last millennium and the global mean surface temperature response in the first year after eruption. They then picked six particularly large tropical eruptions in model simulations and scaled the surface temperature response in line with the intensity of the 1991 Mount Pinatubo eruption, which ejected 20 Tg of SO2. The results of the model simulations were found to be similar to real-world observations, suggesting their modelling work was on the right track. These results were then scaled down for the Tonga eruption with its stratospheric injection of 0.4 Tg of SO2. The final results showed that that the global mean surface temperature will decrease by only 0.0072F (0.004C) in the first year after the eruption so up until January 2023. This is within the scope of internal variability of the climate system 'and thus not strong enough to have significant impacts on the global climate', the team report. The cooling in the southern hemisphere will be stronger than in other parts of the world the strongest cooling of more than 0.018F (0.01C) will occur in parts of Australia and South America, while cooling over most of China will be under 0.018F. The researchers did include one caveat however these conclusions would hold true as long as this sort of eruption from Hunga Tonga-Hunga Ha'apai is a one-time-only event. No explosive eruptions have been detected there since the January 15 event so far; however, it may become active again in the future as this volcano has erupted many times over the past 100 years. 'As a result, we should keep monitoring the activity of HTHH in the coming days, months, and years,' said Professor Zhou. The results have been published in the journal Advances in Atmospheric Sciences. The notorious hacking group Anonymous claims to have shut down Russia's space agency so that Vladimir Putin 'no longer has control over spy satellites' amid his invasion of Ukraine. Network Battalion 65 or 'NB65', which is affiliated with Anonymous, posted a tweet claiming to show server information for Roscosmos. They said they had downloaded and deleted confidential files related to the space agency's satellite imaging and Vehicle Monitoring System. However, the head of Roscosmos denied the claim and called Anonymous 'scammers and petty swindlers'. The hacking group Anonymous claims to have shut down Russia's space agency so Vladimir Putin 'no longer has control over spy satellites' amid his invasion of Ukraine (file photo) Network Battalion 65 or 'NB65', which is affiliated with Anonymous, posted a tweet claiming to show server information for Roscosmos (pictured). However, the head of Roscosmos denied the claim and called Anonymous 'scammers and petty swindlers' Director General Dmitry Rogozin tweeted: 'The information of these scammers and petty swindlers is not true. 'All our space activity control centers are operating normally.' He added that Russia would treat any hacking of its satellites as a justification for war. Rogozin has previously said that control of the Russian space industry, orbital group and the Russian International Space Station segment is protected from cyber criminals. Earlier the hackers tweeted: 'The WS02 was deleted, credentials were rotated, and the server is shut down. 'We won't stop until you stop dropping bombs, killing civilians, and trying to invade. Go the f*** back to Russia.' It comes just days after Anonymous claimed it had successfully breached over 300 Russian websites and offered troops more than $53,000 (39,000) to give up their tanks. The hacker community claims to have collected over RUB 1 billion ($10.3 million) and is offering tank crews money for each surrendered tank, according to Ukrainian media. Last week Anonymous declared 'cyber war' against Putin's government after he mounted a full-scale invasion of Ukraine The group also announced that they had taken down the website of the Kremlin-backed TV channel RT, which broadcasts in Britain and has been heavily criticised for its coverage Last week Anonymous declared 'cyber war' against Putin's government after he mounted a full-scale invasion of Ukraine. In a post on Twitter, the group wrote: 'The Anonymous collective is officially in cyber war against the Russian government.' Around 30 minutes later, they announced that they had taken down the website of the Kremlin-backed TV channel RT, which broadcasts in Britain and has been heavily criticised for its coverage. Anonymous has previously targeted groups including the Ku Klux Klan and Islamic extremists. Members are known as 'Anons' and are distinguished by their Guy Fawkes masks. In July last year, the collective warned Tesla founder Elon Musk that they planned to target him after saying he wields too much power over the cryptocurrency markets. Google has unveiled technology that can read people's body movements to let devices 'understand the social context around them' and make decisions. Developed by Google's Advanced Technology and Products division (ATAP) in San Francisco, the technology consists of chips built into TVs, phones and computers. But rather than using cameras, the tech uses radar radio waves that are reflected to determine the distance or angle of objects in the vicinity. If built into future devices, the technology could turn down the TV if you nod off or automatically pause Netflix when you leave the sofa. Assisted by machine learning algorithms, it would also generally allow devices to know that someone is approaching or entering their 'personal space'. Rather than using cameras, the tech uses radar - radio waves that are reflected to determine the distance or angle of objects in the vicinity Google has unveiled technology that can read people's body movements to let devices 'understand the social context around them' and make decisions, such as flashing up information when you walk by or turning down volume on RADAR: HIGH-FREQUENCY RADIO WAVES Radar is an acronym, which stands for Radio detection and ranging. It uses high-frequency radio waves and was first developed in World War Two to aid fighter pilots. It works in a simple manner, a machine sends out a wave and then a separate sensor detects it when it bounces back. This is much the same way that sight works, light is bounced off an object and into the eye, where it is detected and processed. Instead of using visible light, which has a small wavelength, radar uses radio waves which have a far larger wavelength. By detecting the range of waves that have bounced back, a computer can create an image of what is ahead that is invisible to the human eye. This can be used to see through different materials, in darkness, fog and a variety of different weather conditions. Scientists often use this method to detect terrain and also see to study archaeological and valuable finds. As a non-invasive technique it can be used to gain insight without degrading or damaging precious finds and monuments. Advertisement The technology was outlined in a new video published by ATAP, part of a documentary series that showcases its latest R&D research. The tech giant wants to create 'socially intelligent devices' that are controlled by 'the wave of the hand or turn of the head'. 'As humans, we understand each other intuitively without saying a single word,' said Leonardo Giusti, head of design at ATAP. 'We pick up on social cues, subtle gestures, that we innately understand and react to. What if computers understood us this way?' Such devices would be powered by Soli, a small chip that sends out radar waves to detect human motions, from a heartbeat to the movements of the body. Soli is already featured in Google products such as the second-generation Nest Hub smart display to detect motion, including the depth of a person's breathing. Soli was first featured in 2019's Google Pixel 4 smartphone, allowing gesture controls such as the wave of a hand to skip songs, snooze alarms and silence phone calls, although it wasn't included in the following year's Pixel 5. The difference with the new technology is that Soli would be at work when users are not necessarily conscious of it, rather than users actively doing something to activate it. if built into a smart TV, it could be used to make decisions such as turning down the volume when it detects we are asleep information garnered from a slanted head position, indicting it's resting against the side of a chair or sofa. At some point in the future, the tech could be so advanced enough to capture 'submillimeter motion' that it could detect if eyes are open or closed. Other examples include a thermostat on the wall that automatically flashes the weather conditions when users walk past, or a computer that silences a notification jingle when it sees no users are sitting at the desk, according to Wired. Assisted by machine learning algorithms, the tech would allow devices to know that someone is approaching or entering its 'personal space' The technology could mean a thermostat on the wall would automatically flash weather conditions when users walk past Also, when users are in a kitchen following a video recipe, the device could pause when users move away to get ingredients and resume when they come back. The tech, which is still in development, has some flaws in a crowded room, radar waves could have difficulty detecting one person from another, as opposed to just one big mass. Also, taking control away from the user to hand it over to devices could lead to a whole new era of technology doing things that users don't want it to do. 'Humans are hardwired to really understand human behaviour, and when computers break it, it does lead to these sort of extra frustrating [situations],' Chris Harrison at Carnegie Mellon University's Human-Computer Interaction Institute, told Wired. This image shows what the device determines to be an overlap between two personal spaces - that of the human, and of the device 'Bringing people like social scientists and behavioral scientists into the field of computing makes for these experiences that are much more pleasant and much more kind of humanistic.' Radar has an obvious privacy advantage over cameras allaying any customer fears that Google staff could be viewing livestreams of you sleeping in front of your TV, for example. But some consumers may still be concerned how data on their movements is being used and stored, even if it is anonymised. 'There's no such thing as privacy-invading and not privacy-invading,' Harrison said. 'Everything is on a spectrum.' A geothermal energy start-up plans to invent a wave drill, that can penetrate 12.4 miles in the Earth's crust, releasing virtually unlimited amounts of clean energy. Quaise Energy, a startup out of MIT, based in Boston and Houston, recently secured $40 million in funding to help it get the first drilling rig off the drawing board. The system works by drilling down to base rock, then firing high-power millimeter waves into the ground, without the need for complex mechanical drills that are limited by the pressure and intense heat deep into the crust. Regular metal drills get broken or just melt beyond a certain depth, when the heat and pressure becomes too much for them to handle. The goal is to be able to repurpose existing fossil fuel power plants, replacing burning coal with 900F heat from miles below the surface of the Earth. The firm hope to have the first drilling platform live by 2024, the first wells producing up to 100 megawatt of geothermal energy by 2026, and fossil power plants repurposed by 2028, delivering clean energy around the world. A geothermal energy start-up plans to use a wave drill, that can penetrate 12.4 miles (20km) in the Earth's crust, releasing virtually unlimited amounts of clean energy The goal is to be able to repurpose existing fossil fuel power plants, replacing burning coal with 900F heat from miles below the surface of the Earth Geothermal energy is already in use, in areas where pockets of naturally occurring heat sources are close to the surface, and in easily accessible locations. The problem is, for them to be viable they also have to be close enough to a power grid, making geothermal power plants relatively rare. When they do work, they provide a totally reliable, round-the-clock power source, that continues going, unlike other renewables, such as wind and solar. If the sun isn't shining, or wind doesn't blow, then power isn't generated, but with geothermal energy, the rocks under the Earth are always hot. Currently geothermal supplies about 0.3 per cent of global energy consumption, but Quaise believes its technology can solve that, and see the figure rapidly increase. 'A rapid transition to clean energy is one of the biggest challenges faced by humanity,' said Arunas Chesonis, Managing Partner of Safar Partners, the firm behind the fundraising round. 'Geothermal energy can provide a lot more power using fewer resources. We have to approach the clean energy transition from both of those angles. The firm hope to have the first drilling platform live by 2024, the first wells producing up to 100 megawatt of geothermal energy by 2026, and fossil power plants repurposed by 2028, delivering clean energy around the world QUAISE ENERGY TIMELINE 2024: First full-scale hybrid drilling rig combining conventional rotary drilling and millimeter wave drilling capabilities. 2026: First Super Hot Enhanced Geothermal System rated to 100 MW of thermal energy from a handful of wells. 2028: First fossil-fired power plant re-powered with clean geothermal steam Advertisement 'Quaise's solution makes us optimistic for a future where clean, renewable energy will secure the future of our planet.' Being able to tap into a globally available supply of geothermal energy requires drilling much deeper into the Earth than currently possible. The Kola Superdeep Borehole in Russia holds the record for deepest produced hole, going down about seven miles, but even that isn't enough for Quaise Energy. They suggest that drilling would need to go down to about 12 miles below the surface in order to reach rocks hot enough to power massive power plants. The problem is, when a drill goes below the base rock, temperatures and pressure start to increase, which in turn damage the drill and stop it going any deeper. Quaise's solution is to not use a physical drill at all, but rather turn to a sci-fi inspired 'beam' technology, that vaporizes the rocks in its path. This new millimeter wave drilling system uses a technology that has been around for a decade, but not produced at commercial scales before. Slide me Quaise Energy says its geothermal drilling system would require a lower footprint than wind and solar, and can operate continuously It is a form of 'directed energy drilling', and uses high-frequency waves to heat rock in its path to the point where it melts or vaporizes. Quaise Energy uses a gyrotron to power its drilling platform, this is a high-power linear-beam vacuum tube that generates millimeter-wave electromagnetic waves The system works by drilling down to base rock, then firing high-power millimeter waves into the ground, without the need for complex mechanical drills Being able to drill deep into the surface, from anywhere on the planet, without expensive, and easily damaged drills, is a game changer for renewable power, according to the team behind the technology. It would allow for geothermal power stations to be placed anywhere, and even replace existing fossil fuel stations with geothermal energy sources. Securing the funding will allow Quaise to accelerate product development, and begin construction n the first field-deployable wave drilling machine. 'This funding round brings us closer to providing clean, renewable baseload energy,' said Carlos Araque, CEO and co-founder of Quaise Energy. 'Our technology allows us to access energy anywhere in the world, at a scale far greater than wind and solar, enabling future generations to thrive in a world powered with abundant clean energy.' The company plans to use its novel drilling technology to re-power traditional power plants, saving infrastructure costs and utilizing the current oil and gas industry's workforce to accelerate the shift towards a sustainable energy industry. 'We need a massive amount of carbon-free energy in the coming decades,' said Mark Cupta, Managing Director at Prelude Ventures, involved in funding the firm. Quaise Energy spun out of the MIT Plasma Science and Fusion Center in 2018. Cambodia inaugurates China-funded national road connecting capital, coastal province Xinhua) 13:14, March 02, 2022 TAKEO, Cambodia, March 2 (Xinhua) -- Cambodia on Wednesday inaugurated the China-funded National Road No. 3, which links its capital Phnom Penh and the southwestern coastal province of Kampot. The 134.8-km road stretches from Chom Chao roundabout in the capital's western suburb to Kampot, running through Kandal, Kampong Speu and Takeo provinces. Cambodian Prime Minister Samdech Techo Hun Sen and Chinese Ambassador to Cambodia Wang Wentian presided over the inauguration ceremony, which was attended by nearly 1,000 people. Speaking at the event, Hun Sen said the road is crucial to boost economic and tourism development and that Kampot is the only province that produces salt for the kingdom. "This is another testament to the fruitful cooperation between Cambodia and China under the frameworks of the comprehensive strategic partnership, the ironclad friendship, and the community with a shared future between the two countries," he said. "I hope that our people will benefit from this road, which connects between our capital city and coastal province," he added. The road was built by the China Road and Bridge Corporation at the cost of about 215 million U.S. dollars, which was the preferential buyer's credit loan from the government of China. It took 34 months to be completed. Hun Sen praised the contractor for completing the project 14 months earlier than scheduled and thanked it for building the road in good compliance with technical standards. Ambassador Wang said the National Road No. 3 is a key transportation artery connecting Phnom Penh and the coastal province of Kampot, expressing his belief that the road will play a crucial role in boosting economy and tourism as well as improving the livelihoods of people living along the route. "The inauguration ceremony truly reflects the strong momentum and fruitful results of China-Cambodia pragmatic cooperation," he said. He added that although the COVID-19 pandemic has seriously impacted the flow of people and logistics, some major projects of bilateral cooperation have withstood the pressure of the pandemic and have been successfully completed as planned with high quality. (Web editor: Peng yukai, Liang Jun) Three former Florida correctional officers were sentenced Tuesday for assaulting a handcuffed inmate until he lost consciousness. Coty Michael Wiltgen, 32, Ethan Burkett, 25, and William Shackelford, 25, who all worked at the Hamilton Correctional Institution Annex in Jasper, were on duty on March 3, 2020, when an inmate pushed Burkett out of the way while chasing another prisoner, according to the Department of Justice. Advertisement Thats when Wiltgen pepper-sprayed the man and handcuffed him. The officer and Shackelford then led the cooperative and compliant victim away from cameras and made (him) fall to the ground. Wiltgen then proceeded to kick the man 15 times while he was lying face down on the ground, called him a racial epithet and spit on him. Shackelford kneeled on the mans back to keep him on the ground. Advertisement From left: Coty Michael Wiltgen, William Shackelford and Ethan Alan Burkett Burkett then joined the group , hit the man twice on the upper back with an open hand and punched him, according to the Department of Justice. The man was eventually knocked unconscious by one of Wiltgens kicks. Burkett, Wiltgen, and Shackelford knew that the use of force was unnecessary and excessive, counter to their training and completely unjustified at the time that they used, and watched others use, force against the victim, prosecutors said in a statement. As a result of the assault, the victim suffered several injuries. All three men pleaded guilty last summer to violating the civil rights of an inmate. Wiltgen was sentenced to 37 months in federal prison, followed by two years of supervised release, Burkett received 31 months in federal prison, followed by one year of supervised release, and Shackelford got 25 months in federal prison, followed by one year of supervised release. A gigantic sunspot the size of the Earth has been spotted in the atmosphere of the sun, providing solar scientists with fresh insight into activity on our nearest star. The National Science Foundation's Inouye Solar Telescope, on the Hawaiian island of Maui, has just started its 12-month operational commissioning phase. This is the largest solar telescope in the world, and a cornerstone mission in finding out more about the sun, and how it impacts the Earth through solar eruptions. The new image isn't the first from Inouye, which began releasing high-resolution pictures of the sun two years ago. But it is one of the most detailed views of the star ever taken from the ground. This is also the first picture released as part of a dedicated scientific observation, exploring the magnetic reconnection phenomena, surrounding a giant sunspot. 'The diameter of the dark part of the sunspot (called the umbra) is about the same diameter of Earth,' a spokesperson explained. A gigantic sunspot the size of the Earth has been spotted in the atmosphere of the sun, providing solar scientists with fresh insight into activity on our star Inouye started its first science observations on February 23, as part of an experiment led by Dr Tetsu Anan, Principal Investigator with the National Solar Observatory. The team are looking at the 'electric field associated with magnetic reconnection driving a jet in the chromosphere' of the sun. It is designed to verify a process known as 'magnetic reconnection' by measuring electric fields that are believed to occur during this process. Magnetic reconnection is the mechanism by which solar magnetic fields are suddenly and energetically reconfigured, resulting in jets of plasma ejected from the solar atmosphere. This process has long been theorized but has yet to be proven. Observations from Inouye's unique suite of instruments are allowing scientists to observe this elusive but vital phenomenon for the very first time. 'It is an honor to have been selected as the first science experiment executed at the Inouye Solar Telescope,' said Dr Anan, The National Science Foundation's Inouye Solar Telescope, on the Hawaiian island of Maui, has just started its 12 month operational commissioning phase To observe the sun in unprecedented detail, the telescope features a 13-foot (4 metre) mirror the largest ever for a solar telescope WHAT IS THE DANIEL K. INOUYE SOLAR TELESCOPE? The Daniel K. Inouye Solar Telescope is a US National Science Foundation facility located on the volcano Haleakala on Maui, Hawaii. To observe the Sun in unprecedented detail, the telescope features a 13-foot (4 metre) mirror the largest ever for a solar telescope. The surrounding observatory sits around 10,000 feet (3,048 metres) above sea level at the mountain's summit, offering astronomers unparalleled viewing conditions. State-of-the-art adaptive optical technology allows the telescope to be precisely focused while compensating for the blurring of images caused by light passing through the Earth's atmosphere. To protect Inouye from the enormous heat generated by focusing around 13 kilowatts of solar power, the telescope has a specialised cooling system that includes more than seven miles (11.3 kilometres) of piping. This system even makes use of ice that is generated on-site at night. At the same time, the dome that covers the telescope is covered by thin cooling plates and shutters that help maintain a constant temperature around the instrument. A liquid-cooled metal doughnut known as a 'heat-stop' acts to block most of the Sun's energy from reaching the main mirror, which allows scientists to examine specific regions of the star's surface in peerless detail. Advertisement 'This a moment we've all looked forward to a historic welcoming to the new age of solar observations. I'd like to thank the co-investigators and everyone involved with the Inouye Solar Telescope for this monumental milestone.' Dr Jiong Qiu, from Montana State University, was one of several co-investigators involved in the experiment, and added that magnetic reconnection is the keyword in many energy release events in the sun's atmosphere, making it an important target. 'For many years, solar physicists could only infer or estimate an average reconnection electric field based on many assumptions,' Dr Qiu said. 'I am hopeful that being able to directly measure this crucial physical parameter with the enabling technology by the Inouye Solar Telescope will bring breakthroughs in solar physics and revolutionize our understanding of magnetic reconnection. The solar telescope has been over 25 years in the making and is hailed as the 'crowning achievement' for ground-based solar astronomy. 'We are proud to bring the world's largest and most powerful solar telescope online,' said Dr Sethuraman Panchanathan, NSF Director. The facility operates at 10,000 ft above sea level near the summit of Haleakala on Maui, Hawai'i, where unique environmental conditions enable observations of the elusive solar corona. The telescope's operational phase is a long-awaited accomplishment, marking the end of a construction phase bookended by groundbreaking in 2012 and an 18-month delay caused by the COVID-19 global pandemic. 'The Inouye Solar Telescope team remained committed to developing an innovative solar telescope that pushed the frontiers of new technology,' said Dr David Boboltz, Program Director in NSF's Division of Astronomical Sciences. 'From design through construction, they overcame many challenges to realize a world-class facility poised to deliver on its transformational potential for all of humankind.' The new image isn't the first from Inouye, which began releasing high-resolution pictures of the sun two years ago, but this is some of the most close up views of the star ever taken from the ground - and providing a detailed view of sunspots An image shows the sun's surface at the highest resolution ever taken, shot by the Daniel K. Inouye Solar Telescope (DKIST) in January 29, 2020 The stunning first images from the Inouye Solar Telescope revealed patterns in the roiling plasma that makes up the sun's surface The Inouye Solar Telescope will take high-resolution images and make measurements of the magnetic fields of solar phenomena including sunspots, solar flares, and coronal mass ejections. Solar activity drives space weather events that can impact Earth by disrupting power grids, communication networks, and other technology we depend on. It has been designed to work alongside other advanced observatories, as well as probes near the sun, such as the Parker Solar Probe, to provide greater insight into space weather behavior to aid in developing the means of predicting such events. 'Taking the first science observations with the Inouye Solar Telescope marks an exciting moment for the solar science community,' commented Dr Thomas Rimmele, NSO Associate Director and lead of the Inouye Solar Telescope. 'There is no other facility like the Inouye Solar Telescope. It is now the cornerstone of our mission to advance our knowledge of the Sun by providing forefront observational opportunities to the research community. It is a game changer.' Russian trolls have been caught creating fake Facebook accounts for Ukraine-hating citizens who do not actually exist. The social media giant said it had removed a batch of profiles, including ones for a fictitious aviation engineer and guitar teacher spouting anti-Kyiv propaganda. Both were revealed to have faces generated by artificial intelligence. They are understood to have been made by two disinformation groups operating in Russia, as well as the Russian-dominated Donbas and Crimea regions of Ukraine. Among the information being shared is that Ukraine is a 'failed state' and that President Volodymyr Zelensky is 'building a neo-Nazi dictatorship', as part of an attempt by Russia to undermine trust in the Ukrainian government. Russia has been accused of creating fake, AI-generated Facebook and Twitter accounts of Ukrainians 'who hate their country'. The AI-generated photo of 'Vladimir Bondarenko' 'has weird ears' (left), while another female fake Ukrainian has mismatched earrings (right) Quick thread: I want you all to meet Vladimir Bondarenko. Hes a blogger from Kiev who really hates the Ukrainian government. He also doesnt exist, according to Facebook. Hes an invention of a Russian troll farm targeting Ukraine. His face was made by AI. pic.twitter.com/uWslj1Xnx3 Ben Collins (@oneunderscore__) February 28, 2022 The fake aviation engineer-turned blogger was called Vladimir Bondarenko from Kyiv, 'who really hates the Ukrainian government' and even has a whole backstory. 'He was an aviation engineer, until he was forced into blogging when Ukraine's aviation infrastructure "collapsed",' said NBC's Ben Collins. Another female AI-created fake Ukrainian, Irina Kerimova from Kharkiv, was 'a private guitar teacher' until she supposedly became editor-in-chief of a Russian propaganda website called Ukraine Today. Sensity, a service that detects fraudulent documents, also identified the AI images as deepfakes META'S STATEMENT 'In the last 48 hours, we uncovered a relatively small network of about 40 accounts, Pages and Groups on Facebook and Instagram. 'They were operated from Russia and Ukraine and targeted people in Ukraine across multiple social media platforms and through their own websites. 'We took down this operation, blocked their domains from being shared on our platform, and shared information with other tech platforms, researchers and governments. 'When we disrupted this network on our platform, it had fewer than 4,000 Facebook accounts following one of more of its Pages and fewer than 500 accounts following one or more of its Instagram accounts. 'This network used fake accounts and operated fictitious personas and brands across the internet including on Facebook, Instagram, Twitter, YouTube, Telegram, Odnoklassniki and VK to appear more authentic in an apparent attempt to withstand scrutiny by platforms and researchers. 'These fictitious personas used profile pictures likely generated using artificial intelligence techniques like generative adversarial networks (GAN). 'They claimed to be based in Kyiv and posed as news editors, a former aviation engineer, and an author of a scientific publication on hydrography the science of mapping water. 'This operation ran a handful of websites masquerading as independent news outlets, publishing claims about the West betraying Ukraine and Ukraine being a failed state. 'Our investigation is ongoing, and so far weve found links between this network and another operation we removed in April 2020, which we then connected to individuals in Russia, the Donbass region in Ukraine and two media organizations in Crimea NewsFront and SouthFront, now sanctioned by the US government. 'In the past several days, weve seen increased targeting of people in Ukraine, including Ukrainian military and public figures by Ghostwriter, a threat actor that has been tracked for some time by the security community.' Advertisement Collins pointed out some flaws with the AI-generated photos of the fake Ukrainians, believed to have been taken from ThisPersonDoesNotExist.com, an online tool that generates random fake faces. For example, the photo of Vladimir Bondarenko 'has weird ears', while Irina Kerimova is shown with mismatched earrings. Sensity, a service that detects fraudulent documents, also identified the AI images as deepfakes. These fake people had a presence across several platforms, including Facebook, Instagram, Twitter, YouTube, Telegram, Odnoklassniki and VK. Meta, which owns Facebook, said it uncovered a relatively small network of about 40 accounts, Pages and Groups on Facebook and Instagram targeting Ukraine that had these fake profiles. The company said: 'We took down this operation, blocked their domains from being shared on our platform, and shared information with other tech platforms, researchers and governments. 'These fictitious personas used profile pictures likely generated using artificial intelligence techniques like generative adversarial networks (GAN). 'They claimed to be based in Kyiv and posed as news editors, a former aviation engineer, and an author of a scientific publication on hydrography the science of mapping water. 'This operation ran a handful of websites masquerading as independent news outlets, publishing claims about the West betraying Ukraine and Ukraine being a failed state.' Twitter said it had also banned more than a dozen accounts sharing links to Ukraine Today. The AI-generated profiles are actually just one of two anti-Ukraine disinformation campaigns that Meta has been tackling. While the AI-generated profiles are tied to Russia, the other operation has connections to a hacking group from Belarus with ties to the Belarusian government called Ghostwriter. Belarus has been aiding the attack on Ukraine, led by Russian President Vladimir Putin including by allowing Russian Armed Forces to perform weeks-long military drills on its territory. This second Belarusian operation hacked into accounts of real Ukrainian journalists, public officials and other figures 'and posted a video of Ukrainians waving a white flag of surrender', Collins said. Nathaniel Gleicher, Meta's head of security policy, said: 'Ghostwriter typically starts by compromising their targets email, then uses that to take over their other accounts. 'This is why its so important to enable two-factor authentication and use a password manager to avoid reusing passwords across the internet.' Meta, the company that owns Facebook, has been removing anti-Ukrainian operations from their sites (file photo) Russia's ongoing attack on Ukraine has been led by Russian President Vladimir Putin (pictured) According to Gleicher, the larger of the two disinformation groups the first one using fake AI profiles operated in Russia, as well as the Russian-dominated Donbas and Crimea regions of Ukraine. Gleicher told NBC that the propaganda campaign was able to 'seed stories across the internet that Ukraine isnt doing well' by 'pretending to be journalists based in Kyiv'. 'The good news is that neither of these campaigns have been that effective, but we do see these actors trying to target Ukraine at this point,' Gleicher said. 'These actors are trying to undermine trust in the Ukrainian government, suggest that its a failed state, suggest that the war is going very poorly in Ukraine or trying to praise Russia.' SpaceX says its Starlink satellites are not at risk of colliding with NASA missions, or other space objects as it revealed that it is building an advanced collision avoidance system. NASA raised concerns about the Elon Musk-founded firm's ambitious proposal to deploy 30,000 satellites as part of the second generation of its orbital internet service. SpaceX previously had authorization for about 12,000 satellites, and has so far launched 2,000, but wants to increase the number to improve coverage, NASA said peppering orbit with so many satellites could 'impact science and human spaceflight missions'. Warning it could lead to a 'significant increase' in collisions. SpaceX said in a statement: 'Our satellites use multiple strategies to prevent debris generation in space,' suggesting they would not collide with other objects. Adding they are 'designed for demise', including controlled de-orbit to low altitudes at end of life, low orbit insertion when going to space, on-board collision avoidance systems, and a low profile chassis to protect key components. The firm says it is investing significant resources to ensure launch vehicles, spacecraft, and satellites meet or exceed space safety regulations, and is developing a state-of-the-art collision detection system, to provide alerts. SpaceX says its Starlink satellites are not at risk of colliding with NASA missions, or other space objects, adding it is building an advanced collision avoidance system NASA raised concerns about SpaceX 's ambitious proposal to deploy 30,000 satellites as part of the second generation of its orbital internet service. This image shows all the satellites that are currently orbiting the Earth SPACEX'S STARLINK A WORSE THREAT TO ASTRONOMY THAN LIGHT POLLUTION Mega-constellations of low Earth orbit satellites, including SpaceX Starlink and Amazon Kuiper, are a 'worse threat to astronomy than light pollution', according to an expert. Piero Benvenuti, IAU General Secretary, has said: 'In the past, the main source of interference was the light pollution by urban illumination, the so-called artificial light at night,' Benvenuti said in a statement. 'But more recently, the impact of the large constellations of communication satellites became a more serious concern because of their ubiquitous invasiveness.' There are 2,000 SpaceX Starlink satellites currently in space, with as many as 42,000 planned over the coming years, and it is just one of a number of firms looking to fill low Earth orbit with spacecraft, to provide fast, space-based internet. These networks of tens to thousands of spacecraft have proven controversial, especially among astronomers, as they leave streaks in images of space. Read more: SpaceX's Starlink a WORSE threat to astronomy than light pollution Advertisement SpaceX has faced criticism over its mega-constellation of satellites since it first launched, primarily from astronomers concerned about the impact the constellations of bright objects in low orbit have on observations of the night sky. However, there have also been concerns raised by other operators, including Amazon's Kuiper, calling out SpaceX for trying to dominant low Earth orbit. This update by SpaceX comes amidst recent concerns raised by NASA about the impact of more Starlink satellites. 'NASA has concerns with the potential for a significant increase in the frequency of conjunction events and possible impacts to NASA's science and human spaceflight missions,' the agency wrote the Federal Communications Commission. NASA noted there are currently 25,000 total objects tracked on-orbit, about 6,100 of which are below 370 miles. SpaceX's second generation (Gen2) expansion 'would more than double the number of tracked objects in orbit and increase the number of objects below 600km over five-fold,' NASA added. In a recent update, to address concerns from NASA and others, SpaceX says it was founded to 'revolutionize space technology towards making life multiplanetary,' something Musk has said many times before. As well as being a major launch provider for other satellite operators, and the only commercial firm able to deliver astronauts to the ISS, SpaceX has its own major satellite constellation - Starlink. 'SpaceX has demonstrated this commitment to space safety through action, investing significant resources to ensure that all our launch vehicles, spacecraft, and satellites meet or exceed space safety regulations and best practices,' the firm said. Not everyone agrees, particularly when it comes to spacecraft safety. Jonathan McDowell at the Harvard-Smithsonian Center for Astrophysics, who is also part of the American Astronomical Society panel examining the impacts of satellites on astronomy, has echoed NASA's concerns. 'We've been concerned with having these large numbers of satellites that interfere with astronomical observations,' McDowell said. 'I think we need a little more experience with the several thousand operating satellites before we can ramp up to the tens of thousands.' SpaceX says it has already proved itself, by designing and building highly reliable, maneuverable satellites that have demonstrated reliability of greater than 99%. SpaceX has faced criticism over its mega-constellation of satellites since it first launched, primarily from astronomers concerned about the impact the constellations of bright objects in low orbit have on observations However, there have also been concerns raised by other operators, including Amazon's Kuiper, calling out SpaceX for trying to dominant low Earth orbit RECENT STARLINK LAUNCHES February 3, 2022: 49 satellites January 18, 2022: 49 satellites January 6, 2022: 49 satellites December 18, 2021: 52 satellites December 2, 2021: 48 satellites November 13, 2021: 53 satellites September 14, 2021: 51 satellites Advertisement 'SpaceX transparently and continuously shares the details of our Starlink network both with governments and other satellite owners/operators,' it said. 'We work to ensure accurate, relevant, and up-to-date information related to space safety, and space situational awareness is shared with all operators. 'SpaceX shares high fidelity future position and velocity prediction data (ephemerides) for all SpaceX satellites.' The firm is also working on improving detection of debris, that could pose a risk to its, and other spacecraft. It already gathers high fidelity location and prediction data for its satellites - from when they first launch, to when they are sent to burn up in the atmosphere. This is already shared continuously with the US Space Force, LeoLabs and other operators for tracking, the firm said. 'To accomplish safe space operations in a scalable way, SpaceX has developed and equipped every SpaceX satellite with an onboard, autonomous collision avoidance system that ensures it can maneuver to avoid potential collisions with other objects. In the future, Starlink constellations could have a whopping 42,000 Starlink satellites in low-Earth orbit, SpaceX CEO Elon Musk (pictured) hopes MEASURES SPACEX TAKES TO AVOID COLLISION Designing and building highly reliable, maneuverable satellites that have demonstrated reliability of greater than 99% Operating at low altitudes (below 600 km) to ensure no persistent debris, even in the unlikely event a satellite fails on orbit Inserting satellites at an especially low altitude to verify health prior to raising into their on-station/operational orbit Transparently sharing orbital information with other satellite owners/operators Developed an advanced collision avoidance system to take effective action when encounter risks exceed safe thresholds SOURCE: SpaceX Advertisement 'If there is a greater than 1/100,000 probability of collision (10x lower than the industry standard of 1/10,000) for a conjunction, satellites will plan avoidance maneuvers. 'When planning a maneuver for any conjunction, the satellites take care to avoid inadvertently increasing risk for other conjunctions above the same threshold.' It does this autommatically, using on board systems, but SpaceX says it also has operators on call at all timmes to coordinate and respond to queries. 'In addition to collision avoidance maneuvers, Starlink satellites can autonomously duck for conjunctions, orienting their attitude to have the smallest possible cross-section (like the edge of a sheet of paper) in the direction of the potential conjunction, reducing collision probability by another 4-10x.' While extremely costly to deploy, satellite technology can provide high-speed internet for people who live in rural or hard-to-serve places where fiber optic cables and cell towers do not reach. The technology could also be a critical backstop when hurricanes or other natural disasters disrupt communication. On January 18, SpaceX marked its 2,000th Starlink satellite launched into space with another batch of 49 satellites. Travis Longcore, a professor at UCLA's Institute of the Environment and Sustainability, has previously called Starlink 'a crime against humanity'. 'It robs us of the skies of our ancestors to every corner of the Earth,' Professor Longcore said. Jurgen Klopp is refusing to entertain the idea of Liverpool completing the Quadruple and is not banking on his side to create history. Liverpool's odds of doing a clean sweep of trophies have been slashed after they secured the first leg in the Carabao Cup; they host Norwich in the FA Cup fifth round, hold a 2-0 lead over Inter Milan in the Champions League last 16 and are six points behind Manchester City in the title race. They may never get a better chance to win all four prizes in the same campaign but Klopp is not looking any further than the clash with Dean Smith's side and warned that if a squad as talented as City's could not do the Quadruple, it is unlikely Liverpool will outstrip them. Jurgen Klopp is refusing to entertain the idea of Liverpool completing the Quadruple The Reds secured the first leg on Sunday by lifting the Carabao Cup after beating Chelsea 'I don't have to stop myself (talking about it) and the boys not as well,' said Klopp. 'The only team who could get the quadruple is us, because we won the first final. I get that. But even City with all the quality they have in the last years couldn't win the quadruple. 'That says pretty much everything. It is really difficult, and that is why nobody has to dampen any kind of excitement. The reality is, to win something is you have to be focused on the next step and not the one after that because if you do that you will struggle.' Klopp will make changes against Norwich, with Alisson Becker coming back in goal to replace Wembley's Man of the hour Caoimhim Kelleher. Klopp says he's not getting distracted by the congratulatory messages he's had since Sunday Liverpool's manager has been swamped with congratulatory messages since Sunday but he is not getting distracted by them. 'That (people) think we have a chance to do so, you can see it as a compliment but I don't need these kind of compliments!' said Klopp. 'It doesn't feel like we are close. We are close to nothing at the moment. We are just in three competitions now, like some other teams. 'It is better people think we can do good things than think we are useless but it is not important or even helpful. We face a lot of really good teams between now and the end of May.' Roman Abramovich moved his large shareholding in a Russian steelmaking firm Roman Abramovich moved his large shareholding in a Russian steelmaking firm eight days before Vladimir Putin ordered the invasion of Ukraine. The Chelsea owner transferred his shares in Evraz, the Russian steelmaking giant, directly to himself from an offshore company on February 16, just over a week before Vladimir Putin ordered the Ukraine invasion. Analysts have told Sportsmail that the transfer of the 28.64 per cent shareholding, from Virgin Islands-registered Greenleas International Holdings Ltd, could make it less vulnerable to the sanctions which have followed the invasion. It could also make the shareholding easier to sell. The value of the shares have plummeted since Putins forces attacked Ukraine. Grzegorz Kuczynski, director of the Eurasia Program at the Warsaw Institute, told Sportsmail: There was a risk that this offshore company would become a subject of sanctions. Mr Kuczynski also said that the steel companys material was used to make tanks and was a significant part of Russias military campaign in Ukraine. He said: Evraz steel is used to build tanks, amongst other things. The company is important for the Russian arms industry, in this sense. It is important for Russia's war plans, including with regard to Ukraine. But a spokesperson for Abramovich insisted that Evraz steel manufactured in Russia was not used for military. The spokesperson said the Russian produced steel was only used for rail and construction. The Chelsea owner transferred his shares in Evraz, the Russian steelmaking giant and whose steel is used for tanks In a 2017 document produced by Evraz as part of an investigation into steel importation in the US, the company said its Chicago operations produced several products critical to US National Security such as armoured plate for US military. But Abramovichs spokesperson said the US-produced steel served entirely different purposes. The Warsaw Institute, an international relations think tank specialising in Eastern Europe, is uncertain whether Abramovich also owns shares in the Russian oil giant Rosneft, having invested nearly 225million in shares when it floated in 2006. Rosneft is one of Russia's largest producers of crude oil and another major supplier of its military. The Rosneft website, which includes company details, was not accessible from the UK yesterday. It is understood that Abramovich has used Jewish connections in Ukraine to attempt to broker peace discussions between Russia and the country it has invaded. Abramovich has substantial business interests in Ukraine, with an Evraz plant in the Donbass area of the country since 2010. Abramovich can ill-afford a prolonged war and sanctions designed to strangle and collapse the entire Russian economy, because he has so much invested in it. The move was made eight days before Vladimir Putin ordered the Ukraine invasion last week But the view from the ground in Kyiv is that the exercise is entirely futile, because there is simply no common ground between the invading and invaded country. Russia is demanding international recognition of Crimea, the retention of all lands it has occupied in this invasion and the replacement of the Ukrainian government. None of these demands are remotely acceptable to Ukraine. Ukraine wants Russian troops out of its country and an exchange of POWs and dead troops. But Russia does not recognise there POWs and dead troops to swap. Abramovich can ill-afford a prolonged war and sanctions designed to strangle and collapse the entire Russian economy, because he has so much invested in it Abramovich announced on Saturday that stewardship and care of Chelsea was being given to trustees of the clubs charitable foundation. But Sportsmail understands that the six trustees will insist on a rock-solid insurance policy before agreeing to the 55-year-olds plan, with a number of them still extremely apprehensive about accepting stewardship at all. One of the main conditions trustees would insist on is the inclusion of a robust indemnity insurance policy, to ensure they are not liable for any financial ramifications the club may suffer while they are put in charge. Chelsea are aware of the problems they may face in convincing trustees and are thought to be exploring other options, including a holding company being set-up to take on stewardship responsibilities instead. Self-confessed Manchester United fan Conor McGregor has stated that he is interested exploring the possibility of buying Chelsea. The situation surrounding Abramovich and Chelsea remains very unclear, but Sportsmail understands the oligarch is looking for a quick sale amid the threat of sanctions on Russian businessmen from the UK government. The Blues owner wants somewhere in the region of 3billion for the London club, who are currently champions of the world. He has reportedly instructed American bank the Raine Group to handle the sale of Chelsea and it is understood that the Russian is targeting American buyers as investment from China, the Far East and Eastern Europe has dried up for clear political reasons. However, a new contender has enterred the mix. Taking to Twitter, UFC megastar Conor McGregor shared an image of a WhatsApp chat in which he told someone that Chelsea was for sale at 3bn and that they 'should buy it'. Alongside the image he wrote: 'I wish to explore this @ChelseaFC'. Conor McGregor has stated that he is interested exploring the possibility of buying Chelsea It's somewhat interesting that McGregor would want to buy the Blues with the Irishman known to be a Manchester United supporter. He has even expressed interest in buying the Red Devils in the past. Whether or not the notorious could actually afford such a purchase remains a question. Roman Abramovich is selling up due to the growing economic sanctions in the UK The 33-year-old makes somewhere between 25m and 50m for a UFC fight, depending on pay-per-view sales. He also famously made 100m for his huge crossover bout with Floyd Mayweather in 2017. His Proper No 12 whiskey brand has proved to be his biggest earner, the Dubliner reportedly selling his majority stake for 430m last year. Iggy Pop has canceled his appearance at the Park Live festival in Moscow amid the Russian invasion of Ukraine. The Lust For Life artist, 74, had been slated to take the stage July 10 at the festival at Gorky Park, but has canceled due to the ongoing conflict. 'The festival appearance of Iggy Pop in Moscow on the 10th of July 2022 is canceled,' a statement on the punk music icon's Twitter account read Tuesday. 'In light of current events, this is necessary. The latest: Iggy Pop, 74, has canceled his appearance at the Park Live festival in Moscow amid the Russian invasion of Ukraine. The musical artist was snapped in Italy in 2019 'Our thoughts are with the Ukrainians and all the brave people who oppose this violence and seek peace. #StandingWithUkraine.' The Passenger vocalist, whose real name is James Osterberg Jr., pulled out of the festival a day after the band The Killers canceled their scheduled outing at the festival, citing the ongoing conflict. Other performers currently scheduled to take the stage at the festival include My Chemical Romance, Slipknot, Limp Bizkit, Gorillaz, Deftones and Five Finger Death Punch, among others. Iggy Pop is the latest musical artist to cancel scheduled shows in Russia, as notable names including Green Day, Louis Tomlinson and Franz Ferdinand have also nixed shows in the wake of Russian forces invading Ukraine last week. A statement on the musical artist's Twitter confirmed the cancelation and reason behind it The Lust For Life artist had been slated to take the stage in July 10 at the festival at Gorky Park, but has canceled due to the ongoing conflict. He was snapped in London in 2019 Green Day on Sunday took to Instagram to announce they were not going to play their May 29 show at Moscow's Spartak Stadium. 'We are aware that this moment is not about stadium rock shows, it's much bigger than that. But we also know that rock and roll is forever and we feel confident there will be a time and a place for us to return in the future,' the band, which consists of Billie Joe Armstrong, Mike Dirnt and Tre Cool, said in a statement. 'Refunds available at the point of purchase. Stay safe.' Russian forces began invading Ukraine February 24, approaching from all directions at the direction of Russian President Vladimir Putin, who said the invasion is in the hopes of 'peacekeeping' linked to longtime links between Russia and Ukraine. Iggy Pop joined a growing list of artists who have canceled performances in Russia A TV tower in Kyiv was struck by Russian forces on Tuesday, which marked the sixth day of the invasion U.N. human rights chief Michelle Bachelet said Monday that at least 102 civilians have been killed and 304 more injured in the wake of the Russian invasion, Reuters reported. 'Most of these civilians were killed by explosive weapons with a wide impact area, including shelling from heavy artillery and multi-launch rocket systems, and air strikes,' Bachelet said in Geneva at the Human Rights Council. 'The real figures are, I fear, considerably higher.' Amid the conflict, thousands of people have looked to flee the Ukraine, with multiple countries looking to provide aid and military help to the nation. Ukraine President Volodymyr Zelenskyy has urged Ukrainians to resist Russian occupation, and has sought to have peace talks with Russia. U.S. President Joe Biden on Thursday said that he would be imposing economic sanctions on Russia, and dispatch troops to help countries in NATO. 'The prayers of the entire world are with the people of Ukraine tonight as they suffer an unprovoked and unjustified attack by Russian military forces,' Biden said. The invasion was in its sixth day Tuesday, as Russian forces in tanks and armored vehicles were headed into the Ukrainian capital of Kyiv. Today host Karl Stefanovic has spent the last week bravely covering the floods that have devastated thousands across Queensland and New South Wales. And while the 47-year-old has been praised for his on-the-ground reporting in Ballina, NSW, some viewers couldn't help but question his choice of clothing as he waded through murky floodwater on Wednesday. Instead of wearing waterproof gumboots, Karl opted for leather boots and brown chinos, both of which looked completely ruined as he walked through the flooded streets. Scroll down for video 'Has he never heard of gumboots?' While Today host Karl Stefanovic has been praised for his on-the-ground reporting from Ballina, NSW, during the catastrophic floods, some viewers couldn't help but question his choice of clothing as he waded through the murky water 'Has Karl not heard of gumboots?' one fan asked on the Today show's Instagram account, while another added: 'Someone get Karl some gumboots!' Others simply praised Karl's professionalism and hands-on approach to reporting, despite his glaring outfit error. 'Heartbreaking for all the people in the flood areas. Thanks Karl for doing a great job reporting. Stay safe!' one viewer wrote. Another added: 'Karl! Great job you are doing. You are truly a man with a big heart.' Attire: Instead of wearing waterproof gumboots, Karl opted for leather boots and brown chinos, both of which looked completely ruined as he walked through the flooded streets The flood crisis in northern NSW is showing no sign of slowing down, with thousands of Ballina residents forced to evacuate, including hospital patients. The entire town is on evacuation alert after the Richmond River burst its banks. 'There are a lot of elderly people here in Ballina,' Karl said during his report. 'They're so scared about what's going to happen. 'Most have been moved but there are still some - particularly over the western parts of Ballina - that are still in their houses. Hopefully they can be moved soon as this water continues to rise.' 'We'll come back with more information on Ballina as soon as we get to higher ground,' he concluded. Not equipped: 'Has Karl not heard of gumboots?' one fan asked on the Today show's Instagram account, while another added: 'Someone get Karl some gumboots!' Comments: Others simply praised Karl's professionalism and hands-on approach to reporting, despite his glaring outfit error Further south, an another major flood warning has been issued for the Clarence River at Grafton, Ulmarra and Maclean. Dangerous weather conditions are expected all the way from south of Newcastle in the Hunter to north of Eden on the South Coast and reach inland as far as the Blue Mountains. Sydneysiders in low-lying areas are on high alert after the Bureau of Meteorology issued flood warnings for the city's west, north-west and south-west on Wednesday morning. Concerns: 'There are a lot of elderly people here in Ballina,' Karl said during his report. 'They're so scared about what's going to happen' Devastating: The Ballina Hospital was evacuated on Tuesday evening as flood waters rise in northern NSW Flood warnings include the Upper Nepean at Menangle, the Hawkesbury River at Richmond at Windsor and the Colo River at Upper Colo. An initial minor flood warning was also issued for the Georges River at Liverpool and Milperra. Penrith in Sydney's west has copped a 67.8mm drenching in the last 24 hours with more rain on the way. Other hard hit suburbs included Holsworthy (66.8mm), Lucas Heights (54.7mm), Terrey Hills (44.6mm) and Camden (44.4mm). Khloe Kardashian put on a jaw-dropping display in her latest post. The reality star, 37, poured her curves into a skintight leather jumpsuit as she struck poses against a truck in photos posted to her Instagram on Tuesday. 'Slippery when wet,' she captioned the images. Traffic stopper! Khloe Kardashian poured her curves into a skintight leather jumpsuit as she struck poses against a truck in photos posted to her Instagram on Tuesday Khloe sizzled as she struck poses in the seriously sexy outfit, which featured a low-cut neckline showing off her ample cleavage. She wore a matching pair of mocha heels and a snake print trench coat which fell seductively off her shoulders. Her long blonde hair was curled into billowing ringlets that cascaded down her back and chest. Khloe showcased her modeling prowess as she struck an array of sexy poses against the rusty vehicle. 'Slippery when wet': Kardashian captioned the sexy images Ride or die! The beauty put on a head-turning display in her skintight leather jumpsuit The post comes after her ex Tristan Thompson faced the wrath of hecklers chanting Khloe's name at the Chicago Bulls vs. Miami Heat game on Monday. As Tristan focused on making his shot, hecklers in the audience called out, 'Khloe, Khloe, Khloe!' The jeering did little to distract Tristan, however, as he ultimately made the shot. Unfortunately, his team lost 112-99. All eyes on her: She wore a matching pair of mocha heels and a snake print trench coat which fell seductively off her shoulders It's definitely not the first time hecklers have attempted to taunt Tristan using Khloe's name. In 2019, Tristan was heckled with the 'Khloe' chant after his controversial kiss with family friend Jordyn Woods. And earlier this year, Tristan had a fan ejected from a game after the guest allegedly heckled him about the Kardashians. Khloe and Tristan had an on-off relationship that lasted about half a decade, repeatedly scarred by his infidelity to her. Khloe, Khloe! The post comes after her ex Tristan Thompson faced the wrath of hecklers chanting Khloe's name at the Chicago Bulls vs. Miami Heat game on Monday Less than 48 hours before True was born DailyMail.com exclusively broke news of Tristan's alleged fling with New York City strip club bartender Lani Blair. They remained together then but broke up in February 2019 after Tristan shared a kiss at a party with Kylie Jenner's then best friend Jordyn Woods. When the coronavirus lockdowns struck Tristan and Khloe moved in together so they could both be with True - and wound up rekindling their romance as well. Their latest split went public this past June as he denied a swirl of cheating rumors - and last year he allegedly welcomed a child with another woman. Shooting hoops: As Tristan focused on making his shot, hecklers in the audience called out, 'Khloe, Khloe, Khloe!' DailyMail.com exclusively obtained court documents in late 2021 claiming Tristan was having a baby by Maralee Nichols. Maralee gave birth on December 1 and released a statement a couple of weeks later along with the first public pictures of her son. Tristan fired up his Instagram early in January and confessed for the first time that he is the father of Maralee's new child. 'Today paternity test results reveal that I fathered a child with Maralee Nichols,' he wrote on Insta Stories, apologizing to Khloe and telling her that 'you don't deserve this. You don't deserve the heartache and humiliation I have caused you.' 'There was never any doubt that Tristan Thompson was the father of Maralee Nichols' baby,' her attorney Harvey Englander later told DailyMail.com. 'Tristan made numerous false and defamatory statements and declarations about Maralee over the past few months, and she is taking his contrite statement today in the context of all of those statements,' he added. Maralee has said her 'goal' is only to 'raise our son in a loving and private environment' and she has denied 'leaking' any pregnancy stories to the press. Further she has disputed the idea that she and Tristan were having 'casual sex,' insisting she believed he was single when they first became involved. Tristan expressed his love for Khloe on social media last March just hours before flew to Houston, where he apparently fathered his new baby with Maralee. Incidentally Khloe first became involved with Tristan when his ex-girlfriend Jordan Craig was still pregnant with his firstborn son Prince, five. Although Jordan claims she was still with Tristan when he took up with Khloe, Khloe has insisted she thought he was single at the time. Advertisement She was showing off her most fashionable looks just days earlier in Italy for Milan Fashion Week. But Kim Kardashian was spotted back in California on Tuesday after a private jet flight to the US with her daughter North West. The 41-year-old Keeping Up With The Kardashians star and her daughter eight-year-old daughter were seen emerging from an office building in Los Angeles with one of North's young friend's in tow. Back in town: Kim Kardashian, 44, and her daughter North, eight, were spotted together at an office building in Los Angeles on Tuesday. Kim had just flown back to the US on a private jet after spending time in Italy for Milan Fashion Week Kim was swallowed up in an oversize burgundy plaid jacket with large breast pockets and sleeves that reached down past her hands as she emerged from the building with some paperwork in her hands. She appeared to wear a simple black top underneath her coat, and she matched it with figure-hugging black Balenciaga leggings. The shapewear mogul kept her low-key theme going with a cool set of black Vans sneakers, a design that her sister Kourtney Kardashian has often rocked in the past as well. She opted to tie her lustrous raven locks up in a casual top knot, and she blocked out the sun with chunky black sunglasses. Chic: North had on a stylish set of browline sunglasses as she arrived at the office building with her mother and a friend Covered up: Kim was swallowed up in an oversize burgundy plaid jacket with large breast pockets and sleeves that reached down past her hands as she emerged from the building with some paperwork in her hands Back in black: She appeared to wear a simple black top underneath her coat, and she matched it with figure-hugging black Balenciaga leggings Too cool for school: The shapewear mogul kept her low-key theme going with a cool set of black Vans sneakers, a design that her sister Kourtney Kardashian has often rocked in the past as well Taking it easy: She opted to tie her lustrous raven locks up in a casual top knot, and she blocked out the sun with chunky black sunglasses Kim covered up with a black mask in accordance with Los Angeles County's mask mandate, though the mandate is expected to be scaled back as soon as Friday. North matched her mother's baggy style with a long gray Madhappy with the brand name in colorful bubbly letters on the chest, which costs around $165 from its website. She wore it with shorts and beige-and-white high-top sneakers while showing off her long, highlighted braids, and on her way into the building she had on a stylish set of classic browline glasses. Joining her was a friend who complemented her sporty casual look and sweetly placed her arm over North's shoulder as they headed into the office building. Safety first: Kim and her daughter and friend covered up with a black mask in accordance with Los Angeles County's mask mandate, though the mandate is expected to be scaled back as soon as Friday Casual: North matched her mother's baggy style with a long gray Madhappy with the brand name in colorful bubbly letters on the chest, which costs around $165 from its website It takes two: Joining her was a friend who complemented her sporty casual look and sweetly placed her arm over North's shoulder as they headed into the office building Comfy: North paired her sweatshirt with shorts and beige-and-white high-top sneakers while showing off her long, highlighted braids. Kim seemed to be keeping her cool despite her estranged husband Kanye West's efforts in court to slow down her request to be declared legally single as their divorce continues Recently she also fired up her Insta Stories to post some selfie footage in which she stood in her closet modeling a selection from her successful shapewear line SKIMS. 'I am trying on all of the SKIMS stuff that Im finally getting around to,' she cooed to her approximately 289 million Instagram followers. 'This liquid shimmer dress is so cute.' Kim seemed to be keeping her cool despite her estranged husband Kanye West's efforts in court to slow down her request to be declared legally single as their divorce continues. The 44-year-old rapper's lawyers have filed legal documents arguing that all prenuptial agreements signed in California after 2002 are presumed to be invalid, TMZ reported on Tuesday. Kardashian, 41, will be asking a judge to declare her legally single on Wednesday, March 2, the outlet reported. 'California premarital agreements entered on or after January 1, 2002, are presumptively invalid,' West's lawyers claimed in his filing. 'The presumption of invalidity exists until rebutted at trial or the parties ratify the agreement. We are in the early stages of the case so no ratification has occurred.' However, West has not previously claimed that his agreement with Kardashian is invalid. According to the outlet, California's law requires one of the spouses to challenge the prenuptial agreement for it to be presumed invalid, but the Monster rapper has not yet done so. If he were to do so, he would need to prove that the agreement was 'unconscionable,' meaning that it was too one-sided, or that either party didn't agree to it voluntarily. Delay tactic: Lawyers for West, 44, filed documents claiming all prenuptial agreements signed after 2002 including his agreement with Kim Kardashian, 41 are invalid, TMZ reported Tuesday; West and Kardashian seen in 2020 Legal argument: 'California premarital agreements entered on or after January 1, 2002, are presumptively invalid,' West claimed in his filing. 'The presumption of invalidity exists until rebutted at trial or the parties ratify the agreement. We are in the early stages of the case so no ratification has occurred' Taking his time? However, West has not previously claimed that his agreement with Kardashian is invalid. According to the outlet, California's law requires one of the spouses to challenge the prenuptial agreement for it to be presumed invalid, but the Monster rapper has not yet done so Lopsided: If he were to do so, he would need to prove that the agreement was 'unconscionable,' meaning that it was too one-sided, or that either party didn't agree to it voluntarily TMZ notes that West had a lawyer representing him when he signed the prenuptial agreement, suggesting that his signature wasn't involuntary. The document is also expected to help him retain much of the massive fortune he amassed during his marriage to Kardashian, which comes from several hit albums and his lucrative fashion deals. West's ex previously filed documents claiming that his recent social media posts have been riddled with 'misinformation,' and she claimed their attacks on her and her boyfriend Pete Davidson have caused her 'emotional distress.' 'I believe that the court terminating our marital status will help Kanye to accept that our marital relationship is over and to move forward on a better path which will assist us in peacefully co-parenting our children,' Kardashian wrote in documents filed on February 23, according to Rolling Stone. Doesn't hold water: TMZ notes that West had a lawyer representing him when he signed the prenuptial agreement, suggesting that his signature wasn't involuntary Conflict: West's ex previously filed documents claiming that his recent social media posts have been riddled with 'misinformation,' and she claimed their attacks on her and her boyfriend Pete Davidson have caused her 'emotional distress.' Back and forth: Kardashian is using her estranged husband's social media posts as an argument for speeding up her transition to single status, but West's attorneys said she would need to prove he had personally written the posts, though they didn't appear to explicitly deny that he had written them in their own filings Hard at work: Recently she also fired up her Insta Stories to post some selfie footage in which she stood in her closet modeling a selection from her successful shapewear line SKIMS 'This liquid shimmer dress is so cute': 'I am trying on all of the SKIMS stuff that Im finally getting around to,' she cooed to her approximately 289 million Instagram followers Kardashian is using her estranged husband's social media posts as an argument for speeding up her transition to single status, but West's attorneys said she would need to prove he had personally written the posts, though they didn't appear to explicitly deny that he had written them in their own filings. 'Kim claims she read something online allegedly by Kanye and characterizes the posts in her declaration as misinformation. The social media posts are not attached to the declaration. Kim needed to offer the social media posts into evidence, and show that the posts were written by Kanye,' his lawyers wrote, adding that Kardashian's claims amount to 'double hearsay.' Although West's attorneys appear to be raising doubts about whether he's responsible for posts on his social media account, he seems to have taken steps in his posts to cast himself as their author. In a since-deleted Instagram post, the hitmaker shared a photo of himself holding up a yellow notepad that read, 'My account is not hacked,' and the date, ' 2 13 22.' The posts caption featured the recognizable breathless all-capitals style that many of West's recent posts have adhered to. Mixed messages: The rapper filed to have Kardashian's complaints about his social media posts ruled inadmissible, claiming she hadn't proved he wrote them, but he previously posted on Instagram that his account was 'not hacked' 'MY ACCOUNT IS NOT HACKED,' the post repeated in the caption, before noting that West would be taking his children to Sunday Service, followed by the Super Bowl. He also included a note to SNL Weekend Update anchor Michael Che offering to pay him double 'WHATEVER THEY PAYING YOU' to get him away from cast member Pete Davidson. Sources claimed to TMZ that the musician and fashion designer has not been working closely with his legal team. Instead, he made it clear that he didn't want to divorce Kardashian, but left it up to his attorneys to craft a legal strategy for him. Source also said it's unlikely that he'll appear in court for the hearing on Wednesday. Kardashian filed for divorce in February 2021, and the couple initially seemed to be on the same page, but in recent weeks West has taken to attacking her boyfriend on social media. He has also repeatedly posted text conversations that appear to be with his estranged wife, including one conversation in which she appeared to write, 'Why can't you keep any of our conversations private ???' 'Cause I got a text from my favorite person in the world,' he allegedly replied. 'I'm your number one fan. Why wouldn't I tell everyone!!!!' Kardashian doesn't appear to have any desire to slow down her divorce, but her ex has shared multiple times in public that he hopes to win her back. The California man who fatally shot his three children and another adult inside a church Monday night, then died by suicide, has been identified. David Mora-Rojas, 39, walked into The Church in Sacramento Monday with an AR-15 and shot 10-year-old Samantha Mora Gutierrez, 9-year-old Samarah Mora Gutierrez and 13-year-old Samia Mora Gutierrez, according to the Sacramento County Coroners Office. Advertisement Samantha would have turned 11 on Wednesday. Nathaniel Kong, the 59-year-old who was supervising the court-ordered custody visit, was also shot and killed. Advertisement David Mora-Rojas (Merced County Sheriff's Office via AP) Less than a week earlier, Mora-Rojas had been charged with resisting arrest, battery on a police officer and driving under the influence after he assaulted a Los Banos California Highway Patrol officer, the Sacramento Bee reported Tuesday. He spent the night in jail and was released on bail a day later. Mora-Rojas was at the church for the supervised custody visit as part of a five-year restraining order obtained by his ex-girlfriend, which required him to stay away from her and her children. The restraining order also banned him from possessing a firearm. The woman blamed Mora-Rojas mental instability and he was ordered to complete 16 sessions of anger management classes if he wanted unsupervised visits with the girls, according to the Bee. Olivia Munn took to Instagram Tuesday as she took her three-month-old son Malcolm for a walk in her backyard in California after the pair recently took a cross-country trip from New York. In the clip, the 41-year-old actress donned a red flannel top with glasses and her hair down and parted as she looked to calm down her baby son, who she welcomed with boyfriend John Mulaney, 39, on November 24. The Oklahoma City native spoke in hushed tones as she pushed Malcolm's stroller on the sunny day, making sure to stay in the shade. The latest: Olivia Munn, 41, took to Instagram Tuesday as she took her three-month-old son Malcolm for a walk in her backyard in California after the pair recently took a cross-country trip from New York 'Mr. Malcolm is on New York time, so yeah we are outside walking in the backyard on the stroller because its the only way hell settle down and chill out,' the Newsroom star said, panning on the adorable child who was clad in a light lavender onesie and grey knit cap. Munn continued, 'Right bub? We got to stay out of the sun so we're relegated to the section of the backyard, but its working - its working right?' The Predator actress added a graphic of a speech bubble above the baby that read, 'For now.' The Gateway actress earlier took to the social media site Tuesday with a selfie in which she held the child on her lap after the pair had traveled to California from New York, where they supported Mulaney as he hosted Saturday Night Live. The Gateway actress earlier took to the social media site Tuesday with a selfie in which she held the child on her lap after the pair had traveled to California from New York The actress said in the clip, 'Mr. Malcolm is on New York time, so yeah we are outside walking in the backyard on the stroller because its the only way hell settle down and chill out' She added, 'We got to stay out of the sun so we're relegated to the section of the backyard, but its working - its working right?' The Predator actress added a graphic of a speech bubble above the baby that read, 'For now' She wrote: 'We did it! We flew round trip cross country at 12/13 weeks old! Now wake us in a week and get me some chapstick.' The Hit-Monkey star on Monday shared a shot of Mulaney as he held his son while in the dressing room at SNL. 'Malcolm visited SNL Thursday afternoon,' Munn captioned the shot. 'Here he is looking like your uncle being carried out of a wedding because he went too hard.' Mulaney opened up about becoming a parent in his appearance on the NBC comedy staple Saturday. The actress donned a red flannel top with glasses and her hair down and parted The Oklahoma City native spoke in hushed tones as she pushed Malcolm's stroller on the sunny day, making sure to stay in the shade The Hit-Monkey star on Monday shared a shot of Mulaney as he held his son while in the dressing room at SNL 'Since I last hosted, different things have happened - life is a lot better and happier now - I have a 12-week-old son,' he said. 'Im very excited, he is a pretty cool guy for someone who cant vote. His legs are like little calzones, and I want to eat him.' Mulaney last July filed for divorce from his wife of seven years, Anna Marie Tendler, 36, and the split was finalized in January. Mulaney in September opened up on his relationship with Munn on Late Night with Seth Meyers. 'I got into this relationship thats been really beautiful with someone incredible,' Mulaney said. 'And were having a baby together. I was nervous when I was about to say the news!' Abbie Chatfield is arguably one of Australia's most in-demand celebs, with a hit podcast, reality shows, endorsement deals, and now her very own radio program. And now the outspoken Bachelor star has revealed exactly how she scored her own show on the Hit Network, Hot Nights with Abbie Chatfield. When pressed by co-host Rohan Edwards about how she landed the lucrative gig, the 26-year-old boasted she was simply offered it out of the blue by Southern Cross Austereo's chief content officer, Dave Cameron. 'Do you want a radio show?' Abbie Chatfield has admitted that she was simply offered her new Hit Network radio show 'I had a Zoom call with Dave Cameron one day, and he said, "Do you want a radio show?" 'I was in my workout gear eating Maccas and I was like, "Yeah. That would be really fun. I mean, that would be really exciting".' Abbie first broke into the industry with her podcast, It's a Lot, which she launched shortly after appearing on The Bachelor. Popular: The 26-year-old currently hosts Hot Nights with Abbie Chatfield on the Hit Network and Listnr The podcast eventually got picked up by Listnr, which is owned by Southern Cross Austereo, which then led to her own separate radio show. 'It is definitely an interesting way of getting into radio because its throwing out any formal training,' Abbie told The Australian earlier this month. 'Ive been so fortunate to be myself throughout my media career to date and I think it proves relatability is something that encourages listener consumption and engagement.' What training? 'It is definitely an interesting way of getting into radio because its throwing out any formal training,' Abbie told The Australian earlier this month Abbie also insisted that her success comes down to her authenticity. 'I dont like to think of myself as a brand, I dont think that would be any good for my mental health,' she explained. 'There is a misconception of me in the industry that I am upholding a fake personality how exhausting, I am just being me.' Abbie isn't the only major podcaster to be picked up by major radio network, with Brittany Hockley and Laura Byrne's Life Uncut signing with ARNs KIIS network last year. How on earth does she do it? I'm sure that question echoes the thoughts of many women on looking at Dame Helen Mirren, 76, receive her lifetime achievement award at the Screen Actors Guild this week. How does she manage to nail red-carpet style time and again, at event after event, even, on this occasion, knocking Lady Gaga and Cate Blanchett, both substantially younger and certainly no wallflowers, into the shade? Her choice of that particular Dolce & Gabbana dress was a triumph and proved my personal maxim: 'You're never too old for pink.' 'Dont' be afraid of colour' is the message as Helen Mirren dazzles in citrus yellow at Cannes last year (left) and shows of some elegant ruching at the wait (right), both by Dolce & Gabbana But, of course, all pinks are not equal and this had just the right amount of lilac in it to flatter her lightly tanned skin and add a sophistication to what can be a girly colour. Along with the rich embellishment of deep pink flowers and a dashing silver chain epaulette, the dress was no prom-queen number but a gown for a woman of substance. And if there's one thing Mirren has proved over the years, it's that she has cracked the formula for grown-up dressing with lashings of glamour. As a hugely successful actress, she has to appear constantly in a range of different, magnificent outfits that can undergo the intense scrutiny of the red carpet. And while there are younger actresses who object to having their appearance commented on, you sense that Mirren just enjoys having fun with hers. She collaborates with UK-based stylist Rachel Fanconi for much of the time and LA-based Lee Harris on occasion. Both avoid the mistake made by many of shoehorning their clients into looks that overwhelm them or are fashionable for fashion's sake. Mirren looks beautiful in a peony pink full skirted dress by Schiaparelli (left) and a sleek kaftan by US design team The Row (right) That's never the case with Dame Helen. She always owns the look. Her outfits play to the camera with bold gestures, sparkle and sassy accessories, but they are clearly rooted in a set of tried-and- trusted guidelines that never let her down even as the years advance. Like many actresses, Helen Mirren is not especially tall, and has always had curves. Over the years she has learnt what shows her off to the best advantage, emphasising and, if need be, creating, her narrow waist, and frequently drawing attention to a decolletage that must be the envy of many women in their 70s. Not that she goes anywhere near a blousy cleavage she is far too elegant for that but her gowns frequently skim the clavicle and shoulder, or dip into a Winterhalter-style embonpoint, often replacing bare skin with the forgiving sheer of tulle, chiffon and lace. Similarly, her use of sleeves often gauzy, sparing ageing arms the spotlight is a classic trick in tailoring for the more mature dresser. Mirren wears her hair pulled back from her face at the premiere of The Duke last month (left) and dazzles in British brand Goat (right) While many older women seek refuge in the safe house of neutrals, Mirren is unafraid of colour. In fact, she's pretty unafraid of any colour or style, from the striking pink Schiaparelli pleats she wore to the 2019 Oscars, the fabulous silver Giambattista Valli she appeared in for the L'Oreal awards, and even pitching up on a gondola at Dolce & Gabbana's Alta Moda show last summer, in a theatrical golden, jewel-encrusted corset. The Italian duo's clothes have become a recent staple for her red carpet appearances, and work well with her earthy playfulness, which cuts through their sometimes over-the-top display of stereotypical Italian style. Of course, it helps that Dame Helen is an exceptionally good-looking woman. With an excellent bone structure high cheekbones and arched brow, slightly olive skin tone and dark, sapphire eyes she started off with the gods smiling in the looks department. Dolce & Gabbana is a firm favourite for the Dame, both in pretty pink tones (left) and ravishing red (right) But it's how she has managed the ageing process so brilliantly allowing those eyes their natural crow's feet while at the same playing around with fabulous turquoise eyeshadows, heavy lashes and brilliantly coloured lips that has become her signature style. It is the fact that she looks so good at her age, not for her age that adds to her allure. She doesn't look like a woman attempting to appear a decade or more younger, or a woman who is flinging every preventative measure at her skin and body to hold back the years. Heavens, she has even allowed a grey creep to her hair which, with archetypal Mirren bravado, she currently wears long, or prettily piled up, as she did at the premiere of her new film The Duke, last month. No doubt there's a great colourist working behind the scenes grey hair that looks this good demands an enormous amount of attention but she shows how effectively it can be part of the glamour arsenal. Especially when paired with amazing jewellery. As befits a woman who has played both our Queen and Catherine the Great, Dame Helen is never knowingly under-blinged. Timeless style: Mirren shows off masterful tailoring to its best effect in a polka dot Alexandra Rich gown (left), still stylish following on from her 2007 Oscar win in 2007 Most of us don't have access to the same level of rocks but costume pieces can add lustre just as well. At last year's event for Prince Albert of Monaco's Foundation, she teamed a lusciously extravagant leaf-shaped necklace and earrings with a green gown to get across the environmental message of the evening. And, at the 2020 Golden Globes, her plum-coloured draped Dior chiffon the full skirt not only giving prominence to her nipped-in waist but creating a lightness of touch that never fails to take years off a woman was teamed with real diamonds. In the upcoming weeks, with the Oscars and Baftas ahead of us, no doubt there will be more inspiring appearances. At this week's SAG ceremony she joked that at her age 'sag' is a word she prefers not to pronounce. But, frankly, who doesn't mind a bit of sag, if it makes you look a bit like Helen Mirren. Laura Byrne has announced she will donate 100 per cent of the proceeds from her jewellery brand ToniMay to the Red Cross flood appeal. She said on Tuesday all sales for a 24-hour period would go towards helping those affected by the extreme weather battering Queensland and northern NSW. The former Bachelor star, 35, has a personal connection to Lismore, which has been devastated by the floods, because she studied a Fine Arts degree there. Giving back: Laura Byrne (pictured) has announced she will donate 100 per cent of the proceeds from her jewellery brand ToniMay to the Red Cross flood appeal 'I know that everyone is sitting on social media looking at the photos of floods and what is happening in Queensland and New South Wales,' Laura said. 'It's horrific, entire houses underwater.' After confirming all ToniMay sales would be going to flood relief, Laura said the crisis needs to be given the same attention as the 2019-2020 bushfires. For a good cause: The former Bachelor star, 35, has a personal connection to Lismore, which has been devastated by the floods, because she studied a Fine Arts degree there 'I feel so sorry for the families who have lost so much. This is a little way we can help to support that. We're there,' she said. The Life Uncut podcast host also shared a number of photos highlighting the damage caused by the flooding event. Lismore and the Northern Rivers region have been battered by floods, resulting in death and destruction. Treacherous: A convoy of at least 20 cars and several horses are trapped on a bridge at Woodburn near Lismore in northern NSW The body of a second elderly woman was found in Lismore overnight. Police confirmed on Wednesday the body of a woman aged in her eighties was found inside her South Lismore home, hours after another woman's body was found in her home nearby. There are fears the bodies of more trapped residents will be found on Wednesday as the massive clean-up effort begins. Evacuation: More than 300,000 residents across NSW have been given evacuation order or warnings (pictured in Grafton) 'Today's going to be probably the hardest day in Lismore's history to be honest with you,' Lismore mayor Steve Krieg said. 'Today's all about rescue and recovery.' The flood crisis in northern NSW continues with thousands of Ballina residents forced to evacuate, including hospital patients. Rescue effort: LifeFlight Special Mission helicopter crews spent Tuesday wrenching stranded residents in northern NSW to safety. Pictured is the aerial view of Coraki The entire town is on evacuation alert after the Richmond River burst its banks. Further south, another major flood warning has been issued for the Clarence River at Grafton, Ulmarra and Maclean. Donations can be made on the Red Cross website. Their relationship has set tongues wagging around the world. And now an Australian Instagram star has weighed in on Kim Kardashian's romance with Pete Davidson, announcing their bold prediction for the A-list couple. The Celeb Spellcheck account revealed they had a dream in which Kim, 41, began using her Saturday Night Live star boyfriend, 28, as a model for her clothing line. Fascinating: An Australian Instagram star has weighed in on Kim Kardashian's (right) relationship with Pete Davidson (left), announcing their bold prediction for the A-list couple The profile's anonymous admin took to their Instagram Stories to post an image of the high-profile couple stepping out together in Los Angeles. They captioned it: 'Last night I had a dream that Kim released a men's line called Skims for Him and used Pete in all the marketing campaigns and I can't help but think it's going to happen soon.' Kardashian's clothing line Skims, founded in 2019, recently doubled its market value to $3.2billion. It sells shapewear bodysuits and shorts for women. New model? The popular Celeb Spellcheck account revealed they had a dream in which Kim, 41, began using her Saturday Night Live star boyfriend, 28, as a model for her clothing line Mogul: Kardashian's clothing line Skims, founded in 2019, recently doubled its market value to $3.2 billion. It sells shapewear bodysuits and shorts for women Comedian Pete has been in a relationship with the KUWTK star since October. However, not everyone is happy about the fledgling romance, including Kim's estranged husband Kanye West. The rapper, 44, recently shared a screenshot of a text he'd received from Davidson that read: '...you as a man I'd never get in the way of your children. That's a promise. 'How you guys go about raising your kids is your business and not mine. I do hope [some] day I can meet them and we can all be friends.' West, who suffers from bipolar disorder, then shared a pantsless snap of Pete with his friend Machine Gun Kelly, which he captioned: 'You will never meet my children.' 'My account is not hacked': Twenty-two-time Grammy winner Kanye 'Ye' West called Saturday Night Live star Pete Davidson, the boyfriend of his estranged wife Kim Kardashian, a 'd**khead' West also shared a screenshot of a text he'd received from Davidson that read: '...I'd never get in the way of your children. That's a promise. How you guys go about raising your kids is your business and not mine. I do hope [some] day I can meet them and we can all be friends' Kim began dating Pete after she hosted his NBC sketch show on October 9. Meanwhile, Kanye has been canoodling with Kim Kardashian lookalike Chaney Jones and Uncut Gems alum Julia Fox, whom he split from earlier this month. Kim filed for divorce from West a year ago after six years of marriage. The pair share four children, North, eight, Saint, six, Chicago, four, and Psalm, two. Kanye West's ex Julia Fox turned heads in a figure-hugging black latex bodysuit under a silver sequined minidress at the premiere of The Batman in New York City on Tuesday. While attending a viewing of one of 2022's most hotly-anticipated movies, the 32-year-old Uncut Gems star channelled one of the film's biggest characters, Catwoman, with her eye makeup in a dynamic winged style. Julia teamed the dress and bodysuit combe with a bold ankle-length trench coat and gloves as she arrived for the premiere in the city. Edgy: Kanye West's ex Julia Fox channelled Catwoman with a black latex bodysuit under a silver sequined minidress at the premiere of The Batman in New York City on Tuesday In addition to a sexy smokey eye with smudged eyeliner, the mother-of-one sported a pink lipstick and light sweep of blush for a natural rosy glow. Earlier this month, Julia confirmed that she had split from Kanye, 44, following a six-week whirlwind romance, and said she was never 'in love' with the rapper. Julia confirmed in a since-deleted statement on her Instagram Story that she and the rapper called it quits, but admitted she was never 'in love' with the music star. Hard to miss! The 32-year-old Uncut Gems star channelled one of the film's biggest characters, Catwoman, with her eye makeup in a dynamic winged style Gorgeous makeup look: In addition to a sexy smokey eye with smudged eyeliner, the mother-of-one sported a pink lipstick and light sweep of blush for a natural rosy glow Rather than be upset, rising star Julia referred to herself as a '#1 hustler' and hinted that she now plans to write a tell-all book about the short-lived romance. 'Y'all would love if I was soooo upset! The media would love to paint a picture of me a sad lonely woman crying on a plane by myself but it's NOT TRUE!!' Julia told fans in a note. 'Why not see me for what I am which is a #1 hustler. I came up yall lol and not only that but Kanye and I are on good terms! I have love for him but I wasn't in love w the man Jesus Christ what do u guys think I am 12 years old?!' Moving on: Julia confirmed in a since-deleted statement on her Instagram Story that she and the rapper called it quits, but admitted she was never 'in love' with the music star Kanye and Julia met on New Year's Eve and then moved at warp speed into a full-blown relationship, with the actress even penning an essay about their romance. Doubling down on her denial of being upset, Julia added: 'and for the record the only time I cried in 2022 was on Feb 6th on my dead BFF bday,' - referring to the tragic death of good friend and celebrity manager Chris Huvane. She finished her statement by writing: 'Anyway If u want the full tea ur gonna have to buy the book when it comes out :)' Doing well: Rather than be upset, rising star Julia referred to herself as a '#1 hustler' and hinted that she now plans to write a tell-all book about the short-lived romance Grand entrance: Julia also offered a glimspe of her bold eye-catching look as she arrived for the premiere in the city Sources told E! News two weeks ago week that Julia 'doesn't have the energy' to put more into a relationship with the rapper. 'Julia is a mom first and her family and work obligations are in New York,' the source said of the actress. 'Ye did express he wanted her in Los Angeles, but she couldn't take that on.' The insider also noted: 'Although they remain close, their relationship has evolved.' Sizzling: Her racy red carpet look was clearly inspired by Selina Kyle herself as she slipped into the latex catsuit A second source told the gossip site: 'When she's not around, he reverts back to his old ways with social media outbursts and public antics.' And while Julia had remained 'unbothered' by his recent pleas to estranged wife Kim to bring their family back together, she is 'focusing on her friends and family right now, and does not have the energy to put into a relationship.' Prior to their split, Julia discussed her romance with host Alex Cooper on the podcast Call Her Daddy, revealing why she wasn't intimidated by the idea that he still longs for estranged wife. Different priorities: Sources told E! News two weeks ago week that Julia 'doesn't have the energy' to put more into a relationship with the rapper; pictured earlier this year The actress said: 'I'm sure there's still some residual feelings, and that's normal, it's human. I also know that he's with me now. And that's all that matters.' The Milan, Italy-born beauty told that Cooper while they had never formally discussed their romantic status, 'I call him my boyfriend and he calls me his girlfriend.' Julia, who appeared with Adam Sandler in 2019's Uncut Gems, described her romance with West as 'organic' and 'natural,' and off to a strong beginning. Love Is Blind star Abhishek 'Shake' Chatterjee defiantly defended himself after critics slammed his behavior toward his fiancee Deepti Vempati. On Tuesday, the 33-year-old veterinarian posted a video on his Instagram page and expressed his thoughts on the controversy. 'I mentioned earlier that there are certainly things that I want to work on for myself or get better at but one thing I don't feel inclined to do is to pretend I'm sad or sorry about certain things certain things that were out of my control, certain things that I can't necessarily even speak about,' Shake said. Speaking out: Love Is Blind star Abhishek 'Shake' Chatterjee defiantly defended himself after critics slammed his behavior toward his fiancee Deepti Vempati 'I'm just not going to do that. I'm not sorry. I'm not sorry.' The part-time DJ, who was seen shirtless as he walked around his apartment in the clip, continued, 'I think I handled the situation as best as anybody in my situation could. 'And at the end of the day, I'm going to live my best life going forward. And you don't have to like me. Only I have to like me, thankfully. And that's real life.' The latest: On Tuesday, the 33-year-old veterinarian posted a video on his Instagram page and expressed his thoughts on the controversy. Shake turned off comments on the video, which was captioned: 'And that's just real life', along with a man shrugging emoji. The television personality was criticized for negative comments that he had made about Deepti, 31, behind her back over the course of the show. In the hit Netflix series, couples look for love and get engaged before meeting in person. 'I'm not sorry': The television personality was criticized for negative comments that he had made about Deepti, 31, behind her back over the course of the show Shake and Deepti, who starred on the show's second season, appeared to share a strong emotional connection but he expressed to others that he did not feel a strong physical attraction to her. In one episode, Shake told fellow cast member Jarrette Jones, 'I'm not physically attracted to her, man. It feels like I'm with my aunt or something.' Deepti eventually left Shake at the altar during the show's finale last Friday. Hurtful: After the finale aired, Deepti told Buzzfeed that she found his comments hurtful when she watched the episodes After the finale aired, she told Buzzfeed that she found his comments hurtful when she watched the episodes. Deepti said, 'Shake and I had conversations about how physical intimacy and that chemistry was lacking between us. 'But to watch it back and see how he did it it was kind of like, 'Oh, look at me, I'm this cool dude that's just gonna talk s**t about you to my friends.' 'You don't talk about somebody who is your fiance, let alone a best friend or even just a real friend that way.' She added, 'It was kind of disappointing and hard to watch, especially because my parents were so impacted by it. We welcomed him into our home.' Meanwhile, Deepti's brother revealed he is 'proud' of her for ending her relationship with Shake. The reality star's sibling, Sunny Vempati and his partner, Hina, called out Shake for 'making some awful and cringeworthy comments about her.' 'Deepu, we are SO incredibly proud of you!!! We've witnessed you grow into such an incredible and beautiful woman, you've inspired so many people to realize their self worth and demand what they deserve and settle for nothing less,' the couple began in a statement via Instagram on Saturday. Proud: Meanwhile, Deepti's brother revealed he is 'proud' of her for ending her relationship with Shake They continued: 'We wish you didn't pick that [clown] but despite his childishness, you carried yourself with grace and continued to see the good in people.' Nodding to the remarks Shake made about not being attracted to Deepti, Sunny said he doesn't ordinarily 'get involved in drama' but was had to defend his sister. 'Bruh, you're a loser,' he fired. 'You minimized my sister's life by making some awful and cringeworthy comments about her. You made these statements knowing your own mom would one day watch it; my parents and my entire family had to sit through you talking behind my sister's back about insecurities she fought her entire life.' Their thoughts: The reality star's sibling, Sunny Vempati and his partner, Hina, called out Shake for 'making some awful and cringeworthy comments about her' 'Deepu, we are SO incredibly proud of you!!! We've witnessed you grow into such an incredible and beautiful woman, you've inspired so many people to realize their self worth and demand what they deserve and settle for nothing less,' the couple began in a statement via Instagram; (L to R) Shake and Deepti got engaged on season two of Love Is Blind Sunny continued: 'Despite your comments on and off camera about her body, she continued to only ever be supportive of you, despite our best efforts to convince her to see through your BS. THAT'S the person she is.' 'In spite of your best efforts to pretend this was all fictional and it was because of the 'edit', no one forced you to say those words. We welcomed you into our home, and you saw it as an opportunity for clout; so forgive me if I'm not sympathetic towards you and the hate you're receiving,' he concluded. In his final sentence, Sunny wrote: 'Good luck with the rest of your life and stay the f**k away from my sister.' The family no longer approves: In his final sentence, Sunny wrote: 'Good luck with the rest of your life and stay the f**k away from my sister' Choosing herself: Deepti and Shake split on their wedding day after she came to the conclusion she deserved 'somebody who knows for sure' they are in love with her Deepti approved of her brother's statement, which she reposted to her Instagram Story on Sunday. 'The love and support from my family is unmatched,' she gushed. Deepti and Shake split on their wedding day after she came to the conclusion she deserved 'somebody who knows for sure' they are in love with her. Tommy Dorfman stepped onto the red carpet for The Batman world premiere in a denim shirt dress with the superhero character printed across the front. The 29-year-old actress teamed the dress with strappy black heels and a purple quilted purse. The 13 Reasons Why star rocked a brunette bob with a center part. Fashion sense: Tommy Dorfman stepped onto the red carpet for The Batman world premiere in a denim shirt dress with the superhero character printed across the front Tommy showed off her long legs in the denim number, which she buttoned all the way up. She donned a jeweled choker around her neck and left the cuffs of the sleeves unfastened. The Batman print was shaded in purple and the fashionista played off it with purple-toned makeup. The Atlanta-born actress rocked a manicure in a glossy black color as she posed at the event's step-and-repeat. Killer combo: The 29-year-old actress teamed the dress with strappy black heels and a purple quilted purse Edgy haircut: The 13 Reasons Why star rocked a brown bob with a center part Dorfman's dark hair was textured in a loose, crinkled wave as she gave the camera her best model stare. The Fluidity entertainer took to Instagram to share photos she took before attending the premiere. She took a selfie in a mirror with a pair of sunglasses on her face and wrote, 'Time to go see @zoeisabellakravitz be that b*tch in @thebatman.' A second image showed the superstar posing in front of a poster with her back to the camera. She tagged the star - who plays Catwoman in the film - and added multiple explanation points. Fierce: Dorfman's dark hair was textured in a loose, crinkled wave as she gave the camera her best model stare Social media appearance: The Fluidity entertainer took to Instagram to share photos she took before attending the premiere Last month Tommy and her husband Peter Zurkuhlen officially called it quits after five years of marriage, months after the star came out as a trans woman. In new court documents, obtained by TMZ Founder & CEO of ChipChop Holdings filed for divorce in Los Angeles. The former couple met at a housewarming party hosted by a mutual friend, became engaged in April 2015 and wed the following year. Pose: A second image showed the superstar posing in front of a poster with her back to the camera In July, when Tommy came out as transgender, she also revealed that her relationship with Zurkuhlen had evolved into a friendship. 'I was in a nine-year relationship in which I was thought of as a more male-bodied person, with a gay man,' she explained in an interview with Time. 'I love him so much, but we've been learning that as a trans woman, what I'm interested in is not necessarily reflected in a gay man. So we've had incredible conversations to redefine our relationship as friends.' Alessandra Ambrosio is gracing the cover of this month's Harper's Bazaar Mexico. In two cover shots, the 40-year-old Brazilian-American model puts on a busty display in a corset-inspired ensemble, while also showing off her fit physique. Fronting 'The Women's Issue' of the publication, Alessandra models a series of spring fashion looks. Cover girl: Alessandra Ambrosio puts on a busty display while showing off her taut abs on the cover of Harper's Bazaar Mexico It comes as the star has been taking some time off on vacation with her boyfriend Richard Lee. She shares her two children Anja, 13, and Noah, nine, with her ex-fiance Jamie Mazur, whom she dated from 2005 to 2018. Ambrosio and her current partner Lee have been romantically linked for one year, after they were first spotted canoodling in February 2021. They have since been captured vacationing together several times, most recently in her native Brazil around the new year. And again: In two cover shots, the 40-year-old Brazilian-American model puts on a busty display in a corset-inspired ensemble, while also showing off her fit physique Prior to Richard, the supermodel was romantically linked to designer Nicolo Oddi but the pair appear to have split up sometime before December 2020. As well as her family holidays, the Brazilian beauty is also keeping busy with business. She launched swimwear brand GAL Floripa in 2018. The cover girl said she created the company with her best friend Gisele and sister Aline because she believed in female bonds. 'Celebrating their motherland roots and sisterhood bonds, iconic beauty Alessandra Ambrosio, with her soul sisters Gisele Coria and Aline Ambrosio, join forces to conceive an authentic and personal project: a lifestyle brand with purpose to inspire women to embrace their femininity with a holistic approach,' it said on her website. The Holiday Rating: Rock Till We Drop Rating: Ladies, a moral dilemma for you. Is it ever right to fetch your husband a sharp and possibly fatal blow across the back of the head with a frying pan? Sean (Owen McDonnell) is certainly asking for it in The Holiday (C5). The scruffy, double-chinned dad-of-two is openly texting his mistress and telling lies to his wife. And hes just admitted to sleeping with one of her closest friends, a slip that he considers insignificant because it was 20 years ago and we were off our faces. That frying pan would be richly deserved. In France, the law practically encourages it they call it a crime of passion. Sean and his wife Kate (Jill Halfpenny) might even be in France. Theyre certainly somewhere with blue skies and clear seas, staying in a tourists farmhouse with a bunch of pals from their university days. This four-part psychological drama, which continues tonight, is a poor advert for foreign travel with people you havent seen for ages. Especially when they bring their own marriage woes . . . and their appalling children. Sexual tensions crackle and theres constant needling as they compare their wealth. Owen McDonnell and Jill Halfpenny star in Channel 5's four-part psychological drama The Holiday Kate has her suspicions about all of them. But she is a police officer, and weve seen hints that her tendency to believe the worst of people has led to bust-ups in the past. Shes trying to be more trusting. But when a woman calling herself Coralgirl sends texts to Sean, warning him to delete all messages, trust is surely wasted. Its frying pan time. The problem is that these middle-class couples are too interchangeable. The wives are uptight, over-protective, frustrated, gossipy and suspicious. The hubbies are boozy, resentful, sly, boring and deceitful. Its hard remembering who is married to whom, and you could swap all of them around without changing the story. Meanwhile, the teenagers are desperate to be anywhere but with their parents. Theyre sneaking off to swig vodka and smoke dope. Everythings bound to go wrong. We know that, because the credits at the start gave us a glimpse of the denouement, with the farmhouse in flames. Theyll never get the deposit back. What with all this overseas infidelity and Sheridan Smiths disastrous family break to Turkey in No Return last month, you couldnt be blamed for thinking we were safer in lockdown. But lockdown took its toll in loneliness, particularly on older people. Spandau Ballets Martin Kemp and rapper Lady Leshurr were trying to lift spirits, putting together two pop groups of pensioners for the Isle of Wight Music Festival last summer, in Rock Till We Drop (BBC2). This opening episode was entirely taken up with auditions, as Martin and Leshurr watched endless tapes, and visited candidates at their homes or invited them to try-outs at the rehearsal rooms. Rapper Lady Leshurr (pictured) and Martin Kemp) try to put two pop groups of pensioners together for the Isle of Wight Music Festival in BBC Two's Rock Till We Drop The only criteria were that artistes had to be over 64 and have talent and personality. Some were natural stars. I was born to be famous, declared 80-year-old Rosemary, who possessed a sultry, Eartha Kitt voice though she worked in Marks & Spencer for 30 years. Postman Martin, 67, looked like Keith Richards after a long weekend and he played the guitar like a Rolling Stone, too. In a parallel universe, Martin might be a superstar with four mansions and five ex-wives. But the tension was spoiled by an opening sequence, showing us fights from later rehearsals. Do the producers suppose well instantly forget the shots of a bass player in tears or the drummer throwing away his sticks in disgust? Those memorable images revealed who would be picked and ruined half the fun. A woman who torched five cop cars during the anti-police brutality protests in Seattle in 2020 was sentenced Tuesday to five years behind bars. Margaret Aislinn Channon, 26, was captured on video using fire and aerosol cans to light five Seattle Police Department vehicles on fire on May 30, 2020, days after George Floyd was killed, kicking off nationwide protests. Advertisement She also admitted to stealing clothes from nearby stores, smashing the window at a Verizon store and entering a sandwich shop and destroying the cash register, according to the Department of Justice. Margaret Aislinn Channon got a five-year sentence. The right to protest, gather, and call out injustices is one of the dearest and most important rights we enjoy in the United States, U.S. Attorney Nick Brown said in a statement. Advertisement Indeed, our democracy depends on both exercising and protecting these rights. But Ms. Channons conduct was itself an attack on democracy. She used the cover of lawful protests to carry out dangerous and destructive acts, risking the safety of everyone around her and undermining the important messages voiced by others. At her sentencing, U.S. District Judge John Coughenour blamed Channon for doing tremendous damage to the Black Lives Matter movement in Seattle. Channons attorneys called her actions a seriously misguided attempt to effect positive change and pointed out that she had been peacefully protesting before that night. Prosecutors offered her a lighter sentence if she pleaded guilty to conspiracy instead of arson, but Channon said she wanted to take full responsibility. Black Lives Matter is an organization with leadership that does not condone illegal activity, she wrote in a letter to court. I apologize to the many workers and activists who have given decades of their lives to building a countermeasure to police violence that did not want to see fire. Jasmine Stefanovic (nee Yarbrough) certainly had her hands full on Monday. The wife of Today host Karl Stefanovic was seen loading her daughter Harper's belongings into the car outside her home on Sydney's lower north shore. While it's unclear where she was going, Jasmine has been looking after Harper, one, solo for the last few days while her husband reports on the floods from Ballina, NSW. She has her hands full! Jasmine Stefanovic (nee Yarbrough) was seen loading her daughter Harper's belongings into the car outside her home on Sydney's lower north shore on Monday The shoe designer, 37, looked stylish in a Moschino jumper, which she teamed with navy shorts and a pair of comfortable white sneakers. Jasmine, who swept her long blonde hair into a low bun, carried a pram and bassinet into the back of her luxury vehicle. It comes after Jasmine and Karl 'regretfully' listed their holiday home in Noosa, Queensland, for sale last week. The home is located on a street where millionaires and politicians spend their holidays, which means it will likely sell at the higher end of its price guide, or even exceed expectations, reports realestate.com.au. Comfort: The shoe designer, 37, looked stylish in a Moschino jumper, which she teamed with navy shorts and a pair of comfortable white sneakers The home, which goes under the hammer on March 24, is predicted to draw plenty of offers before its auction date. Karl, 47, confirmed the listing of the $3.6million property on Saturday, revealing he and Jasmine weren't using it enough to justify ownership. 'The reality though is I can't get away from work in Sydney nearly enough and the logistics of coming in and out of Queensland have been challenging,' the Today show host told The Courier Mail. Off she goes! Jasmine, who swept her long blonde hair into a low bun, carried a pram and bassinet into the back of her luxury vehicle Busy at work: While it's unclear where she was going, Jasmine has been looking after Harper, one, solo for the last few days while her husband Karl reports on the floods from Ballina, NSW 'Eventually we will come back to Noosa when we have more time. If we can afford it. It's the best beach community anywhere,' he added. Karl said the couple had lovingly renovated the home to suit their needs. 'We've added a teenage retreat, a bathroom and a wine cellar. It's a really beautiful slice of Sunshine Beach paradise,' he said. The property overlooks Sunshine Beach and has four bedrooms, four bathrooms, a three-car garage and a swimming pool. 0n the market: It comes after Jasmine and Karl (pictured together) 'regretfully' listed their holiday home in Noosa, Queensland , for sale last week There is a spacious living room that connects to an outdoor entertaining area with beach views. All four bedrooms have water views, while the master bedroom also has a large ensuite with a bath and a double-vanity sink. The swimming pool has a waterfall feature and see-through glass, which means the beach is always in sight, even when underwater. Wendy William's cheating ex husband Kevin Hunter has filed a lawsuit for $7million against the TV company producing The Wendy Williams Show for alleged wrongful termination. The civil lawsuit filed in a federal court in New York City Tuesday claimed that Hunter, 49, was wrongly fired by Debmar-Mercury as an executive producer due to his marital status with the show's host. Williams, 57, filed for divorce from Hunter in April 2019 citing irreconcilable differences after his mistress Sharina Hudson gave birth to his child in March 2019. 'Hunter was one of the reasons behind the Wendy William Show's tremendous success and everything seemed to go south after he left. Mr. Hunter was unlawfully terminated solely due to his marital status to Wendy, which is contrary to human rights laws in NYC,' his attorney Abe George told DailyMail.com. Wendy William's ex husband Kevin Hunter has filed a lawsuit for $7million against the TV company producing The Wendy Williams Show for alleged wrongful termination. The couple are pictured in 2019 before their divorce Happier times: Wendy Williams and ex-husband Kevin are show in July 2018 in New York City 'This lawsuit seeks to compensate Mr. Hunter for the sweat equity that he put into the show and that Debmar-Mercury will continue to profit on even in their new reincarnation of the Wendy Williams Show,' Hunter's lawyer added. Hunter is seeking a monetary award of at least $7 million, as well as punitive damages, lost wages and legal fees, according to court documents The lawsuit listed Debmar-Mercury founders Ira Bernstein and Mort Marcus as defendants and demanded a jury trial. Hunter was seeking a monetary award of at least $7 million, as well as punitive damages, lost wages and legal fees, according to court documents. Hunter was an executive producer of The Wendy Williams Show since 2007 and the lawsuit stated that he was involved in the show's branding and helped conceptualize 'the wildly popular segments ''Hot Topics,'' ''Shoe Came,'' and "Hot Seat'' segments of the show'. The lawsuit stated that Hunter was served with notice that Williams was filing for divorce on April 11, 2019, and a week later he received a written notice of his termination from Bernstein. 'The termination of Plaintiff was based strictly upon Plaintiffs marital status and his impending divorce to the Shows host, ignoring all of the contributions that Plaintiff made to make the Show a success,' the lawsuit stated. The lawsuit listed Debmar-Mercury founders Ira Bernstein and Mort Marcus as defendants and demanded a jury trial. Hunter was seeking a monetary award of at least $7 million, as well as punitive damages, lost wages and legal fees, according to court documents It's been a tumultuous few years for Wendy, who has dealt with addiction, a cheating husband, divorce and now the loss of her show. Wendy's troubles began in 2017, when DailyMail.com revealed in a blockbuster expose that Hunter had been having a ten-year affair with masseuse Sharina Hudson. In December 2018 the star claimed she hired a private investigator to spy on her husband who she suspected was still carrying on with his Hudson. Then, in 2019, DailyMail.com revealed that Wendy was staying overnight at a private facility run by the Pure Recovery Network in Long Island City, New York. She had plunged into an alcohol- and pill-fueled depression when she fractured her shoulder during a confrontation with her cheating husband Hunter. And finally in 2020, Wendy finalized her divorce from Hunter and he was seen moving out of their New Jersey home. Her unfaithful spouse was spotted carrying boxes out of their Livingston, New Jersey, after he was served divorce paper. Movers filled the truck with large boxes and furniture as Hunter was seen looking grim amid the divorce. Williams and Hunter have 21-year-old son Kevin Samuel together. Last year Williams took a leave of absence from her daytime talk show due to various medical issues. Debmar-Mercury announced last month that frequent guest host Sherri Shepherd, 54, had been signed on to host a new talk show Sherri as a replacement for The Wendy Williams Show. Wendy filed for divorce from her husband Kevin Hunter after reports his mistress Sharina gave birth to a baby girl. 'For you lonely girls who can't keep your hands off other people's men, there is a hot place in hell for you!' the TV host said on her show Family picture: Kevin, Wendy and their son Kevin Hunter Jr are shown in July 2017 in New York City The talk show host tested positive for a breakthrough infection of COVID-19 in September. DailyMail.com previously revealed that Wendy failed to show up to studio to shoot her new season September. Fans who had lined up outside the Chelsea Studios in New York had already been issued with tickets and wristbands and signed appearance waivers to be part of the first show of Season 13, when a member of staff made the shock announcement that the star wasn't coming, and filming was canceled. 'Wendy has tested negative for Covid,' the staffer told the disappointed crowd who had waited more than two hours for admission, 'But her health is still not great, and she wants to be better than ever when she comes back.' Earlier a member of staff had told fans to think up questions for the 'Ask Wendy,' section telling them that it was 'her favorite' and that she was 'looking forward to getting all your questions.' Wendy was last seen on her show on July 16, 2021. Her team said she will come back for Season 13 on September 20, but that was pushed back to October 4 and then to October 18 Wendy Williams was spotted by DailyMail.com in September leaving her Manhattan apartment while being pushed in a wheelchair Debmar-Mercury announced last month that frequent guest host Sherri Shepherd, 54, had been signed on to host a new talk show Sherri as a replacement for The Wendy Williams Show A statement posted on Instagram shortly after said, 'She has been and continues to be under a doctor's care and is still not ready to return to work. 'We plan to return with new shows on Oct 18. 'Her breakthrough covid case is no longer an issue and she has tested negative, but she is still dealing with some ongoing medical issues.' Fans who had hoped to attend the filming were sent apologetic emails offering them tickets to filming of The Nick Cannon Show instead. After walking the catwalk at Milan Fashion Week, Kendall Jenner was spotted in Paris, hanging out with two of her half-sister Kourtney Kardashian's exes - Luka Sabbat and Younes Bendjima. The supermodel, 26, was spotted briefly in a video posted to Mustafa the Poet's Snapchat, hanging out with Sabbat, 24, Bendjima, 28, and Euphoria star Jacob Elordi, 24. Jenner was seen just briefly in the video before getting out of the way of the camera, seen filming Elordi taking a picture with a small camera. Hanging out: After walking the catwalk at Milan Fashion Week, Kendall Jenner was spotted in Paris, hanging out with two of her half-sister Kourtney Kardashian's exes - Luka Sabbat and Younes Bendjima Luka: The 26-year-old supermodel was spotted briefly in a video posted to Mustafa the Poet's Snapchat, hanging out with Sabbat, 24, Bendjima, 28, and Euphoria star Jacob Elordi, 24 Jenner was spotted at a table next to Elordi, as Mustafa recorded video of Elordi and then turned the camera on Sabbat. Mustafa is heard asking Sabbat about an, 'Illuminati exclusive,' as Sabbat said he knew nothing about the 'triangle with the eye,' as the Eiffel Tower is seen in the background behind them. Mustafa then turned the camera across to the other side of the room, where Bendjima was seen standing near the table, giving the camera a wink. Jacob: Jenner was spotted at a table next to Elordi, as Mustafa recorded video of Elordi and then turned the camera on Sabbat Younes: Mustafa then turned the camera across to the other side of the room, where Bendjima was seen standing near the table, giving the camera a wink The video was taken after Kendall hit the runway for Paris Fashion Week, rocking a newly-dyed auburn hair color. She was spotted with Kaia Gerber and Bella Hadid for the Off White during Paris Fashion Week on Monday. The supermodel was also seen in a burgundy leather outfit while returning to the Ritz Hotel in Paris after her runway duties. Kendall: The video was taken after Kendall hit the runway for Paris Fashion Week, rocking a newly-dyed auburn hair color Kendall's sister previously dated Younes Bendjima in October 2016, after they met at a bar in Paris. They were together for nearly two years before they split in August 2018, with sources claiming they had too many 'ups and downs.' Kourtney was spotted several times in the fall of 2018 with Sabbat, with the pair even attending Diddy's birthday party together in November 2018. Kendall and Luka: Kourtney was spotted several times in the fall of 2018 with Sabbat, with the pair even attending Diddy's birthday party together in November 2018 While it's unclear exactly when they parted ways, Sabbat revealed in February 2019 that he was single and said they were, 'definitely not dating.' Bendjima also made headlines in 2021, when he shared a series of text messages from Kourtney's ex, Scott Disick, who was angered over Kourtney's new relationship with Travis Barker. Disick asked Bendjima, 'Yo is this chick ok!????' with Bendjima responding, 'Doesn't matter to me as long as shes happy. PS: i aint your bro.' Megan Fox showed off her statuesque legs when she was spotted stepping out in sunny Los Angeles this week. The 35-year-old actress was modeling a plunging bubblegum pink blazer dress that featured sleek metallic accents. Her plunging ensemble allowed her to flash a bit of cleavage as she pounded the pavement along a street lined with flowers. Stepping out: Megan Fox showed off her statuesque legs when she was spotted stepping out in sunny Los Angeles this week Sharpening her screen siren features with makeup including a slick of crimson lipstick, she balanced on a pair of sky-high stilettos. Megan let her luxurious dark hair tumble freely over her shoulders as she surfaced for her latest outing in the city of angels. She and her fiance Machine Gun Kelly, aka Colson Baker, announced on Instagram that they have recently adopted a kitten. Machine Gun Kelly posted a selfie of the pair of them with their new pet and wrote in the caption: 'welcome Whiskey to the gang.' Off she goes: The 35-year-old actress was modeling a plunging bubblegum pink blazer dress that featured sleek metallic accents Looking fab: Her plunging ensemble allowed her to flash a bit of cleavage as she pounded the pavement along a street lined with flowers The heartwarming photo was part of an album that included a shirtless snap of Kelly lying in bed cuddling with his new moggy. Megan's latest outing comes less than two months after Kelly revealed a bizarre quirk of the engagement ring he helped design for her. 'The bands are actually thorns. So if she tries to take it off, it hurts,' he told Vogue, explaining: 'Love is pain!' His remarks went public a week after they sealed their engagement by drinking each other's blood after his dramatic proposal. Height of fashion: Sharpening her screen siren features with makeup including a slick of crimson lipstick, she balanced on a pair of sky-high stilettos Hello, gorgeous: Megan let her luxurious dark hair tumble freely over her shoulders as she surfaced for her latest outing in the city of angels Megan announced their big news with a three-camera Instagram video that showed him down on one knee at the Ritz Carlton Dorado Beach resort. She revealed that 'we drank each others blood' after he proposed under a banyan tree - the same spot where they previously had 'asked for magic' in June 2020. Their engagement is not the first time that the couple have decided on using blood as a way of showing their love for one another. Last February he revealed that the Jennifer's Body actress had given him a drop of her blood in a vial on a necklace as a gift. By the way: She and her fiance Machine Gun Kelly, aka Colson Baker, announced on Instagram that they have recently adopted a kitten Kelly has never been married before but does co-parent a 12-year-old daughter called Casie with his ex-girlfriend Emma Cannon. Megan meanwhile shares three sons of her own - Noah, nine, Bodhi, eight, and Journey, five - with her sizzling ex-husband Brian Austin Green. She filed for divorce from Brian in 2015 citing irreconcilable differences, but she was back with him and pregnant with Journey the following year. Three years after they got back together, Megan took the legal step of filing to dismiss the divorce petition in April 2019. Baby mine: Machine Gun Kelly posted a selfie of the pair of them with their new pet and wrote in the caption: 'welcome Whiskey to the gang' Before the coronavirus lockdowns Megan and Kelly were in Puerto Rico as co-stars filming their upcoming movie Midnight In The Switchgrass. Then in May 2020 the dynamic duo were glimpsed grabbing takeout in his Aston Martin in the wake of rumors she was self-isolating separately from Brian. A couple of days later Brian emotionally announced on his podcast ...With Brian Austin Green that Megan had left him earlier. Kanye West was seen spending time with friends in Miami, after firing his third divorce lawyer in the past year amid divorce from Kim Kardashian. As he exited his hotel with a buddy, who wore a black 'Rolling Loud Club' hoodie, the rapper, 44, appeared in high spirits as he flashed a beaming smile while strolling along the sidewalk on Monday evening. For his outing, the father-of-four wore an all-black ensemble, consisting of a bulky leather jacket, plain t-shirt, jeans and a pair of Balenciaga x Crocs rain boots. Doing well: Kanye West was seen spending time with friends in Miami, after firing his third divorce lawyer in the past year amid divorce from Kim Kardashian At one point, the Praise God hitmaker, who released his 11th album Donda 2 last Tuesday, chatted on his phone. On Tuesday, reports surfaced that West recently let go of his attorney Chris Melcher, who is highly respected among family law judges in Los Angeles. Sources told TMZ that the 22-time Grammy winner and Melcher's working relationship 'had become extremely difficult, with little communication.' Night out: As he exited his hotel with a buddy, who wore a black 'Rolling Loud Club' hoodie, the rapper, 44, appeared in high spirits as he flashed a beaming smile while strolling along the sidewalk on Monday evening Fashionable: For his outing, the father-of-four wore an all-black ensemble, consisting of a bulky leather jacket, plain t-shirt, jeans and a pair of Balenciaga x Crocs rain boots Looking serious: At one point, the Praise God hitmaker, who released his 11th album Donda 2 last Tuesday, chatted on his phone He has since hired Samantha Spector, who represented Nicole Young in her divorce with producer Dr. Dre. TMZ claims this is the fourth attorney to represent him since his ex filed for divorce in February 2021. A hearing, that will approve or deny Kardashian's request to be declared legally single, is set for Wednesday. While the outlet reported the 41-year-old reality star was expected to call in or video chat at the hearing, an insider said it was 'highly unlikely' West would attend in person or virtually. Surprising: On Tuesday, reports surfaced that West recently let go of his attorney Chris Melcher, who is highly respected among family law judges in Los Angeles By the way: Sources told TMZ that the 22-time Grammy winner and Melcher's working relationship 'had become extremely difficult, with little communication' Moving on: He has since hired Samantha Spector, who represented Nicole Young in her divorce with producer Dr. Dre Last week, West filed court documents opposing Kardashian's request to be declared legally single as their divorce continues to drag on. 'Kim's motion should be denied without prejudice so that Kim can refile it with the mandatory corrections and requested conditions set forth in the proposed judgment. Alternatively, a hearing regarding these additional conditions should be set,' according to documents obtained by E!, filed by Kanye's lawyer in response to Kim's bifurcation request. Kim filed for bifurcation last year - in which she asked to be declared legally single as other divorce matters continue to be settled. The request is scheduled for approval in March, according to Billboard. In the rearview: Last week, West filed court documents opposing Kim Kardashian's request to be declared legally single as their divorce continues to drag on Messy split: It seems as though West is concerned Kim may remarry before their divorce is finalized, according to Page Six However, attorneys for Kanye say in their latest legal filing that the rapper would only agree to the plan if certain conditions were put in place. Billboard reports that attorneys for Kanye 'attempted to informally resolve these conditions' with Kim's legal team but 'significant problems remain.' It seems as though West is concerned Kim may remarry before their divorce is finalized, according to Page Six. This concern may be what compelled him to file the latest documents. In his filing, Kanye has requested they establish a 'right of reimbursement', which will see either party being 'reimbursed monies owed' in the event one of them died, according to Page Six. It's over: Kim filed to be legally single and have her maiden name restored in December 2021; seen in 2016 However an attorney for Kim has 'asserted that this condition is unnecessary given the premarital agreement.' In addition, Kanye is seeking to ensure 'no assets are transferred out of trusts they created,' Page Six reports. Kim has also called the condition 'unnecessary' as their prenup keeps their assets separate. Kanye also wants Kim to waive marital privilege until a final agreement has been made on their property and custody of their four children. The absence of marital privilege means all of their communication will be part of the court record. Kanye also wants her to waive marital privilege in the event she remarries so communication about custody will be available in court. 'So much love from Joe Rogan and Freddie Gibbs thank you for supporting the future Go to stemplayer.com,' West wrote on his Instagram Kim filed to be legally single and have her maiden name restored in December 2021. 'Irreconcilable differences have led to the irremediable breakdown of the marriage, and there is no possibility of saving the marriage through counseling or other means,' documents stating her request to become legally single obtained by E! read. 'The continued maintenance of technical marital status between [Kardashian] and [West] serves no useful purpose, and there is no reason to maintain the legal relationship.' The documents also alleged Kanye had 'been non-responsive' to attempts made by Kim to 'move the case forward to a speedy and amicable resolution.' The filing also said Kim would agree to 'any conditions' the court wished to put in place for her to divorce Kanye. West is remaining active on his social media accounts, and most recently praised controversial podcast host Joe Roganand rapper Freddie Gibbs for talking about his new album. Married at First Sight bride Cathy Evans has blasted an online troll for making a cruel statement about her surgically-enhanced figure. The influencer, who appeared on Married At First Sight Australia in 2020, famously underwent a $30,000 surgical makeover in June, including 10 liposuctions and a Brazilian Butt Lift. Posting to Instagram Stories on Wednesday, Cathy uploaded a series of shocking messages she'd received form a troll questioning why she was 'still fat' after surgery. 'I've had enough': Married At First Sight bride Cathy Evans (pictured) has blasted an online troll for making a cruel statement about her surgically-enhanced figure. Cathy is pictured in December 'Your body is horrendous even after surgery you fat whale,' the troll cruelly wrote. In a subsequent message, the user wrote: 'Why are you still fat as f**k after your surgery? What a waste of money, you whale.' Disgusted, Cathy responded in her caption: 'Here I am trying to get through my DMS, answering people's questions etc etc, but tonight is the night for all the trolls [vomiting emoji]'. 'Your body is horrendous even after surgery you fat whale': Posting to Instagram Stories on Wednesday, Cathy uploaded a series of shocking messages she'd received form a troll questioning why she was 'still fat' after surger Hitting back: Disgusted, Cathy responded in her caption: 'Here I am trying to get through my DMS, answering people's questions etc etc, but tonight is the night for all the trolls [vomiting emoji]'. Cathy is pictured in February Dangerous: 'The world does not need more hate, only kindness. Let's rid these people off socials. This is why suicide rates are so high,' she added 'I've had enough,' she continued, before calling the user a 'disgrace' and slamming them for hiding behind their cat's Instagram page rather than contacting her personally. Cathy followed this with a separate post asking her fans to report the troll's account to Instagram. 'The world does not need more hate, only kindness. Let's rid these people off socials. This is why suicide rates are so high,' she added. Defiant: Cathy followed this with a separate post asking her fans to report the troll's account to Instagram. Cathy is pictured in February Va-va-voom! Cathy often shows off her surgically-altered frame in skimpy outfits. She is pictured here in January Cathy debuted the results of her full-body makeover on Instagram in late July. At the time, the influencer revealed why she decided to go under the knife, after critics told her to 'go to the gym' instead of the plastic surgeon. 'People are saying, ''Why aren't you just going to the gym?'' And I do go to the gym,' she said in a YouTube video. Before and after: Cathy underwent a $30,000 surgical makeover, including liposuction and a Brazilian Butt Lift in June last year (results are shown here) Unfortunately, she suffered an unpleasant experience during her recovery. Just days after going under the knife, Cathy was forced to evacuate her home due to a nearby fire just days after undergoing surgery. She said the experience left her humiliated and in excruciating pain because she was wearing a nappy at the time. 'What I am after is not found at the gym. This shaped, sculpted body by a surgeon or doctor is not found at the gym,' she added. Stressful: During her recovery process, Cathy broke down in tears as she recalled being evacuated from her home due to a nearby fire The bandaged bride said through tears: 'We were all out on the street. I had to stand out like this, I'm so embarrassed. 'It hasn't been smooth sailing for me,' she sobbed. She explained that she was lying down and trying to recover when police and fireman barged into her home to get everybody to evacuate. 'I really struggle to get up and all the fluid's moving through my body, so I was kind of shocked and trying to get up faster and I was in more pain. Anyone needing support with eating disorders or body image issues is encouraged to contact: Butterfly National Helpline on 1800 33 4673 (1800 ED HOPE) Jussie Smollett made a rare appearance in spotlight on Tuesday night. The troubled actor was seen arriving at Harry Belafonte's 95th Birthday at The Town Hall in New York City. However, the former Empire star - who was convicted in December 2021 of lying to police in January 2019 about what he said was a racist, homophobic attack - did not walk the red carpet of the event. Jussie Smollett makes a rare public appearance at Harry Belafonte's 95th birthday bash in NYC... as he files documents requesting a new trial months after guilty verdict The sighting comes after it was revealed that the actor's legal team have filed documents to request a new trial unless the judge reverses the verdict and finds him not guilty of disorderly conduct for faking the police report, according to TMZ. The actor requested the new trial two months after he was found guilty by the jurors of five of the six felony charges against him. The outlet reported that Jussie claimed his constitutional rights were violated after his legal team was blocked from participating in the juror selection process. Rare sighting: The former Empire star - who was convicted in December 2021 of lying to police in January 2019 about what he said was a racist, homophobic attack Night out: The troubled actor was seen arriving at Harry Belafonte's 95th Birthday at The Town Hall in New York City Jussie claimed that prosecutors portrayed a pattern of racism in their juror selections, TMZ reported. In addition, he claims his defense team weren't allowed to pose questions to the potential jurors as well as alleging the pool was 'tainted.' He also alleged that the prosecutors pressured the witnesses to give 'false testimony' and limited his defense team from questions all of the witnesses. Jussie's legal team claimed that the judge barring the public and media from the courtroom was 'wrongful.' Re-trial? Jussie has claimed that prosecutors portrayed a pattern of racism in their juror selections Jussie was convicted last month for lying to police about a racist, homophobic attack that authorities said he staged, will return to court for sentencing March 10. Cook County Judge James Linn set the sentencing date in Chicago for the former Empire actor, who told the judge he was in New York, during a hearing on Zoom. Smollett was found guilty by a jury Dec. 9 of five felony counts of disorderly conduct under a subsection of the law that prohibits making false reports to police. He was acquitted on a sixth count. Smollett, who is black and gay, maintained throughout the nearly three-year legal battle that he was attacked in downtown Chicago in January 2019 by people who yelled racist and anti-gay slurs and put a noose around his neck. He denied during the trial that he staged the attack. While the charges carry a possible sentence of three years in prison, legal experts have said Smollett is unlikely to get prison time for the low-level felonies, and is more likely to be sentenced to probation and ordered to perform community service. Meanwhile, lawsuits that were on hold pending the outcome of the criminal case may now move forward. They include a lawsuit the city of Chicago filed against Smollett to recoup over $130,000 it spent investigating what police initially believed was a terrible hate crime. Cook County State's Attorney Kim Foxx repeatedly misled the public about her office's handling of the Jussie Smollett case and was responsible for 'a major failure of operations' in dismissing charges against the Empire actor, a special prosecutor's damning report states. Paperwork: newly release report by a special prosecutor has found that Cook County State's Attorney Kim Foxx (left) and her office were responsible for 'a major failure of operations' in dismissing charges against Jussie Smollett (right) The 68-page confidential report detailing missteps and multiple instances of false statements made by Foxx and her prosecutors in the initial investigation of Smollett was released after a judge ruled that it should be made public. Some of the offices actions may be violations of legal ethics, special prosecutor Dan Webb concluded. He said Foxx and others in her office did nothing criminal. The report includes findings by Webb, who took over the case after Foxx dropped charges against Smollett in March 2019. Georgia Love was involved in a road rage incident in Melbourne's CBD this week. The Bachelorette star, who recently left her TV career at Channel Seven for a job in public relations, said she 'screamed at' by another driver while she was attempting to park her car. Posting to Instagram, the 33-year-old wrote: 'Just got properly screamed at by a driver because I dared to hold her up 20 seconds to reverse park.' Road rage attack: Former Bachelorette star Georgia Love has revealed she was 'screamed at' by a driver in Melbourne's CBD on Wednesday She ended on a positive note, noting the incident meant that Melbourne was bustling once again as the Covid-19 pandemic looks to be drawing to a close. 'The CBD is back,' she added, alongside a smiley-face and love-heart emoji. The incident comes just weeks after Georgia announced her new career move in public relations. Yikes: Posting to Instagram, the 33-year-old wrote: 'Just got properly screamed at by a driver because I dared to hold her up 20 seconds to reverse park' Positive thinking: She ended on a positive note, noting the incident meant that Melbourne was bustling once again as the Covid-19 pandemic looks to be drawing to a close The announcement came approximately five months after Seven yanked Georgia off the air and moved her to a behind-the-scenes role after she received backlash for a 'racist' Instagram post. Prior to the scandal, Love worked as a news reporter and presenter for the network. She's now left Seven to join storytelling agency Enthral as a senior public relations and content manager. Her new role will reportedly focus on 'positive and uplifting stories'. End of an era: The incident comes weeks after Georgia announced her new career move, leaving her role at Channel Seven to work in public relations Fresh start: The reality star will help create 'positive and uplifting stories' for storytelling agency Enthral 'I'm looking forward to putting the skills, knowledge and experience learnt from 11 years working in newsrooms into something new, while still remaining within the media industry,' Love said in a statement. 'Storytelling has always been what I love the most about being a journalist, so when the opportunity came up to work with an agency that puts storytelling first and has a strong journalistic DNA, it couldn't have been a better fit.' The former reality star added that she feels 'extremely positive' about her surprise career change. She was pulled from her on-air duties at Channel Seven in September and relegated to the production desk just days after posting an offensive video on Instagram. The journalist had sparked backlash for sharing footage of a cat behind the window of an Asian restaurant and writing: 'Shop attendant or lunch?!' She deleted the video an hour later and apologised for causing 'offence', but at the time denied the post had any racist 'insinuation'. Georgia also posted a similar 'joke' about pets and Chinese restaurants in 2013. Backlash: It comes approximately five months after Seven yanked the 33-year-old off the air and moved her to a behind-the-scenes role after she received backlash for a 'racist' Instagram post Following a workplace investigation, Seven alerted staff via email that Georgia had been 'counselled' and reassigned to an off-camera role 'effective immediately'. A Seven spokesperson told Daily Mail Australia: 'We have addressed this matter internally and disciplinary action has been taken. 'Seven does not condone this inappropriate conduct and all of our staff have the right to work in a safe, nurturing workplace free from prejudice.' Claim to fame: Georgia became a household name when she starred as the lead in Channel 10's The Bachelorette in 2016 (pictured) Shortly after that, Love found herself in hot water again when she was called out by a colleague in leaked emails obtained by the Herald Sun for chastising the newsroom over grammar. She was shamed by a senior reporter for correcting the newsroom over the incorrect use of the word 'surgeries' in an email titled 'grammar note' this week. The Herald Sun understands the email was sent by Love following a bulletin read by reporter Melina Sarris. In a leaked email also obtained by The Herald Sun, a senior reporter called out the former Bachelorette for her 'unreasonable' email, encouraging the team to 'carry on' with their 'great work'. Career: Following The Bachelorette, Love spent several years working with 10 as a weather presenter and on-air news talent Georgia started her broadcast career as a news anchor for WIN News in Tasmania. She then joined Channel 10 as their official Bachelorette for season two in 2016, before staying with the network as a weather presenter and occasional on-air talent for shows like Studio 10. In 2021, she made the move over to Channel Seven to work as a news reporter and producer. In addition to her journalism career, Love also dabbles as a podcast host and social media influencer. The Adam Project stars Ryan Reynolds and Jennifer Garner were seen in New York City Monday promoting the motion picture. The A-list actor, 45, wore a blue, black and white flannel top over a button-up dark blue shirt with grey slack and brown shoes as he was seen leaving the Four Seasons on the weekday. The Vancouver native, who plays the titular role of Adam in the film, sported a beard and wore brown framed glasses on the outing in the city. The latest: The Adam Project stars Ryan Reynolds, 45, and Jennifer Garner, 49, were seen in New York City Tuesday promoting the motion picture Garner, 49, was seen in a button-up navy blue trench coat over a patterned black dress with blue high heels as she was seen arriving at The Greenwich Hotel where a junket was being held for the sci-fi film. She had a cup of coffee and an iPhone in hand and wore her brown tresses down on the windy day. Garner was later snapped leaving the Four Seasons in an orange sweater with blue jeans and a pair of dark-rimmed glasses with earrings. The 13 Going on 30 actress smiled at photographers as she had her coat in hand while departing the premises. Garner had a cup of coffee and an iPhone in hand and wore her brown tresses down on the windy day Garner appeared focused as she made her way to promote the film, which debuts on Netflix this month The film, which also stars Zoe Saldana, Mark Ruffalo, Walker Scobell and Catherine Keener, is about a pilot who travels through time to work with his younger self and late father in an effort to save the future. Following the premiere of the movie Monday at the Lincoln Center, Garner and Reynolds spoke out the charitable efforts they have made amid the ongoing Russian invasion of Ukraine. Reynolds spoke about his pledge with wife Blake Lively to match $1 million in donations to the United Nations High Commissioner for Refugees to help refugees in the wake of the conflict. 'We just felt that we were incredibly fortunate to be able to do something like that, and its hard not to elicit enormous empathy to the idea that families big and small are being told they have to flee their homes theyve had their whole lives in a matter of minutes,' Reynolds told Variety. 'I just cant imagine how that would feel for a parent, let alone anybody.' The A-list actor wore a blue, black and white flannel top over a button-up dark blue shirt with grey slack and brown shoes as he was seen leaving the Four Seasons on the weekday Garner has been working with Save the Children to provide Ukrainian families with essential goods and services amid the tumultuous time Garner was later snapped leaving a Four Seasons hotel in an orange sweater with blue jeans and a pair of dark-rimmed glasses with earrings Garner spoke about her efforts through Save the Children to provide Ukrainian families with essential goods amid the tumultuous time. 'My heart goes out to the people in Ukraine,' she told the outlet. 'Im thinking especially of the women and children. 'We work hand-in-hand with UNHCR and Red Cross to make sure, while theyre building shelters and refugee camps, that children, babies and mothers are specifically cared for, whether thats psycho-emotional support, diapers, childrens clothing, shoes, socks, infant formula, baby food, toys, books, teddy bears, blankets, things they might not have grabbed as they left their homes and fled.' She said that efforts are being made 'to get education up and running for them while they figure out where theyre going to be next,' adding, 'Im proud of that work and am happy to be supporting it.' The movie, directed by Shawn Levy, is set to debut on Netflix March 11. Aussie Home Loans heiress Deborah Symond O'Neil looked effortlessly stylish on Wednesday. The daughter of financier John Symond donned a $700 blue and tan frock by designer Lee Mathews, teamed with comfy black sandals. The 33-year-old added a chic handbag and delicate gold jewellery to the look. Stylish: Aussie Home Loans heiress Deborah Symond O'Neil, 33, showed off her flair for fashion in a $700 designer frock as she stepped out in Sydney on Wednesday (pictured) Deborah swept her blonde locks into a ponytail at the nape of the neck, and looked to have worn minimal makeup, drawing attention to her natural and radiant beauty. In October, the entrepreneur announced the arrival of her daughter, Violet Symond O'Neil, on Instagram. Deborah shared the happy news alongside a series of photos of the newborn. Effortless: The daughter of financier John Symond donned a blue and tan frock by Lee Mathews, teamed with comfy black sandals and delicate gold jewellery Natural: Deborah swept her blonde locks into a ponytail at the nape of the neck, and looked to have worn minimal makeup, drawing attention to her natural and radiant beauty 'VIOLET SYMOND O'NEIL. Words can't describe just how much we love you! 04102021,' she captioned the post. It's the second child for Deborah and her husband of three years, Ned O'Neil, with the couple already parents to two-year-old son, Beau. Several of Deborah's famous friends left congratulatory comments on her post, including Jasmine Stefanovic, Kate Waterhouse and Phoebe Burgess. Welcome to the world: In October, Deborah announced the arrival of her daughter, Violet Symond O'Neil (pictured), on Instagram 'Violet is absolutely gorgeous. Congratulations,' wrote Kate, while Jasmine added, 'So beautiful! And love the name. Congratulations xxx'. The socialite rose to prominence after her elaborate wedding to Ned become national news in April 2018. Deborah walked down the aisle surrounded by 120 esteemed guests and the couple's very famous fathers, including Aussie Home Loans founder John Symond. So sweet: 'VIOLET SYMOND O'NEIL. Words can't describe just how much we love you! 04102021,' she captioned the post Hamilton Island's exclusive Qualia resort was booked out for the three-day long celebration. The couple exchanged vows in front of John, 74, and Ned's father Denis O'Neil, a superyacht broker and owner of Rose Bay Marina. The couple flew 120 guests, including the 10 men and women in their wedding party, to North Queensland for the elaborate wedding. A helmet worn by aviator Amelia Earhart during a trans-Atlantic flight nearly a century ago fetched $825,000 Sunday, according to Texas-based Heritage Auctions. Earhart was a passenger on that 1928 flight piloted by Wilmer Stultz and Louis Gordon, where she became the first woman to fly over the Atlantic Ocean. In 1932, the 34-year-old adventurer made history again by herself flying from Newfoundland, Canada, to Northern Ireland. No other female pilot had accomplished that feat. She disappeared over the Pacific Ocean during a 1937 flight. Advertisement American aviatrix Amelia Earhart poses for photos as she arrives in Southampton, England, after her transatlantic flight on the "Friendship" from Burry Point, Wales, June 26, 1928. (AP) The leather flight cap that sold to an unidentified bidder also comes with a story that includes a lost, but found twist. Minnesota man Anthony Twiggs, who sold the helmet, said he inherited it from his mother when died more than 20 years ago. She was part of a crowd in Cleveland, Ohio, that swarmed Earhart after the aviator completed a 1929 race that had begun in California. Earharts helmet came off amid the celebration and was recovered by a boy who gave it to Twiggs mother, who was a schoolgirl at the time. Twiggs, 67, spent decades trying to prove his mothers recollection of events authenticated the helmet. Last fall, photo-matching technology showed that indeed the headgear belonged to Earhart. Advertisement He told the New York Times that his mom wasnt impressed by the boy who tried earning her affection by giving her the helmet hed acquired, though she was impressed by the artifact itself. My mother kept it for Amelia, he said. Earhart was declared dead in January of 1939. October marks the 100-year anniversary of her first aviation record, when she became the first woman to fly solo at an altitude above 14,000 feet. With News Wire Services She's a millionaire business mogul and the founder of one of the country's most successful publicity agencies. But the Sydney identity, 42, looked unrecognisable as she traded in her designer wardrobe and signature beauty look for 'The Big Cat Quiz' ahead of the launch of Stan's Tiger King series, JOE vs CAROLE, premiering on Friday March 4. The mother of two donned Carole Baskin's unique look of an oversized pink blouse, blue jeans and flower headpiece, as she filmed a promotional clip alongside former NRL star Beau Ryan as Carole's nemesis Joe Exotic. Guess who! Millionaire business mogul and Sydney identity (pictured) transformed into Carole Baskin for Stan's upcoming Tiger King series JOE vs CAROLE The publicist with a following of 265,000 on Instagram is none other than Roxy Jacenko. Roxy looked unrecognisable as Carole, ditching her trademark sleek ponytail and glamorous makeup, for Carole's long blonde crimped locks. In character as Carole for her role as a Stan ambassador, Roxy took part in a hilarious question and answer session with Beau. Recognisable? The mother of two donned Carole Baskin's unique look of an oversized pink blouse, blue jeans and flower headpiece, as she filmed a promotional clip alongside former NRL star Beau Ryan (right) as Carole's nemesis Joe Exotic Has to be seen to be believed: The publicist with a following of 265,000 on Instagram is none other than Roxy Jacenko (pictured) The upcoming JOE vs CAROLE series chronicles Carole's feud with Joe and is based on Robert Moor's podcast. Saturday Night Live actress and comedian Kate McKinnon completely transforms into Carole, while John Cameron Mitchell plays Joe. Carole's husband Howard is portrayed by Kyle MacLachlan, of Twin Peaks and Sex and the City fame. New look: Roxy looked unrecognisable as Carole, ditching her trademark sleek ponytail and glamorous makeup, for Carole's long blonde crimped locks Banter: In character as Carole for her role as a Stan ambassador, Roxy took part in a hilarious question and answer session with Beau The show will be based on the Wondery podcast 'Joe Exotic', hosted and reported by Robert Moor, which the Netflix docuseries Tiger King was based on. The limited series will centre on Carole Baskin, 'a big cat enthusiast, who learns that fellow exotic animal lover Joe "Exotic" Schreibvogel is breeding and using his big cats for profit,' according to the series description. 'She sets out to shut down his venture, inciting a quickly escalating rivalry. Not long now: The upcoming JOE vs CAROLE series chronicles Carole's feud with Joe Exotic and is based on Robert Moor's podcast. Saturday Night Live actress and comedian Kate McKinnon (pictured) completely transforms into Carole Lookalike: The Saturday Night Live actress looks just like the real Carole Baskin (pictured) But Carole has a checkered past of her own and when the claws come out, Joe will stop at nothing to expose what he sees as her hypocrisy. The results prove dangerous,' the description reads. Joe has been behind bars since 2020 when he was convicted of trying to hire two different men to kill Carole. JOE vs CAROLE premieres Friday March 4, only on Stan Fun! The upcoming series chronicles Carole's feud with Joe (played by John Cameron Mitchell, pictured) and is based on Robert Moor's podcast Before he settled down with his wife Kristen Bell, actor Dax Shepard dated Ashley Olsen, and had nothing but nice things to say about her on his podcast. The 47-year-old actor revealed on the February 28 episode of his Armchair Expert podcast that he dated the 35-year-old fashion designer, '15 or 16 years ago.' While he didn't reveal how long they dated for, it was likely right before he met his 41-year-old wife, who he started dating in late 2007. Dax admits: Before he settled down with his wife Kristen Bell, actor Dax Shepard dated Ashley Olsen, and had nothing but nice things to say about her on his podcast Years ago: The 47-year-old actor revealed on the February 28 episode of his Armchair Expert podcast that he dated the 35-year-old fashion designer, '15 or 16 years ago' Shepard and his Armchair Expert podcast co-host Monica Padman were discussing Olsen's clothing line The Row, which she founded with her twin sister Mary-Kate Olsen. He then revealed that they dated, adding, 'Shes just the most wonderful person. Shes fantastic.' The actor added that they were dating, 'when she was putting all her energy and focus into launching that in a big way,' referring to her clothing line. Wonderful: He then revealed that they dated, adding, 'Shes just the most wonderful person. Shes fantastic' Energy: The actor added that they were dating, 'when she was putting all her energy and focus into launching that in a big way,' referring to her clothing line 'So, I was able to see her meet with design teams and, like, run her s**t and she handled her [business], and its very impressive,' he added. Both Ashley and her sister Mary-Kate have largely kept out of the public eye since launching to fame as child stars on Full House. Shepard revealed both sisters are quite, 'sarcastic,' acknowledging, 'thats a pretty weird pairing but shes super funny, and sarcastic and intelligent. And they are major f***ing bosses.' Private: Both Ashley and her sister Mary-Kate have largely kept out of the public eye since launching to fame as child stars on Full House Sarcastic: Shepard revealed both sisters are quite, 'sarcastic,' acknowledging, 'thats a pretty weird pairing but shes super funny, and sarcastic and intelligent. And they are major f***ing bosses' He added that he had never seen an episode of Full House before he started dating Ashley, acknowledging he likely wouldn't have been attracted to her had he known her from the show. 'I luckily never saw that show. Because I probably wouldnt have been able to be attracted to Ashley if I knew her as a baby,' Shepard admitted. He also added how they first met, stating, 'I just saw her at a party and was kind of thunderstruck by her beauty.' No Full House: He added that he had never seen an episode of Full House before he started dating Ashley, acknowledging he likely wouldn't have been attracted to her had he known her from the show Thunderstruck: He also added how they first met, stating, 'I just saw her at a party and was kind of thunderstruck by her beauty' Shepard and Bell announced their engagement in January 2010, though they decided to hold off on tying the knot until California allowed same-sex marriage. After the Defense of Marriage Act was ruled unconstitutional, Shepard asked Bell to marry her on Twitter, which she accepted. They formally tied the knot at the Beverly Hills County Clerk's Office in October 2013, with the couple welcoming daughter Lincoln in March 2013 and daughter Lincoln in December 2014. Married at First Sight bride Domenica Calarco is not one to hold back her opinions. And during Wednesday night's dinner party, the makeup artist, 29, ripped into fellow bride Carolina Santos after discovering how she's been treating her 'husband' Dion Giannarelli. Domenica let loose at Carolina after she said she was 'embarrassed' to be seen with Dion at Bondi Beach because she has 60,000 followers on Instagram. Her follower count sits at 63,000, while Dion only has 14,500 fans following him. 'You're not Beyonce': Married At First Sight bride Domenica Calarco, 28, ripped into Carolina Santos on Wednesday night after she told her groom that she was 'embarrassed' to be seen with him at Bondi Beach in Sydney 'It doesn't make sense to me, I literally can not sit here listening to dumb stupidity,' a fiery Dom yelled. 'Babe, you're not Beyonce. Not everyone in Bondi is gonna know who are if you're going for a walk with Dion,' she continued. 'I did not say that,' replied Carolina, attempting to backtrack. Confused: Domenica let loose at Carolina (pictured) after she said she was 'embarrassed' to be seen with Dion at Bondi Beach because she has 60,000 followers on Instagram 'Babe, you're not Beyonce. Not everyone in Bondi is gonna know who are if you're going for a walk with Dion,' said Dom An annoyed Dion cut in: 'Did you not say to me, I am not going to Bondi because you've got 60,000 followers, and you that don't want to go down there because you might be seen.' 'That's exactly what I said,' she then admitted. Speaking to producers, Domenica explained: 'I did not understand [Carolina's comments] - that sh*ts me so much.' Regret: 'I did not say that,' replied Carolina, attempting to backtrack An annoyed Dion cut in: 'Did you not say to me, I am not going to Bondi because you've got 60,000 followers, and you that don't want to go down there because you might be seen' Later on in the episode, Dion said he was frustrated that Carolina wasn't putting in any effort with him after she 'checked out' during the last dinner party. 'You're not trying, you don't want to try. You don't find me attractive,' he told her. 'You don't find common ground and you put up the wall. So it doesn't matter what anybody says around this table. It doesn't feel like it's going to get through to you.' Married At First Sight continues Sunday at 7pm on Channel Nine Not impressed: 'I did not understand [Carolina's comments],' Dom told producers Advertisement Alicia Keys, Whoopi Goldberg and Alfre Woodard stepped out on Tuesday night to celebrate legendary entertainer and activist Harry Belafonte's 95th birthday in New York City. The star-studded event was held at the Town Hall in Manhattan and featured a number of musical performances and tributes, as well as the presentation of the Harry Belafonte Social Justice Awards. Proceeds benefited Harry's social justice organization Sankofa.org, whose mission is to 'educate, motivate, and activate artists and allies in service of grassroots movements and equitable change,' in honor of its 10th anniversary. Star-studded: Whoopi Goldberg, Alicia Keys, and Alfre Woodard stepped out on Tuesday night to celebrate legendary entertainer and activist Harry Belafonte's 95th birthday in New York City He co-founded Sankofa.org in 2012 with his daughter Gina Belafonte, who was also present at the event with her daughter Maria. This was the organization's first public fundraising event. Harry expressed gratitude for so many political, civil rights and racial justice leaders, as well as celebrities, coming together to celebrate his legacy on his 95th birthday in a statement. 'I am honored that so many are coming together to celebrate my birthday, life, and legacy,' the entertainer began. 'I founded Sankofa.org alongside my daughter Gina and Raoul Roach to create additional space for artists and allies to collaborate to garner an artistic approach to the needs of our disenfranchised communities, to use art as a tool to educate messages of hope, and to encourage and energize the public to become engaged. One heart, one mind, one soul.' Red carpet: Ahead of the festivities, fundraiser attendees posed on the red carpet which featured a Sankofa.org themed backdrop with the organization's raised fist logo emblazoned on it; Whoopi Goldberg (left) and Alfre Woodard (right) Details: She had an orange and yellow scarf hanging from her neck and slipped her feet into a pair of black sandals Family: Harry's daughter Gina Belafonte and her daughter Maria Belafonte posed with their arms wrapped around another. Gina modeled a black and silver dress while Maria donned a black slip dress and a leather trench coat Bundled up: Laurence Fishburne bundled up in a brown coat and green scarf, while famed choreographer Bill T. Jones rocked a pair of black leather pants and a blinding yellow scarf As reported by Forbes, the Harry Belafonte Social Justice Awards were created 'to acknowledge the vast reach of Mr. Belafonte's contribution to social justice and American history.' The night's award recipients included: Angela Davis, Rashad Robinson, Kimberle Crenshaw, Dr. Cornel West, Darren Walker, Hank Willis Thomas, former Attorney General Eric Holder and Congresswoman Barbara Lee. Ahead of the festivities, fundraiser attendees posed on the red carpet which featured a Sankofa.org themed backdrop with the organization's raised fist logo emblazoned on it. Suited up: Danny Glover suited up for the occasion in a blue jacket, matching trousers and a purple patterned tie. The actor was joined by a lovely female guest Peace: Broadcast journalist Amy Goodman flashed a peace sign at shutterbugs while wearing an all-black getup layered beneath a purple windbreaker. Jamaican author Donna Hylton, who has become an advocate for the rights and well-being of women and girls, posed in a blue jumpsuit Performer: Rapper Doug E. Fresh and TV producer Janell Snowden arrived together in their finest evening wear. The posed closely beside one another on the red carpet Classic: Civil rights leader Rashad Robinson opted for a classic black suit for the occasion. Lawyer Kerry Kennedy had some fun with her look by rocking a tweed suit with floral-patterned lapels Keys, 41, skipped the red carpet but she captivated attendees inside of the Town Hall as she took to the stage to deliver a passionate speech about Harry's legacy and the impact of his activism. She addressed the crowd in a sharp black pantsuit. The songstress layered her jacket over a beige turtleneck and her curly brunette hair was styled in an updo. Goldberg, 66, posed for shutterbugs on the step-and-repeat in a black kaftan with white embroidery down the front and on the sleeves. Protecting herself and others from COVID-19, the actress arrived with a face mask on. She briefly lowered it for pictures. Riding solo: Rev. Al Sharpton arrived solo to the event with a black coat buttoned over his blue suit and multi-colored scarf Mingling: Dr. Cornel West, Annahita Mahdavi West, and Rev. Al Sharpton captured mingling on the red carpet Rare public outing: Jussie Smollett, who was convicted in December 2021 of lying to police in January 2019 about what he said was a racist, homophobic attack, was captured arriving to the event but did not pose for photographs inside Woodard, 69, stunned in a purple taffeta dress and had an orange and yellow scarf hanging from her neck. 'HB95 is the celebration of Harry Belafonte's bold, insistent, joyous stride towards Justice. Sankofa.org is the vehicle he's given the generations to continue that journey forward. There goes the roof!' said the star in a statement ahead of the event. Laurence Fishburne bundled up in a brown coat and green scarf, while famed choreographer Bill T. Jones rocked a pair of black leather pants and a blinding yellow scarf. Passionate: Keys, 41, skipped the red carpet but she captivated attendees inside of the Town Hall as she took to the stage to deliver a passionate speech about Harry's legacy and the impact of his activism Classy: She addressed the crowd in a sharp black pantsuit. The songstress layered her jacket over a beige turtleneck and her curly brunette hair was styled in an updo Heading out: Keys was captured leaving the event Strolling: She strolled out of the venue with her cellphone in hand Gina Belafonte and daughter Maria Belafonte posed with their arms wrapped around another. Gina modeled a black and silver dress while Maria donned a black slip dress and a leather trench coat. Danny Glover suited up for the occasion in a blue jacket, matching trousers and a purple patterned tie. The actor was joined by a lovely female guest. Broadcast journalist Amy Goodman flashed a peace sign at shutterbugs while wearing an all-black getup layered beneath a purple windbreaker. Jamaican author Donna Hylton, who has become an advocate for the rights and well-being of women and girls, slipped into a blue jumpsuit layered beneath an embroidered jacket. Rapper Doug E. Fresh and TV producer Janell Snowden arrived together in their finest evening wear. The posed closely beside one another on the red carpet. Paired up: Whoopi Goldberg joined Gina Belafonte on stage to deliver an empowering speech Proceeds: Proceeds benefited Harry's social justice organization Sankofa.org, whose mission is to 'educate, motivate, and activate artists and allies in service of grassroots movements and equitable change,' in honor of its 10th anniversary Co-founder Harru co-founded Sankofa.org with Gina Civil rights leader Rashad Robinson opted for a classic black suit for the occasion. Lawyer Kerry Kennedy had some fun with her look by rocking a tweed suit with floral-patterned lapels. Rev. Al Sharpton arrived solo to the event with a black coat buttoned over his blue suit and multi-colored scarf. Jussie Smollett, who was convicted in December 2021 of lying to police in January 2019 about what he said was a racist, homophobic attack, was captured arriving to the event but did not pose for photographs inside. Awards: As reported by Forbes , the Harry Belafonte Social Justice Awards were created 'to acknowledge the vast reach of Mr. Belafonte's contribution to social justice and American history'; Alfre Woodard and Danny Glover pictured speaking on stage Recipients: The night's award recipients included: Angela Davis, Rashad Robinson, Kimberle Crenshaw, Dr. Cornel West, Darren Walker, Hank Willis Thomas, former Attorney General Eric Holder and Congresswoman Barbara Lee; Alfre Woodard and Danny Glover pictured speaking on stage Gratitude: In a statement obtained by the outlet, Harry expressed gratitude for so many political, civil rights and racial justice leaders, as well as celebrities, coming together to celebrate his legacy on his 95th birthday; Spike Lee and Laurence Fishburne pictured speaking on stage Speakers: Alfre Woodard and Danny Glover united for the evening to speak about Harry, along with Michael Moore (pictured) and lawyer Bryan Stevenson Guest list: Aloe Blacc, John Legend, The Belafonte Alumni Band, Lenny Kravitz, Q-Tip, Tim Robbins, Sweet Honey in the Rock, and Jesse Williams were also reported to be in attendance; Bryan Stevenson pictured speaking on stage Music: Doug E. Fresh put his rap skills to use by giving a performance during the fundraiser with a live band Once all attendees made their way inside, the festivities commenced. Whoopi Goldberg joined Gina Belafonte on stage to deliver an empowering speech, while director Spike Lee spoke to the crowd with Laurence Fishburne. Alfre Woodard and Danny Glover united for the evening to speak about Harry, along with Michael Moore and lawyer Bryan Stevenson. Doug E. Fresh put his rap skills to use by giving a performance during the fundraiser with a live band. Aloe Blacc, John Legend, The Belafonte Alumni Band, Lenny Kravitz, Q-Tip, Tim Robbins, Sweet Honey in the Rock, and Jesse Williams were also reported to be in attendance. Whether it be at home, out shopping, or heading on to yet another red carpet event with some of her fashionista friends, Ashley Benson knows how to wear her ensembles. And on Tuesday it was mission accomplished again when the Pretty Little Liars alum stepped out to pick up some lunch to-go from The Oaks Gourmet Market & Cafe in Los Angeles. The actress went with a classic American combination, in terms of casual-cool, in blue jeans with a black leather motorcycle jacket and matching cowboy boots. On the move: Ashley Benson, 32, stepped out to pick up some lunch to-go at a popular cafe in Los Angeles on Tuesday The actress appeared to have a list of items in hand as she made her way from her parked vehicle to inside the cafe. While it hasn't been the hot and balmy temperatures some outsiders normally attribute to Southern California, it does still get glaring enough that Benson needed to don a pair of dark sunglasses. She would wear her classic motorcycle jacket over a plunging black top that gave a hint of her cleavage. American classic: The Anaheim Hills native wore some American classics, which included blue jeans, with a black leather motorcycle jacket and matching cowboy boots Her ensemble was wrapped up with her blonde tresses styled long, a few inches past her shoulders, with a part in the middle. It didn't take long before Benson returned back outside, with her pick-up order in hand, for the walk back to her parked car. When she hasn't been working on her rising career in Hollywood in recent years, Benson has had two high-profile romances, one of which could be described as on-again,-off again. Love life: Since 2018, Benson has had two high-profile romances, which includes her two-year relationship with top model Cara Delevingne Benson dated top model Cara Delevingne for about two years beginning in 2018, and then, around the same time, moved on to G-Eazy (born Gerald Earl Gillum), whom she dated for about a year before they called it quits in February 2021, according to People. While they were seen out together on a number of occasions during their separation, chatter of another romance only just started to heat up after they were spotted dining out together over the holidays. 'They had issues to figure out and have been taking it slowly but are in a good place right now' an insider said after confirming their reunion. She's back in America after enjoying a family trip to Australia last month. And on Tuesday, Natalie Portman had a very animated conversation over lunch with a friend in Los Feliz, Los Angeles. The Black Swan actress, 40, kept things casual, opting to go make-up free for the outing and wearing a white T-shirt teamed with denim hot pants. Highly expressive: On Tuesday, Natalie Portman, 40, had a very animated conversation over lunch with a friend in Los Feliz, Los Angeles Natalie dined al fresco while clad in the light wash shorts and her top, which brandished the words 'Au Revoir' (French for 'goodbye'). The star ensured she was comfortable in a pair of trainers, while adding an unexpected pop of colour with lilac socks. It comes after Natalie abruptly pulled out of her movie Days of Abandonment, which was set to be filmed in Sydney, for 'unforeseen personal reasons' last year before returning to LA. Low Key: The Black Swan actress kept things casual, opting to go make-up free for the outing and wearing a white T-shirt teamed with denim hot pants 'Due to unforeseen personal reasons, Natalie Portman has stepped down from HBO's Days of Abandonment prior to the start of filming,' HBO said in a statement at the time. 'Unfortunately, the production will not move forward. We are very sorry we won't be able to bring this beautiful story to the screen with our talented writer/director and cast. 'We send our sincere thanks to our cast, producers, and crew for all their passion and hard work.' Keeping it casual: Natalie dined al fresco while clad in the light wash shorts and her top, which brandished the words 'Au Revoir' (French for 'goodbye') The movie had been in pre-production, and centred around a woman named Tess, who abandoned her own dreams in favour of maintaining a stable home life, only for her husband to walk out on her. Natalie was also set to executive produce the film, based on the best-selling novel by Elena Ferrante. The actress, her husband and their two children, Aleph and Amalia, had relocated Down Under in September 2020 ahead of her filming Thor: Love and Thunder in Sydney. There were even rumours the Israeli-born actress was looking to make Australia her permanent home, after she and Benjamin Millepied inspected properties in Sydney last year. She jetted off to Mexico with a slew of pals over the weekend ahead of her birthday. And Rebel Wilson, who turns 42 on March 2, looked completely relaxed as she luxuriated by the pool at the exclusive One&Only Palmilla resort on Tuesday. The Pitch Perfect star showed off her incredible 35kg (77lbs) weight loss in revealing purple activewear by the resort pool, before slipping into a racy black swimsuit. Let the celebrations begin! Rebel Wilson showed off her weight loss in revealing activewear before slipping into a racy black swimsuit by the pool as she kicked off her 42nd birthday celebrations in Mexico on Tuesday (pictured) Rebel offered a glimpse of her toned tummy in a purple sweater, which she teamed with matching metallic leggings that clung to her lean legs. Her blonde locks were swept back off her face into an effortless ponytail, and she appeared to have gone without makeup, drawing attention to her natural beauty. The Australian actress kept hydrated with a bottle of water and appeared relaxed as she luxuriated in the sun with her pals, which included a bikini-clad beauty. Trim and terrific: The Pitch Perfect star showed off her incredible 35kg (77lbs) weight loss in a purple sweater, which she teamed with matching metallic leggings that clung to her lean legs Effortless: Her blonde locks were swept back off her face into an effortless ponytail, and she appeared to have gone without makeup, drawing attention to her natural beauty Pricey: Rebel mingled with her pals at the One&Only Palmilla resort, with rooms costing upwards of AUD $1,800 (USD $1,300) per night at the stunning destination Rebel was later spotted by the pool, working on her tan, while donning a racy black swimsuit. She added the resort's white cap and reflective sunglasses to the look, and at times, scrolled on her iPhone. Ocean front rooms at the One&Only Palmilla resort can cost upwards of AUD $1,800 (USD $1,300) per night at the stunning destination. Abroad: Rebel revealed to her Instagram fans on Tuesday that she was celebrating her birthday in Mexico Sun's out: Rebel was later spotted luxuriating by the pool and working on her tan, while donning a racy black swimsuit Holiday mode: The actress added the resort's white cap and reflective sunglasses to the look, and at times, scrolled on her iPhone In a series of Instagram posts on Tuesday, Rebel told fans she was celebrating her birthday at the pricey Mexican resort. 'Spending my one and only birthday this year at One&Only Palmilla,' Rebel captioned the three photos. Rebel showed off her slender curves in a tailored green blazer along with a white cap with the hotel's logo on it. Ready to unwind: In a series of Instagram posts on Tuesday, Rebel told fans she was celebrating her birthday at the pricey Mexican resort Birthday trip: 'Spending my one and only birthday this year at One&Only Palmilla,' Rebel captioned the three photos Birthday girl: In the Instagram posts, Rebel showed off her slender curves in a tailored green blazer along with a white cap with the hotel's logo on it The star also shared a number of images showing the ocean view from her luxurious hotel room. In a series of Instagram Stories shared on Saturday, Rebel filmed her pals, including actor Hugh Sheridan, 36, on a private jet. 'Just going on a little trip for the weekend!' Rebel said humbly in one of the clips, before filming her view out the window. Decadent: The star also shared a number of images showing the ocean view from her luxurious hotel room Vacation: In a series of Instagram Stories shared on Saturday, Rebel filmed her pals, including actor Hugh Sheridan, 36, on a private jet Enthusiasm: 'Just going on a little trip for the weekend!' Rebel said humbly in one of the clips, before filming her view out the window Excited: She also posed alongside her friends inside the plane, as well as on the staircase before they took off High life! Rebel is pictured in one of her Instagram posts on Tuesday, arriving at the resort She also posed alongside her friends inside the plane, as well as on the staircase before they took off. Rebel has been making headlines over the past three years, having dropped an incredible 35kg in total. Back in November 2020, the comedian proudly announced on her Instagram Stories that she had reached her goal weight of 75kg (165lbs or 11.8 stone). Sharing a photo of the number 74.6 on the scale, Rebel said that while it's not about a number, she needed a 'tangible measurement' to keep her motivated. 'Hit my goal with one month to spare! Even though it's not about a weight number, it's about being healthy, I needed a tangible measurement to have as a goal and that was 75 kilograms,' the Bridesmaids actress captioned the post. Party! Rebel is seen here with her pals boarding a private jet over the weekend Love Island star Joanna Chimonides rounded up her best pals to help celebrate her collaboration with clothing brand South Beach on Tuesday night. The reality star pulled out all the stops for her big night at London's Berkeley hotel, wowing in a racy cut-out dress which flaunted her stunning figure. She was joined by an equally glam Georgia Steel, who flashed her abs in a two-piece and Francesca Allen in a sheer nude jumpsuit. Dressed to impress: Love Island star Joanna Chimonides rounded up her best pals to help celebrate her collaboration with clothing brand South Beach on Tuesday night Joanna showed off her impressively taut stomach in her brown wrap-over dress. The flimsy piece featured a halter-neck style and exposed a glimpse of the beauty's underboob too. She accessorised with strappy black heels and a bright blue manicure for her night of celebrations. Georgia Steel meanwhile showed some skin in a brown leather two piece, pulling down the top of her skirt to show off her tanned and toned stomach. Let's party: Joanna celebrated with (L-R) Instagram model Maria Wild and Love Island alum Elma Pazar, Francesca Allen and Georgia Steel Francesca Allen dared to bare in a figure-hugging jumpsuit. The racy garment featured a sheer top, showing off Francesca's nude underwear. The beauty also flashed a look at her stunning engagement ring, after announcing her boyfriend Ed Crossan, the vice chairman of London-based waste management company Powerday, had proposed in December. Looking fab: The reality star pulled out all the stops for her big night at London's Berkeley hotel, wowing in a racy cut-out dress which flaunted her stunning figure Strike a pose: Georgia Steel (let) showed some skin in a brown leather two piece, pulling down the top of her skirt to show off her tanned stomach. Francesca Allen (right) dared to bare in a figure-hugging jumpsuit Ready to wed: Francesca flashed a look at her stunning engagement ring, after announcing her boyfriend Ed Crossan had proposed in December Ready to party: Elma looked stunning in her daringly low little black dress for the party night Joanna, who was on series five of Love Island, was celebrating the launch of her activewear collaboration with South Beach. She recently spoke out about the sim-shaming she has experienced, revealing she has battled nasty comments about her weight for years. Speaking to OK! Joanna explained: 'I have always had this thing about me being really, really slim and too slim. 'People as I have grown up, and still to this day, I get comments like, 'Have you eaten today?' or 'Are you not hungry?' and 'Girl, what have you been eating? Have you not eaten anything?'' Celebrations: The girls lined up for a very glam photo outside the hotel before heading inside for a dinner Va va voom! Gabby Allen was also at the bash, looking incredible in her corset top 'I have even got people saying, "Are you unwell?" I am naturally thin genetically. My mum is slim as well.' Joanna has since been working out three times per week with her personal trainer along with consuming 2,000 calories a day in order to gain muscle and feel stronger and 'curvier'. 'I did look at myself at some angles before I was working out and I would be like, "woah I am slim". It made me feel a bit uneasy. There was one time when I was getting a lingerie picture and I was actually like: "I need to stop."' 'I stopped getting my picture that day and I was like: "I feel just too skinny". It was horrible, it really was, and that same day I messaged my PT Sophie saying: "I need to get back into it."' She's in the French capital to model in runway shows. And on Tuesday, Gigi Hadid put on a quirky display in textured tie dye print trousers and a matching top while out and about in Paris during Fashion Week. The model, 26, kept warm by layering up with a white top beneath her quirky green co-ord set, and a long light grey coat worn over. Quirky: On Tuesday, Gigi Hadid, 26, put on a quirky display in textured tie dye print trousers and a matching top while out and about in Paris, France during Fashion Week Gigi's flared trousers skimmed the floor as she strolled along in trainers, while the matching jumper clung to her slim frame. Gigi was first spotted with her long blonde locks styled into chic waves, before later they were scraped back off her face into a chic bun. Adding to the texture in her ensemble, she carried her belongings in a fluffy cream handbag. Gigi also switched up her designer sunglasses, beginning with a glamorous pair of black oversized shades before opting for a vibrant blue pair. Braving the cold: The model kept warm by layering up with a white top beneath her quirky green co-ord set, and a long light grey coat worn over Gigi is one of the world's best-paid models, but the catwalk star previously revealed that she doesn't like to give her own thoughts on the outfits she has to wear for work. She explained: 'It's not my job to have an opinion on what I'm wearing [on set]. 'It's my job to wear what I wear and have enough of a photographic mind to understand how to make that piece look good, sellable, and give the feeling that is wanted by the creative team.' And despite being one of the most photographed women in the world, Gigi doesn't even like to look at herself in the mirror. She shared: 'I don't spend a lot of time in the mirror at all. I brush my teeth in the shower in the morning. Or I usually look out the window.' Earlier this year it was announced that Gigi would be replacing Alexa Chung to co-host the second series of Netflix's Next In Fashion with Tan France. Gigi, who has an 18-month-old daughter named Khai with her ex Zayn Malik, recently said she is 'so excited' to be hosting alongside Tan. The pair confirmed the news on Instagram in late January, writing: 'Who would have thought when we met over Facetime 4 years ago that we'd be hosting NEXT IN FASHION TOGETHER!' Series one of the fashion competition hit Netflix in January 2020 starring Tan and Alexa. Alexa has yet to comment on the news she has been replaced. Advertisement Episode seven of Pam & Tommy saw the actress big dreams of movie stardom continue to crumble, as the couple lost a legal battle over the distribution of their sex tape. In dramatic scenes the actress furiously lashed out at the ruling by insisting she's being viewed as 'a s**t with no rights,' thanks to her previous racy roles, having been grilled by journalists and late-night hosts alike about the 'devastating' theft. Elsewhere, having finally lost grip on the tape thanks to its vast spread by bootleggers, Rande is forced to do the dirty work of gangster Louis 'Butchie' Peraino to pay back his debt, after Miltie fled to Europe with a vst sum of their earnings months earlier. At odds: Episode seven of Pam & Tommy saw the actress' big dreams of movie stardom continue to crumble, as the couple lost a legal battle over the distribution of their sex tape The episode begins in May 1996, the dawn of coffee cash cow Starbucks, with gangster Butchie demanding to see Milton after learning he's missed out on thousands of money from the tape's sales. Meanwhile Rande is confronted by ex-wife Erica about international calls to Holland which he insists is part of his 'new business venture,' leading her to furiously demand he finally move out. As he desperately tries to get hold of Miltie, who is too busy snorting cocaine, Rande begins to realise he's lost grip on the infamous tape, with bootleg version available across the country. Drama: Elsewhere, having finally lost grip on the tape thanks to its vast spread by bootleggers, Rande is forced to do the dirty work of gangster Louis 'Butchie' Peraino to pay back his debt Where is he? The episode begins in May 1996, the dawn of coffee cash cow Starbucks, with gangster Butchie demanding to see Milton after learning he's missed out on thousands of money from the tape's sales Meanwhile a pregnant Pamela arrives for a press conference for Barbed Wire, and is quickly grilled by a journalist about magazine Penthouse's acquisition of her sex tape, despite her attempts to brush them off by insisting she's taking 'legal steps' and that she and Tommy were 'victims of a burglary.' As Rande's sales of the tape continue to tank thanks to bootleggers, he is ambushed by Butchie, who demands to know Miltie's whereabouts, and after taking out his rage on Rande's knee, issues a chilling threat if he doesn't get his $50,000. He quickly pens a cryptic note for Tommy asking him to meet him at Dodgers Stadium with $27,000, aptly ending the letter: 'All the best, Karma.' Pensive: Meanwhile a pregnant Pamela arrives for a press conference for Barbed Wire, and is quickly grilled by a journalist about magazine Penthouse's acquisition of her sex tape, despite her attempts to brush them off So many questions: After being pressed by one journalist, she insists she's taking 'legal steps' and that she and Tommy were 'victims of a burglary. Elsewhere, Pamela prepares for an appearance on Jay Leno's chat show, while her team and Tommy eagerly watch backstage, and the presenter quickly begins to pry on the infamous tape. While Pamela feigns ignorance by insisting she doesn't know which tape he's referring to, viewers then get a glimpse of her actual fury, as she dramatically tells Jay it's been 'devastating,' before snapping back into character with a playful smile. As Tommy furiously threatens to take his rage out on the late night host, Pamela reminds him that the coming days need to focus on her big film role, and he exists to 'solely make easier for her,' before heading to her hotel alone. Scary: As Rande's sales of the tape continue to tank thanks to bootleggers, he is ambushed by Butchie, who demands to know Miltie's whereabouts, and after taking out his rage on Rande's knee, issues a chilling threat if he doesn't get his $50,000 Shameless: Elsewhere, Pamela prepares for an appearance on Jay Leno's chat show, while her team and Tommy eagerly watch backstage, and the presenter quickly begins to pry on the infamous tape Furious: While Pamela feigns ignorance by insisting she doesn't know which tape he's referring to, viewers then get a glimpse of her actual fury, as she dramatically tells Jay it's been 'devastating,' before snapping back into character with a playful smile Watching Sleepless in Seattle, Pamela breaks down in tears during the moving phone scene, before calling Tommy to say how much she 'misses' him, unaware her husband is preparing to meet Rande in the deserted parking lot. Despite having the money in hand, Tommy reminds Rande that while he may be a 'bad person,' his wife Pamela didn't deserve to be put through such an ordeal, and after branding his former handyman a 'loser' sensationally burns his cash. Running back to Butchie empty-handed the gangster says he's going to get $3,200 he's owed from a gambler, and instead of using his powers of persuastion, will have to use force. Fuming: As Tommy furiously threatens to take his rage out on the late night host, Pamela reminds him that the coming days need to focus on her big film role, and he exists to 'solely make easier for her,' before heading to her hotel alone Emotional: Watching Sleepless in Seattle, Pamela breaks down in tears during the moving phone scene, before calling Tommy to say how much she 'misses' him, unaware her husband is preparing to meet Rande in the deserted parking lot Rage: Despite having the money in hand, Tommy reminds Rande that while he may be a 'bad person,' his wife Pamela didn't deserve to be put through such an ordeal, and after branding his former handyman a 'loser' sensationally burns his cash Development: The following morning, Pamela and Tommy get a call from their lawyer about the lawsuit against Penthouse, but learn the judge threw out the case after deciding stills from the tape were still 'newsworthy' The following morning, Pamela and Tommy get a call from their lawyer about the lawsuit against Penthouse, hopeful that a quick verdict meant it was ruled in their favour. But sadly, the couple learn the case was thrown out after the judge ruled against them, by deeming the tape 'newsworthy,' meaning Penthouse are free to run images from the racy video. Given her reluctance to take legal action in the first place, Pamela is quick to see through the jargon, stating that in reality she is being deemed a 's**t with no rights who doesn't get a say in what happens to pictures of her body.' Angry: Given her reluctance to take legal action in the first place, Pamela is quick to see through the jargon, stating that in reality she is being deemed a 's**t with no rights who doesn't get a say in what happens to pictures of her body' Use force! Running back to Butchie empty-handed the gangster says he's going to get $3,200 he's owed from a gambler, and instead of using his powers of persuastion, will have to use force Really? Asking Erica whether she's seen the video, she admits she found their whole exchange 'super wholesome and romantic,' and found Tommy 'strangely likeable' to his clear rage At odds: Finally getting hold of Miltie, who is in the midst of yet another drug-fuelled romp, the pair have a chilling exchange before he hangs up the phone in fury Bat in hand, Rande confronts gambler Albert about Butchie's money, but can't go through with using force, and is furious to see the headline that Penthouse won the legal case. Asking Erica whether she's seen the video, she admits she found their whole exchange 'super wholesome and romantic,' and found Tommy 'strangely likeable' to Rande's clear rage. Finally getting hold of Miltie, who is in the midst of yet another drug-fuelled romp, the pair have a chilling exchange before he hangs up the phone in fury. The day is here! Clad in a jaw-dropping PVC jumpsuit, Pamela finally gets her moment in the spotlight at the Barbed Wire premiere, with the couple eagerly putting on the PDA despite journalists' questions about the Penthouse case Upset: Despite being praised by Tommy for the performance, after the screening she overhears two critics branding the film a 'steaming pile of s**t,' and her husband quickly rushes her away to another theater where the film is playing Worry: Sneaking into the screening, the pair hear fans laughing in disbelief, with their reaction changing from delight to utter shock Reaching the end of his tether, he tearfully confesses to Erica that he stole Tommy and Pamela's safe, and reacts in absolute rage by reminding her ex that their tape is a far cry from the consensual sex performed by porn stars on screen because they sign 'f*****g releases,' and kicks him out. Clad in a jaw-dropping PVC jumpsuit, Pamela finally gets her moment in the spotlight at the Barbed Wire premiere, with the couple eagerly putting on the PDA despite journalists' questions about the Penthouse case. Despite being praised by Tommy for the performance, after the screening she overhears two critics branding the film a 'steaming pile of s**t,' and her husband quickly rushes her away to another theater where the film is playing. Sneaking into the screening, the pair hear fans laughing in disbelief, with their reaction changing from delight to utter shock. Rande takes out his frustrations on Albert by demanding he pay up Butchie's money, aptly repeating he only 'did it to himself,' and the episode ends on a sad note as a disappointed Pamela and Tommy drive home from the premiere. Pam & Tommy is available on Hulu in the US and Disney+ in Europe. Infuriated: Reaching the end of his tether, Rande tearfully confesses to Erica that he stole Tommy and Pamela's safe, and reacts in absolute rage by reminding her ex that their tape is a far cry from the consensual sex performed by porn stars Authorities have launched an investigation after the body of a woman was found burning in a shopping cart near downtown Los Angeles. A man arriving to work made the gruesome discovery Tuesday morning near North Main and Wilhardt streets in the Chinatown neighborhood, NBC 4 reported. Firefighters responded to the scene around 5 a.m. to find the remains still burning despite the workers best efforts to put out the flames. Advertisement Its not clear whether or not the woman was alive when she was set ablaze. Police said her body was so badly burned that they could not determine her age. The woman has not been identified nor has a cause of death been determined. Authorities are investigating the case as a potential homicide. Advertisement Surveillance video from a nearby business captured a man riding a bicycle around the same time as the fire, but no one has been arrested. (Shutterstock) We dont know if this is homeless-elated, Lt. Ryan Rabbett told KTLA. We dont if its gang-related. We really are in the preliminary stage of this investigation. He said authorities are also investigating a potential, second crime scene. Anyone with information on the death has been asked to call 877-LAPD-247. Nick Grimshaw and Emma Willis have teamed up to host a makeover show on Channel 4, which will see family homes transformed in just three days. The former BBC Radio One host, 37, and the former Big Brother presenter, 45, took to their respective Instagram accounts to share details about their exciting new venture. The show, called The Great Home Transformation, will come to screens in spring and will see the pair help to transform family homes across the country in just three days. Project: Nick Grimshaw and Emma Willis have teamed up to host a makeover show on Channel 4, which will see family homes transformed in just three days Emma revealed the makeovers will be achieved using a 'revolutionary truck' and 'specialist technology'. On his social media, Nick said he is 'obsessed with all things design' as he voiced his excitement about the project while sharing a picture of himself and Emma. In the snap, his eye for design was apparent as he and Emma seemed to have coordinated their checkered jackets to match both each other and the colourful wallpaper behind them. Alongside the pictures, he wrote: 'Ooooooh I am so excited to announce that me and @emmawillisofficial are joining forces for a brand new series on @channel4. New show: The former BBC Radio One host, 37, and the former Big Brother presenter, 45, took to their respective Instagram accounts to share details about their exciting new venture Big news: The show, called The Great Home Transformation, will come to screens in spring and will see the pair help to transform family homes across the country in just three days. 'As you know I am obsessed with all things design so cannot wait for you to see how we are gonna be transforming family homes across the UK. 'The Great Home Transformation is coming to your screens this spring.' Meanwhile, Emma revealed further exciting details about the makeover show on her Instagram account, writing: 'This Spring we will be transforming family homes across the country in just three days, with the help of a revolutionary truck, specialist technology and interior design intelligence. 'Isn't that right @nicholasgrimshaw?! The #GreatHomeTransformation is coming soon to @channel4.' In a unique twist, the six-part series will see the redesign work mostly done by Emma and Nick and the families, a source told The Sun. Makeover show: Emma revealed the makeovers will be achieved using a 'revolutionary truck' and 'specialist technology' Design: In a unique twist, the six-part series will see the redesign work mostly done by Emma (pictured in July) and Nick and the families The source said the makeovers won't include any structural changes, showing Britons at home ways to radically change their own homes through 'smart design'. They added: 'For a bit of extra oomph, each episode will include a big reveal of a 'secret room' for one family member, to tug on the heartstrings a little.' It is the first big TV job for Nick since he left BBC Radio 1 last summer, ending his 14-year stint presenting with the station. Insiders said at the time that Nick had made the decision to leave his popular show because he wanted a new challenge. Speaking on his show at the time, Nick said of his exit: 'I have some news guys, some big news. It's big news for me to announce. I want to do it at the start of the show otherwise I'll be weird for the next two hours. 'I've been thinking about it for a little while, after 14 years of working here I've made a big decision.' He added: 'It a huge decision, an exciting one and a happy one. It's something I've given a lot of thought. Radio 1 is home to me. It's the only station I've wanted to work. 'I was thinking the past 18 months have been the most surreal moments ever. A lot of you guys, you take stock in times like this and look at your life. I looked at mine and I wanted to make that change. 'My childhood dream was to work on Radio 1 and I have been lucky enough to make that dream come true. 'It has been everything I'd imagined and even more. I grew up wanting to connect with people and to feel accepted and the Radio 1 listeners gave me that and let me be part of their daily life, for which I will be eternally grateful. New challenge: It is the first big job for Nick since leaving BBC Radio 1 last summer, ending his 14-year stint presenting with the station 'But over the last few months I've been doing a lot of thinking about my future and after 14 years, I've made the decision that it's time for me to move on - I'd like to thank the listeners as without them none of this could have been possible and the Radio 1 family, who have been such a huge part of my life. Thank you thank you thank you.' At the time, insiders told MailOnline Nick's decision to leave Radio 1 'isn't about money', but because he wants a new challenge. A source said: 'It's not about the money. He's done Drivetime, the Breakfast show, hosted late night but now he's stepping away from radio as he wants a new challenge. 'Nick's loved every minute of his time at Radio 1 and loves broadcasting. He will still be starring on Celebrity Gogglebox. 'He has been at Radio 1 for 14 years and wanted a change.' Fernanda Gimenez made sure all eyes were on her as she arrived at the world premiere of The Batman in New York City on Tuesday. The TikTok star commanded attention as she went braless in a sheer mini-dress on the star-studded red carpet. Fernanda, 19, left almost nothing to the imagination as she put on a steamy display with her content creator beau Sebastien Andrade. Wow: Fernanda Gimenez made sure all eyes were on her going braless in a sheer mini-dress as she arrived to the world premiere of The Batman in New York City on Tuesday Fernanda, who rose to fame by sharing performances on her social media account looked sensational in the daring ensemble. The Instagram model contained her modesty by wearing a black thong which showed off her peachy derriere. The stunning brunette teamed the ensemble with a pair of black high-heel platform sandals which showcased her incredible pins. Hot! Fernanda, 19, left almost nothing to the imagination as she put on a steamy display with her content creator beau Sebastien Andrade The Uruguayan beauty styled her luscious locks up while leaving some curtain bangs framing her flawless face. The star wore a full palette of makeup with a dark smouldering eye. Meanwhile, media personality Sebastian looked edgy, nailing an all-black ensemble. Sizzling: The TikTok star commanded attention as she went braless in a completely see through sheer mini-dress as she posed up a storm on the red carpet The influencer looked smart in a long black satin blazer, jeans and a basic t-shirt. He paired the look with some chunky Chelsea boots while adding a hint of colour donning a gold link necklace. The social media couple put on a very amorous display for onlookers as Sebastian placed his hand on Fernanda's posterior. She also packed on the PDA by placing a protective hand on his chest while embracing him during the star-studded event. Steamy: The social media couple put on a very amorous display for onlookers as Sebastian placed his intimate hand on Fernanda's posterior Meanwhile, the movies leading stars Zoe Kravitz and Robert Pattinson had the world's eyes on them as they arrived to the premiere. Giving a nod to her character Catwoman, the 33-year-old actress stunned on the red carpet in a plunging black gown with a bust made to resemble a feline silhouette. The Matt Reeves-directed blockbuster hits theatres Friday, March 4, and sees Pattinson transform into the eponymous Caped Crusader. Stars: The film's stars Zoe Kravitz and Robert Pattinson had all eyes on them as the arrived to the world premiere of The Batman in New York City on Tuesday Australian streaming platform Stan has revealed its latest project, Bali 2002. The series, which has started production, is based on the October 2002 Bali bombings that killed 202 people, including 88 Australians. The inspiring drama explores how everyday heroes from Bali, Australia and beyond defied the odds to bring order from chaos and hope from despair. Work in progress: Australian streaming platform Stan has revealed its latest project, Bali 2002. (Pictured: actress and series star Rachel Griffiths) The upcoming show will feature an all-star cast, with Aussie actors Rachel Griffiths and Richard Roxburgh taking on the lead roles. It will also star Bridgerton actress Claudia Jessie, Nitram's Sean Keenan, Ewen Leslie and Arka Das, along with a diverse cast of Australian and Indonesian actors. The project is the first original drama series to be co-commissioned between Nine and Stan. Tragedy: The series, which has started production, is based on the October 2002 Bali bombings that killed 202 people, including 88 Australians. Pictured: the aftermath of the car-bomb explosion in Kuta The four-part series will premiere on Stan later this year, and will honour the everyday heroes who emerged from the tragedy. Bali 2002 has been developed in consultation with those directly impacted by the tragedy, which saw attacks on tourist hotspots. The Bali terror attacks took place on October 12, 2002, with two of Kuta Beach's busiest nightclubs left decimated by explosions. Starring role: The upcoming series will feature an all-star cast, with Aussie actors Rachel Griffiths and Richard Roxburgh (pictured) taking on the lead roles In the aftermath, Balinese locals teamed up with Australian and British tourists to rescue those injured in the blasts. Amidst this chaos, heroes arose from the most unlikely places and cultures united in the search for healing, justice and meaning. Stan Chief Content Officer Cailah Scobie said: 'Bali 2002 promises to be a powerful, inspiring and sensitively told drama series that pays respect to everyday heroes from Australia, Bali and beyond.' Bali 2002 the series will be available on Stan later this year. Advertisement She's jetted to Talum, Mexico for a work trip to shoot a new campaign. And Molly-Mae Hague was spotted taking in her beautiful surroundings on Tuesday as she took a break from a beach photoshoot. The Love Island star, 22, showed off her incredible figure in a skimpy white bikini layered under crochet trousers as she strolled along the sand. Gorgeous: Molly-Mae Hague was spotted taking in her beautiful surroundings on Tuesday as she took a break from a beach photoshoot in Talum, Mexico Molly-Mae flaunted her tan in her chic beachwear, with her plunging, halterneck bikini top highlighting her curves. The skimpy bikini bottoms were on show underneath her white crochet trousers, which the influencer pulled up to her waist. Going barefoot, Molly accessorised with statement shades and pinned her wavy blond locks into a half up style. Curves: The social media influencer flaunted her derriere in her sheer trousers and thong bikini as she relaxed during a break from work Life is a beach: Molly-Mae flaunted her tan in her chic beachwear, with her plunging, halterneck bikini top highlighting her curves Kicking back: She took a stroll along the sand, with an iced coffee in hand while waiting for the next shot to be set up The star posed in a pair of white bikini bottoms and an oversized Nike T-shirt in the picture shared on Instagram on Tuesday. The beauty kept her signature blonde locks up in a bun, as she looked out onto the ocean. Molly shared the picture to her 6.2 million followers, captioning: 'Fallin into your ocean eyes' (sic) What a look: The skimpy bikini bottoms were on show underneath her white crochet trousers, which the influencer pulled up to her waist Dressed for the sunshine: Going barefoot, Molly accessorised with statement shades and pinned her wavy blond locks into a half up style Busy: The creative director of Pretty Little Thing spent her break busily checking her phone Is that Tommy? Molly was also seen FaceTiming on her phone, chatting animatedly and laughing at the screen The Influencer and Creative Director is currently in Tulum, Mexico for a work trip as she shoots a campaign. She revealed that she was 'filming something very special' to her fans through Instagram on Tuesday. During her trip, she has also been sharing snaps of the beautiful Mexican scenery, alongside her bikini-clad content. Time of her life: The star looked like she was catching up with her boxer beau Tommy Fury who is back home in the UK In paradise: Molly-Mae is in Mexico for a work trip, with the star sharing teasing updates on her social media channels Jet-set: The Love Island star is back travelling again, jetting off for a number of work trips and beach shoots over the past few months Gorgeous: Molly-Mae looked every inch the top model as she took a moment to herself during her busy day shooting What a view: The blonde beauty was see staring out at the beautiful blue ocean as she enjoyed the Mexico sunshine Toned: Molly-Mae set pulses racing as she showed off her toned figure in a new Insta snap from Mexico on Tuesday Busy: The influencer and Creative Director is currently in Tulum, Mexico for a work trip as she shoots a campaign However, Molly took to Instagram on Monday to reveal her 'guilt' for posting content during the ongoing Ukraine crisis. Reaching out to fans via her story, Molly admitted she felt it was 'impossible' to go on with life as normal. She created a poll, in which she asked fans whether they thought she should continue posting updated about her life - or whether she should take a break from social media. Unsure: Molly took to Instagram on Monday to reveal her 'guilt' for posting content during the ongoing Ukraine crisis Fan feedback: despite Molly's guilt, 69% of her fans voted for her to continue to post as normal, as she shared a number of messages she had received Despite Molly's guilt, 69% of her fans voted for her to continue to post as normal, as she shared a number of messages she had received. Many of her followers described her content as light relief, offering reassurance for Molly to continue posting. The influencer also offered her support in the series of stories, writing: 'My DM's are always open, I really want to find other ways I can continue using my platform to raise awareness.' Rosario Dawson looked nothing short of sensational as she attended the opening night of the Italian Cultural Institute's Filming Italy festival in Los Angeles on Tuesday. The actress, 42, showed off her chic sense of style in a plunging black blazer and matching trousers as she posed on the red carpet as the A-list event at Harmony Gold. She paired the stylish ensemble with a pair of black heeled boots and wore her slick black locks in a blown out style. Strike a pose: Rosario Dawson looked nothing short of sensational as she attended the opening night of the Italian Cultural Institute's Filming Italy festival in Los Angeles on Tuesday Rosario beamed as she sported a full face of glam makeup for the event and accessories with silver hoop earrings. The event was attended by other high-profile entertainers including Joe Manganiello who cradled his beloved pet chihuahua Bubbles on the red carpet. The actor, 45, dressed to impress in a burgundy suit which he wore over a black silk shirt and donned a pair of black dress shoes. Joe proudly posed with his pooch as he sported some silver stubble and styled his dark locks up straight. Adorable: Joe Manganiello dressed to impress in a burgundy suit as he cradled his beloved pet Chihuahua Bubbles on the red carpet Tixiana Rocca and Gabriele Muccino also attended the 7th edition of the Filming Italy Event in LA. The Festival will explore human rights, the future of young people, equal opportunities, the recovery of the film industry after the lockdown. There will be more than fifty screenings including films, TV series, docufilms, short films, as well as some masterclasses. Work it: The actress looked chic in a black blazer and matching trousers and elevated her height with a pair of black heeled boots Trio: Filming Italy Los Angeles Artistic Director Tiziana Rocca (left), director Gabriele Muccino (middle) and actor Rosario Dawson (right) attended the opening night of the Italian Cultural Institute's "Filming Italy Los Angeles 2022 Friends: Tiziana Rocca cut a glamorous figure in a black maxi dress and blazer as she snapped a picture with Joe Rosario recently split from New Jersey Senator Cory Booker, who was her boyfriend of almost three years. A source close to the A-list couple told People that Dawson and Booker have decided to put an end to their relationship, but remained in good terms and considered each other 'good friends.' The pair reportedly met at a fundraiser for then-Maryland gubernatorial candidate Ben Jealous in 2017. Rumors that they had broken up first emerged in November last year, with two sources telling Marie Claire that the power couple had decided to go their separate ways due to their conflicting schedules and the distance. Dawson and Booker were first spotted flirting at the Broadway show Dear Evan Hanson, with Booker allegedly singing 'I love you' to Dawson while they took pictures with the cast backstage. Rumors soon emerged that the Senator and The Mandalorian actress were together. In February 2019, Booker confirmed he was in a relationship but declined to say who her partner was. 'I'm dating somebody really special,' he told the radio show The Breakfast Club,'I got a boo.' Dawson then confirmed the relationship to TMZ in March that year, adding that she was grateful to be with somebody she 'respected, admired and loved so much.' Larry Emdur has called out looters for stealing from houses and businesses amid the devastating floods in New South Wales and Queensland. The Morning Show host, 57, shared a typed message to his Instagram page on Wednesday, slamming 'beyond pathetic' individuals for stealing 'from people who have lost everything'. Major flooding is underway on the Brisbane, Logan, Bremer and Mary Rivers, and Warrill Creek, after the torrential downpours of the past week, while the floods in northern New South Wales have now made their way down to Sydney. 'You are beyond pathetic!' Enraged Larry Emdur, 57, called out looters for stealing from houses and businesses in the NSW and QLD flood zones in an Instagram post on Wednesday. Pictured with his The Morning Show co-host Kylie Gillies on the Seven network 'Dear absolute f***ing a***holes looting houses and businesses in the devastated flood zones,' Larry wrote. 'Know this, every single person in Australia hates you write now! Stealing from people who have lost everything... You are beyond pathetic!!' he continued. The Channel Seven star captioned the post, 'This makes me so mad and so so sad'. Outrage: Larry shared this typed message to his Instagram page, slamming 'beyond pathetic' individuals for stealing 'from people who have lost everything' Using his platform: The TV presenter added the hashtags 'Un-Australian', 'pathetic' and 'please catch them' He added the hashtags 'Un-Australian', 'pathetic' and 'please catch them'. The death toll from the floods in northern New South Wales has risen to three after a man's body was found in the Lismore CBD on Wednesday. The deluge has now made its way down to Sydney with residents told to 'prepare for the worst'. A major flood warning was issued on Wednesday afternoon for the Hawkesbury and Nepean rivers in the city's west and north-west, where residents are already on high alert for deadly floods. Devastating: The weather system has seen huge swathes of New South Wales and southern Queensland battered by days of relentless rain Massive rain storm: Northern NSW has been devastated by floods this week (pictured in Lismore on Wednesday) The first evacuations have begun in the city's south-west with parts of Milperra, Chipping Norton and Lansvale ordered to leave immediately as the Georges River rises. Major flooding is underway on the Brisbane, Logan, Bremer and Mary rivers, and Warrill Creek, after the torrential downpours of the past week. More than 1.77m of rain fell on Mount Glorious, 1.55m at Pomona on the Sunshine Coast and 1.23m at Upper Springbrook on the Gold Coast in seven days. Brisbane copped 795mm - the city's wettest week since records began in 1840 - with Premier Annastacia Palaszczuk saying much of the wider region is devastated. ALISON BOSHOFF: When he was cast as Prince Charles in The Crown , the naysayers had a field day. Dominic West was too muscular, had too much hair and was far too sexy to play the role. She made a memorable appearance at the Saint-Laurent show with her son Romeo. And Victoria Beckham continued to showcase her sophisticated sense of style as she stepped out in a stylish black shirt dress from her own collection during Paris Fashion Week on Wednesday. The designer, 47, donned her $890 dress with a belt to highlight her slender waist as she headed into the French capital. Out and about: Victoria Beckham continued to showcase her sophisticated sense of style as she stepped out in a stylish black shirt dress during Paris Fashion Week on Wednesday Cutting a chic figure, Victoria sported the long-line black shirt dress with a matching belt along with her signature sunglasses. Adding a pop of colour, the fashion show favourite accessorised with bright orange heels and a cross-body bag from her own range. Finishing her outfit with a thin silver sparkly bracelet, Victoria sported yet another fashion-forward look as she headed into the city ahead of the latest show. Arrival: The designer donned a simple black shirt dress with a belt to highlight her slender waist as she headed into the French capital Gorgeous: Cutting a chic figure, Victoria sported the long-line black shirt dress with a matching belt along with her signature sunglasses Sensational: Victoria sported a pair of her signature sunglasses as she stepped out in Paris during Fashion Weeek Perfection: Adding a pop of colour, the fashion show favourite accessorised with bright orange heels and a cross-body bag from her own range Sensational: Finishing her outfit with a thin silver sparkly bracelet, Victoria sported yet another fashion-forward look as she headed into the city ahead of the latest show Just hours earlier, the star made an eye-catching appearance at the Saint-Laurent show alongside her son Romeo, who towered over his PVC-clad mother as they posed ahead of the event together. The designer opted for a smart lilac sweater over clashing red PVC trousers, a look she teamed with distinctive red stiletto heels. Joining his fashion conscious mother, Romeo wore a baby pink woollen sweater over loose fitting acid wash jeans and box fresh white trainers. Height advantage: Not many can leave Victoria in the shade, but her taller than average son Romeo made a valiant attempt as they attended Paris Fashion Week on Tuesday evening Daring: The fashion designer said on Instagram they were have favourite 'squeaky pants' as she showed off the red PVC trousers from her collection Here she is! Exiting her hotel in Paris ahead of another day of fashion shows, Victoria proudly displayed her sleek and simple sense of style Meanwhile the Beckhams have begun work on a new machinery store at their 6 million farmhouse in the Cotswolds. Images from the site show that preparations are underway to build the adjacent unit on the land surrounding their lavish home, just weeks after winning permission to build an outhouse. Since purchasing their Cotswolds home in December 2016, the couple have clashed with neighbours over plans to build a lake, wine cellar and guard house on the property. Rumours: Meanwhile the Beckhams have begun work on a new machinery store at their 6 million farmhouse in the Cotswolds In the works: Images from the site show that preparations are underway to build the adjacent unit on the land surrounding their home, weeks after winning permission to build an outhouse Drama: Since purchasing their Cotswolds home in December 2016, the couple have clashed with neighbours over plans to build a lake, wine cellar and guard house on the property David and Victoria submitted the plans to West Oxfordshire District Council in May 2021. It also comes in the wake of increased speculation that Victoria's old band The Spice Girls are planning to reunite for The Queen's Platinum Jubilee later this year, after signing confirmation papers stating she is still part of the band The documents, filed with Companies House, confirmed that she will be an active director of Spice Girls Ltd for at least another year. Development: David and Victoria submitted the plans to West Oxfordshire District Council in May 2021, and spent much of the Covid lockdown isolating at the property Claims: It also comes in the wake of increased speculation that Victoria's old band The Spice Girls are planning to reunite for The Queen's Platinum Jubilee later this year Paperwork: Victoria signed confirmation papers stating she is still part of the band News: The documents, filed with Companies House, confirmed that she will be an active director of Spice Girls Ltd for at least another year Entrance: As ever Victoria put on yet another stylish display in her fun black shirt dress as she stepped out in Paris Here she is! She made an eye-catching appearance in the city in her chic look Stepping out: The one-time pop star was later seen leaving her hotel and taking son Romeo and his girlfriend Mia Regan to a restaurant for dinner Style queen: The star looked as glamorous as ever as she went about her business, dressed in the same outfit as earlier in the day 'If she wanted to quit the band and had no wish to perform again then she'd have resigned as a director last week,' a source told the Sun. 'She'd still obviously get her cut of record sales but wouldn't be involved in any decision-making like going on tour or performing. 'Victoria signing the confirmation papers as a director for another year shows she's still an active member of The Spice Girls.' MailOnline contacted Victoria's representatives for comment at the time. Street fashion show: The artist formerly known as Posh turned the sidewalk into something of a catwalk as she made her way to her car Taking strides: The star could be seen teetering on a pair of heels as she made her way to the vehicle Glamour puss: The fashionista gave a glimpse at her slender leg through a thigh-high split in her dress Family affair: Victoria's son Romeo went for a casual look for the evening for his meal out with his mother Filming has finally commenced on the Netflix biopic based on the successes of self-made millionaire Dave Fishwick. Phoebe Dynevor was seen arriving on the set at Burnley Centre Library sporting a stylish red biker jacket and a chic black blouse as she arrived on set for the first time alongside Rory Kinnear transformed into the charismatic businessman. The feel-good film will tell the story of how David set up no-nonsense lending company Burnley Savings and Loans, also known as the Bank Of Dave, which has helped a range of businesses in the area. Arrival: Phoebe Dynevor has been seen filming scenes for Netflix biopic Bank Of Dave for the first time as she battled the rainy weather on the set in Burnley on Tuesday Braving the rainy weather, Phoeoe donned a stylish red biker leather jacket teamed with grey boyfriend jeans as she arrived onto the set. Despite the blustery conditions, the star was in good spirits as she got into character to play a fiery local doctor named Alexandra. After rising to prominence in the period drama Bridgerton in 2020, Phoebe has made her feature film debut in The Colour Room, and will reprise her role as Daphne in the Netflix series later this month. Glimpse: Actor Rory Kinnear has transformed into the self-made millionaire David Fishwick, heading to the set with Joel Fry Spitting image: Rory (left) is the dead ringer for the businessman and author David (right), who set up no-nonsense lending company Burnley Savings and Loans Chic: Braving the rainy weather, Phoebe donned a stylish red biker leather jacket teamed with grey boyfriend jeans as she arrived onto the set Standing out: The star donned a simple black blouse under the jacket and her brunette tresses styled into loose waves as she began filming Keeping warm: In an attempt to combat the wet weather, Phoebe wrapped up in a cosy blue padded coat with an umbrella over her head Rory was also seen heading onto Burnley High Street to film scenes with Joel Fry, who plays a lawyer named Hugh who is hired by Dave to fight his case against the British banking system. As the cameras rolled, Rory showed David's generous nature by handing money to a street performer. Dave himself previously shared the news that his life would be turned into a biopic with This Is Money last month. Exciting: Phoebe is set to play a fictional character for the Bank Of Dave, taking on the role of a fiery local doctor named Alexandra Screen star: After rising to prominence in the period drama Bridgerton in 2020, Phoebe has made her feature film debut in The Colour Room He has now lent nearly 30million via his bank and currently has a three year waiting list for people to open a savings account. He made his money selling minibuses, a business that he says continues to thrive despite the recent chip shortage hitting the vehicle market. During and after the financial crisis, he was fed-up with how businesses were struggling to get finance for vehicles and the rest is history. He took matters into his own hands, setting up a bank, presenting a hugely successful and award-winning Channel Four programme and publishing a best-selling book, though there were plenty of big hurdles along the way. Still smiling? Despite the unpleasant weather conditions, Phoebe still mustered a smile as she arrived on set Wrapping up warm: She donned a thick padded jacket over her outfit in an attempt to stay warm between scenes The film will tell the story of how the working class Burnley man fought against all the odds to set up the community bank, so that he could help the local businesses of Burnley. In his bid to help Burnley, he took on the elitist financial institutions of London and fought to receive the first new banking license to be issued in Britain for more than 100 years. Joel Fry, who recently starred as a lead in big-budget family movie Cruella, plays Hugh who is hired by Dave to fight his case against the British banking system. Back to work: Rory was also seen heading onto Burnley High Street to film scenes with Joel Fry, who plays a lawyer named Hugh who is hired by Dave Big money: David has now lent nearly 30million via his bank and currently has a three year waiting list for people to open a savings account Money maker: In his bid to help Burnley, David took on the elitist financial institutions of London and fought to receive the first new banking license to be issued in Britain Hard at work: Later Rory was seen heading to the Burnley Court House to film further scenes, where Dave was surrounded by reporters full of questions about his case The film has been written by Piers Ashworth from Save The Cinema, Blithe Spirit and St Trinian's - who also wrote the first draft script of Mission Impossible for Tom Cruise. The movie is being directed by award-winning up and coming director, Chris Foggin, who made the British feel good film Fisherman's Friends, also based on a true story about a folk music group from Port Isaac, Cornwall. Dave himself previously said: 'To have a global movie filmed here in Burnley about such an important part of my life, is truly amazing. Hitting back: It's likely that they were filming scenes surrounding the case David brings against the British banking system Exciting: The film has been written by Piers Ashworth from Save The Cinema, Blithe Spirit and St Trinian's - who also wrote the first draft script of Mission Impossible for Tom Cruise Anticipated: The movie is being directed by award-winning up and coming director, Chris Foggin, who made the British feel good film Fisherman's Friends 'David Henshaw and myself was overwhelmed, when we were approached with the idea of making the film. All our team at The Bank of Dave are incredibly excited.' Chris Foggin, director of the film, said: 'I was immediately drawn to this story about the triumph of community, and I'm delighted to be working with such a wonderful cast. I truly believe the world needs films like this.' Piers Tempest adds: 'This is such a great story and I'm delighted to be working with Chris and the team on the film, which I am sure will really resonate with audiences worldwide.' Jodie Turner-Smith, 35, has been giving fans a look inside her and 43-year-old husband Joshua Jackson's Fashion Week travels with loved-up Instagram snaps. The Nightflyers actress shared a number of pictures to her Instagram on Tuesday of her and Joshua enjoying a date night in Milan on Friday for the Gucci show. The pair dazzled in their respective Gucci ensembles, with Jodie sporting a blush frilled-lace dress while Joshua donned a baby blue suit. Adorable! Jodie Turner-Smith, 35, shared some loved-up Instagram snaps from Milan and Paris with husband Joshua Jackson, donning Gucci outfits as they headed to the show in Milan The spouses both looked chic in black Gucci sunglasses as they strolled through Milan in one image In the Instagram carousel, Jodie also shared an image of the two spouses in an elevator - with the Little Fires Everywhere actor resting his head on his wife, alongside selfies of the pair as they headed to the Gucci show. Jodie also showed off her cleavage as she posed in an ultra-chic Gucci suit - featuring a blue pattern design. City of love: The couple are currently in Paris for Fashion Week, with Jodie sharing their day of sightseeing to her Instagram Stories on Tuesday Chic: Jodie sported a blush frilled-lace dress at the show while Joshua donned a baby blue suit as they attended a Gucci event Flying visit: Jodie captioned the post: '12 hours in Milano as guests of Gucci' The beauty opted for an avante-garde style look, with small diamante's creating a wing from her eyelid and a voluminous high ponytail. She captioned the post: ' 12 hours in Milano as guests of Gucci' She also gave a special mention to Creative Director of Gucci, Alessandro Michele, writing: 'My dear @alessandromichele, i am honoured to be alive to witness your iconic reign at this incredible fashion house. The show was exquisite' (translated) Dressed to impress: The couple supported Gucci in both cities during the respective fashion week's, after Jodie recently walked in the brand's Hollywood Boulevard runway show Downtime: Joshua and Jodie enjoyed a glass of wine in the French capital Stunning! Jodie also showed off her cleavage as she posed in an ultra-chic Gucci suit - featuring a blue pattern design Dapper: The spouses both looked chic in black Gucci sunglasses in Milan On Tuesday, actors and spouses Jodie and Joshua enjoyed the day in Paris - sharing pictures and videos as they enjoyed sightseeing, shopping and drinks. Jodie' story saw her and Joshua visiting the Louvre and the Eiffel Tower, as they cosied up with a glass of wine in the French capital. The couple supported Gucci in both cities during the respective fashion week's, after Jodie recently walked in the brand's Hollywood Boulevard runway show. Joshua and Jodie, who have been married since 2019, enjoyed the European getaway as they took a break from parenting their daughter Janie, who they welcomed in April 2020. Glowing! The beauty opted for an avante-garde style look in Milan, with small diamante's creating a wing from her eyelid and a voluminous high ponytail Wrapped up: the couple got cosy in an elevator in Milan - with the Little Fires Everywhere actor resting his head on his wife Sightseeing: they visited the Eiffel tour during their sightseeing down-time from Fashion Week Suave: Joshua's suit included Gucci stitching on the arm, alongside a pair of white trainers A JetBlue pilot was pulled off a plane at a Buffalo airport after failing a breathalyzer Wednesday morning. A spokesperson for the Niagara Frontier Transportation Authority told WIVB 4 that James Clifton, 52, of Orlando, had a 0.17 blood alcohol content, more than four times the legal limit for a pilot, according to the Federal Aviation Administration rulebook. Advertisement A Jet Blue airplane at John F. Kennedy International Airport in New York. (Seth Wenig/AP) The FAA also requires pilots to adhere to the rule 8 hours from bottle to throttle, wherein pilots do not consume alcohol for at least eight hours before flying. Some airlines have even stricter rules. The flight, which was set to depart for Fort Lauderdale at 6:15 a.m. was delayed for more than four hours and did not arrive in Florida until 1:11 p.m. Advertisement Its unclear if Clifton will be charged, but he was reportedly cooperative with police when he was removed from the cockpit after a TSA officer noticed he was acting drunk. The safety of JetBlues customers and crewmembers is our first priority, JetBlue told WGRZ in a statement. We adhere to all DOT rules and requirements concerning alcohol at all times and have a very strict zero tolerance internal alcohol policy. We are aware of the incident that occurred this morning in Buffalo and are cooperating fully with law enforcement. We are also conducting our own internal investigation. The crew member involved has been removed from his duties. Hollywood pinup and model Blanca Blanco has flown to Paris to be a part of fashion week. The actress - who has been in the series Tale Of Tails and the movie Betrayed - shared images from the city after landing on Monday. The author of the memoir Breaking The Mold also posted images where she was wearing lingerie in her swanky hotel, The Sofitel Paris Le Faubourg: 'Happy to be in the City of Love.' In France: Hollywood pinup and model Blanca Blanco has flown to Paris to be a part of fashion week this month The star showed off her figure in a top and panties. The actress has been vocal about how she likes to work out every day and skip the carbs to be in top shape for her career. The Washington state native walked in a show for French fashion designer Christopher Guillaume. The siren has had a long relationship with the designer becoming his muse. Leggy: The actress - who has been in the series Tale Of Tails and the movie Betrayed - shared images from the city after landing on Monday She looked stunning in a light purple floral print dress that looked inspired by Grace Kelly from the 1950s with its slightly off the shoulder sleeves. Her hair was parted on the side and worn back as she added red lipstick with a line under her bottom lip. The looker also had on oversized diamond earrings and a diamond necklace for added glamour. On the balcony: The brunette beauty also posted images where she was wearing lingerie in her swanky hotel: 'Happy to be in the City of Love' Backside: The star showed off her figure in a top and panties. The actress has been vocal about how she likes to work out every day and skip the carbs to be in top shape for her career The beauty also shared images where she was in a purple and black dress as she posed on the streets of Paris. This comes just after her memoir Breaking The Mold - which has become a bestseller - debuted. The book shares many details of her life like how her father use to beat her with a horse whip and how she was sexually assaulted in her 20s by a man pretending to be a movie producer. In the chapter about her sexual assault, Blanca writes that she was asked to star in a film by a small company. Showtime! The Washington state native walked in a show for French fashion designer Christopher Guillaume. The siren has had a long relationship with the designer becoming his muse Glam dame: She looked stunning in a light purple floral print dress that looked inspired by Grace Kelly from the 1950s with its slightly off the shoulder sleeves. Her hair was parted on the side and worn back as she added red lipstick with a line under her bottom lip. The looker also had on oversized diamond earrings and a diamond necklace for added glamour Showstopper! And then she was seen in a long light lilac dress with gauze down the front and feathers on the chest The Washington state native checked out the company and the man and everything seemed legitimate. So she went to meet the producer, who seemed legit and ready to work with her. But when he asked her to meet him on the film's set in a parking lot, there were no movie sets or crew members which made Blanca very nervous. She asked him where the staff was and that is when he sexually assaulted her. Luckily Blanca was a runner in high school and was fast enough to run away from the man but he caught up to her in her car and almost stopped her from driving away. Cute dress! The beauty also shared images where she was in a purple and black dress as she posed on the streets of Paris She has the right fashion moves: She posed with one leg out outside the Sofitel The door shut on her leg, almost breaking it, but she managed to drive away - with dog open and leg injured from the man. Blanca went to the police and she later found out there had been other complaints about the man, but he was not caught. She told the story in her book because she wanted to warn other young women about wily con artists who pretended to be what they were not. Blanco - who dates actor John Savage - released Breaking the Mold this year. Last year she told DailyMail.com exclusively about the release. A hot read: This comes just after her memoir Breaking The Mold - which has become a bestseller - debuted. The book shares many details of her life like how her father use to beat her with a horse whip and how she was sexually assaulted in her 20s by a man pretending to be a movie producer 'I wrote 'BREAKING THE MOLD' during the COVID lockdown, as I felt my story could help others because poverty and abuse has been increasing. I will take you on my journey from poverty to success and how I made it happen,' the Mission: Possible actress told DailyMail.com. 'I share and provide tools and techniques that worked for me,' she said about her book which is coming out from Briton Publishing. The Cannes Film Festival favorite added, 'My book is an autobiography and I share about childhood poverty, abuse, and how I overcame it. I feel it will motivate readers if they are caught in a bad situation.' Tough upbringing: The beauty's early years were a 180 where she had to suffer physical abuse from her father and also live a life of poverty in Washington state that saw her live in a garage for years The truth about her childhood: Now the star has written a memoir, titled Breaking the Mold, about her dark past and how she overcame the pain to flourish in Hollywood. The book will be out in 2022, DailyMail.com has learned exclusively She was isolated during her painful youthful, never having the support system she really needed, especially at school. 'I never told my classmates about our poverty, living in a garage, because I wanted to be treated just like them - a normal kid! No one knew, not even the teachers.' She also shared an excerpt with DailyMail.com about the abuse she endured. 'It happened when we were living in Mexico as children but the abuse continued throughout the years. The book will be out in early 2022 Her father was not loving, she said, and instead he was an 'abusive father and husband.' 'He used to beat us and used a Chicote a type of switch or whip used to control horses to beat us with,' she shared. 'He even held his gun to our mothers head and threatened to shoot her right in front of us. We were all scared of him, especially our mother. We were all crying and trying to protect our mother who he had pushed into the bed and we were surrounding her and begging him not to shoot. 'His rage and uncontrolled anger was all because she was asking him to give her money to buy us food when he suddenly snapped. 'This continued even when we were older. He went to attack me when our mother was dying but that time I squared up to him and dared him to touch me. Now I was older and not afraid of him any more. He backed down, shocked that I challenged him!' Blanco was born in Watsonville, California. At three-years old, her family moved to Southwest Mexico. Her father was a police officer there and was shot twice forcing the family to return to the U.S., to, hopefully, live the American Dream. Blanca was nine-years-old. She survived: 'I wrote 'BREAKING THE MOLD' during the COVID lockdown, as I felt my story could help others as poverty and abuse has been increasing and I will take you on my journey from poverty to success and how I made it happen,' the Mission: Possible actress told DailyMail.com exclusively A graduate... even though her father was abusive: 'He used to beat us and used a Chicote a type of switch or whip used to control horses to beat us with,' she shared. The book will be out in early 2022 'He even held his gun to our mothers head and threatened to shoot her right in front of us. We were all scared of him, especially our mother' HOW SHE COPED The star shares her tools that worked for her to deal with anxiety. She said she applied Cognitive Behavioral Therapy (cbt) techniques. 'The heartbreaking part was that I lost my sweet mom while writing my book, and I share in my book, I find my self crying a few times a week but I know she is no longer suffering but sadness is there,' said Blanca. She also advises to 'trust your intuition; it's there for a reason.' And she said if you are not challenged, then there is no growth. 'Experiences shouldn't be a waste of time, walk with confidence. YOU are a diamond. 'It may seem like forever, but doors do open eventually. Move forward; it's hard to go backwards. It's ok to be an outcast. Even if you fall on your face. You're still moving forward.' 'Education is not given its earned, own it. "Are you breathing?" Be thankful you are breathing with no pain Live for Today. 'You woke up today, its already a good day' 'Haters will hate that only means that you are exactly where they wish they were - it's uncomfortable to go backwards literally.' Advertisement Her family of seven lived in poverty for her entire childhood, residing in a small garage with no hot water, no shower and no heat while facing the frigid winters of Washington State. They then moved into a tiny trailer in a small trailer park, often with unsafe water causing sickness. She attended Chelan High School where she became determined not to remain in poverty. Upon leaving school she became the schools role model for younger graduating students and made a motivational video to help them. With the help of her guardian angel, a teacher who cared, she said, she achieved 'full ride scholarships enabling her to continue on to college then to university.' She became the first Latina woman in the area to go to college working hard in order to graduate and continue her full ride scholarships, where she took an associate of science degree from Spokane Falls Community College. She then went on to Washington State University achieving a 4.0 grade average and earned a bachelors degree in psychology followed by masters degree in social work from Eastern Washington State University. Her first job after receiving her Masters in Social Work degree was working in hospice care. Deciding to follow her dreams, she moved to Los Angeles where she became an actress and studied under Gordon Hunt (Helen Hunts father). She immediately landed many roles in film and television. The star achieved a Best Supporting Actress award for her role as Melanie in the movie Betrayed. The foreword is by Edward I. Byrnes, Ph.D. Professor of Social Work Eastern Washington University. She tragically miscarried quadruplets at 14 weeks last year. On Wednesday, Jorgie Porter, 33, revealed that she had no idea she'd lost her quadruplets because her body was 'still being pregnant' after enduring a missed miscarriage. The Hollyoaks star explained she opted for surgical removal while her fiance Ollie Piotrowski discussed feeling 'helpless' throughout the ordeal, as the couple appeared together on Loose Women. No idea! On Wednesday, Jorgie Porter, 33, revealed that she had no idea she'd lost her quadruplets because her body was 'still being pregnant' after enduring a missed miscarriage Jorgie first recalled learning about the pregnancy, telling the Loose Women panel: 'I was excited that we got pregnant because that's what we wanted. We went for an early scan because we've got twins in our family - on both sides. 'The doctor said we can see three sacks - we had no idea what that meant. They said "we're gonna rush you into a hospital appointment". 'With that one we were told there were four sacks. We were still not the wiser, until she said "quadruplets." Ollie, who she's been dating since 2020, added: 'I fell over!' while Jorgie admitted she panicked: 'My body is too small!' Heartbreaking: The Hollyoaks star explained she opted for surgical removal as she appeared with her fiance Ollie Piotrowski on Loose Women All new: 'Before we found out it was quadruplets I thought "this is insane what pregnant women go through",' admitted Jorgie of the early stages of her pregnancy Four times the hormones: 'Throughout the pregnancy it was not really enjoyable - my hormones were just... Having the hormones times four was just really stressful' she explained She continued: 'So we were just shocked. And throughout the pregnancy it was not really enjoyable - my hormones were just... 'When you are pregnant you wanna tell some people, and you don't tell many people early on. I'm not sure why. But, I don't like to keep a secret. I like to tell everyone what's going on in my life. 'Having the hormones times four was just really stressful. I was in work with costumes. Within three or four weeks my body started to change dramatically and costumes wouldn't fit. Tragic: Turning to her devastating miscarriage, Jorgie recalled: 'During our fifth or sixth scan, they said "you've had a miscarriage, they've gone." I was ready for girl gang' No signs: Asked if there were signs she'd miscarried, Jorgie explained: 'No, it was a missed miscarriage, so my body was still being pregnant and doing the symptoms of pregnancy' 'Before we found out it was quadruplets I thought "this is insane what pregnant women go through".' What is a missed miscarriage? A missed miscarriage, also known as a missed abortion or a silent miscarriage, occurs when a foetus dies, but the body does not recognise the pregnancy loss or expel the pregnancy tissue. As a result, the placenta may still continue to release hormones, so the woman may continue to experience signs of pregnancy. It's usually diagnosed during a routine checkup, where the doctor will fail to detect a heartbeat. A subsequent ultrasound will show an underdeveloped foetus. Advertisement Turning to her devastating miscarriage, Jorgie recalled: 'We were going for scans regularly because we were being looked after. 'And it was during our fifth or sixth scan, they said "you've had a miscarriage, they've gone." I was ready for girl gang. Asked if there were any signs she'd miscarried the Hollyoaks star explained: 'No, that was another thing. It was a missed miscarriage, so my body was still being pregnant and doing the symptoms of pregnancy' 'The next bit is really heartbreaking, the question of how they're gonna go. The hospital said... there are options where... how do we get rid of this? 'So we went through the route of surgery so I could be knocked out. I didn't wanna see and hear things... 'They've never really done this surgery before so they didn't know what the outcome could be. They said there could be a lot of blood loss.' Ollie added: 'It was kind of just thrown on just that it was a miscarriage. As a man it was really helpless and scary. Thankfully the couple have come out even stronger, with Georgie admitting: 'We do talk a lot. We are really good the fact that we communicate a lot.' Ollie explained: 'I cried straight away, while you were really tough and strong. Then a few days later you had a meltdown and I had to be strong.' Real talk: 'It was kind of just thrown on just that it was a miscarriage. As a man it was really helpless and scary' added Ollie Strong: Thankfully the couple have come out even stronger, with Georgie admitting: 'We do talk a lot. We are really good the fact that we communicate a lot' Amid the couple's heartache, Jorgie shared the happy news that Ollie had popped the question three weeks before Christmas. The actress, best known for her role as Theresa McQueen in the Channel 4 soap, got engaged to Ollie while staying at the Gleneagles Hotel in Perth and Kinross. The former Dancing On Ice star and her fiance have been dating since 2020 and went Instagram official in October of that year. Jorgie returned to Hollyoaks in 2020 as part of a storyline to mark the soap's 25th birthday. Laura Anderson arrived in style at Manchester Airport on Tuesday. The former Love Island star, 32, was dressed casual and chic when she was spotted outside the arrivals hall after an eight hour flight from her current home in Dubai. The Scottish influencer made sure to be prepared for the drop in temperatures as she wrapped up in an elegant camel trench coat. Globetrotter: Laura Anderson arrived in style at Manchester Airport on Tuesday as she was dressed casual and chic after an eight hour flight from Dubai The former cabin crew member kept her travel choice comfy and she looked relaxed in a Balenciaga jumper, with side stripe sweatpants. Laura was the epitome of jet-setting fashion as she carried a Louis Vuitton Neverfull MM tote bag while walking outside the terminal in a pair of grey ultra mini Ugg boots. The blonde beauty finished off the look with a purple beanie, hat which added a pop of colour to her neutral travel attire. Vitamin sea: Laura has set up home in Dubai and is known for posting some sultry snaps in the sun (pictured in January) Happy homecoming: The former air-steward kept her travel attire causal and comfy as she looked relaxed in a Balenciaga jumper, with side stripe sweatpants Stylish: The blonde beauty looked finished off the look with a purpose beanie hat which added a pop of colour to the overall travel attire Home time: The Scottish native looked refreshed as she carried her personalised pink marble initial suitcase along while wheeling her additional belongings into an awaiting car Back on home soil: The influencer made sure to be prepared for the drop in temperatures as she wrapped up in an elegant camel trench coat Laura looked refreshed as she carried her personalised pink marble initial suitcase along while wheeling her additional belongings into an awaiting car. She wore a radiant palette of makeup with lashings of mascara while blonde waves were styled to perfection. It comes as Laura recently underwent a hair transformation, by chopping her long extensions into a chic bob after being inspired by Nicole Scherzinger . The TV personality took to Instagram last week to debut the new look, filming herself with her long blonde tresses before cutting to the glamorous shorter hairdo. Wearing a full face of glamorous makeup accentuating her pretty features, she donned a simple grey t-shirt for the first clip, with her hair styled poker straight. Wow! Laura Anderson has undergone a hair transformation, by chopping her long locks into a chic bob, (left) after being inspired by Nicole Scherzinger She then underwent both a hair makeover and an outfit change, slipping into a hot pink blazer, with her new hair styled in curls. Laura was inspired by Nicole who also underwent a chop earlier this week, and revealed her new hairdo the same way with the same audio. Captioning the video, Laura wrote: 'I did it. Inspired by the Scherzy'. Inspiration: Laura was inspired by Nicole who also underwent a chop earlier this week, and revealed her new hairdo the same way with the same audio The transformation comes after Laura explained why she forgave her boyfriend Dane Bowers and took him back three years after he cheated on her. The TV personality met Dane at a party in November 2017 where they had instant chemistry, despite their 10 year age gap and began dating. However, Laura was rocked when she discovered that Dane was seeing someone else six months in. She explained to The Sun: 'We weren't in a relationship at that point, and we never said we were exclusive, but I was disappointed, so I confronted him and ended it.' German supermodel Anna Ewers has had an incredible ascension in the modeling world as she has gone from newcomer to a fashion favorite in a handful of years. And now the 29-year-old blonde beauty has landed on the cover of Elle's March digital issue. The 5ft9in looker was seen in this season's most beautiful resort wear - which included a lot of swimwear - while enjoying the Moroccan sun at a luxurious resort. Ready for her closeup: German supermodel Anna Ewers has had an incredible ascension in the modeling world. And now the 29-year-old blonde beauty has landed on the cover of Elle's March digital cover Chanel girl: She also showed off her incredibly toned figure in a stunning black-and-white Chanel bikini with a gold, pearl and rhinestone belt for the cover She also showed off her incredibly toned figure in a stunning black-and-white Chanel bikini with a gold, pearl and rhinestone belt for the cover image. And there was a red swimsuit with cutouts that brought out her best features. The photogenic wonder was also seen in a blue one-piece suit as she lay on a white and red striped bed. Ewers spoke to ELLE about how she got her start in modeling, how she is helping forge a supermodel renaissance, and why she keeps her private life off Instagram. 'That's one thing that makes me wish [we were back] in the '90s, because there was no social media,' Ewers said as she chuckled. Legs for days: The 5ft9in looker was seen in this season's most resort wear - which included a lot of swimwear - while enjoying the Moroccan sun at a luxurious resort Elle time: Ewers spoke to ELLE about how she got her start in modeling, how she is helping forge a supermodel renaissance, and why she keeps her private life off Instagram 'I see my job as a job, and my private life as my private life, and I don't know why I would have to share my everyday life with everybody else. I don't want to see that a model drinks coffee in the morning. It's not very mysterious,' added the catwalker. She told the publication that she had on her bedroom wall the 1993 old black-and-white Calvin Klein ad featuring Kate Moss. Anna was around 12 at the time. Privacy please: 'That's one thing that makes me wish [we were back] in the '90s, because there was no social media,' Ewers said as she chuckled Don't ask: 'I see my job as a job, and my private life as my private life, and I don't know why I would have to share my everyday life with everybody else. I don't want to see that a model drinks coffee in the morning. It's not very mysterious,' added the catwalker 'It was a very different time, but an amazing time for the industry,' says the now-29-year-old model, who has been compared to Claudia Schiffer. On posing alongside Moss in a 2015 David Yurman campaign after admiring her career from afar. 'I was nervous to meet her, but she was very sweet and very, very cool,' Ewers said. A Moss fan: She told the publication that she had on her bedroom wall the 1993 old black-and-white Calvin Klein ad featuring Kate Moss. Anna was around 12 at the time Tops: 'It was a very different time, but an amazing time for the industry,' says the now-29-year-old model, who has been compared to Claudia Schiffer The setting: Elle also shared a photo of the pool on the eye-popping property Anna also shared that she is looking forward to a trip to Tuscany in Italy to visit her boyfriend. 'We trained our dog to be a truffle dog and we just got our license, so I am very excited to find truffles!' said the star. ELLE's March 2022 digital cover can be seen on ELLE.com. Pink lady: On posing alongside Moss in a 2015 David Yurman campaign after admiring her career from afar. 'I was nervous to meet her, but she was very sweet and very, very cool,' Ewers said Danniella Westbrook showed off the results of a year's worth of face surgery, filler and Botox in glamorous snaps as it's revealed she's set to go under the knife to have part of her rib put in her cheek. The former EastEnders star, 48, opened up on her upcoming operation which she hinted may take its 'toll' on her, with the star having the procedure after her cheek was left damaged by botched dental work. Danniella, who looked amazing in new images, also shared that she's currently going through 'a lot of operations at the moment' as she told of her ongoing treatments to restore her face. Transformation: Danniella Westbrook showed off the results of a year's worth of face surgery, filler and Botox in glamorous snaps as it's revealed she's set to go under the knife to have part of her rib put in her cheek The way she was: The actress' battle with drugs has been well-publicised, and she famously had her nose reconstructed after her septum collapsed from excessive cocaine use in 2002 The mum-of-two had previously undergone the rib procedure in 2018, after osteoporosis rotted away her cheekbones and gums. And speaking to OK! magazine about her latest bout of facial reconstruction, she explained: 'I'm going through a lot operations at the moment. They're good but they're very hard.' She continued: 'The first two of my operations haven't taken a toll on me but the next lot will do. I'm seeing a bone surgeon next who is going to be removing a rib.' Surgery: The former EastEnders star, 48, opened up on her upcoming operation which she hinted may take its 'toll' on her, with the star having the procedure after her cheek was left damaged by botched dental work 9pictured in 2021) MailOnline have contacted Danniella's rep for further comment. The actress has spent the last year getting lip filler and Botox, in addition to surgery on her face as she works hard to get back to her best. And it appears the hard work has paid off as Danniella looked stunning in glamorous new snaps. The former Celebrity Big Brother star sported a white robe and a sleek palette of make-up as she lay down on a fancy bed in lovely new images. Wow: The actress has spent the last year getting lip filler and Botox, in addition to surgery on her face as she works hard to get back to her best it appears the hard work has paid off as she looked stunning in glamorous new snaps She was seen smiling away while posing for the camera, no doubt excited for what's to come in 2022. Last month, Danniella revealed that she was looking forward to her upcoming set of surgery. Sharing a throwback snap of herself on Instagram, she penned: 'Cant wait for all my surgery to be done will be back too my best and fighting fit and next year I will be 50! Bring it on Im ready. More than ready , Im ready for a full transformation physically. Danniella previously discussed first undergoing the procedure four years ago during an appearance on Good Morning Britain. Looking ahead: Last month, Danniella revealed that she was looking forward to her upcoming set of surgery as she shared a throwback snap from 2009 (pictured) She explained: 'When I was doing excessive amounts of drugs and lost my nose I would have got it then, not after being 13 years clean. I wouldn't have just got it in the last three years." On her dental work that went wrong, she said: 'The screws, which they have left in, the bone didn't close around them when I had implants, which led to blood getting into the bone so it just died. 'That gave me the septicaemia which gave me the bone disease and started rotting away and it's all down to that. 'They were going to have to take some of my skull but they're going to use a floating rib.' Touching her cheek, she went on: 'I have no cheek bone here at all where it's just gone from osteoporosis, nothing to do with cocaine at all. 'If it was I would openly say that it was, like I did before with my nose.' Open: Danniella previously discussed first undergoing the procedure four years ago during an appearance on Good Morning Britain The news of her upcoming procedure comes months after she underwent surgery for a sinus infection. The actress previously told her fans that she was waiting to go to theatre at Aintree University Hospital, after doctors feared the nasty infection, which saw her end up in ICU, could 'reach her brain'. The following day, the former EastEnders star announced that the surgery had been a 'huge success' and she came bearing more good news for her concerned Twitter followers. She wrote in November: 'Thanks for all the messages of support for my operation. It was a huge success and Im so happy thank you to @LivHospitals and the best staff surgical team and cleanest hospital ever x #NHS #Liverpool,' she said. Her hospitalisation comes after she vowed to turn her life around following years of drug abuse and relapsing onto 'cocaine and champagne' earlier in 2021. The actress' battle with drugs has been well-publicised, and she famously had her nose reconstructed after her septum collapsed from excessive cocaine use in 2002. At the height of her use, it was reported she would take up to five grams of cocaine a day, blowing close to 250,000 on the drug. The star has since embarked on multiple rehab stints in order to battle her demons - and revealed she was finally clean in June 2020, after attending a clinic in Mijas, Spain. Recovery: The news of her upcoming procedure comes months after she underwent surgery for a sinus infection James Nesbitt looked tense as he returned as DCI Tom Brannick while filming new scenes for the second series of BBC's Bloodlands in Belfast. The Northern Irish actor, 57, cut a smart figure in a pastel blue shirt and dark trousers, which he paired with a tie, a jumper, and a grey speckled overcoat as he embodied the notorious lead character. He looked grave as he walked into a coffee shop on Donegal Streel in new scenes, where he met with Lola Petticrew, who plays his on-screen daughter Izzy Brannick. He's back! James Nesbitt cut a smart figure in a pastel blue shirt and tie, which he paired with trousers and a grey speckled overcoat as he embodied lead character DCI Tom Brannick Lola looked effortlessly chic in a mustard yellow cardigan, which they paired with a green neckerchief and a grey collared jacket. The Dating Amber star, 26, styled their brunette tresses in a short pixie cut - a strikingly different look from their normal fringed bob. Although the shots gave nothing away, both actors looked tense as the second series of the crime drama will no doubt bring unexpected twists and turns in the already complex storyline. Fans were left wondering what the six-part second series will hold for the father-and-daughter duo after the tense finale revealed the mysterious serial killer 'Goliath' was none other than Brannick himself. Bloodlands: He looked grave as he walked into a coffee shop on Donegal Streel in new scenes, where he met with Lola Petticrew, who plays his on-screen daughter Izzy Brannick A description of the plot for the second series says a murder of a crooked accountant threatens to expose Brannick's identity, forcing him to keep the accountant's widow Olivia (Victoria Smurfit) 'dangerously close'. According to BelfastLive, it adds: As they try to solve the riddle her husband left behind, and become more and more immersed in the puzzle of each other, Tom and Olivia draw in Tom's fellow officers DS Niamh McGovern (Charlene McKenna), DCS Jackie Twomey (Lorcan Cranitch) and DC 'Birdy' Bird (Chris Walley), as well as his daughter, Izzy (Lola Petticrew), until deceit and betrayal build to a shattering climax.' It is not clear when the second series drama, which is executive produced by Line of Duty creator Jed Mercurio, will air but it is expected later this year. The first series saw James' character Brannick investigating a kidnapping with links to 'Goliath', who last struck in County Down 23 years ago, just before the Good Friday Agreement was signed. What's to come? The first series of Bloodlands ended with Brannick cuddling his daughter Izzy on the sofa Among Goliath's suspected victims was Brannick's wife Emma, an intelligence agent investigating terrorism. But in the series finale, it was revealed that Brannick himself was 'Goliath', with fans left on the edge of their seats waiting to discover what will happen next. Dozens of viewers said the fast-paced series finale left them with 'more questions than answers', with one claiming she needed a 'whole PowerPoint presentation' to explain what was going on. Viewers were first introduced to Brannick as a concerned husband and father determined to uncover what happened to his wife, whom he believed had gone undercover and disappeared. But it quickly became clear that all was not as it seemed. It transpired Emma was having an affair with Protestant paramilitary godfather David Corry, who was shot dead by Goliath on an island in Strangford Lough, County Down. Unexpected: Fans were left wondering what the six-part second series will hold after the tense finale revealed the mysterious serial killer 'Goliath' was none other than Brannick himself Goliath was also behind the murders of IRA quartermaster Joe Harkin and IRA arm-dealing priest Father Simon Quinlan. When Corry's brother Adam revealed the affair to Brannick in the second episode, the detective did not hesitate in shooting him dead. At the start of the finale, Brannick's boss DCS Jackie Twomey (Lorcan Cranitch), was being treated as the prime suspect in the Goliath case. In a scene reminiscent of Line of Duty, Heather Pentland (Susan Lynch) grilled Twomey but ultimately there was not enough evidence to tie him to the murders. DS Niamh McGovern (Charlene McKenna) grew suspicious of Brannick's reaction to the inconclusive interview and began to suspect he had framed Twomey. By speaking in Irish Gaelic - a detail which was widely praised by viewers - she was able to communicate her suspicions to Twomey in secret. At the same time, McGovern was uncovering Brannick's connections to the Goliath murders, he was ambushed by the henchmen of kidnap victim Pat Keenan (Peter Ballance), who still wanted revenge. Brannick was eventually exposed as Goliath by Dr Tori Matthews (Lisa Dwan), the illegitimate daughter of Goliath murder victim Quinlan and Izzy's university tutor. Using Izzy as a lure, Matthews convinced Brannick to come to her holiday cottage in the mountains, where he finally revealed what had happened more than two decades ago. Brannick explained how in early 1998, in the build-up to the Good Friday Agreement, he had received a phone call from David Corry, who claimed to be holding Emma after discovering she had infiltrated his loyalist terror operation. Secrets revealed: Brannick was exposed as Goliath by Dr Tori Matthews (Lisa Dwan), pictured, the illegitimate daughter of Goliath murder victim Quinlan and Izzy's university tutor Brannick claimed he was told he had to 'do certain things' if he wanted to see his wife again. This involved killing Harkin and Quinlan on the island in the lough, where they were awaiting a delivery of a weapons shipment. After shooting the two men dead, Brannick waited for Corry. He was shocked when Corry arrived with his lover Emma, and shot Corry dead. But he couldn't kill his own wife and told her to 'disappear'. An emotional Brannick sobbed as he confessed his crimes to Matthews and sent her to retrieve the gun he had used to murder Quinlan, Harkin and the Corry brothers, saying he simply wanted to tell his daughter himself before turning himself in. Observant: Brannick's fellow officer DS Niamh McGovern (Charlene McKenna), pictured, is set to be drawn into further 'deceit' and 'betrayal' in the second series But when Matthews arrived at the lough island in search of the gun, she was ambushed by Keenan, who had been tipped off by Brannick as to where he could find the woman who had kidnapped him. Keenan shot Matthews dead, using the 'Goliath' gun. Brannick arrived to shoot Keenan dead. When the police arrived, having tracked Brannick's mobile phone, they found the detective with a gun in hand, standing over two bodies. He claimed he had killed Keenan, who must be Goliath, because he was armed and dangerous. The episode concluded with Petland and Twomey debriefing Brannick, who said he was convinced Keenan had been Goliath. She spent January looking for love while filming for series 10 of Celebs Go Dating. But, Jessika Power has sparked speculation that she faked being single in order to appear on the show, after she recently moved in with her boyfriend Connor Thompson. The Australian reality star, 30 - who reportedly signed a 40,000 deal to be on the E4 dating series - has reportedly engaged bosses for 'wasting everyone's time.' Faked it? Jessika Power, 30, has sparked speculation that she faked being single in order to appear on series 10 of Celebs Go Dating, which filmed in January A source told The Sun: 'Everyone thinks Jessika has been with Connor the whole time. She has now moved him into her apartment and they are no longer hiding their romance. 'The whole 'split' was very convenient so she could cash her cheque but not surprisingly she didn't meet anyone on the show. It's wasted everyone's time really and bosses aren't happy.' Stars who sign up for the show have contracts which stipulate they must be single throughout the process. It was previously claimed that Jessika moved to the UK for Conner back in October, but split after just eight days when she signed up to do the reality show. MailOnline has contacted Celebs Go Dating and Jessika Power's representative for comment. Totally single? Just last month, the reality star was claiming to be single but recently moved in with her boyfriend Connor Thompson (Pictured on January 29) Whoopsie! The Australian reality star - who reportedly signed a 40,000 deal to be on the E4 dating series - has reportedly engaged bosses for 'wasting everyone's time' Just last month, Jessika was claiming to be single while going on dates with numerous men while being filmed for the E4 show. The former Married At First Sight Australia star even took one potential love match away on the mini-break, before heading straight back to podcaster Connor. Despite claiming they were no longer together, Jessica reportedly angered show bosses by travelling back and forth from London to Manchester to see him. They were spotted kissing in the street at one point, and the pair continued to post loved-up photographs to social media despite their split. Yikes: The former Married At First Sight Australia star even took one potential love match away on the mini-break (pictured), before heading straight back to podcaster Connor Festive "friends"!? It was previously claimed that Jessika moved to the UK for Conner, but split after just eight days when she signed up to do the reality show (Pictured on December 24) Jessica first found fame on Married At First Sight Australia last year after cheating on her husband Mick Gould with their co-star Dan Webb. But now the star lives in Manchester, and has applied for residency in the UK, where she has been living on a work visa for the past few months. If approved, she can stay in Britain for another five years. It comes after the blonde gave an update on her financial status, boasting she 'no longer worries about money' after joining the adult subscription service OnlyFans. 'I've had it since August last year and I am able to purchase two new houses... guess it's worth it,' she said in a video on her Instagram Stories. 'I've also funded my whole lifestyle to come here [The UK], I flew first class, I just bought tickets to Dubai in business class,' she continued. Jessika, who earns up to $120,000 per quarter as an adult model, told The Daily Telegraph she wants to use the website 'for good'. 'I have always used my platform to talk about confidence, body confidence, self-esteem and female empowerment,' she explained. Kelly Rizzo posted a touching tribute to her late husband, Bob Saget, to her Instagram Story on Tuesday. In her clips, the 42-year-old media personality spoke about working through the grief that she had experienced after the comedian's passing. The Full House star was found dead at the age of 65 in a Florida hotel room this past January, and numerous tributes poured out from his fans and former costars. Expressing her thoughts: Kelly Rizzo posted a touching tribute to her late husband, Bob Saget, to her Instagram Story on Tuesday Rizzo began her message by expressing her gratitude to all of the fans who had helped her through her period of mourning. 'I just wanted to take a second to say to everybody that it has not gone unnoticed. I have been incredibly grateful and appreciative of all of you for the love and support,' she said. The travel blogger also pointed out that she had been able to connect with new people through the social media platform, stating: 'I have had people who were strangers that now have become friends on Instagram.' Rizzo then spoke about expressing her grief after Saget's passing to the public ad noted that she was unprepared for the experience. Showing her gratitude: Rizzo began her message by expressing her gratitude to all of the fans who had helped her through her period of mourning Opening up: Rizzo then spoke about expressing her grief after Saget's passing to the public ad noted that she was unprepared for the experience; she is seen with the late comedian in 2018 'Even though I'm still very new to this world, I feel I've had kind of a crash course in it. Especially doing it very publicly, it adds a whole other level that takes it to this different place that you understand in a certain way,' she said. The social media personality remarked that she had 'been doing my best to try to even engage with people and respond to comments.' Rizzo again stated that she wanted 'to tell everyone how thankful and grateful and appreciative I am of everything that you've all done to try to help me through this incredibly difficult time.' She added: 'So many people have shared their stories with me of the loss that you've been through...and it's just really kind that you've tried to help me by sharing your stories.' Adjusting: The social media personality remarked that she had 'been doing my best to try to even engage with people and respond to comments' The social media personality made a point of stating that the outpouring of support from her followers had made her grieving process much less difficult. 'I can assure you that the kindness you all have shown has been a little bright spot and has made this a bit easier,' she said. Rizzo concluded by expressing that watching all of the support from the late actor's fans had been especially heartwarming. 'The thing that has really helped is seeing how much you all loved Bob because this outpouring is something, like, I don't think anybody has ever seen,' she said. Saget was found dead at a Ritz-Carlton hotel in the Orlando, Florida area on January 9th. He had been on a stand-up tour and performed at a venue in the area that same night. The late comedian was found by hotel workers who became concerned after he missed his check-out time. A funeral was held for the former Full House lead on January 14th, and many of his former costars attended the event. Saget was subsequently buried near the graves of his other family members at the Mount Sinai Memorial Park in Forest Lawn Cemetery. An autopsy later confirmed that the actor had died as a result of blunt force trauma, and People reported that he may have passed out in his bathroom and hit his head on the marble floor before stumbling into his bed and losing consciousness. No signs of foul play were found by local police in the comedian's hotel room. Saget's body was also tested for COVID-19, and although the tests yielded a positive result, the coronavirus was not thought to have been a factor in his death. She joined her boyfriend's mother in the front row during London Fashion Week last month, as they sat alongside Jourdan Dunn at the Supriya Lele show. And Mia Regan joined the Beckham clan once again on Wednesday, as she headed to a Louis Vuitton store in Paris with Victoria and Romeo. The model, 19, flashed her navel in a creamcropped knitted top with gold buttons, styled with a pair of grey wide-leg trousers and cuffed hem. Family affair! Mia Regan joined the Beckham clan once again on Wednesday, as she headed to a Louis Vuitton store in Paris with Victoria and Romeo The family could possibly have been getting kitted out for the Louis Vuitton show which traditonally closes Paris Fashion Week. Sticking with the neutral tones for the outing, the fashionista rocked a tan leather jacket which was adorned with some stylish patchwork. Mia stepped out in a pair of camel boat shoes, while bringing some bling wearing a chunky silver choker necklace and dazzling display of rings. She looked super chic in white shades while styling her hair in a messy bun, as she allowed her curtain bangs to flow freely down her pretty visage. Casual chic: The model, 19, flashed her navel in a creamcropped knitted top with gold buttons, styled with a pair of grey wide-leg trousers and cuffed hem Stepping out: Sticking with the neutral tones for the outing, the fashionista rocked a tan leather jacket which was adorned with some stylish patch work Accessories: Mia stepped out in a pair of camel boat shoes, while bringing some bling wearing a chunky silver choker necklace and dazzling display of rings So chic! She looked super chic in white shades while styling her hair in a messy bun, as she allowed her curtain bangs to flow freely down her pretty visage Elegant: While Mia opted for a fun look, Victoria, 47, opted for a chic and sophisticated ensemble as she joined the couple wearing a belted black dress While Mia opted for a fun look, Victoria, 47, opted for a chic and sophisticated ensemble as she joined the couple wearing a belted black dress. The fashion designer wore a black bucket bag over her shoulder, while she added a pop of colour with a pair of bright red suede stilettos. Victoria, who was seen piling into the back of a black car with Romeo and Mia after the shopping trip, wore her highlighted brunette tresses in soft waves. Here she is! The fashion designer wore a black bucket bag over her shoulder, while she added a pop of colour with a pair of bright red suede stilettos Low-key glam: Earlier in the day, influencer Mia beamed as she walked through the busy city throughcare snapping up some memories with a camera Coupled up! She was joined by her longterm boyfriend Romeo, 19, who was looking equally stylish in a pink knitted jumper which he teamed with blue jeans Details: Romeo accessorised his fashionable out fit with a pair of red trainers, quirky black shades and a silver chain necklace Earlier in the day, influencer Mia beamed as she walked through the busy city throughcare snapping up some memories with a camera. She was joined by her longterm boyfriend Romeo, 19, who was looking equally stylish in a pink knitted jumper which he teamed with blue jeans. Romeo accessorised his fashionable out fit with a pair of red trainers, quirky black shades and a silver chain necklace. Loved-up: The sweet couple held hands as they strolled through the centre of town and made their way into the designer store Romance: Mia and her beau Romeo went official with their romance in May 2019 and are still going strong Chatting: The couple appeared to be chatting away as they walked along beside each other The sweet couple held hands as they strolled through the centre of town and made their way into the designer store. Mia and her beau Romeo went official with their romance in May 2019 and are still going strong. Mia shared snaps of the couple relaxing by the sea to her Instagram account in January. Shopping trip? The family could possibly have been getting kitted out for the Louis Vuitton show which traditonally closes Paris Fashion Week Leading the way! Romeo led the way as Mia held is hand from behind Snapped! Mia documented the trip on her camera Pretty Little Liars alum Shay Mitchell showcased her bourgeoning baby bump in a glittery silver mini-dress to pre-tape the ironically titled Watch What Happens Live in Manhattan on Tuesday. The Canadian 34-year-old - who announced she was expecting her second child on February 7 - paired her plunging frock with a gold jacket and silver strappy stilettos selected by stylist Monica Rose. Hairstylist Danielle Priano coiffed Shay's (born Shannon) wet waves and make-up artist Ash K. Holm fully contoured her complexion. Maternity wear in 2022: Pretty Little Liars alum Shay Mitchell showcased her bourgeoning baby bump in a glittery silver mini-dress to pre-tape the ironically titled Watch What Happens Live in Manhattan on Tuesday Mitchell - who boasts 46.1M social media followers - Instastoried behind-the-scenes snaps of her dressing room at the boozy Bravo talk show hosted by Andy Cohen, which airs this Thursday. The Beis founder also posted a TikTok video of how she looked before the glam, before the moisturizing face mask, and before the chin lift mask. Shay lip-synched: 'Okay, sure I look like this right now, but if you send me one text that says something about mimosas or brunch I can be ready in like five minutes.' Missing from Mitchell's side in New York on Tuesday was her babydaddy - Dreamcrew CBO Matte Babel - and their two-year-old daughter Atlas Noa. Taking a page from Rihanna's book? The Canadian 34-year-old - who announced she was expecting her second child on February 7 - paired her plunging frock with a gold jacket and silver strappy stilettos selected by stylist Monica Rose Glam: Hairstylist Danielle Priano coiffed Shay's (born Shannon) wet waves and make-up artist Ash K. Holm fully contoured her complexion Airing this Thursday! Mitchell - who boasts 46.1M social media followers - Instastoried behind-the-scenes snaps of her dressing room at the boozy Bravo talk show hosted by Andy Cohen Make-up free: The Beis founder also posted a TikTok video of how she looked before the glam, before the moisturizing face mask, and before the chin lift mask Shay lip-synched: 'Okay, sure I look like this right now, but if you send me one text that says something about mimosas or brunch I can be ready in like five minutes' 'Honestly, it's been good. You know, when you make that initial [pregnancy] announcement it's kind of nice,' The Cleaning Lady executive producer told Variety on February 14. 'Now I can let it all hang out, literally. Like I said in the in the post, it's been a very up-and-down past few weeks [due to the death of my grandmother]. But I'm really excited and I know my Gram is too. We're excited for the new addition.' Shay is 'no rush to marry' the Canadian 41-year-old, whom she began dating in January 2017. 'I don't really know if that's in the cards of us. I think we both agree, maybe it's just me,' Mitchell told E! News Daily Pop back on August 3. Family: Missing from Mitchell's side in New York on Tuesday was her babydaddy - Dreamcrew CBO Matte Babel (L) - and their two-year-old daughter Atlas Noa (R) 'It keeps it sexy': The Cleaning Lady executive producer is 'no rush to marry' the Canadian 41-year-old, whom she began dating in January 2017 (pictured in 2020) 'Last week shooting #somethingfromtiffanys': Last month, Mitchell (R, pictured February 21) wrapped filming a mystery role in Daryl Wein's (M) rom-com Something from Tiffany's alongside Kendrick Sampson (L), Zoey Deutch, and Ray Nicholson Action! Oscar winner Reese Witherspoon's Hello Sunshine and Amazon Studios produced the engagement ring flick, which is based on Melissa Hill's 2011 novel (pictured February 9) 'There's no pressure here. I love it. I love the fact that we come home and every day I'm like, "I choose you and you choose me." It keeps us on our toes. I'm like, "Hey, I can walk out. I don't need to go through a lawyer, I can just walk out." And same with him. It keeps it sexy.' Last month, the Trese actress wrapped filming a mystery role in Daryl Wein's rom-com Something from Tiffany's alongside Kendrick Sampson, Zoey Deutch, and Ray Nicholson. Oscar winner Reese Witherspoon's Hello Sunshine and Amazon Studios produced the engagement ring flick, which is based on Melissa Hill's 2011 novel. Shay also reprised her role as bisexual entrepreneur Stella Cole in the 10-episode second season of Jordan Weiss' comedy series Dollface, which dropped February 11 on Hulu. Just a few months after handing over the reins to The 700 Club, televangelist Pat Robertson has pulled himself out of mothballs, er, retirement, to offer a unique, apocalyptic take on Russian President Vladimir Putins invasion of Ukraine. Appearing on the Christian Broadcasting Network, the 91-year-old said Putin was compelled by God to invade Ukraine. The Russian leader is fulfilling an apocalyptic prophecy that ends with him overrunning Israel, Robertson claimed. Advertisement Pat Robertson is predicting Biblical trouble. (Steve Helber/AP) I think you can say, Well, Putins out of his mind, the nonagenarian said in a video exerpted by Right Wing Watch on Twitter. Yes, maybe so. But at the same time, hes being compelled by God. Advertisement He went into Ukraine, but that wasnt his goal, said Robertson, who stepped back from his 55-year helming of the popular show late last year. His goal was to move into Israel ultimately. And God is getting ready to do something amazing. And that will be fulfilled. Breaking News As it happens Get updates on the coronavirus pandemic and other news as it happens with our free breaking news email alerts. > Robertson went on to describe his take on what Putin is doing, which is that hes setting Ukraine up as a staging ground to make his way across the Dardanelles Strait to Turkey, and from there ultimately to Israel which hes being called upon by God to invade, whether he knows it or not. Is Putin crazy? Is he mad? Well, perhaps. But God says, Im going to put hooks in your jaws, and Im going to draw you into this battle whether you like it or not, Robertson intoned. And hes being compelled after the move into the Ukraine, hes being compelled to move again, to get a land bridge, and then across the Dardanelles with Turkey, and watch whats going to happen next. You read your Bible, because its coming to pass. Pat Robertson came out of retirement to claim that Putin "is being compelled by God" to invade Ukraine in preparation for a massive End Times invasion of Israel. pic.twitter.com/Pmwybf57Ay Right Wing Watch (@RightWingWatch) February 28, 2022 Putin has framed some of his rhetoric around the Holocaust, notoriously saying that he aimed to de-Nazify Ukraine, whose president, Volodymyr Zelenskyy, is descended from Holocaust survivors. One of Russias airstrikes in Kiev on Tuesday hit the Babyn Yar Holocaust Memorial Site with missiles meant for the citys main television tower. Babyn Yar is where the Nazis massacred Ukraines Jews during World War II. Over two days in 1941 alone, Nazi killing squads executed more than 33,000 Jewish people there, at the bottom of a ravine, as The Washington Post noted. Babyn Yar is Europes largest mass grave of the Holocaust, advisory board chair Natan Sharanksy said in a statement confirming the strike. Even before it was hit, the centers leadership had condemned Putins misuse of Holocaust-related language. As experts who work with Holocaust research and commemoration, we are deeply outraged that the aggressor country has used genocidal rhetoric to justify its shameful actions, leaders of the center said in a statement quoted by Sharansky. Russia has vulgarly instrumentalized anti-Nazi rhetoric and is trying to take on the role of a fighter against Nazism. More than 1,500 Ukrainians, including civilians, have died since Russia sent troops in last weekend. This is not Robertsons first go-round with apocalyptic scenarios. At the beginning of the coronavirus pandemic, he said the scourge was Gods way to hold us guilty for abortion and same-sex marriage. He has also claimed that a plague of womens reproductive rights had made God send the terrorist attacks of 9/11 to our shores, and predicted several world-ending scenarios, none of which came to pass. Lucy Boynton looked casually chic as she left her hotel during Paris Fashion Week wearing a face mask on Wednesday. The British actress, 28, showed off her low-key sense of style in a grey jumper and checked trousers as she hopped into a waiting car. The girlfriend of Bohemian Rhapsody star Rami Malek completed her look with chunky black leather shoes and toted a designer bag. Out and about: Lucy Boynton looked casually chic as she left her hotel during Paris Fashion Week wearing a face mask on Wednesday The star made sure to put safety first by wearing a white surgical face covering over her nose and mouth to get into the car. Lucy wore her short blonde tresses in a sleek cropped do and opted for a pretty makeup look to show off her natural beauty. The blonde beauty was seen leaving Le Bristol Paris, one of the French city's best hotels. Stepping out: The British actress, 28, showed off her low-key sense of style in a grey jumper and checked trousers as she hopped into a waiting car Style: The girlfriend of Bohemian Rhapsody star Rami Malek completed her look with chunky black leather shoes and toted a designer bag Lucy's appearance comes after she was spotted enjoying a romantic date night with her boyfriend Rami Malek in Mayfair at the end of last year. The 40-year-old Oscar-winning actor and his girlfriend, who have been dating since 2018, cosied up in a booth at the upmarket eatery Isabel. Their romantic outing followed reports that Rami moved Lucy into his Los Angeles home last September. Careful: The star made sure to put safety first by wearing a white surgical face covering over her nose and mouth to get into the car The look: Lucy wore her short blonde tresses in a sleek cropped do and opted for a pretty makeup look to show off her natural beauty Fancy: The blonde beauty was seen leaving Le Bristol Paris, one of the French city's best hotels An insider told The Mirror: 'Things are going well for Rami and Lucy. The pandemic meant they spent a lot of time together and solidified their relationship. 'He's over the moon and all their friends are saying they are soulmates,' they added. The pair met on the set of Bohemian Rhapsody in 2017. Advertisement Jennifer Lopez was hard at work on Wednesday as she threw herself into the screenplay of her latest venture. The award-winning actress, who is often described as a triple threat on account of her horde of talents, looked relaxed on a balcony in Gran Canaria as she held the script for upcoming action film The Mother. Surrounded by crew members on the Spanish island, J.Lo, 52, fully immersed herself into learning her lines, burying her head in the words while occasionally stopping to stretch. Getting the Lo'down! Beaming Jennifer Lopez was spotted in Gran Canaria learning her lines for upcoming action film The Mother on Wednesday The make-up free artist ensured comfort was at the heart of her look while she got into character, as she donned a cream knit jumper and scraped her hair into a tousled ponytail. The American A-lister was bound to showcase her years of expertise in the field as she rehearsed extensively with film crew ahead of the movie's scheduled release this year. The Mother is directed by Niki Caro, who is also behind Whale Rider, 2020's live action version of Disney's Mulan and The Zookeeper. Practise makes perfect: The award-winning actress, who is often described as a triple threat on account of her horde of talents, looked relaxed on a balcony Line learning: J.Lo, 52, was hard at work as she threw herself into the screenplay of her latest venture Crew: The accoladed artist ensured comfort was at the heart of her look while she got into character, as she donned a cream knit jumper and scraped her hair into a tousled ponytail While Jennifer's character has not been divulged, the plot centres on an assassin who comes out of hiding, while feeling fleeing from dangerous assailants, to protect her daughter she left earlier in life. Other famous faces starring in the future big screen feature include Joseph Fiennes, Omari Hardwick and Gael Garcia Bernal. Filming commenced last October but was halted on January 11 2022 due to the COVID variant outbreak. New role: The American A-lister was bound to showcase her years of expertise in the field as she rehearsed extensively with film crew ahead of the movie's scheduled release this year Intirguing: While Jennifer's character has not been divulged, the plot centres on an assassin who comes out of hiding to protect her daughter she left earlier in life One to watch out for: The film is scheduled for release in 2022 by Netflix Written by Misha Green (Spartacus), Andrea Berloff (Straight Outta Compton) and Peter Craig (The Town), the film is scheduled for release in 2022 by Netflix. Last month, it was announced that the Jenny From The Block hitmaker will be receiving the Icon Award at the 2022 iHeartRadio Music Awards on March 22. She will receive the gong, 'honouring her impact on pop culture, longevity and continued relevance as a touring and radio force with a loyal fan base worldwide.' The superstar has a string of hit songs on her discography, from Waiting For Tonight from the 1990s to the recent soundtrack for her film Marry Me. Now in its ninth year, the iHeartRadio Music Awards will celebrate the most-played artists and songs on iHeartRadio stations and the iHeartRadio app throughout 2021, while also offering a preview of the upcoming hits of 2022. Laura Whitmore stunned as she walked the red carpet at the NME Awards on Wednesday night at London's O2 Academy Brixton. The television presenter, 36, opted for an edgy PVC mini-dress with puff sleeves by Rotate Birger Christensen for her evening out at the bash. Love Island host Laura showed off her long slender legs and looked statuesque as she stood tall on a pair of black heels and posed with her hand on her hip. In style: Laura Whitmore, 36, stunned as she walked the red carpet in an edgy PVC mini-dress at the NME Awards on Wednesday night at London's O2 Academy Brixton The broadcaster wore lashings of make-up to highlight her pretty facial features and wore her hair partially scraped back and resting behind her ears. Laura struck a number of poses on the red carpet, ensuring onlookers got a good look at her outfit. The media personality took to Instagram before the event, posing in her hotel room before her departure. Strike a pose: Love Island host Laura showed off her long slender legs and looked statuesque as she stood tall on a pair of black heels and posed with her hand on her hip The NME Awards ceremony was co-hosted by comedian Daisy May Cooper and Grime star Lady Leshurr and featured performances from Griff, Rina Sawayama, BERWYN, CHVRCHES and Robert Smith of The Cure. Bad Guy hitmaker Billie, 20, contested for Best Solo Act In The World, Best Music Film for Billie Eilish: The World's A Little Blurry and Best Music Video for Happier Than Ever. Indie star Sam, 27, competed for the Best Album In The World and Best Album By A UK Artist prizes for Seventeen Going Under, while the album's title track received nods for Best Song In The World and Best Song By A UK Artist. Get the look: The broadcaster wore lashings of make-up to highlight her pretty facial features and wore her hair partially scraped back and resting behind her ears Posing up a storm: Laura struck a number of poses on the red carpet, ensuring onlookers got a good look at her outfit The Hypersonic Missiles hitmaker and Grammy-winner Billie went head-to-head with The Weeknd, Grime star Dave, Arlo Parks, Rina Sawayama, and more, to be crowned Best Solo Act In The World. Sam also received a nod for Best Solo Artist In The UK, along with Arlo, Dave, Simz and Rina. As for Wolf Alice, the Ellie Rowsell-fronted group's Mercury Prize-nominated album, Blue Weekend, was up for Best Album In The World and Best Album By A UK Artist, and the Smile rockers were also shortlisted for Best Band In The World and Best Band From The UK. Stepping out: The media personality took to Instagram before the event, posing in her hotel room before her departure Elsewhere, International stars, including Lana Del Rey, BTS, Olivia Rodrigo, Lorde, and Megan The Stallion were been nominated for some of the major prizes. Lana's latest LP, Blue Banisters, competed for Best Album In The World, along with the likes of Tyler, The Creator's Call Me If You Get Lost, and this year's Innovation Award winner, Halsey, and their LP If I Can't Have Love, I Want Power. BTS and Coldplay's My Universe secured a Best Collaboration nod and the K-Pop septet are also up for Best Song In The World for Butter. Social butterfly: Laura took to Instagram to share a snap of her dress, showing off the backless detail Olivia was also up for Best Song In The World for Good 4 U and Best New Act In The World. Lorde's Solar Power also had a chance of winning the coveted Best Song In The World prize. And rap megastar Megan contested with Bleachers, Bring Me The Horizon, IDLES, Little Simz, Rina Sawayama, Self Esteem, Tomorrow x Together, Wizkid, and Yungblud for Best Live Act. Ready to rock: The star captioned a snap 'come on' as she posed in the bathroom at her accommodation Ahead of the ceremony, it was announced that Bleachers' Jack Antonoff would be honoured with the Songwriter Award. Jack said: 'Looking at the company of artists who have received this award and I am absolutely humbled. This one goes out to everyone who writes and knows that sacred place it comes from. If you know it, it's a place you live in. This means the world to me.' 'To hear that Bleachers are also shortlisted for Best Live Act well that's the s**t. We play every show like the last night on earth. So this one means a hell of a lot to be recognised for it.' Jennifer Hudson is returning to her television roots with the launch of The Jennifer Hudson Show at Fox Television Station this fall. The 40-year-old Academy award-winning actress, who initially found fame after starring on American Idol in 2004, is 'positioned to be the new flagship' talk show once Ellen DeGeneres ends her 19-season run later this year, according to Variety. 'I have experienced so much in my life; I've seen the highest of the highs, the lowest of the lows, and just about everything in between, but as my mother always told me, "Once you think you've seen it all, just keep on living,"' she said in a statement. Congratulations! Jennifer Hudson is returning to her television roots with the launch of The Jennifer Hudson Show at Fox Television Station this fall; seen on Sunday at the Screen Actors Guild Awards in Santa Monica 'People from around the world have been a part of my journey from the beginning twenty years ago and I'm so ready to join their journey as we sit down and talk about the things that inspire and move us all.' While Hudson's new show is with a different network than Ellen's Warner Bros. TV, Degeneres' production company, Telepictures, is working on the Hudson show. In addition, 'executive producers Andy Lassner and Mary Connelly served as showrunners on Hudson's test show, which was shot last fall on DeGeneres stage.' She continued: 'I have always loved people, and I cannot wait to connect on a deeper level and let audiences see the different sides of who I am, the human being, in return. 'And I couldn't be more thrilled to do it alongside this incredible team. We're about to have a lot of fun and shake things up a little bit!' Moving on: Jennifer is 'positioned to be the new flagship' talk show once Ellen DeGeneres ends her 19-season run later this year, according to Variety DailyMail.com contacted Hudson's representatives for further comment about the new opportunity. David Decker, executive vice president of Warner Bros. Domestic Television Distribution, added: 'Daytime has found its Dreamgirl. We are excited to bring Jennifer Hudson to Fox, Hearst and all our broadcast station partners this fall. Warner Bros. stands as the cornerstone between A-list talent and top tier stations building successful brands that drive audiences.' DeGeneres announced in May that she was ending her long-running show after 19 seasons when her contract is up in 2022, following a toxic workplace scandal that plagued the comedian and also the long-running show. Ellen addressed accusations from both current and former employees that she had fostered a toxic workplace, and apologized during an opening monologue on her show last season. 'I have experienced so much in my life; I've seen the highest of the highs, the lowest of the lows, and just about everything in between, but as my mother always told me, "Once you think you've seen it all, just keep on living,"' she said in a statement; seen in 2021 Ellen who is married to Portia de Rossi pondered the decision 'for a while', but also admitted that when she penned a three-season extension two years ago she knew then the 19th series would be her last. 'I've thought a lot about this decision, I sat with it for a while. I meditated on it, I talked to Portia, I talked to myself,' she said in a pre-recorded video shared on Twitter. 'Two years ago, I signed a deal for three more years, and I always knew in my heart that season 19 would be my last. Nineteen is a great number. The 19th amendment gave women the right to vote, and I believe women should be allowed to vote. 'You may wonder why I've decided to end after 19 seasons and the truth is I always trust my instincts. My instinct told me it's time.' Hollywood star Chris Hemsworth has praised the heroes helping to save people in flood-stricken northern NSW and Queensland. The Thor actor, 38, shared a series of photos to Instagram on Wednesday of the devastating floods, and thanked the emergency workers and everyday Aussies saving those stranded in their homes. 'Absolutely devastating watching some of the worst floods in Australia's history hitting Queensland and NSW,' Chris wrote. 'True heroes': Chris Hemsworth (pictured on March 7, 2021) has paid tribute to the heroes rescuing thousands of people affected by flood-stricken northern NSW and Queensland 'Heroic efforts by everyone involved in rescuing thousands of people who have been stranded,' he continued. 'Lots of love to everyone who has been affected and a big shout out to all who had a boat or jet ski and launched straight into rescue missions without hesitation. True heroes.' It comes after Chris' wife Elsa Pataky also shared a tribute to the brave Australians helping out during the catastrophic floods. 'Northern Rivers and beyond had been hit by the worst floods in history. People have spent hours waiting on rooftops to be rescue,' the Spanish actress wrote. Tribute: The Thor actor, 38, shared a series of photos to Instagram on Wednesday of the devastating floods, and thanked the emergency workers and everyday Aussies saving those stranded in their homes. Pictured: Lismore submerged in floodwater on Tuesday 'Thanks to all those who are able to help save people and animals stranded by the floodwaters, you are the real heroes.' She added: 'So amazing to watch how everyone pulls together in a disaster and helps the community. Our hearts go out to those affected by the floods. Stay safe.' About 340,000 residents in northern NSW are under evacuation orders or warnings as unprecedented flooding leaves hundreds unaccounted for in the regional town of Lismore. 'You are real heroes': It comes after Chris' wife Elsa Pataky (pictured) also praised the heroes helping save people in the flood crisis The flood crisis has engulfed the northeastern part of the state, with major flood warnings in place for the Tweed, Richmond, Wilsons, Brunswick, Bellinger and Clarence rivers. The Bureau of Meteorology warned NSW is in for more thunderstorms, heavy rain and damaging winds on Tuesday evening as extreme weather moves south. NSW Emergency Services Minister Steph Cooke said 340,000 people in the northern rivers and north coast areas of the state are on high alert under evacuation orders or warnings. NSW Premier Dominic Perrottet described the floods as a one-in-1000-year natural disaster, adding he expects waters to peak at about 16metres in Lismore. The previous record was just a tick of 12 metres in 1954. He is expecting his first child with fiancee Tegan Kynaston in August. And proud father-to-be Kyle Sandilands has created a baby book to capture all the precious moments throughout the journey. Tegan, 36, shared a photo to Instagram on Wednesday of the KIIS FM radio host, 50, adding ultrasound scans to the book. Documenting the journey: Proud father-to-be Kyle Sandilands has started a baby book ahead of the arrival of his first child with fiancee Tegan Kynaston Kyle couldn't wipe the smile off his face as he snipped photos to add to the album. 'Starting our baby book,' Tegan captioned the post. The couple announced they were set to welcome their first child together live on The Kyle and Jackie O Show last month. 'We're having a baby!' Kyle declared as the entire KIIS FM studio cheered. Cute moment: Tegan, 36, (right) shared a photo to Instagram on Wednesday of the KIIS FM radio host, 50, adding ultrasound scans to the book His co-host Jackie 'O' Henderson said she was 'so happy' for the pair and told them their lives were about to change forever. The couple had learned Tegan was expecting one week earlier. Kyle said his manager, Bruno Bouchet, had to deflect questions from reporters after Tegan was seen sporting a slight bump in public on February 2. He then joked he plans to hire a 'dozen Fijian nannies' once the baby is born. Tegan, who is three months pregnant, also revealed her fiance had been busy preparing for their child's arrival, even helping pick out cribs. Growing family: Kyle and Tegan (pictured with their child's ultrasound scan) announced their baby news live on air last month Kyle and Tegan, who got engaged in Queensland over the Christmas holidays, began trying for a baby last year. The former Australian Idol judge confirmed in December he had been given the 'all-clear' after undergoing fertility testing. He told Daily Mail Australia: 'I was really nervous [about the fertility test] until it came back saying, "Yep, it's all great, everything's fine." '[Tegan] is all good, obviously. She's a young and healthy woman. So it's good to know that everything's fine in that area so it won't interfere with any future plans.' He reached Warsaw, Poland on Tuesday after fleeing his war-torn native Ukraine amid the Russian invasion. And on in the early hours of Wednesday, Maksim Chmerkovskiy revealed he was about to get on a flight back to Los Angeles after his terrifying ordeal. The Dancing With The Stars pro's final leg of his journey came after he was arrested in Kyiv and then took a 'traumatizing' train ride full of women and children heading to Poland. The latest: He reached Warsaw, Poland on Tuesday after fleeing his war-torn native Ukraine amid the Russian invasion. And on in the early hours of Wednesday, Maksim Chmerkovskiy revealed he was about to get on a flight back to Los Angeles after his terrifying ordeal The father of one, 42, captioned the video with: 'Personal update. News from Ukraine. An important plea. Please spread.' Maks shares five-year-old son Shai with wife Peta Murgatroyd; they reside in Los Angeles. The dancing pro was born in Ukraine but immigrated to New York with his parents and brother Val in 1994, where they became US citizens. The country announced last week that men of fighting age - between 18-60 - were prohibited from leaving Ukraine but since Maks holds a U.S. passport, he is exempt from the mandate. Flight home: The Dancing With The Stars pro's final leg of his journey came after he was arrested in Kyiv and then took a 'traumatizing' train ride full of women and children heading to Poland Journey: The father of one captioned the video with: 'Personal update. News from Ukraine. An important plea. Please spread' He kicked off the five minute video with a view of his plane as he waited inside Warsaw's airport. Maks said: 'Hey I'm ready to go, boarding this plane,' as he shows the plane at the tarmac. 'I also found a patch of gray hairs that just came up that was definitely not there. That's a little bit of a joke. But not a joke. I'm going to do my best, I don't know if I can. I don't have a good internet here. I'm going to try and put up some images - the latest... yesterday... a couple of days... this last night was insane.' He went on to talk about the non-stop bombing throughout the country and casualties among civilians. Maksim slammed Russian President Vladimir Putin and said the Russian people are 'confused' and 'not sure.' Maksim said while waiting for his flight: 'He doesn't represent all the Russians,' he said. Just want that to be very clear. I don't want there to hate. I don't want there to be disgust with them as a nation. They're our brothers and sisters. My mom's brother... his family lives in Russia.' He continued: 'My grandpa lives in Russia. On the Russia territory. They moved when they had no job, no work, no opportunity to another nearby village basically they are also scraping by.' Adding: 'It's not like it was amazing. But the point to show - it's just a neighborhood. To us it wasn't moving a country... it's just moving to a different neighborhood. So I'm not sure how to feel about it. I'm mostly angry. I'm also f****n angry and p****d. But it doesn't represent everybody.' 'I came from that place. USSR didn't represent me and I think he doesn't represent the good ones. We just got to help them and open their eyes. So keep talking, keep using your voice and so will I. I'm getting on a plane. Talk to you from LA,' closing out the video. From the heart: 'I came from that place. USSR didn't represent me and I think he doesn't represent the good ones. We just got to help them and open their eyes. So keep talking, keep using your voice and so will I. I'm getting on a plane. Talk to you from LA,' closing out the video Dancing With The Stars pro Maksim Chmerkovskiy timeline in Ukraine FEBRUARY 2 Maksim Chmerkovskiy, who was born in Ukraine but became a US citizen in 2019, flies to Kyiv with plans to stay for a 'few months' film a new Ukrainian show called World of Dance. FEBRUARY 6 The Dancing With The Stars pro, 42, begins filming as a judge on the panel and declares he's 'really happy to be back in Ukraine'. FEBRUARY 24 Maksim shares a tearful clip from Kyiv saying 'I want to go back home' and says he is 'about to go into a bomb shelter because s**t's going down'. His wife Peta Murgatroyd, with whom he has a five-year-old son Shai, pleads for his safe return and asks for prayers. She admits: 'My pain is overwhelming and I'm struggling. Please pray that he has a swift, safe exit.' FEBRUARY 25 He shares another clip filmed in Kyiv and tells fans he is 'safe' but the situation is 'pretty die' and that the 'whole country is being called to go to war. I don't know the answer, I just want the shooting to stop.' FEBRUARY 26 He calls out his former DWTS partner Kirstie Alley for tweeting she doesn't know what's 'real' and 'fake' about Russia invading his home country. He noted: 'No one needs your prayer if you don't know what's real or fake.' FEBRUARY 27 Petra admits she's going through 'hell' but thanks fans for their kindness and support, revealing strangers made her cookies to offer comfort. Maks commented on her post, writing: 'I love you and Ill see you soon! Save me a cookie.' FEBRUARY 28 Maks reveals he was arrested in Kyiv but doesn't reveal why. He said the 'streets are crazy' and the arrest was 'probably the least traumatizing moment' but noted it was a 'reality check.' He reveals he plan to flee, noting 'I'm going to try and make my way out. I'm going to start making my way towards the border. I have options. Just a little nervous but I think it's going to be alright. I know its' going to be okay.' He later boards a train heading to Warsaw alongside women and children, calling the journey 'claustrophobic.' MARCH 1 The dancing pro reaches Warsaw, Poland after 31 hours of no sleep on his 'traumatizing' train ride women and children fleeing Ukraine following the Russian invasion. The star thanks the 'amazing Polish people.' MARCH 2 Maks boards a plane in Warsaw heading to Los Angeles. He is greeted at the airport by his wife Peta Murgatroyd in an emotional reunion. MARCH 4 In his first interview since fleeing Ukraine, Maks tells GMA that feels 'guilty' for leaving the war-torn country and is dealing with bouts of crying in the wake of the traumatic experience. He also revealed the reason that he was arrested in Kyiv was for breaking curfew. Emotional: Maksim, pictured on February 24, shared a tearful clip from Kyiv and said 'I want to go back home' and says he is 'about to go into a bomb shelter because s**t's going down' Advertisement Family: Maks and Peta, who married in 2017, are parents to five-year-old son Shai His exit from Poland comes hours after he sat down in his Warsaw hotel room and decompressed following his dramatic ordeal fleeing Ukraine. Maksim said he 'lived through some s**t that I'm going to need a lot of therapy for' on an Instagram Live. Maksim has been documenting his journey fleeing his native country after the Russian invasion; The father of one finally arrived to Warsaw, Poland on Tuesday after 31 hours of no sleep. He shared a detailed account of his trek to Warsaw, Poland, revealing he was starting his train journey on Monday after he got arrested in Kyiv. Made it: The star, who also revealed he was arrested in Kyiv, revealed that after a long 'claustrophobic' and 'traumatizing' train ride with women and children out of the war torn country Chmerkovskiy, who has been in Kyiv working as a judge on the Ukrainian version of World of Dance, had planned on staying in his native land when the fighting first broke out, however, after he got a 'reality check' by being arrested Monday, he decided to flee. Maks called his train ride 'claustrophobic' and 'traumatizing,' filled with women and children fleeing the war torn country. 'I made it on the train. We're heading to Warsaw (hopefully). Train to Lviv was not an option,' the choreographer penned. 'The situation at the train station is insane. AT first it feels manageable, but it get A LOT worse when it comes time to actually board the train.' 'Long story but all I can say now is that I'm a big man with nothing but a backpack it's TRAUMATIZING,' he continued. 'Currently I'm in a cabin with 4 adults and 7 kids (ages 2-11) which is usually only occupied by maximum of 3 people.' Speaking out: Maksim, 42, shared a detailed account of his trek to Warsaw, Poland, revealing he was starting his train journey on Monday after he got arrested in Kyiv. The father of one arrived to Warsaw after 31 hours of no sleep Maksim revealed that the train car that he was traveling on was outfitted for roughly 30 riders but refugees were told they needed to fit 135 people inside. 'Walkways are packed. People everywhere. It's sweaty and claustrophobic,' he said. Photos from a train station in illustrate the reality star's situation. Thousands of people were seen bundled up in freezing temperatures standing practically on top of one another as they attempted to get a train out of the country. What finally broke me is when I was watching an eight-ish year old boy, hysterically crying and not wanting to let go of his father,' he wrote in a heartbreaking post on Instagram. 'Verbatim: "if you stay I want to stay too because if they kill you I won't be able to help".' His wife, Peta, shared his post on her social media feed saying she was 'so f**king proud' of her husband for helping out the refugee children. Maks' decision to finally leave Kyiv came after he was arrested while in the capital city amid the Russian military assault. 'The streets are crazy,' he said. 'At one point I got arrested but again all good, promise. That was probably the least traumatizing moment in this whole thing as far as Ukraine is concerned, but for me, it was just a reality check.' 'I'm going to try and make my way out. I'm going to start making my way towards the border. I have options.' Adding: 'Just a little nervous but I think it's going to be alright. I know it's going to be okay. Maksim posted graphic videos to his stories and grid throughout Ukraine, as the star says he's tried and stressed out after seeing innocent people being killed. His reality: 'I'm at a station about 20, 30, 40, I don't actually know where I'm at but like 30 minutes before the Polish border, they stopped to change wheels on the train, I can't make this up and let us out... for fresh air and I went to the bathroom and now we're going back and this is the train,' as he showed train and the crowds He said on Sunday: 'I'm in a very safe place but this is nuts and I think everybody is going through a lot of emotions and i think it's time I expose mine in a more personal manner. 'This is a war. This is a crazy situation. It's insane and I'm losing my final little things. This is not a cry for help. I'm a big boy. I can handle myself.. but I'm starting to not be able to just sort of keep my head.' 'The reality is, I just want to go home. I'm just hoping for a safe ending to it all.' His wife Peta took to Instagram on Sunday with an emotional message in which she shared that an empathetic group of strangers had made a kind gesture to her amid the absence of Maksim. 'Although I'm going through hell right now and I want it all to end[there] is light that shines through the darkness,' said Murgatroyd, who is mother to five-year-old son Shai with Chmerkovskiy, who she wed in July of 2017. Murgatroyd, an alum of Dancing With the Stars, remains at the family's home in California amid the uncertain time. She said that strangers baked her cookies 'and proudly brought them to [her] door. Gratitude: He took a moment to thank the Polish people: 'I absolutely have to say this: Polish people are amazing!!!! Thank you from the absolute bottom of my heart and soul,' adding a prayer sign, heart and hands in the air emoji Refugees: Chmerkovskiy, who has been in Kyiv working as a judge on the Ukrainian version of World of Dance, had planned on staying in his native land when the fighting first broke out, however, after he got a 'reality check' by being arrested he decided to flee One of the lucky ones: Ukraine announced last week that men of fighting age - between 18-60 - were prohibited from leaving Ukraine but since Maks holds a U.S. passport, he is exempt from the mandate 'They stood there with smiles so wide. Let me repeat strangers, whom I don't talk to thought that they should get in their kitchen and bake me cookies,' she said. 'They also took it upon themselves to google if I was allergic to anything, just to make sure they weren't hurting me.' Chmerkovskiy has also provided frequent social media updates amid the conflict, as he said Thursday he had not attempted to leave the country due to safety concerns around the border of Poland. The professional dancer said he felt his odds for departure from the Ukraine were helped in having an American passport. Chmerkovskiy added that the conflict had taken an emotional toll on him, as he said he 'will never be the same' in the wake of the invasion. 'This is stressful and Im getting old feelings back, like Ive done this before,' he said Thursday. 'This does feel like the way it was when and why we left in the 90s. Like my old PTSD Ive finally fixed is coming back.' Terrifying: Thousands of people were seen bundled up in freezing temperatures standing practically on top of one another as they attempted to get a train out of the country (Pictured: Evacuation train in Kyiv) Getting out: Thousands of Ukrainian residents waiting for hours to board trains into neighboring countries as Russian forces continue to shell cities across the country (Pictured: Lviv train station) Support: His wife, Peta Murgatroyd, shared his post on her social media feed saying she was 'so f**king proud' of her husband for helping out the refugee children On Sunday, Chmerkovskiy took to Instagram Stories with a number of messages, urging people in the dance community in European countries to help take care of refugees if they were able to. He shared a number of links to resources to help people exit safely amid the ongoing military conflict. Chmerkovskiy also wrote, 'Russia needs a revolution!!! Russian people are being lied to!!! Russians! Wake up! It will take you generations to get over this and generations of people around the world will never forgive you!!!' On Sunday, Russian President Vladimir Putin ordered to put nuclear weapons on enhanced alert for 'special regime of combat duty' amid heightened tensions with Europe and the United States following the invasion. Putin cited aggression toward Russia from NATO as well as economic sanctions and moves shutting down Russian banking institutions using the banking system SWIFT. HONG KONG (AP) - Hong Kongs leader on Wednesday said people's movements may be restricted during mandatory testing this month of the entire population for the coronavirus, as health officials reported a record 55,353 daily infections and over a hundred deaths. Chief executive Carrie Lam said authorities are still refining the plan, but that there would be no "complete" lockdown that would prevent entry and exit from the city. "The extent of it must take into account Hong Kongs circumstances and peoples needs," she told reporters. Hong Kong is planning to test its more than 7 million residents as it grapples with soaring numbers of COVID-19 cases in its worst outbreak of the pandemic, linked largely to the omicron variant. Officials on Wednesday reported 117 deaths, taking the total number above 1,000. About 80% of the deaths have occurred since late December. Most involved elderly patients who were not fully vaccinated. "We recorded about 55,000 infections today, which is within our expectation. Recently every two or three days the number of confirmed cases is doubling," said Albert Au, a health officer with the Centre for Health Protection. He said cases have not yet peaked. Patients in hospital beds wait in a temporary holding area outside Caritas Medical Centre in Hong Kong , Wednesday, March 2, 2022. Some people are forced to wait outside the hospital due to it currently being overloaded with possible COVID-infected patients. (AP Photo/Kin Cheung) U.S. authorities on Wednesday warned Americans against traveling to Hong Kong, with the State Department raising its travel advisory to Level 4 - Do Not Travel - because of rising cases and restrictions imposed by the city and mainland China under their "zero-tolerance" policy toward the coronavirus. "We especially want to note for families considering traveling to or residing in Hong Kong that in some cases, children in Hong Kong who test positive have been separated from their parents and kept in isolation until they meet local hospital discharge requirements," the travel advisory said. The surge is threatening to overwhelm Hong Kongs hospitals, with officials saying they have reached maximum bed capacity and some general wards are being converted into isolation areas. Public mortuaries have also reached full capacity, and help is being sought from the private sector to store bodies, officials say. The Hospital Authority has also ordered refrigerated containers to temporarily store bodies, health officials said. Supermarket shelves were wiped bare this week as residents stockpiled daily necessities after reports spread of a possible citywide lockdown. Authorities have called for calm and reassured people that food supplies are normal. In Beijing, Chinese Foreign Ministry spokesperson Wang Wenbin backed Hong Kong's virus control measures. Wang said the measures "are necessary, science-based and responsible to effectively prevent and control the epidemic and ensure the health of Hong Kong residents and foreigners in Hong Kong." "We believe that the relevant measures will further build up the international communitys confidence in Hong Kongs epidemic control, ensure Hong Kongs safe and orderly interaction with the international community, and provide a more secure and stable business environment for international investors in Hong Kong," Wang said at a daily briefing Wednesday. Patients in hospital beds wait in a temporary holding area outside Caritas Medical Centre in Hong Kong , Wednesday, March 2, 2022. Some people are forced to wait outside the hospital due to it currently being overloaded with possible COVID-infected patients. (AP Photo/Kin Cheung) Patients in hospital beds wait in a temporary holding area outside Caritas Medical Centre in Hong Kong , Wednesday, March 2, 2022. Some people are forced to wait outside the hospital due to it currently being overloaded with possible COVID-infected patients. (AP Photo/Kin Cheung) Patients in hospital beds wait in a temporary holding area outside Caritas Medical Centre in Hong Kong , Wednesday, March 2, 2022. Some people are forced to wait outside the hospital due to it currently being overloaded with possible COVID-infected patients. (AP Photo/Kin Cheung) A patient on hospital bed is escorted to the temporary holding area outside Caritas Medical Centre in Hong Kong , Wednesday, March 2, 2022. Some people are forced to wait outside the hospital due to it currently being overloaded with possible COVID-infected patients. (AP Photo/Kin Cheung) A patient on hospital bed is escorted to the temporary holding area outside Caritas Medical Centre in Hong Kong , Wednesday, March 2, 2022. Some people are forced to wait outside the hospital due to it currently being overloaded with possible COVID-infected patients. (AP Photo/Kin Cheung) Workers from the Food and Environmental Hygiene Department, move a corpse from the mortuary to the coffin van at the Queen Elizabeth Hospital in Hong Kong, Wednesday, March 2, 2022. Some hospitals in Hong Kong are currently being overloaded with possible COVID-infected patients. (AP Photo/Janice Lo) An aerial view shows a construction site of a new makeshift COVID-19 hospital and isolation facilities, in Tsing Yi of Hong Kong, Wednesday, March 2, 2022. (AP Photo/Kin Cheung) Should Vladimir Putin find himself looking for a bite near Central Park, he may have to settle for a street meat cart. The Russian Tea Room has no reservations about siding with Ukraine amid Russias siege on the independent nation and it apparently has no love for the countrys current leader either. Visitors to the iconic eaterys website are instantly greeted with a bold popup making the nearly century-old restaurants position on the war in Ukraine crystal-clear. Advertisement The Russian Tea Room on West 57th Street. (Jefferson Siegel / New York Daily News) The Russian Tea Room denounces Russias unprovoked acts of war in the strongest terms possible, reads that notice. For 95 years the NY institutions history has been deeply rooted in speaking against communist dictatorship and for democracy. Just as the original founders. Soviet defectors who were displaced by the revolution, stood against Stalins Soviet Union, we stand against Putin and with the people of Ukraine. That same notice was posted to the restaurants Instagram page Monday along with a banner reading Solidarity with Ukraine. Advertisement Putins army rolled into Ukraine last week hoping to feast on its neighboring nation. Resistance has been fierce, making Ukraine a symbol of inspiration for the free world while exposing Russias president as spoiled leftovers of an era best forgotten. The bloodshed continued Tuesday night. [ Trump's NYC eateries written up for 'live mice,' other 'critical' health code violations in recent months ] A Russian Tea Room employee who answered the restaurants phone Tuesday evening declined to comment and suggested to the Daily News calling the corporate office in the morning. The 51st Annual Spring Powwow, organized by First Nations @ UW in April, marked the events post-pandemic return. Drawing both Indigenous people and nonnatives from across the country, the powwow is one of the largest student-run events on campus and has been an important event for Pacific N $23.50-$73* Multi-platinum rock band Barenaked Ladies have added a performance in Huber Heights, OH to their extensive 2022 summer tour. The Last Summer On Earth Tour with special guests Gin Blossoms and Toad The Wet Sprocket will stop at Rose Music Center at The Heights on Tuesday, July 19. Were looking forward to getting back out on the Last Summer On Earth tour, vocalist/guitarist Ed Robertson shares. Having Gin Blossoms and Toad the Wet Sprocket out with us is going to be a blast. Thats a LOT of hits per night! Barenaked Ladies is ready to hit the road again and bring out all the fan favorites that have built them a long-lasting career and worldwide fanbase. The Toronto-based cult fave (Paste Magazine) have now sold over 15 million albums worldwide and earned multiple JUNO Awards and Grammy nominations. This will be the 6th edition of the tour, founded by the band in 2012 the year that the Mayan calendar predicted would be the last, hence the Last Summer On Earth. Barenaked Ladies headline and bring some of their best friends and favorite bands along for a summer of good times, and of course, great music. Past acts include Cracker, Big Head Todd & the Monsters, Blues Traveler, Guster, Ben Folds Five, Violent Femmes, Colin Hay, OMD, Howard Jones, Better Than Ezra, and KT Tunstall. We know the Mayan Calendar was wrong about the end of the world, adds Ed Robertson, but could they have been THAT wrong?! Cmon out and rock with us like its your Last Summer On Earth! Thank you for reading! Please purchase a subscription to read our premium content. If you have a subscription and are still unable to access our content, please link your digital account to your print subscription If you have a subscription, please log in or sign up for an account on our website to continue. Right war. Wrong country. Even with the teleprompter running, and the correct words scrolling before him, President Biden went off script making a blunder that had social media wondering what map he was looking at. Advertisement In a blistering attack on Russia and its bully president, Biden said Russian leader Vladimir Putin had isolated himself with his unprovoked attack on Ukraine. Only, Biden got the country wrong. Advertisement U.S. President Joe Biden delivers the State of the Union address during a joint session of Congress in the U.S. Capitols House Chamber on March 01, 2022 in Washington, DC. (Pool/Getty Images) Putin may circle Kyiv with tanks, Biden said Tuesday night in his State of the Union address. But he will never gain the hearts and souls of the Iranian people. He will never extinguish their love of freedom. He will never weaken the resolve of the free world. Iranian. Love of freedom. Thats not how they wrote it up. Social media smelled the Biden blooper blood in the water and swiftly attacked. Putin will never gain the hearts and minds of the Iranian people, conservative commentator Ann Coulter repeated on Twitter. Thats a relief. Newxmax anchor Greg Kelly joined in on the trending Twitter topic. The IRANIAN PEOPLE, he wrote. WE STAND WITH YOU! Others were a bit more critical. Grandpa its past your bedtime, one Twitter user wrote. Advertisement Others got philosophical. He referenced Iranian people, another Twitter user wrote.. Maybe he meant Ukrainian. Or maybe not. The money-making approach to healthcare taken by a section of medical professionals and institutions has been called out by Divya Sathyaraj, well-known nutritionist, activist and daughter of actor Sathyaraj. Recounting the experience of one of her patients at a private hospital, Divya said, "I was shocked to hear that a general physician at a leading hospital in Chennai charged my patient, a construction labourer, Rs. 5100 for a three-minute consultation for her 7-year-old child. Has money overtaken humanity?" Pointing out that this was not an isolated case, she alleged that some hospitals, doctors and pharmacies were making a fortune out of common people by overcharging and selling expired medicines. "I have a lot of respect for doctors and the majority are dedicating their heart and soul to this profession; but doctors like this can create a bad impression about the entire private sector, she said, adding, Private hospitals should take steps to prevent this. Noting that Tamil Nadu Chief Minister, M K Stalin, had done amazing work during the COVID-19 outbreak to help the poor, and people like the state health secretary Dr. J. Radhakrishnan were doing great work to make sure that government hospitals are functioning efficiently, Divya however stressed that government has limitations. On the other hand, issues like this are happening in the private sector, which is very sad," she added. "I meet a lot of people from all walks of life during my practice and sometimes I recommend a medical doctor to them, as we nutritionists are a complimentary section of the medical sector. I know a quite number of them are more afraid of medical bills than the illness. This has to change. We desperately need a system that brings hope and healing to people from the lower-income groups. Health is your right, don't give up your fight, " she asserted. It may be recalled that, a few years ago, Divya, who has always been vocal about social issues, had written to the Prime Minister about malpractices in the medical and pharmaceutical fields and the letter had gone viral. New Delhi: Kerala Chief Minister Pinarayi Vijayan said that 180 students, who returned from Ukraine, will be flown down from Delhi in an Air Asia flight at 4 pm today which is arranged by the state government. CM Vijayan tweeted, "180 students will be flown down from Delhi to Kochi in an @AirAsiaIndia chartered flight at 4 pm, by the Govt. of Kerala. We are ensuring that all Keralites repatriated from Ukraine, reach back safe and sound. Those who are yet to register should do so with @Norka_Roots." On Tuesday, the government said as many as 36 students hailing from Kerala arrived from Ukraine on Monday evening and 25 of them left for Kochi and the rest for Thiruvananthapuram. The Kerala government tweeted on Tuesday, "Kerala students update: Among 36 students arrived from Ukraine to Delhi yesterday evening, 25 left for Kochi by Vistara UK 883 at 5.35 (arrival 8.45) and 11 left for Trivandrum by Vistara UK 895 at 8.10 (arrival 11.25)." These students were brought back under 'Operation Ganga. Indian nationals evacuated from war-torn Ukraine, on board a special Air India flight arrive at the Indira Gandhi International Airport, in New Delhi. (Photo: PTI) New Delhi: Six flights under India's evacuation mission 'Operation Ganga' have departed for India in the last 24 hours, External Affairs Minister S Jaishankar said on Wednesday. India launched the evacuation mission under which the Indians from Hungary, Romania, Poland and Slovakia are being brought back home after they exited Ukraine through its land border crossings. Jaishankar said the flights that departed for India in the last 24 hours included the first one from Poland. In the last few days, Indian evacuation flights were operating from Romanian capital Bucharest and Hungarian capital Budapest. "#OperationGanga developments. Six flights have now departed for India in the last 24 hours. Includes the first flights from Poland. Carried back 1,377 more Indian nationals from Ukraine," Jaishankar tweeted this morning. Following the closure of Ukrainian airspace, India is facilitating the evacuation of stranded Indians from Ukraine through its land border crossings. The first evacuation flight carrying 219 Indians from Bucharest landed in Mumbai on Saturday evening. At a media briefing on Tuesday night, Foreign Secretary Harsh Vardhan Shringla said 26 flights have been scheduled to bring out Indian citizens over the next three days. He said apart from Bucharest and Budapest, airports in Poland and the Slovak Republic will also be used to operate the flights. "I had mentioned that we had an estimated 20,000 Indian students in Ukraine at the time that we issued our first advisory," he said. "This is the general number of people who are Indian nationals in Ukraine and from that number, approximately 12,000 have since left Ukraine, which is 60 per cent of the total number of our citizens in Ukraine," Shringla said. He further added: "Of the remaining 40 per cent, roughly half remain in the conflict zone in the Kharkiv-Sumy area and other half have either reached the western borders of Ukraine or are heading towards the western borders of Ukraine. In other words, they are generally out of the conflict areas, out of harm's way." The Indian embassy in Ukraine issued a series of advisories earlier last month requesting the people to consider leaving the country after its tensions with Russia increased. Indian nationals, evacuated from crisis-hit Ukraine, being welcomed by relatives upon their arrival at the airport in Mumbai, Tuesday, March 1, 2022. (PTI Photo/Kunal Patil) New Delhi: All Indian nationals have left Ukrainian capital Kyiv, Foreign Secretary Harsh Vardhan Shringla said on Tuesday. At a media briefing, Shringla said he has conveyed to envoys of Russia and Ukraine India's demand for "urgent safe passage" for all Indian nationals stuck in Kharkiv and other conflict zones. He said at a high-level meeting on the Ukraine crisis, PM Narendra Modi expressed deep anguish over the loss of life of an Indian citizen in Kharkiv. "We remain very concerned over the situation in Kharkiv, Sumy and other conflict zones," Shringla said. "Over the next three days, 26 flights have been scheduled to bring back Indian citizens," he said. Shringla said a C-17 IAF aircraft is expected to fly out at 4 AM on Wednesday to Romania to repatriate our citizens. India has been operating flights to bring back Indians from Romania and Hungary after they crossed over to these countries. Shringla also said that Prime Minister Modi received a call from President of France Emmanuel Macron. Modi also spoke to the President of Poland. Apart from Bucharest and Budapest, airports in Poland and the Slovak Republic will also be used to operate evacuation flights, he said. PM Modi chairs meet on Ukraine issue Prime Minister Narendra Modi chaired a high-level meeting Tuesday evening on the Ukraine crisis with focus on the evacuation of Indian citizens from the war-hit country, official sources said. This was his fourth meeting on the Ukraine situation since Sunday. External Affairs Minister S Jaishankar and another Union minister Piyush Goyal were among those who attended the meeting besides top bureaucrats. Two Indian Air Force aircraft take off for Romania and Hungary from the Hindon airbase to bring back Indians stranded in Ukraine (ANI) New Delhi: A C-17 Globemaster aircraft of the Indian Air Force left for Romania on Wednesday morning carrying humanitarian aid to Ukraine. The aircraft is expected to bring back Indians from Romania, who exited war-hit Ukraine through its border crossings. Officials said the aircraft left for Romania early morning. India on Tuesday sent the first tranche of humanitarian assistance comprising medicines and other relief materials to Ukraine via Poland. India had decided to send the relief supplies to Ukraine to help it deal with the humanitarian situation along its border areas with tens of thousands of people attempting to flee the Russian invasion. "The prime minister noted that the first consignment of relief supplies to Ukraine to deal with the humanitarian situation on Ukraine's borders would be despatched tomorrow," the Ministry of External Affairs said on Monday. 6 flights departed for India in last 24 hours under 'Op Ganga' Six flights under India's evacuation mission 'Operation Ganga' have departed for India in the last 24 hours, External Affairs Minister S Jaishankar said on Wednesday. India launched the evacuation mission under which the Indians from Hungary, Romania, Poland and Slovakia are being brought back home after they exited Ukraine through its land border crossings. Jaishankar said the flights that departed for India in the last 24 hours included the first one from Poland. In the last few days, Indian evacuation flights were operating from Romanian capital Bucharest and Hungarian capital Budapest. "#OperationGanga developments. Six flights have now departed for India in the last 24 hours. Includes the first flights from Poland. Carried back 1,377 more Indian nationals from Ukraine," Jaishankar tweeted this morning. All arrangements made for travel of evacuated Indians from Ukraine, says Union Minister Jitendra Singh Union Minister Jitendra Singh on Wednesday received the Indians who returned on a special flight from war-hit Ukraine on Wednesday. He said that state-wise help desks have been created at the Delhi airport to help the students who came from war-hit Ukraine reach their respective homes. "We have created help desks for every state. Students are approaching the respective help desks. They are being provided refreshments. We have made arrangements for the Volvo buses so that students of other states can travel to their respective home places by road. We have made arrangements for guest houses for the students who will be going by train," Singh told the mediapersons at the Delhi Airport. Singh also said that a few of the students will be travelling by flight, including three of them headed for Srinagar. "We will be making arrangements. All the ministers are involved in making arrangements for the evacuated students," he added. Sonbhadra: Prime Minister Narendra Modi on Wednesday said India could evacuate its citizens stranded in war-hit Ukraine because of its rising power. Addressing a poll rally in Uttar Pradesh's Sonbhadra district, Modi said the government would not spare any effort in bring home Indians stranded in Ukraine. Taking a jibe at rivals, the prime minister said those who questioned the valour of armed forces and 'Make in India' can not make the country strong. Sonbhadra district will go to polls in the last phase on March 7. Relatives of a student (R) evacuated from Ukraine on a special flight, welcome her with a garland at Indira Gandhi International Airport in New Delhi. (Photo: AFP) New Delhi: Russia on Wednesday said it is working "intensely" to create a "humanitarian corridor" for safe passage to Russian territory of Indians stuck in Kharkiv, Sumy and other conflict zones in Ukraine. At a media briefing, Russian Ambassador-designate Denis Alipov said Russia is in touch with India on the issue of safety of Indians and that the safe passage will be put into place "as soon as possible. "We are working intensely on creating the corridor and secure safe passage for Indians stuck in various conflict zones in Ukraine," he said. He said Russia is working on ways and means to provide safe passage to Indians for their secure passage to Russian territory from the conflict zones in Ukraine. To a question, Alipov said he does "see any hurdle" in the supply of the S-400 missile systems to India because of the Western sanctions against Russia following the Ukraine crisis. India has taken an "unbiased" position based on assessment of the situation in Ukraine and not because it is dependent on Russian arms, he added. "We do coordinate our positions at the UN and inform India about our approach," he said. Alipov further added: "We do everything possible to keep India up-to-date on what is happening." VIJAYAWADA: Chief Minister Jagan said on Wednesday that the AP government is effecting revolutionary changes in the agriculture sector through transparent systems. Despite the Covid crisis, the agriculture sector fared well and the introduction of e-cropping at the village level was a revolutionary change. The chief minister was speaking at the state credit seminar at which he released a State Focus Paper (SFP) 2022-23 prepared by the National Bank for Agriculture and Rural Development. He said the role of NABARD and other banks was quite prominent in the economic and social development of the state. It was assisting various government initiatives, especially in strengthening the rural economy during the pandemic terms. Despite the Covid-linked curbs, the agriculture sector achieved a growth rate of 4.16 per cent, he said and added that the government aimed at making AP a leading state in agriculture. Elaborating on the governments initiatives for farmers welfare, the CM said, We are assisting farmers right from seed up until the sale, through RBKs, and even compensating them during times of crop loss. Revolutionary steps have been taken in this sector by introducing e-cropping at village level and Agri labs in rural constituencies, besides establishing godowns, cold storages and processing units at parliamentary constituency level. All these would add value to crops, he said and urged Nabard to provide more assistance to this sector. He said the government is strengthening cooperative banks and societies by transparent policies, where banking correspondents at RBKs will be acting as liaison persons to banks and societies. In addition, he emphasized on using the latest technology in agriculture and said drones will be introduced in RBKs. These shall be managed by imparting of skills at village level. Also, he said 16 new medical colleges are being constructed besides developing the 11 existing medical colleges under the Nadu-Nedu initiative. Special focus was laid on providing quality education, as todays children will play a key role in strengthening the rural economy by bringing in the latest technology to develop the villages. NABARD chairman Chintala Govindarajulu said Nabard prioritizes in establishing the agricultural infrastructure and hailed the initiatives taken by the CM to develop the cooperative sector. He said Rs 58,000 crore was given to Dwacra communities across the country, of which Rs 22,000 crore was given to Andhra Pradesh and Telangana. Notably, 100 per cent repayment is being done towards the zero-interest loan scheme in the state, he said. Vijayawada: In a unique act, farmers donated 3,000 to 6,000 per acre for construction of devotional Prabhalu costing 2530 lakh at the ancient hilltop Kotappakonda Tirunallu on occasion of Maha Shivaratri. This tradition of farmers donating money has been continuing since decades. Prabhalu are made of bamboo decorated with colour clothes and illuminated using lights. These are between 5070 feet tall. All villages surrounding Kotappakonda take these chariots to the hilltop in a procession. Interestingly, supporters of YSR Congress and Telugu Desam decorate their chariots with their party flags. These party leaders compete with each other in decorating their Prabhalu, with political leaders, including ministers, MLAs and MPs, joining the Tirunallu. Key villages surrounding Kotappakonda are Kavuru, Kamavaripalem, Aminsahebpalem, Appapuram, Maddirala, Yadavalli, Boppudi and Purshottammapatnam. They start constructing Prabhalu one month before Maha Shivaratri and take them to the hilltop on Shivaratri day. Villagers K. Ramu, G. Nageswara Rao and others said tradition of Prabhalu has been continuing for past 300 years. Kavuru village started taking up bamboo and electric Prabhalu in 1946. They said every farmer voluntarily gives 3,0006,000 per acre for construction of Prabhalu, each costing around 20 lakh. Another 5 lakh is spent on Annadanam (poor feeding) on Shivaratri. Forgetting all political and other differences, villagers stand united in the Prabhalu programme. Kotappakonda is the only hill which appears with three peaks when looked from any direction. There is a stairway with 703 steps that was constructed in the 1761 by the then king Gunda Rayalu. It is still helping devotees to reach the hilltop temple. Kotappakonda Tirunallu is a state festival as recognised by AP government. Nearly 45 lakh people join the festival on the holy Maha Shivaratri day on the hilltop. There are also visitors from Telangana, Tamil Nadu, Karnataka and other states. Narasaraopet MLA G. Srinivas Reddy and his spouse and Narasaraopet MP Lavu Srikrishna Devarayalu and family members offered silk robes separately to Trikoteswara Swamy on Tuesday, launching the Shivaratri celebrations. MLA Srinivas Reddy said officials of all departments worked hard past 15 days to ensure smooth conduct of the Tirunallu. From his ambitious cancer moonshot, to his tough talk on Russian aggression. President Bidens State of the Union speech got high marks Tuesday night from Democrats who promised to push his agenda. Bidens first national progress report included goals on infrastructure, coronavirus and global cooperation. Congressional Democrats said they had the presidents back, and were animated in their response as Biden spoke to them -- and the American people -- directly in the Capitol. Advertisement US President Joe Biden delivers the State of the Union address as U.S. Vice President Kamala Harris (L) and House Speaker Nancy Pelosi (D-CA) look on during a joint session of Congress in the U.S. Capitol House Chamber on March 1, 2022 in Washington, DC. (SAUL LOEB/Getty Images) The Presidents address to the nation should give us all hope for the future prosperity of America, including the investments in manufacturing and technology, U.S. Rep. Yvette Clarke (D-Brooklyn) wrote on Twitter. The Presidents strategy to combat COVID-19 is the right move to help us all get to the other side of the pandemic. Everyone deserves treatment when they need it. And America has a duty to help other countries with less. Advertisement U.S. Rep. Gregory Meeks (D-Queens) praised Biden for his commitment to immigration. Reuniting families is not just the right thing to do but an economically smart thing to do, Meeks tweeted..I stand with @POTUS in increasing the number of immigration judges so that we can hear these cases in a more efficient manner and reach a just outcome for these families. Biden also called on lawmakers to support his U.S. Supreme Court nominee, Ketanji Brown Jackson, who would be the first Black woman on the high court if she is confirmed by the Senate. Tonight at the #SOTU, were closing out #BlackHistoryMonth and kicking off #WomensHistoryMonth with the historic nomination of the first Black woman who could serve on the Supreme Court: Judge Ketanji Brown Jackson, said U.S. Sen. Kirsten Gillibrand (D-N.Y.). Sen. Chuck Schumer, D-N.Y. (left) and Sen. Kirsten Gillibrand, D-N.Y. (right) (Win McNamee/Getty Images) Gillibrand confessed to Biden after his speech that she broke decorum a couple of times as he made his most salient points. I was screeching Go Joe the whole time, Gillibrand told Biden as she hugged him after his speech. I was, like, inappropriate in every way. No, you werent, Biden reassured her. New Jersey Gov. Phil Murphy chimed in, praising Biden for a broad and bold vision. Advertisement His unity agenda shows that we are at our best when we work together to tackle longstanding problems like the opioid epidemic, mental health, veterans health care and and finding a cure for cancer, Murphy said in a statement. And his forceful support for a free and democratic Ukraine against Russian aggression showed that principled American leadership on the global stage is back. HYDERABAD: Industries and IT minister K.T. Rama Rao called upon industry bodies like the Confederation of Indian Industries (CII) to question the 'flawed policies' of the Centre on industrial and economic fronts. Rama Rao was addressing a CII event here on Wednesday. He said independent bodies like CII should not hesitate to question wrong policies of the Centre which were obstructing the growth of the country's economy and development. He came down heavily on the Centre for sanctioning funds and projects to states on 'political grounds' and ignoring a progressive state like Telangana, which emerged as the fourth largest contributor to India's GDP within seven years of formation. "The CII should ask the Central government why it is so when we manufacture more expensive items and import cheaper ones? What is this logic? On one side we talk about Atma Nirbhar Bharat and self-reliance and on the other side our policies are so flawed that even if we want to manufacture in the country, it's more expensive. How do you survive in this environment? Rao questioned. Pointing out that China and India's GDP remained almost equal till 1980s but China's GDP has exceeded India by six times in the past 35 years, Rama Rao said, "I have been requesting the government of India, if you want to compete with China, you need to think on scale. China has large industrial parks. Why is size important? It brings down the cost of production. Today, Telangana is conceptualising a pharma city which is about 14,000 acres. We have already set up Indias largest industrial textile park in Warangal and we have been asking the Government of India to support us. First there is a policy paralysis in Delhi. They dont listen. I am not saying that Investments are not coming. But they are not coming as much as they are needed." "Today we are witnessing a war between Russia and Ukraine. I am sure many Indians have thought of this and so have I. What is our position on making our own missiles, our own defence systems and ammunition? About two years ago, the Government of India was conceptualising the defence industrial production corridor. I went to the then defence minister Nirmala Sitaraman ji and told her that the most logical destination for this to be was between Hyderabad and Bengaluru, because of the existing ecosystem. Hyderabad has a large number of defence PSUs and so does Bengaluru. So, it makes a great sense of deal to have this corridor between these two large cities. She said the decision was already made and it would be Bundelkhand. I want Uttar Pradesh to grow, but will it attract Lockheed Martin or some of the large aerospace companies? I asked her. But she said no and that the decision had already been made," Rama Rao said. Stating that he had nothing against UP, Bihar, Madhya Pradesh and Rajasthan, Rama Rao said, "For India to grow, support the states that are doing really well. I am all for supporting UP, Bihar, Madhya Pradesh and Rajasthan. I have nothing against them. I want them to do well. But our policymaking has to be in sync with strengths. You can't say because Uttar Pradesh has 80 Lok Sabha seats and Telangana has just 17, we won't do it here and that UP has Yogi and he is upyogi (useful) to the Centre and K. Chandrashekar Rao is in Telangana and he isn't useful to us, so we won't set up the corridor here. Telangana is also part of this country." As I write this, Ukraine, a nation of 44 million people, is fighting valiantly to defend its freedom and territorial integrity against Vladimir Putins war of choice for all the wrong reasons. Caught between disbelief, despair and compulsions of realpolitik, the world at large seems helpless to help beyond an expression of outrage even as the Russian armed forces continue to penetrate deep inside Ukraine. Moscow has placed its nuclear forces on alert, in an ominous signal of a possibly prolonged confrontation. Russias exclusion from the SWIFT financial system and more pledges of military support from the United States and other countries, meanwhile, is of some comfort to those who stand on the right side of history. Mr Putins repeated misadventures starting with Georgia in 2008 and the annexation of Crimea in 2014 represent a brazen infraction of the first principles of the UN Charter. Russias ambition to redraw the territorial map of Central Europe and to forcibly reconfigure its geopolitics is a case without parallel in the 21st century. The possibility of a sovereign nation losing its identity within days by deployment of brute Russian force inspired by the fading memories of imperial grandeur and superpower status of the erstwhile Soviet Union tests the assumptions of a rules-based international order. Just as the world was beginning to limp back to a semblance of normality, having suffered the consequences of a devasting Covid-19 pandemic, Russias unprovoked assault on the territorial integrity of Ukraine has ramifications for global political stability. It raises once again the profoundly important question about the role and relevance of the UN and its instrumentalities as facilitators of global peace. The escalating armed hostilities in Ukraine underscore the urgency of reform of the UN system so that the aspirations of the numerical majority are not suborned by the mighty minority through an unconscionable exercise of the veto power, seen in the West-sponsored UNSC resolution against Russia. In a bizarre scenario, the aggressor, acting as a judge in its own cause, vetoed the critical UNSC resolution to shield itself against a formal international censure for its act of war in Ukraine. Moscows justification for Ukraines demilitarisation as a measure of self-defence, through what it describes as special military operations to prevent the former Soviet republic from moving into the US-led Natos orbit, is an orchestrated case of invented injury to reclaim lost territory and restore the dented Russian prestige following the dismemberment of the USSR. Mr Putins excursions in Georgia, Crimea, Moldova and Donbas are clearly part of a time driven strategy bolstered by the China-Russian entente and facilitated by divisions in Europe to reset the imperial table and reclaim Russias lost sphere of influence. Revelling in revanchism, Mr Putin longs for Moscows old glory and wishes to rewrite the past into the future. Though Mr Putins assertion that Ukraine cannot be treated as a state independent of Russia is a historical absurdity post-1991, his boastful challenge that any country attempting to interfere will create consequences you have never seen has introduced a chilling dimension to a grim situation. An extended war in Europe could de-freeze frozen conflicts in the region and challenge the received wisdom that economic interdependence between nations could alone safeguard international peace. The trajectory of the Ukrainian conflict could rekindle international interest in nuclear capability as the ultimate deterrent and defence against threats to territorial integrity, in a setback to the nuclear disarmament process. Throughout its evolution, international law has been repeatedly called upon to defend not only its efficacy but also its existence as an instrument of world peace. The debates in the UNGA and UNSC on several defining moments bear testimony to its impotence for securing peace in zones of conflict. This reminds us we live in a world of power untamed by legal constraints. Will the world find its voice to denounce Mr Putins war gambit or yield yet again to validate the ancient Greek wisdom that those who have the odds of power exact as much as they can and the weak yield to such conditions, as they get, is the question. A resolution of the Ukraine crisis consistent with its sovereignty and territorial integrity will indeed test the tenuous balance between power and principle. It will demonstrate whether the question of justice can be divorced from the equation of power and whether in civilising itself in the use of state power, the world has progressed from force to diplomacy, from diplomacy to law. For the moment, we must accept that the repeated triumph of force over freedom in times of conflict belies the claim that the present global order is designed to secure the triumph of freedom everywhere. Europes darkest hour today must spur the world to recognise the futility of evading hard choices to sustain principles that can ensure a just and humane world order. Indian diplomacy is challenged again to navigate, as best as possible, the balance between principle and pragmatism. In asserting the inviolability of the sovereignty and territorial integrity of nations, without explicitly endorsing Russias censure in the UNSC by its abstention, Indias has been a fine balancing act. While reinforcing the sacrosanct principles of the UN Charter, India has preserved its strategic neutrality in the service of its overarching and multidimensional national interests. Jawaharlal Nehru had cautioned that no government dare do anything, which in the short or long run is not manifestly to the advantage of the country.... Prime Minister Narendra Modis implicit message to Mr Putin in his telephonic conversation and through Indias UNSC statements is to step back from the red line and work towards a negotiated settlement. Despite the formidable, vastly superior war machine at his command, Mr Putin must know in todays wired world, any act of injustice or brutality will have global ramifications. He would know from history that the cry for freedom is an unending frenzy once it seizes popular imagination and that neither the aggressor nor the victim can escape the ravages of war. He should know that just as Iraq and Afghanistan have irretrievably diminished Americas credibility as the superpower arbitrator of global peace, the perception of Mr Putin as an aggressor in Ukraine has dented his standing both in the chanceries of the world and in the collective consciousness of the people as a whole. A collective global will to stand in solidarity with the Ukrainian people fighting for their freedom and dignity will be the test of civilisational progress anchored in empathy for the oppressed and resistance against injustice. The ban will be efefctive for passenger and cargo flights, and scheduled as well as charter flights. (Representational image: Wikimedia) WASHINGTON: The U.S. government on Tuesday announced a ban on Russian flights from American airspace following similar moves by the European Union and Canada after Russia's invasion of neighboring Ukraine. "I am announcing that we will join our allies in closing off American airspace to all Russian flights, further isolating Russia and adding an additional squeeze on their economy," Biden said in his State of the Union address. The U.S. Transportation Department Federal Aviation Administration orders will take effect by the end of the day Wednesday and will suspend operations of all aircraft owned, certified, operated, registered, chartered, leased, or controlled by, for, or for the benefit of, a person who is a Russian citizen. This includes passenger and cargo flights, and scheduled as well as charter flights "effectively closing U.S. air space to all Russian commercial air carriers and other Russian civil aircraft," the Transportation Department said. Late on Tuesday, United Airlines said it had temporarily suspended flying over Russian airspace, joining other major U.S. carriers who have taken the step after Russian troops last week poured into Ukraine. United had been continuing to fly over Russian airspace to operate some flights to and from India in recent days. Delta Air Lines, American Airlines and United Parcel Service all confirmed this week they had halted flights over Russia. FedEx on Tuesday did not respond to emails asking if it has stopped flying over Russia. United is canceling two flights to India for Tuesday and Wednesday as it evaluates how it could continue to operate via a different route that does not use Russian airspace. White House officials had privately asked if the move would harm U.S. supply chains or have other negative impacts, sources told Reuters. Russian flights have been effectively barred from U.S. destinations for the most part in recent days because of bans on the use of Canadian and European airspace. Some foreign governments have privately questioned why the United States did not move faster to ban Russian planes as have some U.S. lawmakers. Russian President Vladimir Putin has asserted Ukraine committed "genocide" in the Donbass region of eastern Ukraine, without presenting evidence, and said the invasion, called a "special operation" by Russian officials, was therefore justified to end it. Tech giant Apple announced Tuesday a halt in all product sales in Russia, the latest fallout over Moscow's invasion of Ukraine. Western governments, sporting organisations and big companies have cut Russia off or dealt it punishing sanctions over the internationally condemned attack on its neighbour. "We have paused all product sales in Russia. Last week, we stopped all exports into our sales channel in the country," said an Apple statement. The iPhone maker also announced Apple Pay and other services have been limited, while Russian state-owned media RT and Sputnik news apps were no longer available for download outside Russia. "We are deeply concerned about the Russian invasion of Ukraine and stand with all of the people who are suffering as a result of the violence," the statement said. "We are supporting humanitarian efforts, providing aid for the unfolding refugee crisis," it added. Also read: Five killed in Russian strike on Kyiv TV tower Ukraine's defiant government, which has urged its people to battle Russian forces, has asked for help from all quarters, including Apple's CEO Tim Cook. "I appeal to you... to stop supplying Apple services and products to the Russian Federation, including blocking access to the Apple Store!" Ukraine's digital minister Mykhailo Fedorov wrote in a letter he posted to Twitter Friday. Apple also said that it has disabled both traffic and "live incidents" in Apple Maps in Ukraine as a safety measure for Ukrainian citizens. "We will continue to evaluate the situation and are in communication with relevant governments on the actions we are taking. We join all those around the world who are calling for peace," the Apple statement said. The announcement came just as the European Union banned Russian RT and Sputnik from broadcasting in the bloc while banning "certain" Russian banks from the SWIFT bank messaging system. Tech firms from Facebook to TikTok and Microsoft had already moved to curb the reach of Russian state-linked news outlets, which stand accused of pushing misinformation about Moscow's invasion of Ukraine. Social media platforms have become one of the fronts in the attack, home to sometimes false narratives but also real-time monitoring of a conflict that marks Europe's biggest geopolitical crisis in decades. Facebook's parent Meta said Monday it would be restricting access in the European Union to RT and Sputnik. Video sharing app TikTok told AFP it had restricted Russian state-owned media access on its platform in the EU, while Microsoft said it was removing RT from its app store and would change its search engine Bing's algorithm to shift RT and Sputnik content to lower in results. Twitter and Facebook have both been hit with access restrictions in Russia since the invasion of Ukraine and are now "largely unusable," said web monitoring group NetBlocks. India's aluminium companies have sought the help of the Prime Minister's Office for immediate resumption of coal supplies to save domestic industries and jobs. With the industrys captive power plants (CPPs) left with critically low coal stocks of only three to four days, as against the prescribed level of over 15 days, there is a possibility that those employed at the plants and the several thousand ancillary and downstream industries may struggle to remain gainfully employed in the coming days, an aluminium industry body said in a letter to PMO. "With Coal India Ltd continuing to give unjustifiable priority to the power sector despite improvement in coal stocks, the supplies to the non-power sector have declined by a staggering 18.2 per cent in the last few months (September 2021-January 2022) compared to the same period last year. At the same time, coal stocks for the power sector have improved by 20 per cent for the same reporting duration," it said. According to the industry's premier body Aluminium Association of India (AAI), the industry requires an uninterrupted power supply through in-house captive power plants operating day and night. According to AAI, the industry has invested over Rs 50,000 crore to set up captive plants near the coal mine pit heads that are designed to operate on domestic coal grades from these mines. "Therefore, the coal demand for these CPPs cannot be suitably met simply through imports, due to both economic and technological constraints. The logistics involved in sourcing coal is also prohibitive as the large quantities could lead to the congestions of the rail networks and ports in India," it said. Producing a single ton of aluminium needs nearly 14,500 units of continuous power. Any outage of more than two hours can cause the molten aluminium in the smelting pots to freeze, leading to plant shutdowns of nearly 6 months and a further year to begin generating the metal at the desired purity levels again. With captive plants already facing a backlog of over 1,200 rakes, the AAI has urged the PMO to ensure on priority a supply of at least 25-30 coal rakes per day to the sector. Aluminium, a power-intensive sector, requires 15 times more electricity than steel and 145 times more power than cement to manufacture one tonne of the product. Coal accounts for around 40 per cent of aluminiums production cost. In the last letter to the PMO in October last year, the industry stated that the collapse of the sector will lead to the risk of livelihood for over one million local people, banks debt exposure of over Rs 1 lakh crore and additional national forex loss of Rs 90,000 crore. Check out latest DH videos here Chicago wheat jumped almost 3 per cent on Wednesday as the market continued its bull run, climbing to the highest since 2008 on concerns over prolonged supply disruptions following Russia's invasion of its rival grain exporter Ukraine. Corn eased after climbing to its highest since May and soybeans fell for the first time in three sessions. The most-active wheat contract on the Chicago Board of Trade (CBOT) rose 2.8 per cent to $10.11-1/4 by 0145 GMT, having earlier hit its highest since March 2008 at $10.23 a bushel. Read | India to ship record wheat as Ukraine crisis upends trade flows Corn slid 0.4 per cent to $7.22-3/4 a bushel, after rising to its highest since May earlier in the session, while soybeans gave up 0.6 per cent to $16.79-3/4 a bushel. Global wheat, corn and sunflower oil importers are likely to seek alternative shipments as the conflict between key suppliers Russia and Ukraine curbs supplies. Buyers of animal feed corn have rushed to book European Union supplies to replace Ukrainian exports blocked by Russia's invasion, traders said, but with the bloc also sensitive to loss of Ukrainian supply they may soon have to look elsewhere. Also Read | How Ukraine crisis will impact wheat prices Together, Russia and Ukraine account for about 29 per cent of global wheat exports, 19 per cent of corn exports and 80 per cent of exports of sunflower oil, which competes with soyoil. The world's three biggest container lines on Tuesday suspended cargo shipments to and from Russia, in another blow to trade with the country. Investors worry the conflict may prevent farmers in Russia and Ukraine from planting crops like corn this spring. Commodity funds were net buyers of CBOT corn, wheat, soybean, soyoil and soymeal futures contracts on Tuesday, traders said. Check out the latest DH videos here: Honda Motor said on Wednesday it has suspended its automobile and motorcycle exports to Russia, as countries impose stricter sanctions on Russia in protest against its invasion of Ukraine. A Honda spokesperson told Reuters that exports to Russia were already suspended as of Wednesday, without elaborating on when the suspension took effect. Individual dealers sell Honda vehicles in Russia since the automaker does not have factories in the country. Honda sold 1,406 new cars in Russia in fiscal 2020 which ended in March 2021. Also Read Nearly 6,000 Russian troops killed so far: Zelenskyy Honda cited logistics and finance issues as the reason for the suspension, specifically exporting the vehicles and making payments. Mitsubishi Motor Corp said on Tuesday it may suspend production and sale of its cars in Russia citing potential supply chain disruptions as a result of sanctions on Russia. Mazda Motor Corp also plans to halt exports of auto parts to Russia, Japan's Nikkei newspaper reported on Wednesday. Watch the latest DH Videos here: India's production and exports of Russia's Sputnik Covid-19 vaccines are expected to slow further following US sanctions on Russia's sovereign wealth fund that promotes the shot globally, three Indian pharmaceutical industry sources told Reuters. The Russian Direct Investment Fund (RDIF) had billed India as one of Sputnik's biggest production hubs and markets, though local sales have stagnated at 1.2 million doses out of 1.8 billion doses of various vaccines administered in the country. RDIF, which has said the US sanction this week could complicate its promotion of Sputnik shots, has deals with several Indian companies to make nearly 1 billion doses of it, though output has not risen beyond a few million doses. Read | No takers for Sputnik V vaccine; thousands of vials to go to waste RDIF's main Indian distributor for Sputnik is Dr. Reddy's Laboratories and its manufacturing partners include Hetero and the Serum Institute of India (SII). Another Indian company, which was to make more than 100 million Sputnik doses but had held off production due to a lack of demand in India, has now decided to not manufacture it at all, said a person with direct knowledge's of the matter. The person declined to be named or identify the company. Another source at an Indian company said Sputnik sales were likely to be slow in the near future. RDIF and Hetero did not respond to requests for comment. The SII declined to comment. Dr. Reddy's, one of India's biggest drugmakers which has been selling its products in and around Russia for more than three decades, said it did not see any impact as Indian companies no longer import material from Russia to make Sputnik shots in India. "We have manufacturing capabilities in India and drug substance is not imported. Hence there is no impact," a spokesperson said in an email. "Overall, we are monitoring evolving developments closely and preparing accordingly." Some 4 million Sputnik doses, bottled in India using imported material from Russia last year, were exported around October. Last month, India sent 135,875 locally made doses of the single-dose Sputnik Light vaccine to Uzbekistan, according to India's foreign ministry Last month, Samsung unveiled the much-awaited premium Galaxy S22 smartphone series. It comes in three variants-- a regular Galaxy S22, an above standard Galaxy S22 Plus and a top-end Galaxy S22 Ultra-- with prices ranging between Rs 72,999 and Rs 1,18,999, in India. They are slated to hit stores later this month on March 11. DH has received the Galaxy S22 Ultra 5G review unit and here are our initial thoughts about Samsung's most expensive S series mobile. Display and design The Galaxy S22 Ultra 5G flaunts an all-new unibody design. The 2021-series Galaxy S21 Ultra (review) came with a dedicated curved chiselled camera module fused with the frame and it protruded a lot over the back. But, with the new phone, Samsung has ditched conventional style and instead fused the four camera lenses along with the LED flash and companion photography sensor to the back shell. The design language is refreshing and I love it. Of course, this is subjective as some are used to traditional phone design and their priority lies with just the performance. As far as the colour goes, this unit is a Burgandy model, a shade darker than the Galaxy Note20 Ultra(review) Mystic Bronze. Talking of the latter, the new Galaxy S22 Ultra can be really called its true successor as Samsung has officially killed the Galaxy Note series. The new Samsung Galaxy S22 Ultra with S Pen. Credit: DH Photo/KVN Rohit The Galaxy S22 Ultra come with an S Pen stylus and a dedicated holster. Also, the next-generation S Ultra series models are expected to continue the legacy of the Note series at least for a few more years until Samsung comes with new mobile design innovation. The device features armoured aluminium rail around the edges and both the front and back are protected by Gorilla Glass Victus+, which is understood to be the sturdiest protective cover on an Android phone to date. And, of course, the device comes with an IP68 rating. On the top, the Galaxy S22 Ultra features 6.8-inch Quad HD+ (3088 x 1440p) Infinity-O-Edge Dynamic 2X AMOLED display and support variable 1-120Hz refresh rate, and up to 240Hz touch sampling rate in Game Mode. To offer better readability outdoors, Samsung for the first time has introduced Vision Booster and this feature can enable the display to hit peak brightness up to 1,750 nits. The new Samsung Galaxy S22 Ultra 5G. Credit: DH Photo/KVN Rohit Another interesting aspect of the device is that Samsung has used repurposed plastic wastes including discarded fishnets and others for several key components and also in the retail packaging to reduce the negative impact of consumer electronics goods on the environment. Processor configurations In India, Samsung for the first time is offering premium Qualcomm silicon during the first phase of launch. Previously, the devices used to come with Exynos chipset. The Galaxy S22 Ultra 5G houses a 4nm class Snapdragon 8 Gen 1 octa-core processor, which can clock CPU speed up to3.0GHz. Also, it comes paired with Adreno 730 graphics engine to ensure a better gaming experience and smooth day-to-day performance on the device. It is backed by 12GB RAM, 256GB/512GB storage and Android 12-based One UI 4.1. The user experience has been great in terms of operating the day-to-day chores such as opening apps and switching between them, and loading cameras. I need more time to fully assess the phone in terms of gaming and while recording high-resolution videos. Furthermore, the Galaxy S22 Ultra houses a 5,000mAh battery and it is more than enough for the device to last a full day easily, despite enabling a high display refresh rate. Though the retail package doesn't come with a charger adapter, the device supports 45W fast charging and also come with 15W wireless charging capability. Also, it supports multiple 5G SA/NSA bands-- N1, 2, 3, 5, 7, 8, 12, 20, 25, 28, 38, 40, 41, 66, 75, 77, and N78. Samsung Galaxy S22 Ultra come with a quad-camera module. Credit: DH Photo/KVN Rohit Photography hardware Samsung's new ultra-premium phone houses feature-rich quad-camera module-- main 108MP (with OIS, f/1.8) + 12MP 120-degree Ultra Wide sensor (f/2.2) + 10MP telephoto lens (with 3x zoom, f/2.4 OIS) + 10MP Periscope lens (10x zoom, f/4.9, 100x Space Zoom) with LED flash, laser autofocus and supports 4K video recording at 60 fps (frames per second) and even 8K at 30fps. On the front, it boasts 40MP (f/2.2). Samsung Galaxy S22 Ultra's camera sample. Credit: DH Photo/KVN Rohit In the brief time I spent with the device, it has been able to impress me with macro shots and also colour though warmer than natural look great to the eyes. Samsung Galaxy S22 Ultra's camera sample. Credit: DH Photo/KVN Rohit I have been told the company has improved the Portrait mode, Zoom picture capability with Artificial Intelligence (AI)-powered algorithm and also new Advanced Nightography in both the front and back camera to offer crisp and sharp images in all light conditions; I am very keen to test them out and let you readers know the full review coming on March 9. Samsung Galaxy S22 Ultra's camera sample. Credit: DH Photo/KVN Rohit Samsung Galaxy S22 Ultra 5G comes in two storage options--256GB and 512GB-- for Rs 1,09,999 and Rs 1,18,999, respectively. Get the latest news on new launches, gadget reviews, apps, cybersecurity, and more on personal technology only on DH Tech. In Punjab Assembly Election 2022, Amritsar West Assembly Constituency (AC No. 16) in Amritsar district goes to polls on February 14, 2022. Punjab Election Result 2022: Amritsar West Assembly constituency result will be declared on March 10, 2022. In Punjab Assembly Election 2017, INC candidate Raj Kumar Verka won Amritsar West constituency seat securing 52,271 votes, beating BJP candidate Rakesh Gill by a margin of 26,847 votes. In 2017, the total voters in Amritsar West constituency were 1,79,766. Of that, 1,06,740 voters cast their ballot visiting polling booths or exercising their voting franchise through postal ballots. Use the map below to get the latest updates, winners and losers in Amritsar West assembly constituency. Biden announces closure of U.S. airspace to Russian planes Xinhua) 13:15, March 02, 2022 WASHINGTON, March 1 (Xinhua) -- U.S. President Joe Biden announced Tuesday that the United States will close its airspace to all Russian planes in response to Moscow's ongoing military operations in Ukraine. Biden made the announcement while delivering his State of the Union address, the first of his presidency, to a joint session of Congress. "Tonight I'm announcing that we will join our allies in closing off American airspace to all Russian flights, further isolating Russia and adding additional squeeze on their economy," Biden said. The U.S. move followed similar ones made by the European Union and Canada on Sunday. In retaliation, the Russian aviation authority said Monday that Russia will ban airlines from 36 countries, including the 27 members of the EU, from using the country's airspace. While condemning Russia and reaffirming U.S. support for Ukraine, Biden reiterated in his speech that U.S. forces "are not engaged and will not engage in the conflict with Russian forces in Ukraine." (Web editor: Peng yukai, Liang Jun) House Speaker Nancy Pelosi said Tuesday that she would not wear a face mask to President Bidens State of the Union address, suggesting the COVID pandemic has eased enough to make the protective measure optional. People have to use their judgment about it, Pelosi said. If I had little children or if I were around little grandchildren, I would because some of them would not be vaccinated. Advertisement Speaker of the House Nancy Pelosi (D-Calif.) (J. Scott Applewhite/AP) The influential Democrat spoke about the pandemic, the Russian invasion of Ukraine, and President Bidens leadership under fire in an interview with MSNBCs Andrea Mitchell hours before the big speech. Pelosi said she reluctantly agrees with the White House that U.S. forces cannot directly get involved in the fight against Russia. Advertisement To be drawn into a conflict, with President Biden being such a unifier in all of this, and President Putin being a taunter for World War III, it just cant happen, Pelosi said. The House Speaker also discussed her impression of Russian strongman Vladimir Putin, conceding that she doesnt know what is the matter with him. Pelosi said she has spoken to world leaders about Putins demeanor, and most dont understand his actions or his end game in Ukraine. They just take at face value the evil that he is putting forth as something that we have to deal with, Pelosi said. She added that most are not playing armchair shrink or physician when it comes to Putin, although theres no shortage of opinions about his state of mind. French President Emmanuel Macron, for example, said he found Putin to be a very different person in a recent meeting compared to a one-on-one meeting just three years ago. Some people say he has cancer, and some people say he has brain fog from COVID. Other people just think hes a complete raging bully, Pelosi said. But whatever it is, the people of Ukraine are paying the price for it. Russian officials are ready to hold a second round of talks with Ukraine on Wednesday but it is unclear whether Ukrainian officials will turn up, the Kremlin said. Kremlin spokesperson Dmitry Peskov said there was contradictory information about the talks, which would follow a meeting at the Belarusian border on Monday that failed to produce a breakthrough. Ukrainian President Volodymyr Zelenskyy said Tuesday that Russia must stop bombing Ukrainian cities before more talks could take place on Russia's invasion of his country. "First we can try to predict whether Ukrainian negotiators will show up or not. Let's hope this happens. Our (negotiators) will be there and ready," Peskov told reporters. Also Read Explained | What are thermobaric weapons and how do they work? He said Moscow needed to formulate a harsh, thought-out and clear response to measures imposed by Western countries to undermine the Russian economy. Asked whether the Nord Stream 2 gas pipeline project led by Russia's Gazprom was dead, Peskov said the infrastructure was still there and common sense was for it to be launched. Berlin has said it will halt certification of the pipeline which runs from Russia to Germany but has yet to open. Peskov said Russia's economy was experiencing a serious blow but that it was solid and the country had experience of getting through crises. Watch the latest DH Videos here: On the seventh day of fighting in Ukraine Wednesday, Russia claims control of the southern port city of Kherson, street battles rage in Ukraine's second-biggest city Kharkiv, and Kyiv braces for a feared Russian assault. Here is a summary of the situation on the ground, based on statements from the sides, Western defence and intelligence sources and international organisations. - Russia says it has taken "full control" of Kherson, a port city on the Black Sea. Also Read India avoids condemning Putin to get weapons for China fight - Kherson's mayor says "We are still Ukraine. Still firm". - Ukraine says Russian paratroopers also landed in Kharkiv, Ukraine's second city. - There is fighting in the streets of Kharkiv, Ukraine's army says. - Emergency services report four dead, nine wounded in Kharkiv shelling. Also Read UK PM Boris Johnson calls Putin 'a war criminal', urges UN vote against invasion - AFP witnesses see rocket damage to security, police and university buildings in Kharkiv. - Russia steps up bombing of Ukraine's cities, including west and south of Kyiv. - With Western observers noticing a Russian military column outside Kyiv, the capital remains braced for a possible assault. - Spain is the latest country to announce supply of "military hardware" to Ukraine. - Ukraine claims 5,840 Russian soldiers have lost their lives in the conflict so far, a claim which cannot be verified. - Russia acknowledges that it has sustained losses, but so far has given no figures. - According to the Russian defence ministry, its forces have destroyed over 1,500 Ukrainian military elements including 58 planes, 46 drones and 472 tanks. - Ukraine denies suffering military losses on this scale. - Tuesday's Russian attack on a Kyiv TV tower killed 5, Ukraine says. - More than 350 civilians have died in the conflict so far, including 14 children, Ukraine says. - UN says nearly 836,000 people have fled conflict. Watch the latest DH Videos here: Plagued by poor morale as well as fuel and food shortages, some Russian troops in Ukraine have surrendered en masse or sabotaged their own vehicles to avoid fighting, a senior Pentagon official said Tuesday. Some entire Russian units have laid down their arms without a fight after confronting a surprisingly stiff Ukrainian defense, the official said. A significant number of the Russian troops are young conscripts who are poorly trained and ill-prepared for the all-out assault. And in some cases, Russian troops have deliberately punched holes in their vehicles gas tanks, presumably to avoid combat, the official said. The Pentagon official declined to say how the military made these assessments presumably a mosaic of intelligence including statements from captured Russian soldiers and communications intercepts or how widespread these setbacks may be across the sprawling battlefield. The official spoke on the condition of anonymity to discuss operational developments. But taken together, these factors may help explain why Russian forces, including an ominous 40-mile convoy of tanks and armored vehicles near Kyiv, Ukraines capital, have come to a near crawl in recent days, US officials said. Follow live Ukraine-Russia crisis updates here Besides dealing with shortages of fuel, food and spare parts, the Pentagon official said, Russian commanders leading that armored column toward Kyiv may also be regrouping and rethinking their battle plans, making adjustments on the fly to gain momentum for what US intelligence and military officials say is an inevitable push in the next several days to encircle and ultimately capture the capital. They have a lot of power available to them, said the Pentagon official, adding that 80 per cent of the more than 150,000 Russian troops amassed on Ukraines borders have now joined the fight. But US analysts have been struck by the risk-averse behaviour of such a large force, the Pentagon official said. Russia launched an amphibious landing to seize Mariupol, a pivotal port city on the Sea of Azov, but landed forces around 40 miles from the city. That allowed the Russians extra time and space to mount an invasion, but also gave the citys defenders time to prepare. Overnight, Russian troops surrounded Mariupol. Russias vaunted air force has yet to gain air superiority over Ukraine, with Russian warplanes thwarted by Ukrainian fighter jets and a surprisingly resilient and potent array of air defenses, from shoulder-fired Stinger anti-aircraft missiles to much larger surface-to-air weapons, the Pentagon official said. Also Read Russia batters Ukraine; both sides say ready for more talks For Russian forces coming out of Belarus, logistics problems have proved stubborn, a European official said Tuesday. Before the invasion, US and British intelligence had raised questions about the supply chain for the Russian troops in Belarus. During military exercises there, some of the soldiers were getting inadequate supplies of food and fuel, according to independent analysts. But US officials told allies that the Russians had fixed those problems by mid-February, which was one reason that US warnings about the invasion intensified in the middle of last month, according to the European official, who spoke on the condition of anonymity to discuss operational developments. But the challenges that Russian forces have faced show that their supply chain troubles have not been completely resolved, the European official said. The logistics failures may help explain the presence of the long, slow-moving convoy of military equipment that is coming toward Kyiv, a tactical failure that is presenting a key target for the Ukrainian military, the European official said. Russian officials, the European official said, expected to have secured air supremacy, at least around Kyiv. But the fact that Ukrainian air defense systems were still operating has put both Russian aircraft and the convoy of equipment in danger. This article originally appeared in The New York Times. Watch the latest DH Videos here: Ukraine had enough funds to cover all current spending, Finance Minister Sergiy Marchenko said on Wednesday, noting international support amid Russian invasion of his country. "We have huge international support... We carry out all social payments, pensions, salaries and financial support for the Army," Marchenko told Ukrainian TV in an interview, adding the ministry would continue issuing domestic war bonds. Check out DH's latest videos: Ukraine's besieged cities were bracing for more attacks on Wednesday as Russian commanders facing fierce Ukrainian resistance intensify their bombardment of urban areas in a push toward the capital Kyiv. Already shunned by the West over its invasion of Ukraine, Russia has shown no sign of stopping an assault that has included strikes on Kyiv and rocket attacks in the second city of Kharkiv. Dozens have been killed. Facing emboldened Ukrainian troops bolstered by citizen soldiers, Russia has failed to capture a single city since its full-scale invasion began nearly a week ago. Western analysts say Russia has fallen back on tactics that call for devastating built-up areas before entering them. Also Read Brent crude jumps to $110/bbl, highest since 2014, on choked Russian supply Hundreds of thousands of Ukrainians have fled the fighting as a miles-long Russian military convoy north of Kyiv advances toward the city. West of Kyiv, in the city of Zhytomyr, four people, including a child, were killed on Tuesday by a Russian cruise missile, a Ukrainian official said. Russian President Vladimir Putin has drawn global condemnation and sanctions that have sent the rouble to historic lows and forced Russians to queue outside banks for their savings. Putin ordered the "special military operation" last Thursday in a bid to disarm Ukraine, capture the "neo-Nazis" he says are running the country and crush its hopes of closer ties to the West. Ukraine, which is not a member of NATO, has called on the US-led military alliance to implement a no-fly zonea request rejected by Washington, which fears stoking a direct conflict between the world's two biggest nuclear powers. Washington and its allies have instead sent weapons to Kyiv, and Treasury Secretary Janet Yellen said the United States had agreed with partners to convene a task force "to freeze and seize the assets of key Russian elites." Also Read Foreign students stuck at Ukraine border complain of racism The move "will inflict financial pain on the powerful individuals surrounding Putin and make clear that no one is beyond our collective reach," Yellen said in a statement following a Tuesday call with Group of Seven officials. 'Stop bombing people' The West has imposed heavy sanctions on Russia to shut off its economy from the global financial system, pushing international companies to halt sales, cut ties, and dump tens of billions of dollars worth of investments. The sanctions have had an immediate impact on Russia's economy, with queues forming outside banks as Russians rush to salvage their savings. Exxon Mobil joined other major Western energy companies including British BP PLC and Shell in announcing it would quit oil-rich Russia over the invasion. Several countries have moved to ban Russian planes from their airspace, and US President Joe Biden was expected to announce a similar ban during his State of the Union speech on Tuesday night, a source familiar with the situation said. Also Read Dictators must 'pay a price': Biden in State of the Union The heaviest Russian bombardment so far appeared to be around Ukraine's second-largest city Kharkiv, near the border with Russia. A Russian strategic bomber fired 16 guided missiles toward a residential area of Kharkiv on Monday, Ukraine's defence ministry said. "According to preliminary data, dozens of Kharkiv residents, including children, died from these airstrikes," the ministry said on its Facebook page. In Ukraine's largely Russian-speaking city of Donetsk, in territory controlled by Russian-backed separatists, authorities said three civilians had been killed by Ukrainian shelling. Reuters was not able to confirm any of the incidents on reports of casualties. The United Nations says at least 136 civilians have been killed in the invasion, but the real number of people is likely much higher. Russia has not published any precise casualty figures for its own military, but says its losses have been far lower than those of Ukrainian forces. Also Read Apple, Ford, other big US brands join corporate wave shunning Russia Russian and Ukrainian negotiators met over a ceasefire on Monday but talks broke down with no further rounds yet announced. Ukrainian President Volodymyr Zelenskyy said on Monday that Russia must "first stop bombing people" before talks could make any headway. Zelenskyy, who has been staying in a heavily guarded government compound in Kyiv, warns that the capital remains Russia's main target. Residents have been sheltering in underground metro stations at night for fear of attacks. "We resist the invasive aggression," Zelenskyy wrote on Twitter late on Tuesday, after thanking Western leaders for their support. "Today, more than ever, it is important for us to feel that we are not alone." Watch the latest DH Videos here: The United Nations is set to approve a plan to create the world's first-ever global plastic pollution treaty on Wednesday, describing it as the most significant green deal since the 2015 Paris climate agreement. Member states have held talks for more than a week in Nairobi to agree on the outline of a pact to rein in soaring plastic pollution, an environmental crisis that extends from ocean trenches to mountain tops. Government officials will later today approve a resolution that lays out the broad terms for a treaty that should be finalised by the end of 2024, said Inger Andersen, Executive Director of the United Nations Environment Programme. Also Read | Climate change to uproot millions, especially in Asia, according to UN "This is a historic moment," Andersen told delegates in Nairobi, warning that the success of any agreement would depend on the final terms that are still to be negotiated. "As we embark on this journey, let us be clear that the agreement will only truly count if it has clear provisions that are legally binding." Any treaty that puts restrictions on plastic production, use or design would impact oil and chemicals companies that make raw plastic, as well as consumer goods giants that sell thousands of products in single-use packaging. Reuters reported on Monday that a draft resolution stated that the plastic treaty would be both legally binding and address the "full lifecycle of plastic", which could cover production and packaging design, as well as waste. Also Read A hotter planet means a hungrier planet, IPCC climate report warns However, the terms in the draft resolution are broad and a U.N. intergovernmental negotiating committee will now have to contend with countries and business interests that will interpret those words to their advantage, delegates said. Switzerland's ambassador for the environment Franz Perrez hinted at the divisions between countries during some 90 hours of late-night negotiations over the last week. "This is a division between those who are ambitious and want to find a solution and those who don't want to find a solution for whatever reasons," he told a news conference in Nairobi on Tuesday. "We have to overcome together the concerns of those who are not yet ready to make these ambitious steps that we would like to make together." Watch the latest DH Videos here: China will not join in sanctions on Russia that have been led by the West, the country's banking regulator said on Wednesday, adding that he believed the impact of the measures on China would be limited. China, which has refused to condemn Russia's invasion of Ukraine, has repeatedly criticised what it calls illegal and unilateral sanctions. "As far as financial sanctions are concerned, we do not approve of these, especially the unilaterally launched sanctions because they do not work well and have no legal grounds," Guo Shuqing, chairman of the China Banking and Insurance Regulatory Commission, told a news conference. Also Read | Taiwan leader warns against 'turning a blind eye' to aggression "We will not participate in such sanctions. We will continue to maintain normal economic and trade exchanges with relevant parties," he said. China and Russia have grown increasingly close in recent years, including as trading partners. Total trade between the two jumped 35.9% last year to a record $146.9 billion, according to Chinese customs data, with Russia serving as a major source of oil, gas, coal and agriculture commodities, running a trade surplus with China. "The impact from the sanctions on China's economy and financial sector is so far not too significant," Guo added. "Overall they will not have much impact (on China) even in the future," Guo said, citing the resilience of China's economy and financial sector. Watch the latest DH Videos here: Jean-Jacques Kabeya is furious: like other foreign students in Ukraine -- from Africa, Asia and the Middle East -- he says has been stopped from leaving the country by its border guards. He and several other foreigners alleged racist treatment by both the border guards and ordinary Ukrainians in interviews to AFP. Two days after fleeing the bombing around the eastern city of Kharkiv, Kabeya reached the checkpoint at Shegyni, at the border with Poland, on Sunday evening. But the soldiers and security guards there turned him back, said the 30-year-old student studying to become a pharmacist. Also read: Europe welcomes Ukrainian refugees - others, not so much "They told me 'You're going to stay here, you're fleeing the war, stay here; you are going to fight with us -- you're not leaving, least of all you blacks'," he said. Now, after 36 hours waiting in vain to get through, he was back at the train station in the western city of Lviv. There he found some compatriots from the Democratic Republic of Congo, who took him under their wing. "It's a catastrophe!" said Kabeya, adding that he was still trying to find a way out. Ukraine is a popular destination for foreign students, with tens of thousands heading there to study. But other foreign students in Lviv had similar stories to tell, and the governments of Nigeria and South Africa have already called for better treatment for their citizens. The African Union issued a statement Monday expressing concern at what appeared to be "shockingly racist" treatment of foreign students. Some countries did however report that a few dozen of their citizens had managed to leave the country. Also read: Crisis stretches Indian neutrality to the limit At Shegyni border post on Tuesday morning, there were still several hundred people, muffled up against the cold, queueing patiently to make the crossing. They were from Pakistan, India, Algeria, DR Congo, Cameroon, Ghana and Algeria. Some said they had spent four nights there, with temperatures dropping as low as -10 (14 degrees Fahrenheit), in a desperate bid to leave. On the other side of the road was another queue, reserved for Ukrainians -- mainly women and children as most men had stayed behind to fight. That line was moving more quickly. "All of us, we've got our papers," said Mesum Ahmed, a 23-year-old computer student from Pakistan. "Because we're foreigners, they are treating us like dogs. "We've been sleeping here, on this pavement," said Ahmed, dressed in denim and sporting a beanie and a travel pillow around his neck. "But the Ukrainians, they couldn't care less." "You can see fine well what separates them from us," a young Nigerian added, bitterly. "We're black, that's what it is." The only help on hand was from the local volunteers serving them hot drinks and sandwiches. "We're here, we wait, and they don't tell us anything," said Richard Adjen Kusi, a student from Ghana. He left the central city of Cherkassy when Russian President Vladimir Putin "started talking about nuclear weapons three days ago." But everything seemed to be blocked here, he said. "It's not moving one centimetre...I'm scared." A group of around 30 students from Cameroon who until recently had been in the central city of Kirovograd said it was only in the last few days that they had experienced racism in Ukraine. Before the war, everything had been fine. Read | In subtle message to Putin, Modi stresses 'respect for sovereignty' of all nations But Bryan Famini, a 22-year-old economics student, said that changed with the invasion. "In the stations, on the trains, were were systematically kept away from the seating," he said. "Some Ukrainians even made fun of us from their cars, seeing us walking," said 22-year-old Ghislain Weledji. "I've been disappointed by this country," he added. "I won't be coming back." Ukraine's border service denied there had been any difficulties. "Nobody has been prevented from leaving Ukraine," they told AFP. No they had received no complaints. On the Polish side, officials confirmed that anyone fleeing Ukraine would be welcomed, whatever their nationality. As well as the nearly 680,000 refugees who have already left Ukraine, there are an estimated one million who have had fled their homes but are still inside the country. At Lviv station, 70 kilometres (44 miles) from the border, thousands of Ukrainians -- and some foreigners -- were still waiting Tuesday, in the hope of getting a place on one of the rare trains leaving for Poland. Amanjyot, a 23-year-old medical student said she had tried to board one train the day before but that Ukrainians had been given priority. But she and her friends were grateful for the succour provided by Ukraine's Red Cross workers and other charities in front of the station. "They help so much!" she said. There was plenty of food and they took care of everyone, without discrimination, she added. For the first time, two powerful women politicians -- Kamala Harris and Nancy Pelosi -- were seated on the platform behind President Joe Biden during a State of the Union address at the US Capitol on Tuesday. Vice President Harris and House Speaker Pelosi flanked the president as is customary during the annual State of the Union. Pelosi, 81, is the first and only woman to serve as Speaker of the House and Harris, 57, is the first woman to serve as vice president. Harris and Pelosi were sitting behind Biden during the State of the Union because the two seats on the dais have always been reserved for the vice president and the House Speaker, regardless of political affiliation. Read | Biden warns Putin 'has no idea what's coming' Both Harris and Pelosi also sat behind the president during his address to Congress last year but that speech, delivered just weeks after Biden took office, was not considered a State of the Union address, US media reported. George W. Bushs 2007 address, shortly after Pelosi became the first female speaker of the House, marked the first time there was one woman behind a President. Harris is the first woman and first Black and Asian American person ever sworn in as US vice president. Harris, a Democrat, has served as the US Senator from California and has been described as a trailblazer by former president Barack Obama. Harris was born in Oakland in California. Her mother Shyamala Gopalan migrated to the US from Tamil Nadu, while her father, Donald J Harris, moved to the US from Jamaica. Pelosi, born in Maryland, was re-elected as Speaker in 2009. She served as the House Minority Leader from 2011 to 2019 when she was elected as the Speaker after the Democratic Party gained control of the House. Pelosi, from California, has been a US representative for over 30 years, first taking office in 1987. Watch latest videos by DH here: New Zealand police moved in on Wednesday to end an anti-vaccine mandate protest that has disrupted the country's capital for the past three weeks, towing away cars and dismantling tents set up outside parliament. Taking inspiration from truckers' demonstrations in Canada, hundreds of protesters have been blocking streets with trucks, cars and motorcycles, in a protest that has led to violent clashes. Police said 60 people were arrested during Wednesday's operation and they had "gained significant ground" in efforts to clear the protesters. At least three officers were injured, police said. Protesters used fire extinguishers, paint-filled projectiles, homemade plywood shields and pitchforks as weapons and a cord was set up as a trip wire, police said. Social media footage showed protesters throwing full water bottles and shouting abuse at the police. Also Read | Canada's protests settle down, but could echo in politics Authorities used loudspeakers to warn protesters they face arrest for trespassing on parliament grounds if they refuse to leave. Pepper spray was used against some protesters. "Those protesters illegally occupying parliament grounds and surrounding streets have been given ample opportunity to leave. It is time for them to go," Prime Minister Jacinda Ardern said at a news conference after the police action. The protests have been fuelled by misinformation and conspiracy theories, she said. Police Commissioner Andrew Coster said it was time to clear the roads of Wellington. The protest began as a stand against Covid-19 vaccine mandates but was later joined by groups calling for an end to all pandemic restrictions. Also Read | US truckers launch 'The People's Convoy' in pandemic protest "We are fighting for our standard of life. We want our sovereign right to our bodies," said Kate Siegert, who is unvaccinated, as she watched protesters move forward to block police advances. Siegert, who has made several trips from her home in Auckland to join the protest, said she lost her IT job because of mandates requiring vaccination for those who work in the health industry. At least 10 children were seen within the protest area and police said they had concerns for their wellbeing. Lisa Suasua, 55, who has been part of the protests for weeks said she will stay until the end. "They (the police) have been pretty brutal. They don't talk, they ask us to move on," she said. "They came in about 6 in the morning and started pulling up the tents in the church (grounds) that has women and children in it and just started coming through with their riot gear," she said. A country of five million people, New Zealand imposed tough anti-virus curbs that restricted its cases to just over 118,000 and 56 deaths, far lower than in many developed countries. But fuelled by the Omicron variant, daily infections are currently hovering near record levels. About 95% of eligible people are vaccinated with two doses, with shots mandatory for some staff in front-line jobs. Check out the latest DH videos here: The U.S. ban on Russian flights in American airspace announced by President Biden is expected to begin on Wednesday night at 9 p.m. Eastern Time. The Federal Aviation Authority and Transportation Department announced the bans timing after Biden told the nation during his State of the Union address that the action was designed to punish Russia for its invasion of Ukraine. Advertisement Aeroflot Airbus A330 plane at Sheremetyevo airport, Moscow, Russia in 2013. (Sergei Ivanov/AP) Biden won standing ovations from both Republican and Democratic lawmakers when he announced the new measures to roll back the Russian invasion. While he may make gains on the battlefield, he will pay a continuing high price over the long run, Biden said. Advertisement [ Biden wins cheers from both sides of the aisle for tough on Russia SOTU ] The ban covers both passenger and cargo flights, as well as charters. Exceptions will be made for Russian carriers with planes on the ground in the U.S. who need to make additional flights necessary for their aircraft to depart the United States, the Transportation Department said. The Russian Aeroflot airline had operated five daily flights to New York, Los Angeles, Miami and Washington D.C. Even before the Biden announcement, United Airlines announced that it was no longer using Russian airspace and canceling some flights to India. A Wednesday flight from Mumbai to its Newark hub is scheduled to stop in Bangor, Maine, to refuel after taking a circuitous route over the Middle East. Expand Autoplay Image 1 of 191 Firefighters work to extinguish a fire after an airstrike hit a tire shop in Lviv, Ukraine, Monday, April 18, 2022. Russian missiles hit the city of Lviv in western Ukraine on Monday, killing at least six people, Ukrainian officials said, as Moscow's troops stepped up strikes on infrastructure in preparation for an all-out assault on the east. (Mykola Tys/AP) European airlines fly over Russia far more often than their U.S. counterparts. Before the war, about 600 flights to or from Europe passed through Russian airspace, according to aviation data firm Cirium. Were choosing to hold Russia accountable for its actions, Linda Thomas-Greenfield, the U.S. ambassador to the United Nations, told the General Assembly ahead of a planned vote denouncing the Ukraine invasion. The nonbinding measure, which demands that Russia stop the war and withdraw from Ukraine, passed by a potent 141-5 margin with China and 34 other nations abstaining. Russia and Belarus voted no, along with Syria, North Korea and Eritrea, all of which are internationally isolated totalitarian nations. Pope Francis on Wednesday asked people around the world to remember Ukrainians in underground shelters seeking protection from bombardments and thanked Poland for taking in the bulk of refugees from the war. Francis spoke at his weekly general audience on Ash Wednesday, which he has declared a day of prayer and fasting for peace in Ukraine. After addressing Poles, the pope went off script to say that the Polish translator on the stage with him, Father Marek Viktor Gongalo, is Ukrainian. "His parents are now in underground shelters to protect themselves from the bombs in a place near Kyiv," the pope said. "By accompanying him, we accompany all the people who are suffering from the bombings, including his elderly parents and so many other elderly who are in underground shelters defending themselves. Let us remember these people in our hearts." Read | Russian military claims control over Ukraine's Kherson Kyiv residents have been sheltering in metro stations and other underground sites at night, there are long lines for fuel, and some products are running out in shops. More than half a million Ukrainians have fled the fighting since the invasion, which Russia calls a special military operation, began, most crossing into Poland and Romania. The European Commission proposed granting temporary residence to Ukrainian refugees. "You were the first to support Ukraine, opening your borders, your hearts and the doors of your homes to Ukrainians fleeing war," the pope said, addressing Poles through the translator. "You are generously offering them everything they need to live in dignity, despite the drama of the moment. I am deeply grateful to you and I bless you from my heart!" he said. Francis has called for humanitarian corridors to help refugees leave and said those who make war should not be deluded into thinking that God is on their side. The Kremlin says its campaign is not designed to occupy territory but to destroy its neighbour's military capabilities and capture what it regards as dangerous nationalists. The Vatican has called for an immediate stop to the attack and said it is ready to "facilitate dialogue" between Russia and Ukraine. Watch latest videos by DH here: Russia bombed a TV tower in Ukraine's capital on Tuesday and rained rockets on the city of Kharkiv as Moscow intensified its bombardment of Ukrainian urban areas in a shift of tactics after its six-day invasion stalled. A US official said a miles-long armoured column bearing down on the capital Kyiv had not made any advances in the past 24 hours, frozen in place by logistics problems, short on fuel and food, and perhaps pausing to reassess tactics. Russia's defence ministry urged Kyiv residents to flee and said it would strike unspecified areas used by Ukraine's security services and communications. Speaking in a heavily guarded government compound in Kyiv, Ukrainian President Volodymyr Zelenskyy said Russia must "first stop bombing people" before peace talks could make any headway. Also read: Crisis stretches Indian neutrality to the limit In a joint interview with Reuters and CNN, Zelenskyy also urged NATO members to impose a no-fly zone to stop Russia's airforce, something the military alliance has ruled out. As Zelenskyy, unshaven and wearing simple khaki clothes, spoke, news came that a Russian missile had struck a TV tower near the Babyn Yar Holocaust memorial site in Kyiv, killing at least five people. Zelenskyy, who also spoke by phone for 30 minutes with US President Joe Biden on Tuesday, said the artillery barrages on the eastern city of Kharkiv amounted to "state terrorism". Biden and Zelenskyy discussed how Russia had intensified attacks on sites used by civilians, the White House said. The US president is expected to highlight Western unity over Ukraine in his State of the Union address later on Tuesday. 'Shambolic' President Vladimir Putin has drawn global condemnation and sanctions that have already sent the rouble into freefall and forced Russians to queue outside banks for their savings. The West has imposed heavy sanctions on Russia to shut off its economy from the global financial system, pushing international companies to halt sales, cut ties, and dump tens of billions of dollars' worth of investments. Also read: Apple says 'paused' all product sales in Russia But nearly a week since Russian troops poured over the border, they have not captured a single major Ukrainian city after running into far fiercer resistance than they expected. "Looking at the Russian operation so far, they're having tremendous problems with logistics and communications. The whole effort seems shambolic," Michael Kofman, an expert on the Russian military at Washington's Wilson Center, wrote in a tweet. Many Western military analysts fear that Russia will now fall back on tactics which call for crushing bombardment of built-up areas before trying to enter them. A senior US defence official, speaking on condition of anonymity, said: "One reason why things appear to be stalled north of Kyiv is that the Russians themselves are regrouping and rethinking and trying to adjust to the challenges that they've had." The Russians have been surprised not only by the scale of Ukrainian resistance but also by poor morale among their own forces, some of whom surrendered without a fight, the official said, without providing evidence. Russia still has more forces to throw into the fight, though. Also read: Foreign students stuck at Ukraine border complain of racism Russia's Defence Minister Sergei Shoigu said the "special military operation" would continue until it had achieved its goals, defined by Putin as disarming Ukraine and capturing the "neo-Nazis" he says are running the country. Rocket strikes on Tuesday in Kharkiv, Ukraine's second biggest city, killed at least 10 people and wounded 35, Ukrainian Interior Ministry adviser Anton Herashchenko said. Human rights groups and Ukraine's ambassador to the United States have accused Russia of using cluster bombs and vacuum bombs, weapons condemned by many organisations. Moscow denies targeting civilians. Munitions experts who reviewed footage on social media of attacks on Monday said Kharkiv appeared to have been targeted by cluster bombs. High-rise buildings, schools, and kindergartens were among the buildings destroyed in those strikes, Interfax Ukraine reported, citing Ukraine's defence ministry. In the south, Russia claimed to have completely encircled Ukraine's Azov Sea coast. If confirmed, that would mean Russian forces invading from Crimea had joined up with separatists in the east and had cut off Ukraine's main eastern port, Mariupol. Zelenskyy said Kyiv remained the main target. Some Kyiv residents have been sheltering in underground metro stations at night, there are long lines for fuel, and some products are running out in shops. Appeal ro Europe In an emotional address to the European Parliament by video link on Tuesday, a day after he signed an official request to join the European Union, Zelenskyy urged the bloc to prove that it sided with Ukraine. "Do prove that you will not let us go. Do prove that you are indeed Europeans and then life will win over death and light will win over darkness," he said. Russian Foreign Minister Sergei Lavrov told a Geneva disarmament meeting via video link that Ukraine had been seeking nuclear weapons. He did not provide evidence other than saying "Ukraine still has Soviet nuclear technologies and the means of delivery of such weapons." More than 100 diplomats walked out of the hall in protest as his speech began, underlining Russia's international isolation. Ukraine's general staff said Russian losses included 5,710 personnel, 29 destroyed and damaged aircraft and 198 tanks, all figures that could not be verified. Russia has given no full account of its battlefield losses. 'I saw war' Moscow announced a ban on foreign companies selling assets to try to halt the flight of Western companies abandoning their Russian ties. Putin also issued a decree banning cash exports of foreign currency from Russia exceeding $10,000 in value. The rouble hit a record low on Tuesday, threatening the living standards of ordinary Russians. Most effective among the sanctions so far have been those on Russia's central bank that prevent it from using its $630 billion foreign reserve war chest to prop up the rouble. With energy prices soaring, the US and its allies agreed Tuesday to release oil reserves as buyers avoid Russian suppliers. More than 660,000 people, mostly women and children, have fled Ukraine to neighbouring countries such as Poland and Romania since the invasion began, the UN refugee agency said. At the Hungarian border crossing Tiszabecs, a mother cradled a baby in her arms after a four-day drive from Kyiv. "I saw war, I saw rockets," said her older son Ivan, 15, who looked exhausted after the journey. His father had stayed behind to fight. Russia renewed its assault on Wednesday on Ukraine's second-largest city in a pounding that lit up the skyline with balls of fire over populated areas, even as both sides said they were ready to resume talks aimed at stopping the new devastating war in Europe. The escalation of attacks on crowded cities followed an initial round of talks between outgunned Ukraine and nuclear power Russia on Monday that resulted in only a promise to meet again. It was not clear when new talks might take place or what they would yield. Ukraine's leader earlier said Russia must stop bombing before another meeting. Follow live Ukraine-Russia crisis updates here Ukrainian President Volodymyr Zelenskyy has decried Russia's bombardment as a blatant terror campaign, while US President Joe Biden warned on Tuesday that if the Russian leader didn't pay a price for the invasion, the aggression wouldn't stop with one country. The bombardment continued Wednesday. Ukrainian UNIAN news agency quoted the health administration chief of the northern city of Chernihiv as saying two cruise missiles hit a hospital there. The hospital's main building suffered damage, Serhiy Pivovar said, and authorities were working to determine the casualty toll. No other information was immediately available. Also Read | Ukraine asks Russian mothers to fetch captured troops A Russian strike also hit the regional police and intelligence headquarters in Kharkiv, Ukraine's second-largest city with a population of about 1.5 million, killing four people and wounding several, the state emergency service of Ukraine said. It added that residential buildings were also hit, but did not provide further details. A blast blew the roof off of the five-story police building and set the top floor alight, according to videos and photos released by the service. Pieces of the building were strewn across adjacent streets. The attack followed a day after one in Kharkiv's central square that killed at least six people and shocked many Ukrainians for hitting at the center of life in a major city. A Russian strike also targeted a TV tower in the capital of Kyiv. Also Read | UN says Ukraine refugee surge soon to hit 1 million Roughly 874,000 people have fled Ukraine and the UN refugee agency warned the number could cross the 1 million mark soon. Countless others have taken shelter underground. The overall death toll from the seven-day war is not clear, with neither Russia nor Ukraine releasing the number of troops lost. Ukraine's State Emergency Service said more than 2,000 civilians have died, though it was impossible to verify that claim. The UN human rights office has tallied 136 civilian deaths, while acknowledging the actual toll is surely far higher. Ukrainian authorities said five people were killed in the TV tower strike, which also hit the site of the Babi Yar Holocaust memorial. A spokesman for the memorial said a Jewish cemetery at the site, where Nazi occupiers killed more than 33,000 Jews over two days in 1941, was damaged. Russia previously told people living near transmission facilities used by Ukraine's intelligence agency to leave their homes. But Russian Defense Ministry spokesman Igor Konashenkov claimed Wednesday that the airstrike on the TV tower did not hit any residential buildings. He did not address the reported deaths or the damage to Babi Yar. Zelenskyy, who called the strike on the square in Kharkiv a war crime that the world would never forget, expressed outrage Wednesday at the attack on Babi Yar and concern that other historically significant and religious sites, such as St. Sophia's Cathedral, could be targeted. Shelling earlier hit the town of Uman, a significant pilgrimage site for Hasidic Jews. This is beyond humanity, Zelenskyy said in a speech posted on Facebook. They have orders to erase our history, our country and all of us. Zelenskyy, who is Jewish, called on Jews around the world to protest the invasion. Even as Russia pressed its assault, Kremlin spokesman Dmitry Peskov said Wednesday that a delegation would be ready later in the day to meet Ukrainian officials. Ukrainian Foreign Minister Dmytro Kuleba also said his country was ready but noted that Russia's demands have not changed and that he wouldn't accept any ultimatums. Neither side said where the talks might take place. As the war wears on, Russia finds itself increasingly isolated, beset by the sanctions that have thrown its economy into turmoil and left the country practically friendless, apart from a few nations like China, Belarus and North Korea. Leading Russian bank Sberbank announced on Wednesday that it is pulling out of European markets amid the tightening Western sanctions. In Washington, Biden used his first State of the Union address on Tuesday to highlight the resolve of a reinvigorated Western alliance that has worked to rearm the Ukrainian military and adopt those tough sanctions. Throughout our history we've learned this lesson when dictators do not pay a price for their aggression, they cause more chaos, Biden said. They keep moving. And the costs and threats to America and the world keep rising. As Biden spoke, a 64-kilometre convoy of hundreds of Russian tanks and other vehicles advanced slowly on Kyiv, the capital city of nearly 3 million people, in what the West feared was a bid by Russian President Vladimir Putin to topple the government and install a Kremlin-friendly regime. The invading forces also pressed their assault on other towns and cities. Britain's Defense Ministry said Kharkiv and the strategic port of Mariupol were encircled by Russian forces and that troops had reportedly moved into the center of a third city, Kherson. Russia's Defense Ministry said it had seized Kherson, although the city's mayor denied Russia had taken full control. The Vienna-based International Atomic Energy Agency, the United Nations' nuclear watchdog, said it had received a letter from Russia saying its military had taken control around Ukraine's largest nuclear power plant. According to the letter, personnel at the plant continued their work on providing nuclear safety and monitoring radiation in normal mode of operation, and it said the "radiation levels remain normal. Russia has already seized control of the decommissioned Chernobyl nuclear power plant, scene of the world's worst nuclear disaster in 1986. The IAEA says that it has received a request from Ukraine to provide immediate assistance in coordinating activities in relation to the safety of Chernobyl and other sites. Many military experts worry that Russia may be shifting tactics. Moscow's strategy in Chechnya and Syria was to use artillery and air bombardments to pulverize cities and crush fighters' resolve. Britain's Defense Ministry said it had seen an increase in Russian air and artillery strikes on populated urban areas over the past two days. Human Rights Watch said it documented a cluster bomb attack outside a hospital in Ukraine's east in recent days. Residents also reported the use of such weapons in Kharkiv and Kiyanka village. The Kremlin denied using cluster bombs. Cluster bombs shoot smaller bomblets over a large area, many of which fail to explode until long after they've been dropped. If their use is confirmed, that would represent a new level of brutality in the war. In the southern port city of Mariupol, the mayor said Wednesday morning that the attacks had been relentless. We cannot even take the wounded from the streets, from houses and apartments today, since the shelling does not stop," Mariupol Mayor Vadym Boychenko was quoted by the Interfax news agency as saying. Boychenko referred to Russia's actions as a genocide using the same word Putin has used to justify the invasion. On Tuesday, Moscow made new threats of escalation, days after raising the specter of nuclear war. A top Kremlin official warned that the West's economic war against Russia could turn into a real one. Russia has blamed the conflict on Western threats to Russia's security, and Peskov, the Kremlin spokesman, said Moscow was weighing counter-sanctions against unfriendly countries. He didn't elaborate on what they could target. Peskov acknowledged the global economic punishment hitting Russia and Russians now is unprecedented but said Moscow had been prepared for all manner of sanctions, and the potential damage had been taken into account before launching the invasion. We have experience with this. We have been through several crises, he said. Ukraine's Defense Ministry said it had evidence that Belarus, a Russian ally, is preparing to send troops into Ukraine. A ministry statement posted early on Wednesday on Facebook said Belarusian troops have been brought into combat readiness and are concentrated close to Ukraine's northern border. Belarusian President Alexander Lukashenko has said his country has no plans to join the fight. Watch latest videos by DH here: Home was finally just a flight away for around 100 Indian students, who managed to cross over to Poland from war-hit Ukraine on Wednesday morning after experiencing several anxious moments over the last one week. The students, who had to brave hunger and freezing temperatures amid a sense of uncertainty, heaved a sigh of relief when they crossed over to Poland. They now await their flight back home on Thursday. We finally made it after experiencing so many anxious moments in the last one week, including freezing nights at the underground railway station in Kyiv, said Ansh Pandita, a third-year student of the Taras Shevchenko National Medical University in the Ukrainian capital. Also read: Risking lives, students leave war-ravaged eastern Ukraine for border The students shared their picture as soon as they entered Poland. From the border, they were taken into buses kept in readiness by the Indian mission. At Lviv, we saw a little over 20 students from the Kharkiv Medical College waiting to cross over, said Ansh, who hails from Ghaziabad and had taken over the role of the leader of the group. The students had posted videos on social media platforms seeking help when they were stranded at the Vokzal station, Kyivs main train hub. Ansh and the other students who spoke to PTI over the phone from their hotel Prezydenckie in Rzeszow, located nearly 60 kilometres from the Poland-Ukraine border, said the Indian mission in Poland is organising their return, adding, We are hopefully going to get our flight on Thursday. We were starved, tension was high for the last seven days, but now we are all safe and I cant even describe the happiness in words, an exhausted Ashna, the twin sister of Ansh, said. The students, after being left to fend for themselves by the Indian mission in Kyiv, hired a bus after reaching Lviv from the capital city at night. Of course, we were in a dilemma whether to go to Poland or Hungary but then, all of us decided for Poland because it was nearer and we were dead exhausted, Ansh said. After crossing the Ukraine border from Budomeriz, things went smoothly for the students. A mission bus took them to Rzeszow, where the Indian embassy staff registered them for their onward journey to India. The students had a traumatising time on Monday at the railway station in Kyiv, where they were not allowed to board a train and in some cases, the Ukrainian guards even beat them up. After they were pushed away from a number of trains, the students split into smaller groups and somehow managed to get on to a train to Lviv, where the officials of many embassies are stationed. The train was crowded and they could manage only standing space during the nine-hour journey. Back home in Ghaziabad, Ansh and Ashnas parents Anil and Sunita breathed a sigh of relief following days of anxiety. Last one week -- seven days and seven nights -- were a nightmare for me and my wife as we were horrified, frightened for our twin kids who got stuck in Kyiv.... We had sleepless nights, only to keep faith in god that they will return safely. We, as parents, were providing moral support to them, keeping them strong and supporting them so that they face the tough situation but down within, tears and anxiety were gripping us, said Anil. Finally, they managed to leave Kyiv at their own risk and without any support from the authorities and somehow managed to cross over to Poland today. This gave us some relief, but we are waiting for their safe return, he added. Anil recalled that he was a displaced Kashmiri Pandit and had to build everything again from the scratch. India on Tuesday "strongly and emphatically" asked Ukraine and Russia to create "urgent safe passages" for the Indian nationals stuck in various conflict zones in Ukraine, after a medical student from Karnataka was killed in intense shelling in the eastern Ukrainian city of Kharkiv. At a media briefing, Foreign Secretary Harsh Vardhan Shringla said all Indian nationals left Kyiv on Tuesday after the Indian embassy issued an advisory, asking them to get out of the Ukrainian capital urgently. It is learnt that most of the officials of the Indian embassy in Kyiv also moved to Lviv in western Ukraine and other locations to help Indians exit the country, but the mission has not been shut down. Shringla said an embassy office in Ukraine is being set up in Lviv to assist Indian citizens exit Ukraine. Also read: In subtle message to Putin, Modi stresses 'respect for sovereignty' of all nations After attending a high-level meeting chaired by Prime Minister Narendra Modi on the situation in Ukraine, Shringla said at the briefing that the evacuation of Indians from Kharkiv is now India's top priority. "We have absolutely, strongly and emphatically asked them (the Russian and Ukrainian envoys) to create the safe passage. But there is a war going on and we will have to make the best of the situation so that we can find a way," he said. "I think our interlocutors both in Ukraine and Russia understand that and we will try and continue to press them to enable us to withdraw and evacuate our citizens," he added. Shringla said a team of Indian officials reached Belgorod, which is not far from Kharkiv, and it will examine all options of taking out the stranded Indians from the conflict zones. He said over the next three days, 26 flights have been scheduled to bring out the Indian citizens, adding that airports in Poland and the Slovak Republic will also be used, apart from those in Bucharest and Budapest. The foreign secretary said a C-17 aircraft of the Indian Air Force (IAF) is expected to fly out at 4 am on Wednesday to Romania to repatriate the Indian citizens. Also read: Death of Karnataka student prods Modi govt to prioritise evacuation of Indians from eastern Ukraine He said more IAF aircraft could be used in the evacuation mission in the next few days. Shringla referred to his comments a few days ago that an estimated 20,000 Indians were in Ukraine at the time India issued its first advisory. The first advisory was issued over a fortnight ago, when the tensions between Russia and Ukraine were increasing. "This is the general number of people in Ukraine. From that number, approximately 12,000 have since left Ukraine, which is 60 per cent of the total number of our citizens in Ukraine," the foreign secretary said. Roughly a half of the remaining 40 per cent remained in the conflict zones in Kharkiv and Sumy and the other half have either reached the western borders of Ukraine or are heading towards the western parts of the country, he added. "In other words, they are out of the conflict areas," Shringla said. The foreign secretary said around 2,000 Indians have returned to their homeland, while 4,000 to 5,000 are getting ready to be brought back by flights. To a question on whether Indians are facing difficulties in getting out of Ukraine, he said there is "no endeavour to block our citizens from coming out". "I think the issue is logistical. There are huge queues of people, there are lines of vehicles," he added. Shringla said all Indian nationals have left Kyiv. The Ukrainian capital also witnessed bombings and shellings by Russian forces. Also Read | Haveri village plunges into grief, mourns son Naveen's death "The information with us is that we have no more nationals left in Kyiv. Nobody has contacted us from Kyiv. All our inquiries have revealed that each and every one of our nationals has come out of Kyiv," he said. Earlier in the day, the Indian embassy in Ukraine asked all the Indians stranded in Kyiv to leave the Ukrainian capital urgently by trains or any other means of transport. The foreign secretary said a flight carrying the first tranche of humanitarian assistance to Ukraine left India on Tuesday morning. He said the consignment comprised medicines, medical equipment and other relief materials. "Another flight will carry the second consignment also through Poland tomorrow," he added. The war on Ukraine claimed an Indian youths life on Tuesday as a 21-year-old medical student from Haveri district in Karnataka was killed in Russian shelling in Kharkiv city. According to officials from the Karnataka State Natural Disaster Management Centre (KSNDMC) -- the nodal agency coordinating with the Ministry of External Affairs for the safe evacuation of Karnataka students -- the deceased, Naveen Shekharappa Gyanagoudar, was killed during early morning shelling by Russian forces. "My son's death in Ukraine is painful. There are many Indian students in the war-torn country who are literally struggling to return their motherland. The government must leave no stone unturned to bring them back home safely" said Naveen's father Shekharppa Gynagoudar. Read | One from Karnataka accompanying Naveen injured in Ukraine Naveen was a fourth-year student of the Kharkiv National Medical University in Ukraine. He went out to buy food and was in a queue in front of a grocery store, when he was killed, apparently as a result shelling by Russian Armed Forces targeting an administrative building in the city. Chief Minister Basavaraj Bommai on Tuesday said all efforts are being made to bring back Naveen's mortal remains. I have requested the Prime Ministers Office and the Ministry of External Affairs for help in getting the body, an emotional Bommai told reporters. I know its difficult considering that its a war zone. If not immediately, we will try to get the body in the next couple of days. Also read: Karnataka student killed in Russian shelling Holding back tears, Bommai said he knew Naveens family personally. He spoke to Naveens father Shekar over phone and expressed condolences. Naveen hailed from the Haveri district that Bommai represents. Naveen was a 4th-year medical student. Last week, he went into the bunker. He came out of the railway station (Tuesday) to regroup with others. He was killed in an air strike. Two others from Chalageri in Ranebennur taluk were with him and one of them sustained injury, Bommai said. I knew the family. One of their cousins lives in Dubai, he said and paused to get a grip over himself. I have requested the MEA... on how can we recover the body? What is the situation? In what state is the body? We dont know, he said. Check out the latest DH videos here: Prime Minister Narendra Modi has asked the Indian Air Force (IAF) to evacuate Indians stranded in Ukraine due to the Russian military offensive against that country, sources said on Tuesday. The IAF is likely to deploy several C-17 aircraft as part of Operation Ganga from Tuesday, they said. Read more By Sudhi Ranjan Sen India plans to avoid condemning Vladimir Putins invasion of Ukraine as it needs Russian weapons in its stand-off with China, and officials in New Delhi are confident the US wont apply much pressure, people familiar with the matter said. Moscow has been one of Indias biggest weapons suppliers since the Cold War, with more than half of Indias fighter jets and all of its tanks coming from the country. Russia also backed Prime Minister Narendra Modis hardline policies in the disputed region of Kashmir, which were widely criticised. Also Read Leave Kharkiv under all circumstances tonight: Embassy to all Indian citizens Both factors are holding Modi back from publicly censuring Putin along with the US, Europe and other nations, said the people who asked not to be identified because they werent authorised to speak to the media. India raised eyebrows over the weekend when it joined China and the United Arab Emirates in abstaining from voting on a draft resolution at the United Nations Security Council resolution condemning the invasion, which was ultimately vetoed by Russia. India needs Moscows diplomatic support and weaponry to deal with neighbouring China, particularly after the two nations clashed along their Himalayan border. India and China have been in conflict over the past two years, with both sides amassing troops, tanks and artillery guns. Follow live Ukraine-Russia crisis updates here Modis government is also confident Washington will look the other way on this issue as India becomes a more important US partner in taking on China in the Asia-Pacific region, the people said. India is part of the so-called Quad group with the US, Japan and Australia that has sought to counter Chinas influence. Indias External Affairs Ministry didnt immediately respond to a request for comment. Foreign Secretary Harsh Vardhan Shringla said on Tuesday that New Delhis position on Russia was based on certain very careful considerations when it came to UN resolutions. We will consider all of them in their entirety and take decisions in our best interests, he said. Its hard to imagine Washington moving away from its determination to expand defense and security ties with India over the past 20 years, said Nilanthi Samaranayake, Director of the Strategy and Policy Analysis Program at CNA, a research organisation in the Washington area. India has a history of pursuing its own path in international affairs, despite external pressure. Also Read India on Ukraine: A finely balanced position Putin visited India in December to shore up ties after Modis government bought $5 billion in weapons, including Russias S-400 advanced missile-defense system. While the US banned NATO ally Turkey from its advanced F-35 fighter jet program over a similar purchase, so far Washington has avoided any punishment for India. Indian policy makers have mostly focused their response to Russias invasion on evacuating at least 4,000 Indian students stranded in Ukraine, an issue with domestic political ramifications as voting takes place in five state elections. The entire government machinery is working round the clock to ensure that all Indian nationals there are safe and secure, Modis office said in a statement on Monday. India also needs the help of Russia and Ukraine to bring the students home safely, according to Shringla from the External Affairs Ministry. Just trying to get our people in the heat of battle, while it rages, may not be the best option, he told reporters. We have to make sure that both the sides are sort of in a position where they can offer us a safe passage. We are working to secure that option. Watch the latest DH Videos here: India's opposition on Wednesday stepped up pressure on the government to condemn the Russian invasion of Ukraine, a day after an Indian student died during shelling in the eastern city of Kharkiv. India is yet to publicly criticise long standing arms supplier Russia publicly, instead urging both sides to cease hostilities, causing frustration among its other allies including the United States. The government has taken a critical stand privately with Russian president Vladimir Putin, an Indian foreign ministry source said. Thousands of Indian students remain trapped in Ukraine, leading to calls for the government to step up pressure on Russia to assist evacuation efforts. Follow live Ukraine-Russia crisis updates here "The Government of India should stop its verbal balancing act and sternly demand that Russia stop immediately the bombing of key cities in Ukraine," said P. Chidambaram, a lawmaker from the opposition Congress party, in a tweet. India abstained in a United Nations Security Council vote condemning the invasion last week, though in recent days it has subtly shifted tone. Prime Minister Narendra Modi "stressed upon the importance of respecting the sovereignty and territorial integrity of nations" during a call with Polish president Andrzej Duda, a statement by India's foreign ministry said late on Tuesday. Also Read | Ukraine crisis: Modi, Macron agree on need to reach ceasefire as soon as possible Russia has long supported India internationally on critical issues including Kashmir, as well as provided the bulk of its military capability. New Delhi has for decades attempted to lessen its reliance on Russian-made weapons, while keeping the relationship close enough to avoid Moscow aligning more with rival Asian power China. "India is increasingly uncomfortable with the position that Russia has taken, but it is very difficult for it to voice it in public," said Harsh Pant, a defence and geopolitical analyst at the New Delhi-based Observer Research Foundation. Some 60 per cent of India's military hardware is still Russian-made, Pant said, and a relationship with Moscow is essential to maintain equipment and source spare parts. Check out latest DH videos here An unprecedented crisis has struck Ukraine and in such times, an Indian restaurant in its capital city of Kyiv has won hearts for turning into a makeshift shelter for hundreds of people stranded in the country. The restaurant is owned by Gujarat-born Manish Dave, 52, who has opened the doors of hope to many Kyiv residents looking to flee the country. To follow updates on Ukraine-Russia crisis, click here The Indian restaurant Saathiya is located in the basement of Chokolivskyu Boulevard. It was started for Indian students studying in Ukraine, and after the war broke out, it has become a safe house for anyone who wants a hot meal and shelter. Dave told The Washington Post that he would serve the people "as long as he can". He also spread the word through messaging app Telegram inviting people to take shelter in his restaurant. Dear friend from India or any nation, our restaurant is in the basement and it's a safe place to stay in this situation. If you don't have a proper safe place to stay during this time, please go here, we will try our best to arrange free food and stay according to our capacity. Stand united with Ukraine, his message read. Also Read | Bring students back to motherland: Pained father of Indian Kharkiv victim urges government We have been keeping stock of ration left with us. We have rice and flour to last 4-5 days, but we need to buy vegetables and other items. There are restrictions on movement between 10 pm and 7 am, Dave was quoted as saying by Times of India. During times of war, Dave hopes to help as many people as possible. Watch the latest DH Videos here: Russian aircraft will be banned from flying in American airspace, President Biden said Tuesday night. The European Union and Canada had already announced similar bans, prompting Russia to respond with restrictions of its own. Advertisement President Biden delivers the 2022 State of the Union address, his first, on Tuesday night. (SAUL LOEB/Getty Images) We will join our allies in closing off American air space to all Russian flights, further isolating Russia, and adding an additional squeeze on their economy, Biden said during his State of the Union address. Russia continued its attack on Ukraine throughout Tuesday, stepping up bombing campaigns on the capital of Kyiv and the second-most populous city of Kharkiv. Advertisement The American airspace ban was reported shortly prior to the State of the Union and confirmed during Bidens address. Biden opened his speech by speaking on Ukraine for more than 10 minutes. Some members of Congress wore items of clothing that were blue and yellow, the colors of Ukraine, or had small Ukrainian flags. The Indian Embassy in Ukraine has warned the country's students in Kharkiv to immediately leave the city. However, this seems to be difficult as after trudging for miles these students are finding that the doors of the trains passing through the Kharkiv railway station remain closed. They are not able to catch trains to reach the borders of the countries bordering Ukraine. Ashutosh Chauhan, a resident of Madhya Pradesh's Bhopal, stranded at Kharkiv's railway station, told IANS, "All the students here are leaving by themselves. To my knowledge, there are about 1,500 students who are stranded in Kharkiv." Also Read | Local people were helpful but Ukrainian officials kicked Indians, says UP student on return "We left our hostel at 6 in the morning. The hostel was about 14 km away from the railway station. Two trains have passed through the station but the doors were not opened. There is no one to help. We are making our own arrangements." Apart from the Indian students, there are also citizens of Ukraine queued up outside the station, he said. "We have brought food packets with us. There is constant shelling. Explosions can be heard constantly from here." The death of Indian student Naveen Shekharappa on Tuesday has triggered further panic among the students in Ukraine and their parents in India. Meanwhile, the Russian Ambassador to India has assured that an inquiry will be conducted into the death of the Indian student. Also Read | Student from Punjab's Barnala dies of stroke in Ukraine Another student Inzamam, a resident of Bihar, was stuck in Kiev for the past several days. Now, after several attempts, he has been able to catch a train and get out of Kiev. "I have come from Kiev to the western side, from here the borders of Romania, Poland and Slovakia are not too far. There is a lot of danger for the students trapped in Kharkiv and Kiev," Inzamam told IANS. "There is no food available on the Poland border and it is freezing cold here. I am facing a lot of trouble. It is easy to go through the Romania and Slovakia border. So I will now try to come back to India through the Romanian border," he added. The Government of India is constantly trying to evacuate the students from the war-torn country. Several flights have reached Delhi with the students, yet there are many who are still stranded in Ukraine. India has deployed three IAF C-17 planes to bring back stranded people from the countries bordering Ukraine. Meanwhile, the embassy issued a second advisory within an hour asking Indian nationals in Ukraine to leave Kharkiv anyhow by 6 p.m. (9.30 p.m. IST) on Wednesday. "If you are not able to get a train, bus or any other means of transport, leave Kharkiv on foot by 6 p.m. (Ukrainian time)," the embassy has said in an "urgent advisory". Russia shelled the second most populous city of Ukraine, Kharkiv damaging various installations and the fighting has now reached the streets. "For their own safety and security, they must leave Kharkiv immediately, repeat immediately in the light of the deteriorating situation," the embassy stated. "They should proceed to Pisochyn (11 km), Babai (12 km) and Bezlyudivka (16 km) as soon as possible for their safety." Check out latest DH videos here The war on Ukraine claimed an Indian youths life on Tuesday as a 21-year-old medical student from Haveri district in Karnataka was killed in Russian shelling in Kharkiv city. According to officials from the Karnataka State Natural Disaster Management Centre (KSNDMC) -- the nodal agency coordinating with the Ministry of External Affairs for the safe evacuation of Karnataka students -- the deceased, Naveen Shekharappa Gyanagoudar, was killed during early morning shelling by Russian forces. Naveen was a fourth-year student of the Kharkiv National Medical University in Kharkiv. He went out to buy food and was in a queue in front of a grocery store, when he was killed, apparently as a result shelling by Russian Armed Forces targeting an administrative building in the city. Also read | Russia to continue Ukraine operation until goals achieved, says minister A local woman picked up his mobile phone and conveyed to his friends that he had been killed and his body had been taken to the morgue of the Kharkiv National Medical University. Sudden blast in city centre Kharkiv with casualties. We lost an Indian student who was nearby & (and) was in queue to buy food stuffs, Pooja Praharaj, a student coordinator, tweeted from Kharkiv. With profound sorrow we confirm that an Indian student lost his life in shelling in Kharkiv this morning. The Ministry is in touch with his family. We convey our deepest condolences to the family. Arindam Bagchi (@MEAIndia) March 1, 2022 She also posted a video of an explosion in the city. Kharkiv has been witnessing intense fighting between Russian and Ukrainian forces over the past few days. Naveen, a native of Chalageri in Haveri district died during the shelling. His friends revealed that he had ventured out of the bunker to visit a nearby store to buy essentials, said Manoj Rajan, Nodal Officer and Commissioner, KSNDMC. Even as the state government led by Chief Minister Basavaraj Bommai was making efforts by coordinating with the MEA for the safe evacuation of Kannadiga students, Rajan appealed to students not to lose courage and stay safely in the bunkers. It (the death) is a matter of grief. But we would like to tell all the other parents to have courage. We will put all our efforts to safely bring our students back. Bommai and Prime Minister Narendra Modi also spoke to Naveens father Shekar and offered condolences to the family. Also read | 55 Karnataka students have returned safely so far under Operation Ganga Rajan also explained that the state government has been making all possible arrangements to bring Naveens body back and said Bommai has personally spoken to the External Affairs minister and is in constant touch with embassy officials through the MEA to bring Naveens body home soon. In New Delhi, the envoys of Moscow and Kyiv to New Delhi were summoned to the Ministry of External Affairs and asked to urgently ensure safe passage for all Indians. Foreign Secretary Harsh Shringla told journalists in New Delhi late in the evening that the Government of India was in touch with local authorities and would try to bring back his mortal remains. Modi had yet another meeting with External Affairs Minister S Jaishankar and other senior officials to review the progress of Operation Ganga, which was launched to evacuate the citizens of India from war-torn Ukraine. He expressed anguish over death of Naveen and also spoke to the deceased students father Shekarappa Gyanagouda. Though the Modi government has been evacuating citizens of India from western Ukraine through neighbouring Romania, Poland, Hungary and Slovak Republic, it could not yet help nearly 4,000 mostly students stranded in Kharkiv, Sumy and other eastern cities of the country, due to intense fighting between Russian and Ukrainian forces. Its been 6 (six) days we are begging our Indian govt (Government) @PMOIndia @DrSJaishankar to help us, they didnt even make a single move. Today one died, tomorrow 100 and day after 1000. Are you waiting to take our 4000 bodies by your evacuation plan? Praharaj, herself a medical graduate, posted on Twitter, drawing attention of the Prime Minister and the External Affairs Minister to the plight of the Indians, spending days and nights in bunkers and other shelters. Check out the latest DH videos here: Describing the Uddhav Thackeray-led Maha Vikas Aghadi government as "Dawood-samarpit-sarkar", Leader of Opposition Devendra Fadnavis reiterated the demand of resignation of Nawab Malik, who has been arrested by the Enforcement Directorate. However, the NCP after a high-level review meeting chaired by party supremo Sharad Pawar, ruled it out. We will be making some revelations during the Budget session of Maharashtra Legislature, Fadnavis said. Leading the opposition charge, Fadnavis announced the decision to boycott the customary tea meeting hosted by the Chief Minister on the eve of the Legislature session. Malik, the state Minority Affairs Minister and NCP chief spokesperson, was arrested last week by the Enforcement Directorate in connection with a money laundering case involving property deals and monetary transactions with people linked to Dawood Ibrahim. Read | Malik not proven guilty, no need to resign: Minister How can you have deals and money transactions with people associated with Dawood Ibrahim? Fadnavis asked, adding that by not taking the resignation of Malik, the MVA government is defying Constitutional norms. He wondered how the government is going out of its way to save Malik, as "such a thing has not happened in Maharashtra or India". Association with people inimical to India cannot be toleratedit is unfortunate that the government whose head is Shiv Sena leader (Thackeray) is standing behind such a person, he said. State NCP President and Water Resources Minister Jayant Patil said that after Maliks arrest, the government has made amply clear that there was no question of his resignation. Let the BJP create any ruckus in the House. Our stand remains unchanged - no resignation means no resignation, Patil said. Watch latest videos by DH here: With militant numbers dwindling fast and recruitment of local youth into militancy on a decline in Kashmir, Pakistani terrorists, who were lying low for the past few years have become active, sources told DH. As against 13-14 local youth joining militancy in January and February last year in south Kashmir, four locals have been recruited in the same period this year. South Kashmir, which comprises four districts of Pulwama, Shopian, Anantnag and Kulgam, often referred to as the hotbed of new-age militancy in the valley, had around 140-150 militants operating over the last five years at any given point of time. Now, there are only over 70 left in the region, according to the list maintained by security forces. The situation in north Kashmir districts of Baramulla, Kupwara and Bandipora which shares the Line of Control with Pakistan-occupied-Kashmir too has seen improvement with lesser recruitment of local youth into militancy ranks. However, according to police and Army reports, a good number of Pakistani terrorists are operating in north Kashmir. There had been a sustained increase in recruitment of local youth into militancy since 2016, when Burhan Wani was killed, which had led to large-scale protests that summer. Also Read Number of naxal-affected districts has come down from 126 to 70: President Kovind Official figures reveal that in 2018, over 210 locals joined the militancy which came down to 117 in 2019 due to a stringent lockdown following the abrogation of Article 370. However, the numbers went up again in 2020 with 178 locals joining the militancy before coming down to 142 last year. A senior police officer said that with local militancy losing its steam, Pakistani terrorists, who were lying dormant till now, have started to become active. If you see the numbers of Pakistani terrorists getting killed in the last few months, it has increased, he said. Since November 2020, nine Pakistani terrorists were killed. As local recruitment is down Pakistani terrorists had to come out since it is a make or break situation. They had to come out to entice violence, the officer said. He said that there has hardly been any stone-pelting in south Kashmir following encounters which was a routine three years back. Mobile and internet lines are no longer cut during anti-militancy operations as was the procedure a few years back. It clearly shows that people are no more interested in violence, he said. Watch the latest DH Videos here: Russia is aiming to erase Ukraine, its history and people, President Volodymyr Zelenskyy said in a video on Wednesday as the seventh day of Moscow's invasion of its neighbour started with heavy shelling of the Black Sea port of Mariupol. He said so far at least 6,000 Russian troops have been killed. Moscow switched to strikes on Ukrainian cities on Tuesday and appeared poised for an advance on Kyiv as the West tightened an economic noose around Russia in retaliation. But Zelenskyy, unshaven and wearing a khaki T-shirt, said the West's response was not enough, calling for more international support, including backing Ukraine's bid to join the European Union. Track updates on the Ukraine crisis here "This is no time to be neutral," said Zelenskyy, whose defiant and emotional tone in regular video addresses have offered his country support and leadership in the war, which he said killed nearly 6,000 Russian troops so far. Referring to the Tuesday shelling in Kyiv next to Babyn Yar - the site of a World War Two massacre of tens of thousands of Jews by German occupation troops and Ukrainian auxiliaries - Zelenskyy said: "This strike proves that for many people in Russia our Kyiv is absolutely foreign." "They don't know a thing about Kyiv, about our history. But they all have orders to erase our history, erase our country, erase us all." Ukraine's south-eastern Azov Sea port of Mariupol was under constant shelling and unable to evacuate the injured while Kherson, on the Black Sea to the west, was completely surrounded by invading Russian forces, local authorities said on Wednesday. "We all died again by Babyn Yar. Although the world has promised again and again that it will never happen again," said Zelenskyy. "Don't you see what is happening? That's why it is very important now that you, millions of Jews around the world, do not stay silent. Because Nazism is born in silence. Scream about murdering of civilians, scream about murdering of Ukrainians." Check out the latest DH videos here: Women and Child Development Ministry Smriti Irani on Wednesday dismissed a report published in the science journal The Lancet that stated that over 19 lakh children became orphans in India during the pandemic, dubbing it sophisticated trickery. The ministry has maintained that during the pandemic 1,53,847 children had lost either one or both parents in the last two years under the pandemic. This is sophisticated trickery intended to create panic among citizen, divorced from truth and ground realities, Irani told reporters at a briefing. The ministry data suggests that 1,53,847 children lost one or more parents since April 1, 2020 either to Covid or due to any other reason. The data, officials said, is compiled from the states and UTs as per the directive of the Supreme Court. The apex court had directed all the states and UTs to identify children who have lost one or more of their parents or have been abandoned during the pandemic due to any reason. The loss of a parent could have been due to Covid, natural, unnatural, or from any other cause. Following the courts directive, the National Commission for Protection of Child Rights (NCPCR) was asked to set up a portal called Bal Swaraj, where data on children was uploaded. So far, 1,53,827 children have been registered on the portal including 1,42,949 children with single parent, 492 abandoned children and 10,386 children who have lost both their parents, officials said. At 26,318, Odisha had the largest number of orphans, followed by Maharashtra with 20,429, and then Gujarat with 14,934 orphans. Karnataka had 5,098 such cases, Rajasthan 6,830, and Madhya Pradesh 7,662. In addition to that, ministry officials said that under the PM CARES scheme, applications from 4,196 children have been approved for the benefits of the scheme. The ministry has refuted The Lancets data and the NCPCR has sent the journal a notice contesting the number, and asking them to reveal the source of the data. The official number of covid fatalities in India stands at 5.14 lakh, with several rights groups claiming that the number is higher. A WCD ministry official said that what could explain the wide discrepancy in the data is the journal's definition of a guardian, which includes a grandparent as well as any primary caregiver of the child, while Indias official definition of an orphan is a child who has lost one or both parents. The PM CARES is available to any child who has lost one or both parents due to Covid, while the Bal Swaraj portal documents the loss of either one or both parents due to any reason. Watch the latest DH Videos here: Buildings housing offices of civic bodies across Tamil Nadu wore a festive look on Wednesday as 12,800 newly-elected councillors took the oath of office. This is the first time that the 21 municipal corporations, 138 municipalities, and 489 town panchayats have elected representatives after a gap of six years. The councillors, who were sworn in on Wednesday, will come to their respective council buildings on Friday to elect heads of the civic bodies through the indirect election. In some places, the councillors were taken for a leisure trip by members of their political parties to ensure they dont jump the ship before the heads and vice heads are elected on March 4. In Chennai, Principal Secretary/Commissioner Gagandeep Singh Bedi administered the oath of office to all 200 councillors who emerged victorious in the February 19 elections. Among those who were sworn in are a pregnant woman, 21-year-old graduate, and 98 women, as the 50 per cent reservation for women in local bodies kick-in in the state. Also Read | Stalin's event sets the tone for cohesion to pin down BJP in 2024 LS polls While the majority of the DMK members invoked party patriarch M Karunanidhi and Chief Minister M K Stalin, a few invoked Udhayanidhi Stalin, the CMs son and MLA. The AIADMK councillors remembered J Jayalalithaa among others. In Coimbatore, all 100 councillors who took the oath said they are aware that their election is subject to the outcome of a case in the Madras High Court filed in connection with the elections. The council halls in all 648 civic bodies were decked up to welcome the councillors whose tenure will end in March 2027. While the commissioners administered the oath to councillors in municipal corporations and municipalities, it was the turn of the Executive Officer (EOs) in town panchayats to do the honours. Also read: M K Stalin wants Constitution to be amended to grant 'more powers' to states The DMK alliance, which registered a landslide win in the elections, is poised to form councils in all 21 municipal corporations in the state, including Coimbatore, a known AIADMK bastion. The ruling party will also capture around 120 municipalities and 400 town panchayats. In total, indirect elections for 1,296 posts will be held on March 4 across the state. While nominations will be received in the morning, the elections will be held, if there is more than one contender, in the afternoon. The DMK is yet to announce candidates for the elections due to stiff competition within the party the leadership is mulling giving a considerable amount of posts to youngsters. Chennai, the state capital, will get its first woman mayor from the Scheduled Castes (SC) with the Greater Chennai Corporation (GCC) being reserved for SC (women) by the Tamil Nadu government. The Chennai Corporation has had two women mayors in the past Tara Cherian (1957-1958), and Kamakshi Jayaraman (1971-1972). Also read: When Sonia Gandhi did a Google search to find out Stalins age Two municipal corporations located just outside Chennai Tambaram and Avadi will also have members from the same community as mayors. While Tambaram is reserved for SC (women), Avadi is SC (general). Of the 21 Corporations, two are reserved for SC (women), one for SC (general), and nine for General (women). The remaining nine are general category seats. This is the first time that elections to urban local bodies were held for the first time since 2011 the civic bodies were bereft of elected representatives since October 24 after the Madras High Court granted a stay on the elections announced by the then AIADMK Government. After three years, the government conducted elections to rural local bodies in 2019, and the elections to urban local bodies could not be held due to the Covid-19 pandemic and assembly elections. The DMK government, which assumed office in May 2021, has now conducted the long-pending elections. Watch the latest DH Videos here: Tamil Nadu government is open to setting up a brand new airport in Hosur located just outside Bengaluru if a feasibility study commissioned by it provides positive feedback on passenger traffic and its growth in the coming years. The government, a senior official told DH on the condition of anonymity, will take a final call on establishing an airport in the industrial city by the end of 2022 as the detailed study is expected to be completed before September. The official said that the study by a consultant will identify two new locations for setting up the airport besides going into detail on the possibility of launching flight operations from the Taneja Aerospace complex, a private property, in Hosur. We want to have an airport exclusively for Hosur which is attracting huge investments in the past few years. But an airport cannot be built or flight operations launched from some existing facility without a proper study. In the first place, we should know the potential in terms of demand and its growth in the coming years, the official told DH. Another official said that once the government gets a detailed report from the consultancy that undertook the study, there will be clarity on a lot of issues. We are open to building a brand new airport if it is economically viable. We are identifying two land parcels near Hosur which will be looked at in detail during the study. Taneja Aerospace complex is not the only option now like earlier. We feel running an airport from a private complex has its own disadvantages. That is why two new areas will be explored, he added. The Tamil Nadu Industrial Development Corporation Limited (TIDCO) is spearheading the fresh effort after an attempt by the government in 2018 to launch services from the Taneja Aerospace complex failed due to a slew of factors, including the location falling within 150 km of the Bengaluru International Airport Limited (BIAL). The official quoted above said the government is also exploring the option of asking BIAL to run the operations of the new airport in Hosur once it is set up. All options are on the table. Since BIAL owns the Bengaluru airport, we feel they will be interested in Hosur as well, the official said. The renewed push for an airport comes at a time Hosur is emerging as one of the top destinations in the state for fresh investments with home-grown Tata setting up an electronics ecosystem and Ola building the worlds largest scooter factory in and around Hosur. The study will identify at least three potential sites for setting up the airport, analyse air traffic growth trends in the past decade in nearby airports, forecast future traffic for the next 30 years, and assess the catchment area of the proposed airport and availability of landside road and rail connectivity. Watch the latest DH Videos here: An intervention of People for the Ethical Treatment of Animals (PETA) has brought relief to a Kerala girl Arya Aldrin and many like her who wish to carry their pets in the repatriation pets from Ukraine. Even as Aldrin managed to carry her pet, a five-month-old Siberian Husky, up to Romania airport she was quite uncertain about getting permission to carry the pet in the repatriation flight to India. But PETA intervened in the matter after it came across similar plight of many students. Subsequently, the centre relaxed the norms for importing pets. Hence Arya is hopeful of bringing home the pet. Also Read | Russia pounds Ukraine as Kyiv rejects 'ultimatums' According to PETA India, the Department of Animal Husbandry and Dairying issued an office stating that considering unique and extraordinary situations in war-hit Ukraine the import of pet dogs and cats along with stranded Indians being rescued by the government is being facilitated as a one-time relaxation measure. PETA India approached the minister following an appeal for help on social media by an Indian student Rishabh Kaushik who was refusing to leave war-hit Ukraine without his puppy Malibu. Shyama, who is close to Aldrin's family, said that Arya was waiting at the airport for her turn to board the repatriation flight. A native of Idukki in Kerala, Aldrin is pursuing MBBS in Kyiv. A picture of Aldrin carrying the pet on her way to Romania had gone viral on social media. Watch the latest DH Videos here: As many as 31 evacuation flights will be operated to neighbouring countries of crisis-hit Ukraine and will bring back more than 6,300 Indians stranded in the eastern European nation, according to official sources. Under 'Operation Ganga', the flights will be operated by Air India, Air India Express, IndiGo, SpiceJet and Indian Air Force. From March 2, 21 evacuation flights will be operated to bring back Indians from Bucharest in Romania, while 4 will be from Budapest in Hungary, the sources said. Further, 4 flights will be operated to bring back people from Rzeszow in Poland and 1 flight from Kocise in Slovakia. Also Read Working on providing safe passage to Indians stranded in Ukraine, says Russia Indian Air Force will be bringing back Indians from Bucharest. Together, the planned 31 flights -- from March 2 till March 8 -- will be coming back with more than 6,300 people. The sources on Wednesday said Air India Express and SpiceJet planes have a capacity for around 180 people while Air India and IndiGo can carry up to 250 and 216 passengers, respectively. While Air India Express will be operating a total of 7 flights, SpiceJet will press 4 flights into service. Air India will operate 7 flights and IndiGo will fly back people in 12 flights. Air India Express and Air India will be flying in people from Bucharest while IndiGo has planned 4 flights each from Bucharest, Budapest and Rzeszow. SpiceJet will operate 2 flights from Bucharest, 1 from Budapest and 1 from Kocise in Slovakia. The sources said nine evacuation flights have brought back Indians stranded in Ukraine since February 26, and around 5-6 flights are "under way". Also Read Indian restaurant 'Saathiya' in Kyiv becomes a shelter for the stranded External Affairs Minister S Jaishankar on Wednesday said that six flights under 'Operation Ganga' have departed for India in the last 24 hours. "#OperationGanga developments. Six flights have now departed for India in the last 24 hours. Includes the first flights from Poland. Carried back 1,377 more Indian nationals from Ukraine," he said in a tweet this morning. On Tuesday, Foreign Secretary Harsh Vardhan Shringla said that around 2,000 Indians have returned to their homeland, while 4,000-5,000 are getting ready to be brought back by flights. Amid the Russian offensive against Ukraine, India started the evacuation of around 14,000 of its stranded citizens in the Eastern European country on February 26. Watch the latest DH Videos here: After nine years on the run, she was arrested while on a walk. Spanish authorities arrested the U.K.s most wanted woman on Sunday while she was walking her dogs, police said. Advertisement Sarah Panitzke, 47, was detained in the town of Santa Barbara, about 100 miles south of Barcelona on Spains east coast. Sarah Panitzke is detained by Spanish police. (Handout) Panitzke was on trial in May 2013 when she disappeared from Britain. She was part of a 1 billion tax fraud scheme and sentenced in absentia to eight years in prison. Advertisement But instead of spending those eight years in the clink, she apparently spent most of them in Spain dodging the law. Spanish police said they were close to catching Panitzke in 2015, but she slipped through their hands with an impressive disguise. Continuing the search, Spains Guardia Civil finally got another helpful tip this February that said Panitzke was in Santa Barbara, according to a press release. Learning from their mistakes last time, the cops deployed a small army of plainclothes officers to monitor Panitzkes movements. On Sunday, she went out to walk her dogs and was met by a bunch of cops. Panitzke will likely be extradited back to Britain to serve her sentence. Authorities did not say if she would face additional charges for fleeing from justice. Panitzke was part of a 16-person fraud operation that centered on dodging the U.K.s 20% sales tax, or VAT. She was the last of the conspirators to be captured. Sarah Panitzke has been on the run for almost nine years. Given the length of time she might have thought we had stopped searching, but she remained on our radar, said Tom Dowdall of the U.K.s National Crime Agency. This should serve as a warning to others on our most wanted list we will not rest until you are captured, no matter how long it takes. Ahead of the budget session of the Maharashtra Legislative Assembly, NCP president Sharad Pawar on Wednesday chaired a review meeting with ministers and leaders of his party. The four-week budget session of the Maharashtra Assembly will begin on Thursday in the shadow of NCP leader and minister Nawab Malik's arrest in a money laundering case. Speaking to reporters, the party's state unit chief and MVA minister Jayant Patil said, "No matter what the Opposition says, Malik will not be asked to resign from his ministerial post. The opposition BJP has threatened to disrupt the proceedings of the legislature session if Malik continues as a minister. Also Read | MVA slams BJP for misusing central agencies Senior party leader Praful Patel, MPs and ministers in the Maha Vikas Aghadi government attended the meeting chaired by Pawar. The Bombay High Court will hear Malik's plea challenging his arrest by the Enforcement Directorate, as his custody ends on Wednesday. After a cabinet meeting, the MVA leaders, ministers and legislators are scheduled to meet at Ramtek, the official residence of senior NCP leader and food and civil supplies minister Chhagan Bhujbal, to chalk out the government's strategy for the budget session. Check out latest DH videos here Russia on Wednesday said it is working "intensely" to create a "humanitarian corridor" for safe passage to Russian territory of Indians stuck in Kharkiv, Sumy and other conflict zones in Ukraine. At a media briefing, Russian Ambassador-designate Denis Alipov said Russia is in touch with India on the issue of the safety of Indians and that the safe passage will be put into place "as soon as possible." "We are working intensely on creating the corridor and secure safe passage for Indians stuck in various conflict zones in Ukraine," he said. He said Russia is working on ways and means to provide safe passage to Indians for their secure passage to Russian territory from the conflict zones in Ukraine. Also Read Indian restaurant 'Saathiya' in Kyiv becomes a shelter for the stranded To a question, Alipov said he does "see any hurdle" in the supply of the S-400 missile systems to India because of the Western sanctions against Russia following the Ukraine crisis. India has taken an "unbiased" position based on the assessment of the situation in Ukraine and not because it is dependent on Russian arms, he said. "We do coordinate our positions at the UN and inform India about our approach," he said. Watch the latest DH Videos here: Alipov said, "We do everything possible to keep India up-to-date on what is happening." When we remember 2002, we must keep in mind that the anti-Muslim pogrom, which was genocidal in nature, was not a work of a day or weeks. Observers were left stunned by the expanse of the violence and the sheer number of people who got actively involved in it. This, apart from those who silently watched it, lent a hand here and there without soiling their hands, and those who later rationalised it. What made them participate in the violence of this nature? It was concerted and organised machinery of hatred against Muslims and Christians that prepared the ground for this mass violence. This hate drive was also a campaign to turn ordinary Hindus into murderers and looters. You have to watch the documentary Final Solution by Rakesh Sharma to understand the machinery and mechanism of hate against Christians and Muslims, which slowly, gradually prepared a mind ready for violence against Muslims. Or condone it if not actively participating in it. Rationalise and justify it. It is a mix of what they call 'education' on a regular basis, the creation of new organisations, and occasional loud propaganda. All this to convince Hindus that Muslims have to be either banished or eliminated. All this while, the Hindus are told that they have allowed themselves to remain weak, and the time has come for them to wake up. A character in the film, who is a hate preacher, claims that the response to the Godhra train burning was swift and decisive because the Hindu samaj had already woken up; there was "jagriti" there. That hate has not left us. Watching the Karnataka of 2021 and 2022, one can see the unfolding of the process of decentralised education, propaganda and assertion of hatred against Muslims and Christians. A woman Akhil Bharatiya Vidyarthi Parishad (ABVP) member threatening Muslims on camera that they would be chopped off if they insisted on wearing hijab. Bharatiya Janata Party (BJP) leaders spewing venom against Muslims. They know that there is no cost they have to pay. And their hate campaign draws Hindus into their fold. A recent report shows how effective this hate campaign is. How young girls and boys are turned into violent anti-Muslim 'activists'. This hate is not confined to Karnataka. In fact, it is hate that defines the India of our times. But we must be exact. It is largely true about Hindu society. There is an increasing and disturbing tendency in the Hindus to define themselves as superior to others. This other includes Muslims and Christians. Occasionally, Sikhs too. This feeling of superiority is not innocuous. It is more about others than oneself. It has to be generated and strengthened by constantly denigrating the other. By calling them inferior. Outsider. Intruder. Imposter. Polluter. Violent. In a video, I saw a young Hindu man telling the reporter that he is a Hindu and is allergic to Muslims. This is how Hindus are being prodded to describe themselves. Their identity is now more about their aversion to others than themselves. A new Hindu has been produced. One who is Hindu only because he hates Muslims and Christians. You will find him/her attacking the hijab-wearing Muslim women, breaking Muslim shrines, disrupting namaz, Sunday mass, lynching Muslims. Or abusing them. He/she organises online sales of Muslim women and plans for their physical elimination. It is real. This hateful Hindu is now everywhere. Donning saffron gamchhas. If one is truthful, it is not difficult to see that hate against Muslims and Christians has grown in gargantuan proportions in the last two decades. It is not automatic. All of us have our prejudices. But to turn this prejudice into active hatred, you need an organised drive. In India and outside India too, the Rashtriya Swayamsevak Sangh, with its extensive network of affiliated organisations, which include the BJP, has been doing it for the last 90 years. Portraying Muslims and Christians as alien to India and everything that is Hindu. Telling Hindus that their material and spiritual interests are contrary to those of the Muslims and Christians. It does not stop here. Hindus are told that they are the real owners of India. Others do not have an equal claim over India. Their presence is a threat to the Hindus, as with their increasing numbers, they will deprive Hindus of their land. They will also take away jobs, which should be only for the Hindus. Hindus are superior to others and are the original and first people of India, and therefore others have to be at their mercy if they want to live in India, is what the RSS has been telling the Hindus. With this feeling of superiority, an inferiority complex is also kept alive. That Muslims are more virile, sexually more appealing to women, and there is a real threat if they are allowed to remain free, then Hindu women will go to them. This combination of superiority and inferiority produces a lethal hatred against Muslims in an average Hindu mind. This hatred gives a sense of empowerment to the hating Hindus. They feel powerless before the State, which can inflict pain on them through steps like demonetisation, GST and by leaving them in the lurch when Covid-19 struck them. This powerlessness is compensated by giving them the power to dominate Muslims and Christians. The power of humiliating others, destroying their lives. This hate does result in physical violence. The violent masses have an assurance of impunity. It makes at the same time Muslims and Christians weak as they know that the State is one with the violent masses, and they would not be allowed to fight back. With their hands tied and back to the walls, they become an easy punching bag for this empowered hateful Hindu. The decisive victory of the BJP, the political arm of the RSS in the 2014 elections under the leadership of Narendra Modi, who had presided over the mass violence of 2002 as the chief minister of Gujarat, anti-Muslim hatred and violence got centre staged in India. In politics and society, it became respectable as the hate-spewing man, who as the CM invented new and more insidious ways of othering the Muslims, of insulting and humiliating them, became the prime minister of India. He told the Hindus that they have to be unapologetic about their hatred and violence. Hate became mainstream in India. It was powered by the state apparatus as it fell in the hands of the chief instigator of hate that Narendra Modi is. Then we realised that it was everywhere. The media became the engine of this hatred. We found that our police officers, our bureaucracy and even our armed forces were full of hateful people, who given a chance, demonstrated it unashamed. As said earlier, hatred is not spontaneous, and it is not automatic. It has to be produced constantly and injected into the system in an organised manner. The BJP and its affiliates, led by the prime minister, are the source of this hatred. We have to carefully look around to understand the organisation of hatred that has captured India. It has turned ordinary Hindu youth into hateful people and made them believe in the fantasy of a Muslim and Christian-free India where Hindus rule. But this fantasy is turning into a living nightmare for the Muslims and Christians of India. This hatred is being expressed in laws, executive orders, and the political and social programmes of this government. In physical violence. By goons and by the police. The world has the immediate memory of a land, Germany, where this hatred led to genocide. India has now reached that stage. What we do at this stage will decide how we will be remembered as a people by future generations. Germany could plead that it was taken by surprise. But we have no defence like this, no excuse. We have been amply warned, alerted. We must stop this hate in its track. In Karnataka, Assam, Uttar Pradesh, everywhere. Or we should be prepared for a revolving cycle of violence. (The writer teaches at Delhi University) Disclaimer: The views expressed above are the author's own. They do not necessarily reflect the views of DH. People suffering from Covid-19 may have several variants of the SARS-CoV-2 virus hidden away from the immune system in different parts of the body, according to the findings of two studies. An international team led by researchers from the University of Bristol, UK, and Max Planck Institute for Medical Research in Germany noted that this may make complete clearance of the virus from the body of the infected person much more difficult. The studies, published in the journal Nature Communications, demonstrate how the virus can evolve distinctly in different cell types, and adapt its immunity, in the same infected host. Also Read | Two years after world's biggest lockdown, India surges back to normal life The researchers investigated the function of a tailor-made pocket in the SARS-CoV-2 spike protein in the infection cycle of the virus. The pocket in the spike protein, which the virus uses to enter and infect the cells, played an essential role in viral infectivity, they said. "An incessant series of variants have completely replaced the original virus by now, with Omicron and Omicron 2 (a subvariant) dominating worldwide," said Professor Imre Berger from the University of Bristol. "We analysed an early variant discovered in Bristol, BrisDelta. It had changed its shape from the original virus, but the pocket we had discovered was there, unaltered," Berger said. Also Read | Students back to schools in Kashmir after two years The researchers noted that BrisDelta presents as a small subpopulation in the samples taken from patients, but appears to infect certain cell types better than the virus that dominated the first wave of infections. "Our results showed that one can have several different virus variants in one's body," said Kapil Gupta, lead author of the BrisDelta study. "Some of these variants may use kidney or spleen cells as their niche to hide, while the body is busy defending against the dominant virus type. This could make it difficult for the infected patients to get rid of SARS-CoV-2 entirely," Gupta said. The team applied cutting-edge synthetic biology techniques, state-of-the-art imaging and cloud computing to decipher viral mechanisms at work. Also Read | India logs 7,554 new Covid-19 cases, 223 deaths To understand the function of the pocket, the scientists built synthetic SARS-CoV-2 virions in the test tube, that are mimics of the virus but have a major advantage in that they are safe, as they do not multiply in human cells. Using these artificial virions, the researchers were able to study the exact mechanism of the pocket in viral infection. They demonstrated that upon binding of fatty acid, the spike protein decorating the virions changed their shape. This switching 'shape' mechanism effectively cloaks the virus from the immune system, according to the researchers. "By 'ducking down' of the spike protein upon binding of inflammatory fatty acids, the virus becomes less visible to the immune system," said Oskar Staufer, lead author of the second study. Also read: Delhi lifts all Covid-19 curbs as cases decline, physical classes to resume from April 1 "This could be a mechanism to avoid detection by the host and a strong immune response for a longer period of time and increase total infection efficiency," Staufer said. "It appears that this pocket, specifically built to recognise these fatty acids, gives SARS-CoV-2 an advantage inside the body of infected people, allowing it to multiply so fast. This could explain why it is there, in all variants, including Omicron" Berger added. However, the researchers noted that the same feature also provides a unique opportunity to defeat the virus, exactly because it is so conserved -- with a tailor made antiviral molecule that blocks the pocket. Watch the latest DH Videos here: Prithviraj from Bikarnakatte, a fourth-year medical student who was stranded in war-torn Ukraine, said that he is travelling to Budapest via train and that God only saved us. Speaking to DH while on the way to Budapest, he said the situation was very bad when we left on Tuesday. It was God who saved us. We narrowly escaped before they captured the nuclear power plant at Zaporizhzhia. Follow live Ukraine-Russia crisis updates here He said the Indian embassy has informed them that they will arrange a flight from Hungary to India. But I am not sure of the availability of the flights as more than 1,500 students are reaching Budapest from Zaporizhzhia State Medical University. I heard many who had reached Budapest two days ago are waiting at the airport. In fact, he along with other students had planned to travel to Slovakia. However, as the students could not cross the border, he decided to travel to Budapest. We the students request the government arrange more flights so that all the stranded students at Budapest airport can reach home at the earliest, said Prithviraj. Check out latest DH videos here Haveri MP Shivakumar Udasi said on Wednesday that External Affairs Minister S Jaishankar has promised to make all efforts to bring back the body of Naveen Gyanagouda, a medical student who was killed in the war-hit Ukraine, to his native place. Udasi met Jaishankar and requested him to bring Naveen's body at the earliest. "The minister also said that all Indian students will be evacuated from Ukraine at the earliest," Udasi told reporters here. Naveen S Gyanagouda, a fourth-year medical student was killed in intense shelling when he went out to get food at the National Medical University, Kharkiv, Ukraine. Udasi said he also submitted the entire list of Karnataka people living in Ukraine to the minister and asked him to evacuate all of them at the earliest. Udasi said he will be in Delhi for a few days and coordinate with the External Affairs Ministry officials in this regard. Check out latest DH videos here The Karnataka governments proposal to combat climate change with a Rs 53,000-crore budget for 2020-2030 has been left on the shelf of the Union government for about a year, even as officials and activists warn that a lack of urgency in implementing the action plan will have a detrimental effect on the nature. In April 2021, The Karnataka State Action Plan on Climate Change Version 2 was sent to the Ministry of Environment Forests and Climate Change (MOEF & CC). The 250-page document provides an in-depth analysis of the climate profile and magnitude of risks caused by climate change as well as the budgetary requirements to take up mitigation measures. Eleven months later, the state is still awaiting clearance from the ministry. We have been told that not many states have submitted their action plans. The committee that clears the proposals wants to meet after at least three or four states submit their plans, a senior government official said. Also read: A hotter planet means a hungrier planet, IPCC climate report warns Jagmohan Sharma, director general of Environmental Management & Policy Research Institute (EMPRI), confirmed the report was sent. We are waiting for the approval, he said. EMPRI is the nodal institute that brought together scientists to draft the action plan. Karnatakas action plan report detailed the adverse impacts caused by the rise in global temperature, including its effect on agriculture, industry, forests and ecology. Among the several warnings of the report was the impact of climate change on vegetation. It said future climate in seven districts would not be suitable for the existing vegetation or forest type and biodiversity, which will lead to a crisis. It flagged the need to invest Rs 52,827.4 crore in mitigation measures in agriculture, forestry, fisheries and energy among other sectors. It also suggested several programmes for labourers, welfare of SCs and STs and for rural development. On Monday, the Intergovernmental Panel on Climate Change (IPCC) warned that human-induced actions were leading to more frequent and intense extreme events, causing large-scale damage. The IPCC noted that near-term actions that limit global warming would substantially reduce projected losses and damages related to climate change in human systems and ecosystems. Also read: Climate report flags Bengaluru lake loss A R Vasavi, a social anthropologist who has been working on rural development issues in the villages of Chamarajanagar, said delayed action will directly affect livelihoods. The adverse impact of climate change on food security is well documented. The vulnerable population will be the most exposed to such disasters; we saw the suffering caused by the pandemic in rural areas, she said. She said, Governments are dependent on the extractive economy, including extractive agriculture, where the amount of resources extracted from nature is completely unsustainable. This can be seen from the efforts to restart mining in greenfields, she said, adding that such policies were necessary to continue corruption. Karnataka Chief Minister Basavaraj Bommai on Wednesday said he received some photos of medical student Naveen Gyanagoudar who was killed in Russian shelling at Kharkiv in the war-hit Ukraine. Bommai also said the state government is working with the Centre to first secure Naveens dead body. Naveens friends have sent some photos, after the shelling stopped, with a matching dress. Ill talk to Minister for External Affairs S Jaishankar and our embassy in Ukraine, Bommai told reporters. We will seriously try to move on recovering his body. We want to first make sure the body is secured so that it can be transported later, Bommai said. Read | Bring students back to motherland: Pained father of Indian Kharkiv victim urges government Naveen, 21, was killed when he was reportedly out to get breakfast and exchange currency, sparking outrage and raising questions on Indias evacuation efforts. Bommai defended the Centre and said India had intensified its evacuation measures. Some 26 flights are scheduled to fly in the next 2-3 days, he said. And, we will try to push as many Kannadigas as possible on these flights. According to Bommai, the evacuation effort is still fluid given the war situation. Since its a war zone, we cant definitely say how things will happen. The Centre has talked to the Ukraine government on making plans to move Indians to westward safe points away from the war zones, he explained. Bommai also said the government will definitely provide compensation to Naveens family that hails from Chalageri in the Haveri district, which the CM represents. Read | One from Karnataka accompanying Naveen injured in Ukraine Hitting out at the Congress for criticising the government, Bommai said: If Congress is playing politics over war and death, theyve stooped so low. He said the Congress-led UPA government was not able to bring bodies back during earlier wars. Now, if theres any country thats trying to bring back its citizens, its India. Four ministers have been sent and our embassy strengthened. Theres communication and consistent efforts are on. But all that the Congress wants is politics, he said. Check out the latest DH videos here: Bruiser Theatre Company is set to take the Derry stage as part of the live theatre tour of their critically-acclaimed production of Mojo Mickybo by Belfast playwright Owen McCafferty. The show, playing at Derry Playhouse March 12 2022, shows the friendship between two boys growing up in Belfast in the seventies a friendship that at first is immune to the sectarian violence taking place around them, but which nonetheless is ultimately destroyed by it. Mojo and his mate Mickybo are two nine-year-old boys from opposing sides of the sectarian divide. They are 'thick as two small thieves', playing headers, being mouthy, building huts, spitting from cinema balconies and re-enacting their favourite movie, Butch Cassidy and the Sundance Kid. They are young cowboys in the making, with the violence of The Troubles only obliquely impacting on them until finally their friendship is destroyed in a way that they only later come to understand. This pure, undiluted storytelling in Bruisers trademark dynamic physical style is fast-paced, darkly funny and action-packed. The show is brought to life by two of our finest local actors, Michael Condron and Terence Keeley, who seamlessly slip in and out of multiple roles and imaginary worlds. The local talents hold credits to their name including Derry Girls, Game of Thrones, Westend and Broadway. Bruiser Theatre said of the show: "Mojo Mickybo portrays a kind of innocence betrayed by communal hatred, showing the harsh absurdity of sectarianism. "Our young heroes, Mojo and Mickybo, represent the division of a benighted country that has spent a century at war with itself. "Bruiser Theatre Company are renowned for their fast-paced, energetic, and engaging performances. "Under the meticulous direction of Lisa May, Mojo Mickybo is ready for a live audience following its successful online run while theatres were closed. "Bruiser Theatre Company is delighted to be returning to live theatre, and proud to present this showcase of both Northern Irelands talent and complex history as our first piece of live theatre back after the easing of restrictions." Artistic Director, Lisa May said: We at Bruiser are very excited to be producing Mojo Mickybo. "It flies at breakneck speed, is witty, darkly funny and searingly honest; perfect to explore in Bruisers bold physical style. "To me, it feels like Owen McCaffertys love letter to Belfast, warts and all, and shows how sectarian anger is so deeply buried into the psyche of those who have grown up during the troubles; it is passed on to generation after generation. "Nostalgic yet damning, hilarious yet heartbreaking; Mojo Mickybo is sadly all too relevant for todays audience, not just in Northern Ireland but around the world. Simon Magill, Creative Director at The Metropolitan Arts Theatre said: "The MAC is once again thrilled to be working alongside Bruiser Theatre Company. "Directed by the ever theatrically inventive Lisa May, Owen McCafferty's Mojo Mickybo resonates with a Belfast audience and Bruiser's exemplary version will chime with audiences of all ages. "A tale of fractured friendships told through the eyes of children, audiences will be drawn into Mojo and Mickybo's world of cinematic fantasy and street reality in this superb, dark, and funny production." Get your tickets at: https://www.derryplayhouse.co.uk/event/mojo-mickybo#book Derry health services are set to receive the benefits from The National Lottery Community Fund after they announced over 1.5 million of funding for services in Northern Ireland and Scotland. The funding is set to expand SPRING Social Prescribing; an innovative health project that is easing pressure on GPs, reducing visits to Emergency Departments and improving the wellbeing of patients across the two countries. SPRING Social Prescribing first received National Lottery funding in 2018 and has helped over 3,000 people, by allowing health professionals to refer patients to community-led services to help meet their non-medical needs. The project in Derry is led by Bogside and Brandywell Health Forum and involves 19 partner organisations who are members of the Healthy Living Centre (HLC) Alliance in Northern Ireland and the Scottish Communities for Health & Wellbeing (SCHW). Derry GP, Dr Paul Molloy, has seen first-hand the benefits of the project over the last few years. Dr Molloy said: The social prescribing scheme has been a tremendous success and shows that taking a holistic approach to someones health is just as important as addressing physical illness. The benefits to physical and mental health have been reflected in positive feedback from patients and reduced levels of attendances to health services. Ryan Tracey, Programme Manager for SPRING said: We are absolutely delighted to receive this additional National Lottery funding, to support the wellbeing of more people and further embed Social Prescribing as the norm for health professionals and policy makers in Northern Ireland and Scotland. Patients are referred to SPRING Social Prescribing with a range of issues including mental health problems or chronic pain, and many repeatedly attend their GP or ED, but have nowhere else to turn. "Our Social Prescriber partners work with each individual to create a plan to meet their needs through community activities such as support groups, exercise classes, counselling or holistic therapies. John Cassidy, Chair of Scottish Communities for Health and Wellbeing, an umbrella group of social prescribing partners added: It is important to think of social prescribing as more than simply a process of referral or as a method of signposting individuals to community provision. "It involves building relationships, taking a holistic approach and engaging individuals at the heart of the process. We are delighted to see the SPRING Social Prescribing Project being funded for a further two years. Due to National Lottery players, more than 30 million a week is raised for community projects such as this programme. Paul Sweeney, Chair of The National Lottery Community Fund Northern Ireland Committee and member of The Funds UK wide Board concluded: Thanks to National Lottery players the SPRING Social Prescribing project has been able to make meaningful health improvements to people across Northern Ireland and Scotland. Bogside and Brandywell Health Forum and partners are providing a valuable connection between the health service and the community, building on the strengths that already exist, to improve peoples lives. I am looking forward to seeing the difference the new funding will make. Donald Trump lives through a looking glass bordered by a gold-plated frame. It is only in this alternate reality that he can blame his successors weakness for inviting Vladimir Putins invasion of Ukraine. To be sure, decades of failures by western leaders, including by American presidents of both parties, helped give Putin the yellow if not the green light to do his worst. But nothing compares to the consistent coddling delivered by Trump as a candidate and in his four years in power. Advertisement Two of a kind. (Evan Vucci/AP) A very abbreviated recap: During the presidential transition period, Trump spoke openly about easing off sanctions that had been imposed on Russia for its election meddling. Weeks into his term, after he said he respected Putin and was challenged that the Russian president was a killer, Trump pushed back with this apologia: What, do you think our countrys so innocent? Advertisement In mid-July 2017, Trump tried to weaken new congressionally imposed sanctions against Russia before they passed by veto-proof majorities and he begrudgingly signed them into law, calling them seriously flawed. On that ignominious day in July 2018, standing alongside Putin, Trump was asked whether he sided with U.S. intelligence agencies universal assessment that Russia had interfered in the 2016 elections. His reply: President Putin says its not Russia. I dont see any reason why it would be. Deference has rarely been so devious. As former national security adviser John Bolton documents, in 2019, Trump tried to block sanctions against Russia for the poisoning in England of former Russian military officer Sergei Skirpal and his daughter. He told his secretary of state to call his Russian counterpart and blame some bureaucrat for them. The coup de grace: In 2019, rather than deliver congressionally authorized military aid to Ukraine, Trump tried to make it contingent on Volodymyr Zelensky announcing an investigation into Joe Bidens son Hunter. The former U.S. president who today cant stop admiring Putins supposed strength and cunning is the same sad man who, looking forward to the 2013 Miss Universe pageant in Moscow, mused about Putin becoming my new best friend. Best friend of Ukraines worst enemy. Derry Against Fuel Poverty are holding their second Derry protest this Saturday March 5 at 4pm in Waterloo Place. The protest comes after they received a wave of support for their action at Firmus Gas in Antrim, last week. Spokesperson for the group, Sinead Quinn, said: "All we ask is that you join us for one hour on Saturday to help send a fierce message to all levels of government; Council, Executive and Westminster. Everyone is welcome. "Whilst we recognise the global context has shifted dramatically in the past week, we continue to beat the drum for the people of Derry who are still experiencing severe hardship in the face of rising household costs. "In fact, bills are only climbing higher with oil, petrol and diesel prices skyrocketing and more hikes on the way. "We're being contacted on a regular basis by people who are chronically ill, mothers with young children and working people who simply can't afford to heat, eat or light their homes. It is a frightening and unprecedented time for many. "We recognise that this is a "global crisis". However, it cannot be allowed to stand as some kind of rationale for the lack of appropriate and timely intervention by our government. "As we saw most recently during the pandemic, appropriate and timely responses at all levels of government were extremely important to managing that particular global crisis at the local level. "This "can't do" approach at Stormont must be replaced by resourcefulness and innovation. "It's fair to assume that our political representatives can't even begin to really understand what it's like to be poor. "A cold house and an empty fridge serves as a stark reminder of the situation we're facing on a daily basis. "Whilst MPs are getting a raise of 2,200 and MLAs are seeing 500 extra in their pockets, the most vulnerable people in our society literally can't keep up with prepay meters running out of credit. Times are bleak. "We know that the Stormont government had time and money to deal appropriately with this cost of living crisis. "It was forecast early in 2021 and would be felt keenly in our pockets in early Autumn 2021. "The political parties can blame each other all they want but we won't forget the opportunities that were turned down like the opportunity to reinstate the 20 a week Universal Credit uplift cut and the ability to adequately address the crisis with a wider energy support scheme. Our politicians forget who put them in their jobs, let's remind them." A tanker carrying oil from Russia is due to arrive in Lough Foyle this evening, on its way to Foyle Port, outside Derry City. On Tuesday (March 1), the British Department for Transport announced the closure of ports to all Russian-owned, operated, controlled, chartered, registered or flagged vessels. However, the ban does not cover the origin of the cargo. Speaking to Inish Live, a spokesperson for Foyle Port said: Foyle Port is currently operating to the parameters of the sanctions set out by the Department for Transport in London. "It has been highlighted to the department, by the port, that the commodity on a ship is beyond the set sanctions. "It is clear from the department that we are obliged to facilitate this vessel, which is not Russian owned, registered or managed." The ship tracking website, Marine Traffic, gave the 184 metre-long Pluto as being in the Irish Sea this afternoon, with the vessel expected in Foyle Port at 8.00pm. It is believed, Pluto, is carrying crude oil from Primorsk, near St Petersburg, on the Baltic Sea, in northwestern Russia. Meanwhile, SDLP leader and Foyle MP in the British Parliament, Colum Eastwood, insisted the vessel should not be permitted to dock in Derry. He said: "This vessel, which contains Russian goods cargo, is not welcome and should not be allowed to make land in Derry. It runs contrary to the spirit of the sanctions which have been introduced to bring pressure to bear on Putins regime to end the outrageous invasion of Ukraine. "The people of Derry stand in solidarity with the people of Ukraine who are enduring unimaginable suffering at the hands of Putins forces. I have been in touch with the Port to offer assistance through my office to ensure that the spirit of the sanctions are upheld and that the vessel is prevented from docking in Derry." Infrastructure Minister, Nichola Mallon has visited the 220million Flagship A6 Dungiven to Drumahoe Dualling Scheme to mark the significant progress made on this strategic project. The scheme will provide 25.5 kilometres of high standard dual carriageway between Drumahoe and Dungiven, including a bypass of Dungiven with new roundabouts connecting the scheme to the existing road network at either end. Visiting the site today Minister Mallon said: The A6 is a strategically important route as it connects the North West to Belfast and beyond so I am delighted to confirm that huge progress that has been made on this vital scheme. "The existing road carries around 15,000 vehicles per day and with traffic levels continuing to grow, the very significant investment of 220million from my Department will help to address regional imbalance, contribute to the economic development of the area, and bring long-term benefits to road users and local communities. Work commenced in September 2018 and I am pleased to say that the project is now very well advanced with the earthworks, drainage and all 22 of the structures along the scheme substantially complete. "The pavement construction is also progressing well with more than 30% of the surface course already laid along the main carriageway. Last year the 189million A6 Randalstown to Castledawson dual carriageway was opened to traffic, and when the A6 Dungiven to Drumahoe section is completed this year, approximately three quarters of the Belfast to Derry route will be of dual carriageway standard or better. Continuing Minister Mallon said: As well as improving the standard of carriageway along the A6, both schemes also provide enhanced provision for public transport, pedestrians and cyclists. "New park and rides sites are now operational at Drumderg (Toome) and Drumahoe, with a further park and ride site currently under construction at Claudy. My officials and the contractor have worked hard to minimise any inconvenience for the public and I want to thank them for all their efforts. "I look forward to the completion of this scheme as it will significantly enhance the connectivity of the north-west, improve journey time reliability, reduce journey times and crucially improve road safety. Minister Simon Coveney on UN General Assembly vote and referral of Russia to the ICC Statement Ireland is at the forefront of efforts to bring an end to this unprovoked conflict. In the last number of days, in Dublin and in multilateral organisations across the globe, the Irish Government and our diplomats and officials have worked tirelessly to support Ukraine and to hold Russia accountable for its actions. Today the United Nations General Assembly adopted a strong resolution condemning Russia for their illegal, unjustified and unprovoked attack against Ukraine. Ireland co-sponsored this Resolution, along with almost a hundred other UN Member States, and we are proud to be numbered amongst the 141 countries who voted to adopt this resolution today. As an elected member of the UN Security Council, Ireland has also been active in condemning Russias aggression in Ukraine. We co-sponsored a Security Council Resolution last week, which was ultimately vetoed by Russia. I am pleased that the General Assembly has acted today, where the Security Council has failed. The strong and cross-regional support in the General Assembly for the resolution is a firm rejection of Russias flagrant violation of the UN Charter, and of international law. Irelands Embassies across the world actively lobbied for its adoption. I am also proud today to join a group of 38 States in referring the situation in Ukraine to the International Criminal Court (ICC). This referral answers the call of the ICC prosecutor contained in his announcement on Monday, indicating his intention to begin an investigation encompassing alleged crimes that have occurred as part of the conflict in Ukraine in recent days. By referring the situation in Ukraine, Ireland and other States Parties will enable the prosecutor to immediately begin his investigation into alleged crimes currently unfolding there and will promote justice and accountability for the Ukrainian people caught in the conflict. Ireland has also been active at the Conference on Disarmament in Geneva, where I spoke this morning to warn that Russias actions and aggressive nuclear rhetoric threaten to undermine the global nuclear disarmament and non-proliferation regime. I expressed our abhorrence at the use of prohibited cluster munitions in the conflict, and expressed grave concern about civilian casualties arising from Russias extensive use of explosive weapons in populated areas. At an emergency session of the International Atomic Energy Agency (IAEA) Board of Governors in Vienna, Ireland called for Russia to cease all actions that compromise the safety, security and physical protection of nuclear facilities in Ukraine. We underscored that any attack or threat against peaceful nuclear facilities is a violation of the principles of the UN Charter, international law and the IAEA statute, and joined the call for maximum restraint to avoid any action that may put these facilities at risk. Tomorrow, I will address the Human Rights Council and will call for an immediate ceasefire, the unconditional withdrawal of Russian forces, and the holding to account of all perpetrators of violations and abuses of human rights. Ireland is an original co-sponsor of the resolution tabled by Ukraine on the situation of human rights in Ukraine stemming from the Russian aggression, calling for the appointment of an independent international commission of inquiry by the Human Rights Council. Ireland together with some 140 other diplomats joined the walk out yesterday in response to the address by Foreign Minister Lavrov. Irelands support for Ukraines sovereignty, territorial integrity and the right to choose its own foreign and security policy path remains unwavering. ENDS Press Office 02 March 2022 Notes to editors The other States to also refer the situation to the ICC are: Republic of Albania, Commonwealth of Australia, Republic of Austria, Kingdom of Belgium, Republic of Bulgaria*, Canada, Republic of Colombia, Republic of Costa Rica, Republic of Croatia, Republic of Cyprus, Czech Republic, Kingdom of Denmark, Republic of Estonia, Republic of Finland, Republic of France, Georgia, Federal Republic of Germany, Hellenic Republic, Hungary, Republic of Iceland, Ireland, Republic of Italy, Republic of Latvia, Principality of Liechtenstein, Grand Duchy of Luxembourg, Republic of Malta, New Zealand, Kingdom of Norway, Kingdom of the Netherlands, Republic of Poland, Republic of Portugal, Romania, Slovak Republic, Republic of Slovenia, Kingdom of Spain, Kingdom of Sweden*, Swiss Confederation and United Kingdom of Great Britain and Northern Ireland. | The Wisconsin Department of Health Services (DHS) supports the new Centers for Disease Control and Prevention (CDC) metrics used to determine the risk level of COVID-19 in communities. Widespread access to vaccines and testing, available treatment options, and high levels of population immunity have combined to make a new approach to monitoring and preventing COVID-19 possible. Under the new COVID-19 Community Levels metrics, wearing a well-fitting mask in public indoor settings is recommended only when a particular community is experiencing high COVID-19 Community Levels, unless you or someone you live with is at high risk for severe disease. With this new guidance, universal masking in schools is recommended in areas with "high" COVID-19 Community Levels. People who are immunocompromised or have a high risk for severe disease are encouraged to talk with their health care provider about COVID-19 prevention strategies. These changes are intended to prevent COVID-19 from straining our health care systems while allowing communities, organizations, and individuals to make decisions based on their own unique circumstances. DHS urges Wisconsinites to respect settings where masks are still required, such as on public transportation and in health care settings. The availability of vaccines, boosters, testing, and effective treatments has moved us into a new phase of the COVID-19 pandemic, said DHS Secretary-designee Karen Timberlake. Thanks to these tools, we can more effectively prevent or reduce the risk of severe illness due to COVID-19. However, this does not mean the pandemic is over. COVID-19 will continue to spread in our communities, so we must be ready to do what we can to prevent it from overwhelming our hospitals and health care systems. Regardless of where you live, the CDC and DHS recommend that everyone stay up to date with COVID-19 vaccines. It is also recommended that everyone continue to wear a mask around others and get tested for COVID-19 if they are experiencing symptoms or have been exposed to someone with COVID-19. We urge all Wisconsinites to continue using a combination of COVID-19 prevention strategies that will allow us to continue with our daily lives while keeping community members safe and healthy. Subscriber content preview Plans call for opening 30 new stores and remodeling 200 existing stores. By ANNE D'INNOCENZIO AP Retail Writer NEW YORK Target will invest up to $5 billion this year in physical stores, remodels, new brands and expanding its online fulfillment as the discounter continues to drive sales growth and differentiate itself from rivals. The plans, announced Tuesday at its annual investor meeting held in New York, include opening 30 new stores, from midsize locations in dense suburban areas to small stores in cities like Charleston, South Carolina. It also plans to remodel 200 of its existing stores, reaching more than half of its 1,900 stores this year. The Minneapolis retailer also aims to roll out brand partnerships including opening 250 more Ulta Beauty shops in its stores, with plans to eventually operate 800 shops. . . . Subscriber content preview OLYMPIA (AP) The Washington Legislature has overwhelmingly passed two measures to clarify part of a wide-ranging package of police reform laws passed last year, in the wake of widespread protests for racial justice. One bill would clarify that a ban on military equipment for police departments would not include less-lethal weapons like beanbag shotguns. Some departments had put away their beanbag weapons pending clarification by the Legislature. . . . Subscriber content preview BOISE, Idaho (AP) A federal judge has rejected a request by wealthy landowners in central Idaho to stop construction of a public trail crossing their ranch to connect the popular tourist destinations of Redfish Lake and Stanley. U.S. Magistrate Judge Candy Dale ruled last week that the U.S. Forest Service and other entities followed proper environmental and other procedures in approving the trail on an easement the agency has crossing the private land. . . . Subscriber content preview Rendering by Gensler [enlarge] Looking south from 128th, the building would be tallest on its north end, then step down in height along the slope south to the Village at Totem Lake. MainStreet Property Group hasn't yet assembled the site, immediately north of the Village at Totem Lake; but with architect Gensler, it has grand ambitions there in Kirkland. Next Monday, March 7 will be the first design review for a new mixed-use plan at 11919 N.E. 128th St. The meeting will be virtual. . . . President Biden, a long-time presidential hopeful, has waited decades to give a State of the Union address, and by all accounts it went off without a hitch. There were history-making moments, and many others that were jarring, disorienting and downright surreal. Advertisement Here we are, in 2022, in the midst of what might be a new cold war, with Vladimir Putins tanks rolling into a sovereign nation as Biden spoke. Few in the House chamber were wearing masks, finally showing faces that had gone covered for nearly two years. Advertisement But nothing was more surreal than the complete role reversal two major American political parties have undergone in just a few short years. If youd been living on a deserted island the last 20 years and were dropped into Bidens speech last night, you might have assumed we still had a Republican president. From his anti-Russia bombast to his fund the police rallying cry, the Democratic president made little effort to hide from what has traditionally been considered conservative territory. Thats because he didnt have to. Republicans, thanks to former President Donald Trump, have completely ceded the ground that the Grand Old Party used to proudly own. Start with Russia. Unlike Trump, who spent much of his presidency defending and envying Putin, Bidens been tough on the Russian leader from day one, acknowledging what the rest of the world already knows: that hes a bad guy, a dictator, no one to admire. So unlike Trump, he was on solid ground to denounce him Tuesday night on the world stage, boasting, We countered Russias lies with the truth. Then theres NATO. Traditionally heralded by the GOP from its first Republican supporter Sen. Arthur Vandenberg to its first commander Dwight Eisenhower to perhaps its strongest proponent Ronald Reagan Trump had little affection or use for the international body. He tried numerous times to leave NATO something Putin would have loved. So, last night, when Biden promised The United States and our allies will defend every inch of territory that is NATO territoryevery single inch it was as much a rebuke of Trump and return to Reagan as it was a message for Putin. Advertisement Moving on to the economy, no issue has animated movement conservatives more over the decades than lowering the debt and deficit. But it was Biden last night who not only promised to lower the deficit, but boasted of being the only president ever to cut the deficit by more than $1 trillion in a single year. If only Republicans still cared, this could be their talking point. But, no surprise, under Trump the deficit exploded, and the long-held conservative principle magically vanished. One of the most jarring moments of the night was hearing Biden promote American manufacturing. More cars and semiconductors in America; more infrastructure and innovation in America; instead of relying on foreign supply chains, lets make it in America. To which Democrats stood and chanted U.S.A. while Republicans sat in silence. Anyone who lived through the post-9/11, George W. Bush, Toby Keith, Made in America era probably felt like they were hallucinating. The Daily News Flash Weekdays Catch up on the days top five stories every weekday afternoon. > But for all of Trumps bombast around Making America Great Again, his Buy America campaign went practically nowhere, and his trade wars hurt many domestic manufacturers. Advertisement On tech, Biden was the first president to mention social media in a State of the Union address, promising to hold platforms accountable for the national experiment theyre conducting on our children for profit. Republicans like to talk tough on tech, but Trump relied on Facebook and Twitter to spread his messages far and wide. His wife Melanias Be Best anti-cyberbullying campaign was often ridiculed for its hypocrisy, considering Trump was a notorious cyberbully himself. Finally, on policing, Biden probably rubbed some progressives the wrong way when he strongly defended law enforcement. Lets not abandon our streets, or choose between safety and equal justice. We should all agree: the answer is not to defund the police. Its to fund the police. For all of Trumps back the blue rhetoric, he not only encouraged an insurrection at the Capitol which saw his supporters attacking police, but on his way out of office, he tried to get Congress to chop $244 million in state and local law enforcement funding. From Russia to the deficit to the police and places in between, Bidens speech wasnt just of another time, but of another party. That Republicans under Trump ceded so many good principles and talking points to Democrats, just because Trump either decided they didnt matter or was a problematic proponent of them, is a colossal failure. But Republicans will forever pay the price for backing Trump until they no longer do. secuppdailynews@gmail.com Page Content On 21 February 2022, the ACRPS Iranian Studies Unit (ISU) hosted a group of experts for a panel entitled Irans Relations with the States of the GCC. The panel consisted of Dr Dina Esfandiary, Senior Advisor in the Middle East and North Africa department of the International Crisis Group, Houchang Hassan-Yari, Professor and Head of Political Science Department at the Sultan Qaboos University in Oman, and Ibrahim Fraihat, Dean of Student Affairs and Associate Professor of International Conflict Resolution at the Doha Institute for Graduate Studies. The panel was moderated by Mehran Kamrava, Director of the ISU and Professor of Government at Georgetown University in Qatar. Esfandiary began by providing a brief overview of Irans relations with the GCC states. She described the region as having undergone a lot of turmoil, particularly under the Trump administration. US policy of maximum pressure led to a period of instability in the region with Iran lashing out and terrifying its neighbours, while the US was content to stand back even after Iran attacked Saudi oil installations. However, Esfandiary posits that the region is moving towards an era of pragmatism, partly due to the pandemic, and because divisions within the GCC were seen as making states weaker. According to Esfandiary, the UAEs relations with Iran have thawed, with the United Arab Emirates adopting a two-pronged approach, to both engage with and contain Iran. In the context of mild improvements in the relationship between Iran and the UAE, recent Houthi attacks on Abu Dhabi may have complicated relations. Nevertheless, Irans possible hand in the attack has been pragmatically downplayed by the UAE and denied by Iran. Iran and Qatars relations are generally positive and pragmatic, a necessary relationship due to the gas field shared between the two countries. Their relations improved when Qatar refused to stop engaging with Iran during the Gulf diplomatic crisis in 2017, and when Iran subsequently helped Qatar to overcome this difficult period. Esfandiary expressed hopefulness of the possibility of a dialogue between the Gulf states as a whole and Iran, mediated by countries like Qatar, Kuwait, Oman, and European stakeholders. This was followed by Ibrahim Fraihat, who began by placing his intervention under the question: Will history repeat itself? He compared the current phase of the Iranian negotiations with Irans 2015 nuclear agreement. Similar to the 2015 negotiations, the current talks in Vienna focus only on Irans nuclear program, ignoring its broader foreign policy objectives and strategies. However, this time, Iran and Saudi Arabia are also engaged in rounds of dialogue in Baghdad, which opens the possibility of further negotiations between the two countries. Fraihat argued that this parallel process is not solving anything and making matters worse. The Vienna negotiations are allowed to reach a conclusion even if there is no Saudi-Iranian agreement in Baghdad over Irans relations with the region. However, the major powers will not allow Iran and Saudi Arabia to reach an agreement in Baghdad in isolation from the Vienna talks as they are the ceiling for the Baghdad talks. He further remarked that so far, no progress has been achieved in Baghdad and Iran has used it for public relations. According to Fraihat, the 2015 nuclear deal did not lead to a change in Iranian policies in the region, and in fact the current security situation is worse today than it was in 2015, with Houthi missiles reaching the strategic depths of Saudi Arabia and the UAE. Fraihat believes that Iran has no incentive to change its current policies. Therefore, he argued that history may be repeating itself, but in a worse way than in the past. He noted that the increased influence of Israel is causing an imbalance in the region and lessening the potential for stability and security in the region. To round off the panel discussion, Hassan-Yari began by arguing that due to Irans geographic and military size, the relative weakness of the smaller Gulf states makes it very difficult for them to have normal relations with Iran. He stated that the foreign policy of Iran is mostly ideological rather than pragmatic but agrees that the Baghdad process will not be fruitful as both the Iranians and Saudis see themselves as leaders of the Muslim world, and there is no room for compromise. Oman is an exception to the other Gulf states due to its unique foreign policy which allows the country to have favorable relations with Iran, while siding with the GCC on crucial matters. Due to the military withdrawal in the region starting with the Obama administration, Israel has become a sort of a replacement for the American umbrella, opening the door to the Abraham Accords, which Hassan-Yari says Saudi Arabia will eventually become a part of. Kamrava moderated the discussion that followed the panel, asking about the importance, or lack thereof, of the new presidential administration in Tehran. Hassan-Yari contended that the new presidency is not important because decision making is in the hands of Khamenei, and this has resulted in previous presidents not having much power. Esfandiary agreed with the caveat that different presidents bring a different tone to Iranian diplomacy, which makes other countries more or less willing to engage diplomatically with Iran. Fraihat agreed with Esfandiary, further stating that Iran tends send mixed messages, which makes it difficult for the region as a whole to know what to expect from the new president. Discussing whether Raisi, with his conservative credentials, would be more able to open relations between Iran and the Arab states, like Richard Nixon did between the US and China during his presidency, Fraihat recalled previous breakthrough agreements like the Egypt-Israel peace treaty, which was signed under President Anwar Sadat. He concluded that Raisi has a good chance of succeeding as long as he does not fall into the trap of only engaging in dialogue and not taking any action. Hassan-Yari disagreed and stated that Raisi does not have the same decision-making power that Nixon had, and is ultimately a superficial president, and that Rouhani had a better chance of improving relations with Arab countries than Raisi. On why the Gulf countries trust Israel more than Iran, Esfandiary believes that there was a lot of mistrust between Israel and the Gulf states, but they have a common enemy which allows them to come together publicly to address some of the common threats that they have in the region. She claimed that the Gulf states and Israel share a common enemy of not only Iran, but the withdrawal of US troops from the region. Looking at it from the perspective of the GCC countries, Fraihat stated that they see Israels expansionist agenda as being limited to Palestine, while they see Iran as a danger to them. Hassan-Yari continued the discussion by stating that Israel and the Gulf states see Iran as an existential threat, giving them grounds to cooperate, and that Tehran views the Saudi leadership as illegitimate puppets of American imperialism. Esfandiary then addressed Irans position in Iraq, claiming that Iran has no intention of leaving Iraq and that the country is on the list of Irans priorities regarding foreign countries, due to their shared history and border. Fraihat agreed with Esfandiary, but sees the situation as changing with growing Iraqi resentment of Iranian control. Hassan-Yari maintained that Iran would not disengage from Iraq because that would break the chain of its influence in Syria and Lebanon. Examining how Iran views Saudi Arabia, Esfandiary noted that the country views Saudi Arabia as a smaller concern because it is more interested in engaging with world powers such as Russia, China, and even the United States. According to Fraihat, Iran and Saudi Arabia made mistakes in their conflict strategies, and they should find a way to end their rivalry because it serves neither countrys interests. The Government will exceed its targets this year under its Housing For All plan, the Housing Minister has claimed. Darragh OBrien said there is a target to build 24,600 private and public homes and he expects to hit and possibly exceed that number. Last year the Government announced plans to spend 4billion annually on building 33,000 new homes every year by the end of the decade. The Housing For All plan has committed to building an average of 9,500 social homes every year and to eradicate homelessness by 2030. Delighted to join colleagues on an extremely wet day in St. Canices #Finglas where @coophousingie & @DubCityCouncil are delivering 32 much-needed homes to families & individuals with the support of @DeptHousingIRL #HousingforAll pic.twitter.com/KoDNgGdvzO Darragh O'Brien (@DarraghOBrienTD) March 2, 2022 Mr OBrien was speaking as he opened a development of 32 homes at St Canices Hall in Finglas, Dublin. The housing minister was joined by Lord Mayor of Dublin, Alison Gilliland. The development, two blocks of 32 apartments, consisting of 16 two-bedroom and 16 one-bedroom units with terraces, balconies and roof terraces, was launched by Co-operative Housing Ireland (CHI). The development provides homes for a diverse range of needs, including people living alone, families, people who have experienced homelessness, people who experience disability and older people. Mr OBrien defended a Government to decision to use private developers to build public housing. Its about partnership here and its about co-operation, he added. Ive asked our state agencies to hand land over to another agency that weve set up, which is the Land Development Agency. Enough land for a further 15,000 homes. So weve got to use all the weapons in our armoury to actually tackle this housing crisis. Its good now to see actually approved housing bodies, local authorities, the state directly, the private sector, all building. We need all of them to build if were going to hit the targets that we need to get up to an average of 33,000 new-build homes each year between now and 2030. I get the frustration but there is there is hope. The projections this year are good. We have a target this year of delivering 24,600 private and public homes and I expect us to hit and exceed that target. We will build up further so it is happening. We have new tenants in place in state-backed affordable rents through our cost rental. It didnt exist a year ago, thats in place now and we will have hundreds more tenants. Were going to have affordable purchase for working people and were going to build 9,000 new social homes this year. Were also bringing older homes and vacant homes back into use, which is a big scourge. Were making progress and Housing For All is going to work. Its a fully financed housing plan and its the first time thats been done in the history of the state. Its the most ambitious plan in the history of the state. Brianna Hansel (left) accepts the first-place award and giant check during the assembly last week at Douglas High School. Other top honorees are MacKinzey Peregoy, Trinity Letcher, Callie Kunz and Tai Johnston (not pictured). Batmans not the only one wearing a mask. Director Matt Reeves missed the U.S. premiere of his film The Batman on Tuesday night after catching COVID. Advertisement We were taking the film around, we did the press tour, and despite my being double vaccinated and boosted, I got COVID, Reeves said in a video message at the premiere, shared by Variety. The good news is that Im healthy; Im good. But Im not with you, and its a great heartbreak for me because this movie means so much to me. Matt Reeves walks the red carpet at the premiere of "The Batman" in London on Feb. 23. (TOLGA AKMEN/AFP via Getty Images) Reeves, 55, had been working on the film since 2017. He was at the movies world premiere in London on Feb. 23. Advertisement [ The Batman star Jeffrey Wright shares how Mayor Adams helped inspire his performance as James Gordon ] Stars Robert Pattinson and Zoe Kravitz were in attendance Tuesday night. While The Batman debuted in over 300 theaters across the U.S. on Tuesday night, distributors decided to yank its release in Russia following the invasion of Ukraine. The Batman was one of several high-profile films to be removed from the Russian market. Question remains: How much will they ask for? The Converse County Tourism Promotion Board the entity charged with spending those lodging tax dollars charged to anyone staying in hotels and campgrounds agreed to have the tax renewal placed on the ballot this year. But, given the changes with the how the tax is collected and distributed at the state level now, the board members were at a loss at how much to ask voters to approve. During their February in Glenrock, tourism board members said Converse County Clerk Karen Rimmer had asked if they would have a ballot issue at all given that the state now has a two percent lodging tax in place statewide to fund tourism marketing in essence a two percent sales tax on stays in hotels and campgrounds. The general consensus from the board was yes, they need to have something on the ballot because the two percent goes to fund statewide marketing, not local events and, at least so far, they havent seen much marketing of counties outside of the big things like Yellowstone, Cheyenne Frontier Days, Jackson, etc. The question, they asked themselves but didnt answer, was how much to ask voters for given that statewide two percent base. They can ask for up to three percent for local tourism boards, but they were told that under the new law, if voters reject their request this time, they cannot ask voters to consider any local tax again for four years. Meanwhile, in the Legislature, efforts to fix the statewide lodging tax funding by the new law failed this week. WyoFile.coms Daniel Bendtsen reported Tuesday that the Wyoming Tourism Boards budget is set to nearly double for the next biennium to roughly $41.9 million because favorable tourism seasons in the last two years since the new law went into effect have swollen revenue streams. Efforts in the Legislature this past week to trim that spending failed when amendments, including one to divert some of that money to the Wyoming State Fair marketing, were shot down. After the House and Senate rejected tourism cuts mid-last week, legislators returned with proposed amendments Friday that would move $500,000 out of the Wyoming Tourism Boards purview and instead fund the Wyoming State Fair, WyoFile reported. Rep. Aaron Clausen, R-Douglas, said it is unfair for the Wyoming Tourism Board to have a monopoly on lodging tax revenues. In his community, where the Wyoming State Fair takes place, he said, its not tourists paying the bulk of the lodging tax. Its not a huge tourist area, he said. We do have some tourism, but its a big oil and gas area. Thats what the hotels and restaurants are full from, and this just takes some of these funds and builds (the fair account). Duncan, OK (73533) Today Variable clouds with strong thunderstorms. Damaging winds, large hail and possibly a tornado with some storms. Low around 60F. Winds ESE at 10 to 20 mph. Chance of rain 70%.. Tonight Variable clouds with strong thunderstorms. Damaging winds, large hail and possibly a tornado with some storms. Low around 60F. Winds ESE at 10 to 20 mph. Chance of rain 70%. Lawyers for Lisa Smith, who denies membership of Islamic State, have told the Special Criminal Court that Facebook is involved in a "wholesale breach" of privacy rights by indefinitely storing users' personal messages. Michael O'Higgins SC, for Ms Smith, is objecting to the admissibility of messages sent using Facebook between his client and known Islamist terrorists in Australia and Syria as far back as 2012. He said it is the court's job to protect people's rights when there is a "corporation out there recording every utterance from 'Happy Birthday' up". The court has heard that gardai initially received some of the messages from the American authorities who were investigating John Georgelas, a known associate of Ms Smith who was wanted in the US to face terrorism charges. Georgelas is presumed to have died while fighting for Isis in Syria. Gardai later went to a District Court and received a warrant to go to Facebook's head office in Dublin where they were given access to the same messages on the social media giant's servers. Ms Smith (40) from Dundalk, Co Louth has pleaded not guilty to membership of an unlawful terrorist group, Islamic State, between October 28th, 2015 and December 1st, 2019. She has also pleaded not guilty to financing terrorism by sending 800 in assistance, via a Western Union money transfer, to a named man on May 6th, 2015. Mr O'Higgins said the conversations that the prosecution intends to introduce in evidence were, "private conversations preserved in aspic for many many years." He added: "The idea that private conversations can be produced ten years later and decanted into a court case is a very, very significant incursion on people's right to communicate with each other. It's at the apex of any breach of a person's rights." Mr O'Higgins went through the Date Protection Act 2003 which he said provides no legal basis for Facebook to store private messages between users. He said the "wholesale breach" of privacy rights was also prohibited by the Constitution. He added: "My client has the constitutional right to discuss her political and religious beliefs without someone storing every utterance and storing it so it might be used years later." The right to privacy, counsel said, is the right to be left alone. "This is a wholesale breach of the right and on the state of the evidence it would appear to be systemic and a matter which is crying out for attention." Mr O'Higgins said it is the court's job to protect people's rights when there is a "corporation out there recording every utterance from 'Happy Birthday' up." He said gardai should not be allowed to benefit from evidence stored unlawfully and unconstitutionally by Facebook. Counsel further told the court that the American court which first allowed the Federal Bureau of Investigation (FBI) to access Facebook's records relating to John Georgelas did not consider Ms Smith's rights. He said the subsequent handover of private, sensitive data from the FBI to gardai is not allowed under the Data Protection Act. In relation to the warrant obtained by gardai to access Facebook's records, Mr O'Higgins said gardai did not give the District Court judge adequate information. He said they had not revealed to the judge that they had already received the same documents from the American authorities and failed to tell the judge that Ms Smith had denied joining Isis during interviews she gave to gardai after her arrest in early December 2019. Sean Gillane SC for the prosecution will respond to Mr O'Higgins's arguments tomorrow. Mr Justice Tony Hunt is presiding at the three-judge, non-jury court with Judge Gerard Griffin and Judge Cormac Dunne. Larry David shelved a two-part documentary about his life and career hours before it was set to premiere on HBO and HBO Max. The Larry David Story, which was set to premiere March 1 was postponed indefinitely, HBO said. Advertisement The network also removed a trailer for The Larry David Story which was rumored to touch upon Davids life in comedy, from his early years to his successes with Seinfeld and Curb Your Enthusiasm. Larry David attends the premiere of HBO's "Curb Your Enthusiasm" at Paramount Pictures Studios on October 19, 2021 in Los Angeles, California. (Rich Fury/Getty Images) The film, directed by longtime collaborator Larry Charles, was reportedly not up to snuff is on the shelf until it gets reedited, according to Puck. Advertisement The highlight of the documentary was reportedly a long interview between Charles and David that gets candid about [Davids] personal and professional highs and lows, from his humble beginnings as an unfunny Brooklyn kid to becoming Americas favorite misanthrope and hell share his thoughts on everything from metaphysics to parenthood. In a social media statement, HBO acknowledged the film was postponed, but added that David wanted to have the premiere in front of an audience. The #LarryDavidStory on @HBOMax is being postponed. Instead, Larry has decided he wants to do it in front of an audience. Stay tuned for more info. HBO Documentaries (@HBODocs) March 1, 2022 No updated release date information has been made available. Meanwhile, HBO has still not said whether Curb will get a 12th season at the network. The shows 11th season concluded in December 2021. By Steve Hansen The Staff of The News Representatives and officials brainstorm for facility Last updated 3/4/2022 at 6:02pm Steve Hansen Curry County Adult Detention Center Administrator Mark Gallegos, left, and Clovis Police Chief Roy Rice discuss community behavioral health needs Friday with James Corbett, chief executive officer of Initium. CORK woman Katie B. McGraths life was changed overnight after she was diagnosed with a devastating brain injury, which has had major repercussions on her life. She underwent countless surgeries and setbacks but fought back every step of the way, and has now written a book to give hope to anyone else on a journey to recovery. Her ordeal began at the start of 2015, when Katie, who is now 43, started getting excruciating headaches, along with distorted vision and a tingling numbness in her foot. Author Katie B. McGrath. Picture: Emma Jervis Photography The symptoms were infrequent at first, and having just started a new job, she just put it down to the fact that she was busy, and didnt want to seem dramatic by going to A&E. However, the headaches got progressively worse, in fact debilitating, and were accompanied by nausea and faintness. One such attack saw her collapse at her Douglas home one evening, where she was discovered by chance by her husband Donal. I woke up on the hallway tiles. I slowly picked myself up off the floor and thought I was hallucinating when I saw Donal walk up the driveway. He was due to go to a spinning class which he rarely missed and only came back as hed forgotten to pack his trainers, she remembers. The couple went straight to South Doc and, feeling nauseous again, Katie went to the bathroom: I have no recollection after this point but Donal knew it was a dangerous situation when I didnt return after a few minutes. He was alarmed by the loud gurgling sounds I was making inside, broke down the door, and found me on the floor covered in my own vomit. She was rushed to hospital and a CT scan found Katie had fluid in the brain, or hydrocephalus, and doctors performed an emergency drainage procedure that night. But there was worse to come. She was told she had a benign tumour in her brain, which shed had since birth, and underwent a five hour surgery the next day. Thankfully, it was a success and the surgeons were able to remove most of the tumour and cyst. There was a small portion of the tumour that couldnt be removed, which was due to its close proximity to the hypothalamus, she said. But her recovery was slow: I was in a compete state of shock. I had a new drug regimen to adhere to and was exhausted, faint, with a very poor memory and concentration. The summer months flew by in a haze and I rested at home and recovered. I was fortunate enough to have a multitude of family and friends visit me, which passed the time and cheered me up. Katie McGrath has written about her experience of her brain injury to help others. That includes her husband Donal, who she describes as her wonderful better half. We have been together since 2006 and were married in 2013. Donal has definitely honoured his in sickness and in health vow and has been my pillar of strength and support for the past 15 years. That September, Katies vision unexpectedly became blurry again and a CT scan revealed her condition had returned and that she would need another craniotomay. I was stunned. How could this horror of a nightmare be occurring to me again? We were given more woeful news when we were told that the cyst had resprouted. I thought I was appearing in my own horror film! Thankfully, surgeons performed another successful craniotomy and also inserted a shunt. This would allow the surgeons to drain the cystic fluid if the cyst resprouted again and would possibly eliminate the need for another invasive surgery. My recovery was swifter this time. I was recovering well for a few weeks at home until my vision became blurry again in October. I wasnt alarmed as I knew the shunt would help and prevent the need for another operation. However, an MRI jaw-droppingly displayed that the cyst had resprouted but was now in a different position, which meant another invasive surgery and this time in Beaumont Hospital, Dublin. Katie had the brain surgery through her nose, which, while a success, took its toll on her: The post-op pain was the most intense this time round and I couldnt blow my runny nose or sneeze for a few weeks after. My recovery was slow and uncomfortable and I couldnt smell or taste my food either. Next up were 28 radiotherapy sessions between December, 2015, and January, 2016. Then, on the last week of my treatment, my vision suddenly became blurry again. I was sent for another MRI, which showed the cyst attached to the tumour had either become inflamed or expanded due to the radiotherapy. At this stage, it felt like I was living in a twilight zone. And there was more unpleasant news as I had to start taking a potent steroid, which had numerous and unpleasant side effects, leaving me deprived, agitated, exhausted, and anxious. Fortunately, the steroids worked and that February she was told her tumour had shrunk and would eventually disappear. This was the most joyful news I had received in a long time! But then began her long road to recovery, where Katie had to face the trauma that her year of fear caused. She was also grappling back pain and had to accept that due to poor poor peripheral vision she could no longer drive. Katie reached out for counselling to help her get through the trauma. Picture: Emma Jervis Photography The cysts that were pressing on my optic nerves caused irreplaceable damage. I am heartbroken over my driving loss and constantly grieve for it. I feel my independence has been snatched from me and I am constantly reliant on others. It is even more difficult for me at the moment as I cannot take the bus due to the risk of contracting Covid. My immune system is compromised so I have to be extra vigilant at the moment and avoid public transport, crowded areas, etc. Katies recovery was epic and exhausting. I was emotionally traumatised and knew I needed the help of a counsellor. I needed to speak to an unbiased source that I wouldnt feel judged by, she said. I needed to let my guard down and release my feelings. Katie took that step and never looked back. It was wonderful. I cannot state enough how beneficial and effective counselling is. It breaks down barriers; it releases pressure from your mind and body and supplies you with fresh, new solutions to your problems, she explained. Talking is terrific and I really want to lift the stigma about counselling only being suitable for very depressed people. We could all benefit from conversing with a talented professional and obtaining their valuable advice. Nobody has all the answers and we often have to face unforeseen circumstances that can rattle us. Journalling her illness was very therapeutic and led to her discovering her passion for writing, which she says has been the best gift of all. Katies recovery is continuing but she still suffers from neuro fatigue, forgetfulness, slow thought process and poor coordination. Katie continues her recovery and has spoken honestly about this experience in her new book, Heads or Tales. Picture: Emma Jervis Photography These side effects cannot be physically seen on my body but they have affected my life in a monumental way. The only physical evidence I possess of my brain injury is a small swelling at the right side of my fore head. Thats why a brain injury is referred to as an invisible illness, as its more challenging on your mental and emotional levels. Writing the book, her memoir, Heads or Tales, was part of her recovery. I am very honest in my book and speak openly about the physical and emotional pain I endured. This can help people relate to their own past or present pain, fears and doubts. I end my book on a very positive note and this again can allow people to find light in their darkness. I want to let them know that they are not alone. Basically, I wanted to write a book that wasnt present for me when I was sick and in recovery. Heads and Tales, published by Little Red Writing, can be bought on Amazon in paperback and kindle version, and in paperback on Waterstones and Book Depository. It can also be ordered directly from most major book stores. ARCHITECTS, artists, designers, eco-builders and craftspeople from across the globe are being invited to submit design proposals for a new 'EcoLab' in Cork's Tramore Valley Park. Organised by Cork City Council as part of the KinShip Project led by artists Marilyn Lennon and Sean Taylor, The KinShip EcoLab Competition is an open call to design an experimental and innovative temporary structure of architectural importance for the popular amenity. "With the support of Creative Ireland, Cork City Council together with artists Lennon Taylor offers architects, artists, designers, eco-builders and craftspeople from all over the world the opportunity to create a temporary architectural structure for public gatherings and workshops at Tramore Valley Park," the Lord Mayor of Cork, Cllr Colm Kelleher said. Artists Lennon Taylor (Marilyn Lennon and Sean Taylor) of The KinShip Project, at Tramore Valley Park, Cork. Picture: Darragh Kane Artists Marilyn Lennon and Sean Taylor said the designs for the EcoLab should "focus on eco-friendly and cost-effective building techniques to set an example of green building practice in Ireland and beyond". They added that the entries "should encourage a conversation about material provenance, construction practices, and the role of architecture in the greater climate change debate". The winning design must be pragmatic and easily constructible. It is understood that local communities may be invited to participate in the construction process where possible. There are two stages in the competition. The first is a pre-qualification stage where applicants are required to submit details of their track record designing and building architectural structures, preferably with ecological materials and processes. Applicants will also need to demonstrate their project management skills and how they propose to construct the EcoLab. The deadline for submissions is March 29. Successful shortlisted applicants will be invited into a dialogue process from April 11. The winner will be announced in June. For further information see corkcity.ie/en/kinship/ecolab-information/ I would say to the people of Ukraine on behalf of Cork city, our city stands with you and anything we can do we will do to help you. That was the message from the Lord Mayor of Cork, Cllr Colm Kelleher, today speaking after he tied a yellow ribbon on the gate of Bishop Lucey Park and laid a wreath symbolising the support of the people of Cork for the people of Ukraine. The moving event saw members of the Ukrainian community in Cork and friends of the Ukrainian community gather in a powerful show of unity against the ongoing Russian attacks. The people of the Ukraine are our European brothers and sisters and what they are experiencing at the moment is absolutely disgusting and deplorable, the Lord Mayor said, speaking to the media at the peaceful rally. What is happening in the Ukraine is tantamount to what happened in central Europe in 1939 by another tyrant. Putin is a war criminal and needs to be treated as such. What is happening to the people men, women and children of the Ukraine is disgusting and I have to admire those brave men that are bringing their families to the borders, saying goodbye to little girls, little boys, their mothers and fathers and sisters and wives and then taking up arms to go back and defend their homeland, he said. A heartfelt show of solidarity here at Bishop Lucey Park as Lord Mayor Cllr Colm Kelleher is calling on the people of Cork to show your support with the people of Ukraine https://t.co/GaU3UIuhXQ@KelleherColm @dfatirl @UKRinIRL @GeraskoLarysa pic.twitter.com/uai6kLPChn Cork City Council (@corkcitycouncil) March 2, 2022 Following Mr Kellehers directive, the Ukrainian national flag was raised at Bishop Lucey Park today as Ukrainian natives sung their national anthem. As she sang, Nadiya Hnat, originally from Ternopil in Ukraine but who has lived in Ireland since 2016, wept for the suffering her native country is currently enduring. Speaking to The Echo she said the support in Cork means a lot to her and moved by the kindness shown to her during this profoundly difficult time. On the bus, people were telling me that we all stand with you, we understand how you feel. My GP rang me two days ago to ask me how I feel, how my family is. Also at the solidarity rally was Yuliia Garreau, a Ukrainian native who has lived in Cork for four and a half years. She said she is feeling heartbroken by the Russian invasion but that the strength of the Ukrainian army and its people have given her hope. I can see that our army is really strong, really strong. Not only the army but I can see that other [Ukrainian] guys are as well. They are pushing back day by day, hour by hour, minute by minute, second by second. It gives me hope that it will be our victory. Of course, there is another question what the price of this victory will be? Ms Garreau said she fears for family members and friends currently in Ukraine, including her mother. My mother is there alone. She is living in the Rivne region. Shes living 6km from the nuclear station and I really hope that nothing will happen to that nuclear station, she explained. Very touching display of solidarity with the people of Ukraine as the Ukrainian Flag is raised and a wreath is placed in Bishop Lucey Park pic.twitter.com/WqdMCL5pvb Cork City Council (@corkcitycouncil) March 2, 2022 Ms Garreau said she was deeply touched by Irelands decision to lift visa requirements between Ukraine and Ireland and is grateful for the support shown to her home country. I moved to Ireland from Kyiv and a huge part of my heart is there still. We hope that this will be over soon. Also at the solidarity rally were students from Colaiste Eamann Ris, holding posters which read No to War, End the War and Putin Hands off Ukraine. The students themselves wanted to come, school principal Aaron Wolfe, told The Echo. We were asked when they heard about it on the news, they said they wanted to come down and represent the young people of Ireland and its very important we listen to the young people and they feel very, very strongly about whats going on in Ukraine at the moment. Its very difficult in schools because we have a diverse cultural background in the school. We have students from Ukraine, we also have students from Russia and those students they dont agree with the conflict either and they feel very frightened that their families are going to be targeted and theres going to be an anti-Russian feeling in the country. Schools are very complex at the moment and were trying to all work together and get them through this but its very hard for young people connected to it, Mr Wolfe continued. First Year student, Amelia Cudak said her grandmother lives near the Ukrainian border in Poland and that she is worried about the ongoing conflict. She is right near the border of Ukraine and she could see the planes flying over her and its very scary right now. We call her every single day to check if shes alright. Transition year student in the school, Kristian Vukorepa, said attending todays event was very important to him. It is my greatest gratitude to be here today and to show support for all of the people who are really suffering every day and I really am sorry that this is actually happening and that we have to be here today, but this is what has to be done in order to stop Russian aggression. Dancing with the Stars professional Maksim Chmerkovskiy updated his followers before leaving Poland on Wednesday, two days after he fled his native Ukraine amid Russias invasion. Chmerkovskiy shared an Instagram video as he boarded a plane out of Warsaw on Wednesday and said, Talk to you from L.A. Advertisement Im ready to go. Im at the airport, Chmerkovskiy said, before expressing his concerns about Ukraine and its people while the country is under attack. The 42-year-old Chmerkovskiy left Ukraine on Monday, days after Russias invasion began, and made it to Warsaw following a 23-hour trip. Advertisement Maksim Chmerkovskiy (Michael Loccisano/Getty Images) He shared a separate video from his hotel room in Poland on Tuesday night, saying hed been awake for 36 consecutive hours. I have a lot to unpack. Its gonna take a very long time, and the number one priority right now is that the war is just heating up, the professional dancer said. I keep seeing reports, and theyre going to get worse. The Daily News Flash Weekdays Catch up on the days top five stories every weekday afternoon. > Chmerkovskiy, who moved to Brooklyn in 1994, also shared the guilt he felt after fleeing Ukraine, comparing it to his previous experience of leaving the country. I was put up for adoption and I got adopted by a beautiful, young, vibrant, exciting, forward-thinking country, and I fell in love, Chmerkovskiy said. I left Ukraine in 94 a sad, sad person because I felt like I was getting unrooted. Chmerkovskiy, who won the 18th season of Dancing with the Stars in 2014, has frequently chronicled his experiences on social media since the Russian invasion began. He described the train station where he departed Ukraine as a traumatizing scene, and called the train sweaty and claustrophobic. Theres usually up to 30 people in this particular wagon, Chmerkovskiy wrote on Instagram. We were told we have to fit 135. Walkways are packed. Advertisement In a video Monday, Chmerkovskiy revealed he was arrested in Ukraine, but didnt say for what. He added that the arrest was probably the least traumatizing moment in this whole thing, as far as Ukraine is concerned, but for me, it was just a reality check. STAFF at a social welfare office in Cork City had to call gardai because a man refused to leave. The officers then had to pepper-spray the man and carry him out because he would not walk. Henry Okeiyimnor, aged 45, did not turn up at Cork District Court for the case against him. Judge Olann Kelleher heard the prosecution evidence in the absence of the defendant, whose solicitor Eddie Burke was present. Bench warrant issued The judge convicted the accused but did not sentence him. Instead, he issued a warrant for his arrest so that he could be brought to court for sentencing. Gardai Kevin ONeill and Lee Gayden responded to a call from staff at the social welfare office at Clarkes Bridge in Cork at lunchtime on August 17 last. They testified that Okeiyimnor told the staff he was homeless and insisted they give him some kind of welfare payment. It was later established he was not homeless and was residing at an address at Castlewood, Little Island, Co Cork. The gardai said he refused to leave the office and was warned he would be sprayed with incapacitant spray if he did not go. He refused to walk to the Garda vehicle outside and he had to be carried out. At the vehicle he refused to get in and he had to be carried in. He spat out, hitting me on the leg [with spit], Garda ONeill said. Garda Gayden testified: "He was in the middle of a dispute with staff members. He refused to leave the scene having been requested to do so by staff. While being arrested he took a mobile phone from his pocket and began to make a phone call. Garda Kevin ONeill went to take the phone away. He pushed Garda ONeills hand away. He then turned to get something out of his bag. I went to stop him because I didnt know what was in the bag. He grabbed my wrist area and pulled me towards him. He had to be pepper-sprayed as he refused to let go. He continued to be aggressive towards us on arrest. Judge Kelleher said: I convict. Ill issue a bench warrant for his arrest for sentence. The accused was convicted of assaulting a garda and failing to identify himself when required by gardai. Declan Brennan and Isabel Hayes An auditor for Irish Nationwide has told a million euro theft trial that he had no knowledge of any alleged secret deal between the accused and former bank boss Michael Fingleton. Former solicitor Michael Lynn (53) is on trial at Dublin Circuit Criminal Court accused of the theft of around 27 million from seven financial institutions. Mr Lynn of Millbrook Court, Red Cross, Co Wicklow, has pleaded not guilty to 21 counts of theft in Dublin between October 23rd, 2006 and April 20th, 2007. It is the prosecution case that Mr Lynn obtained multiple mortgages on the same properties in a situation where banks were unaware that other institutions were also providing finance. The financial institutions involved are Bank of Ireland Mortgages Bank Ltd, Danske Bank, Irish Life and Permanent, Ulster Bank, ACC Bank PLC, Bank of Scotland Ireland Ltd, and Irish Nationwide Building Society. On day 13 of the trial, defending counsel Feargal Kavanagh SC was cross-examining Killian McMahon, an internal auditor for Irish Nationwide Building Society between 2003 and 2006 about the bank's lending practices. 'Giving money out willy-nilly' Mr Kavanagh told the jury that he was attempting to establish that the loan procedures were more in the breach than in the observance. He said this was a case where a bank was giving money out willy-nilly and then came back to whinge about it later. Judge Martin Nolan told Mr Kavanagh that there was no evidence that this bank did not care about its money. They cared about their money, the judge said. After Mr Kavanagh described Irish Nationwide as a reckless institution, Judge Nolan told counsel: I don't think you should propagandise during his questioning and that his function was not to make comments. Mr Kavanagh put it to the former bank auditor that the building society was guilty of reckless lending and management. Our procedures could have been better, Mr McMahon replied. Mr Kavanagh asked was it just negligence that led to the bank's operations costing the State billions of euro. 'Secret' Counsel went on to ask Mr McMahon if he was aware of files recording the dealings of Irish Nationwide's then chief executive Michael Fingleton with high-net-worth individuals. Mr McMahon said he had no reason to believe there were any such files. When asked if he was aware of any secret profit deals, Mr McMahon replied there was no such thing as secret profit deals, as far as he was aware. That's the nature of a secret, he said at one point. Mr Kavanagh said he was instructed that his client and Mr Fingleton met over coffee and he asked the witness if there would be a note of that. Mr McMahon said it was unlikely. Mr Kavanagh asked if they were discussing a secret loan deal? Judge Nolan asked counsel was he putting it to the witness that there was a secret deal between Mr Fingleton and Mr Lynn. Counsel replied yes, and does he know anything it?. Mr McMahon replied I don't. Earlier Patrick McGrath SC, prosecuting, brought Mr McMahon through every investment property Mr Lynn took mortgage applications out on with INBS. The court heard the bank was at a total loss of just under 4.2 million after it emerged other banks had advanced loans to Mr Lynn on the same properties. Internal documents within INBS concluded in February 2008 that suspect documents, undertakings, representations and submissions were submitted in support of the mortgage application(s). It was clear the information provided was false and misleading and Mr Lynn misrepresented his position. The society believes it was the victim of a deception and it would not have advanced any monies to Mr Lynn in this case if it had been aware the information supplied was false and misleading. The trial continues on Tuesday before Judge Martin Nolan and a jury. Jonathan McCambridge, PA Uncertainty surrounds the fate of a Russian-chartered tanker which is currently docked at Belfast harbour. The Eduard Toll is registered in the Bahamas, but is currently chartered by the Yamal Liquified Natural Gas project in Russia. The UK government this week said it would ban all ships with a Russian connection following the invasion of Ukraine. British transport secretary Grant Shapps wrote on Twitter: At Londons Foreign Office where weve just become the first nation to pass a law involving a total BAN of ALL ships with ANY Russian connection whatsoever from entering British ports. Please RT to encourage all countries to do the same in support of the people of #Ukraine. The Eduard Toll is docked at Harland & Wolffs shipyard (Liam McBurney/PA) The Eduard Toll is currently docked at the Harland and Wolff shipyard. The ship arrived before the invasion of Ukraine began and it is not clear what action could be taken. A Harland and Wolff spokesperson said: We are aware of a request issued by the Department for Transport instructing UK ports not to provide access to any ship which is owned or controlled by any person connected with Russia, flying the Russian flag or registered in Russia. Harland & Wolff has a long tradition of working with UK government and will continue to support the UK governments position. Tom Tuite A Dublin pensioner has been charged with rape and sexual assault of two young girls in his extended family 18 years apart. Dublin District Court heard the man allegedly had a picture of one of the girl's head and shoulders cut out and placed over another image of a semi-naked female. The man, 66, faced objections to bail after he was charged on Wednesday. He cannot be named for legal reasons. Detective Lindsay Hennelly told Judge Bryan Smyth that the accused replied "no" when asked if he had a response to the charges. She told the court that both girls were aged 10: the alleged rape was last year and the sexual assault from 2003 to 2005. During a specialist interview, one girl identified the accused and alleged it happened in Dublin at another close family member's home. The man had been living there at the time. Second complaint Detective Garda Hennelly said this allegation prompted the second complaint. A woman alleged he sexually assaulted her at the same location between 2003 and 2005 when she was a young child. She had made a disclosure to a friend at the time, the court heard. The detective also alleged the accused had an image on his phone of one girl's head and shoulders placed over a picture of a semi-naked female. The investigating officer also feared witness interference. He failed to turn up to work and went to England, where he had lived previously, and then claimed to gardai that he could not get a flight back. The detective agreed with defence solicitor Stephen O'Mahony that the accused did not accept the allegations. During his client's interview, "there was a narrative of innocence". Mr O'Mahony said his client had limited means and had applied for a pension. The solicitor told the court that the man panicked when gardai asked him to get a flight back to Ireland. Gardai arrested him when he returned, but he left his driving licence in the UK. The solicitor said his client had just 800 left in savings and presently had no address available. He also said his client returned despite the difficulty of securing bail. The offences can result in maximum life and 14-year sentences, and the DPP had directed that he will face trial in the Central Criminal Court. Judge Smyth noted the seriousness of the alleged offences; however, he granted bail with strict conditions. He said the accused needed a 3,000 independent surety, or he would have to lodge 2,500 cash. In addition, once bail has been taken up, he must not leave the jurisdiction, have no contact with the complainants or witnesses, and stay out of several areas. Legal aid was granted. He was remanded in custody with consent to bail under the terms outlined and will face his next hearing on March 9th. SACRAMENTO Californias Ocean Protection Council (OPC) has published a state-wide microplastics strategy as it looks to convene government, industry and consumers in stemming the flow of contaminants. The two-pronged strategy details preventative measures for immediate implementation, and areas in which further research is required to enable targeted solutions. Recommendations and research priorities are expected to be integrated into existing initiatives and working groups to fast-track their application and boost public engagement. AMSTERDAM - The Laudes Foundation has launched an online platform to help the fashion industry adapt to new legislation such as the European Union's proposed mandatory due diligence legislation. The philanthropic organisation, controlled by the Brenninkmeijer family which owns C&A, says the free 'Transparency in Action' portal will help global brands better understand the role of transparency and improve their supply chain disclosures. The European Commission last week unveiled its draft directive on corporate sustainability due diligence which would make brands responsible for human rights and environmental issues in their global supply chains. Danish beer company Carlsberg is set to be the first in the industry to phase out the plastic rings connecting its cans, The Guardian reported Thursday. The company will replace the rings with a glue that withstands cold temperatures but can easily give when you are ready to break open a cold one. When youre done, the glue can be recycled along with the can. Carlsberg vice president of product development Myriam Shingleton told The Independent that the company had worked for three years on developing an alternative to the plastic rings that environmentalists have warned about since the 1970s. Environment and sustainability have always been very important to us, Shingleton said. The ring-less cans will be available in the UKs Tesco supermarkets by Sept. 10 and then will spread to Norway. Environmentalists have long warned that the rings from six packs could strangle marine life and urged consumers to cut them open before throwing them away, The Independent reported. But the ring phaseout will also tackle the broader problem of ocean plastic pollution by removing 1200 UK tons (approximately 1344 U.S. tons) of plastic from the ocean each year, according to Carlsbergs estimates. Thats 60 million plastic bags worth of plastic. This is an interesting development and will help cut down the amount of plastic on our beaches and in our seas. These kinds of can yokes are regularly found in small numbers on our beach cleans, Marine Conservation Society senior pollution policy officer Dr. Sue Kinsey told The Guardian. She said the last Great British Beach Clean found 100 in one weekend. Carlsberg isnt the only company to try to find an eco-friendly solution to the plastic ring problem. Floridas Saltwater Brewery developed a compostable ring alternative that would biodegrade if it ended up in the oceans, CBS reported in May. That project was a collaboration with Eco Six Pack Rings (E6PR), New York ad agency We Believers and a Mexican biodegradable manufacturer called Entelequia. Saltwater Brewery is the first to use the new rings, and offers them with the Screamin Reels IPA at the Tasting Room and South Florida outlets Publix, Total Wine & More, Whole Foods Market, Luckys Market and ABC Fine Wine & Spirits. More than 50 percent of beer consumed in the U.S. is sold in cans, We Believers co-founder Marco Vega told CBS, a trend that is only expected to grow in the near future. Most of the material used to hold these cans is still plastic. E6PR hopes to change that, though, and scale up its biodegradable alternative to soda and other six-pack cans, eventually replacing the plastic version, Fast Company reported. Coors Light is making an effort to lighten the load it places on the environment. Parent-company Molson Coors announced Tuesday that six-packs of its Coors Light brand would no longer come in the infamous plastic rings that trap marine life, CNN reported. Instead, starting later this year, the beer will come in a recyclable, sustainable cardboard alternative. Coors said it was the largest U.S. beer brand to make the change. Were chill about a lot of things, but single-use plastic isnt one of them, Coors Light tweeted Tuesday. So were eliminating plastic rings from our packaging, starting this year and finishing by 2025. Were chill about a lot of things, but single-use plastic isnt one of them. So were eliminating plastic rings from our packaging, starting this year and finishing by 2025. Learn more https://t.co/MFZRydOI4N pic.twitter.com/8l4Z3vA1p3 Coors Light (@CoorsLight) March 1, 2022 The plastic-ring phase out is part of a larger sustainability push at Molson Coors, which has promised to complete a series of environmental goals by 2025. These include: Ensuring all packaging is 100 percent reusable, recyclable or compostable and all plastic packaging is made from 30 percent recycled content. Growing Coors barley in 10 percent less water. Brewing beer in 22 percent less water. Restoring 3.5 billion gallons of water to watersheds. Reducing greenhouse gas emissions by half in direct operations and by 20 percent across the companys supply chain. The plastic-ring replacement is being funded by an almost $85 million capital investment. It will apply to all of the approximately 30 brands that Molton Coors distributes in North America, CNN reported, including Blue Moon and Miller Light. We believe that buying beer shouldnt mean buying plastic, Marcelo Pascoa, vice president of marketing for the Coors family of brands, told Food & Wine. Thats why were taking a step toward making packaging even more sustainable, and with this achievement Coors Light will save 400,000 pounds of single-use plastic from becoming waste every year. The plastic rings used for soda and beer six packs have been controversial long before the current concern over ocean plastic pollution. The Associated Press reported in 1987 that plastic-ring entanglements killed up to one million seabirds and 100,000 marine mammals every year, though the source of this statistic is unknown, according to National Geographic. Still, the threat of entanglement led the U.S. Environmental Protection Agency (EPA) to mandate that all plastic rings be degradable by 1994. But marine life is still in danger before the rings degrade, and the rings can still break down into smaller pieces that animals could eat by mistake. Since the 1980s, worry about plastic pollution overall has mounted. Today, around 18 billion pounds of plastic enter the worlds oceans every year, harming nearly 700 species. Molson Coors CEO Gavin Hattersley told CNN that the companys decision reflects how important sustainability now is to its consumers. Our consumers like the thought of products they consume being environmentally friendly, Hattersley said. The amount of plastic recycled is very, very low. Coors is not the first major beer maker to jettison plastic rings. Danish brewery Carlsberg and Corona both implemented or trialed alternatives in 2018. The U.S. lags behind the rest of the world, however. In the UK, Guinness, Coors and Budweiser have all already switched to paper, according to Food & Wine. Coors is now bringing the change across the pond, where it has the potential to make an important difference. Coors Light is the second best-selling U.S. beer brand after Bud Light. However, Budweiser Brewing Group still sells its U.S. brands in plastic, according to CNN. Costa Rica is a lush wonderland of rainforests and exotic plant and animal wildlife from crocodiles and dolphins to blue-jeans poison-dart Frogs and howler monkeys that has attracted tourists from all over the globe. In an effort to keep the tourist economy there strong, government leaders have partnered with researchers from the Stanford Natural Capital Project to learn about the ways Costa Ricas unique environment is an asset to its tourism. Through their research, published in the journal Proceedings of the National Academy of Sciences, the international team based at Stanford University which includes academics and professionals from the Chinese Academy of Sciences, the World Wildlife Fund, the Stockholm Resilience Centre, The Nature Conservancy and the University of Minnesota discovered that tourists favor areas with roads and lodging that provide easy access to Costa Ricas remarkable variety of wildlife, Stanford News reported. The Central American countrys leaders want to use the information from the study to build a nationwide system in order to keep track of the ways in which the countrys own natural resources contribute to the economy. These findings show just how important wildlife is, especially when paired with infrastructure, for a thriving tourist economy, said Alejandra Echeverri, a postdoctoral researcher at the Stanford Natural Capital Project, who was co-lead author on the paper, as reported by Stanford News. If Costa Rica wants to keep attracting tourists, it needs to invest in both nature conservation and infrastructure that allows people to enjoy majestic animals like the resplendent quetzal and other iconic wildlife. In 2012, Costa Rica banned hunting the first country in the Americas to do so and has been ranked as one of the best ecotourism destinations in the world, according to Green Global Travel. The Stanford Natural Capital Project team used NASA satellite data along with posts on social media to analyze the countrys tourism patterns and quantify the countrys wildlife, reported Stanford News. The satellite images provided the researchers with the locations of lodging and hotels, as well as land use information. The team also looked at information from the social birdwatching app eBird. The combination of this data allowed the researchers to locate the most popular tourist areas. People often consider wildlife and infrastructure to be at odds with one another, but our approach shows that isnt necessarily true, said postdoctoral researcher at Princeton University and co-lead author of the paper Jeffrey Smith, who was a Ph.D. student at the Stanford Natural Capital Project during the research, as Stanford News reported. This technology allows countries to understand how infrastructure and nature can be interwoven at a much finer scale to support both the economy and biodiversity. For example, instead of assuming an area of land can only be used as a nature preserve or a megaresort, planners can consider options like ecolodges, which are profitable and more wildlife-friendly. The research points to the possibility of making parks like the countrys Barra del Colorado Wildlife Refuge more accessible, without endangering species habitat, by adding trails or nearby lodging that is eco-friendly. Balancing the potential revenue from tourism with the protection of a wide array of species has to be a priority in making certain decisions for a country like Costa Rica, the researchers said. And thinking long-term about the preservation of wildlife habitat when planning new development is key. Tourism can also have a protective factor against poaching and other unlawful activities like hunting. We found a win-win in this research that tourists are drawn not just to sun and beaches, but actually to places with more wildlife, said co-founder and faculty director at the Stanford Natural Capital Project and the papers senior author Gretchen Daily, as reported by Stanford news. While the balance between expanding tourism and protecting the natural assets that attract visitors needs to be handled carefully, especially considering the ruinous effects of overdevelopment, this research demonstrates how tourism can be a major driver toward green development in countries around the world. The Costa Rican government will continue to use new satellite data to track patterns in tourism to inform future plans for the country. The information they compile will be reported to the United Nations System of Environmental Economic Accounting as an aid to their countrys objectives regarding sustainable development. By Jordan Davidson Guinness is joining the fight against single use plastic. The brewer has seen enough hapless turtles and marine life suffering from the scourge of plastic. Guinnesss parent company, Diageo, announced that the iconic Irish stout will no longer use plastic rings or shrink wrap. Instead, the company will invest $21 million to replace plastic with 100 percent recyclable and biodegradable cardboard, according to CNN Business. The change, which will be introduced in Ireland in August and the rest of the world by August 2020, also applies to Guinnesss other products, Harp and Smithwicks. Great packaging is essential for our products, said David Cutter, Diageos chief sustainability officer added, reported the The Telegraph. Consumers expect our packs to look beautiful, be functional, and sustainable. I am proud to announce this investment, through which we have been able to combine all three. We have been working tirelessly to make our packaging more environmentally friendly. Diageo estimates that its new initiative will be equivalent to removing 40 million 500 ml plastic bottles, which if laid out end-to-end, would reach from London to Beijing, or New York City to Honolulu, according to The Telegraph. Were continuously looking for ways to work with our suppliers, customers and consumers to make our packaging more sustainable and our targets ensure that 100% of plastics used are designed to be widely recyclable, or reusable/compostable, the company said in a statement, The Hill reported. This piggybacks on Diageos statement last year when it announced its intention to to ensure all plastics are widely recyclable or reusable by 2025. For 260 years Guinness has played a vital role in the communities around us. We already have one of the most sustainable breweries in the world at St. Jamess Gate and we are now leading the way in sustainable packaging, said Mark Sandys, global head of beer, Baileys and Smirnoff for Diageo, as reported by The Telegraph. Guinness follows the footsteps of other brewers who have taken steps to reduce ocean plastic. In 2016, Salt Water Brewery announced all their six-packs of Screamin Reels IPA would be packaged with E6PR (Eco Six Pack Ring), a compostable holder made with some brewing byproducts like spent wheat and barley, according to National Geographic. Marilyn Manson is suing ex-fiancee and Evan Rachel Wood for defamation, saying she made up sexual-assault claims against him right down to the email accounts and FBI agents. In the suit, filed in Los Angeles Superior Court on Wednesday, Manson, known legally as Brian Warner, calls Woods allegations of sexual abuse a malicious falsehood that has derailed Warners successful music, TV and film career, according to Variety, which obtained a copy of the complaint. Advertisement Marilyn Manson is seen in 2019. (Richard Shotwell/Richard Shotwell/Invision/AP) The suit also claims that Wood and her partner Ashley Gore created a fake FBI agent who wrote a fictitious letter to imply that Mansons alleged victims and their families were in danger and sparking a federal investigation. Gore is also named in the lawsuit. Advertisement Wood was just one of several women who came forward last year alleging sexual abuse by Manson. Evan Rachel Wood is seen in 2017. (Jordan Strauss/Jordan Strauss/Invision/AP) Mansons allegations come on the eve of the release of a new documentary in which Wood claims, among other things, that her then-boyfriend essentially raped me on camera while they were making a 2007 music video and he penetrated her during what was supposed to be a simulated sex scene. Wood is now 34, but she was 19 when she began dating him in 2007, and he was 38. She said he had groomed, gaslighted and abused her during the course of their years-long relationship. Last November Los Angeles police raided Mansons home, seizing hard drives and other material under a search warrant. By David Doniger and Alex Hillbrand This is a big year for the Montreal Protocolthe 30th anniversary of the worlds most successful environmental protection agreement. Every country on Earth is a party to this treaty, which has prevented catastrophic destruction of the ozone layer that protects us from the suns dangerous ultraviolet radiation. Phasing out ozone-destroying chemicals has also provided a huge climate protection side-benefit, because many of those chemicals are also powerful heat-trapping agents. Countries took climate protection a step farther by adopting the Kigali Amendment to phase down hydrofluorocarbons (HFCs) in October 2016. Representatives of the parties, industry and nongovernmental organizations are gathered this week in Bangkok. Topping the agenda are steps to complete the accelerated phase-out of the last generation of ozone-depleting chemicalsthe hydrochlorofluorocarbons (HCFCs)agreed in 2007, by negotiating the next three year replenishment of funding to assist developing countries in meeting their reduction commitments. Countries are also discussing the role of the Montreal Protocol in supporting energy efficiency improvements as a co-benefit of transitioning to environmentally friendly refrigerants in air conditioners and refrigeration. The funding branch of the Montreal Protocol, the Multilateral Fund (MLF), covers the agreed incremental costs that developing countries incur to meet their obligations under the Protocol. Every three years, countries agree to replenish the MLF to support country programs to help convert from old to new substances and from old to new product designs. This week, negotiations will begin for the period 2018-2020, ultimately leading to an agreed replenishment level at the Meeting of the Parties in November 2017. The bulk of the MLFs activity in the next three-year period will focus on the phase-out of HCFCs. It will also include funding for countries to avoid transitioning to HFCs with high climate-warming power (global warming potential or GWP) by leapfrogging straight from ozone-depleting chemicals to low-GWP alternatives. This will help avoid the buildup of HFC-using equipment that must later be replaced . Funding over the next three years will also include money for important preliminary HFC-related activities. Eligible HFC-specific initial activities have been under discussion since last October and were recently agreed by the MLFs governing Executive Committee (ExCom). Last week, the ExCom agreed that the MLF will fund a list of initial enabling activities (i.e., activities that precede preparation of national implementation plans) to support the phasedown of HFCs, including supporting country actions for early Kigali Amendment ratification, work on institutional arrangements and licensing systems, data reporting on HFC production and consumption, and more. In addition, the committee agreed to fund a limited number of HFC phase-down investment projects not tied to any country plan to phase down HFCs. These pilot-type projects will help the MLF determine typical costs for HFC conversions, and will aid ExCom as it writes guidelines for how much funding should be made available for HFC phase-down activities. These projects will offer leadership companies in developing countries a great opportunity to start phasing down HFCs early, with financial support from the Protocol. Countries also requested a study on the most cost-effective ways to destroy HFC-23, a super-potent by-product of HCFC-22 production, with a GWP 14,800 times that of carbon dioxide. The first major commitment of developing countries under the Kigali Amendment is mandatory destruction of HFC-23 starting Jan. 1, 2020. Better understating the costs will help the MLF allocate funds for the required destruction. Key issues surrounding funding eligibility, however, will not be addressed by this study. While the vast majority of the funding for the 2018-2020 replenishment will be devoted to the HCFC phase-out, these three ExCom decisions begin to build the framework for implementing the Kigali Amendment and will guide parties to provide additional funding for preliminary HFC-related activities. The Technology and Economic Assessment Panel (TEAP), which advises the parties on the replenishment, will now be able to add HFC-related activities to its replenishment report, which provides advice to the parties on funding. The TEAPs final report will be done in advance of the Meeting of the Parties in November 2017, at which the total funding for the replenishment will be agreed. A robust funding package for the 2018-2020 replenishment will help developing countries complete the HCFC phase-out and start the HFC phase-down ahead of schedule. To fulfill the promise of the Kigali Amendment, it will be important for funding countries to provide ample support to allow countries to leapfrog HFCs whenever possible and, in addition, to begin setting the stage for the full phasedown of HFCs in the years to come. In another unexpected outcome of the climate crisis, wildfire smoke may be putting the recovery of the ozone layer at risk. A new study from Massachusetts Institute of Technology (MIT) chemists published in the Proceedings of the National Academy of Sciences this week found that the devastating Australian wildfires of 2019 and 2020 contributed to the depletion of the ozone layer, MIT News reported. The research is the first to find a chemical connection between smoke from wildfires and ozone depletion. All the hard work that the world went to to reduce chlorofluorocarbons (ozone-depleting chemicals once used in aerosol sprays) is not paying off as well in the areas that experience extreme wildfires, research leader and MIT professor Susan Solomon told BBC News. The best hope would be that we reduce global warming gases also and stop increasing the wildfires, but thats obviously more difficult. The Montreal Protocol, in which nations agreed to phase out ozone-destroying chemicals, is considered the most successful environmental treaty of all time. It was signed in 1987 after it was discovered that emissions from chlorofluorocarbons (CFCs) were weakening the Earths protective coating of ozone and therefore exposing the life below to more harmful ultraviolet radiation from the sun. It was previously estimated that the treaty would prevent more than 280 million cases of skin cancer, 1.6 million skin cancer deaths and more than 45 million cases of cataracts in the U.S. alone by 2100. However, it turns out that world leaders collective failure to act on the climate crisis is putting this successful example of environmental collaboration at risk. The climate-fueled Black Summer wildfires that ravaged Australia in 2019 and 2020 burned through more than 43 million acres, displaced or killed almost three billion animals and sent more than one million tons of smoke particles into the atmosphere, MIT News explained. That smoke put the ozone layer at risk. The research team noticed that nitrogen dioxide levels dropped in the stratosphere in March 2020, a drop that corresponded to increased smoke reaching this atmospheric layer. Less nitrogen dioxide is linked to ozone depletion. This chemistry, once you get past that point, is well-established, Solomon told MIT News. Once you have less nitrogen dioxide, you have to have more chlorine monoxide, and that will deplete ozone. All told, the researchers estimated that the fires depleted the ozone layer by one percent. To put that in perspective, ozone has recovered by about one percent thanks to the Montreal Protocol over the past decade. Luckily, the smoke does not persist in the stratosphere. As the bushfire aerosols leave the stratosphere over time they come back down to the [Earths] surface ozone depletion stops, study co-author Dr. Kane Stone of MIT told The Guardian. This is a short term decrease, but its significant. That said, the concern is that extreme wildfires will happen more and more frequently unless greenhouse gas emissions are rapidly reduced. The Australian fires look like the biggest event so far, but as the world continues to warm, there is every reason to think these fires will become more frequent and more intense, Solomon told MIT News. Its another wakeup call, just as the Antarctic ozone hole was, in the sense of showing how bad things could actually be. Capitol News Illinois is a nonprofit, nonpartisan news service covering state government and distributed to more than 400 newspapers statewide. It is funded primarily by the Illinois Press Foundation and the Robert R. McCormick Foundation. Washington, MO (63090) Today Rain. Low 54F. Winds E at 5 to 10 mph. Chance of rain 100%. Rainfall near a quarter of an inch.. Tonight Rain. Low 54F. Winds E at 5 to 10 mph. Chance of rain 100%. Rainfall near a quarter of an inch. Athens, AL (35611) Today Partly cloudy early with increasing clouds overnight. A stray shower or thunderstorm is possible. Low around 60F. Winds NE at 5 to 10 mph.. Tonight Partly cloudy early with increasing clouds overnight. A stray shower or thunderstorm is possible. Low around 60F. Winds NE at 5 to 10 mph. U.S. human rights situation in 2021: American people pay heavy price for U.S. governments manipulation of COVID-19 prevention and control People's Daily Online) 14:36, March 02, 2022 By late February 2022, the COVID-19 death toll in the U.S. had already surpassed 940,000. (Cartoon by Lu Lingxing) In 2021, the human rights situation in the U.S., a country which has long had a notorious record, worsened. On Feb. 28, China issued The Report on Human Rights Violations in the United States in 2021. The report points out that, as of late February 2022, according to data from Johns Hopkins University in the U.S., the number of confirmed COVID-19 cases in the U.S. had exceeded 78 million and the countrys death toll surpassed 940,000. Moreover, the number of COVID-19 deaths recorded in 2021 has far surpassed the total for 2020 in the U.S. According to an analysis conducted by researchers at the University of Southern California and Princeton University, deaths caused by COVID-19 has reduced the overall life expectancy of Americans by 1.13 years, the biggest drop since the Second World War. Life expectancy was estimated to fall by 2.10 years among African Americans and 3.05 years among Latinos, while the decline was only 0.68 years among whites. The U.S. governments unscientific, unequal and irresponsible COVID-19 prevention and control actions have seriously undermined its peoples rights to life and health. In an attempt to deflect away from the embarrassment caused by their governments incompetence in responding to COVID-19, some U.S. politicians fabricated the lab leak theory on COVID-19 to try to shift the blame to China. (Cartoon by Lu Lingxing) Despite having the worlds most advanced medical equipment and technology, the U.S. has had the largest number of COVID-19 infections and deaths globally. The U.S. government never reassessed its response measures and to date still lacks effective anti-epidemic plans. Instead, it has stoked up the hype surrounding the origins-tracing of COVID-19, and has been keen on passing the buck, shifting blame and engaging in political manipulation. The New York Times reported on Nov. 18, 2021, that the pandemic has proven to be a nearly two-year stress test that the U.S. has flunked, and that the American people's trust in their government is now bankrupt. (Web editor: Hongyu, Liang Jun) Actress Angelica Ross said that the Biden-Harris administration hasnt done enough to protect the U.S. transgender community, urging the White House to take immediate action against a growing number of bills targeting trans youth in the country. The Pose and American Horror Story star had some tough words for President Biden during this years LGBTQ State of the Union address. Advertisement During the 14-minute-long address, which aired on Logo TV and social media platforms ahead of the presidents first State of the Union address, the actress and longtime activist said that she wont praise the current administration for doing the bare minimum. Citing last years official proclamation of Transgender Day of Remembrance, she noted a drastic change from the previous administration, which she said hardly acknowledged this epidemic of transphobic violence. Advertisement However, even though this shift in policy is long overdue, its not nearly enough. President Biden, many of our Black trans sisters and siblings gave you our vote because you told us that you could reach across the political aisle and dance with the devil in the pale moonlightYou say trans youth are brave and claim to have their backs, yet your administration has not done enough to sufficiently protect them, she said. Talk is cheap, we need you to act. Ross said that it is unacceptable that the Equality Act, legislation that would protect LGBTQ people from discrimination, is currently stalled in the Senate. The Daily News Flash Weekdays Catch up on the days top five stories every weekday afternoon. > She also noted another startling trend of anti-trans animus in our country, saying that more than 100 anti-LGBTQ bills were introduced in 34 U.S. states in 2021, the worst year on record for anti-LGBTQ legislation. Angelica Ross poses in the press room on night one of the Creative Arts Emmy Awards on Sept. 11, 2021, in Los Angeles. (Richard Shotwell/Richard Shotwell/Invision/AP) On Tuesday night, during his address, Biden urged lawmakers to pass the Equality Act. He also said that state laws targeting trans youth are wrong. For our LGBTQ+ Americans, lets finally get the bipartisan Equality Act to my desk, he said, referring to the legislation, which passed the House over one year ago. The onslaught of state laws targeting transgender Americans and their families is simply wrong, he added. As I said last year, especially to our younger transgender Americans, Ill always have your back as your president, so you can be yourself and reach your God-given potential. According to Logo TV, the LGBTQ State of the Union address is an annual event in which a member of the queer community reflects on the issues that have affected LGBTQ+ people over the past year and looks ahead to what the future holds as cultural and political priorities change. Advertisement Last years address was delivered by fellow Pose star Billy Porter for the third time. The Emmy, Grammy and Tony-winning performer also delivered the address in 2019 and 2020 In what should come as a surprise to no one, Carl Peis Nothing has reportedly been busy at work developing a smartphone. According to TechCrunch , the startup plans to announce the device by sometime next month. Details on the phone are sparse, but its said to borrow design cues from the companys Ear 1 wireless earbuds. Specifically, it will reportedly incorporate the elements of transparency found on Nothings first product. TechCrunch reports Nothing showed off the device to industry executives at Mobile World Congress, currently underway in Barcelona, Spain. Beyond those details, the outlet doesnt say much about the phone itself. But given Peis past involvement in OnePlus, that might be enough to get smartphone enthusiasts excited. After all, for the seven years that he was involved with the company, OnePlus released some of its most talked-about phones, including the OnePlus One , 3T and 6 , and built a devoted fanbase on the back of its design and software philosophies. Ford is determined to compete against electric vehicle rivals like Tesla and Rivian, and it's willing to reorganize the company to improve its chances. The brand is splitting its car manufacturing business into separate EV-only and internal combustion engine (ICE) divisions to help it fight both "new EV competitors" and conventional challengers. The electric unit, Model e, is meant to speed up large-scale development of EVs while producing connected vehicle technology for all of Ford. Effectively, the badge hopes to edge closer to the fast-moving, tech-driven cultures of its EV-only competitors. The ICE division, Ford Blue, will concentrate on "relentlessly attacking" costs, improving quality and streamlining operations to help turn a profit. Blue will supply hardware-focused engineering and manufacturing to the rest of the company. Company chief Jim Farley will serve as president of Model e. Apple and Tesla veteran Doug Field, who joined Ford in September 2021, will lead the unit's development as its Chief EV and Digital Systems Officer. The split, part of a larger Ford+ strategy, isn't a complete surprise. Ford EVs like the Mustang Mach-E and F-150 Lightning have seen strong early demand, but Tesla still dominates the US electric market with deliveries of over 1 million cars last year. The move theoretically helps Ford catch up to or surpass Tesla while keeping ICE cars viable at least, until ICE is phased out. This approach also mirrors EV-focused strategy changes at some of Ford's mainstream competitors. GM already plans to become EV-only by 2035, while Stellantis unveiled a "Dare Forward" plan that will see EVs lead sales in Europe and the US by 2030. Even Hyundai was rumored to have stopped developing new combustion engines, although it denied the claim. Electric cars are taking priority across the industry, and Ford doesn't want to risk being left behind. Google has blocked users from being able to edit Maps in Ukraine, Russia and Belarus, according to BuzzFeed News. It's also deleting all user-submitted places and contributions, such as photos, videos and business information in those countries made since February 24th. The tech giant came to the decision "out of an abundance of caution" after people claimed across social networks that the Russian military has been relying on pins created by users on Maps to coordinate air strikes on Ukraine. As BuzzFeed News explains, there are posts circulating on websites like Twitter with screenshots of Maps showing pins labeled " " or Ukrainian for "farm" in Kyiv. People were reportedly claiming that user-made tags saying "farm" or "agriculture" created on February 28th matched the locations of the missile strikes on cities that include Kyiv and Kharkiv. Google told the publication, however, that some of the user edits marking locations in Ukraine as "farms" were made a year ago. Even so, it's disabling user contributions to Maps since the Russian invasion had started. A company spokesperson said: "Out of an abundance of caution, we are removing user contributions like photos, videos, reviews and business information and all user-submitted places from Google Maps in Ukraine, Russia and Belarus since the invasion began, and are temporarily blocking new edits from being made." A few days ago, the tech giant also removed live traffic data on Maps in Ukraine, most likely to protect the locations of fleeing locals. It blocked the YouTube channels of Russian state-owned media outlets RT and Sputnik on across Europe, as well, following the European Commission's announcement that it would ban what it calls "Kremlin's media machine" in the EU. Other tech companies had also responded to calls to limit their services in Russia and to block access to its state-owned media outlets. Facebook took down fake accounts spreading Russian disinformation and restricted RT's and Sputnik's access to its platform, for instance. More recently, Apple halted all product sales in Russia and disabled all traffic data in Ukraine after a request from Ukrainian Vice Prime Minister Mykhailo Fedorov. After nearly two years working from home, Google employees in the Bay Area and several other cities will be back at the office on April 4th. The announcement came in an email from John Casey, Googles vice president of global benefits, reported CNBC. Casey cited the steady drop in COVID-19 cases in the Bay Area, advances in treatment and improved safety measures as reasons behind the returns timing. Google, along with much of Silicon Valley, initially planned a January return-to-work date, but was forced to delay it due to the Omicron surge. Since then, the company has allowed workers to voluntarily return to its Mountain View and San Francisco offices if they agree to wear a mask and are fully vaccinated. Google is taking a slow approach to transitioning its entire workforce back to the office. Last year CEO Sundar Pichai laid out a "hybrid work" plan, with most employees having the option to work remotely for at least part of the week. We'll see this plan in action in April, with most Google employees still working from home two days a week. Employees can work at the office more often if they choose, or file for an extension of their work-from-home arrangement if theyre not ready to return. Springtime seems to be when much of Big Tech is eyeing a return to campus. Microsoft employees returned to work at the Redmond, Washington headquarters this week, but with the expectation that most employees will spend about 50 percent of their time working remotely. Most Meta employees will be returning to the office on March 28th. Twitter employees can opt to work remotely forever, but has allowed employees access to their San Francisco and New York City offices if they show proof of vaccination. President Joe Biden called for the vast majority of federal employees to return to the office in his State of the Union Speech on Tuesday. So its likely well see even more companies announce their re-opening dates soon, especially if cases continue to decline and cities drop mask mandates. Hyundai plans to release 17 full electric vehicle models by 2030 as part of its efforts to strengthen its lineup and to catch up to rival automakers. The company's CEO Jaehoon Chang has made the announcement when he unveiled Hyundai's electrification roadmap in an investor presentation. Out of 17, 11 models will be under the main Hyundai brand, while 6 will be released under its Genesis luxury brand. The automaker announced last year that Genesis will switch to electric powertrains completely by 2025, though at the time, it said that it expects to have eight EV models available for sale in 2030. Chang's latest announcement includes more concrete details about Hyundai's electrification plans. He said the company is investing 19.4 trillion won ($16.08 billion) in its EV-related endeavors, including setting up more manufacturing plants with the capability to produce EVs. The automaker is also aiming to capture a 7 percent market share in the global EV market and to sell 1.87 million electric vehicle units per year by 2030. The company has yet to reveal the exact models it's releasing within the next eight years, but it did say that three of them are sedans, six are SUVs, one is a light commercial vehicle, while the last one is a new vehicle type. The first release will most likely be the IONIQ 6, an all-electric sedan that will be available for purchase this year. In 2024, Hyundai will be releasing the IONIQ 7, as well. While $16.08 billion is a considerable investment, analysts told Reuters that it's in in no way "aggressive" when compared to the commitments made by some rival companies. Toyota, for instance, plans to invest 8 trillion yen ($70 billion) for its electrification projects by 2030, while GM had earmarked $35 billion for its EV and automated vehicle investments from 2020 through 2025. Netflix has today announced that it will acquire Next Games, a Finnish mobile game developer that has already made an RPG based on Stranger Things. The deal will see Netflix hand over around 65 million (around $72 million), with all of the paperwork expected to be finalized by the summer. Next Games has plenty of experience courting the TV-tie-in market, and previously made The Walking Dead: Our World which was kept updated in sync with the (in)famous zombie show. As Michael Verdu, VP of Games at Netflix explained, Next Games will become a core studio, expanding our internal game studio capabilities. This is very in-line with Netflixs strategy to broaden out what it can offer to users beyond prestige TV miniseries that regularly last 2-3 hours longer than they should. As well as titles spun-out of Stranger Things and The Dark Crystal: Age of Resistance, Netflix has also launched a Hearthstone-esque card battler called Arcanium: Rise of Akhan and Krispee Street. Not to mention its projects in interactive fiction like Bandersnatch and the recently-released Cat Burglar. The backlash to Russias invasion of Ukraine continues to build. According to Variety , Netflix has paused all future projects it had planned to undertake within the country. The company had four original productions underway in Russia, including one directed by Dasha Zhuk that was in shooting before the decision. According to Deadline, Netflix has one untitled series that will be completed. The fate of the two other projects is less clear. In particular, the company reportedly hasn't made a decision about what to do with Anna K, its high-profile adaptation of Leo Tolstoys Anna Karenina. The move comes after Netflix said it would not comply with Russias Vitrina TV law . The measure requires that audiovisual companies with more than 100,000 subscribers carry 20 free state channels, including NTV and Spa. In December, the countrys Roskomnadzor telecom regulator said Netflix would have to comply with the law, but Russia had yet to enforce it before the company made its decision at the start of the week. At the time, Netflix said it had no plans to offer the required programming due to the current situation. Like that move, the decision to halt a handful of productions may be more of a symbolic gesture than a major sacrifice on Netflixs part. The company only began offering a localized version of its platform in Russia about a year ago, and it reportedly has fewer than 1 million subscribers in the country. It also doesn't have an office in the country, nor any employees. We've reached out to Netflix for comment. Theres a reason why Scarlett Johansson remains mum when it comes to maternity. The Black Widow star and mother of two recently opened up about why she was so protective of her pregnancies. Advertisement Scarlett Johansson attends the premiere of Illumination's "Sing 2" on December 12, 2021 in Los Angeles, California. (Matt Winkelmeyer/Getty Images) Last August, Johansson privately welcomed baby son Cosmo with her husband, Saturday Night Live head writer Colin Jost. The 37-year-old Manhattan native also shares a 6-year-old daughter, Rose, with ex-spouse, journalist Romain Dauriac. She told Vanity Fair that she was so protective of both pregnancies, not wanting to feel scrutinized in the public eye in an interview published Tuesday. Advertisement The newborns birth took the world by surprise since it wasnt confirmed the couple were expecting. Promoting Black Widow by doing only zoom interviews also made it easy for her to keep the pregnancy a secret. I wanted to be able to have my own feelings about my changing body without other people also telling me how they saw me, whether it was positive or negative, she shared. I realized when I was pregnant with my son, its funny how much stuff people put on you when youre pregnant their hopes or their judgment or their desire, a lot of that is put on pregnant women. She added, And while I was definitely excited to be pregnant in some ways, I also had a lot of not-great feelings about it, and that would be scrutinized by Im talking about, like, women that were close to me. You expect it from men, but from women, its like, Come on, girl, youve been through it. I feel like a lot of things have moved forward in the past five years in terms of womens empowerment, but that thing remains sort of in the Dark Ages. So much judgment its crazy. Johansson concluded. Russia's space agency has refused to launch OneWeb internet satellites unless the company provides assurances they won't be used for military purposes and the UK sells its stake in OneWeb . Roscosmos was scheduled to launch 36 satellites on a Soyuz rocket on Friday. Roscosmos chief Dmitry Rogozin said the agency made the demands in response to the UK issuing sanctions against Russia following its invasion of Ukraine , as CNBC reports. Among other things, the government banned Russian ships from entering UK ports and sanctioned most of Russias financial system. Kwasi Kwarteng, the UK's business and energy secretary, suggested Roscosmos' demands were a non-starter. "There's no negotiation on OneWeb: the UK Government is not selling its share," he wrote on Twitter . "We are in touch with other shareholders to discuss next steps." Rogozin said he'd give the UK two days to reconsider. There's no negotiation on OneWeb: the UK Government is not selling its share. We are in touch with other shareholders to discuss next steps... Kwasi Kwarteng (@KwasiKwarteng) March 2, 2022 To date, 428 OneWeb satellites have been launched to low Earth orbit on Soyuz rockets. OneWeb plans to provide global internet coverage from space using 648 first-generation satellites . There are two kinds of Android tablets: Samsung's Galaxy Tab S line and everything else. That's because while most Android slates don't rise above being simple media browsing and casual gaming machines, Samsung is doing more than any other company to transform Android into a true multitasking platform. And even though Samsung is approaching the limits of what Google's mobile OS can do, the combination of Dex mode and high-end hardware makes for a premium tablet that sits in a class of its own. Hardware and design Featuring a 12.4-inch OLED display, the $900 Tab S8+ is the middle child of Samsung's new Tab S8 lineup, sitting in between the $700 11-inch Tab S8 and the $1,110 Tab S8 Ultra, which boasts a massive 14.6-inch screen. Samsung Galaxy Tab S8+ SCORE 85 Engadget 85 Critics - Not yet scored N/A Users - Not yet scored N/A Pros Gorgeous display microSD card slot Super thin design S Pen is included Good battery life Enhanced multitasking in Dex mode Cons A 4:3 or 3:2 aspect ratio would be better for productivity No headphone jack Keyboard cover costs extra Kinda pricey Sam Rutherford/Engadget Without deviating too much from previous entries, Samsung has trimmed down its latest high-end tablet yet again, leaving the Tab S8+ with the slimmest of bezels. And measuring just 0.22 inches thick and weighing 1.24 pounds, the whole thing is very sleek. Meanwhile, there's a new Armor Aluminum frame that Samsung claims is 33 percent harder than what it used on the Tab S7 line. The Tab S8+ also has quad speakers with Dolby Atmos located on each corner of its chassis, so no matter which way you hold it, audio sounds rich and full. The Tab S8+'s highlight feature is really its 2,800 x 1,752 screen, which delivers rich, punchy colors and a 120Hz refresh rate that makes scrolling through websites and flipping between apps feel smooth. My one complaint is that I really wish Samsung had opted for a wider 3:2 aspect ratio display instead of sticking with 16:10. If all you do is watch movies or play games, 16:10 makes a lot of sense. But when it comes to productivity, the extra vertical screen space you get from a 4:3 or 3:2 display makes multitasking or having two windows open side-by-side a lot more usable. With Apple and Microsoft already having long since moved to 4:3 and 3:2 screens on iPads and Surfaces, I question why Samsung hasn't done the same. Sam Rutherford/Engadget The Tab S8+ also features good performance thanks to the inclusion of Qualcomm's Snapdragon 8 Gen 1 chip, along with 8GB of RAM and either 128GB or 256GB of storage. And, unlike Samsung's flagship Galaxy phones, you even get a microSD tray for additional storage. The downside is that there's no headphone jack, which is rather frustrating because it's hard to believe that Samsung really couldn't find room for a 3.5mm port on a device this big. Finally, Samsung rounded out the Tab S8+'s design with a magnetic strip around back for charging the stylus; a strip of pogo pins on one side for attaching keyboard covers; and a speedy in-screen fingerprint sensor that outperforms side-mounted options. Dex mode While Android tablets at large are still waiting for Android 12L to receive a number of much-requested multitasking features, the Galaxy Tab S8 line has a custom solution in Dex. By touching the Dex button in the Tab S8's Quick Settings (or using a CMD + W keyboard shortcut), you can switch from the standard Android UI to a more powerful desktop-like view complete with a taskbar and multi-window support. There's also a system tray for easily accessing features like WiFi and Bluetooth connections, while the Android App Drawer is located behind a handy icon in the bottom left. Sam Rutherford/Engadget I used the Tab S8+ to write large parts of this review, and after booting into Dex mode, I found myself feeling almost immediately at home. I was able to snap windows to each side of the screen just like on a Windows PC, with the Tab S8+ also supporting a number of familiar keyboard shortcuts. You don't get the full range of commands that you would in Windows or macOS, but a number of the basics like Alt-Tab and Alt-F4 are there. Now, I wish I didn't need to toggle between Dex and the standard Android layouts. And in less popular apps that haven't been optimized for the Tab S8's big screen, you can run into some clunky and awkward experiences, with apps that can't be maximized or games that dont run properly in the background. The biggest thing that stops the Tab S8+ from feeling like a laptop is Samsung's $160 book cover keyboard, which doesn't have a built-in touchpad. Touching icons to open apps is fine in short bursts, but if you're considering serious productivity, you'll want to get the more expensive $230 book cover keyboard, which does have an onboard trackpad. But for the most part, while it might take a little getting used to, Dex mode on the Tab S8+ does an admirable job of turning a traditional tablet into a much more powerful 2-in-1. S Pen The other big selling point for the Tab S8 line is Samsung's included S Pen, which includes an expansive range of first-party drawing and annotation apps. By reducing the Tab S8's input latency from 9ms down to just 2.8ms, Samsung has essentially eliminated any sort of lag, and frankly, it feels fantastic. Sam Rutherford/Engadget Samsung Notes is your default choice for jotting down quick thoughts, while its handwriting-to-text conversion features allow you to save more legible copy for easier viewing later. And if you need more support for translating text, annotating slideshows or PDFs, or simply making funny doodles to send to friends, there are dedicated apps for that too. Samsung has all the basics covered out of the box, though if you're a hardcore artist, you'll find more sophisticated drawing and sketching apps on Apple's App Store. Cameras The photography experience on tablets is often an afterthought because let's be honest, who wants to be the person pulling out a 12-inch device to snap pics at a concert or ballgame? So even though the Tab S8's cameras aren't anywhere near as good as what you'd get on a Galaxy S phone, Samsung threw in not one but two rear cameras that are more than serviceable. That includes a 12-megapixel wide-angle camera and a 6MP ultra-wide cam in back, as well as a 12MP selfie shooter up front. In bright light, images are sufficiently sharp and colorful, though youll start to notice noise creep in pretty quickly as the conditions get dimmer. Battery life Sam Rutherford/Engadget It's hard for a screen this big to not suck up a lot of juice, especially if you have the brightness turned up. But even so, the Tab S8+ posted a respectable time on our local video rundown test of 9:21, which isn't a far cry from the 10 hours we got from the iPad Pro. However, if you're playing games or multitasking, just be aware that you can drain the Tab S8+'s battery a lot faster than that. In more mixed use cases, I typically got closer to six or six and a half hours on a charge. Oh, and while the Tab S8+ does support 45-watt fast charging, you'll need to buy a power brick that supports those speeds on your own, because Samsung doesn't include a charger in the box. Wrap-up The big question I've been asking myself is, compared to something like Lenovo's $630 P12 Pro, is the Galaxy Tab S8+ worth 50 percent more? And you know what, actually yes. That's because while they might have similar designs and screen sizes, the Tab S8+'s display is brighter, it has noticeably faster performance and its quad speakers sound richer and fuller. Little luxuries like its in-screen fingerprint reader make it easier to use on a daily basis. And Samsung's S Pen and stylus apps are more sophisticated than anything you'll find on a rival Android slate. It's just an all-around more premium device. Sam Rutherford/Engadget But what elevates the Tab S8+ above rival Android tablets is Dex mode. With the touch of a button, the Tab S8+ switches to a more desktop-like UI that makes multitasking and doing work actually a feasible idea, instead of struggling with productivity like you do on so many traditional Android tablets. In fact, the consumer version of the P12 Pro isn't even scheduled to get Android 12 until the end of March, let alone whatever happens to Android 12L. Even so, despite all the work Samsung has done, the Tab S8 still isn't quite as powerful or accommodating as an iPad Pro or even a Windows-powered detachable like a Surface Pro 8. And with a total price of at least $1,000 once you factor in Samsung's keyboard cover, the Tab S8+ doesn't offer much in the way of savings versus Apple or Microsoft. But both of those devices run on different OSes, and depending on your situation, switching might be a nonstarter. That said, if you need support for Android apps but still want something suited for productivity, a Chromebook is also worth considering. But if you're dead set on a high-end multi-purpose Android tablet, the Tab S8 line should be at the top of your list. The Snapchat app will no longer show ads in Russia, Belarus and Ukraine. In addition, Snap has halted all ad sales in Russia and Belarus following the Russian invasion of Ukraine, the company has announced in a blog post. It said that it will continue offering the multimedia app in those countries, as it remains an important tool of communication, but that it will comply "with all sanctions targeting Russian businesses and individuals." It also emphasized that it has no physical offices in Russia and that it does not accept revenue from Russian state-owned entities. By implementing those ad bans, Snap has joined the growing list of tech companies that had also taken steps to limit ad availability in those regions. Twitter paused ads and recommendations in Ukraine and Russia "to ensure critical public safety information is elevated and ads don't detract from it." Both Facebook and Microsoft blocked state media outlets from using their advertising platforms, while Google-owned YouTube barred state-owned RT and other Russian channels from being able to generate ad revenue. As the company said in its post, it has never allowed RT and other state-owned outlets to publish on Snapchat's Discover page, so it doesn't have to carry out additional measures to block them from the app's equivalent of a news feed. Still, the company said it's "vigilantly monitoring" its platform "for any evidence of disinformation or misuse." The Ukranian government wants gaming giants to join a tech industry crackdown on Russia following its Ukraine invasion. As Polygon observed, Vice Prime Minister Mykhailo Fedorov has called on Microsoft, Sony and other gaming companies to "temporarily block" all Russian and Belarusian player accounts. He also asked eSports organizers to halt participation from Russian and Belarussian competitors, and to cancel any events planned for either country. These moves would motivate Russians to resist the "disgraceful military aggression" in Ukraine, Fedorov argued. He believed technology could be the "best answer" to Russia's military hardware. We've asked Microsoft and Sony for comment. Some game developers have already shown support for Ukraine. Cyberpunk 2077 creator CD Projekt Red, for instance, donated the equivalent of $232,000 to humanitarian efforts in the country. It's not clear if Microsoft or Sony will take action. Russia isn't the largest market for either company (Sony's PS4 has mostly thrived in Europe and North America), but banning the country even briefly would still represent a significant move that's many players who'd be kicked offline. Microsoft has already banned Russian state media, though, and they'd be joining companies like Apple that have halted at least some business. There may be pressure on the PlayStation and Xbox teams to act, even if they don't go as far as Ukraine might like. After a week of negotiations in Nairobi, the United Nations has agreed to start working on a first-ever global plastic pollution treaty, Reuters reports. It's not projected to be completed until 2024, but according to the UN it could end up being as important as the 2015 Paris Climate Agreement, the most significant global effort to curb climate change yet. In 2019, the organization found that humanity is damaging nature at an "unprecedented" rate, with plastic pollution growing by more than ten times since 1980. Heck, we've even found microplastics in the Arctic, one of the most remote areas on Earth. The real question, of course, is how UN members plan to address the scourge of plastics. As the New York Times reports, the agreement would involve coming up with legally binding measures to clean up plastic waste. But crucially, it would also involve limiting plastic production, a move that's certain to face industry pushback. As you'd expect, different countries also have different priorities. While major plastic producers like the US and Japan objected to language in the agreement, developing nations stressed the need for more involvement. In particular, the agreement highlighted the importance of waste pickers, who work long hours sorting trash, all the while breathing in toxic fumes. Enid, OK (73701) Today Cloudy skies this evening followed by thunderstorms late. A few storms may be severe. Low 53F. Winds NE at 10 to 15 mph. Chance of rain 90%.. Tonight Cloudy skies this evening followed by thunderstorms late. A few storms may be severe. Low 53F. Winds NE at 10 to 15 mph. Chance of rain 90%. Justice. Karma. The universe balancing itself out. Whatever you wanna call it, it just happened to Netflix's so-called Tinder Swindler, AKA Sam Leviev. Leviev (not his real name) became famous through a Netflix documentary, in which three different women detailed how he swindled them out of what amounted to millions of dollars. He pretended to be the son of an Israeli diamond magnate, and staged extravagant and romantic dates with women he met on Tinder in order to convince them that he really was rich - then, through various means, he convinced them that he needed to borrow money, swearing his family would return it, and made off with it. (Like the Nigerian Prince email scam, but with extra steps so savvier internet users would still fall for it.) Well, for all the effort he went to convincing his victims that he was the real deal, it sure didn't take much convincing to get Leviev and his girlfriend to get scammed the same way. According to a report from TMZ, last Thursday, a woman who was verified on instagram slid into Leviev's DMs, telling him that her boyfriend worked at Meta and could get the both of them verified. Wanting that little blue check for himself, Leviev accepted a Facetime call with the boyfriend - and, deciding that the bustling office they staged in the background looked legit, he and his girlfriend sent two separate payments of roughly $3,000 to the guy - you know, so that they could verify him and clear out all the fake accounts in his name and stuff. Except no, because, Leviev's manager, sensing something fishy, looked into it with a real Meta employee, and they confirmed that they do not charge for verification - but by then, the two had already deleted all their presence from the internet, thus successfully making off with the cash. It's a small sum compared to what the guy got out of the women he tricked, but it still feels good to watch him fall for a scam and get shafted himself. He might yet face more reprecussions anyway, because the real Leviev family is suing him for using their name for his schemes. The political and economic instability of the Sahel is as clear as day following a second coup in Mali in May 2021 (just nine months after the previous one), coups in Burkina Faso and Chad, and the increased presence of Russian-backed Wagner mercenaries in Mali. Furthermore, the UN reports that 2.1 million people are internally displaced in Mali, Burkina Faso, and Niger. The Sahel region is still recovering from a 2018 food crisis that left between 7 and 13 million malnourished. 5 000 or more conflict-related fatalities have been reported in these three countries for three years straight, with nearly 2 500 instances of political violence in 2021 alone. Yet developments in the Sahel have taken a backseat while the Wests attention has been focused on Ukraine. Europeans have been sidelined from the great power politics (with contemporary characteristics) playing out in eastern Europe, in part due to internal divisions, but they have also been completely unable to provide any meaningful contribution to stabilizing the Sahel. This is illustrated by the flailing French-led Operation Barkhane, Denmarks expulsion from Task Force Takuba (supporting Barkhane), and largely symbolic EU-wide sanctions on some members of Malis junta. A BROKEN EU RECORD International organizations, the EU and EU member states have failed to implement the integrated approach required to address the root causes of regional instability and sustain peace in the Sahel. Weak politico-military checks and balances produce ever frequent coups and economic aid winds up funding patronage networks and corrupt heavy-handed regimes. The multiple military missions active in the Sahel are focused on securitization, border management, and counter-terrorism. This approach was initiated by France in 2013 before the 2015 terrorist attacks across Europe and in Bamako, and before the significant migratory pressures of 2015. From 2015 onwards, they seized the moment to Europeanize and intensify this approach under the (misled) assumption that more hard security was needed to enact real change. However, more often than not, these activities deprive local economies of essential income and spoil the fine political balance that allows authorities to maintain the little influence with local leaders that they have. Since 2018, when the EUs Court of Auditors delivered a damning report on the operational ineffectiveness of the EUs CSDP missions in the Sahel, the situation has only deteriorated further. Despite early optimism that regionalizing the EUs approach through the G5 Sahel, a platform aiming to increase security and development coordination, this French-led initiative put a definitive end to any significant role for the Economic Community of West African States (ECOWAS) and African Union (AU) in the Sahel. The Sahel does not suffer from a lack of structures meant to improve its governance but, rather, the mushrooming of duplicative and inefficient platforms, initiatives, and organizations many imposed by external actors (such as France) as a condition for economic aid and development assistance. And yet, the 2022 EU-AU Summits draft statement calls for more structured European-African security cooperation and African solutions to African problems. In repeating these mantras as if a broken record, the EU is not only doubling down on an approach that has thus far clearly not worked for the Sahel but fails to take any responsibility for making matters worse. BACK TO THE OLD DRAWING BOARD - The draft summit statement unfortunately echoes the latest publicly available draft Strategic Compass, meant to provide a roadmap for greater EU cooperation in security and defense. But a paradigm shift is required if the EU wants to demonstrate the added value of its Sahel engagement. The EU must re-balance its securitizing rhetoric and actions, balancing military assistance and operations, security sector reform and border management with a more development- and human security-centric approach. This would at once give the EU a new opportunity to earn its chops as a relevant security provider, prove that member states are serious about burden-sharing in matters of security and peace, and reduce (national) political exposure to failure. France must give up its exclusive politico-military channels and monopoly of intelligence activities in the Sahel. Instead, it should keep up good habits on display during its rotating Presidency of the Council to truly follow through on its ambitions for greater EU strategic autonomy. The EU Political and Security Committee should then ask the European External Action Service to go back to the old drawing board and come up with a new Political Framework for an EU Crisis Approach to the Sahel more aligned with its own humanitarian-development-peace nexus. This must focus on seeking and sustaining dialogue with non-state (and sometimes radicalized) actors, who are often viewed as legitimate authorities in local communities, as well as supporting the Sahel with jobs and natural resource management, and proactively engaging local authorities in disarmament, demobilization and reintegration plans. Simplifying governance is also key. This means taking a regional perspective and encouraging positive spillover effects by empowering ECOWAS, which the AU hopes can be part and parcel of its peace and security architecture. The EU should channel development and humanitarian aid, as well as technical assistance through ECOWAS structures and offer seconded EU personnel to boost its administrative capacity. The EU should also consider integrating its few (positive) tangible outcomes, such as the Regional Advisory and Coordination Cell for the Sahel, within ECOWAS structures, rather than continue to support a delegitimized G5 Sahel. By contributing to better governance (diplomacy) and addressing the root causes of instability (development), the EU may better understand how to re-calibrate its military engagement (defense). As a complete transfer of ownership and total military retreat is not feasible in the short-term despite EU insistence on African solutions to African problems European efforts must be tightly coordinated with the AU, UN, and United States. The upside is significant: a new EU approach might prove the added value of the EUs model to civil society in the Sahel and simultaneously address the root causes of the deteriorating security situation. Lest the region become the playground of illiberal great powers that are only too happy to open and close the tap of instability when it serves their strategic interests. The EU-AU Summit: Untying the Sahelian Knot Opinion by Dylan Macchiarini Crosson Centre for European Policy Studies / CEPS. The Opinion can be downloaded here: PRAGUE, March 2, 2022 /PRNewswire/ -- Zentiva is a major developer and producer of high-quality and affordable medicines in Europe. Zentiva will donate 100,000 packs of medicines to humanitarian aid programs targeted at helping the citizens of Ukraine. The medicines will include life-saving hospital medicines, cardiovascular medicines, pain medication, and anti-infectives. The Company is working with governmental organisations and NGOs, as they respond to the urgent requests from the Ukrainian government and Ukrainian citizens as they cross the borders into the EU. "There is an urgent need for medicines and requests are coming in very fast. Zentiva has large manufacturing operations in the Czech Republic (Prague) and Romania (Bucharest) so we can help by responding quickly to support the citizens of Ukraine and their need for medicines. We are in close contact with several governments to be ready to support and have pledged 100,000 packs of medicines", said Sona Porubska Head of Zentiva Corporate Affairs. The donation plan is part of a broader set of activities being undertaken by the Company to provide support to Ukrainian citizens, including the Zentiva Ukraine team, their families, and our partners in the country. About Zentiva Zentiva is a producer of high-quality affordable medicines serving patients in Europe and beyond. With a dedicated team of more than 4,700 people and a network of production sites - including flagship sites in Prague, Bucharest, and Ankleshwar - Zentiva strives to be the champion of branded and generic medicines in Europe to better support people's daily healthcare needs. At Zentiva it is our aspiration that healthcare should be a right and not a privilege. More than ever, people need better access to high-quality affordable medicines and healthcare. We work in partnership with physicians, pharmacists, wholesalers, regulators, and governments to provide the everyday solutions that we all depend on. Visit us at www.zentiva.com. Media ContactMounira Lemoui Head of Communications ZENTIVA GROUP, a.s. U Kabelovny 529/16, Dolni Mecholupy, 102 00 Prague 10 Mobil: (+420) 727 873 159/ E-mail: mounira.lemoui@zentiva.com Logo - https://mma.prnewswire.com/media/1757203/ZENTIVA_Logo.jpg Moscow residents stood in long queues in front of ATMs amid the financial uncertainty caused by sanctions imposed by the West against Russia for its invasion of Ukraine. Wendy Williams ex-husband is suing the producers of her talk show, alleging wrongful termination. Kevin Hunter filed a suit against production company Debmar-Mercury, saying he was axed from the daytime show as his and Williams marriage disintegrated. Advertisement Williams filed for divorce in 2019 over Hunters alleged infidelities. Wendy Williams and husband Kevin Hunter (Charles Sykes/AP) In the suit, filed Tuesday in New York, Hunter is seeking at least $7 million in compensatory damages, plus punitive damages and court costs. Advertisement In the paperwork, obtained by the Daily News, Hunter said he and Williams launched into discussions with Debmar-Mercury in 2007 to bring Williams, a popular radio host, to TV. The show launched in 2008, went national in 2009 and dominated the 10AM daily morning time slot, the suit says. Demar-Mercury announced last month it was pulling the plug on Williams show at the end of its current season. Williams has been out all season for health reasons, with a series of guest hosts filling in. One of the guest hosts, Sherri Shepherd, will get a new show in the fall in place of Williams program. But Hunter who goes by Kevin but whose legal name is Kelvin says he was responsible for much of his exs success in her salad days. Kelvin Hunter was one of the reasons behind the Wendy William (sic) Shows tremendous success and everything seemed to go south after he left. Mr. Hunter was unlawfully terminated solely due to his marital status to Wendy, which is contrary to human rights laws in NYC, Hunters attorney, Abe George, told The News in a statement. This lawsuit seeks to compensate Mr. Hunter for the sweat equity that he put into the show and that Debmar-Mercury will continue to profit on even in their new reincarnation of the Wendy Williams Show. Zelenskyy makes appeal for help to EU lawmakers Zelenskyy spoke via video link at the European Parliament in Brussels, where lawmakers earlier strongly criticised Russia's invasion. Commentary From Crisis Management Expert Edward Segal, Author of the Award- Winning Book "Crisis Ahead: 101 Ways to Prepare for and Bounce Back from Disasters, Scandals, and Other Emergencies " (Nicholas Brealey) Natural gas leaks and explosions can result in deadly and destructive crisis situations for companies and entire communities. Last January, AP reported that an explosion from a gas leak injured two workers at a U.S. Steel Corp. plant in suburban Detroit, Michigan. In September 2018, excessive pressure in natural gas lines caused a series of explosions and fires to occur in as many as 40 homes in three Massachusetts towns. Now, according to new research, where people live in that state can determine their risks of a natural gas leak crisisand how long it takes to get those leaks repaired. 'Leaks Can Go On For Months Or Years' According to the Environmental Defense Fund, "In the vast web of natural gas pipes beneath America's streets, leaks are a persistent challenge, with significant implications for our climate. Major leaks are typically fixed promptly. But when sufficient resources aren't provided for repairs, other leaks can go on for months or years. "Utility companies are required by law to inspect their lines for safety and fix safety problems within a specified time. But these rules don't require the repair of all leaks. Other rules governing howand how much they can charge customers make it hard to invest in the major pipeline upgrades needed to prevent leaks." Leak-Prone Infrastructure With over 6,000 miles of aging, leak-prone infrastructure, Massachusetts bears a disproportionate share of the country's leak-prone gas pipelines. Massachusetts has some of the oldest natural gas infrastructure in the country, with pipes that leak methanea potent greenhouse gas. The state, however, has also led the nation in transparency of gas leaks reporting and in prioritizing repair of higher environmental impact leaks. New Research Findings Salem State University professor Marcos Luna and Dominic Nicholas, a director at HEET (a Massachusetts-based nonprofit seeking to reduce carbon emissions) examined over 25,000 Massachusetts gas leaks in relation to demographic groups. They recently published their findings in a new peer-reviewed paper in Energy Policy. Luna and Nicholas said their research shows that low-income and communities of color, as well as renters, limited English-speaking households and adults with lower levels of education, are disproportionately exposed to gas leaks and that leak repairs are comparatively slower for these populations. They observed that, "A growing body of research shows that natural gas leaks at the distribution level are much more common and extensive than previously thought. "Although scholars and advocates have raised alarms about the climate change and economic significance of these leaks, there has been little consideration of the problem from an environmental justice perspective." The director of environmental justice for the state of Massachusetts did not immediately respond to a request to comment for this story. 'These Findings Are Not Surprising' "There is a disparity. It's consistent. It's across the state. That's a civil rights issue to begin with," Luna told WBUR. "This is not acceptable." "Unfortunately, these findings are not surprising. These results show it's critical that policy makers, regulators and private industry incorporate an environmental justice framework to monitor, protect and engage with environmental justice communities," said Luna. The Big Picture According to Luna and Nicholas: "From the wellhead to the gas appliances in homes, researchers increasingly find that natural gas leaks are more common and extensive than previously understood or reported." "These leaks have outsized climate impacts because methane, the primary constituent of natural gas, has more than 80 times the global warming potential of carbon dioxide over the first 20 years that it reaches the atmosphere." "Lost methane may account for one quarter of current warming. Locally, gas leaks pose explosive fire hazards, contribute to degradation of indoor and outdoor air quality and kill street trees." Next Steps Luna and Nicholas suggested that regulators and gas utilities, who have knowledge of the necessary safety and emissions prioritizations, use an equity analysis to ensure they provide equitable service to environmental justice communities. They also recommend that utilities nationwide be required to report their leak inventories transparently and publicly. "Detailed and regular reporting of leak inventories by utilities is critical and should be required of all gas utilities nationwide," Nicholas concluded. ### In a rare example of citizen activism to stop corporate welfare, residents of Bandera Cowboy Capital of the World banded together on Valentines Day to kill a proposed tax break intended to spur economic development. I am particularly encouraged because they attacked the plan by getting their local school board to vote down a Chapter 313 application. These programs are convoluted but fiendish statewide corporate subsidy gimmicks I have ranted about in the past. On ExpressNews.com: Taylor: Texas shameful Chapter 313 program is the sort of corporate welfare we dont need The applicant for the proposed subsidy, a newly created solar company named Montague Solar LLC, has big plans. It proposed building a $102 million, 1,000-acre solar farm on a ranch in Bandera County and to receive property tax breaks from Bandera ISD. According to Alan Hancock of North Carolina-based Pine Gate Renewables, the parent company of Montague Solar, the 120 megawatt solar farm could power 27,000 homes for a year. That would be a big project, especially for a county of about 24,000 people. The companys approach to school trustees began in June, according to Brittany Hicks, the school board president. She told me she was skeptical about the proposal but felt a fiduciary duty to learn more. I dont have enough information to make a decision, but I dont want to turn down money that the school could use, she said. Kin Man Hui / Staff photographer Montague Solar officially submitted a Chapter 313 application in October. The 313 program allows private companies often but not exclusively energy companies looking to build to receive substantial reductions in their school property taxes for 10 years. In exchange, applicants such as Montague Solar must certify that the proposed new economic development might happen elsewhere without the tax break, which in most cases isnt literally true, according to an investigation published last year by Hearst Newspapers. On ExpressNews.com: Huge corporations are saving $10 billion on Texas taxes, and youre paying for it I estimate the company hoped to save about $1.9 million, based on a decade of reduced property values and the school property tax rate of 0.9958 percent. Why districts say yes School districts usually say yes to 313s because the state of Texas thats ultimately you and me as taxpayers agree to wholly reimburse the districts with unrestricted funds. Its a win for private energy companies, a win for school districts and a loss for Texas taxpayers overall. Two out of three aint bad, right? Its such a fiendishly good deal for school districts that, in the absence of citizen activism, most school boards approve these deals without taxpayers even knowing what went on. The difference in Bandera, however, were troublemakers like Lauren Byington, Rene Leith and Susan Hull. I mean the good trouble, necessary trouble, as U.S. Rep. John Lewis would have called their activism. Leith, a Bandera Realtor, alerted a womens activist group and began asking pointed questions about the project. She objected in part to the corporate welfare aspect of it on taxation grounds. Ultimately the lack of taxes attributed to the baseline in Bandera County, that gets spread to everybody else. That has to be made up somewhere, she said. Ultimately we as property owners have to pay that. And she didnt like it for political reasons. Theyre milking the system, Leith said. We are a very conservative county. If its a worthwhile project you should stand on your own. Finally, she said, the massive scale of Montague Solars project threatened the tourism livelihood of the area. We are in the middle of the beautiful Texas Hill Country, Leith said. We are a tourist-oriented county and this would impact that. Byington is a Bandera resident who organized resistance through a website called BetterBandera.com. She published data on topics from the scale of the power generation to other Chapter 313 projects statewide. Powerful information After her online activism began in November it became a locus of opposition for the community. Residents came to a January community meeting with Montague Solar representatives, including Hancock, ready to challenge the company. We got some strong questions, and some good questions. And we try to be completely transparent in those situations, said Hancock, the official with Montague Solars parent company. Hull noted the coalition of activist Bandera residents spanned the political spectrum. Its not about whether you believe in renewable energy or not. Or whether you prefer oil and gas or not, she said. I wanted to get involved, but if this is going to be about bashing solar energy, Im not interested. Despite any political differences, Hull said, residents remained disciplined in their political opposition and united. The tone of the January question-and-answer meeting went poorly for Montague, according to four people who attended. Hicks, the president of the school board, sat in the audience. They did not seem very prepared or knowledgeable about it. It didnt seem that they cared about the community. They had very vague answers on questions. Nothing felt right about it for me, she said. Its kind of sneaky, honestly. When it was pitched to me (back in June) it was described as free money. During the next school board meeting Feb. 14, Bandera ISD voted to decline the Chapter 313 proposal. We are fairly sure the Chapter 313 process is over, Hancock told me, and the Bandera ISD trustees are no longer considering the application. As far as the overall project, we are still evaluating that, Hancock said. Still picking pockets As the Hearst investigation of such giveaways showed, Chapter 313 benefits historically accrued to oil and gas refinery companies, which received subsidies for building something they were already going to build. Over the past decade and through early 2021, companies enjoyed about $10.8 billion worth of private benefit. That total is quickly increasing. In recent years, renewable energy companies caught wind of this boondoggle, albeit traditionally at a smaller scale. The industry has recently ramped up attempts to get Chapter 313 subsidies in number and scale. A majority of current and pending applications are for solar and wind projects. After grassroots opposition from both the right and left, the Texas Legislature in May declined to renew Chapter 313 but kept the window for new applications open until the end of 2022. So a massive ramp-up is underway. Texas legislative leadership has vowed to bring back the program, at least for the oil and gas industry. In February, House Speaker Dade Phelan promised the Texas Oil and Gas Association he would resurrect a version of the Chapter 313 program. On ExpressNews.com: Taylor: The Chapter 313 monster the mother of all corporate welfare revives? Even without that, the subsidies keep growing. Of the 627 currently active agreements made since 2013 statewide, 217 began their tax abatements in 2021 or later. In other words, 34.6 percent of all Chapter 313 tax abatements began just last year even though the program was supposedly allowed to end. In addition, 141 new Chapter 313 applications in the pipeline in 2021 and 2022 are pending approval, of which Banderas turndown was a rarity. When the corporate welfare is as sweet as thi. d might end soon, the line for a subsidy grows quickly. Across Texas, most Chapter 313 applications go unopposed. School districts like unrestricted funds, private energy companies like the sweet tax breaks, and Texas taxpayers are generally none the wiser despite having to make up the difference. Michael Taylor is a columnist for the San Antonio Express-News, author of The Financial Rules for New College Graduates and host of the podcast No Hill For A Climber. michael@michaelthesmart money.com | twitter.com/michael_taylor A San Antonio man who admitted to scamming investors out of more than $600,000 received an 18-month federal prison sentence Tuesday. Edward C. Wagner, 60, also must serve three years of supervised release and pay just under $77,000 in restitution to victims. Wagner reached a plea deal with federal prosecutors in October, admitting to one count of wire fraud in connection with the investment scheme and one count of tax evasion. He must pay almost $1.1 million in taxes and penalties to the Internal Revenue Service, or any lesser amount he and the agency agree to, U.S. District Judge Xavier Rodriguez said in delivering the sentence. A federal grand jury had indicted Wagner almost three years ago on 11 counts of wire fraud, six counts of tax evasion and two counts of money laundering. All but two of the counts were dropped under the plea agreement. Wagner raised money from investors by promoting pharmaceutical-related companies Pharmacogenetics, EcoChem, Leaf24 and Nutrecs. On ExpressNews.com: San Antonio businessman who defrauded Houston oil company, Texas bank sentenced to 15 months in prison He presented the companies as actual operating businesses, but he never took the necessary steps to get any of the ventures off the ground, the plea agreement stated. They never engaged in any significant business operations and they didnt have any physical locations other than Wagners residence. This was intentional deception to investors, Rodriguez said. Wagners lawyer, Molly Lizbeth Roth, asked that he be sentenced to a long term of probation, meet with the IRS to resolve the unpaid taxes and perform community service. Wagner told the judge he has a very nice job related to the roll out of a Medicare expansion program, adding that whether he kept the job depended on the outcome of the court proceeding. The job would allow him to make restitution to his victims and the IRS, he said. My concern is for my family, Wagner said before expressing remorse for his crimes. I want to make sure theyre all right. Prosecutor William Harris opposed Roths request, asking the judge to sentence Wagner to 30 months the low end of the sentencing guidelines. Time after time after time after time after time, Mr. Wagner presents business opportunities to people, Harris said. He then converts the money to his own use. Minimal (work) has been done to ever try and make these profit-generating ventures. Hes done it previously and skated prosecution. This time he got caught up in prosecution. Wagner instructed investors to wire money to bank accounts he controlled, and then spent it for his own personal use, the plea agreement said. He was initially very communicative with the victims, including sending them lulling emails about the imminent success of the business, the document added. That would morph into excuses, and ultimately a cessation of communication. All of Wagners victims lived outside of Texas and wired money to banks in Texas, resulting in the wire fraud charges. The one count of wire fraud that Wagner pleaded guilty to involved an investor identified as only BW who wired $160,000 to EcoChems Chase Bank account in 2014. It was the single largest investment from any individual, according to the indictment. SA Inc.: Get the best of business news sent directly to your inbox Not all of Wagners victims apparently sought restitution. For that reason, hes only required to make a combined $76,733 in restitution to three victims. Wagner never reported any of the income he received from investors to the IRS. He didnt file income taxes for himself or any of the four companies. An audit of Wagner and his wife found they had more than $2.8 million in taxable income from 2007 through 2010. They were assessed more than $1 million in taxes, penalties and interest. More than $1.4 million of the taxable income and $744,000 of the unpaid taxes and penalties were attributed to Wagner. Wagner took steps to hide his income, using nominee accounts, dealing extensively in cash and cashiers checks, and avoiding making financial records, the plea agreement said. Rodriguez sentenced Wagner to 18 months in prison on each count, to run concurrently. Wagner must report for prison by Sept. 1. pdanner@express-news.net This is a carousel. Use Next and Previous buttons to navigate Its now Lent, and every Friday between now and Easter, customers will line up out the door and around the block at Rudys Seafood on the South Side, eager for the trinity of fried seafood, bread and fries. Get the latest news, sports and food features sent directly to your inbox. Rudys Seafood has been a San Antonio South Side institution since 1964 and has occupied its current location for the past 34 years. And while the demand for its baskets of freshly fried crabs, oysters, fish fillets and shrimp is steady all year long, that business jumps into overdrive during Lent. Owners Roland Ramirez and his wife, Karina, prepare for that onslaught with the precision and planning of generals going into friendly battle. Roland Ramirez said that on a typical day, Rudys nine employees may serve 300 customers. But during Lent, that more than doubles to 700 or more. Hungry patrons start lining up well before opening, and those who come later can expect to wait an hour or longer. Staff file photo As for the seafood, Rudys has inventory of 500 pounds of seafood for a normal day. During Lent, that goes up by at least 100 pounds a day. On some Fridays, Ramirez said, he can sell more than 1,000 pounds. On ExpressNews.com: San Antonio Mexican seafood restaurants El Bucanero, El Golfo de Mexico, El Siete Mares do battle in Mike Sutters Lenten showdown It gets crazy, thats all I can say but in a good way, Ramirez said. We are just blessed to have the support of the community around us. You treat the customer right, and they will come back. Ramirez said that business is consistent at his restaurant, but Lent typically brings about a 25 to 30 percent boost to the bottom line. Rudys was opened by the late Yndalecio Rudy Ramirez, Rolands father. Rudy worked on a shrimp boat in Corpus Christi and yearned to bring a taste of the Gulf Coast to San Antonio. A mural of him sits above the restaurant in the signage. Inside is a mural of Rolands brother, Jerry Ramirez, who died in 2020 due to COVID complications. Chuck Blount / Staff The interior of the restaurant is arranged like an airport security line, with rows of stanchions to corral the crowds and a row of chairs so diners can sit while waiting for their food. Rudys isnt a particularly large restaurant, with only enough room for about a dozen tables, so much of the business is done via carryout. Roland said that the daily special, which includes two fish fillets and three jumbo shrimp for $14.75, is the fan favorite, but the jumbo fish burger for $9.49 and the family meal deals that hover around $30 are also top sellers. On ExpressNews.com: Chucks Food Shack: Welcome to Steak 101, with all the dos and donts for great grilled steak I would say that going to Rudys for Lent is a pilgrimage of sorts that everybody should take, said San Antonian Jamie Gonzalez, a longtime customer who grew up on the South Side eating at Rudys and who now works for a produce distributor. It played such a big role in the community, and it was more than a fish place. They are a phenomenal family that always made you feel welcome. At Rudys, Fish Friday isnt a sacrifice; its a real taste of San Antonio history. Rudys Seafood, 4122 S. Flores St., 210-532-1315. Hours: 11 a.m. to 8 p.m. Mondays-Thursdays, 10 a.m. to 9 p.m. Fridays-Saturdays. Online: rudysseafoodsa.com cblount@express-news.net | Twitter: @chuck_blount | Instagram: @bbqdiver This is a carousel. Use Next and Previous buttons to navigate NATALIA Shortly after the school day ended, the gymnasium at Natalia High School was full of chatter and music as locals arrived to learn about wellness initiatives in their county. Embedded in those initiatives was a coronavirus information campaign by students from the University of the Incarnate Word and Texas A&M University-San Antonio, who have been regular visitors to this Medina County town population 1,220 trying to counter misinformation. Natalia is in a rural area. Its a quick drive to Interstate 35 and only about 30 miles southwest of San Antonio, but organizers of a grant program saw it as isolated enough to need facts about testing and vaccinations. We realized that this community has so many questions and they dont have anybody to answer them, said Rosemary Ornelas, an A&M-San Antonio community health education student. Theres only one nurse in the whole city of Natalia so I felt like it was our job to take that and be that voice for them. When a COVID-19 vaccine became available, Teri Wootan and her family in Natalia got it with a two-hour round trip to Uvalde. Now a UIW psychology major, Wootan joined the outreach program and pitched the idea of partnering with Natalia officials to make her high school a focus of participation. I grew up there and Ive lived there my whole life, she said. When you live in a small town, resources are very limited and theres a lot of elderly people that cant make the drive back to, like, San Antonio, or other (nearby) areas. Sam Owens /San Antonio Express-News The college students, or vaxambassadors, worked with the city and Natalia Independent School District to organize weekly vaccination clinics and other events, including an information fair. The outreach began with a grant by the UIW Interfaith Youth Council to educate people on preventing the spread of COVID-19 through faith-based institutions. But last year UIW received a $149,000 grant from the Centers for Disease Control and Prevention to partner with Texas A&M San Antonio and the Texas Department of State Health Services to promote vaccination against the disease. Now the university has more partners, including the Medina County Health Unit and South Texas Rural Health, which is offering its mobile clinic for weekly vaccination efforts and wellness checkups. Seeing how much is involved and whats being offered there, it kind of makes you emotional, Wootan said. Seeing people get the health services that they really deserve, and need, is great. The grant pays stipends for Wootan and 16 other students to work in Frio, Medina and Atascosa counties, supervised by UIW psychology professor Maria Felix-Ortiz and Heather Barton Weston, assistant professor of community health education at A&M-San Antonio. Sam Owens /San Antonio Express-News Promoting the need to get your shot within a wellness program can help circumvent the politics of the vaccine, which is viewed with distrust, and sometimes hostility, in more conservative rural areas. It takes the stigma away, Felix-Ortiz said. In Natalia, students are talking to people up to five days a week, in churches, businesses and on sidewalks, handing out flyers titled How Can I Protect Myself and Others Against COVID-19?, COVID-19 Test or Vaccine? and COVID-19 & Your Heart, among others. The literature also is available in Spanish. Last week, about 65 local residents, school staff and students trickled through the high school gym in an hour. There were booths set up by WIC, Aetna Insurance, the Medina County Health Unit and dental health providers alongside those run by the high schools HOSA students -- Health Occupations Students of America. In these counties it is very hard for people to be well informed, said Anselma Martinez, 70, a lifelong Natalia resident, after getting her blood pressure checked by UIW nursing students. Martinez daughter, Catherine Feltner, an advisor to the HOSA program here, loved the idea of partnering with the universities for a wellness fair with the vaccination component highlighted. Sam Owens /San Antonio Express-News Im happy to serve my community and surrounding communities here, Feltner said. And also, for our students to know that it is important to give back and to educate. Events like this one, and the college students almost daily presence in town, have helped them earn the trust and welcome of most residents, they said. When they first started last summer, people distributed flyers containing misinformation about vaccines right in front of their booths, some students said, but after approaching them for conversations, going over some of the myths, those encounters have diminished. These guys have managed to get past that polarization and that rhetoric thats been out there, Barton Weston, the A&M professor, said of the students. And thats the hard part, to be able to engage with someone who doesnt have the same views as you and to be able to maintain an open conversation and dialogue in a manner that you are educating them to allow them to own their decisions. danya.perez@express-news.net Whoopi Goldberg laid into performative Colorado Rep. Lauren Boebert, who is being widely condemned for jeering President Biden when he talked about soldiers including his own son being put at risk in war zones. Who the hell do you think you are, little girl? Goldberg said on ABCs The View on Wednesday. You dont have to like this president to be respectful of him talking about the military and his son who died. Advertisement "Who the hell do you think you are, little girl?" Whoopi Goldberg on Rep. Lauren Boebert (R-CO) heckling Biden during SOTU pic.twitter.com/msiyscFHEK The Recount (@therecount) March 2, 2022 Boebert jeered the president at the State of the Union address Tuesday, acting as though she were at a monster truck rally. The high school dropout from Colorado was even booed by fellow Republicans after an outburst that came while Biden spoke of U.S. troops being exposed to toxic waste from disposal burn pits while deployed abroad. His son, former Army Major Beau Biden, died from brain cancer in 2015. The president wondered if that was due to Beau Bidens time in the military. Advertisement Whoopi Goldberg on "The View." (ABC) A clearly flustered Goldberg said Americans who serve in the military do the stuff we cant do and should be revered. Her View cast mates also condemned Boeberts behavior. Boebert claimed on Twitter that she shouted at the president during his speech because his comments about U.S. troops brought to mind the 13 soldiers who were killed during the 2021 military evacuation from Afghanistan. Rep. Lauren Boebert (R-Colo.), left, and Rep. Marjorie Taylor Greene (R-Ga.) scream "Build the Wall" as President Biden delivers his first State of the Union address Tuesday. (Evelyn Hockstein/AP) Boebert and conspiracy pushing Georgia Rep. Marjorie Taylor Green have been widely criticized for their behavior during the presidents address. That reportedly included calls for Biden to build a wall on the nations border with Mexico. Democratic politicos compared the far-right Republican reps to trash. Democrat Alex Walker is running to unseat Boebert in Colorados November election. His campaign recently ran an ad in which manure falling from the sky overwhelms a town. Colorado needs a bull, he says in that spot. Not a bull-sh--ter. [ White House chides lawmakers who heckled Biden during State of the Union ] Last month, Goldberg found herself apologizing for saying on The View that the Holocaust wasnt a racial issue, when in fact, the Nazis responsible for that genocide believed they were of a master race. Goldberg was briefly suspended from the program. Tom Fox, MBR / TNS The contest to replace state Rep. Lyle Larson in the 122nd Texas House District ended in a pileup short of the 50 percent threshold. The unofficial results include all voting precincts, and they set the stage for a runoff election between Elisa Chan, a former San Antonio City Council member who left the council in 2013 after the Express-News reported that she had made a series of homophobic remarks, and Mark Dorazio, who owns a construction company and has been active in local GOP politics for decades. This is a carousel. Use Next and Previous buttons to navigate Results in San Antonio-area congressional races: Former Austin City Councilmember Greg Casar, a member of the Democratic Socialists of America, has won the Democratic primary for Texas 35th Congressional District. With all precincts reporting, hes captured 61 percent of the vote. He faced three challengers: state Rep. Eddie Rodriguez, D-Austin, San Antonio City Councilmember Rebecca Viagran and Carla-Joy Sisco. The battle for the district, which stretches down Interstate 35 from Austin to San Antonio, was among Texas most watched on Tuesday night. Casar pulled in massive outside fundraising and support, including endorsements from U.S. Rep. Alexandria Ocasio-Cortez and Sen. Elizabeth Warren. U.S. Rep. Lloyd Doggett, D-Austin, currently represents the district, but he decided to run for a new seat after last years redistricting process. The 35th is a deep-blue seat, and whoever wins the runoff is all but certain to win again in November. Still, 10 Republicans also ran for the nomination in the 35th District. Engineer Dan McQueen and household manager Michael Rodriguez came out on top, earning 21 and 15 percent of the vote, respectively. 28th District National Republicans have targeted Texas 28th district, the South Texas seat currently represented by U.S. Rep. Henry Cuellar of Laredo, a moderate Democrat. Cuellar faced two progressive primary challengers this year, including Jessica Cisneros, the Laredo immigration attorney who came within 4 percentage points of unseating him in 2020. The incumbent came up just short of winning the race outright, counting 49.98 percent of the vote with all precincts reporting. Cisneros earned about 45 percent of the vote, while a third challenger, Tannya Benavides, secured nearly 5 percent. Itll be a Cuellar-Cisneros rematch in May. Meanwhile, seven Republicans vied for the nomination in the 28th District. That race is also heading to a runoff between Cassy Garcia, the first-time candidate backed by U.S. Sen. Ted Cruz, and Sandra Whitten, who was the 2020 nominee for the district. No candidate cracked 25 percent in that election. 23rd District First-term U.S. Rep. Tony Gonzales, R-San Antonio, sailed to victory in the GOP race for the 23rd district, a sprawling seat running from San Antonio to El Paso. He secured about 78 percent of the vote, overcoming two challengers. His Democratic opponent will be Marine Corps veteran John Lira, who beat a single challenger by double digits. 21st District Incumbent U.S. Rep. Chip Roy, R-Austin, crushed three GOP challengers on Tuesday night. He has represented the 21st district, which includes much of Texas Hill Country, since 2019. Though the district grew much redder after redistricting, six Democrats ran for the nomination. This race is heading to a runoff between progressive activist Claudia Zapata, who earned 47 percent of the vote, and physician Ricardo Villarreal, who had 27 percent. 20th District U.S. Rep. Joaquin Castro, who is vying for his sixth term representing the 20th district in Bexar County, ran unopposed. So did his Republican challenger, health care executive Kyle Sinclair. 15th District The 15th District, currently represented by U.S. Rep. Vicente Gonzalez, D-McAllen, runs from Guadalupe to Hidalgo counties. Gonzalez decided to switch districts ahead of the primary, opening up a seat for nine GOP candidates and six Democrats. Its the most purple of all Texas districts. In 2020, the districts voters picked Republican Donald Trump over Democrat Joe Biden by just 2.8 points. In the Republican race, insurance agent Monica De La Cruz came out on top with 57 percent of the vote. The Democratic contest, meanwhile, is headed to a runoff between trial attorney Ruben Ramirez and small business owner Michelle Vallejo. They earned 28 and 20 percent of the vote, respectively. cayla.harris@express-news.net There wasnt much drama in Tuesdays San Antonio-area House primary elections, with the exception of District 122, where the top two Republican candidates are headed to a runoff. Elisa Chan, a former City Council member and owner of an engineering firm, will face Mark Dorazio in the May 24 runoff. Chan and Dorazio, who owns a construction company, emerged at the top of a four-candidate field. The north San Antonio seat was vacated by Lyle Larson when he announced in October he would not seek reelection. The district is expected to be competitive in November, a relative rarity after a redistricting process that culled competitive districts. Final unofficial results show Chan led with 37 percent of the vote, well short of a majority. Dorazio, whos been active in GOP politics for decades, received about 28 percent. Both are stanch conservatives who are likely to stress their bona fides in a district long held by Larson, a Republican moderate who sometimes opposed policies of Gov. Greg Abbott. Chan served three terms on the City Council in District 9, which overlaps with some of the legislative district. An outlier on the more liberal council, she left in 2013 after taking considerable heat for making a series of homophobic remarks. In a recent campaign ad, she also slammed radical liberals for trying to indoctrinate children with critical race theory. The GOP primary winner will face Democrat Angi Aramburu, a personal trainer and owner of the fitness company Go Fetch Run that hosts classes for people and dogs. In House District 31, state Rep. Ryan Guillen, who switched from the Democratic Party to the GOP last fall, survived his first primary in his new party. The newly minted Republican faced two others in the primary: nurse and Emergency Medical Services professional Alena Berlanga and retired Navy Capt. Michael Monreal. With all precincts reporting in this district stretching south from San Antonio into 10 smaller counties, Guillen won about 59 percent of the vote, enough to win the nomination outright and avoid a runoff. Before Guillen switched parties, he was the most conservative Democrat in the state House. If hed stayed in that party, he would have faced a tough re-election fight in his re-drawn district, where 62 percent of voters supported Donald Trump in 2020. One Democrat is running teacher Martha Gutierrez. In House District 124 of San Antonio, Air Force veteran and food scarcity nonprofit Josey Garcia will be the Democratic nominee to replace former state Rep. Ina Minjarez in the safely Democratic seat. Garcia won about 70 percent in a three candidate field. In November, she will face Republican Jonny Aredondo, a retired college basketball referee who has run in a number of San Antonio local political races for years. In District 44, covering Guadalupe and Gonzales counties, there will be a rematch of 2020 between Republican Rep. John Kuempel and Democrat Robert Bohmfalk, a retired Methodist pastor. Kuempel beat Bohmfalk soundly last time. In District 117, a majority-Hispanic, blue-leaning district west of downtown San Antonio, incumbent Democrat Rep. Phil Cortez will face Republican Aaron Schwope. Democratic Rep. Barbara Gervin-Hawkins will face Republican Ronald Payne in District 120, which is a safely blue seat. Democratic Rep. Diego Bernal will face Republican Charlotte Valdez in District 123, which is also solidly blue. While District 118 has historically gone blue, it attracted headlines last fall when Republican John Lujan prevailed over Democrat Frank Ramirez in a November special election. The two will rematch this November, as Republicans hope to entrench gains theyve made among Hispanic voters since 2020. In competitive District 121, two Democrats Becca Moyer-Defelice and Gabrien Gregory faced off for the opportunity to run against Republican Rep. Steve Allison, who narrowly won re-election in 2020. Moyer-Defelice won 79 percent of the vote. In District 125, incumbent Democratic Rep. Ray Lopez held a strong lead over challenger Eric Michael Garza. Lopez would face Republican Carlos Antonio Raymond in November. Finally, Rep. Trey Martinez is running unopposed in District 116, as is Rep. Liz Campos in District 119. Cayla Harris contributed reporting. WASHINGTON Immigration attorney Jessica Cisneros forced U.S. Rep. Henry Cuellar into a runoff as the 28-year-old challengers second swing at the longtime Laredo incumbent kept progressive hopes of a major South Texas political upset alive for at least a couple more months. Im really glad that over half of the voters agree that its time for new leadership, Cisneros said on Wednesday, striking an optimistic tone after a late election night ended with no clear winner. On May 24, when I turn 29 years old, I expect to be the Democratic nominee for this district. Cisneros drew just under 47 percent of the vote to Cuellars 48.5 percent. Tannya Benavides, a former educator and community organizer who also ran as a progressive, brought in about 5 percent. Cisneros chalked it up as a victory and said she doesnt plan to retool a strategy she believes is working heading into the runoff. BACKGROUND: Rep. Henry Cuellar locked in close rematch with progressive Jessica Cisneros We are surging right now, in terms of momentum, and Henry Cuellar right now is on the decline, she said. We knew from the very beginning that this was going to be a very tough election, because were going up against a 17-year entrenched incumbent who started out with millions of dollars in his campaign war chest, funded by a lot of special corporate interests, and we had a campaign fueled entirely by people people that believe South Texas deserves investments in health care, in infrastructure, in our jobs, in our education, in our environment. Cuellar was optimistic, too. After winning the most votes and showing the largest amount of support, we will now move to a runoff election on May 24th and we are confident we will win, he said in a statement. For now, at least, the Laredo Democrat has survived a serious challenge from a well-funded opponent even while under a federal investigation that Cisneros and her allies kept front-and-center in the final stretch of the race. The FBI searched Cuellars home and campaign headquarters in January. He has said the investigation will show no wrongdoing on his part. And while Cisneros far outperformed Cuellar in portions of the district around San Antonio, the longtime Laredo Democrat held strong in counties along the border that have long been his base of support. That was especially true in Zapata County, where nearly 44 percent of voters cast ballots a massive showing in a primary season marked by low turnout. Cuellar won more than 70 percent of the vote there. The key to Cuellar living to fight another day: pro-Trump Dem primary voters along the border who responded to his anti-progressive messaging, Dave Wasserman, an editor at the Cook Political Report, tweeted. Cuellar spent much of the campaign touting millions in federal funding for local projects he says hes brought to the district and endorsements from 171 current and former elected officials from the area. He has stuck to conservative talking points, as well, casting Cisneros as too far to the left for the district. Brandon Bell, Staff / Getty Images Dont believe Jessica Cisneros lies attacking Henry Cuellar to distract from her agenda that will hurt South Texas, because she knows her agenda wont fly here, goes one Cuellar ad that says Cisneros is backed by the defund the police movement and that she would cut border security. Cisneros got help from Bexar voters Cisneros, meanwhile, drew more than 70 percent of the vote in Bexar County, where her campaign has said a strong showing would be key to her success. U.S. Rep. Alexandria Ocasio-Cortez and U.S. Sen. Elizabeth Warren, two stars of the political left, both made trips to San Antonio to rally support for Cisneros in the final stretch of the race. She had nearly 75 percent of the vote in Guadalupe County, northeast of San Antonio, and more than 55 percent in Atascosa to the south. Benavides, who did not immediately respond to a request for comment on Wednesday, has said she would rally behind Cisneros in a runoff. Asked if she would work with Benavides, Cisneros said she would accept the support of any person thats ready to fight for new leadership in South Texas. The question is, can she pull this of with what almost 2 before the runoff? said Jon Taylor, who chairs the political science department at the University of Texas at San Antonio. We know as much as anything else, in politics, this is a lifetime. A Cisneros victory would be a major political upset. Cuellar is one of the most senior members of the Texas congressional delegation and one of the highest ranking Democrats in the House with the support of his partys leadership. He has a seat on the powerful House Appropriations Committee and serves as a chief deputy whip. The rematch is one of the most closely watched races in the nation and is seen as a proxy battle for larger ideological debates in the Democratic Party. Cisneros campaigned on progressive touchstones, including Medicare for all, while Cuellar has long been one of his partys most conservative members, occasionally breaking ranks and voting with Republicans. Taylor said Cisneros will need to convince moderate and conservative Democrats that shes not some kind of firebrand, while making the case the Cuellar is damaged goods with the FBI investigation. He said Cuellar has done a good job so far appealing to those voters by focusing on his record and warning Cisneros would be bad for the district. And both sides are likely to continue bringing in big campaign hauls and spending heavily over the next several weeks, Taylor said. Its going to get scorched-earth, he predicted. Texas Take: Get political headlines from across the state sent directly to your inbox Republicans have also targeted the district as one of three in South Texas they believe they can flip in November after making surprising gains in the region in 2020. Taylor predicted the party will spend heavily in the district, especially if Cuellar is knocked out of the race. If Cisneros wins, youre now talking about a situation where Republicans will ratchet it up big time, seeing this as a potential gain for them trying to gain control of the U.S. House, he said. But the Republicans, too, are headed for a May runoff between Cassy Garcia, a former staffer for U.S. Sen. Ted Cruz, and Sandra Whitten, a grassroots activist from Laredo who ran unsuccessfully against Cuellar in 2020. Garcia ended Tuesday night with 29 percent of the vote to Whittens 15 percent. A win for Garcia would set up a full slate of Latina candidates for Republicans in the South Texas districts the party aims to flip. With the support of former President Donald Trump, Monica De La Cruz sailed through a crowded Republican primary in a district left open after U.S. Rep. Vicente Gonzalez decided to run in neighboring district. De La Cruz nearly unseated Gonzalez in 2020 and the district was redrawn to lean more to the right. Mayra Flores won a four-way race for the Republican nomination in the district Gonzalez is now running in, left open by retiring U.S. Rep. Filemon Vela. ben.wermund@chron.com Editor's Note: Tannya Benavides' last name was misspelled in an earlier version of this story. This is a carousel. Use Next and Previous buttons to navigate The top two progressive candidates running in San Antonio-area congressional seats had strong showings on Tuesday, with former Austin City Councilmember Greg Casar winning his race outright and Laredo immigration attorney Jessica Cisneros likely heading to a runoff against incumbent U.S. Rep. Henry Cuellar. The Associated Press called the race for Casar just after 11 p.m., and latest returns showed him at 62 percent of the vote in the 35th Congressional District. Over the course of his campaign, Casar pulled in massive outside fundraising and support, including endorsements from U.S. Rep. Alexandria Ocasio-Cortez and Sen. Elizabeth Warren. Our campaign has built a movement of working people, from San Antonio to Austin, who are ready to fight because our futures depend on it, Casar said in a release. Im incredibly honored to be the next Democratic nominee for TX-35. Together, were taking our fight to the halls of Congress to fight and deliver on passing Medicare for All, protecting reproductive rights, creating good jobs, and fixing our power grid. The battle for the district, which stretches down Interstate 35 from Austin to San Antonio, was among Texas most watched on Tuesday night. Casar faced three challengers: state Rep. Eddie Rodriguez, D-Austin, San Antonio City Councilmember Rebecca Viagran and Carla-Joy Sisco. U.S. Rep. Lloyd Doggett, D-Austin, currently represents the district, but he decided to run for a new seat after last years redistricting process. The 35th is a deep-blue seat, and Casar is all but certain to win again in November. Still, 10 Republicans are also running for the nomination in the 35th District. Engineer Dan McQueen holds a slight lead over the group with 20 percent of the vote, followed by household manager Michael Rodriguez at 15 percent. About 42 percent of precincts are reporting. That race is one of several San Antonio-area contests that are likely headed to a runoff. Among them: the high-energy primaries on both sides of the aisle in South Texas 28th district, currently represented by U.S. Rep. Henry Cuellar of Laredo. Some races too close to call Cuellar, a moderate Democrat, has been targeted by both parties, whose attack efforts have increased in recent weeks after the FBI raided his home and campaign office. In his primary, he faced two progressive challengers: Jessica Cisneros, the Laredo immigration attorney who came within four points of unseating him in 2020, and Tannya Benavides, a former educator and community organizer. As of midnight, with 51 percent of precincts reporting, Cisneros held a very slight lead over the incumbent, counting 49 percent of the vote to Cuellar's 47 percent. Benavides pulled about 4.5 percent of the vote. Seven Republicans are also vying for the nomination in the 28th District. Leading the group is Cassy Garcia, the first-time candidate backed by Ted Cruz, followed by Sandra Whitten, who was the 2020 nominee for the district. With roughly 49 percent of precincts reporting, no candidate has cracked 25 percent. In Texas 15th district, which runs from Guadalupe to Hidalgo counties, nine Republicans and six Democrats were on the ballot to represent the open seat. Its currently represented by U.S. Rep. Vicente Gonzalez, D-McAllen, but he switched districts ahead of the primary. The 15th is the most purple of all Texas districts. In 2020, Republican Donald Trump beat Democrat Joe Biden by just 2.8 points. It looks like the Democratic race is headed to a runoff, and the leaders are trial attorney Ruben Ramirez at 28 percent and small business owner Michelle Vallejo at 20 percent. Attorney John Villarreal Rigney is close behind at 19 percent of the vote, with 40 percent of precincts reporting. In that district, the Republican race is already tucked away. The Associated Press called the race for insurance agent Monica De La Cruz, who held 56 percent of the vote with 40 percent of precincts reporting. Also apparently headed to a runoff are Democrats Claudia Zapata, a progressive activist, and Ricardo Villarreal, a physician two of the six candidates vying for the Democratic nomination in Texas 21st district, which includes much of Texas Hill Country. The seat, which grew much redder after redistricting, is currently represented by U.S. Rep. Chip Roy, R-Austin. Roy, meanwhile, easily overcame three challengers to secure a win on Tuesday. He has represented the district since 2019. A handful of other races were also quickly decided. U.S. Rep. Joaquin Castro, who is vying for his sixth term representing the 20th district in Bexar County, ran unopposed. So did his Republican challenger, health care executive Kyle Sinclair. And first-term U.S. Rep. Tony Gonzales, R-San Antonio, sailed past two challengers to secure the GOP nomination for the 23rd district, a sprawling seat running from San Antonio to El Paso. His Democratic opponent will be Marine Corps veteran John Lira, who had earned 57 percent of the vote as of press time. cayla.harris@express-news.net This is a carousel. Use Next and Previous buttons to navigate WASHINGTON The hotly contested South Texas rematch between longtime U.S. Rep. Henry Cuellar and progressive immigration attorney Jessica Cisneros is headed for a runoff after Cuellar fell just short of the 50 percent of the vote needed to win Tuesday night. For the second time in two years, Cisneros came within 3,000 votes of Cuellar, drawing nearly 47 percent of the vote, according to unofficial results. Cuellar ended with just more than 48 percent. With the addition of a third candidate this time, former educator and community organizer Tannya Bennavides a progressive who drew nearly 5 percent of the vote the race ended in a runoff. A victory for Cisneros would be a major political upset, and she assured supporters at a watch party in Laredo late Tuesday night that it would happen tonight or tomorrow or maybe even in May. Tonight we are showing that our dreams are powerful enough to take on a machine, Cisneros said. Cisneros and Cuellar drew major support from opposite ends of the district that stretches from Laredo through San Antonio and into Guadalupe County. Cisneros drew more than 70 percent of the vote in Bexar County, where her campaign has said a strong showing would be key to her success. U.S. Rep. Alexandria Ocasio-Cortez and U.S. Sen. Elizabeth Warren, two stars of the political left, both made trips to San Antonio to rally support for Cisneros in the final stretch of the race. She had nearly 75 percent of the vote in Guadalupe County and more than 55 percent in Atascosa. But Cuellar held strong in the southern portions of the district, drawing nearly 60 percent of the vote in Webb County, where his name is well known: Cuellar has been in office for 17 years, his brother, Martin, is sheriff and his sister, Rosie, is tax assessor. He drew more than 70 percent of the vote in Zapata County and roughly 70 percent in Starr County, as well. Cuellar is one of the states most senior members of Congress and rarely faced serious political challenges until Cisneros nearly unseated him in 2020. Cuellar is a member of the powerful House Appropriations Committee and a chief deputy whip with the support of his partys leadership. His campaign is well-funded, supported by major oil and gas, technology and pharmaceutical companies, and he spent heavily to fend off the challenge. LIVE ELECTION RESULTS: San Antonio-area races But Cisneros has argued momentum is on her side after Cuellars home and campaign headquarters were searched by the FBI in January, revealing a federal investigation he has insisted will show no wrongdoing on his part. The rematch between Cuellar and Cisneros is seen as a proxy battle for larger ideological debates in the Democratic Party. Cisneros campaigned on progressive touchstones, including Medicare for all, while Cuellar has long been one of his partys most conservative members, occasionally breaking ranks and voting with Republicans. Each side raked in millions in campaign donations and spent heavily to blanket airwaves, with Cuellar warning Cisneros policies would be bad for the district as Cisneros seized on the FBI investigation Cuellar was caught up in, as well as recent votes he took bucking his party. Justice Democrats, a progressive group that recruited Cisneros to run in 2020, spent more than $420,000 on mailers, digital ads and TV spots, including one slamming Cuellar for taking campaign cash from oil and gas, detention centers, Republicans. The race was also the first test of a district long centered on Laredo that was redrawn to include tens of thousands more voters from Bexar County. The district, which previously covered parts of Bexar County almost entirely east of Loop 410, now stretches across much of southeast San Antonio and into downtown. Its northwestern-most tip now extends beyond the Alamo. The district is one of three in South Texas that Republicans hope to flip in November as they seek to build off surprising gains in 2020. The Republican primary appeared to be headed for a runoff, as well. Cassy Garcia, a former staffer for U.S. Sen. Ted Cruz, took the lead in the seven-way race with roughly 30 percent of the vote. Sandra Whitten, a grassroots activist from Laredo who challenged Cuellar in 2020, was in second place with about 15 percent. ben.wermund@chron.com Yuri Gripas, MBR / TNS WASHINGTON U.S. Rep. Vicente Gonzalez overcame a crowded Democratic field to win his partys nomination for the South Texas seat being vacated by eight-term Brownsville congressman Filemon Vela, who is retiring. Gonzalez left a neighboring district he has represented since 2017 after it was redrawn to give Republicans a better chance of winning in November. The Associated Press called the race for Gonzalez, who was endorsed by Vela, at 9:37 p.m. Yuri Gripas, MBR / TNS WASHINGTON Monica De La Cruz sailed through a crowded Republican primary field in her second run in a South Texas district that Republicans hope to flip in November. The Associated Press called the nine-way race for De La Cruz who had a 40-point lead at 11:27 p.m. Express-News /File photo A 51-year-old woman who was critically wounded in a North Side shooting on Monday died from her injuries, according to the San Antonio Police Department. The woman has been identified as Maria Virginia Hernandez. Police said the suspected shooter, 54-year-old Enrique Lara, fled to Mexico but was apprehended by authorities there on Tuesday. Hays County Judge Ruben Becerra sailed to victory over challenger Brandon Burleson in Tuesdays Democratic primary, ending a race that was marked by lawsuits, criminal accusations and social media warfare. Becerra collected 68 percent of the vote, compared with Burlesons 32 percent, according to unofficial election results with all precincts reporting in Hays County. Becerra will face the Republican nominee, Precinct 2 Commissioner Mark Jones, in the November general election. Jones ran unopposed in the Republican primary. I get to say now, Look at my track record. Never mind my personal attacks, lets talk policy, Becerra said to a group of supporters in a Facebook video posted to his campaign page Tuesday night. So now its on to November, and were going to need you all the more in November. Burleson, a local business owner, did not immediately respond to the Express-News request for comment. Hill Country Headlines: Top stories from the booming region sent to your inbox The race between Becerra and Burleson got messy starting in mid-January following an altercation at a Martin Luther King Jr. memorial event between Becerras wife, Monica Becerra, and Burlesons mother and grandmother. Monica Becerra alleged that after the altercation, Brandon Burleson hit her, causing a sprained ligament that sent her to the emergency room. The San Marcos Police Department was called to the scene, but no charge was filed. Burlesons lawyers later filed two civil lawsuits against Becerra and members of his family. One alleges slander and false statements made by Becerra, his family and friends made on social media. The other alleges that Becerras wife caused severe emotional distress to Burlesons 88-year-old grandmother at the MLK celebration. Burlesons family is seeking more than $1.2 million in damages from the Becerra camp. On ExpressNews.com: This will change Buda forever: 2,500-home project pits developer against small city Becerra appeared to put the accusations behind him Tuesday night, though the lawsuits remain. Its people over politics in our world, he told the small crowd gathered to support him. Becerra has held his seat since 2018. The winner of the November general election will be tasked with leading Hays County through a variety of challenges in Texas fastest-growing county, including jail overpopulation, soaring development, and management of COVID grants and funds. Annie Blanks writes for the Express-News through Report for America, a national service program that places journalists in local newsrooms. ReportforAmerica.org. annie.blanks@express-news.net. Publix will no longer carry Russian vodka on its store shelves, the company said Wednesday. The announcement came nearly a week into the invasion of Russian forces into democratic Ukraine. Advertisement Publix stands with the people of Ukraine, Publix spokeswoman Maria Brous told the South Florida Sun Sentinel on Wednesday. To show our support, we have decided to remove Russian-made vodka brands from our shelves. Brous said the Russian-made vodka brands that have already been removed include Beluga, Ruskova, Russian Standard and Zyr. Advertisement According to its website, Publix opened its first liquor store in 2003, and now has more than 300 locations across its chain. Besides Florida, the market has stores in Alabama, Georgia, North Carolina, South Carolina, Tennessee and Virginia. Shoppers will need to ignore the Russian-made vodka in the sales ads that hit stores Thursday. Our sale circulars are printed weeks in advance, and due to that timeline, we were unable to pull this product from the printed version of the circular, Brous said. Publix isnt the only retailer offering support: Total Wine & More stores removed all the Russian-made products from store shelves, posting on Facebook that it was to show support for the Ukrainian people. The post included a picture of an empty shelf with a sign stating that it is no longer selling any Russian-made product. Total Wine & More has 229 stores across 27 states and, according to its website, is the countrys largest independent retailer of fine wine. [ RELATED: Twisted Sisters Dee Snider slams Florida anti-maskers in pro-Ukraine tweet ] The governors of several states have ordered government-run liquor stores to stop selling Russian-made vodka. Utah Gov. Spencer Cox over the weekend instructed the states Department of Alcoholic Beverage Control to take off all Russian-produced and branded products from the shelves of its retail stores. The governors of New Hampshire, Ohio and Pennsylvania have also taken action as well. In Texas, Gov. Greg Abbott urged all liquor stores and restaurants in the state to stop serving Russian-made products on a voluntary basis. Advertisement Reuters reported the move is mostly symbolic since only 1.2% of U.S. vodka imports came from Russia in the first half of 2021, citing the Distilled Spirits Council of the United States, which tracks such data. The groups data shows that Russian vodka accounted for only $18.5 million of the $1.4 billion worth of total vodka imports in the United States in 2021, which included $660 million from France, according to Reuters. There will not be action coming from the governors mansion in Florida, however. [ LEE EN ESPANOL: Publix dejara de vender vodka ruso en solidaridad con Ucrania ] When asked this week if there was any consideration by Gov. Ron DeSantis to ask retailers to pull Russian vodka from the shelves, his press secretary said no. All products that are currently on store shelves were already imported and purchased, so throwing them out at this point would be a loss for Florida retailers, not for Vladimir Putin, said spokeswoman Christina Pushaw. Lisa J. Huriash can be reached at lhuriash@sunsentinel.com or 954-572-2008 or Twitter @LisaHuriash A Hays County elementary school teacher was arrested on suspicion that he was having inappropriate relationships with at least two students, Kyle police said. Andrew Palmore, 49, was charged Tuesday with two counts of indecency with a child with sexual contact and two counts of improper relationship between an educator and a student. Both charges are felonies. Palmore was a second grade teacher at Blanco Vista Elementary School in San Marcos. The Hays Consolidated Independent School District immediately placed Palmore on administrative leave and removed his access to its campuses when it learned of the investigation on Tuesday. And the district is recommending to its board of trustees that he be fired. Police did not release details about the crimes, though they said the offenses Palmore is charged with did not occur on school property or during school hours. On ExpressNews.com: Affidavit: San Antonio man says he sexually assaulted children, looked at child porn for 10 years Palmore has been with Hays CISD since 2012, when he was a substitute teacher at multiple elementary and middle schools in the district. In 2014, he was hired full time at Blanco Vista Elementary, where he taught second, fourth and fifth grade students. Police are asking residents, parents or guardians who may have any information about the case to contact Detective Carrasco at 512-268-3232. We know these incidents are extremely unsettling for our community, but we are working together during this difficult time to provide our students and affected families with the justice, care and support they deserve, Kyle Police Chief Jeff Barnett said. taylor.pettaway@express-news.net A magazine's recent list of the best hotels in San Antonio is another reminder of the world-class accommodations the Alamo City has to offer. Last month, Conde Nast Traveler released a list of the best San Antonio-area hotels according to its editors. The not-so-surprising list includes all the usual suspects Hotel Emma, La Cantera Resort & Spa, Menger Hotel, etc. The magazine described its list as "a slate of hotels as vibrant and storied as the citys annual Fiesta celebration." On ExpressNews.com: Hilariously bad online review of famous S.A. tourist attractions The list includes something for everyone looking for a vacation or staycation. You can relax or unwind at the JW Marriott San Antonio Hill Country Resort & Spa, or stay downtown at the Hotel Valencia Riverwalk. One of the city's newest hotels, the Thompson San Antonio, is also featured on the list, as is "Hotel Emma," which the magazine calls a "five-star showstopper." The publication also made sure to include the Menger Hotel. Situated next door to the Alamo, it often makes lists for most haunted locations in the U.S. Each hotel had one or two price tag symbols listed next to its name, depending on how pricey they are, and a brief description. Hotel Havana is described as the perfect spot for creative types or couples seeking a romantic getaway. The magazine calls Ocho, the hotel's restaurant, "Instagrammable" and urges potential guests to book reservations in advance. The St. Anthony, a Luxury Collection Hotel that is a century-old hotel, is recognized for its "museum-worthy fine art," French antiques and service. The magazine calls this hotel "the spot" for fundraising events and "high-powered happy hours." Below is the full list of the best hotels according to Conde Nast Traveler: Hotel Havana Thompson San Antonio Hotel Valencia Riverwalk St. Anthony, a Luxury Collection Hotel Canopy by Hilton San Antonio Riverwalk La Cantera Resort & Spa Hotel Emma JW Marriott San Antonio Hill Country Resort & Spa Menger Hotel Malak.Silmi@express-news.net The San Antonio Water System is looking to relinquish its responsibility to provide water and wastewater services to 520 acres of Kendall County after a developer requested them from the water company for a contentious new subdivision. The patch of Kendall County land is included in each of SAWS water and wastewater certificates of convenience and necessity, or CCNs, which delineate the areas where SAWS is required to provide such services when requested. Of the roughly 500,000 acres covered in SAWS CCNs, less than 1 percent are in Kendall County. On Tuesday, SAWS staff briefed trustees on their options in light of a request for a utility service agreement from a proposed 120-acre development called Lily Ranch, which would bring SAWS first customers in Kendall County if SAWS were to approve the developers request. Providing water to the development would require a $50 million infrastructure project, while significant downstream sewer improvements would be needed to supply wastewater services, according to the staffs briefing. But as development near Boerne and the southwestern side of Kendall County begins to boom, SAWS board of trustees Tuesday leaned toward transferring water and wastewater services to another company so that SAWS can focus on providing services within Bexar County. The boards agenda item on the matter was for discussion only, so no decisions were made. Jerry Lara /San Antonio Express-News I personally have concerns about us having involvement on the Kendall County side, certainly for the water services because of the dependency on Canyon Lake water, which is somewhat femoral on a dry year, SAWS Trustee Amy Hardberger said, referring to the fact that water service to the development would not be sourced by the Edwards Aquifer. And if were not going to do water, I also would not like us to be involved in wastewater either. It doesnt make sense for us to sort of have one arm across the county line only. On ExpressNews.com: SAWS agrees to provide water to Northwest Side development over environmental objections The area is in San Antonios extraterritorial jurisdiction, meaning unincorporated land within 5 miles of the citys boundaries. It is also over the Edwards Aquifer Contributing Zone, a vital and sensitive part of San Antonios drinking water system. Because SAWS is required to provide services for developments within its water and wastewater CCNs, another provider must accept responsibility for serving the area before SAWS can let it go. In this case, one possibility is San Jose Water, a private water company that could take over the water and wastewater CCNs. Under that scenario, San Jose Water, which does not have adequate infrastructure to immediately provide wastewater services, would buy wholesale services from SAWS. If San Jose Water agrees to such a transfer, SAWS must go through the Public Utilities Commission, gain approval from SAWS board and receive consent from the San Antonio City Council a lengthy process that includes public comment and and could yield objections. Theres a lot of environmental concerns about growth in that area, said Robert Puente, CEO of SAWS. Its very close to Hill County, and its in the sensitive area regarding the (Edwards) Aquifer. Were not the gatekeepers to that development, and if theres going to be growth there, then itll be good for the environmental community to speak to the county, or to Boerne, instead of us. Lily Ranch is just off Old Fredericksburg Road, near Balcones Creek, a stream that joins Cibolo Creek, which recharges the Edwards Aquifer. Environmental stakeholders, such as the Greater Edwards Aquifer Alliance, are concerned that new impervious cover could increase flooding and degrade surface water and aquifer recharge. Just over 1,700 people have signed a petition to stop the construction of the subdivision in Kendall County and developer Ashton Woods. In January, Kendall County commissioners approved the second phase of the development, a project that most commissioners were not particularly fond of, according to a report by The Boerne Star. Were not out on some island where were going to start drawing in new development, Buck Benson, a lawyer representing Ashton Woods, told SAWS trustees on Tuesday. We just want SAWS service. Thats all were really asking for. Wed love to have SAWS wastewater service and water service. And if we cant get both, then give us some alternative. We just want to be able to move forward. On ExpressNews.com: An underground world seen by few: SAWS building massive new sewer pipeline on the South Side Since its initial proposal, Ashton Woods has made several concessions on Lily Ranch, such as reducing the developments density from 500 homes to 375 homes, complying with the dark skies provisions to decrease light pollution, and providing for creek preservation through water quality ponds and a monitoring well for the local Cow Creek Groundwater Conservation District. One thing that SAWS board made clear was its desire to work with the environmental community and stakeholders going forward. I would like to continue outreach to the environmental community to make them aware of what were talking about, SAWS Chairwoman Jelynne LeBlanc Jamison said. Were still discussing all of the growth issues that weve had here, both in the city and with projects in the county. Elena Bruess writes for the Express-News through Report for America, a national service program that places journalists in local newsrooms. ReportforAmerica.org. elena.bruess@express-news.net A Corpus Christi man was sentenced to life in prison Tuesday for exploiting at least three children whom he enticed into sending sexually explicit photos and then extorted for sex, the Department of Justice said. Edward Sanchez, 59, was convicted on several charges related to child exploitation, including foreign travel to engage in illicit sexual conduct with minors. Evidence showed that from March 2016 to November 2018, Sanchez traveled to the Philippines, posing as a benefactor to a school, where he sought sexual relationships with students, officials said. On ExpressNews.com: Babysitter arrested; accused of sexually abusing child for six years At least three minors testified against Sanchez, saying he initially requested pornographic images while he was in the United States and later extorted the children into meeting him for sexual encounters when he was in the Philippines. Some of the encounters included unprotected sex, and Sanchez would provide the minors with pills to prevent conception. Sanchez also attempted to arrange access to the victims family members for sex on behalf of another man. The jury received thousands of pages of social media messages detailing Sanchezs exploitation, the DOJ said. On ExpressNews.com: Affidavit: San Antonio man says he sexually assaulted children, looked at child porn for 10 years Sanchez claimed that his conduct was lawful by Filipino standards and that the United States laws were racist, the DOJ said. He was convicted in July 2021 after a weeklong trial and 10 hours of deliberation by a jury. As U.S. Judge Nelva Gonzales Ramos handed Sanchez a life sentence, she noted his complete lack of remorse, the DOJ said. Homeland Security Investigations conducted the investigation, along with Corpus Christi police. taylor.pettaway@express-news.net A Texas woman faces at least 10 years in prison after admitting to trafficking more than $2 million of methamphetamine, the Department of Justice said. Jacqueline Garcia, 24, of Alamo, pleaded guilty Monday to possession with intent to distribute. Officials said she was found with more than 70 kilograms of highly pure meth during a traffic stop on Nov. 1, 2021. Garcia was driving northbound on U.S. 281 near Alice when a Jim Wells County Sheriffs captain pulled over her silver SUV for a traffic violation. The captain observed a strong odor of gasoline coming from the vehicle, and Garcia told him she was traveling with an extra tank of gas in case she ran out, a federal complaint said. On ExpressNews.com: Authorities bust meth network stretching from Hondo to Mexico During a search of the vehicle, the captain noticed that the fuel tank appeared to be solid as if it was filled with something other than liquid and that the brackets used to keep the fuel tank in place had tool marks consistent with removal or tampering, the complaint said. A police dog then alerted his handler to the gas cap. Authorities impounded the vehicle and found nine bundles of crystal meth in the gas tank. The drugs weighed about 175 pounds had a street value of $2 million. Lab analysis revealed that the meth was 98 percent pure. On ExpressNews.com: $350K of crystal meth seized from car at McDonalds parking lot When police questioned her, Garcia said she knew there were drugs in the vehicle but didnt know what kind or where they were hidden, the complaint said. She told police that she was taking the drugs to Dallas, where she would be paid for transporting them. Garcia is scheduled to be sentenced June 8. She faces 10 years to life in prison with a maximum fine of $10 million. taylor.pettaway@express-news.net On Aug. 20, 1968, Soviet tanks rolled into Czechoslovakia to crush that countrys Prague Spring reform movement. That same week, Democrats in the United States were preparing for their national convention in Chicago by crafting a party platform. The Soviets ruthless display of aggression came at a sensitive time in a tumultuous American election year and it threw this countrys political discourse into disarray. Prior to the Soviet invasion, doves on the Democratic Platform Committee had pushed for a peace plank as a statement against U.S. military intervention in Vietnam. Almost immediately, however, that effort collapsed. Platform Committee chairman, U.S. Rep. Hale Boggs, D-Louisiana, said the attack on Czechoslovakia further demonstrates that the world must continue to rely on the principle of collective security. U.S. Sen. Ralph Yarborough, the liberal lion of Texas politics, stated on Aug. 21 that the Soviets action made it a very definite possibility that lame-duck President Lyndon Johnson would decide to enter the presidential race. Jacquelyn Martin, STF / Associated Press That didnt happen, but Johnson did see his biggest diplomatic accomplishment, a nuclear nonproliferation treaty which had been in the works for five years, stalled as a result of the Red Army offensive. Republican presidential nominee Richard Nixon urged members of the U.S. Senate to send a message to the Soviet leaders by slow-walking the ratification process, which frustrated Johnson to no end. Eight months after Johnson signed the treaty, the Senate finally approved it, with Nixon in the White House. Twelve years earlier, Nixon had been vice president when the Soviet Union suppressed a rebellion in Hungary by sending 200,000 troops into Budapest. An estimated 2,500 Hungarians lost their lives and another 200,000 fled the country. The Soviets launched their invasion of Hungary three days before the 1956 presidential election between Republican incumbent Dwight Eisenhower and Democratic challenger Adlai Stevenson. Eisenhower swiftly sent a note to Soviet Premier Nikolai Bulganin, saying he had been inexpressibly shocked by the invasion of Hungary and urging in the name of humanity and in the cause of peace that the Soviets withdraw their forces. The Soviets ignored Eisenhowers plea and he took no other action. American voters were still making sense of the crisis when they went to the polls and reelected Eisenhower in a landslide. Over the past week, a Russian act of aggression has once again collided with the cross-currents of election-year politics in the United States. Russian President Vladimir Putin launched an invasion of Ukraine less than a week before midterm primary season began with Tuesdays election in Texas, which occurred on the same day that President Joe Biden was scheduled to deliver his first State of the Union address. The heroic resistance of the Ukranian people has upended the political conversation in this country. In a Feb. 19 interview, Ohio Republican Senate hopeful JD Vance dismissed the plight of the Ukranians. I think its ridiculous that were focused on this border in Ukraine, Vance said. Ive got to be honest with you. I dont really care what happens to Ukraine one way or another. Five days later, with U.S. public sentiment coalescing behind the Ukranian resistance, Vance changed his tune. Russias assault on Ukraine is unquestionably a tragedy, especially for the innocent people caught in the crossfire, he said. A similar pivot was evident in the rhetoric of Fox News host Tucker Carlson, who went on the air last Tuesday and mocked the idea that he should dislike Putin. Has Putin ever called me a racist? Has he threatened to get me fired for disagreeing with him? Has he shipped every middle-class job in my town to Russia? Carlson asked, before concluding that the answer to every question was no. Six days later, however, Carlson said, In this country, virtually everyone understands that the invasion of Ukraine is bad. Its bad for us and for the world. And Vladimir Putin is bad too. Two weeks ago, at least some Republicans were inclined to defend Putin because the GOPs standard-bearer, former President Donald Trump, has spent much of his political life praising the Russian autocrat. Now, the GOP line is that Putin invaded Ukraine because he sensed Bidens weakness. While you consider this argument, ask yourself: Did the Soviet Union invade Hungary because they sensed Eisenhowers weakness? Did North Korea invade South Korea in 1950 because they sensed Harry Trumans weakness? Did Adolf Hitler attack Poland in 1939 because he sensed Franklin Roosevelts weakness? Putins invasion of Ukraine has drawn international scorn and crippling economic sanctions for Russia. His move was not the act of a rational thinker. But we need to be rational in our response. ggarcia@express-news.net | Twitter: @gilgamesh470 COVID-19 cases are plummeting and Americans are letting their guard down. Its common to see crowds with no masks in sight. In addition, the Centers for Disease Control and Prevention updated its guidelines Friday, loosening pandemic precautions, such as masking indoors, for some 70 percent of Americans. States led by both Republicans and Democrats are easing mask and vaccine requirements. The seven-day average new cases in Bexar County has dropped dramatically over the past few weeks, with only 209 reported Tuesday down from 866 two weeks ago. But Bexar County residents shouldnt be throwing out their masks quite so fast. There were still 283 patients in local hospitals with COVID-19 as of Tuesday, including 76 in intensive care units and 41 on ventilators. Wed be hard pressed to find anyone who isnt exhausted with the pandemic. We hear you. But we must consider the facts and heed advice from medical experts. The CDCs new guidelines recommend using county COVID-19 community levels to help determine which COVID-19 prevention measures to use for individuals and communities. Bexar County was marked high for its COVID-19 community level as of Friday, according to the CDCs website. The city of San Antonio rates the risk level as moderate. Hopefully, you arent one of the people San Antonio Metropolitan Metro Health District described as having omicron parties to intentionally get the virus. We all know better. On ExpressNews.com: Its a terrible, terrible idea: Planning a COVID-19 party in San Antonio? Have you gotten your COVID-19 vaccine and booster? In a Feb. 22 tweet, San Antonio Mayor Ron Nirenberg acknowledged COVID-19 hospitalizations and cases are on a steady decline in San Antonio. But he added: If you have been fortunate enough to avoid this surge, but have delayed keeping current on your vaccinations, now would be a great time to protect yourself. Vaccines work. Yet in Bexar County, less than 35 percent of eligible people are boosted, according to a city of San Antonio news release last week. We know vaccines work. Scientific data shows that people who are up to date on vaccines have a much lower risk of severe illness and death from COVID-19 compared with unvaccinated people. Vaccines are one measure included in the mitigation efforts from the CDC that we all should all know by now: Wear a mask indoors in public. Stay up to date with COVID-19 vaccines. Get tested if you have symptoms. Take additional precautions if youre at high risk for severe illness. Local residents are still getting infected and there are still deaths. San Antonio has suffered 5,913 COVID-19 fatalities in this pandemic as of Tuesday, according to Texas Health and Human Services data. Its not too late to get your COVID-19 booster our most powerful tool against the deadly virus. The city of San Antonio continues to offer vaccine clinics, listing them on its website, and pharmacies offer them. When describing the new set of guidelines as a framework for adapting precautions as virus levels change in counties, Dr. Rochelle Walensky, director of the CDC, told reporters Friday that Americans should adjust as needed within our communities and prepare for future surges of the virus. We want to give people a break from things like masking when our levels are low, and then have the ability to reach for them again should things get worse in the future, she said. We need to be prepared and we need to be ready for whatever comes next. Its not too late to adjust our approach to staying healthy during this pandemic. This is a carousel. Use Next and Previous buttons to navigate Former District Judge Peter Sakai and State Rep. Ina Minjarez are headed to a May 24 Democratic runoff for Bexar County judge. The winner will face Republican nominee Trish DeBerry in November. Sakai had just over 40 percent of the votes in Tuesdays primary, followed by nearly 31 percent for Minjarez, about 19 percent for Ivalis Meza Gonzalez, former chief of staff to Mayor Ron Nirenberg, and almost 10 percent for Gerardo Ponce, a consultant and former court coordinator. Incumbent County Judge Nelson Wolff, who has served since 2001, did not seek re-election. Sakai, 67, has spent 26 years as a district judge and previously was a municipal lawyer. He has said he wants to break down silos to find solutions through bipartisanship, but he is prepared to push back against the state, if needed, to protect the best interests of residents. The McAllen native is endorsed by the Tejano Democrats of Bexar County. On ExpressNews.com: Who will be the next Bexar County judge? Sakai has highlighted tax reform, economic development, education partnerships and restorative justice as top priorities in his campaign. State Rep. Ina Minjarez, 46, broke quorum during last years legislative session in protest of a voting rights bill and has been the most forceful critic in the county judge race of state Republican leaders in handling the pandemic. She has a legislative background dealing with education, transportation, opioid abuse and a strained foster care system. She also has legal experience as an attorney for over 20 years and was a prosecutor in the DAs office. Her campaign video promotes Minjarez as the only candidate with a proven record. Born and raised in El Paso, Minjarez has endorsements from local state legislators and County Commissioner Justin Rodriguez, who called her a champion for Bexar County in the Legislature. Minjarez has said shell focus on property tax relief, educational opportunities that break cycles of poverty, and roads, drainage, clinics and hospitals to serve health care deserts in a growing urban county. On the Republican side, former County Commissioner Trish DeBerry carried 63 percent of the votes in a race against conservative anti-establishment candidate Nathan Buchanan. On ExpressNews.com: DeBerry made a ridiculously difficult decision to run for county judge DeBerry, 57, is a public relations consultant and former broadcast journalist who resigned as Precinct 3 commissioner in December. She is positioning herself as fiscally conservative yet moderate on social issues and has said she hopes to serve two terms as county judge. A San Antonio native with a bachelors degree from Trinity University in communications and politics, DeBerry has mentioned supporting law enforcement, lowering property taxes, protecting seniors and veterans, and creating jobs as campaign priorities. The Young Republicans of Bexar County and Deputy Sheriffs Association of Bexar County have endorsed her. DeBerry is the only candidate with a record on the county dais, having secured a slight property tax rate decrease and reinstatement of an elderly abuse investigator in the District Attorneys Office among her accomplishments. shuddleston@express-news.net Jessica Phelps Gov. Greg Abbott and Beto ORourke easily defeated their primary opponents on Tuesday night, setting the stage for what could be the biggest battle for Texas governor in nearly 30 years. Meanwhile, Former District Judge Peter Sakai and State Rep. Ina Minjarez appear headed to a runoff for Bexar County judge. The winner will face Republican nominee Trish DeBerry in November. This is a carousel. Use Next and Previous buttons to navigate Embattled Texas Attorney General Ken Paxton fell short of the 50 percent threshold needed to win the Republican nomination outright in Tuesdays primary and will face off against Land Commissioner George P. Bush in a May runoff, according to unofficial voting results. Paxton was out ahead with about 43 percent of the vote, and while it was close for much of the night, Bush forged ahead of former Texas Supreme Court Justice Eva Guzman for second place. East Texas Congressman Louie Gohmert trailed well behind. Bush is the grandson of former President George H.W. Bush and the nephew of former President George Bush. He is the only remaining Bush to hold public office. Paxton and Gohmert each come from the GOPs right wing, while Bush and Guzman are comparatively more moderate. At a watch party in his hometown of McKinney on Tuesday night, Paxton appeared unfazed about not winning outright. To the establishment, they got what they wanted: They got me in a runoff, he said. We're going to have to fight the fight for the next two and a half months, get our vote back out, unite the conservatives and let's go win this in May. Bush, the heir to his familys political dynasty, was optimistic. Looking like things are going in our direction, Bush told reporters at a watch party at an Austin beer hall. Texans have spoken pretty clearly that they want something different. The campaigns of Guzman and Gohmert did not respond to requests for comment, but Gohmert spoke to reporters at his watch party in his hometown of Tyler. According to KLTV, he said he was hoping to come in second but conceded that it looked like it wasnt going to happen. The outspoken congressman, who has held his seat in Congress for 18 years, added that he would wait to talk with the person who comes in second before making an endorsement in the runoff. PREVIOUS COVERAGE: Republican candidates for Texas attorney general go into attack mode: 'Gutter politics' The race was widely considered the premier statewide contest Tuesday, with Paxton hoping to overcome a slew of legal troubles that have invigorated his competitors. Four Democrats were vying in their partys primary, each hoping to capitalize on what they see as the incumbents political vulnerability. Late Tuesday, incomplete, unofficial results showed former ACLU attorney Rochelle Garza drawing twice as many votes as her closest competitors but not winning outright. She appeared headed toward a runoff with former Galveston mayor Joe Jaworski or Dallas-based civil rights attorney Lee Merritt. Paxton, a close ally of former President Donald Trump, has been under indictment for nearly seven years on three felony securities fraud charges. In fall 2020, seven of Paxtons former aides reported him to federal law enforcement over allegations that he had abused the power of his office to help a friend and campaign donor. Some of the whistleblowers have since filed a retaliation lawsuit, which is still pending. Paxton has denied wrongdoing in both cases, denouncing them as a political witch hunt and the type of attack that every effective conservative faces. All three of Paxtons competitors highlighted Paxtons political baggage as a potential liability should he face off against a Democrat in the general election. They warned it could deliver the Democrats their first win in a statewide election since 1994. Paxton won re-election by fewer than 4 percentage points in 2018. RELATED: AG Ken Paxton's attempt to influence judges draws a Texas Bar complaint from an Austin attorney Paxton, a social conservative and culture warrior whose campaign is focused on promoting his record of suing the Biden administration over COVID-19 and border policies, expressed confidence that he would come out on top in recent weeks. On Friday, he told Dallas-based conservative talk show host Mark Davis that he thought he was gonna go ahead and win this thing outright. Even with a runoff, which he expected would be against Bush, he said he wasnt concerned. I think whatever happens, well be fine, Paxton told Fox News on Monday. I think I can take any of them in a runoff. Were proud of our record, and well put that up against any of these rookies out there. In the final weeks leading up to the primary, the candidates launched attack ads against each other, and during a televised debate that Paxton skipped last week, Bush and Guzman sparred while Gohmert focused on Paxton. Paxton and Bush each targeted Guzman in negative campaign ads. During last weeks debate, Bush had slammed Guzman for opposing the construction of a border wall, one of Trumps major presidential priorities, and criticized her for being a gutter politician. But Guzman said Bush was lying and pointed to her campaign website that lists build the wall as the first bullet point of her border security plan. MORE ON THAT: George P. Bush turns to border security to bolster his conservative image in bid for attorney general Guzman, who served on the states highest court from 2009 to 2021, also called Bush entitled and accused him of being upset at her for jumping into a race that he assumed hed win given his famous political family. More recently, Paxton began going after Guzman as well, telling supporters she was too woke for Texas for attending a summit that discussed implicit bias in the criminal justice system. Texans cant trust Eva Guzman to defend our conservative values because Eva Guzman simply doesnt share our values at all, Paxton wrote in an email to supporters and reiterated in a video. Guzman pushed back by saying its a bald-faced lie and that she opposes critical race theory, which is an academic framework for examining how racism has played a role in American policies and laws and perpetuated discrimination. The term has become a buzzword, however, and Republicans have often used it to encompass any discussions about race or racism they find unpalatable. In the last couple years, conservatives have taken to campaigning against the concept being taught in schools, despite it being a primarily graduate-level concept not typically taught to grade school students. Ken Paxton is lying about me because hes failed to keep CRT out of our schools, Guzman said in an advertisement Sunday. As your attorney general, I will fight against CRT and for parents rights. The runoff election is scheduled for May 24. taylor.goldenstein@chron.com A Nassau County, Florida, family is suing SeaWorld for more than $100,000 after claiming they were assaulted by another group of guests last May and that security staff at the Orlando park did not help prevent it or assist them properly afterward. In a lawsuit filed in Orange County circuit court on Feb. 1, Aimee, Michael and Connor Johnson, along with Holly Witt of Duval County on behalf of a child, allege they were seriously injured because SeaWorld security was lacking. Advertisement The plaintiffs say they were followed by a group of teenagers after confronting them for acting aggressively in line for a ride, and they could not find security staff before the youth attacked them, according to the lawsuit. The suit also contends employees did not intervene during the fight and security staff let the perpetrators leave afterward, leading to another confrontation in the parking lot while the plaintiffs were heading to the hospital. Advertisement The familys lawyer, Christopher Kubacki, declined an interview with the Orlando Sentinel, citing the early stages of the lawsuit. SeaWorld Orlando spokeswoman Lori Cherry said the company does not discuss pending litigation. In a court filing Friday, SeaWorlds lawyer denied all the allegations and said that under Florida law, the park has a duty to protect guests. The filing said the plaintiffs injuries were caused by their own negligence or carelessness and that they seemingly provoked the other group. An Orange County Sheriffs Office representative confirmed deputies responded to reports of a fight at SeaWorld on May 2, 2021, but further details were not immediately available. The lawsuit cites several instances of SeaWorld employees failing to protect the Johnson group on that date. While in line for an undisclosed ride, a group of young people started running into them in front of SeaWorld staff, according to the lawsuit. The other group started threatening them when confronted, the suit says, and after they got off the ride, the teens were waiting for them near the exit. The group walked away but the young adults followed them, causing them to look for security, according to the suit. Advertisement They claim the teens then assaulted them and they had to defend themselves even though employees in the area could have intervened, records show. The Johnsons and Witt allege SeaWorld security only arrived after the group was injured. Security staff collected statements and information but let the teens leave afterward, the suit says. The Johnson group asked for an escort to the parking lot so they could go to the hospital, and SeaWorld sent one person to accompany them, assuring them there would be no issues, the litigation says. But the teens were waiting in the parking lot and drove circles around them, according to the lawsuit. The plaintiffs claimed they called for SeaWorlds assistance again, but a staff member arrived only as the teens were leaving. The plaintiffs said they needed medical attention and continue to suffer mental and physical pain from the incident, but the lawsuit doesnt give details on their injuries. They are requesting a jury trial. Records show a court date has not been set. krice@orlandosentinel.com and @katievrice on Twitter This is a carousel. Use Next and Previous buttons to navigate Texas Agriculture Commissioner Sid Miller survived the indictment of his longtime top aide on corruption charges and attacks from two aggressive primary challengers to win the Republican nomination in his re-election bid, unofficial election results from 96 percent of state precincts showed. Miller was challenged by Rep. James White, a West Texas Republican who chaired the public safety committee in the Texas House; and Carey Counsil, a rancher and economics professor. Whites campaign raised and spent more money than Millers, in large part due to massive donations from Texans for Lawsuit Reform, a political action committee. The incumbent was pushed above the 50 percent threshold to avoid a runoff shortly after polls closed on the strength of absentee and early votes, and held that lead as more and more Election Day ballots were reported. Shortly before midnight on Tuesday, he led the next-closest contender, White, by more than 350,000 votes. Millers opponents focused their campaigns on the arrest last spring of Todd Smith, a longtime political aide of Millers who faces charges he solicited tens of thousands in bribes from farmers in exchange for hemp licenses that are supposed to cost $100 under state law. TEXAS TAKE: Get political headlines from across the state sent directly to your inbox Smith was indicted on the charges in January, and Counsil and White heavily criticized Miller for the Smith indictment and other ethical lapses throughout Millers political career. White at times described Miller as dishonest and a fake conservative. Although Miller, endorsed by Trump, is running for his third term in office, his political brand is that of a fiery outsider. He runs a popular Facebook page with 868,000 followers, where he posts memes and conspiracy theories about the 2020 election. He is outspoken against Gov. Greg Abbott and Lt. Gov. Dan Patrick, describing them recently as political enemies and suggesting without proof they may be fanning investigations against him. Miller and Smith parted ways voluntarily, Miller said. Drawing from the Trump playbook, Miller has said he believes the charges against his former aide are fake and a political witch hunt. In the general election, Miller is set to face Susan Hays, a rural West Texas attorney who provided legal advice to Texas hemp farmers after the crop was legalized through a 2019 bill. She, too, has centered much of her attacks against Miller around the Smith indictment. It remains to be seen if that line of attack against Miller will resonate with general election voters more than it did with those in the primary. edward.mckinley@chron.com This is a carousel. Use Next and Previous buttons to navigate Gov. Greg Abbott and Beto ORourke easily defeated their primary opponents on Tuesday night, setting the stage for what could be the biggest battle for Texas governor in nearly 30 years. Abbott outdistanced his seven GOP primary opponents, which included spirited but underfunded challenges from former Texas Republican Party chairman Allen West and former state Sen. Don Huffines. The Associated Press called both races just an hour after the polls had closed. Huffines spent more than $15 million and West over $2 million on their campaigns, yet couldnt overcome more than $50 million Abbott has spent since 2019 to secure renomination to run for a record-tying third four-year term as governor. Im running for re-election to keep Texas on the right course, Abbott told hundreds of cheering supporters at the Texas State Aquarium in Corpus Christi where he held a victory party. IN-DEPTH: Greg Abbott, Beto ORourke look to score in primaries ahead of heavyweight battle ORourke blew out his four Democratic opponents, none of whom spent more than a few thousand dollars on their campaigns. ORourke, the former El Paso congressman, spent more than $6.5 million to lock down the nomination and advance to the general election against Abbott. It looks like, from the early returns I will be your nominee for governor for the state of Texas, ORourke told supporters at a rally in Fort Worth on election night. West and Huffines both tried to make the race a referendum on how Abbott managed the pandemic and the Texas border under his watch. Both argued that Abbott went too far in mandating restrictions on businesses and people during the early months of the pandemic and hadnt done enough in his seven years to make the border more secure. Abbott blunted both of those messages over the last year by his actions. In the spring of 2021, he announced Texas was ending all mandates and restrictions on businesses. Then later he sent 10,000 National Guard soldiers and increased Department of Public Safety officers on the Texas border. Abbott ultimately won former President Donald Trumps endorsement and Trump came to Texas in January to publicly rally his supporters to back Abbott. It felt like Abbott had a rightward shift that kept what could have been credible challengers at bay, said Billy Monroe, a political science professor at Prairie View A&M University. He knew he had to go right and cut off some of those arguments, Monroe said. Monroe said West and Huffines did a lot of the right things to challenge an incumbent, including raising decent money and aggressively campaigning. But never underestimate the incumbency advantage, he said. No incumbent Texas governor has lost in a primary since Uvalde's Dolph Briscoe in 1978. West, 61, knew he was in an uphill battle against the better-known and better-funded Abbott. He often referenced David and Goliath in the Bible as the reason for being optimistic despite the odds he faced. David just had three stones. But he had heart, West said in an interview on Monday as he tried to rally voters to the polls. West is a former Florida congressman who lost his re-election in 2012 and moved to Garland after that race. In 2020, he ran for chairman of the Republican Party of Texas and defeated incumbent James Dickey. He resigned from that post in July to take on Abbott. Huffines said he felt like he did all the right things to give Abbott a real challenge. He pointed to his strong fundraising, opening 12 field offices, having TV and radio ads up and keeping up a nonstop travel schedule around the state. I think weve run really a quality campaign a great campaign, Huffines said in an interview with the Houston Chronicle on Monday. He said he has little doubt his campaign pushed Abbott to move rightward. He said hes certain Texas never would have passed some of the new gun laws, abortion restriction laws and beefed up its border presence if Abbott hadnt faced a stiff challenge in the primary. Huffines, 63, runs a commercial real estate company and served one term in the Texas Senate before losing re-election in 2018. This was the first serious primary challenge of Abbotts political career. In previous statewide campaigns for Texas attorney general, the Texas Supreme Court and governor, he either was unchallenged in the primaries or faced token opposition. Abbott, first elected governor in 2014, has already offered a preview of how hes going to fend off ORourke. On the campaign trail, hes been focused on the strong economy and low unemployment in Texas during his tenure. Weve created an economic juggernaut, Abbott said during his speech in Corpus Christi. More Texans have jobs today than ever before in the history of our great state. Hes tried to warn that ORourke represents a danger to those gains because of his views on fighting climate change that could hurt the oil and gas industry. But ORourke, 49, has brushed off that Abbotts attack, insisting he will do nothing to hurt those jobs, but seek to create more clean energy jobs in Texas. He said he wont advocate plans that would hurt oil and gas workers. Meanwhile, ORourke has been campaigning for months on the state of the electricity grid under Abbotts watch. ORourke said hes going to hold Abbott accountable for the grid failures last year that left millions of Texans without electricity during frigid conditions and killed more than 200 people. This guy cant even keep the lights on in the energy capital of the world, ORourke said at his victory party in Fort Worth. Abbott has argued that he and the Legislature took steps this year to fix the problems and now Texas has a grid that is much better prepared for future storms including cold spells that hit this winter. The power grid is more resilient, more stable and stronger than it has ever been in the history of our state, Abbott, 64, said during a campaign stop in San Antonio earlier this month. Abbott an attorney and former judge is a native of Wichita Falls but grew up in Duncanville. He got his start as a judge in Houston. Lieutenant governors race Incumbent Lt. Gov. Dan Patrick has apparently won his primary race, with 77 percent of the vote as late results continued to trickle in on Wednesday. Though he faced five GOP challengers, the race was never expected to be close, with the sitting lieutenant governor chasing a third term with a $23 million campaign war chest. Patrick, one of Texas big three leaders, is among the most right-wing members of Texas Republican Party and has driven conservative priorities through the Legislature. The people of Texas have spoken with one conservative voice, confirming what we already know, Patrick said in a statement. Texans are committed to keeping our state on its conservative path. The top two Democrats running for lieutenant governor are set to face each other May 24 in a runoff election. Mike Collier, the Houston accountant who came within 5 percentage points of unseating Patrick in 2018, remained the front-runner Wednesday afternoon with 41 percent of the vote. State Rep. Michelle Beckley, D-Carrollton, is in line to compete with Collier in the runoff she maintained about a 20,000-vote lead over educator Carla Brailey, the former vice chair of the Texas Democratic Party. We're thrilled by the outpouring of support tonight from all across the state, said Ali Zaidi, Collier's campaign manager. We look forward to uniting Texans against Dan Patrick, who is destroying our beloved state with his dangerous brand of partisan politics. Texas can and must do better. Staff writer Cayla Harris contributed to this report. jeremy.wallace@chron.com This is a carousel. Use Next and Previous buttons to navigate State lawmakers across the Houston area defeated their primary challengers in Tuesdays elections, while several open statehouse races headed to runoffs between the top two finishers. The closest scare for an incumbent came in the primary between state Rep. Harold Dutton, a moderate Democrat who chairs the House Public Education Committee, and educator Candis Houston. With results from more than 98 percent of Harris County voting centers, Dutton was in position to eke out a win by less than 200 votes. It was the second straight cycle in which Dutton barely scraped past his primary competition. First elected to his northeast Houston district in 1984, Dutton went more than 30 years without a serious challenge before narrowly holding on to his seat in a runoff last cycle. Houston, who serves as president of the Aldine chapter of the American Federation of Teachers, received more than half her fundraising from teachers unions, some of whom were eager to defeat Dutton over his effort to oust Houston ISDs elected school board and install state-appointed replacements. Dutton also received flak from fellow Democrats when he revived a bill last year that aimed to restrict which teams transgender student athletes could join an episode that Dutton casts off as a misunderstanding. On the Harris County Republican ballot, all three statehouse incumbents who faced primary opponents state Reps. Lacey Hull, Mike Schofield and Valoree Swanson easily defeated their opponents. Swansons race drew particular interest, as she faced a rematch against former state representative Debbie Riddle, who she unseated in 2016. But the race proved to be a blowout, with Swanson capturing more than two-thirds of the vote. Just outside of Houston, two moderate Republicans achieved mixed results in their primaries, with state Rep. Ernest Bailes of Shepherd avoiding a runoff in his largely rural district northeast of Harris County, while state Rep. Phil Stephenson of Wharton was forced into an overtime round against former Waller County commissioner Stan Kitzman. Stephensons district, located west of Harris County, was dismantled during redistricting last year, when state lawmakers stripped out a large portion of Fort Bend County and expanded the district to include four new counties, including Waller. Kitzman won 54 percent of the votes in Waller County, according to unofficial returns, helping propel him into the runoff. Stephenson drew just 17 percent support in Waller County. To win outright, candidates must secure a majority of the total votes, or 50 percent plus one vote. Otherwise, the primary gets resolved in a May 24 runoff election between the top two finishers. In a less competitive Texas House race, state Rep. Alma Allen, D-Houston, defeated her two primary challengers with 54 percent of the vote, likely ensuring her return to the House for a tenth term. Republican state Rep. Cecil Bell of Magnolia defeated his sole primary opponent, Magnolia ISD trustee Kelly McDonald, with 67 percent of the vote, according to unofficial returns. Bells district covers southwest Montgomery County. The vast majority of state representatives from Harris County ran unopposed in Tuesdays primary. Twelve Democrats and four Republicans two-thirds of the 24 lawmakers currently representing Harris County in the lower chamber did not face an opponent from their own party. Runoffs in four open districts At least four open statehouse races in the Houston area were headed to runoffs, including the closely watched Republican primary to decide state Rep. Jim Murphys successor. Attorneys Shelley Barineau and Mano DeAyala finished atop the five-candidate race, shutting out former Houston City Council member Greg Travis, who finished third. In Harris Countys most crowded statehouse race, a former Houston City Council and Houston ISD member, Jolanda Jones, easily led a field of seven Democratic candidates running for the seat of state Rep. Garnet Coleman, who retired Monday after 30 years in the Legislature. Real estate agent Danielle Keys Bess edged out Houston Community College Trustee Reagan Flowers for the second position against Jones, who received more than twice as many votes as any other candidate. Two Republicans also ran for House District 147, though the seat is all but certain to be represented by a Democrat. President Joe Biden would have carried the new version of the district with 78 percent in 2020. Colemans early retirement means a separate special election will be held in May to decide who will represent the district through the end of the current two-year term. Southeast of Houston, Republican trial lawyer Patrick Gurski and former State Board of Education member Terri Leo-Wilson were set for a runoff to decide who will replace state Rep. Mayes Middleton in House District 23. Middleton, R-Wallisville, is vacating the Galveston-area seat to run for the Texas Senate. In another open GOP primary in northeast Harris County, Humble City Council member Charles Cunningham crushed his only opponent, Kingwood resident Deanna Robertson, with 79 percent in the race to succeed retiring state Rep. Dan Huberty. Cunningham, a former colleague of Hubertys on the Humble ISD board of trustees, was endorsed by the outgoing incumbent. Without any Democratic opposition in November, he was effectively elected to the seat on Tuesday. Cunninghams likely win ensures there will continue to be at least one Black Republican in the Legislature. The lone incumbent Black Republican, state Rep. James White of Hillister, gave up his seat to run for agriculture commissioner and lost. Meanwhile, in the Democratic primary for a newly drawn state House seat in Fort Bend County, physician Suleman Lalani led three other Democrats running for the bright-blue district, which covers parts of Sugar Land, Mission Bend and unincorporated Fort Bend. He was poised to face social worker Vanesia Johnson in the runoff. jasper.scherer@chron.com Jill Karnicki, Houston Chronicle / Staff photographer Jolanda Jones, former Houston City Council and Houston ISD board member, and realtor Danielle Keys Bess are headed for a runoff in the Democratic primary race for Rep. Garnet Coleman deeply blue district that he's represented since 1991. Jones had about 41 percent of the vote, with the next closest candidate being Realtor Danielle Keys Bess at 20 percent, as of unofficial Harris County voting results with most voting centers reporting. This is a carousel. Use Next and Previous buttons to navigate A Travis County district judge on Wednesday temporarily stopped the states child welfare agency from investigating possible child abuse charges against the parents of a 16-year-old who underwent gender-affirming health care. But the court stopped short of blocking such investigations statewide at least for now. The judges decision came in response to a suit filed by two national civil rights groups against Gov. Greg Abbott and the Texas Department of Family and Protective Services on behalf of the family, which came under review for supporting their daughters care for gender dysphoria. State attorneys, who did not respond to a request for comment, have already appealed the decision. The investigation was prompted by a directive from Abbott last week, backed by a non-binding legal opinion by Attorney General Ken Paxton that equated surgical and medication treatments with child abuse. Most major professional medical organizations support evidence-based care for treatment of gender dysphoria, which is defined by the American Psychiatric Association as psychological distress and anxiety due to a mismatch between a persons sense of their gender and their assigned sex at birth. The 16-year-olds mother, who is not named in the suit, is an employee of the child welfare agency and was put on administrative leave from her job last week. Earlier that day, she asked her supervisors for clarification on the impact of Abbotts new order, according to the suit, which does not contain details on who reported the alleged abuse. "This should never have happened and is unfathomably cruel, said Brian Klosterboer, ACLU of Texas attorney representing the plaintiffs. Families should not have to fear being separated because they are providing the best possible health care for their children." The ruling came as the Biden Administration's Health and Human Services Department rolled out new guidance calling for Texans to file a federal complaint if they experience any discrimination on the basis of gender identity or disability while seeking gender-affirming care. "This is government overreach at its worst," Biden said in a statement Wednesday. "Like so many anti-transgender attacks proliferating in states across the country, the governors actions callously threaten to harm children and their families just to score political points. These actions are terrifying many families in Texas and beyond. And they must stop." In granting a temporary restraining order Wednesday, District Judge Amy Clark Meachum, a Democrat, said otherwise the employee would be at risk of losing her job, and she and her husband face the imminent and ongoing deprivation of their constitutional rights, the potential loss of necessary medical care, and the stigma attached to being the subject of an unfounded child abuse investigation. The court will hold a hearing March 11 on whether Meachum should issue a broader and longer-lasting injunction. Order targets use of 'puberty blockers,' hormone therapy Paul Castillo of Lambda Legal, one of the attorneys for the plaintiffs, said in court Wednesday that at least two other families are also under investigation by the states child welfare agency and some medical providers have stopped prescribing gender-affirming medications to Texas transgender youths. Abbotts order applies to the use of puberty blockers, which delay the onset of puberty for children diagnosed with gender dysphoria, and of hormone treatments for older children, as well as surgery, though thats not common among minors. IN WASHINGTON: Meet the Houston 8-year-old standing up to Abbott, for trans kids, at Bidens State of the Union Paxton, in his legal opinion, argued that courts were likely to find that taking away a childs constitutional right to procreate, especially when they are too young to legally consent and even the use of gender-affirming medications could result in physical and mental harm that amounts to abuse. He also compared transgender health care to the opioid crisis which proliferated in part because of doctors who downplayed the risk of addiction to the drugs. There is always the potential for novel medical determinations to promote purported remedies that may not improve patient outcomes and can even result in tragic harms, Paxton wrote. The same potential for harm exists for minors who have engaged in the type of procedures or treatments above. A growing body of evidence shows that such care does the opposite, however, including a Feb. 25 study by University of Washington researchers that found gender-affirming care was associated with lower risk of depression and suicide. Ricardo Martinez, CEO of Equality Texas, said at a press conference outside the Travis County courthouse Wednesday that politically active parents who have spoken out against anti-transgender bills at the Texas Legislature are being targeted by DFPS. What started as a bigoted stunt by the attorney general and the governor has turned into political persecution, Martinez said. Thats a whole nother level of evil: Prioritizing attacking kids with loving families when there are kids in foster care sleeping in administrative offices awaiting placement. Issue seen as winner for GOP The suit before the Travis County district court argues that the governors directive violates the Texas Administrative Procedures Act, the separation of powers requirements of the Texas Constitution and the constitutional rights of transgender youth and their parents. The other plaintiff in the case, Megan Mooney, is a Houston psychologist who treats children with gender dysphoria. Her job requires her to report child abuse, but she disagrees with doing so, saying it would harm her clients and violate her ethical obligations as a professional counselor. Castillo said Mooney had already received communications from people threatening her license. CHILDREN PUSH BACK: Houston kids confront anti-trans legislation that targets them Assistant Attorney General Ryan Kercher argued in court that Paxton's legal opinion alone was not a directive to DFPS and did not change the law. Kercher said the opinion just concluded that a court could find certain transgender care to be abuse. Despite the, frankly, breathless media coverage of these important issues, there has been no call to investigate all trans youth or all youth undergoing these gender-affirming procedures, Kercher said. Meachum was skeptical of this argument, asking why Abbott would have written the letter to DFPS if not to spur enforcement. How often does the governor send DFPS directives on doing investigations? she asked. Kercher said he didnt know. Castillo noted that a statement given to reporters by DFPS last week said the agency would follow Paxtons opinion. The judge also alluded to the ongoing class-action court case launched against the agency for its mishandling of the states foster care system. A court-ordered team monitoring the agency found that 23 children had died in the states custody between summer 2019 and spring 2021. Has he (Abbott) been working with the Commissioner on all of those issues or is this the only issue that has been the focus of directives with him? Meachum asked. Democrats and LGBT advocates have accused Paxton and Abbott of using transgender children as political pawns, pointing out that they chose to take action on the issue in the week before contested primary elections for both of them. Top Abbott strategist Dave Carney, in a call with reporters on Wednesday, did not speak to the timing but underscored that the governor sees the issue as a 75 to 80 percent winner. Texans have common sense, he said. taylor.goldenstein@chron.com By Clayton Fox, RealClearInvestigations March 2, 2022 Despite promises from President Biden and top health officials that COVID-19 vaccines would prevent severe illness, death, and perhaps even transmission of the virus, data indicate that thousands of Americans are dying from the disease even after having been vaccinated. Striking evidence comes from California, Georgia, and Illinois, where a third of people dying with COVID had been vaccinated even some who had received a third booster shot. In the absence of publicly available federal data, the three states offer some of the best numbers on the post-vaccine impact of a pandemic that has claimed 950,000 American lives. Some health experts say such deaths were predictable. After all, initial reports on the Pfizer, Moderna, and Johnson & Johnson jabs promised vaccine efficacy rates in the 90%-plus range not perfection. So even if a substantial percentage of the population is vaccinated, vaccinated people will still die. And the vaccines were designed to combat a strain of the virus before the delta and omicron variants appeared, suggesting the new scourges may have played a major role in the vaccines disappointing effectiveness. Nevertheless, on July 21, 2021, President Biden assured Americans at a Cincinnati town hall that If you are vaccinated, you are not going to be hospitalized, you are not going to be in the ICU unit, and you are not going to die. Dr. Anthony Fauci, director of the National Institute of Allergy and Infectious Diseases, echoed his remarks in an interview later that month: The vaccines are very effective in protecting you and extremely effective in protecting you against severe disease. The president has largely held to his stance, allowing during his State of the Union address on Tuesday that new vaccines might be needed, even as reality increasingly undermined it. In December, he asserted, This is a pandemic of the unvaccinated words soon to become an administration mantra. He would later warn: We are looking at a winter of severe illness and death for the unvaccinated for themselves, their families and the hospitals they'll soon overwhelm. With such debatable claims, authorities have arguably harmed the vaccinated and unvaccinated alike. The vaccinated especially the elderly or immunocompromised have been given a false sense of invincibility. The unvaccinated have been not only scapegoated; some have lost their jobs as the administrations pronouncements were used to enforce inflexible employer vaccine mandates. It is true that COVID mortality statistics are uncertain. They are clouded in many cases by failures to distinguish those who died from COVID versus those who died with COVID, and by variations in how unvaccinated is defined with numerous deaths classified as unvaccinated up until two weeks after a victims second jab. But the fairly detailed and unambiguous data from California, Georgia, and Illinois show the vaccinated making up a significant percentage of those dying from COVID as the new strains became prevalent. When the delta strain circulated from mid-November to mid-December of last year, the vaccinated accounted for 21% of all COVID-related deaths in California and Georgia, and 38% in Illinois. After delta was overtaken by the omicron variant, the proportions in California and Georgia rose substantially to over 33% -- a level comparable to Illinois, which remained at its already higher rate. The paucity of overall national data was illustrated by a remarkable Feb. 20 New York Times story, in which COVID reporter Apoorva Mandavilli wrote that the Centers for Disease Control and Prevention has published only a tiny fraction of the data it has collected. She quoted an official speaking anonymously saying that the CDC was reluctant to make detailed information about hospitalizations sorted by vaccination status available because it "might be misinterpreted as the vaccines being ineffective. Yet available state and other statistics suggest just that -- at least when measured against the original Biden standard that the vaccinated "are not going to die": The proportion of fully vaccinated and/or boosted deaths against the number of total deaths is substantial, and appears to have been gradually increasing in recent months at least in several states. Of the eight states publishing detailed, so-called "breakthrough" death data on the vaccinated to the present, RealClearInvestigations found that Massachusetts with a substantial 75% fully vaccinated rate suffered the highest percentage of vaccinated deaths: 55% from January 1 to February 12, 2022. Even a recent little-publicized and less comprehensive CDC report notes that among those 18 years of age or older across 25 U.S. jurisdictions, from early April to late December 2021, there were approximately 7 million COVID cases and 95,000 deaths among the unvaccinated, versus approximately 3 million cases and 23,000 deaths among the vaccinated. That one in five deaths were associated with the vaccinated, according to the study, suggests protection weaker than the public has been led to believe. But in a Jan. 19, 2022 op-ed in The Hill, Dr. Lyndon Haviland of the CUNY School of Public Health castigated dissenters for making much of vaccinated deaths: By trumpeting the term breakthrough cases, public health authorities are spreading the impression that these infections are novel, unique and unanticipated by the scientific community. In fact, the vaccine was designed precisely with this likelihood in mind, and it is working exactly as intended. With cases of hospitalization and death largely isolated among the unvaccinated population, it clearly shows the vaccines are doing their job and achieving the desired outcome. But given the significant and rising proportions of double- and triple-vaccinated deaths, this assertion representative of much of the U.S. public health establishment is obviously misleading. Haviland did not reply to a request for comment from RealClearInvestigations. Dr. Peter Hotez, Dean of the National School of Tropical Medicine at Baylor College of Medicine, urged a rethinking of the term fully vaccinated as it applies to severe illness. I think the key here is to understand that by last fall it was clear that fully vaccinated, meaning 2 doses, was anything but, he said. Hotez points out that by six months past the second dose, CDC data have shown only 57% protection vs hospitalizations and 38% vs ER visits. He says mRNA vaccines should be viewed as a three-dose series and people with two doses only partially vaccinated. He cites data showing that after three doses, there is a 90% reduction in hospitalization and 82% reduction in ER visits. Those who receive three doses are highly protected against hospitalization and presumably death as shown by the CDC. Pfizer CEO Albert Bourla made the same point more bluntly in an interview with Yahoo News on January 10, 2022. We know that two dose[s] of the vaccine offer very limited protection, if any, he said. The three doses with a booster offer reasonable protection against hospitalization and deaths, and against deaths I think very good. On Feb. 11, the Washington Post reported that a new CDC study shows booster protection against hospitalization waning to 78% after four months. At a recent press briefing, Dr. Fauci stated: The potential future requirement for an additional boost or a fourth shot for mRNA or a third shot for J&J is being very carefully monitored in real time and recommendations, if needed, will be updated. Dr. Fauci did hint at the need for boosters very early on; as early as January 2021, he was contemplating the need for updated shots to handle new variants. But he, the president, and the media pushed the widespread uptake of shots designed to stymie the original Wuhan strain. RealClearInvestigations asked for comment from the authorities on issues of vaccine messaging and effectiveness, including the White House, Dr. Faucis NIAID, and the CDC. They did not respond. If nothing else, it seems clear that this is not a pandemic of the unvaccinated. A question that remains to be answered is whether public health officials had an obligation to be more forthright about the vaccines limitations. Meanwhile, the administration has been keen to call for the censorship of those it views as peddling pandemic misinformation linking them to violent extremist attacks during 2021 in a recent Department of Homeland Security bulletin. Largely unacknowledged is a variety of research papers from leading institutions, dating back to at least December of 2020, suggesting that mutations could undermine the effectiveness of coronavirus vaccines. In Tablet Magazine on Feb. 14, Dr. Vinay Prasad, an oncologist and public health researcher at the University of California, San Francisco, decried the politicization of the Centers for Disease Control: The agency is not in fact impartial (and thus not sufficiently scientific), but captured by the countrys national political system. This is a precarious situation he wrote, as it undermines trust in federal agencies and naturally leads to a trust vacuum, in which Americans feel forced to cast about in a confused search for alternative sources of information. New Centers for Disease Control and Prevention guidelines may have distracted from another crucial COVID-19 update: Monday was the deadline for eligible Florida health care workers to provide proof of vaccination or risk consequences such as getting fired. The Biden Administration and the Centers for Medicare & Medicaid Services on Nov. 4 laid out a rule that requires workers at nearly all Medicare and Medicaid-certified health care facilities to submit proof of vaccination or a religious or medical exemption. Advertisement Noncompliant hospitals face fines or even termination from the program, according to CMS, though penalties will not begin until March 30 if hospitals are working toward 100% compliance. The rule could impact the nearly 4.7 million Floridians who use Medicare or Medicaid as their health insurance. A series of legal challenges from states including Florida delayed enforcement of the rule, but on Jan. 13 the U.S. Supreme Court ruled the federal government could enforce it. The deadlines vary by state as a result of separate lawsuits and rulings. The deadline for Florida health care workers to get their first COVID-19 shot was Jan. 27, with a second due by Feb. 28 for those receiving vaccines that require double doses. Advertisement On top of that deadline, the CDC on Friday revised how it measures COVID-19 risk in a community. Hospital burden, rather than case counts, now determines how people are advised to act. What the public sees ... what their perception of risk is, dramatically changed in one day, said University of South Florida Associate Professor of Epidemiology Jason Salemi. He said 70% of the counties that were classified as low-risk under this new measure on Friday would have been classified as high previously. If youre baffled, youre not alone: A Pew Research Center poll in February found 60% of U.S. adults say changes to public health officials recommendations confuse them. Heres how these updates may impact Central Florida. Vaccines for health care workers AdventHealth, which employs around 36,000 health care workers across greater Orlando, and Orlando Health, which employs over 23,000 workers, are both required by federal law to have fully vaccinated or exempted employees by Mondays deadline. On Jan. 13, 96% of AdventHealth workers were vaccinated, according to spokesperson Jeff Grainger. He said updated figures were not available on Tuesday. Orlando Health has not shared its staff vaccination totals. Orlando Health spokesperson Nicole Ray said the hospital was recording staff vaccinations as required by the federal mandate but stopped short of confirming whether it was enforcing the mandate through termination or other actions. Advertisement Like other hospitals and healthcare systems across the country, Orlando Health is required to maintain COVID-19 vaccine information on file for every team member, including records of vaccination or documentation of a vaccine exemption, said Ray. As a healthcare provider, we continue to strongly encourage vaccinations and have vaccines readily available for any team member wishing to receive the COVID-19 vaccine. On Jan. 22, Florida dropped its challenge against the federal vaccine mandate. Gov. Ron DeSantis spokesperson Christina Pushaw in a Tuesday email said the states Agency for Health Care Administration does not plan to record whether hospitals comply with the Biden Administrations vaccine mandate. The state is not surveying for compliance with the Biden Administrations CMS vaccine mandate, which is overreach into personal medical decisions that has exacerbated shortages of health care workers in other states where it is enforced, Pushaw said in an email. Dr. Kenneth Alexander, chief of the Division of Infectious Diseases at Nemours Childrens Health in Orlando, said he has not seen health care staff shortages as a result of its vaccination requirement. Nemours Childrens Health required staff to get vaccinated by Oct. 6, before CMS came out with its requirements. Advertisement Did we offer exemptions? Yes. How many were granted? Very few because they set a high bar. Did we lose people? Yes. How many? Not very many, he said. The vast majority of people accept that this is the right thing to do to protect our patients, our families and to keep our healthcare system running. A news release from Nemours states 127 employees left the company in response to the mandate. Nemours has about 8,100 employees companywide across offices in four states, including Florida, according to spokesperson Margot Winick. When kids in the community get sick, they count on us being there. We cant run a hospital if a bunch of our staff are sick, Alexander said. Furthermore, I would feel absolutely terrible if one of our staff gave a vulnerable kid COVID. CDC revises community masking guidelines Meanwhile, the CDC announced changes Friday to its metrics for COVID-19 containment. It previously used cases and test positivity. It now considers hospitalizations, hospital capacity and new COVID-19 cases to calculate whether risk to a communitys residents is low, medium or high. Alexander said this may be more helpful in assessing community risk because a high case level may not strain some communities such as communities with high vaccination rates. Advertisement The goal ... is that if you or I gets terribly sick, we want to know that theres a bed for us or a ventilator if we need it, he said. It doesnt really matter to me too much about the kid who gets mildly ill and gets better and might not even get tested. Only people living in counties where hospitals are highly burdened are advised to wear masks in public indoor areas, including schools. Salemi said this new rule could hurt opportunities to mitigate spread before cases escalate to the point they require hospitalization. Other metrics, such as wastewater testing, should be used to make policy decisions and evaluate risk, he added. You might be missing an opportunity to act as soon as possible if you only focus on hospitalizations, Salemi said. The Health Report Weekly A weekly update on health news in Florida. > Orange, Osceola, Lake and Polk are all in the high category, which means masking indoors is still recommended. Volusia and Seminole are in the medium category as of Thursday. Statewide, the updated CDC guidance is unlikely to change policy, said Florida Department of Health spokesperson Jeremy Redfern in an email. Advertisement The guidelines from the Department of Health are not the same as the CDC guidelines, as the state of Florida is not relying on community masking as a mitigation technique, he said. DeSantis and State Surgeon General Joseph Ladapo on Thursday urged Floridians to buck CDC guidelines. Orange County spokesperson Kelly Finkelstein said the updated CDC policy, along with other scientific data, will inform Orange County Mayor Jerry Demings decisions and he will tell the public if and when he decides to change county policies. Mayor Demings makes all decisions based upon the advice of experts and scientific data available including the Centers for Disease Control and Prevention guideline changes, she said. Mayor Demings continues to meet with the Executive Policy Group to evaluate current COVID-19 data for Orange County. ccatherman@orlandosentinel.com Deep concern for the people of Ukraine has triggered some farms to set up donation sites, acting as drop off points for essential items urgently needed. Since Russia invaded Ukraine last week thousands of innocent people have fled their homes and have now been reported as displaced or left homeless. Ukrainians, including young children, have been left with no shelter, clothing, food or school supplies and many have felt forced to flee the country to reach safety. Farms and estates across the UK have been setting up donation sites to help the Ukrainian people in their time of need. North Wales-based Rhug Estate, located near Corwen, has set up its conference room to act a place where people can donate supplies. Blankets, coats for women and children, warm clothes including hats, gloves, scarfs and socks can be dropped off at the conference centre. The site is located behind the farm shop, and will be open between 9am and 5pm on Friday, Saturday, Sunday and Monday, 4 - 7 March 2022. Lord Newborough, owner of Rhug Estate, said the situation looked set to become Europes largest refugee crisis this century. I have friends who are still in Ukraine. There are Rhug Estate staff who have family still in Ukraine," he said. "These are normal families who are now concerned for their lives. They have sent me terrifying footage of the war that is going on on their doorstep. "We searched for a local donation site but couldnt find one in this area of Denbighshire so the team here at Rhug have rallied round and we will become that local drop off site for everyone to come to and donate items. "The people of Ukraine are relying on international aid and the generosity of strangers around the world. We must do all we can. Elsewhere, Mossgiel Organic Farm, located in Ayrshire, has already received lorry loads of essential items such as clothes, blankets, duvets, sleeping bags, toys, nappies and canned food. Speaking on social media, the Scottish dairy farming business said it would create a list of new places receiving items later today (2 March). "We have all been watching in horror at the devastating situation in Ukraine and how it's affecting the very innocent people who live there," the farm said on social media. "We couldn't even begin to imagine what life must be like there at the moment and can only hope that our world leaders can unite and put a stop to this as swiftly as possible." A GoFundMe page has also been set up to collect donations for the Ukrainian people, which has so far raised over 1.3 million as of 2 March. Growers will now be allowed to use neonicotinoid seed treatment on the 2022 sugar beet crop in England after the threshold for use was recently met. The government gave the green light in January for the use of Syngentas Cruiser SB, which contains thiamethoxam, due to the risk virus yellows poses to this year's crop. Emerging sugar beet seedlings are vulnerable to predation by aphids which have the potential to spread the virus. Defra explained that the sugar beet crop had been 'severely affected', with 2020 yields down by a quarter on previous years. It added that other pesticide and organic treatments were not sufficiently effective in controlling virus yellows. In a new update, Defra said modelling has predicted a 68% level of virus yellows incidence, meaning the threshold for use has now been met. This means the seed treatment can now proceed under strict conditions, the department explained on Tuesday (1 March). The maximum amount of treatment approved for use is 6% of the quantity of active substance applied on a range of crops in 2016 before neonicotinoids were prohibited. A Defra spokesperson said: "The threshold for use has now been met according to the independent scientific modelling conducted on the virus spread. "Under the terms of this authorisation seed treatment can go ahead with strict controls in place to mitigate risks." The spokesperson added; "The decision to approve an emergency authorisation was not taken lightly and based on robust scientific assessment. "We evaluate the risks very carefully and only grant temporary emergency authorisations for restricted pesticides in special circumstances when strict requirements are met and there are no alternatives." Twelve EU countries - with significant sugar production - have granted emergency authorisations in the last three years for neonics following the 2018 EU-wide ban - backed by the UK coming into force. The restrictions were imposed following a report by European Food Safety Authority (EFSA) which concluded that thiamethoxam posed a "high acute risk" to honey bees. The UK and New Zealand trade deal will allow a major increase in sheepmeat imports, with the sheep sector warning it will create an 'unnecessary risk' for British farmers. The National Sheep Association (NSA) has made the warning after responding to the signing of the free trade agreement on Monday (28 February). The New Zealand deal follows a similar one agreed between the UK and Australia, at the end of 2021. Both have been hailed by the Department for International Trade (DIT) as successful agreements allowing extensive trade opportunities for UK industries. However, the deals are with the worlds largest sheepmeat exporters, with the NSA warning they do not go far enough in protecting UK sheep farmers via the special measures. It says the UK sheep sector is 'concerned' over where it is expected to transition to after 15 years, when trade is expected to be liberalised completely. The NZ trade deal includes the opportunity for tariff free volumes to rise incrementally from 114,000 tonnes now, to 165,000 tonnes by year 15. At the end of this 15 year period, trade is expected to be liberalised completely. This is combined with the Australian agreement of 125,000 tonnes - almost the total volume of lamb consumed in Britain. NSA chief executive, Phil Stocker warned: This deal is opening ourselves up to a level of risk that could come and bite us in years to come. "It could pave the way for Britains environmental and land management policies to reduce domestic production and then feed ourselves from anywhere across the globe." Mr Stocker added that the New Zealand trade deal was largely one-way, with 'little benefit' to be gained by British sheep farmers. "It is worth considering that the last two years have seen reduced imports of New Zealand lamb due to Brexit and Covid," he said. "Our domestic supply chains have catered well for demand in the absence of this." He said the sector was not in agreement with the model being proposed that would see farms tightening their production window and exporting more, with more imports brought in when product is not available. Mr Stocker added: This to me doesnt benefit our sheep farming system here in the UK and neither does it win on our aspiration for high standards, climate change targets, or reliable food security. Only subscribers with PAID Print or E-Edition subscriptions please enter here to gain access. If you are not already a Paid subscriber do not go through this portal. Please return to the subscription page to purchase one of our offers. Thank you! Category Select Category Apparel/Garments Textiles Fashion Technical Textiles Information Technology E-commerce Retail Corporate Association Press Release SubCategory Select Sub-Category In a recent interview on a television show, actress Ankita Lokhande and her husband Vicky Jain discussed the difficulties they had following the death of actor Sushant Singh Rajput in 2020. Vicky and Ankita opened up about the ups and downs of their relationship in the second episode of Star Plus' new show Smart Jodi, specifically the agony created by Sushant's tragic death. Ankita was in a relationship with Sushant from 2010 until 2016. She co-starred in Pavitra Rishta with him. Ankita and Vicky made their debut appearance in the second episode, discussing a difficult period in their relationship. Ankita met Sushant Singh Rajput's family after his suicide on June 14, 2020, and made multiple appearances in front of the media to talk about him. She mentioned this on the show when asked about it, "I have forgotten my past. But in that moment, that thing needed me and I was unable to tell that to Vicky. But he understood me without me needing to say anything." Vicky Jain claimed the event put their relationship to the test. "There cannot be a tougher test for a relationship than what happened suddenly. There was a turn that shocked not just us but the whole nation. Nobody can be prepared for such a thing," he said. Many criticised Vicky on social media when Ankita appeared with Sushant's family following his death, and conspiracy theorists questioned Ankita's motives. Vicky addressed all of this and said, "A lot of people had wrong notions about things. I was unable to understand it all. I am proud of Ankita that she very boldly handled it. She fulfilled whatever duties and responsibilities she had. Wherever it was needed, she said her piece for herself and that relationship. For that honesty, I always supported her." Vicky and Ankita started dating in 2019 and got married on December 14 last year. Alan Ginsburg announces the Ginsburg Family Foundation grants totaling $40 million to UCF, Nemours Childrens Health and the Holocaust Museum of Hope and Humanity in Winter Park on Feb. 24. (Willie J. Allen Jr./Orlando Sentinel) A $40 million gift from the charitable foundation of local developer and philanthropist Alan Ginsburg will help correct longstanding health inequities for disadvantaged children, build a world-class Holocaust museum in Orlando and promote inclusion, civil discourse and civic engagement at the University of Central Florida. The newly announced grants from the Ginsburg Family Foundation include $25 million to establish the Ginsburg Institute for Health Equity at Nemours Childrens Health, which the hospitals CEO called a turning point in addressing the profound health disparities that have hurt our nations children for decades, particularly children of color or those living in poverty. Advertisement It is the foundations largest single gift ever. We know how to treat advanced cancer, and we know how to do complex surgery, but we dont know the answer to the basic questions about creating a healthy population, said Dr. Lawrence Moss, president and CEO of Nemours Childrens Health. Advertisement The interdisciplinary institute will focus on preventing health problems in children through addressing such societal issues as food insecurity and unstable housing, Moss said. It will research risk factors and test pilot programs in Central Florida with the hope of scaling those programs to its hospitals nationally. According to the 2019 Community Health Needs Assessment compiled by Central Floridas nonprofit hospitals, food insecurity and access to both physical and mental health care need more attention and investment. A separate 2019 assessment commissioned by Nemours also singled out childhood obesity and lack of access to prenatal care as problems for the region. This is not just some esoteric think-tank, Moss said. We have on-the-ground work to do in Central Florida. Moss said the institute was inspired by research from the University of Chicagos Heckman Equation Project. The Heckman Equation is a theory by Nobel Prize-winning economist James Heckman that government assistance and investment in early education, particularly for low-income children, saves money because it results in fewer medical costs, less crime and, eventually, adults who contribute more to the nations economy. Multiple other studies suggest early intervention improves childrens health and quality of life for decades. Moss hopes the institute can begin research within a year. Hes gathering a panel of national experts and wants Central Florida community leaders to share their opinions on which issues to prioritize, noting that diversity is a top priority. Historically, studies on childhood health have too often focused primarily on white children, Moss said. This is an open invitation to anybody at any organization who cares about the health of our kids in Central Florida to join with us, he said. All of the foundations grants prioritize the values of diversity, equity and inclusion, said Marc McMurrin, the charitys president and CEO. Advertisement The pandemic caused us all to evaluate life differently, he said, forcing us to take inventory on what was important as individuals, families and our community. The civil unrest [across the country] revealed painful divides of inequity and prejudice. Alan Ginsburg says he could relate, growing up facing antisemitism as the only Jewish student in his Michigan high school. Ginsburg moved to Central Florida in 1981, founding The CED Cos., specializing in building multifamily communities. He has long been a supporter of the Holocaust Memorial Resource and Education Center in Maitland, and his foundations $40 million total in grants includes $10 million for the centers planned 43,000-square-foot Holocaust Museum for Hope & Humanity near downtown Orlando. The Health Report Weekly A weekly update on health news in Florida. > The project, stalled because of the pandemic, is now expected to cost more than its initial $60 million estimate and open sometime in 2025. In 2020, leaders announced a partnership with USC Shoah Foundation, founded by moviemaker Steven Spielberg, that will bring 55,000 video interviews with Holocaust survivors to Orlando only the fifth place in the world to house the unprecedented digital collection in its entirety. The collection will allow visitors to ask questions directly of digital, three-dimension images of survivors and using artificial intelligence pull from archived video testimonies to allow the survivors to appear to answer. The Ginsburg Family sets an example that inspires each of us to actively participate in the creation of a just and caring community where bigotry and antisemitism have no home, said Ellen Wise Lang, daughter of Holocaust Center founder Tess Wise. Our vision is to create an enlightening experience for students, residents and the tens of millions of visitors from around the world who come to Central Florida each year. Advertisement At UCF, the foundations $5 million grant will create the Ginsburg Center for Inclusion and Community Engagement for students, faculty and the public. Among other things, the center will provide first-generation students a dedicated space to find scholarship information and career readiness resources. UCF also will expand its pre-collegiate programs in public schools to help more kids be prepared for college success. The center is expected to open July 1. ksantich@orlandosentinel.com, ccatherman@orlandosentinel.com Regulatory News: This press release features multimedia. View the full release here: https://www.businesswire.com/news/home/20220301006276/en/ Menus (in French). Credit Korian. After the broadcast of the Cash Investigation "EHPAD: l'heure des comptes" programme on Tuesday 1st March on France 2, Korian group (Paris:KORI), which operates more than 1,000 post-acute and elderly care facilities across Europe and some home care and assisted living networks, would like to clarify certain matters. The programme, which criticises Korian France's elderly care facilities on the basis of misleading and inaccurate allegations, relies mainly on statements made by two former employees, one of whom remains anonymous while the other managed a Korian facility until June 2016 and is now involved in a dispute with the company. This person, who came from Orpea, had already been quoted by journalist Victor Castanet in the section of his book "Les Fossoyeurs" that concerned Korian, to which we contributed by providing detailed answers. None of the documents and statements referred to in the programme relate to circumstances that are recent, the most recent date from 2016 or 2017, i.e. more than five years ago. They in no way correspond to Korian group's current methods or organisation, which have undergone major changes since 2016. The programme also contains a hidden camera sequence, shot in September 2020 by a journalist who was hired to work in a facility and worked there as a carer for three days, having presented a CV claiming that she had 3-year experience (2016-2019) working as a caregiver for elderly people at home. At the time, the facility was suffering staff shortages because of the second wave of Covid-19, and was dealing with the sudden death of its manager a few weeks previously. Korian condemns the use of such methods, which are particularly deceitful and disingenuous in the circumstances. Our responses to the main criticisms made in the programme are as follows: Alleged recruitment of unqualified staff members. Ms Marie Maurice, a journalist for Cash Investigation, was hired as a carer on a fixed-term contract on 5th September 2020, as part of efforts to bolster the workforce in the context of Covid. Given the emergency situation faced by the facility in the context of the resurgence of the Covid-19 pandemic, teams did not check the accuracy of the references provided before hiring the person in question. The journalist then abandoned her position without warning. "Stand-in" carers. Like all players in this sector, in which the labour market is very stretched, our facilities can employ, on an exceptional basis, carers and medico-psychological support staff as stand-ins for state-qualified Nursing Assistants. The company has developed a dedicated education pathway for these staff members to gain recognition for their experience and enable them to obtain the state Nursing Assistant diploma. In 2021, 300 people followed this route to a diploma. The list of employees concerned is also disclosed to the supervisory authorities (regional healthcare authorities and regional councils). For several years, Korian group has been promoting work-study and professional qualification programmes to address the shortage of qualified professionals in occupations relating to care and personal services, and to help its staff members gain promotions. In 2021, 2,700 people out of the Group's 26,000 employees in France benefited from such programmes, and those seeking to gain recognition for their experience had a particularly high pass rate (78% on average including 68% for the Nursing Assistant diploma, more than double the national average of 30%). Staff replacement policy. Korian encourages facilities to plan ahead to cover scheduled absences across all its roles, both through the recruitment of more permanent staff to provide cover in certain roles (permanent support staff), and through the recruitment of people who regularly work in the facilities on fixed-term contracts. In practice, given pressure in local labour markets and particularly during the summer and Christmas periods, it is not always possible to cover absences fully, especially in the event of unscheduled absences. Facilities take the need for temporary staff into account when preparing their budgets. Procedures regarding medication. In accordance with applicable regulations, the Group's protocols state that medication can only be administered by nurses with the relevant state qualification. However, in exceptional circumstances, such nurses can delegate the act of administering medication to a qualified Nursing Assistant, however the administration remains under the responsibility of the qualified nurse, in line with Article R. 4311-4 of the French Public Health Code. A list of persons authorised to dispense medicines must be available and regularly updated. Nurses with the relevant state qualification must ensure that Nursing Assistants working under their responsibility have the knowledge, expertise and information required to carry out that task (particularly in the case of new employees and temporary staff). Any breach of these rules represents misconduct that may lead to disciplinary action. Our audit and internal control procedures are particularly strict in this respect. As regards the specific case of the facility featured in the programme, when its new manager arrived in September 2020 she identified issues in the administration of medicines, particularly relating to traceability. Remedial measures and disciplinary measures including the dismissal of one staff member for misconduct were taken. These measures were reported to the regional healthcare authority, showing the effectiveness of Korian's control systems and the total transparency that Korian applies in its reporting with the healthcare authorities. Use of public funding. Korian facilities receive public funding for their care and dependency care activities, in line with the regulations. That funding amounted to 532 million in 2020 in France, and it is allocated in full to care and dependency care expenditure: the Group makes no profit from these funds. Each year, the Group prepares accounts (ERRDs) for each facility, which are then submitted to the price-setting authorities (regional healthcare authorities and regional councils) for approval. These accounts show all expenditure incurred for care and dependency care purposes. As regards personnel costs, the amounts reported correspond to wages and social security contributions as shown by the facility's payroll. In addition, the ERRDs include, firstly sums paid with respect to employment tax, profit-sharing and training costs, and secondly fees paid to self-employed healthcare professionals working in the facility as substitutes. Expenditure in those two categories accounts for around 10% of the total personnel costs reported in the ERRDs. Under no circumstances are other sums added by management control that may artificially inflate that expenditure as the programme alleges. Catering and external purchases. Korian formally denies that rationing takes place in any form whatsoever. Since 2016, catering has been provided entirely in-house by the Group, with a chef and a dedicated team in each facility. Meals are cooked daily on-site from unprocessed ingredients, with the constant aim of offering high-quality, seasonal food that meets residents' requirements. Menus are reviewed regularly according to a four-week cycle. The allegations made in the Cash Investigation programme i.e. that croutons were removed from the recipe of an onion soup served on Grandparents' Day in February 2016 in order to save money do not in any way correspond to company policy. The document in question does not specifically relate to the Grandparents' Day menu; it made changes to menus over a three-week period, substituting or adjusting 23 recipes in total. As a result, Cash Investigation's presentation of the document in no way represents the full picture. To illustrate the point, the menus served on the same occasion in 2021 and 2022 are enclosed with this press release. Personal hygiene procedures for residents. Personal hygiene is ensured daily and more often if necessary, in the same way oral hygiene is generally ensured every morning and evening. This care is carried out in line with the standards and best practices of care established for our facilities. Operating margin targets assigned to facilities. The Group reiterates that Korian's operating margin (excluding rent) equalled 24.9% of revenue in France in 2020, which represents a net income of around 4% of revenue, and targets an average 26% operating margin (excluding rent). The operating margin figures for 2013-2016 mentioned by the manager in the programme do not correspond to the figures of the facility he was managing between 2013 and 2016, in fact the operational margin of the facility was stable over the four years. Since 2017, it has invested more than 500 million in modernising and developing its network of nursing homes. It is planning to invest another 600 million in the next four years. About Korian Korian, the leading European care services group for elderly and fragile people. www.korian.com Korian has been listed on Euronext Paris Section A since November 2006 and is included in the following indices: SBF 120, CAC Health Care, CAC Mid 60, CAC Mid Small and MSCI Global Small Cap Euronext ticker: KORI ISIN: FR0010386334 Reuters: KORI.PA Bloomberg: KORI.FP View source version on businesswire.com: https://www.businesswire.com/news/home/20220301006276/en/ Contacts: INVESTOR RELATIONS Sarah Mingham VP Investor Relations & Financing sarah.mingham@korian.com Tel: +33 (0)1 55 37 53 55 Carole Alexandre Deputy Head of Investor Relations carole.alexandre@korian.com Tel: +33 (0)7 64 65 22 44 MEDIA CONTACTS Cyrille Lachevre Tel: +33 (0)6 20 42 12 08 Clachevre@cylans.ovh Pascal Jentsch VP International Communications Tel: +33 (0)7 65 18 58 55 Pascal.jentsch-ext@korian.com Marjorie Castoriadis Head of Media Relations Tel: +33 (0)7 63 59 88 81 Marjorie.castoriadis@korian.fr Vancouver, British Columbia--(Newsfile Corp. - March 1, 2022) - Dynasty Gold Corp. (TSXV: DYG) (FSE: D5G1) (OTC Pink: DGDCF) ("Dynasty" or the "Company") is pleased to announce that it plans to complete a non-brokered private placement of up to 2,950,000 units for a gross proceeds of $500,000. Each unit consists of one common share at $0.17 and one common share purchase warrant at $0.25 for a period of two years. The financing is subject to TSX Venture Exchange's approval. The Company shall have the right to call the outstanding Warrants for expiry upon a 30 days notice in the event that the closing price of the common shares of the Company on the TSX-V is above $0.35 for 7 consecutive trading days. The units issued under the private placement are subject to a four-month hold period from the date of closing. Finder's fees are payable to qualified finders. The proceeds of the private placement will be used for Thundercloud exploration and general working capital. About Dynasty Gold Corp. Dynasty Gold Corp. is a Canadian exploration company currently focused on gold exploration in North America with projects located in a greenstone belt in Ontario and in the Midas gold camp in Nevada. The Company is currently advancing its Thundercloud gold deposit which contains 182,000 oz gold. The 43-101 Mineral Resource report and related press release with details on the resource are available on the Company's website and were filed on www.sedar.com. The 100% owned Golden Repeat gold project in the Midas gold camp in Elko County, Nevada, is surrounded by a number of large-scale operating mines. In addition, Dynasty owns a 70% interest in the Hatu Qi2 gold mine in the Tien Shan Gold belt, Xinjiang, China, with which it is in legal dispute with Xinjiang Non-Ferrous Industrial Metals Group and its subsidiary Western Region Gold Co. Ltd. For more information, please visit the Company's website www.dynastygoldcorp.com. ON BEHALF OF THE BOARD OF DYNASTY GOLD CORP. "Ivy Chong" _________________________________ Ivy Chong, President & CEO For additional information please contact: Vancouver Office: Ivy Chong Phone: 604.633.2100. Email: ichong@dynastygoldcorp.com Jemini Capital: Jerry Huang Email: jerry@jeminicapital.com This press release contains certain "forward-looking statements" that involve a number of risks and uncertainties. There can be no assurance that such statements will prove to be accurate and actual results and future events could differ materially from those anticipated in such statements. The TSX Venture Exchange has not reviewed and does not accept responsibility for the adequacy or accuracy of this release. To view the source version of this press release, please visit https://www.newsfilecorp.com/release/115324 Calgary, Alberta--(Newsfile Corp. - March 1, 2022) - Bengal Energy Ltd. (TSX: BNG) ("Bengal" or the "Company") is pleased to announce that it has entered into definitive agreements with respect to a non-brokered private placement of approximately 52.3 million common shares of the Company (the "Common Shares") at a price of $0.08 per Common Share for aggregate gross proceeds of approximately $4.2 million (the "Private Placement"). All amounts are in Canadian dollars. The Private Placement is expected to close on or about March 3, 2022 (the "Closing"). Closing of the Private Placement is subject to customary closing conditions, including, but not limited to, receipt of all necessary approvals, including approval by the TSX. All securities issued pursuant to the Private Placement will be subject to a 4 month and a day hold period under securities laws, in addition to any other hold period or restrictions required by applicable securities laws. Texada Capital Management Ltd. ("Texada"), a company owned and controlled by Mr. Bill Wheeler, a director of the Company, and his spouse, is a subscriber under the Private Placement and has agreed to purchase 41,067,871 Common Shares. It is anticipated that, following Closing, Mr. Bill Wheeler (together with Texada and his spouse) would own, directly or indirectly, 398,679,360 Common Shares, being 82.2% of the issued and outstanding Common Shares. The net proceeds from the Private Placement, along with Bengal's internally generated cashflow, are expected to be used to fund Bengal's 100% owned and operated development program over 2 distinct blocks in Australia's onshore Cooper/Eromanga Basin, which is scheduled to commence later in March 2022. This exploration and development program is expected to include: up to $2.8 million for the re-start of shut-in producer wells and re-commissioning of pipeline infrastructure at the Company's 100% Wareena block; and up to $2.2 million to stimulate the Caracal-1 well and to establish storage and load-out infrastructure at the Company's 100% owned and operated ATP Tookoonooka block. About Bengal Bengal Energy Ltd. is an international junior oil and gas exploration and production company with assets in Australia. The Company is committed to growing shareholder value through international exploration, production and acquisitions. Bengal's common shares trade on the TSX under the symbol "BNG". Additional information is available at www.bengalenergy.ca. CAUTIONARY STATEMENTS: Forward-Looking Statements This news release contains certain forward-looking statements or information ("forward-looking statements") as defined by applicable securities laws that involve substantial known and unknown risks and uncertainties, many of which are beyond Bengal's control. These statements relate to future events or our future performance. All statements other than statements of historical fact may be forward-looking statements. The use of any of the words "plan", "expect", "future", "project", "intend", "believe", "should", "would," "anticipate", "estimate", "new", "develop" or other similar words or statements that certain events "may" or "will" occur are intended to identify forward-looking statements. The projections, estimates and beliefs contained in such forward-looking statements are based on management's estimates, opinions, and assumptions at the time the statements were made, including assumptions relating to: the satisfaction of the conditions to and completion of the Private Placement, including approval of the TSX, and the timing thereof; subscriber participation in the Private Placement; the anticipated use of proceeds of the Private Placement and expected benefits to the Company from the Private Placement; and the Company's development plans for its 100% owned and operated development program over 2 distinct blocks in Australia's onshore Cooper/Eromanga Basin, including the expected timing thereof and the anticipated resulting benefits to the Company. Bengal believes the expectations reflected in the forward-looking statements contained herein are reasonable but, no assurances can be given that any of the events anticipated by the forward-looking statements will transpire or occur, or if any of them do so, what benefits Bengal will derive from them. As such, undue reliance should not be placed on forward-looking statements. The forward-looking statements contained herein are subject to numerous known and unknown risks and uncertainties that may cause Bengal's actual performance or achievement in future periods to differ materially from those expressed in, or implied by, these forward-looking statements, including but not limited to, risks associated with: the Company's ability to obtain TSX approval of the Private Placement and complete the Private Placement; general economic, market or business conditions, particularly in North America and Australia; and the impact of the COVID-19 pandemic and the ability of the Company to carry on its operations as currently contemplated in light of the COVID-19 pandemic. Accordingly, actual and future events, conditions and results may differ materially from the estimates, beliefs, intentions and expectations expressed or implied in the forward-looking information. The Company cautions that the foregoing list of assumptions, risks and uncertainties is not exhaustive. Additional information on these and other factors that could affect the Company are included in reports on file with Canadian securities regulatory authorities and may be accessed through the SEDAR website (www.sedar.com). The forward-looking statements contained in this news release speak only as of the date hereof and Bengal does not assume any obligation to publicly update or revise them to reflect new events or circumstances, except as may be require pursuant to applicable securities laws. FOR FURTHER INFORMATION PLEASE CONTACT: Bengal Energy Ltd. Chayan Chakrabarty, President & Chief Executive Officer (403) 205-2526 Jerrad Blanchard, Chief Financial Officer (403) 781-7021 Email: investor.relations@bengalenergy.ca Website: www.bengalenergy.ca To view the source version of this press release, please visit https://www.newsfilecorp.com/release/115322 ZTE's Telecom Power solutions leverage Big Data and artificial intelligence (AI) to improve and optimize energy efficiency and operations and maintenance (O&M) efficiency, enhance power supply reliability and site security, cater to increased power demand, and lower costs. SHENZHEN, China, March 1, 2022 /PRNewswire/ -- Frost & Sullivan recently assessed the global telecom DC power industry and, based on its findings, recognizes ZTE Corporation (0763.HK / 000063.SZ), a major international provider of telecommunications, enterprise and consumer technology solutions for the mobile internet, with the 2022 Global Telecom DC Power Product Leadership Award. ZTE offers holistic telecom power products and solutions that provide a superior customer ownership experience throughout each product's lifecycle. ZTE creates highly efficient, modular, intelligent, and green telecom power solutions that address current customer pain points and evolving future 5G requirements. The Zero Carbon Energy Network, an advanced DC power system, addresses carbon emission challenges based on 5G networks and evolving hyper-scale data center architecture. The system transforms highly interconnected and intelligent energy infrastructure to offer a complete shift from traditional network energy solutions. ZTE's Zero Carbon Energy Network enables seamless energy management and scheduling, from power generation to power consumption of the entire energy power supply chain. The energy network improves and optimizes energy efficiency and O&M efficiency. The level of intelligence embedded in the energy network's components, such as lithium-ion batteries, solar, power distribution and transformation, and thermal control, set it apart from competing solutions. The network has the following three layers: The product technology layer drives low-carbon and zero-carbon initiatives. This first layer includes the following: Intelligent solar to optimize green energy generation Intelligent transformation to facilitate efficient power conversion Intelligent energy storage Intelligent power distribution to provide power on demand Intelligent thermal control to reduce power consumption The integrated solution layer creates new forms of network energy infrastructure while implementing low-carbon deployment and operation of the entire network. The management layer offers the continuous optimization of the unified network energy management platform through cloud energy management. According to Gautham Gnanajothi, Global Research Director at Frost & Sullivan, "ZTE relentlessly enhances customer value through continuous product development and technology innovation. Its strategy to place customers' requirements at the heart of its product and technology development underpins its focus on quality and reliability." ZTE's iEnergy solution, a unified cloud energy management platform, allows for tremendous improvements to network management efficiency and unprecedented site security. The solution offers complete visibility and a holistic view of the energy status of the entire network and performs detailed and multi-dimensional analysis of the network energy efficiency and O&M components, allowing operators to improve energy efficiency of the network, reliability of the power supply, and O&M efficiency. The company's one-cabinet and all-pad concept and UniPower solution improve energy efficiency (up to 75%) and deployment speed and lower construction and site acquisition costs while saving power, rental, and O&M costs for operators. In addition, the solution provides flexibility, simplification, rapid deployment, and efficiency to construct and transform 5G sites and equipment rooms, enhancing customer value multi-fold. "ZTE has established a unique brand image for itself in a highly competitive telecom power market with its brand name being synonymous with technology excellence, innovation, and customer focus. The company's innovative product development strategies and unique customer value enhancement initiatives are important pillars of its success," explained Gnanajothi. "The company's commitment to developing high-performance, low-cost products and solutions, as well as providing outstanding customer ownership experiences, elevate ZTE's position in the global market." Each year, Frost & Sullivan presents this award to the company that has developed a product with innovative features and functionality that is gaining rapid market acceptance. The award recognizes the quality of the solution and the customer value enhancements it enables. Frost & Sullivan Best Practices Awards recognize companies in various regional and global markets for demonstrating outstanding achievement and superior performance in leadership, technological innovation, customer service, and strategic product development. Industry analysts compare market participants and measure performance through in-depth interviews, analyses, and extensive secondary research to identify best practices in the industry. About Frost & Sullivan For six decades, Frost & Sullivan has been world-renowned for its role in helping investors, corporate leaders, and governments navigate economic changes and identify disruptive technologies, Mega Trends, new business models, and companies to action, resulting in a continuous flow of growth opportunities to drive future success. Contact us: Start the discussion. Contact: Kala Mani. S. ?P: +603-2023 2037 E: kala.manis@frost.com? About ZTE Corporation Global Leading Integrated Communication Information Solution Provider. ZTE Corporation is a global leader in telecommunications and information technology. Founded in 1985 and listed on both the Hong Kong and Shenzhen Stock Exchanges, the company has been committed to providing innovative technologies and integrated solutions for global operators, government and enterprise, and consumers from over 160 countries across the globe. Serving over 1/4 of the global population, the company is dedicated to enabling connectivity and trust everywhere for a better future. Media Contact: Margaret Ma ZTE Corporation P: +86 755 26775189 E: ma.gaili@zte.com.cn Photo - https://mma.prnewswire.com/media/1756864/ZTE_Frost_and_Sullivan.jpg Vancouver, British Columbia--(Newsfile Corp. - March 1, 2022) - Gunpoint Exploration Ltd. (TSXV: GUN) ("Gunpoint" or the "Company") is pleased to announce that it has completed its previously announced non-brokered private placement of 3,000,000 units (the "Units") at a price of $0.50 per Unit for aggregate gross proceeds of $1.5 million (the "Offering"). Each Unit consists of one common share of the Company (each, a "Common Share") and one-half of one common share purchase warrant (each whole common share purchase warrant, a "Warrant"). Each Warrant entitles the holder to purchase one additional Common Share at an exercise price of $0.75 until February 28, 2024. The securities issued pursuant to the Offering are subject to a four month plus one day hold period from the date of issuance, expiring on June 29, 2022, in accordance with Canadian securities laws. The Company plans to use the proceeds of the Offering for exploration on its Talapoosa gold project in Nevada and for general corporate purposes. The Company paid a finder's fee to an arm's length party of $12,250 in connection with the Offering in accordance with the policies of the TSX Venture Exchange. The Offering is considered a "related party transaction" pursuant to Multilateral Instrument 61-101 - Protection of Minority Security Holders in Special Transactions ("MI 61-101") because directors and officers of the Company acquired an aggregate of 2,120,000 Units pursuant to the Offering. The Company was exempt from the requirement to obtain a formal valuation or minority shareholder approval in connection with the participation in the Offering by such directors and officers in reliance of Sections 5.5(b) and 5.7(1)(a) of MI 61-101. A material change report will be filed in connection with the Offering less than 21 days in advance of the closing of the Offering, which the Company deems reasonable in the circumstances so as to be able to avail itself of potential financing opportunities and to complete the Offering in an expeditious manner. Mr. Randy Reifel, President, Chief Executive Officer and a director of the Company, acquired 1,090,000 Units pursuant to the Offering. Following completion of the Offering, Mr. Reifel holds, directly and indirectly, an aggregate of 5,098,501 Common Shares, representing approximately 10.2% of the issued and outstanding Common Shares on an undiluted basis. Mr. Reifel also holds, directly, an aggregate of 1,400,000 stock options and an aggregate of 545,000 Warrants, entitling him to acquire an equal number of Common Shares. Assuming the exercise of all of Mr. Reifel's stock options and Warrants, an aggregate of 7,043,501 Common Shares will be, directly or indirectly, owned by Mr. Reifel, representing approximately 13.6% of the current issued and outstanding Common Shares on a partially-diluted basis. Mr. Reifel acquired the Units for investment purposes. He will review his holdings from time to time and may increase or decrease his position as future circumstances may dictate. The early warning report of Mr. Reifel, as required under National Instrument 62-103, contains additional information with respect to the foregoing matters and will be filed under the Company's SEDAR profile at www.sedar.com. For further information, contact Mr. Reifel at the following address and phone number: Suite 201, 1512 Yew Street, Vancouver, BC V6K 3E4 (604) 617-1717. The securities to be issued under the Offering have not been and will not be registered under the U.S. Securities Act of 1933, as amended, and were not to be offered or sold in the United States absent registration or an applicable exemption from the registration requirements. This news release shall not constitute an offer to sell or the solicitation of an offer to buy nor shall there be any sale of the securities in the United States or in any other jurisdiction in which such offer, solicitation or sale would be unlawful. About Gunpoint Exploration Ltd. Gunpoint owns the Talapoosa project, an open pit heap leach gold deposit in Nevada. Gunpoint is listed on the TSX Venture Exchange where it trades under the symbol "GUN". For more information on Gunpoint, please visit our website at www.gunpointexploration.com or contact Randy Reifel at (604) 617-1717. GUNPOINT EXPLORATION LTD. "P. Randy Reifel" P. Randy Reifel President 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 release. Cautionary Note Regarding Forward-Looking Statements: Certain statements contained in this news release constitute forward-looking information under applicable Canadian securities laws, including, without limitation, statements with respect to the use of proceeds from the Offering. These statements relate to future events or future performance. The use of any of the words "could", "intend", "expect", "believe", "will", "projected", "estimated" and similar expressions and statements relating to matters that are not historical facts are intended to identify forward-looking information and are based on the Company's current belief or assumptions as to the outcome and timing of such future events. There can be no assurance that such statements will prove to be accurate, as the Company's actual results and future events could differ materially from those anticipated in these forward-looking statements as a result of the factors set forth in the section entitled "Risk and Uncertainties" in the Company's management's discussion and analysis for the nine months ended September 30, 2021, available under the Company's profile at www.sedar.com. Actual future results may differ materially. Various assumptions or factors are typically applied in drawing conclusions or making the forecasts or projections set out in forward-looking information. Those assumptions and factors are based on information currently available to the Company. The forward-looking information contained in this news release is made as of the date hereof and the Company undertakes no obligation to update or revise any forward-looking information, whether as a result of new information, future events or otherwise, except as required by applicable securities laws. Because of the risks, uncertainties and assumptions contained herein, investors should not place undue reliance on forward-looking information. The foregoing statements expressly qualify any forward-looking information contained herein. NOT FOR DISSEMINATION IN THE UNITED STATES OR FOR DISTRIBUTION TO U.S. NEWSWIRE SERVICES To view the source version of this press release, please visit https://www.newsfilecorp.com/release/115333 RIYADH, Saudi Arabia, March 2, 2022 /PRNewswire/ -- Jazeera Paints, the leading Saudi company in the field of paints, colors, and construction solutions, participated in the Real Estate Future Forum, which was held recently over two days at the Four Seasons Hotel, in the Kingdom Center in Riyadh, from Feb 23-24, 2022, and sponsored the forum as the 'Construction Solutions Partner'. This partnership stems from the company's interest in raising the quality of life in real estate development, whether in raising the rate of safety and security, health, and beauty on buildings. The company presented a summary of what has been reached by its team of researchers and experts in this field. It has provided innovative structural solutions to real estate developers, such as zero-emission paints, fire-retardant paints, innovative thermal and water-based insulators, and other products to address cracks and holes in the wall. In this regard, Mr. Abdullah Al-Rumaih, CEO of Jazeera Paints, commented: "There is still a room for improvement, raising the quality of real estate development in Saudi Arabia. This forum came at the perfect time to be a comprehensive forum, linking between all concerned parties in the field of real estate development, to improve this industry to levels that are compatible with, and may even exceed, international standards, to satisfy the quality of life that people in Saudi are looking for." The forum touched on several important topics in the field of real estate development, including the impact of regulatory and legislative trends on the real estate sector, future cities and urban development, smart cities, and sustainability, raising the level of quality and safety in construction technology, and quality of life in real estate development. It is noteworthy that the Real Estate Future Forum provided an opportunity to discuss the present and future of the real estate sector in the Kingdom, its legislation and regulations, and their impact on this sector, which ranks among the forefront of economic sectors and is highly relied upon in the future. The forum is a rare opportunity to see the results of in-depth studies of the real estate sector. Speakers from inside and outside the Kingdom discussed a set of topics about laws and legislation, their ability to manage risks professionally, and the expected and unexpected challenges. Follow us on https://twitter.com/JPaintsGlobal Photo: https://mma.prnewswire.com/media/1757713/Jazeera_Paints.jpg 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. Zaandam, the Netherlands, March 2, 2022 - Ahold Delhaize today publishes its 2021 Annual Report, an integrated report that provides an overview of the Company's financial and ESG performance in 2021. The Annual Report will be on the agenda of the Annual General Meeting of Shareholdersin November. This growth and investment plan includes a step up in investments in digital, automation and state-of-the-art infrastructure to drive innovation and support Ahold Delhaize's accelerated growth plans to 2025. The 2021 Annual Report is available here. - Ends - Cautionary notice This communication includes forward-looking statements. All statements other than statements of historical facts may be forward-looking statements. Words and expressions such as 2022, will, have, need, commitment, strategy, target, 2040, belief, ambition, by, 2025, long-term, plan(s), growth or other similar words or expressions are typically used to identify forward-looking statements. Forward-looking statements are subject to risks, uncertainties and other factors that are difficult to predict and that may cause actual results of Koninklijke Ahold Delhaize N.V. (the "Company") to differ materially from future results expressed or implied by such forward-looking statements. Such factors include, but are not limited to, the risk factors set forth in the Company's public filings and other disclosures. Forward-looking statements reflect the current views of the Company's management and assumptions based on information currently available to the Company's management. Forward-looking statements speak only as of the date they are made and the Company does not assume any obligation to update such statements, except as required by law. For more information: Press office: +31 88 6595134 / media.relations@aholddelhaize.com Investor relations: +31 88 659 5213 Social media: Instagram: @Ahold-Delhaize | LinkedIn: @Ahold-Delhaize | Twitter: @AholdDelhaize About Ahold Delhaize Ahold Delhaize is one of the world's largest food retail groups and a leader in both supermarkets and e-commerce. Its family of great local brands serves 55 million customers each week, both in stores and online, in the United States, Europe, and Indonesia. Together, these brands employ more than 413,000 associates in 7,452 grocery and specialty stores and include the top online retailer in the Benelux and the leading online grocers in the Benelux and the United States. Ahold Delhaize brands are at the forefront of sustainable retailing, sourcing responsibly, supporting local communities and helping customers make healthier choices. The company's focus on four growth drivers - drive omnichannel growth, elevate healthy and sustainable, cultivate best talent and strengthen operational excellence - is helping to fulfil its purpose, achieve its vision and prepare its brands and businesses for tomorrow. Headquartered in Zaandam, the Netherlands, Ahold Delhaize is listed on the Euronext Amsterdam and Brussels stock exchanges. Attachment SINGAPORE / ACCESSWIRE / March 2, 2022 / Jadestone Energy plc (the "Company"), an independent oil and gas production company focused on the Asia-Pacific region, is pleased to announce that full production has resumed at the Montara Project ("Montara") offshore Australia. As previously announced, Montara production has in recent weeks been running at reduced rates following an engine failure in the gas reinjection compressor. The engine has been replaced and gas lift reinstated, allowing for full production to be restored at rates seen immediately prior to the gas compressor fault. Paul Blakeley, President and CEO commented: "A key element of our strategy to increase efficiency and uptime at Montara is availability of key spares. Having a spare gas re-injection compressor engine core on hand allowed us to effect timely repairs, thereby limiting the period of reduced production. Our offshore team has worked diligently and safely to carry out this significant maintenance activity, with full production now restored as oil prices strengthen above US$100/bbl. For further information, please contact: Jadestone Energy plc Paul Blakeley, President and CEO +65 6324 0359 (Singapore) Phil Corbett, Investor Relations Manager +44 7713 687467 (UK) ir@jadestone-energy.com Stifel Nicolaus Europe Limited (Nomad, Joint Broker) +44 (0) 20 7710 7600 (UK) Callum Stewart Jason Grossman Ashton Clanfield Jefferies International Limited (Joint Broker) +44 (0) 20 7029 8000 (UK) Tony White Will Soutar Camarco (Public Relations Advisor) +44 (0) 203 757 4980 (UK) Billy Clegg jse@camarco.co.uk James Crothers About Jadestone Energy Jadestone Energy plc is an independent oil and gas company focused on the Asia-Pacific region. It has a balanced, low risk, full cycle portfolio of development, production and exploration assets in Australia, Malaysia, Indonesia, Vietnam and the Philippines. The Company has a 100% operated working interest in the Stag oilfield and in the Montara project, both offshore Australia. Both the Stag and Montara assets include oil producing fields, with further development and exploration potential. The Company also has interests in four oil producing licences offshore Peninsula Malaysia; two operated and two non-operated positions. Further, the Company has a 100% operated working interest in two gas development blocks in Southwest Vietnam, and an operated 100% interest (assuming completion of the Hexindo stake acquisition, as announced in November 2021) in the Lemang PSC, onshore Sumatra, Indonesia, which includes the Akatara gas field. In addition, the Company has executed a sale and purchase agreement to acquire a 69% operated working interest in the Maari Project, shallow water offshore New Zealand, and is working with the seller to obtain final New Zealand government approvals. Led by an experienced management team with a track record of delivery, who were core to the successful growth of Talisman's business in Asia, the Company is pursuing an acquisition strategy focused on growth and creating value through identifying, acquiring, developing and operating assets in the Asia-Pacific region. Jadestone Energy plc is listed on the AIM market of the London Stock Exchange. The Company is headquartered in Singapore. For further information on the Company please visit www.jadestone-energy.com. Cautionary Statements This announcement may contain certain forward-looking statements with respect to the Company's expectations and plans, strategy, management's objectives, future performance, production, reserves, costs, revenues and other trend information. These statements are made by the Company in good faith based on the information available at the time of this announcement, but such statements should be treated with caution due to inherent risks and uncertainties. These statements and forecasts involve risk and uncertainty because they relate to events and depend upon circumstances that may occur in the future. There are a number of factors which could cause actual results or developments to differ materially from those expressed or implied by these forward-looking statements and forecasts. The statements have been made with reference to forecast price changes, economic conditions and the current regulatory environment. Nothing in this announcement should be construed as a profit forecast. Past share performance cannot be relied upon as a guide to future performance. The Company does not assume any obligation to publicly update the information, except as may be required pursuant to applicable laws. This announcement does not contain inside information. This information is provided by RNS, the news service of the London Stock Exchange. RNS is approved by the Financial Conduct Authority to act as a Primary Information Provider in the United Kingdom. Terms and conditions relating to the use and distribution of this information may apply. For further information, please contact rns@lseg.com or visit www.rns.com. SOURCE: Jadestone Energy PLC View source version on accesswire.com:https://www.accesswire.com/691072/Jadestone-Energy-PLC-Announces-Montara-Production-Successfully-Restored Former Orange-Osceola State Attorney Aramis Ayala will run to become the states next attorney general, she announced Wednesday. In a statement launching her campaign, Ayala cited the need to fight back against recent legislation supported by the states Republican leaders, including current Attorney General Ashley Moody and Gov. Ron DeSantis, that have threatened to restrict abortion access, voting and the rights of LGBTQ people. Advertisement Weve seen the Governor and Attorney Generals dangerous attacks on voting and civil rights, reproductive health, the LGBTQ+ community, immigrants, communities of color, our most vulnerable neighbors, and the environment, Ayala said. Ayala, a Democrat, previously explored running for U.S. Senate and in May announced her intention to enter the crowded race to replace U.S. Rep. Val Demings, who is challenging Sen. Marco Rubio. Advertisement Aramis Ayala (Courtesy photo) We must level the playing field, and that starts with an Attorney General who has the courage and vision to fight back, stand up to the mega corporations, insurance and gun lobbies corrupting the process on the backs of Floridians, protect our democracy, and defend the peoples interests so that justice and opportunity for all becomes our reality thats why Im running for Attorney General, Ayala said Wednesday. Ayala was elected Floridas first Black state attorney in 2016, upsetting the incumbent, fellow Democrat Jeff Ashton, in a closed primary. Soon after taking office, she announced she would no longer seek the death penalty in any cases. That sparked a legal battle when then-Gov. Rick Scott stripped her of all capital cases and cut her offices budget. Ayala fought all the way to the Florida Supreme Court, which ultimately sided with Scott. She cited her opposition to the death penalty in deciding not to seek a second term, later endorsing her eventual successor, current State Attorney Monique Worrell. Ayala also instituted cash bail reform in her judicial district, telling her prosecutors not to ask judges to impose bail on people charged with nonviolent crimes in most cases; created a new diversion policy under which her office no longer pursued low-level drug offenses; and created a Brady list to track law enforcement officers with questionable credibility as witnesses. dstennett@orlandosentinel.com Regulatory News: Getlink (Paris:GET): The Board of Directors, meeting on 23 February 2022 under the chairmanship of Jacques Gounon, resolved to convene the ordinary and extraordinary General Meeting of Getlink's shareholders on 27 April 20221 The Board of Directors agreed the financial resolutions to be proposed to the shareholders at the General Meeting as well as those relating to the unchanged remuneration of the Chief Executive Officer, the Chairman and the Directors. It is proposed that shareholders vote on a dividend of 0.10 per share. In view of the rules on the independence of directors set out in the Afep-Medef Code applicable to Getlink, the Board of Directors has decided not to propose the renewal of the terms of office of Patricia Hewitt nor Jean-Pierre Trotignon (twelve years' tenure). The Board of Directors warmly thanks Patricia Hewitt and Jean-Pierre Trotignon for the quality of their involvement in the work of the Board of Directors and its committees. The Board of Directors has decided to propose to the shareholders' General Meeting the renewal of the terms of office as Directors of Corinne Bach, Elisabetta De Bernardi di Valserra, Carlo Bertazzo, Bertrand Badre and Jacques Gounon, whose terms of office expire at the end of the General Meeting, for a period of four years, as well as the renewal of Perrette Rey's term of office for a period of one year. Subject to the renewal of his term of office as Director by the General Meeting, the Board of Directors will decide on the renewal of Jacques Gounon's term of office as Chairman of the Board of Directors. In addition, in order to maintain strong credentials in geostrategic issues and British public affairs, the Board has decided to propose to the General Meeting the appointment of Lord Ricketts, a former UK Ambassador to France and a member of the UK House of Lords, as a member of the Getlink Board of Directors for a period of four years. As an extension of its commitment to energy transition, the Board has decided to propose to the General Meeting the appointment of Brune Poirson as a member of the Getlink Board of Directors for a period of four years. Brune Poirson, a French former minister who has always been committed to sustainable development, will bring to the Board of Directors her expertise, particularly in environmental matters. She will contribute to expanding the Board's work on the Group's sustainable development strategy and related action plans. In the same vein, the Board of Directors has decided to propose a resolution to shareholders for a Say on Climate advisory vote on Getlink's ambition and targets for the transition to carbon neutrality. Subject to public health conditions at the relevant time, the combined General Meeting will be held in person on 27 April 2022 at 10:00 a.m. (CET) in Marcq-en-Barul (Lille, France). BRUNE POIRSON Born in 1982 in Washington D.C., of French and American nationality, and a graduate of the London School of Economics, the IEP at Aix and the Kennedy School at Harvard, Brune Poirson began her career in London, within the Foundation for Innovation of Great Britain, then joined the French Development Agency as a development coordinator in New Delhi, on a project for the distribution of drinking water in shanty towns. After some time as the director of sustainable development and social responsibility for one of Veolia's subsidiaries in Delhi, she joined a green start-up incubator in Boston. Brune Poirson was for three years French Secretary of State for Ecological Transition and the first French woman to be elected Vice-President of the United Nations Environment Assembly. Brune Poirson is Chief Sustainable Development Officer and a member of the executive committee of the French hotel group Accor. LORD RICKETTS Born in 1952, a British national and with an MA degree from Pembroke College Oxford and honorary doctorates from the University of Kent (DCL) and the University of Bath (DLL), Peter Ricketts, Baron Ricketts of Shortlands began his career at the UK Foreign and Commonwealth Office (FCO) in 1974. He was posted to the UK delegation to NATO in Brussels before becoming assistant private secretary at the FCO to the then Foreign Secretary Sir Geoffrey Howe in 1983, then First Secretary at the Embassy in Washington (USA) in 1985, Head of Division in Hong Kong in 1990, advisor for European and Economic Affairs in the French Embassy in 1995 and deputy political director in 1997. In 2000, he was appointed chairman of the Joint Intelligence Committee, then in 2001 political director of the FCO. From 2003 to 2006, he was the UK Permanent Representative to NATO. In 2006, he became Permanent Under Secretary of the FCO, and in 2010, National Security Adviser to the UK government. From 2012 to January 2016, he was the UK's ambassador to France and Monaco. A member of the UK House of Lords, chairman of the Normandy Memorial Trust (Voluntary Association) (UK), Vice Chairman of the Royal United Services Institute, London, Peter Ricketts is a member of the Board of Directors and a member of the nomination, remuneration and governance committee of ENGIE. 1 The notice of meeting will be published in the BALO (the French legal gazette) on 2 March 2022 and will be available on the Company's website. View source version on businesswire.com: https://www.businesswire.com/news/home/20220301006039/en/ Contacts: For UK media enquiriescontact John Keefe on 44 (0) 1303 284491 Email: press@getlinkgroup.com For other media enquiries contact Romain Dufour on +33(0)1 4098 0464 For investor enquiries contact Jean-Baptiste Roussille on +33 (0)1 40 98 04 81 Emailjean-baptiste.roussille@getlinkgroup.com Michael Schuller on +44 (0) 1303 288749 Email:Michael.schuller@getlinkgroup.com AL-KHOBAR, Saudi Arabia, March 2, 2022 /PRNewswire/ -- Over the last quarter-century, the meteoric rise of the internet and portable electronic devices has swiftly transformed education. Over just the last two years, however, the pace of transformation has accelerated further and even more profoundly as the world has dealt with the COVID-19 pandemic. Amidst such upheaval in the education industry, Prince Mohammad Bin Fahd University (PMU) has agilely adapted and innovated to ensure that its student body of more than 18,000 enrollees has retained access to the best available resources and is equipped for the altered workplace of the present and future. "The last couple of years have presented major obstacles to the enterprise of higher education as it has existed in our modern technological era," said Dr. Issa Al Ansari, President of PMU. "Yet by embracing the power of educational technology and skillfully adapting our pedagogy, we are continuing to meet our goal at PMU as a service provider of higher education by aligning with the latest practices and advancements." This new era where administrators, faculty, and students engage some, most, or even all of the time in the enterprise of higher learning offsite through digital tools has required institutions to revamp their operations. In this regard, the Information Technology (IT) Department at PMU has worked alongside the university's faculty and staff, as well as with the students themselves, in managing to effectively stay the academic course during the COVID-19 crisis. Among the many initiatives the IT Department pursued, its technicians proactively installed and upgraded the university information technology infrastructure in order to meet the needs of a suddenly large and long-term remote user community. Other efforts involved rolling out digital tools such as Blackboard Ultra, an online teaching application, and Microsoft Teams, a web-conferencing program, and assisting educators and students in how to use them. PMU's technicians also made virtual private networks (VPNs) available to remote users to grant them access to vital on-campus licensed software. By embracing digitally enhanced educational instruction and interactions, the PMU faculty have likewise adapted their teaching methods for all-remote and, when pandemic conditions have allowed, hybrid environments involving a mix of in-person and offsite learning. "The pandemic has changed the world, and we at PMU have changed in response both pedagogically and technologically," said Dr. Al Ansari. "We are doing our part to help usher in a bright future for our global society." Video - https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=wzKDKPJ39IA Photo - https://mma.prnewswire.com/media/1757336/Prince_Mohammad_Bin_Fahd_University.jpg Logo - https://mma.prnewswire.com/media/1393618/PMU_Logo.jpg Contact: Ankit S Bhosale (+966 13) 849 9346 abhosale@pmu.edu.sa DGAP-News: First Hydrogen Corp. / Key word(s): Personnel FIRST HYDROGEN APPOINTS WILLIAMS AS NON-EXECUTIVE DIRECTOR 02.03.2022 / 00:15 The issuer is solely responsible for the content of this announcement. For Immediate Release TSXV/FHYD/OTC/FHYDF/FSE/FIT FIRST HYDROGEN APPOINTS WILLIAMS AS NON-EXECUTIVE DIRECTOR Vancouver, B.C., March 2, 2022 - Vancouver, British Columbia - First Hydrogen Corp. ("FIRST HYDROGEN" or the "Company") (TSXV: FHYD) (OTC: FHYDF) (FSE: FIT) is pleased to announce it has appointed Dr. Peter Williams as a Non-Executive Director of First Hydrogen UK. His appointment will help grow First Hydrogen's UK subsidiary, which is focused with delivering the first hydrogen-fuelled and zero-emissions utility vehicles, green hydrogen production and distribution. Peter is currently Group Technology Director and Head of Investor Relations at global chemical company INEOS. Prior to INEOS, Peter worked at British Petroleum (BP) for more than two decades holding senior positions in business, technology and strategy. He also serves as Non-Executive Director for V-Carbon, a company that is creating a circular economy for carbon fibre and delivers engineered and sustainable carbon fibre solutions for the automotive, aviation and aerospace industries. He also sits on the Engineering & Physical Sciences Research Council in the UK. Peter will bring to First Hydrogen his considerable experience of technology built up over 40 years with BP and INEOS. Nicholas Wrigley, Chairman of First Hydrogen comments: "We're delighted to welcome Peter on board and know he will be a fantastic asset to our team. As a trained chemist and material scientist he brings great insight on improving the use of hydrogen and sustainable materials, particularly in the automotive sector. His expertise will prove particularly invaluable as we develop the first hydrogen-fuelled commercial fleet vehicles and refuelling solutions. The First Hydrogen team is also assessing the viability of green hydrogen production in the UK and elsewhere to be able to provide its mobility customers with a full service, to include the fuel." Peter Williams, Non-Executive Director of First Hydrogen UK, says: "I'm delighted to join such a forward-looking company as it develops the potential of hydrogen for transportation. Successfully switching to zero-emissions fuels will help us to dramatically cut carbon and is an important component of the drive to a climate neutral economy." About First Hydrogen Corp. First Hydrogen Corp. is a Vancouver and London UK-based company focused on zero-emission vehicles and supercritical carbon dioxide extractor systems. The company is designing and developing a hydrogen-fuel-cell-powered light commercial demonstrator vehicle under two agreements with AVL Powertrain and Ballard Power Systems Inc. The LCV will have a range of 500+ kilometres. First Hydrogen is developing refueling capability working with FEV Consulting GmbH, the internal automotive consultancy of FEV Group of Aachen Germany. On behalf of the Board of Directors of FIRST HYDROGEN CORP. "Balraj Mann" Chairman & Chief Executive Officer Contacts: Balraj Mann First Hydrogen Corp. 604-601-2018 investors@firsthydrogen.com Cautionary Note Regarding Forward-Looking Statements This news release contains information or statements that constitute "forward-looking statements." Such forward looking statements involve known and unknown risks, uncertainties and other factors that may cause actual results, performance or achievements, or developments to differ materially from the anticipated results, performance or achievements expressed or implied by such forward-looking statements. Forward-looking statements are statements that are not historical facts and are generally, but not always, identified by words such as "expects," "plans," "anticipates," "believes," "intends," "estimates," "projects," "potential" and similar expressions, or that events or conditions "will," "would," "may," "could" or "should" occur. Forward looking information may include, without limitation, statements regarding the operations, business, financial condition, expected financial results, performance, prospects, opportunities, priorities, targets, goals, ongoing objectives, milestones, strategies and outlook of First Hydrogen, and includes statements about, among other things, future developments and the future operations, strengths and strategies of First Hydrogen. Forward-looking information is provided for the purpose of presenting information about management's current expectations and plans relating to the future and readers are cautioned that such statements may not be appropriate for other purposes. These statements should not be read as guarantees of future performance or results. The forward-looking statements made in this news release are based on management's assumptions and analysis and other factors that may be drawn upon by management to form conclusions and make forecasts or projections, including management's experience and assessments of historical trends, current conditions and expected future developments. Although management believes that these assumptions, analyses and assessments are reasonable at the time the statements contained in this news release are made, actual results may differ materially from those projected in any forward-looking statements. Examples of risks and factors that could cause actual results to materially differ from forward-looking statements may include: the timing and unpredictability of regulatory actions; regulatory, legislative, legal or other developments with respect to its operations or business; limited marketing and sales capabilities; early stage of the industry and product development; limited products; reliance on third parties; unfavourable publicity or consumer perception; general economic conditions and financial markets; the impact of increasing competition; the loss of key management personnel; capital requirements and liquidity; access to capital; the timing and amount of capital expenditures; the impact of COVID-19; shifts in the demand for First Hydrogen's products and the size of the market; patent law reform; patent litigation and intellectual property; conflicts of interest; and general market and economic conditions. The forward-looking information contained in this news release represents the expectations of First Hydrogen as of the date of this news release and, accordingly, is subject to change after such date. Readers should not place undue importance on forward-looking information and should not rely upon this information as of any other date. First Hydrogen undertakes no obligation to update these forward-looking statements in the event that management's beliefs, estimates or opinions, or other factors, should change. NEITHER TSX VENTURE EXCHANGE NOR ITS REGULATION SERVICE PROVIDER (AS THAT TERM IS DEFINED IN THE POLICIES OF THE TSX VENTURE EXCHANGE) ACCEPTS RESPONSIBILITY FOR THE ADEQUACY OR ACCURACY OF THIS RELEASE 02.03.2022 Dissemination of a Corporate News, transmitted by DGAP - a service of EQS Group AG. The issuer is solely responsible for the content of this announcement. The DGAP Distribution Services include Regulatory Announcements, Financial/Corporate News and Press Releases. Archive at www.dgap.de Original-Research: Eloro Resources Ltd. - von Sphene Capital GmbH Einstufung von Sphene Capital GmbH zu Eloro Resources Ltd. Unternehmen: Eloro Resources Ltd. ISIN: CA2899003008 Anlass der Studie: Update Report Empfehlung: Buy seit: 02.03.2022 Kursziel: CAD 15,30 (vorher CAD 15,80) Kursziel auf Sicht von: 24 Monate Letzte Ratinganderung: - Analyst: Peter Thilo Hasler Highest-grade intersection obtained so far Eloro Resources released highly encouraging results from several additional diamond drill holes at its flagship Iska Iska silver-tin polymetallic complex in the Bolivian Potosi Department, where drilling has identified a large mineralized caldera system. In our view, Eloro Resources made good progress with defining the mineralization at Iska Iska, which appears to be on the verge of outlining a significant NI 43-101 compliant mineral resource. We believe continued positive exploration results from the company's drill programs at its Iska Iska target should help lift the stock again and are reiterating our Buy rating for Eloro Resources and our fully diluted price target of CAD 15.30 per share, derived from an in-situ valuation of Iska Iska's Santa Barbara Breccia Pipe adjusted by the increase in the number of shares outstanding. The recent drill program tested targets from the Santa Barbara adit and the NW extension in the Santa Barbara Mineral Resource Target Area. Highlights from the batch of assays include higher-grade sections of (1) 507.64g Ag eq/t (119.36g Ag/t, 0.14g Au/t, 0.57% Pb and 0.52% Sn) over 49.55m and (2) 401.81g Ag eq/t (31.46 g Ag/t, 0.19 % Pb and 0.61 % Sn) over 28.58m. We note that the reported metal factors are the highest reported to date from the diamond drill program at Iska Iska. With a potential strike length of 4km and a thickness of 2km, expanding to a depth 1km (see also exhibit 2), Iska Iska could be one of the largest silver-tin discoveries in Bolivia in recent history, according to our view. With more than 4,600m completed since the restart last month, for an overall total of 45,779m in 81 drill holes, drilling productivity continues to be high. Eloro resources furthermore announced that underground drilling will be completed soon and exchanged for a high capacity surface rig which will further increase production. Given that approximately 1,500 samples await drill core analysis at laboratories in Lima and Galway, we expect more regular news flow going forward, since both Covid impacted laboratories seem to return to normal productivity. We expect continued positive news flow from Eloro Resources mainly from (1) an additional 11 holes totalling 7,859m that have been completed where assay results are still pending, (2) additional underground drilling at the Santa Barbara deposit to test the major magnetic anomaly to the southwest, (3) a series of surface holes testing the southern Santa Barbara target area by using a third surface diamond drill, and (4) the testing of a major magnetic anomaly in the Porco area. Die vollstandige Analyse konnen Sie hier downloaden: http://www.more-ir.de/d/23493.pdf Kontakt fur Ruckfragen Peter Thilo Hasler, CEFA +49 (89) 74443558/ +49 (152) 31764553 peter-thilo.hasler@sphene-capital.de ubermittelt durch die EQS Group AG. Fur den Inhalt der Mitteilung bzw. Research ist alleine der Herausgeber bzw. Ersteller der Studie verantwortlich. Diese Meldung ist keine Anlageberatung oder Aufforderung zum Abschluss bestimmter Borsengeschafte. HAIKOU, China, March 2, 2022 /PRNewswire/ -- Authorities in South China'sHainan Province on Tuesday revealed the mascots for the 2022 China International Consumer Products Expo, styled after the Hainan gibbon. Hainan gibbons are the most endangered of all gibbons and the world's rarest primate. They are endemic to the southern Chinese island of Hainan. The mascots reflect the green consumption approach of the expo, according to Ruslan Tulenov, a global media officer at the Hainan Provincial Bureau of International Economic Development. The mascots embody the three dominant and distinctive industries of Hainan, namely the seed industry, deep-sea industry and aerospace industry. Designers have endowed the mascots with diverse personalities, expecting that global enterprises and consumers can share opportunities and create a better life together through the expo, Tulenov said. Themed "Share open opportunities, co-create a better life," the event is scheduled to run from April 12 to 16 in Haikou, the capital of Hainan. France will be the guest-of-honor country this year. The exhibition area will span over 100,000 square meters, 80 percent of which will be set up for overseas exhibitors featuring fashion, jewelry, food, medicine and other professional services. The expo is expected to become a leading platform for global consumer fashion, and well-known brands will release their latest products during the exhibition. Image Attachments Links: Sure Valley Ventures, the founder-led Venture Capital (VC) firm that invests in high growth software companies in sectors such as the Metaverse, Artificial Intelligence (AI) and Cybersecurity, is pleased to announce a new $130m fund focused on the Metaverse and related sectors. The new fund includes a cornerstone 50m ($67m) investment from the British Business Bank through its Enterprise Capital Funds (ECF) programme, which aims to increase the supply of equity capital to high-potential, early-stage UK companies. Sure Valley is a seed capital investor in software companies that are focused on bringing a disruptive innovation to market. The team plans to invest into 25 software companies in the metaverse and related sectors through this new fund. Currently based in London, Dublin, and Cambridge, the Sure Valley team will also be opening an office in Manchester to help access deals in the significant and exciting innovation clusters that have developed around creative technologies in the North of England. Sure Valley Ventures Managing Partner and Co-Founder, Barry Downes, said, "We have been investing in the metaverse sector since 2017 and have invested in and supported multiple category leading start-ups in the space such as Admix, VividQ, War Ducks, Volograms, Engage XR and Virtex. We are now delighted to partner with the British Business Bank and existing and new investors on this new $130 million metaverse technology Fund. As entrepreneurs and founders ourselves, we have been on the other end of the table and therefore understand the challenges that start-ups face for funding, particularly in new and emerging sectors such as the metaverse. This new fund will enable us to build on our success to date to find and invest in the next generation of leaders in the metaverse." Ken Cooper, Managing Director, Venture Solutions, British Business Bank said: "The British Business Bank's Enterprise Capital Funds programme plays a significant role in developing and maintaining effective venture capital provision in the UK, lowering the barriers to entry for emerging fund managers and for those targeting under-served areas of the market. Our cornerstone commitment to Sure Valley will support investment into high potential, early stage software companies that are leading change in the disruptive tech sector, across the UK." The sectors that Sure Valley Ventures invest in have significant growth potential over the next few years, for example Goldman Sachs and Morgan Stanley are predicting that the Metaverse could be an $8 trillion opportunity1. Sure Valley has established a strong track record in these sectors, having invested in them since the firm's inception in 2017 through investee companies Engage XR, War Ducks, Admix, Volograms, VividQ and Virtex in the Metaverse sector, including Getvisibility, Smarttech, Nova Leah and Precog Systems in the security space, Cameramatics, Artomatix and Ambisense in the AI sector. Alongside the equity invested, Sure Valley supports entrepreneurs via its value-adding Platform, which draws on the team's knowledge and experience as founders to create a programme which is tailored to each investee company's individual needs. Sure Valley's platform also features a global network of advisors, based in leading innovation hubs across the globe, including San Francisco, Silicon Valley, New York, LA, Austin and Seattle in the USA as well as leading European hubs such as London, Cambridge, Manchester and Dublin. Sure Valley has had success helping its investee companies grow and scale from Seed to Series A, and beyond with 93% of its investee companies raising follow-on Series A or B rounds within 24 months of the initial seed investment. This is a notable result, considering that on average 48% of companies fail to raise a follow on investment round at all, according to CBInsights2. In addition, many of Sure Valley's current portfolio have gone on to further successes, including to IPO, e.g. Engage XR a leading corporate metaverse company and Smarttech 247 an AI-based cybersecurity company that plans to IPO in Q2 2022. ENDS 1 Goldman Sachs Sees the Metaverse as $8 Trillion Opportunity Metaverse Bitcoin News 2 The Venture Capital Funnel (cbinsights.com) View source version on businesswire.com: https://www.businesswire.com/news/home/20220302005100/en/ Contacts: For further information, please contact: SEC Newgate Isabelle Smurfit and Elisabeth Cowell shardcapital@secnewgate.co.uk +44 (0) 20 3757 6882 OSLO, Norway and MELBOURNE, Australia, March 2, 2022 /PRNewswire/ -- Placard, Australia's largest card manufacturer and the only one qualified by all major card schemes, has selected biometric fintech pioneer Zwipe as its technology partner in pursuing the global market opportunities for biometric payment cards and other security products. Placard delivers more than 100 million cards each year for the most established brands in the financial, retail, identification, government, loyalty and hospitality sectors. Placard's success over the past two decades is accredited to high-quality products and a deep understanding of how new technology and product innovations can benefit customers and societies at large. With the disruptive Zwipe Pay platform, Placard will be able to deliver highly advanced and secure biometric card products that are also exceedingly user-friendly. "We are excited about the opportunity that this innovative technology represents. The biometric solution provided by Zwipe combines break-through technologies and is the ideal platform for the next generation of payment cards. We believe that highly secure touch-less payments and PIN-free cards create a very compelling proposition for consumers and that our collaboration with Zwipe will provide differentiation and meaningful commercial value to our customers", said Tess Barone, General Manager Sales & Marketing, Placard. As part of this agreement, Zwipe will provide biometric technology, technical services and go-to-market commercialization support to enable Placard to manufacture biometric cards. The partners will engage with issuers and other enterprises to run pilots from Q2 2022, followed by full commercial rollouts. Commenting on this partnership, Andre Lvestam, CEO at Zwipe, said: "We are very pleased to announce our partnership with Placard, one of the most prominent card manufacturers in the Australasian region. There is a clear growing interest in biometric payment cards globally and Placard will be vital in accelerating the deployment of biometric payment cards to banks and consumers. Zwipe will be supporting Placard's clients during their launch processes to ensure the best customer experience and successful commercialization." About Placard Placard is an Australian organization which has been established since 1987, and is Australia's largest secure plastic card manufacturer. Placard is continuously expanding, providing comprehensive card programs to over 500 clients and producing upwards of 100 million cards per year. Placard provides end to end card solutions and has a reputation of meeting its commitments to its clients and consistently achieves service levels beyond its clients' expectations. Placard's secure manufacturing and bureau facilities are Visa, MasterCard, China Union Pay and American Express accredited to the highest level. Placard's core competencies lie in the design, printing, manufacture, personalization and mailing of ISO Standard secure and non-secure plastic cards. With Bureau services encompassing the latest Visa and MasterCard EMV standards for embossing, manufacture of Dual Interface cards, magnetic stripe encoding, indent printing, thermal print duable flat graphics, high quality Drop on Demand personalization, laser printing processes and intelligent matching & mailing services. For more information, please visit www.placard.com.au or call Tess Barone, General Manager, Sales & Marketing on +61 3 9722 5200. About Zwipe Zwipe believes the inherent uniqueness of every person is the key to a safer future. We work with great passion across networks of international organizations, industries and cultures to make convenience safe and secure. We are pioneering next-generation biometric card and wearables technology for payment and physical & logical access control and identification solutions. We promise our customers and partners deep insight and frictionless solutions, ensuring a seamless user experience with our innovative biometric products and services. Zwipe is headquartered in Oslo, Norway, with a global presence. To learn more, visit zwipe.com For further information please contact: Andre Lvestam, CEO, +47 934 36 952, info@zwipe.com This information was brought to you by Cision http://news.cision.com https://news.cision.com/zwipe-as/r/zwipe-s-biometric-payment-card-platform-selected-by-placard-in-australia,c3517235 The following files are available for download: Nordea Bank Abp / Key word(s): Annual Results Nordea Bank Abp: Annual Financial Report 02.03.2022 / 10:30 Nordea has published its annual reporting package 2021, including sustainability reporting Nordea Bank Abp Stock exchange release - Annual Financial Report 2 March 2022 at 9.00 EET Nordea has today published its Annual Report for the financial year 2021, which includes the audited Financial Statements, the Board of Directors' Report and the Corporate Governance Statement. In 2021, for the first time, the sustainability reporting is integrated into Nordea's Annual Report and therefore a separate Sustainability Report is no longer published. Further, Nordea has today published its Remuneration Report for Governing Bodies for year 2021. The Annual Report, the Corporate Governance Statement and the Remuneration Report for Governing Bodies can be downloaded at nordea.com. Nordea has also published the Annual Report in Swedish in European Single Electronic Format (ESEF). Authorised public accountants PricewaterhouseCoopers Oy has provided an independent auditor's reasonable assurance report on Nordea's ESEF Financial Statements in Swedish in accordance with ISAE 3000 (Revised). Documents: Nordea Annual Report 2021 Nordea Annual Report 2021 (ESEF, only in Swedish) Remuneration Report for Governing Bodies 2021 The Board of Directors has proposed to the Annual General Meeting 2022 to adopt, through an advisory resolution, the Remuneration Report for Governing Bodies for year 2021. For further information: Matti Ahokas, Head of Investor Relations, +358 9 530 080 11 Group Communication, +358 10 416 8023 or press@nordea.com The information provided in this stock exchange release was submitted for publication, through the agency of the contact persons set out above, at 9.00 EET on 2 March 2022. This information is provided by RNS, the news service of the London Stock Exchange. RNS is approved by the Financial Conduct Authority to act as a Primary Information Provider in the United Kingdom. Terms and conditions relating to the use and distribution of this information may apply. For further information, please contact rns@lseg.com or visit www.rns.com. End of Media Release BRUSSELS/FRANKFURT/PARIS (dpa-AFX) - French stocks were moving lower on Wednesday, as nervous investors shifted money into bonds amid renewed concerns about Russia's escalating war on Ukraine. It is feared that the Ukraine tensions may push up the commodity prices and peg the global economic recovery. Russian armed forces have captured the southern Ukrainian city of Kherson, RIA news agency reported earlier today. Meanwhile, U.S. President Joe Biden accused his Russian counterpart Vladimir Putin of waging a 'premeditated and unprovoked' war against Ukraine. The benchmark CAC 40 was down 25 points, or 0.4 percent, at 6,372 after plummeting 3.9 percent on Tuesday. Banks extended losses, with Credit Agricole and Societe Generale both falling around 2 percent. Pharma group Biomerieux slumped 12 percent after publishing a disappointing guidance for the year. Copyright(c) 2022 RTTNews.com. All Rights Reserved 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. Cardior Pharmaceuticals, a clinical-stage biotech company developing non-coding RNA (ncRNA)-based therapeutics for patients with cardiac diseases, today announced the expansion of its Scientific Advisory Board (SAB) with four newly appointed cardiology and RNA drug development experts. Johann Bauersachs, MD; Perry Elliott, MD; Gerasimos Filippatos, MD, PhD; and Barry Ticho, MD, PhD, will provide Cardior with important scientific, medical and development guidance as the company advances its lead program CDR132L, an oligonucleotide-based ncRNA inhibitor targeting microRNA-132, towards a Phase 2 clinical trial in patients with heart failure. The SAB will also collaborate with Cardior's leadership team as it further develops the breadth of its pipeline of ncRNA therapeutics with curative potential. Cardior's innovative product candidates address the underlying causalities of heart diseases including genetic cardiomyopathies. David Crandall, PhD, member since inception of the SAB, will step down. "As we move toward Phase 2 initiation and the next stage of development post our successful Series B funding, we value the commitment from these highly-regarded scientific and industry leaders who bring us significant expertise in the fields of cardiology and RNA-based medicines. Their combined track record of successfully guiding research efforts that produce effective therapeutics will be vital as we evolve into a late-stage clinical company as well as accelerate the fundamental research and development fueling our pipeline of highly stable and effective RNA-based therapies in large indications and in the field of cardiomyopathies," said Rahul Agrawal, Chief Medical Officer of Cardior. "We would like to thank David for his support in the short time we established Cardior and its transformative pipeline." Cardior's Scientific Advisory Board welcomes the following experts: Johann Bauersachs, MD, is Head of the Department of Cardiology and Angiology at Hannover Medical School with research focus on ncRNAs in acute and chronic heart failure. He is a Board member of the German Cardiac Society, and Chair of its Committee on Clinical Cardiovascular Medicine. He is Study Chair of the DIGIT-HF study investigating the effect of Digitoxin in patients with advanced heart failure and is actively involved in many other clinical trials. He received his medical degree from the University of Freiburg, Germany. Perry Elliott, MD, is a Professor of Cardiovascular Medicine at the University College London (UCL) and a Senior Investigator for the United Kingdom's National Institute for Health Research (NIHR). He is the current Director of the UCL Institute of Cardiovascular Science and the UCL Centre for Heart Muscle Disease and is a consultant cardiologist at the Centre for Inherited Cardiovascular Disease at the Bart's Heart Centre in St. Bartholomew's Hospital London. Dr. Elliott is a board member of various cardio-related organizations including his position as Chairman of the European Society of Cardiology (ESC) Council on Cardiovascular Genomics and its Heart Academy. He received his MBBS at the St. Thomas' Hospital Medical School and received his cardiology training from the St. George's Hospital Medical School in London. Gerasimos Filippatos, MD, PhD, is a cardiologist at the University of Athens, Greece as well as Member of the Heart Failure Association (HFA) of the European Society of Cardiology (ESC). He has served as Chair of the Clinical Section and the Committee on Acute Heart Failure of the HFA and as Chair of the ESC's Working Group on Acute Cardiac Care. He studied medicine at the University of Patras, Greece, and earned his doctorate in physiology and critical care from the University of Athens. Barry Ticho, MD, PhD, is currently Chief Medical Officer at Stoke Therapeutics where he is responsible for the company's efforts to develop first-in-class RNA based medicines that treat severe genetic diseases. As co-founder and former CEO of Verve Therapeutics with years of experience in R&D from Moderna, Pfizer and Biogen, he brings an in-depth knowledge of developing mRNA treatments for cardiovascular and metabolic diseases. Dr. Ticho obtained his MD and PhD degrees from the University of Chicago. He has served as a member of the clinical staff at Harvard Medical School and Massachusetts General Hospital, where he conducted laboratory research on the regulation of cardiac development. About Cardior Cardior Pharmaceuticals is a leading clinical-stage biopharmaceutical company pioneering the discovery and development of RNA-based therapeutics designed to prevent, repair and reverse diseases of the heart. Cardior's therapeutic approach uses distinctive non-coding RNAs as an innovative platform for addressing the root causes of cardiac dysfunctions. The company aspires to bring transformative therapeutics and diagnostics to patients and thereby make a lasting impact on the treatment of cardiac diseases worldwide. View source version on businesswire.com: https://www.businesswire.com/news/home/20220302005082/en/ Contacts: Contact for Cardior Dr. Claudia Ulbrich Barbara Gaertner-Rupprecht Cardior Pharmaceuticals GmbH Tel: +49 511 33 85 99 30 Media Inquiries Trophic Communications Eva Mulder or Charlotte Spitz Phone: +49 (0) 171 35 12 733 cardior@trophic.eu The retrial of accused killer Dayonte Resiles opened in a Fort Lauderdale courtroom Wednesday, with prosecutors and defense lawyers mostly retracing the steps they took during the defendants first trial. Again, prosecutor Maria Schneider painstakingly laid out a timeline of the morning Davie resident Justin Su discovered the body of his mother, Jill Halliburton Su, in the bloody bathtub of their home on Sept. 8, 2014. The suspects DNA was found on two crucial pieces of evidence a knife outside the home and a belt that was used to bind the victim during a struggle. Advertisement Again, defense lawyer Michael Orlando promised jurors that the evidence would leave them with more questions than answers. Those questions, he said, include why Justin Su was eliminated as a suspect so quickly, whose fingerprints were found in the master bedroom (where part of the struggle took place), and how Resiles, who had never been to the home, could possibly have known where the security cameras were to avoid them while breaking in and covering them up once he was inside. [ RELATED: Lawyers brace for retrial in Dayonte Resiles murder case ] Resiles first trial ended in a hung jury last December while jurors agreed that Resiles participated in Sus murder, two jurors told the Sun Sentinel afterward that they did not believe he acted alone. Thats a possibility that has not been explicitly addressed in front of a jury, but prosecutors hinted at it by having the judge include a felony murder instruction. That instruction would have allowed a murder conviction even if jurors believed Resiles was an accomplice to someone else who stabbed the victim to death. Advertisement At one point, the jury in last years trial announced it had found Resiles guilty of manslaughter, only to have the verdict rescinded when the jurys forewoman recanted. She later said she felt pressured to compromise by fellow jurors who did not want to send a Black man, Resiles, to prison for life. A second juror denied the racial aspect of the debate, but agreed that it was contentious and centered around whether Resiles deserved a life sentence. In the end, jurors could not agree on a verdict, giving both prosecutors and defense lawyers a second chance to present their arguments. [ RELATED: 'What have I done?' Juror describes turmoil in Resiles case ] If the current jury convicts Resiles, 27, of first-degree murder, he could face the death penalty. Breaking News As it happens Be the first to know with email alerts on important breaking stories from the Orlando Sentinel newsroom. > The victim was a distant relative, but not an heiress, of the founder of the Halliburton multinational energy corporation the name Halliburton was avoided during the trial because of its political reputation and because the victim rarely used it. The defense used the Halliburton name in the retrial Wednesday while suggesting her connection to the familys wealth might have been part of a motive for murder. The victim and her husband, Nan Yao Su, had returned from a business trip to Malaysia on Sept. 7, 2014, the day before the murder, and their son hosted at least one gathering of friends while they were away, Schneider told the jury. Records from their gated community show Justin Su and his father had left the home by late morning on Sept. 8. The burglar or burglars who entered the Su home broke in through a glass door, apparently unaware that Jill Su was still home, sleeping. Prosecutors believe she was killed because she interrupted the burglary. Resiles had a history of burglary arrests before he was arrested in the Su murder based on the DNA evidence. In 2016, he staged an escape from a Broward courtroom that prosecutors point to as evidence that he knows hes guilty. Defense lawyers said the escape is its own offense and does not prove Resiles killed anyone. Advertisement The trial is scheduled to resume Thursday before Broward Circuit Judge John Murphy. Rafael Olmeda can be reached at rolmeda@sunsentinel.com, 954-356-4457 or on Twitter @rolmeda AMSTERDAM, March 2, 2022 /PRNewswire/ -- Internationally renowned smart transportation company, Segway-Ninebot, has this week released details of the all-new Ninebot KickScooter D Series at the Press Conference Launch 2022. The three models with different travel ranges (18km, 28km, and 38km) were displayed for consumers alongside the slogan - "Deliver Delight" - with the announcement that pre-sales will be made available for European customers starting from today at an affordable price and a special offer of Get 1 FREE Accessory for Every Purchase of the D Series with limited stock available on the Segway-Ninebot Store. Lightweight and portable, the Ninebot KickScooter D Series is targeted ideally at consumers living in cities where they can benefit from being able to switch between transport methods and confidently allow them to get from A to B. In choosing between the D18E, D28E, and D38E models, the user experience remains consistent, with differences such as travel range and slope climbing capability. The D Series KickScooters are cost-effective and high-quality companions for commuters or students as they enable great flexibility and an effective way of avoiding traffic jams. At the press conference, President of Segway-Ninebot Europe, Dennis Hardholt said, "We have been continuously creating smarter mobility solutions and by introducing the new affordable D Series, we are making kick scooters even more accessible to a broader market. This new D Series offers real value for money." The scooters currently come in a sporty and stylish vibrant red and black design making them really stand out. The Ninebot KickScooter D Series is completely collapsible and packs easily into the trunk of a car or under a desk. All three models feature anti-slip, puncture-resistant, explosion-proof, and ultra-durable 10-inch air tyres that support smooth riding on various terrains greatly improving riding comfort. The double braking system consists of a front electronic brake and a rear drum brake which secures riding safety. The 2.1W ultra high-range bright LED headlight increases the range of visibility whilst riding at night and features a smart light irradiation angle design that keeps the light below the line of sight to avoid headlight dazzle. The dashboard has an easy-to-use LED display that shows real-time battery and speed status, and allows for switching between standard, sports, and eco mode. Additionally, the entire vehicle can be controlled and monitored via the mobile app, which allows riders to always be conveniently in control. In terms of quality upgrades, pedal width has been lengthened by 30% to 17cm, which allows for more foot room, and a high toughness structural steel frame has been strengthened to be 2.5x more fracture-resistant and 3.8x more shape-deform resistant, now able to support up to 100kg. The motor life has also been upgraded to allow for 3,000 hours of use which equates to roughly 1 hour per day for eight years, whilst supporting stronger power output, to achieve up to 25km/h riding speed and up to 20% slope climbing capacity. For more information, please visit Segway-Ninebot (www.segway.com) About Segway-Ninebot Segway-Ninebot is a global enterprise in the fields of intelligent short-distance transportation and service robots. In 1999, Segway was established in Bedford NH, US, which is the world leader in commercial-grade, electric, self-balancing personal transportation. Ninebot is an intelligent short-distance transportation equipment operator integrating R&D, production, sales, and service, established in Beijing, 2012. As Segway and Ninebot completed a strategic combination in 2015, Segway-Ninebot came into being. At present, the company's businesses are all around the world and have subsidiaries in Beijing, New York, Seattle, Los Angeles, Dallas, Amsterdam, Seoul, Paris, Barcelona, Munich, Changzhou, Shenzhen and Hangzhou, selling products in more than 180 countries. With its world-renowned intellectual property, Segway-Ninebot will create more products that will lead users and the entire industry into the future. Photo - https://mma.prnewswire.com/media/1756916/D_Series_D38E_38km_range_350W_rated_power_20__slope_climbing.jpg JERSEY CITY, N.J., March 2, 2022 /PRNewswire/ -- InsightAce Analytic Pvt. Ltd. announces the release of a market assessment report on the "Flow Cytometry Services Market by Accreditation Types (Government and Third-party accreditation), Services types Type of General Flow Cytometric Service (assay development and consumables manufacturing), Type of Based Analysis Based Flow Cytometric Services (PBMC Analysis, Whole Blood Cells Analysis, Bone Marrow Aspirate Analysis, Stem Cells Analysis, Rare Cells Detection, Cell Profiling And Subsetting, Intracellular Staining), Others - Market Trends, Industry Competition Analysis, Revenue and Forecast To 2030." According to the latest research by InsightAce Analytic, the global Flow Cytometry Services market is valued at US$ 876.33 Million in 2021, and it is expected to reach US$ 1,501.02 Million by 2030, with a CAGR of 6.21% during the forecast period of 2022-2030. Request for Sample Pages:https://www.insightaceanalytic.com/request-sample/1209 Flow cytometry is an effective laboratory technique used to analyze the cell population in heterogenous suspension based on their physical and fluorescence characteristics. This is achieved using instrumentation that directs a single stream of cells past a light source and measures scattered and emitted energy in various wavelengths. This scattered light is responsible for determining cells' size and intracellular complexity. The tool analyses the data at the thousand particles per second quantified and plotted digitally. Researchers use fluorescent molecules with different excitation and emission properties to be united, detected, and differentiated to provide compound data from a single cell. These fluorescent molecules may be stuck to antibodies targeting specific proteins or protein modifications, or they may be dyes that directly combine with cellular components. The technique is mainly used to research and diagnose diseases like cancer and AIDS. Many articles and research papers have been published regarding the connection between HIV and the flow cytometry technique. Flow Cytometry services consist of specimen processing, experimental design, acquisition and data analysis to strengthen biotech, pharmaceutical companies and researchers in drug development. Request for ToC/Proposal:https://www.insightaceanalytic.com/report/global-flow-cytometry-services-market/1209 The market growth can be attributed to diminishing restrictions on commercial activities like transportation, packaging, and manufacturing, which were operational challenges earlier in the pandemic. The initiatives undertaken by governments and global health organizations to increase awareness about cancer and HIV infections will amplify the rate of diagnosis and hence the public and private diagnosis centres. Rapidly enhancing the rate of pre-clinical trials is one of the foremost drivers of this service market as the flow cytometry required from the beginning of the research and development of the drug. Regionally, The Asia-Pacific region has significant development opportunities due to less stringent regulations and data requirements than other areas. Key market players operating in the Flow Cytometry Services market include FlowMetric Life Sciences, Flow Contract Sites Laboratory, Bio-Legend, Q2 Solutions, ProImmune, MLM Medical Labs, Unilabs, Firalis, Agilex Biolabs, ACROBIOsystems, Ardena, Life Science Research, Cell flow cytometry, Research Lab Services, Fluorescence, CHOP Research Institute, Bio-Rad Laboratories, Plant Cytometry services, Aurelia Bioscience, Proimmune, Sphere Fluidics Limited, Iconplc, Beakman Coulter, IBR Inc., FACS Servies, Flow Contract side Laboratory, Rockland-inc, NeoGenomics, Charles River Laboratories, ProMab, RayBiotech, Creative Proteomics, ACM Global Laboratories, Covance, ReachBio, Mdbiosciences, CSI Laboratories, Other Prominent Players. Key developments in the market: In Feb 2022 , Cytognos has acquired by BD (Becton, Dickinson and Company). Through this acquisition, Cytognos' key products increase BD's broad portfolio of diagnostic and research solutions for certain cancers that use flow cytometry as the primary means of discovery, diagnosis and understanding, including lymphoma, leukaemia and multiple myeloma. Cytognos has acquired by BD (Becton, Dickinson and Company). Through this acquisition, Cytognos' key products increase BD's broad portfolio of diagnostic and research solutions for certain cancers that use flow cytometry as the primary means of discovery, diagnosis and understanding, including lymphoma, leukaemia and multiple myeloma. In Feb 2022 , KCAS has acquired FlowMetric, LLC. KCAS has made major investments, including a nearly completed 70,000-square-foot new facility in Kansas City ; continuing to attract the industry's top scientific expertise and focusing on excellent customer service, and increasing globalization through further acquisitions. The acquisition of FlowMetric provides additional operational support to the merged company's clients, allowing them to fulfil rising demand and industry demands. KCAS has acquired FlowMetric, LLC. KCAS has made major investments, including a nearly completed 70,000-square-foot new facility in ; continuing to attract the industry's top scientific expertise and focusing on excellent customer service, and increasing globalization through further acquisitions. The acquisition of FlowMetric provides additional operational support to the merged company's clients, allowing them to fulfil rising demand and industry demands. In Jan 2022 , Insightful Science announced acquisition of Omiq Inc. Insightful Science's flow cytometry software portfolio now includes OMIQ in addition to Cytapex Bioinformatics and FCS Express. GraphPad Prism, SnapGene, Geneious, Dotmatics, LabArchives, Protein Metrics, and nQuery, among other top products, are part of an expanding range of scientific R&D tools. Insightful Science announced acquisition of Omiq Inc. Insightful Science's flow cytometry software portfolio now includes OMIQ in addition to Cytapex Bioinformatics and FCS Express. GraphPad Prism, SnapGene, Geneious, Dotmatics, LabArchives, Protein Metrics, and nQuery, among other top products, are part of an expanding range of scientific R&D tools. In June 2020 , The XF-1600* flow cytometer from Sysmex America, Inc. is now available. For a wide range of applications, the fully automated XF-1600TM provides laboratories with increased flexibility and efficiency. Curious about Report Details @ Request for ToC/Proposal:https://www.insightaceanalytic.com/report/global-flow-cytometry-services-market/1209 Market Segments Global Flow Cytometry Services Market, by Accreditation Types, 2019-2030 (Value US$ Mn) Government Third-Party Accreditations Global Flow Cytometry Services Market, by Services Types, 2019-2030 (Value US$ Mn) Type of General Flow Cytometric Services Assay Development Consumables Manufacturing Type of Analysis based Flow Cytometric Services PBMC Analysis Whole Blood Cells Analysis Bone Marrow Aspirate Analysis Stem Cells Analysis Rare Cells Detection Cell Profiling and Subsetting Intracellular Staining Other types of Flow Cytometric Services Global Flow Cytometry Services Market, by Region, 2019-2030 (Value US$ Mn) North America Europe Asia Pacific Latin America Middle East & Africa North America Flow Cytometry Services Market, by Country, 2019-2030 (Value US$ Mn) U.S. Canada Europe Flow Cytometry Services Market, by Country, 2019-2030 (Value US$ Mn) Germany France Italy Spain Russia Rest of Europe Asia Pacific Flow Cytometry Services Market, by Country, 2019-2030 (Value US$ Mn) India China Japan South Korea Australia & New Zealand Latin America Flow Cytometry Services Market, by Country, 2019-2030 (Value US$ Mn) Brazil Mexico Rest of Latin America The Middle East & Africa Flow Cytometry Services Market, by Country, 2019-2030 (Value US$ Mn) South Africa GCC Countries Rest of the Middle East & Africa Why should buy this report: To receive a detailed insights/trends/analysis of the prospects for the global Flow Cytometry Services market To receive an industry snapshot and future trends of the Flow Cytometry Services market To analyze the Flow Cytometry Services market drivers and challenges To get information on the Flow Cytometry Services market size (Value US$ Mn) forecast to 2030 Significant investments, mergers & acquisitions in the Flow Cytometry Services market For More Information @ https://www.insightaceanalytic.com/report/global-flow-cytometry-services-market/1209 Other Related Reports Published by InsightAce Analytic: Global Peptide CDMO (Pharmaceutical) Market Global mRNA Synthesis and Manufacturing Services Market Global Protein Design and Engineering Market About Us: InsightAce Analytic is a market research and consulting firm that enables clients to make strategic decisions. Our qualitative and quantitative market intelligence solutions inform the need for market and competitive intelligence to expand businesses. We help clients gain a competitive advantage by identifying untapped markets, exploring new and competing technologies, segmenting potential markets, and repositioning products. Our expertise is in providing syndicated and custom market intelligence reports with an in-depth analysis with key market insights in a timely and cost-effective manner. Contact Us: InsightAce Analytic Pvt. Ltd. Tel.: +1 718 593 4405 Email: info@insightaceanalytic.com Site Visit: www.insightaceanalytic.com Follow Us on LinkedIn @ bit.ly/2tBXsgS Follow Us On Facebook @ bit.ly/2H9jnDZ Logo: https://mma.prnewswire.com/media/1729637/InsightAce_Analytic_Logo.jpg VANCOUVER, BC / ACCESSWIRE / March 2, 2022 / Sky Gold Corp. (TSXV:SKYG)(OTC PINK:SRKZF) ("Sky Gold Corp." or the "Company") announces exploration activities for the forthcoming 2022 field season on the company's Mustang property, which is contiguous with New Found Gold Corp.'s Queensway gold project. The Company is currently sourcing a contractor to commence activities on the Mustang Property which will include induced polarization ("IP") geophysics, detailed soil and rock geochemistry sampling over established anomalies, trenching and geological mapping. This program will be followed by a Phase 2 diamond drill program directed at other targets including: West Targets - Comprises multiple gold-in-soil anomalies over an area measuring approximately 1,000 meters x 600 meters oriented in a NE-SW direction, paralleling the interpreted Dog Bay Line regional structure. The soil anomalies are located east of the Jasperoid and Barite Showings. - Comprises multiple gold-in-soil anomalies over an area measuring approximately 1,000 meters x 600 meters oriented in a NE-SW direction, paralleling the interpreted Dog Bay Line regional structure. The soil anomalies are located east of the Jasperoid and Barite Showings. North Woodman Pond Target - Covering an area of 2,000 by 750 meters, this target includes the highest gold-in-soil values received to date of 55 parts per billion gold ("ppb") Au, with highly anomalous arsenic (As) at 87 parts per million ("ppm"). This target is flanked on both sides by the Schooner Fault and offset structures, as identified on Exploits Discovery Corp. ("NFLD") contiguous Mt. Peyton project. NFLD reports that the Schooner Fault represents a sub-parallel trending fault system, identified by GoldSpot Discoveries Corp. (TSX.V: SPOT) for NFLD, located approximately 3.5 km west of the known gold bearing Appleton Fault that hosts New Found Gold's Keats, Lotto, and Knob Zone gold discoveries. - Covering an area of 2,000 by 750 meters, this target includes the highest gold-in-soil values received to date of 55 parts per billion gold ("ppb") Au, with highly anomalous arsenic (As) at 87 parts per million ("ppm"). This target is flanked on both sides by the Schooner Fault and offset structures, as identified on Exploits Discovery Corp. ("NFLD") contiguous Mt. Peyton project. NFLD reports that the Schooner Fault represents a sub-parallel trending fault system, identified by GoldSpot Discoveries Corp. (TSX.V: SPOT) for NFLD, located approximately 3.5 km west of the known gold bearing Appleton Fault that hosts New Found Gold's Keats, Lotto, and Knob Zone gold discoveries. RB (Road Breccia) Target - The RB Target comprises gold-in-soil anomalies along with associated anomalous As values. The anomaly area measures roughly 1,200 meters by 600 meters, in an east-west direction, with anomalous copper (Cu) values being more widespread. "We are looking forward to starting our 2022 field season directed at defining multiple targets on the Mustang Property that have never been drill tested. Our Mustang and Virginia properties are strategically located in the heart of Newfoundland's modern-day gold rush and poised for discoveries," stated Mike England, CEO of Sky Gold. Last year (2021) activities included geological mapping, prospecting, soil and rock geochemistry, magnetic geophysics and 3,283 meters of diamond drilling in 19 holes. Drilling was conducted in three areas along the main Mustang Zone, over a length of 1.2-kilometres, trending north-northeast and south-southwest. Significant intervals of lower-grade gold were intercepted in multiple holes, with potential for low-grade, bulk-style mineralization on portions of the Mustang zone. The Company also identified multiple new gold-in-soil geochemical anomalies in the northern and western portions of the Mustang Property (see news release dated June 2, 2021). The Company also owns the Virginia property in Newfoundland, located contiguous to the southern margin of Labrador Gold Corp.'s Kingsway property where drilling is active on the Big Vein target. The Virginia property has received all necessary permits for its maiden diamond drill program. Soil Geochemistry Survey Details Sample processing and assays were completed by Eastern Analytical Labs, of Springdale, Nova Scotia, and ISO 17205 certified laboratory facility. The minus-80 mesh fractions of the samples were analyzed by Fire Assay for Au, and Induction-Coupled Plasma optical emission analysis (ICP-OES), after four-acid (HCl/HNO3/HClO4/HF) digestion for Al, As, Ba, Be, Bi, Ca, Cd, Ce, Co, Cr, Cu, Fe, In, K, La, Mg, Mn, Mo, Na, Ni, P, Pb, S, Sb, Se, Sn, Sr, Ti, U, V, W, Zn and Zr. Qualified Person Catherine Fitzgerald, P.Geo., a Qualified Person under National Instrument 43-101, and Independent Director of Sky Gold, is the Qualified Person responsible for reviewing and approving the technical contents of this news release as they pertain to the Evening Star property. About Sky Gold Corp. Sky Gold Corp. is a junior mineral exploration company engaged in acquiring and advancing mineral properties in Canada and the USA. The Company is active in Newfoundland on the Mustang and Virginia properties, which are located contiguous to New Found Gold Corp's Queensway project, where high-grade gold mineralization has been discovered, with the district being actively explored by numerous companies. The Company owns the Evening Star property, located 12 km southeast of Hawthorne, NV, which is prospective for precious (silver and gold) mineralization and CRD (Carbonate Replacement Deposit) base metal mineralization. The Company owns the Imperial Project comprising two contiguous claim blocks (6,576 hectares) prospective for gold and VMS (volcanogenic massive sulphide) mineralization and covers 4.7 kilometres of the northern border with Amex Exploration's Perron property in Quebec, where high-grade gold has been intersected in three zones along a 3.2 km corridor. ON BEHALF OF THE BOARD "Mike England" Mike England, CEO & Director FOR FURTHER INFORMATION PLEASE CONTACT: Tel. 1-604-683-3995 Toll Free. 1-888-845-4770 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 release. FORWARD-LOOKING STATEMENTS: This news release contains forward-looking statements, which relate to future events or future performance and reflect management's current expectations and assumptions. Such forward-looking statements reflect management's current beliefs and are based on assumptions made by and information currently available to the Company. Investors are cautioned that these forward-looking statements are neither promises nor guarantees and are subject to risks and uncertainties that may cause future results to differ materially from those expected. These forward -looking statements are made as of the date hereof and, except as required under applicable securities legislation, the Company does not assume any obligation to update or revise them to reflect new events or circumstances. All of the forward-looking statements made in this press release are qualified by these cautionary statements and by those made in our filings with SEDAR in Canada (available at WWW.SEDAR.COM). SOURCE: Sky Gold Corp. View source version on accesswire.com:https://www.accesswire.com/691035/Sky-Gold-Plans-2022-Exploration-Activities-on-the-Mustang-Property-Newfoundland Figure 1: Accreditation from IHS-GPAC to Fujitsu as "World Leader in Migraine Workplace Awareness, Education, and Employee Support Programs" Figure 2: Estimated economic loss due to absence from work due to chronic headache disorders and decreased performance Figure 3: Overview of the FUJITSU Headache Project TOKYO, Mar 2, 2022 - (JCN Newswire) - Fujitsu today announced that it was the first company in the world to be honored by the Global Patient Advocacy Coalition of the International Headache Society(1)(IHS-GPAC) as a world leader in migraine workplace awareness, education, and employee support programs.Chronic headache disorders, which include migraine, tension, and other chronic headache types, have a significant impact on daily life and work productivity. To address this problem, Fujitsu has developed and implemented training programs for employees globally in the workplace to promote awareness and treatment of headache disorders, as well as prevention programs for employees suffering from such disorders. Fujitsu's efforts were evaluated by the International Headache Society as a model case of corporate measures to support employees living with headache disorders.As a leader in migraine workplace awareness, education, and employee support programs, Fujitsu will further promote the dissemination of information related to health measures including headache countermeasures not only for employees, but also to their families, customers, and business partners. Fujitsu anticipates that these efforts will encourage greater understanding and continue to provide employees with advanced support for headache disorders and a variety of other related health issues.BackgroundIn the workplace, chronic headache disorders tend to be trivialized due to a common lack of understanding. As a result, many employees that suffer from these disorders continue to work while enduring painful headaches and other severe symptoms, leading to a decline in productivity and quality of life (QOL).In June 2018, Fujitsu conducted an in-house survey among Fujitsu employees in cooperation with International Headache Society, the World Health Organization (WHO), and the Japan Headache Society. The survey was designed to evaluate the impacts of chronic headache disorders on their work. Of the 2,500 people surveyed, 85% had experienced headache disorders. Of those who experienced headache disorders, 84% had never been treated. In addition, it was found that the economic loss to Fujitsu due to headache disorder-related sick leave and lower performance was approx. 900 USD per year per chronic headache disorder-affected employee. The cost was even higher for those affected by migraine (approx. 2,300 USD). The total cost was approx. 197 million USD per year for all employees, representing approximately 1% of the total annual salary paid to all employees. It was also revealed that health related QOL scores(2) of employees with chronic headache disorders were lower than the national standard for Japan. This demonstrates that headache disorders have a significant impact on daily life and work productivity. To address this issue, Fujitsu launched the "FUJITSU Headache Project" as a headache disorder prevention program that is now globally available to all employees.Outline of the "FUJITSU Headache Project"Based on the results of a joint study conducted in 2018 (Fujitsu employee survey on the degree of impact of chronic headache disorders on work), Fujitsu in fiscal year 2019 developed the FUJITSU Headache Project in cooperation with IHS-GPAC and the Japanese Headache Society. Utilizing e-Learning programs to help Fujitsu Group employees in Japan acquire correct knowledge about headache disorders, Fujitsu held video seminars for headache patients, online headache consultations with specialists, and headache exercises. Through these initiatives to help employees with headache disorders, Fujitsu attempts to improve QOL and boost work productivity, and aims to create a workplace where people suffering from headache disorders can work comfortably and with peace of mind.1. Project period: July 2019 to February 20222. Target: Approximately 70,000 Fujitsu Group employees in Japan3. Content: e-Learning programs and on-demand video seminars, online headache consultations, etc.Future plansBased on the results of the various initiatives of the "FUJITSU Headache Project," Fujitsu, the IHS-GPAC, WHO, and the Japanese Headache Society will analyze and verify the impact of the Fujitsu Headache Project on the improved awareness and understanding of headache disorders among all employees, as well as changes in the burden and work productivity of employees with chronic headache disorders.(1) International Headache Society :UK-based charity organization founded in 1981 for people committed to helping people with headaches or facial pain. International Headache Society Global Patient Advocacy Coalition (IHS-GPAC) is a coalition of global and regional headache, neurology, and pain societies, leading patient and headache advocacy organizations, regulatory agencies, patient advocates and leading headache specialists from around the world. The coalition was launched in 2019.(2) Health-related QOL Score :Quantifies the impact of disease and treatment on the patient's subjective sense of health (mental health, vitality, pain, etc.) and daily work, housework, household work, as well as family, leisure, and social activities.About FujitsuFujitsu is the leading Japanese information and communication technology (ICT) company offering a full range of technology products, solutions and services. Approximately 126,000 Fujitsu people support customers in more than 100 countries. We use our experience and the power of ICT to shape the future of society with our customers. Fujitsu Limited (TSE:6702) reported consolidated revenues of 3.6 trillion yen (US$34 billion) for the fiscal year ended March 31, 2021. For more information, please see www.fujitsu.com.Source: Fujitsu LtdCopyright 2022 JCN Newswire . All rights reserved. LONDON, March 2, 2022 /PRNewswire/ -- New Open Property Group research found that just 40% of homes in England meet the recommended Energy Performance Certificate (EPC) rating of 'C'. The EPC scale is ranked from A-G and is used to measure the efficiency of a property based on the level of its emissions, its potential heat or energy loss and its likely fuel costs. Currently, 63% of properties in the City of London meet the EPC rating of 'C' or above. This is closely following by Salford, which has 58% of properties meeting the recommended energy rating and Peterborough, where 53% of its properties are in the band of 'C' or above. At the other end of the scale Birmingham was ranked last, where only 31% of homes meet the target energy rating. Both Stoke-on-Trent and Lancaster also fell below the nationwide average with 32% and 33% of their properties respectively scoring an EPC rating of 'C' or above. In terms of regions across England, London saw 45% of its properties meeting the EPC band of 'C' or above. Yorkshire and The Humber was the lowest scoring region on the list, where only 35% of its properties meet the recommended EPC standards of 'C'. What does this also mean for UK landlords? The Government have proposed a bill where all rental properties would need to meet a compulsory energy performance certificate rating of band "C" on new tenancies by December 2025. Openpropertygroup.com Managing Director, Jason Harris-Cohen said: "The Government is proving relentless in its quest to be carbon net zero by 2050. Landlords are seen as a soft target and raising the bar in terms of EPC standards feels somewhat unfair. Buy-to-let owners have not long finished ensuring their properties meet the current 'E' EPC rating but now face three years of further eco improvements to reach a new 'C' target. Sadly, the energy efficiency measures required in the near future are the most expensive. Switching to LED light bulbs alone isn't going to be enough - we're moving into the territory of solar panels, cavity wall insulation and air source heat pumps." "Landlords will seriously have to look at their yields when it comes to profits, margins and financing energy efficiency works. Some of the UK's biggest cities - Leeds, Birmingham and Brighton - have some of the biggest issues with poor EPC ratings. Once the sums are done, many landlords will find they won't be able to recoup any eco investments, especially if their local area can't tolerate increased rents." "The UK's ageing housing stock also presents an issue, with period and pre-war properties falling short when it comes to EPC ratings. We forecast a trend towards investing in new homes - especially given that data released by the Government showed that 97% of new homes delivered in the second quarter of 2021 had an EPC rating of C or above." 2022 Cities in England: EPC Rating Cities in England Percentage of properties with an EPC rating of 'C' or above City of London 63% Salford 58% Peterborough 53% Cambridge 51% Manchester 48% Exeter 47% Norwich 47% Oxford 45% Gloucester 44% Newcastle Upon Tyne 43% Plymouth 43% St Albans 42% Sunderland 42% Bristol 40% Liverpool 40% Sheffield 40% Nottingham 39% York 39% Carlisle 38% Portsmouth 38% Wakefield 38% Worcester 37% Brighton 36% Derby 36% Leeds 36% Wolverhampton 36% Leicester 35% Coventry 34% Lancaster 33% Stoke-on-Trent 32% Birmingham 31% 2022 Regions in England: EPC Rating Regions in England Percentage of properties with an EPC rating of 'C' or above London 45% South East 43% East of England 42% North East 40% South West 40% East Midlands 38% North West 38% West Midlands 36% Yorkshire and The Humber 35% Sources: 2022 Department for Levelling Up, Housing & Committees An Energy Performance Certificate (EPC) indicates the energy efficiency of a building. The assessments are banded from A to G, where A is the most efficient in terms of likely fuel costs and carbon dioxide emissions. For more information please visit www.openpropertygroup.com About Open Property Group Open Property Group are a professional house buying company who help people sell their properties quickly. They buy all types of properties (including vacant or let), throughout England and Wales. Open Property Group specialise in buy to let property purchasing which suit landlords who want to cash in property quickly without disrupting the tenants. Homeowners benefit from selling their house fast, with a completion date fixed to the owners' requirements. By selling directly, you pay no agent fees, ?and can plan ahead with certainty. We also pay your agreed legal costs too. Photo - https://mma.prnewswire.com/media/1757009/Infographic.jpg Contact: David Donaldson david@openpropertygroup.com 07427623617 MOSCOW (dpa-AFX) - President Joe Biden announced that the American air space will be closed to all Russian flights. Delivering State of the Union Address at the Capitol Tuesday night, Biden said he took this decision to further isolate Russia and put an additional squeeze on their economy. Russia's economy is reeling under pressure due to repercussions of punitive actions taken by the West over Russian invasion of Ukraine. Western allies imposed tough sanctions on Russia and blocked some Russian banks from a global payments system. The Ruble has lost 30 percent of its value. The Russian stock market has nosedived and trading remains suspended. Biden made it clear that U.S. forces will not engage in conflict with Russian forces in Ukraine. 'Our forces are not going to Europe to fight in Ukraine, but to defend our NATO Allies - in the event that Putin decides to keep moving west,' he told the Congress. For that purpose, the Pentagon has mobilized American ground forces, air squadrons, and ship deployments to protect NATO countries including Poland, Romania, Latvia, Lithuania, and Estonia. Biden announced release of 30 million barrels of oil from its own Strategic Petroleum Reserve to help blunt domestic gas prices. This is part of a commitment made at an emergency meeting of the International Energy Agency (IEA) member countries Tuesday in response to Russia's invasion of Ukraine. In a meeting chaired by U.S. Secretary of Energy Jennifer Granholm, the United States and 30 other member countries, supported by the European Commission, agreed to collectively release an initial 60 million barrels of oil from strategic petroleum reserves to address significant market and supply disruptions. 'We will continue advancing ongoing efforts to accelerate Europe's diversification of energy supplies away from Russia and to secure the world from Putin's attempts to weaponize energy supplies,' Granholm said in a statement after the meeting. 'And we stand ready to do more if necessary, unified with our allies,' Biden said. 'When the history of this era is written Putin's war on Ukraine will have left Russia weaker and the rest of the world stronger,' he told lawmakers. Biden's speech, witnessed by Ukrainian Ambassador Oksana Markarova, at times evoked bipartisan applause and cheer for Ukraine, with many of the Congress members waving Ukrainian flags. Copyright(c) 2022 RTTNews.com. All Rights Reserved Copyright RTT News/dpa-AFX Kostenloser Wertpapierhandel auf Smartbroker.de Attendees invited to join SolarWinds Head Geeks in interactive sessions SolarWinds (NYSE:SWI), a leading provider of simple, powerful, and secure IT management software, today announced it will attend SQLBits (March 8 12, 2022) in London. SolarWinds Head Geeks Kevin Kline and Sascha Giese will deliver presentations on database management and monitoring. The company will also exhibit its latest enhancements to its database performance management portfolio March 10 12 at ExCel, London. "Understanding how to effectively manage and optimize databases is critical as hybrid environments continue to be the reality for today's tech pros," said Kevin Kline, Head Geek, SolarWinds. "Our latest database portfolio updates are designed to provide intelligent insights and monitor overall performance of the database-no matter how distributed the workforce is-and I look forward to sharing additional monitoring best practices during my sessions at SQLBits." The SolarWinds database management portfolio consists of SolarWinds Database Performance Analyzer SolarWinds Database Performance Monitor, SolarWinds SQL Sentry, and SolarWinds Database Insights for SQL Server To learn more about SolarWinds data management strategies, tune into upcoming industry events and sessions hosted by SolarWinds Head Geeks: How to Troubleshoot SQL Server CPU Issues with Kevin Kline, SolarWinds Head Geek When: Thursday, March 10 10.10 a.m. Room 4 In this session, Kevin Kline will go deep into the internal behaviour of SQL Server CPU, including parallelism, worker thread management, and how to troubleshoot CPU problems. One Size Does Not Fit All with Sascha Giese, SolarWinds Head Geek When: Thursday, March 10 11.30 a.m. Room 1 SolarWinds offers five alternative solutions for database monitoring and management. Sascha Giese looks into the differences and how to find the best tool for the job, right from the start. Less QQ, More Pew-Pew in IT with Sascha Giese, SolarWinds Head Geek When: Saturday, March 12 10.50 a.m. Room 4 The SolarWinds Orion Platform offers full-stack end-to-end observability for all layers of the IT infrastructure. Sascha Geise will provide an overview of the Orion Platform, demonstrating how to reduce friction in larger IT teams across various silos. Additional Resources SolarWinds Database Performance Analyzer SolarWinds SQL Sentry SolarWinds Database Insights for SQL Server SolarWinds Database Performance Management Solutions SolarWinds Expands Reach of Database Performance Monitoring Products Through Microsoft Azure Marketplace Connect with SolarWinds THWACK Twitter Facebook LinkedIn SWIevents About SolarWinds SolarWinds (NYSE:SWI) is a leading provider of simple, powerful, and secure IT management software. Our solutions give organizations worldwide-regardless of type, size, or complexity-the power to accelerate business transformation in today's hybrid IT environments. We continuously engage with technology professionals-IT service and operations professionals, DevOps and SecOps professionals, and database administrators (DBAs) to understand the challenges they face in maintaining high-performing and highly available IT infrastructures, applications, and environments. The insights we gain from them, in places like our THWACK community, allow us to address customers' needs now, and in the future. Our focus on the user and commitment to excellence in end-to-end hybrid IT management has established SolarWinds as a worldwide leader in solutions for observability, IT service management, application performance, and database management. Learn more today at www.solarwinds.com. The SolarWinds, SolarWinds Design, Orion, and THWACK trademarks are the exclusive property of SolarWinds Worldwide, LLC or its affiliates, are registered with the U.S. Patent and Trademark Office, and may be registered or pending registration in other countries. All other SolarWinds trademarks, service marks, and logos may be common law marks or are registered or pending registration. All other trademarks mentioned herein are used for identification purposes only and are trademarks of (and may be registered trademarks of) their respective companies. 2022 SolarWinds Worldwide, LLC. All rights reserved. View source version on businesswire.com: https://www.businesswire.com/news/home/20220302005039/en/ Contacts: Samantha Browning/Fiona Todd Wildfire Phone: 0208 408 8000 SolarWinds@wildfirepr.com Katherine O'Keeffe SolarWinds Phone: +353 21 5002954 pr@SolarWinds.com SHENZHEN, China, March 2, 2022 /PRNewswire/ -- CNLINKO is an advanced manufacturing company committed to providing global customers with more advanced, more efficient, high-safety, and cost-optimized connection solutions and technical support. Recently, they have expanded the best-selling product YM series industrial waterproof connectors and launched a new product series of YM24 version, which covers all types of power, signal and data connectors, and will achieve more comprehensive coverage in the scope of application and fields, satifying users with a one-stop solution to diversified connection needs. The YM24 series industrial connector meets IEC61984 and UL1977/2238/1863 certification standards, covering all types of PIN, signal RJ45, optical fiber, data USB, HDMI, etc., and can meet users' various requirements in equipment and systems, saving user's cost in choosing. YM24 connectors adopt an all-plastic shell design with PBT material, which significantly improves its ability to cope with the salt spray corrosive environment, while reducing the weight, making the product stronger and more durable. The YM24 series adopts a spring-type rotary locking connection design in its connection method, precise occlusion, firm locking, no worries about external impact or vibration. YM24 series connectors also adopt contact gold plating process on its inner core, which has high corrosion resistance and conductivity, and is effective in coping with temperature rise changes caused by current. The YM24 series have got widespread market's attention, due to their comprehensive types, higher cost performance, high water resistance, high corrosion resistance, strong vibration and impact resistance, strong durability, light weight and flexibility. It can be widely used in landscape lighting, marine equipment, new energy, testing equipment, automation equipment, medical equipment, security equipment, LED displays, electronic equipment, intelligent transportation, and the Internet and other fields. CNLINKO, founded in 2004, is an advanced global manufacturing enterprise integrating R&D, production, sales and service of industrial waterproof connectors. We have attached great importance to R&D innovation and quality assurance for a long time. This has made our company's reputation worldwide and has been highly recommended and widely adopted by engineers all over the world. In the future, we will continue to explore the global market as always, drive product upgrades with technology, and provide more satisfactory products and quality services to more than 30,000 customers all the world. Link to order YM series: https://cnlinko.com/Products/221 Phone number : 0086-755-86960323 Photo - https://mma.prnewswire.com/media/1757956/image.jpg Profit-driven private prisons in U.S. violate human rights: report Xinhua) 14:41, March 02, 2022 Cartoon: Who traded me for $? (Xinhua/Yin Zhelun) BEIJING, March 2 (Xinhua) -- According to China's latest report on U.S. human rights violations in 2021, prisoners held in U.S. private prisons are at risk of being abused, and conditions in private detention facilities where migrants are held are poor. The UN News reported on Feb. 4, 2021 that in 2019, there were about 116,000 U.S. prisoners held in privately operated facilities, representing about 7 percent of all state prisoners and 16 percent of federal prisoners, quoting data from the U.S. Bureau of Justice Statistics. China's State Council Information Office released the Report on Human Rights Violations in the United States in 2021 on Monday, which was based on information from international media reports and government statistics. U.S. authorities detained more than 1.7 million migrants along the Mexico border during the 2021 fiscal year that ended in September. Among them, up to 80 percent are held in private detention facilities, including 45,000 children, the report said. Most of the detention facilities in the United States are built and operated by private companies. In order to reduce operating costs and maximize profits, private companies generally build in accordance with the minimum standards contracted with the government, resulting in poor detention facilities and a harsh internal environment, it said. A lack of supervision has led to chaotic management of the detention facilities and repeated violations of human rights, while detainees suffered varying degrees of physical and mental health damage, the report added. (Web editor: Peng yukai, Liang Jun) Ukainian President Volodymyr Zelensky speaks to the press in the town of Bucha, northwest of the Ukrainian capital Kyiv, on April 4, 2022. (Ronaldo Schemidt/Getty-AFP) KYIV, Ukraine Russian forces laid siege to two strategic Ukrainian seaports Wednesday and pressed their bombardment of the countrys second-biggest city, while the huge armored column threatening Kyiv appeared stalled outside the capital. Moscows isolation deepened, meanwhile, when most of the world lined up against it at the United Nations to demand it withdraw from Ukraine. And the prosecutor for the International Criminal Court prosecutor opened an investigation into possible war crimes in Ukraine. Advertisement A second round of talks aimed at ending the fighting was expected Thursday between Ukraine and Russia, but there appeared to be little common ground between the two sides. Russia reported its military casualties for the first time since the invasion began last week, saying nearly 500 of its troops have been killed and almost 1,600 wounded. Ukraine did not disclose its own military losses but said more than 2,000 civilians have died, a claim that could not be independently verified. Advertisement With fighting going on on multiple fronts across the country, Britains Defense Ministry said Mariupol, a large port city on the Azov Sea, was encircled by Russian forces, while the status of another vital port, Kherson, a Black Sea shipbuilding city of 280,000, remained unclear. French teacher Pjotr Vyerko, 81, gestures in a bedroom in his house which was damaged by the shock waves of a Russian airstrike in Gorenka, outside the capital Kyiv, Ukraine, Wednesday, March 2, 2022. Vyerko told the Associated Press that he's prepared to use his rifle to shoot invaders because he has a daughter and grandson. If they come here, Ill jab them with a pitchfork if I dont have weapons -- but I do have weapons, he said. (Vadim Ghirda/AP) Russian President Vladimir Putins forces claimed to have taken complete control of Kherson, which would make it the biggest city to fall yet in the invasion. But a senior U.S. defense official disputed that. Our view is that Kherson is very much a contested city, the official said, speaking on condition of anonymity. Mariupol Mayor Vadym Boychenko said the attacks there had been relentless. We cannot even take the wounded from the streets, from houses and apartments today, since the shelling does not stop, he was quoted by the Interfax news agency as saying. Meanwhile, the senior U.S. defense official said the immense column of hundreds of tanks and other vehicles appeared to be stalled roughly 16 miles from Kyiv and had made no real progress in the last couple of days. The convoy, which earlier in the week had seemed poised to launch an assault on the capital, has been plagued with fuel and food shortages and has faced fierce Ukrainian resistance, the official said. On the far edges of Kyiv, volunteer fighters well into their 60s manned a checkpoint to try to block the Russian advance. Advertisement In my old age I had to take up arms, said Andrey Goncharuk, 68. He said the fighters needed more weapons, but well kill the enemy and take their weapons. Russia also pounded Kharkiv, Ukraines second-largest city with about 1.5 million people, in another round of aerial attacks that shattered buildings and lit up the skyline with balls of fire. At least 21 people were killed and 112 injured over the past day, said Oleg Sinehubov, head of the Kharkiv regional administration. Several Russian planes were shot down over Kharkiv, according to Oleksiy Arestovich, a top adviser to Ukrainian President Volodymyr Zelenskyy. Kharkiv today is the Stalingrad of the 21st century, Arestovich said, invoking what is considered one of the most heroic episodes in Russian history, the five-month defense of the city from the Nazis during World War II. From his basement bunker, Kharkiv Mayor Igor Terekhov told the BBC: The city is united and we shall stand fast. Russian attacks, many with missiles, blew the roof off Kharkivs five-story regional police building and set the top floor on fire, and also hit the intelligence headquarters and a university building, according to officials and videos and photos released by Ukraines State Emergency Service. Officials said residential buildings were also hit, but gave no details. Advertisement Seven days into Russias invasion, the U.N. said more than 870,000 people have fled Ukraine in a mounting refugee crisis on the European continent, while the head of the U.N. nuclear watchdog agency warned that the fighting poses a danger to Ukraines 15 nuclear reactors. Rafael Grossi of the International Atomic Energy Agency noted that the war is the first time a military conflict is happening amid the facilities of a large, established nuclear power program, and he said he is gravely concerned. When there is a conflict ongoing, there is of course a risk of attack or the possibility of an accidental hit, he said. Russia already has seized control of the decommissioned Chernobyl power plant, the scene in 1986 of the worlds worst nuclear disaster. In New York, the U.N. General Assembly voted to demand that Russia stop its offensive and immediately withdraw all troops, with world powers and tiny island states alike condemning Moscow. The vote was 141 to 5, with 35 abstentions. Assembly resolutions arent legally binding but can reflect and influence world opinion. The vote came after the 193-member assembly convened its first emergency session since 1997. The only countries to vote with Russia were Belarus, Syria, North Korea and Eritrea. Cuba spoke in Moscows defense but ultimately abstained. Advertisement Ukraines U.N. Ambassador Sergiy Kyslytsya said Russian forces have come to the Ukrainian soil, not only to kill some of us ... they have come to deprive Ukraine of the very right to exist. He added: The crimes are so barbaric that it is difficult to comprehend. A large explosion shook central Kyiv on Wednesday night in what the presidents office said was a missile strike near the capital citys southern railway station. There was no immediate word on any deaths or injuries. Thousands of Ukrainians have been fleeing the city through the sprawling railway complex. A spokesman for the Russian Defense Ministry, Maj. Gen. Igor Konashenkov, released his sides military casualty figures, disputing as disinformation reports of much higher losses. Ukraines leader claimed almost 6,000 Russian soldiers have been killed. Konashenkov also said more than 2,870 Ukrainian troops have been killed and about 3,700 wounded, while over 570 have been captured. Russia also ramped up its rhetoric. Foreign Minister Sergei Lavrov reminded the world about the countrys vast nuclear arsenal when he said in an interview with Al-Jazeera that a third world war could only be nuclear. Breaking News As it happens Be the first to know with email alerts on important breaking stories from the Orlando Sentinel newsroom. > In the northern city of Chernihiv, two cruise missiles hit a hospital, according to the Ukrainian UNIAN news agency, which quoted the health administration chief, Serhiy Pivovar, as saying authorities were working to determine the casualty toll. Advertisement In other developments: The price of oil continued to soar, reaching $112 per barrel, the highest since 2014. Russia found itself even more isolated economically as Airbus and Boeing said they would cut off spare parts and technical support to the countrys airlines, a major blow. Airbus and Boeing jets account for the vast majority or Russias passenger fleet. Kremlin spokesman Dmitry Peskov acknowledged the global economic punishment is unprecedented but said Moscow had been prepared for all manner of sanctions. We have experience with this. We have been through several crises, he said. Isachenkov and Litvinova reported from Moscow; Karmanau reported from Lviv, Ukraine. Edith M. Lederer and Jennifer Peltz at the United Nations; Mstyslav Chernov in Mariupol, Ukraine; Sergei Grits in Odesa, Ukraine; Robert Burns and Eric Tucker in Washington; Francesca Ebel, Josef Federman and Andrew Drake in Kyiv; and other AP journalists from around the world contributed to this report. Building on expertise of Company advisors, Codebase is actively acquiring assets within metaverse environments Potential investments will include underlying metaverse currencies and property Bloomberg Intelligence recently estimated that the metaverse's market size will reach USD 800bn by 20241 VANCOUVER, BC / ACCESSWIRE / March 2, 2022 / Codebase Ventures Inc. ("Codebase" or the "Company") (CSE:CODE)(FSE:C5B)(OTCQB:BKLLF) is pleased to provide an overview of its proposed metaverse investment strategy. The Company's is contemplating an investment portfolio, focused upon accumulating key investments in the DeFi ecosystem as a result of extensive research and planning with Company advisors in alignment with Codebase's blockchain, DeFi investment thesis. "The metaverse is assumed to be the next phase of the internet that will see the merging of virtual reality (VR), augmented reality (AR), and mixed reality (MR) with the real world. In simpler terms, the metaverse can be viewed as a collection of virtual worlds that are interrelated, just like how the world wide web is a nexus of connected websites. This internet-native world might change the world from what it is today by providing an alternative digital reality where humans will be able to "live," work, and play. It is expected to be the successor of the mobile internet, similar to how Web 3.0 is expected to become the successor of Web 2.0."2 "The metaverse and virtual reality represent immersive technologies with the potential to completely change the way we communicate, play games, and even visit our loved ones - and we've only seen this growth accelerate throughout the pandemic," said Jake Chernoff, Codebase Technology Advisor. "Although we are seeing these technologies develop at an accelerated pace, the metaverse is an early stage, unexplored industry - and the race for metaverse superiority is just beginning." The potential to acquire underlying currencies and property within the metaverse is a key strategic investment pillar for Codebase to position the Company with assets within this emerging space. 1https://www.bloomberg.com/professional/blog/the-metaverse-is-already-now-four-surprising-bi-charts/ 2 https://cryptonews.com/exclusives/investing-in-the-metaverse-4-ways-to-invest-in-virtual-future.htm About Codebase Ventures Inc. Codebase Ventures Inc. seeks early-stage investments in emerging technology sectors, including the blockchain ecosystem and fintech. The Company identifies such opportunities and applies its relationships and capital to advance its interests. For further information, please contact: George Tsafalas - Ivy Lu Investor Relations Telephone: Toll-Free (877) 806-CODE (2633) or 1 (778) 806-5150 E-mail: IR@codebase.ventures Neither the Canadian Securities Exchange nor its Regulation Services Provider (as that term is defined in the policies of the Canadian Securities Exchange) accepts responsibility for the adequacy or accuracy of this release. Forward Looking Statements Certain information set forth in this news release may contain forward-looking statements that involve substantial known and unknown risks and uncertainties. All statements other than statements of historical fact are forward-looking statements, including, without limitation, statements regarding future financial position, business strategy, use of proceeds, corporate vision, proposed acquisitions, partnerships, joint-ventures and strategic alliances and co-operations, budgets, cost and plans and objectives of or involving the Company. Such forward-looking information reflects management's current beliefs and is based on information currently available to management. Often, but not always, forward-looking statements can be identified by the use of words such as "plans", "expects", "is expected", "budget", "scheduled", "estimates", "forecasts", "predicts", "intends", "targets", "aims", "anticipates", "may" or "believes" or variations (including negative variations) of such words and phrases or may be identified by statements to the effect that certain actions "may", "could", "should", "would", "might" or "will" be taken, occur or be achieved. A number of known and unknown risks, uncertainties and other factors may cause the actual results or performance to materially differ from any future results or performance expressed or implied by the forward-looking information. These forward-looking statements are subject to numerous risks and uncertainties, certain of which are beyond the control of the Company including, but not limited to, the impact of general economic conditions, industry conditions, risks relating to epidemics or pandemics such as COVID-19, including the impact of COVID-19 on the Company's business, financial condition and results of operations, lack of investor demand for Bitcoin and/or Bitcoin futures exchange traded funds, and dependence upon regulatory approvals. Readers are cautioned that the assumptions used in the preparation of such information, although considered reasonable at the time of preparation, may prove to be imprecise and, as such, undue reliance should not be placed on forward-looking statements. The Company does not assume any obligation to update or revise its forward-looking statements, whether as a result of new information, future events, or otherwise, except as required by securities laws. SOURCE: Codebase Ventures Inc. View source version on accesswire.com:https://www.accesswire.com/691025/Codebase-Outlines-Proposed-Strategy-for-Metaverse-Investments BARCELONA, Spain, March 2, 2022 /PRNewswire/ -- The Green Optical Network Summit was held during MWC22 Barcelona by IDATE, a well-known French research and analysis organization. At the summit, all parties called for accelerating the construction of green optical networks. Richard Jin, President of Huawei Optical Business Product Line, released the Green Intelligent OptiX Network based on the value proposition of "More Bits, Less Watts", aiming to promote the green development of society through technological innovation. In recent years, green development has become an industry consensus, and 197 countries and regions have signed the Glasgow Climate Pact. Against this backdrop, the ICT industry has also set carbon emission reduction targets. However, there are challenges and pressures in this process. On one hand, operators need to expand network capacity to meet user requirements. On the other hand, large-scale network construction increases energy consumption. Therefore, building green and efficient networks by leveraging technological innovation has become the top priority of the ICT industry. Richard Jin, President of Huawei Optical Business Product Line, said that Huawei's E2E Green Intelligent OptiX Network solution is capable of reconstructing green network, green sites, and green operation, helping operators and the industry achieve the goal of "More Bits, Less Watt". In terms of green sites, the all-optical grooming capability should be introduced to equipment service grooming. OXC reduces unnecessary electrical-layer processing and massive manual fiber connections, greatly reducing site space occupation and system power consumption. In terms of service access, the OSU technology is used to integrate multiple devices based on the flexible service access capability from 2M to 100G, greatly reducing site space and power consumption. In terms of green network, operators should increase the construction of optical networks. This is in line with the low-carbon trend of "fiber-in copper-out". In addition, based on a fiber network, the FTTR for Home solution for home users and the FTTR for SME, OTN P2P, and OTN P2MP series private line solutions for the enterprise market are used to achieve one network for multiple purposes, meeting operators' requirements for expanding the home broadband and enterprise private line markets. On the other hand, invalid service forwarding is one of the causes of high network power consumption. Operators should deploy WDM devices as close to the user side as possible to achieve a simplified architecture of one-hop transmission, greatly reducing network construction and power consumption costs. In terms of green operation, research shows that a communications network is idle for 80% of the time. Dynamic power adjustment of devices is critical to energy saving and emission reduction of an entire network. Starting from the home, access, and transport segments of a communications network, Huawei provides a series of intelligent power consumption management solutions for ONTs, OLTs, and OTNs based on the concept of "Bits Manage Watts" to reduce power consumption. Richard Jin said, "The value of Huawei Green Intelligent OptiX Network for operators lies in greatly reducing network power consumption. At the same time, we are committed to accelerating the green development of various industries through continuous innovation and upgrade of ICT technologies." Photo - https://mma.prnewswire.com/media/1757947/Richard_Jin_released_Green_Intelligent_OptiX_Network.jpg The "Construction in Germany Key Trends and Opportunities to 2025 (Q4 2021)" report has been added to ResearchAndMarkets.com's offering. The publisher expects Germany's construction industry to grow by 1.2% in 2021, before it stabilizes at an annual average growth of 2% over the remainder of the forecast period (2022-2025). This compares to the previous forecast of 0.2% growth for 2021. This marginal upward revision reflects stronger-than-expected construction growth in Q3 2021, as well as favorable base effects, and assumes that construction activity will accelerate further over the next few quarters, supported by the government's focus on improving regional connectivity through the development of the country's rail and road transport infrastructure, coupled with efforts to boost energy production. The German construction industry fared relatively well compared to its peers in Western Europe in 2020. Although the industry's value add contracted by 4.5% on a year-on-year (Y-o-Y) basis in Q1 2021, industry output recovered in the second quarter of 2021, increasing by 3.1% in Q2 and 3.5% in Q3 2021, which helped the industry register a cumulative growth of 0.9% in the first nine months of 2021. The industry's output over the forecast period will be supported by the government's focus on the development of green infrastructure as part of its climate change strategy. The government has also supported the construction sector through its fiscal policy response to the Coronavirus (COVID-19) outbreak, announcing an additional EUR3.1 billion (US$3.5 billion) each year between 2021 and 2024 on public investment in infrastructure, including roads and railways and the construction of affordable housing. Improvements in consumer confidence and positive developments in regional economic conditions will also provide momentum. The construction of the Fehmarn belt underwater tunnel between Germany and Denmark, which is worth EUR7 billion (US$7.8 billion), will underpin activity in the transport infrastructure sector over the medium term. Growth will also be supported by the 10-year plan to invest EUR86 billion (US$94.7 billion) on the maintenance and modernization of the country's rail network between 2020 and 2030. This report provides detailed market analysis, information, and insights into Germany's construction industry, including: Germany's construction industry's growth prospects by market, project type and construction activity Critical insight into the impact of industry trends and issues, as well as an analysis of key risks and opportunities in Germany's construction industry Analysis of the mega-project pipeline, focusing on development stages and participants, in addition to listings of major projects in the pipeline. Scope Historical (2016-2020) and forecast (2021-2025) valuations of the construction industry in Germany, featuring details of key growth drivers. Segmentation by sector (commercial, industrial, infrastructure, energy and utilities, institutional and residential) and by sub-sector Analysis of the mega-project pipeline, including breakdowns by development stage across all sectors, and projected spending on projects in the existing pipeline. Listings of major projects, in addition to details of leading contractors and consultants Reasons to Buy Identify and evaluate market opportunities using the publisher's standardized valuation and forecasting methodologies. Assess market growth potential at a micro-level with over 600 time-series data forecasts. Understand the latest industry and market trends. Formulate and validate strategy using the publisher's critical and actionable insight. Assess business risks, including cost, regulatory and competitive pressures. Evaluate competitive risk and success factors. Key Topics Covered: 1 Executive Summary 2 Construction Industry: At-a-Glance 3 Context 3.1 Economic Performance 3.2 Political Environment and Policy 3.3 Demographics 3.4 COVID-19 Status 3.5 Risk Profile 4 Construction Outlook 4.1 All Construction Outlook Latest news and developments Construction Projects Momentum Index 4.2 Commercial Construction Outlook Project analytics Latest news and developments 4.3 Industrial Construction Outlook Project analytics Latest news and developments 4.4 Infrastructure Construction Outlook Project analytics Latest news and developments 4.5 Energy and Utilities Construction Outlook Project analytics Latest news and developments 4.6 Institutional Construction Outlook Project analytics Latest news and developments 4.7 Residential Construction Outlook Project analytics Latest news and developments 5 Key Industry Participants 5.1 Contractors 5.2 Consultants 6 Construction Market Data 7 Appendix For more information about this report visit https://www.researchandmarkets.com/r/h8vsmv View source version on businesswire.com: https://www.businesswire.com/news/home/20220302005619/en/ Contacts: ResearchAndMarkets.com Laura Wood, Senior Press Manager press@researchandmarkets.com For E.S.T Office Hours Call 1-917-300-0470 For U.S./CAN Toll Free Call 1-800-526-8630 For GMT Office Hours Call +353-1-416-8900 The first-of-its-kind Cloud Car ecosystem will bring software-defined vehicles to the cloud via a scalable, secure, and hardware agnostic platform Wipro Limited (NYSE: WIT, BSE: 507685, NSE: WIPRO), a leading global information technology, consulting, and business process services company, today announced the launch of its "Cloud Car" platform, which will be unveiled during the Engineering the Cloud Car Ecosystem panel at MWC Barcelona. Wipro's Cloud Car platform will bring together its Wipro FullStride Cloud Services and engineering capabilities with a best-in-class partner ecosystem as well as consortiums. A first in the industry, the platform will deliver auto makers an integrated, cloud-native software solution-equipped with an end-to-end cybersecurity system-to help them innovate faster at a lower cost and keep software-defined vehicles (SDVs) digitally relevant for years. "Today, most SDVs come with pre-set features that are difficult and time-consuming to upgrade, rendering them outdated as new technologies come to market," said Thomas Mueller, CTO, Engineering and R&D Services, Wipro Limited. "Our goal is to make it possible for automobile manufacturers to deliver vehicles that get better every day, so both they and generations of owners can drive better return on investments." Wipro's Cloud Car platform will decouple previously integrated software and hardware, enabling manufacturers to validate and upgrade software at an unmatched digital scale. As a result, generations of owners will be able to customize their vehicles based on their unique and changing needs. Automobile manufacturers, on the other hand, will be able to address software failures via over-the-air updates, without having to resort to physical recalls. The 'always-on,' 'feature-on-demand' functionality will come with a robust cyber security and functional safety architecture and will help increase vehicles' residual value. "By 2030, the vast majority of new vehicles will be SDVs," added Mueller. "These cars will connect in real-time with the world around them. They will leverage artificial intelligence and machine learning to constantly gather data, provide valuable information and, eventually, make autonomous decisions. Unlocking the true potential of SDVs will require moving them to the cloud. We are fast forwarding to that future by making the Cloud Car ecosystem available to every automotive company in the world today The Cloud Car platform will also leverage a 'shadow mode' architecture, working passively in the background, gathering and consolidating data from sensors and cameras as well as the driver, which, over time, will help with the validation and safety of autonomous functionalities. Wipro's Cloud Car ecosystem includes more than 40 partners, focusing on these key technologies: Connectivity Cloud computing Silicon manufacturing Open-source software solutions Middleware and mechatronics Mobility Wipro will be unveiling the Cloud Car platform during the Engineering the Cloud Car Ecosystem panel to held today at 17:00-18:00 CET at The MWC Broadcast Stage, Hall 4. About Wipro Limited Wipro Limited (NYSE: WIT, BSE: 507685, NSE: WIPRO) is a leading global information technology, consulting and business process services company. We harness the power of cognitive computing, hyper-automation, robotics, cloud, analytics and emerging technologies to help our clients adapt to the digital world and make them successful. A company recognized globally for its comprehensive portfolio of services, strong commitment to sustainability and good corporate citizenship, we have over 220,000 dedicated employees serving clients across six continents. Together, we discover ideas and connect the dots to build a better and a bold new future. Forward-Looking Statements The forward-looking statements contained herein represent Wipro's beliefs regarding future events, many of which are by their nature, inherently uncertain and outside Wipro's control. Such statements include, but are not limited to, statements regarding Wipro's growth prospects, its future financial operating results, and its plans, expectations and intentions. Wipro cautions readers that the forward-looking statements contained herein are subject to risks and uncertainties that could cause actual results to differ materially from the results anticipated by such statements. Such risks and uncertainties include, but are not limited to, risks and uncertainties regarding fluctuations in our earnings, revenue and profits, our ability to generate and manage growth, complete proposed corporate actions, intense competition in IT services, our ability to maintain our cost advantage, wage increases in India, our ability to attract and retain highly skilled professionals, time and cost overruns on fixed-price, fixed-time frame contracts, client concentration, restrictions on immigration, our ability to manage our international operations, reduced demand for technology in our key focus areas, disruptions in telecommunication networks, our ability to successfully complete and integrate potential acquisitions, liability for damages on our service contracts, the success of the companies in which we make strategic investments, withdrawal of fiscal governmental incentives, political instability, war, legal restrictions on raising capital or acquiring companies outside India, unauthorized use of our intellectual property and general economic conditions affecting our business and industry. The conditions caused by the COVID-19 pandemic could decrease technology spending, adversely affect demand for our products, affect the rate of customer spending and could adversely affect our customers' ability or willingness to purchase our offerings, delay prospective customers' purchasing decisions, adversely impact our ability to provide on-site consulting services and our inability to deliver our customers or delay the provisioning of our offerings, all of which could adversely affect our future sales, operating results and overall financial performance. Our operations may also be negatively affected by a range of external factors related to the COVID-19 pandemic that are not within our control. Additional risks that could affect our future operating results are more fully described in our filings with the United States Securities and Exchange Commission, including, but not limited to, Annual Reports on Form 20-F. These filings are available at www.sec.gov. We may, from time to time, make additional written and oral forward-looking statements, including statements contained in the company's filings with the Securities and Exchange Commission and our reports to shareholders. We do not undertake to update any forward-looking statement that may be made from time to time by us or on our behalf. View source version on businesswire.com: https://www.businesswire.com/news/home/20220302005136/en/ Contacts: Sanuber Grohe Wipro Limited sanuber.grohe@wipro.com CHICAGO, IL and VANCOUVER, BC / ACCESSWIRE / March 2, 2022 / The Planting Hope Company Inc. (TSX.V:MYLK)(FRA:J94) ("Planting Hope" or the "Company"), a plant-based food and beverage company focused on producing nutritious and planet-friendly products, is pleased to announce the launch of two new flavorful, on-trend additions to the RightRice family: Mediterranean RightRice and Roasted Garlic RightRice Risotto. Made with herbs and spices, Mediterranean RightRice brings together the bright flavors of thyme, basil, and lemon, while Roasted Garlic RightRice Risotto delivers the slightly sweet flavor of caramelized garlic blended with aromatic spices. The two new RightRice flavors are debuting at all Whole Foods Market stores nationwide across the United States and will be on shelves by early March. These flavors will be added to the Whole Foods Market RightRice lineup, which currently includes four RightRice pre-seasoned flavors (Original, Garlic Herb, Spanish, and Cilantro Lime) and three RightRice Risotto flavors (Creamy Parmesan, Wild Mushroom, and Basil Pesto), for a total of nine shelf-facing flavors in the Rice category. Mediterranean RightRice and Roasted Garlic RightRice Risotto will be replacing Thai Curry RightRice and Creamy Cracked Pepper RightRice Risotto, respectively. "We are thrilled to expand our nutritious and delicious RightRice product line with two new on-trend flavors, Mediterranean RightRice and Roasted Garlic RightRice Risotto, delivering on customer and retailer demand," said Julia Stamberger, CEO and Co-founder of Planting Hope. "We are excited to debut these new flavors with Whole Foods Market, with distribution to all major cities and markets across the United States. We believe Whole Foods Market is highly influential in both the natural channel and the food industry at large and has been a great collaborator with RightRice since its exclusive debut with Whole Foods Market in 2019. We appreciate Whole Foods Market's ongoing support of the RightRice brand and the positive response to RightRice from Whole Foods Market's customers." "Whole Foods Market is committed to introducing products that tap into current food trends and bring in new culinary experiences to our customers," said AnaMaria Friede, Executive Leader of Grocery for Whole Foods Market. "RightRice fits in with the 'reducetarianism' trend, where customers are reducing consumption of meat, dairy, and eggs without cutting them out completely; and the new RightRice products provide a great choice of complete plant-based protein while delivering on delicious taste." RightRice and RightRice Risotto 10 grams of complete, plant-based protein 5 grams of fiber Almost 40% less net carbohydrates than a bowl of white rice Vegan Non-GMO Project Verified Certified Gluten-Free Certified Kosher Simple ingredients: lentils, chickpeas, peas, rice, and seasoning About RightRice RightRice redefines a household staple with a delicious vegetable-based rice grain that's packed with the power of vegetables and complete plant-based protein. RightRice is the first-of-its-kind: a shelf-stable vegetable grain that's a blend of over 90 percent vegetables, including lentils, chickpeas, green peas, and rice, and delivers on both taste and nutrition. With 10g of complete protein and 5g of fiber per serving, RightRice delivers more than double the protein, five times the fiber, and around 40 percent fewer net carbohydrates than traditional white rice, plus it can be prepared in about 10 minutes. RightRice is now available in a range of pre-seasoned flavors, plus multiple flavors of RightRice Medley and RightRice Risotto. RightRice products are currently sold in more than 7,000 doors in leading retailers across North America, including Whole Foods Market, Wegman's, Kroger, Sprouts, Albertsons/Safeway, HEB, Ahold, and Meijer, as well as online through Amazon, Thrive Market, Hive, and RightRice.com. All RightRice products are made using real herbs and spices, and are plant-based, Non-GMO Project Verified, certified gluten-free and certified kosher. RightRice continues to receive awards and acclaim since its launch in 2019, including People Magazine's Best Plant-Based Food Award, NOSH's Best New Product, and Sunset Magazine's 2021 Pantry Award, in addition to being highlighted as the Best Alt Grain Grocery Store Swap by goop. RightRice Risotto was awarded Best Sauce/Store Cupboard Product in FoodBev's 2021 World Plant-Based Taste Awards and received the 2021 Eco Excellence Award for Best Gluten Free Product, in addition to being chosen as a 2021 Editors' Pick for Best New Product by Progressive Grocer. For more information visit: www.rightrice.com. About The Planting Hope Company Inc. Planting Hope develops, launches and scales uniquely innovative plant-based and planet-friendly food and beverage brands. Planting Hope's award-winning and cutting-edge products fill key unmet needs in the skyrocketing plant-based food and beverage space. The Planting Hope brand family includes Hope and Sesame Sesamemilk, RightRice Veggie Rice, Mozaics Real Veggie Chips, and Veggicopia Veggie Snacks. Founded by experienced food industry entrepreneurs, Planting Hope is a women-managed and woman-led company with a focus on nutrition, sustainability, and diversity. For more information visit: www.plantinghopecompany.com. Contacts Company Contact: Julia Stamberger CEO and Co-founder (773) 492-2243 julia@plantinghopecompany.com Media Contact: Rachel Kay Public Relations Becca Stonebraker (818) 383-3929 becca@rkpr.net Investor Relations Contact: Caroline Sawamoto Investor Relations (773) 492-2243 ir@plantinghopecompany.com 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 release. Forward-Looking Statements This news release contains "forward-looking statements" or "forward-looking information" (collectively referred to hereafter as "forward-looking statements") within the meaning of applicable Canadian securities legislation. All statements that address activities, events, or developments that the Company expects or anticipates will, or may, occur in the future, including statements about the Company's ability to execute on its goals, the timing pertaining to these goals the potential demand for the Company's products, the timing and success of anticipated product launches and distribution of the Company's products, and the Company's business prospects, future trends, plans and strategies. In some cases, forward looking statements are preceded by, followed by, or include words such as "may", "will," "would", "could", "should", "believes", "estimates", "projects", "potential", "expects", "plans", "anticipates", "continues", or the negative of those words or other similar or comparable words. In preparing the forward-looking statements in this news release, the Company has applied several material assumptions, including, but not limited to, the assumption that demand for the Company's product will be sustained or increase in accordance with management's projections, that the Company's current business objectives can be achieved and that its other corporate activities will proceed as expected, and that general business and economic conditions will not change in a materially adverse manner. Although the management of the Company believes that the assumptions made and the expectations represented by such statements are reasonable, there can be no assurance that any forward-looking statement herein will prove to be accurate. Forward-looking statements involve known and unknown risks, uncertainties, and other factors which may cause the actual results, performance, or achievements of the Company to be materially different from any future results, performance, or achievements expressed or implied by such forward-looking statements. Although management of the Company has attempted to identify important factors that could cause actual results to differ materially from those contained in forward-looking information, there may be other factors that cause results not to be as anticipated, estimated, or intended. Risks and uncertainties applicable to the Company, as well as trends identified by the Company affecting its industry can be found in the Company's annual information form dated January 6, 2022 and the Company's continuous disclosure record available on SEDAR at www.sedar.com. Such cautionary statements qualify all forward-looking statements made in this news release. The Company undertakes no obligation to update or revise any forward-looking statements, whether as a result of new information, future events, or otherwise, except as required by applicable law. SOURCE: The Planting Hope Company Inc. View source version on accesswire.com:https://www.accesswire.com/691020/Planting-Hope-Launches-Two-New-RightRiceR-Flavors-Debuting-in-Whole-Foods-Market-Stores-Across-the-United-States Stonebridge Companies is a manager and operator of over 11,500 hotel rooms across 13 states TowerBrook and Related Fund Management to partner with Stonebridge to capture growth opportunities in a favorable market TowerBrook Capital Partners L.P. ("TowerBrook"), an international investment management firm, and Related Fund Management ("RFM"), a real estate investment management firm, announced the completion of their investment in Stonebridge Companies ("Stonebridge" or the "Company"). The transaction was funded through a majority investment from TowerBrook, with a significant minority investment from RFM and a substantial roll-over investment from Navin Dimond, Founder and CEO of Stonebridge. In conjunction with the investment, TowerBrook, RFM and Mr. Dimond have also committed significant capital to establish a real estate investment platform to fund new hotel acquisitions. Based in Denver, Colorado and founded by Navin Dimond in 1991, Stonebridge manages and operates over 11,500 hotel rooms (67 hotels) across 13 states in the Midwest, Northeast, South, and West Coast markets. The Company provides hotel management services, hotel investment opportunities, and development services across its portfolio. The Company's mission to deliver Distinguished Hospitality to guests, team members, and partners has allowed it to grow its portfolio of hotels across multiple full-service, extended stay, select-service, and mid-scale hotel brands. The Company also holds franchise licenses with Hilton Worldwide, Marriott International, Hyatt, InterContinental Hotel Group, and Wyndham, as well as supports independent hotels. Michael Recht, Managing Director at TowerBrook, stated, "Stonebridge is a strong operator that has demonstrated a consistent history of growth over several decades. Navin is a visionary who has built a unique platform that is sought after by hotel owners and investors. We are excited to partner with Navin and the Company to continue to grow and scale the business." Mr. Dimond added, "This transaction and partnership with TowerBrook and RFM will allow Stonebridge to grow our current portfolio, further expand our geographic footprint, and continue to refine our operations. TowerBrook and RFM are ideal partners to help Stonebridge achieve its next phase of growth." Michael Winston, Managing Director at Related Fund Management added, "We were attracted to Stonebridge for its strong operational prowess and diversified portfolio of managed properties across well-known brands with a focus on full- and select-service in geographically desirable areas. With hotel occupancy rates expected to return to pre-COVID levels in the next 12-18 months, Stonebridge's current managed portfolio and our new real estate investment platform will be well-positioned to benefit from a prolonged period of consumer, business, and group travel recovery." "Given Stonebridge's strong history of investing in hotels and its established platform, TowerBrook is excited to commit additional capital to pursue investment opportunities in the hotel real estate market. The new investment vehicle will seek to develop strategic capital partnerships alongside our captive operating solution, with the objective of investing $1bn+," said Luke Doramus, Managing Director at TowerBrook. As a part of the transaction, Mr. Dimond will continue his role as CEO. Jim Abrahamson, a hotel industry veteran who previously served as the CEO of Interstate Hotels Resorts and currently serves as independent Chair of the Board of VICI Properties, Inc. and as a Board Director of other travel, hospitality and service related companies, has been named as non-executive Chairman of the Board for the Company. Stonebridge Companies was advised by Bryan Cave Leighton Paisner LLP. TowerBrook was advised by Sidley Austin LLP. RFM was advised by Sullivan Cromwell LLP. Financial terms of the transaction were not disclosed. About TowerBrook TowerBrook Capital Partners is a purpose-driven, transatlantic investment firm that works to grow and improve large and middle-market businesses by partnering with management teams and employees to build excellent companies that make a positive impact on society. Since inception in 2001, TowerBrook has raised a total of $18.7 billion and invested in more than 85 companies on both sides of the Atlantic. TowerBrook operates as a single, unified team of experienced investment professionals focused on unlocking value in complex situations. The firm's highly synergistic family of funds make control and non-control investments across the capital structure, providing capital and resources to transform the capabilities and prospects of its portfolio companies. As a disciplined investor with a commitment to fundamental value, TowerBrook seeks to deliver superior, risk-adjusted returns to investors on a consistent and responsible basis. TowerBrook is the first mainstream private equity firm to be certified as a B Corporation. B Corporation certification is administered by the non-profit B Lab organisation and is awarded to companies that demonstrate leadership in their commitment to environmental, social and governance (ESG) standards and responsible business practices. For more information, please visit www.towerbrook.com About Related Fund Management Related Fund Management is a multi-strategy real estate investment manager that currently manages approximately $10.3 billion in commingled funds and separately managed accounts on behalf of public and private pension plans, endowments, family offices and sovereign wealth funds (estimate as of 9/30/21). RFM has a team of over 40 professionals headquartered in New York City with additional offices in Dallas, Los Angeles and South Florida. Since inception in 2010, RFM has invested across all portions of the capital stack and in all major real estate sectors. View source version on businesswire.com: https://www.businesswire.com/news/home/20220302005195/en/ Contacts: TowerBrook: Brunswick Group Blake Sonnenshein Alex Yankus 917-818-5204 towerbrookcapital@brunswickgroup.com Related Fund Management: Jon Weinstein 212-801-3902 joweinstein@related.com XARACOLL 300mg Dose Cohort Experienced Less Pain and XARACOLL was Generally Well Tolerated with an Adverse Event Profile Comparable to the Current Prescribing Information Innocoll Pharmaceuticals Limited, a commercial-stage biotechnology company and portfolio business of Gurnet Point Capital, announced today positive topline results from Study INN-CB-024, a Phase 3 randomized, double-blind, placebo-controlled study evaluating the safety and efficacy of a 300mg dose of XARACOLL, an innovative collagen drug-device implant, in patients undergoing abdominoplasty. Among patients receiving XARACOLL, a reduction in pain intensity and opioid use was observed through 24 hours post-surgery. Study INN-CB-024 enrolled 366 patients, who were randomly assigned to have either XARACOLL 300mg (n=181) or placebo collagen matrix (n=185) implanted during surgery. The primary outcome measure was the time-weighted sum of pain intensity from time of implantation through 24 hours (SPI24). There was a statistically significant treatment effect for XARACOLL compared to placebo in SPI24 (p 0.002). Further, approximately three times as many patients in the XARACOLL cohort were opioid free through 24 hours compared to the placebo-collagen matrix group (18.8% versus 6.5%). This data complements the positive results of XARACOLL in acute post-surgical pain following open inguinal hernia repair in adults, for which XARACOLL is currently approved. The most common treatment emergent adverse events (TEAE) (>=2% for XARACOLL and greater than placebo collagen-matrix) were dysgeusia (2.2% versus 1.6%), incision site swelling (2.8% versus 2.7%), incision site erythema (2.8% versus 2.2%), postprocedural discharge (2.8% vs 1.1%), back pain (7.7% versus 7.6%), pruritus generalized (2.8% vs. 1.6%), rash (2.2% vs. 1.1%), oropharyngeal pain (4.4% vs 1.6%), blood pressure increased (3.3% vs. 1.6%). There was one serious adverse event of surgical drain site infection in a patient that received placebo collagen-matrix that was considered unrelated to treatment. No TEAE led to study discontinuation. These positive topline Phase 3 clinical trial results will support Innocoll's soft tissue surgery development program and its anticipated sNDA application to expand the indications for XARACOLL. Additional studies in this development program include surgery types such as abdominoplasty, ventral hernia, hysterectomy, reduction mammoplasty and colectomy. "We are excited to report the positive results of this Phase 3 clinical trial with XARACOLL. This study supports XARACOLL's potential for use in post-surgical pain relief in patients undergoing soft tissue surgery," said Louis Pascarella, Innocoll President and Chief Executive Officer. Acute postsurgical pain management, especially across soft tissue surgeries, has historically relied on systemically administered treatments, especially opioid medications. Exposure to opioids post-operatively can result in opioid-related adverse reactions like constipation in the short-term, but in addition several publications have reported that receipt of an opioid after surgery is associated with a risk for persistent opioid use 1 year later.1 Gwendolyn Niebler, DO, Innocoll's Chief Medical Officer added, "We are proud of these results. The prospect of providing a non-opioid treatment option like XARACOLL to more patients looking to manage acute post-surgical pain after soft tissue surgeries is compelling." About Innocoll Pharmaceuticals Limited Innocoll Pharmaceuticals Limited is a global biotech pharmaceutical company headquartered in Athlone, Ireland and is a subsidiary of Innocoll Biotherapeutics Holding Limited. The Innocoll group of companies is focused on the development and commercialization of pharmaceutical technologies to meet some of today's most important healthcare challenges. Innocoll is a portfolio business of Gurnet Point Capital. About Gurnet Point Capital Gurnet Point Capital is a unique healthcare investment platform within the B-Flexion Group and led by a team with deep expertise in an industry for which they share a passion, both as investors and senior executives. GPC invests long-term capital and supports entrepreneurs in building a new generation of companies that deliver outsized returns through active ownership. Based in Cambridge, MA, its remit encompasses life sciences and health care focused businesses, with a particular emphasis on businesses that have high growth potential in the product development and commercialization stages of their evolution. With its strategy of driving best in class operational transformation for these businesses, to create social impact while generating significant economic value, Gurnet is able to deliver differentiated results for its investors and partners. www.gurnetpointcapital.com About XARACOLL XARACOLL (bupivacaine HCl) implant is a bioresorbable collagen implant providing postsurgical pain relief through the delivery of bupivacaine, a local anesthetic, at the surgical site. XARACOLL implant releases bupivacaine after placement at the surgical site through diffusion from the porous collagen implant, which dissolves over time. XARACOLL was approved in August 2020 by the US Food and Drug Administration (FDA) for adults to produce postsurgical analgesia for up to 24 hours following open inguinal hernia repair. It is investigational for use in other soft tissue surgeries. XARACOLL is a registered trademark of Innocoll Pharmaceuticals Limited. Further Information About XARACOLL INDICATIONS AND USAGE XARACOLL contains an amide local anesthetic and is indicated in adults for placement into the surgical site to produce postsurgical analgesia for up to 24 hours following open inguinal hernia repair. Limitations of Use Safety and effectiveness have not been established in other surgical procedures, including orthopedic and boney procedures. IMPORTANT SAFETY INFORMATION CONTRAINDICATIONS Known hypersensitivity to bupivacaine or to any local anesthetic agent of the amide-type or to other components of XARACOLL Obstetrical paracervical block anesthesia. The use of bupivacaine in this technique has resulted in fetal bradycardia and death WARNINGS AND PRECAUTIONS Dose-Related Toxicity: Monitor cardiovascular and respiratory vital signs and patient's state of consciousness after placement of XARACOLL Methemoglobinemia: Cases of methemoglobinemia have been reported in association with local anesthetic use. See full Prescribing Information for more detail on managing these risks ADVERSE REACTIONS Most common adverse reactions in clinical trials (incidence =2% and higher than placebo) included incision site swelling, dysgeusia, headache, tremor, blurred vision, seroma, scrotal swelling, pyrexia, oral hypoesthesia, and post procedural discharge. To report SUSPECTED ADVERSE REACTIONS, contact Innocoll at 1-833-606-1421 or the FDA at 1-800-FDA-1088 or www.fda.gov/medwatch. DRUG INTERACTIONS Local Anesthetics: The toxic effects of local anesthetics are additive. Avoid additional local anesthetic administration within 96 hours following XARACOLL implantation. If additional local anesthetic administration with XARACOLL cannot be avoided, monitor patients for neurologic and cardiovascular effects related to local anesthetic systemic toxicity. USE IN SPECIFIC POPULATIONS Pregnancy: Based on animal data, may cause fetal harm Moderate to Severe Hepatic Impairment: Consider increased monitoring for bupivacaine systemic toxicity Please see full Prescribing Information. www.xaracoll.com/xaracoll_pi.pdf 1 Clarke H, Soneji N, Ko DT, Yun L, Wijeysundera DN. Rates and risk factors for prolonged opioid use after major surgery: population based cohort study. BMJ. 2014;348:g1251 Nooromid MJ, Blay E, Jr, Holl JL, et al. Discharge prescription patterns of opioid and nonopioid analgesics after common surgical procedures. Pain Rep. 2018;3(1):e637. View source version on businesswire.com: https://www.businesswire.com/news/home/20220302005437/en/ Contacts: Media Blair Hennessy (212) 371-5999 bth@abmac.com BRUSSELS (dpa-AFX) - U.S. ADP private payrolls data for February is scheduled for release at 8:15 am ET Wednesday. Ahead of the data, the greenback traded mixed against its major counterparts. While it rose against the yen and the franc, it retreated from its early highs against the euro and the pound. The greenback was worth 115.29 against the yen, 1.1110 against the euro, 1.3330 against the pound and 0.9195 against the franc at 8:10 am ET. Copyright(c) 2022 RTTNews.com. All Rights Reserved 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. - March 2, 2022) - Altamira Gold Corp. (TSXV: ALTA) (FSE: T6UP) (OTC Pink: EQTRF) ("Altamira" or the "Company") is pleased to announce that the Company has raised $1,663,905 since January 1st, 2022. These funds were received as a result of the exercise of 16,639,047 share purchase warrants, with an exercise price of $0.10, that were issued in connection with the February 28th, 2020 non-brokered private placement and expired on February 28th, 2022. Altamira currently has 31,423,577 warrants outstanding, with a weighted average exercise price of $0.27 and a weighted remaining contractual life of 1.04 years. The Company's current treasury stands at approximately $5.4 million. Officers and directors of the Company exercised a total of 4,979,598 warrants for proceeds of $497,960. Of this total, the CEO of the Company exercised a total of 3,312,931 warrants representing proceeds of $331,293, and the Company's Chairman exercised a total of 1,666,667 warrants representing proceeds of $166,667. In connection with the exercise of the warrants, the CEO and the Chairman sold 1,850,421 and 890,500 common shares respectively for proceeds of $339,881 and $167,086. Michael Bennett, President & CEO commented "We are pleased to have the continued support of our shareholders as we advance the drilling on both our Santa Helena and Apiacas projects in Brazil. We look forward to what we believe will be an exciting year ahead for Altamira in 2022." Technical Update Diamond drilling continues at both the Santa Helena Project and the Mutum target within the Apiacas Project area. At the Mutum target, a total of 10 drill holes have now been completed and samples are presently being assayed with results expected during March. At the Santa Helena Project area, a total of 11 drill holes have been completed targeting both the porphyry-style alteration and mineralization, and the vein-style copper and gold mineralization. Drill core from Santa Helena are being logged, structurally orientated and sampled ahead of dispatch to the assay laboratory in March. During March a detailed drone magnetometer survey will begin over the entire central area of the Santa Helena Project using equipment recently acquired from Terraplus Inc/ GEM systems in Canada and imported into Brazil by Altamira Gold. This survey along with the results from the Phase 1 drilling will be used to help design the second phase of drilling at Santa Helena expected to start in mid-2022. Qualified Person Guillermo Hughes, FAIG and M AusIMM., a consultant to the Company as well as a Qualified Person as defined by National Instrument 43-101, supervised the preparation of the technical information in this news release. 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 release. About Altamira Gold Corp. The Company is focused on the exploration and development of gold projects within western central Brazil. The Company holds 8 projects comprising approximately 190,000 hectares, within the prolific Juruena gold belt which historically produced an estimated 7 to 10Moz of placer gold. The Company's advanced Cajueiro project has NI 43-101 resources of 5.66Mt @ 1.02 g/t gold for a total of 185,000 oz in the Indicated Resource category and 12.66Mt @ 1.26 g/t gold for a total of 515,000oz in the Inferred Resource category. On Behalf of the Board of Directors, ALTAMIRA GOLD CORP. "Michael Bennett" Michael Bennett President & CEO Tel: 604.676.5660 Toll-Free:1-833-606-6271 info@altamiragold.com www.altamiragold.com Forward-Looking Statements Statements in this document which are not purely historical are forward-looking statements, including any statements regarding beliefs, plans, expectations or intentions regarding the future. It is important to note that actual outcomes and the Company's actual results could differ materially from those in such forward-looking statements. Except as required by law, we do not undertake to update these forward-looking statements. To view the source version of this press release, please visit https://www.newsfilecorp.com/release/115359 Emogene Stegall is one of the most respected public officials in Florida. Since 1972, she has held the position of elections supervisor in Lake County. She worked 14 years in the elections office before she was elected to lead it. She doesnt know if she will continue to hold onto office, but says its possible. (Carin Perez/Orlando Sentinel) ORG XMIT: B58779287Z.1 (Carin Perez / Orlando Sentinel) Emogene Stegall, who served more than four decades as Lake Countys supervisor of elections before retiring in 2016, died Saturday of congestive heart failure. She was 95. She was a strong-willed and remarkable woman, daughter Paula Stegall Stinson said. Her work ethic was admired and respected in our family. And she passed that on to her grandchildren and great-grandchildren. Were going to miss her. Advertisement Stegall became a well-known figure in Lake County after she was first elected in 1972. And for decades, Stegall was the only Democrat political office holder in a solidly GOP county, getting re-elected time and again with crossover support from Republicans. She held office longer than any other politician in Lake County history. Still, Stegall would often tell reporters and county officials that she was firmly nonpartisan. Advertisement She was gentle, but she was firm, said Alan Hays, Lakes supervisor of elections, who was elected in 2016 and took over the office after Stegall. She ran a tight ship. She truly was an institution. Emogene Stegall was one of the most respected public officials in Florida. Since 1972, she has held the position of elections supervisor in Lake County. She worked 14 years in the elections office before she was elected to lead it. (Carin Perez/Orlando Sentinel) ORG XMIT: B58779287Z.1 (Carin Perez / Orlando Sentinel) Lake Commissioner Leslie Campione said Stegall was an exceptional public servant and a warm and caring person. Emogene Stegall is someone I will always respect and admire, Campione said. After 44 years in office, Stegall announced in mid-2016 that she would not run again. She told her family that she didnt want to go through another campaign. I will be free to do some things that I havent been able to do, including reading, spending more time with her family and her church, First United Methodist of Tavares, Stegall told a Sentinel reporter on one of her final days in office in late December of that year. Stegall was born in New Salem, Mississippi, as the second-oldest of five children to parents who were farmers. Stegall married Edwin Stegall in 1947 and two years later the couple moved to Tavares. Stinson was the couples only child. Edwin Stegall, a Lake County business owner, died in May 2010 of pancreatic cancer. In 1958, Stegall started working at the Lake Supervisor of Elections Office as a deputy clerk at a time when the county had roughly 17,000 registered voters. The office still used paper ballots, had two manual typewriters and no air conditioning. Today, there are nearly 264,000 registered voters in Lake County. She was gentle, but she was firm. She ran a tight ship. She truly was an institution. Alan Hays, Lakes supervisor of elections, who was elected in 2016 and took over the office after Stegall. In 1972, when Richard Nixon was president, Stegall decided to run for the office and wore out three pairs of shoes walking door to door in her first campaign. She won the election and continued getting re-elected every four years. Advertisement By habit, Stegall arrived at her office just before 7:30 a.m. nearly every weekday morning. She was a real Southern lady, and she was really fair with everybody, said Welton Cadwell, a former Lake commissioner. But she was tough if you worked for her. You better abide by the rules. And she ran the show. At a time when many elected officials can rarely be reached by the public, Stegall was a common figure in her office. Breaking News As it happens Be the first to know with email alerts on important breaking stories from the Orlando Sentinel newsroom. > I really enjoy working, Stegall told a Sentinel reporter in 2012. If you like what youre doing, it doesnt feel like work. Stegall often said in her final political campaigns that her office was one of the first in Central Florida to use the latest voting technology. Her staff developed a reputation for delivering results on election nights before any other county in the region. In 2001, Lake County spent $3 million on a high-tech touchscreen voting system, replacing an optical scanning system, after the previous years chaotic presidential election with thousands of questionable ballots being tossed in the presidential contest between George W. Bush and Al Gore. Advertisement Stegall served as president of the Florida State Association of Supervisors of Elections, and as a member of that organizations board of directors. Besides her daughter, Stegall is survived by sister Diane Umfress, of Fulton, Mississippi, and brother Frank Wheeler, of Eustis; two grandchildren; five great-grandchildren. Arrangements are being handled by Steverson, Hamlin & Hilsbish Funerals and Cremations in Tavares. mcomas@orlandosentinel.com Scout RC Drilling Extends Gold Mineralization to the West, Diamond Drilling Commences Toronto, Ontario--(Newsfile Corp. - March 2, 2022) - Royal Road Minerals Limited (TSXV: RYR) ("Royal Road" or the "Company") is pleased to provide an exploration update from its Caribe gold discovery in northeastern Nicaragua. The Caribe project forms a part of the Company's Strategic-Alliance agreement (see press release; September 6, 2017) with Hemco Mineros Nicaragua ("Hemco" a subsidiary of Mineros S.A., TSX:MSA) and is located in the highly prospective "Golden Triangle" of northeastern Nicaragua. Royal Road Minerals is operator of the Strategic Alliance. Royal Road's exploration team discovered the Caribe project during reconnaissance exploration in February of 2018. Outcrop at Caribe is concealed under soil and saprolite cover and there is no previous record of mining or mineralization in the area. In 2019, Royal Road and Hemco completed an initial 4-hole, exploratory drilling program at Caribe which returned promising results for gold. A follow-up diamond drilling program commenced at the project during August of 2020 and has returned encouraging initial results including CB-DDH-025, 207.45 meters at 1.1 grams per tonne, CB-DDH-016, 100.45 meters at 1.0 gram per tonne; CB-DDH-017, 90 meters at 1.0 gram per tonne and CB-DDH-015, 63 meters at 1.0 gram per tonne gold (see Press Releases November 10, 2020, February 11, 2021, March 17, 2021, September 1, 2021 and Table 1). Drilling at Caribe has revealed that in some cases, soil and laterite cover extends to depths in excess of 30 meters, concealing important geological and geochemical information and frustrating efforts to interpret geometry and predict extensions to known gold mineralization. Consequently, in September 2021, the Company took the decision to suspend diamond drilling and commence a program of grid-based scout reverse-circulation drilling at the project. The program utilizes a small, low-impact, man-portable reverse-circulation (RC) drilling rig which drills through soil and saprolite cover down to the first 2-3 meters of weathered rock where a sample is taken for analysis. 210 vertical scout-RC holes averaging approximately 18m in depth have so far been completed (see Figure 1). Figure 1 To view an enhanced version of Figure 1, please visit: https://orders.newsfilecorp.com/files/4008/115362_rr.htm2.jpg Results received to-date imply that the gold mineralizing system remains open to the west and southwest and portable XRF analyses[1] suggest a broad and significant copper anomaly towards the east (Figure 1). Gold at Caribe is hosted in coarse pyroclastic rocks and associated with multi-phase stockwork and hydrothermal breccia events within a broad low-temperature sericite halo and in later-stage sulfide-rich hydrothermal breccia bodies with a matrix composed of pyrite, chalcopyrite and molybdenite. Previous interpretations had assumed a fault- limited control to the western extent of gold mineralization at Caribe, however this new scout-RC data clearly implies continuity across the fault and/or some element of fault control to gold mineralization at the project. Diamond drilling has now recommenced at the project and further infill and extensions to the scout-RC program are planned. TABLE 1: CARIBE PRELIMINARY DRILL RESULTS TABLE (> 0.9 g/t GOLD) GOLD COMMENTS HOLE ID E N Z(m) DIP AZIM DEPTH FROM TO LENGTH (m)* GRADE (g/t) 2019 Program CB-DDH-001 793252 1530691 49 60 306 94.55 2.00 30.00 28 1.1 CB-DDH-002 793252 1530688 49 60 111 138.57 1.00 14.00 13 1.0 33.00 37.00 4 1.0 CB-DDH-003 793254 1530689 49 60 42 112.85 78.00 80.00 2 1.7 BOGGED AND ABANDONED 110.00 112.85 (EOH) 2.85 1.2 CB-DDH-004 793346 1530775 44 60 40 67.10 13.00 31.00 18 1.0 BOGGED AND ABANDONED 62.00 67.00 (EOH) 5 1.0 2020-2021 Program CB-DDH-005 793258 1530689 43 60 220 100.65 NO SIGNIFICANT INTERSECTIONS >1g/t GOLD CB-DDH-006 793350 1530772 36 60 40 160.12 28.00 102.00 74 0.9 129.00 143.00 14 1.0 CB-DDH-007 793349 1530769 36 60 220 123.52 22.00 28.00 6 1.0 BOGGED AND ABANDONED 61.00 63.00 2 1.0 65.00 77.00 12 1.0 83.00 89.00 6 1.0 CB-DDH-008 793395 1530824 35 60 40 79.30 NO SIGNIFICANT INTERSECTIONS >1g/t GOLD CB-DDH-009 793270 1530770 38 60 125 161.65 9.00 14.00 5 1.0 BOGGED AND ABANDONED 37.00 82.00 45 1.0 123.00 158.00 35 1.1 CB-DDH-010 793296 1530664 37 60 305 114.37 0.00 42.00 42 1.0 CB-DDH-011 793338 1530633 35 60 40 80.82 38.00 80.00 42 1.0 BOGGED AND ABANDONED CB-DDH-012 794646 1532046 37 60 360 184.52 NO SIGNIFICANT INTERSECTIONS >1g/t GOLD CB-DDH-013 794646 1532046 37 60 335 131.15 CB-DDH-014 793875 1532118 40 60 40 180 CB-DDH-015 793349 1530771 43 90 0 190.62 18.00 26.00 8 1.0 BOGGED AND ABANDONED 53.00 62.00 9 1.0 88.00 151.00 63 1.0 CB-DDH-016 793314 1530813 43 60 125 149.45 49.00 149.45 (EOH) 100.45 1.0 BOGGED AND ABANDONED CB-DDH-017 793295 1530744 43 60 90 244 51.00 141.00 90 1.0 BOGGED AND ABANDONED CB-DDH-018 793364 1530641 35 60 40 68.62 NO SIGNIFICANT INTERSECTIONS >1g/t GOLD BOGGED AND ABANDONED CB-DDH-019 793296 1530664 35 50 40 102.17 0.00 35.00 35 1.0 BOGGED AND ABANDONED 56.00 66.00 10 1.0 79.00 82.00 3 2.1 CB-DDH-020 793604 1530412 37 60 40 67.1 NO SIGNIFICANT INTERSECTIONS >1g/t GOLD BOGGED AND ABANDONED CB-DDH-021 793349 1530846 34 60 125 250.1 88.00 117.00 29 1.0 CB-DDH-022 793498 1530892 37 60 236 353.8 75.00 87.00 12 1.2 97.00 99.00 2 1.0 110.00 117.00 7 1.0 186.00 191.00 5 1.0 CB-DDH-023 793498 1530892 37 60 40 340.07 188.90 199.00 10.10 0.6 0.86 960 43 COPPER % MOLYBDENUM ppm SILVER ppm CB-DDH-024 793338 1530633 34 50 40 114.57 NO SIGNIFICANT INTERSECTIONS >1g/t GOLD BOGGED AND ABANDONED CB-DDH-025 793290 1530792 34 60 125 224.17 3.00 210.45 207.45 1.1 INCLUDING 21m at 4.2 g/t GOLD CB-DDH-026 793383 1530891 35 60 125 130.57 116.75 126.57 9.80 1.4 CB-DDH-027 793386 1530889 34 60 305 149.45 29.00 32.50 3.50 1.0 83.00 114.00 31.00 1.0 CB-DDH-028 793423 1530824 34 60 305 218.07 101.00 103.00 2.00 1.0 139.90 147.65 7.75 0.4 0.23 COPPER % MOLYBDENUM ppm SILVER ppm 155.00 163.00 8.00 1.3 CB-DDH-029 793496 1530893 34 60 305 242.47 177.70 215.50 37.80 1.0 CB-DDH-030 793454 1530965 34.64 -60 305 222.65 NO SIGNIFICANT INTERSECTIONS >1g/t GOLD CB-DDH-031 793539 1530944 34.36 -60 305 215.02 CB-DDH-032 793385 1530645 37 -60 305 170.8 62.00 75.00 13.00 0.9 CB-DDH-033 793547 1530903 35 -60 305 218.07 NO SIGNIFICANT INTERSECTIONS >1g/t GOLD CB-DDH-034 793289 1530795 35 -90 0 166.22 CB-DDH-035 793289 1530795 37 -60 305 195.63 CB-DDH-036 793399 1530740 37 -60 220 137.25 84.00 105.98 21.98 0.8 CB-DDH-037 793440 1530771 37 -60 220 190.62 NO SIGNIFICANT INTERSECTIONS >1g/t GOLD CB-DDH-038 793442 1530712 38 -60 220 140.3 *NOT TRUE WIDTH AND THE COMPANY DOES NOT HAVE SUFFICIENT INFORMATION TO MAKE A DETERMINATION OF THE TRUE WIDTHS OF THE DRILL HOLE INTERSECTIONS DOWN HOLE CUT-OFF 0.2 g/t gold MAXIMUM INTERNAL DILUTION, 10 Meters "We are pleased that the scout-RC program is returning the information we had hoped for and revealing further potential for gold and possibly copper mineralization at Caribe" said Tim Coughlin, Royal Road's President and CEO "The influence of such deep saprolite cover and the inability to confidently predict geometry and continuity, made locating diamond drill holes something of a challenge towards the latter end of last years campaign. With these new scout-RC results, as further results are received and as we extend and infill the scout-RC grid, we will be better able to understand controls and guide the location of our diamond drill holes". 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 release. The information in this news release was compiled, reviewed and verified by Dr. Tim Coughlin, BSc (Geology), MSc (Exploration and Mining), PhD (Structural Geology), FAusIMM, President and CEO of Royal Road Minerals Ltd and a qualified person as defined by National Instrument 43-101. Royal Road Minerals employees are instructed to follow standard operating and quality assurance procedures intended to ensure that all sampling techniques and sample results meet international reporting standards. More information can be found on Royal Road Minerals web site at www.royalroadminerals.com Quality Assurance and Quality Control: Diamond drill core is cut in half over 1-meter downhole intervals using a core saw. Samples are prepared and assayed by independent and ISO accredited laboratories of Bureau Veritas Minerals (BVM) and their local subsidiaries. Bagged 1-meter samples are collected from site and delivered to BVM sample preparation laboratories in Managua. Samples are prepared using the BVM codes PRP70-250 plus PUL85, where samples are crushed to 70% less than two millimeters, a riffle split of 250 grams is collected and then pulverized to better than 85 per cent passing 75 microns. Prepared sample pulps are then sent for analysis to BVM labs in Vancouver Canada. Gold is analyzed by fire assay with an atomic absorption finish and a measurement range of 0.005 to 10 ppm. Samples over 10-ppm gold are re-analyzed by fire assay with a gravimetric finish. Multielement concentrations are analyzed by four-acid digestion and inductively coupled plasma mass spectrometer. Samples over 10,000ppm Cu, Zn, Pb or Mn and 200 ppm W, are re-analyzed with four acid digestion and Inductively Coupled Plasma Emission Spectrometer (ICP-ES). Commercially prepared standards (gold-copper pulps), blanks (pulps and coarse chips) and field duplicates are inserted into the sample stream by Royal Road Minerals for a total of 15% QA/QC to ensure sample precision. In the case of duplicate analyses of a sample, the average of both analyses is used as the final reported value. Unless otherwise stated, gold grades are not capped for calculation of length-weighted averages. RC chip samples are taken every meter after having entered 2-3 meters within the saprock-fresh rock boundary. Samples are collected from the drilling site and dried at the core yard. Where dry sample weights exceed 4.5Kg they are split. Bagged 1-meter samples are collected from site and delivered to the BVM sample preparation laboratory in Managua. Samples are prepared using BVM codes PRP70-250 plus PULSW where a riffle split of 250 grams is collected and then pulverized to better than 85 per cent passing 75 microns. Sample pulps are then sent for analysis to BVM labs in Vancouver Canada. Gold is analyzed by fire assay with an atomic absorption finish and a measurement range of 0.005 to 10 ppm. Samples over 10 ppm gold are re-analyzed by fire assay with a gravimetric finish. Multielement concentrations are analyzed by four-acid digestion and inductively coupled plasma mass spectrometer. Samples over 10,000ppm Cu, Zn, Pb or Mn and 200 ppm W, are re-analyzed with four acid digestion and Inductively Coupled Plasma Emission Spectrometer (ICP-ES). Commercially prepared standards (gold-copper pulps), blanks (pulps and coarse chips) and field duplicates are inserted into the sample stream by Royal Road Minerals for a total of 15% QA/QC to ensure sample precision. In the case of duplicate analyses of a sample, the average of both analyses is used as the final reported value. Unless otherwise stated, gold grades are not capped for calculation of length-weighted averages. Cautionary statement: This news release contains certain statements that constitute forward-looking information and forward-looking statements within the meaning of applicable securities laws (collectively, "forward-looking statements") including statements relating to the Hemco-Mineros Alliance and those describing the Company's future plans and the expectations of its management that a stated result or condition will occur. Such forward-looking statements involve known and unknown risks, uncertainties and other factors that may cause the actual results, performance or achievements of the Company, or developments in the Company's business or in the mineral resources industry, or with respect to the Hemco-Mineros Alliance, to differ materially from the anticipated results, performance, achievements or developments expressed or implied by such forward-looking statements. Forward-looking statements include all disclosure regarding possible events, conditions or results of operations that is based on assumptions about, among other things, future economic conditions and courses of action, and assumptions related to government approvals, and anticipated costs and expenditures. The words "plans", "prospective", "expect", "intend", "intends to" and similar expressions identify forward looking statements, which may also include, without limitation, any statement relating to future events, conditions or circumstances. Forward-looking statements of the Company contained in this news release, which may prove to be incorrect, include, but are not limited to, those related to the Hemco-Mineros Alliance, Hemco-Mineros, and the Company's plans exploration plans. The Company cautions you not to place undue reliance upon any such forward-looking statements, which speak only as of the date they are made. There is no guarantee that the anticipated benefits of the Hemco-Mineros Alliance and the Company's business plans or operations will be achieved. The risks and uncertainties that may affect forward-looking statements include, among others: economic market conditions, anticipated costs and expenditures, government approvals, and other risks detailed from time to time in the Company's filings with Canadian provincial securities regulators or other applicable regulatory authorities. Forward-looking statements included herein are based on the current plans, estimates, projections, beliefs and opinions of the Company management and, in part, on information provided to the Company by Hemco-Mineros, and, except as required by law, the Company does not undertake any obligation to update forward-looking statements should assumptions related to these plans, estimates, projections, beliefs and opinions change. For further information please contact: Dr. Timothy Coughlin President and Chief Executive Officer USA-Canada toll free 1800 6389205 +44 (0)1534 887166 info@royalroadminerals.com [1] Semi-quantitative only, derived from in-house portable Olympus Delta XRF Premium DP-6000 analyzer, results require confirmation by an independent certified laboratory. XRF cannot analyze for gold. To view the source version of this press release, please visit https://www.newsfilecorp.com/release/115362 BARCELONA, Spain, March 2, 2022 /PRNewswire/ -- STL [NSE: STLTECH], an industry-leading integrator of digital networks, together with ASOCS and VMWare, today announced the launch of industry's first end-to-end 5G Enterprise solution to address the growing demand for private 5G enterprise connectivity for campus, industrial and venue applications. Unveiled at MWC 2022, where STL demonstrated its All-in 5G offerings, this 5G Enterprise solution will comprise Garuda , STL's O-RAN 5G indoor/outdoor small cells, CYRUS, Open Distributed Unit and Centralised Unit from ASOCS and VMware Edge Compute Stack as the virtualization layer and cloud management . 5G Enterprise networks have proven to be game changers for businesses and are set to have a market value of US$ 14 billion by 2028. These future-ready 5G networks will be enabled by open standards-based architectures and will be able to handle dense environments required for seamless indoor coverage. STL's Garuda small cell radio is ideal for small, medium and large enterprises, supporting more than 30 concurrent user devices per radio. ASOCS' CYRUS, a fully virtualized O-RAN CU/DU enterprise solution, delivers standalone and 5G connectivity in a single software stack. VMware Edge Compute Stack is an edge computing solution that helps to build, run, manage, and protect edge-native applications at the Near and Far Edge. The combination of STL, ASOCS and VMware offers a powerful on-premise fully virtualized and open RAN 5G solution on general purpose servers; this solution can be hosted alongside enterprise IT infrastructure on general purpose commercial off-the-shelf (COTS) servers, seamlessly blending with an enterprise's existing infrastructure. In December 2021, STL & ASOCS had jointly demonstrated the 5G enterprise use-case as a part of the O-RAN Alliance annual plugfest, including the interoperability of Garuda with ASOCS' Distribution Unit/Centralised Unit. Speaking on the collaboration, Gilad Garon, ASOCS CEO, said: "Our strong partnership with STL and VMware brings a strong end-to-end Private 5G enterprise network solution which we already see being adopted in Smart Manufacturing and the digital transformation to Industry 4.0. With our CYRUS virtual RAN solution along with STL's Garuda and computation at the edge with VMware, enterprises will be able to easily deploy and manage 5G networks with high high-performance level, security, and flexibility." Commenting on the solution, Muneyb Minhazuddin, vice president of edge strategy, VMware, said: "We are delighted to associate with STL and ASOCS to bring the 5G enterprise networks solutions to provide compelling benefits to businesses. VMware Edge Compute Stack provides a purpose-built, integrated VM and container-based stack that enables organizations to deploy and secure edge-native apps at the far edge. It will complement STL's Garuda and ASOCS' CYRUS in paving the way for more seamless 5G enterprise connectivity." Speaking on the collaboration, Chris Rice, CEO, Access Solutions, STL, said: "This collaboration is a testament to the benefits of open networking principles - bringing three partners together to offer a very powerful solution to address various 5G Enterprise opportunities, globally. Enterprises will now be able to leverage a robust, secure 5G network that is easy to scale and upgrade and drives greater levels of service efficiency." About STL - Sterlite Technologies Ltd: STL is a leading integrator of digital networks providing All-in 5G solutions. Our capabilities across wireless connectivity, optical networking, software, and services, place us amongst the top 5G RAN vendors by Gartner. These capabilities are built on open-source and converged architectures helping telcos, cloud companies, citizen networks, and large enterprises deliver next-gen experiences to their customers. STL partners with service providers globally in achieving a green and sustainable digital future in alignment with UN SDG goals. STL has a strong global presence in India, Italy, the UK, the US, China, and Brazil. Read more, Contact us. stl.tech |Twitter | LinkedIn | YouTube Logo: https://mma.prnewswire.com/media/876464/Sterlite_Technologies_STL_New_Logo.jpg Photo: https://mma.prnewswire.com/media/1758062/STL_VMware_ASOCS.jpg Increase in prevalence of cardiovascular and orthopedic disorders, advancement in medical technology, and rise in awareness regarding implantable devices drive the growth of the global biomaterials market PORTLAND, Ore., March 2, 2022 /PRNewswire/ -- Allied Market Research published a report, titled, "Biomaterials Market by Type (Metallic, Polymeric, Ceramic, and Natural) and Application, (Cardiovascular, Dental, Orthopedic, Wound Healing, Plastic Surgery, Ophthalmology, Tissue Engineering, Neurological Disorders, and Drug Delivery Systems): Global Opportunity Analysis and Industry Forecast, 2021-2030." According to the report, the global biomaterials industry generated $64.87 billion in 2020, and is expected to reach $212.40 billion by 2030, witnessing a CAGR of 12.7% from 2021 to 2030. For Right Perspective and Competitive Insights, Get Sample Report at: https://www.alliedmarketresearch.com/request-sample/89 Drivers, Restraints, and Opportunities Increase in prevalence of cardiovascular and orthopedic disorders, advancement in medical technology, and rise in awareness regarding implantable devices drive the growth of the global biomaterials market. However, expensive nature of biomaterial implants and compatibility issues restrain the market growth. On the other hand, surge in funding by governments to increase R&D activities in the field of biomaterials presents new opportunities in the market. Covid-19 Scenario During the Covid-19 pandemic, elective surgeries were postponed as hospitals shifted their resources to take care of Covid-19-infected patients. This reduced the demand for biomaterials, as many surgeries that involved their usage were postponed. Moreover, many clinics that conducted dental, orthopedic, plastic surgery, ophthalmology, and other procedures were closed due to lockdown. This lowered the demand for biomaterials for the short term. However, the demand is expected to increase steadily post-lockdown. The metallic segment to continue its dominance in terms of revenue throughout the forecast period Based on type, the metallic segment contributed to the highest market share in 2020, accounting for nearly three-fifths of the global biomaterials market, and is expected to continue its dominance in terms of revenue throughout the forecast period. This is due to high specific strength, high corrosion resistance, and low modulus along with usage in orthopedics, dental, cardiovascular, and neurological permanent and bioresorbable implants. However, the polymeric segment is projected to witness the largest CAGR of 13.9% from 2021 to 2030, owing to increased scope of polymeric biomaterials in various applications such as facial prostheses, tracheal tubes, sutures, heart components, kidney & liver parts, dentures for hip & knee joints, drug delivery systems, lenses, soft tissue replacement, and sealants & medical adhesives. Do You Have Any Query Or Specific Requirement? Ask to Our Industry Expert: https://www.alliedmarketresearch.com/purchase-enquiry/89 The orthopedic segment to maintain its leadership status during the forecast period Based on application, the orthopedic segment accounted for the highest market share in 2020, holding more than one-fourth of the global biomaterials market, and is estimated to maintain its leadership status during the forecast period. This is attributed to rise in demand for biomaterials in orthopedic applications and continuous developments for the introduction of advanced orthopedic implants. However, the tissue engineering segment is expected to manifest the fastest CAGR of 20.8% from 2021 to 2030, owing to rise in usage of biomaterials for regeneration of damaged tissues by combining cells from the body with highly porous scaffold biomaterials to facilitate tissue regeneration or stimulate the growth of new tissues. North America to maintain its leadership status by 2030 Based on region, North America held the highest market share in terms of revenue in 2020, accounting for nearly half of the global biomaterials market, and is expected to maintain its leadership status by 2030. This is attributed to increase in R&D activities, widespread technological advancements, and developments regarding the use of novel biomaterials in wound healing, tissue engineering, neurology, plastic surgery, and ophthalmology in the region. However, Asia-Pacific is expected to register the fastest CAGR of 14.1% during the forecast period, owing to improved healthcare infrastructure, rise in incidence of ophthalmic, neurological, cardiovascular, and orthopedic disorders, and well-established presence of domestic companies. Leading Market Players Carpenter Technology Corporation Corbion N.V Covalon Technologies Ltd. Evonik Industries Linden Capital Partners (Collagen Matrix, Inc.) Noble Biomaterials Inc. Royal DSM Victrex plc. Stryker Corporation (Wright Medical Group N.V) Zimmer Biomet Holdings, Inc. Avenue Basic Plan | Library Access | 1 Year Subscription | Sign up for Avenue subscription to access more than 12,000+ company profiles and 2,000+ niche industry market research reports at $699 per month, per seat. For a year, the client needs to purchase minimum 2 seat plan. Request for 14 days free trial: https://www.alliedmarketresearch.com/avenue/trial/starter "We have also published few syndicated market studies in the similar area that might be of your interest. Below are the report title for your reference, considering Impact of Covid-19 Over This Market which will help you to assess aftereffects of pandemic on short-term and long-term growth trends of this market." Trending Reports in Healthcare Industry (Book Now with 10% Discount): Dental Consumables Market - Global Opportunity Analysis and Industry Forecast, 2020-2028 Prefilled Syringes Market - Global Opportunity Analysis and Industry Forecast, 2019-2028 Stroke Management Market - Global Opportunity Analysis and Industry Forecast, 2019-2028 Drug Screening Market - Global Opportunity Analysis and Industry Forecast, 2019-2028 Ophthalmic Lasers Market - Global Opportunity Analysis and Industry Forecast, 2019-2028 Bone Densitometers Market - Global Opportunity Analysis and Industry Forecast, 2019-2028 Electronic Health Records (EHR) Market - Global Opportunity Analysis and Industry Forecast, 2019-2028 Brain Health Supplements Market - Global Opportunity Analysis and Industry Forecast, 2019-2028 3D Imaging Market - Global Opportunity Analysis and Industry Forecast, 2019-2028 Immunodiagnostics Market - Global Opportunity Analysis and Industry Forecast, 2019-2028 About Us Allied Market Research (AMR) is a full-service market research and business-consulting wing of Allied Analytics LLP based in Portland, Oregon. Allied Market Research provides global enterprises as well as medium and small businesses with unmatched quality of "Market Research Reports" and "Business Intelligence Solutions." AMR has a targeted view to provide business insights and consulting to assist its clients to make strategic business decisions and achieve sustainable growth in their respective market domain. Pawan Kumar, the CEO of Allied Market Research, is leading the organization toward providing high-quality data and insights. We are in professional corporate relations with various companies and this helps us in digging out market data that helps us generate accurate research data tables and confirms utmost accuracy in our market forecasting. Each and every data presented in the reports published by us is extracted through primary interviews with top officials from leading companies of domain concerned. Our secondary data procurement methodology includes deep online and offline research and discussion with knowledgeable professionals and analysts in the industry. Contact: David Correa 5933 NE Win Sivers Drive #205, Portland, OR 97220 United States USA/Canada (Toll Free): +1-800-792-5285, +1-503-894-6022 UK: +44-845-528-1300 Hong Kong: +852-301-84916 India (Pune): +91-20-66346060 Fax: +1(855)550-5975 help@alliedmarketresearch.com Web: https://www.alliedmarketresearch.com/reports-store/life-sciences Follow Us on LinkedIn: https://www.linkedin.com/showcase/life-sciences-industry-research/ Logo: https://mma.prnewswire.com/media/636519/Allied_Market_Research_Logo.jpg SHENZHEN, China, March 2, 2022 /PRNewswire/ -- ZTE Corporation (0763.HK / 000063.SZ), a major international provider of telecommunications, enterprise and consumer technology solutions for the mobile internet, today announced that its Next-gen Cloud AI Home Security Camera Pro has landed the Best Connected Consumer Device award at the Global Mobile (GLOMO) Awards during the Mobile World Congress (MWC) 2022 in Barcelona, Spain. ZTE's Next-gen Cloud AI Home Security Camera Pro innovatively employs device-cloud collaboration technology whereby massive AI applications are deployed in the cloud and users can download them on demand to implement multiple use cases with just one camera. With this technology, the camera can deliver more functions and better experiences for users. In addition, the camera and cloud can jointly perform scenario analysis to boost analysis efficiency and save computing resources. The Next-gen Cloud AI Home Security Camera Pro also features interface openness and capability exposure, which is part of ZTE's commitment to helping build a smart care ecosystem. To date, the product has been deployed at scale in China, helping users guard homes, look after the elderly and children, protect against thefts and intrusions, etc. anytime, anywhere. The GLOMO Awards are the industry's most prestigious accolade, judged by the sector's most prominent subject matter experts. The Best Connected Consumer Device award that ZTE has won is for an everyday consumer electronic device or gadget that brings new and smart applications, efficiencies and functionality to the user, at home or on the move. Media Contact: Margaret Ma ZTE Corporation Tel: +86 755 26775189 Email: ma.gaili@zte.com.cn ORLANDO, FL / ACCESSWIRE / March 2, 2022 / Costas, Inc. (OTCMKTS:CSSI) Costas, Inc. (CSSI or "the Company") About COSTAS (CSSI): http://www.otcmarkets.com/stock/CSSI/profile. COSTAS, INC. is a publicly traded company listed on OTCMarkets under the trading symbol 'CSSI'. The Company has identified an acquisition target with a long-term business strategy in the dental lab industry, and has made an offer to its shareholders to acquire the company in its entirety. Costas, Inc. has made an offer to the shareholders of Standard Dental Labs Inc. (SDL), a company incorporated in Wyoming in 2019, to purchase all of its shares. SDL's business plan, which includes a strong executive team, is to purchase existing dental labs in the private sector, and to consolidate those labs regionally into one larger facility. "Industry consolidation creates economies of scale, and in this industry that can mean the difference to survival." said James Brooks, Costas' new Chief Executive Officer. In a May 2020 article, Barlow Research Associates stated that the average small business owner in America is over 60 years old, and of those, more than 40% are above age 65. Barlow Research states that small business owners are less likely to drain retirement savings to rescue their businesses, making retirement difficult or impossible. This risk increases in uncertain economic times. Consolidation of these labs would enable the Company to purchase more advanced equipment, making the constituents more competitive in a regional market. According to recent data from Emergent Research: Among older owners polled, 40% now say they are seriously considering closing their businesses. They report not having the energy or resources to pour into rebuilding the business after this recession, mainly because of their age. Acquiring cash flowing, and profitable businesses with a financial track record, is CSSI's new business strategy. The dental lab industry as a whole is estimated to be a $10B market in the US alone in 2022 (source: Grandview Research, Aug. 2021), but is growing steadily due to increasing demand from the retirement community. About Costas: https://costas-inc.com/about-us FORWARD LOOKING STATEMENTS: This press release and the statements of representatives of Costas, Inc. (the "Company") related thereto contain, or may contain, among other things, "forward-looking statements" within the meaning of the Private Securities Litigation Reform Act of 1995. All statements, other than statements of historical fact included herein are "forward-looking statements," including any other statements of non-historical information. These forward-looking statements are subject to significant known and unknown risks and uncertainties and are often identified by the use of forward-looking terminology such as "guidance," "projects," "may," "could," "would," "should," "believes," "expects," "anticipates," "estimates," "intends," "plans," "ultimately" or similar expressions. All forward-looking statements involve material assumptions, risks and uncertainties, and the expectations contained in such statements may prove to be incorrect. Investors should not place undue reliance on these forward-looking statements, which speak only as of the date of this press release. The Company's actual results (including, without limitation, Costas' ability to advance its business, generate revenue and profit and operate as a public company) could differ materially from those stated or anticipated in these forward-looking statements as a result of a variety of factors, including factors and risks discussed in the periodic reports that the Company files with OTC Markets (Pink Sheets). All forward-looking statements attributable to the Company or persons acting on its behalf are expressly qualified in their entirety by these factors. The Company undertakes no duty to update these forward-looking statements except as required by law. For further information contact: admin@costas-inc.com Costas Corporate Phone Number: (321) 465-9899 SOURCE: Costas, Inc. View source version on accesswire.com:https://www.accesswire.com/690926/Costas-Inc-Makes-Offer-to-Purchase-Standard-Dental-Labs-Inc Cerebras Systems, the pioneer in high performance artificial intelligence (AI) compute, today announced that TotalEnergies Research Technology USA has selected the world's fastest AI computer, the Cerebras CS-2 system, to accelerate its multi-energy research. This continues the rapid adoption of Cerebras by leading enterprises around the world and is the first publicly announced deployment of the Cerebras CS-2 in the energy sector. This press release features multimedia. View the full release here: https://www.businesswire.com/news/home/20220302005202/en/ TotalEnergies Research Technology USA Selects Cerebras Systems CS-2 to Accelerate Multi-Energy Research (Photo: Business Wire) "TotalEnergies' roadmap is crystal clear: more energy, less emissions. To achieve this, we need to combine our strengths with those who enable us to go faster, higher, and stronger," quipped Dr. Vincent Saubestre, CEO and President, TotalEnergies Research Technology USA with a thinly veiled reference to the olympic motto Citius, Altius, Fortius. "Cerebras Systems offers one of the highest performance AI accelerators. We count on the CS-2 system to boost our multi-energy research and give our research 'athletes' that extra competitive advantage." Thanks to the CS-2's leading AI compute, modeling and advanced analytics will enable fast and accurate simulations across a large range of issues tackled by TotalEnergies: from batteries to biofuels, to wind flows, drillings, and CO2 storage. We are thrilled to partner with TotalEnergies and bring our industry-leading AI performance to the multi-energy market," saidAndrew Feldman, CEO and co-founder of Cerebras Systems. "The energy sector has a long history of leading the way in using compute to generate insight. AI and AI's integration with simulation can accelerate TotalEnergies' mission to deliver affordable, cleaner, and more reliable access to energy. We are proud to participate in this important endeavor." Predictive modeling requires massive computing resources and high bandwidth data communication. Using traditional general-purpose hardware for this work typically requires large clusters of GPUs or CPUs and frequent data movement between individual processors. Limited chip-to-chip bandwidth causes a communications bottleneck, which slows down the modeling workload and delays time to insight. This challenge can be remedied with a single Cerebras CS-2 system, the fastest AI computer in existence. A single CS-2 delivers not only cluster-scale computing power, but communication and memory bandwidth orders of magnitude greater than traditional clusters. This translates into extraordinary performance on workloads like predictive modeling that are central to efficient energy development and production. In recent work with TotalEnergies, Cerebras demonstrated more than 100x improvement on a finite difference benchmark for seismic modeling vs traditional architectures. Total and Cerebras engineers wrote the benchmark code using the new Cerebras Software Language (CSL). The CSL is part of the Cerebras SDK, which allows developers to take advantage of the strengths of the CS-2 system. With customers and partners in North America, Asia, Europe and the Middle East, Cerebras is delivering industry leading AI solutions to a growing roster of customers in the enterprise, military, and high performance computing segments, including Argonne National Laboratory, Lawrence Livermore National Laboratory, Pittsburgh Supercomputing Center, EPCC, Tokyo Electron Devices, and GlaxoSmithKline. For more information about the Cerebras CS-2 system and its application in energy, please visit https://cerebras.net/industries/energy/. About Cerebras Systems Cerebras Systems is a team of pioneering computer architects, computer scientists, deep learning researchers, and engineers of all types. We have come together to build a new class of computer system, designed for the singular purpose of accelerating AI and changing the future of AI work forever. Our flagship product, the CS-2 system is powered by the world's largest processor the 850,000 core Cerebras WSE-2, enables customers to accelerate their deep learning work by orders of magnitude over general purpose compute. View source version on businesswire.com: https://www.businesswire.com/news/home/20220302005202/en/ Contacts: Press contact (for media only) Kim Ziesemer Email: pr@zmcommunications.com DUNEDIN, FL / ACCESSWIRE / March 2, 2022 / Sean H?gen, principal and founder of BlackH?gen Design, an interdisciplinary user research, and product design firm, will co-present a concentrated workshop focused on contextual inquiry methods when developing medical devices and healthcare systems at the HFES International Symposium. The event, highlighting human factors and ergonomics in healthcare, is being held at the Hilton New Orleans Riverside Hotel from March 20 - 23, 2022. The presentation will be particularly enlightening for biomedical engineers, medical device designers, human factors engineers, and usability specialists. What: "Show Me, Don't Tell Me: Methods of Contextual Inquiry" When: Sunday, March 20 from 8:00 a.m. to 5 p.m. CDT Where: Hilton New Orleans Riverside Hotel, New Orleans, LA Synopsis: Contextual inquiry includes observation and interviewing techniques originally developed by anthropologists. These techniques can help gain insights about people, the products, and systems they use, the task they are trying to accomplish, and the environments (physical, social, and technical) in which they live and work. This workshop is a primer course on how to conduct contextual inquiry studies that inform the development of medical devices and healthcare systems with insightful inputs regarding user needs. The FDA and IEC (International Electrotechnical Commission) have recognized the inherent value of contextual inquiry as an integral part of developing medical devices and successful user experiences. Many products and systems have benefited greatly from applying contextual inquiry in the generative and feasibility phases of product and system development. Key Learnings: How to plan and execute a contextual inquiry study How to analyze, synthesize, and translate findings from contextual inquiry in the healthcare domain Applying contextual inquiry in both clinical and home environments Speaker BIO Since founding BlackH?gen Design in 1995, Sean has led design research and usability design, within both institutional and home environments, across twenty countries. His focus at Black H?gen is in the management of the user research and synthesis phases of product development, which includes design research, usability testing, user-centric innovation techniques, usability engineering, and establishing user requirements as they apply to product definition. With a BS in Product Design and a minor in Human Factors Engineering from Ohio State University, Sean has more than 30 years of design research in industries ranging from transportation design to emergency center workstations, ruggedized electronics, medical devices, and graphic user interfaces. Sean has complemented his professional career as a designer with a passion for teaching and sharing his knowledge through lectures and workshops at several academic and industry-related venues. Having served as a board member with IDSA (Industrial Designers Society of America) he has worked with its Design Foundation, in developing educational tools and methods that will address the patient safety crisis. Sean has been a contributing subject matter expert and author for international and domestic usability standards and technical reports since 2004. About BlackH?gen Design BlackH?gen Design provides research and development services to both small and large organizations, but primarily the firm's clients are among the top global medical device manufacturers, including Japan, Netherlands, England, Germany, Switzerland, India, and Australia. They include Medtronic, Bayer, Resmed, Philips, Baxter, Stryker, Smith + Nephew, B|Braun, Olympus, J&J, GE and BD, among others. For more information, visit www.blackhagendesign.com. About the HFES International Symposium on Human Factors in Ergonomics in Health Care The HFES International Symposium on Human Factors and Ergonomics in Health Care is an educational activity to bring the best of HF/E and Health Care professionals together to improve health care systems worldwide. The event highlights learning opportunities on the latest science and best practices, innovations in the safety of health care providers and patients, a focus on HF/E initiatives, and how to improve regulatory approaches. Networking with human factors experts, pharmaceutical and medical device companies, biomedical engineers, health care providers, FDA representatives, and patient safety researchers, provides an opportunity to share ideas and best practices. For more information, visit www.hfes.org. Media Contact: Dawn Fontaine Ripple Effect Communications dawn@rippleeffectpr.com Tel. 617-536-8887 SOURCE: BlackHagen Design View source version on accesswire.com:https://www.accesswire.com/690674/Sean-Hagen-to-Present-at-the-2022-HFES-International-Symposium WASHINGTON (dpa-AFX) - Payroll processor ADP released a report on Wednesday showing U.S. private sector employment jumped by much more than expected in the month of February. ADP said private sector employment surged by 475,000 jobs in February compared to economist estimates for an increase of 388,000 jobs. The report also showed a substantial revision to the January data, with the revised data showing employment spiked by 509,000 jobs compared to the previously reported loss of 301,000 jobs. The stronger than expected job growth partly reflected a sharp increase in employment in the service-providing sector, which added 417,000 jobs. Employment in the leisure and hospitality sector helped lead the way higher, surging up by 170,000 jobs during the month. The report also showed employment at large businesses spiked by 552,000 jobs in February, more than offsetting the loss of 96,000 jobs at small businesses. 'Last month large companies showed they are well-poised to compete with higher wages and benefit offerings, and posted the strongest reading since the early days of the pandemic recovery,' said Nela Richardson, ADP chief economist. She added, 'Small companies lost ground as they continue to struggle to keep pace with the wages and benefits needed to attract a limited pool of qualified workers.' On Friday, the Labor Department is scheduled to release its more closely watched monthly employment jobs, which includes both public and private sector jobs. Economists currently expect employment to jump by 400,000 jobs in February after surging by 467,000 jobs in January. The unemployment rate is expected to edge down to 3.9 percent from 4.0 percent. Copyright(c) 2022 RTTNews.com. All Rights Reserved 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. Growth of the construction industry in the developing countries, rise in construction activities, and increase in government projects drive the growth of the global construction films market. PORTLAND, Ore., March 2, 2022 /PRNewswire/ -- Allied Market Research published a report, titled, "Construction Films Market by Type (LDPE and LLDPE, HDPE, Polypropylene (PP)/BOPP, PET/BOPET, Polyamide/BOPA, PVB, PVC, and Others), Application (Gas & Moisture Barrier, Vapor Barrier, Curing Blanket, and Others), and End Use (Residential, Commercial, Industrial, and Others): Global Opportunity Analysis and Industry Forecast 2021-2030". According to the report, the global construction films industry generated $8.0 billion in 2020, and is anticipated to generate $14.6 billion by 2030, witnessing a CAGR of 6.3% from 2021 to 2030. Prime determinants of growth Growth of the construction industry in the developing countries, rise in construction activities, and increase in government projects drive the growth of the global construction films market. However, Use of non-biodegradable plastic hinders the market growth. On the other hand, increase in demand from the automotive industry presents new opportunities in the coming years. Request PDF Brochure:https://www.alliedmarketresearch.com/request-sample/8185 Covid-19 Scenario The outbreak of the COVID-19 pandemic has had a negative impact on the growth of the global construction films market. The pandemic had halted the construction activities around the world and disrupted the supply chain, owing to the implementation of lockdown, especially during the initial phase. However, the market is going to recover soon in 2022. The gas & moisture barrier segment to maintain its leadership status throughout the forecast period Based on application, the gas & moisture barrier segment held the highest market share in 2020, accounting for more than one-fourth of the global construction films market, and is estimated to maintain its leadership status throughout the forecast period. Moreover, the same segment is projected to manifest the highest CAGR of 6.3% from 2021 to 2030. Get Detailed COVID-19 Impact Analysis on the Construction Films Market @ https://www.alliedmarketresearch.com/request-for-customization/8185?reqfor=covid The residential segment to maintain its lead position during the forecast period Based on end user, the residential segment accounted for the largest share in 2020, contributing to more than one-third of the global construction films market, and is projected to maintain its lead position during the forecast period. Moreover, the same segment is expected to portray the largest CAGR of 7.4% from 2021 to 2030, due to the rising number of residential construction projects across the globe as a result of the growing population. Asia-Pacific, followed by North America, to maintain its dominance by 2030 Based on region, Asia-Pacific, followed by North America, held the highest market share in terms of revenue 2020, accounting for nearly two-fifths of the global construction films market. Moreover, the same region is expected to witness the fastest CAGR of 7.2% during the forecast period, attributed to mass scale infrastructure and massive urbanization in the developing countries of the region. Leading Market Players Berry Global Eastman Chemical Company E.I. du Pont de Nemours Mitsubishi Chemical Corporation Mondi Raven Industries, Inc. RKW SE Saint-Gobain Supreme Toray Industries, Inc. Interested in Procuring This Report? Visit Here: https://www.alliedmarketresearch.com/construction-films-market/purchase-options Avenue Basic Plan | Library Access | 1 Year Subscription | Sign up for Avenue subscription to access more than 12,000+ company profiles and 2,000+ niche industry market research reports at $699 per month, per seat. For a year, the client needs to purchase minimum 2 seat plan. Avenue Library Subscription | Request for 14 days free trial of before buying: https://www.alliedmarketresearch.com/avenueTrial Get more information: https://www.alliedmarketresearch.com/library-access Similar Reports: Window Films Market: Global Opportunity Analysis and Industry Forecast, 2021-2030 Construction Chemicals Market: Global Opportunity Analysis and Industry Forecast, 2019 - 2026 Breathable Films Market: Global Opportunity Analysis and Industry Forecast, 2021-2030 Water-Soluble Films Market: Global Opportunity Analysis and Industry Forecast, 2021-2030 Polyethylene Films Market: Global Opportunity Analysis and Industry Forecast, 2021-2028 About Us: Allied Market Research (AMR) is a full-service market research and business-consulting wing of Allied Analytics LLP based in Portland, Oregon. Allied Market Research provides global enterprises as well as medium and small businesses with unmatched quality of "Market Research Reports" and "Business Intelligence Solutions." AMR has a targeted view to provide business insights and consulting to assist its clients to make strategic business decisions and achieve sustainable growth in their respective market domain. Pawan Kumar, the CEO of Allied Market Research, is leading the organization toward providing high-quality data and insights. We are in professional corporate relations with various companies and this helps us in digging out market data that helps us generate accurate research data tables and confirms utmost accuracy in our market forecasting. Each and every data presented in the reports published by us is extracted through primary interviews with top officials from leading companies of domain concerned. Our secondary data procurement methodology includes deep online and offline research and discussion with knowledgeable professionals and analysts in the industry. Contact: David Correa 5933 NE Win Sivers Drive #205, Portland, OR 97220 United States Toll Free: 1-800-792-5285 UK: +44-845-528-1300 Hong Kong: +852-301-84916 India (Pune): +91-20-66346060 Fax: +1-855-550-5975 help@alliedmarketresearch.com Web:https://www.alliedmarketresearch.com Follow Us on:LinkedIn Twitter Logo: https://mma.prnewswire.com/media/636519/Allied_Market_Research_Logo.jpg Dieppe, New Brunswick--(Newsfile Corp. - March 2, 2022) - Colibri Resource Corporation (TSXV: CBI) ("Colibri" or the "Company") is pleased to announce that the Company and its partner Silver Spruce Resources has initiated a geological mapping program at the Diamante Gold & Silver Project. Diamonte is located in southeastern Sonora, approximately 12km NE of Minera Alamos' Santana Mine which is currently under development and is expected to announce commercial production in Q2 2022. For terms of the option agreement between Colibri and Silver Spruce on Diamante please refer to Colibri's news release dated April 29th, 2021. The operation of the project is managed by a three-person committee, with Colibri holding two seats and Silver Spruce holding one. Silver Spruce Reports: (March 2nd, 2022) "The geological mapping and rock sampling is focused on lithological details, structural measurements and verification of sampling coordinates to validate proposed collars, depths and orientations," stated Greg Davison, Silver Spruce Vice-President Exploration and Director. "Our new high resolution LiDAR maps and historical reports have identified additional evidence of surface workings for examination, some with artisanal mining exhibiting individual adits with or without crosscuts following vein and shear structures." Mr. Davison also stated, "The early returns from the vein target mapping program are promising. The Company, along with our partner Colibri Resource Corp., will jointly manage and fund an initial 2,000 metre drilling program upon receipt of the drilling permit, expected in late March 2022, from SEMARNAT, the Mexican government environmental authority." Figure 1. Diamante 1 and 2 Concession Location Map. Note adjacent El Mezquite and Jackie. Nicho mine development by Minera Alamos located <10 km SE of the Properties. To view an enhanced version of Figure 1, please visit: https://orders.newsfilecorp.com/files/4269/115377_colibri1en.jpg Preliminary reports from the field team have verified steeply dipping polymetallic sulphide-rich veins from La Prieta, one of the principal veins targets (Figure 2). The mineralization is hosted within sheared and altered andesites of the Tarahumara Formation which dominates the geological exposure on the Diamante 1 property (Figure 3). The complete geological and analytical results from the current mapping and sampling program will be reported in due course. Figure 2. Diamante 1 Concession - Polymetallic sulphide vein in sheared andesite. To view an enhanced version of Figure 2, please visit: https://orders.newsfilecorp.com/files/4269/115377_colibri2en.jpg Figure 3. Diamante 1 Concession Map with location of Phase 1 drilling targets on regional geology, graduated Au-Ag values and interpreted surface workings (red crossed picks). To view an enhanced version of Figure 3, please visit: https://orders.newsfilecorp.com/files/4269/115377_colibri3en.jpg The targets under consideration for Phase 1 drilling include La Prieta, Aguaje, El Chon-El Chon Oeste, La Olla, Pillado, Calton, El Cumbro and Mezquite-Raizudo targets. Assays for historical surface and U/G channel samples reported up to 39.8 g/t Au, 3,460 g/t Ag, 18.2% Pb, 33.5% Zn and 1.47% Cu (see Press Releases of April 12, 2021 and January 24, 2022). For example, a 9.10 metre composite channel sample from La Olla underground workings, comprising four sub-samples, contained a weighted 0.58 g/t Au, 98 g/t Ag, 2.58% Pb and 21.95% Zn (Cu not reported). The significant impact of the base metals to the value proposition is well illustrated using Au-equivalent (AuEq) and Ag-equivalent (AgEq) grade determination as indicated in Table 1 (sorted by AuEq). Metal values (US$) used for AuEq and AgEq calculations are as follows: Au ($1,899/oz), Ag ($23.77/oz), Pb ($1.07/lb), Zn ($1.64/lb) and Cu ($4.55/lb). Table 1 provides geochemical results for select samples (n=11 of 354) sorted by AuEq from seven target areas on both Diamante 1 and 2 concessions. Table 1. Select precious metal and base metal assays sorted by Au Eq (>15 g/t) (n=11). To view an enhanced version of Table 1, please visit: https://orders.newsfilecorp.com/files/4269/115377_colibri4en.jpg Project Geology The Property is located within the west-central portion of the Sierra Madre Occidental Volcanic Complex within the northwest-trending "Sonora Gold Belt" of northern Mexico. Diamante offers strong precious metal tenor with a polymetallic endowment, multiple quality targets, styles of mineralization, limited artisanal mining and small-scale production, of particular significance for our exploration moving forward, no records of drilling. Geological features of epithermal low to intermediate sulphidation Ag-Au (Pb-Zn), high sulphidation Au-Cu, and potential porphyry style Au-Cu occur as disseminated, stockwork and vein styles accompanied by phyllic, argillic, advanced argillic and propylitic zones, with near-surface overprinting by weathering with iron oxide and oxyhydroxide staining, jarosite and relict vuggy silica. Recent exploration verified pathfinder elements including As, Sb, Hg, Cd and Bi. Structural lineaments with ENE, NE and NW orientations and branching, oblique vein sets to the N-S direction correspond to known vein systems. These include vein targets at La Prieta, El Cumbro, Mezquite Raizudo, El Chon, La Olla, Calton and Pillado. Disseminated and stockwork mineralization at Anomalia Sur and El Puerto offer bulk low-grade targets. Mineralization is reported visually as pyrite, arsenopyrite, chalcopyrite, sphalerite, argentiferous galena, argentite, hematite and probable metal oxides, carbonates and sulphates, including copper carbonate (malachite), copper sulphates and plumbojarosite. Project Background Silver Spruce can acquire up to 50% interest in four Diamante concessions with a cumulative land position of 1,057 hectares (see Press Release of April 29, 2021). The Property is very well situated in terms of resource and logistics for exploration and is easily accessible from Mexican Highway #16 which transects Diamante 1 and on several ranch trails and dry river beds to Diamante 2. Mining and exploration in the surrounding area is very active with adjacent and nearby properties held by Alamos Gold, Argonaut, Agnico Eagle, Evrim, Newmont, Garibaldi, Kootenay Silver and Penoles among others. Geochemical Analysis, Quality Assurance and Quality Control All metal values disclosed herein by Silver Spruce are reported from historical grab and channel samples which may not be representative of the metal grades. The Company's Qualified Person believes that the sampling, analytical protocols and data will withstand scrutiny for inclusion. Qualified Person Greg Davison, PGeo, Silver Spruce VP Exploration and Director, is the Company's internal Qualified Person for the Diamante Project and is responsible for approval of the technical content of this press release within the meaning of National Instrument 43-101 Standards of Disclosure for Mineral Projects ("NI 43-101"), under TSX guidelines. ABOUT COLIBRI RESOURCE CORPORATION: Colibri is a Canadian-based mineral exploration company listed on the TSX-V (CBI) and is focused on acquiring and exploring prospective gold & silver properties in Mexico. The Company has six exploration projects of which five currently have exploration programs being executed in 2022. (1) The flagship Evelyn Gold Project is 100% owned and explored by Colibri, (2) the Pilar Gold & Silver Project (optioned to Tocvan Ventures - (CSE: TOC)), (3) the El Mezquite Gold & Silver Project , (4) the Jackie Gold & Silver Project, and (5) the Diamante Gold & Silver Project. 3,4, and 5 are subject to earn-in agreements by Silver Spruce Resources - (TSXV: SSE). For more information about all Company projects please visit: www.colibriresource.com. Neither 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 release. Notice Regarding Forward-Looking Statements: This news release contains "forward-looking statements". Statements in this press release which are not purely historical are forward-looking statements and include any statements regarding beliefs, plans, expectations or intentions regarding the future. Actual results could differ from those projected in any forward-looking statements due to numerous factors. These forward-looking statements are made as of the date of this news release, and the Company assumes no obligation to update the forward-looking statements, or to update the reasons why actual results could differ from those projected in the forward-looking statements. Although the Company believes that the plans, expectations and intentions contained in this press release are reasonable, there can be no assurance that they will prove to be accurate. For information contact: Ronald J. Goguen, President, Chairperson and Director, Tel: (506) 383-4274, rongoguen@colibriresource.com To view the source version of this press release, please visit https://www.newsfilecorp.com/release/115377 In next Tuesdays election, Winter Park voters have six charter amendments before them a slate of proposals designed to put hurdles on dramatic development plans, protect open space and make government more accountable. In other communities, some of these measures might not be a good fit. But theyre well-crafted for the city Winter Park is today and for where it is headed. Voters should consider passing all six. Heres a rundown: Amendment 1: Selling public land The first five amendments would require a supermajority vote four of the five City Commission members to approve something that, under current rules, could be accomplished by a simple majority. Critics paint this as a nearly insurmountable barrier. That doesnt reflect reality usually, when the commission is split 3-2 on a particular decision, its because there are significant problems with the proposed course of action that arent addressed. Meritorious proposals usually pass with a unanimous vote. Advertisement If Amendment 1 passes, it would take four votes for the city to sell publicly owned property. Thats an appropriate thing to ask most often, transfers of public property benefit private interests. Adding the supermajority requirement improves the odds that the publics interests are protected. Amendment 2: Rezoning public land This would require a supermajority for any zoning or comprehensive-plan change for land designated as parks, public-use or quasi-public use. Those designations include big parcels along busy thoroughfares that could be prime spots for development but a closer look reveals a different kind of value: These are the citys ballfields, its playgrounds, the open vistas that give Winter Park residents a glimpse of the lakes that are otherwise hidden behind big, expensive homes. They should only be surrendered when theres a compelling reason to do so. Advertisement Amendments 3 and 4: Increasing density Amendment 3 would require a supermajority for any rezoning or comprehensive-plan amendment that shifts residential or lakefront property to business or commercial designations (or, in the case of lakefront, to a higher-density residential zoning). Amendment 4 would require a supermajority to rezone residential anywhere in the city if it increased dwelling-unit density by more than 25 percent. These two amendments could be problematic if the city were trying to cope with inner-city decay while urban sprawl erupted on its boundaries Thats not the case in Winter Park: Almost all of its boundaries are directly abutted by other municipalities limits and most of the city is built out. Political Pulse Weekly Get latest updates political news from Central Florida and across the state. > The most valid concern is that Amendments 3 and 4 would make it very difficult to construct new affordable housing that Winter Park desperately needs. But the two proposals would also provide a layer of protection for lower-income and historic minority neighborhoods currently at risk for gentrification, such as the community around Hannibal Square. Its a tradeoff, but one that should work for Winter Park. Amendment 5: Protecting wetlands This is probably the easiest one on the list for most voters: It would require a supermajority vote for any development that would destroy wetlands. Critics argue that city rules already protect wetlands and they do. But making those protections tougher makes sense, since state authorities have become increasingly lax in defending the marshes and water bodies that are critical to many of Floridas ecosystems. This would make Winter Parks rules more strict than the states. Amendment 6: Increased transparency The wording on this one is complex, but its basic intent is to restart the approval process on any proposed ordinance or zoning change whenever its language or provisions are significantly changed. Again, city rules already require this to some extent. But this would make it even harder to spring last-minute surprises on residents. Theres a vocal contingent arguing hard against all these amendments, and we have to give them credit for waging a thoughtful, factual campaign. In every case, their argument rests on one central point, and its a valid one: Making these rules more rigid deprives Winter Park of flexibility it might need to respond quickly to high-value proposals. We agree there could be some missed opportunities because of these new rules. Thats a tradeoff Winter Park residents have to consider when they vote. But they should ask themselves what they want more: Slightly better odds of landing an as-yet-unknown sparkler of a proposal or more protective rules that are on duty all the time, protecting the charm and character that make Winter Park so special. Winter Park needs the protection more. On all six of Winter Parks ballot questions, we recommend Yes. Advertisement The Orlando Sentinel Editorial Board consists of Opinion Editor Krys Fluker, Jennifer A. Marcial Ocasio, Jay Reddick and Editor-in-Chief Julie Anderson. Contact us at insight@orlandosentinel.com. MOSCOW (dpa-AFX) - As the war enters seventh day, Ukraine's key cities are being increasingly engulfed by the advancing Russian forces. Russia's defense ministry claimed to have captured the southern city of Kherson, having a population of 300,000. But city mayor says the port of Kherson is still held by Ukrainian forces. Heavy fighting is reported in Kharkiv in the north-east between Russian paratroopers and Ukrainian forces. At least 21 people were killed and 112 others injured in bombing, according to the mayor of Kharkiv, which is Ukraine's second most populous city. In Kiev, five people were killed in Russian missile attack on a TV tower in the city. Rockets also struck a maternity clinic and a Holocaust memorial site in Kyiv after the Russian military warned of 'high-precision' strikes. A 40 mile-long convoy of Russian armored vehicles is approaching the capital, and has reached about 15 miles north of it. On Tuesday, U.S. President Joe Biden announced that the American air space will be closed to all Russian flights, following the lead of the European Union and Canada. Major companies such as Apple, Google, Ford, Boeing, and Exxon Mobil have either stopped or limited services in Russia over the invasion of Ukraine. More than half a million Ukrainians have sought refuge in neighboring countries, the UN estimates. The International Energy Agency (IEA) member countries' decision to collectively release 60 million barrels of oil from strategic petroleum reserves to address market and supply disruptions did not have any immediate impact global oil prices. Brent crude oil price rose to $113 a barrel. Meanwhile, Kremlin spokesman Dmitry Peskov said a Russian delegation will be ready for new round of talks with Ukraine on Wednesday. 'Our delegation will be ready to continue the conversation tonight,' he told reporters in a conference call. Copyright(c) 2022 RTTNews.com. All Rights Reserved Copyright RTT News/dpa-AFX Kostenloser Wertpapierhandel auf Smartbroker.de Brian Ross Appointed to Lead Strategic Evolution and Growth TORONTO, March 2, 2022 /PRNewswire/ -- Jackman, North America's leading brand reinvention specialists, announced today the appointment of Brian Ross to Chief Executive Officer. As part of a broader growth and succession plan, Brian takes over from Jackman's Founder, Joe Jackman, who after 15 years in the position moves to Executive Chair of the Board and an oversight and client advisory role. Most recently the founding CEO of Precima, a Nielsen IQ company, Brian takes the helm of Jackman at a time of unprecedented market change and opportunity. "What began as a CEO-focused, end-to-end business transformation practice, Jackman has expanded to become a commercially-minded innovator with the deep-bench experience that senior leaders of all kinds rely on to help them figure out where to go and how to grow," said Joe Jackman. "I've known Brian for many years and have always respected his keen mind, determination, and humanity. He not only brings with him an extraordinary track record of delivering insight-led results for clients, Brian has this demonstrated ability to build high-performing teams with a positive culture. That's important to us. He has the respect of retail and CPG leaders around the world, and I couldn't be happier to see him lead the next chapter of our development at Jackman." Working closely with Sandra Duff, President, and her team of strategic, creative and activation leaders and the entire multi-disciplinary team, Brian will be focused on client growth, offering development, international expansion, and productization, all areas of deep expertise. "I'm honored to be named CEO of Jackman," Ross said. "I have had the opportunity to see first-hand the unique approach that Jackman brings to deliver exceptional value in partnership with clients. I look forward to joining this incredible team toward the continued path of innovation, growth and customer-centric value creation." Brian's career has spanned categories and countries. Prior to NielsenIQ/Precima, he spent several years in management positions across LoyaltyOne businesses, notably providing client management and analytics support for key partners of the AIR MILES Reward Program in Canada and retail partnerships globally. He founded Precima in 2007 to deliver the next-generation of customer-centric solutions and strategic consulting, industry-leading analytics, and software-as-a-service platform. From 2008 to 2022, Precima grew to become a global leader in retail, CPG and B2B strategy and analytics, with over 300 experts in the United States, Canada and Europe. Brian's passion is enabling clients to drive growth by putting the customer at the center of the business. Deeply experienced across grocery, pharmacy, department store, specialty retailing, financial services and consumer packaged goods, Brian shares his broad range of expertise and thought leadership in regular features in leading marketing publications and is a frequent speaker at industry events and forums. Brian officially becomes a Reinventionist on March 28, 2022. For More Information: Janet Shapiro janet@smithpublicity.com 856-489-8654 x1006 About Jackman Jackman is North America's leading transformation company. From full-scale business reinventions to customer experience optimization and strategy refreshes, Jackman is expert at unlocking value through actionable human insight, strategy-led innovation, creative conceptualization and all-channel activation. Learn more at www.jackmanreinvents.com. BANGALORE, India, March 2, 2022 /PRNewswire/ -- The Acrylic Acid Market is Segmented by Derivative Type (Acrylic Esters, Acrylic Polymer, and Others), and End-User (Diapers, Surface Coatings Industry, Adhesives and Sealants Industry, Plastic Additives Industry, Water Treatment Industry, Textiles Industry, Surfactants Industry, and Others). The report covers global opportunity analysis and industry forecasts from 2021 to 2030. The acrylic acid market size was valued at USD 12.0 billion in 2020, and it is anticipated to reach USD 19.2 billion by 2028, registering a CAGR of about 4.8% during the forecast period (2021 to 2030). Major Factors Driving The Growth Of The Acrylic Acid Market Growing demand for glacial acrylic acid (GAA) in superabsorbent polymers (SAP) for diapers, water treatment processes, and surface coating applications is expected to be a major driver for the growth of the acrylic acid market. Furthermore, the acrylic acid market is expected to be fueled by rising demand for surfactants, adhesives, and sealants. Get your sample today: https://reports.valuates.com/request/sample/ALLI-Manu-2A90/Acrylic_Acid_Market Trends Influencing The Growth Of The Acrylic Acid Market The Acrylic Acid market in the hygiene industry is expected to be driven by rising hygiene awareness, growing infant and aging populations in emerging economies, and ongoing demand for feminine hygiene products. SAPs are materials that can absorb and retain large quantities of liquid or aqueous solutions. As a result, they're ideal for water-absorbing applications like baby diapers, adult incontinence pads, absorbent medical dressings, and controlled-release drugs. As a result, the growing use of acrylic polymer in diaper manufacturing is expected to propel the acrylic acid market forward. Acrylic acid is increasingly being used to make acrylate esters, which are used in a variety of applications including paints and coatings, textiles, plastics, and adhesives. The overall acrylic acid market is being propelled by the growth seen in the construction sector and new infrastructure projects around the world. Furthermore, the growing use of Butyl acrylates, which account for the majority of acrylate esters demand, is primarily driven by coating applications, boosting the Acrylic acid market. Features such as variable degrees of durability, hardness, tackiness, and glass transition temperatures are expected to promote consumption in a variety of end-use applications. This in turn is expected to drive the growth of the Acrylic acid market. Browse the Table of Contents and List of figures at: https://reports.valuates.com/reports/ALLI-Manu-2A90/acrylic-acid Acrylic Acid Market Share Analysis Diapers dominated the global acrylic acid market in terms of revenue in 2020, owing to rapid increases in consumers' disposable income and urbanization, which are driving the adoption of acrylic-based diapers in emerging and developed economies. Rising demand for superabsorbent polymers and widespread acceptance of acrylic-based products in emerging economies such as Asia-Pacific is driving the acrylic acid market. Because of the increasing adoption of superabsorbent polymers by disposable diaper manufacturers, the acrylic polymer segment dominated the global acrylic acid market in 2020 and is expected to continue to do so during the forecast period. Report Customization Request: https://reports.valuates.com/request/customisation/ALLI-Manu-2A90/Acrylic_Acid_Market Key Market Players Mitsubishi Chemical Holdings Corporation Arkema S.A. BASF SE The Dow Chemical Co. The Lubrizol Corporation Evonik, Industries Ag LG Chem Ltd. Myriant Corporation Formosa Plastic Group SIBUR Chapter Cost Request: https://reports.valuates.com/request/chaptercost/ALLI-Manu-2A90/Acrylic_Acid_Market Buy Now for Single User + Covid-19 Impact: https://reports.valuates.com/api/directpaytoken?rcode=ALLI-Manu-2A90&lic=single-user SUBSCRIPTION We have introduced a tailor-made subscription for our customers. Please leave a note in the Comment Section to know about our subscription plans. SIMILAR REPORTS - The global Glacial Acrylic Acid market size is estimated to be worth USD 3640.5 Million in 2022 and is forecast to a readjusted size of USD 4740.8 Million by 2028 with a CAGR of 4.5% during the review period. - The global Acrylic Acid Copolymer market size is estimated to be worth USD 799 Million in 2022 and is forecast to a readjusted size of USD 999.4 Million by 2028 with a CAGR of 3.8% during the review period. - The global Acrylic Acid and its Derivatives market size is estimated to be worth USD 11700 Million in 2022 and is forecast to a readjusted size of USD 13970 Million by 2028 with a CAGR of 3.0% during the review period. - The global Acrylic Acid and Esters market size is estimated to be worth USD 10570 Million in 2022 and is forecast to a readjusted size of USD 12400 Million by 2028 with a CAGR of 2.7% during the review period. - The Global Ethylene Acrylic Acid Copolymer market size is estimated to be worth USD 237.5 Million in 2022 and is forecast to a readjusted size of USD 351.3 Million by 2028 with a CAGR of 6.7% during the review period. - Global Catalyst for Synthesis of Bio-based Acrylic Acid Market Insights and Forecast to 2028 - Global Bio-based Acrylic Acid Market Insights and Forecast to 2028 - Global 2-Methyl-Acrylic Acid Market Insights, Forecast to 2028 - Global Acrylic Acid-2-Hydroxypropyl Acrylate Copolymer Market Outlook 2022 - Global 3-Chloropropionic Acid Market Research Report 2021 - Salicylic Acid Market Size, Competitive Market Share & Forecast, 2021-2030 To see the full list of related reports on the Acrylic Acid ABOUT US: Valuates offers in-depth market insights into various industries. Our extensive report repository is constantly updated to meet your changing industry analysis needs. Our team of market analysts can help you select the best report covering your industry. We understand your niche region-specific requirements and that's why we offer customization of reports. With our customization in place, you can request for any particular information from a report that meets your market analysis needs. To achieve a consistent view of the market, data is gathered from various primary and secondary sources, at each step, data triangulation methodologies are applied to reduce deviance and find a consistent view of the market. Each sample we share contains detail research methodology employed to generate the report, Please also reach to our sales team to get the complete list of our data sources CONTACT US: Valuates Reports sales@valuates.com For U.S. Toll-Free Call +1-(315)-215-3225 For IST Call +91-8040957137 WhatsApp: +91 9945648335 Website: https://reports.valuates.com Follow on Twitter - https://twitter.com/valuatesreports Follow on Linkedin - https://in.linkedin.com/company/valuatesreports Follow on Facebook - https://www.facebook.com/valuatesreports Logo: https://mma.prnewswire.com/media/1082232/Valuates_Reports_Logo.jpg VANCOUVER, BC, March 2, 2022 /PRNewswire/ -- The global biosensors market size was USD 25.5 Billion in 2021 and is expected to register a significantly rapid revenue CAGR during the forecast period, according to latest analysis by Emergen Research. Increasing application of biosensors in various end-use industries such as healthcare, research labs, agriculture, and others are some major factors expected to drive global biosensors market revenue growth. Drivers: Rapid technological advancements in biosensors such as Point of Care (POC) testing and the determination of multianalyte for environment monitoring and screening are factors also expected to drive revenue growth of the global market during the forecast period. Miniaturization in biosensors has led to the development of easy-to-use, small, and compact biosensors, which has improved traditional methods of testing and diagnostics. In addition, increasing investments by key market players in research and development of new and more advanced products is further expected to boost demand for biosensors. Furthermore, biosensors play a vital role in constant monitoring of patient health conditions, which has made these popular for deployment among an increasing geriatric population and patient pool. Wearable biosensors technology has greatly benefitted individuals who require long-term care. Get Free Sample PDF Copy of the Report@ https://www.emergenresearch.com/request-sample/42 Restraints: However, high initial costs associated with R&D of biosensors are major factors expected to hamper revenue growth of the market during the forecast period. Only large companies are capable of investing in development of biosensors as the cost can range between USD 40 and 50 million. High cost is also limiting application in other sectors such as industrial processes, food packaging and testing, and agriculture and environment monitoring. Furthermore, technologically advanced and reliable biosensors need significant amount of time to complete. Slow rate of commercialization of biosensors and approval can take up to five years of the company's time and wealth, which is expected to hamper market growth to some extent over the forecast period. Growth Projections: The global biosensors market is expected to register a revenue CAGR of 8.0% over the forecast period and revenue is projected to increase from USD 25.5 Billion in 2021 to USD 50.7 Billion in 2030. Rising technological advancements and emergence of nanotechnology-based biosensors are factors driving revenue growth of the market. COVID-19 Impact Analysis: COVID-19 pandemic has been having a wide-ranging impact on various industries and slowed down global economic growth. However, biosensors industry was positively impacted owing to increasing demand for biosensors in hospitals and in home care diagnostics. Biosensors are used in diagnosis of tumors, medical imaging, and structural health monitoring. The COVID-19 pandemic has prompted the development of biosensors to detect presence of proteins in the causative agent in real-time. In addition, paper-based and chip-based biosensors are low-cost, user-friendly, and provide rapid diagnosis for COVID-19. Thus, several industry players are focusing on development of sensitive and reliable biosensors for COVID-19 diagnosis. Advanced biosensors are also a screening tool, which can be used for surveillance, address control, and can aid in the preparedness of future outbreaks. Discount Available on Biosensors market report [Click Here]@ https://www.emergenresearch.com/request-discount/42 Current Trends and Innovations: Extensive adoption of biosensors has resulted in the development of quartz, glass, and silica based biosensors owing to their unique properties. Silicon nanomaterials have greater potential for technological advancements in biosensor applications due to their abundance, biocompatibility, electronic, and mechanical properties. In addition, silicon nanomaterials are important for biomedical and biological applications as these are not toxic. Silicon nanomaterials are used for various applications such as biosensing, bioimaging, and therapy of cancer. Geographical Outlook: North America is expected to register a significantly robust revenue growth rate over the forecast period due to presence of well-established medical and biosensors manufacturing industries in countries in the region. Strategic Initiatives: Some major companies included in the global market report are Abbott, Medtronic, Bio-Rad Laboratories, Inc., Cytiva, LifeScan IP Holdings, LLC, Nova Biomedical, Universal Biosensors, AgaMatrix, PHC Holdings Corporation, and ACON Laboratories, Inc. In December 2020, Bio-Rad Laboratories, Inc., which is a global leader of life science research and clinical diagnostic products, announced the expansion of its joint marketing agreement with Siemens Healthineers. As part of the agreement, Bio-Rad will provide quality control products and unity quality control data management solutions for Siemens Healthineers' Atellica Solution platforms. Explore Complete Report Description and Table of Contents of Biosensors Market Report@https://www.emergenresearch.com/industry-report/biosensors-market Emergen Research has segmented the global biosensors market on the basis of product, technology, application, end-use, and region: Product Outlook (Revenue, USD Billion; 2019-2030) Wearable Biosensors Non-wearable Biosensors Technology Outlook (Revenue, USD Billion; 2019-2030) Electrochemical Biosensors Optical Biosensors Piezoelectric Biosensors Thermal Biosensors Nanomechanical Biosensors Application Outlook (Revenue, USD Billion; 2019-2030) Healthcare Agriculture Bioreactor Food Toxicity Others End-use Outlook (Revenue, USD Billion; 2019-2030) Point of Care (POC) Home Diagnostics Research Labs Environmental Monitoring Food & Beverages Biodefense Others Customization Available as per your Specific Requirement@ https://www.emergenresearch.com/request-for-customization/42 Regional Outlook (Revenue, USD Billion; 2019-2030) North Americ a. U.S. b. Canada c. Mexico a. U.S. b. c. Europe a. Germany b. France c. U.K. d. Italy e. Spain f. Benelux g. Rest of Europe a. b. c. U.K. d. e. f. Benelux g. Rest of Asia Pacific a. China b. India c. Japan d. South Korea e. Rest of APAC a. b. c. d. e. Rest of APAC Latin America a. Brazil b. Rest of LATAM a. b. Rest of LATAM Middle East & Africa a. Saudi Arabia b. UAE c. South Africa d. Turkey e. Rest of MEA Latest Blog Articles Published by Emergen Research: Top 5 Lithium Mining Countries Leading the Global Renewable Energy Transition Top 5 Lithium Mining Companies Leading the Global Renewable Energy Transition Top 10 Companies Offering High-performance Core Materials for Industrial Applications World's Top 10 Companies Offering 5G Services in the Defense Sector World's Top 10 Companies Offering Top-notch Business Transcription Services Top 10 Companies in the World That Are Transforming Industries with Pioneering IoT Solutions About Emergen Research Emergen Research is a market research and consulting company that provides syndicated research reports, customized research reports, and consulting services. Our solutions purely focus on your purpose to locate, target, and analyze consumer behavior shifts across demographics, across industries, and help clients make smarter business decisions. We offer market intelligence studies ensuring relevant and fact-based research across multiple industries, including Healthcare, Touch Points, Chemicals, Types, and Energy. We consistently update our research offerings to ensure our clients are aware of the latest trend's existent in the market. Emergen Research has a strong base of experienced analysts from varied areas of expertise. Our industry experience and ability to develop a concrete solution to any research problems provides our clients with the ability to secure an edge over their respective competitors. Contact Us: Eric Lee Corporate Sales Specialist Emergen Research | Web: www.emergenresearch.com Direct Line: +1 (604) 757-9756 E-mail: sales@emergenresearch.com Visit for More Insights: https://www.emergenresearch.com/insights Explore Our Custom Intelligence services | Growth Consulting Services Read our Press Release on Biosensors @ https://www.emergenresearch.com/press-release/global-biosensors-market Read Blog Article on Biosensors Top Companies@ https://www.emergenresearch.com/blog/top-10-leading-companies-in-the-global-biosensor-market Logo: https://mma.prnewswire.com/media/1579538/Emergen_Research_Logo.jpg CHICAGO, March 2, 2022 /PRNewswire/ -- According to a new market research report the report "Predictive Maintenance Market with COVID-19 Impact Analysis by Component (Solutions, Services), Deployment Mode (On-premises, Cloud), Organization Size (Large Enterprises, SME), Vertical and Region - Global Forecast to 2026", published by MarketsandMarkets, the market size to grow from USD 4.2 billion in 2021 to USD 15.9 billion by 2026, at a Compound Annual Growth Rate (CAGR) of 30.6% during the forecast period. Various factors such as increasing spending on marketing and advertising activities by enterprises, changing landscape of customer intelligence to drive the market, and proliferation of customer channels are expected to drive the adoption of predictive maintenance technologies and services. Browse in-depth TOC on "Predictive Maintenance Market" 372 - Tables 51 - Figures 294 - Pages Download PDF Brochure: https://www.marketsandmarkets.com/pdfdownloadNew.asp?id=8656856 Predictive maintenance is an approach used by enterprises to predict future failure points as well as monitor the condition of an asset in real-time. Besides passive monitoring, the predictive maintenance technique leverages ML algorithms that take critical historical data, such as temperature, pressure, and vibration, as an input, thus providing prediction related to the condition of an asset in real-time. This, in turn, enables enterprises to significantly reduce unplanned machine downtime and decide whether any particular asset needs maintenance. Predictive maintenance ensures the machine is taken for maintenance before it fails, due to which there are minimal losses in production. Traditional maintenance software currently cannot manage these expectations, as these maintenance solutions are reactive and periodic, which might affect the productivity of an enterprise due to unexpected downtime of the asset. Predictive maintenance solutions leverage technologies, such as Artificial Intelligence (AI), Internet of Things (IoT), and big data, to gather meaningful insights from all the data received from the machines, thus helping in taking necessary actions before the breakdown of the asset. Public Cloud segment to account for a larger market size during the forecast period Public cloud deployment mode in the Predictive Maintenance Market offers a cloud-based environment and is available to the general public over the internet. It requires minimal investment, no hardware setup, and no infrastructure management. It is a type of virtual network environment wherein various service providers provide cloud-based analytical solutions. Organizations are moving their complex core applications to public cloud due to its compatibility, security, and performance. Government and Defense vertical to have the largest market size during the forecast period Government and public institutions are shifting toward a digital mode of operations, with the developed IT infrastructure in place, to improve reliability and efficiency. Government and public authorities are taking various initiatives, such as smart cities and traffic management, to enhance the lifestyle of its citizens and administer the cities. Public sector organizations all over the world have the responsibility of employing high-value assets and operations associated with utilities, public venues, roads, bridges, transit and mobility systems, airports, ports, and public health systems. Speak to Analyst: https://www.marketsandmarkets.com/speaktoanalystNew.asp?id=8656856 APAC to hold higher CAGR during the forecast period The Predictive Maintenance Market has been segmented into five major regions: North America, Europe, APAC, Latin America, and MEA. APAC is expected to grow at a good pace during the forecast period. The region will be booming, as it is experiencing a lot of new entrepreneur setups, which would be looking forward to acquiring new customers and gaining customer trust by involving new paradigms of maintenance technologies to have a competitive advantage over the established players. Predictive maintenance vendors in this region focus on innovations related to their product line. China, Japan, India, and Bangladesh have displayed ample growth opportunities in the Predictive Maintenance Market. Market Players: The major vendors in the global Predictive Maintenance Market include Microsoft (US), IBM(US), SAP(Germany), SAS Institute (US), Software AG (Germany), TIBCO Software (US), HPE (US), Altair (US), Splunk (US), Oracle (US), Google (US), AWS (US), GE (US), Schneider Electric (France), Hitachi (Japan), and PTC (US). Browse Adjacent Markets: Analytics Market Research Reports & Consulting Related Reports: Customer Journey Analytics Market by Component, Organization Size, Deployment Mode, Data Source, Application (Campaign Management & Product Management), Vertical (BFSI, Retail & eCommerce, & Telecommunications and IT), and Region - Global Forecast to 2026 Big Data Market with COVID-19 Impact Analysis, by Component, Deployment Mode, Organization Size, Business Function (Finance, Marketing & Sales), Industry Vertical (BFSI, Manufacturing, Healthcare & Life Sciences) and Region - Global Forecast to 2026 About MarketsandMarkets MarketsandMarkets provides quantified B2B research on 30,000 high growth niche opportunities/threats which will impact 70% to 80% of worldwide companies' revenues. Currently servicing 7500 customers worldwide including 80% of global Fortune 1000 companies as clients. Almost 75,000 top officers across eight industries worldwide approach MarketsandMarkets for their painpoints around revenues decisions. Our 850 fulltime analyst and SMEs at MarketsandMarkets are tracking global high growth markets following the "Growth Engagement Model - GEM". The GEM aims at proactive collaboration with the clients to identify new opportunities, identify most important customers, write "Attack, avoid and defend" strategies, identify sources of incremental revenues for both the company and its competitors. MarketsandMarkets now coming up with 1,500 MicroQuadrants (Positioning top players across leaders, emerging companies, innovators, strategic players) annually in high growth emerging segments. MarketsandMarkets is determined to benefit more than 10,000 companies this year for their revenue planning and help them take their innovations/disruptions early to the market by providing them research ahead of the curve. MarketsandMarkets's flagship competitive intelligence and market research platform, "Knowledge Store" connects over 200,000 markets and entire value chains for deeper understanding of the unmet insights along with market sizing and forecasts of niche markets. Contact: Mr. Aashish Mehra MarketsandMarkets INC. 630 Dundee Road Suite 430 Northbrook, IL 60062 USA: +1-888-600-6441 Email: sales@marketsandmarkets.com Research Insight: https://www.marketsandmarkets.com/ResearchInsight/operational-predictive-maintenance-market.asp Visit Our Website: https://www.marketsandmarkets.com Content Source: https://www.marketsandmarkets.com/PressReleases/operational-predictive-maintenance.asp Logo: https://mma.prnewswire.com/media/660509/MarketsandMarkets_Logo.jpg CEO Shannon Wilkinson Awarded MyVegas Top 100 Women of The Year LAS VEGAS, NV / ACCESSWIRE / March 2, 2022 / Tego Cyber Inc. (OTCQB:TGCB), an emerging developer of proactive cyber threat intelligence applications and solutions, today announced that it was nominated and has won the 'Top 10 Vegas Born Businesses' award by the readers of MyVegas Magazine and its CEO, Shannon Wilkinson, has been recognized as one of the Top 100 Women of the Year. "It is truly an honor to be recognized with this award, which reflects the tremendous work of the entire team at Tego Cyber, whose efforts are helping position Tego as a leader in the field of cyber threat intelligence," said Shannon Wilkinson, co-founder and CEO of Tego Cyber Inc. "These solutions are more important than ever as the United States and organizations globally face unprecedented cybersecurity threats. In particular, the Tego Threat Intelligence Platform (TTIP) uniquely integrates with top end security platforms to gather, analyze, and proactively identify threats to an enterprise network. Our platform provides important context, including specific details needed to identify and counteract threats. Over the past year, we have significantly advanced the software, which now integrates with Splunk and Elastic Security, with near term plans to integrate with Devo, IBM QRadar, AT&T Cybersecurity, Exabeam, Google Chronical and other SIEM platforms. We are extremely pleased with the positive feedback we have received from Fortune 500 companies to governments and other global organizations, who recognize the importance of proactively responding to and preventing attacks on critical digital infrastructure." Every year MyVegas spotlights 100 women who are recognized leaders in their field and have made a positive impact to the Las Vegas community through their hard work and dedication. "It is truly an honor to be recognized by my community with this award," continued Shannon Wilkinson. "It is greatly appreciated and very humbling. Cyber-attacks represent an unprecedented threat to our nation and the global community. We are working tirelessly to accelerate the commercial rollout of our TTIP, which we believe will play an invaluable role in defending governments, corporations and critical infrastructure worldwide." About Shannon Wilkinson Shannon is a graduate from the University of Nevada, Las Vegas with a bachelor's degree in Management Information Systems. She earned her master's degree in Information Systems Management from the University of Phoenix. The first 12 years of her career were spent overseas, working for the United Nations Department of Peacekeeping Operations building mission critical software platforms. In the fall of 2019, Shannon co-founded Tego Cyber Inc. with a mission to develop an innovative threat intelligence application designed to help macro enterprises effectively respond to the ever-changing cyber threat landscape. Shannon was selected as the 2018 Las Vegas Women in Technology - Cybersecurity, 2017 Las Vegas Women in Technology Entrepreneur as well as appeared in the MYVEGAS Magazine Top 100 Women of Las Vegas in 2017 and 2018. She has authored an Amazon Best Seller and is featured on several news sources as a cybersecurity expert. About MYVEGAS Magazine MYVEGAS Magazine is Las Vegas' official city magazine, designed and written by locals, for locals. MYVEGAS brings the most relevant content and trending news, both digitally and in print. A quarterly publication, each issue highlights special features, such as the Top 100 Doctors of the Year, the Top 100 Lawyers of the Year, and more. MYVEGAS avidly supports local businesses and their continued success, as they host special events, networking mixers, provide support to charities, offer special advertising packages, and much more. Check out MyVegasMag.com for more and subscribe to our weekly newsletter. About Tego Cyber Inc. Tego Cyber Inc. (the "Company") was created to capitalize on the emerging cyber threat intelligence market. The Company has developed a cyber threat intelligence application that integrates with top end security platforms to gather, analyze, then proactively identify threats to an enterprise network. The Tego Guardian threat intelligence application takes in vetted and curated threat data and after utilizing a proprietary process, the platform compiles, analyzes, and then delivers that data to an enterprise network in a format that is timely, informative, and relevant. The threat data provides additional context including specific details needed to identify and counteract threats so that security teams can spend less time searching for disparate information. The first version of the application will integrate with the widely accepted Splunk SIEM to provide real-time threat intelligence to macro enterprises using the Splunk architecture. The Company plans on developing future versions of the Tego Guardian application for integration with other established SIEM systems and platforms including: Elastic, IBM QRadar, AT&T Cybersecurity, Exabeam, and Google Chronical. For more information, please visit www.tegocyber.com. Forward-Looking Statements The statements contained in this press release, those which are not purely historical or which depend upon future events, may constitute forward-looking statements within the meaning of Section 27A of the Securities Act of 1933 and Section 21E of the Securities Exchange Act of 1934. Statements regarding the Company's expectations, hopes, beliefs, intentions or strategies regarding the future constitute forward-looking statements. Prospective investors are cautioned that any such forward-looking statements are not guarantees of future performance and involve risks and uncertainties, and that actual results may differ materially from those projected in the forward-looking statements because of various factors. All forward-looking statements included in this press release are based on information available to the Company on the date hereof and the Company assumes no obligation to update any such forward-looking statement. Prospective investors should also consult the risks factors described from time to time in the Company's Reports on Forms 10-K, 10-Q and 8-K and Annual Reports to Shareholders. Contact: Tego Cyber Inc. 8565 S Eastern Avenue, Suite 150 Las Vegas, Nevada 89123 USA Tel: 855-939-0100 (North America) Tel: 725-726-7840 (International) Email: info@tegocyber.com Web: tegocyber.com Facebook: facebook.com/tegocyber LinkedIn: linkedin.com/company/tegocyber Twitter: twitter.com/tegocyber Investor Relations: Crescendo Communications, LLC Tel: 212-671-1020 Email: TGCB@crescendo-ir.com SOURCE: Tego Cyber Inc. View source version on accesswire.com:https://www.accesswire.com/691070/Tego-Cyber-Inc-Awarded-Top-10-Vegas-Born-Businesses-by-MyVegas-Magazine Cartamundi, the worldwide leader in "play" solutions and trusted partner to leading toy companies across the globe, today announced the appointment of Tricia Bouras, as executive vice president for the company's North America Retail and Industry segment, under theUnited States Playing Card Company (USPCC). USPCC was acquired by Cartamundi in 2019 and is renowned globally for its premier playing card brands, Bicycle and Bee, craftsmanship and innovation. This press release features multimedia. View the full release here: https://www.businesswire.com/news/home/20220302005792/en/ Tricia Bouras, Executive Vice President, North America Retail and Industry, United States Playing Card Company (Photo: Business Wire) With more than 30 years of strategic work and transformational results for major brands, Bouras' experience aligns with the planned growth objectives for the company. Bouras is expected to lead initiatives to evolve the USPCC brand portfolio to new levels, grow the global B2C strategy and increase market share over the next five years. "Tricia is a proven leader who brings extensive experience, guiding and leading high-performing teams and strategic initiatives with incredible business results," said Stefaan Merckx, CEO of Cartamundi. "We're happy to welcome Tricia to the Cartamundi team." Innovation and the next phase of growth is already underway, as the company recently launched its first-ever Bicycle NFT "Genesis Collection," featuring the brand's iconic cards transformed 1000 years into the future by artist Adrian Valenzuela. https://bicyclecards.com/article/collecting-playing-card-nfts/filter=.collectors.collectors Additionally, the company is partnering with The Original Smiley Brand to develop a limited-edition collector's deck of Bicycle playing cards available starting early March at select Nordstrom locations across the U.S as well as at Nordstrom.com and Bicyclecards.com. Prior to joining USPCC, Bouras led multimillion-dollar portfolios for major global brands. As former President of the Footwear Division at RG Barry Corporation, Bouras leveraged corporate endeavors resulting in significant positive bottom-line impact across business divisions including the well-known Dearfoams brand. Prior to that, she served as vice president of Hanesbrands, Inc. leading revenue growth for a portfolio spanning six brands and five categories across North America and Europe. "I'm excited for the future category growth and product innovation opportunities aligned with the strength of these incredible iconic brands," said Tricia Bouras, executive vice president, Cartamundi. Bouras resides in Kentucky with her family. She earned a Bachelor of Fine Arts from the School of the Art Institute of Chicago. About The United States Playing Card Company The United States Playing Card Company is the leader in the production and distribution of premier brands of playing cards, including BICYCLE, BEE, AVIATOR, HOYLE, and KEM. BICYCLE cards have been the bestselling playing card brand for almost 135 years. Founded in 1867, the company manufactures and globally distributes a broad portfolio of traditional playing cards, card games, board games, accessories, and casino gaming products. Read more at: http://www.usplayingcard.com. About Cartamundi Cartamundi acquired The United States Playing Card Company in 2019. Cartamundi is the worldwide leader in "play" solutions. Our team of over 3,000 employees is united in delivering our common purpose of "sharing the magic of playing together." The opportunity to "play" gives us all the ability to connect, de-stress and learn something new. We are promoting "play" through our extensive global portfolio of (playing) card brands, while continuing to invest in manufacturing and innovation to bring new ideas to life. These contributions ensure we are the trusted partner of leading toy companies around the world. Our global brand portfolio includes a suite of heritage brands which go back as far as 1848, including global brands like Bicycle, Bee, Copag, Shuffle and many locally loved brands. These brands combine craftsmanship with innovation as the basis for their continued relevance and positive contribution to the local communities that love and use these brands. We are a family-owned company with headquarters in Belgium and have a global sales office network and 13 manufacturing facilities. Learn more about what we do at: https://www.cartamundi.com. View source version on businesswire.com: https://www.businesswire.com/news/home/20220302005792/en/ Contacts: Carla M. Mancuso, PR Director Email: carlamancuso36@gmail.com Toronto, Ontario--(Newsfile Corp. - March 2, 2022) - ScreenPro Security Inc. (CSE: SCRN) (OTCQB: SCRSF) ("ScreenPro" or the "Company") is excited to announce that senior management will be hosting a webinar Monday March 7th, 2022, at 2pm EST to provide corporate updates on the latest developments at the Company, including the increase of Covid testing contracts and the company's vision to diversify it's business lines with Concierge Medical and the proposed acquisition of Add Biomedical. Webinar Details: Date: Monday March 7th, 2022 Time: 2pm EST. Zoom Registration: https://bit.ly/3hpOEn1 The Company will be holding Q&As at the end of the webinar. All questions will be preapproved at managements discretion and subject to time constraints. Please submit all inquiries and questions to investors@screenprosecurity.com to be considered. About ScreenPro ScreenPro is a Screening and Medical Technology company that provides turnkey screening solutions with its proprietary medical alerting software. ScreenPro's unique access to multiple manufacturers of high-quality test kits and its strategic partnership with labs in British Columbia, Ontario and Quebec allows ScreenPro to be a full-service nationwide provider of COVID testing solutions across Canada. In addition, ScreenPro has its own medical doctor and nursing professionals with on the ground support staff and transportation, with access to high quality PPEs to ensure that clients are protected in all aspects of their testing needs. For additional information on ScreenPro and other corporate information, please visit the Company's website at www.screenprosecurity.com. About Add Biomedical Add Biomedical is a biomedical screening company specialized in creating solutions for disease diagnosis. The Company focuses on Oncology with the use of CA 15-3 Rapid Test Kit's for breast cancer screening, Veterinary Animal Disease screening and Infectious Disease screening to detect diseases like HIV-1 and HIV-2. With female breast cancer being the most commonly occurring cancer worldwide, early diagnosis is key to prevention and treatment. The Company's initial focus is breast cancer detection with health screening as the solution. The technology is easy to use, fast, portable, cost effective and can be operated in resource limited areas. Add Biomedical is committed to early diagnosis which can saves lives. For additional information on Add Biomedical and other corporate information, please visit the Company's website at: www.addbiomedical.com. For more information about the Company, please refer to the Company's profile on SEDAR at www.sedar.com. Neither the Canadian Securities Exchange (the "CSE") nor it's Regulation Services Provider (as that term is defined in the policies of the CSE) accepts responsibility for the adequacy or accuracy of this release. For further information please contact: Lena Kozovski, CEO Email: info@screenprosecurity.com Forward-Looking Statements: Certain statements contained in this news release may constitute forward-looking information, including statements relating to expectations regarding the acquisition and business of Concierge Medical Consultants Inc. and the future development of ScreenPro's business. Forward-looking information is often, but not always, identified by the use of words such as "anticipate", "plan", "estimate", "expect", "may", "will", "intend", "should", and similar expressions. Forward-looking information involves known and unknown risks, uncertainties and other factors that may cause actual results or events to differ materially from those anticipated in such forward-looking information. The actual results of ScreenPro could differ materially from those anticipated in this forward-looking information as a result of regulatory decisions, competitive factors in the industries in which ScreenPro operates, prevailing economic conditions, changes to ScreenPro's strategic growth plans, and other factors, many of which are beyond the control of ScreenPro. Management of ScreenPro believes that the expectations reflected in the forward-looking information herein are reasonable, but no assurance can be given that these expectations will prove to be correct and such forward-looking information should not be unduly relied upon. Any forward-looking information contained in this news release represents ScreenPro's expectations as of the date hereof and is subject to change after such date. ScreenPro disclaims any intention or obligation to update or revise any forward-looking information whether as a result of new information, future events or otherwise, except as required by applicable securities legislation. ### To view the source version of this press release, please visit https://www.newsfilecorp.com/release/115381 Canada Goose (NYSE: GOOS; TSX: GOOS) is deeply concerned by the conflict unfolding in Ukraine. We stand with all of those who are impacted by the violence. We are supporting humanitarian efforts, providing aid to assist with the refugee crisis, and taking further actions to help. We have taken a number of actions in response to the conflict. Through the Canada Goose Response Program, we are donating $100,000 CAD to the United Nations High Commissioner for Refugees (UNHCR) who are leading global humanitarian efforts in the region. Further, while no Canada Goose retail locations have been impacted, in light of the challenged operating environment and evolving sanctions against Russian interests, we have decided to suspend all wholesale and e-commerce sales to Russia. We will continue to monitor the situation as it evolves and join others around the world calling for peace. About Canada Goose Founded in 1957 in a small warehouse in Toronto, Canada, Canada Goose (NYSE:GOOS, TSX:GOOS) is a lifestyle brand and a leading manufacturer of performance luxury apparel. Every collection is informed by the rugged demands of the Arctic, ensuring a legacy of functionality is embedded in every product from parkas and rainwear to apparel and accessories. Canada Goose is inspired by relentless innovation and uncompromised craftsmanship, recognized as a leader for its Made in Canada commitment. In 2020, Canada Goose announced HUMANATURE, its purpose platform that unites its sustainability and values-based initiatives, reinforcing its commitment to keep the planet cold and the people on it warm. Canada Goose also owns Baffin, a Canadian designer and manufacturer of performance outdoor and industrial footwear. Visit www.canadagoose.com for more information. View source version on businesswire.com: https://www.businesswire.com/news/home/20220302005810/en/ Contacts: Media media@canadagoose.com Investor Relations ir@canadagoose.com VICTORIA, Seychelles, March 2, 2022 /PRNewswire/ -- PrimeXBT , a global multi-asset platform offering a comprehensive suite of trading products and cryptocurrency services, has listed 24 new trading instruments featuring many of today's most popular cryptocurrencies. In-Demand Cryptocurrency Trading Instruments Listed On PrimeXBT The expansive list of new trading instruments features two dozen highly in-demand crypto assets. The new trading instruments also join a wide range of forex currencies, commodities, stock indices, and existing cryptocurrencies such as Bitcoin, Cardano, Solana, and Dogecoin. With these latest additions, PrimeXBT's lineup has reached a milestone of 100 unique trading instruments. "We are proud to offer the trading community a one-stop-shop enabling a diverse trading portfolio of assets," said a PrimeXBT spokesperson. "The new listing further presents a range of profitable opportunities all under one roof." The lineup of new trading instruments includes: BNB/USD TRX/USD XTZ/USD LUNA/USD FTT/USD FIL/USD AVAX/USD FTM/USD EGLD/USD MATIC/USD XLM/USD AXS/USD SHIB/USD MANA/USD KLAY/USD ATOM/USD ICP/USD HNT/USD NEAR/USD SAND/USD THETA/USD ALGO/USD VET/USD XMR/USD PrimeXBT Continues To Reinforce Robust Product Offering Through Regular Updates Listing in-demand crypto assets requested by the trading community is among several ways PrimeXBT continues to expand its overall product lineup and potential customer reach. Traders of any experience level can discover a wealth of ways to access markets. The recently launched PrimeXBT Trading Academy teaches traders how to get started trading any of the platform's wide variety of popular trading instruments. A new Contests section lets traders use virtual funds to compete for prizes while also testing their skills in a simulated real-time market. Covesting allows newcomers to follow more experienced traders who profit for them. There is also a newly released native Android and iOS application, which users can use to access any of the 24 new trading instruments just released. The new trading instruments are now live on PrimeXBT today. Users can see the current trading conditions and fees on the PrimeXBT website . About PrimeXBT PrimeXBT is a multi-award-winning fintech company established in 2018 which offers a Cryptocurrency, FX, Indices, and Commodities synthetic contract trading infrastructure. The platform provides access to a wide range of trading tools while maintaining security, liquidity and enabling a safe and efficient trading environment for everyone. PrimeXBT also offers the Covesting copy-trading module, which allows users to browse through hundreds of trading strategies provided by other traders, and automatically copy their trading activity. Its getting even more personal in Tallahassee. In a slap to free thought, the Florida House of Representatives passed controversial bills last week that would effectively muzzle teachers and corporate trainers in discussing race, gender identity and sexual orientation. The Florida Senate is expected to pass similar legislation, paving the way for Gov. Ron DeSantis to sign the measures into law. Advertisement The Republican-backed bills are another salvo in the culture wars, part of a nationwide appeal to conservative voters who fear the countrys founding institutions and freedoms are under attack by the woke left. It was a theme echoed at the recent annual Conservative Political Action Conference (CPAC) in Orlando, where DeSantis and other Republicans denounced liberal ideology. (Gary W. Green, Orlando Sentinel) But make no mistake: The messages at CPAC and the measures that could become law in Florida and elsewhere are the real threats to our way of life. At their core, they take aim at honest, open and unregulated free speech, thus undermining the sacred principles of freedom they claim to support. Advertisement They bring to mind the world in George Orwells dystopian novel 1984, where an individual thought could be banned, and have no place in the landscape of 2022. One of the House Bills, HB 7, builds on the Stop W.O.K.E. Act, which DeSantis introduced last year. It stands for Stop Wrongs to Our Kids and Employees. But instead of protecting these individuals, it harms them by suppressing their voices. Another bill, which critics have dubbed the Dont Say Gay bill, is equally toxic, not to mention patently discriminatory. In the classroom, proponents say HB 7 would empower parents. But what it really does is stifle discussion on topics like race. If a lesson made students feel discomfort a sense of guilt for historic wrongs because of their race, color, sex or national origin it could be prohibited. A similar scenario could play out in the workplace. If training on sexual harassment, for instance, made an employee uncomfortable, the business could face a lawsuit, a scenario that prompted local chambers of commerce and national companies to sound the alarm. As the civil rights organization Equality Florida rightly said after the bills passage: They will turn Florida into a surveillance state and give the government broad license to censor conversations about American history, the origins of racism and injustice, and the existence of LGBTQ+ people. Political Pulse Weekly Get latest updates political news from Central Florida and across the state. > Is this what conservatives, who embrace limited government, want? Who will decide what words or content causes discomfort? Surely, weve learned that what one parent considers taboo may be just the opposite to another. Will a Jewish schoolchild feel discomfort when learning of the atrocities of the gas chambers at Auschwitz? Or maybe a student of German descent? Or both? Will a student in senior high be scornful to learn of the public and pervasive lynchings of Black people primarily in the South? Would that be right to feel uneasy? Or is discomfort a recognized disorder? And by whom? Advertisement What about the discomfort caused by a right-wing mantra of dont say gay that could prove to be so hurtful to young people who are, in fact, gay and already face discrimination? The questions are not ours alone. Since January 2021, 41 states have leaned in to the idea of restricting how teachers can discuss racism and sexism, according to an analysis by Education Week. Fourteen have imposed bans and restrictions. You can feel the chill as governments take on the role of Big Brother, meddling in the very personal space of thought. Thirty-eight years after Orwells fictional 1984, the past feels very present. Dick Batchelor is a former Florida legislator, president of the Dick Batchelor Management Group and a member of the Central Florida 100. LONDON and NEW YORK, March 2, 2022 /PRNewswire/ -- The Bank of London, the next generation technology company and the world's first purpose-built global clearing, agency, and transaction bank, today announces that it will be partnering with the Rainbow Honours to launch "The Bank of London Rainbow Honours". These awards celebrate the groups, institutions, charities, businesses, and individuals from the entire LGBTQI community who have worked all year around to influence, change, and promote LGBTQI equality for the betterment of all. Taking place on 1 June 2022 at 8 Northumberland Avenue in central London, 'The Bank of London Rainbow Honours' will showcase and celebrate those who strive to make the workplace a better place for LGBTQI+ employees and those who give up their spare time to volunteer. The awards will also salute businesses who demonstrate their commitment to equality all-year round. At The Bank of London, equity, diversity and inclusion are at the heart of our business sitting alongside our company values which include authenticity, empowerment, courage and kindness. The whole Bank is empowered through this lens, living them every day - starting from the very top. It isn't just paying lip-service like some companies do - our Group Chief Executive & Founder, Anthony Watson is the first - and only - openly gay person to launch a bank in the United Kingdom, and currently the only openly gay Chief Executive of a British bank. Anthony Watson, Group Chief Executive Officer & Founder of The Bank of London, said: "As LGBTQI+ history month draws to a close, I'm delighted to announce The Bank of London Rainbow Honours. In a society where LGBTQI+ people have been routinely marginalised; it is more important than ever that we honour those members of our community who are our role models, those who are our allies, and those organisations who are working tirelessly for the betterment of LGBTQI+ people across the United Kingdom." Linda Riley, Founder of The Rainbow Honours, said:?"We are incredibly excited to be announcing details of The Bank of London Rainbow Honours. These awards will recognise the individuals, organisations, charities and unsung heroes who help to make the world a better place for LGBTQI+ communities. Over the last 20 years, the UK has led the way on LGBTQI+ rights with historic legislation to create a fairer, more accepting and more diverse society but there is still so much more to do. We are now calling on the public and businesses to get involved by nominating their champions today."? Nominations for The Bank of London Rainbow Honours are now open at?www.rainbowhonours.com Categories will include: LGBTQI CHAMPION - This honour is given to an individual who has used their time to volunteer for charities or other good causes, and has leveraged their experience and skills to mentor others either within or outside the workplace. OUTSTANDING LGBTQI NETWORK GROUP - Awarded to the corporate LGBTQI staff network which provides the greatest support to its members. HOUSING PROVIDER - This award is given to a housing provider who actively promotes their schemes to the LGBTQI community. CAMPAIGN - Awarded to the best campaign, whether it be marketing or a campaign to promote LGBTQI visibility. COMMUNITY HERO - Awarded to an individual who has gone over and above to support the LGBTQI community at its very roots, in the place where they live. CELEBRITY ALLY - Awarded to someone in the public eye who does not identify as LGBTQI but who uses their platform and influence to promote LGBTQI equality and visibility. RISING STAR - Presented to an individual who has seen their profile increase dramatically over the past year to the benefit of the LGBTQI community, either within the workplace or the wider community. CORPORATE LGBTQI CHAMPION - Presented to a LGBTQI individual who champions the community in every aspect of their work life and beyond. CORPORATE ALLY - Given to someone who does not identify as LGBTQI but who has leveraged their influence to demonstrate support for LGBTQI equality, diversity and inclusion in the workplace and beyond. The Bank of London - SMALL BRAND / ORGANISATION - This award is given to a SME which has demonstrated outstanding commitment to an LGBTQI community. LARGE BRAND / ORGANISATION - This award is given to a company or other organisation which has demonstrated outstanding support for the LGBTQI community. CHARITY - This award is given to the charity - including those who may not be LGBTQI specific - which has run a campaign or campaigns to the benefit of the LGBTQI community MEDIA MOMENT - This honour is to celebrate a moment in media history that has impacted the LGBTQI community. MEDIA DIVERSITY - This award is presented to an individual or programme that strives to ensure that diversity and inclusion is at the very core of everything they do. CAMPAIGNER / INFLUENCER - Awarded to a person who identifies as LGBTQI and whose words and deeds have helped further the cause of LGBTQI equality. LGBTQI ICON - Awarded to a person who identifies as LGBTQI and whose words and deeds have helped further the cause of LGBTQ equality. About The Bank of London The Bank of London launched 30 November 2021, with a $1.1 billion valuation, making it the first pre-revenue bank in history to attain 'unicorn' status upon debut. It launched as the sixth principal clearing bank of the United Kingdom, and only the second in 250 years. The Bank of London is a leading-edge technology company and the world's first purpose-built global clearing, agency, and transaction bank. We leverage our patented technology innovations and differentiated bank capabilities to lift economies and communities by powering the borderless economic infrastructure of the future. The bank has been established to assist banks, clearing houses, digital & traditional asset firms, governments, financial services companies from local fintechs to global institutions, payment networks and non-financial brands seeking to launch fully compliant financial products and services in-country and across-borders. With headquarters in London and offices in New York, The Bank of London is a principal clearing bank of the United Kingdom authorised by the Bank of England's Prudential Regulation Authority and regulated by the Financial Conduct Authority and the Bank of England's Prudential Regulatory Authority. For more information visit: thebankoflondon.com, or on Twitter and Instagram at: @thebankoflondon. About Anthony Watson Anthony Watson is a veteran of both Wall Street and the City of London, and one of less than a handful of people in the world to successfully launch financial disrupters in both the UK and the United States, with The Bank of London being the second billion dollar plus firm he has founded. In addition, he's the first - and only - openly gay Chief Executive of a British bank, and the first - and only - openly gay person in Europe to be the founder of a bank. He's had a distinguished career as an entrepreneur, inventor, philanthropist, and leading Lesbian, Gay, Bisexual & Transgender rights advocate. He tweets at: @AnthonyWatson Companies sign memorandum of understanding Keysight Technologies, Inc., (NYSE: KEYS), a leading technology company that delivers advanced design and validation solutions to help accelerate innovation to connect and secure the world, announced that it has signed a memorandum of understanding (MoU) with Analog Devices, Inc., which includes joint demonstrations of open radio access network (O-RAN) technology at key industry events. Analog Devices will use Keysight Open Radio Architect (KORA) solutions to showcase the performance of an O-RAN radio unit (O-RU) reference design in booth #2F25 at Mobile World Congress 2022, held from February 28 to March 3 in Barcelona, Spain. The O-RU reference design provides designers a tested platform, which includes Analog Devices' new RadioVerse SOC and an Intel Agilex FPGA running Analog Devices 7.2x split low PHY baseband. It enables development of high-performance multi-channel O-RUs using an optimized number of components. "Keysight is pleased to strengthen the company's collaboration with Analog Devices by joining forces at key industry Plugfests and exhibitions, as well as by aligning our respective O-RAN technology roadmaps to accelerate deployment of multi-vendor networks," said Giampaolo Tardioli, vice president and general manager of Keysight's Network Access group. "KORA test tools allow Analog Devices to create end-to-end performance verification environments across a wide range of scenarios and use cases using real-world data." Keysight offers a comprehensive suite of O-RAN solutions that span early pre-silicon development to system integration and addresses test requirements from the edge of the RAN to the core of the network. Analog Devices and Keysight recently collaborated to verify the interoperability and conformance of ADI's 3.5GHz 5G O-RU platform at the 2021 Global Plugfest event organized by the O-RAN ALLIANCE. "As a leading provider of 4G and 5G software defined radios, Analog Devices supports the O-RAN ecosystem with solutions that speed time-to-market and deliver optimal performance for 5G networks," said Joe Barry, vice president of Wireless Communications at Analog Devices. "Keysight's robust solutions for O-RAN test, validation and emulation enable Analog Devices to accelerate development schedules, delivering early access to advanced O-RU technology for a global O-RAN ecosystem." In June 2021, Keysight and Analog Devices initiated a collaboration to speed development of O-RAN solutions and ease the transition towards open, disaggregated and virtualized radio network architectures. Analog Devices leverages several KORA solutions, including Open RAN Studio and DuSIM. Open RAN Studio offers test capabilities across radio frequency (RF) and protocol measurement domains to create a complete O-RU test environment for performance, interoperability and conformance validation, ensuring compliance to both 3GPP and O-RAN specifications. DuSIM enables Analog Devices to validate the functionality, performance and conformance of a central unit by using embedded user equipment emulation capabilities. About Keysight Technologies Keysight delivers advanced design and validation solutions that help accelerate innovation to connect and secure the world. Keysight's dedication to speed and precision extends to software-driven insights and analytics that bring tomorrow's technology products to market faster across the development lifecycle, in design simulation, prototype validation, automated software testing, manufacturing analysis, and network performance optimization and visibility in enterprise, service provider and cloud environments. Our customers span the worldwide communications and industrial ecosystems, aerospace and defense, automotive, energy, semiconductor and general electronics markets. Keysight generated revenues of $4.9B in fiscal year 2021. For more information about Keysight Technologies (NYSE: KEYS), visit us at www.keysight.com. Additional information about Keysight Technologies is available in the newsroom at https://www.keysight.com/go/news and on Facebook, LinkedIn, Twitter and YouTube. All trademarks are the property of their respective owners. View source version on businesswire.com: https://www.businesswire.com/news/home/20220302005778/en/ Contacts: Geri Lynne LaCombe, Americas/Europe +1 303 662 4748 geri_lacombe@keysight.com Fusako Dohi, Asia +81 42 660-2162 fusako_dohi@keysight.com $1M across three nonprofits will focus on immediate needs, hardships Wells Fargo announced today $1 million in donations across three nonprofits to enable humanitarian aid for Ukraine and Ukrainian refugees, as well as support services for U.S. service members and their families across the globe. "In times like this, it's important we come together to support those most impacted," said Wells Fargo CEO Charlie Scharf. "We appreciate the nonprofits on the ground and hope our grants will enable them to accelerate getting humanitarian aid to those who require it most. At the same time, we want to support our nation's military, which is often called upon in times of need, and we will continue to provide essential services for service members and their families." The funding is as follows: American Red Cross , in coordination with the global Red Cross network including the International Federation of Red Cross and Red Crescent Societies (IFRC), International Committee of the Red Cross (ICRC) A global first responder, the Red Cross is distributing food, water, first aid supplies, medical supplies, clothing and other urgent support as well as providing temporary shelter to people affected by the crisis. , in coordination with the global Red Cross network including the International Federation of Red Cross and Red Crescent Societies (IFRC), International Committee of the Red Cross (ICRC) A global first responder, the Red Cross is distributing food, water, first aid supplies, medical supplies, clothing and other urgent support as well as providing temporary shelter to people affected by the crisis. World Central Kitchen World Central Kitchen provides meals in times of crisis. Their team is currently serving tens of thousands of meals to Ukrainian families fleeing their homes as well as those who remain in country. World Central Kitchen provides meals in times of crisis. Their team is currently serving tens of thousands of meals to Ukrainian families fleeing their homes as well as those who remain in country. USO The USO is rapidly responding with support for American service members in Eastern Europe with call centers, hygiene and meal kits, care packages, and other essentials. It also offers resources that provide care and comfort to U.S. service member families during this stressful time. In addition, the company is making it easier for its employees to support these organizations through its internal employee giving system. Wells Fargo is also amplifying employee generosity to these organizations through its Community Care Grants program, allowing donations of up to $1,000 to qualify for additional grant dollars to further extend impact. About Wells Fargo Wells Fargo Company (NYSE: WFC) is a leading financial services company that has approximately $1.9 trillion in assets, proudly serves one in three U.S. households and more than 10% of small businesses in the U.S., and is the leading middle market banking provider in the U.S. We provide a diversified set of banking, investment, and mortgage products and services, as well as consumer and commercial finance, through our four reportable operating segments: Consumer Banking and Lending, Commercial Banking, Corporate and Investment Banking, and Wealth Investment Management. Wells Fargo ranked No. 37 on Fortune's 2021 rankings of America's largest corporations. In the communities we serve, the company focuses its social impact on building a sustainable, inclusive future for all by supporting housing affordability, small business growth, financial health, and a low-carbon economy. News, insights, and perspectives from Wells Fargo are also available at Wells Fargo Stories. Additional information may be found at www.wellsfargo.com Twitter: @WellsFargo. *The American Red Cross name, emblem, and copyrighted materials are being used with its permission, which in no way constitutes an endorsement, express or implied, of any product, service, company, opinion, or political position. The American Red Cross logo is a registered trademark owned by The American National Red Cross. For more information about the American Red Cross, please visit redcross.org. News Release Category: WF-PESG View source version on businesswire.com: https://www.businesswire.com/news/home/20220302005746/en/ Contacts: Kim Erlichson, 201-463-4243 Kim.Erlichson@wellsfargo.com BIRMINGHAM, AL / ACCESSWIRE / March 2, 2022 / C Spire Business has been named as one of the top managed service providers (MSPs) in North America for 2022 by CRN , a brand of The Channel Company and a top technology news and information source for solution providers, IT channel partners and value-added resellers (VARS). The business division of the Southeastern U.S.-based diversified telecommunications and technology services company made the MSP 500 list's Elite 150 category for the eighth consecutive year. The ranking recognizes leading solution providers that demonstrate innovative and forward-thinking approaches to managed services. "We are honored to accept this recognition from CRN once again," said Suzy Hays, general manager of C Spire Business. "Our managed services help businesses operate more efficiently and navigate the growing complexities of IT solutions and maximize return on IT investments." With cutting-edge approaches to delivering managed services, MSPs have become an integral part of the success of businesses worldwide, helping empower organizations to leverage complex technologies, keeping a strict focus on their core business without straining their budgets. CRN's annual MSP 500 list identifies the leading service providers in North America whose forward-thinking approaches to managed services are changing the landscape of the IT channel, helping end users increase efficiency and simplify IT solutions, while maximizing their return on investment. "In addition to having to adjust their own business operations to account for the changed conditions during the pandemic, MSPs have also seen increased demand for their managed communications, collaboration and security services," said Blaine Raddon, CEO of The Channel Company. "The solution providers on our 2022 MSP 500 list deserve credit for their innovative and game-changing approaches to managed services in these unpredictable times, as well as their ability to optimize operational efficiencies and systems without straining IT budgets." The MSP 500 list will be featured in the February 2022 issue of CRN and online at www.crn.com/msp500 . About C Spire Business C Spire Business is a division of C Spire, a diversified telecommunications and technology services provider. The managed solutions provider brings together a team of specialized IT experts to deliver a wide range of technology services for businesses. The team collaborates with firms to provide new ideas and technologies that keep them prepared for the future. From cloud services to VoIP, C Spire Business engineers work with companies to offer customer inspired IT solutions focused on their needs. This news release and other announcements are available at www.cspire.com/news. For more information about C Spire Business, visit www.cspire.com/business and click on the business tab or follow us on Facebook at www.facebook.com/CSpireBusiness ; on Twitter at www.twitter.com/CSpireBusiness and on LinkedIn at www.linkedin.com/showcase/c-spire-business . About The Channel Company The Channel Company enables breakthrough IT channel performance with our dominant media, engaging events, expert consulting and education, and innovative marketing services and platforms. As the channel catalyst, we connect and empower technology suppliers, solution providers and end users. Backed by more than 30 years of unequalled channel experience, we draw from our deep knowledge to envision innovative new solutions for ever-evolving challenges in the technology marketplace. www.thechannelco.com . CONTACT: Todd Smith, Deane | Smith Agency 615-202-7944 todd@deanesmith.agency SOURCE: C Spire View source version on accesswire.com:https://www.accesswire.com/691029/C-Spire-Recognized-Among-Top-150-Managed-Service-Providers-by-CRN Regulatory News: Forsee Power (FR0014005SB3 FORSE the Company ) (Paris:FORSE), the expert in smart battery systems for sustainable electromobility, announces the renewal of its partnership with IVECO France, a major player in passenger transport with its two brands (IVECO BUS and HEULIEZ). Since 2013, the two industrial companies have been working together to develop zero-emission public transport; more than 600 electric buses operate in Europe. Forsee Power is supplying its new generation of high-energy ZEN 42 batteries, offering an additional 20% energy density, which allows the OEM to offer transport operators up to 300 km of autonomy with a maximum of 460 kWh on board the HEULIEZ GX 337 ELEC model or up to 5 additional passengers for the same autonomy as the previous generation (ZEN 35). They also have the advantage of being perfectly interchangeable. Part of the high-energy ZEN range, the ZEN 42 is an overnight-charging battery pack for all-electric heavy vehicles. Its very good energy density of 147 Wh/kg allows vehicles to drive all day without being recharged. The ZEN 42 battery pack is a 42 kWh modular system whose mechanical design has been optimized for integration on the roof and at the rear of the bus. A partnership since 2013 that places the two industrial players in leading positions in Europe European leader in battery systems for electric buses, Forsee Power has been equipping GX ELECs since 2013 and supports the manufacturer in the electrification of all its buses in Europe. IVECO France, with its HEULIEZ brand, is today the leader in the electric bus segment in France with a 44% market share. Its buses run in more than 20 French cities. The various models have also conquered many European cities, including Ingelheim in Germany, Groningen and Utrecht in the Netherlands and Trondheim in Norway. The manufacturer's electric range is available in 4 lengths of 9.5 m; 10.7m; 12m and 18m. It is marketed under the name GX ELEC HEULIEZ in France and IVECO E-WAY internationally. Depending on the needs of cities and routes, the buses integrate Forsee Power's high-power or high-energy technologies to ensure a day of complete autonomy or fast charging on the route. An autonomy record run, achieved on the initiative of Verkerhrsbetriebe Bachstein, a transport company based in Celle in Germany, was recorded in July 2021 with a 12-meter IVECO E-WAY equipped with Forsee Power batteries. The distance of 543 kilometers traveled in 48 hours on a single charge has been certified by TUV Nord. Sustainable products and production close to the Rorthais assembly site in France Since its creation, Forsee Power has been committing to responsible production of its batteries to limit the impact on global warming and make the transition to zero-emission mobility a success. Its expertise involves the development of innovative, efficient, and sustainable technologies, which support customers and cities in their approach to reducing their carbon footprint. Forsee Power also offers a range of services including financing solutions (battery leasing) and second-life solutions to reuse vehicle batteries into stationary energy storage systems. Forsee Power produces its battery systems in its factory in Chasseneuil-du-Poitou in France, located just 100 kilometers away from Rorthais, a center of excellence dedicated to electromobility where the manufacturer's electric buses are assembled. Transport is responsible for more than 25% of greenhouse gas emissions. With more than 25 years of expertise in batteries, we know how to develop technologies capable of meeting any need for power and energy while providing a real answer to the challenges of zero-emission mobility. Our product innovation approach is entirely based on eco-design, which establishes objectives for extended life cycles, superior performance and higher safety standards. We are proud to pursue this partnership with a leading OEM like IVECO, to support the decarbonization of public transport in Europe explains Christophe Gurtner, CEO and Founder of Forsee Power. About Forsee Power Forsee Power is a French industrial group specializing in smart battery systems for sustainable electric transport (light vehicles, off-highway vehicles, buses, trains and ships). A major player in Europe, Asia and North America, the Group designs, assembles, and supplies energy management systems based on cells that are among the most robust in the market and provides installation, commissioning, and maintenance on site and remotely. Forsee Power also offers financing solutions (battery leasing) and second-life solutions for transport batteries. The Group recorded revenue from sales of EUR 72.4 million in 2021 and has more than 600 employees. For more information: www.forseepower.com @ForseePower View source version on businesswire.com: https://www.businesswire.com/news/home/20220302005636/en/ Contacts: Forsee Power Sophie Tricaud Director of Communication, Sustainability Public Affairs investors@forseepower.com NewCap Thomas Grojean Quentin Masse Investor Relations forseepower@newcap.eu +33 (0)1 44 71 94 94 NewCap Nicolas Merigeau Media Relations forseepower@newcap.eu +33 (0)1 44 71 94 98 Finsbury Growth & Income Trust Plc - Transaction in Own Shares For immediate release 2 March 2022 FINSBURY GROWTH & INCOME TRUST PLC (the "Company") MARKET PURCHASE OF COMPANY'S OWN SHARES The Company announces that it has today purchased 5,000 of its own shares ("Ordinary Shares") at a price of 825.00p per Ordinary Share. Such shares will be held in treasury by the Company. The transaction was made pursuant to the authority granted at the Annual General Meeting of the Company held on 9 February 2022. Following this transaction, the total number of Ordinary Shares held by the Company in treasury is 1,065,621; the total number of Ordinary Shares that the Company has in issue, less the total number of Ordinary Shares held by the Company in treasury following such purchase, and therefore, the total number of voting rights in the Company is 223,925,682. The figure of 223,925,682 may be used by shareholders as the denominator for calculations of interests in the Company's voting rights in accordance with the FCA's Disclosure Guidance and Transparency Rules. For and on behalf of Frostrow Capital LLP Company Secretary For further information, please contact: Victoria Hale Frostrow Capital LLP Tel: 020 3 170 8732 OneSubsea awards Vallourec a contract to supply work-over risers for Equinor's Bacalhau field in Brazil Meudon (France), March 2, 2022 - Vallourec, a world leader in premium tubular solutions, has been awarded a contract by OneSubsea, the subsea technologies, production, and processing systems division of Schlumberger, to supply 3,000 meters of upset riser joints equipped with VAM TTR HW NA connection for the Bacalhau Project offshore Brazil. The contract was awarded on behalf of Subsea Integration Alliance, a strategic global alliance between Subsea 7 and OneSubsea. Discovered in 2012 and located 185 km from the coast, the Bacalhau field is at a water depth of 2,050 m in the presalt Santos basin. The development will consist of 19 subsea wells tied back to one of the largest floating production, storage and offloading units (FPSO) in Brazil. The first oil is planned in 2024. After a comprehensive design phase to meet the expectations of Bacalhau field operator Equinor, OneSubsea selected the Vallourec high-performance solution for the Open Water Intervention Riser System (OWIRS). This solution is based on seamless shaped steel pipes equipped with a special premium VAM TTR HW NA connection to cope with fatigue conditions and the sea corrosive environment. Vallourec PFP tube mill in Aulnoye-Aymeries (North of France) will produce shaped pipes whose upset ends will also be threaded on site. "We are very proud to have been selected by OneSubsea and Equinor for the Bacalhau project. Being selected for the supply of a demanding open water intervention riser system gives us an opportunity to prove that our shaped pipes are highly efficient and competitive. Our Aulnoye-Aymeries PFPtube mill has unique capabilities to manufacture reliable pipes with upset ends, optimized body weight and versatile options for VAM or customer-supplied connections" said Hubert Paris, Senior Vice President Europe/Africa. About Vallourec Vallourec is a world leader in premium tubular solutions for the energy markets and for challenging industrial applications such as oil and gas wells in harsh environments, new generation power plants, daring architectural projects, and high-performance mechanical equipment. Vallourec's pioneering spirit and cutting-edge R&D continually open new technological frontiers. Operating in more than twenty countries, its nearly 17,000 dedicated and passionate employees work hand-in-hand with their customers to offer much more than just tubes: they deliver innovative, reliable, competitive solutions to make every project possible. Listed on Euronext in Paris (ISIN code: FR0013506730, Ticker VK), Vallourec is part of the CAC Mid 60, SBF 120 and Next 150 indices and is eligible for Deferred Settlement Service. In the United States, Vallourec has a sponsored Level 1 American Depository Receipt (ADR) program (ISIN code: US92023R4074, Ticker: VLOWY). Parity between ADR and a Vallourec ordinary share has been set at 5:1. About Subsea Integration Alliance Subsea Integration Alliance is a non-incorporated strategic global alliance between Subsea 7 and OneSubsea, the subsea technologies, production, and processing systems division of Schlumberger, bringing together field development planning, project delivery and total lifecycle solutions under an extensive technology and services portfolio. As one team, Subsea Integration Alliance amplifies subsea performance by helping customers to select, design, deliver and operate the smartest subsea projects. This eliminates costly revisions, avoids delays and reduces risk across the life of field. For more information, visit www.subseaintegrationalliance.com. For more information, please contact: Investor relations Jerome Friboulet Tel: +33 (0)1 49 09 39 77 Investor.relations@vallourec.com Press relations Heloise Rothenbuhler Tel: +33 (0)6 45 45 19 67 heloise.rothenbuhler@vallourec.com Individual shareholder relations Toll-Free Number: 0 800 505 110 actionnaires@vallourec.com vallourec.com Follow us on Twitter @Vallourec Attachment Nearly 26,000 sq.m let since the start of 2022 Regulatory News: At 96/104 avenue Charles de Gaulle in Neuilly-sur-Seine, Gecina (Paris:GFC) has signed a firm nine-year lease for around 3,800 sq.m with a leading European hairdressing group. This space is currently occupied and will be relet from July 1, 2022, the day after the current tenant's departure. This transaction highlights Gecina's ability to anticipate its letting challenges and reflects the attractive positioning of this building, located on the major Paris-La Defense corridor. With a total of 10,560 sq.m, 96/104 has once again benefited from a new lease being signed before its current occupants are scheduled to leave. At Horizons in Boulogne-Billancourt, where the building's top section floors 7 to 20 is currently being renovated, Gecina will welcome a major French group listed on the CAC 40 from September 30, 2022. The nine-year lease covers a total of over 3,000 sq.m. This new lease represents a first transaction before the delivery of the work that is underway. Designed by Ateliers Jean Nouvel, Horizons is currently benefiting from a renovation led by the architects Saguez Favretto, aimed at improving the comfort of its workspaces and the quality of life of its occupants thanks in particular to a range of services that has been completely rethought in order to ensure alignment with the standards required for YouFirst, Gecina's client-centric brand. About Gecina As a specialist for centrality and uses, Gecina operates innovative and sustainable living spaces. The Group owns, manages and develops Europe's leading office portfolio, with over 97% located in the Paris Region, and a portfolio of residential assets and student residences, with over 9,000 apartments. These portfolios are valued at 20.1 billion euros at end-2021. Gecina has firmly established its focus on innovation and its human approach at the heart of its strategy to create value and deliver on its purpose: "Empowering shared human experiences at the heart of our sustainable spaces". For our 100,000 clients, this ambition is supported by our client-centric brand YouFirst. It is also positioned at the heart of UtilesEnsemble, our program setting out our solidarity-based commitments to the environment, to people and to the quality of life in cities. Gecina is a French real estate investment trust (SIIC) listed on Euronext Paris, and is part of the SBF 120, CAC Next 20, CAC Large 60 and Euronext 100 indices. Gecina is also recognized as one of the top-performing companies in its industry by leading sustainability benchmarks and rankings (GRESB, Sustainalytics, MSCI, ISS ESG and CDP). gecina.fr View source version on businesswire.com: https://www.businesswire.com/news/home/20220302005904/en/ Contacts: GECINA Financial communications Samuel Henry-Diesbach Tel: +33 (0)1 40 40 52 22 samuelhenry-diesbach@gecina.fr Virginie Sterling Tel: +33 (0)1 40 40 62 48 virginiesterling@gecina.fr Press relations Julien Landfried Tel: +33 (0)1 40 40 65 74 julienlandfried@gecina.fr Armelle Miclo Tel: +33 (0)1 40 40 51 98 armellemiclo@gecina.fr SAN FRANCISCO, March 2, 2022 /PRNewswire/ -- After being subjected to misinformation alleging the Premise platform was a tool used by the Russian government, Premise has reactivated its Ukrainian task marketplace with the continued purpose of providing humanitarian assistance to Ukrainian citizens. "Like many companies operating in sensitive environments, Premise suffered from misinformation and temporarily stopped its services in Ukraine to ensure we were not putting our users in danger. We immediately reached out to law enforcement, who investigated and found no credibility to the claims. Google too found the claims to be without merit," said Maury Blackman, CEO of Premise. "Premise will be capturing critical sentiment data to support humanitarian efforts in Ukraine as they endure the effects of an invasion by the Russian government. This data is invaluable to NGOs, nonprofits, and development organizations seeking to assist Ukraine." Reports emerged on social media accusing Premise of being a tool used by Russian forces to target Ukrainian troops and infrastructure. Although this allegation is completely false, out of an abundance of caution and concern for the safety of our Ukrainian Contributors, Premise paused its tasks in Ukraine while it communed with investigative authorities. On Sunday, February 27, a law enforcement body with access to international resources confirmed to Premise that it had undertaken a full investigation of the matter and that the company and its technology was not aiding Russian forces. Then, on Tuesday, March 1, Google did the same and restored the Premise App to the Google Play store. As a result, Premise today announced that it would be restarting its task marketplace in Ukraine to continue to help provide humanitarian support to its citizens. Specifically, Premise will be launching surveys to gauge the sentiments of Ukrainians regarding a few critical topics related to humanitarian assistance. These topics include: Food security Displacement Water & Sanitation Water Availability Community Needs Essential Services Read our blog post for a more comprehensive view of Premise and its operations. About Premise Premise is a crowdsourced insights company. Our technology mobilizes communities of global smartphone users to source actionable data in real-time, cost-effectively, and with the visibility you need. In more than 128 countries and 37 languages, we find Data for Every Decision. To learn more, please visit www.premise.com . Media Contact Lanny Davis ALange@tridentdmg.com (202) 480-4309 City leaders are expected to be in attendance while others will tune in virtually to hear how TPT is conducting technology transfer and availability to benefit communities across the nation SAN DIEGO, CA / ACCESSWIRE / March 2, 2022 / TPT Global Tech, Inc. ("TPTW" or the "Company") (OTCQB:TPTW) today announced its Chairman & CEO will be addressing The World Conference of Mayors Board of Directors and other public attendees on Friday, March 4th between 1 pm and 3 pm in Tuskegee, Alabama. The WCM meeting coincides with the Board Meeting of the Historic Black Towns and Settlements Alliance, Inc. which will hold its gathering at the same time. Mr. Thomas will be addressing the company's overall technology goals and how such availability and technology transfer can positively impact towns and cities across the nation and the globe. The World Conference of Mayors, Inc. was founded in 1984 and serves as a non-profit, non-political worldwide conference of Mayors, former Mayors, and other elected and appointed local public figures. Its mission is to help provide access to a combination of technical assistance, professional governmental training, and dedication. Collectively, the Conference works to stimulate positive and constructive relations between mayors internationally based on interlocking interests and concerns. "I am honored and proud to have been selected as a keynote speaker to address such an array of leaders from around the country and the world," said Stephen Thomas, Chairman & CEO of TPT Global Tech. "Our communications technologies, medical testing and reporting systems, and software, and other aspects and offerings of TPT align well with the needs and desires of this organization. I intend to provide an overview of our strategic offerings that I hope each and every attendee can see as a benefit to the communities they are connected to." About TPT Global Tech TPT Global Tech, Inc. based in San Diego, California, is a technology-based company with divisions providing telecommunications, medical technology and product distribution, media content for domestic and international syndication as well as technology solutions. TPT MedTech offers its QuikPASS and QuikLAB testing, check and verification systems for Covid-19 and other infectious diseases and is operating domestically and internationally. TPT Global Tech offers Software as a Service (SaaS), Technology Platform as a Service (PAAS), Cloud-based Unified Communication as a Service (UCaaS). It offers carrier-grade performance and support for businesses over its private IP MPLS fiber and wireless network in the United States. TPT's cloud-based UCaaS services allow businesses of any size to enjoy all the latest voice, data, media, and collaboration features in today's global technology markets. TPT Global Tech also operates as a Master Distributor for Nationwide Mobile Virtual Network Operators (MVNO) and Independent Sales Organization (ISO) as a Master Distributor for Pre-Paid Cell phone services, Mobile phones Cell phone Accessories and Global Roaming Cell phones. For more information about how TPT Global Tech's technologies and to schedule a call with CEO Stephen Thomas, please contact Shep Doniger at 561-637-5750 and sdoniger@bdcginc.com. Forward-Looking Statements This press release contains "forward-looking statements" within the meaning of various provisions of the safe harbor provisions of the Private Securities Litigation Reform Act of 1995, commonly identified by such terms as "believes," "looking ahead," "anticipates," "estimates" and other terms with similar meaning. Specifically, statements about the Company's plans for accelerated growth, improved profitability, future business partners, M&A activity, new service offerings, and pursuit of new markets are forward-looking statements. Although the company believes that the assumptions upon which its forward-looking statements are based are reasonable, it can give no assurance that these assumptions will prove to be correct. Such forward-looking statements should not be construed as fact. The information contained in such statements is beyond the ability of the Company to control, and in many cases, the Company cannot predict what factors would cause results to differ materially from those indicated in such statements. All forward-looking statements in the press release are expressly qualified by these cautionary statements and by reference to the underlying assumptions. Shep Doniger 561-637-5750 sdoniger@bdcginc.com IR-Frank Benedetto 619-915-9422 SOURCE: TPT Global Tech, Inc. View source version on accesswire.com:https://www.accesswire.com/691233/TPT-Global-Tech-Chairman-CEO-StephenJ-Thomas-III-to-Address-The-World-Conference-of-Mayors-Board As is now clearer than ever, the greatest military threat to the United States and its allies in the near future is Russia. Many in the West have long lulled themselves into believing that Russian nuclear weapons somehow do not matter. Nothing could be further from the truth. Over the past 20 years, Russia has maintained, modernized and upgraded the worlds largest nuclear arsenal. Nuclear weapons constitute a core element of Russian military strategy. The most well-known component of Russias nuclear arsenal is the strategic component that consists of over 1,500 thermonuclear warheads on intercontinental missiles aimed at the United States that take 30 minutes to arrive at their targets. While Russias strategic nuclear weapons are the most frightening, they are far less likely to be used than Russias tactical (nonstrategic) nuclear weapons. Advertisement Michael J. Szanto is an international affairs analyst and holds a Ph.D. from the University of Miami. - Original Credit: Courtesy photo (Courtesy photo) The bulk of Americas strategic forces are deployed on nuclear-powered subs. Our subs constitute a particularly vital second-strike capacity to deter Russian attacks against the American homeland but still must guard against threats from Russian nuclear depth charges and nuclear-tipped torpedoes much like the Cold War. Americas strategic deterrent does largely create the mutually assured destruction that many are aware of. However, the doctrine of mutually assured destruction is widely misunderstood in terms of the larger game theory context. MAD doesnt prevent Russia from numerous types of military aggression including limited nuclear strikes against military targets. Rather, it prevents the United States from credibly threatening massive retaliation. In fact, the Russian military is often thought to view limited nuclear strikes, particularly with tactical nukes, as de-escalation. Advertisement The most likely nuclear threat comes from Russian tactical nukes, which are not even covered by the New START or any other treaty. The limited obsolete nature of U.S. tactical nuclear weapons comes out of a unilateral 1990s disarming by the United States based on a misplaced assumption that America would never again face off against a hostile Russia. Russia has 10 times as many tactical nuclear weapons as the United States. Russian battlefield nukes are designed to detonate cleaner with minimized long-lasting fallout and thus are viewed by the Russian military as very usable in battle. In fact, the Russian military routinely rehearses tactical nuclear weapons in conventional battles. Overall, todays Russian military intends to counter American advantages in terms of land and surface forces with tactical nuclear weapons. Russias offensive tactical nukes include nuclear artillery, short-range missiles and nuclear-tipped anti-ship missiles. Even in terms of conventional ground forces, Russia remains quite formidable. During a military crisis, the U.S. military would be very challenged in shipping all of the heavy equipment necessary to stop on the ground a Russian military offensive against allies like Lithuania, Estonia, Latvia or even Poland. American air superiority could be significantly challenged by very capable Russian air defenses. Our ground forces would be terribly outgunned at least at first, and the Russians may be able to massively derail our ability to rapidly bring in reinforcements, particularly in terms of tanks, artillery and other heavy equipment. The Russian military may rapidly escalate to the use of clean, low-yield nuclear weapons in the theater of combat. On top of the sheer explosive power of such weapons, tactical nukes could prompt radiation that mortally wounds many soldiers in the immediate vicinity. This is the grim reality of facing off against an aggressive enemy with the worlds largest nuclear arsenal, coupled with an overwhelming advantage in terms of tactical nuclear weapons. Michael J. Szanto is an international affairs analyst and holds a Ph.D. from the University of Miami. Vancouver, British Columbia--(Newsfile Corp. - March 2, 2022) - PORTOFINO RESOURCES INC. (TSXV: POR) (OTCQB: PFFOF) (FSE: POTA) ("Portofino" or the "Company") is pleased to announce the execution of a Memorandum of Understanding ("MOU") with Recursos Energeticos Y Mineros De Salta S.A. ("REMSA"), the state-owned mining company of the Province of Salta, Argentina. The MOU provides Portofino with an option to earn a majority interest in multiple mining concessions that REMSA maintains. The initial mining properties with geological potential have been identified by Portofino and REMSA and are focused on lithium brine targets and total more than 27,000 hectares ("ha"). The property concessions are located in the heart of the world-renown Argentine Lithium Triangle and in close proximity to multiple world-class lithium projects. The concession size and locations are indicated below and in Figure 1: Hombre Muerto Norte (3,028ha) - Concessions are located in close proximity to Galaxy/Posco (Sal de Vida) project which is at Feasibility study stage. The Hombre Muerto salar also hosts multiple developing lithium projects and includes Livent Corp's producing Fenix project. Pastos Grandes (3,489ha) - Concessions are located in close proximity to the Millennial Lithium project which was recently sold to Lithium Americas for $400 million. Arizaro (19,111ha) - Concessions located south of the advanced Rincon project which was recently sold to Rio Tinto for $825 million. Incahuasi (722ha) - Concessions located on the Chile border and just west of the Rio Tinto Rincon project. Rio Grande and Salinas Grandes (1060ha). - Concessions located east of Orocobre's producing Olaroz project. Subject to results of initial surface exploration activities on each project, Portofino may exercise its "Option" to form a joint venture company ("JV") to advance to the next stages of exploration and development. The Option shall remain in effect for up to two years from initial (non-invasive) exploration work in each mining concession. Notwithstanding this initial list, Portofino will have a preferential right to option (under the same terms) any new areas obtained by REMSA. The prospection and initial exploration campaigns will be financed by Portofino. Portofino has executed a separate agreement with Ronialem S.R.L. ("Ronialem") pursuant to the introduction to REMSA. In addition, Ronialem has provided local advice in structuring the REMSA agreement and will support ongoing efforts in Salta. In exchange, Ronialem would hold a 15% interest in any JV formed with REMSA. Upon giving notice of intent to exercise its Option, certain of the projects may be subject to public tender. The Option, however, provides Portofino with a right of first refusal to match any competing offer. Portofino and Ronialem ("the Partners") have agreed to reserve up to 15% of the JV for REMSA in any successful bid. Portofino would thus hold a minimum 70% interest in any resulting JV. If the Partners are unsuccessful in a public tender process, the MOU includes a provision whereby the Partners are entitled to receive payment of the greater of 4 times exploration and evaluation expenditures on the concessions or 50% of gross proceeds from the winning bidder. Figure 1. Portofino-REMSA Concessions To view an enhanced version of Figure 1, please visit: https://orders.newsfilecorp.com/files/3751/115408_fd5424df44eab8dd_002full.jpg Mr. Alberto Castillo, CEO of REMSA commented, "We deeply appreciate the confidence that Portofino has shown in REMSA, and the government of the Province of Salta. This is another example of the positive investment conditions created through the leadership of Governor Gustavo Saenz and implemented in Salta in recent years. Salta has established consistent and transparent policies toward responsible mineral exploration and development, while offering clear protection for the environment and our people." David Tafel, CEO of Portofino, additionally commented, "This unique agreement provides Portofino with multi-lithium project diversification and exposure to world class lithium brine salars within the Province of Salta. We are very pleased and honoured that REMSA has shown such confidence in working together with our Argentine geological team in advancing these projects and look forward to the immediate commencement of exploration activities in Salta." About REMSA REMSA is a corporation formed in 1985, that oversees the administration of the energy and mineral resources of the Province of Salta. It contributes to the productive and social development of the province by managing and promoting the exploration and development of projects within the mining and energy sectors. Portofino, Ronialem and REMSA executing Mineral Concession Option Agreement To view an enhanced version of this graphic, please visit: https://orders.newsfilecorp.com/files/3751/115408_fd5424df44eab8dd_003full.jpg Qualified Person The technical content of this news release has been reviewed and approved by Mike Kilbourne, P.Geo., who is a Qualified Person as defined by National Instrument 43-101, Standards of Disclosure for Mineral Projects. The QP has not completed sufficient work to verify the historic information on the properties in the province of Salta, Argentina, particularly regarding historical exploration, neighbouring companies, and government geological work. About Portofino Resources Inc. Portofino is a Vancouver-based Canadian company focused on exploring and developing mineral resource projects in the Americas. It's battery minerals projects include the (drill-ready) Yergo Lithium property which encompasses the entire Aparejos Salar, located within the world-renowned "Lithium Triangle" in Argentina, as well as three Ontario, Canada lithium projects- Allison Lake North (Red Lake), Greenheart Lake and McNamara Lake (Ignace). Portofino's South of Otter and Bruce Lake projects are in the historic gold mining district of Red Lake, Ontario, Canada proximal to the high-grade Dixie gold project owned by Great Bear Resources Ltd. In addition, Portofino holds three other northwestern Ontario gold projects; the Gold Creek property located immediately south of the historic Shebandowan Nickel-Copper mine, as well as the Sapawe West and Melema West properties located in the rapidly developing Atikokan gold mining camp. ON BEHALF OF THE BOARD "David G. Tafel" Chief Executive Officer For Further Information Contact: David Tafel CEO, Director 604-683-1991 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 release. This news release may contain forward-looking statements concerning future operations of Portofino Resources Inc. (the "Company"). All forward-looking statements concerning the Company's future plans and operations, including management's assessment of the Company's project expectations or beliefs may be subject to certain assumptions, risks and uncertainties beyond the Company's control. Investors are cautioned that any such statements are not guarantees of future performance and that actual performance and exploration and financial results may differ materially from any estimates or projections. To view the source version of this press release, please visit https://www.newsfilecorp.com/release/115408 CHINO HILLS, CA / ACCESSWIRE / March 2, 2022 / SOHM, Inc. (OTC PINK:SHMN), a Pharmaceutical, Nutraceutical, and Cosmeceutical company that manufactures and markets generic drugs covering numerous treatment categories, announced today that Dr. David Aguilar, an experienced leader in CMC activities for pre-clinical and IND filings of allogeneic cell-based therapies, has signed on to serve on the Advisory Board as an Expert Medical Advisor. "I am honored to welcome Dr. Aguilar to our advisory board", Mr. Baron Night, President and CEO of SOHM Inc. said. "Dr. Aguilar's expertise and years of experience in novel reagents and regenerative medicine will greatly benefit SOHM's current and future pipelines." Dr. Aguilar has extensive research experience in areas focusing on pharmacology, molecular diagnostics, protein biochemistry, cell engineering, and genome editing. He received his executive leadership training at Stanford University and Co-founded Exeligen Scientific Inc. where he assisted in the development of novel reagents and intellectual property focused on the gene editing and cell engineering space. Dr. Aguilar established several regenerative medicine-focused manufacturing facilities in North America as a consultant. Dr. Aguilar has a Ph.D. in Pharmacology from the University of Arizona. He has a Bachelor of Science in Biochemistry and Cell Biology from the University of California in San Diego. He also has certifications including the Stanford Latino Entrepreneur Leadership Program (SLELPs) where he was awarded a Certificate in 2016. He has a certificate from the Stanford University School of Business executive leadership training program with a focus on principles of scaling excellence within an organization. Lastly, Dr. Aguilar has a certificate from the Intellectual Property and Licensing Workshop at the University of California San Diego awarded in 2016. Dr. Aguilar commented, "It is my pleasure to join SOHM, Inc. I'm looking forward to supporting SOHM's commitment to excellence." SOHM, Inc. looks forward to announcing additional appointments in the weeks ahead. About SOHM, Inc. SOHM, Inc., is a growing generic pharmaceutical manufacturing and marketing company with a vision "Globale Prospero" that tries to build continuous growth. SOHM manufacturing and marketing targets the rapidly growing healthcare segments such as Nutraceuticals, Cosmeceuticals, and other major therapeutic segments. SOHM is headquartered in North America with manufacturing alliances in India as well as has strategic alliances with US manufacturing facilities. Although SOHM's generic pharmaceuticals are exported globally and were introduced to the USA in early 2013, SOHM continues its focus on distribution to emerging markets in Africa, Latin America, and Southeast Asia. To learn more about SOHM, Inc., visit www.SOHM.com Safe Harbor Statement: This news release contains "forward-looking statements", which are statements that are not purely historical and include any statements regarding beliefs, plans, expectations, or intentions regarding the future. Such forward-looking statements include, among other things, the development, costs, and results of new business opportunities. Actual results could differ from those projected in any forward-looking statements due to numerous factors. Such factors include, among others, the inherent uncertainties associated with new projects and development stage companies. These forward-looking statements are made as of the date of this news release, and we assume no obligation to update the forward-looking statements or to update the reasons why actual results could differ from those projected in the forward-looking statements. Although we believe that any beliefs, plans, expectations, and intentions contained in this press release are reasonable, there can be no assurance that any such beliefs, plans, expectations, or intentions will prove to be accurate. Investors should consult all of the information set forth herein and should also refer to the risk factors disclosure outlined in our annual report for the most recent fiscal year, our quarterly reports uploaded from time-to-time on OTCMarkets.com. For more information, please contact: SOHM, Inc. 714-522-6700 SOURCE: SOHM, Inc. View source version on accesswire.com:https://www.accesswire.com/691253/SOHM-Inc-Expands-Advisory-Board-with-Appointment-of-Dr-David-Aguilar-PhD-as-its-Expert-Medical-Advisor ST AUGUSTINE, FL / ACCESSWIRE / March 2, 2022 / James McCabe, President and CEO of Maverick Energy Group, Ltd. (OTCMKTS:MKGP) ("Maverick"), an independent oil and gas company, announced today that Maverick has completed an additional onsite review of Maverick's Permian Basin assets on February 24-26, 2022. Maverick inspected several of its fields located in Glasscock and Howard County Texas which comprise over 1,280 acres. The production facilities were found to be generally in good condition with electric power to most wells in place. Most of the producing wells appear to only need turning on to begin producing oil. Maverick has a 100 percent working interest ownership in the Glasscock and Howard County Texas leases. The other Maverick leasehold inspected is in Pecos County, Texas with a combination of producing and injection wells comprising over 10,000 acres. Maverick owns one hundred percent of the working interest in this leasehold with full depth rights. These wells appear to have very good pressure at the wellhead. All production equipment is in place. Maverick's offices are suitable for conducting day-to-day operations and were found to contain extensive and well-maintained files and records on all the wells and acquired assets. Maverick is considering adding personnel to oversee the day-to-day administrative operations in the Midland office. A visit was made to Maverick's commercial saltwater disposal facility and found to be in excellent condition. The 10-acre site has a disposal capacity of 10,000 barrels per day and has two truck bays to receive water. All equipment is in place, including to recover "skim" oil from salt water before it is disposed. In addition, there is a fresh water well which can provide another source of revenue. A meeting was held in USR's Houston office on Saturday February 26th with Maverick's COO David LaPrade. Extensive discussions were held on Mavericks Permian assets, to include returning all assets to a productive status, insuring all regulatory and title requirements are met, and identifying additional upside potential that can be developed. A member of USR's technical team will further evaluate Maverick's assets and recommend additional development efforts. About Maverick EnergyGroup Maverick Energy Group, LTD is a crude oil and natural gas acquisition, production, exploration, and horizontal drilling development company focusing on select areas of North America. Maverick believes that its access to patented and proprietary horizontal production enhancement technologies facilitates the rapid accumulation of valuable oil and gas assets, while at the same time greatly improving the rate of production and lifetime potential of these properties. Company Website: @www.maverickeg.com Safe Harbor Statement This release contains forward-looking statements within the meaning of the Private Securities Litigation Reform Act of 1995. You can identify these statements by the use of the words "may," "will," "should," "plans," "expects," "anticipates," "continue," "estimates," "projects," "intends," and similar expressions. Forward-looking statements involve risks and uncertainties that could cause results to differ materially from those projected or anticipated. These risks and uncertainties include, but are not limited to, the Company's ability to successfully execute its expanded business strategy, including by entering into definitive agreements with suppliers, commercial partners, and customers; general economic and business conditions, effects of continued geopolitical unrest and regional conflicts, competition, changes in technology and methods of marketing, delays in completing various engineering and manufacturing programs, changes in customer order patterns, changes in product mix, continued success in technical advances and delivering technological innovations, shortages in components, production delays due to performance quality issues with outsourced components, regulatory requirements, and the ability to meet them, government agency rules and changes, and various other factors beyond the Company's control, all as set forth in the risk factors stated in Maverick's Regulation A offering statement on Form 1-A. CONTACT: Maverick Energy Group, Ltd. investors@maverickeg.com SOURCE: Maverick Energy Group, Ltd. View source version on accesswire.com:https://www.accesswire.com/691268/Maverick-Energy-Group-Ltd-Announces-Initial-Inspection-Results-of-Permian-Basin-Assets Vancouver, British Columbia--(Newsfile Corp. - March 2, 2022) - Couloir Capital Ltd. is pleased to announce initiation of research coverage on Metallic Minerals Corp. (TSXV: MMG) ("MMG" or "Company"). The report is titled, "Silver Junior Next to One of the World's Highest Grade Silver Deposits." The report can be downloaded through Couloir Capital's research portal: https://www.couloircapital.com/research-portal Click on "Sign in / Sign up". Report Excerpt: We expect that at the very least, MMG will continue with substantial drilling initiatives this year, which we believe is a major driver of potential valuation upside given it develops resource assets further and allows for potential advancement along the development cycle. Our discussions with management indicate that MMG is working on the thesis that East Keno contains the same vein structure running through West Keno, and that as such the East, Central and Western portions of the project together comprise a single giant mineralized system. Were this to be proven true, it would indicate the company's belief that Keno Silver is prospective for bulk-tonnage silver mineralization also be similarly true, which would be bullish for the company. About Metallic Minerals Metallic Minerals Corp. is a growth-stage exploration company, focused on high-grade silver and gold projects in underexplored, brownfields mining districts of North America. Their objective is to create shareholder value through a systematic, entrepreneurial approach to exploration in the Keno Hill silver district, La Plata silver-gold-copper district, and Klondike gold district through new discoveries and advancing resources to development. Metallic Minerals has consolidated the second-largest land position in the historic Keno Hill silver district of Canada's Yukon Territory, directly adjacent to Alexco Resource Corp 's operations, with nearly 300 million ounces of high-grade silver in past production and current M&I resources. About Couloir Capital Couloir Capital Ltd. is a research and advisory firm comprised of a team of veteran investment professionals dedicated to providing world-class opportunities in the natural resource exploration and development sectors along with real and alternative asset classes and strategies. For further information, please contact: Rob Stitt, Managing Director, Couloir Capital Ltd. Email: rstitt@couloircapital.com www.couloircapital.com Analyst Disclosure: Couloir Capital or affiliated companies hold shares or warrants in MMG. To view the source version of this press release, please visit https://www.newsfilecorp.com/release/115419 Omniyat, Dubai--(Newsfile Corp. - March 2, 2022) - The Nexus Project is excited to announce its most recent update, the Nexus Dubai (NXD) Token. Nexus Token - NXD, is the network's reward token with support for different networks. It's built on the Polygon network, which is referred to as a 2nd layer of the Ethereum network that allows for quick processing power and decentralization based on "Proof of Stake," a next generation consensus algorithm. Polygon is a decentralised Ethereum scaling platform that enables developers to build scalable user-friendly dApps with low transaction fees without risking security - Polygon was created to solve the scalability concerns that had been identified with Ethereum. The Nexus Project, a bridging multi-network token that supports a variety of networks, is providing digital incentives for people's daily consumption behaviour by a decentralized ecosystem. Nexus Dubai Token - Multi Reward Token To view an enhanced version of this graphic, please visit: https://orders.newsfilecorp.com/files/8509/115389_c930e70ba4b8e8dd_001full.jpg. Digital rewards/points services have moved from being a mere discount program to being used to increase customer's engagement and loyalty to a firm in the web 1.0 ~ 2.0 era. The Nexus Project aims to centralize digital incentives and digital points in the Nexus merchant network and use it as a ticket to the democratic and decentralized sector of cryptocurrency. This way, the project will evolve the digital incentive/digital point service as a Web 3.0 solution that does not rely on the issuing company by supporting the value of digital points through a proprietary token. The Nexus Project intends to offer a digital payment infrastructure that will contribute to economic development by increasing accessibility. Thus, by integrating smart contracts, asset collateral, and personal authentication mechanisms, the project employs blockchain technology to facilitate not only small purchases but also signing and settlement of large purchases such as real estate. Payment can be made easily at a wide range of places including retail stores and restaurants, mainly in Dubai and Abu Dhabi. By keeping the payment application updated, customers can be shown more attractive affiliated stores and recommended products. Plus, with a new improved common settlement a new economic zone will be created for all the UAE Merchant network. With the common payment system, users will be able to obtain goods and services conveniently and at a reasonable price wherever they go in the world. Purchasing Nexus Dubai (NXD) Token Signing up for a cryptocurrency exchange will enable investors to buy, sell, and hold Nexus Dubai(NXD) Token - both for fiat money and other cryptocurrencies. Some of the most popular cryptocurrency exchanges for trading in Nexus Dubai stock are currently MEXC Global, BitMart, and SushiSwap (Polygon). Token Allocation Public Share - 20% Company - 15% Incentives - 10% Partner Programs - 20% Staking of Service - 25% Farming -7% Staking - 3% Social Links Website: https://nexuscoin-dubai.com/ Telegram: https://t.me/nexusdubai Twitter: https://twitter.com/nexus_dubai Reddit: https://www.reddit.com/r/nexusdubai/ Github: https://github.com/nexus-dubai/nxd Linktree: https://linktr.ee/Nexus_Dubai Contact: Company Name: Vertech Technology LLC Address - 2501 One Business Bay Tower by Omniyat, Dubai, United Arab Emirates Email: vetech.tjay@gmail.com To view the source version of this press release, please visit https://www.newsfilecorp.com/release/115389 Calgary, Alberta--(Newsfile Corp. - March 2, 2022) - Cassiar Gold Corp. (TSXV: GLDC) (OTCQX: CGLCF) ("Cassiar Gold" or the "Company") is pleased to announce that it has entered into an agreement with Red Cloud Securities Inc. and Raymond James Ltd. (the "Co-Lead Underwriters") to act as co-lead underwriters and joint bookrunners on behalf of a syndicate of underwriters (collectively, the "Underwriters") pursuant to which the Underwriters have agreed to purchase 4,000,000 flow-through units of the Company (each, a "FT Unit") to be resold to charitable purchasers at a price of C$1.50 per FT Unit (the "Offering Price") on a "bought deal" basis by way of a short form prospectus for gross proceeds of C$6,000,000 (the "Offering"). Each FT Unit will consist of one common share of the Company to be issued as a "flow-through share" within the meaning of the Income Tax Act (Canada) (each, a "FT Share") and one half of one common share purchase warrant (each whole warrant, a "Warrant"). Each whole Warrant shall entitle the holder to purchase one non-flow-through common share of the Company (each, a "Warrant Share") at a price of C$1.60 at any time on or before that date which is 24 months after the closing date of the Offering. The Company has granted to the Underwriters an option, exercisable for a period of 30 days after and including the closing date of the Offering, to purchase up to an additional 15% of the FT Units sold under the Offering for resale to charitable purchasers at the Offering Price to raise additional gross proceeds of up to C$900,000 to cover over-allotments, if any, and for market stabilization purposes. Proceeds from the sale of FT Shares will be used to incur "Canadian exploration expenses" as defined in subsection 66.1(6) of the Income Tax Act and "flow through mining expenditures" as defined in subsection 127(9) of the Income Tax Act. Such proceeds will be renounced to the subscribers with an effective date not later than December 31, 2022, in the aggregate amount of not less than the total amount of gross proceeds raised from the issue of FT Shares. The Company intends to use the net proceeds raised from the Offering for the exploration of the Company's Cassiar Gold property in British Columbia, Canada. The FT Units will be sold by way of a short form prospectus to be filed in British Columbia, Alberta, Saskatchewan, Ontario and Nova Scotia. The Offering is scheduled to close on or around March 24, 2022 and is subject to certain conditions including, but not limited to, the receipt of all necessary approvals including the approval of the TSX Venture Exchange. The securities being offered have not been, nor will they be, registered under the United States Securities Act of 1933, as amended, and may not be offered or sold in the United States or to, or for the account or benefit of, U.S. persons absent registration or an applicable exemption from the registration requirements. This news release shall not constitute an offer to sell or the solicitation of an offer to buy nor shall there be any sale of the securities in any jurisdiction in which such offer, solicitation or sale would be unlawful. About Cassiar Gold Corp. Cassiar Gold Corp. is a Canadian gold exploration company holding a 100% interest in its flagship Cassiar Gold Property located in British Columbia, Canada. The Cassiar Gold property spans 590 km2 and consists of two main project areas: Cassiar North, which hosts a NI 43-101-compliant inferred resource estimate of 1Moz at 1.43 g/t Au (cutoff grade of 0.7 g/t) known as the as the Taurus Deposit (see National Instrument 43-101 Technical report on the Cassiar Gold property, amended Nov. 12, 2019, by S. Zelligan, posted to SEDAR); and Cassiar South which hosts numerous gold showings, historical workings, and exploration prospects over a >15 km long and up to 10 km wide trend. Historical underground mines in the Cassiar South area have yielded over 300,000 oz of Au at grades of between 10 and 25 g/t Au (BC Minfile), underscoring the high potential for further discovery and expansion of bonanza-grade orogenic gold veins. The Cassiar Gold Property is highly accessible by road and has a fully permitted 300 tpd mill and tailings facility, which could provide the potential for near-term production if new and expanded high-grade resources are defined in the areas of active mining leases that cover some of the most prospective parts of the South Cassiar area. Cassiar Gold acknowledges, respects, and supports the rights of Traditional First Nations in the lands and communities where we operate. CONTACT INFORMATION Cassiar Gold Corp. Shirley Anthony VP Investor Relations & Communications 1-778-999-2771 Shirley@cassiargold.com Forward-Looking Statements This press release may contain forward looking statements including those describing Cassiar's future plans and the expectations of management that a stated result or condition will occur. Any statement addressing future events or conditions necessarily involves inherent risk and uncertainty. Actual results can differ materially from those anticipated by management at the time of writing due to many factors, the majority of which are beyond the control of Cassiar and its management. In particular, this news release contains forward-looking statements pertaining, directly or indirectly, to the following: Cassiar's exploration plans and work commitments, market conditions and the Company's financing activities, the ability to close the Offering in the amount anticipated or at all, the use of proceeds of the Offering and economic factors, business and operations strategies. Readers are cautioned that the foregoing list of risk factors should not be construed as exhaustive. These statements speak only as of the date of this release or as of the date specified in the documents accompanying this release, as the case may be. The Company undertakes no obligation to publicly update or revise any forward-looking statements except as expressly required by applicable securities laws. 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 release. NOT FOR DISTRIBUTION TO UNITED STATES NEWSWIRE SERVICES OR FOR DISSEMINATION IN THE UNITED STATES To view the source version of this press release, please visit https://www.newsfilecorp.com/release/115428 Toronto, Ontario--(Newsfile Corp. - March 2, 2022) - Xigem Technologies Corporation (CSE: XIGM) (FSE: 2C1) ("Xigem" or the "Company"), a technology provider for the emerging remote economy, today announced that the Company has cancelled 4,225,000 incentive stock options (the "Options") pursuant to its Stock Option Plan. The Options had been granted between March 19, 2021 and July 5, 2021 to several of the Company's directors, officers, consultants and advisory board members. About Xigem Technologies Corporation Established in Toronto, Ontario, Xigem is positioned to become a leading technology provider for the emerging near trillion-dollar remote economy, with software capable of improving the capacity, productivity, and overall remote operations for businesses, consumers, and other organizations. iAgent, the Company's patented technology, FOOi, its proprietary peer-to-peer mobile payments app, and Cylix Data, its business intelligence engine, will provide organizations, businesses, and consumers with the tools necessary to thrive in a vast array of remote working, learning and treatment environments, while the Company looks to aggregate a portfolio of innovative technologies capable of disrupting traditional business models. www.xigemtechnologies.com Instagram: @xigemtechnologies Twitter: @XigemTech Facebook: @xigemtechnologies LinkedIn: www.linkedin.com/company/xigem-technologies CAUTIONARY NOTE REGARDING FORWARD-LOOKING STATEMENTS This news release may contain certain "forward-looking information" and "forward-looking statements" within the meaning of applicable securities legislation. All information contained herein that is not historical in nature may constitute forward-looking information. Xigem undertakes no obligation to comment on analyses, expectations or statements made by third-parties in respect of Xigem, its securities, or financial or operating results (as applicable). Although Xigem believes that the expectations reflected in forward-looking statements in this news release are reasonable, such forward-looking statement has been based on expectations, factors and assumptions concerning future events which may prove to be inaccurate and are subject to numerous risks and uncertainties, certain of which are beyond Xigem's control. The forward-looking information contained in this news release is expressly qualified by this cautionary statement and is made as of the date hereof. Xigem disclaims any intention and has no obligation or responsibility, except as required by law, to update or revise any forward-looking information, whether as a result of new information, future events or otherwise. Neither the Canadian Securities Exchange nor its Market Regulator (as that term is defined in the policies of the CSE) accepts responsibility for the adequacy or accuracy of this release. SOURCE: Xigem Technologies Corporation On behalf of the Company: Brian Kalish, Chief Executive Officer For further information: Phone: (647) 250-9824 ext.4 Investors: investors@xigemtechnologies.com Media: media@xigemtechnologies.com Twitter: @XigemTech Instagram: @xigemtechnologies Facebook: @xigemtechnologies LinkedIn: www.linkedin.com/company/xigem-technologies www.xigemtechnologies.com To view the source version of this press release, please visit https://www.newsfilecorp.com/release/115425 Vancouver, British Columbia--(Newsfile Corp. - March 2, 2022) - Whitehorse Gold Corp. (TSXV: WHG) ("Whitehorse Gold" or the "Company") announces that Alex Zhang has been appointed as a director of the Company. Dr. Mark Cruise has resigned as Chairman and from the Board and Nikki Graham has resigned as General Counsel and Corporate Secretary. The Company thanks Dr. Cruise and Ms. Graham for their service and wishes both well in future endeavors. Lorne Waldman has been appointed as Chair of the Board and Jean Zhang, the Company's CFO, has been appointed as Corporate Secretary of the Company. Alex Zhang is a Professional Geoscientist registered with Engineers and Geoscientists BC (EGBC) with more than 30 years of experience in mineral exploration and has worked with Eldorado Gold Corporation, Afcan Mining Corp., Sino Gold Mining Ltd., Silvercorp Metals Inc. and most recently New Pacific Metals Corp. He supervised exploration activities of multiple major gold projects and silver-lead-zinc polymetallic projects in China, Canada and Bolivia at various stages from exploration through development to production with roles as senior exploration geologist, senior resource geologist, exploration manager, chief geologist and vice president of exploration. Mr. Zhang brings a full range of technical and managerial skills related to mineral exploration and mining projects. Mr. Zhang received his Master's Degree of Engineering in mineral exploration from China University of Mining and Technology, and received his Master's Degree of Science in mineral exploration from Queen's University in Ontario, Canada. Grant of stock options The Company has granted, subject to regulatory approval, an aggregate of 1,475,000 stock options to directors, officers, employees and consultants of the Company, pursuant to the terms of the Company's stock option plan. The options are exercisable for a period of 5 years from the date of grant at price of $0.50 per share, being the closing price of the common shares on the TSX Venture Exchange ("TSX-V") on February 24, 2022. The options vest in six equal tranches over a period of three years. The options are subject to the provisions of the plan and the policies of the TSXV. The Company also announces the cancellation of an aggregate of 1,673,333 stock options. The cancelled stock options are comprised of 1,233,333 stock options previously granted on November 18, 2020 at an exercise price of $0.315 and 544,167 stock options previously granted on May 6, 2021 at an exercise price of $1.38. ABOUT WHITEHORSE GOLD CORP. Whitehorse Gold is a responsible mineral exploration and development company focused on its 170-square-km Project located in southern Yukon, approximately 55 km south-southwest of Whitehorse. The Project hosts the advanced-stage Skukum Creek and Goddell deposits, and the formerly producing Mt. Skukum high-grade gold mine, all of which remain open for expansion, plus additional untested mineralized occurrences. Project infrastructure includes an all-weather access road, a 50-person camp, approximately 6 kms of underground development, and a previously operating 300-tpd mill and associated support facilities. Underground operations by a previous operator at Mt. Skukum from 1986 to 1988 saw 233,400 tons of ore mined and processed to recover approximately 79,750 ounces of gold (Total Energold Corporation, 1989). The Company is also reviewing other mining assets in jurisdictions that provide year round access. On Behalf of Whitehorse Gold Corp. signed "Gordon Neal" Gordon Neal, CEO & Director For further information please contact: Investor Relations, Whitehorse Gold Corp. Phone: 604-336-5919 Email: info@whitehorsegold.ca www.whitehorsegold.ca 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. Forward-Looking Statements Information set forth in this news release contains forward-looking statements that are based on assumptions as of the date of this news release. These statements reflect management's current estimates, beliefs, intentions and expectations. They are not guarantees of future performance. The Company cautions that all forward looking statements are inherently uncertain, and that actual performance may be affected by a number of material factors, many of which are beyond the Company's control. Accordingly, actual and future events, conditions and results may differ materially from the estimates, beliefs, intentions and expectations expressed or implied in the forward-looking information. Except as required under applicable securities legislation, the Company undertakes no obligation to publicly update or revise forward-looking information. To view the source version of this press release, please visit https://www.newsfilecorp.com/release/115354 Bedford, Nova Scotia--(Newsfile Corp. - March 2, 2022) - Sylla Gold Corp. (TSXV: SYG.H) (the "Company") is pleased to announce that, further to its press release of January 27, 2022, it has closed the first tranche of a non-brokered private placement through the issuance of 11,997,500 units (each, a "Unit") at a price of $0.20 per Unit for aggregate gross proceeds of $2,399,500 (the "Offering"). Each Unit is comprised of one common share (each, a "Common Share") in the capital of the Company and one Common Share purchase warrant (each, a "Warrant"). Each Warrant entitles the holder thereof to acquire one Common Share at a price of $0.32 per Common Share for a period of two (2) years from the closing of the Offering. In connection with the closing of the first tranche of the Offering, the Company paid certain eligible persons (the "Finders") a cash commission of $130,600 and issued 640,000 broker warrants (each, a "Broker Warrant"). Each Broker Warrant entitles the holder thereof to acquire one Common Share at an exercise price of $0.32 per Common Share for a period of two (2) years from the closing of the Offering. All securities issued pursuant to the Offering are subject to a hold period of four months plus a day from the date of issuance and the resale rules of applicable securities legislation. The proceeds from the Offering will be used by the Company for corporate and general working capital purposes, exploration and to satisfy payables. The closing of the Offering is subject to certain conditions including, but not limited to, the receipt of all necessary regulatory and other approvals, including the approval of the TSX Venture Exchange. This news release does not constitute an offer to sell or a solicitation of an offer to sell any of the securities in the United States. The securities have not been and will not be registered under the United States Securities Act of 1933, as amended (the "U.S. Securities Act") or any state securities laws and may not be offered or sold within the United States or to U.S. Persons unless registered under the U.S. Securities Act and applicable state securities laws or an exemption from such registration is available. The Offering constituted a "related party transaction" as defined in Multilateral Instrument 61-101 - Protection of Minority Securityholders in Special Transactions ("MI 61-101"), as insiders of the Company subscribed for an aggregate of 1,005,000 Units. The Company is relying on the exemptions from the valuation and minority shareholder approval requirements of MI 61-101 contained in sections 5.5(b) and 5.7(1)(b) of MI 61-101, as the Company is not listed on a specified market and the fair market value of the Units being issued to insiders in connection with the Offering does not exceed $2,500,000, as determined in accordance with MI 61-101. The Company did not file a material change report in respect of the related party transaction at least 21 days before the closing of the Offering, which the Company deems reasonable in the circumstances in order to complete the Offering in an expeditious manner. Pursuant to the Offering, Gregory Isenor subscribed for 930,000 Units of the Company. Prior to the completion of the Offering, Mr. Isenor beneficially owned or controlled 2,047,100 Common Shares of the Company, representing approximately 12.05% of the Company's issued and outstanding Common Shares on a non-diluted basis. Upon completion of the Offering, Mr. Isenor will beneficially own or control 2,997,100 Common Shares of the Company and 930,000 Warrants, representing approximately 10.27% of the Company's issued and outstanding Common Shares on a non-diluted basis and 13.06% on a partially diluted basis. Depending on market and other conditions, or as future circumstances may dictate, Mr. Isenor may from time to time increase or decrease his holdings of Common Shares or other securities of the Company. A copy of the early warning report will be available on the Company's issuer profile on SEDAR at www.sedar.com. For more information, please contact: Regan Isenor President and Chief Executive Officer Tel: (902) 233-4381 Email: risenor@syllagold.com 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 release. This news release contains certain "forward-looking information" within the meaning of applicable securities laws. Forward looking information is frequently characterized by words such as "plan", "expect", "project", "intend", "believe", "anticipate", "estimate", "may", "will", "would", "potential", "proposed" and other similar words, or statements that certain events or conditions "may" or "will" occur. These statements are only predictions. Forward-looking information is based on the opinions and estimates of management at the date the information is provided, and is subject to a variety of risks and uncertainties and other factors that could cause actual events or results to differ materially from those projected in the forward-looking information. For a description of the risks and uncertainties facing the Company and its business and affairs, readers should refer to the Company's Management's Discussion and Analysis. The Company undertakes no obligation to update forward-looking information if circumstances or management's estimates or opinions should change, unless required by law. The reader is cautioned not to place undue reliance on forward-looking information. NOT FOR DISTRIBUTION TO UNITED STATES NEWSWIRE SERVICES OR FOR DISSEMINATION IN THE UNITED STATES To view the source version of this press release, please visit https://www.newsfilecorp.com/release/115436 Anrok, a San Francisco, CA-based sales tax solution for software-as-a-service (SaaS) businesses, raised $20M in funding, with a valuation north of $100M. The funding was led by Index Ventures and Sequoia. The company intends to use the funds to further extend its product offering for customers and expand its team. Led by Michelle Valentine, co-founder and CEO, Anrok provides an end-to-end platform gives SaaS businesses everything they need to manage sales tax out of the box. From monitoring sales and transactions against state-specific thresholds as well as tracking how remote employees impact their sales tax exposure, finance leaders can be automatically alerted when new obligations emerge. Its automated solution enables businesses to register in new states directly within the platform, saving hours of time and linking registration workflows with when sales tax collection begins. Industry-leading companies such as Airbase, AgentSync, Front, Gem, Persona, Productboard, and Vanta use Anrok to monitor sales tax exposure, calculate sales tax across their invoicing tools, and file and remit on their behalf. FinSMEs 01/03/2022 The man is 72, homeless, diabetic and in a wheelchair, his size 13 feet painfully swollen. He has come to a parking lot in Parramore where there are free showers and laundry services to get a clean pair of socks, though he no longer has the dexterity to put them on himself. Eric Camarillo, the 34-year-old in charge here, kneels as he tries to get the socks over the mans long-neglected toenails, which have begun to curl sideways. Advertisement The man winces. Im so sorry, Camarillo offers softly. Lets start again. Advertisement Central Floridan of the Year finalist Eric Camarillo is founder and president of SALT Outreach, a nonprofit organization battling homelessness through a mobile center that offers showers, clothing, mail services and help with employment and housing. Here, it operates in the parking lot of the Christian Service Center in Orlando on Feb. 1, 2022. (Rich Pope / Orlando Sentinel) It may seem like a small thing a clean pair of socks but to those who are dejected, desperate, homeless and often sick, any comfort is big. The people typically begin flocking here well before the gates open at 9 a.m., the line often stretching around the perimeter, and they keep coming until the gates close again at 5 for showers, for laundry, for new clothing or haircuts, to pick up their mail or charge their phones. And every encounter, even simply for a pair of socks, is a chance for Camarillo and his staff to build relationships, hoping to connect the homeless to social workers who can help them navigate a return to housing. This is SALT Outreach Service and Love Together the faith-based nonprofit organization Camarillo started in 2011 with the help of a few close friends and, for most of its first decade, an all-volunteer workforce that is now in the hundreds. For Camarillos devotion, innovation, humility and grace, he is a finalist for the Orlando Sentinels Central Floridian of the Year. Growing with the need After years of incremental growth, SALT mushroomed when the COVID-19 pandemic hit. When everyone else was closing down and staying home, Eric and his team were the ones that ran toward the problem, said Lisa Portelli, senior advisor to Orlando Mayor Buddy Dyer on homelessness. I dont mean to sound overly dramatic, but remember that this was a time when we didnt know if you could live or die if you got this, right? And here they are, willing to be down there, running showers, doing laundry, [giving out] masks and antibacterial gel. They demonstrated the most incredible courage and commitment to their cause I think Ive ever seen. [ SALT Outreach lands grant ] In the span of 11 years, Camarillos nonprofit has gone from two volunteers feeding about 15 homeless people once or twice a month to a paid staff of 25 helping as many as 200 people every day. It has grown from an annual budget of $2,000 to over $1 million. And while its home base is currently the parking lot of the Christian Service Center on West Central Boulevard five days a week, it also operates in Sanford once a week, Daytona Beach and Tampa once a month and Cocoa once a quarter. The team also made recent trips to California to meet with faith-based groups that want to copy there what SALT has done here. Theyre very entrepreneurial, very ambitious, very innovative. And it doesnt really stop, said Eric Gray, executive director of the Christian Service Center, who invited SALT to use the parking lot and a spare building free of charge. Advertisement Im very impressed with them and with [Camarillo] as a CEO, Gray said. Hes very polite and very, very soft-spoken. But in actuality, his brain is going a million miles a minute, playing chess constantly, trying to figure out whats the next best move. Perhaps, Gray said, Camarillos dedication also comes from empathy. For six months as a young adult, he was homeless himself. He just didnt know it at the time. Living out of a car Camarillo grew up in Chicago with a Mexican-American father who was severely ill and a Filipino mother who worked the graveyard shift as a nurse to support the family. He had two younger brothers, one of them autistic. When Camarillo was 15, he and a friend were walking home from school when they were stopped by gang members, who held them at gunpoint. If a police car hadnt happened to drive by just then, its not clear what would have happened, but the scare was enough to prompt the family to relocate to Central Florida, where an uncle lived. At 19, though, Camarillo returned to Chicago to work in financial services sales mortgages, mutual funds, life insurance. He had a legion of childhood friends there and enough money to last what he thought would be a few months until he was bringing in big commissions. Advertisement I was really driven by money and success, he said. I thought of myself as a businessperson trying to make a million dollars a year. Within a few weeks, he was broke and living out of his car. He washed himself and his clothes in 7-Eleven restrooms. He ate at Mexican restaurants, consuming free chips and salsa, then ducking out before anyone could take his order. If he had a dollar, hed order a slice of bread at a Panera, load it with as much free butter as possible, and fold it in half for a sandwich. It prevented starvation, but not hunger. And though he never thought of himself as homeless then, he said, he knows looking back that he was simply too proud to admit it. After six months, he came home with his tail between his legs, as he puts it, moved back in with his mother, and began searching for a job and a purpose, not necessarily in that order. I didnt believe in God, necessarily, he said. But I cried out to somebody: Why am I here? What am I supposed to do with my life? I really believe that everybody has a God-shaped hole in their heart. I know I did in mine. Advertisement Trying to fill it has directed every step since. Little miracles It prompted him to randomly open a Bible a friend had given him. To seek out the Orlando Filipino Seventh-day Adventist Church in Apopka, where he was baptized in May 2010. To leave a $50,000-a-year job at a bank because they wanted him to work on Saturdays, the Adventists sabbath. [ Orlando charities face feast or famine in COVID ] After I quit, I cried in the [banks] bathroom for, like, 15 minutes, he said. I had thousands of dollars of bills to pay every month, and I didnt know how I was going to pay that. They all thought I was crazy. But each month afterward, little miracles would happen, Camarillo said. The bank issued him a check for paid time off he hadnt taken. An overdue sales commission landed. He found odd jobs, until, eventually, he landed fulltime work washing dishes at a school, trading his suit and tie for an apron and bandana. It was humbling. During this time, he started volunteering with a couple of friends from church to feed homeless people, and he enrolled in college, first at Seminole State and then the University of Central Florida, supporting himself with both full-time work and student loans. By 2019, hed earned a bachelors degree in social work and a masters in nonprofit management and racked up over $100,000 in college debt. Advertisement Hed also met the woman he would marry in 2020. She came to volunteer at SALT and ended up working there full-time. Political Pulse Weekly Get latest updates political news from Central Florida and across the state. > He was in this relationship, hes working a full-time job, hes going to school and he is running SALT, said the organizations outreach pastor, Wilfredo Montalvo, a decade-long friend. When I think of someone whos humble and determined and completely dedicated, the first person I think of is Eric. . When I came and saw everything he had done, it blew my mind, especially since for nine of the 10 years it had existed, SALT was run completely by volunteers. Another leap of faith In the spring of 2021, a year into the pandemic, Camarillo wanted to quit his job again this time from Amazons human resources department to devote all his energy to SALT. He and his team had raised $4,000 for a clothing trailer and $40,000 for a shower trailer with bathrooms; theyd hired several case workers and other staff. Theyd won a $250,000 grant from the city of Orlando to operate showers and laundry services, and the Orlando Utilities Commission gave them a donation to cover the cost of installing solar panels for their operations to keep energy costs down. At the time, he came to me for personal advice, said Portelli, the mayors advisor. The organization was doing well, but it was not super-solidly funded yet, and I knew he had gotten married, and I didnt think it was the best idea [to quit his Amazon job]. He did it anyway. That was really a demonstration of his faith in the mission. Every minute of every day, he lives his faith. Two weeks later, on April 15, National Laundry Day, SALT cut the ceremonial ribbon on a $74,000 laundry trailer with six industrial-sized washers and six dryers. Now Camarillo spends most of his days trying to sustain what he has built and push it to the next level. His goal is the creation of a permanent supportive housing village of eight units, constructed out of 40-foot shipping containers, each with a kitchen, bathroom, living area and at least weekly visits from a social worker. SALT already has raised over $107,000 in donations toward the $240,000 needed. Advertisement I feel like God continues to bring situations to my awareness, to see things that wont allow me to grow numb to the need like a young mother who came to us the other day who was sleeping in her car with three children, he said. I dont know whats in store for us. I dont know all the challenges ahead. But I know were going to find a way to keep moving forward. Other Central Floridian of the Year finalists: ksantich@orlandosentinel.com Calyptia, a San Francisco, CA-based provider of a First-Mile Observability platform, closed a $5m seed funding round. The round was led by Sierra Ventures and Carbide Ventures, with participation from Bill Tais ACTAI Ventures and other angel investors. The company intends to use the funds to continue to expand operations and its business reach. Led by Eduardo Silva, CEO & co-founder, Calyptia provides a First-Mile Observability platform which has the ability to collect and analyze data at its source and provide immediate insight into system performance. Calpytia Enterprise, based on open source projects Fluent Bit and Fluentd, enables every company to manage observability data at scale and receive immediate insight into their systems performance. Calyptia Enterprise for Fluent Bit includes extensive developer toolsets to simplify enterprise adoption and integrates with existing observability backends to both improve systems analytics and reduce cost.The product is already seeing traction from users among Fortune 50 enterprises across banking, financial technology, Human Resource and other cloud provider industries. Calpytias technical partnerships include Amazons OpenSearch, among others. FinSMEs 01/03/2022 NCX (formerly known as SilviaTerra), a San Francisco, CA-based science-driven forest carbon marketplace delivering large-scale, immediate impact for climate and communities, raised $50m in Series B financing. The round was led by Energize Ventures with participation from J.P. Morgan, Intercontinental Exchange (ICE), Dalus Capital, Clearvision Ventures and existing backers Scribble Ventures, and Marc Benioffs TIME Ventures. In conjunction with the funding, Katie McClain, partner at Energize Ventures, joined NCX Board of Directors. The company intends to use the funds for expansion outside of the United States in addition to the formation of new natural capital markets created to serve the growing $1 billion voluntary carbon market. Led by Zack Parisa, Co-founder and CEO, NCX monetizes the benefits of forest stewardship through its natural capital marketplace. By using high integrity data and measurements to generate carbon credits, NCX is enabling corporations to meet net-zero goals with high quality offsets that support landowners of all sizes. In its first year of the exchange, NCX generated participation from 2,470 landowners with a collective 4.3 million acres across 39 states. Carbon credit buyers incentivising the delayed harvest of forests through the NCX marketplace include Microsoft, Rubicon, South Pole, Incyte, and others. FinSMEs 02/03/2022 SpaceAge Labs, a Singaporean IoT/AI solutions startup, raised US$1.25m in seed funding. The round was led by Silicon Solution Partners (SSP) and SEEDS Capital, the investment arm of Enterprise Singapore. The startup will use this seed funding to grow its team, expand internationally, and roll out several pilot projects across Singapore, Australia, and the U.S. Led by Mr Deepak Pitta (founder and CEO), Mr Ananth Subba (Chief Technology Officer, who is currently based in Australia), Mr Leela Krishna (Chief Business Officer) and Mr Sashikumar Y (Chief Product Officer), SpaceAge Labs is advancing IoT/AI solutions to to make cities cleaner, greener, and safer. The companys flagship product is remoteEye, a complete, sensor-agnostic IoT/AI platform that enables connected operations and maintenance. remoteEye consists of three parts: rEye IoT Nodes These are low-powered, wireless devices that read and transmit data from industrial sensors located at the assets. Wireless networks The sensor data is transmitted via low power wide area wireless networks to the cloud. The networks are at low cost (from S$1 per month per device), able to transmit over long distances (several kilometres) and consume low power (up to five years of battery life). rEye Data Cloud Enterprise-grade IoT/AI software that stores, analyses, and visualises this sensor data. This software is secure, easy to use and able to scale easily from managing one asset to thousands of assets. Proprietary AI software and geospatial data analysis provides useful insights and predictions that can be accessed via web or mobile. While remoteEye can be applied in various sectors, SpaceAge Labs is initially targeting three sectors: Water/Wastewater; Urban Greenery/Landscaping; and Facilities management. SpaceAge Labs is also supported by NUS Enterprise, the entrepreneurial arm of the National University of Singapore (NUS), Imagine H2O (a water innovation accelerator) and PUBs Singapore Water Exchange. Planetspark, a wholly owned subsidiary of SGX mainboard listed Excelpoint Technology Ltd. is also a partner working closely with SpaceAge Labs to help accelerate their technology alongside joining the round as an investor. FinSMEs 01/03/2022 Sure Valley Ventures, the London, UK-based founder-led venture capital firm that invests in high growth software companies in sectors such as the Metaverse, Artificial Intelligence (AI) and Cybersecurity, completed an 85m first close of a 95m UK software technology fund. This includes a cornerstone 50m investment from the British Business Bank through its Enterprise Capital Funds (ECF) program, which aims to increase the supply of equity capital to high-potential, early-stage UK companies. Sure Valley is a seed capital investor in software companies. It plans to invest into 25 software companies from across the UK through its new fund. Currently based in London, Dublin, and Cambridge, the team will also be opening an office in Manchester to help access deals in innovation clusters that have developed around creative technologies in the North of England and in the Metaverse and AI opportunities in cities such as Manchester, Leeds, Sheffield and Newcastle. The first investment from the Fund will be into a Belfast-based company. Led by Managing Partner and Co-Founder Barry Downes, Sure Valley Ventures has established a strong track record in these sectors, having invested in them since the firms inception in 2017 through investee companies including Getvisibility, Smarttech, Nova Leah and Precog Systems in the security space, Engage XR, War Ducks, Admix, Volograms, VividQ and Virtex in the Metaverse sector and Cameramatics, Artomatix and Ambisense in the AI sector. Alongside the equity invested, Sure Valley supports entrepreneurs via its platform, which draws on the teams knowledge and experience as founders to create a programme which is tailored to each investee companys individual needs. Sure Valleys platform also features a global network of advisors, based in leading innovation hubs across the globe, including San Francisco, Silicon Valley, New York, LA, Austin and Seattle in the USA as well as leading European and Asian hubs. FinSMEs 02/03/2022 Kentucky Power admitted in a Kentucky Public Service Commission filing recently that it overcharged its customers by $3.2 million in January and that the amount would be returned to customers in March via a reduction in the companys fuel adjustment clause in March. The letter was sent by Brian K. West, Kentucky Powers vice president of regulatory and finance, in connection with regular filings it is required to make regarding its Fuel Adjustment Clause, which is intended to allow the company to recoup costs connected to fluctuating costs of fuel and power. According to the letter, the overcharge, referred to in the letter as an over-recovery, resulted from a higher-than-normal Fuel Adjustment Clause factor caused by high fuel costs and higher-than-estimated usage. In response, West wrote in the letter, the company will reduce its March Fuel Adjustment Clause factor by 72 percent from $0.00762/kWh to $0.00213/kWh, which is 94 percent less than the January factor of $0.03556/kWh. The fuel system set up in Kentucky allows any unexpected over-recovery to be returned to customers quickly in the form of an offset in the going forward fuel factor, West wrote in the letter. Further, West wrote, the company recognizes the burden that fuel clause volatility can impose on its customers and proposes the following actions: To immediately notify the PSC of any abnormal change in the Fuel Adjustment Clause factor; In the event there is an abnormal increase, the company proposes to spread the increase out over a period of months in order to lessen the immediate burden on customers; and Undertake a review of changes in the calculation methodology to reduce monthly volatility in its calculated Fuel Adjustment Clause. Employees for The City of Prestonsburg got some welcome news at the Feb. 28 meeting of the Prestonsburg City Council, as Mayor Les Stapleton announced a 7 percent pay increase across the board for all city employees. The council held a second reading of an amendment to the ordinance dealing with wage scales, which was approved. Stapleton praised his department heads for being what he called, frugal with their funding. Im sure you guys are wondering why we had to amend this mid-year. The reason is, some people were on the upper end of the new pay scales where they were at. We do not pay prevailing wage so were not even close to that and we had to make some adjustments, said Stapleton. The council also approved making starting pay for part-time and summer employees higher than the minimum wage. We have not wasted money by any means. I will tell you right now, we are going to give all the employees a 7 percent pay increase. Stapleton continued, Were going to have a starting pay that is better than minimum wage for all part time employees, summer employees. Stapleton also cited the recent pay increases of surrounding cities like Pikeville, who, according to Stapleton, gave the citys police officers a $5 increase on the hour. Its going to be hard for us to keep police officers here once theyre certified and trained, said Stapleton. Stapleton also stated the Kentucky State Police will give a $15,000 pay increase if the current budget holds in Frankfort. The Prestonsburg City Council also recognized two of its own during the meeting. Prestonsburg Firefighter Tyler William Sparks recently passed his Level 1 International Fire Service Accreditation Congress or (IFSAC) Instructor training. This IFSAC training allows Tyler to teach state level courses, said Stapleton. Also, Prestonsburg Police Captain Ross Shurtleff recently graduated from The Department of Criminal Justice Executive Development Class. Were trying to get all of our employees into more educational opportunities thats going to help them advance themselves and make our city more trustworthy, more integrity and have us sitting in a much better place administratively, Stapleton said. Abortion should be legal in all circumstances Abortion should be legal in most circumstances Abortion should be legal in a few circumstances Abortion should never be legal in any circumstances Vote View Results Two years ago, Florida Chief Financial Officer Jimmy Patronis launched an investigation into 100,000 Florida businesses to see whether any had ties to the Chinese government. He has expressed no interested in a similar crusade to find Russian-owned businesses. (Steve Cannon) Weve got a lot of ground to cover today, including legislators trying to give more money to tourism, the state offering a new sky-high-priced lottery ticket and what Orange County should look for in its new school superintendent. But first a flashback: Advertisement Two years ago, Floridas Chief Financial Officer Jimmy Patronis viewed China as such a threat to the world, he launched an investigation into 100,000 Florida businesses to see if any were owned by the Communist Party of China. Patronis commie crusade made more headlines for goofiness than effectiveness. (Both the city of Key West and Lee County Solid Waste Department received Patronis letters asking if they were Chinese-owned. And many actual business owners were either perplexed or insulted.) Advertisement Still, Patronis said he felt an obligation to do everything possible to stand firm against China. Why then, I wondered, wasnt Patronis going after Russia with the same zeal now? In a written statement, Patronis said: I think war is different. People dying is different. He then he went on to blame Joe Biden. The logic there was interesting. When the stakes are more serious, you take less action. Similarly, Gov. Ron DeSantis began the week with relative silence on Russia. When a Sentinel reporter asked Monday morning if DeSantis was calling for any sanctions or policy changes with Russia including with regards to state investments in Russian holdings a spokeswoman responded: Generally speaking, the policy proposals youve mentioned would be under the purview of the federal government. She went on to say that Governor DeSantis is focused on doing his job for the people of Florida. If that was true, it was a new stance for a governor who has reveled in going after other countries whose behavior he found offensive. In the past, DeSantis has called for Action Against Communist China, issued a proclamation about the election in Venezuela and called for Florida to support Israel by placing Ben & Jerrys on Floridas list of scrutinized companies. Advertisement The governor thought all those international issues were worth his action and attention. But Russias invasion? That, his office said, was a federal issue. The optics were jarring. Over the weekend, governors in other states were calling for punishment and sanctions everyone from Texas Republican Gov. Greg Abbott to California Democrat Gavin Newsom. Yet DeSantis was focused on berating the United States own Centers for Disease Control and Prevention. Ive asked the members of the Texas Restaurant Association, Texas Package Stores Association & all Texas retailers to voluntarily remove all Russian products from their shelves. Texas stands with Ukraine.#StandWithUkraine Greg Abbott (@GregAbbott_TX) February 26, 2022 By the end of Monday, the pressure apparently grew too intense, and DeSantis finally addressed the Russian invasion though he spent more time criticizing Joe Biden than Vladimir Putin. And a state official said it would take a look at $300 million worth of Florida holdings in Russian-domiciled investments. Fla @GovRonDeSantis finally weighs in on Ukraine & Russia....echoes Trump line about Russia taking action under other presidents but not Trump. Criticizes Biden "weakness" & on energy policy. Now he's questioning media coverage of Ukraine Gary Fineout (@fineout) February 28, 2022 One could argue the states governor and chief financial officer should always stay focused on state issues. But in the past, both these guys have been eager to use their political offices to go after other foreign adversaries. So their Now-isnt-the-time and Lets-stay-focused-on-Florida approach to politics sure stands out now. More money for tourism Visit Florida already gets $50 million in tax money to promote tourism in the Sunshine State. On Wednesday, Florida Politics reported that legislators want to throw another $2 million at the agency, so that Visit Florida can market Florida to Floridians. Advertisement Im not sure why the agency cant just re-prioritize its existing funding if it wants to focus more on in-state travel. But if Tallahassee lawmakers who are flush with federal pandemic-relief money are trying to find ways to spend more money, how about getting more of the 20,000+ special-needs families off the waiting list for services? Or investing in mental health? This state has a crisis-level shortage of psychiatrists not ride attendants. $50 lottery tickets The Florida Lottery wants more of your money. Deciding that it wanted to add to its collection of tickets that cost $1, $2, $3, $5, $10, $20 and $30, the Florida Lottery this week debuted a new $50 scratch-off ticket. Political Pulse Weekly Get latest updates political news from Central Florida and across the state. > Yes, this is the so-called Education Lottery. But as a reminder: An Orlando Sentinel analysis found the state actually spent a lower percentage of its budget on public education 20 years after the lottery started. And Florida still ranks in the bottom 10 states for both average teacher salary and overall per pupil spending. So gamble or dont gamble. Thats your call. But if you want to better fund education, dont buy scratch-offs. Send different people to Tallahassee. Advertisement Super search Speaking of education, Orange County Public Schools is about to begin searching for a new superintendent now that Barbara Jenkins is about to retire. A good goal would be to find someone dedicated to making the massive agency more user-friendly and responsive to both families and teachers. There are a lot of things OCPS does well, including the districts school-building program and impressive array of classes, vocational offerings and extracurriculars. But most parents I hear from say that trying to deal with the mammoth bureaucracy downtown can be frustrating. And teachers often say they feel disconnected or ignored. Put another way: Ive heard from thousands of teachers in my 24 years at this newspaper. And Ive heard them say many things. But I cant recall a single one ever saying: The district makes doing my job easier. Im a better teacher because of them. And shouldnt that be the goal? smaxwell@orlandosentinel.com Gov. Ron DeSantis told high school students lined up behind him to take off their masks before a televised event at the University of South Florida, saying it was COVID theater and ridiculous in a county where the federal government still recommends face coverings. You do not have to wear those masks, DeSantis told the students, pointing directly at two of them. Please take them off. Honestly, its not doing anything. Weve gotta stop with this COVID theater. So if you wanna wear it, fine, but this is ridiculous. Advertisement DeSantis then shook his head and sighed as he began his news conference. Hillsborough County Public Schools confirmed the students were from Middleton High School in Tampa. Three of the six students took off their masks, but the other three kept them on. Advertisement Correction: I believe these students are in high school. Hillsborough School District says some of their kids from Middleton HS in Tampa were involved in the presser, so I believe these are those students. Evan Donovan (@EvanDonovan) March 2, 2022 The Centers for Disease Control and Prevention guidance is that people in counties with a low rate of coronavirus do not have to wear a mask. Hillsborough County is listed as a high-risk county and masks are still recommended indoors. Hillsborough was averaging 425 cases a day as of Wednesday, the largest average in the state. DeSantis spokeswoman Christina Pushaw was asked why DeSantis reacted that way when his stance has long been that masking is an individual choice. She responded, as the governor said, you can wear them if you want but theres no evidence they make any difference. That has been clear for a long time, and the data informed our states official guidance. DeSantis and state Surgeon General Joseph Ladapo announced their own COVID-19 guidance last week, pushing back against what they called unscientific corporate masking. Ladapo claimed that there has never been any evidence that masks have been effective, a position that public health experts said was dangerous. First of all, its a complete, absolute lie about masks having no scientific evidence and value, Dr. Aileen Marty, an infectious disease physician of the medical school at Florida International University, told the Sentinel last week. Weve got 120 years worth of data showing that masks are valuable in halting transmitted respiratory infections. Political Pulse Weekly Get latest updates political news from Central Florida and across the state. > Kenneth Alexander, Nemours chief of infectious diseases in Orlando, agreed. From a guy who has watched people die of COVID, I still wear my mask, Alexander said Tuesday. Theyll say masks dont work. ... Thats like saying seat belts dont work. Youre right, seat belts dont save everybodys life every time. They do most of the time. And so seat belts, taken as a whole are a good thing. Same for masks, masks do work. Do they reduce the risk to zero? No. In a statement to WFLA-TV Tampa, Hillsborough Schools Superintendent Addison Davis said, It is a student and parents choice to protect their health in a way they feel most appropriate. We are proud of the manner in which our students represented themselves and our school district. Advertisement A DeSantis Democratic rival for governor, Agriculture Commissioner Nikki Fried, was quick to respond as well. As governor, I wont bully students, she wrote on Twitter, as she shared a video of the governor and the teenagers. You can judge someones character by how they treat waiters. And high school students. Shame on [DeSantis]. U.S. Rep. Charlie Crist, another Democrat running to unseat DeSantis, also responded. Young people in our state deserve to be treated with respect, not dunked on by a heartless, egotistical Governor with a political agenda, he wrote on Twitter. Staff writer Kate Santich contributed to this report. GREEN BAY, Wis. (WBAY/Gray News) - Officers in Wisconsin said they found a severed head at a home and body parts in other locations, according to a criminal complaint made public. WARNING: Details in the story and video are disturbing. Taylor D. Schabusiness, 24, is charged with first-degree intentional homicide, mutilating a corpse and third-degree sexual assault, WBAY reported. A court commissioner set her bond at $2 million cash at a hearing Tuesday afternoon. Schabusiness seemed calm when she appeared in Brown County court via video conference. She said little, only acknowledging that she has the right to an attorney. The prosecutor called this one of the most serious offenses we had in this county in some time. Taylor Schabusiness is being held on $2 million cash bond. The state argued Schabusiness has ties to Texas, raising a concern shes a flight risk. The prosecution also said Schabusiness was on put on probation seven weeks before the crime and supposed to be on monitoring but apparently wasnt wearing her monitoring bracelet. I think the facts alleged are extremely concerning and disturbing and go to the violent nature and grave nature of the offense, Assistant District Attorney Caleb Saunders said in court. Green Bay police said they were called to a home around 3:25 a.m. local time Feb. 23. A person who lived in the home reported finding the severed head in a bucket. Police located the human head in the basement of the home. A towel had been placed over it, and dried blood was found on a nearby mattress. Investigators learned Schabusiness may have been the last person seen with the victim. They found her at a home and said she had dried blood on her clothing. Police searched Schabusiness van and found a box with additional human body parts including legs on the rear passenger seat, according to the criminal complaint. Police obtained a search warrant for the home. They found multiple other body parts, body fluids and knives. Investigators said Schabusiness told them she and the victim had been doing drugs and having sex. She said they had used chains while having sex, and she went crazy and started strangling the victim. A detective said she admitted to hiding the body parts, according to the complaint. She also went into detail about the weapons she used to dismember the body. Schabusiness made the comment that at one point, she did get paranoid and lazy and that she thought it was the dope that was making her paranoid, officials said in the complaint. Investigators said she told them she did not mean to kill the victim, but she enjoyed choking him and continued to do it. Police met with the victims family Tuesday. Police, forensic teams and the Dane County Medical Examiners Office investigated and processed multiple locations associated with the crime. Copyright 2022 WBAY via Gray Media Group, Inc. All rights reserved. This is our best offer! You get home delivery Monday through Saturday plus full digital access any time, on any device with our six-day subscription delivery membership. This membership plan includes member-only benefits like our popular ticket giveaways, all of our email newsletters and access to the daily digital replica of the printed paper. Also, you can share digital access with up to four other household members at no additional cost. Subscriptions renew automatically every 30 days. Call 240-215-8600 to cancel auto-renewal. Most subscribers are served by News-Post carriers; households in some outlying areas receive same-day delivery through the US Postal Service. If your household falls in a postal delivery area, you will be notified by our customer service team. Keep the conversation about local news & events going by joining us on Facebook, Twitter and Instagram. Recent updates from The News-Post and also from News-Post staff members are compiled below. Gainesville, TX (76240) Today Thunderstorms likely. Rainfall will be locally heavy at times. A few storms may be severe. Low around 65F. Winds SE at 10 to 20 mph. Chance of rain 80%. 1 to 2 inches of rain expected.. Tonight Thunderstorms likely. Rainfall will be locally heavy at times. A few storms may be severe. Low around 65F. Winds SE at 10 to 20 mph. Chance of rain 80%. 1 to 2 inches of rain expected. Gov. Ron DeSantis told high school students lined up behind him to take off their masks before a televised event at the University of South Florida, saying it was COVID theater and ridiculous in a county where the federal government still recommends face coverings. You do not have to wear those masks, DeSantis told the students, pointing directly at two of them. Please take them off. Honestly, its not doing anything. Weve gotta stop with this COVID theater. So if you wanna wear it, fine, but this is ridiculous. Advertisement DeSantis then shook his head and sighed as he began his news conference. Hillsborough County Public Schools confirmed the students were from Middleton High School in Tampa. It appears that four students took off their masks, but three kept them on. Advertisement Correction: I believe these students are in high school. Hillsborough School District says some of their kids from Middleton HS in Tampa were involved in the presser, so I believe these are those students. Evan Donovan (@EvanDonovan) March 2, 2022 The Centers for Disease Control and Prevention guidance is that people in counties with a low rate of coronavirus do not have to wear a mask. Hillsborough County is listed as a high-risk county and masks are still recommended indoors. Hillsborough was averaging 425 cases a day as of Wednesday, the largest average in the state. DeSantis spokeswoman Christina Pushaw was asked why DeSantis reacted that way when his stance has long been that masking is an individual choice. She responded, as the governor said, you can wear them if you want but theres no evidence they make any difference. That has been clear for a long time, and the data informed our states official guidance. DeSantis and state Surgeon General Joseph Ladapo announced their own COVID-19 guidance last week, pushing back against what they called unscientific corporate masking. Ladapo claimed that there has never been any evidence that masks have been effective, a position that public health experts said was dangerous. First of all, its a complete, absolute lie about masks having no scientific evidence and value, Dr. Aileen Marty, an infectious disease physician of the medical school at Florida International University, told the Sentinel last week. Weve got 120 years worth of data showing that masks are valuable in halting transmitted respiratory infections. Political Pulse Weekly Get latest updates political news from Central Florida and across the state. > Kenneth Alexander, Nemours chief of infectious diseases in Orlando, agreed. From a guy who has watched people die of COVID, I still wear my mask, Alexander said Tuesday. Theyll say masks dont work. ... Thats like saying seat belts dont work. Youre right, seat belts dont save everybodys life every time. They do most of the time. And so seat belts, taken as a whole are a good thing. Same for masks, masks do work. Do they reduce the risk to zero? No. In a statement to WFLA-TV Tampa, Hillsborough Schools Superintendent Addison Davis said, It is a student and parents choice to protect their health in a way they feel most appropriate. We are proud of the manner in which our students represented themselves and our school district. Advertisement A DeSantis Democratic rival for governor, Agriculture Commissioner Nikki Fried, was quick to respond as well. As governor, I wont bully students, she wrote on Twitter, as she shared a video of the governor and the teenagers. You can judge someones character by how they treat waiters. And high school students. Shame on [DeSantis]. U.S. Rep. Charlie Crist, another Democrat running to unseat DeSantis, also responded. Young people in our state deserve to be treated with respect, not dunked on by a heartless, egotistical Governor with a political agenda, he wrote on Twitter. Staff writer Kate Santich contributed to this report. Gainesville, TX (76240) Today Thunderstorms - some may contain locally heavy rain, especially this evening. A few storms may be severe. Low around 65F. Winds SE at 10 to 20 mph. Chance of rain 70%. 1 to 2 inches of rain expected.. Tonight Thunderstorms - some may contain locally heavy rain, especially this evening. A few storms may be severe. Low around 65F. Winds SE at 10 to 20 mph. Chance of rain 70%. 1 to 2 inches of rain expected. Vladimir Putins invasion of Ukraine last week happened to coincide with my reading of David McCulloughs Pulitzer Prize-winning biography of Harry S. Truman, our 33rd president. Clearly, Russia has been a problem for a long time. Near the end of World War II, Franklin Roosevelt and Winston Churchill struggled to convince Josef Stalin to comply with previous agreements about the shape of the post-war world. With his troops deployed in Germany, Poland, Czechoslovakia, Yugoslavia, Hungary and elsewhere, Stalin saw expansionist opportunities for the Soviet Union, and he was determined to take advantage of them. In the late 40s, President Truman confronted few problems that caused him more anxiety and frustration than the U.S.S.R., and few projects took more of his energy than finding ways to prevent its expansion. Truman, a plain-spoken Missourian, said the Russians were like people from across the tracks whose manners were very bad. For the next four decades, world politics revolved around the Wests resistance to the spread of communism and the Soviet Unions determination to expand its hegemony, especially in Eastern Europe. An economic interpretation of this conflict sees a battle between communism and free enterprise, but its more than that. Roosevelt and Truman recognized that the Soviet system had no tolerance for the things that Americans value most: democracy, free elections, freedom of speech, freedom of religion, freedom of the press, self-determination, a right to privacy. Stalin and the Soviet Union were to be resisted. He was an autocrat who maintained power with coercive secret police, gulags, torture and terror. In the 1930s, Stalin, in an effort to subdue Ukraine, engineered a famine that resulted in the deaths of 4 million Ukrainians. The U.S. has its faults. We are not perfect. But we were always on the right side of this struggle between democracy and autocracy. Fortunately, the Soviet Union collapsed in 1991. Alas, it is trying to make a comeback, in the person of Vladimir Putin. Quality journalism doesn't happen without your help Support local news coverage and the people who report it by subscribing to the Corvallis Gazette-Times. In 1946, President Truman said that lasting peace depended on the three great powers Britain, Russia and the U.S. Further, the great powers must also have the confidence of the smaller nations. Russia hasnt the confidence of the small nations, nor has Britain. We have. At present the mantle for resistance against autocracy has fallen upon the shoulders of one of those smaller nations, Ukraine. Unfortunately, Ukraines young President Volodymyr Zelenskyy got a rocky introduction to modern American democracy. He can be forgiven if he got the impression that President Donald Trump was conditioning military aid to Ukraine on Zelenskyys cooperation in an investigation of one of Trumps political rivals. And while Zelenskyy courageously leads the resistance to Putin, our still-popular ex-president finds so much to admire in Putin that Russian state television is running subtitled clips of him praising the Russian autocrat. Further, our commitment to democracy does not include a willingness to provide American troops to fight the Russians over Ukraine. In lieu of troops, the U.S. and its European partners are applying increasingly rigorous sanctions. But the sanctions are largely half-measures, applied carefully out of concern for the European and American economies. Few think that sanctions will stop Putin and, indeed, they have not. So while Ukrainian patriots and heroes are taking to the streets to fight for what we believe in, Biden must gingerly inform Americans that the war in Ukraine may cost us at the pump. How many times have we heard that phrase during this crisis? Still, withholding U.S. troops is probably the right decision at this point. But autocrats like Putin rarely respond to soft power. Force is the only language they understand. War is a great evil, but its not the worst evil. Sometimes only force can prevent fear, misery, hunger, torture, genocide, totalitarianism. If history is any guide, pure pacifism is unrealistic. Peace is rarely achieved through diplomacy and sanctions. The crisis in Ukraine is a test of our commitment and will to maintain democracy. May we show as much resolve as the Ukrainians. As President Truman put it, I want peace and Im willing to fight for it. John M. Crisp, an op-ed columnist for Tribune News Service, lives in Georgetown, Texas, and can be reached at jcrispcolumns@gmail.com. Love 0 Funny 0 Wow 0 Sad 0 Angry 0 Oscar Isaac stands on the bridge of the Halcyon starcruiser inside Star Wars: Galactic Starcruiser at Walt Disney World (David Roark / Courtesy photo) Actor Oscar Isaac has visited Star Wars: Galactic Starcruiser, the new immersive experience at Walt Disney World. The company released a video of Isaac taking a tour of the Halcyon starship by Scott Trowbridge, portfolio creative executive for Walt Disney Imagineering. Isaac, who played pilot Poe Damron in three Star Wars films, remarked on the attractions authentic look. Advertisement It looks like the sets that I was on. I dont see the seams anywhere. It feels a little bit strange. Where are the cameras? Are we shooting a scene here? he said. The video includes his stops on the ships bridge, lightsaber-training pod, engineering room and Sublight Lounge, the bar off of the atrium. Advertisement I think Poe Damron would spend a lot of time in this room, he said. Isaac is starring in the Moon Knight miniseries that debuts on Disney+ this month. He also appears at Damron inside the Star Wars: Rise of the Resistance ride at Disneys Hollywood Studios theme park. In addition, Disney has released a photo of Walt Disney Co. CEO Bob Chapek visiting the bridge alongside Jerome Smith, general manager of Star Wars: Galactic Starcruiser. Both Isaac and Chapek checked out the Halcyon in the days before the official grand opening of Galactic Starcruiser on Monday. Email me at dbevil@orlandosentinel.com. Want more theme park news? Subscribe to the Theme Park Rangers newsletter at orlandosentinel.com/newsletters or the Theme Park Rangers podcast at orlandosentinel.com/travel/attractions/theme-park-rangers-podcast. Gillette, WY (82718) Today Some clouds this evening will give way to mainly clear skies overnight. Low 38F. Winds SW at 5 to 10 mph.. Tonight Some clouds this evening will give way to mainly clear skies overnight. Low 38F. Winds SW at 5 to 10 mph. The West cutting Russia off the Society for Worldwide Interbank Financial Telecommunication or SWIFT and imposing heavy sanctions are unlikely to produce a significant impact on Viet Nam and Vietnamese businesses, said industry experts and banking regulators. "As Russia and Ukraine account for less than 2 per cent of the global economy, the ongoing conflict likely won't hurt the world's economic recovery in a significant manner. However, cutting Russia off from SWIFT will hurt its ability to export oil, and in effect drive global oil prices up slowing down the recovery process," said Tu Tiet Phat, director-general of Asia Commercial Bank (ACB). Export-import turnover between Viet Nam and Russia was US$35 billion ($4 billion with Ukraine) during 2021, according to a report by the Ministry of Industry and Trade. As Russia isn't among their key markets, Vietnamese firms are not too severely affected. In addition, firms can still find ways to do transactions via a third-party bank, though this is slower and more costly, according to experts. Viet Nam's main exports to Russia include seafood, vegetables, fruits, nuts, coffee, tea, pepper, rice, handicrafts, rubber, wood furniture, footwear and electronics. The Southeast Asian country imports from Russia large amounts of wheat, fertiliser, oil and chemicals, pharmaceutical supplies, steel and heavy machinery. Rising global oil prices, however, would hurt Viet Nam's effort to ramp up its economic activities, said Prof. Quoc Phuong. "Prior to the conflict, the tension between Russia and Ukraine had driven oil price to over $100 per barrel. With no end in sight, there is no telling how high oil prices will go," he said. Phuong advised the Government to preemptively cut back on fees and taxes to keep gas prices in the domestic market down while making preparations for different scenarios. "We won't be seeing major direct impacts on Viet Nam's economy in the short run but we should be very concerned over rising oil prices and the long-term effects of sanctions imposed on Russia," said Phuong. Truong inh Hoe, general-secretary of the Vietnam Association of Seafood Exporters and Producers (VASEP), however, claimed the conflict would hurt Vietnamese seafood exporters as European retailers would find it difficult to conduct business in Russia and Ukraine. Hoe said Vietnamese firms must act now to diversify their markets and make financial preparations as transportation costs would likely soar even higher. The timing was also bad as Vietnamese seafood exports to Russia had been on the rise, growing by 21 per cent year-on-year in 2021, and started to gain popularity among consumers. Prof. Vu Thanh Liem, former deputy director of the General Statistics Office of Vietnam, said the conflict was not without opportunities for Vietnamese firms to work with. Liem said Russia had been making an economic pivot in recent years, away from the European markets and towards Asian markets, of which Viet Nam is a major one. Heavy sanctions on Russia would also disrupt supply in Western markets and open doors for Vietnamese suppliers, especially in food and energy. Viet Nam, as well as other Asian economies, might be able to take this opportunity to ramp up trade with not just Russia but other affected economies, he said. VNS KIRKLAND, Wash., March 01, 2022 (GLOBE NEWSWIRE) -- The following is an open letter from Alaska Structures, Inc. At Alaska Structures, our thoughts and prayers are with the brave men and women in Ukraine fighting for democracy and the sovereignty of their country, and those fleeing the unprovoked military attack from Russia. Russian War on Ukraine - Neighboring Countries Brace for Potential Conflict and Ukrainian Refugee Crisis With Russia's invasion of Ukraine, Europe and Allied Forces are on high alert should the conflict escalate into neighboring countries. During a recent press conference, NATO Secretary-General Jens Stoltenberg stated, "NATO will continue to take all necessary measures to protect and defend all Allies, including by reinforcing the eastern part of the Alliance." After Russia's illegal annexation of Crimea in 2014 and following the 2016 Warsaw Summit, NATO established four multinational battlegroups in Estonia, Latvia, Lithuania, and Poland. Led by the United States, the UK, Canada, and Germany, the combat-ready battlegroups strengthened NATO's deterrence and defense in eastern and southeastern Europe. Despite efforts to pursue diplomacy, the Russian War on Ukraine has prompted the consideration of enhancing defense capabilities with additional NATO battlegroups to deter further Russian territorial aggression, including acts of aggression against NATO members bordering Russia. Should additional battlegroups be needed to strengthen force protection and improve deterrence, NATO and Allied Forces will need rapidly deployable military shelters to quickly establish military base camps and forward operating sites (F.O.S.). A Ukrainian Refugee Crisis in the Making Fierce and creative Ukrainian resistance has slowed invading Russian forces. Should the conflict intensify, and the invasion overtakes Kyiv and other large cities, the displacement of hundreds of thousands to millions of Ukrainians could quickly overwhelm borders and existing immigrant facilities in neighboring countries. According to Romania's interior minister, Lucian Bode, "We are currently analyzing how many refugee camps we can install in a relatively short time: 10, 12, 24 hours." The makings for a migrant crisis not seen since World War II exist. Poland, Romania, Hungary, Slovakia, and Moldova have agreed to receive and accommodate Ukrainian citizens fleeing Russia's attack. With the possibility of long-term displacement, Ukrainians will need temporary housing capable of withstanding the cold winter weather, food, clothing, as well as education and healthcare services while seeking resettlement. To avoid a Ukrainian refugee crisis, the U.N. Refugee Agency is asking the international community for $190 million in humanitarian assistance to help meet the needs of 1.8 million people, as outlined in the 2022 Humanitarian Response Plan for Ukraine. Military Shelters Created an "Instant City" during the Afghanistan Humanitarian Crisis in 2021 There are lessons from recent refugee emergencies that apply here. In response to the Afghanistan Humanitarian Crisis, in less than one week's time, a flight line at Germany's Ramstein Air Base was transformed into an "instant city" capable of housing up to 12,000 Afghanistan evacuees at a time. Ramstein Air Base is the headquarters for the U.S. Air Force in Europe and NATO's Allied Air Command. More than 350 military shelters from Alaska Structures were allocated from War Reserve Material (WRM) stocks and used as the U.S. European Command's (EUCOM) primary evacuation hub for Operation Allies Refuge, supporting the largest and most complex humanitarian evacuations in history. The "instant city" provided families from Afghanistan with temporary housing, food, water, clothing, hygiene facilities, medical tents, worship areas, and screening facilities before they could be transported and resettled to other locations. Contact Gerrit Boyle Alaska Structures, Inc. International: +1-907-344-1565 Toll-Free (U.S. and Canada): +1-888-370-1800 gb@aks.com Related Images forward-operating-site-in-eastern.jpg Forward Operating Site in Eastern Europe A photo accompanying this announcement is available at https://www.globenewswire.com/NewsRoom/AttachmentNg/8fb8b5e8-18ec-46e9-b82d-6f1c61a39a4b Washington, March 01, 2022 (GLOBE NEWSWIRE) -- Tomorrow, Administrator Isabella Casillas Guzman, head of the U.S. Small Business Administration, will visit a small manufacturing plant in Baltimore to highlight the positive impact of President Bidens American Rescue Plan Act and other Biden-Harris Administration policies have had on Americas local economies. Administrator Guzman and Associate Administrator of the Office for Entrepreneurial Development, Mark Madrid, will join the U.S. Black Chambers, Inc. for a visit. The U.S. Black Chambers, Inc. is one of 51 Hubs within the SBAs Community Navigator Program an American Rescue Plan initiative designed to reduce barriers faced by underserved entrepreneurs when attempting to access programs needed to recover from an economic crisis or to start and grow their business. The program provides $100 million in funding to the Hub organizations to work with community groups (spokes) to improve access to government resources. Administrator Guzman will highlight significant policy achievements made by the Biden-Harris Administration in its first year, including the American Rescue Plan and the Infrastructure Investment and Jobs Act . Thanks in large part to these programs and more, entrepreneurship has rebounded, and American small businesses will soon have access to new contracting opportunities to help rebuild our nations infrastructure, move goods faster to market, and strengthen our supply chains. This visit marks the Administrators third official visit to Baltimore, MD. In her first year in office, Administrator Guzman has visited 26 states and U.S. territories, including Puerto Rico, and over 41 cities. Media is invited to join the tour of the manufacturing facility but must RSVP by 9:00 a.m. ET, Wednesday, March 2nd for credentialing. WHEN: Wednesday, March 2, 2022 10:30 a.m. to 11:30 a.m. WHERE: Made in BMore Clothing EMAGE Center 2132 W. North Avenue Baltimore, MD 21217 WHO: Isabella Casillas Guzman , U.S. Small Business Administration , U.S. Small Business Administration Mark Madrid , U.S. Small Business Administration , U.S. Small Business Administration Ron Busby , President, U.S. Black Chambers, Inc. , President, U.S. Black Chambers, Inc. Rasheed Aziz , Owner, EMAGE Center , Owner, EMAGE Center Debra Keller Greene , Chair, Greater Baltimore Black Chamber of Commerce , Chair, Greater Baltimore Black Chamber of Commerce Kendrick Tilghman , President, Greater Baltimore Black Chamber of Commerce , President, Greater Baltimore Black Chamber of Commerce Scott Phillips, President, N Scott Phillips Consulting, Inc. WHY: The SBA is highlighting the positive economic impact of President Bidens American Rescue Plan, and the Infrastructure and Jobs Act and they benefit small businesses. MEDIA RSVP: Please RSVP to SBA Press Secretary Christina Carr at Christina.Carr@sba.gov with the reporters name and press outlet. Space is limited, so early responses are recommended. ### About the U.S. Small Business Administration The U.S. Small Business Administration helps power the American dream of business ownership. As the only go-to resource and voice for small businesses backed by the strength of the federal government, the SBA empowers entrepreneurs and small business owners with the resources and support they need to start, grow or expand their businesses, or recover from a declared disaster. It delivers services through an extensive network of SBA field offices and partnerships with public and private organizations. To learn more, visit www.sba.gov. HAMILTON, Ontario, March 01, 2022 (GLOBE NEWSWIRE) -- Reliq Health Technologies Inc. (TSXV:RHT or OTCQB:RQHTF) (Reliq or the Company), a rapidly growing global healthcare technology company that specializes in developing innovative Virtual Care solutions for the multi-billion dollar Healthcare market, today announced that the consolidated financial statements (Financial Statements) and Managements Discussion and Analysis (MD&A) for the quarter ended December 31, 2021, are now available on the Companys profile on SEDAR (www.sedar.com). We have now filed our quarterly financials for Q2 Fiscal Year 2022, said Dr. Lisa Crossley, CEO of Reliq Health Technologies, Inc. The first two quarters of FY2022 were a period of rapid growth for the Company. Revenues for the period from July 1 December 31, 2021 were $3,748,292 as compared to $843,449 for the period from January 1 June 30, 2021, an increase of over 344%. Gross Margin improved to 74% in Q2 FY2022 as compared to 58% for FY2021. Despite the dramatic resurgence of COVID (Omicron variant) in Q2 FY2022, the Company reached a revenue run rate of $2 Million/month as of December 31, 2021, where run rate represents the number of subscribers onboarded as of the given date. Revenue run rate is a leading indicator of revenue that is expected to be recognized within the following two to three months as patients complete training and adapt to using the platform consistently in order to reach the required compliance thresholds. As previously disclosed, during the pandemic the Company extended flexible payment terms to clients and received similarly generous payment terms from our key suppliers. Receivables older than one year are expected to be paid in full by our clients by the end of March 2022 and the Company expects to collect all other receivables in a timely manner going forward now that most of our clients have resumed normal operations. The Company is also pleased to provide the following corporate update. 1. Highlights from Q2 FY2022 Quarterly Financial Statements During the period ending December 31, 2021 and subsequent, the Company: Increased sales before returns quarter-over-quarter by 36% to $2,183,075 relative to the previous quarter (Q1 FY 2022 - $1,608,168). Increased gross profits quarter-over-quarter to $1,583,702 in Q2 FY2022 (Q1 FY2022: $1,159,024). Gross Margin for the quarter was 74%, a significant increase as compared to FY 2021 (58%). Increased working capital significantly to $5,921,491 as at December 31, 2021 (June 30, 2021 - $939,933). Reduced current liabilities to $945,347 as at December 31, 2021 (June 30, 2021 - $2,238,209). After adjusting for non-cash expenses including share-based compensation and accretion and one-time non-reoccurring expenses including legal fees related to the settlement of the proposed Class Action claim and expenses relating to prior quarters, the Companys adjusted EBITDA (gain) for Q2 FY2022 was $48,062 (Q2 FY2021 adjusted EBITDA (loss): $1,684,491). Signed implementation plan agreements with current clients that are expected to add over 10,000 new patients to the platform in Calendar Year 2022, leveraging the new Medicare Remote Therapeutic Monitoring billing codes for patients with musculoskeletal or respiratory conditions. Five new billing codes for RTM were introduced on January 1, 2022, allowing clinicians to provide ongoing in-home treatment and monitoring for patients with musculoskeletal and respiratory conditions. RTM involves having patients use medical devices that collect non-physiological data such as therapy/medication adherence and therapy/medication response, and also allows for patient self-reporting of key metrics such as pain level, mobility, nighttime waking due to breathing difficulties, etc. The new RTM codes have increased Reliqs target patient population by over 20 million newly eligible patients to over 57 Million total eligible patients. Signed an agreement with Data Soft Logic (DSL) to provide iUGO Care to DSLs existing and new clients. Data Soft Logic currently has over 600 home health and hospice care agency clients who work with more than 1,000 primary care physicians to provide care to over 500,000 Medicare and Medicaid patients. Reliq expects to begin onboarding DSLs patients in Q2 Calendar Year 2022 and to ramp up to adding over 50,000 new patients per year each year beginning in 2023, at an estimated revenue of $60 per patient per month. Signed an agreement with Cognizant to leverage Cognizants Care Management resources for future deployments of Reliqs iUGO Care software to large scale clients. Cognizant provides services to 300+ health systems and over 347,000 care providers who together provide care to over 200 million lives globally. The agreement with Cognizant will allow Reliq to scale to new levels and provide even the largest healthcare organizations with confidence that the Company can meet the needs of their patient populations, no matter the size, allowing Reliq to access new opportunities to provide virtual care to much larger patient populations both within the US and globally. Signed contracts with 39 new US primary care physician practices and 10 other healthcare organizations in specialties including hospice care, nephrology, orthopedics, long term care, cardiology and care management. Signed contracts with 9 new home health agencies in the US. 2. Overview of Revenue Run Rate, Revenue Recognition and Guidance Despite the dramatic resurgence of COVID (Omicron variant) in Q2 FY2022, the Company reached a revenue run rate of $2 Million per month or $24 million per year at the end of the quarter (December 31, 2021). Revenue run rate is calculated using the number of subscribers as of the given timepoint and is an indication of the revenue expected over the next year, excluding new clients and patients subsequently announced within the given year. New patient revenue is typically recognized after the second or third full month that a patient is on the platform when patients typically reach the required compliance thresholds. Therefore, revenue run rate is a leading indicator of revenue which is expected to be recognized approximately three months later. Revenue run rate differs from revenue guidance in that guidance includes expected growth over the year. 3. Outlook for Calendar Year 2022 The Company expects to generate $40 Million CAD in revenue in Calendar Year 2022. 4. Date for Webinar to Review Q3 FY2022 Financials The Companys consolidated financial statements for Q3 FY2022 (quarter ending March 31, 2022) are due to be filed on or before May 30, 2022. The webinar to review the financial statements will be scheduled on or before May 31, 2022. About Reliq Health Reliq Health Technologies is a rapidly growing global healthcare technology company that develops innovative Virtual Care solutions for the multi-billion dollar Healthcare market. Reliqs powerful iUGO Care platform supports care coordination and community-based healthcare. iUGO Care allows complex patients to receive high quality care at home, improving health outcomes, enhancing quality of life for patients and families and reducing the cost of care delivery. iUGO Care provides real-time access to remote patient monitoring data, allowing for timely interventions by the care team to prevent costly hospital readmissions and ER visits. Reliq Health Technologies trades on the TSX Venture under the symbol RHT and on the OTC as RQHTF. ON BEHALF OF THE BOARD Dr. Lisa Crossley CEO and Director For further information please contact: Company Contact Investor Relations at ir@reliqhealth.com US Investor Relations Contact Investor Relations Lytham Partners, LLC Ben Shamsian New York | Phoenix 646-829-9701 shamsian@lythampartners.com 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 release. Cautionary Statements Regarding Forward Looking Information Certain statements in this press release constitute forward-looking statements, within the meaning of applicable securities laws. All statements that are not historical facts, including without limitation, statements regarding future estimates, plans, programs, forecasts, projections, objectives, assumptions, expectations or beliefs of future performance, are "forward-looking statements". We caution you that such "forward-looking statements" involve known and unknown risks and uncertainties that could cause actual and future events to differ materially from those anticipated in such statements. Forward-looking statements include, but are not limited to, statements with respect to commercial operations, including technology development, anticipated revenues, projected size of market, and other information that is based on forecasts of future results, estimates of amounts not yet determinable and assumptions of management. Reliq Health Technologies Inc. (the "Company") does not intend and does not assume any obligation, to update these forward-looking statements except as required by law. These forward-looking statements involve risks and uncertainties relating to, among other things, technology development and marketing activities, the Company's historical experience with technology development, uninsured risks. Actual results may differ materially from those expressed or implied by such forward-looking statements. SOURCE: Reliq Health Technologies Inc. VANCOUVER, Wash., March 01, 2022 (GLOBE NEWSWIRE) -- ConMet eMobility and Carrier Transicold, pioneers in zero-emission transport refrigeration technology, and Sysco Corp., the global leader in foodservice distribution, today announced that they have entered into an agreement to supply Sysco with new zero-emission* refrigeration systems as part of a commercial evaluation program. The new system combines the ConMet PreSet Plus eHub with Carrier's Vector refrigeration unit to provide fleets a zero-emission solution for commercial trailers. Regenerative energy created by the lightweight, modular, in-wheel motors of the eHub system power the electric Vector refrigeration unit. An initial delivery of this advanced system took place earlier this year at Sysco's Riverside, California, operating site, a location at the forefront of the company's electrification efforts. "Sysco is proud to partner with ConMet and Carrier to deploy their innovative, zero-emission refrigeration solutions," said Neil Russell, Sysco's senior vice president of corporate affairs and chief communications officer. "This is an important step in advancing our overall emission reduction strategy while helping our industry move toward more sustainable transportation solutions and ensuring critical access to reliable temperature-control technology." This collaboration aligns with the visions for each of the companies, which are working toward a more sustainable future. ConMet is committed to sustainable manufacturing while developing innovative products that help customers meet their own environmental goals. Carrier offers a comprehensive, integrated and growing suite of sustainability solutions and services that allow customers to reach their energy and decarbonization goals. Sysco has set a science-based climate goal to reduce emissions by 2030, which includes the electrification of 35% of its U.S.-based fleet. "We are proud to partner with Sysco, whose vision for the future aligns with ConMet's," said Marc Trahand, vice president and general manager of ConMet eMobility. "Working with our customers to develop and deploy transformative technologies like the eHub system is central to our mission. We strive to increase the efficiency and effectiveness of our customers' businesses while helping to secure our planet's future." "Electric technology can deliver lifecycle cost benefits for sustainable transport refrigeration units and supports Carrier's goal of reducing our customers' carbon footprint one gigaton by 2030," said Mike Noyes, vice president and general manager, Truck Trailer Americas, Carrier Transicold. "We're pleased that companies like Sysco see the benefits of performance and fuel savings for themselves." *Exclusive of potential refrigerant impact About ConMet ConMet, a division of Amsted Industries, is a leading global supplier of wheel hubs, aluminum castings, and structural plastics to original equipment manufacturers and aftermarket channels in the commercial vehicle industry. Founded in 1964, ConMet innovation has been critical in designing, engineering, and manufacturing revolutionary technologies for trucks and trailers. Today, ConMet products are standard equipment on most heavy-duty vehicles in North America and have a growing footprint worldwide. ConMet eMobility was established in 2020 to address the needs and challenges of clean energy technology. The growing team has years of experience in electrical engineering, system controls, battery science, and more. Together with the unmatched wheel-end expertise and support of ConMet, ConMet eMobility is enabling the development of zero-emission commercial vehicles, capturing and regenerating the kinetic energy that would otherwise go wasted. About Sysco Sysco is the global leader in selling, marketing and distributing food products to restaurants, healthcare and educational facilities, lodging establishments and other customers who prepare meals away from home. Its family of products also includes equipment and supplies for the foodservice and hospitality industries. With more than 58,000 associates, the company operates 343 distribution facilities worldwide and serves more than 650,000 customer locations. For fiscal 2021 that ended July 3, 2021, the company generated sales of more than $51 billion. Information about Sysco's CSR program, including Sysco's 2021 Corporate Social Responsibility Report, can be found at www.sysco.com/csr2021report. About Carrier Transicold Carrier Transicold helps improve transport and shipping of temperature-controlled cargoes with a complete line of equipment and services for refrigerated transport and cold chain visibility. For more than 50 years, Carrier Transicold has been an industry leader, providing customers around the world with advanced, energy-efficient and environmentally sustainable container refrigeration systems and generator sets, direct-drive and diesel truck units, and trailer refrigeration systems. Carrier Transicold is a part of Carrier Global Corporation (NYSE: CARR), the leading global provider of healthy, safe, sustainable and intelligent building and cold chain solutions. For more information, visit www.Transicold.Carrier.com.. Follow Carrier on Twitter:@SmartColdChainand on LinkedIn at Carrier Transicold Truck Trailer Refrigeration. For more information contact: Megan Vincent, ConMet: Marketing@conmet.com Greg Brostowicz, Carrier: Greg.Brostowicz@carrier.com Related Images Image 1: ConMet eMobility-Sysco Trailer ConMet eMobility-Sysco Trailer This content was issued through the press release distribution service at Newswire.com. Attachment Washington, March 01, 2022 (GLOBE NEWSWIRE) -- Tonight, President Biden delivered his first State of the Union Address to the nation calling for increased funding to our nations Historically Black Colleges and Universities (HBCUs). In recognition of the Thurgood Marshall College Fund's continued advocacy for enhanced support to aid HBCU students in their efforts to persist towards graduation, President Biden called for a $2,000 increase to the maximum Pell Grant award which serves as a financial lifeline for many students TMCF proudly serves. President Biden also acknowledged the vital role that HBCUs, Tribal Colleges and Universities (TCUs) and Minority Serving Institutions (MSIs) play in helping underrepresented students achieve economic mobility, particularly in STEM fields. Importantly, he recognized that our institutions have historically received fewer resources than other colleges and universities, thereby undermining our ability to grow and support more students. Cognizant of these shortcomings, TMCF appreciates President Bidens request that Congress expand existing institutional aid grants to our schools. As a U.S. Senator, and Vice President of the United States, President Biden has remained a steadfast supporter of our nations HBCUs. Tonight, President Biden has once again demonstrated his commitment to ensuring HBCUs continue to thrive and provide access to a quality education for all regardless of a students social-economic circumstances. said Dr. Harry L. Williams, President and CEO of the Thurgood Marshall College Fund. As the nation continues to navigate both the COVID-19 pandemic and conflict abroad, I am delighted to hear that HBCUs remain a top priority for the Biden Administration. TMCF looks forward to our continued, bipartisan engagement with members of Congress and the Biden Administration to further build the capacity of our nations HBCUs. Pune, India, March 01, 2022 (GLOBE NEWSWIRE) -- The global Turbocompressor Market size was valued at USD 4.92 billion in 2020. The market is projected to rise from USD 5.05 billion in 2021 to USD 7.77 billion by 2028 at a CAGR of 6.4% during the forecast period 2021-2028. Fortune Business Insights has deep-dived into these insights in its latest research report titled, Turbocompressor Market, 2021-2028. According to the study, turbocompressors are highly sought-after to eliminate the pressure surge in the injected gas. The machine has gained ground in the oil & gas industry and natural gas development. Soaring demand for natural gas will encourage leading companies to invest in the portfolio. However, the onslaught of the COVID-19 pandemic could challenge stakeholders vying to expand their penetration. Request to Sample PDF Brochure: https://www.fortunebusinessinsights.com/enquiry/request-sample-pdf/turbocompressor-market-101400 COVID-19 Impact Shutdown of Industrial Facilities to Dent Industry Outlook The COVID-19 outbreak did not bode well for the business forecast following the shutdown of manufacturing facilities and lack of funds. Besides, supply chain disruptions and the imposition of lockdown rules further challenged the growth prospect. Prominently, delays in procuring raw materials caused major disruptions. However, smart city projects across advanced and emerging economies are expected to offset the impact of the pandemic. Major Players Profiled in the Market Report: Ingersoll Rand (Ireland) Atlas Copco (Sweden) Elliot Group (U.S.) Howden (Scotland) Kawasaki Heavy Industries, Ltd. (Japan) Kobe Steel (Japan) MAN (Germany) Mitsubishi Heavy Industries (Japan) GE (U.S.) Sulzer (Switzerland) SKF (Sweden) Siemens Energy (Germany) To get to know more about the short-term and long-term impact of COVID-19 on this market, please visit: https://www.fortunebusinessinsights.com/industry-reports/turbocompressor-market-101400 Segments Type, Stage, Application, and Region Are Studied Based on type, the market is segmented into axial turbocompressor and centrifugal turbocompressor. In terms of stage, the industry is segregated into single-stage and multi-stage segments. With respect to application, the market is fragmented into power generation, oil & gas, automotive, water & wastewater, mining, chemical and others. On the basis of geography, the market includes North America, Asia Pacific, Europe, the Middle East and Africa and Latin America. Report Coverage The report includes quantitative and qualitative analysis to provide a birds-eye-view of the global market. The report also deep-dives into top-down and bottom-up approaches to forecast market size, revenues, and growth of major players in the landscape. The use of primary sources, such as interviews with key opinion leaders, has boosted the dynamics and insights with respect to trends. The report includes secondary sources, including SEC filings, press releases, annual reports, and paid databases. Drivers and Restraints Commercialization Trend to Boost Product Uptake Stakeholders expect commercialization to foster the turbocompressor market growth across advanced and emerging economies. Notably, research activities are expected to gain ground for real-time data monitoring and advanced process control features. To illustrate, in October 2021, Atlas Copco compressors exhibited a host of technologies such as aeration technologies and a range of blowers for wastewater treatment. Moreover, the machine has become trendier across end-user sectors, including oil & gas, chemical, and power generation. Industry players are expected to bank on the expansion of air-conditioning, ventilation, and heating in electric hybrid vehicles. However, the prevalence of substitute products as well as rigorous environmental regulations could mar the market forecast. Leading companies are expected to grapple with changing dynamics in new compressor technologies. Ask for Customization: https://www.fortunebusinessinsights.com/enquiry/customization/turbocompressor-market-101400 Regional Insights Technological Advancements to Augur Well for North America Market The U.S. and Canada are likely to emerge as happy destinations due to the presence of leading companies and technological advancements. Specifically, municipal wastewater systems in Canada are expected to have served around 86% of the population in the country. The North America market size accounted for USD 1.58 billion in 2020 and will witness a similar trend during the forecast period. The turbocompressor market share in Europe will observe an appreciable gain in the wake of adoption of smart water systems. Stakeholders expect the U.K., Germany, and France to spearhead the installation of wastewater plants. To illustrate, in July 2020, H+E GmbH in Germany, Stuttgart secured the contract for a supply water treatment plant for an automobile manufacturer in Germany. The growth of automotive production is expected to have a notable influence on the regional outlook. Industry participants project the Asia Pacific market forecast to be strong in the wake of rising urbanization and industrialization. The chemical industry is likely to count on the penetration of compressors across India, China, South Korea, and Taiwan. Notably, BASF claims China to be the largest contributor to the chemical market growth, boding well for the business forecast. Competitive Landscape Leading Companies to Infuse Funds into Product Launches to Tap Markets Leading companies are likely to inject funds into product rollouts, mergers & acquisitions, R&D activities, and technological advancements to gain a competitive edge. The prevailing trends indicate major companies could invest in strategic expansion in the ensuing period. Key Industry Developments February 2020 Celeroton rolled out CT-2X turbocompressor to meet the growing demand for pressure ratios and higher mass flow. Celeroton rolled out CT-2X turbocompressor to meet the growing demand for pressure ratios and higher mass flow. July 2020Sulzer expanded its turbocompressors HST 30 range with the addition of two new designs, including HST 30-58-8 and HST 30-38-2 for wastewater applications. Quick Buy Turbocompressor Market Research Report: https://www.fortunebusinessinsights.com/checkout-page/101400 Table of Content Introduction Research Scope Market Segmentation Research Methodology Definitions and Assumptions Executive Summary Market Dynamics Market Drivers Market Restraints Market Opportunities Key Insights Key Emerging Trends For Major Countries Latest Technological Advancement Regulatory Landscape Industry SWOT Analysis Porters Five Forces Analysis Qualitative Analysis Impact of COVID-19 Impact of COVID-19 on the Turbocompressor Market Steps Taken by the Government to Overcome the Impact Key Developments in the Industry in Response to COVID-19 Potential Opportunities and Challenges due to COVID-19 Outbreak Global Turbocompressor Market Analysis (USD Billion), Insights and Forecast, 2017-2028 Key Findings / Summary Market Analysis, Insights and Forecast By Type Centrifugal Turbocompressor Axial Turbocompressor Market Analysis, Insights and Forecast By Stage Single-Stage Multi-Stage Market Analysis, Insights and Forecast By Application Oil & Gas Power Generation Chemical Water & Wastewater Automotive Mining Others Market Analysis, Insights and Forecast By Region North America Latin America Europe Asia Pacific Middle East and Africa TOC Continued.. Speak to Analyst: https://www.fortunebusinessinsights.com/enquiry/speak-to-analyst/turbocompressor-market-101400 Have a Look at Related Research Insights: Offshore Support Vessel (OSV) Market Share & COVID-19 Impact Analysis, By Vessel Type (Anchor Handling Tug Supply Vessel (AHTS), Platform Supply Vessels (PSV), Crew Vessel, Others), By Water Depth (Shallow Water, Deepwater, Ultra-Deepwater), By Application (Oil & Gas, Offshore Wind, Patrolling, Research & Surveying, Others), and Regional Forecast, 2021-2028 Industrial Gas Turbine Market Share & COVID-19 Impact Analysis, By Capacity (1-2MW, 2-5MW, 5-7.5MW, 7.5-10MW, 10-15MW, 15-20MW, 20-30MW, 30-40MW, 40-100MW, 100-150MW, 150-300MW, 300+MW), By Technology (Heavy Duty, Light Industrial, Aeroderivative), By Cycle (Simple Cycle, Combined Cycle), By Sector (Electric Power Utility, Oil & Gas, Manufacturing) and Regional Forecasts, 2021-2028 District Heating Market Share & COVID-19 Impact Analysis, By Heat Source (Coal, Natural Gas, Renewables, Oil & Petroleum Products, and Others), By Plant Type (Boiler, CHP, Others), By Application (Residential, Commercial, Industrial), and Regional Forecast, 2021-2028 Heat Exchanger Market Share & COVID-19 Impact Analysis, By Type (Shell & Tube, Plate & Frame, Air Coolers, Cooling Towers, Others), By Application (Chemicals, Oil & Gas, Power Generation, HVAC, Automobile, Pharmaceuticals, Food & Beverages, Others), and Regional Forecast, 2021-2028 Solid Oxide Fuel Cell Market Share & COVID-19 Impact Analysis, By Application (Stationary, Transport, Portable), By End-User (Commercial, Data Centers, Military & Defense, and Others), and Regional Forecast, 2021-2028 District Cooling Market Share and COVID-19 Impact Analysis, By Technology (Electric Chillers, Absorption Chillers, and Others), By End User (Residential, Industrial, and Commercial), and Regional Forecast, 2021-2028 About Us: Fortune Business Insights delivers accurate data and innovative corporate analysis, helping organizations of all sizes make appropriate decisions. We tailor novel solutions for our clients, assisting them to address various challenges distinct to their businesses. Our aim is to empower them with holistic market intelligence, providing a granular overview of the market they are operating in. Contact Us: Fortune Business Insights Pvt. Ltd. 9th Floor, Icon Tower, Baner - Mahalunge Road, Baner, Pune-411045, Maharashtra, India. Phone: English French Press release Paris La Defense, 2 March 2022 2021 annual results Results at the top of the guidance range: EBITDA at 214.8 million, Net income, Group share at 59 million Complete discontinuation of coal on Reunion Island in 2024: work underway at Albioma Bois-Rouge and favourable decision on the biomass conversion for Albioma Le Gol Successful entry into geothermal energy and acquisition of a second plant in Turkey Albioma's Board of Directors, chaired by Frederic Moyne, met on 2 March 2022 and approved the Group's consolidated financial statements for the 2021 financial year. Thanks to the mobilisation and commitment of our teams, whom I would like to thank, and to the strength of our model, Albioma recorded a good performance in 2021. The Group confirms its role as a key player in the energy transition. We have pursued our efforts to implement our long-term strategy, making great strides towards the complete discontinuation of coal on Reunion Island in favour of biomass in our two thermal power plants. To this end, we are delighted with the decision for the conversion of the Le Gol plant and the extension of its electricity sales contract until 2044, announced by the French Energy Regulation Board (CRE) on 24 February. The year was also marked by the development of our project portfolio, in solar and geothermal energy, where we have just made a new acquisition, backed by a very promising experience at the end of the first year of operation of the Gumuskoy plant in Turkey. More generally, we are proud of our social and environmental performance, which reflects our ambition for growth that respects the environment. said Frederic Moyne, Chairman and Chief Executive Officer of Albioma. Consolidated key figures for 2021 In millions of euros (audited figures) 2021 2020 (reported) Change % Revenue 573.3 506.7 +13% EBITDA 214.8 206.4 +4% Net income 71.3 64.4 +11% Net income, Group share 59.0 55.3 +7% Revenue amounted to 573.3 million, a strong rise compared with the previous year. Stripping out the impact of changes in fuel prices (+33.1 million) and the currency effect related to the decline of the Brazilian real (-2.0 million), it was up by 7%. EBITDA for the year rose by 4% to 214.8 million. It includes, in particular: the full-year effect of the biomass conversion rider for tranche 3 of Albioma Le Moule (ALM 3), the excellent performance by the Brazilian power plants, the contribution of the new geothermal power plant Gumuskoy in Turkey, pricing compensation for additional construction costs (Albioma Galion and Albioma Saint-Pierre) and to settle a dispute with a supplier. Net income, Group share is up 7% to 59.0 million. Highlights Operations: 1 st full year of operation of ALM 3 on biomass after conversion with record availability, full year of operation of ALM 3 on biomass after conversion with record availability, Excellent performance of plants in Brazil, Strong contribution of the first geothermal power plant in Turkey. Development: Significant progress on the conversion of French Overseas plants to 100% biomass: Reunion Island, Bois-Rouge: work underway on Bois-Rouge and extension of the electricity sales agreement until 2043, Reunion Island, Le Gol: decision issued on 24 February for the conversion and the extension of the electricity sales agreement until 2044, Acquisition of a wood pellet production plant in Quebec. 29 MWp of Solar projects secured, Acquisition of a second geothermal power plant in Turkey. France Thermal biomass Good availability of the thermal power plants The availability of thermal power plants in France was 90.5% in 2021 (compared with 91.7% in 2020, excluding ALM3 conversion work). It was impacted by technical incidents at the Bois-Rouge and Le Moule power plants during the first half of the year. Tranche 3 of Le Moule, which has operated 100% on biomass since November 2020, posted an excellent performance in 2021, with a record availability rate of 97.7%. Total electricity production from thermal facilities in Overseas France was down to 1,892 GWh compared with 1,940 GWh in 2020, mainly due to the sharp drop in call rates by EDF on Reunion Island in an unprecedented context of soaring coal and CO 2 prices in 2021. EBITDA for the business was 166.7 million, up 3% compared with 2020 (162.3 million), thanks to the full-year effect of the biomass conversion rider for tranche 3 of Albioma Le Moule and the securing of pricing compensation for Albioma Galion and Albioma Saint-Pierre. Construction and development of projects Continuation of the biomass conversion works of the Albioma Bois-Rouge power plant The conversion of the Bois-Rouge power plant to 100% biomass continued under good conditions in 2021. The complete discontinuation of coal is scheduled for end-2023 and priority will be given to locally-available biomass resources (bagasse, forest wood, lagging waste, etc.) alongside imported traceable (in accordance with the EU timber regulation) and sustainable (FSC and PEFC certification required from our suppliers) biomass, in the form of wood pellets. 100% biomass conversion of the Albioma Le Gol power plant. The Group has taken note of the publication of the decision of the French Energy Regulation Board (CRE) on 24 February 2022 validating the rider to the power purchase agreement and ruling on the cost of the entire project to convert the Albioma Le Gol power plant on Reunion Island to biomass, as well as its extension of operation until 2044. This favourable opinion follows the publication of the ministerial decree of 17 January 2022 establishing the rate of return on capital invested in the conversion work, which was set according to the proposal made by the CRE. Diversification of the Group's sustainable biomass supply sources On 27 December 2021, the Group finalised the acquisition of a wood pellet production plant located in Quebec, Canada. This transaction allows Albioma to diversify its sustainable biomass supply sources, supplementing the portfolio of contracts developed with leading international suppliers. Ideally placed to supply the Group's plants in the French Caribbean, the plant produces SBP-certified pellets from wood waste or low-grade wood from sustainably-certified forests. The transaction also includes a long-term contract for access to 45,000 tonnes of pellet storage capacity at the Port of Quebec, as well as guarantees of raw material supply. The plant is expected to be re-commissioned early in the second half of 2022 and its nominal production capacity of 200,000 tonnes will be reached after additional investments. Solar Power Stable production and commissioning of new plants Electricity production from the Solar power business amounted to 123 GWh, compared to 125 GWh in 2020. This mainly stems from the commissioning of new plants in Reunion Island and Mayotte which partly offset the lower level of sunshine in French Guiana. In addition, on 21 April 2021 the Group sold 9 MWp of non-controlling interests in the companies OTS and Corbiere, which were acquired when it bought Eneco France at the end of 2018. EBITDA for the business totalled 34.5 million in 2021 compared with 34.8 million in 2020. Project development 29 MWp of Solar power projects secured in 2021 The Group continued to develop its solar power business, winning 29 MWp of projects across all regions. In particular, it won an aggregate capacity of 17.4 MWp in the governmental call for tenders in areas not connected to mains electricity. In mainland France, the Group also won 11.7 MWp during the latest calls for tenders. The commissioning of these projects is scheduled for 2023. 2021 Finance Act: changes in the regulatory environment Article 54 sexies of the 2021 Finance Act voted on 16 December 2020 provided for the possibility of revising tariffs downwards for solar power purchase agreements signed between 2006 and 2010. The decrees setting out the terms of application and specifying the level of the reduction were published in November 2021 and are effective from 1 December 2021. The impact on the Group's full-year EBITDA would be 3 million. Only two ground-based projects representing 9 MWp are significantly impacted, the other projects are not affected or are subject to no or inconsiderable reductions. For the two installations which are the most affected, the Group has exercised the safeguard clause with the CRE, as provided for by law, in order to negotiate a more reasonable reduction in the tariff. The activation of this clause suspends the application of the revision for 18 months following the date of application. Provisions for risk and impairment of assets were recognised at 31 December 2021 to take into account the downward revision of revenues if this is confirmed. Brazil Thermal Biomass Excellent operational performances from the plants Production in Brazil was up sharply to 594 GWh after reaching 373 GWh in 2020. This includes the production of the Vale Do Parana plant, which was commissioned at the end of 2020 (172 GWh). Excluding Vale Do Parana, the three existing power plants recorded an excellent performance, with a production of 422 GWh, a clear increase of almost 13% compared to the same period last year (373 GWh). The drought that affected the level of the reservoirs of the hydraulic dams, at their lowest level in 91 years, resulted in a price of BRL 584 per MWh on the spot market between July and September. Part of the production was sold at prices of around BRL 1,500/MWh as part of the emergency regulated auctions set up by the government to offset the production deficit. EBITDA increased to 14.5 million in 2021 compared with 12.0 million in 2020. Project development Securing of energy sales by the Albioma Codora Energia plant On 8 July last year, Albioma Codora Energia won a competitive tender for a new 20-year PPA (power purchase agreement) beginning in 2025, amounting to 64 GWh/year at a guaranteed, inflation-indexed price of BRL 202/MWh. This agreement can be honoured thanks to the increased volume of sugar cane milled in the adjoining sugar refinery and the recovery of energy from vinasse (ethanol distillation residue). Most of the energy produced by Albioma Codora Energia is already sold on the regulated market with long-term, index-linked agreements. Turkey Geothermal Energy Solid performance in line with expectations from the Group's first power plant The Gumuskoy power plant, acquired in January 2021, performed well with an output of 49 GWh, in line with expectations and up from 46 GWh last year. The work to increase production carried out in the second half of the year with the support of the local teams has already led to improvements in recent months and should bear full fruit in 2022. Project development On 14 February 2022, the Group completed the acquisition of a second geothermal power plant (renamed Albioma Kuyucak), in Turkey, becoming its sole shareholder. Commissioned at the end of 2017, the plant (18 MW gross) is based on an operating licence valid until 2042, with scope to extend for an additional 10-year period. It produces electricity from five production shafts for a net exported production at end-2021 of 83 GWh. Until the end of 2022, the plant will benefit from a feed-in tariff of approximately USD 118/MWh and a tariff of USD 105/MWh between 2023 and 2027. The acquisition of this plant strengthens Albioma's entry into the geothermal business. The Group will benefit from the synergies between the neighbouring Gumuskoy and Kuyucak plants and will be able to capitalise on the teams expertise to roll it out in new regions. Capital increase reserved for Group savings plan subscribers Albioma carried out a capital increase reserved for employees, executives and former employees subscribing to the Group savings plan in France and Brazil in May 2021. This new programme is part of the Groups policy of increasing the number of medium- and long-term employee shareholders and provides them with regular opportunities to indirectly invest in Albioma shares on preferential terms. Continued progress in CSR Albioma was included in the top third of the national Gaia index, a benchmark for ESG (environment, social and governance) ratings, which evaluated 390 French mid-sized listed companies in 2021. A member of the index since 2014, Albioma has been awarded a score of 73/100, which has risen steadily over the past two years, with a significant increase of 7 points. Albioma is thus ranked above the average of the national benchmark, evaluated at 59/100. Already distinguished for several years by V.E. (formerly Vigeo Eiris), another SRI (Socially Responsible Investment) reference, the Gaia ranking is the reward for Albioma's strong commitment in terms of governance, social and environmental policy and dialogue with its external stakeholders. The Group also participated for the first year in the CDP Disclosure 2021 assessment (Carbon Disclosure Project) and obtained a score of C, which is equivalent to the average for the renewable energy generation sector. The CDP is a non-profit organisation that has been collecting data from companies worldwide to assess their environmental impact. A strong balance sheet to finance growth Consolidated gross financial debt excluding IFRS16 increased as a result of drawdowns to finance acquisitions and projects under construction (biomass conversion, solar power). It amounted to 971 million at the end of 2021, as compared with 901 million at the end of 2020. Project debt came to 828 million (compared with 789 million at the end of 2020). The net debt / EBITDA ratio over 12 rolling months improved by 4.1 times at 31 December 2021 (compared with 3.8 times at 31 December 2020). The Groups cash and cash equivalents, including security deposits, amounted to 112 million at 31 December 2021, compared with 129 million at 31 December 2020. Consolidated net financial debt was 859 million (compared with 772 million at the end of 2020). The Group still had sufficient resources to pursue its development. Dividends The Board of Directors will submit to the Shareholders' Meeting a proposal to distribute a dividend of 0.84 per share, with an option for 50% to be paid in new shares. This proposal is part of a dividend growth policy with a target payout of around 50% of net income, Group share excluding exceptional items. 2022 objectives For 2021, the Group announces EBITDA objectives of 210 to 220 million and net income, Group share of 52 to 60 million (including a 3 million loss in EBITDA due to the revision of S06-S10 solar contracts under the 2021 Finance Act). Outlook The Group aims to commit between 600-800 million in investments over the period 2021-2025 whilst retaining a sound financial structure. Next on the agenda: revenue for the first quarter of 2022 on 21 April 2022 (before trading). About Albioma Contacts Albioma is an independent renewable energy producer, supporting the energy transition with renewable energies (biomass, solar power and geothermal). The Group operates in the French overseas departments, mainland France, Mauritius, Brazil and Turkey. For 25 years it has been developing a unique partnership with the sugar industry, producing renewable energy from bagasse, a fibrous residue of sugar cane. Albioma is also the leading generator of photovoltaic power overseas, where it constructs and operates innovative projects with integrated storage capabilities, and in mainland France. In 2021, the Group acquired its first geothermal power plant in Turkey. The business is growing in 2022 with a second power plant in the same geographical area. Investors Julien Gauthier +33 (0)1 47 76 67 00 Media Charlotte Neuvy +33 (0)1 47 76 66 65 presse@albioma.com Albioma is listed on the Euronext Paris exchange (compartment B) - Eligible for SRD, PEA, PEAPME and forms part of SBF 120 and CAC Mid 60. The Group is also included in the Gaia-Index, an index for socially responsible midcaps. www.albioma.com Appendices Consolidated income statement In thousands of euros Year ended 31 December 2021 Year ended 31 December 2020 Revenue 573,284 506,728 Purchases (including change in stocks) (183,219) (139,648) Logistics costs (14,953) (13,068) Staff costs (60,371) (56,337) Other operating expenses (116,577) (96,536) Amortisation of electricity and steam supply agreements (6,840) (6,881) Charges to depreciation, amortisation and provisions (80,023) (76,161) Share of net income of equity-accounted companies 3,306 1,636 Current operating income 114,608 119,733 Other operating income and expenses 13,664 2,749 Operating income 128,272 122,482 Cost of financial debt (32,028) (31,767) Other financial income 710 534 Other financial expenses (1,436) (822) Profit before tax 95,517 90,428 Tax charge (24,182) (26,059) Net income for the year from continuing operations 71,335 64,368 Net income from activities held for sale - Net income 71,335 64,368 Net income attributable to: shareholders of Albioma 59,024 55,314 non-controlling interests 12,311 9,054 Basic earnings per share 1.878 1.781 Diluted earnings per share 1.831 1.720 The standard tax rate is 27.6% (effective tax rate restated, if applicable, for the effects of non-deductible impairment losses, excluding Brazil). At 31 December 2020, the rate was 28.3%. Consolidated statement of financial position Assets In thousands of euros 31/12/2021 31/12/2020 Non-current assets Goodwill 15,591 16,884 Intangible assets 90,450 93,501 Right-of-use assets (IFRS 16) 29,099 28,515 Property, plant and equipment 1,384,259 1,283,434 Non-current financial assets 13,072 5,058 Investments in associates 25,667 22,753 Deferred tax assets 2,439 2,472 Other non-current assets 0 99 Total non-current assets 1,560,579 1,452,715 Current assets Stocks and assets in progress 75,798 60,327 Clients 95,810 67,462 Other current operating assets 36,699 44,433 Cash and cash equivalents 107,860 125,792 Total current assets 316,167 298,014 Total assets 1,876,746 1,750,730 Equity and liabilities In thousands of euros 31/12/2021 31/12/2020 Shareholders' equity - Group share Share capital 1,234 1,218 Additional paid-in capital 76,557 64,807 Reserves 409,209 362,784 Translation reserves (43,082) (41,549) Net income for the year 59,024 55,314 Total shareholders' equity, Group share 502,942 442,574 Non-controlling interests 96,544 89,762 Total equity 599,486 532,337 Non-current liabilities Employee benefits 48,612 52,605 Provisions for liabilities 3,392 6,633 Deferred tax liabilities 22,975 18,617 Non-current financial debt 860,174 822,830 Lease liabilities related to right-of-use assets (IFRS 16) 39,982 36,682 Non-current derivatives 32,543 55,023 Total non-current liabilities 1,007,678 992,391 Current liabilities Trade payables 91,328 71,106 Tax and social security liabilities 43,032 42,911 Current financial debt 110,795 79,172 Lease liabilities related to right-of-use assets (IFRS 16) 2,010 1,777 Other current operating liabilities 22,417 31,035 Total current liabilities 269,582 226,002 Total equity and liabilities 1,876,746 1,750,730 Statement of consolidated cash flows In thousands of euros Year ended 31 December 2021 Year ended 31 December 2020 Operating activities Net income for the year attributable to shareholders of Albioma 59,024 55,314 Non-controlling interests 12,311 9,054 Adjustments . Charges to depreciation, amortisation and provisions 86,734 84,272 . Change in deferred tax (3,513) 964 . Share of net income of associates net of dividends received (2,358) 840 . Gains and losses on disposals 220 (64) . Share-based payments 5,056 1,833 . Cost of financial debt 32,028 31,767 . Current tax charge for the year 27,647 25,095 Cash flow from operations 217,148 209,075 Impact of the change in the working capital requirement (14,445) (11,897) Tax paid (28,656) (23,547) Net cash from operating activities 174,047 173,631 Investing activities Acquisitions of non-current assets (162,928) (128,520) Increase in financial assets (715) Sales proceeds from non-current assets 747 201 Acquisitions and disposals of subsidiaries less any cash acquired or sold (24,069) (1,259) Net cash from/(used by) investing activities (186,965) (129,578) Financing activities Capital increases subscribed by non-Group shareholders 5,594 1,377 Change in intra-group cross shareholdings (10,000) 191 Dividends paid to shareholders of Albioma SA (18,418) (14,008) Dividends paid to non-controlling interests (8,958) (7,308) Borrowings and financial debt issued or subscribed 186,848 149,295 Cost of financial debt (31,970) (31,767) Borrowings and financial debt repaid (126,483) (171,324) Other items (18) (2,763) Net cash from/(used by) financing activities (3,405) (76,307) Currency effect on cash and cash equivalents and other changes (1,019) (3,679) Net change in cash and cash equivalents (17,342) (35,933) Opening cash and cash equivalents 125,202 161,135 Closing cash and cash equivalents 107,860 125,202 Change in cash and cash equivalents (17,342) (35,933) Cash 93,164 89,039 Cash equivalents 14,695 36,753 Total cash and cash equivalents 107,860 125,792 Bank overdrafts (590) Net cash and cash equivalents 107,860 125,202 Attachment Zaandam, the Netherlands, March 2, 2022 Ahold Delhaize today publishes its 2021 Annual Report, an integrated report that provides an overview of the Companys financial and ESG performance in 2021. The Annual Report will be on the agenda of the Annual General Meeting of Shareholders (AGM), which will be held on April 13, 2022. Later today the 2022 AGM convocation and meeting agenda will be published. Frans Muller, CEO of Ahold Delhaize, said: I am proud of our performance and what we have been able to achieve in 2021. Despite expectations that the world would return to pre-pandemic life, COVID-19 continued to have a major impact in our brands markets and kept our people very busy. I have enormous appreciation for associates in stores, distribution centers and support offices across Ahold Delhaize and its brands who worked so incredibly hard to serve the needs of customers and communities. As a result, from a business standpoint, Ahold Delhaize went from strength to strength on many fronts during the year. Consumer trends around cooking and eating at home, shopping online and healthy eating have remained and evolved, and convenience continued to grow in importance. Ahold Delhaizes great local brands have geared up their online propositions, delivery services, click and collect locations and brought unique customer experiences to their markets with new loyalty programs to truly enable customers to shop whenever and wherever they want. Over the past year, associates, customers and shareholders have become even more aware of global challenges and the need to accelerate the transition to a sustainable food system. Ahold Delhaize doubled down on its commitment to its climate strategy and brought forward its net-zero carbon emissions target for scope 1 and 2 by 10 years to 2040. Embedded in Ahold Delhaizes belief that what is healthy for people, is healthy for the planet, another sharpened ambition is the increased target for healthy own-brand food sales to be at least 55% by 2025. Looking forward An important milestone for Ahold Delhaize during the year was announcing updates to its long-term strategy Leading Together and key medium-term commitments during its Investor Day in November. This growth and investment plan includes a step up in investments in digital, automation and state-of-the-art infrastructure to drive innovation and support Ahold Delhaizes accelerated growth plans to 2025. The 2021 Annual Report is available here. - Ends - Cautionary notice This communication includes forward-looking statements. All statements other than statements of historical facts may be forward-looking statements. Words and expressions such as 2022, will, have, need, commitment, strategy, target, 2040, belief, ambition, by, 2025, long-term, plan(s), growth or other similar words or expressions are typically used to identify forward-looking statements. Forward-looking statements are subject to risks, uncertainties and other factors that are difficult to predict and that may cause actual results of Koninklijke Ahold Delhaize N.V. (the Company) to differ materially from future results expressed or implied by such forward-looking statements. Such factors include, but are not limited to, the risk factors set forth in the Companys public filings and other disclosures. Forward-looking statements reflect the current views of the Companys management and assumptions based on information currently available to the Companys management. Forward-looking statements speak only as of the date they are made and the Company does not assume any obligation to update such statements, except as required by law. For more information: Press office: +31 88 6595134 / media.relations@aholddelhaize.com Investor relations: +31 88 659 5213 Social media: Instagram: @Ahold-Delhaize | LinkedIn: @Ahold-Delhaize | Twitter: @AholdDelhaize About Ahold Delhaize Ahold Delhaize is one of the worlds largest food retail groups and a leader in both supermarkets and e-commerce. Its family of great local brands serves 55 million customers each week, both in stores and online, in the United States, Europe, and Indonesia. Together, these brands employ more than 413,000 associates in 7,452 grocery and specialty stores and include the top online retailer in the Benelux and the leading online grocers in the Benelux and the United States. Ahold Delhaize brands are at the forefront of sustainable retailing, sourcing responsibly, supporting local communities and helping customers make healthier choices. The companys focus on four growth drivers drive omnichannel growth, elevate healthy and sustainable, cultivate best talent and strengthen operational excellence is helping to fulfil its purpose, achieve its vision and prepare its brands and businesses for tomorrow. Headquartered in Zaandam, the Netherlands, Ahold Delhaize is listed on the Euronext Amsterdam and Brussels stock exchanges (ticker: AD) and its American Depositary Receipts are traded on the over-the-counter market in the U.S. and quoted on the OTCQX International marketplace (ticker: ADRNY). For more information, please visit: www.aholddelhaize.com. Attachment Italy and France: EIB supports strengthening of Europe's semiconductor industry with 600 million loan to STMicroelectronics A loan to finance research and development (R&D) and new innovative production lines of a global semiconductor leader This support is in line with the policy of the European Union and its Member States to strengthen the semiconductor industry in Europe Funding that also contributes to the strategic objectives of European technological sovereignty in the semiconductor industry Paris, March 2, 2022 The European Investment Bank (EIB) is providing significant financial support to STMicroelectronics: a 600 million loan for the semiconductor group's research and development (R&D) and pre-industrialisation activities in Europe. The operation concerns investments in R&D activities for innovative technologies and components, as well as in pilot production lines for advanced semiconductors. These investments will be implemented in STMicroelectronics existing facilities in Italy (Agrate and Catania) and France (Crolles). They will contribute to the development of technologies and products to address the major challenges of environmental transition and digital transformation in all sectors. The global semiconductor market is currently worth more than 500 billion and is expected to double by 2030. Europe accounts for around 10% of world production capacity, a sharp decline compared with previous decades (24% in 2000 and 44% in 1990). The EIB's support for STMicroelectronics actively contributes to the policies put in place at European level in coordination with the Member States, in order to strengthen the semiconductor industry in Europe, in research and development, design and production and bring public financing to strategic industrial projects. The aim is to support the competitiveness of European players of this key sector, as it affects all industrial sectors, particularly those in which European manufacturers hold leadership positions. Bruno Le Maire, French Minister for the Economy, Finance and Recovery, said: There will be no political sovereignty without digital sovereignty. Europe must use all the tools it has, to invest in new technologies. The EIBs role is crucial, when it grants a 600 million loan to STMicroelectronics. Our goal is clear: to accelerate the production of semiconductors in France and Italy. It is only by mastering this technology, that we will be able to safeguard the European Unions strategic independence. Those investments contribute more broadly to the support to our new growth model that creates high-value industrial jobs in our countries. Daniele Franco, Italian Minister for the Economy and Finance, said: The semiconductor industry is fundamental for the digital transition of the European Union economies. The support that the EIB provides to STMicroelectronics, one of the worlds most advanced and innovative companies, represents an important step towards strengthening and making the European semiconductor industry more competitive, with a significant impact on employment and growth. Jean-Marc Chery, President and CEO of STMicroelectronics, said: "This new loan from the EIB, with which we have been working in partnership for many years, is complementing the various existing instruments supporting our industry, such as the important projects of common European interest (IPCEI) and others that are currently being set up by the European Commission and the Member States. It is essential to work in Europe on the whole value chain: R&D, design and manufacturing, in collaboration with the different European ecosystems. ST will contribute to the goal of 20% of global production in Europe by 2030 and will continue to develop and manufacture in Europe innovative technologies and products to support the environmental transition and the digital transformation of all industries. EIB Vice-President Gelsomina Vigliotti, said: "Semiconductors are the key components without which no digital and ecological transition is possible. Thanks to the long-standing relationship between the EIB and ST, which has resulted in eight financing operations since 1994 worth more than 3,15 billion, the EIB supports Europe's autonomy, competitiveness and technological sovereignty. EIB Vice-President Ambroise Fayolle, said: Financing innovation, a key factor in European competitiveness and technological sovereignty, is an EIB priority. This 600 million loan to support the R&D efforts of one of Europe's leading semiconductor companies illustrates Europe's commitment to this sector, which is crucial to the future of our economies and our strategic autonomy. Background information STMicroelectronics STMicroelectronics is one of the world's leading semiconductor companies, with a strong European R&D and manufacturing footprint. Since 1994, the EIB has been able to support ST through seven operations for a total amount of over 3.15 billion. An independent device manufacturer mastering the semiconductor supply chain with state-of-the-art manufacturing facilities, ST employs over 48,000 people working with more than 200,000 customers and partners to enable smarter mobility, more efficient power and energy management, and the wide-scale deployment of the Internet of Things and 5G technology. ST is committed to becoming carbon neutral by 2027. Further information can be found at www.st.com. European Investment Bank The EIB, whose shareholders are the 27 Member States of the European Union, is the Union's long-term financing institution. It finances quality investment that contributes to the achievement of the European Union's policy objectives. In 2021, the EIB provided more than 3 billion in Italy and France for projects dedicated to innovation and digital transformation. Press contacts EIB Christophe Alix, c.alix@eib.org, tel: +352 43 79 84303, mobile: +33 6 11 81 30 99 Lorenzo Squintani, l.squintani@eib.org, tel: +352 4379-82528, mobile: +352 691 285 772 Website: www.eib.org/press - Press Office: +352 4379 21000 press@eib.org STMicroelectronics Media relations: Alexis Breton, alexis.breton@st.com Investor relations: Celine Berthier celine.berthier@st.com Website: www.st.com France Cabinet of Bruno Le Maire: presse.mineco@cabinets.finances.gouv.fr, +33 1 53 18 41 13 Italy Ministry of Economy and Finance: ufficio.stampa@mef.gov.it, +39 06 47614605 Attachment Dublin, March 02, 2022 (GLOBE NEWSWIRE) -- The "Global Functional Cosmetics Market by Functionality (Conditioning Agents, UV Filters, Anti-Aging Agents, Skin Lightening Agents), Application (Skin Care, and Hair Care), and Region (North America, APAC, Europe, MEA, South America) - Forecast to 2026" report has been added to ResearchAndMarkets.com's offering. The functional cosmetics market is projected to reach USD 4.1 billion by 2026, at a CAGR of 5.2% from USD 3.2 billion in 2021 Functional cosmetics are those components in the cosmetic product formulation that impart pharmacological properties or other direct effects in the cure, diagnosis treatment, mitigation, or prevention of diseases. They are used in cosmetics to provide functional properties when applied to the skin. The growth of the functional cosmetics market is dependent on high spending power on cosmetics and the desire to look beautiful. Accelerating demand for anti-ageing, skin whitening, and sun protection products is one of the factors driving the growth of the market The rise in global warming and increase in temperature is affecting the skin epidermal layer. The harmful radiation from the sun destroys the epidermal layer leading to water loss and dryness in the skin, thus, destroying the cell and further causing pigmentation disorder, skin cancer, wrinkles, blemishes and sunburns among others. To protect the skin from such effects, people are getting more conscious to use a variety of products to treat their skin and avoid such situations of their skin getting damaged with the environmental effects. There is a surge in the use of sun protection products with a variety of options to suit every skin's need. From varying SPF (sun protection factor) to additional benefits like pigmentation control, sun protection products are gaining momentum. The desire for even-toned and light-coloured skin is the major factor driving the demand for skin whitening/lightening products. Skin whitening products are gaining importance in the Asia-Pacific region with India, China and Japan leading the way. This is because, in these regions particularly, fair skin is associated with beauty, youth and prosperity. The rising standard of living of the middle-class population, strong economic growth and increased per capita spending on beauty products are the key parameters that are increasing the global demand for these products. Conditioning agent is estimated to be the largest functionality in the functional cosmetics market between 2021 and 2026 The conditioning agents for skin can influence the homeostatic process of repair and growth by augmenting the skin's renewal mechanism. The conditioning agents used in hair have fairly no effect on growth and neither can help in cellular repair. These agents can help in temporarily improving the cosmetic appearance of damaged hair which further needs to be reapplied as the removal occurs. The market for this segment is driven by the increasing population and rising per capita spending on cosmetics in Asia-Pacific and Europe. However, the market for conditioning agents in North America is projected to register relatively low growth due to the increasing government regulations in the region. Skincare was the largest application for the functional cosmetics market in 2020 The functional cosmetics used in skincare applications basically cater to problems such as protection from harmful sun rays, wrinkles, blemishes, acne, ageing, and frown lines, among others. Skincare products are widely in demand all across the world due to the common need of humans to look good. The essence of bright and glowing skin is a major thriving factor for the growing demand for beauty and skincare products. An increase in male-specific cosmetic products and a growing population in the Asia-Pacific region is expected to boost the demand for skincare cosmetic products, thereby increasing the demand of functional cosmetics used in these products. North America is estimated to be the third-largest functional cosmetics market in 2020, in terms of value North America was the third-largest functional cosmetics market in 2020. The market in the region has a moderate-to-high growth rate owing to the maturity level of the industrial sector in the region. North America is a diversified market for petrochemicals due to the presence of many major chemical companies in the region. Intense competition among the major players in the market has led to price stabilization in the past few years. The improving international economic scenario is contributing to the rising demand for functional cosmetics in various end-use industries in the region. The market in the US and Mexico is expected to witness significant growth during the forecast period. Premium Insights High Growth Expected in Emerging Economies During Forecast Period Asia-Pacific to be Fastest-Growing Region in Functional Cosmetics Market During Forecast Period Germany Accounted for Largest Share in Europe Market Skin Care to Dominate Functional Cosmetics Market Across Regions India to be Fastest-Growing Functional Cosmetics Market During Forecast Period Market Dynamics Drivers Increasing Demand for Multifunctional Ingredients Accelerating Demand for Anti-Aging, Skin-Whitening, and Sun Protection Products Restraints High Cost of Organic Products Opportunities Shifting Focus Toward Male-Specific Cosmetics Porter's Five Forces Analysis Value Chain Analysis Raw Materials Ingredient Manufacturing End-Use Product Patent Analysis Introduction Approach Document Type Insights Legal Status of Patents Legal Status of Functional Cosmetics Patents Jurisdiction Analysis Maximum Patents Filed by Companies in China Top Applicants Macroeconomic Indicators COVID-19 Impact Companies Mentioned Adeka Corporation Ashland Inc. Basf Se Clariant Ag Cp Kelco Dupont Eastman Chemical Company Emery Oleochemicals Group Evonik Industries Ag Gattefosse Givaudan Sa Innospec Inc. Kao Corporation Koninklijke Dsm N.V. Lucas Meyer Cosmetics Momentive Performance Chemicals Inc. Nouryon Sederma Seppic Sa Sonneborn LLC Stepan Company Symrise Ag United-Guardian, Inc. Vantage Specialty Chemicals For more information about this report visit https://www.researchandmarkets.com/r/hgao0g Attachment SEATTLE, March 02, 2022 (GLOBE NEWSWIRE) -- The House of LR&C is proud to announce its official recognition as a Certified B Corporation. The distinct certification is awarded to companies that meet the highest standards of social, environmental and economic performance. As a result of this designation, all brands under The House, including menswear line, Good Man Brand , contemporary womens brand, LITA by Ciara and gender inclusive streetwear line, HUMAN NATION , were reviewed to ensure they met the rigorous standards of the B Corp guidelines. Since inception sustainability and being a force for good have always been a core component of The Houses foundation, and were committed to holding ourselves transparently accountable so our customers dont have to choose between fashion and responsibility, said Christine Day, Co-Founder and CEO of The House of LR&C. Were honored to leverage this gold standard certification as distinguished third-party verification of our ongoing commitment to high-quality sustainable fashion. We love making good products the effortless choice, supporting both people and the planet and will take full advantage of the additional guidance and resources available to us through this opportunity. Joining more than 4,500 Certified B Corporations worldwide and over 1,800 in the United States and Canada, The House of LR&C fulfilled this accreditation through a rigorous verification process that assessed its social and environmental efforts. As a company with a conscience, The House of LR&C incorporated B Corp requirements from the beginning and sustainable practices have always taken precedence at all stages of the product development cycle, from design through to consumer use. With a focus on how clothes are made, what they are made of, and who is making them, The House established a simple matrix called The Goods Sourcing Mandate, based on the Textile Exchanges preferred materials standard, to ensure its sourcing the most sustainable fabrics to create quality products that will last and to raise the bar for the fashion industry. Leaning into its goal of making a positive, high impact on people, The House also donates 3% of net revenue to the Why Not You Foundation, which is a nonprofit organization created by The Houses Co-founders, Russell Wilson and Ciara. The Why Not You Foundation is dedicated to education, childrens health and fighting poverty, while empowering todays youth to lead with a why not you attitude. More and more entities are continuing to recognize and amplify the importance of true sustainable measures. Were seeing this in places like New York with their Fashion Sustainability and Social Accountability Act bill, which if passed aims to hold brands in the fashion capital accountable for their role in climate change, said Therese Hayes, Chief Sustainability Officer at The House of LR&C. Our purpose has always been to push past the crowded, greenwashed market, and build a Company whose genesis lies in delivering the Love, Respect and Care the world needs now, and were devoted to collectively moving the needle alongside our fellow B Certified corporations. More information about The House of LR&Cs B corp certification can be accessed HERE . To shop and learn more about the company, visit us online at www.thehouseoflrc.com . About The House of LR&C The House of LR&C was built to democratize the retail industry with a mission to impact our people and the planet - change the way we do fashion, make it inclusive and participatory. How we buy. How we source. How we market. Russell Wilson and Ciara combined their passion for design & fashion with the retail expertise of Christine Day, CEO, to create The House of LR&C in 2020. A year that showed the world that genuine compassion, connectivity, and doing good for our planet are table stakes. The House of LR&C brands include Good Man Brand, Human Nation and LITA by Ciara. We are a proud certified B-Corporation and are choosing to live into United Nations Sustainability Principles as our True North. Welcome into The House of LR&C. Visit us at thehouseoflrc.com . Brittany Fraser / Sarah Montalto LRC@icrinc.com A photo accompanying this announcement is available at https://www.globenewswire.com/NewsRoom/AttachmentNg/0ab91822-3c7a-4915-b63f-b8bf37c9cc9c Dublin, March 02, 2022 (GLOBE NEWSWIRE) -- The "Global Cardiac Arrhythmia Monitoring Devices Market, Size, Forecast 2022-2027, Industry Trends, Growth, Impact of COVID-19, Company Analysis" report has been added to ResearchAndMarkets.com's offering. The Global Cardiac Arrhythmia Monitoring Devices Market is estimated to reach US$ 9.03 billion by 2027. The report estimates that the market is expected to expand at a CAGR of 8.6% during 2021-2027. Over the years, a range of cardiac arrhythmia monitoring devices has been developed to manage cardiac arrhythmias. Besides, cardiac arrhythmia monitoring devices are used to provide the physicians with data that can either affirm or rule out the existence of an arrhythmia. Further, fewer cardiac monitors and recorders increasingly used to give the patients more selective recording. In addition, with an impressive technological advancement, the global cardiac arrhythmia monitoring devices market is set to chart an enviable growth trajectory over the forecast period of 2021 to 2027. Impact of COVID-19 on Growth Trends The impact of COVID-19 has been unprecedented and staggering, with cardiovascular devices witnessing a negative demand shock across all areas amid the pandemic. Based on the analysis, the global demand saw a massive decline in 2019 compared to the expected average year-on-year growth. However, in 2021 the market gained its momentum with the sudden rise attributable to its demand and growth. Further, the development of the global market is driven by a significant increase in the prevalence of chronic heart diseases. Worldwide Cardiac Arrhythmia Monitoring Devices Market Size was US$ 5.5 Billion in 2021 Factors driving the market growth include advances in cardiac arrhythmia monitoring devices, favorable rebates for treatment, expanding incidences of cardiovascular diseases. Apart from that, extending the emphasis on containment of healthcare costs, increasing the adoption rate of low-cost ECG services among the lower-income group, and favorable government policies for startup firms are some of the other factors. Mobile Cardiac Telemetry Monitors Grow at the Highest Rate In the report, by type, the analyst has covered ECG Monitors, Implantable Monitors, Holter Monitors, Mobile Cardiac Telemetry, and Others. As per the analysis, mobile cardiac telemetry monitor segments in the type category are anticipated to expand at the highest rate across the forecast period. Mobile cardiac telemetry monitoring devices monitor the electrical activity in the heart for an extended time. Moreover, the device can also detect, record, and wirelessly transmit asymptomatic and symptomatic arrhythmia to a monitoring station for analysis. End-users Insights: Hospitals have the Dominant Market Share Hospitals are the dominant end-users in the cardiac arrhythmia monitoring devices market. The rising prevalence of cardiac rhythm disorders has led to increased emergencies requiring continuous cardiac rhythm monitoring. In hospitals, healthcare professionals utilize cardiac rhythm monitors to analyze cardiac arrhythmia risk in critical situations. Remarkably, the need for constant cardiac rhythm monitoring in the emergency department will foster the market revenue. Ventricular Tachycardia Foresees Tremendous Demand As per the analysis, Atrial tachycardia constituted the most dominant market share throughout. Atrial tachycardia is a condition of supraventricular tachycardia (SVT) and is an actual condition reported in intensive care unit operations. Therefore, increasing the incidence of SVT will offer immense growth opportunities to cardiac arrhythmia monitoring devices in emergencies. Asia Pacific, the Hotspots for Investment Opportunities Asia Pacific countries like China, Japan, and India, are the hotspots for investment prospects because of the higher growth rate of diagnosis, treatment, research activities, quality improvisations, increasing partnerships, and healthcare modernization. To expand the revenue share, EGC monitoring device companies are focusing on the evolution of advanced ECG monitoring like implantable cardiac monitors and cardiac telemetry monitors with avant-garde facilities that will indirectly pump the market for cardiac arrhythmia monitoring devices and also promote the services and software market over the forecast period. Competitive Landscape The global key players manufacture the majority of cardiac arrhythmia monitoring devices. Key leaders with more funds for research and an adequate distribution system have established their position in the market. Moreover, the global market is witnessing an emergence of some small players due to the rise of awareness, further helping the market grow. The major players covered in the report include Abbott Laboratories, GE Healthcare, Koninklijke Philips N.V., Medtronic PLC, Asahi Kasei Corporation, Boston Scientific Corporation, HILL-ROM HOLDINGS, INC, and Nihon Kohden. This research report provides a detailed analysis of Cardiac Arrthymia Monitoring Device Industry. Type - Market has been covered from 5 viewpoints: ECG Monitors Implantable Monitors Holter Monitors Mobile Cardiac Telematory Others End-user - Market has been covered from 8 viewpoints: Hospitals Clinics Laboratories LTC Homecare ASC Cathlabs EMS Application - Market has been covered from 5 viewpoints: Tachycardia Atrial Tachycardia Ventricular Tachycardia Bradycardia Premature Contraction Region - Market has been covered from 5 viewpoints: North America Latin America Europe Asia-Pacific Rest of the World Key Players Analysis Abott Laboratories GE Healthcare Koninklijke Philips N.V. Medtronic PLC Asahi Kasei Corporation Boston Scientific Corporation Hill-Rom Holdings, Inc. Nihon Kohden Company Insights: Business Overview Recent Developments Sales Analysis For more information about this report visit https://www.researchandmarkets.com/r/2huz45 Attachment Orlando, Florida, March 02, 2022 (GLOBE NEWSWIRE) -- Laser Procedure of Florida offers advanced laser tattoo removal treatments featuring the Astanza Trinity laser and Zimmer Cryo cooling machine in Orlando, Florida. The up-and-coming laser practice holds its grand opening on Saturday, March 5, from 1 to 5 PM. Laser Procedure of Florida completely removes unwanted tattoos and fades existing body art to improve cover-up tattoos. Its mission is to deliver unparalleled tattoo removal results using cutting-edge laser technology at an affordable price. Laser Procedure of Florida focuses on providing the best laser tattoo removal experience throughout the greater Orlando area. Our clients can sense that from our clean practice environment, friendly and knowledgeable staff, and free consultations and competitive pricing, said Alfredo Jativa, owner. Investing in the Astanza Trinity was a clear choice because of its ability to eliminate any tattoo, no matter its colors. Combined with the Zimmer Cryo, our clients can receive excellent fading and removal results while receiving the safest, most comfortable treatment application. Thanks to its dual-wavelength Nd:YAG and ruby laser systems, the Astanza Trinity is the industrys most advanced Q-switched laser technology. Together, these systems emit three full-powered wavelengths that target and treat all ink colors, including resistant bright blue and green pigments. The Trinitys power is unmatched, giving Laser Procedure of Floridas practitioners the ability to remove unwanted tattoo ink with high efficiency and fewer treatments. The Zimmer Cryo cooling machine is a non-invasive device that produces superior skin numbing before, during, and after a laser session by directing freezing air at the treatment site. The Zimmer Cryo mitigates pain, reduces swelling, and minimizes any risks of thermal injury. Laser Procedure of Floridas drive for great results plus our industry-leading Trinity laser makes them a premier destination for individuals with unwanted tattoos, said Bryce Fisher, Astanza Account Representative. Astanza is happy to partner with Alfredo and his team as they meet the skin needs of people in the Orlando area. To celebrate its grand opening, Laser Procedure of Florida is currently offering 50% off the first treatment for new customers throughout March 2022. The grand opening will feature local artists art, food and beverages by La Antioquena Restaurant, and live music by Dr. Thomas Alber. About Laser Procedure of Florida Laser Procedure of Florida was founded to provide a professional laser tattoo removal experience for the greater Orlando population. Laser Procedure of Florida is dedicated to patient comfort, effective removal results, and affordable pricing. All technicians have been professionally trained at New Look Laser College and have earned designations as Certified Laser Specialists (CLS) and Laser Safety Officers (LSO). For more information about Laser Procedure of Florida, visit https://lptattremoval.com/, call (407) 513-2134, or follow them on Facebook and Instagram. Laser Procedure of Florida is located at 3708 Edgewater Drive, Orlando, FL 32804. About Astanza Laser Astanza is the leader in lasers for tattoo removal, hair removal, and additional aesthetic procedures. In addition to delivering cutting-edge medical laser devices such as the Duality, Trinity, MeDioStar, and DermaBlate systems, Astanza offers its customers a complete range of training, marketing, and business consulting services to achieve success in this growing field. Astanza is an award-winning company that has received several accolades from leading industry organizations, including MyFaceMyBody and Aesthetic Everything. They are also certified as a Great Place to Work. Astanza Laser is headquartered in Dallas, TX, with customers throughout North America and Europe. For product, investor, or press information, call (800) 364-9010, or visit https://astanzalaser.com/. Connect with Astanza on LinkedIn, Facebook, Instagram, Twitter, and YouTube. COLUMBUS, Ohio, March 02, 2022 (GLOBE NEWSWIRE) -- Walden University and HealthLinx are jointly providing a 2022 Magnet Program Director virtual workshop, "Spring Training for Magnet Program Directors," from April 5-6, 2022. "Walden University is dedicated to providing continuing education and professional development opportunities for nurses throughout various stages of their careers," says Dr. Tracy Slemp, dean of Walden's College of Nursing. "This new workshop will help Magnet Program Directors enhance their knowledge of their role and responsibilities as they lead their healthcare organizations in demonstrating a culture of nursing excellence in pursuit of a successful Magnet designation." The workshop will feature sessions that will take a deep-dive into the new Magnet Manual and related updates from the American Nurses Credentialing Center (ANCC) for 2022. Attendees will have the opportunity to learn from expert-level, experienced Magnet leaders, and to participate in an interactive Question and Answer session with these experts at the end of each day. "This is an exciting opportunity to engage Magnet Program Directors across the country with intricate details to help guide their organization's Magnet Journey," says Gina Boring, HealthLinx executive vice president of nursing excellence. "This workshop is a great opportunity to bring this group together to hear from leading experts who have been in their seat before and can speak from past experiences and provide critical updates to the current climate. This is a really unique way for MPDs to truly understand the finer details and necessary steps to achieve these recognitions." As an added incentive, attendees will have the opportunity to earn up to 8.25 contact hours. Each registrant for the workshop will receive access to all sessions taking place over both days. Walden University is accredited as a provider of nursing continuing professional development through the American Nurses Credentialing Center's Commission on Accreditation (P0469). Magnet and Pathway to Excellence are registered trademarks of the American Nurses Credentialing Center (ANCC). The products and services of HealthLinx are neither sponsored nor endorsed by ANCC. All Rights Reserved. ### About Walden University More than 50 years ago, Walden University was founded to support adult learners in achieving their academic goals and making a greater impact in their professions and communities. Students from across the U.S. and more than 120 countries are pursuing a certificate, bachelor's, master's or doctoral degree online at Walden. The university offers more than 80 degree programs with over 250 specializations and concentrations. Walden University is accredited by The Higher Learning Commission, hlcommission.org. For more information, please visit WaldenU.edu. About HealthLinx HealthLinx is a Nursing Leadership, Magnet and Pathway to Excellence Consulting partner for hospitals seeking performance improvement. We are obsessed with transforming healthcare facilities into great places to work that always deliver elite patient care. About Adtalem Global Education Adtalem Global Education (NYSE: ATGE), a leading workforce solutions provider, partners with organizations in the healthcare and financial services industries to solve critical workforce talent needs by expanding access to education, certifications and upskilling programs at scale. With a dedicated focus on driving strong outcomes that increase workforce preparedness, Adtalem empowers a diverse learner population to achieve their goals and make inspiring contributions to the global community. Adtalem is the parent organization of ACAMS, American University of the Caribbean School of Medicine, Becker Professional Education, Chamberlain University, EduPristine, OnCourse Learning, Ross University School of Medicine, Ross University School of Veterinary Medicine and Walden University. Adtalem has more than 10,000 employees, a network of more than 275,000 alumni and serves over 82,000 members across 200 countries and territories. Adtalem was named one of America's Most Responsible Companies 2021 by Newsweek and one of America's Best Employers for Diversity 2021 by Forbes. Follow Adtalem on Twitter (@adtalemglobal), LinkedIn or visit adtalem.com for more information. Media Contact(s): Jacquelyn Manetakis Senior Director, Global Communications (630) 303-4438 jacquelyn.manetakis@adtalem.com Adam Hritzak Marketing Director, HealthLinx (614) 542-3343 Adam.hritzak@healthlinx.com Related Images Image 1: MPD Spring Training Workshop Image 2: Walden University Image 3: HealthLinx This content was issued through the press release distribution service at Newswire.com. Attachment DENVER and ABU DHABI, United Arab Emirates, March 02, 2022 (GLOBE NEWSWIRE) -- BioIntelliSense, Inc., a continuous health monitoring and clinical intelligence company, announced today its strategic collaboration with Mubadala Health, the integrated healthcare network of Mubadala Investment Company. This collaboration will incorporate BioIntelliSenses innovative remote care technologies with Mubadala Healths continuous care model to drive clinical workflow efficiencies, unlock data-driven clinical insights and deliver a personalized care experience. The collaboration with Mubadala Health in launching a continuous remote monitoring capability will help providers deliver a new level of care to patients in UAE, said James Mault, MD, Founder and Chief Executive Officer of BioIntelliSense. This partnership with Mubadala Health represents a tremendous opportunity to apply the BioSticker and BioButton wearable medical devices across multiple care settings, make early detection simple, and empower care teams with personalized clinical intelligence that enables informed proactive interventions. A Media Snippet accompanying this announcement is available by clicking on the image or link below: Hasan Jasem Al Nowais, Chief Executive Officer of Mubadala Health, said: This partnership is in line with our comprehensive strategy to provide innovative care to our patients and create efficiencies in the way healthcare is delivered. Through the use of this new technology, Mubadala Health can better meet the needs of patients, delivering customized care, at the right time and place, across our integrated network. BioIntelliSenses technology will allow our clinicians to access near real-time information on patients vital signs and symptoms, enabling them to identify changes in health sooner and intervene earlier. This strategic partnership will help create fully integrated, continuous care delivery that starts during a patients hospitalization, enabling monitoring of their health status throughout their recovery process, and from the comfort of their own home after leaving the hospital, Al Nowais added. The adoption of BioIntelliSense's flagship FDA-cleared BioSticker and medical grade BioButton wearable devices, along with its algorithmic-based data services, enables Mubadala Health to capture continuous multi-parameter patient trending data passively and securely across a broad range of physiological leading indicators (resting heart rate, respiratory rate, temperature, body position, activity level, sleep, gait analysis, et al.). Together with BioCloud analytics and intelligent alerting, Mubadala Health can remotely monitor at-risk, long-term care patient populations by exception and allocate resources efficiently based on a documented clinical need through a centralized command center using the data from the BioIntelliSense multi-parameter wearable devices. In addition to launching the BioIntelliSense initiative for long-term care, Mubadala Health is working with BioIntelliSense to establish similar remote monitoring programs for orthopedics, oncology, end-stage renal disease, post-hospital discharge, home healthcare, and elderly primary care. These programs are facilitated through Tamouh Health, BioIntelliSenses strategic distribution partner in the UAE. About BioIntelliSense BioIntelliSense is ushering in a new era of continuous health monitoring and clinical intelligence for Remote Patient Monitoring (RPM). Its medical-grade Data-as-a-Service (DaaS) platform seamlessly captures multi-parameter vital signs, physiological biometrics and symptomatic events through an effortless patient experience. The FDA-cleared BioSticker and medical grade BioButton devices make remote monitoring and early detection simple. Through the platform's advanced analytics, clinicians will now have access to high-resolution patient trending and reporting to enable medical grade care from in the hospital to the home. For more information on how BioIntelliSense is redefining remote patient monitoring through medical-grade and cost-effective data services, please contact us at info@biointellisense.com or visit our website at BioIntelliSense.com. About Mubadala Health Mubadala Health is the integrated healthcare network of Mubadala Investment Company. Established in 2021, Mubadala Health operates, manages, and develops a portfolio of healthcare assets including: Cleveland Clinic Abu Dhabi, Healthpoint, Imperial College London Diabetes Centre (ICLDC), Amana Healthcare, National Reference Laboratory (NRL), Capital Health Screening Centre (CHSC), Abu Dhabi Telemedicine Centre (ADTC), Danat Al Emarat, HealthPlus Diabetes & Endocrinology Center, HealthPlus Family Clinics, HealthPlus Fertility, HealthPlus Womens Health Center, Moorfields Eye Hospital Abu Dhabi, and a stake in Al Meswak Dental Clinics Group. With a vision to transform the regional healthcare landscape, Mubadala Health sets a new benchmark for the UAE and regional healthcare industry through its state-of-the-art facilities and world-class caregivers who strive to put patients first across its continuum of care. Innovation, research, and education are the foundational pillars of Mubadala Health, supporting the further development of a sustainable healthcare sector in line with the vision of Abu Dhabi and the region. Mubadala Health is on Twitter, Instagram, Facebook and LinkedIn with the handle: @mubadalahealth. Media Contacts: BioIntelliSense Carolyn Walsh Chief Commercial Officer cwalsh@biointellisense.com Mubadala Health Farah Al Alami Senior Director, Communications & Marketing falalami@mubadalahealth.ae Related Links https://www.biointellisense.com https://www.mubadalahealth.ae The East Carolinian has created a forum that centers around topics within the community where readers can express their experiences and concerns. With Valentine's Day coming up, do you think the ECU community and the City of Greenville is doing all they can to make people feel loved and supported? Survey GRAND JUNCTION, Colo., March 02, 2022 (GLOBE NEWSWIRE) -- ProStar Holdings Inc. (ProStar or the Company) (OTCQX: MAPPF) (TSXV: MAPS) (FSE: 5D00), a world leader in Precision Mapping Solutions, is pleased to announce that Canadian Patent No. 2980438, prepared and prosecuted by Lewis Roca LLP, one of the United States leading intellectual property law firms, has been granted to ProStar. The patent is considered a pioneer patent in the field of utility data collection and directed to an improved method for calculating tolerance zones for utility assets. The patented method provides critical utility asset data in a more timely and efficient manner which helps to prevent damages to utilities and the environment during infrastructure construction, repair, and groundbreaking activities. ProStar is the pioneer in precision utility locating, precision utility mapping, as well as digital management of underground utility and pipeline information, said Raymond R. Tabandeh, the Lewis Roca partner who prosecuted the patent. This is ProStars 21st issued patent and further buttresses ProStars extensive U.S. and Canadian patent portfolio, added Tabandeh. ProStars patents are directed to the processes and methods that digitally capture, record, and display the precise location of buried utilities. With recent advancements in mobile, cloud, and GPS/GNSS technologies combined with an ever-increasing amount of damages to buried utilities caused by construction activities or aging, ProStars patents position the Company to be a world leader in utility damage prevention. Click here to see a complete list of ProStars IP portfolio. ProStars Chief Executive Officer and coinventor of the issued patent, Page Tucker stated, It is a major milestone for any early-stage company to have been issued any number of patents, let alone over 20. Not only does this 21s patent issuance validate that we are the pioneer in precision utility mapping, but this issuance also puts us in a very strong position supported by an extensive IP portfolio to now begin the process of enforcing the patents against those that are potentially infringing. Click here to see a complete list of ProStars patents About Lewis Roca Rothgerber Christie LLP Ranked in the Top 50 Patent Firms in the U.S. by Juristat, Lewis Rocas patent attorneys have an undergraduate degree in science or engineering, and many of the attorneys have graduate degrees, enabling them to have a deeper understanding of clients technology. Extensive patent services include: Patent Prosecution, Patent Litigation, Design Patents, International Patent Protection, Patent Opinions & Evaluations, Prior Art Searches & Evaluations, and PTAB Proceedings. About ProStar: ProStar is a world leader in Precision Mapping Solutions and is creating a digital world by leveraging the most modern GPS, cloud, and mobile technologies. ProStar is a software development company specializing in developing patented cloud, and mobile precision mapping solutions focused on the critical infrastructure industry. ProStars flagship product, PointMan, is designed to significantly improve the workflow processes and business practices associated with the lifecycle management of critical infrastructure assets both above and below the Earths surface. ProStars PointMan is offered as a Software as a Service (SaaS) and seamlessly connects the field with the office and provides the ability to precisely capture, record, display, and manage critical infrastructure, including roads, railways, pipelines, and utilities. Some of the largest entities in North America have adopted ProStars solutions, including Fortune 500 construction firms, Subsurface Utilities Engineering (SUE) firms, utility owners, and government agencies. ProStar has strategic business partnerships with the worlds leading geospatial technology providers, data collection equipment manufacturers, and their dealer networks. The Company has made a significant investment in creating a vast intellectual property portfolio that includes 20 issued patents in the United States and Canada. The patents protect the methods and systems required to digitally capture, record, organize, manage, distribute, and display the precise location of critical infrastructure, including buried utilities and pipelines. ProStars Executive management team has extensive experience in the management of both early-stage and Fortune 500 technology companies in the private and public sectors. For more information about ProStar, please visit www.prostarcorp.com. Contact: Joel Sutherland Investor Relations 970-822-4792 Investorrelations@prostarcorp.com Neither the TSXV nor its Regulation Services Provider (as that term is defined in the policies of the TSXV) accept responsibility for the adequacy or accuracy of this release. Cautionary Statements Regarding Forward-Looking Information This press release contains forward-looking information within the meaning of Canadian securities laws. Such information includes, without limitation, information regarding the terms and conditions of the Companys future plans. Although the Company believes that such information is reasonable, it can give no assurance that such expectations will prove to be correct. Forward-looking information is typically identified by words such as: believe, expect, anticipate, intend, estimate, postulate and similar expressions, or are those, which, by their nature, refer to future events. The Company cautions investors that any forward-looking information provided by the Company is not a guarantee of future results or performance and that actual results may differ materially from those in forward-looking information as a result of various factors, including, but not limited to: the state of the financial markets for the Companys securities; the state of the technology sector; recent market volatility; the COVID-19 pandemic; the Companys ability to raise the necessary capital or to be fully able to implement its business strategies; and other risks and factors that the Company is unaware of at this time. The reader is referred to the Companys recent Information Circular filed on SEDAR on November 20, 2020 for a more complete discussion of applicable risk factors and their potential effects, copies of which may be accessed through the Companys issuer page on SEDAR at www.sedar.com. High River, AB, March 02, 2022 (GLOBE NEWSWIRE) -- Western Financial Group is pleased to announce its acquisition of Central Agencies, an insurance brokerage located in Camrose, Alberta. This partnership is a great fit for us and will further strengthen our presence in Alberta, said Kenny Nicholls, President and CEO of Western Financial Group. Central Agencies is a reputable local broker with strong ties to the community, great business relationships, and is an organization that shares our values. Both Western Financial and Central Agencies are successful and focused organizations with skilled insurance experts and shared community values, making this partnership a natural fit. Considering the evolving conditions in our industry, joining Western Financial Group became the right next step for our business, said Norman Mayer, Founder, and Owner of Central Agencies. We are grateful to have served the Camrose community for nearly 60 years. Together we will carry on our legacy and continue representing our values here in Camrose. We are excited for the opportunities this partnership will bring to our people, business, and the community. To learn more about Western Financial Group and Central Agencies, visit their websites: Western Financial Group Inc. Western Financial is a diversified insurance services company that has cared for the insurance needs of over one million Canadians for more than one hundred years. Headquartered in High River, Alberta, Western Financial provides personal, business, and life insurance services in over 200 communities through sales and service centres, affiliates, and online. Western Financial Group is Canadas insurance broker with the local touch. Western Financial Group is a subsidiary of Trimont Financial Ltd., a subsidiary of The Wawanesa Mutual Insurance Company. Central Agencies Since 1963, Central Agencies has worked with families and businesses in East Central Alberta to realize their insurance needs. Founder Norman Mayer searched out insurance companies with proven reputations for offering highly competitive rates, diversified policies, and quick claims service. Over four decades later, Central Agencies team of skilled, dedicated brokers continue to focus on customer service and strong business relationships. Attachment NEW YORK, March 02, 2022 (GLOBE NEWSWIRE) -- The celebration was held at Hale Salon, located on Franklin St., as part of the platform's recognition of small businesses. Brian was joined by his closest family and friends. The event was initiated with a reception, where guests were served refreshments from a local catering business, Lemons and Olives. Following the reception, Brian gave a prepared speech on his platform's most significant issues and showcased the campaign ad for the very first time. Several public figures also attended, including radio and YouTube show host Heshy Tischler, and president of Bogardus Plaza, Victoria Weil. Also in attendance were Yiatin Chu, President of the Asian Wave Alliance, and family friend Doug Garr, Mario Cuomo's former speechwriter, reports Mr. Robinson's campaign committee, Common Sense Policies NYC for Brian Robinson. Brian Robinson is a proud Jewish American father, husband, and man of his community. His passion for building a greater quality of life for the people around him led to founding his own consumer advocacy company. Started in his apartment over a decade ago, the company rapidly expanded to champion debtor rights for both small businesses and individuals alike. Brian has advocated for consumers against aggressive creditors and insurmountable debt. He alleviated the pressure of harassing lenders by providing protection against FDCPA violations. Likewise, he also recruited and built an in-house debt arbitration team backed by a network of debtor rights attorneys - all so that his clients could provide a better financial future for themselves and their loved ones. Brian showed his prowess as a leader and mediator at an early age. He became a mentor in his high school's Peer-to-Peer program, where he helped incoming freshmen adapt to their new environment. This sparked a passion for community service, and he started to also mentor students entering special education classes. He went on to volunteer at an inner-city Orleans Parish middle school where he tutored vulnerable youths in the basic sciences. Brian's love for his community led him to then explore an interest in politics at Tulane University. He combined this newfound interest with his love for theory and dialogue and graduated with a Bachelor's in Political Philosophy. He authored the book Adderall Blues, based on his own experiences with ADD, to emphasize the importance of mental health and a system that supports intelligences of all types. The book became a finalist for the 2017 American Book Fest Best Book Award. Brian has been a guest lecturer on the topic since, recently presenting at the Manhattan Adult ADD Support Group, where his presentation broke the record number of attendees. Still true to his community roots, Brian continues to volunteer for Bogardus Plaza. He spends the rest of his time in Lower Manhattan, where he lives with his loving wife Lindsey and their beautiful four-year-old daughter. Contact: Admin@votebriannyc.com Phone: 917.341.1455 Related Images Image 1: Brian Robinson Congress NY 10 Moderate Democrat This content was issued through the press release distribution service at Newswire.com. Attachment Reston, VA, March 02, 2022 (GLOBE NEWSWIRE) -- The Graduate Management Admission Council (GMAC), a global association of leading graduate business schools, today released a first-of-its-kind longitudinal study. In the report entitled The Value of Graduate Management Education: From the Candidates Perspective, GMAC surveyed roughly 3,600 individuals globally over the past 12 years about the motivations behind their pursuit of graduate management education (GME). These individuals now reaping the rewards of their distinguished business degree in a wide array of job functions and industries shared their views from their business school experience. Overall, 9 out of 10 graduates rated the value of their MBA or business masters degree as good, excellent or outstanding. Over 85% concluded that their investment in graduate business education had a positive return. Most graduates (84%) reported that their business school experience helped improve their professional situation while about 7 out of 10 reported that it helped achieve personal (72%) and financial goals (68%). In the face of an ever-evolving work environment, international travel restrictions and rising education cost, many are asking the question: is a business degree worth it? said Sangeet Chowfla, president and CEO of GMAC. Our groundbreaking research surveyed thousands of individuals from around the world, spanning from the last financial crisis to the current pandemic-prompted economic uncertainty. An overwhelming majority of them testified that their business degree increased their employability and earnings power, prepared them for leadership positions, and supported their desired lifestyle. Without a doubt, their answer to the question is a resounding yes! Key Findings Women, less often than men, pursued GME for entrepreneurship skills or business ownership Women and men mostly share the same view on the value of graduate management education and its impact on their career advancement. When it comes to motivation behind their pursuit of GME, most women (77%) and men (72%) identified increasing job opportunities as a top driver. However, the greatest gender difference was observed when men (41%) were more likely to go to business school to develop entrepreneurship skills and own their own business than women (28%). In addition, a greater percentage of men (56%) reported that their graduate business education experience prepared them well for international employment opportunities compared to women (46%). The findings suggest that in todays evolving work environment, women perhaps more risk-averse and resource-deprived shy away from starting their own companies and choose to work closer to home, said Maite Salazar, Chief Marketing Officer of GMAC. Understanding this dynamic could inform business schools on how to encourage more women to pursue graduate management education by providing them access to and addressing their challenges in entrepreneurship. Business degrees facilitate growth through promotions, moving across functions and industries Survey results confirmed that a business degree helped candidates get promotions and achieve career mobility across job functions and industries. About two-thirds of business school graduates reported that they advanced at least one job level after they obtained their graduate business degrees. The advancement is especially prevalent among graduates who started at more junior levels before they completed the programs. Specifically, more than 85% of graduates moved up from entry levels, more than half moved up from middle levels, one-third of graduates moved up from senior levels, and a quarter moved up from executive levels. A notable motivation among the drivers for pursing a business degree is that about half aspired to change career paths in either job function or industry. In fact, the survey found that overall, 60 percent of the business school graduates changed job functions after obtaining their degrees while about half moved across industries. Interestingly, consulting as a job function and industry demonstrated the most versatility; over three-quarters of those who worked in consulting after obtaining their business degrees moved from a different job function, and seventy percent of those who worked in consulting after GME moved from another industry. On the other hand, the technology industry experiences the lowest amount of transition, with only one-third moving on to a different industry after completing their graduate business education. U.S. underrepresented minorities sought GME to impact communities, own businesses Among the top 10 leading motivations driving the pursuit of graduate business education, increasing impact on communities ranked last at just 24 percent. In contrast, the percentage of underrepresented minorities (URM) candidates in the United States who reported pursuing GME to increase impact on communities was 42 percent, nearly double that of non-URM candidates (23%). The proportion of URM candidates who pursued GME to develop entrepreneurship skills and own their own business was 48 percent, also significantly higher than that of non-URM candidates (32%). This coincides with another finding of the report that a lower percentage of URM candidates reported career advancements, compared with non-URM candidates. In the backdrop of todays global health and economic crisis, many career-minded individuals are shifting their perspectives, looking for social impact in their own communities and becoming their own boss to achieve financial freedom, said Sabrina White, Vice President of School and Industry Engagement at GMAC. Acknowledging these differences by race-ethnicity offers an opportunity for schools to engage in community partnerships that increase access to the benefits of GME for the marginalized populations. About the Report The Value of GME study included over 3,600 candidates worldwide who completed their graduate business education between 2010 and 2021. GMAC surveyed these candidates before and after they completed graduate business school about their motivation to pursue GME and evaluation of their experience by their personal, professional, and financial goals. Among them, 40% were women. The median age was 27 at the pre-GME survey with an interquartile range of 24-30. These candidates came from 113 countries on all 6 populated continents. They attended 728 graduate business schools or universities across 66 countries. More details of the full report, and other research series produced by GMAC, are available on gmac.com. A companion piece for GME candidates with sample profiles of the graduates is published on mba.com. About GMAC The Graduate Management Admission Council (GMAC) is a mission-driven association of leading graduate business schools worldwide. Founded in 1953, GMAC creates solutions and experiences that enable business schools and candidates to better discover, evaluate, and connect with each other. GMAC provides world-class research, industry conferences, recruiting tools, and assessments for the graduate management education industry, as well as tools, resources, events, and services that help guide candidates through their higher education journey. Owned and administered by GMAC, the Graduate Management Admission Test (GMAT) exam is the most widely used graduate business school assessment. More than 12 million prospective students a year trust GMACs websites, including mba.com, to learn about MBA and business masters programs, connect with schools around the world, prepare and register for exams and get advice on successfully applying to MBA and business masters programs. BusinessBecause and The MBA Tour are subsidiaries of GMAC, a global organization with offices in China, India, the United Kingdom, and the United States. To learn more about our work, please visit www.gmac.com Attachment HAMILTON, Ohio, March 02, 2022 (GLOBE NEWSWIRE) -- The Records Company stands with the sovereign nation of Ukraine in this time of unprecedented humanitarian crisis in the region. To that end, the company has made a $25,000 initial donation to CARE's Ukraine Crisis Fund in support of humanitarian aid for refugees. CARE, in partnership with People in Need, is providing essential supplies for a projected four million people displaced by the Russian invasion of Ukraine. Furthermore, The Records Company has committed to an additional donation of one dollar from each record request fee the company receives for the next month. In a video released to the company's social media feeds on Tuesday evening, CEO Grady Marin pointed out how the crisis hits "hard and close" to home. Vice President Agata Zachary is a native of Poland and "knows all too well what suffering is." For The Records Company, support for the Ukrainian people is a moral obligation. "We must do all we can for humanity, especially in a time of need," Marin said. The company also posted an update to its blog this week containing additional details to assist clients and partners who choose to build their own strategies to support the region. "We must come together and provide support against tyrants, so the world can be a better place. That's why we're committed," added Marin. The Records Company works with law firms, insurance companies, healthcare providers and other businesses around the United States. We offer retrieval and storage of medical, business, and other paper and electronic records from all 50 states as well as international sources. The company has retrieved and delivered more than 1.6 million records since 2013. Contact: Amanda Smith - press@therecordsco.com Related Images Image 1 This content was issued through the press release distribution service at Newswire.com. Attachment LONDON and NEW YORK, March 02, 2022 (GLOBE NEWSWIRE) -- Anyone who has touched a bordereaux system knows first-hand the pain of collecting and manually cleansing the raw data. A challenging and time-intensive system, bordereauxs clunky infrastructure has always made it difficult for users to process and analyze data in real time. Until now. In the time it usually takes to cleanse one data column, London-based distriBinds bordereaux transformation engine will configure a spreadsheet of raw data into an easy-to-read, multi-format report ready for analysis. And through a newly formed relationship with U.S.-based Stere, U.S. carriers, reinsurers, and managing general agents (MGAs) now have easy access to this revolutionary system. Developed with input from industry-leading underwriters and claims executives and tested in Lloyds Lab, distriBinds system redefines the bordereaux landscape through a one-two punch. First, it completely eliminates one of the industrys most onerous tasks - manual data manipulation. Second, it automatically produces a detailed report that includes customizable monthly data analysis capabilities and issue notification. distriBind is the latest addition to Steres program placement digital ecosystem, a one-stop-shop that tackles speed-to-market, capacity sourcing, and other challenges facing MGAs, insurtechs, and embedded insurance programs. Steres superior selection engine improves program owner success rate by pairing human intuition with well-designed technology. It is a combination that eliminates manual capacity placement pain points and inefficient post-placement steps plaguing the industry. I am absolutely delighted to announce this partnership with Stere, which accelerates our growth into the crucial US Delegated Market, said distriBind Founder and CEO Dave Connors. From the first time I met Dogan, I was struck by his passion for bringing innovation to this market and enthusiasm for the benefits of automation. Harnessing distriBinds automated reporting to Steres cutting-edge program placement marketplace is a no-brainer that will provide huge benefits to agents and carriers in the US. distriBinds system, which received an Innovate UK grant for its AI Premium Capacity Utilisation Predictive Algorithms, has already been adopted by a broad range of MGAs, brokers, and insurers across the European and London markets to streamline their bordereaux process through real-time data visibility and reduction in operational costs and process errors. distriBind has solved a long-running, systemic industry problem with a product that seamlessly adapts to any market or deal framework, something that makes it ideally suited to the bespoke needs of Steres global client base, said Stere CEO Dogan Kaleli. Through this partnership, we can offer clients a flexible program that truly turns bordereaux processing on its head, and I am excited by the operational improvements this will bring to all industry players. Through the distriBind system, Stere users will receive: Real-time APIs that allow for real-time pass through of data from distribution to capacity Powerful and detailed validation at the transaction level Automated reconciliation of the full written/premium/cash cycle The ability to easily receive or send data to-from business partners in any format OCR and smart ingestion algorithms that digitize PDFs and spreadsheets Powerful analytics including portfolio-level capacity prediction Be able to manage the full life-cycle of risk, premium and claims A flexible data model offers granularity without legacy constraint A DA ecosystem for sharing information across the value chain About distriBind distriBind is a London-based InsurTech company dedicated to solving problems caused by bordereaux. Its AI-powered, next-generation delegated authority platform is the first in the market to properly address these widely recognised problems. distriBind can assist MGAs and coverholders, whether they distribute using traditional relationship-based sales methods or use digital distribution via app, portal or digital quote & bind by automation of back office and reporting, while also providing capacity providers with powerful portfolio management capabilities. A Cohort 6 Lloyds Lab participant, distriBind has previously been awarded a grant by Innovate UK to enhance its AI predictive engine and was the runner-up in the ACORD Insurtech Innovation Challenge London 2020. For more information about distriBind, please visit www.distribind.io. About Stere Stere is a digital ecosystem for insurance programs. With Stere, program leaders source capacity and access digital tools to launch sooner and grow faster and smarter. Stere clients are capacity seekers such as MGAs, program administrators, and embedded insurance programs, along with their ecosystem partners such as carriers, fronting carriers, reinsurers, brokers, program consultants, and technology providers. Visit www.stere.io or email hello@stere.io for a demo. Press Contact: Adrianne Kaufmann (978) 440-0427 adrianne@princecomms.com Zaandam, the Netherlands, March 2, 2022 Ahold Delhaize today issues the convocation of the Annual General Meeting of Shareholders (AGM), which will be held on April 13, 2022. The convocation, the agenda (including explanatory notes), and other relevant documentation for the AGM are available via this link. The 2021 Annual Report will be on the agenda of the AGM and is available here. - Ends - Cautionary notice This communication includes forward-looking statements. All statements other than statements of historical facts may be forward-looking statements. Words and expressions such as 2022, will, have, need, commitment, strategy, target, 2040, belief, ambition, by, 2025, long-term, plan(s), growth or other similar words or expressions are typically used to identify forward-looking statements. Forward-looking statements are subject to risks, uncertainties and other factors that are difficult to predict and that may cause actual results of Koninklijke Ahold Delhaize N.V. (the Company) to differ materially from future results expressed or implied by such forward-looking statements. Such factors include, but are not limited to, the risk factors set forth in the Companys public filings and other disclosures. Forward-looking statements reflect the current views of the Companys management and assumptions based on information currently available to the Companys management. Forward-looking statements speak only as of the date they are made and the Company does not assume any obligation to update such statements, except as required by law. For more information: Press office: +31 88 6595134 / media.relations@aholddelhaize.com Investor relations: +31 88 659 5213 Social media: Instagram: @Ahold-Delhaize | LinkedIn: @Ahold-Delhaize | Twitter: @AholdDelhaize About Ahold Delhaize Ahold Delhaize is one of the worlds largest food retail groups and a leader in both supermarkets and e-commerce. Its family of great local brands serves 55 million customers each week, both in stores and online, in the United States, Europe, and Indonesia. Together, these brands employ more than 413,000 associates in 7,452 grocery and specialty stores and include the top online retailer in the Benelux and the leading online grocers in the Benelux and the United States. Ahold Delhaize brands are at the forefront of sustainable retailing, sourcing responsibly, supporting local communities and helping customers make healthier choices. The companys focus on four growth drivers drive omnichannel growth, elevate healthy and sustainable, cultivate best talent and strengthen operational excellence is helping to fulfil its purpose, achieve its vision and prepare its brands and businesses for tomorrow. Headquartered in Zaandam, the Netherlands, Ahold Delhaize is listed on the Euronext Amsterdam and Brussels stock exchanges (ticker: AD) and its American Depositary Receipts are traded on the over-the-counter market in the U.S. and quoted on the OTCQX International marketplace (ticker: ADRNY). For more information, please visit:www.aholddelhaize.com. New York City, NY, March 02, 2022 (GLOBE NEWSWIRE) -- Vital links between animal welfare and the environmental crises will be formally recognized for the first time at a global level after the adoption of a historic resolution today (Wednesday, March 2) at the United Nations Environment Assembly (UNEA 5). At the fifth session of UNEA, in Nairobi, Kenya, a crucial resolution was passed that will help develop a better understanding of the relationship between improving animal welfare and tackling the drivers of wildlife loss, climate change, pollution and pandemic diseases. The resolution on the Nexus between Animal Welfare, Environment and Sustainable Development calls on the United Nations Environment Programme (UNEP) Executive Director to prepare a report exploring the link between animal welfare, the environment and sustainable development. This includes stopping biodiversity loss, restoring ecosystems, reducing climate change, pollution and the risk of new infectious diseases that can pass from animals to humans. A further resolution on Sustainable Nitrogen Management was also passed, marking an important victory against nitrogen pollution, an enormous planetary challenge. However, it is a missed opportunity that the goal to halve nitrogen waste globally by 2030 was lost in the negotiations. This is a momentous decision for animal welfare. Improving animal welfare is vital to securing a sustainable future for animals, people, and the planet, so the adoption of this resolution is hugely significant, although its just the beginning, said Ben Williamson, U.S. Executive Director, Compassion in World Farming. Its now up to all Member States and UNEP to fully implement the resolution agreed today to ensure the improvement of animal welfare and nature protection at the country level across the globe. We look forward to working with the U.S. on the national implementation. Compassion worked as part of a major global movement of animal welfare groups raising support for the adoption of the resolution, under the leadership of Compassion trustee Josphat Ngonyo and the Africa Network for Animal Welfare (ANAW), together with the World Federation for Animals and AU-IBAR. Together the groups wrote to environment ministries across the globe urging them to back the resolution, which was universally passed by 193 countries. The resolution was initiated by the government of Ghana and co-sponsored by six other Member States: Senegal, Burkina Faso, Ethiopia, Democratic Republic of Congo, South Sudan and Pakistan. ### For more information or to schedule an interview, please email Ronnika.McFall@ciwf.org About Compassion in World Farming: Compassion in World Farming is a global farmed animal protection organization that campaigns peacefully to end factory farming and replace it with a food system that is compassionate, fair, and sustainable for all. The charity is dedicated to reforming a broken food and farming system and introducing a more humane, fair, and sustainable one. Compassion engages with the worlds leading food companies to create and adopt meaningful animal welfare policies while tracking progress against those commitments to ensure compliance. It works tirelessly towards a better future for animals, people, and the planet by educating concerned consumers and supporting meaningful public policy. With headquarters in the U.K., we have offices across Europe, in the U.S., China and South Africa. To find out more about Compassion in World Farming or join the movement, visit: ciwf.com and follow us on Twitter, Instagram and Facebook. TORONTO, March 02, 2022 (GLOBE NEWSWIRE) -- Churchill Resources Inc. (Churchill or the Company) (TSXV: CRI) is pleased to announce that planning and arrangements for its second phase of drilling and geophysical surveys at Taylor Brook in western Newfoundland are nearing completion. Results from the 2021 work continue to support the exploration model of a magmatic Ni-Cu system on the property outcropping at the Layden Showing and appearing to have significant scale. In particular: Two grab samples collected at the Layden Showing assayed 4.46%Ni, 1.07%Cu, 0.08%Co plus 0.479ppm PGEs (Pt + Pd + Au), and 3.69%Ni, 0.57%Cu, 0.11%Co and 0.761ppm PGEs. Interpretive processing, including inversions, of the 2021 detailed magnetic and electromagnetic surveys, along with regional magnetic survey data, suggest that the mineralized Layden Intrusive may be part of a much larger system with 8-10 kilometres of strike length. Airborne VTEM (Versatile Time-Domain Electromagnetic) survey results, including anomaly picks, have recently been generated for the Taylor Brook South property which covers the majority of the interpreted strike length to the postulated Layden Intrusive system. The VTEM results are being compiled, with conductor plate modelling commissioned shortly, to define drill targets along the Layden trend. Borehole Electromagnetic (BHEM) survey results from the 2,500m cumulative length of Phase 1 drillholes have identified several off-hole, high conductance plates at the Layden Intrusive in the area of the high-grade showing. These are priority drill targets for massive or semi-massive sulphide concentrations. BHEM conductor plate orientations appear to support field interpretations that there are several mineralized breccia sequences structurally hosted within the Layden Intrusive, ranging from 5-15m wide, and which have thus far demonstrated sulphide contents up to 40% (pyrrhotite-pentlandite-chalcopyrite) locally over 10-20cm. Preliminary petrographic results have confirmed Churchills field interpretations that a discrete intrusive body, consisting of meta-gabbroic to meta-pyroxenitic rock, hosts the sulphide breccia magmatic system comprising the Layden mineralization, ie. Typical hosts to this style of magmatic nickel deposits. Geochemical data corroborates the petrographic and field classifications of the lithologies and mineralization, as the mineralized breccia structures intersected in core exhibit similar trace element profiles as the high grade, exposed Layden Showing. Radiometric age-dating of the Layden intrusives, under the direction of Dr. Derek Wilton, defines a Late Grenvillian age (ie. Ca. ~1000Ma), suggesting emplacement during the very last period of extensive continental margin magmatism marked by intrusion of alkaline magma of felsic to intermediate, and mafic (anorthosite, troctolite) compositions. Assay results have been received for the first hole from the Phase 1 program, TB21-01, which had no significant nickel or copper values. The hole is interpreted to not have sampled one of the mineralized breccia structures due to its vertical orientation, oblique to the predicted trend. TB21-01, designed to test a flat-lying VTEM conductor at depth to the east of the Layden Showing, intersected ~90m of weakly mineralized breccia between 101m and 196m downhole, beneath metagabbro cap rocks, before exiting into basement gneisses. Assays for the remaining Phase 1 holes are in-progress and expected later in March and April; their delay was due to unprecedented demand at the laboratory. Paul Sobie, Chief Executive Officer of Churchill remarked, We are well into planning Phase 2 drilling now as more results have been received and integrated into our geological model. All results continue to support the model of discrete magmatic intrusive(s) hosting potentially economic Ni-Cu-Co mineralization which we will aggressively evaluate. With our better understanding of the geology and mineralization at the Layden Showing area, we will focus on defining a systematic program to evaluate the proximal strike length of the Layden Intrusive through drilling, large loop and BHEM surveys. Once the snow is gone, we will institute a regional program of geochemical sampling and prospecting over magnetic and EM targets along the Layden Trend that extends for at least 8-10km on the Taylor Brook South property based on current interpretations. Taylor Brook Project Churchills Phase 1 program consisted of 13 diamond drill holes totalling 2,477m completed between early October and late November 2021, before a break was scheduled for borehole EM surveying, and the initiation of geochemical and petrographic studies, as well as completion of assay results. The thirteen Phase 1 holes served to test several proximal VTEM conductive plates, as well as to better understand the overall geology of the Layden Intrusive where the historical mineralization had been found. Figure 1 shows simplified results of that drilling in relation to the position of both the BHEM and VTEM conductors. In general, it appears that the VTEM plates are mapping major lithological variations and structures, whereas the higher conductance BHEM plates appear to map sulphide concentrations; most BHEM plates have not yet been intersected by historical or Churchill drilling. Figure 1 is available at https://www.globenewswire.com/NewsRoom/AttachmentNg/02b35760-1c32-4fe3-98f2-27c137134dab Drilling, mapping, and geophysical surveys indicate that the mineralized outcrop at the original Layden Showing appears to be part of a much larger intrusive magmatic Ni-Cu system striking east-southeast and plunging shallowly to the southeast. The Layden magmatic system is hosted by a discrete, magnetic, meta-gabbroic to meta-pyroxenitic intrusions within basement gneiss. The Ni-Cu mineralization is in the form of pods, thin horizons and blebs of pyrrhotite, pentlandite and chalcopyrite which brecciate the host pyroxenite in sub-vertically oriented linear structures. Figure 2 is a regional magnetic inversion encompassing Churchills detailed 2021 magnetic data over the Taylor Brook and Taylor Brook South properties, with Figure 3 an enlargement of approximately 4km along strike from the Layden Showing. A large magnetic stock associated with the southern portion of the Taylor Brook Intrusive Complex, the large differentiated gabbroic intrusive in this area, appears to be the source of the trend hosting the Layden Intrusive some 8-10km to the northwest. The magnetic stock feature correlates well with the known gravity anomaly in this area. As mentioned above, work on this trend will include immediate assessment of the VTEM results as well as systematic regional work to be conducted Spring and Summer 2022 to target drillholes. Gravity traverses over the stock feature will also be carried out. Figure 2 is available at https://www.globenewswire.com/NewsRoom/AttachmentNg/909cf86a-b33f-4a20-99c3-7686baeacf9a Figure 3 is available at https://www.globenewswire.com/NewsRoom/AttachmentNg/f981f0a7-41ff-455e-bb1f-feef730f0600 Florence Lake Project The helicopter-borne VTEM and Horizontal Gradiometer Geophysical Survey will re-commence in early April, at the Florence Lake Project in Labrador, after having been postponed due to deteriorating weather conditions in December. No production flights were carried out in the previous mobilization. Churchill has commissioned Goldspot Discoveries Corp. (TSX-V: SPOT) to compile all historical exploration data on the project, for integration with the results from the VTEM survey. This work is scheduled to be completed later in March. The Florence Lake Property contains Raglan-type ultramafic volcanic-hosted massive and disseminated sulphide nickel showings. It was last explored by Falconbridge and JV partners between 1990-1997 during which time approximately 6,250m of drilling were completed in 45 shallow holes. The 1996 drill core is located on the property for relogging and sampling, whereas, 1992-3, partly sampled core, is stored at NL Government core library in Happy Valley Goose Bay. Highlights of that work included drill testing of the high-grade Baikie Showing where shallow drilling (<-100m depths) returned: DDH FLK-92-02: 2.19% Ni, 0.22% Cu, 0.16% Co over 11.32 metres from 44.7 to 56m DDH FLK-92-12: 1.33% Ni, 0.05% Cu over 13.5 metres from 83.0 to 96.5m The Baikie Showing has demonstrated mineralized continuity over 110m of strike length from twelve drillhole intercepts and ground mapping, and is interpreted to be a near vertically plunging subzone of disseminated, semi-massive and massive sulphide mineralization, possibly similar to the Raglan or Kambalda style of nickel deposits. Other showings along strike have generated +1.0% nickel grab samples or short drill intersections and need modern exploration work along with Baikie. Churchill announced positive results of due-diligence resampling of the historical core in a news release dated October 7, 2021. The technical and scientific information in this news release has been reviewed and approved by Dr. Derek H.C Wilton, P.Geo., FGC, who is a qualified person as defined under National Instrument 43-101 Standards of Disclosure for Mineral Projects and independent of the Company. The Churchill drill core samples are half core samples laid out and split by qualified geologists and technicians under the direction of Senior Project Consultant Dawn Evans-Lamswood, P.Geo. at the Companys drill camp near the property. The samples were placed in labelled, sealed plastic bags and periodically batches are delivered to Eastern Analytical for analysis. Standard OREAS 13b and blanks were inserted in the assay batches. Eastern Analytical is an ISO/IEC17025 accredited laboratory. About Churchill Resources Inc. Churchill is managed by career mining industry professionals and currently holds four exploration projects, namely Taylor Brook in Newfoundland, Florence Lake in Labrador, Pelly Bay in Nunavut and White River in Ontario. All projects are at the evaluation stage, with known mineralized Ni-Cu-Co showings at Taylor Brook, Florence Lake and Pelly Bay, and diamondiferous kimberlitic intrusives at White River and Pelly Bay. The primary focus of Churchill is on the continued exploration and development of the Taylor Brook and Florence Lake Nickel Projects. Further Information For further information regarding Churchill, please contact: Churchill Resources Inc. Paul Sobie, Chief Executive Officer Tel. +1 416.365.0930 (o) +1 647.988.0930 (m) Email psobie@churchillresources.com Alec Rowlands, Corporate Consultant Tel. +1 416.721.4732 (m) Email arowlands@churchillresources.com Cautionary Note Regarding Forward Looking Information This news release contains "forward-looking information" and "forward-looking statements" (collectively, "forward-looking statements") within the meaning of the applicable Canadian securities legislation. All statements, other than statements of historical fact, are forward-looking statements and are based on expectations, estimates and projections as at the date of this news release. Any statement that involves discussions with respect to predictions, expectations, beliefs, plans, projections, objectives, assumptions, future events or performance (often but not always using phrases such as "expects", or "does not expect", "is expected", "anticipates" or "does not anticipate", "plans", proposed, "budget", "scheduled", "forecasts", "estimates", "believes" or "intends" or variations of such words and phrases or stating that certain actions, events or results "may" or "could", "would", "might" or "will" be taken to occur or be achieved) are not statements of historical fact and may be forward-looking statements. In this news release, forward-looking statements relate to, among other things, the Companys objectives, goals and exploration activities conducted and proposed to be conducted at the Companys properties; future growth potential of the Company, including whether any proposed exploration programs at any of the Companys properties will be successful; exploration results; and future exploration plans. These forward-looking statements are based on reasonable assumptions and estimates of management of the Company at the time such statements were made. Actual future results may differ materially as forward-looking statements involve known and unknown risks, uncertainties and other factors which may cause the actual results, performance or achievements of the Company to materially differ from any future results, performance or achievements expressed or implied by such forward-looking statements. Such factors, among other things, include: the expected benefits to the Company relating to the exploration conducted and proposed to be conducted at the Companys properties; failure to identify any additional mineral resources or significant mineralization; the preliminary nature of metallurgical test results; uncertainties relating to the availability and costs of financing needed in the future, including to fund any exploration programs on the Companys properties; business integration risks; fluctuations in general macroeconomic conditions; fluctuations in securities markets; fluctuations in spot and forward prices of gold, silver, base metals or certain other commodities; fluctuations in currency markets (such as the Canadian dollar to United States dollar exchange rate); change in national and local government, legislation, taxation, controls, regulations and political or economic developments; risks and hazards associated with the business of mineral exploration, development and mining (including environmental hazards, industrial accidents, unusual or unexpected formations pressures, cave-ins and flooding); inability to obtain adequate insurance to cover risks and hazards; the presence of laws and regulations that may impose restrictions on mining and mineral exploration; employee relations; relationships with and claims by local communities and indigenous populations; availability of increasing costs associated with mining inputs and labour; the speculative nature of mineral exploration and development (including the risks of obtaining necessary licenses, permits and approvals from government authorities); the unlikelihood that properties that are explored are ultimately developed into producing mines; geological factors; actual results of current and future exploration; changes in project parameters as plans continue to be evaluated; soil sampling results being preliminary in nature and are not conclusive evidence of the likelihood of a mineral deposit; title to properties; ongoing uncertainties relating to the COVID-19 pandemic; and those factors described in the most recently filed managements discussion and analysis of the Company. Although the forward-looking statements contained in this news release are based upon what management of the Company believes, or believed at the time, to be reasonable assumptions, the Company cannot assure shareholders that actual results will be consistent with such forward-looking statements, as there may be other factors that cause results not to be as anticipated, estimated or intended. Accordingly, readers should not place undue reliance on forward-looking statements and information. There can be no assurance that forward-looking information, or the material factors or assumptions used to develop such forward-looking information, will prove to be accurate. The Company does not undertake to release publicly any revisions for updating any voluntary forward-looking statements, except as required by applicable securities law. Neither the TSXV nor its Regulation Services Provider (as that term is defined in the policies of the TSXV) accepts responsibility for the adequacy or accuracy of this news release. LOS ANGELES, March 02, 2022 (GLOBE NEWSWIRE) -- More than 4 million Americans are quitting their jobs every month, a trend of people prioritizing physical and emotional health now known as the Great Resignation. Plant medicine experiences available at retreats like Rythmia Life Advancement Center can help both workers and employers find that better work-life balance. Dr. Jeff McNairy, Chief Medical Officer and co-founder of Rythmia, acknowledges that the Great Resignation largely is about employees' widespread frustration with the workplace, which makes this the time for employers to reassess their practices. "With the Great Resignation, now is the time to reassess ways to keep employees happy, connected, and ultimately more productive and successful as individuals, which will lead to companies also being more successful," McNairy said. "Looking at the whole person is essential in finding success long-term with employees. Treating employees as disposable or overworking them to the point of exhaustion and mental fatigue is not the answer." Employers can address that with traditional options like flexible work hours, allowing work from home, limiting work hours and mandating time off, but there also are more proactive measures. "A way to enhance the employee experience is to include health plans that allow for holistic practices and remedies," McNairy said. "Incorporating meditation, yoga, and exercise into corporate structures is helpful, and some tech-based companies have been doing this for several years. Looking for ways to improve the staff's mental health is vital to enabling long-term production and value." That's where retreats like Rythmia come in. "Taking time for yourself, healing, and centering yourself is absolutely essential to do on a regular basis," McNairy said. "People can come to Rythmia once a year for a personal re-set. The amount of self-awareness, clarity, releasing of tension, and self-realization that occurs in just one week's time at Rythmia is incredible. As the chief medical officer, I oversee all the staff and guests, and I have witnessed this "re-set" thousands of times." One aspect of the Rythmia re-set is its plant medicine experience, where guests participate in ayahuasca ceremonies that open doors for self-reflection, understanding and personal transformation. Plant medicines have become more accepted and more widely used in the wake of clinical studies that show ayahuasca, psilocybin, cannabis, and iboga have huge promise in treating conditions like post-traumatic stress disorder (PTSD), opiate addiction, nicotine addiction, alcoholism, anxiety, and depression. Rythmia combines plant medicine with many other elements, including yoga, healing massage, dance, organic dining and courses in personal spiritual development, as part of its healing experience. Putting inner health at the forefront of life enables people to create new habits, lifestyles, priorities, and realities. Through authentic connection with the mind and body, stronger self-awareness is established, breaking down the raw aspects of life that people want to change. Rythmia can help build the consciousness needed to form thoughtful intentions and healthy decisions. "The priority of our health at all angles is becoming a significant practice for the betterment of ourselves," McNairy said. "This leads to the betterment of our economies, societies, and cultures. The pandemic has forced pivots on our personal and business lives, accelerating the discovery and appreciation for our health and connection to our soul." The Great Resignation has proven to be an empowering movement, causing people to leave their stable corporate careers to pursue mental, physical, and spiritual alignment. This has created the opportunity to prioritize what people care about most. With more workers leaving their jobs to find connections with themselves and those around them, there is a need for mental health retreats, like-minded communities, and personal advancement centers. Rythmia Life Advancement Center helps individuals grow on a personal level. ### ABOUT RYTHMIA LIFE ADVANCEMENT CENTER Rythmia Life Advancement Center is focused on incorporating plant medicine into metaphysical teachings. The results of its program are spectacular with over 95% of its 10,000 clients reporting a life-changing miracle during their stay. Furthermore, the company is a model of diversity. 82% of Rythmia's staff are members of a minority community and/or identify as LGBTQ+. And the company prides itself on its management team, 70% of whom are members of a minority community and/or identify as LGBTQ+. For further information and/or reservations, call (888) 443-5566 or visit https://rythmia.link/press Media Contact: Bianca Facey (203) 577-7588 (Direct) bianca@newswire.com www.Newswire.com Related Images Image 1 This content was issued through the press release distribution service at Newswire.com. Attachment New York, NY, March 02, 2022 (GLOBE NEWSWIRE) -- Hanzo, a technology pioneer in preserving, collecting, reviewing, and exporting dynamic, complex collaboration and web-based data, announces a partnership with Nightfall AI, the first cloud-native extensible data loss prevention (DLP) platform. This partnership provides two significant product offerings. First, for clients requiring a DLP solution, Hanzo pairs with Nightfall to discover, classify, and protect sensitive data within cloud applications such as Slack, Google Drive, and others. Second, for non-DLP clients, Hanzo leverages Nightfalls ML-powered detection engine in order to provide message and file intelligence for content collected for internal investigations or ediscovery matters. Combined with Hanzos own Vision ML behavior analysis, Hanzo now offers over 150 types of PII/PHI/PCI, credentials and secrets detected. Hanzo illuminates sensitive data and allows customers to search and discover specific classifications at any point along the ediscovery journey including data exports. This partnership strengthens our offerings for our customers. By leveraging Nightfall's detection engine, we're providing greater data intelligence and making it affordable to proactively identify potential risks," said David Ruel, senior product manager, Hanzo. "Sensitive data detection and content analysis on Slack messages and attachments is a game-changer for customers. Now enterprises will have a solution that helps their legal, forensic, HR, and IT teams better understand their many data sources, gain insights into the information within these systems, and address the issues before they lead to litigation. This partnership advances Hanzo's commitment of providing enterprises with the best-in-class solutions for bringing awareness and understanding of the information in Slack, Google and other collaboration platforms. Organizations can limit risk by proactively identifying information that counters their corporate governance, privacy, and data security policies. Powering sensitive data classification and protection in every app or service is why we launched the Nightfall Developer Platform, said Rohan Sathe, co-founder, and chief technology officer at Nightfall. Were excited to partner with innovative companies like Hanzo who seamlessly incorporate our AI-powered data classification engine within their system to provide enterprises superior capabilities for analyzing their Slack ediscovery data. As remote work becomes the new normal, regulatory and privacy concerns increase, and data security continues to be a top priority. Protecting sensitive data and understanding the nature of message and file content is more important than ever. The combination of Hanzo and Nightfall helps enterprise legal and HR teams manage and mitigate risk, including: Real-time monitoring of sensitive content such as PII, PCI, PHI, credentials, and secrets to detect and take action. Ability to collect and classify historical data collected by Hanzo using consistent Nightfall DLP detection rules. Automating workflows to more efficiently manage critical investigations and discovery tasks. Provide greater intelligence into Slack communications. "Collaboration and messaging platforms have completely changed the way we communicate both in tone and complexity. Additionally, these applications generate vast volumes of data, presenting enterprises with the potential for significant risk," said Dave Ruel, senior product manager, Hanzo. "Incorporating DLP capabilities into ediscovery delivers greater visibility into the information they have in Slack and help organizations better target collections for discovery or investigations." You can learn how your teams can discover more by joining Hanzo during Legalweek, March 9-11, 2022, at booth #3126. Or contact us to see our solutions for todays collaborative applications. Coming up, Hanzo and Nightfall will be hosting a webinar, Drive Data Intelligence With Collaborative Data on March 22 at 1 pm EST. Register here https://www.hanzo.co/resources/collaborative_data_intelligence. About Nightfall AI Nightfall's mission is to bring efficiency and efficacy to data protection. Organizations depend on Nightfall to discover, classify, and protect sensitive data across cloud services via machine learning & natural language processing (NLP). As the industry's first cloud-native data loss prevention & data classification platform, Nightfall has scaled rapidly to a broad set of customers across the globe, ranging from hyper-growth tech startups to Fortune 100 enterprises. Nightfall's SOC 2 Type 2 compliant platform has been deployed across consumer-facing & highly regulated industries like healthcare, insurance, and education to address data leakage and compliance risks around HIPAA, GDPR, CCPA, and more. Nightfall is backed by Bain Capital Ventures, Venrock, Webb Investment Network, and a cadre of high-profile operators, including CEO/executives at Okta, Splunk, FireEye and Salesforce. For more information on Nightfall and Cloud Native DLP, please visit nightfall.ai or contact us at hello@nightfall.ai. About Hanzo Hanzo helps global enterprises manage and reduce legal risk wherever work gets done. Capture data for investigations, litigation, and compliance wherever employees collaborate including hard-to-capture sources like Slack, Jira, project management, collaboration platforms, and internal SaaS systems. Hanzo's software empowers defensible preservation, targeted collection, and efficient review of dynamic content. Hanzo is SOC 2 Type 2 certified, demonstrating its commitment to data security and serving large corporations worldwide. Learn more at hanzo.co and follow updates on Twitter: @gethanzo or on LinkedIn. Attachment Dallas, Texas, March 02, 2022 (GLOBE NEWSWIRE) -- Dickeys Barbecue Pit is bringing its Legit. Texas. Barbecue. across western Michigan as the worlds largest barbecue concept is set to expand into The Tulip City! Dickeys Barbecue Restaurants, Inc. CEO Laura Rea Dickey announced today the brand signed an area development agreement with trusted franchisee Krage Fox to bring the Texas-style barbecue concept to Holland in May. The new Holland restaurant will mark Foxs fourth Dickeys opening in four years, joining his Jenison, Kalamazoo and Rockford locations. Fox plans to open up to four more locations in Michigan. The Western Michigan University alumnus and Michigan native has seen record-breaking sales across his three franchise locations thanks, in part, to Foxs dedication and passion for each community he serves. Fox is recognized as an exemplary member of the community and even previously gave away free barbecue lunches to Kalamazoos first responders as a thank you for their tireless efforts on the frontline the last two years. Were excited to continue growing our partnership with Krage, Laura Rea Dickey said. Krage is one of our highest performing Owner Operators nationwide, and we couldnt be happier to be opening another location in Michigan with him. We look forward to seeing the impact he makes on the Holland community as he introduces Dickeys tastes of Texas to more of the Great Lakes region. When Dickeys Barbecue Pit makes its Holland debut in May, it will mark the brands 15th location in Michigan. To learn more about Dickeys, follow Dickeys Barbecue Pit on Facebook, Instagram and Twitter. Download the Dickeys Barbecue Pit app from the Apple App Store or Google Play. About Dickeys Barbecue Restaurants, Inc. Dickey's Barbecue Restaurants, Inc., the worlds largest barbecue concept, was founded in 1941 by the Dickey family. For the past 80 years, Dickeys Barbecue Pit has served millions of guests in 44 states Legit. Texas. Barbecue. At Dickeys, all our barbecued meats are smoked onsite in a hickory wood burning pit. Dickeys proudly believes theres no shortcut to true barbecue and its why our name isnt BBQ. The Dallas-based, family-run barbecue franchise offers eight slow-smoked meats and 12 wholesome sides with 'No B.S. (Bad Stuff)' included. Dickeys Barbecue 550 locations across the United States and eight other countries. Dickeys was named to Newsweeks 2022 Americas Favorite Restaurant Chains list and USA Today 2021 readers choice awards. Dickeys won first place on Fast Casuals Top 100 Movers and Shakers list, been named a Top 500 Franchise by Entrepreneur and named to Hospitality Technologys Industry Heroes list. Led by CEO Laura Rea Dickey, who was named among the countrys 50 most influential women in foodservice in Nations Restaurant News, was recognized by Fast Casuals Top 100 Movers and Shakers list and honored by Dallas Business Journal. Dickey's Barbecue Pit has also been recognized by Fox News, Forbes Magazine, Franchise Times, The Dallas Morning News, The Wall Street Journal, People Magazine and QSR Magazine. Dickeys Barbecue is part of Dickeys Restaurant Brands which has more than 700 restaurants nationwide including brands Wing Boss, Trailer Birds, Big Deal Burger and bbqathome.com. DRB is led by CEO Roland Dickey Jr. For more information, visit www.dickeys.com. # # # Attachment Los Angeles, March 02, 2022 (GLOBE NEWSWIRE) -- WWP Beauty Launched Innovative Turnkey, Packaging, and Accessories Solutions at MakeUp in Los Angeles. The company brought its full service & sustainable solutions to color cosmetics, skincare, haircare, body care, and personal care beauty brands who visited the MakeUp in Los Angeles show. Los Angeles, CA WWP Beauty, a world-class full-service supplier to the global beauty industry, launched a lineup of new and sustainable turnkey, packaging, and accessories collections during the MakeUp in Los Angeles tradeshow. The companys booth featured a playful and social-friendly Instagram wall for visitors and customers to snap a picture in front of, and their show theme, Playground was centered around bringing back the fun, connection, and an optimistic outlook to the in-person event. Josh Kirschbaum, WWP Beauty CEO, commented We could not have been more excited to return to the MakeUp in Los Angeles event, showcasing our company in a way that the industry has not seen previously. It was important for us to bring with us multiple turnkey, packaging, and accessories collections that offered sustainable solutions for every category of beauty, with the ultimate goal of helping every beauty brand find its path to create a positive impact on the planet. During the show, WWP Beauty launched ten new collections across every category of beauty, including: Playground - Bring the fun back to your skincare routine, with this natural derived product collection. The sensorial, skin-loving & transformative formulations are enhanced with probiotics & ashwagandha that bring balance & relieve stress. Hair Retreat - A beauty wellness moment and the skintification of hair. Innovative formulation, mindful accessories & sustainable packaging, designed to host products that detox, strengthen and promote the overall health of the scalp & hair. Beauty Bites - A collection of bite-size packaging designed for beauty on the go that will help create small beauty moments throughout the day, proving the best things comes in a small package. Body Cult - Wellness redefined, protect your wellbeing and the planet through a sustainably curated collection of body care packaging that promotes indulgence, relaxation, and the recharge of your body and soul. Manly - A fluid collection of functional packaging tailored to enhance the grooming experience. Double Care - A multifunctional collection of dual packaging solutions that declutter lifestyles & life spaces. More benefits & less waste. Color Revolution - A collection of mindful, color cosmetic refillable packaging solutions that reduce material usage, lower carbon emissions, promote a more circular design system, and ultimately help create a more sustainable future. Side Effect Dropper - The universal sustainable package with a new gesture and endless options in PCR, Glass, and Molecular Recyclable materials. Mono Material Pump - A mono-material, recycle-friendly pump made for all things beauty. Eco Bags - Sustainable and stylish eco-smart bags in a wide array of sustainable materials including Bamboo Fiber, Recycled & Organic Cotton, Soybean Fiber, Hemp, Kraft Paper, Lychee Grain Regenerated PU, Recycled Vegan Leather, Cork, RPET, Recycled PVB, Recycled EVA, Tencel, and Tyvek. # # # About WWP Beauty WWP Beauty is committed to developing future-focused, sustainable solutions for the global beauty industry through close collaboration, exceptional agility, and unparalleled scale. The companys full-service offering of formula, packaging, and accessories, paired with their in-house manufacturing capabilities allow them to stand out as the source for everything beauty. Through a worldwide team of beauty experts that span across North America, EMEA, and APAC, WWP Beauty offers their customers global support at the local level. To learn more, visit our website at www.wwpbeauty.com. Attachment English French OneSubsea awards Vallourec a contract to supply work-over risers for Equinors Bacalhau field in Brazil Meudon (France), March 2, 2022 Vallourec, a world leader in premium tubular solutions, has been awarded a contract by OneSubsea, the subsea technologies, production, and processing systems division of Schlumberger, to supply 3,000 meters of upset riser joints equipped with VAM TTR HW NA connection for the Bacalhau Project offshore Brazil. The contract was awarded on behalf of Subsea Integration Alliance, a strategic global alliance between Subsea 7 and OneSubsea. Discovered in 2012 and located 185 km from the coast, the Bacalhau field is at a water depth of 2,050 m in the presalt Santos basin. The development will consist of 19 subsea wells tied back to one of the largest floating production, storage and offloading units (FPSO) in Brazil. The first oil is planned in 2024. After a comprehensive design phase to meet the expectations of Bacalhau field operator Equinor, OneSubsea selected the Vallourec high-performance solution for the Open Water Intervention Riser System (OWIRS). This solution is based on seamless shaped steel pipes equipped with a special premium VAM TTR HW NA connection to cope with fatigue conditions and the sea corrosive environment. Vallourec PFP tube mill in Aulnoye-Aymeries (North of France) will produce shaped pipes whose upset ends will also be threaded on site. We are very proud to have been selected by OneSubsea and Equinor for the Bacalhau project. Being selected for the supply of a demanding open water intervention riser system gives us an opportunity to prove that our shaped pipes are highly efficient and competitive. Our Aulnoye-Aymeries PFP tube mill has unique capabilities to manufacture reliable pipes with upset ends, optimized body weight and versatile options for VAM or customer-supplied connections said Hubert Paris, Senior Vice President Europe/Africa. About Vallourec Vallourec is a world leader in premium tubular solutions for the energy markets and for challenging industrial applications such as oil and gas wells in harsh environments, new generation power plants, daring architectural projects, and high-performance mechanical equipment. Vallourec's pioneering spirit and cutting-edge R&D continually open new technological frontiers. Operating in more than twenty countries, its nearly 17,000 dedicated and passionate employees work hand-in-hand with their customers to offer much more than just tubes: they deliver innovative, reliable, competitive solutions to make every project possible. Listed on Euronext in Paris (ISIN code: FR0013506730, Ticker VK), Vallourec is part of the CAC Mid 60, SBF 120 and Next 150 indices and is eligible for Deferred Settlement Service. In the United States, Vallourec has a sponsored Level 1 American Depository Receipt (ADR) program (ISIN code: US92023R4074, Ticker: VLOWY). Parity between ADR and a Vallourec ordinary share has been set at 5:1. About Subsea Integration Alliance Subsea Integration Alliance is a non-incorporated strategic global alliance between Subsea 7 and OneSubsea, the subsea technologies, production, and processing systems division of Schlumberger, bringing together field development planning, project delivery and total lifecycle solutions under an extensive technology and services portfolio. As one team, Subsea Integration Alliance amplifies subsea performance by helping customers to select, design, deliver and operate the smartest subsea projects. This eliminates costly revisions, avoids delays and reduces risk across the life of field. For more information, visit www.subseaintegrationalliance.com. For more information, please contact: Investor relations Jerome Friboulet Tel: +33 (0)1 49 09 39 77 Investor.relations@vallourec.com Press relations Heloise Rothenbuhler Tel: +33 (0)6 45 45 19 67 heloise.rothenbuhler@vallourec.com Individual shareholder relations Toll-Free Number: 0 800 505 110 actionnaires@vallourec.com vallourec.com Follow us on Twitter @Vallourec Attachment Pittsburgh, PA, March 02, 2022 (GLOBE NEWSWIRE) -- Young Women In Bio (YWIB), an initiative of Women In Bio committed to empowering students to affect positive change through science, technology, engineering, and math (STEM), is thrilled to announce applications for the 2022-2023 YWIB Ambassador Program are now open. YWIB invites rising freshmen, sophomores or juniors in high school within the United States or Montreal, Canada who identify as female and demonstrate leadership in promoting STEM within their communities and on social media to apply. YWIB launched the YWIB Ambassador program in 2020 for students interested in championing and supporting the organizations efforts to create educational and leadership opportunities in STEM for young women. YWIB is looking to welcome approximately 20 students to the 2022-2023 class of Ambassadors. These students will have the opportunity to meet and interact with other young people with a passion for STEM. They will also have exclusive opportunities to learn from and network with professionals in life sciences and other STEM fields, organize and lead YWIB activities at their local chapters and participate in social media campaigns to promote STEM. YWIB Ambassadors who successfully complete the program receive a scholarship to support their ongoing efforts to affect positive change in the world of STEM. We are particularly seeking students who consider themselves to be STEM influencers for this years YWIB Ambassador class students who are not only passionate about STEM, but who also enjoy inspiring others to develop an interest in STEM, said Sarah Odeh, YWIB National Chair. We look forward to building connections amongst the Ambassador class throughout the school year and staying in touch as they progress through high school and college and beyond. Forty-six YWIB Ambassadors have graduated from the program since its founding in 2020. In addition to building relationships with other Ambassadors and YWIB/WIB leaders and mentors, past Ambassadors heard from speakers with the Broad Institute, Biotech Pioneers in Gene Therapy, Girls Who Code, StemifyGirls, and more. YWIB has not only given me the opportunity to inspire others, but it has also allowed me to learn more about myself through my mentors and other Ambassadors, said one YWIB Ambassador. The YWIB community has also provided me with a number of connections to those with great experience and advice, as well as a number of friendships with other young [people] pursuing careers in STEM. To learn more about the YWIB Ambassador program and to complete the application, visit www.womeninbio.org/YWIBAmbassadors. Applications must be submitted by April 30, 2022, for consideration. Selected YWIB Ambassadors will be notified by May 30, 2022, and the program will kick off in July 2022. ABOUT YOUNG WOMEN IN BIO (YWIB) Young Women In Bio (YWIB) gives girls today the inspiration and support they need to become tomorrows leaders in science, technology, engineering, and math. We strive to provide education and mentoring, as well as share our passion for scientific fields. Through 14 chapters across the United States and Canada, YWIB partners with leading companies, universities, hospitals, and other organizations to host highly engaging, educational, and motivational programs for young women interested in STEM. To learn more, visit www.womeninbio.org/ywib. ABOUT WOMEN IN BIO (WIB) Founded in 2002 to support women employed in the field of life sciences from the classroom to the boardroom, Women In Bio (WIB) is a multifaceted organization with 14 chapters in North America. It offers an array of professional educational programs, peer to peer learning, mentoring, and networking opportunities, and is the only organization for women that integrates all career levels and life sciences fields. WIB is funded by sponsors and partners dedicated to supporting women of all ages in their lifelong journey, in the life sciences and beyond. Please visit www.womeninbio.org. CATO, N.Y., March 02, 2022 (GLOBE NEWSWIRE) -- iCone Products LLC announces today the creation of a cloud-based data service for digitally marked work zone events called the R.O.A.D Database. Smart and connected work zones are becoming commonplace in North America, supported by integrated Internet of Things (IoT) technology. Consolidating this set of traffic control and roadway infrastructure devices - otherwise known as an "Internet of Road Work (IoR)" - allows drivers, contractors, traffic managers, and others to receive real-time status information about key traffic control devices being used in roadway construction operations and any disruptive anomalies they may cause to surface transportation. The Real Ontime Accurate Data (R. O. A. D.) for Work Zones is a cloud-based database of road event data supplied by preeminent equipment and infrastructure developers, IoT equipment retrofit companies, construction operators, maintenance and traffic control companies. These organizations all work together to provide data for safer roads. This database represents an industry-first in that it is populated by the actual producers and generators of the work-zone data, collectively known as the Work-Zone Data Industry (WZDi). The R.O.A.D Database will be the clearinghouse for work zone-generated attributes that may require corrective or attentive action or alertness from roadway users. The launch of the R.O.A.D database will involve a significant portion of the WZDi, made possible through relationships with several major traffic control equipment manufacturers, pavement marking companies and other significant producers of smart work zone technology and data that perform tasks on a daily basis such as temporary work zones, lane closures, protecting lives and equipment, painting lanes, closing roads, and performing maintenance, through automatic communications from devices integrated inside roadway assets. One of the founding data suppliers to the R.O.A.D Database is the originator of the Internet of RoadWork (IoR), iCone Products' ConnectedTech Data Community (CTDC), which combines universal smart retrofit kits for work zone equipment and includes data from devices built by most of the companies within the portable traffic control equipment market. The R.O.A.D Database will adhere to the established protocol of data feeds for the collection and distribution of information related to the location and activity of road work developed by The Federal Geographic Data Committee Transportation Subcommittee Work Zone Data Working Group. R.O.A.D. intends to enhance this feed with additional certification of valid traffic control components with secure, documented data transfers, with a verified chain of custody from the field device to the client. This extra layer of compliance is the WZDi's process of ensuring that the data produced is accurate, timely, and meaningful. About iCone Products: iCone Products, LLC is guiding the future of Work Zone Safety. As the creator of the IoR - Internet of RoadworkTM, iCone has developed a suite of ConnectedTech products that collects and transmits real-time information about the status of the roadways into the cloud. Navigation applications, traffic control centers, and contractors receive the information to assist motorists in navigation, protect crews in work zones, and create an overall safer environment on public roadways around the world. As an integrated technology platform, iCone's devices can mark virtually anything that may intrude upon a public right-of-way that would cause a vehicle to change either its speed or direction of travel. iCone's ConnectedTech Data Community is designed to provide a unique and broad digital collection of surface roadway operators that collectively contribute information along with iCone Internet of Roadwork (IoR) - enabled equipment to a repository of data that provides increased safety through an additional layer of security for both workers and oncoming motorists. This data is also provided to the navigation community, improving route navigation through direct communication with in-car navigation systems such as Google Maps, Waze and eventually directly displayed in the dash of automobiles. All Inquiries & Press, please contact: Garvin Forrester, COO g.forrester@iconeproducts.com, Ph: (315) 626-6800 Related Images Image 1: "Wheel of Safety" - Internet of Road Work Applications "Wheel of Safety" - Internet of Road Work Applications This content was issued through the press release distribution service at Newswire.com. Attachment English French TORONTO, March 02, 2022 (GLOBE NEWSWIRE) -- Metro Supply Chain announced today that it has donated $50,000 to the Canadian Red Cross to support humanitarian relief efforts in Ukraine. "The armed conflict in Ukraine has left millions of people in the country in immediate need of essential items and emergency care. To support ongoing relief efforts, Metro Supply Chain is donating $50,000 to the Red Cross Ukraine Humanitarian Crisis. Our thoughts are with the people of Ukraine," said Martin Graham, Group President of Metro Supply Chain. Canadians wishing to help are encouraged to donate to the Canadian Red Cross' Ukraine Humanitarian Crisis Appeal at www.redcross.ca. Those wishing to donate in the United States are encouraged to contribute directly to the American Red Cross at www.redcross.org. About Metro Supply Chain Metro Supply Chain is a strategic supply chain solutions partner for some of the worlds fastest growing and most recognizable organizations. Managing more than 12 million square feet in over 80 sites across North America and Europe with a team of 6,000, it is the largest privately-owned supply chain solutions company based in Canada. For more than 40 years, Metro Supply Chains scale, wide capabilities and entrepreneurial structure has enabled it to meet its customers most challenging supply chain needs, including the creation of complex e-commerce fulfillment and last-mile delivery networks. For more information, contact: Alison Wood, Head of Marketing and Communications awood@metroscg.com Tel: +1 437 332-4361 Raleigh, NC, March 02, 2022 (GLOBE NEWSWIRE) -- RegEd will present its next-generation Xchange Agency Contracting solution at the 2022 LIMRA Distribution Conference for Financial Services. Developed with input from some of the nations largest insurance companies, Xchange Agency Contracting significantly reduces the time to contract and appoint producers while providing a streamlined user experience. To gain competitive advantage in todays marketplace, insurance companies must foster strong relationships with their distribution partners, said Debra Freitag, Chief Strategy Officer at RegEd. Xchange Agency Contracting improves producer satisfaction and can increase lifetime sales potential by providing a seamless experience that attracts top producers and accelerates the placement of compliant business. We look forward to discussing the opportunities these capabilities present with the leaders gathered at the LIMRA Distribution Conference. Distribution professionals involved in channel growth, productivity and reshaping distribution for success will meet at the 2022 LIMRA Distribution Conference for Financial Services at the InterContinental Miami from March 1-3. Entitled The Shape of Things to Come, the conference will include sessions such as The Imperative of Innovation, Evolution to the Firm of the Future, and Modernizing the New Business Process for Your Agents and Customers! Attendees will include leaders from distribution, sales, recruiting, compensation, distribution finance, training, marketing support and product development, LIMRA notes. Improving onboarding for agencies and agents Xchange Agency Contracting automates agency and agent onboarding and credentialing, providing a seamless, frictionless process: Best-in-class capabilities connect contracting, licensing, appointment, registration and CE/training and ongoing maintenance of credentials. The appropriate contracting package is automatically generated and presented based on agency data to reduce data entry. Following contract completion, business process automation (BPA) auto-triggers transactions and drives work processes without human intervention, providing true hands-free transactions. Licensure and demographic data automatically populate from an agencys CRM solution and regulatory databases, greatly streamlining the collection of producer data. Real-time credentials validation delivers an automated clear to sell signal to ensure compliant business placement. Automated data synchronization with the National Producer Database (PDB) through alerts from the National Insurance Producer Registry (NIPR), Web Electronic Filing Transfer (WebEFT) and internal databases maintains producer and agency credentialing and compliance data. Xchange Agency Contracting also offers comparative metrics, such as a snapshot of an independent agents appointments across multiple carriers and a view of the insurers share of written premium from each agency. These metrics can help carriers identify opportunities and form strategies to gain that business. To learn more about how Xchange Agency Contracting drives high efficiency in agency and agent contracting, visit RegEd at the 2022 LIMRA Distribution Conference for Financial Services or schedule a demonstration. About RegEd RegEd is the market-leading provider of RegTech enterprise solutions with relationships with more than 200 enterprise clients, including 80% of the top 25 financial services firms. Established in 2000 by former regulators, the company is recognized for continuous regulatory technology innovation with solutions hallmarked by workflow-directed processes, data integration, regulatory intelligence, automated validations, business process automation and compliance dashboards. The aggregate drives the highest levels of operational efficiency and enables our clients to cost-effectively comply with regulations and continuously mitigate risk. Trusted by the nations top financial services firms, RegEds proven, holistic approach to RegTech meets firms where they are on the compliance and risk management continuum, scaling as their needs evolve and amplifying the value proposition delivered to clients. For more information, please visit www.reged.com. Chicago, March 02, 2022 (GLOBE NEWSWIRE) -- Oman data center market size is expected to grow at a CAGR of over 11.42% during the period 20212027. Oman aims to work toward generating 30% of renewable energy sources locally by 2040. The country is likely to add around 160 MW of power capacity during 20222027. Oman data center market research report includes market size in terms of area, investment, power capacity, and colocation revenues. Get insights on 6 existing data centers and 1 upcoming facility across Muscat and other cities. OMAN DATA CENTER MARKET REPORT SCOPE REPORT ATTRIBUTE DETAILS MARKET SIZE (REVENUE) $470.8 Million (2027) MARKET SIZE (AREA) 162 thousand Sq. Feet (2027) MARKET SIZE (POWER CAPACITY) 34.5 MW (2027) COLOCATION MARKET SIZE (REVENUE) USD 45.5 Million (2027) CAGR (REVENUE) 11.42% (2022-2027) BASE YEAR 2021 FORECAST YEAR 2022-2027 KEY HIGHLIGHTS OFFERED IN THE REPORT: Oman is one of the fastest growing markets in the Middle East in terms of digital transformation initiatives and the adoption of Internet of Things (IoT), with an internet penetration rate of 95%. Cloud service providers such as Alibaba, IBM, and Microsoft operate in Oman via local partners. Muscat, being the commercial and economic capital, is the primary data center hub in Oman, with 3 existing third-party data centers contributing to over 50% of the existing capacity. Oman has s free trade zones such as Al Mazunah Free Zone, Salalah Free Zone, Sohar Free Zone, and Duqm SEZ, which provide benefits to investors such as corporate tax exemption up to 10 years, full exemption of import and export tax, and support with local labor recruitment. The Oman Vision 2040 and the National Energy Strategy expect to generate around 30% of the electricity in the country from renewable energy sources by 2030. This includes the development of two solar IPPs in Manah, 11 solar-diesel hybrid facilities, wind farm in Dhofar, and Sahim, an initiative to install small solar panels on commercial, residential, and other properties. In Oman, multiple colocation operators provide colocation and cloud-based services to government entities. Other industries verticals such as BFSI, heavy, industries, content/OTT service providers, and cloud native organizations will also drive the market in coming years. KEY OFFERINGS: Market Size & Forecast by Area, Power Capacity, Investment, and Colocation Revenue | 2020-2026 Impact of COVID-19 on Data Center Market Snapshot of existing and upcoming third-party data center facilities in Oman Facilities Covered (Existing): 6 Facilities Identified (Upcoming): 01 Coverage: 2 Cities Existing vs. Upcoming (Data Center Area) Existing vs. Upcoming (IT Load Capacity) Data center colocation market in Oman Market Revenue & Forecast (2021-2026) Retail Colocation Pricing Market Dynamics Leading trends, growth drivers, restraints, and investment opportunities Market Segmentation A detailed analysis by IT infrastructure, electrical infrastructure, mechanical infrastructure, general construction, and tier standard Key Market Participants List of 11 IT infrastructure providers, 5 construction service providers, 12 support infrastructure providers, and 4 data center investors Get your sample today! https://www.arizton.com/market-reports/oman-data-center-market OMAN DATA CENTER MARKET SEGMENTATION The adoption of Software-defined Networking (SDN) is likely to increase owing to smart city initiatives carried out by government agencies. In terms of networking, most data centers adopt high bandwidth switches 40/100 GbE at the aggregator layer. Air- and water-based cooling systems are majorly adopted in the Oman data center market. The growing construction of data centers will be one of the factors for the development of multiple chillers, cooling towers, and CRAH units. Equinix's MC1 phase 2 data center facility in Oman has installed air-cooled chiller systems and chilled water CRAH units of N+1 redundancy. Infrastructure vendors providing installation and commissioning services have a strong presence in the country. Direct Services and Hill International have a presence in the market for MEP services in Oman. The need for specific expertise for installing and commissioning data centers is increasing as investments trigger job opportunities in the country. Market Segmentation by Infrastructure Type IT Infrastructure Electrical Infrastructure Mechanical Infrastructure General Construction Market Segmentation by IT Infrastructure Server Storage Systems Network Infrastructure Market Segmentation by Electrical Infrastructure UPS Systems Generators Transfer Switches and Switchgears PDUs Other Electrical Infrastructure Market Segmentation by Mechanical Infrastructure Cooling Systems Rack Cabinets Other Mechanical Infrastructure Market Segmentation by Cooling Systems CRAC & CRAH Units Chillers Cooling Towers, Condensers, and Dry Coolers Economizers & Evaporative Coolers Other Cooling Units Market Segmentation by General Construction Core & Shell Development Installation & commissioning Services Building & Engineering Design Fire Detection and Suppression Physical Security Data Center Infrastructure Management (DCIM) OMAN DATA CENTER MARKET DYNAMICS In Oman, enterprises have traditionally maintained on-premises data centers for data storage to have more control over the data. Maintaining an on-premises data center also ensures that the data can be retrieved at a low latency by users in the same building. It also gives control on cybersecurity of the data center. In addition, many on-premises data centers could not cater to the additional data traffic. Many of them are built according to Tier II standards, and any power instability can affect data center operations severely. Due to the outbreak of the COVID-19 pandemic, many companies faced difficulties in managing on-premises data centers due to restrictions and lockdowns. To cater to day-to-day operations of data centers and handle any issues became a challenge due to unavailability or limited availability of trained personnel. In Oman, most government entities - private and public organizations process the data on on-premise facilities. KEY DRIVERS AND TRENDS FUELING MARKET GROWTH: Cloud Adoption driving Data Center Demand Big Data & IoT boosting Data Center Investments Procurement of Renewable Energy in Oman 5G Deployment leading to Edge Data Center Investments OMAN DATA CENTER MARKET - EXISTING VS. UPCOMING DATA CENTERS Existing Facilities in the region (Area and Power Capacity) Muscat Other Cities (Area and Power Capacity) List of Upcoming Facilities in the region (Area and Power Capacity) Get your sample today! https://www.arizton.com/market-reports/oman-data-center-market KEY MARKET PARTICIPANTS IT Infrastructure Providers Broadcom Cisco Systems Dell Technologies Fujitsu Hewlett Packard Enterprise (HPE) Huawei IBM Juniper Networks Lenovo NetApp Oracle Construction Constructors & Sub-Contractors AECOM DC Pro Engineering Direct Services Hill International Turner & Townsend Support Infrastructure Providers ABB Airedale International Air Conditioning Alfa Laval Caterpillar Cummins Eaton Johnson Controls Legrand Schneider Electric STULZ Siemens Vertiv Group Data Center Investors Equinix Ooredoo Oman Data Park Gulf Data Hub Explore our data center knowledge base profile to know more about the industry. Read some of the top-selling reports: About Arizton: Arizton Advisory and Intelligence is an innovation and quality-driven firm, which offers cutting-edge research solutions to clients across the world. We excel in providing comprehensive market intelligence reports and advisory and consulting services. We offer comprehensive market research reports on industries such as consumer goods & retail technology, automotive and mobility, smart tech, healthcare, and life sciences, industrial machinery, chemicals and materials, IT and media, logistics and packaging. These reports contain detailed industry analysis, market size, share, growth drivers, and trend forecasts. Arizton comprises a team of exuberant and well-experienced analysts who have mastered in generating incisive reports. Our specialist analysts possess exemplary skills in market research. We train our team in advanced research practices, techniques, and ethics to outperform in fabricating impregnable research reports. Mail: enquiry@arizton.com TORONTO, March 02, 2022 (GLOBE NEWSWIRE) -- B2B Bank announces an increase to its prime lending rate by 25 basis points from 2.45% to 2.70%, effective March 3, 2022. About B2B Bank B2B Bank is a leading provider of banking products to more than 15,000 financial advisors and brokers across Canada. Through the professional advisor and broker channels, it offers a broad range of products and services to consumers including Investment, RSP and TFSA Loans, mortgages, GICs, banking services and investment accounts and services through B2B Bank Dealer Services. B2B Bank is proudly dedicated to serving the needs of its clients and it continues to provide innovative products and solutions that help advisors and brokers build rewarding relationships with their clients. B2B Bank is a Schedule I bank. For more information, please visit https://b2bbank.com. Contact: Merick Seguin Senior manager, media relations Laurentian Bank of Canada Mobile: 514 451-3201 merick.seguin@laurentianbank.ca Welcome Guest! You Are Here: NOT FOR DISSEMINATION IN THE UNITED STATES OR FOR DISTRIBUTION TO U.S. WIRE SERVICES VANCOUVER, British Columbia, March 02, 2022 (GLOBE NEWSWIRE) -- Further to its news releases dated February 23, 2022 and February 28, 2022, Abacus Mining & Exploration Corporation (Abacus or the Company) (TSXV: AME) is pleased to announce an increase to the non-brokered private placement (Offering), now for proceeds of up to $750,000 through the issuance of up to 12,500,000 units (Units) at a price of $0.06 per Unit. Each Unit will consist of one common share of the Company and one half of one non-transferable common share purchase warrant, with each warrant exercisable to purchase one common share of the Company at a price of $0.10 per common share for a period of 2 years from the date of closing of the Offering. Proceeds from the Offering will be applied towards exploration and for general working capital. The Company holds options and leases on the Willow and adjacent Nev-Lorraine copper-molybdenum properties near Yerington, Nevada, and a 20% interest carried to production in the advanced Ajax copper-gold development project in B.C. Investors are referred to the Company website for the latest news and project descriptions. The Offering is being conducted pursuant to available prospectus exemptions, including the exemption to existing shareholders of Abacus who are permitted to subscribe pursuant to British Columbia Instrument 45-534 Exemption from Prospectus Requirement for Certain Trades to Existing Security Holders. If total subscriptions received for the Offering exceed the maximum Offering amount of $750,000, Units will be allocated pro rata among all subscribers qualifying under all available exemptions, unless the Company otherwise increases the maximum Offering amount. The financing is subject to TSX Venture Exchange approval. In connection with the Offering, certain finders may receive a cash fee and/or non-transferable finder warrants. All securities issued will be subject to a four month hold period under Canadian securities law. On Behalf of the Board, ABACUS MINING & EXPLORATION CORPORATION Paul G. Anderson, P. Geo. President and CEO About Abacus Abacus is a mineral exploration and mine development company currently focused on copper and gold in B.C. and Nevada. The Companys main asset is a 20% ownership interest, together with KGHM Polska Miedz S.A. (80%), in the proposed copper-gold Ajax Mine located southwest of Kamloops, B.C., which has undergone a joint provincial and federal environmental assessment process. On December 14, 2017, a decision was made by the B.C. Minister of Environment and Climate Change Strategy and the Minister of Energy, Mines and Petroleum Resources to decline to issue an environmental assessment certificate for the Project. KGHM have recently reopened an office in Kamloops, B.C. to facilitate First Nation, community and governmental engagement in order to advance the project towards a potential resubmission of the environmental application. Abacus also holds an option on the Willow copper-gold property located near Yerington, Nevada in which it can acquire up to a 75% ownership interest, and the contiguous Nev-Lorraine claims subject to a ten-year lease agreement. For the latest reports and information on Abacus projects, please refer to the Companys website at www.amemining.com. Forward-Looking Information This release includes certain statements that are deemed forward-looking statements. All statements in this release, other than statements of historical facts, that address events or developments that Abacus expects to occur, are forward-looking statements. Forward-looking statements are statements that are not historical facts and are generally, but not always, identified by the words expects, plans, anticipates, believes, intends, estimates, projects, potential and similar expressions, or that events or conditions will, would, may, could or should occur. Although the Company believes the expectations expressed in such forward-looking statements are based on reasonable assumptions, such statements are not guarantees of future performance and actual results may differ materially from those in the forward-looking statements. Factors that could cause the actual results to differ materially from those in forward-looking statements include changes to commodity prices, mine and metallurgical recovery, operating and capital costs, foreign exchange rates, ability to obtain required permits on a timely basis, exploitation and exploration successes, continued availability of capital and financing, and general economic, market or business conditions. Investors are cautioned that any such statements are not guarantees of future performance and actual results or developments may differ materially from those projected in the forward-looking statements. Forward-looking statements are based on the beliefs, estimates and opinions of the Company's management on the date the statements are made. Except as required by applicable securities laws, the Company undertakes no obligation to update these forward-looking statements in the event that management's beliefs, estimates or opinions, or other factors, should change. This press release does not constitute an offer to sell or a solicitation of an offer to buy any of the securities in the United States. The securities have not been and will not be registered under the United States Securities Act of 1933, as amended (the U.S. Securities Act), or any state securities laws and may not be offered or sold within the United States or to or for the account or benefit of a U.S. person (as defined in Regulation S under the U.S. Securities Act) unless registered under the U.S. Securities Act and applicable state securities laws or an exemption from such registration is available. Neither 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 release. LANCASTER, Pa., March 02, 2022 (GLOBE NEWSWIRE) -- When the $65 million High Foundation Fund was established at Lancaster County Community Foundation last fall, it was truly extraordinary. That was just the beginning of S. Dale High's innovative plan to sustain his legacy of using business and philanthropy to contribute to the greater good of the community. Today, S. Dale High and the High Family announce the transfer of family ownership of High Industries to High Foundation. This new structure, making High Foundation a major stakeholder of High Industries, will result in millions of dollars of profits being invested into the Lancaster community and other communities where High Industries provides economic investment and employment. High Industries is a major force in building and rebuilding North Americas infrastructure. High companies employ nearly 2,000 coworkers in 11 businesses in 38 locations in six states. This new structure gives coworkers a direct line to creating more thriving, vibrant communities where they live and work. Profits will be invested into the High Foundation for the good of the community, toward initiatives that address poverty and community transformation, cultural and economic vibrancy, and collaboration and social innovation. High Foundation investments will be disbursed through: Major partnerships and collaborations The grant application process on highfoundation.org Scholarships for children of High coworkers High Foundation Fund at Lancaster County Community Foundation This is the creation of a new kind of company, said Dale High, where High Foundation has become the major shareholder and the community is the recipient of the profits of High Industries moving forward. This allows our coworkers the satisfaction of knowing that the profits they help generate will go back into the community. So, every day when they are building value, they are building it for the community. A Higher Purpose As he began to plan for the next chapter of High Industries, Dale High envisioned a change in the structure of the companyan inspired model that continues the companys legacy and work in the community. He asked the question, "What if we could create a company that directly benefits the community?" This shift continues the legacy of Dale Highs transformative and innovative leadership, which has guided High Industries in using business as a force for good in the community for decades, and High Foundation as a committed community partner for the past 40 years. I am proud of Dale and our family for making this move, said Suzanne High. The High Family wholly supports this change as a continuation of its legacy and philosophy. While ownership of High Industries is changing to the High Foundation, the High Family will remain in the companies in a number of ways. For me, as Vice Chair of the High Foundation, I have seen firsthand the life-changing impact of our investments, and I am excited to see that continue to grow. A Bridge to Opportunity Since 1980, High Foundation has been a thought leader and community partner, contributing over $20 million to projects and initiatives that eliminate the cycle of poverty and enable the dignity, diversity, equality, and inclusion of all people. High Foundations 40year legacy of impact spans improvements in education, health and human services, arts and culture, historic preservation, environmental stewardship, and social enterprise in Lancaster City and beyond. Robin Stauffer will continue to lead High Foundation as Executive Director and work with key community partners. High Foundation has put a strong governance structure in place to support future growth and collaboration. Additional Trustees have recently been added to the Board, and Committees have been created. High Foundation will be scaled appropriately to handle the growth that will occur as a result of the new structure, and the High Family has ensured that sufficient reserves are in place to maintain financial durability for years to come. This is a remarkable gift from Dale High to High coworkers and our communities, said Robin Stauffer, Executive Director of High Foundation. This new structure multiplies the already generous impact High Foundation has had and emboldens the Foundation for even greater impact. The Ultimate Example of Business for Good Familyowned since 1931, Lancasterbased High Industries is a major force in building and rebuilding North Americas infrastructure. Since joining the family business in 1963, Dale has led High Industries to success through the thoughtful, intentional approach of putting people, community, and business for good above all else. Today, High companies employ nearly 2,000 coworkers in 11 businesses in 38 locations in six states. High Industries will continue to thrive and grow under the leadership of its existing Board of Directors, CEO Mike Shirk, the High Executive Committee and High Industries leadership teams. High Industries will continue to maintain a healthy financial position and have the capacity to invest in its strategic plans. The High Philosophy of building trustworthy relationships and being innovative leaders will continue to define corporate culture and values. What will change is that profits from High Industries will be managed, grown, and distributed into the community through High Foundation under the leadership of the Board of Trustees and Executive Director Robin Stauffer. This means that profits will directly benefit the communities in which High companies provide economic investment and employment. In the past, dividends distributed from High Industries went to the High Family. Now they will go directly to High Foundation for investment in the communities where our companies operate. This immediately grows the resources available to High Foundation. Its the ultimate commitment to social responsibility and doing business for good in an impactful and lasting way. Its a truly bold and unique move made possible through Dale Highs vision and dedication to making it happen, noted Mike Shirk, CEO of High companies. To view Dale Highs announcement about this extraordinary gift to the Lancaster and High coworker communities, please visit www.highfoundation.org. About High Foundation High Foundation is a philanthropic nonprofit organization that is funded by members of the High Family, owners of High Companies. The Foundations overall mission is to align with community benefit organizations to support positive change within areas of identified need in communities in which High companies do business. The current focus of the Foundation is eliminating poverty and strengthening Lancaster City in Pennsylvania. In addition, the Foundation assists High coworkers in meeting the costs of a college education for their children through the High Foundation Scholarship Program. About High Industries Inc. High Industries Inc. is a Lancaster, Pa.based company with 2021 revenue of approximately $570 million. Its affiliates High Steel Structures Inc., High Concrete Group LLC, High Steel Service Center LLC, High Transit LLC, High Structural Erectors LLC, and High Construction Company deliver a wide range of products and services to customers across the East Coast and Midwest United States. These products and services include steel bridge superstructure fabrication and erection; precast concrete building systems; metal processing and distribution; heavyhauling transportation; steel and precast concrete erection services; general contracting and architectural design. More information is available by visiting www.high.net. # # # Attachment English French FORT KENT, Maine, March 02, 2022 (GLOBE NEWSWIRE) -- Irving Woodlands, LLC., will return as title sponsor for the March 5 Can-Am Crown International Sled Dog 250-mile race in Fort Kent, Maine. The company has sponsored the events 250-mile race and awarded the top 12 finishers since 2005. Between the three races, 30-mile, 100-mile, and 250-mile, there will be 30 musher and dog teams running from Fort Kent through Allagash, Portage and various other towns in Northern Maine. "Aroostook County is home to so many of our employees and their families, says Jim Irving, Co-CEO of Irving Woodlands LLC and Irving Forest Products, Inc. We've been part of Northern Maine for over 70 years and we look forward to the Can-Am Crown and community spirit every year. In celebration of the 30th Annual Can-Am Crown Sled Dog Races, and for all the northern Maine community has done to host the activity for three decades, Irving Woodlands, LLC is donating an additional $50,000USD to Aroostook County Action Program ($25,000), Fish River Rural Health Food Pantry ($10,000), and Ashland Food Pantry ($15,000) on behalf of the hundreds of volunteers who commit themselves to hosting the popular event year after year. This is a great opportunity to reconnect with our neighbors and help community volunteers make this world-class event possible, says Doug Cyr, Human Resources Manager, Irving Woodlands, LLC. We were happy to work with the great folks at these three organizations last spring and wanted to connect with them again to see how we might help their operations and the community they serve. For Irving (R-L) Douglas Cyr Human Resource Manager Andrew King Purchase Stumpage Manager Kevin Michaud Business Analyst Peter Tabor Regional Manager ACAP Back row left to right: Alyssa Levesque, Sherry Locke, Jason Parent Front row left to right-Wanda Osgood, Jamie Chandler and Trudy Gorneault JDI Peter Gagne (Operations Supervisor) JDI Cheryl Thibeault (Office Administrator) JDI Peter Tabor (Regional Manager) FRRH CEO Heather Pelletier JDI Mike Michaud (Operations Supervisor) JDI employees (L-R) Ashley Ballanger Continuous Improvement Specialist Josh Philbrook Mill Manager Peter Tabor Regional Manager Matthew Stedman Planning Forester ABOUT ACAP Aroostook County Action Program, Inc. (ACAP), is a 501c3 non-profit organization founded in 1972. ACAP provides guidance to the community in responding to emerging human needs in the areas of Prevention and Wellness, Early Care and Education, Energy and Housing, and Workforce Development. ABOUT FRRH Fish River Rural Health (FRRH) provides access to comprehensive primary and preventive care of the highest quality to the underserved population and improves the health care status of the residents of the Upper St. John Valley. ABOUT AEFB Since 1972, Ashland Emergency Food Bank (AEFB) has provided food to residents of Ashland, Maine and surrounding rural communities. Each month, over 600 families representing approximately 1,700 individuals are assisted by AEFB. CONTACT: Jessica Sundblad Sundblad.Jessica@jdirving.com For photos please visit: https://jdirving.com/Newsroom-Northern-Maine-Donation.aspx New York, NY, March 02, 2022 (GLOBE NEWSWIRE) -- On February 23, 2022, investor, entrepreneur, and philanthropist Matthew J. Bruderman and his wife Kerri Beth hosted a fundraiser for New York Republican gubernatorial candidate Lee Zeldin at their home in Oyster Bay, which raised more than $500,000 in donations, Congressman Zeldins highest grossing fundraiser to date. Special guest former Vice President Mike Pence attended the event, alongside NYPD Deputy Inspector Alison Esposito. This was Espositos first campaign stop after her announcement as Zeldins running mate earlier that morning. This overwhelming outpouring of support from so many New Yorkers underscores that the fight to Save Our State is only just beginning, said Congressman Lee Zeldin. This unparalleled momentum is proof New Yorkers are ready to restore our state to glory, and they know it starts with a major change at the ballot box in 2022. Thank you to the Bruderman family for their unwavering commitment to this mission, their incredible passion for our community and country, and inspiring so many others to do the same." Bruderman added: My family, like many others, is tired of the way Democrats have mismanaged things. They are only good at liberal pandering and not what is required to run a state. We need a real qualified leader to save our state. We know Lee Zeldin IS the person to do it. Additional attendees included Nassau County executive Bruce Blakeman, Suffolk Republican Committee Chairman Jesse Garcia, Nassau County Republican Party Chairman Joe Cairo, and former U.S. Representative from New York Peter King, as well as several influential business people and celebrities. Additional images can be downloaded at: https://www.dropbox.com/sh/1g7hlgay7j8v6qv/AACyWx9GVK5zkNsWkNuI0RYja?dl=0 Attachments Los Angeles, March 02, 2022 (GLOBE NEWSWIRE) -- Los Angeles, California - Los Angeles, CA Decades of substance addiction eventually led to a new road to recovery for a Los Angeles man who found a whole new life at Muse Treatment. He was so grateful, he left an enthusiastic 5-star review for the treatment center on Google. Muse Treatment absolutely saved my life, wrote Devanne. [They] gave me the much-needed tools to help me get through the 35 years of trauma I have survived. Muse is a Los Angeles addiction treatment center where clients find new strategies for coping with mental health and substance use disorders. Muse treats addiction to alcohol and drugs, including prescription painkillers and medication for anxiety, depression, and other co-occurring psychological conditions. Devanne came to Muse after fighting addiction for more than three decades. But drugs werent his only issue. I used pain pills and alcohol to numb both physical and mental pain I had been drowning in, he wrote. I was in a loveless marriage. I was surrounded by people but completely alone. I figured, what the hell did I have to lose? So I hopped on a plane. I didnt know leaving Florida behind forever, finding love for myself for the first time ever, and looking forward to life again, could ever be possible. Devannes experience using drugs and alcohol to self-medicate emotional pain is a common one for many Muse clients. Its known as a dual diagnosis or co-occurring disorder. In cases like Devannes, substance addiction is really just a symptom of a deeper emotional or psychological problem. The two must be treated together. If only the addiction is treated but not the underlying problem, the client is more likely to relapse because they still havent resolved the root cause. Public health experts have found that almost 9 million Americans are battling both addiction and a mental illness, but only 7.4% receive treatment for the two conditions together. Muse offers a variety of treatment plans custom-designed to fit the individual needs of each client. The Muse experience usually begins with medically assisted detox, a cleansing period in which harmful toxins are cleansed from the body and the client is physically prepared for the emotional work of rehab. This is followed by residential and outpatient rehab, an extended period of therapy using evidence-based approaches to help the client learn new coping strategies. These include group and individual therapy sessions, cognitive behavioral therapy, and other leading-edge techniques. Like many other Muse alumni, Devanne was most enthusiastic about the Muse staff. Clients often say it was Muses caring, compassionate, and highly qualified staff that made the difference in their success. The staff was amazing! he wrote, listing several staff members by name. His therapist, he wrote, Opened Pandoras box, gently led me through, and provided me with the tools to deal with the contents within it. I can go on and on, he enthused. These people are now my family! Muse can be your home away from home, he concluded. I now have six months sober (and) I can finally just breathe. I can just be. Let Muse love you, like they did for me! Anyone struggling with substance use disorder can contact Muse and speak with a treatment specialist anytime 24/7. Success is possible at Muse, no matter how many times a person may have tried and been unsuccessful. To begin the process of recovery for oneself or another person, visit Muse Treatment online or call 800-426-1818. https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=ZJMwVG-Wdm8 ### For more information about Muse Treatment, contact the company here: Muse Treatment (800) 426-1818 1251 Westwood Blvd, Los Angeles, CA 90024 TORONTO, March 02, 2022 (GLOBE NEWSWIRE) -- Kinross Gold Corporation (TSX:K; NYSE:KGC) (Kinross and the Company) is deeply concerned about the loss of life and destruction in Ukraine and wishes to express its sympathy and support for the people who are suffering because of this tragic situation. The Company today is announcing a donation of $1,000,000 to the Canadian Red Cross Ukraine Humanitarian Crisis Appeal to assist those people most in need. Kinross is hopeful for a peaceful and diplomatic solution in Ukraine. The Company is suspending all activities at its Udinsk development project. The Company is also in the process of suspending operations at its Kupol mine, with the focus on the safety and well-being of its more than 2,000 employees and in recognition of its obligations to manage and mitigate the mine's environmental impact on an ongoing basis. The Company intends to adhere to all sanctions and legal restrictions that have, or will be, announced by relevant governments. About Kinross Gold Corporation Kinross is a Canadian-based senior gold mining company with mines and projects in the United States, Brazil, Russia, Mauritania, Chile, Ghana and Canada. Our focus is on delivering value based on the core principles of operational excellence, balance sheet strength, disciplined growth and responsible mining. Kinross maintains listings on the Toronto Stock Exchange (symbol:K) and the New York Stock Exchange (symbol:KGC). Media Contact Louie Diaz Vice-President, Corporate Communications phone: 416-369-6469 louie.diaz@kinross.com Investor Relations Contact Chris Lichtenheldt Vice-President, Investor Relations phone: 416-365-2761 chris.lichtenheldt@kinross.com Source: Kinross Gold Corporation An armed man stands by the remains of a Russian military vehicle in Bucha, close to the Ukraine capital of Kyiv, on Tuesday. Russia on Tuesday stepped up shelling of Kharkiv, Ukraines second-largest city, pounding civilian targets there. Casualties mounted and reports emerged that more than 70 Ukrainian soldiers were killed after Russian artillery hit a military base in Okhtyrka, a city between Kharkiv and Kyiv. Please visit for gloucestertimes.com for the latest news on the war. It takes longer to walk a block in Salt Lake City than anywhere else in the U.S. I discovered this the hard way during a recent stay downtown. At first, I would walk to restaurants that seemed close by -- just four or five blocks away -- only to discover that they took 20 minutes to reach. After a while, I just drove everywhere, despite having located centrally.This is because Salt Lake City has the largest blocks and widest streets of any major U.S. city. As I recently pointed out in my publication, downtown blocks in Salt Lake are 660 x 660 feet. By comparison, Austin and Little Rock, Ark., have block lengths and widths around 300 x 300 feet. Portland, Ore., which is known nationwide for its walkable downtown, has blocks that are 200 x 200 feet. Its not just Salt Lake Citys blocks that are wide. Its streets are too: At 130 feet, theyre double the width of those in Manhattan, Portland and San Francisco.This layout is a byproduct of the citys Mormon heritage. In 1833, several years after founding the religion in upstate New York, Joseph Smith outlined how Mormon cities should look and feel. The plan drew from that eras East Coast design principles, as well as the churchs desire for order. Smith called for a temple at the center of a grid and for large blocks that enabled family farming.In the early years, the church, thanks to persecution, had trouble finding a permanent settlement where it could execute these plans. But when Mormons finally entered Utah in 1847, the churchs then-president, Brigham Young, applied Smiths principles to Salt Lake City. Temple Square -- the current headquarters of the Mormon Church -- is in the center of the city. While Smiths plan didnt call for wide streets, Young added them, claiming that they would enable farmers to easily turn their cattle around without resorting to profanity.Today, the only group cursing Salt Lakes large blocks are urbanists. They consider them anachronisms for a densifying city, since they endanger pedestrians, separate uses and hinder walkability. Various activists have suggested implementing a complete streets strategy that features bike lanes, bulb-outs and medians. The Kentlands Initiative, a local nonprofit, has gone further, suggesting that the city build new housing and retail right in the middle of the streets. In this sense, Salt Lake Citys obscenely wide streets, while a problem, could also be an opportunity.But while the city government is somewhat receptive to that notion, its unlikely to happen. There are challenges with being too creative, says Molly Robinson, an urban designer for the planning department, especially in the actual roadways. Robinson says that Utahs arid climate makes plant-filled medians expensive to maintain, and that city residents cherish their mountain views. Putting trees, much less buildings, in the medians might block such views, which would be politically unpopular. So, for now, the Mormon planning principles that made Salt Lake Citys streets wide open remain intact. Where drivers such as Nikita Mazepin could still breathe a sigh of relief after the verdict of the FIA surrounding the drivers from Russia and Belarus on Monday night, there now seems to be a serious obstacle for Mazepin and his participation in the 2022 F1 season. The motorsport federation in England has prohibited teams, drivers and officials from Russia and Belarus from participating in motorsport events in England. F1 journalist Chris Medland reports this on Twitter. So where the FIA seemed to be reporting good news to Mazepin and others, this measure from Motorsport UK will hit hard. The measure means that Mazepin, if he stays with Haas, would not be able to participate in this year's British Grand Prix at Silverstone. Even for drivers who will race under the FIA flag, which was the measure the FIA took on Monday night, are not welcome at races in England. When will Haas tie the knot? It all makes Haas' decision no easier. They were already in Barcelona with their main sponsor UralKali, which they removed from their cars. Now that Mazepin is definitively not allowed to participate in one of the races on the 2022 calendar, things are not looking very rosy for the Russian. With test days in Bahrain already scheduled for next week, Haas will be in some hurry to make a decision. After FIA allowed them under an FIA flag yesterday, Motorsport UK announces no Russian/Belarusian licenced teams are approved to enter, and no Russian/Belarusian licenced competitors and officials are approved to participate, in UK motorsport events. Chris Medland (@ChrisMedlandF1) March 2, 2022 Starkville, MS (39762) Today Partly cloudy early followed by cloudy skies overnight. A stray shower or thunderstorm is possible. Low 67F. Winds light and variable.. Tonight Partly cloudy early followed by cloudy skies overnight. A stray shower or thunderstorm is possible. Low 67F. Winds light and variable. A Place for All Conservatives to Speak Their Mind. bp and Honeywell have signed a licensing agreement for Honeywell UOPs Ecofining technology. bp is undergoing pre-feed engineering for its proposed diesel and sustainable aviation fuel (SAF) project in Western Australia. bp plans to convert hydroprocessing equipment at its former refinery site in Kwinana, Australia, to produce approximately 10,000 barrels per day (kbd) diesel and SAF from renewable feeds, integrating with its existing terminal operations. bp announced in October 2020 that it would cease fuel production at its Kwinana Refinery and convert it to an import terminal, helping to ensure ongoing security of fuel supply for Western Australia. Kwinana Refinery The refinery provided fuels for Western Australia for 65 years. However, the continued growth of large-scale, export-oriented refineries throughout Asia and the Middle East has structurally changed the Australian market, bp noted at the time. Revamping to Honeywell UOPs Ecofining process is expected to provide a fast-to-market, capital efficient solution, suited for repurposing underutilized hydroprocessing units to produce diesel and SAF from renewable feeds, which have substantially similar molecules to petroleum-based diesel and jet fuel and can be used as a drop-in replacement without engine modificationsin the case of SAF in blends of up to 50% with the remainder as conventional jet fuel. Depending on feedstock choice, diesel and SAF produced from the Ecofining process is expected to result in a significant reduction in greenhouse gas emissions compared with conventional diesel or aviation fuel from petroleum. Honeywell helped pioneer SAF production with its UOP Ecofining process, which has been used to produce SAF commercially since 2016. The UOP Ecofining process, developed in conjunction with Eni SpA, converts non-edible natural oils, animal fats and other waste feedstocks to diesel and SAF. Both products offer improved performance over commercial petroleum-based diesel and jet fuels. Honeywell recently committed to achieve carbon neutrality in its operations and facilities by 2035. About half of Honeywells new product introduction research and development investment is directed toward products that improve environmental and social outcomes for customers. A.P. Moller Maersk is temporarily suspending new Maersk bookings within ocean, air and intercontinental rail to and from Russia, with the exception of foodstuffs, medical and humanitarian supplies (bar dual-use items). The suspension began 1 March and covers all Russian gateway ports. Maersk will announce further details as it progresses with the planning. The company also noted that, with the ever-evolving situation with governments posing new sanctions against Russia and the regular adjustments that are being made to the list of restrictions, it is starting to see the effect on global supply chain flows such as delays and detention of cargo by customs authorities across various transshipment hubs, resulting in unpredictable operational impacts. It is key for Maersk that we minimize supply chain disruption and do not add to the global congestion in ports and depots. For cargo already underway and bookings placed before this suspension was announced, we will do our utmost to deliver it to its intended destination. Consequently, we will still call Russia although we will not accept new bookings unless they belong in the exception categories mentioned above. However, please expect significant delays as countries such as the Netherlands, Belgium and Germany are holding back vessels en route to Russia in search of restricted commodities, primarily dual-use items. The inspections of export and transshipment cargo bound for Russia are related to implementing procedures to comply with sanctions and export controls recently imposed by different jurisdictions. A.P. Moller Maersk Maersk also noted that it cannot receive from or make payments to any sanctioned Russian banks, or any other sanctioned party. MSC and ONE suspend as well. Until recently, Maersk was the worlds largest container line. Data compiled by Alphaliner found that as of 1 March 2022, MSC (Mediterranean Shipping Co) has overtaken Maersk in terms of capacity. MSCs fleet can carry 4,308,612 TEUs to Maersks 4,293,689. MSC has a 17% share of the global market, Maersk has a 16.9% share. MSC has also introduced with immediate effect a temporary stoppage on all cargo bookings to and from Russia, covering all access areas including Baltics, Black Sea and Far East Russia. MSC said it will continue to accept and screen bookings for delivery of essential goods such as food, medical equipment and humanitarian goods. MSC will contact customers directly, as necessary, in respect of any Russia-related cargo that is already in transit. ONE (Ocean Network Express)ranked N 6 by Alphalinerhas suspended booking acceptance to and from Odessa, Ukraine and Novorossiysk, Russia until further notice. Booking acceptance to and from St. Petersburg, Russia is suspended with immediate effect until further notice while the company evaluates operational feasibility. On February 28, the Board of Directors of Vietnam Bank for Industry and Trade Securities Joint Stock Company (HOSE: CTS) unanimously approved the signing of credit limit contract with Vietnam Technological and Commercial Joint Stock Bank (HOSE: TCB), as follows: - Credit limit : VND700,000,000,000 - Term: 12 months from the date of signing. Solaris has won a tender for the delivery of five hydrogen-powered Urbino 12 hydrogen buses to Palma de Mallorca, the capital of the island of Mallorca. The contract is worth about 4 million. This investment is part of the Green Hyslan project, financed with EU funds. The project objective seeks to promote the development of clean energy as part of initiatives aimed at combating climate change by 2050. As a result of the planned activities, the Spanish island is to become a European benchmark in terms of using zero-emission energy. The Urbino 12 hydrogen bus was launched in 2019 at the UITP Global Public Transport Summit in Stockholm as a complement to battery-electric products. The launch of another vehicle of this type, the articulated Urbino 18 hydrogen bus, is slated for the second half of 2022. The Solaris Urbino 12 hydrogen bus has a range of up to 350 km. The refueling takes only a few minutes, which makes the bus very easy to handle and provides flexibility for local transport operators. Compared to diesel vehicles, it produces only slight vibrations and the noise level is barely noticeable. At present, Solaris Urbino 12 hydrogen buses can be seen, for example, on the streets of Bolzano in Italy, Cologne and Wuppertal in Germany as well as in the province of South Holland in the Netherlands. How to Clip Click and hold your mouse button on the page to select the area you wish to save or print. You can click and drag the clipping box to move it or click and drag in the bottom right corner to resize it. When you're happy with your selection, click the checkmark icon next to the clipping area to continue. According to a new report from the IDC, MediaTek is now the number one chipset supplier for Android phones sold during Q4 2021 period in the US. Based on that report, MediaTek gets 48.1% of the market while Qualcomm is left with 43.9% of the pie. IDC claims MediaTeks success is built on the back of solid sales figures for Samsungs Galaxy A12 and Galaxy A32 as well as Motorollas G Pure and Dimensity powered carrier phones from T-Mobile and Boost mobile. Theres a countering statement from Counterpoint Research, though, which claims in its report that Qualcomm still holds a 55% share of Android phones in the US compared to 37% for MediaTek. It remains to be seen how the two makers will fare going forward but MediaTek is surely on the rise in the low and midrange Android segments and its newly announced Dimensity 8000 series chips will likely contribute to its growing presence in the US and other markets. Via 1 Via 2 Xiaomi sub-brand Redmi unveiled two new devices for the Chinese market today, of which one is eerily familiar. That's because the newly announced Redmi Note 11E Pro is nothing but a rebranded Redmi Note 11 Pro 5G, launched recently for international markets. Thus, the Redmi Note 11E Pro keeps the same specs as its international counterpart, down to the 6.67" 1080x2400 Samsung-made 120 Hz Super AMOLED touchscreen, the Snapdragon 695 chipset, 108 MP main camera, 8 MP ultrawide, 2 MP macro cam, 16 MP selfie snapper, and 5,000 mAh battery with 67W fast charging support. The Redmi Note 11E Pro starts at CNY 1,699 ($269, 241) with 6GB of RAM and 128GB of storage, goes up to CNY 1,899 ($300 or 270) if you want to amp up the RAM to 8GB, and the top model is priced at CNY 2,099 ($332 or 298), offering 8GB of RAM and 256GB of storage. It will be available starting on March 4. The all-new Redmi Note 11E, on the other hand, is cheaper - just CNY 1,199 ($189 or 170) with 4GB of RAM and 128GB of storage, or CNY 1,299 ($205 or 184) with 6GB of RAM and the same storage amount. This model is powered by the Dimensity 700 chipset, and it has a 6.58-inch 90 Hz LCD display, a 50 MP main camera, a 2 MP depth sensor, a 5 MP selfie snapper, and a 5,000 mAh battery. It will be available starting on March 18. It's unclear if this device will make it to international markets or not, and if so, under what name, but we'll let you know if that ever happens. Source 1 (in Chinese) | Source 2 (in Chinese) | Via 1 | Via 2 Samsung announced the Galaxy A13 5G last year, but it's yet to unveil the A13 4G that we've been hearing about for months. However, it shouldn't be too long before the Galaxy A13 4G goes official since the smartphone has bagged NBTC certification, and its support pages have also gone live on Samsung's official websites for India, Russia, Switzerland, and the UK. Neither NBTC nor Samsung's websites include the Galaxy A13 4G's key specs, but thanks to Geekbench, we know the A13 4G with model code SM-A135F will come with Exynos 850 SoC, Android 12, and 3GB RAM. Although there could be more RAM options that are yet to be confirmed. Aside from the Galaxy A13 4G, Samsung could also unveil the Galaxy M23 5G soon, since its support pages have gone live in the UK and Russia, and the smartphone has also been certified by NBTC. Via Artist Gisela McDaniel paints while wearing her heart on her sleeve, alchemizing the trauma and healing of her subjects survivors of sexual violence, colonalism and racism in three-dimensional, multifaceted works of art. When I make a painting, its about who they are in a holistic sense. Im celebrating that they exist, they are still here and have gone through things that could have eaten them up, but they didnt allow that to happen, said McDaniel, herself a survivor of sexualized violence, and a CHamoru of mixed race growing up in the Midwest. Im really focused on giving somebody a peek into that, to share things we normally dont share. Its not shameful, its not dark like that, its just another layer of our existence, its part of our experience. Her rich, colorful oil paintings, sometimes life-size, are embellished deconstructed personal items, such as a piece of prom dress, as well as jewelry, shells and other found items. And her assemblages are enhanced by audio, with the voices and stories of her subjects triggered by motion sensor technology. I think of portraiture as history, and theres all these layers that I added to make it more holistic, like having a voice and having objects there. It feels very multidisciplinary, rather than just being painting and something thats flat. Theres so many layers to it, she said. The 26-year-old McDaniel is considered a rising star in the international art world. Since getting her BFA from the University of Michigan in 2019 she has had solo and group shows in galleries and museums in London, Los Angeles, Miami, Detroit, Cleveland, Boston, Kansas City, Baltimore, Cincinnati and Dhaka, Bangladesh. A growing roster of collectors institutions and individuals are purchasing her pieces, including former Walt Disney President Michael Ovitz. People are excited about the work, she said. Im still in shock and Im still processing that. Outside of CHamoru communities, for it to be really widely seen is really incredible, but its very overwhelming. Values passed down Despite being an art world sensation, she is grounded in the lessons and love of her CHamoru mother and grandparents. I think being raised by a sociologist definitely influenced me a lot. She was always interested in people and where they came from and their stories, and I think it just rubbed off on me sitting in her lectures when I was 4 years old, she said of her mother, Antoinette Charfauros McDaniel, a Yale-trained sociologist, university professor and CHamoru scholar-activist living in Cleveland. When youre dealing with other peoples stories, you dont want to mishandle that, and you want to treat it with care. That is something I received from my nana and tata, that care and respect. And all their values that were passed from them to me, thats something thats woven into my practice, she said of her grandparents, Jesus Chu Quitugua Charfauros , familian Chunge of Barrigada, and Victoria Lujan Blas Charfauros, familian Capili of Tamuning. Her grandfather left Guam for the military and never returned, raising their five children first in Virginia and then San Diego. Gisela McDaniel was born in Bellevue, Nebraska, but grew up most of her life in Ohio, where her father, Philip C. McDaniel is from. She has fond memories of summer and Christmas trips visiting her grandparents in their ranch style, three-bedroom, pink house with a small backyard on Daisy Place in San Diego. Theyre my favorite people in the world, she said of her tata and nana, who were WWII survivors and active members of the Sons & Daughters of Guam Club in San Diego. So I saw them as much as I could. They were so in love, they really loved each other and it was really wonderful to witness that. The best place to be is their house, which was filled with love and food. The living room at their house, they had photos of every single grandkid framed on their wall and they had all their kids on the wall. You could tell theyre really proud of all of us, she added. Family memories McDaniel remembered as a 10-year-old being at the Naval Base Coronado bowling alley and hearing her grandfather brag about her to all his bowling league buddies. So tata was in a bowling league, and he and nana would always go, she said. Because I wasnt there (San Diego) as often, I would spend the whole time with them and they would drag me to the bowling alley and (I would) watch tata bowl. Theyd be so proud of me and theyd be bragging about me and everybodys talking about their grandkids and competing with each other. And sometimes we bowl together and its funny because I remember being really bad at it, like he had to put the bumpers up, she added. But ever since he passed, Ive been really good at bowling. I dont really know what bowling scores are but I can throw a strike pretty easily and I definitely couldnt do that before. Her grandmother passed away five years ago, nine months after her grandfather died. When he passed, we all went bowling as a family, she said. There was a shift in my life where I did start being really proud of being CHamoru, when I think about all the things I learned from my grandmother and my aunties. Those are the knowledge I want to celebrate, it has shaped me into who I am. Its the values of my family. Its where I come from, she said of the genesis of her latest solo exhibition, Manhaga Fuuna, which opened last month at the Pilar Corrias Gallery in London. I went into that show with the only focus and only controlling factor of it, was that every single person, except for one who was from American Samoa was from Guam (in the artwork), she said. Sparking a conversation It was all people who either came to me or I was already friends with or my mother was friends with, its all word of mouth. My only thing was somebody who was CHamoru in the diaspora. It was a year of interviewing, and people sharing what they want to share. Then I find the similarities and I weave them together. Its really significant when people are expressing the same things over and over again, the same feelings, the same ways theyre moving through things. Im glad that its being widely recognized because that does spark a conversation. I do get to talk about Guam, in London, and on a global scale, she said. Im asking people to acknowledge where were coming from and whats going on. They dont get to just consume these paintings for free without learning something about Guam or knowing or engaging where this comes from, and the stories behind that. I want to see CHamoru artists celebrated. I want to see our work out there because when we go to museums, theres nothing about Guam in there, and we deserve to be a part of that conversation. We deserve to be in these (museum) rooms. Gisela McDaniel is preparing new work for an exhibit this March in Miami before she heads to Guam in April for a monthlong artist residency. This longing I had Im just hoping to do interviews and spend time with people, she said. I already contacted people that Ive met to paint last time and didnt didnt end up getting the time. Im really looking forward to going, and Im gonna bring my mother, and weve never been together so this would be really special. This will be her second trip to the island; the first was a shortened trip due to the pandemic in the spring of 2020. I think it was just this longing I had because I had always really wanted to go to Guam. You know, I grew up hearing about it and hearing all these stories, and it was never something I could afford to do. My grandparents were quite sick for a few years, and it was something I always wished I had done with them and wasnt able to, she said. I even had on the (airplane) descent into Guam a dream that my grandfather visited me. I woke up, crying and I felt like he was with me and that is what Im supposed to do. A Terminal High Altitude Area Defense, or THAAD, interceptor missile launcher, operated by the U.S. Armys 3rd Air Defense Artillery Regiment, at Andersen Air Force Bases Northwest Field in Yigo, Nov. 17, 2021. New guidelines from the Centers for Disease Control and Prevention suggest about 69% of Americans may need to wear masks indoors or social distance. Gov. Lou Leon Guerrero remains open to lifting mask mandates and other COVID-19 restrictions, spokesperson Krystal Paco-San Agustin said. Paco-San Agustin said changes would be made when data supports it, but wasnt able to provide more specific targets in case numbers, deaths and hospitalizations that the administration is looking to hit. Last week, the CDC unveiled its COVID-19 Community Levels and new guidelines. Counties across the U.S. are assigned a level of low, medium or high, based on the number of new cases, new hospital admissions and hospitalized COVID-19 patents over the past seven days. Masks are only recommended for residents and schools in high-level communities. At lower levels, masks are a matter of personal preference and whether you are at high risk from COVID-19 or in contact with someone who is. Some states, including California and New York, have begun lifting mask mandates. Its unclear where Guam falls on the scale. The CDCs database doesnt list the island. The Department of Public Health and Social Services didnt provide the information as of Wednesday evening. Average cases Average new cases have been falling since Guam peaked on about Jan. 27, Public Health data shows. The new CDC guidelines require less than 200 new cases per 100,000 to be considered for the low level. Data compiled by the New York Times has Guam at 149 new cases per 100,000 as of Wednesday. Thats down from 179.67 per 100,000 residents last week, based on data from Public Health. As of Wednesday, Guam Memorial Hospital was tracking 26 COVID admissions over the past seven days, according to GMH spokesperson Mai Habib. There were 161 staffed beds at GMH, she said, and 27 people hospitalized there as of Wednesday, according to the Joint Information Center. Those numbers may be high enough to place Guam at a high level. But not all hospitalization data needed to calculate Guams COVID-19 Community Level were readily available on Wednesday. Public Health will have COVID-19 updates Thursday morning. CNMI The Commonwealth of the Northern Mariana Islands remained at a high level Wednesday, officials from the Commonwealth Healthcare Corporation said during a media briefing. Social distancing and mask requirements remain in place. The CNMI is currently leading the nation in new COVID-19 cases per capita, based on New York Times data. Guam is in second place. The commission that oversees law enforcement on Guam is trying to determine how to handle officers who cant perform their duties because of medical disabilities. The Peace Officer Standards and Training Commission has been responsible for decertifying law enforcement officers since 2014, but no process for doing so has ever been established. John Santiago, a former airport police officer who said he was demoted with little notice or explanation over a year after he developed a disability, is now fighting his demotion on the grounds that the Guam International Airport Authority did not go through the POST Commission when he was reassigned and his pay was slashed. Santiago is not the only former airport officer to fight a disability-related demotion in recent years, PDN files show. POST Commission interim Executive Director Bob Camacho said Wednesday that agencies are supposed to contact the commission when they move to decertify an officer for medical reasons. As far as I know, there has never been an agency that asked for decertification. They just inform us that this individual no longer works. Long-serving officers with medical issues are a challenge faced by all Guam law enforcement. Agencies can reassign an officer with medical issues if the officer consents, Camacho said, but involuntary reassignment requires formal decertification. The POST Commission has never performed one, he said. The commission is already ironing out the rules to decertify officers, and Camacho said he plans to meet with Department of Administration Officials to address the requirements. All law enforcement agencies will also have to provide input. I think were going to have a better handle of it by next month, Camacho said. But the commission doesnt have the resources to handle every single decertification, Camacho said. The problem is, we have over 1,000 peace officers. Im not sure if were going to be able to address each case. They have to go through hearings and all these other things. The POST Commission has been searching for a full-time executive director since last year. Camacho is also the deputy director of the Department of Corrections. Camacho said in the past two years, he has been to to the Civil Service Commission to address personnel issues for DOC, and thats just one agency. He proposed that POST Commission allow the CSC to handle the process and hearings, if they were willing to. Camacho encouraged other law enforcement agencies to inquire what duties an officer with a medical issue could perform before taking them entirely out of the field. It is a workaround for the fact that agencies cant directly ask about an officers health, because of rules around confidentiality. Can you work at night? Can you escort a prisoner? Can you can use handcuffs? A lot of times people are put on desk watch, but they can really do certain other things. And thats been a customary thing, because we dont go into delve into the job performance issues, he said. Across the board, all our agencies right now are having difficulty with manpower, right? Were short in everything. So what we want to try to do is maximize the use of each individual. Simon Sanchez High School teacher Jim Healy used Black History Month to teach his students about the role of ordinary citizens in the civil rights movement. We tend to focus on Martin Luther King, maybe Emmett Till, Rosa Parks, Montgomery bus boycott, maybe the March on Selma, but people forget there were over 40 murdered regular citizens, regular African-Americans who were trying to vote or register people to vote who were killed by the Klan during the civil rights movement from 1955 to basically when Martin Luther king dies in 1968, Healy explained. Black History Month, in February, is an annual celebration to honor the achievements of African Americans and recognize their role in U.S. history. Healy, who teaches U.S. history, and former teacher Andri Baynum started the Black History Month commemoration at the high school. We didnt have anything really for Black History Month other than what individual social studies teachers might do in their classrooms, so we started it, Healy said. For the past few years, Healys class teamed up with the Guam Community College ProStart Culinary classes to produce shoebox lunches. African-Americans werent allowed to eat in a lot of restaurants during segregation, and so they had to bring their own lunches and a lot of them were sort of so poor. They didnt have lunch boxes and they would carry their lunch in a shoebox, Healy said. The culinary students prepared soul food, and Healys students decorated the outsides of the containers with a story of an individual who was killed during the civil rights movement. Healy wanted his students to highlight the stories of African-Americans who were lynched during the time period. He got their names from the Civil Rights Memorial designed by Maya Lin at the Southern Poverty Law Center in Montgomery, Alabama. Other activities included a spirit week along with dance and rap competitions. On the last day of the month, students would recite the last paragraph of Martin Luther Kings I have a dream speech in the main hallway. Healy also used Black History Month to address racism and racial issues that students deal with on Guam. I dont deal with typical white U.S. history and my students all get it, Healy said. They already know the history by the time Black History Month rolls around. My kids get excited to show off and to get other students interested in black history because of how rich and how powerful it is, how sad it is, how brutal it is, and how uplifting it is. The Guam Department of Agriculture is temporarily halting live poultry imports from Colorado and eastward states due to a bird flu outbreak. The ban went into effect Monday. In mid-January, the U.S. Department of Agricultures Animal and Plant Health Inspection Service confirmed highly pathogenic Eurasian H5 avian influenza on the East Coast, which has since been migrating westward, according to a news release from the Guam Department of Agriculture. On Feb. 24, inspectors confirmed the presence of the disease in a non-commercial backyard flock in Michigan. The Guam Department of Agriculture halted import of live poultry from all states east of Colorado. The temporary ban will last until the spread of the virus has subsided. As the outbreak develops, there may be a need to further alter the boundaries of the ban. The temporary ban applies to live poultry only theres no threat from poultry meat and eggs. The USDA has issued a reminder that the proper handling and cooking of poultry and eggs to an internal temperature of 165 degrees Fahrenheit kills bacteria and viruses. The U.S. Center for Disease Control and Prevention declared the current bird flu cases dont present an immediate human health concern. The aircraft carrier USS Abraham Lincoln and the guided missile destroyer USS Spruance landed on Guam on Wednesday for a port visit. The carrier has 5,100 crew members with 16 of those having ties to Guam according to a press release from the Navy. Coming home The USS Abraham Lincoln is on island to resupply and refuel for a few days. Those from Guam are welcomed back home. Makani Borja, born in Baltimore, Maryland, said that hes excited about his first time being on Guam. He has aunts and uncles on the island and is looking forward to seeing the scenery and what the island has to offer him. Monique Winslett, maiden name Camacho, is a 2011 graduate of John F. Kennedy High School. She said that shes also excited to see her family on Guam, whom she hasnt seen in over six years. She was disappointed that she couldnt bring her family, who had never been to Guam, but hopes to bring them after her current deployment. Russian conflict Rear Adm. Jeffrey T. Anderson of Carrier Strike Group 3 addressed the Russian conflict and the concern for global peace and security. There is no question that the actions from Russia violate the core principals that govern global peace and security, Anderson said. Their actions also have unified the world as well as further isolated it, and they stand in contrast to the principles that we uphold. He appreciates the support from Guam and emphasizes his commitment to the region as they uphold important strategic visions. He is grateful to be here and looking forward to engage with the community. COVID safe The USS Abraham Lincoln and USS Spruance crew members have a 100% vaccination rate and zero COVID cases. Capt. Amy Bauernschmidt said that the local COVID guidelines have been reviewed beforehand by crew members. Have an idea? Want to praise or comment on something? Submit your letter to the editor. Haiti - FLASH : Obtain online diplomas, certificates, authenticated and legalized transcripts, a reality shortly According to the Minister of National Education Nesmy Manigat, it will soon be possible for users to place their application online, to pay and to withdraw diplomas, certificates and authenticated and legalized transcripts for which applicants waste a lot of time and money in the current process. Coming from all over the country, some people often spend more money on transport than on the service itself, underlines Minister Manigat who considers the establishment of this platform to be one of his priorities, stating "We are on the point of settling all this [...] It will not take much time given that the Departmental Bureau of State Examinations (BUNEXE) is already very advanced in the construction of this platform which will ultimately require reorganizations in order to to integrate into the electronic landscape of each of the institutions, members of this partnership." For the commissioning of the electronic payment platform, the Ministry is working on the development of a partnership with the mobile telephone companies, Natcom, and Digicel and the Banque Nationale de Credit (BNC). The Digicel delegation that took part in the first meeting was led by Jean-Philippe Brun, Director General of the institution. That of Natcom was under the direction of Trung Le Thanh, deputy to the General Manager. The BNC team was led by Margareth J.B. Bonhomme, from the Research and Development Department. Minister Manigat was assisted, among others, by his Chief of Staff Jacques Abraham, the Director General of the National Office for Partnership in Education (ONAPE) Herve Boursiquot and the Coordinator of the Education and Quality Pole, Joseph Job Maurice. This meeting made it possible to lay the foundations for cooperation, the objective of which is to enable users to obtain the required documents in record time. Following this meeting, the Minister Manigat and the Minister of Foreign Affairs Geneus discussed the need to allow Haitians in the diaspora to be able to legalize, after authentication by the Ministry of National Education, these academic documents. The two Ministers are of the opinion that Haitian nationals, regardless of their host country, will be able to benefit from this service. HL/ S/ HaitiLibre Haiti - Politic : Towards a strengthening of bilateral cooperation with Suriname On the sidelines of the 33rd Intersessional Meeting of Heads of Government of the Caribbean Community (Caricom), in San Pedro (Belize) https://www.haitilibre.com/en/news-36073-haiti-politic-the-prime-minister-ai-ariel-henry-in-belize.html , Prime Minister ai Ariel Henry, during a bilateral meeting with the President of the Republic of Suriname Chandrikapersad "Chan" Santokhi, discussed issues related to strengthening cooperation bilateral, to security, to the migratory crisis, to respect for conventions and international treaties enshrining the principle of non-refoulement with regard to refugees. "Chan" Santokhi has agreed to support the various initiatives of Haiti relating to the fight against insecurity, which is one of the highest priorities and concerns of the Haitian Government. The most important point discussed concerned the strengthening of economic, cultural and commercial cooperation between Haiti and Suriname through the two framework agreements signed in June 2013 by the two countries https://www.haitilibre.com/en/news-8817-haiti-politic-signature-of-two-agreements-with-suriname.html . The first agreement concerns economic, scientific, technical and cultural cooperation, and the second concerns air transport between the two Republics, which undertake to work together in accordance with their national laws and regulations. The implementation of development projects in the fields of infrastructure, industry, trade, education, health, sports, finance, telecommunications and transport, agriculture, livestock, energy, forestry, tourism, transfer of knowledge through public bodies, dispatch of expert missions within the framework of technical assistance and training of the two countries, constitutes the clauses of these protocols. In addition, Prime Minister Henry took the opportunity to present to the President of Suriname, the candidacy of the former Minister of Public Health, Dr. Florence Duperval Guillaume for the post of Director General of the Sanitary Bureau of the Pan American Health Organization (OPS). Suriname's vote will be very important for Haiti in these elections which will be held at the 30th Pan American Health Conference on September 26, 2022, in Washington. See also : https://www.haitilibre.com/en/news-36073-haiti-politic-the-prime-minister-ai-ariel-henry-in-belize.html HL/ HaitiLibre Haiti - Diaspora Covid-19 : Daily Bulletin #712 GLOBAL SITUATION 2019-2022: Epidemiological situation: Wednesday March 2, 2022 the number of people infected worldwide with the Covid-19 coronavirus and its variants since the start of the pandemic (March 11, 2020) amounts to 439,135,686 cases (+1,757,573 in 24 hours ), the day before (+1,365,204) Number of infected countries: 224 *Healings: 371,673,822 people have been cured of Covid-19 worldwide (+2,777,291 in 24 hours), the day before (+2,320,080) *Deaths: 5,985,659 people died of Covid-19 worldwide (+9,862 in 24 hours), the day before (+7,464) *Active cases (less deaths and recoveries) in the world is currently 61,476,205 cases (-1,029,580 in 24 hours), the day before (-962,340) Average cure rate in the world: 84.63% (+) Average mortality rate in the world: 1.36% (=) World: Number of daily confirmed cases (Day-1) Vaccination: 10.84 billion doses of vaccine injected (+40 million doses injected in 24 hours. Update March 2, 2022 (latest data available). HAITI: Epidemiological situation: Warning: The Ministry of Public Health and Population (MSPP) did not make available after February 24, 2022 daily data on the Covid-19 situation in Haiti. Accordingly, the data below on the situation in Haiti is the latest available. According to the Ministry of Public Health, +6 new in 48 hours of Covid-19 and its variants have been confirmed in Haiti as of February 24, 2022 (latest partial data available) for a total of 30,342 confirmed cases throughout the national territory (48.7% women and 51.3% men), since the first case (March 19, 2020 https://www.haitilibre.com/en/news-30319-haiti-health-origin-of-the-first-2-cases-of-covid-19-in-haiti.html). Previous update (+37 cases on February 22, 2022). Heals: 25,210 (+4) Cure rate: 83.08% (=) Deaths: 820 deaths (+0) Death rate: 2.70% (=) 5th Wave (Omicron Dominant): Total of the 5th wave (starting December 27, 2021) amounts to 4,341 confirmed cases and 54 deaths Haiti: Active Cases Trend: (less recoveries and deaths) (Day-1) Screening since the start of the pandemic: 179,117 tests (+646 in 48 hours) since March 19, 2020, latest data available. Note that the very small number of people screened every day at the national level out of a population estimated at 11.6 million citizens, does not statistically allow us to make a representative estimate of the situation in Haiti, which translates into a < B>number of daily confirmed cases largely underestimated. TOP 5 of the most affected municipalities in the West (2022): Delmas: 725 (+2); Petion-ville 612 (+0); Port-au-Prince 404 (+0); Tabarre 278 (+0); Cross-Bouquets 224 (+0) Confirmed cases by department (2022 / 2021 / 2020): West: 2022: 2,486 cases; (2021: 9.890); (2020: 6,945 cases) North: 2022: 261 cases; (2021: 664); (2020: 677 cases) Center: 2022: 211 cases; (2021: 1.001); (2020: 508 cases) Artibonitis: 2022: 162 cases; (2021: 855); (2020: 593 cases) Northeast: 2022: 147 cases; (2021: 404); (2020: 314 cases) Southeast: 2022: 229 cases; (2021: 768); (2020: 274 cases) South: 2022: 211 cases; (2021: 891); (2020: 262 cases) North West: 2022: 241 cases; (2021: 383); (2020: 229 cases) Grand'Anse: 2022: 136 cases; (2021: 861); (2020: 176 cases) Nippes: 2022: 33 cases; (2021: 249) (2020: 149 cases) Cumulative deaths by department (2022-2021): West: 292 deaths (2020: 104 deaths) North: 53 deaths (2020: 34 deaths) Center: 74 deaths (2020: 13 deaths) Artibonite: 39 deaths (2020: 39 deaths) North East: 7 deaths (2020: 6 deaths) South: 51 deaths (2020: 6 deaths) Southeast: 14 deaths (2020: 9 deaths) North West: 15 deaths (2020: 12 deaths) Grand'Anse: 7 deaths (2020: 13 deaths) Nippes: 27 deaths (2020: 5 deaths) Distribution of deaths by age (since the start of the epidemic): 0-9 years: 15 deaths 10-19 years: 10 deaths 20-29 years: 29 deaths 30-39 years: 54 deaths 40-49 years: 78 deaths 50-59 years: 133 deaths 60-69 years: 186 deaths 70-79 years: 181 deaths 80 years and over: 134 deaths Vaccination: 150,734 Haitians (1.29% of the population) +920 in 24 hours have received a 1st dose of vaccine since July 16, 2021, date of the first injection through 149 open vaccination centers https://www.haitilibre.com/en/news-35051-haiti-covid-19-list-of-149-vaccination-centers-open-in-the-country.html and 100,126 Haitians are fully vaccinated (2 doses, 0.86% of the population) +889 in 24h. Update February 15, 2022 latest information available (source MSPP). List of 149 Vaccination centers open in Haiti (and schedules) by department: (updated October 20, 2021, latest information available) https://www.haitilibre.com/en/news-35051-haiti-covid-19-list-of-149-vaccination-centers-open-in-the-country.html DIASPORA: Epidemiological situation: USA: *Cases since the first case (February 29, 2020): 80,697,924 cases (+50,581 in 24 hours), the day before (+79,586) *Healings: 53,730,805 healings (+230,543 in 24 hours), the day before (+307,272) National Cure Rate: 66.58% (+) *Deaths: 977,402 deaths (+2,252 in 24 hours), the day before (+2,031) National death rate: 1.21% (+) *Active cases (minus deaths and recoveries): 25,989,717 (-182,214 in 24 hours), the day before (-229,717) Tests: 951,544,688 last data available. USA: Number of daily confirmed cases (Day-1) Vaccination: 553.61 million doses of vaccine injected since December 14, 2020, date of the first injection in the United States (+220,000 doses in 24 hours). Update March 2, 2022 (latest data available). DOMINICAN REPUBLIC: Confirmed cases since March 1, 2020: 574,912 cases (+356 in 24 hours) the day before (+485 in 48 hours). First case (March 1, 2020) Healings: 568,804 healings (+482 in 24h), the day before (+291 in 48h) National Cure Rate: 98.93% (-) Deaths: 4,369 deaths (+1 in 24 hours), the day before (+0 in 48 hours) Mortality rate: 0.75% (-) Positive rate over 4 epidemiological weeks: 5.35% (-) Active cases: (excluding deaths and recoveries) 1,739 cases (-127 in 24 hours) the day before (+194 in 48 hours) Dominican Republic: Trend of active cases: (minus recoveries and deaths) (Day-1) TOP 5 Provinces with the most new cases in the last 24 hours: National District: +74 new cases in 24 hours Barahona: +70 new cases in 24 hours Santiago: +48 new cases in 24 hours Santo Domingo: +45 new cases in 24 hours Espaillat: +40 new cases in 24 hours Tests (since the 1st case): 3,119,841 tests (+7,431 in 24 hours), the day before (+12,109 in 48 hours) Vaccination: 15.26 million doses of vaccine injected since February 16, 2021, date of the first injection in the Dominican Republic (+10,000 doses injected in 24 hours). Update February 27, 2022 (latest data available). QUEBEC: Confirmed cases since the first case (February 27, 2020): 922,679 (+698 in 24 hours), previous (+3,160 in 72 hours) Healings: 893,845 people (+65 in 24 hours), previous (+7,059 in 72 hours) Cure rate: 96.87% (+) Deaths: 13,996 deaths (+14 in 24 hours), previous (+27 in 72 hours) Death rate: 1.51% (=) Active cases: (excluding death and recovery) 14,838 cases (), previous (-3,926 in 72 hours) Quebec: Confirmed case trend: Test: 16,717,793 people tested since the first case (+14,113 in 24 hours) Vaccination: 18,433,508 doses of vaccine injected since December 14, 2020, date of the first injection (+11,079 doses in 24 hours), latest data available - MSSS as of March 1, 2022) FRANCE: *Confirmed cases since the first case (January 24, 2020): 22,782,609 cases (+79,794 cases in 24 hours), previous (+56,083) *Healings: 21,080,677 healings (+179,405 in 24h), previous (+280,960) National Cure Rate: 92.52% (=) Deaths: 138,576 deaths (+209 in 24 hours), previous (+232) Death rate: 0.60% (=) Active Cases: 1,563,356 (-99,820 in 24h), previous (-221,784) Test: 246,629,975 (last data available February 27, 2022) France: Trend of active cases: (minus recoveries and deaths) (day-1) Vaccination: 140.88 million doses of vaccine injected since December 27, 2020, date of the first injection in France (+10,000 doses injected in 24 hours. Update March 2, 2022 (latest data available) Previous bulletin : https://www.haitilibre.com/en/news-36077-haiti-diaspora-covid-19-daily-bulletin-711.html See also : https://www.haitilibre.com/en/news-30319-haiti-health-origin-of-the-first-2-cases-of-covid-19-in-haiti.html https://www.haitilibre.com/en/news-30165-haiti-flash-first-case-of-covid-19-in-the-dominican-republic.html HL/ HaitiLibre Update Required To play the media you will need to either update your browser to a recent version or update your Flash plugin. Published on 2022/03/01 | Source Lee Byung-hun, Shin Min-a, Cha Seung-won, Lee Jung-eun, Han Ji-min, Kim Woo-bin, Kim Hye-ja, Go Doo-shim, Uhm Jung-hwa, Park Ji-hwan, Choi Young-joon, Bae Hyun-sung, Roh Yoon-seo and Gi So-yoo have gathered for tvN's new Saturday-Sunday drama "Our Blues". Led by Lee Byung-hun and Shin Min-a, it will provide healing to viewers. Advertisement "Our Blues" is an omnibus drama. It depicts the stories of ordinary people against the backdrop of a five-day market in Jeju. Its cheer for the lives of everyone at the end or peak of their lives and at the beginning. Lee Byung-hun transforms into a truck dealer born in Jeju. Shin Min-a comes to Jeju with a story and meets her past neighborhood brother Lee Byung-hun. Lee Jung-eun is the owner of a fish store. Cha Seung-won is the branch manager of a bank transferred to Jeju. The setting is that he is Lee Jung-eun's first love from over 30 years ago. Uhm Jung-hwa heads from Seoul to Jeju to see her close friend Lee Jung-eun. Han Ji-min and Kim Woo-bin transform into a young diver and a boat captain, respectively, to portray romance. Kim Hye-ja is a grandmother who sells seafood in the five-day market, and Go Doo-shim acts enthusiastically as a female diver in Sanggun. Child actor Gi So-yoo plays the granddaughter of Go Doo-shim in the drama. She leaves her mom and dad and lives with her grandmother awkwardly. Park Ji-hwan becomes a man who sells soondae gukbap. Choi Young-joon plays the role of an ice store owner. Bae Hyun-sung and Roh Yoon-seo play high school students. Writer Noh Hee-kyeong and director Kim Kyoo-tae united. The two have created numerous well-made masterpieces together. "Our Blues" will premiere on April 9th. Published on 2022/03/01 Kim Beom has been a fixture in South Korean media culture since 2006, when he got a big break appearing the popular situation comedy "High Kick" as the teenage grandson of the multigenerational household headed by Lee Soon-jae. But Kim Beom has long since transitioned to adult roles. Most recently, this includes "Ghost Doctor" which concluded on February 22nd with ratings of 7.953%. Kim Beom recently gave an interview about his experiences on the supernaturally themed drama. Advertisement In "Ghost Doctor" Kim Beom plays Doctor Go, who comes from a wealthy family and becomes caught up in ghostly shenanigans. Kim Beom describes his character arc as starting from a place of no resilience or responsibility but gradually coming into both over the course of his experiences. Kim Beom also appreciated the backstory of his character, with the pain of his own past and feeling unloved also contributing to his present day personality issues. Another aspect of interest for the character is how its two roles in ones. Kim Beom doesn't just play Doctor Go, but also Doctor Cha, the titular "Ghost Doctor" of the show who at times takes possession of Doctor Go's body. Kim Beom claimed that doing this was a lot more fun than he was expecting. Kim Beom noted that staff seemed to enjoy these performances too, as he could see them smiling broadly during the possessive episodes. ___________ "Ghost Doctor" is directed by Boo Seong-cheol, written by Kim Sun-soo, and features Rain, Kim Beom, UEE, Son Na-eun, Sung Dong-il, Tae In-ho. Broadcasting information in Korea: 2022/01/03~2022/02/22, Mon, Tue 22:30 on tvN. Fintech platform BharatPe on Wednesday revealed for the first time that Ashneer Grover, his wife Madhuri Jain, and their relatives were engaged in extensive misappropriation of company funds and grossly abused company money to fund their lavish lifestyles. In a statement, BharatPe said it reserves all rights to take further legal action against him and his family. "The Grover family and their relatives engaged in extensive misappropriation of company funds, including, but not limited to, creating fake vendors through which they siphoned money away from the company's expense account and grossly abused company expense accounts in order to enrich themselves and fund their lavish lifestyles," BharatPe elaborated. The company said that the Board will not allow the "deplorable conduct of the Grover family to tarnish BharatPe's reputation or that of its hard-working employees and world-class technology." "As a result of his misdeeds, (Ashneer) Grover is no longer an employee, a founder, or a director of the company," the company announced. Ashneer had sent an emotionally-charged resignation letter ahead of the crucial BharatPe board meeting as an independent PwC 'governance review' found him guilty of financial irregularities worth several crores along with his wife Madhuri Jain Grover. The Board was set to grill Ashneer over the PWC report regarding his conduct and take action based on it, which was to ultimately sack him. Sensing what was coming his way, Ashneer decided to shoot off an emotionally-charged and lengthy resignation to the Board, in a bid to salvage his image. BharatPe said that the Board is taking all necessary steps to further strengthen the company's corporate governance, including the appointment of an audit committee, an internal auditor, and the implementation of other key internal controls. "Minutes after Ashneer Grover received notice that some of the results of the inquiry would be presented to the Board, he quickly shirked responsibility by sending an email to the Board submitting his resignation and fabricating another false narrative of the events to the public,a said the company. The company said it has taken strong objection to Grover spinning lies and hurling baseless allegations and threats. The resignation came as top investors in the fintech platform declined to buy his 8.5 per cent stake in the company for Rs 4,000 crore as he had sought. Ashneer also lost an arbitration in Singapore he filed against the fintech platform for launching a probe against him. According to sources, Grover's valuation does not hold ground as the company is not valued at $6 billion as being projected by him. At a $2.85 billion valuation and at the current dollar-rupee exchange rate, his stake would be around Rs 1,824 crore. Published on 2014/12/18 | Source Korean movies opening today 2014/12/18 in Korea: "Awaiting", "Ensemble", "A Rented Room In Heaven", and "Change Zoororing Showcase" Advertisement "Awaiting" (2014) Directed by Kang Je-gyu With Moon Chae-won, Go Soo, Son Sook, Yoo Ho-jeong, Choi Kyu-hwan, Yoon Da-hoon,... Formerly known as "Min-woo Is Coming" Synopsis A story about a woman who waits for one man for 60 years. "Ensemble" (2012) Directed by Lee Jong-pil Synopsis On the stage, seven of classical music performers appear. Kwon Hyuk-joo, who started violin at 3 and is a star of the classical music world now. Sung Minje, a contrabassist who wants to be popular. Kim Jiyun, who is a bling-bling-looking violinist. Jang Jong-seon, a clarinetist who thinks seriously. Lee Han-na, a violist who has performances all over the world. Park Go-eun, who has ever lived holding the cello in her arms. Park Jin-woo, a pianist who does mixed martial arts fighting. The ensemble has begun with the stories about their lives and passion for classic music. "A Rented Room In Heaven" (2007) Directed by Kim Jae-soo With Oh Sung-tae, Ha Hee-kyeong, Jang Du-yi, Yoo Ji-hyun, Lee Sung-kyung-I,... Synopsis Having gone through hard times, a shrewd barmaid for "Seasons of Roses", Wha-Sim still has reserved some of her pure heart. To the place where she is continuing her usual daily life, Joon-chi comes by like an accident. Once a writer, Joon-Chi encounters Whasim while he has been wandering from place to place and they become to live together in a small rented room. Since then Joon-Chi and Whasim are indulged in sensual pleasures with each other as if it were to be a means of consoling. In the meanwhile, a young barmaid, Sunny who was attached to Wha-Sim like a sister comes to the place... "Change Zoororing Showcase" (2014) Directed by Lee Jong-hyeon, Park Si-hoo-I With Kim Seo-young, Yang Jeong-hwa, Jeon Sook-kyung, Shin Kyung-sun,... "Change Zoororing Showcase" is a Korea/Japan co-production Synopsis The animals next door are gone! Help! Zoororing Investigators! Arumdrissy Village is where humans and animals live in peace. The village is full of festives thanks to the competitioni n choosing the best animal companion. Then one day, the Zoororing Investigators realize one by one, the competing animals are disappearing one by one and set out to find the criminal. Then they come across a crucial clue... Will the Zoororing Investigators save the missing animals? Login or sign up to follow actresses, movies & dramas and get specific updates and news Login Sign Up Email Password Password Username Your E-mail will only be used to retrieve a lost password. Stay logged in Help Quincy, IL (62301) Today Cloudy with rain developing after midnight. Low 53F. Winds E at 5 to 10 mph. Chance of rain 90%. Rainfall near a quarter of an inch.. Tonight Cloudy with rain developing after midnight. Low 53F. Winds E at 5 to 10 mph. Chance of rain 90%. Rainfall near a quarter of an inch. What's Included With a Digital Only subscription, you'll receive unlimited access to our website and e-edition. Our digital products are available 24/7 and are accessible anywhere, anytime. If you have any questions or need further assistance, please call our customer service team at 574-583-5121 or email cgrace@thehj.com. AUBURN The final decision of a lawsuit filed against the Auburn Common Council by Auburn Mayor Mike Ley now lies in the hands of Steuben Superior Court Judge William Fee, who was appointed as a special judge in the case. After a five-hour court proceeding on Feb. 16, legal counsel on both sides submitted their findings in the case on Wednesday for the judge to rule. The lawsuit stems from the passing of an ordinance by the Auburn Common Council establishing a utility service board earlier this year. Upon passage of the ordinance which would take control of Auburn Electric and Auburn Essential Services out of the mayors hands Mayor Mike Ley vetoed the ordinance. That set up a veto override vote by the Auburn Common Council, which approved the ordinance on a two-thirds vote. During this time, Ley also collected the needed signatures to place the issue on the ballot as a referendum, leaving the final decision up to the citizens of Auburn. Leys legal counsel, Bose McKinney & Evans LLP, submitted findings claiming that the establishment of the utility service board is illegal according to state statue. They also claim that AES cant fall under the control of the utility service board because it isnt a true utility. Leys counsel claims AES is a department within the city, which would give control to Ley for the hiring and firing of a department head. A declaratory judgment was filed on the three ordinances passed by the council, stating they are invalid because they seek to transfer department powers, duties, functions or obligations without the mayors approval. The Common Councils counsel, Shambaugh, Kast, Beck & Williams LLP, claims that the Common Council is in its rights to form the utility service board governing the Auburn Electric and AES. They claim AES is a true utility because it has been classified that way on city documents including budgetary documents. State Board of Accounts documents also list AES as a utility. The councils counsel cites Indiana code defines utility to include every plant or equipment within the state used for the conveyance of telegraph and telephone messages and the production transmission delivery refurnishing of heat, light, water or power either directly or indirectly to be public. A municipally-owned utility is defined to include every utility owned or operated by a municipality. It closes with the ordinances, which are the subject of this litigation, were duly passed in conformity with law, and were a lawful exercise of the legislative functions embodied in the Common Council of the City of Auburn. Since the veto override vote, the Common Council, which doubles as the citys utility service board, held its organizational meeting on Monday, Feb. 7 where it approved Kevin Webb as board chair, Matthew Kruse as vice chair and Natalie DeWitt as secretary. During that meeting, it also appointed Rob Higgins as interim superintendent over Auburn Electric and AES. Its final point of business during the Feb. 7 meeting was the approval of a contract for 2022 not to exceed $225,000 with Links Creative Alliance for design services, including the citys website. The city has utilized the services of Links Creative Alliance for several years with contracts over $200,000 in 2019 and 2020 and close to $200,000 in 2021. During his testimony on Feb. 16, Ley said it was his intention to put the contract for website services and marketing out for bid in 2022, but with the recent signing of the contract by the utility service board, the city is tied to the contract for 2022. In conclusion, Leys counsel said the declaratory judgment on the three ordinances are invalid because they purport to grant the Common Council Board authority to oversee a department of the city that provides utility services. Leys counsel also asked Judge Fee to consider a permanent injunction of the issue. Since the filing of the lawsuit, the Auburn Common Council has also passed a fourth utility service board ordinance which would give the utility service board control of the water department and water pollution control department. Ley has yet to veto that ordinance, and said Thursday morning he wasnt sure whether or not he was going to veto. If he doesnt veto the bill or sign the bill, it is the same as a veto. We're always interested in hearing about news in our community. Let us know what's going on! Submit Shares of SBI Life Insurance Company and HDFC Life Insurance Company rose sharply on reports of a possible delay in the much-awaited initial public offering (IPO) of Life Insurance Corporation of India. SBI Life shares settled 5.7 per cent higher at Rs 1,120, whereas HDFC Life 7.0 per cent up at Rs 560. In an interview with Hindu BusinessLine, Union Finance Minister Nirmala Sitharaman said if "global considerations" warrant any delay, she wouldn't mind looking at it again. LIC had on February 13 filed the Draft Red Herring Prospectus (DRHP) with capital markets regulator SEBI, looking to sell the Centre's 5 per cent equity stake in the company via IPO route. The Centre aims to offload a total of 316 million equity shares to investors through the public offering of the 6.32 billion outstanding shares, the DRHP document showed. The Centre wishes to conclude the IPO by the end of FY22, and it would like to cash in on the LIC IPO to meet its revised divestment estimate. The current fiscal's divestment target was revised to Rs 78,000 crore from the Budget estimates of Rs 1.75 lakh crore. Reporter Daisy Nelson is an alumnus of the ASU Walter Cronkite School of Journalism. She was born and raised in Lake Havasu City. She is a multimedia journalist and layout designer. Follow her Twitter account @daisylaree_ to see her reporting process. We couldnt help but notice the number of articles in recent editions of this news For an alarming moment reading the Friday editorial in Havre Daily News on Montana politicians bashing the president during the Ukraine crisis, I imagined the United States already at war with Russia. It is true that in times of war American politicians are expected to follow the leader, whether in the case of WWII (with rare exceptions like Montanas Jeanette Rankin), or our more recent crusade to rid the world of weapons of mass destruction in Iraq. Once we are in the fight, a political leader who makes pronouncements along the lines of, Ukraine is a core interest of Russia, but not of the United States, must be corrected, but we are not yet at war with Russia, and it would be best to keep it that way. While I see no reason to defend any of the political figures mentioned, I do not think those slow to join the war party are the danger. That an empire invades a fledgling democracy is reason for outrage. That the empire in question controls more than enough nuclear weapons to annihilate the population of several worlds, and is ruled by an autocrat who hurls wild accusations, and wilder threats to use those weapons is reason for thought. Our real danger is hot action before cool thought. Already, a member of the House who has achieved some prominence, Rep. Kinzinger, has suggested a no fly zone to intercept Russian aircraft entering Ukrainian airspace, a move certain to result in direct confrontation between U.S. and Russian forces. We can be sure Rep. Kinzinger is not the only eager warrior in our government. Many voices have called for isolating Russias Putin and treating him as a pariah. Many have also concluded that Mr. Putin is increasingly paranoid. It is right to confront an armed bully. But if the bully is both nuts and capable of pressing a button to annihilate all the worlds kindergartens, threats may not be the best approach. For 80 years, it has been axiomatic that war between nuclear armed superpowers is unthinkable. Unthinkable, yes, but nuclear war is not at all unimaginable, not at any time since Hiroshima. No, a direct confrontation between nuclear states, particularly the United States and Russia, has been unthinkable because people in the business of planning wars havent been able to think of a way to make that war work without bringing both participants to an end. The result of that impasse has been that, while each of those powers has supplied weapons to the others adversaries in wars in Vietnam, Afghanistan and elsewhere, neither has directly confronted the other, and no superpower has initiated war in Europe where the NATO alliance places nuclear weapons at the disposal of numerous clients. Until now. Now Putins reckless aggression has launched the planet into an unknown space. Some say we have entered the most dangerous period since the Cuban missile crisis 60 years ago, but this may be an underestimate. When Russia placed nuclear weapons in Cuba, the key champions were Nikita Krushchev, a boisterous and reasonable sort, and young John Kennedy. When Kennedy challenged Krushchev, European leaders did not feel compelled, as some have already done in the case of todays Ukraine war, to remind the world that they too had nuclear weapons. For the United States, now is a time to prioritize humanitarian aid to the people of Ukraine, to assure safe haven for refugees fleeing this war, and to do everything in its power to support a negotiated ceasefire. But until someone finds a way to compel nuclear states to fight each other with one arm tied behind their backs, or to eliminate those weapons, the most important thing for the United States to do is to follow the foreign policy dictum of one of our former presidents to, Dont do stupid (expletive). Will Rawn of Havre is a retired Montana State Univesrity-Northern professor. HENLEYS town centre manager has resigned after only four months. Craig Buckby, whose job was to improve the economic vibrancy of the town, had previously described Henley as a dream place to work. But Sheridan Jacklin-Edward, clerk to Henley Town Council which employed him, said things with Craig havent worked out. The council is to advertise for a successor. Mr Buckby, who has experience in managing corporate, commercial and community projects, was previously chief executive of the Slough town centre business improvement district before joining the council. In his short time in Henley he came up with several ideas to attract visitors, including a big wheel in the style of the London Eye on Mill Meadows and an ice rink this Christmas. Both ideas, which were exclusively revealed by the Henley Standard, had received a mixed response from residents. He had also been working on organising the towns events to mark the Queens platinum jubilee in June. Mr Buckby, who had succeeded Helen Barnett in the role, arrived in Henley at a difficult time for retailers as they try to recover from being closed for months due to coronavirus lockdowns. He told the Henley Standard that he wanted to encourage people to go shopping in the high street again rather than online. Mr Buckby said: Its nationally known as a go-to place and I can see that people are passionate about the town centre. I think its possible that Henley will come out of the pandemic and get that vitality back. I want to ensure that happens. The road to recovery is something I can help with. Im very impressed with the energy of the town council, particularly of the Mayor. With that sort of support, officers like me can do good things. Ive got 1,001 ideas. All the ideas that I have will be shared with councillors and businesses first because they need to have a say. I need to work out whats possible and what isnt. Last June, Ms Barnett resigned as town centre manager after nearly five years. She took the decision after a challenging couple of months. Ms Barnett, who lives in Nuffield, said: It was definitely time for me to go. I have loved my time in Henley and everyone has been really supportive, from my team to the retailers, to the wider community. Free access for current print subscribers As a home delivery subscriber, you get free unlimited digital access to premium content on HenryHerald.com, including local news, local sports, obituaries, legal notices, local features, and the e-edition. All you need is your print subscription account number and your last name. Don't know your subscription number? Email access@henryherald.com with your delivery address. Activate your account now. The Indian Air Force's first evacuation flight with 200 Indians from Romanian capital Bucharest landed at the Hindon air base here in the early hours of Thursday, sources said. The first flight -- which was conducted using C-17 military transport aircraft -- landed in Delhi at 1.30 am. Three more C-17 aircraft of the Indian Air Force (IAF) with approximately 300 evacuees from Ukraine will land at the Hindon airbase by 8 am on Thursday, sources said. India has been evacuating its citizens through special flights from Ukraine's western neighbours such as Romania, Hungary and Poland as the Ukrainian airspace has been shut since February 24 due to the Russian military offensive. Greenville, TX (75401) Today Thunderstorms - some may contain locally heavy rain, especially this evening. Low 68F. Winds SSE at 10 to 20 mph. Chance of rain 100%.. Tonight Thunderstorms - some may contain locally heavy rain, especially this evening. Low 68F. Winds SSE at 10 to 20 mph. Chance of rain 100%. Throughout the coronavirus pandemic, we've all known individuals who have done more than their share to help their neighbors and communities with food, comfort, care, companionship and dozens of other needs. If you know of such a person, you can nominate them to be featured in our upcoming H Explosions erupted around Kiev's 1,300-ft TV tower on Tuesday afternoon (local time), just hours after Russia told civilians to evacuate because it was about to begin bombarding 'strategic' targets in the Ukrainian capital, Daily Mail reported. At least two large blasts were seen near the foot of the tower, around three miles from central Kiev, at around 5.30 pm local time. It was not immediately clear whether the tower had been the target of the strikes, or whether they had been targeting nearby buildings. The tower remained standing, but several state broadcasts went off air, the report said. That raised fears that Kiev was about to come under heavy bombardment after the cities of Kharkiv, Mariupol and Kherson were hit by indiscriminate shelling earlier in the day, Daily Mail reported. According to the State Emergency Service of Ukraine, two unidentified missiles hit and set on fire a building right next to the TV tower. The fire has been extinguished, local media reported. Ukrainian TV channels stopped broadcasting after a missile hit. Ukraine's Ministry of Internal Affairs said that the backup broadcast of some channels will be launched "in the nearest time". The office of the President of Ukraine also said the TV tower in Kiev has been hit. The President's office reported that broadcasting equipment has been hit. The office stated that TV channels will temporarily be unavailable but reserve broadcasting capacities will be deployed as soon as possible. Additionally, several channels can be streamed via YouTube and the Megogo service, it said. On Sunday, I went with a couple of my family members to a baseball game in Milwaukee between the Chicago Cubs and the Milwaukee Brewers. Everything was going well. I used my phone to get driving directions to the stadium from St. Joseph, and the Apple Maps app got us to the exact location on Chinese State Councillor and Foreign Minister Wang Yi held a phone conversation at request with Ukrainian Foreign Minister Dmytro Kuleba on Tuesday. The Chinese government attaches great importance to the safety of Chinese nationals in Ukraine and cares about their safety every moment, Wang noted, adding that all Chinese nationals in Ukraine are envoys of China-Ukraine friendship and friends of the Ukrainian people. The process of evacuating overseas Chinese and students from Ukraine is underway, Wang said, expressing gratitude to the Ukrainian side for support, cooperation and help from the Ukrainian government and society. China appreciates Ukraine's launch of special evacuation trains for foreign nationals, which is in line with the international humanitarian spirit, Wang said. Wang said he hopes the Ukrainian side will take all necessary measures to ensure the safety of Chinese nationals in Ukraine and continue to provide guarantee and facilitation for their evacuation. Kuleba said that it is an important duty for Ukraine to ensure the safety of foreign nationals, and that Ukraine pays great attention to China's concerns and is assisting Chinese students and nationals to evacuate smoothly. Ukraine will continue to ensure the safe evacuation of foreign nationals responsibly, Kuleba added. Kuleba briefed Wang about the first round of Ukraine-Russia talks, saying that the end of the fighting is the top priority for Ukraine, Xinhua news agency reported. Ukraine stays open to a negotiated settlement to the current issue and treats the talks with Russia with positive sincerity, said Kuleba, adding that despite current difficulties, the Ukrainian side remains calm and willing to push forward the talks. China has played a constructive role in the Ukrainian issue, said Kuleba, mentioning that Ukraine stands ready to strengthen communication with the Chinese side and looks forward to China's mediation in achieving a ceasefire. Wang said that the situation in Ukraine has changed rapidly, and that China laments the outbreak of the conflict between Ukraine and Russia and is extremely concerned with the harm to civilians. China's basic position on the Ukrainian issue is open, transparent and consistent, said Wang, noting that China always stands for respecting the sovereignty and territorial integrity of all countries. Regarding the current crisis, China calls on Ukraine and Russia to find a solution to the issue through negotiations, and supports all constructive international efforts conducive to a political settlement, said Wang. China always believes that one country's security cannot be at the expense of others' security, and security of one region cannot be achieved by expanding military blocs, Wang stressed. As the fighting continues to expand, the top priority is to ease the situation as much as possible to prevent the conflict from escalating or even getting out of control, especially to prevent harm to civilians as well as a humanitarian crisis, and to ensure the safe and timely access of humanitarian aid, he said. Wang elaborated on China's position with regard to ensuring the safety of Chinese nationals in Ukraine and urged the Ukrainian side to assume corresponding international responsibilities. Sign Up for the e-Edition! Get the newest edition of the weekly Shopper delivered to your inbox every Wednesday at 6am! The Russian occupiers are trying to somehow keep up the combat capability of their units but it gets worse and worse, Ukraine Defence Minister Alexei Reznikov said. According to him, the invaders have surrendered and refused to continue the offensive. "In Russia, the relatives of the prisoners and the dead are starting to go out to protest. The total lies of Russian propaganda are cracking. The enemy was afraid of direct contact with the Ukrainian defenders. Therefore, it switched to the criminal tactics of remote shelling of peaceful cities," Reznikov noted, NV reported. The Head of Dnipro City State Administration, Borys Filatov, has said that Bashtanka residents in the Mykolayiv region captured and burned the enemy's "infamous" Pantsir S-1 unit, a self-propelled close-range anti-aircraft gun and missile unit, Ukrainska Pravda reported. Filatov said "...Bashtanka villagers, without knowing it, captured and burned a state-of-the-art Pantsir S-1 unit worth $15 million. The troops from the "Victory nation" were running away across the Ukrainian fields, like rats". One battalion of the Armed Forces of Ukraine in one armed vehicle and with only one Javelin anti-tank missile captured six Russian tanks in one battle near Kharkiv, said journalist Yuriy Butusov. Butusov said, "In a battle near Kharkiv, the mechanised battalion of one of the brigades of Ukrainian Armed Forces captured 6 (six) of the newest Russian T-80 BVM tanks from the 200th Motorised Rifle Brigade of the Russian Armed Forces commanded by Colonel Denis Kurilo," Ukrainska Pravda reported. According to Butusov, the commander of the Ukrainian battalion has appropriated all the tanks -- soon "a freelance company using the latest Russian equipment with minimal mileage will appear as part of our battalion," Ukrainska Pravda reported. Half Moon Bay, CA (94019) Today Partly cloudy this evening, then becoming cloudy after midnight. Low 47F. Winds WSW at 5 to 10 mph.. Tonight Partly cloudy this evening, then becoming cloudy after midnight. Low 47F. Winds WSW at 5 to 10 mph. Industrial experts said that while there are many ways to alleviate the difficulties facing businesses, financial support as well as tax and fee cuts have always been the most direct and effective means, particularly for those involved in the industrial economy and, more specifically, in the manufacturing sector. Wei Qijia, a researcher at Economic Forecasting Department at the State Information Center, said tax and fee cuts usually directly improve investors' market sentiment toward small businesses. More importantly, such cuts help maintain the liquidity flow of medium-sized, small and micro businesses, allowing them to funnel more cash into production. Over the past five years, the central government has been working on a variety of tax breaks for small businesses, and some are already feeling the gains. Li Xinli, president of Anhui province-based Hefei HRGLY Intelligent Equipment, which produces intelligent packing equipment for pharmaceutical factories, said that his company's market share and scale has increased since 2017. Its growth can largely be attributed to conducive policies, particularly to well-calibrated tax breaks and financing from the Hefei government. The company relocated its headquarters from Shanghai to the Hefei Economic and Technological Development Zone in 2017, and has since grown in size from around 40 employees to 210. "We've greatly benefited from the local government's policies to reduce taxes and fees, which helped attract talent and fostered connections between banks and enterprises," Li said. "Last year, the tax deferral payment policies targeting manufacturers helped solve the acute liquidity pressure we were facing at that moment." Li also lauded the financing his company has received thanks to Hefei government's policies. "The local government has been encouraging financial institutions to offer more loans to high-tech and manufacturing businesses. As both a high-tech company and a manufacturer, we have experienced pressure securing loans," he said. "Since the government has decided to pay half the interest, loans have become more accessible and affordable. All these measures have contributed greatly to our expansion in recent years." Still, Li admits, recruiting talent remains an issue, as the number of people willing to work in manufacturing is declining. Wei, the researcher from the State Information Center, confirmed that in recent years, the manufacturing sector has been grappling with a significant loss of technical talent, further exacerbating labor shortage problems. "The key to invigorating the industrial economy and promoting high-quality development is to concentrate on key issues facing China's domestic industrial growth," he said. "It is important to firmly grasp the characteristics of current industrial development to truly promote the steady improvement of the sector." Russia's Foreign Minister Sergei Lavrov has warned that a Third World War 'will be nuclear and destructive' as the fallout of his nation's invasion of neighbour Ukraine intensifies, Daily Mail reported. In a thinly veiled threat for NATO ' title=' NATO '>NATO not to get involved in Ukraine, Lavrov said that any future world war would be fought with nuclear weapons- a statement that comes just days after President Vladimir Putin warned that any country sending troops to Ukraine would be met with severe consequences, the report said. The Foreign Minister went on to claim that Moscow was ready to enter a second round of negotiations aimed at achieving peace in Ukraine, and accused Kiev of deliberately delaying the process at the request of the United States. "We are ready for the second round of negotiations, but the Ukrainian side is delaying (the process) at the behest of the Americans," said Lavrov. A Russian source close to the negotiations said that the second round of talks was supposed to take place later on Wednesday close to the Belarusian-Polish border after an initial attempt at diplomacy concluded on Monday. Lavrov this morning also sought to justify the invasion of Ukraine by saying Russia's forces "will not allow Ukraine to obtain nuclear weapons". Scientists have described a new species of the Neotropical orchid genus Maxillaria from cloud rainforests of northern Ecuador. The genus Maxillaria, abbreviated as Max in the horticultural trade, belongs to one of the most diverse and species-rich groups of orchids. Depending on the applied classification, it counts from approximately 420, through 634 to 750 species. Commonly called spider orchids, flame orchids or tiger orchids, representatives of the genus are distributed in the rainforests of Latin America from central Mexico to Bolivia, as well as in the West Indies. Several Maxillaria species are popular, horticultural plants with large and showy flowers, often nicely fragranced. It is not uncommon that some distinctly colored individuals are introduced to the commercial market under names of similar, more or less related species, as informal varieties or color forms, largely causing confusion. While investigating the diversity of Maxillaria in Ecuador, weve encountered plants that were commercially referred to as Maxillaria sanderiana xanthina, said Dr. Monika Lipinska from the University of Gdansk and her colleagues from Poland, Ecuador and Kazakhstan. In the course of conducted morphological and micromorphological analyses, we concluded that it is a new, separate species. The new species is known only from the location of Maldonado in the Ecuadorian province of Carchi. Scientifically named Maxillaria anacatalinaportillae, it grows as an epiphyte in cloud rainforests at altitude of 1,700 m above sea level. According to the IUCN Red List criteria, Maxillaria anacatalinaportillae should be classified as Critically Endangered, based on the small number of known populations and restricted area of distribution, the researchers said. The province of Carchi in recent years suffered from problems caused by climate change, anthropogenic impact on the environment, and the lack of awareness of natural resources. The change of land use, expansion of the agricultural frontier, population growth, or the opening of new roads are some dynamics that generate pressure on the ecosystems, compromising the ecological processes that take place in them. The discovery of Maxillaria anacatalinaportillae is reported in a paper in the journal PhytoKeys. _____ M.M. Lipinska et al. 2022. Maxillaria anacatalinaportillae (Orchidaceae, Maxillariinae), a new remarkable species from Ecuador. PhytoKeys 190: 15-33; doi: 10.3897/phytokeys.190.77918 One Hundred Shoreditch, East London's newest hotel, opens its doors this week. Prominently located on Shoreditch High Street, the design led, independent hotel will offer a vibrant and social program of events encompassing music, art, fashion, design and wellbeing, which will run throughout the year. The hotel's creative hub, a gallery and art space, The Workshop, will be partnering with Nelly Duff, the East-end art institution on London's Columbia Road to showcase global contemporary and urban print and street art. The Workshop will rotate exhibitions, events and pop-up retail to bring guests the best of East London's buzzing and original cultural scene. The laid-back cocktail bar by Mr Lyan, Seed Library, is welcoming East London favorites Love Vinyl for a takeover on Friday 4th March; followed by London-based DJ, Alena Arpels, who will bring a selection of rare groove, funk, soul, disco and jazz-funk records to the basement bar on Saturday 5th March. The Wine Bar at Goddard & Gibbs has partnered with much loved, local wine store Passione Vino on guest wines by the bottle and glass and future events. To celebrate International Women's Day on Tuesday 8th March, the hotel will host a 'Women in Comedy' panel discussion made up of some of the most exciting names in female comedy talent. The event will raise money for the hotel's chosen charity, REFUGE - a charity providing specialist support to those experiencing domestic violence and abuse. The hotel has also partnered with Spitalfields Crypt Trust - an East London charity focused on helping people facing homelessness and addiction transform their lives. A revolving program of drop-in wellness events kicks off with a probiotics wellbeing initiative in partnership with The Gut Stuff, allowing guests to tailor unique solutions to them. This is in addition to the hotel's dedicated Peloton studio and an in-room Peloton offering. Visit www.onehundredshoreditch.com to see all of One Hundred Shoreditch's programming, events and offerings, and keep up to date with the latest from East London's newest hotel. About One Hundred Shoreditch Located in a prominent position on Shoreditch High Street, One Hundred Shoreditch is home to 258 bedrooms and suites, six restaurants and bars and five meeting and event spaces. The restaurants and bars include Goddard and Gibbs, an all-occasion restaurant, wine bar and take-out hatch specializing in British seafood; Seed Library, a cocktail bar by renowned bartender Mr Lyan and a rooftop bar and terrace with panoramic views across East London. The lobby bar and coffee shop complete the hotel's food and drinks offering. The bedrooms and suites at the hotel are designed to be your retreat from the vibrancy and energy of the area, providing headspace and calm in the heart of Shoreditch allowing you to disconnect from the outside world. The hotel's five meeting and event rooms are suitable for everything from private dinners and receptions to meetings and weddings. The One Hundred Room, with its floor to ceiling glass, offers views of the city skyline. Hotel website Bangkok, Thailand - Dusit Thani Public Company Limited (DUSIT) has announced its 2021 earnings results, including total revenue of THB 3,443 million, up 3.7% year-over-year, and EBITDA of THB 515 million, an increase of THB 292 million YoY (+130.9%). Net loss was THB 954 million, a 6.5% decrease on 2020 when net loss was THB 1,011 million. Ms Suphajee Suthumpun, Group Chief Executive Officer, DUSIT, said that while the global pandemic continued to have a significant impact on overall business last year, an increase in revenue from hotel business and other revenues, as well as strict control of costs and expenses, ensured the company achieved satisfactory EBITDA. A clear improvement in overseas hotel business, driven by the easing of international travel restrictions in several destinations worldwide, contributed to enhancing revenue generation. This was bolstered by DUSITs asset optimisation plan including the sale and manage back of Dusit Princess Chiang Mai hotel alongside a rise in profits from the strategic sales of available-for-sale investments, and diversified investment in food business and property development projects. In line with our vision to turn challenges into opportunities, last year we also accelerated our strategy for organisational transformation to improve our infrastructure for better efficiency and agility and pave the way for sustainable growth in the next normal, said Ms Suthumpun. Recognising significant shifts in consumer demands and expectations, we also focused on enhancing our business model across three dimensions Financial, Business, and Operations and updated, retooled and reimagined where necessary to drive short-, mid, and long-term value. Our 2021 results reflect this." We are confident that the steps we have taken since the beginning of the pandemic, and continue to take now, will position us for swift and effective recovery when travel and other pandemic-related restrictions are eased further. We also expect our strategic journey for balance, expansion, and diversification to continue apace when the situation improves. Thailands Office of the National Economic and Social Development Council (NESDC) estimates that Thailand will welcome 5.5 million foreign visitors in 2022, a significant improvement on last years 400,000 visitors, and back up towards the 6.7 million visitors received in 2020. While the Omicron variant of COVID-19 is currently impacting business, the symptoms are fortunately less severe than previous variants, so we are confident that international travel and hotel business will be quick to rebound in Thailand in line with effective vaccination programmes, reduced barriers to entry, and policies and procedures to help us safely live with COVID-19 as an endemic, said Ms Suthumpun. Alongside boosting our hotel business, the lifting of restrictions will have a significant positive impact on our education and food business, too especially as temporary school closures and restrictions on dining were in place for most of 2021. This year, we look forward to seizing any existing, new, and emerging opportunities to deliver sustainable value for our stakeholders. About Dusit International Established in 1948, Dusit International or Dusit Thani Public Company Limited (DUSIT) is a leading hospitality group listed on the Stock Exchange of Thailand. Its operations comprise five distinct yet complementary business units: hotels and resorts, hospitality education, food, property development, and hospitality-related services. The group's portfolio of hotels, resorts and luxury villas includes more than 300 properties operating under a total of six brands (Dusit Thani, Dusit Devarana, dusitD2, Dusit Princess, ASAI Hotels, and Elite Havens) across 16 countries worldwide. The group also operates culinary schools and hospitality colleges in Thailand, plus catering companies for the education sector in Thailand, Cambodia, and Vietnam. Dusit International's diversified investments in real estate development, hospitality-related services, and the food sector are part of its long-term strategy for sustainable growth, which focuses on three key areas: balance, expansion and diversification. For more information, please visit dusit-international.com. Sureerat Sudpairak Corporate Manager Public Relations +66 (0) 2200 9999 ext. 3321 Dusit Greenfern Industries Limited (GFI) is about to commence writing clinical trial protocols for a low dose CBD medication that could set it on the pathway to become a pharmacist-only, over-the-counter product registered in Australia. In February 2021 the Australian Therapeutics Goods Administration (TGA) made it legal to purchase products containing low-dose (less that 150mg per day) of cannabidiol (CBD) over the counter. This down scheduled the substance from a Schedule 4 (prescription medicine) to a Schedule 3 (S3), pharmacist-only medicine, meaning people with certain ailments could go to the pharmacist and purchase CBD. However, S3 products must first be approved by the TGA and be included on the Australian Register of Therapeutic Goods (ARTG) before they can be supplied. This has created a sizable challenge for organisations pursuing S3 registration as applications must be supported by data demonstrating the quality, safety and efficacy of the medicine. Fresh Leaf Analytics have previously estimated that the pharmacy-only CBD market in Australia will grow to $250 million in product sales at its market maturity and could capture up to 2 million consumers. GFI managing director Dan Casey said almost 25 per cent of medicinal cannabis patients in Australia take a CBD product at a daily dose below 150mg. It was likely that group may migrate to the pharmacy channel once low-dose CBD products become available over the counter. Speed to market is important because the first products to hit the pharmacy-only market will take a considerable market share, Casey said. Were excited to be continuing on this pathway to get a registered CBD product on the shelves in Australia. We can then look at possible pathways for this product to benefit the patients of New Zealand. He said the company had completed a Strategic Assessment Workshop drawing expert advisory from four separate functional areas: trial design, regulations, clinical and commercialisation. This has then led on to a proof-of-concept study design which proves the concept, including liaising with the TGA, and will now begin the protocol writing. The protocol will outline how the clinical trial will be run, including the objectives, design, methodology, statistical considerations and organisation of the trial to ensure the safety of participants and the integrity of the data that we would collect, Casey said. This is an exciting opportunity to bring a novel cannabinoid product to the Australian marketplace under the Schedule 3 legislation targeting anxiety. Our novel investigational medical product, GFI-782B, has completed all CMC (chemistry, manufacturing and controls) and toxicology requirements needed for drug registration and is ready to commence first-in-human clinical trials. If the trial was to go ahead and was conclusive it would provide a pathway for the medicine to make its way to approved Australian pharmacies through the Australian Therapeutic Goods Administrations CBD Schedule 3 and ARTG registration. GFI has engaged iNGENu, an Australian-based research organisation wholly owned and operated by Cannvalate Pty Ltd, that exclusively focusses on cannabinoid and psychedelic research and whose core focus is quality clinical trials designed for sponsors seeking registration of novel drugs. iNGENu has extensive experience in Australian based clinical research and their team have established a reputation globally as a specialty contract research organisation. The trial design aspects have been calibrated with the team over the last 6 months and were very positive about the outcome of the trial design and the road ahead for GFI. Comments from our readers No comments yet Add your comment: Your name: Your email: Not displayed to the public Comment: Comments to Sharechat go through an approval process. Comments which are defamatory, abusive or in some way deemed inappropriate will not be approved. It is allowable to use some form of non-de-plume for your name, however we recommend real email addresses are used. Comments from free email addresses such as Gmail, Yahoo, Hotmail, etc may not be approved. Anti-spam verification: Type the text you see in the image into the field below. You are asked to do this in order to verify that this enquiry is not being performed by an automated process. Related News: 5th May 2022 Morning Report GAS MARKET UPDATE MAY 4TH ANZ 2022 Half Year Results Documents PGW Raises Guidance Air NZ Rights Offer Period Closes and Bookbuild Commences 4th May 2022 Morning Report BIF acquires shares in ZeroJet Limited Morrison & Co completes acquisition of Infratil shares IKE Q4 and FY22 performance update Chorus amends syndicated bank facility Winter hotel bookings in Portugal have surpassed 2019 numbers for the first time since the start of the pandemic, according to data sourced from SiteMinders World Hotel Index. On February 7, 2022, Portuguese hotel booking volumes measured 101.93% of those recorded during the same period in 2019 and have remained above pre-pandemic levels since. The figures come as a result of strong growth in Portugals hotel bookings over recent weeks, with hotel booking numbers up from only 61.99% of 2019 levels on January 1, 2022. The growth demonstrates the strength of the Portuguese hotel industrys quick recovery, both from the disruption caused by the Omicron COVID-19 variant in December and ongoing disruptions over the past year. During this same period last year, Portugals hotel bookings were at around just 20% of numbers for the same period in 2019, emphasising the sectors resilience over the past 12 months. International travellers remain a major contributor Significantly, a majority of hotel bookings (73.87%) in February came from international bookers up from 60.63% at the end of last year. Of all bookings made with Portuguese hotels during the past two weeks, more than a third (34.69%) are due to arrive this month, 21.53% in Aprilhighlighting the importance of the Easter holidays12.46% in May, and 24.81% over the summer. Overseas visitors are set to increasingly make up the majority of hotel guests arriving in the coming months, including this month of March (79.36%), April (85.13%) and May (89.21%), suggesting that international guests are booking ahead more than their domestic counterparts. Portugal outpaces regional recovery Portugals latest figures compare favourably to the average for hotel bookings globally, which sit at 71.77% of booking volumes during this same period three years prior. When compared to 2019, the countrys hotel bookings also register a stronger performance than southern European destinations such as Spain (80.11%), Italy (52.86%) and Malta (46.91%), as well as major northern European markets such as the UK (74.95%) and Germany (55.07%). Andre Gois, Country Manager for Portugal at SiteMinder, says: This positive news confirms Portugals strength as a year-round destination and a regional leader, supported by a steady domestic market and a continual flow of international travellers. SiteMinders data also reflects a shift away from the last-minute bookings which we saw become the norm over the past two years. Travellers have been increasingly prepared to book ahead, reflecting a renewed sense of security after a prolonged period of shortened guest horizons in the face of the ongoing threat of short-notice travel restrictions. Adds Gois: However, hoteliers must avoid becoming complacent, to ensure they avoid pitfalls, while capitalising on the opportunities available to increase their share of bookings. The guests who hotels are welcoming today are not the same as two years ago. They have higher standards and are accustomed to the integrated, nimble and flexible world of digitally-enabled commerce. To meet these expectations, accommodation providers would benefit from using the latest technology to design and implement holistic hotel commerce strategies, allowing them to offer a consistent customer experience throughout the guest journey, forged by effectively using consumer data to design personalised marketing and products. This also presents ample opportunities for hoteliers to increase revenue, direct bookings, guest monetisation, third-party brand advocacy and loyalty. Those accommodation providers that can embody and surpass the expectations of the evolved hotel guest, will be the ones who can corner the market in this period of travel resurgence. About SiteMinder SiteMinder Limited (ASX:SDR) is the worlds leading open hotel commerce platform, ranked among technology pioneers for opening up every hotels access to online commerce. Its this central role that has earned SiteMinder the trust of tens of thousands of hotels, across 150 countries, to sell, market, manage and grow their business. The global company, headquartered in Sydney with offices in Bangkok, Berlin, Dallas, Galway, London and Manila, generated more than 100 million reservations worth over US$35 billion in revenue for hotels in the last year prior to the start of the pandemic. For more information, visit siteminder.com. Maria Cricchiola Director of Brand Communications & PR +61 2 8031 1287 View source The escalation of the Russian-Ukrainian crisis in past few days has upset the worlds balance and brought with it a new climate of tension and insecurity, forcing the world to put everything (including the pandemic) on the backburner. Of course, the tourism sector has also been affected by these developments; in this article, we will try to quantify the impact that the Russian-Ukrainian crisis is having on the travel industry. Source: Lybra THE SHOCK WAVE. All European countries have been hit by the powerful shockwave generated by the war; flight search data clearly shows that there is (again) a lot of fear of travelling, regardless of geographical proximity to Ukraine. Political instability is one of the main reasons affecting tourist demand; in fact, the Russian-Ukrainian crisis is having such a wide impact that it is also substantially affecting the demand in countries on the opposite side of the continent. The part of the world most affected is undoubtedly Eastern Europe. In first place is Ukraine, which recorded a decrease of -54% of searches during the last week, compared to the previous week; its also important to note that demand for travel to the country had already been falling sharply for weeks. All around, demand for travel collapsed inexorably: Lithuania (-45%), Estonia (-43%), Hungary (-41%), Albania (-38%), Czech Republic (-38%), Bosnia-Herzegovina (-38%), Romania (-36%). Norway and Finland are the only two Northern European countries to fall into this group, with -38% and -35% respectively. In contrast, Serbia is the only Balkan country that has not suffered a reduction in demand. DISTANT EUROPE. The Russian-Ukrainian crisis has also affected countries that are geographically distant: searches for flights to Italy fell by 33% in the last week, as did those to Spain (-32%), Germany (-31%), Portugal (-31%) and Iceland (-30%). France (-29%) and the UK (-19%) also recorded a decrease in travel demand. Source: Lybra About Lybra (Formerly Lybra.Tech) Lybra is a leading global hospitality technology company, offering an innovative, machine learning revenue management system (RMS) for the global hospitality industry. Lybra's Assistant RMS was designed to improve the quality of hoteliers' lives, by simplifying and automating daily operations to skyrocket their property's bookings and revenue - even in times of decreased demand, like the current COVID-19 pandemic. In May 2020, Lybra was acquired by The Zucchetti Group, a leading international technology company offering software, hardware and ITC services to many global sectors, including hospitality, education, transport and logistics, manufacturing, among others. As part of The Zucchetti Group, Lybra is even more well-positioned to offer hotel clients the most accurate pricing suggestions because of the wealth of international market and demand data - compiled by the global hospitality technology companies that are owned by The Zucchetti Group - that is now integrated into the company's Assistant RMS. To learn more about Lybra, visit lybra.tech. Earlier this week, Travelodge, one of the UKs largest hotel chains that operates over 590 hotels across the UK, Ireland and Spain, has appointed Disability Positive to advise on policy and training programmes to support customers with lived experience of disability and long term health conditions, and their families. Travelodge is the UKs first budget hotel chain to appoint a dedicated disability charity. Cheshire based charity, Disability Positive, started in 1992 and is majority led, managed and staffed by people with lived experience of disability and long-term health conditions. The charity has over three decades of providing support, services, opportunities and a voice to people with lived experience of disability. Disability Positive is also well known for influencing positive change in Government policy. Annually Travelodge welcomes millions of customers across its hotels and some of these customers have lived experience of disability or a long-term health condition. Disability Positive will provide advice supporting Travelodge to further evolve and enhance its customer journey, helping to make travel accessible to everyone. The charity will undertake a review of the full Travelodge journey for customers with lived experience of disability and long term health conditions and their families. This includes searching for a Travelodge hotel, booking a room, checking in and out and their experience in the room, bathroom and dining areas to help Travelodge enhance the customer experience. Craig Bonnar, Travelodge, Chief Executive said: At Travelodge we are future facing, committed to putting our customers, colleagues and planet at the heart of our business in order to make a positive difference that really matters. We are delighted to appoint Disability Positive to help us to create a better experience for our customers living with disability and long term health conditions and their families. Lynne Turnbull, Disability Positive, Chief Executive Officer said: Disability Positive is committed to upholding the rights of people with lived experience of disability and long term conditions whilst removing the disabling barriers within society. Disabled people should be valued and have opportunities to participate fully within their communities, including accessing and being employed in hospitality. Disability Positive is delighted to be working with Travelodge as policy consultant, to support positive change to enhance the customer experience, and move us closer to achieving our vision of a world that is Disability Positive. Travelodges other charity partners include the NSPCC and The British Heart Foundation. To date, with the help of its staff and customers, Travelodge has raised over 650,000 for The British Heart Foundation. About Travelodge Travelodge is the UK's first budget hotel chain and opened its first hotel in 1985 on the A38 Burton under Needwood. Today the UK's second largest hotel chain operates 593 hotels across the UK, Ireland and Spain. Room rates start from 32 and can be booked at www.travelodge.co.uk The Travelodge Press Office +44 1844 35 8703 Travelodge The situation in Ukraine is actively evolving, as are the needs of citizens in the country and neighboring regions. We will be keeping this list up to date with the evolving ways the hotel/hospitality industry helps in the coming weeks and months. In this article, Hospitality Net aims to provide an overview of hospitality-industry initiatives to support the people of Ukraine. We aim to update this article on a daily basis. Accommodation For Ukraine Refugees last updated on 30 March 2022 Hospitality for Ukraine - visit website Hospitality for Ukraine is a global directory of hospitality companies offering free accommodation for refugees fleeing the war in Ukraine. We are working to link organisations on the ground with accommodation providers to help those who need it most. (Stay the Night initiative) - visit website Hospitality for Ukraine is a global directory of hospitality companies offering free accommodation for refugees fleeing the war in Ukraine. We are working to link organisations on the ground with accommodation providers to help those who need it most. (Stay the Night initiative) #HospitalityHelps - visit website The #HospitalityHelps initiative has one single goal: providing temporary hotel accommodation to Ukrainian residents, who are forced to leave their homes as a result of the war. (The Bench initiative) - visit website The #HospitalityHelps initiative has one single goal: providing temporary hotel accommodation to Ukrainian residents, who are forced to leave their homes as a result of the war. (The Bench initiative) Hospitality for Peace - visit website The global hotel tech community has rallied together to support Ukrainian relief efforts and corporate partners have committed to match your donations to amplify their impact. (#HospitalityForPeace) - visit website The global hotel tech community has rallied together to support Ukrainian relief efforts and corporate partners have committed to match your donations to amplify their impact. (#HospitalityForPeace) Airbnb : Support for refugees fleeing Ukraine - visit website : Support for refugees fleeing Ukraine - visit website Facebook Group - Accommodation, Help & Shelter for Ukraine - visit website Facebook Group - Host A Sister - visit website Facebook Group - Transport a Sister - visit website Facebook Group - Uniti Pentru Ucraina (United For Ukraine - Romania) - visit website HomeToGo - Ukraine Crisis Relief - visit website ukrainenow.org - visit website We are a global decentralized effort to help Ukrainians and other nations deal with the humanitarian crisis and consequences of a brutal invasion by the Russian Federation. Supported by airbnb. - visit website We are a global decentralized effort to help Ukrainians and other nations deal with the humanitarian crisis and consequences of a brutal invasion by the Russian Federation. Supported by airbnb. pomagamukrainie.gov.pl - visit website Polish gouvernment website - Are you leaving Ukraine? Are you already in Poland? Fill in a simple form - we will send it to the relevant unit that provides help to refugees. Whos Out? last updated on 7 March 2022 Skifts reporters and editors are working to explain how the war on Ukraine is impacting travel. Airbnb CEO Brian Chesky tweeted that the company is suspending all operations in Russia and Belarus. Expedia Group announced earlier in the week that it ceased the sale of travel into and out of Russia. That includes its Vrbo vacation rental brand. Booking Holdings CEO Glenn Fogel announced Friday the company suspended operations in Russia and Belarus. Tripadvisor and its Viator brand are canceling experiences booked in Russia and Belarus, Tripadvisor is blocking attempts to book vacation rentals there, and will halt doing business with Russia-backed tourism boards. Tripadvisor is still accepting advertising from companies offering hotels in Russia and Belarus. Spains eDreams Odigeo shut its Russia website February 28, and removed Russia and Belarus airlines from its inventory. eDreams Odigeo stopped offering hotels in Russia March 4 because its hotel supplier, Booking Holdings, suspended operations in Russia and Belarus March 4. GetYourGuide was not showing any results for experiences in Russia, but it was for Belarus. Sabre, Amadeus and Travelport ceased offering distribution services for Aeroflot, meaning travel agents cant book the airlines flights. Sabre continues to operate Aeroflots Passenger Services System. With sanctions in place, no airlines from the U.S., the European Union or the UK are flying into Russia. Apple, including Apple Pay, stopped doing business in Russia. TUI Groups Musement and GoTui.com stopped selling things to do in Russia. UEFA Champions League cancelled the leagues finals in St. Petersburg Zoom revoked software development licenses in Russia. Boeing suspended aid to Russian airlines, including maintenance, parts and technical support. The Travel Corporation suspended all 2022 tours of Russia or with stops in Russia. Intrepid Travel is still posting Russia trips on its website but the company has cancelled all tours in the country and Ukraine through the end of June. Intrepids North America managing director maintains its not boycotting Russia and will return to the country when it believes its safe to do so. G Adventures removed all Russia tours from its website. Bruce Poon Tip, the companys founder, said his company wouldnt accept bookings from Russian agencies. Kensington Tours still features a trip to Russia on its website, but I read the company is not accepting bookings for trips to Russia. Trafalgar wont be operating Russia tours in 2022, according to the company. Rick Steves Europe canceled its Russia tours. SmarTours cancelled its Russia itineraries. Opinion last updated on 7 March 2022 A Plea For Hoteliers To Aid Fleeing Ukrainians | By Jeff Weinstein read article We Need Hotel Rooms for Displaced Families | By Jonathan Worsley read article Tourism Tidbits: The Invasion of Ukraine | By Peter Tarlow - read article Send links and resources to [email protected] As sanctions against Russian companies and those that do business with Russian entities expand daily, the role of lawyers is increasingly in the spotlight, including pressure to drop their Russian clients. And the plight of U.S. lawyers practicing in Moscow is even more problematic. Fourteen large corporate law firms operating in Texas also have more than 200 lawyers in their Moscow offices. Corporations, such as BP and Shell, have in-house lawyers who live and practice in Russia. In addition, several large Russian companies, such as Lukoil, hire scores of Texas lawyers to handle legal matters related to contract agreements, financial transactions and international arbitration. Three of those 14 law firms - Akin Gump of Dallas, Houston-based Baker Botts and Norton Rose Fulbright - formerly Houston-based Fulbright & Jaworski - have deep Texas roots and combined have more than 50 attorneys in their Moscow offices. On HoustonChronicle.com: Exxon stops oil production in Russia as war in Ukraine intensifies Baker Botts, which has represented energy companies from its Moscow operation, issued a statement Tuesday condemning the Ukraine invasion. We are actively examining the complicated impacts of this conflict on our clients and the future of our work in Russia, Baker Botts leaders said in a written statement. These include the serious ethical, moral and legal considerations for the firms next steps and working directly with clients on any necessary transitions. Protecting and supporting the people of our Moscow office remains a top priority for our firm at this difficult time, the firm said. Three national law firms with large operations in Texas - Baker McKenzie, Sidley Austin and White & Case - said his week that they are dropping Russian clients that are specifically named on the banned list. Some law firms, such as Baker Botts, say they are reevaluating their operations in Russia. A few firms have encouraged their attorneys to leave Moscow as quickly and quietly as possible, as they fear retribution from the Kremlin, according to lawyers at those law firms. Lawyers right now find themselves in a very tricky situation involving Russia, said Texas A&M Law Professor Milan Markovic. Theres a lot of public pressure on law firms to stop doing business with Russian companies. The speed of what is happening regarding sanctions is problematic. As an example of the constantly evolving sanctions environment, Akin Gumps international trade practice group has sent more than 30 updates to its clients during the past five days. Although the current sanctions have a technical carve out for lawyers providing legal advice to Russian clients to help them remain in legal compliance, U.S. lawyers face other concerns in Russia. A big problem in Russia is getting paid, said Ryan McConnell, an adjunct professor of law at the University of Houston Law Center and a partner at the R. McConnell Group. If you are unable to pay employees, you are not able to operate. And there is the very real issue of physical safety. Law firms are concerned about their peoples safety. Citing security concerns for their legal teams, lawyers at several law firms declined to comment on the record. Lawyers at Akin Gump and Norton Rose Fulbright declined to be interviewed. Norton Rose Fulbright found itself in an internal dispute that went public Tuesday. First, Bloomberg published an internal memo reportedly from the global firms leadership instructed its staff to refrain from providing any commentary regarding Russias invasion of Ukraine. A few hours later, chair of Norton Rose Fulbrights Canada operations wrote on LinkedIn that he and his colleagues stand with the people of Ukraine and that no other position is remotely acceptable and is completely disavowed. On HoustonChronicle.com: What will Russia's invasion in Ukraine mean for Houston? Soaring oil prices are just the start. Norton Rose Fulbright later told Bloomberg that the original memo was not meant to prohibit its lawyers from speaking out in favor of Ukraine. Most of the lawyers in Moscow for Akin Gump, Baker Botts and Norton Rose Fulbright specialize in corporate finance, mergers and acquisitions, energy law and international trade representation. Markovic said there is a long-running debate over whether lawyers should represent unpopular clients. In many cases, however, these clients have long relationships with the law firms, sometimes for decades, he said. You cannot suddenly wash your hands of clients because public sentiment has turned against them, Markovic said. Even when ending a representation, lawyers are ethically required to do as little harm as possible. Matthew Boyden, an adjunct professor at the University of Houston Law Center, said the sanctions carve out for lawyers is necessary. The lawyers are needed to provide legal advice, Boyden said, including to prohibited entities, on how to remain in compliance with the law. For a longer version of this article, please visit TexasLawbook.net. This is a carousel. Use Next and Previous buttons to navigate As activity in downtown Houston starts to pick up again, dining hub Finn Hall is opening what its owners are describing as the largest outdoor dining patio in the downtown district. The 1,265 square-foot patio adds an al fresco dining option to the existing 20,000 square-foot Finn Hall located in the Jones on Main building at 712 Main Street. The towers owners, Houston-based real estate firms Midway and Lionstone Investments, say its the largest outdoor patio by square footage within the downtown district, or the 1.84 square-mile area bound by Interstate 69 to the east, Interstate 45 to the south and west and Interstate 10 to the north. Finn Hall's new patio is part of the citys More Space: Main Street program. The pandemic-related initiative was launched to give struggling downtown restaurants the ability to expand their outdoor dining space by closing Main Street to vehicle traffic between Commerce to Rusk Streets. The program was set to expire in March, but Houston City Council recently voted to extend the initiative for another year. The pedestrian-friendly program is available to eateries and bars across seven blocks. Downtown bar Little Dipper was the first business to take advantage of the program in March 2021. Quite frankly it has been working and quite popular . This may be something that will be long-term because it is well received and people like sitting out, being out, especially when the weather is great, said Mayor Sylvester Turner in a Februrary meeting approving the program extension. Other Midway news: Developer buys 68-acre former ConcoPhillips campus in west Houston For Finn Hall, Midway and Lionstone funded construction of the 75-seat patio, which spans about half the art-deco building along the Main Street side. Now we have the opportunity to activate our outdoor patio with music and a robust events program, so like our food, our patrons can enjoy something different each time they dine with us, said Miranda Cartwright, General Manager at Midway, in a statement. Finn Hall has already been hosting new events recently featuring art, live music, and food pop-ups. The food hall now is home to the restaurants Pho Binh (which opened last year); Papalo Taqueria; Lit Chicken; Greenway Coffee; Yong; Pizza Zquare; Dish Society and Swallows Nest Bar. The expanded outdoor dining area opened just in time for the Houston Rodeo that started last week and CERAWeek, a major energy conference that takes place downtown next week. Both events are hosting their first in-person gatherings since the pandemic started. Kroger has pulled Russian-produced vodka from its store shelves in support of Ukraine, a company spokesperson said Tuesday. "As Americas grocer, Kroger is taking action to show our support and solidarity with Ukraine. Over the weekend, we removed Russian-produced vodka from our shelves, and today, we are sending emergency food assistance to support refugees through a grant from The Kroger Co. Zero Hunger | Zero Waste Foundation to the UN World Food Programme's Ukraine Emergency Fund. We will match all gifts made by our associates and customers, up to $250,000." The Cincinnati-based grocer has nearly 2,800 stores in 35 states. In Texas, its stores are prohibited from selling liquor. Kroger joins a slew of other liquor stores in removing Russian-produced vodka throughout the U.S. and Canada since Russia invaded Ukraine on Thursday for control of its capital Kyiv. Among those is national chain Total Wine & More, who on Monday posted a photo of their bare shelves on Facebook. "Today, this is what you will see in our stores. In support of the Ukrainian people, we have removed all Russian-made products from our shelves," the post read. The move also comes after a number of governors across the U.S., including Texas Governor Greg Abbott, have called for restaurants, bars and retailers to remove Russian-sourced brands from stores shelves. "Ive asked the members of the Texas Restaurant Association, Texas Package Stores Association & all Texas retailers to voluntarily remove all Russian products from their shelves," Abbott tweeted Saturday. "Texas stands with Ukraine." In Canada, a professor at University of New Brunswick who worked on democratic reforms in Russia, Ukraine and Kasakhstan told CBC News that wasting or refusing to sell Russian products does not amount to a sanction. "That's certainly important symbolically for those of Ukrainian descent," Henryk Sterniczuk told CBC. "But from the economic perspective, it is not very meaningful." This is a carousel. Use Next and Previous buttons to navigate Dont you adore those cute, clever, sociable, adaptable and irrepressible little songbirds called house sparrows? No, I didnt think so. Dislike, or something stronger, usually expresses peoples feelings about the ubiquitous little brown birds. They invade purple martin houses, take over bluebird boxes, crowd out pretty songbirds at bird feeders and chatter raucously with gratingly repetitive sounds of cheep-cheep-chirep-chirep. But house sparrows are survivors, even though theyre not a protected species as nonnative birds. You can trap and euthanize them no, dont do that! or install contraptions to ward them off, but good luck with that! The birds just keep coming, no matter what. Nor can you escape them, unless you take an ocean voyage on a private yacht. Go to Alaska, the Yukon Territory, the western U.S., Costa Rica, the Bahamas, or even Hawaii, and house sparrows will greet you. So why are these intrusive, European songbirds even here? Its because during the early 1850s, a well-intentioned Nicolas Pike imported 50 pairs of house sparrows from their native land in England to Brooklyn, N.Y. Pike and others thought the birds would eat inchworms killing trees in Manhattans Central Park. And farmers thought house sparrows would devour pesky insects destroying crops. Little did farmers know the birds would also devour grains meant for livestock. House sparrows House sparrows are one of two Old World sparrows imported to the U.S. in the 1800s, the other being Eurasian tree sparrows that only live in St. Louis and central Illinois. Male house sparrows have a black bib, gray cap, chestnut nape and brown back with black streaks. Females are tan with bland yellow beaks and black streaking on their backs. They're highly social birds that feed and roost in flocks and form monogamous breeding pairs. They have shorter legs, thicker bodies and stouter bills than native sparrows like resident seaside sparrows along the coast and chipping sparrows in the Hill Country. Some evidence indicates a decline in house sparrows due to pesticides. See More Collapse House sparrows were also imported to San Francisco circa 1871, as well as other parts of the country. The birds soon spread throughout the continent, aided by grain fields in the Midwest and by the proliferation of towns and cities with abundant waste foods and insects. The continentwide population of house sparrows had reached more than 150 million birds by the early 1940s. The birds were here to stay. They occupied towns, cities and farms, just as their ancestors did in Europe. Having once depended on forests for tree cavity nests, the birds learned that human communities have buildings and homes with nooks and crannies for nest sites as well as nest boxes in neighborhood yards. We must admit that their nests are extraordinary feats of architecture. The birds weave twigs, strings, leaves and pieces of cloth into an intricately shaped globular or cup-shaped nest with a soft lining on the bottom for eggs and chicks. It even pains me to clear out a marvelously constructed house sparrow nest insinuated into a purple martin house. Email Gary Clark at Texasbirder@comcast.net. Book of Texas Birds, by Gary Clark with photography by Kathy Adams Clark (Texas A&M University Press.) Ive recently noticed a pesky entrenched belief that motherhood has made worse: If Im not suffering, Im not doing it right. Its like, if Im not giving my kids every ounce of my energy, or if I get help from other people, or if I say no to something because its unpleasant or I dont want to do it, then Ive stopped short of giving my all. Heres how it plays out: Not giving my all = not brushing up against pain and struggle (or at least discomfort) = not doing enough. Sometimes that translates into Im not enough/Im a failure; it depends on the day. But bottom line, it does not equal victory, success, and well, doing it right. I could intellectually argue with this equation. Ive also done a lot of work to not be crippled by it. But I continue to be confused by the whole darn thing, and I dont think Im alone. In Eastern thought, a lot about our culture could be called yang (as in yin and yang). Masculine energy has long been predominant. Theres an intensity and forcefulness thats prized: No pain, no gain. When the going gets tough, the tough get going. Never take the easy way out. Get out of your comfort zone. Go hard or go home. Always give 100 percent (at least!). Take the bull by the horns. Weve learned and tend to deeply believe that wading through pain and resistance is how we get the fruit. Its what were supposed to do: Grit your teeth and muscle through. Thats doing it right. The first time someone flipped this on me was when I was in college. I was meeting with a career counselor while trying to decide on a major. Ive decided I should apply to the business school, I told him, Ill have to suffer through accounting and finance, but its practical. Hold on, he stopped me, if suffering through is how you describe that path, then its not for you. I was dumbfounded and relieved, but Ive continued to assume that discomfort is the way to go. Tami Simon talked about this in a podcast with Saje Dyer, author and daughter of the late Wayne Dyer, who was an internationally renowned self-help bestseller. On Insights at the Edge, Dyer spoke of her fathers reaction to the song I Hope You Dance, by Lee Ann Womack. Its full of beautiful lyrics: I hope you still feel small when you stand beside the ocean. Whenever one door closes, I hope one more opens. Promise me that youll give faith a fighting chance. And when you get the choice to sit it out or dance, I hope you dance. Dyer recalled how her father agreed with the entire song, except for one line that is also in the song: Never settle for the path of least resistance. He told his daughter you should always take the path of least resistance. He said resistance is life saying you may be going down the wrong path. He urged her to go toward what flows, toward what doesnt feel like strain, tension and opposition. The discussion was a beautiful extrapolation of exactly what my counselor had said, and I love the sentiment. But certainly not all resistance is bad. If that were the case, I wouldnt have done half the things Im proud of Im in my life. Overdoing yin cant be the answer. They alluded to that in their conversation but didnt spell it out. I apparently need this spelled out. If leaning in is good sometimes, how do you know when to press forward? When is resistance worth wading through verses being a flashing wrong-way light? How do you find the balance? Im still chewing on this, but heres what Ive got so far. First, gleaning clarity requires putting all outside expectations, internal guilt trips and shoulds aside. Its important to identify and extract the pressures that cloud our ability to discern. Then, with that out of the way, we can tune into what feels right in our bodies. Its like when my friend was trying to decide if she would continue nursing her baby. She had to put other peoples input and even her own tsk tsk voice out of the picture. Then, she could get a sense in her mind and body for how different options felt. Nursing felt like tension, exhaustion, strain. It erred toward suffering. Switching to formula felt lighter. Like a relief. Her answer was clear. Martha Beck has been writing bestselling books about this kind of stuff for decades. She says that combing through heavier resistance can be appropriate when its linked with something we really want. That was absent in my business school scenario, but it comes up in a big way with my daughter. She has a swallowing disorder and a feeding tube. Roughly 95 percent of her nutrition goes through a surgically implanted port in her stomach. Beyond feeding her through the tube, we are trying our darndest to teach her how to eat. Its an uphill battle. So far, weve done two monthlong stints at a special feeding hospital in Dallas, and we literally spend hours every day on oral motor therapy, practice meals, tube feeding, etc. Its intense the path that has been full of challenges, and Ive felt all kinds of resistance. But at least for this moment, I think were on the right path because theres something here that I really want something I long for: giving my daughter the possibility to be able to eat and enjoy food down the line. Despite all the resistance along the way, when I play out that outcome, my body settles. I exhale, my shoulders relax. Its hard to explain, but it feels like, sigh yes, that. Yoga and meditation are really helpful for getting more connected with the truth thats in our bodies, but its as simple as noticing how we physically feel. Our bodies affirm paths and outcomes with feel-good sensations like warmth, expansion, relaxation, softness, openness, settling. The opposite can be useful to recognize, too: tense, hunched, strained, tight, holding breath these are noes. Such sensations can be intense or extremely subtle, but theyre powerful indicators when we know to tune in. I can think of past relationships that were full of resistance and longing, but I didnt realize at the time that my body was saying no. I remember thinking, Im hanging on by a thread. Thats how my body felt, like gripping, all the time. Eventually, I got the message. This stuff is not black and white. Im still trying to make sense of how to balance the yin and the yang. How and when to push. How to not suffer, but still make progress, and not constantly second-guess. I guess my main conclusion is that resistance is a yellow light. It means we could be approaching suffering (which is definitely a red light), so slow down and check in. Turn down the noise and tune into which possibility feels like a fit, then go forward with that. In the end, I dont know that theres any such thing as doing it right. But I hope this may be helpful as we all keep trying. Marci Izard Sharif is an author, yoga teacher, meditation facilitator, and mother. In Feeling Matters, she writes about self-love, sharing self-care tools, stories, and resources that center around knowing and being kind to yourself. As a developing country, Sint Maarten must continue to acknowledge the contributions of its local pioneers, past and present, that have laid the foundation on which we stand today. I would like to thank all persons involved from the Ministry of Education Culture Youth and Sport (MECYS) who have presented these important features thus far under the banner, We Story The Collection, said Minister of Education Culture Youth & Sport, the Honorable drs. Rodolphe Samuel. As Black History Month concludes the Ministry of Education Culture Youth and Sport (MECYS) continues its We Story The Collection, focusing on Mrs. Elaine Gumbs-Vlaun, who is an outstanding pioneer in the areas of sport, politics, social work and civil service while contributing to the community of Sint Maarten. Minister Samuel took some time from his busy schedule to visit Mrs Gumbs-Vlaun at her home to learn about her outstanding contributions. Specifically in the sport of Volleyball in the 1970s Mrs. Elaine Gumbs-Vlaun contributed as a player on the champions team, the national team and made world history in volleyball as the first female International Volleyball Referee Candidate after successfully completing the course at the Ohio State University. Mrs. Gumbs-Vlaun played with the Super Six female volleyball team who were consistent champions during that era and with her teams success, she was able to represent Sint Maarten regionally. Whilst in the Netherlands, Mrs. Gumbs-Vlaun played A Division volleyball for two years prior to returning to the island. Mrs. Gumbs-Vlaun also played a pivotal role in keeping volleyball alive on Sint Maarten and advises all persons within sport to be disciplined and dedicated to their sport. Along with her contribution to the sporting world, Gumbs-Vlaun also pioneered in the political arena on Sint Maarten as the 1st Female Island Council Member. When the SPM appeared on the political scene in 1979 Gumbs-Vlaun made her entry into politics as the partys third candidate. She picked up 141 votes in that Island Council election. However, it would not be until 1983, that Gumbs-Vlaun would be elected to the Island Council, making her the first woman to hold this post in Sint Maarten. She received 507 votes a hearty 35% of the parties total. In 1985 counsellor Gumbs-Vlaun debut in the parliamentary elections earned her 469 votes 28.5% of SPMs 1646 votes. Gumbs-Vlaun participated in the elections of 1991 (211 votes), 1994 (188 votes) and 1995 (287 votes). In 1994, Councillor Gumbs-Vlaun, a member of the SPA since 1990, was appointed to the Executive Council by the second SPA/PDP coalition government. In November 1995, she was put in charge of the Central Committee. - (Book: Know Your Political History) As an outstanding pioneer, Mrs. Gumbs-Vlaun was Sint Maartens first local social worker and she was instrumental in the start-up of the Department of Social Services. With more firsts under her belt Mrs. Elaine Gumbs Vlaun was also the 1st local to Head the Court of Guardianship and the 1st Sint Maartener to become Assistant Director of Huize St. Josef in Curacao. Huize St. Josef was setup as a home for abused and neglected youth for the islands of the Netherlands Antilles. Additionally, her pioneering work extended to other areas, which led her to become one of the founding members of Safe Haven and the Mental Health Foundation. Along with Elsje Bosch she was instrumental in organizing a geriatric course geared towards persons working in the St. Martins Home for the elderly on Sint Maarten. In conclusion, Minister Samuel stated, Moving forward it is my goal to continue bringing about more awareness and increasing the visibility of the many facets of Sint Maartens rich and diverse heritage with We Story The Collection. As more feature stories are written they will be placed on the website of the Government of Sint Maarten at www.sintmaaten.gov/westory where all persons will have full access. This is a carousel. Use Next and Previous buttons to navigate Montgomery County Judge Mark Keough wont face a runoff for his second term. With all precincts reporting, Keough won re-election with 43,390 (66.12 percent) of the votes with Sara Countryman and Billy Graff receiving 10,631 (16.20 percent) and 11,613 (17.69 percent) respectively. First I give all the credit to the Lord who has walked me through the most significant years of my life. I couldnt be more pleased, Keough said Tuesday night. The people have spoken. The support that I have felt throughout this endeavor has been uncommon and I look forward completing this term and starting the next term next year. On HoustonChronicle.com: Combat veterans Wesley Hunt, Morgan Luttrell in position to win GOP congressional primaries without runoffs, early voting results suggest The former legislator turned county judge left the Texas House with a goal to help more people with immediate needs. The desire has been put to the test as Montgomery County saw numerous serious weather events and endured a pandemic that paralyzed the nation. Keough has faced criticism during his term from taking a hard stance against mask mandates and other restrictions set forth by Gov. Greg Abbott to an arrest for driving while intoxicated. Keough ultimately pleaded guilty and paid $2,000 in fines. Precinct 2 Commissioner Montgomery County Precinct 2 Commissioner Charlie Riley won a third term with all precincts reporting with a solid victory over challenger Jennifer Eckhart. Riley had 12,311 (56.47 percent) of the votes over Eckharts 9,489 (43.53 percent) votes. Riley remained confident in his re-election, noting he wanted to continue several projects currently underway. We have some thing started and we want to continue doing some things, he said in a previous article. We have a lot to do over here in Precinct 2. I think someone who has been here, gotten things started should stay here and get things wrapped up. Precinct 4 Commissioner Newcomer Matt Gray toppled incumbent and former Precinct 4 Justice of the Peace James Metts. Gray had pulled in 5,960 (52.92 percent) votes with Metts trailing with 5,303 (47.08 percent) votes. Gray ran on the promise that more accountability is needed in Precinct 4. On HoustonChronicle.com: U.S. Rep. Dan Crenshaw takes big lead early in GOP primary I see the need for leadership, Gray said. We need plans, transparency and accountability. With the extreme amount of growth, we are seeing on this side of town, weve got to act now. We cant be reactive any longer. Gray has worked in the oil and gas industry for 15 years working with contractors and managing projects worldwide. Currently, he is a facilities maintenance construction project manager with Humble ISD. I work with public funding and procurement to oversee large district projects, Gray said adding he has also served on bond committees while at the district. I will serve as commissioner by prudently maintaining the budget, working with teams to manage the growth that we are experiencing, properly maintaining the roads, improving drainage, fighting to lower taxes. Gray will run unopposed on the Nov. 8 ballot. County clerk After more than 25 years, Montgomery County will have a new county clerk. Brandon Steinmann saw victory after all precincts reporting over challenger Jeanie Stewart to take over the reigns from Mark Turnbull who retired after seven terms. Steinmann will run unopposed on the Nov. 8 ballot. Steinman secured 43,611 (71.94) with Stewart earning 17,010 (28.06 percent). One of my earliest political campaigns was for Marks first campaign and I am excited about the opportunity to continue the good work he has been doing as our county clerk, said Steinmann said in a previous article. County Court at Law No. 1 John Hafley secured a win over challenger Brian Cain with all precincts reporting with 43,267 (72.98 percent) of the votes over Cain with 16,020 (27.02 percent). My entire life has been dedicated to the criminal justice system, he said adding he served as a police officer, prosecutor, operates his own law practice and as a military veteran is currently brigadier general in the United States Army Reserve. I want to continue that service. According to Hafleys website, as a criminal defense attorney, he has focused on clients rights under the constitution and embraces The Bill of Rights Hafley has worked in the Montgomery County Court system for nearly a decade and said he understands what it means to be a servant leader. Hafley will run unopposed on the Nov. 8 ballot. County Court at Law No. 3 After being appointed to fill the unexpired term of former Judge Patrice McDonald, Tucker landed her first term on the bench over challenger Laura Watson. Tucker will run unopposed on the Nov. 8 ballot. With all precincts reporting, Tucker secured 41,396 (68.35 percent) votes over Watsons 19,173 (31.65 percent) votes. CCL No. 3 is a family court and handles all Child Protective Services cases filed in Montgomery County after being given that distinction in August 2020 by the Montgomery County Board of Judges. Tucker noted after 12 years as an associate district attorney in Montgomery County, where she specialized in child abuse cases, makes her a good fit for the bench. I really spearheaded those efforts to bring all of those cases to County Court at Law No. 3, Tucker said noting the court handles all the cases for foster children in the county. I feel it is such an important area of the law that a lot of people dont know about and a lot of people dont want to be involved with. They are very difficult cases. County Court at Law No. 4 Echo Hutson successfully made the leap from prosecutor to judge after landing 37,739 (63.46 percent) votes over challenger Gary S. Miller who pulled in 21,728 (36.54 percent) votes. Hutson will run unopposed on the Nov. 8 ballot. Hutson has served as the chief prosecutor of the Domestic Violence Division at the Montgomery County District Attorneys Office. Over the course of her career, Hutson has served as chief prosecutor over each of Montgomery Countys five misdemeanor court dockets. In 2011, Hutson helped create Montgomery Countys first Domestic Violence Division severing as the first specialized domestic violence prosecutor in the county and has supervised the specialized Domestic Violence Docket in County Court 4 for the majority of the courts existence. Its been an incredibly successful docket, she said adding the only reason she would run for office is the courts focus on domestic violence. Thats my specialty, thats what I have been doing so I want to jump in and take that over from the judicial side. Having done that for so long and knowing why we do what we do and knowing what we do, I just think it is a natural fit. Congressional races In the crowded race to succeed retiring U.S. Rep. Kevin Brady, former Navy SEAL Morgan Luttrell easily led a field of 11 Republicans in a district covering Montgomery County. Based on early returns, Luttrell had 32,418 votes (52.8 percent) to clear the threshold to avoid a runoff, though the results of Election Day voting had yet to be fully reported. Luttrells main rival in the 8th District, political operative Christian Collins, repeatedly bashed Luttrell for receiving a flood of financial support from a Kevin McCarthy-affiliated super PAC, as he sought to frame the race as the people versus the Washington establishment. McCarthy is the House minority leader in Washington. Collins also touted his own support from two controversial members of the hard-line House Freedom Caucus, U.S. Reps. Marjorie Taylor Greene of Georgia and Madison Cawthorn of North Carolina. Both came to Texas to rally for Collins in February. For his part, Luttrell was boosted by a number of prominent Republicans, including Lt. Gov. Dan Patrick, former governor Rick Perry and U.S. Rep. Dan Crenshaw. In Texas 2nd Congressional District, Crenshaw on Tuesday easily defeated a trio of primary challengers who sought to tackle the Houston Republican from the right. Crenshaw declared victory on Twitter after drawing 75 percent of the vote. Though Crenshaw financially overwhelmed his opponents and was expected to cruise to victory, he has drawn fire from some conservatives after referring to members of the House Freedom Caucus as grifters and performance artists. Unlike many GOP candidates, Crenshaw also accepted the results of the 2020 presidential election. State races Republican state Rep. Cecil Bell of Magnolia was re-elected to his District 3 seat with 14,000 votes (67.2 percent) over his sole primary opponent, Magnolia ISD trustee Kelly McDonald. Bells district covers southwest Montgomery County. In District 15, Republican state Rep. Steve Toth was re-elected to his seat with 13,882 votes (69.2 percent) over challenger Maris Blair. Houston Chronicle Washington bureau reporter Benjamin Wermund and Austin bureau reporter Jasper Scherer contributed to this story. cdominguez@hcnonline.com Rents are on the rise, as is the cost of living more generally: workers across Houston are feeling the pinch accordingly, even as the state economy is generally healthy. The comptrollers office is projecting a budget surplus of billions, even before oil prices hit $100 a barrel. Perhaps we should do something for workers. Perhaps we should, for example, consider raising the minimum wage. In fact, Houston Mayor Sylvester Turner did just that last month, signing an executive order raising the minimum wage for workers at Houstons airports to $15 an hour by 2023. On Thursday Elsa Caballero, the president of SEIU Texas, was pleased both by this development and the support it signals for workers in upcoming negotiations with the city. Once you have someone in the leadership community that can connect to those workers and what theyre going through, it makes a huge difference, Caballero added, noting that Turner qualifies: his own mother worked as a maid at Houstons Rice Hotel, raising her family on her wages after his father died when he was just 13. The mayor, to her point, previously raised the wage for airport workers to $12 an hour, from $7.25-the federal minimum wage, which applies in this state. The effects of his new order will be felt beginning next month, when the minimum wage at the citys three airports increases to $13.00 an hour; it will reach the $15 mark in October 2023. This kind of move is just common sense, Turners office argues. The City has an interest in retaining a qualified experienced workforce at City aviation facilities and quality working conditions are necessary to keep the City thriving with a strong workforce and sustainable quality of life, last months order says. One of the affected workers is Bria Wiggins, 29, who for the past six years has worked at George Bush Intercontinental helping passengers who use wheelchairs. I love the work! I love helping elderly passengers, Wiggins told me Tuesday. The passengers love her too, she added, and sometimes ask for her number so she can help them on their return to Houston, or their next flight. Her current wage, however, is just $12 an hour; things are tight. Her rent, which she shares with her mother-who works as a receptionist at a nursing home-is around $1000 a month. She takes two buses to work each morning, leaving her house at eight or eight thirty for a shift that begins at 11 am. Its not just city workers and contractors who are affected by low wages, of course. Turner acknowledged this at his press conference last month, announcing plans to raise wages for other municipal workersand to encourage the private sector to do the same. I hope that our city's largest employers will follow the City of Houston's lead and do their part to raise their minimum wage, he said. Such a move would be long overdue, according to Cynthia Lewis, 59, who works as a janitor in a beautiful building downtown. I love my job, Lewis told me. I love the clients. I love my bosses. But the thing is, were just having a hard time. Her pay was recently increased, she continued, from $10 an hour to $10.75. Put differently, her paycheck has increased from $331 to $350. She still has to pick which bills to pay first, and economize in various ways. In light of gas prices, for example, Lewis takes a bus and a train to work each day. After I pay all my bills and everything, I barely have money for myself, said Lewis. Its very stressful. Sometimes when Im at work, Im mad, but I still put my smiley face on because I have to keep going. Its been a decade since the Fight for 15 campaign began with a November 2012 strike by fast-food workers in New York City. The campaign has at this point made inroads with Democrats across the country, and has the support of President Biden, although Congress has not yet heeded his calls to act on the subject. Biden last year issued an executive order directing that federal employees and contractors be paid a $15 minimum wage. This increase will provide those workers and their families a little more breathing room, Biden said in a statement last month, when the order took effect. And because we know that higher wages boost productivity and mean lower job turnover, these orders will allow the government to do its work better and faster. He added that some 70,000 federal workers and 300,000 contract workers will be affected by the policy, and that the workers in question are disproportionately women, people of color, and people with disabilities. Does anyone disagree with this change? Well, sure. Naturally. Bidens move drew a swift rebuke from Texas Attorney Gen. Ken Paxton, a Republican, who last month sued the administration over the move, leading an august coalition of states: Texas, Louisiana, and Mississippi. In the suit, Paxton accuses Biden of overreach, and of proceeding with little apparent regard for the widespread havoc on the economy that will result. But despite Paxtons confident assertion-that Bidens move was bound to result in widespread havoc for the economy-such havoc has yet to materialize. There are still problems with our economy, to be sure, including inflation, which is top of mind for many consumers. A bigger issue for many employers, however, is the persistent labor shortages, in many sectors, which emerged during the COVID-19 pandemic. And while the minimum wage may not be an issue that divides the GOP, it is one where the partys leaders and its voters are not necessarily aligned. Youll sometimes hear Republican elected officials, or conservative scholars, argue that the minimum wage should be set by the market, and that government standards on the subject should be scrapped entirely. But such provocations are rarely issued by regular people. A survey last year from the Pew Research Center, for example, found that 62 percent of respondents, across the country, support raising the minimum wage to $15 an hour. Just as striking, perhaps, is that 71 percent of those opposed to this particular idea nonetheless think the minimum wage should be raised. Its as if the populist fervor that has roiled the right in recent years is actually rooted in some underlying sense, or experience, about the rights of workers and the conditions they face. Perhaps even conservatives believe that work has an inherent dignity, and should be compensated accordingly. And perhaps they recognize that policies that support workers support the community, and the economy, more generally. People have kids; people have second jobs; people are going back to school; $12 is not really helping them out, Wiggins said. 15 dollars will mean a lot to everybody. The airport worker added, plainly: It matters in general for Houston, meaning me and everybody else who lives here. erica.grieder@chron.com This is a carousel. Use Next and Previous buttons to navigate 2 1 of 2 OnScene TV Show More Show Less 2 of 2 OnScene TV Show More Show Less A Humble police officer fired shots Tuesday evening during a confrontation, striking two suspects who were transported to the hospital, authorities say. It occurred in the 9800 block of FM 1960 Bypass Road West. The officer approached a stolen vehicle around 6:06 p.m. and there was a confrontation, during which the officer fired shots, according to Lt. Eric Squier with Humble police. This is a carousel. Use Next and Previous buttons to navigate 2 1 of 2 Houston Police Department Show More Show Less 2 of 2 Houston Police Department Show More Show Less Police are looking for the public's help to find a couple accused of stealing four bottles of tequila from a southwest Houston liquor store last month. Authorities released a video Wednesday of the Feb. 12 incident which showed a woman who entered a liquor store at the 10100 block of Beechnut Street around 6 p.m. and grabbed four tequila bottles before she tried to walk out without paying. This is a carousel. Use Next and Previous buttons to navigate Marissa Sanchez walked into Erica Davis office shortly after lunch on a day in late January, two years ago, upset. She was having issues with her boss, she said: Harris County Precinct 1 Chief Deputy Chris Gore, her supervisor in the human trafficking squad. She was so stressed that she was dreading coming to work. Even though she once loved her job, she was looking elsewhere. A few days before, shed broken out in hives. Over 34 minutes, the Precinct 1 deputy constable told Davis, the chief of staff for Precinct 1 Constable Alan Rosen, that Gore was making her job difficult, describing a boss who was jealous and possessive. Its hard to work when I have a problem with my own boss, she said. The way he talks, it's like, Damn, you're acting like you're my boyfriend or something, she said. For a while, I mean, I dealt with it, but then, it's gotten worse, and worse, and worse. The transcript which surfaced late last week in court filings is the latest salvo in an ongoing civil lawsuit that Sanchez and four other current and former Precinct 1 employees filed last May against the Precinct 1 Constables Office, Rosen, Gore, and another supervisor, Shane Rigdon. DOES HARRIS COUNTY NEED CONSTABLES?: In fallout from 'bachelor party' scandal, critics want to know Now Playing: A bombshell civil rights lawsuit accused Harris County, Precinct 1 Constable Alan Rosen and two of his top-ranking superiors of a wide array of misconduct at the constable's office, one of the largest in Harris County, including sexual harassment, sexual battery, civil rights violations and retaliation. Video: Marie D. De Jesus/Houston Chronicle A judge ruled Rosen couldnt be personally sued in the case, and the other individual defendants have since been dropped from the lawsuit; none could be reached for comment for this story. Their attorney, William Helfand, played down the contents of the new filing, saying it rehashed previous allegations raised in the lawsuit that are without merit. Nothing speaks louder than the dismissal of all three of the individuals from the lawsuit, he said. They were all accused of wrongdoing, they were all dismissed in the early stages of the lawsuit and they were dismissed because they didnt do anything wrong. He also questioned the decision by the plaintiffs attorneys to include the transcript in a court filing in the first place. There is no purpose under the federal rules to attach the transcript at issue to the motion filed, he said, unless it was done to continue efforts to impugn the dedicated and professional law enforcement officers who have been dismissed from this lawsuit because none did anything in violation of any law. Davis, who is not named in the lawsuit, told the Chronicle that the transcript proved her willingness to listen to Sanchez concerns and help her resolve them. She said that the incident reveals my character and commitment to transparency. I did everything I could do without receiving a formal complaint, which I asked for multiple times during my conversation, and I definitely stand by my actions, said Davis. Additionally, I immediately informed the chief over internal affairs after the conversation. Davis went on to challenge Harris County Judge Lina Hidalgo for the Democratic nomination, but was defeated in Tuesdays primary. COURT FILING: Harris County constable leaders used 'bachelor party' stings to exploit female deputies, lawyer says Rosen, who was first elected in 2012, has previously said he has a zero-tolerance stance against sexual assault and sexual harassment and would never allow a hostile work environment as alleged in the lawsuit. He has defended his office, saying internal investigators found no violation of law or policy, but nevertheless moved Gore to a different assignment. Sanchez and the other plaintiffs alleged sexual harassment, sexual battery, civil rights violations and retaliation. They claim that Gore picked them for an undercover unit despite the fact that they were inexperienced rookies, and then ordered them to carry out bachelor party stings. The operations involve setting up surveillance in a hotel room, and male and female deputies all undercover pretending to be partygoers. Some of the female deputies pose as prostitutes, potentially enticing sex workers to agree to provide sex for cash which in turns leads to an arrest. They then try to use those arrests to pressure the sex workers to provide information about their traffickers or pimps. Instead of capturing traffickers, the plaintiffs alleged, they were subjected to sexual harassment, unwarranted touching, unwanted kissing, molestation, and sexual ridicule. They contend female deputies were ordered to purchase and wear revealing clothing for these operations, and that Gore kissed and fondled them. The tactic raised eyebrows among veteran vice detectives in other departments. Another employee who worked for the agency as an advocate for victims of human trafficking has also sued, saying she was ignored and then fired when she conveyed concerns about the departments vice operations to superiors. Sanchez secretly recorded the conversation with Davis on Jan. 27, 2020, according to her attorney, Bill Ogden. That was more than a year before Sanchez and other Precinct 1 employees sued their bosses. The transcript, a rare look into the departments handling of such matters, details Sanchez outcry to her bosses about her difficulties working with Gore. The transcript shows Davis asked Sanchez if she wanted to make a complaint, but she said she didnt want to be seen as swaying her. The failure of Sanchez superiors to investigate her concerns and address the problem was absolutely wrong, Ogden said. FEDERAL INVESTIGATION: FBI investigating Harris County Precinct 1 constables in wake of 'bachelor party' scandal Sanchez, 28, had been with the department a little over a year. She was working patrol when Gore approached her and urged her to join the departments human trafficking unit, a squad dedicated to taking down pimps and sex work operations. She said she felt obligated to take the assignment, documents show, even though she loved working patrol. I was good where I was at, and then he came to me and started like bugging me to come to human trafficking, she said. Over the course of the conversation, Sanchez told Davis that Gore was her partner on the job but taking it a little too far. If I leave him, he gets upset, she said. He makes it known it bothers him, so I can't fully do my job and learn because I've been in this division for six to seven months. And there's a lot of stuff I don't know because he's keeping me from doing my job. At points, she described not wanting to go to the bathroom because she might run into Gore. Sanchez repeatedly stressed not wanting to leave Precinct 1. We want you here, Davis responded, according to the transcript, adding that she wanted Sanchez to feel protected. She told Sanchez that the young deputy was protecting other men and women by coming forward. A JUDGE RULES: Constable Alan Rosen can't be sued over Harris County deputies' sex abuse claims, judge rules Sanchez also described a time when a female coworker drove her to pick up her truck. At some point, Gore had the coworkers vehicle towed, Sanchez said. I felt like that was like he was retaliating because she took me to go get my truck, Sanchez said. She also recalled an incident in which a coworker told her that Gore had been watching her on the precincts surveillance cameras while she was talking to a male colleague. The coworker said Gore had asked him who Sanchez had been talking to. I bet he's watching me too, Davis replied. Its unclear whether Davis followed department protocol for handling the allegations. She told Sanchez she didnt want to lose her to another agency and to take some comp time. And she suggested transferring to another unit for a period of time, returning to the trafficking unit when things had calmed down. Lets give you a breather, she said. You might feel refreshed for a month or so. UNSOLVED: DNA testing puts cold cases in the spotlight. But in Houston, hundreds of the dead remain unidentified. Employment attorney Mark Oberti said sexual harassment cases are common. Defendants must prove severe or pervasive harassment, he said a high legal bar. They must also show they reported the harassment through the appropriate channels and that their bosses failed to take prompt and remedial action. Thats a lot of hoops to get through to win, he said. Plaintiffs definitely win a small minority of the ones filed. Davis appears to have floated the idea of a transfer back to patrol, the document shows. Davis and Rigdon who was also in the meeting strategized about transferring Sanchez out of the unit, but appear to have been concerned about doing it in such a way that Gore would not retaliate. Sanchez told Davis that she loved working patrol, but didnt want to have to take an assignment where shed be starting at the bottom with a night shift assignment. And she loved the work she was doing on the human trafficking unit, she said. Davis suggested Sanchez write her a letter describing the situation, so she could figure out how to maneuver. She compared moving Sanchez off the human trafficking unit to a different position to how the department would treat an incident on the street, where they would bench a deputy or move them off patrol. I want to make this a healthy move, she said, just for a little bit. Ultimately, Sanchez transferred to patrol. Fourteen months later, she and her colleagues sued. st.john.smith@chron.com Aldine ISD announced Tuesday that it would lift its mask mandate a few days earlier than planned due to the ongoing decline in COVID-19 cases and updated guidance from the U.S. Centers for Disease Control. The district previously said face coverings no longer would be required in all of its school buildings after March 11. Now, the school systems mask rule will end Monday. The decision was made after the CDC provided new guidance last week that most individuals can stop wearing masks and stay safe. Aldine ISD officials also cited the newly expanded vaccine eligibility for younger children, as well as input from state and local health officials in its announcement. On HoustonChronicle.com: Houston ISDs equity-based strategic plan calls for teacher raises, librarians at all campuses Although no longer required, the district continues to strongly encourage the wearing of facemasks, especially for unvaccinated individuals, to minimize the spread of the virus, reads a statement issued by the district. While the COVID-19 vaccine is not required, the district encourages all eligible students and staff to get vaccinated. Aldine ISD will continue to work with community partners to help ensure the community is educated and has access to testing and vaccines. Spring ISD on Tuesday also announced it would no longer mandate masks and would recommend them instead starting March 4. As a district, we believe this decision will enable our families and staff to make their own personal choices based on individual health needs, reads a statement released by the district. On Monday, Houston ISD announced it would lift its mask mandate Tuesday and relax other protocols, such as allowing field trips and getting rid of seating assignments in certain situtaions. Channelview ISD also announced Monday it would lift its mask requirement. Aldine administrators will continue to monitor cases in the schools and in the local community and could make changes to the districts protocols as necessary, officials said. On HoustonChronicle.com: Houston ISD to lift mask, allow field trips The districts online COVID dashboard will also continue to be updated daily with active cases. Aldine ISDs COVID-19 dashboard will also continue to be updated daily with active lab-confirmed cases of Aldine staff and students who have been in district schools and facilities. hannah.dellinger@chron.com Page Content On March 1, 2022, the Court of First Instance ruled in three administrative injunction cases brought forward by three immigrants without a residence permit for either the Dutch side or the French side. The Minister of Justice ordered their return to their native country, and placed them in administrative detention to secure their removal. The courts found that certain procedures and guidelines regarding the administrative detention were not fully complied with by the Ministry of Justice. As a result, the court ordered the immediate release of the three immigrants, pending the appeal process against their detention orders. The release was done within hours of the judgement being legally received by the government to be executed. Important to note, is that whilst the immigrants were released, the court denied the request to suspend the removal order of the immigrants. As such, although the three immigrants were released, they must make arrangements to leave the island as the rulings of March 1 did not change that. The Immigration and Border Protection Service (IBP) intends to improve its operations and procedures to prevent situations like the ones that led to the three rulings of March 1. These cases will be used as a learning experience to strengthen the operations of IBP. IBP will continue to enforce the National Ordinance Admittance and Expulsion to the best of its abilities. This is a carousel. Use Next and Previous buttons to navigate More than 21 million gallons of waste leaked from the city of Baytowns sewer system and into the surrounding community in recent years, causing a disproportionate effect on predominantly Hispanic neighborhoods, according to recent legal action taken by environmental advocates. Bayou City Waterkeeper on Monday gave the city a formal warning that it planned to sue over what it says are numerous violations of the federal Clean Water Act for the unlawful spills. The system released dirty sewage at least 882 times between 2016 and 2021, according to the group. On HoustonChronicle.com: Sewer spills put city under EPA scrutiny Baytown spokesperson Jason Calder wrote in an email that the city was fully compliant with the law and has an agreement to work with state regulators on sewage issues. The potential suit mirrors one Bayou City Waterkeeper threatened against the city of Houston. Federal and state environmental regulators stepped in to pursue that one, which was resolved last year when Houston agreed to upgrade its troubled system and a judge signed off on the plan. A disproportionate amount of Houstons sewer spills also occurred in low-income communities of color, a 2016 Houston Chronicle analysis found. Sewage systems can release untreated wastewater in rainstorms or because of broken pipes. This can cause public health problems when backups occur in homes. The so-called overflow can also contaminate waterways with bacteria. The city reported its spills to state regulators, forming the basis for a suit. Baytowns four treatment plants discharge into several waterways including Cedar Bayou, which does not meet the states water quality standards because of high levels of bacteria, according to Bayou City Waterkeeper. The Baytown waterways eventually drain into Trinity and Galveston bays. Bayou City Waterkeeper mapped the spill locations that Baytown provided to the Texas Commission on Environmental Quality and found that the larger spills correlated with places where much of the population was Hispanic. The system includes more than 500 miles of pipes with the capacity to move an average of 24.2 million gallons of wastewater per day, according to the advocates. The legal action adds to a growing conversation around environmental justice in the country. Baytown sits just east of the Houston Ship Channel and is home to about 84,000 people, according to the U.S. census. The industry-heavy area already faces other potential environmental harms, including hazardous chemicals released by industrial plants into the air. Lots of different entities and people are responsible here, Bayou City Waterkeeper Legal Director Kristen Schlemmer said. The reason were seeing a high rate of overflows in Baytown is that there is a problem, and its a problem thats been going on for years. On HoustonChronicle.com: Judge OKs federal consent decree requiring Houston to make $2 billion in sewer upgrades TCEQ said in a statement that the city has participated since 2013 in its Sanitary Sewer Overflow Initiative, which is meant to help cities with aging systems. The city can direct resources toward fixing the problems rather than paying penalties. In Baytowns case, the city is supposed to inspect its lines, lift stations and manholes and repair or replace them as needed. It submits an annual report on its progress. The agency takes into consideration a citys participation in the program when making enforcement decisions about overflows, so long as there has been no documented harm to human health or the environment and the problems are being addressed, the statement said. State and federal regulators now have 60 days to file their own suits on the matter, and then, if they do not, Bayou City Waterkeeper plans to file its own. emily.foxhall@chron.com This is a carousel. Use Next and Previous buttons to navigate The family of a man shot and killed in February by a pair of bounty hunters in Fifth Ward are questioning their tactics, with their lawyers contending that neither of the men identified themselves as such and wore ski masks. Several relatives of Walter Hutchins, 31, gathered outside the Harris County civil courthouse Tuesday to ask the Houston Police Department and Harris County District Attorneys Office for a thorough investigation into his Feb. 23 death. The shooting unfolded around 9:30 p.m. outside a business in the 3400 block of Liberty Road, with surveillance footage from a nearby business showing at least three vehicles swarming the street and armed men jumping out as Hutchins got into his car. Melissa Phillip / Staff Photographer Melissa Phillip / Staff Photographer Melissa Phillip / Staff Photographer Melissa Phillip / Staff Photographer People holds signs during a press conference Tuesday, March 1, 2022, in Houston held by attorney Ben Crump about the death of Walter Hutchins, who was shot and killed by bounty hunters. (Melissa Phillip / Staff Photographer) People holds signs during a press conference Tuesday, March 1, 2022, in Houston held by attorney Ben Crump about the death of Walter Hutchins, who was shot and killed by bounty hunters. (Melissa Phillip / Staff Photographer) The bounty hunters a colloquial term may have staked out the street for several hours in an attempt to capture Hutchins, family lawyers said, saying that their vehicles were spotted over a length of time in the video. The footage captured the moment the vehicles stopped in an apparent attempt to block Hutchins escape. Men believed to be the bounty hunters jumped out with guns pointed at him. One of the bounty hunters opened fire as Hutchins vehicle rolled into the street. The encounter lasted about five seconds. Anyone can put themselves in the place of Walter, lawyer Bob Hilliard said at the news conference. Suddenly, without warning, there are four people pointing guns and yelling at you. All Walter tried to do, if you look at the video, is put his car in reverse to get out of that situation. And they immediately all started shooting at him and he was dead in seconds. Hilliards co-counsel, civil rights lawyer Ben Crump, said the men had ski masks on. He wondered if Hutchins thought he was about to be robbed. On HoustonChronicle.com: Family of couple from 1980s cold case travels to Houston crime scene, sparking memories along the way One of the bounty hunters appears to wearing a black protective vest, according to the video. Houston police officers heard the gunfire from a few blocks away and found Hutchins with a gunshot wound to the head. He was taken to a hospital but did not survive. The bounty hunters, according to police, told investigators that Hutchins fired first and one of them returned fire with a rifle. The shooting remains under investigation, officials said. Authorities have not said if Hutchins was armed or if he fired a gun at the bounty hunters. The video does not indicate whether or not Hutchins wielded a weapon, and instead appears to show him huddled in the area of the drivers seat as the vehicle rolled backwards. The identities of the bounty hunters or who hired them is not known. On HoustonChronicle.com: Secret recording shows Harris County deputy's call for help over boss 'acting like my boyfriend' What is known is that bond forfeiture cases had been stacking up against Hutchins following multiple failures to appear in court, district clerk records show. Bondsmen often task bounty hunters with capturing bail jumpers over owed funds. Hutchins was charged in 2018 with burglary of a habitation and continuous violence against a family member, and in 2019 with assault of a family member and credit card abuse all felonies. The lack of appearances in each case prompted warrants for his arrest and attempts by the courts to recover the forfeited bond amount a combined $140,000 between at least two bail agents, records show. Carl Moore, Hutchins criminal defense attorney, said that he spoke to his client the week before Hutchins death and that he planned to turn himself in. Not appearing in court does not merit being executed, especially on an non-aggravated offense, Moore said. When a bond forfeiture case begins a bondsman has about nine months to round up a defendant on a felony charge before they are on the hook to repay the court for the surety bond amount. The forfeitures in Hutchins case were filed May 2021, records show. The problem with bounty hunters in Texas is theyre paid by their bounties they're paid to be aggressive, Hilliard said. If they capture someone who has a warrant, they get paid. If they dont, they dont get paid. Theres a monetary incentive for them not to be careful. If police had captured Hutchins instead, the bounty hunters would not be paid, Hilliard said. Hutchins is the second person since October to be killed during a bounty hunter clash in Harris County. On HoustonChronicle.com: Houston man charged in death of woman who was strangled, dismembered A bounty hunter aiming to capture a 24-year-old bail jumper instead shot him to death Oct. 11 at a west Harris County apartment, fearing that the man, Elmer Leija, would run him over, according to authorities. Leija had bond forfeitures in Harris and Montgomery counties, records show. A grand jury has yet to convene in the matter, Harris County Sheriffs Office officials said, meaning that the bounty hunter could still face criminal charges in the mans death. Burglary charges were filed against three purported bounty hunters in January 2021 when the men forcefully entered a Cypress home and exchanged gunfire with the homeowner whom they mistook for a fugitive, officials said. The trio, wearing black tactical gear, pulled up as the homeowner stepped outside and ordered him to the ground. The encounter moved inside the house as the homeowner ran to get a gun and open fire. The bounty hunters fled and were later charged. In that case, the bounty hunters repeatedly said they were police, according to officials. Bounty hunters require state licensing as private investigators and some require security training if they carry a weapon. While capturing a fugitive, bounty hunters can not execute a warrant without written authorization from the bail bondsman or wear clothing that implies that they are police officers or federal agents, according to state statutes. The bounty hunter can, however, display identification that indicates that they are acting on behalf of a bail bond surety. nicole.hensley@chron.com This is a carousel. Use Next and Previous buttons to navigate Fort Bend County Judge KP George will square off against former Precinct 4 Constable Trever Nehls in the November election. George, a first-term Democrat, and Nehls, a Republican, cruised to victory in their respective primaries Tuesday. With all vote centers reporting, unofficial results show George won nearly 70 percent of the vote to defeat Ferrel Bonner, according to unofficial returns. "Fort Bend County voters overwhelmingly voted to select me and the most diverse slate of candidates in Fort Bend history. Together, we will stand united and represent every person that lives in our beautiful community," George said in a statement after midnight. "We will continue to move Fort Bend forward by making our county more effective, engaging, and efficient for ALL." In the Republican primary, Nehls captured more than 90 percent of the vote against Max-alalibo Ibifrisolam. George was elected as part of the blue wave in 2018, becoming the first person of color and of Asian descent to serve as county judge. He has been highly visible during the pandemic, achieving a high rate of vaccination in the county months after vaccines became available. Nehls, a businessman, is a decorated combat veteran who served with the Army National Guard in Afghanistan and Kuwait. The twin brother of U.S. Rep. Troy Nehls, he served as Fort Bend County Precinct 4 Constable for two four-year terms before losing a 2020 bid to succeed his brother as county sheriff. norm.gomlak@chron.com Marie D. De Jesus, Houston Chronicle / Staff photographer Adrian Garcia, the Harris County commissioner for Precinct 2, held a commanding lead in the early returns of the Democratic primary for the seat, while Jack Morman and Jerry Mouton led the Republican field looking to challenge him in November. Garcia led challengers George Risner and Gary Harrison and had a majority of the vote, according to early vote returns, meaning he likely would be able to win outright if the outcome is not swayed by election day returns. The Harris County Elections Administration has requested an extension on the 24-hour deadline to report the results of Tuesdays primary elections, according to Texas Secretary of State John Scott. State law requires that counties report results from both early voting and Election Day within 24 hours of the polls closing. Just after polls closed at 7 p.m. Tuesday, Scotts office said that they were informed by Harris County election officials that the county would not be able to count and report the results by 7 p.m. Wednesday. Harris County election officials have indicated to our office that the delay in ballot tabulation is due only to damaged ballot sheets that must be duplicated before they can be scanned by ballot tabulators at the central count location, Scott said in a statement. Failing to meet the deadline is a Class B misdemeanor, Scotts office said. Our office stands ready to assist Harris County election officials, and all county election officials throughout the state, in complying with Texas Election Code requirements for accurately tabulating and reporting Primary Election results, Scott said. Harris County elections officials downplayed the announcement, and said they held a phone call with Scotts office to discuss the 30-year-old provision requiring precinct election records to be delivered within 24 hours after the polls close. Officials said they had released early voting results shortly after the polls closed, and said in a statement, Election Day results will be reported, and the remainder of the reconciliation process will continue over the next few days, as we prioritize accuracy over speed. They said, however, that after discussing the potential criminal and new civil penalties associated with delayed reporting and the outdated nature of such a law, and at the recommendation of the Secretary of States Office, the political parties decided to seek a court order regarding the time associated with counting the ballots. The Harris County Elections office debuted their new voting machine, the Hart InterCivic Verity Duo, last year in what they said was an effort to make voting quicker, easier and safer, but many voters found the system cumbersome. The touch screen interface produces two paper ballot sheets that voters then feed into a scanner. It was not immediately clear how many ballot sheets may have been damaged, or at what point in the process the damage occurred. A Katy ISD teacher is facing a criminal charge for allegedly having an improper relationship with a student, according to the district. The teacher, identified as Robert Ownby, resigned from his position at Obra D. Tompkins High School during an investigation into the alleged abuse, according to a statement the schools principal sent to parents Wednesday. This is a carousel. Use Next and Previous buttons to navigate Iryna Petrovska Marchiano fears that soon, the novelty and shock of the Russian-Ukraine war will fade. That's why the former president and active volunteer for the Ukrainian American Cultural Club of Houston commissioned a #StandWithUkraine peace mural at 112 Travis Street, in hopes of bolstering awareness and support for the Ukrainian people. The mural, a blue and yellow heart, was painted by local artist Shelbi Nicole. UKRAINE: Track Russia's invasion of Ukraine with these maps and interactive chart "The heart is a heart that's breaking right now," Marchiano said, "This is a heart that's signifying the love for our mother country and the people that are needlessly suffering, having done nothing to provoke this war." Marchiano also started the website HTX4UKRAINE, hoping it can serve as a resource for those who want to get involved, donate to their cause and contact their elected representative. "We decided that it would help people to have a one stop shop for all information on how people can aid the effort in Ukraine," Marchiano said. Marchiano says that the Ukrainian American Cultural Club is working with other Ukrainian organizations and families to centralize their local fundraising efforts so people can transparently donate to their cause. On HoustonChronicle.com: Ukraine war upends Biden's agenda on energy, climate change Every weekday, from 5:30-7:30 pm, the Club, the Ukrainian community and supporters of their cause have been and will continue to gather on the corner of Post Oak and Westheimer to raise awareness for the Ukrainian people. "People refuse to give up," Marchiano said. "People still want to keep coming out because this helps them deal with [the war] emotionally. It gives them a way of fighting the battle in their own special way as opposed to just sitting at home and crying into a pillow." Regarding Editorial: Abbott and Paxton, don't threaten parents of trans kids and their doctors, (Feb 26): Trans people embody the inherent worth and dignity that is a pillar of our Unitarian Universalist faith. At the Texas Unitarian Universalist Justice Ministry, our hearts are with trans kids, their families and caregivers, and all trans and nonbinary people. We love you fiercely, and will forever fight for your rights and honor the beautiful ways you are you. Attorney General Ken Paxton's and Gov. Greg Abbott's threats to trans kids and their families are abhorrent, unconscionable and immoral, and their fear-mongering poses real danger to the health and safety of trans Texans. However, we also want to send reassurance from partners like Texas Impact, who assure us the AG and governor are wrong on the law. To trans Texans and parents, caregivers, and families of trans kids: You are deeply loved. Paxton and Abbott do not speak for your communities of faith. Your clergy are not required to report gender-affirming care, nor would we. We pray you are tending to your needs and doing what gives you joy right now. Please reach out to local Unitarian Universalist clergy around Texas or our UU church care teams for support. We pledge to do everything we can. Erin Walter, executive director of the Texas Unitarian Universalist Justice Ministry Thank you for your excellent editorial concerning transgender youth health care. PFLAG Houston firmly opposes Ken Paxtons opinion and Greg Abbotts directive labeling gender-affirming health care for transgender youth as child abuse. PFLAG provides support, education and advocacy to LGBTQ+ individuals, their family members and allies. We believe that all children should be valued by society and deserve to be safe. You can talk to one of our moms by calling the Helpline at 713-46-PFLAG or by email at HelplinePFLAGhouston@gmail.com. Supporting transgender children through medically necessary, gender affirming health care is the opposite of child abuse. Every major medical association has made clear that affirming health care for transgender youth is medically necessary and lifesaving. The communications from the AG and governor do nothing but stir up misinformation, confusion and worry for families of transgender youth as well as for mandatory reporters. Mandy Giles, president of PFLAG Houston Children discover who they are over time by interacting with others their families, peers, media, faith communities and schools. Children learn from the culture they inhabit what it means to be a human being, to love and be loved, and to be productive citizens. Unfortunately, recent actions by the Texas attorney general and governor are antithetical to the welfare of transgender children. Equating heath care with child abuse is absurd, damaging not only transgender childrens health but their learning. Turning doctors, social workers, teachers, priests and neighbors against these families promotes death and division in our communities. Thankfully, such opinions do not carry the force of law. Treating anyones child as unworthy of care and understanding is reprehensible. Every young Texan should be afforded respect as a child of God. We should reject this malicious interpretation of laws designed to protect all our children. Rev. Lisa Hunt, rector of St. Stephen's Episcopal Church Regarding Texas CPS says it will treat hormone therapy for transgender kids as possible child abuse, (Feb. 22): Gov. Greg Abbott and Attorney General Ken Paxton have perilously twisted the definition of child abuse by asking Texans to report parents of transgender minors receiving gender-affirming medical care to child protection. This directive runs counter to the purpose of the child protection system, endangers children and parents and unjustly targets transgender children and young people. A child protection report raises the question of whether a child is in immediate danger of neglect or abuse. Gender-affirming medical treatment does not meet this definition. The medical community has established protocols to support caregivers and children in safely making these decisions. Moreover, a report could potentially result in separation of a child from their family. That event alone increases a childs chances for poorer educational, social and economic outcomes. Texass child protection agencies are already heavily burdened with reports that merit attention. This mandate would divert resources that could help children in legitimate danger. Child abuse reporting has long been weaponized against communities historically targeted for oppression. The effort to remove parental rights and to reject trans childrens innate sense of self is another example. We implore Texans to refuse this call and affirm the belonging of trans children and their parents. Kathy Park, CEO, Evident Change The ACLU is suing Greg Abbott for attempting to enforce Ken Paxtons misguided legal opinion that gender-affirming treatment for transgender adolescents is child abuse. This made me curious about the responsibilities of the Texas Attorney Generals office. I discovered that the philosophy of the Texas AGs office is supposed to be guided by the principles of individual liberty, limited government, economic freedom, and personal responsibility. I fail to see how this opinion adheres to any of these principles and believe it is in direct conflict with individual liberty, limited government, and personal responsibility. While Paxton and Abbott champion parental rights when it comes to wearing masks or learning uncomfortable truths about U.S. history in school, they somehow have no problem interjecting government into parents difficult, private decisions about whats best for a vulnerable childs mental and physical health. It is beyond time for state officials in Austin to mind their own business. Texas parents dont need Big Brother to watch them. Aletha Evert, Houston Our place in the world is being challenged. Russian President Vladimir Putins aggression in Eastern Europe challenges the free world order. On the American political right, it is time we reject lingering isolationist and nationalist tendencies, and step up for freedom at home and abroad. Last week, at the Conservative Political Action Conference, an annual meeting that once featured serious debate, speakers struggled to adapt their culture war talking points as Russia invaded Ukraine. Former President Trump continued to praise the wisdom and cunning of the Russian dictator. One speaker, Candace Owens, has openly sided with Putin. CPAC, where thousands in Orlando paid $300 to hear leaders excuse Russian aggression, shows how some leaders nationalist and isolationist tendencies have corrupted the conservative movement. In Washington, where hundreds of conservatives from 40 states paid $35 to rally around principles instead of grievances, we were paving another way. While we had a smaller audience, a smaller budget and were streamed on Fox Nation instead of Fox News, radical paradigm shifts often begin small. A few people in a small room ignite movements before they catch fire. A handful of pub-goers in Tun Tavern in 1775 gave life to one the finest fighting organizations the world has ever seen in my beloved Marine Corps, just two blocks down from where the Continental Congress formed with 56 folks in Carpenters Hall. Small gatherings around impassioned causes, bringing together an array of viewpoints united around a critical priority, change the world. It starts with ideas, then passion, organization and action. In 2019, small gatherings around impassioned ideas started a new conservative revolution. Mostly small government conservatives dismayed with the nationalist and authoritarian direction of the GOP, we met first to commiserate. In Austin, Jennifer Waisath Harris, a longtime Republican communications strategist, assembled a few of us around drinks in a gallery. Then we met to organize. Heath Mayo, a young Texas lawyer and founder of Principles First, took to the wind around the country and brought a few people together in rooms from Boston to Los Angeles to crystallize the principles we were uniting around. In 2020, the diaspora of disaffected conservatives came together in Washington and began to organize. Local chapters and connections began forming. Prominent leaders like Bill Kristol began to throw their weight behind the organization and the momentum carried us to the summit this past weekend in Washington. At our conference, Lt. Gov. Geoff Duncan, R-Ga., and Rep. Adam Kinzinger, R-Ill., electrified the crowd making the case for principled conservative leaders to rise up and lead. Lt. Col. (Ret) Alexander Vindman and Rep. Liz Cheney, R-Wyo., called for U.S. leadership and support for Ukraine during a time when we can choose to keep the freedom lamp lit or let Putin extinguish the light of freedom in Ukraine. Halfway across the world, President Volodymyr Zelenskyy and a host of Ukrainian citizens are showing the world what a principled stand looks like. They are fighting for their families safety, their homes and for their freedom in a way which makes our American grievances look small. Their passionate defense inspires us to remember our fortunate place in this world where the initial small gathering in Philadelphia in 1774 birthed a country where our life, liberty and desired pursuits are defended and secured. There are two conservative sides to choose from. At Principles First, we side with a free, western-aligned Ukraine. Will we protect self-determination and a robust education as the building blocks of a free society, or will we cancel the ideas and books we find troubling? At Principles First we side with freedom. Will we accept grift and corruption as the cost of doing business in American politics or will we build a coalition of democracy defenders to restore trust and integrity? At Principles First, of course, we choose principles. The Continental Congress met for another 15 years after 1774 before our Constitution was signed. Change does not happen overnight. It takes work. It takes time. Most importantly, it takes citizens who put the national interest above their own and join us in our effort to conserve our experiment in self-governance for another 245 years. Pitcock, a Marine Corps veteran and member of the conservative organization, Principles First, is a small business owner in Texas. This is a carousel. Use Next and Previous buttons to navigate 2 1 of 2 Brandon Bell, HO / TNS Show More Show Less 2 of 2 Danny Zaragoza, Staff Photographer Show More Show Less While the race for lieutenant governor is all but over on the Republican side, the Democratic contest could be on its way to a runoff. Incumbent Lt. Gov. Dan Patrick has a substantial lead over his five primary challengers, holding about 77 percent of the vote with 90 percent of precincts reporting. His race was never expected to be close, with the sitting lieutenant governor chasing a third term with a $23 million campaign war chest. WASHINGTON Immigration attorney Jessica Cisneros forced U.S. Rep. Henry Cuellar into a runoff as the 28-year-old challengers second swing at the longtime Laredo incumbent kept progressive hopes of a major South Texas political upset alive for at least a couple more months. Im really glad that over half of the voters agree that its time for new leadership, Cisneros said on Wednesday, striking an optimistic tone after a late election night ended with no clear winner. On May 24, when I turn 29 years old, I expect to be the Democratic nominee for this district. Cisneros drew just under 47 percent of the vote to Cuellars 48.5 percent. Tannya Bennavides, a former educator and community organizer who also ran as a progressive, brought in about 5 percent. Cisneros chalked it up as a victory and said she doesnt plan to retool a strategy she believes is working heading into the runoff. BACKGROUND: Rep. Henry Cuellar locked in close rematch with progressive Jessica Cisneros We are surging right now, in terms of momentum, and Henry Cuellar right now is on the decline, she said. We knew from the very beginning that this was going to be a very tough election, because were going up against a 17-year entrenched incumbent who started out with millions of dollars in his campaign war chest, funded by a lot of special corporate interests, and we had a campaign fueled entirely by people people that believe South Texas deserves investments in health care, in infrastructure, in our jobs, in our education, in our environment. But Cuellar, who has so far not commented on the results, has reason to be optimistic, as well. For now, at least, he has survived a serious challenge from a well-funded opponent even while under a federal investigation that Cisneros and her allies kept front-and-center in the final stretch of the race. The FBI searched Cuellars home and campaign headquarters in January. He has said the investigation will show no wrongdoing on his part. And while Cisneros far outperformed Cuellar in portions of the district around San Antonio, the longtime Laredo Democrat held strong in counties along the border that have long been his base of support. That was especially true in Zapata County, where nearly 44 percent of voters cast ballots a massive showing in a primary season marked by low turnout. Cuellar won more than 70 percent of the vote there. The key to Cuellar living to fight another day: pro-Trump Dem primary voters along the border who responded to his anti-progressive messaging, Dave Wasserman, an editor at the Cook Political Report, tweeted. Cisneros got help from Bexar voters Cisneros, meanwhile, drew more than 70 percent of the vote in Bexar County, where her campaign has said a strong showing would be key to her success. U.S. Rep. Alexandria Ocasio-Cortez and U.S. Sen. Elizabeth Warren, two stars of the political left, both made trips to San Antonio to rally support for Cisneros in the final stretch of the race. She had nearly 75 percent of the vote in Guadalupe County, northeast of San Antonio, and more than 55 percent in Atascosa to the south. Bennavides, who did not immediately respond to a request for comment on Wednesday, has said she would rally behind Cisneros in a runoff. Asked if she would work with Bennavides, Cisneros said she would accept the support of any person thats ready to fight for new leadership in South Texas. A Cisneros victory would be a major political upset. Cuellar is one of the most senior members of the Texas congressional delegation and one of the highest ranking Democrats in the House with the support of his partys leadership. He has a seat on the powerful House Appropriations Committee and serves as a chief deputy whip. The rematch is one of the most closely watched races in the nation and is seen as a proxy battle for larger ideological debates in the Democratic Party. Cisneros campaigned on progressive touchstones, including Medicare for all, while Cuellar has long been one of his partys most conservative members, occasionally breaking ranks and voting with Republicans. TEXAS TAKE: Get political headlines from across the state sent directly to your inbox Republicans have also targeted the district as one of three in South Texas they believe they can flip in November after making surprising gains in the region in 2020. But the Republicans, too, are headed for a May runoff between Cassy Garcia, a former staffer for U.S. Sen. Ted Cruz, and Sandra Whitten, a grassroots activist from Laredo who ran unsuccessfully against Cuellar in 2020. Garcia ended Tuesday night with 29 percent of the vote to Whittens 15 percent. A win for Garcia would set up a full slate of Latina candidates for Republicans in the South Texas districts the party aims to flip. With the support of former President Donald Trump, Monica De La Cruz sailed through a crowded Republican primary in a district left open after U.S. Rep. Vicente Gonzalez decided to run in neighboring district. De La Cruz nearly unseated Gonzalez in 2020 and the district was redrawn to lean more to the right. Mayra Flores won a four-way race for the Republican nomination in the district Gonzalez is now running in, left open by retiring U.S. Rep. Filemon Vela. ben.wermund@chron.com Yi-Chin Lee, Houston Chronicle / Staff photographer WASHINGTON U.S. Rep. Dan Crenshaw on Tuesday easily defeated a trio of primary challengers who sought to tackle the Houston Republican from the right. Crenshaw declared victory on Twitter after drawing 75 percent of the vote. This is a carousel. Use Next and Previous buttons to navigate More than 1,600 ballots in Harris County were not read properly by the countys new voting machines because of human error, the elections administration office said, resulting in a slower tabulation process for Tuesdays primaries. The new system requires voters to take paper ballots with their selections from a voting machine and feed it into a counting machine. Voters did this incorrectly in some cases, said elections office spokeswoman Leah Shah, making the ballots unreadable. Instead, those ballots were re-scanned at the countys election headquarters, an extra time-consuming step. Shah said Harris Countys long primary ballot required voters to feed two sheets of paper instead of the usual one, increasing the chance of error if they are inserted the wrong way or inadvertenly creased or wrinkled. The 1,629 incorrectly scanned ballots represent less than 1 percent of the nearly 500,000 primary ballots cast. These are margins of error that are already accounted for, built in to how we process the ballot, Shah said. But we also understand the importance of having the paper trail and having that extra layer of security and backup. Voter Sara Cress, who ran the countys popular elections social media accounts in 2020, said the first page of her ballot became wrinkled in her hand as she filled out the second page. When she attempted to feed the scuffed sheet into the counting machine, it would not take. I tried it twice, and then two poll workers tried it over and over again, and it just was giving errors, Cress said. As of 1 p.m. on Wednesday, 18 hours after polls closed, Harris County had reported results from 98 percent of polling sites. Secretary of State John Scott said Tuesday evening that his office was informed that Harris County would not be able to count all votes by 7 p.m. Wednesday, as required by law. County Elections Administrator Isabel Longoria disputed this Tuesday evening, stating her office had never made such a statement. Shah said new requirements under SB1, the voting bill passed last year by the Legislature , placed additional strain on county elections staff. She said 30 percent of the 24,000 mail ballots received have been flagged for rejection because they fail to meet the laws ID requirements. Elections staff have been calling those voters, who mostly are over 65, to inform them of the March 7 deadline by which they must provide the correct information or their ballots will not be counted. Harris County Republican Party Chairwoman Cindy Siegel said the election was badly mismanaged and Longoria should be fired. She said in addition to the ballot feeding issues, the elections office bungled the distribution of supplies and voting machines over the weekend, leading to problems at polling sites on Tuesday. This comes down to managing the process, Siegel said. I dont think you can blame it just solely on voter error or the machines. Odus Evbagharu, chairman of the county Democratic Party, said his poll workers also reported problems receiving supplies and feeding ballots into the machines. He said instead of sacking Longoria, the parties and elections office should examine what went wrong in this election and make improvements for November. Evbagharu noted that other counties besides Harris reported high mail ballot rejection rates. He said since the Republican-controlled Legislature added additional restrictions to voting, it should have also provided funding to counties for additional elections administration staff to comply with the new rules. You cant put more burden on local officials without giving them relief, Evbagharu said. This isnt an issue that just happened in Harris County. This happened everwhere. Evbagharu also said holding a joint primary, where the Democratic and Republican parties share polling places and staff, would be more efficient. Republicans opposed this because the party wants to keep control over its primary and maintain voter confidence, Siegel said. Harris County, which has 2.4 million registered voters spread out over 1,800 square miles, often has lagged behind the other largest Texas counties in reporting election results. The county last year switched to a new type of voting machine, in part because its existing fleet of machines were aging and because they comprised the largest voting system in the United States that did not produce a paper backup. Commissioners Court unanimously selected the Verity Duo model from Austin-based firm Hart InterCivic. Eighteen other Texas counties use this machine. Hart InterCivic did not respond to a request for comment Wednesday about the ballot-reading issues in Harris County. Longoria is the countys first elections administrator. Despite bipartisan opposition, the Democratic majority on Commissioners Court established an independent elections office in 2020. This took the voter registration duties from the tax assessor-collector and election management role of the county clerk and transferred them to an appointed elections administrator. The trio of Democrats said this is more efficient, noting most of the other large Texas counties had already adopted the election administrator model. The two Republicans opposed the move because they said it installs an unelected bureaucrat whom voters cannot dismiss for poor performance. So far, Harris County has experienced similar hiccups in elections under Longoria as under county clerks. Voting reporting in the low-turnout 2021 state constitutional amendment election stretched into the following day because of a power glitch. The November midterm elections will be the highest-turnout contest Longoria has managed. She predicted last year Harris County would be able to tally votes as quickly as Dallas, Bexar, Travis and Tarrant counties in the midterms. zach.despart@chron.com Jason Fochtman, Houston Chronicle / Staff photographer State Sen. Dawn Buckingham was the top candidate in the Republican primary for Texas land commissioner and is headed for a runoff election in May against fellow Republican Tim Westley. Buckingham, an eye surgeon from Lakeway, got about 42 percent of the vote in the eight-way GOP contest to succeed Commissioner George P. Bush, who is running for attorney general. With such a crowded field, the odds of falling short of the threshold were especially high. This is a carousel. Use Next and Previous buttons to navigate Two Republican combat veterans running for open congressional seats in the Houston area won their primaries outright on Tuesday, defeating conservative opponents who had attempted to paint them as pawns of House Republican leadership. With nearly all votes recorded, former Army helicopter pilot Wesley Hunt secured the GOP nomination over nine other candidates in west Houstons newly drawn 38th Congressional District. And in a similarly crowded race to succeed retiring U.S. Rep. Kevin Brady, former Navy SEAL Morgan Luttrell beat out a field of 11 Republicans running for a Montgomery County district that was reconfigured to add 300,000 residents in west Harris County. Hunt received 56 percent of the vote, according to unofficial returns, while Luttrell was hovering above 52 percent in his race. They each needed to secure a majority 50 percent plus one vote to avoid a runoff against the second-place finisher. Both districts were drawn to heavily favor Republicans, making Hunt and Luttrell near locks to win their elections in November. The outcome was a major win for Kevin McCarthy, the House minority leader in Washington who backed Hunt and Luttrell against their more conservative opponents. McCarthy is supporting a number of House candidates this cycle as part of his quest to become speaker if Republicans win control in November. Luttrells main rival in the 8th District, political operative Christian Collins, repeatedly bashed Luttrell for receiving a flood of financial support from a McCarthy-affiliated super PAC, as he sought to frame the race as the people vs. the Washington establishment. During the closing weeks of the primary, the super PAC mounted an aggressive spending campaign that helped Luttrell offset a similar barrage of pro-Collins spending by a super PAC aligned with the right-wing House Freedom Caucus. Two controversial members of the caucus, U.S. Reps. Marjorie Taylor Greene of Georgia and Madison Cawthorn of North Carolina, came to Texas in February to rally for Collins. For his part, Luttrell was boosted by a number of prominent Republicans, including Lt. Gov. Dan Patrick, former Gov. Rick Perry and U.S. Rep. Dan Crenshaw. Like Luttrell, Hunt was viewed as the heavy favorite heading into Tuesday, having easily outraised the rest of the field combined. He also drew financial support from a number of outside groups, including the McCarthy-aligned super PAC. Hunts most serious opponent for the new 38th Congressional District seat was GOP activist Mark Ramsey, who finished with about 30 percent of the vote, according to unofficial results. Ramsey was backed by a trio of conservative groups that mail out slates of recommended primary candidates to hundreds of thousands of households in the Houston area. Crenshaw, Nehls easily win re-election In Texas 2nd Congressional District, Crenshaw easily defeated his three Republican challengers. Though the second-term congressman financially overwhelmed his opponents and was expected to cruise to victory, his recent feuding with members of the House Freedom Caucus who he collectively referred to as grifters and performance artists in December added a level of intrigue to the race. Unlike a number of GOP candidates, Crenshaw also openly accepted the results of the 2020 presidential election. The only other Houston-area incumbent to draw a primary opponent, U.S. Rep. Troy Nehls, R-Richmond, also was easily re-elected on Tuesday. Four incumbent Democrats U.S. Reps. Lizzie Fletcher, Sylvia Garcia, Al Green and Sheila Jackson Lee were uncontested in their primaries. Republican U.S. Rep. Brian Babin also did not receive a primary opponent. The newly drawn 38th District, set to be represented by Hunt, is one of two congressional seats that Texas picked up due to explosive population growth, as measured by the 2020 Census. Nearly one-third of the new districts residents come from the neighboring 7th Congressional District, where Hunt ran in 2020 and lost to U.S. Rep. Lizzie Fletcher, D-Houston, by about 3 percentage points. The new district covers a large chunk of west and northwest Houston, running from River Oaks at its easternmost point to Barker Reservoir along Harris Countys southwest border. It also stretches north through Jersey Village to Tomball. More than 500,000 residents, or about two-thirds of the district, live in unincorporated Harris County. If the district had existed during the 2020 election, former President Donald Trump would have carried it by 18 percentage points. Hunt, if elected, would be the second Black Republican to represent Texas in Congress. The first, Will Hurd of Helotes, didnt seek re-election in 2020. There are currently two Black Republicans in the U.S. House: Byron Donalds of Florida and Burgess Owens of Utah. jasper.scherer@chron.com This is a carousel. Use Next and Previous buttons to navigate 2 1 of 2 Yi-Chin Lee, Houston Chronicle / Staff photographer Show More Show Less 2 of 2 Associated Press Show More Show Less In two major greater Houston-area GOP primaries that come down to rematches with previous competitors, incumbent Reps. Lacey Hull and Valoree Swanson handily won, as of unofficial Harris County voting results. In District 150 in north Harris County, Swanson had a comfortable lead with 69 percent of the vote, as of the unofficial results with nearly every voting center reporting. In second, Debbie Riddle, the former lawmaker who Swanson unseated six years ago, had about 25 percent of the vote. Swanson has garnered at least 57 percent of the vote in all three of her previous elections. This is a carousel. Use Next and Previous buttons to navigate A Travis County district judge on Wednesday temporarily stopped the states child welfare agency from investigating possible child abuse charges against the parents of a 16-year-old who underwent gender-affirming health care. But the court stopped short of blocking such investigations statewide at least for now. The judges decision came in response to a suit filed by two national civil rights groups against Gov. Greg Abbott and the Texas Department of Family and Protective Services on behalf of the family, which came under review for supporting their daughters care for gender dysphoria. State attorneys, who did not respond to a request for comment, have already appealed the decision. The investigation was prompted by a directive from Abbott last week, backed by a non-binding legal opinion by Attorney General Ken Paxton that equated surgical and medication treatments with child abuse. Most major professional medical organizations support evidence-based care for treatment of gender dysphoria, which is defined by the American Psychiatric Association as psychological distress and anxiety due to a mismatch between a persons sense of their gender and their assigned sex at birth. The 16-year-olds mother, who is not named in the suit, is an employee of the child welfare agency and was put on administrative leave from her job last week. Earlier that day, she asked her supervisors for clarification on the impact of Abbotts new order, according to the suit, which does not contain details on who reported the alleged abuse. "This should never have happened and is unfathomably cruel, said Brian Klosterboer, ACLU of Texas attorney representing the plaintiffs. Families should not have to fear being separated because they are providing the best possible health care for their children." The ruling came as the Biden Administration's Health and Human Services Department rolled out new guidance calling for Texans to file a federal complaint if they experience any discrimination on the basis of gender identity or disability while seeking gender-affirming care. "This is government overreach at its worst," Biden said in a statement Wednesday. "Like so many anti-transgender attacks proliferating in states across the country, the governors actions callously threaten to harm children and their families just to score political points. These actions are terrifying many families in Texas and beyond. And they must stop." In granting a temporary restraining order Wednesday, District Judge Amy Clark Meachum, a Democrat, said otherwise the employee would be at risk of losing her job, and she and her husband face the imminent and ongoing deprivation of their constitutional rights, the potential loss of necessary medical care, and the stigma attached to being the subject of an unfounded child abuse investigation. The court will hold a hearing March 11 on whether Meachum should issue a broader and longer-lasting injunction. Order targets use of 'puberty blockers,' hormone therapy Paul Castillo of Lambda Legal, one of the attorneys for the plaintiffs, said in court Wednesday that at least two other families are also under investigation by the states child welfare agency and some medical providers have stopped prescribing gender-affirming medications to Texas transgender youths. Abbotts order applies to the use of puberty blockers, which delay the onset of puberty for children diagnosed with gender dysphoria, and of hormone treatments for older children, as well as surgery, though thats not common among minors. NEWSLETTERS Join the conversation with HouWeAre We want to foster conversation and highlight the intersection of race, identity and culture in one of America's most diverse cities. Sign up for the HouWeAre newsletter here. IN WASHINGTON: Meet the Houston 8-year-old standing up to Abbott, for trans kids, at Bidens State of the Union Paxton, in his legal opinion, argued that courts were likely to find that taking away a childs constitutional right to procreate, especially when they are too young to legally consent and even the use of gender-affirming medications could result in physical and mental harm that amounts to abuse. He also compared transgender health care to the opioid crisis which proliferated in part because of doctors who downplayed the risk of addiction to the drugs. There is always the potential for novel medical determinations to promote purported remedies that may not improve patient outcomes and can even result in tragic harms, Paxton wrote. The same potential for harm exists for minors who have engaged in the type of procedures or treatments above. A growing body of evidence shows that such care does the opposite, however, including a Feb. 25 study by University of Washington researchers that found gender-affirming care was associated with lower risk of depression and suicide. Ricardo Martinez, CEO of Equality Texas, said at a press conference outside the Travis County courthouse Wednesday that politically active parents who have spoken out against anti-transgender bills at the Texas Legislature are being targeted by DFPS. What started as a bigoted stunt by the attorney general and the governor has turned into political persecution, Martinez said. Thats a whole nother level of evil: Prioritizing attacking kids with loving families when there are kids in foster care sleeping in administrative offices awaiting placement. Issue seen as winner for GOP The suit before the Travis County district court argues that the governors directive violates the Texas Administrative Procedures Act, the separation of powers requirements of the Texas Constitution and the constitutional rights of transgender youth and their parents. The other plaintiff in the case, Megan Mooney, is a Houston psychologist who treats children with gender dysphoria. Her job requires her to report child abuse, but she disagrees with doing so, saying it would harm her clients and violate her ethical obligations as a professional counselor. Castillo said Mooney had already received communications from people threatening her license. CHILDREN PUSH BACK: Houston kids confront anti-trans legislation that targets them Assistant Attorney General Ryan Kercher argued in court that Paxton's legal opinion alone was not a directive to DFPS and did not change the law. Kercher said the opinion just concluded that a court could find certain transgender care to be abuse. Despite the, frankly, breathless media coverage of these important issues, there has been no call to investigate all trans youth or all youth undergoing these gender-affirming procedures, Kercher said. Meachum was skeptical of this argument, asking why Abbott would have written the letter to DFPS if not to spur enforcement. How often does the governor send DFPS directives on doing investigations? she asked. Kercher said he didnt know. Castillo noted that a statement given to reporters by DFPS last week said the agency would follow Paxtons opinion. The judge also alluded to the ongoing class-action court case launched against the agency for its mishandling of the states foster care system. A court-ordered team monitoring the agency found that 23 children had died in the states custody between summer 2019 and spring 2021. Has he (Abbott) been working with the Commissioner on all of those issues or is this the only issue that has been the focus of directives with him? Meachum asked. Democrats and LGBT advocates have accused Paxton and Abbott of using transgender children as political pawns, pointing out that they chose to take action on the issue in the week before contested primary elections for both of them. Top Abbott strategist Dave Carney, in a call with reporters on Wednesday, did not speak to the timing but underscored that the governor sees the issue as a 75 to 80 percent winner. Texans have common sense, he said. taylor.goldenstein@chron.com In a Feb. 16 meeting of the U.S. Senate Committee on Foreign Relations that had been dedicated to U.S.-Colombia relations, U.S. Sen. Ted Cruz, R-Texas, demanded details on not just the Biden administration's stance on Colombia but on Mexico too. Cruz said he was "deeply concerned about deepening civil unrest in Mexico and the breakdown there of civil society." Cruz read off a series of dire statistics and expressed concern for politicians and journalists being killed there. Regarding journalists, Cruz said, "In 2020, more journalists were killed in Mexico than in any other country in the world." Cruz isn't alone in his concern. Secretary of State Antony Blinken tweeted similar concern on Feb. 22 for "the high number of journalists killed in Mexico this year," as five Mexican journalists were killed in the first six weeks of the year. We took a look at this statistic. Is Cruz right, and why are there so many press freedom violations in Mexico? Data on journalists killed worldwide Cruz's office pointed to articles by the Guardian and The Associated Press, which reported 2020 data from the Committee to Protect Journalists. The Committee to Protect Journalists, a New York-based independent nonprofit, tracks press freedom violations worldwide as part of its mission to defend journalists' right to inform the public. It has three decades of data on journalists and media workers killed worldwide. In 2020, 49 journalists were killed. Independent investigators for the organization work to confirm whether that journalist was targeted for their work, Natalie Southwick the organization's Latin America and the Caribbean Program Coordinator told PolitiFact Texas. The "unconfirmed motive" category in their data means the case has a potential link to journalism but the Committee is still investigating. There were 32 journalists whose deaths were confirmed to be tied to their jobs. Of the 49 journalists killed worldwide in 2020, nine journalists were in Mexico more than any other country, according to the organization. Of the 32 journalists killed with a confirmed motive such as death during a dangerous assignment or murder Afghanistan and Mexico each saw five journalists killed. Four of these Mexican journalists were murdered and one was on a dangerous assignment. Southwick said there are many reasons why a journalist might be targeted. Generally, the journalists most at risk are in smaller cities and towns who may be reporting on drug cartels or local government corruption. Increasingly, reporters covering environmental issues and immigration also are under threat. "Not necessarily journalists who work for the big outlets in Mexico City or some of the other capitals, but people in smaller cities and towns where their faces are really well known, where everyone kind of knows each other. People know their schedules. And the mayor that you're reporting on is someone who might live up the street from you," Southwick said as example. These smaller city journalists often have access to the fewest resources to protect themselves, Southwick said. Targeting smaller city journalists isn't specific to Mexico; there are similar patterns in Honduras and Brazil, for example. It can be difficult to confirm that their deaths were tied to their work because people are afraid to go on the record to share what they know about these deaths, Southwick said. The New York-based nongovernmental organization Human Rights Watch noted in its 2022 World Report that the danger posed to journalists in Mexico is on par with war zones like Syria and Afghanistan for journalists. "Authorities routinely fail to investigate crimes against journalists adequately, often preemptively ruling out their profession as a motive," Human Rights Watch reported. Cruz also said, Mexico "alone counted for almost a third of the journalists killed" based on the Guardian article's conclusion from the data. However, a member of the Committee to Protect Journalists wrote that the Guardian had compared all journalists killed in Mexico (whose deaths had both confirmed and unconfirmed motives) to the overall number of journalists who died by a confirmed motive. Only 16% of journalists' killings with a confirmed motive, and 18% of all journalists killed, were in Mexico in 2020. So Cruz was right that more journalists were slain in Mexico in 2020 than in any other country. And while the statistic Cruz cited was from 2020, press freedom is an ongoing issue for Mexican journalists. "Looking broadly at the environment for the press, by far it's the deadliest country in this hemisphere and one of the most dangerous countries in the world for the press, and that's been the case for several years running now," Southwick said. Ruling Cruz said in a Feb. 16 Foreign Relations committee meeting while also noting the deaths of politicians, "In 2020, more journalists were killed in Mexico than in any other country in the world." Data from the Committee to Protect Journalists backed this claim. We rate this as True. Sources Chicago, IL (60637) Today Partly cloudy this evening with more clouds for overnight. Low 41F. Winds NE at 5 to 10 mph.. Tonight Partly cloudy this evening with more clouds for overnight. Low 41F. Winds NE at 5 to 10 mph. Following article based on the Russian Foreign Minister Sergey Lavrovs remarks at the High-Level Segment of the UN Human Rights Councils 49th session, via videoconference, March 1, 2022 by Sergey Lavrov I hoped to be able to attend the Human Rights Council in person after a two-year break. However, I have been forced to address you via videoconference. The reason for this lies in the outrageous measures taken by the European Union, which has refused to respect one of the fundamental human rights the right to freedom of movement. Members of the European Union chose the path of unilateral illegitimate sanctions and used them to avoid having to engage in direct honest dialogue, face to face. This is something that they are clearly afraid of. The situation around the world is becoming increasingly complex. It is deteriorating right in front of our eyes. This is because the United States and its allies persist with their aggressive efforts to impose the so-called rules-based order on other members of the international community. How has this order affected human rights? Ukraine is a telling example in this regard. It is the policy of the Washington-led collective West which is to blame for the fact that the Kiev regime has been at war with its own people since 2014. It has been at war with everyone who does not agree with the neo-Nazi Maidan values, with the criminal policy of the Ukrainian authorities, which have been systematically violating human rights and the rights of ethnic minorities, as well as the commitments Kiev has within the UN and the OSCE, and even the Constitution of their own country. The radical nationalists and neo-Nazis who seized power in Kiev following a government coup, supported by the West, unleashed terror on the country. The very recollection of the tragedy in Odessa, on May 2, 2014, makes us shiver. Peaceful demonstrators were burnt alive in the trade union building. We know the criminals who perpetrated this horrendous act. In fact, they posed for cameras, but have yet to be punished. The mass graves discovered in Donbass serve as irrefutable evidence of the criminal consequences from the massive shelling of civilian infrastructure. Forensics experts identified most victims as women and elderly people. Our Western colleagues have been ignoring the multiple facts relating to these outrageous violations of the most basic of human rights, the right to life. The attempts to draw the HRCs attention to the violence and atrocities perpetrated over the past 8 years have been met with indifference. For all these years, the Ukrainian regime has been carrying out an aggressive policy to get rid of everything Russian and promote forced assimilation. People who identify as Russian and would like to preserve their identity, language, and culture, are told in all clarity that they are not welcome in Ukraine. Vladimir Zelensky referred to them as species and suggested that they go to Russia. He initiated a law on indigenous people, where there was no place for Russians who have been living on these lands for centuries. This is quite reminiscent of the laws Nazi Germany used to have. The Russian language is being purged from schools and universities, from the public space and even from everyday life. Quite frequently, people who speak their native language can pay for it not only with the loss of their jobs and health, but with their lives. Just imagine Ireland banning the English language, or Belgium the French language, or Italy the German language. This is unthinkable. Not only did the West fail to reject the frontal attack which has been launched against the Russian language in Ukraine, but some even encouraged it. Any sign of dissent leads to harsh consequences. Cleansing the government of objectionable and disloyal employees has become a routine process, the main tool of which is the law on lustration adopted by the Verkhovna Rada. There are many other legislative acts enabling the regime's security forces to harshly suppress dissent and persecute the opposition. The authorities impose bans on TV channels and other media, and carry out reprisals against their own citizens, including members of parliament. Isn't this a violation of the freedom of speech and the right to express one's opinion? Lies about the Second World War are being shamelessly inculcated. Hitler's local henchmen are proclaimed heroes, and actual anti-fascist heroes are forgotten. Monuments to those who defeated Nazism are being demolished. War criminals who fought in the ranks of the Third Reich are being glorified. The most recent step came in the form of the Cabinet of Ministers of Ukraine sending a draft law about Ukraine's withdrawal from the CIS Agreement on Perpetuating the Memory of the Courage and Heroism of the Peoples in the 1941-1945 Great Patriotic War to the Verkhovna Rada on February 23. And so it was utterly blasphemous for Vladimir Zelensky to declare, on the very same day, that he honours the memory of his grandfather who fought in the Red Army to liberate the Soviet Union and Europe from Nazism. The Kiev regime even violated something as sensitive and personal as peoples spirituality. Religious discrimination is on the rise. The former authorities headed by President Poroshenko, with the support of Washington, effected a church schism and created what is now known as the Orthodox Church of Ukraine. Laws have been adopted against the canonical Ukrainian Orthodox Church of the Moscow Patriarchate. Its churches are being seized, and millions of its parishioners and clergy are being persecuted. What is this other than a violation of religious freedom? These large-scale, systematic attacks on rights and freedoms, as well as the consistent effort to inculcate neo-Nazism, are being carried out with the express consent of the United States, Canada, and the EU who arrogantly proclaim themselves exemplars of democracy. They have also brought unceremonious pressure to bear on international human rights mechanisms of the UN, the Council of Europe and the OSCE, which were unable to muster the courage to respond accordingly to the egregious lawlessness in Ukraine during all these years. The West began to turn a blind eye to what was happening back in February 2014, when the radicals carried out an unconstitutional coup and tore up the agreement, backed by EU guarantees, with the then President of Ukraine. The putschists who came to power declared their intention of seeking alliance with the West and immediately launched an offensive against the Russian language, resolved to expel everything that is Russian from Crimea, and sent gunmen there. The eastern regions of Ukraine that opposed the coup were accused of terrorism, although they had not attacked anyone. On the contrary, punitive battalions were used against them; their cities were bombed from the air and fired at from artillery and multiple launch rocket systems. They destroyed civilian sites, schools, and hospitals. They killed civilians. An inhuman economic, transport and food blockade was imposed on Donbass. The Kiev regime got away with all of that. International organisations, at best, were limited to impotently calling on both sides. Clearly, in these circumstances, the people of Crimea and Donbass simply had no other choice. In March 2014, the vast majority of Crimeans, acting entirely in accordance with international law, supported the peninsula becoming part of Russia. Exercising the right of peoples to self-determination that is enshrined in the UN Charter allowed them to defend their right to life and to freely use their native language, their traditions, their history and culture. Kiev retaliated by blocking the North Crimean Canal which is the main source of fresh water for Crimeans. Again, no one said a word in response, despite the five international conventions that enshrine the right to safe drinking water. With regard to the residents of Donbass, after an agreement was reached in February 2015 on the UNSC-approved Minsk Package of Measures, they hoped that their voice would be heard and justice would prevail. They hoped that Kiev would start a dialogue with its citizens in Donetsk and Lugansk and begin to act on other obligations under the Minsk agreements, which, however, it has openly sabotaged with the direct support of the West while continuing its armed provocations. Recently, the Ukrainian regimes criminal actions went into overdrive. As a result, since mid-February alone, more than 100,000 refugees from Donbass have found shelter in Russia. We have collected a massive base of evidence of flagrant mass violations of human rights committed by the Kiev authorities. The website of the Permanent Mission of Russia in Geneva posted an online exhibition of documents and photographs exposing the atrocities of the Ukrainian military and neo-Nazi volunteer battalions. I urge everyone who cares about human rights to visit this exhibition in order to find out the truth that the Kiev regime, its sponsors and most of the Western media are doing their best to conceal. In the face of gross violation of the rights of Russian and Russian-speaking citizens of Ukraine, an eight-year war against them that bears every sign of genocide, the stubborn refusal of the West to get the Ukrainian authorities to fall in line and the absence of any response from UN human rights bodies, the OSCE or the Council of Europe, Russia could not remain indifferent to the fate of Donbass and its 4 million people. President Vladimir Putin resolved to recognise the Donetsk and Lugansk people's republics and, at the urging of the leaders of the DPR and LPR, to launch a special military operation to protect their residents in accordance with the treaties of friendship and mutual assistance with these republics. The goal of our actions is to save lives by fulfilling our allied obligations, as well as to demilitarise and denazify Ukraine so that this never happens again. This is particularly relevant as that country continues to be drawn into NATO and the current regime which has openly made territorial claims against the Russian Federation, threatened to use force and to obtain military nuclear capabilities is flooded with attack weapons. With regard to the recently launched campaign about the alleged violation of Ukraines sovereignty and territorial integrity, whose masterminds show total indifference and contempt for the violation of human rights, I would like to draw attention to the 1970 Declaration on Principles of International Law concerning Friendly Relations and Co-operation among States in accordance with the Charter of the United Nations. This document was adopted by unanimous resolution of the UN General Assembly and states that the principle of respect for territorial integrity is applicable to states that observe in their actions the principle of equal rights and self-determination of peoples (...) and, as a result, possessed of a government representing the whole people belonging to the territory without distinction as to race, creed or colour. Clearly, the neo-Nazi government in Kiev continues to fail to meet that definition with regard to the peoples of Ukraine. The United States and its allies, which are directly responsible for numerous violations of human rights and international humanitarian law and are guilty of crimes that killed hundreds of thousands of people in Yugoslavia, Iraq, Libya, and Afghanistan, once again apply double standards. The current Kiev regime is a vivid example of the fact that when you are a loyal vassal of the hegemon and participate with particular zeal in serving his policy of containing Russia, you can do anything you like. You can trample upon human rights and freedoms, kill people, and cultivate neo-Nazi traditions and practices. In exchange for your absolute fealty and obedience, the civilised West will turn a blind eye to everything. Moreover, the other day, the European Union, in a fit of Russophobic frenzy, decided to supply lethal weapons to Kiev. For us, the life of every Russian and Ukrainian, every resident of Donetsk and Lugansk, is as valuable as the life of a European or an American. As President Vladimir Putin repeatedly stated, we have invariably been respectful of the Ukrainian people, their language and traditions. We have no intention of encroaching in any way on the interests of the citizens of Ukraine, with whom we are bound not only by a common history as well as civilisational, spiritual and cultural affinity, but also by bonds of blood and kinship. Today, Russia is home to millions of people who were born in Ukraine. We consider them one of us. Together, we always have been, and always will be, so much stronger and more successful than apart. The main thing is to stop the time-servers who have illegally seized power from betraying the core interests of the Ukrainian people by pursuing the policy, favoured by the West, of turning their country into an anti-Russia, a policy that has become their raison detre. The true hysteria we are witnessing in NATO and the EU is further confirmation that creating an anti-Russia has been the goal of the United States and all the allies that Washington lined up behind it. As you may know, negotiations between Russias representatives and Kievs delegation have got under way at Vladimir Zelenskys request. I hope that the Ukrainian side is aware of the seriousness of the situation and its responsibility, and grasps the need to display independence and a real willingness to negotiate, and to avoid a repeat of the Minsk accords record. I would like to conclude my remarks by reminding you that human rights are a universal constant. They cannot be dependent on the self-serving ambitions of a narrow select circle seeking to rewrite the 1948 Universal Declaration of Human Rights, distort it to their liking, and replace the current consensus underlying all our work with their rules. The role of the UN Human Rights Council is to ensure adherence to our common values, not someone elses narrow values; to promote mutually respectful discussion without any politicisation or double standards; and not to allow the human rights agenda to be used to interfere in internal matters. We should be guided only by this approach as we strive to achieve justice on all issues affecting peoples vital interests, be it the institution of statelessness, which brings disgrace on Europe, the rising Nazi revival movement, or the Wests obsession with unlawful unilateral sanctions, whose impact on ordinary people no one tries to hide. These illegal restrictions are no longer confined to financial and economic prohibitions. They are being extended to culture, sports, tourism, education, information, and generally all contacts between people. The West has clearly lost control of itself and, in an attempt to take it out on Russia, has taken to destroying all the institutions and rules it has itself created, including the inviolability of property. The Wests arrogant philosophy based on a sense of its own superiority, exceptionalism, and licence must come to an end. The sovereign equality of states is a key principle of the UN Charter. It fully applies to the UNHRCs work. Russia has always been open to equitable and mutually respectful discussions of all matters and is ready to seek a fair balance of interests. Stop & Shop is installing EV stations at a number of its 400 stores. Two are being put in at the State Road grocery and more at its Pittsfield locations. EV Charging Stations Being Installed at County Stop & Shops The charging stations will provide up to 30 miles. NORTH ADAMS, Mass. Stop & Shop's network of electric vehicle charging stations has reached the Berkshires. The grocery on State Road has two stations installed so far and more stations are set to be installed at the Pittsfield locations. The regional supermarket chain began putting in the EV stations last July at stores in Connecticut, Massachusetts, New Jersey and Rhode Island. The project is partnership with Volta Charging to install stations at participating stores that will allow customers to charge at no cost. "A Volta charging station is currently under construction at the North Adams Stop & Shop. Volta hopes this construction will be completed by month's end," said Stop & Shop spokeswoman Caroline Medeiros. "The Volta charging station at our Pittsfield store is at the beginning of the process and the timing for this location is TBD." At every launched store, customers will be able to access two electric vehicle charging stations, featuring Volta Charging's high-resolution, two-sided digital displays. Customers with electric vehicles can park in the designated spaces and charge while they shop. On average, a Volta charging station can deliver up to 30 miles of range per hour. "We're thrilled to partner with Volta Charging and offer our customers the benefit of electric vehicle charging at no cost," said Gordon Reid, president of Stop & Shop, in a statement released last July. "Providing this convenience allows us to do more than make things easier for our customers; it allows us to also make things better for the environment." Stop & Shop has more than 400 stores in Massachusetts, Connecticut, Rhode Island, New York and New Jersey. Volta Charging, part of Volta Industries, is working to develop a network that will "catalyze the shift from combustion-powered miles to electric miles," according to the press release. Volta has more than 2,200 stations, largely along the west and east coasts. The Stop & Shop stations will be the first in Berkshire County. North Adams Schools Puts Off Mask Mandate Decision to March 14 NORTH ADAMS, Mass. The public schools will extend the use of face coverings at least until at least March 14. The School Committee voted reconvene on that date to make a decision, depending on COVID-19 data in the schools. Gov. Charlie Baker lifted the state mask mandate in public schools as of Feb. 28 and the U.S. Centers for Disease Control is no longer requiring masks on school buses or vans. That doesn't mean that masking is off the board, said Superintendent Barbara Malkas, but rather it has been shifted to local decision makers. "The guidance that came through from the CDC did not unilaterally eliminate mask wearing in schools," she said. "There there are still some caveats and still some consideration is around rates of infection." The latest draft policy from the Massachusetts Association of School Committees is that face coverings are "strongly recommended" to be worn indoors by those unvaccinated or otherwise immunocompromised. Some school districts have extended mask mandates into March, including Pittsfield, which is waiting for data from this week before lifting its mandate. Lenox is extending to March 15 and has set parameters for lifting the ban, and Central Berkshire is also waiting until next week to take up the issue. The exception has been McCann Technical School, but Malkas noted it was a single high school that has a high enough rate of vaccination that its committee felt comfortable lifting the mandate. "Pretty much every district that had a mask policy in place wanted to wait until a little bit of time after to see what the infection rates were post vacation," she said. "Personally, that is the view that I support. "Because I don't want us to be in a situation where we are making a decision mass no longer have to be more than school. and then within a few days or a week, we find ourselves in a situation where we should be putting maths back on." She recommended waiting two more weeks before making a decision. Malkas said the schools reported eight new cases on the first day back from February vacation on Monday. This is compared to 30 coming back from the holidays. "It's not so much any one individual day that's going to indicate whether or not we are seeing a decrease in the number of infections but certainly the trend or pattern over time," she said. Judith Fairweather, speaking on behalf of the North Adams Teachers Association, urged the committee to consider teachers' concerns in discussing the masking. The union's survey of its members found that more than half of respondents were in favor of masking. "There were 102 respondents, although more than 50 percent are just completely filling with the mass motivate in the public school and their voices deserve to be heard," she said. About two-thirds want those who are unvaccinated to continue masking. Fairweather noted that there had been less concern about positive cases within classrooms because everyone was masked. "What will happen when a member of a classroom is positive and masks are no longer required?" she asked, asking the committee to consider vulnerable adults and children and protections for those who still choose to mask. Malkas said the vaccination rates for students are not very high, at least according to the voluntary reporting. Out of 504 students in secondary grades, 257, or 51 percent, are vaccinated; only 37 percent of the 658 elementary students, responded and, of those, 26 were vaccinated. The superintendent said staff is much higher, with 90.6 percent of the 248 responding vaccinated and closer to 98 percent for professional staff. "I don't know what the right answer is I'm actually disappointed .... or to make required for students who are not vaccinated," said Committee member Emily Daunis said she didn't know what the right answer was but was disappointed in the low rates of vaccination. Requiring masks for those unvaccinated might help motivate them," she said. Committee member Karen Bond wanted to know how the testing and quarantining would work with changed policy. "I really think community needs to know how this is going to play out and not be surprised if their child misses school because they receive testing or something like that," she said. Malkas said the schools are continuing the test and stay program but acknowledged that the "catchment of students who will be considered a close contact with that definition and without wearing masks will increase." Students who are symptomatic for the novel coronavirus and test positive, will be out of school for five days from the day they test positive. No symptoms, they must continue wearing a mask. "Those different scenarios could lead to a higher level of absenteeism, if we in fact see a higher level of infection in schools," Malkas said. The superintendent believed the state Department of Education would be evaluating in April whether it would continue to provide free surveillanced testing. April 22 was given as the last date for opting in to contract tracing. Committee member David Sookey open to lifting mandate sooner but, like several other members, felt they should wait until after the first pool testing results came in Friday. Committee member Richard Alcombright moved to simply keep the mask mandate in place but Bond felt it should have a date certain. " I think leaving it without a date leaves everyone in limbo, because we're going to have to make this decision either way," she said. The motion was amended for the School Committee to meet Monday, March 14, at 4:30 p.m. at which point it will have two weeks of data. PITTSFIELD, Mass. City Hall and other buildings downtown were lit up in blue and gold on Tuesday night, the colors of the flag of Ukraine. Mayor Linda Tyer said the lightings were an expression of solidarity with the "courageous men and women of Ukraine" who are currently under attack by the neighboring nation of Russia. Russian forces began a large-scale invasion of Ukraine on Feb. 24 and is currently shelling its major cities. The United States and the European Union have placed sanctions on Russia and provided some help to Ukraine, but not troops. Ukraine is not a member of the North Atlantic Treaty Organization. "For days, the eyes of the world have been transfixed to the atrocities inflicted upon the sovereign country of Ukraine and her people. These unjust acts of war reflect the very worst of humanity, leaving a trail of devastation that will reverberate long after the invasion is over," Tyer wrote. "At the same time, we bear witness to the indomitable strength, courage, and resolve of the Ukrainian people who refuse to give up their country without a fight. Their tenacious resolve stands as a glimmer of hope in the midst of unspeakable horror unfolding in real-time." Blue and yellow also bathed the exteriors of 100 North St., Barrington Stage, the Colonial Theatre, Crawford Square, the Shipton Building, and Persip and Sotille parks. The mayor said it was a spark of light that "symbolizes a hope that cannot be extinguished." Several of the cats being cared for at the Berkshire Humane Society after being dumped on a back road in January. Joshua Christman, who helped rescue the cats in Richmond, fills out an adoption application for one of the cats on Wednesday. PreviousNext Two Pittsfield Individuals Charged With Dumping Cats MSCPCA Deputy Chief Richard LaBlond speaks Wednesday morning at the Berkshire Humane Society. PITTSFIELD, Mass. Two people will face animal cruelty charges after more than a dozen cats were dumped on the eve of a snowstorm in Lanesborough and Richmond in January. Pittsfield residents Kelly Hathaway and Arthur Raney are facing 15 counts of felony cruelty, fines of up to $5,000 and time in jail or prison per each charge, said Deputy Chief Richard LaBlond of the law enforcement division of the Massachusetts Society for the Prevention of Cruelty of Animals. LaBlond, speaking at a press conference at the Berkshire Humane Society on Wednesday, said arraignment is on March 18. "Our thanks go out to Berkshire Humane because of what would have happened to these cats if they didn't have the volunteers and the staff ... It was a freezing and cold night that Friday. There was a blizzard the next day, so we really appreciate them," he said. The cats, ages ranging from 5 1/5 months to 7 years old, are now in good health. Dr. Yoanna Maitre, a consulting veterinarian for Berkshire Humane Society, said she checked on the cats soon after they came in. "They actually were overall in reasonably good condition, but they were underweight, and they do have chronic diarrhea ... but overall, I think they're rapidly improving, and they were spared a worse fate because of how quickly they were captured and brought in here." LaBlond pointed to the work of the public, Lanesborough and State Police investigating and aiding in identifying the suspects. He said there is no known motive for the abandonment of the cats at this time. "There's no reason, because they had to drive right by this place to drop them off. People do foolish things," he said. "And we're very lucky, in this case, that it all came together. Because with most abandonments, it's very hard to put a case together because there's no information, no witnesses, or nothing like that. In this case, because of the general public, we were able to put something together." The Humane Society is offering a $1,000 reward for information that leads to the arrest and conviction of the persons involved with the incidents over the weekend. Investigators interviewed residents along the roadway and looked at camera footage, and say the suspects were caught on video driving to the area where the cats were found clustered in the road. John Perreault, executive director of Berkshire Humane Society, said there may still be cats missing from the incident. "We believe, from the video that was provided, that there still two cats left," he said. "Our community cat volunteers and neighbors are still trying to locate and capture a gray cat that has been seen and has been unable to be caught at this time. There's also video of a black cat that hasn't been seen since the night of the video." In addition to the missing cats, one was found dead that night, one died the following day and 11 are at the shelter. Perreault said the cats currently being cared for by the shelter can be adopted once they receive a health certificate. He thanked all those involved in rescuing and caring for the cats. "Some of the heroes that made all this happen stand behind me today," he said. "Because of the collaboration amongst the law enforcement, shelter staff, volunteers and members of this community; because of them, the 11 cats you will be able to meet will be able to find that forever home." Perrault said its cost thousands of dollars so far to treat the cats. Joshua Christman, who helped rescue the cats in Richmond by asking for help via Facebook Live at the time, said he was relieved to know that the cats were in good health. He also credited the shelter and law enforcement for their help and even plans on adopting one of the cats, Arlo. "It feels great. These guys are the heroes. They were out there helping pick up the cats, locate them and the effort throughout the week, not just that night," he said. "It's a good feeling knowing that the ones that are here are alive and well." Perreault reiterated multiple times during the press conference that there was no reason for this incident to occur because of the resources throughout the county. "If you're having a problem, or maybe even before the problem starts or gets worse, to the point you may have to surrender, give the shelter a call," he said. "And we can certainly work with you. There are other agencies that, if they would have received a call, might have helped or connected them to us." Door Prize Pop-Up Eatery Bringing Regional Fare to Mass MoCA NORTH ADAMS, Mass. Bryan "Swifty" Josephs and Jenny Klowden have been hard at work making farm-to-table soups, sides, and sandwiches from across the American region every Thursday. The couple are attempting to infuse their menu with their experiences from traveling cross county three times. They use a lot of local produce and ingredients when composing the menu. They opened the pop-up eatery at Massachusetts Museum of Contemporary Art in February. "Just all about taking things that we've had while traveling that we loved, and kind of putting a Door Prize spin on it, trying to apply the local produce, the local available, and bring the ingredients up a level, and do everything in house," Josephs said. "Just honor that moment we had a month ago or years ago stopping on the side of the road for a sandwich." Several customers were impressed with what the duo has brought to the table. Liz Hartung has ordered from the pop-up a couple of times since opening. During a recent visit, she praised the grilled cheese and tomato soup. "I was here last week. And it was the first week it was open. And last weekend it was a seitan [pork] sandwich. And that was really really good, too," she said. Amanda Kleintop commended the food and the outside venue while going to the pop-up for the first time. "I also just like being outside because winter in New England is hard. So it's just easy to hang out after work and then go back home and just like a kind of happy hour," Kleintop said. Klowden and Josephs have been enjoying making an impact in the area with their food. "People welcomed us with open arms. The community and the people are excited about it and have been really kind and said nice things about it and seem to really enjoy what we're doing, which has been really fun," Klowden said. "It was much harder in the [San Francisco] Bay Area to make an impact." In 2013, Nico Dery, who works for the North Adams Chambers of Commerce, brought the pop-up duo together in Oakland, Calif. "We [Dery] worked together at Blue Bottle Coffee in its early days and she was telling me she had a guy for me," Klowden. "I didn't like being set up, but I was like, OK, and she showed me a picture. He was wearing a chef coat and holding up two giant cowboy steaks with the biggest smile you've ever seen. And I was like, 'Yeah, I'll meet him.'" Food has been something they have bonded over since the beginning of the relationship hamburgers on their first date. They worked together very early on in their relationship. "As soon as we met, we started doing some events together. I was doing event planning for the Bolinas Art Museum in the Bay Area and he came on and helped me with that. We did all sorts of things when he was working for a catering company," she said. A year after meeting, they opened a fermentation company called "Swifty Pickles" where they taught classes about home fermentation and sold packaged pickles to bars as bar snacks. Your support is needed now more than ever Help support your local news Local news sources need your help. Stay in the know on Coronavirus, local updates, and more. New York (United Nations), 2 March 2022 (SPS) The Frente POLISARIO has condemned the wave of repression unleashed by the occupying state of Morocco against Sahrawi civilians in the Occupied Territories of Western Sahara. Member of the National Secretariat, Representative of the Frente POLISARIO to the United Nations and Coordinator with MINURSO, Dr Sidi Mohamed Omar, addressed yesterday a letter to the Secretary-General of the United Nations, Mr Antonio Guterres, in which he expressed the strong condemnation by the Sahrawi authorities of the recent wave of repression carried out by the occupying sate of Morocco against peaceful Sahrawi demonstrators and human rights activists in the Sahrawi Occupied Territories. The letter also denounced strongly the continued criminal acts perpetrated by the occupying state of Morocco against Sahrawi civilians and renewed the urgent call upon the Secretary-General to operationalise the legal and moral responsibility of the United Nations towards the Sahrawi people especially Sahrawi civilians in the Sahrawi Occupied Territories. The following is the full text of the letter as received by SPS: H.E. Mr Antonio Guterres Secretary-General of the United Nations United Nations, New York New York, 1 March 2022 Your Excellency, Upon instructions from my Authorities, I am writing to you again to express our strong condemnation of the continued, egregious, and systematic human rights violations perpetrated with complete impunity by the occupying state of Morocco in the Sahrawi Territories under the Moroccan illegal military occupation. On 27 February 2022, Sahrawis of all ages took to the streets in the Sahrawi Occupied Territories to commemorate peacefully the 46th anniversary of the proclamation of the Sahrawi Arab Democratic Republic (SADR) by raising the SADR flags and chanting slogans in support of the right of the Sahrawi people to freedom and independence. They also expressed their utter rejection of the continued illegal military occupation by the Moroccan state of parts of the SADR as well as their strong condemnation of the gross violations committed by the occupying state of Morocco against Sahrawi civilians and particularly human rights activists. As usual, the security forces of the occupying state responded to the peaceful demonstrations with brutal and indiscriminate violence and, as a result, dozens of Sahrawi civilians were brutalised and beaten severely at the hands of Moroccan security agents and state-sponsored thugs. In the occupied city of Bojador alone Moroccan security forces violently assaulted a group of largely Sahrawi women and human rights activists who intended to demonstrate peacefully in front of the beleaguered house of the family of Sid Brahim Jaya to express their solidarity with human rights activist Sultana Sid Brahim Jaya and her family on the SADR 46th anniversary. As documented by testimonies backed by photographic evidence, the Sahrawi women were severely beaten, maltreated, dragged through the street, and sexually harassed by a group of Moroccan security agents including those permanently stationed by the house of the family. The Frente POLISARIO strongly condemns this recent wave of repression unleashed by the occupying state of Morocco against Sahrawi peaceful demonstrators and human rights activists, which is a continuation of the parallel and retaliatory war waged against Sahrawi civilians in Occupied Western Sahara since the occupying state violated and torpedoed, with complete impunity, the 1991 ceasefire on 13 November 2020. The Frente POLISARIO also denounces strongly the continued criminal acts perpetrated by the occupying state of Morocco against Sahrawi civilians in the Sahrawi Occupied Territories including the latest heinous crime targeting Sahrawi citizen Habib Aghrichiin the occupied city of Dajla. Once again, weurgently call upon you, Mr Secretary-General, to operationalise the legal and moral responsibility of the United Nations towards the Sahrawi people especially Sahrawi civilians in the Sahrawi Occupied Territories. This entails taking practical measures to ensure their safety and security and establishing an independent and permanent UN mechanism for the protection and regular reporting on the human rights in Occupied Western Sahara where the UN Mission, MINURSO, is present on the ground in the Territory. As we have already warned, the persistence by the occupying state of Morocco in its heinous crimes and blatant human rights violations against Sahrawi civilians, without being held accountable or punished for that, seriously undermines the prospects of the already stalled peace process, and closes the door on the desired peaceful solution. Please accept, Your Excellency, the assurances of my highest consideration. Dr Sidi M. Omar Ambassador Representative of the Frente POLISARIO at the United Nations Coordinator with MINURSO Photo taken on Feb. 27, 2022 shows a market destroyed in U.S. air strikes in Sangin district of Helmand Province, Afghanistan. The U.S.-led coalition forces may have run from Afghanistan last year, but the indiscriminate killing and widespread atrocities committed against the Afghan people during the occupation will haunt the victims and their families for years. (Photo by Arghand/Xinhua) SANGIN, Afghanistan, March 1 (Xinhua) -- The U.S.-led coalition forces may have run from Afghanistan last year, but the indiscriminate killing and widespread atrocities committed against the Afghan people during the occupation will haunt the victims and their families for years. Abdul Wajid witnessed wholescale slaughter in southern Helmand Province. "For 20 years, we watched killing, destruction and terror. Our business, trade, economy and agriculture were reduced to zero," Wajid, who is in his thirties, told Xinhua recently. Standing in front of a bombed-out building in Sangin district, Wajid recalled being under attack day and night, from all directions: "It was horrific. The bodies of our people were all over the streets." Rejecting U.S. claims of pursuing terrorists and reconstructing the country, Wajid pointed at the devastation everywhere. Houses, shops and markets were indiscriminately bombed. "There were troops busy killing us. People were blown to pieces. Their families could not find the bodies," Wajid said. "They targeted wedding parties from the air or by mortar from the ground. They had no mercy. They didn't spare our cattle, our chicken, or our children." Following the 9/11 attacks on New York and Washington D.C., the United States accused Afghanistan of harboring Osama Bin Laden, the leader of al-Qaeda, and invaded the country in October 2001. During the 20 years in Afghanistan, thousands of foreign troops, including more than 2,400 U.S. service members, lost their lives. Countless Afghans were killed, thousands in Sangin. Abdul Ghani was already old when the U.S. forces arrived in town many years ago. "They killed six of my family and drove me out of my house. I had to leave everything, including the children, behind," he said. Ghani, and many like him, need support just to get through his daily life, let alone rebuild the ruins of his home. "The Americans didn't come here to build the country, they came here to destroy it," he said. Photo taken on Feb. 27, 2022 shows a damaged building in Sangin district of Helmand Province, Afghanistan. The U.S.-led coalition forces may have run from Afghanistan last year, but the indiscriminate killing and widespread atrocities committed against the Afghan people during the occupation will haunt the victims and their families for years. (Photo by Arghand/Xinhua) Photo taken on Feb. 27, 2022 shows a bazaar destroyed in U.S. air strikes in Sangin district of Helmand Province, Afghanistan. The U.S.-led coalition forces may have run from Afghanistan last year, but the indiscriminate killing and widespread atrocities committed against the Afghan people during the occupation will haunt the victims and their families for years. (Photo by Arghand/Xinhua) Photo taken on Feb. 27, 2022 shows a road in Sangin district of Helmand Province, Afghanistan. The U.S.-led coalition forces may have run from Afghanistan last year, but the indiscriminate killing and widespread atrocities committed against the Afghan people during the occupation will haunt the victims and their families for years. (Photo by Arghand/Xinhua) People leave a mosque in Sangin district of Helmand Province, Afghanistan, on Feb. 27, 2022. The U.S.-led coalition forces may have run from Afghanistan last year, but the indiscriminate killing and widespread atrocities committed against the Afghan people during the occupation will haunt the victims and their families for years. (Photo by Arghand/Xinhua) Photo taken on Feb. 27, 2022 shows a bazaar destroyed in U.S. air strikes in Sangin district of Helmand Province, Afghanistan. The U.S.-led coalition forces may have run from Afghanistan last year, but the indiscriminate killing and widespread atrocities committed against the Afghan people during the occupation will haunt the victims and their families for years. (Photo by Arghand/Xinhua) Western politicians have had a field day denouncing the barbarity (Boris Johnsons words) of Russian attacks on Ukrainian civilian targets. This is shameless bunkum. British pilots and mechanics have kept the Saudi air forces pounding Yemens cities and villages. by Eric S. Margolis Having been a soldier and correspondent in 14 wars, Im trying to see through the inevitable fog of war that beclouds the current conflict in Ukraine. This is no easy task. Moscow has done a poor job of explaining its position and scared the hell out of everyone with its nuclear alert. Western media has championed the cause of Ukraine in a totally one-sided manner. So, we have plucky David v. evil Goliath. Never mind that civil war between Ukrainian nationalists, militant rightists and the Kiev regime has been flaring for 14 years. Russia, which ruled Ukraine with a few pauses since the 1700s, sought to rapidly overthrow the western-backed Ukrainian nationalist government in Kiev by launching what the French calls un coup de main, a lightening attack to seize Ukraines centers of power. But this effort did not work out. Ukrainian government forces, secretly armed with the latest antitank and anti-aircraft weapons by the Western powers, blunted Moscows initial attacks. I strongly suspect the presence of US and/or British Special Forces. More heavy offensives appear to be on the way. An initial attack on the key port of Odessa quickly petered out. Did the Russian soldiers lack enthusiasm? Hard to say at this point. Many were reportedly loathe to attack their Ukrainian brothers. This conflict was not popular in Mother Russia. We have not yet seen any eruption of ever-mighty Russian nationalism that was so powerful in World War II. Nor the pure racial-religious hatred seen in the crushing of Chechen independence in 1990. In that gruesome conflict, Russia destroyed the Chechen capital and many towns across Chechnya. But the fierce Chechen were Muslims, not fellow Orthodox Slavs. So far, Russian forces, whose doctrine calls for massive artillery use, have been sparing in their use of big guns and rocket batteries. Much more is very likely to come. The Russian Air Force and Black Sea Fleet have also been notably absent. Perhaps President Vladimir Putin has sought to keep the Ukraine conflict to a low-key punitive action. But many other dangers are evident. Turkey says it will adhere to the important 1936 Montreux Convention that limits the entry of warships into the Black Sea. The US Navy plans a very aggressive campaign against Russia in the Black Sea and around Vladivostok in the North Pacific. Will Turkey bar the US Navy from that inland sea? Regarding the nuclear scare. President Putin has previously stated that because of Russias reductions in its conventional forces it would henceforth rely increasingly on tactical and strategic nuclear weapons. Anyone who attacked Russia could expect at least a limited nuclear riposte. Western politicians have had a field day denouncing the barbarity (Boris Johnsons words) of Russian attacks on Ukrainian civilian targets. This is shameless bunkum. British pilots and mechanics have kept the Saudi air forces pounding Yemens cities and villages. The US Air Force and Navy have destroyed many of Iraq, Libyas and Syrias urban areas, notably Falluja, Aleppo and Mosul. Israels US-supplied air force flattened parts of Gaza. Our side is not without sin. The western powers need to abate their righteous jeremiads against Russia and work to find a face-saving way for Russia out of this dangerous morass. France has made a good start. By contrast, Germany has again shown its total lack of independent policy. As much as we feel sympathy for Ukraine, we must also remember that Russia remains a great power of sorts and needs to be shown a clear exit from this mess. America must not be carried away by glee at Russias discomfort and try to complete the destruction of the once mighty Soviet Union into an eastern Yugoslavia. Copyright Eric S. Margolis '1883' star Sam Elliott blasts 'The Power of the Dog' as "a piece of s***" On 26 February, Danish reporter Stefan Weichert and photographer Emil Filtenborg Mikkelsen were shot by unidentified attackers when they were on their way to a shelled kindergarten in the town of Ohtyrka, north-east of Ukraine. The International Federation of Journalists (IFJ) stresses once again the importance of guaranteeing the safety of reporters covering the Russian invasion of Ukraine on the ground. The two journalists, who were covering the war in Ukraine for the Danish newspaper Ekstra Bladetde, were deliberately shot by attackers when they were driving to cover the shelling of a kindergarten. After the shooting, they stemmed the flow of blood from their wounds and waited in their car for emergency services to take them to hospital. They were wounded despite wearing bullet-proof vests. The have already been evacuated from Ukrainian territory and are on their way to their home country, the IFJ affiliated Danish Union of Journalists confirmed. IFJ General Secretary Anthony Bellanger said: "As the scale and brutality of the Russian war in Ukraine grows, it is becoming increasingly dangerous for journalists to cover the conflict safely. We call on the international community and Unesco to do everything possible to secure the safety of journalists working on the ground." The IFJ has a safety guide for reporters reporting in war zones: IFJ Media Safety Advisory for Journalists Covering Armed Conflict in Ukraine. Six days after Russian troops attacked Ukraine, Russia's Prosecutor General ordered the country's media watchdog to "restrict access" to the media after they were accused of publishing "information calling for extremist activity and violence" and "deliberately false information about the actions of Russian military personnel" in Ukraine. Russian authorities are increasing pressure on journalists covering the fighting in Ukraine. The State Duma is due to discuss a bill introducing criminal penalties for false news reports about Russian military operations on Friday 4 March. When the rules change, there are bound to be hangups. But this could get ugly. On February 25, the Centers for Disease Control and Prevention updated its guidance to note that most people, 72 percent of the U.S. population, live in areas where those who are healthy do not need to wear masks indoors. That figure is based on the number of current hospitalizations, hospital capacity, and new Covid cases. The CDC has a list of counties on its website that are considered areas of high transmission. For all others, there is no recommendation for indoor masking unless you are at potential "increased risk" for Covid. Cities and states are also lifting their mask mandates. New York peeled back its mask mandate for most indoor settings last week, while California, this week, largely dropped its requirements. Oregon and Washington State will shift from mask requirements to mask recommendations in schools starting March 11. On Monday, Illinois will lift its mask mandate for restaurants, bars, gyms, and stores, and Chicago will end its proof-of-vaccination requirement. Massachusetts, Connecticut, and New York City are poised to ditch mask mandates in schools. Washington, D.C., is also expected to lift indoor mask requirements on March 12. If you're dizzy from the changes, you're not alone. Consumers and workers are also puzzled by what's happening. While you can expect some grace while policies shift, at some point, you're going to have to try to make sense of it all. Here's a plan for responding to consumers and workers grappling with how they should internalize the changing guidance: You can still mandate masks, but it's a risk Even though your state may no longer require masks, you still can mandate them for employees and customers. And you may want to do so. If a large portion of your staff is unvaccinated, of if you have immunocompromised employees in the workplace, it may be a good idea to ask staff to wear more protective face coverings. Keep in mind that if your employee falls sick and can track it back to the workplace, they can sue the company for gross negligence, a charge that may come with hefty fines. You should be prepared for pushback--from employees and customers who no longer want to wear masks. Customers may be turned away at the door if they see a mask requirement for entry, especially in places where masks aren't common. In New York City, for example, most people have them on hand because they're still necessary for public transit. However, that's not the case for most of the country. If you do continue to require masks, make sure you have proper signage so employees and customers don't feel the need to ask. Note that OSHA is still issuing citations More than half a million people have fled Ukraine since Russia launched its full-scale invasion on 24 February 2022. We are witnessing what could become the largest humanitarian crisis on European continent which focused on the flow of refugees from Ukraine. by Anwar A. Khan German Chancellor Angela Merkel once wonderfully dropped a line, Every person who comes is a human being and has the right to be treated as such, but where is the dignity of Ukraine refugees who are fleeing to near-by border countries, such as, Poland, Hungary, Moldova, Romania, Slovakia, Belarus, et al to save their lives from the Russian onslaught? More than half a million people have fled Ukraine since Russia launched its full-scale invasion on 24 February 2022. We are witnessing what could become the largest humanitarian crisis on European continent which focused on the flow of refugees from Ukraine. Attaint, disgrace, dishonor and shame on the Russian government! The title is at first glance an echo of Gianfranco Rosis magnificent refugee documentary study Fire at Sea: a film whose subtlety, complexity and depth I have to say go way beyond this. Actually, it is a quotation from Shakespeares drama titled, The Tempest, when Prospero tells Miranda the history of their sea sorrow, and how they came to be exiles on a remote island, far from Milan, the former seat of his power and prosperity. Redgrave stages a brief, powerful dramatised reading of the scene, with Prospero played by Ralph Fiennes. They are refugees, in their way, Redgrave is implying: people like us, white Europeans to whom we are naturally invited to extend sympathy and esteem. Another contemporary reading of The Tempest might be to imagine Caliban, the islands indigenous inhabitant, harassed and demonised as a monster, getting into an inflatable and finally turning up in Milan as a refugee, demanding succour. Refugees face brutal miseries. When some people talked to some of Ukraine refugees, they have revealed more painful truths about the refugee crisis.Ukraine refugee crisis now, is the biggest shame of humanity, which the Russian Government and its army is responsible for. Displacement affected many families.They have zero hope of going back home, this is how they feel. Every human on the face of earth should try to sleep in their own homeland. The refugees represent the full picture of the Ukraine refugee crisis and they are the ones who are paying. Their dream is to live in our own homeland a countrythe same country that is everyones simple right They have a bigger dream that shadowed the majority of their smaller dreams. But They are now registered as either a refugee or without identity. We are seeing the Ukraine mother and her kids travelling alone to the unknown future with or without her husband. They are leaving their destroyed house and their scattered memories in this long road to take shelter in the neighbouring countries. One refugee has said, I am trying to tell the people whom live their lives in peace and dignity, freedom and safety to feel our pain and to help us to stand again for life. Only those suffering the atrocities by the Russian authorities and the sorrows of displacement know well the meaning of being a refugee and the weight of this widespread burden. We, the people of Bangladesh, experienced the similar indescribable agonies in 1971 war waged on us by Pakistan like a rogue state in collusion with Uncle Sam like a bestial country when our ten million people took shelter in India as refugees to establish Bangladesh. The wars, natural disasters, and misfortunes are unfortunately happening on wider scale nowadays. Suffering and displacement are inevitable for those facing such calamities. However, the aim of this article is to share awareness and empathy with those courageous people around the world, and in Ukraine in particular. A home is where we belong, where we save the joyful and sorrowful memories of moments we spend with the loved ones, where we seek shelter and warmth, where we have our families and friends, and where our hearts always dwell. However, when such home becomes a source of fear, war, merciless bloodshed, destruction, anger, and so on, what will happen to our memories, our future, our dreams, and our hopes? Ukraine refugees do not have the time to ponder on such questions, as fleeing for a safer shelter wherever it may be is their only concern with the outbreak of devastating and merciless troubles by the war between Russia and Ukraine. Displacement inflicts lifetime damage upon a refugee, who is forced to leave behind all what defines him most importantly, their identity. For many of us terror is something that we hear about and read about on media outlets. Yet, for refugees, terror is something stripping them of their humanity, their rights, their future, their dreams, and their peace of mind. It is denying them a life they deserve to live like the rest of us. It is stealing their memories, their land, their identity, their past, and their whole existence. This is the difference between us and refugees; terror and destruction are not a piece of news they read about while enjoying the safety of their homes and the serenity of their living rooms, but it is the bullets falling over their heads devouring everything they ever knew, left with only the hope of surviving to make it to the category of refugees. And every one of them will tell you, more than almost anything in the world, they want to go home. Alas, they also want to live. The sheltering countries must remain with their people through thick and thin, even asking them to go an extra mile and become true beacons of hospitality. They flee their own wretched land so their hunger may be pacified in foreign lands, their tears wiped away in strange lands, the wounds of their despair bandaged in faraway lands, their blistered prayers muttered in the darkness of queer lands. The international medias lens into the Ukraine refugees limns with so many terror-scarred people. We cant sit back and watch them suffer. They are guests of sheltering countries. They must act like a decent host. Beyond the bustle of the travel guide, the struggle of thousands attempting to navigate life on new and unfamiliar soils is played out on a daily basis. Under this grave hapless billet, the sheltering countries should give them a new heart and put a new spirit in them; we should remove from them their heart of stone and give them a heart of flesh. They should be doers of what is pleasing to these suffering people. We should remember mercy, compassion, and mighty acts on behalf of those who suffer. Help them to rest in the knowledge of justice and triumph over evil. Human beings must be the source of all goodness, generosity and love. We thank many people for opening the hearts of many to those who are fleeing for their lives. Help them now to open their arms in welcome, and reach out their hands in support. That the desperate may find new hope and lives torn apart be restored. We ask this in the name of our good spirit who fled fearing persecution at their birth place. Grant them safety, hope, and new life, even in difficult and exhausting days. Be their light and their salvation. We pray that we will open our eyes to see the vision of Creators kingdom as a place where all can live without fear. Open our hearts and fill them with our love, so that we may share our love with those fleeing a life of enslavement and terror in their own country, and welcome them to live in safety among us. Guide our feet so that we may walk alongside them, learning about them, their needs, their desires; guide our hands that we may reach out and show them how to navigate the ways of our country. Strengthened with the showers of our blessings, may we build the bridges that will allow us to come together in a community of loving support for one another. May all our people know that we are with them. Look with compassion upon them. Grant us the grace to see the refugees as we see them. The Ukraine refugees must go back their homes in Ukraine singing songs sooner. And that should be our terminus choice. But if it gets delayed, the hope will be getting too far away; we shall not be able see the light at the end of the tunnel. This pale faced people with frustration writ large on their faces are etched with guilt, as if torture, death, the misery of millions, is sorrows that they must not bear alone. Dante Alighieri competently said, The darkest places in hell are reserved for those who maintain their neutrality in times of moral crisis. It is a humanitarian crisis and the world leaders and the UN should come forward to exert their influence on the Russian army to find out a lasting solution, the possibility to begin a new life, is the only dignified solution for the Ukraine refugees. We call on the international community to share equitably the responsibility for protecting, assisting and hosting refugees in accordance with principles of international solidarity and human rights. Remember when a home becomes a distant memory to the Ukraine refugees,mankind should bear in mind that humanity must prevail against all business interests of powerful countries. -The End The writer is an independent political analyst based in Dhaka, Bangladesh who writes on politics, political and human-centred figures, current and international affairs By any measure, the idea that the founders of King of Prussia, Pennsylvania-based Banana Loca came up with in 2019 was a quirky one: a gadget that cores and then fills bananas with foods like Nutella or peanut butter. But Renee Heath, 38, and Bechara Jaoudeh, 39, believed in it enough to invest $280,000 of their personal funds to develop it. In the five months prior to the show, the two-employee company had about $135,000 in sales, driven by organic marketing and influencers posting about the product. But the founders' time and expense really paid off in December 2021, when they got an appearance on Shark Tank, where Mark Cuban and Kevin O'Leary together bought 25 percent equity in the company for $250,000, including a $3 per unit royalty until Heath and Jaoudeh paid the $250,000 back. After the show aired, Heath and Jaoudeh spent a week living in their warehouse in Camden, New Jersey, while fulfilling more than 11,000 orders for the $28.99 device. And that was just one obstacle along the way to having a successful product. Here are some of the biggest challenges--and lessons learned--from the Banana Loca founders. Get help from nontraditional sources When they were first engineering their gadget, Heath and Jaoudeh focused on making it accessible to everyone from children to the elderly. "There was nothing we tried that could take Nutella and shove it down a long, thin cavity," says Heath. "We needed something that was easy to use, so we had to create it." For assistance, they looked outside of the food industry to DesignThink--a Phoenixville, Pennsylvania-based industrial design company with experience in cardiology valves and stents, as well as expertise in syringe techniques and fluid dynamics that would be useful for developing the injector device. In the experimentation phase, Heath and Jaoudeh also bought metal straws, cupcake frosters, pineapple corers, and a Play-Doh press to spur inspiration. Keep teaching yourself Prior to Banana Loca, Jaoudeh and Heath did not have any experience in bringing a physical product to market. Jaoudeh, who is also co-founder and CEO of digital marketing agency Philly Marketing Labs, had sold a jarred seasoning through Whole Foods years earlier, but creating a durable plastic product came with a unique set of challenges. Finding a manufacturer proved especially difficult--the founders looked into Chinese companies but the distance and language were barriers. When one candidate turned out to be only a reseller, they turned to their networks for a trusted connection. Eventually one of Jaoudeh's contacts introduced them to a manufacturer representative in China. Even after finding the right fit, it wasn't smooth sailing: They faced tariff hikes and the first product shipment was on one of the boats that got stuck in the Suez Canal in March 2021. Throughout the process, Heath and Jaoudeh had to continually teach themselves the ins and outs of supply chain issues. "We weren't playing with investor money," Jaoudeh says. "We were taking money away from our savings and families to fund this. It was really important we didn't make any mistakes." Be prepared for negative reactions Following Banana Loca's Shark Tank episode, videos on TikTok went viral of users testing and commenting about the product. Many failed to use the gadget properly, according to Heath and Jaoudeh, which initiated negative reviews. It was difficult for the founders to respond to every video, leaving them in need of a way to give new and potential customers a reliable how-to guide. Like just about everyone, I've spent the past few days staring in horror at the TV, watching Russia's barbaric invasion of Ukraine and the incredible courage of the Ukrainian response. (Some places to donate to support Ukraine here). And just like the rest of the world, I've been floored in particular by the mettle of Ukrainian president Volodymyr Zelensky, a former comedian turned politician who, when asked if he'd like to be evacuated in the face of Russian threats on his life, famously responded, "I need ammo, not a ride." This is clearly courage beyond what the vast majority of us could muster. But according to star Wharton professor Adam Grant, that doesn't mean those called to more everyday forms of leadership can't learn at least one important lesson from watching Zelensky. What makes a great leader depends on context. "The internet is ablaze with opinions about what makes him such an effective leader in his own country. The popular story starts with the inner virtues of a great man: Zelensky is being profiled for his charisma and courage and compared to George Washington. Then it turns to the crucible, highlighting how crisis fractures weak leaders and forges strong leaders: Zelensky is being called a lion who found his roar," Grant writes on his blog. All of this praise may be well earned, but it misses an essential point. What makes leaders great isn't just their internal characteristics, but their ability to understand and reflect the values and identity of those they lead. "Psychologists find that we're drawn to leaders who represent our group. The people we elevate into positions of authority aren't typical members of our group--they're prototypical members of our group. They're the people we see as exemplifying the ideals of the group and acting in the best interests of the group," Grant explains. Gandhi, he notes, exemplified the Indian value of asceticism. New Zealand's Jacinda Arden, mourning victims of a mosque shooting in a hijab, mirrored her society's embrace of inclusivity. "The prototypical Ukrainian is a fighter," Grant observes (and the whole world now agrees). It's undeniable that Zelensky embodies that ideal. It all starts with empathy and service. Leaders don't become icons just by being the best versions of themselves. They also need to enact the aspirations of those they lead. That requires empathy and humility. This ability to understand and embody the values of your team is something everyday leaders can learn from Zelensky. "Charisma attracts attention. Courage earns admiration. But commitment to a group is what inspires loyalty. We follow the leaders who fight for us--and we make sacrifices for the leaders who serve us," Grant concludes. More businesses are showing their support for Ukraine by cutting ties with Russia, but it'll often come at a cost. Russia's invasion of Ukraine is prompting businesses to pull Russian products from their shelves or conduct business elsewhere. Meta will no longer allow Russian-state media to run ads on its platforms. Certain U.S. governors are banning liquor stores owned by the state from selling Russian vodka. Daimler Truck, one of the world's largest commercial vehicle manufacturers, said that it immediately halted its business affairs in Russia, which include its partnership with Kamaz, a Russian truck maker. Smaller businesses are similarly ditching their business interests and associations with Russia. The Chicago-based Ann's Deli & Bakery, which is known for selling Russian goods, displayed a sign at the store saying the business would no longer supply Russian-made products, per a report from the DailyMail. Jacob Liquor Exchange in Wichita, Kansas, decided to pull more than 100 bottles of Russian vodka from the liquor store and intends to feature Ukrainian vodka more widely. There's also DroneDek Corporation, a Lawrence, Indiana-based startup looking to disrupt the mailbox space. CEO Dan O'Toole says the three-year-old company, which has 12 employees, will no longer attempt to establish its drone-delivery patents in Russia as a result of the invasion. The company is also removing Russia from its global roll-out for its smart mailboxes and will not conduct business in the country for the foreseeable future. The company's smart mailboxes are designed to accommodate both standard mail delivery and drone parcel delivery. O'Toole acknowledges that though he helms a smaller company, the startup's intent to cease ties with Russia is symbolic, and he hopes that other businesses will follow suit. "To say nothing is to say a lot," he says. To be sure, companies big or small should think long and hard about the ramifications of such a response. Withdrawing entirely may not be wise for every business. A communications company operating in the region that's offering to help keep regular citizens informed of what's happening on the ground, for instance, wouldn't necessarily want to pull out. And businesses should double-check the origins of the products they're dropping: While some bartenders are protesting the invasion of Ukraine by dumping out Stoli Vodka, the only thing Russian about that vodka brand is the name itself. (Stoli Vodka is bottled in Latvia.) There may also be long-term consequences for companies curbing growth opportunities. One is certainly the revenue hit that follows when withdrawing business, so it would be wise to start looking elsewhere for other opportunities. Companies need to ask themselves if continuing business in Russia is a growth opportunity that they really want to have, says Jeff Carr, a clinical professor of marketing and entrepreneurship at New York University's Leonard N. Stern School of Business. "Companies need to keep in mind that they should be choosing their customers and clients as carefully as they believe that their clients and customers choose them," he says. Nicole Sayegh Succar, a lawyer at the Washington, D.C.-based Crowell & Moring, adds that if companies want to stay in Russia, they need to invest in compliance to ensure that continued business activity remains above the line. "If they don't have the means to do that, then, unfortunately, the perceived financial upside may not be as great," adds Succar, who focuses on matters related to U.S. sanctions against Russia and other countries. For O'Toole, he says his actions are merited and just, but they're also going to sting. DroneDek worked for about two years to conduct its due diligence and establish its intellectual property in Russia, a process that's both timely and costly. The company worked for months to extend the reach of its U.S. patents to other regions of the world, including the likes of Australia, Brazil, the European Union, Israel, Japan, and the United Kingdom. Russia used to be on that list, until O'Toole and his team made their decision this past weekend. "Russia is a huge country and obviously there's a lot of opportunity there, but it's not the opportunity for DroneDek," he says. Though O'Toole says that the decision to cut ties with Russia was pretty unanimous among staff, he recognizes that not every investor may be on board. He even says that he would go as far to purchase back shares from investors who don't approve of the company's decision, but adds that investors have yet to take him up on his offer. Since 1963, The Independent has helped create a great community! Since our founding in September of 1963, The Independent has been dedicated to giving Livermore, Pleasanton, Dublin, and Sunol readers the news they need to be in-the-know about what's going on in the Tri-Valley region. In its regulatory filing, Asian Paints Limited informed the exchanges and investors that the company has approved the appointment of Ms. Nehal Vakil as Non-Executive Director of the Company, effective March 1, 2022, to fill the casual vacancy created on the Board on account of the sad demise of Mr. Abhay Vakil, Non-Executive Director of the Company.Ms. Nehal Vakil is the daughter of the Non-Executive Director of the Company, Late Mr. Abhay Vakil, and is a member of the Promoter(s) Group of the Company.Ms. Nehal Vakil geared up her career with Asian Paints Limited (the Company) in the year 1999. She actively participated in the Finance function of the Company, wherein she was, inter alia, responsible for monitoring budgets, revenue, and variance trends for the corporate center.She also assisted in compilation of quarterly financial reports consolidated at Company and group levels.Currently, she is the Director incharge of the operations of Vikatmev Containers Ltd., (Vikatmev) a leading container manufacturer in Mumbai. At Vikatmev, she is a team head that strategizes and devises new approaches to boost customer numbers, growth and revenue. She looks after cost controls measures to meet budget restrictions and maximise profitability.Asian Paints ended at Rs3,039 down by Rs133.65 or 4.21% from its previous closing of Rs3,172.65 on the BSE. Its scrip has touched day's high and low of Rs3,115 and Rs2,992 respectively. Prevent Unauthorized Transactions in your demat / trading account Update your Mobile Number/ email Id with your stock broker / Depository Participant. Receive information of your transactions directly from Exchanges on your mobile / email at the end of day and alerts on your registered mobile for all debits and other important transactions in your demat account directly from NSDL/ CDSL on the same day." - Issued in the interest of investors. KYC is one time exercise while dealing in securities markets - once KYC is done through a SEBI registered intermediary (broker, DP, Mutual Fund etc.), you need not undergo the same process again when you approach another intermediary. No need to issue cheques by investors while subscribing to IPO. Just write the bank account number and sign in the application form to authorise your bank to make payment in case of allotment. No worries for refund as the money remains in investor's account." www.indiainfoline.com is part of the IIFL Group, a leading financial services player and a diversified NBFC. The site provides comprehensive and real time information on Indian corporates, sectors, financial markets and economy. On the site we feature industry and political leaders, entrepreneurs, and trend setters. The research, personal finance and market tutorial sections are widely followed by students, academia, corporates and investors among others. remaining of Thank you for Reading! On your next view you will be asked to log in to your subscriber account or create an account and subscribepurchase a subscription to continue reading. The father of Naveen Shekharappa, the Indian student who was killed in a Russian rocket attack on the Ukrainian city of Kharkiv on Tuesday has said that his son was a topper who was forced to go abroad as he could not get a medical seat in India 'due to the system'. "Despite scoring 97% in PUC, my son could not secure a medical seat in State. To get a medical seat one has to give crores of rupees and students are getting the same education abroad spending less money," Shekharappa Gyanagoudar a native of Chalageri in Karnatakas Haveri district said on Tuesday, hours after his son was killed. BCCL MBBS abroad is less expensive "I found out that I would have to spend anywhere between Rs 85 lakh and Rs 1 crore to put him in a private medical college. Thats when I decided to send him to Ukraine, but that proved far more costly, Gyanagoudar, a retired paper mill employee, said. Due to the education system and casteism, he could not get a seat despite being an intelligent student, Gyanagoudar told PTI. I am dejected with our political system, education system and casteism. Everything is in the control of private institutes.., he said. ANI The 21-year-old student studying at Kharkiv National Medical University, Ukraine died in shelling while he was standing in a queue to buy food. According to his father, he had borrowed money from his friends and relatives to send Naveen to Ukraine to study MBBS. Put Indian flag on the building In one of the last conversations, Naveen had with his family, Gyanagoudar had told his son to put up an Indian flag on the building to be safe from the rocket attacks. According to him, Union Minister Piyush Goyal had recommended this. They can't clear NEET On Monday, Union parliamentary affairs minister Pralhad Joshi, who is also an MP from Karnataka had claimed that about 90% of Indians who study medicine abroad fail to clear qualifying exams in India - NEET. BCCL The Minister also said 60 per cent of the Indian students who go abroad land up in China, Russia and Ukraine with the cumulative MBBS fee in these countries being around Rs 35 lakh, including the cost of education and living expenses. In contrast, the MBBS course in any private medical college in India costs between Rs 45-55 lakh. Following the death of Naveen, the opposition hit out at the government accusing it of insulting Indian students instead of evacuating them from the conflict zone. For more on news, sports and current affairs from around the world, please visit Indiatimes News. The first shipment of humanitarian assistance from India to Ukraine which is facing a military assault from Russia was despatched on Tuesday. According to the Ministry of External Affairs, the first consignment comprising of medicines, medical equipment, and other relief material was sent on Tuesday via Poland. PIB "A flight left this morning having the first tranche of humanitarian assistance to Ukraine through Poland. The consignment comprised of medicines, medical equipment and other relief materials," Foreign Secretary Harsh Vardhan Shringla said. According to him, the humanitarian assistance was sent to Ukraine at the request of the Ukrainian Government. We discussed the modalities of Humanitarian aid. We are grateful to India for starting this aid. The first plane is expected to land in Poland today. I was assured by Foreign Secy that Ukraine will get maximum humanitarian aid: Ambassador of Ukraine to India on meeting with MEA pic.twitter.com/ejT3LVZkdB ANI (@ANI) March 1, 2022 India on Monday decided to send the relief supplies to Ukraine to help it deal with the humanitarian situation along its border areas that has arisen out of tens of thousands of people attempting to flee the Russian invasion. PIB "The prime minister noted that the first consignment of relief supplies to Ukraine to deal with the humanitarian situation on Ukraine's borders would be despatched tomorrow," the Ministry of External Affairs (MEA) said on Monday. Two tonnes of humanitarian aid included tents, blankets, surgical gloves, protective eye gear, water storage tanks, sleeping mats, tarpaulin and medicines. The second batch of humanitarian aid from India to Ukraine was sent on Wednesday through Poland. Poland is one of the many neighbouring countries of Ukraine India has been using to evacuate its citizens who have been caught in the war. On Wednesday, three more Indian Air Force aircraft flew to Poland, Hungary and Romania to ramp up efforts to evacuate Indian nationals stranded in Ukraine. ANI Union Minister Jitendra Singh on Wednesday received the Indians who returned on a special flight from war-hit Ukraine. He said that state-wise help desks have been created at the Delhi airport to help the students who came from war-hit Ukraine reach their respective homes. "We have created help desks for every state. Students are approaching the respective help desks. They are being provided refreshments. We have made arrangements for the Volvo buses so that students of other states can travel to their respective home places by road. We have made arrangements for guest houses for the students who will be going by train," Singh told the mediapersons at the Delhi Airport. Singh also said that a few of the students will be travelling by flight, including three of them headed for Srinagar. "We will be making arrangements. All the ministers are involved in making arrangements for the evacuated students," he added. BCCL "The students are very confident. They have been saying that the students were confident that Prime Minister Narendra Modi will recuse them. We are making arrangements to rescue the Indian students still stranded in Ukraine," he stated. The minister further stated that about 220 students have arrived from Istanbul. "I asked a girl student, which state she comes from to which she replied that she's from India," said Singh, adding that "the students are still in disbelief that they have actually been evacuated due to stress. We ensured they spoke with their parents on arrivals, Singh told ANI. For more on news, sports and current affairs from around the world, please visit Indiatimes News. In a scary incident, a truck carrying United States Postal Service (USPS) mail flew off a 50-foot bridge and into a river near Boston - a video of the terrifying incident released by the police showed. According to the cops, the driver miraculously survived and waited for rescuers on the broken front of the trailer. Twitter The State Police Association of Massachusetts released the footage of Saturday's incident, which took place on Route 128, on Twitter. The video was captured by a surveillance camera at a nearby boat dock and showed the truck going past the guardrail, and down the icy Charles River. "EXCLUSIVE FOOTAGE: Never before seen video of the major TT crash Saturday in Weston," reads the caption on the microblogging website. Unable to swim, the driver climbed atop the partially submerged vehicle to save himself from drowning. "He was just saying he was really cold," Deputy Fire chief Justin Woodside told reporters. He added that firefighters were able to respond quickly because they were already in the area. Wearing cold water suits, the rescuers brought the driver to the shore. He was then taken to Brigham and Women's Hospital. According to NBC 10, doctors who evaluated the driver said he avoided any injuries in the horrifying accident. The Massachusetts Police further said that as they tried to pull the truck out of the river, it broke in half and the packages fell into the icy river. Heres what the scene looks like in Weston. pic.twitter.com/TTkKWmNbL2 Mass State Police (@MassStatePolice) February 26, 2022 The police also said that postal inspectors were notified about the incident. They visited the site later on Saturday and the police said the inspectors will take care of the packages which were not recovered by the firefighters from the river. The cops are investigating the cause of the accident, which took place near the ramp from I-95 to the Massachusetts Turnpike. Exit 39 of I-95 remained closed for more than 10 hours following the incident. Twitter For more trending stories, click here. In what can be seen as the first major financial step against Russia by India, the country's largest public sector bank SBI has reportedly stopped processing transactions involving Russian entities against which international sanctions have been announced amidst the Ukraine-Russia war. As per a Reuters report, SBI has sent a letter to certain clients asking them to take extra precautions while handling any transactions related to sanctioned nations. The $9.4 Billion Bilateral Trade With Russia shutterstock The Reuters report added No transactions involving entities, banks, ports or vessels appearing on a US, European Union or United Nations sanctions list shall be processed irrespective of the currency of the transaction. Also, a senior SBI executive reportedly told the agency that the lender (SBI) had a significant international presence and it needs to comply with the US and EU regulations as it is present in those jurisdictions and that the bank cannot be seen as not adhering to these rules. On the other hand, while there was no official comment from SBI, it is understood that the curb will only apply to fresh transactions and that it will not have any impact on past deals. It remains to be seen if such a step by the biggest PSU bank will have any impact on the bilateral trade between India and Russia, which has stood at $9.4 billion so far this fiscal. Other lenders are also likely to follow suit, as per a report in The Telegraph. Also Read: Former SBI Chairperson Arundhati Bhattacharya Says Indias IT Sector Battling A Hiring Crisis Waiting For Details From The Govt Banks like SBI are reportedly waiting for more details from the US and other nations on the nature of sanctions against the Russian entities. And thats not all. The domestic lenders are also reportedly waiting for instructions from the Centre regarding how to proceed with transactions pertaining to Russian banks. In the past few days, numerous countries have announced financial sanctions against Russia, to demonstrate their stance against the countrys invasion of Ukraine. Earlier, the UK PM had announced their largest sanctions against Russia, besides Russia also being shut out of the international payment system SWIFT. Also Read: How Russia-Ukraine War Is Pushing Debt-Ridden Sri Lanka Towards A Possible Default For more such latest financial news and interesting content, keep reading Worth. Click here March 2, 2022 This page has been automatically translated by Original news Experienced the digital logistics corridor between the ports of La Spezia and Casablanca The data on the loads of a ship arrived today in the port Moroccan had been anticipated before his departure With today's arrival at the port of Casablanca of the ship Pinara, started on February 21 from the port of La Spezia, the international logistics corridor between the two ports of call which is object of the European project FENIX- Thanks to the platform informatics developed within the project, data on containers on board and the related transport and customs documents they had been anticipated before the departure of the ship. The pilot project made it possible to test the tools innovative related to the digitized logistics corridor that allows the exchange of data between the systems of the Port System of the Eastern Ligurian Sea, which administers the port La Spezia, and the Port Community System of the port of Casablanca, Portnet, thanks also to the collaboration with the Customs Agency and of the Monopolies. In particular, thanks to the use of IoT technology it is it was possible to exchange some data related to the e-seal and the Manifesto in Import already from the departure of the ship from La Spezia and made immediately visible to the actors of the logistics corridor international between Italy and Morocco. In 2021 the port of Casablanca has enlivened overall 29,0 million tons of goods, with a bending of the -4,3% on the previous year. The only container traffic is piled to over 10,4 million tons (+2.7%) and is was made with a handling of containers equal to 1,105,784 teu (+4.7%). Booking.com Index Home Page News - Via Raffaele Paolucci 17r/19r - 16129 Genoa - ITALY phone: +39.010.2462122, fax: +39.010.2516768, e-mail Real-time social media posts from local businesses and organizations across Northern Virginia, powered by Friends2Follow. To add your business to the stream, email cfields@insidenova.com or click on the green button below. With the March 11 scheduled close of its regular session fast approaching, the Florida Legislature remains so focused on putting the finishing touches on its various culture-war signaling bills that one might think Tallahassee hasnt noticed that the states property insurance market is rapidly hurtling toward utter collapse. The causes are multi-pronged: a uniquely challenging set of catastrophe risks, all increasingly magnified by the combination of rapid development and climate change; a litigation environment in which claims disputes drag on years beyond the events that initiated them; a reputed epidemic of questionable claims, many related to roofs; and a primary market that, more than a decade past its last major crisis, remains far too reliant on thinly capitalized domestic companies with insufficient geographic diversification. All of this is, as they say, coming to a head. The latest in a series of concerning indicators came with the Feb. 25 order by Circuit Judge Angela Dempsey appointing the Florida Department of Financial Services as receiver for the Orlando-based St. Johns Insurance Co., which Insurance Commissioner David Altmaier had deemed insolvent. Dempsey subsequently issued a Feb. 28 order approving the transfer of 147,000 St. Johns policies to Slide Insurance Co. St. Johns adds to the growing list of recent liquidations of Florida property insurers. The department last year ordered liquidations of both Gulfstream Property and Casualty Insurance Co. and American Capital Assurance Co. And several other domestic writers similarly evince signs of teetering on the brink of insolvency: TypTap Insurance Group, a home and flood-focused insurtech subsidiary of Tampa-based HCI Group, had been planning an initial public offering this year. That plan was scuttled in January, with the company citing unfavorable market conditions. TypTap has now likewise ceased writing new business in the state. The ominous signs dont end there. Progressive Insurance is non-renewing 56,000 Florida policies covering homes with roofs that are more than 15 years old. And United Insurance Holdings Corp.the ninth largest homeowners insurer in Floridaannounced last month that it also had ceased writing new homeowners business in the state as of Jan. 1. Given these cascading dominoes, ones concern must turn to Citizens Property Insurance Corp., Floridas state-run insurer-of-last-resort. In the month of January alone, Citizens grew by 17,485 policies. Its Jan. 31 count of 776,790 policies in-force was up 75% from the 443,228 policies that were in-force Jan. 31, 2020. At the current pace of growth, Citizens would top 1 million policiesa level it hasnt seen since January 2014by the end of 2022. Which brings us back to the Legislature, which certainly has not given these issues the priority they would seem to merit. But a pair of property-insurance-reform measuresS.B. 1728 and S.B. 186have slowly been winding their way through the state Senate, and both share a provision that could gain some attention amid the prevailing zeitgeist, even if only in a limited way. What the bills share is that both would clarify that Citizens statutory glidepath applies only to an insureds primary residence. Initially implemented in 2009, the glidepath had limited Citizens annual premium increases to 10%. S.B. 76, passed last year, calls for a series of gradual increases in the cap, which was raised to 11% this year and will continue to rise by one percentage point each year until ultimately hitting 15% in 2026. By limiting the glidepath to primary residences, the legislation currently before the Senate would allow Citizens to immediately charge risk-based rates to the many second homes and vacation homes currently covered by the state-run insurer. The change would serve both to improve Citizens financial position and, at the margin, to discourage some policyholders from turning to Citizens who might otherwise be able to obtain private coverage. Those include, of course, some propertiesmany of them in Miami-Dade and southern Broward Countyowned by the very so-called oligarchs that the Biden administration and many Western governments are currently in the process of sanctioning following Russias unprovoked invasion of Ukraine. As is well-known, South Florida has been one of the favored spots for wealthy Russians over the past decade or two. Over that time, Sunny Isles Beach has gained the nickname of Little Moscow, while spots like tony Fisher Island have similarly drawn interest from Russian billionaires. Of course, wealthy Russian nationals (much less the smaller group who could be called oligarchs) constitute only a small portion of the non-primary residences currently insured by Citizens. And removing vacation homes from the Citizens glidepath, while certainly a step in the right direction, would not be nearly enough to fix problems of this magnitude. Fortunately, the two Senate bills do not stop there. S.B. 186, sponsored by Sen. Jeff Brandes (R-St. Petersburg), would make several changes to Citizens, including: Allowing surplus lines insurers (who, notably, do not participate in the Florida Insurance Guaranty Association) to participate in Citizens depopulation programs, so long as the insurers policy count remains above 700,000; Increasing the maximum surcharges that can be levied on Citizens policyholders in the event of a projected deficit to any of its three accounts (personal lines, commercial lines, and coastal accounts), with surcharges rising to 20% if Citizens passes one million policies and 25% if it passes 1.5 million; Requiring that a policy absorbed by Citizens from an insurer deemed unsound be assessed the higher of either the old premium or the premium that Citizens would normally assess for that given property; and Providing that a residential Citizens policyholder is not eligible for renewal if an authorized insurer provides them with a coverage offer that is no more than 20% greater than the Citizens renewal premium. S.B. 1728, sponsored by Senate Banking and Insurance Committee Chair Jim Boyd (R-Bradenton), shares some features with S.B. 186, including removing non-primary residences from the Citizens glidepath and disallowing renewals for policyholders who receive coverage offers that are no more than 20% greater than their Citizens premium. It also looks to address the recent explosion of roof claims by allowing insurers to only cover the depreciated actual cash value of roofs that are more than 10 years old. Roofs that are less than 10 years old or that were damaged by named hurricanes or in total loss events would still have to be covered for full replacement costs. The Brandes bill is currently before the Senate Appropriations Committee, having previously cleared the Senate Banking and Insurance Committee and an Appropriations subcommittee. Boyds bill has moved one step further, having cleared both the Insurance and Appropriations committees. It does, however, potentially face challenges in the Legislatures other chamber, as House Speaker Chris Sprowls (R-Palm Harbor) has expressed opposition. So, what does this all have to do with Russian oligarchs? Very, very little. But if that framing can help get this Legislatures attention, its worth a try. Topics Carriers Florida Russia Property Ukraine A Pennsylvania man who spent nearly 14 years in prison for a deadly 1993 fire before winning a new trial and having the charges against him dropped has filed a federal lawsuit against a prosecutor and two former police officers involved in his case. Daniel Carnevale, 58, alleges malicious prosecution, fabrication of evidence and civil conspiracy on the part of a deputy Allegheny County district attorney and the former Pittsburgh homicide detectives who now work as investigators for the DAs office. The lawsuit filed Thursday in U.S. District Court alleges fabrication and withholding of evidence and accuses the defendants of orchestrating the use of false testimony. Mr. Carnevales conviction was part of the disturbing resurrection of a tragic fire that occurred some 13 years prior, where there was no reliable evidence that the fire was caused by arson, let alone that it was intentionally set by Mr. Carnevale, the suit said. Mike Manko, a spokesperson for the office, declined comment on the pending litigation, which he said was under review. Carnevale has maintained his innocence since he was incarcerated in 2006, accused of setting a January 1993 fire at two apartment buildings that left three people dead. He won a new trial after prosecutors said some evidence had never been turned over to the defense, but before that trial prosecutors withdrew the charges in 2020. The case stems from the January 1993 fire at the Columbia House and Regal Apartments in the Bloomfield neighborhood that killed Anita Emery, 31, Florence Lyczko, 63, and Chris Stahlman, 22. The federal Bureau of Alcohol, Tobacco, Firearms and Explosives said the blaze had been intentionally set using lacquer thinner from a five-gallon drum recovered at the scene. No arrest was made until 13 years later, when two cold-case officers said a new witness had come forward. Carnevale was convicted of three counts of second-degree murder and sentenced to life. The Pennsylvania Innocence Project said federal agents didnt follow proper scientific procedures for determining whether the cause was arson. An investigator testified at trial that the fire had to be arson because a natural or accidental cause had been eliminated. Copyright 2022 Associated Press. All rights reserved. This material may not be published, broadcast, rewritten or redistributed. Topics Lawsuits Lloyds Names Gomez as Chief People Officer Lloyds of London has appointed Sara Gomez as chief people officer (CPO). As CPO, she will focus on developing Lloyds talent, leadership and inclusion strategy. She brings experience as a CPO from a career that spans roles in the retail, commercial and financial sectors, most recently at the FinTech Greensill. Before that Sara was at Moss Bros, following seven years at Direct Line Group. Gomez joined Lloyds in July 2021 and was appointed Interim chief HR officer and a member of Lloyds Executive Committee in December 2021. Gomez called Lloyds an iconic brand and said she sees tremendous opportunity to make Lloyds a magnet for the very best talent in financial services. Brace Underwriting Strengthens Specialty With McMillan London-based Brace Underwriting Limited announces the appointment of Neil McMillan as senior underwriter. McMillan brings almost four decades of specialty London market experience to Brace. He joins from Canopius where since 2013 he held the role of underwriter in the North American facilities department and was also a lead underwriter in property and casualty business emanating from managing general agents. Prior to Canopius and throughout his career, McMillan has held a number of senior positions including North American class underwriter at Brit, vice president of Alea Londons North American facilities division and deputy underwriter at Zurich Specialties in London. Based in London and reporting to Adam Holberry, co-founder and chief underwriting officer, McMillan assumes his role with immediate effect. Brace specializes in aternative risk binders, focusing on specialist MGAs that come to market with a differentiated product, an alternative distribution method, or expertise in a niche. Based in Lloyds, Brace is part of Beat Capital Partners, writing consortia operated by Beat Syndicate 4242, an established Lloyds syndicate. Beat is backed by Bain Capital Credit, Elliott Management and Amwins. Topics Excess Surplus Underwriting Lloyd's London A little boy jumped on stage to perform with the band at the Bourbon and Bacon Festival in Wellington on Friday March 22, 2019. Jennifer Lett South Florida Sun Sentinel (Jennifer Lett / Sun Sentinel) Two of everyones favorite B-words are back in South Florida in a big way. The eighth annual Bacon & Bourbon Fest will return to the Wellington Town Center Promenade March 26-27. Advertisement The Promenade is nice because they have a big pavilion and its covered, which made for a great area to put our bar, says event organizer Nancy Stewart, referring to the festivals second year at the al fresco gathering place alongside Lake Wellingtons shore. Its beautiful that its on the waterfront thats a beautiful backdrop. They built the new boat docks. We love that we get a lot of residents that live in the area who bring their pontoon boats. Locals were able to serve themselves unlimited sodas after they purchased a mug from Wild Bills at the 2019 Bourbon & Bacon Festival in Wellington. (Jennifer Lett / Sun Sentinel) [ RELATED: Take a sunset stroll along Wellingtons new promenade ] As the title spells out, the outdoor two-day event will spotlight whiskey and pork products as well as arts and crafts vendors. Even better, admission is free. Advertisement Also returning this year will be the Last Drop Bar, with rare and limited spirits offered ...until its gone, adds Stewart. This was very popular last year. We had some really very rare bourbons that were available and people loved it. The bourbon The three distillers featured at the bourbon bars are Luxco, Jospeh Magnus and Garrison Brothers, each offering flights as well as glasses. The Last Drop will spotlight Benjamin Prichards Rye Whiskey, Buffalo Trace, Clyde Mays Straight Bourbon, Collier & McKeel, Colonel E.H. Taylor Single Barrel and Small Batch, Kinsey Rye and Kinsey Whiskey, Legacy, Peerless Small Batch and Stagg Jr., The specialty cocktails at the Last Drop will be made with Ezra Brooks 99 proof, Hirsch Horizon Bourbon, Jim Beam Fire, Journeyman Featherbone Bourbon, Rebel Yell Bourbon and Skrewball. Mixed drinks made with Ezra 99 will include Moscow Mules, Bourbon Bloody Marys, Manhattans and Old Fashioneds. The Bacon & Bourbon Fest will return March 26-27 to the Wellington Town Center Promenade. (Festival Management Group / Courtesy) The bacon In addition to Delray Beachs A Kitchen empanadas, Lake Worths Gilbert Rib King BBQ whole pig roast, pulled pork and ribs, other food vendors will include: KeNiyas Kitchen out of West Palm Beach with a variety of bacon-on-a-stick dishes (garlic ginger candied, white chocolate pistachio, maple honey vanilla, jerk, chocolate, bacon & biscuit) The Purple Shrimp out of West Palm Beach (shrimp po boy, fish po boy, bourbon & butter bread pudding with vanilla ice cream and bacon & corn fritters). Advertisement Henrys Kitchen out of Port St. Lucie (battered bacon with fries, honey-covered cinnamon bacon with fries, chocolate-covered bacon with fries, fried pork belly with fries, loaded fries with bacon and loaded mac & cheese with bacon) Genoa Italian Concessions out of Orlando (bacon cheese dogs, bacon cheeseburgers, bacon cheese fries and a wide variety of menu items from chicken parmigiana sandwiches to surf & turf meals) If you go The Bacon & Bourbon Fest will take place at 12150 Forest Hill Blvd., Wellington. Hours are 11 a.m.-9 p.m. Saturday, March 26 and 11 a.m.-6 p.m. Sunday, March 27. There is free parking onsite at the Wellington Community Center and the Wellington Aquatics Complex If you want updates and special deals, text the word bacon to 833-222-1965. For more information, go to BaconBourbonFest.com. [ RELATED: Fords Garage in Wellington plans on parking throughout SoFlo 14 new restaurants in the next 7 years ] Insured losses from Februarys windstorms Dudley and Eunice will likely fall between 3.0 and 4.5 billion Euro (US$3.4 and US$5.1 billion), with Germany accounting for around 40% of the total loss, according to risk modeling firm RMS. In addition to Germanys 40%, about 20% of the losses will likely be in the Netherlands and about 15% in the United Kingdom. The storms, also also known as Ylenia and Zeynep, also hit Ireland, France, Belgium, Denmark, Switzerland, Austria, the Czech Republic, Poland, and Slovakia between February 16-19, 2022. The RMS analysis suggests that Eunice is expected to contribute between 2.5 and 3.5 billion Euro (US$2.8 and US$4.0 billion) to the overall insured loss total. This estimate would rank Eunice as the most damaging European windstorm event since Kyrill in 2007. These wind-only loss estimates are based on hazard reconstructions and include damage to property, automobiles, agriculture, and direct business interruption, but exclude losses from damage to infrastructure as well as losses caused by storm surge and inland flooding that are expected not to be material. The loss estimates consider unique aspects of these events, including market dynamics and economic effects from the ongoing COVID-19 pandemic, which will likely act to increase losses beyond typical expectations. This includes losses to large facilities, such as power plants and stadiums, and uncertainty in replacement costs, driven by material prices and shortages. The estimates also consider a marginal amount of post-event loss amplification and the possibility of claims leakage, the payment for damage from other events under a single occurrence, given that several events occurred in close succession. This includes Storm Franklin, which impacted Europe to a smaller degree between February 20-22, 2022 but its damage may be reimbursed under Dudley or Eunice claims. The RMS estimates track with those of another modeling firm, Verisk Extreme Event Solutions (formerly AIR Worldwide), which predicted losses between 3 billion and 5 billion (US$2.2 billion-$5.6 billion), with the majority expected in Germany, UK, and the Netherlands, Insured Losses for 2 Recent European Windstorms Estimated at 3B-5B: Verisk Although the last two decades have mostly spared us from history-making windstorms like Daria (1990) or Lothar (1999), Windstorms Dudley and Eunice remind us how destructive these events can be and highlight the importance of storm clustering, the close succession of multiple storms following similar trajectories, in Europe, said Michele Lai, senior product manager for Europe Climate Models at RMS. Topics Catastrophe Natural Disasters USA Profit Loss Windstorm Europe Germany Shipments of foodstuffs and medical supplies to Russia risk being damaged or spoiled due to significant delays at ports and customs, shipping group Maersk told its customers on Wednesday. Maersk and two other large container lines have temporarily suspended cargo shipments to and from Russia in response to Western sanctions on Moscow following its invasion of Ukraine. The suspension did not include foodstuffs, medical and humanitarian supplies. We do, however, warn caution on still placing bookings for perishable cargo due to significant delays in key transshipment hubs that may damage the cargo, Maersk said in a customer advisory on its website. It said customs authorities in the European Union and UK are inspecting all containers to and from Russia transiting their terminals and ports to identify sanctioned and restricted shipments. As a consequence, Maersk said it could not provide any guarantees and saw a significant risk to our customers perishable cargo. For the past year the world has been struggling with supply chain bottlenecks caused by surging demand for retail goods transported on container ships amid lockdowns related to the coronavirus pandemic. The indirect impacts of sanctions was now putting further pressure on global freight, Maersk added. This is a global impact, and not only limited to trade with Russia. (Reporting by Jacob Gronholt-Pedersen and Stine Jacobsen, Editing by Louise Heavens and Jane Merriman) Topics Russia Trucking Energy giant BP is seeking to appeal a decision that allowed a small Kansas towns lawsuit over soaring natural gas prices in February 2021 to proceed. BP, formerly known as British Petroleum, filed two documents last week that indicate it wants to shut down a lawsuit filed by the small Crawford County town of Mulberry, The Wichita Eagle reported. One document seeks permission to appeal a Feb. 8 ruling by Chief District Judge Lori A. Bolton Fleming before the case goes to trial. In that ruling, Fleming removed the Mulberry city government from the lawsuit but allowed individual residents to proceed with the action, which claims BPs price hikes during a deep freeze in February 2021 were price-gouging. The second court document outlines BPs belief that it cannot by sued by the residents because they dont buy their gas directly from BP. The lawsuit is seen as a potential test case to determine if other Kansans will have to pay millions of dollars in extra natural gas costs from the 2021 freeze. Mulberrys gas cost on Feb. 9, 2021, was $2.98 per million British Thermal Units. The price rose to $329.60 per million BTU from Feb. 13 to Feb. 16, when the city stopped buying gas. On Feb. 17, the price hit $622.79. Copyright 2022 Associated Press. All rights reserved. This material may not be published, broadcast, rewritten or redistributed. Topics Lawsuits Pricing Trends Kansas Holmes Murphy Names Jay Reimers as Senior Client Advocate Holmes Murphy has hired Jay Reimers as a senior client advocate in its Minneapolis, Minnesota office. With 10 years experience in the insurance industry, Reimers has a track record of client success, earning client respect, working with large risk management programs, and establishing a diverse range of partnerships. In this new role, Reimers will be responsible for advising clients in managing risk and helping them prepare for challenges. Prior to joining Holmes Murphy, Reimers served as senior vice president of business development for Hays Companies, where he also specialized in strategic client advocacy. Pinnacle Actuarial Resources Promotes Greg Fears Jr., Radost Roumenova Wenman and Trenton Lipka Bloomington, Illinois-based Pinnacle Actuarial Resources, Inc. announced the promotions of Greg Fears Jr. and Radost Roumenova Wenman to senior consulting actuary and Trenton Lipka to consulting actuary. Fears has been in the property/casualty insurance industry since 2001. He has substantial experience in loss reserving, funding studies, loss cost projections, captive feasibility studies, risk margin calculations and a variety of actuarialanalyses for insurance companies. Fears serves on the Casualty Actuarial Society (CAS) and American Academy of Actuaries (AAA) Casualty Loss Reserve Seminar (CLRS) Joint Program Committee. Wenman joined Pinnacle in 2016, and has worked in the property/casualty industry since 2006. She has specialized in pricing and product development, with a focus on developing homeowners, private passenger auto and commercial lines pricing solutions via advanced predictive models. Wenman serves the CAS as a member of the CAS Actuarial Review committee. Trenton Lipka is Pinnacles newest consulting actuary. He has experience in assignments that include loss reserving and loss cost projections, among others, working with loss reserve analyses for group captive insurers writing workers compensation, general liability, auto liability, auto physical damage and inland marine. Lipka joined Pinnacle in 2017, and served most recently in an associate actuary role. Topics Market Labor unions and worker advocates have applauded President Joe Bidens nomination of Judge Ketanji Brown Jackson for the Supreme Court. Yet a look back at Jacksons decisions in cases involving business and labor suggest that she wont always rule as they want or expect her to. Though Jackson is widely seen as a liberal on social and economic issues and as a defender of workers rights, her decisions, as a federal district court judge and then as a federal appellate judge since last year, defy easy categorization. Shes as likely to rule for a corporation in a race discrimination claim as she is for the plaintiff, said Ted Ruger, dean of the University of Pennsylvania Carey Law School, who served with Jackson on the Harvard Law Review during law school. Like any judge who follows the law and listens to the evidence in the case, she may disappoint some who always want a predictably liberal outcome. Out of 40 employment and business-related rulings reviewed by The Associated Press, Jackson ruled for the defendants 30 times since 2013 while serving as a judge on the U.S. District Court in Washington. Many of the cases involved discrimination claims that employees had filed against government agencies. And they hinged largely on interpretations of arcane provisions of employment laws. In one of her private-sector cases, Jackson ruled that a Lyft ride-sharing driver had agreed to the companys terms of service when she signed up with the company, and therefore had to pursue arbitration to settle a dispute, rather than a class-action lawsuit. The driver had claimed that she and others were Lyft employees who were protected by a law in the District of Columbia that entitled them to paid sick leave. In the view of Ruger, Jackson tends to closely follow procedural law, even when doing so might erect barriers for employees who want to make claims against companies or governments. Ruger says Jackson tends to closely follow procedural law, even when doing so might erect barriers for employees who want to make claims against companies or governments. In one representative case from 2017, two Black employees of Lockheed Martin had alleged racial discrimination in the companys performance appraisal system. The employees asked Jackson to certify a class-action lawsuit against the defense contractor on behalf of themselves and roughly 5,500 salaried Black employees. Jackson declined. In her ruling, which relied heavily on a 2011 Supreme Court decision that rejected a class action against Walmart, Jackson found that the employees had failed to explain how the companys performance appraisal system discriminated against Black workers. She concluded that they also failed to prove that the performance appraisal system discriminated against Black workers in the same way a standard that would be required for a class action. Two anecdotes in a class of over 5,500 almost certainly do not constitute `substantial proof that any commonalities between them are pervasive throughout the class, Jackson wrote. Yet the ruling wasnt exactly a victory for Lockheed Martin. Jackson questioned the adequacy of the companys proposed $22.8 million settlement fund, saying it was unclear exactly what claims other employees might bring against the company. The judge also noted that class members who didnt respond to the settlement notice _ not just those who opted out _ would be ineligible to receive compensation from the fund. This settlement agreement, Jackson wrote, effectively allows Lockheed to inoculate itself against any and all race discrimination and race-related benefits claims by a huge swath of its African-American employees for a price that hardly seems adequate. The two employees eventually reached a settlement agreement with Lockheed Martin. Lia Epperson, a constitutional law professor at American Universitys Washington College of Law, noted that much of the work done by a U.S. District Court judge for the District of Columbia involves cases against the government, and she said Jackson showed fairness to administrations of both parties. In different criminal cases, Epperson suggested, Jackson has ruled for both prosecutors and defendants. She has a reputation of fairness and impartiality, and she seems to be guided by fidelity to fact and law, said Epperson, who knows Jackson from the years when they crossed paths as Harvard undergraduates. In her first opinion as a federal appeals court judge, a position to which Jackson was confirmed last year, she ruled against President Donald Trump in a case praised by labor unions. Before she was confirmed for the appellate court, Jackson seemed hostile to the Trump administration, says Levy. In 2019, the U.S. education and agriculture departments had asked the Federal Labor Relations Authority, which oversees federal labor agreements, to adopt a new threshold for when collective bargaining would be required. In September 2020, the authority required bargaining only if a workplace change had a substantial impact on a condition of employment. Employee unions sued, saying the new standard diminished their bargaining rights. Since the mid-1980s, the labor authority had required bargaining in cases where there had been more than a minimal change in working conditions. In a victory for the unions, Jackson ruled that the decision to override 35 years of precedent was arbitrary and capricious. She also questioned whether the change would solve the problems the agency had claimed it was trying to fix. As a former public defender, she has deep experience representing people who are too often denied access to equal justice, a perspective that has been missing from the Supreme Court since Justice Thurgood Marshall retired 30 years ago, Mary Kay Henry, president of the Service Employees International Union, the nations second-largest labor union. But Curt Levey, president of the Committee for Justice, a Washington group that promotes conservative judicial nominees and limited government, argued that the case was an example of Jackson having reflexively ruled against the Trump administration. When Levey studied her record before she was confirmed for the appellate court, he said, she seemed hostile to the Trump administration. Her ruling in the case, Levey said, applied the Administrative Procedures Act in a way that was less deferential to the administration than what the Supreme Court has specified in previous cases. Refusing to certify the class of plaintiffs in the Lockheed Martin case, though, Levey said, could be a good sign that perhaps she is not an ideologue in general. Copyright 2022 Associated Press. All rights reserved. This material may not be published, broadcast, rewritten or redistributed. Topics Lawsuits USA Claims Commercial Lines Business Insurance Washington Cartier sued Tiffany & Co on Monday, accusing its luxury rival of stealing trade secrets concerning its high-end jewelry from an employee it lured away in December, in a sign competition in the fast-growing jewelry category is heating up. According to a complaint filed in a New York state court in Manhattan, Tiffany hired an underqualified junior manager away to learn more about Cartiers High Jewelry collection, where pieces typically cost $50,000 to $10 million. Cartier, a unit of Switzerlands Richemont SA, called Tiffanys hiring of Megan Marino a desperate bid to revive its own high jewelry unit after it was left in disarray following several departures, reflecting Tiffanys disturbing culture of misappropriating competitive information. According to court papers, Tiffany appeared to pin ultimate blame on Marino by firing her after just five weeks. In an affidavit accompanying the complaint, Marino said Tiffany was more interested in hiring me as a source of information than as a High Jewelry manager. Cartier also accused Tiffany, owned by luxury goods group LVMH, of letting a recently hired former Cartier executive work on a high jewelry project called the Blue Book despite her six-month non-compete agreement. Contacted by Reuters, Tiffany said in a statement: We deny the baseless allegations and will vigorously defend ourselves. The lawsuit seeks an injunction requiring that Tiffany return and not use stolen trade secrets, plus unspecified damages. Cartier said in a statement: Cartier fully respects the rights of competitors to pursue their commercial objectives. In this case, however, Tiffanys commercial ambition crossed the line between the ordinary course of business and unfair competition. Bernstein analyst Luca Solca said he believed LVMH was indeed in the process of becoming a contender for category leadership against Richemont. Branded jewelry after the Tiffany acquisition has transformed from an oligopoly to a duopoly. Tiffany has plenty of opportunity to revive its fortunes, Solca said in an emailed statement. On Jan. 19, Richemont said strong demand for jewelry and watches following a trough earlier in the coronavirus pandemic boosted quarterly sales by 32%. Sales at Richemonts jewelry brands Cartier, Buccellati and Van Cleef & Arpels rose 38%. Read full story The case is Cartier v Tiffany and Co, New York State Supreme Court, New York County. (Reporting by Jonathan Stempel, additional reporting by Silke Koltrowitz in Zurich; Editing by Sandra Maler and Jonathan Oatis) Topics Lawsuits Fraud New York A federal judge on Feb. 28 rejected a lawsuit filed by Gulf of Mexico charter fishing boat operators opposed to federal regulations that include a requirement that they affix tracking equipment to their vessels. U.S. District Judge Susie Morgan ruled Monday in favor of the National Marine Fisheries Service. The devices will help make sure logbooks are correct and that data on catches are accurately reported, the agency said in court records. Morgan rejected the boat operators arguments that permanent tracking amounts to a violation of Fourth Amendment protections against unreasonable searches and seizures. The suit was filed in 2020 by a group of charter operators from Louisiana and Florida. Morgan granted class-action status last year, meaning hundreds of others would have been covered by a favorable ruling. But, on Feb 28, Morgan said in an 80-page ruling that the fisheries service has had tracking requirements in place for decades for the commercial fishing industry. She said the tracking equipment for charter vessels for private fishers is similar to that used for commercial fishing operations, that the information collected is limited in scope and that it is gathered at regular intervals _ not like an unannounced search. The longstanding practice of tracking in the fishing industry reinforces the Courts determination that the tracking requirement sufficiently provides notice and limits discretion to contain an adequate substitute for a warrant, she wrote. Topics Louisiana Both the former owner of a Rogers, Arkansas-based medical supply and billing company and its former chief executive officer have been indicted by a federal grand jury for their roles in three separate conspiracies to defraud the U.S. government and private workers compensation insurers: a billing and kickback fraud scheme with multiple physicians and medical clinics, and separate frauds with two Louisiana physicians to ship medications to them from Arkansas and distribute those medications from their clinics in violation of Louisiana laws, the U.S. Attorneys Office for the Western District of Arkansas said. Additionally, the former company owner was charged with wire fraud for falsifying emails he provided in a civil lawsuit involving his sale of the company. A federal grand jury in Fort Smith returned a 12-count indictment, charging Hunter Matthew Burroughs, 42, and Stephen Keith Andrews, 48, each with one count of conspiracy to commit health care fraud, two counts of conspiracy to commit wire fraud, and eight counts of wire fraud. Additionally, the indictment charges Burroughs in another wire fraud count. According to the indictment, Burroughs, who in 2011 founded the Rogers company, and Andrews, who served as the companys chief executive officer, defrauded both federal and private workers compensation insurers in schemes that ran until 2017. The basic premise of the health care fraud scheme was that Burroughs, Andrews, and other individuals associated with the Rogers company recruited physicians to dispense pain creams and patches to their workers compensation patients by offering them a split of the profits collected from successfully billing insurers, typically 50 percent. One such physician was Robert Dale Bernauer, Sr., who ran a clinic in Lake Charles, La. Bernauer pleaded guilty to his role in the same conspiracy on July 30, 2021. After signing contracts with physicians, the indictment alleges, Burroughs and Andrews caused the Rogers company to supply them with pain creams and patches, and to act as the billing agent for the physicians, handling all of the paperwork and submitting fraudulent claims to both the U.S. Department of Labor, Office of Workers Compensation Programs, which covers all federal employees, and to private insurers as well. The company billed insurers at markups of anywhere from 15 to 20 times what the medications actually cost, and then paid the physicians unlawful kickbacks on amounts collected. The companys former billing director, Amanda Dawn Rains, pleaded guilty to her role in the same conspiracy on October 6, 2021. Additionally, the indictment alleges, Burroughs and Andrews conspired separately with Bernauer and with another Louisiana physician to have the Rogers company ship medications to the doctors, and bill insurers for their prescriptions, despite knowing neither physician had the required Louisiana license to dispense medications from his clinic. Finally, the indictment charges Burroughs in a separate count with attempting to defraud a Florida court and the Florida corporation to which he sold the medical supply and billing company. It alleges Burroughs falsified five emails he provided as discovery in a civil lawsuit he had filed against the Florida company, and then testified falsely about the emails in a sworn deposition. The charges contained in this indictment are simply accusations, and not evidence of guilt. Evidence supporting the charges must be presented to a federal trial jury, whose duty is to determine guilt or innocence. Source: U.S. Attorneys Office for the Western District of Arkansas Topics Carriers USA Florida Louisiana Fraud Workers' Compensation Arkansas Talking trash about a competitor may be as old as humanity. But a Florida-based workers compensation insurance broker is charging that some bad-mouthing by another broker cost it a long-standing relationship with major insurance carrier. Comp360 LLC, with headquarters in Lakeland, Florida, and offices in Kansas, has filed a defamation lawsuit in federal court, alleging that KT Enterprises spread misinformation about the firm to Summit Insurance Co. Defendants have interfered with plaintiffs relationship with Summit by spreading falsehoods to Summit regarding plaintiff and plaintiffs principals character, the lawsuit complaint reads. Defendants spread of falsehoods has caused Summit to drop plaintiff as a broker. The lawsuit, initially filed in Polk County Circuit Court in Florida but moved last week to the U.S. District Court for the Middle District of Florida, names Kevin Taban and Eddie Bryant as defendants. They and others with KT Enterprises could not be reached for comment before deadline. Comp360s president is Fielding Dickey. He launched the company in 2005 after working as a loss consultant with Summit Holdings, the firms website shows. He declined comment Tuesday, while the suit is pending. The complaint, handled by Blue Chip Law in Tampa, does not go into detail about the nature of the alleged defamation, or how widespread such tactics may be in the comp insurance world. But it said that beginning in June 2021, Taban, Bryant and KT began feeding misinformation to Summit about Comp360 and its principal, in hopes of destroying plaintiffs relationship with Summit. The alleged communications may have worked. Comp360 charges tortious interference and claims that Summit dropped Comp360 as a broker shortly after the defamation began. The Defendants business conduct described above shows they have continuously taken action contrary to honest practice in industrial or commercial matters as it relates to their efforts to compete with Plaintiff for a common pool of clients and vendors, the complaint reads. Defendants have purposely engaged in conduct to remove a key insurer from the plaintiffs offering so the defendants could obtain a larger market share and unfairly compete with plaintiff by claiming to offer products plaintiff could not (because defendants improperly interfered with the relationship). The suit asks for more than $100,000 in compensatory damages and punitive damages. KT Enterprises has not yet filed an answer to the complaint. Topics Lawsuits Agencies Florida A 75-year-old driver likely wont face criminal charges after crashing her Bentley into a busy Miami Beach sidewalk cafe, killing one man and injuring eight others, police said. There were no signs that the woman was impaired on Feb. 24 as she tried to parallel park, Miami Beach police told the Miami Herald. The woman suddenly accelerated in reverse, ran over a curb and hit a parked car before crashing into a table with five diners and hitting nearby pedestrians, police said. The beige 1990 Bentley then trapped people underneath as it knocked over a traffic sign and hit a tree. Gary Prince, 67, of Miami Beach died at a hospital shortly after the crash, police said. Two men, 78 and 61, were seriously injured, a child suffered minor injuries, and five others suffered less serious injuries, police said. Workers and patrons from at the Call Me Gaby restaurant worked to lift the car off of people. Miami Beach Police spokesperson Ernesto Rodriguez said the investigation is continuing and the driver could face traffic citations. The driver was operating the car in a careless or negligent manner, the police report said, and it wasnt the first time: Court records show she was cited in Broward County in 2015 for driving on the wrong side of a divided highway, paying a $165 fine after pleading guilty. Photo: The scene after the driver crashed into the sidewalk cafe, Call Me Gaby restaurant, on Feb. 24. (Miami Beach Police via AP) Copyright 2022 Associated Press. All rights reserved. This material may not be published, broadcast, rewritten or redistributed. Topics Law Enforcement Personal Auto A month after Broward Sheriff Gregory Tony fired the head of the deputies union, Jeff Bell announced a federal lawsuit against Tony. It marks Bells second attempt at winning a court battle over what he alleges is a violation of his First Amendment rights. Advertisement After an extensive Internal Affairs investigation launched in April 2020, Tony fired Bell on Jan. 27 after the investigation found Bell violated Sheriffs Office policies, including truthfulness, corrupt practices, employee statements, conduct unbecoming an employee and discretion, a Sheriffs Office news release said. [ Broward Sheriff Gregory Tony fires deputy union boss; criminal search warrant served at agencys office ] The investigation determined Bell used corrupt practices to prevent Tony from becoming sheriff by providing misinformation to news media about the Sheriffs Office not providing an adequate supply of personal protective equipment to union members at the start of the pandemic, Tony wrote in the January release. Advertisement The lawsuit complaint says that the Sheriffs Office suppressed Bells public speech when he was suspended with pay in April 2020 on grounds of conduct unbecoming after speaking out publicly about his opinion that the Sheriffs Office was unprepared for the pandemic and that the Sheriffs public statements to the contrary were false and dangerous to deputies and the community they serve. While the investigation into Bell was underway, Tony was investigated by the Florida Department of Law Enforcement for lying on official applications to become a Florida law enforcement officer, including an arrest for murder, a false statement on a drivers license replacement application, ingesting LSD and his traffic citation history, the complaint says. The investigation was closed, and Tony will not be charged. [ State finds Broward Sheriff Gregory Tony lied about his murder arrest and much more. But he wont be prosecuted. ] The complaint claims that when Tony fired Bell in January, that Tony assessed the truthfulness of Bells statements through the prism of his own statements and determinations as to what is truthful. Bell originally filed the lawsuit against Tony in April 2020, but U.S. District Judge Raag Singhal dismissed it in May that year as the case failed to allege an adverse employment action because Bell had not been fired and was suspended with pay, according to the complaint. Now that Bell has been terminated, the damages are clear. Sheriff Tony will be held to account in the District Court for his blatant attack on the labor union, Bells news release says. [ Investigation: Lies and omissions helped propel Broward Sheriff Gregory Tony to the top ] The lawsuit seeks payment of Bells attorney fees and costs, a declaration that Tony violated Bells First Amendment rights, to prohibit Bell from being disciplined for exercising First Amendment rights and to get his job as union president back. The State Bar of California is investigating a data breach after learning that a website published confidential information about 260,000 attorney discipline cases in California and other jurisdictions. State Bar officials learned about the posted records on Feb. 24, the Los Angeles Times reported. The records included case numbers, file dates, information about the types of cases and their statuses, respondent and complaining witnesses names. We apologize to anyone who is affected by the websites unlawful display of nonpublic data, State Bar executive Leah Wilson said in a statement. We take our obligations to protect confidential data with the utmost seriousness, and we are doing everything we can to ensure that we resolve this issue quickly and prevent any such breaches from recurring. Full case records were not published. Officials said they dont know whether the published information was the result of a hacking incident. Judyrecords.com is a website that aggregates nationwide court case records. The State Bar website allows the public to search for case information, but the information on the attorney discipline cases posted by judyrecords.com is not supposed to be available to the public, the Times said. Copyright 2022 Associated Press. All rights reserved. This material may not be published, broadcast, rewritten or redistributed. Topics California A Houston-based oil company on Feb. 28 sued two container ship operators and an organization that helps oversee marine traffic, saying they failed to prevent last falls underwater pipeline leak off the Southern California coast. Amplify Energy Corp., which owns the pipeline that ruptured and faces a criminal charge for its oversight, claims that in January 2021 two ships dragged their anchors across the pipeline that ferried crude from offshore oil platforms to the coast. The federal court filing also accuses the Marine Exchange of Southern California of failing to route the ships to deeper waters before an impending storm and failing to inform Amplify after the anchor-dragging incidents. The ships are MSC Danit, operated by Mediterranean Shipping Company, S.A,, and the COSCO Beijing, operated by Costamare Shipping Co., S.A. It is entirely foreseeable that allowing massive container ships to remain anchored near a pipeline might, in the event of a storm, result in damage to that pipeline and subsequent harm to the environment, Amplify wrote in its filing, adding more than 20 other vessels left anchorages outside the ports of Los Angeles and Long Beach to ride out the storms high winds and waves in deeper water. Amplify alleged that had the ships and Marine Exchange not been negligent, the spill wouldnt have happened. The filing adds the exchange, which logs shipping activity in the heavily traveled region, to ongoing litigation over the spill. Amplify already faces federal lawsuits over damages incurred by local fisherman, tour operators and others stemming from the October spill of about 25,000 gallons (94,600 liters) of crude oil into the Pacific Ocean. The Marine Exchange declined to comment and referred questions to the Coast Guard, with which it operates vessel traffic services, according to the exchanges website. A message was also left for the Coast Guard. The MSC Danit and COSCO Beijing were already named in the ongoing litigation. An email message was sent to MSC. No one answered a phone listed for COSCO in Los Angeles. While less severe than initially feared, the oil spill about 4 miles (6.4 kilometers) offshore shuttered beaches for a week and fisheries for more than a month, oiled birds and threatened wetlands that Orange County communities have been striving to restore. U.S. prosecutors last year charged Amplify and two of its subsidiaries with illegally discharging oil. They claimed the companies failed to respond to eight leak detection system alarms over a 13-hour period that should have alerted them to the spill and would have minimized the damage. Amplify has said workers believed they were false alarms. The complaint filed Monday seeks damages for lost revenue from suspended oil production since the spill, and that the Marine Exchange not allow ships to anchor near the pipeline when severe weather is likely. Copyright 2022 Associated Press. All rights reserved. This material may not be published, broadcast, rewritten or redistributed. Topics Lawsuits California Energy Oil Gas Opinion Policies Editorials are longer opinion pieces that are written by a group of community members recruited across campus who address relevant issues on a local, national and international level. Editorials are research-based. The purpose of the Editorial Board is to promote discussion concerning relevant issues in the community while advising on possible solutions. Topics are chosen via relevancy and interests of the members, which are then discussed by the Editorial Board in order to reach a general consensus concerning the topic or issue. Feedback policy If you have a grievance concerning the content or argument of the Editorial Board, please contact either Opinion Editor Peyton Hamel (peyton.hamel@iowastatedaily.com) or the Editorial Board as a whole (editorialboard@iowastatedaily.com). Those wanting to respond to editorials can also submit a letter to the editor through the Iowa State Daily website or by emailing the letter to Opinion Editor Peyton Hamel (peyton.hamel@iowastatedaily.com) or Editor-in-Chief Sage Smith (sage.smith@iowastatedaily.com). Column Policy Columns are hyper-specific to opinion and are written by only columnists employed by the Iowa State Daily. Columnists are unique because they have a specific writing day and only publish on those writing days. Each column undergoes a thorough editing process ensuring the integrity of the writer, and their claim is maintained while remaining research-based and respectful. Columns may be submitted from community members. These are labelled as Guest Columns. These contain similar research-based content and need to be at least 400 words in length. The following requirements should be met: first and last name, email and relation or position to Iowa State. Emails must be tied to the submitted guest column or it will not be accepted or published. Pseudonyms are prohibited and the writer will be banned from submissions. Read our full Opinion Policies here. Updated on 10/7/2020 Pharmaceutical manufacturer Novartis has reached an agreement with UK firm Sterling Pharma Solutions to divest its facility in Ringaskiddy in Cork. As part of the agreement announced today, Sterling will produce medicines in Ireland for Novartis. Both companies said the agreement with Sterling will secure the continued manufacturing of medicines and significant expertise in Ringaskiddy. Sterling said they foresee the continued provision of manufacturing, in a number of key areas, like cardiology, immunology and oncology to Novartis. Under the terms of the agreement, Sterling will acquire the 111-acre site, which includes three active pharmaceutical ingredient (API) manufacturing buildings, as well as support and development facilities. Novartis Ireland currently employs about 1,500 people across three locations in Cork and Dublin. In October 2019, the company announced the consolidation of manufacturing operations at Ringaskiddy with plans to phase out 320 jobs over a three-year period. At the time, 350 people were working at the manufacturing operation with a further 180 staff based at a global service centre on the same site. That process is currently at its halfway stage. Currently, there are approximately 400 staff working in manufacturing at the Ringaskiddy site. The site in Cork recently secured a $16m (14.4m) investment from Novartis to manufacture a strategic raw material for a significant cardiovascular medicine. Sterling will also manufacture Novartis medicines in the areas of immunology and oncology on the site. Maeve Byrne, Managing Director of Novartis Ringaskiddy said: We are very proud of our colleagues, who have achieved an excellent reputation for high quality, reliable production over the last 27 years. We are pleased to have secured the continued manufacturing of Novartis medicines in Ringaskiddy by Sterling, as well as to support the sustainability of jobs with significant expertise." Financial details of the sale, which is expected to close in the final quarter of this year have not been disclosed. Audrey Derveloy, Country President of Novartis in Ireland said they will support staff throughout the transition process. Sterlings Chief Executive Officer, Kevin Cook, said the addition of the Ringaskiddy facility to their portfolio will allow them to provide expanded capacity to their customers. "The site at Ringaskiddy has a number of synergies with our current global facilities enabling us to continue our growth strategy in the small molecule market, as well as extending our capabilities in several key technological areas such as peptide manufacturing and large-scale chromatography. The addition of the Ringaskiddy campus will see Sterlings global workforce to more than 1,000 employees. The Novartis acquisition follows Sterling's acquisition of a site in Wisconsin in the US from Alcami in 2020 and a dedicated antibody-drug conjugate facility in Deeside in the UK last year. A man accused of murdering a 71-year-old pensioner in her home told a detective that he had committed "five other murders", was working for the Kinahan Cartel and received 5,500 "for doing a murder", his trial has heard. When gardai called to the defendant's home, the 29-year-old fell to his knees, cried uncontrollably and said: "I killed a woman. I murdered a woman. I slit her throat and stuck a knife in her head". Trevor Rowe (29), with an address at Abbey Street, Kilkenny has pleaded not guilty to murdering 71-year-old Ann Butler at her home at Maudlin Street, Kilkenny on March 20, 2020. Detective Garda Martin Power testimony Giving evidence today, Detective Garda Martin Power of Kilkenny Garda Station told John O'Kelly SC, prosecuting, that he was on duty at 6.40pm on March 25 when he went to assist his colleagues on Cathedral Street, who were investigating the source of several anonymous phone calls made to the 999 emergency services call centre in Waterford. The detective said he was aware that the caller had indicated that he had murdered a woman, that her body was at the rear of Langtons Hotel and if this was not taken seriously then he would commit another murder. When he called to the accused's house, Det. Gda Power said the door was opened and he could hear an incoherent voice, which he believed was Mr Rowe's, coming from upstairs in the property. The detective walked upstairs into an open plan living room and met Mr Rowe, who was standing in front of the couch and appeared to be rummaging with both hands behind his back. Det. Gda Power said the accused recognised him. "I asked him what he was doing with his hands and he pulled out two screwdrivers, one in each hand. I asked him to leave the screwdrivers down and he complied with my request and left them aside," he said. The witness said he then asked the accused what knowledge he had of the 999 phone calls. "He walked around the back of the couch and fell to his knees crying uncontrollably," he said. The detective testified that the accused then said to him: I killed a woman. I murdered a woman. I slit her throat and stuck a knife in her head on March 20 at Maudlin Street. Det. Gda Power explained to Mr Rowe that gardai had conducted a search of Maudlin Street and nobody had been located. "He said it was the second house behind Langtons," said the detective. The witness asked Mr Rowe if he would show him where the body was on Maudlin Street and the accused agreed to take him there. "He was clearly under the influence of intoxicants and I observed bottles of Budweiser in his flat," he added. Det. Gda Power said the accused then claimed to have committed five other murders, was working for the "Kinahans" and got paid 5,500 "for doing a murder". "I know Trevor Rowe over 20 years and I didn't believe him when he proclaimed he had murdered anyone," said the detective. Mr Rowe was placed in an unmarked patrol car and requested gardai to stop the vehicle when they arrived at Maudlin Street, just a short distance away from Langton's car park. Det. Gda Power said he walked further up Maudlin Street with the accused and, at that point, Mr Rowe fell to the ground, broke down crying and indicated the area to him. "I knocked on a door and spoke to a male who answered the door and he said he was fine. I asked who was in the house next door with the red door. I then knocked on it and got no reply," he said. The detective said he opened the door because it was unlocked and as he did "a gush of heat" hit him along with a smell of what he believed to be a decaying body. "It was so strong I had to cover my nose and mouth with my hand and immediately closed the door," he said. The witness asked his colleague to check if there was a body in the house and he confirmed that there was a female body in a room and that the circumstances of her death appeared suspicious. "Mr Rowe was at the top of the steps and on the ground crying uncontrollably, asking that he not be brought into the house as he did not want to see the body," said the officer. Evidence of arrest Mr Rowe was arrested at 7.38pm that evening on suspicion of the murder of Ms Butler and conveyed to Kilkenny Garda Station. The witness said the accused was clearly upset in the patrol car and at times resorted to hitting the seat in front saying "what have I done, I just wanted her to be found". The accused said he had slit the woman's throat and put a knife in her head. "He also said he murdered another woman, cut her head off and threw it over John's Bridge and left her body at the back of the river," said the detective. Under cross-examination, Det. Gda Power told defence counsel Kathleen Leader SC that he knew Mr Rowe for the last 20 years and was on first-name terms with him. He agreed that the accused came from a troubled and disadvantaged background and whilst his mother did the best to look after him, she had her own problems. He also said that Mr Rowe's circumstances would have been difficult when he was young and authorities had been involved in his care from a very early age. Det. Gda Power said he was aware of Mr Rowe's drug and alcohol dependency. The witness agreed that the accused was respectful towards him, a conscientious person and was "a pleasure to deal with" in the garda station. In those circumstances at the time, Det. Gda Power agreed he did not believe that Mr Rowe was capable of killing someone. "I wouldn't have known him to be a person of violence," he said, further agreeing that it was only when he knew someone was dead in the house did he proceed on the basis that Mr Rowe had killed them. Gardai who called to a murder accused's home found him hysterically shouting that he had "slit her throat, buried a knife in her head" and that this was his "fifth one", his trial has heard. Garda Kevin Seymour testimony Giving evidence earlier on Wednesday, Garda Kevin Seymour told John O'Kelly SC, prosecuting, that he was in a patrol car when he got a call from the control centre on March 25 at 5.25pm. He was told that a man claiming to be God had said he murdered someone last Friday and that her body was in the second house at the back of Langtons Hotel. Gda Seymour said because gardai had such little information they had conducted welfare checks on Maudlin Street and nobody had any concerns for their neighbours. The witness said he got another call from the control centre stating they had received a call from a phone belonging to a Mr Noel Pierce and the dispatcher was informed that if gardai did not take the call seriously then there would be another murder that night. Mr Pierce has testified that he was living at Cathedral Square in Kilkenny on March 25, 2020, when Mr Rowe called to his house after 5.45pm without any notice. The witness said that Mr Rowe went into the toilet and used his phone. Gda Seymour said he went to Mr Pierce's house and gardai asked him for his mobile number, which matched one of the numbers that had rung the control centre. Mr Pierce's phone was then seized. The witness said he then went to the house of Mr Rowe's mother and afterwards to the accused's address at Abbey Street. Gda Seymour said he knocked on the door, which was ajar, and a man in the downstairs apartment told them that he shared accommodation with "some Rowe fella" upstairs. The witness could hear shouting and banging coming from upstairs and said his colleague Garda Bernard Power entered the premises before coming out with Mr Rowe. The garda said Mr Rowe was quite hysterical, seemed to be intoxicated, had his head bowed and was shouting: I slit her throat, I buried a knife in her head, that's my fifth one and I can't take it. Gda Seymour said Mr Rowe was brought to Maudlin Street and began to point towards a corner house, which they had checked prior to meeting Mr Rowe that day. The witness said the accused was saying "No, no, no" at the time. "He kept pointing at the house and broke down on the ground. We went to the house and upon opening the door a strong odour came from it," he said. Gda Seymour said the lights were on in the hallway and in the first bedroom but not in the living room. There were blood-stains along the wall in the hall. The witness said one of his colleagues entered the living room and stated that there was a body lying on the couch. Under cross-examination, defence counsel Kathleen Leader SC asked the witness to explain what he meant about her client "breaking down". "He just went down on his knees and started roaring uncontrollably. He wasn't roaring anything in particular, just crying very hysterically," said Gda Seymour. Garda Daniel Keane testimony Garda Daniel Keane told Mr O'Kelly that he was driving another patrol car on March 25 and was aware of the anonymous 999 calls made to the control centre. The witness said he was present when gardai attended Ms Rowe's house and she had asked officers whether her son had "done something terrible". Ms Rowe told gardai that Trevor no longer lived with her and was now living at Abbey Street. Gda Keane said he heard noises and shouting coming from the upstairs apartment at Abbey Street. The witness said gardai entered the premises and Mr Rowe was upstairs in the dark. The accused appeared intoxicated and was shoving something down the back of his trousers at the time but was told to stop by gardai. The accused then dropped two screwdrivers from his hands, he said. The witness said he heard Mr Rowe say: "I murdered her, I done her head in and slit her throat. I could tell you about five more too". The accused then lay on the ground and cried. Mr O'Kelly asked the witness if gardai had asked the accused who he had killed. "He didn't make a response and wasn't making sense," he replied. Gda Keane said the defendant got into the patrol car which was driven to Maudlin Street. Gardai knocked at a house with a red door but someone came to the door and indicated to officers that everything was ok there. Read More Anne Butler murder trial hears accused called gardai three times after killing Mr Rowe and gardai proceeded to walk up Maudlin Street. When they turned onto a lane, Mr Rowe fell to his knees and said "I didn't mean to" before pointing at a corner house in the courtyard. The court heard this was not Ms Butler's house but the one beside it was. Under cross-examination, Gda Keane agreed with Ms Leader that Mr Rowe said he had murdered a woman when they went to his apartment and had laid on the ground crying. He also agreed that her client was not making any sense at that stage. The witness further agreed that Mr Rowe had looked confused when he pointed out a house with a red door only for officers to be told everything was OK there. When the accused fell to his knees on Maudlin Street and broke down, the witness said he heard Mr Rowe say he "didn't mean to" and then point in the direction of Ms Butler's house. The trial continues this afternoon before Ms Justice Karen O'Connor and a jury of seven men and five women. President Joe Biden will vow to make Vladimir Putin pay a price for Russias invasion of Ukraine in his first State of the Union address. Mr Biden planned in his remarks to highlight the bravery of Ukrainian defenders and the resolve of a newly reinvigorated Western alliance that has worked to rearm the Ukrainian military and cripple Russias economy through sanctions. He is set to deliver an ominous warning that without consequences, Russian President Putins aggression would not be contained to Ukraine. Throughout our history weve learned this lesson when dictators do not pay a price for their aggression, they cause more chaos, Mr Biden is to say, according to advance excerpts released by the White House. They keep moving. And, the costs and threats to America and the world keep rising. President Joe Biden (Patrick Semansky/AP) Even before the Russian invasion sent energy costs skyrocketing, prices for American families had been rising, and the Covid-19 pandemic continues to hurt families and the countrys economy. Mr Biden planned to outline plans to address inflation by reinvesting in American manufacturing capacity, speeding supply chains and reducing the burden of childcare and eldercare on workers. We have a choice, Mr Biden was to say. One way to fight inflation is to drive down wages and make Americans poorer. I have a better plan to fight inflation. Lower your costs, not your wages. Set against disquiet at home and danger abroad, the White House had conceived Tuesday nights speech as an opportunity to highlight the improving coronavirus outlook, rebrand Mr Bidens domestic policy priorities and show a path to lower costs for families grappling with soaring inflation. But it has taken on new significance with last weeks Russian invasion of Ukraine and nuclear sabre-rattling by Mr Putin. Mr Biden will address a mask-optional crowd in the House chamber, one sign of the easing coronavirus threat. But he will also speak from within a newly fenced Capitol due to renewed security concerns after last years insurrection. Rising energy prices as a result of Russias war in Ukraine risk exacerbating inflation in the US, which is already at the highest level in 40 years, eating into peoples earnings and threatening the economic recovery from the pandemic. And while the geopolitical crisis in Eastern Europe may have helped to cool partisan tensions in Washington, it cannot erase the political and cultural discord that is casting doubt on Bidens ability to deliver on his pledge to promote national unity. Mr Biden is speaking to an American public that is frustrated with his performance. A February AP-NORC poll found that more people disapproved than approved of how Mr Biden is handling his job, 55% to 44%. That is down from a 60% favourable rating last July. White House officials acknowledge the mood of the country is sour, citing the lingering pandemic and inflation. Mr Biden, in his speech, will highlight progress from a year ago with the majority of the US population now vaccinated and millions more people at work but also acknowledge that the job is not yet done, a recognition of American discontent. Mr Biden aides say they believe the national psyche is a trailing indicator that will improve with time. But time is running short for the president, who needs to salvage his first-term agenda to revive the political fortunes of his party before Novembers midterm elections. Taoiseach Micheal Martin has described Russian president Vladimir Putin as a "thug" and a "bully" who has committed war crimes in breach of international law. Speaking in the Dail, Mr Martin also said while he understood the anger towards the Russian ambassador and his utterances in advance of the invasion, he said no EU country was proposing the expulsion of ambassadors at this time. He said it was important that Ireland works in unity with EU partners. Mr Martin said it was important from a practical point of view, in terms of looking after our citizens either in Russia or in Ukraine that we keep all channels open right now. He said Ireland had "a limited presence and the embassy in Moscow" with six individuals, who "have a fundamental function to look after our citizens in Russia, he said. It comes as Ukraine's prime minister told Mr Martin the situation on the ground in Ukraine was "extremely difficult and tough". The Taoiseach spoke with Denys Shmyhal on Tuesday evening with the Ukrainian PM saying civilians, including children, were being killed in indiscriminate attacks. Mr Martin said his Ukrainian counterpart "thanked Ireland for our solidarity, political, economic and humanitarian support in the face of Russian aggression". He added he told Mr Shmyhal of Ireland's strong support for EU enlargement and Ukraines application for membership. Ukraine's president, Volodymyr Zelenskyy, earlier appealed to the European Union to grant the country membership to the bloc. [social=twitter]https://twitter.com/MichealMartinTD/status/1498748113082888192[/social= In the Dail on Tuesday, Mr Martin said Ireland had no hesitation in supporting sanctions against Russia. First of all, we will do everything we can to ensure compliance with the sanctions. We have no interest, none, zero, in enabling any Russian oligarch or anyone who's part of the sanctions list. We have no interest, as a country, in protecting anybody in that regard, let us be crystal clear in that, he said. Mr Martin told the Dail Putin had fundamentally altered the multilateral rules-based order since the end of the Cold War. No one in this House or anywhere else should be under any illusions about the seriousness of the situation that Europe and the world faces right now this afternoon, Mr Martin said. Vladimir Putin, a bully and a thug, has unleashed an unprovoked and unjustifiable war on the people of Ukraine, committing war crimes in the process as we are witnessing. As [Ukrainian] President [Volodymyr] Zelenskyy said, most movingly to the European Parliament this morning, every day now in Ukraine is someones last day. I was very struck by both the contribution he made there and indeed to the European heads of state last Thursday at the EU council. He added: The biggest challenge facing us as a country, I believe, is that we must be very, very generous in terms of the refugee crisis that will undoubtedly flow as a result of this war. It will be beyond anything that weve comprehended before. Ive said to my colleagues in Government and to the departments: we must put to one side what we might have considered to be the norms in terms of responding in a humanitarian way to the plight of the Ukrainian people. In terms of issuing visa waivers for Ukrainian citizens, he said, the Cabinet on Tuesday morning went further in the European Union in allowing displaced people to come to Ireland. He said EU justice and home affairs ministers will meet on Thursday in Brussels to ratify this. Asked by Sinn Fein President Mary Lou McDonald and Social Democrats leader Catherine Martin about what Putin has done, Mr Martin said: I agree with the sentiments expressed by the deputy in relation to the appalling attack and war being raged against Ukrainian people by Vladimir Putin and the Russian leadership. And I have no doubt that the vast majority of Russian people do not support this war, he said. Mr Martin also addressed "the diplomatic issue" stating: First of all, anything we do I believe should be in concert with our European partners. I think European strength and support unity of purpose is very important here, he said. Ms Murphy cited examples of Russian companies being able to use the IFSC in Dublin as a means to avoid sanctions and operate a scheme of accessing money and called on the Government to clamp down on that. Separately, Mr Martin responded to a question from Right to Change TD Joan Collins, who raised the recent unfair dismissal case of workers in a Dublin restaurant over the withholding of tips by the company. Mr Martin said tips were essentially being retained or kept used as part of wages is absolutely unacceptable. That's reprehensible and wrong, if that was what transpired here. He said there should be full and absolute transparency governing the issue of tips. He said many people are under the impression that tips go to workers but they dont. Alan Kelly has announced he is to resign as Labour Party leader after his parliamentary colleagues told him they had lost confidence in him. Delivering a public statement at Leinster House on Wednesday evening, Mr Kelly acknowledged that the party had not made progress in the opinion polls under his leadership. In an emotional speech, Mr Kelly thanked his party members, staff, family and friends. He singled out his wife Regina, who was by his side as he made his announcement on the plinth of Leinster House. He said: I am resigning as leader of the Labour Party. I was advised by my parliamentary colleagues on Tuesday morning that they had lost confidence in my leadership. It was a surprise to me, he said. Alan Kelly arrives at the plinth and announces he resigns as leader of the Labour Party. He was advised on Tuesday his party had lost confidence in him and he accepted immediately. They had frank discussions in recent weeks. We havent been able to move on in the opinion polls. pic.twitter.com/a4xvwPDR37 aoife moore. (@aoifegracemoore) March 2, 2022 Mr Kelly said the party had a number of frank discussions in recent weeks and especially over the last week or so. He said it is his intention to stay on as a TD, and thanked the people of Tipperary for electing him in three elections. Mr Kelly said it was quite difficult to gain momentum as a new party leader during the pandemic and acknowledged that Labour has remained stagnant in the polls. He said: Becoming leader of the Labour Party was the best political day of my life. I was very humbled and overwhelmed by the support I got. Ultimately, the leadership of the party is a decision for the Central Council parliamentary party have expressed their collective view. For that reason, I've decided to step down. It's understood that Ivana Bacik, who won a seat in the Dublin Bay South constituency last July, is tipped to succeed Mr Kelly. The Irish Examiner revealed earlier today that his position as leader has been in doubt after months of internal strife within the party. The Labour parliamentary party members will meet this evening where they will decide the next steps, however, Mr Kelly's leadership has been the source of concern for many within the party for months. It is understood that staffing issues have been a source of concern. Mr Kelly said that his parliamentary colleagues had told him they had lost confidence in his leadership. Picture: Niall Carson/PA Wire Sources also confirmed there had been criticism of Mr Kelly's leadership style as the party continues to stall in the polls. One representative said that Mr Kelly's plan to improve the party would involve him "travelling around the country, pressing the flesh". Another source said that issues had come to a head in last week's parliamentary party when Mr Kelly faced serious criticism from the representatives present, with one TD saying that they ultimately felt that the decision on Mr Kelly's future would lie with Dublin Fingal TD Duncan Smith. "If Duncan says he has to go, he has to go," they said. A senior Labour source said that it was: "Duncan (Smith) and Ged (Nash) and Sean Sherlock driving this" about the leadership heave. While the staffing issue had been a factor, a source said "it's not the big thing, it's not what pushed people over the edge". "It's all been very fraught. It has been a weird time for the party for a long time. "There were fundamental conversations around his leadership happening before the latest controversy." It is understood that many had been unhappy with Mr Kelly for a long time. "It's not nice, it's grim." It is understood there will be an emergency meeting of the executive board in the next 48 hours and an interim leader will be appointed. The executive will also have to decide on how any leadership contest will be run and the timing of this. Membership are said to be bewildered by the news of Mr Kellys resignation. This is very much seen as a parliamentary party issue, the people we are seeing speaking out are saying they dont understand and theres no reason to resign. The Irish Examiner has attempted to contact every member of the parliamentary party and key advisers in recent days to no reply. Mr Kelly was announced as the new leader of the Labour Party in April 2020, having won 55% of the vote. Developers have submitted fresh plans to An Bord Pleanala for over 600 new homes at the former CMP Dairy site on the Kinsale Road in Cork. It is the second such application made by Watfore Ltd, a property management and development subsidiary of Dairygold after the planning board sought further consideration and/or amendment to the proposals first lodged last August. The site is a 3.39-hectare brownfield location lying between Cork Airport and the city centre, at the junction of Tramore Road and Kinsale Road. Largely idle since the CMP dairy closed in 2006, the site was rezoned to residential, local services and institutional uses by Cork city council in 2019 which would facilitate the proposed development. The strategic housing development has now reached the application stage and will consist of 561 apartments and 48 townhouses, along with a community hub facility, a gym, a retail unit and a cafe. The housing will be split across 189 one-bed, 338 two-bed, 48 three-bed and 34 four-bed dwellings. Furthermore, 257 of these will be build-to-rent apartments. It means that over half (55%) will be two-bed dwellings with just under a third (31%) being one-bed. Planners said that Cork city is significantly underperforming in the provision of apartments and that this development addresses the distinct market need for smaller dwellings in Cork city. The proposed development has been designed to be inclusive of all age groups and mobility levels, they said. It is envisaged that a sustainable, diverse community can be realised on-site, supported by existing and proposed facilities and services on-site and in the local area. The scheme would also incorporate 209 shared car parking spaces, along with electric vehicle charging points, 1,145 bicycle spaces and 21 motorcycle spaces. Furthermore, it is also intended for the primary care centre to be built on the site at a future stage. A planning application for that would be separate from this process. A meeting in October involving An Bord Pleanala, planners for the development and Cork City Council, the council said it was committed to seeing this primary care centre realised. The council added that while it was welcomed to see a development planned for the site, a potential occupancy of 2,000 people raised a concern in terms of density and layout of the site. After submitting a consultation for its strategic housing development, planners were given a number of issues by An Bord Pleanala that must be addressed in their application. Chief among them is the delivery of pedestrian and cycle links from the proposed development to the closest bus stop and Black Ash Park and Ride. The planning board wanted to be provided with a housing quality assessment, a traffic and transport assessment and details of a green infrastructure plan. It also sought further justification for the height strategy outlined by the planners and how it integrates with the wider area and density. Planners said that it going from their original proposals of 706 dwellings to 609 dwellings, it reduced the density and significantly reduced heights at the southern end of the site. While the proposed development is located in a suburban area of Cork city, its immediate surrounding environment is not currently residential, with the nearest houses being approximately 170m from the site, they said. Therefore, the redevelopment of the site presents an opportunity for significant transformation of the immediate area for positive residential development. An Bord Pleanala is due to make a decision in this case by 16 June 2022. In a statement to the Irish Examiner, a spokesperson for Watfore Ltd said the project is expected to create over 500 jobs during construction and support at least 200 jobs once complete. The spokesperson said: "The vision for Creamfields is that it will breathe a new lease of life into the area and become a catalyst for a wider development of a significant new city centre precinct. "The layout and design of the development allows for easy and safe connectivity to Cork Airport, Tramore Valley Park and will also be within 15 minutes of the city centre by public transport." Ukrainian officials said that the Russian forces fired at the Kyiv TV tower and Ukraines main Holocaust memorial, among other civilian sites targeted on the sixth day of the Russian invasion. Ukraines State Service for Emergency Situations said the strikes on the TV tower killed five people and left five more wounded. Burma Another 100 Homes Lost in Myanmars Thantlang as Regime Forces Torch Town Yet Again Almost half of the structures in the mountain-top town of Thantlang, Chin State, have been burned down after 26 arson attacks by junta forces. / Thantlang Placement Affairs Committee - IDPs help More than 100 houses in Thantlang burned down when military regime forces torched the mountain-top town in western Myanmars Chin State for a reported 26th time in late February. Thantlang Placement Affairs Committee-IDPs, a local organization helping people displaced from Thantlang, said in a statement released on Tuesday that 101 houses burned down on Feb. 25 and 27 in the juntas latest arson attack. Thantlang has suffered from repeated arson attacks by regime forces since September last year when large numbers of local armed resistance fighters in Chin State inflicted heavy casualties on regime soldiers there. In late October, junta troops burned down more than 160 houses in the town. Aerial photos depicting smoke rising above a burning Thantlang shocked the world when they were splashed in international media. The US condemned the attack. Nestled in the mountains of Chin State, Thantlang had around 2,700 houses before the coup in February 2021. Now, after repeated blazes set by regime forces over the past six months, more than 1,000 of those houses are gone. A local Chin resistance fighter said regime troops are stationed on a hill in the middle of the town, and conduct the frequent arson attacks in order to keep the ground around them clear. The resistance forces are fighting [with junta forces] every day in Thantlang. They want to clear the ground so they know when the resistance fighters are close. However, he added that regime forces also burn houses in reprisal whenever one of their fellow soldiers is killed. An official from the Thantlang organization believed the regimes repeated targeting of the town could be due to the growing number of resistance fighters in the area, as the Chin National Army, an armed wing of the Chin National Frontan anti-regime ethnic Chin partyhad gained strength in recent months. Regime forces are monitored closely by resistance fighters from the hills near Thantlang, the committee member said. Thantlang residents have been forced to flee the town since September, when the arson attacks started. Some have taken shelter in villages nearby, while some went to the Chin State capital, Hakha. Almost the whole of Thantlangs population of 10,000 have been forced to abandon their property and flee; the belongings of many have since been reduced to ashes. The town is currently nearly deserted. This is the inhumane action of the military council. It is very bad, the official from the aid organization said. You may also like these stories: Myanmar Junta Denies Medical Treatment to Political Prisoners Both Sides Sustain Casualties as Fighting Rages Between PDFs and Myanmar Junta New ASEAN Envoy to Myanmar Says He Wants to Meet Junta Opponents Burma Food Shortages in Western Myanmar as Regime Forces Block Access to Region IDPs in Mindat. / CJ Internally displaced persons (IDPs) and residents in Mindat, Kanpetlet and Thantlang townships in southern Chin State are facing food shortages and rising food prices due to junta forces blocking access roads. The military regime has been attacking resistance groups in southern Chin State, and has cut supply routes in Magwe Regions Saw Township linked with Mindat, Kanpetlet and Thantlang townships. As a result, locals are now running short of rice and other basic foodstuffs, as well as medicines and other consumer goods. They have continuously blocked the roads. They barely allow food supplies to pass through. As a result, food prices have almost doubled. Food supplies are also scarce and hard to buy. Medicines are also hard to buy, a Mindat resident told The Irrawaddy. Junta soldiers have occasionally robbed food and medicine shipments as they were transported to Chin State, he added. Since May, the military regime has blocked humanitarian aid from reaching tens of thousands of people affected by the fighting in Chin State. While we are having difficulties bringing in food, we also havent been able to grow any food for months. So we are facing greater hardship. People who are sheltering at IDP camps said food is now running out. We could not sell the elephant foot yam that we grew last year because there was nothing to transport it with. Things have got harder. We are also not growing elephant foot yam this year, so food shortages are expected in the coming months, said the Mindat resident. Other locals also said that a food crisis is very likely to occur in Chin State if the junta continues to block access roads. The regime has also confiscated food supplies bound for Kanpetlet on many occasions, and IDPs there are already going hungry. Some 4,000 locals have been displaced in Kanpetlet since clashes broke out in the town between the Chinland Defense Force and the Myanmar military last May. One Thantlang resident said: There are some 270 people from around 60 households at the IDP camp in our town. Food is running out because the regime has cut supply routes. IDPs have no money and they barely receive donations. We need donors. Mountain-top Thantlang was heavily shelled by junta forces last year and over 200 houses went up in flames, according to residents. Over 21,000 people from five townships in Chin State fled their homes due to food shortages last year, according to the United Nations Office for the Coordination of Humanitarian Affairs (UNOCHA). Some 218,900 people have been displaced by fighting in Chin, Kachin, Kayah, Karen, Mon and Shan states as well as in Magwe, Sagaing and Tanintharyi regions, according to UNOCHA. The United Nations estimates that the number of people needing assistance will grow from one million before last years coup to 14.4 million this year, including more than five million children. About 25 million people, or roughly half Myanmars population, could be living below the national poverty line in 2022. You may also like these stories: Kachin Independence Army, PDFs Attack Myanmar Junta Bases in Kachin State Myanmar Junta Foreign Minister Barred From ASEAN Meeting Myanmar Coup Leaders Protege Appointed to Junta Anti-Graft Body Burma Junta Jets Bomb Villages as Fighting in Northern Myanmar Intensifies Internally displaced villagers in Putao in the last week of February. / Kachin News Junta jets launched airstrikes four times in February in Myanmars northernmost township of Putao in Kachin State, where clashes between regime troops and the combined forces of the Kachin Independence Army (KIA) and local Peoples Defense Forces (PDF) have been ongoing for a month. The latest airstrikes took place in Sum Pi Yang in Putao. The junta launched airstrikes on Shanegut Bum Hill in Sum Pi Yang, where fighting intensified on the ground on Tuesday, said Colonel Naw Bu, the KIAs spokesperson. Col. Naw Bu told The Irrawaddy that junta jets have been in action four times since February 3. Military tensions remain high in Putao with hundreds of displaced villagers from Sum Pi Yang, Lon Sha Yang and Nsi Yang still sheltering in the forest, according to locals. A few villagers managed to reach Putao Town or Myitkyina, the Kachin capital, which is 330 kilometres south of Putao. However, locals said that most refugees fleeing Sum Pi Yang and Lon Sha Yang are unable to pass military regime checkpoints. While Putao saw the most serious fighting in Kachin in February, there were also fierce clashes in the jade town of Hpakant, as well as in Bhamo and Mansi. Junta jets also launched airstrikes against KIA bases in Hpakant and Tanai townships. KIA spokesperson Col. Naw Bu didnt disclose casualty figures, but local media reported that at least 10 regime soldiers were killed on February 27 alone. Last week, the road connecting Putao and Myitkyina was closed, causing a shortage of goods in Putao and a spike in commodity prices, especially for petrol and diesel fuel. On Wednesday, the road reopened but traffic was limited to goods and petrol trucks from 6am to 5pm, said Putao PDF, with only a driver and his assistant allowed on each vehicle. Putao PDF warned traders not to transport any military-linked products such as beer produced by military-backed breweries or military equipment and weapons. For now, the people displaced by the clashes are unlikely to be able to return to their villages. It may be difficult for the villagers to return to their homes at the moment. They will have to wait and see how the situation develops as the other sides [junta] troops are still in those areas, said Col. Naw Bu. People in the fighting areas must be careful whenever they travel. The junta uses civilian vehicles to transport their goods and military equipment. Therefore we closed the road for the peoples safety, added Col. Naw Bu. Telecommunications are also restricted in Putao. Myanma Posts and Telecommunications SIM cards barely work, while the Telenor network was shut down for a week until Tuesday. The Ooredoo network has been inaccessible for two weeks, and only the Myanmar military-backed Mytel network is currently accessible, according to a Putao resident who wished to remain anonymous. You may also like these stories: Myanmar Junta Jails Ousted NLD Chief Minister for 21 Years Over Alleged Corruption Russia-Ukraine Crisis Prompts Myanmar Junta Emergency Meeting Isolated Russia Defends Ukraine Invasion at UN General Assembly Guest Column ASEAN Responds to Invasion of Ukraine Russian President Vladimir Putin attends an ASEAN summit via a video link at his residence outside Moscow on Oct. 28, 2021. / AFP Russias all-out invasion of Ukraine that began on Feb. 24 offers valuable lessons for the countries in the region, which have often become the pitched geopolitical battleground for the great powers. From now on, no matter how the Ukraine crisis ends, it will significantly impact the security of Europe and lead to the emergence of a new order to which ASEAN has to quickly adjust. On Saturday, ASEAN was ready and issued a strongly worded statement towards one of its strategic partners saying that they are deeply concerned over the evolving situation and hostilities in Ukraine. The statement was released after Russian troops began military assaults on key Ukrainian cities. Russia is one of the groupings nine strategic partners that also comprise China, Japan, South Korea, India, Australia, New Zealand, the US and the EU. We call on all relevant parties to exercise maximum restraint and make utmost effort to pursue dialogues through all channels, including diplomatic means to contain the situation, to de-escalate tensions, and to seek peaceful resolution in accordance with the international laws, and the principles of the United Nations charter and the Treaty of Amity and Cooperation in Southeast Asia, the statement read. Before its release, it was circulated among all the 10-member countries including Myanmar. Naypyitaw went along without any objection. However, before ASEANs common positions were made public, key ASEAN members had already issued their own views. Indonesia and Singapore condemned the military action by Russia. Other ASEAN members also expressed concern to various degrees. In a statement, a spokesperson of Singapores Foreign Ministry strongly condemned any unprovoked invasion of a sovereign country under any pretext. He added Singapore is gravely concerned by Russias special military operation in the Donbas region, and reports of land and air attacks on multiple targets in Ukraine. We reiterate that the sovereignty, independence and territorial integrity of Ukraine must be respected. Teuku Faizasyah, the Indonesian Foreign Ministry spokesperson, said that Indonesia is concerned about the escalation of the armed conflict in Ukraine, which seriously endangers the safety of the people and affects peace in the region. [We] assert that international law and the United Nations Charter on territorial integrity must be adhered to and condemn any action that clearly constitutes a violation of the territory and sovereignty of a country, said Faizasyah. Indonesia, he added, still expects all parties to prioritize negotiations and diplomacy to stop conflicts and encourage peaceful settlements. Besides the ASEAN joint statement, Thailand made two additional comments. The first was a short one at home and the other a more critical one at the UN headquarters in New York. In his remarks at the UNs 76th plenary session, Suriya Chinadawongse, Thailands representative to the UN, expressed deep concern over the escalation of tensions threatening international peace and security. Thailand also supports efforts to find a peaceful settlement of the situation through dialogue in accordance with the UN charter and international law, upholding the principles of sovereignty and territorial integrity. Thailand supports the Minsk agreementthe ceasefire pact signed in 2015 between Kyiv and Moscow as well as other UN efforts and regional mechanisms including the OSCE and Normandy Format. Thailand is also concerned at the possible humanitarian consequences. For Myanmar, it was doublespeak as it turned out. Zaw Min Tun, the military juntas spokesperson, said the Russian military had done what was justified for the sustainability of their countrys sovereignty and showed its status as a powerful country for the balance of world peace. Since the coup last February, Russia and the junta in Naypyitaw have further strengthened their relationship especially in security cooperation. Russia is a major arms exporter to Myanmar. According to the Stockholm International Peace Research Institute, between 1998-2018, Russia was the No. 1 arms supplier to all Southeast Asian countries. Later this year, Russias relations with ASEAN and the wider Asia-Pacific region will be put to the test internationally as Russian President Vladimir Putin is due to attend the ASEAN-related summits in Phnom Penh and the Asia Pacific Economic Leaders Meeting in Bangkok in November. These two major events will place a marker or two on Russias role and profile after the Ukraine debacle. It is difficult at this time to make any forecast. For Thailand, the stakes are high as ever as the country is hosting the APEC summit. Concerned authorities fear that major powers conflict could manifest itself on the APEC platform. Before the official announcement was made on Feb. 11 that the US would host next years APEC, some political dramas were played out at earlier senior official meetings in Phuket to bar the US from assuming the chair. As the host, Thailand is looking forward to welcoming all the leaders of 21 economies, especially the US, China and Russia. When Thailand chaired APEC in 2003, His Majesty King Bhumibol Adulyadej the Great welcomed three state guestsUS President George W Bush, Chinese President Hu Jintao and Putin. Of the three leaders, only Putin remains in power. He is expected to attend the Bangkok summit this November. Since it will be the first year of possible physical meetings among all leaders from 21 economies in the Asia Pacific which includes the US, Russia and China, Thailand wishes to use this opportunity to herald a new economic development model for the world to see. However, if the tensions in Ukraine continue without any possibility of a settlement, it could directly impact the scheduled APEC leaders meeting, which has been set for Nov. 18 and 19. Kavi Chongkittavorn is a veteran journalist on regional affairs. This article first appeared in The Bangkok Post. You may also like these stories: Myanmar Impasse Challenges ASEAN Cambodia: ASEANs Spoiler or Savior? Cambodia Set to Take Global Stage Again as ASEAN Chair Trinity, TX (77320) Today Partly cloudy early followed by cloudy skies overnight. A stray shower or thunderstorm is possible. Low 74F. Winds SSE at 5 to 10 mph.. Tonight Partly cloudy early followed by cloudy skies overnight. A stray shower or thunderstorm is possible. Low 74F. Winds SSE at 5 to 10 mph. POMPANO BEACH All she heard was a casual conversation between her two roommates in the hallway outside her bedroom in their Pompano Beach home. Then she heard the boom of two gunshots, followed by a roommate shouting, Dont shoot me, mister! a probable cause affidavit says. Donald Wayne Stephen, 72, of Pompano Beach, was arrested Saturday and is accused of shooting his roommate three times, killing him, the affidavit says. He faces one count of murder without premeditation. Advertisement The Broward Sheriffs Office is not releasing the victims name, citing Marsys Law, a 2018 voter-approved constitutional amendment that allows victims of crimes to withhold their name and information from the public. Donald Wayne Stephen, 72, of Pompano Beach, was arrested Saturday and is accused of shooting his roommate three times, killing him. He faces one count of murder without premeditation. (Broward Sheriff's Office) The shooting happened shortly before noon Saturday at Stephens home near the 2000 block of Northwest 12th Street in Pompano Beach, the Sheriffs Office said. When deputies and fire rescue crews got to the home, they found the victim lying in a pool of blood outside. Advertisement Several witnesses told investigators they saw the victim walk out of the home, stained with blood and struggling to stand before he collapsed. They saw Stephen walking right behind him, the affidavit says. Call 911! Call 911! the victim shouted to a witness before he collapsed a second time in the front yard, the affidavit says. As the witness called 911, he saw Stephen stand over the victim watching him lie in agony, the affidavit says. Another witness, a neighbor, asked Stephen what happened, to which he responded, He got shot. I shot him, Stephen replied when the neighbor asked who shot the victim, the affidavit says. Stephen did not try to help the victim or call 911, the affidavit says. A blood trail started at the victims front walkway and followed to where he collapsed. Detectives found a spent bullet lying on the sidewalk, believing the bullet fell out of the victims body as he struggled to escape, the affidavit says. Fire rescue crews pronounced the victim dead at the scene after attempting to render aid, the Sheriffs Office said. The mens other roommate told investigators she heard the two casually conversing in the hallway prior to the shooting. Then she heard two gunshots and the victim beg not to be shot, the affidavit says. The roommate called 911 just as she saw the two men fall into her bedroom, feeling and smelling blood on her bed, the affidavit says. She then ran to hide in her closet. Advertisement Inside the home, deputies found a black semi-automatic gun lying in the living room, the affidavit says. The victims body had several gunshot wounds, according to an examination by the Broward County Medical Examiners Office. Investigators determined the victim was shot first in the bathroom, in the hallway after he escaped the bathroom and a third time again in the hallway, where a blood stain about 4-and-a-half-feet tall was left behind, the affidavit says. Both the victim and Stephen had called 911 about each other before, the affidavit says. 911 call records showed the victim called in June 2021 about Stephen being drunk, armed and trying to fight him. Then in September, the victim told dispatchers someone was messing with him and his belongings and that he would hurt whomever it was that was doing this with a machete, the affidavit says. In December 2021, Stephen called 911 and reported the victim was yelling and asked for officers to come for help. Advertisement Stephen is held in the Broward Main Jail without bond. Ithaca, NY (14850) Today Cloudy skies this evening will become partly cloudy after midnight. Low 44F. Winds NNW at 5 to 10 mph.. Tonight Cloudy skies this evening will become partly cloudy after midnight. Low 44F. Winds NNW at 5 to 10 mph. Ithaca, NY (14850) Today Cloudy early with some clearing expected late. Low near 45F. Winds NNW at 5 to 10 mph.. Tonight Cloudy early with some clearing expected late. Low near 45F. Winds NNW at 5 to 10 mph. BuzzFeed reporter John Paczkowski has sent a tweet with a screenshot that shows Apple has "paused all product sales in Russia." With Apple having previously stopped Apple Pay users in Russia from being able to use the service, it was only a matter of time before Apple stopped selling products in Russia too, as the war has escalated, and that has now happened. The screenshot Paczkowski shared from Apple says: "We are deeply concerned about the Russian invasion of Ukraine and stand with all of the people who are suffering as a result of the violence. We are supporting humanitarian efforts, providing aid for the unfolding refugee crisis, and doing all we can to support our teams in the region. "We have taken a number of actions in response to the invasion. We have paused all product sales in Russia. Last week, we stopped all exports into our sales channel in the country. Apple Pay and other services have been limited. RT News and Sputnik News are no longer available for download from the App Store outside Russia. And we have disabled both traffic and live incidents in Apple Maps in Ukraine as a safety and precautionary measure for Ukrainian citizens. "We will continue to evaluate the situation and are in communication with relevant governments on the actions we are taking. We join all those around the world who are calling for peace." Google has also stopped users in Russia from making additions to Google Maps as it was feared it was being used by the Russian military to co-ordinate attacks in Ukraine. "We have paused all product sales in Russia. Last week, we stopped all exports into our sales channel in the country. Apple Pay and other services have been limited. RT News and Sputnik News are no longer available for download from the App Store outside Russia." https://t.co/zVh60Pls6N John Paczkowski (@JohnPaczkowski) March 1, 2022 Meanwhile, Facebook, now known as Meta, has also made the decision to demote content from Russian state-controlled media outlets from Facebook pages and Instagram accounts. The Sonos Roam SL is a new, more affordable version of the excellent Sonos Roam portable speaker, with the difference being no microphone is included, thus enabling a lower price, while maintaining the superlative sound quality. Coming to Australia later this year is the latest Sonos portable speaker, the Sonos Roam SL. It's virtually identical to the Sonos Roam model that launched last year to great acclaim, offering incredible sound for its size, long-lasting all-day battery life, effortlessly easy set-up and more. The big difference between the two is that Sonos Roam SL doesn't come with a microphone, so you can't answer calls with it or talk to a digital assistant, nor can you the feature that can tune the sound to a room more effectively. In the US, the price difference between the Roam and Roam SL is US $20, but in Australia, where the original Roam sells for AUD $299, this will obviously be a larger gap, and while there's no official Australian price as yet, but if I had to guess, it will probably be around AUD $50 cheaper - we'll obviously find out what the final price is when Sonos announces it for Australia. The Sonos Roam SL doesn't yet appear at the Australian Sonos site, but you can see it at the US version of the site, with its US pricing and the pictures, tech specs and more here. Sonos bills the Roam SL as the company "making its most versatile speaker more accessible than ever," and bills the Roam SL as "the essential ultraportable speaker that sounds great at home and can be taken anywhere, now at a more affordable price without a microphone." The company states "Roam SL will be available in Australia later this year, pricing and pre-order details to be confirmed closer to the date." In one sense, having a speaker without a microphone is a blast from the past, because speakers used to be just that - speakers. These days, most portable speakers are also portable communications devices that let you make and take calls, talk to a virtual assistant and get answers to queries, and more. However, in 2022, it's clear that not everyone needs their speaker to be a communications device - some people just want it to be a speaker, and given this means you can get Sonos sound quality at a more affordable price, it's sure to be a popular model that brings more people into the Sonos ecosystem. Here are the headline features and benefits Sonos has shared: Enjoy richly detailed sound with the clarity, depth, and fullness youd expect from a larger speaker. Connect to the rest of your Sonos system at home on WiFi and automatically switch to Bluetooth when you're away. Stereo pair Roam SL with a second Roam SL, or a Sonos Roam via WiFi. Keep exploring with up to 10 hours of continuous playback on a single charge and up to 10 days of battery life when in sleep mode. For even longer battery life, enable the Battery Saver setting so your speaker powers down completely when not in use. Roam SL is dust proof and fully waterproof with a rigorously tested IP67 rating. Tactile buttons help avoid accidental button presses while on-the-go. A triangular shape and soft profile make Roam SL comfortable to pick up and ensure it looks great inside your home. Place Roam SL vertically for a smaller footprint or horizontally to provide added stability on uneven surfaces outdoors. So, you'll soon be able to roam the Sonos soundscape at an even more affordable entry point, and it should come as no surprise to hear me say that this... sounds good! Security vendor Sophos has appointed Chad Cleevely to the role of APJ channel sales director. "The channel is a key priority for Sophos, and we are excited to welcome Chad to Sophos to lead this very important part of our business for APJ," said Sophos APJ senior vice president Gavin Struthers. "Chad brings more than 20 years' experience in the channel, gained through senior sales and managerial roles for some of the world's leading technology organisations. "Chad is a valuable addition to the Sophos channel community across the region and I look forward to working with him to deliver next-generation cybersecurity to the market," . Cleevely brings 25 years' experience to Sophos. He joins the company from Quest Software where he held the equivalent role. Cleevely previously worked as senior regional sales manager at Dell and as commerce and B2B channel manager at IBM. He also spent 15 years with Symantec, culminating in the role of channel sales manager. Cleevely holds certificates in sales and marketing management and IT service management, and is an AWS cloud practitioner. "I am delighted to join Sophos APJ on its mission to deliver innovative and highly-effective cybersecurity solutions to IT professionals and the channel that serves them," he said. "The threat landscape continues to evolve at an alarming pace, and I am excited by the opportunity to work with Sophos' partners across the entire region to help keep organisations safe from this ever-changing threat environment." Australia's biggest telco, Telstra, and OneWeb, a low earth orbit (LEO) satellite communications company, have announced the signing of a Memorandum of Understanding (MoU) to explore new solutions for improved digital connectivity across Australia and the Asia Pacific region. We're told the non-exclusive agreement brings together Telstras telecommunications expertise in Australia, and OneWebs satellite capability to deliver innovative connectivity in the future. Telstra said the partnership complements its T25 ambition to grow and extend its network leadership position and boost mobile coverage across the country, in addition to being another key milestone for OneWebs path to global coverage later in 2022. Andrew Penn, Chief Executive Officer at Telstra said the partnership reinforces Telstras ongoing commitment to providing world class communications for regional Australia at a time when investment in expanding digital infrastructure remains a top priority for the countrys economic recovery and development post-pandemic. We see lots of opportunities for our consumer, small business and enterprise customers using LEO satellite connectivity from backhaul to back-up for resiliency, from IoT to supporting emergency services, from home broadband to supporting agritech. It also opens up opportunities in the wider Asia Pacific region alongside our existing and future operations. Neil Masterson, Chief Executive Officer at OneWeb said this is great news for communities and businesses across Australia and the Asia Pacific, who can now look forward to high-speed, low latency connectivity from Space. Together with Telstra, OneWebs global LEO network has the power to connect even the most remote parts of the region, and we look to realising our ambition to bringing connectivity to those hardest to reach. Telstra reminds us its mobile network currently reaches 99.5% of the population and covers 1 million square kilometres, more than any other Australian mobile provider. Meanwhile, we're also reminded OneWeb is making significant progress in building its constellation and currently has 428 satellites in low earth orbit, representing more than two thirds of its planned fleet, delivering connectivity to customers in remote regions of Alaska, Canada, and the North Sea. Launches will continue during 2022 to enable the company to offer commercial connectivity services globally later this year. OneWeb and Telstra say they will work together "over the coming months" to finalise the detailed scope of the agreement. This Week in Review A weekly review of the best and most popular stories published in the Imperial Valley Press. Also, featured upcoming events, new movies at local theaters, the week in photos and much more. The retrial of accused killer Dayonte Resiles opened in a Fort Lauderdale courtroom Wednesday, with prosecutors and defense lawyers mostly retracing the steps they took during the defendants first trial. Again, prosecutor Maria Schneider painstakingly laid out a timeline of the morning Davie resident Justin Su discovered the body of his mother, Jill Halliburton Su, in the bloody bathtub of their home on Sept. 8, 2014. The suspects DNA was found on two crucial pieces of evidence a knife outside the home and a belt that was used to bind the victim during a struggle. Advertisement Again, defense lawyer Michael Orlando promised jurors that the evidence would leave them with more questions than answers. Those questions, he said, include why Justin Su was eliminated as a suspect so quickly, whose fingerprints were found in the master bedroom (where part of the struggle took place), and how Resiles, who had never been to the home, could possibly have known where the security cameras were to avoid them while breaking in and covering them up once he was inside. [ RELATED: Lawyers brace for retrial in Dayonte Resiles murder case ] Resiles first trial ended in a hung jury last December while jurors agreed that Resiles participated in Sus murder, two jurors told the Sun Sentinel afterward that they did not believe he acted alone. Thats a possibility that has not been explicitly addressed in front of a jury, but prosecutors hinted at it by having the judge include a felony murder instruction. That instruction would have allowed a murder conviction even if jurors believed Resiles was an accomplice to someone else who stabbed the victim to death. Advertisement At one point, the jury in last years trial announced it had found Resiles guilty of manslaughter, only to have the verdict rescinded when the jurys forewoman recanted. She later said she felt pressured to compromise by fellow jurors who did not want to send a Black man, Resiles, to prison for life. A second juror denied the racial aspect of the debate, but agreed that it was contentious and centered around whether Resiles deserved a life sentence. In the end, jurors could not agree on a verdict, giving both prosecutors and defense lawyers a second chance to present their arguments. [ RELATED: 'What have I done?' Juror describes turmoil in Resiles case ] If the current jury convicts Resiles, 27, of first-degree murder, he could face the death penalty. The victim was a distant relative, but not an heiress, of the founder of the Halliburton multinational energy corporation the name Halliburton was avoided during the trial because of its political reputation and because the victim rarely used it. The defense used the Halliburton name in the retrial Wednesday while suggesting her connection to the familys wealth might have been part of a motive for murder. The victim and her husband, Nan Yao Su, had returned from a business trip to Malaysia on Sept. 7, 2014, the day before the murder, and their son hosted at least one gathering of friends while they were away, Schneider told the jury. Records from their gated community show Justin Su and his father had left the home by late morning on Sept. 8. The burglar or burglars who entered the Su home broke in through a glass door, apparently unaware that Jill Su was still home, sleeping. Prosecutors believe she was killed because she interrupted the burglary. Resiles had a history of burglary arrests before he was arrested in the Su murder based on the DNA evidence. In 2016, he staged an escape from a Broward courtroom that prosecutors point to as evidence that he knows hes guilty. Defense lawyers said the escape is its own offense and does not prove Resiles killed anyone. Advertisement The trial is scheduled to resume Thursday before Broward Circuit Judge John Murphy. Rafael Olmeda can be reached at rolmeda@sunsentinel.com, 954-356-4457 or on Twitter @rolmeda With three months to go before the in-person trade fair Agritechnica Asia & Horti Asia 25-27 May 2022 at the BITEC exhibition grounds in Bangkok, registered exhibitors from 26 countries have celebrated the news last month that quarantine for vaccinated travelers to Thailand is no longer required. Supported by the official co-host, the Thai Ministry of Agriculture and Cooperatives, and with 300 exhibitors expected, the trade fairs theme is sustainable production. More and more countries in Southeast Asia are opening their borders to quarantine-free travel. Seeing these developments, we are looking forward to a high international turnout of exhibitors with so much to offer Southeast Asian farmers, said Ms. Katharina Staske, managing director of DLGs office in Thailand. New: smart farming and seven international pavilions An important part of Thailands sustainable production, precision and smart farming technologies and applications including many from startups will be explored at the new Thailand Smart Farming Pavilion jointly organized with the Ministry of Agriculture and cooperatives. Smart farming in Thailand and solutions like drone and satellite technology, automation and robotics and working weed robots have already attracted attention at the Regional Summit held in Thailand late last year. The topic of smart farming will be explored further at the Smart Farming Pavilion which will present solutions aimed at all farm sizes. Seven country pavilions for China, Finland, Germany, India, Japan, the Netherlands and South Korea, each located within the trade fair, will showcase equipment, technical solutions and inputs from global companies to Asia farmers in the regions. New: vertical farming and cannabis production Located in the horticultural exhibition area Horti Asia, the new pavilion Vertical Farming co-organised by the Association for Vertical Farming (AVF) focuses on the production of plant-based food in urban spaces while the Cannabis Pavilion set up by Thailand Cannabis Industry Association (TCIA) aims to further knowledge in cannabis production, an area increasingly attractive to Thai farmers since its legalization in 2021. Comprehensive conference programme The exhibition will be accompanied by about 30 professional sessions on all three exhibition days, exploring topics like Thailand Cane and Sugar Industries after Covid-19; Towards carbon reduced (or neutral) rice production and processing ; and Development of Smart Industrial Agriculture Technology in Thailand. A selection of discussion events will also be held online. Together with the Department of Agricultural Extension of the Ministry of Agriculture and Cooperatives, guided tours through the exhibition will be offered to invited farmer groups and interested visitors. Tours address topics relevant for the farmers of the region such as efficient water management or post-harvest solutions. Compiling reviews from IMDb and Metacritic, Stacker composed a list of the 50 best space movies of all time, from classic hits to new releases. Click for more. Jacksonville, TX (75766) Today Partly to mostly cloudy. A stray shower or thunderstorm is possible. Low 71F. Winds SSE at 5 to 10 mph.. Tonight Partly to mostly cloudy. A stray shower or thunderstorm is possible. Low 71F. Winds SSE at 5 to 10 mph. TALLAHASSEE Legislation named in honor of a slain Orlando college student that seeks to improve apartment safety is now ready for final votes. The Florida Senate is set to pass Miyas Law on Wednesday, state Sen. Linda Stewart said. The legislation is named for Miya Marcano, who police say was murdered by a maintenance worker who had a key to her apartment. Advertisement I am hopeful that we may soon carry this important legislation across the finish line in these final weeks of session, the Orlando Democrat said. The passage of this bill would represent a major win for the safety of all tenants. [ RELATED: Miya Marcanos death heaps scrutiny on apartment safety ] If the Senate approves, Miyas Law would head to the House, where it has met more resistance. Advertisement The Senate version would require landlords with five or more units to conduct a national background check on employees and maintain a log of keys. Senators are expected to amend the bill to limit background checks to criminal offenses committed within the past five years, Stewart said. It also would require landlords to provide 24-hour notice, instead of 12 hours, for non-emergency maintenance and repairs. Yma Scarbriel, mother of Miya Marcano, attends her daughter's funeral service on Thursday Oct. 14, 2021 at Cooper City Church of God in Cooper City, Fl. Marcano, a 19-year-old college sophomore from Pembroke Pines, was found murdered in a wooded area near her apartment complex in Orlando on Oct. 2. (Susan Stocker / South Florida Sun Sentinel) The Houses version of Miyas Law is different. It doesnt mandate background checks. Instead, apartment complexes catering to students would be required to notify tenants of their background check procedures. That requirement would apply to landlords with 15 or more units who market to students or have at least 60% of their tenants enrolled in a university or college. Landlords would need to notify tenants whether they do background checks and also post a list of employees and contractors that have access to units. Marcano, a 19-year-old student at Valencia College, was reported missing on Sept. 24 from her apartment at Arden Villas. Police suspect 27-year-old Armando Caballero, an Arden Villas maintenance worker, killed her and dumped her body. Caballero was found dead by suicide at a Seminole County apartment complex just days before Marcanos body was discovered. Advertisement State lawmakers are scheduled to wrap up their 60-day legislative session on March 11. sswisher@orlandosentinel.com Donate Now As a public service during this pandemic, the Jewish News is providing free, unlimited access to all articles. Jewish News is a nonprofit publication that is owned by the community and relies on community support. NEW YORK A Ghislaine Maxwell trial juror whose post-verdict revelation that he had suffered child sex abuse has jeopardized Maxwells conviction may receive immunity to testify before the judge mulling whether the verdict will stand. Prosecutors said in a submission to U.S. District Judge Alison J. Nathan on Wednesday that they were in the process of seeking approvals to offer immunity to the man to compel his testimony at a hearing next Tuesday. They said the immunity offer was considered after the juror's lawyer told the judge that his client planned to invoke his Fifth Amendment privilege against self-incrimination at the hearing. Advertisement Maxwell, 60, remains behind bars after she was convicted of charges including sex trafficking and conspiracy at a monthlong trial that featured testimony from four women who testified about Maxwell's role in the recruitment of teenage girls for financier Jeffrey Epstein to sexually abuse from 1994 to 2004. Epstein, 66, took his own life while he was awaiting trial in August 2019 in a Manhattan federal lockup. As Maxwell awaits a June sentencing, her lawyers are seeking to have the verdict overturned on the grounds that the juror identified in court documents as Juror No. 50 would never have been on the jury if he had accurately answered questions on a 50-point questionnaire filled out by prospective jurors in November. Advertisement In this courtroom sketch, Ghislaine Maxwell, right, sits with her mask off during a break in her sex trafficking trial on Dec. 20, 2021, in New York. (Elizabeth Williams/AP) The juror checked the No box to Question 48, which asked: Have you or a friend or family member ever been the victim of sexual harassment, sexual abuse, or sexual assault? (This includes actual or attempted sexual assault or other unwanted sexual advance, including by a stranger, acquaintance, supervisor, teacher, or family member.) [ RELATED: Guilty: Ghislaine Maxwell convicted in Jeffrey Epstein sex abuse case ] Nathan said she plans to ask the juror about his answers to Question 48 and Question 25, which asked: Have you, or any of your relatives or close friends, ever been a victim of a crime? Juror No. 50 also checked the No box in response to that question. The controversy arose in January when the juror told news outlets that he had disclosed to fellow jurors during a weeklong deliberation that he was a child sex abuse victim and convinced other jurors that a victims imperfect memory of sex abuse doesnt mean it didnt happen. The juror has said he flew through the questionnaire and didn't remember being asked whether he was a sex abuse survivor. [ RELATED: Billionaire sex offender's 'sweetheart deal' violated our rights, victims tell feds ] Defense lawyers asked the judge to toss out the verdict based on the juror's revelations and order a new trial. They said if she did not do so, she should question other jurors as well, especially after a second juror reportedly post-trial revealed a history of sex abuse. And they asked to explore Juror No. 50's online and email communications. But Nathan said last week she would limit the inquiry to her posing questions to Juror No. 50 about his answers to the two questions she deemed relevant. The rest of the requests, she said, were vexatious, intrusive, unjustified, and a fishing expedition. Audrey Strauss, acting U.S. attorney for the Southern District of New York, points to a photo of Jeffrey Epstein and Ghislaine Maxwell, during a news conference in New York on July 2, 2020. On Dec. 29, 2021, Maxwell was convicted of helping American financier Jeffrey Epstein sexually abuse teenage girls. (John Minchillo/AP file) (John Minchillo/AP) Epstein pleaded guilty to state charges in Palm Beach County in July 2008. He admitted he hired local underage girls to provide sex and erotic massages at his home. His sentence has been referred to as a sweetheart deal that allowed him lenient work release while he served about 13 months of an 18-month sentence, followed by a year of house arrest. An investigation by the Florida Department of Law Enforcement focused on former Palm Beach County State Attorney Barry Krischers decision not to aggressively prosecute sex abuse allegations against Epstein over a decade ago; Epsteins generous work release privileges in jail; and allegations that Epstein had sex with young women while under the jails supervision. Advertisement The investigation found Epstein received differential treatment in jail, but no evidence was uncovered that suggests county officials broke any laws. Epstein killed himself in a New York jail in 2019 as he awaited a sex trafficking trial. Maxwells lawyers argued at trial that she was made into a scapegoat by federal prosecutors after his death. Far Fetched Pet Grooming owner Kaylan Laws with groomer Dallas McMahan and client Fritzie. Laws won first place in the Big Stone Gap Small Business Challenge after six weeks of learning about challenges facing small business startups and presenting her business plan and vision for success. Hong Kong: Mainland experts continue HK visit The Mainland expert delegation led by the Head of the National Health Commission's COVID-19 leading task force Prof Liang Wannian continued its Hong Kong visit today. They visited the Centre for Health Protection (CHP) of the Department of Health (DH) to exchange views with DH and Hospital Authority (HA) representatives and offer advice. Director of Health Dr Ronald Lam, CHP Controller Dr Edwin Tsui and relevant DH colleagues and the HA representatives held a meeting at the CHP this morning with Prof Liang and the Mainland experts as well as the Mainland task force of epidemiologists. They had an in-depth discussion on the epidemic situation in Hong Kong and analysed relevant statistics as well as elaborated on the challenges posed by the fifth wave of COVID-19 and the Mainland experience in tackling the epidemic. Dr Lam thanked the Central People's Government for its extensive and swift support to the Hong Kong Special Administrative Region. He also expressed gratitude to the commission's expert delegation for their visit and advice offered on the anti-epidemic work. A CHP representative explained the statistical analysis under the fifth wave of epidemic in Hong Kong and illustrated the key measures in risk prevention and control. The experts provided valuable opinions during the meeting and the CHP will continue its exchange with them in exploring and intensifying the strategies and measures to control the fifth wave. Led by Prof Liang, the delegation came to Hong Kong on February 28. They were joined by four epidemiological experts who arrived in Hong Kong earlier to conduct visits in Hong Kong. This story has been published on: 2022-03-02. To contact the author, please use the contact details within the article. BEIJING, Mar.2 -- The Cobra Gold 2022 humanitarian assistance and disaster relief (HADR) exercise wrapped up in Thailand recently. The Chinese military personnel took part in the HADR table top exercise (HADR-TTX) under the theme of international disaster response and civil-military coordination in the context of the epidemic situation via video link, and exchanged views with other participants on the early warning mechanism for disaster relief. The exercise has not only involved the lectures on routine topics including international and regional humanitarian agencies and the disaster response operation mechanism, but also added seminars on the HADR mechanism establishment and operation under the epidemic situation. The Cobra Gold joint exercise is annually held since 1982. China started to participate as the observer in 2002 and began to dispatch troops in 2014. This time, the Chinese military members actively provided the Chinese experience and solutions, hoping to contribute their own strength to the improvement of the international joint disaster relief capability. The Florida Senate moved forward Tuesday with contentious education measures that would increase scrutiny of school library books and limit how certain race-related concepts are taught, though senators tweaked one of the bills passed by the House last month. The Senate Rules Committee voted 11-5 along party lines to approve the measure involving school-book scrutiny (HB 1467), readying the issue to be considered by the full Senate. Advertisement An extension of Republicans recent push to increase parental rights and involvement in students education, the measure is largely centered on giving parents and members of the public broader access to the process of selecting and eliminating library books and instructional materials. [ RELATED: Floridas 15-week abortion ban will have dramatic effects on patients and providers. Heres what to expect. ] Bill sponsor Joe Gruters, R-Sarasota, said the measure would help the community understand what materials students might encounter in the classroom. Advertisement This is all about transparency and making sure that parents know exactly whats being taught in their schools, said Gruters, who doubles as chairman of the Republican Party of Florida. Under the bill, committees that meet for the purposes of ranking, eliminating, or selecting instructional materials would be required to include parents of school district students. The proposal similarly would require school districts to publish to individual schools websites procedures related to media centers. Those procedures would have to provide for the regular removal or discontinuance of books based on factors such as alignment to state academic standards and relevance to curriculum. Alerting school districts If instructional materials are removed from a school using procedures that are spelled out in the bill, school districts across the state would be notified. The state Department of Education would be responsible for publishing and regularly updating a list of materials that were removed or discontinued as a result of objections, and in turn the department would disseminate the list to school districts for consideration in their selection procedures. [ RELATED: Your questions about Floridas Dont Say Gay bill and other proposals, answered ] Gruters said other districts would be made aware of prohibited materials so we do have consistency, from one district to the next, of the books that were banned only. The measure drew strong objections from Democrats, who made comparisons between changes proposed in the bill and historical instances of censorship by authoritarian governments. Advertisement Really scary stuff Sen. Gary Farmer, D-Lighthouse Point, criticized the measure as really scary stuff and likened its proposals to book burning in Nazi Germany during the 1930s. Its common knowledge that book burning was an integral part of the propaganda campaign which led to the Nazi party taking control of Germany, Farmer said. Later Tuesday, the Rules Committee also voted 11-5 along party lines to approve a measure (HB 7) that would target certain race-related instruction in schools and workplace training sessions. The bill emerged after Gov. Ron DeSantis sought to prevent the teaching of critical race theory, which is based on the premise that racism is embedded in American society and institutions. Under the measure, which is ready to go to the full Senate, school instruction or a training exercise would constitute discrimination if it compels people to believe certain concepts. For instance, part of the bill dealing with schools would label instruction discriminatory if it led students to believe that they bear personal responsibility for and must feel guilt, anguish, or other forms of psychological distress because of actions committed in the past by people of the same race or sex. Advertisement Democrats peppered Senate sponsor Manny Diaz Jr., R-Hialeah, with questions about the bill. Whats the impetus for that line of thinking, that a teacher would create an imposition of guilt on a student because they are talking about history? asked Sen. Audrey Gibson, D-Jacksonville. The impetus would be to have all of these constructive discussions and to make sure that our students are learning our history, including the mistakes and the terrible things that occurred in our past so that theyre not repeated again, without pushing on guilt to the individual student, Diaz replied. A Tallahassee two-step Critics also questioned the process that Senate Republican leaders used to move forward with the controversial education bills. During debate over the bill dealing with books and school boards, Farmer suggested that Republicans were engaging in what he called a Tallahassee two-step. Both of the House bills had similar Senate versions that had not gone through all of their assigned committees. We have a rule in the Senate for House bills, if were going to take them up when we havent taken up a Senate bill or a Senate bill hasnt made it through its committees, its supposed to require a two-thirds vote. So this is a little Tallahassee two-step here, where they bring the House bill over, refer it to one committee, vote it out of that committee, and then it gets to go to the floor so you dont have to do that two-thirds vote, Farmer said. Advertisement School Board terms The Senate committee approved a change to the bill to cap school board members terms at 12 years. The House passed the measure earlier this month with eight-year term limits for school board members. Gruters, who is chairman of the Senate Education Committee, proposed the amendment. If the full Senate passes the bill with 12-year term limits, the measure would have to go back to the House. I think 12 years is a better number, Gruters said. Sometimes I feel that eight years just isnt enough for members. And I think 12 years, you should certainly be able to get done everything you want to accomplish in that period of time. Danielle Thomas, director of advocacy and legislative services for the Florida School Boards Association, argued that school board elections already provide for regular turnover of members. We dont believe that term limits are needed for our school board members. School boards see greater turnover in their elections than any other elected offices, Thomas said, telling lawmakers that Florida school boards collectively have seen 36 to 46 percent turnover with each election cycle since 2010. Joplin, MO (64801) Today Showers and thundershowers this evening will give way to steady rain overnight. Low near 55F. Winds ESE at 10 to 15 mph. Chance of rain 100%. 3 to 5 inches of rain expected.. Tonight Showers and thundershowers this evening will give way to steady rain overnight. Low near 55F. Winds ESE at 10 to 15 mph. Chance of rain 100%. 3 to 5 inches of rain expected. TAMPA Environmental advocates are encouraged that a bill to open Floridas seagrass beds to development which could be devastating for the dwindling manatee population has only a slim chance of passing the Legislature this session. We would be destroying what little seagrass we have left in the state, said David Cullen, a lobbyist for Sierra Club Florida. It just makes no sense at all. Advertisement The original version of a bill by Sen. Ana Maria Rodriguez, R-Doral, would have permitted development on the beds, while also allowing seagrass mitigation banks. Both are controversial ideas. Environmentalists oppose development because they argue it will further deplete the manatees food source, while some experts believe that mitigation of seagrass works only under limited conditions. Lawmakers recently removed both the development and mitigation provisions from the proposal. Rodriguez did not immediately return phone and email messages to discuss her bill. Advertisement The Senate Environment and Natural Resources Committee approved the bill along party lines in a narrow 3-2 vote. Sen. Aaron Bean, R-Jacksonville, voted for the legislation but declined to discuss the bill in an interview. The same bill has been stuck in the community affairs committee for nearly 10 weeks, with fewer than two weeks left in the legislative session. [ RELATED: Manatees still starving to death, despite desperate rescue efforts ] Opposition from environmental advocates and the 1,101 dead manatees last year dont make the prospects look good for the legislation as the session in Tallahassee enters the home stretch, Cullen said. Its a bad bill, he said. Theres really no way to fix it. Facing a record death toll for manatees, the Florida Department of Environmental Protection is now feeding them up to 20,000 pounds of lettuce a week. The feeding was intended to prevent manatees from starving to death as their essential food source, seagrass, is being killed off by runaway algae growth that blocks sunlight the seagrass needs to grow. Floridas seagrass is disappearing at a faster rate than tropical rain forests and coral reefs, said James Fourqurean, marine ecologist and professor at Florida International University. He cast doubt on mitigation as a way to offset the loss. There just really arent a lot of places that I can think of where you could successfully grow seagrasses, Fourqurean said. Seagrasses are growing almost every place that water quality will allow them to grow. [ RELATED: Manatees finally eat lettuce offered to them to hold off starvation ] Fourqurean said he doubts that mitigation banks would restore seagrasses in the same watershed where they are destroyed, pointing to water quality as the key factor in the health of seagrass beds. Mitigation banks for seagrass dont work, Fourqurean said. Advertisement Similar proposals have been discussed in one form or another for over a decade. In 2008, then-Gov. Charlie Crist vetoed a similar bill that would have opened seagrass areas to development. That bill, which passed in the House and Senate unanimously, was killed by Crist because of a mitigation provision that was added at the last minute. [ RELATED: Manatees will receive emergency rations of romaine lettuce if starvation looms this winter ] Crist, a Republican-turned-Democrat who is running for the Democratic nomination for governor this year, said improving water quality and conserving established seagrass beds should be the states priority. From when I was governor to today, the science has been the same, Crist said in an email reply to questions from a reporter. Floridas fragile seagrass is vital to our marine ecosystem, and seagrass mitigation banks remain unproven. Peter Clark, founder of Tampa Bay Watch, said the organization is selective with its seagrass mitigation efforts: The nonprofit group will only begin replanting seagrass beds in areas that have seen marked improvement to water quality. Its very hard to replace those small quantities all around these different areas, Clark said. So, by creating a large regional bank, where we know the conditions are really good for seagrass to grow, helps to ensure the viability of the sea grasses in that new area will offset the impacts that occur in other locations. Advertisement While the legislation may be DOA this session, Clark and opponents dont expect discussion of the bill to go away anytime soon. This will give everybody time to take a step back and evaluate whether its good for Florida, Clark said. This story was produced by Fresh Take Florida, a news service of the University of Florida College of Journalism and Communications. The reporter can be reached at pratorj@ufl.edu. Wharton, TX (77488) Today Cloudy. A stray shower or thunderstorm is possible. Low 74F. Winds SE at 10 to 20 mph.. Tonight Cloudy. A stray shower or thunderstorm is possible. Low 74F. Winds SE at 10 to 20 mph. If you already subscribe to our print edition, sign up for FREE access to our online edition. Thanks for reading the Wharton Journal Spectator. Reporter Susan covers the towns of Somers and Enfield. She joined the JI in May 2021 and graduated from Skidmore College. She recently completed docent training for the Wadsworth Atheneum and hopes to start giving tours some time next year. Blackshear, GA (31516) Today Mostly clear. Low near 65F. Winds light and variable.. Tonight Mostly clear. Low near 65F. Winds light and variable. The annual Startup Accelerator sponsored by AICPA and CPA.com has made a sizable expansion into environmental, social, and governance (ESG) issues. The 2022 accelerator features 10 early-stage technology companies that are developing innovative solutions for the accounting space. Previous accelerators included five participants, but the 2022 version adds a second five-startup cohort working to address environmental, social, and governance (ESG) issues. "The Startup Accelerator has always been about identifying emerging trends, and ESG is a tremendous opportunity for the accounting profession," said Barry Melancon, CPA, CGMA, president and CEO of the Association of International Certified Professional Accountants, in a news release. "The expansion of this year's program to include a second cohort focused on ESG is reflective of the growing opportunity for CPAs and firms to elevate their role as trusted advisers, as well as the Association's commitment to the space." Each of the 10 companies selected for the 2022 Startup Accelerator will receive a $25,000 grant, participate in a six-month curriculum, receive guidance from expert advisers, and have the chance to showcase its solution at AICPA ENGAGE, the accounting's profession's largest conference. The participants picked for the 2022 Startup Accelerator are: AuditMiner , an Omaha, Neb.-based company with a product that leverages automation to streamline and standardize audit workpapers and templates for CPA firms providing employee benefit plan audits. , an Omaha, Neb.-based company with a product that leverages automation to streamline and standardize audit workpapers and templates for CPA firms providing employee benefit plan audits. Once Accounting , a Dallas-based company that addresses the challenge of managing client records across multiple platforms. The company, formerly known as BaCo Tech, provides a client integration platform that seamlessly incorporates records into a firm's tax or accounting software. , a Dallas-based company that addresses the challenge of managing client records across multiple platforms. The company, formerly known as BaCo Tech, provides a client integration platform that seamlessly incorporates records into a firm's tax or accounting software. Fieldguide , a San Francisco-based startup with an automation and collaboration platform that streamlines the end-to-end engagement workflow for modern risk assurance and advisory firms. , a San Francisco-based startup with an automation and collaboration platform that streamlines the end-to-end engagement workflow for modern risk assurance and advisory firms. LumiQ , a Canada-based company that offers a native podcast app where engaging conversations with business leaders count as verified CPE or CPD credits. CPAs and accountants can earn credits on their commute, at the gym, or walking their dog. , a Canada-based company that offers a native podcast app where engaging conversations with business leaders count as verified CPE or CPD credits. CPAs and accountants can earn credits on their commute, at the gym, or walking their dog. Knuula, a Frisco, Texas-based company whose solution allows firms to easily customize, distribute, and manage client engagement letters, streamlining an often time-consuming process. ESG Cohort Caesar Sustainability , a remote-based company that offers a comprehensive data collection and management platform to centralize workflows and data storage for ESG reporting. , a remote-based company that offers a comprehensive data collection and management platform to centralize workflows and data storage for ESG reporting. ESG Trust , a San Francisco-based company with an integrated data management solution that identifies ESG risks opportunities, measures standards, and maps stakeholders to the value chain, streamlining ESG information gathering and collaboration. , a San Francisco-based company with an integrated data management solution that identifies ESG risks opportunities, measures standards, and maps stakeholders to the value chain, streamlining ESG information gathering and collaboration. Good.Lab , a San Francisco-based startup whose ESG performance management and compliance software allows organizations to transform their ESG data reporting engine to deliver actionable insights and data to management, investors, and customers. , a San Francisco-based startup whose ESG performance management and compliance software allows organizations to transform their ESG data reporting engine to deliver actionable insights and data to management, investors, and customers. Sustain.Life , a company whose SaaS platform helps companies across industries reduce their environmental impact by providing ESG tools that enable the measurement and management of their carbon emissions. , a company whose SaaS platform helps companies across industries reduce their environmental impact by providing ESG tools that enable the measurement and management of their carbon emissions. Standard Carbon, a Winnipeg, Canada-based company that leverages artificial intelligence to deliver transparent, carbon-offset assurance statements. The AICPA and CPA.com launched the Startup Accelerator to stay on the leading edge of the emerging technologies transforming the accounting profession. The strategy has been to support the growth of technology startups throughout the accounting and finance ecosystem. "We created this program five years ago as a way to identify emerging trends and drive innovation within the accounting profession," said Erik Asgeirsson, president and CEO of CPA.com. "The Accelerator has been a great success, supporting leading-edge companies to help drive the transformation of accounting services in key areas such as blockchain, assurance, ESG, and automation." To comment on this article or to suggest an idea for another article, contact Jeff Drew at Jeff.Drew@aicpa-cima.com. The International Court of Justice said Tuesday it would hold genocide hearings on March 7 and 8 over the war in Ukraine, as fighting intensifies. The International Court of Justice, the principal judicial organ of the United Nations, will hold public hearings in the case concerning Allegations of Genocide under the Convention on the Prevention and Punishment of the Crime of Genocide (Ukraine v. Russian Federation) on Monday 7 and Tuesday 8 March 2022,, the court said in a statement. The hearings will be devoted to the request for the indication of provisional measures submitted by Ukraine, the statement added. More than 660,000 people have already fled abroad, the UN refugee agency said, estimating that a million people are displaced within ex-Soviet Ukraine, which has a population of 44 million. The UN estimates that up to four million refugees may need help in the coming months and 12 million more will need assistance within the country. International Criminal Court prosecutor Karim Khan had already announced he was launching an investigation on the situation in Ukraine following Russias invasion. I am satisfied that there is a reasonable basis to believe that both alleged war crimes and crimes against humanity have been committed in Ukraine since 2014, Khan said in a statement Monday. Russia has defied international bans, boycotts and sanctions to press ahead with an offensive it says is aimed at defending Ukraines Russian speakers and toppling the leadership. An Indigenous community in Canada said Tuesday it has identified 169 potential unmarked graves at a former residential school site, adding to a growing tally of such gruesome discoveries that first rocked the country last year. The Kapaweno First Nation in northern Alberta province posted on its website the results of a six-day survey, using ground-penetrating radar, of the Grouard Mission site, about 370 kilometers northwest of Edmonton. The school, also known as the St. Bernard Mission School, was opened by the Catholic Church in 1894 and ran until 1961. The University of Albertas Institute of Prairie and Indigenous Archaeology led the search. In a report it said its findings are the beginning of a long journey to find answers to what happened to the children who never came home from the residential school at St. Bernards Mission. There remains a lack of justice and accountability for what happened, it said. There is more work to be done to find those answers. Numerous investigations into former residential schools are underway across the country, with more than 4,000 children believed to be missing, according to authorities. The Kapaweno First Nation discovery brings the total number of unmarked graves found so far to more than 1,500. In total, about 150,000 Indigenous children were enrolled from the late 1800s to the 1990s in 139 residential schools across Canada, spending months or years isolated from their families, language and culture. Many were physically and sexually abused by headmasters and teachers, and thousands are believed to have died of disease, malnutrition or neglect. A truth and reconciliation commission concluded in 2015 the failed government policy amounted to cultural genocide. The International Court of Justice said Tuesday it would hold genocide hearings on March 7 and 8 over the war in Ukraine, as fighting intensifies. The Hague-based ICJ, the United Nations top court, will open the public hearings after Ukraine lodged a complaint with the court to order Russia to stop its invasion. The hearings will be devoted to the request for the indication of provisional measures submitted by Ukraine, the court said in a statement. More than 660,000 people have already fled abroad, the UN refugee agency said, estimating that a million people are displaced within ex-Soviet Ukraine, which has a population of 44 million. The UN estimates that up to four million refugees may need help in the coming months and 12 million more will need assistance within the country. The ICJ, which is based in the Netherlands seat of government in The Hague, does not have a mandate to bring criminal charges against individual Russian leaders behind the invasion. But it is the worlds top court for resolving legal complaints between states over alleged breaches of international law. International Criminal Court prosecutor Karim Khan had already announced he was launching an investigation on the situation in Ukraine following Russias invasion. I am satisfied that there is a reasonable basis to believe that both alleged war crimes and crimes against humanity have been committed in Ukraine since 2014, Khan said in a statement Monday. Russia has defied international bans, boycotts and sanctions to press ahead with an offensive it says is aimed at defending Ukraines Russian speakers and toppling the leadership. The United States trusts the Court is taking into consideration the dire circumstances and rapidly unfolding events, the State Department said in a statement Tuesday. Spokesman Ned Price said Washington hopes the court will act with utmost urgency on Ukraines request for provisional measures in the hearing. Each day that Russia is unconstrained in its aggression is a day that brings more violence, suffering, death, and destruction in Ukraine, he said. British Prime Minister Boris Johnson on Wednesday called Russian President Vladimir Putin a war criminal and urged UN unanimity to condemn his invasion of Ukraine. His comments came in parliament, where MPs gave a standing ovation to Ukraines ambassador in attendance. Johnson wore a UK-Ukraine flag pin, and many lawmakers wore clothing in Ukraines blue and yellow colours. What we have seen already from Vladimir Putins regime, in the use of the munitions that they have already been dropping on innocent civilians, in my view already fully qualifies as a war crime, Johnson said. UK ministers have been warning that Putin, his cronies and commanders could face prosecution at the International Criminal Court in The Hague, which has already opened a probe into the invasion. Ahead of a vote by the UN General Assembly in New York, Johnson added: We call on every nation to join us in condemning Russia and demanding that Putin turns his tanks around. Johnson warned of further sanctions if the offensive continues, reprising a new three-word slogan: Putin must fail. With the heroism of Ukraines people and the unity of the West, Ive no doubt that he will fail and we will succeed in protecting Ukraine, Johnson said. A former chief prosecutor at the International Criminal Court will head a UN investigation into a wide range of alleged violations committed by all sides in Ethiopias conflict, the UN said Wednesday. Fatou Bensouda of Gambia, who served as ICC chief prosector from 2012 to 2021, is among three international experts appointed by the president of the UN Human Rights Council to investigate the rights situation in Ethiopia, the council said in a statement. Council president, Ambassador Federico Villegas of Argentina, also appointed Kaari Betty Murungi of Kenya and Steven Ratner of the United States to serve on the newly-created International Commission of Human Rights Experts on Ethiopia. The top UN rights body agreed last December, despite strenuous objections from the government in Addis Ababa, to send international investigators to Ethiopia, amidst a grinding 15-month war. The commission was handed a one-year renewable mandate to impartially investigate allegations of violations and abuses committed by all sides in the conflict that erupted in Ethiopia in November 2020. The investigators have also been tasked with establishing the facts and circumstances surrounding the alleged violations and abuses, collect and preserve evidence, to identify those responsible, where possible, and to make such information accessible and usable in support of ongoing and future accountability efforts. The decision to create the commission came after a joint investigation by the UN rights office and Ethiopias Human Rights Commission (EHRC) determined that possible war crimes and crimes against humanity had been committed by all sides during the conflict. Ethiopias war broke out in November 2020 when Prime Minister Abiy Ahmed sent troops into Tigray to topple the Tigray Peoples Liberation Front (TPLF), a move he said came in response to the rebel groups attacks on army camps. The war has killed thousands and, according to the UN and the United State, driven hundreds of thousands to the brink of starvation. Blackshear, GA (31516) Today Partly cloudy skies. Low around 65F. Winds SW at 5 to 10 mph.. Tonight Partly cloudy skies. Low around 65F. Winds SW at 5 to 10 mph. Ukraines ambassador to the United Nations accused Russia of seeking to commit genocide in his country, speaking at a rare General Assembly debate on Wednesday, more than a week after Moscows invasion. They have come to deprive Ukraine of the very right to exist, Sergiy Kyslytsya told the Assembly ahead of a vote on a resolution demanding Russia withdraw its forces from the eastern European country. Its already clear that the goal of Russia is not an occupation only. It is genocide. Russias envoy Vassily Nebenzia, speaking shortly after, accused Ukraine of rampant neo-Nazism and the West of using open and cynical threats to persuade other countries at the UN to vote in favor of the resolution. He said Russia only wants to stop a separatist conflict in Donbas, in eastern Ukraine. A vote by the 193 members of the UN on whether to deplore the invasion and demand Russias withdrawal will follow shortly. The resolution needs a two-thirds threshold of those voting to pass. The resolution, led by European countries with the support of Ukraine, is non-binding but would serve as a powerful rebuke of Moscows attack on Ukraine. Russian President Vladimir Putin launched the full-scale invasion of Ukraine on February 24. Moscow has pleaded self-defense under Article 51 of the UN Charter. But that has been roundly rejected by Western countries who accuse Moscow of violating Article 2 of the Charter, requiring UN members to refrain from the threat or use of force to resolve a crisis. From wars in Chechnya to Syria, Vladimir Putin has overseen military campaigns that have inflicted vast and often indiscriminate damage on civilian infrastructure, raising fears he might repeat the tactics in Ukraine, observers say. With his latest invasion seen by Western officials as going more slowly than expected, they see him turning increasingly to the use of artillery and missile strikes that, if continued, will lay waste to residential areas. Putins more than twenty-year career at the top of Russian politics was founded on his ruthlessness in military affairs. Back in 1999, he was a surprise nomination for prime minister by then ailing president Boris Yeltsin whose popularity had been sapped by the countrys economic woes, corruption and a bloody separatist war in the region of Chechnya. One of Putins first major acts as premier was to oversee a whole-scale offensive against the rebels in the breakaway Muslim-majority region in the far south-east. Although he denied that a ground invasion was being prepared, tens of thousands of troops were ordered into Chechnya along with an aerial and artillery bombardment that reduced the capital Grozny to rubble. Putin behaved like a political kamikaze, throwing his entire political capital into the war, burning it to the ground, Yeltsin later wrote in his memoirs. Grozny, already damaged during what was known as the First Chechen War in 1994-96, was described by the United Nations as the most destroyed city in the world following this second conflict from 1999. But the fighting, reported by state media under tightly controlled conditions, turned Putin from a relative unknown to a favourite for the presidential election the following year which he went on to win. Syrian action After the invasion of neighbouring Georgia in 2008, which saw Russian troops easily overpower their badly equipped rivals, Putin ordered Russian troops into Syria in 2015 in support of Bashar al-Assads regime. The move, which caught the West by surprise, saw Russian warplanes play a central role in a bombing blitz against rebels that devastated Syrian cities, most notably during the siege of Aleppo in 2016. Aleppo is now a synonym for hell, then UN chief Ban Ki-moon said in December that year after a blocade trapped tens of thousands in the city which was pummelled with artillery and air strikes. Charles Lister, an expert on the Syrian conflict at the Middle East Institute, wrote on Twitter this week that images of the shelling of the Ukrainian city of Kharkiv were like Aleppo all over again. Elie Tenembaum, a security expert at the French Institute of International Relations (IFRI), said that Putin had in fact initially attempted different tactics in Ukraine. Apparently anticipating little resistance, air-borne special forces were landed near Kyiv last week in an attempted thunder run to take out the government, but were quickly killed or captured. It didnt work. They were up against too great a resistance, so what were seeing now is a return to fundamentals, Tenembaum told AFP. Their main firepower is unguided munitions which risk devastating Ukrainian forces while causing very, very large numbers of civilian casualties which will increase the exodus (of refugees), he added. Images coming out of the country from Ukraines second-city of Kharkiv, the southern port of Kherson and the suburbs of Kyiv showed damage to apartment blocks, schools, university buildings or government offices. A suspected cruise missile exploded in the main square of Kharkiv on Tuesday. I dont see how Putin can climb down with dignity, warned Eliot A. Cohen, a security analyst at the Washington-based Center for Strategic and International Studies (CSIS) in Washington. He will continue to double down, which will mean more destruction and suffering. War crimes? Critics of the Russian leader have long warned that he has been emboldened by previous operations which have gone unchallenged. Russian chess master and opposition figure Garry Kasparov told Times Radio in London this week that war crimes on an industrial scale is not new for Putin. The 69-year-old leader has called Russias invasion a special military operation and said it was justified to defend Moscow-backed separatists in eastern Ukraine as well as to de-nazify the country which he claims is under far-right control. Rights groups such as Amnesty International as well as online investigators that gather videos shot on the ground have begun safeguarding evidence they hope one day might lead to prosecutions. Amnesty said it was documenting the escalation in violations of humanitarian and human rights law, including deaths of civilians resulting from indiscriminate attacks on civilian areas and infrastructure. Ahn Hyo Seop, Kim Sejeong, Kim Min Gyu and Seol In Ah's "A Business Proposal" left a strong impression on the viewers with its first episode, earning positive reviews and feedback! 'A Business Proposal' Records High Viewership Rating With Pilot Episode The first episode of SBS TV's Monday and Tuesday drama "A Business Proposal" finally met the public on Monday, February 28! Ahn Hyo Seop and Kim Sejeong, along with actors Kim Min Gyu and Seol In Ah, painted the small screen with laughter and excitement. The comical and romantic elements, sensuous directing, delightful plot and characters full of vibrant personalities captured the hearts of many viewers with its first episode. "A Business Proposal" episode 1 recorded an average of 4.9% nationwide rating on February 28. It rose up to 6.8% maximum rating during its broadcast, signifying a great start for the new SBS drama. As the story progresses, the drama is expected to break its own viewership rating records. The cast and production unit of "A Business Proposal" earnestly ask for everyone's support throughout the drama's run. 'A Business Proposal' K-Drama Details and More "A Business Proposal" is based on the popular webtoon of the same name, which was adapted from the novel. The drama gave an entertaining streaming experience with director Park Seon Ho's guidance and witty directing, who brought imagination to reality. In addition to that, the comedic lines tossed from one character to another are penned by screenwriters Han Seol Hee and Hong Ji Hee. In particular, the light and lovely atmosphere in the drama makes people forget of the day's stress and heavy situation due to the pandemic, drawing positive response from the viewers. "A Business Proposal" is a romantic comedy drama that depicts the chaotic love story between CEO Kang Tae Mu (Ahn Hyo Seop) and office worker Shin Ha Ri (Kim Sejeong) who meet on a blind date without knowing they bump into each other at work everyday. The oozing chemistry between the two raises expectations for the over-the-top romance that will be shown in the succeeding episodes. On the other hand, "A Business Proposal" episode 2 airs on Tuesday, March 1 at 9:00 p.m. KST on SBS TV. For international viewers, the rom-com drama will be available on Netflix at 11:30 p.m. KST with English subtitles. KDramaStars owns this article. Written by Elijah Mully. Lee Young Ae makes generous deed to help the victims in Ukraine. Following the chaos engulfing the country, the Hallyu star showed her support through financial aid. In a tweet, the Ukrainian ambassador to Korea Dmitro Ponomarenko shared the good news noting that they are excited to receive a heartfelt "letter and donations from famous Korean actress Lee Young Ae" showing her support to Ukraine. "Her words of wanting the war to end as soon as possible are also touching. The donation will be delivered to victims of the Russian attack," the statement reads. In the post, the photo showed not just a letter from the "Inspector Koo" star but a cheque amounting to 100 million won or 83,000 USD. Lee Young Ae Delivers Touching Message to the Ukrainian Victims In a letter shared by the Ukrainian ambassador to Korea, Lee Young Ae sympathized with the victims noting that she is also a "family member of a war veteran" and could "feel the horror of war more deeply than anyone else." Moreover, she also hoped that war would be over as soon as possible and prayed "for the well-being and safety of all Ukrainians." Sending words of encouragement, the Hallyu star wished that the citizens "will not lose hope and courage." According to CNBC, the Ukrainian government is seeking financial support through crypto for assistance at the height of Russia's military offensive in the country. In a report, the government has raised "more than $10 million in cryptocurrency donations" per blockchain analytics firm Elliptic. Lee Young Ae Helps Pediatric Patients and Victims of Child Abuse On the other hand, this is not the first time that the 51-year-old star shared her blessings through acts of kindness. In January 2021, Lee Young Ae joined hip-hop artist Simon Dominic and tv personality Yoo Byung Jae in helping the victims of child abuse. The actress showed support by donating 100 million KRW to the Asan Medical Center, according to media outlets. The money will be used by pediatric patients and healthcare workers. In addition, the center also shared that the "Jewel in the Palace" star has given a total of 350 million KRW or 320,000 USD since 2006. This is to help aid critically ill patients who are in dire need of financial support. Lee Young Ae is a well-known K-drama star whose popularity skyrocketed after landing the lead role in the 2003 historical drama "Jewel in the Palace." After 14 years, she headlined the cast of another historical Kdrama "Saimdang, Light's Diary," followed by the comedy-crime series "Inspector Koo" four years later. In 2021 she was among the actresses who showed stellar performance, joining Han So Hee for "My Name," Jun Ji Hyun for "Jirisan," and Kim So Yeon for "The Penthouse 3." KDramastars owns this article Written by Geca Wills In celebration of the fashion magazine's first anniversary, phenomenal star Song Joong Ki trends as he becomes the cover boy of Vogue Hong Kong's March 2022 issue. Read on to see his pictorials below! Song Joong Ki Looks Expensive on the Cover of Vogue Hong Kong's March 2022 Issue Vogue Hong Kong surprised readers on March 1 upon releasing a sneak peek of this month's magazine contents. The issue is also in commemoration of Vogue Hong Kong's first anniversary. To celebrate the milestone, Song Joong Ki graces the cover with his ethereal visuals, clad in dapper suit and sophisticated ensembles. Upon the release of his teaser, the "Space Sweepers" actor immediately trended on Twitter and his fans from all over the world expressed their admiration for the handsome star. Vogue Hong Kong also released a chop of Song Joong Ki's pictoria, as well as a clip of the A-lister greeting readers and announcing his collab with the magazine. The K-drama star had a classic transformation as he exhibited various types of charms while wearing pieces of branded outfits and accessories. Known for his classy visuals, Song Joong Ki maintained authenticity in his latest collaboration with Vogue Hong Kong. #SongJoongKi x Vogue Man Hong Kongs anniversary cover star Joongki I did some screenshots and edits https://t.co/cucZ9oc6i0 pic.twitter.com/L5KQzG9VmV Joongki (@sjkwings1985) March 1, 2022 More of cover boy Song Joong Ki's photos and exclusive interview can be found in Vogue Hong Kong's official website and printed magazine March issue. Is Song Joong Ki Reprising His Role in 'Arthdal Chronicles' Season 2? Apart from his upcoming revenge drama "The Youngest Son of Chaebol," which is expected to premiere this year, Song Joong Ki's fantasy series "Arthdal Chronicles" is also confirmed for season 2. A representative from the "Arthdal Chronicles" team stated on February 21 that they are already in the process of finalizing everything before they begin filming. It has been said that filming starts this year and "Arthdal Chronicles" season 2 is slated to premiere in 2023. However, the production didn't disclose whether Song Joong Ki will reprise his role as the main character, alongside Kim Ji Won and Kim Ok Bin. Further, the sequel is confirmed to have a production budget of 10 million KRW. Follow KDramastars for more Korean drama, movie and celebrity news. Shai Collins wrote this. Kdramastars owns this article. Kim Hye Soo is undoubtedly the queen of court and legal dramas! Recently, she showed off her riveting acting skills in the new Netflix series "Juvenile Justice" with Kim Moo Yeol, Lee Sung Min and Lee Jung Eun. "Juvenile Justice" centers around a judge at the juvenile court who detests young offenders, and gives a maximum sentence rulings in every case. If you loved Kim Hye Soo in "Juvenile Justice," here are some of her dramas and movies you might want to check out! 1. 'Signal' Kim Hye Soo's "Signal," like "Juvenile Justice," is a legal crime drama that uses real-life crime cases to portray a story. Helmed together with Lee Je Hoon and Cho Jin Woong, Kim Hye Soo's "Signal" focuses on the two passionate detectives from different timelines, the past and the present, who are adamant to solve cold cases through a walkie-talkie. In the drama, Kim Hye Soo portrayed the role of veteran detective Cha Soo Hyun. 2. 'The Day I Died' "Juvenile Justice" actors Kim Hye Soo and Lee Jung Eun first met through the 2020 crime investigative drama "The Day I Died" as colleagues. The drama depicts the determination of a detective who's assigned to work on a case of a young girl's disappearance. Kim Hye Soo took on the role of Kim Hyun Soo, a detective who takes a break from her job due to personal reasons. She comes back to focus on the cold case and searches for the truth behind Noh Jung Ui's disappearance. 3. 'The Thieves' The 2012 award-winning heist film "The Thieves" stars veterans Kim Hye Soo, Kim Yeon Seok, Lee Jung Jae, Jun Ji Hyun, Kim Hae Sook, Kim Soo Hyun and more. Unlike her other roles, Kim Hye Soo plays the role of a thief and gang member in the star-studded film. It's a huge heist where the thieves target a $20-million diamond known as "Tear of the Sun" which is safely kept in a casino. Together, they steal the diamond while keeping their own agenda in their hearts. It's an action-filled story that also touches friendship, betrayal, romance and more. 4. 'Hyena' The 2020 SBS TV drama "Hyena" might be Kim Hye Soo's most famous work today, which also stars award-winning actor Ju Ji Hoon. While Kim Hye Soo works as a juvenile judge in "Juvenile Justice," she works as a defense lawyer in the drama. The story revolves around two lawyers who work for the top 1% of South Korea. Kim Hye Soo plays the role of Jung Geum Ja, a lawyer who only cares about money. It's a refreshing K-Drama that delivers life lessons, comical scenes and witty lines while still tackling relevant issues in the society. Have you seen "Juvenile Justice"? Share your thoughts on the drama in the comment box below! KDramaStars owns this article. Written by Elijah Mully. The office rom-com drama "A Business Proposal" premiered with a promising storyline, great acting performances and remarkable chemistry, receiving endless positive feedback from the public. 'A Business Proposal' Enjoys New High in Viewership Ratings Ahn Hyo Seop, Kim Sejeong, Kim Min Gyu and Seol In Ah captured the hearts of many with their new rom-com series "A Business Proposal" which aired for the first time on Monday, February 28. The drama centers around the chaotic yet heart-fluttering blind date of a regular office employee and her CEO. On February 28, "A Business Proposal" premiered and received favorable reviews from viewers of all ages. It recorded a stable viewership rating of 4.9% nationwide. Episode 2, which was released on March 1, sets a new record for the drama. During its broadcast, "A Business Proposal" peaked at 7.2%. At the end of the episode, Ahn Hyo Seop and Kim Sejeong's new drama recorded a nationwide rating of 6.1%, a 1.2% higher than its previous episode. As the drama progresses, the production unit of "A Business Proposal" hopes to achieve higher numbers and break its own viewership records. 'A Business Proposal' Episode 2 Highlights In episode 2, Jin Young Seo (Seol In Ah) and Shin Ha Ri (Kim Sejeong) blow their own cover, revealing their true identities to Kang Tae Mu (Ahn Hyo Seop). Enraged from the pretense, Kang Tae Mu asks to see Shin Ha Ri one more time and receive his much-deserved apology. He also calls the wedding off, which his grandfather didn't take well. Kang Tae Mu is sent to another set of blind dates, even going to Japan for one. Adamant to stop his grandfather from sending him to another date, he lies and tells he got back with his ex-girlfriend. He had one person in mind to play the part of his "pretend girlfriend," Shin Ha Ri only needs to say yes to Kang Tae Mu's proposal and plan. Shin Ha Ri firmly declines, even though her CEO bribed him to pay for her loans. Unfortunately, the stern and strict company president didn't know how to give up and pursued Shin Ha Ri. At the end of the episode, the two quirky characters unexpectedly share a brief, sweet kiss. 'A Business Proposal' Episode 3 Release Date and Time The newest hilarious romance drama "A Business Proposal," which quickly became a fan-favorite, is now in its second week! Episode 3 is set to be released on Monday, March 7 at 10:00 p.m. KST on SBS TV. For international viewers, the drama will be available on Netflix with English subtitles at 11:30 p.m. KST. KDramaStars owns this article. Written by Elijah Mully. Ahn Bo Hyun and Jo Bo Ah's "Military Prosecutor Doberman," which premiered on February 28, impressively recorded high audience ratings. Keep on reading for all the details. 'Military Prosecutor Doberman' Beats Own Viewership Ratings Before March began, tvN dropped the much-awaited action-suspense drama "Military Prosecutor Doberman," starring two of the hottest actors, Ahn Bo Hyun and Jo Bo Ah. With its intriguing teasers and stills, viewers were quick to be immersed in the new drama and its tandem. "Military Prosecutor Doberman" then debuted and graced the Monday and Tuesday slots, and instantly received recognition for its story that goes beyond what is expected. Nielsen Korea reported that "Military Prosecutor Doberman" won the ratings battle on its pilot episode and garnered an average viewership rating of 5.3 percent nationwide. Meanwhile, episode 2 that was released on March 1 recorded ratings of 7 percent which was higher than the previous episode's audience rating. On the other hand, its drama competitor, "A Business Proposal," starring Ahn Hyo Seop and Kim Sejeong, also showed it's of to a good start. It kicked off with 4.9 percent rating and increased to 6.5 percent. Jo Bo Ah and Ahn Bo Hyun's Thoughts on 'Military Prosecutor Doberman' Before the drama premiered, Jo Bo Ah said in their online press conference about her thoughts on their new series. According to the "Tale of the Nine Tailed" actress, since "Military Prosecutor Doberman" is an action drama, she can easily express more of her character freely. She added that the cast currently works hard to have a diverse and fun filming environment. YOU MIGHT BE INTERESTED IN: 'A Business Proposal' Records Higher Viewership Rating With Second Episode Meanwhile, Ahn Bo Hyun highlighted his chemistry with new on screen partner Jo Bo Ah. He mentioned that viewers should anticipate how their relationship will change even though they have different reasons for entering the military. He concluded his message by saying, "Please look forward to the action drama that will showcase the refreshing catharsis as the first military court drama that viewers will surely enjoy." Have you watched "Military Prosecutor Doberman"? What are your thoughts about it? Share your comments with us! For more K-Drama, K-Movie, and celebrity news and updates, keep your tabs open here at Kdramastars. Kdramastars owns this article. Written by Shai Collins. If you already subscribe to our print edition, sign up for FREE access to our online edition. Thanks for reading The Henderson News. The White House says sanctioning Russian fuel exports 'on the table,' but Biden still weighing their impact on gas prices at home. White House Press Secretary Jen Psaki, is seen here on February 22 in Washington, DC. More than $30,000 has been raised by members of Kelowna's Ukrainian-Canadian community for the purchase and shipment of body armor, helmets, and tactical medical supplies to Ukraine as the country tries to prevent a Russian takeover. Hospitalizations related to COVID-19 are less than half what they were at the peak of the Omicron wave but B.C is not in "a race" against other provinces to drop pandemic health orders, Health Minister Adrian Dix said Tuesday. Some students applying to University of Wisconsin System campuses have long wondered whether theres a minimum GPA or test score they must meet to gain admission, despite UW admissions officers denying there is any hidden threshold, the Wisconsin State Journal reported recently. A Republican-authored bill, co-sponsored by Assembly Speaker Robin Vos of Rochester and Rep. Robert Wittke of Wind Point and approved by a Senate committee on Feb. 16, would remove the mystery behind undergraduate admissions decisions by requiring UW campuses to use only objective admissions criteria that would have to be published on their websites. The bill, SB 925, has yet to be taken up by the full Senate. System campuses currently use a holistic admissions process that considers a range of factors, such as a students grades, essays, GPA, rigor of course selection and extracurricular activities. Lawmakers, in the initial letter seeking co-sponsors, argue that campuses could still use a holistic admissions process that weighs more data points than just grades and test scores but the criteria would now have to be publicly available and grounded in measurable facts, the State Journal reported. Test scores were among those considerations until the COVID-19 pandemic hit and many colleges, including the System, adopted test-optional policies in response to the limited testing site availability. The System last year extended its policy allowing students to forego sending standardized test scores for through the 2024-25 school year. Test-optional advocates supported the move, saying the ACT and SAT are biased against students of color and those from low-income backgrounds. But the Systems decision drew criticism from several Republicans who are co-sponsoring the admissions bill, including Vos. Lawmakers said the UW admissions process currently allows for individual judgement calls made without public oversight. The admissions process for our public universities should not be shrouded in secrecy, the legislators memo said. Decisions about who earns the privilege to attend a public university should be made in a fair and transparent manner. The System, in testimony outlining its opposition, warned that having objective admissions standards would lead to more students being denied admission, enrolling out-of-state and harming the states workforce needs. Officials noted that admission rates at 10 of its 13 campuses this fall were above 90% and ideological discrimination against applicants is already banned under state law. We agree with the reasoning between the Republican bill. Objective is better than subjective when it comes to admission to public universities. We believe there should be multiple objective measures. These could include a students grades in core subject areas and the progression of a students academic career. If there were to be a weighted formula, and perhaps it already exists, then that formula should be made public. The UW System schools are for all the states students, and are funded by all of the states taxpayers, so multiple data points should be part of any such a law, enabling admissions officers to fairly compare students from different schools. There should be multiple measuring sticks and standards. But those measuring sticks and standards should be public. Love 0 Funny 0 Wow 0 Sad 0 Angry 0 Note: Special one-year subscription at a reduced price for first-time subscribers or for subscriptions that have been expired for at least one year those living in Jackson County and the Cherokee Indian Reservation (28719) addresses qualify. Offer good through Friday, Aug. 2, 2019. We accept Visa, Mastercard and Discover; we do not accept AMEX. Ketchikan, AK (99901) Today A steady rain this evening. Showers continuing overnight. Low 39F. SE winds at 10 to 20 mph, decreasing to less than 5 mph. Chance of rain 70%.. Tonight A steady rain this evening. Showers continuing overnight. Low 39F. SE winds at 10 to 20 mph, decreasing to less than 5 mph. Chance of rain 70%. 26 Shares Share The hands were heavily stained black, the skin with severe eczematous changes, yet she did not mention them. She was a young mother who had come to the clinic to have her six-month-old baby boy seen by the doctors from America. I was the team leader of a faith-based medical team serving in the outskirts of Nouakchott, the capital of Mauritania in Northwest Africa. We were there to provide primary medical care and public health teaching in support of a wonderful Swiss couple who ran a malnutrition clinic for the children of this impoverished country. Mostly, though, we came to love and serve. Nouakchott is on the edge of the vast Sahara Desert. The people we served had been primarily nomadic as had their ancestors for centuries before them. They had been forced by an extended drought (who knew a drought could even occur in the Sahara!) to find another way to survive. The physical and emotional needs were as great as I have seen in 20 years of leading medical missions internationally. I examined her baby and reassured her he was healthy. My eyes, though, kept going back to her hands. Finally, I asked to see them. Painful fissures traversed the blackened skin. I asked about her work. She had two jobs one washing dishes, the other dyeing cloth, her hands exposed daily to hours of hot water and caustic irritants. She had no gloves to protect them, no moisturizer to soothe and heal them. She simply did what she had to do to provide for her family. She was typical of the Islamic women we saw that week. Her face unseen, hidden by her malafa, a scarf wrapped over the head and covering the face, leaving only the eyes exposed. Her eyes were dark, intense, reflecting an inner strength and determination. I told her how much I respected her for being the strong woman and mother that she was. She sat up straight and looked at me, her eyes smiling back. She thanked me and stood to leave. I signaled for her to sit down. I gave her the remaining skin moisturizer I had brought as well as all my exam gloves, anything that might protect her hands and provide some relief. She thanked me with a nod of her head and the look of her eyes, and left, her baby held closely. I wondered what would become of her and her baby. Did she have hope that her life would get better? I wanted to believe so. To live without hope is not to truly live. The majority of people in the world live with no hope of things getting better. Every day is a struggle to survive. Each of you has seen this, too. It may be that patient facing a critical illness, grieving the heartbreak of loss, or experiencing the devastation of Alzheimers. In the busyness of life, may you not miss the hands in front of you. May the needs of others become personal to you as they become more real to you. Thank you for seeing that need and going to it. In doing so, you bring hope and with hope you bring life, and that makes all the difference. Andy Lamb is an internal medicine physician. He can be reached at Bugle Notes. Image credit: Shutterstock.com Thank you for reading! Please log in, or sign up for a new account to continue reading. To subscribe, click here. Already a subscriber? Click here. MBABANE Two students have safely made it back home from Ukraine. This was confirmed by the Minister of Foreign Affairs and International Cooperation, Thuli Dladla,who said Kabawo Sithole and Simphiwe Ntshalintshali landed at the King Mswati III International Airport just after 5.30pm yesterday. These are the first students who have been able to make it back home so far. The minister said over 50 students had also safely made it out of Ukraine into neighbouring countries and were waiting for their turn to board a plane back home. We cannot give an exact figure as they cross at different times and some might be still making their way to the border as we speak. It is a continuous process and the exact number will only be confirmed once we know that they are in one area, but we can confirm that they are above 50, said the minister. She said about 28 students had already made it to Romania while others were still struggling to make it to Poland as the queues were extremely long. She said the students were now opting to use the Hungary border which was said to have less queues. The minister also confirmed that about nine students had already made it to Hungary and were safely accommodated in hotels. Poland has become a very difficult border to use so others will be using Hungary and some Slovakia, she said. According to the minister, as far as she knew, the flow of traffic was better in Hungary even though it was slowly starting to be congested. Poland has been congested since day one but we are happy that a lot of the students have made their way out of harms way while others are still travelling towards the different borders, added the minister. Moving forward, the minister said the plan was to get the students back home in groups of 14 at the end of the week between Friday and Saturday. She said government had paid for the plane tickets. In an interview with one of the students yesterday, she said with regards to their studies some of their universities had said classes would continue online. The only challenge we have right now is how exams will be written for third and sixth-year students but we are yet to get further information, the student said. LOBAMBA I signed that article, if given a chance I would sign it again if lives are endangered in the kingdom. The above words were said by the Minister of Information, Communication and Technology (ICT), Princess Sikhanyiso. She was responding to a question posed by Lobamba Lomdzala Member of Parliament (MP) Marwick Khumalo during the Portfolio Committee debate of the Ministry of ICT. Khumalo had asked the princess if it was true that she switched off the internet for the nation during the unrest. He based his question on screenshots of WhatsApp messages that once circulated. The screenshots contained what was supposedly messages by Cabinet ministers, begging the princess to shut down the internet. Is this true? Did you switch off the internet? I do not believe you authorised that. Regardless of the monumental loss we made, I fail to believe that you are capable of such, said Khumalo. The princess said as a ministry, they took the decision based on factors such as national security, the spread of fake news and perpetuation of violence through videos that were shared on social media. We do promote freedom of expression but we still expect accountability and truthfulness. When we see threats to national security, we will take that decision, she said. In addition, the minister said next time they would ensure that their decision did not affect businesses and revenue. Meanwhile, Khumalo further said the act of shutting down the internet was unfair and it cost the nation because so many people depended on the internet for business. He further stated that it gave a bad image if a government spokesperson responded by saying no comment. You do not say no comment, you got hired to do your job and you say no comment (sic), he said. In addition, he said the norm of saying no comment gave government a bad image and robbed them the chance to communicate accurate information to the public. If you have the nerve to say no comment when you are given a chance to do your work, do it or allow others a chance to do the job, he said. Khumalo then applauded the ministry of ICT for not including Eswatini Broadcasting and Information Services (EBIS) in their budget. He said it was a good move because they did not deserve to be in the budget. Lithuna ke chairperson akudzingi ube ulivusa, kumele kuchamuke labanye, were his exact words. The MP said EBIS was dead and it should remain dead because it was not doing any good. Again, when responding to this, the princess said the submission on the government spokesperson was not necessarily for their ministry but the Prime Ministers office. Ours is to disseminate information to the public and we try by all means to follow the journalism ethics which among other things require truthfulness at all times, said the princess when responding. Meanwhile, MP Khumalo said the ministry needed to work around the clock and find a new CEO for Eswatini Television Authority. The position of the CEO for the TV station was left vacant by Bongani Austin Sigcokosiyancinca Dlamini, who passed away. Khumalo pleaded with the princess to find a new CEO. Money He said the position needed to be filled so that money was not wasted and that the station was run smoothly. His sentiments were echoed by other committee members, who said the acting CEO had acted for a long time and needed to be rescued. When responding to this, the minister said they were currently looking into a consultant that would help them find a perfect candidate for the job. The candidates we had thought we found turned out not suitable for the job, so we are now going to find a consultant to help us find the perfect candidate, she said. BEIJING, March 2 (Xinhua) -- Chinese President Xi Jinping has urged armed police forces to always serve as the faithful guardian of the Communist Party of China (CPC) and the people. Xi, also general secretary of the CPC Central Committee and chairman of the Central Military Commission, made the remarks in the reply to a letter from a People's Armed Police Force unit in Shanghai. In his letter, Xi praised the unit for its honorable tradition and achievements in learning the Party's history, and called for carrying forward the great founding spirit of the CPC. Since 1998, members of the unit have devoted their weekends and holidays to explaining the Party's history to over 4.5 million visitors to the site of the first CPC National Congress in Shanghai. The site is part of a memorial that chronicles the founding of the CPC as well as the Party's efforts and achievements over the past 100 years. Armed police officers of the unit recently wrote to Xi to report their progress in studying the Party's history. MBABANE Kwaluseni Member of Parliament Sibusiso Mabhanisi Dlamini is one of the witnesses who will testify in the criminal trial of Hosea MPs Mduduzi Bacede Mabuza and Mthandeni Dube of Ngwempisi. However, in his statement which was recorded with the police, Dlamini did not make mention of the duo, save for the events that happened when a petition was to be delivered to his constituency. Dlamini (51) is one of the 50 witnesses who have been lined up by the Crown to testify against Mabuza and Dube. Despite that at this stage of Mabuza and Dubes trial, the names of the witnesses are not known, a statement that was recorded by Dlamini at Matsapha Police Station on June 17, 2021 after 11am, has gone viral on social media. The Crown has provided the defence with the statements of witnesses who will testify in the matter. Statement Dlaminis statement and others were provided to the defence legal team as per the procedure in criminal cases. The evidence that was presented by the Crown since late last year was in the form of videos which were played in court until last Thursday. The Crown will lead witnesses from today as it continues to present its case against Mabuza and Dube. The two MPs have been accused of committing acts which offend the Suppression of Terrorism Act, as well as murder and inciting members of the public to riot, among other charges. They were co-charged with former Siphofaneni MP Mduduzi Gawuzela Simelane, who is still at large. Scheduled The MPs trial had been scheduled to proceed yesterday before Judge Mumcy Dlamini. However, the matter could not proceed since the interpreter was not feeling well and the representatives of the parties approached the judge in chambers and upon their return, they spent the better part of the day sorting the logistics of proceeding with the trial from today. Mabuza and Dube remained in court until after 3pm when they left for Matsapha Maximum Correctional facility. Dlaminis statement was recorded after the incident that happened at Kwaluseni where he was attacked by members of the youth who had gone there to deliver a petition in June last year. At the time, according to the statement, Dlamini informed the police that Wandile Dludlu allegedly threatened to bomb his house if he did not respond to their petition. He stated in the statement that he learnt through social media that the youth would deliver a petition to Kwaluseni Constituency on June 8, 2021. He said he and members of the constituency council were not happy to be informed through social media about the delivery of the petition. The Kwaluseni MP informed the police that he called the Manzini Regional Administrator, Chief Gija, about the planned delivery of the petition. Chief Gija, according to Dlamini, allegedly advised him to notify the station commander of Matsapha Police Station about the delivery of the petition. He said the youth did not come to deliver the petition on June 8. Informed Dlamini also stated that he was informed by the Constituency Councillor, Jabulani Nkambule, that there was a social media post to the effect that the youth of Kwaluseni would deliver the petition on June 15. He said he again notified the regional administrator and the station commander about the intended delivery of the petition. He alleged that about 25 police officers from Matsapha Police Station, who were not dressed in police uniform, were deployed at the inkhundla centre. According to Dlamini, during a meeting with the constituency council at 10:45am, the station commander, together with other offices, arrived and informed them that the youth had arrived to deliver the petition and he should avail himself at the gate to receive it so that the youth may leave afterwards. Dlamini said as they made their way to the gate at the inkhundla centre, a police officer was allegedly attacked and he was referred to as Mabhanisi. The officer, according to Dlamini, was also accused by the youth of closing the gate on them. They thought I was the police officer as we are identical. This was a clear sign that the youth who came to deliver the petition were not from Kwaluseni, Dlamini informed the police. He further told the police that: While we were receiving the petition, I was subjected to abuse by the petitioners. All insults were directed to me and they claimed that they voted me into Parliament and I was selling them to the King, King Mswati III. He alleged that his assailants mentioned that they did not support the Tinkhundla System of Government and he was further advised to retract his statement that had appeared in the Eswatini Observer the previous weekend. Finally, he stated, after they had allegedly insulted him, the police, the King and everyone who is associated with the Tinkhundla System of Government, they pelted those who were at the inkhundla centre with stones. The petition, according to Dlamini, was not signed and did not bear any contact details. He said the police did not react when they were pelted with stones and praised them for that since there were young boys among those who had come to deliver the petition as they might have been injured. Bombed There was a threat that my house would be bombed if I did not respond to their petition. All this was said by Wandile Dludlu, he alleged. When the trial of the MPs commenced in court, police officers from the four regions of the country presented photographs they had taken from places where arsonists had burnt public and private property during the peak of the political unrest last year. The number of witnesses to testify in the matter, 50, was revealed by the Crown during the pre-trial conference that was held at the High Court before the start of the trial last year. The prosecution was, however, adamant that it would not disclose the names of the witnesses because of security reasons. The Crown served the MPs and their representatives with the statements of witnesses and the trial could not proceed at the time because, according to their former legal representative, Human Rights Lawyer Thulani Maseko, they were not ready. Maseko said he still had to go through the statements with the accused persons and prepare their defence. We have just been served with the statements of witnesses. That is why we couldnt start today because we have just been served with the statements of witnesses. They (Crown) are saying that they will call about 50 witnesses for now. Change We dont know, maybe the number might change. We need to take that big file to these guys (Mabuza and Dube) at Matsapha and go through each and every statement and prepare our defence based on what the State has against us, Maseko said. In the composite summary of evidence which the Crown presented to the defence, it is alleged that Mabuza and Dube, as well as Mduduzi Magawugawu Simelane, held various meetings in different places where they allegedly incited members of the public to revolt against government. The Crown told the court that as a result of the alleged incitement by the three accused persons, different tinkhundla centres were burnt and these included Timphisini, Ndzingeni, Hosea, KuMethula, Mayiwane, Ngwempisi, Somntongo, Ntondozi, Sandleni, Engudzeni, Matsanjeni and Maseyisini (vandalised). Incitement Further, as a result of the incitement of the public by all the accused persons, various properties around the country were destroyed and different items looted. These include three OK supermarkets in Matsapha, Eswatini Breweries, Nhlangano Health Centre, Mbabane Embangweni Complex, and Buy Cash hardwares all over the country, Lewis Stores and different ATMs for various financial institutions around the country, submitted the Crown. The case will proceed today. Shenandoah, IA (51601) Today Rain showers early will evolve into a more steady rain overnight. Low 49F. Winds ENE at 5 to 10 mph. Chance of rain 70%.. Tonight Rain showers early will evolve into a more steady rain overnight. Low 49F. Winds ENE at 5 to 10 mph. Chance of rain 70%. Support local journalism Local news, sports and entertainment when you want it. Please consider subscribing so we can continue to bring you the best local news, sports and entertainment coverage. US Supreme Court nominee Judge Ketanji Brown Jackson, seen here on February 18, in Washington, DC, heads to Capitol Hill March 2 for a series of meetings with senators. UK-based Turner & Townsend, a global consultancy business serving clients in the real estate, infrastructure and natural resources sectors, has appointed Mark Dyson as the new head of infrastructure for Saudi Arabia. An industry veteran, he has over 15 years of experience delivering large infrastructure projects in the Middle East and the United Kingdom. In his new role, Dyson will be responsible for delivering existing KSA major infrastructure projects and driving infrastructure portfolio growth in the kingdom by ensuring that clients receive the best of the firms technical expertise and innovation. He has been with the business for the past nine years and has been fundamental in Turner & Townsends successful pursuit and delivery of several major public sector infrastructure programmes in the region. Dyson has also actively been involved in the firms strategic positioning and key client development within Saudi and Qatar markets. Regional Infrastructure and Programme Advisory Lead Gary Haldane said: "Marks appointment reflects our dedication to strengthening our infrastructure capability in KSA. He has been instrumental in successfully delivering large-scale infrastructure programmes in the region." "The growth of our regional infrastructure presence is a testament to our approach in helping the Kingdom with economic diversification. As a business, we are fully committed to supporting the goals of Saudi Vision 2030. A key focus for us will be to deliver better outcomes on Kingdom infrastructure programmes by transforming performance, incorporating more sustainability principles, and driving inclusivity in the industry," he added. On his new role, Dyson said the KSA market will see an influx of major infrastructure projects requirements over the next few years as the construction sector powers forward with the delivery of Vision 2030 Giga Schemes and the establishment of the National Infrastructure Fund. "The demand for infrastructure to support KSAs 2030 vision will be huge over the next 10 years. As a business, we are very excited about the opportunity this demand presents us with, to support our existing and future clients on the challenges they will face in delivering, what will no doubt be, complex major infrastructure programmes," he noted. "Our global and local experience in delivering these programmes provides us with a perfect platform to do deliver service excellence to our clients in this space," he added.-TradeArabia News Service By Lee Sun-ho The invasion of Ukraine courtesy of the resolute order of Russia's oligarchic President Vladimir Putin on Feb. 24 this year made me ponder about national security and people's livelihoods in various communities around the world. By Trudy Rubin How does the world confront a Russian leader who is acting like Hitler? How should the United Nations deal with Russia, which has a veto in the Security Council but is led by a war criminal? After his massive attack on a sovereign Ukraine, Vladimir Putin cannot be treated as a normal leader. He must be branded an international pariah and condemned by the vast majority of nations as an outlaw. The U.N. General Assembly should suspend Russia from participation at the United Nations, as it did to apartheid South Africa in 1974. Some may scoff that this would be irrelevant since it won't save Ukrainians in the short term. Neither will harsh economic sanctions that will only play out over time. And it's too late to send more defensive weapons to Kyiv for Ukrainian troops. Yet Putin clearly cares about his international image. Otherwise he wouldn't be so obsessed about justifying his invasion by promoting the foul narrative that Ukraine's leaders are a bunch of Nazis threatening Moscow and bent on "genocide" against Russian-speaking Ukrainians. Maybe, locked in his COVID bunker, Putin really believes this nonsense. But the rest of the world has to demonstrate that it rejects his lies. As Ukrainian President Volodymyr Zelenskyy, who is Jewish, plaintively asked, in a speech to the Russian people on the eve of the invasion, "How could I be a Nazi?" In reality, Putin is aping Adolf Hitler, claiming the neighboring state of Ukraine has no right to exist, because he wants to annex it to Russia. The Russian leader has also promised to carry out "denazification" in Ukraine, which means Russian forces will seek to kill or imprison Zelenskyy and a list of other government leaders, along with civilians who oppose the invasion. Since hundreds of thousands of Ukrainians are likely to demonstrate against any puppet leader imposed by Moscow, this opens the door for massive civilian casualties and no one doubts Putin would be ready to inflict them. The Russian leader is already guilty of massive war crimes in Syria, where Russian planes deliberately bombed schools, hospitals, and markets in order to save the regime of Bashar Assad. So it is critically important for the U.N. General Assembly to demonstrate that a majority of members not just the West sees through Putin's lies. As Ukraine's ambassador to the United Nations, Sergiy Kyslytsya, said: "Pretending now that the U.N. can work as if nothing happens will be immoral." Ironically, the meeting was being chaired by Russia's U.N. ambassador, Vassily Nebenzia, since Russia holds the rotating presidency of the Security Council at the moment. It was as if Saddam Hussein were chairing a council meeting discussing how to reverse the invasion and annexation of Kuwait. To add insult to injury, Nebenzia claimed: "We are being aggressive not to the Ukrainian people, but to the junta that is in power in Kyiv." You can't get more cynical than that Kremlin doublespeak. Translated: A Russian dictator has the right to remove a president chosen by a free vote of the Ukrainian public and replace him with a Kremlin-controlled regime. And he can kill as many civilians as he needs to get the deed done. If the United Nations lets Putin get away with this claim, then the world body might as well declare itself dead. However, there are signs that a broad segment of the U.N.'s member states understands that Putin must not be allowed to get away with murder. The Kenyan ambassador to the Security Council, Martin Kimani, was quite blunt in a Security Council speech challenging Putin's dream of restoring the Russian empire. If that were acceptable behavior, Kimani said, then every African country would be at war with its neighbors trying to change borders drawn by former colonial powers. And other members have surely noted that Putin hinted he was willing to use nuclear weapons against any nation that tries to "interfere" with his invasion, saying this "will lead to the kind of consequences you have never experienced in your entire history." Those are the words of a leader who could embroil the world in a nuclear war. So it is time for the introduction of a U.N. General Assembly resolution to suspend Russia until such time as Putin pulls back from Ukraine. Or maybe indefinitely. If enough U.N. members sign on, even China might recognize that its Russian ally is stabbing it in the back by undercutting Beijing's sacred mantra that no country has the right to interfere in another country's sovereign affairs. To paraphrase Ukraine's Ambassador Kyslytsya on Feb. 23: "There should be no purgatory for war criminals. They should go straight to hell." Meanwhile, the U.N.'s future is on the line, as is Ukraine's and perhaps the world's. Trudy Rubin (trubin@phillynews.com) is a columnist and editorial-board member for the Philadelphia Inquirer. This article was distributed by Tribune Content Agency. Middle East operators have opened the first regional community lab in collaboration with Telecom Infra Project (TIP) and Intel, following the signing of the Open Radio Access Network (Open RAN) MoU last year. The move will accelerate the implementation of Open RAN solutions in their existing telecom networks in order to support the early adoption and development of a robust regional ICT ecosystem. Now two new operators - Bahrain's leading telecom services operator Batelco and Oman's telco group Omantel have also signed the Open RAN MoU, joining the e& (formerly Etisalat Group), stc, Zain Group, Mobily, and du from Emirates Integrated Telecommunications Company (EITC), in their commitment to deploy Open RAN across their footprint and enhance supreme network experiences for end-users. The Middle East lab will provide a platform for the parties to jointly deploy open and disaggregated technologies into their networks to optimise the online experiences of businesses and consumers. Flexible, interoperable and standards-based solutions such as OpenRAN present a compelling opportunity for operators to become more efficient in meeting the ever-growing need for high bandwidth, low latency, and advanced connectivity. The lab will provide shared facilities and access to the most innovative Intel technologies for members and vendors, and catalyst for OpenRAN deployments. Through the TIP end-to-end process, operators become empowered to deploy more flexible and resilient networks optimised for specific use cases. By sharing industry knowledge to align and prioritise their technical requirements, TIP participants contribute to the creation of centralised technical roadmaps that will set the direction for the development of new network infrastructure products and solutions. Operators can then leverage TIPs test and validation process to quickly and easily assess those products and solutions that will best contribute to the transformation of their networks. Mohamed Al Marzooqi, Vice President, Technology Synergies, e& said: "More than ever, our customers rely on high-quality connectivity for their daily requirements. The need for such smart connectivity will only increase in the future. Im delighted to witness more operators from our region partnering with us in our efforts to position the Middle East as a global leader in developing and deploying such innovative network solutions." "e& is committed to supporting technology and service innovation within the markets where we operate, through our participation in TIP and our partnership with Intel. We strongly believe open technologies present the right prospects to achieve this, while helping enhance the flexibility and efficiency of our networks," he added. Welcoming Batelco and OmanTel, Nawaf Al Gharabally, Group's Chief Technology Officer at Zain said: "Through broad regional alignment on OpenRAN and standardisation over Intel technologies, we will provide a clear demand signal to the industry that reflects the needs of our respective markets and customers." "The new [Open RAN Labs] is a testament to this. We will work together through this collaborative hub to find solutions that address the specific use cases we encounter in the Middle East and are an essential component to faster commercial deployments. We urge all regional players to join us in this drive to deliver new and innovative solutions," he noted. On the operator collaboration, Rashid Mohamed, General Manager Networks, Batelco said: "This alignment of operators on OpenRAN is a milestone for the telecommunications ecosystem in the Middle East. It will create a more competitive and robust supply chain, leading to faster 5G deployment, network efficiencies, opportunities for new technology vendors, and unlock advanced services for customers." "We are pleased to join other like-minded and leading organisations in amplifying innovative opportunities in the region," he stated. Bernhard Merwe, CTO, OmanTel, said: "OmanTel is excited to be joining this ground-breaking MoU. This is an initiative that will help us deliver on our mission to provide the highest quality connectivity to our customers while also benefiting from the shared experiences of our community in deploying open network technologies." "We see a clear opportunity to enhance the way we work with the vendor community and build a more resilient and diverse ecosystem that benefits the region as well as our industry," he added. Hisham Alabdaly, GM Infrastructure Design, stc said: "By partnering with TIP, Intel and the operator community in the Middle East, we are helping pioneer a new and innovative approach to developing the solutions that align with our strategic goals and best support the present and future needs of our customers." "In doing so, we are also supporting the growth of our local ICT sectors because open network technologies like OpenRAN provide a trusted avenue for new entrants in both the hardware and software space to work with service providers," he added. Saleem Al Balooshi, Chief Technology Officer at du said: "We are excited to take the next step in accelerating the pace of innovation and promote the development of an open technology that will help to enhance the flexibility, efficiency and security of our networks." "This has multiple advantages for the customers as our networks will become highly programmable and automated, so we can foster collaboration and innovation, release new features quickly, provide capacity on demand, automate network management and deliver tailored enterprise solutions," he added. Mohammed Al Atawi, VP Technology Governance, Mobily said: "Mobily is already committed to making our vendors active partners in our business operations, and the move towards open network technologies is the next logical step in that journey." "We believe the end-to-end process established by the Telecom Infra Project, supported by Intel standard technologies is the best way to ensure we all benefit from the paradigm shift that open and disaggregated technologies represent. We are confident of its cooperative test and validation framework where results and learnings are shared between industry players," he added. Referring to the partnerships among regional mobile operators, Caroline Chan, VP, Network and Edge Group & TIP Board Member, Intel said: This is a great example of how industry collaboration can accelerate the shift toward a software-defined infrastructure at the network edge. A virtualised, Open RAN is an area of tremendous innovation, which can be further propelled by leveraging Intels FlexRAN reference architecture with optimised software and hardware components. The lab opens new possibilities to innovate 5G services that can accelerate the digital transformation in the Middle East. Vish Mathur, Head of Engagement Telecom Infra Project highlighted the shared responsibility of each telco operator in the successful deployment of Open RAN. He said: Regional collaborations on Open RAN development, such as the Middle East MoU and the European MoU, clearly illustrate the growing momentum behind disaggregated technologies in our industry. "While specific use cases may differ depending on the region, the need for these technologies is universal. TIP and Intel play a key role in this context, bringing together stakeholders from across the world, such as the MoU signatories, to accelerate the development of a critical mass of open and disaggregated network solutions in response to operators needs," observed Mathur. "We hope to see more regional initiatives that leverage TIP and welcome all industry organisations to join our efforts to advance global connectivity," he added. If you're interested in submitting a Letter to the Editor, click here. Submit BTS Jungkook continues to dominate the music charts with his song, "Stay Alive." Read further to know more details. BTS Jungkook's 'Stay Alive' Stays at the Top of the Charts It's been two weeks since BTS Jungkook released "Stay Alive," but the track is still at the top of the Billboard World Digital Song Sales Chart. Jungkook's "Stay Alive (Prod. by SUGA of @BTS_twt)" spends a second week at #1 on the World Digital Song Sales chart. chart data (@chartdata) March 1, 2022 This means that BTS Jungkook also became the first K-pop soloist to spend two weeks straight on the Billboard World Digital Song Sales Chart. Jungkook is the FIRST AND ONLY Kpop Solo Act to spend first two weeks charting at #1 on Billboard World Digital Song Sales with Stay Alive prod. Suga pic.twitter.com/7AMv5fXKWe (@jungkooktrends) March 1, 2022 And he is also the first K-pop soloist since 2015 to spend two consecutive weeks at number one with "Stay Alive." stay alive by jungkook is now the first song by a korean male soloist and also the first korean ost to spent two consecutive weeks inside billboard global 200 excl. US chart. pic.twitter.com/vUcTYisozY 5.6M (@mostsuccessfuI) March 1, 2022 Other than this, "Stay Alive" ranked 20 on the Emerging Artists Chart, number 25 on the Billboard Digital Song Sales Chart, number 67 on the Global 200 Excl. US Singles, and number 98 on the Billboard Global 200 Chart. "Stay Alive" is also the first OST by a K-pop soloist and first K-pop debut solo to spend two weeks straight on the Billboard Digital Song Sales. BTS Jungkook Talks About Success BTS Jungkook is enjoying the success of his newest collaboration with BTS Suga, who produced "Stay Alive." However, in July 2021, BTS Jungkook shared his honest thoughts about the success of BTS, as well as success in general. He said that success sometimes feels like a burden and a curse. While speaking with Weverse magazine, BTS Jungkook said that the success of their songs, particularly "Dynamite," has put so much pressure on him. With this, he constantly thinks that he needs to do better and work harder so that BTS's next songs would be as successful as the English track. BTS Jungkook also acknowledged the fact that BTS is an amazing group, but there are times wherein he couldn't keep up with them. BTS Jungkook Opens Up on Struggles to Always Be Perfect In December 2021, he also spoke to GQ Australia about the pressures of always trying to be perfect. When asked how he would draw himself, BTS Jungkook said that he would draw a hexagon that's broken and cracked. He explained that he always tries to be perfect and climb higher. Even though he has a lot of talents, he couldn't also deny the fact that he gets lazy sometimes. Since the hexagon is the most perfect shape according to BTS Jungkook, he resonates with it but believes that he's the cracked and imperfect version of the shape. When asked what color would his hexagon be, BTS Jungkook said that it would be grey because it's an achromatic color. Camille Heimbrod wrote this. KpopStarz owns this article. Tree Energy Solutions (TES) is accelerating its plans to develop the German port of Wilhelmshaven into a world-scale hub for importing Green Gas. The fast-tracking will provide for alternative energy security for Germany and Europe whilst accelerating the growth of Green Gas imports over time. With Green Hydrogen at its core, the Wilhelmshaven green gas terminal is sustainable, carbon-neutral, and transitional, meeting the Germans government short term and long-term energy requirements. A green energy hub for Wilhelmshaven whilst accommodating LNG as an intermediate source of energy supply given the current energy-crisis TES Wilhelmshaven project, initiated in 2019, is set to play an even more significant role in delivering energy to Germany and contributing to Europes energy strategy in a sustainable way while stimulating material economic growth for the regional economy. TES confirms that an acceleration of its project will be fully consistent with and supportive of the strategic priorities of sustainability and diversification of energy supply, by accommodating the handling of gas imports alongside imports of green gas in the early stages. TES expects that this could even accelerate the possibilities to achieve Germanys sustainability goals but also prevent future stranded assets. We are now planning further work to ensure an operational start of phase 1 by winter 2025 at scale. In view of our planned full scale (we are planning 6 independent tanks combined with 6 ship-berths using a novel approach with minimal environmental and visual impact), we are also willing to constructively accommodate any alternative gas importers and still ensure Third Party access in line with current DG Energy regulations and practices. TES welcomes participation from other parties on the condition that it accelerates the project and does not jeopardise the long-term clean and green energy ambitions that are core to the TES DNA. TES also believes that managing the current crisis should be done in such a way that long-term climate targets will and do not need to be compromised. The TES-Wilhelmshaven project is a unique project that can exactly do this, said Paul van Poecke, Founder and Managing Director at TES. Poecke continues: The TES-Wilhelmshaven project is unique in its ability to achieve Germanys and Europes plans to decarbonise in a sustainable way at an industrial scale whilst carefully and prudently navigating the current energy-crisis. We want to boldly drive forward energy transition with the aim of making Germany's energy supply CO2-neutral. This will be achieved by developing Wilhelmshaven as a green energy hub. The latest developments do not interfere with the energy targets to be met by 2045. Already Bundeskanzler Scholz mentioned how Germany sees to support the development of an import terminal in Wilhelmshaven with hydrogen potential. TES believes that its fully sustainable Wilhelmshaven-project deserves at least the same if not stronger support compared to alternative traditional LNG-terminal initiatives considering the concurrent climate-crisis. The primary objective of the European Union's decarbonisation policy is to achieve the fastest possible reduction of CO2 emissions at the lowest possible cost, said Otto Waterlander, Chief Commercial Officer at TES. The current rapid growth of renewable energy must continue. But it will be impossible to replace all molecules with electrons. With only 28% of the EUs Primary Energy Consumption of 17,407 TWh coming from electrons, we must focus on the other 78% to achieve our net-zero ambitions. Green hydrogen imported by TES will significantly accelerate the energy transition in Germany and help the mobility, industry and power sectors achieve their decarbonisation targets and solve the energy storage problem. It will make an immediate impact on CO2 emissions and eliminate customers exposure to significant CO2 costs. Our Wilhelmshaven project will account for 10% of the total annual primary energy demand of Germany by 2045, approximately the annual energy consumption of 43 million households in the country. TES Green hydrogen will be primarily produced using solar, wind and hydro power in countries with abundant renewable energy sources, after which CO2 will be added to make green CH4 which will be used as the energy carrier. This will then be transported to Wilhelmshaven utilising a specially constructed fleet of ships. At Wilhelmshaven, the green CH4 can be converted back into green hydrogen, with the resulting CO2 being captured and returned to the producing countries by ship in a continuous closed-loop system, this way it guarantees that the CO2 never leaves the cycle and we avoid GHG emissions. In the initial phase of 25 TWh per year of green gas import, more than half a million tonnes of hydrogen can be produced and imported in Wilhelmshaven. This will rise to 250 TWh per year and more than 5 million tonnes of hydrogen in a final stage. This corresponds to one tenth of the total annual primary energy demand of Germany. The energy output of the project means that an essential milestone of the German and European hydrogen and climate protection strategy will be achieved.-- TradeArabia News Service Papua New Guinea celebrated its National Day at Expo 2020 Dubai on Monday with a focus on global cooperation to achieve its sustainable development goals and positively impact the global climate change agenda. Sheikh Nahayan Mabarak Al Nahayan, UAE Minister of Tolerance and Coexistence Commissioner General of Expo 2020 Dubai, welcomed Samuel Basil, MP, Deputy Prime Minister and Minister for Transport of Papua New Guinea. Sheikh Nahayan said: Papua New Guineas participation highlights its economic potential, the rich culture and the diversity of its tribes, as well as its achievements in the field of sustainable development. Given that Papua New Guinea has been a regional champion in promoting environmental preservation and tackling climate change, the UAE looks forward to expanding on its collaborative efforts with Papua New Guinea in these fields and aims to further solidify our thriving relationship, as we explore new areas for future cooperation. Basil said: Apart from the cultural richness, the island of New Guinea hosts the third-largest rainforest in the world and most of this, including the biodiversity, is in Papua New Guinea. The rainforest not only contributes to the healthy lungs of the world, but also to the global agenda on climate change. It needs to be protected and my country would need the international community, including like-minded, bilateral partners, to assist in conserving this great international asset through long-term partnership. The inclusive manner in which the Exposition is organised has given our two peoples and those of the participating countries the opportunity to engage in cultural, trade and investment conversations that have the potential to bring the world closer together. In fact, the Expo 2020 Dubai experience will go down in history as one of the innovative experiences of countries of the world living and working together in one village. The speeches were followed by an explosion of colour and sound in a cultural performance that featured dance, music and bilas the colourful, eye-catching body decoration worn during dancing that includes everything from jewellery and body paint, to feathers and headdresses. The Papua New Guinea Pavilion at Expo 2020 Dubai shows off the importance of living in balance with the environment crucial for a country with the largest biodiversity in the world, and the third-largest rainforest and carbon sink, after the Amazon and the Congo Basin. The country is also rich in agricultural land, pristine oceans, mineral and petroleum resources, and exportable goods such as coffee, chocolate, cocoa and vanilla. Visitors to the pavilion at Expo 2020 Dubai might be surprised to learn that Papua New Guineas population of 8.5 million is made up of a thousand different tribes, and more than 850 languages are spoken across the country. National and Honour Days at Expo 2020 Dubai are moments to celebrate each of Expo 2020 Dubais 200-plus International Participants, shining a light on their culture and achievements and showcasing their pavilions and programming. -TradeArabia News Service EAST MISSOULA, Mont. - As the number of volunteer firefighters declines across the nation, Montana station volunteers are working to pick their numbers back up. Volunteer firefighters play a huge role in protecting homes and people. In Montana, nearly 93% of fire departments are volunteer run, one of those is East Missoula Rural Fire Department. The department is fully ran by volunteers and staffed 24/7. According to Captain Malichi Musser, the department serves over 2,000 residents and responds to about 400 calls each year. He described the department as a springboard to bigger opportunities, like Seattle and Denver. Musser said they need about ten more volunteers to have a full crew of 30. It takes a lot of people to effectively manage a structure fire and put it out," Musser said. "That's our main concern. Then, obviously, if we only have a few people that are having to spend 24 hours plus here a week, theyre going to get burnt out. Thats going to result in worse care for the community, mistakes being made, and so theres a personnel safety as well as a public safety component to that. East Missoula Rural Fire Department isn't alone. Departments like Tri-Lakes Fire in East Helena and St. Marie in Glasgow are also actively recruiting. In the most recent survey by the National Fire Protection Association, the number of volunteer firefighters in the United States dropped nearly 70,000 between 2010 and 2018. To join East Missoula's team, experience isn't needed, just a driver's license and high school diploma. The department provides basic training to ensure safety and connects volunteers with medical training. To apply for East Missoula Rural Fire Department, click here. (The Center Square) President Joe Biden blasted the defund police movement during his State of the Union address Tuesday evening, but others in his party are not going along with his messaging. "We should all agree: The answer is not to defund the police," Biden said in his address. "The answer is to fund the police with the resources and training they need to protect our communities." Almost immediately, Biden was met with pushback from his own party. Some Democratic lawmakers and a contingent of activists have continued to push for defunding police despite Bidens rhetoric to the contrary during his time in office. With all due respect, Mr. President, Rep. Cori Bush, D-Mo, wrote on Twitter in response to the speech. You didnt mention saving Black lives once in this speech. All our country has done is given more funding to police. The result? 2021 set a record for fatal police shootings. Defund the police. Invest in our communities. While Bush doubled down on her message, other Democrats have drifted from it. Tuesday was not Bidens first time to emphasize funding police. He has consistently held that message, defying others in his party. Last June, Biden called for hiring more police to stop the wave of violent crime that continues to sweep across American cities. But what I would say to you is that the president has never supported defunding the police, Press Secretary Jen Psaki said at a news briefing at the time. Hes always supported community policing programs. Hes supported giving funding to to states and localities around the country, including through his American Rescue Plan, because he thinks there is an essential role to play for community policing. Biden also pointed to specific policing strategies, like beat cop patrols as well as measures meant to prevent deaths, like body cameras, banned chokeholds, and restricted no-knock warrants for its officers. Like some of you that have been around for a while Ive worked with you on these issues for a long time, Biden said Tuesday evening. I know what works: Investing in crime prevention and community policing cops who walk the beat, who know the neighborhood, and who can restore trust and safety. Lets not abandon our streets or choose between safety and equal justice. Lets come together and protect our communities, restore trust, and hold law enforcement accountable. During his speech, Biden noted he met with the families of slain New York City Police Department officers Wilbert Mora and Jason Rivera. I recently visited New York City Police Department days after the funerals of Officer Wilbert Mora and his partner, Officer Jason Rivera, he said. They were responding to a 911 call when a man shot and killed them with a stolen gun. Officer Mora was 27 years old. Officer Rivera was 22 years old. Both Dominican Americans who grew up in the same streets that they later chose to patrol as police officers. I spoke with their families, and I told them that we are forever in debt for their sacrifices and well carry on their mission to restore the trust and safety in every community deserves. Have a news tip or would like to report a typo? Email Anthony Victor Reyes at areyes@kvoa.com. The Northern New England Red Cross is installing smoke detectors this weekend. Do you have a fire evacuation plan for your home? How about when you are traveling? UAE residents staying overnight in Switzerland have surpassed pre-pandemic levels, according to the latest figures released by Switzerland Tourism. Comparing figures between July to December 2021 with the same period in 2019, the number of bed-nights recorded, increased 20.8% from 188,384 to 227,482. The number of UAE arrivals also grew from 75,084 to 85,632, during the same period, 2019 versus 2021. These are extraordinary figures and underscores the popularity of Switzerland with Emirati nationals as well as residents. From the moment that UAE residents were allowed to travel to Switzerland (June 28, 2021) we have seen a significant increase in the volume of visitors and the length of stay has also grown from an average of 2.5 nights per visitor to 2.66, commented Matthias Albrecht, GCC director for Switzerland Tourism. The substantial increase in numbers is supported by a recent survey conducted by YouGov, which in its 2022 Travel and Tourism Brand and Destination Rankings Report, highlighted Switzerland as the top ranked overseas destination for UAE residents. YouGovs index gave Switzerland a positive impression score of 31.6 a year-on-year increase of 17.9%, ahead of Singapore (30.9), Canada (28.6) and the Maldives (27.6). In further welcome news for UAE travellers to Switzerland, on February 17, 2022, the Swiss federal government announced that visitors from the UAE are no longer required to provide an entry form, vaccine certificate, or negative PCR test. UAE visitors can now enjoy the endless attractions Switzerland has to offer, from natural scenery and outdoor pursuits to delicious local cuisine and immersive cultural experiences. With regulations eased, masks and Covid certificates are not needed when entering shops, restaurants, cultural venues, and other public settings and events, added Albrecht. Looking ahead to the 2022 summer season, Switzerland Tourism is planning a massive marketing campaign, which will focus on sustainability or in other words Swisstainable. Travellers today care deeply about the environment, according to a Booking.com 2021 global survey, 83% of the 29,000 respondents said that sustainable travel was essential to them, with 61% adding that the Covid-19 pandemic had actually heightened their interest in traveling sustainably. However, its not always easy to find sustainable options, something Google recognised in September 2021. After confirming third-party authentication, Google started labelling hotels as Eco-Certified in their global search results. This was in response to the increasing number of searches for keywords associated with eco-travel - the term green hotel, had apparently quadrupled over the previous 18 months. Switzerland is renowned the world over for its sustainable development, especially for its public transport system, which reaches each and every sightseeing spot by train, bus or boat - it is right at the heart of Swiss tourism and Swisstainable is a solid commitment to empower tourists to make informed choices on their path to a greener future. The Swisstainable programme is designed as a simple and informative guide for visitors, which also encourages the industry as a whole to get involved and reduce its impact on the climate. Accessible and inclusive, Swisstainable is open to all Swiss tourism operators, based on various criteria, with three participating tiers. Level 1 Committed, Level 2 Engaged, Level 3 Leading. Alongside the practical guidance provided by Swisstainable, more general recommendations include: 1. Get up close to nature 2. Experience the local culture in an authentic way 3. Consume regional products 4. Stay longer and delve deeper. Protecting the environment provides perfect synergy with Switzerland as a travel destination and taking an eco-friendly approach doesnt mean fewer opportunities to explore. Instead, sustainable tourism invites you to travel more consciously while expanding your horizons, added Albrecht.-- TradeArabia News Service A few Lake Geneva subdivisions are in various stages of construction, while one of the larger residential proposals is set to add more homes and amenities this year. Construction is under way at Symphony Bay, where another 50 homes are being added to the current total, which lies between 125 and 130. So were around that 175 and 180 mark, give or take, said Brian Pollard, president of Fairwyn Ltd., the company that is developing Symphony Bay. The subdivision, which is located near the corner of Townline Road and North Edwards Boulevard, is being built out in several phases. The Lake Geneva City Council approved plans for the subdivision in 2017. Pollard said construction recently began on the third phase of the subdivision, which is set to include over 100 residential lots. There will be more single-family homes. We will have a few bigger home sites in that phase, Pollard said. So were going to be able to offer three-car garages and things like that. The third phase also is set to include a clubhouse. On March 21, Pollard is set to present plans for the clubhouse to the Lake Geneva Plan Commission. The proposed clubhouse area calls for outdoor pickleball and bocce ball courts, a swimming pool, workout facility, library, family room and art room. Pollard said he hopes to begin construction of the clubhouse this summer, if the plans are approved. Currently, Symphony Bay has a clubhouse off South Lake Shore Drive, directly south of The Boat House Bar & Grill, across from Geneva Lake. Once complete, the Symphony Bay subdivision is set to include about 427 residential units. Pollard said he plans to construct between 40 to 50 homes a year and have the subdivision completed within the next five to six years. Pollard said he is pleased with the progress on the subdivision. The sales have gone great. People who are buying them have been a great asset to our city, Pollard said. They have been great to work with. We feel its going to be a great asset to the city. Pollard said several residents who have moved into the subdivision have formed their own groups and clubs. The customers who we have built for are really happy, Pollard said. Theyve created a bunch of clubs, from bocce ball groups to card clubs, to sewing clubs, to reading book clubs. Its really starting to become a community. More subdivisions Several other Lake Geneva subdivisions also under development. A subdivision that could include 183 residential units is set to be built on 27 acres of land near the northwest corner of Townline Road and Edwards Boulevard. The proposed development is adjacent to a 10.5-acre parcel that has been preserved for future commercial development. On Dec. 28, 2021, members of the Lake Geneva City Council unanimously approved a revised general development plan for the development. The subdivision is set to feature 156 multi-family units on the east side of the development, 12 duplex units on the north side, five single-family homes on the southwest side and 10 duplex units on the west side. On July 26, 2021, city alderpersons initially approved a general development plan for the subdivision. However, its developers, the Vistas Group in Chicago, revised the general development plan after receiving results from a traffic impact analysis study that was conducted near the intersection of Highway 120 and Townline Road. The study recommended that the developers move an entrance near Edwards Boulevard for the duplex and multi-family units to about 500 feet south of Park Drive instead of directly west of Park Drive as originally proposed. The study also recommended that a residential street in the right in and right out access only be constructed near Townline Road and Cumberland Trail. Still awaiting approval for the subdivision is a precise implementation plan, which includes landscaping, building design and final site plan. Building and Zoning Administrator Fred Walling said the developers have not submitted a precise implementation plan for the subdivision at this time. I feel thats probably coming in the near future, Walling said. But theres a lot of engineering thats got to go along prior to that stage going through. Other subdivisions in the works include: Vistas of Lake Geneva: Located on 17 acres of land near the intersection of LaSalle Street and Edgewood Drive, the subdivision will feature 58 single-family homes and is being constructed in three phases. City aldermen approved the subdivision Dec. 28, 2020. Walling said several homes in the subdivision are currently under construction. Summerhaven subdivision: A subdivision that had been in the planning stages for about 10 years is currently under construction. The Lake Geneva City Council approved the final phase of the Summerhaven subdivision Oct. 12, 2020. The subdivision, which is located south of Wells Street near Lake Geneva Boulevard, is being constructed in three phases. The first phase includes 28 condominium units, and the second phase includes four single-family homes. The third phase is set to feature 23 single-family homes. Summerhaven also will include a swimming pool and pool house. Walling said construction of several of the homes has been delayed because of the increased costs for materials. The cost of materials, including lumber, has increased during the past few years, he said. Developers are putting the breaks on building homes, because it costs about five times as much to build a home than it did 25 months ago. Get local news delivered to your inbox! Subscribe to our Daily Headlines newsletter. Sign up! * I understand and agree that registration on or use of this site constitutes agreement to its user agreement and privacy policy. BURLINGTON Police are seeking charges in connection with a sexual assault reported at Burlington High School. Burlington Police Department records show that a sexual assault was reported at 3:19 a.m. on Friday, Feb. 11, at the school, 400 McCanna Parkway. Police Sgt. Robert Jones said Tuesday that charges have been referred against a suspect to the Racine County district attorney. Jones would not comment on whether either the assault suspect or accuser were students, or whether the incident occurred at the high school or somewhere else. Burlington Area School District officials could not be reached for comment. Get local news delivered to your inbox! Subscribe to our Daily Headlines newsletter. Sign up! * I understand and agree that registration on or use of this site constitutes agreement to its user agreement and privacy policy. The second annual Bacon Fest can go on as scheduled. Members of the Lake Geneva City Council unanimously approved an event permit, Feb. 14, for the Lake Geneva Regional News to host Bacon Fest, May 14 and May 15 at Flat Iron Park, 201 Wrigley Drive in Downtown Lake Geneva. The council members also approved a temporary Class B retailers liquor license for the Walworth County Food Pantry and Diaper Bank to sell alcohol during the event and a temporary liquor operator license to John Hughes to sell alcohol during Bacon Fest. Bacon Fest is set to feature food vendors and food trucks serving bacon-inspired dishes, beer tent, live music, bounce house, contests and non-food vendors. The is being hosted by the Wisconsin Valley Media Group the parent company of the Lake Geneva Regional News, Kenosha News and Racine Journal Times. Representatives from the Wisconsin Valley Media Group requested a $10,000 grant from the Tourism Commission to help advertise and promote the event. Members of the Tourism Commission advised the media group, Jan. 10, that they would have to obtain an event permit first before being awarded the grant. This will be the second year for Bacon Fest. About 2,500 people attended the event last year, which was held for one day. Because of the success of last years Bacon Fest, representatives from Wisconsin Valley Media Group have decided to expand Bacon Fest to two days this year. Last years Bacon Fest raised about $6,000 for the Walworth County Food Pantry and Diaper Bank. Get local news delivered to your inbox! Subscribe to our Daily Headlines newsletter. Sign up! * I understand and agree that registration on or use of this site constitutes agreement to its user agreement and privacy policy. SOMERS The University of Wisconsin-Parkside honored Tommy Thompson Tuesday afternoon for his dedication to the public university system and leadership, especially during the challenges of the COVID-19 pandemic. Thompson, the former four-term Wisconsin governor and U.S. Secretary of Health and Human Services who has served as interim president of the University of Wisconsin System since July of 2020, announced last month that he will step down on March 18. He helped guide the system of more than 180,000 students through the COVID-19 pandemic. Thompson has spent the last few weeks visiting each of the 13 UW System schools. Thompson, who wore a Ranger green shirt for Tuesdays event, said Parkside holds a special place in his heart. Parkside is a gem, and I dont think people in Kenosha and Racine know the beauty and the value that this campus gives to their communities, Thompson said. This campus is turning out the leaders of Kenosha and Racine counties for the future and all over the state. I couldnt be happier to be here. I love coming back here. Theres an excitement about being on this campus. Everybody is friendly. Everybody wants to do it. Its all about the students. Thompson said he owes his professional success to the UW System. The 80-year-old was born into a poor family and raised in the small Juneau County city of Elroy before deciding to enroll at UW-Madison to study law because it was affordable. Students laughed at me when I moved in because I didnt have a suitcase. All I had were my belongings in a grocery bag, he said. I tell you that story because I love this university system. How could anybody that poor, that naive, that afraid to speak, be able to accomplish what Ive been able to accomplish? The University of Wisconsin, the system, gave me the opportunity. Gave me the opportunity to unlock what was inside of me and allowed me to serve the great people of this wonderful state we call home. Honored by university Parksides alumni association on Tuesday presented Thompson with lifetime honorary alumni status. UW-Parkside Chancellor Debbie Ford also presented him with a rendering of a bronze plaque that will eventually be installed at the school thanking him for his leadership. Man of the moment, a tireless champion, collaborative leader, and one of the finest public servants for Wisconsin, the nation and the University of Wisconsin System. Thank you for your brilliant leadership, unwavering support and outstanding stewardship, advocating for continued investment in student success at the University of Wisconsin-Parkside and throughout the UW System, Ford read from the plaque. You stepped up and accepted the challenge of guiding UW-Parkside and the UW System through a global pandemic, when others might have shied away, ensuring that UW-Parkside and the UW System continue to be drivers of opportunity, providing quality affordable and vital access to a UW education for all students regardless of age, gender, race, occupation, cultural background or family status. With much gratitude and appreciation, we honor your service. MADISON, Wis. The Wisconsin Supreme Court grappled Tuesday with whether to allow a woman accused of killing a man to argue at trial that the homicide was justified because she was a sex trafficking victim in a case that could help define how far immunity extends for trafficking victims across the country. Prosecutors allege Chrystul Kizer shot Randall Volar in the head at his Kenosha home, burned down the house and stole his BMW in 2018. Kizer, who was 17 at the time of the shooting, contends she met Volar on a sex trafficking website and he went on to sexually assault her and traffic her to others. She told detectives she shot Volar after he tried to touch her, according to a criminal complaint. Charges she faces include arson, theft and first-degree intentional homicide. Kizer's attorneys want to argue that Kizer's actions were justified under a 2008 state law that absolves sex trafficking victims of any offenses committed as a result of being trafficked. Almost 40 states have passed laws that provide sex trafficking victims at least some criminal immunity, according to Legal Action of Wisconsin, which provides legal assistance to the poor. An appellate court in June ruled Kizer could make that case to the jury. Prosecutors appealed to the state Supreme Court, contending the immunity statute can't possibly extend to homicide. Kizer's attorney, Katie York, told the justices during oral arguments Tuesday that prosecutors are wrong. The Legislature chose (the wording of) any offense, York said. They certainly could have limited (immunity) to certain types of crimes, but they did not do so. Assistant Attorney Timothy Barber said York's interpretation would create an unprecedented expansion of self-defense doctrine by removing any questions about whether killing someone was reasonable or necessary. This can't be what the Legislature intended, Barber said. The state does not believe that killing someone to get out of a trafficking situation is what's contemplated under the statute. He also argued that the shooting wasn't a direct result of trafficking because Kizer traveled to Kenosha to see Volar and had time to contemplate shooting him. York insisted most of the evidence in the case hasn't emerged yet and a jury should be allowed to decide how closely the shooting and the alleged trafficking were connected. The justices appeared to wrestle with the concepts. Patience Roggensack, a conservative, said the law does seem to trample established self-defense doctrine. She called it a real conundrum and Kizer's case really bad for me. You're telling us this is stronger than self-defense, Roggensack said. (Kizer) doesn't have to prove there's no other way around the bush when she shot him in the head. She had an absolute privilege to do it under the statute. Jill Karofsky, who directed the state Justice Department's Office of Crime Victim Services before becoming a judge, responded to Barber's arguments that the shooting wasn't a direct result of trafficking with disbelief, telling him that trafficking isn't a one-time crime and a victim can be trapped in it for years. I think what the other side is saying is it's a direct result out of these years of abuse, said Karofsky, a liberal. I don't understand. Your argument doesn't make any sense to me. The Associated Press does not typically identify people who say they are victims of sexual assault, but Kizer discussed her case in an interview from jail with The Washington Post that was published in 2019. It's unclear when the justices might rule. Their decision could set a precedent for how far criminal immunity extends in other states, according to legal experts. More than a dozen anti-violence groups from around the country have filed briefs supporting Kizer. They contend that trafficking victims may feel they have to take matters into their own hands to escape. Groups Appointed for UW Strategic Planning More than 115 members of the University of Wyoming community were nominated to serve on groups charged with developing a university strategic plan to recommend to President Ed Seidel and the UW Board of Trustees later this year. From that group of nominees, the Strategic Planning Team named this week consists of 65 individuals from across the UW community. Co-chaired by Vice Provost for Strategic Planning and Initiatives Anne Alexander and Vice President for Student Affairs Kim Chestnut, the team primarily will be responsible for carrying out dialogues and workshops with academic and nonacademic units focused on the land-grant mission of providing transformative learning opportunities; providing discovery and innovation through scholarship and creative activities; having societal impact on Wyoming and beyond; and exploring financial sustainability and resourcing UWs mission. A subgroup of the Strategic Planning Team, the Strategic Planning Council, will steer the broader groups efforts, identify priorities from the dialogues and draft the plan itself. The Strategic Planning Council members are Adrienne Freng, Faculty Senate chair and a professor of criminal justice; Carrie Gomez, a senior program coordinator at UW-Casper; Janel Seeley, an associate lecturer and director of the Ellbogen Center for Teaching and Learning; Alex Kean, deputy vice president for finance and budget; Adam Myers, an associate professor in physics and astronomy; Steve Smutko, Spicer Chair of Collaborative Practice and associate dean of the Haub School of Environment and Natural Resources; Tristan Wallhead, a professor of kinesiology and health and an associate dean of the College of Health Sciences; Peter Parolin, dean of the Honors College; Brianna Casey, an academic adviser in Advising, Career Services and Exploratory Studies; Brett Befus, associate vice president for institutional advancement; Chris Maki, president of Staff Senate and manager of space allocation; Tanner Russell, associate director of enrollment management in the College of Business; Hunter Swilling, Associated Students of UW president and a junior majoring in molecular biology; and Tanya Brown and Patrice Parkinson, both Ph.D. students in counselor education and supervision. Im grateful that so many of our students, faculty, staff, trustees and others have been willing to join in this process to build on UWs strengths and help us move UW toward the vision of a best-in-class 21st century land-grant university true to its Wyoming roots, Seidel says. Staff, student, faculty and stakeholder leadership and buy-in will be foundational to our success in building this roadmap for UW. The groups are scheduled to meet for the first time today (Thursday), with dialogues and workshops taking place this semester. The drafting phase for the plan is scheduled to begin in April or May, with presentation of the plan to the president and UW Board of Trustees early in the fall semester. The work of the Strategic Planning Team and Strategic Planning Council follows the work of UWs Strategic Scenario Planning Team, the Blue Sky Group and the four pillars groups organized last year and focused on making UW more digital, more entrepreneurial, more interdisciplinary and more inclusive. Numerous listening sessions were held with various constituent groups at that time. The new strategic planning effort also comes on the heels of the academic reorganization and new initiatives presented to the Board of Trustees last year -- including the new School of Computing approved by the board in January. The strategic planning process will consider how to help carry out the academic reorganization and how to best leverage UWs new and existing initiatives for the future of the university, Provost and Executive Vice President Kevin Carman says. Additionally, many excellent ideas came from the groups organized last year, and their reports and recommendations will be considered in the new planning process. In addition to reflecting the four pillars focused on making UW more digital, more entrepreneurial, more interdisciplinary and more inclusive, the strategic planning process will be based on three key themes: institutional excellence, student success and service to the state. For more information about strategic planning at UW, go to this website, which will be updated as the process unfolds: www.uwyo.edu/acadaffairs/plans. When Wisconsins natural resources policy board voted down limits for forever chemicals in groundwater, they also effectively killed groundwater standards for more than a dozen other toxic substances. Conservatives on the Natural Resources Board last week rejected proposed groundwater standards for two fluorinated compounds known as PFAS based on their disbelief in the science and the Department of Natural Resources economic impact analysis of standards for groundwater, the source of drinking water for roughly two-thirds of Wisconsin residents. But there was no discussion of new or modified limits for about two dozen other substances, including trichloroethylene, a common dry cleaning chemical known as TCE, and chromium-6, a carcinogen made famous by Erin Brockovich. A 2017 law requires that the rule, developed over the past 2 years, be delivered to the Legislature for approval by Thursday, meaning the DNR will have to start over if the agency wants to implement those standards. Tony Wilkin Gibart, executive director of Midwest Environmental Advocates, said the board failed to carry out its mission when it scrapped years of taxpayer-funded work that went into crafting the rule. The Natural Resources Board failed to even make a rational, justifiable decision with respect to those contaminants, Gibart said. Board chair Greg Kazmierski faulted the agency for lumping PFAS in with other substances, which the board authorized when it approved the rule parameters in early 2020. Kazmierski said he would have preferred to table the rule to allow the agency to address the boards concerns about PFAS, but thats not how it went down. Its a victim of the process, Kazmierski said. Thats one of the hazards of waiting till the last possible minute to present those rules. The agency initially estimated it would require some 925 staff hours to prepare the rule. Steve Elmore, director of the DNRs drinking and groundwater program, said toxicologists, hydrologists, economists and other staff experts spent many hours over the past 30 months. Elmore said the DNR has not decided whether to restart the rule-making process to address the other 25 contaminants. Were looking at our options, he said. Developed with input from industry and environmental groups as well as hundreds of concerned citizens, the proposed rule was based on Department of Health Services recommendations for safe levels of 27 substances. Some, such as PFAS, would have been added to a list of more than 90 regulated contaminants. The DNR also proposed lower enforcement standards for some substances and higher limits for others, including boron and tetrachlorethelyne, or PCE. We looked at all the latest science and some were found to be less toxic than we previously understood, Elmore said. The board has previously approved 11 such revisions to the groundwater protection law. Kazmierski said he doesnt favor amending rules on the fly, although the board did just that when it amended the agencys recommended limits for PFAS in drinking water. He said that was an attempt to approve a rule that could get past the Legislatures rules committee. If approved, the groundwater rule would have enabled the DNR to force polluters to clean up spills or face fines, which the agency estimated would cost businesses and local governments about $3.3 million a year on average, including about $2.6 million just for the PFAS compounds. The board did vote to adopt weakened PFAS standards for drinking water, which will require municipalities, condo associations, institutions and businesses that provide water to the public on a daily basis to conduct testing and install filtration systems if the two compounds exceed concentrations of 70 parts per trillion. According to the agency, it is most cost-effective to address PFAS contamination at the source. About 1.7 million people more than one in four residents who drink groundwater pumped through private wells would be responsible for testing and treating their water if they choose. The burden shifts to local units of government, Gibart said. By not moving forward on the groundwater standards the state has less ability to prevent PFAS and other contaminants from entering the aquifer in the first place. Vacation News has been THE entertainment guide for more than 70 years! Featuring restaurants, music, arts & theater, business profiles everything thats happening at the Lake is in Vacation News each issue. CLICK HERE Many farmers look at feeding calves as a cost, but they should see it as an investment. The right calf management can lead to higher levels of milk production. If you don't get it right at the get-go, it's going to be a lot more difficult to keep that plant being healthy through the years, said Kathy Demchak, a Penn State berry researcher. Minister of Foreign Affairs Prof. G.L. Peiris and the Sri Lanka delegation had high level bilateral meetings on 28 February, 2022, with the United Kingdom, the Commonwealth Secretariat, the Organization of Islamic Cooperation (OIC) and the World Intellectual Property Organization (WIPO), on the side lines of the High-Level Segment of the 49th session of the Human Rights Council which commenced 28 February, 2022. During his meeting with Minister of State of the United Kingdom for South and Central Asia, UN and the Commonwealth Lord Tariq Ahmed, the Minister of Foreign Affairs discussed bilateral cooperation, and progress achieved by Sri Lanka in advancing reconciliation as well as the Governments comprehensive efforts at fostering unity and harmony. The Minister emphasized the need for understanding and recognition of Sri Lankas efforts. At the Meeting with Secretary General of the Commonwealth Baroness Patricia Scotland, the Minister discussed avenues of furthering Sri Lankas cooperation with the Commonwealth including on the economic front, tourism, and opportunities for youth such as vocational training. The Commonwealth Secretary General commended Sri Lankas lead role on the Blue Economy and requested enhanced engagement in this area. The Minister and the delegation also had a constructive meeting with Permanent Observer of the Organization of Islamic Cooperation in Geneva Ambassador Nassima Baghli, where Sri Lankas longstanding friendly relations with members of the OIC, the multi-ethnic and multi-religious nature of the Sri Lankan society, the significant contribution from its Muslim community and matters relating to advancing their interests, were discussed. The Minister also had a productive meeting with Director General of WIPO Daren Tang and exchanged ideas on further advancing technical cooperation in intellectual property in the areas of policy development, digitization, geographical indications, and empowerment of youth in the use of IP for research and development. The Minister was accompanied by Minister of Justice Ali Sabry, State Minister of Production, Supply and Regulation of Pharmaceuticals Channa Jayasumana, Secretary to the Ministry of Foreign Affairs Admiral Prof. Jayanath Colombage, Additional Solicitor General Nerin Pulle,and Permanent Representative of Sri Lanka to the UN in Geneva C.A. Chandraprema. Ministry of Foreign Affairs Colombo 02 March, 2022 View PDF Minister of Foreign Affairs and the Secretary General of the Commonwealth hold discussions on the sidelines of the 49th session of the HRC Permanent Observer of the Organization of Islamic Cooperation in Geneva meets with Foreign Minister Director General of WIPO and the Sri Lanka delegation led by the Foreign Minister discuss cooperation on intellectual property Weather Alert ...RED FLAG WARNING IN EFFECT FROM 10 AM TO 9 PM MDT TODAY FOR THE NORTHEAST HIGHLANDS, NORTHEAST AND EAST CENTRAL PLAINS, SANDIA, MANZANO AND GALLINAS MOUNTAINS, WEST CENTRAL HIGHLANDS, AND MIDDLE RIO GRANDE VALLEY DUE TO STRONG WINDS, LOW HUMIDITY, AND AN UNSTABLE ATMOSPHERE... .Strong west to northwest winds developing today will shunt out low level moisture which has worked into portions of eastern NM overnight. Therefore very low humidities and unstable conditions are expected across much of central, eastern, and southern NM. Temperatures will be below normal over most of northern and western NM however elevated critical fire weather conditions are still possible. Winds taper off this evening over all and humidities increase over portions of northeast and east central NM. ...RED FLAG WARNING REMAINS IN EFFECT FROM 10 AM THIS MORNING TO 9 PM MDT THIS EVENING... * AREA AND TIMING...Northeast Highlands, Northeast and East Central Plains, Sandia, Manzano, and Gallinas Mountains, West Central Highlands, and Middle Rio Grande Valley from 10 am to 9 pm MDT today. * 20 FOOT WINDS...West to northwest 20 to 30 mph with gusts up to 45 mph today. * RELATIVE HUMIDITY...7 to 13 percent. * IMPACTS...Outdoor burning should not be done. Any fires that develop will likely spread rapidly. PRECAUTIONARY/PREPAREDNESS ACTIONS... Please advise the appropriate officials or fire crews in the field of this Red Flag Warning. && ...AIR QUALITY ALERT... The following message is transmitted at the request of the New Mexico Departments of Health and Environment. * WHAT...Westerly transport winds becoming northwest tonight and Thursday will generally carry smoke toward the east then southeast through late afternoon and evening. Diminishing winds and nighttime inversions tonight will focus the greatest overnight impacts close to and down-drainage of the large fires. * WHERE...Smoke will continue to significantly impact areas across much of southern Colfax, Los Alamos, Mora, southeast Rio Arriba, Sandoval, San Miguel, and Santa Fe counties during the next 24 hours. This includes but is not limited to the following communities: Espanola, Kewa Pueblo, La Cueva, Las Vegas, Los Alamos, Mora, Ocate, Ohkay Owingeh, Pojoaque, Pueblo of Cochiti, Pueblo of San Felipe, Pueblo of Santa Clara, Pueblo of Santa Ana, Santa Fe, Sapello, and White Rock. * WHEN...Remainder of this afternoon through noon MDT Friday. * IMPACTS...Those with conditions such as asthma, chronic obstructive pulmonary disease, interstitial lung disease, lung cancer, and heart disease will be especially vulnerable to impacts from poor air quality, as will adults over age 65, young children, and pregnant women if smoke concentrations become unhealthy. * HEALTH INFORMATION...Remember, your eyes are your best tools to determine if it is safe to be outside. Use the 5-3-1 Method available at https://nmtracking.org/environment/air/FireAndSmoke.html. If visibility is: Under 5 miles, the air quality is unhealthy for young children, adults over age 65, pregnant women, and people with heart and/or lung disease, asthma or other respiratory illness. Outdoor activity should be minimized. Around 3 miles, young children, adults over age 65, pregnant women, and people with heart and/or lung disease, asthma or other respiratory illness should avoid all outdoor activities. Around 1 mile, the air quality is unhealthy for everyone. People should remain indoors and avoid all outdoor activities including running errands. Unless an evacuation has been issued, stay inside your home, indoor workplace, or in a safe shelter. With the ongoing COVID-19 pandemic affecting New Mexico and with the wildfire season underway, New Mexicans will need to take extra precautions. Smoke from wildfires may cause people to have more severe reactions if they are infected COVID-19. The best way to protect against the potentially harmful effects of wildfire smoke and to reduce the spread of COVID-19 is to stay home and create a clean indoor air space. NMDOH offers tips here: https://nmtracking.org/environment/air/IndoorQuality.html and https://cv.nmhealth.org New Mexicans will also need to take steps to keep their homes cool to avoid heat-related illnesses. NMDOH offers tips here: https://nmtracking.org/health/heatstress/Heat.html. For smoke forecast outlooks from the Interagency Wildland Fire Air Quality Response Program please visit: https://outlooks.wildlandfiresmoke.net. ...WIND ADVISORY REMAINS IN EFFECT UNTIL 8 PM MDT THIS EVENING... * WHAT...West winds 25 to 35 mph with gusts up to 50 mph. * WHERE...Central Highlands, Eastern Lincoln County, South Central Highlands, De Baca County, Guadalupe County, Quay County, Eastern San Miguel County, Harding County and Northeast Highlands. * WHEN...Until 8 PM MDT this evening. * IMPACTS...Gusty winds will blow around unsecured objects. Tree limbs may be blown down. Expect strong cross winds on area roadways. PRECAUTIONARY/PREPAREDNESS ACTIONS... Winds this strong can make driving difficult, especially for high profile vehicles. Use extra caution. && New Delhi [India], March 2 (ANI): A delegation of six Members of Parliament from Punjab on Wednesday met Minister of State for External Affairs Meenakshi Lekhi and urged her to evacuate Indian students from Ukraine at the earliest. They laid special emphasis on students held in Kharkiv which is on the Russian border but almost 1600 kms from Poland and Romania border and that city is the epicentre of conflict between Ukrainian and Russian forces. Also Read | Urban Company To Award Shares Worth Rs 150 Crore to Gig Workers. The ministers also requested Lekhi that after the death of one student, the anxiety of people has increased. "Ukrainian police brutality on Indians should be stopped at every cost as these disturbing videos of girls being beaten and abducted had angered every Indian," they said. Also Read | Chandan Jindal Dies of Stroke in Ukraine, Family of 22-Year-Old Student From Punjabs Barnala Seeks Help To Bring Body Home. They also handed the list of stranded people and students of Punjab to the MoS. Minister assured the delegation that the Government of India is taking every step for the safety, security and evacuation of all Indians in Ukraine. She also assured that Indian Air force planes have been pressed to service for fast and effective evacuation from Ukraine. Jasbir Singh Gill, Manish Tiwari, Gurjit Aujla, Ravneet Bittu, Chowdhary Santokh Singh, Dr Amar Singh were part of the delegation. (ANI) (This is an unedited and auto-generated story from Syndicated News feed, LatestLY Staff may not have modified or edited the content body) UW Researcher, Bahamian Scientists Collaborate on Post-Hurricane Dorian Recovery on Grand Bahama As part of her doctoral research, Elizabeth Lynch, a UW Department of Anthropology postdoctoral researcher, records ground stone features on the Purgatoire River in southeastern Colorado. Lynch is leading a collaborative research project to gather forest recovery data in the Bahamas two years after a powerful hurricane struck the country. (Elizabeth Lynch Photo) A University of Wyoming researcher and two colleagues from the University of The Bahamas are gathering data to evaluate community perspectives about forest recovery efforts two years after a devastating Category 5 storm hit parts of the Commonwealth of the Bahamas and caused mass destruction. Elizabeth Lynch, a UW Department of Anthropology postdoctoral researcher, is leading the project titled Citizen Science Forest Recovery and Community Perspectives on Post-Hurricane Dorian Grand Bahama. She is collaborating with Nicolette Bethel, a social anthropologist, and Clare Bowen-OConnor, a plant ecophysiologist, both from the University of The Bahamas (UB). They will conduct research on Grand Bahama in the northernmost area of the islands in the Bahamian archipelago, located east of Florida and west of the Great Abaco islands. The project received $62,282 from the Natural Infrastructure for Caribbean Resilience Program, which is funded by the U.S. Department of State and administered by the U.S. Forest Service. The team also received $5,000 from the CGS International Research Grant Fund for preliminary collaborative research. The significance of this project is the collaborative nature and focus on the integration of community input into ongoing ecosystem recovery activities, Lynch says. Our project brings together Bahamian communities, international and local students and researchers, and governing authorities. In September 2019, Hurricane Dorian -- the most intense storm on record in the Bahamas -- devastated the islands natural vegetation composed of pine, coppice and mangrove forests. Homes, commercial buildings, utilities and infrastructure including roads, docks and airports also were destroyed, particularly in the settlements of Freeport and East End Grand Bahama. Most of the forest resources on Grand Bahama (70,289 acres) suffered catastrophic damage due to hurricane-force winds and saltwater intrusion. The collaborative research project incorporates the concepts of spatial justice. For instance, in circumstances where people are displaced from homes and communities, their voices need to be included in decision-making to allow for more equitable and resilient responses to climatic change throughout the Bahamian archipelago, Lynch says. The project builds collaborative engagement with other researchers working on a range of recovery projects on the island. University of The Bahamas (UB) faculty member Mark Stephens, right, tests soil conditions in Grand Bahama, assisted by UB student Amber Turner, left, and University of Brasilia doctoral candidate Maria Rita Fonseca. UB students and two faculty members are collaborating with Elizabeth Lynch, a UW anthropology postdoctoral researcher, on a study in the Bahamas. (Kristen Welsh-Unwala Photo) She mentions Kristen Welsh-Unwala, from UB, who conducts research on small island sustainability, and her student, Amber Turner. Turner is researching potable water resources such as preparation, recovery and perceptions in the wake of major hurricanes on Grand Bahama. The title of their project is Strengthening of Forests through Groundwater Restoration and is funded by the Bahamas Protected Areas Fund. Both researchers will be contributing to our project as we proceed, Lynch says. Lynch and her two UB colleagues will collect data on the attitudes toward the renewal of forest resources and determine the perspectives on climate change relating to the impacts of high-intensity storms on environmentally sensitive areas, such as in the Bahamas. The results of this research will provide a social impact analysis of post-Dorian forest recovery efforts and a long-term monitoring and maintenance strategy for these resources by the community, she adds. The project will be conducted in the forest reserve and conservation forests of Grand Bahama over a two-year period, followed by a long-term monitoring program supported by UB personnel and community members. The initial assessment will examine the recovery of the forested areas two years after the storm struck and will survey the present status of the communities impacted by Hurricane Dorian. About 240 acres of forest reserve land was identified for restoration work in selected permanent plots that engage both UB students and neighboring community members, such as high school students, residents, nongovernmental organizations and local interest groups. UB plant science students will lead the collection of plant measurements as part of their coursework. We are in the process of constructing a plant nursery for the propagation of native plants to reforest areas devastated by Hurricane Dorian, Bowen-OConnor says. In January, we assessed plant abundance and regeneration in established permanent plots in east Grand Bahama. We also quantified the pinewood volume to determine the potential economic value of pine trees within the groundwater wellfields boundaries. UW researchers will lead the ethnographic -- a branch of anthropology and the systematic study of individual cultures that explores cultural phenomena -- study of the communities affected by Hurricane Dorian, with the goal of training UB students pursuing anthropology studies during the second year of the project. Assisting Lynch are UW students Erin Woolley, a senior from Cody and a project research assistant; Lander sophomore Kenzie McPhie, a UW Honors College researcher; and Keaton Lovato-Hegdahl, a senior from Casper and a project volunteer. For more information, email Lynch at elynch2@uwyo.edu. New Delhi, Mar 2 (PTI) As India steps up efforts to evacuate its citizens from war-hit Ukraine, the Ministry of External Affairs (MEA) said on Wednesday that efforts are on to reach cities in the eastern part of that country, though it is not easy. The eastern part of Ukraine has been witnessing intense fighting between Russian and Ukrainian troops. Also Read | Lieutenant General RP Kalita Meets Nagaland CM Neiphu Rio, Assures Full Support in Maintaining Conducive Security Environment in Region. The comments by MEA spokesperson Arindam Bagchi came hours after the Indian embassy in Ukraine asked all Indians in Kharkiv to leave the city immediately for three safe zones. He said nearly 17,000 Indian nationals have left Ukraine's borders since advisories were issued over a fortnight back. Also Read | Urban Company To Award Shares Worth Rs 150 Crore to Gig Workers. Bagchi said 15 flights are scheduled over the next 24 hours and some of them are already operating. "The cities in eastern remain areas of concern for us. Some students were able to board trains out of Kharkiv yesterday night and this morning and we assisted in the process through the student contractors and other partners," Bagchi said. "We have been in communication with the Russians regarding the safe passage of our nationals from Kharkiv and other nearby cities," he said. Bachi said India is also exploring the option of reaching the eastern part of Ukraine to help in the evacuation of Indian nationals stranded in the areas. "It's not easy because the route is not open at all times," he said at a media briefing. Separately, he said an Indian national, identified as Chandan Jindal, died in Ukraine due to natural causes. He was in the hospital for the last few days. Bagchi also said that there has been a sharp increase in the number of Indians who have left Ukraine over the recent past. "We now estimate that nearly 17,000 Indian nationals have left Ukraine's borders since our advisories were issued. This of course includes some Indians who had not registered with the embassy earlier," Bagchi said. Earlier, the MEA had said that 20,000 Indians were in Ukraine when India had issued the first advisory in mid-February when the tension between Russia and Ukraine started building up. Bagchi said the Indian embassy in Kyiv was asked to set up a temporary office in Lviv to facilitate border crossings by Indian nationals, adding a large segment of the team in the mission is now at Lviv. The MEA spokesperson also said that a mechanism has been put in place for issuing emergency certificates to those Indian citizens who somehow lost their passports. About the evacuation mission, Bagchi said flights under 'Operation Ganga' have increased sharply and that six flights have landed in India in the last 24 hours taking the total to 15. He said the total number of Indians who have returned on board these flights is 3,352. He said the advisory issued by the Indian embassy in Ukraine asking citizens to leave Kharkiv is based on information from Russia. "We would urge all our nationals to leave Kharkiv immediately to safe zones," he said. (This is an unedited and auto-generated story from Syndicated News feed, LatestLY Staff may not have modified or edited the content body) New Delhi, Mar 2 (PTI) As fighting intensified in Kharkiv, India on Wednesday asked its nationals to leave the second-largest Ukrainian city urgently to three nearby places "even on foot", while Russia promised to create "humanitarian corridors" for evacuation of Indians from the conflict zones. Prime Minister Narendra Modi held another high-level meeting on Wednesday night on the Ukraine crisis as the four union ministers sent to Ukraine's neighbouring countries coordinated the stepped-up rescue efforts with the deployment of planes by the Indian Air Force. Also Read | Kerala CM Pinarayi Vijayan Seeks PM Narendra Modi's Urgent Intervention To Set Up Humanitarian Corridor for Indian Students Stranded in Ukraine. In an urgent advisory, the Indian embassy in Ukraine asked the Indians to reach the Ukrainian towns of Pesochyn, 11 km away from Kharkiv, Babai (12 km) and Bezlyudivka (16 km) by 6 PM local time (9:30 PM IST). The advisory came amid Russia stepping up attacks on key Ukrainian cities and a day after an Indian medical student died in shelling in Kharkiv. Also Read | Mumbai Reports 100 COVID-19 Cases; No Addition to Death Toll for 6th Consecutive Day. External Affairs Ministry Spokesperson Arindam Bagchi said at a media briefing that the Indian embassy asked the nationals to leave Kharkiv immediately on the basis of information from the Russian side. "The students who cannot find vehicles or buses and are in Railway station can proceed on foot to Pesochyn, Babai and Bezlydivka," the advisory, second of the day, said "Proceed immediately. Under all circumstances, Indians must reach these settlements by 1800 hours (Ukrainian time) today," it said. It is learnt that the Russian side informed India about the possible increase in intensity in fighting in Kharkiv and suggested that all Indians should leave the city. While the first advisory was put out on Twitter at around 1:40 PM ( 5 PM IST) the second one was issued at around 2:40 PM (6 PM IST). Bagchi said India is also exploring the option of reaching the eastern part of Ukraine to help in the evacuation of Indian nationals but added that it's not easy as the route is not open at all times. Separately, Russian Ambassador-designate Denis Alipov said his country is working "intensely" to create a "humanitarian corridor" for safe passage to Russian territory of Indians stuck in Kharkiv, Sumy and other conflict zones in Ukraine. "We have received an Indian request for the emergency evacuation of all those stuck there (Ukraine) to the Russian territory and we are now actively working on the ways and means to launch an operation to provide the humanitarian corridors so that people have the secure passage to safety to the Russian territory," he said. Alipov said Russia is in touch with Indian authorities on the issue of Indians stuck in Kharkiv, Sumy and in the areas northeast of Ukraine which are witnessing intense conflict. He hoped that the humanitarian corridors will be out in place "as soon as possible". As India shored up efforts to evacuate its citizens, four C-17 17 Globemaster aircraft of the Indian Air Force with approximately 800 evacuees from Ukraine are slated to land at the Hindon airbase on Thursday, sources said. On Wednesday morning, a C-17 aircraft left for Romania carrying humanitarian aid to Ukraine. At the media briefing, Bagchi said the cities in eastern Ukraine remained areas of concern and that some Indian students were able to board trains out of Kharkiv yesterday night and this morning. "We have been in communication with the Russians regarding the safe passage of our nationals from Kharkiv and other nearby cities," he said He said that there has been a sharp increase in the number of Indians who have left Ukraine over the recent past. "We now estimate that nearly 17,000 Indian nationals have left Ukraine's borders since our advisories were issued. This of course includes some Indians who had not registered with the embassy earlier," Bagchi said. Earlier, the MEA had said that 20,000 Indians were in Ukraine when India had issued the first advisory in mid-February when the tension between Russia and Ukraine started building up. About the evacuation mission, Bagchi said flights under 'Operation Ganga' have increased sharply and that six flights have landed in India in the last 24 hours taking the total to 15. He said the total number of Indians who have returned on board these flights is 3,352. Out of these, 1,796 were evacuated through Romania, 430 through Poland and 1126 through Hungary. Prime Minister Modi has held a series of meetings since Sunday to spearhead India's efforts to safely bring back its nationals, asserting that this is his government's top priority. Union Ministers Hardeep Singh Puri, Kiren Rijiju, Jyotiraditya Scindia and V K Singh were in Hungary, Slovakia, Romania and Poland respectively to coordinate evacuation efforts. The ministers posted pictures on Twitter in which they were seen interacting and assisting the students who had crossed from Ukraine. Meanwhile, an Indian national, identified as Chandan Jindal, died in Ukraine due to natural causes. He was in the hospital for the last few days after suffering an Ischemia stroke. Jindal was admitted at the Emergency Hospital Vinnytsia in Ukraine, official sources here said. His family has requested the government to bring back his mortal remains. Jindal was studying at Vinnytsia National Pirogov Memorial Medical University, Vinnytsia. (This is an unedited and auto-generated story from Syndicated News feed, LatestLY Staff may not have modified or edited the content body) Thane, Mar 2 (PTI) The railway police in Maharashtra's Kalyan has arrested an Army jawan wanted for allegedly molesting a foreign national on an express train three years ago, an official said on Wednesday. Also Read | iQOO 9 & iQOO 9 Pro 5G Now Available for Online Sale via Amazon, Check Offers Here. Based on a tip-off, Army jawan Sateesh T was arrested from a house in Kalyan town of Maharashtra's Thane district, senior inspector Shardul Walmiki of Kalyan Railway police said. Also Read | 'Today Is Not My Birthday', Says Punjab CM Charanjit Channi As PM Narendra Modi, Others Wish Him on Twitter. According to the police, the accused had allegedly molested a Portuguese woman travelling in Goa-Nizamuddin Express train between Kalyan and Kasara stations on February 14, 2019. The accused, a native of Kerala, was travelling in the same compartment as the victim. The woman lodged a complaint with the Indian Embassy, which was then forwarded to the Kalyan Railway police station for probe, the official said. Based on the CCTV footage and details provided by the woman, the police zeroed in on the jawan, he said. Once the accused got a hint that the police were on a lookout for him, he applied for a pre-arrest bail in the Kalyan sessions court, which was dismissed, and he later moved the High Court, which also rejected his plea. (This is an unedited and auto-generated story from Syndicated News feed, LatestLY Staff may not have modified or edited the content body) Mumbai, Mar 2 (PTI) Mumbai police have summoned Union minister Narayan Rane and his MLA son Nitesh Rane to record their statements in connection with a case against them for allegedly defaming the family members of late Disha Salian, former manager of deceased Bollywood actor Sushant Singh Rajput, on various media platforms, an official said on Wednesday. Also Read | Apple Spring Event 2022 Date Likely To Be Announced Today: Report. The police have issued notices against the BJP minister and his son under section 41A of the Code of Criminal Procedure (CrPC), asking them to appear for recording their statements, he said. Also Read | Vivo X80 Series To Be Launched in India Next Month: Report. According to the notice, Nitesh Rane has been asked to appear before the police official, who is probing the case, on March 3 and his father Narayan Rane on March 4, he said. Last Saturday, Malvani police had registered an FIR against the father-son duo for allegedly making defamatory remarks and spreading false information about Salian's death. Salian had allegedly committed suicide by jumping from a high-rise in suburban Malad on June 8, 2020, six days before Rajput (34) was found hanging at his apartment in suburban Bandra. According to the FIR, the remarks were made by the Union minister on February 19 in a press conference, where his son Nitesh Rane was also present. During the press conference, the minister had made certain claims regarding Salian's death. The FIR had been registered on the complaint lodged by Disha's mother Vasanti Salian after she approached the Maharashtra State Women's Commission (MSWC) demanding action against Narayan Rane, Nitesh Rane and others for defaming the Salian family on various media platforms. The MSCW had asked police to block the social media accounts spreading false information about the death of Disha Salian, and also sought action against the Ranes, following which an FIR was registered, the police official said. (This is an unedited and auto-generated story from Syndicated News feed, LatestLY Staff may not have modified or edited the content body) Mumbai, Mar 2 (PTI) The RBI on Wednesday cancelled the licence of Sarjeraodada Naik Shirala Sahakari Bank, Sangli, Maharashtra, as it did not have adequate capital and earning prospects. With cancellation of the licence, Sarjeraodada Naik Shirala Sahakari Bank Ltd has ceased to carry on banking business with effect from the close of business hours on Wednesday, the Reserve Bank said in a statement. Also Read | Urban Company To Award Shares Worth Rs 150 Crore to Gig Workers. The Commissioner for Cooperation and Registrar of Cooperative Societies, Maharashtra has also been requested to issue an order for winding up the bank and appoint a liquidator for the lender, it said. On liquidation, every depositor would be entitled to receive deposit insurance claim amount of his/her deposits up to a monetary ceiling of Rs 5 lakh from the Deposit Insurance and Credit Guarantee Corporation (DICGC). Also Read | Tamil Nadu: Archaeology Department Excavates Chola-Period Gold and Copper Bracelet at Maligaimedu. "As per the data submitted by the bank, more than 99 per cent of the depositors are entitled to receive full amount of their deposits from DICGC," the RBI added. Giving details about the licence cancellation, the RBI said Sarjeraodada Naik Shirala Sahakari Bank does not have adequate capital and earning prospects, and with its present financial position would be unable to pay its present depositors in full. "Public interest would be adversely affected if the bank is allowed to carry on its banking business any further," it said. As on January 27, 2022, DICGC had sanctioned Rs 64.70 crore of the total insured deposits based on the willingness received from the concerned depositors of the bank. (This is an unedited and auto-generated story from Syndicated News feed, LatestLY Staff may not have modified or edited the content body) New Delhi [India], March 2 (ANI): Union Minister G Kishan Reddy welcomed the Indian nationals who were stranded in Ukraine amidst Russia's military operation in the country after they landed in the national capital on Wednesday. The minister interacted with them at the Delhi airport and greeted them with flowers. Also Read | Amid Ukraine-Russia Conflict, President Volodymyr Zelensky's Comedy Series 'Servant of the People' in Demand. Speaking to media persons, Reddy said, "Russia attacked Ukraine and we are evacuating Indian students from the war zone area. Efforts are underway to evacuate all Indian students from Ukraine." On February 28, Prime Minister Narendra Modi chaired a high-level meeting to review the ongoing efforts under Operation Ganga to bring back Indians stranded in Ukraine. Also Read | Lieutenant General RP Kalita Meets Nagaland CM Neiphu Rio, Assures Full Support in Maintaining Conducive Security Environment in Region. The Prime Minister said that the entire government machinery is working round the clock to ensure that all Indian nationals there are safe and secure. The government also informed that the first consignment of relief supplies to Ukraine to deal with the humanitarian situation on Ukraine's borders has been despatched. On February 24, Russian President Vladimir Putin recognized Ukraine's breakaway regions - Donetsk and Luhansk - as independent entities escalating the ongoing tensions between the two countries. Ukraine gained independence in 1991 after the disintegration of the Soviet Union. Earlier in February, Russian President Vladimir Putin said that special military operations are being launched "to protect" the people in the Donbas region. He also warned other countries that any attempt to interfere with the Russian action would lead to "consequences". Leaders from a number of countries including the UK, the US, Canada, and the European Union have condemned Russia's military operations in Ukraine. (ANI) (This is an unedited and auto-generated story from Syndicated News feed, LatestLY Staff may not have modified or edited the content body) New Delhi, Mar 2 (PTI) The Russian defence ministry on Wednesday said its armed forces are ready to take all necessary measures for the safe evacuation of Indian citizens from the eastern Ukrainian city of Kharkiv. An official of the Russian embassy in India shared the details of the Russian defence ministry's briefing. Also Read | India Abstains From Voting on UNGA Resolution That Deplores Russia's Aggression Against Ukraine. At a media briefing in Moscow, the ministry also alleged that the Ukrainian authorities are "forcibly keeping" a group of Indian students in Kharkiv against their wishes to go to Belgorod. When asked, Ukrainian Ambassador to India Igor Polikha strongly rubbished the allegations and said Ukraine, which is "bleeding", is helping the foreign students stranded in the country. Also Read | Kerala CM Pinarayi Vijayan Seeks PM Narendra Modi's Urgent Intervention To Set Up Humanitarian Corridor for Indian Students Stranded in Ukraine. "We did our best to mitigate the issue of students trying to cross the western borders amid huge crowds of refugees and this issue is basically solved. As far as I know, the first batch of Indians has already left Kharkiv towards the western border," he said. According to the details shared by the Russian official, the Russian defence ministry also claimed that the Ukrainian authorities have offered the students that they can exit Ukraine through the country's border with Poland. It said the route to the Polish border has areas of active hostilities. As fighting intensified in Kharkiv, India asked its nationals on Wednesday to leave the second-largest Ukrainian city urgently to three nearby places "even on foot", while Russia promised to create "humanitarian corridors" for the evacuation of Indians from the conflict zones. The Russian defence ministry said its armed forces are ready to take all necessary measures for the safe evacuation of the Indian citizens. "According to our information, Ukrainian authorities forcibly keep a large group of Indian students in Kharkiv who wish to leave Ukrainian territory and go to Belgorod," according to the Russian defence ministry. Belgorod is a bordering region in Russia and is not very far from Kharkiv, according to an official. A team from the Indian embassy in Moscow has already reached Belgorod for any possible evacuation of Indians from Kharkiv. The ministry said the Russian side is ready to send the students back home from Russian territory by its own military transport planes or Indian aircraft, adding that it will depend on what the Indian side proposes to do. India had asked Russia to facilitate the safe passage of Indians from various conflict zones after the killing of an Indian student in shelling in Kharkiv on Tuesday. (This is an unedited and auto-generated story from Syndicated News feed, LatestLY Staff may not have modified or edited the content body) New Delhi, Mar 2 (PTI) The advisory by India asking its citizens to immediately leave war-torn Ukraine's Kharkiv city panicked the stranded Indian students while their parents back home got glued to the TV and surfed the Internet frantically for updates. The embassy has asked Indians to proceed to Pisochyn (11 km), Babai (12 km) and Bezlyudivka (16 km) even by foot if they cannot find vehicles or buses. Also Read | Amid Ukraine-Russia Conflict, President Volodymyr Zelensky's Comedy Series 'Servant of the People' in Demand. Reyham Khan, a first-year medical student said, "We have received an advisory today to leave immediately... there is so much chaos. "People have started walking, but to where? We were staying in bunkers sending SOS messages. But this sudden directive has left everyone in a panic," the student said over the phone. Also Read | Lieutenant General RP Kalita Meets Nagaland CM Neiphu Rio, Assures Full Support in Maintaining Conducive Security Environment in Region. Aanchal Sharma, the mother of a second-year medical student of Kharkiv National Medical University, is praying for her son's safety who has left the bombed-out city. "My son has left for Pisochyn but I am going to be on pins till I hear from him. This feels like sitting on a ticking bomb," said the anxious mother. Another student, Pragun, said they took a lot of pain to reach the railway station but found it chock-a-block with people trying to flee the Russian military offensive. "All the trains are full and we are not allowed to board them". In a video sent from Kharkiv, a student heard saying, "I am standing at Kharkiv railway station for three hours. I left much before the advisory was issued but we haven't been allowed to board the trains. The cold is bone-chilling." The Ministry of External Affairs said the Embassy in Ukraine asked the Indian nationals to leave Kharkiv immediately based on information from the Russian side. "For their safety and security, they must leave Kharkiv immediately repeat immediately in the light of the deteriorating situation. They should proceed to Pisochyn, Babai and Bezlyudivka as soon as possible for their safety," the embassy said. The first advisory was put out on Twitter at 5 pm IST, while the second one was issued an hour later. Union Minister Hardeep Singh Puri who is in Budapest to oversee the evacuation of Indians fleeing Ukraine tweeted, "There was joy and spontaneous cheer as I interacted with our students at Hotel Grand Hungarian who were on their way to Budapest Airport to board the special aircraft waiting to fly them home. "Modi Govt will bring back every young student from Ukraine," he said. (This is an unedited and auto-generated story from Syndicated News feed, LatestLY Staff may not have modified or edited the content body) New Delhi, Mar 2 (PTI) Export cargoes to CIS (Commonwealth of Independent States) countries are impacted due to ongoing war between Russia and Ukraine as no shipping line is willing to take consignments there, exporters' body FIEO said on Wednesday. CIS countries include Azerbaijan, Armenia, Belarus, Kazakhstan, Kyrgyzstan, Moldova, Russia, Tajikistan, Turkmenistan, Uzbekistan and Ukraine. Also Read | Urban Company To Award Shares Worth Rs 150 Crore to Gig Workers. Federation of Indian Export Organisations (FIEO) Director-General Ajay Sahai said shipments to these nations are stopped because no shipping line is willing to take cargoes as there is no movement of ships through the Black Sea. To these countries, Indian goods move from the Suez Canal and the Black Sea. Also Read | iQOO 9 & iQOO 9 Pro 5G Now Available for Online Sale via Amazon, Check Offers Here. "Banks are also reluctant to accept the documents for shipments which are already at the Russian ports," he said. Exporters are suggesting the government to consider the possibility of trading in local currencies with Russia. The commerce ministry is also holding meetings to discuss ways to minimise the impact of the war on trade. Finance Minister Nirmala Sitharaman recently stated that India is more worried about the impact caused by the standoff between Ukraine and Russia, particularly on its exports. Bilateral trade between India and Russia stood at USD 9.4 billion (USD 2.55 billion exports and USD 6.9 billion imports) so far this fiscal, against USD 8.1 billion in 2020-21. India's main imports from Russia include fuels, mineral oils, pearls, precious or semi-precious stones, nuclear reactors, boilers, machinery and mechanical appliances; electrical machinery and equipment and fertilisers. While major export items from India to Russia include pharmaceutical products, electrical machinery and equipment, organic chemicals and vehicles. India's bilateral trade with Ukraine stood at USD 2.3 billion (USD 372 million exports and about USD 2 billion imports) so far this fiscal, as against USD 2.5 billion in the last fiscal. The main items of Indian import from Ukraine are agriculture products, metallurgical products, plastics and polymers, etc., while pharmaceuticals, machinery, chemicals and food products, etc., are the major Indian exports to Ukraine. HRS hrs (This is an unedited and auto-generated story from Syndicated News feed, LatestLY Staff may not have modified or edited the content body) Houston, Mar 2 (AP) Issues related to media publicity and a gag order as well as a concern over a lack diversity among attorneys representing those killed or injured during last year's deadly Astroworld music festival were discussed during a court hearing on Tuesday. The hearing was the first time lawyers handling the nearly 500 lawsuits filed after 10 people died and hundreds of others were injured during a massive crowd surge at the Nov. 5 concert headlined by rapper Travis Scott had met in court after the cases were consolidated before one judge. Also Read | Instagram, YouTube Block Russian News Outlets RT and Sputnik Across Europe. After being appointed last month by a judicial panel overseen by the Texas Supreme Court to handle all pretrial matters in the lawsuits, state District Judge Kristen Hawkins issued a gag order in the case. During Tuesday's hearing, Hawkins clarified her order, saying lawyers could tell the media about factual issues that happen in court, but she didn't want attorneys to make their cases in the court of public opinion and possibly influence the jury pool. Also Read | Pakistan Sees Major Surge in Offences Against Women in 2021, Says Report. This case should be tried in the courtroom and not on social media or with press releases or other statements to the media, Hawkins said. Brent Coon, an attorney who is representing about 1,500 concertgoers and is asking for $10 billion in damages, said after the hearing he understands the judge's goal of let's keep who's pointing the finger at who, let that be courtroom issues and jury issues ultimately. But this is a case of public import for all the reasons that are obvious, Coon said. Most of Wednesday's court hearing was spent discussing how the cases would proceed, the creation of a leadership structure that would speak on behalf of attorneys for each side, how disputes over evidence or other matters would be handled. Hawkins said she planned to have monthly hearings. She requested that by the next hearing, lawyers give her a breakdown of the various lawsuits by four categories: deaths, bodily injuries, brain injuries and post traumatic stress disorder. Coon said it could be years before any trials or settlements in the case take place. During the court hearing, civil rights attorney Ben Crump, who is representing the family of the youngest person to die from injuries during the festival, said that most of the victims killed or injured were Black but the majority of attorneys representing them are white. During Wednesday's hearing, most of the 50 to 60 attorneys in the courtroom were white. There seems to be not much representation in the court of those African American voices. We really grapple with it. We are concerned about them not having a voice, said Crump, who represents the family of 9-year-old Ezra Blount, who was Black. Ezra's father, Treston Blount, who was with his son at the concert, was at Tuesday's court hearing. In recent years, Crump has represented victims of police brutality and vigilante violence and has been the lawyer for the families of Trayvon Martin, Breonna Taylor and George Floyd. Hawkins told Crump this issue is something that has not gone unnoticed by the court ... I would like that to be considered going forward. But Hawkins said she was not going to choose someone's counsel for them. I do know we have excellent attorneys in this room and those attorneys come from all aspects of Harris County. Neal Manne, who represents Astroworld festival promoter Live Nation, thanked Crump for highlighting this issue, saying, I agree with him. Houston police are still conducting a criminal investigation of the Astroworld concert. The U.S. House Oversight and Reform Committee in December announced it was investigating Live Nation's role in the deadly concert. Last month, Houston officials announced the creation of a new task force that will look at improving the safety at large Houston-area events. Those who died in the concert ranged in age from 9 to 27 years old. Roughly 300 people were injured and treated at the scene, and 25 were taken to hospitals. Those killed died from compression asphyxia. (AP) VM (This is an unedited and auto-generated story from Syndicated News feed, LatestLY Staff may not have modified or edited the content body) A safari taxi drives away after dropping off tourists at the Carnival Victory cruise ship at the West Indian Co. dock in Havensight, St. Thomas, during pre-pandemic times. The Hague [Netherlands], March 2 (ANI): The International Court of Justice (ICJ) will hold public hearings on the Ukraine-Russia crisis on March 7 and 8 in a hybrid format. "The International Court of Justice, the principal judicial organ of the United Nations, will hold public hearings in the case concerning Allegations of Genocide under the Convention on the Prevention and Punishment of the Crime of Genocide (Ukraine v. Russian Federation) on Monday 7 and Tuesday 8 March 2022, at the Peace Palace in The Hague, the seat of the Court," read the ICJ statement. Also Read | Instagram, YouTube Block Russian News Outlets RT and Sputnik Across Europe. According to the statement, the hearings will be devoted to the request for the indication of provisional measures submitted by Ukraine. Earlier, while addressing an urgent communication to Russian Foreign Affairs Minister, Judge JE Donoghue, International Court of Justice President, said, "I call the attention of the Russian Federation to the need to act in such a way as will enable any order the Court may make on the request for provisional measures to have its appropriate effects." Also Read | Pakistan Sees Major Surge in Offences Against Women in 2021, Says Report. Meanwhile, on February 24, Russian forces launched military operations in Ukraine, three days after Moscow recognized Ukraine's breakaway regions - Donetsk and Luhansk - as independent entities. Several countries including the UK, the US, Canada, and the European Union have condemned Russia's military operations in Ukraine and imposed sanctions on Moscow. These countries have also promised Ukraine to help with military aid to fight Russia. The US, Canada and European allies agreed to remove key Russian banks from the interbank messaging system, SWIFT which means Russian banks won't be able to communicate securely with banks beyond Russia's borders. President Putin has also signed a decree on special economic measures against the US and its allies. Fighting in Ukraine has so far pushed more than 500,000 people across the country's borders, according to the UN refugee agency. Speaking at an emergency session of the UN General Assembly on February 28, Russia's Permanent Representative to the United Nations, Vasily Nebenzya, had said that Russia has no plans to occupy Ukraine. On February 28, negotiations between delegations of Russia and Ukraine were held in the Gomel Region of Belarus and another round of talks is scheduled for March 2. (ANI) (This is an unedited and auto-generated story from Syndicated News feed, LatestLY Staff may not have modified or edited the content body) New Delhi, March 2: Prime Minister Narendra Modi on Tuesday spoke with French President Emmanuel Macron and discussed the ongoing situation in Ukraine. According to a release by the Prime Minister's Office (PMO), both the leaders also shared their concerns over continuing hostilities and the deteriorating humanitarian situation in Ukraine. PM Modi reiterated India's consistent appeal for cessation of hostilities and a return to dialogue and diplomacy. He stressed India's belief that respect for international law, the UN Charter and the territorial integrity and sovereignty of all states underpin the contemporary world order, said the release. PM Modi welcomed the talks between the two parties and stressed upon the importance of ensuring free and uninterrupted humanitarian access and smooth movement of all people. Vladimir Putin Was Wrong, US is Ready, Says Joe Biden in First State of the Union Address. Prime Minister Modi also briefed Macron about India's efforts to evacuate its citizens from the conflict areas and to send urgent relief supplies, including medicines for the affected populations, the release added. Earlier, Foreign Secretary Harsh Vardhan Shringla reveal that all Indian nationals have left Kyiv and nearly 60 per cent of Indians in Ukraine have left the country so far. The seventh flight carrying 182 Indian nationals stranded in Ukraine reached Mumbai from Romania's Bucharest as part of Operation Ganga on Tuesday. (This is an unedited and auto-generated story from Syndicated News feed, LatestLY Staff may not have modified or edited the content body) New Delhi, March 2: Prime Minister Narendra Modi on Tuesday spoke with Polish President Andrzej Duda and thanked him for providing assistance for evacuating Indian citizens from Ukraine. The Prime Minister warmly thanked President Duda for the assistance provided by Poland in the evacuation of Indian citizens from Ukraine, and for the special gesture of relaxing visa requirement for Indian citizens crossing over to Poland from Ukraine, according to a release by the Prime Minister's Office (PMO). PM Modi also expressed his particular appreciation for the warm reception and facilitation extended by Polish citizens to Indian nationals at this difficult time. PM Narendra Modi Discusses Ukraine Situation with French President Emmanuel Macron, Stresses Respect for Territorial Integrity, Sovereignty of All States. Alluding to the traditionally friendly relations between the two countries, PM Modi recalled the assistance offered by Poland in the wake of the Gujarat earthquake in 2001, the release said. PM Modi also recollected the exemplary role played by the Maharaja of Jamnagar in rescuing several Polish families and young orphans during the Second World War. PM Modi informed President Duda that General (Dr.) V.K. Singh (Retd.), Minister of State for Road Transport & Highways and Civil Aviation, would be stationed in Poland as his special envoy, to oversee the evacuation efforts of Indian citizens. Vladimir Putin Was Wrong, US is Ready, Says Joe Biden in First State of the Union Address. The Prime Minister reiterated India's consistent appeal for cessation of hostilities and a return to dialogue. He stressed upon the importance of respecting the sovereignty and territorial integrity of nations, the release said. Earlier, India sent the first tranche of humanitarian assistance to Ukraine through Poland, informed Foreign Secretary Harsh Vardhan Shringla. The consignment comprised medicines, medical equipment and other relief material. (This is an unedited and auto-generated story from Syndicated News feed, LatestLY Staff may not have modified or edited the content body) Bucharest [Romania], March 2 (ANI): Civil Aviation Minister Jyotiraditya Scindia, who is overseeing the evacuation efforts of Indian nationals stranded in Ukraine as a Government of India-appointed special envoy, on Wednesday (local time) met the Indian Ambassador to Romania and Moldova, Rahul Shrivastava to discuss the operational issues for evacuation and the flight plan from Bucharest and Suceava in the coming days. "Met the Indian Ambassador to Romania & Moldova, Sh Rahul Shrivastava Ji to discuss the operational issues for evacuation and the flight plan from Bucharest & Suceava in the coming days. #OperationGanga in full gear!" Scindia tweeted. Also Read | Instagram, YouTube Block Russian News Outlets RT and Sputnik Across Europe. The ministers informed that Moldova's borders have been opened for incoming Indian students and talks are underway to make arrangements for their journey to Bucharest for onward flight to India. "Moldova's borders have been opened for incoming Indian students. Proper shelter and food arrangements will be made. Talks are on to make arrangements for their journey to Bucharest for onward flight to India," he tweeted. Also Read | Pakistan Sees Major Surge in Offences Against Women in 2021, Says Report. Earlier in the day, Scindia, who will oversee the evacuation efforts of Indian nationals in Romania and Moldova, met and interacted with Indian students awaiting their flights at the Bucharest Airport and assured them of their quick departure from the Romanian capital. "Met & interacted with Indian students awaiting their flights at the Bucharest Airport. Overwhelmed by their grit & concerned by their anxiety amid the tough times. However, assured them of their quick departure from Bucharest. PM Narendra Modi ji & all of India have got their back!" he tweeted. After Russia's forces launched military operations in Ukraine on February 24, the Government of India launched 'Operation Ganga' to bring back stranded Indian nationals from the conflict-torn Ukraine. As part of the 'Operation Ganga' mission, special flights are being operated free of cost. The first such evacuation flight carrying 219 Indian nationals stranded in Ukraine landed in Mumbai on February 26. Several such flights have landed in India so far. Indian Air Force (IAF) has also joined the government's evacuation efforts as its C-17 transport aircraft left for Romania in the early hours of Wednesday morning from the Hindan airbase near New Delhi. 24x7 control centres have been set up to assist in the evacuation of Indian nationals through the border crossing points with Poland, Romania, Hungary and Slovakia. A new route has been opened through Moldova and an MEA team is also now in place there and is operational. The team will assist in the evacuation of Indians through Romania. A dedicated Twitter Account (@opganga) has been set up to assist Operation Ganga. The Indian Embassy in Kyiv has advised Indian citizens against moving to any of the border checkpoints without prior coordination with government officials at border posts. In a bid to energize the evacuation efforts, the Government of India appointed four special envoys who will oversee evacuation operations of stranded Indians in Ukraine's neighbouring countries. Union Minister for Petroleum and Natural Gas Hardeep Singh Puri will oversee evacuation efforts in Hungary, Union Law Minister Kiren Rijiju in Slovakia, Gen (retd) VK Singh in Poland while Civil Aviation Minister Jyotiraditya Scindia will be going to Romania and will also go to Moldova. Prime Minister Narendra Modi has held several meetings so far to review the ongoing efforts under Operation Ganga to bring back Indians stranded in Ukraine. He has also said that India will help people from neighbouring countries and developing countries who are stranded in Ukraine and may seek assistance. Meanwhile, Foreign Secretary Harsh Vardhan Shringla informed on Tuesday that all Indian nationals have left Kyiv and nearly 60 per cent of Indians in Ukraine have left the country so far. He said out of an estimated 20,000 Indian citizens in Ukraine, 60 per cent have left the country since the first advisory was issued by the government. "Of the remaining 40 per cent, roughly half remain in the conflict zone in Kharkiv and the other half have either reached the western border of Ukraine or are heading towards the western border. They are generally out of conflict areas," Shringla said. Briefing the media about the evacuation of Indians including students from Ukraine in the wake of Russian military operations, Shringla informed that over the next three days, 26 flights have been scheduled to bring out Indian citizens. "Apart from Bucharest and Budapest, airports in Poland and the Slovak Republic will also be used," he said. An Indian student, Naveen Shekharappa died in Ukraine's Kharkiv following shelling in the area on Tuesday. He hailed from the Haveri district in Karnataka. Russian forces launched military operations in Ukraine on February 24, three days after Moscow recognized Ukraine's breakaway regions - Donetsk and Luhansk - as independent entities. Several countries including the UK, the US, Canada, and the European Union have condemned Russia's military operations in Ukraine and imposed sanctions on Moscow. These countries have also promised Ukraine to help with military aid to fight Russia. The US, Canada and European allies agreed to remove key Russian banks from the interbank messaging system, SWIFT which means Russian banks won't be able to communicate securely with banks beyond Russia's borders. President Putin has also signed a decree on special economic measures against the US and its allies. Fighting in Ukraine has so far pushed more than 500,000 people across the country's borders, according to the UN refugee agency. Speaking at an emergency session of the UN General Assembly on February 28, Russia's Permanent Representative to the United Nations, Vasily Nebenzya, had said that Russia has no plans to occupy Ukraine. On February 28, negotiations between delegations of Russia and Ukraine were held in the Gomel Region of Belarus and another round of talks is scheduled for March 2. (ANI) (This is an unedited and auto-generated story from Syndicated News feed, LatestLY Staff may not have modified or edited the content body) Prime Minister Narendra Modi and President of the European Council Charles Michel New Delhi [India], March 2 (ANI): Prime Minister Narendra Modi on Tuesday spoke with President of the European Council Charles Michel and expressed his anguish over the deteriorating situation and humanitarian crisis in Ukraine. During the talks, PM Modi reiterated India's appeal for cessation of hostilities and a return to dialogue, according to PMO release. Also Read | Instagram, YouTube Block Russian News Outlets RT and Sputnik Across Europe. PM Modi also spoke about efforts being made by India to send urgent relief supplies, including medicines, to the affected areas. The Prime Minister stressed that the contemporary global order was anchored on international law, UN Charter and respect for territorial integrity and sovereignty of all states, the release said. Also Read | Pakistan Sees Major Surge in Offences Against Women in 2021, Says Report. The Prime Minister welcomed the talks between the two parties and stressed upon the importance of ensuring free and uninterrupted humanitarian access and smooth movement of all people, the release added. Earlier, European Council President condoled the death of an Indian student in Ukraine's Kharkiv in the shelling. Naveen Shekharappa, a medical student from Karnataka's Haveri died when Russian soldiers blew up a government building in Kharkiv on Tuesday. News of the student's death came within an hour of the Indian embassy in Ukraine asking its citizens to urgently leave the capital Kyiv. (ANI) (This is an unedited and auto-generated story from Syndicated News feed, LatestLY Staff may not have modified or edited the content body) Kyiv, Mar 2 (AP) Ukrainian officials have reported a powerful explosion in Kyiv, between the Southern Railway station and the Ibis hotel, an area near Ukraine's Defense Ministry. Ukraine President Volodymyr Zelenskyy's office told The Associated Press on Wednesday night that it was a missile strike. Also Read | China To Maintain Normal Trade Relations With Russia Despite International Sanctions. Officials said it wasn't immediately clear how damaging the strike was, whether there were any casualties or where exactly the missile hit. ___ Also Read | India Abstains From Voting on UNGA Resolution That Deplores Russia's Aggression Against Ukraine. Washington: US Secretary of State Antony Blinken this week will visit six European countries, including the Baltic states and Moldova, which are on particular edge as Russia intensifies its war in Ukraine. The State Department says Blinken will travel Thursday to Belgium for a meeting of NATO foreign ministers before heading to the Polish border with Ukraine to meet refugees, and then Moldova, Lithuania, Latvia and Estonia. Poland and the three Baltics are members of NATO and fall under its Article 5 defense provisions, which means the allies are bound to defend them if they are attacked. Given their location immediately adjacent to Russia, they are believed to be at special risk should the Ukraine conflict spread. Western-leaning Moldova is not a NATO member but has relations with the alliance and has long objected to the presence of Russian troops in the disputed territory of Transnistria. As the Russian invasion of Ukraine has picked up steam, most NATO members, including the Baltics, have steadily increased military and financial assistance to Kyiv even as Russian President Vladimir Putin has warned of reprisals for any nation that interferes in what he calls a special military operation. Ukraine's President Volodymyr Zelenskyy has decried Russia's escalation of attacks on crowded cities as a blatant terror campaign. ___ Warsaw: An international organization made up only of democracies held an emergency meeting on Wednesday following Russia's invasion of Ukraine. The Warsaw-based Community of Democracies said in a statement that its members at the gathering condemned Russia's aggression and backed Ukraine's sovereignty, territorial integrity, and democratic aspirations of its people. Romania's Foreign Minister Bogdan Aurescu, whose country holds the community's rotating presidency, called for continued support for Ukraine's right to choose its own foreign policy and for more attention to be given to other places facing Russian pressure, including Moldova, Georgia and the Western Balkan region. This seems to be the beginning of the most difficult period in generations. And this is the fight of our generation and a real test on our democracies, Aurescu said. Thomas Garrett, the organisation's secretary general, underlined that democracies worldwide must unequivocally show they stand with Ukraine. A Ukrainian lawmaker in Kyiv addressed the political representatives. She called on Russia to stop bombing our towns and cities and appealed to the UN, EU, and other international organisations to help Ukraine obtain a ceasefire for humanitarian relief. The lawmaker was not identified for security reasons. ___ Washington: A senior US defense official says the Russian convoy still appears to be stalled outside the city centre of Kyiv, and has made no real progress in the last couple days. The official on Wednesday said the convoy is still plagued with fuel and food shortages and logistical problems, as well as facing continued fierce resistance from Ukrainians. He said there has been an increase in the number of missiles and artillery targeting the city, suggesting the Russians are trying to make a more aggressive move to try and take the city. The official, who spoke on condition of anonymity to discuss military assessments, said Russians have not been able to achieve air superiority and Ukrainian air defenses remain operable and their aircraft continue to fly. The official said that about 82% of the Russian troops that had been arrayed around Ukraine are now inside the country just a slight uptick over the last 24 hours, and that Russia has launched more than 450 missiles at various targets in the country. In other areas of the country, the US official said that the US is seeing preliminary indications that Russian forces are going to try to move south towards Mariupol from Donetsk, in what appears to be an effort to encircle the city. ___ Brussels: European Union finance ministers on Wednesday convened for the second time in less than a week to weigh the likely impact on Europe of the full-scale Russian military assault on Ukraine, a country that borders the bloc's eastern flank. Policymakers are scrambling to recalculate economic projections made less than a month ago, when the European Commission the EU's executive arm predicted the bloc's economic growth would slow from 5.3% last year to 4% this year and 2.8% in 2023. Top European commissioners said on Wednesday those figures are too optimistic because the conflict in Ukraine will probably stoke rises in energy prices, financial-market turbulence, supply-chain bottlenecks and a weakening of consumer confidence. We don't expect the recovery to be derailed completely but to be weakened, said European Commissioner for Economy Paolo Gentiloni. The gloomier outlook has also raised the prospect of a prolonged period of unrestrained spending by member countries to support their economies. ___ Zahony: Some of the nearly 1 million people who have fled Russia's devastating war in Ukraine in recent days count among society's most vulnerable, unable to make the decision on their own to flee and requiring careful assistance to make the journey to safety. At the train station in the Hungarian town of Zahony on Wednesday, more than 200 young Ukrainians with disabilities residents of two orphanages in Ukraine's capital of Kyiv disembarked into the cold wind of the train platform after an arduous escape from the violence gripping Ukraine. The refugees, most of them children with mental and physical disabilities, were evacuated from their care facilities once the Russian assault on the capital intensified. It wasn't safe to stay there, there were rockets, they were shooting at Kyiv, said Larissa Leonidovna, the director of the Svyatoshinksy orphanage in Kyiv. We spent more than an hour underground during a bombing. The UN refugee agency says more than 874,000 people have fled Ukraine since Russia's invasion last week and the figure is rising exponentially, putting it on track to cross the 1 million mark on Wednesday. Moving from the train in groups of 30, the children also from the Darnytskyy orphanage in Kyiv were escorted to buses waiting to take them to Opole, Poland, where they would be settled and receive further care. ___ Washington: The White House has announced additional sanctions against Russia and its ally Belarus, including extending export controls that target Russian oil refining and entities supporting the Russian and Belarusian militaries. Among Wednesday's new measures are sanctions targeting 22 Russia defense entities that make combat aircraft, infantry fighting vehicles, electronic warfare systems, missiles, and unmanned aerial vehicles for Russia's military. The US Commerce Department also announced additional export controls on oil and gas extraction equipment that would hurt Russia's refining capacity over the long term. The Biden administration, and Western allies, have largely stayed away from hitting the Russian energy sector to avoid causing tremors to the global supply of energy. The White House, however, said in a statement that US and allies share a strong interest in degrading Russia's status as a leading energy supplier over time. The latest sanctions imposed on Wednesday include the US closing off its air space to all Russian flights. President Joe Biden previewed that he would making the move in his State of the Union address on Tuesday evening. (AP) (This is an unedited and auto-generated story from Syndicated News feed, LatestLY Staff may not have modified or edited the content body) Washington, March 2: Accusing his Russian counterpart Vladimir Putin of waging a "premeditated and unprovoked" war against Ukraine, President Joe Biden in his maiden State of the Union Address said the United States is ready to tackle the challenge posed by him. "Throughout our history we've learned this lesson when dictators do not pay a price for their aggression, they cause more chaos. They keep moving. And, the costs and threats to America and the world keep rising," Biden said addressing the joint session of the Congress in his first State of the Union. "That's why the NATO Alliance was created to secure peace and stability in Europe after World War II. The United States is a member along with 29 other nations. It matters. American diplomacy matters, he said, launching a blistering attack on Putin. Russia-Ukraine War: US Expels Russian National Working for UN Secretariat. "Putin's war was premeditated and unprovoked. He rejected efforts at diplomacy. He thought the West and NATO wouldn't respond. And, he thought he could divide us here at home. Putin was wrong. We were ready, Biden said. In his State of the Union Address, Biden touched upon some of the key successes of the year old administration and his policy perspective to some of the key challenges being faced by the nation, both on the domestic and international front. (This is an unedited and auto-generated story from Syndicated News feed, LatestLY Staff may not have modified or edited the content body) Ottawa [Canada], March 2 (ANI): Canadian Prime Minister Justin Trudeau on Tuesday (local time) spoke with South African President Cyril Ramaphosa about Russia-Ukraine and other global issues. Trudeau strongly condemned the large-scale military aggression by Russia against the territorial integrity, sovereignty, and independence of Ukraine. Also Read | Instagram, YouTube Block Russian News Outlets RT and Sputnik Across Europe. According to Trudeau's statement, they both expressed their profound concern for the human cost of armed conflict and agreed on the importance of international humanitarian law and the Charter of the United Nations. The leaders discussed efforts to bring an end to this unnecessary conflict that will have far-reaching global impacts, including for developing countries emerging from the pandemic. Also Read | Pakistan Sees Major Surge in Offences Against Women in 2021, Says Report. Both leaders also discussed how they could work together to help ensure a strong and rapid global response to the situation in Ukraine, the statement said. The two leaders reaffirmed their shared commitment to maintaining and strengthening the deep relationship between Canada and South Africa, including pandemic recovery and climate change. They expressed their strong commitment to continue working closely together at the G20, within the Commonwealth, and at the United Nations to promote global peace, security, and stability for greater shared prosperity, the statement added. Earlier, Ukraine Foreign Affairs Minister Dmytro Kuleba assures efforts to help Africans seeking evacuation. "Russia's invasion of Ukraine has affected Ukrainians and non-citizens in many devastating ways. Africans seeking evacuation are our friends and need to have equal opportunities to return to their home countries safely. Ukraine's government spares no effort to solve the problem," Kuleba tweeted. (ANI) (This is an unedited and auto-generated story from Syndicated News feed, LatestLY Staff may not have modified or edited the content body) London, Mar 2 (PTI) The UK on Wednesday called for the "broadest possible coalition" against Russian President Vladimir Putin's actions in Ukraine, which includes India. Boris Johnson's spokesperson at 10 Downing Street told PTI that a phone call with Prime Minister Narendra Modi can be expected in the coming days, as the British Prime Minister reaches out to world leaders to seek universal condemnation of Putin's attacks on Ukrainian cities. Also Read | China To Maintain Normal Trade Relations With Russia Despite International Sanctions. We want to secure the broadest possible coalition against the actions that Putin is taking, the spokesperson said, in response to a question about the UK's message for India over the ongoing crisis in Ukraine. The Prime Minister has been speaking to a lot of world leaders to that end We expect him to be doing a lot of leaders calls in the coming days. We haven't locked down timings for each of those, the spokesperson said. Also Read | Russia-Ukraine War: Russian Warships Preparing for Black Sea Landing in Odessa. Referring to a United Nations General Assembly resolution condemning Russia's actions to be voted upon by all member countries later on Wednesday, the UK PM's spokesperson said Britain's aim was that all countries unite in sending the clearest possible message to the Russian President. We would hope and expect that all countries could agree that invading a democratically elected country, with no provocation, bombing innocent men, women and children is something to be abhorred and condemned. We will continue to petition everyone to that end, the spokesperson said. The draft of the UN General Assembly resolution demands that the Russian Federation immediately, completely, and unconditionally withdraw all of its military forces from the territory of Ukraine within its internationally recognised borders. While such resolutions are non-binding, they are used to mount political pressure on countries. At a similar UN Security Council resolution vote vetoed by Russia last week, India had abstained and called for a return to the path of diplomacy and cessation of violence. Meanwhile, Downing Street confirmed that the timetable for the India-UK free trade agreement (FTA) talks scheduled for a second round of negotiations between officials from both sides next week remains on track. (This is an unedited and auto-generated story from Syndicated News feed, LatestLY Staff may not have modified or edited the content body) Budapest, Mar 3 (AP) Some of the nearly 1 million people who have fled Russia's devastating war in Ukraine in recent days count among society's most vulnerable, unable to make the decision on their own to flee and requiring careful assistance to make the journey to safety. At the train station in the Hungarian town of Zahony on Wednesday, more than 200 Ukrainians with disabilities residents of two care homes in Ukraine's capital of Kyiv disembarked into the cold wind of the train platform after an arduous escape from the violence gripping Ukraine. Also Read | China To Maintain Normal Trade Relations With Russia Despite International Sanctions. The refugees, many of them children, have serious mental and physical disabilities, and were evacuated from their care facilities once the Russian assault on the capital intensified. It wasn't safe to stay there, there were rockets, they were shooting at Kyiv, said Larissa Leonidovna, the director of the Svyatoshinksy orphanage in Kyiv. We spent more than an hour underground during a bombing. Also Read | India Abstains From Voting on UNGA Resolution That Deplores Russia's Aggression Against Ukraine. Russia's intensifying attack on Ukraine has forced hundreds of thousands to leave the country in the last six days in what one UN official predicted could become Europe's biggest refugee crisis this century. The UN refugee agency says more than 874,000 people have fled Ukraine since Russia's invasion last week and the figure is rising exponentially, putting it on track to cross the 1 million mark on Wednesday. More than half of the refugees nearly 454,000 have gone to Poland, while more than 116,300 have entered Hungary and over 79,300 have crossed into Moldova. Another 67,000 have fled to Slovakia, and some 69,000 have gone to other European countries. While many of those fleeing are able-bodied adults, choosing to brave long and sometimes dangerous journeys to bring themselves and their families to safety, others are at the mercy of their caregivers to deliver them out of danger. These children need a lot of attention, they have illnesses and require special care, said Leonidovna, the director of the Kyiv orphanage. Moving from the train in groups of 30, the children also from the Darnytskyy orphanage in Kyiv were escorted to buses waiting to take them to Opole, Poland, where they would be settled and receive further care. There are 216 people altogether, the children along with their chaperones, said Viktoria Mikolayivna, deputy director of the Darnytskyy home. Cold weather gripping Eastern Europe on Wednesday made conditions even harder for those fleeing into countries neighbouring Ukraine. At the border area of Palanca in southern Moldova, a country that shares a long border with Ukraine, temperatures hovered around freezing and a fresh blanket of snow covered the ground. Mothers with young children came wrapped in blankets and clothing, but the cold weather has made an already desperate situation even worse. Julia, a 32-year-old mother with a 3-year-old child, tried to calm her son who was burning with fever. She felt helpless, she said, but is proud that she made the decision to help her family. Thank God that I can protect my family, but I didn't want to leave my country. But I had to find another way to protect my family, she told The Associated Press. Braving snow and sub-freezing temperatures, thousands of refugees continued to flee Ukraine into neighbouring Romania through the Siret border crossing. Alina Onica, a 41-year-old Red Cross volunteer in Siret, said that the freezing weather and snow are only adding to the challenges and needs of the refugees being displaced by war. It made it more difficult because many left their homes a couple of days ago, and all they had was the clothes on their backs, she said. "They have been asking for gloves, hats, and blankets. It's a humanitarian crisis and we're hoping it will end soon. Nastya Kononchuk, who hopes to reach the Bulgarian capital of Sofia to wait out the war with her dog, said she is originally from the Black Sea city of Odesa but was living in Kyiv. Her husband drove her to the Romanian border, but then returned to joined Ukraine's armed forces. It was a very long road and very scary," she said of the journey, when she heard the thud of missiles all around. "You don't understand, Is it ours or is it enemy?'" Maybe it's okay that now we don't have children," she added. "But we have our dog, it is our child." Victoria Baibara, who left Kyiv two days ago with her 6-year-old son after witnessing escalating bombing in the capital, arrived in Romania on Wednesday and will travel to Istanbul to stay with friends, she said. It's so hard, it's hard for a child, we can't explain to him why we should leave our home, why we hear these bombs," the 29-year-old said. "He is also very scared. I am also very scared. ... It's so cold and it was hard to stay with a child in the snow. Marya Unhuryan, from Chernivsti in western Ukraine, came by car to Siret with her 9-year-old daughter and other relatives, all women. I feel a lot of pain. ... Just pain. A lot of pain for my country and my people," she said. She's 9 years old and she does not understand the situation. She just wants to eat pizza in Italy and go to Disney in France. (AP) (This is an unedited and auto-generated story from Syndicated News feed, LatestLY Staff may not have modified or edited the content body) BANGKOK, March 2 (Xinhua) -- Thailand's exports in January climbed 8 percent year on year to 21.26 billion U.S. dollars, official data showed Wednesday. The pace of increase moderated from a jump of 24.2 percent in December 2021 but topped the 0.1-percent rise in the same month of last year, according to data from the Ministry of Commerce. The increase was largely attributed to an improving global demand amid the continuous expansion of the world's manufacturing sector, an easing of the container shortage for exporters and cooperation between the private sector and government departments, Thailand's Deputy Prime Minister and Commerce Minister Jurin Laksanavisit said. The ministry expected exports, a key driver of the country's economic growth, to rise by 3-4 percent this year, after expanding 17.1 percent year on year in 2021, according to Jurin. The Economic Intelligence Center of the Siam Commercial Bank, one of Thailand's biggest commercial banks, said merchandise exports, which will remain the main economic driver in 2022, should continue to expand, though at a slower rate following global trade and economic conditions. In January, Thailand's imports climbed 20.5 percent year on year to 23.79 billion U.S. dollars, leading to a trade deficit of 2.53 billion dollars, according to the ministry. Washington [US], March 2 (ANI): The World Bank on Tuesday approved a plan to use USD 1 billion frozen Afghan funds for aid urgently needed for education, agriculture, health and family programmes. The executive board of the World Bank plan will bypass sanctioned Taliban authorities by disbursing the money through UN agencies and international aid groups, reported Tolo News. Also Read | Russian Missile Strike Hit Buildings in Ukraines City Zhytomyr, Rescue Efforts Underway. It will provide a major boost to efforts to ease the country's worsening humanitarian and economic crises and there will be a "strong focus on ensuring that girls and women participate and benefit from the support," the statement continued. The approach "aims to support the delivery of essential basic services, protect vulnerable Afghans, help preserve human capital and key economic and social services, and reduce the need for humanitarian assistance in the future," the bank said in a statement, reported Tolo News. Also Read | Crude Oil Price Soars to $113 A Barrel as Russia-Ukraine Conflict Worsens. Afghanistan Reconstruction Trust Fund (ARTF) was frozen in August when the Taliban overran Kabul in last August. The World Bank statement said that as a first step, ARTF donors will decide on four projects worth about USD 600 million that will support "urgent needs in education, health and agricultural sectors, as well as community livelihoods," reported Tolo News. Foreign governments ended financial aid constituting more than 70 per cent of government expenditures while the United States led in the freezing of some USD 9 billion in Afghan central bank funds. The funding cuts accelerated an economic collapse, fuelling a cash crunch and deepening a humanitarian crisis that the United Nations says has pushed more than half of Afghanistan's population of 39 million to the verge of starvation. (ANI) (This is an unedited and auto-generated story from Syndicated News feed, LatestLY Staff may not have modified or edited the content body) Haveri, March 2: The devastated family members of Naveen Shekarappa Gyanagoudar, who died in the shelling in war-torn Ukraine, are hoping that the deceased young man's body would be brought back to India at the earliest. The family members till now have not got any specific inputs from the authorities on when their son's body would be brought back to the country. Harsha, the brother of deceased Naveen, said on Wednesday said, "No one is confirming whether the body will be brought back. His body should be brought back to us. His friends are coming back alive and we are coping with the news of death," he said. Shekarappa, Naveen's father, stated that he had lost his son and he wanted the government to bring back other boys alive to India. "Thousands of students are stuck in Ukraine, they are assets of our country. They should be brought back safely," he said. PM Narendra Modi Speaks to Father of Naveen Shekarappa, Who Died in Shelling in Ukraine. Chief Minister Basavaraj Bommai has stated that he has appealed to the external affairs ministry on the recovery of the body in two or three days if it is not possible immediately. The body of Naveen is lying in a war zone, which has made things complicated for the authorities. This news has deepened the grief of the family and relatives of Naveen. Rajashekara Gouda, the maternal uncle of Naveen blamed the system resulting in his death. "Naveen has scored 97 per cent in II PUC (12 class). He could not get a medical seat under the government quota. The family could not pay a donation and he had to go to Ukraine to fulfil his dream of becoming a doctor," he said. Gouda said that Naveen had collected information from his friends and went to Ukraine to study medicine. He used to call every day and comforted his parents that nothing would happen to him. Naveen's father Shekarappa also expressed his anguish that because of caste and donation his son had to pay with his life. He has urged the government to bring back the body of his son. Naveen was a topper at school and scored 606 marks out of 626 in SSLC (Class 10) examination. The deceased boy was supposed to take 8th semester exams in June. He was also planning to take up an internship. He had gone to Ukraine after II PUC. Naveen Shekharappa, Indian Student From Karnataka, Killed in Shelling in Ukraine's Kharkiv. Prime Minister Narendra Modi, Chief Minister Basavaraj Bommai, former CM B.S. Yediyurappa has personally spoken to the family of deceased Naveen and assured that all efforts would be made to bring back the body to India. (The above story first appeared on LatestLY on Mar 02, 2022 10:20 AM IST. For more news and updates on politics, world, sports, entertainment and lifestyle, log on to our website latestly.com). China will maintain normal trade relations with Russia despite international sanctions, Chinese Foreign Ministry spokesman Wang Wenbin has said. BREAKING: President and Chancellor of Austria to call on Russia to withdraw troops from Ukraine and to 'end the bloodshed', despite the constitution binding the country to 'permanent neutrality'. The Spectator Index (@spectatorindex) March 2, 2022 (SocialLY brings you all the latest breaking news, viral trends and information from social media world, including Twitter, Instagram and Youtube. The above post is embeded directly from the user's social media account and LatestLY Staff may not have modified or edited the content body. The views and facts appearing in the social media post do not reflect the opinions of LatestLY, also LatestLY does not assume any responsibility or liability for the same.) New Delhi, March 2: Payment startup BharatPe has stripped its co-founder Ashneer Grover of all positions for its alleged "misdeeds" and may take further legal actions, including clawing back of some of his shareholding. BharatPe, which allows shop owners to make digital payments through QR codes, in a statement said Grover resigned after receiving the agenda for an upcoming board meeting that included submission of an independent audit regarding his conduct. The Board of the company met last evening, and the meeting went past midnight, following which a statement was issued. The company said it reserves the right to take action based on the report's findings. Ashneer Grover Hand in Gloves With Wife Madhuri Jain in Grossly Abusing Company Money, Says BharatPe. "The Grover family and their relatives engaged in extensive misappropriation of company funds, including, but not limited to, creating fake vendors through which they siphoned money away from the company's account and grossly abused company expense accounts in order to enrich themselves and fund their lavish lifestyles," it alleged. Minutes before midnight of March 1, Grover got an email inviting him for a board meeting at 19:30 on March 2. At 12:05 on Tuesday, he resigned. Sources said the Board of BharatPe took note of the termination of employment of Grover as a consequence of his resignation from the post of managing director as well as a director on the company board. But, since he resigned without the approval of the board and majority investors, consequences under the shareholder agreement have now been triggered, they said, adding this could mean that the company is within its right to claw back shares up to 1.4 per cent. Grover currently owns a 9.5 per cent stake in BharatPe, while his co-founder Shashwat Nakrani owns 7.8 per cent. Investor Sequoia Capital India is the largest shareholder in BharatPe with a 19.6 per cent stake, followed by Coatue at 12.4 per cent and Ribbit Capital at 11 per cent. When contacted, Grover said he was appalled at the personal nature of the company's statement but not surprised. "It comes from a position of personal hatred and low thinking," he said. "I would want to learn who among Amarchand, PwC and A&M has started doing an audit on 'lavishness' of one's lifestyle?" BharatPe, which has engaged a law firm and risk advisory consultants to conduct a more detailed investigation after allegations of financial irregularities, last month sacked Madhuri Jain, head of controls and wife of Grover, for alleged financial irregularities, including using the company funds for personal visits abroad, beauty treatments, buying electronics and paying for helps employed at her residence. The company statement alluding to the lavish lifestyle may have referred to Jain's misuse of funds. A preliminary internal investigation has pegged the magnitude of the financial misconduct at over Rs 50 crore. PricewaterhouseCoopers (PwC) alongside Alvarez & Marsal (A&M) is doing the audit. Grover, however, said the "only thing lavish about me is my dreams and ability to achieve them against all odds through hard work and enterprise". He went on to state that he would want the Board to be reminded "USD 1 million of secondary shares investors bought from me in Series C, USD 2.5 million in Series D and USD 8.5 million in Series E". "I hope the board can get back to working soon - I as a shareholder am worried about the value destruction. I wish the company and the board a speedy recovery," he said. Grover, who was on January 19 sent on a two-month leave of absence following allegations of using abusive language against Kotak Mahindra Bank staff and fraudulent practices, had filed an arbitration plea with the Singapore International Arbitration Centre (SIAC), claiming the company's investigation against him was illegal. The emergency arbitrator (EA) last week rejected all the five grounds of his appeal, denying him a single relief. He resigned from BharatPe on Tuesday. Just days before this, his wife Jain, who helmed procurement, finance and human resources from the company's early days, was fired following the review and her ESOPs were cancelled. In the statement, BharatPe said to uphold the highest governance standards, and in light of complaints received, the Board directed a thorough review of the company's internal controls. "Minutes after Mr Ashneer Grover received notice that some of the results of the inquiry would be presented to the Board, he quickly shirked responsibility by sending an email to the Board, submitting his resignation and fabricating another false narrative of the events to the public," it said. "The company has taken strong objection to Mr Grover spinning lies and hurling baseless allegations and threats". The company said it reserves all rights to take further legal action against him and his family. "The Board will not allow the deplorable conduct of the Grover family to tarnish BharatPe's reputation or that of its hard-working employees and world-class technology," it said. "As a result of his misdeeds, Mr Grover is no longer an employee, a founder, or a director of the company." Grover has reportedly made several allegations on BharatPe board members and investor Sequoia Capital. According to a media report, Grover has said if he starts speaking then Sequoia will not be able to make a single investment in India, and there will be ED and CBI behind them. "The Board remains highly focused on supporting the growth and continued success of the company. The Board is taking all necessary steps to further strengthen the company's corporate governance, including the appointment of an audit committee, an internal auditor, and the implementation of other key internal controls," the company statement said. The success of BharatPe, it said, is a result of the collective effort of a large team of dedicated and talented professionals, and not anyone individual. "We are confident that the company is marking the beginning of a new chapter in its success one grounded in trust and integrity and we are excited to embark upon this next leg of our journey." United Nations, March 2: The US is expelling a Russian national who is working with the UN Secretariat, a United Nations spokesperson has said. "I can confirm that the US Mission to the United Nations informed the Secretariat on Feb 28 (of) its decision to take action under Section 13b of the UN-UN Headquarters Agreement with respect to a staff member in the Secretariat," said Stephane Dujarric, spokesman for UN Secretary-General Antonio Guterres, Xinhua news agency reported. "We regret that we find ourselves in this situation, but are engaging with the host country in line with Section 13b of the agreement," he said. The spokesman refused to give any more details "in deference to the privacy of the individual concerned and the sensitivity of the matter". He said the US decision is strange as the work contract for the staff member concerned was scheduled to end on March 14. The US on Monday announced the expulsion of 12 staff members of the Russian Permanent Mission to the UN. Russia-Ukraine War: Elon Musks Promised Starlink Terminals Reach Ukraine. In a statement, the US Permanent Mission to the United Nations described the 12 Russian diplomats as "intelligence operatives" who have abused their privileges of residency in the United States "by engaging in espionage activities". Russia's permanent representative to the United Nations, Vassily Nebenzia, on Monday regretted the US decision. Nebenzia said the expulsion is a hostile step taken by the United States and "yet another gross violation" of the UN-US Headquarters Agreement and of the Vienna Convention. The US decisions to expel 12 Russian diplomats and one UN staff member from Russia came amid Russian military operations in Ukraine. (The above story first appeared on LatestLY on Mar 02, 2022 08:15 AM IST. For more news and updates on politics, world, sports, entertainment and lifestyle, log on to our website latestly.com). A large cargo vessel carrying thousands of luxury cars, such as Porsche and Lamborghini, from Germany to Rhode Island in the U.S. sank on Tuesday in the mid-Atlantic. According to CBS News, the Panama-flagged Felicity Ace had sunk nearly two weeks after it caught fire. The Portuguese Navy and the ship's manager said Felicity Ace sank about 250 miles off Portugal's Azores Islands as efforts to tow it started due to structural problems caused by the fire and rough seas, WBZ4 reported. The Portuguese Navy further noted that the cargo ship sank onto the ocean at a depth of around 30,000 feet. Joao Mendes Cabecas, the captain of the nearest port on the island Faial, told Reuters that water started to come in when the cargo ship was being towed. The captain added that the ship lost its stability and sank into the ocean. Cabecas further noted that there were no reports of an oil leak so far, but there were fears of the fuel tanks being damaged while it lies at the bottom of the ocean, BBC reported. In response to the tragedy, the Portuguese Air Force dispatched a plane to the area where the sinking occurred to monitor any signs of pollution. According to reports, the cargo ship carried around 2,000 metric tons of fuel and 2,000 metric tons of oil. READ NEXT: Joe Biden, White House, Say Americans Should Not Worry on Nuclear War Amid Russia and Ukraine Conflict Porsche, Lamborghini, Among Luxury Cars Onboard Felicity Ace When Felicity Ace sank into the Atlantic Ocean on Tuesday, luxury cars such as Lamborghini and Porsche were onboard. Insurance experts told Reuters that the incident could result in around $155 million losses. The total number of cars in the cargo ship was not clear. However, reports noted that the size of the cargo ship could accommodate at least 4,000 vehicles. Portuguese authorities said the cargo ship carried electric and non-electric vehicles. Volkswagen mentioned that the damage to the cars would be covered by insurance. However, the company did not say how many cars they had on the ship. Meanwhile, Bentley and Porsche confirmed that they have units in the cargo ship. Bentley noted that they have 189 cars in Felicity Ace, while Porsche said they have about 1,100 units onboard. Porsche noted that they are now in the process of contacting their customers in the United States. "We are already working to replace every car affected by this incident and the first new cars will be built soon," Angus Fitton, vice president of public relations at Porsche Cars North America Inc., told Associated Press. On the other hand, Lamborghini has not yet stated how many units they have on the ship. Cargo Ship Felicity Ace Going to Rhode Island Caught Fire Aside from sinking into the deep ocean, cargo ship Felicity Ace also experienced other tragedies as it traversed to Rhode Island in the U.S. from Germany. It can be recalled that a fire broke out in the cargo ship on February 16 while it was traveling. At least 22 crew members were rescued by a Portuguese Air Force helicopter when the fire broke out, setting the ship adrift into the ocean. Portugal's Navy confirmed no casualties when the fire broke out on the cargo ship. The rescued crew members were taken to a hotel after being saved. According to reports, suspicion on what started the fire has fallen on the lithium batteries used in the electric vehicles. However, officials underscored that there was still no firm evidence on what caused the fire in the cargo ship. READ MORE: Brazil Carnival 2022: Thousands Took to Streets of Rio De Janeiro Defying Ban on Festive Celebrations This article is owned by Latin Post. Written by: Joshua Summers WATCH: Cargo Ship Full Of Luxury Cars Caught On Fire In Atlantic - From NBC News President Joe Biden used his first State of the Union speech Tuesday in addressing the Ukraine and Russia crisis, saying the United States stands with Ukraine amid the war. According to Reuters, Biden led a standing ovation for Ukraine and its people during his State of the Union address. "Let each of us if you're able to stand, stand and send an unmistakable signal to Ukraine and to the world," Biden said. Democrats and Republicans in the chamber of the House of Representatives then rose to applaud their support for Ukraine. Many of them also waved the flags of Ukraine. Ahead of the president's arrival, Ukrainian flags were passed among attendees. Several women members of Congress were reportedly wearing clothes in the colors of Ukraine's flag - yellow and blue. Biden started his State of the Union address by sending a resounding message to the world that the West is united in its response to Russia's invasion of Ukraine and in condemning Russia's President Vladimir Putin for his aggression, CNN reported. Biden has heavily criticized Putin in his remarks, saying the Russian leader badly miscalculated how events would unfold and now "Russia's economy is reeling and Putin alone is to blame." "He thought he could roll into Ukraine and the world would roll over. Instead he met a wall of strength he never imagined. He met the Ukrainian people... From President Zelenskiy to every Ukrainian, their fearlessness, their courage, their determination, inspires the world," the president said. Biden noted that "Putin's war was premeditated and unprovoked," and that the Russian leader rejected efforts at diplomacy. "He thought the West and NATO wouldn't respond. And, he thought he could divide us here at home. Putin was wrong. We were ready," Biden said. Joe Biden also warned Putin, other corrupt officials, and Russian oligarchs that harsh punishments are still coming in response to Russia's invasion of Ukraine. "We are joining with our European allies to find and seize your yachts, your luxury apartments, and your private jets. We are coming for your ill-begotten gains," Biden noted. In the excerpts of his State of the Union address released by the White House, Biden seemed to call Putin a dictator, The Daily Mail reported. "Throughout our history we've learned this lesson - when dictators do not pay a price for their aggression, they cause more chaos. They keep moving," Biden said, adding that the threats to America and the world "will keep rising." Biden then explained why the North Atlantic Treaty Organization (NATO) Alliance was created, and that is "to secure peace and stability in Europe after World War Two." "The United States is a member along with 29 other nations... It matters. American diplomacy matters," he noted. Reuters reported that before his State of the Union address, two sources familiar with the matter said Biden would also announce that the U.S. will ban Russian flights in the American airspace. Biden started his state of the union address at 9 p.m. ET, USA Today reported. It was televised on all major TV networks, including CBS, NBC, ABC, and PBS. READ NEXT: Joe Biden, White House, Say Americans Should Not Worry on Nuclear War Amid Russia and Ukraine Conflict Joe Biden and Russia's President Vladimir Putin The U.S. and its allies have already launched several sanctions against Russia's economy and financial system, as well as Vladimir Putin and his inner circle of oligarchs. Last Friday, the U.S. government joined European countries in imposing sanctions on Putin and Russia's Foreign Minister Sergei Lavrov. The EU states and Britain agreed earlier Friday to freeze any European assets of Putin and Lavrov to increase pressure on Moscow to halt its invasion of Ukraine. Before this, Biden has announced sanctions on Russia that target the country's largest banks and companies. The said sanctions reportedly cut off Russia from western financial markets and imposed restrictions on the exports of advanced technology used to power the country's tech and military sector. According to U.S. Treasury Secretary Janet Yellen, these sanctions would impact nearly 80 percent of all banking assets in Russia. Joe Biden to Send Support to Ukraine Hours before Joe Biden's State of the Union address, the U.S. president announced that his administration would further support Ukraine. Biden tweeted that the U.S. would provide security assistance and humanitarian aid to Ukraine. He added that the United States will continue to hold Russia accountable, pointing out that the sanctions they imposed "are already having a devastating impact." I just spoke with President Zelenskyy to discuss our continued support for Ukraine including security assistance and humanitarian aid as it defends itself against Russian aggression. We will hold Russia accountable, and our sanctions are already having a devastating impact. pic.twitter.com/9X9x07QbD0 President Biden (@POTUS) March 1, 2022 READ MORE: Joe Biden State of the Union Address: Washington D.C. Mayor Issues Alert Over Potential Truck Protests; Pentagon to OK National Guard Reinforcement This article is owned by Latin Post. Written by: Joshua Summers WATCH: Biden Sends More Aid To Ukraine, Puts Sanctions On Russian Banks - From TODAY Business owners and local leaders celebrated at Springfield's Eastfield Mall, which is home to 22 Latino-owned businesses, as 16 of which opened their doors within the last six months. Tuesday, Andrew Melendez, Director of the Massachusetts Latino Chamber of Commerce, along with Springfield Mayor Domenic Sarno, hosted an event at the mall honoring the nearly two dozen businesses. Representatives Orlando Ramos and Carlos Gonzalez and Senator Adam Gomez were also in attendance, Western Mass News reported. According to Melendez, the rise of Latino and Black-owned businesses in the Eastfield Mall "sets the tone" for transitioning malls, shopping plazas, and downtown storefronts around Springfield and Massachusetts. "We congratulate the 12 new businesses and all 22 Latino businesses in the Eastfield Mall," he said, adding that the pandemic has only increased the community's desire to start their own businesses, per WWLP. Business Owners Express Delight; Puerto Rican, Latino Shoppers Filled The Mall Carlos and Wendy Torres' "All Things Anime" started from three shelves in another person's store, selling T-shirts, Funko Pop! vinyl figurines, and more - all related to the world of Japanese animation. In November, they finally had their own space, as they are among the businesses that opened a store in the Eastfield Mall. According to Torres, their business has "really taken off." Whenever people are really looking for things related to their favorite anime, Torres said, "their faces light up." She also thinks it is a good improvement for the mall since people can now see the difference when they walk around. Meanwhile, the owner of BoriSushi, Betsy Abreu, combined sushi techniques with traditional Puerto Rican ingredients such as plantains and avocado. Her rolls, Abreu said, resemble culinary mash-ups that have been going on in Puerto Rico for a time now, with cooked items like beef and pork and traditional rice. "It's sushi with a Latin flavor and we are doing very well," she said. Also, another business that features traditional Puerto Rican cuisine is the restaurant La Isla Menos, owned by Marielys Rosado. According to her, the mall is filled with Puerto Rican and Latino shoppers. Rosado called the mall lively, a world that might not have been associated with it in recent years following the loss of traditional anchor stores like Sears, JCPenney, and Macy's. ALSO READ: Russia Threatens to Drop International Space Station on America, Europe Over Ukraine War Sanctions Eastfield Mall's Traditional Anchor Locations Remain Empty Eastfield Mall settled its lawsuit against Cinemark and is now marketing that space after leasing it for a year as courtroom space. Although Macy's will host a Spirit Halloween pop-up this summer and Diem Cannabis, a marijuana company, still has designs on it as a retail and growing location, the anchor locations remain unrented. Nearly all of the mall's in-line stores, the ones facing the mall, are rented. Now it is a matter of persuading the public that Eastfield, built in 1967 as Greater Springfield's first enclosed mall, has retailers and customers. Melendez announced that the mall is now offering microbusinesses free pop-up shop space for a month at a time. The program begins in April and includes professional business mentoring and assistance from the chamber in areas such as accountancy and social media marketing. It is an opportunity to reach a whole new audience, according to Melendez. After the one-month program, new enterprises will have the chance to expand into space in the Eastfield Mall or in the city of Springfield. Alberto Navarro, who owns a nine-year-old art studio and custom clothing shop called Gifted Tones Paint and Music Lounge, claimed he is likely the oldest among the Latino businesses in the mall. He is currently rebranding as Neighborhood Dreamers, offering everything from graphic design to vinyl cutting and paint parties. Navarro has seen the mall through all stages, from when there was not even a single person walking in the mall until now that it is crowded again. He said current mall management, including manager Dave Thompson, works hard to host events and promotions. The mall's role as a location for vaccination clinics and COVID testing contributed to attracting visitors and getting them inside. READ MORE: Ukraine Vice PM Asks Elon Musk for Starlink Help Amid Russia Crisis, SpaceX Boss Gives Perfect Response! This article is owned by Latin Post. Written by: Jess Smith WATCH: 16 new Latino-owned businesses open at the Eastfield Mall - from WWLP - 22News Mexico's President Andres Manuel Lopez Obrador announced that the Latin American nation will not be imposing any economic sanctions on Russia for its invasion of Ukraine. Lopez Obrador cited wanting to have good relations with all the governments in the world as his reason to refuse imposing sanctions, according to a Reuters report. The Mexican president also called out what he described as censorship of Russian state-sponsored media by social media companies. Lopez Obrador said he does not agree that media from Russia or any country is censored. Other Latin American administrations have strong links with Russia, such as Cuba, Venezuela, and Nicaragua, while Russia's connection with Mexico is seen to be limited, with Mexico's strong relationship with the United States. Lopez Obrador's statement came after a question about the interest in Mexico of Russia's second-largest oil producer Lukoil and Russian airline Aeroflot. The president also confirmed that his administration has not reached out to the governments of Ukraine or Russia, adding that Mexico's role cannot go any further than providing humanitarian help, according to an Adolu Agency news report. Lopez Obrador said they are reaching Ukraine through the United Nations, "but no more than that." He added that they cannot fail into a leading role that has nothing to do with the control that should prevail in foreign policy. READ NEXT: Mexico City Replacing Christopher Columbus Statue With One of Indigenous Woman; City Mayor Says It's to Deliver "Social Justice" Mexico's Stance on Russia-Ukraine Crisis Lopez Obrador was internally criticized for his reluctance to condemn the invasion, with official Mexican reactions calling for dialogue between the parties. Foreign Minister Marcelo Ebrard later issued a statement condemning the Russian attack a day after the hostilities erupted, according to a The Hill report. Mexico was part of the 11 United Nations Security Council members to vote for a resolution condemning Russia's action. China, India, and the United Arab Emirates abstained, while Russia vetoed the resolution. Lopez Obrador said that they do not consider sanctions to correspond to them, adding that the best thing is to promote dialogue to achieve peace. Financial experts noted that the sanctions against Russia could likely have a huge impact on the Latin Americans that were using Russian assistance to deal with U.S. sanctions imposed on their governments, according to a Newsweek report. The Venezuelan government had started using Russian banks to make payments to other countries after the sanctions levied against them during former U.S. President Donald Trump's administration. Russia-Ukraine Crisis U.S. President Joe Biden has slammed Russian President Vladimir Putin in his State of the Union speech, saying that the Russian leader will pay a "continuing high price over the long run," according to an Aljazeera News report. U.S. payment card firms Visa Inc. and Mastercard Inc. have blocked several Russian financial institutions from their network following the government's sanctions imposed on Russia. The U.S. government is also expected to announce a ban on Russian flights from American airspace, a move that was earlier made by the European Union and Canada. Ukraine's Ministry of Internal Affairs said 80,000 Ukrainians have returned home from abroad to join in the fight against Russia. READ MORE: Mexico's President Andres Manuel Lopez Obrador 'New Era' of Politics, Family Scandal and Wealth This article is owned by Latin Post Written by: Mary Webber WATCH: Mexico no impondra sanciones economicas contra Rusia @RT Play en Espanol - from RT Play en Espanol The Tinder Swindler, made popular by Netflix's true-crime documentary, is currently facing a lawsuit by the real Leviev diamond family he pretended to belong by claiming the name Simon Leviev. Israeli Russian diamond tycoon Lev Leviev and his family filed a lawsuit against the Tinder Swindler, with the real name Shimon Hayut, for allegedly impersonating them and unjustly enriching himself using their family name, according to a People report. The lawsuit was filed in Tel Aviv, Israel. It stated that Hayut has been making false claims of being part of the Leviev family, which gained him benefits, including material ones. Guy Ophir, the Leviev family's attorney, said in a statement that the lawsuit was "only the beginning" of several lawsuits. The attorney added that they will file a monetary suit against Hayut and any other affiliate that will work with, such as some websites that have joint ventures with him and/or offered to buy cameos from him. Ophir said that anyone that will "try to capitalize from this scheme will be sued," according to an NBC News report. Chagit Leviev, the daughter of Lev Leviev, also spoke of the lawsuit that their family filed against Hayut. Chagit noted that Hayut stole their family's identity and has tried to exploit their "good name" to con victims. She then went on to say that Hayut has no relation to the Leviev family and has no affiliation with their company, LLD Diamonds. READ NEXT: Umbrella Academy Season 3 Hints Sparrow Academy Members With New Poster Tinder Swindler Coming Into Light With Netflix Documentary Netflix released a true-crime documentary shedding light on Hayut, who is a convicted fraudster born in Israel. Hayut used dating apps to meet multiple women, established lines of credit and loans using their names, and left them holding the bill payments, according to Netflix. He was already convicted in Finland under his real name. However, he carried out his Tinder scheme under the name of Simon Leviev and claimed to be part of the wealthy diamond family. Hayut then supposedly took the name David Sharon to evade the authorities once his name and his con act were exposed. It was reported that he stole around $10 million and would evade repayment by threatening or stalling his victims. Hayut was released from prison after only five months, and Tinder has confirmed that he has no known active profiles or aliases on its services. Aside from Tinder, Hayut was also banned from Hinge after Netflix released the "The Tinder Swindler" true-crime documentary. Match Group Inc., Plenty of Fish, and OkCupid also banned Hayut from their dating sites and apps. Hayut sent a voice message to the filmmakers, which was included in the film. The fraudster said in a voice message that he will proceed with the lawsuit over grounds of defamation and lies and that "everything is based, basically, on a lie." Hayut since then lived as a free man after his release and regularly posted on his Instagram account, which has more than 100,000 followers. As of early February, his Instagram account has been deleted. READ MORE: Cobra Kai Season 4 Returns With John Kreese and Terry Silver Joining Forces: Netflix Trailer Clip Hints This article is owned by Latin Post. Written by: Mary Webber WATCH: The Tinder Swindler | Official Trailer | Netflix - from Netflix Several personalities, including Ashton Kutcher and top GOP official Mitch McConnel, have reacted to the conflict between Russia and Ukraine on Tuesday. Kutcher and McConnel's comments came as Russia launched an invasion into Ukraine on Thursday, Fox News reported. The move from Russia was called by President Vladimir Putin a "special military operation." On Tuesday, Russian forces reportedly escalated their attack against the crowded urban areas of Ukraine. Reports noted that Kyiv, Ukraine's second-biggest city, was gravely affected as well as its main television tower. READ NEXT: Joe Biden, White House, Say Americans Should Not Worry on Nuclear War Amid Russia and Ukraine Conflict Ashton Kutcher's Support on Ukraine On Tuesday, "That '70s Show" actor Ashton Kutcher took to Twitter to call on people who know Russians and tell them that the Russian media is lying to its people. Post for socials: If you know someone from Russia Call them and tell them their media is lying to them. Ukraine doesn't want to fight, they just don't want Putin's government and don't want to be occupied. ashton kutcher (@aplusk) March 1, 2022 "Ukraine doesn't want to fight, they just don't want Putin's government and don't want to be occupied," Kutcher said. I stand with Ukraine ashton kutcher (@aplusk) February 25, 2022 The actor then sounded his message of support to Ukraine in a separate tweet. Kutcher was not the only celebrity who decried the conflict involving Ukraine and Russia. It can be recalled that rapper Cardi B commented on the conflict, expressing her hopes that world leaders would "think about who's really getting affected" by the tension, per Independent. "War, sanctions, invasions, should be the last thing these leaders should worry about," Cardi B added. Sending love and good prayers to all innocent people of Ukraine and Russia and Europe who are caught up in this sad and corrosive moment of asymmetrical violence and destruction, especially the young people. You have done nothing to deserve this perversion and obscene spectacle. Mark Ruffalo (@MarkRuffalo) February 24, 2022 "Avengers" star Mark Ruffalo also took to Twitter to send love and good prayers" to the "innocent" people of Ukraine, Russia, and Europe who were affected by the tension. "Eternals" star Angelina Jolie also hopped in to express her thoughts on the conflict. "Like many of you, I'm praying for the people in Ukraine. My focus along with many UNHCR colleagues is that everything possible is done to ensure the protection and basic human rights of those displaced, and refugees in the region," Jolie said on her Instagram post. To my friends and family in Ukraine - my heart breaks that this conflict has escalated in such a devastating way. Please take great care and be as safe as you can. Sending thoughts to you and your loved ones during this chaotic and disruptive time. pic.twitter.com/UXyu0lOzNa JARED LETO (@JaredLeto) February 25, 2022 Meanwhile, Jared Leto urged the people of Ukraine to "take great care and be safe" amid the crisis. Top GOP Mitch McConnel Calls Russia's President a "Thug" On Tuesday, top GOP Official Mitch McConnel slammed Russian President Vladimir Putin, calling him a "thug" following the war that has erupted in the west, Reuters reported. "What President Putin is, is a ruthless thug who's just invaded another sovereign country and killed thousands of innocent people. That's what President Putin is," McConnel said. McConnel's comments came when he was asked about former President Trump's statement about Putin, calling the Russian president's actions "genius" and "pretty savvy." Aside from calling Putin a thug, the top GOP official also said on Tuesday that Republicans largely support President Joe Biden's actions towards Russia and its invasion of Ukraine. McConnel noted that they are "all together" in supporting the people of Ukraine and that he was thrilled that the country is unified amid the conflict. The comments from the top GOP official came as the Democrats sought around $6.4 billion in humanitarian and security aid from Congress in support of Ukraine. However, McConnel noted that they refuse to grant the budget, contending that the U.S. has hit a "snag." READ NEXT: Russia Threatens to Drop International Space Station on America, Europe Over Ukraine War Sanctions This article is owned by Latin Post. Written By: Joshua Summers WATCH: What You Need to Know About the Russia-Ukraine Conflict - From ABC News When it comes to seeing his children, Kanye West is taking no chances, as he hired one of the country's top attorneys to handle his divorce from Kim Kardashian. According to recent legal documents obtained by The Blast, Ye brought in Samantha Spector to represent him in the ongoing divorce, indicating that he is unwilling to gamble his children's custody. The legal move comes as the 'Keeping Up With The Kardashians' star attempts to escalate the "status" of the couple's divorce - and become legally single regardless of whether their property or custody issues have been settled, per The Blast. Ye has been very vocal about his issues with Kim K. as well as having access to his four kids. The issues began after Kim referred to herself as the children's "main provider and caregiver," prompting West to retaliate quickly. "What do you mean by the main provider?" The "Donda" rapper wrote. He continued that the country of America witnessed Kim K. attempting to "kidnap my daughter" at Chicago's birthday party by failing to provide the address. Ye Hires Samantha Spector To Deal Divorce It appears that Ye and Kim Kardashian were at odds when the rapper was allegedly denied full access to the children. Enters the scene is Samantha Spector. Spector, who has been practicing law for over 20 years, is the Founder of Spector Law, a professional law corporation that exclusively focuses on family law matters. The divorce lawyer's diverse clientele ranges from musicians, athletes, high-net-worth individuals to some of the biggest stars in Hollywood, including Dr. Dre's ex-wife Nicole Young and Amber Heard against Johnny Depp. In both cases, she navigated nasty allegations of abuse and complex financial concerns involving multimillion-dollar assets. Kanye's decision came on the heels after Kardashian filed legal paperwork claiming her former husband's Instagram posts are causing "emotional distress." In the filing, Kim is asking for a judge to order the marriage over while the former couple sorts out their remaining issues. The founder of the Skims wrote in the documents, "I very much desire to be divorced." Throughout February, Ye, 44, has called out Kardashian on his 14.7 million-follower Instagram account for allowing their 8-year-old daughter, North, to be on TikTok, among a slew of other comments regarding their co-parenting troubles. The Yeezy founder has also repeatedly made jokes and threats to Kardashian's new partner, Pete Davidson, on social media and in the lyrics of his new music. ALSO READ: Disney, Warner Bros., Sony Halt All Upcoming Film Releases in Russia Over Ukraine Invasion Kim Will Not Be Able To Control The Situation - Kanye West Claims When there are no additional issues in a divorce proceeding, California's family law courts are known for granting 50/50 custody. Kardashian will find it tough to govern when and where Kanye may see his children. In any case, Ye alleges that her security or legal team will be unable to control the situation. The former couple will most likely agree on a timetable, or a court will make one for them, according to reports. It does not appear there will be any concerns between the parties moving ahead on the matter, including reinstating the reality star's name back to "Kim Kardashian" from "Kim Kardashian West." Kim and Kanye are scheduled to appear on Wednesday in a Los Angeles courtroom to discuss the "status" situation. READ MORE: Ukraine Vice PM Asks Elon Musk for Starlink Help Amid Russia Crisis, SpaceX Boss Gives Perfect Response! This article is owned by Latin Post. Written by: Jess Smith WATCH: Kim Kardashian's Epiphany That 'Caused My Divorce' From Kanye West - from Entertainment Tonight Mexican drug cartels and human smugglers were discovered to use fraudulent Texas paper tags to evade law enforcement along the U.S.-Mexico border. An NBC 5 investigation found that Mexican drug cartel operatives were able to exploit the weaknesses at the Texas Department of Motor Vehicles and get real temporary Texas paper tags registered to false names and addresses. Federal agents told NBC 5 that those tags were used to disguise the ownership of smuggling vehicles, which makes it harder for investigators to stop the flow of illegal drugs and undocumented immigrants along the U.S.-Mexico border. Richard Sanchez, assistant special agent in charge at the U.S. Drug Enforcement Agency (DEA), noted that the scheme has been consistent and has been happening for quite some time. Sanchez said there were also some undercover investigations where DEA agents saw drug traffickers instructing people on the benefits of using paper tags to move shipments, with some of the paper tags directly given to undercover agents. Sanchez noted that the undercover agents were even instructed to fix that tag to the vehicle. Authorities said the paper tags are a "dream" for drug traffickers as it makes it harder for police to determine who owns a smuggling vehicle. A Federal Bureau of Investigation (FBI) agent, who once investigated the sale of fraudulent Texas paper tags, told NBC 5 that human smugglers also obtained the paper tags from Mexico's side of the border as they try to have some legitimacy as they cross into the U.S. The FBI agent noted that smugglers only need a printer and an internet connection. State troopers that Texas Governor Greg Abbott has deployed to the border have also encountered paper tags in their investigations. In a statement sent to NBC 5, the Texas Department of Public Safety (DPS) said it is aware of the growing problem with the fraudulent temporary tags and is working to combat it by identifying cases where fraudulent tags are involved in crimes. The DPS added that they are also sending more DPS troopers to special training to help them identify fraudulent tags. NBC 5 also obtained videos of DPS troopers chasing suspected drug traffickers and human smugglers in cars with paper tags in the border region. In one incident in Laredo, an SUV with a paper tag carrying bales of drugs rushed off the road and down through a large drainage ditch as the driver tried to escape. READ NEXT: Mexican Drug Cartels Getting New Weapons From Central America Amid Mexico's Lawsuit Against Guns - Sinaloa Cartel Insider Operation Targeting Texas Paper Tags Use by Mexican Drug Cartels and Human Smugglers Earlier this month, the Fort Worth Police Department in Texas said it has launched a special operation in high crime areas aimed at taking fraudulent paper tags off the streets, according to another NBC 5 report. Police said they have already apprehended a couple of suspects using fraudulent tags in an effort to conceal other crimes. They stopped 41 cars, which led to 16 arrests for other more serious crimes. Fort Worth Chief Neil Noakes noted that police found weapons, drugs, and people with felony warrants. Fort Worth Deputy Chief Pedro Criado said they have three open investigations in three locations of their city that are illegally distributing and selling the paper tags. DEA earlier said they busted a major fentanyl smuggling ring in Fort Worth and found it using paper tags. Eduardo Chavez, DEA special agent in charge, told NBC 5 that every vehicle this group was using to transport their illegal drugs was using temporary tags. Human Smugglers In a statement, Jack Staton, acting special agent in charge for Immigration and Customs Enforcement (ICE) Homeland Security Investigations El Paso, Texas, said human smugglers have no concern for humanity, adding that it is just a money business for them. Staton further noted that human smugglers look at people "as merchandise, "as a way to make money." Staton said human smuggling on the U.S.-Mexico border is a daily occurrence, with the Rio Grande being the busiest area for human smuggling activity right now. According to ICE, smugglers move humans as part of cargo transports, in vehicles, boats, tractor-trailers, trucks, and boxcars on trains. Human smugglers also use legitimate transportation options such as commercial buses and flights. READ MORE: El Chapo's Wife Emma Coronel Aispuro Moved to Texas Prison to Serve out Rest of Sentence for Taking Part in Sinaloa Cartel's Operation This article is owned by Latin Post. Written by: Mary Webber WATCH: KPRC 2 Investigates: How to Tell a Legitimate Paper Tag vs. A Fake One - From KPRC 2 Click2Houston A four-year-old boy in Georgia died Sunday after he accidentally shot himself with a gun that was left inside his mother's car. The Daily Mail reported that Miyell Hernandez was left inside the car of his mom, who went shopping inside a grocery store before he fatally shot himself. READ NEXT: Joe Biden State of the Union Address: U.S. President Denounces Russia's Vladimir Putin's Attack on Ukraine Georgia Boy Shot Himself While Younger Sibling and Cousin Are Present Miyell Hernandez's eight-month-old sister and their 13-year-old cousin were also inside the vehicle with him. According to DeKalb County police, Hernandez found his mother's unsecured gun and "accidentally shot himself" in a Publix store parking lot at around 5 p.m. Police said the teenager ran inside the store for help after the gun went off. NBC News reported that the four-year-old boy was rushed to a hospital but did not survive his injuries. Police said no charges had been filed in the case as of Tuesday. Guadalupe Woods, Hernandez's aunt, told 11Alive that the mother of the Georgia boy went inside the grocery store to buy a birthday cake for his grandfather, Independent reported. Maria Hernandez, the mother of the 13-year-old, also told 11 Alive that her daughter was in the passenger seat turning on some music before she heard the firearm go off and smoke suddenly filled the car. Maria noted that two bystanders called 911 after her daughter went for help inside the store, but "by then he was already gone. She added that "nobody knew there was a gun in the vehicle." Maria described the four-year-old Georgia boy as "the sweetest kid ever." In light of the shooting incident, police said they would host an event later this month that will give tips on how to secure guns and would offer free gun locks. Other Relatives of the Georgia Boy React to His Death The other relatives of the Georgia boy also reacted to his death. April Griffin, Miyell Hernandez's grandmother, described the boy as "innocent" and "pure." "Even though he's not here, we know he went to heaven. We know it," Griffin told the Atlanta Journal-Constitution. Woods then said that the boy's death would forever be remembered since it happened on their father's birthday. Woods also expressed heartbreak for her niece, who witnessed his brother's death. "I'm pretty sure my niece is going to be pretty messed up for the rest of her life because she was unfortunately in there when it happened... But we'll figure something out. We'll just keep going," the four-year-old's aunt noted. A GoFundMe has reportedly been created to help pay for the costs of Miyell Hernandez's funeral, and more than $3,000 was already raised as of Tuesday. DeKalb County Police Chief Mirtha Ramos said their "hearts and thoughts go out to the Hernandez family," and asked gun owners "to always keep their guns safe and secure." A national count by Everytown for Gun Safety, an American gun control nonprofit, showed that there had been at least 30 unintentional shootings by children across the country, resulting in 13 deaths and 18 injuries so far this year. Last year, at least 377 unintentional shootings by children were recorded, resulting in 154 deaths. READ MORE: California Church Shooting: Dad Shoots, Kills His 3 Children Before Committing Suicide Inside Church This article is owned by Latin Post. Written by: Joshua Summers WATCH: 4-Year-Old Fatally Shoots Himself in Parking Lot of Lithonia Grocery Store - From CBS46 Atlanta Need help logging in? We have transitioned to a new user-friendly interactive website. You will need an account and a subscription to see the site in its entirety. HOME DELIVERY subscribers get online access for free with their subscription. If you are a home delivery subscriber, create a new account and follow the directions to validate your home delivery subscription. If you were a previous ONLINE ONLY subscriber, you should have received an email with directions on how to log in. If you are still experiencing issues contact us at bulletincirc@gmail.com. What was described as a cocktail of drink and cocaine saw a man end up in Portlaoise District Court last Thursday. Ryan Cahill, 34, of Apartment 58, Block 3 , Parklands, Northwood, Dublin faced a number of charges all on the same date of July 18, 2021. These comprised criminal damage at Hillcrest, Rockdale, Portlaoise; obstruction of a Garda at the Abbeyleix Road, Portlaoise; assault of Garda Rigney on the Abbeyleix Road; dangerous driving on the Abbeyleix Road; drunk and drug driving and eight charges of hit and run. Garda Rigney told the court that on July 18, 2021 Mr Cahil was at a friend's house in Rockdale. For some strange reason he damaged the TV in the house in a fit of rage He then got into a car and proceeded to collide with a number of cars on the Abbeyleix Road. When Garda Rigney arrived on the scene two cars were damaged and one was pulled up on the footpath. Mr Cahill was in the car he was driving and he was in a highly intoxicated state. Garda Rigney told the court that three members of the public had to assist him with Mr Cahill. They eventually managed to subdue him. The only saving grace, Garda Rigney said, was that Mr Cahill was in his stocking feet. Otherwise it could have been worse. He was not able to get out of the car. Later a blood sample showed a reading of 248 for alcohol and 445.9 for cocaine. Mr Cahill had no previous convictions. Garda Rigney said he had since apologised to him. Appearing for Mr Cahill, solicitor Barry Fitzgerald said that the drink and drugs Mr Cahill had taken had led to a psychotic episode for him. Mr Fitzgerald noted that Mr Cahill had no prior convictions and had an unblemished record. He worked as a relief manager in the retail sector. He had significant mental health difficulties. There was a letter from his doctor to the court. On this date he was at a party. He had drink taken and took cocaine. He was also on prescribed medication at the time. The fusion of this cocktail led to this reaction and he was out of control. He had apologised when he came to and Mr Fitzgerald said he appeared very contrite. The amount of damage to the TV was 649. Mr Fitzgerald said that Mr Cahill would make good on the loss. He had a letter of apology to Garda Rigney, to the court and his mother had a letter to the court. Mr Fitzgerald suggested it was an isolated incident. He had not taken alcohol or drinks since. This had given him a fright as well as everyone else. Judge Staines said that what had happened, taken as a whole, merited a custodial sentence. However, he had no previous convictions, he had pleaded at the first opportunity, he had apologised to Garda Rigney and appeared remorseful. She noted the letters handed into court and said that it appeared to be an aberration. For drink driving he was disqualified for four years, for drink driving he was fined 300 and disqualified for four years; for drug driving he was disqualified for one year; for dangerous driving he was disqualified for two years. For criminal damage he was told to pay 700 compensation. He was also told to pay 500 in compensation to Garda Rigney. Judge Staines told him that if he took drink and drugs he had to take responsibility for what happened. He was given until July 7 to pay the compensation. A man was found with a forged driving licence in a search at Fairgreen, Portlaoise court was told last week. Janis Plavanajs, 40, of 14 Rockview Drive, Mountrath Road, Portlaoise was charged with having a false instrument - a Latvian driving licence - at Iceland, Fairgreen on August 9, 2020. Sgt JJ Kirby told the court that at 2.45pm during a search at Fairgreen a forged driving licence was found. Solicitor Josephine Fitzpatrick said he was a Latvian national. It was a foolish decision to have this licence which was clearly a false licence. He had no previous convictions and had pleaded guilty early. He was fined 200. A couple were found growing cannabis plants, Portlaoise District Court heard last week. Darren Houlihan, 31, of Ross, Rathdowney was charged with the cultivation of cannabis and possession of cannabis and possession for sale or supply at Ross, Rathdowney on July 25, 2021. Also facing the same charges was Paulina Szczuorwska, 30, also of Ross, Rathdowney. Sgt JJ Kirby told the court that Garda Doreen OConnor carried out a search under warrant of a property at this address. Cannabis and a weighing scales had been found in the search. There was also 2,305 in cash. There was a tent with a grow house like fashion. It was not too sophisticated. Sgt Kirby said the cannabis had a potential value of 2,400. There were three cannabis plants. Appearing for Mr Houlihan and Ms Szczuorwska, solicitor Josephine Fitzpatrick said that they were in a relationship. Both were using cannabis and were experimenting with growing it for their own use. They had some success with some plants. Some cannabis was found growing and there were some immature plants. It was a wake up call for them and they were grateful for it and wished to put it behind them. Paulina did retail work and Darren had worked in Lisheen mines for a number of years. Both had pleaded guilty early. Ms Fitzpatrick suggested that the 2,000 seized by the Gardai might be applied in a manner which the court would direct. The couple are expecting their second child. Judge Staines that the 2,000 be given to Merchants Quay Ireland who were doing fabulous work in the midlands. She said it was a serious matter. There were three plants growing and there was other paraphilia. She noted the gardai comments that they had fully cooperated and were not involved in this activity anymore. She sought a Probation Report for June 2. Bruce Doyle, a 3rd Year Student in St. Fergals College Rathdowney took part in the Crean Challenge in Iceland in February. This event is one of the toughest challenges on the Scouting calendar and requires several months of preparation. Here Bruce tells us about what hes done to prepare for such an adventure and gives us a report on the trip itself. My name is Bruce and Im from the 2nd Laois (Rathdowney) Scout Group. For me, the Crean Challenge process began in March 2021, when I had to apply with a written CV and a Video Application detailing why they should choose me to be part of this experience. In June, 2021, an email came through from the Crean Challenge team confirming that I got accepted. Initially, I thought Id been lucky enough to have been accepted into a group that would challenge for places amongst the final expedition team, but at the initial meeting, it soon became apparent that Id been chosen as one of the lucky 32 Scouts, from all around Ireland to participate in the Crean Challenge 2022. Im a 3rd Year Scout, having made my way through the Scout Groups Beavers and Cubs Section and age was a limiting factor, this was my one and only chance, as Covid had prevented the previous years challenge. The preparation for the expedition began officially in August 2021 and there were 4 training weekends planned, in addition to the 4 training hikes that I had to complete separately (minimum 15km distance and 500m in height) and complete 2 projects as set out by the Crean Challenge mentors. Each training weekend took place in a different part of Ireland. We began with a Backwoods Camp in Castleconnell (Limerick), where we camped and Hammocked and cooked Irish Stew over an open fire. This was our first get together camp and it was on this weekend that the 32 Scouts were broken up into the four patrols of 8 and I became a member of the Green Patrol. Wed be in these patrols for the remainder of the challenge. Then went to the Galtees for the second weekend (Burncourt, Co. Tipperary), where we had a 10hr hike on the Galtees, honing in on our navigation and mapwork skills. Again, we camped on our own and did everything as a patrol and it was on this weekend that we first experienced our cooking stoves, that we would be using in Iceland. In November we headed to the east of the country, to Lough Dan (Roundwood, Co. Wicklow) where we completed a night hike over Scarr and then set up camp in the early hours of Saturday morning, before an early rise for a day hike around Tonelagee, where we practiced our River Crossings, which would be similar to some of the challenges we could expect to encounter in Iceland. All four Patrols navigated and hiked in lone patrol formation, reaching check points set up across the hills. In January 2022 we travelled south to Cronins Yard (Killarney, Co. Kerry) were we climbed Carrauntoohil on our last Group activity, before the trip itself. This weekend was kind of special as the covid Restrictions were beginning to be relaxed nationwide and we could all begin to mix as one group, as on the previous weekends we were restricted to mixing only within our patrols. After climbing Carrauntoohil, and to mark the completion of the training weekends the leaders put on a BBQ and presented us with our Crean Challenge Jackets.. next time we would all meet as a group, would be in Dublin Airport on the 19th February. Between Training Weekend 4 and the departure date to Iceland, I had to complete my projects, tidy up my log-book and study for my Junior Cert Mock exams. But once these were completed on the 18th, I headed off to Dublin airport in the early hours of the 19th February. To be totally honest, I hadnt really experienced anything like the nervousness and anxiety that I felt in the car on the way up to Dublin airport. While my parents and brother tried to distract me and occupy my thoughts, my stomach was doing somersaults all the way up the M7.. but as soon as we got to the T1 Short Term carpark, I saw two other Scouts in their Crean Jackets and the nerves left quite quickly. After a brief cheerio with the family, the Expedition team moved upstairs in Terminal One, allowing family and friends to head home. It was then, the trip really begun. Upon arrival in Iceland, we were very lucky to make it out to USU (Scout Centre). Weather warnings were in place all over Reykjavik and many roads closed. We had to swap out our first bus for a 4x4 bus capable of travel in such harsh conditions. After a brief walk around the centre on the Saturday evening, we settled into our dormitories, which would be our accommodation for the next few nights. After breakfast on the Sunday, we completed our route cards before some dinner which comprised of pasta and hot dogs. Then we went out to the snow to clear some patches to set up their tents for the night as we were camping out on the Sunday night. It took about 2 hours to dig down to grass level and clear enough space for the 2 tents that our patrol would use. After breakfast on Monday, we put away our camping gear and then we went for a short hike to get used to the conditions, which comprised of very strong winds and deep snow, several meters in places. On the Sunday the Weather warnings were extended until Tuesday, so Mondays preparation hike to a Power station was very weather dependant, but thankfully it went ahead, as planned. However, the weather turned while we were out hiking and the storm conditions came in earlier than expected. If anything, this was a good learning experience of how quickly the weather can change and why you need to Bi Ullamh (Be Prepared). Thankfully all scouts made it back for some well deserved lunch, showers and rest time ahead of our cultural evening, where we got to try some delicacies of Iceland - sheep's head, whale blubber and fermented shark. I didnt eat too much of what was on offer, but thankfully we were served up a lamb dinner by the Scouters that evening, so we all went to bed with full bellies. The weather outside had gotten worse throughout the day and while we settled down to watch a movie (Everest), candles were on the ready as power cuts were expected, due to the stormy weather conditions. As things stood, we had to wait and see what the weather was like on Tuesday as regards doing the planned activities. Unfortunately, the storm didnt improve and we woke up still in a red weather warning area. The storm conditions put a stop to any outside activities, with the strong winds (23m per second) and snowfall, so fast and hard, that it felt like bullets of ice hitting my body. We finalised our Route Cards for the expedition hike, we learned about first aid scenarios that would be specific to our environment for the hike, carried out gear checks and kept up to speed with the latest weather reports for the next 24/36 hours. At this stage, we were hoping and praying that the weather would ease up tonight and leave a suitable window to start hiking at 6am tomorrow. Wednesday was a very early start with breakfast at 5.30am and the first patrol out the door at 6.30am. Unfortunately, the original planned route had to be changed late on Tuesday evening due to avalanche risks on the original route left from the storm weather. Our planned overnight hike accommodation where now inaccessible, so the new route meant we started from and returned to our current accommodation centre. The new route was just as challenging if not more so, as the recent storms had left over metre deep of fresh snow that we had to try and navigate through as well as the treacherous conditions on the hills. Thankfully all scouts had received training in fitting and using crampons (spikes for our boots) by an Iceland Mountain Rescue team, who joined us on the hike, as it would have been impossible to complete without this additional footwear. Our Chief Scout (Jill Pitcher Farrell) who had flown into to join us on the Tuesday evening was assigned to hike with our patrol for the hike, so this added an extra bit of importance to successfully completing the hike. Thankfully all patrols made it back safely to the USU (Scout Centre). The Crampons were needed for most of the hike as there was lots if ice. It was a challenging but rewarding hike for all and some amazing views were witnessed along the way. We bulked up on some well deserved chocolate cake ahead of dinner and then finished up a few programme bits and bobs that needed to be completed, but mostly we had a chance to relax and update our logbooks. On Thursday, we departed USU are moved into a local scout den in Reykjavik (Capital of Iceland), but before we headed off we did some rope-work and ice axe training. We arrived at the scout den in Reykjavik, had some time to work on our logbook, then we walked to the geo thermal pool which was so warm and a great relax after our hard week. That night we got some pizza for tea .. On Friday we had hoped to head back into Reykjavik town centre to explore the city, but because the weather had turned again, we only got as far as a large shopping mall but at least we could spend our Icelandic Krona and finished off the evening with the awards ceremony, at which both our own Chief Scout, Jill and the vice Chief Scout of Iceland attended, they said a few words and presented all the participants with their awards. As we had such an early flight back to Dublin on the Saturday, no sleep but lots of fun was had on the Friday night and we departed the Scout Hall at 3am Saturday morning for the journey to the airport that would eventually bring us home to Ireland for 10am, where we were met by our family and friends. Trips like this dont just happen theres a massive amount of work to get such an expedition to a successful conclusion. I want to thank all the Crean Challenge team for giving me the opportunity to have been part of the 2022 Crean challenge, especially my mentors, Morgan and Megan. I also want to thank my own Leaders from 2nd Laois (Rathdowney) Scout Group who helped me along with this Challenge. The whole thing is still just crazy to me, going from a random campsite with 32 random teenagers to a scout den in Iceland with 32 new friends. Electric Picnic returns to Laois after a two year pandemic pause this September, and a new documentary will get us all remembering what is so wonderful about Ireland's biggest music and arts festival. A Piece of the Picnic will premiere on RTE 2FMs YouTube channel on the evening of Sunday March 6, ahead of the new line-up announcement. See link below story to watch it. It looks back over past festivals, with performances and interview with Irish artists. It also tells the story of the past two years when Electric Picnic didnt happen, giving audiences a flavour of some of the most-loved elements of Irelands largest gathering of music and arts Electric Picnic. "Everyone has missed the presence of the Picnic on the summer calendar over the last two years and this documentary invites you to take a trip down memory lane ahead of the long-awaited return of music, arts, and free-spirited revelry at the Picnic this year," say the organisers. Photo: Charles Reagan Hackleman With performances across an array of genres in a festival setting, featuring the very best Irish musicians, artists, comedians and more across some iconic Electric Picnic stages and installations, the film captures the unique essence of the festival through the eyes of those who contributed not only to this project itself, but who are pivotal year upon year in creating the magic at Stradbally Hall. Salty Dog curator Chaz Preston describes its essence. Whether you are 11, 75, 80, 100 you are inspired by your surroundings, the people, the ideas, and that is what the Electric Picnic is about, its a festival of music, creative ideas and breaking the moulds of our daily lives and realising anything is possible. The project engaged with Irish artists, crews and contractors to build the production from the (literal!) ground up, all the way through to making the very film itself. Its a celebration of all things LIVE - the people, the art, the festival, and the industry. A Piece of the Picnic was funded and supported by the Department of Tourism, Culture, Arts, Gaeltacht, Sport and Media as part of the Live Performance Support Scheme 2021. "The project could not have been created without the hard work and support of the artists, crews, contractors and contributors who worked tirelessly to make this project a reality. A particular thanks must be said to Thomas Cosby, and the curators, makers and creators from Art Lot, Conradh na Gaeilge, Cerebral Fortress, the Comedy Stage, Crypto Mining Co., Greencrafts, Hazelwood, Jerry Fish Electric Sideshow, Mindfield, Salty Dog, Trailer Park and Trenchtown," Festival Republic say. Sure to have you reminiscing about the best moments shared at Irelands beloved Electric Picnic over the years, whether that is wandering through the woods under the twinkle of fairy lights or letting your hair down dancing to your favourite acts in front of the mainstage, the documentary comes just days ahead of the line-up reveal on Thursday 10th March at 11am. And if youre yet to get your hands on the ticket of the summer, Electric Picnic tickets for 2022 will go on sale at 11am on Friday 11th March from all usual outlets. Set your alarms you dont want to miss out as the festival organisers welcome back music-lovers, art enthusiasts and good-time gallavanters with open arms. A Piece of the Picnic was funded by the government Live Performance Support Scheme. WATCH A PIECE OF THE PICNIC HERE, from Sunday evening. HMGoG School Nursery and Reception Enrolments The Department of Education has this week opened the application window for Nursery and Reception enrolments for the 2022/2023 academic year. As was the case last year, the application process will be conducted in an electronic manner. Applications will be received and processed digitally, with interested parents and carers being directed to the Department of Educations website at www.education.gov.gi Parents/carers ordinarily resident in Gibraltar are able to register children who they wish to start Nursery and/or who are due to start Reception in September 2022. Nursery enrolments are open to children born between 1st September 2018 and 31st August 2019. Reception enrolments are open to children born between 1st September 2017 and 31st August 2018 who are not currently attending a Government Nursery. Children attending a Government Nursery do not need to re-enrol. Parents / carers are requested to register their children as soon as possible by completing the online enrolment form available at www.education.gov.gi. Together with the completion of all required information on the electronic form, parents/carers will need to upload a number of documents. These include a long version of the childs birth certificate, evidence of residence in Gibraltar (e.g ID Card/Permit of Residence is required) and a recent local water and electricity bill. Once the electronic form and relevant uploads have been completed, the enrolment form will be processed by the enrolment team at the Department of Education. Once processed, parents/carers will receive communication from the Department of Education confirming their childs catchment school allocation. Individuals wishing to request an alternative school to their catchment school allocation will be able to request a transfer at this later stage. The closing date for enrolments is 8th April 2022. Enrolments made after the closing date may be considered, but please note that the Department of Education will not necessarily be able to provide a placement within the catchment area. The Department of Education will very carefully scrutinise all applications for eligibility, particularly from the point of view of residency. This will be extended to pupils already at school, who, if found not to be entitled to Education in Gibraltar will be advised to make alternative arrangements as from the end of this academic year. Parents/carers are advised that the Department of Education is actively reviewing catchment areas with a view to ensuring that these are as geographically appropriate as possible. This exercise will also help to ensure that pupil distributions across schools provide the best possible pupil:staff ratios. A powerful and versatile Geographic Information System (GIS) will be used to inform this process and will allow the Department of Education to manage catchment areas in a more dynamic manner which, over time, will facilitate more effective responses to the changing needs of our communitys demographic. Any queries regarding the enrolment process should be emailed to This email address is being protected from spambots. You need JavaScript enabled to view it. The multi-million investment by Laois County Council to create an enterprise park and bring jobs to Laois, has been defended by the county manager, after one councillor questioned the finance. On the same day that councillors approved sale of the fourth serviced site at J17 National Enterprise Park, to an Irish company for over 1 million and a promise of 50 jobs, the council CEO John Mulholland gave a passionate rebuttal to criticism that he should be charging more for the sites. The council bought the greenfield site from Supermac's in 2017 and has so far spent 7.2 million of public money in laying out roads, lights, water services and electricity connections. The aim is to sell all the sites for companies to build units on, with some 360 jobs already in the pipeline from companies who invested. When you leave work on a Friday evening you are thinking how are we capable of making bad news out of good news?. The decision to invest in junction 17 was really a milestone in 2017. We were not of the view there would be such a rapid response but it surprised us all, John Mulholland said at the February council meeting. Had we not taken the path we took in 2017, there would be a cheese factory in Belgium now instead of it being in Portlaoise. They have 100 workers there at the moment and are exceedingly happy in the way the business is going on, he said. That site of over 2ha was sold for 925 plus VAT, but the prices of the remaining land will be higher as the park is attracting increased business interest the CEO said. You need to get a critical mass in the first place to make it attractive. You cant start off and pitch the price way up there, you would scare them all away. Because of the expenditure we incurred, we will hit the reset button and look at what prices the market could sustain. Initially we pitched sites at the IDA prices on the Mountrath Road of 185,000 per hectare and that worked to bring a first flush of businesses. People are seeing what happened and there is a huge energy and interest in it, Mr Mulholland said. Now we are looking to see what more can we do, more land, more facilities. Theres one thing for certain, the state had invested 650 million in Laois over the decades, on the Portlaoise bypass and water supplies and building schools. What does that say? At some point you have to see there is a huge demand , he said. There's a value of 200 million in this county on social houses alone. We have to cater for the ambitions of young people who are going to deliver jobs, opportunity and innovation in this county. We are quite confident in terms of what we spend, we will get it back in the sale of land and development levies. I mentioned this in May as well. We are in the fortunate position that we can sell land at a good price, but we can set our own development levies to cover the cost of infrastructure. He said they footed the cost for installing water, waste water, roads, gas and electricity because nobody else is going to do it. We are that way motivated. We want to make an impact in local economic development. We will continue to do it and we will work with Enterprise Ireland, the IDA, businesses and landowners. We dont have the luxury of doing nothing. It comes with risks, we look at it as a management team, the council CEO said. He was responding to comments from Cllr Aisling Moran, who requested and got detailed financial information on the parks development. She posed multiple further questions and requested more figures about the enterprise park. She also unsuccessfully proposed to stop the sale of a 1 million site to Kirby Group, but no councillor had seconded her proposal. To break even we need to charge more money [for sites]. I am for business for the record. This is about transparency and accountability for the best use of public money, Cllr Moran said. A Laois councillor has accused a council scientist of "farmer bashing" after hearing damning statistics that show agricultural activity is the biggest pressure on river water quality in Laois. A scientific study carried out by Laois County Council has found found that just 14% of Laois rivers are in high condition, while the greatest pressure on water quality is attributed to agriculture at over 43%. In a presentation given to the February meeting of Laois County Council, scientist Ann Marie Callan told councillors why. "The most significant is agriculture and that is to be expected because a lot of the land is agriculture. It is not surprising because of the growing dairy herd and the number of new applications. The more farms, the more pressure on water quality. "We have to reach good or high status by 2027," Ms Callan said. Cllr Willie Aird, himself a dairy farmer in Portlaoise, told the scientist she was "farmer bashing". "This is disappointing. That's farmer bashing. They invested a huge amount of money. I don't like it when you come out with that. On behalf of all my farming colleagues, when something like that happens in a council chamber," he said. Other councillors focused on asking the scientist to dredge silt and vegetation out of rivers so they can take more flood water, a practice that requires numerous environmental licences and is only permitted in summer to limit damage to ecology. "There are too many rules required. If rivers were cleaned without all this red tape there wouldn't be stagnant water," Cllr John King said. "What about farmers' land destroyed by flooding? I'm all for the environment but you are worried about tiny microbes and plankton, not people's livelihoods. Every other county dredges rivers. They are completely clogged, fish don't swim in them," claimed Cllr Aisling Moran. Ms Callan explained that machinery also damages ecology in rivers. "When you go into a river with machinery it disturbs ecology and affects the water," she said, suggesting silt traps to prevent silt from digging drains entering rivers in the first place. "It's about working with the environment in the best way so it is best for the farmer and ecology," she said. She said that there will be a focus on nature based solutions such as meandering land drains. Septic tank inspections will also be carried out. Cllr Paddy Bracken urged that the public wastewater network in Mountmellick be extended to take in homes in the town that have old septic tanks. "There are 40 or 50 tanks polluting the river, you know this. We as a council got no funding," he said. Rivers at risk around the council include the Owenass, Triogue, Delour, Tonet, Mountrath river, Erkina, Goul, Gully, River Ballyroan, Stradbally River and Douglas river. The highest quality rivers include the Barrow near the Slieve Bloom Mountains and Clonaslee. Just 14% of Laois rivers are in High condition, while 15% are at the lowest grade of Poor condition. Almost half the county's waterways are in Good condition at 44%, while 27% are a step down, in Moderate position. Commercial forestry was next at 11.9%. Hydromorphology was next at 10.4%, which means damage to habitats caused by changing the natural function of a river by dredging, straightening or adding dams or walls. Down the list of damage to clean rivers and river life, are urban waste water, urban run-off, mining, domestic wastewater, anthropogenic (human activity) pressures, abstractions and finally invasive species (1.5%). The study is Laois' part of a Draft River Basin Management Plan for Ireland 2022 - 2027. Laois County Council is to be resourced so that staff can protect water quality. The public are invited to view and make submissions to the national draft plan before March 31. See the website here. A cross-border research project developing new blood tests to diagnose cancer has been awarded a major funding boost through the Irish Governments Shared Island initiative. Academics from Trinity College in Dublin and Queens University in Belfast are set to collaborate on cutting-edge work to design liquid biopsy techniques after securing up to 4 million over the next four years. The cancer research initiative is among 62 projects benefiting from 37.3 million allocated under the first funding round of the Shared Island North-South Research Programme. The programme is part of the Shared Island initiative which was launched in 2020 and seeks to enhance co-operation, connections and mutual understanding on the island of Ireland. Taoiseach Micheal Martin and higher education minister Simon Harris are set to unveil all recipients of the cross-border research funding at an event at Trinity later today (Wednesday February 2). Queens academic Dr Paul Mullan, who is involved in the All-Ireland Cancer Liquid Biopsies Consortium, said the research would initially concentrate on tests to achieve earlier diagnosis of ovarian, breast and lung cancers. He said liquid biopsies were much less invasive than having to surgically remove parts of tumours using the traditional biopsy method. But he said the challenge had always been the difficultly developing tests that could accurately detect small traces of cancer DNA in the blood. The funding is going be a huge boost, Dr Mullan said. Because at the minute were all working sort of independently and were all doing our own thing. I think this joined-up approach will certainly push forward things much quicker, I think it makes sense all in. Another beneficiary of the funding award is a project to foster sustainable innovation along the islands Atlantic coast, from the western counties of Northern Ireland and Donegal down to the Shannon Estuary. The Atlantic Corridor project, which has also been awarded up to 4 million over four years, will involve the National University of Ireland, Galway (NUIG), Ulster University (UU), Galway Mayo Institute of Technology (GMIT) and the University of Limerick (UL). The research will focus on addressing challenges experienced by these areas, such as retention of local talent, over-reliance on foreign direct investment and a lack of indigenous SME (small and medium-sized enterprise) growth. Funding awards will also include projects working in areas such as vaccine-training and youth crime. The programme is being administered by the Higher Education Authority (HEA) on behalf of the Department of Further and Higher Education, Research, Innovation and Science. The awards range from 200,000 over two years to 4million over four years. Taoiseach Mr Martin said the programme would enhance the islands reputation for research excellence. These awards will support the Governments Shared Island vision by bringing researchers from all corners of the island together to work on pioneering projects over the next four years, and is not only strengthening existing relationships but is fostering new research partnerships, he said. Im particularly impressed by the high level of interest and the calibre of the proposals, and I am confident that these cross-border collaborations will further strengthen the islands reputation for innovation and research excellence. Minister for further and higher education, research, innovation and science Simon Harris said: Research, science and innovation are invaluable tools in helping us understand the challenges facing us and identify solutions to them. Today, we are announcing 62 new research projects developed by researchers across the island on our shared challenges. This will deepen relationships between north-south and help create and build new ones. The chief executive of the HEA Dr Alan Wall added: The North-South Research Programme provides an opportunity for researchers to work to combine knowledge, expertise and skills, to work collaboratively to address global, national and regional challenges and to deepen the relationships between researchers and the impact of their research on how we share this island. A second call for funding under the programme will open in 2023. The scope and scale of that round has yet to be confirmed. A new festival has been launched in Laois, to celebrate the rich history of aviation and exploration in the county. The Festival of Flight will run from the 7th to the 10th of April, with music events, arts and science workshops, history talks and films. One of the main events of the weekend will be a live performance of the Impossible Dream, the piece composed by Martin Tourish and the young musicians of the Music Generation Laois Trad Orchestra to celebrate the life and achievements of the Portlaoise Aviator James Fitzmaurice. The piece will be performed as part of a special event at St Peters Church of Ireland Church in Portlaoise starting at 3pm on Saturday 9th April and will also feature talks on the history and future of aviation and exploration in Laois and Ireland. Tickets for the event are available via the Dunamaise Arts Centre, www.dunamaise.ie. Portlaoise Plane The Portlaoise Plane, the 100 year old artefact built in Portlaoise which was one of the first planes to fly in Ireland, will be on public display during the weekend, and there will be a ceremony to mark the 94th anniversary of the first east west transatlantic flight, including a parade from the Irish Air Corps and a fly past of historic and modern aircraft. Teddy Fennelly, Chair of the Colonel James Fitzmaurice Commemoration Committee, organisers of the festival said We are delighted that the Portlaoise Plane will be accessible to the public again during this new Festival. "As well as being a valuable artefact on its own right, the Portlaoise Plane is linked to Portlaoises other major aviation story: A young James Fitzmaurice records in his memoirs that he witnessed the construction of the plane and was also present when it made its first short experimental flight. "This early exposure to the excitement of flight was credited by Fitzmaurice with inspiring him in his career as a pioneering aviator. This links the Portlaoise Plane directly with the first east-west transatlantic flight elevating the story and confirming the place of Portlaoise as the centre of Irish aviation history. Former Chairman of the Heritage Council Michael Parsons said, The Heritage Council encourages national and local exploration and appreciation of Irelands rich natural, built and cultural heritage. The Portlaoise Plane tells a story of exploration, bravery and derring do, that should make the Aldritt, Conroy and Rogers families very proud of their ancestors. "All of us in Laois and Ireland can join in celebrating this great story of these pioneers of Irish Aviation. The Heritage Council commends Laois County Council for its warm support of the Portlaoise Plane. I personally wish that the plane will soon be on permanent display where it belongs here in Portlaoise. Aircraft Technical Forum The festival will also feature a networking meeting of senior aircraft technical professionals in the field of aircraft leasing at Bloom HQ in Mountrath, drawing together the history of aviation in Ireland with its bright future. Alan Phelan, CEO of APTN.aero and committee member of the Col Fitzmaurice Commemoration Committee said Being situated at the crossroads of Ireland, Laois is an ideal venue to bring aviation professionals together outside of their normal work environments in both Shannon and Dublin. It also showcases how Interconnected Hubs such as Bloom HQ can be used by large organisations to embrace the blended working model to improve our work-life balance. Schools and Family Workshops As part of the festival, schools and families will be offered the chance to participate in a range of workshops exploring all aspects of flight, from the science of superheroes to the biology of flight in the natural world to flights of fancy in the artistic and creative field. Catherine Casey, Heritage Officer with Laois County Council said We are delighted to be working with our friends in Midlands Science again to deliver science based workshops, exploring the science of flight, and at the other end of the spectrum we want to really open up everyones imagination to the creative and playful side of flight, with arts workshops supported by Creative Ireland Laois. We have a call out for artists open at the moment and wed love to hear from anyone who can create and deliver workshops that will inspire children & young people to creatively and imaginatively respond to the theme of flight. All details are on the festival website, www.laois.ie/festivalofflight . Col Fitzmaurice Commemoration Committee The Festival of Flight is led by the Col Fitzmaurice Commemoration Committee, which is made up of Teddy Fennelly, Alan Phelan, Michael Parsons, Louise Cahill, PJ Kavanagh, Sean Murray and Catherine Casey. The event is being run in partnership with Laois County Council, Laois Heritage Society, Music Generation Laois, the Dunamaise Arts Centre and Midlands Science, and is supported by Creative Ireland Laois as part of the Creative Ireland Programme 2017-2022 in partnership with Laois County Council and the Heritage Council. For details of all events across the Festival, see www.laois.ie/festivalofflight. Tipperary's The 2 Johnnies have confirmed they will be back on RTE 2FM in two weeks' time. The pair made the announcement on Tuesday evening that they will return to the airwaves on Monday, March 14. They added: "Thank you for yer support everyone." See the full statement below: Johnny McMahon and Johnny O'Brien previously issued an apology through a statement after Holly Cairns TD claimed some of their content was "virulently sexist". The Social Democrats Deputy was quoted in the Irish Independent to condemn the inclusion of sexist slogans from car stickers which were included in teaser clips for the duo's new RTE 2FM show, Drive It, which started this week. The video has since been deleted but made reference to slogans the pair shared with the thousands of listeners to their separate podcast series. The comments or content was not aired at any stage on 2FM. The pair have been off air pending a review by RTE into a video with offensive comments about women is completed, the broadcaster had said. In a statement on Tuesday night, The 2 Johnnies said: "We would like to thank 2FM for working through this with us," as they confirmed that they would return to do the show on March 14. Drive It with The 2 Johnnies will return on that date. Volunteers collecting supplies for shipping to Ukraine have praised the generosity of the public in Ireland. Dale Johnson is among those helping co-ordinate the collection effort in Dublin. He said that they are struggling to keep up with the large amount of donations of food, medical supplies and bed linen in recent days. Working out of Donnybrook Bikes in Dublin, Mr Johnson has been busy organising donations for Ukrainian refugees. The shop is owned by a Ukrainian family working with Green Speed delivery service, who are transporting the goods to Poland and on to Kyiv. One shipment of donations from the Irish public has already arrived in the Ukrainian capital. We filled four or five cars on that first delivery, Mr Johnson said. The shop filled up again and we had to look for somewhere to empty the goods and now we are looking for more storage. We filled a few more cars. Its been a great support from everyone. Loads of people are bringing food for babies, nappies, medical supplies, bed linens, and stuff like that. When you fill up the car it doesnt make a difference because the donations are coming as fast as filling up the cars. There is a list online of what the Ukrainians need. They said they have enough clothing at the moment but they need the miscellaneous items which is stuff like batteries, power banks, and bed linens. They really need medical supplies because that stuff is hard to get your hands on. If you find that stuff in your house, they are in real need of that. The collection effort has been repeated right across Ireland in dozens of locations. A Detective Garda, who previously served in the Kildare Division, has resolved a High Court action he brought over being informed he had to re-apply for an important Health and Safety role within An Garda Siochana that he had held for several years. The action was taken by Detective Cathal Brennan, who in 2011 was appointed to the role of Regional Health and Safety Officer for An Garda Siochana's National Support Services (Special Crime Operations). In 2017 he was informed by an Assistant Garda Commissioner that he was being stood down from the role, that a competition would be taking place to regularise the position, and that he would have to reapply for the job he obtained six years previously. He claimed the decision to remove him from a role he had already been appointed to, and the failure to regularise his position, amounted to a breach of the terms of his contract of employment. In proceedings against the Garda Commissioner, the Minister for Justice Equality and Law Reform, Ireland and the Attorney General the detective sought various reliefs from the court, including declarations that he was validly appointed to the role. The claims were denied. On Wednesday when the case came before the court, Mr Justice Senan Allen was informed that the dispute had resolved on terms. With the consent of all the parties, the court made declarations that the Detective was validly appointed to his role as Regional Safety Advisor for National Support Services (Special Crime Operations) in February 2011. The court also made a declaration that the detective is entitled to continue in his role, subject to the terms and conditions of his service as a member of An Garda Siochana. The court said it had also been agreed that an order that the defendants pay the Detective's legal costs, on the Circuit Court scale, could be made. It was further agreed that the proceedings could be struck out. The settlement was mentioned before the court last month but was adjourned after the judge expressed a concern over some of the wording of the agreement. The judge welcomed the settlement of the dispute. In his action the Detective claimed that he had a legitimate expectation that he would be entitled to to continue in the position he was appointed to in 2011. After being appointed to the role he claims he was required to obtain a master's degree in Health and Safety. This the Detective, who has served in the Co Kildare Division of an Garda Siochana, did at his own expense. As well as seeking various declarations, including one that he was validly appointed to the role, he sought injunctions retraining the defendants from appointing anyone else to the roe. He also sought damages for the alleged breach of contract. In their defence the state parties denied all of the detective's claims, including that he had been validly appointed to the role. In a counter claim the defendant had argued that if he was validly appointed they were entitled to set off in the amount of money paid to the plaintiff by way of the Detective allowance. Arising out of that claim the defendants sought an order requiring the detective to repay sums he received by way of the allowance paid to Detective Gardai from February 2011. They had also sought damages for what they claimed was a breach of contract by the detective. A woman living in Sallins for the past 15 years is organising humanitarian aid to be sent to refugees fleeing over the Ukrainian border into Poland due to the invasion by Russia. Mother-of-three Magdalena Godzien, as well as friends and neighbours, are gathering non-perishable foodstuffs as well as toiletries for hundreds of families fleeing the conflict. Magdalena, who is from the town of Przemysl on the Polish/Ukraine border, has relatives in Ukraine and said she was desperate to help the plight of people fleeing the war. The professional seamstress (36) told the Leader: I was watching it on the TV and I decided I had to do something to help the people of Ukraine. I put the word out in Sallins and people have been dropping off goods at my house in Sallins Bridge. We will sort and pack all the products and put them into a lorry to travel to the Polish/Ukraine border. Items needed at the moment include goods for babies such as nappies, baby wipes, baby food in jars and toys. Also required are tootbrushes, sanitary products for women, socks, duvets and pillows. Magdalena added: I know from talking to people in Sallins and across Kildare that they have been deeply affected by what is happening in Ukraine and they wanted to do something to help the Ukranian people. Irish people are standing shoulder to shoulder with the people of Ukraine. Magdalena has urged anybody who can help to contact her at the Ireland for Ukraine page on Facebook. She added: I have been overwhelmed by the generosity of people. I have met some very kind and helpful people. Magdalena has also contacted the mayor of her hometown in Poland who said he is very grateful for the assistance from Kildare. Ryanair has announced it will be the first airline to return to Ukraine. Chief executive Michael OLeary said it will return to the eastern European country when its safe to do so but warned that might not be until the winter. The airline was previously the largest to serve Ukraine. Ukrainian airspace was closed last week following Russias invasion. Speaking at a press conference in the City of London, Mr OLeary said: We do want to see the Ukrainians succeed. He added that the best way to punish Russia would be for the West to drive down the price of oil. A Ukrainian man living in Kildare has appealed for a number of specific items to help those back in his homeland. Alex Babyuk made the plea on Monday during a meeting in Newbridge organised by Fianna Fail Senator Fiona O Loughlin. A number of Ukrainian nationals met in a cafe in the town to discuss the situation and the best ways to donate to those affected by the current invasion ordered by Russias leader, Vladimir Putin. The second floor of Chat N Chew on Newbridges Edward Street was generously provided for the meeting at 4pm, which saw over thirty Ukrainian nationals attend. The meeting in Chat N' Chew. PIC: Aishling Conway She told those in attendance: "I organised this event in order to show solidarity with the Ukrainians in our community, although in a way, it's sad that it has taken a crisis to recognise and acknowledge that you are living in our community, and that we are glad that you are living here." "We are deeply shocked, saddened and heartbroken over what is currently happening in Ukraine," the Newbridge politician added. The meeting was also attended by Maciej Krzetowski, a Polish-born resident who is best known for his work with Newbridges Rotary Club charity. Mr Krzetowski said that he would help people seeking consultations for visa applications for themselves and/or for their relatives back in Ukraine free of charge. He added that he has been also liaising with the Polish ambassador to Ireland regarding the best ways to help Ukrainian residents. Senator O Loughlin added that she has also been in contact with Ukrainian MPs that she knows from her time working with the Council of Europe. Soon after, members of the meeting were invited to voice their concerns: when one woman said that she was concerned about matters relating to passports, another man told her that Ukrainians do not need an international travel passport to leave Ukraine to travel to Ireland. However, he added that they were unsure if those wishing to leave the country would need Covid certificate, and if they did, if they would have to quarantine upon arrival to Ireland. PIC: Aishling Conway When it came to organising donations, Senator O Loughlin said that AIB has organised a truck to collect in the Westgrove Hotel in Clane and in Naas, which will be leaving on Friday. Mr Babyuk then spoke and revealed that he and his partner will be storing supplies for donation in Kildare, He also called on those in attendance to help in organising a list for supplies that are needed, as some Ukrainians are being overwhelmed with certain supplies, such as toys and nappies. Mr Babyuk added: "I am not trying to turn down the help, it is very much appreciated, but there's certain items that would really help resist the invasion... and I'm not necessarily talking about military items, I'm talking about helmets and padded clothes to protect people from shrapnel, surgical clamps and bone drills, to name a few." Other items that are being sought for Ukrainian citizens include non-perishable foods and medicine, and he also revealed that one of the members of Ukrainians in Ireland has acquired a plane to deliver supplies. Mr Babyuk continued: "The people in Ukraine need the help more than those at the border, as the ones at the border don't stay there for a long time." In response, Senator O Loughlin said that she knows about a Ukrainian man who is currently developing an app for Irish people who want to help the Ukrainian people. Another man also pointed to a website that arranges for shelter for Ukrainians, which can be viewed here. PIC: Aishling Conway A number of people became visibly emotional during the meeting: one woman broke down as they thanked the Irish community for all its "amazing support" so far. She later revealed that she was extremely concerned about her ill sister back in Ukraine. After the meeting, one local man, Ken Doyle spoke to the Leinster Leader: he revealed that he is married to a Ukrainian woman named Olesya. Mr Doyle also revealed that he had lived in Kyiv for five years, and given his connection to the country, is deeply concerned about the conflict. "I'd just like to ask everyone to keep up to date with the info on Fiona (O' Loughlin)'s social media pages, and help wherever they can," he added. Mr Babyuk also spoke to the Leader following the meeting, where he voiced his belief that more needs to be done to resolve the conflict. He also revealed that his immediate family, consisting of his parents and his brother's family, are refusing to leave Ukraine, as they do not want to be refugees: "My brother Andrew and his wife Cristina lived in Ireland for a number of years but went back home after their daughter was born in 2011 Andrew has military education and is leading a reconnaissance squad in the Ukrainian Army." When asked what needs to be done to resolve the crisis, he said: "More immediate action, both in terms of military aid and supplies, is needed in Ukraine by both NATO and the wider EU nations. He added: "If Russia does take over Ukraine, the majority of Ukrainian people will not be willing to live under this new regime, and the refugee crisis will only increase as people flee the country to get away from Putin's forces. "A big area of concern in Ukraine is the sky: we are currently struggling with air defence... Russia is hammering us down with ballistic rockets. Someone back in Ukraine said that if we can take care of our skies, we will be able to take care of the situation on the ground." He also reiterated the stance he took over a potential invasion by Putins forces in an article that was published in The Irish Times last month: "As I said in the article, I am sure that Russia ('s army) will attack another country if it is allowed to swallow Ukraine. "If this happens, Russia will gather its strength from resources in Ukraine, which is a large country, and Belarus and in 10 to 15 years, they will send kids conscripted from invaded territories to invade Europe country by country." DONATIONS Mr Babyuk also provided a list of supplies that are needed for Ukraine, and divided them into two sections: medical equipment, and territorial defence needs. For medical equipment, the following items are urgently needed: venous tourniquet, immobilisation tires, haemostatic drugs, syringes, tonometers, tamponade material with haemostatic, bandages, decompression needles, ambu bags, first aid kits, and surgical instruments, especially surgical clamps and occlusive dressing. Meanwhile, the list of items relating to territorial defence needs are as follows: multi-channel radios/walkie-talkies with a 10km radius, helmets, body armour and padded clothing, thermal imagers, car mats, torches, monoculars/binoculars, knee guards, armrests, medical backpacks, tactical glasses, work gloves, sleeping bags, diode lamps, and petrol generators. Anyone who is interested in donating supplies to Mr Babyuk, who has capacity for storage, can email him at BabyukAlex@yahoo.co.uk. PIC: Aishling Conway On 1 and 2 March 2022, at the invitation of Mr. Yankuba Darboe, the Commissioner General of the Gambia Revenue Authority (GRA), Dr. Kunio Mikuriya, the Secretary General of the World Customs Organization (WCO), visited Banjul, Gambia to exchange views on the progress regarding Customs reform and meet with political leaders. At the GRA headquarters, Dr. Mikuriya was briefed by the GRA management team on the recent progress in Customs modernization, including the ongoing migration of the IT system from ASYCUDA ++ to the World version. After exchanging with Customs, Secretary General Mikuriya met with Mr. Mambury Njie, Minister of Finance and Economic Affairs, who expressed his satisfaction with Customs performance and shared his expectations for further modernization by using WCO tools and programmes. Dr Mikuriya went on to meet with H.E Dr. Isatou Touray, Vice President of the Republic of Gambia, who expressed, on behalf of the President, the strong support of the government for the continuous improvement of the GRA. She highlighted the importance of supporting trade to enhance economic development. Secretary General Mikuriya thanked the Vice-President for supporting Customs through the judicious spending of the financial resources to demonstrate how Customs and Tax revenue collections contributed to develop infrastructure and improve government services. He added that her effective leadership, together with Ms. Lucy Fye-Jagne, the chairperson of the GRA Board of Directors, is inspiring, and goes in line with the work of the WCO on the topic of Gender Equality and Diversity. Dr. Mikuriya also took the opportunity to visit the border post of Jiboroh, an important installation connecting the Gambian town with the Southern Senegal. He witnessed the good cooperation existing with other government agencies which were all housed in the Customs post. He also visited the border post of Selety on the Senegalese side and took note of the excellent Customs cooperation between Gambia and Senegal. He stated that this type of collaboration is necessary to ensure connectivity at borders as a basis for the African Continental Free Trade Area. The Delegation visited the compound of the Jah Oil Company in Gambia to highlight the importance of customs-business partnership. Cancer is a deeply personal thing for almost everyone, we have all lost a mother, a brother, a cousin or a friend. Ahead of the event itself on July 23, one of the Relay for Life organisers, Peter Whyte gathered everyone around at the Curragh Racecourse, this year's host venue, last Wednesday, to thank them for their participation and continued support for the cause that the Curragh racecourse will play host to. As Peter came to thank the Irish Cancer Society, we were introduced to a representative, Emma Hayden. Emma gave a tearful tribute to a family member that she had lost to cancer just the day before. They were touching words that served as an emotional reminder of why we were all here to continue to support the work of Relay for Life. Another driving force behind this operation and a cancer survivor himself is Peter ONeill. Peter talked me through what will take place over the 24-hour event in July and why it is so special to be back in person and at the Curragh racecourse. The relay itself starts off at 1oclock on the Saturday and it starts with the survivors taking the first lap. After that they are brought back in here, served refreshments and some pampering for them because they are the most important people of the relay. They show others that you can survive from cancer. A lot of us on the committee and even the choir you can see around wearing our purple t-shirts, survivors are identified by our purple t-shirts, Peter said proudly as he pointed to the word survivor written on his purple t-shirt. The passion for this cause was clear to see and it was a passion I shared. I saw my grandmother battle cancer and win triumphantly. She has done the relay before but I may pick her up one of those purple t-shirts for this years event. Peter also described the finer details of the relay and the emotional significance of all the elements of the day. The team members, who are made up of cancer survivors, lead the charge on relay day. There are candle bags sold by the committee and given to the teams. The candles are decorated in honour of someone who has died from cancer, is fighting or has survived. They come back to us in numerical order and during the relay the scouts lay them all out in a parallelogram shape and that forms the relay path. It is around that path that all the team members walk during the 24 hours of relay, Peter explained. It's huge to have it back in person after two years. Its like a new beginning to us coming back here, back to our home which we feel is in the Curragh. The interest in the Curragh and the new structure here we are hoping to get a bumper number of teams this year. There was special mention given to key three key phrases throughout the launch, Celebrate those in purple who have survived, Remember who we have lost, and Fight back against this disease. There was great appreciation from all in attendance that the event was back in the Curragh this year, after some time away for renovations to the venue and then followed by the Covid-19 pandemic, Relay for Life, felt they were back to normal again. Curragh Racecourse CEO Brian Kavanagh spoke about his delight to welcome back the event to the Curragh: It was such an easy decision for us at the Curragh, we have been anxious to get back to supporting the event and we would like to congratulate the team on their efforts for it. All of the Relay for Life team shared their appreciation to all in attendance, Niamh Curley who is organising the teams this year and Lisa Nagle who is in charge of the survivors care both spoke to the importance of the heroes in all this, the survivors themselves. The ones who don the purple t-shirts show all of those battling cancer right now that it is possible to beat it. The emotional words and the tributes were all spoken around the brilliant music from the Newbridge gospel choir. Cashflow has returned to Drumshanbo with the installation of a new ATM at The Square. Drumshanbo Credit Union installed the ATM yesterday, Tuesday March 1 and it is now open for public use. Drumshanbo lost it's Bank of Ireland ATM when the back closed last year. The installation of the cash machine has been hailed as a great day for the wider community and local economy. A LIMERICK man who was found outside his 5km limit under Covid-19 regulations, told a garda that he "didn't care", Nenagh District Court was told. Owen Treacy, who has an address at Gillogue House, Gillogue, Clonlara pleaded to the offence which was detected at Carrigatoher, Nenagh, on February 26, 2021. Sergeant Michael Keating told the court that the gardai had received a report of a possible sulky race at Carrigatoher on the date in question but when they arrived there was no race taking place. However, there was a number of males present beside a vehicle that had a horsebox attached. There was a horse in the horse box. He said that Mr Treacy, who has strong connections to the city, had attempted to drive away from the scene and did not have a reasonable excuse as to why he was there. "He told the garda: 'I don't care. Give me a fine. I'll pay'," Sgt Keating told the court adding that Mr Treacy has 124 previous convictions. Solicitor Ted McCarthy said Mr Treacy never received a fixed charge penalty notice in relation to the summons as he had been on remand (in prison) at the time. "He accepts he was outside his limit and shouldn't have been," said Mr McCarthy. Judge Elizabeth MacGrath said was noting Mr Treacy's comments and she fined him 100. ILLICIT drugs destined for Limerick have been seized during Revenue searches in Dublin. As a result of routine profiling, Revenue officers examining parcels at two premises in the Capital seized just over 6.9kgs of various types of drugs including herbal cannabis, cannabis resin, heroin, methamphetamine, butane honey oil and hash cakes. The contraband, which will be forensically examined, has an estimated value of approximately 194,000. A Revenue spokesperson confirmed the illegal drugs were discovered with the assistance of detector dogs Sam and Bailey (pictured). The drugs were found concealed in parcels labelled as stickers, pet clothes, clothes, pencils, shoes and antique glassware, that originated in the United States, Spain, Switzerland, Portugal, France, Canada, the Netherlands and the United Kingdom. They were were destined for addresses in Limerick, Dublin, Kildare, Meath, Cork, Clare, Tipperary and Longford. Investigations are ongoing and gardai have been informed. "These seizures are part of Revenue's ongoing operations targeting the importation of illegal drugs. If businesses or members of the public have any information regarding smuggling, they can contact Revenue in confidence on Confidential Phone Number 1800 295 295," said a spokesperson. TWO LIMERICK schools have been given the go ahead for extensions to their current buildings. St Mary's National School, Croom and Scoil Pol, Kilfinane have had their applications for works approved by the Department of Education. The new extension for St Mary's will include three new classrooms, two of which will be for children with special needs, general office, staffroom, principal's office and separate staff and pupil toilets. Funding for the extension has been approved and the Board of Management can now proceed with construction. Scoil Pol has also gotten the go ahead for their new extension which will include four classrooms, science laboratory and preparation area, art room, music room, construction room and preparation area and a design, communications and graphics room. Limerick County Fianna Fail TD, Minister Niall Collins welcomed the news that both schools had been approved for funding. Minister Collins said: "Funding has been approved for a massive new extension for Scoil Pol. Its a significant investment and the extension will be a welcome addition to the school community. "Im delighted to see that funding has been secured for a massive new extension at St. Marys National School. Its a really big extension and its great news for the community in Croom." RESIDENTS in Limerick's Regeneration communities and further afield are being encouraged to attend a jobs fair in the area tonight. Moyross Youth Academy in the Bays building will play host to the event between 6pm and 8pm this evening. The event will give attendees an outline of the job opportunities that are available at the moment in a range of sectors. Representatives of a number of major Limerick employers will be present, notably Johnson and Johnson, which employs hundreds of staff at the National Technology Park, Shannon fire alarm firm EI Electronics, and local caterers Master Chefs. More locally, St Munchin's Community Centre will also showcase opportunities available in Kileely, while the Technological University of the Shannon, and the local authority will also be present, as will the defence forces. The aim of the jobs fair is to bring employers into the communities and provide attendees with direct contact to the opportunities available within their company. The event will also enable attendees to access information in relation to the supports available to engage in further education, training and employment. Mayor Daniel Butler said: "I would like to acknowledge the companies and organisations that have come together to bring this event into the community. This is a great opportunity for residents and people of the neighbouring communities and I would encourage everyone to attend and meet prospective employers." "This event enables the community to interact directly with companies and organisations whether its a job you are looking for or if further education and training is a preferred route people would like to pursue then this is the place to be," he added. Similar Jobs Fairs are going to take place in the other Regeneration areas. A LIMERICK resident born and raised in Ukraine has spoken of how she escaped the country just as war broke out. Maryja Danchuk, who lives at Mount Kennett Place, told of how she walked from her native Lviv, where she was visiting family, to the Polish border, where she was able to travel back to Limerick. She returned safely earlier this week, but has left behind her mum, who has vowed to stay in Ukraine and defend the nation against the Vladimir Putin-led attacks. Speaking to the Leader through a translator, Maryja explained how at the first sign of war, she was conscious of her two girls - aged 12 and 7 - who were still in Limerick, and she wanted to ensure she was safe and able to be a mum to them. So, she left her family's home and walked the approximately 80 kilometres to the border with Poland - a gruelling trek- before she waited for another eight hours to secure onward transport. After a two-day journey from Poland, Maryja arrived back in Limerick earlier this week, and has begun to help out at the Kala gel nails shop, with Anna Mazeika, Serosep Diagnostic Solutions, leading a local campaign to collect medical goods and other essential items for hospitals in the war-torn nation. "I am very disturbed and horrified by the Russian attacks on an innocent country and an innocent people. I'm devastated this has happened to my nation," said Maryja, who has lived in Limerick for two years. She says she has not heard from her family back home for a number of days. "I ran away [from Ukraine]. Everything I am seeing on the news is just horrifying and devastating. I was at home visiting my family, and because I had children here in Limerick, I decided I needed to get back across," she explained. For Maryja, being back in Limerick is "bittersweet". "I am grateful to be here because I am with my kids. But I am so worried about my family over there. Bittersweet being safe, but yet knowing there is war and danger over there," she said. "I am very emotional over this. At some stage, I would love to bring my mother and sister over to Ireland. But they are not going to leave. They say they will definitely stay in Ukraine to defend their country. It is very hard to know they are in trouble," she said. "It's terrifying. I feel guilty coming back here to be with my kids and leaving them in Ukraine. I wanted to stay and help. The fact I am safe, but there people are over there who are dying is heartbreaking. There is such a sense of guilt. I made it, but others haven't. And I don't know if I am going to see them, or they will survive," the catering worker added. She paid tribute to the support she's received from the Limerick community. "I am so so grateful to the people who are helping. People are all brilliant here. People from all over the world and of course the Irish community," added Maryja. Anna, who is aiding the collection, paid tribute to Carambola Kidz, which has provided logistical support, as well as her own employer Serosep. Collections of essential items will continue at the former Cleeve's Factory in O'Callaghan Strand for the remainder of this week from 5pm. Please email Mazeika.anna@gmail.com for larger deliveries out of hours only. LOCAL politicians have pledged to do all they can to protect jobs at Europes largest alumina refinery, in West Limerick. There are fears that local jobs could be impacted in the wake of Russias invasion of Ukraine, if Aughinish Aluminas Russian parent firm Rusal is hit by tough European Union (EU) sanctions. Operational on the Limerick peninsula since 1983, the bauxite producer employs 482 people, with the company itself stating in planning documents that it is responsible for a further 385 downstream jobs. Europe has condemned the Vladimir Putin-led attacks on Ukraine, and has imposed tough economic measures. This includes a ban on exports from the EU to Russia on goods and technology in the aviation industry. There are fears for the future of local workers with Aughinish Alumina responsible for 30% of EU alumina, used for aircraft. There are also wider environmental concerns if the refinery were to cease abruptly. Its led to management in Aughinish holding crunch meetings with Enterprise Minister Leo Varadkar. A spokesperson for the Tanaiste said at present, there is no implication of any jobs impact and that Mr Varadkar is keen the plant continues to operate. Stephen Lavelle of Siptu, which represents the majority of workers in Rusal said they are monitoring the situation closely, while Minister of State and local TD Niall Collins has written to Taoiseach Micheal Martin to highlight the importance of the plant. Im keen to ensure any sanctions against Russia, which are merited, do not adversely impact here in Ireland, he said. Kevin Sheahan, who leads the Adare/Rathkeale council district in which the alumina firm is located, said: We need to make noise and let people know we are annoyed at any suggestion of shutting down Aughinish. Workers there are finding it just as difficult to live in this country today as anywhere else. If they find themselves in receipt of social welfare, we will have a serious crisis in the economy of every small town and village in West Limerick and North Kerry. Councillor Sheahan also pointed out the operators of the refinery are subject to strict conditions to ensure the red mud, or bauxite residue pools which emanate on the peninsula do not spread further. If they ran off the site because we do something at government level about the owners, the odds are these tasks would never be carried out, and we would be left with an appalling mess which would cost us dearly to clean up ourselves, he added. The opposite to that is we are in receipt of a serious amount of money [from the company] each year in terms of commercial rates and water charges which benefit all of Limerick. It would inflict a very serious wound in our business as a local authority and for the people of Limerick, Cllr Sheahan said. Meanwhile, a general Russian cargo ship, named the Pola Feodosia, was expected to arrive into Aughinish late on Tuesday night. Its understood the vessel is linked to the refinery. LIMERICK City North councillor John Costelloe is to step down from politics, it's been announced this evening. In a statement, Cllr Costelloe says in recent times, he has not been able to give the time and effort he feels being an elected representative deserves, due to health issues. "I have had the privilege of serving the people of Limerick City North these past number of years. While it has been a very demanding and time consuming role, I have always tried to carry out my duties with 100% commitment as the people of Limerick City North deserve no less," he said, "After much consideration, I felt I needed to take a step back from such a heavy and stressful workload and put my own health first." The Sinn Fein member was co-opted onto the local authority in 2016 following Maurice Quinlivan's elevation to Dail Eireann at that year's general election. Three years later, he was one of only two Limerick Sinn Fein election candidates returned in what was a disappointing local election for his party, as they plunged from their 2014 high of six. A former antiques dealer based in Nicholas Street, Cllr Costelloe was orignally from Emmett Place, off O'Connell Avenue. But he's previously declared: "there's northside blood in my veins." He will resign his seat at the next council meeting, and Sinn Fein will co-opt a replacement. Cllr Costelloe added: "I want to thank my Sinn Fein party colleagues in Limerick, particularly Maurice, Paul and Sharon, for their support and understanding as I reached this difficult decision and look forward to working with them to find a replacement." Mr Quinlivan paid tribute to the lifelong Sinn Fein member, adding: "I wish him and his family all the best in the future, and wish him good health." A Government plan to allow workers to request the right to work from home is fatally flawed, an Oireachtas committee has heard. The Enterprise, Trade and Employment Committee heard conflicting views on the draft remote working legislation, a flagship project of Tanaiste Leo Varadkar. The Irish Congress of Trade Unions (Ictu) condemned it as largely toothless and stacked in favour of the employer at every turn, while employers group Ibec portrayed it as a cumbersome piece of legislation that would impose drastic new obligations on businesses. The Bill, which the Government says would allow workers to request the right to work from home, is currently being scrutinised by TDs and senators. During the committee meeting on Wednesday, attended remotely by representatives from Ictu and Ibec, it was stressed that remote working is one of the few good things to emerge from the Covid-19 pandemic. However, some politicians raised serious concerns about the drafting of the legislation. Tanaiste Leo Varadkar has taken the lead on the Bill on remote working (Niall Carson/PA) Sinn Fein TD Louise OReilly said: The legislation, in its current format, wouldnt work for anybody. Its literally a tick box for employers. That sentiment was shared by Ibec and Ictu, but for dramatically different reasons. Maeve McElwee, director of employer relations at Ibec, stressed that, while the group is not opposed to remote working, the Bill raises complex considerations and the threat of a significant cost impact. She said it would be reasonable to expect that employees who request to work remotely can identify a suitable and secure work area which, where necessary, is not too far from an employers on-site location. The obligation to ensure a proper and safe place of work, ensuring data security, confidentiality and the protection of intellectual property at a place of work are paramount considerations for employers, she said. They must be permitted to refuse requests for remote working where there are concerns relating to these issues. The proposed legislation, she added, has taken a one-size-fits-all approach. And she warned it could lead to absurd situations, giving the example of a small cafe being forced to have a remote working policy that could never, in fact, be realised. Opening statement by Patricia King, general secretary, Irish Congress of Trade Unions to the Joint Oireachtas Committee on Enterprise, Trade and Employment, on remote work legislation 'draft Bill stacked in favour of the employer', she said.https://t.co/xdeA6FfONg Irish Congress(ICTU) (@irishcongress) March 2, 2022 Ictu general secretary Patricia King offered a polar opposite perspective on the Bills provisions. Some people are mixing and confusing it with the right to remote working. I wish we were talking about the right to remote working. Were not. Were talking about the right to request remote working, she said during the committee. The draft Bill is stacked in favour of the employer at every turn and is fatally flawed in key parts. She warned that employers, under current provisions, can refuse a request on any grounds they choose that relates to the business, including a mere assertion that remote working is not suitable to the needs of the business. And while both sides were united in bemoaning the lack of consultation on the proposed legislation, they offered opposing views on the scale of the problems raised by remote working. Ms McElwee at one stage offered the example of data privacy issues raised by people working from home and living with friends or flatmates. Who do you share your home with? Where or when do you lock away this information? Do they also have rights to work remotely? And if you work for one of the big legal houses, and your colleague or the person you share your apartment, your home with, work for our biggest competitor, how is our data secure? How are conversations not overheard? How do I know you havent left a document on the table inadvertently? Ms King hit back at that example, saying that some of those issues will arise whether you work from home or not. If youre a professional working in a legal company, and you have to have papers read for the next morning and you take them home with you to read them at night, you could leave them on a table. You wouldnt have to be working from home to have breaches of confidentiality. Remote work legislation needs radical change. Our Statement: https://t.co/7Q8OqZFuO2 Read the ICTU and FSU Report: 'Make Remote Work!' https://t.co/GfVFYA2JtE@irishcongress pic.twitter.com/mQTBoVRzKH Financial Services Union (@fsuireland) March 2, 2022 Some of the committee members also displayed a degree of scepticism towards the objections from Ibec. Fine Gael TD Richard Bruton probed some of the objections from employers, adding that it is disappointing to hear the two sides so far apart. We shouldnt be putting up ab initio arguments against this when were already two years into using this in many workplaces, he said. Labour senator Marie Sherlock also questioned whether it is realistic to believe that employers have left serious issues unaddressed for the past two years. Are you really suggesting that employers are only beginning to grapple with these issues now? she asked. Pointing to the concerns about data security, she said: I find it hard to believe that employers have allowed a Wild West with regards to digital security systems in place for their workers working remotely. Ms McElwee denied this is a retrospective rejection. #OireachtasTV Watch LIVE as the Joint Committee on Enterprise, Trade and Employment meets for Pre-legislative scrutiny of the Right to Request Remote Work Bill 2022 with @ibec_irl & @irishcongress #seeforyourselfhttps://t.co/poaTtaWxIZ https://t.co/ieTGshJMBQ Houses of the Oireachtas Tithe an Oireachtais (@OireachtasNews) March 2, 2022 Were not saying these are issues that havent been dealt with over the past two years, she said. In fact, weve been saying this for at least two years. And we were saying it pre-pandemic as we were looking at more organisations moving to remote working, but they are big challenges to grapple with. What Im saying is that, when we talk about the scale and the fact that we have recognised that its possible, Im saying some of it is possible. Some of it will absolutely remain longer term. A lot of it would not have been as facilitated and would not have been done with the blessing of employers in the absence of the public health guidance and advice. However, a suggestion for a middle-ground approach in the form of a code of practice was knocked back by Ms King, while being welcomed by Ibec. I know that codes of practice, even with statutory provisions, are just that, Ms King said. Chinese President Xi Jinping meets with Kyrgyz President Sadyr Zhaparov, who came to China for the opening ceremony of the Beijing 2022 Olympic Winter Games, at the Great Hall of the People in Beijing, capital of China, Feb. 6, 2022. (Xinhua/Ding Lin) BEIJING, Feb. 6 (Xinhua) -- Chinese President Xi Jinping on Sunday said China is willing to deepen mutually beneficial cooperation in an all-round way with Kyrgyzstan, so as to bring more benefits to the people of the two countries. Xi made the remarks when meeting with Kyrgyz President Sadyr Zhaparov who came to China for the opening ceremony of the Beijing 2022 Olympic Winter Games. Xi also said China stands ready to comprehensively upgrade security cooperation with Kyrgyzstan to jointly safeguard the security and stability of the two countries and the region. China and Kyrgyzstan have established high-level comprehensive strategic partnership, said Xi, adding that the Chinese side firmly supports the Kyrgyz side in independently choosing its development path and in safeguarding national independence, sovereignty and security. Xi noted that China is willing to increase its import of high-quality green agricultural and sideline products from Kyrgyzstan, speed up advancing key cooperation projects, and support the construction of the China-Kyrgyzstan-Uzbekistan railway. He also voiced China's willingness to expand cooperation with Kyrgyzstan in areas such as healthcare, poverty alleviation, vocational education, women and youth affairs. Zhaparov expressed the Kyrgyz side's firm support for China in safeguarding its core interests on issues involving Xinjiang, Taiwan and Hong Kong. The Kyrgyz president noted the country is willing to work closely with China to make the China-Kyrgyzstan-Uzbekistan railway a flagship project in the Belt and Road cooperation. He also said that Kyrgyzstan expects to enhance its coordination and cooperation with China in international and regional affairs, as well as combating terrorism and organized crime, so as to safeguard the security of the two countries and the region. The two sides have issued a joint statement between the two heads of state and signed multiple documents for cooperation in culture, green development, and translation of each other's classic works, among other areas. Chinese President Xi Jinping meets with Kyrgyz President Sadyr Zhaparov, who came to China for the opening ceremony of the Beijing 2022 Olympic Winter Games, at the Great Hall of the People in Beijing, capital of China, Feb. 6, 2022. (Xinhua/Liu Weibing) sdApple Inc., Ford Motor Co. and Dell Technologies Inc. joined the roster of companies retreating from Russia, while other global businesses, including Volkswagen AG, warned of further supply disruptions following the countrys invasion of Ukraine. Exxon Mobil Corp. said late Tuesday it was halting operations at a multibillion-dollar oil and gas project in Russia and would make no further investments in the country following its attack on Ukraine. The moves were wide ranging and reflected several dynamics that have played out since Russian President Vladimir Putin invaded Ukraine last week. Some companies have signaled they wanted to take a stand against Russia. At the same time, key parts and commodities that typically flow out of Ukraine, a major agricultural exporter and an auto-parts supplier, have been bottled up inside the country. Sanctions against Russia, prohibiting a range of financial transactions and exports, have businesses halting sales and other operations there. All that has some companies with deep Russian roots reviewing their interests in the country. Apple said Tuesday it stopped selling iPhones and other products in Russia, saying it was deeply concerned about the Russian invasion of Ukraine." Silicon Valleys tech giants have been facing particular pressure to cut off services and content to Russia. On Friday, Ukraines vice prime minister, Mykhailo Fedorov, asked Apple Chief Executive Tim Cook to stop supplying Apple products and services to Russia, including halting access to the App Store. Ford on Tuesday said it was suspending its joint-venture operations in Russia, citing concern over the invasion of Ukraine. Exxon, the U.S. oil giant, said it was preparing to shut down production from the massive Sakhalin Island development in Russias Far East. Exxon owns a 30% stake in the project, alongside Russian state-controlled oil producer Rosneft, Japans SODECO and Indias ONGC Videsh. The company said it is taking steps to exit from the consortium. Exxon is also developing plans for expatriate staff in Russia to leave the country, if the employees wish to do so, according to a person familiar with the plans. The most of Exxons roughly 1000-person workforce in Russia is made up of Russian citizens. Volkswagen, meanwhile, said it may shutter its flagship German plant later this month because it cant get parts from suppliers in war-torn Ukraine. Volkswagen had previously idled production at its plant in Zwickau, Germany, its most important factory for producing electric cars, including the ID.4 that is exported to the U.S. Supplies of wiring harnessesa kit containing wires, connectors and terminals to connect a cars componentshave been interrupted. Although production at Volkswagens Wolfsburg plant is running normally, the auto maker said it expects more restrictive production next week and that it would be unable to manufacture in Wolfsburg" the week after. Production at its commercial vehicles plant in Hannover would also be impacted, as well as its component factories, the company said. Bayerische Motoren Werke AG, the German luxury-car maker, said it had stopped exports of vehicles to Russia and would cease assembly of vehicles with a partner in Kaliningrad. Due to the current geopolitical situation we will stop our local production and export for the Russian market until further notice," a spokesman said. BMW also said that supply-chain disruptions, such as the closure of some supplier plants in Ukraine, would hit production at some factories Commodities giant Glencore PLC said Tuesday it was reviewing its business in Russia, including stakes in EN+ Group PLCthe controlling shareholder of the worlds No.2 aluminum producerand oil company Rosneft Oil Co. Glencore joined a growing list of companies, including BP PLC and Shell PLC, that are assessing their longtime ties with Russia. BP has said it plans to exit its near 20% stake in Rosneft, while energy rival Shell has said it would pull back from joint projects in Russia. Glencore condemns the actions taken by the Russian government against the people of Ukraine," the company said in a statement, adding that it was reviewing all our business activities in the country." Glencore owns 10.55% of EN+, which controls United Co. Rusal International PJSC, and around 0.5% of Rosneft. Dell said it suspended product sales in Russia. Ericsson AB, the Swedish telecom-equipment maker, said it, too, was suspending shipments into Russia. The worlds biggest container ship operatorsA.P. Moller-Maersk A/S and Mediterranean Shipping Co.said they would temporarily suspend services to Russian ports, even those far from the conflict in Ukraine. Maersk said Tuesday it was halting bookings in light of the sanctions imposed on Russia. Both operators said they would continue to move foodstuffs to and from Russia. The billionaire entrepreneur who co-founded Haidilao International Holding Ltd. has stepped down as chief executive, as the Chinese chain of hot-pot restaurants tries to move past an ill-timed expansion during the pandemic. Zhang Yong is being replaced as CEO by his former deputy, Yang Lijuan. The change was announced eight days after Haidilao warned it expected to record an annual loss equivalent to more than $600 million, following its decision to close or suspend its operations at hundreds of restaurants. Haidilao, whose restaurants are mostly in China, opened more than 600 new locations in the year to June 2021, taking its total outlets to nearly 1,600 globally. But the breakneck expansion was expensive and quality suffered. In November, the company reversed course, saying it would close or suspend about 300 outlets that werent bringing in much money. Ms. Yang, until now the companys deputy CEO and chief operating officer, was tasked with leading the turnaround, which the company dubbed the Woodpecker" plan. The company was too aggressive to expand during the pandemic, because they thought the pandemic will be over in a very short period, and the rent at the time was very favorable, so they stepped up investment," said CMB International research analyst Walter Woo. Another concern has to do with Haidilaos staff costs, as it said no employee will be laid off despite the store closures, Nomura analyst Emily Lee said. The companys staff costs as a percentage of revenue are much higher than peers in China, she said. Haidilao went public in Hong Kong in 2018, raising the equivalent of more than $960 million. It was seen by investors as a good way to bet on the rising purchasing power of the Chinese consumer, and was distinguished by its customer service, with measures such as offering manicures and shoe shines to guests waiting for tables. At its peak early last year, Haidilao was worth more than $57 billion, making it one of the worlds largest restaurant companies, and Mr. Zhang, a naturalized Singapore citizen, was estimated to be that countrys richest person. But Chinas zero-tolerance approach to the coronavirus, sporadic outbreaks and an aversion to dining in big groups hit its operations hard, and investors have sharply marked down Haidilao stock. It was the worst performer in Hong Kongs Hang Seng Index last year, and has lost 74% over the 12 months to Wednesdays close. Forbes now reckons Mr. Zhang is worth some $6.9 billion, down from $23 billion last April. Mr. Zhang will remain chairman and guide Haidilaos long-term strategy, the company said in a filing to the Hong Kong exchange late Tuesday. On Feb. 21, Haidilao said it expects to record losses of at least 3.8 billion yuan, or the equivalent of $602 million, for 2021, despite an expected surge in revenue of more than 40%, to the equivalent of more than $6 billion. As well as shrinking its branch network, Haidilao cited global public-health measures and internal management issues" as problems that had affected its results. Alphabet Inc's Google confirmed on Tuesday that it had removed Russian state-funded publishers such as RT from its news-related features, including the Google News search tool, following Russia's invasion of Ukraine and various sanctions against Russia. Kent Walker, Google's president of global affairs, said earlier Tuesday in a blog post that "in this extraordinary crisis we are taking extraordinary measures to stop the spread of misinformation and disrupt disinformation campaigns online." This story has been published from a wire agency feed without modifications to the text. Only the headline has been changed. Washington: President Joe Biden has urged Americans to prepare themselves for new coronavirus variants. In his first State of the Union Address, Biden said COVID-19 need no longer controls the lives of the Americans. We must prepare for new variants. Over the past year, weve gotten much better at detecting new variants. If necessary, well be able to deploy new vaccines within 100 days instead of many more months or years," Biden The US President launched a new initiative -Test to Treat"- aimed at helping COVID-19-infected people get tested at a nearby pharmacy and receive free antiviral pills on the spot. The US, which is the worst-affected country from the deadly pandemic, has reported over 79,088,500 confirmed cases and more than 952,600 COVID-related deaths, according to the latest statistics from Johns Hopkins University. Condemning Russia's "premeditated and unprovoked" attack on Ukraine, US President Joe Biden today said that Russian President Vladimir Putin is isolated from the world more than ever. The US President said that Putin rejected repeated efforts at diplomacy and thought that the West and NATO wouldn't respond. "We prepared extensively and carefully. We spent months building a coalition of other freedom-loving nations from Europe and the Americas to Asia and Africa to confront Putin. I spent countless hours unifying our European allies. We shared with the world in advance what we knew Putin was planning and precisely how he would try to falsely justify his aggression," said Biden. "We are inflicting pain on Russia and supporting the people of Ukraine. Putin is now isolated from the world more than ever," he said, adding that the US, along with its allies, is now enforcing powerful economic sanctions against Russia. Biden further said that they are cutting off Russia's largest banks from the international financial system and preventing Russia's central bank from defending the Russian Ruble making Putin's USD 630 Billion "war fund" worthless. "We are choking off Russia's access to technology that will sap its economic strength and weaken its military for years to come," he said. He further announced that American airspace will be closed for Russian flights, which will further isolate Russia. Tiny zombies that were frozen in Arctic permafrost for 24,000 years were recently brought back to life and have produced clones in a lab in Russia. These hardy creatures are bdelloid rotifers, or wheel animals, so-named for the wheel-like ring of tiny hairs that circle their mouths. Rotifers are multicellular microscopic animals that live in freshwater environments, and they've been around for about 50 million years. In that time, rotifers have picked up a survival trick or two. Researchers previously found that modern rotifers could be frozen at minus 4 degrees Fahrenheit (minus 20 degrees Celsius) and then revived up to 10 years later. Now, scientists have resuscitated rotifers that froze in ancient Siberian permafrost during the latter part of the Pleistocene epoch (2.6 million to about 11,700 years ago). Once thawed, these ancient rotifers began reproducing asexually through parthenogenesis, creating clones that were their genetic duplicates. Related: Photos: Ice age mammoth unearthed in Idaho Permafrost ground that has been frozen solid for two years or more can preserve snapshots of life (and death) from millennia ago. For instance, a small bird carcass found in Siberian permafrost in 2020 was 46,000 years old but looked "like it [had] died just a few days ago," Live Science previously reported . A frozen and mummified cave bear , also found in Siberia in 2020 and dating to about 39,000 years ago, still had a fleshy black nose and much of its fur. Retaining a lifelike appearance after spending thousands of years in ice is impressive. But some types of plants and animals locked in ancient permafrost have managed to do something even more astonishing; return to life from a frozen state. In 2012, scientists described how they regenerated 30,000-year-old plants from immature fruit tissue that had been frozen in Siberian permafrost, Live Science reported that year . Two years later, researchers regrew Antarctic moss that had been icebound in Antarctica for 1,500 years. Tiny worms called nematodes have also been recovered and revived from ancient permafrost in two Siberian locations: at one site the rocks were around 32,000 years old, and in the other they were approximately 42,000 years old, Live Science reported in 2018. And now, more frozen animal "zombies" in permafrost have been resuscitated from a suspended metabolic state known as cryptobiosis. Bdelloid rotifers can enter cryptobiosis to survive extreme conditions such as freezing temperatures and drought. (Image credit: Michael Plewka) Zombie clones Rotifers evolved to use cryptobiosis because most of them live in watery habitats that often freeze or dry up, said Stas Malavin, a researcher at the Institute of Physicochemical and Biological Problems in Soil Science in Pushchino, Russia, and lead author of a new study describing the revived rotifers. "They suspend their metabolism and accumulate certain compounds like chaperone proteins that help them to recover from cryptobiosis when the conditions improve," Malavin told Live Science in an email. Rotifers also have mechanisms for repairing DNA damage and for protecting their cells against harmful molecules called reactive oxygen species, Malavin explained. For the new study, scientists collected permafrost samples by drilling to depths of 11.5 feet (3.5 meters) below the surface in Siberia's Alazeya River, where radiocarbon dating showed that the soil was around 24,000 years old. When they thawed the samples, the researchers discovered rotifers in the Adineta genus in a cryptobiotic state. First, the scientists isolated and analyzed the permafrost samples to make sure that they weren't contaminated by modern microorganisms, according to the study. To revive the frozen sleepers, "We put a piece of permafrost into a Petri dish filled with [a] suitable medium and wait until organisms that are alive recover from their dormancy, start moving, and multiply," Malavin said. Lateral view of rotifer. (Image credit: Michael Plewka) Of course, once the defrosted survivors began cloning themselves, the scientists couldn't tell which ones were ancient and which were newborns, as the rotifers were genetically identical. Because rotifers typically only live for about two weeks, the scientists gathered their data from the clones of the 24,000-year-old rotifers, rather than from the Ice Age survivors themselves, Malavin said. "Organisms isolated alive from permafrost potentially represent the best models for cryobiology research," and could provide valuable clues about the mechanisms that allow those organisms to survive, Malavin said. Those mechanisms could then be tested in cryopreservation experiments with human cells, tissues and organs, he said. However, it doesn't mean that humans will be capable of duplicating rotifers deep-freeze sleep and recovery anytime soon, Malavin added. "The more complex the organism, the trickier it is to preserve it alive frozen," he said. "For mammals, it's not currently possible." The findings were published online June 7 in the journal Current Biology . Originally published on Live Science. Click here to read the full article. Actors Jeremy Irons (House of Gucci), Sinead Cusack (Wrath of the Titans) and Greta Bellamacina (This Sceptred Isle) are set to take part in a charity fundraising event for Ukrainian refugees on Wednesday evening in London. The trio are set to give readings at the event, which will also include talks by journalist Misha Glenny and historian Sir Simon Schama about Putins Russia. The Kiva Cello Quartet will also play. Funds will go to the Wonder Foundation, its Polish partners, Panorama and Pontes, and Moldovan food business incubator Katalyst, all of whom are providing services from housing and employment to food and assimilation to hundreds of Ukrainian families fleeing the war. An Evening for Ukraines Refugees takes place in Central London on Wednesday March 30. Tickets can be purchased here. DETENTION Viktor Marunyak, the elderly subject of Roman Bondarchuks IDFA winner and Ukraines 2016 Oscar entry Ukrainian Sheriffs, has been kidnapped by Russian forces. Marunyak appointed himself a sheriff in his East Ukrainian village in the absence of any real police or official authorities after the Russian invasion of Eastern Ukraine in 2014 and kept the peace between his neighbors about stolen chickens and provided advice on life and love wherever he could. Bondarchuk and his Ukrainian Sheriffs co-writer Darya Averchenko got in touch with Marunyaks daughter, who lives in Germany, when they heard the news of his abduction. They found out from her that Marunyak was initially taken away by the Russian military in mid-March. The soldiers tried to frighten Marunyak at first but then said that they just needed a place to spend the night, Averchenko told Variety. They returned with Marunyak and 25 soldiers spent the night in Marunyaks home. The next day, the soldiers moved to the village school and cultural center. They didnt touch him and told that if there are no provocations we wont oppress and we will leave the village soon, Averchenko says. But there are even more of them now, and they are no longer soldiers, but special forces. Matters evidently escalated after the special forces entered the village. Marukyaks sister reported that he was kidnapped on March 21 and that on March 23 he was brought in handcuffs to his house, Averchenko says. The issue appeared to be that Marunyak is an outspoken advocate of democracy and justice. The occupants planted grenades at his place, told him hell be taken to Russian jail for this for 20 years. Marunyak answered: We are in Ukraine here! The occupants told him: There will be Russia here from April 1. Then the Russian soldiers looted and destroyed his house, leaving his wife without any food, says Averchenko. Viktor is chronically ill, but they refused to take his medicine, Averchenko adds, saying that the situation has been brought to the attention of Ukrainian ombudsman Lyudmyla Denysova and Amnesty International. MEDIA PROJECT An international group of historians and journalists with leading Ukrainian media group Starlight Media have created a project called NEVERAGAIN.MEDIA, which compares the events in Russia and the actions of Vladimir Putin on the eve of the invasion of Ukraine to the situation in Nazi Germany and the actions of Adolf Hitler on the eve of World War II. The aim of the project, published in the English, Russian and Ukrainian languages, is to demonstrate using facts, that Russias aggression against Ukraine poses a real threat to the security of Europe and the world. The authors conclude that Putin is almost 100% repeating Hitlers steps and leading the world to a new global war. If the Russian dictator is not stopped in Ukraine today, the fighting will spread to Europe and the world tomorrow. The project is addressed to the Western media, politicians and ordinary citizens, in order to objectively analyze current events in Ukraine. The authors of the project also hope that the collected materials will reach Russians. DOCUMENTARY Argonons BriteSpark Films has been commissioned by U.K. broadcaster Channel 4 to make a 30-minute film about British member of parliament (MP) Johnny Mercers recent trip to Ukraines warzones. Soldier turned filmmaker Levison Wood (whose company Blackmane Media is partnering with BriteSpark for the film) flew with Mercer and director Neil Bonner to Lviv and Kyiv to document what is happening there. The film will be broadcast under the Dispatches banner. As well as documenting the evacuations of hundreds of thousands of women and children, the trio met Ukrainian resistance fighters. The filmmakers were invited to see the warzone for themselves by Ukrainian MPs. I want this film to communicate the amazing resilience and bravery of the people we met in Kyiv, said Mercer. I hope it will help my colleagues and the British public make the right decisions about how we can all support Ukraine to get through this conflict, which is our generations righteous fight. Porter, director of programmes at BriteSpark Films, said: Its a privilege to be collaborating with Johnny and Lev on this film. Their material, gathered in extraordinary circumstances, highlights the plight of the Ukrainian people from a totally unique perspective. Louisa Compton, head of news and current affairs and specialist factual and sport, added: In this film Johnny Mercer will bring us to the frontline of the biggest story of the moment. The on the ground reporting will be invaluable both for showing British viewers the reality of life as it is right now for Ukrainian people and for documenting the damage of Putins war to the civilian population. Bonner co-directs with Erica Jenkin (Stacey Dooley Back on The Psych Ward) while Wood and Porter executive produce for Blackmane and BriteSpark, respectively. Compton commissioned the film for Channel 4. K.J. Yossman DECREE Under martial law, Ukraine President Volodymyr Zelenskyy has decreed that all national channels will be combined together as a round-the-clock single platform. This is part of the unified information policy being implemented by the countrys National Security and Defense Council. Establish that, in a state of war, the implementation of a unified information policy is a priority issue of national security, which is ensured by combining all national television channels, the program content of which consists mainly of information and / or information and analytical programs on a single information platform for strategic communication round-the-clock news Marathon Single News #UArazom, the decision states. ACCREDITATION FIAPF, the International Federation of Film Producers Associations, has paused the accreditations of the Moscow International Film Festival and Message to Man International Film Festival until further notice, as both are financed by the government of the Russian Federation, whose actions are in violation of international norms, the organization said. FIAPF concludes there is no guarantee that the operation of these festivals will fully respect the entire set of values and rules of the FIAPF accreditation program, incl. in particular to act to bring together films of the world and give priority to the promotion of films. PLATFORM Film network Crew United has launched Filmmakers-for-Ukraine, an information site where Ukrainian filmmakers and their families can find help fast. The platform has the goal of informing people in a simple and up-to-the-minute way about offers of aid coming from all European countries. Besides Ukrainian filmmakers and their families the platform is also geared towards helping disadvantaged groups and minorities in Ukraine, such as BIPoC, LGBTQIA+, Roma, people with disabilities, children, and sick and elderly people. The platform provides people in Ukraine seeking help and people who wish to offer support with information on the issues of transport, shelter, work, medical assistance, food, clothing and contacts to psychological and legal aid. It also contains offers of assistance, fundraising campaigns, petitions and appeals from the film industry and an information page curated by film journalists containing sources of important documentary and feature films about Ukraine. CONCERT U.K. broadcasters ITV and STV and Livewire Pictures are teaming with the Disasters Emergency Committee (DEC) and the media and entertainment group Global to stage a two-hour fundraiser concert for the humanitarian appeal in Ukraine on March 29. While performers have not been announced yet, Concert for Ukraine promises to bring together names from the world of music for a unique event spreading a message of hope and support. The live show will be broadcast on primetime across ITV, STV, ITV Hub and STV Player. The show is produced by Livewire Pictures. Global is joining as media partner, and retail chain Marks & Spencer will be headline sponsors for the broadcast. All sponsorship and advertising revenue generated from the broadcast of the event, which is expected to raise over 3 million ($3.9 million), will be donated by ITV to the DEC appeal. The broadcast will combine music performances with short films recognizing the ongoing relief efforts and the plight faced by people affected by the conflict in Ukraine. Viewers will be able to donate money to the cause throughout the evening. ITV recently supported the DEC appeals for the Afghanistan crisis in Dec. 2021. Additionally, ITV has raised 60 million for Soccer Aid for UNICEFs global work since the show began. Katie Rawcliffe, head of entertainment commissioning at ITV, said Music is a very powerful tool when it comes to showing support and solidarity, and at ITV we are proud and privileged to be working with Livewire Pictures, Global, M&S and the DEC on such an important and necessary fundraising event. Bobby Hain, MD of Broadcast at STV, said: Weve seen time and time again that the generosity of STV viewers knows no bounds. As the crisis in Ukraine continues to intensify at an alarming rate, this event will be an opportunity for our audiences to come together through the power of music, show our whole-hearted support for Ukraine, and help make a difference to those affected through the work of DEC charities. Saleh Saeed, chief executive of the DEC, added: Funds raised by this concert will make a real difference to those affected by the conflict, sending a strong message of love and enabling DEC charities to help now with urgent aid as well as helping to rebuild lives in the months and years ahead. FESTIVAL CPH: DOX (March 23-Apr. 3) has added three more titles to its special program of Ukraine films. The Earth is Blue as an Orange (Iryna Tsilyk/Ukraine-Lithuania), Maidan (Sergei Loznitsa/Ukraine-The Netherlands) and This Rain Will Never Stop (Alina Gorlova/Ukraine-Germany-Latvia) join A House Made of Splinters (Simon Lereng Wilmont/Denmark-Ukraine), Novorossiya (Enrico Parenti and Luca Genari/Italy), Outside (Olha Zhurba/Ukraine-Denmark-The Netherlands) and Treasures of Crimea (Oeke Hoogendijk/The Netherlands) in the program. Niklas Engstrm, artistic director of CPH:DOX, said: Almost three weeks have gone since Putin started his terrible invasion of Ukraine and turned our world and worldview upside down. Like everyone else, CPH:DOX is of course very concerned about the current situation in Ukraine, and therefore we have chosen to expand our program and give more space to some of the many brave Ukrainian filmmakers who in recent years have created strong and important films with the conflict as a backdrop. All our thoughts go to Ukraine and the many refugees who are currently being forced to leave their homeland. FESTIVAL The upcoming Vilnius International Film Festival (March 24-April 3) has announced it will implement a total boycott of Russian cinema by refusing to screen any and all Russian films, as well as projects at its market side, in solidarity with Ukraine and welcoming the appeal made by the Ukrainian Film Academy for a total boycott. We must do everything we can to help our brothers and sisters in Ukraine, said the fests artistic director Algirdas Ramaska, who noted: With the boycott, the festival has taken a stand without any compromise. Films inspire us to define the difference between good and evil. Lets be curious, ask ourselves what our role in this tense world is, he added, underlining that Lithuania which was the first Soviet republic to declare independence in 1990 is not afraid to speak up. Nick Vivarelli FESTIVAL The San Sebastian International Film Festival has expressed solidarity with Ukraine and said it will not ban dissident Russian filmmakers from the festival. [O]ur selection processes evaluate films on an individual basis, never on the basis of their nationality, even when they come from countries with governments that violate fundamental rights, and we will continue to do so in these turbulent times, the festival said in a statement. We cannot make all the citizens of a country responsible for the decisions of their governments. Often, as is the case of the thousands of Russian citizens who have taken to the streets in protest against the war, these citizens not only disagree with their governments decisions, but also fight against them. Those Russian voices that oppose the aggression committed by their country will always have a place at the San Sebastian Film Festival. We would like to end by expressing our desire for the re-establishment of international law and peaceful stability in the zone with a view to guaranteeing the wellbeing of the Ukrainian population. K.J. Yossman LETTER Leading Ukrainian media organizations 1+1 media, StarLight Media, Media Group Ukraine and Inter Media Group alongside the Ministry of Culture and Information Policy of Ukraine and NGO Detector Media, have written an open letter to Ursula von der Leyen, president of the European Commission, and Vera Jourova, VP of the European Commission, calling on the ban of all Russian satellite channels in the EU and broadcast Ukrainian TV instead. Russian TV channels are justifying the Russian war against Ukraine in their multiple news stories, they are withholding the truth about the real scale of the military actions and their own losses, they are discrediting Ukrainian authorities and international partners, undermining with such actions democratic values and principles and questioning freedom of speech as the basis of European values, and also generating an enormous amount of fake news, thus deceiving their audience not only in the Russian Federation, but also in the EU countries and in the United States of America, the letter said. FESTIVAL The Tokyo International Film Festival, which in 2019 screened Ukrainian films Atlantis and The Painted Bird, has called for a peaceful resolution to the ongoing crisis in Ukraine. The Tokyo International Film Festival expresses its deep concern over this situation, in which peoples lives and their rich culture, including films, are now in jeopardy, the festival said in a statement on March 11. As an organization that aims to contribute to the promotion of global friendship and culture through cinema, the Tokyo International Film Festival feels the hardships of those affected by the crisis as our own and is committed to supporting the films and art produced by them, regardless of national borders. For these reasons, we strongly call for a peaceful resolution to this crisis as early as possible. The Tokyo International Film Festival will explore what measures should be taken at our 35th edition in October-November this year, the statement added. SANCTIONS The U.K. government has imposed sanctions on Russian oligarch Roman Abramovich, the owner of Premier League soccer club Chelsea FC. Abramovich had put the club up for sale recently, with net proceeds from the sale going to a charitable foundation in aid of Ukraine war victims. Under the terms of the sanction, Abramovich sees his assets frozen, a prohibition on transactions with U.K. individuals and businesses, a travel ban and transport sanctions imposed. Putins attack on Ukraine continues & we are witnessing new levels of evil by the hour. Today the Government has announced further sanctions against individuals linked to the Russian Government. This list includes Roman Abramovich, the owner of Chelsea Football Club, U.K. Culture Secretary Nadine Dorries tweeted on March 10. "It's important to fight together with the virus, especially for foreigners. Because I can help other foreigners in speaking English," said Anne Dugua, a French volunteer who joined the fight against the COVID-19 resurgence in Suzhou, China. #GLOBALink Produced by Xinhua Global Service WASHINGTON The hotly contested South Texas rematch between longtime U.S. Rep. Henry Cuellar and progressive immigration attorney Jessica Cisneros is headed for a runoff after Cuellar fell just short of the 50 percent of the vote needed to win Tuesday night. For the second time in two years, Cisneros came within 3,000 votes of Cuellar, drawing nearly 47 percent of the vote, according to unofficial results. Cuellar ended with just more than 48 percent. With the addition of a third candidate this time, former educator and community organizer Tannya Bennavides a progressive who drew nearly 5 percent of the vote the race ended in a runoff. A victory for Cisneros would be a major political upset, and she assured supporters at a watch party in Laredo late Tuesday night that it would happen tonight or tomorrow or maybe even in May. Tonight we are showing that our dreams are powerful enough to take on a machine, Cisneros said. Cisneros and Cuellar drew major support from opposite ends of the district that stretches from Laredo through San Antonio and into Guadalupe County. Cisneros drew more than 70 percent of the vote in Bexar County, where her campaign has said a strong showing would be key to her success. U.S. Rep. Alexandria Ocasio-Cortez and U.S. Sen. Elizabeth Warren, two stars of the political left, both made trips to San Antonio to rally support for Cisneros in the final stretch of the race. She had nearly 75 percent of the vote in Guadalupe County and more than 55 percent in Atascosa. But Cuellar held strong in the southern portions of the district, drawing nearly 60 percent of the vote in Webb County, where his name is well known: Cuellar has been in office for 17 years, his brother, Martin, is sheriff and his sister, Rosie, is tax assessor. He drew more than 70 percent of the vote in Zapata County and roughly 70 percent in Starr County, as well. Cuellar is one of the states most senior members of Congress and rarely faced serious political challenges until Cisneros nearly unseated him in 2020. Cuellar is a member of the powerful House Appropriations Committee and a chief deputy whip with the support of his partys leadership. His campaign is well-funded, supported by major oil and gas, technology and pharmaceutical companies, and he spent heavily to fend off the challenge. LIVE ELECTION RESULTS: San Antonio-area races But Cisneros has argued momentum is on her side after Cuellars home and campaign headquarters were searched by the FBI in January, revealing a federal investigation he has insisted will show no wrongdoing on his part. The rematch between Cuellar and Cisneros is seen as a proxy battle for larger ideological debates in the Democratic Party. Cisneros campaigned on progressive touchstones, including Medicare for all, while Cuellar has long been one of his partys most conservative members, occasionally breaking ranks and voting with Republicans. Each side raked in millions in campaign donations and spent heavily to blanket airwaves, with Cuellar warning Cisneros policies would be bad for the district as Cisneros seized on the FBI investigation Cuellar was caught up in, as well as recent votes he took bucking his party. Justice Democrats, a progressive group that recruited Cisneros to run in 2020, spent more than $420,000 on mailers, digital ads and TV spots, including one slamming Cuellar for taking campaign cash from oil and gas, detention centers, Republicans. The race was also the first test of a district long centered on Laredo that was redrawn to include tens of thousands more voters from Bexar County. The district, which previously covered parts of Bexar County almost entirely east of Loop 410, now stretches across much of southeast San Antonio and into downtown. Its northwestern-most tip now extends beyond the Alamo. The district is one of three in South Texas that Republicans hope to flip in November as they seek to build off surprising gains in 2020. The Republican primary appeared to be headed for a runoff, as well. Cassy Garcia, a former staffer for U.S. Sen. Ted Cruz, took the lead in the seven-way race with roughly 30 percent of the vote. Sandra Whitten, a grassroots activist from Laredo who challenged Cuellar in 2020, was in second place with about 15 percent. ben.wermund@chron.com A video posted online shows former Austinite and drug trafficker on the lam praising Russian troops invading Ukraine as "liberators." The man, Russell Bonner Bentley, is seen in a video posted to Twitter in front of Russian military tanks before they invaded Ukraine's capital city, Kyiv. "It's Tejas on the frontline with the de-Nazifiers and liberators of Ukraine," Bentley says in the video. "These guys are tough. These guys are ready and there is plenty of them." RELATED: San Antonio sold Laika out of cheesecakes throughout the weekend to support Ukraine The video was posted to Twitter by international correspondent for The Independent Borzou Daragahi, saying "Just a good ol' boy apparently embedded with Russian forces in Ukraine." Bentley is a former arborist from Austin turned drug trafficker and self-proclaimed communist who is on the run from U.S. Marshals, according to a 2018 Texas Monthly article. He was also an Army engineer based in Germany, a musician in South Padre, and a marijuana legalization activist in Minnesota and Alaska. Bentley has reportedly been embedded with the Russian military since the last Russia-Ukraine crisis in 2014. He joined a militia group recruiting foreign fighters known as the the Vostok Battalion in 2014 and has since become a local celebrity in the area. During the 2014 Ukraine crisis, he also purported that the conflict was the result of Nazis in Ukraine. When Russian President Vladimir Putin invaded Ukraine on February 24, he called it a military operation to "denazify" Ukraine as justification. There is an ultra-nationalist militia group in Ukraine that formed in 2014 as part of the National Guard of Ukraine known as the Azov Battalion. The militia wears insignias featuring neo-Nazi symbols. However, neither U.S. officials and the United Nations have recognized Putin's justification and have denounced his actions as an invasion. It should be noted that Ukraine's President Volodymyr Zelenskyy, is Jewish. Bentley, however, still believes that Russian forces are liberating Ukraine from Nazis, saying the military will "bring the hammer" to save the "good people" of Ukraine. As for the "bad people" Russian forces will "Boom! Kick their a**." The U.S. has since enacted sanctions against Russia and the UN has reported that at least 102 civilians have been killed in Ukraine and 304 injured, according to CNN. Those figures might be an underestimation as the invasion continues. by Xinhua Writers Tan Jingjing, Gao Shan LOS ANGELES, March 1 (Xinhua) -- "We all have dreams. At BYD in Lancaster, you see how Chinese and Americans can help each other build our dreams, dreams for jobs, for a better future and for a greener world," Chinese Ambassador to the United States Qin Gang said Tuesday. Qin made the remarks during a visit to BYD's manufacturing plant in Lancaster, southern California, where he was joined by more than 300 cheerful American workers, who shared their personal stories and working experience for the Chinese leading new-energy vehicle manufacturer. For Alfredo Lopez, a local worker and father of three, working at BYD makes it easier for him to have a better life. Lopez and his wife have both been working at BYD's Lancaster plant for several years. He told Ambassador Qin that he has got many training opportunities since enrollment, and "feels great" to manufacture zero emission buses and tractors for major cities in the United States. "We are making quality electric buses for the future," Lopez said, upbeat about the great potential in U.S.-China new energy cooperation. New energy cooperation is an important part of U.S.-China cooperation, and the two countries should go hand-in-hand on climate goals, Lopez said. Veteran worker Herbert Colato said Americans are a big beneficiary of BYD's comfortable, safe, and environmentally-friendly electric cars. He said BYD has been committed to building an environmentally safe community, hoping that the company will create more jobs for locals, offer more training opportunities, and grow together with the city. "BYD stands for Build Your Dreams. Being here seeing how employees are working and how green buses are being built, I can feel not only buses are being built, but also how dreams are being built," Qin told workers at the plant. "Dreams are coming true," Qin noted. When BYD opened its Lancaster manufacturing plant in 2013, it had a handful of employees working on 10 buses in a 106,000-square-foot (9,848-square-meter) building that once housed a motorhome manufacturing facility, according to the company. In the past nine years, BYD has grown to become the largest battery electric bus manufacturer in North America, creating about 600 manufacturing jobs in Lancaster -- about 1,000 total U.S. jobs, according to the company. Since the delivery of its first U.S. battery electric bus in 2014, BYD has delivered all-electric buses to more than 60 customers in North America, and obtained orders for a total of about 1,000 units. What happened when China and America were working together is "truly phenomenal," said Lancaster Mayor R. Rex Parris. "We share goals, focus on the welfare of the world. Things are so much amazing about China and America when we come together." He said it is worth noting that BYD has brought cheaper buses for operation, but also Lancaster is the only city in America whose air quality got better last year. "That is the impact of China and America," Parris said. BYD is demonstrating what China and the United States can do together to build dreams for better lives and a better world, Ambassador Qin said. If you do not have a current print subscription to the Lodi News-Sentinel, but want to view unlimited articles for the month, please choose this option. A Ukrainian woman living in Longford has spoken of how her daughter was among the last people to escape from the war torn country as it faced up to a full scale Russian invasion. Mother of three Mila Yevtushenko described the harrowing moment her 18-year-old daughter Valerie believed she would not make it back to Ireland after cutting short a holiday in the midst of an unyielding Russian onslaught. She is in bits, said Mila, speaking to the Leader on Monday evening. She was on the last plane back to come back from Kyev and I can still remember her saying to me: 'Mummy, I don't want to die'. A resident of Ireland for almost the past two decades, Mia who now resides in Longford, said despite her daughter's safe passage home, her unease at watching events unfold in her homeland have continued unabated. My parents live in Cherkasy which is about 160km from Kyev and my sister, Valentina and her husband live in Kyev. It's just been so, so worrying. Those fears have taken their toll, with Mia revealing she has lost three kilos in the space of a week amid the spectre of her home country coming under ever increasing attack. Mia's neighbour Natalia Bumblauskienie, who also hails from Ukraine also spoke to this newspaper and how the ensuing conflict was leading to mass hysteria and untold upset. Everthing we know, we know from the internet, she said, adding her own family resided in a town which had so far escaped Russian insurgence forces. In my town, there are many volunteers who are ready to go to defend Ukraine. It comes after Russia's offensive into its eastern European neighbour yesterday (Tuesday) entered its sixth day. Russian forces attempted to overcome what has been a more protracted invasion than it had originally envisaged by yesterday launching a heavy bombardment of Kharkiv, Ukraine's second largest city. International criticism of Russian President Vladimir Putin has shown little sign of easing with calls this week for Kremlin and its head of state to face war crimes in the face of ongoing indiscriminate shelling. And like much of that transnational condemnation, Mia said the Russian premier would, in time, have little or nowhere to hide. For me, I can't understand it, she said. He is a father and had a wife. You just don't do this kind of thing to people. There are so many lies being told too when you look at the Russian news, I just don't understand it. That said, Mia waxed lyrical at the fortitude which had been shown by her fellow countrymen and women back home and issued a public thank you to the local Longford community for the level of solidarity which had been shown to native country in recent days. We will never give up, she said. They (Ukrainians) are a very spiritual people and we have a very strong belief inside ourselves, she said. And I am so happy with the response (of the public). Just looking at Facebook and all the things like sleeping bags, food and other items that people have donated, it really has shown the inner quality of people and makes me so proud to say that I have lived here for the last 19 years. It takes a little streak of madness to decide to get in your lorry and hand-deliver essential supplies to Ukrainians just across the Polish border, according to Longford woman, Hazel Robinson, who certainly has more than a little streak of madness in her. And it wasnt off the ground I licked it, she laughed, while in conversation with the Leader on Monday morning. In fact, Hazel and her mother Hilary are both embarking on the long journey to Poland - by boat and by road - to deliver supplies this week. The eyes of the world are firmly fixed on Ukraine as its people fight to keep their country from the grasp of Russian invaders, and people in Longford - and further afield - are doing what little they can to offer their support to those who need it. And, despite being a rural county in the middle of a small state on the edge of Europe, what little we can do could prove huge to those in need. Helping Hands Longford has begun a massive collection drive for Ukraine, with plans to transport donations of essentials to Poland later this week, thanks to a heroic offer of help from local charity, Hungry Horse Outside. Hazel and her mother Hilary Robinson are in the planning stages of their journey, which will see them take a ferry to the main land before driving to Hrebenna, on the Polish border with Ukraine. When Russia hit Ukraine, everyone was in massive shock, said Hazel, who runs a Facebook group called Updates Ireland, which currently has more than 181,000 members from across Ireland and beyond. One woman from Waterford said she was setting up a group and what she needed to collect. I wanted to get involved, so I did and then it started skyrocketing. They organised a point for people to drop off donations, and they wanted to set up a GoFundMe for transportation. Mam was in Germany rehoming horses, so shes already on a trip. I rang her and I was telling her about the idea. I had it in my head, I wonder could we do this, so I rang her and she said we could do this - we have the money in our Hungry Horse Outside account - we can do this and we can see if we can get stuff for animals too. Hungry Horse Outside is an animal welfare organisation, which specialises in the rescue and care of horses and donkeys. Currently, there are tens of thousands of Ukrainians seeking refuge in Poland, many of whom are women and children who have left their men behind to fight. Photographs on social media over the past week showed many families fleeing their homes with their pets in tow - unwilling to leave behind valuable members of their families. There are a lot of animals struggling, so well be bringing over pet food to them too, said Hazel. Donations have been flooding in over the past few days with Helping Hands Longford putting a call out for personal hygiene items, sanitary products, baby items such as food, nappies, etc, medical bandages, plasters, antiseptics, underwear and socks for all ages, sleeping bags, foil heat sheets, hats, gloves, scarves, pads for the disabled and those with special needs, non-perishable foods, etc. Were trying to get as much as possible into the space we have - not so much clothes, but non-perishable items, big bottles of dettol, power banks, said Hazel. Things that women will need. Because a lot of the men are fighting and the women want to be able to contact them, so they need to charge their phones because the next time they speak to their husbands or partners or fathers could be the last - and just imagine knowing that. After the woman in Waterford put out a call for donations on the Updates Ireland Facebook page, Hazel said the whole thing just started flowering all over the country. I was getting hundreds of messages in. Its amazing to see a group of people from different backgrounds coming together for a cause, she said. The spirit of the Irish people is unbelievable. We should be proud of our country and our people. Whenever theres a time of crisis, the Irish come through. When something horrible happens, youll always see the light. Hazel and Hilary have booked their passage on the ferry for Thursday evening and estimate their 2,695km journey to the Polish border with Ukraine will take approximately two days. Were about to embark on a trip of a lifetime, said Hazel, who admitted to being nervous about travelling so close to the Ukrainian border but eager to offer assistance to people who are in need - an admirable trait in both Robinson woman. I have done so much in my life and Ive shocked myself but this has trumped it all. I always said you need a small streak of madness and I have that. But I didnt lick it off the ground, Hazel laughed. Im nervous. But I want to do this. Its been a team effort and well need more team effort but its amazing to see how good people have been. Hilary and Hazel will travel to Tramore on Wednesday to collect donations from there, before packing Longfords addition to the delivery into their vehicle on Thursday. Im concentrating soley on the collection and the transportation of the essential items, said Hazel, stressing that any information on donating should be sought from Helping Hands Longford where Tena Keown and Geraldine McNally and their team are gathering items and preparing them to be transported. Hazel and Hilary will be driving the Hungry Horse Outside lorry to Poland but, should it be required, Hazel will drive a second vehicle. This collection will not be for clothing and large items, but rather the smaller items, which can be brought in bulk and distributed among more people, such as hygiene items, sanitary items, foods, dog foods, etc. Mam thinks it will take two days to get there, but I did hear once you get to the Polish border, you can be there for hours, said Hazel. In the lorry were going in, theres a small sleeping area that well be sleeping in on the side of the road. The pandemic made the world smaller because we realised were all in the same situation. And now this has made Europe so small because we realise how close we are to our neighbours, said Hazel. Whats most important here is our community spirit and how good the Irish people are. We really dont give ourselves enough credit. For more information on where to donate items and how to donate, see the Helping Hands Longford Facebook page. Hazel and Hilary will be keeping people updated on their journey via the Hungry Horse Outside Facebook page along the way. Monday was a milestone day for Ireland as the remaining Covid-19 restrictions were lifted, including the legal requirement to wear masks in any setting. The Government decided last week, following advice from health officials, that from February 28, the wearing of masks in any setting is not mandatory, but will be advised on public transport and in healthcare settings. And, while the news signals a near-end to what has been a long and difficult two years for all, there are some who are not so quick to remove the masks. I think its way too soon for mask removal. Covid isnt gone away - you just need to look at the case numbers, said local Cystic Fibrosis campaigner, Jillian McNulty, who wore masks in many public settings even before the pandemic. Its shocking theyve removed masks, social distancing and Covid passes. They shouldve waited until at least summer. Its a scary time for vulnerable patients like myself. This has always been our normal but, at least with maks, social distancing, etc, it was safer. The fact that now people will be charged 90 per PCR is also insane. No-one can afford that, so people just dont be tested and thus wont isolate, so its going to spread more. Tanaiste Leo Varadkar said the removal of the majority of remaining restrictions was another milestone moment in the countrys journey out of the Covid-19 pandemic. Its a big day for many businesses and workers as economic life begins to return to normal, he said on Monday. Staff and customers who want to continue to wear a mask should of course continue to do so. We know that many people will be nervous about this latest step in our journey with Covid, especially the medically vulnerable. For those commuting today, you are not legally required to wear a mask on public transport anymore, however we are still recommending that you do. Health officials had recommended the major shift in Covid-19 rules following a meeting of the National Public Health Emergency Team (Nphet), the body that guided the countrys policymakers during the long pandemic. However, politicians and health advisers have insisted these changes do not mean that the pandemic is officially over. The rules on close contacts are also changing today, Mr Varadkar confirmed. If you have no symptoms, you do not need to test or isolate and can continue on your business and go to work as normal. This is the case regardless of your vaccination status. The only exception is for healthcare workers who have a confirmed case in their home, they will need to take antigen tests and follow different guidance. A major fundraising campaign is underway in Roscommon and beyond to raise money for the Zoe Cryan Trust Fund, in the hopes of improving the quality of life for seven-year-old Zoe Cryan, who was born extremely premature at 24 weeks. Weighing only 540grams when born, Zoe spent 272 days in The Coombe/Our Ladys Crumlin Hospital before she could go home to her parents, Siobhan and Dave. Since Zoes birth in 2014, it has been a rollercoaster for her and her parents but through it all she has been the most determined, strong and loving little girl. Zoe has a diagnosis of Cerebral Palsy, which presents differently with each person. For Zoe, it has affected her legs, feet, core and her oral functions. Zoe uses her wheelchair full time and walks short distances with the aid of her k-walker. Unfortunately over the past 18 months, Zoes feet have deteriorated and she requires intensive Physio and specific Braces to help her feet and legs, which she can't access here in Ireland. Until last June, Zoe was 100% peg fed and her parents have worked extremely hard to support her swallowing pureed food. Now she only requires her peg for water and meds. This change only happened with the help of a Centre in Boston, NAPA, where Zoe and her parents attended in 2019. Their therapists worked with Zoe for three weeks on her swallowing through a device called Vital stimulation. This had life-changing benefits for Zoe but she still requires intensive specialised therapy in order to chew foods and swallow in safe way. Her parents are also hoping that, with intensive therapy, her speech will become clearer and allow her to communicate with her friends and family fully. This type of service isn't available to Zoe here in Ireland and so she needs to travels back to Napa to give Zoe every opportunity possible. To raise funds for Zoe, pianist Leanne Anastasi, director of Ballinagare Piano will perform for 24 hours non-stop at Kilmurry Hall, Castlerea from Saturday, March 5 at 8pm. There will be face painting and balloons by Fierce Fun Faces on Sunday between 12pm and 3pm, and refreshments will be sold throughout the event, with proceeds going towards Zoes Wish to Chew & Chat. Anyone who would like to donate via GoFundMe can do so by searching Zoes Wish to Chew and Chat. Zoes family has already raised over 23,000 of their 35,000 goal but any donation at all would be beyond appreciated and help get Zoe on her way to Chewing and Chatting. A Longford reporter is currently in Hungary, on the border with Ukraine, which is currently in the midst of a Russian invasion. Fran McNulty travelled to the border this week to report on the refugees that have crossed the border to escape the attacks on their country. On RTE's Prime Time last night, Mr McNulty reported from what he said was "in many ways the darkest of nights" as Ukrainian refugees continued to come through the border crossing, leaving their country behind. "They're seeking safety from the Russian invasion. It's an invasion we know has caused pain and suffering to millions of people already," he said. "It's an invasion which has disgusted and horrified the world, yet still Russia is pushing forward. This evening its warning to people in Kyiv to leave has led many people to fear for the worst in this war. "What started as a trickle of refugees here has become a river and some of these we have spoken to today have said they fear that's going to become a tsunami in the days and weeks ahead as many people are so desperate to get out of Ukraine - many of them with nowhere to go and all of them wondering just what's going to happen next." "I don't know how I will help them from here, but I will." @franmcnulty hears from a Ukrainian woman who was forced to leave members of her family behind as she evacuated the war-torn country | #rtept | Read more: https://t.co/tgdudHI5ML pic.twitter.com/tkQjrixpPu RTE Prime Time (@RTE_PrimeTime) March 1, 2022 Meanwhile, Longford mother and daughter, Hilary and Hazel Robinson, are preparing to drive from Longford to Hrebenne, Poland, where they will deliver a lorry full of essential medical equipment, baby items, power banks, non-perishable foods, etc, to those who have fled from Ukraine in the past week. For more on this story and others, see below: Ukrainian woman living in Longford tells of daughter's dice with death A Ukrainian woman living in Longford has spoken of how her daughter was among the last people to escape from the war torn country as it faced up to a full scale Russian invasion. The Regional Hospital Mullingars Adult and Paediatric Emergency Departments are both busy today (Wednesday, March 2). An Ireland East Hospital Group spokesperson said, "The hospital is in escalation and the teams are working to manage the current Adult and Paediatric In-Patient and Covid-19 Bed Capacity together with Scheduled Care. "We would ask patients to consider their options before attending the Emergency Departments. "If you do come to ED and are not triaged as seriously ill, you may need to wait for a long period to be seen. "Adult and Paediatric Patients who require urgent care will be prioritised. Ukrainian woman living in Longford tells of daughter's dice with death A Ukrainian woman living in Longford has spoken of how her daughter was among the last people to escape from the war torn country as it faced up to a full scale Russian invasion. "Hospital Management would like to thank the public for their support and understanding during this period." Local News, Travel & Local Attractions By Chris Boyle Published: March 02 2022 Event will unveil new study calculating the potential economic impact of more inbound flights into Long Island MacArthur airport. HIA-LI, one of Long Islands largest business advocacy organizations, is hosting a panel titled The Future of Long Island MacArthur Airport and Tourism on Long Island on Wednesday, March 2 between 8:00 and 10:00 am at Long Island MacArthur Airport in Ronkonkoma. In addition to exploring Long Island MacArthur Airports overall economic importance to businesses of all sizes across the region, the results of a new Economic Impact Study examining the airports potential effect on tourism growth will be shared for the first time. The study, conducted by the Ronkonkoma law firm of Campolo, Middleton & McCormick, LLP, calculates the level of new tourism revenue that could be generated on Long Island if Breeze Airways were to operate at maximum capacity at the airport. The airline, founded by JetBlue co-founder David Neeleman, began offering nonstop flights to Norfolk, Virginia and Charleston, South Carolina from the airport on February 17. The study also examines the potential economic impact and tourism revenue that could be generated across all inbound flights at MacArthur Airport assuming maximum capacity of flights and seats across any airline. Panelists will include Shelley LaRose-Arken, Commissioner of Long Island MacArthur Airport, and Bryan DeLuca, Board Chairman of Discover Long Island and Executive Director of Atlantis Holdings, LLC. The panel will be moderated by HIA-LI Board Member Joe Campolo of Campolo, Middleton & McCormick. Angie Carpenter, the Town of Islip Supervisor, will provide opening remarks. Long Island MacArthur Airport holds tremendous untapped potential as a source of new, incoming tourism dollars for Long Island, said Mr. Campolo. Its an ideal gateway for introducing the world to Long Islands first-class quality of life, our vibrant industries, and our many compelling destination opportunities. When air travelers come here via Long Island MacArthur Airport, they can conveniently bypass the traffic and crowds associated with larger, urban airports, said Richard Humann, PE, Chairperson of the HIA-LI board and President and CEO of H2M architects + engineers in Melville. We need to do all we can to maximize MacArthurs value to the Long Island economy. Long Islands visitor economy exceeds $6 billion in value, underscoring our status as a globally significant travel venue, said HIA-LI President and CEO Terri Alessi-Miceli. The panel will examine ways MacArthur can play a key role in boosting Long Island tourism, capitalizing upon our 120 miles of beaches, our award-winning Wine Country, our Gold Coast mansions, our museums, and much more. A December survey of 504 Long Island businesses also conducted by Campolo, Middleton & McCormick found that the addition of more nonstop flights at the airport could potentially generate more than $1 billion in new, annual revenue for the facility. Activate your all-inclusive access for print subscribers: Link your losaltosonline.com account to your print subscription here. Your account number is your one-line street address as printed on your newspaper use normal capitalization. Example: 138 Main St. When your current subscription expires later this year, you will be able to renew at losaltosonline.com/users/admin/service/purchase. If you have any trouble accessing your account or linking your subscription, our Subscription FAQ may have the answer you need. Contact howardb@latc.com or call him at (650) 397-5213 with any questions or to learn more. UNITED NATIONS, March 1 (Xinhua) -- UN Secretary-General Antonio Guterres is against discrimination against some foreign nationals attempting to flee the fighting in Ukraine, his spokesman said on Tuesday. "The secretary-general strongly repudiates, in any shape or form, all discrimination based on race, religion, ethnicity, in the context of this conflict, as well as in terms of the treatment of people trying to leave Ukraine to seek refuge in another country," said Stephane Dujarric, spokesman for Guterres. The stern statement followed reports of some nationals of other countries, such as students and workers from Africa and Asia, being refused accommodation on transport out of Ukraine. In Geneva, UN Under-Secretary-General for Humanitarian Affairs and Emergency Relief Coordinator Martin Griffiths, said donors pledged 1.5 billion U.S. dollars toward the 1.7 billion dollars sought in relief for victims of the fighting in Ukraine. Despite the fighting, UN staffers are still staying and delivering humanitarian aid, the spokesman said. He told reporters in a regular briefing that the number of staffers in Ukraine remained roughly the same as he reported last week, around 1,500, with some shifting of staff in and out of Ukraine. The world body's communication lines with staff remain open, Dujarric said. The UN Children's Fund and its partners are mobilizing to treat the mental and emotional damage caused by the conflict, and the first shipments of the World Food Programme are on their way from Turkey to Ukraine, the spokesman said. The UN Refugee Agency delivered its first truckload of household materials to central Ukraine for families in evacuation shelters and others in need, he added. Lekoil Ltd - London-based oil and gas exploration and production company with projects focused in Nigeria and West Africa - Shareholder Lekoil Nigeria's CEO Olalekan Akinyanmi granted interim injunction by Grand Court of Cayman Islands to prevent investment agreement between Lekoil and Savannah Energy PLC. On Monday, both companies signed a convertible facility agreement for Savannah to provide a GBP900,000 loan, repayable on Wednesday and bears 5% per annum interest. Should Lekoil not pay, Savannah can convert the outstanding amount to 177.1 million new shares in Lekoil at a price of 0.5 pence each. Savannah will also agree with Lekoil to have unpaid fees settled by the issue of 22.9 million new shares, and both companies have signed an option agreement granting Savannah the option to be assigned the company debt owed to Lekoil by Mayfair Assets & Trusts Ltd, and its associated security related to OPL 310. Should the option be exercised, Savannah will pay USD1 million to Lekoil. The injunction by the court prevents Lekoil from issuing or alloting any shares for the convertible facility agreement, option agreement or tripartite agreement with Savannah, effectively preventing the deal Current stock price: suspended By Dayo Laniyan; dayolaniyan@alliancenews.com Copyright 2022 Alliance News Limited. All Rights Reserved. Zenith Energy Ltd - Calgary, Canada-based oil & gas company - Decides to not renew its option agreement with Noble Hill-Network Ltd for the purchase of a 42% interest in the latter's share capital. "The company remains of the view that the development of the North-West Corner of OML 141 in Nigeria has significant potential, and it shall look to revisit the opportunity once the ownership of NHNL is unequivocally confirmed by the Nigerian courts," the company stated. Current stock price: 0.77 pence 12-month change: down 29% By Dayo Laniyan; dayolaniyan@alliancenews.com Copyright 2022 Alliance News Limited. All Rights Reserved. BEIRUT, March 2 (Reuters) - Complying with a London court order requiring Lebanon's Bank Audi and SGBL to pay a depositor $4 million of money stuck in the nation's crisis-hit banking sector will result in other savers losing out, Bank Audi said on Wednesday. The court ordered Bank Audi and its peer SGBL on Feb. 28 to make the payments, amounting to about $1.1 million and $2.9 million respectively, to claimant Vatche Manoukian by March 4. In the absence of any capital control law in Lebanon, banks began imposing informal restrictions on withdrawals and transfers abroad as the country's financial system collapsed in 2019 after years of unsustainable financial policies, corruption and waste. These controls were never formalised with legislation and have been challenged in local and international courts, with mixed results "The profusion of lawsuits filed by depositors against banks before Lebanese and foreign jurisdictions is a direct consequence of the mismanagement of the crisis since October 2019, and more specifically the failure to enact a most needed capital control law", Bank Audi said. Bank Audi said it intends to comply with the UK order but will consider its options on whether to appeal. Deputy Prime Minister Saade Chami said he hoped a draft law that has been with parliament for some time would be approved soon. There is a renewed push to pass the capital law, even before the latest court ruling, because it is highly needed," he told Reuters. Bank Audi said the order means "wealthy depositors who happen to be resident in the United Kingdom being able to be paid 100% of their funds out of the pockets of the remaining depositors who do not have the right or ability to bring proceedings overseas". "This will significantly reduce the money available to the other depositors." A lawyer for Manoukian said the decision acknowledged his client's "legal right to transfer his money out of Lebanon". "This is the first case relating to the Lebanese financial crisis to be successfully brought in the UK. This decision is likely to be of interest to other English and EU domiciled individuals with funds held in Lebanese banks," the lawyer, Graham Shear, said. SGBL has not responded to requests for comment. A capital control law is a requirement for Lebanon to make progress in IMF talks towards an aid package. (Reporting by Tom Perry and Timour Azhari;Editing by Bernadette Baum and Elaine Hardcastle) (Alliance News) - UK Prime Minister Boris Johnson has insisted no Nato allies are contemplating heeding Ukraine's pleas to enforce a no-fly zone over the nation to prevent bombings from Vladimir Putin's planes. The PM again rejected Ukrainian President Volodymr Zelensky's calls for British forces to actively join the effort, warning it would trigger a wider war with Russia. With the invasion of Ukraine in its sixth day, Johnson visited Nato members Poland and Estonia to shore up support for the defence alliance. But he ruled out British forces fighting in Ukraine, as he faced impassioned calls for a no-fly zone to be imposed to protect civilians as a major assault on Kyiv was feared to be nearing. Johnson clarified that the UK is not actively supporting British nationals volunteering to help the defence of Ukraine, contradicting an earlier remark from Foreign Secretary Liz Truss. "I think for any Nato member to get involved actively in conflict with Russia is a huge step which is not being contemplated by any member," Johnson stressed during a press conference against the backdrop of armoured vehicles, at the Tapa military base in Estonia. "This is a time when miscalculation and misunderstanding is all too possible and it's therefore crucial that we get that message over. "When it comes to a no-fly zone in the skies above Ukraine we have to accept the reality that that involves shooting down Russian planes that's a very, very big step, it's simply not on the agenda of any Nato country. "We will not fight Russian forces in Ukraine," he added. "Our reinforcements like these reinforcements here in Tapa are firmly within the borders of Nato members." Nato Secretary-General Jens Stoltenberg warned that a vast column of "heavy Russian armour" moving towards Kyiv would bring "more death, more suffering and more civilian casualties", as he stressed the need for heavy sanctions. Estonian Prime Minister Kaja Kallas said troops from Kremlin-ally Belarus had entered Ukraine, adding: "There's no doubt Belarus is a co-aggressor in this conflict." In an earlier visit to Warsaw, Poland, a Ukrainian journalist who fled over the border made an impassioned plea for Johnson to assist with a no-fly zone. Daria Kaleniuk, the executive director of the Anti-Corruption Action Centre civil society organisation, said: "Nato is not willing to defend because Nato is afraid of World War Three, but it's already started and it's Ukrainian children who are there taking the hit." Johnson apologised as he ruled out the move, having blamed Putin's regime for "barbaric and indiscriminate" violence against Ukrainian citizens. The prime minister said evidence of Putin's attacks on civilians could be used in a future trial at the International Criminal Court. Johnson committed to doing more to allow Ukrainians to come to the UK, with around 200,000 eligible under an expanded route for people to bring family members in. "What we are going to do is we are extending the family scheme so that actually very considerable numbers would be eligible you could be talking about a couple of hundred thousand, maybe more," he said. "Additionally, we are going to have a humanitarian scheme and then a scheme by which UK companies and citizens can sponsor individual Ukrainians to come to the UK." While the prime minister was in the air on the way back to Britain, the UK government announced a further GBP80 million in aid for Ukraine. The funding will be used to save lives, protect vulnerable people inside the country and in the wider region, and to tackle the growing humanitarian crisis, the Foreign, Commonwealth & Development Office announced. The department said it takes the UK's overall aid support during the current crisis to GBP220 million. Satellite images showed the extent of the Russian forces massing around Kyiv, with a column of armoured vehicles, tanks, artillery and support vehicles stretching 40 miles. That force was 17 miles from the capital on Monday. Ukraine has already accused Moscow of war crimes by bombarding civilian areas in the second city of Kharkiv. But Western leaders fear that the Russian president could order more "barbaric" tactics, with intelligence suggesting the advance on Kyiv has made little progress, probably due to logistical problems. Meanwhile, there was a mass walkout of diplomats from the UN Human Rights Council when a speech from Russian foreign minister Sergei Lavrov began. UK Foreign Secretary Liz Truss said Lavrov's statement was "full of disinformation" and did not deserve the attention of other members. "Russia is isolated and should be ashamed to sit in the UN chamber," she said. During her own speech to the Geneva meeting, Truss said: "Putin is responsible for civilian casualties and over 500,000 people fleeing with the numbers still rising fast. The blood is on Putin's hands not just of innocent Ukrainians, but the men he has sent to die." source: PA Copyright 2022 Alliance News Limited. All Rights Reserved. LONDON, March 2 (Reuters) - Oil prices jumped to near eight-year highs and wheat to 14-year peaks, while aluminium, Dutch gas and European coal prices hit records as Western sanctions on Russia over its invasion of Ukraine disrupted Russian commodities exports. Russian forces were attempting to subdue Ukrainian cities, seven days into an invasion that has sparked massive sanctions, pushing international companies to halt sales, cut ties and dump billions of dollars' worth of investments. Brent crude oil hit $113.94 a barrel, its highest since June 2014, a gain of more than 40% so far this year. Two crude tankers due to load Russian Urals and Kazakh oil this week have been or are due to be cancelled, sources told Reuters. "Oil has been pushing higher on growing perceptions that Russian oil is unable to be 'transacted'," said ED&F Man Capital Markets analyst Edward Meir. "Although oil is not technically under sanction, traders are understandably nervous about taking delivery of Russian crude, let alone storing, shipping and ultimately selling it." Russia accounts for about 10% of global oil supplies. Russia and Ukraine account for about 29% of wheat exports. Wheat prices hit $10.59 a bushel, the highest since March 2008. Corn prices rose to $7.47-3/4 a bushel, the highest since December 2012. "Global buyers of grains have been increasingly turning to the U.S., Europe or South America to secure supplies in the immediate term, given the ongoing conflict," ING said in a note. "Moreover, demand for stockpiling has also increased due to current uncertainty." European gas prices gained more than 30% after the United Kingdom ordered its ports to deny entry to Russian-owned ships and European Union countries were considering a similar ban after a halt on air traffic. Dutch gas hit a record high of 185 euros a tonne, while British gas climbed to 398.06 pence a therm, close to the record seen last December. Russia supplies the European Union with 40% of its gas needs. It accounts for 40% of global mined palladium output, 10% of nickel supplies and 6% of global aluminium production. European coal prices for 2023 rose to a record $260.5 a tonne on fears of shortages in Europe, which relies on Russian coal. Newcastle coal futures jumped to a record $400 a tonne as buyers scrambled to find alternatives to supplies from Russia, the third largest exporter after Indonesia and Australia. Palladium prices around $2,640 an ounce were trading near the seven-month peak hit on Tuesday, aluminium hit a record high at $3,597 a tonne and nickel touched $26,505, the highest since May 2011. Russian steel producer Severstal said it suspended supplies to the EU due to sanctions on its shareholders. However, the Chinese banking regulator said it will not participate in sanctions on Russia, which is a major exporter of oil, gas, coal and agricultural commodities to China. Malaysian palm oil futures rose past 7,000 ringgit a tonne to hit a record high, on the prospect of rising demand as the closure of Ukrainian ports hits supplies of sunoil from the Black Sea region. SAO PAULO, March 1 (Xinhua) -- The partnership between China and Brazil is win-win and long-term, a Brazilian business veteran in the animal protein sector has said. "Brazil provides China with good and safe meat products to complement China's domestic supply in a sustainable way, and it's a win-win cooperation," Ricardo Joao Santin, president of the Brazilian Association of Animal Protein (ABPA), said in a recent interview with Xinhua. China is one of the most significant markets for Brazil's poultry and pork products. Having been in the industry for 13 years, Santin believes that the "strong, complementary" cooperation between the two countries in the food sector has established a trustworthy and sustainable partnership. As the world's major agri-products exporter, Brazil's agribusiness sector experienced a rough 2021 due to hiking soy and corn prices and logistics obstacles induced by the pandemic. The poultry and pork sector was no exception. Members of the ABPA have invested over 1 billion reais (approximately 190 million U.S. dollars) to ensure the safety and hygiene of their meat and egg products since the beginning of the pandemic. With some 140 members from the entire poultry, pork and egg agribusiness production chain, the ABPA aims to promote sound international trade practices in the poultry and pork farming sector and bolster food security. "I have a personal statement for my work that is 'there should be no border for food,'" said Santin. The ABPA assigned its first representative in China three years ago, aiming to "fulfill the Chinese market's demand and understand it better." Currently, it has four offices across the globe, including two in Brazil, one in Beijing and one in Brussels. "We are looking forward to showing China more Brazilian brands," Santin said. (Alliance News) - Russian oligarch Alexey Mordashov, the single biggest shareholder in the German travel group Tui AG, is leaving the firm's supervisory board in view of the EU sanctions imposed on him. The company made the announcement on Wednesday, saying that "the aim of the EU sanctions is that Mr Mordashov can no longer use his shares in Tui," and therefore not make any profit from them. "Mr Mordashov is also resigning from the Tui supervisory board with immediate effect. He formally declared the resignation of his mandate to the company today," it said. The sanctions would have no impact on the company itself, Tui stressed. The EU had put sanctions in place against a number of Russian businessmen and oligarchs on Monday because of the attack on Ukraine. The EU assets of those targeted, including Mordashov, were frozen and their freedom to travel restricted. Mordashov has been a Tui shareholder for around 15 years and holds just over a third of the shares. On Tuesday, he questioned the sanctions against him, saying "I fail to understand how these sanctions against me will contribute to the settlement of the dreadful conflict in Ukraine." Tui shares closed 0.7% lower at 217.50 pence each in London on Wednesday. source: dpa Copyright 2022 Alliance News Limited. All Rights Reserved. (Alliance News) - The following is a round-up of updates by London-listed companies, issued on Tuesday and not separately reported by Alliance News: ---------- Hutchmed China Ltd - Hong Kong-based biopharmaceutical company - Receives approval to market fruquintinib, an inhibitor of vascular endothelial growth factor receptors, in Macau. Drugs of this type are often used to treat cancer. ---------- UP Global Sourcing Holdings PLC - Oldham, Greater Manchester-based consumer brands owner - Petra brand receives first "substantial" order from a German hypermarket retailer. "Petra, the group's recently acquired German kitchen electrical brand, is well recognised in the German market and enjoys a reputation for quality and design innovation," UP Global says. Deal is worth EUR1 million. ---------- JPMorgan Russian Securities PLC - Russia-focused investor - Says 49% of portfolio comprises of locally-listed stocks it is currently not allowed to trade in due to restrictions. Holds shares in Russian state-backed VTB Bank amounting to 1.9% of investor's portfolio. Company manager monitoring impact of sanctions and also waives management fee. Will not buyback shares during uncertain market conditions and says sanctions restrict ability to pay further dividends. "It remains the company's intention to resume quarterly dividend payments once circumstances permit," JPMorgan Russian says. ---------- Puma VCT 13 PLC - venture capital trust - Exercises over-allotment facility linked with GBP25 million fundraise. To raise further GBP5 million. ---------- Bango PLC - Cambridge-based mobile commerce company - Begins trading on OTC Markets Group's OTCQX Best Market. "Trading on OTCQX will further increase the visibility and accessibility of Bango to North American investors. OTCQX supports more transparent quotation and trading of Bango ordinary shares in US dollars during trading hours in the United States, allowing easier access for investors who prefer securities that trade domestically in US dollars," Bango adds. ---------- Omega Diagnostics Group PLC - Alva, Scotland-based medical diagnostics - Says total amount raised from fundraise is GBP5.5 million. It had planned to raise up to GBP7 million. ---------- DeepMatter Group PLC - Glasgow, Scotland-based digital chemistry data company - Signs collaboration deal with Standigm Inc, a workflow artificial intelligence drug discovery company, based in South Korea. "The first stage of the agreement is expected to generate revenues of GBP233,000. The group is now actively working towards broadening the scope of the agreement in the three-year term," DeepMatter says. "DeepMatter will provide access to its proprietary data and algorithms via its unique data and laboratory integration platform." ---------- 7digital Group PLC - London-based music licensing provider - Signs deal with existing B2B music streaming service customer worth at least EUR2.2 million over three-year period. "The company has been providing services to the customer since 2016, with contract renewals on an annual basis. This latest contract expands the relationship to a long-term agreement, providing greater visibility over revenue. The company also expects the value of the contract to increase as the fast-growing customer seeks to expand its brand into further territories, which would require further licence agreements with 7digital," 7digital says. ---------- Mobile Streams PLC - London-based mobile content provider - Says monthly revenue now exceeds USD150,000. "In addition, the company has commenced the process of uploading its content, including Esports, to the Huawei App gallery and anticipates once successful these will be made available across the Huawei handset user base," Mobile Streams adds. ---------- Hardide PLC - Oxfordshire-based advanced surface coating technology developer - Delivers first production set of coated turbine blades for Ansaldo Energia Spa, a manufacturer of steam and gas turbines. "These blades are to be installed in advanced gas turbine engines with high operational flexibility that cut CO2 emissions and operational costs in a very demanding market. More orders for this application are expected to be placed during 2022," Hardide adds. ---------- Getech Group PLC - Leeds-based provider of geoscience data - Wins GBP1.2 million deals for its geoscience data and energy software products. "The contracts, which include annual and multi-year licences with new and existing customers, add to Getech's recurring revenue and orderbook," company says. ---------- Journeo PLC - Leicestershire-based transport information systems and technical services - Gets GBP2.1 million order from City of Edinburgh to upgrade real-time outdoor passenger display systems. "The purchase order includes the supply and support of over 400 optically bonded new displays as part of the second phase of a 5 year GBP4.8 million services and support contract," Journeo says. ---------- AFC Energy PLC - Cranleigh, England-based hydrogen power generation technologies provider - Says it and partner Acciona agree to deploy AFC's first hybrid fuel cell system in Spain. ---------- Phoenix Copper Ltd - British Virgin Islands-based base and precious metals production and exploration company - Under environmental, social and governance plans, Phoenix is to create the Konnex Community Advisory Team. This is to build "meaningful relationships" in communities near Empire State mine in Idaho, US. ---------- Beowulf Mining PLC - developing Kallak iron ore mine in Sweden and Aitolampi graphite mine in Finland - Invests further GBP200,000 in Vardar Minerals Ltd. Increases stake to 51% from 49%. Also notes talks with Vardar's management for final plan for drilling, including at Wolf Mountain, which has lead and zinc targets. "Drilling could start in the next 1-2 months and Beowulf would provide the funding," Beowulf adds. ---------- Mila Resources PLC - London-based gold company focused on Australia - Second drill hole at Kathleen Valley, Australia hosts sulphides akin to adjacent Bellevue gold discoveries. "Drilling continues to define a wide coherent zone of mineralisation which is open at depth and maintains a very-linear consistent zone," Mila says. ---------- 88 Energy Ltd - Australia-based oil explorer in US state of Alaska - Says mobilisation of Arctic Fox rig to Merlin-2 appraisal well drilling location is now complete. "Pre-spud operations are continuing and now entering the final phase. The Merlin-2 spud date is scheduled for the week commencing 7 March 2022," 88 adds. ---------- Cloudbreak Discovery PLC - London-based natural resource project generator - Raises GBP1.5 million in share placing, to advance various project generation initiatives and for working-capital purposes. Cloudbreak places 20 million shares at 7.50p each, representing a 20% discount to Monday's closing price of 10.22p. ---------- By Eric Cunha; ericcunha@alliancenews.com Copyright 2022 Alliance News Limited. All Rights Reserved. (Alliance News) - Vivo Energy PLC on Wednesday posted strong financial results for 2021 as volumes recovered to close to pre-pandemic levels on the back of rapid expansion of its retail footprint. London-based Vivo sells fuels and lubricants under Shell PLC and Engen brands in 23 African countries. Pretax earnings leapt by 45% to USD253 million in 2021 from USD175 million in 2020. Revenue was up 22% to USD8.46 billion from USD6.92 billion as the group expanded its retail network by a net total of 133 retail sites. Vivo declared a final dividend of 4.0 US cents, bringing the total payout to 5.7 cents. In 2020, it returned 3.8 cents to shareholders. Driven by strong operational performance, adjusted earnings before interest, taxes, depreciation and amortisation grew by 24% to USD447 million from USD360 million. It was 3.7% ahead of USD431 million in 2019. Volumes increased by 7.3% to 10.3 million litres from 9.6 million litres, moving within a touching distance of 2019 levels, underpinning the recovery that remains firmly on track. In 2019, volumes stood at 10.4 million litres. "We delivered a strong performance in 2021, demonstrating the robustness of our business model, and continued to deliver against our growth strategy. We were pleased with the recovery in volumes to close to pre-pandemic levels," said Chief Executive Christian Chammas, who is stepping down from the role after ten years since 2012. Stanislas Mittelman is replacing Chammas. "This was predominantly driven by our retail segment, which is now above 2019 levels, as mobility improved and we continued to expand the network, opening a net total of 133 new sites during the year," Chammas said. In November, Vivo accepted a USD2.3 billion takeover offer from energy and commodity trading company Vitol Group, its largest shareholder. This transaction is expected to be completed in third quarter. Vivo shareholders have already approved the deal, with the South African Reserve Bank giving its thumbs-up. Shares in Vivo remained untraded at ZAR27.79 on Wednesday morning in Johannesburg. The stock was up 0.2% to 136 pence in London. By Artwell Dlamini; artwelldlamini@alliancenews.com Copyright 2022 Alliance News Limited. All Rights Reserved. 2 March 2022 Victoria Oil & Gas Plc ("VOG" or the "Company") Loan Note Issue Victoria Oil & Gas Plc, whose wholly owned subsidiary, Gaz du Cameroun S.A. ("GDC"), is the onshore gas producer and distributor with operations located in the port city of Douala, Cameroon, is pleased to announce that it has entered into a definitive agreement with Hadron Master Fund ("Hadron") to raise gross proceeds of US$1.15 million through the issue of an unsecured loan note (the "Loan Note"). The proceeds from the issue of the Loan Note, which are to be fully received by 4 April 2022, will be utilised for general working capital purposes at the VOG level. The key terms of the Loan Note are set out below: The repayment date is 28 February 2023; and on the repayment date VOG shall repay 110% of the aggregate Loan Note principal amount without further interest. Pursuant to the terms of the Loan Note, the Company has granted Hadron warrants over an aggregate value of US$1.15 million at the Subscription Price in ordinary shares of 0.005 in the Company's share capital ("Ordinary Shares") (the "Warrants"). The Warrants can be subscribed for at any time prior to the third anniversary of the Loan Note. The Subscription Price of each Warrant is the lower of (i) 5.05 pence per Ordinary Share, representing a premium of 20% to the 5-day volume weighted average trading price of an Ordinary Share for the 5 Business days immediately prior to the date of the Loan Note or (ii) a 20% premium to the placing price of equity in the 6 months following the issue of the Loan Note. The /US$ exchange rate to be used in the issuance of the Warrants is fixed at 1.3412 and therefore there are expected to be 16,979,032 Warrants issued, subject to any adjustment to the Subscription Price as a result of (ii) above. As Hadron's current interest is more than 10 per cent. of the issued ordinary share capital of the Company, and is therefore a substantial shareholder, the issue of the Loan Note is deemed a related party transaction for the purposes of Rule 13 of the AIM Rules for Companies ("AIM Rules"). For the purposes of the AIM Rules, the directors of the Company, having consulted with the Company's Nominated Adviser, Strand Hanson Limited, consider that the terms of the transaction are fair and reasonable so far as its shareholders are concerned. Roy Kelly, Chief Executive Officer, commented: "We are very pleased to yet again have the continued support of one of our major shareholders, and moreover such a knowledgeable one. This funding helps strengthen our balance sheet and improve the working capital of the parent company." The information contained within this announcement is deemed to constitute inside information pursuant to the EU (Withdrawal) Act and amended pursuant to Market Abuse (Amended) (EU Exit) Regulations 2019. Upon the publication of this announcement, this inside information is now considered to be in the public domain. For further information, please visit www.victoriaoilandgas.com or contact: Victoria Oil & Gas Plc Roy Kelly/Rob Collins Tel: +44 (0) 20 7921 8820 Strand Hanson Limited (NOMAD) Rory Murphy/James Dance Tel: +44 (0) 20 7409 3494 Shore Capital Stockbrokers Limited (Broker) Mark Percy / Toby Gibbs (corporate advisory) Tel: +44 (0) 207 408 4090 Weather Alert ...The Flood Warning continues for the following rivers in Louisiana... Mississippi River At Red River Landing affecting West Feliciana, East Baton Rouge and Pointe Coupee Parishes. For the Lower Mississippi River...including Red River Landing, Baton Rouge, Donaldsonville, Reserve, New Orleans...Minor flooding is forecast. PRECAUTIONARY/PREPAREDNESS ACTIONS... Motorists should not attempt to drive around barricades or drive cars through flooded areas. Caution is urged when walking near riverbanks. Additional information is available at www.weather.gov/lix. Click on the Rivers and Lakes menu for forecasts and observations. The next statement will be issued when updates are needed. && ...FLOOD WARNING NOW IN EFFECT UNTIL EARLY SATURDAY MORNING... * WHAT...Minor flooding is occurring and minor flooding is forecast. * WHERE...Mississippi River At Red River Landing. * WHEN...Until early Saturday morning. * IMPACTS...At 51.0 feet, All river islands along the reach from Red River Landing to Baton Rouge will be inundated. Recreational camps and river bottom farm land will be under water. * ADDITIONAL DETAILS... - At 11:00 AM CDT Wednesday the stage was 49.6 feet. - Recent Activity...The maximum river stage in the 24 hours ending at 11:00 AM CDT Wednesday was 49.7 feet. - Forecast...The river is expected to fall below flood stage Friday evening and continue falling to 41.5 feet Wednesday, June 01. - Flood stage is 48.0 feet. - Flood History...This crest compares to a previous crest of 48.8 feet on 04/22/2014. - http://www.weather.gov/safety/flood && Jefferson, GA (30549) Today Partly cloudy. A stray shower or thunderstorm is possible. Low 59F. Winds light and variable.. Tonight Partly cloudy. A stray shower or thunderstorm is possible. Low 59F. Winds light and variable. TAKEO, Cambodia, March 2 (Xinhua) -- Cambodia on Wednesday inaugurated the China-funded expanded National Road No. 3 which links the capital Phnom Penh and the southwestern coastal province of Kampot. The 134.8-km expanded road starting from Chom Chao roundabout in Phnom Penh's western suburb runs through Kandal, Kampong Speu and Takeo provinces. Cambodian Prime Minister Samdech Techo Hun Sen and Chinese Ambassador to Cambodia Wang Wentian both addressed the inauguration ceremony, which was attended by nearly 1,000 people. Hun Sen said the road is crucial to boosting economic and tourism development and that Kampot is the only province that produces salt for the kingdom. "This is another testament to the fruitful cooperation between Cambodia and China under the frameworks of the comprehensive strategic partnership, the ironclad friendship, and the community with a shared future between the two countries," he added. "I hope that our people will benefit from this road," he said. The road was built by the China Road and Bridge Corporation (CRBC) at a cost of about 215 million U.S. dollars, and the project, which began in October 2018, was funded by the Chinese government. Hun Sen praised the Chinese contractor for completing the project earlier than scheduled and thanked it for building the road in full compliance with technical standards. "Through Chinese Ambassador to Cambodia Wang Wentian, I'd like to send my profound gratitude to the government and people of China for always financing key road and bridge projects in Cambodia, which are the key elements for socio-economic development," he said. Wang said National Road No. 3 is a key transportation artery for Cambodia, and expressed the belief that it will play a crucial role in boosting economy and tourism as well as improving the livelihoods of people along the route. Its opening to traffic truly reflects the strong momentum and fruitful results of the China-Cambodia pragmatic cooperation, he said. Although the COVID-19 pandemic has affected the flows of people and goods, some major projects of bilateral cooperation have withstood the pressure from the pandemic and have been successfully completed on time and with high quality, he added. "This not only reflects the resilience of the China-Cambodia mutually beneficial cooperation, but also shows strong vitality of the China- Cambodia community with a shared future," Wang said. Local residents expressed their satisfaction with the national road. "Undoubtedly, this road will facilitate travel, transport of agricultural produce and other goods, and attract more tourists and investors to this coastal province," Thun Sokleng, a 43-year-old farmer in Kampong Speu province, told Xinhua. "This road will reduce travel time and logistical costs, and that's good for doing businesses. I believe that this road will contribute to improving living conditions of the people in the areas along it," she said. Another Kampong Speu resident, Tes Sarin, 68, said he is grateful to China for having provided a lot of assistance to Cambodia for the development in all sectors, especially in the infrastructure, with many roads and bridges built. "We hope more Chinese tourists will come to Cambodia after COVID-19 is over," he added. Bashkim Osmani, the alleged boss of the mafia organisation that was the target of a huge international police operation two weeks ago, is expected to appear in a Palma court on Wednesday. As part of the operation, Osmani was arrested in Croatia. His extradition was requested and granted. National Police officers were sent to Croatia to accompany him back to Mallorca, which was the main focus for the police operation. Osmani has a mansion in Camp de Mar and various business interests on the island. Operation Casino was directed at a powerful mafia, based in Mallorca, which is said to have laundered millions of euros over two decades - the proceeds from drugs trafficking and prostitution. The organisation came under investigation in 2018, its head figure said to be Osmani, a Kosovar Albanian who came to Mallorca in 1999. This is a carousel. Use Next and Previous buttons to navigate MANISTEE Manistee Area Public Schools band students have been hard at work in 2022, and with a number of events on the horizon, show no signs of slowing down. This week's festival in Shelby on Thursday and Friday kicks off a busy March for Manistee band students. Andrea Mack, MAPS director of bands, said the bus driver shortage has made arranging transportation to all the events difficult this year. "We're all going to Shelby, and we were able to make it work because the busing worked out knock on wood. That's really a challenge," she said. "It's all about busing. ... They just don't have any extra bus drivers. ... Now that we're ready to kind of go do more things, it's just a matter of when things are we can't control that. I can only do what I can do." MAPS held a band concert on Feb. 21 which served as a bit of a tune-up this week's band festival. "It went well," Mack said. "Our fifth graders played for the first time." Manistee will not have to worry about busing for the MSBOA District 1 High School All-Star Band on March 15, as the district is hosting the event. "The all-star band is basically nominated by the directors, and they're all coming here," Mack said. MHS band students will head to the Great Lakes Concert Band Festival at Eastern Michigan University on March 17 and 18. In addition to performing, the students will participate in clinics, watch other schools perform and have fun pit stops at the Henry Ford Museum and Craig's Cruisers along the way. "I'm excited about that," Mack said. "I'm very thankful that the band boosters and the school can help make it happen." To start the year, Manistee students attended the Michigan School Band and Orchestra Association District 1 Middle Schools Honor Band on Jan. 11 in Shelby. Later in January, Jack O'Donnell, Sarah Huber and Emily Sullivan went to the MSBOA Michigan Music Conference in Grand Rapids, which culminated in a performance with the All-State Band at the DeVos Performance Hall on Jan. 29. Mack said she was excited for her three All-State high schoolers. "They did an audition in October. Through the whole state, everybody records," she said. "There were like 1,700 kids that auditioned, and they took 375 and made the All-State band, so it's a huge deal." The following week, Manistee High School students headed to Cadillac for a District 1 Solo and Ensemble Festival on Feb. 5. In a solo and ensemble festival, each student or group of students is evaluated by one judge and rated on a scale of one to five, with one being the highest rating possible. Manistee had a strong showing at the event. "I'm really proud of them," Mack said. "There were 24 events and we had 23 ones and one two." Mack said she was impressed with Annika Haag, who received a top score for her flute solo despite being a relative newcomer to the instrument. "I'm really proud of her because she just started playing the flute in August. She and her sister moved from another school and she played violin before," Mack said. "Since we don't have orchestra, she picked up the flute and she got a one. For her to do that was pretty amazing." Mankato, MN (56001) Today Partly cloudy this evening, then becoming cloudy after midnight. Slight chance of a rain shower. Low 46F. Winds SE at 5 to 10 mph.. Tonight Partly cloudy this evening, then becoming cloudy after midnight. Slight chance of a rain shower. Low 46F. Winds SE at 5 to 10 mph. A worker installs the windshield produced by glass manufacturer Fuyao to a car at a car shop in Dayton, Ohio, the United States, July 26, 2019. (Xinhua/Zhang Fengguo) "The key message from the report was that the manufacturing sector continues to see solid demand, but activity remains constrained by an inadequate amount of supply," economists said. WASHINGTON, March 1 (Xinhua) -- The U.S. manufacturing sector saw growth in February despite continued supply chain bottlenecks, the Institute for Supply Management (ISM) reported Tuesday. The Purchasing Managers' Index (PMI) stood at 58.6 percent, up 1 percentage point from the January reading. Any reading above 50 percent indicates the manufacturing sector is generally expanding. Tim Quinlan and Shannon Seery, economists at Wells Fargo Securities, wrote in an analysis that the ISM manufacturing index rose in February amid a rise in new orders and production, but the backlog of orders sub-index also rose by the most since early 2011. The New Orders Index registered 61.7 percent, up 3.8 percentage points compared to the January reading, according to the ISM report. The Production Index registered 58.5 percent, up 0.7 percentage point compared to the January reading. The Backlog of Orders Index, meanwhile, registered 65 percent, 8.6 percentage points higher than the January reading, the report showed. "The key message from the report was that the manufacturing sector continues to see solid demand, but activity remains constrained by an inadequate amount of supply," Quinlan and Seery said. "The COVID-19 omicron variant remained an impact in February; however, there were signs of relief, with recovery expected in March," said Timothy Fiore, chair of the ISM's manufacturing business survey committee. A higher-than-normal quits rate and early retirements continued, Fiore added. The ISM report showed that the Employment Index registered 52.9 percent, 1.6 percentage points lower than the January reading. LOS ANGELES No. 1 University of Hawaii punched its ticket to the semifinal round of the NCAA tournament with a sweep over North Greenville in the NCAA quarterfinal round Tuesday night. The Rainbow Warriors won 25-15, 25-17, and 25-16 at host site Pauley Pavilion and will play the No. 2 se What does the ?Z? that appears on the tanks and trucks of the Russian army mean? What does the ?Z? that appears on the tanks and trucks of the Russian army mean? Many images are being broadcast of Russian army vehicles heading towards Ukraine and a particular symbol which can be seen on many of the tanks has drawn attention. A letter 'Z' is displayed on tanks, trucks and other army vehicles, which at times appears framed within rectangles and even triangles. One of the hypotheses is that they serve to avoid 'friendly fire' between other Russian combat vehicles, as the Russian and Ukrainian tanks are of the same model. It is also speculated that they may be the places where the units are destined. "Often these symbols will be location-based - they will communicate where the unit is going," Michael Clarke, former director of defence of the think tank RUSI, told Sky. "They are probably signals that tell which units are heading to the northeast or northwest of a district, for example." It should be remembered that these secret symbols are very typical in military conflicts. Back in th day, the United States used a chevron to indicate the different battalions during the Iraq invasion in 2003. Ruslan Leviev from the Conflict Intelligence Team explained on his Twitter account that the theory that has gained the most strength for him is that the tanks of both sides are very similar, since they both have the same origin. Therefore, this Z would be of great help to planes when it comes to identifying allies and enemies in a possible bombardment. "Some believe this is a signal to their own aircraft, so theirs don't get bombed, but we see a lot of vehicle movement every day and this 'Z' is very rare," he explained. Belarus and Russia have strong ties. On Monday, the Russian and Ukrainian delegations met for talks at the Ukrainian - Belarussian border. Belarus supported Russia at the beginning of the invasion as a Russian base. Geolocation apps show how some missiles bombarding Ukraine came from the Belarussian border. Experts also believe Belarus could serve as Russia's new base for nuclear weapons. However, there's always an explanation. Putin annexed Belarus to his dream of reviving the Soviet Union. Technically, Putin considers the independence of the Belarussians, but there's more context to follow. What's the link between Russia and Belarus? Since 1994, Alexander Lukashenko rules the Belarussian nation. Lukashenko is an autocratic figure liked by Putin. In 2020, Putin saved Lukashenko's regime. The younger Belarussian generation rebelled against the autocrat claiming Lukashenko rigged the elections. The exit polls and election monitors believed Sviatlana Tsikhanouskaya, a former English teacher and the wife of a jailed popular candidate, won the election. Hundreds of thousands protested on the streets. Meanwhile, Putin bailed out the Belarussian economy. The relationship between Lukashenko and Putin is an anti-democratic coalition supported by Russia. Foreign policy experts know there's a "soft annexation" of Belarus into Russia. Some Russian oligarchs bought key pieces of the Belarussian economy after the collapse of the Soviet Union. Lukashenko's position favors the Kremlin's desires. The Belarussian regime is alive because of Putin, and they are forced to succumb to Russia's orders. Belarussian troops are loyal to Lukashenko. Reports say they will join Russian forces in the invasion. The Belarusian border lies only around 140 road miles to Kyiv. In recent days, the European Union and the United Statessanctioned Russia's economy and oligarchs after Putin's invasion. However, some of those sanctions targeted Belarus and Belarussian power figures. Weather Alert ...FLOOD WATCH REMAINS IN EFFECT THROUGH THURSDAY AFTERNOON... * WHAT...Flooding caused by excessive rainfall continues to be possible. * WHERE...Portions of Arkansas and Oklahoma, including the following counties, in Arkansas, Benton, Carroll, Crawford, Franklin, Madison, Sebastian and Washington AR. In Oklahoma, Adair, Cherokee, Choctaw, Craig, Creek, Delaware, Haskell, Latimer, Le Flore, Mayes, McIntosh, Muskogee, Nowata, Okfuskee, Okmulgee, Osage, Ottawa, Pawnee, Pittsburg, Pushmataha, Rogers, Sequoyah, Tulsa, Wagoner and Washington OK. * WHEN...Through Thursday afternoon. * IMPACTS...Main-stem river flooding is expected in several locations. Extensive low land flooding will be likely in some areas, especially where the heavier rain has already occurred. Many low-water crossings will likely become flooded. Area creeks and streams are already running high and will likely flood with more heavy rain. * ADDITIONAL DETAILS... - Additional rounds of thunderstorms with very heavy rain are expected this evening through the overnight hours. Widespread 2 to 3 inches of rain is expected with locally higher amounts of 5 to 6 inches. The heavier rain will begin to shift east of far southeast Oklahoma and northwest Arkansas Thursday afternoon. - http://www.weather.gov/safety/flood PRECAUTIONARY/PREPAREDNESS ACTIONS... You should monitor the latest forecast and be alert for possible Flood Warnings. Those living in areas prone to flooding should be prepared to take action quickly should flooding develop. Be especially cautious while driving at night. Do not drive through water of unknown depth. && BEIJING, March 2 (Xinhua) -- Chinese President Xi Jinping has urged armed police forces to always serve as the faithful guardian of the Communist Party of China (CPC) and the people. Xi, also general secretary of the CPC Central Committee and chairman of the Central Military Commission, made the remarks in the reply to a letter from a People's Armed Police Force unit in Shanghai. Estonian Prime Minister Kaja Kallas (C), Secretary General of the North Atlantic Treaty Organization (NATO) Jens Stoltenberg (R) and British Prime Minister Boris Johnson attend a joint press conference at the Tapa Army Base in northern Estonia, March 1, 2022. Visiting Secretary General of the North Atlantic Treaty Organization (NATO) Jens Stoltenberg on Tuesday stressed diplomatic efforts to solve the ongoing Ukraine crisis. Stoltenberg made the remarks at a joint press conference with Estonian Prime Minister Kaja Kallas and visiting British Prime Minister Boris Johnson at the Tapa Army Base in northern Estonia. (Estonian government/Handout via Xinhua) TALLINN, March 1 (Xinhua) -- Visiting Secretary General of the North Atlantic Treaty Organization (NATO) Jens Stoltenberg on Tuesday stressed diplomatic efforts to solve the ongoing Ukraine crisis. Stoltenberg made the remarks at a joint press conference with Estonian Prime Minister Kaja Kallas and visiting British Prime Minister Boris Johnson at the Tapa Army Base in northern Estonia. He called for an immediate stop of the war in Ukraine, pullout of Russian forces and the engaging of diplomatic efforts. "Over the last weeks, in response to Russia's attacks on Ukraine, we have increased our defensive presence in the air, on land, and at sea," he noted. There are "over 100 jets at high alert operating from 30 different locations and over 120 ships from the Baltic Sea to the Mediterranean," Stoltenberg said, adding that Britain, the United States and other allies are deploying thousands more troops to the eastern part of the alliance. "For the first time in our history, we are deploying the NATO response force," said the NATO chief, who termed NATO as a defensive alliance that does not seek conflict with Russia. The second round of peace talks between Russia and Ukraine could take place on Wednesday, the TASS news agency reported Tuesday citing sources. The first round of the negotiations, which lasted about five hours, concluded on Monday in Belarus' Gomel region, with no clear breakthrough. For his part, Johnson said that he wanted to be "crystal clear" that "we will not fight Russian forces in Ukraine" and "our reinforcements, like the reinforcements here in Tapa, are firmly within the borders of NATO members." On the number of reinforced troops, the British prime minister said "we will always keep things under review." He also termed the "no-fly zone" on Russian aircraft over Ukraine as a very big step that "simply is not on the agenda of any NATO country." More than 900 members of the Royal Welsh infantry regiment of the British Army and nearly 200 Danish troops together with their vehicles and equipment will be joining NATO Battlegroup Estonia at Tapa Army Base, the Estonian Public Broadcasting reported on Tuesday. Estonian President Alar Karis met with Stoltenberg at Tallinn airport earlier on the day. Stoltenberg also made a trip to Poland with a visit to Lask airbase on Tuesday. URUMQI, March 2 (Xinhua) -- Northwest China's Xinjiang Uygur Autonomous Region has set up a special fund of 100 million yuan (about 15.8 million U.S. dollars) for the development of high-tech enterprises this year. The move aims to further cultivate and strengthen high-tech enterprises in Xinjiang, as well as their innovation capacity, according to the regional finance department. The special fund will award high-tech enterprises and contribute to their research and development (R&D) expenses, said Zhu Jie, deputy director of the regional department, adding the fund will help stimulate the innovation drive of enterprises and promote the high-quality development of Xinjiang. There are 58 listed companies on the main boards in Xinjiang, of which 13, or 22.4 percent, are high-tech enterprises. "Compared with other provinces and municipalities in China, Xinjiang has fewer high-tech enterprises, less investment in research, fewer R&D personnel, and not enough supporting and incentive policies," said Zhu. Xinjiang Huier Agriculture Group Co., Ltd. is among the beneficiaries of the special fund. Established in 2005, the company provides smart agricultural services for about 66,700 hectares of farmland across Xinjiang. BEIJING, March 2 (Xinhua) -- Personal data breach has become a source of crimes involving telecom and internet fraud in China, the Supreme People's Procuratorate (SPP) said Wednesday. Procuratorates across the country prosecuted over 9,800 people for breaching personal data in 2021, a 64-percent increase from 2020, according to data released by the top procuratorate. Procuratorates last year prosecuted over 500 people working in industries such as telecom, banking, insurance and real estate, who were found to have been involved in personal data breaches, the SPP said. About 40,000 people involved in telecom and internet fraud cases were also prosecuted in 2021, the SPP added, noting that the fraudulent activities were committed mainly under the pretense of personal finance and investment, dating and online shopping. If your love for coffee is synonymous with ours, youll agree with one thing: Facing mornings without the hit of cuppa caffeine feels like a doctor going to his clinic without his stethoscope. But wed also accept that a coffee alternative wont be such a bad idea. The fifth cup of this fuel can set you off on a high-octane spinout. Caffeine surges blood pressure and adrenaline but constricts blood vessels, causing overstimulation. To avoid all kinds of shaky sensations, switch to these healthier beverages thatll keep you from zoning out for the most part of the day. 1. Matcha Tea Matcha, a popular type of green tea youve already heard enough about, is a richer source of antioxidants. Its regular consumption can assist your body in reducing the risk of high blood pressure, type 2 diabetes and body fat. Remember that with matcha tea, youre consuming the whole leaf so to reduce caffeine intake, you need to be careful about the quantity of the powder you add to your water. Depending on how its prepared, it may have more or less caffeine than coffee. 2. Golden Milk Golden milk is caffeine-free. Along with turmeric, you can add other refreshing spices such as black pepper, cinnamon, cardamom and ginger to your milk. Turmeric has powerful anti-inflammatory properties due to curcumin and black pepper helps your bodys ability to absorb curcumin. Its a tasty, healthy and invigorating drink that increase alertness. 3. Chicory Coffee Much like coffee beans, chicory roots are roasted, ground and brewed before being used as a hot beverage. Fibre-rich chicory coffee is good for digestion and for a healthy gut. Its taste is synonymous with coffee but you get all those benefits without caffeine. You can also consume the powder in the form of a supplement to boost immunity. 4. Rooibos Tea Unlike coffee and tea, South African red tea aka rooibos tea is low in tannin antioxidants which can interfere with iron absorption. Red tea is packed with enough antioxidants to help protect you against heart disease and reduce the risk of cancer. Rooibos has a slightly sweet, fruity flavour, which we think youd like early in the morning. 5. Kombucha Made by fermenting black tea with bacteria, yeast and sugar, Kombucha is a rich source of probiotics, antioxidants and acetic acid. It can also help boost your immune system, improve cholesterol and blood glucose levels in people with diabetes. 6. Apple Cider Vinegar Apple cider vinegar is a result of fermenting crushed apples using yeast and bacteria. It contains acetic acid, which may help control blood sugar levels. ACV is a beverage you cannot consume without diluting first. Doing so can burn your mouth and throat. Add honey or any other sweetener you prefer because just ACV and water will give you a bit of a kick. 7. Lemon Water If you dont want to complicate your kitchen trips early in the morning, just switch to lemon water. Start your day with a dose of vitamin C. Its caffeine-free and all set to give your immune system a boost, protect your skin from sun damage and assist your body in creating collagen. Feel free to infuse the water with other fruits and veggies like mint, cucumber, basil, watermelon etc. Bollywood is an industry that never fails to entertain us, whether through movies or through real-life incidents between celebrities. Despite being an industry that is relatively large in terms of the high number of people it employs, it still is a place where stars are connected in more ways than one realises. By this, we mean, that an actress that would work with Shah Rukh Khan may also have worked with other stars like Salman Khan, Aamir Khan, Ranveer Singh, and so on. Well, as you know, often there are instances of actors working together and eventually dating each other in real life as well. This was the case with Bollywood stars Ranbir Kapoor and Deepika Padukone, who decided to date each other during the filming of their 2008 film Bachna Ae Haseeno. Prime Video It was reported that the actors hit it off for quite some time and even worked in a wonderful film like Imtiaz Ali's Tamasha. Netflix However, not all was cool as the two eventually broke up with Ranbir going on to date Katrina Kaif and then Alia Bhatt, who he is with presently, and Deepika moving on with Ranveer Singh, who she is now married to. Now, while the two may have moved on completely in their lives, it was once reported that Ranbir had apparently been quite a possessive boyfriend during their relationship. According to reports, it was said that the actor even once ignored a big Bollywood superstar because of 'jealousy'. The actor was actually Bollywood Khiladi Akshay Kumar. Twitter According to reports, Akshay had been shooting with Deepika for the 2009 film Chandni Chowk To China, and Ranbir wasn't a big fan of the idea. As per reports, Ranbir wasn't very thrilled at the idea of Akshay shooting with Deepika in Bangkok and even chose to ignore Akshay when he bumped into him later. Prime Video "He (Ranbir) was also a bit jealous about Deepika shooting Chandni Chowk to China with Akshay Kumar in Bangkok and had actually ignored Akshay when he bumped into him later," as per AajTak and Khaleej Times reports. Not just that, it was also reported that Ranbir had apparently even clashed with Deepika's ex-boyfriend Nihar Pandya in what was reported to be a 'fistfight'. Well, of course, we have no official confirmations about these instances from the camps of any of the actors, and we'd just consider it a rumour mill. But what we know for sure is that both Ranbir and Deepika have moved on from each other and are more than happy with their current partners. Ranbir will next be seen in the upcoming film Brahmastra whereas, Deepika will be seen alongside Shah Rukh and John Abraham in the upcoming Pathan film. Source: Bollywood Life Sara Ali Khan is among the few celebrities in India who proudly celebrates all festivals, visits temples and dargah and respects all religions equally and this might be because she grew up in a secular family. Instagram/Sara Ali Khan Although she was raised a Muslim, she doesnt restrict herself to following one religion and sets a great example of secularism. However, sometimes, it raises a storm, like whenever she posts a picture on social media paying her respect to any religion other than Islam. Instagram/Sara Ali Khan Something similar happened recently on the occasion of Mahashivratri as she shared a throwback picture from when she visited the Omkareshwar Temple Jyotirlinga in Madhya Pradesh. She captioned the photo, Happy Mahashivtratri Jai Bholenath. Some of her followers saw this as an opportunity to troll the actress on the basis of her religion and questioned her on her beliefs as a Muslim. The comment section turned into a Hindu-Muslim war with some accusing her of being a bad Muslim, while others defended her for being respectful of all religions. Instagram/Sara Ali Khan However, there were some who defended her and leave her alone. Requesting every muslim please don't abuse her his father is muslim her mother is Hindu she's practising both religion you just Disrespecting our own religion by abusing her stop this nonsense. Another wrote, Literally prayed for you, because you are settling a great example of secularism [sic.]. A user commented, Why it can't be her choice.. let her pray and hail whomever she want... she don't need ur certificate.. Instagram/Sara Ali Khan This is not the first time that Sara has been trolled and called a bad Muslim' for visiting temples and gurudwaras or celebrating festivals of other religions. However, it seems like she doesnt care what some people out there say about it. Instagram/Sara Ali Khan It is just the many perils of being a celebrity. You cannot make everyone happy, especially in India when religion is considered. For fans who spend their days stalking their favourite celebs on social media for motivation, Bollywood transformations are a source of inspiration and surprise. Most recently, Boney Kapoor's daughter and Arjun Kapoor's sister, Anshula Kapoor, stunned everyone with her fitness transformation. Taking to Instagram, she posted a picture of herself in which her weight loss is very evident. In the comments section, social media users praised her for dramatic weight loss. However, she's not the only star kid who has inspired fans and followers with her fitness journey. Before Anshula, known names like Sara Ali Khan, Fardeen Khan among others too made headlines for their weight-loss transformations. Below, let's take a look at the list of celebrity kids who inspired fans with their fat-to-fit journey: Arjun Kapoor Before making his Bollywood debut with Ishaqzaade, Arjun struggled with his weight issues and underwent a dramatic fitness transformation. He opted for a healthy lifestyle and is now committed to his gym routine. Talking to Bombay Times about his weight issues, he said, "Not many know, but I have been battling obesity for the longest time. I was just not a fat kid, it was a health issue. It hasnt been easy. My underlying health condition has always made it a struggle for me to constantly stay a certain size". Sara Ali Khan Ahead of her entry into films, Saif Ali Khan and Amrita Singh's darling daughter, Sara Ali Khan, weighed around 96 kilos. Yes, you read that right! The actress said on Koffee With Karan that she used to suffer from a hormonal condition, or PCOD, which made it tough for her to lose weight. However, she shed all the additional pounds and is super fit now. Sonakshi Sinha Instagram Prior to her Bollywood debut, Sonakshi admitted in an interview that she had shed 30 kilos to share the screen with Salman Khan in Dabangg. The actress even confessed that she would not have lost weight if it weren't for Salman. Sonam Kapoor Instagram Bollywood's fashionista reportedly shed around 35 kilos before starring opposite Ranbir Kapoor in Sanjay Leela Bhansali's Saawariya. She, too, was said to have PCOD and was on the verge of becoming diabetic. However, with her sheer dedication, the actress decided to get fit and inspired fans with her journey. Fardeen Khan Instagram When Fardeen was active in films, he used to be fit and fabulous always. However, during his long break from Bollywood, the actor gained weight and his pictures even went viral back then. However, he has now lost the extra kilos and is looking handsome like before. Well, be ready to see him on the big screen once again. Attention fans of the Wizarding World! With the new Fantastic Beasts: Secrets Of Dumbledore film nearing its much anticipated April release, Warner Bros has released what is the latest official trailer for the film. And boy! It is exciting AF! Warner Bros. The movie is the third instalment in the Fantastic Beasts series, which is the spin-off of Harry Potter. Led by Magical Beasts-lover Newt Scamander, the new trailer looks to unravel some elements of the relationship between original Harry Potter characters Albus Dumbledore and Gelert Grindelwald. Well, here's a few interesting things we found out from the trailer: 1. A Dumbledore Vs Grindelwald Fight Warner Bros It was bound to happen! The iconic fight between friends, lovers and the greatest wizards Dumbledore and Grindelwald will happen in this movie, and we can see a few scenes probably warming up to that. It is known that the two wizards, played by Jude Law and Mads Mikkelson have not been able to engage in a direct conflict due to a magical blood pact, however, this will change in the new film. 2. Hogwarts Looks To Be More Central To The Plot Warner Bros In the trailer, there are a lot of shots of the Hogwarts castle that became a dream place for every Harry Potter enthusiast because of its importance in the Harry Potter books and the movies. Well, Dumbledore can be seen leading Newt and others to the iconic Room Of Requirement in the trailer. It sure looks like whatever happens in the movie, Hogwarts will be right at the centre of everything. 3. A Muggle Has A Crucial Part To Play In The Wizarding World's Affairs Warner Bros. The Muggle character of Jacob Kowalski seems to be integral to the whole Fantastic Beasts universe with Newt Scamander's bestie even getting his own wand in the film. Crazy, right? This is something that never happened in the earlier Harry Potter movies with there being a clear distinction between Wizards and Muggles. However, things are changing with this film, and it sure looks like Kowalski will have an important say in the future of the franchise. 4. Return Of Fawkes Warner Bros. Remember the magical bird that was Fawkes, the Phoenix from the OG Harry Potter movies? Yes, Dumbledore always had the Phoenix in his office at Hogwarts and the bird even fought off a Basilisk in the Chamber of Secrets to help Harry defeat Voldemort. Well, looks like Fawkes had an important say in Dumbledore's fight against Grindelwald too. And with the whole movie centred around Newt's magical beasts, Fawkes is too a magnificent creature whose powers would be crucial in helping Newt, Dumbledore, and others stand a chance against Grindelwald. Well, are you excited about the film? Let us know in the comments sections! Tom Cruise is among the biggest Hollywood stars and his female fans are crazy about him. However, he also had his share of controversies and bad publicity. The actor's ex-manager recently disclosed unexpected revelations regarding his terrible anger. She recounted an instance in which Cruise threw a photo album at his now-former manager, which hit her hard on the face. Years ago, Tom Cruise's name got embroiled in another controversy which reportedly resulted in his split with Nicole Kidman. Well, did you know that the Knight And Day actor once sued a gay p*rn celebrity who claimed to have had a love affair with the Hollywood heartthrob? Yes, you read that right! Cruise filed a $100 million defamation claim against p*rn actor Chad Slater, who goes by the stage name Kyle Bradford, in 2006, according to ABC News. The decision was made after Slater purportedly claimed that he had a love affair with the actor, which caused his marriage with Nicole Kidman to end. Filed by the Top Gun star, the lawsuit against the p*rn star read, "While Cruise thoroughly respects others rights to follow their own sexual preference, he is not a homosexual and had no relationship of any kind with Kyle Bradford and does not even know him". Cruise won the legal battle, however, despite filing a $100 million lawsuit, he only got $10 million. The actor apparently donated the money he received from the lawsuit to a charity, according to reports. Before this, the actor and Nicole Kidman had previously sued a British tabloid for referring to their marriage as a "sham". For the unversed, both Cruise and Kidman have now moved on in their lives. In 2006, the actor got hitched to Katie Holmes after parting ways with Kidman after 11 years of marriage. However, the duo ended their marriage in 2012. On the professional front, Cruise is currently working on Mission Impossible 7, which is slated to release in 2023. While the eighth part is expected to hit the theatres in 2024. It's true! The world really doesn't make much sense right now. If it wasn't for the Covid-19 pandemic, the forest fires of Australia, or global warming, it's the war now! Reuters Russian President Vladimir Putin's decision to invade Ukraine has been catastrophic for the country, with many citizens, soldiers losing their lives, and many escaping to other countries in search of safety. Well, as things turn out, one of the many people running from the country is a Hollywood superstar. The actor has worked in many A-list Hollywood films through the years, and guess what, he's a two-time Oscar winner as well. It's Hollywood biggie Sean Penn, who has done movies like Mystic River, I Am Sam, Carlito's Way, The Gunman, and Milk. Reuters So, how did the actor get stuck in Ukraine at the time when the war actually broke out? Sean is one actor who is renowned for carrying out several international humanitarian and anti-war efforts over the years and even founded the non-profit disaster relief organization CORE in response to the 2010 earthquakes in Haiti. The actor, who has been shooting for a documentary in the country since November 2021, was in Ukraine recently to take photos of what would be the frontlines in the Donetsk region. According to reports, the photos from his upcoming documentary produced by VICE Studios show him visiting the Ukrainian Armed Forces. It is reported that Penn had even condemned Putin's decision to invade Ukraine by calling it "a brutal mistake of lives taken and hearts are broken" in a statement made to USA TODAY. "If he (Putin) doesn't relent, I believe Mr Putin will have made a most horrible mistake for all of humankind. (Ukrainian President Volodymyr Zelenskyy and the Ukrainian people) have risen as historic symbols of courage and principle. Ukraine is the tip of the spear for the democratic embrace of dreams. If we allow it to fight alone, our soul as America is lost." Penn said. Soon after that Penn was praised by many including the Office of the President in Ukraine. "Sean Penn demonstrates the courage that many others, especially western politicians lack. The director specially came to Kyiv to record all the events that are currently happening in Ukraine and to tell the world the truth about Russia's invasion of our country." the President's office wrote on Facebook. However, with things not looking to get better any time soon, Penn has now confirmed that he has evacuated to Poland. The actor shared a picture of himself on Monday as he carried a suitcase while walking along a highway. Myself & two colleagues walked miles to the Polish border after abandoning our car on the side of the road. Almost all the cars in this photo carry women & children only, most without any sign of luggage, and a car their only possession of value. pic.twitter.com/XSwCDgYVSH Sean Penn (@SeanPenn) February 28, 2022 "Myself & two colleagues walked miles to the Polish border after abandoning our car on the side of the road. Almost all the cars in this photo carry women & children only, most without any sign of luggage, and a car their only possession of value." He wrote on Twitter. Well, all we can do is applaud him and all those who are fighting for the freedom of Ukraine. May sense prevail and here is praying this war comes to an end soon! One of the greatest pains in life is that of losing someone you love. Not that death isnt inevitable, but no matter how much peace you try to make with the concept of loss, it creates a hollow in your chest that almost nothing can make up for. Now imagine that kind of a loss, that pain and multiply it 10 fold. That is what Naveen Shekharappas father suffered after he heard that his 21-year-old son who had gone to Ukraine to study, was killed in an airstrike by Russia. The young and ambitious Naveen from Karnataka, who had moved abroad to study and build a better life for himself and his parents was reduced to nothing but collateral damage in this war that Russia has waged against Ukraine. And even though the ones sitting on the other end of this strike seem to be Russian, there is no denying that our country has its own contribution to the tragic killing of Naveen. Despite scoring 97% in PUC, my son could not secure a medical seat in State. To get a medical seat one has to give crores of rupees and students are getting the same education abroad spending less money," shared the grief-stricken father of Naveen, who was killed in Ukraine while he was out to get food from a nearby grocery store. Shekharappa Gyanagoudar, father of Indian student Naveen who was killed in Ukraines Kharkiv asks Govt to bring back his mortal remains. He asks Govt to also look at hefty donations that medical colleges demand, forcing Indian students to take admission abroad. @TheQuint pic.twitter.com/THKdjU1lVE Nikhila Henry (@NikhilaHenry) March 1, 2022 Hours after news of his son being ruthlessly killed in the strike near the Governors House, a dejected Shekharappa Gyanagoudar spoke about how he sent his son abroad because the education system in India was so flawed. He shared, Due to the education system and casteism, he could not get a seat despite being an intelligent student. He also went on to say, I am dejected with our political system, education system and casteism. Everything is in the control of private institutes.. A sentiment that is bound to come forward in light of his sons demise. Naveen Shekharappa Gyanagoudar 21 year old from Haveri district in Karnataka studying at Kharkiv Medical University- lost his life today. Hope GOI will expedite evacuating students from Ukraine. Deepest condolences to Naveens family & friends. Im sorry we failed you. pic.twitter.com/NBoloWJUiw Divya Spandana/Ramya (@divyaspandana) March 1, 2022 He then said, I found out that I would have to spend anywhere between Rs 85 lakh and Rs 1 crore to put him in a private medical college. Thats when I decided to send him to Ukraine, but that proved far more costly. Crowds gather outside the home of deceased Indian student Naveen Shekharappa Gyanagoudar in Haveri, Karnataka. He was killed in shelling in Kharkiv, Ukraine. @TheQuint pic.twitter.com/WQycy4XbUB Nikhila Henry (@NikhilaHenry) March 1, 2022 And while people will still put the outright blame of Naveens death on this unfortunate war between two countries, it also comes as an eye-opener for us to look into the intricacies of our education system, one whose incompetence has forced several students to move out and subsequently suffer a tragic end. Prime Minister Narendra Modi spoke to the father of Naveen Shekharappa, an Indian student who died in shelling in Kharkiv, Ukraine this morning. (File pic) pic.twitter.com/OEXXs7XjiD ANI (@ANI) March 1, 2022 Last we checked, education shouldve been a right, not a privilege for those who can throw the maximum amount of money at the table. Because in that case, children of middle-class people like Shekharappa Gyanagoudar, a retired paper mill employee, will have no choice but to sacrifice their own blood. And that is too big a gamble to ask people to make. Gyanagoudar also happened to share the last conversation he had with his son, where he was advising him to "place an Indian flag" outside the building he was in. The video of their conversation indicated how that is what minister Piyush Goyal had also advised them to do. Despite scoring 97% in PUC, my son could not secure a medical seat in State. To get a medical seat one has to give crores of rupees&students are getting same education abroad spending less money, says father of Naveen Shekharappa, an Indian student who died in shelling in Ukraine pic.twitter.com/wXqArRW9eq ANI (@ANI) March 1, 2022 We have talked to minister Piyush Goyal. He said that there is a little problem. If we try to move from there, then rescue is possible. He has said that our government has talked to both the countries, both the countries have assured them that nothing will happen to the Indians there," his father was heard saying. However, Pooja Praharaj, a student coordinator in Kharkiv later shared how, He lived near the Governor's House and had been standing in the queue for food. Suddenly there was an airstrike that blew up the Governor's House and he was killed". Karnataka | Shivkumar Chanabasappa Udasi, BJP MP from Haveri met with the kin of Naveen Shekharappa, an MBBS student, who died in shelling in Kharkiv, #Ukraine this morning. pic.twitter.com/SYGFeQHATX ANI (@ANI) March 1, 2022 .@IYC_Mumbai organised a candle light march in Mankhurd Shivajinagar assembly to pay tribute to Late Naveen Shekharappa who was tragically killed in Ukraine. We demanded that GOI needs to start acting sooner & stop glorifying their basic duties of evacuating Indians from Ukraine! pic.twitter.com/d2cquAKKZy Zeeshan Siddique (@zeeshan_iyc) March 2, 2022 Reports suggest that in the bunker where Naveen and several other students had taken shelter, only 2% of them were actually allowed to move. In fact, several accounts of students being manhandled, beaten and stopped from moving are coming forward. There are few things in life that come as difficult for almost everyone I know. Waking up early in the morning on a cold winter day, accepting that pineapple can be a topping on pizza and well, decoding Subramaniam Swamys political allegiance. And while the former two are still things that we can somehow understand and make peace with, senior BJP leader Subramanian Swamy and his thoughts continue to be a puzzle that no one is willing to solve, perhaps only acknowledge. And the recent piece of this unsolved puzzle came in the form of a nasty dig at none other than the Prime Minister of our country, Narendra Modi, wherein Swamy referred to him as a political hijra. Twitter Before I begin to etch out the details of Swamys latest political jab, its important to know who he really is. An Indian politician, economist and statistician, who also serves as a nominated Member of Parliament in Rajya Sabha, Swamy can be best described as a 'washermans dog'. Not because he is as loyal as a dog is touted to be, but quite the opposite - because he neither belongs to the house nor to the waterside. BJPs strongest weapon and weakest link, Subramanian Swamy is more of a trooper than he is a politician. Choice of weapon? Strategically irksome Tweets, backed up by an army of about 10.6 million people on Twitter, that are ever-ready to side with (or not) him as and when he elects who his next target would be. And no points for guessing who it was this time. Twitter Ever since Russia invaded Ukraine, the world is witnessing what could be the beginning of an end. With a hostile and ongoing attack on Ukraine by Russia, countries have started to rally allies for Ukraine, as tensions between Russia and the West grow stronger with every strike in Kyiv by Russian soldiers. At the same time, India is tiptoeing around the situation to protect its diplomatic relations with Russia, which is the major supplier of all of its advanced weapons. And while there has been pressure on India - political and moral, to strongly condemn and stand against the Russian aggression and attack, India has only gone as far as urging Russian President Vladimir Putin to call for concerted efforts from all sides to return to the path of diplomatic negotiations. Twitter Now, the thing is, I, as someone who is closely following the situation between Russia and Ukraine, can almost feel the frustration of not being able to stand for what is clearly right and wrong. However, I can also not deny how the best bet for India would be to not strain its relationship with Russia, the one country that could be crucial in order to stand up to China as it grows to become stronger each day. Subramaniam Swamy on the other hand, has a rather linear take on the matter, one where he chose to show empathy for one entire country by showing antipathy for a community in the process. Now that it is clear that what Russia has done in Ukraine violates BRICS Resolution in Delhi Declaration of last year. Will Modi have the guts to tell Putin to back off? Subramanian Swamy (@Swamy39) March 1, 2022 Taking to his Twitter account, the Rajya Sabha MP wrote on Tuesday, Now that it is clear that what Russia has done in Ukraine violates BRICS Resolution in Delhi Declaration of last year. Will Modi have the guts to tell Putin to back off? But that is not what created an uproar. It is what came next. A Prime Minister of 1.4 billion cultured people cannot be a political hijda Subramanian Swamy (@Swamy39) March 1, 2022 Replying to Swamys tweet, a user emphasized, No, hes caught between a rock and a hard place, the best is to play neutral which he is doing. And that right there was enough to miff the political leader who went as far as saying, A Prime Minister of 1.4 billion cultured people cannot be a political hijda. Clearly, Subramaniam Swamy didnt care for counting himself in the count of cultured people, after his distasteful remark. Not to mention how he went ahead to casually imply hijdas to be weak and without a spine, as though his comment made him any different. Twitter At this point, I am well endowed with the it is what it is & never mince your words trope that his tweeple army can throw at me. But what I am not clear with is how can a well-read man as himself choose to demean not just the Prime Minister of a country, but an entire marginalized community of LGBTQ+ people, simply to make a point? And poorly, at that. The fact that Subramaniam Swamy would stoop down to the level of insulting the transgenders by making that comparison is pretty telling of his concern for a set of different people in a country abroad. Charity begins at home, they say. And from a time when people would actually care for his opinion, he has now successfully sabotaged his reputation by this one final nail in his coffin, that has made people come undone in his Twitter feed. I feel this statement definitely crosses a lot of lines. Uncalled for language in political discourse. Amit Chaudhury (@mrGlassHfEmpty) March 1, 2022 And from your language, it seems that he is PM of 1.4 billion minus 1 cultured people Crypto Geekbot (@SenegalPP) March 1, 2022 I used to hold high regards for you not so far in the past. Then I came across the word opportunist. Now, hmm... Nothing. Get well soon. (@Kam_vasudeva) March 2, 2022 It not only disrespects the person who holds the highest position in this country but it disrespects even the LGBTQ community for using the word as a derogatory term, wrote one user in the comments. While another one commented, I agree with every word except that only a minuscule of the 1.4 billion people are "cultured". And this is further subject to your notion of culture. You dont have to use a transphobic slur while criticising him. This is extremely problematic and jeopardises the understanding of an already marginalised community. Soumya Mishra (@soumya__mishra) March 1, 2022 Hijda is the bravest person you can see in society.... What hijda faced in day to day if you were at his place you would have give up on life . They are not shy to be naked, they don't ego ... They have sometime put their self-respect and it's a daily thing. Arvind Kumar (@antar_dwand) March 1, 2022 Didnt expect such disrespect addressed for a PM from a so called educated person ! It not only disrespects the person who holds the highest position in this country but it disrespects even the lgbtq community for using the word as a derogatory term. Unnamed (@Ahumansvoice) March 1, 2022 People also jumped to the defence of the LGBTQ+ community as they wrote, Hijda is the bravest person you can see in society.... What hijdas face in day to day if you were at his place you would have give up on life. Please do not refer to the prime minister as hijda. Hijdas are brave and courageous and humane people. Modi is everything but not hijda. () (@amtuktuk) March 1, 2022 I agree with every word except that only a miniscule of the 1.4 billion people are "cultured". And this is further subject to your notion of "culture". Prof. P S Bhogal (@BhogalPS) March 1, 2022 Calling out on his use of the transphobic slur, another user wrote, You dont have to use a transphobic slur while criticising him. This is extremely problematic and jeopardises the understanding of an already marginalised community. Guess he didnt see this coming, did he? The irony of wanting the PM to raise his voice for something and instigating a war of words against himself. Hows this for taking a stand, Mr Swamy? You know how when the worst happens to you, whether it is you failing an exam or tripping on the office floor embarrassing yourself in front of your colleagues, you somehow find a way to defend yourself and blame anything/one but yourself? Yeah, that instinct to latch on to any possible explanation for what happened is something that kicks in during desperate situations, much like the case was with BharatPe co-founder, Ashneer Grover. Ashneer Grover From his crude comments on the show Shark Tank India to spicy rumours of his involvement in fraud manipulation by the BharatPe board, the fintech expert has been in the news for as long as one can remember. And we have to admit, while things may have started with a bang, they are definitely not ending with it too. Ashneer Grovers wife Madhuri Jain was recently fired by the BharatPe board on charges of misappropriation of funds. Soon after, Ashneer Grover too resigned from his post, claiming he was vilified by the investors. Opening up about his exit, Ashneer Grover spoke to CNBC TV18 to share just what happened and most importantly - why. For someone who had given his vote of confidence to fellow board members like CEO Suhail Sameer, Rajnish Kumar, it was odd to see Ashneer Grover resign from the company and call the others out on being mere puppets in raking this controversy. When asked why everyone would stand against him, Ashneer says There's a deep resentment against me after my popularity with Shark Tank & that is what is playing out here'. Thoda sa weak excuse hain Beer_View (@parthpatel21) March 1, 2022 He said, With me at the helm, they [Rajnish and Suhail] will always be in the shadows. As long as I am running the company, and I am at the helm, I will overshadow all of this. Doesn't matter how big you are, and that's become apparent to everyone after Shark Tank even more," claiming that the decision to gang up against him was pure resentment. He added, It is a resentment because, with the growth of the company, I have outgrown the company much more than the company itself." In fact, Grover even claimed, In this company, the only guy that's ever raised a penny is me." No concrete answers to direct questions. He is not helping his case. aditya kishore patankar (@adit504) March 1, 2022 ...& this is why I'm Out RuPay Trading (@RupayTrading) March 1, 2022 When asked in detail whether what he cited was true, Grover suggested, Anyone you want to call, let's have an open debate... You ask them [Kumar, Sameer, and the investors], why have you gone against him [Grover]?" Ashneer Grover, who is famous for not mincing his words, concluded his interview by yet again being unabashed in his opinion as he called the investors spineless and saying, I resent over trusting people, and I'm not going to ever do it again." Popularity increased because of Kotak episode more than shark tank. Debasish Goswami (@debgo26) March 1, 2022 i wonder what is he smoking. He thinks he built a revolutionary business that too all by himself. itni lambi mat phenko ki khud ko hi na dikhe kitni dur tak phenka. kunal lakhani (@kunallakhani11) March 1, 2022 Meanwhile, people are busy wondering if this was the real and the only reason behind his resignation. One user wrote, thoda as weak excuse hai, while another commented, No concrete answers to direct questions. He is not helping his case. BEIJING, March 2 (Xinhua) -- China's Ministry of Public Security Wednesday said it has launched a special operation against criminal activities of illegally crossing the border or frontier and organizing such offenses. The action will clamp down on organizing and transporting illegal border crossings and using fake licenses in the process, as well as organizing, inveigling, and recruiting personnel into crossing the border illicitly. It is also aimed to guard against imported COVID-19 infections. Since December 2020 when a similar campaign was initiated, Chinese police have investigated 18,700 criminal cases, with over 96,000 suspects captured and 797 criminal dens busted, said the ministry. Gloria Brown Bruister, 81, passed away on Tuesday, May 3, 2022, at UAB Hospital in Birmingham, Ala., with her loving daughters by her side. Born on July 21, 1940, to Jay Lavell and Mattie Noblin Brown, Gloria graduated from Meridian High School in 1958. Married soon after to Hubert L. Bruist File photo taken on July 3, 2019 shows a visitor (R) tries Turkish ice cream at the Beijing International Horticultural Exhibition in Beijing, capital of China. (Xinhua/Ju Huanzong) CHONGQING, March 2 (Xinhua) -- The internet is brimming with amusing videos of Turkish ice cream vendors displaying their playful tricks, as they flip the ice cream cones before giving them to customers. Such entertaining scenes are perhaps an everyday affair in the ancient town of Ciqikou in southwest China's Chongqing municipality, where Ali Buyuksakalli from Turkey's Istanbul City has been serving this exotic delicacy to customers for about a decade. The 36-year-old ice cream vendor currently runs more than 50 ice cream parlors across China, sharing the delicious Turkish treat and the culture associated with it. Turkish ice cream, which has a history of more than 300 years, is a hallmark Turkish delicacy and one of the most preferred summertime desserts. The unique food is so thick that sometimes it needs to be eaten with a knife and fork. And it is believed to be one of the chewiest ice creams in the world, Buyuksakalli said. The delicacy is often prepared and sold in a highly amusing way, engaging customers in humorous interactions. Buyuksakalli enjoys entertaining his customers by pulling the scoop back just before they are tricked into thinking they are going to have it. Buyuksakalli brought this one-of-a-kind ice cream to China for the first time in 2010 as an exhibitor at the Shanghai World Expo. "I met my wife in China, a beautiful girl from Suzhou in the eastern province of Jiangsu. After we got married, we opened our first Turkish Taksim ice cream shop in Shanghai," he said. "I am very happy to work in China, and I am often praised and thanked by my customers when I make ice cream and perform for them," Buyuksakalli added. After visiting Chongqing in 2009, he and his wife fell in love with the city's tranquil pace of life and decided to settle down there in 2011. In recent years, China's continued opening-up has made life easier for foreigners living in the country. "Foreign cheese and bread used to be hard to get, but are now easily accessible. Authentic Turkish food and goods from all over the world can be bought here, and I even buy some items online in China and then send them back to Turkey," Buyuksakalli said. As an important partner under the Belt and Road Initiative, Turkey has witnessed increasing trade, cultural and personnel exchanges with China over the years. "China is the first choice for many in Turkey to travel abroad, and I have recruited many people from my hometown to work in China," Buyuksakalli added. Turkish employees can work in his ice cream shops after completing a year of professional training, and now all his shops have Turkish employees. He said he is particularly grateful to China for its rapid and effective containment of the COVID-19 outbreak, which would have otherwise seriously affected his business. "Many of my shops are in scenic areas, and the number of tourists picked up quickly after the epidemic was brought under control. Now, some of my shops can rake in a daily turnover of about 10,000 yuan (about 1,584 U.S. dollars), or 30,000 yuan during the peak summer season," Buyuksakalli said. The Turkish businessman's family in Istanbul has been involved in making ice cream for more than four decades, and he and his brother have expanded the business to France and China. Buyuksakalli believes that the centuries-old delicacy has a prosperous future. "I hope my children can continue the sweet business in China in the future." On March 19, 2020, the Green River District Health Department reported its first case of coronavirus in the region. As the second anniversary approaches, Clay Horton, public health director for the district health department, is optimistic that Daviess County and most of the region will drop into the yellow zone, with 10 or fewer new cases per 100,000 people, by then. In the past three weeks, he said, the number of new cases in the seven-county area have dropped from 1,467 to 636 to 300 this week. Were declining at a rapid pace, Horton said. But were still in the high category. McLean is the only county in the district that is currently in what the Centers for Disease Control calls the medium category of new cases. All the others are in the high category. The CDC says that means people still need to wear masks indoors. But Horton said he expects Daviess and other counties to be in the medium category by the end of the week. Kentucky uses a color-coded map to show which counties are in each category. Green is one or no new cases per 100,000. Yellow is 10 or fewer. Orange is 11 to 25. And red is more than 25 new cases per 100,000. We just dropped out of the red, Horton said. Were in orange now. But at our current rate of decline, Id say in two weeks we should be in the yellow. Last week, the health department started releasing a weekly report on new cases rather than releasing it twice a week. Last year, the new cases were reported daily. Districtwide, there were 300 new cases and 13 deaths in the past week. That broke down to 158 new cases in Daviess County, 11 in Hancock, 46 in Henderson, eight in McLean, 28 in Ohio, 22 in Union and 27 in Webster. Five of the deaths were in Daviess, four in Henderson, two in Webster and one each in Ohio and Union counties. Horton said the decline in the number of deaths always trails the number of new cases reported. Those should start dropping soon, he said. The number of people being tested for COVID-19 has also been dropping in recent days. But Horton said with people now able to do testing at home, its hard to know how many tests are actually being taken. He said theres always a threat of a new variant, like omicron. But so far, there doesnt appear to be a new one about to reach the region. Its a little too early to let our guard down, Horton said. My advice is to still wear masks indoors for a little while longer. 270-691-7301 klawrence@messenger-inquirer.com Three local students have been selected from about 1.5 million students to be named National Merit Finalists. Dylan Mather, an Owensboro High School senior, Catherine Wright, an Apollo High School senior, and Hunter Wimsatt, who is dual-enrolled at the Gatton Academy of Mathematics and Science in Kentucky and Owensboro Catholic High School, all have moved forward in the competition that began, for them, in the fall of their junior year. The National Merit Scholarship Program began in 1955, and students enter and participate by taking the Preliminary SAT or the National Merit Scholarship Qualifying Test, typically when they are juniors. Approximately 1.5 million students enter the program each year, and of that about 50,000 are named high-scorers. Of that 50,000, about 15,000 across the United States are named finalists. About 7,500 of the finalists will receive a Merit Scholarship, totaling $2,500, according to nationalmerit.org. Hunter, 17, is the son of Brad and Alissa Wimsatt. He said he feels thankful for all of the academic guidance from his teachers and parents he has had throughout his years in school. Its awesome to know that you are among the top performing students in the nation, he said. He hasnt decided which college he will be attending after graduation, but said it will likely be out of state. He does plan to double major in math and computer science. Wright, the daughter of Stacy and Joseph Wright, said being named a finalist in the competition is exciting. It feels like all my work in the last 12 years is culminating into something I can be proud of, she said. This is the ribbon on the present of my high school experience, knowing I have been able to accomplish this. When she graduates in May, Wright plans to attend college, though she hasnt decided where, and study nursing. She doesnt yet know if she will become an RN or if she will pursue certifications to become a nurse practitioner. The process for entering the National Merit Scholarship Program is daunting at first, but Wright said it was good to push herself to enter and progress through the competition. Mather, 18, is the son of Ginni and Michael Mather. He said to be named a finalist in the competition is an honor. The opportunities this will give me are amazing, he said, adding that after high school he plans to attend a university that offers a sizable National Merit Scholarship. Its a relief to have the whole process complete. It was honestly a year-and-a-half process that was a lot of work. He plans to study either computer science or management information systems at the University of Alabama after high school graduation. Some finalists in the competition will go on to earn the $2,500 scholarship, but Mather said he is just excited to be named a finalist. That alone is enough to move him further in his educational goals at university. Its a big relief to have this off my chest, he said. Bobbie Hayse, bhayse@messenger-inquirer.com, 270-691-7315 With less than four months until the primary election, Congressman Charlie Crist stressed a need for party unity among the Democratic gubernatorial candidates this past weekend, and rightly so. This is a carousel. Use Next and Previous buttons to navigate See how Manistee area lawmakers voted on recent measures. 2021 House Bill 5090, Revise bar and restaurant social district law To revise details of a 2020 law that lets three or more bars and restaurants serve alcohol in a shared commons area within a social district, by also allowing one of them to close off a section for their own patrons during a special event. The bill would also repeal a 2025 sunset on the law authorizing these commons areas, and permit local governments to regulate their hours. Passed 37 to 1 in the Senate Sen. Curt. VanderWall, R-Ludington, supported the measure. 2022 House Bill 5686, Require legislature approve changes to school "seat time" and related issues To require that prior to their adoption any changes made by state officials to a pupil accounting and auditing manual must be sent to the chair of the state House and Senate education policy committees. This document is used to set standards for the number of school days and hours provided by public school districts for purposes of determining whether a district meets the qualifications to get state school aid money. The bill would prohibit any changes to these rules from going into effect until the next school year. Passed 54 to 50 in the House State Rep. Jack OMalley, R-Lake Ann, supported the measure 2022 Senate Resolution 107, To affirm our commitment to the fundamental rights of parents to direct the education of their children The resolution states in part that It is essential that parents voices are respected and incorporated into the development of 26 academic curricula. Passed 22 to 16 in the Senate Sen. Curt. VanderWall, R-Ludington, supported the measure and opposed an amendment to the measure that failed. 2021 Senate Bill 768, Cut state income tax rate Passed 62 to 42 in the House State Rep. Jack OMalley, R-Lake Ann, supported the measure 2021 House Bill 5657, Revise child fatality review confidentiality Passed 104 to 0 in the House State Rep. Jack OMalley, R-Lake Ann, supported the measure 2021 House Bill 4693, Revise landlord referral restriction To revise a law that bans landlords from offering, and tenants accepting, more than half a months free rent in return for a tenant referral. The bill would allow up to a months free rent for this. Passed 38 to 0 in the Senate Sen. Curt. VanderWall, R-Ludington, supported the measure 2021 House Bill 4242, Revise bait fish sales restrictions To repeal a ban on exporting live minnows, wigglers, or crayfish as bait if they were grown and taken within this state. Such exports require a state license, and the bill would also increase the license fee from $25 to $500, and mandate monthly reports from vendors. Passed 37 to 1 in the Senate and Passed 86 to 18 in the House Sen. Curt. VanderWall, R-Ludington, supported the measure; and State Rep. Jack OMalley, R-Lake Ann, supported the measure 2021 House Bill 4173, Eliminate cap on crime information rewards To revise a law authorizing counties to give rewards of up to $2,000 for information leading to the arrest and conviction of a criminal or the capture of an escaped convict, by eliminating a cap on how much a county can pay. Passed 102 to 0 in the House State Rep. Jack OMalley, R-Lake Ann, supported the measure 2021 House Bill 4834, Replace capital equipment tax on heavy equipment rentals with a new rental tax Passed 35 to 2 in the Senate Sen. Curt. VanderWall, R-Ludington, supported the measure 2021 Senate Bill 445, Waive some unemployment job search requirements during epidemic To revise during the coronavirus epidemic an unemployment benefits requirement that a recipient be "available" for either part-time or full-time work. Under current law the requirement is to be available for full-time work. To waive during the coronavirus epidemic an unemployment benefits requirement that a recipient getting benefits authorized by federal "stimulus" spending bills be "able and available to appear for evaluation of eligibility for benefits" and available to work job suitable to the beneficiary's experience and training. Passed 38 to 0 in the Senate and Passed 101 to 3 in the House Sen. Curt. VanderWall, R-Ludington, supported the measure; and State Rep. Jack OMalley, R-Lake Ann, supported the measure This is a carousel. Use Next and Previous buttons to navigate MICHIGAN Each spring, as the days get longer and the temperatures begin to rise, Michiganders head out into the woods to take part in the states oldest agricultural activity tapping maple trees for sap to be turned into mouth-watering maple syrup, candies and other sweet treats. This year, 24 members of the Michigan Maple Syrup Association will participate in this years annual Michigan Maple Syrup Weekends, running mid-March through early April. The farms offer a variety of family-friendly activities that provide a chance for people to get a firsthand look at how maple sap is collected, boiled down and turned into sweet maple syrup and other maple treats. Many of them offer tours of their operation, including tree tapping demonstrations, samples of their products, recipes for the use of maple syrup and local maple syrup products available to purchase. In the spring, as the days get longer and the temperatures rise, Michigans sugar maple trees begin to release liquid gold the clear sap which is boiled down into sweet and delicious maple syrup. The process dates back to the early Native Americans, before Michigan ever became a state. Today, Michigan ranks fifth in the nation for maple syrup production, with an economic impact of nearly $2.5 million annually. On average, Michigan produces about 90,000 gallons of syrup per year. It takes 40 gallons of sap to make one gallon of syrup, meaning more than 3.6 million gallons of sap are harvested. Maple sugaring also contributes to the overall $104 billion agricultural and $22 billion tourism industries in Michigan. Due to its high sugar content of approximately 2%, sugar maple is the preferred tree for tapping, although black maple, red maple, silver maple and ash leafed maple each with a sugar content of about one percent can also be tapped to produce syrup. Sugar maple is Michigans most common tree species and the northern hardwood forests in which they grow in abundance covers about five million acres. While some Canadian provinces and the New England state area are often recognized as leaders in the maple sugaring industry, Michigan itself has more than three times the number of sugar maples than Quebec or Vermont, meaning the potential for growth is unlimited. Currently, Michigan utilizes less than one percent of its potential maple resources. As with any agricultural crop, sap changes from farm to farm and region to region, depending on the soil content. The areas climate and species of trees also play a role in this industry, meaning syrup flavor profiles change from region to region, even within the same state. Of course, theres more than just syrup to be enjoyed. Producers of maple syrup are also making candy, ice cream and other sweet treats with their bounty. Even Michigan wineries, breweries and distilleries are crafting beverages with maple sap or syrup for special seasonal offerings. A map and listing of the 24 farms participating in the Michigan Maple Weekend can be found online at MichiganMaple.org. Attendees are reminded to wear boots as mud and snow may still be abundant this time of the year. Even though many activities are outside, guests are asked to wear masks and remain socially distanced in order to maintain health and safety during the pandemic. Maple Weekend celebration schedule: March 19-20 Aiken Sugar Bush, Walkerville Butternut Creek Sugar Shack, Mendon H & H Sugarbush, Chelsea Law Family Farm, North Branch MapleWorxz, Caro Merten Farms, Hart Mikes Maple Syrup, Fenwick Shepherd Sugarbush, Shepherd Sugar Shack at Heritage Park, Hanover Ty-Kat Sugar Shack, Galien March 26-27 4D Acre Farm, Hawks Alpine Maple Farm, Gaylord Bonz Beach Farms, Onaway Britt Family Pure Maple Syrup, Tawas City Delaneys Wood Fired Maple Syrup, Rose City Highland Hills Maple Syrup, Marion Maple Dale Farm, Atlanta Owl Ridge Maple Sugar Farm, Frankfort Rons Pure Maple Syrup | Reetz Family Sugar Bush, West Branch (Since 1872) Southwell Sugar Shack, Mancelona Sweet Success Sugar Bush, Mio Wood Farms, Rapid City April 2-3 TEHRAN, March 2 (Xinhua) -- The bitter memories of the U.S. failure to deliver promises prompted Iran to seek a reliable agreement in the ongoing nuclear negotiations, a top Iranian security official said Wednesday. Secretary of Iran's Supreme National Security Council Ali Shamkhani made the remarks in a special meeting with a group of lawmakers on the latest developments in the Vienna talks focusing on the restoration of a 2015 nuclear deal, official news agency IRNA reported. He highlighted the necessity of the swift settlement of a few remaining issues in the negotiations, saying the bitter experience of U.S. non-fulfillment of promises and Europe's inaction has made it inevitable that Iran will push for a reliable, balanced and lasting agreement. Also, he said Iran's main strategy is to focus on the creation of mechanisms to "neutralize" U.S. sanctions in addition to having them lifted. During the meeting, the lawmakers underlined the need for continuous efforts by the Iranian negotiating team to uphold the nation's rights within the framework of the 2015 nuclear deal, formally known as the Joint Comprehensive Plan of Action (JCPOA). Iran signed the JCPOA with world powers in July 2015. However, former U.S. President Donald Trump pulled the United States out of the agreement in May 2018 and reimposed unilateral sanctions on Iran, which prompted the latter to drop some of its nuclear commitments and advance its halted nuclear program. Since April 2021, eight rounds of talks have been held in Vienna between Iran and the remaining JCPOA parties, namely Britain, China, France, Russia plus Germany, with the United States indirectly involved in the talks, to revive the landmark deal. A trio of state legislative committees will begin an inquiry next week into Connecticuts school construction program that is at the center of a federal investigation into potential wrongdoing by the programs former director, Konstantinos Diamantis. The inquiry will begin Monday with testimony from two Lamont administration officials who were put in charge of the Office of School Construction Grants and Review following Diamantis departure last October amid allegations of misconduct. Those officials, school construction director Noel Petra and his boss, Department of Administration Services Commissioner Michelle Gilman, will speak to lawmakers about initial reforms that have been implemented to improve oversight of the school construction program, as well as audits of the hundred of millions of dollars in grants that were distributed under Diamantis six-year tenure. That funding has been subject to scrutiny due to the federal probe and allegations that Diamantis used his authority to steer construction contracts to a select few companies. Obviously theres a lot of interest in figuring out whats going on with school construction and what lessons have been learned from the alleged impropriety of [Diamantis], said state Rep. Sean Scanlon, D- Guilford, who is organizing the hearing as co-chair of the Finance Committee. In addition to the Finance Committee, Scanlon said members of the Education and Government Administration and Elections committees will participate in the hearing. Last week, Republicans called for a formation of a new bi-partisan panel to oversee an investigation of Diamantis and the school construction program, a proposal that was quickly brushed aside by the legislatures Democratic leadership, who said that the committees they control are well-equipped to handle any oversight of Gov. Ned Lamont and his administration. House Minority Leader Vincent Candelora, R- North Branford, said this week that lawmakers need to look well beyond school construction, while casting the existing plans for a hearing as partisan in nature. Its not a good faith effort in understanding this process and how we got here, Candelora said. We need to do a thorough investigation. Im not sure either of these committees is in a position to do this while still going through the legislative process. Democrats, however, have no plans to double up on the efforts of the U.S. Attorneys Office to uncover potential criminal wrongdoing involving Diamantis, Scanlon said. Instead, he said the inquiry will focus on policy decisions that contributed to the allegations of pressure from Diamantis and a lack of oversight over the school construction office, as well as any additional changes that may need to be made to restore the integrity of the program. Its important to separate the past from the future looking forward, Scanlon said, adding Im not an investigator, Im not a police officer, Im a legislator. Diamantis has denied any wrongdoing, and said that the Lamont administration has falsely depicted him as having run amok after the school construction office was moved to the Office of Policy and Management in 2018. For someone to judge what is a discrepancy to someone who never knew the program and learned it in five minutes is a disservice to the program, is a disservice to the people who worked at that program and cared about the communities we worked with, Diamantis told Hearst Connecticut last week. A spokeswoman for the Department of Administrative Services did not respond to a request for comment Tuesday. Gov. Ned Lamont has previously promised cooperation with legislative inquiries into the school construction office, telling reporters If they want a public hearing, they can have a public hearing, sure. Diamantis was originally hired to lead the school construction program in 2015 as a member of former Gov. Dannel Malloys administration. When Lamont became governor three years later, Diamantis was hired as deputy secretary of the OPM and allowed to transfer his school construction work to that office. Lamont later reversed that decision, sending the school construction office back to the Department of Administrative Service after Diamantis retired amid an investigation into allegations of misconduct. OPM Secretary Melissa McCaw, who served as Diamantis boss at the budget office, announced last week that she would depart state government to take the job of finance director in East Hartford, after facing increasing scrutiny of her oversight of Diamantis' work. Scanlon said there will not be a time limit Monday to questions from lawmakers, who will particpate in the hearing virtually. He said further hearings are possible as lawmakers seek to learn more about Diamantis and the school construction office. BEIJING, March 2 (Xinhua) -- The National People's Congress (NPC), China's top legislature, will hold a press conference on Friday, one day before the opening of its annual session. A spokesperson for the fifth session of the 13th NPC will take questions from media on the agenda of the session and the work of the people's congresses, according to the press center of the session. The press conference will be held via video link due to COVID-19 prevention and control requirements. The event will be broadcast live by China Media Group and on China.org.cn. President Joe Biden in his first State of the Union address vowed to help veterans suffering from illnesses caused by exposure to chemicals on the battlefield. "I've always believed that we have a sacred obligation to equip all those we send to war and care for them and their families when they come home," he said. Noting that service members in Iraq and Afghanistan inhaled fumes from burn pits that included jet fuel and trash, Biden said that "when they came home, many of the world's fittest and best trained warriors were never the same." Read Next: Answer to Putin's Invasion of Ukraine Could Be NATO Expansion "Headaches. Numbness. Dizziness," Biden continued. "A cancer that would put them in a flag-draped coffin." The last line elicited a heckle from Rep. Lauren Boebert, R-Colo., that Biden "put them in, 13 of them," in an apparent reference to the 13 U.S. troops killed in a suicide bombing during the withdrawal from Afghanistan. Boebert was booed by Democrats as Biden continued his speech with reference to his sons battle with brain cancer after his own military career. Biden's comments Tuesday night elevate the issue of toxic exposure to the American public in a forum that often sees just passing references to veterans. As part of what he called his four-part "unity agenda" -- proposals he said should garner support from both sides of the aisle -- Biden focused on post-9/11 veterans with illnesses likely related to battlefield toxic exposures. U.S. troops who deployed, like the president's son Beau, "faced many dangers" that included toxic smoke from waste incinerated in massive burn pits. "We don't know for sure for sure if a burn pit was the cause of his brain cancer, or the diseases of so many of our troops," Biden said. Among his new initiatives: fast-tracking access to Department of Veterans Affairs health care and disability claims for veterans diagnosed with nine rare respiratory cancers a move that will affect about 100 veterans previously denied claims, as well as those who develop those cancers in the future. While Beau Biden's cancer, glioblastoma, is not among them, President Biden said he was committed to "finding out everything we can." He also called on Congress to pass a law to help sickened veterans or their survivors get expedited benefits and health care. The House is set to vote Thursday on a sweeping, $208 billion bill to do just that. Biden highlighted the story of Danielle Robinson, whose husband, Army National Guard Sgt. 1st Class Heath Robinson, deployed to Kosovo and Iraq and died of cancer at age 39. Danielle Robinson was among the guests in the House chamber, invited by first lady Jill Biden. "Danielle says Heath was a fighter to the very end. He didn't know how to stop fighting, and neither did she. Through her pain, she found purpose to demand we do better. Tonight, Danielle -- we are," Biden said. This year's speech to a joint session of Congress also comes as Americans and the world watch horrors unfold in Ukraine after Russia's invasion and U.S. troops shuttle into the region to assuage jittery NATO allies worried Russian President Vladimir Putin will continue pressing west. Biden opened his speech by commending Ukrainians' resolve in the face of Russia's brutal attack and vowing that the United States will maintain its own resolve to support Kyiv. Putin "thought he could roll into Ukraine and the world would roll over. Instead, he met a wall of strength he never imagined. He met the Ukrainian people," Biden said in a line that elicited a bipartisan standing ovation. Many lawmakers in both parties were wearing yellow and blue, the colors of the Ukrainian flag, in another show of support for Ukraine, and Ukraine's ambassador to the United States, Oksana Markarova, was in the House chamber Tuesday night as one of the first ladys guests. Biden also acknowledged the thousands of U.S. troops who have been sent to countries including Poland, Romania, Latvia, Lithuania and Estonia, but reiterated that no American service members will enter Ukraine itself. "Let me be clear, our forces are not engaged and will not engage in conflict with Russian forces in Ukraine," Biden said. "As I have made crystal clear, the United States and our allies will defend every inch of territory of NATO countries with the full force of our collective power." In running down the consequences Putin is facing for his actions, including sanctions and global isolation, Biden also ad-libbed a warning: "He has no idea what's coming." -- Rebecca Kheel can be reached at rebecca.kheel@military.com. Follow her on Twitter @reporterkheel. -- Patricia Kime can be reached at Patricia.Kime@Military.com. Follow her on Twitter @patriciakime. Related: Biden to Spotlight Vets Health in Address to Congress, Pushing Burn Pit, Mental Health Hel Hunter Schuler doesn't plan to make a career out of the military. Like many Guardsmen, he enlisted to serve in a part-time role to get the best of both worlds: He was able to serve his country and build his civilian career at the same time with access to robust benefits. It's an attractive offer that plays a key role in maintaining the National Guard -- a critical player in the Pentagon's combat power abroad and humanitarian efforts at home. Schuler, in his 10th year of service, is a medic with the rank of specialist in the Texas National Guard. The junior enlisted soldier, who otherwise had a very conventional part-time role in the Guard, is the first service member in decades, perhaps ever, to sign onto a union. Hes challenging senior Guard leaders who outrank him many times over. Read Next: Ukraine Wants Foreign Reinforcements. Will American Civilians Fight? "The idea started as a joke," Schuler told Military.com. "But now we have a real opportunity to make the lives of soldiers better." For his civilian job, Schuler works as a deputy clerk for the Supreme Court of Texas. He recently earned a master's degree in statistics and applied to a statistics doctorate program at Southern Methodist University. Schuler, along with a handful of other enlisted troops and officers across the Texas Army and Air National Guard, became members of the Texas State Employees Union in February. Union leaders have declined to publicize the specific number of members. It's a radical move among military personnel, with decades of federal law seemingly prohibiting such organizing. It stunned some Guard leaders in other states and prompted the Texas Military Department to lash out, calling organizers "agitators." In January, the Justice Department said in a court filing that the law forbidding troops from unionizing does not apply to Guardsmen on state orders. That decision came on the heels of extensive pandemic-response missions that spurred a complaint from several public labor unions in Connecticut, including police and firefighters, arguing the Guard has a right to unionize and advocate for themselves, given how often governors are relying on them. Schuler and his allies in the Texas Guard who aligned with the Texas State Employees Union are in the midst of bolstering their ranks, pitching the union to other soldiers and airmen, who may be skeptical. The unionization effort follows a year of Gov. Greg Abbott's scandal-marred border mission, Operation Lone Star. Guardsmen have flooded social media and contacted reporters with grievances about poor living conditions, pay that is sometimes months behind, and the rapid mobilization of 10,000 troops, costing some their livelihoods and sinking their civilian jobs. Schuler and dozens of other soldiers interviewed by Military.com in recent months see Abbott's frequent appearances on Fox News touting the mission as political window dressing for his reelection bid. There have been a handful of volunteers deployed to the border for decades, but it's unclear why Abbott needed to mobilize 10,000 of his troops on such short notice -- exactly a year before the Texas primaries, where he faced his first serious political challenge in years. Even in cases of war, troops are often given several months' notice before deployment. In this case, the Guardsmen are on state orders, which are not typically used for long-term missions. Under state orders, troops are under the control of the governor. In that status, they are effectively state employees -- paid by the state and not falling under Defense Department rules. Guardsmen on state orders are often paid less and do not accrue any benefits associated with active duty, such as the GI Bill or VA home loan eligibility. For long-term missions, such as the responses to the pandemic and the Jan. 6, 2021, insurrection, Guardsmen are typically activated under Title 32 orders -- granting them full federal pay and benefits, though they remain under the command of the governors of the states they serve. They are not entitled to federal legal protection against civilian employer retaliation and home foreclosure, protections that those on federal orders enjoy. While Operation Lone Star is underway, there is a separate federally funded Guard mission on the border comprising about 2,000 troops who are effectively conducting the same mission but are being paid more and accruing benefits. "Even if Abbott ends the mission tomorrow, he can start it again in the next election," Schuler said. "I may not be serving five years, but I know there will be soldiers just like me who are facing the same problems I am now. Hopefully by unionizing, at least future governors will know if they push soldiers too far, they'll just unionize and create a public policy or perceptive nightmare." But the Texas Military Department is stressing to troops that state law prohibits public employees -- in this case, Guardsmen -- from collective bargaining and strikes. "Servicemembers should not be misled by union agitators into believing that Texas law allows them to engage in collective bargaining, it does not," a statement from the Texas Military Department said in February. But that warning is a straw man, union organizers say. They are aware of Texas laws curtailing the ability to bargain and strike, which isn't the Guardsmen's goal. Schuler sees it as an intimidation tactic. "It is every soldier's legal right to join this union if they want to," he said. "I think they're trying to confuse soldiers. We know we can't collectively bargain, and we aren't looking to strike. I think they conflate unionizing with that and [are] taking advantage of potential lack of knowledge among soldiers." The union aims for short-term goals such as establishing a cordial relationship with Texas Guard leadership and long-term goals like advocating for troop-friendly legislation. One bill for which Schuler said he would advocate would require that a governor seek the consent of the Texas Legislature for any involuntary state missions that exceed 30 days, an idea he hopes would be appealing to fiscal conservatives. The tipping point for Schuler was the treatment of soldiers on the border mission. Troops usually get around four days of leave a month and are limited to a strict radius in which they are allowed to travel. Many troops' homes are outside that radius -- or they have to spend half their leave just on the travel. Discussions on leave and how far Guardsmen are allowed to travel have been consistent points of contention between senior leaders, according to recorded phone calls and meetings obtained by Military.com. The issues culminated in numerous instances of self harm, health and disciplinary issues among soldiers, many of which are related to heavy drinking among idle service members -- with bar fights and DUIs being commonplace among the rank and file. There have also been at least four reported suicides, as well as other instances of self harm, according to National Guard documents provided to Military.com. But Texas Guard officials have been skeptical about the mission's impact on the mental health of its force. "Suicides among the nation have risen, and we are part of the general population," Col. Rita Holton, a spokesperson for the Texas National Guard, told Military.com in a January interview. "We've had suicides in our organization; there are suicides in every organization. Unless the individual left a note and said, 'I'm going to kill myself because I'm serving on this mission,' there's no way anyone can say it's due to their service on the mission." The possibility of military unionization started in the 1970s, after several European troops began organizing and as the U.S. Defense Department shifted to an all-volunteer force following several major wars. That prompted fears from career service members their pay and benefits would be cut as Congress sought to trim military spending, according to Jennifer Mittelstadt, professor of history at Rutgers University. But the desire to establish military unions never got off the ground after near universal backlash from Congress, Pentagon leaders and even numerous editorials from major news outlets balking at the idea. But an influx of high-profile union effort talks, including among Capitol Hill staff and Apple store and Starbucks employees, as well as strikes among workers at Kellogg's and John Deere, labor issues are getting attention not seen in decades. That, combined with governors increasingly leaning on Guardsmen to fill in state labor gaps at hospitals and schools, could be a flashpoint for troops to organize. "The National Guard is pressed to the wall; they're being called into all kinds of new services. That leads to questions over whether they will be treated and compensated," Mittelstadt told Military.com. "At the same time, we're seeing a huge swell of labor union organizing and activism -- more than there probably has been in 40 years. Some public unions, like teachers and police, are rapidly organizing. To me, this seems like a good time for the Texas Guard to get involved and organized." So far, Texas troops who have unionized have not been retaliated against. Schuler said he hopes to build a good relationship with Guard leaders in Texas. "I hope they're willing to have serious discussions about living conditions and working conditions," he said. "Despite being cast as agitators, that's the opposite of what we want. We aren't the enemy; we're just soldiers who want something better." -- Steve Beynon can be reached at Steve.Beynon@military.com. Follow him on Twitter @StevenBeynon. Related: More than 1,000 Guard Troops Got the Wrong Pay on Border Mission Scores of aspiring fighters have expressed on social media their interest in joining the fight against Russia in Ukraine. Most of those interviewed by Military.com claim to be U.S. veterans, some saying they are en route to Poland or packing their bags, though none of their stories could be verified. Others said they plan to go, but are awaiting their passports. The wave of interest comes after social media posts from Ukrainian government offices, like embassies, began to offer any "foreigners willing to defend Ukraine" the opportunity to join an "International Legion of Territorial Defense." Hanna Maliar, Ukraine's deputy minister of defense, said Monday that the country has received "thousands" of requests from foreigners to fight in their war. Read Next: Captured Russian Troops Call Home While Filmed by Ukrainian Officials, Raising Geneva Convention Questions While passing interest on social media is scant evidence of any widespread desire among Americans to fight for Ukraine, the rumblings suggest some may be gearing up to do just that. A spokesman for the Ukrainian Embassy in Washington, D.C., did not immediately respond to questions regarding the number of applications it had received as of Tuesday. But experts warn that would-be volunteers should be aware that joining a volunteer brigade is risky and devoid of many of the protections Americans, especially veterans, would expect on the battlefield. Claire Finkelstein, the founder and academic director of the Center for Ethics and the Rule of Law, says any volunteers "will fall into the category of civilians directly participating in hostilities, and that makes them targetable by the enemy." "They're not going to get any breaks" under international law, she added in an interview with Military.com. More importantly, Finkelstein noted that, in the event of a volunteer's capture by the Russians, "they will be unlikely to be treated with full POW status" under the Geneva Conventions. For Americans, this should be an especially strong worry, she added. "The United States is in a poor position to insist on humane treatments of those captured in hostilities, given our own treatments of individuals that we detained in the war on terror." There have been outlier cases of American civilians fighting for foreign armies -- in Ukraine since the war started with Russian separatists following the annexation of Crimea in 2014, and alongside Kurdish militias in Syria. The most notable case is the so-called Lincoln Battalion during the Spanish Civil War. More than 3,000 American volunteers joined that war, nearly one-quarter of whom were killed as the U.S. Navy had ships sitting off the coast while the country was gripped by fighting, much as American troops sit peering across Ukraine's borders today. Coffee or Die Magazine even reported on two U.S. Army veterans who recently traveled to Ukraine and trained its forces in advance of this year's invasion. Finkelstein explained that Ukraine making volunteers formal members of its military -- complete with uniforms and training -- would give them the most protection under the law. "It's really important that those who fight for a state fight as an integrated part of that state and not as a contractor, because then the state is taking responsibility for them. It's giving them the same sort of rights and privileges, and has the ability to confer, at least in principle, the same combatant immunity that anyone else would have," she explained. However, application forms posted by the Ukrainian Embassy in the U.S. specifically make volunteers acknowledge that they are joining "under a contract on a voluntary basis" and that they have to provide their own "uniform, personal protection [equipment]." A post by Maliar on social media Monday noted that the Ukrainian government will pay its soldiers 100,000 hryvnias -- about $3,300 -- per month. On Friday, the Ukrainian Embassy spokesman told Military.com that volunteers would not be paid a salary so as not to make them "mercenaries." "If Ukraine were really smart, they would give dual citizenship to anyone who volunteered because that would protect them maximally," Finkelstein said. If those risks don't put you off, the good news is that legally there are few issues with Americans fighting in another country's war. "There's no legal repercussions, per se, it's just that you don't have the protection of your own government," Finkelstein said, adding that many Americans regularly serve, and even sustain injuries, in the Israeli armed forces. One specific protection Finkelstein noted is Department of Veterans Affairs coverage. It's not clear how the agency, which cares for some 11 million patients, would take to treating health conditions that come from another nation's war. -- Steve Beynon can be reached at Steve.Beynon@military.com. Follow him on Twitter @StevenBeynon. -- Konstantin Toropin can be reached at konstantin.toropin@military.com. Follow him on Twitter @ktoropin. Related: Russia Pummels Ukraine's No. 2 City and Convoy Nears Kyiv U.S. policymakers have rallied behind Ukraine as it faces Russia's assault, but there's one proposal to harden Ukraine that's facing bipartisan opposition: a no-fly zone. Ukrainian leaders including President Volodymyr Zelensky have asked the United States and its allies to impose a no-fly zone to deny Russia one of its key advantages over Ukraine in its larger and more powerful air force. But Democratic and Republican lawmakers alike, as well as Biden administration officials, say enforcing a no-fly zone with the U.S. military would risk a direct confrontation between the United States and Russia, which in turn could lead to all-out war between the world's two largest nuclear powers. Read Next: Ukraine Wants Foreign Reinforcements. Will American Civilians Fight? "In order to impose that no-fly zone, you have to enforce it," said Sen. Jeanne Shaheen, D-N.H. "And I think that puts American pilots in a difficult situation that could start a war with Russia. And I don't think that's in the United States' interest." A week into Russia's invasion, Ukrainian forces have fared better than expected, holding onto Kyiv and frustrating Moscow, which has also been stymied by its own planning failures. Russia has also not yet unleashed the full power of its air force on Ukraine, with a U.S. senior defense official telling reporters Tuesday that the Russians aren't "necessarily willing to take high risks with their own aircraft and their own pilots." But U.S. defense officials warn that Russia still has significant capabilities at its disposal that it has yet to use and that Russian leadership will learn from early setbacks to adjust their tactics, including turning to siege warfare that could level Kyiv. Ukrainian leaders are arguing they can build on their early successes and defeat Russia if the West establishes a no-fly zone. "We need the West to impose a no-fly zone over significant parts of Ukraine," Zelensky said in a statement to Axios on Monday. "Ukraine can beat the aggressor. We are proving this to the world. But our allies must also do their part." Zelensky also tweeted Tuesday that he "emphasized the need to close the sky over" Ukraine in a call with German Chancellor Olaf Scholz. The United States has deployed thousands of troops to reinforce NATO's eastern flank and bolster allies worried the Ukrainian conflict could spill over their borders. But President Joe Biden has insisted no U.S. troops will enter Ukraine. And administration officials this week are making clear that vow also extends to enforcing a no-fly zone, which could entail U.S. military aircraft shooting down Russian jets if they ignore the protected area. "A no-fly zone would require implementation," White House press secretary Jen Psaki said Monday. "It would require deploying U.S. military to enforce, which would be potentially a direct conflict and potentially war with Russia, which is something we are not planning to be a part of." Debates about a U.S. military-enforced no-fly zone have flared during other recent conflicts, particularly during the height of the Syrian civil war as advocates and policymakers sought ways to protect civilians. The Obama administration rejected proposals for a no-fly zone in Syria over concerns it could take tens of thousands of troops to enforce and risk a confrontation with Russia, which has forces in Syria supporting the regime. The United States and its allies did take part in establishing and maintaining no-fly zones in Bosnia in the 1990s, Iraq after the Gulf War, and Libya in 2011. A 2013 Congressional Research Service report on no-fly zones noted "many assess" strategic planning for those operations "was at best incomplete." Now, with the conflict in Ukraine raging, even those typically at odds with the Biden administration are warning that a potential no-fly zone could lead to a U.S.-Russia war. "If it was possible, I'd be for it, but it's impossible without causing a confrontation between U.S. forces and Russian forces, which has got to be avoided for obvious reasons," said Sen. Jim Risch, R-Idaho, the ranking member of the Senate Foreign Relations Committee. Still, the idea has found support from a limited number of defense hawks. Sen. Roger Wicker, R-Miss., who is in line to be the top Republican on the Senate Armed Services Committee when Sen. Jim Inhofe, R-Okla., retires at the end of the year, said a no-fly zone is "something I wouldn't take off the table." "I think like-minded nations should explore that based on humanitarian concerns," Wicker said. While lawmakers are largely rejecting the idea of a no-fly zone, they are lining up behind providing more funding to deal with the crisis. The Biden administration last week asked Congress for $6.4 billion to respond to the invasion, including $3.5 billion for the Pentagon to cover the cost of the troop deployments and to restock U.S. weapons being shipped to Ukraine. Lawmakers in both parties have expressed support for more funding, but are debating specifics, such as whether to include it in a broader government spending bill or to move the Ukraine funding separately. Some lawmakers have also suggested going further than the administration requested, potentially as high as $10 billion. "We're going to work on a bipartisan, robust aid package with both military and security needs," Senate Majority Leader Charles Schumer, D-N.Y., told reporters Tuesday. "There are very good discussions going on about that right now." -- Rebecca Kheel can be reached at rebecca.kheel@military.com. Follow her on Twitter @reporterkheel. Related: US-Enforced No-Fly Zone over Syria Risks Conflict with Russia: Selva For as destructive as the worlds combined nuclear arsenals could be, it sure seems like both the United States and Soviet Union were pretty cavalier about using them. The U.S. alone had 32 different nuclear weapons incidents, which includes straight-up losing six of them, none of which was ever found. The Soviets, of course, had a far-from-perfect nuclear record. The USSR may have lost upward of a hundred weapons. It also would have launched a nuclear attack against the U.S. if it werent for one officer who recognized a malfunction in the early warning system. As highly as we like to think of our military leadership, the launch code for World War III was 00000000 for 15 years. We shouldnt be surprised that a bear was nearly able to start that war by itself. On Oct. 25, 1962, America was in the middle of the Cuban Missile Crisis. The Soviets had begun to construct nuclear launch sites on the island of Cuba, allowing the USSR to target areas deep inside the American mainland. It also sparked alarm that a Soviet attack was soon to follow. The U.S. government was livid, and for 13 days, it demanded the removal of the missiles. This response seems strange in retrospect, because the United States had been using the same tactic against the Soviets using missiles based in Turkey since 1961. The Navy was blockading Cuba, and Soviet ships were headed straight for the blockade. Things were pretty tense. With all this going on, much of the U.S. military was at DEFCON 3, which meant the Air Force had to be ready to mobilize within 15 minutes. Strategic Air Command, the bulk of the U.S. nuclear arsenal, was at DEFCON 2, one step below a nuclear war. At midnight on Oct. 25, a portly saboteur set off the intruder alarms at Duluth Sector Direction Center in Minnesota. A sentry fired shots at the intruder and raised alarms all over the area, believing the Soviets were making a move against the Air Force assets. In a frenzy, Volk Field Air National Guard Base in Wisconsin sounded the wrong alarm. Pilots were scrambling to get to their aircraft and to take nuclear weapons to World War III. But almost as fast as the alarm was sounded, cooler heads prevailed as the presumed saboteur walked off into the woods on four legs. The guard realized that his perpetrator was likely a black bear, a creature native to the area. Most of the bases stood down their alert. The only base that didnt was Volk Field. Pictured: Sabotage. (Greg Hume) It turns out the alarm at Volk Field was a lot more serious than just warning of intruders. The airplanes that were about to head off into the night were armed and ready. The alarm that sounded would be rung only if the United States was going to war with Soviet Union. To stop the pilots from potentially nuking the USSR, the base commander had to get one of his officers to drive a truck onto the flight line, right in the takeoff path of the jets. He was able to make it to them and abort the mission as they started their engines. The black bear that almost ended civilization wasnt the only close call of the Cold War. It wasnt even the only time nuclear war almost started during the Cuban Missile Crisis. Despite all evidence to the contrary, it seems humanity doesnt want to commit nuclear suicide after all. -- Blake Stilwell can be reached at blake.stilwell@military.com. He can also be found on Twitter @blakestilwell or on Facebook. Want to Learn More About Military Life? Whether you're thinking of joining the military, looking for post-military careers or keeping up with military life and benefits, Military.com has you covered. Subscribe to Military.com to have military news, updates and resources delivered directly to your inbox. 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Summary of all keyboard shortcuts WASHINGTON, March 1 (Xinhua) -- U.S. President Joe Biden announced Tuesday that the United States will close its airspace to all Russian planes in response to Moscow's ongoing military operations in Ukraine. Biden made the announcement while delivering his State of the Union address, the first of his presidency, to a joint session of Congress. "Tonight I'm announcing that we will join our allies in closing off American airspace to all Russian flights, further isolating Russia and adding additional squeeze on their economy," Biden said. The U.S. move followed similar ones made by the European Union and Canada on Sunday. In retaliation, the Russian aviation authority said Monday that Russia will ban airlines from 36 countries, including the 27 members of the EU, from using the country's airspace. While condemning Russia and reaffirming U.S. support for Ukraine, Biden reiterated in his speech that U.S. forces "are not engaged and will not engage in the conflict with Russian forces in Ukraine." As a current print subscriber, you receive 24/7 access to our website and online e-edition at no additional charge. All you have to do is activate your access. To activate digital access, you will need your account number. You can find your account number on any recent subscription notice or bill. According to Troy E. Renck of the Denver Post, the Rockies, Rangers, Mets, and Orioles have been the most aggressive suitors for free agent starter Tim Redding. Redding, 31 in February, posted a 4.95 ERA in 33 starts for the Nationals this year while earning $1MM. They decided to non-tender him. Other notes from Renckthe Rox have had productive talks with Glendon Rusch, and Ray King has drawn interest from the Phillies, Marlins, and Pirates. John Fay of the Cincinnati Enquirer talked to Ken Griffey Jr.s agent, Brian Goldberg. Theyre talking to four teams, two in each league. The Mariners are one; the Reds and Rays are not. Nick Cafardo suggested the Nationals back on December 7th. Fay believes Griffey could be signed for $3-4MM on a one-year deal. His knee is said to be healthy now following offseason surgery. Socialite Afia Schwarzenegger believes government has failed to employ the appropriate systems and competent people to sell the E-Levy agenda to citizens. In a recent post she stated that due to poor communication strategies, government stood the chance of appearing as heroes to the citizenry in the face of constant public agitations. Welcome to Ghana where governments communication is weak and they will not employ the right people to handle that, do you know you are already paying for the E-Levy, especially MTN mobile money users, she stated. Afia who claims the E-Levy has been in existence for a while now stated that government only seeks to increase the already existing electronic taxing system. Government should have discreetly hidden behind the various telcos, watch them increase the old levy and they (the government) will bounce back against them and advocate for a decrease, this would have painted the government as heroes to the citizenry. She stated. She, therefore, tasked Ghanaians to rather charge government not to increase the existing levies because according to her, the citizens are already paying the levy. The General Secretary of the National Democratic Congress (NDC), Mr Johnson Asiedu Nketia, has said Ghanas biggest opposition party resorted to petitioning the Commonwealth Secretariat about the maltreatment of its members and past government officials because they are not being given fair hearing in court. In the petition signed by Mr Nketia, the NDC complained among others: Since assuming the reins of power in 2016, the message of physical violence against political opponents that Nana Addo preached and championed before the 2016 general elections has turned into structural, institutional and systematic forms of violence in the form of human rights violations, harassment, and political persecutions against members and supporters of the NDC. Justifying the petition, Mr Nketia said: This government is not respecting the right to life, right to a fair trial, and right to express ones self. He said it was imperative that the Commonwealth come and advise the government insisting the government should respond to the Commonwealth. That is why we are requesting that they send a team to come and investigate the claims that we are making, he stated. Meanwhile, Attorney General Godfred Dame has said the petition is just an attempt by the NDC to evade the claws of justice. Mr Dame, who is also the Minister of Justice, told journalists on Tuesday, 1 March 2022: I find it [petition] to be very hypocritical and misleading. He explained: All the government has sought to do is that the NDC and its officers are brought to book. I will not be deterred at all in my quest to ensure that there is accountability for the people of Ghana, he vowed. He noted that the cases that we have investigated and the actions we have filed in court are on account of solid evidence that we have unearthed through painstaking investigation. I can cite the incident of Alfred Woyome, pointing out: All this recourse to the tribunal is an attempt to get the NDC to run away from justice [because] their claims are unjustified. I do not think we must pay too much attention to it, he added. To him, It is a clear attempt to undermine the administration of justice in the court and an attempt to interfere with the sound administration of justice. As far as I know, no foreign entity can influence or interfere with the courts of justice in the country, he averred. As far as I am concerned, all this attempt by the NDC is an attempt to infringe the sovereignty of Ghana. ---Classfmonline.com The French president will not visit the city of Marseille because of the crisis in Ukraine, his campaign team said on Monday, as the first round of the French presidential elections is due to start in 42 days. Emmanuel Macron, who was to hold his first campaign meeting on Saturday 5 March in Marseille, has said he will not go to the southern city. The French president, who is not yet officially candidate for re-election, is worried by the situation in Ukraine and has a series of meetings with various heads of state, his campaign team explained Monday. Emmanuel Macron has until Friday 6 pm to formally declare his candidacy for re-election. In the midst of the Ukrainian crisis, Emmanuel Macron has put off the question of his candidacy until closer to the deadline set by the Constitutional Council. Candidates meet on Ukraine Prime Minister Jean Castex on Monday also received seven candidates for the presidency for a briefing on the Ukrainian conflict including: Fabien Roussel, Yannick Jadot, Anne Hidalgo, Valerie Pecresse, Nicolas Dupont-Aignan, Marine Le Pen and Eric Zemmour. All the candidates accepted the invitation, except Nathalie Arthaud of Lutte Ouvriere. On a trip to Reunion Island, the leader of France's far-left party France Unbowed, Jean-Luc Melenchon should, according to his entourage, be received at Matignon on his return - certainly on Wednesday. After nearly two hours of meeting, candidates were satisfied. "We have had very complete information", said Valerie Pecresse. "Very useful, very interesting and we must pay tribute to the prime minister," said Eric Zemmour. Anne Hidalgo described it as "useful and important" meeting Concerns about the election campaign The government's information approach was approved. But there were still concerns about the election campaign. Green leader Yannick Jadot explained he does not want these concerns to be ignored. "This great democratic moment must take place. It is a great and necessary debate that the French people deserve." The government was reassuring. "Guarantees have been given to us on the 'normal' conduct of the presidential election. So it is obviously important," the candidate of the National Rally (RN) party Marine Le Pen said. All the candidates hope that the campaign for the presidential election can be held as scheduled. The news broke from Chennai in south India as a senior photojournalist killed himself on 13 February 2022 in his office itself. Initially, it was assumed T. Kumars suicide as a personal affair, but soon the harsh reality surfaced. The victim did not receive full salaries for nearly five years and he was in desperate need of money. His wife (Kavitha) underwent medical treatments and only daughter Pavithras engagement ceremony was also approaching. Kumar (56) might have exhausted the borrowing space from family members and well-wishers! Hence, it was his last undesirable action. After the incident, I could realise Kumar was known to me as he worked in Guwahati as a representative of the United News of India (UNI) for some months. Kumar had a very amiable nature to nurture friendship and even tried to help everyone according to his capacity. We had a number of chatting over the media as a whole. Kumar was a passionate listener to my lectures unending, which often crossed the limit. At the end of my discourse, he always concluded the session saying- Nava-da you have to come to my place soon. Reactions to Kumars demise was little slow as everybody understood it as a self-killing matter, but when the real cause came out, the Indian media fraternity got a real jerk. A responsible journalist, who was with the UNI for more than three decades, had to end his life as was being denied his dues. Kumar was not waiting for any lottery or other funds to support his family in distress. He was only expecting his salaries, unpaid fully for over 50 months, and it was the commitment of UNI management authorities while engaging him in work. Should not it be treated as a crime against the insensitive UNI management for slowly putting Kumar on the verge of self-destruction? Lately various media rights bodies have come forward condoling Kumars unacceptable death and also raising some finds for the bereaved family. There are over 200 UNI employees across the country, who are also waiting for their dues for years. Need not to deny that the Indian media fraternity has been suffering heavily since the Covid-19 hit the country two years back. Morning newspapers lost their circulation drastically, so their business, influence and visibility. Satellite news channels also start missing valued audiences. And as a dependent agency on the mainstream media outlets (also some government organs), the UNI also faced a humiliating downfall. The largest democracy on Earth with a billion-plus population today supports around 82,000 registered publications with more than 15,000 in the newspaper category. Published in various languages like English, Hindi, Urdu, Sanskrit, Bengali, Tamil, Telugu, Marathi, Malayalam, Kannada, Gujarati, Punjabi, Odia, Assamese, etc the daily newspapers have a cumulative circulation of around 110 million. But following the corona-crisis, these physical newspapers have lost almost one-third of their actual circulation figures because of the prolonged nationwide lockdown and various aftereffects. Similarly, India has around 1,600 satellite television channels where more than 400 are news related outlets. As most satellite news channels are free-to-air (FTA) in nature, they heavily depend on commercial advertisements for survival. These news channels cannot ask money from their viewers (subscribers) and the proprietors have to manage all expenditures from running offices to staff salaries to productions to flawless distributions from their resources. More amazingly, the FTA channel owners have to pay a huge amount of money to cable operators and direct-to-home (DTH) agencies. However, there is no clarity on how much money a cable operator or a private DTH agency can demand from an FTA channel. The logic behind the financial transactions narrates that those cable operator/DTH agencies can charge the amount of money for providing space into their respective packages which are distributed to viewers. On the other hand, they collect money from the consumers as well as the freight charges for downloading the signal from the satellite and distributing it to the households. Nobody knows if these financial transactions fall under the government financial tax network or not! With the advent of internet services, which are drastically cheaper in India, millions of digital news platforms are coming up to feed the population where the literacy rate is growing above 75 per cent in recent years. One can say, todays media family has increased its outlets significantly. The digital platforms have cleverly blended the flavours of daily newspapers, news channels and also radio outlets, where the audience can get text messages as well as audio-visual inputs. In the long run, taking advantage of the expanded space of smartphones, the digital media may ruin the combined market of traditional outlets by slowly grabbing advertisement revenues. The fall of mainstream media outlets have affected the business of news agencies as they generate revenues mostly from the morning dailies, news channels and private radio outlets. Initially the Indian news agencies (including UNI) played an important role as a trusted bridge between the international news providers and local media outlets. But with the change of government policies and invasion of the internet service, the agencies start losing their space. The last blow to the UNI came in 2017 as Prasar Bharati decided to withdraw its subscription for All India Radio and Doordarshan. The agency had to incur a huge loss after the move. But for any reason the UNI management cannot escape the blame for Kumars tragic end. The board of directors with its faulty policies started destroying the agency long back (at least before the corona-disaster). When it was in a sound financial position, the management launched a multi-lingual television news agency (UNI TV), but soon it failed to generate adequate subscriptions seemingly because of its unprofessional news intakes. So, for the unprofessionalism on part of the management, employees must not suffer. The UNI management should promptly pay all the outstanding dues to the Kumars family, if not any compensatory amount at this moment. The author is a northeast India-based media commentator Jean-Jacques Kabeya is furious: like thousands of foreign students in Ukraine -- from Africa, Asia and the Middle East -- he has been stopped from leaving the country by its border guards. He and several other foreigners alleged racist treatment by both the border guards and ordinary Ukrainians in interviews to AFP. Two days after fleeing the bombing around the eastern city of Kharkiv, Kabeya reached the checkpoint at Shegyni, at the border with Poland, on Sunday evening. But the soldiers and security guards there turned him back, said the 30-year-old student studying to become a pharmacist. "They told me 'You're going to stay here, you're fleeing the war, stay here; you are going to fight with us -- you're not leaving, least of all you blacks'," he said. Now, after 36 hours waiting in vain to get through, he was back at the train station in the western city of Lviv. There he found some compatriots from the Democratic Republic of Congo, who took him under their wing. "It's a catastrophe!" said Kabeya, adding that he was still trying to find a way out. Ukraine is a popular destination for foreign students, with tens of thsaoudns heading there to study. But other foreign students in Lviv had similar stories to tell, and the governments of Nigeria and South Africa have already called for better treatment for their citizens. The African Union issued a statement Monday expressing concern at what appeared to be "shockingly racist" treatment of foreign students. Some countries did however report that a few dozen of their citizens had managed to leave the country. Separate lines At Shegyni border post on Tuesday morning, there were still several hundred people, muffled up against the cold, queueing patiently to make the crossing. They were from Pakistan, India, Algeria, DR Congo, Cameroon, Ghana and Algeria. Some said they had spent four nights there, with temperatures dropping as low as -10 (14 degrees Fahrenheit), in a desperate bid to leave. On the other side of the road was another queue, reserved for Ukrainians -- mainly women and children as most men had stayed behind to fight. That line was moving more quickly. Nearly 680,000 have already fled Ukraine, and more are waiting at the border. By AFP "All of us, we've got our papers," said Mesum Ahmed, a 23-year-old computer student from Pakistan. "Because we're foreigners, they are treating us like dogs. "We've been sleeping here, on this pavement," said Ahmed, dressed in denim and sporting a beanie and a travel pillow around his neck. "But the Ukrainians, they couldn't care less." "You can see fine well what separates them from us," a young Nigerian added, bitterly. "We're black, that's what it is." The only help on hand was from the local volunteers serving them hot drinks and sandwiches. "We're here, we wait, and they don't tell us anything," said Richard Adjen Kusi, a student from Ghana. He left the central city of Cherkassy when Russian President Vladimir Putin "started talking about nuclear weapons three days ago." But everything seemed to be blocked here, he said. "It's not moving one centimetre...I'm scared." A group of around 30 students from Cameroon who until recently had been in the central city of Kirovograd said it was only in the last few days that they had experienced racism in Ukraine. Before the war, everything had been fine. But Bryan Famini, a 22-year-old economics student, said that changed with the invasion. "In the stations, on the trains, were were systematically kept away from the seating," he said. "Some Ukrainians even made fun of us from their cars, seeing us walking," said 22-year-old Ghislain Weledji. "I've been disappointed by this country," he added. "I won't be coming back." 'No discrimination' Ukraine's border service denied there had been any difficulties. "Nobody has been prevented from leaving Ukraine," they told AFP. No they had received no complaints. On the Polish side, officials confirmed that anyone fleeing Ukraine would be welcomed, whatever their nationality. As well as the nearly 680,000 refugees who have already left Ukraine, there are an estimated one million who have had fled their homes but are still inside the country. At Lviv station, 70 kilometres (44 miles) from the border, thousands of Ukrainians -- and some foreigners -- were still waiting Tuesday, in the hope of getting a place on one of the rare trains leaving for Poland. Amanjyot, a 23-year-old medical student said she had tried to board one train the day before but that Ukrainians had been given priority. But she and her friends were grateful for the succour provided by Ukraine's Red Cross workers and other charities in front of the station. "They help so much!" she said. There was plenty of food and they took care of everyone, without discrimination, she added. One of the long-standing unresolved issues between Bangladesh and India is the Teesta water-sharing agreement. The agreement between Bangladesh and India on Teesta water sharing has been discussed for the last few years. But the Teesta issue has stopped with assurance. After the Ganges Treaty in 1996, the issue of distribution of water of the river Teesta became the most important topic of discussion. The issue of Teesta water sharing between Bangladesh and India started at the Ministerial level meeting of the two countries in August 1983. In September 2011, the then Prime Minister of India Manmohan Singh visited Dhaka. At that time Teesta water-sharing agreement was to be signed. The term of the interim agreement was 15 years. According to the agreement, India's right to 42.5 percent of the Teesta's water and Bangladesh's 37.5 percent will be established. But the deal was not finalized due to opposition from West Bengal Chief Minister Mamata Banerjee. Later in 2014, Prime Minister Sheikh Hasina visited India. His visit to India sparked hopes of signing the Teesta Treaty. During the visit, he had a meeting with West Bengal Chief Minister Mamata Banerjee. But even then, the Chief Minister of West Bengal did not agree. She said that the main reason for her disagreement was that she was not willing to give water to Bangladesh by depriving the people of North Bengal. Even in 2015, West Bengal Chief Minister Mamata Banerjee visited Dhaka with Indian Prime Minister Narendra Modi. Although positive statements were made about the Teesta treaty at that time, no results were obtained. There are 54 inter-border rivers or common rivers flowing through Bangladesh and India. Of these, India holds most of the waters of 43 common rivers, which is virtually unfair to neighboring countries. The technical committee of 54 India-Bangladesh Joint Rivers Commission has been meeting for two days from January 5, 2021. The meeting was virtually completed due to the coronavirus situation. The meeting discussed a framework agreement for the distribution of water in the common river. Earlier, the Bangladesh government agreed to draw 1.82 cusecs of water from the Feni River for humanitarian reasons to address the water crisis in the town of Sabroom in Tripura. However, the issue of distribution of Teesta water has remained unresolved day after day. The agreement was important in sharing water across a transboundary river, as it ensured a country's water share and availability. If the agreement is not completed then it will not be possible to meet the water shortage in the city of Sabroom and even in Bangladesh, it will not be possible to implement it by constructing an irrigation project with a pump house. The agreement would benefit both countries. Ghazaldoba Dam was established in 1998 in the Malbazar subdivision of Jalpaiguri district in India upstream of Teesta river in Nilphamari. Through the construction of this dam, the control of the river Teesta passed into the hands of India. The dam has 54 gates that are closed to divert water from the mainstream of Teesta to various sectors. The dam was built mainly to divert the Teesta water into the Teesta-Mahananda canal. Before the Ghazaldoba Dam, where 2500 cusecs of water were available in the Teesta Basin, now the water flow is less than 400 cusecs due to the withdrawal of water from India. During the dry season in Bangladesh in 1997, the flow of water in the Teesta was about 6,500 cusecs, which dropped to 1,348 cusecs in 2006, and in 2014 it stood at only 800 cusecs. Which is affecting the entire economy of Bangladesh. Many lands have become uncultivable due to a lack of water. As a result, ordinary farmers are facing losses, which is affecting their livelihood. Due to insufficient water flow, the river is filling up with chars. Even in summer, there is no water in the river at all. People cross the river on foot. Teesta has turned into a dead river. If this continues, not only public life but also biodiversity will be threatened. The Teesta water-sharing agreement is now the demand of the time. But India's procrastination over the Teesta water-sharing deal suggests they are reluctant to abide by it. The Teesta project will excavate 115 km of the river Teesta flowing through the border of Bangladesh. The depth of the river will be significantly reduced through excavation. Many rivers will be rescued through river management. Land along the river will be made suitable for cultivation. It will even be possible to build industrial cities on both the banks of the river Teesta which will create employment opportunities for many people. Which will enrich the economy of the country. Basically not signing the Teesta River agreement is belittling the neighborly spirit between India and Bangladesh. India should remember that Bangladesh is a well-trusted ally in the region. If India doesn't sign the agreement with Bangladesh, Bangladesh will definitely try to find out an alternative. It is often said that Bangladesh and India are currently witnessing a golden age in their bilateral relations. India should take immediate steps to resolve the dispute before accepting China's cooperation on the Bangladesh issue. Bangladesh has already agreed to be a part of China's Belt and Road Initiative (BRI). But despite this, Bangladesh has indicated that it still considers India as its most important neighbor and ally. Due to the growing domestic demand, Sheikh Hasina is keen to solve the problem of Teesta River distribution. But if it is too late on the part of India, Bangladesh may think of an alternative path. But it needs to be signed as soon as possible. India should sign the treaty with Bangladesh for ensuring its own interest. A fruitful solution to the Teesta problem will not only benefit Bangladesh economically but also help strengthen bilateral relations between India and Bangladesh. The Teesta Treaty will also greatly benefit India also. If this bilateral agreement goes ahead, it will be able to satisfy all the stakeholders of Bangladesh. India will definitely be able to strengthen its position as a strong ally of Bangladesh and build a strong economic and diplomatic partnership. Therefore, speedy action should be taken in this regard and the 'golden age of bilateral relations with Bangladesh should be utilized in the best interest of India. The river Teesta has immense potential. If the proper implementation of the Teesta water-sharing agreement or Teesta project is possible then not only the people of the Teesta coast or North Bengal but the whole of Bangladesh will enjoy its benefits. The change will come in the public life of the people of North Bengal. Bangladesh's economy will be prosperous. Overall, it is important to take effective steps to implement the Teesta Agreement or the Teesta Project. BEIJING, March 2 (Xinhua) -- The 13th National Committee of the Chinese People's Political Consultative Conference (CPPCC), the country's top political advisory body, is set to convene its fifth annual session on March 4. The CPPCC is an important channel and specialized body for socialist consultative democracy and an important part of China's governance system. The following are some key quotes from Chinese President Xi Jinping on socialist consultative democracy: -- The system of multiparty cooperation and political consultation under the leadership of the Communist Party of China is the country's basic political system and a new model that has grown out of the soil of China. -- The CPPCC should perform its role as an organization for maintaining the united front, promote solidarity and unity, balance commonality and diversity, consolidate the common theoretical and political foundation, strengthen political guidance, and build consensus. It should strive to seek the greatest common ground, draw the widest possible inclusive circle, and create a powerful driving force for national rejuvenation. -- There are diverse ways to realize democracy, so we must not be confined to just one particular rigid model. Experience has shown that China's model of democracy is workable and effective in the country. -- Under China's socialist system, whenever a problem crops up, we should turn to deliberation first. Matters involving many people are discussed by all those involved; to reach the greatest common ground on the wishes and needs of the whole of society is the essence of people's democracy. -- Consultative democracy is an important mechanism through which the Party can lead the people in effectively governing the country and ensure that the people are the masters of the country. It complements electoral democracy. Ukraine has introduced a temporary visa-free policy for foreigners wishing to join their forces fighting Russian military intervention. The policy, made official today, doesnt apply to Russian nationals, who are referred to as citizens of the aggressor state in a directive signed by Ukraines President Volodymyr Zelensky. Earlier in the week, President Zelensky announced the formation of a new division, the international legion of Ukrainian territorial defense, which will be staffed by foreigners who, alongside Ukrainians, will be fighting to repel Russian invaders. According to the government, thousands of applications have already been received. Source : DW Africa The governing council chairman of the University of Education, Winneba (UEW) Nana Ofori-Ansah I is justified for the removal of the substantive Finance Officer Mr Francis Obeng. He acted on the advice of the Attorney General to ensure that peace prevails in UEW, Modernghana News can report. This came to light when UEW Convocation Representatives called on government to intervene and have the schools governing council chairman, Nana Ofori-Ansah I fired for his alleged "bulldozer approaches." In a joint press release from the UEW Convocation Representatives dated February 28, 2022 and copied to ModernGhana News, it condemned the conduct of the Chairman whom they accused of being autocratic. Particularly referencing the "unilateral decision" of Nana Ofori-Ansah I to terminate the appointment of the substantive Finance Officer Mr. Francis Obeng, the UEW Convocation Representatives urged government to stop the governing council chairman from abusing his office. We need to put on record that the inconclusive Council meeting held on the 24th of February 2022 on the matter of substantive Finance Officer position, and the unilateral decision of the Council Chairman to terminate the appointment of the substantive Finance Officer, Mr. Francis Obeng, without assigning any tangible reason, without due process and without recourse or reference to the Governing Council but on his personal decision and accord is dictatorial, authoritarian, wrong administratively, illegitimate, and a slap in the face of university administrative principles, part of a joint release copied to President Akufo-Addo reads. However, documents obtained from the Office of the Attorney-General and Minister of Justice by ModernGhana News has justified the action of Nana Ofori-Ansah I which suggests he did no wrong in terminating the contract of Mr. Francis Obeng. Brief background: Following the interdiction of Dr. Theophilus Senyo Ackorlie, who was the substantive Finance Officer of the University among other members, the governing council of UEW in July 2019 appointed Mr. Francis Obeng as the Finance Officer. Mr. Obeng was with the University of Cape Coast as the Deputy Finance Officer until he was granted one year leave of absence in August 2019 to enable him to take up the appointment as the Finance Officer at UEW. He subsequently applied for an extension of the leave of absence, which will expire in August 2023. Dr. Theophilus Senyo Ackorlie vacant position was filled with Mr. Francis Obeng to carry out the duties of a Finance Officer. Fast forward: After the court cleared Dr. Theophilus Senyo Ackorlie of all charges, the Office of the Attorney-General and Minister for Justice wrote to the schools governing council chairman, Nana Ofori-Ansah I to facilitate his reinstatement. The meaning and effect of the ruling of the court is that Dr. Theophilus Senyo Ackorlie, a Principal Officer, ought to be reinstated to his rank and position of authority at the University. That rank and position of authority can only be that of Finance Officer. There is no equivalent. To this extent, Dr. Ackorlie should be reinstated to the grade and office of a Finance Officer, since he has been cleared of all charges levelled against him. "Mr. Francis Obengs appointment could be terminated or withdrawn forthwith to make room for the reinstatement of Dr. Theophilus Senyo Ackorlie as ordered by the Court, parts of a letter signed by Godfred Yeboah Dame to Nana Ofori-Ansah I reads. It is based on the advice of the Attorney General the governing council chairman terminated the appointment of Mr. Francis Obeng as pointed out in the letter below. 02.03.2022 LISTEN Vice President Dr Mahamudu Bawumia on Tuesday closed the maiden National Labour Conference, with a call to social partners to back efforts at rebuilding the national economy from the devastating impact of COVID-19 and current global threats. The Government, he said, was still focused on building a modern prosperous private-sector led economy, anchored on a vision of a Ghana beyond aid. The pursuit of a stable inclusive ago-economy, and the transformation and formalisation of the economy, leveraging technology, he said, needed the sustained support of the Organised Labour, Employers and other social partners. The conference, which was opened by President Nana Addo Dankwa Akufo-Addo, on Monday, was held on the theme: "Strengthening Tripartism for Peaceful Labour Relations and Resilient Economy". The two-day National Labour Conference, organised by the Ministry of Employment and Labour Relations and its National Tripartite Constituents, provided a platform for participants to dispassionately discuss labour issues and shape government's approach towards resolution of labour matters. They also discussed state of the national economy, conditions of service of public sector workers, public sector salaries, labour productivity, labour dispute prevention and resolution and sustainable pensions for all citizens Vice President Mahamudu said the Government was focused on rationalising public expenditure, improving public sector efficiency, harnessing international revenue mobilisation, supporting private sector growth and deepening the country's digital footprint. These endeavours would be successful through effective social dialogue among government, employers and workers organisations. Such engagement s, he noted, would ensure sound industrial relations, promote social justice and help build a resilient economy. Dr Bawumia, who sat in the plenary session, which discussed the communique from the conference, emphasised the Government's commitment to respect the fundamental rights and independence of workers and employers organisations. That, he said, was necessary for ensuring peace on the labour front to collectively build a resilient economy and improve the working conditions of workers. He thanked the tripartite constituents for their immense support given to the government in negotiations and consultations based on inter and intra exchange of Information. He expressed the belief that the country would make a quick economic recovery from the COVID-19 pandemic if the tripartite constituents worked collaboratively and promoted consensus building. Making entrenched claims or taking entrenched positions during disagreements, he noted, would derail the progress. "We're improving tripartism, good governance, consensus building and shaping policy towards a resilient national development," Dr Bawumia assured. Mr Ignatius Baffour Awuah, Minister of Employment and Labour Relations, read the communique issued by the delegates. It called for the review of the Single Spine Pay Policy to address salary disparities and link productivity to reward systems. It also called for a national dialogue on pensions to among others, consider the pensionable income to include allowances and non cash rewards. The delegates urged the government to work towards fiscal consolidation, while the demands of labour should not compromise the macroeconomic stability. Daasebre Akuamoah Agyapong II, Kwahuhene, who chaired the event, emphasised the need for employing sound dialogue to solve labour issues. President Nana Addo Dankwa Akufo-Addo has assented to a request from the Labour partners to make the conference an annual event. GNA The United Nations is to launch formal negotiations on Wednesday for a global treaty to address a plastic trash "epidemic" that supporters say is a historic moment for the planet. The UN Environment Assembly (UNEA), convening in Nairobi, is poised to adopt a resolution creating an intergovernmental committee to negotiate and finalise a legally binding agreement by 2024. The amount of plastic trash entering the oceans is forecast to triple by 2040, and governments have been under pressure to unite behind a global response to the crisis. The framework for a comprehensive treaty has been approved by UN member states, including major plastic producers like the US and China, according to sources close to the negotiations. Officials say it gives negotiators a broad and robust mandate to consider new rules that target plastic pollution from its birth as a raw material to its design, use and safe disposal. This could include limits on making new plastic, which is derived from oil and gas, though policy specifics will only be determined during later talks. The rate of plastic production has grown faster than any other material and is expected to double within two decades, the UN says. By Tony KARUMBA AFPFile The mandate provides for the negotiation of binding global targets with monitoring mechanisms, the development of national plans and financing for poorer countries. Negotiators also have the scope to consider all aspects of pollution -- not just plastic in the ocean but tiny particles in the air, soil and food chain -- a key demand of many countries. 'One for the history books' "We are 100-percent happy with the outcome," said Ana Teresa Lecaros, director of environment in the foreign ministry of Peru, a country that co-signed one of the draft resolutions. Inger Andersen, the head of the UN Environment Programme, said a plastics treaty would be "one for the history books" and the most important pact for the planet since the Paris climate agreement. The rate of plastic production has grown faster than any other material and is expected to double within two decades, the UN says. By some estimates, a garbage truck's worth of plastic is dumped into the sea every minute. By Noel CELIS AFPFile But less than 10 percent is recycled, with most winding up in landfill or oceans. By some estimates, a garbage truck's worth of plastic is dumped into the sea every minute. "Plastic pollution has grown into an epidemic of its own," said Norway's climate and environment minister, Espen Barth Eide, who chairs UNEA. He said he was "quite optimistic" about bringing down the gavel on a strong resolution in Nairobi. A plastics treaty would be the most important pact for the planet since the Paris climate accord. By Simon MAINA AFPFile Environment groups are also buoyed by the outcome of the talks but like officials and diplomats, caution that the strength of any treaty will only be determined by rigorous negotiations to come. The first round of discussions is set for May, according to sources involved in the process. Big corporations have expressed support for a treaty that creates a common set of rules around plastic and a level playing field for competition. Big plastic makers have underscored the importance of plastic in construction, medicine and other vital industries and warned that banning certain materials would cause supply chain disruptions. The Supreme Court on Tuesday dismissed a suit that sought to challenge the re-instatement of Prof. Mawutor Avoke as Vice Chancellor of the University of Education, Winneba (UEW). The parties were absent in Court when the case was called notwithstanding that they had been served hearing notice, according to the Court Clerk. A private citizen, Emmanuel Ansong Baah, went to the Supreme Court following last month's Order of the High Court, Winneba, for UEW to reinstate Prof. Avoke and five other principal officers who had been dismissed by the University four years ago. He was arguing before the apex Court that the application for Prof. Avoke's re-instatement should not have been entertained by the High Court since it was filed out of time. He also questioned the High Court's reliance on an EOCO report exonerating Prof. Avoke which report he argued had not been signed and stamped, and was not on the letterhead of EOCO. On the basis of these arguments he thus wanted the Court to quash the orders of the High Court, Winneba. Constrained by the absence of the parties in Court on Tuesday, however, the Supreme Court struck out the case. Former Russian president Dimitry Medvedev has hit out at France's finance minister Bruno Le Maire after he claimed that Europe was waging economic war against Russia. "We will bring about the collapse of the Russian economy," Le Maire told the Franceinfo broadcaster after France, the EU and other western governments said they would impose a new round of sanctions on Moscow. "The economic and financial balance of power is totally in favour of the European Union which is in the process of discovering its own economic power," he said. "We are waging total economic and financial war on Russia." But Medvedev, who is deputy chair of the Russian Security Council, responded on Twitter that such rhetoric could have serious repercussions. "Watch your tongue, gentlemen," said Medvedev who led Russia between 2008 and 2012 before becoming President Vladimir Putin's prime minister until 2020. "And don't forget that in human history, economic wars quite often turned into real ones," he added. Le Maire later told AFP that his language had been inappropriate. "We are not in conflict with the Russian people," he added. French President Emmanuel Macron has sought to keep open a dialogue with Putin, with the two men speaking again on Monday. But French ministers have been using increasingly strident rhetoric to describe the western strategy of trying to strangle Russia's economy and cause pain for Putin's business allies. Asset seizures "The oligarchs need to watch out because the list of oligarchs that have been targeted by the EU is very large," French Foreign Minister Jean-Yves Le Drian told the BFM channel. He said they were being hit not only in their share portfolios but also with the possibility of asset seizures. "So if I was an oligarch, in Russia or France, I'd be worried," he added. On Monday, the EU added more Kremlin-linked oligarchs and Putin's spokesman to its sanctions blacklist. Among the high-profile names were Igor Sechin, head of the state oil giant Rosneft, and Nikolay Tokarev, boss of pipeline mammoth Transneft. Three men ranked within Russia's 10 richest by Forbes were also added: metals magnate Alexei Mordashov, tycoon Alisher Usmanov, and businessman Gennady Timchenko. Le Drian added: "I hope he (Putin) realises how the balance of power has shifted and that he has lost the information war." (With AFP) The Russian army said on Wednesday it had seized the southern Ukrainian port city of Kherson as its forces continued to envelop the capital Kyiv during the seventh day of fighting. "Russian army units have taken full control of the regional capital of Kherson," said armed forces spokesman Igor Konashenkov. He added that civilian infrastructure and public transport were functioning normally. The advances came as the American president Joe Biden denounced his Russian counterpart Vladimir Putin as a dictator. Speaking during his first State of the Union address on Tuesday night in Washingotn, Biden told American politicians: "Russia's Vladimir Putin sought to shake the foundations of the free world thinking he could make it bend to his menacing ways. But he badly miscalculated. "He thought he could roll into Ukraine and the world would roll over. Instead he met a wall of strength he never imagined. "He met the Ukrainian people. From President Zelenskiy to every Ukrainian, their fearlessness, their courage, their determination, inspires the world. "Throughout our history we've learned this lesson when dictators do not pay a price for their aggression they cause more chaos. They keep moving." Biden said the United States would join a host of western governments and ban Russian aviation from its airspace. The US Department of Transportation and Federal Aviation Administration said the measures would take effect on Wednesday night. It will mean that no aircraft owned, certified, operated, registered, chartered, leased, or controlled by a Russian citizen can pass through American skies. On Wednesday, Ukrainian security services reported that Russian airborne troops had landed in Kharkiv, the country's second most populous city. Ukraine's State Special Communications agency said the soldiers attacked the military medical clinical centre hospital and were involved in skirmishes with local forces. In Kyiv, residents continued to take shelter in the city's metro stations. RFI correspondent Stephane Siohan posted pictures on social media of scenes in the underground system despite warnings from Putin that inhabitants should leave the capital. The Ukrainian President Volodymyr Zelenskiy claimed on Wednesday that nearly 6,000 Russians since Putin had ordered the invasion. However, the figures have not been independently confirmed. Referring to Tuesday's attack on Babi Yar - the site of a World War II massacre of Jews by German occupation troops and Ukrainian auxiliaries - Zelenskiy said: "This strike proves that for many people in Russia our Kyiv is absolutely foreign. "They don't know a thing about Kyiv, about our history. But they all have orders to erase our history, erase our country, erase us all." Repercussions On Wednesday, the repercussions of the conflict were felt in the energy sector. Brent crude - the international benchmark for oil prices - hit $113 a barrel, marking the highest level since June 2014. It rose even after the International Energy Agency's members agreed to release 60 million barrels of oil from emergency stockpiles. During his State of the Union address, Biden announced the release of 30 million barrels of oil from the government's reserves held underground in salt caverns along the Texas and Louisiana coasts . Biden said the move would help to protect Americans from higher fuel prices. I want you to know that we are going to be okay, Biden said. Dr Yaw Osei Adutwum, the Minister of Education has urged members of boards of institutions to desist from leaking out information on issues discussed at council meetings. He said such acts were not only wrong but criminal. Dr Adutwum, who was inauguring the Governing Board of the Cape Coast Technical University in Accra, said it was important that members of Council kept discussions at meetings confidential and focus on the interest of the institutions. Dr Adutwum administered the oath of secrecy and oath of office to the fifteen-member board, with Professor Harold S. Amonoo-Kuofi as the Board Chairman. He tasked the members of the board to bring their various expertise and experiences to bear to turn the fortunes of the University for national growth. "We need to hear about Cape Coast Technical University based on your accomplishment, look for opportunities for transformation and support the Vice-Chancellor to succeed. "Let's focus on what is critical according to the strategic plan of the University and move things forward on behalf of the University. You must operate within your mandate and the statute, which established you as a university," he advised. Dr Adutwum urged all the Technical Universities to position themselves to match up with the government's industrialisation agenda by training students who could support the development of industry. Prof Amonoo-Kuofi, on behalf of the members, pledged the readiness of the Council to work very hard to achieve its mandate towards the transformation of the University. GNA French actor Gerard Depardieu, a friend of President Vladimir Putin - and a Russian citizen since 2013 - on Tuesday came out against the war in Ukraine and called for negotiations. "Russia and Ukraine have always been brother countries," the 73-year-old film star told French news agency AFP in a phone call. "I am against this fratricidal war. I say 'stop the weapons and negotiate'," Depardieu said. In 2013, he sparked a huge outcry by leaving France and taking Russian nationality in protest at a proposed tax hike by President Francois Hollande's on the rich in his homeland. Putin treated him to a dinner to present him with his new citizenship and Depardieu was subsequently full of praise for the strongman. "I will say what I think about Putin: the Russian nation needs a person just like this - with a Russian temper. Putin is trying to return just a bit of dignity back to the people," he said after the dinner. Since then, the actor has never stopped praising his new homeland, Russia, a "great democracy", and praising Vladimir Putin, whom he has notably compared to Pope John Paul II. "Many people would like to have a Putin as president," Gerard Depardieu said on the set of France 2 news programme on 15 June 2015. Only last month, as tensions soared at the Ukraine border, Depardieu opened an Instagram account with a picture of himself embracing Putin. He also said on French television: "Leave Vladimir alone." In 2015, Ukraine blacklisted Depardieu in apparent retribution for his reported refusal to recognise the independence of the former Soviet state. The culture ministry gave no official reason for the ban at the time, but it had previously identified Depardieu and other Russia-friendly international film stars as national security threats whose movies should be banned. The COVID-19 Trust Fund has disbursed over GH47.5 million of funds received from the public over the last 21 months with a balance of GH12.3 million as of December 31, 2021. A breakdown of disbursement showed that COVID-19 Private Sector Fund was the largest recipient with GH10.3 million transferred to the fund and GH6.8 million separately going into the construction of infectious disease centre initiated under the Private Sector Fund. About GH GH7.6 million was used to procure Personal Protective Equipment (PPE) during the reopening of tertiary institutions, GH5.7 million to procure laboratory supplies for the Ghana Health Service (GHS) and GH2.5 million to the National Commission for Civic Education for sensitisation. The ARB APEX Bank, Verterinary Service Department and the Ghana Police Service, respectively received GH3.96 million, GH1.9 million and GH1 million while GH2.5 million was used to procure and sew PPE for distribution. Dr William Collins Asare, the Administrator of the Trust Fund released a statement of account for the entity at a public Forum held under the theme, The Accountability Gap in the Covid Responses of Ghana. He indicated that the Trust Fund had received a total of about GH59.8 million with about GH10 million in kind and most of the cash that we received came within the first four months. Mr James Klutse Avedzi, Member of Parliament for Ketu North, the Chairperson of the Public Accounts Committee, noted that since Ghana recorded its first case of COVID-19 in 2020, about GH1.2 billion of the Contingency Fund was released by Parliament as requested by the finance ministry. The government, he said, further secured other funds from the International Monetary Fund and the World Bank while Parliament approved GH11.16 billion during the mid-year budget review and in 2021, additional allocation for GH4. 5 billion was made in the budget. Mr Avedzi said COVID-19 expenditure, which was cross-sectorial and at different level of the governance structure, needed to be audited as a project by the Auditor General to ensure proper accountability. The Auditor General under the powers granted it by Article 187(2) have to audit the expenditure of government in relation to COVID-19, he stressed. Mr Joseph Winful, Chair of the Economic Governance Platform (EGP), said effective financial resource management was a vital element to democracy and patriotism, adding that, I believe if we do that, we will be satisfying the citizens of Ghana. GNA A visitor takes photos of ZTE's new cellphones during the Mobile World Congress in Barcelona, Spain, on Feb. 28, 2022. (Photo by Gustavo Valiente/Xinhua) China is currently the world leader in the 5G rollout with "1.425 million 5G base stations" and "518 million" people having a 5G phone thanks to a very high 5G coverage allowing for "more than 10,000 5G industry applications." BARCELONA, Spain, March 2 (Xinhua) -- Xie Junshi, executive vice president and chief operating officer (COO) of Chinese telecommunications company ZTE Corporation, discussed a wide range of issues related to 5G and suggested that it could be a "social vaccine" during the ongoing Mobile World Congress (MWC) 2022 in Barcelona. After two years of cancellations and changes brought on by the coronavirus pandemic, the MWC is back in full swing this year. "This is the biggest, most impactful event for the world ICT (information and communications technology) industry and as we see the world is gradually recovering from the pandemic," Xie said in an exclusive interview with Xinhua. The pandemic coincided with the 5G rollout and this new technology has helped many people remain in touch with family and friends, and enabled them to work from home during periods of lockdown experienced in many countries. "I think 5G will bring very big changes to the whole industry. First of all -- and I think this is felt more deeply after the events of the past years -- digitalization may become a kind of social vaccine in the post-pandemic era." "The digitalization of communication, whether it is telecommuting, online collaboration, online shopping, and the digitalization of manufacturing, should play an irreplaceable role in the healthy development of the whole world economy, and also gradually enhance the immunity of the whole society, which I think is very important," he explained. A visitor is seen at the Mobile World Congress (MWC) in Barcelona, Spain, March 2, 2022. (Photo by Gustavo Valiente/Xinhua) The return of MWC allows companies to once again hold formal presentations of their new products, and ZTE is no different. "We have launched our simplest, easy-to-use 5G network solution, and solutions for efficient, intelligent operation and network maintenance. This is also very much in line with our future dual carbon strategy, as we work towards a green, low-carbon and sustainable future," Xie said. He said that ZTE would also "focus on launching new 5G customer premises equipment (CPE) products this year, as well as our global Blade series of smartphones." China is currently the world leader in the 5G rollout with "1.425 million 5G base stations" and "518 million" people having a 5G phone thanks to a very high 5G coverage allowing for "more than 10,000 5G industry applications." "A major benefit of 5G in typical application scenarios currently is that it reduces costs, improves quality and increases efficiency," Xie said, highlighting ZTE's "5G cloud-based AGV (automated guided vehicle)" as well as "domestic" and "global 5G industry applications," such as "smart ports in Belgium, smart medical care in Colombia, smart ecological agriculture in Austria, and smart manufacturing in Thailand." "Through such 5G industry applications, we can significantly reduce costs and improve efficiency," he said. Xie said he was excited to see the new applications that could emerge in the 5G era: "For example, WeChat exploded in the 3G era and Douyin (TikTok) emerged in the 4G era, so what will the killer app be in the 5G era?" He said this is of interest to most everyone," predicting further advances in "ultra-high definition video, as well as augmented reality (AR) and virtual reality (VR) applications." Visitors watch an immersive 360 holographic show at Barcelona Looks Up stand at the Mobile World Congress (MWC) in Barcelona, Spain, March 2, 2022. (Photo by Gustavo Valiente/Xinhua) "We can already see this trend in China, South Korea and some other countries with high 5G penetration," he explained, adding that "5G technology has brought us improved audio-visual experience, with 360-degree views and far-and-close telescopic free views," which allow "viewers to sit at home and have the feeling of being there." The Member of Parliament (MP) for Ketu North in the Volta Region, Hon. James Klutse Avedzi has called on the Auditor-General to use resources at his office to conduct a separate audit into the Covid-19 expenditure of the government. Since March 2020 when Ghana recorded its first case of the Coronavirus, government has spent billions on various interventions in a bid to fight the global pandemic to protect the citizenry. In 2020 Parliament approved some GHS11.1 billion after a request by the Finance Minister when the Covid-19 hit the country. The following year 2021, an additional GHS4.56 billion was approved by Parliament to help fight the pandemic. Government also received $1 billion in support from the IMF plus some $430 million from the World Bank. These and monies received by the government from international entities have been spent but are yet to be extensively audited. Speaking at a Public Forum organised by the Economic Governance Platform (EGP) and Ghana Anti-Corruption Coalition (GACC) on Tuesday, March 1, 2022, in Accra, Hon. James Klutse Avedzi stressed that it is about time government accounted for all Covid expenditure. The politician charged the Auditor-General to conduct a project and focus resources on auditing the governments Covid-19 expenditure from March 2020 to date. Up to date, we dont have an audit on the Covid-19 expenditure. In the 2020 auditor general report which was published in June 2021, we did not have expenditure on Covid-19. So we are expecting the auditor general to constitute Covid-19 expenditure as a project, Hon. James Klutse Avedzi said at the Forum on the theme, "The Accountability Gap in the Covid Responses of Ghana. The Ketu North MP continued, It should not be under the normal annual budget audit. If it is audited as a project then we will then know that all the receivables and approved expenditure, what were those expenses used for? James Klutse believes that in the interest of accountability, a specific audit focused on the governments Covid-19 expenditure is needed. Government spokesperson on Governance and Security, Mr Palgrave Boakye-Danquah has said Ghanaians should not encourage conversations about a possible overthrow of a constitutionally elected government in Ghana. He said such thoughts are extremely backward. Speaking on the New Day show on TV3 with Johnnie Hughes on Wednesday, March 2, he said The more we encourage conversations of coup detats the more people feel yes, it is imminent. I have witnessed coup detats. In Liberia, I have seen how devastating coup detats can wreck a country. So, let us put it as a liking scale. Today, 2nd of March, there is a coup in Ghana. This is what will happen, shops will be closed, schools will be closed, hospitals will be closed, there is going to be a total shut down. People will go out in arms, carry knives, those who have guns will carry it , they will come to your homes, people will die. People will start burning malls, people will take the hospitals, young people will die. If this is what we want then I think we should prepare the table for a buffet and start eating. He added When we raise the conversations around coup detats, I am deeply concerned no matter the merit of it. I think it is important that we have a soul search having come through from 1978, 1981, up until the 4th Republic to this state, I think that it is extremely backward to have tabled that motion of a thought of an indicator of how it looks like. On this subject matter, a former Attorney General under the Rawlings administration, Dr Obed Asamoah has described persons who are calling for military takeover as childish. He said these persons are unaware that the consequences of coups are nondiscriminatory and that they themselves are at risk. Speaking in an interview with TV3's Roland Walker on Tuesday, March 1, Dr Obed Asamoah explained that the soldiers who overthrow a constitutionally elected government will always revenge against persons they had bone to pick with. If for example, he said, someone was fighting with a military officer over a woman, that person will be targeted if there is coup and be eliminated. This fix Ghana elements, some of them are openly calling for military takeover. Those people are childish. When coup happens the power that is wielded by the soldiers immediately after the coup is not discriminatory, they look at it in personal terms. If for example you have crossed some military officer in traffic and he is annoyed with you he is coming to shoot you in the confusion of the revolution. Or maybe, you have been fighting with him over some girlfriend, in the confusion he will shoot you. So the consequences can be non-discriminatory, they can affect the very people who are asking for that, he said. He further indicated that it is not automatic that a military government will solve the problems facing the people for which they are calling for a revolution. The other thing is you can have a military government that will be completely inefficient, he added. The Speaker of Parliament, Alban Bagbin, has also expressed concerns about commentaries on coups among some Ghanaians in the country lately. He noted that if coup happens, it is Parliament that will suffer not the judiciary or the executive. Speaking during a meeting with Council of State members on Tuesday, March 1, he said If there is coup, it is parliament that suffers, judiciary will always be there, there will always be an executive arm and because of that absence of parliament many Ghanaians don't understand what parliament is. I have gone through it from 1993 up to date, I have seen some of the challenges, I have identified some. When I took over as Speaker then the weight came on me. I see myself, even though I am a member of the NDC, throughout my practice I have not been a fanatic of party politics. I have always preached across the political divide. ---3news.com The Accra Metropolitan Assembly (AMA) says it will soon surcharge occupiers and owners for not painting their buildings at least once in every two years. Section 181 of the Local Governance Act, 2016 (ACT 936), requires that (a) a household or an owner or occupant of premises within the jurisdiction of the Assembly shall keep the house clean, white-washed and painted on regular basis at least once in two years. Section (b) of the by-law says, where the owner, occupier or landlord fails to comply with the above provision, the Assembly shall undertake the painting and charge the owner, occupier or landlord with the expense incurred in undertaking the painting. The Assembly said though there had been enough grace period after the promulgation of the by-law in 2017, it was still engaging in sensitisation to make people within the jurisdiction see the law as a responsibility. Mr Gilbert Ankrah, Head of Public Affairs, AMA, told the Ghana News Agency in an interview that very soon the Assembly would enforce the by-law in line with its beautification and operation clean your frontage agenda. He said last year, the Assembly painted some houses in the James Town enclave at no cost to the owners and occupiers as part of the sensitisation. Mr Ankrah said it also gave paints to some house owners and occupiers to beautify their houses. The move is to set example as implementors of the law and create a sense of responsibility for the people to follow suit. Mr Ankrah said the house cleaning, white-washing and painting and Operation Clean Your Frontage, were to help address public health issues. The by-law also demands that the Assembly demolishes dilapidated or close to collapsed buildings after eight-days' notice to the owner and charge the owner for the cost incurred. A person "who contravenes this by-law commits an offence and is liable on summary conviction to a fine, not more than one hundred penalty units or a term of imprisonment of not less than thirty days and not more than six months or to both; and in case of a continuing offence, is liable to a fine of not more than one penalty unit for each day that the offence continues. Fifty per cent (50%) of the fine paid will be allotted to the Assembly. The law was promulgated in place of the Accra Metropolitan Assembly Maintenance of Premises By-law, 1995, which was revoked. Madam Joyce Naa Lamiokor, a dealer in fabrics, said she had no knowledge of the by-law, but she painted her house every year as a maintenance culture. Mr Bernard Tetteh-Adjei, a landlord, said he knew of the by-law, but his tenants were unable to contribute towards the painting of his four-bedroom apartment due to COVID-19. He said they were ready to paint the house themselves and appealed to the Assembly to support them with some buckets of paint. GNA Shirley Ayorkor Botchwey, Minister of Foreign Affairs and Regional Integration, says at at 1700 hours on 28th February, 2022, an estimated 527 Ghanaian nationals had crossed the Ukrainian border to various European countries. Out of the number, some 49 Ghanaians, including one child were received by the Diplomatic Mission in Prague, Czech Republic, and are awaiting processing for departure to Ghana. In Slovakia, 25 Ghanaians had arrived and were on their way to Prague to be received by Ghana's Diplomatic mission, while in Romania, 134 Ghanaians were received by an official of the Prague Diplomatic Mission and were also awaiting relevant processes for departure to Ghana. The Foreign Affairs Minister said 81 Ghanaians had arrived in Poland and 221 others at the border in Hungary and were enroute to the city of Budapest. Interacting with parents of Ghanaian students stranded in Ukraine Tuesday, she said, "the Government of Ghana is ready to evacuate all the 527 of its citizens in a coordinated manner". Evacuation options had been limited as Ukraine closed its airspace at the start of the military operations after the Russian invasion. That left, as with the only viable option; evacuation by land to neighbouring countries such as Moldova, Poland, Romania, Slovakia, Hungary and the Czech Republic. The Minister said arrangements were being made to immediately evacuate the nationals at no cost as long as they were willing to be evacuated. "Government has put in place the necessary package to facilitate transportation, accommodation, feeding, medical support, among others, to ease any burden on our compatriots," she said. Some 17 students, part of an initial 220 students expected, arrived at the Kotoka International Airport Tuesday morning aboard Qatar Airlines from Romania. Two other batches from Romania in different groups of 70 and 64, respectively, were expected to arrive later this week with 16 expected to arrive from Poland in the coming days. Other African students, including Ghanaians, according to their parents, were still stuck on their university campuses unable to leave as conflict intensifies and soldiers advance to cities like Kharkiv - the second largest in Ukraine. Madam Botchwey noted that the Ministry had dispatched officials from Ghana's Diplomatic Missions to various borders to assist Ghanaians when they crossed over into neighbouring countries. She said according to unconfirmed information, Ghanaians in Ukraine were 1200 with 945 of them being students, registered with the National Union of Ghana Students (NUGS), Ukraine and 29 of them on Government scholarships. GNA The Ghana Anti-Corruption Coalition (GACC) and Economic Governance Platform (EGP) on Tuesday, March 1, 2022, organised a public forum in Accra on the accountability gap in Ghanas Covid-19 response. The forum brought together key stakeholders to deliberate on findings of research into the expenditure of the government since the country started fighting the Covid-19 pandemic. Delivering a presentation on the findings, Mr. Bright Sowu who is head of programmes at the GACC disclosed that although the Covid-19 situation in Ghana peaked in 2021, the government failed to make a budgetary allocation to fight the pandemic. This is what surprised us the most in the research that we undertook, that there was no Covid funding for MMDAs in 2021 and 2022, Mr. Bright Sowu disclosed. He said from the findings of the research, the government did secure approval from Parliament for GHS4 million in 2021 to tackle Covid-19. However, the money was not disbursed to the MMDAs. He said the 10 district assemblies contacted from seven out of the 10 regions covered in the research confirmed that they receive no money to fight Covid-19. Another reason why this is surprising is in 2020 we had budgeted and Covid came in March so we were in a bit of a panic and we had to go and find money. We moved from 2020 to 2021, we still had the pandemic and we even anticipated that the figures will even go higher because we were in an election year. So how does it happen that for the first time we could actually budget for local governments and actually spend money to be able to effectively combat Covid, there was no money that came at all to local government for 2021. This is an issue that we seriously need to look into, Mr. Bright Sowu shared. He further shared that from the MMDAs engaged, they said they were told to use funds from the District Assembly Common Fund to tackle the pandemic. Unfortunately, the funds were also not released by the government. From the research, The Economic Governance Platform and Ghana Anti-Corruption Coalition identified some accountability issues on governments expenditure on Covid-19. As such, it has been recommended that the government accounts for money spent in order to clear the many issues that came up in the research bothering on corruption. The research also recommends that an audit be conducted on the Covid expenses of the government. Having chaired the public forum, Ketu North Member of Parliament James Klutse Avedzi backed the calls for an audit, while stressing that it should be conducted as a separate project by the Auditor-General. Up to date, we dont have an audit on the Covid-19 expenditure. In the 2020 auditor general report which was published in June 2021, we did not have expenditure on Covid-19. So we are expecting the auditor general to constitute Covid-19 expenditure as a project, Hon. James Klutse Avedzi said at the Forum on the theme "The Accountability Gap in the Covid Responses of Ghana. He added, It should not be under the normal annual budget audit. If it is audited as a project then we will then know that all the receivables and approved expenditure, what were those expenses used for? In his address, Mr. Joseph Winful, chairman of the Economic Governance Platform charged Civil Society Organisations to continue pushing for accountability from government institutions. He said, everyone has a responsibility and must display patriotic behaviour to make this country becomes better for everyone. On his part, Dr. Director General of the Internal Audit Agency, Dr. Oduro Osae identified the use of pre-auditing instead of risk-based auditing as a major problem. He said in the midst of the many questions raised in relation to the Covid-19 expenditure of government, emphasis should be placed on performance audits to ascertain whether funds were indeed put into good use in the last three years. He further revealed that the Internal Audit Agency has been doing some work with Economic and Organised Crime (EOCO) and will soon prosecute three institutions found to have wasted funds. He said a bipartisan probe into the governments Covid-19 expenditure in the interest of accountability to the people of Ghana is needed urgently. Agricultural Extension Officers in the Upper West Region have pledged to support the Ghana Warehouse Receipt System (WRS) project of the IFC World Bank Group. The Extension Officers who described the WRS project as one of the best initiatives to address post-harvest losses in the region also indicated their commitment to adopt and integrate WRS initiatives into their outreach activities. The Extension Officers at the end of a training workshop observed that the skills acquired from the workshop will enable them to support farmers to address key issues relating to post-harvest losses in the Upper West Region. The Regional Women in Agriculture Officer, Madam Barekisu Django Alhassan, said the training has helped her to understand how her outfit can support farmers to reduce post-harvest losses, adding that this is one of the best initiatives that can help address all our struggles with the post-harvest issues in the region and beyond. In fact we have been struggling with post-harvest issues but this training has given us more information as to what we should do better. We have learnt so much and going forward we are going to integrate the practices and the standards of the WRS into our extension activities so we can reach out to as many farmers as possible within the coming months, Mr. Stephen K. Yelsung from the extension division of the regional department of agriculture disclosed at the end of the training program. Mr. Iddrisu Mahamadu, Wa Municipal Extension Division of the Department of Agriculture on his part indicated that, the Warehouse Receipt System and its interventions present many opportunities for farmers to make more money from their grains that can lead to improvement in their livelihoods. I think this intervention is really helpful and it has many opportunities for smallholder farmers to get what they really deserve for their produce in terms of money. Going forward we need to let farmers know and we can do this by training other extension officers so we can get to more farmers as soon as possible. With financial support from the Switzerlands State Secretariat for Economic Affairs (SECO), the IFC Ghana WRS project is being implemented in nine regions across the country. The project is providing advisory and technical support aimed at setting up a well-functioning regulated WRS that is expected to help reduce post-harvest storage loses and facilitate an increased access to financial services and structured markets to farmers and the supply chain. This intervention focuses on strengthening the WRS ecosystem for the successful operations of the Ghana Commodity Exchange (GCX). ABOUT IFC IFCa member of the World Bank Groupis the largest global development institution focused on the private sector in emerging markets. We work in more than 100 countries, using our capital, expertise, and influence to create markets and opportunities in developing countries. In fiscal year 2021, IFC committed a record $31.5 billion to private companies and financial institutions in developing countries, leveraging the power of the private sector to end extreme poverty and boost shared prosperity as economies grapple with the impacts of the COVID-19 pandemic. For more information, visit www.ifc.org. Health experts from the Greater Accra Ear, Nose and Throat (ENT) Nurses Group on Tuesday said using ear buds to remove wax from the ears is unsafe and can lead to hearing impairment. Mrs Caroline Adwoa Aidoo, the Public Relations Officer for the Group, said the ear wax, also referred to as cerumen, played an important role in the ear by helping to lubricate, prevent infections, and trap dirt and insects from entering the ear, hence it must not be removed. The bad thing about using ear buds is that, instead of bringing out the wax it pushes it further back into the ear and blocks the eardrum, which may cause hearing difficulty, she said. She urged the public to visit any ENT facility to have their ears washed if they felt the wax was in excess instead of using ear buds. Mrs Aidoo said this at a health screening exercise held at the GH Media School to mark the World Hearing Day, which is observed on March 3, every year. This year's theme is: To Hear for Life, Listen with Care, which focuses on the importance of safe listening as a means of maintaining good hearing throughout one's life. Lieutenant Commander Michael Donkor, the Chairman for the Greater Accra ENT Nurses Group, and a Clinical Audiologist, 37 Military Hospital, said the louder the music listened to the higher the possibility of losing hearing capabilities later in life. He cautioned participants and the public, especially on-air media personalities, to desist from listening to sound above 80 decibels for more than 40 hours a week. Lt. Donkor advised smart phone users to get a Sound Level Meter app on their phones to help track the level of sound or noise around them. If you are in an environment where the noise levels are 80 decibels and above, you have two options; either you leave or use ear plugs he said. Lt. Donkor admonished on-air media personnel to use ear plugs to reduce the amount of sound that went into the ear. There are simple ear plugs that can be used while using headsets in the studio that reduces the amount of sound going directly into the earonce sound is attenuated the impact is less he stated. The team advised the public to have their ears examined at least once a year, as part of their routine health checks. The World Hearing Day is to raise awareness on how to prevent hearing loss and promote hearing care across the world. Each year, the World Health Organisation decides the theme and develops evidence-based advocacy materials such as brochures, flyers, posters, banners, infographics, and presentations for the campaign on maintain good hearing. GNA The Peoples National Convention, PNC, has jumped to the defence of embattled Dome-Kwabenya Member of Parliament, Sarah Adwoa Safo. According to the party, it views the constant attacks on the MP as one founded on gender bias. In a Twi interview on Accrabased Okay FM, General Secretary of the PNC, Janet Nabla entreated the New Patriotic Party, NPP, to engage the MP while toning down on the attacks on her. Taking on Assin Central MP, Kennedy Agyapong, over scathing attacks on Adwoa Safo in recent times, Madam Nabla said his outburst stemmed out of jealousy. She further urged the general public to disregard the comments made by the Assin Central MP. Kennedy Agyapong is not the husband of Adwoa Safo. Right now, nobody should even be listening to him because if someone is your ex, people must fear them more than anyone else. Now that Adwoa Safo is married, there will be that kind of enmity between them. So what he is saying, I dont even want to hear it. It is amounting to jealousy. It is jealousy because previously when Adwoa Safo wasnt married, did you hear Ken Agyapong come to vilify Adwoa Safo? Now that Adwoa Safo has a husband, when Ken Agyapong is speaking about her therell be some kind of jealousy in him. Ghanaians should not listen to ex-lover Kennedy Agyapong, she said on Friday, February 25, 2022. Janet Nabla also urged Parliament not to use the Dome-Kwabenya MP as a scapegoat in dealing with absentee MPs. She asked that Kennedy Agyapong and Henry Quartey should also be made to exit Parliament if the law on absenteeism is to be enforced. If you have children with someone, and she has landed in troubleno matter what, you shouldnt be doing what you are doing. He himself has not been in Parliament for 18 days. What we are saying is that if they want to remove Adwoa Safo, Honorable Ken Agyapong and Henry Quartey must also follow suit, she said. ---kasapafmonline I write with utmost respect to advise Professor Raymond Atuguba to avoid certain comments during his public lectures, concerning the electronic transaction levy (e-levy) matter. He should be bold to admonish the government to manage the countrys natural resources effectively and also spend the taxpayers money wisely. I had a shock of my life when I read the e-levy statements from the document concerning the public lecture he delivered at the Erata Hotel in Accra under the auspices of SOLIDAIRE Ghana Governance Forum on Monday February 28, 2022. In my opinion, Raymond should revise his notes and come up with better comments on the e-levy. It is an undeniable fact that Ghanas economy has been mismanaged and I think its about time we speak truth to power and save future generations. Instead of endorsing the passage of the cruel e-levy, Atuguba should have used the opportunity to offer professional guidance to the government to help seal the financial leakages in the system and also advise the President to spend public funds carefully, rather than renting private jet with huge sums of money to waste state resources. Dr. Raymond Atuguba was trained in Law at the Ivy-League Harvard University, USA and Mr. Ken Ofori Atta was also trained in Finance at the Ivy-League Yale University, USA. I was trained in Mining Engineering and Mineral Economics at the Elite Colorado School of Mines, USA which is the worlds number one (#1) Mining University. Regardless of the fact that I am not a finance person, my subsequent explanation in this publication is aimed at disputing the fabrications from Raymond and Ken that the E-Levy is the only alternative to bolster Ghanas economy, after Ken Ofori Atta has mismanaged the countrys finances through his wanton borrowing with little to display. Firstly, in his speech, Prof supported the passage of the e-levy and said, we should pass the darn, farafucken E-Levy Bill immediately and effectively to prevent the collapse of the economy. Again, he continued by stating that Ghanaians have no choice but to pass the e-levy. It would have been better if he had disclosed the analysis he conducted to justify his statements. In my opinion, his declarations were just calculated strategies to mislead Ghanaians, in favour of the government to accept this wicked and devilish financial approach, aimed at pickpocketing from the good people of Ghana. He should have developed other possible and acceptable tax revenue strategies to educate the government on what to do next in its efforts to sustain the economy. I would like to remind Raymond that the e-levy policy is expected to generate an approximate annual revenue of GHS 6.0 billion, which is about US$ 885 million with the 1.5% tax on electronic transactions. However, is Atuguba aware that the nation currently has GHS 52.5 billion or US$ 7.75 billion sitting in an unknown account (Refer to 2020 auditors report on Ghana Commercial Bank)? Again, is he aware that GHS 12.8 billion or US$ 1.89 billion was missing in 2020, according to the Auditor-Generals report? I urgently and fervently encourage any Ghanaian with economic management expertise to educate the government on other legitimate revenue mobilization alternatives, instead of the e-levy which will worsen the hardships that Ghanaians are already experiencing. Retrieving the supposed misplaced money from individuals and sealing financial leakages in the system should be the immediate step taken to regenerate money to the governments coffers and help stimulate the economy. Let all Ghanaians ask the Finance Minister, Mr. Ken Ofori Atta about how such huge sums of money worth GHS 52.5 billion could be allegedly transferred to an unknown account. Does it mean the account didnt exist? Does it mean the money was paid to a bank account without details? How was the money transferred then? I am not sure if Yale University Graduates have developed ways to transfer money to a bank account without name and account number. The Parliament of Ghana should summon Mr. Ken Ofori Atta immediately to explain this miraculous banking transaction to all Ghanaians, if it is true. Why do we allow him to get away with this impunity? Prof. Atuguba in his delivery said, we must ensure that the government does not run to the IMF for a bailout, when he was quoting and underpinning the Finance Ministers statements that We are a proud nation. We have the resources. We have the capacity. We are not people of short sight. Yes, I agree with him on all these but the big question is; why cant the government effectively manage our enviable natural resources to improve revenue generation that can lead to economic sustainability? Does Prof. Atuguba realize that mismanagement and bad leadership are the main causes of the economic mess in the country? Is Prof aware that the government is reluctant to render accountability on the COVID 19 funds worth billions of United States dollars? How do we practice democracy if public servants refuse to be accountable? May I ask if Atuguba can prove to Ghanaians and justify that the e-levy will be appropriately used and not be mismanaged like the various financial infractions we have witnessed under this same government. Ghana is blessed with abundant natural resources, including oil & gas, gold, diamond, bauxite, manganese, lithium, etc. Again, the country exports cocoa, coffee, cashew, rosewood, timber, among others. The is a clear indication that yete sika so (Ghanaians sit on money), as Nana Akufo Addo declared before he gained power to become the President. How many countries across the world are blessed with these immense natural resources, yet the intelligent, patriotic and foresighted leaders manage their economies without partaking in IMF bailouts. Honestly, the e-levy will pamper the government to continue with its lazy approach without scouting for smart ways of generating revenue to build the economy. As a mining professional, I would be humble enough to advise the government to look into how we can generate enough revenue from mining activities, especially small-scale mining operations. Currently, thirty-five percent (35%) to forty percent (40%) of gold exported from Ghana is produced through small-scale mining activities. Let all Ghanaians ask the government how much tax revenues are achieved from small-scale mining operations in Ghana. Why is the nation unable to collect adequate taxes from the sector that produces such a big percentage of gold from the leading gold producing country in Africa? I will personally be happy to see a document that shows revenues from the small-scale mining sector since this governments assumption of office from 2017 until date. From an optimized financial analysis on small-scale mining profitability in Ghana conducted by my team, if a minimum of 200,000 Ghanaian small-scale miners work in the thirteen (13) out of the sixteen (16) regions, a minimum annual tax revenue of US$ 250 million, approximately GHS 1.7 billion can be generated for the state. Ghana loses gargantuan amount of money from small-scale mining activities everyday because the previous and current governments have not identified the rich tax revenue potentials in that sector. Tax revenue from small-scale mining alone can sponsor the Free SHS which costs about GHS 1.4 billion yearly, according to the Finance Ministry. The revenue can be close to US$ 1.0 billion or GHS 6.5 billion, if the sector is properly formalized to minimize the associated water pollution, land degradation and be managed effectively to employ about one million Ghanaian youth. Also, there are over 10,000 foreigners, especially Chinese nationals who are operating illegal mining in Ghana without paying taxes. We all recall that a Chinese lady was arrested at the Kotoka International Airport on US$ 313 million money laundering deal in October 2019, according to online citinews.com and also published in Ghanas renowned newspaper, Daily Graphic (https://citinewsroom.com/2019/10/chinese-woman-arrested-in-accra-over-us-313-million-money-laundering-deal/). If one person could gain this colossal amount of money from Ghana without paying taxes, can we imagine how much money the rest of the thousands of foreigners generate from the country without paying taxes? On the large-scale mining operations in Ghana, Goldfields Ghana Ltd alone paid US$ 320 million, approximately GHS 2.2 billion in January 2022 for the 2021 financial year, according to online ghanaweb.com (https://www.ghanaweb.com/GhanaHomePage/business/Gold-Fields-pays-US-320-million-to-government-in-taxes-1456306) and other traditional newspaper publications in Ghana. There are more than fifteen (15) large-scale mining companies in Ghana, using surface and underground methods to extract minerals. Additionally, there are various contractors and sub-contractors working in the mining companies across the country who pay corporate and employee taxes. In all, the government can potentially generate over US$ 1.5 billion, approximately GHS 10 billion from 2021 large-scale mining tax revenue to be paid in 2022 alone. Is this not even more than the anticipated GHS 6 billion pickpocketing e-levy? Ghanaians can guess how much this government alone has received from mining taxes since 2017. Where is the money? This is just mining so I will beseech Ghanaian professionals in the other sectors of the economy to also conduct voluntary research to identify areas we can improve to sustain the economy. Conspicuously, my preliminary findings through detailed investigations have disclosed that the Finance Minister, Mr. Ken Ofori Atta has never disclosed the exact revenue from mining operations in any of his budgets since he assumed office in 2017. Meanwhile, he has been detailing oil/petroleum tax revenues and even been displaying the yearly expenditures. For example, in the 2020 Financial Budget, pages 20, 31, 32, 36, 37 and 40 highlighted the tax revenues and expenditures during the 2019 year. It included oil and gas but no amount was written for mining and quarrying. I challenge the Finance Minister to come out and dispute this fact. All Ghanaians should ask him to explain where this huge money was reported to. Furthermore, Ghanaians were promised that this government would move the economy from taxation to production, hence I would like to find out if e-levy is part of taxation or production? Did the NPP government campaign in that direction purposely to deceive Ghanaians and win votes? Combating corruption to minimize financial malfeasance is a critical area that the government should monitor effectively. It can help in protecting the public purse and generate more revenue to the nations coffers. The country has lost money through the PDS deal, Ameri deal, PPA deal, Banking Sector Fraud, Galamsey Missing Excavators, Missing Gold, among others. Again, the government can put strategic measures in place to include the informal sector business owners and employees who do not currently pay taxes to the ambit of taxation. How many carpenters, fitters, tailors, tilers, masons, etc., pay taxes in Ghana? At least, they can be included in the tax bracket at a reduced rate. Likewise, it is an open secret that lots of lawyers and business owners, especially those in the oil and gas industry evade taxes in the country. The government should develop ways of widening the tax bracket and avoid overtaxing the few people who already pay. I would like to remind Prof. Raymond Atuguba and the government about a quote from an American Governor, Bobby Jindal in 2015, Higher taxes still does not create prosperity for all. And, government still does not grow jobs. Adding the e-levy to the existing taxes may collapse small businesses and aggravate the already alarming rate of unemployment in the country. Reducing tax rates can incentivize the private sector to create more jobs, boost investment drive and likely increase GDP over the long term. I will therefore use this opportunity to commend the minority caucus in Parliament for fighting relentlessly to challenge the unpopular e-levy policy in the interest of all Ghanaians, both home and abroad. It is my prayer that they do not succumb to any pressure from anybody, including Ex-President Kufuor, Ex-President Mahama, President Akufo Addo, The Clergy, The Chiefs, etc. Their efforts will save the good people of Ghana from potentially untold sufferings. Ghanaians are expecting highly educated people like Professor Raymond Atuguba to use such public lecture platforms to counsel the Executive Body of government, led by President Akufo Addo to rethink the economic policies, fix their mess and put the economy back on track without focusing on the needless e-levy. They should listen to the pleas of the people and abolish the draconian e-tax. God bless our homeland Ghana!! Solomon Owusu, PhD Mining Engineering & Mineral Economics Consultant Colorado, USA. 02.03.2022 LISTEN On 3rd March 2022, Ahaspora, GH-PAC USA and Diaspora Drive shall be hosting their maiden event Ghana Action Forum under the theme Bridging Home & Abroad for Ghanas Development. The Ghana Action Forum is endorsed by Beyond the Return, with key partners including Diaspora Affairs under the Office of the President and Ghana Tourism Development Company. Key sponsors for the upcoming event include; Fidelity Bank, Expresspay, European Union GrEEn Project, British High Commission, Enterprise Insurance and Ghana Investment Promotion Centre. Along with the event's strong corporate and governmental support, the Ghana Action Forum is pulling some of Ghanas top industry leaders, shakers, movers and influencers to participate in panel conversations and keynote speeches highlighting key challenges, opportunities and proposing strategic solutions to engage diasporans with Ghana. Special Guest of Honour for the maiden event is Her Excellency Mrs Samira Bawumia, the Second Lady of the Republic of Ghana. The Ghana Action Forum, is a two day event which envisions actionable and implementable outcomes that will further spur growth and development in the country and simultaneously impact the diaspora. HONG KONG, March 2 (Xinhua) -- The Chinese mainland has already sent epidemiologists, isolation facility builders, and virus testers to support Hong Kong's ongoing fight against a raging wave of COVID-19 infections. Now, the legion has a new squad -- 38 meat processing specialists. They arrived in the Hong Kong Special Administrative Region (HKSAR) on Wednesday and will pick up the slack to kickstart the normal supply of pork and beef to the local residents after virus' outbreaks forced the shutdown of Hong Kong's two major slaughterhouses on Feb. 25. The team consists of experienced practitioners from Shanghai, Hangzhou, Shenzhen, Nanning, and Xilingol League -- regions in all four directions of the Chinese mainland. They are expected to be stationed in Hong Kong for two months inside a closed loop, said Ng Fung Hong, a top food distributor and slaughterhouse operator in Hong Kong. The suspension of butcher service has already weighed on Hong Kong's supply of fresh meat. Ng Fung Hong said the 38 specialists, who have volunteered to join the task force, will get down to work once Hong Kong's food watchdog gives the go-ahead. Zhou Guoming, the team leader, said he came well-prepared and has got support from both his company and family. "With my skills, I feel honored to do something practical for the people of Hong Kong, so that they can take home fresh meat as soon as possible," Zhou said. On the last day of February, the supply of fresh food from the mainland to the HKSAR largely returned to the normal level. On Feb. 28, about 2,100 tonnes of vegetables were transported from the mainland to Hong Kong by land and water, accounting for nearly 90 percent of the daily average vegetable supplies in the previous year. The supply of chilled meat from the mainland has been recently maintained at a higher level than usual, reaching about 1.4 times the daily average amount on Monday, official data showed. As part of the Chinese central authorities' efforts to help Hong Kong combat COVID-19, a train carrying goods from the mainland arrived in the HKSAR on Wednesday. The freight train loaded with anti-epidemic supplies in 18 containers came from Shenzhen. The goods include 1.1 million COVID-19 virus test kits, 20,000 pieces of protective clothing and other medical supplies. The supplies will be distributed to the anti-epidemic front on the same day. The Shenzhen-Hong Kong freight train service is planned to run once a day at the current stage, and more times daily possibly according to the needs of Hong Kong. A single train trip takes 35 minutes. The move also marked the resumption of railway transport of mainland supplies to Hong Kong, 15 years after the decades-old regular service of sending fresh food to Hong Kong by rolling stock ended amid the rapid development of highway transportation. The deputy minister for Fisheries and Aquaculture Development has promised that Ghana will not cut corners in prosecuting those who contravene fisheries laws. Deputy Anims comments come in light of evidence that the destructive and illegal saiko trade in which trawlers target the staple catch of small-scale fishers might be taking a new form, with trawlers landing the fish directly at port, rather than transferring the catch to specially adapted canoes at sea. The Environmental Justice Foundation (EJF) commends Deputy Anim for his statements, but strongly urges the government to turn words in to action and bring an immediate and permanent end to all saiko fishing, with full enforcement, prosecutions and deterrent penalties. Saiko is a severely destructive form of illegal fishing, where trawlers target the staple catch of canoe fishers and sell it back to local communities at a profit. It steals jobs, threatens food security and endangers Ghanas economy. While a strong crackdown last year has stopped the landings of saiko canoes, there is now evidence that the trade may be taking a different form, as acknowledged by the Deputy Minister Moses Anim at the recent stakeholder meeting to validate the fisheries management plan (2022-2026) in Accra. Under this new method, saiko catches including juvenile fish are being landed directly by trawlers at Tema port and brought to communities by road, undercutting small-scale fishers. This worrying new form of the trade was also highlighted by the President of the National Fish Processors and Traders Association, Madam Regina Solomon, who decried the landing of anchovies by trawlers at Tema, and stressed the negative impact this is having on the trade of fish processors. Deputy Anim was clear that perpetrators of illegal fishing activities in Ghana will be dealt with according to the law to safeguard Ghanas fisheries. He warned that the ministry was aware that the trade may have changed form, and said that the government would not hesitate to apply sanctions should any illegalities be identified. EJF welcomes this decisive statement by the deputy minister and the commitment of the ministry to crackdown on operators breaking Ghanas fisheries laws. EJFs research on the saiko trade in 2017 indicated that saiko alone took around 100,000 tonnes of fish, worth over US$ 50 million when sold at the landing site. Saiko is costing Ghanaians millions of dollars annually , and threatening coastal livelihoods. Enhancing transparency in fisheries and enforcing regulations is vital in safeguarding the livelihoods of local fishers. Many of the transparency measures , including publishing details of fishing licence conditions, vessel ownership and sanctions for illegal fishing, are low-cost, simple to implement and can be introduced immediately. Steve Trent, CEO and founder of EJF, said: I applaud the deputy ministers statement wholeheartedly, but Ghana still needs immediate and effective enforcement of its fisheries laws. Perpetrators must be sanctioned to serve as a deterrent to others and prove that this government means to stop saiko and all other forms of illegality in its entirety. Rigorous inspections at the two industrial ports Tema and Takoradi are also vital to prevent any new form of saiko and ensure that trawlers stop illegally catching the peoples fish once and for all. These efforts should be underpinned by a move to full transparency in the fisheries sector. His Excellency President Nana Akufo-Addo must personally ensure that words become action. Until that happens these abuses that are destroying Ghanas fisheries, ruining lives and livelihoods, and breaking national laws, will simply continue. Now is the time for action. 02.03.2022 LISTEN The Criminal Court Wednesday March 2 adjourned the case of former Works and Housing Minister Alhaji Collins Dauda to April 4. The full trial will commence at the next hearing. Collins Dauda and four others are standing trial for allegedly causing financial loss to the state in the $200m Saglemi Housing Project. The legal case management ended on Wednesday to pave way for the commencement of the trial set for April 4. All five accused were in court. The judicial case management set the tone for the trial and gives the guidelines and coordination for the trial. It also allowed the state prosecutors and the lawyers for the accused to file their witness statements. Alhaji Collins Dauda is standing trial for his alleged involvement in the Saglemi housing project. He faces 52 charges including causing financial loss to the state, misapplying public property and issuing false certificates. Other four individuals including the former works and housing Minister Kweku Agyeman Mensah are also standing trial for the same alleged offences The state levelled the criminal charges against the five individuals for intentionally misapplying $200 million of state funds by paying for 1,412 affordable housing units at Saglemi, instead of 5,000 units, as Parliament had approved. Council for the accused Gordon Edudzie Tameklo earlier told tv3 they were expecting the prosecutors to file their additional papers on the same day. ---3news.com Day-in-day-out highly qualified and experienced Nurses are leaving the shores of Ghana in search of greener pastures. Some research has shown that about 60% of Nurses interviewed indicated that they have plans to move out of Ghana and work in other countries. The popular destinations of these Nurses include the United Kingdom, United States of America, Australia, Canada and recently Barbados and United Arab Emirates. This trend is worrying as this threatens to worsen the Nurse-Patient ratio in the Country and for that matter the quality of Nursing Care for the Ghanaian population. This write-up intends to examine the factors contributing to the mass movement of Nurses from Ghana to other Countries, especially high-income countries. The write-up will also look at some benefits that may accrue to Ghana from the emigration of Nurses. Finally, the write-up will consider ways to stem this tide of mass emigration of Nurses. Factors accounting for the mass movement of Nurses Most writers on this issue have categorized the factors contributing to the emigration of Nurses as push and pull factors. Push factors are the situations in the sending countries provoking the exit of Nurses. Pull factors are the prospects in the destination countries that entice Nurses. Push factors are important in making the decision to migrate because those who are happy with their work and living conditions are not likely to emigrate. Pull factors on the other hand informs the decision to migrate, that is, labour markets in receiving Countries. Generally speaking, push factors include low remuneration, poor living and working conditions, lack of career development opportunities, high cost of living, job and economic insecurity. Research suggests that most Nurses in Ghana will emigrate mainly because of low remuneration, poor living and working conditions. They are also likely to move to developed countries because of high cost of living vis-a-vis their incomes. Also, heavy workload without incentives, inability to save from meagre salaries are reasons why Nurses are leaving Ghana for developed countries. Another, reason why Nurses move from Ghana to other countries is poor pensions and social security. It appears job security and career development opportunities, at least for those who work in the Government Sector, are not the main reasons why Nurses may leave Ghana for developed Countries. On the other hand, pull factors attract migrants to high income countries. Generally, they include availability of vacancies, high wages, better living and working conditions, career improvement opportunities and guaranteed safety and family security. Benefits of the Mass Movement The issue of mass movement is not without benefits. The notable benefits that accrue from it are: Remittance to family and friends in Ghana. Most Nurses who emigrate are likely to remit money to family and friends. This in the long-run will improve on the economy and living standards in the country. Most migrant Nurses are likely to return to stay and work in Ghana after their time out there. The skills and work experience that they have gathered abroad will benefit the Ghanaian population on their return, thereby boosting productivity in the long-run. What can be done to reverse the trend of mass movement? Government should work at improving the conditions of service of Nurses and other health workers. That is, salaries should be improved. Allowances including rent, commuting, etc should be introduced. Government should consider sponsorship for Nurses to pursue graduate and postgraduate programmes as well specialized programmes. Government should continue to retool Health facilities and equip them with modern equipment to facilitate service delivery and improve the working environment. In the long-run, Government should consider instituting an incentive package for Nurses and other Health Professionals to own affordable homes at locations of their choices. Government should consider reintroducing the vehicle duty waiver policy for health workers that existed in time past. This will also serve as an incentive. Conclusion Mass Migration of Nurses from Ghana to high income countries is a major issue that requires the attention of Government and the general population of Ghana. It threatens to reverse the gains that have been made over the years in the Health Sector. Government needs to improve the working and living conditions of Nurses and other Health Workers in the Country to retain highly qualified and experienced ones. THE AUTHOR: FAROUK ADAM IDDRISU MSC.(LONDON), BSC. ADMIN(GHANA), LL.B (GHANA) HEALTH POLICY, PLANNING, FINANCING AND MANAGEMENT SPECIALIST MEMBER OF THE ASSOCIATION OF HEALTH SERVICE ADMINISTRATORS-GHANA It cannot be gainsaid that the National Union of Ghana Students has contributed immensely to the democratic development of our country. From the policies and programs proposed and advocated, the provision of better political leaders and the protection of the fundamental human rights of ordinary citizens. From the days of our Independence struggle to the achievement of our Independence and thereafter, NUGS has always been there for Ghanaian Students. Even in the hay days of Nkrumah's administration, where his penchant for power and influence led him to take cruel actions against the Judiciary and Universities through the passage of the Universities Act (1961) which made him as the Head of State, to be the Chancellor of the universities and the 1964 Amendment Act which sought to bring the Judiciary under the control of the CPP-led government, NUGS was there to defend and battle for the Ghanaian interest. The glory days of our Union came in the era of Busia, Acheampong and Rawlings. The Union did not only oppose repressive rules and policies but also proposed human centered policies that ensure that the development path of our country was on the right road. NUGS in the 1970s, as a way of patriotism, recommended the introduction of a National Service Program that would mandate graduates from tertiary institutions who had benefitted from Free Education to render one-year voluntary service to the nation. Even at a time where Witches and Lizards feared to question the authority of Chairman Rawlings, NUGS was there to battle for what they believed was right and deserving. The success of our Fourth Republic cannot be eulogized without reference to the extraordinary commitment of NUGS. Fighters like Kwaku Paintsil, Haruna Iddrisu, Okudzeto Ablakwa and many more prominent past Executives of our beloved Union fought so hard just so the basic right and privileges of the Ghanaian Student would be protected. The story of NUGS is a story of continuous struggle, commitment, dedication, sacrifice, loyalty, patriotism and the respect for the dignity of man. Despite the rich and handsome state of our Union over the decades, the current state of the Union is one that is worrying and terrifying. The Union is at a crossroad. It's on a fence sitting mood. The Union lacks identity and direction. It suffers from inherent incompleteness. And now more than ever, there's the urgent need for us to rescue our Union. This is not the first time our Union is bedeviled with such difficulties and challenges. Challenges have been part of the growth of our Union - wars, repressions, persecutions and sometimes, the distortion of one's future. Each time, there have been those who told us to fear the future. Who threatened to disrupt us if we don't do their bidding. And at each time, we overcame them. Guided by our own recent history that " the sweet heady wine of power is apt to besot and turn rulers into oppressive tyrants", we always rose up at the needed hour. And because we did, because we saw opportunities where others saw peril, we emerged stronger and better than before. What was true then can be true now. The challenges may be new, the problems may be new, their methods may be new but the perpetrators are the same. Will we face it with fear and panic and lose sight of it or we will face it head on and defeat it? Challenges: Ownership Who owns NUGS? Is it the political class, godfathers, political parties, NUGS executives or the Ghanaian Students? The spirit of the preamble of the Constitution of our Union clearly indicates who owns the Union (Ghanaian Students) but the actions and inactions of the Union in recent years gives a different outlook. NUGS for some time now is incapable of fighting for the interest of the ordinary Ghanaian student. The Union-Executives are burnt on doing the bidding of their political parties and godfathers. They, on countless occasions, have chosen the path of disdain to the plight of the ordinary student and sided with the party in power. They are only interested in securing their own future and perhaps, getting a ministerial appointment after their tenure of office at the expense of the Ghanaian Student. This is the time to fight for our Union. Leadership Good leadership was always at the citadel of everything during the glory days of NUGS. Good leadership gives you a sense of purpose. It's passion inherent and direction driven. Bad leadership destroys a good Union. The leadership of our Union today is weak, lacks the zeal, passion and revolutionary spirit. Today, we cannot for once prepare human centered policies to government. We are unable to have a common front and position on national issues. We have lost our position as the conscience of the nation. Because we allowed, godfathers, politicians and despotic leaders to break into our ranks, we are now a subject of public ridicule. Direction Good Unions and organizations are those with better leaders, good members, rich history and are aware of what lies ahead in the future. What is the direction of NUGS? Where do we envisage to be in the next 10-20 years? It's important we understand where we are coming from, where we are and where we are going. The direction of our Union is dark and unseen. Selfishness, greed, sycophancy, obsequiousness, evil and sheer wickedness has been the lot at the moment. Nobody seems to care about the ordinary Ghanaian student. The Union is not thinking anymore. We are not asking questions anymore. We seem to be passive, dogmatic and unconcerned about the current happenings in our education system. Nobody seems to be interested in the future of education in Ghana. What kind of products will the current education system produce for the country in the next 10-20 years? Disunity At the time NUGS was vibrant, strong and passion driven, the Union was united. It was the only nationally recognized Student Union in the country. It was able to attract the best minds from all the tertiary institutions in the country, which more often, gave hope and believe in the Union. The Union is disintegrated today. It is unable to command strong forces as it used to. We must begin to restructure our Union, look back at where we fell and join forces together. NUGS, PUSAG and USAG must come together and have a common front. It is possible. The NUGS story The story of the students NUGS can be likened to the story of the Owu brothers. A young and vibrant twins who despite being brilliant needed to pass through fire in order to have University Education. They never gave up regardless of the challenges they went through. Persistence!! It is the same as the story of Odoom Benjamin. A young boy from Dunkwa whose father, irrespective of being talented, intelligent and patriotic, had his ambition of being a graduate soiled because his parents couldn't afford to pay his fees. This is the story of the old NUGS. The story of the current NUGS is that of a gentleman from a rich family who never had any personal ambitions but rather looked up to his father for direction and influence. The story of our Union today is that of a Spoilt Man The Way Forward There are four big questions that, going forward, we as a Union must begin to answer regardless of who becomes the next president. How do we give every Ghanaian Student a fair share of opportunity and security in this new economy? Undoubtedly, Covid-19 has had an awful impact on the Ghanaian economy. We are unable to generate enough revenue to invest in education. We lack behind in terms of educational infrastructures. Many young people across the length and breadth of the country, from Bawku to Dunkwa, from Bogoso to Hohoe and beyond, attend schools under bad conditions. Their education is exposed to Educational hazards and infractions. NUGS must begin to reshape the National Conversation on Education. We must begin to ask questions and provide policy alternatives on how the problems of education in Ghana can be addressed. How do we keep our Union safe and seek for a better future for Ghanaian students? Our Union is a welfare institution. The leadership of the Union, at all times, must be guided accordingly. We must be bold and firm to stand against any entity that seeks to jeopardize the future of Ghanaian students. The Union must be ready to be at the table for the people they serve. How do we make our politics reflect what's best in us? All politics is local. The actions of leadership must be geared towards the collective good. Leadership is a privilege to better the lives of others. It is not an opportunity to satisfy personal greed. Student leaders across our various institutions must be made to understand that their job is not to defend school authorities and management but to fight for the collective good of Students. Ordinary students must be the final judges on whether there have been improvement in their lives or not. Let's give power back to the people. For all our differences, we rise and fall together. Governance at its best is when politics reflects the decency of the people. There's good in us, let's invest in it. How do we make NUGS the Conscience of the Nation? Dr. Busia in one of his famous quotes stated that " when a man passes through the black clouds of suffering and lives successfully through pain, the experience gives greater depth and wider dimension to his character" Being aware of our rich history and guided by the numerous challenges, we must begin to reshape the focus of our Union. NUGS must begin to invest in student think thanks. We must begin to invest in students who can analyze government policies, see through the necessary loopholes and identify possible solutions to them. We must be more nationalistic and forward looking. The affairs of our students' front cannot continue to be business as usual. The time to Reawaken our consicence and Re-focus is Now. Victoria Ascerta !!! Odoom Benjamin Dunkwa-on-offin DMF /16/10 The Ashanti regional anti-robbery squad has urged residents of Bekwai and its environs to be on the lookout for some two armed robbers who were part of a gang of five connected with the blocking of the road from Abodam-Koniyaw near Bekwai and robbing of some market women. The gang is reported to have blocked the road from Abodom-Koniyaw near Bekwai with wooden logs to rob some passengers. The police shot two of the gang members on Wednesday, 2 March 2022. According to the police, the anti-robbery squad, during an intelligence-led operation, engaged the robbers in a shootout. The police noted in a statement issued following the incident that in the process of the engagement, two of them [robbers] were shot, one was arrested and two others who might have sustained gunshot wounds managed to escape and are being pursued. The police, therefore, urged residents of the surrounding communities and medical facilities to be on the lookout for suspicious persons and inform the police for further actions. Source: classfmonline.com Prof. Olivia Frimpong Kwapong 02.03.2022 LISTEN Prof. Olivia Frimpong Kwapong has been appointed as the new board chair for Graphic Communication Company Limited. The appointment is in accordance with article 168 of the Constitution and section 2(1)(e) of the National Media Commission Act, 1993 (Act 449). The appointment has been announced by the National Media Commission in a press release issued on Wednesday, March 2, 2022. Prof. Olivia Frimpong Kwapong is set to work with seven other people on the board of Graphic Communication Company Limited. About Prof. Olivia A. T. Frimpong Kwapong Olivia A. T. Frimpong Kwapong is an Associate Professor and Head of the Department of Adult Education and Human Resource Studies at the University of Ghana. She also acts as the Dean of the School of Continuing and Distance Education and chairs the Board of Ghana News Agency. Olivia holds a PhD degree from the University of Ghana and has studied as a Special Doctoral Candidate at Harvard University. In the year 2013 she served as a Fulbright Visiting Scholar, at Bloomsburg University in the United States of America. Her research has focused on empowerment of women through adult education, open and distance learning and the use of ICTs. She has published extensively in both local and international journals. She has authored five books and over 30 journal articles. Prof. Kwapong has consulted for local and international organizations that promote the empowerment of women and the creation of access to tertiary education. She has benefitted from numerous awards that gave her opportunity to travel and study abroad and also to undertake research. CUTS International Accra, a research and public policy think tank with support from GIZ Support Programme for AfCFTA has begun a nationwide capacity building workshop for the Malawian Private Sector on African Continental Free Trade Agreement (AfCFTA) Rules of Origin. The exercise seeks to build the capacities of the Malawian private sector, representatives of industry associations, chamber of commerce on recently negotiated AfCFTA Rules of Origin. The workshop is taking place in three major cities of Malawi; Lilongwe, Mzuzu, and Blantyre from 28th February-8th March 2022 with CUTS International Accra providing the training. Speaking at the opening session of the capacity building workshop in Lilongwe, Malawi on Monday, the West African Regional Director for CUTS Accra, Mr Appiah Kusi Adomako said the private sector and more particularly, SMEs are the drivers of trade across Africa and must be equipped with all protocols and the annexes of AfCFTA to help the maximize the potentials of the free trade agreement. The private sector is the driver of the economy across Africa. It must therefore be at the forefront if AfCFTA is to be successfully implemented and beneficial to the people. This is because, without a strong SMEs sector, which can produce and export competitively to other parts of the African continent, African countries would not be able not to take full advantage of the free trade agreement Mr Adomako added. Mr Adomako mentioned that findings from a survey conducted by his outfit in Ghana show that less than 13 per cent of SMEs know about the AfCFTA while the remaining are uninformed about the content of the agreement. Hence, the need to embark on this campaign and education on the rules of origin and how it relates to the work of the private sector. When it comes to rules of origin, the knowledge level among SMEs is very minimal as it is fairly new among African countries. If not properly understood, it could cause problems for both importers and exporters doing trade under the AfCFTA, he added. In her remarks, Mrs Charity Musonzo, the Director of Trade at the Malawi Ministry of Trade said the training is timely and an important one as it will allow the private sector to gain a deeper understanding and equip them with the tools and techniques on the subject of Rules of Origin of the AfCFTA. For Malawi, Rules of Origin have been a challenging issue as they do not only constitute a highly technical area but also because their designation and application have not been harmonized across the various regional trade agreements that Malawi is involved in (COMESA, SADC, TFTA, AfCFTA, and WTO). Customs Administration of Rules of Origin has also been a challenge. She added. According to her, the lack of such harmony has created a spaghetti bowel effect to the extent that both traders, as well as government officials involved in trade facilitation, are in most cases faced with challenges to understand applicable rules of origin. The lack of full understanding and capacity at Customs Administration has often let third party goods cleared under preferential arrangements denying revenue for Government. Mrs Musonzo disclosed that her outfit plans to undertake analytical studies, strategy development, position papers development and public-private sector dialogues under the various bilateral and regional free trade agreements and negotiations that Malawi is involved in and their impact on Malawis exports. She mentioned that her Ministry will continue to partner with donor agencies, research organization and the private sector to enhance market access of Malawian products, reducing the trade balance and support the trade agenda for the economic growth and prosperity of the Malawi economy. Sajeev Nair, Programmes Advisor for CUTS International Lusaka advised the private sector to prioritize sourcing their raw materials from AfCFTA members to enable them benefit fully from the rules of origin. Members of the private sector lamented their weak capacity to be able to produce and export to other countries and called for support from the Malawian government help retool their operations to enable compete fairly under the AfCFTA. The Nigerian government has chartered three jets from local carriers Max Air and Airpeace in an effort to bring back home their citizens stranded in Poland, Hungary and Romania, according to Nigeria's foreign ministry. "The first batch of evacuees are expected to arrive in Nigeria on Thursday, 3 March" Gabriel Aduda, permanent secretary for the ministry, said in the statement. Nigerians, many who are students in Ukraine, fled the country at the beginning of the Russian invasion, but some reports claimed they had suffered major hardships and racism in just trying to escape the country like everyone else. Some 1,000 Nigerians are scheduled for the airlift. "We assure Nigerians that we are working round the clock to see that our citizens are bought back home safely," added Aduda. There are some 5,600 Nigerian students in Ukraine, said the ministry. Ukraine's ambassador to South Africa said that there are some 16,000 African students in Ukraine, but many have no embassy in the eastern European country, which has made their repatriation even harder. Difficulties in getting out The Ghanaian government brought back 17 out of 500 students stranded in neighboring countries on Tuesday, while other African governments are scrambling to get their citizens out safely. The Africa Union on Monday condemned reports Africans had been mistreated and prevented from crossing the Ukraine border, saying that this would be shockingly racist. Both Polish and Ukrainian border officials said that they had treated everyone the same, but a number of tense unverified videos were posted on social media showing how black people trying to cross over were not being allowed. Some 680,000 people have left Ukraine, while an estimated one million people are internally displaced within the country. The National Leadership of the Ghana Muslim Mission has called on world leaders and the United Nations to stop Russia from the further incursion into Ukraine. The Mission said that had become necessary to save lives and property, saying the over 7.5 million children in Ukraine needed to be protected. In a release issued to the Ghana News Agency, on Tuesday, in Accra, it said the GMM was worried and concerned about the current happenings in various parts of the world where the ravages of war had destroyed many lives and properties. Countries such as Syria, Palestine, Libya, Iraq, Afghanistan, among others are still suffering the ill effects of war and the recent invasion of Ukraine by Russia a few days now, is no exception. The release said, the world needed peace when it was still dealing with the corona virus pandemic, which had destroyed many lives and businesses. The least we can do now is to start another conflict. It lauded government for its efforts at getting Ghanaians in Ukraine to safety. The release prayed for peace to prevail in Palestine, Syria, Ukraine, Afghanistan, Libya and other parts of the world in turmoil. We need peace in our lives and the world at large. Allah says in the Holy Quran, 'The believers are but a single brotherhood. So, make peace with your brothers.' God abhors the disturbances of peace hence we urge our brothers and sisters to live with each other and all others around them in peace. GNA Mr Nicholas Kupog Yayin, District Chief Executive for Bia East in the Western North Region has announced the completion of the Adabokrom Community Day Senior High School Block, popularly known as (E-Block). The project comprised a three-storey classroom block, headmaster's bungalow, teachers' bungalow, canteen, and water connectivity. The DCE, in an interview with the Ghana News Agency (GNA) said contrary to reports that the Project had been abandoned, the building, which started during the previous administration was about 21 percent complete when the NPP government took over and completed it. It's ready to admit its first batch of students this academic year, Mr Yayin assured. Mr Yayin explained that the contractor had left site when they took over, so the chief and elders from Adabokrom appealed to the President to help complete the project, of which he did, and the project was re-awarded on contract. The DCE said his outfit had engaged all stakeholders, including the Ghana Education Service to ensure the school admitted its first batch of students this April. Mr Yayin commended the Government for ensuring the completion of the project since it would go a long way to improve upon secondary education in the area because it would be the first Senior High School in the Bia East District. He mentioned the construction of a magistrate court complex and bungalow, District Police station among others as some of the ongoing physical projects in the district. He also announced that the district now has its own Police commander resident in the district. Bia East District can now boost of National service secretariat, Commission on Human Rights and Administrative Justice office, among other government agencies which hitherto were under Bia West District,' Mr Yayin said. Mr Philip Nkuah, Assembly Member for Adabokrom Electoral Area told the GNA that the community, through the support of Social Responsibility Agreement (RSA) from the Forestry Commission has constructed an eight-bedroom house to be used as a hostel facility to accommodate the students. That, according to him, was the community's small way of helping to accommodate the students who would be admitted next month. He lauded the traditional authorities for agreeing to fund the project from the Social Responsibility Agreement between them and the timber firms. GNA BEIJING, March 2 (Xinhua) -- China's State Council Information Office will release a white paper titled "China's Parasports: Progress and the Protection of Rights" at 10 a.m. Thursday, and a press conference will be held by the office. Morrison & Foerster advised entities managed by SoftBank Latin America Fund in connection with a Series A funding round for Digibee, a low-code integration platform. Digibee will use the investment round to expand abroad, focusing on the U.S. and Latin America. Launched in 2017, Digibee makes it easy for businesses to build and deploy integration workflows without having to touch any code. The service also focuses on turning integrations into reusable business logic, and a year ago, the company launched Capsules, or packs of common integrations that can be shared across organizations. Launched in 2019, the $8 billion SoftBank Latin America Fund works with a variety of companies and entrepreneurs to accelerate tech-focused innovation and define the future of Latin America. MoFo also recently advised SoftBank Latin America Fund on investments in Incode, a next-generation identity and authentication platform for global enterprises, Pismo, an all-in-one processing platform for banking, payments, and financial markets infrastructure, CRM&BONUS, a Brazilian-based platform that allows real-time control of giftback delivery to consumers, GAIA, an e-commerce platform for the sale of furniture and design accessories in Mexico, Open Co, a Brazilian consumer credit company, and Laika, a Colombia-based pet supplies e-commerce platform. The MoFo team advising SoftBank Latin America Fund on the transaction was led by Miami-based corporate partner Alexandra Aguirre, together with associate Fernando Guardazzi. Morrison & Foerster advised entities managed by SoftBank Latin America Fund and Riverwood Capital in connection with co-leading a Series B funding round for Gupy, a Brazilian human resources technology startup. Founded in 2015, Gupy uses artificial intelligence to help companies of different sizes digitize and improve the recruitment process, onboarding, and long-term development of their talent. According to the startup, it has around 1,500 client companies with 22.5 million users in Latin America and 470 employees. Launched in 2019, the $8 billion SoftBank Latin America works with a variety of companies and entrepreneurs to accelerate tech-focused innovation and define the future of Latin America. Founded in 2008, Riverwood Capital invests in high-growth companies in the technology and technology-enabled industries globally, offering a unique combination of operational, strategic, technology, and financial insight to portfolio companies that typically need growth capital and expertise to scale. Riverwood has actively invested in and supported leading technology businesses in Latin America for over a decade. The MoFo deal team advising SoftBank Latin America Fund and Riverwood Capital on the transaction was led by Miami-based corporate partner Alexandra Aguirre, together with associate Fernando Guardazzi. Read more in Gupys press release. Microchip shortages, along with high acquisition cost, subdued sales of key automobile players in February 2022. On Tuesday, auto major Maruti Suzuki India reported that its total sales last month inched lower on a year-on-year (y-o-y) basis to 1,64,056 units from 164,469 units sold during the corresponding period of the previous year. Domestic sales were at 137,607 units and sales to other original equipment manufacturers stood at 2,428 units. The auto-maker reported its highest ever monthly exports of 24,021 units. "The shortage of electronic components had a minor impact on the production of vehicles which are primarily sold in domestic market," it said. "The company took all possible measures to minimise the impact." The shortage has impacted production of vehicles, consequently, elongating waiting periods and escalating cost. Similarly, Hyundai Motor India reported lower cumulative sales on a y-o-y basis. The cumulative sales last month fell to 53,159 units down from February 2021 off-take of 61,800 units. The company's domestic sales declined to 44,050 units from 51,600 units sold during the corresponding period of last year. "As the industry continues to grapple with semiconductor shortage situation, Hyundai along with its partners is continuously exploring alternatives to ensure customers can take delivery of their most loved Hyundai cars at the earliest," Hyundai Motor India said. On the other hand, Tata Motors reported a 27% rise in its overall domestic sales for February on a year-on-year basis to 73,875 vehicles sold, compared to an off-take of 58,366 units during the corresponding period of last year. The company's passenger vehicle domestic sales rose by 47% to 39,981 units from 27,225 units off-take in February 2021. In terms of commercial vehicles, the domestic sales were higher by 11%, at 37,552 units from 33,859 units off-take in February 2021. Another auto giant, Mahindra and Mahindra (M&M) reported a rise in its overall sales during last month. The company reported a rise of 89% growth in its vehicle sales to 54,455 vehicles on a y-o-y basis. "With an overall sale of 54,455 vehicles, we have achieved a growth of 89% in February 2022. All segments showed robust growth including SUVs at 79%, which registered the highest ever monthly volume," said Veejay Nakra, chief executive officer, automotive division, M&M. "We expect demand to continue to remain strong as the Covid situation eases further. We continue to closely monitor the semi-conductor related parts supply and take corrective action as appropriate." In terms of two-wheeler sales, rural distress as well as inventory correction efforts continued to dent sales. Two-wheeler major Hero MotoCorp sold a total of 358,254 units of motorcycles and scooters in February 2022, lower than 505,467 units off-take during the corresponding month of 2021. Additionally, Honda Motorcycle and Scooter India reported total sales of 312,621 units in February 2022 down from 442,740 units sold during the corresponding period last year. Honda's exports for the month stood at 26,944 units. "Passenger vehicle sales are showing some signs of recovery as semiconductor issues ease out but one will have to look at geo political tensions very closely as a prolonged issue on the geopolitical side could pose challenges to the supply chain especially looking at the importance of Russia and Ukraine in the semiconductor manufacturing process value chain," said Hemal Thakkar, director, Crisil Research. "Two wheelers the current inventory levels are still high and the OEMs are in correction mode which is why we are seeing a sequential correction in inventory every month since October or November 2021." Shamsher Dewan, vice-president & group head - corporate ratings, ICRA, said: "Semiconductor shortage was easing gradually. However, recent geopolitical developments are likely to derail the industry again as both Russia and Ukraine are suppliers of key inputs." Disclaimer: Information, facts or opinions expressed in this news article are presented as sourced from IANS and do not reflect views of Moneylife and hence Moneylife is not responsible or liable for the same. As a source and news provider, IANS is responsible for accuracy, completeness, suitability and validity of any information in this article. The issue of ghost loans or fake loans that can wreck a persons credit report burst into the public domain when a large number of people began to discover that their credit scores had plummeted or their credit reports contained incorrect information about loans they had never availed. After a public furore, the Reserve Bank of India (RBI) promised to initiate quick action, but it has probably been stopped in its tracks by the discovery that the problem is not limited to one company Dhani Loans & Services (Dhani) but is a larger, systemic issue. Almost all fin-tech lenders follow the same faulty process that Dhani had adopted to complete know-your-customer (KYC) formalities to on-board customers to be able to sanction and disburse loans in minutes. They have been getting away with this because people are just beginning to wake up to the problem of fake/ghost loans. Moreover, like all online systems, things work well most of the time; but it is only when the number of errors becomes large enough and the grievance redress process remains broken, that it leads to public outrage and forces the regulator to take corrective action. Moneylife has written about ghost loans and the fact that poor verification processes ( Systemic Issues with KYC Verification Leads to Wrong Credit Disbursal by Dhani and Other Digital Lenders; Urgent Solution Needed ) are a systemic issue. The victims range from a senior business journalist to our most-searched celebrity Sunny Leone. The quantum of fake loans could range from a few hundred to well over a lakh of rupees. Depending on the repayment record, the consequences for the victim are: a sharp fall in credit score leading to higher interest on their borrowing, lower credit limits and, worse, denial of credit, if there is a default on the fake loan. For instance, The Ken says that Sunny Leones credit score dropped 20% for a paltry Rs2,000 that showed up as an unpaid loan, by abuse of her PAN (permanent account number) alone; all other details, such as her address, phone number, email ID and date of birth, were incorrect, allowing the loan to be diverted to someone else. This shows the shocking lack of checks in KYC processes followed by fin-tech lenders. The Faulty Process RBIs KYC rules require a photograph and proof of address and identity. The documents permitted are: PAN, voter ID, Aadhaar number, NREGA (National Rural Employment Guarantee Act) card, drivers licence, etc, which can be presented in person or online. Video-based real-time verification or electronic KYC is an expensive process; Aadhaar/PAN is verified by pinging government databases; but some lenders, allegedly, use less reliable options. Consumer organisations, including Moneylife Foundation, have urged RBI to mandate the use of verified e-KYC through the Central Registry of Securitisation Asset Reconstruction and Security Interest of India (CERSAI), to reduce frauds. Such e-KYC is already mandated by the capital market, pensions and insurance regulators; however, RBI has been refusing to act on this without explaining its reluctance. According to Gagan Banga, an independent director of Dhani, explaining corrective action initiated on their ghost loan issue, said, most fin-tech companies follow a similar, two-fold process. The first is an Aadhaar-based verification with an OTP (one-time password) sent to the linked mobile number. The second method allowed borrowers to upload alternative identity proof, which was misused by forging and morphing documents. Dhani has halted the second process and has initiated a clean-up. If this sounds flimsy, then it must be noted that most other lenders follow the same on-boarding process. These include Slice Card (offered by a subsidiary of Quadrillion Finance Pvt Ltd), Moneytap (owned MWYN Tech Pvt Ltd), CASHe (of Bhanix Finance and Investment Ltd) and Kreditbee Services Pvt Ltd. Bajaj Finserv, a large lender, requires only a PAN for the Bajaj EMI (equated monthly instalment) card. Ghost loans, and the panic that followed, could be have been avoided by better identity checks; but two other issues compound the problem. 1. According to L Srikanth, founder of Cashless Consumer, an advocacy organisation for tech safety, many app-based lenders are cutting costs by procuring data from profilers who create and sell risk scores which act as a proxy for credit scores. The data is scraped from government websites and utility companies that remain completely lax about data protection. This data is then mapped against other databases to obtain mobile numbers and UPI payment addresses, and even social media, to create risk profiles, he says. Such profiles are extensively used by lenders, especially for recovery operations. 2. India has a serious problem with poor quality data and mismatch of information across official IDs such as PAN, Aadhaar, passports, drivers licences and voter IDs. Addresses are written differently, so are spellings of names and places and there are endless data-entry errors by government officials. This prevents perfect verification across multiple identities. Even if such checks were mandated, ordinary people would be harassed, since corrections are notoriously slow and often lead to new errors. Photo identification is even less reliable, given the quality of photos on PAN and Aadhaar documents. Data cleaning and matching for key identity documents ought to be a national project that can perhaps be branded Swachh Data Abhiyan. Control over Credit Reports Given the complexity of issues, a possible solution is to focus on information that is submitted by lenders to credit information companies (CICs) that generate our credit scores. At the moment, the system is heavily stacked against individuals. Credit reports are deliberately complicated so that CICs can generate and sell credit scores. Although one can file a complaint about wrong entries in credit reports, the process is slow and tedious. CICs cannot amend any credit data, without express written consent from the lender. A disputed entry can take as many as 30 days to resolve even if the lender cooperates; otherwise, it is a harrowing process. For instance, an individual who disputed a ghost loan was asked by the app-based lender to produce a no dues certificate before rectifying the credit record! Sometimes, lenders are deliberately vindictive and recovery officials use the threat to wreck credit records with impunity to extract payments. All this stems from poor grievance redress systems and the fact that the regulator has rarely stirred itself on behalf of victims of fraud. The Solution One simple solution would be for the industry to work with CICs and follow the practice adopted by credit card companies to report fraud and disputed transactions. CIC could send out a mobile phone alert when new borrowing is reported on ones credit profile. The message should include a number and email to allow people to raise an immediate dispute and initiate corrective action if the dispute is false. A centralised system that would cover all four CICs operating in India can easily be set up with RBI-registered fin-tech companies paying for the convenience of fast on-boarding, while also reducing the incidence of fraud. While it does not resolve the problem of flimsy on-boarding and dodgy data-entry, it protects individuals by providing immediate information and giving them better control over their credit reports. Such control is crucial because fin-tech companies are constantly expanding their business in ways that people cannot be expected to understand or keep pace with. For instance, a new source of panic and concern among people is loans showing up on their credit reports from lenders such as Arth Digital, Clix Capital, Simpl Pay, Capfloat, Karur Vysya Bank and others. It turns out that most of these companies have partnered with large fin-tech marketplaces or food delivery companies, such as Amazon, Zomato, Jio Mart and others, that offer no-cost EMI-based payments or buy-now-pay-later schemes that are backed by loans from such companies. Most people who avail these offers are unaware that they show up as loans/borrowings on their credit reports and impact their credit scores. People complain that while the marketplaces, focused on pushing sales, make it very easy to avail such facilities, the terms of the loans are never clear and it is almost impossible to opt out and make a full payment. If RBI quickly mandates and implements a system of alerting customers, it would help create better awareness, increase transparency, ensure a drastic improvement in grievance redress and allow better oversight by the regulator. On Wednesday, the indices opened gap down and ended with loss, although there was a substantial recovery in the second half. On the National Stock Exchange (NSE), 1,055 stocks advanced, 1,032 declined, and 47 remained unchanged with advance decline ratio of 1.02. The trend of the major indices on Wednesdays trading are given in the table below: Brent crude reached $112 per barrel on concerns of supply shortage, touching the highest price since 2014. The UPL Board has approved share buyback of up to 1.26 crore share at a price of Rs 875 per share. It is looking to spend Rs1,100 crore on buyback. Deepak Parekh has resigned as non-executive Chairman of HDFC Ergo. KK Mistry has been nominated as non-executive Chairman in his place. Insurance companies rise significantly reacting on the news of delay in LIC IPO. HDFC Life and SBI Life gained more than 6%. NCLT Chandigarh has approved the merger of Jindal Stainless and JSL (Hisar). The stock ended in green. Maruti Suzuki has taken price increase of around 8.8% since January 2022. Its market share declined from 47.7% to 45% on y-o-y basis. It has booking of around 2.5lakh to 2.6lakh. The stock closed 6% down. Coal India closed 9% higher after company reported higher than expected coal production in February. Dr Reddy closed around 5% down as the production and exports of Russia's Sputnik Covid-19 vaccines is expected to slow down, due to sanctions. Bajaj Auto reported a decline of 16% in its total vehicle sales in February. The stock was down 4%. The top gainers and top losers of the major indices are given in the table below: The closing values of the major Asian indices are given in the table below: The following is a release from Commissioner of Securities and Insurance-Office of the Montana State Auditor: Helena, Mont.- Commissioner of Securities and Insurance Troy Downing approved over $340,000 in restitution payments to victims of Metals.com. The victims, ranging in age from 60 to 77, received payments of $14,676 to $50,000. "Victims of securities fraud are often left emotionally and financially devastated. Thanks to the Securities Restitution Fund promoted by this agency and the hard work of our team, we were able to offset losses to protect Montana victims." Commissioner Troy Downing said, "The Securities Restitution Fund has made all the difference in the world for these Montanans. While some states have similar programs, ours uses no taxpayer dollars and is one of the most robust in the nation providing larger awards quickly and with minimal red tape." In January 2022, Commissioner Downing settled with Metals.com over allegations the company manipulated and lied to investors. The settlement allowed the Montana victims, who collectively invested more than $2.9 million in precious metals, to apply to the Montana Securities Restitution Assistance Fund (SRAF). The SRAF is a fund unique to Montana to help victims of securities fraud. "Receiving these funds from the Securities Restitution Fund has been tremendously helpful. It really has made an impact. These con artists were professional liars even claiming losses in my investment were purposeful to save money on taxes." Walter Henderson, a victim in Belgrade, continued, "I wish I had known all I had to do was call the Commissioner's office to better understand the risks of this investment and check to see if these folks were even licensed in the first place." Commissioner Downing awarded payments to all eligible Montana Metals.com victims that applied to the SRAF. Victims who are no longer Montana residents are ineligible to apply. Victims who have not yet applied have two years to do so. The SRAF is funded by fees collected from the securities industry and contributions from bad actors there is no cost to Montana taxpayers. "Getting taken advantage of is a stressful time. The people selling precious metals in this scheme were professional scammers who acted like friends." A victim in Anaconda said, "It's easy to get caught up in gold fever when the economy is in bad shape, and you're promised precious metal prices will continue to rise. The ability to recover some losses has relieved a lot of financial stress for me and my loved ones." The following list includes the victim's location and award amount. County Award Amount Yellowstone $29,232.32 Yellowstone $17,751.28 Flathead $28,494.71 Lake $50,000 Lake $25,775.44 Lake $25,775.44 Deer Lodge $14,676.80 Gallatin $50,000 Silver Bow $50,000 Silver Bow $50,000 "All investments carry risk. If you receive unsolicited financial advice or promises of high returns, call our office first before handing over your hard-earned money," says Commissioner Downing. CSI is a criminal justice agency that regulates, licenses, investigates complaints, and prosecutes bad actors in the securities industry. Our team can be reached at 444-2040 or by going to CSIMT.gov. Troy Downing is the Commissioner of Securities and Insurance, Montana State Auditor. Commissioner Downing is a two-tour combat veteran, businessman, and entrepreneur. MISSOULA, Mont. - Claire Matten, a name for the history books. She's become the first woman in Montana designee into the society of office and industrial realtors to represent real estate sectors across the state. For Claire, this milestone is new, exciting, but shares the journey leading up to this point didn't come easy. She's an advisor and now the only woman in Montana to sit at the table among 6 designees, bringing a new voice for Montanans future real estate development. She shares some of the biggest challenges she's faced in a business with little to no representation of woman, just like her. "There came a point in a number of positions I've had throughout the years where the ceiling had been met and I think it was important to recognize and to make a decision internally if I was willing to stay in that position or strive for something that granted me more growth,' said Matten. Instilling her next step, she decided to go for it, applying, and working towards SIOR designation. She hopes this honor paves the way for more woman to strive for the big picture success, no matter where you are and who is with you. "I've heard everything from she will never be more than just a glorified assistant to things like - she'll probably just get pregnant and quit or lots of things that are associated with female in male dominated industries that you can't listen to and you choose to surround yourself with men and women who champion your success," said Matten. And she found that Sterling CRE Advisors in Missoula, and like many women she's not just a worker, she's a mother with a family. When asked what she wants her kids, friends, and all Montana women out there to know. "There is no limit to whatever professional or personal growth that you seek out.. I was not deterred by the fact that there was no woman SIOR members in Montana, I didn't even flinch at it, and so I hope my daughters and my son's take that same message away," said Matten. It may be a first for Montana, but with women like her making new strides across the country, Matten assures us she certainly won't be the last success story we hear. People walk past a screen of a currency exchange office displaying the exchange rates of U.S. Dollar and Euro to Russian Rubles in Moscow, Russia, March 1, 2022. Russian President Vladimir Putin signed a decree introducing temporary economic measures to ensure the country's financial stability, the Kremlin announced Tuesday. These measures will be taken in response to anti-Russian sanctions by the United States, other countries and international organizations, according to the decree. (Photo by Alexander Zemlianichenko Jr/Xinhua) MOSCOW, March 1 (Xinhua) -- Russian President Vladimir Putin signed a decree introducing temporary economic measures to ensure the country's financial stability, the Kremlin announced Tuesday. These measures will be taken in response to anti-Russian sanctions by the United States, other countries and international organizations, according to the decree. Among the measures, Russia will ban the outflow of foreign currencies in an amount exceeding the equivalent of 10,000 U.S. dollars starting Wednesday. Effective since Wednesday, restrictions regarding transactions of securities, real estate and loans will be imposed on foreigners associated with countries that have taken anti-Russian actions. On Monday, Putin also inked a decree introducing "special economic measures" to cushion the impact of a new wave of Western sanctions amid Russia's special military operation in Ukraine. A lecturer at the Arkansas State University challenged her occupational therapy students to create a piece of adaptive equipment for a stroke patient. Students did not disappoint as they came up with an invention called HugAgain, which allows stroke patients like Emily Sisco's father to give two-armed hugs again. Emily, an occupational therapy assistant and adjunct professor at Arkansas State University, captured the moment her father, Kevin Eubanks, wrapping his grandsons in a massive hug. "This is the first time I've gotten to hug my boys" said the grandfather, who suffered a stroke eight years ago. Cambodian Prime Minister Samdech Techo Hun Sen (R, front) and Chinese Ambassador to Cambodia Wang Wentian (L, front) attend the inauguration ceremony of the National Road No. 3 in Takeo province, Cambodia, March 2, 2022. Cambodia on Wednesday inaugurated the China-funded National Road No. 3, which links its capital Phnom Penh and the southwestern coastal province of Kampot. The 134.8-km road stretches from Chom Chao roundabout in the capital's western suburb to Kampot, running through Kandal, Kampong Speu and Takeo provinces. (Photo by Ly Lay/Xinhua) TAKEO, Cambodia, March 2 (Xinhua) -- Cambodia on Wednesday inaugurated the China-funded National Road No. 3, which links its capital Phnom Penh and the southwestern coastal province of Kampot. The 134.8-km road stretches from Chom Chao roundabout in the capital's western suburb to Kampot, running through Kandal, Kampong Speu and Takeo provinces. Cambodian Prime Minister Samdech Techo Hun Sen and Chinese Ambassador to Cambodia Wang Wentian presided over the inauguration ceremony, which was attended by nearly 1,000 people. Speaking at the event, Hun Sen said the road is crucial to boost economic and tourism development and that Kampot is the only province that produces salt for the kingdom. "This is another testament to the fruitful cooperation between Cambodia and China under the frameworks of the comprehensive strategic partnership, the ironclad friendship, and the community with a shared future between the two countries," he said. "I hope that our people will benefit from this road, which connects between our capital city and coastal province," he added. The road was built by the China Road and Bridge Corporation at the cost of about 215 million U.S. dollars, which was the preferential buyer's credit loan from the government of China. It took 34 months to be completed. Hun Sen praised the contractor for completing the project 14 months earlier than scheduled and thanked it for building the road in good compliance with technical standards. Ambassador Wang said the National Road No. 3 is a key transportation artery connecting Phnom Penh and the coastal province of Kampot, expressing his belief that the road will play a crucial role in boosting economy and tourism as well as improving the livelihoods of people living along the route. "The inauguration ceremony truly reflects the strong momentum and fruitful results of China-Cambodia pragmatic cooperation," he said. He added that although the COVID-19 pandemic has seriously impacted the flow of people and logistics, some major projects of bilateral cooperation have withstood the pressure of the pandemic and have been successfully completed as planned with high quality. Aerial photo taken on March 1, 2022 shows the National Road No. 3 in Takeo province, Cambodia. Cambodia on Wednesday inaugurated the China-funded National Road No. 3, which links its capital Phnom Penh and the southwestern coastal province of Kampot. The 134.8-km road stretches from Chom Chao roundabout in the capital's western suburb to Kampot, running through Kandal, Kampong Speu and Takeo provinces. (Photo by Ly Lay/Xinhua) Aerial photo taken on March 1, 2022 shows the National Road No. 3 in Takeo province, Cambodia. Cambodia on Wednesday inaugurated the China-funded National Road No. 3, which links its capital Phnom Penh and the southwestern coastal province of Kampot. The 134.8-km road stretches from Chom Chao roundabout in the capital's western suburb to Kampot, running through Kandal, Kampong Speu and Takeo provinces. (Photo by Ly Lay/Xinhua) Aerial photo taken on March 1, 2022 shows the National Road No. 3 in Takeo province, Cambodia. Cambodia on Wednesday inaugurated the China-funded National Road No. 3, which links its capital Phnom Penh and the southwestern coastal province of Kampot. The 134.8-km road stretches from Chom Chao roundabout in the capital's western suburb to Kampot, running through Kandal, Kampong Speu and Takeo provinces. (Photo by Ly Lay/Xinhua) 3. General election matchups still muddy for new Congressional districts Texas found itself with two new Congressional seats as a result of the 2020 U.S. Census. The 37th District is located in the Austin area, while the 38th District encompasses the northwest Houston area. Rep. Lloyd Doggett, formerly of the 35th District, will represent the Democrats in November for the 37th District. The race of the Republican side is poised to go to a runoff, with Jenny Garcia Sharon, who gained 46.8% of the vote, looking to face off against either Rod Lingsch or Jeremiah Diacogianni. AP has not yet called the race on the Republican side, as just over 400 votes separate the latter Republican candidates. In the 38th District, Wesley Hunt, an Army combat veteran, is leading a crowded Republican field with 56.4% of the vote, though just 60% of precincts are reporting and AP has not yet called the race. Engineer Mark Ramsey currently has 30.2% of the vote. The Democratic primary for the 38th District may go to a runoff, as well. Houston-area school teacher Diana Martinez Alexander and former school district superintendent Duncan Klussman are the current top two vote getters. The 37th District is projected to be a solid Democratic seat, according to the Cook Political Report, while the 38th District is a solid Republican seat. Wayne Christian handily led the three challengers seeking his seat on the Railroad Commission. The incumbent, who currently serves as chairman of the three-member commission, received 566,812 votes or 47.45 percent of the vote with 72 percent of the votes counted as of press time. In second place was Sarah Stogner with 179,270 votes or 15.01 percent of the vote. Tom Slocum Jr. received 171,289 votes or 14.34 percent of the vote while Dawayne Tipton received 137,341 votes or 11.50 percent. Should Christian not top 50 percent of the vote, he would face the second-place finisher in a May runoff. Democrat Luke Warford will be waiting for the Republican nominee in November. I put in the work, Tipton told the Reporter-Telegram in a telephone interview. Id like to thank all the people who supported me and there will be more and better things in the future. Marvin Sarge Summers, who was killed in a car accident in Midland County several weeks ago, remained on the ballot and received 139,903 votes or 11.71 percent of the vote. In Midland County, Christian received 4,385 votes or 48.87 percent of the vote. Christian was elected to the commission in November 2016. Prior to being elected to the Railroad Commission, he served in the Texas House of Representatives from 1996 to 2013. After joining the commission, he was appointed the Official Representative of Texas on the Interstate Oil and Gas Compact Commission by Gov. Greg Abbott. It appears Kevin Sparks will avoid the runoff hes been dreading during the latter parts of his campaign for state senator. With 78.5 percent of the vote in and 55.2 percent of the vote collected, Sparks was feeling good that Midland was finally going to be home to a state senator. Sparks campaign officials said latt Tuesday there was a 95 percent chance Sparks would avoid a runoff with Tim Reid of Amarillo. During a recent campaign stop in Midland, officials with the campaign said they hoped to avoid the considerable resources it would take to continue to the latter part of May. It is not official yet, but it looks really good at this point, Sparks said Tuesday night. The votes outstanding are in areas where we should do well. It was known for a while that District 31 would have a new senator. Current Sen. Kel Seliger (R-Amarillo) announced a while back he would not seek reelection. That opened the field early for Sparks to announce and work an electorate, including up in the Amarillo area. District 31 covers more than 40 counties from the Amarillo area past Midland-Odessa into more central Texas. Sparks told the Reporter-Telegram on Tuesday that he thought it was key that some people embraced our vision of Texas in the north part of the district and they worked hard for our campaign. The oilman said people across the district could relate to his business background, whether they were ranchers, farmers or coffee shop owners. Along the way, Sparks collected endorsements from former President Donald Trump and Lt. Gov. Dan Patrick, who commented that it was time to have an oil expert among the senate body. Sparks win is a victory for Midland and Odessa leaders that have long sought the seat. Amarillo had long held the seat with Seliger and Teel Bivins before him. Even Sparks father Don Sparks ran for the state senate seat nearly 20 years ago. Sparks realizes the significance of winning the Republican nomination, which means winning the seat as there is no Democratic candidate. Im not sure it is setting in yet, Sparks said about the long wait. There is some excitement about that possibility. A team of mainland health experts led by Liang Wannian (4th L), head of the COVID-19 response expert panel under China's National Health Commission, meets and exchanges views with representatives of the Department of Health and the Hospital Authority of the Hong Kong Special Administrative Region (HKSAR) in south China's Hong Kong, March 2, 2022. The team on Wednesday visited the Center for Health Protection (CHP) of the Department of Health in the HKSAR. (Information Services Department of the HKSAR Government/Handout via Xinhua) HONG KONG, March 2 (Xinhua) -- A team of mainland health experts led by Liang Wannian, head of the COVID-19 response expert panel under China's National Health Commission, on Wednesday visited the Center for Health Protection (CHP) of the Department of Health in the Hong Kong Special Administrative Region (HKSAR). The team met and exchanged views with representatives of the Department of Health and the Hospital Authority. During the meeting, they had an in-depth discussion on the COVID-19 situation in Hong Kong and analyzed relevant statistics. The challenges posed by Hong Kong's fifth coronavirus wave as well as the mainland experience in tackling the virus were also elaborated. Director of Health of the HKSAR government Ronald Lam expressed gratitude to the central government for its extensive and swift support to the HKSAR, and thanked the expert team for their visit and valuable advice offered on Hong Kong's anti-epidemic work. The CHP will continue its exchange with the expert delegation in exploring and intensifying the strategies and measures to control the fifth wave of the epidemic. Three teams of medical experts from the mainland have arrived in Hong Kong to work with the HKSAR government in fighting the latest COVID-19 outbreak. Hong Kong reported 55,353 new COVID-19 cases and 117 deaths on Wednesday, official data showed. A citizen wearing a face mask walks on a street in Hong Kong, south China, March 2, 2022. Hong Kong reported 55,353 new COVID-19 cases and 117 deaths on Wednesday, official data showed. (Xinhua/Lo Ping Fai) Citizens wearing face masks take the subway in Hong Kong, south China, March 2, 2022. Hong Kong reported 55,353 new COVID-19 cases and 117 deaths on Wednesday, official data showed. (Xinhua/Lo Ping Fai) A citizen wearing a face mask walks on a street in Hong Kong, south China, March 2, 2022. Hong Kong reported 55,353 new COVID-19 cases and 117 deaths on Wednesday, official data showed. (Xinhua/Lo Ping Fai) Citizens wearing face masks walk on a street in Hong Kong, south China, March 2, 2022. Hong Kong reported 55,353 new COVID-19 cases and 117 deaths on Wednesday, official data showed. (Xinhua/Lo Ping Fai) LOGAN CYRUS/AFP via Getty Images Irving, Texas-based ExxonMobil on Tuesday announced plans to discontinue its oil and gas operations in Russia, joining other energy industry giants cutting ties with the country over its invasion of neighboring Ukraine. Exxon is pulling out of managing the Sakhalin-1 oil and gas project on behalf of Japanese, Indian and Russian companies, saying it is "beginning the process to discontinue operations and developing steps to exit the Sakhalin-1 venture."An operator of the project, not just an investor, Exxon says the process "will need to be carefully managed and closely coordinated with co-venturers in order to ensure it is executed safely." The Texas Department of Family and Protective Services is investigating one of its own employees after Gov. Greg Abbott directed the agency to probe parents of transgender youth for possible child abuse. Last week, Abbott issued the controversial directive following a legal opinion issued by Attorney General Ken Paxton defining gender-affirming health care, including puberty blockers and sex change procedures, as child abuse when administered to minors. An employee of the state's protective services agency with a 16-year-old transgender child says she was placed on administrative leave last week and now faces termination, according to a lawsuit filed on Tuesday. The employee, who works on the review of reports of abuse and neglect, says she was visited by an investigator from DFPS seeking medical records related to her child, who is identified in court documents as Mary Doe. The state investigator told the employee, identified as Jane Doe, that the sole allegation against her and her husband, John Doe, is that their transgender daughter may have been provided with gender-affirming health care and was currently transitioning from male to female," according to the suit. Jane Doe has refused to turn over records requested by DFPS. Not providing Mary with the medically necessary health care that she needs is not an option for us," Jane Doe wrote in the suit. We are terrified for Marys health and well-being, and for our family. I feel betrayed by my state and the agency for whom I work. On Tuesday, the American Civil Liberties Union of Texas and Lambda Legal, a civil rights organization focused on the LGBTQ community, sued to block the inquiry. According to the filing, other investigations have also begun, some almost immediately after the directive was issued. The groups argue that Abbott and Paxton's directives were issued without proper authority, "in violation of the Texas Administrative Procedures Act, the separation of powers requirements of the Texas Constitution, and the constitutional rights of transgender youth and their parents." Dr. Megan Mooney, a licensed psychologist in Houston, is also a plaintiff in the suit. Mooney is required to report suspected child abuse under Texas law and has a practice that includes transgender patients, many of whom have been diagnosed with gender dysphoria, according to the suit. No family should have to fear being torn apart because they are supporting their trans child, said Adri Perez, the policy strategist at the ACLU of Texas, in a statement. A week before an election, Gov. Abbott and Attorney General Ken Paxton issued a partisan political attack that isnt rooted in the needs of families, the evidence from doctors and the expertise from child welfare professionals." As news of the lawsuits spread online, users took to social media to express their dismay. Charlotte Clymer, a writer and activist, warned that Abbott's directive could have potentially deadly consequences for transgender children. "What's happening in Texas will lead to higher rates of abuse, harassment, and ultimately suicides of trans children," Clymer tweeted Tuesday. "Greg Abbott is attempting to completely erase trans children from the public square, and trans kids will die because of it. Those are the stakes here." Other users called for Texans to consider the targeted attacks on transgender children when voting at the polls during the primary Tuesday. Abbott and Paxton are both up for reelection. "Its really happening," tweeted transgender activist and actress Jen Richards. "A parent was placed on leave and is being investigated for simply providing love and care to her trans child. Texas primaries are today. Please vote if you can. This is nauseating and terrifying." Chris Mosier, the first openly transgender athlete for Team USA, said trans kids in Texas and other states facing similar legislation, "deserve better." Texas Democratic gubernatorial candidate Beto O'Rourke also chimed in on the investigations, tweeting "The people of Texas are so much bigger than this hate. Together, we will overcome it and protect trans kids." Hours prior, the former El Paso congressman tweeted "Imagine what our kids could accomplish if they had a governor who invested in their success instead of obsessively attacking them." Behaviorally Hires Switzerland Office Leader Behavioral insights consultancy Behaviorally has appointed Lonneke de Roo as Senior Vice President in Geneva, leading the firm's Switzerland office. Previously known as PRS IN VIVO USA, Behaviorally combines its own behavioural framework with category expertise to examine the drivers of consumer behaviour and shopper growth. In Switzerland, de Roo (pictured) joins with more than twenty years' experience in shopper behaviour, packaging and product research. Most recently, she was Senior Director of Business Development at behavioural research specialist EyeSee, prior to which she served as VP, Client Development at PRS IN VIVO Group, also leading the Geneva office. Earlier, she held senior roles at Perception Research (which was merged with IN VIVO to become PRS IN VIVO); Strategir; and Ipsos. Commenting on the news, Group President, Crispin Beale said: 'We're very pleased to be welcoming Lonneke to our rapidly expanding team as we significantly grow our footprint throughout Europe, and globally, to meet growing client demand'. In her new role, de Roo is joined by Sarah Heitz, who joins as Market Development Director, having also most recently worked as EyeSee, where she was Business Development Director. Before this she spent nearly six years at PRS IN VIVO, latterly as Insights Manager. Web site: www.behaviorally.com . Wang Yang, a member of the Standing Committee of the Political Bureau of the Communist Party of China (CPC) Central Committee and chairman of the National Committee of the Chinese People's Political Consultative Conference (CPPCC), speaks when presiding over the closing meeting of the 20th session of the Standing Committee of the 13th CPPCC National Committee in Beijing, capital of China, March 2, 2022. (Xinhua/Huang Jingwen) BEIJING, March 2 (Xinhua) -- The 13th National Committee of the Chinese People's Political Consultative Conference (CPPCC), China's top political advisory body, closed its 20th standing committee session on Wednesday in Beijing. Wang Yang, a member of the Standing Committee of the Political Bureau of the Communist Party of China (CPC) Central Committee and chairman of the National Committee of the CPPCC, presided over the closing meeting and delivered a speech. Wang noted that in the past year, members of the Standing Committee of the CPPCC National Committee conducted consultation with an emphasis on achieving a good opening of the 14th Five-Year Plan period (2021-2025) and demonstrated its advantage of a specialized consultative body in the country's system for governance. The meeting reviewed and adopted documents including the draft agenda and the schedule for the fifth annual session of the 13th CPPCC National Committee, and reports on the work of the Standing Committee of the CPPCC National Committee and its handling of proposals. The documents will be submitted to the annual session for review. Wang stressed that members of the Standing Committee of the CPPCC National Committee should be fully prepared to provide advice and build consensus during the upcoming session. He called on the members to play a key role in providing political advice, strive to answer questions, and resolve issues by applying their own experience and practice at work, while ensuring a well-organized annual session. Muskogee, OK (74401) Today Variable clouds with strong thunderstorms. Damaging winds, large hail and possibly a tornado with some storms. Low 63F. Winds SE at 10 to 20 mph. Chance of rain 100%. 2 to 3 inches of rain expected.. Tonight Variable clouds with strong thunderstorms. Damaging winds, large hail and possibly a tornado with some storms. Low 63F. Winds SE at 10 to 20 mph. Chance of rain 100%. 2 to 3 inches of rain expected. Protesters against the coronavirus disease restrictions and vaccine mandates gather as they camp in front of the parliament in Wellington, New Zealand, Feb. 14, 2022. DAR ES SALAAM, March 1 (Xinhua) -- Tanzanian aviation authorities said on Tuesday they are dispatching a team of aviation experts to the Comoros to investigate the cause of a plane crash on Saturday that left 14 passengers and crew missing. Hamza Johari, the director general of the Tanzania Civil Aviation Authority (TCAA), said the aviation experts will join their counterparts in the Comoros to investigate the cause of the plane accident that crashed off the Indian Ocean island nation. The aircraft, a Cessna Caravan, crashed into the Indian Ocean sea as it was about to land, with Comorian authorities saying the fate of the 14 people on board, 12 Comorian passengers and two Tanzanian pilots, could not be immediately established. Mohammed Mazrui, whose firm Fly Zanzibar Limited owns the fateful aircraft, said on Monday the aircraft was leased to a Comorian carrier and was flying from the capital of Moroni to the city of Fomboni when the accident occurred. The plane disappeared from radar about 2.5 km from its destination, with the cause of the accident still unknown, said Mazrui, according to media reports. The Comorian transport ministry said debris believed to be of the aircraft had been found, adding that an operation was being conducted to recover the debris from the ocean. Senior police officer Abdel-Kader Mohamed told the media in Moroni that three speedboats had been sent to the crash site to search for survivors and collect debris and items belonging to passengers. People walk towards a line to vote in the primary election in Edinburg, Texas, March 1, 2022. Coastal Carolina University graduate student Kateryna Taylor-Tarasenko hasnt gotten much sleep lately. Right now, I am under a lot of stress. I have completely lost my appetite," Taylor-Tarasenko said. "And I cant remember the last time I had a good nights rest. Taylor-Tarasenko is from Nikopol, a city in the southeastern part of Ukraine, and her parents, family and friends are all still living there. Due to the time difference, she stays up late into the night to speak to them as they are waking for the day. The first thing I do every morning is contact them to make sure that they made it through the night, she said. Taylor-Tarasenko received her bachelors degree in accounting from the University of Kharkiv in Ukraine, and once she got her 10-year green card, she decided to pursue a masters degree. I heard that Coastal Carolina University had a really good business school, and after checking it out and reading a lot of good reviews, I decided to continue my education there, she said. The 27-year-old plans to graduate this August and pursue a career as a certified public accountant. This past December, she was able to travel to her home country and see her family, and she has fortunately been able to maintain frequent contact. She is an only child. I have been able to speak with them every day, and I try to stay on the phone with them as long as I can," she said. "Im always on my phone, watching the news and checking on my family and friends." So far, she said, Nikopol has been safe from the Russian invasion. My parents are very strong and brave. Ukraine is their home, and they will protect it at all costs, Taylor-Tarasenko said. Everyone in Ukraine has really pulled together to stand up to Russian tyranny, and they are all fighting with everything they have. Everyone men and women, young and old, are trying to fight or help their fellow Ukrainians however they can. Woburn, MA (01801) Today Rain showers this evening with clearing overnight. Expect mist and reduced visibilities at times. Low 48F. Winds NNW at 5 to 10 mph. Chance of rain 40%.. Tonight Rain showers this evening with clearing overnight. Expect mist and reduced visibilities at times. Low 48F. Winds NNW at 5 to 10 mph. Chance of rain 40%. JOHANNESBURG, March 2 (Xinhua) -- Africans converged in South Africa for a successful three-day conference "Meetings Africa" where they unanimously agreed to collaborate to grow the sector, said Amanda Kotze-Nhlapo, the Chief Conventions Bureau Officer of the South African National Conventions Bureau on Wednesday. "We had 4,000 meetings which were confirmed, and buyers held a total of 10 meetings per day. I spoke to many from different countries and were happy about the meeting, people are willing to work together and help each other to advance the African agenda," she told Xinhua. "Africa is open, we are there to take on the world. If you want to be rejuvenated, there is no other where the sound of the drum can call people together like Africa," Kotze-Nhlapo added. Meetings Africa started on Feb. 28 and ended on March 2, where tourism operators from Africa met to exchange ideas following a two-year break due to COVID-19. Kotze-Nhlapo said this year they expect tourism to grow with large margins. Zambian Tourism Authority communications and corporate affairs manager Betty Chabala told Xinhua that they met many potential buyers from abroad who showed interest to visit Africa. "Large conferences should be encouraged with COVID-19 protocols to safeguard travelers and employees. We had a good turnout of buyers and Africa is now a lucrative destination," she said. "Some businesses will be physical and hybrid. We need to embrace new technology like zoom and webinars, they will continue to be part of us,"she added. Botho Mogami, sales and marketing manager Protea Hotels in Botswana said the meeting was fruitful as the first step to show the world that Africa is "back on business and ready to welcome visitors to its shows". She said the conference was good to "reconnect" and speak with one voice that Africa is ready to welcome visitors under the COVID-19 protocols. Charles Robert Thomas III Charles Robert Thomas III "Bobby", 84, died Feb. 26 at the MUSC Health Medical Center in Florence. Born Aug. 16, 1938 in Brooklyn, N.Y., he was the son of the late Charles Robert and late Winifred (Taylor) Thomas. He was the firstborn child of their eight children. He was predeceased by two brothers and two sisters, and by his beloved sons, Christopher Thomas and Owen Thomas. He is survived by his wife Carol, as well as his five remaining children and stepchildren. He is also survived by 11 grandchildren and six great-grandchildren and many nephews and nieces. Bobby graduated from Xavier High School in New York City and attended the Merchant Marine Academy in Kings Point, N.Y. Between his second and third years he was invited to an Around-the-World cruise to work and study on a sailing ship. He visited many exciting and interesting ports of call. He was a gifted student athlete in a variety of sports, and early in his working life considered a career in sports. He was also drawn to working in the fish business at the famed Fulton Fish Market in New York City, as his father and grandfather had done. However, he finally settled on his chosen vocation as an executive chef and hospitality professional. Throughout his career both as a chef and restaurant owner he received many accolades, including having his recipes published in cookbooks and his establishments praised by world renowned food critics. He was invited to join the prestigious James Beard Foundation Circle of Chefs. He also owned and established numerous businesses including, Eastern Seafood, with locations in New York City and The Hamptons; The Red Hook Inn, in Red Hook, N.Y.; The Little Creek Inn, in Dover Del., and his last restaurant Lunch in Marion. His signature dish was his Manhattan Clam Chowder, a recipe he credited to his grandfather, Charlie. However, he always added his own special touch and spice to it, which he did to everything in life. Pizza lovers crushed by the closing of Jacksonville's Pizza Hut almost two years ago might want to start salivating now. A company behind several commercial development projects in Springfield is asking Jacksonville's Plan Commission to approve a zoning change that would be a step toward bringing the restaurant franchise back to town. Cehog LLC of Springfield is seeking approval for a zoning change from B-3 to B-3 with special use of property at 117 E. Morton Ave., according to its application. Cehog is a limited liability corporation owned by Springfield's Hoogland family. B-3 zoning is for intensive retail and service businesses, according to planning commission guidelines. The restaurant would be located in an existing retail center that now includes Dunkin' Donuts and Pearle Vision. It also would have a drive-through, according to the application. Pizza Hut was at 818 W. Morton Ave. but abruptly closed its doors in September 2020 after franchise owner NPC International filed for Chapter 11 bankruptcy protection. Seventeen other Illinois locations were among about 300 nationwide that were closed around the same time. The Jacksonville Plan Commission will consider the request during a session starting at 6 p.m. today in the council chamber of the Municipal Building at 200 W. Douglas Ave. The Plan Commission will make a recommendation to the City Council, which is responsible for a final determination of the application. A Washington developer's desire to bring a cannabis dispensary to Jacksonville is scheduled to face review today after a winter storm shut down plans to seek required rezoning last month. The city's Plan Commission is scheduled to meet at 6 p.m. in the Municipal Building at 200 W. Douglas Ave. to consider a petition by Kenny Pleasant of Bellevue, Washington, to rezone property at 1112 Veterans Drive from B4, a business designation, to B4 with special use. The retail shop would be between West Morton and Superior avenues on a 1.65-acre property owned by Daniel Kindred of Jacksonville. The Plan Commission will make a recommendation to City Council, which is responsible for a final determination of the application. If approved by the council, it would be one of the first adult-use cannabis dispensaries in a 50-mile radius outside of Springfield, which has six, or Quincy, which has three. The city has guidelines in place for recreational marijuana businesses since its was legalized in the state on Jan. 1, 2020. Among the requirements for dispensaries is that they cannot be within 150 feet of a nursery, school or residential care facility or of a residential property. They also stipulate that cannabis-related businesses may be required to install enhancements, such as security cameras, lighting or other improvements to ensure the safety of employees and customers. Buyers must be at least 21 years old under state law. There were 110 dispensaries around the state as of Dec. 31 that sold more than 30 million cannabis products in 2021. Adult-use recreational and medical cannabis sales last year were double those of 2020, hitting $1.37 billion, according to the Illinois Department of Financial and Professional Regulation. About $943 million of the sales were to in-state customers. Jacksonville Police ARRESTS, CITATIONS Eric M. McCormick, 42, of 506 Seventh St., Manchester, was booked into the Morgan County jail at 3:48 a.m. Tuesday on charges of criminal trespass to property, possession of burglary tools, nine counts of unlawful possession of a debit or credit card, and retail theft/price switching. ACCIDENTS Joyce M. Vortman, 86, of Jacksonville was cited on a charge of improper lane use after the car she was driving and one being driven by Daniel J. Janssen, 55, of Sherman collided at 2:03 p.m. Monday on West Morton Avenue at Massey Lane. Pike County Sheriff ARRESTS, CITATIONS Carl L. Hoos, 65, of Barry was booked into Pike County Jail at 8:56 a.m. Feb. 21 on a phone harassment charge. Daniel R. Miller, 48, of Barry was booked into Pike County Jail at 9:37 a.m. Feb. 22 on a petition to revoke or modify bond. Bruce J. Richards, 35, of Barry was booked into Pike County Jail at 11:57 p.m. Feb. 22 on a domestic battery charge. Jennifer K. Hughes, 39, of Cottage Hills was booked into Pike County Jail at 4:42 p.m. Saturday on a warrant accusing her of violating bail. Tracie Ann Batchelor, 33, of Louisiana, Missouri, was booked into Pike County Jail at 10:45 a.m. Feb. 23 on a warrant accusing her of aggravated battery and two counts of domestic battery. Compiled by David C.L. Bauer Tourism groups in three western Illinois river counties are going fishing in hopes of reeling in support for the counties restaurants. The newly christened Catfish Trail features more than 40 restaurants across Pike, Adams and Hancock counties that have catfish on their menu. Quincy Area Convention and Visitors Bureau Executive Director Holly Cain credits a recently retired co-worker for the idea. She said, You should do a catfish trail, because there are so many places to eat catfish, Cain said. She was just thinking of Quincy, but we cover three counties. Pike had just done a Tenderloin Trail ... that was so successful. We thought wed sort of mirror what they did with the Tenderloin Trail. Its no coincidence that the Catfish Trail is starting now, Cain said. We thought wed launch it right before Lent, she said, noting the 40 days in the pre-Easter Christian calendar when fish and seafood surge in popularity. But the trail wont end in 40 days, the way Lent does. We want it to be evergreen so people can enjoy it year-round, Cain said. The restaurants featured on the trail offer catfish in a variety of forms, from fried catfish dinners to catfish strips, filets, sandwiches. Some, such as Sprouts Inn and OSheas in Quincy and three of the five restaurants on the trail in Hancock County, offer whole catfish as part of a dinner. Others, such as Fat Boys in Rockport, offer catfish fritters. And, despite being a catfish trail, many of the restaurants also offer other fish varieties, including buffalo and salmon, and seafood such as shrimp and clams. Were on the two rivers here, Cain said of the Mississippi River that creates the Illinois border to the east and the Illinois River that skirts the three counties to the east. I think (catfish) is definitely more of a Midwestern flair here in our area. Its a Midwestern dish. For David Camphouse, executive director of Pike County Chamber of Commerce, which created the Tenderloin Trail, the Catfish Trail was a no-brainer. We had a tremendous amount of success from our Tenderloin Trail, Camphouse said, noting that it drew people from well into Missouri, Jacksonville, Madison County, the Metro East. It definitely helped restaurants that have had a hard time over the last couple of years with the pandemic. Catfish was a perfect option after tenderloin. We wanted to celebrate what they were known for doing and doing well, Camphouse said. Catfish has been a staple of Pike County and a lot of our restaurants for a long, long time. Joining the trail also didnt require much thought from Pam Watts, owner of Wattsup Cafe in Nebo. This is a very small community, Watts said of Nebo, which has around 340 residents. My cafes the only cafe in the area. We have really good food and a really good rapport with the community. I just wanted to make sure people knew we were here. Thats why she participated in the Tenderloin Trail when the opportunity arose and why she signed on to the Catfish Trail. Wattsup Cafe serves catfish and buffalo dinners on Fridays. There were people who didnt even know we were there who came to the Tenderloin Trail, Watts said. Her restaurants regulars know her fried fish is good, she said, adding with a laugh that its nothing healthy. People just like fish here, she said. They cant wait til we serve it on Fridays. While she was pleased that the Tenderloin Trail attracted new customers to her small cafe, shes hoping, along with Cain and Camphouse, to hook a few more with her catfish. I hope this will acknowledge to the area that were here, we have good food, Watts said. Even though were little, were a good restaurant. Catfish Trail maps showing participating restaurants in the three counties are available online at SeeQuincy.com and at the restaurants. TRIPOLI, March 2 (Xinhua) -- A number of armed factions in western Libya have announced their rejection to the new government that was approved by the House of Representatives, the country's parliament. "We hereby announce our complete rejection to the procedure adopted by the House of Representatives, by which a new government was approved, which is a violation of the political agreement and the rules of procedures of the House of Representatives," the armed factions said in a joint statement late Tuesday. "Our only option is to return legitimacy to the Libyan people and hold elections to select those who will represent that legitimacy," added the statement, which was published via local media. In the statement, the armed factions called on the Presidential Council to dissolve the House of Representatives and hold elections early. The Libyan House of Representatives approved a new government on Tuesday, replacing the incumbent Government of National Unity led by Prime Minister Abdul-Hamid Dbeibah. "The House of Representatives unanimously granted confidence to the new government, with a majority of 92 votes," the parliament spokesman Abdullah Blehig said in a statement. In September last year, the House of Representatives withdrew confidence from Dbeibah's government and designated it as a caretaker government. On Feb. 10, it unanimously voted to appoint Fathi Bashagha, the former interior minister, as the new prime minister. However, Dbeibah insisted that his government would remain in office until an elected government is established. On Feb. 21, he announced a plan to hold general elections in June. Dbeibah's government on Tuesday accused the House of Representatives of approving the new government "without attaining quorum" during the session, vowing to continue to prepare for the elections in June. General elections in Libya had been scheduled for Dec. 24 last year, but were postponed indefinitely because of technical and legal issues, according to the country's elections commission. This is a carousel. Use Next and Previous buttons to navigate BEARDSTOWN It was a historical day for the City of Beardstown on Tuesday with the Illinois National Guard, Illinois Department of Military Affairs and the Beardstown Park District holding the final step in moving of the Guard the transfer of the armory key to the park district. "The armory you see here represents more than bricks and mortar. From the very beginning it has represented a community partnership that has worked well for 35 years and will continue to thrive as the Beardstown Park District takes ownership of the building," Brig. Gen. Mark Alessia said. "Although the transfer of ownership of this armory to the Beardstown community represents a new stage in this partnership, it should not be interpreted as the Illinois National Guard 'leaving' Beardstown or that Beardstown is any less important to our National Guard." The ceremony at 1801 Wall St. also featured members from the Guard, the city's park district and Mayor Tim Harris. "I am anxiously looking forward for this transition. Deion (Summers) thinks it's going to be a great asset here to us and we appreciate what the Guard has done for us all the years. I think this is going to be a big improvement for all of Beardstown and we're all very proud of it and we have a lot of good people working here and a lot of good plans," Harris said. The National Guard will still keep a recruiting office on-site, the rest of the facility will be turned over to Beardstown Park District for its use, which uses part of it currently. Summers, the Beardstown Park District director, was excited that he now will have more access to the building's square footage to implement programs for community members, expanding the Schewe Community Center. "We have new ideas to bring into the building," Summers said. "We want to increase adult programs. We don't have a lot for the elderly." With now having access to more rooms, Summers said that they can add programs like yoga and have them in smaller rooms instead of the large gym. They also plan on updating the availability of the center to area residents with increasing hours by being open longer on Saturday and being open on Sunday so the center can be available to those that work during the week. The National Guard has occupied the building over the past 35 years, which is located in Roy Roberts Park and cost $1.5 million to build $907,000 which came from the federal government, $350,000 from the state and an anonymous donation of $250,000 from a Beardstown resident officially opened Nov. 7, 1987. For the National Guard, over 50 soldiers with the 616th Engineer Utilities Detachment will move operations to Macomb. "The community gets more space to run vital programs for its residents and the Illinois National Guard is able to shed excess space that will allow us to invest in the modern infrastructure necessary to complete our mission into the future," Alessia said. For Summers, who said that there is a member rate to join the center or daily rates available, he plans on implementing programs slowly over the coming year and beyond. "Not in it to make money," he said. "It's here for the community." PLEASANT HILL Two people were being held Tuesday in Pike County Jail after their arrest Monday on drug and other charges. Officers from the West Central Illinois Task Force, Pike County Sheriffs Department and Pleasant Hill Police searched a house in the 300 block of Mound Street in Pleasant Hill about 4:43 p.m. Monday. Jamestown, CA A man and woman from Oakdale with previous drug arrests warrants allegedly gave false names to a depute to hide those crimes. A traffic stop of a Jeep near the Preston Lane and Seco Street intersection in Jamestown last Wednesday (Feb. 23) night resulted in the seizure of Fentanyl and Methamphetamine. When being questioned by a Tuolumne Sheriffs Deputy the suspects inside the vehicle stated they did not have any ID and both gave the name of a sibling instead to avoid arrest for multiple drug and burglary warrants, according to Sheriffs spokesperson Ashely Boujikian. Seeing drug paraphernalia in plain sight inside of the vehicle, Boujikian detailed, After searching both occupants of the vehicle, deputies discovered additional drug paraphernalia, fentanyl and a California Identification Card matching the description of the driver, 29-year-old Samuel Batson. A search of the Jeep turned up methamphetamine, additional drug paraphernalia and a second California Drivers License that appeared to belong to the female passenger, 28-year-old Brendie Arredondo, proving she was not the sibling she had originally stated to the deputy. Both were arrested on charges of false personation of another, several drug possession-related charges and for their previous local felony warrant and two outside agency felony warrants. ADDIS ABABA, March 2 (Xinhua) -- The Food and Agriculture Organization (FAO) of the United Nations on Wednesday said the desert locust upsurge that had ravaged the Horn of Africa for more than two years has ended. "The current desert locust upsurge has finally ended in the Horn of Africa after more than two years of intensive survey and control operations carried out by ground and air with generous support from the international community," the FAO said in its latest dessert locust situation update. According to the FAO, for nearly the second consecutive month, no significant locust infestations had been detected in Djibouti, Eritrea, Ethiopia, Somalia, and Kenya during February. The UN agency, however, stressed that although rain has not fallen recently and ecological conditions are dry, small groups of immature adults were seen moving southwards in eastern Ethiopia, which suggests that a few residual infestations may still be present. "Therefore, surveys and vigilance should be maintained," the FAO said. This year's winter breeding along both sides of the Red Sea and the Gulf of Aden has been very poor due to a lack of rainfall. China, which has been helping deal with natural disasters in the Horn of Africa region, had been helping countries in the region in their efforts to effectively respond to the desert locust upsurge. When Ethiopia suffered from the worst desert locust invasion in about 25 years for much of 2019 and 2020, the Chinese government had donated batches of what the Ethiopian government described as "timely and much-needed" anti-locust materials. The batch of anti-locust donations by the Chinese government included 72 metric tons of pesticides, 2,000 units of hand-held ULV sprayers as well as 20,000 sets of personal protective gear. The desert locust (Schistocerca gregaria), considered as the most dangerous of the nearly one dozen species of locusts, is a major food security peril in desert areas across 20 countries, stretching from west Africa all the way to India, covering nearly 16 million square kilometers, according to the UN. Images By Tang Ming Tung/Getty Images The city of Plainview is scaling back on its release of COVID data. New reports will now be released on Tuesdays only. Details regarding vaccination and COVID-19 data is being referred to www.dshs.texas.gov. The latest report was released on Tuesday. MEDAL OF VALOR When Plainview Police were called out to an aggravated assault involving a deadly weapon on June 13, 2021, Corporal Chris Rodriguez responded. It had been reported that a victim had been threatened with a firearm and stabbed multiple times. Upon arrival, Rodriguez conducted the follow-up investigation and found the suspect at the 400 block of Canyon Street. The suspect pulled a pistol and held it to his own head when presented with the prospect of being arrested. Rodriguez maintained a calm control over the scene and talked the suspect down. The suspect voluntarily surrendered. On Friday night, Rodriguez was presented with the Plainview Police Departments Medal of Valor. He was accompanied by his wife, Sandra. The Medal of Valor is awarded to individuals who demonstrate exceptional bravery at the imminent risk of bodily injury. Rodriguez later told The Herald he has been in law enforcement for more than 20 years and hes been with the Plainview PD for just over two years. Being a cop is something he wanted to do since he was a kid. --- POLICE COMMENDATION Four Plainview Police Officers were awarded the Police Commendation recognition Friday night for their actions during an aggravated robbery callout on Nov. 18. The callout was made to a hotel at the 2000 block of W. 5th St. where four suspects armed with a shotgun forced their way into a hotel room and robbed someone. Sgt. Jesse Ortiz, Cpl. Chris Rodriguez, and Officers Sergio Martinez and Jake Amason were recognized for their work through the investigation. Ellysa Harris/Plainview Herald Ortiz received the license plate number and other descriptive information for the vehicle while heading to the location of the incident and actually located it at a store at the 1000 block of W. 5th St. He maintained surveillance on the vehicle and attempted a traffic stop after witnessing the driver commit a traffic violation. The suspect accelerated away from Ortiz, Rodriguez and Amason and fled to an alley in the 100 block of SE 7th St. where all occupants fled on foot. They were later apprehended (with the help of the Hale County Sheriffs Office). Two of the suspects were detained by HCSO and Ortiz. The other two suspects were found hiding in a storage unit above a garage and were drawn out of their hiding space at gunpoint. As he spoke about his officers actions, Chief Derrick Watson described them as selfless and brave. --- LIFE SAVING AWARD Cpl. Jeremy Martinez was recognized Friday night with the departments Life Saving Award. Martinez was attending a rosary on the evening of April 23 when a woman experienced cardiac arrest and collapsed. Martinez stepped in to assist her with two off-duty nurses and provided CPR until the Fire/EMS Department arrived. The womans husband later expressed his gratitude at their actions saying there are not enough words to thank Officer Jeremy Martinez and the two off duty nurses for helping save my wifes life that day. --- COMMUNITY SERVICE AWARDS Three citizens were recognized by the Plainview Police Department Friday night during the 8th annual PD Employee Recognition Awards Dinner. Ellysa Harris/Plainview Herald Larry Juarez, Yesenia Garcia and Monica Rodriguez were all presented with the departments Community Service Award. Juarez and Garcia were recognized for their actions on Dec. 1 when the PD received a call regarding a child found wandering in the middle of the street at the 800 block of Borger by themself during 30 degree weather. The two citizens noticed the child, who was wearing only footed pajamas and was too scared to answer questions, and contacted law enforcement. They also provided the child some care and a blanket for comfort as they walked door-to-door with officers to figure out where the child lived. Rodriguez was recognized for providing assistance to community children each Christmas by helping the department with its annual Christmas With Cops program. She generally volunteers her time and supervises the finances. Ellysa Harris/Plainview Herald The actions of the three citizens were described as keeping in line with the finest traditions of community service and reflect great credit on each individual. --- DISTINGUISHED SERVICE AWARD Five Plainview Police Officers were recognized on Friday with the Distinguished Service award from the department. When the Lubbock County Sheriffs Office lost one of its own Sgt. Josh Bartlett on July 15 during a callout in Levelland, Plainviews own Lt. Gabriel Carrillo, Sgt. Chris Hall, Officer Lance Lucero, Det. Luis Montelongo and Det. Cade Morris all volunteered to help provide extra assistance to the law enforcement departments in Levelland in the hours and days that followed. Ellysa Harris/Plainview Herald Many law enforcement officers in Plainview with the PD and the Hale County Sheriffs Office knew Bartlett and trained with him. His loss was felt greatly across Plainviews law enforcement agencies. --- CERTIFICATE OF POLICE EXCELLENCE Its been a while since staffing levels at the Plainview Police Department were at 100%. The department experienced a staffing shortage in 2021 that was years in the making, noted Chief Derrick Watson. On Friday during the departments eighth annual employee appreciation dinner, Sgt. Cindy Hawkins was awarded a Certificate of Police Excellence for her efforts to recruit and bring staffing levels up to 100%. Ellysa Harris/Plainview Herald Watson said Hawkins visited police academies, scheduled physicals and background checks, supervised field training and went the extra mile to find candidates for the Plainview PD. Her efforts resulted in 12 police officer hires and four public safety dispatch hires, which amount to about one-third of the department within the one-year period. As she was presented and her work highlighted, it was noted that she placed particular emphasis in drawing in some local recruits. Feb. 17 A crash resulting in vehicle damage was reported at the 400 block of W. 16th St. on Feb. 17. An assault was reported at the 700 block of Zephyr on Feb. 17. Officers were dispatched to the location in reference to a domestic disturbance. During the investigation, charges were filed against two individuals for assault. Feb. 18 Theft was reported at the 3300 block of Olton Road on Feb. 18. The theft is noted as fraud. An assault was reported at the 600 block of Nassau St. on Feb. 18. A theft was reported at the 1500 block of N. I-27 on Feb. 18. Police were dispatched to the 400 block of W. 3rd St. on Feb. 18 in reference to a suspicious person. Officers made contact with a man upon arrival who was found to have an active felony warrant for unauthorized use of a motor vehicle. Nicholas David Gonzalez, 33, was arrested and transported to the Hale County Jail. Police arrested 22-year-old Desiree Nicole Gomez on Feb. 18 at the 1100 block of N. Date St. during a traffic stop conducted for not having headlights when required. The driver was discovered to have active municipal warrants and evaded police on foot. Gomez was arrested after a short pursuit and transported to the Hale County Jail where she was found to be in possession of a controlled substance and drug paraphernalia. Gomez was charged with active warrants for failure to appear/bail jumping and for driving with no license. She was also arrested for evading arrest or detention and with possession of a controlled substance, which is a felony. Feb. 19 A 48-year-old man was arrested at the 1300 block of W. 5th St. on Feb. 19. He was charged with possession/delivery of drug paraphernalia. Theft from a vehicle was reported at the 4000 block of Olton Road on Feb. 19. An unknown person took an air compressor and a rope ladder from the bed of a pickup parked in the parking lot of the Super 8 Motel. A burglary was reported at the 500 block of W. 17th St. on Feb. 19. The burglary occurred sometime between 1 p.m. Feb. 13 to 3:30 p.m. on Feb. 19. Feb. 20 Police conducted a traffic stop at the 800 block of N. I-27 on Feb. 20 and arrested a 33-year-old man for driving while intoxicated. The stop was conducted because the vehicle was driving with no headlights at night. A 30-year-old woman was arrested on Feb. 20 at the 1500 block of Quincy St. for several municipal warrants for following too closely, failure to control speed, driving with no license and for failure to appear/bail jumping. A stolen vehicle was reported at the 800 block of Quincy St. on Feb. 20. A stolen vehicle was reported at the 1300 block of W. 5th St. on Feb. 20. A 31-year-old woman was arrested on Feb. 20 at the 3200 block of Olton Road during a stop for a criminal traffic violation. The woman was charged with driving without a valid license with previous suspension without financial resolution. A 43-year-old woman was arrested at the 900 block of W. 28th St. on Feb. 20 for multiple misdemeanor warrants for running a red light and for failure to appear/bail jumping. Officers were called to the 3100 block of N. I-27 in reference to criminal mischief, aggravated assault and abandoning or endangering a child. Feb. 21 Theft from a vehicle was reported at the 2600 block of W. 19th St. on Feb. 21. A burglary was reported at the 3200 block of Lexington St. on Feb. 21. Police arrested 19-year-old Joshua Maleke Cooper for burglary of a habitation, which is a felony. Shoplifting was reported at the 3200 block of Olton Road on Feb. 21. Police arrested a 31-year-old woman at the 3300 block of W. 16th St. on Feb. 21 for two active misdemeanor warrants for operating an unregistered vehicle and for failure to appear/bail jumping. A 34-year-old man was arrested at the 1400 block of W. 13th St. during a traffic stop on Feb. 21. Juan Carlos Cabral Tapla was found to have an active warrant and was in possession of a social security card belonging to someone else. He was charged with fraud use/possession of identifying information, which is a felony, and with a warrant. Shoplifting was reported at the 4600 block of Olton Road on Feb. 21. A 42-year-old woman was arrested on Feb. 21 at the 1800 block of W. 5th St. for active misdemeanor warrants for public intoxication and for failure to appear/bail jumping. Feb. 22 A 27-year-old man was arrested on Feb. 22 at the 700 block of Canyon during a traffic stop. Officers found the individual to have an active misdemeanor warrant for criminal trespass. A crash resulting in vehicle damage was reported at the intersection of W. 24th and Galveston St. on Feb. 22. A burglary was reported at the 600 block of W. 22nd St. on Feb. 22. A terroristic threat was reported at the 700 block of Broadway on Feb. 22. A 25-year-old man was arrested on Feb. 22 at the 1500 block of N. I-27. Feb. 23 An abandoned vehicle was reported at the 1800 block of SW 3rd St. on Feb. 23. The vehicle was located in the lane of traffic and was removed from the roadway. Criminal mischief was reported at the 1000 block of Portland St. on Feb. 23. Officers were dispatched to the location in reference to theft of service. The water curb stop valve had been broken allowing water to flow. Its unknown how much water was used. A crash resulting in vehicle damage was reported at W. 11th and Quincy St. No injuries were reported. Criminal mischief was reported at the 300 block of S. Broadway on Feb. 23. Officers responded to a report of damage that had already occurred to a fence. A sexual assault of a juvenile was reported to Plainview PD on Feb. 23. The alleged assault occurred in Floydada. Feb. 24 A 32-year-old man was arrested on Feb. 24 for driving under the influence of alcohol. The individual was stopped at the 4600 block of SW 3rd St. Officers initiated the stop after being dispatched in reference to a man asleep in the drivers seat while the vehicle was on. When officers made contact with the driver, they found he had an active warrant for public intoxication. He was charged with the warrant and with a charge of driving while intoxicated. Fraud was reported at the 2600 block of Joliet St. on Feb. 24. Forgery of checks was reported at the 3100 block of Olton Road on Feb. 24. A known person tried to cash a forged check at a bank. The bank representatives were aware of the stolen check belonging to someone in Floydada. The check was confiscated and was provided to Plainview PD. A crash resulting in vehicle damage was reported at the 2000 block of N. Quincy St. on Feb. 24. A crash resulting in an injury was reported at W. 11th and Yonkers on Feb. 24. Both drivers denied emergency medical services. Police responded to the 900 block of Fresno on Feb. 24 in reference to criminal mischief. The homeowner reported damage to the front door and door frame on his vacant property but was unable to provide a suspect description. A hit-and-run crash resulting in vehicle damage was reported at the intersection of S. Quincy and SW 3rd St. on Feb. 24. Police responded to the 1000 block of N. I-27 on Feb. 24 in reference to multiple thefts from vehicles. According to the incident report, three vehicles were found to be missing catalytic converters. They were taken by an unknown suspect. Feb. 25 A crash resulting in injury was reported at the 3400 block of Olton Road on Feb. 25. The injuries were non-life-threatening and EMS was denied at the scene. Both vehicles sustained disabling damages and airbags were deployed. Forgery of checks was reported at the 800 block of W. 11th St. on Feb. 25. A suspect took money from the victims bank account between April and June 2021. An assault was reported at the 200 block of SE 10th St. on Feb. 25. Officers were initially dispatched regarding a disturbance. Officers were notified that the assault was unwanted contact. No bodily injuries were noted at the time. Officers issued a citation. A crash resulting in vehicle damage was reported on Feb. 25 at the 600 block of W. 20th St. Police were dispatched to the 600 block of W. 20th St. on Feb. 25 in reference to criminal trespass. When officers arrived, they heard screaming inside the residence from the front door. Officers entered and witnessed a man pushing a female. Another female was witnessed lying on the floor and said he had pushed her down, too. The 32-year-old man was arrested on a charge of assault causing bodily injury, family violence and was taken to the Hale County Jail. An assault was reported at the 1100 block of N. Date St. on Feb. 25. Feb. 26 An aggravated assault with a weapon was reported at the 1000 block of W. 5th St. on Feb. 26. Police were called to the 1600 block of Smythe St. on Feb. 26 in reference to a report regarding multiple gunshots fired. A criminal citation for possession of marijuana was given to an individual at the 3600 block of W. 4th St. on Feb. 26 after officers located a usable amount of marijuana in the individuals vehicle. A sexual assault was reported on Feb. 27. A hit-and-run crash was reported at the 3000 block of W. 11th St. on Feb. 27. The crash resulted in vehicle damage. Criminal mischief was reported at the 1100 block of Ennis St. on Feb. 27. Damaged property was reported. Since downtown Austin's Eastern European restaurant Russian House opened on E Fifth Street in 2012, guests have washed down crispy pork schnitzel and Ukrainian borscht with infused vodka in flavors like wild mushroom and cigar. After this weekend, they'll have do it at The House. On the afternoon of Sunday, February 27, owner Varda Monamour announced that she was changing the restaurant's name in light of Russia's invasion of Ukraine. On Tuesday, March 1, Monamour sent a statement to MySA further explaining the need for a name change. "I have removed the letters because I represent the place where everyone is welcomed, and everyone feels safe and loved," Monamour wrote in an email, which included both Russian and Ukrainian flag emojis. "As of today the name is too sharp and brings pain to those in struggle ALL Ukrainians and Russians and those who are against aggression of any type and if my actions bring relief to single person in this world it is worth it!" Monamour has Ukrainian and Russian heritage, and says she opened the restaurant as a "cultural island" in Texas. A place to celebrate the music, literature, food, drinks, and people of Slavic countries. Over the years, the restaurant has hosted Slavic and Ukrainian dance events, post-Soviet-themed dinners, and Russian language classes. Monamour mentioned that the restaurant has hosted world music events during South by Southwest. Musicians from the Balkans, plus, Azerbaijan, India, Turkey, Colombia, and more are slated to play music from around the world at what is listed on the official SXSW website as House Nazdorovye. "We are the HOUSE of Slavic/Post-Soviet States Culture!" Monamour said. Monamour isn't turning away from her Russian heritage, but rather removing what she deems to be divisive from the name of the only Russian restaurant in Austin. "I feel more Russian than I ever did," Monamour told MySA. "I brought a piece of my culture all the way across the world and became successful despite belief that Texans are too conservative and we would not be accepted!" So far, Monamour says, she has gotten "so much" love and support after the announcement. But she has also received many "angry and sarcastic messages," as well, though she did not elaborate on the content of those messages. Chris O'Connell/MySA An employee took the claw of a hammer to the "Russian" portion of the restaurant's sign, removing the gold letters on Sunday. For now, there is just a faint trace of the word where the sun has beaten on the red paint. New name and all, Monamour confirms that nothing else is changing about her restaurant. "We have been accepted and loved, we have taught and shared with people of Austin our traditions and we are not changing our concept/menu/staff," Monamour told MySA. "We are what we have been for the past decade!" The name change came the day after Governor Greg Abbott called on the Texas Restaurant Association, Texas Package Stores Association, and all Texas retailers to remove all Russian products from their stores. Several Texas businesses followed suit, including County Line Barbecue, which removed Russian vodka from its restaurants in Austin, San Antonio, El Paso, and Albuquerque, New Mexico, and Total Wine & More, which removed all Russian-made products from its stores. The backlash against Russian names and products echoes the 2003 movement to rename French fries and spurn French goods after the country declined to support the invasion of Iraq. Freedom fries appeared on diner menus, and in New Brunswick, New Jersey, a restaurant owner dumped $1,000 worth of Champagne and French wine down a toilet in protest. The difference for Monamour is she is herself Russian, and still ardently celebrating Russian culture. She just thinks the name is too divisive right now. "I did it out of deep love and respect for my culture because what is going on right now is not what Russia and Russian people are," she wrote. "I stand with Peace!" DAR ES SALAAM, March 2 (Xinhua) -- At a hotel in Tanzania's Serengeti National Park, Zhang Cuishan, wearing a short-sleeved shirt, was checking the status of the project. Not far behind him, a herd of elephants was drinking leisurely at the edge of a pond, oblivious to human activity. This is the photo Zhang left when the hotel was just completed. The hotel, built by Zhang, has become a local celebrity, attracting tourists from all over the world every day. "Building hotels in Africa has given me a deeper understanding of the relationship between human and nature," Zhang told Xinhua before the World Wildlife Day that falls on Thursday. Zhang, 42, General Manager of Tanzania Branch of China Railway Jianchang Engineering Company (CRJE), has been in Africa for 15 years. In 2012, Due to his outstanding performance, he was appointed as project manager of a five-star hotel in Serengeti National Park. As Tanzania's largest national park and a UNESCO World Heritage site, the Serengeti is famous for the annual migration of millions of wildebeests, zebras and other wildlife. Since the project is located in the hinterland of the Serengeti, the requirements for ecological and environmental protection are extremely strict. "Any construction waste and household waste generated during construction must be packed and taken away in time. After the construction, the working and living places of the construction personnel will be dismantled to restore the original ecological appearance," said Zhang. If wild animals enter the construction site, the construction should be suspended and notified to the forest police immediately. Only after the animals are driven away, the construction can be resumed. Wild plants are also protected in high standards. In one case, the construction team found an acacia tree blocking the hotel during construction. In the end, Zhang chose to revise the design drawings and re-construct around the tree. "It's not easy to grow a tree on the prairie, and we have to do everything we can to protect it," Zhang said. Tanzania is rich in tourism resources and tourism is recovering from the pandemic. According to Damas Ndumbaro, Tanzania's minister of Natural Resources and Tourism, Tanzania's tourism industry has received 923,000 foreign tourists in 2021, with tourism revenue of 1.254 billion U.S. dollars, up 76 percent year on year. In Zhang's view, with the implementation of the achievements of the Forum on China-Africa Cooperation, China-Tanzania cooperation will embrace more opportunities. "More tourists from all over the world will come to Tanzania in the future, and Tanzania's tourism industry has a promising future," Zhang said. Tickets are on sale for an event showcasing Texas-grown wines, professional chef-made food, and live music, all of which benefit local causes. Texas Wine Revolution (TWR), a 501c3 non-profit organization, is ready for its inaugural Texas Wine Auction, set to take place on April 9 from 6 to 11:30 p.m. at Vista Oaks in Fredericksburg. While a chance to showcase Texas-grown wine, the Texas Wine Auction serves to raise money for the Hill Country Memorial Foundation and an endowment to Texas A&M AgriLife Extension Viticulture & Fruit Lab. We really had this dream for a couple of years now about a medical van. So many vineyard workers, winery workers, and restaurant workers have very little access to medical care, said Chris Brundrett, President of Texas Wine Revolution and co-founder of William Chris Wine Company. Courtesy of Texas Wine Revolution Hill Country Memorial Foundation will establish a medical mobile unit providing wellness services throughout the Hill Country for under-served populations. Those populations include employees of restaurants, wineries, vineyards, and other hospitality personnel. An endowment to Texas A&M AgriLife Extension Viticulture & Fruit Lab will help with research and development for the Texas wine industry, according to a press release. The Texas Wine Auction features both live and silent auctions, music performances by the Powell Brothers, and culinary delights with wine pairings presented by Texas chefs and wineries. William Chris Wine Company, the featured winery, will showcase their wines alongside Arche Wines, Becker Vineyards, Brennan Vineyards, Calais Winery, Flat Creek Estate, Float Wines, Hawk's Shadow Winery & Vineyards, Hidden Hangar, Kalasi Cellars, Reddy Vineyards, Texas Wine Collective, and Westcave Cellars. Cuisine pairings will be provided by Texas chefs, including Dallas-native, and notable Bravo Top Chef alum, Casey Thompson, Austin-based chefs Todd Duplechan of Lenoir and Shane Stark of Mongers Market + Kitchen, as well as chef John Washburne of Otto's German Bistro, and chef Michael Hall of Hill & Vine. Courtesy of Texas Wine Revolution We've got a lot of support. I think it's just everyday we're getting another one or two wineries that want me involved, said Dave Bryant, Texas Wine Auction co-founder and 2022 auction chair. Bryant said the main goal is to raise as much money as they can for the auction while also throwing a great party. The auction has arranged complimentary transportation pick-up points around Fredericksburg for ticket holders sponsored by Texas Wine Tours. To purchase tickets, reserve accommodations, review transportation options, and learn more about the Texas Charity Wine Auction, visit Texas Wine Auctions website. Casey Sykes/Getty Images One of the San Antonio Spurs' young stars is heading to JBSA-Lackland in lead up to the team's Military Appreciation Night. Small forward Keldon Johnson, the Spurs' second-leading scorer, is stopping by at 2 p.m. on Wednesday, March 2 to tour the "Alamo Wings." The Air Force Reserve Command's 433rd Airlift Wing, also known as the Alamo Wing, is partnering with USAA to host Johnson, who will meet the Alamo Wing's Citizen Airmen and sign autographs. During his visit, Johnson will become an honorary member of the 433rd, receive a flight jacket and tour the wing, including a flight in a C-5M flight simulator and a tour of a massive C-5M Super Galaxy aircraft, according to a news release. Jessica Phelps The Texas primary elections closed out Tuesday, March 1, setting the stage for multiple high profile midterm elections in November. But you've probably seen posts on social media about propositions on the Republican primary ballot. While the Democrats didn't have any propositions on their ballot this year, Republicans had 10. The content of the propositions included hot-button issues for the Texas GOP, including trans rights, critical race theory, abortion, border security and more. All 10 propositions have drawn criticism from Texas Democrats. SYDNEY, March 2 (Xinhua) -- Two Australian orthopaedic surgeons have developed a 3D-printing technique to create high-tech ankle replacements. Dr. Tim O'Carrigan and Dr. Mustafa Alttahir from the Limb Reconstruction Centre at the Macquarie University (MQ) said their process provided "life-altering" joint replacements for patients who had suffered traumatic injuries, amputations, deformities, or arthritis. Their breakthrough is achieved using specialized computer-aided design (CAD) software which enables the surgeons to create a customized prosthesis unique to each patient. In contrast, the traditional surgical treatment is ankle fusion, which involves removing the remaining joint cartilage and inserting screws between the bones, so the bones ultimately grow together. "Fusions come with their own set of issues, including the potential for failure, and further arthritis from the increased wear and tear on the surrounding joints," O'Carrigan said, noting that cartilage usually acted as a buffer between the bones, so its loss caused the bones to rub together painfully. "Joints are designed to move, so we prefer to maintain that movement wherever possible by doing a replacement," O'Carrigan said. He gave an example of a recent patient who had previously undergone a conventional ankle operation. That process, however, had led to the collapse of the joint with the talus, which is the large bone between the ankle joint and heel bone. "In this case, we were able to replace the talus with a 3D-printed metal prosthesis that could articulate with the ankle replacement and fuse with the surrounding bone," O'Carrigan said. He said after an ankle replacement with a 3D prosthesis, patients spend just six weeks on crutches while the new joint attaches to the bone, followed by another six weeks wearing a surgical boot, with full recovery taking about a year. The surgeons said that all patients were assessed on a case-by-case basis, as unfortunately not every arthritic ankle was suitable for one of their pioneering joint replacements. They noted that fusion could still be the best option for someone who had already lost too much of the "architecture of their ankle" or had a lot of scar tissue from previous operations or had extensive muscular damage. Incumbent Wayne Christian, chair of the Texas Railroad Commission, which regulates oil and gas in the state, is headed for a Republican primary runoff election against Sarah Stogner, an oil and gas attorney who posted a campaign ad of herself mostly naked atop an oil pump jack. The crowded primary race for a seat on the Railroad Commission was too close to call late Tuesday night, but by Wednesday morning, 98.6% of the votes had been counted and Christian had secured 47.1% of the votes, falling short of the 50% needed to win the election outright. Stogner received 15.2% of the vote. Christian and Stogner will face each other in a runoff election May 24. The winner will face Democrat Luke Warford, a former top staffer for the Texas Democratic Party, in the November general election. Warford is the only Democratic candidate. The Railroad Commission, the oldest state agency, employs more than 800 people and has a budget of $144 million this year. The agency is governed by three board members elected statewide who serve staggered, six-year terms. Only one seat is up for election in 2022. The campaign for Railroad Commission typically doesnt attract as much attention as other races, but this year was different. Christian faced corruption allegations from some of his opponents after he voted against the recommendation of Railroad Commission staff to approve a permit for an oil field waste dump facility, then days later accepted a $100,000 campaign donation from the company that received the permit. This is a carousel. Use Next and Previous buttons to navigate 3 1 of 3 Sarah Stogner Show More Show Less 2 of 3 @Sarah4RCC / Twitter Show More Show Less 3 of 3 Another candidate, Marvin Sarge Summers, died in early February on the campaign trail when his vehicle collided with a tanker truck in Midland. The agencys regulatory power includes overseeing the natural gas system, a crucial element of the Texas power grid that failed last year during a winter freeze, leaving millions of people without power for days. Stogner and Christians other opponents in the race Dawayne Tipton, a former oil field roughneck who has worked various oil sector jobs including offshore drilling, and Tom Slocum Jr., an engineering consultant from the Houston area all criticized Christian and the Railroad Commission for not being proactive before and during last years deadly winter freeze. They also criticized his response to the freeze. While Christian did not win the race outright, he avoided a primary upset like the one in March 2020, when his colleague, former Railroad Commissioner Ryan Sitton, reelection in the Republican primary after raising $2.2 million. Sittons opponent, now-Commissioner Jim Wright, raised less than $13,000. Christian faces an unusual opponent in the runoff election. Stogner did not accept campaign contributions and attracted much of the attention she has received after her seminude stunt. The state established the Railroad Commission in 1891 to prevent monopolies in the oil industry. Eventually, the Legislature added oil and gas drilling permits, surface mining, natural gas utilities, and oil and gas pipelines to the agencys purview while moving regulation of railroads to the Texas Department of Transportation in 2005. The Railroad Commission also helps ensure that companies follow state and federal rules on safety and pollution. The Texas Tribune is a nonpartisan, nonprofit media organization that informs Texans and engages with them about public policy, politics, government and statewide issues. Yves here. This post is an important reminded that despite the rouble getting pummeled and Western investors stumbling over each other to exit Russian stocks, Russia is not as isolated as the Western media would have you believe. The fact that some key countries are trying to stand aside (see India, which needs Russian fertilizer) or are now even more aligned with Russia than the US (Saudi Arabia) is pointedly not mentioned in the US press. By Simon Watkins, a former senior FX trader and salesman, financial journalist, and best-selling author. He was Head of Forex Institutional Sales and Trading for Credit Lyonnais, and later Director of Forex at Bank of Montreal. He was then Head of Weekly Publications and Chief Writer for Business Monitor International, Head of Fuel Oil Products for Platts, and Global Managing Editor of Research for Renaissance Capital in Moscow. He has written extensively on oil and gas, Forex, equities, bonds, economics and geopolitics for many leading publications, and has worked as a geopolitical risk consultant for a number of major hedge funds in London, Moscow, and Dubai. Originally published at OilPrice While it was no surprise that China abstained when the UN Security Council voted to condemn Russias invasion of Ukraine, the abstentions from the UAE and India were more surprising. This vote highlights that Washingtons ability to counter the influence of China and Russia in the Middle East is limited. The fading influence of the U.S. in the Middle East is a result of its withdrawal from the Iran nuclear deal, its withdrawal from Syria, and its failure in Afghanistan. Last weeks failure of the UAE and India along with just China to vote in favor of the UN Security Councils resolution to condemn Russias aggression against Ukraine and to demand the immediate, complete, and unconditional withdrawal of Russian forces from the neighboring country earned all three countries the explicit thanks of Russia. It also highlights the broader shift in the once clear-cut global political alliances to the two principal power blocs in the world: the U.S. and its allies on the one hand, and China-Russia and its allies on the other. Nowhere has this shift been more evident in recent months than in the cases of the UAE which on 13 August 2020 became the first country to sign a U.S.-sponsored relationship normalization deal with Israel and of India. Saudi Arabia is on the same level, as is analyzed in-depth in my new book on the global oil markets, and reinforced this with the very recent statement that it is still committed to working alongside Russia in OPEC+. The clear and principal purpose of the U.S. in brokering these relationship normalization deals, and those that followed, was to counter the burgeoning influence of China and Russia in the Middle East. However, not only has the UAE in recent months been keen to distance itself from such a unipolar view of its global political allegiances but also now India which had been intended by the U.S. as a replacement global bid for China in the oil market has stepped back from fully committing the role envisaged for it by Washington. Shortly after the concept of the relationship normalization deals between Israel and as many countries in the Middle East and North Africa as possible had been originated in the U.S., various high-level sources in Washington let it be known that its new oil and gas market world order would, as far as the Middle East was concerned, involve Gulf states selling oil and gas predominantly to U.S. allies, including India, and that India as well would be the big back-up global bid for the commodities. This meant that in times of crisis, such as is now occurring in Ukraine, energy supplies to Western powers would not be subject to the potentially devastating threats that could proceed from Russia simply cutting off its gas supplies to Europe or, as has more recently happened with widespread sanctions against Russia, leave many U.S. allies in Europe scrabbling around to find alternative energy supplies. It was thought, as also analyzed in-depth in my new book on the global oil markets, that the relationship normalization deals would allow the U.S. and its allies to, in effect, corner large elements of the oil and gas supply in the Middle East. It was also thought by Washington that, by positioning India as the global replacement buyer for oil and gas instead of China, Chinas geopolitical position in its own backyard of Asia Pacific would be weakened over time. There is every reason to expect this strategy to work, provided that the U.S. begins to encourage the countries involved to understand that the new world order (as clearly heralded by the Russian invasion of Ukraine) is a zero-sum game, with one side ultimately winning at the others expense, and that all countries need to pick a side and be prepared to be judged by which side they pick. At the time that the U.S. made the decision to substitute China with India in the global oil and gas markets, military units of India and China had clashed on 15 June 2020 in the disputed territory of the Galwan Valley in the Himalayas. As also examined in my new book on the global oil markets, this clash reflected a much greater change in the core relationship between the two countries than the relatively small number of casualties might have implied. It marked a new push back strategy from India against Chinas policy of seeking to increase its economic and military alliances from Asia through the Middle East and into Southern Europe, in line with its multi-layered multi-generational project, One Belt, One Road (OBOR). Until China dramatically upped the tempo of this OBOR-related policy at around the same time as the U.S. signaled its lack of interest in continuing its own large-scale activities in the Middle East through its withdrawal from the Joint Comprehensive Plan of Action with Iran and its withdrawal from much of Syria India had stuck to a policy of trying to contain China. With the announcement in August 2020 of the U.S.-brokered Israel-UAE normalization deal it appeared that a new corridor of co-operation was being developed from the U.S. (and Israel), through the UAE (and Kuwait, Bahrain, and in part Saudi Arabia) to India, as a regional counterbalance to Chinas growing sphere of influence. Also around the same time, the International Energy Agency (IEA) released a report showing that India will make up the biggest share of energy demand growth at 25 percent over the next two decades, as it overtakes the European Union as the worlds third-biggest energy consumer by 2030. More specifically, Indias energy consumption is expected to nearly double as the nations GDP expands to an estimated US$8.6 trillion by 2040 under its current national policy scenario. This is underpinned by a rate of GDP growth that adds the equivalent of another Japan to the world economy by 2040, according to the IEA. At that time, the U.S. believed that Indias then-willingness to play this role in the global oil and gas markets would allow it to retain influence over the UAEs oil flows set to move from around 4 million barrels per day (bpd) to 5 million bpd given the Emirates already close links to India. Also around that time, the chief executive officer of the Abu Dhabi National Oil Company (ADNOC), Sultan al-Jaber, stated that he looked forward to exploring partnerships with even more Indian companies across the energy giants hydrocarbon value chain. He added that he wants this to include expanding the commercial scale and scope of the strategic reserves partnership, in line with ADNOC being the only overseas company to hold and store Indias vitally-important strategic petroleum reserves (SPR). In keeping with the developing scope of this relationship, Indias government approved a proposal that allows ADNOC to export oil from the SPR if there is no domestic demand for it, in the first instance from the Mangalore strategic storage facility (the other major SPR pool being at Padur). This decision marked a major shift in the policy of India in the handling of these vital energy reserves, with the country having previously completely banned all oil exports from the SPR storage facilities. This commitment to meeting Indias increasing energy demands was reiterated by the UAE last week as the Brent oil price broke through US$100 per barrel with its inclusion in the Joint UAE-India Vision Statement, which follows the signing of the India-UAE Comprehensive Economic Partnership Agreement on 18 February 2022. The problem for the U.S. in this and as has just been echoed as well in Indias unwillingness to sync with the U.S. and its allies condemnation of the Russian invasion of Ukraine last week is that Russian President Vladimir Putin used the chaotic domestic political situation in the U.S. following its withdrawal from Afghanistan and then end of combat mission in Iraq to sneak in and do a huge, wide-ranging deal with India, effectively scuppering Washingtons own vision for India and the UAE. As exclusively highlighted by OilPrice.com, mid-December 2021 saw Russias state-owned oil giant, Rosneft, sign a deal with Indian Oil to supply it with almost 15 million barrels of crude by the end of this year. The deal takes on even more significance as it was just one part of 28 investment deals between Russia and India signed during the very recent visit of Putin himself to Indian Prime Minister, Narendra Modi. These covered a broad range of subjects, including not just oil, gas, petrochemicals, steel, and shipbuilding, but also military matters. Specifically, said Modi: We have set a target of US$30 billion in trade and US$50 billion in investment by 2025. A joint statement from Russia and India said: [We have] reiterated their intention to strengthen defense cooperation, including in the joint development of production of military equipment. Specifically, according to further official statements from one or both sides, India will produce at least 600,000 Kalashnikov assault rifles the weapon of choice for terrorists and militias across the Middle East and elsewhere and, even more disturbing for the U.S., Indias Foreign Secretary, Harsh Vardhan Shringla, said that a 2018 contract for Russias S-400 air defense missile systems is now being implemented. (Natural News) Ben Armstrong warned the Biden administration that acting tough now against Russia could put the world on the brink of a nuclear war. [Russian President Vladimir] Putin is never going to view Biden as not weak. I dont know why they dont understand that. How do they not understand that Putin is never going to respect Biden, so telling Biden to act tougher isnt going to work. Am I wrong? How do they not know this? So why are they saying really irresponsible things? Ive heard some irresponsible stuff that could get America blown up, Armstrong said in a recent episode of his self-titled program. He was alluding to Bidens earlier warning to Putin that the U.S. forces will defend North Atlantic Treaty Organization (NATO) territories if Russia broadens its assault beyond Ukraine. Following Bidens warning, the Pentagon announced that 7,000 extra personnel and military equipment were being deployed to Germany. If you want to act tough, you better be prepared to back up what youre saying, Armstrong said. Heres what Im saying. Im not irresponsible. And Im not saying those things. I was saying we need to de-escalate and not escalate this. And the Ukraine is not our fight. (Related: Trump blasts Joe Biden over handling of Russia-Ukraine crisis, warns that world war is now very possible.) Globalists escalate tension in Ukraine Armstrong said he was worried because the globalists have escalated the tension in Ukraine. The globalists are looking at Putin. And they are saying, look hes even struggling taking the Ukraine. They dont understand that the reason why Vladimir Putin is struggling with the Ukraine is because hes trying to take the city [of Kiev] without blowing it up, Armstrong said, referring to Ukraines capital city. Putin wants Kiev for Russia. This is not how he would fight a war with an actual enemy that he doesnt view as a Russian brother. He views the Ukraine as something hes going to integrate. He doesnt want it flattened and destroyed, Armstrong said. The Russians are well-aware about radioactive fallout. Putin doesnt want Kiev to be a nuclear wasteland. They came through Chernobyl folks. But the world needs to understand that Putin is a killer. At some point, Armstrong said, Putin will get frustrated and will start showing the city what hes capable of. Russia is on nuclear high alert, although Armstrong believes its not intended for Ukraine. Theyve got the codes out there for the military they are ready. All it takes is a word. Putin has told his military to put the world on notice. The reason why is for the Western nations to see. That has nothing to do with the Ukraine. That nuclear high alert has to do with the sanctions. Because the Western world escalated it, Armstrong said. (Related: Western media is literally peddling Neo-Nazi propaganda to prompt war between Russia and Ukraine.) Ive been saying for the greater good of humanity: The Ukraine is not worth escalating. But we have many leaders that want to act tough. And they think by acting tough, theyre going to put us in a better position. Instead, all theyre going to do is put Putin in a corner and make him lash out. Never underestimate Putin Those leaders may be underestimating Putin, or they havent been paying attention to what the Russian leader is saying all this time. Putin is saying, I will first strike with nuclear weapons. Hes saying that, and nobody believes him. Everyone thinks that hes not serious, Armstrong noted. He believes nuclear [weapon] is something that should be used as a first resort if you need to win, especially against a foe like the United States. Now, nobody wants to believe him. And everyone will think that Im hysterical for saying, um, Vladimir Putin will use nuclear weapons for (the) first strike. The general consensus is that no one would do (the) first strike. That would mean mutual destruction. Folks, let me get your head into the right place. You live in 2022, not 1985. I think most Americans still think of nuclear war, like in the movies, war games where little nuclear missiles are launched, and you can see them coming. You have an hour to prepare, and you know what country that came from. That is not how it is, Armstrong said. If Putin launches it, there will be no radar, theres nothing that will indicate this. There will just be an explosion out of nowhere. Lets just take New York City because it should obviously be like one of the number one targets, then Washington D.C. All of a sudden, your leaders are taken out. Speaking of which, Armstrong thinks doing the State of the Union is a bad idea at this time. I dont know whats going to happen. Im just thinking, if Im an evil man like Putin, and I want to do a first strike, all the leaders are going to be gathered in one place at one time, and they only do this once a year. And youre talking about every leader that is essential. Why would you do that when someones threatening the brink of war? Thats all Im going to say. More related stories: Biden and his war hawks clamor for war with Russia; Ukraine tells him to STOP WARMONGERING and calm down. Russia accuses US of developing bioweapons near its borders. Matrixxx Grooove: Putin, Russia want denazification, demilitarization of Ukraine. Watch the February 28 episode of the Ben Armstrong Show as Ben Armstrong talks about the possibility of a nuclear war. This video is from The New American channel on Brighteon.com. Follow WWIII.news for more news about the ongoing Russia-Ukraine conflict. Sources include: Brighteon.com DailyMail.co.uk (Natural News) The last time such a brazen act of treason was committed against America, actress Jane Fonda traveled to North Vietnam and was photographed sitting at an anti-aircraft gun wearing a helmet, in a massive propaganda victory for Hanoi. Literally, Jane Fonda provided aid and comfort to an enemy while American troops were fighting and dying there. Now, it seems, her act of harming the United States has nearly been equaled by the rank amateurs running the Biden regime, according to a report last week by The New York Times, of all papers. In the months during Russias buildup of forces along the boundaries of Ukraine, the Biden administration was feeding that intelligence to China and China, in turn, turned it over to Russia (because neither country is our friend): Over three months, senior Biden administration officials held half a dozen urgent meetings with top Chinese officials in which the Americans presented intelligence showing Russias troop buildup around Ukraine and beseeched the Chinese to tell Russia not to invade, the Times reported. Each time, the Chinese officials, including the foreign minister and the ambassador to the United States, rebuffed the Americans, saying they did not think an invasion was in the works. After one diplomatic exchange in December, U.S. officials got intelligence showing Beijing had shared the information with Moscow, telling the Russians that the United States was trying to sow discord and that China would not try to impede Russian plans and actions, the paper continued. The report came just after tens of thousands of Russian troops stormed into Ukraine in a long-expected invasion and fighting had already reached the outskirts of the capital of Kyiv and the countrys second-largest city, Kharkiv. The paper also reported that the meetings during which Biden regime officials gave U.S. intelligence to China came after a video summit between Joe Biden and Chinese President Xi Jinping in mid-November. The Times noted further: After the meeting, American officials decided that the Russian troop buildup around Ukraine presented the most immediate problem that China and the United States could try to defuse together. Some officials thought the outcome of the video summit indicated there was potential for an improvement in U.S.-China relations. Others were more skeptical, but thought it was important to leave no stone unturned in efforts to prevent Russia from attacking, one official said. A few days later, Biden regime officials met with Chinas U.S. ambassador, Qin Gang, at the Chinese embassy, during which they told him what American intelligence agencies had discovered: That Russian forces had ringed Ukraine, and that armored units were among them. CIA Director William Burns previously flew to Moscow on Nov. 2 to present the same information to his Russian counterparts, the Times reported, adding that U.S. intelligence officials shared the same information in mid-November with NATO. In addition to providing Beijing with all of the Russian troop buildup intelligence, Biden regime amateurs also told Chinese officials what specific sanctions the U.S. was preparing to impose on Russia if Putin invaded, and how they could also negatively impact China because of the countrys close ties with Russia. Regime amateurs also tried to convince China whom nearly every nation trades with and depends on for a raft of commodities that its reputation would suffer in a Russian invasion as if Xi is worried about that. But of course, the increasingly desperate attempts went nowhere, the Times reported, with Chinas Qin reportedly acting skeptical and suspicious. And why wouldnt he? China is not our friend; surely Qin thought that the regime amateurs were simply trying to feed him disinformation in an attempt to splinter the Russia-China relationship. This blatant act of treason will go unpunished, though, because our governmental institutions have become so politicized they simply no longer function as designed. Sources include: ConservativeBrief.com NYTimes.com (Natural News) Since U.S. medical doctors never blame vaccines for health problems, nary an American who suffers the health consequences of these horrible injections knows the real culprit. For decades now, vaccines have been known to contain an array of toxins that should never be injected into the human body. These contaminants bypass all of the bodys normal filters and defense systems, including the lungs, the digestive tract and the skin. Some reactions happen right away while some take days. Others can take months or even years to rear their ugly heads but when they do, it can be devastating. Doctors are trained to excuse vaccine toxins as necessary adjuvants and excipients for conjuring immune reactions American doctors are trained to excuse these toxins, such as thimerosal (mercury), aluminum, sodium chloride, MSG, latex, formaldehyde, peanut oil, gelatin, squalene and human abortion cells, as necessary adjuvants and excipients for conjuring immune reactions. They always say theres not enough in there or theres such a miniscule amount that it wont hurt you. Big lies. Thats the epitome of misinformation. These things function like poisons for the human body, sending the immune system into a shock state of fight or flight, and disrupting the central nervous system sometimes to the point of permanent damage. Plus, children and babies (including in the womb) develop severe allergies to peanuts, dairy, eggs, latex, soy, monosodium glutamate and other toxins that are common in vaccines, because they have been repeatedly injected directly into muscle tissue and the bloodstream (even crossing the blood/brain barrier). COVID clot shots are even worse, compounding health issues while creating new ones that are deadly Just watch the TV commercials (and radio) as of late, created by Pfizer, trying to normalize atrial fibrillation (AFIB), myocarditis and irregular heart beats, as if healthy children, athletes and military members should expect this. What Pfizer fails to mention is their clot shots are the main cause. Since COVID vaccines inject or create billions of spike proteins (toxic nanoparticles) that stick (and join together) to clog the blood vessels, millions of people, including healthy people with no prior heart or blood issues, are suffering heart strain, heart failure and death. The booster shots are just adding to the carnage. Plus, COVID vaccines cause cancer by inhibiting DNA damage repair mechanisms. This has been proven scientifically and exposed by doctors who examine their patients blood and DNA after COVID vaccines are administered. In fact, new research published by the Multidisciplinary Digital Publishing Institute (MDPI) reveals that the billions of spike proteins significantly inhibit DNA from repairing itself. That means you can wave goodbye to adaptive immunity. In other words, the COVID vaccines are intended to make humans reliant on more vaccines, while crippling the natural immune system and your cells ability to repair itself and adapt. Specifically, the genes that are damaged are the ones that suppress cancer tumors. Thats one reason theres been a huge spike in new cancer cases since the COVID gene-mutating injections hit the market just two years ago. The illnesses that are intensified, compounded and exacerbated by COVID vaccines include cancer; blood clots; COVID-19 itself; myocarditis, irregular heart beat and AFIB, neurological disorders; chronic lethargy and depression; allergies; restless leg syndrome; insomnia; and auto-immune disorder and dysfunction (ADE). Restless leg syndrome caused by Moderna COVID vaccine per phase IV data extracted from CDC and FDA clinical studies Have you received your CDC-recommended permanent restless leg syndrome (RLS) injection yet? Phase IV clinical trials for COVID-19 vaccines have been analyzed and synthesized to reveal some horrifying statistics regarding the onset and aggravation of RLS caused by the gene therapy injections. Over 40 percent of people who get RLS from the Moderna Covid jab get it the same day, and nearly half get RLS during the same week they received the clot shot. Nearly 75 percent of those victims are female, and the range of age affected varies widely, with most being above age 30. It gets much worse because 60 percent of those who suffer RLS from the Moderna COVID jab NEVER recover from it. Other side effects include headaches (33 percent), general pain (29 percent), chronic fatigue (33 percent), nausea (28 percent), chills, fever, dizziness, weakness and insomnia. Tune your internet dial to Vaccines.news for updates on experimental scamdemic COVID vaccines and boosters that cause pre-existing conditions and sicknesses to become deadly virtually over night. Sources include: NaturalNews.com 1 NaturalNews.com 2 DailyExpose.uk NaturalNews.com 3 eHealthMe.com (Natural News) There is no doubt that the many on the American Left are staunchly anti-gun. The cognitive dissonance it takes to simultaneously hate cops while demanding that cops be the only ones who have guns is astonishing. Unfortunately, however, it is the norm. (Article by Matt Agorist republished from TheFreeThoughtProject.com) As many readers of the Free Thought Project understand, gun control does nothing to stop criminals from getting their hands on guns and carrying out horrible acts of violence. What gun control actually does is take the right of self-defense away from law-abiding citizens while only allowing criminals and the government to be armed This is a lose/lose situation. When only the state and criminals have the means of defending themselves, the citizens become sitting ducks, ready to be overtaken. This became evident this week in Ukraine as Putin began the invasion. In Ukraine, the largely corrupt bureaucracy is able to limit who gets a gun because there are no statutes governing gun laws like America has a Second Amendment. In the case of Ukraine, it is often only the politically connected folks who get to carry guns. Thanks to the lack of legal protections regarding firearm ownership, authorities have ridiculous discretion when deciding who can have a gun. The president and ministers often give guns to members of the elite, while making it hard for ordinary people to obtain them. It is estimated that more than 50,000 guns have been issued as presents from authorities to elite figures. Because it is difficult for the average citizen to obtain a gun, the black market for guns in Ukraine has flourished. The gun control measures in the country have essentially ensured that only state actors and their friends, and the folks willing to break the law are the only ones with guns. We opened the weapons arsenal, and our enemies did the same, National Police Chief Serhiy Knyazev said in a 2017 interview, describing this very scenario. Now, as Russian troops cross their borders, most Ukrainians are forced to leave their homes and run as many of them are unarmed and defenseless. Seeing this problem albeit too late Ukrainian President Volodymyr Zelensky sought to fix it by arming the citizens after the fact. We will give weapons to anyone who wants to defend the country. Be ready to support Ukraine in the squares of our cities, he tweeted as the conflict escalated. We will give weapons to anyone who wants to defend the country. Be ready to support Ukraine in the squares of our cities. ????????? ?????????? (@ZelenskyyUa) February 24, 2022 All those who are ready to take up arms, join the ranks of the area defense forces of the Armed Forces of Ukraine. We simplified procedures. Only your ID is needed. We give weapons to all patriots! Ukraines Armed Forces said in a tweet, following up Zelensky. The problem, like what happened in Ukraine, of government and criminals monopolizing the ability to defend themselves, is nothing new. It was for this very reason that the founding fathers constructed the Second Amendment. Though the American left largely claims this Amendment exists for hunting, as the Ukrainian crisis illustrates, that couldnt be further from the truth. The highly hypocritical and often embarrassingly wrong Occupy Democrats briefly came to this realization this week when they praised the Ukrainian authorities for arming its citizens. Seriously. To be clear, this group thinks no one should have a gun and thinks that gun manufacturers should be sued for acts committed with their products. By this logic, fork makers should be held liable any time someone hurts someone else with a fork. Its asinine. Because they are so logically inconsistent, the following tweet from the folks at OD supporting the arming of Ukrainians, was not utterly shocking. Still, however, it was definitely something to relish in. The tweets below are a far cry from their previous stance of no one needs an automatic rifle. But harsh realities can often cause moments of clarity even if just for a moment. BREAKING: Ukraines Interior Minister announces that 10,000 automatic rifles have been handed out to the civilians of Kyiv as they prepare to fight tooth and nail to defend their homes against Putins invasion. RT IF YOU STAND WITH THE BRAVE UKRAINIAN PEOPLE! Occupy Democrats (@OccupyDemocrats) February 24, 2022 How long ago was it that we heard from folks just like Occupy Democrats that you will never fight off a modern Army with an AR-15? Yet here we are, witnessing these same people tripping over themselves to praise the arming of citizens. Obviously, the hypocrites at Occupy Democrats dont represent all the people on the Left. But their concession offers some great insight. They arent so much praising guns in the hands of citizens as they are virtue signaling their support for the people of Ukraine. Their solidarity with the oppressed rings embarrassingly hollow, however, as these same people praised Biden when he invaded a foreign country against their will in Syria, and executed people inside of it, including women and children. Make no mistake, this selective outrage is entirely engineered and if anyone of these people had a semblance of principle, they would stand against all occupations, not just the ones that are politically convenient and that garner them more likes on Twitter. Read more at: TheFreeThoughtProject.com (Natural News) Moderna CEO Stephane Bancel had a hard time answering why the Wuhan coronavirus (COVID-19) has a genetic sequence patented by the company three years before the emergence of the disease in China. Bancel fumbled with his answer during a Feb. 24 appearance on the program Mornings with Maria on Fox Business. Program host Maria Bartiromo asked the Moderna CEO about the presence of a tiny section of DNA patented in 2016. My scientists are looking into those data to see how accurate they are or not. As Ive said before, the hypothesis of an escape from a lab by an accident is possible. Humans make mistakes, Bancel answered. It is possible on the claim you just mentioned. The scientists are analyzing to know if its real or not. The Moderna CEO continued: It is possible that the Wuhan Institute of Virology (WIV) laboratory in China was working on virus enhancement or gene modification, and then theres an accident where somebody was infected in a lab and then infected family and friends. Bartiromos question stemmed from a study published in Frontiers in Virology that mentioned the presence of the MSH3 gene sequence in the SARS-CoV-2 furin cleavage site. The Feb. 21 study pointed out that the MSH3 genes presence which has a one in three trillion chance of occurring in nature is highly unusual and requires further investigations. Author and survival researcher Steve Quayle pointed out that the MSH3 gene sequence belonged to Moderna. The Cambridge, Massachusetts-based drug manufacturer filed the patent for MSH3 on Feb. 4, 2016 and was approved on March 7, 2017. According to Quayle, MSH3 has been known to affect how damaged cells repair themselves in the body. (Related: SMOKING GUN: Genetic sequence in COVID-19 spike protein was patented by Moderna three years earlier.) Bancels answer appeared to reinforce lab-leak theory Bancels response to Bartiromos question appeared to reinforce the lab-leak theory of COVID-19. It argues that SARS-CoV-2 escaped from the WIV through an infected researcher, who then transmitted the virus. The lab-leak theory contradicts the dominant narrative of the virus emerging from the Huanan Seafood Market at the capital of Chinas Hubei province, located 20 miles away from the institute. During the early days of the COVID-19 pandemic, top infectious disease expert Dr. Anthony Fauci attempted to dismiss the validity of the lab-leak theory. Emails from Fauci that surfaced following a Freedom of Information Act request proved that he was aware of the possibility that SARS-CoV-2 may have leaked from the WIV laboratory and spread to the population. Among the trove of emails was one dated Jan. 1, 2020 from immunologist Dr. Kristian Anderson of the Scripps Research Institute in California. Scripps told Fauci in the email that some features of the virus behind COVID-19 could potentially be man-made. Another email dated April 19, 2020 featured EcoHealth Alliance President Peter Daszak. In the April exchange, the British zoologist thanked Fauci for publicly standing up and stating that the scientific evidence supports a natural origin for COVID-19 from a bat-to-human spillover. Two days before Daszak sent his email, Fauci announced that the virus is believed to have emerged from bats in China. Commenting on the release of Faucis emails, virologist and whistleblower Dr. Li-Meng Yan said the messages proved her theory right all along that the virus escaped from a lab. She added the White House chief medical advisors 2020 emails had a lot of useful information which suggested that he always knew more than what he revealed. [The emails] verify my work from the very beginning. These people know what happened, but they choose to hide [it] for China and for their own benefits, Yan told Newsmax during a June 2021 interview. More related stories: If the spike protein facilitates entry of a gain-of-function coronavirus into cells, then why are we coerced to submit to spike protein-generating vaccines? Lab leak cover-up? WHO coronavirus origin investigator thanked Fauci for dismissing lab leak theory. Moderna rebrands mRNA as Spikevax to indicate it turns people into spike protein factories. Emails show efforts by Fauci to suppress lab leak theory of COVID-19 origins. Watch Moderna CEO Stephane Bancel having difficulty answering Maria Bartiromos question below. This video is from the RED PILLED channel on Brighteon.com. Head over to Conspiracy.news for more stories about Modernas patented genetic sequence being present in SARS-CoV-2. Sources include: InfoWars.com FrontiersIn.org StrangeSounds.org DailyMail.co.uk Brighteon.com (Natural News) The High Court of New Zealand has upheld a legal challenge against forced Wuhan coronavirus (COVID-19) vaccination for the countrys Police and Defense Force staff. According to the ruling, the mandate breaches New Zealands Bill of Rights and is not demonstrably justified. Justice Francis Cooke was petitioned by a group of Police and Defense Force personnel to judicially review the mandate, which was enacted under the COVID-19 Public Health Response Act back in December. The mandate would have required all Defense Force personnel and all Police constables, recruits and authorized officers to receive two doses of a COVID injection by March 1. On January 6, however, three unvaccinated staff who did not want to be force-injected called on the court to intervene. They were supported with affidavits from 37 of their colleagues who were also in a similar position. The group says that two rights contained in the New Zealand Bill of Rights Act of 1990 protect against mandates like this. These include the right to refuse a medical treatment and the right to manifest religious beliefs. One of the groups religious objections addressed concerns about the fact that the Pfizer vaccine had at some point been tested on cells that had been derived from a human fetus. New Zealands COVID jab mandates will remain in place for others, though UCLA Health claims that Fauci Flu shots do not contain any actual aborted fetal cells. However, thats a false claim. The Johnson & Johnson (J&J) injection, as one example, does contain ingredients derived from aborted baby tissue. Both Pfizer and Moderna also used aborted baby tissue to test their injections. Requiring that a person take these shots without consent is a violation of New Zealands Bill of Rights as it stands in conflict with the religious beliefs of some of the affected persons. In his judgment, Cooke did not accept some of the applicants arguments. However, he did agree that the mandate is not a reasonable limit on rights that can be demonstrably justified. I conclude that the Order does not involve a reasonable limit on the applicants rights that can be demonstrably justified in a free and democratic society and that it is unlawful, he added. Cooke went on to state that the mandate limits the right to be free to refuse medical treatment as recognized by the New Zealand Bill of Rights Act, including because it limits the ability of unvaccinated people to remain employed. The mandate also limits the right to manifest religious beliefs for those who decline to be vaccinated because the vaccine has been tested on cells derived from a human fetus which is contrary to their religious belief, Cooke further added. New Zealands other COVID jab mandates will remain in place, however. For some reason, the Bill of Rights does not apply to anyone else only those who work in law enforcement are considered special enough to not be forcibly injected with messenger RNA (mRNA) poisons. In essence, the order mandating vaccinations for police and NZDF staff was imposed to ensure the continuity of the public services, and to promote public confidence in those services, rather than to stop the spread of COVID-19, Cooke said. Indeed health advice provided to the government was that further mandates were not required to restrict the spread of COVID-19. I am not satisfied that continuity of these services is materially advanced by the order. Cooke estimates that only about 164 people, all unvaccinated, are affected by his decision. This is out of a workforce of nearly 15,700 people. At one point in New Zealand, Prime Minister Jacinda Ardern made a point of authorizing sex orgies amid her lockdown policies. More news stories about Fauci Flu shot mandates can be found at ChemicalViolence.com. Sources include: TheEpochTimes.com NaturalNews.com (Natural News) Two Swedish studies confirm that the mRNA technology used in Pfizers Wuhan coronavirus (COVID-19) vaccines can hijack human DNA within hours after getting injected into the body. The study, published last October in MDPI, titled SARS-CoV-2 Spike Impairs DNA Damage Repair and Inhibits V(D)J Recombination In Vitro, found that the spike proteins in mRNA COVID-19 vaccines enter the nuclei of cells and prevent them from being able to repair damaged DNA. Mechanistically, we found that the spike protein localizes in the nucleus and inhibits DNA damage repair by impeding key DNA repair protein BRCA1 and 53BP1 recruitment to the damage site, wrote the researchers. Our findings reveal a potential molecular mechanism by which the spike protein might impede adaptive immunity and underscore the potential side effects of full-length spike-based vaccines. During the Nov. 15, 2021 episode of The Highwire, host Del Bigtree and investigative journalist Jefferey Jaxen talked about how dangerous it was for any substance to enter cell nuclei. The nucleus of the cell is the main control center, its the VIP section, its the brain of the cell, explained Jaxen. Nothing should be getting in there, like a spike protein. Jaxen pointed out that when the mRNA COVID-19 vaccines were first being distributed and administered around the world, Big Pharma, government and public health officials and mainstream media outlets all claimed that the vaccines spike protein does not enter the DNA and the vaccine does not alter the DNA. This study appears to fly in the face of those statements, said Jaxen. DNA of the vaccinated can be transformed within six hours of the injection The Swedish study is not the first one that confirmed the link between mRNA COVID-19 vaccines, spike proteins and cell and DNA damage. In May 2021, scientists from the Massachusetts Institute of Technology (MIT) found that SARS-CoV-2 RNA can be reverse-transcribed and integrated into the genome of human cells. This is when the RNA is used to make a copy of a persons DNA. (Related: Fast-tracked COVID-19 vaccine alters human DNA, turns people into genetically modified property.) The findings of the MIT study have made vaccine skeptics question whether the same reverse transcription process may also occur with the RNA in mRNA COVID-19 vaccines. To that end, a group of Swedish scientists from Lund University conducted a study to investigate whether the encoded spike protein RNA in Pfizer vaccines can be reverse-transcribed into human DNA. The study, titled Intracellular Reverse Transcription of Pfizer BioNTech COVID-19 mRNA Vaccine BNT162b2 In Vitro in Human Liver Cell Line, was published on Feb. 25 in MDPI. This recent study, which used human liver cells, found that the mRNA injection is more than capable of entering the cells and the RNA could then be reverse-transcribed into the DNA within just six hours. Our study shows that [Pfizers mRNA injection] can be reverse-transcribed to DNA and this may give rise to concern if BNT162b2-derived DNA may be integrated into the host genome and affect the integrity of genomic DNA, which may potentially mediate genotoxic side effects, wrote the researchers. Alden et al, Lund University, Sweden confirms one of our worst fears, wrote cardiologist and vaccine researcher Dr. Peter McCullough. The exogenous [extracellular] genetic material coding for the dangerous spike protein is reverse-transcribed into the human genome; possible long-term constitutive expression/synthesis of disease-promoting/lethal spike. More related articles: Fully vaccinated individuals are SHEDDING GRAPHENE and infecting the unvaccinated, causing serious health complications. COVID-19 vaccine spike proteins are SHEDDING, giving people heart attacks, strokes and more. How to DEFEAT micro blood clots and block the spike protein by protecting the QUALITY of your blood. COVID vaccine spike proteins destroy DNA repair pathways, paving the way for CANCER to grow and spread. STUDY: COVID vaccines inhibit DNA repair, cause cancer. Watch this clip from the Nov. 15 2021 episode of The Highwire with host Del Bigtree and investigative journalist Jefferey Jaxen as they explain the Swedish study that found mRNA COVID-19 vaccine spike proteins prevent DNA repair. This video is from The HighWire with Del Bigtree channel on Brighteon.com. Sources include: DailyExpose.uk MDPI.com 1 MDPI.com 2 Brighteon.com (Natural News) A number of popular stories chronicling Ukraines resistance against Russias ongoing invasion including those promoted by U.S. Congressmen, media outlets, and even conservatives online have turned out to be false, despite garnering millions of shares and likes. (Article by Natalie Winters republished from TheNationalPulse.com) The viral, fake stories come amidst social media platforms rolling out robust fact-checking operations, often used to swiftly censor stories counter to establishment narratives or critical of the Democratic Party. These programs, however, have routinely failed to flag the following stories as false with the same tenacity. 1. The Snake Island Martyrs. Thirteen Ukrainian border guards stationed on the countrys Snake Island, located in the Black Sea, were quickly alleged to have been killed by Russian forces, at the onset of Russias invasion. Audio recordings of what was allegedly their final moment went viral on social media, with a Russian warship demanding: I ask you to lay down your arms and surrender to avoid bloodshed and unnecessary deaths. Otherwise, you will be bombed. Russian warship, came the reply, go f**k yourself. The 13 Ukrainians, the countrys president Volodymyr Zelenskyy said, died heroically. He later promised to recognize each solder with the title of Hero of Ukraine. Days later, however, the Ukraine Navy revealed that the guards had actually been taken captive by Russian occupiers and were all still alive. 2. The Ghost of Kiev. A video of a Ukrainian fighter pilot dubbed the Ghost of Kiev/Kyiv showed a jet supposedly shooting down multiple Russian fighter jets, causing several casualties. Social media users were quick to champion the pilot as a hero despite the video actually tracing its origins to a video game. The video was created with the 2008 game Digital Combat Simulator and was first shared via YouTube, where the original poster acknowledged the footage was from a simulator. Representative Dan Crenshaw also hyped the debunked Ghost of Kiev tale in a Tweet along with promoting the Snake Island myth. Snake Island says go f yourself. Ghost of Kyiv kills 5 Russian jets by himself. Woman passes out sunflower seeds to Russians so theyll grow flowers when they die. 25 y/o woman says shell make Molotov cocktails this weekend. Ukrainians are fighters. Putin can go to hell. Dan Crenshaw (@DanCrenshawTX) February 25, 2022 3. The Fake Farewell. A photo of two Ukrainian children sending off soldiers to fight Russians quickly went viral on social media, with posts on Twitter containing the image amassing tens of thousands of likes. Pro-war Representative Adam Kinzinger even shared the picture. In reality, the dramatic image actually traces its roots over half of a decade back to Ukraine in 2016 and has appeared in several news stories since then. 4. Its An Airsoft Gun The story of former Miss Grand Ukraine Anastasiia Lenna joining Ukraines military to fight against Russia also turned out to be false despite amassing thousands of likes and shares across social media platforms. While the photo of Lenna is from one of her recent Instagram posts, where she expressed support for Ukraine against Russian forces, the gun in the popular picture is actually an airsoft rifle. Even conservative outlets like Breitbart News peddled the propaganda, which in turn led to Lenna clarifying the lack of her military status, writing I AM NOT A MILITARY, JUST A HUMAN in a post five days later. 5. Straight From The Big Screen Literally. Clips of Ukrainian soldiers kissing their loved ones goodbye as they supposedly left to fight Russia also quickly went viral, except the footage, which has already garnered thousands of likes, comes from a 2017 film The War of Chimeras. The story of war, love and death that was documented by the immediate participants of events. Off screen and later on it are the two a boy and a girl. He volunteered for the front; she went to the place just after the battle, explains its plot summary. Damn war Here is the capital of Ukraine: scenes of anxiety, farewell, love pic.twitter.com/rjB2RWkFS9 naser sadeghi (@nasersadeghi19) February 24, 2022 6. Anonymous Imposters. A video supposedly created by the notorious hacker group Anonymous threatened to launch massive cyberattacks and empty the bank accounts of Russian citizens who refused to protest Putin in a minute-long video circulating across social media platforms. On March 3rd, 2022, all money will be debited from your bank accounts and transferred in favor of the Armed Forces of Ukraine, claimed a video voiceover, appearing to attempt to try to get Russian citizens to withdraw funds from their bank accounts. Ukraines Ministry of Digital Transformation, however, admitted that the video wasnt actually created by Anonymous. CORRECTION: Ukraines Ministry of Digital Transformation said the video address by the Anonymous hacker group that threatened to withdraw money from Russians bank accounts if they dont protest Putin turned out to be fake. The Kyiv Independent (@KyivIndependent) February 28, 2022 The plethora of false stories in such a short period of time serves as a reminder about vigilance in reporting and fact-checking. The National Pulse is committed to reporting the truth, 100 percent of the time. Not just when it suits a political, or geopolitical narrative. Support our work, here. Read more at: TheNationalPulse.com (Natural News) Sen. Mark Warner (D-Va.) is having a meltdown over the prospect of Russias side of the Ukrainian invasion story gaining traction online. In a recent tweet, Warner said he is concerned that Russian disinformation will spread unless the CEOs of all the major tech companies restrict the spread of Russian propaganda. YouTube responded to Warners tweet by suppressing all videos from Russian state media channels so that they will be seen by fewer people in accordance with Googles openly acknowledged policy of algorithmically censoring unauthorized content. All such videos have also been demonetized on the Google-owned video platform. Over at Facebook and Instagram (Meta), Russian state media outlets are now prohibited from running ads and monetizing on their platforms. Twitter similarly announced a pause on all ads in both Russia and Ukraine. Glad to see action from tech companies to reign in Russian propaganda and disinformation after my letter to their CEOs yesterday, Warner tweeted after that. These are important first steps, but Ill keep pushing for more. U.S. lawmakers threaten to destroy Silicon Valleys profits if tech companies refuse to punish Russia For a while now, the United States military-industrial complex has been trying to control what Big Tech does. For the past two years, for instance, platforms like Facebook and Twitter were pressured to censor all content questioning face masks and vaccines. Now, that censorship agenda has expanded to the Russia-Ukraine conflict, with Washington, D.C., of course taking the side of Ukraine. Articles and news segments warning of the sinister threat posed by Russian propaganda to misinform and divide western populations using the internet are being churned out at a rate thats only likely to increase as this latest narrative management campaign gets into full gear, Zero Hedge reported. The Associated Press has a new article out, for example, titled War via TikTok: Russias new tool for propaganda machine.' In that article, the AP claimed that [a]rmies of trolls and bots stir up anti-Ukrainian sentiment, and that [s]tate-controlled media outlets look to divide Western audiences. Clever TikTok videos serve up Russian nationalism with a side of humor, the article added. The same article goes on to claim that analysts at several different research organizations contacted the AP to report a sharp increase in online activity by groups affiliated with the Russian state. Thats in keeping with Russias strategy of using social media and state-run outlets to galvanize domestic support while seeking to destabilize the Western alliance, the AP alleges. One of these organizations is known as Cyabra, an Israeli tech company that works to detect disinformation in order to eradicate it from the internet. The Atlantic Council, a state-funded NATO narrative management firm, also interferes with the free flow of information online. The Center for Countering Digital Hate (CCDH), an empire-loyal non-governmental organization (NGO) that claims to focus on fighting racism and prejudice has also jumped into the fray with a new report accusing Facebook of failing to label Russian propaganda 91 percent of the time it appears. The CCDH also blasted Mark Zuckerberg personally for his alleged failure to stop Facebook being weaponized by the Russian state. Russian media outlet RT, as one prominent example, is being censored all over the place, not just in the U.S. but also in Australia, Germany and Poland. The countries of France and the United Kingdom are also being pressured to censor RT. The imperial media arent going to subvert RT by platforming voices who dispute the empires narratives no matter how badly they hate it, because the exact reason they hate RT is because it disputes the empires narratives, Zero Hedge says. Theyre not worried about Russian propaganda operations; theyre worried about someone else running interference on their own propaganda operations. More related news can be found at Censorship.news. Sources for this article include: ZeroHedge.com NaturalNews.com (Natural News) Chile has passed an employment law to protect against discrimination of mutants and genetically modified humans. The bill titled Prohibits Labor Discrimination Against Mutations or Alterations of Genetic Material or Genetic Testing was passed by the National Congress of Chile last February 16. It may not seem related for now, but it is worth noting that Chile is one of the most highly vaccinated countries in the world. At the start of February, a campaign to administer a fourth dose got underway for a large portion of its population. Chile approves neurorights bill Last year, Chiles Senate unanimously accepted a bill to amend the constitution to protect neurorights or brain rights. It is now expected that the bill will be signed into law by the countrys president. Once the process is completed, Chile will become the worlds first country to have legislation that protects mental privacy, free will and non-discrimination in citizens access to neurotechnology. The aim is to give personal brain data the same status as an organ, so that it cannot be bought or sold, trafficked or manipulated, a science journalist based in Santiago, Chile wrote in the January edition of the UNESCO Courier. At the same time, a constitutional reform to amend Article 19 of the Magna Carta, the countrys constitution, is being considered to protect the integrity and mental indemnity of the brain from the advances and capacities developed by neurotechnologies.' (Related: Genetically-modified humans are already walking among us.) Nevertheless, the past few years have shown nothing to prove that it was done for the peoples benefit. During a recent podcast by Unlimited Hangouts Whitney Webb, the researcher and journalist talked about the ulterior motives and background of the people who are pushing for neurorights, both at the national and international level. Chile a testbed for neurorights law Webb said Chile was the testbed for the neurorights regulation and the connected constitutional amendment. Chile is also the first country in the world to enact neurorights which earned the support of the 25 major neuroscientists in the world who are members of the BRAIN Project. She added that Microsoft is one of the major contributors of the BRAIN Project, which is a public/private partnership. This is about regulating and creating the legal conditions to open up a market of that technology, Webb noted. Interestingly, the Chilean neurorights bill was not was written by a Chilean. It was penned by Spanish-American neuroscientist Rafael Yuste, a professor of biological and neuroscience at Columbia University in New York City. Yuste is also a coordinator of 650 international centers of the BRAIN Project, with close association to Silicon Valley and is one of Jeffrey Epsteins best science pals according to Webb. Neurotechnologies are scientific tools to read and alter the activity of neurons, which are developing at an increasingly accelerated rate and are very necessary to understand how the brain works and to be able to cure mental and neurodegenerative diseases, Yuste said. This is no longer science-fiction, it is reality and it affects all of humanity. Chile can be the pilot country, the beachhead to discuss this issue at a global level that we believe is an urgent challenge we face because ones own thinking is the most fundamental human right, said Senator Guido Girardi, president of the Senates Challenges of the Future Commission. Neurotechnologies already exist that can read the unconscious, or put emotions, thoughts, ideas, feelings, things that people have not experienced, into the brain. More related stories: FDA considers approval of genetically modified babies. Genetically modified humans now a reality as China tests gene editing on people. Col. John Mills tells Ann Vandersteel: China has a diabolical plan to clone people Brighteon.TV. Dr. Vladimir Zelenko tells Pastor David Scarlett: COVID vaccines are changing people into transhumans Brighteon.TV. Watch the video below to know how the age of genetically modified humans has arrived. This video is from the InfoWars channel on Brighteon.com. Follow Transhumanism.news to know more about genetically modified humans, mutants and transhumans. Sources include: DailyExpose.uk UnlimitedHangout.com Brighteon.com (Natural News) If Democrats are anything, they are massive hypocrites who chose to ignore their own positions and demands when it is politically and culturally convenient for them to do so especially when it comes to the subject of American Second Amendment rights. If the party of the Marxist left had their way, no American citizen would be allowed to own firearms of any kind because Marxists, by their very nature, are authoritarians who dont want the people they rule over to have any effective means of opposing them. Suddenly though, in their rush to embrace Ukraines effort to beat back a Russian invasion, the anti-gun Democrats cheering for Kyiv have conveniently ignored the fact that the government of President Voloydymyr Zelenskyy is passing out thousands of fully automatic weapons to civilians who only have to produce a valid ID to get one. Seems the Ukrainians have now learned the value of an armed populace, which American gun owners have known for more than two centuries. According to The Machine Gun Nest Blog: This is a huge development that has largely been (unsurprisingly) ignored by the corporate media. We know the reason why; the Ukrainians are about to demonstrate to the world why the founding fathers of the United States enshrined the right to keep and bear arms in the constitution, right after the right to speak freely, no less. On Wednesday, the Ukrainian parliament passed Law #5708 on the Right to Civilian Firearms. A spokesperson for the Ukrainian government was very clear about the purpose, saying: This bill is to ensure that every citizen receives the sacred right to self-defense. So why is it that this movement to expand gun rights has been largely ignored by the media? The American corporate media, with few exceptions, behaves as nothing more than propaganda outlets for the Democratic Party, so given that fact, it isnt hard to understand why the likes of ABC, NBC, CBS, CNN, MSNBC and their print allies wont acknowledge the importance of an armed citizenry. The fact that most Ukrainians were barred from owning firearms no doubt factored into Vladimir Putins and his generals invasion plans. Its possible, too, that Putin and his commanders never imagined the Ukrainian government would actually issue citizens guns with which to fight the invading forces. The same people that have told American gun owners that their AR15s would be useless against a government armed with nuclear weapons and F-15 Jets would have to explain why ACTUAL weapons of war (not semi-automatic sporting rifles like the AR15) are being given out to citizens to fight off a tyrannical invader, the blog noted further. According to reports from Interior Minister Denys Monastyrsky, as of Feb 26th, 2022, over 25,000 automatic rifles, 10 million bullets, and an unknown number of RPGs have been given to civilians RPGs being rocket-propelled grenades. In a piece published in the New York Post, a Ukrainian lawyer turned combatant is quoted as saying: We always look at the Second Amendment of the U.S. Constitution. It is not just about self-protection but the protection of freedom and independence. We Ukrainians really show this meaning of the Second Amendment. Another factor influencing the decision to hand out weapons to civilians: Ukraine has actually been fighting a Russian proxy war since 2014, shortly after Moscow annexed the Crimea and fomented an uprising in the countrys eastern Donbas region. BREAKING: Ukraines Interior Minister announces that 10,000 automatic rifles have been handed out to the civilians of Kyiv as they prepare to fight tooth and nail to defend their homes against Putins invasion. RT IF YOU STAND WITH THE BRAVE UKRAINIAN PEOPLE! Occupy Democrats (@OccupyDemocrats) February 24, 2022 If youre an American who stands with the brave citizens of Ukraine who have been issued 10,000 automatic rifles as they prepare to repel Putins bloodthirsty invaders please RT and follow our account for the latest breaking Ukraine news. Occupy Democrats (@OccupyDemocrats) February 24, 2022 Several Twitter users noted they took screengrabs of tweets like these for future use because, again, Democrats are monumental hypocrites and it wont be long before these same yahoos start screaming for more bans of weapons of war in the U.S. Oh, and the corporate media will cheer them on as well. Sources include: ZeroHedge.com NaturalNews.com (Natural News) Florida Gov. Ron DeSantis on Feb. 24 signed a controversial bill that protects hospitals from claims related to the Wuhan coronavirus (COVID-19). The approval of Senate Bill (SB) 7014 effectively extended liability protections for hospitals and other facilities in the state until June 2023. SB 7014 was a revised version of the earlier House Bill (HB) 7021 filed by Republican State Reps. Colleen Burton and Patt Maney in January 2022. The original bill protected hospitals from COVID-19 claims that have accrued before the effective date of this act and within one year after. However, SB 7014 amended this text to include claims filed before June 1, 2023. According to LifeSiteNews, DeSantis and state legislators enacted laws to protect businesses and health care providers from various COVID-related lawsuits and their accompanying financial burden. These include circumstances wherein a health provider made a good faith effort to substantially comply with authoritative or controlling government-issued health standards at the federal, state or local level. Critics of SB 7014 have expressed concerns that its effectivity prolongs the ability of doctors and hospitals agreeing with the medical establishment to use federal treatment standards as a shield from legal actions. In what appears to be an attempt to soften the blow of SB 7014, DeSantis announced new guidance for doctors in the Sunshine State on Feb. 24. Together with Florida Surgeon General Dr. Joseph Ladapo, the Florida governor encouraged physicians to exercise their individual clinical judgment and expertise based on their patients needs and preferences. These also encompassed emerging treatments backed by quality evidence, with appropriate patient informed consent, including off-label use or as part of a clinical trial. With todays actions, state guidance is now clear that practitioners will have the flexibility to make the decision to treat patients with off-label prescriptions if they determine that it may help the patient, it is something the patient would like to try and [the patient] provides informed consent to try. Florida has always believed in providing all possible treatment options to health care providers and led efforts to make monoclonal antibody treatments statewide, DeSantis office said in a statement. (Related: Biden hands Americans a death sentence by restricting COVID-19 medications.) Different groups urging DeSantis to veto bill The Florida governor had been urged by different groups to veto SB 7014 and its earlier counterpart HB 7021. A group made up of 35 organizations and activists penned a letter to the governor asking him to block the bill, which ended in vain when DeSantis signed the bill into law. In the letter, the group condemned SB 7014 because it allowed health care providers to simply follow COVID-19 treatment guidelines set by the Centers for Disease Control and Prevention (CDC) against their patients wishes and remain free from liability. Government-issued health standards (or treatment protocols) include the CDCs COVID-19 guidelines, which many say arent working. Some medical professionals have stated that these CDC protocols have led to unnecessary medicines, ventilation and deaths. We know you share with us the core values of protecting life, individual liberty and the freedom of medical choice. Yet what has happened on countless occasions and will continue to happen in Florida if this law is adopted, is that Floridians are being denied treatment, checked into hospitals and cut off from their loved ones. Brighteon.TV hosts Stew Peters and Dr. Jane Ruby were among the bills critics, vocally denouncing the proposal and exhorting the GOP governor to veto HB 7021. Were absolutely going in the wrong direction here in Florida, [as the bill] actually provides additional legal liability shields to hospitals, nurses and doctors until June of 2023. Im not sure why we needed [it] when we already have the CDC giving what they call blanket waivers, Ruby said. Peters agreed, saying: What this is doing is empowering the [hospital] administrators, which are the ones that operate the bottom line. The hospitals are by and large for-profit businesses. There are administrators that work there [and] get bonuses and promotions based on whether or not theyre operating in the red, green or the black. [They] obviously are operating in the green because of this COVID-19 pandemic. More related stories: HOSPITAL HOMICIDE: American war veteran dies after hospital refuses to administer court-ordered ivermectin treatment. The Sheriff Mack Show: Nurse Erin Olszewski talks about hospital murders during the pandemic Brighteon.TV. Dr. Paul Marik: Hospitals are KILLING COVID-19 patients by refusing to give them life-saving medications. Hospitals intentionally inflating COVID cases to collect financial incentives, whistleblower says. Stew Peters calls on Florida Gov. DeSantis to VETO bill legalizing hospital homicide. Watch Stew Peters and Dr. Jane Ruby talk about HB 7021 below. This video is from the FalconsCAFE Sharing is caring channel on Brighteon.com. MedicalTyranny.com has more about SB 7014 and other laws that protect hospitals from COVID-19 claims. Sources include: LifeSiteNews.com Brighteon.com (Natural News) The push is on to regulate, i.e., control, all cryptocurrencies at the central government level. The cover story for this latest step towards ushering in a new world order is that leaving cryptos decentralized will allow Vladimir Putin to sidestep the economic sanctions that have been placed on him for invading Ukraine. Central banks like the European Central Bank (ECB) will control all crypto from the top down, ensuring that those who actually survive the transition into the new age will have no option other than to obey their globalist overlords otherwise they will not be allowed to buy or sell. Putins invasion, in other words, appears to be a catalyst in forcing the entire world into a centralized cryptocurrency-based financial paradigm. ECB President Christine Lagarde is now calling on lawmakers to approve a new regulatory framework for crypto at warp speed that will give the banksters full control over peoples digital assets. Whenever there is a ban or prohibition or a mechanism in place to boycott or prohibit, there are always criminal ways that will try to circumvent the prohibition or the ban, Lagarde read from her script. Its so critically important that MiCA is pushed through as quickly as possible so we have a regulatory framework within which crypto assets can actually be caught. Ukraine invasion is another problem-reaction-solution situation We saw a trial run of this recently when Canadian Prime Minister Justin Trudeau tried to interfere with crypto payments being sent to the truckers participating in the Freedom Convoy protests. Trudeau attempted to halt those payments by having his government identify the associated wallets and blacklist them. Then the whole thing was suddenly called off when Trudeau rescinded his Emergencies Act declaration. Not long after that, Putin invaded Ukraine and suddenly there is a mad rush to have governments all around the world set up new restrictions for crypto that will put the globalists in the drivers seat. Coincidence? Hardly. Incidentally, they are using the same excuses now with the Russia situation as were used in Canada basically that people are donating crypto to the wrong side of the fight, and thus must be stopped by the government overlords. In this case, the world is being told that Ukraine is the good guy, and anyone supporting the bad guy, Putin, has to be stopped from using crypto. Crypto must also be captured and controlled because Russia itself will try to use it to circumvent economic sanctions, we are also told. If you really focus hard, you will see through the fog of all the media ballyhoo that governments are now racing to impose these types of restrictions while everyone is distracted and confused about the war. In many ways, the Ukraine invasion is actually the next phase of the plandemic, as it seeks the very same end: more government control and less individual freedom. The invasion is also likely a cover for an engineered global economic collapse, which will be used as a catalyst to shift everyone into a new government-controlled crypto paradigm. The banksters are evil parasites, wrote someone in response to this news. Anything less than complete submission, surveillance and control of the host is unacceptable to these creatures. Crypto has been recognized as a threat to the existing banking cartel, wrote someone else. Now the cartel gets to hand Vlad the Ukraine and put in place the tools to criminalize crypto. Actually, they only like the cryptos that they can control, noted someone else, sharing the same perspective as this writer that the goal is not to eliminate all crypto, but just the ones that are not centralized and fully controlled by the banking cartel. And now well see that they can control all of them. More related news coverage can be found at Collapse.news. Sources include: ZeroHedge.com NaturalNews.com (Natural News) Dr. Andrew Kaufman talked about the HIV and AIDS agenda, as well as the lies peddled by the government to manipulate the public during a Feb. 25 interview with Josh Sigurdson of World Alternative Media. Weve been told over and over again in our lives that germs and viruses make us sick, and they explain a number of things. But has anyone ever really said, Well, what exactly is that based off?' asked Kaufman. In this film, we look at that in depth, from a really scientific point of view. We also show the human struggle that was associated with this kind of core deception, and how it was used to manipulate the public. Kaufman believes that people need to transition into this new age, returning to natural healing, and have what is called the terrain theory or terrain medicine, which looks at how nature heals itself, rebalances itself and supports those processes in the bodies to bring about real healing. (Related: Covid vaccines cause AIDS: proof.) According to Kaufman, staying away from other humans or sterilizing ourselves to destroy bacteria goes against human nature. As social creatures, he said, humans need to cooperate, collaborate, show affection and have interactions. Human existence is dependent upon each other in many ways, but this false narrative creates a model of warfare. He believes that the governments are trying to move us into a virtual existence, to take away human interaction. So that the virtual world becomes a substitute. And of course, if were doing all of our actions and business in the virtual world, its very easy to track and surveil. And thus, we can be essentially controlled much easier than we can in the physical world when no one sees what were doing behind closed doors, Kaufman said. Bioweapons in vaccine form Kaufman shared that in early 2020, there were leaked reports that said that what the government and Big Pharma companies are doing is creating bioweapons in vaccine form that could give people HIV. Doctors have said that immune erosions occur after two doses of the COVID-19 vaccine, with untested boosters possibly affecting individuals to an even greater extent. It has come to the point where peoples immune systems have absolutely been destroyed. The conditions that qualified for AIDS did not suddenly come out during the AIDS epidemic, Kaufman explained. They have existed and had been known in many books before that. What brought about an expansion of AIDS at the time came from different factors. (Related: Cases of vaccine-induced VAIDS on the rise due to mass covid vaccination.) In Northern California, for instance, it was seen in a lot of decadent and self-destructive behavior, including drug abuse. The antibiotics and chemicals, combined with lifestyle, all added up to sickness. And when pharmaceutical companies started treating these patients, things only took a turn for the worse. There is not a single person who claimed to have HIV or AIDS that wasnt heavily vaccinated. This is whats happening now. The government is merely moving into another propaganda campaign because their narratives are collapsing. They just want to continue the agenda of wanting to keep people afraid of viruses so that they can run the program when they need to. This is also where they continue with the idea of making people afraid of others. However, it was the vaccinations that correlated with the timing and increase in deaths, not COVID as they wanted people to think, and they are merely manipulating numbers as they see fit. Kaufman encouraged people to maintain their health in a way that will help them really recover from almost any condition on their own. If people are not dependent on the government, he said, then the government has much less control over what people do or say. Its time that people take control, take that key that unlocks themselves, their mind, their body, their beliefs, and break out of the psychosis that were witnessing worldwide, he said. More related stories: As covid injections spread autoimmune disease and VAIDS, media pivots to incoming AIDS vaccine that will only accelerate the vaccine genocide. Dr. Zev Zelenko: Anyone with immune deficiency can die from a cold. Evidence shows COVID vaccines cause serious damage to the immune system. The fully vaccinated may already be suffering from jab-induced AIDS, government data suggests. Media pushing HIV variant narrative as cover story for vaccine-induced immune system collapse. Watch the full February 25 episode of World Alternative Media below. This video is from the World Alternative Media channel on Brighteon.com. Follow Pandemic.news for more updates related to the COVID-19 pandemic. Sources include: Brighteon.com AmericasFrontlineDoctors.org CANBERRA, March 2 (Xinhua) -- The faunal emblem of Australia's capital city has been added to the country's threatened species list. Federal Environment Minister Sussan Ley recently wrote to her counterpart in the Australian Capital Territory (ACT), Rebecca Vassarotti, informing her that the gang-gang cockatoo will be officially listed as "endangered" following a significant decline in population numbers. The gang-gang, which makes its home inside hollow trees, is native to southeastern Australia. It is the faunal emblem of the ACT with an estimated figure of more than 100 individuals calling Canberra home. Ley said the decision to move the parrot to the threatened species list was based on advice from the Commonwealth Threatened Species Scientific Committee. The Department of the Environment in 2021 revealed that the national gang-gang population has declined by 69 percent over the last 21 years as a result of bushfires and climate change. As an endangered species, an official recovery plan will be developed for the gang-gang. Vassarotti said the ACT government welcomed the decision to list the bird, which provides additional focus to work collectively to protect this important species. "Gang-gangs are a much-loved species in Canberra, and so, obviously, we are saddened by the announcement," she told the Australian Broadcasting Corporation (ABC). "But we do welcome the announcement because what this does, is it provides us with the opportunity to increase focus on the species and it means that we will be able to work with other jurisdictions in terms of understanding what the health of this species is." (Natural News) As air raid sirens fill the air of Kyiv and Russian trucks head for Donbas, Volodymyr Zelensky, president of Ukraine, is crying like a little girl over NATOs refusal to protect him and his country. (Article by Don Surber republished from DonSurber.Blogspot.com) He attended the annual meeting of the Munich Security Conference and insulted the people he wants as allies. He demanded, What are you waiting for? I laugh at him. Who made the United States his servant? Why should our soldiers spill their blood for him? Who is he? Ukraine may be a small country of 41 million people. (Make that 39 million now that Russia has officially recognized two county-sized regions as breakaway countries.) But Ukraine leads the league in corruption, doesnt it? Two years ago, President Donald John Trump asked him to investigate Biden and his crackhead son for corruption. Instead, Zelensky let Congress impeach Trump without protest. And now Zelensky wants our help? OK. Well send Hunter Biden. Just tell him theres a ton of crack inside each tank and he will Rambo his way to Moscow. Two years ago, Zelensky was a mouthy little man in an interview with Time magazine and three European news outlets. Time reported, The president explained that, despite getting caught up in the impeachment inquiry now unfolding in Washington, D.C., Ukraine still needs the support of the United States. Otherwise his country does not stand much of a chance, Zelensky said, in its effort to get back the territory Russia seized from Ukraine in 2014, starting with the Crimean Peninsula. Nor can Ukraine rely on steady financial support from abroad if President Donald Trump and his allies continue to signal to the world that Ukraine is corrupt, Zelensky said. When America says, for instance, that Ukraine is a corrupt country, that is the hardest of signals.' Boo hoo hoo. OK, we will stop calling Ukraine a corruptistan, while we watch Putin devour Kyiv and the rest of the totally-not-corrupt country. I do feel for Ukraine. 6 million people starved to death in the Holomodor in which Stalin deliberately cut off the nations food supply. People cannibalized their babies. But we have a border crisis of our own. The shade Zelensky cast two years ago carries a price. Trump supporters are staying on the sidelines this time. What did he say? Time reported, During the interview in his office in Kyiv, the comedian-turned-president denied, as he has done in the past, that he and Trump ever discussed a decision to withhold American aid to Ukraine for nearly two months in the context of a quid pro quo involving political favors, which are now at the center of the impeachment inquiry in Congress. But he also pushed back on Trumps recent claims about corruption in Ukraine, and questioned the fairness of Trumps decision to freeze American aid. If youre our strategic partner, then you cant go blocking anything for us, he said. I think thats just about fairness. Its not about a quid pro quo.' Trump by the way knew nothing about the delay in releasing the funds. Zelensky knew that. He was playing politics. Zelensky was oddly silent about Biden bragging to the Council for Foreign Relations nearly two years earlier about withholding aid to Ukraine unless it fired the prosecutor who was investigating the company that paid off his son. Now Biden is president and Putin is rolling in and no one will stop him because Donald Trump is gone. Zelensky wanted Trump out. OK, Trumps out. Enjoy Biden. And by Biden, I mean Putin because Donald Trump was the only one stopping him from taking over Ukraine. Read more at: DonSurber.Blogspot.com (Natural News) Lost in the thick of President Vladimir Putins invasion of Ukraine, which reportedly is not going as well for him as he had planned, is NATOs response to his naked aggression. As tens of thousands of Russian troops poured into Ukraine from several points along the border, NATO was initially caught off-guard but quickly responded with the activation of a 40,000-strong quick reaction force for the first time since its formation more than a decade ago. No matter who tries to stand in our way they must know that Russia will respond immediately, and the consequences will be such as you have never seen in your entire history. I hope that my words will be heard, Putin said in a televised address to his country and the world as he ordered his forces into Ukraine. That led to NATOs response, as reported by UNZ.com: In a move that can only be regarded as a major escalation, NATO officials announced on Friday that they would deploy troops from its Combat-Ready Response Force to support the Ukrainian regime in its war with Russia. The Alliance will also send additional weapons which will be used to blunt the Russian offensive that has already seized large parts of the country and obliterated most of Ukraines defensive capability. It is impossible to overstate the gravity of NATOs action which assigns such importance to preserving its junta regime in Kiev that they would willingly pit NATO against a nuclear-armed Russia in what could become a much broader regional war, the report and assessment continued. Clearly, the strategic objectives of this murky conflict go far beyond the mere control of an ethnically-divided, failed state situated between Europe and Asia. Ukraine is no longer just a geopolitical trophy for western elites, but a last-gasp effort for Washington to prove it still controls the levers of global power, the report added. In addition to deploying NATO forces, NATO and other European countries also announced they will begin sending lethal weapons to Ukraine as well to include, surprisingly, Germany, despite that countrys post-World War II policy of not sending weapons to active combat zones. Germany had come under withering pressure from NATO and the European Union to step up and help out the Ukrainians whose military is badly outmatched by superior Russian firepower and technology, not to mention sheer numbers of professional troops, notes Politico: From its own stockpile, the German government will send 1,000 anti-tank weapons and 500 Stinger anti-aircraft defense systems to Ukraine. The government has also authorized the Netherlands to send Ukraine 400 rocket-propelled grenade launchers and told Estonia [to] send nine howitzers. A government spokesperson said the weapons will be delivered as soon as possible. NATOs decision to send arms to the Ukrainians means that Putins forces have no choice but to find them and destroy them where they are being assembled and stockpiled for shipment before they can be received Kyiv. Thats the only way he has to protect the lives of Russian soldiers destroy weapons before they can be used to kill his military personnel. But attacking weapons depots means that NATO personnel will be killed and wounded, and from there the fight would escalate with the potential of plunging the entirety of Europe into a third destructive war in just over a century. Yesterday, NATO Allies activated our defense plans on land, at sea, and in the air. The United States, Canada and European Allies have deployed thousands more troops to the eastern part of the Alliance, NATO Secretary-General Jans Stoltenberg announced. We now have over 100 jets at high alert operating in over 30 different locations and over 120 ships from the High North to the Mediterranean including three strike carrier groups, he added. We have many planes operating in the eastern part of the Alliance (and) several Allies have partly already assigned troops and forces to the NATO Response Force. Has Putin set World War III in motion, for real this time? Sources include: UNZ.com Politico.com (Natural News) The Ontario Ministry of Transportation has closed 39 independent trucking companies for their participation in the Freedom Convoy protest against Wuhan coronavirus (COVID-19) restrictions. In another round of anti-protest sanctions, the ministry affirmed that 12 trucking companies in Ontario and 27 outside the province have been slapped with seizure orders canceling their authority to carry out business in Ontario following their alleged involvement in the Freedom Convoy protest. (Related: Canadas Freedom Convoy invokes waves of protests against Canadas COVID mandates.) In an effort to preserve future police investigations into the illegal occupation in Ottawa, the ministry will not release the names of affected businesses at this time, a ministry spokesperson stated, indicating a criminal investigation may be initiated against the 39 trucking companies that participated in the protest. Plates of 24 passenger vehicles from Ontario and 34 from outside the province were also suspended. According to the Ottawa Police 115 vehicles were towed during the protest. Trudeau government cancels Emergencies Act Truck News reported the confirmation of the sanctions on Feb. 23, the same day Prime Minister Justin Trudeau canceled the Emergencies Act and Ontario Premier Doug Ford removed the provinces state of emergency. In spite of the cancelation of the Emergencies Act, World Economic Forum member and Canadian Finance Minister Chrystia Freeland asserted that some of the powers given to the federal government through the Act could be made lasting. Contained in the measures the government applied was the monitoring of cryptocurrency exchanges and crowdfunding platforms, along with the suspension of private bank accounts without a court order. Meanwhile, Canada has ordered banks to unlock accounts that belong to people who joined or supported the weeks-long Freedom Convoy protest that saw nearly 200 arrests and brutal force response from police. Trudeaus government earlier suspended bank accounts and other assets during what they announced as an emergency period in Ottawa. According to one local conservative MP, among those targeted was a single mom with a minimum wage job who gave just $50. Freeland defended the freezing of accounts on Feb. 21. These measures were put in place to disrupt illegal activity in Canada, she said. We were very clear that we would be following the money, that we would be using financial tools to disrupt illegal blockades and occupations. The focus absolutely has been on leaders and on the vehicles that were such an important part of the illegal blockades and occupations. She also told protesters that the way to get your account unfrozen is to stop being part of the blockade and occupation. The Freedom Convoy demonstrations originally focused on Canadas COVID vaccine requirement for truckers entering the country but changed into a wider protest against the countrys highly restrictive COVID precautions and Trudeaus false liberal government. Ottawa protesters are mostly gone from the Parliament Hill area after having been driven away by officers sporting riot gear in what was the biggest police effort in Canadas history. Canadian police ordered freeze on bank accounts Police reportedly ordered a freeze on more than 206 bank accounts, including one valued at $3 million. A few individuals and organizations having multiple accounts were reportedly affected by the financial freezing. Police also stopped transactions concerning 253 cryptocurrency addresses. In a statement released on social media, Freedom Convoy organizers said the freezing of bank accounts was a financial warfare and it left many citizens in shock. This is already backfiring. Prime Minister Justin Trudeau keeps expanding the list of political opponents whom he is targeting with financial sanctions. In response, Canadians are pulling their money out of the banks and realizing the value of cryptocurrency, the organizers stated. This, in the short-term, is very bad for the banks and our national economy. The more severe implication, however, is that by using the Emergencies Act as financial warfare, it will sow mistrust in both the banking system and the government and the repercussions will be felt for years to come. Trudeau is tearing the fabric of our nation like never before, and the evidence is stacked against him. Our hearts go out to each and every innocent, freedom-loving Canadian that has fallen victim to this governments illegal, impulsive and tyrannical overreach, the group added. More related stories: Canadian police threatened to arrest journalists covering Trudeaus Freedom Convoy crackdown. Trudeaus national police force blacklists 34 crypto wallets associated with Freedom Convoy. Canadian authorities arrest Freedom Convoy organizers, freeze bank accounts and threaten to kill pets. Scott Kesterson: America needs to support Canadas fight for freedom Brighteon.TV. Former Canadian military chaplain: Trudeau has declared war on Canadians, treats them as terrorists. Watch the video below to know more about Freedom Convoy in Canada. This video is from the Son of the Republic channel on Brighteon.com. Follow Freedom.news to know more about the Canadian Freedom Convoy. Sources include: LifeSiteNews.com TruckNews.com DailyMail.co.uk Brighteon.com (Natural News) In direct violation of the United Nations Convention, the United States military has made it a habit to manufacture deadly viruses, bacteria and toxins at bioweapons laboratories located all around the world. And it turns out that some of them are located in Ukraine. The Pentagon reportedly controls bioweapons labs in some 25 different countries including Ukraine. The others are located in Georgia (the country), Iraq, Jordan, Afghanistan, Pakistan, Azerbaijan, Laos, Thailand, Vietnam, Cambodia, Malaysia, the Philippines, Kenya, Uganda, Tanzania, Cameroon, Senegal, Guinea, Sierra Leone, Liberia, South Africa and Cote dIvoire. All of these U.S. bio-laboratories exist because of a $2.1 billion military program run by the Defense Threat Reduction Agency (DTRA). The program itself is called the Cooperative Biological Engagement Program (CBEP). In the former Soviet Union country of Ukraine, the Pentagon funds a shocking 11 bio-laboratories through the Department of Defense (DoD) Threat Reduction Agency (DTRA). Contrary to what its name implies, the DTRA does not reduce threats; it creates more of them by funding new bio-laboratories. Ukraine has no control over the military bio-laboratories on its own territory, reports the Exploring Real History blog. According to the 2005 Agreement between the U.S. DoD and the Ministry of Health of Ukraine, the Ukrainian government is prohibited from public disclosure of sensitive information about the U.S. program and Ukraine is obliged to transfer to the U.S. Department of Defense (DoD) dangerous pathogens for biological research. As part of the agreement, the Pentagon was also granted access to certain state secrets held by Ukraine. The Science and Technology Center in Ukraine has spent hundreds of millions on creating weapons of mass destruction The United States, in partnership with Canada, Sweden and Ukraine, established a protocol to develop weapons of mass destruction at a place called the Science and Technology Center in Ukraine (STCU). The STCU is an international organization funded primarily by the U.S. government that has been accorded diplomatic status. It officially supports the projects of scientists who were previously involved in the Soviet Unions biological weapons program. Over the past two decades, the STCU has invested more than $285 million in funding for some 1,850 projects of scientists who previously had involvement in creating weapons of mass destruction. At another Pentagon controlled-and-operated laboratory in Kharkiv, Ukraine, some 20 Ukrainian soldiers died after being exposed to a flu-like virus weapon, while another 200 were hospitalized. The incident occurred in January 2016 and the Ukrainian government did not report on the dead soldiers at all. Just two months later, another 364 people died across Ukraine from Swine Flu A, also known as H1N1, the same strain that we were all told caused a global plandemic in 2009. An intelligence group called DPR reported that the U.S.-owned biolab in Kharkiv is the place from where the deadly virus leaked, meaning the Pentagon was directly responsible for it. In another instance in South East Ukraine, a highly suspicious hepatitis A infection spread rapidly. It turns out that several Pentagon biolabs are located in that area as well. An outbreak of hepatitis A that occurred in January 2018 resulted in 37 people having to be hospitalized. Local police subsequently launched an investigation into infection with human immunodeficiency virus and other incurable diseases. In the very same city about a year later, 100 people mysteriously became infected with cholera. Both the cholera and the hepatitis A outbreak were blamed on contaminated drinking water, but the evidence suggests that the real cause was Pentagon-run biolabs throughout the area. American money constantly flows to other countries like Ukraine where weapons of mass destruction are being produced in biolabs These are just two cases among many of disease outbreaks that have occurred throughout Ukraine over the years, and virtually all of them are linked to Pentagon-run biolabs. Some of these outbreaks also spread to Moscow, including a 2014 incident involving a new highly virulent strain of cholera called Vibrio cholera, which is genetically similar to a strain reported in Ukraine. A 2014 Russian Research Anti-Plaque Institute genetic study confirmed that the strain of cholera in Russia that wreaked havoc was essentially the same as one that mysteriously appeared in neighboring Ukraine. Southern Research Institute, one of the U.S. contractors working at the bio-laboratories in Ukraine, has projects on Cholera, as well as on Influenza and Zika all pathogens of military importance to the Pentagon, Exploring Real History further reports. In 2008 and 2012, the Black & Veatch Special Project Corp. was awarded $198.7 million worth of DTRA contracts to build and operate numerous bio-laboratories in Ukraine, as well as in Germany, Azerbaijan, Cameroon, Thailand, Ethiopia, Vietnam and Armenia. Another program in Georgia and Ukraine involved the transfer of $18.4 million in federal money flowing to a U.S. company called Metabiota. Metabiota had previously been contracted to work for the DTRA before and during the Ebola crisis in West Africa. It also received $3.1 million in funding for work in Sierra Leone. Southern Research Institute has been a prime subcontractor under the DTRA program in Ukraine since 2008, reports indicate. The company was also a prime Pentagon contractor in the past under the U.S. Biological Weapons Program for research and development of bio-agents with 16 contracts between 1951 and 1962. This is just a small sampling of the Pentagons global tentacles, which tell a much different story about the Ukraine-Russia situation than the one being told by the corporate-controlled media, NATO, and the military-industrial complex behind this sinister global bioweapons program. More related news can be found at Evil.news. Sources for this article include: ExploringRealHistory.blogspot.com NaturalNews.com (Natural News) Russian President Vladimir Putin is demanding that Ukrainian forces surrender to his invading army in order to spare the country bloodshed as his forces entered the suburbs of the capital of Kyiv, leading its mayor to declare it must be held at all costs. As fighting raged through the country on the sixth day of the invasion, a 40-mile long convoy of Russian military vehicles was seen via satellite and by ground observers snaking its way towards Kyiv. By Tuesday morning, Russian units were engaged by elements of the Ukrainian army as well as civilians who have been conscripted to help hold off and beat back President Vladimir Putins forces. Explosions were heard in Kyiv ahead of the weekend, as Mayor Vitali Klitschko, a former boxer whose brother also fought professionally in the U.S., both winning various title belts at one point, ordered a curfew due to the presence of Russian saboteurs, many of whom are believed to have been in the capital city for months ahead of the advance. Western defense and military experts believe that ultimately Russia will be successful, but they have also noted that Ukraine has put up a much stiffer defense than Putin and other world leaders likely expected, meaning Russias military advances towards Kyiv and Ukraines second-largest city, Kharkiv, have been slowed considerably. The people rose to defend their state, and they showed their true faces. This is terror. They are going to bomb our Ukrainian cities even more. They are going to kill our children even more insidiously. This is an evil that has come to our land and must be destroyed, Ukrainian President Volodymyr Zelenskyy, who has remained in Kyiv to lead his people rather than take flight, said during a rousing speech on Saturday. If children are born in shelters, even when the shelling continues, then the enemy has no chance in this undoubtedly peoples war, Zelenskyy added. To victory! Glory to Ukraine! On Tuesday, Russian forces fired a missile at a government building in Kharkiv, leveling the structure and producing scores of casualties. A child is among those reported injured in the explosion, but the total number of casualties and injured remains unknown. Ukraine has claimed that Russia launched GRAD and cruise missiles on Kharkiv, Fox News reported. Russian and Ukrainian delegations met a day earlier in Belarus, but the outcome of those talks is not yet known. Reports said that both sides agreed to continue talking, building on Putins early demand for unconditional surrender. The Biden regime on Tuesday released a transcript of a phone call he held with Zelenskyy. I just spoke with President Zelenskyy to discuss our continued support for Ukraine including security assistance and humanitarian aid as it defends itself against Russian aggression. We will hold Russia accountable, and our sanctions are already having a devastating impact. pic.twitter.com/9X9x07QbD0 President Biden (@POTUS) March 1, 2022 My determination is to see that the EU- NATO -and all of the allies are on the same page when it comes to sanctions against Russia for its invasion of Ukraine, Biden said. One thing that gives us power to push back against (Putin) is the unity of NATO and the west. In an interview with CNN, Zelenskyy said the first thing that needs to happen before any peace progress can be made is that Russian forces have to cease their assault. You have to speak first of all. Everybody has to stop fighting and to go [back] to that point from where it began five, six days ago, Zelensky said. Its important to stop bombing people and then we can move on and sit at the negotiation table. Asked if he thought talking with the Russians is a waste of time, he replied: Well see. Sources include: CNN.com FoxNews.com (Natural News) Conservative journalist Ben Swann outlined three major reasons why the United States involvement in Ukraine led to the current conflict between Russia and the West. Youre probably hearing a lot of calls about how the U.S. should get involved in whats happening in Ukraine. Maybe this is an unpopular opinion, but for that last 10 years the U.S. has been involved in Ukraine, and its [this] involvement that seems to have gotten us to this point, said the Truth in Media founder. 1. The US interfered with Ukraines democracy Swann said Ukraine is not a bastion of freedom and democracy, contrary to how it is shown in the media. There is a lot going on there that does not represent democracy. Opposition leaders have been arrested [and] three different opposition TV stations have been shut down. He pointed out that the U.S. got involved after the democratic election of former Ukrainian President Victor Yanukovych, which led to his overthrow in 2014. The U.S. helped foment a color revolution in order to overthrow the democratically elected leadership of Ukraine [and] installed a puppet leader who would represent the West, he explained. Swann also mentioned the role of incumbent Under Secretary of State for Political Affairs Victoria Nuland, who was posted to Ukraine during the Obama administration. She was crucial, not only in overthrowing the existing Ukrainian government, but in selecting and installing its rabidly anti-Russian replacement, he said. A leaked recording of her phone call with former U.S. Ambassador to Ukraine Geoffrey Pyatt revealed that she was in favor of economist and lawyer Arseniy Yatsenyuk over former world champion boxer-turned Kiev Mayor Vitali Klitschko to replace the deposed Yanukovych. 2. The US goaded Ukraine into ignoring the Minsk agreements Swann also mentioned the role of the Minsk agreements signed in the capital of Belarus, located north of Ukraine. In 2014 and 2015, there were agreements between Russia and Ukraine about what to do [with] the Donbas region. These two agreements [stipulated] that the Donbas region would be returned to Kievs control, while ensuring the safety and rights of the areas citizens, he said. However, the Truth in Media founder noted that Ukraine never bothered to implement the terms of the agreements. He added that the U.S. stepped into the scene again by telling the Ukrainian government to ignore the agreements and not to worry about them. Days before he ordered the attack on Ukraine, Russian President Vladimir Putin declared the independence of the Donetsk Peoples Republic (DPR) and Luhansk Peoples Republic (LPR) both located in the Donbas region. He also signed decrees recognizing the sovereignty of the two peoples republics. I consider it necessary to take a long-overdue decision: to immediately recognize the independence and sovereignty of [the] DPR and LPR, the Russian leader said in a Feb. 21 speech. (Related: Russia recognizes breakaway republics of Ukraine as U.S. tries to exploit the region for global war.) 3. The US repeatedly mentioned Ukraine and Georgias NATO membership Lastly, Swann quoted new cables from the Central Intelligence Agency (CIA) released by WikiLeaks admitting that the agency was actually enticing the Russians to take some kind of military action by mentioning the possibility of Ukraine and Georgia joining the North Atlantic Treaty Organization (NATO). Russia has continually asked the U.S. and NATO for a guarantee that Ukraine would not be given membership, [but] President [Joe] Biden himself has refused to do so, the CIA cables stated. Ukraine and Georgias NATO aspirations not only touch a raw nerve in Russia, they engender serious concerns about the consequences for stability in the region. Not only does Russia perceive encirclement and efforts to undermine Russias influence in the region, but it also fears unpredictable and uncontrolled consequences which would seriously affect Russian security interests. Putin himself acknowledged this provocation in his Feb. 21 speech declaring the independence of the DPR and LPR. He said: Who is the main enemy for the U.S. and NATO? We know that too. Its Russia. In NATO documents, our country is officially and directly declared the main threat to North Atlantic security. More related stories: Putin puts his nuclear forces on high alert in response to NATO actions, sanctions, amid ongoing Ukraine war. Putin declares two Ukraine regions independent republics, sends in peacekeeping troops. 22 Observations about the new World War which just started in Ukraine. Watch the video below as Ben Swann elaborates on how American involvement in Ukraine led to the current war. This video is from the Kapelski channel on Brighteon.com. Head over to WWIII.news for more stories about the ongoing war in Ukraine. Sources include: Brighteon.com DissidentVoice.org DailyMail.co.uk (Natural News) Russias envoy to the United Nations (UN) claims that the country does not plan to occupy Ukraine and that its operations will end as soon as it achieves its objectives. Permanent Representative of Russia to the United Nations Vasily Nebenzya said during a recent UN General Assembly that the country he represents is only acting to save the lives of pro-Russian separatists in Ukraines eastern Donbas region who for nearly a decade have been the victims of atrocities. He further claimed that the Russian army will not occupy Ukraine. Occupation of Ukraine is not part of our plans. The purpose of this special operation is to protect the people who have been subjected to abuse and genocide by the Kiev regime for the past eight years. This is why its necessary to demilitarize and de-nazify Ukraine, said Nebenzya. As an example of the crimes supposedly committed by the Ukrainian government, Nebenzya cited an incident that occurred in 2014 in the southwestern city of Odesa, wherein pro-Russian protesters were burned alive after a building they occupied was set on fire by anti-Russian demonstrators. Nebenzya added that Russia is only acting to defend itself from the Ukrainian government and its plans to gain access to nuclear weapons. As proof, Russia cited a statement made by Ukrainian President Volodymyr Zelenskyy on Feb. 18. The ambassador further argued that the Russian invasion of Ukraine does not violate any of the underlying principles of the United Nations. Nebenzya claimed that Russia is merely acting to prevent another world war. Russia also supposedly engaged in preemptive action against Ukraine to prevent it from joining the North Atlantic Treaty Organization (NATO). Ukraine joining NATO is a red line, said Nebenzya. It compels us to adopt measures in response and has placed us at the verge of this conflict. Finally, Nebenzya claimed that Russia is acting defensively and that it did not begin hostilities. The Russian Federation did not begin these hostilities, he said. They were unleashed by Ukraine residents, dissenters. Russians are seeking an end to this war. (Related: Ongoing Russia-Ukraine conflict pushing global economy closer to collapse.) Russian officials insist Moscow will not occupy Ukraine On Friday, Feb. 25, Russias ambassador to Japan held a prolonged conference with reporters where he repeated Nebenzyas claim that Russia has no intention to occupy Ukraine. Ambassador Mikhail Galuzin said Russia was acting defensively to prevent the further expansion of NATO into Eastern Europe, while at the same time seeking to demilitarize and de-nazify Ukraine. Like Nebenzya, Gazulin claimed that ethnic Russians and Russian-speaking Ukrainians in the Donbas region are being subjected to human rights abuses, including genocide, by the government in Kiev. He even accused Ukraine of glorifying Nazi cooperationists instead of the Soviet and Russian heroes who brought an end to Nazism. Despite clear evidence to the contrary, Gazulin further claimed that Russia was only attacking military targets in Ukraine and is not intentionally targeting civilians. He added that it was up to the Ukrainian people to choose their future, implying that they should ditch the pro-European government in favor of putting in power one that is more pro-Russian. Gazulin also refused to call Russias invasion of Ukraine a war. He instead referred to it as a special operation. He made this claim as he repeated the assertion that Ukraine brought this invasion upon itself for violating a 2014 peace agreement with the pro-Russian separatist governments in the Donbas region. Russian Minister of Foreign Affairs Sergey Lavrov on Friday also held a press conference reiterating that Russias special operation is only limited in its scope and is not seeking the occupation of Ukraine. No one is going to occupy Ukraine. The aim of the operation has been openly declared: demilitarizing and de-nazifying, said Lavrov. Russia sees no possibility of recognizing the Ukrainian government as democratic given that it is oppressing and using methods of genocide against its own people. Lavrov claimed that President Vladimir Putin wants Ukraine to be truly independent and free from the influence of foreign powers so that it can elect a new government. Lavrov added that this government should represent all Ukrainians, end the genocide of Russians in Ukraine, prevent foreign powers from using it to contain Russia and stop supporting neo-Nazi groups. Ukrainian officials deny all of Russias allegations, especially the claim that it is acting defensively. Ukraines ambassador to the UN, Sergiy Kyslytsya, said during the General Assembly meeting: Everyone knows that Russia and Russia alone started this invasion. More related stories: Ukrainian official blasts pathetically weak sanctions against Russia, claims it leaves Moscow with lots of money soaked in our blood. Ukrainian president calls for international foreign legion of volunteers to help fight off Russian invasion; Putin raises nuclear weapons readiness. NATO, Western governments ponder next move after Putin orders his nuclear forces upgraded to special readiness amid ongoing Ukraine war. Despite bombing seven countries back to the Stone Age himself, Obama blasts Putin for invading one. Russian forces capture Chernobyl power plant; media expresses concern over possibility of radioactive leak from site. Listen to this episode of the Health Ranger Report as Mike Adams, the Health Ranger, talks about how the situation in Ukraine underscores the importance of being prepared for disaster situations. This video is from the Health Ranger Report channel on Brighteon.com. WWIII.news has the latest information regarding the ongoing conflict between Russia and Ukraine. Sources include: RT.com FreePressJournal.in NYPost.com RepublicWorld.com Brighteon.com (Natural News) Im concerned about Russian disinformation spreading online, so today I wrote to the CEOs of major tech companies to ask them to restrict the spread of Russian propaganda, US Senator Mark Warner tweeted on Friday. (Article by Caitlin Johnstone republished from CaityJohnstone.Medium.com) Since then YouTube has announced that it has suppressed videos by Russian state media channels so that theyll be seen by fewer people in accordance with its openly acknowledged policy of algorithmically censoring unauthorized content, as well as de-monetizing all such videos on the platform. Google and Facebook/Instagram parent company Meta both banned Russian state media from running ads and monetizing on their platforms in response to Russias invasion of Ukraine. Twitter announced a pause on ads in both Russia and Ukraine. Glad to see action from tech companies to reign in Russian propaganda and disinformation after my letter to their CEOs yesterday, Warner tweeted on Saturday. These are important first steps, but Ill keep pushing for more. For years US lawmakers have been using threats of profit-destroying consequences to pressure Silicon Valley companies into limiting online speech in a way that aligns with the interests of Washington, effectively creating a system of government censorship by proxy. It would appear that were seeing a new expansion of this phenomenon today. Glad to see action from tech companies to reign in Russian propaganda and disinformation after my letter to their CEOs yesterday. These are important first steps, but Ill keep pushing for more. Mark Warner (@MarkWarner) February 26, 2022 And the imperial media are pushing for more. Articles and news segments warning of the sinister threat posed by Russian propaganda to misinform and divide western populations using the internet are being churned out at a rate thats only likely to increase as this latest narrative management campaign gets into full gear. The Associated Press has a new article out for example titled War via TikTok: Russias new tool for propaganda machine. Armies of trolls and bots stir up anti-Ukrainian sentiment. State-controlled media outlets look to divide Western audiences. Clever TikTok videos serve up Russian nationalism with a side of humor, AP warns. Analysts at several different research organizations contacted by The Associated Press said they are seeing a sharp increase in online activity by groups affiliated with the Russian state, AP writes. Thats in keeping with Russias strategy of using social media and state-run outlets to galvanize domestic support while seeking to destabilize the Western alliance. The different research organizations AP ends up citing include Cyabra, an Israeli tech company that works to detect disinformation, as well as the state-funded NATO narrative management firm The Atlantic Council. As tends to happen whenever a consensus begins to form that a certain category of speech must be purged from the internet, imperial spinmeisters are already working to expand the definition of Russian propaganda which must be purged from the internet to include independent anti-imperialist commentators like myself. Dopey Louise Mensch wannabe NatSec LARPer calling for me to be labeled State Affiliated Media and de-platformed across all western social media because RT is one of the many outlets who occasionally republish my blogs for free. https://t.co/54yZtQUsFzpic.twitter.com/XKzLnwvAPs Caitlin Johnstone ? (@caitoz) February 26, 2022 Imperial narrative manager Robert Potter has a thread on Twitter currently calling for me and other anti-imperialist content creators to be labeled State-Affiliated Media on Twitter and ideally de-platformed across all western social media, in my case solely because RT is one of the many outlets who occasionally choose to republish some of my blog posts for free. I am not as Potter claims an OP Ed columnist for Russia Today. I dont work for RT, I dont write for RT, I dont submit articles to RT, and Ive never been paid by RT or the Russian government. RT is just one of the outlets who sometimes avail themselves of my longstanding invitation for anyone who wants to to republish my work free of charge. That RT editors would find my daily rants against western imperialism agreeable is not scandalous or conspiratorial but normal and self-evident. Yet for agents of imperial narrative control like Potter (who ironically works directly for the US State Department but thinks my posts should be labeled State-Affiliated Media by Twitter), even this is enough to justify complete silencing. I will not be in the slightest bit surprised to see a great deal more of these efforts as the new cold war continues to escalate. The Center for Countering Digital Hate, an empire-loyal NGO ostensibly focused primarily on fighting racism and prejudice, has published a report accusing Facebook of failing to label Russian propaganda as such 91 percent of the times it occurs. The CCDH decried Mark Zuckerbergs failure to stop Facebook being weaponized by the Russian state. This sudden narrative management thrust has also seen RT taken off the air in nations like Australia, Germany and Poland, with pressures mounting in France and the UK to follow suit. This despite the fact that all western powers would have to do to eliminate RT completely is simply start allowing leftist and anti-imperialist voices to be heard on mainstream media platforms. It would immediately suck up RTs entire foreign audience as people whod previously needed to look outside the mainstream for sane perspectives gravitate toward media made with much better funding and a higher level of talent. But of course we all know thats never going to happen. The imperial media arent going to subvert RT by platforming voices who dispute the empires narratives no matter how badly they hate it, because the exact reason they hate RT is because it disputes the empires narratives. Theyre not worried about Russian propaganda operations, theyre worried about someone else running interference on their own propaganda operations. Nazis in Ukraine? Russian propaganda. US-backed coup in 2014? Russian propaganda. Donbas provocations? Russian propaganda. US/allies armed terrorists in Syria? Russian propaganda. Mass media is propaganda? Russian propaganda. The governments not your friend? Russian propaganda. https://t.co/OjtURhlht7 Caitlin Johnstone ? (@caitoz) February 26, 2022 RTs audience makes up about 0.04% of TV viewing in the UK. This isnt about RT, its about the the agenda to continually expand and normalize the censorship of unauthorized speech. Thats what it was about when they were pretending it was about the need to fight Covid misinformation before that, and when they were pretending it was about the need to fight domestic US extremism before that, and when they were pretending it was about the need to defend election security before that, and when they were pretending it was about the need to fight Russian propaganda the first time before that one cycled back around again. Whoever controls the narrative controls the world. Humans are storytelling creatures, so whoever can control the stories the humans are telling themselves about whats going on in the world has a great deal of control over the humans. Our mental chatter tends to dominate such a large percentage of our existence that if it can be controlled the controller can exert a tremendous amount of influence over the way we think, act, and vote. The powerful understand this, while the general public mostly does not. Thats all weve been seeing in these attempts to regulate ideas and information as human communication becomes more and more rapid and networked. An entire oligarchic empire is built on the ability to prevent us from realizing at mass scale that that empire does not serve us and inflicts great evil upon our world. The question of whether our species can awaken to its highest potential or not boils down to whether our dominators will succeed in locking down our minds, or if we will find some way to break free. Read more at: CaityJohnstone.Medium.com (Natural News) A Ukrainian man who escaped the onslaught of Russian forces after President Vladimir Putin ordered a full-scale invasion of his country took to Twitter to describe what he called a hellish 20-hour walk to Poland, along with photos to document what he encountered. Long story short: I just walked to Poland, says the man behind the Twitter account Ukraine Conflict Live 2022. It was a hellish 20-hour journey undertaken in the middle of winter with thousands of refugees. I saw some terrible things, he continued, adding pictures of miles-long lines of vehicles on roads, a great many of which had simply been abandoned after running out of fuel. Vehicles were backed up for 25 kilometers, many out of gas. Several were abandoned as their occupants fled west on foot as fast as possible. pic.twitter.com/XfTtR99AUH Ukraine Conflict Live 2022 (@UkraineLive2022) February 25, 2022 The man went on to say that Ukrainian Army soldiers were also stopping vehicles and busses and rounding up any man between the ages of 18 and 60 to be conscripted to fight. In one place, a commissar was shouting, say goodbye to your daughters, mothers, and girlfriends; you must turn back and fight the Russian invader!' UA soldiers were stopping cars and busses and yanking out any man aged 18-60 to conscript in the Ukrainian Army. In one place, a commissar was shouting say goodbye to your daughters, mothers, and girlfriends; you must turn back and fight the Russian invader! pic.twitter.com/B61MZ48S1n Ukraine Conflict Live 2022 (@UkraineLive2022) February 25, 2022 We made friends with a 24-year-old named Max who was pulled out of the caravan as he talked with us. I had time to get his number before his conscription and he left with a grin of utter disbelief. I will never forget that face, the man posted, adding that when one wife screamed for her husband to be spared conscription, a soldier smacked her and took him anyway. Things seem really desperate, he continued. There were old women carrying rucksacks hobbling along the shoulder. I asked one where she was going and she said Poland! She was going to walk the 80km on her own. Toddlers took the journey hard. Many were forced to walk the distance despite not knowing what was going on. Forget your wife, forget your daughter, fight for Ukraine. pic.twitter.com/8IoZ9JIALK Ukraine Conflict Live 2022 (@UkraineLive2022) February 25, 2022 UA soldier ordering bus driver to turn over all men aged 18-60 for conscription. pic.twitter.com/Rar5OsBu5r Ukraine Conflict Live 2022 (@UkraineLive2022) February 25, 2022 This was the longest and worst night of my life. Im just speechless, the man posted. Anyway Im currently in Poland, where a welcome committee greeted us with tea. It was amazing tea. This was the longest and worst night of my life. Im just speechless. Anyway Im currently in Poland, where a welcome committee greeted us with tea. It was amazing tea. pic.twitter.com/GM1DadGXaj Ukraine Conflict Live 2022 (@UkraineLive2022) February 25, 2022 Meanwhile, the war continued to rage on Monday, with Russian forces steadily advancing on Ukraines two major cities, the capital of Kyiv and the second-largest city of Kharkiv. Along the way, Russian forces have been suffering casualties, according to various reports showing blown-up tanks and burning Russian vehicles. Kharkiv has just been massively shelled with Grad multiple rocket launchers. Dozens of dead and hundreds of wounded! This horror must be seen by the whole world! Death to the occupiers! Anton Gerashchenko, an adviser to the Minister of Internal Affairs of Ukraine, documented on his Facebook page on Monday, as reported by Fox News. The continued attacks come as Russian and Ukrainian negotiators met at the Belarusan border to discuss peace terms, which of course Russia hopes to dictate, especially after capturing two more Ukrainian cities ahead of talks. It is nothing short of remarkable what the Ukrainian military has accomplished, said U.S. Army Gen. Jack Keane, who serves as chairman of the Institute for the Study of War. Sources include: FoxNews.com ThreadReaderApp.com (Natural News) The official US embassy website recently REMOVED all evidence of bio-labs in Ukraine. These bio-labs are funded and jointly operated by the US Department of Defense (DOD). The laboratory documents were public knowledge up until February 25, 2022. These documents include important construction, financing and permit details for bioweapon laboratories in Ukraine. But now the US government is scrubbing these documents from the internet and becoming less transparent with this critical information. This comes at a time when the world population is waking up to the reality of gain-of-function bioweapons research, lab leaks and predatory vaccine and diagnostics development. These bio-labs generate pathogens of pandemic potential that exploit human immune systems and are the foundation for which medical fraud, malpractice, vaccine-induced death and genocide originates. Could the existence of these bioweapons labs have something to do with Russias special military mission? For years, Russia has accused the US of developing bioweapons near its borders. Are the Russians currently gathering evidence from these labs? What is the current status of these facilities? What if Russia was not conducting an imperialist invasion and occupation of Ukraine a reality that has been propagated by Western media outlets? What if Russia was instead targeting international crime syndicates and going after criminal elements in the Ukrainian government that have harmed the Ukrainian people and others around the world? The U.S. erected a vast network of bio-labs in Ukraine and is scrubbing details from the net The US DOD funded at least 15 different bio-labs in Ukraine. These are not Chinese or Russian bio-labs. At least eight of these are bioweapons labs are operated exclusively by the US. These laboratories consolidate and secure pathogens and toxins of security concern to conduct enhanced bio-security, bio-safety, and bio-surveillance measures through international research partnerships. Each facility costs the US taxpayers anywhere from $1.8 to over $3 million. The DOD facilitated the permit process to allow Ukrainian scientists to work with pathogens of pandemic potential. The US DOD works directly with Ukraines Ministry of Health, State Service of Ukraine for Food Safety and Consumer Protection, the National Academy of Agrarian Sciences and the Ministry of Defense. This network of bio-labs includes facilities in Odessa, Vinnytsia, Uzhgorod, Lviv, Kiev, Kherson, Ternopil, Crimea, Luhansk and two suspect facilities in Kharkiv and Mykolaiv. In recent years, many of these labs have reached Bio-safety Level 2 status, allowing scientists to experiment with viruses and bacteria. Over the past two years, these laboratories, in cooperation with the Ukrainian Ministry of Defense, erected four more mobile laboratories to conduct epidemiological surveillance of the Ukrainian people. These laboratories are part of a multi-national working group that creates disease surveillance networks that strengthen global health security. Up until February 25, 2022, the existence and details of these bioweapons labs were public knowledge. The US embassy had previously disclosed the locations and details of these laboratories in a series of PDF files online. On February 26, 2022, the official embassy website shut down the links to all 15 bioweapon laboratories. All the documents associated with these labs have been removed from the internet. If you click on any of the links, the PDF files are no longer available. Thankfully, these files have been archived and can still be accessed. What is the US embassy trying to hide? Sources include: Strangesounds.org NaturalNews.com TOKYO, March 2 (Xinhua) -- Toyota Motor Corp. on Wednesday said operations at all of its domestic plants had been resumed after being suspended a day earlier due to one of its suppliers being hit by a cyber attack. The Nagoya-based automaker said that after it had restored its production data system it restarted operations at 14 of its suspended assembly plants. The system data was connected to one of its domestic suppliers of plastic parts, Kojima Industries Corp., which had experienced equipment glitches. Toyota said Wednesday that the computer system failure at Kojima had not yet been completely fixed. Kojima Industries confirmed its computer server system had suffered a virus attack. The parts supplier said a message of a threatening nature was also found, raising suspicions the firm had been attacked by ransomware. Kojima Industries, staffed by roughly 1,600 workers, made the government aware of the attack and contacted the police. On Saturday evening, the supplier's servers stopped working, it was reported. Toyota said that shuttering its operations for the day affected the output of roughly 13,000 vehicles, which equates to about 5 percent of its monthly production. Japanese Prime Minister Fumio Kishida told a press briefing on the matter Tuesday that an investigation has been launched into the Toyota-linked cyber attack. Nuclear winter is known to be a theoretical human-caused global climatic condition from a nuclear war where smoke blankets our atmosphere and blocks the sunlight, causing a so-called global cooling effect. Concerns of nuclear winter are growing due to a potential nuclear war amid the Russia-Ukraine war. Based on previous studies and theories, a nuclear explosion will likely have certain biological and environmental hazards due to radiation. Being a post-effect of a large-scale global nuclear war, a nuclear winter may release smoke and other chemicals that can harm the environment and all living organisms. Russia launched a full-scale invasion of Ukraine in late February following several weeks of tensions along the Russian-Ukrainian border. Russian President Vladimir Putin called its action in Ukraine a "military operation" and issued a nuclear threat to countries that would interfere. The Nuclear Winter Theory For decades, several scientific theories have emerged to discuss the potential existence of nuclear winter in case a large-scale nuclear war occurred. Although a nuclear winter has never happened before, scientists explored its potential effects on the planet; to all living organisms, and the environment. According to an article published in The New York Times in 1990, scientists have coined the term "nuclear winter" in 1983, and it is often called the nuclear winter theory. Scientists have debated on whether an all-out nuclear war will cause a global chilling effect, also known as a nuclear winter. The article indicated that nuclear winter theorists may have overestimated the severity of its possible impact. However, scientists have linked the occurrence of nuclear winter to measurable concepts like the climatic predictions on the effect of carbon dioxide in the atmosphere. Astronomer Carl Sagan, along with other scientists, realized the concept of a nuclear winter also falls in the field of meteorology and climatology since the potential global chilling effect from a nuclear war will alter and darken the Earth's atmosphere for a prolonged period, as per the Smithsonian Magazine. The scientists claim that the planet will enter a phase of either cold or freezing temperatures during a nuclear winter. Fumes of atmosphere-blocking toxic gases and hazardous airborne particles are also possible during this period, with the high probability of killing animals, plants, and humans. Also read: Japan Nuclear Disaster in 2011 Inspires Switzerland to be Nuclear-Power-Free Biological and Environment Repercussions Whether a nuclear winter occurs or not, the immediate impact of a nuclear explosion and its radiation will evidently cause biological and environmental repercussions. Insights regarding a nuclear blast is relatively abundant since its first usage during World War II. In 1945, the US dropped an atomic bomb in the cities of Hiroshima and Nagasaki in Japan as a means to force the Japanese imperial army to surrender. The initial blast from the bomb approximately killed hundreds of thousands of people and destroyed plants and trees, as per the BBC. Additionally, the nuclear blast resulted in biological hazards on its survivors. Radiation from the nuclear warhead has led to cases of physical deformities among the survivors and their descendants in the coming decades. Related article: Russia's Attack on Ukraine Raises Risk of Nuclear War: How Bad Will a Nuclear Fallout Be? Mythical creatures have been a fascination of folklore and supernatural stories for thousands of years. With variances in appearances and names, mythical animals or mythical beasts have been used as both a symbol of the culture and religion of a society-where some have their own unique interpretation. Mythological creatures did not just emerge out of nowhere, instead, their conceptualization and designation were based on sightings throughout history. However, some of these sightings have misidentified real yet bizarre animals as a supernatural creature or something else. Mythical Creatures List As per the Ranker website, the following are some bizarre animals misidentified as mythical creatures: Kraken The colossal size and tentacles of this sea monster depicted in pop culture and folklore have reportedly terrified seafarers in the past. Unverified accounts suggest that the Kraken can sink a whole ship into the ocean. However, the discovery of the giant squid resembles that to the appearance of the Kraken. Dragon A woolly rhinoceros skull was thought to be from the fire-breathing and winged mythical dragons. In 1840, Austrian paleontologist Franz Unger reportedly went to Klagenfurt, Austria, and found that the once thought dragon skull actually belonged to the woolly rhinoceros, as per the Ranker site. Kappa The river-based spirits have been the center of folklore in Japan, but they turned out to be the giant salamander that can grow up to five feet in size. In addition, giant salamanders also live near rivers and other bodies of water. Sea Serpent Once thought to be a mythical snake-like creature that dates back to ancient Greece, sea serpents were potentially based on the sightings of the oarfish, considered to be the longest bony fish (Osteichthyes). The oarfish can grow up to 50 feet long. Unicorn People from the ancient Roman Empire and the Middle Ages misidentified the tusk of a Narwhal whale belonging to a unicorn's horn. The description of unicorns is similar to a horse but with a tusk on its forehead. Griffin This mythological beast is described in ancient times to have an appearance of a lion and an eagle in the landscape of what is now Europe and Asia. The discovery of the protoceratops dinosaur fossil was only misidentified to be a griffin. Cyclops In Greek mythology, the cyclops is a giant one-eyed humanoid described to possess tremendous strength. However, Austrian paleontologist Othenio Abel proposed that the source of the cyclops legend was from the remains of an ancient elephant called pygmy mammoth, as per Research Gate. Also read: Is Bigfoot Real? Discovery of Strange Footprint Sparks Debate Culture and Religion From research about mythology published by the National Research University Higher School of Economics, the study highlights that mythology is embedded in the cultural and religious aspects of society, especially during ancient times. In relation to mythical creatures, misidentification of real living animals does occur. Although modern technology and recent studies debunked the existence of mythical creatures, attribution of a living or extinct animal as a mythical beast can still transpire in modern times. According to an article published in National Geographic in 2011, some scientists believe that approximately 86% of Earth's species on land and water are yet to be discovered. Over the past decade, there has been progressing discovery of new species of both living and extinct animals. Related article: Mermaid Hoax Documentary Draws Largest Animal Planet Audience A massive asteroid with a comparable size bigger than Burj Khalifa, the tallest building in the world, and The Shard, the tallest building in the UK, is continuing its fly-by on Earth at 03:00 a.m. ET (local time) on Friday, March 4. The asteroid is relatively close to the planet but will safely pass on Friday. Classification and Type The National Aeronautics and Space Administration (NASA) classified the massive asteroid called "2001 CB21" or "13871" as a Potentially Hazardous Asteroid (PHA). NASA reportedly classifies asteroids with less than 7.5 million kilometers (4.6 million miles) under the PHA asteroid category. According to NASA's Center for Near-Earth Objects Studies (CNEOS), 2001 CB21 belongs to the near-Earth asteroids (NEAs) and it is characterized as a mid-sized asteroid. NEAs are named after the Apollo asteroid discovered in 1862. Also read: How Ancient Asteroids and Comets Helped Alter Early Earth's Oxygen Levels Asteroid Size and Distance Astronomers compared the asteroid to the width size of the Eiffel Tower and the Golden Gate Bridge. The asteroid has a diameter of approximately 1.3 kilometers (0.81 miles) and was first discovered in 2001 when the asteroid was more than 20 million miles away from Earth. When the asteroid passes Earth, it will have a distance of 4.8 million kilometers (3 million miles) from our planet. The distance is significantly farther from the moon-whose distance is only 384,000 kilometers (238,606 miles) from Earth. Speed and Potential Impact The massive asteroid is traveling at a speed of approximately 59,000 kilometers per hour (36,000 miles per hour). However, there were no immediate reports of a potential impact or indirect effect on Earth's atmosphere. According to Europe's Virtual Telescope site, the PHA and Apollo-designated type of asteroid will pose no risk on Earth. The astronomy group said the asteroid is visible on the night sky as a moving sharp dot-wherein the stars surrounding it appear to be "slightly elongated." Planet-Killing Asteroids The impact of an asteroid on a planet is dependent on its size and speed. Other factors may include the gravity or the composition of the asteroid or other space rocks. It is through these factors astronomers determine how wide will be the impact of an asteroid hitting Earth. A space rock has the potential become a planet-killing asteroid if their size exceeds the conventional measurement that would only affect a certain region or continent. For instance, the Chicxulub asteroid has a radius size of 5 kilometers (3.1 miles), which can be seen in the Chicxulub crater impact site in Mexico. According to Space.com, the Chicxulub asteroid has been considered a planet-killing asteroid responsible for wiping out the dinosaurs 65 million years ago. Since then, there have been no asteroids of their kind that hit Earth. With the potentially hazardous 13871 (2001 CB21) asteroid being bigger than The Shard, it will potentially be catastrophic on a regional level if it hits the Earth. Luckily, people can only view the space rock when it safely fly by Earth in the coming days. The massive asteroid was first discovered in February 2001 where its name 2001 CB21 was derived from. Near-Earth objects like asteroids and comets pass through Earth at a certain period in time. Prior to their arrival, astronomers usually provide their names, characteristics, distance, and speed. Related article: 'Potentially Hazardous' Asteroid Expected to Fly by Earth on March 4 Archaeologists recently discover that one of Egypt's most fascinating artifacts didn't originate in the transcontinental country. King Tutankhamun's legendary iron dagger has long been discussed by scholars pertaining to its meteoritic origin. Debates had been raised about how the dagger came to be, but the space rock itself that created it revealed a mystery that has not been previously tackled. Nonetheless, a new study reveals that the 'meteorite dagger' might have come from space, but it most definitely did not land in Egypt - "or on Earth". "The era of King Tutankhamun was around 1300 BC, during the late Bronze Age," Researcher Tomoko Arai of the Chiba Institute of Technology in Japan told SYFY WIRE. "It is widely believed that the subsequent Iron Age started around 1200 BC. That is when the presence of the Tut iron dagger has raised doubt." Researchers reported in a study recently published in Meteoritics and Planetary Science the chemical analyses of the nicely preserved meteoritic iron dagger found in the tomb of King Tutankhamen. King Tut's iron dagger might have been brought from outside Egypt Going back to history, Tutankhamun, commonly known as King Tut, reigned and lived a short life (1361-1352 B.C.) during Egypt's 18th dynasty-that is, during the Late Bronze Age, before the period of widespread iron use known as the Iron Age. He is known chiefly for his intact tomb, which includes a magnificent golden portrait mask on the King's head, numerous pieces of jewelry and amulets laying upon the mummy and in its wrappings. Having little claim to fame, Tutankhamun was better known for his tomb which had been documented and renowned through the highly popular "Treasures of Tutankhamun" exhibit featured in the Tutankhamun Exhibition. Unlike these riches, his iron dagger may not have looked as much but it tells a lot about how meteoritic iron was well established at that time. This iron-made artifact suggests that the metal was obtained from meteorites, but its manufacturing method remains unclear. Since a manufacturing technology to make a dagger out from meteoric iron may not have been present in the 18th dynasty Egypt, written evidence suggests that King Tut's iron dagger might have been brought from outside Egypt. Also read: The Lost Balkanatolia: A Forgotten Continent from 40 Million Years Ago Whispers from the Amarna letters The Kings's dagger had a pattern that could have only been from an octahedrite - the most common iron meteorites known to have a Widmanstatten pattern, formed by lines of kamacite (an iron-nickel alloy). While the location of where this meteorite landed and how the dagger was made remain unknown, the dagger was zapped with X-rays which provided researchers a better idea of what it was made of. "This structure consists of Ni-poor Fe metal (kamacite) and Ni-rich Fe metal (taenite)," said Arai. "General forging temperature of steel is above 1,742 F. The dagger was generated by low to moderate temp forging, so the Widmanstatten structure survived during its manufacture." The 3,400-year-old tablets known as the Amarna Letters which kept records of diplomatic matters around the time gave researchers hypothesis that the dagger was indeed foreign. "We find the plaster used for the gold hilt was also what was not used in the ancient Egypt during that era. We think this is also in line with a foreign origin," Arai noted. Also read: 500-Year-Old Landslide in Red Sea Could Trigger a Tsunami in Egypt and Saudi Arabia After a week of torrential downpours that has triggered disastrous inundation and resulted in the deaths of nine people throughout southeast Queensland as well as Northern NSW, homeowners of the north coast community of Ballina are bracing for a stressful evening as floods from two inundated watersheds approach on the community. Upon getting stuck instantly amid increasing floods, some 50 individuals and at least 5 ponies were evacuated from a footbridge in Lismore in northern New South Wales, Australia. The Richmond Creek crossing is situated near Woodburn, in southern Lismore. 50 People Died After Rising Flood Water Around 1,000 torrent evacuation have taken place already in the deadly north-east New South Wales watershed disaster. Homeowners and their animals were attempting to flee the disaster in northern NSW and crossed the footbridge near Lismore on Monday, but they were quickly stranded as steam swelled and submerged both extremities of the domed crossing. Inhabitants were forced to spend the evening on the footbridge owing to the darkness and hazardous environments, according to 9news. Large numbers of residents were forced to flee as severe thunderstorms slammed Australia's eastern seaboard on Monday, drowning communities and leaving families stranded on roofs. Regulators have also issued a warning about potentially fatal severe flooding. According to the National Disaster Department communications coordinator for northern NSW, David Rankin, homeowners in the neighborhood voluntarily utilize that footbridge to safeguard their automobiles. Due to the increasing water levels, the Ballina Medical center was being abandoned. 55 service users have been immediately transported to Xavier Catholic University, in which a provisional medical center has been built up by NSW Medical and the SES, The Independent reported. "They transported them there, with their ponies, to defend oneself," Mr Rankin explained. The neighborhood was eager to put that resource to service. Authorities want the population to be able to utilize their points of interest to go to protection so they are encouraged to take the upper position. Also read: 500-Year-Old Landslide in Red Sea Could Trigger a Tsunami in Egypt and Saudi Arabia Austalian Residents Suffered From Heavy Rain Villagers used canoes to evacuate the trapped humans and animals on Tuesday morning. According to accounts, they were brought to security. "All of us have changed literally so much, it's really sad," Cassie Smith, A Woodburn native who stayed the overnight on the footbridge with her relatives and sister's animals, Cassie Smith remarked that a lot have literally chance and the situation definitely resemble a combat zone. A lady was discovered dead within her Lismore house on Ewing Street about 10.20 a.m. on Tuesday by flooding. The Meteorological department informed that the crisis appears to impact most of northern New South Wales. Citizens on New South Wales' north shore are experiencing a one-in-500-year deluge, according to reporters, while paramedics are rushing through the schedule to evacuate anyone trapped in flooding. On Monday, at least 8 individuals dead upon torrential storms deluged components of Brisbane, causing the worst massive flooding in the town since 2011. Brisbane Lord Mayor Adrian Schrinner stated in a release that the floodwaters are quite unusual from those that wreaked havoc 5 years earlier. In 2011, rainfall had ended days before the Brisbane River reached its high, and officials had cautioned of floods river channel for many days. Officials reported that the deluge wrecked hundreds of houses and structures, swamped highways, and prompted rolling blackouts in various sections of Brisbane . Also read: U.N. Climate Change Report Shows Impacts are Larger than What Humans can Adapt The glaciers of the Patagonian snowfields are one of the quickest disappearing on the globe. As these icecaps recede, the ground underneath them begins to rise at considerably higher rates than projected. The Fast Pace Melting Glaciers in Patagonia Researchers have determined that a disparity in plate boundaries that started appearing approximately 18 million years ago beneath presently ice sheet is presumably cruising the current dramatic sandstones rise shown in Patagonia, which encompasses distant and unpopulated regions where little seismographic analyses have previously been performed. In an interview of Science Alert with Hannah Mark, lead author of the investigation and Woods Hole Oceanographic Institution geophysicist she explained that the discrepancies in iceberg mass as they expand and decline, together with the underlying framework that experts photographed in this work, are generating fast and regionally varied elevation in this area. If the investigators' projections are accurate, the reduced viscosity values in the mantelpiece underneath the Patagonian glacier could accelerate tectonic rise caused by thawing permafrost by long periods of time. Comparable self-absorbed, slow lithospheric speeds and a softening outer shell have previously been identified underneath the components of Antarctica, and while prior studies forecasts that the Patagonian uplift will plateau all over its present trajectory, guesstimates of lithospheric speeds are ambiguous and delicate to lithospheric levels, thus the more readings, the clearer, as per National Oceanic and Atmospheric Administration (NOAA). These findings, when paired with additional core samples from nearby observation wells, indicated how a breach in the descending continental crust over 100 kilometers below Patagonia has allowed warmer, less elastic subsurface fluid to pass through the peninsula. This implies that the subsurface processes linked with the fissure frame had strengthened through age, or that the crustal layer in the south began out deeper and harsher, and hence was least influenced by the fissure frame than the layer up north. Furthermore, the investigation discovered that the warmest and least fluid sections of the subsurface were near to the opening, or substrate pane, beneath the area of the Patagonia snowfields that had just reopened. Also read: U.N. Climate Change Report Shows Impacts are Larger than What Humans can Adapt Experts Study on The Largest Glacial Adjustments Ever Recorded This abnormality suggests that rising subsurface levels have chemically degraded the overlaying earth's crust, which is weakening beneath the diminishing ice sheets. A proper analysis of such evolving mountain ranges can help researchers foresee storm surge, and what geologists discover about permafrost in one area of the globe can help them study ice plebs in other parts of the globe. "Recognizing the progression of these glacial ice enables us to comprehend what ice caps in Greenland and Antarctica might exist in the coming years in a much tropical temperatures," NASA's Jet Propulsion Laboratory glaciologist Eric Rignot said of the Patagonian snowfields. To track what was occurring beneath the ground, Mark and collaborators collected spatial information all around Patagonian snowfields that cross the Andes Mountains in southern Chile and Argentina. Even though Patagonia is inaccessible, the effects of these geographical and seismic shifts will be influenced by such factors, since fast-melting mountains lead to worldwide ocean warming, which is currently threatening low-lying populations. More so, Washington University in St Louis planetary scientist Douglas Wiens remarked that the little viscosity values suggest that the underlying adapts to ice ages on a timeframe of decades and decades, instead of millennia, as we see in Canada. Also read: 500-Year-Old Landslide in Red Sea Could Trigger a Tsunami in Egypt and Saudi Arabia Sign up to get breaking news, weather forecasts, and more in your email inbox. Sign Up Now HOUSTON, March 1 (Xinhua) -- Republican Governor Greg Abbott and Democrat star Beto O'Rourke were projected to have easily won their respective party's gubernatorial primary in Texas, which on Tuesday held the first primary of the U.S. 2022 midterm election season. Seeking a third term, Abbott, 64, defeated his seven Republican opponents, including former Texas Republican Party Chairman Allen West, multiple U.S. media outlets projected soon after the poll closed across the country's second most populous state at 7:00 pm local time (0100 GMT on Wednesday). Meanwhile, O'Rourke, a 49-year-old former U.S. Senate nominee and presidential candidate, fenced off challenges from four other Democrats and secured the Democratic nomination. "This is stage one of what will be a tremendous battle as we go forward to Nov. 8," Abbott said in a campaign speech in El Paso last week. During the primary campaign, Abbott touted the state's economy under his leadership while slamming O'Rourke on his left-leaning climate change positions, catering to the fossil fuels industry seen as the state's lifeline. Meanwhile, O'Rourke blasted the governor for the failures of the state energy grid last winter, which claimed at least 246 lives and resulted in enormous economic damage in the state. "I think the one big race here in Texas is going to be for governor. That is a huge race because it is very political, red, blue. It's time for change," Michael Martinez, a San Antonio voter, told Xinhua earlier on Tuesday. The Texas primary is also the first statewide election, in which voters will cast their ballots following redistricting based on the results of the 2020 national census, as well as the first statewide election after Texas enacted its controversial voting law in December. The state's races for major state positions also include lieutenant governor, state attorney general and others. Furthermore, Texan voters will choose each party's candidates to face off in November for district-based congressional and legislative offices, which will offer clues about where the U.S. midterm cycle is headed. According to local media reports, Texas is an open primary state, which means voters do not register as members of a particular political party. Instead, they can cast a ballot in either party's primary election, though not both. In November 2015, a group of four Torrington High School students, including myself, successfully lobbied the Board of Education to amend the district policy on student use of personal electronic devices. It was a rare example of the Torrington Board of Education actually listening to student input and validating their hard work. There should not be a surprise that that did not last. The decision by the Board of Education to invest in Yondr pouches, which would effectively lock up student cell phones for the duration of the school day, is appalling, antiquated and draconian. Cellphones can be useful tools during the school day. At the very Board of Education meeting where the Yondr pouches were approved, several students eloquently advocated for the use of cellphones in the classroom. Some of the capabilities referenced by students were exclusive to cellphones, and would not be encompassed by district-provided devices, which are far from infallible. Additionally, the benefit outside of class time cannot be overlooked. Cellphones can be useful during periods between classes and down time. Lunch time, a supposedly sacred period for students to unwind and eat in the middle of the day, is a perfect time for cellphones to be permitted. Before the counterargument is made, students do still speak to each other. Cellphones have not created silent cafeterias, a point to which anyone who enters a school cafeteria can attest. Cellphones have merely expanded the social experience of students, and increased their access to other forms of communication and consumption. While cellphones can have detriments, they also serve as lifelines for the students of the modern era, particularly with the isolation brought by the pandemic. Technology has become intertwined with their lives, and it is not going away. Just because, as the argument goes, back in your day you did not have cellphones and did just fine, does not mean that they are valueless or that modern students do not rely on technology. That argument is akin to suggesting that back in my day we didnt need light bulbs, we had fire. Some members of older generations ignore the benefits of cellphones and technology merely because it is dissimilar to the way that they learned. That is clearly the move that the Torrington Board of Education has made, as well. I cannot even say that the Board of Education made their decision out of ignorance. Students came to the meeting and explained the value of the cellphones to the board. They also proposed using the existing infrastructure and policies and applying them consistently. It seemed evident that the issue at hand was not one of policy, but of enforcement. The Board of Education chose to ignore the alternatives, alienating the student contributors, who valiantly advocated for their position, even bringing a signed petition to the board. Some of the board members vocally applauded the students and some parents for advocating, seconds after voting in favor of the acquisition against which they advocated. As students, it often feels as though there is nothing you are able to influence. Policies and procedures are created without student input, and without consideration about how students may feel. This is the latest example of a situation in which some of the brightest students at Torrington High School impressively advocated for themselves, and were shot down swiftly by a Board of Education that responded but thanks for trying! Parents who raised legitimate concerns about personal property and student safety were also shot down, as the board pushed through the Yondr pouches despite community objections. It is not difficult to imagine why community engagement in the Board of Education proceedings is low. The passage of Yondr pouches constitutes a lazy blanket ban that signifies that the Board of Education has accepted defeat on ways to compromise between the value of cellphones and their ability to serve as a distraction. Rather than improve the enforcement of the current policy, the Torrington Board of Education has taken an extreme measure that alienated students and ignored the concerns of parents. Unfortunately, nobody should be surprised. Darnell Battle was salutatorian of the Torrington High School class of 2017. Newburyport, MA (01950) Today Cloudy skies this evening will become partly cloudy after midnight. Slight chance of a rain shower. Low 46F. Winds NNW at 5 to 10 mph.. Tonight Cloudy skies this evening will become partly cloudy after midnight. Slight chance of a rain shower. Low 46F. Winds NNW at 5 to 10 mph. JERUSALEM, March 2 (Xinhua) -- The Israeli National Cyber Directorate (INCD) and the U.S. Department of Homeland Security (DHS) have signed agreements to strengthen cooperation in cybersecurity, the two sides announced in a joint statement on Wednesday. According to the agreements, which were signed between the INCD and DHS during the Cybertech Global Conference held in Israel's coastal city of Tel Aviv on Tuesday, the two sides would expand cooperation in building cybersecurity and resilience capabilities, combating shared cyber threats such as ransomware, and strengthening critical infrastructure cybersecurity. They also decided to increase collaboration in ground and air transportation in terms of information sharing, standards and methodology, joint cybersecurity studies and exercises, and research and development, the statement said. The INCD and DHS also agreed to facilitate expert-to-expert exchanges to detect and manage risks from emerging technologies such as artificial intelligence, quantum computing, homomorphic encryption, and position navigation and timing. Troopers lead a man through the Ashburton Park entrance and down a State House corridor Tuesday afternoon. The State Police said two people were arrested after trying to rush past the security checkpoint. Help support your local hometown newspaper/website. Independent local news reporting matters. Please log in, or sign up for a new account and purchase a subscription, for as little as $3, so we can continue to provide independent local reporting on our communities. Woodville, AL (35768) Today Some clouds. A stray shower or thunderstorm is possible. Low 61F. Winds NNE at 5 to 10 mph.. Tonight Some clouds. A stray shower or thunderstorm is possible. Low 61F. Winds NNE at 5 to 10 mph. HOUSTON, March 1 (Xinhua) -- The American Petroleum Institute (API) on Tuesday reported a sharp decline of 6.1 million barrels of crude oil in U.S. inventories for the week ending Feb. 25. Analysts expected an increase of about 2.796 million barrels for this week. The API reported a drop of 5.983 million barrels in the previous week. U.S. oil prices soared on Tuesday as the West Texas Intermediate (WTI) for April delivery added 7.69 U.S. dollars to settle at 103.41 dollars a barrel on the New York Mercantile Exchange. Film Critic Chuck Koplinski is The News-Gazette's film critic. His email is chuckkoplinski@gmail.com and you can follow him on Twitter (@ckoplinski). Champaign, IL (61820) Today Cloudy skies. Slight chance of a rain shower. Low near 50F. Winds E at 5 to 10 mph.. Tonight Cloudy skies. Slight chance of a rain shower. Low near 50F. Winds E at 5 to 10 mph. Our County Editor Dave Hinton is editor of The News-Gazette's Our County section and former editor of the Rantoul Press. He can be reached at dhinton@news-gazette.com. Michael Madigan allegedly used his political positions and role at the Chicago law firm of Madigan & Getzendanner to further the goals of the criminal enterprise. Reporter Mary Schenk is a reporter covering police, courts and breaking news at The News-Gazette. Her email is mschenk@news-gazette.com, and you can follow her on Twitter (@schenk). KIEV, March 2 (Xinhua) -- Ukrainian Presidential Adviser Oleksiy Arestovich said that the delegations of Ukraine and Russia will hold the next round of talks on Wednesday. "Negotiations will take place tonight," Arestovich told the local Suspilne TV channel. The composition of the Ukrainian delegation will remain the same, Arestovich said. Earlier in the day, Ukrainian Foreign Minister Dmytro Kuleba said that it was unclear when the next round of Ukraine-Russia talks will be held. Kuleba said on Facebook that Kiev was ready to negotiate, but would not work with "Russian ultimatums." Russia and Ukraine conducted their first round of negotiations in Belarus on Monday, with both sides failing to reach a clear breakthrough. Longview, TX (75601) Today Mostly cloudy. A stray shower or thunderstorm is possible. Low near 70F. Winds SSE at 5 to 10 mph.. Tonight Mostly cloudy. A stray shower or thunderstorm is possible. Low near 70F. Winds SSE at 5 to 10 mph. Researchers from the Mitochondrial Medicine Frontier Program at Children's Hospital of Philadelphia (CHOP) have found that developmental delays associated with Leigh syndrome, the most common pediatric mitochondrial disorder, may occur earlier than previously recognized even before metabolic stroke and regression which could provide clinicians with an opportunity for earlier diagnosis and therapeutic interventions. The findings were recently published online by the journal Molecular Genetics and Metabolism. Leigh syndrome has been characterized by neurodevelopmental regression, when a child loses previously achieved skills and developmental milestones, with metabolic strokes occurring in their deep brain regions typically early in life. Currently, no FDA-approved therapies or cures exist, and developmental delays associated with Leigh syndrome are often the primary symptom studied in clinical trials. Historically, developmental disabilities were thought to mainly occur after the onset of metabolic stroke and neurologic regression. However, some rare instances have been reported in which primary developmental delays occurring prior to neurologic regression were observed in Leigh syndrome patients. The CHOP researchers decided to examine existing data to see if primary developmental delays were more common than previously believed. By looking at the pre-regression history of these patients, we were hoping to see signs that would allow us to diagnose Leigh syndrome at an earlier stage prior to their acute decompensation. Since we found that developmental delays were the presenting symptom for many of these cases, our study demonstrates that mitochondrial energetics impact developmental trajectories prior to their first episode of neurodevelopmental regression." Rebecca Ganetzky, MD, co-senior author, attending physician, Assistant Professor, and Director of Biochemical Test Development in the Mitochondrial Medicine Frontier Program at CHOP Among a cohort of 69 Leigh syndrome patients, 47 had a history of primary developmental delays prior to any regression and 53 had neurodevelopmental regression. The study team identified three distinct phenotypes among these patients: those with primary developmental delays followed by regression (31 patients), primary developmental delays without subsequent regression (16 patients), and regression without primary developmental delays (22 patients). Those with a history of primary developmental delays were more likely to have earlier disease onset and worse long-term educational outcomes. "This study demonstrates that Leigh syndrome disorders should be considered a diagnostic possibility at the time when a child is recognized to have early developmental delays, even if the child hasn't yet had a serious regression episode that is often the trigger to begin the diagnostic process," said study co-author Marni Falk, MD, an attending physician, Professor, Distinguished Chair, and Executive Director of the Mitochondrial Medicine Frontier Program at CHOP. "We hope our findings will lead to prospective natural history studies that examine specific neurodevelopmental outcomes to help us design future clinical trials for therapies to help these patients at as early a stage in their disease course as possible." Women who enter menopause very early, before age 40, were found to be more likely to develop dementia of any type later in life compared to women who begin menopause at the average menopause-onset age of 50 to 51 years, according to preliminary research to be presented at the American Heart Association's Epidemiology, Prevention, Lifestyle & Cardiometabolic Health Conference 2022. The meeting will be held in-person in Chicago and virtually Tuesday, March 1 Friday, March 4, 2022, and offers the latest in population-based science related to the promotion of cardiovascular health and the prevention of heart disease and stroke. Our study found that women who enter menopause very early were at greater risk of developing dementia later in life. Being aware of this increased risk can help women practice strategies to prevent dementia and to work with their physicians to closely monitor their cognitive status as they age." Wenting Hao, M.D., Ph.D. candidate at Shandong University in Jinan, China Dementia involves serious changes in the brain that impair a person's ability to remember, make decisions and use language. Alzheimer's disease is the most common type of dementia, while the second most common is vascular dementia, which is the result of disruptions in blood flow to brain cells caused by strokes or plaque build-up in arteries supplying blood to the brain. Both of these types of dementia are more common with age. Diseases affecting specific parts of the brain can also lead to dementia, and a person can have dementia due to more than one disease process. In the current study, the researchers analyzed the potential relationship between age at menopause onset and the diagnosis of dementia from any cause. Health data was examined for 153,291 women who were an average age of 60 years when they became participants in the UK Biobank (between 2006 and 2010) were examined. The UK Biobank is a large biomedical database that includes genetic and health information on a half million people living in the United Kingdom. The investigators identified the diagnosis of all types of dementia including Alzheimer's disease, vascular dementia and dementias from other causes. They calculated risk of occurrence in terms of the age at which the women reported having entered menopause, compared with the women who began menopause at average age of menopause onset, which is 50-51 years (51 years is the average age for menopause onset among women in the U.S.). The results were adjusted for factors including age at last exam, race, educational level, cigarette and alcohol use, body mass index, cardiovascular disease, diabetes, income and leisure and physical activities. The analysis found: Women who entered menopause before the age of 40 were 35% more likely to have been diagnosed with dementia. Women who entered menopause before the age of 45 were 1.3 times more likely to have been diagnosed with dementia before they were 65 years old (called presenile or early-onset dementia). Women who entered menopause at age 52 or older had similar rates of dementia to those women who entered menopause at average age of menopause onset, which is the age of 50-51 years. Although post-menopausal women are at greater risk of stroke than pre-menopausal women, and stroke can disrupt blood flow to the brain and may result in vascular dementia, in this study the researchers did not find an association between age at menopause and the risk of vascular dementia. "Dementia can be prevented, and there are a number of ways women who experience early menopause may be able to reduce their risk of dementia. This includes routine exercise, participation in leisure and educational activities, not smoking and not drinking alcohol, maintaining a healthy weight, getting enough vitamin D and, if recommended by their physician, possibly taking calcium supplements," Hao said. The researchers suggest that lowered estrogen levels may be a factor in the possible connection between early menopause and dementia. "We know that the lack of estrogen over the long term enhances oxidative stress, which may increase brain aging and lead to cognitive impairment," Hao said. Health care clinicians who care for women should be aware of a woman's age at menopause onset and closely monitor for cognitive decline in those who reached menopause before age 45. "Further research is needed to assess the added value of including the timing of menopause as a predictor in existing dementia models," Hao said. "This may provide clinicians with a more accurate way to assess a woman's risk for dementia." The study has several limitations. Researchers relied on women's self-reported information about their age at menopause onset. In addition, the researchers did not analyze dementia rates in women who had a naturally occurring early menopause separate from the women with menopause induced by surgery to remove the ovaries, which may affect the results. The data used for this study included mostly white women living in the U.K. and may not generalize to other populations. Intestinal cells can change specializations during their lives. The BMP signaling pathway an important communication mechanism between cells appears to be the driver of these changes. That is what scientists from the groups of Hans Clevers (Hubrecht Instituut) and Ye-Guang Chen (Tshinghua University, Beijing) have concluded after research with organoids and mice. The study will be published in Cell Reports on 1 March 2022 and offers new insights into potential targets for the treatment of metabolic diseases. The intestinal wall is made up of different types of cells. Some are for instance responsible for the uptake of nutrients, while others produce hormones. It was long thought that after their formation, intestinal cells specialize in one function that they continuously perform until they die. However, recent studies show that these cells can change specializations. Researchers from the groups of Hans Clevers and Ye-Guang Chen (Tsinghua University, Beijing) now discovered that these changes are driven by the BMP signaling pathway. Driver of change The BMP signaling pathway is one of many signaling pathways in the body. Such pathways form lines of communications between cells: with the production of a protein by one cell, it gives a signal to the next cell, which in turn produces proteins. Eventually, this whole cascade of protein production triggers certain processes for example processes that are important during embryonic development. Joep Beumer, one of the researchers on the project, explains: "We knew that BMP signaling plays an important role in the initial specialization of intestinal cells. What we now discovered, is that it is also the driver of changes in the specializations of these cells over their lifetimes. Migration Intestinal cells arise from stem cells that lie in indentations (i.e. the crypts) of the intestinal wall. These intestinal cells then migrate up the intestinal villi. During their migration, they perform a certain function, for example the absorption of nutrients or the production of hormones. Once they reach the top of the villi, they die. The function of intestinal cells changes during their migration along the villi. They for example produce antimicrobial components in the lower parts of the villi (at the start), while they are involved in absorbing fats later on in their journey." Joep Beumer, Researcher, Hubrecht Institute This gradual change in the function of the cells is called zonation. "At the same time, the BMP signaling pathway is not very active in the crypts and in the lower parts of the villi, while it becomes more and more active higher up in the villi. Human organoids The scientists at the Clevers lab used intestinal organoids for their research. These are tiny 3D structures that can be grown in the lab and that mimic the function of the gut. In these miniature guts, the researchers were able to mimic conditions of low or high BMP signaling, similar to the altering environment along the intestinal villi. Using 'Single cell RNA sequencing', a technique that makes it possible to see which genes are active and which ones are not, they made a surprising discovery. Jens Puschhof explains: "When BMP was active in the organoids, the cells in these miniature guts were identical to the cells located in the top of the villi, while inactivation of BMP made the cells in the organoids resemble the cells located in the lower parts of the villi. In other words, zonation turned out to be dependent on the BMP signaling pathway." Mouse model The results found in organoids had to be confirmed in living organisms. Colleagues from the group of Ye-Guang Chen used a mouse model in which BMP signaling could be turned off in the gut. In mice with an inactive BMP signaling pathway in the gut, intestinal cells no longer changed specializations during their migration from the crypts to the villi. "That confirmed our conclusion: BMP signaling is the driver behind zonation of intestinal cells," says Beumer. Methodological implications The study, to be published in Cell Reports, has important implications for the use of organoids for research. "Normally, researchers inhibit BMP signaling in organoids," says Fjodor Yousef Yengej. "Although this proved beneficial for growth, not all functions of the gut are represented in these cultures." Activation of BMP signaling may be required for research into certain topics, such as fat absorption. Treatment of metabolic diseases In addition to providing these new fundamental insights into the functions of intestinal cells during their lives, the study may ultimately contribute to the development of new treatments for metabolic diseases. "In certain metabolic diseases, there is an accumulation of fat in parts of the body such as the liver, or an imbalance in gut hormones. We now know that active BMP signaling stimulates fat absorption, so if we can inhibit signaling in these patients, we can also influence fat absorption," Beumer concludes. BMP inhibitors targeting the gut are yet to be developed, but would have broad beneficial effects on metabolism. With more than $12 million in new funding from the National Institutes of Health (NIH), the Abramson Cancer Center at the University of Pennsylvania will build on its preclinical research of an emerging form of radiation that provides ultra-fast doses-;of under a second, compared to several minutes with conventional radiation-;and shows promise of greater protection of normal tissue, thereby minimizing toxic effects to the body. The Department of Radiation Oncology will use the $12.3 million, five-year NIH grant to compare the ability of proton, carbon and electron radiotherapy to protect normal tissues from harmful effects while controlling or eradicating solid tumors of the gastrointestinal tract, lungs, soft tissues throughout the body, and bones. This research will include delving deep into the molecular mechanisms that cause toxicity and to help minimize these effects on normal tissue, so that the new technology-;called FLASH, due to its incredible speed-;can move toward clinical trials. Early animal studies, primarily in Europe and the U.S., including at Penn, have shown that when the same dose of radiation is delivered at a much faster rate, it tends to reduce injury to normal tissues while being equally potent against tumors. This could revolutionize radiotherapy, as critical organs near tumors can be spared, reducing toxicity to the body. Moreover, FLASH radiotherapy can be delivered in one to three treatments compared to 20, 30 or more treatments typically delivered with conventional radiotherapy. For decades, radiation oncologists had to administer a fraction of the total dose of conventional radiotherapy each time to minimize toxicity to healthy tissue surrounding tumors. However, FLASH radiotherapy has demonstrated a sparing effect of some normal tissues in animal models without compromising its anti-tumor action when delivered all at once. Based on early promising results in animal models, we plan to study the mechanism of action of FLASH radiotherapy, and ways to deliver it safely." Constantinos Koumenis, PhD, the Richard H. Chamberlain Professor of Radiation Oncology at Penn and co-principal investigator Proton radiation painlessly delivers radiation through the skin from a machine and, in many situations, has an advantage over X-ray therapy because it delivers less radiation to normal tissues that lie past the tumor. In contrast to current clinical electron beam therapy, which can treat only less invasive tumors, protons are able to treat deep-seated cancers. "We are intrigued by the mechanism of action of FLASH radiotherapy, and we appreciate the NIH recognizing us as leaders in this area with strong expertise in radiobiology and radiation oncology to study it further in our state-of-the-art research facilities," said Amit Maity, MD, PhD, the Morton Kligerman Professor of Radiation Oncology at Penn and co-principal investigator. "A great deal remains to be done to better understand under what conditions FLASH radiation is able to reduce normal tissue injury and how it does so, and the work proposed in this grant will be a major step forward in this direction." Penn's research team features more than 30 scientists, including biologists, physicists, and clinicians, and for this NIH funded program, they will collaborate with scientists from Duke University, Oxford University, and the University of Heidelberg. "We hope to understand the best method for administering FLASH radiotherapy with shorter duration of treatment, decreased frequency of therapy, and reduced impact to healthy tissue," said James Metz, MD, chair of Radiation Oncology and leader of the Roberts Proton Therapy Center at Penn. "We envision FLASH radiotherapy not as a complete replacement for conventional radiotherapy, but as a valuable tool in the hands of radiation oncologists to treat specific solid tumors in which it would be best indicated." The grant consists of four projects, including observation and treatment of osteosarcoma in dog patients, as a potential precursor to human clinical trials. Researchers will also compare the relative effectiveness of FLASH radiotherapy to conventional proton therapy and electron and carbon radiation to better understand molecular mechanisms which underlie how normal tissue can be spared from treatment effects. Neurons in the brain coexist with and rely on many other cell types to function properly. Astrocytes, which take their name from their star shape, ensure the survival of neurons by feeding and detoxifying them with the help of a multifunctional protein, APOE. One of three forms of this protein, APOE4, significantly increases the risk of developing Alzheimer's disease, but the mechanisms at play are unknown. A collaboration between the University of Geneva (UNIGE), the European Molecular Biology Laboratory (EMBL), the University of Zurich and the pharmaceutical company AbbVie has discovered a potential mechanism: far from ceasing to function, APOE4 is on the contrary more efficient. By triggering astrocytic lipid secretion, it causes the accumulation of potentially toxic lipids that are harmful to neurons, and thus might contribute to the development of Alzheimer's disease. These results published in the journal Cell Reports, shed new light on the neurodegenerative mechanisms of a disease that affects nearly 50 million people worldwide. Astrocytes, present in very large numbers in the brain, have a major protective function. These cells secrete apolipoprotein E (or APOE), a small protein that forms particles containing lipids and vitamins to feed the neurons. It also detoxifies the neurons by getting them rid of "lipid waste" that could become harmful if not removed. As the neurons are unable to eliminate this waste on their own, APOE comes into play to collect it and bring it back to the astrocytes where it is destroyed. The gene coding for APOE exists in three frequent variants in humans: APOE2, present in 8% of the population, APOE3, the most common, and APOE4, which is found in nearly 15% of people and increases the risk of developing Alzheimer's disease by a factor of ten. "The reasons why APOE4 increases the risk of Alzheimer's disease so significantly are not well understood," explains Anne-Claude Gavin, a professor in the Department of Cell Physiology and Metabolism at the UNIGE Faculty of Medicine and holder of a Louis-Jeantet Foundation Chair, who directed this research together with Viktor Lakics, a Research fellow and Biology Area Leader in Neuroscience discovery at AbbVie. What are the mechanisms behind the dysfunction of APOE4? And above all, could they serve as a basis for prevention or therapy? To answer these questions, Anne-Claude Gavin and her team joined forces with scientists from the European Molecular Biology Laboratory (EMBL), the University of Zurich and AbbVie. A protein that is too effective Working on these questions, the research team identified novel molecular mechanisms that explain how APOE binds to astrocyte membranes to detect and extract the lipids it needs. Employing human cell lines with different APOE variants, in vitro experiments demonstrated that APOE is very efficient at transporting potentially harmful lipids produced in neurons. "And to our great surprise, the APOE4 variant proved to be even more efficient than the other forms", reveals Katharina Beckenbauer, a former post-doc in Anne-Claude Gavin's group, senior scientist at AbbVie, and one of the first authors of the work. "So, contrary to what we thought until now, the problem is not that APOE4 stops working, but, in fact, the opposite. And the mechanism goes haywire." A hijacked function As astrocytes age, they become less efficient and start to accumulate lipids rather than destroy them. "We modelled this process experimentally and observed the molecules secreted by the astrocytes," explains Karina Lindner, a PhD student in Anne-Claude Gavin's laboratory and one of the first authors of this work. "We observed that cellular ageing diverts APOE from its primary function -; transporting lipids to neurons and also recovering lipid waste from them - towards the secretion of triglycerides, particular lipid species that could become harmful if not removed." And this phenomenon is exacerbated with APOE4: it stimulates the secretion of triglycerides, leading to their uncontrolled accumulation. This deleterious accumulation of potentially harmful lipids could very well be an important contributor to the neuronal death, a hallmark of Alzheimer's disease. "APOE4 would thus have the capacity to accelerate the pathological process in the disease through the mechanism we have discovered." In order to better understand the details of the action of APOE and especially of the E4 variant, the scientists at UNIGE want now to determine how secretion of these potentially harmful lipids is regulated and whether this secretion can be detected in people suffering from Alzheimer's disease. About half of Montana schools that had tested their water by mid-February under a new state rule had high levels of lead, according to state data. But the full picture isn't clear because less than half of the state's school buildings had provided water samples six weeks after the deadline. For many schools with high lead levels, finding the money to fix the problem will be a challenge. The options aren't great. They can compete for a dwindling pool of state money, seek federal aid passed last year, or add the repairs to their long lists of capital improvement projects and pay for the work themselves. "We prioritized emergency needs and then will follow up with the next-most-serious thing," said Brian Patrick, Great Falls Public Schools' director of business services and operations. "Obviously, this is something we want to get addressed right away. We want safe water for our kids." Lead, a toxic metal long known to cause lasting organ and nervous system damage, can make its way into drinking water through pipes and fixtures. Children are especially vulnerable to lead poisoning, which can slow development and cause learning, speech, and behavioral problems. Although federal rules require that community water sources be tested for lead, schools have largely been free from that oversight and can decline to be tested. The rule in Montana, created by the state Department of Public Health and Human Services in 2020, requires schools to check at least every three years for lead in the water of any sink or fountain used for drinking or food prep. Schools' initial deadline to get that done was Dec. 31, 2021. According to the rule, any faucet whose water has a lead concentration of 5 parts per billion or higher must be fixed or routinely flushed. Fixtures that test higher than 15 ppb must immediately be shut off. "There is no safe level of lead," said health department spokesperson Jon Ebelt. "And that is why schools, DPHHS, and [the Department of Environmental Quality] are taking actions to remove sources of lead in childrens environment." The American Academy of Pediatrics recommends that school water fountains not have water lead concentrations higher than 1 ppb, according to a 2016 policy paper. State officials have said 589 school buildings need to meet Montana's new rule. Of the 222 schools that had turned in samples by Feb. 18, 110 had at least one water fixture with lead levels higher than 15 ppb, according to a KHN analysis of state data. Almost a third of all fixtures tested so far across the state had dangerous levels of lead in their water, according to state data. The highest test result so far came from Skyview High School in Billings, where a sink in a theater control room tested at 7,800 ppb federal environmental regulators classify lead concentrations over 5,000 ppb as hazardous waste. That sink and any other that had levels higher than 15 ppb were blocked off from use, said Scott Reiter, director of facilities at Billings Public Schools. Montana's rule mandates that schools' results be publicly posted but doesn't require schools to tell parents when students have been exposed. For many Montana schools, this is the first time they've tested for lead. In some cases, schools with a long list of high lead numbers must wait for solutions, with some sinks and fountains blocked from use. At Billings West High School, more than 40 fixtures tested in the red higher than 15 ppb out of 139 samples taken. As of mid-February, repair work hadn't begun at Billings West as district officials prioritized projects that keep access to drinking water for students and employees in other schools, whether that's applying filters or replacing fixtures. "We're just taking it one school at a time," said Billings Public Schools Superintendent Greg Upham. "In some cases, it will fall to our general funding facilities budget, which is unfortunate, but, you know, on the safety side of it, that's what we need to do." Greg Montgomery, who manages DEQ's new monitoring program, said he's still reaching out to schools that haven't finished sending in water samples. "This rule rolled out right as covid hit," Montgomery said. "And schools have also had a lot of turnover. I'll get calls from new facility people saying they just heard about the program and how do they get started." Although DEQ helps oversee the program, the rule's enforcement falls to DPHHS. Ebelt said the deadline was set before the pandemic and covid slowed that work for many schools. He said a total of 308 schools had submitted an inventory of their buildings' plumbing fixtures and more samples had been coming in. As of Feb. 28, 293 schools had provided samples. Not all results have been posted. "We plan to be flexible with the deadline and will continue to work with schools," Ebelt said. Classroom and bathroom sinks were more likely than any other type of fixture to have high levels of lead. Of all the drinking fountains tested, 20% tested high enough to need flushing or get turned off, according to state environmental officials. Schools don't have a deadline to make repairs, though some have taken anything whose water tested over 5 ppb out of service. Nationwide, no one has tracked how many lead pipes deliver water to homes, schools, and businesses, let alone tested every faucet for traces of the neurotoxin. At least seven states California, Illinois, Louisiana, Minnesota, Missouri, New Hampshire, and Virginia require school districts to test for lead and report elevated levels to parents, according to the National Conference of State Legislatures. Last year, Washington state mandated that schools test drinking water for lead if the buildings went up or pipes went in before 2016. And in 2020, Virginia lawmakers instructed school boards to submit plans to test for lead and to make fixes if needed. Patrick, with Great Falls Public Schools, said that in some cases, the district brought in water bottle fill stations with filters to replace old hallway drinking fountains. The district already had plans to use part of the proceeds from a bond issuance to replace the internal piping at Lewis and Clark Elementary School, where 23 fixtures had lead levels of 5 ppb or higher. He said that the district had considered testing in the past but that the estimated cost was too high. With the new rule, the state covers the cost of lab tests and supplies for taking samples. However, if repairs are needed, many schools may be left to foot the bill themselves. The state set aside $40,000 to help schools fix problems, but that money is first come, first served. As of Feb. 18, about $15,000 remained. Patrick said that as schools calculate total repair costs, they're submitting that information to state officials. He hopes that more than $40,000 will be set aside for repair projects the next time schools submit samples. For now, the gap in funding may mean delaying other projects. "It just means a project that we're going to do, like re-asphalting part of a playground or something like that, gets postponed for another year," he said. The bipartisan infrastructure bill that Congress passed late last year included $55 billion to expand access to clean drinking water. But the money hasn't been disbursed to states yet, it's not limited to school repairs, and how much of that funding will land in Montana isn't clear yet. Montgomery, of DEQ, said that if schools don't have the money to make fixes, some may qualify for rural development grants or low-interest loans. In Troy, 27 of the 58 water fixtures tested at the elementary school came back above the state's allowed limit of less than 5 ppb, with five in the red. The rural school district now faces the cost of repairing those water sources after incurring the hidden cost of the staff time it takes to inventory and sample every water source no small expense for a small district with limited cash and workers. "We're just going to chip away at it with the general funds that we do have, and there may be some areas that we just shut down different water sources too," said Jacob Francom, superintendent of Troy Public Schools. "Fixtures are very expensive and testing regularly, I mean, it starts to add up." KHN data editor Holly Hacker contributed to this article. BARCELONA, March 2 (Xinhua) -- According to the market research company Counterpoint Research, 7 out of the top 10 smartphone brands most popular in Europe are based in China. The Chinese manufacturers present at the ongoing Mobile World Congress in Barcelona appear determined to bring this figure higher. Produced by Xinhua Global Service Drug misuse is not exclusive to the opioid epidemic, according to a recent West Virginia University study. Every year, about 50,000 people in the United States are admitted to the emergency room due to misuse of a common over-the-counter pain medication acetaminophen. With that in mind, Mark Garofoli, director of experiential learning at the WVU School of Pharmacy, spearheaded research that revealed that the public's knowledge and perceptions of OTC pain meds is lacking. In a survey of 1,174 West Virginians, 85% of respondents answered two-thirds of questions about OTC pain meds incorrectly. Society needs more education on over-the-counter pain medications. The real issue is figuring out how, where and when to provide the information. As with most issues, it isn't viewed as important until it's staring one in the face while on a gurney in an ER." Mark Garofoli, Clinical Assistant Professor, West Virginia University Garofoli and his team posed questions to participants on how they perceived OTC medication, followed by nine fact-based questions about acetaminophen (Tylenol), ibuprofen (Advil, Motrin) and naproxen (Aleve). Only two of the 1,174 respondents answered all nine questions correctly. One question included, "What is the largest amount of OTC acetaminophen 500 mg tablets anyone can swallow in one day before contacting a healthcare professional?" The answer is six. That question reminds Garofoli of his time working at a beach town pharmacy, where a tall man in a cowboy hat asked him what he recommended for back pain. "I asked, 'Well, what have you tried?' The gentleman replied, 'I tried Tylenol and that ain't worth anything.'" Garofoli then asked him how much he took, to which the customer responded, "Well, 57 yesterday and 23 today (as of 10 a.m. that day)." "We then continued the conversation to discuss just how important it was for him to receive urgent medical care because if he did not," Garofoli said, "within a day or so he would be turning yellow, and in another day, he wouldn't be able to seek said care anymore." Side effects of OTC pain medication, Garofoli noted, can include upset stomach, liver damage (from acetaminophen) and blood thinning and stomach bleeding (from aspirin, ibuprofen and naproxen). Another concerning finding revealed itself when participants were asked, "Whom do you ask questions regarding OTC pain medication?" 46% said "family members." "Although healthcare professionals are viewed as organic sources of this information, concern can arise when people rely upon mere family members for this healthcare information," Garofoli said. OTC use of pain medication has likely exacerbated since the COVID-19 pandemic due to the lockdown of healthcare systems, staffing shortages and longer wait times, Garofoli theorized. Because of this, he believes education and awareness are more vital than ever. "Over-the-counter pain medications are the needle in the haystack of an opioid crisis fueled primarily by needles full of more provocative substances," he said. "Just because over-the-counter pain medications are sold at dollar stores, grocery stores and flea markets everywhere, universal safety is not implied." As for the beach town pharmacy cowboy, Garofoli urged him to check into the nearest hospital. A few days later, the man came back to the pharmacy. "He came up to the counter saying, 'Hey doc, I was told to shake your hand. Apparently, you saved my life,'" Garofoli recalled. "After exchanging pleasantries, I said, 'Well, now let's talk about that back pain of yours.'" The encounter would also set the stage for Garofoli to partner with West Virginia high school students interested in science on this research. After sharing the story of the beach town cowboy with Health Sciences colleagues Shafic Sraj and Ahmad Hanif, they agreed they needed to compose a plan to prevent those occurrences from happening. Garofoli got inspiration from a weekly Teaching Scholars session when Cathy Morton, director of the Health Sciences and Technology Academy, spoke about providing opportunities for high school students in the realm of science and technology. Garofoli and his team collaborated with HSTA students, who screened the lay public for knowledge regarding OTC pain medications. "COVID hit but our high schoolers persevered by pivoting to electronic means of research involving numerous community members," Garofoli said. The research was presented at PAINWeek 2021, a conference for frontline practitioners treating acute and chronic pain. "We, as healthcare professionals, need to educate the public on the safe utilization of over-the-counter pain medications," Garofoli said. "Legality and access mean nothing to a chemical that is already in a human body. Regardless of whether a substance (medication) is illegal or legal, requires a prescription or is available at a dollar store, the substance can cause incredible relief or tragic devastation." President Joe Biden argued forcefully for the power of democracy while calling out Russia's invasion of Ukraine in a March 1 State of the Union address that soon turned to the domestic concerns of the economy, inflation, and covid-19. Biden's one-hour speech was given to a largely unmasked crowd of lawmakers, Supreme Court justices, and Cabinet members in the House chamber, a sign of the diminished threat of the omicron variant. Speaking on the subject of the coronavirus, Biden attempted to thread the needle between being optimistic and on guard, saying the nation was entering a phase in which covid-19 need no longer control our lives, although the U.S. should stay focused on expanding vaccines, treatments, and testing and monitoring new variants. And when Biden introduced Ukrainian ambassador Oksana Markarova, who was in the gallery as a guest of first lady Jill Biden, the room much more crowded than for a speech there in April last year responded with a standing ovation. As expected, Biden used the address to condemn Russian President Vladimir Putin's use of force against Ukraine while touting the strength of the Ukrainian people and the NATO alliance. He also went through a fairly lengthy domestic to-do list that touched on a number of health policy issues. He spoke about the need to cut the cost of prescription drugs, citing the high price tag of insulin. Joshua Davis, a 13-year-old Virginia boy who has Type 1 diabetes, attended the speech as another one of the first ladys guests. He watched and applauded from the gallery as Biden urged capping the cost of insulin at $35 a month so everyone can afford it. Biden also renewed his call to let Medicare negotiate lower prices for prescription drugs. The president promised nursing home reforms through the Medicare program that would lead to higher quality-of-care standards. He unveiled what he called his Unity Agenda for the Nation. It includes initiatives aimed at ending the opioid epidemic, taking on the nations mental health needs especially those of children improving services for veterans, and ending cancer. He was also firm in the need to protect access to health care, preserve womens reproductive rights, and advance maternal health care. KHN and PolitiFacts team of reporters and editors watched it all. You can read the detailed fact check here. Here are the health care highlights: Under the new guidelines, most Americans and most of the country can now go mask-free. And based on projections, more of the country will [cross] this point in the next couple of weeks. This is accurate. Under updated guidelines that the Centers for Disease Control and Prevention released Feb. 25, about 70% of Americans live in communities with low to medium risk from covid and will be allowed to go out in public and indoor spaces maskless. The agency considers counties to be at high risk if they are recording 200 or more new infections for every 100,000 people, or if 10% or more of hospital beds have been occupied by covid patients within the previous seven days. An area is also deemed at high risk if 10 or more people for every 100,000 residents are being admitted to hospitals for the disease. Under the new rules, residents of high-risk areas will have to mask up. In medium-risk communities, however, masks are recommended only for those who are immunocompromised. In communities with low levels of covid, there is no recommendation to wear a mask. In addition, recent CDC projections for the next four weeks suggest continued drops in hospitalizations and deaths. If those forecasts play out, more Americans will likely be able to go maskless. 75% of adult Americans are fully vaccinated, and hospitalizations are down by 77%. Most Americans can remove their masks and stay in the classroom and move forward safely. This is a largely accurate description of official numbers and guidance. According to the CDC, as of March 1, 75% of Americans 18 or older are fully vaccinated, or 193,643,363 people. It was unclear what the starting point was for Biden's claim that covid-related hospitalizations are down by 77%, but about 60,000 people with the coronavirus are hospitalized nationally, down from about 160,000 in January, according to New York Times data. This translates to a 62.5% drop. Additionally, it is accurate that most Americans are not required to wear a mask under the CDC's updated guidelines. The American Rescue Plan is helping millions of families on Affordable Care Act plans save $2,400 a year on their health care premiums. This is accurate. The American Rescue Plan Act expanded subsidies for marketplace health insurance plans to many Americans more than 3 million who didn't previously qualify for them. The subsidies meant Affordable Care Act insurance premiums for many families were much lower. The Department of Health and Human Services estimated that for 4 in 5 enrollees it would cost $10 or less a month, after tax credits, to sign up for health insurance. The $2,400-per-year savings appears to be derived from a 2021 HHS press release that described examples of how the expanded subsidies will save money, such as: A family of four making $90,000 will see their premiums decrease by $200 per month. That would translate to $2,400 per year. Estimates from other organizations support savings in this number range. According to KFF, a nonprofit health policy organization, individual consumers could save, on average, $70 per month on health insurance because of the American Rescue Plan subsidies. For a family of three, that would translate to a savings of $210 per month, or about $2,500 per year. But not all kids would necessarily automatically qualify for ACA coverage many instead qualify for the Children's Health Insurance Program, known as CHIP. Still, KFF's 2021 subsidy calculator shows that a 40-year-old couple with two kids who make 200% of the poverty level (a midrange income) would receive $16,247 per year in subsidies. Compared with a KFF subsidy calculator dating back before the American Rescue Plan, that same family would have received $13,878 in subsidies. Thats exactly a $2,369 difference in savings. So, the $2,400 does seem very reasonable, said Cynthia Cox, vice president and director for the program on the ACA at KFF. PolitiFact reporters Jon Greenberg, Louis Jacobson, and Amy Sherman contributed to this report. Patients across the country are set to benefit from cutting-edge medical advances and treatments as the government invests 260 million today (Wednesday 2 March) to support research and development, as well as the manufacturing of new drugs, devices and diagnostics. Of the funding announced today, up to 200 million will be invested to enable research to better access NHS data through Trusted Research Environments and digital clinical trial services. This will make crucial data more securely and quickly available for research, while offering the highest levels of privacy. It will also ensure that the NHS will be able to deliver new life-saving treatments to patients faster, and will support more diverse and inclusive clinical research to tackle health inequalities and improve patient care. A further 60 million will support commercial-scale manufacturing investments by companies at the leading-edge of innovation, from cell and gene therapies and earlier and better diagnostic technologies, to medical devices. The funding for manufacturing investments will be distributed through the new Life Sciences Innovative Manufacturing Fund ( LSIMF ), following the success of the earlier Medicines and Diagnostics Manufacturing Transformation Fund. The fund will help support the growth of the UK's world-leading life sciences sector while also supporting the government's levelling up agenda by creating jobs and ensuring the UK continues to be an attractive investment destination. Business Secretary Kwasi Kwarteng said: The past 2 years have shown just how important our fantastic medical and life sciences industry is for the UK not only in dealing with the pandemic, but also for the vital economic opportunities they create throughout the country. By providing 260 million to boost UK medical manufacturing and medical research, we are ensuring the industry has the support it needs to improve patient outcomes and generate high-skilled jobs while building up Britain's manufacturing base in the process." Health and Social Care Secretary Sajid Javid said: NHS data is making the whole world safer and healthier and has been vital in saving thousands of lives during the COVID -19 pandemic. This funding will ensure the UK can continue to help researchers access NHS data securely so patients can benefit from more innovative treatments faster. I'm absolutely committed to boosting the UK's position as a world-leading research centre, transforming our health service and ensuring the NHS continues to deliver excellent care for patients." The 200 million funding into the healthcare system will deliver on government commitments set out in the Life Sciences Vision, to harness NHS data to drive health research and innovation, building on pioneering work carried out during the pandemic to develop diagnostics and treatment for COVID -19. This includes the RECOVERY trial which made use of NHS data through NHS DigiTrials and led to the discovery of Dexamethasone, the world's first proven treatment for COVID -19, in just 100 days, which has saved at least a million lives across the world. By making it quicker and easier to set up and run clinical trials, this funding will also ensure the UK continues to be at the forefront of life sciences research. The new infrastructure will supercharge efforts to improve the nation's health and to deliver the Life Sciences Vision, including in crucial areas such as cancer, cardiovascular medicine and mental health. The UK has one of the strongest Medical and Life Sciences industries globally, with a turnover of over 88.9 billion, supporting 268,000 jobs across the country. As set out in the Life Sciences Vision, the government is committed to harnessing the UK's existing strengths to continue to attract large scale manufacturing and the well-paid job opportunities that come with it. The pandemic further reinforced the importance of the UK's life sciences industry and of having a resilient UK-based medical manufacturing industry and supply chains, with the UK government investing hundreds of millions of pounds into manufacturing a successful vaccine through the work of the Vaccines Taskforce. Today's manufacturing funding announcement is part of the government's ongoing commitment to the life sciences sector, with 354 million allocated to life sciences manufacturing through the Global Britain Investment Fund. This has also included funding to strengthen UK vaccine manufacturing resilience for the COVID response and potential future health emergencies, among other projects. Science Minister George Freeman said: UK leadership in the discovery of new diagnostics, devices and drugs - from gene therapy to digital stents - is now driving our work in new and advanced manufacturing of medical technologies. Our new Life Sciences Innovative Manufacturing Fund will not only help further develop domestic medical manufacturing capabilities and enhance Britain's ability to respond to future pandemics, but will also help create well-paying, high-skilled jobs across the whole UK - a vital part of our plans for levelling up." Chair of The Medicines Manufacturing Industry Partnership (MMIP) Brian Henry said: The Life Sciences Innovative Manufacturing Fund is an excellent development. Science has already created the next generation of vaccines and advanced therapies for patients, we want to see the UK take its place as a world-leading centre for manufacturing them. The Fund will help boost the UK's attractiveness as a place for companies to invest in the latest technology, creating jobs and growth and making the UK a manufacturing as well as a science superpower." Dr Ben Goldacre, Director of the DataLab, Nuffield Department of Primary Care Health Sciences, University of Oxford, said: This funding announced today will drive forward the longstanding ambition to broaden access to NHS data while preserving patient privacy, by building secure Trusted Research Environments that support modern, transparent, efficient approaches to data analysis." The Life Sciences Innovative Manufacturing Fund is the successor to the Medicines and Diagnostics Manufacturing Transformation Fund ( MDMTF ). It was also established to help grow and strengthen the UK's medicines and diagnostics manufacturing industry by encouraging companies to use new technologies, and to build or expand facilities throughout the country. Companies awarded funding through the MDMTF , announced for the first time today, include: From the liver to the kidneys to the lungs, the human body is equipped with many levels of filters, which protect the body from harmful outside materials. But this system also has its downsides. Critically important drugs such as chemotherapy or multiple sclerosis treatments are also foreign materials, so the body filters out a large portion of these drugs up to 90%, in some cases. One way scientists and physicians compensate for this is by giving patients substantial quantities of a drug. This way, even though much of the drug gets filtered out, enough of it gets through to get the job done. But higher dosage levels also mean more adverse side effects. To avoid such high dosages, another strategy is to design the vehicle carrying the drug to target a specific destination. "Many drug delivery vehicles fail to reach the right location in the body, and the main reason is because our bodies have this really nice filtering system. So many of them end up in the liver, the kidney or the spleen," said Minkyu Kim, assistant professor of materials science and engineering(link is external) and biomedical engineering(link is external). "If we can overcome this by developing new drug delivery vehicles, it will be a significant advance." Kim is setting out to do just that with a $600,000 CAREER Award, the National Science Foundation's most prestigious award in support of early-career faculty who have the potential to serve as academic role models in research and education. His plan is to combine materials science, synthetic biology and multiscale mechanics to develop a new form of drug delivery microparticle designed to bypass the body's filtration systems. "We're incredibly proud to have Minkyu representing MSE among the ranks of NSF CAREER awardees," said Sammy Tin, inaugural Patrick R. Taylor Endowed Chair in Materials Science and Engineering. "Minkyu's work at the intersection of MSE and biomedical engineering is an excellent example of how materials scientists can directly improve human lives." Same drugs, new vehicle How do you get past a system designed to deny entry to outsiders? You masquerade as an insider. Kim is creating a microparticle vehicle that mimics the properties of a red blood cell. Those cells consist of a protein- and lipid-based casing carrying hemoglobin, the protein which transports oxygen throughout the body. Instead of being a vehicle for hemoglobin, the microparticle Kim designs will be a vehicle for drug particles. He will first use a well-established process to contain a drug in a microsphere core. Then, he will add a layer of artificial proteins he develops, followed by a lipid bilayer. Taken together, these components imitate a red blood cell, and even enable a controlled release of the drug. It can carry these drugs past a series of biological filters to the part of the body where the drugs are needed. It's as if you needed to attend an event that only admitted people driving red cars, so you borrowed a red car from a friend. You'd get to where you had to go, because you used a vehicle that was allowed in. Of course, building a protein structure that imitates the qualities of a red blood cell is much more complicated than borrowing a car. Red blood cells have a few key properties which are most important to imitate. For one, they can squeeze through very small spaces and return to their original shape, over and over again. A red blood cell is about 7 micrometers in diameter, and they go through microcapillaries, which are a lot smaller than that. The cytoskeleton of a red blood cell is made up of a well-ordered structure of proteins. When it needs to move through a small space, that structure can be extended by protein unfolding, but once the stresses are removed, the original structure returns. A red blood cell can do this a thousand times and continue to show the same mechanical behavior." Minkyu Kim, Assistant Professor of Materials Science and Engineering and Biomedical Engineering, College of Engineering, University of Arizona Red blood cells can also stay in the body much longer than typical drug delivery vehicles. "Right now, the fate of drug delivery vehicles is up to four weeks, maximum," Kim said. "My goal is for these microparticles to reach the lifespan of a red blood cell, which is about four months. And eventually, I hope, even longer." Because red blood cells are so effective at moving through the body, some researchers have investigated the possibility of using actual red blood cells as drug vehicles. But this requires human blood donations, particular storage methods, and careful accounting of blood type. This vehicle Kim plans to create could be adapted to carry a wide variety of drugs and used in patients with any blood type. "The goal is to develop a universal platform anyone can start with, to engineer whatever they want," Kim said. "You can engineer the outside. You can engineer the inside." Kim is working with Tech Launch Arizona(link is external), the commercialization arm of the university, to license the technology to a company that can take it forward into the marketplace. In addition to his own research efforts, Kim also plans to develop an interdisciplinary research program for students, grounded in his experience as a faculty member in two departments. He will create new modules for undergraduates focused on biopolymers and pair each undergraduate student in his lab with a graduate student mentor. He will also continue his ongoing efforts to work with and recruit underrepresented students, via his collaborations with the University of Arizona's Keep Engaging Youth in STEM (KEYS) program, the Undergraduate Research Opportunities Consortium (UROC) and the National Institutes of Health's Maximizing Access to Research Careers (MARC) program. Jocelyne Rivera, a former MARC trainee and 2021 graduate who conducted research in Kim's lab, was the first Hispanic woman accepted to the National Institutes of Health Oxford-Cambridge Scholars Program. "The NSF CAREER award is given to young engineers and scientists whose research work holds significant promise for achieving high impact," said Art Gmitro, head of the Department of Biomedical Engineering. "Dr. Kim's work integrates cutting-edge research in material science with important clinical application in improved therapeutic drug delivery." The coronavirus disease 2019 (COVID-19) pandemic caused over 438 million documented cases, with over 5.96 million deaths worldwide. The high number of deaths within a year of the onset of the outbreak spurred the development of vaccines against the severe acute respiratory syndrome coronavirus 2 (SARS-CoV-2), with the Pfizer-BioNTech messenger ribonucleic acid (mRNA) vaccine being the first to receive emergency use authorization (EUA) in the USA. With billions of doses having been rolled out in that country, a new study shows the impact of the vaccine program on the state of public health in the USA. This is important in shaping future decisions about vaccination as a public health strategy and on a personal level. Introduction Both randomized clinical trials (RCTs) and real-world data show that the COVID-19 vaccines have high effectiveness against SARS-CoV-2 infection and severity of illness. The greatest effect was on the number of symptomatic infections, deaths, and hospitalizations. The current study, published on the medRxiv* preprint server, discusses the cost-effectiveness of the vaccine strategy using the Pfizer vaccine as the index intervention. Earlier research has explored this aspect with respect to the healthcare system. In addition, this study examines the effects of vaccination with the Pfizer vaccine on productivity, and its economic impact, using data from multiple studies of high quality for quantitative analysis. The researchers aimed to find the public health impact of this vaccine at one year, using a combination of statistical methods. The target group comprised the US population aged 12 years and above, with information on the clinical features, the type, number and location of contacts, the spread of the virus, economic and human behavioral factors being used to analyze the vaccine impact on this group. Vaccine coverage was derived from official data, while various studies were mined for data on vaccine efficacy following one or two doses of this vaccine, as well as the duration of protective vaccine-induced immunity. The various outcomes investigated included the number of deaths and symptomatic cases avoided, both outpatient and inpatient cases. The economic results were estimated by the quantitative reduction in healthcare utilization and the reduced costs to society. What did the study show? The researchers estimated 12% prior infection with the virus among the vaccine-eligible US population, that is, about 33 million. Without vaccination, about a quarter of the susceptible eligible population would have been infected, they estimated, during 2021. Approximately 60% would be due to the Delta strain, while over a fifth would have been caused by the ancestral strain. Over one in seven was caused by Alpha, and 2% by Gamma. Overall, they estimated that 3.5 million hospitalizations would have occurred without vaccination and almost half a million deaths. The official tracker of the Centers for Disease Control and Prevention (CDC) shows very similar estimates. Thus, the primary series of the Pfizer vaccine prevented about 8.7 million symptomatic cases, 690,000 hospitalizations, and 110,000 deaths from COVID-19. Over 77% of deaths, and almost 55% of hospitalizations, were among the elderly aged 65 years of age or more, who experienced less than a fifth of the deaths. Almost 73% of hospital stays were not associated with mechanical ventilator use, while a quarter were in the intensive care unit (ICU). Of the latter, more than half required mechanical ventilation, compared to 5% of those in a normal ward. The vaccine is estimated to have increased the number of life-years and Quality Adjusted Life Years (QALYs) by over a million, mostly by averting COVID-19-related deaths. A lower effect was due to a reduction in symptoms of infection and the chronic adverse effects of mechanical ventilation. Productivity was gained, to the tune of $44 billion, with over a third of this being due to less productivity lost by premature deaths and two-thirds due to reduction in absence from work due to symptomatic COVID-19. What are the implications? According to these findings, the Pfizer vaccine is linked to a large impact on public health in the USA. The mechanisms include averting millions of symptomatic COVID-19 cases, thousands of hospitalizations, and thousands of deaths. In direct correlation with these effects, billions of dollars were seen to have been saved directly by avoiding healthcare-related payments and indirectly via averting losses in productivity. This agrees with other studies that have shown vaccination reduces the societal burden of COVID-19. It shows that even without regard to the indirect benefits of vaccination, such as reduced viral transmission and the opening up of businesses and public places as immunity approaches population immunity levels. This is the first study to assess multiple outcomes following vaccination using several types of data, including clinical severity, epidemiological characteristics, economic parameters, and others, to arrive at an estimate of the public health impact of this vaccine in the US population. However, it did not include children or certain high-risk groups who did not respond as expected to the vaccine. The findings of this study may not fully reflect the current or future disease trends (e.g., prevalence of Omicron variant), vaccine clinical profile, healthcare resource use and costs. As COVID-19 data continues to rapidly expand and evolve, future studies are warranted to assess the public health impact in those additional settings as well as in the longer-term. *Important notice medRxiv publishes preliminary scientific reports that are not peer-reviewed and, therefore, should not be regarded as conclusive, guide clinical practice/health-related behavior, or treated as established information. Hematopoietic stem cells (HSCs) have the capacity to both self-renew and differentiate into all mature blood cell types, making them promising treatments for a variety of diseases. However, the mechanisms involved in engraftment-;when the cells start to grow and make healthy blood cells after being transplanted into a patient-;are poorly understood. A recent study led by researchers at Massachusetts General Hospital (MGH) and Boston University School of Medicine has revealed the unique signature of genes expressed by HSCs capable of undergoing this process. The findings, which are published in Nature Communications, could enable scientists to expand these cells outside of the body or to convert other types of stem cells into cells that can repopulate the blood system. In adults, HSCs are found in the bone marrow and bloodstream, but before birth, they can be found to a greater extent in the liver, where they multiply, or proliferate, into additional HSCs at a very high rate. Moreover, research in animals has shown that HSCs in the fetal liver are more capable of engraftment than HSCs from bone marrow. To understand what allows fetal liver HSCs to have these superior proliferation and engraftment characteristics, investigators examined the gene expression patterns that are unique to these highly potent stem cells. They combined this examination with a variety of experimental methods to characterize the protein expression and functionality of those same cells. "This in-depth analysis revealed that these stem cells express a protein on their surface called CD201 that correlates very closely with this engraftment potential and can be used to isolate functional stem cells away from other cell types," says cosenior author Alejandro B. Balazs, PhD, a principal investigator at the Ragon Institute of MGH, MIT and Harvard. "This will help us improve the process of bone marrow and stem cell transplantation by allowing us to purify these cells." The enhanced understanding of the genes involved will also help scientists propagate HSCs with high engraftment potential in the lab and manipulate them to more efficiently fight blood cellrelated diseases such as sickle cell anemia, HIV and certain types of cancer. Altogether, this work has resulted in a detailed blueprint of the most potent blood stem cells and will lead to a better understanding of why these cells have such an extraordinary regenerative capacity. Such insights will allow us to create safer and more efficient therapies for patients suffering from blood disorders." Kim Vanuytsel, PhD, Study Lead Author and Research Assistant Professor of Medicine, School of Medicine, Boston University A new study using serum from human blood samples suggests neutralizing antibody levels produced by two-dose mRNA vaccines against the original and early variants of the SARS-CoV-2 virus wane substantially over time, and offer essentially no protection against the omicron variant. The same Ohio State University lab found in a previous study, posted on the preprint server bioRxiv, that a third COVID-19 mRNA vaccine booster shot did produce effective levels of neutralizing antibodies against omicron. This study has not yet been peer-reviewed. Our new work shows that two doses of mRNA vaccine do not offer protection against omicron, and even having a breakthrough infection on top of vaccine does not help much. But our earlier study showed that the booster can really rescue the shortcomings of the two doses." Shan-Lu Liu, Study Senior Author and Virology Professor, Department of Veterinary Biosciences, Ohio State University The new research is published online as a First Release paper in the journal Science Translational Medicine. The researchers examined antibodies in serum samples from 48 health care professionals with experimental versions of the parent virus and the alpha, beta, delta and omicron variants. Serum samples were collected pre-vaccination, three to four weeks after a first vaccine dose, three to four weeks after a second vaccine dose and six months after the second vaccine. "There was a substantial increase in neutralizing antibodies after the second dose against every variant except the omicron variant," said first study author John Evans, a PhD student in Ohio State's Molecular, Cellular and Developmental Biology Program who works in Liu's lab. "From the second dose to six months later, there was an at least five-fold drop in immunity, even against the parent virus." Neutralizing antibodies that block viral particles' entry into host cells are considered the gold standard of protection against COVID-19 infection. Twelve of the samples came from people suspected to have had a COVID-19 infection at time points ranging from before vaccination to after two vaccine doses based on a different kind of antibody testing. And though the findings suggested a breakthrough COVID-19 infection on top of vaccination increased immunity against most versions of the virus, antibodies from only one individual with previous infection reached levels that could put up a reasonable fight against omicron. "Overall, nobody in this study had good immunity against omicron," said Liu, also an investigator in the university's Center for Retrovirus Research and a program co-director of the Viruses and Emerging Pathogens Program in Ohio State's Infectious Diseases Institute. The experimental viruses were what are called pseudoviruses a non-infectious viral core decorated with different SARS-CoV-2 spike proteins on the surface structured to match known mutations in the variants studied. The researchers used a special method to detect neutralizing antibodies in the health professionals' blood samples to account for the varying levels of antibodies produced by individuals. "Individuals did respond very differently to the first dose, and the same was true for the second dose," Liu said. Results also showed that people who received the Pfizer-BioNTech mRNA vaccine produced about two-fold lower levels of neutralizing antibodies than those who received the Moderna vaccine. Men also had significantly higher antibody levels compared to women against all variants over the post-vaccination time points. Liu said the dramatic reduction in immunity six months after two vaccine doses and the earlier paper's finding that a booster protects against omicron highlight how important a third shot is to avoiding infection. "After the second vaccine dose, the neutralizing antibodies effective against omicron dropped 23-fold, but with a booster shot, immunity dropped only three- to four-fold which is comparable to booster effectiveness previously reported against the delta variant," he said. "Similar observations have been made by other labs." Tinnitus, most often described as "ringing" in the ears even though no external sound is present, also can be perceived as humming, hissing, buzzing or roaring sounds. According to the United States Centers for Disease Control and Prevention (CDC), more than 50 million Americans experience some form of tinnitus 2 million have extreme and debilitating cases. Worldwide, about 30 percent of people will experience tinnitus at some point in their life. Many individuals impacted by COVID-19 experienced changes in their sense of smell, taste, hearing, balance and in some cases, tinnitus. Among the various causes of tinnitus is stress, including tension, anxiety and depression. What's unclear, however, is whether the psychological impacts of the pandemic such as stress actually worsened tinnitus and its impacts. Researchers from Florida Atlantic University, the Royal Surrey NHS Foundation Trust in the United Kingdom, and the University of Cambridge conducted a study that focused on the potential indirect effects of COVID-19 on the experience of tinnitus. They assessed whether the severity of tinnitus, as measured using ratings of tinnitus loudness, annoyance, and effect on life, was influenced by the lockdown related to pandemic. Although COVID-19 upended so many aspects of society, there is some good news at least as it relates to tinnitus. For the study, researchers compared two independent groups of new patients; one group assessed during three months of lockdown in the United Kingdom and one group assessed during the same period in the preceding year. They examined patients' pure-tone audiometry, and their score on visual analog scale (VAS) of tinnitus loudness, annoyance, and effect on life, which were imported from their records. Researchers compared VAS ratings from both groups. All patients were seeking help for their tinnitus for the first time. Results of the study, published in the Journal of the American Academy of Audiology, do not support the idea that the pandemic led to a worsening of tinnitus loudness, annoyance, or impact on life and the mean scores did not differ significantly for the groups seen prior to and during lockdown. Any changes in psychological well-being or stress produced by the lockdown did not significantly affect ratings of the severity of tinnitus. "People experienced various types of adversities during the pandemic, including loss of income, difficulty in obtaining services, experience of the virus itself, and the impact of constant bad news and social distancing," said Ali Danesh, Ph.D., co-author, professor, Department of Communication Sciences and Disorders/Communication Disorders Clinic within FAU's College of Education, a member of FAU's Stiles-Nicholson Brain Institute and FAU's Institute for Human Health and Disease Intervention, professor of biomedical sciences, FAU Schmidt College of Medicine, and an affiliate faculty, Department of Psychology, FAU Charles E. Schmidt College of Science. "It's possible that pandemic related factors exacerbate the experience of tinnitus, as tinnitus is linked to general anxiety and psychological well-being. On the other hand, perhaps the effect of COVID-19 on everyday life made individuals with tinnitus realize that there are more important things than tinnitus, putting it into perspective and leading to a decrease of the impact of tinnitus that counteracted any effect of increased anxiety and decreased well-being." Several studies on tinnitus reported sleep-related problems, poor mental health, and suicidal ideations as consequences of the COVID-19 pandemic and its associated social isolation and economic uncertainties. It is questionable whether people are able to judge reliably whether their tinnitus itself has changed or whether their tinnitus-related symptoms such as sleep disturbances or anxiety have changed. Prior studies of the indirect effects of COVID-19 on the experience of tinnitus have used different methodologies, which may have led to biases." Hashir Aazh, Ph.D., Affiliate Associate Professor at FAU and Honorary Hearing Research Consultant, Department of Audiology, Royal Surrey County Hospital The current study avoided potential biases by comparing self-reported tinnitus severity between new patients seen during lockdown and another group of patients seen during the same time frame, preceding lockdown. "If a given respondent felt that their tinnitus was worse during the pandemic than before the pandemic, how could they determine whether this was due to lifestyle changes, health concerns, or social distancing?," said Danesh. "Visual analog scale scores for tinnitus loudness, annoyance, and impact on life did not differ significantly between new patients seen prior to and during lockdown. This may indicate that tinnitus can influence anxiety and well-being, but there is not an effect in the opposite direction." The retrospective study examined data for 105 consecutive patients who were seen at a tinnitus clinic in an audiology department in the United Kingdom during lockdown and 123 patients seen in the same period of the previous year. The average age of the patients seen during the lockdown was 50 years, while the average age of the patients seen in 2019 was 56 years. The two groups were reasonably well matched in age, gender, and severity of hearing loss. Study co-author is Brian C. Moore, Ph.D., emeritus professor of auditory perception, Department of Experimental Psychology, University of Cambridge. Infection with the severe acute respiratory syndrome coronavirus 2 (SARS-CoV-2), the causal agent of the ongoing coronavirus disease 2019 (COVID-19) pandemic, can lead to various clinical outcomes ranging from asymptomatic cases to severe infections and even death. A majority of early SARS-CoV-2 infections have been linked to the Huanan Seafood Market (HSM) in Wuhan, China, where various animal meats and exotic seafood were available for purchase. Although HSM is assumed to be the source of the COVID-19 pandemic, it is possible that an individual introduced SARS-CoV-2 into the market through human-to-human transmission, as early COVID-19 cases could not be epidemiologically linked to the market. Study: Surveillance of SARS-CoV-2 in the environment and animal samples of the Huanan Seafood Market. Image Credit: sleepingpanda / Shutterstock.com Background Several studies have indicated that some of the suspected SARS-CoV-2 positive samples were detected even earlier than the first case in Wuhan. In fact, these reports indicate that SARS-CoV-2 might have been in circulation in other regions. Although bats are believed to be the original source of SARS-CoV-2, it remains unclear whether an intermediate animal host enabled the virus spillover between bats and humans. To this end, one study has indicated that pangolins harbored a highly similar receptor binding domain as SARS-CoV-2; however, there remains limited evidence to confirm that pangolins were definitively the intermediate host for this virus. Researchers have also previously documented the animal species in HSM between May 2017 and November 2019, which demonstrated that neither bats nor pangolins were traded during this period. Thus, further questions remain as to whether HSM was the original source of SARS-CoV-2. About the study A new study published on the Research Square* preprint server describes the surveillance of SARS-CoV-2 within the HSM. HSM is separated into an eastern and western zone, wherein seafood and animals are mainly sold in the western zone, while livestock and meat are sold in the eastern zone. According to the sales record, during late December 2019, animals or animal products were sold in ten animal stalls. Some of the animals that were sold included Sika deer, avian species including chickens, ducks, pheasants, and doves, as well as snakes, badgers, rabbits, bamboo rats, porcupines, hedgehogs, and crocodiles, to name a few. In early January 2020, the markets were closed due to the rapid spread of SARS-CoV-2. During this time, the Chinese Centers for Disease Control and Prevention (China CDC) dispatched an epidemiological team, which collected environmental and animal samples from HSM. Study findings The scientists analyzed a total of 1,380 samples from the environment and animals within the market in early 2020 to detect the presence of SARS-CoV-2 through the use of reverse-transcriptase qualitative polymerase chain reaction (RT-qPCR) assay. Overall, the nucleic acid test (NAT) revealed that 7.9% of samples were SARS-CoV-2 positive. Additionally, researchers estimated the cycle threshold (Ct) values of real-time polymerase chain reaction (PCR) which ranged from 23.9 to 41.7. Among the environmental samples, which were collected from in and around the market, seventy-three samples tested positive for SARS-CoV-2. Three live viruses were also successfully isolated from these samples with Ct values less than 30 in the NAT. High-throughput sequencing on the Miseq platform was used to obtain seven complete SARS-CoV-2 genome sequences. To this end, the viruses isolated from the HSM shared high similarities with human isolate HCoV/Wuhan/IVDC-HB-01. Interestingly, SARS-CoV-2 was not detected in any of the animal samples, which covered around eighteen species sold in the market. The activities of merchants were also analyzed against the NAT results of the environmental samples. The sampling covered 19.8% of the vendors in the market, with a majority of SARS-CoV-2 positive samples linked to vendors from the west zone. The distribution of the positive environmental samples in Huanan Seafood Market. A. As the place of the early cluster of COVID-19 patients, the Huanan Seafood Market is separated into eastern and western zones with the Xinhua Rd. between them. To detect for the presence of SARS-CoV-2 RNA, reverse transcription, quantitative polymerase chain reaction (RT-qPCR) was performed. The locations of the positive samples were marked in the map of the market within orange, while the location of the samples that the live viruses were isolated from were labeled with red. The map also shows locations of stalls where domesticated wildlife products were sold. B. Timeline of environmental and animal samples collected within and around Huanan Seafood Market. Although some vendors sold more than one type of animal product, no significant differences were observed between different vendors, including cold-chain products. This indicates the possibility that SARS-CoV-2 was circulating in the HSM, particularly in the western zone, and ultimately led to the extensive distribution of this virus within the market. Moreover, the spread of SARS-CoV-2 might have occurred through the crowding of buyers and the contaminated environment. To analyze the potential origins of the SARS-CoV-2, RNA-sequencing analysis using SARS-CoV-2 positive environmental samples was conducted. To this end, SARS-CoV-2 nucleic acids isolated from the environmental samples exhibited a significant correlation with those from infected humans. This finding strongly implied that SARS-CoV-2 might have been originated from humans in the HSM, rather than an animal source. Conclusions SARS-CoV-2 RNA was detected in the western zone of HSM, thus confirming the prevalence of this virus in the market. Although live viruses were isolated from the environmental samples, SARS-CoV-2 was not detected in animal samples from the market. Continual surveillance of wild animals using a viromic approach must be conducted to immediately detect the natural and intermediate hosts for SARS-CoV-2, which would prevent further spillover of the virus. *Important notice Research Square publishes preliminary scientific reports that are not peer-reviewed and, therefore, should not be regarded as conclusive, guide clinical practice/health-related behavior, or treated as established information. Monica Melkonian wanted the Johnson & Johnson covid vaccine. It was only one shot and then she would be protected against the virus. So she was thrilled when the vaccination clinic at the Deschutes County Fair & Expo Center on April 7 had her first choice. But on April 13, Melkonian started experiencing headaches, a sharp pain behind her left eye. That same day federal health officials announced a pause in the use of the J&J vaccine after learning that six people had developed a rare blood-clotting disorder following their shots. Despite her ongoing headaches, she and her husband, Stan Thomas, spent the next Saturday working around their home. He hung a ceiling fan in their garage where he works on motorcycles. She spent the day pulling weeds. They walked their lot identifying the projects they wanted to complete that summer. Late into the evening, they soaked in their hot tub, drinking champagne and margaritas, eating strawberry shortcake. They watched the moon rise and the stars come out in the dark Central Oregon sky. "We were literally talking about how amazing our lives have been and how lucky we were," Thomas said. Less than a week later, she was dead. The 52-year-old woman is one of only nine people in the U.S. known to have died from vaccine-induced thrombotic thrombocytopenia, a rare side effect of the J&J vaccine, and a victim of tragic timing. Thomas believes his wife would be alive today had the information about potential side effects been shared even a few days earlier. Instead, he is left to tell her story and protect her legacy. Both were experts in the field of occupational health and safety and directly involved with the pandemic response. Both knew a one-in-a-million risk of the covid vaccines paled in comparison with the risks of the virus itself. And while Thomas remains steadfastly pro-vaccine and bristles at the idea of the anti-vaccine movement capitalizing on his wife's death, he questions whether health authorities have done enough to help people understand their vaccination options. According to data compiled by the Centers for Disease Control and Prevention, women between ages 30 and 49 appear to be at highest risk for the complication that killed Melkonian. Federal health officials now recommend everyone take the Pfizer or Moderna mRNA vaccines instead. They've left the J&J vaccine on the market to avoid undermining confidence in a vaccine that will likely play a crucial role in bringing the global pandemic to an end. It's a decision that Melkonian's death helped illuminate. Her case was presented to the experts who made that recommendation. Now Thomas is fighting to ensure her sacrifice is not forgotten. It's easy to lose sight of the humanity hidden in the statistics of risk. "When it's 8 million doses and two people are going to die from it," he said, "who thinks it's going to be you?" 'This isn't happening!' Melkonian and Thomas had met while working as fatality investigators for the Oregon Occupational Health and Safety department. He had been her mentor in 1996, overseeing her first inspections. After their respective marriages ended, their friendship turned to romance, and they got married in 2007. When covid hit, their jobs centered on the pandemic. Thomas oversaw planning for Oregon's nonmedical response, while Melkonian worked for a software company that helped companies track vaccinations. "From day one, the pandemic was part of this household," Thomas said. "There was no escaping it." They talked frequently about the coming covid vaccines and the differences among them. They recognized that all three were safe and effective, and that the possibility of a bad side effect was minimal. He wanted mRNA vaccines. She wanted to be protected as soon as possible, and the one-dose J&J vaccine seemed it would accomplish that faster. "You definitely hit the jackpot," Thomas recalled telling her after she got her shot. "You should go buy a lottery ticket, because today's your lucky day." It turns out it was a lottery no one wants to win. The chance of a woman her age dying from the shot was literally 1 in 1 million. "A month later, we realized once that needle hit her arm, it was a one-way ticket to here," Thomas said. On that day working around their home, her headaches had mostly gone. They went to bed basking in the warmth of their perfect day. But at 4 a.m. the next day, April 18, Thomas heard Melkonian cry out and hit the floor. She had experienced a seizure and couldn't move her right arm. Thomas suspected a stroke and immediately thought of the vaccine. "No! This isn't happening to me," Melkonian cried out as Thomas spoke with the 911 operator. As they waited for the ambulance, they used those precious minutes to tell each other the kinds of things you say when you don't know what the future will hold. By the time the ambulance arrived, she could no longer speak. "The progression of this was just lightning-fast," Thomas said, "which I am tragically grateful for." At the St. Charles Bend emergency room, Thomas told her to squeeze his hand once for yes and twice for no, as doctors asked her questions. "The last thing that I said to her was that I loved her and asked her to squeeze my hand twice," Thomas said. "She did." They rolled her out of the room to get a CT scan, and when she returned, she couldn't respond in any way. Quick progression Dr. Scott Rewinkel, a neurologist who specializes in clinically complex patients at the hospital, was paged about a seizure patient. He reviewed Melkonian's CT scan. She had experienced several brain bleeds on the left side of her frontal lobe. "And that's an unusual spot for somebody her age and her general health," he said. Just days earlier, Rewinkel and his neurology colleagues at the hospital had discussed guidelines for identifying and treating the very condition that had struck Melkonian. It's a paradoxical condition in which the immune system destroys the platelets needed for clotting, while leading to blood clots in the venous sinuses of the brain. The patient experiences clotting and bleeding at the same time. Thomas thought if he could just get his wife home, she'd be all right. "That was my hope: Get her back, and then therapy and everything, and we can still go have fun and live our lives," Thomas said. "By Sunday night, that hope was gone." The progression of this was just lightning-fast, which I am tragically grateful for." Stan Thomas Despite doing everything called for in the treatment guidelines, doctors were struck by how quickly her condition deteriorated. Every successive CT scan showed the bleeding spreading over more of her brain. There was one last-ditch effort they could try. They could open her skull to allow the brain to swell outside its fixed confines. But her brain had already been so damaged, she likely would have faced significant disabilities. The bleeds had hit areas of the brain associated with language and personality. "Who am I getting back?" Thomas recalled asking the doctor as they weighed the procedure. "What I'm getting back is somebody that's going to be sitting in a wheelchair with drool running down her stomach, not knowing what she's looking at off the deck." Helping others The doctors estimated that without further intervention Melkonian would die by the end of the week. Thomas told them to take any blood or tissue samples, to run any tests that might help doctors understand why the J&J vaccine was causing this side effect or how to reverse it. "The body is a vessel for the soul, and the soul is gone. So get what you can," Thomas said he told them. On the afternoon of April 20, some 200 doctors, nurses, and other staffers lined the hospital hallway as they pushed Melkonian on her final journey. Thomas, along with her son and her brother, walked behind them. Then they went outside the hospital, lowered the American flag, and raised the Donate Life flag beneath it, while inside doctors removed her organs. Her liver and right kidney went to a 40-year-old man, her left kidney to a 50-year-old man, her heart to a 40-year-old man. Three days later, a CDC advisory council reviewed the data on the J&J vaccine and recommended lifting the 10-day pause. The committee members felt taking one of the approved vaccines off the market would hamper vaccination efforts, and that the one-dose vaccine offered important benefits for people who might be difficult to bring back for a second shot, or for places where the super-cold storage required for the mRNA vaccines might not be available. Then the FDA updated its fact sheet on the vaccine, advising women under 50 of the potential side effect. Rewinkel had presented Melkonian's case so it could be included in the analysis. "The big takeaway is that the risk is very, very small," Rewinkel said. "It's simply a game of statistics and numbers." The odds of having a complication from a covid vaccine, he said, are incredibly small compared with the risks of the virus. In December, the committee reviewed updated data on the J&J vaccine through August 2021. After more than 14 million doses were administered, 54 total cases of the clotting disorder had resulted in eight deaths. That's 0.00006%. The U.S. case fatality rate for covid is 1.2%. A ninth clotting death occurred but doesn't change the death rate measurably. The committee considered whether the now ample supply of the mRNA vaccines meant the J&J vaccine could be pulled, but decided to leave it in place. Instead, the panel recommended the mRNA vaccines over the J&J shot. The J&J shots are still being given and more than 18 million shots have been administered in the U.S. 'A hero of the times' Thomas inquired about a Federal Emergency Management Agency program to help with burial costs for people who died of covid but was told his wife was not eligible because her death certificate didn't list covid as the cause of death. To Thomas, such rules seem to ignore her death as part of the full toll of pandemic fatalities. "She's a hero of the times that we're living in, in this pandemic, in this world which we are faced with today," he said, "for the legacy of the work she did, and doing her societal obligations, and giving her life for it." Thomas is also upset that the risks of the various vaccines weren't communicated earlier and more clearly. "They're not taking time to explain the acceptable risk," he said. "They're not taking time to communicate what shots are good for what age groups. Maybe officials didn't know of the risk before Melkonian got her shot rare side effects often emerge only when a vaccine is administered to large numbers of people. In the clinical trials of the J&J vaccine, one person developed that side effect and survived. Thomas would have preferred a more nuanced public health message, explaining the differences among the vaccines and how women ages 30 to 49 were at higher risk of complications from the J&J vaccine. Although Melkonian was a few years older than that range, her husband feels she would have heeded such a warning. "It was an absolute failure to some degree," he said. "The fear of scaring everybody away from the vaccines overran the ability to educate the public correctly." A couple of weeks after Melkonian died, Thomas still hadn't been vaccinated. He called up a friend who was helping to run the county's vaccine clinic. He knew her from years of working with Deschutes County Search and Rescue. "I can't go get a shot where Monica got her shot," he said he told her. "I can't go in there." She arranged for him to get his first vaccination shot at the search-and-rescue team's building. Several friends showed up to support him. One made breakfast. They did their best to keep his mind off the circumstances, but his mind was awash with conflicting thoughts. "My wife, my best friend, my soulmate is dead because of what's happening to me right now," he recalled thinking. "I know people are going to look at me and go, 'You're an idiot!'" He figured people would second-guess his decision to get vaccinated after her death. "I've got friends that refuse to get a shot and they're losing their job because they don't want to get a shot. And they're like, 'But look what happened to Monica,'" he said. "They use her as justification." However, he said, he still believes in covid vaccines and that his choice was made before his wife died. He is now among the more than 200 million Americans vaccinated against covid. Photo taken on March 1, 2022 shows armed personnel in Donetsk. (Photo by Victor/Xinhua) MOSCOW/KIEV, March 2 (Xinhua) -- Fighting continues as Russia's "special military operation" in Ukraine has entered the seventh day, while a new round of peace talks is reportedly to take place. A massive Russian airstrike hit the center of Ukraine's second-largest city of Kharkiv on Tuesday, as rockets struck residential areas and buildings of the regional state administration, according to Ukraine's State Service for Emergencies. The agency on Tuesday reported Russia's attack on the Kiev TV tower which had killed five people and injured five others. Russia would strike the information warfare and psychological operation center of the Ukrainian Armed Forces as well as technological facilities of the Ukrainian Security Service in Kiev with high-precision weapons, Russian Defense Ministry spokesman Igor Konashenkov told a regular briefing on Tuesday. Russian Defense Minister Sergei Shoigu vowed to continue the military operation in Ukraine until achieving the main goal of defending Russia from Western threats. "The main thing for us is to protect Russia from the military threat posed by Western countries that are trying to use the Ukrainian people in the fight against our country," Shoigu said during a video conference with senior defense officials. Since the military operation started on Thursday, the Russian Armed Forces had destroyed 1,325 Ukrainian military infrastructure objects, Konashenkov said. In addition, 395 tanks and other armored combat vehicles, 59 multiple launch rocket systems, 179 field artillery guns and mortars as well as 286 units of special military vehicles had been destroyed, he added. The access of Ukrainian troops to the Sea of Azov had been completely blocked, Konashenkov told reporters. In the meantime, Ukrainian Foreign Minister Dmytro Kuleba called on foreign ministers of Poland, France and Germany to increase sanctions pressure on Russia and provide more weapons and financial support to Ukraine. Amid the deadly conflict, Russian and Ukrainian delegations held on Monday their first round of negotiations in search of a solution to the crisis in Belarus' Gomel region, with no clear breakthrough. The second round of the peace talks could reportedly take place on Wednesday, TASS news agency reported citing sources. According to BelTA news agency, Belarusian President Alexander Lukashenko did not rule out the possibility of a meeting between Russian and Ukrainian presidents if progress was to made in the negotiations. But Kremlin spokesman Dmitry Peskov said that it was too early to talk about such a meeting. Photo taken on March 1, 2022 shows armed personnel in Donetsk. (Photo by Victor/Xinhua) People are seen in a bomb shelter in Donetsk, March 1, 2022. (Photo by Victor/Xinhua) A woman is seen in a bomb shelter in Donetsk, March 1, 2022. (Photo by Victor/Xinhua) The UK bilaterally donated 1 million doses of the Oxford-AstraZeneca vaccine to Bangladesh. The vaccine consignment arrived in Bangladesh on 23 February 2022. This bilateral donation from the UK will reinforce Bangladesh's fight against the coronavirus pandemic and the country's economic recovery. Prior to this, the UK donated over 4 million doses of the AstraZeneca vaccine to Bangladesh in December 2021 through COVAX facilities. While welcoming the second consignment of vaccines donation from the UK, the British High Commissioner HE Robert Chatterton Dickson said: "We welcome the arrival of 1 million doses of the AstraZeneca vaccine from the UK to Bangladesh. This bilateral donation adds to the 4 million doses that the UK donated through COVAX last year. "This support from the UK takes us one step ahead to defeat the pandemic and further strengthens our commitment to stand with the people of Bangladesh to recover faster and build a healthier and prosperous future." Complementing the vaccine donations, the UK's Foreign Commonwealth and Development Office (FCDO), through its delivery partners, created an enabling environment for the Government of Bangladesh to accelerate and expand the vaccination program as well as reduce the transmission of the infection especially among the low-income people. This includes support for on-line vaccine registration for the disadvantaged, raising awareness, additional healthcare provider and technician support, training of health workers including vaccinators, and transporting vaccines to the districts as well as to the schools across the country. Since the pandemic started, the UK government has reprioritized more than 55.9 million to fund Bangladesh's National Preparedness and Response Plan to tackle COVID-19 including support for Rohingya refugees and the host communities. The UK has been at the forefront of the global response to COVID-19. Last year at the G7, the UK committed to donate 100 million doses by June 2022. 80% of those UK doses will be distributed through the COVAX facility. Earlier, the UK kick-started efforts to establish COVAX facility in 2020, providing a total of 548 million to fund vaccines for lower-income countries. More information The zine "MoodRing" features the artwork and writing from local teens. The launch party will be held at the Carnegie Center this Thursday from 6-7:30 p.m. Carl E. Kramer is a retired adjunct assistant professor of history at Indiana University Southeast. He earned a Ph.D. in American history at the University of Toledo, where he also minored in Russian history. (Newser) Update: Spain's former king is off the hook in an alleged fraud case. Prosecutors say investigations of 84-year-old Juan Carlos, who moved to the United Arab Emirates amid a financial scandal in 2020, have been dropped due to a lack of evidence, Reuters reports. They say they couldn't prove a link between a $72 million payment to the former king and the awarding of a lucrative Saudi Arabian rail contract. Juan Carlos has paid more than $5 mllion in back taxes in connection with the case. Swiss investigators have already dropped a similar case. In a statement, the Spanish prosecutor's office said the former monarch's suspicious financial dealings were outside the statute of limitationsand as monarch at the time, he would have had immunity. Our original story from Aug. 3, 2020 follows: Spains former monarch, King Juan Carlos I, says he is leaving Spain to live in another country amid a financial scandal. The royal familys website on Monday published a letter from Juan Carlos to his son, King Felipe VI, saying, I am informing you of my considered decision to move, during this period, out of Spain. Juan Carlos, in the letter, says he made the decision against the backdrop of public repercussions of certain episodes of my past private life. He says he wants to ensure he doesnt make his sons role difficult, adding that my legacy and my own dignity, demand that it should be so. He did not say which country he will be moving to, reports the AP. Since Spains Supreme Court opened its probe earlier this year, Spanish media outlets have published damaging testimony from a separate Swiss investigation into an alleged $76 million gift to Juan Carlos by Saudi Arabias late King Abdullah. Juan Carlos allegedly then transferred a large amount to a former companion in what investigators say might have been an attempt to hide the money from authorities. The 82-year-old former king is credited with helping Spain peacefully restore democracy after the death of dictator Francisco Franco in 1975. But marred by scandals in the later years of his reign, Juan Carlos in 2014 abdicated in favor of his son Felipe VI, losing the inviolability protection Spains Constitution grants to the head of state. Juan Carlos lawyer said that even though the king will be outside Spain he intends to be available to cooperate with the investigation. (Read more King Juan Carlos I stories.) (Newser) Tyrannosaurus rex is the most intensively studied dinosaur in the world. Yet generations of paleontologists have failed to notice that T. rex is not a unique species but actually three, according to new research published Tuesday in Evolutionary Biology. "This paper is likely to rock the paleo community, and the public that is so used to good old T. rex," its lead author, independent paleontologist Gregory Paul, tells the New York Times. In analyzing 38 T. rex specimens, he and two colleagues found 26 could be grouped into one of three types: an early, robust form with two sets of incisors in its lower jaws and two later formsone robust and one gracileeach with one set of incisors. In their eyes, the variation in these forms, including in the femur, indicate three unique species. The early, robust form is proposed as a new species, Tyrannosaurus imperator or "tyrant lizard emperor," to include the famous Sue kept at Chicago's Field Museum. Over 1 million to 2 million years, researchers say this species split into Tyrannosaurus rex or "tyrant lizard king"currently the only species in the Tyrannosaurus genusand the other newly proposed species, the more slender Tyrannosaurus regina or "tyrant lizard queen," to include "the Nation's T. rex" skeleton kept at the Smithsonian National Museum of Natural History. The problem is that many other paleontologists disagree. Dr. Thomas Carr of Carthage College, who performed an analysis of all known T. rex specimens in 2020, says his data doesn't support the findings. Others say minor differences in body proportion across the three proposed species only suggest change over time. Philip Currie of the University of Alberta is among them, which explains why he chose to remove his name from the study before publication, per the Times. Paul counters that "the variation in Tyrannosaurus is beyond the norms for dinosaurs," equal to that between a lion and a tiger, per Reuters. He adds the pushback is no surprise given T. rex's status. "If it had been a paper about putting another dinosaur into different species, nobody would really care," he tells the Times. (Read more Tyrannosaurus rex stories.) This article first appeared in The Conversation The opinions expressed in this op-ed are those of the author and do not necessarily reflect the views of Military.com. If you would like to submit your own commentary, please send your article to opinions@military.com for consideration. In the weeks before Russia invaded Ukraine, President Joe Biden and U.S. national security officials provided the public with a running stream of intelligence of the sort that is usually classified. The administration announced that Russian President Vladimir Putin was assembling troops along the eastern border of Ukraine and provided pictures of that buildup. Russia had a "kill list," with plans to detain or kill Ukraine President Volodymyr Zelenskyy and other prominent Ukrainians. Biden said that Russia was going to invade Ukraine "in the coming days." The Conversation U.S. asked international relations scholar Stephen Long at the University of Richmond to analyze why the U.S. government made the choice to do this and what effect it had. Are these disclosures of very specific material by the government unusual? A fascinating set of events played out in the runup to this war. There was the national security adviser of the United States, Jake Sullivan, going out in front of the cameras and revealing intelligence that must have come from the highest sources that the U.S. has, not just inside of Ukraine, but inside of Russia, and making this information public in a way that is unprecedented. That really made this war one of the most clearly and completely anticipated conflicts that the world has seen in this century. It's unprecedented for good old-fashioned reasons of the intelligence trade: You don't want to endanger or reveal your secret sources of information. If you have good sources, especially within a highly repressive regime, those sources are pure gold to you. The last thing that you want to do is reveal information that could make it easier for that regime to identify them. Even just a few pieces of leaked intelligence could be sufficient, because they could allow the government to identify meetings in which a certain person was present, or a certain set of people was present, and they can then narrow down their list of suspects. What information did the government give the public? U.S. officials gave very detailed descriptions of the building up of Russian troops. They described the types of weapons that were being assembled in advance of an invasion. I recall one instance in which Putin had claimed that this buildup was all in support of the planned military exercises with Belarus. That's when the U.S. revealed it had evidence of blood supplies being moved to the temporary encampments of Russian troops, and asked why they would need supplies of blood on the premises to back up military exercises. There was a pattern to the pronouncements: Almost right away after Putin said something about his intentions, the U.S. revealed something that showed he was lying. Nina Jankowicz, an information warfare scholar, has referred to this technique as "prebunking." For example, the U.S. made public information about Russia's plans to frame the Ukrainians for launching attacks across the Russian border what are known as "false flag" events. The U.S. revealed the Russians were planning to do this before the Russians actually did it and that, I think, prevented Russia from using such a trumped-up attack as a pretext to invade Ukraine. Was this strategy something new for US intelligence? It was extremely clever and very new. And it was risky in the sense that, of course, Putin could have changed direction at the last minute and withdrawn all of these troops. So there was the possibility that the revealed information would appear to be incorrect after the fact. But the greatest risk, of course, was to the sources. In this photo provided by the Ukrainian Presidential Press Office, Ukrainian President Volodymyr Zelenskyy delivers his speech addressing the nation in Kyiv, Ukraine, Friday, Feb. 25, 2022. Russian troops bore down on Ukraine's capital Friday, with explosions and gunfire sounding in the city as the invasion of a democratic country fueled fears of wider war in Europe and triggered new international efforts including direct sanctions on President Vladimir Putin to make Moscow stop. (Ukrainian Presidential Press Office via AP) Why would they take that risk? Why would an intelligence agency be willing to endanger highly placed sources, perhaps even within the Russian regime or in its military? My intuition, although I don't have any hard facts about it, is simply that first, you had very brave sources, who were genuinely trying to prevent an unnecessary war. In my view, those sources were trying to prevent their young soldiers from being sent across the border to do something unnecessary for Russian security. I would also say that the U.S. intelligence community judged that the importance of preventing this war was greater than any loss of potential avenues for it to receive good intelligence. What do you think accounts for this change in strategy about revealing intelligence? There was a lot of skepticism in European circles about whether Putin would actually follow through on an invasion of Ukraine. I would guess that the change in strategy was, in part, an attempt to bring European countries on board with the U.S. perception of the seriousness of the threat from Russia. Revealing this information made clear what Putin's intentions were and made Putin's lies transparent. It showed that even once he'd been called out for lies, he would continue to act aggressively and that he was dead set on his objectives, no matter how much condemnation he received. I think that that helped change opinions in Europe about the seriousness of the threat Putin posed. The results were more rapid and unified sanctions, including some that came with costs to European states. I don't think that this would have happened as easily and as quickly had it not been for that preparatory work to show exactly how far Putin was willing to go. That was really a smart play, and it definitely paid off politically, even though the invasion went forward. Russian President Vladimir Putin attends a cabinet meeting via video conference at the Novo-Ogaryovo residence outside Moscow, Russia, Dec. 24, 2021. (Alexei Nikolsky, Sputnik, Kremlin Pool Photo via AP) The release of U.S. intelligence helped show that Russian President Vladimir Putin was lying about his intentions toward Ukraine. Russian Presidential Press Service via AP There was also a lot of analysis by the public gleaned from social media during the lead-up to the war. How did that affect the perception of this intelligence? What is called open-source intelligence, or OSINT, has helped bolster the credibility of the claims made by American officials. And a lot of the open-source information is coming from local sources in Ukraine and even local sources in Russia itself. There's some cross-verification there between what the U.S. government is telling the world and what the world can see easily on Twitter and other social media, from people who are on the ground in the place where the conflict is happening. Of course, there's a risk of misinformation, and we've seen instances where old footage has been posted as if it's new. Will there be more of this intelligence sharing with the public? It's a new tool that I think we can expect to see used more frequently in the future, in instances in which the government can release specific, detailed information that demonstrates that an aggressive leader like Putin is lying. Not just broad claims that we have intelligence that shows that he's not telling the truth, but sharing the actual intelligence with people in a way that makes it clear that it's not just U.S. officials' judgment or opinion. Instead, these disclosures can demonstrate that the facts simply do not align with what the person is saying and they are lying. Stephen Long is Associate Professor of Political Science and Global Studies, University of Richmond This article is republished from The Conversation under a Creative Commons license. Read the original article. (Newser) A New York City grandmother has died three months after she was repeatedly hit in the head with a large rock. GuiYing Ma, 62, was attacked the day after Thanksgiving while she was sweeping the sidewalk outside a building in the Jackson Heights neighborhood in Queens, the New York Daily News reports. Elisaul Perez, 33, was arrested the day after the attack and charged with offenses including assault with intent to disfigure and dismember. "We are reviewing the latest development in this tragedy and will add or upgrade any appropriate charges supported by the evidence," a spokesperson for the Queens DA said after Ma's death. The right side of Ma's brain was damaged in the attack, and she spent 10 weeks in a coma, but she woke up in early February and seemed to be on the mend, CNN reports. Yihung Hsieh, who started a GoFundMe campaign for Ma, says she wasn't able to speak, but she could wave at husband Zanxin Gao. "Just one day earlier he was staying with her and she was waving her hand. Everything looked like it was getting better," he says. "Then the next day we got a phone call from the hospital and the doctor said she had no heartbeat anymore. Mawho arrived in New York from China four years agois the fourth person in the city to die from violence directed at the Asian American and Pacific Islander community in the last two months, the Guardian reports. The NYPD said in November that the attack on Ma was being investigated by its Hate Crimes Task Force, though no hate crime charges have been filed against Perez, who has been in custody since his arrest. According to the GoFundMe campaign, the suspect had "multiple prior arrests, a long criminal record, and was known to be a menace to the community." (Read more New York City stories.) (Newser) In a development some commentators see as life imitating Curb Your Enthusiasm, HBO has abruptly pulled a documentary on Larry Davidat his request. The two-part documentary The Larry David was supposed to premiere at 9pm Tuesday, but the Curb creator and Seinfeld co-creator apparently wasn't happy with the finished product, Deadline reports. The documentary is "being postponed," HBO tweeted Monday night. "Instead, Larry has decided he wants to do it in front of an audience. Stay tuned for more info." The documentary featured a wide-ranging conversation between David and another Larry, longtime collaborator Larry Charles, per the Hollywood Reporter. It was directed by Charles and produced by Charles and Mark Herzog. HBO described it as David getting candid about his personal and professional highs and lows, "from his humble beginnings as an unfunny Brooklyn kid to becoming Americas favorite misanthrope." "I never thought of myself as funny," he told Charles in a trailer that was taken offline Tuesday. "Anything I was associated with that could be successful was a shock." It's not clear when the interview with Charles in front of an audience will happenor if the shelved documentary will ever be released. (Read more Larry David stories.) (Newser) As Russia stepped up its shelling of Ukrainian cities on the sixth day of its invasion, Ukrainian President Volodymyr Zelensky urged NATO to bring in a no-fly zoneand expressed hope that President Biden would use his State of the Union address to deliver a strong message against the invasion. In an interview with Reuters and CNN from a Kyiv bunker, Zelensky accused Russia of indiscriminately attacking civilians and historic landmarks in what amounted to "state terrorism." He said that for peace talks to make and progress, Russia must first "stop bombing people." Zelensky said Russian bombardment killed numerous people around the country Tuesday, including at least 17 children. More: "Frank, undisguised terror." Zelensky slammed the "frank, undisguised terror" of the Russian bombardment and described the shelling of Freedom Square in the city of Kharkiv as a war crime, the AP reports. A strike on an administrative building on the square killed at least six people. The Slovenian Foreign Ministry said its consulate was also destroyed in the strike. Kyiv residents urged to be "extremely cautious." Kyiv Mayor Vitali Klitschko told the capital's residents to stay off the streets and be "extremely cautious" Tuesday night, the BBC reports. "It is better to spend this night in a shelter," he said. A missile strike in Kyiv Tuesday killed five people. A TV tower and a Holocaust memorial were damaged. Kyiv Mayor Vitali Klitschko told the capital's residents to stay off the streets and be "extremely cautious" Tuesday night, the BBC reports. "It is better to spend this night in a shelter," he said. A missile strike in Kyiv Tuesday killed five people. A TV tower and a Holocaust memorial were damaged. US says coalition will "devastate" Russian economy . White House chief of staff Ron Klain says the US has formed a coalition to "devastate" Russia's economy. "The concern is that he continues to target civilians in Ukraine," Klain said of Putin in an interview with NBC ahead of Biden's State of the Union address. "I care less about what hour of the day or night this happens and more about the fact that what Vladimir Putin is doing in Ukraine is wrong." . White House chief of staff Ron Klain says the US has formed a coalition to "devastate" Russia's economy. "The concern is that he continues to target civilians in Ukraine," Klain said of Putin in an interview with NBC ahead of Biden's State of the Union address. "I care less about what hour of the day or night this happens and more about the fact that what Vladimir Putin is doing in Ukraine is wrong." Maternity clinic hit . Yet another Russian strike hit a maternity clinic on the outskirts of Kyiv Tuesday night, the Guardian reports. "A missile hit the maternity clinic. Much damage was done but the building is standing," the clinic's chief said. "Everyone has been evacuated. . Yet another Russian strike hit a maternity clinic on the outskirts of Kyiv Tuesday night, the Guardian reports. "A missile hit the maternity clinic. Much damage was done but the building is standing," the clinic's chief said. "Everyone has been evacuated. Convoy appears stalled on the way to Kyiv. An ominous convoy of Russian tanks and other combat vehicles that stretches for some 40 miles appears to be stalled around 20 miles away from Kyiv, a US defense official said Tuesday. The American official, speaking under condition of anonymity, said the Russians appear to be dealing with food and fuel shortages, the Washington Post reports. (Read more Russia-Ukraine conflict stories.) (Newser) Revelers decked out in traditional purple, green, and gold came out to party on Fat Tuesday in New Orleans first full-dress Mardi Gras since 2020 after the coronavirus pandemic canceled last year's festivities. The general feeling of a city bereft of its signature event last year was summed up by the gold glitter messages on Mike Robertshaws and Nora Ellertons green and purple capes, the AP reports. Hers read, "Welcome back, yall." His said, "We missed you." The fun included back-to-back parades across the city and marches through the French Quarter and beyond, with masks against COVID-19 required only in indoor public spaces. Parade routes were shorter than usual, because there weren't enough police for the standard ones, even with officers working 12-hour shifts as they always do on Mardi Gras and during the end of the Carnival season. But with COVID-19 hospitalizations and case numbers falling worldwide and 92% of the city's adults at least partly vaccinated, parades and other festivities were back on. Costumed partiers gathered before dawn to see the North Side Skull & Bone Gang, dressed as skeletons, wake up the city's Treme neighborhood, reminding everyone of their mortality. From then on it was Let the good times roll, with celebrations in just about every corner of the city, leading up to a ceremonial clearing of Bourbon Street at midnight. Fewer revelers appeared to be wearing politically themed costumes than in past years. Most of those who did so supported Ukraine, which is battling a Russian invasion. The return of Carnival season has been a much-needed boon for business in New Orleans, where the famed restaurants and music venues were restricted or closed for months. Parades were canceled last year because officials realized tightly packed crowds in 2020 had created a superspreader event, making the city an early Southern hot spot for COVID-19. Instead, people decorated their houses to look like floats as a way to keep the Carnival spirit alive. (Read more Mardi Gras stories.) (Newser) The father who fatally shot his three daughters, their chaperone, and himself during a supervised visit at a Sacramento church Monday had been arrested on charges involving violence just days before the tragedy. David Mora, also identified as David Fidel Mora-Rojas, was pulled over for driving drunk Feb. 23 and he ended up assaulting a California Highway Patrol officer, injuring him, a spokesperson for the Merced County Sheriffs Office tells the Sacramento Bee. Mora faced charges of resisting arrest, battery on a police officer, and driving under the influence, but after spending one night in jail, the 39-year-old posted bail and was released. Samia, 13, Samantha, who would have turned 11 Wednesday, and Samarah, 9, were killed days later along with Nathaniel Kong, 59, who was supervising the court-ordered visit. Kong was a family friend, not a social worker or court liaison, KCRA reports. Mora's estranged girlfriend had last year sought a domestic violence restraining order against Mora, and a five-year one was issued May 19. Other than visits supervised by a member of the former couple's church, he was barred from being within 100 yards of her or their daughters, and he was not allowed to possess any firearms. It is not clear how he obtained the AR-15-style assault rifle used in the slayings. The girls' mother had accused him of mental instability as well as violence, and a judge ordered him to take anger management classes if he wanted to apply for unsupervised visits. (Read more Sacramento stories.) (Newser) Rashida Tlaib's controversial progressive response to President Biden's State of the Union address did indeed call out members of her own party: "No one fought harder for President Biden's agenda than progressives," the Democratic congresswoman and member of the so-called "Squad" said, per Fox News. "We rallied together with our supporters, held town halls in our communities, engaged new people, and we even played hardball in Congress. But two forces stood in the way: a Republican party that serves only the rich and the powerful and just enough corporate backed Democratic obstructionists to help them succeed." Yahoo News reports Tlaib, who spoke on behalf of the Working Families Party, was a "particularly divisive choice" to deliver the response, with some centrists saying she's a radical. She called on Biden to take action on criminal justice reform, affordable child care, paid leave, funding for elder care, free community college, affordable housing, lower prescription drug costs, access to abortion, student debt, clean energy, climate change, and more; both she and Biden, for example, spoke about the importance of a $15 minimum wage and the need to crack down on Wall Street. She also praised Biden's COVID-19 vaccination campaign and relief distributed amid the pandemic, NPR reports. She also said progressives stand with Ukraine. "The United States and our allies must work together towards an immediate ceasefire and the diplomatic resolution to help save lives," she said. "We must pursue targeted sanctions that put pressure on Russia's billionaires, not the everyday Russians who have no choice in this conflict and are courageously protesting the war as we speak. We need a humanitarian response to this crisis. We must welcome Ukrainian refugees from all walks of life to the United States." Watch the address at PBS. (Or check out AP's fact check of Biden's speech here.) (Newser) Russia says it's ready for a second round of peace talks with Ukraine on Wednesday. "In the second half of the day, closer to evening, our delegation will be in place to await Ukrainian negotiators," Kremlin spokesman Dmitry Peskov told reporters, per the AP. He said he would not announce the location ahead of time. The two sides last met for fruitless talks near the Belarus-Ukraine border on Sunday. Since then, Ukrainian President Volodymyr Zelensky has said Russia must "stop bombing people" in order for progress to be made. And the bombing continues. More: Heavy fire overnight: Russia appeared to escalate attacks on residential areas Tuesday night, including in the northwestern city of Zhytomyr, per the Washington Post. The latest intelligence assessment from the UK Defense Department, released Wednesday, says Russia has also continued heavy artillery and airstrikes on Kyiv, Kharkiv, Mariupol, and Chernihiv in the last 24 hours. It adds Russian forces are now in the city center of Kherson on the Black Sea. Russian tanks in Kherson: The Post confirmed a strike on an apartment building and "Russian tanks rolling into a residential area" in Kherson. "We are all waiting for a miracle. We need it," Mayor Igor Kolykhayev said in a Facebook message. Ukraine's Defense Ministry has said "the city is not captured totally." The Post confirmed a strike on an apartment building and "Russian tanks rolling into a residential area" in Kherson. "We are all waiting for a miracle. We need it," Mayor Igor Kolykhayev said in a Facebook message. Ukraine's Defense Ministry has said "the city is not captured totally." Holocaust memorial hit: Russia's Defense Ministry claimed Wednesday that the main TV tower in Kyiv had been disabled to prevent "information attacks." The missile strike also damaged the Babi Yar Holocaust Memorial, which marks the spot where Nazis killed more than 33,000 Jews over two days in 1941, per the Post and AP. Footage showed "a gruesome scene of blown-out cars and buildings and several bodies on fire," per the Post. TV stations have since been restored. Russia's Defense Ministry claimed Wednesday that the main TV tower in Kyiv had been disabled to prevent "information attacks." The missile strike also damaged the Babi Yar Holocaust Memorial, which marks the spot where Nazis killed more than 33,000 Jews over two days in 1941, per the Post and AP. Footage showed "a gruesome scene of blown-out cars and buildings and several bodies on fire," per the Post. TV stations have since been restored. 'Orders to erase us': Zelensky, who is Jewish, referred to the damage to the Holocaust memorial in appealing to Jews around the world to protest Russia's invasion. "This is beyond humanity," he said, per the AP. "They have orders to erase our history, our country, and all of us." Jailed Russian opposition leader Alexei Navalny similarly called on Russians around the world to take to the streets daily to protest "the aggressive war against Ukraine unleashed by our obviously insane czar," per Reuters. Change in tactics: Experts say Russia appears to be shifting tactics after dealing with logistical supply chain issues, low morale, and strong resistance. They will "carpet bomb cities, indiscriminately in some cases," British Defense Secretary Ben Wallace said Wednesday, per the Post. "That is the brutality I'm afraid we are witnessing and it's going to get worse." The Pentagon says Russia has transitioned to siege warfare in Kharkiv and Chernihiv, and may also do so in Kyiv. Experts say Russia appears to be shifting tactics after dealing with logistical supply chain issues, low morale, and strong resistance. They will "carpet bomb cities, indiscriminately in some cases," British Defense Secretary Ben Wallace said Wednesday, per the Post. "That is the brutality I'm afraid we are witnessing and it's going to get worse." The Pentagon says Russia has transitioned to siege warfare in Kharkiv and Chernihiv, and may also do so in Kyiv. Other sites hit: Videos show an apparent attack on the five-story regional police and intelligence headquarters in Ukraine's second-largest city of Kharkiv, per the AP. A government official describes "a fierce firefight that repelled Russian 'sabotage and reconnaissance groups' from a military hospital," per the Post. Meanwhile, Russia claims to have seized Ukraine's largest nuclear power plant, the Zaporizhzhia plant in Enerhodar. Deaths: Zelensky claims 6,000 Russian soldiers have died in the invasion though "Russia has not released overall casualty numbers and the figure could not be confirmed," per the AP. The United Nations confirmed 136 civilian deaths as of Tuesday. Thirteen of the dead were children. Zelensky claims 6,000 Russian soldiers have died in the invasion though "Russia has not released overall casualty numbers and the figure could not be confirmed," per the AP. The United Nations confirmed 136 civilian deaths as of Tuesday. Thirteen of the dead were children. More troops incoming: Russian soldiers may soon be getting a boost. Ukraine's Defense Ministry says it has evidence that Belarus is readying to send troops into Ukraine from the northern border. It describes "significant aircraft activity" and "movement of a column of vehicles with food and ammunition" near the border within the last 24 hours, per the AP. (Read more Ukraine stories.) (Newser) On Tuesday, Montana Gov. Greg Gianforte announced the 150th anniversary of Yellowstone National Park, praising its beauty and wonder. It's also the same day the governor showed up in a different headline, this one involving his killing of a mountain lion that wandered outside the protected areas of that same park. NBC News notes it's illegal to hunt in Yellowstone itself, but animals who leave the park's limits for unprotected land in Montana, as well as in neighboring Idaho and Wyoming, are fair gameand Gianforte apparently capitalized on the opportunity in late December by shooting a mountain lion that had been chased up a tree by hounds. The Washington Post reports the 5-year-old mountain lion had had a GPS-enabled collar placed on it by Yellowstone scientists so they could keep tabs on its activity. Gianforte spokeswoman Brooke Stroyke confirmed Gianforte's Dec. 28 kill, noting he had a license to hunt mountain lions and that members of his group who had the hounds possessed a hound training license. "After the lion was treed, the governor confirmed the mountain lion was a [male], harvested it, and put his tag on it," Stroyke noted in an email, adding that the governor also reported the harvesting to Montana's Fish, Wildlife, and Parks. A spokesman for that agency similarly backed Gianforte's legal hunt. "Mountain lion hunting has a strong history in Montana, and mountain lion hunters are some of the elusive predators' strongest advocates and those most engaged in how lions are managed across the state," Greg Lemon said in an email, per NBC. Some locals are complaining that the mountain lion was kept in the tree for a couple of hours until Gianforte arrived to harvest it; Stroyke denies that happened. Conservationists irked at recently loosened hunting laws have also targeted the practices of Gianforte, who last year killed a tagged wolf that had wandered off protected lands before completing a required certification course. Aside from his hunting exploits, Gianforte is perhaps best known on the national stage for body-slamming a reporter during his 2017 run for Congress. (Read more Greg Gianforte stories.) (Newser) The moon is about to get walloped by 3 tons of space junk, a punch that will carve out a crater that could fit several semitractor-trailers. A leftover rocket will smash into the far side of the moon at 5,800mph on Friday, away from telescopes' prying eyes, the AP reports. It may take weeks, even months, to confirm the impact through satellite images. Experts believe it's been tumbling haphazardly through space since China launched it nearly a decade ago. Chinese officials are dubious it's theirs. However, the US Space Command, which tracks lower space junk, confirmed Tuesday that the Chinese upper stage from a 2014 lunar mission never deorbited, as previously indicated in its database. Still, it couldn't confirm the country of origin for the object scientists expect will carve out a hole 33 feet to 66 feet across and send moon dust flying hundreds of miles across the barren, pockmarked surface. "We focus on objects closer to the Earth," a spokesperson said in a statement. But asteroid tracker Bill Gray, a mathematician and physicist who first identified the collision course in January, said he's confident now that it's a Chinese rocket part, based not only on orbital tracking back to its 2014 liftoff, but also on data received from its short-lived ham radio experiment. "I really just don't see any way it could be anything else," he told the AP. The NASA Jet Propulsion Laboratory's Center for Near Earth Object Studies endorses Gray's reassessment. A University of Arizona team also recently identified the Chinese Long March rocket segment from the light reflected off its paint, during telescope observations of the careening cylinder. China has a lunar lander on the moon's far side, but it will be too far away to detect Friday's impact just north of the equator. NASA's Lunar Reconnaissance Orbiter will also be out of range. It's unlikely India's moon-orbiting Chandrayaan-2 will be passing by then, either. To prevent future uncertainty, Gray and others are calling for systematic tracking of space junk, which only a handful of skywatchers appear to monitor in their spare time. (Read more space stories.) (Newser) The Russian Air Force is ranked third in the world by the World Directory of Modern Military Aircraft, whose ranking takes into account factors like modernization, logistical support, and attack capabilities. By the numbers, it's also third, with its current active inventory of about 3,800 aircraft coming in behind only the US Air Force and US Army's fleets, reports Flying Magazine. So ... where is it? It's the question Reuters is asking after a week in which it says Russia has "act[ed] far more delicately with its air power" than expected, "so much so that US officials can't exactly explain what's driving Russia's apparent risk-averse behavior." An unnamed senior US official says it's believed Russia is only using about 75 aircraft currently, and the RUSI think-tank in London on Monday wrote "the roughly 300 modern combat aircraft ... positioned within easy range of the main contact zones in northern, eastern, and southern Ukraine appear to have largely stayed on the ground throughout the first four days of fighting." Just as perplexing is the fact that Ukraine's air force is still airborne. As RUSI wrote, as with "almost every military conflict since 1938," the expectation was that one of Russia's first steps would be to wipe out Ukraine's air force and air defenses, but Ukraine's air force fighter jets are still in play. RUSI shares a number of possible explanations, among them that what Russia wrought on Aleppo and Homs was the kind of indiscriminate bombing that didn't seek to minimize civilian casualties; it's possible the air force could be on deck, waiting for a change in strategy. Foreign Policy flags some perspective from Seth Jones and Philip Wasielewski of the Center for Strategic and International Studies ahead of the invasion, who noted that "the Russian military also has limited experience in coordinating a large number of aircraft that will support the ground attack"what occurred over Syria and Chechnya "do not compare with the number of sorties that could be required in Ukraine across a front possibly several hundred miles wide." (Read more Russia-Ukraine conflict stories.) So the lens has been a dominant thing for six hundred years now, and I think depictions need to get away from that, really. If you do, marvellous things can happen.David Hockney, 2022 Have you ever had the experience of photographing something faraway, and, in the photo it looked far too small compared to its surroundings? This blog post talks about why this phenomena happens, and what we can do about it. Ive always had the idea that linear perspective is the correct way to do perspective. In art courses I learned about two-point and three-point perspective and their development in the Renaissance; in computer graphics courses, I learned about the pinhole camera model, and how consumer cameras typically use lenses to approximate pinhole cameras. These methods of linear perspective are supposed to make it look like youre looking through a window. If you put one eye at exactly the right spot in front of the images, then it would be like looking through a window, at least in terms of the geometry of the scene. And, often in the culture of art and in computer graphics, when artists do something different than strictly follow the rules of linear perspective, they are deviations from standard perspective. Nonlinear perspectiveswhich use different rules for projecting 3D shapes to 2Dare considered an artistic choice, a form of creative expression, whereas linear perspective depicts objective reality. Photography makes persuasive illusions; people talk about photography as recording reality. Making my own pictures led me down a road to understanding how wrong these views are. There is no such thing as correct perspective; all choices of perspective have advantages and disadvantages. It is impossible to accurately portray everything about 3D space in a 2D picture, so artists must make choices, and linear perspective is just one option. I began questioning perspective when comparing my paintings to photographs taken at the same time. This comparison often surprised me. For example, heres a picture that I quickly sketched on a Winter day in Seattle: I thought it was a pretty good drawing of the Aurora Bridge. I also quickly snapped a photo at the same time, to have on hand in case I wanted to keep working on the picture later. Later, when I looked at the photo, the shapes looked really different: Both the foreground building and the far bridge support appeared much larger in my drawing than they were in the photo, while many other objects vanished from the drawing. My first reaction was to criticize the drawing. I didnt do a good job making the bridge long enough, or drawing all the details in the canal. But then I also noticed that the camera tends to make distant objects look too small. While biking with a friend into a town called Esztergom, I marvelled at the enormous church on a hill towering over us. Yet, heres how the photo I took then looked: I later drew a picture from this photograph that better captured my memory of how big the church was: Once I noticed this effect, I see it every time I take a wide shot of a large space: the objects far away look too small in the photo compared to how big they seem in real life. My drawings usually end up making those objects much bigger. You can try this yourself. When youre out in a large open space, looking at, say, a large building off in the distance, take a picture that captures the whole scene: not just the building but the streets near you. Does the building look as big in the photo as it does in real life? Most likely, the building seems like a small part of the photo instead of towering over the surroundings. Of course, you can zoom in, but then you have a picture of just the building and not the rest of the world around it. The amazing thing to me is that, once I have the photo, my instinct is to accept the photo as objective reality. If the photo and my drawing disagree, it must be that the drawing is wrong. Its only when I am physically in the space itself, comparing the photo and the real life experience that I see how much the photo differs from reality. By the way, in the case of photographing the Moon, there are many theories around why the moon looks so small, e.g., refraction in the atmosphere, but, in photographs, I think this another instance of the same effect: in linear perspective, the faraway objects that we focus on look too small among their surroundings, and most of our day-to-day photography is based on linear perspective. Natural Perspective Had other people noticed this phenomenon? I recalled that Rob Pepperell had mentioned something like this when I met him earlier that year. Indeed, his papers described exactly the phenomenon Id experienced. Heres a painting he made in an attempt to portray the experience of viewing the world at a particular location, with one eye fixed in a single direction: The main thing to notice here is that objects at the center of the image are largest. When you look at an object, it seems to dominate ones perception, and it also somehow feels largest. (His image was inspired by a similar drawing by the 19th-century philosopher Ernst Mach.) In contrast, compare to these two photographs that Rob took, one showing a zoom in on his feet, and one a wide-angle shot. The zoomed-in view doesnt include any of the visual context on the sides, whereas the wide-angle view makes his feet much smaller: There seems like something of a paradox here. On one hand, we dont perceive the object at the center of our view to be physically larger than when it is in peripheral vision. Yet, somehow, in a drawing it should be larger than the objects around it. It is tempting to relate this to the fact that we have many more visual receptors in the center of our vision. It is as if we are aware of so much more detail in the center of our vision, and somehow we expect pictures to capture this. In subsequent papers, Rob and his collaborators showed how common this kind of expansion is. For example, heres Turners High Street, Oxford and a photograph from the same spot, taken 200 years later: Turner's High Street, Oxford, 1810, and a photograph of High Street by David Fisher, 2015 Note how much bigger the towers appear in the painting. (The photo has been digitally manipulated to make Carfax Tower visible in the distance). Rob and his colleague Alistair Burleigh developed a technique that simulates this expansion, which they call Natural Perspective. Natural Perspective seems to me like it could better capture what its like to experience a scene, as long as youre looking at the center. They have further developed it as a 3D renderer. But Natural Perspective is not correct perspective. Like all perspective systems, it has advantages and disadvantages. Natural Perspective has its own disadvantages. For example, the picture looks distorted: lines that should be straight are curved, whereas linear perspective preserves straight lines. What if there is no true perspective? But the paper that really transformed my understanding of perspective is On Right and Wrong Drawings, with Jan Koenderink as first author. Like many of Koenderinks papers, I found it baffling when I first tried to read it, and then eye-opening when I came back to it later. This paper points out that artists almost never use correct linear perspective, using examples from Robs previous papers: Initial enthusiasm among fifteenth century Italian artists for the newly published methods was soon tempered by the realization that ad hoc modifications were required to avoid perceptual oddities. They point to the 19th-century greats Turner and Constable, who were both proficient in perspectiveTurner was a Professor of Perspectiveyet neither obeyed linear perspective in their landscapes, and Turner spoke in detail about the problems with linear perspective. Across art history, artists have developed a wide variety of approaches to perspective, from orthographic-like projections in ancient tapestries and hieroglyphics, to more discontinuous perspective in some Chinese scroll paintings, to more freeform perspectives in some modern and contemporary art; Hockney is a vocal proponent of them. Second, they point out that viewers almost always view pictures from the wrong location. A cornerstone of linear perspective is the idea that the viewer must be at the focal center of the image to view it correctly. If you view a linear perspective image from the focal center, it should be like looking through a windowindeed, Leonardo da Vinci wrote that linear perspective images only work from the focal center. Yet, in reality we dont do this. Most of the photos we look at would have to be viewed with ones eye a few inches from the page. People in art galleries walk all around and view paintings from all sorts of angles. Hence, the whole idea of linear perspective falls apart. (Many perception researchers have claimed that viewers mentally correct when viewing a photograph from the wrong position, but I dont find the arguments convincing for reasons I wont go into here.) Finally, Koenderink point out that choosing a projection amounts to choosing from among a number of different goals and constraints. The discuss parametric alternatives, focusing on stereographic projection from Helmholtz; in my opinion, this is the weakest part of the paper, because they were apparently unaware of more advanced work on this topic in computer graphics and computer vision research, which Ill describe at the end of this post. But there are some rules There are so many ways to make pictures, and none of them is the single correct way. Yet, we are still sensitive to how perspective works. Consider, for example, in early 2020, the misleading way that telephoto photography was used to make outdoor spaces look crowded and not socially-distanced.. In fact, an insightful paper by Cooper et al. showed that, absent other cues, we tend to interpret photographs as if we are viewing them from the correct focal length. This makes photos taken from extreme focal lengths look distorted: Heres a sequence of photos of one person, taken by simultaneously increasing the focal length while moving away from the subject: Photos of the same person at different focal lengths, from Cooper et al. Unless you happen to know this person, this looks like four different people. The portrait taken from the correct focal length tends to look most appealing. One study showed that these differences affect how viewers perceive the personality of the subject being photographed: faces photographed from the closer distance appeared more benevolent, whereas those taken from a larger distance appeared more impressive, and intermediate-distance portraits appeared more attractive. There are software algorithms designed specifically to correct selfies for this purpose. These observations mean that the perspective isnt entirely freeform, with no rules. Artists can draw anything, but different drawings will give different impressions, and some drawings can be very misleading. The choice of perspective is a choice between trade-offs: for example, the desire to focus on some objects versus others, versus the goal of maintaining straight lines. Computational photography for nonlinear perspective Inspired by the different kinds of perspective systems in art, computer graphics and vision researchers have developed many kinds of nonlinear perspective. For me, the seminal (though not first) paper in this space is by Rob Carroll et al. This paper makes two important points. First, we neednt find a single parametric projection, as previous authors had, but instead can treat perspective as an image warp. Second, because choosing a perspective projection entails trading off incompatible goals, the warp can be formulated as a nonlinear optimization. Heres an example showing different wide-angle projections of a single room: Different projections of the same scene, from Carroll et al. Notice how distorted the wide-angle linear perspective image is (upper left). The stereographic and Mercator images dont preserve straight lines, whereas Carrolls method has neither of these problems. A more recent method automates this for some cases. Many other wonderful papers have introduced different types of artist-inspired nonlinear perspective, including methods inspired by full-length Renaissance portraits, cubism, de Chirico, David Hockneys joiners, and many others. And many computational methods have no traditional analogue: Cyclograph image by Seitz and Kim What about making distant objects look big enough, like in my Aurora Bridge drawing above? One approach that achieves this is Computational Zoom: Computational Zoom has the disadvantage that it requires you to take several photographs from different positions, though, and the subject has to stand still while you take those photos. In a new paper, led by Sean Liu, in collaboration with Maneesh Agrawala, Steve DiVerdi, and myself, weve developed a method called ZoomShop that works from a single photograph: The bigger picture Photography is not all-seeing in the sense that the eyes see. Our vision, a binocular one, is in a continuous state of flux, while the camera captures and fixes forever a single, isolated, condition of the moment. Besides, we use lenses of various focal lengths to purposely exaggerate actual seeing, and we often overcorrect color for the same reason. In printing, we carry on our willful distortion of fact Edward Weston, 1932 Theories of perception and photography often tend to be all-or-nothing. Either linear perspective and cameras are correct, and cameras dont lie. Or, there is no objective reality and everything is made-up. The reality is clearly far more complex. Our artwork employs all sorts of complex nonlinear structures, and our brains are able to understand and interpret them. Even more confusing, theres some evidence that people with very different cultural backgrounds may vary in perspective perception in some cases. Understanding how and why perspective works is a hard problem (and one that Im working on), as is developing new software tools to make images to easily convey what we want to convey. I continue this theme in my next blog post, on light and dark. Thanks to Rob Pepperell and Sean Liu for comments on this post, and to Taesung Park for pointing on the Oxford High Street example to me. (Newser) Ukraine's defense ministry has told the mothers of captured Russian troops that they can have their sons backif they come to Kyiv to collect them. In a message on the ministry's Facebook page, authorities provided instructions on getting to the border and contacting Ukrainian officials to be taken to the capital, which is being shelled by Russian forces. The ministry urged readers to share the information with "thousands of unfortunate Russian mothers, whose sons were captured in Ukraine," Business Insider reports. It added that Ukrainians, "in contrast to Putin's fascists, do not make war with mothers and their captured sons." The ministry also provided a phone number mothers can call to find out whether their sons have been killed or captured in the conflict. It's not clear how many Russian troops have been captured since the invasion began almost a week ago. Ukraine says around 6,000 Russian invaders have been killed, while Russia's defense ministry said Wednesday that 498 of its troops have died in the conflict and almost 1,600 more have been wounded, Reuters reports. The ministry claimed almost 3,000 Ukrainian troops and what it called "nationalists" have been killed. Ukrainian authorities have shared videos of captured Russian soldiersand graphic photos of dead ones. Svetlana Golub, head of the Soldiers' Mothers Committee NGO, which advocates for Russian soldiers' rights, tells the Guardian that her phone hasn't stopped ringing since Thursday with calls from frantic relatives. "It is crazy, she says. "We are getting hundreds and hundreds of calls. Its just a sea of tears." The families, she says, "are being completely left in the dark. They had no idea that a military special operation was about to happen." Golub and military experts believe the Kremlin is probably concealing the true death toll. A Pentagon official said Tuesday that morale is so low among some Russian units that they have surrendered en masse or sabotaged their own vehicles to avoid fighting, the New York Times reports. (Read more Russia-Ukraine conflict stories.) (Newser) Russian Foreign Minister Sergei Lavrov warned Wednesday that were World War III to begin, it would involve nuclear weapons, reports Reuters. A few days earlier, Vladimir Putin announced he was putting the nation's nuclear deterrent forces on high alert, suggesting he was transitioning the country's nukes to a higher level of readiness. So what are the chances we'd get to the point where Russia actually dips into its nuclear stockpile? It's a question that's been asked and debated in recent weeks. Some coverage: The stockpile itself: The BBC looks at what Russia has: The Federation of American Scientists estimates just shy of 6,000 nuclear warheads, though roughly 1,500 have been retired and earmarked for disposal. The remaining 4,500 aren't all ready for action, though. It's thought about 1,500 are "deployed"i.e., on a sub at sea or at missile and bomber bases. Its stockpile is the biggest among the nine nuclear countries on the planet. The BBC looks at what Russia has: The Federation of American Scientists estimates just shy of 6,000 nuclear warheads, though roughly 1,500 have been retired and earmarked for disposal. The remaining 4,500 aren't all ready for action, though. It's thought about 1,500 are "deployed"i.e., on a sub at sea or at missile and bomber bases. Its stockpile is the biggest among the nine nuclear countries on the planet. Parsing Putin's words: At the Guardian, Kristin Ven Bruusgaard observes that despite what Putin said Sunday, Russia's nuclear arsenal "remains on a certain level of readiness even during peacetime," and the US hasn't detected any signs that warheads are being moved. So if little has changed, why did Putin signal a move was being made? "To influence the Western calculus by repeating that a confrontation with Russia would entail a significant nuclear risk," en Bruusgaard writes. "To Moscow, the situation is now grave enough to gesture at its nuclear options." One scenario: At Slate, Fred Kaplan sees one scenario in which Putin might actually go nuclear: if the US or NATO gets personally involved, say by sending troops or dropping bombs. "If Putin thought he couldn't win that war with conventional arms alone (he's having a hard enough time against just the Ukrainian army), he might very well escalate to nuclear war. That's what nuclear weapons are fornot just to deter a nuclear attack by an adversary but also to deter (and, if necessary, tip the course of) a large-scale conventional war." At Slate, Fred Kaplan sees one scenario in which Putin might actually go nuclear: if the US or NATO gets personally involved, say by sending troops or dropping bombs. "If Putin thought he couldn't win that war with conventional arms alone (he's having a hard enough time against just the Ukrainian army), he might very well escalate to nuclear war. That's what nuclear weapons are fornot just to deter a nuclear attack by an adversary but also to deter (and, if necessary, tip the course of) a large-scale conventional war." The NATO angle: At Foreign Policy, Anchal Vohra writes that Russia's nuclear capabilities are exactly why the US and its European allies have ruled out sending troops. She points out that, "desperate to save his people, Ukrainian President Volodymyr Zelensky has appealed, in vain, for immediate entry to NATO, which would oblige the alliance to come to Ukraine's defense. 'I've asked 27 leaders of Europe if Ukraine will be in NATO. Ive asked them directly. All are afraid and did not respond,'" Zelensky said. At Foreign Policy, Anchal Vohra writes that Russia's nuclear capabilities are exactly why the US and its European allies have ruled out sending troops. She points out that, "desperate to save his people, Ukrainian President Volodymyr Zelensky has appealed, in vain, for immediate entry to NATO, which would oblige the alliance to come to Ukraine's defense. 'I've asked 27 leaders of Europe if Ukraine will be in NATO. Ive asked them directly. All are afraid and did not respond,'" Zelensky said. Nothing imminent: In comments to NPR, Olga Oliker of the International Crisis Group puts it like so: "I think it's very unlikely that Moscow is just going to lob a nuclear weapon at something. Obviously it's been a week when a lot of people's assumptions have been challenged, but I'll cling to this one for a while." (Read more Russia stories.) (Newser) Children are not being exempted from Moscow's harsh crackdown on protests against Russia's invasion of Ukraine. Five children and their mothers were detained Tuesday after they tried to leave flowers outside Ukraine's Moscow embassy while carrying signs reading "No to War," NPR reports. Distressing images and video of the children were posted on Facebook by university researcher Alexandra Arkhipova and shared on Twitter by Dmytro Kuleba, Ukraine's foreign minister. "Putin is at war with children," Kuleba said. "In Ukraine, where his missiles hit kindergartens and orphanages, and also in Russia." The five children and their mothers were taken away in a police van and detained in a holding cell. Footage shows one girl sobbing in a police van, saying, "I don't understand. Why are we sitting here?" Arkhipova identified the children as Liza, 11; Gosha, 11; Matvey, 9; David, 7; and Sofya, 7. She said police allegedly told mothers Yekaterina Zavizion and Olga Alter that they could lose custody of the children, reports the Moscow Times. Arkhipova said police initially threatened to hold the terrified children overnight, but they were released after a few hours and told they could face future court dates and fines. According to official figures, around 7,000 protesters have been arrested in Russia since the invasion began almost a week ago, the Telegraph reports. Moscow Mayor Sergey Sobyanin, a close Putin ally, has said all protesters are "provocateurs" and warned that "all attempts to organize street disorders will be thwarted." (Read more Russia-Ukraine conflict stories.) (Newser) A 37-year-old man awaiting sentencing for his role in the Capitol riot has died by suicideand his family blames "the constant delays in hearings." Sharpsville, Pennsylvania, resident Matt Perna was due to be sentenced April 1, the Pittsburgh Post-Gazette reports. In an obituary, his family said postponements had dragged the case out for more than a year. "Because of this, Matts heart broke and his spirit died, and many people are responsible for the pain he endured," they said, among them "his community (which he loved), his country, and the justice system." Perna was out on bail and the Mercer County Coroner's office confirmed Tuesday that he died by suicide at his residence on Friday. According to the Department of Justice, Perna was arrested on Jan. 19, 2021 and pleaded guilty to all four counts against himincluding a felony count obstruction of an official proceedingas part of a plea agreement on Dec. 17 last year. Prosecutors said Perna spent around 20 minutes inside the Capitol building during the Jan. 6 riot and posted a video on Facebook later that day, NBC reports. "It's not over, trust me," he said. "The purpose of today was to expose Pence as a traitor." A person who knew Perna contacted the FBI after the agency shared his photo and asked for the public's help. In Perna's obituary, his family said he went to Donald Trump's Jan. 6 rally to "peacefully stand up for his beliefs." "Matts family stood by him during this devastating ordeal, and are extremely proud of his passion for life and his pursuit of many dreams," they wrote. "His actions last year are not looked down upon, instead his family is grateful and humbled by his courage." They said Perna was "ushered in by police" and did not "break, touch, or steal" anything inside the building. A sentencing memo had not been filed in his case, but others who have pleaded guilty to the same felony obstruction count faced recommended sentences of more than two years, WUSA9 reports. (Read more Capitol attack stories.) (Newser) Two British men told investors that they brokered loans for wealthy wine collectors using fine wines as collateralbut the collectors didn't exist, and neither did most of the wine, prosecutors in New York say. Stephen Burton and James Wellesley are accused of scamming investors out of almost $100 million in what Food & Wine describes as a "wine-based Ponzi scheme." The two men face federal charges of wire fraud, wire fraud conspiracy, and money laundering conspiracy, reports Reuters. They could face up to 20 years in prison if convicted. Authorities say Wellesley, 57, was arrested in the UK last month, while Burton, 55, is a fugitive. Per the indictment, Burton and Wellesley "posed as" executives of a company called Bordeaux Cellars and put on conferences where they solicited investors beginning in 2017, the AP reports. They allegedly told would-be investors that high-net-worth wine collectors would fork over wine to use as collateral in order to secure loans, and that the investors whose money facilitated those loans would get regular interest payments. The men allegedly claimed they kept custody of the high-end wines for the duration of the loans, "but the 'high-net-worth wine collectors' did not actually exist and Bordeaux Cellars did not maintain custody of the wine," prosecutors say. Instead, the two men allegedly used incoming funds for personal expenses and to pay the interest payments they had promised investors, though the payments to investors ceased in 2019. "Unlike the fine wine they purported to possess, the defendants repeated lies to investors did not age well," Breon Peace, US Attorney for the Eastern District of New York, said in a statement. "As alleged, these defendants duped investors by offering them an intoxicating investment opportunity collateralized by valuable bottles of fine wine that turned out to be too good to be true." (Read more wine stories.) (Newser) Most of the world lined up against Moscow in the United Nations on Wednesday: The UN General Assembly voted to demand that Russia stop its offensive and immediately withdraw all troops from Ukraine, with world powers and tiny island states alike condemning Moscow. The vote was 141 to 5, with 35 abstentions. It came after the 193-member assembly convened its first emergency session since 1997 and just its 11th such session since 1950, reports the Guardian. The only countries to vote against the resolution were Russia, Belarus, Eritrea, North Korea, and Syria. The abstentions included China, Cuba, India, and Iran. Assembly resolutions arent legally binding, but they do have clout in reflecting international opinion, reports the AP. The Guardian shares the language: With the General Assembly affirming it "deplores in the strongest terms the aggression by the Russian Federation against Ukraine" and "demands that the Russian Federation immediately, completely and unconditionally withdraw all of its military forces from the territory of Ukraine within its internationally recognized borders." The vote came as Russia reported its military casualties for the first time since the invasion began last week, saying nearly 500 of its troops had been killed and almost 1,600 wounded. Ukraine insisted Russia's losses were far higher but did not immediately disclose its own casualties. The United Nations says that more than 870,000 people have fled Ukraine and that the number could soon hit 1 million. Ukraines State Emergency Service reported that more than 2,000 civilians have been killed, but that could not immediately be independently verified. (Read more United Nations stories.) TDT | Manama The Daily Tribune www.newsofbahrain.com Staff Reporter The British Club Bahrain today announced that it will not stock a single Russian product on its shelves. This information surfaced after a poster mentioning the club's decision became viral across many social media platforms. The decision has been unanimously made by the executive committee of the club, The British Club Bahrain Manager Daniel Mcrae told The Daily Tribune. The move is against war and violence and those engaging in such acts, Mr Daniel pointed out. It is not against Russia or Russians as we have Russian members at the Club. We also have Ukrainian members as well here, he added. Bahrain residents who are parents of students stranded in Ukraine plead for help Bahrain residents who are parents of students stranded in Ukraine plead for help TDT | Manama The Daily Tribune www.newsofbahrain.com Many Bahraini residents, who are parents of students stranded in Kharkiv province of Ukraine, are having sleepless nights as their children are stuck in a terrifying war zone. They have been urging the Indian government to speed up the evacuation process as the situation is worsening day by day. Speaking to The Daily Tribune, Bahrain resident Stephen Jacob said that his daughter, a medical student in Ukraine, has been sheltered, along with her classmates, in the basement of a college hostel in Kharkiv for over a week now. Mr Stephens daughter Hima Maria Stephen is a first-year student at Kharkiv National Medical University. She was formerly a student of Indian School Bahrain. Naveen Shekharappa Gyanagoudar, the Indian student who was killed in Russian shelling yesterday in Kharkiv, is also a student of Kharkiv National Medical University. The situation is extremely bad. I am worried about my daughters safety, said Mr Stephen, who along with 12 other parents approached the Indian Embassy in the Kingdom pleading for support to bring their children home. I was told that many countries including Israel, Egypt and Pakistan have successfully evacuated their citizens from Kharkiv though I could not verify this claim. The Daily Tribune yesterday reported the ordeal faced by the daughter of another Bahrain resident, who too has been stranded in the Kharkiv province. Ashly Prem, a former student of Asian School and Indian School Bahrain, told The Daily Tribune that she along with her classmates were being sheltered at the subway station in Kharkiv, which is considered safe from attacks. We are in touch with the Indian Mission here through a web link. Evacuating us looks like a hard task for the embassy as this region is located on the eastern side of Ukraine and only has a border with Russia. We are only 40km away from the Russian border. Ashlys father Preman Kandoth, a long-time resident in the Kingdom, is among the Indian parents having their children in Ukraine, who have sent a letter to Indian Prime Minister Narendra Modi, requesting to bring them home. Russian forces have bombarded the regional government building in Kharkiv yesterday, killing at least 10 civilians, officials were quoted by The Guardian newspaper, as a huge armoured column rolling towards the capital, Kyiv, raised fears Russia may resort to pulverising civilian areas. Ukraines foreign minister, Dmytro Kuleba accused the Russian president, Vladimir Putin, of murdering innocent civilians as he tweeted a video of the huge explosion in Kharkivs Freedom Square, calling it a barbaric missile strike resulting from Putins inability to break Ukraine down. The president, Volodymr Zelenskiy, said repeated Russian missile strikes on Kharkiv including the latest on the central administration building, which left at least 35 wounded amounted to state terrorism and a war crime. Evil, armed with rockets, bombs and artillery, must be stopped immediately, destroyed economically, he said. TDT | Manama The Daily Tribune www.newsofbahrain.com The High Appeals Court has acquitted a businessman who was earlier sentenced to two years in prison for embezzlement after participating with two others in purchasing a popular GCC play. The man agreed with two others, including the plaintiff, to purchase the play, settling to pay 50% of the total amount, while the remaining 50% to be equally covered by the other two men, 25% apiece. The trio agreed to share the losses and the profits as per each persons percentage. However, according to the mans lawyer Islam Abdulrahman Ghunaim, he covered the full amount, paying almost BD31,000 to purchase the rights of showcasing the play in Bahrain, and this includes preparing a theatre to accommodate it. The plaintiff claimed that the businessman didnt transfer to them the profits generated from the play after he paid his share as per the signed deal, and this was refuted by the lawyer who underlined that the money sent to his client was mainly to cover the costs. My client completely financed the project via his own money, and the duo involved in the deal didnt live up to the agreement terms. He submitted to the Public Prosecution all the documents that confirmed the same, Al Ghunaim said in his closing argument. An expert who looked into the case also cemented the lawyers claims, affirming that the businessman didnt owe any money to the plaintiff after examining all the documents submitted by both of them. The defendant was earlier sentenced to two years in prison after he was found guilty by the High Criminal Court. TDT | Manama The Daily Tribune www.newsofbahrain.com Enab Beirut Bahrain, a subsidiary of Bin Hindi Foods, announced its second anniversary as a top Lebanese Cuisine chain in Bahrain. Since its opening in March 2020, Enab Beirut Bahrain has been providing an exquisite fine-dining atmosphere building memorable moments for guests to share. It goes without saying, that whether you believe in eat to Live or Live to eat, one thing is for sure, Lebanese Cuisine from Enab Beirut is always a preferred choice. Enab Beirut Bahrain has experienced exceptional growth and development over the past 2 years despite the numerous Market challenges, said Salim Itani, General Manager. Moving forward, our focus will remain on offering quality service, a small taste of Beirut, and a big Lebanese experience to our guests. The Anniversary Ceremony that took place at Enab Beirut Bahrain located in Adliya Block 338, included the CEO and Vice Chairman of Bin Hindi Group, Mr Ahmed Abdulla Bin Hindi, along with Top Management and Media representatives. Bin Hindi Group strive for continuous growth and the aim to always surpass customer expectation. Japan's Defense Ministry says a helicopter believed to belong to Russia has violated Japanese airspace over the northernmost prefecture of Hokkaido. The ministry says a helicopter entered Japanese airspace off Nemuro Peninsula in eastern Hokkaido at around 10:23 a.m. Wednesday, Japan time. Japanese Air Self-Defense Force fighter jets scrambled and radioed a warning. The helicopter reportedly left. It is said to have been in Japanese airspace for less than a minute. The Defense Ministry lodged a protest against the Russian government through diplomatic channels. It is also trying to determine where the helicopter came from, and whether the territorial violation is linked to Russia's invasion of Ukraine. The last time the ministry announced a territorial violation by an aircraft confirmed or presumed to be Russian was in September last year, when a Russian plane entered airspace around Hokkaido's Cape Shiretoko. Japan will accept refugees fleeing the Russian invasion of Ukraine. Japanese Prime Minister Kishida Fumio said, "To show our solidarity with people of Ukraine, we will accept those who fled from Ukraine to a third country." Foreign Minister Hayashi Yoshimasa told Ukraine's ambassador to Japan that Tokyo will work with other G7 members and the wider international community for a ceasefire. Hayashi said, "I was deeply moved to see Ukrainian people fight for their nation's sovereignty and independence. Please accept my heartfelt condolences for the victims of the Russian aggression." Ukrainian Ambassador to Japan Sergiy Korsunsky said, "Ukraine is facing a grave challenge now. On behalf of the people of my country, I express my deep gratitude for Japan's support." An opposition lawmaker said at a Diet meeting the ambassador's request for an appointment with Hayashi went unmet for one month. The lawmaker accused the government of lax crisis management. Hayashi replied he was not aware of the request. Ukraine's ambassador told NHK there are ways to counter Russia's overwhelming military power. Ambassador Korsunsky said, "We're not asking anybody to fight on our side. We're just standing -- it's our war. What we ask for my partners, that's weapons, and political support, and financial resources to survive humanitarian crisis. They help in any possible way, so therefore, we believe we'll survive. With partners, friends, we're not alone." Concern is growing among university officials in Japan that foreign students eager to study in the country may ditch their plans due to the governments slow move to open the borders amid the coronavirus pandemic. On Tuesday, the government raised the daily cap on the number of nontourists allowed into the country, including Japanese nationals returning home, by 1,500 to a total of 5,000 as part of easing its border controls, which have been criticized as closed-door policy measures. However, some 152,000 foreigners have been granted student visas but have yet to be permitted to come to Japan. According to the Immigration Services Agency, 842 foreign students entered the country in December last year. But there were only 12 new arrivals among them. At Waseda University, the number of enrolled foreign students fell to 6,762 in the school year that ended in March 2021 from 8,350 the previous year. The number of foreign students admitted in the 2021 school year ending this month is believed to come to around 300, university officials said. Japan Airlines is changing the way it shares flights with European carriers under what are called codeshare agreements. Many European countries have banned Russian airliners from entering their airspace, and Moscow has countered with a similar ban. That led to the cancellation of some flights from Europe to Japan that fly over Russia. JAL has operated codeshare flights in partnership with European airlines. Since Japanese airlines are not subject to Russia's ban, JAL is selling seats on such flights without mentioning the partner airline's name. The flights connect Tokyo's Haneda Airport with London and Helsinki, as well as Narita Airport with Frankfurt. JAL officials say the aim is to make sure passengers can take their flights, and the measure will continue until March 26. Police in Tokyo have arrested a 33-year-old woman and her 29-year-old husband on suspicion of violating the Anti-Prostitution Law by forcing a 26-year-old female acquaintance into prostitution and using the earnings to pay for their rent and luxury brand items. According to police, the woman and her 3-year-old child lived with the couple at their apartment in Itabashi Ward, Fuji TV reported. Police said Yukino Takehara, who is unemployed, and her husband Yuki, a waterproofing worker, have denied they forced their acquaintance, a single mother who was having trouble making ends meet, into prostitution. Police allege the couple forced the victim into prostitution about 600 times, taking in around 8.6 million yen. Moreover, the suspects handed the woman less than 1,000 yen for each session. Police said Yukino became acquainted with the woman on a video-sharing website in February 2018. After learning that the woman was a struggling single mother, Yukino invited her to live with she and her husband in Tokyo. In November 2018, the woman and her child moved into the couples home. From around July 2019, the couple started to demand that she pay rent and told her, If you dont have money, then work in a brothel. ...continue reading Uber Technologies will expand its network of "dark stores" in Japan as part of its effort to boost its rapid grocery delivery business, stepping further into a new frontier of online shopping that is quickly growing into a battleground. Uber's meal delivery service, Uber Eats, opened two dark stores -- distribution centers for online shopping -- in Tokyo's Nihonbashi district and Setagaya Ward since December, making a move toward becoming a retailer itself. Dubbed Uber Eats Market, they are dedicated facilities stocked with fresh and frozen foods that are ordered via the Uber Eats app and delivered by registered couriers in as little as 30 minutes. Compared to listing products by supermarkets or convenience stores, running its own operation enables Uber to use data to predict demand and manage inventory efficiently. Yukiko Muto, president of Uber Eats Japan, said in an interview that "gross bookings of those stores are extremely high" and that it plans to increase the number of stores in Tokyo. "We will focus on increasing use cases that serve the needs of all kinds of customers, through both partnerships and our own efforts." Muto said it aims to increase gross bookings for groceries by 3.5 times from 2021. Groceries are becoming an important growth driver for Uber Eats, which launched in Japan in 2016 and has taken a lead in online meal delivery during the COVID-19 pandemic. It has signed up about 150,000 merchant stores and 100,000 couriers, and operates in all 47 prefectures. The company does not disclose order volume or its financials for Japan, but surveys often rank Uber Eats as one of the most popular food delivery brands in the country, along with by local app Demae-can. The government is set to extend the COVID-19 quasi-state of emergency in Tokyo and 14 prefectures as Japan has been facing a slower-than-expected fall in infection numbers due to the highly contagious Omicron variant, officials said Wednesday. The measures, under which restaurants and bars are required to close early and stop or limit the serving of alcohol, will likely remain in place until March 21, the officials said. The government will formally decide on the extension after consulting with a panel of health experts on Friday. The 14 prefectures include Osaka, Aichi, Hokkaido as well as the three areas neighboring Tokyo -- Chiba, Kanagawa and Saitama. Currently, 31 out of the nation's 47 prefectures are under a quasi-emergency, which can be more limited in terms of coverage and restrictions than a full state of emergency. ...continue reading This is a carousel. Use Next and Previous buttons to navigate For nearly eight years, Greg Dembowski has been closely monitoring the first Chick-fil-A to open in Connecticut. Its a very successful business here in Brookfield, said Dembowski, the towns economic development director. But thats an understatement, considering the grand opening in October 2014 saw dozens of people lined up to be part of the First 100, a promotion offering free food for a year to the first 100 customers through the door. They arrived 24 hours ahead of the official opening, prepared to camp out overnight in the parking lot with tents, TVs and video game systems. Autumn Driscoll Chick-fil-A is temporarily moving away from the First 100 promotions as the company navigates COVID-19, but similar scenes played out pre-pandemic at the openings in North Haven and West Hartford in 2016 and 2017. Since opening the Brookfield restaurant, traffic woes have followed Chick-fil-As success around Connecticut. In Brookfield, it was an easy enough solution last year as officials considered how to prevent traffic from getting bogged down at Chick-fil-A during prime ordering hours. They decided to build an extra lane for cars crossing into the restaurants entrance on Federal Road, with the federal government picking up 80 percent of the tab. Christian Abraham / Hearst Connecticut Media But some other towns are determining fans of that $5 chicken sandwich may not be worth the extra cost, as drivers await their turn to pull into drive-thru lanes. In a 2019 study, the quick-service restaurant trade publication QSR tagged Chick-fil-A as having the busiest drive-thru windows of any national chain. Secret shoppers dispatched by a research firm counted at least six cars in the drive-thru lanes at one-third of the Chick-fil-A locations they observed. Of 10 major chains in the study, no other topped the 10 percent mark, with McDonalds closest at 9 percent. Six cars is one thing but in Fairfield, officials feared traffic would back up beyond the ability of drive-thru lanes to accommodate 36 vehicles. In November, they denied the companys proposal to take over the former Joes American Bar & Grill on Post Road. The proprietor is appealing that decision. In reaching their decision, Fairfield officials said they considered Norwalks experience with the first Chick-fil-A in lower Fairfield County. In Norwalk, a franchisee is taking steps to alleviate traffic flow on Connecticut Avenue, which averages nearly 25,000 vehicles daily between two exits of Interstate 95 where the Chick-fil-A is located, according to estimates in a recent real estate listing. The busy stretch of Connecticut Avenue, where the states first Wegmans supermarket is planned nearby, traffic magnets like Costco, Home Depot, Lowes, ShopRite, Stop & Shop and Walmart have existed for years. In 2017, Popeyes Louisiana Kitchen the first in lower Fairfield County joined the neighborhood. Built on a comparatively tight parcel, Popeyes drive-thru traffic clogged Connecticut Avenue at the outset. Less than a half-mile up the road, Chick-fil-A opened around the same time in 2017. In opening the Norwalk restaurant, franchisee Archer Bullock won permission from the citys zoning department to build a double set of drive-thru lanes. But traffic worsened during the COVID-19 pandemic when the restaurant closed its indoor dining area, which can seat 120 people, and drive-thru and mobile ordering became the only options for customers. The dining area has reopened and the company has filed plans to move its drive-thru windows to another section of the building in an effort to permanently resolve the traffic issue. Alex von Kleydorff / Hearst Connecticut Media Besides the food and jobs, Norwalk has benefited on another front from Chick-fil-A a sizable property tax assessment of $4.4 million. The company reached a settlement in state court last year to trim the citys prior assessment by $1 million. While destination restaurants like Chick-fil-A offer these economic benefits for municipalities and can provide spillover business for others nearby, some communities have drawn the line at the prospect of vehicles backed up onto roadways as drivers wait to order food. Four years ago, Stamford turned down a Chick-fil-A proposed for the busy Bulls Head intersection north of downtown. Jacy Lewis /Reporter-Telegram Chick-fil-A did not provide details on whether the company recommends specific property sizes and traffic profiles for restaurant locations, and whether it has made any changes as a result of the Norwalk experience, the denials in Fairfield and Stamford or others elsewhere. In the past, the company has pointed to its Chick-fil-A Drive-Thru Innovation Team that adjusts mock drive-thru lanes at its Atlanta headquarters in the quest for fast, attentive and accurate service. In a statement, the company touted the benefits its restaurants generate in their communities. Chick-fil-A has a dozen Connecticut locations, including the Danbury Fair malls food court and the Mohegan Sun resort. Chick-fil-A is a purpose-driven company that seeks to have a positive impact in our communities by strengthening the local neighborhoods we serve, with a key focus on hunger and education, the Chick-fil-A statement reads. Our [operators] are integrated in their local communities and they decide where, when, to whom and how they give back outside of their restaurants ... including through hosting fundraisers to local schools and providing food donations to local soup kitchens, shelters and nonprofits. As local officials weigh whether the traffic woes that are often associated with Chick-fil-A restaurants are worth it, for fans, the lines and parking lot campsites speak for themselves. But an element of cultural phenomena for better or worse has surrounded the brand, bringing it into the forefront of consumers minds. The founder of Chick-fil-A was a devout Baptist, hence the restaurant famously being closed on Sundays. The company has been criticized for its history of donating to anti-LGBTQ+ organizations. Headlines and boycotts surrounding the controversy go back about a decade. But the consumer fervor for chicken continued, and other fast-food chains sat up and noticed, trying to capture their own share of the market. McDonalds rolled out a new line of crispy chicken options in early 2021, and a few months later, Burger King introduced the hand-breaded ChKing to its menu. Popeyes, which released its own sandwich in the summer of 2019, famously got into a social media spat with Chick-fil-A as it debuted, and then saw its supply vanish in just two weeks because of extraordinary demand. As it returned a few months later, the hype led to long lines, abuse toward Popeyes workers, verbal altercations and even physical violence between customers. Right now, Chick-fil-A seems to be winning the chicken game, as it was named the best-performing chicken chain in the U.S. in December by Merchant Centric, an analytics firm serving the fast-food industry. The fast-food chain was also named the top overall in the U.S. by the American Customer Satisfaction Index in June 2021. This is a carousel. Use Next and Previous buttons to navigate Greenwich resident and Royal biographer Diane Clehane died on Monday at age 61. A social media post by her husband Jim Donovan said she had been battling an illness. Clehane reported on the British royal family for more than 20 years and made frequent appearances on NBC's "Today" show and CNN to offer comment about royal affairs, according to Yahoo News. She also authored five books, including "Diana: The Secrets of Her Style" and "Imagining Diana." A long time resident of the Nutmeg State, Clehane was a committee co-chair of the Junior League of Greenwich and had worked as the media relations director for Adopt a Dog. She told Greenwich Time in 2017 that her fascination with the late princess of Wales began in the 1980s. I just couldnt get enough of her style, Clehane, who was in college at the time, said. Many of us saw our own reflection in Diana." A week before her 1998 book, Diana: The Secrets of Her Style," came out, she made a trip to Althorp, the estate where Diana grew up and is buried, to see some of the dresses pictured in her book. Clehane also wrote on celebrity culture for publications such as Vanity Fair, People Newsweek, Forbes and Variety. She worked for The Fashion Group International and organized the group's "Night of Stars," an annual fashion gala that hosted celebrities such as Kim Kardashian, Jennifer Lopez and Meryl Streep. Dimitrios Kambouris/Getty Images Jimi Celeste/Patrick McMullan via Getty Images "She was our FGI family and we have heartfelt memories of Diane on the red carpet, at our staff retreats, as an office colleague and most touchingly, sharing her family stories, dreams and love for husband, Jim and daughter, Madeline," FGI shared on Facebook. Clehane's viewing and funeral mass will be held this week in Greenwich. "In lieu of flowers we ask that a donation in Diane's name be made to the American Cancer Society or Memorial Sloane Kettering Cancer Center," according to Donovan's post. Marina Riker / AP Heading into a special meeting last week First Selectman Patrick Roy anticipated one-sided votes in favor of passing four items on the agenda, including two town cannabis ordinances. He was right on the mark. The two proposed cannabis ordinances both passed by a vote of 15-3. DANBURY Parishioners gathered on Wednesday for a midday Mass at St. Peter Church to mark the start of the Lenten season. The church on Main Street held several Masses for Ash Wednesday, a Christian holy day of fasting and prayer that takes place 46 days before Easter Sunday. Its held every year on the first day of Lent, which is the holy season of penance leading to Easter. New five-year $5 billion commitment to support women business owners, enabling access to capital commitment to support women business owners, enabling access to capital Reaffirms BMO's commitment to Zero Barriers to Inclusion TORONTO, March 2, 2022 /CNW/ - BMO Financial Group today announced a new $5 billion commitment to support women business owners in Canada to mark International Women's Day 2022. Through the program, BMO will allocate $5 billion in capital over five years to women entrepreneurs, building on the commitment of $2 billion in 2014 and $3 billion in 2018. "Our Purpose, to Boldly Grow the Good in business and life, comes to life through initiatives like this that drive progress towards a thriving and inclusive post-pandemic economy," said Christine Cooper, Head, Canadian Commercial Banking, BMO Financial Group. "We recognize the great impact women business owners have on our communities and we are committed to helping them access the capital they need to grow their businesses, and through them, our economy." "This investment from BMO has the potential to make a tremendous difference for women entrepreneurs!" said Hon. Mary Ng, Minister of International Trade, Export Promotion, Small Business and Economic Development. "By advancing gender equality, we know we can add $150 billion to the Canadian economy and if the world follows suit, $12 trillion to the global economy. This is both the right thing to do, and the smart thing to do for our economy. Our government is committed to supporting women entrepreneurs, and by working together with private sector partners stepping up, we can build a more inclusive future." BMO, as a long-time advocate of gender equity, is committed to removing barriers to women's empowerment, championing the advancement of women, and promoting an inclusive market. BMO's bold Purpose commitments include mobilizing $400 billion for sustainable finance, increasing support for small businesses and women entrepreneurs, and committing to key diversity goals. BMO's Zero Barriers to Inclusion 2025 strategy includes diversity goals for senior leader and executive roles, which includes maintaining leadership in gender equity with at least 40 per cent of senior leader roles filled by employees who identify as women. Additionally, its support extends to women experiencing added barriers that are intersectional; the bank's representation goals and initiatives include supporting People of Colour, Indigenous, Persons with Disabilities and 2SLGBTQ+ employees. The BMO for Women program at the bank was established in 2016 and is focused on gender parity for our clients, supporting the growth of women-owned businesses and empowering women to feel confident about their finances and their financial futures. "Recognizing and fostering extraordinary women is at the heart of BMO for Women," said Moriah Linton, Head, BMO for Women. "We are committed to removing barriers to women's financial progress and on International Women's Day and everyday, this means providing access, tools and resources to support women who are driving change and advancing their communities." BMO's long history of support for gender equity includes recent commitments, pledges and partnerships to carry its Zero Barriers to Inclusion 2025 Strategy forward: Fostering women in leadership BMO is committed to gender equity in the workplace: 41.2 per cent of senior leaders and half of independent board members are women . . BMO supports 119,000 women entrepreneurs across its Canadian footprint. across its Canadian footprint. BMO Alliance for Women, BMO's largest Enterprise Resource Group (ERG)with over 4,000 members, is dedicated to championing the inclusion, connection, development, advancement, and support of women for the betterment of BMO's business, communities and culture. Providing support and resources Across North America, BMO has a long history of programs and partnerships to support women: Launched a $750 million Women in Business Bond solution with proceeds allocated toward supporting Canadian women-owned businesses of all sizes as they recover from the economic impact of COVID-19. with proceeds allocated toward supporting Canadian women-owned businesses of all sizes as they recover from the economic impact of COVID-19. Committed $1.2 million in funding to SheEO a not-for-profit company which offers financial support to businesses led by women-identifying and non-binary people. BMO's financial commitment allowed SheEO to fund all 2021 venture applicant companies working to achieve the United Nations Sustainable Development Goals. a not-for-profit company which offers financial support to businesses led by women-identifying and non-binary people. BMO's financial commitment allowed SheEO to fund all 2021 venture applicant companies working to achieve the United Nations Sustainable Development Goals. BMO pledged $200,000 in grants to recognize 26 women-owned businesses across North America for their contribution to social, environmental and/or economic sustainability outcomes through their organizations' policies, practices or products. for their contribution to social, environmental and/or economic sustainability outcomes through their organizations' policies, practices or products. BMOforWomen.com a dedicated BMO website providing tools and educational resources for women entrepreneurs, including the award-winning[i] podcast series Bold(h)er. a dedicated BMO website providing tools and educational resources for women entrepreneurs, including the award-winning[i] podcast series Bold(h)er. Launched an online training module for Canadian employees in Commercial, Business Banking and Wealth relationship management roles, to assist them in better understanding the nuances in working with women entrepreneurs and women investors. BMO Harris Bank launched a new BMO Women in Business Credit Program, a loan product offered under its Women in Business initiative as part of the BMO EMpower commitment in the U.S. The program offers women-owned businesses expanded access to affordable business credit. Empowering women in the community BMO is committed to closing the fairness gap giving women everywhere the opportunity to grow the good for themselves and their communities: Partnerships with organizations who are accelerating women to leadership positions to achieve gender equity, including Catalyst and The Prosperity Project . and . BMO was the first Canadian bank to sign the UN Women's Empowerment Principles . . In 2020, UN Women selected BMO to feature as a case study on supports that private industry has created for women during the pandemic. to feature as a case study on supports that private industry has created for women during the pandemic. For the past four years BMO has supported Plan International Canada's "Girls Belong Here" initiative inspired by International Day of the Girl. initiative inspired by International Day of the Girl. BMO was the first Canadian bank to launch a fund focused on gender diversity. The BMO Women in Leadership Fund provides investors with exposure to a portfolio of North American companies with both gender-diverse leadership and a commitment to gender diversity. provides investors with exposure to a portfolio of North American companies with both gender-diverse leadership and a commitment to gender diversity. Introduced BMO EMpower , a series of long-term commitments to advance inclusive economic recovery in the United States , with a pledge of $5 billion over five years to address key barriers faced by minority businesses, communities and families. , a series of long-term commitments to advance inclusive economic recovery in , with a pledge of over five years to address key barriers faced by minority businesses, communities and families. WMNFINtech, the latest iteration of the BMO-1871 Innovation Program in the United States , helps to bridge the gender gap and give more women entrepreneurs the opportunity to bring cutting-edge technology and products forward. About BMO for Women BMO is committed to supporting initiatives that empower women within its workforce and the communities the bank serves. BMO has partnered with organizations such as the Women Presidents' Organization, GroYourBiz, SheEO, WBE Canada, and Women Get On Board to provide expertise, leadership, knowledge, and opportunities for women to network and learn. Through the BMO-owned recognition program for women in North America BMO Celebrating Women BMO celebrates the accomplishments of women who have given back to their communities or achieved success in business. Since 2012, BMO Celebrating Women has honoured more than 200 women in communities across Canada and the United States. About BMO Financial Group Serving customers for 200 years and counting, BMO is a highly diversified financial services provider - the 8th largest bank, by assets, in North America. With total assets of $1.02 trillion as of January 31, 2022, and a team of diverse and highly engaged employees, BMO provides a broad range of personal and commercial banking, wealth management and investment banking products and services to more than 12 million customers and conducts business through three operating groups: Personal and Commercial Banking, BMO Wealth Management and BMO Capital Markets. _____________________________________________________ i BMO for Women's Bold(h)er podcast received recognitions from Hermes Creative Awards Platinum and AVA Gold SOURCE BMO Financial Group For further information: Media Contact: Peter Scott, Toronto, [email protected], (416) 867-3996 TORONTO, March 1, 2022 /CNW/ - CoinSmart Financial Inc. (NEO: SMRT) (FSE: IIR) ("CoinSmart" or the "Company") one of Canada's leading crypto asset trading platforms, today announced a donation to Ukraine to aid with the urgent humanitarian crisis. The funds will help provide emergency relief to refugees, and to support logistics on the ground such as food and supplies for those that have been displaced. "As a way of showing our support for the people of Ukraine and assisting with international efforts to allay the enormous suffering they are experiencing, CoinSmart has donated to the official relief effort," said CEO, Justin Hartzman. "Incredibly, $19 million in crypto has been raised so far and we implore our customers and the wider crypto community to come together in supporting the appeal and help in whatever way they can." The official Ukraine crypto wallet addresses accepting donations are: Bitcoin (BTC) - 357a3So9CbsNfBBgFYACGvxxS6tMaDoa1P Ethereum (ETH) and USDT (ERC-20) - 0x165CD37b4C644C2921454429E7F9358d18A45e14 Those wanting to help support humanitarian relief efforts in Ukraine, but would rather send dollars, are encouraged to donate to the Canadian Red Cross Ukraine Humanitarian Crisis Appeal online at www.redcross.ca. The Government of Canada has recently matched $10 million in donations made by individual Canadians for the Appeal. About CoinSmart Financial Inc. CoinSmart is a leading Canadian-headquartered crypto asset trading platform dedicated to providing customers with an intuitive way for buying and selling digital assets, like Bitcoin and Ethereum. CoinSmart is one of the few crypto asset trading platforms in Canada to be registered as a securities dealer and marketplace with the Ontario Securities Commission. CoinSmart is also one of the first Canadian headquartered trading platforms to have an international presence, accepting customers across 40+ countries at a time when the digital asset industry continues to rapidly expand. CoinSmart further builds on its mission to make cryptocurrency accessible by providing educational resources tailored to every level of cryptocurrency knowledge and unparalleled 24/7 omni-channel customer support. Offering instant verification, industry leading cold wallet storage, advanced charting with order book functionality and over-the-counter premium services, CoinSmart ensures every client's needs are met with the highest level of quality and care. For more information please visit https://www.coinsmart.com/ . Connect with CoinSmart: Website | LinkedIn | Twitter | Instagram | Facebook SOURCE CoinSmart For further information: Media Contact: Michele McDermott-Fox or David Lewis, The Top Floor Public Relations, [email protected] or [email protected] Our Entrepreneurship & Access Programs are part of DoorDash's ongoing commitment to help level the playing field for entrepreneurs and empower local businesses by offering access to grants, resources, and training to support business growth. Through this work, we aim to connect small business owners to resources like technical assistance, education, and marketing opportunities for increased visibility and long term business growth. Announced at an International Women's Day panel held today, DoorDash also committed to extending their support for women, in particular new parents, by donating $30,000 in Community Credits to Haven on Queensway's First Care program . "We're constantly inspired by the endless ways women continue to break barriers and create change across not just our industry, but entrepreneurship in general, and beyond," said Shilpa Arora, General Manager, DoorDash Canada. "Our commitment to uplifting women's voices is an ongoing effort and we will continue to leverage our platform and partnerships to support and champion women building their dreams." "Empowering female business owners and entrepreneurs will make our economy stronger," said Hon. Nina Tangri, Associate Minister of Small Business and Red Tape Reduction. "I am thrilled that DoorDash has programs to help small business owners, including female-owned, to succeed in the food industry." "We know that the pandemic has affected everyone, but more so women, and that is why it is important to come together to empower women to enter or reenter the job market. It is also important to know that there are great opportunities available within the restaurant industry including exciting opportunities for women in trades which is why this year's theme is #BreaktheBais," said Hon. Jane McKenna, Associate Minister of Children and Women's Issues. "I am excited to know that there is now a new resource available to help people gain the tools they need to succeed in this exciting industry." "As a female business owner sharing my family's story, it's important to feel represented and supported by our partners," says Kristin Finley, Co-owner of Eva's Original Chimneys, Guerrilla Burger & Happy Taco. "Being part of the DoorDash Entrepreneurship & Access Programs has helped my small business, Eva's Original, access resources and technical assistance that helps us to continuously grow." DoorDash Canada Entrepreneurship & Access Programs offer underrepresented business owners access to: Increased visibility and opportunities for marketing support to help consumers identify and explore these small businesses in their neighbourhoods. to help consumers identify and explore these small businesses in their neighbourhoods. Restaurants Canada Independent Annual Operator membership , which includes: , which includes: Group buying discounts - competitive pricing on everyday products, supplies and services. Operational resources - exclusive membership rates to find efficiencies on services like waste management or solutions for payment processing. Health Insurance options - Restaurants Canada offers private insurance and group health benefit programs with affordable premiums. Events & Training - members-only access to the Restaurants Canada conference, latest research, industry updates, educational webinars, training. Interested entrepreneurs can sign up here . About DoorDash DoorDash is a technology company that connects consumers with their favourite local and national businesses across the United States, Canada, Australia, Japan, and Germany. Founded in 2013, DoorDash enables local businesses to address consumers' expectations of ease and immediacy and thrive in today's convenience economy. By building the last-mile logistics infrastructure for local commerce, DoorDash is bringing communities closer, one doorstep at a time. SOURCE DoorDash The GNBC is composed of 29 members, including a Chairperson, with representatives from each provincial and territorial naming authority and several federal departments and agencies. Individual provinces and territories have jurisdiction to name geographical features such as lakes, rivers and mountains. GNBC board members work collaboratively to research, standardize, approve, record and promote the official geographical names in Canada that describe the landscape and waterways, visible facets of the diverse Canadian heritage. Place names are critical to safety and navigation as well as cultural heritage. More specifically, recognizing Indigenous place names contributes to preserving and revitalizing Indigenous cultures, histories and languages and plays a vital role toward advancing reconciliation. As a member of Swan River First Nation, Rob Houle of Kamloops, British Columbia, has been appointed as the new First Nations Indigenous Advisor to the GNBC for a two-year term ending in March 2024. He will serve as a full voting member of the GNBC and will actively contribute to the Board's discussions and activities by: Participating in working groups to address specific themes and projects related to geographical naming practices; Providing culturally appropriate advice, perspectives and insight on historical, geographical, cultural and linguistic matters to aid the Board in developing enhanced policies; Improving collaboration and ongoing relationships with Indigenous Nations and communities; Assisting in the development of guidelines, principles and procedures regarding Indigenous place names and naming conventions; and Promoting and representing the work of the GNBC. Mr. Houle will be stepping into this new role, replacing Ava Hill, who served as the first person to hold the position of Indigenous Advisor to the GNBC between March 2021 and March 2022. The GNBC welcomes nominations for Inuit and Metis advisors. Quotes "The anniversary of the Geographical Names Board of Canada is an opportunity to celebrate 125 years of recording and preserving the history, language, landscape knowledge and cultural heritage of Canada. It is also a time to look back on what has been accomplished and to reflect on our rich history. I would like to formally congratulate Rob Houle on his appointment as the new Indigenous Advisor, in which capacity he will continue the work in recognizing, preserving and strengthening Indigenous histories, languages and cultures in Canada." The Honourable Jonathan Wilkinson Minister of Natural Resources "I am more than honoured to be joining the Geographical Names Board of Canada. Now is an opportune time for us to redefine who we are as a nation, and recapturing Indigenous names plays a huge role in that. By reconnecting and reminding each other of the true history of this land, we will grow closer not only as a people but also as a country. Only then, will we be fully embracing the journey to Reconciliation and respecting our shared heritage." Rob Houle First Nations Indigenous Advisor to the Geographical Names Board of Canada Quick Facts Established in 1897, the Geographical Names Board of Canada is the national coordinating body responsible for official place names. Natural Resources Canada provides pan-Canadian leadership and coordination for the GNBC through the Canada Centre for Mapping and Earth Observation. Indigenous place names are specifically referred to in Article 13 of the United Nations Declaration on the Rights of Indigenous Peoples. Related Information The Geographical Names Board of Canada Celebrates 125 Years Geographical Names Board of Canada Stories from the Land: Indigenous Place Names in Canada Recognizing Women with Canadian Place Names Canada's Commemorative Map Follow us on Twitter: @NRCan ( http://twitter.com/nrcan ) SOURCE Natural Resources Canada For further information: Natural Resources Canada, Media Relations, 343-292-6100, [email protected]; Ian Cameron, Director of Communications, Office of the Minister of Natural Resources, 613-447-3488, [email protected] TORONTO, March 2, 2022 /CNW/ - Halo Collective Inc. ("Halo" or the "Company") (NEO: HALO) (OTCQB: HCANF) (Germany: A9KN) today announced the appointment of Avtar Dhaliwal, a specialist in the food industry with expertise in supply chain, compliance, and regulatory processes, and Quinn Field-Dyte, a renowned financier with expertise in mergers and acquisitions, to the Company's Board of Directors (the "Board"). Effective March 2, 2022, both will join the Board as independent non-executive directors. The Company also announced the resignation of Peter McRae and Andrew Turman from the Board. Mr. Avtar Dhaliwal is a third-generation farmer that has managed over 1,000 acres of land and overseen the growth and cultivation of a wide variety of cash crops for retail and wholesale across Canada. Recently, Mr. Dhaliwal was instrumental in navigating companies through compliance and regulatory hurdles of listing products and large-scale distribution. His experience will be an asset to Halo from seed to sale, including cultivation, extraction, manufacturing, distribution and quality control of cannabis flower, oils, and concentrates. Mr. Avtar has been appointed as Chair of Halo's Compensation Committee. Mr. Field-Dyte's career spans decades in the public markets. He has led financings of hundreds of millions of dollars, including recently being instrumental in a vegan start-up's successful $25-million financing. Mr. Field-Dyte co-founded Embassy Interactive Inc. Presently, he occupies the position of Chief Financial Officer and director at multiple publicly traded companies. Mr. Field-Dyte has been appointed as Chair of Halo's Audit Committee. Ryan Kunkel, Chairman of Board, said, "We are pleased to welcome Avi and Quinn as new directors to the Halo Board at this important time. We are confident they will provide valuable perspectives as we continue to execute our strategy to be the premier west coast focused cannabis company, to pursue other emerging pathways to wellness, and to optimize our portfolio of key strategic assets such as Triangle Canna, Halo Tek, and Akanda." Halo also announced that Peter McRae and Andrew Turman, who have served on Halo's Board since September 2018 and July 2019, respectively, have stepped down from the Board for personal reasons, including retirement and significant other responsibilities. Mr. Kunkel continued, "On behalf of the entire Board, we thank Peter and Andrew for their valuable perspective and incredible commitment to Halo over the past several years. Their numerous contributions and thoughtful insights have been invaluable, and we are grateful for everything they have done for Halo." About Halo Collective Inc. Halo is a leading, vertically integrated cannabis company focused on the West Coast of the United States and operates other emerging businesses in CBD and non-psychotropic mushroom functional beverages. In its cannabis operations, the Company cultivates, extracts, manufactures, and distributes quality cannabis flower, oils, and concentrates and has sold hundreds of millions of grams of cannabis in the form of flower, pre-rolls, vape carts, edibles, and concentrates since inception. The Company sells a portfolio of branded cannabis products including its proprietary Hush, Winberry Farms, Williams Wonder Farms, and Budega brands, and under license agreements with Papa's Herb, DNA Genetics, Terphogz, and FlowerShop*. In Oregon, Halo has a combined 14 acres of owned and contracted outdoor and greenhouse cultivation. The Company also operates Food Concepts LLC, a master tenant of a 55,000 square foot indoor cannabis cultivation, processing, and wholesaling facility in Portland. In California, Halo maintains licenses for extraction, manufacturing, and distribution. The Company has partnered with Green Matter to purchase the Bar X Farm in Lake County and plans to develop up to 63 acres of cultivation, comprising one of the largest licensed single-site grows in California. Halo is opening three retail dispensaries in Los Angeles under the Budega brand in North Hollywood, Hollywood, and Westwood. Halo is also expanding into other consumer health and wellness categories expected to experience rapid growth in consumer demand, including functional supplements such as nootropic nutraceuticals. The Company has recently agreed to acquire H2C Beverages, a company focused on cannabinoids and non-psychotropic mushroom functional beverages, and entered into a distribution and manufacturing agreement with Elegance Brands Inc., to propel the national distribution of beverages, capsules, and topical supplements under H2C and Halo's functional mushroom brand, Hushrooms. Halo has acquired a range of software development assets, including CannPOS, Cannalift, CannaFeels, and a discrete sublingual dosing technology, Accudab. The Company intends to reorganize these entities (including their intellectual property and patent applications) into a subsidiary called Halo Tek Inc., and to complete a distribution of the shares of Halo Tek Inc. to shareholders on record, at date to be determined. Outside of North America, Halo is the largest shareholder of Akanda Corp. ("Akanda"), an international medical cannabis company whose mission is to be the world's leading platform for medical cannabis and wellness products. Led by an experienced global leadership team and guided by the highest ethical standards, Akanda is building a unique seed-to-patient model that leverages the competitive advantages of its cultivation campus in the Kingdom of Lesotho and a distribution marketplace and other innovative solutions designed to maximize patient access and choice. Halo also operates three Kushbar retail cannabis stores located in Alberta, Canada, leveraging its Oregon and California brands. For further information regarding Halo, see Halo's disclosure documents on SEDAR at www.sedar.com. Connect with Halo Collective: Email | Website | LinkedIn | Twitter | Instagram Cautionary Note Regarding Forward-Looking Information and Statements This press release contains certain "forward-looking information" within the meaning of applicable Canadian securities legislation and may also contain statements that may constitute "forward-looking statements" within the meaning of the safe harbor provisions of the United States Private Securities Litigation Reform Act of 1995. Such forward-looking information and forward-looking statements are not representative of historical facts or information or current condition, but instead represent only Halo's beliefs regarding future events, plans or objectives, many of which, by their nature, are inherently uncertain and outside of Halo's control. Generally, such forward-looking information or forward-looking statements can be identified by the use of forward-looking terminology such as "plans", "expects" or "does not expect", "is expected", "budget", "scheduled", "estimates", "forecasts", "intends", "anticipates" or "does not anticipate", or "believes", or variations of such words and phrases or may contain statements that certain actions, events or results "may", "could", "would", "might" or "will be taken", "will continue", "will occur" or "will be achieved". Forward-looking information may relate to anticipated events or results including, but not limited to the opening of the Company's Budega-branded retail dispensaries in California, management's plans regarding its portfolio of cannabis businesses, the size of Halo's planned cultivation facility in Northern California, Akanda's proposed operations and the proposed spin-off of Halo Tek Inc. By identifying such information and statements in this manner, Halo is alerting the reader that such information and statements are subject to known and unknown risks, uncertainties and other factors that may cause the actual results to be materially different from those expressed or implied by such information and statements. In addition, in connection with the forward-looking information and forward-looking statements contained in this press release, Halo has made certain assumptions. Although Halo believes that the assumptions and factors used in preparing, and the expectations contained in, the forward-looking information and statements are reasonable, undue reliance should not be placed on such information and statements, and no assurance or guarantee can be given that such forward-looking information and statements will prove to be accurate, as actual results and future events could differ materially from those anticipated in such information and statements. Among others, the key factors that could cause actual results to differ materially from those projected in the forward-looking information and statements are the following: inability of management to successfully integrate the operations of acquired businesses, changes in the consumer market for cannabis products, changes in the expected outcomes of the proposed changes to Halo's operations, delays in obtaining required licenses or approvals necessary for the build-out of Oregon operations, dispensaries or Canadian operations, the proposed spin-out with Halo Tek Inc., delays or unforeseen costs incurred in connection with construction, the ability of competitors to scale operations in Northern California, delays or unforeseen difficulties in connection with the cultivation and harvest of Halo's raw material, changes in general economic, business and political conditions, including changes in the financial markets; and the other risks disclosed in the Company's annual information form dated March 31, 2021 and other disclosure documents available on the Company's profile at www.sedar.com. Should one or more of these risks, uncertainties or other factors materialize, or should assumptions underlying the forward-looking information or statements prove incorrect, actual results may vary materially from those described herein as intended, planned, anticipated, believed, estimated or expected. The forward-looking information and forward-looking statements contained in this press release are made as of the date of this press release, and Halo does not undertake to update any forward-looking information and/or forward-looking statements that are contained or referenced herein, except in accordance with applicable securities laws. All subsequent written and oral forward-looking information and statements attributable to Halo or persons acting on its behalf is expressly qualified in its entirety by this notice. Non-Solicitation This press release shall not constitute an offer to sell nor the solicitation of an offer to buy any of the securities described herein, nor shall there be any sale of these securities in any state or jurisdiction in which such offer, solicitation or sale would be unlawful prior to registration or qualification under the securities laws of any such state or jurisdiction. SOURCE Halo Collective Inc. For further information: Halo Collective Inc., Investor Relations, [email protected], www.haloco.com/investors OTTAWA, ON, Feb. 24, 2022 /CNW/ - Gender equality will be achieved when people of all genders have opportunities to participate fully in democratic and public life, to attain economic security, and to live free of violence. The Government of Canada is committed to achieving gender equality and to recognizing individuals who are working towards this goal. Today, the Honourable Marci Ien, Minister for Women and Gender Equality and Youth, announced the recipients of the Governor General's Awards in Commemoration of the Persons Case. These awards recognize Canadians who have made outstanding contributions to the advancement of gender equality. The four recipients are: Monique Aubry Frize Carina Gabriele Bailey Greenspon Caitlin Salvino The recipients will be celebrated during a virtual ceremony that will be held on International Women's Day on Tuesday, March 8, 2022. This year's theme, Women Inspiring Women, illustrates the impact that exceptional individuals, such as the Persons Case Awards recipients, can have on Canadians and their communities. The work of these outstanding award recipients is not only helping to make Canada more inclusive and prosperous for all but also inspiring others to make a difference domestically and around the world. When Canadians come together, we can make significant strides towards gender equality. The Governor General's Awards in Commemoration of the Persons Case were created in 1979 to mark the 50th anniversary of the groundbreaking Persons Case. You can find more information by visiting Women and Gender Equality Canada's website. Quick Facts The Governor General's Awards in Commemoration of the Persons Case marks the day in 1929 when the historic decision to include women in the legal definition of "persons" was established by Canada's highest court of appeal. This milestone victory gave women the right to be appointed to the Senate of Canada and paved the way for women's increased participation in public and political life. highest court of appeal. This milestone victory gave women the right to be appointed to the Senate of and paved the way for women's increased participation in public and political life. March 8 is International Women's Day (IWD). It's a global day to recognize and celebrate women's and girls' social, economic, cultural, and political achievements. It's also a time to raise awareness of the progress made towards achieving gender equality and the work remaining to be done. is International Women's Day (IWD). It's a global day to recognize and celebrate women's and girls' social, economic, cultural, and political achievements. It's also a time to raise awareness of the progress made towards achieving gender equality and the work remaining to be done. This year, the Government of Canada's theme is Women Inspiring Women. It celebrates women and girls across Canada who continue to demonstrate outstanding leadership while also contributing to Canada's social, economic, cultural, and political spheres. Associated Links Governor General's Awards in Commemoration of the Persons Case Biographies of Recipients Monique (Aubry) Frize Monique (Aubry) Frize is a trailblazer who has demonstrated leadership and excellence in advancing gender equality in Canada and who has dedicated her life to achieving equality for women and girls. Monique's decadeslong career includes many firsts. She was the first Canadian woman to graduate from the University of Ottawa with a Bachelor of Applied Science in Engineering. She was also the first holder of the Northern Telecom/NSERC* Women in Engineering Chair at the University of New Brunswick in Fredericton, which would become a key program for supporting and advancing women in engineering. Monique has published six books, including her memoirs in 2019 at the University of Ottawa Press. Monique has always been passionate about giving back to the community. Throughout her career, she has actively promoted having women occupy leadership roles in engineering and science careers. She has published many papers and given hundreds of presentations on the topic. In addition, she has been a key champion of documenting and subsequently sharing the stories of women engineers' and scientists' achievements as well as being a role model for girls. Monique has received several awards and honours, including her induction as a Fellow of the Canadian Academy of Engineering and as a Fellow of Engineers Canada, her appointment as an Officer of the Order of Canada, and several honorary doctorates. Many have benefited from Monique's dedication to equality for women and girls. *NSERC stands for the Natural Sciences and Engineering Research Council of Canada. Caitlin Salvino Caitlin is a passionate intersectional feminist advocate who is deeply committed to using the law as a tool for empowerment. In 2017, after facing significant barriers to reforming the sexual violence policy at Carleton University, Caitlin co-wrote the bilingual document OurTurn: A National, Student-Led Action Plan to End Campus Sexual Violence. This action plan was signed by more than 40 student unions across 8 provinces that represent over 600,000 students. It continues to be used today as a tool to advocate for survivorcentric reforms of campus sexual violence policies across the country. She subsequently co-founded Students for Consent Culture Canada, the first national student-led campus sexual violence organization; it works with grassroots student leaders across the country to support them in their efforts to end campus sexual violence. Caitlin is proud to have contributed to a lot of "firsts" in the field of campus sexual violence, including by drafting the first sexual violence policy for a Canadian student union (the Students' Society of McGill University in 2018) and co-writing the first code of conduct for a major scholarship organization (the Rhodes Trust in 2020). As a result of her advocacy efforts, she has sat on the federal Advisory Council on Gender-Based Violence since 2018 and is its youngest member. In addition to her work on campus sexual violence, she has also been actively involved with intersectional feminist and human-rights-related work through experiences with Oxfam Canada, the West Coast Legal Education and Action Fund, and the Bonavero Institute of Human Rights. Caitlin believes the intersectional feminist movement can only progress if it is accessible to women as well as non-binary and Two Spirit individuals who live with disabilities. Accordingly, she is deeply involved in the disability community. She serves as an accessibility advisor to multiple charitable organizations and currently sits on the board of directors of the DisAbled Women's Network (DAWN) Canada as well as her rare disease patient organization. Caitlin completed a Bachelor of Arts in Transnational Law and Human Rights at Carleton University and graduate studies in law at the University of Oxford, where she studied as a Rhodes Scholar (Ontario, 2018). She hopes to continue pursuing her passion for intersectional feminist research and advocacy as a lawyer. Carina Gabriele Carina Gabriele (she/her) is an education advocate, a feminist, and a policy specialist who is passionate about advancing gender equity. She holds a Master of Education in Education Policy from the University of Toronto and an Honours Bachelor of Arts in Women's Studies and English from Western University. During her tenure as an elected executive officer of Western's student union, Carina created Western's Women in House program in collaboration with federal members of Parliament, designed and implemented a free menstrual equity pilot program on campus, and advocated against gender-based violence on campus. Professionally, Carina has worked on Courage to Act, a multi-year project to address and prevent gender-based violence on postsecondary campuses. She has also worked as a research and communications advisor for a Toronto city councillor. She presently works on federal policy issues, with a focus on equity and diversity. Outside of her work, Carina served as a Young Director in Fora's Girls On Boards program. She presently serves as Vice-Chair of the Board at the Ontario Student Trustees' Association (OSTA-AECO) and as a board member at People for Education. Bailey Greenspon Bailey is a community-oriented, social-impact-driven leader in the non-profit sector. For over a decade, Bailey has been building the capacity of and enabling connections for emerging gender equality activists around the world. Bailey has served in progressive leadership roles overseeing programming and advocacy at Fora formerly G(irls)20 since 2017. As the Director of Programs and Advocacy, she led three delegations to the G20 summits in Argentina, Japan, and Saudi Arabia. She was also the architect for the national Girls on Boards and Next Level programs, and she filled a critical gap in gender studies by advancing original, intersectional research about young women's leadership and economic inclusion. In 2020, she served as acting co-CEO and worked with the leadership team to pivot and ensure the sustainability of the organization's programming through the disruptions caused by COVID-19. Bailey is inspired by possibility; she is most comfortable working with ambiguity to develop processes, plans of action, and new approaches. She brings an intersectional and equity-first approach to her work an approach supported by a deep understanding of current affairs, from social media to social movements. Her career began in Tamale, Ghana, where she supported community organizers in building a regional network of youth leaders. It then led her to Impact Hub in Kuala Lumpur, Malaysia. She is naturally inclusive and collaborative, and these values underpin all her work, including in her previous role at the Samara Centre for Democracy and advisory roles at the Institute for Canadian Citizenship, DemocracyXchange, and Progress Toronto. As an educator, Bailey leads workshops and training sessions related to gender, advocacy, and Gender-Based Analysis Plus (GBA Plus). In 2019, she had the joy of training 300 Canadian students on gender equality at the Prime Minister's Youth Summit. As an advocate, Bailey has represented Canada in the G20's women's engagement group (W20), advised the GBA+ Forum held by Women and Gender Equality Canada (WAGE), and facilitated negotiations with Canada's G7 youth engagement group. She has written for the Toronto Star, National Newswatch, and First Policy Response as well as appearing on CBC Radio and various podcasts. Follow Women and Gender Equality Canada: SOURCE Women and Gender Equality Canada For further information: Johise Namwira, Press Secretary, Office of the Minister for Women and Gender Equality and Youth, 873-353-0985, [email protected]; Media Relations, Women and Gender Equality Canada, 819-420-6530, [email protected] This comes after Prime Minister Narendra Modi chaired a high-level meeting on Tuesday to review the efforts to bring back Indians stranded in Ukraine and asked the Indian Air Force to join the evacuation efforts under 'Operation Ganga.' Ramping up the governments efforts to evacuate Indian nationals stranded in Ukraine, an Indian Air Force (IAF) C-17 transport aircraft left for Romania in the early hours of Wednesday morning. The aircraft has taken off from the Hindon airbase at around 4 am. Two more IAF aircraft left for Hungary and Romania later in the day to rescue Indians via Hungary, and Romania today, as reported by ANI. At a press conference by Vice Chief of Air Staff Air Marshal Sandeep Singh, it was also informed that the planes are also carrying relief materials. Ambassador of India to United Nations, T S Tirumurti, on Monday (IST) had said that India has decided to provide urgent relief supplies, including medicines to Ukraine. This comes after Prime Minister Narendra Modi chaired a high-level meeting on Tuesday to review the efforts to bring back Indians stranded in Ukraine and asked the Indian Air Force to join the evacuation efforts under Operation Ganga. Sources cited by ANI said that leveraging the capacities of the Air Force will ensure that more people can be evacuated in a shorter time frame and it will also help to deliver humanitarian aid more efficiently. The development comes after Russia intensified its military offensive on Ukraines second-largest city, Kharkiv. The city came under fierce shelling on Tuesday (IST). An Indian medical student, Naveen Shekharappa, hailing from Karnataka lost his life to shelling in Kharkiv on the same day. According to Foreign Secretary Harsh Vardhan Shringlas statement on Tuesday, half of all the Indian citizens currently in Ukraine are stranded in Kharkiv. He said out of an estimated 20,000 Indian citizens in Ukraine, 60 per cent have left the country since the first advisory was issued by the government. Of the remaining 40 per cent, roughly half remain in the conflict zone in Kharkiv and the other half have either reached the western border of Ukraine or are heading towards the western border. Briefing the media about the evacuation of Indians including students from Ukraine in the wake of Russian military operations, Shringla informed that over the next three days, 26 flights have been scheduled to bring out Indian citizens. Apart from Bucharest and Budapest, airports in Poland and the Slovak Republic will also be used, he said. PM Modi held a high-level meeting over the crisis between Russia and Ukraine on Monday where it was decided that Union Minister of Civil Aviation Jyotiraditya Scindia will be overseeing evacuation operations of stranded Indians in Romania and Moldova, Minister of Law Kiren Rijiju will be visiting Slovakia, Minister of Petroleum and Natural Gas Hardeep Singh Puri will be overlooking operations in Hungary, and Minister of State in the Ministry of Road Transport Gen (Retd) VK Singh will be coordinating the repatriation operations in Poland as part of the Indian governments Operation Ganga. Around 2,000 Indian nationals have been repatriated from Ukraine in nine special flights till now under Operation Ganga. Union Minister Gen.(Retd) VK Singh is the 'special envoy' appointed by PM Modi to oversee repatriation efforts in Poland. A total of 16 flights have already brought back stranded Indian nationals from Ukraine till today. One of the first two repatriation flights from Poland under Operation Ganga reached Delhi on Wednesday. The flight carried Indian nationals who were caught in the crisis in Ukraine after the Russian invasion of the country. The evacuees were welcomed by Union Minister and Bharatiya Janata Party (BJP) leader Smriti Irani upon arrival in Delhi. Welcome back home! Your families are waiting with bated breath. You have shown exemplary courageLets thank the flight crew as well, Irani told the students on the flight. Irani welcomed the students by speaking in regional languages on their return from war-torn Ukraine. Union Minister Gen.(Retd) VK Singh is the special envoy appointed by PM Modi to oversee repatriation efforts in Poland. Upon the departure of the first repatriation flight from Polands Rzeszow Airport, Gen. VK Singh had tweeted on Tuesday (IST), The first flight out of Poland under Operation Ganga has departed from the Rzeszow Airport. We will not rest till we bring back every Indian. The first flight out of Poland under Operation Ganga has departed from the Rzeszow Airport. We will not rest till we bring back every Indian. #General_In_Poland #OperationGanga pic.twitter.com/3lfOO8KgES General Vijay Kumar Singh (@Gen_VKSingh) March 1, 2022 In a bid to further scale up the evacuation efforts, nine flights will take off on March 4 from neighbouring countries of Ukraine with stranded Indians under Operation Ganga, according to government sources quoted by ANI. To expedite rescue operations in view of the Russian advance on major Ukrainian cities, the Indian government had asked the Indian Air Force to join Operation Ganga on Tuesday. On Wednesday, three IAF C-17 Globemasters took off from Hindon airbase to bring back Indians from Romania and Hungary. The IAF aircraft carried relief material for Ukrainians from the Indian government. A total of 16 civilian flights have already brought back stranded Indian nationals from Ukraine till today. The official noted that Russia's current lack of progress may not be only due to problems arising from resistance or their own logistics and they are "possibly regrouping, rethinking, reevaluating" before carrying on again. Russian forces movement towards the Ukrainian capital city of Kyiv is currently stalled, a senior US defense official said on Tuesday morning (local time). Russias advance on Kyiv is where it was yesterday, the official told reporters, citing a variety of factors, including lack of food for Russian troops. Russians are not only facing fuel and sustainment problems but are showing signs that they are running out of food, the official claimed, adding that the Ukrainian resistance also could be a possible reason for the stall. The official also stated that Russias current lack of progress may not be only due to problems arising from resistance or their own logistics and they are possibly regrouping, rethinking, reevaluating before carrying on again. They (Russia) will regroup, they will adjust, they will change their tactics, the official said, adding that the Russian defence ministry openly admitted it would target civilian areas in Kyiv. Earlier this week, a satellite image released by US satellite imaging company Maxar revealed the presence of a huge Russian convoy stretching 64km(40 miles) from Antonov airport in the northern outskirts of Kyiv to the Ukrainian town of Pyrsbirk. Observers believe that it might be part of the Russian strategy to surround the Ukrainian capital, with another military column, before advancing on the city. According to the official, Russia has committed more than 80 per cent of its pre-staged combat power in Ukraine. The official also informed that more than 400 missiles have been launched by Russia towards Ukrainian targets. The official also noted that the Russian military appears to be risk-averse when it comes to its own troops. On Tuesday (IST), Russia bombed the main TV tower of Kyiv, according to Ukrainian interior minister officials. Five people were reported dead in the bombardment. Earlier in the day, Russia had declared its intention of bombing buildings housing offices of Ukranian intelligence services and warned residents living near them to evacuate their homes. BRIDGEPORT A former New Haven police officer, on probation for sexually assaulting a teenage girl, has been charged with sexually assaulting another girl in Stratford that he met on social media. Eddie Rodriguez, 54, of West Haven, was charged Wednesday with second-degree sexual assault and risk of injury to a child. During Rodriguezs arraignment Wednesday afternoon, Assistant States Attorney Justina Moore urged Superior Court Judge Peter McShane to set a high bond because of Rodriguezs prior criminal history. His previous sexual assault is very similar to the facts here, Judge McShane agreed. He ordered Rodriguez held in lieu of $500,000 bond and continued the case to March 31. Rodriguezs lawyer, Assistant Public Defender Kim Mendola, declined comment. According to Stratford police, last Oct. 21 the mother of a 14-year-old girl reported to a resource officer at Stratford High School that her daughter had been sexually assaulted by an older man. Police said the mother told them she had been going through her daughters cellphone when she saw a number of sexually explicit texts from a person who identified himself as Jonathan Eddy. The victim was taken to Bridgeport Hospital where a sex assault kit was done, police said. Police said DNA collected from the victim was determined to match the DNA taken from Rodriguez who was a convicted sex offender. Police said the victim told them she had initially contacted Rodriguez on Snapchat and, while she didnt know how old he was, she agreed to meet him before school. The victim met Rodriguez in a parking lot near the Stratford Library and agreed to get into his car. Once in the car, police said Rodriguez sexually assaulted the victim. He then drove her to school. Police said the victim subsequently identified Rodriguez as the man who assaulted her from a police photo array. Rodriguez was suspended from the New Haven Police Department in 1990 after he allegedly fired 20 shots at the homes of another police officer and a schoolteacher believing he was shooting at the home of former Mayor Biagio DiLieto. Then, in 2011, Rodriguez was accused of sexually assaulting a teenage girl in his West Haven home. He pleaded guilty in 2012 to second-degree sexual assault, illegal sexual contact, according to court records, and was sentenced to five years in prison, followed by 10 years of probation. In 2019, he pleaded guilty to second-degree assault with a firearm and threatening and was sentenced to one year, followed by three years of probation. This is a carousel. Use Next and Previous buttons to navigate GREENWICH More than 200 people came to Greenwich Town Hall Tuesday afternoon to rally in support for Ukraine and urge swift action to stop the fighting after the Russian attack began last week. Attendees waved the Ukraine national flag, held up signs, sang the national anthem and shouted Glory to Ukraine! Glory to the heroes! in the the Ukrainian language. State and local leaders at the rally pledged their support to the embattled eastern European nation locked in a deadly conflict with Russian armed forces. The rally-goers said they felt an obligation to provide humanitarian assistance and public support for Ukraine. I cant be there, so this is the least I can do, said Tania Priatka, a Cos Cob resident of Ukrainian ancestry. We need to be giving them a voice when theyre fighting for their lives. George Lencyk said the events unfolding in Ukraine would have an impact far beyond the region where the fighting has taken place. Its so important that we stop Russian aggression now, he said, and prevent the possibility of Russian aggression spreading. A Stamford resident, he said he was happy to take part in a rally in southern Connecticut to provide a visible show of solidarity. We can show support here, and they can see it there, he said. Like others, Lencyk said the U.S. and Europe should be doing more to isolate Russia and impose severe penalties. Greater urgency in bringing the conflict to an end was crucial, said Iryna Lencik, a sister-in-law of George Lencyk, since every hour brought more death and destruction to Ukraine. The situation is dire. We are trying to do everything we can. Its urgent. We need to act immediately, said Lencyk, a Stamford resident. Greenwich First Selectman Fred Camillo called on the public to donate to Ukrainian relief organizations. Anything you can do to help these people will be greatly appreciated, he said. And when you go to sleep at night, remember what theyre going though in Ukraine, not knowing what tomorrow is going to bring. U.S. Sen. Richard Blumenthal, D-Conn., joined the group via teleconference. He spoke of his visit to Ukraine six weeks ago, and how he came away impressed with what he saw. I knew they were determined and courageous, Blumenthal said. And they are giving the world a lesson in courage and conviction. Blumenthal spoke of the efforts in Washington, D.C., to impose crippling sanctions on Russian President Vladimir Putin and his inner circle, as well to force penalties on the Russian state, noting we need to do more. The senator earned loud applause when he called Putin a thug and in effect, a war criminal. An organizer of the local demonstration, Dr. Inna Lazar of Greenwich, said of the assault on Ukraine, It is escalating. Ukraine needs us, and I know we can do it. Tears came to her eyes as she described the notes and messages she has been receiving from family members there. Another organizer, Greenwich resident and former Miss Connecticut Olga Litvinenko, said, The situation has been devastating, and were asking, what can we do? She also urged participants to provide humanitarian assistance. Organizers said the Ukrainian Congress Committee of America; Revived Soldiers Ukraine; and Razom were reputable organizations providing assistance. Ron Chapple / Getty Image WALLINGFORD Police found six Wallingford stores that violated the state laws that prohibit the sale of tobacco and electric cigarettes to people under 21, the Wallingford Police Department announced Tuesday. Law enforcement conducted unannounced compliance inspections Tuesday to make sure area stores are complying with state laws that raised the legal age to purchase tobacco from 18 to 21 in October 2019. Due to pandemic restrictions, members of Congress are not able to bring in-person guests to President Joe Bidens State of the Union address Tuesday night. But that didnt stop U.S. Sen. Richard Blumenthal, D-Conn., from inviting a Ukrainian-American who lives in New Haven as his virtual guest. Myron Melnyk, a U.S. Army veteran who has family in Ukraine, joined Blumenthal at a virtual news conference Tuesday ahead of the address, which focused on Russias invasion against Ukraine. This invasion has far-reaching implications, Melnyk said. It is not only about the aggression and the invasion of Ukraine. It is about the right of an independent and democratic country to exist. Melnyk said he has cousins who are in a rural area in the southwest part of the country, who are less at risk. But even there, the local, fairly small, regional airport was destroyed. There was a fuel and petrol storage facility that was destroyed, really on the first night of the invasion, he said. Other cousins of Melnyks live in Ukraine's capital Kyiv one is a university professor and the other works for the department of agriculture. They had the option early on to go to the western part of the country because they have property there and their children are there, he said. They had the option to look for safer ground. They chose not to go and their answer was they wanted to stay with their friends, Melnyk said. On Tuesday, a 40-mile-long convoy of Russian tanks and vehicles was about 20 miles north of Kyiv, and a projectile hit the capitals main radio and television tower, according to news reports. Melnyk said he hadnt been able to contact his family Tuesday, which is not so unusual because when sirens go off, people go down into the metro underground. The metro in Ukraine is very deep and secure, he said. The metro stations and platforms serve as bunkers for unexpected or even expected bombings that look like will be taking place more frequently than before. When he spoke to them on Monday, Melnyk said his family worried about access to food and water as the invasion wages on. Many in the Ukrainian-American community have similar stories, he said. He called on the U.S. to do more to help Ukraine, including potentially declaring a no-fly zone over Ukrainian airspace to blunt Russias air attacks an idea that Connecticuts two Democratic senators warned Tuesday would only escalate tensions and could lead to a war between the U.S. and Russia. Melnyk also urged U.S. officials to sanction Russia's energy sector. Referring to the decison by Ukraines President Volodymyr Zelensky and his family to stay in the country despite knowing they are top targets of Russia, Melnyk said, the brave thing that theyve done is really inspiring. Were proud to be Ukrainians, he said with tears in his eyes. julia.bergman@hearstmediact.com HARTFORD Gov. Ned Lamont has nominated 22 Connecticut residents, including two on the Shoreline, to fill vacancies as judges on the Connecticut Superior Court. The court currently has 59 vacancies. This is the second class of Superior Court nominations made by Lamont since he took office in 2019, according to a press release. His first class was made in early 2021 and consisted of 15 judges. Our court system works the best when it reflects the diversity, experience, and understanding of the people who live here, Lamont said in a prepared statement. These men and women that Ive selected to become judges not only have the competence, skills, and proficiency to serve the court with integrity, but come from a variety of backgrounds that provide them with the important shared experiences of the people who will come before them, he added. These nominees have the qualifications that meet the high standards the residents of Connecticut deserve on the bench. Nominees include: Kevin M. Shay, 47, of Old Saybrook, who graduated from the University of Notre Dame and earned his juris doctor degree from the University of Connecticut School of Law. He is a senior assistant states attorney assigned to the Judicial District of Middlesex, and as a special assistant U.S. attorney for the District of Connecticut. Prior to his government service, Shay was a staff attorney for Connecticut Legal Services, and an associate in the litigation department of Nutter, McClennen and Fish in Boston, the news release said. Maria del Pilar Gonzalez, 34, of Guilford graduated from Quinnipiac University and obtained her juris doctor degree from Quinnipiac School of Law. Since 2018, she has served as an assistant U.S. attorney for the District of Connecticut and is a member of the Organized Crime Drug Enforcement Task Force. She is also the District of Connecticuts Violence Against Women Act coordinator. Prior to joining the U.S. Attorneys Office, she served as an assistant states attorney for the Connecticut Division of Criminal Justice in the Appellate Bureau and at Geographical Area 23. The nominations will be considered by the Connecticut General Assembly. To view the other nominees, go to portal.ct.gov. Niagara Falls, NY (14301) Today Some passing clouds. Low 39F. Winds N at 5 to 10 mph.. Tonight Some passing clouds. Low 39F. Winds N at 5 to 10 mph. The Metropolitan Catholic Archbishop of Abuja, Most Reverend Ignatius Kaigama, has advised Christians to engage in charity and almsgiving ... The Metropolitan Catholic Archbishop of Abuja, Most Reverend Ignatius Kaigama, has advised Christians to engage in charity and almsgiving during the Lenten season. The prelate gave the advice in an interview with the News Agency of Nigeria in Abuja, as Christians mark the Ash Wednesday, which signified the beginning of a 40-day lent. NAN reports that the Roman Catholics observe the period beginning with the application of ashes on the forehead, a reminder that from ash we came and to ash we will return. The life of a Christian would be complete only when we show love, support and share with the poor in the society. What we find in our society today is sadly the reality of blind guides, Kaigama said. The archbishop explained that some religious men and women who pose as ministers of God are ignorant about what true religion is. He added, There are some leaders who occupy big positions of responsibility today but lack the disposition to make such offices function properly. Some fight and even kill to occupy such offices, but are only guided by their quest for material possessions and could be regarded as blind guides. He said Nigerians, including leaders, must be upright and follow the teachings of the Holy Books at all times. Kaigama said, Leaders are challenged to expunge hypocrisy and deception, to bear good fruits. Our nation would achieve greater progress when we truly listen to one another in mutual respect. Government leaders must listen to its citizens, politicians must listen to the people they represent, employees must listen to their employers, the north to the south, one religious adherent to the other. This is the path to enduring peace, greater solidarity and harmony in our society. And the best way was to resolve problems such as the lingering fuel scarcity in the nation and the ASUU one-month warning strike to press home her demands from the Government. Chelsea owner, Roman Abramovich, has put the club up for sale and has set his asking price at 4 billion. The 55-year-old, who has owned the... Chelsea owner, Roman Abramovich, has put the club up for sale and has set his asking price at 4 billion. The 55-year-old, who has owned the Premier League side since 2003, over the weekend distanced himself from the Blues, by handing over his stewardship and care to the trustees of Chelseas charitable Foundation. The UK Government has faced calls to freeze Abramovichs assets, as well as anyone who allegedly has ties with President Vladimir Putin, as part of its sanctions against Russia. Abramovich has rejected multiple offers to sell Chelsea in the past. But according to The UK Telegraph, he is now actively looking to sell the club. However, the report claims that the Russian billionaire, who bought Chelsea for 140 million nearly 19 years ago, is expected to receive offers in the region of 2 billion. On Tuesday evening, Swiss billionaire Hansjorg Wyss claimed that he, along with three others, has received a proposal to buy Chelsea from Abramovich. The lingering fuel scarcity in the country has worsened, just as cost of transportation is also on the increase across the country followi... The lingering fuel scarcity in the country has worsened, just as cost of transportation is also on the increase across the country following the hike in the pump price of Premium Motor Spirit, popularly called petrol, in fillings stations in states. Motorists still besieged the few filling stations that dispensed PMS in Abuja and neighbouring Nasarawa and Niger states on Tuesday, as many outlets in Nasarawa and other states sold the commodity at N200/litre and above. This was in contrast to the Federal Governments approved pump price of N162-N165/litre. In Abuja, black marketers freely sold petrol at N400/litre and above. The National Public Relations Officer, Independent Petroleum Marketers Association of Nigeria, Chief Ukadike Chinedu, told newsmen that the price of petrol in Port Harcourt, Rivers State, was above N200/litre in filling stations. The queues in Port Harcourt are clearing out and filling stations sell at N200 and above for a litre of petrol, he said. In Ilorin, Kwara State, the transportation situation grew worse on Tuesday, as petrol scarcity continued. Many petrol stations locked their gates, as only a few outlets, such as Bovas and the NNPC dispensed petrol to motorists at the approved price of N162/litre amidst long queues. Findings showed that fuel was being sold at between N350 to N500/litre in some independent petrol stations. As a result of the fuel scarcity, transport fares increased by more than 300 per cent for both inter and intra-city transport. In the Ilorin metropolis, commercial vehicles charged between N150 and N300 for short-distance trips, instead of the N50 that was previously charged. Inter-city fares from Ilorin to Offa and Omu-Aran rose to between N800 to N1,500, instead of N300 and N800 as was previously charged. In Ondo State, fuel was sold for N200 per litre at the black market level which thrived better late in the evening or at midnight. During visits to some of the filling stations in Akure, the state capital, it was observed that the stations that dispensed petrol during the day, sold the commodity at the approved N165/litre price. Meanwhile, the queues persisted in many filling stations as the scarcity of petrol continued on Tuesday. In Osogbo, the Osun State capital, some residents exploited the situation as they sold petrol at between N250 and N300/litre to motorists. In a few of the filling stations that sold the product, there were long queues of vehicles and motorcycles waiting to get the PMS. Many residents also bought the product in plastic containers, while black marketers were sighted along Station Road and Dele Yes Sir Area of Osogbo on Tuesday. Similarly, petrol scarcity grew worse in Ado Ekiti, the Ekiti State capital, on Tuesday, as the product sold for as high as N300/litre. At the pumps, the product went for between N162 and N250/litre on Tuesday depending on the ownership of the station. Black market operators sold it at N300/litre. At the NNPC outlet and Bovas Petroleum along Bank Road where the product sold for N162/litre, the queues of vehicles and motorbikes were endless. It was the same situation at the NNPC outlet along Iyin Road in the capital city where the product was sold at N165/litre. In Enugu State, fuel was sold in a few stations owned by independent marketers at between N200 and N220/litre, while major marketers sold the product for N165 and N189/litre. A source who monitored the development in Enugu State metropolis, reported that only North-West and Mobil dispensed the product to motorists on Tuesday. The chairman of the Southeast Governors Forum, David Umahi on Tuesday assured Igbos that the national leader of the outlawed indigenous pe... The chairman of the Southeast Governors Forum, David Umahi on Tuesday assured Igbos that the national leader of the outlawed indigenous peoples of Biafra, IPOB, Mazi Nnamdi Kanu will soon be released from DSS detention. Umahi who made this known in Abakaliki said he initiated a political dialogue with President Muhammadu Buhari to ensure the immediate release of Nnamdi Kanu from DSS detention. The governor who equally allocated 2.5 hectares of land located opposite the International Market Abakaliki to the Association of Computer Village Merchants of Nigeria, lamented that many businesses are closing down in the South-East because of unknown gunmen. He said since the commencement of the activities of unknown Gunmen, people now prefer to take their business to other regions of the country. Why do we still have unknown gunmen in Southeast? This is not the first time it is happening in Igboland. There was a time, it was so terrible in Abia, Abia state, in Onitsha and so many other places, and Igbo man knows what to do. We are coming to that point, businesses are moving away from Aligbo, for what? I have gone to President Muhammadu Buhari and initiated a political dialogue over our brother Nnamdi Kanu. And that process is on. And I dont see any reason why we should be killing ourselves. Fighting our people, making sure that the economy of the south-east is down. Some of these people that initiated this sit-at-home are outside the country. They can never do sit-at-home one day there because they work twenty-four hours. And if they do, hunger will kill them he said. He noted that the Igbos are the enemies to themselves pointing out that until the activities of the gunmen are halted, the region would continue to suffer economic deprivation and stagnation. Umahi called for a concerted effort towards bringing to an end such inhuman treatment against Igbos by the Gunmen adding that he has met with President Mohammed Buhari towards having a political solution to the continued detention of Mazi Nnamdi Kanu. He asked those insisting on the sit at home order, to also ensure it is not restricted to the five South-East states but to all Igbos across the country and the globe. Governor Umahi called on NdIgbo to always come back home to invest adding that such investment would not only develop the region but can boost the economic fortunes of the region. Ado Doguwa, majority leader of the House of Representatives, has asked the governors elected on the platform of the Peoples Democratic Par... Ado Doguwa, majority leader of the House of Representatives, has asked the governors elected on the platform of the Peoples Democratic Party (PDP) to sit up and secure their states. Doguwa made the comment on the floor of the lower legislative chamber on Wednesday. The legislator was responding to a contribution made by Ndudi Elumelu, the minority leader of the house. Elumelu, a lawmaker from Delta state, had said insecurity increased when the All Progressives Congress (APC) took over the reins of power. The PDP lawmaker was contributing to a motion sponsored by Ben Igbakpa on the need to address insecurity and abduction in Anambra. Since the APC-led government came into power, they have been an increase in brutalising of Nigerians in making sure that our people who should be on the farm to produce food do have the opportunity to do that, he said. Reacting, Doguwa who is an APC member from Kano said Abdullahi Ganduje, his state governor, has been able to maintain peace. It is in our national interest to remind the government that the interest of government is about the protection of lives and property of the people and citizenry, he said. But while we lend our support for the motion, I find no reason when someone will rise and get out of the course and begin to malign or cast aspersions on a government that has done so wonderfully well about the security of life of the people. l want to remind the minority leader that we are running a federal democracy. We have the federating unit. Of course, every federating unit has its constitutional responsibility. But I want to believe even the state governors in the south do have the same responsibility to protect the lives and property of the people they govern. Whether you control the police or not, I assume the governors are the chief security officer of their respective states. The business of security should not, therefore, be seen specifically as if it is vested only in the hands of the president. What are your (PDP) governors doing in your state? Despite the huge population of citizens in Kano, every Kano man courtesy of governor Ganduje sleeps with his two eyes closed. Tell your governors to sit up. The PDP governors should make sure that they provide security for the lives and property of the people in their state. The Governor of Lagos State, Babajide Sanwo-Olu, on Wednesday celebrated the General Overseer of the Redeemed Christian Church of God, Pas... The Governor of Lagos State, Babajide Sanwo-Olu, on Wednesday celebrated the General Overseer of the Redeemed Christian Church of God, Pastor Enoch Adeboye, as the latter turned 80. In a statement signed by his Chief Press Secretary, Gboyega Akosile, Sanwo-Olu noted that the foremost cleric has greatly contributed to the progress of the state. Sanwo-Olu, in the birthday wish, also prayed for longer life and good health for the cleric, fondly called Daddy GO. The governor said, Sir, you have been a blessing, not just to the Redeemed Christian Church of God, but also to us in Lagos State your unceasing prayers for us and your wise counsel over the years have contributed in no small measure to the phenomenal progress our state has continued to witness. We will forever be grateful. We cannot also ever forget your commitment to the Lagos State Annual Thanksgiving Service since the year 2000. Because of your work, and of the name and legacy of the RCCG, the gospel has touched the very ends of the earth, in line with the Great Commission. In addition, your devoted service in Gods Vineyard has helped put Nigeria in the global spotlight, as a land of spiritual exploits and greatness. Yet, amidst all these wonderful accomplishments, you have remained as simple and humble as ever, never seeking the limelight or personal glory. As you celebrate your 80th birthday, it is our prayer that the Almighty God will grant you more grace and strength to continue to spread the gospel of Jesus Christ, minister to the poor and the broken, and proclaim liberty to the captives. I pray that the Almighty God will continue to crown you with good health to enable you render more service to His kingdom and you will continue to enjoy His manifold blessings and everlasting goodness. Amen. Happy Birthday, Sir. Celebrating Adeboyes wife, the governor said, Let me also specially congratulate our Mummy, your adorable wife, and devoted partner, Pastor (Mrs.) Foluke Adeboye, and thank her for the great support and love she has continued to give to you. I pray that God will continue to keep her strong and vibrant on this lifelong journey of jointly manifesting the fullness of His power and anointing. Zubairu Dada, minister of state for foreign affairs, says the federal government expects that no harm will befall Nigerians that are stuck... Zubairu Dada, minister of state for foreign affairs, says the federal government expects that no harm will befall Nigerians that are stuck in Ukraine. Amid the invasion of Ukraine by Russian troops, thousands of foreigners have been making frantic efforts to flee to neighbouring countries. There have also been complaints of Ukrainian soldiers and border guards frustrating Africans, including Nigerians, from crossing to safety. In the wake of the development, the Nigerian government said its diplomatic mission had received Nigerians in Hungary, Poland and Romania. President Muhammadu Buhari also approved the sum of $8.5 million for the evacuation of 5,000 stranded Nigerians. The evacuation is expected to begin today. Speaking with journalists after the federal executive council (FEC) meeting on Wednesday, the minister expressed optimism that Russian troops will obey the rules of engagement. Rules of engagement are directives that determine the circumstances, conditions, degree, and manner in which the use of force can be applied during military operations. Dada said the government has urged Ukraine and Russias ambassadors to ensure that Nigerians remain safe. We want to believe the Russian armed forces will obey the rules of engagement. They know the rules about civilians that are caught up in situations such as this. We want to assume they will respect international laws and ensure that no harm comes to them, Dada said. Dont forget that even our missions in Ukraine have had to be evacuated. So if for any reason any Nigerian is left behind, we are very very prayerful, we are very hopeful that no harm shall come to them, once of course, they are in some shelters or whatever place they are hiding. Dont forget we had also summoned both the Russian and Ukrainian ambassadors to our ministry, and we did emphasise the need for their troops to ensure that they do not do anything that will harm the lives of innocent citizens. We have seen video clips making the rounds about the alleged treatment that had been meted out to black people who were on queues and in buses and all that. All these we have brought to the attention of the ambassadors and we have expressed our displeasure at this development and demanded that they do something about this. No. The money should go to something that would benefit all citizens of the county, not just Watertown. Yes. The community would benefit from the indoor pools the project would provide. Vote View Results The mob of 400 or 500 people that began gathering at the Beauregard School on Canal Street the evening of Sept. 23, 1897, was an angry one. But thats not all they were. They were also fearful, and maybe a little desperate. And that made them dangerous. In retrospect, those fears were somewhat understandable. Their ultimate actions that night, however which included the rousting of a group of nuns, severing of fire hoses and, most notably, arson were not. They were all part of what would become known as the Beauregard School riot. Its story starts in earnest in 1874, with the completion of what was described by The Daily Picayune as a substantially built and elegant two-story frame slated mansion for tobacco merchant M. Escobal on Canal Street. At the time, the Escobal home was the only house on that side of Canal from Broad Street to the cemeteries. With its landscaped grounds taking up the entire city block bounded by Canal, St. Patrick, Olympia and Iberville streets, it was more than just a showpiece. It was a landmark. The house itself cut a striking figure, surrounded on all four sides by tall, breezy galleries and topped by an enclosed rectangular observatory, also galleried. By 1885, however, Escobals finances had taken a hit, and he was forced to sell the property. Within a decade, the city gained possession and outfitted it for use as a school to be named after Confederate Gen. P.G.T. Beauregard. None of that is what had riled the mob on that night in 1897, however. Rather, it was the return of yellow fever. The outbreak spreads With the connection between mosquitoes and the spread of disease having yet to be established, New Orleanians of the time were used to what was the near-annual scourge of yellow fever. The outbreak of 1897, however, was particularly fearsome. By the time it had run its course three months later, it had reportedly claimed some 300 lives, more than the city had seen in nearly 20 years. With hospitals overflowing, Mayor Walter C. Flower found himself in the position of trying to find a suitable location for a temporary facility to help handle the growing number of patients. The large, well-lit Beauregard School, he decided, was perfect. Thats all it took to trigger nearby residents, who were terrified of the festering disease they imagined it would bring into their neighborhood, which today is part of Mid-City. And so, on the evening of Sept. 23, they began gathering at the school to voice their displeasure. Soon enough, it had all bubbled over into what The Daily Picayune described as a display of desperate, frantic, unreasoning panic. A furious mob When some officials and Sisters of Charity from the Charity Hospital went to the place to prepare it for sanitary uses, they were ordered away by a mob of citizens, who threatened to burn the structure before any sick should be placed in it, The Picayune wrote. A few hours later, shortly after midnight, the mob took action. The first building to be torched was a caretakers cottage behind the school. The next to go was a building used for kindergarten classes. When firefighters arrived, the mob refused to open the gates to let the fire engines through. When the firefighters eventually got in place, the rioters cut their hoses. When they pulled furniture, mattresses and other materials out of the building, the mob burned those, too. Meanwhile, the flames grew. The school, which is a two-story frame building, entirely square, with a cupola, built after the pattern of the old Louisiana plantation homes, showed well in the firelight, The Picayune wrote. In front there were thick shadows, while the rear showed everything ablaze. Notwithstanding the heat, the firemen dashed upon one of the upper galleries of the schoolhouse and played the hose thick and fast into the wells of the fire below. Some saved, some lost Well save the schoolhouse, Fire Chief Thomas OConnor said, but it is without doubt one of the meanest fires Ive seen. He was good on his word. The next morning, the caretakers cottage and kindergarten building were heavily damaged, but the school building, though scorched, still stood. Undeterred, Mayor Flower doubled down on his promise to use it as a yellow fever hospital. For the next three months, until December 1897, it served as just that. In all, 216 patients were treated there. Just as importantly, Charity Hospitals Dr. J.D. Bloom reported that no case has occurred within twelve squares of the institution, and no case has been traceable to any contact from the premises. School ties After being sanitized, the building was put back into service as a school. By 1907, the former mansion was torn down to make room for a new, purpose-built Beauregard School. That two-story, concrete-and-steel building, later renamed in honor of Thurgood Marshall, is today home to Success Preparatory Academy, a charter school. A 2016 excavation at the site uncovered a pair of privies those archaeological treasure troves. Among the items recovered were broken medicine bottles, bedpans, feeding bowls and the like, all reminders of the 1897 yellow fever outbreak and the panic it spawned. Know of a New Orleans building worth profiling in this column, or just curious about one? Contact Mike Scott at moviegoermike@gmail.com. Making a living off street performance may be unconventional, but like many of New Orleans' best elements, it's been woven into the city's cultural fabric since the beginning. Without the hundreds of street musicians and other buskers we see around the city, New Orleans just wouldn't be New Orleans. In this week's Gambit, editor John Stanton and staff writer Sarah Ravits spoke with buskers about the challenges and rewards of playing in New Orleans streets. Flip through the digital edition below to read more. Cant see the e-edition above? Click here. Also in this week's Gambit: "The House That Will Not Stand" opens at Le Petit Theatre; Political Editor Clancy DuBos calls Republican state lawmakers' determination to implement paper balloting a "half-assed attempt to fix a system that isn't broken"; Blake Pontchartrain tells readers about the old building with a stone book at Dryades and Philip streets; Thaihey NOLA serves Thai food in the French Quarter plus news and more. This week's Gambit also includes a new edition of Details. Flip through the digital edition below for floral home accents for spring decor, tips for growing edible plants and lamps to light up your home. If pandemic restrictions make it harder to pick up a Gambit in your usual spot, we have you covered. Our e-edition is available to download at bestofneworleans.com/current and read at your leisure. If you enjoy this weeks issue, please share this digital edition on social media. And as always, New Orleans, thank you for your support. The Gambit staff Herb Keys' sweatshirt read "OG Status," his grill belched smoke and his voice boomed over his spot on the St. Charles Avenue neutral ground just before 8 o'clock Tuesday morning. Keys had 10 pounds of smoked sausage on the grill he'd already finished a batch of pork chops and he was gearing up to watch parades from the spot he has for years, just off of Second Street. He didn't even mind that someone had stolen his other grill while he slept only a few hours before. "It's not a big deal," said Keys, who came in from New Orleans East. Keys' mood a mix of gratitude and joy exemplified that of many on Tuesday who were thrilled to have their beloved Mardi Gras celebration back in full swing after the coronavirus pandemic forced the cancellation of parades last year. The elements, for their part, seemed to agree, meeting revelers with a cool morning that gave way to a perfect, sunny day with temps in the mid-60s. It was a far cry from a year ago, when the city had to express its Carnival spirit primarily through decorating its front porches, and Mardi Gras was marked with freezing temperatures and power outages. But with coronavirus numbers plummeting from their omicron- and delta-fueled spikes, the relief and excitement this year were palpable, starting with the Northside Skull and Bone Gang's wake-up call through Treme at dawn and the costumed revelers of St. Anne amassing in the Marigny to the countless peers of Keys, who staked their claims along the parade route for Rex and Zulu and the truck floats that followed. Amid the strains of music ranging from Drake to Satchmo to Boosie, Keys said he was happy for the return of Mardi Gras, and didn't begrudge the mayor for last year's cancellation. He was even willing to forgive her for recent social media posts that showed her maskless at Mardi Gras functions. "She made a little mess up, but we are all human," he said. Mike Williams, who lives in St. Bernard Parish, had arrived at his spot near St. Charles and Erato around midnight. He was expecting about 25-30 family members to join him, and he looked forward to seeing his nieces and nephews compete for throws from the parades. "I wouldn't call it more exciting," he said. "But I'm happy to see it resuming." At Gallier Hall downtown, Mayor LaToya Cantrell exuberantly toasted the royalty of Rex and Zulu as they passed. They hoisted their glasses, praising the return of Mardi Gras, then smashed them, according to tradition. King Zulu Randolph Rudy Davis thanked the city for making my childhood dream a reality. This feels fantastic, and its not just the weather, said James J. Reiss III, this years Rex, king of Carnival. We needed Mardi Gras back. In Jefferson Parish, Mardi Gras was also making its return after one year off, with the Krewe of Argus and two truck parades rolling along Veterans Boulevard. On the north shore, Lions Club and the Mystic Krewe of Covington rolled as well. In Metairie, Lee Giorgio reigned as King Argus and former New Orleans Saints punter Thomas Morstead tossed and kicked cups to an appreciative crowd, unfazed by the beloved Saints new job with the rival Atlanta Falcons. For many, the return of the parades meant the return of a chance to snag a signature throw. Vickie Coleman, who was standing in line at about 7:30 a.m. at the Avenue Pub on St. Charles Avenue, said she and her friends, seated a few feet away, were there for the coconuts thrown by members of Zulu. "We call it 'Coconut Alley,'" she laughed as she waited to buy Jell-O shots and gain some much-needed bathroom access. A few hours later, just over a mile away, Gocelyn Beasley and her cousins, Logan Lafate and A.C. Robey, stood at the back of the crowd lining Basin Street to see Zulu roll by. Like Coleman, they were there for the coconuts. Top stories in New Orleans in your inbox Twice daily we'll send you the day's biggest headlines. Sign up today. e-mail address * Sign Up "I would love one but they are so hard to get," said Beasley, who lives in New Mexico. Her cousins, in town from Philadelphia, were also hoping to catch some of the coveted throws. But even if they didn't, they were having a good time, they said. "Everyone has been so friendly," Lafate said. Downriver, a sea of thousands of costumed revelers assembled from curb to curb on Royal Street in the Marigny. There were a few topical costumes, a Trump and Putin pastiche here, a pretty pink coronavirus there, and a dappling of hazard cone-inspired satires of New Orleans infrastructure challenges amid the throng. But the tone of Mardi Gras 2022 costuming wasnt political, it was splendidly absurd. One marching troupe on Royal Street carried clear plastic screens in front of their faces, as if they were a mobile Zoom meeting they were, of course, scantily clad from the waist down. Another group dubbed themselves Sloppy Josephines, as they impersonated the cigarette-smoking school cafeteria ladies of lore. And another group of bosom-forward men and women, with hair piled high in honey-colored beehives, paraded as the Dolly Gras, a tribute to the country music superstar. Despite the basically apolitical vibe, the recent invasion of Ukraine stirred the passions of some. Donald St. Pierre and Michael Newer wore ornate outfits with tones of pale blue and yellow, the colors of the Ukrainian flag. +16 Photos: Costumed Mardi Gras revelers flock to Bywater and Marigny neighborhoods on Fat Tuesday Societe de Sainte Anne and multiple other walking groups and dance parties started in the Bywater neighborhood and paraded through the Marigny No, they were not of Ukrainian heritage. Im just a human race person, St. Pierre explained. You just feel helpless sometimes, Newer said, eyelashes glittering. You say, What can I do, right? In New Orleans, when were faced with tragedy, we celebrate boldly. So, I just wanted to be able to celebrate Mardi Gras and acknowledge Ukraine at the same time. In the middle of the French Quarter, two svelte young men asked costumers to pose with them in selfies. Their Eastern European accents were conspicuous. I live in Florida now, but originally Im from Ukraine, said Gleb Boliezhaive who was there with his friend, a Russian. Boliezhaive noted the Russian people don't necessarily support the invasion of Ukraine, and he said he was proud of his friends enduring the conflict. We will meet again, he said, in health and happiness. Outside Lafitte's Blacksmith shop along Bourbon in the French Quarter, the scene was similar. The pandemic didn't seem to be affecting behavior, but it remained a visible presence in the costumes. There were people wearing hats based on the coronavirus' distinctive shape and with shirts labeling each partier a different "variant"; there was a Moses-like figure holding aloft two tablets containing the Ten Commandments of COVID-19; and any number of groups wore beaked plague masks of the kind worn in medieval pandemics. Back out on Canal Street, a little after noon, Carey and Shelley Tolleson were attending just their second Mardi Gras. Two years ago, after moving from California to Biloxi, they came to New Orleans to see Zulu and Rex, and they fell in love with the celebration. But then it was taken from them the next year. "It's only been two years," Shelley Tolleson said, sipping a frozen drink out of a long plastic tube. "But it feels like a long time." Tolleson was one of several who said the crowds seemed a bit lighter this year, and The Associated Press reported hotel occupancy was down by about 20% compared to 2020. But that won't stop the Tollesons from coming back. "We love to dress up, party and drink," she said. "We are coming every year." Staff writer Chad Calder contributed to this report. Jefferson Parish Sheriff's Office detectives investigating the death of a woman shot at her Harvey home Sunday arrested her boyfriend in connection with the killing, according to authorities. Kenny Rojas, 37, was booked with second-degree murder in the death of Lizeth Maldonado, said Capt. Jason Rivarde, a Sheriff's Office spokesperson. Maldonado died in the house the couple shared in the 1200 block of Angus Drive in Harvey. Deputies went to the residence about 4:20 p.m. Sunday after a 911 call reporting a shooting, authorities said. Maldonado was found with at least one gunshot wound to her chest. She was pronounced dead at the scene, Rivarde said. Rojas was identified as a suspect, and investigators began looking for him. He contacted the Sheriff's Office just before 11 p.m. Sunday and surrendered in the 2900 block of North Monterey Court in Terrytown, Rivarde said. No other information was available about the investigation. Rojas was being held Wednesday at the Jefferson Parish Correctional Center in Gretna in lieu of a $500,000 bond. Someone opened fire into a crowd in the New Orleans Central Business District early on Ash Wednesday, sending two people to the hospital, police said. The shooting was reported to police at 2:12 a.m. in the 800 block of South Peters Street, between Julia and St. Joseph streets. A 23-year-old man and a 21-year-old woman were standing outside when police say a vehicle drove up and someone inside began shooting into the crowd. The man and the woman were hit multiple times and were taken by ambulance to a hospital. Police did not immediately release more details, such as a possible motive or a description of the vehicle. Anyone with information about the shooting is asked to call Crimestoppers at 504-822-1111. Brandon Bovain left South Carolina with his younger brother and girlfriend last week after a spur-of-the-moment decision to come to New Orleans for Mardi Gras. After arriving at their hotel off Chef Menteur Highway on Friday night, he ran back to their car to fetch a cellphone they needed to finish checking in. As Bovain dug around in the vehicle to find the phone, people in two separate cars in the hotel parking lot suddenly started shooting at each other. At least one of the bullets struck Bovain, 33, killing him and leaving his 3-year-old son fatherless and his family to lament how a last-minute Carnival vacation ended in tragedy. No one deserves to die that way, one of Bovains brothers, James Bovain, said Tuesday. People involved in the shootout (if something happened to them), it is what it is. But he had nothing to do with the situation. Nobody expected it to be his last trip. As of Tuesday, New Orleans authorities still hadnt publicly released the name of the man shot to death on Chef Menteur at about 9 p.m. Friday. But both senior law enforcement sources and relatives of the slain man identified him Tuesday as Bovain, of Orangeburg, South Carolina. Bovain was one of two visitors to be shot to death in New Orleans in less than 24 hours. On Saturday evening, 15-year-old Heaven Nettles of Houston was shot and killed by gunfire while waiting in a food truck line three blocks away from the Endymion parade. That shooting, in the 2900 block of Conti Street in Mid-City, also killed two other men. Police havent publicly named any suspects or discussed possible motives behind the violence that took the lives of either Bovain or Nettles. By all indications, both victims were struck by stray gunfire that was not meant for them, law enforcement sources said. Bovain who made his living delivering furniture had only recently decided to go to New Orleans with his girlfriend and a younger brother, James Bovain said. They were apparently checking in at their hotel in the 6300 block of Chef when they realized they needed an app on the womans cellphone to finish paying, so Brandon Bovain headed back to their vehicle to get it. Top stories in New Orleans in your inbox Twice daily we'll send you the day's biggest headlines. Sign up today. e-mail address * Sign Up He was inside the car when a shootout between people in two different vehicles broke out in the hotel parking lot, said another of Bovains brothers, Anthony Brown, citing information that detectives shared with their family. At least one bullet hit Bovain, and he died after being brought to a hospital by paramedics. Brown and James Bovain said they could hardly comprehend the misfortune that befell Brandon. He had spent his whole life in South Carolina, and he likely didnt realize the hotel on Chef was off the beaten path for many of the Crescent Citys visitors, Brown said. As the crow flies, the hotel is not unreasonably far from the areas most popular with tourists. But, three years ago, a Danish war veteran touring the U.S. by motorcycle was found shot to death and robbed about four blocks away in a case that made international headlines. Both Brown and James Bovain took a few minutes Tuesday to share memories of their brother. They said he was quick to help people in need and had a talent for soothing crying babies, a knack he first demonstrated with his brothers children. I couldnt for the life of me understand how he could do that, James Bovain said. But then he became a father, and it makes sense now. Brown and James Bovain said their heartbreak is compounded by the fact that no one has been arrested, much less charged. To not have any resolution over what happened is, ultimately, the most disturbing part about it, James Bovain said. Anthony Brown added: Brandon was one of the happiest persons you could meet, and they took my heart away man, they took my world away for nothing. Note: This post was edited to include an accurate photo of Brandon Bovain. An argument between a man and his girlfriend Tuesday evening ended when the woman's brother shot and killed him at the Gretna residence they all shared, authorities said. The alleged gunman, Jose Robles Marques, 42, was arrested and booked on a count of second-degree murder, said Gretna Police Deputy Chief Jason DiMarco. It is the first homicide reported in Gretna in 2022. The victim has been identified as Fernandez Salomon, 42. Salomon, Robles and Robles' sister, an unnamed 41-year-old woman, lived together in a home in the 1700 block of Newton Street, according to DiMarco. Top stories in New Orleans in your inbox Twice daily we'll send you the day's biggest headlines. Sign up today. e-mail address * Sign Up Salomon and Robles' sister began arguing in a bedroom sometime just before 5 p.m. Tuesday. Authorities aren't sure what led to the disagreement, but witnesses told investigators the exchange wasn't physical, DiMarco said. "Her brother entered the bedroom and shot him while he was sitting on a bed," DiMarco said of Salomon. Salomon was pronounced dead at the scene. Police aren't sure why Robles shot Salomon, but authorities said they suspect there were other tensions between the two men. Robles was taken into custody at the residence. The gun used in the shooting was also recovered. It had been reported stolen out of Jefferson Parish in 2018, DiMarco said. Robles was additionally booked on possession of a stolen firearm. He was being held Wednesday at the Jefferson Parish Correctional Center in Gretna on a $505,000 bond. BP Deepwater Horizon oil spill workers who were highly exposed to oil-related chemicals and other particulates during the 2010 cleanup were more likely to be newly diagnosed with hypertension years after the spill, according to a new study released last week. Hypertension, or high blood pressure, increases the risk of heart disease and stroke, two of the leading causes of death in the U.S., according to the federal Centers for Disease Control and Prevention. Our study demonstrates an association (between hypertension and participation in the spill cleanup), but it doesnt rise to the level of causality at this point, said Richard Kwok, an epidemiologist with the National Institute of Environmental Health Science and lead author of the study published in JAMA Network Open, a peer-reviewed medical journal. Kwok said that when the workers participated in the study, conducted between 2011 and 2013, those with hypertension were urged to follow up with their doctors. Cleaning BP oil from Grand Isle Clean up workers tackle the oil washed up on the beach at Grand Isle State Park Thursday, June 3, 2010. Steady blobs of oil, some two feet wid The new findings are key because they focus on longer-term health consequences between one and three years after exposure, while earlier studies focused on health effects immediately after the spill, he added. The April 20, 2010 explosion and fire aboard the Transocean Deepwater Horizon oil rig that was drilling BP's Macondo well killed 11 people, and triggered a blowout resulting in an 87-day-long spill of crude oil into the Gulf of Mexico. A federal judge determined that 3.2 million barrels of oil were released in the water. Cleanup works break to see Obama Oil cleanup workers line Louisiana 1 on Grand Isle as the motorcade of President Barack Obama passes Friday May 28, 2010. The President visite Additional oil and natural gas were either transferred to ships or flared off. Workers used dispersants to attempt to break up oil at the surface and about a mile below the surface as it was released from the well. Some of the surface oil was corralled by ships and burned before it could wash ashore. But much of the oil did reach beaches from Texas to the Florida Panhandle, with the greatest amount found on Louisiana beaches, barrier islands and adjacent wetlands. Initial cleanup activities involving tens of thousands of workers included laying down and later recovering hundreds of miles of boom. Crews also sucked oil out of wetland areas and open water with pumps and absorbent pads, and collected oil mats and tarballs from beaches. Some of the recovery work lasted for several years, as oil mats and tarballs continued to wash ashore. Study methodology The study is the latest produced as part of the Gulf Long-term Follow-up Study program (GuLF Study), which has tracked the health of individuals involved in the cleanup effort. Flaring off BP oil and gas Coast Guard Petty Officer 3rd Class Ryan Leonard looks watches oil and gas flare at the site of the BP Deepwater Horizon oil disaster in 2010. Environmental news in your inbox Stay up-to-date on the latest on Louisiana's coast and the environment. Sign up today. e-mail address * Sign Up To be eligible to participate, workers had to have worked at least one day on any activity related to oil spill response and cleanup. The study also tracked people who received oil spill safety training, but were not hired for the job. More than 32,000 people in all were interviewed, though researchers only used data from 8,351 workers because others had hypertension diagnoses before the spill or provided incomplete information. To determine workers' exposure to burning oil, researchers used self-reported information on the workers activities, location and time spent at work. The team also used computer modeling to estimate concentrations of burned oil particles at three sites: flaring at the Macondo wellhead, atop the water's surface, and from gas and diesel-powered engines on the water. All three were measured from May to July 2010, when surface oil burning and flaring occurred. Exposure estimates were also broken down for two areas, the hot zone within a mile of the well; and what the study labeled the source area, between 1 and 5 nautical miles away. Researchers documented a "newly detected case of hypertension" when a worker reported either beginning to use antihypertensive medication after the spill, or had a blood pressure measurement that came back high. About 12% of study participants fell into either of those categories. Findings align with earlier research Researchers pointed out that total petroleum hydrocarbons, a group of chemicals found in crude oil, including that from the BP well, have long been associated with negative health outcomes related to hypertension. Past studies have also linked oil exposure during prolonged cleanup activities to oxidative stress, or an imbalance between the body's production of free radicals and antioxidants. Oxidative stress can damage tissues, DNA and proteins in the body. Tiny particulates created by burning oil can contribute to atherosclerosis, or hardening of the arteries, which also can lead to hypertension, other studies have shown. Oil spill workers have had the opportunity to apply for financial and other healthcare benefits as part of a settlement with BP and its drilling partners, which is overseen by a federal judge. Individuals who are part of the settlement and have been diagnosed with hypertension also are eligible to participate in a so-called "Back-End Litigation Option", available for those diagnosed with health issues directly related to the spill after April 16, 2012. However, they have to file a notice of intent to sue with the medical claims administrator within four years of their initial diagnosis, under the settlement rules. The medical claims administrator would not comment when asked whether this new study would restart that four-year window for filing a claim, now that the link between high blood pressure and exposure to spill pollutants has been better established. Editor's note: An earlier version of this story misstated the name of the journal in which the study was published. It was published in JAMA Network Open, a peer-reviewed medical journal. Dangerously hot days, which are expected to triple in Louisiana over the next few decades, have been linked to an uptick in emergency room visits for issues like anxiety, mood disorders, schizophrenia and self-harm, a new study found. The research, published last week in JAMA Psychiatry, adds to a growing body of evidence that heat-related health issues pose increasing dangers to vulnerable populations as hot days increase. Though the uptick was small about 8% more mental health visits on hot days the impact on the health care system could be significant as Louisiana gets hotter. If it's happening in millions of adults across the US or in tens of thousands of adults in any particular state, that's still going to represent a pretty costly burden from increasing summertime temperatures, said study author Amruta Nori-Sarma, an assistant professor at Boston University School of Public Health. Louisiana cities are already experiencing two weeks to a month more of extremely hot weather than they did 50 years ago, according to a 2020 analysis by Climate Central, a science research and journalism organization. By 2050, the current average of 35 hot days yearly is expected to skyrocket to nearly 115 days. Scientists examined nearly 3.5 million ER visits across the U.S., including visits in nearly every parish in Louisiana. High heat days were calculated based on the 95th percentile in each location, so a temperature that was considered high in New England might not necessarily rank as a high heat day in Louisiana. In most of central and northern Louisiana, high heat days translated to days over 97.52 degrees Fahrenheit. In southern coastal Louisiana, it was 95 degrees Fahrenheit or higher. Its unclear why exactly heat is related to mental health issues, but health experts speculate there are many causes. People who suffer from mental health issues may have few places to go and are more likely to live in poverty, which means they may not have access to air-conditioning. Heat causes disruption to sleep, said Nori-Sarma. Health care staff can typically count on a busier emergency department when temperatures get very high or very low in the region. When you open the door to go outside and immediately start sweating, those are bad days for everybody, said Dr. John Jones, director of emergency medicine at Baton Rouge General. The mental health population is a lot more susceptible to this. Substance use disorders in combination with mental illness may also exacerbate symptoms, said Dr. Jeffrey Elder, medical director for emergency management at University Medical Center and LCMC Health in New Orleans. Certain drugs, including antidepressants, along with alcohol can interfere with the bodys ability to handle higher temperatures. Top stories in New Orleans in your inbox Twice daily we'll send you the day's biggest headlines. Sign up today. e-mail address * Sign Up Those substances don't allow the body to dissipate heat as well, said Elder. Health experts recommend checking on loved ones and neighbors during high heat days to avoid both physical and mental health dangers. We all need to watch out for each other, said Jones. Bring your neighbor over to sit in your AC because they don't have it, and maybe it saves them a trip to the ER later. For those who study the impact of climate on health, the uptick in emergency visits isnt surprising. Other studies have found links between temperature increase and suicide and violence, says Reggie Ferreira, director and associate professor at Tulane Universitys Disaster Resilience Leadership Academy. The question is how communities will handle hot days that are measured in months rather than weeks in the near future. We've always adapted, so I believe we'll be able to adapt again, said Ferreira. But at what cost? What cultural things do we have to give up? For example, colleagues who study climate in Vietnam have observed how people who catch fish for a living have to get up earlier and earlier to avoid unbearable heat, said Ferreira. That can change how much time people spend with their children during the day as well as their sleeping patterns. It changes the whole family dynamic at the end of the day, said Ferreira. The study found that people in Louisiana handled the heat better than those in the Northeast, where emergency visits for mental health went up even more. But the study was limited to data from private insurance and Medicare Advantage plans, meaning those with low incomes who qualify for Medicaid or go without insurance were not reflected in the data. Had they been able to include those visits in the study, the increase in mental illness visits on hot days probably would have been much higher. We're kind of considering this as a best-case scenario, said Nori-Sarma. Wind-whipped flames are marching across more of New Mexicos tinder-dry mountainsides, forcing the evacuation of area residents and dozens of patients from the state's psychiatric hospital as firefighters scramble to keep new wildfires from growing. The big blaze burning near the community of Las Vegas has charred more than 217 square miles. Residents in neighborhoods on the edge of Las Vegas were told to be ready to leave their homes. It's the biggest wildfire in the U.S. and is moving quickly through groves of ponderosa pine because of hot, dry and windy conditions that make for extreme wildfire danger. Forecasters are warning of extreme fire danger across New Mexico and in western Texas. I was all set to write about it when I received an email from a friend and former colleague (who is now a professor at Georgetown University in Washington DC). He told me hed been reading these columns and appreciated the good news that Ive tried to convey. Canton, Pa. State Police in Wilkes Barre said Nathan Mitchell Bassett, 29, of Canton delivered an 8-ball of methamphetamine to a confidential informant in March of 2021. Bassett appeared in Bradford County Court this week for a preliminary hearing after being charged with felony possession with intent to deliver a controlled substance, third-degree criminal use of a communication facility, and intentional possession of a controlled substance. Court records show charges were filed against Bassett on Jan. 31, 2021 after an investigation by the State Police Vice Unit. State Police said they monitored a confidential informant, who met Bassett near the 30 block of East South Avenue to complete a transaction for methamphetamine. Troopers observed the CI get into a vehicle with Bassett, who allegedly delivered the methamphetamine. A search of the CI after the transaction turned up the illegal substance. Bassett is being held at the Bradford County Prison on $70,000 monetary bail. Docket sheet Success! An email has been sent to with a link to confirm list signup. Error! There was an error processing your request. Get Our Free Newsletters Never miss a headline with NorthcentralPa.com newsletters. Sign Up Today! Morning Headlines: Would you like to receive our daily morning newsletter? Afternoon Update: What's happening today? Here's your update! Daily Obits: Get a daily list straight to your email inbox. Lewisburg, Pa. One week after Bucknell University students, faculty, and staff led a campus walkout voicing their dissatisfaction of the alleged mishandling of campus crimes, students say the issues have not been addressed. In turn, university officials say they are working on addressing communication with students and university staff and faculty regarding the public safety department. A forum with the new Chief of Public Safety, Anthony Morgan, is planned for Thursday, March 3. Students are hoping the public safety department will offer more transparency. One of the walkout organizers, student Jillie Santos, said last week she had met with Morgan, who seemed receptive to working with students and being more transparent. A press release sent Monday from the Bucknell University Democratic Socialists (BUDS), who helped to organize the walkout, claimed the university had not responded to the issues outlined during the Feb. 21 event. The walkout event was held in response to the news of the recent whistleblower lawsuit filed against the university by former public safety officer Colby M. Snook. In the complaint, Snook alleged that former Chief of Public Safety Steve Barilar allowed a student involved in a sexual harassment incident to destroy evidence. "Students participated in the walkout out of a belief that such conduct formed a pattern of abuse and irresponsibility by Public Safety, demanding reforms to the structure and oversight of the department," the release stated. Snooks lawsuit, filed in January at the Union County Court of Common Pleas, maintains that the male student who allegedly recorded a woman in a campus restroom in May 2021 was given an opportunity to erase cell phone evidence. Barilar had allowed the student access to the phone in the public safety offices evidence room after he met with the students parents. Related Reading: Former Bucknell public safety officer sues university for violating whistleblower law Snook's lawsuit claims that when he reported the alleged mishandling of the case, university employees retaliated and created a hostile work environment which forced him to resign on Nov. 16, 2021. Barilar retired at the end of January, a retirement that had long been planned, according to university officials. Morgan stepped into the role of chief of public safety on Feb. 1. Student speakers at the walkout also mentioned the Frans House incident from May 2021, in which fraternity members had harassed and threatened members of the LGBTQ+ affinity house. When public safety officers arrived at the scene, they fraternized openly with the individuals attempting to break into the house and promised them access to it once final exams concluded that semester, according to the students release. The speakers also brought up a letter sent to the university administration two years ago from the Coalition of Concerned Students regarding the mistreatment of the Black campus community. The students said in the release that no plan of action has been formed yet to address the issue. Student organizers announced at the walkout that they had planned a forum for the following day, Feb. 22. Morgan was invited and allegedly accepted the invitation, according to the students release. However, Morgan "allegedly retracted his acceptance shortly before the walkout, citing hesitance to 'distract from the conversation,'" according to the release from the student group. Mike Ferlazzo, director of media relations for Bucknell University said Morgan has met with a number of student groups since he took over the chief of public safety position on Feb. 1, including BUDS, who he met with on Feb. 11. "During that meeting, he was informed of an event the following Tuesday, but it was mischaracterized as an opportunity for further engagement with members of BUDS, not as a public forum associated with a larger protest directed at Public Safety," Ferlazzo said in an email. "He declined the invitation because he didn't want his presence to distract from the conversation." The universitys forum planned for Thursday is part of two Community Conversations on Public Safety planned for the spring semester, according to Ferlazzo. The purpose is to engage the university students and employees in broad discussions. At the forum, Morgan will present his vision for campus security, followed by a 30-minute question-and-answer session with attendees. Students, university staff, and faculty will have an opportunity to meet Morgan at a reception following the forum. Colby Snook lawsuit As for Snooks lawsuit, the allegations are still under investigation. Snook presented the allegations last summer to Union County District Attorney Pete Johnson, who forwarded the complaint to the public corruption office at the Pennsylvania Attorney Generals Office. On Feb. 23, Bucknell filed preliminary objections at the Union County courthouse, contending there was not any evidence of wrongdoing in the allegations made by Snook. The university also denied Snook was discharged after reporting the alleged wrongdoing last summer to the Union County District Attorney. The university denies that he was mistreated by other Bucknell employees, according to a statement issued by the university. Furthermore, the university acknowledged in the statement that Bucknell is aware that the Union County district attorney forwarded Snooks complaint to the Pennsylvania Attorney Generals Office more than six months ago. Bucknell has not received any official contact from the Attorney General suggesting the investigation will result in any charges, but is prepared and willing to cooperate in the investigation, should it move forward, the university said in the statement. Full statement issued on Feb. 24 by Bucknell University: Yesterday Bucknell University filed preliminary objections to the whistleblower complaint filed by a former Bucknell public safety officer, and requested dismissal of the complaint. In support of the motion, Bucknell cites the absence of any evidence of wrongdoing in the allegations made by the plaintiff and denies that the plaintiff was discharged after reporting the alleged wrongdoing to the Union County District Attorney. The plaintiff resigned from the University, and the University denies that he was mistreated by other Bucknell employees. Bucknell is aware that the plaintiffs complaint to the Union County District Attorney was forwarded to the Pennsylvania Attorney Generals Office over six months ago. Bucknell has not received any official contact from the Attorney General suggesting that the investigation will result in any charges, but it is prepared and willing to cooperate in the investigation, should it move forward. Both Union County judges have recused themselves of the case. The Administrative Office of Pennsylvania Courts will assign a judge from outside of the area to hear the case. Is Barilar in or out? Several weeks ago, some members of the campus community became upset when they found out Barilars employment had been retained for a two-week period after his retirement. The extension was to finish a student discipline case unrelated to the lawsuit, Ferlazzo said. At the beginning of February, Barilars profile on the Bucknell website showed up with the title Special Advisor to the General Counsel. A short time later, the title was changed to Casual Public Safety. Ferlazzo said the first title posted was an error. Related Reading: Bucknell retains former public safety chief as counsel, despite corruption allegations Three mothers of Bucknell students sent a letter to university officials expressing their disappointment that Barilars employment term had been extended. The letter was sent to university president John Bravman; Karin Rilley, general counsel; and Pierre Joanis, vice president of human resources. In the letter, the women said it was "a travesty" that the university and Rilley in particular would hire Barilar as an advisor. Rilley met with Snook in July, after he initiated the complaint against Barilar for the alleged misconduct, and she allegedly threatened him about his future employment with Bucknell. Success! An email has been sent to with a link to confirm list signup. Error! There was an error processing your request. Get Our Free Newsletters Never miss a headline with NorthcentralPa.com newsletters. Sign Up Today! Morning Headlines: Would you like to receive our daily morning newsletter? Afternoon Update: What's happening today? Here's your update! Daily Obits: Get a daily list straight to your email inbox. (The Center Square) Gov. Tom Wolf gathered with Democratic lawmakers at a Philadelphia community center on Thursday to urge the Republican-controlled General Assembly to spend Pennsylvanias remaining federal relief funds. Wolf touted his $1.7 billion plan to spend the bulk of the commonwealths remaining American Rescue Plan Act funding at the North Light Community Center, where he stressed the ongoing struggles facing many Pennsylvanians due to the pandemic. Our commonwealth is sitting on billions of dollars in federal COVID-19 relief money that is meant to help our citizens, Wolf said. It is past time to use that money for its intended purpose to improve the lives of Pennsylvanians. Like helping Pennsylvanians afford child care and after-school care, like the program here at North Light Community Center. We know the positive impact quality child care has on future generations, as well as the economic impact child care has on a guardians ability to remain employed. A lot of households across the commonwealth are still recovering financially from the pandemic, and this money would go a long way to helping the people who are still hurting. Wolf pointed to his plan unveiled earlier this month to pump hundreds of millions into a variety of programs for families, businesses, health-care workers and climate change-focused revitalization projects. The plan includes $500 million in direct payments through a PA Opportunity Program to assist families with child care, job training, broadband, transportation and after-school programs. Wolf contends the program will provide needed relief from household expenses and child care, while providing opportunities to complete a degree or other training to increase income. Wolfs proposal also includes $225 million for the COVID Relief Statewide Small Business Assistance Program to provide grants between $5,000 and $50,000 to small businesses impacted by the pandemic. The program allows businesses to use the money to cover operating expenses and technical assistance, with a focus on prioritizing women- and minority-owned businesses, and rural communities. The governor estimates the money would help about 11,000 businesses. Another $204 million would go toward a one-time doubling of payments through Pennsylvanias existing Property Tax Rent Rebate program, which would benefit an estimated 466,000 residents with an additional average rebate of $475. Wolf also wants to spend $250 million on recruitment and retention incentives for long-term critical health-care workers, $40 million to boost behavioral and mental health programs, and $35 million in student loan forgiveness for health-care workers. The Wolf plan would spend another $450 million on conservation, recreation, preservation and community revitalization projects that align with the governors focus on fighting climate change. Rep. Pamela DeLissio, D-Philadelphia, and Sen. Vincent Hughes, D-Philadelphia, attended the press event on Thursday to support Wolfs spending plan. As minority chair of the Children & Youth Committee, I applaud and support the governors proposal to ensure that families who were particularly hard hit over the past two years due to the pandemic have access to additional financial resources to help their families recover and stabilize, DeLissio said. The inaccessibility of high-quality, affordable child care has been a chief obstacle for families, communities and our overall economy as we struggle to recover from the pandemic, Hughes said. Years of disinvestment in the futures of our children have been dramatically exposed over the past 24 months and we now have the opportunity to reverse that trend and invest in the next generation. Wolfs event came the same day Senate Republicans introduced bills to spend the federal relief money on fire companies, the Historically Disadvantaged Business Revitalization Program, and the Main Street Business Revitalization Program. Other Republican proposals aim to funnel the funds into school choice programs, water quality improvements, workforce development and other uses. Success! An email has been sent to with a link to confirm list signup. Error! There was an error processing your request. Get Our Free Newsletters Never miss a headline with NorthcentralPa.com newsletters. Sign Up Today! Morning Headlines: Would you like to receive our daily morning newsletter? Afternoon Update: What's happening today? Here's your update! Daily Obits: Get a daily list straight to your email inbox. Lycoming County, Pa. -- Tiadaghton Valley Regional Police Department has been undergoing regionalization since 2019, bringing police services in six municipalities together to serve 8,500 residents. The Borough of Jersey Shore and Porter Township established the Tiadaghton Valley Regional Police Department almost a decade ago with several other municipalities contracting for their police service. Likewise, Old Lycoming Township Police began contracting their police service to Hepburn and Lycoming Townships almost 20 years ago. "As the exploration of regionalization continues, Old Lycoming Township is taking a keen interest in the idea of sharing a police chief with the Tiadaghton Valley Regional Police Department," said TVRPD Police Chief Nathan DeReemer in a news release on Wednesday. On January 20, Old Lycoming Twp. Police Department's Christopher Kriner announced he would return to criminal investigation at his previous rank of detective sergeant. Kriner had served as chief just 10 months. He has continued to serve as the interim chief and will hand those duties over per an Old Lycoming Township memorandum of understanding with TVRPD to DeRemer, who will begin to oversee both departments, according to the release. Chief DeRemer has led the TVRDP regionalization effort, and although serving on an interim basis he will "immediately begin taking action to make the necessary changes needed in an attempt to further the success of the regionalization of Old Lycoming Twp Police Department," DeRemer said. "A sharing agreement would not result in a reduction in officer staffing in either department," said DeRemer. "It is unknown if the police department budgets would decrease if it shared services but it would definitely lead to greater efficiency and better service." Under the current agreement each department would maintain separate budgets but explicitly share a police chief. TVRPD currently provides law enforcement coverage in Jersey Shore Borough, Porter Twp., Cummings Twp., Nippenose Twp., McHenry Twp., and Piatt Twp. In mid-February, local and county leaders met with Executive Director of USDA-Rural Development for Pa., Bob Morgan in Jersey Shore to discuss funding for a Regional Public Safety Building. That facility would further consolidate and regionalize police, EMS, fire, and other government offices. Related reading: Regional Public Safety Building one step closer to reality in Jersey Shore Morgan praised those consolidation efforts for their unique coordination and cooperation between law enforcement, borough management, emergency servces, and the Lycoming County Comissioners to achieve the large-scale project. Success! An email has been sent to with a link to confirm list signup. Error! There was an error processing your request. Get Our Free Newsletters Never miss a headline with NorthcentralPa.com newsletters. Sign Up Today! Morning Headlines: Would you like to receive our daily morning newsletter? Afternoon Update: What's happening today? Here's your update! Daily Obits: Get a daily list straight to your email inbox. Jersey Shore -- Logan C. Garrett, 21, of Jersey Shore passed away unexpectedly on Monday, February 28, 2022. Born January 26, 2001 in Fairless Hills, Pa., he was a son to Paul Garrett and the former Heather Anderson. He was preceded in death by his paternal grandparents, Fred and Viola Garrett. Logan was a 2020 graduate of Jersey Shore Area High School. He was extremely talented in everything; with his drawing and artwork, voice imitations, self taught on the piano, and school plays. He was recently acknowledged at the Lycoming County Fair for the 2019 "Best in Show" Award and 1st place for his artwork. He won "Best supporting Actor" for the Ray of Light Honors for all local school plays. He enjoyed gaming on his XBox, was an avid hunter and fisherman, and enjoyed those trips with his father. One of his greatest joys was being an Uncle and spending time with his family. His parents were so incredibly proud of him in every way possible. He was known for many many nicknames, Uncle Chi, Logman, and a true gentle giant and a friend to everyone. In addition to his parents, he is survived by his siblings, Bill Garrett, of Bristol, Trisha (Mike) Clark, of Langhorn, Bob (Shannon) Garrett, of Carlisle, Alyssa Keller, of Mill Hall, and Morgan (Jalen) Gerth, of Oswego, NY; maternal grandparents, Cindra (Joe) Tirado, of Jersey Shore and Rodney Anderson, of West Virginia; and several aunts, uncles, nieces and nephews. A funeral service will be held at 3 p.m. Sunday, March 6, 2022 at the Crossroads Church, 1454 S. Rt. 44 Hwy., Jersey Shore. A visitation will be held from 2 p.m. Sunday until the time of service at the church. Arrangements are entrusted to Frederick B. Welker Funeral Home, Jersey Shore. Expressions of love may be made at www.WelkerFuneralHome.com To plant a tree in memory of Logan Garrett as a living tribute, please visit Tribute Store. Success! An email has been sent to with a link to confirm list signup. Error! There was an error processing your request. Get Our Free Newsletters Never miss a headline with NorthcentralPa.com newsletters. Sign Up Today! Morning Headlines: Would you like to receive our daily morning newsletter? Afternoon Update: What's happening today? Here's your update! Daily Obits: Get a daily list straight to your email inbox. Instant unlimited access to all of our content on www.northcoastcitizen.com. The North Coast Citizen E-Edition Newsletter emailed to you each week, the night before the paper hits the street! This subscription is for NEW or RENEWING online subscribers. The charge will appear as "Country Media Inc." on your credit card statement. Indiana law already requires "the voluntary and informed consent of the pregnant woman" prior to obtaining an abortion, and coercing a woman into having an abortion already is a crime under the state's intimidation statute. Nevertheless, the Republican-controlled General Assembly has agreed to create a new crime of "coerced abortion" that would punish anyone "who knowingly or intentionally coerces a pregnant woman to have an abortion" with up to 2 1/2 years in prison. House Enrolled Act 1217 won final approval, 74-17, Tuesday in the House, after last week passing the Senate, 38-10. It now goes to Republican Gov. Eric Holcomb to be signed into law or vetoed. The legislation was relatively noncontroversial compared to most Indiana abortion measures because it largely duplicates existing law. The new components include the addition of a 12th mandatory advisory statement "that no one has the right to coerce the pregnant woman to have an abortion" to the long list of things Indiana law requires a pregnant person be shown and told about abortion at least 18 hours before their procedure. In addition, the legislation mandates an abortion provider who suspects a woman is being coerced into having an abortion, despite her denials, to delay the abortion for at least 24 hours and immediately contact law enforcement who must immediately investigate the allegation. Supporters of the measure said even though state records show Indiana abortion providers only ever have suspected three women of being potentially coerced into abortion, they claim national data show many women who have had an abortion felt pressure before undergoing the procedure. "This bill is not about limiting abortions, it is about protecting women and children. No one should ever be forced to have an abortion against their will," said state Rep. Joanna King, R-Middlebury, the sponsor. Opponents suggested King's proposal is not needed because health care providers already are attuned to domestic violence issues, and a law directing abortion providers to immediately trigger a law enforcement investigation is likely to put a pregnant woman at greater risk from the person allegedly forcing her to have an abortion. Planned Parenthood Alliance Advocates, the state's largest abortion provider, said it views the legislation as another in Indiana's long history of abortion restrictions often later struck down by federal courts that aim to make abortion access as difficult as possible. Love 0 Funny 1 Wow 0 Sad 0 Angry 0 The business news you need Get the latest local business news delivered FREE to your inbox weekly. Sign up! * I understand and agree that registration on or use of this site constitutes agreement to its user agreement and privacy policy. Rush University System for Health plans to expand its presence in Northwest Indiana by opening an outpatient center in Munster. The Chicago-based health care provider, whose RUSH University Medical Center is ranked among the top 20 hospitals in the nation, plans to bring nationally ranked specialty care to the new Rush Munster Outpatient Center at 9200 Calumet Ave. The new medical facility is slated to open this summer. RUSH currently has the Midwest Orthopaedics at Rush Physical Therapy medical clinic in Munster, provides cardiology in Northwest Indiana and does thoracic surgery services at Franciscan Health hospitals in Northwest Indiana. It also plans to provide telestroke services at Franciscan hospitals. RUSH Munster will bring outstanding patient care to Northwest Indiana, providing patients and communities with convenient access to RUSH's nationally ranked clinical programs, said Paul E. Casey, chief medical officer at RUSH University Medical Center. In Munster, RUSH will offer specialists in transplant services; breast surgery; ear, nose and throat; epilepsy; gastrointestinal surgery; neuro-oncology; cardiology; gynecologic oncology; plastic surgery; urogynecology; urology; and vascular services. It will offer outpatient services like imaging, stress echocardiograms, X-rays, electrocardiograms and ultrasounds. RUSH is committed to the communities it serves, including strong collaboration with patients referring physicians, and the new location will make collaborating with RUSHs medical professionals easier for medical practitioners in the area, Casey said. RUSHs new location will make it more convenient for people living and working in the Region to receive the most coordinated, advanced health care from their RUSH providers. U.S. News & World Report ranks RUSH's cancer specialty 45th in the country, cardiology and heart surgery 33rd, ear, nose and throat 45th, gastroenterology and GI surgery 21st and neurology and neurosurgery third. Those nationally ranked specialists will handle both general cases and complex cases referred to them at the new Northwest Indiana outpatient center. RUSH will continue to work closely with other providers in Northwest Indiana, Casey said. Our presence increases the opportunities for collaboration, plus it provides closer-to-home access for many RUSH patients already coming from the Region. Region residents have long sought out medical care in neighboring Chicago, which is home to some of the best hospitals and skilled specialists in the country. Now those hospital systems have been increasing their footprint in Northwest Indiana at a time when local health care systems have been investing more in state-of-the-art technologies and advanced specialties in the hope of keeping more patients closer to home. RUSH is the second major Chicago health care provider eyeing an expansion in the growing Northwest Indiana market, which is becoming increasingly competitive. The University of Chicago also is planning a new micro-hospital in Crown Point, where it's building a 116,000-square-foot facility in the Beacon Hill Development District at Interstate 65 and 109th Avenue. Franciscan Health, Community Healthcare System, Northwest Indiana Health and Methodist Hospitals are already major players on the Northwest Indiana health care scene, each operating multiple hospitals and medical offices across the Calumet Region. RUSH is an academic health system affiliated with RUSH University, where more than 2,500 students study at its Medical College, the College of Nursing, the College of Health Sciences and the Graduate College. It operates Rush University Medical Center, Rush Copley Medical Center, Rush Oak Park Hospital, many outpatient care facilities and a providers network. Love 0 Funny 0 Wow 0 Sad 0 Angry 0 The business news you need Get the latest local business news delivered FREE to your inbox weekly. Sign up! * I understand and agree that registration on or use of this site constitutes agreement to its user agreement and privacy policy. A Gary native who went on to become CEO of a major life sciences firm was named to the National Academy of Engineering, one of the highest honors an engineer can receive. Mike Mussallem, a Rose-Hulman Institute of Technology alumnus and trustee who runs Edwards Lifesciences, was added to the class of 2022. The induction honors those who have made outstanding contributions to engineering research, practice, or education, including, where appropriate, significant contributions to the engineering literature and to the pioneering of new and developing fields of technology, making major advancements in traditional fields of engineering or developing/implementing innovative approaches to engineering education." Since 2000, Mussallem has led Irvine, California-based Edwards Lifesciences, which has developed medical innovations like transcatheter aortic valve replacement, transcatheter mitral therapy, tricuspid therapy, non-invasive hemodynamic monitoring and new surgical heart valves designed for active patients. The company has been active in philanthropy, such as by making donations for the Pi-Vilion and Mussallem Student Union at the Rose-Hulman engineering college in Terre Haute. It's also established a scholarship for Northwest Indiana and greater Chicagoland students there. For more than 40 years Mike has helped bring health care innovations that have improved the lives of patients throughout the world," Rose-Hulman President Robert Coons said. "The National Academy of Engineering honor is the latest of Mikes professional and personal achievements. Were proud that he has joined distinguished Rose-Hulman alumni and former educators as NAE members. Love 0 Funny 1 Wow 0 Sad 0 Angry 0 The business news you need Get the latest local business news delivered FREE to your inbox weekly. Sign up! * I understand and agree that registration on or use of this site constitutes agreement to its user agreement and privacy policy. A new event space and restaurant opened in Hebron, sharing the space where Mixdesign relocated a few years ago. The owner of the company, which has done designs and branding for clients like Fair Oaks Farms, the town of Cedar Lake and the Texas Farm Bureau, opened the Design Barn and Cafe 312 at 312 N. Madison St. in Hebron. The Design Barn is now hosting wedding and corporate events, including a recent Northwest Indiana Forum function, CEO and Creative Director Michaline Tomich said. It can host gatherings of up 300 people and has already proven popular with wedding parties. Mixdesign also has a larger design studio and building shop at the former church it bought on U.S. 231 about five minutes east of Interstate 65, where it has hired more staff. The company, which just celebrated its 20th anniversary this week, has served clients like Whiting, Calumet City, VonTobel, Schilling Lumber and the Dairy Adventure at the Wisconsin State Fair. It's located between Chicago and Indianapolis in a more rural setting Tomich said was ideal for entertaining the firm's clients as it has started to cultivate a more agricultural customer base. Mixdesign did extensive renovations to the 16,000-square-foot long-vacant church, which now has a more modern, industrial interior filled with upcycled decor that Tomich collects while antiquing across the country. It has a contemporary country feel. "It evokes Nashville," she said. She partnered with Jorge Sullon, a chef who left Fair Oaks Farms to start the Manta Food Truck last June, to launch Cafe 312 a few weeks ago after he started using MixDesign's commissary kitchen for his food truck. He and his wife Chef Allie Sullon crafted a breakfast, lunch and dinner menu for the destination restaurant. Breakfast options include a chorizo burrito, avocado toast, a miyo omelet, an acai bowl and creme brulee French toast. The lunch and dinner menu includes salads and sandwiches like a Cuban, grown-up grilled cheese and 312 Roll with smoked pork belly, pulled pork, sweet potato and pico de gallo. It offers both an espresso bar and an actual bar with spirits. Cafe 312, which is named afterthe date when Mixdesign was founded 20 years ago, plans to add a patio for outdoor dining when the weather gets nicer. "It's a great place for brunch, Tomich said. "It's conveniently located between Crown Point and Valparaiso. Everyone in town has loved it." Cafe 312 is open from 7 a.m. to 8 p.m. Thursday through Saturday and from 7 a.m. to 2 p.m. on Sunday. For more information, email 312cafe@designbarnevents.com, call 219-322-3780 or visit the312cafe.com. Love 0 Funny 0 Wow 0 Sad 0 Angry 0 The business news you need Get the latest local business news delivered FREE to your inbox weekly. Sign up! * I understand and agree that registration on or use of this site constitutes agreement to its user agreement and privacy policy. PORTAGE Police say a man on his way to a drug test for his commercial driver's licence was arrested on allegations of driving while intoxicated after an officer detected the smell of burned marijuana and found a heated bottle of urine in his vehicle. "I located a plastic squeezable bottle with a temperature gauge containing a yellow brownish liquid that was still warm to the touch and was registering over 100 degrees on the gauge," the Portage police officer said in his report. When the officer told the accused, Kamon Pettis, 41, who has Chicago and Gary addresses, that it was clear he was in a hurry to leave before the urine cooled down, he "smiled and again just asked if he could leave," the report states. Pettis was arrested and faces charges of operating while intoxicated, possession of marijuana, possession of synthetic urine and possession of drug paraphernalia, police said. The officer said he stopped Pettis' vehicle shortly after 9 a.m. Tuesday after seeing him speeding and repeatedly weaving into the oncoming lane while traveling southbound along Porter-Lake County Line Road south of U.S. 12. After stopping the vehicle, the officer said Pettis appeared intoxicated and failed field sobriety tests. He did not register positive for alcohol consumption, but reportedly told the officer he smokes marijuana to help lower his blood pressure. Police said they found a partially burned marijuana cigarette in his vehicle and a glass smoking pipe containing burned marijuana residue. Love 0 Funny 1 Wow 0 Sad 0 Angry 0 Sign up for our Crime & Courts newsletter Get the latest in local public safety news with this weekly email. Sign up! * I understand and agree that registration on or use of this site constitutes agreement to its user agreement and privacy policy. CROWN POINT A Chicago man charged with killing a 14-year-old girl in 2019 has rejected a plea offer calling for a 65-year sentence, attorneys said. Deonlashawn C. Simmons, 36, is preparing for a jury trial scheduled to begin March 14 before Judge Natalie Bokota, defense attorney Michael A. Campbell said. Simmons has pleaded not guilty to murder in the shooting death of 14-year-old Takaylah Tribitt, whose body was found Sept. 16, 2019, in an alley near East 20th Avenue and Pennsylvania Street in Gary. An autopsy showed Tribitt had been sexually assaulted, but Lake County prosecutors didn't charge Simmons with any sex crimes as part of the case. Tribitt's hands were bound behind her back with a cord, and another cord was wrapped around her neck. DNA on one of the cords linked Simmons to the homicide, court records state. Tribitt died from a gunshot wound to the head, the Lake County coroner's office said. Lake County Prosecutor Douglas Shaw said Tuesday his office offered Simmons a plea agreement that called for a 65-year prison sentence. In exchange for Simmons' plea to murder, prosecutors offered to dismiss habitual offender and firearm enhancements, he said. The sentencing range for a murder conviction in Indiana is 45 to 65 years. Enhancements can add several years to any sentence a convicted person receives. In January, the court ruled much of what Simmons told detectives during two separate interviews at the Chicago Police Department in fall 2020 can be presented to a jury. However, Magistrate Mark Watson granted Simmons' motion to suppress with regard to Simmons' statements about his Facebook profile, which were given in response to questions police asked before advising him of Miranda rights. In portions of his interviews that were not suppressed, Simmons allegedly admitted he knew Tribitt and would give her rides, buy her food, and pay for her to have her hair and nails done. Simmons also said he knew his relationship with Tribitt was "going to be a problem" because of her age, but he denied he had any sexual contact with her, according to charging documents. Besides DNA evidence on the cord found with Tribitt's body, detectives also gathered Simmons' cellphone location data and Tribitt's Facebook records, among other evidence, documents show. Tribitt was living in a Chicago shelter and had been reported missing by a shelter representative about two weeks before she was found dead, Chicago police said. While working to identify her, the coroner's office released a photo of a T-shirt she was wearing, which featured a Superman symbol with the words "Supergirl power." She eventually was identified after family members gave DNA samples for analysis, records state. Love 0 Funny 0 Wow 0 Sad 0 Angry 0 Sign up for our Crime & Courts newsletter Get the latest in local public safety news with this weekly email. Sign up! * I understand and agree that registration on or use of this site constitutes agreement to its user agreement and privacy policy. State lawmakers are taking another shot at enacting legislation to allow all adult Hoosiers legally entitled to own a firearm to carry a handgun in public without obtaining a state license. House Bill 1077 was killed Feb. 24 by the Republican-controlled Senate after the House-approved "permitless carry" plan was revised by the Senate Judiciary Committee to merely make minor modifications to the existing handgun licensing process. Senate President Rod Bray, R-Martinsville, said at the time permitless carry would be back this year, and state Sen. Eric Koch, R-Bedford, on Wednesday announced his intent to delete the contents of Senate Bill 209 and replace them with House Bill 1077, exactly as it passed the House ignoring the changes made by the Senate committee following nine hours of testimony and debate. That's easier said than done, however. During the conference committee process, all proposed changes to legislation must be agreed to by a designated Republican and Democratic senator, as well as a Republican and Democratic representative. Only then can the agreed plan advance to each chamber for final approval. At this point, it appears unlikely the Democratic conference committee members state Sen. Rodney Pol, D-Chesterton, and state Rep. Ragen Hatcher, D-Gary are willing to sign off on reviving House Bill 1077 without changes. Pol, in particular, said he believes lawmakers should consider the Senate committee testimony of Indiana State Police Superintendent Doug Carter, and representatives of the Fraternal Order of Police, who said eliminating handgun carry permits will make Hoosier police officers less safe because there no longer will be an easy way to confirm a person with handgun is legally entitled to be carrying it. "If you choose to support this bill you will not be supporting us. You will not be supporting the front-line officer," Carter said. "Shifting the burden from the individual who applied for the permit to the front-line officer is wrong on so many levels. But that's what you're doing." Hatcher, meanwhile, has long advocated for legislation to develop better systems for licensing gun owners and tracking gun sales to reduce the prevalence of gun violence and the toll it takes on communities, particularly in Northwest Indiana. "This proposal will put more handguns on our streets and add to the challenges many of our urban communities face in addressing violent crime," Hatcher said. "We are putting politics above public safety." The Republican supermajorities in each chamber can use their authority to substitute amenable Republicans for the Democratic conferees in coming days if they want the House-approved permitless carry plan to advance for final votes in the House and Senate. The measure almost is certain to again pass the House since it already was approved Jan. 11 by a 64-29 margin. Permitless carry supporters, including state Rep. Ben Smaltz, R-Auburn, the original sponsor, said they believe it's wrong for Indiana to condition the constitutional right to keep and bear arms on a requirement that lawful gun owners get permission from the state and submit their fingerprints to the government before carrying a handgun in public. "This bill is all about the lawful person and trying to respect their rights," Smaltz said. "(It) seeks to level the playing field for the law-abiding Hoosier to defend themselves in public as they can at home." The outcome in the Senate is less certain since supporting the proposal will mean defying the clearly expressed opposition of professional law enforcement officers and prosecutors across the state a potentially tricky vote in an election year. Should the measure pass both the House and Senate with identical language, it then will go to Republican Gov. Eric Holcomb for a decision on signing the proposal into law or vetoing it. Holcomb has not publicly declared a position on permitless carry. Though it's unlikely Holcomb's state police superintendent would have taken such a strong stance against the legislation unless Carter had an inkling his position accorded with the feelings of his boss. In any case, it takes in Indiana only a simple majority the same 50% plus one required to send legislation to the governor in the first place for the General Assembly to override a gubernatorial veto and enact a measure into law notwithstanding his objections. Love 1 Funny 0 Wow 0 Sad 0 Angry 0 Sign up for our Crime & Courts newsletter Get the latest in local public safety news with this weekly email. Sign up! * I understand and agree that registration on or use of this site constitutes agreement to its user agreement and privacy policy. EAST CHICAGO A city councilman who owns a property where a man was shot to death Christmas Day is offering a $3,000 reward for information leading to an arrest and conviction in the case. Dwayne Rancifer, D-at large, serves as vice president of the East Chicago City Council and owns the building in the 3900 block of Alder Street that houses Ralo's Cocktail Lounge. Eric Douglas, 32, of East Chicago, was shot and killed about 1:45 a.m. Dec. 25 after walking out of the bar with a fellow patron. He was found face down on a sidewalk in front of the bar with a gunshot wound to his head, officials said. East Chicago police said detectives knocked on the bar's door the morning of the homicide, but staff and patrons refused to answer. Police began working with Rancifer and his former attorney, Lonnie Randolph II, to obtain a copy of surveillance video from the bar the morning of the homicide. On Jan. 4, police received a partial video showing the homicide and the seconds leading up to it, Deputy Police Chief Jose Rivera previously said. Police obtained a search warrant for Ralo's after Rancifer and Randolph didn't deliver a full copy of the video to police as promised Jan. 6, Rivera said. Detectives executed the search warrant and retrieved the bar's DVR system and other electronic evidence, he said. The surveillance system was sent to a forensic lab to retrieve any and all data stored in it on the day of the homicide, police said. The Lake County prosecutor's office said in a news release issued Tuesday by attorney Paul Stracci, who currently represents Rancifer, that the video shows a suspect "mingling with several patrons before he walks out of the bar with the victim." "The suspect can be seen through the front bar window raising his hand, and the victim is seen falling out of view," the prosecutor's office said. "The other patrons appear to react and then the video ends." Prosecutor Bernard Carter said the video gave police a snapshot of what happened, but it will take a "team effort" to solve the case. He asked anyone with more information to come forward and said he was pleased Rancifer was offering a reward. Stracci said Rancifer has no connection to the operation of the bar and does not have access to the bar's information technology system. Rancifer wasn't present at the bar the morning of the homicide and "wouldn't have any idea" why bar staff didn't open the door for police, Stracci said. "I have been in regular contact with the prosecutor's office and they have never requested anything, a statement or otherwise, from Mr. Rancifer," he said. Stracci said questions about whether Rancifer is reviewing any agreements he may have the bar's operator were beyond the scope of his current representation of Rancifer. Rancifer said in a statement he's invested in the community. "Whether you knew Eric or his family, his murder affects us all," Rancifer said. "When one of us is murdered on the very sidewalks we and our children walk every day, it causes us to be afraid, robs us of our ability to trust our neighbors and ultimately frays the seams that bind us together." Rancifer said he mourns with Douglas' family and hopes someone will be brought to justice. "It is well beyond time for bar patrons and eyewitnesses to garner the courage to step up, contact the East Chicago Police Department and provide information regarding Eric's murder," Rancifer said. "Fear of retaliation, backlash or even interaction with the police allows violence to thrive in our community. Now is the time for our community to take back control of our neighborhoods and let others know we won't allow our community to be terrorized without consequence." Anyone with information is asked to call Detective Daniel Ponce at 219-391-8318 or dponce@eastchicago.com. Love 0 Funny 0 Wow 0 Sad 0 Angry 0 Sign up for our Crime & Courts newsletter Get the latest in local public safety news with this weekly email. Sign up! * I understand and agree that registration on or use of this site constitutes agreement to its user agreement and privacy policy. GARY After investigating a Buick submerged in the Little Calumet River, police learned the vehicle had been reported as stolen. First responders were called about 1:30 p.m. to a submerged vehicle in the river at West 30th Avenue and Harrison Street, said Gary Police Department Cmdr. Jack Hamady. Gary police and firefighters arrived to find a 2017 Buick in the water. However, no one was found inside. Divers searched the river near the crash, but no one was located, Hamady said. Police then learned the vehicle had been reported stolen out of Chicago on Feb. 22. A tow truck as called to recover the vehicle from the Little Calumet River. The investigation into the incident remains ongoing. Love 0 Funny 0 Wow 0 Sad 0 Angry 1 Sign up for our Crime & Courts newsletter Get the latest in local public safety news with this weekly email. Sign up! * I understand and agree that registration on or use of this site constitutes agreement to its user agreement and privacy policy. Legislation establishing a process for the Aberdeen subdivision to officially become part of Valparaiso, even though the neighborhood is not contiguous to the city, is headed to Gov. Eric Holcomb to be signed into law. The Indiana House voted 86-7 Tuesday to advance House Enrolled Act 1110 to the Republican chief executive. It last week received final approval by the Senate, 46-1. According to the measure, the Aberdeen homeowners association can initiate an annexation by Valparaiso after a financial study, so Aberdeen residents know the fiscal impact of becoming part of Valparaiso, as well as an opportunity for a majority of Aberdeen residents to overrule their homeowners association and halt the annexation. The Senate added a provision permitting Valparaiso, if it ultimately annexes Aberdeen, to simultaneously annex highway and utility right-of-way along State Road 2 to technically create a continuous direct link between the city and the subdivision. Aberdeen and Valparaiso officials both have observed any annexation is a ways off. But they've said that without the law change, there's no point even beginning those conversations because noncontiguous annexation currently is not permitted by Indiana statutes. Representatives of the Aberdeen Property Owners Association said they're reaching out to Valparaiso because Aberdeen residents are facing high costs to repair or replace aging infrastructure, particularly the streets running through the community that Porter County has no interest in taking over. The legislation was sponsored by state Rep. Ed Soliday, R-Valparaiso; and state Sens. Ed Charbonneau, R-Valparaiso; Rodney Pol, D-Chesterton; and Michael Griffin, D-Highland, among others. Love 0 Funny 0 Wow 0 Sad 1 Angry 0 Get Government & Politics updates in your inbox! Stay up-to-date on the latest in local and national government and political topics with our newsletter. Sign up! * I understand and agree that registration on or use of this site constitutes agreement to its user agreement and privacy policy. VALPARAISO Valparaiso got one step closer to creating the "Lincoln Highway Garage" after the City Council approved the creation of a Redevelopment Authority Monday night. The multi-level parking unit is planned for the 300 block of Lincolnway, across from the proposed 121-unit Linc apartment complex. While the size of the proposed garage is not yet known, the city is currently conducting a parking study to analyze downtown parking needs. The Redevelopment Authority would own the garage, and the Redevelopment Commission would lease it. Hageman, the Linc developer, will pay for the maintenance and upkeep of spots specifically set aside for Linc tenants. Valparaiso City Attorney Patrick Lyp said, if the both the Linc and the parking garage are approved, the city will finish the garage around the same time the first of the Linc's three buildings is completed, likely in October of 2023. Lyp said the Redevelopment Authority "for all practical purposes, is a holding entity to ultimately allow the Redevelopment Commission to own tangible assets." "The purpose of asking the council to establish the Redevelopment Authority is to allow for the construction financing of the parking garage which was announced as part of the Linc project," Lyp said. "This is a tool that is utilized rather frequently by other communities as part of financing physical structures." The Redevelopment Authority will consist of three appointed members, one of whom will be a City Council member. Councilman Robert Cotton, D-2, shared concerns that the Redevelopment Authority would shift oversight away from the City Council. Cotton read off a list of authorities the Redevelopment Authority would have including the ability to condemn, lease, purchase or survey property "considered useful in connection with local public improvements." The Valparaiso Democratic Committee released a statement expressing concerns regarding the Redevelopment Authority's ability to exercise eminent domain. Lyp said he could not find a single instance in Indiana where a Redevelopment Authority has exercised eminent domain. Redevelopment Authority powers are limited because it only has two sources of revenue: dollars appropriated by the City Council, and, as would be the case if the Linc project is completed, receiving lease payments "to in essence pay debt to the bond," Lyp said. "Envision the worst-case scenario: Your Redevelopment Authority goes rogue, they decide they want to trespass on people's property, they decide they want to just condemn left and right like there is no tomorrow," Lyp said. "They don't have a dime to their name. They can't do anything." Cotton also asked why the Valparaiso Economic Development Corp. could not be used as the holding entity for the parking garage, as was done when the Garmong shell building went up in 2016. The arrangement was temporary as the ultimate plan was always to sell the Garmong building. Lyp explained that, because the VEDC is a nonprofit focused on economic development, "it would make no sense" for the organization to be the holding entity for a municipal parking garage the city plans to have for decades. The council will be able to dissolve the Redevelopment Authority at any time and all of the actions taken by the authority will be public, Lyp said. The council approved the ordinance establishing the Redevelopment Authority with a vote of 6 to 1. Cotton was the sole "no" vote. "They do not have any money and City Council is here. Someone will be there to represent us, meaning the mayor is responsible, it will be his appointment," Casey Schmidt, R-3, said. "So I think there are many tiers to protect us, I don't see why we shouldn't move forward and take a step that helps us reach our goal." Love 0 Funny 0 Wow 0 Sad 0 Angry 2 Be the first to know Get local news delivered to your inbox! Sign up! * I understand and agree that registration on or use of this site constitutes agreement to its user agreement and privacy policy. HAMMOND Russias invasion of Ukraine signals a dangerous future for weak democracies. That is the verdict of three political science specialists at Purdue University Northwest speaking Tuesday at Alumni Hall about the conflict. Associate Professor Richard Rupp, Professor Meg Rinker and John Swarts, dean of the universitys Honors College and a political science expert, said there is little outside nations can do to help Ukraine stop the invasion. But it will have future implications for neutral countries who have stood on the sidelines between superpower rivals America and Russia. Swarts warned, Other countries are watching this closely to see if Putin can get away with it. Russian President Vladimir Putin unleashed more than 100,000 soldiers, tanks and airstrikes Feb. 24 on Ukraine, an eastern European country bordering Russia. Swarts said it was a worst-case scenario of an effort to decapitate the Ukraines elected government. He said, This is a major challenge to the way we in the West have seen the world since 1945, based on international principles of collective security, inviolable state sovereignty and not the law of the jungle where the strong dominate the weak. Rinker said the Ukraine has been an independent republic since the breakup of the Soviet Union three decade ago, but Russia wants to install a new government fully aligned with Russian interests. Swarts said the aggression could embolden other nations, like China to take over the island of Taiwan or Turkey to annex neighboring Greek Islands. A member of the audience asked what anyone would do to stop Putin from seizing Ukraine or other neighboring countries. They said the United States wont repeat its decision to intervene in the 1991 Middle East conflict called the Gulf War where the U.S. reversed Iraq invasion of its neighbor Kuwait. He said the United states will stand behind European members of the defensive alliance of NATO (North Atlantic Treaty Organization). NATO has gotten a lot more popular in the last week, Rupp said. Latvia, Estonia, Poland and other Eastern European countries have some assurances they wont be swallowed by Russia too. Ukraine wasnt a NATO member. The professors said there now is talk among some neutral European nations like Sweden and Finland to join NATOs security blanket. Swarts said the invasion has ended a hiatus in Russian-American rivalry. In the last 30 years, we have taken our eyes off of Russia," he said. "After the former Soviet Union had split up, that competition for resources and influence ended and it looked like we were all going to live happily ever after." But the old laws of political gravity hadnt gone away. We have just seen them re-emerge. Now we are almost back to the great power rivalry of the 19th and 20th century, he said. Russia has an extreme sensitivity to its western flank. Its nothing new for Russia to attack its neighbors to preserve its western flank. It did it in Poland in 1939, Hungary in 1956 and Czechoslovakia in 1968," he said. The old patterns of international politics are back after a 30-year hiatus. The old laws of political gravity still apply, powerful countries will seek still more power, he said. The professors said what is happening in eastern Europe should be a reminder to the adults of American political parties to put aside their partisan differences and support liberal democracy. Love 0 Funny 0 Wow 0 Sad 0 Angry 0 Get local news delivered to your inbox! Subscribe to our Daily Headlines newsletter. Sign up! * I understand and agree that registration on or use of this site constitutes agreement to its user agreement and privacy policy. So many of the scientists who pioneered research into full doses of psychedelics have started studying whether a microdose might also be beneficial. But evidence is limited, and experts are divided about how microdosing helps people or if it does at all. Much of the early research into microdosing has been anecdotal, consisting of enthusiastic survey responses from users who experienced enhanced attention and cognition, feelings of well-being and relief from anxiety and depression. Lab studies of psilocybin and LSD microdoses tend to support these claims, showing improvements in mood, attention and creativity. But these studies have generally been small, and they didnt compare a microdose to a placebo. You probably only participate at this point in a trial in microdosing if you really have a strong belief that this might help you, said Dr. David Erritzoe, clinical director of the Centre for Psychedelic Research at Imperial College London. And when people expect to benefit from a drug, they typically do. The two largest placebo-controlled trials of microdosing were published last year, and they both suggest that the benefits people experience are from the placebo effect. In the studies, volunteers used their own drugs to participate and, unknown to them, received either active doses or a placebo packaged in identical capsules. At the end of several weeks, almost everyones mood and well-being had improved, regardless of what they had taken. I was initially surprised but also a bit disappointed by the results, because when we set up the study we were quite optimistic that microdosing could have an effect beyond a placebo, said Michiel van Elk, an assistant professor of cognitive psychology at Leiden University in the Netherlands who led one of the trials. Dr. Erritzoe, who ran the other study, found that the drugs efficacy was tied to users expectations. If they took a placebo but thought it was a microdose, they felt better, and if they had an active dose but wrongly guessed it was a placebo, they did not. A third placebo-controlled trial, published earlier this month from the University of Chicago, tried to get around user expectations by giving participants four microdoses of LSD over the course of two weeks, but without telling them about the purpose of the study or even what they were taking. Once again, there was no difference between the LSD and placebo groups. Two major U.S. manufacturers, Boeing and Ford Motor, have suspended their business activities in Russia as the country escalated its war in Ukraine. Boeing said on Tuesday that it had halted major operations in its Moscow office and temporarily closed another office in Kyiv, Ukraine. The company also said it had ceased providing parts, maintenance and technical support services to Russian airlines. In recent days, countries around the world have imposed sanctions on Russian carriers, limiting their ability to use leased planes; fly over Western Europe; or buy spare parts. Boeing employs several thousand people in Russia, Ukraine and a handful of former Soviet states, an operation that includes a major design center in Moscow. The company also runs a flight training campus and research and technology center in the city and has a joint venture in Russia with VSMPO-AVISMA, Boeings largest titanium supplier. Boeing has been trying to diversify its titanium supply in recent years, and it said it had enough of the metal on hand to keep making commercial aircraft in the near term. In the cause of freedom, the world has found in Volodymyr Zelensky its most Churchillian figure in decades. I need ammunition, not a ride the Ukrainian presidents spirited reply to an American offer to spirit him to safety is a line for the ages. His inspiring appearances on the streets of Kyiv recall Britains wartime prime minister during the Blitz, personifying his nations determination to resist. Now its up to President Biden to play Franklin to Zelenskys Winston. That begins by explaining to the American public that losing Ukraine would be a global, not local, calamity. Im writing this before Biden delivers the State of the Union address on Tuesday night, so I hope he will say something along these lines by the time you read this. But the main point is this: Vladimir Putins goal in Ukraine isnt merely to seize territory for Russia, even if he wouldnt mind swallowing an additional chunk of it. He wants to crush its spirit. The threat a free Ukraine poses to his regime isnt, and never will be, military. Its political. Its the thought that if democracy, the rule of law and civil rights can take root in Kyiv, they might soon take root in Moscow, too, bringing an end to his rule and accountability for his crimes. A Ukraine thats a thriving member of the European Union would pose an even graver threat to Putins grip than would Ukrainian membership in NATO. A 28-year-old liberal immigration lawyer was headed for a runoff in May with Representative Henry Cuellar, South Texass 17-year incumbent, after neither candidate on Tuesday was able to muster 50 percent of the vote in the states most closely watched House primary. The first primaries in what promises to be a grueling midterm season gave indications of battles to come. For Republican leaders eager to win control of the House, the congressional results were a promising sign that the party establishment can still beat back challenges from the far right. For Democrats, another lesson emerged progressive activists could pull the party leftward next year, whether or not Democrats still control the House. In Texass 28th district, which stretches from San Antonio to the border region around Laredo, Jessica Cisneros, the immigration lawyer, was narrowly outpaced by Mr. Cuellar, one of the most conservative Democrats left in the House, after losing to him by 3.6 percentage points in the primaries in 2020. The Texas primaries on Tuesday officially opened the 2022 midterm election season, and while several important races remained too close to call early Wednesday morning, the contours were becoming clearer. Here is what we know so far. Abbott and ORourke are the nominees for governor. Gov. Greg Abbott, the Republican incumbent, and Beto ORourke easily won their primaries on Tuesday and will face off in November, with Mr. Abbott seeking a third term as governor and Mr. ORourke trying to become the first Democrat to lead Texas in more than 25 years. Mr. Abbott had two ultraconservative challengers in the Republican primary: Allen West, the former chairman of the Texas Republican Party, and Don Huffines, a Dallas businessman. Neither ended up posing a serious threat. Mr. ORourke who was Texas Democrats Senate candidate in 2018 but narrowly lost the general election to Senator Ted Cruz, and went on to run unsuccessfully for the Democratic presidential nomination in 2020 easily secured his partys nomination. Two detectives from the Columbus County Sheriffs Office drove toward the Lumber River in southeastern North Carolina last Monday and listened to what Eve Waddell was telling them about her husband, William Anthony Spivey. Mr. Spivey, the former police chief in Chadbourn, N.C., who has been charged with more than 70 felonies, went boating on the river a day earlier and had left a note in a truck indicating he wanted to die by suicide, Ms. Waddell told the detectives. But the boat, which was afloat, was empty, the authorities learned, and Mr. Spivey, who had a scheduled court appearance that Monday, Feb. 21, was missing. Or perhaps dead. Shortly after midnight on Feb. 24, the authorities said they found Mr. Spivey, 36, hiding near an apartment complex in Loris, S.C., and charged him with obstruction of justice for staging his death in what the Columbus County sheriff, Jody Greene, described as an elaborate ruse. Dont expect people with narrow experience to have deep insights into the human condition. Recent news described how violent the New York City subways really are. There were four stabbings on the subway in one 18-hour period last week. A few days later, a 57-year-old woman was brutally attacked as well. In her case, she was repeatedly kicked from behind as she walked down the subway stairs. When she refused to fall on her face, her attacker repeatedly hit her in the head with a hammer until she lost consciousness and could not defend herself. Then she was robbed. This brought to mind the recent discussions in front of the US Supreme court. We cant ask experts to solve our daily problems when reality is just a theory to them. The case before the Supreme Court hinged on New York state law. New York requires a criminal background check before you can buy a handgun. All handgun owners in New York are now law-abiding citizens, at least in theory. New York also demands an additional permit to carry a concealed handgun in public. The problem before the court was that the state wouldnt issue those permits to ordinary citizens who go ordinary places. In fact, those carry permits were political plumbs handed out to well-connected elites. During the court discussion, US Supreme court justice Elena Kagan acted shocked that people might want to legally carry concealed firearms on the New York City subway or in Times Square. ..... Look, the third piece of that agenda is support our veterans. Veterans are the backbone and the spine of this country. Theyre the best of us. Ive always believed that we have a sacred obligation to equip those we send to war and care for those and their family when they come home. My administration is providing assistance in job training and housing, and now helping lower-income veterans get V.A. care debt-free. And our troops in Iraq and Afghanistan have faced many dangers. One being stationed at bases, breathing in toxic smoke from burn pits. Many of you have been there. Ive been in and out of Iraq and Afghanistan over 40 times. These burn pits that incinerate waste, the waste of war medical and hazardous material, jet fuel and so much more. And they came home, many of the worlds fittest and best trained warriors in the world, never the same. Headaches. Numbness. Dizziness. A cancer that would put them in a flag-draped coffin. I know. One of those soldiers was my son Maj. Beau Biden. I dont know for sure if the burn pit that he lived near, that his hooch was near, in Iraq and earlier than that in Kosovo is the cause of his brain cancer, or the diseases of so many of our troops. Mr. Biden also vowed to prepare for new variants, saying that if necessary, his administration could deploy new vaccines within 100 days of a variants arrival. He called on Congress to provide new funding for the administration to stockpile more tests, masks and pills. I cannot promise a new variant wont come, Mr. Biden said. But I can promise you well do everything within our power to be ready if it does. Over the past week, as top federal health officials have been debating the new strategy, they have been evaluating a 136-page blueprint by outside experts whose recommendations include stronger air filtration systems in public buildings, billions of dollars in research and a major upgrade to the nations public health system. Titled Getting to and Sustaining the Next Normal: A Road Map for Living With Covid, the plan assumes that there will be fewer deaths from Covid-19 this year. An average of about 66,000 new coronavirus cases are being reported each day in the United States, according to a New York Times database. That is far less than the average daily caseload of about 800,000 in January, at the peak of the winter surge fueled by the highly infectious Omicron variant. But it is still more than five times as much as the daily caseload last June, before the Delta variant drove a summer surge. Even as Mr. Biden proclaims that things are getting better, large segments of the American population remain at risk. Children under 5 are not yet eligible to be vaccinated. On Monday, New York State health officials released data showing that the coronavirus vaccine made by Pfizer-BioNTech is much less effective in preventing infection in children 5 to 11 years than in adolescents or adults. And an estimated seven million Americans have weak immune systems, illnesses or other disabilities that make them more vulnerable to severe Covid. The White House announced last week that it was taking several steps to make masks and coronavirus tests more accessible to people with disabilities. Gina Raimondo, the commerce secretary, will be the so-called designated survivor for the State of the Union, watching from afar when President Biden delivers his speech, according to an administration official. Intriguing in title but, thankfully, not so far in practice the designated survivor does not attend the presidents address. Traditionally, he or she watches from a distant and secure location and is poised to take over the presidents responsibilities in the event that catastrophe strikes the Capitol and wipes out most of the government. Most years, the short tenure of the designated survivor has an oversize presence in the public imagination: There is a TV series by the same title about a low-profile cabinet member who suddenly assumes the presidency after a terrorist attack. But, for many people who are following closely, the Russian invasion of Ukraine and Vladimir V. Putins repeated references to his arsenal of modern battlefield and strategic weaponry has turned the idea from a Hollywood gimmick into a tangible fear. WASHINGTON The House committee investigating the Jan. 6 attack on the Capitol on Tuesday subpoenaed a half-dozen lawyers and other allies of former President Donald J. Trump who promoted false claims about widespread fraud in the 2020 election and worked to overturn his loss. Those who were sent subpoenas for documents and testimony participated in a range of attempts to invalidate Joseph R. Biden Jr.s victory, including filing lawsuits, pressuring local election officials to change the results and drafting proposed executive orders to seize voting machines. The select committee is seeking information about attempts to disrupt or delay the certification of electoral votes and any efforts to corruptly change the outcome of the 2020 election, Representative Bennie Thompson, Democrat of Mississippi and the chairman of the committee, said in a statement. The six individuals weve subpoenaed today all have knowledge related to those matters and will help the select committee better understand all the various strategies employed to potentially affect the outcome of the election. More than 550 witnesses have testified before the committee, which is tasked with writing an authoritative report about the violence of a year ago that left more than 150 police officers injured and resulted in several deaths. WASHINGTON President Bidens challenge on Tuesday night was to unite Americans behind his confrontation with a brutal Russian leader who has shattered more than three decades of post-Cold War peace without setting off fears that the return of superpower conflict will inflict an unacceptable cost. Even as scenes of ruin were being flashed to the world from the Ukrainian cities of Kyiv and Kharkiv, Mr. Biden argued that it was worth paying a price one he suggested he could limit to preserve freedom in Eastern Europe. And he celebrated his success in organizing the Western allies to impose truly painful sanctions on Russias economy as punishment for the invasion of Ukraine and with the hope of loosening President Vladimir V. Putins hold over his country. Mr. Putins aggression, he argued, had actually strengthened an Atlantic alliance the Russian leader intended to splinter. And he made the case that even if Mr. Putin prevailed on the ground in Ukraine, Russia would emerge from this premeditated and unprovoked war weaker and the rest of the world stronger. Yet Mr. Biden left unaddressed, at least for now, several of the hardest questions about where America goes next and how it will ultimately emerge from Mr. Putins audacious effort to dismantle a world order largely designed in Washington. President Biden will use his State of the Union address Tuesday night in part to announce steps to protect nursing home residents and hold providers accountable for unsafe and substandard care, including by expanding inspections and financial penalties on what the White House is calling bad actor nursing homes and poor-performing facilities. More than 1.4 million people in the United States live in more than 15,500 nursing homes, which receive reimbursement with tax dollars through two federal programs: Medicare and Medicaid. The pandemic has thrown into sharp relief the dangers of living in nursing homes, and also the challenges they face. Nursing homes are caring for some of the nations most vulnerable people: older and disabled adults, often with chronic underlying conditions. Like all congregate living facilities, they are places where viruses spread easily. According to the White House, nursing home residents and staff members account for some 200,000 of the nearly 950,000 deaths in the United States from Covid-19. Jen Psaki, the White House press secretary, told reporters on Monday that Mr. Biden would unveil new steps to protect seniors and other nursing home residents by cracking down on unsafe nursing homes. The White House detailed the new initiatives in a fact sheet posted on Monday on its website. Jewish groups and institutions around the world condemned a strike in Ukraines capital, Kyiv, in the area of the Babyn Yar Holocaust Memorial Center, where tens of thousands of Jews were killed by the Nazis in a two-day massacre during World War II. It was not clear to what extent the memorial was damaged by the strike. The memorial is close to Kyivs main radio and television tower in Kyiv, which was hit by a projectile. President Volodymyr Zelensky of Ukraine said at least five people were killed in the area. Mr. Zelensky, who is Jewish, also alluded to the sites history, saying on Twitter, What is the point of saying never again for 80 years, if the world stays silent when a bomb drops on the same site of Babyn Yar? On Facebook, the Babyn Yar Holocaust Memorial Center said that Russian forces had struck the site but did not describe whether there was damage. WASHINGTON Plagued by poor morale as well as fuel and food shortages, some Russian troops in Ukraine have surrendered en masse or sabotaged their own vehicles to avoid fighting, a senior Pentagon official said on Tuesday. Some entire Russian units have laid down their arms without a fight after confronting a surprisingly stiff Ukrainian defense, the official said. A significant number of the Russian troops are young conscripts who are poorly trained and ill-prepared for the all-out assault. And in some cases, Russian troops have deliberately punched holes in their vehicles gas tanks, presumably to avoid combat, the official said. The Pentagon official declined to say how the military made these assessments presumably a mosaic of intelligence including statements from captured Russian soldiers and communications intercepts or how widespread these setbacks may be across the sprawling battlefield. The official spoke on the condition of anonymity to discuss operational developments. But taken together, these factors may help explain why Russian forces, including an ominous 40-mile convoy of tanks and armored vehicles near Kyiv, Ukraines capital, have come to a near crawl in the past day or two, U.S. officials said. KYIV, Ukraine Brushing aside international outrage, Russia widened its assault deep inside Ukraine on Tuesday, bombing civilian areas in the two biggest cities, amassing a miles-long convoy near the capitals doorstep and warning an outside world intent on economic reprisals not to go too far. The Russian attacks hit a hospital in Kharkiv the second consecutive day of lethal Russian strikes on that eastern citys civilian population and a deadly blast struck a broadcasting tower in the capital, Kyiv, knocking out television and radio stations. A famous Holocaust memorial nearby sustained damage. The escalation came amid rumors in Moscow and other Russian cities that the government might increase conscription to bolster its troop strength in Ukraine, where a surprisingly defiant resistance appears to have frustrated Kremlin expectations of quick victory. Now, the conflict in Ukraine looks as if it might become a more drawn-out fight that could plunge Europe into its worst refugee crisis of this century as hundreds of thousands of Ukrainians seek safety elsewhere. With the Russian economy already reeling from an array of sanctions, associates of President Vladimir V. Putin reacted sharply to a declaration by Frances finance minister that Europe would wage total economic and financial war against Russia. PARIS The man the Kremlin holds in dismissive contempt, President Volodymyr Zelensky of Ukraine, has emerged as an online hero. His Twitter account has leapt by hundreds of thousands of followers a day (he now has 4.3 million). Often dressed in olive-green fleece and cargo pants, he has accused Russia of war crimes, signed a formal application to join the European Union, and morphed into a symbol of hope and grace under pressure. As Russia pursues its ruthless invasion, Mr. Zelensky has used social media adroitly to outmaneuver his nemesis, President Vladimir V. Putin. So, too, have many of the 44 million citizens of Ukraine. TikTok, the video-sharing app with more than a billion active users, has shaped views of the conflict and contributed to an intense wave of global sympathy for Ukraine. Call it Resistance 4.0, the influencers war against an unprovoked Russian invasion. Mr. Putins assault against a phantom genocide in Ukraine meets the nimbleness, even the humor, of a people unified and galvanized by the Russian leaders obsessive talk of their nonexistence as a nation. The Russian leader also claims the war is nonexistent and is in fact a special military operation. Technology, blamed of late for every ill from the death of truth to the spread of loneliness, restores feeling and revives human connection as the war unfolds. Brave civilians brandishing newly acquired rifles against armored divisions cannot leave the onlooker cold. Londons subway system, one of the worlds busiest, came to a near standstill on Tuesday when about 10,000 London Underground workers represented by the National Union of Rail, Maritime and Transport Workers walked off the job over concerns about staff reductions and pensions. It was the first of two 24-hour strikes planned for this week. Millions of commuters were encouraged to work remotely because of expected severe disruptions to service in the system, commonly called the Tube, on Tuesday and Thursday. Limited service resumed on some of the systems 11 lines by Tuesday afternoon. The London Underground, like many public transportation systems around the world, has seen steep declines in ridership and revenue during the coronavirus pandemic. The strike on Tuesday coincided with an increase in rail fares in England and Wales. These are the very same transport staff praised as heroes for carrying London through Covid for nearly two years, often at serious personal risk, who now have no option but to strike to defend their livelihoods, the union said in a statement last week. In 1974, a group of amateur treasure divers from nearby Brittany, acting on local lore, found the wreck in roughly 30 feet of ocean. The divers did not report the find to officials as required under French law that says shipwrecks and their cargo in territorial waters are the property of the state. Instead they kept the site secret, and revisited in 1975 to recover its bounty. One of them took a picture of the ingots as they laid on the sea floor, a photo that would prove crucial during the investigation. Mr. LHour caught wind of the find in the late 1970s and traced his way to the treasure hunters, who had divvied up their 100 or so ingots but later fell out amid disputes. When you have a large network of informants, Mr. LHour said, there is always someone who owes you something or who wants to get back at the seller by passing information on to you. By 1983, French prosecutors had filed charges against more than a dozen people in connection with the shipwreck, yet most of the accused testified that they knew nothing of the ingots. But in 1995, Mr. LHour was able to track down a copy of the underwater picture of the ingots taken by one of the divers in 1975. It showed the gold nestled among two sea creatures, a starfish and a sea urchin useful evidence if the ingots ever surfaced. Some of them did, in 1999, on an episode of PBSs Antiques Roadshow in Tampa, Fla., when a French woman presented a set of five Chinese ingots and an underwater photo of the bars. Its complicated, said John MacIntosh, managing partner of SeaChange Capital Partners, an organization that supports nonprofits. He said nonprofits could not be expected to always fully vet from square one everybody that they take donations from. But they have to recognize that it does create a connection and that they are providing implicitly at least some kind of imprimatur on the donor. He recalled that similar questions had arisen over money given to cultural institutions by the Sackler family, whose donations, once welcomed, were later met with growing unease in the art world as the familys pharmaceutical interests became linked to the opioid crisis. There are times when we have to reflect on the connections that we have and sometimes part company with people who have been supportive, Mr. MacIntosh said. George Suttles, the executive director of Commonfund Institute, the research and education arm of Commonfund, which manages the assets of about 50 cultural institutions nationwide, said he was struck by how quickly some cultural institutions had cut ties with Russian artists and donors. Arts organizations need to have systems in place that can provide a uniform way of understanding and gauging the cost-benefit analysis of cutting ties with an associate, he said. Part of what were seeing is that cultural institutions dont have that keen analysis or investigative infrastructure set up, he added. They were rattled. Mr. Potanin, a billionaire who made his fortune in banking and natural resources, including a major stake in one of the worlds largest nickel producers, has never had sanctions imposed against him. But as with many of the rich men who have made their fortunes during the past few decades and kept them as Mr. Putin has ruled Russia, he is closely associated with the Russian president. He was among a group of leading oligarchs who met with Mr. Putin in the Kremlin last week, days after the Russian invasion of Ukraine. He has not commented on Russias actions in Ukraine. When he took office, President Joseph R. Biden Jr. likely hoped that a year later, he could begin his first State of the Union address with an inspirational exhortation about a united country rejecting authoritarianism, provoking standing ovations and flag-waving from both sides of the congressional aisle. On Tuesday night, he did just that. But the unified country that he spoke about was Ukraine, united for the horrific reason of its brutal invasion by Russia. The standing ovations were for its people. The flags being waved were Ukrainian blue and yellow. As for American unity well, it lasted for all of several minutes. The crisis in Europe was not the issue pundits would have expected to hang over this address when Mr. Biden took office. But it ended up making what is often a perfunctory speech a significant TV event, for the message it would send to the besieged Ukrainians and the Kremlin. Overseas, at least, there was an eager audience. Earlier in the day, CNN interviewed President Volodymyr Zelensky of Ukraine, whose defiant viral videos from Kyiv rallied support for his country. Unshaven, weary-looking and wearing green fatigues in his bunker, Mr. Zelensky implored Mr. Biden to send a useful message as his country fended off conquest. As the House chamber filled up, images from Washington were split-screened with shots of the darkened Kyiv skyline. Welcome to Best of Late Night, a rundown of the previous nights highlights that lets you sleep and lets us get paid to watch comedy. Here are the 50 best movies on Netflix right now. Not So Civil Union Stephen Colbert went live on Tuesday night after President Bidens first State of the Union address. And let me tell you, it was a roller-coaster ride of rip roaring reasonableness, Colbert said of Bidens speech. Honestly, its been amazing to be able to do something that isnt a comedy. But coming from comedy, I was very interested in the absurdities of the world. Because as I learned more about Silicon Valley, and how everything works, it can be an absurd place. And the performance aspect of her character the turtleneck and the voice as somebody who has been in rooms with all men and not knowing what to do with my hands or my face, I understood that. Well, you do have a longstanding interest in messy, charismatic women. Underneath the turtleneck, maybe shes one more. MERIWETHER There are a lot of layers and facets and history. I felt like peoples understanding of who she was had been limited to the deep voice and the turtleneck. I was interested in going deeper, and I felt like Rebeccas podcast was made with that spirit of wanting to figure out what motivated her. It was a really hard tone to figure out. As opposed to other stories of start-ups that have failed, the stakes for this were so high. This was peoples health. This was, in a very primal way, their blood. Amanda, why did the series interest you? SEYFRIED I had been very curious about Elizabeth Holmes. I had, on my own, binged everything I could on her. I just I knew that this was something that I was going to be able to live with for a long time and explore in a completely new way for myself as an actor, somebody thats here with us and living her life. It felt like going to college, this job. MERIWETHER It was so much research! SEYFRIED I mean, I bought a book on microfluidics. I sat and I watched and listened to those deposition tapes [related to a 2018 Securities and Exchange Commission lawsuit against Holmes, Balwani and Theranos]. I re-listened to The Dropout. I listened to [an audiobook version of] Bad Blood. I just didnt stop, and it never got old. I felt like I was absorbing her. At some point you had to decide what motivated her. What was it? SEYFRIED Belief. Our imaginations are wild, if we exercise them. I chose to just, as this character, believe in everything. And when I was told that something wasnt true, I doubled down. Unpublished sketches by Dr. Seuss will serve as the inspiration for a new series of childrens books to be written and illustrated by a diverse group of emerging artists, the company that oversees the authors estate said on Wednesday. The line of books will be released under the name Seuss Studios, a new project from Dr. Seuss Enterprises that will publish at least two original books a year beginning in 2023, a spokeswoman for the company said in a statement. Although a list of the authors and illustrators who will work on the books is still being finalized, the company said they will be from diverse backgrounds and include people of color. The announcement comes a year after Dr. Seuss Enterprises said that six books that Theodor Seuss Geisel wrote under the pen name Dr. Seuss would no longer be published because of their use of imagery that portrays people in ways that are hurtful and wrong. Reading THE GOLDEN COUPLE (St. Martins, 326 pp., $28.99) is like arriving at a crime scene in which the criminals have left some fake clues just to mess with your head. This latest book by Greer Hendricks and Sarah Pekkanen teems with red flags that are sometimes red herrings; the trick is to figure out which is which. As Avery, an unorthodox marriage counselor, muses to herself in a session with Marissa and Matthew, the titular couple, Every single person here is concealing something. That includes Avery, whose sketchy methods extend to spying on her clients and appearing unannounced at their offices, and who is apparently being harassed by shadowy representatives of a conglomerate whose corruption she exposed after a patient revealed it in a session. Meanwhile, the sharks circling Marissa and Matthews shaky marriage include Matthews hot ex-girlfriend, Natalie, and the couples old friend and Marissas new lover, Skip, who is possibly a psychopathic stalker. Who is crazy and who is merely flaky? Is there any connection to the terrible thing that happened when Marissa, Matthew and Skip were teenagers? What is Averys real game? The narration further disorients us by alternating between Marissas third-person and Averys first-person perspectives. Not everything tracked, but I am happy to say that the ending made total wacky sense and was a complete surprise. Alex Seguras wittily original SECRET IDENTITY (Flatiron, 368 pp., $27.99) succeeds on so many levels: as a homage to classic noir, a love letter to New York in the seamy 1970s and an immersive tutorial in comic-book publishing of that era. It features Carmen, secretary to the head of a barely afloat comic-book publisher, who longs to write her own comics. Unfortunately, her boss is a chauvinist dingbat. But luck (sort of) smiles on her when she teams up with a co-worker and helps produce an electrifying new series featuring a brooding heroine named the Lynx. (Bonus: Some of its pages are included in the book.) But then the co-worker is murdered. And no one knows Carmen wrote most of the story her name isnt mentioned as an author. Trying to dodge her volatile, on-and-off married girlfriend, find her professional footing and solve her colleagues murder while keeping ahead of the police proves challenging. But there are compensations, like a wild night at CBGBs featuring an electrifying new band, Talking Heads. Bidens new Covid plan The White House released a new coronavirus strategy today that is aimed at ushering the U.S. into a new normal. The idea behind the new strategy is to move the nation out of crisis mode and into a stage where the virus will no longer disrupt everyday life. The president spoke in broad strokes about the way forward during his State of the Union address last night. I know youre tired, frustrated and exhausted, President Biden said. But I also know this: Because of the progress weve made, because of your resilience and the tools that we have been provided by this Congress, tonight I can say we are moving forward safely, back to more normal routines. The plan fleshed out the speech with details, including four main goals: Protecting against and treating Covid-19. A test to treat program will allow Americans to get tested at a pharmacy and, if they are positive, receive antiviral pills on the spot at no cost, the president said last night. The plan includes efforts to boost American vaccine manufacturing capacity to one billion doses a year, inoculate young children when a vaccine is authorized and counter disinformation. Preparing for new variants. The plan aims to improve the countrys surveillance capabilities to identify new variants quickly. Biden said that his administration aimed to develop new vaccines within 100 days of a variants arrival. Avoiding shutdowns. This part of the plan aims to give schools and businesses Covid tests, guidance and supplies, including for improvements to ventilation and air filtration systems. It includes a proposal for paid sick leave for those who miss work for a case of Covid or those who care for a loved one who is infected. Fighting the virus abroad. The plan pledges to donate 1.2 billion vaccine doses around the world and to work to solve the supplemental oxygen crisis by making emergency supplies widely available. While some of these initiatives are new, like the test to treat program, much of the strategy draws on actions the administration is already taking. For instance, the part of the plan aimed at boosting American manufacturing of vaccines was unveiled in November. Congress will have to fund much of the plan. The U.S. has been distracted by a series of failures in Iraq and Afghanistan and has underestimated both Putin and Chinas leaders. European countries have refused to spend much money on their own militaries and have chosen to protect their economic ties with Russia rather than confront Putin. The invasion of Ukraine has the potential to be a turning point. Last night, Biden promised that it would be. When the history of this era is written, Putins war in Ukraine will have left Russia weaker and the rest of the world stronger, he said. While it shouldnt have taken something so terrible for people around the world to see whats at stake, now everyone sees it clearly. We see the unity among leaders of nations, a more unified Europe, a more unified West. Biden on Covid With both symbols and words, Biden signaled that he hoped the country was entering a new phase of the pandemic. He did not wear a mask while walking to the rostrum or during his speech. House Speaker Nancy Pelosi and Vice President Kamala Harris did not wear masks while sitting behind him. Few members of Congress in the audience wore them, either. For more than two years, Covid has impacted every decision in our lives and the life of this nation. And I know youre tired, frustrated and exhausted, Biden said. But I also know this: Because of the progress weve made, because of your resilience and the tools that we have been provided by this Congress, tonight I can say were moving forward safely, back to more normal routines. Biden said his administration would expand availability of post-infection treatments and rapid tests, efforts to prepare for new variants and distribution of vaccines to other countries. He also called for workplaces and schools to remain open. Ford Motor has decided the best way to make the transition to electric vehicles is to transform itself first. On Wednesday, the automaker said it had reorganized its auto operations into two distinct businesses one that makes its gasoline-powered vehicles and focuses on maximizing profits and another that develops and ramps up production of electric models and aims for rapid growth. Fords chief executive, Jim Farley, said in an interview that the two businesses required different skills and mind-sets that would clash and hinder each area if they remained parts of one organization. You cant be successful and beat Tesla that way, he said. Sales of battery-powered cars are rising rapidly, a trend that Mr. Farley and other auto executives see as the industrys biggest disruption since Henry Ford introduced mass production and the Model T in 1908. Ford, General Motors, Toyota, Volkswagen and other traditional manufacturers are spending tens of billions of dollars to field new models, build battery plants and develop new technologies that Tesla has pioneered, such as advanced driver-assist systems and over-the-air software updates. The White House continues to support Ms. Raskin. Michael Gwin, an administration spokesman, said she had earned widespread support in the face of an unprecedented, baseless campaign that seeks to tarnish her distinguished career in public service and her commitment to upholding the highest ethical standards any administration has ever put forward. But the controversy surrounding her nomination could prove uncomfortable for Democrats, who are trying to prevent regulators from so frequently leaving the government to advise the sort of companies they once policed. The Republicans do this all the time because they are seen as the party of business, said Meredith McGehee, a longtime Washington ethics expert. The vulnerability is that here you have a Democrat whos in this position thats in conflict with the rhetoric of the Democratic Party. The issue centers on a wonky but increasingly important corner of finance. Ms. Raskin started on the board of Reserve Trust, a Colorado-based trust company that now calls itself a financial technology firm, shortly after leaving a top role at the Treasury Department in 2017. From 2010 to 2014, she served as a Fed governor. When she joined the board, the Kansas City Fed had recently rejected the firms first application for a so-called master account with the central bank. Such accounts allow firms to tap the Feds payment infrastructure, enabling them to carry out services for clients without relying on an external partner. They are hot commodities, and nonbank financial firms often strive but struggle to qualify for them. To qualify for the account, the firm changed its business model and reapplied in 2017. Dennis Gingold, a founder of Reserve Trust who was a longtime acquaintance of Ms. Raskins and who has donated to the political campaigns of her husband, Representative Jamie Raskin of Maryland, said in an interview that he had helped to bring Ms. Raskin to the company. Mr. Gingold said Ms. Raskin had called the Fed about the master account at his behest, because he was worried that the central bank was not giving the reapplication a fair consideration. From his Washington office, she phoned Esther George, the Kansas City Fed president. The call lasted two minutes and was insignificant, Mr. Gingold said, noting that Ms. Raskin simply asked that the decision be made on the facts. Workers at Starbucks stores in Buffalo are accusing the company of retaliating against union supporters by telling some of them they may have to leave the company if they cannot increase their work availability. At least five of the cases have arisen at a store that unionized in December, though union supporters at other Buffalo-area stores report similar conversations with managers, frequently but not always involving pro-union employees. The company denies any connection between the scheduling issues and union activities and says the matter is strictly logistical. The tensions indicate how labor relations are playing out after initial successes in unionizing company stores. None of Starbuckss roughly 9,000 corporate-owned stores in the United States were unionized before early December, but three have unionized since then, and workers at more than 100 stores across the country have filed for union elections. One of the Buffalo workers, Cassie Fleischer, said her manager told her on Feb. 20 that she would soon no longer be employed at the store where she had worked since 2020 because she had sought to reduce her hours from around 30 to 15, a change the manager said she could not accommodate. The store was recently unionized, and Ms. Fleischer is a prominent union supporter. H&M Group, one of the biggest sellers of clothing in the world, said on Wednesday that it was temporarily pausing all sales in Russia, joining a growing list of companies rethinking their ties to the country after its invasion of Ukraine. H&M Group is deeply concerned about the tragic developments in Ukraine and stand with all the people who are suffering, the company said in a statement. It added that it cares for all colleagues and joins all those around the world who are calling for peace. H&M, which is headquartered in Stockholm, said that it had already temporarily closed its Ukraine stores for the safety of shoppers and employees. The company did not immediately respond to a request about its store count in Russia or when it began selling products there. The announcement came a day after Apple said it paused sales of its products in Russia. Oil companies, including BP, Exxon Mobil and Shell have announced they would exit the country, and two Hollywood studios the Walt Disney Company and Warner Bros. have said they would pause the release of films in Russia. Even before Russias invasion of Ukraine, OPEC Plus was producing substantially less than its targets. The International Energy Agency, which works to shape energy policy around the world, estimated that OPEC Plus fell short by 900,000 barrels a day in January about 1 percent of overall production. Saudi Arabia, the de facto leader of the Organization of the Petroleum Exporting Countries, is likely to have some concern about what is becoming a disorderly rise in oil prices. Apparently matters have not reached a point where the Saudis and allies like the United Arab Emirates might act unilaterally and put more than their agreed share of oil on the market. In addition, analysts say, the Saudis may be content to let geopolitics take the heat for the oil price spike and keep the cash rolling. With Mr. Novak serving as a co-chair of OPEC Plus, discussions of the details of output increases may be at best awkward. OPEC Plus did not hold a news conference after the Wednesday meeting, perhaps to avoid uncomfortable questions that would have been directed at Mr. Novak. Saudi Arabias relationship with Russia has long been contentious, but the collapse of oil prices in 2014, partly due to rapid increases in output in the United States, a rival to both, pushed the two petroleum powers to cooperate to manage output. Moscow is not a member of OPEC, but it was drawn into an alliance with the Saudi-led cartel OPEC Plus in 2016. The two fell out briefly in 2020 at the beginning of the pandemic, setting off a price war, but quickly patched matters up. Riyadh and Moscow to a great extent call the shots in OPEC Plus, to the resentment of some other members. Despite the climbing oil prices, the U.S. oil industry remains reluctant to increase production significantly. But there is growing concern that Russia could turn to digital assets like cryptocurrencies or its own digital ruble to ease the pressure of these restrictions. A 2021 Treasury report highlighted the expanding digital asset marketplace as a potential problem for governments hoping to change rogue countries behaviors by punishing them economically. And last week, The New York Times described the many cryptocurrency tools available to Russian entities that want to keep making deals without involving the traditional banking industry. These reports are even more troubling because of analyses that suggest that the cryptocurrency industry may not be fulfilling its responsibility to comply with U.S. sanctions, the senators wrote. A Treasury spokesman did not respond to a message seeking comment on Wednesday. Cryptocurrency trading involving rubles has jumped since the United States and many of its allies imposed sanctions, according to the crypto tracking firms Chainalysis and Kaiko. But the significance of the increase is unclear: It could suggest that affected Russian entities are converting wealth into cryptocurrency, but its also possible that ordinary Russians are turning to the technology to preserve their savings as the value of the ruble plummets. Major crypto exchanges, including Binance and FTX, have pledged to comply with U.S. sanctions, but the industry has resisted calls from the Ukrainian government to freeze all Russians access to cryptocurrency. The United States has not asked the companies to take such an action. Our mission is better served by focusing on individual needs above those of any government or political faction, Jesse Powell, the chief executive of the crypto exchange Kraken, wrote on Twitter this week. Cryptocurrencies, he said, are a weapon for peace, not for war. War and politics are complicating the efforts of the two biggest polluters in history the United States and Europe to slow down global warming, just as scientists warn of intensifying hazards. On Tuesday evening, President Biden barely made a mention of his climate goals in the State of the Union speech despite promises to make climate an issue that drives his presidency. European politicians have their own problem: They are struggling to get out from under one of the Kremlins most powerful economic weapons its fossil fuel exports, which Europe relies on for heat and electricity. Oil and gas prices are soaring globally. That is a boon to those who extract and sell the very products that drive fatal heat waves, wildfires and sea level rise. And it is leading to new demands for increased drilling in the United States, already one of the worlds biggest producers of oil and gas. The developments come just days after an exhaustive report from the United Nations that implored world leaders to sharply reduce emissions of carbon dioxide, methane and other greenhouse gases that are dangerously heating the planet. To fail, they said, is to face a harrowing future where the rate of global warming outpaces humanitys ability to adapt. Deep below the ground in Ukraine, where Russia continues to mount an aggressive attack, lies vast, untapped mineral wealth that could hold the keys to a lucrative, clean-energy future for the Eastern European nation. Ukrainian researchers have speculated that the countrys eastern region holds close to 500,000 tons of lithium oxide, a source of lithium, which is critical to the production of the batteries that power electric vehicles. That preliminary assessment, if it holds, would make Ukraines lithium reserves one of the largest in the world. But the Russian invasion has come just as Ukraine, under President Volodymyr Zelensky, was trying to position itself as a major player in the clean energy transition an evolution for a country that long built its economy on coal, iron, titanium and other legacy industries. A 28-year-old man was arrested and charged with hate crimes Wednesday evening in connection with a two-hour spree of attacks on women of Asian descent in Manhattan over the weekend, another example of a grim wave of violence against Asian Americans. There was no indication that the assailant knew any of the seven victims, two of whom were treated at local hospitals. The police charged the man, Steven Zajonc, with seven counts of assault and attempted assault classified as hate crimes, as well as with seven counts of aggravated harassment and harassment. Mr. Zajonc, whose address was listed as a Midtown drop-in shelter, was taken into custody at a public library on Wednesday, a police spokesman said. The police said Mr. Zajonc, who is originally from Florida, declined to make a statement after his arrest. The New York Public Library said that guards at the Stavros Niarchos Foundation Library on 40th Street and Fifth Avenue had recognized the man as a regular and had alerted the police. Iris Weinshall, its chief operating officer, said in a statement on Thursday that the guards had a challenging job and that the library was so proud (but not surprised) of their quick thinking and good work. Some Republican politicians and the union representing parole officers said the law removed too much latitude for individual cases and did not address other issues within the parole system. Still, Brian Benjamin, who is now the lieutenant governor to Ms. Hochul, was the bills main sponsor in the State Senate, and Ms. Hochul praised its conception during her signing and signaled a desire to create change in the system. Some Democratic politicians and advocates questioned whether the same pledge still held at a time when Republicans have attempted to pit progressive Democrats efforts to change the criminal justice system against rising public safety concerns. Whats troubling is that the governor is not intervening to uphold the letter of the law, said Assemblywoman Phara Souffrant Forrest, a Brooklyn Democrat who sponsored the bill in the Assembly. A lot of promises were being made, so now where you at? We need immediate intervention to ensure that the intention of the bill is upheld. Hazel Crampton-Hays, a spokeswoman for Ms. Hochul, said the governor would ensure the new rules were applied correctly. We remain committed to implementing the law as written and passed by the Legislature, she said. If the legislature passes any modifications to the law, the Governor will review them. Many of the people named in the court filing on Wednesday were on parole when they were rearrested for misdemeanors. Those charges alone would not have been serious enough to detain them at Rikers. But as parole violations, they would result in automatic incarceration under the old rules. In the new system, a hearing to consider release must be scheduled within 24 hours after someone is detained on any type of parole warrant and they can only be held for the violation if they present a substantial risk of willfully failing to appear. Lawyers at the Legal Aid Society said they planned to make subsequent filings for other groups of detainees. This article is based on interviews with 11 people, including current and former jail workers and other criminal justice officials and members of the detainees families, as well as a review of jail injury reports and court records. A Department of Correction spokeswoman said both incidents were under investigation. Louis Molina, the jails commissioner, declined to be interviewed. He said in a statement that he had identified deficiencies within the department and intended to correct the dysfunction that he inherited from the previous administration, but he did not elaborate. Appointed in January by Mayor Eric Adams, Mr. Molina is facing the worst crisis to befall the city jail system since the crack epidemic crested in the early 1990s. After the coronavirus pandemic first swept through, thousands of correction officers stopped going to work. Gang members gained control over some housing areas, and other detainees were left to fend for themselves, often going without food or basic health care. Rates of violence rose sharply. At least 16 people died after being held in the jail system last year many in preventable ways and on Sunday Rikers Island recorded its first death in 2022, officials said, after a 38-year-old man, Tarz Youngblood, was found unresponsive inside the George R. Vierno Center and doctors were unable to revive him. One of my main priorities is to streamline our data analysis and reporting structures, which will allow us to provide accurate and timely information to our stakeholders, Mr. Molina said in the statement. Tens of thousands of detainees were hurt last year in the jail system, city records show. More than 1,900 suffered lacerations, concussions or broken bones. Of those, at least 450 were injured so severely that they had to be hospitalized nearly triple the number in 2020. No city official can address the problems on Rikers Island without an accurate incident-reporting system, said Bryanne Hamill, a former member of the Board of Correction. A veteran New York City police sergeant pleaded guilty on Wednesday to misdemeanor assault charges stemming from attacks on handcuffed men who had provoked him during two separate arrests, officials said. In one of the attacks, the sergeant, Phillip Wong, punched a man in the face when he was in a cell, according to court records. In the second, he knelt on the back of a man who was shouting I cant breathe on a subway station floor. Sergeant Wong acted after being spit at in one instance and taunted with anti-Asian slurs in the other, the authorities said. Announcing the charges last year, Cyrus R. Vance Jr., the Manhattan district attorney at the time, acknowledged the provocations but said they did not justify the sergeants response. On Wednesday, Mr. Vances successor, Alvin Bragg, reiterated the point. Law enforcement officials are sworn to serve and protect their communities, including New Yorkers in their custody, Mr. Bragg said in a statement. In this case, Sergeant Wong violated not only his oath but the law during the violent arrests of two New Yorkers. SANDS POINT, N.Y. Just before classes began on Wednesday morning, Jordan Goldberg, a fifth grader at Guggenheim Elementary School on Long Island, strode through the doors and stopped short. This doesnt feel normal! he said, clutching his bare, unmasked chin. For the first time since schools reopened during the pandemic, Jordan and many other public school students across the state entered homerooms, gymnasiums and class without masks. Citing low virus caseloads and a desire to return to a sense of normalcy, Gov. Kathy Hochul lifted the states school mask mandate starting Wednesday, leaving mask policy to local officials. But with low vaccination rates among minors and the threat of the coronavirus still present, if lessened, what once had been anticipated as a milestone moment was instead met with a mixed response. From students to teachers to parents, the rush of fresh-faced jubilation on Wednesday was tempered by concerns: On one side was a belief that the order was long overdue; on the other was a fear that the decision was dangerously premature. Mr. Adams announced on Sunday that the mask mandate for city schools would be lifted by March 7, provided cases dont rise significantly before them, marking a new chapter in the citys push to keep schools open amid the pandemic. Mr. Banks said the attendance rate had risen from 65 percent at the beginning of January to 89 percent on Tuesday. Mr. Banks also said Wednesday that he had begun working on a more permanent virtual learning model. Starting this September, he said principals and teachers would be able to work virtually with some students who prefer to learn remotely, though he said he would share details about the plan at a later date. There is a small percentage of students across the city families that have expressed great interest in doing that, and we want to make that opportunity available for them, Mr. Banks said. The chancellor highlighted the importance of preparing students to get middle-class jobs after graduation, which he plans to make a major focus for his first year. Im talking about real jobs that put our young people on a path to economic prosperity, Mr. Banks said. Thats what we should be focused on, not just the day-to-day of going to school. Mr. Banks emphasized the need to improve literacy in schools, especially for students of color: Two-thirds of Black and Latino students are failing state English and math exams. One of the main goals of Mr. Adamss predecessor, former Mayor Bill de Blasio, was getting every child up to reading level by second grade, an enormous undertaking that state test scores show had some success. But the de Blasio administration did not come close to achieving the universal literacy for which it had aimed. The New York City police report on 2021 hate crime arrestees shows that 30 of the 56 men and women charged with hate crimes against Asian Americans were Black, 14 were Hispanic, seven were white, and five were Asian American/Pacific Islanders. While most of the experts on Asian American politics I contacted voiced confidence in the continued commitment of Asian Americans to the Democratic Party and its candidates, there were some danger signals for example, in the 2021 New York City mayoral election. Eric Adams, the Democrat, decisively beat Curtis Sliwa, the Republican, 65.5 percent to 27.1 percent, but support for Sliwa an anti-crime stalwart who pledged to take on the spineless politicians who vote to defund police shot up to 44 percent in precincts where more than half of residents are Asian, according to The City. The story was headlined Chinese voters came out in force for the GOP in NYC, shaking up politics, and the subhead read From Sunset Park in Brooklyn to Elmhurst and Flushing in Queens, frustrations over Democratic stances on schools and crime helped mobilize votes for Republican Curtis Sliwa for mayor and conservative Council candidates. A crucial catalyst in the surge of support for Sliwa, according to The City, was his proposed reforms to specialized high school admissions and gifted and talented programs ignoring the fact that Adams had also pledged to do this. More generally, the City reported, A wave of hate crimes targeting Asian Americans during the pandemic has heightened a sense of urgency about public safety and law enforcement. Asian anger and frustration have, for the first time, left a visible dent in a city election. Grace Meng, a Democratic congresswoman from Queens, tweeted on Nov. 4, 2021: Pending paper ballot counts, the assembly districts of @nily, @edbraunstein, @Barnwell30, @Rontkim and @Stacey23AD all went Republican. Our party better start giving more of a sh*t about #aapi (Asian American-Pacific Island) voters and communities. No other community turned out at a faster pace than AAPIs in 2020. Similarly, Asian Americans led the drive to oust three San Francisco School Board members all progressive Democrats last month. As my Times colleague Amelia Nierenberg wrote on Feb. 16: The recall also appeared to be a demonstration of Asian American electoral power. In echoes of debates in other cities, many Chinese voters were incensed when the school board changed the admission system for the districts most prestigious institution, Lowell High School. It abolished requirements based primarily on grades and test scores, instead implementing a lottery system. In their March 2021 paper, Why the trope of Black-Asian conflict in the face of anti-Asian violence dismisses solidarity, Jennifer Lee and Tiffany Huang, sociologists at Columbia and the University of Pennsylvania, pointed out that since March 2020 there had been over 3,000 self-reported incidents of anti-Asian violence from 47 states and the District of Columbia, ranging from stabbings and beatings, to verbal harassment and bullying, to being spit on and shunned. While these senseless acts of anti-Asian violence have finally garnered the national attention they deserve, Lee and Huang continued, they have also invoked anti-Black sentiment and reignited the trope of Black-Asian conflict. Because some of the videotaped perpetrators appear to have been Black, some observers immediately reduced anti-Asian violence to Black-Asian conflict. Working against such Black-Asian conflict, the two authors argue, is a besieged but real-world solidarity demonstrated in studies showing that Black Americans are more likely than white or Hispanic Americans to recognize racism toward Asian Americans, and that Asian Americans who experience discrimination are more likely to recognize political commonality with Black Americans. Covid-related anti-Asian bias is not inevitable. While China virus rhetoric has been linked to violence and hostility, new research shows that priming Americans about the coronavirus did not increase anger among the majority of Americans toward Asian Americans. Lee and Huang warn, however, that anger among a minority has invoked fear among the majority of Asian Americans. In Asian Americans, Affirmative Action & the Rise in Anti-Asian Hate, published in the Spring 2021 issue of Daedalus, a journal of the American Academy of Arts & Sciences, Lee makes the case that Asian Americans are at a political tipping point: The changing selectivity of contemporary U.S. Asian immigration has recast Asian Americans from unassimilable to exceptional, resulting in their rapid racial mobility. This mobility combined with their minoritized status places them in a unique group position in the U.S. racial hierarchy, conveniently wedged between underrepresented minorities who stand to gain most from the policy (affirmative action) and the advantaged majority who stands to lose most because of it. It also marks Asians as compelling victims of affirmative action who are penalized because of their race. In recent years, a new brand of Asian immigrants has entered the political sphere whose attitudes depart from the Asian American college student activists of the 1960s, Lee writes. This faction of politically conservative Asian immigrants has no intention of following their liberal-leaning predecessors, nor do they intend to stay silent. The seizure of food turned Ukraine into an apocalyptic wasteland plagued by famine. People dropped dead on the streets. Ukrainians ate dirt, grass, food waste. Reports of cannibalism were widespread, and parents were said to have eaten their children. About 3.9 million Ukrainians perished in what became known as Holodomor death by hunger in Ukrainian. But killing them wasnt enough. As a final insult, Stalin, who was infamous for erasing enemies from photographs, forbade talk of the famine and ensured statistics were altered to hide the deaths, as if his victims had never existed. Less than a decade later, the Nazis seized Ukraine. Some 1.5 million Ukrainian Jews were killed, most by mobile Nazi death squads known as Einsatzgruppen, aided by local collaborators in what later became known as the Holocaust of bullets. Babyn Yar, just outside of Kyiv, became the final resting place for 33,000 Jews mowed down in just days. Destruction was not limited to the Jews. Cities, including Kharkiv, were reduced to swaths of rubble. Over two million Ukrainians were pressed into slave labor in Germany. Hunger descended again. In all, because of war and famine and destruction, five million to seven million Ukrainians lost their lives. Nearly 200,000 Crimean Tatars, Muslims who lived in Ukraine for centuries, were deported to Central Asia; tens of thousands died as a result. The end of German occupation didnt end the suffering, it only brought renewed Soviet repression. The U.S.S.R. couldnt abide any identity that challenged Soviet dominance, whether in individuals or nations. For 40 years after the war, Russia methodically swept aside the Ukrainian language and culture, leaving behind a landscape of soulless Soviet kitsch, red stars and slogans and tomes of speeches by Lenin. Ukrainian identity was vestigial and subservient; I still remember my school showing us drawings of peasants in vyshyvanki traditional Ukrainian embroidered shirts insipidly smiling while waving Soviet flags. The Kremlin also suppressed Holocaust remembrance, which it saw as potentially dangerous because it facilitated Jewish communal identity. For decades, the bodies of hundreds of thousands of Jews remained strewn in Nazi killing pits throughout Ukraine without so much as a grave marker. When the regime did permit memorials, the dead were invariably referred to as peaceful Soviet citizens, their Jewish identity purposefully omitted. When I was still a child, in 1986, an explosion at the Chernobyl nuclear plant spewed a radioactive cloud through Ukraine and Belarus. Heroic local volunteers and firefighters put out the radioactive inferno, preventing a second explosion that could have decimated half of Europe; many died horrific deaths in the process and in the aftermath. A large area of land was rendered uninhabitable and remains so today. Moscow stifled discussion of Chernobyl as it happened, cloaking the accident in secrecy and propaganda. Three years later my parents, my grandmother, my sister and I along with thousands of other Soviet Jews fled for Vienna. It was from America that we watched, in 1991, as the Soviet Union crumbled and the Iron Curtain was drawn back. Ukraine gained its independence, but promises of democracy were soon mired in endemic corruption. In 2004, the Orange Revolution saw hundreds of thousands of Ukrainians reverse the outcome of a fraudulent presidential election. In the winter of 2013-14, millions joined the Euromaidan uprising, demanding that Ukraine enter into a partnership agreement with the European Union. Shortly after, Russia illegally annexed the Crimean peninsula while Russian-backed separatists launched an anti-Euromaidan uprising in the east of the country. A year earlier, Constance Baker Motley, the first Black woman to serve as a federal judge, had her confirmation held up for seven months amid charges that she was a Communist sympathizer when she was younger. By the time of her nomination, she had become the most accomplished female litigator in the country. She had been hired by Justice Marshall at the NAACP Legal Defense and Educational Fund at a time when few firms would hire female lawyers, let alone Black female lawyers. She had successfully litigated cases desegregating Clemson University, the University of Georgia and the University of Mississippi. She had represented the Rev. Dr. Martin Luther King Jr. in Albany, Ga., and Birmingham, Ala. She was the first Black woman lawyer to argue before the Supreme Court winning nine of her 10 cases there. After leaving the Legal Defense and Educational Fund, she served in the New York State Senate and was the borough president of Manhattan. And yet she faced a barrage of attempts to discredit her and her extensive experience. As shameful as these tactics were, they were revealing. Senator Eastland was not wrong about the threat constituted by Justice Marshalls and Judge Motleys elevations. The advancement of Black people into positions of power traditionally held by white people is a threat to white supremacy. It frustrates a narrative about merit, threatens the expectation of unlimited control and power, and opens the door to see things through a different lens. When that Black person is one who has fought for racial justice or who unapologetically brings experiences and perspectives to the table that have the potential to interrupt prevailing approaches to how the law is understood and applied, it opens a portal to see aspects of our society that are all too often beyond the range of vision of those in power. Reflecting on what Justice Marshall brought to the conference on the court, Justice Byron White wrote, He characteristically would tell us things that we knew but would rather forget; and he told us much that we did not know due to the limitations of our own experience. That is why, even though Judge Jacksons confirmation is unlikely to change the outcome of issues before the court, firmly in the grip of its conservative majority of six, she has the potential to widen the perspective that is brought to how these issues are debated and discussed at the courts conference. This is how change begins by destabilizing comfortable narratives, with the inclusion of those who have not been seen. Thus, Judge Jackson, a highly respected judge whose record the NAACP Legal Defense and Educational Fund Inc. is continuing to review but who can hardly be described as radical, has already been accused of being a tool of the left wing, and her two and a half years of noble service as a public defender has been cast as evidence of her being soft on crime. These attacks by her opposition constitute a shrewd recognition that even a judge without the kind of civil rights pedigree of Justice Marshall or Judge Motley has the potential to disrupt what might be seen as a clear path to dismantling longstanding civil rights and criminal justice protections. And we have seen the impact of such disruption. Justice Sonia Sotomayor was a prosecutor before becoming a judge. But her voice has emerged as a powerful and riveting counterpoint to the conservative majority. Her dissents sting. And they are meant to. Every chink in the armor of racial and gender exclusion produces outsize opposition precisely because of its potential to destabilize existing norms and systems. Judge Jackson surely recognized this when she honored Judge Motley in last weeks news conference announcing her nomination, when she stated that she shares Judge Motleys commitment to equal justice under law. There will be inspiring moments, and there will be ugly and unwarranted attacks during Judge Jacksons confirmation hearing. But she will be confirmed. And something on the court, and in our expectations of it, will change. The presidential State of the Union address has always been a moment of political theater on a grand scale, full of soaring rhetoric and pageantry as well as policy and partisanship. Only recently has it also become a costume drama, with supporting players using visual cues to make their voices, and positions, heard even though they arent officially supposed to be speaking at all. Only recently, that is to say, have the clothes in the room played such an obvious part in the politics of the room. It is dress that goes far beyond the traditionally patriotic red-white-and-blue ties and suits that have been the default uniform of legislators past. It began during the last administration, in 2018, when Democratic congresswomen donned black in solidarity with the #MeToo movement. Many members of the Congressional Black Caucus also wore kente cloth draped around their necks in protest of President Donald J. Trumps statements regarding Africa and Haiti, and red pins in honor of the death of Recy Taylor, a Black woman raped as a child by a gang of white men who were never brought to justice. It continued the following year, with the coordinated effort of female representatives to wear white in honor of the suffragists, recognition that they were the largest class of women to enter Congress, and a riposte to the West Wing. Happened again, in 2020, during the SOTU that took place during Mr. Trumps first impeachment trial, with many women members of Congress again wearing white. The transporting abilities of scent are often invoked but just as frequently misunderstood. Smells arent better at retrieving memories than other stimuli, like things we see or hear, says Dr. Pamela Dalton, an experimental psychologist at the Monell Chemical Senses Center in Philadelphia. But the memories that smells elicit tend to be more vivid and emotional. So, as we reckon with our not particularly vivid and still mostly homebound existences, why not use scent to relive the visceral joys of wild nights spent surrounded by friends and strangers at bars and nightclubs? A collection of fragrances from the industrys top noses claim to help with just that, and contain notes of juniper, leather and tobacco meant to evoke blurry scenes of jostling bodies and neon lights. Sarah McCartney, the founder of the London-based perfumery 4160 Tuesdays, crafted a scent she called Maxed Out after a New York fan of the brand mentioned that his ideal fragrance would recall the aromas of a former job as a seller of the finest cannabis. He wanted a fragrance to capture marijuana cigars, rum cocktails, blackouts and regret, says McCartney, who opted for notes of tobacco, hemp, leather, rum, cumin (the odor of yesterdays shirt), vanilla and black coffee. I have never experienced anything resembling the situation he wanted me to create in scent, but its like telling a story, she says. So I imagined it, and apparently nailed it in one go. For Diptyques spicy Orpheon fragrance, the perfumer Olivier Pescheux also endeavored to recreate a scene hed never personally been a part of: that of the now-closed Paris nightclub after which the scent is named, which was beloved by Diptyques founders in the early 1960s (and conveniently located next to their first boutique in Saint-Germain-des-Pres). More specifically, Pescheux wanted to capture the smell of velvet, alcohol and tobacco, as well as the aromatic trail left behind by elegant women and dandies. With the founders of Diptyque dead and the Orpheon itself closed, it helped him to call on his own memories of the Latin Quarter jazz club Le Caveau de la Huchette, and to the bossa nova music of Luiz Bonfa and Antonio Carlos Jobim. Bal dAfrique, from Byredo, which was founded by Ben Gorham, reaches to the Folies-Bergere of the 1920s, where Josephine Baker famously danced La Folie du Jour. In addition to Baker serving as an inspiration, so, too, did Gorhams fathers written accounts of his travels through Tanzania and Kenya. Ultimately, Gorham came up with a blend of marigold, bergamot, cedar wood and violet. In a way, he says, its like another page in the diaries. Ukrainian leaders have pleaded with major digital services to treat Russia as a pariah and cut it off from 21st-century digital life. The companies, for the most part, had decided that Ukraine and global democracy were better served if they stayed on. Now, Vladimir V. Putin appears to have made the choice for some of them. The fact that digital access is a tool of aggression in conflict shows that whether the tech companies, governments and the public like it or not, a handful of corporate digital powers are geopolitical players. When tanks begin to roll, its a call to action for the United Nations, the heads of central banks and the chief executives of Google, Facebook, Apple and Microsoft. One of the earliest inklings of this power was the Arab Spring movements in the early 2010s. Activists in Egypt, Tunisia and Libya relied on U.S. social media sites and smartphones to share images of brutality by their governments against anti-regime protesters and to organize the logistics of street campaigns. An Egyptian-born tech worker, Wael Ghonim, created a Facebook page to memorialize a man who had been beaten to death by Egyptian police. It bubbled into massive rallies in Tahrir Square in Cairo. One Tunisian man broadcast his location in the app Foursquare when he was held by government forces and feared that he would disappear. It was the collective might of citizens, not Mark Zuckerberg, that was the instrument of political change. But the Arab Spring was a high point of tech optimism when it seemed as though the internet handed power to the people to disrupt corrupt institutions, and tech companies were on their side. LONDON On the February morning when Englands National Health Service pinged me, saying Id been identified as a contact of someone who had tested positive for Covid, I freaked out completely. Not out of fear of getting sick; Im boosted, and I think if I got the virus I would probably be fine. But the last time I came to London, in September, my euphoric playgoing trip was thrown into disarray when I tested positive post-arrival, which banished me to a hotel room for 10 solitary, asymptomatic days. Was I about to get stuck here again? Id only seen one friend this trip and he was OK, so it had to be a stranger, this person with Covid. My mind scrambled to figure out where our paths had crossed. Based on the time frame that the N.H.S. suggested, I would bet it was at a small, crowded theater two nights earlier my prime suspect being the guy in front of me whod sneezed mid-show. Thats when I noticed he wasnt wearing a mask. Which made him pretty unremarkable here, in a city with genuinely world-beating theater but audience Covid safety protocols ranging from lax to cavalier, and getting looser. Over my 12-day visit, which included some gorgeous productions I am grateful to have seen, that lack of stringency dampened my anticipation of shows, my enjoyment of them and ultimately my interest in going to them. Thurgood Marshall and Constance Baker Motley of the NAACP Legal Defense and Educational Fund and Arthur Shores, a Black lawyer from Alabama who was experienced in civil rights cases, waged a federal court battle on the womens behalf that began in 1953. (Mr. Marshall went on to become the first Black associate justice of the Supreme Court, and Ms. Motley became a noted federal judge.) Federal Judge Hobart Grooms ruled in June 1955 that Alabama could not discriminate against Ms. Lucy and Ms. Myers. The Supreme Court upheld his order in October. The university permitted Ms. Lucy to enroll, though it banned her from dining halls and dormitory rooms. (Pollie Anne Myers, who had had a child before marrying, was not allowed to enroll under the university moral code.) When Ms. Lucy arrived for her first class, on Feb. 3, 1956, the civil rights struggle was focused on the Montgomery bus boycott in support of Rosa Parks, who was arrested when she refused to give up her seat on a city bus to a white person. But Ms. Lucy drew national coverage in her own right. The Alabama student government called for observance of law and order, but protests and scattered vandalism erupted on and near the campus, waged by students and outsiders, on Ms. Lucys first two days in class. On the third day, when she was hit with debris, she made it to her classes but had to be spirited from the campus crouching in the back of a police car. That night, Alabamas board of trustees suspended her. The NAACP defense fund filed a suit contending that the university had conspired with rioters to prevent her admission. There was no evidence for that, and the accusation was subsequently dropped, but the university expelled Ms. Lucy at the end of February on the grounds that she had defamed it. The former detective who is facing charges of recklessly endangering Breonna Taylors neighbors during the fatal police raid on her apartment testified at his trial on Wednesday, saying that he wrongly interpreted the sound of his fellow officers spraying bullets into Ms. Taylors apartment as that of a suspect firing a rifle at the police. The testimony marked the first time that the detective, Brett Hankison, has spoken publicly since the botched March 2020 raid in Louisville, Ky., that left Ms. Taylor dead, and he described a chaotic scene and a series of errors. Mr. Hankison, 45, whose bullets did not strike anyone, is on trial for three counts of wanton endangerment. Prosecutors say he endangered a family of three who lived next to Ms. Taylor when several of the bullets that he fired traveled through Ms. Taylors apartment and into theirs. Mr. Hankison, wearing a gray suit with a silver tie, sounded nervous, and he choked up several times as he described the raid, during which officers burst through Ms. Taylors door shortly after midnight in hopes of finding evidence that her former boyfriend had been selling drugs. They had expected that she would be home alone, but instead she was sleeping in bed next to her current boyfriend, Kenneth Walker, when their banging on the door woke her up. The police knocked down the door, and Mr. Walker, who later said he believed the officers were intruders, fired a handgun once, striking an officer in the thigh. Three officers fired 32 shots in return, several of which struck Ms. Taylor, a 26-year-old emergency room technician. CHICAGO Michael J. Madigan, the former speaker of the Illinois House of Representatives who for decades wielded extraordinary power over Democratic politics in the state, was indicted on Wednesday on federal racketeering, bribery, wire fraud and extortion charges. Prosecutors said Mr. Madigan, who also chaired the Illinois Democratic Party, used his position in the State House to solicit bribes from ComEd, an electrical utility, doing legislative favors for the company in exchange for jobs and money for his political allies. The indictment alleges a long-term, multifaceted scheme to use public positions for unlawful private gain, John Lausch, the top federal prosecutor in northern Illinois, said in a statement. The prosecutors office accused the former speaker of leading for nearly a decade a criminal enterprise whose purpose was to enhance Madigans political power and financial well-being while also generating income for his political allies and associates. The indictment accused Mr. Madigan and a political ally, who was also charged, of accumulating $2.8 million in proceeds from racketeering. Mr. Madigan was also accused of offering to help a Chicago alderman seek an appointment on a state board as part of a scheme to steer business to his law firm. He planned to light the match that would start the fire, Jeffrey S. Nestler, a federal prosecutor, said in an opening statement. He wanted to stop Congress from doing its job. As the trial unfolds over the next several days, the government intends to offer evidence that Mr. Reffitt, 41, had a standoff with the police outside the Capitol after traveling to Washington from his home in Wylie, Texas. Prosecutors say Mr. Reffitt came to Washington with a fellow member of the Texas Three Percenters, a loosely organized militia movement that takes its name from the supposed 3 percent of the U.S. colonial population that fought against the British. Mr. Nestler said that prosecutors would introduce messages that Mr. Reffitt had sent to other members of the group in advance of the attack, saying that the fuel is set and that he planned to strike the match in DC on Jan. 6. The Three Percenter who traveled with him to Washington, Rocky Hardy, is set to testify under an immunity deal with the government. Prosecutors also plan to elicit testimony from two of Mr. Reffitts children, Jackson and Peyton, who were teenagers at the time of the attack. The children plan to say their father threatened them after he returned to Texas in order to keep them from turning him in to the authorities. A large man with a barrel chest and a pigtail, Mr. Reffitt sat without showing much emotion as Mr. Nestler told the jury how he had led a large group of rioters up a staircase at the Capitol, just outside the Senate chamber, brushing off attempts by the police to stop him with pepper balls and heavier projectiles. Even after he was finally subdued with a canister of pepper spray, Mr. Reffitt urged the crowd around him to push on, Mr. Nestler said. For nearly a decade, the refrain from Texas Democrats has been that they are on the verge of making their state competitive, even though no Democrat has won a statewide race since 1994. Tuesdays primary results illustrated that Democrats still have a long way to go. With more than three-quarters of the votes counted, nearly 800,000 more Republicans than Democrats voted for a candidate for governor a gap far larger than the one in 2018, the last midterm primary election in Texas. To be sure, Republicans had a more competitive primary than Democrats. Gov. Greg Abbotts contest against Republican challengers from his right may have been more of a draw than Beto ORourkes glide path to the Democratic nomination. And Democrats will be quick to note that primary turnout is not always a predictor of big turnout in November. Still, Republicans demonstrated they are energized even when divided between far-right and mainstream factions and hardly ceding their hold on the state. Vaccines have been proven safe and effective in stemming the spread of the coronavirus, and several medical experts said the mandates had been successful in persuading more people to get vaccinated. But opponents of the mandate for health workers have cited concerns about staffing shortages at hospitals, as well as the fear of penalizing workers who have been on the front lines battling the spread of the virus. This vaccine mandate is not about public health or science, Senator Roger Marshall, a Kansas Republican who is a physician, said in a speech on the Senate floor, a stethoscope draped around his neck. The Biden administrations mandate is about fulfilling their desire to control every aspect of our lives. And its a slap in the face to the hard-working men and women who never took a day off in the frontline fight of the Covid-19 battle. Most of the Republicans who voted in support of the measure have made a point of disclosing their own vaccination status, stressing that their opposition was rooted in objections about federal overreach. But the party has struggled to stop vaccine misinformation and skepticism within its ranks and to make the distinction between opposing vaccines and rejecting a federal mandate. In December, two centrist Democrats joined Republicans in voting to scrap Mr. Bidens vaccine-or-testing mandate for large employers, although the House did not take up the measure. And in recent weeks, there have been signs that Democrats are worried about the political implications of being perceived as heavy-handed enforcers of vaccine and mask mandates. But the door-to-door searches risk alienating Afghans already reeling from an economic crash and set on edge by the new governments hard-line Islamist rule. What the Taliban are doing is counterproductive to what they want to achieve, said Ibraheem Bahiss, an International Crisis Group consultant. When it comes to military and policing tactics, the Taliban has been observing and learning from their erstwhile enemy over the past 20 years. Now they are imitating many of those tactics to consolidate control. The Taliban, he said, used to capitalize on these same tactics, when the Americans were doing it, to gain recruits and financing. Now theyre relying on them to police urban areas. The search operation began early Friday as dozens of checkpoints spread across Kabul, initially focused on the citys northern neighborhoods. During the last 20 years, these areas, mainly inhabited by the Tajik minority, often flew the tricolor flag of the Northern Alliance, an insurgent coalition that fought the Taliban government in the 1990s. Ghulam Farooq Alim, a Kabul resident and university professor, was ready for the Talibans arrival on Saturday, having been alerted to their approach by his neighbors. He sent his family to a nearby neighborhood before a group of Talibs arrived, pushing their way into his home. They looked for weapons and other military equipment, and scrutinized the registration papers for his cars, threatening to impound one because he didnt have proper documentation. Next door, at his friends house, they tore off freshly installed roofing material, finding nothing. SINGAPORE Much of the world has united against Russia in the aftermath of its incursion into Ukraine. Envoys have walked out of meetings rather than listen to a top Russian diplomat speak. Western nations have been in near lock step on international sanctions. Bartenders are banning Russian vodka. In Asia, the reaction has been far more mixed. Generals in Myanmar have called Russias actions the right thing to do. India abstained from a United Nations Security Council resolution to condemn the attack. China has refused to call the assault on Ukraine an invasion. And in Vietnam, Vladimir V. Putin, the Russian president, is being affectionately referred to as Uncle Putin. While most American allies in the region have fallen in line, authoritarian governments and those with weaker ties to the West have been more reluctant to act on the conflict in Ukraine. Across the Asia-Pacific, only Japan, Singapore, South Korea and Australia have agreed to international sanctions against Moscow. Taiwan, the self-governed territory that China claims as its own, has also agreed to sanctions and voiced support for Ukraine. The uneven response is unlikely to counterbalance the onslaught of Western anger, but it could test the limits of President Bidens pledge to make Mr. Putin a pariah on the international stage. For more than three weeks, hundreds of protesters have disabled the center of New Zealands capital city, occupying the area in front of Parliament and issuing increasingly violent threats to politicians and other public figures in an ostensible battle against the countrys vaccine mandates. On Wednesday, the 23rd day of the protest, the police began an aggressive clampdown, descending on the site in Wellington at 6 a.m., dismantling tents, toilets, a kitchen and other camp infrastructure, and urging the demonstrators to leave. Eventually, most did but not without a fight. In chaotic and sometimes bloody clashes, protesters wielded fire extinguishers, paint-filled projectiles, homemade plywood shields and pitchforks. Some lobbed cobblestones at officers. Others piled detritus onto gas-fueled fires, including one that caused an explosion at a playground near Parliament. Protest leaders, against a soundtrack of the national anthem and the 1980s Maori pop song Poi E, urged demonstrators to hold the line and called the police the Gestapo. Officers, many bearing riot shields, responded with pepper spray and rubber bullets. At least 60 people were arrested, and three officers were taken to hospitals. The Ukrainian church that was formed after independence was granted legitimacy in 2019 by the Patriarchate of Constantinople, the senior authority in Eastern Orthodoxy, outraging Russian political and religious leaders. Parishes in Ukraine soon began switching their loyalties, and the Ukrainian church today counts about 700 parishes in the country, with 12,000 remaining under Russian influence. It is also one of the factors of Russian aggression against Ukraine, said Ihor Kozlovsky, a scholar of religion at the Institute of Philosophy at the Ukrainian Academy of Sciences. If our church would completely unite under the Ukrainian Orthodox Church then Moscow would lose its hegemony in the Orthodox world. Last week in western Ukraine, villagers furious about the Russia invasion ejected a Russian Orthodox priest from his church in Tsenyava, in the Ivano-Frankivsk region. The crowd barbarically took away the church, Archpriest Georgy of the Russian Orthodox Church said in a telephone interview. They knocked down the doors, pushed out the parishioners. He said the crowd was armed with rifles. The priest called the police, but no police arrived, Archpriest Georgy said. The Russian Orthodox Church has been walking a careful line in the conflict. Patriarch Kirill, the top church official in Moscow, made no mention in his Sunday sermon of the war that began three days earlier. The Moscow churchs top official in Ukraine, Metropolitan Onufriy, did condemn the invasion and in a video address asked Mr. Putin to halt it. But the prayers read at the end of liturgy in parishes, which are coordinated by the leadership, encouraged only prayer and made no mention of resistance or Russia, for that matter. We pray for peace in Ukraine and that the enemy leaves our country, the prayer at a Saturday liturgy said, for example, without clearly condemning Russia. As fears of a humanitarian crisis intensify, the commission on Wednesday asked the E.U.s 27 national governments to trigger a special mechanism that would grant blanket protection for up to three years for all Ukrainians fleeing the conflict. Under the measure, which would apply to Ukrainian nationals, as well as foreigners who have been long-term residents, refugees or asylum-seekers in Ukraine, those qualified would be granted the right to live, study and work across the bloc for up to three years. In parallel, they could also apply for long-term asylum. Foreign students and temporary workers fleeing Ukraine would not be granted blanket protection, but would be allowed to cross into the bloc, and then be repatriated unless there was a hindrance for them to return to their home countries. Ukraine has been home to a number of African and Asian students and temporary workers, some of whom have reported discrimination from Ukrainian authorities while trying to flee. The initiative is expected to be approved on Thursday by a majority of member nations, as Europe has been galvanized to action by the human toll of a nearby war. The warm embrace of Ukrainian refugees is a stark contrast to a European refugee crisis in 2015, when more than a million refugees, many of them fleeing strife and conflict in the Middle East and Africa, poured into the bloc, spurring an anti-immigrant backlash and fanning support for political parties on the far right. NEW DELHI The death of an Indian student in the fighting in Ukraine on Tuesday has brought into focus Indias challenge of evacuating nearly 20,000 of its citizens who were stranded in the country when Russias invasion began. Naveen Shekharappa, a fourth-year medical student in Kharkiv, was killed when he left a bunker on Tuesday to fetch food, Indian officials and his family members said. As of late Tuesday, about 8,000 Indian citizens, mostly students, were still trying to make it out of Ukraine, according to Indias Foreign Ministry. The evacuation process has been complicated by active fighting, with the students struggling to make it to jammed border crossings. Many of my friends were on the train last night to get out of Ukraine. It was scary, as the Russian border is barely 50 kilometers from our place and Russians were firing to capture territory, said Stuti Kashyap, a second-year medical student who made it back to India on Feb. 21. While 21 of the 27 European Union countries are also members of NATO, the effort to move equipment and weapons rapidly into Ukraine from Poland is being carried out by individual countries and is not formally either a NATO or E.U. operation. The French say that the E.U.s military staff is trying to coordinate the push. Britain and the United States are doing the same, setting up something called, deliberately blandly and neutrally, the International Donors Coordination Center. It is doubtful that Mr. Putin will be fooled by the name. In fact, even if no NATO soldier ever crosses into Ukraine, and even if convoys of materiel are driven to the border by nonuniformed personnel or contractors in plain trucks, the European arms supplies are likely to be seen in Moscow as a not-so-disguised intervention by NATO. Supplying Ukraine to allow the resistance to bloody Russias nose is a good idea, but the more it ramps up you wonder how Putin will respond, said Malcolm Chalmers, deputy director of the Royal United Services Institute, a defense research institute. What happens if he attacks on the other side of the border? We pursue terrorists across borders, why not him? From the Russian point of view, NATO military veterans who are now contractors helping the Ukrainians and training them, Mr. Chalmers said, might be viewed by Moscow as the Western equivalent of little green men, the Russian soldiers without identifying insignia who first moved in to annex Crimea. Then there is always the possibility of Russian aircraft straying into NATO airspace as they try to interdict convoys or chase Ukrainian planes. Something similar happened the only time a NATO country shot down a Russian Su-24 fighter jet, near the Turkish-Syrian border in 2015. SOCHI, Russia On Feb. 23, Razil Malikov, a tank driver in the Russian Army, called his family and said he would be home soon; his units military drills in Crimea were just about wrapping up. The next morning, Russia invaded Ukraine, and Mr. Malikov hasnt been heard from since. On Monday, Ukraine published a video of a captured soldier in his unit, apologizing for taking part in the invasion. He had no idea they could send him to Ukraine, Mr. Malikovs brother, Rashid Allaberganov, said in a phone interview from the south-central Russian region of Bashkortostan. Everyone is in a state of shock. The reality of war is dawning across Russia. On Wednesday, the Russian Defense Ministry for the first time announced a death toll for Russian servicemen in the conflict. While casualty figures in wartime are notoriously unreliable and Ukraine has put the total of Russian dead in the thousands the 498 Moscow acknowledged in the seven days of fighting is the largest in any of its military operations since the war in Chechnya, which marked the beginning of President Vladimir V. Putins tenure in 1999. KYIV, Ukraine As the escalator glides down the final few yards into the subway stop deep in Kyivs normally immaculate mass transit system, a sprawl of foam mattresses, suitcases and plastic bags filled with food comes into view. The space is surprisingly quiet, almost silent, despite the 200 or so people camped there to escape the bombing and artillery fire above. They sleep three or four to a single mattress. The children push toy cars over the gray granite slabs of the station floors, watching their mothers scroll endlessly on their cellphones, searching for news of the war. Little hands and feet stick out from underneath blankets, though it is noticeably warmer in the station than above ground. Volunteers come and go, bringing food and other necessities of life. One mother sets up a tent, for a modicum of privacy. Until this weekend, the daily high-speed trains from St. Petersburg to Helsinki would typically transport far fewer than the several hundred passengers each could accommodate. But on Saturday, a wave of travelers looking to leave Russia started packing trains destined for Finland. Weve had full trains from St. Petersburg from Sunday onward, Topi Simola, the senior vice president of passenger services at Finnish Railways, said in a telephone interview. They are leaving for good, he said. You can see that from the luggage they carry. Tatjana Erofgeva, who lives in Budapest, was visiting relatives in Russia when the invasion started, according to the Finnish newspaper Hufvudstadsbladet. She took the morning train to Helsinki on Monday. It was the only way out of Russia, Ms. Erofgeva was quoted as saying, noting that many countries had closed their airspace to Russian flights since the invasion of Ukraine last Thursday. PODBORSKO, Poland Scattered around the forest in Poland like archaeological ruins, the crumbling concrete bunkers for decades stored Soviet nuclear warheads. Today, they store only memories deeply painful for Poland, joyous for the Kremlin of the vanished empire that President Vladimir V. Putin wants to rebuild, starting with his war in Ukraine. Nobody here trusted the Russians before and we certainly dont trust them now, said Mieczyslaw Zuk, a former Polish soldier who oversees the once top-secret nuclear site. The bunkers were abandoned by the Soviet military in 1990 as Moscows hegemony over East and Central Europe unraveled in what President Putin has described as the greatest geopolitical catastrophe of the century. Now Eastern European countries fear a catastrophe of their own could be in the making, as Mr. Putin seeks to turn back the clock and reclaim Russias lost sphere of influence, perilously close to their frontiers. Even leaders in the region who have long supported Mr. Putin are sounding the alarm. Warnings about Moscows intentions, often dismissed until last Thursdays invasion of Ukraine as Russophobia by those without experience of living in proximity to Russia, are now widely accepted as prescient. And while there has been debate about whether efforts to expand NATO into the former Soviet bloc were a provocation to Mr. Putin, his assault on Ukraine has left countries that joined the American-led military alliance convinced they made the right decision. The United Nations General Assembly adopted a resolution on Wednesday condemning Russias invasion of Ukraine, with the support of 141 countries out of 193 and a standing ovation in the chamber. Russia voted against the measure, joined by Belarus, North Korea, Eritrea and Syria. The vote was symbolic and is not legally binding. Still, the vote reflected Russias growing isolation on the international stage as war rages in Ukraine. The General Assemblys special emergency session in New York was part of a larger U.N. effort to hold Russia accountable and to find an end to the conflict. The U.N. is being challenged, the U.S. ambassador, Linda Thomas-Greenfield, told the assembly before the vote. If it has any purpose, it is to prevent war and to condemn war and to stop war. That is our job here today. The four-page resolution calls for an immediate halt to the conflict, urges diplomatic negotiations for a peaceful resolution and says that territorial gain from the threat of force will not be recognized. It demands that Russian forces withdraw immediately, protect civilians and allow the safe passage of humanitarian aid. Texas Attorney General Primary Election Results Attorney General Ken Paxton could be headed for a runoff in the most contentious and uncertain major Republican primary race in Texas, but who comes in No. 2 is far from settled. Among those who will try: George P. Bush, the land commissioner; Representative Louie Gohmert; and Eva Guzman, a former Texas Supreme Court justice. Ivan Djuric, a talented pyrographer from Serbia, creates incredibly detailed portraits of celebrities by burning them onto pieces of wood using a special tool. Pyrography, as an art form, can be traced back thousands of years, with evidence of its early existence discovered in countries like China, Egypt and the ancient Roman Empire, but modern artists have really elevated pyrography to an unprecedented level. take Serbian artist Ivan Djuric, whose incredibly detailed portraits rival black-and-white photographs in terms of realism. Using a pyrography tool, he applies varying and precise amounts of pressure to change the intensity of the burn, thus achieving various tones and contrasts. The process is very slow and does not allow for mistakes, Djuric told Telegraf. There is also a lot of sanding, preparation of the wood itself, sketches and the coating of the wood to protect the artwork It takes about 15 days per image to be ready. View this post on Instagram A post shared by Pyrography Djura (Ivan Djuric) (@pyrography_djura) Djuric has perfected his technique over the years and is now regarded as one of the worlds leading pyrography artists. Looking at some of his work, its easy to see why. View this post on Instagram A post shared by Pyrography Djura (Ivan Djuric) (@pyrography_djura) I have always expressed myself through art; I have done a lot of pencil drawings, wood carvings and rustic furniture building so I took two of my passions and combined them into one. View this post on Instagram A post shared by Pyrography Djura (Ivan Djuric) (@pyrography_djura) Djurics works have been featured by Ripleys Believe It Or Not, as well, which attracted a lot of attention to his unique art form. View this post on Instagram A post shared by Pyrography Djura (Ivan Djuric) (@pyrography_djura) Portraits of celebrities like Myke Tyson, Snoop Dogg or Emil Kusturica have found a home with the people who inspired them which, for Djuric, means more than the money that collectors would have spent for them, Djuric told Caters News. View this post on Instagram A post shared by Pyrography Djura (Ivan Djuric) (@pyrography_djura) For more pyrography goodness, check out Ivan Djurics Instagram. View this post on Instagram A post shared by Pyrography Djura (Ivan Djuric) (@pyrography_djura) View this post on Instagram A post shared by Pyrography Djura (Ivan Djuric) (@pyrography_djura) View this post on Instagram A post shared by Pyrography Djura (Ivan Djuric) (@pyrography_djura) Sergiy Kyslytsya SKDKnickerbocker has signed on to provide speech writing support to Ukraine's Permanent Mission to the United Nations. Working on a pro-bono basis, the Stagwell unit advised the Mission ahead of ambassador Sergiy Kyslytsya's appearance before an emergency session of the Security Council during the evening of Feb. 23. He urged the Russian ambassador to call foreign minister Sergey Lavrov and president Vladimir Putin and urge them to call off the invasion of his country. He concluded by saying, "There is no purgatory for war criminals. They go straight to hell, Ambassador." Stephen Krupin, SKDK's managing director and head of executive communications, handles the Ukraine account. He was senior presidential speechwriter for Barack Obama and earlier was chief speechwriter for secretary of state John Kerry and senate majority leader Harry Reid. SKDK does not have a formal contract with Ukraine. At the request of the Russian Ministry of Economic Development and the Council of the Federation, a workshop on Implementing Regulatory Impact Assessment in Russia: Expectations and Practical Steps was held on 4 December 2008 in Moscow. The workshop brought together the World Bank, the OECD and the Centre for Strategic Research of Moscow to discuss the existing proposals for the development of Regulatory Impact Assessment (RIA) in the Russian Federation. The event gathered Russian senior officials from the Presidential Administration, the Ministry of Economic Development, the Council of the Federation and the Institute of Legislation and Comparative Law Studies with responsibility for managing the implementation of RIA and overseeing its implementation. The goal of this event was to present the international experience with RIA and to provide the Russian audience with an introduction to comparative RIA methodologies. In this framework, OECD experts provided comments on Russian RIA draft proposal, highlighting both the main advantages and shortcomings of the Russian draft proposal. The discussions highlighted that there is a great deal of uncertainty over RIA implementation. Although a draft government resolution is prepared and substantive progress has been made in the preparation of an electronic tool for managing RIA, it is not clear when these changes will be introduced and whether there is a political will to do so. The OECD made available some of its publications in Russian: Russian) Introductory Handbook for Regulatory Impact Analysis ( English Russian) Determinants of quality in Regulatory Impact Analysis ( English Russian) Evolution of regulatory policy in OECD member countries ( English Presentations: For further information, please contact Nick Malyshev (nikolai.malyshev@oecd.org). An Offaly musician is in the running to land a prestigious title in April. 17-year-old Kimberley Delaney from Kilcormac has been announced as one of just ten finalists in this year's Fiddler of London 2022 competition, the final of which will take place in the English capital on April 2. Revealing the news on their official Facebook page on March 1, the Fiddler of London 2022 competition said, "We are delighted to announce our tenth finalist in the Fiddler of London 2022. Congratulations Kimberley, we're looking forward to meeting you in London." The competition, which is named in honour of the late Justin Whelehan, was open to entries from all around the world and of all ages. Now in its second year, the 2021 event took place online. However, twelve months on and with a largely vaccinated world now in a safer place far as the pandemic is concerned, Kimberley will be taking to the stage in person on Saturday, April 2, for the Fiddler of London 2022 Live Gala Final at the Irish Cultural Centre in London where she'll perform two different selections of tunes. Adjudicators Mike McGoldrick and Dezi Donnelly will choose the winner of the title on the night with the new Fiddler of London receiving the bronze perpetual sculpture Children of Lir, plus a Supreme polycarbonate Panther series Bam fiddle case. This year's winner will also record an album with Mike McGoldrick as producer. Kimberley is a sixth-year student at Colaiste Naomh Cormac and her selection as a finalist for an event of this stature - one supported by both the government of Ireland and the mayor of London - will come as no surprise to those familiar with Offaly's rich and vibrant traditional music scene. A multi-instrumentalist, Kimberley is as much at home on the banjo, the button-accordion, the piano or the tin-whistle as she is on her beloved fiddle, something that's practically been an extension of herself since she first started learning it at the age of five. A member of Ballyboy Comhaltas Ceoltoiri Eireann (CCE) Kimberley also teaches fiddle in Rahan CCE. Speaking of her surprise and delight at being selected to perform at the Gala Final, Kimberley revealed that when she first spoke to the event's executive director, she found it almost impossible to believe what she was being told... "We had to submit an online application form and videos of ourselves performing four tunes. But when I was doing that, you see, the site crashed, because so many people were trying to enter. So I contacted them - the Fiddler of London organisation - on Instagram, and I was able to send them the videos that way, but the application form still wouldn't go through. What happened next, a few weeks later, was that someone I knew called me and gave me a number that they said I had to ring. I had an idea that it might be to do with the Fiddler of London, but I thought it was going to be about the application form not working, so maybe they needed some information from me. But when I rang the number, it was actually Eilish Byrne-Whelehan, the executive director, and she said, 'Congratulations, you're a finalist!' I was stunned. I just couldn't believe it, I really couldn't. I had to ask Eilish if she was really sure, and she said she was. So yeah, I was definitely stunned, but delighted too, of course." Kimberley was a student - and then a friend - of the late Ashling Murphy for eight years, and is very clear about the hugely positive and influential role Ashling had in her life. "I remember the first time I saw Ashling play the fiddle when I was only about eight years old, I think, and I was convinced she was a star! I thought she just had to be someone famous. Everything about her that day, from how she played to how she looked and acted, I was just in awe. I even made my mam go up and get Ashling's autograph for me, on the back of a cigarette box! A little while after that, my mam told me to grab my fiddle one day because we were going for a drive. I didn't think anything of it because we were always heading off somewhere to play music. But when we walked into Ashling's house and mam said to me, 'This is your new fiddle teacher', I could hardly speak!" Kimberley continued, "I thought Ashling was a star when I saw her first, but she actually became a real-life hero to me as I got to know her over the next eight years. She was like a big sister to me, but with the perfect fiddle teacher built-in too. She had so much patience and was always so kind, and she could give you advice about anything. She was like that with everyone. In my mind, no-one will ever be able to play like she could, but I try to be the same kind of teacher for others that she was for me. That's how I can honour her memory. I'll always think of Ashling when I play, and I'll always want to feel like I'm making her proud of me." Regardless of how things turn out in London in April, Kimberley can rest assured that she's already made her family, friends, school, her wider musical family - and, we're sure, Ashling too - more than proud of her incredible list of achievements to date in her seventeen years. That list includes several Fleadh Cheoil appearances (both as a soloist and as a part of a group), including as part of the Grupa Cheoil collective that Ashling Murphy and her sister Amy guided to a 2nd place finish at the 2018 All-Ireland Fleadh. Kimberley was also awarded two scholarships before taking part in the 2019 Fleadh in Drogheda. As impressive as that list already reads, there's still more to add in order to paint the fullest possible picture of Kimberley's talent. Among several that are noteworthy are appearances on Fleadh TV and TG4 as a member of the group Spreach (Spark) following a week at the Meitheal Irish Trad Music Summer School, and another appearance at the Irish World Academy in Limerick. Moreover, and as importantly as anything already mentioned, if not more so, when it comes to revealing the kind of person - and the kind person - that Kimberley is, is the fact that she's a familiar face at charity events of all kinds and in many local nursing homes as well. Kimberley, should she win the Fiddler of London title, will be named Fiddler in Residence for the Irish Community and will be invited to perform at a number of high-profile events in the UK and Ireland during her year in office. 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. A TOTAL of 240 hours community service in lieu of 10 months in prison was handed down to a man who assaulted a garda. In his evidence to Tullamore District Court last week, Det Sgt Jennings said that on January 20, 2021 gardai called to the home of Roy Dunican (28), Mooney Terrace, Kilcormac to arrest and charge him on directions from the DPP. Mr Mooney became aggressive, picked up an umbrella and hit the door with it. A struggle ensued between Mr Dunican and Det Garda Fergus Hogan and Garda Hogan landed on the pavement hitting his left shoulder. Mr Dunican had to be pepper sprayed. Mr Dunican had previous convictions for assault and road traffic offences. He had previously been handed down a four month suspended sentence. Defending solicitor Donal Farrelly said gardai had no warrant on the night of the arrest. However, Det Garda Hogan said the gardai had made three attempts to get him to come to the garda station. He said they were entitled to go to his home. Mr Farrely said when gardai called Mr Dunican had been in bed with his partner and they pulled the blankets off him. He said the defendant was 27 with a partner and one child. He had reacted badly on the date in question and is struggling with mental health issues. Det Sgt Hogan said his shoulder was ok after around six weeks and there were no lasting effects. Judge Catherine Staines commented that the injuries to his shoulder seemed more serious than he is saying. She noted that Mr Dunican had pleaded guilty and said she would allow for the preparation of a report to see if he is suitable for community service. She put the case back to April 13 and said she will impose 240 hours in lieu of 10 months in prison. The first in-person Fianna Fail Tullamore Comhairle Cheantair meeting was held in the Tullamore Court Hotel on Monday night last and there was much to be discussed. Chairperson PJ Lynam opened by warmly welcoming members and highlighted that while it was ''over two years since the last in-person meeting, tremendous work had been done by Deputy Cowen and all of our councillors - who were extremely busy'. Cllr Tony McCormack, Cathaoirleach of Tullamore MD- spoke with great fervour on the Just Transition project and the submission to the Government made by the Offaly County Council on the Just Transition funding. Cllr McCormack stated ''the ESB and Bord na Mona have been very good to Offaly over the years, but at the same time Offaly has been very good to them''. Cllr McCormack elaborated stating ''we have provided the talent and the raw materials for those companies to do business... they have been very profitable companies and have operated independently of the government for many years''. Cllr McCormack went on to compare the current situation to some African nations who have been plundered for their natural resources only to be left abandoned. He shared his frustration at the gap between the promises of job creation and the current reality in the county. He concluded on the topic by outlining his, Deputy Cowen and the other councillors determination to ensure Offaly its share of the 160 million. Cllr Declan Harvey Cathaoirleach of Offaly County Council updated members on a number of other ongoing projects. Councillors spoke of the ongoing Arts Centre construction, which is due for completion later this year and where some had recently attended the site, they described it as a fantastic building and one that would become a great asset to the town. Plans for the continuation of development of the canal greenway from Bolands lock to the Clara bridge was outlined along with a funding for a feasibility study on the further development of the harbour area. Cllr Danny Owens reflected on the immense progress in relation to the provision of houses in all areas throughout the town and county with record number of housing completions expected this year. The allocation of 14 million for roads throughout the county was also cited as huge benefit to Offaly. Councillors concluded by circling back to the Just Transition fund and how it was expected Offaly would benefit substantially from the Just Transition Funds as Offaly was the area most impacted, with the loss of 1500 jobs. It was noted that the CC's finances were at their lowest levels in year as a result of the recent Covid pandemic restrictions. Deputy Cowen in his address to the meeting thanked all the hospital staff and other who were working at the coalface including staff in the vaccination and testing centres throughout the pandemic. He referred to the Governments programme of support for the safeguarding of employment in all sectors, particularly hospitality and tourism. The priorities for the Government are in the provision of housing for all and the health service and he noted that there was 6m available to the local Council for the provision of housing units locally, in addition to cost rental and affordable housing schemes. Funding was also made available for the provision of E-Hubs throughout the County. Deputy Cowen also welcomed the recent substantial grant aids for insulation of homes and would like to see Credit Unions being in a position to provide green loan to homeowners. Members raised concerns on a number of issues, including the cost and provision of childcare, the extension of the fair deal scheme and the lack of competition in the energy sector. Members also urged greater support and funding for the provision of a local hospice and it was noted that 1 million had been allocated by the government. A Roscrea rock band who have strong links with fellow musicians and artists in Ukraine had planned to return to the country this year for a music festival. Unkindness Of Ravens, who are based in Roscrea and have members from Nenagh, performed at the festival in Ukraine in 2016 and forged very strong links with the musicians they met and played music with. The band were working with an American record label and through that connection found their way to performing at a festival near the city of Lviv in Western Ukraine soon after releasing their debut album. In 2019 the band members founded their own small, boutique record label in Roscrea, Wolftrap Records - named after Wolftrap Mountain in the Slieve Bloom mountains. Having been very impressed by the musicians they met in Ukraine, they subsequently funded the debut release by a Ukrainian band and released it through the Wolftrap label and have sold many copies of that album to Irish audiences, spreading awareness about the very exciting Ukrainian rock and experimental music scene. In 2016 they attempted to assist a Ukrainian band to enter Ireland and perform at the Siege of Limerick festival - however, despite even enlisting the assistance of a Tipperary TD, were unable to secure visas to enter Ireland for all the band members. The Ukrainian band, named Mother Witch and Dead Water Ghosts, still have hopes to perform at the famous biannual Limerick festival. We were deeply impressed by the musicians and excellent music we found in Ukraine, but most of all their incredible spirit. They are compassionate and welcoming people who know about the turbulent history of Ireland, which they are inspired by. We were amazed by the in-depth knowledge of many of the young Ukrainian people on Irish history and the struggle for Irish independence. They also love Ireland's mythological culture, the Roscrea band said. "We crossed the Medyka Prezmysyl border into Ukraine, which we are all seeing on the news reports as the epicentre of one of the worst humanitarian crisis Europe has ever seen. It's absolutely heartbreaking to watch unfold. It's a stunningly beautiful part of the world and we will definitely return - they treated us like one of their own while we were there, it was very moving and left a deep impression on us. "We have kept in touch with our Ukrainian friends since Russia started their invasion last week and they are all safe. Some of them are spending their nights in bomb shelters and metro stations. Having seen the Ukrainian spirit firsthand, we know they are like Irish people and will fight until the bitter end for freedom - their resistance will be absolutely dogged and they will not capitulate, Unkindness Of Ravens said. The Belarusian opposition leader in exile Svetlana Tsikhanouskaya, who has strong links to Roscrea, has expressed solidarity with Ukraine and said the Belarusian people "don't support this war." The world famous politician, who spent several years living with the the Deane family in Roscrea and later returned to work in the town, has been living in exile in Lithuania, where she fled to shortly after running in the 2020 presidential election against dictator Alexander Lukashenko. She had run as an independent candidate following the arrest of her husband, pro-democracy campaigner Siarhei Tsikhanouski. As Belarusian troops and tanks began to cross the border into Ukraine to support the advancing Russian army, the former Roscrea resident said the vast majority of Belarusian people do not support the invasion of their neighbour's lands. "We didn't expect this war would happen. This is the price Lukashenko is paying for Kremlin's support in 2020, which allowed Lukashenko to stay in power. "I really want to express solidarity with all Ukrainians because some people don't want to fight, especially they don't want to fight against Ukraine, our neighbor, people we love... We want to be friends, of course, with them." "I know that a majority of people don't support this war, don't support the participation of the Belarusian army in this war. Only 12% believe that Belarus must send its soldiers and only 13% are in support of the Russian campaign," she said. Yes. I would be the first in line. No. I don't trust that a vaccine will be safe. I plan to, but I want to wait to see effects of first doses. Not sure. Vote View Results What's Included With a Digital Only subscription, you'll receive unlimited access to our website and e-edition. Our digital products are available 24/7 and are accessible anywhere, anytime. If you have any questions or need further assistance, please call our customer service team at 716-372-3121 or email nfinnerty@oleantimesherald.com. Are you a current print subscriber? You qualify for online access to the Omak Chronicle. To receive your access, create a website account and then verify your print subscription or e-edition subscription with your subscriber number, which may be found on your bill or mailing label. Rap star Dave paid an emotional tribute to Jamal Edwards during a concert at London's O2 arena, telling fans he owes "every single thing" he has to the late the music entrepreneur. Two Ontario churches that challenged the province's COVID-19 restrictions on religious gatherings, claiming they violated their right to freedom of religion and assembly under the Constitution, have lost in court. They had gathered in the house chamber on Capitol Hill for the key annual moment in America's political diary. Ukraine's president has condemned Russia's attack on Kyiv, saying the conflict cannot be won with rockets and bombs. He also called on Jewish people to speak out after a missile strike damaged a Holocaust site. Well over 100 UN member states voted to demand the withdrawal of Russian troops from Ukraine. China abstained from the vote rather than backing Moscow, only five countries voted against. The inkstand is the oldest surviving artifact of the House of Representatives, dating back to the early 1800s. In his first State of the Union address, President Joe Biden warns that Russian President Vladimir Putin's attack in Ukraine has been "badly miscalculated" and Kremlin has no idea of what's coming. It can be hard to know how to talk to children about what is happening in the world. Watch VideoSchoolchildren in California, Oregon and Washington will no longer be required to wear masks as part of new indoor mask policies the Democratic governors of all three states announced jointly on Monday. "With declining case rates and hospitalizations across the West, California, Oregon and Washington are moving... Bill Burr tackles a listener's criticism of Americans' views on the Ukraine crisis with the sharp tongue and savage sense of humor that we know and love him for. President Biden will give his first State of the Union address tonight. Watch live and follow here for updates and analysis. #stateoftheunion Rumble 18 Mar 2022 Erin Ryan and Alyssa Mastromonaco share direct actions you can do to help the Ukrainian people now (see below), discuss the most.. Jerusalem Post 04 Apr 2022 Sacred sites such as these are a cornerstone of Jewish heritage and it is that memory that many have sought to erase and many.. 2008-2022 One News Page Ltd. All rights reserved. One News is a registered trademark of One News Page Ltd. Joyce K. Middleton, 83 of Oskaloosa, passed away Tuesday, May 3, 2022 at the Mahaska Health Serenity House. Joyce Karlleen Middleton, daughter of Nolen Winifred and MaryAnn (Nelson) Huffman, was born January 9, 1939, at the home of her maternal grandparents in Beacon, Iowa. She attended grad On Monday, Michigan Attorney General Dana Nessel joined a group of 48 attorneys general calling on the Federal Trade Commission to adopt a national rule to outlaw impersonation scams targeting millions including Michigan consumers, according to a press release issued by Nessel's office. Impersonation scams take on many forms. For instance, tech scams in which the imposters claim they are contacting the victim on behalf of companies like Microsoft or Apple to assist with a ransomware or technology issue are common, according to a letter from the attorneys general, including Nessel, raising concerns about the excess impersonation scams targeting consumers. Michigan consumers have experienced these types of scams. Earlier this month, Ottawa County residents reported being visited at their homes by individuals claiming to be county employees, prompting Nessel to reissue her Government Imposter Scams Consumer Alert. Late last year, Nessel also warned of utility imposter scams, where bad actors will impersonate utility employees to obtain money or personal information from an unsuspecting customer. Though the methods may vary, impersonation scams cause injury to consumers who lose money, drain resources from regulators tasked with protecting the public and cause confusion and loss of trust in government agencies and services, according to the release. "There is a pressing need for FTC rulemaking to address the scourge of impersonation scams impacting consumers across the United States," the letter from the attorneys general states. "A national rule that encompasses and outlaws such commonly experienced scams discussed [in our letter] would assist attorneys general and their partners in reducing consumer harm, maximizing consumer benefits, and holding bad actors to account." According to the letter, a strong national standard outlawing impersonation scams should: Deter bad actors and reduce consumer harm. Provide needed clarity on what conduct constitutes impersonation. Deprive bad actors of the excuse that they were allegedly not aware their activities were illegal in some jurisdictions as opposed to others. Provide more opportunities for the states to collaborate with the FTC on multistate enforcement actions against imposter scammers. Allow states to enforce their own standards, free of any preemption by a federal rule. Nessel also believes, along with a strong national standard outlawing impersonation scams, the FTC should publish additional consumer and business education materials to help prevent consumers from becoming victims of impersonation fraud, according to the release. "As attorneys general, we are seeing first-hand the issues these impersonation scams are creating for consumers, small businesses, and charities across the country," Nessel said in the release. "With millions of consumers being targeted each year, it is now more important than ever to adopt a national rule to combat these scams." Joining Nessel in submitting the comment letter are the attorneys general of Alabama, Alaska, Arizona, Arkansas, Colorado, Connecticut, Delaware, District of Columbia, Florida, Georgia, Guam, Hawaii, Idaho, Iowa, Kansas, Kentucky, Louisiana, Maine, Maryland, Massachusetts, Minnesota, Mississippi, Missouri, Montana, Nebraska, Nevada, New Hampshire, New Jersey, New Mexico, New York, North Carolina, North Dakota, Ohio, Oklahoma, Oregon, Pennsylvania, Rhode Island, South Carolina, South Dakota, Tennessee, Texas, Utah, Vermont, Virginia, Washington, West Virginia, Wisconsin and Wyoming. When misfortune falls upon someone, it is always good to know the community has their back. That is how the family of Lori Pedrotte, a Harbor Beach real estate agent, have felt since she was diagnosed with state 4 rectal cancer, with the cancer also spread to her liver and lungs. Kelsey Keys, Pedrottes daughter, said the family found out about the diagnosis in October and are dealing with a lot of unknowns right now. During the summer of 2021, Loris family noticed she had increased pain and discomfort and spent more time in bed, which eventually led to an ER visit. Its been overwhelming, Keys described it. Weve relied heavily on faith through this journey and trying to stay as optimistic as we can. Pedrottes husband Tony, Keys stepfather, has been providing most help for his wife, from simply being there every day to take care of her to driving her to all her appointments. Pedrotte has already had three weeks of radiation treatment and is going through chemotherapy treatments at McLaren Thumb Region in Bad Axe. Pedrottes family has a GoFundMe page set us to help pay for her various medical expenses. As of Feb. 28, it has raised $3,955 of its $5,000 goal. Zion Lutheran School in Harbor Beach will also be hosting a benefit dinner fundraiser from 3 p.m. to 7 p.m. on March 26, where drive-thru fish dinners will be available for $10. The dinners will be made up of pollack, mashed potatoes and gravy, corn, coleslaw, buns, and homemade desserts. Yvonne Maurer, the dinner organizer, knows Pedrotte since their daughters went to school together and Maurers husband is a cousin of Pedrottes husband. Its a sad outcome to have to go through this cancer, Maurer said. I want to let the family know Im here for them in any way. I would take the shirt off my back for the family. Maurer said the dinner is expected to have 1,000 people attend and she hopes they can meet that demand. A raffle will also take place at the dinner, with tickets costing $5 currently with over 100 prizes for people to bid on. Gifts are still being accepted. An online auction is also taking place to support Pedrotte, with the full list of items seen on the Lori Pedrotte Benefit Silent Auction Facebook page. Those items, as Maurer put it, are ones that are homemade, with blankets, gift baskets, and large pictures among other gifts. The community has been great for being such a small community, not just Harbor Beach but the whole Thumb, Maurer said. Keys echoed Maurers sentiment, saying that people have been dropping meals off at her mothers home as a way of helping out. Its been a big relief to not stress about finances knowing they are doing this, and knowing that she is not able to work, Keys said. The family also has a benefit account set up at Huntington Banks Harbor Beach branch that will be accepting donations as well. Since her cancer diagnosis and subsequent treatments, Pedrotte has been bound to her home, mostly staying in bed. Keys said that even when she goes to her appointments, she has to lie down in the back of the vehicle driving her because of her pain. Some doctors make it seem like itll eventually be terminal, Keys said. Others are optimistic, saying this is something shell overcome. It can go either way. Its why were relying on faith and trying to do whatever we can to overcome. Anyone with questions about the dinner or auction can call Maurer at 989-712-0676 and JoAnn Sutton at 810-263-1753, respectively. A member of the Saginaw Chippewa Indian Tribe who expanded mental health services for Native American children in Mount Pleasant represented Michigan as a guest of the first lady at Tuesday's State of the Union address. The White House announced the eight Americans invited by the first lady to join her in the viewing box for President Bidens State of the Union Address on Tuesday afternoon. Melissa Isaac, known as Gizhwaasod, according to the White House, was chosen for her work with the Michigan Department of Education's Indigenous Education Initiative. Gizhwaasod translates to "protector of the young" in the Anishinaabe Ojibwe language. "Each of these individuals, with their resilience, innovation, service and courage, were chosen by the White House because they represent policies or themes to be addressed by the President in his speech," the White House stated in a press release. Photo provided/Melissa Isaac's LinkedIn Isaac posted to her LinkedIn page that she was "honored to be selected as a special guest to First Lady of the United States, Dr. Jill Biden for the State of the Union Address." As an elementary school teacher at Saginaw Chippewa Academy, Isaac recognized the need to support the mental health of her students and families, according to the release. She successfully applied for a Project AWARE grant from the U.S. Department of Health and Human Services. Using the $9 million grant, Isaac was able to create the Saginaw Chippewa Indian Tribe's Project AWARE program to expand mental health services for children at Saginaw Chippewa Academy, Mount Pleasant Public Schools and Shepherd Public Schools. The program helps students deal with mental health issues, specifically grief and loss. Project AWARE is also helping to maintain and preserve the tribes language and culture, citing the damage done by a local government boarding school that tried to separate Native American children from their culture, according to Saginaw Chippewa Indian Tribe Chief Tim Davis. Last October, the first lady and U.S. Surgeon General Dr. Vivek Murthy met Isaac in Mount Pleasant when they hosted a listening session focused on youth mental health with members of the Saginaw Chippewa Indian Tribe, educators and families. Watch Biden's 62-minute speech below, which was split between attention to Russia's war on Ukraine and worries at home. The State of the Union is typically an address targeted to a national audience, but this years had the world watching. In an interview with CNN and Reuters, Ukrainian President Volodymyr Zelenskyy urged Biden to deliver a strong and "useful" message about Russias invasion, according to The Associated Press. Ukrainian Ambassador to the U.S. Oksana Markarova also joined first lady Jill Biden in the House gallery for the speech. J. Scott Applewhite, Pool/AP A February AP-NORC poll found that more people disapproved than approved of how Biden is handling his job, 55% to 44%. Thats down from a 60% favorable rating last July. Michigan Gov. Gretchen Whitmer signed a bill into law on Monday allowing part-time workers to keep their federal pandemic unemployment assistance after some were being asked to repay benefits due to a conflict between state and federal law. The law, Senate Bill 445, passed the Michigan Senate unanimously and the Michigan House by a 101-3 vote, according to a press release issued by Whitmer's office. It amends the Michigan Employment Security Act to resolve the conflict between state restrictions and the federal Pandemic Unemployment Assistance program, which ended in Sept. 2021. The federal program provided unemployment aid to people who were not otherwise eligible, including part-time workers, and specifies that people seeking benefits, which have since expired, could say they were able and available for full-time or part-time work. The state law required people seeking benefits to say they were available for full-time work, even if they were only working part-time. The sponsor, Sen. Jeff Irwin for Ann Arbor, said the bill would clear up confusion for part-time workers who began getting benefits only to have to certify weekly that they were able and available for full-time work a requirement under Michigan law even though they had been part-time employees, according to reporting by the Associated Press. "Combined with Gov. Whitmers success in securing flexibility from the federal Dept of Labor, the signing of this legislation will provide relief to thousands of people fighting with UIA over paperwork," Irwin said in the release on Monday. The change would affect Pandemic Unemployment Assistance claims filed after March 1, 2020, for those who had issues due to only being available for part-time work, according to the release. "Ive always said that Michiganders should not be penalized for doing what was right at the time they applied for federal pandemic benefits," Whitmer said in the release on Monday. "The changes in this legislation will streamline our unemployment system and provide relief to Michiganders who needed these federal benefits to pay their bills, keep food on the table, and continue supporting small businesses." Whitmers Fiscal Year 2023-24 budget recommendation includes $88 million to strengthen Michigans unemployment insurance system. This is a carousel. Use Next and Previous buttons to navigate More than 90 MyMichigan Health System employees who are not vaccinated against COVID-19 have received exemptions prior to the deadlines imposed by the Centers for Medicare & Medicaid Services (CMS). Phase two of the effort to vaccinate healthcare workers and employers against COVID-19, including the MyMichigan Health system, faced a Monday deadline. The CMS vaccine mandate is in effect and requires hospital employees, as well as certain vendors and contractors, to be fully vaccinated unless they have a qualifying religious or medical exemption, said MyMichigan Health Public Relations Manager Millie Jezior. This is a mandate from the Centers for Medicare & Medicaid Services, which means its coming from the federal government, Jezior said. MyMichigan Health is required to comply with the mandate or risk the loss of its federal funding, which makes up a majority of its funding. When asked for specific numbers of employees who participated in the vaccine, Jezior said the hospital wouldnt divulge such employee data. One Midland nurse said about 75% of the nurses she works with have received exemptions. If employees are not vaccinated, are not 100% remote, or do not have a qualifying medical or religious exemption, they enter an established disciplinary process, Jezior said. Midland resident Abigail Wolfe would like to know what religious reason someone would have for not being vaccinated. Im not sure I would feel comfortable being tended to by an unvaccinated nurse, Wolfe told the Daily News in an interview outside WalMart. You never see a doctor long enough to be exposed. Nurses, you see more of. More than half the states are pursuing renewed legal challenges against a requirement from President Joe Biden's administration for millions of healthcare workers across the U.S. to be vaccinated against COVID-19. The vaccine requirement for Medicare and Medicaid providers was one of several mandates that the Biden administration imposed on private-sector employers to try to drive up vaccination rates and slow the spread of the coronavirus. After a Supreme Court ruling allowed it to go forward, the vaccine requirement for health care workers was implemented gradually in all states. But opponents are again trying to stop it, arguing among other things that circumstances have changed as cases tied to the Omicron variant have steadily decreased. Two of Bidens other high-profile orders are on hold. The U.S. Supreme Court blocked a separate rule that would have required employers with more than 100 workers to require their employees to be vaccinated or to be tested weekly for COVID-19. A lower court also has blocked a requirement for employees of federal contractors to be vaccinated. Bidens various vaccine orders were challenged in court by Republican-led states, conservative groups and some businesses. The lawsuits argued in part that the mandates exceeded federal executive powers and infringed on states rights to regulate public health matters. About 69% of the U.S. population aged 5 and older is fully vaccinated against COVID-19. Following is an overview of the Biden vaccine mandate and the status of the legal fights over them. HEALTH WORKER MANDATE The following Medicare or Medicaid providers or suppliers which the CMS staff vaccination requirement applies to: Hospices Hospitals Ambulatory Surgery Centers Intermediate Care Facilities for Individuals Long Term Care facilities Programs for All-Inclusive Care for the Pathology Services Elderly Organizations (PACE) Community Mental Health Centers Psychiatric Residential Treatment Facilities Comprehensive Outpatient Rehabilitation Facilities Rural Health Clinics Critical Access Hospitals Health Centers End-Stage Renal Disease Facilities Under a rule published by the Centers for Medicare & Medicaid on Nov. 5, a wide range of health care providers that receive federal Medicare or Medicaid funding are to require their workers to be vaccinated. The rule affects doctors, nurses, aides, technicians and even volunteers at hospitals, nursing homes, outpatient surgery centers, home health providers and other medical facilities. It allows exemptions for medical and religious reasons. The CDC says the requirement covers 10.4 million health care workers at 76,000 facilities. Who challenged it: The rule was challenged by several lawsuits filed by Republican-led states, mostly in groups. The states argued there were no grounds for an emergency rule, that CMS had no clear legal authority to issue the mandate and that the rule infringed on states responsibilities. Where it stands: The U.S. Supreme Court on Jan. 13 lifted injunctions that had been issued by lower courts prohibiting enforcement of the health care vaccine mandate in about half the states. CMS subsequently implemented the mandate in several waves. Health workers were required to have their first dose of the vaccine by Jan. 27 in jurisdictions that had not challenged the mandate in court. The first shot requirement kicked in on Feb. 14 in two dozen other states whose collective lawsuits prompted the Supreme Court decision. The requirement took effect Feb. 22 in Texas, which had sued separately from the other states. Sixteen states filed a renewed challenge to the mandate on Feb. 4 in a Louisiana court. They argued that it's unconstitutional to include some state government agencies in the requirement and that the mandate is not needed because vaccines have been less effective at stopping the spread of the Omicron variant. A coalition of 10 other states raised similar arguments in filing a renewed lawsuit Feb. 23 in federal court in Missouri. Whats next: Guidance documents from CMS indicate it will initially grant leniency to health care providers who are showing progress in vaccinating their employees. But providers that dont eventually have their full staff vaccinated or exempted ultimately could face penalties, including the loss of federal Medicare and Medicaid funding. The Associated Press contributed to this report. The Midland Christian Women's Connection will host a luncheon, 12-2 p.m. on Wednesday, March 9 at the Midland Country Club. Sarah Humerickhouse, founder of Foster Families Navigation and Resource Center, will discuss the need for this new nonprofit in the Great Lakes Bay Area. Amy Gardner, of Luna Pier, Michigan, will share how laughter will desert us, but joy is something that remains. Cost is $17, payable at the door either by cash or check; checks can be made out to CWC. Reservations are due by 9 p.m., Sunday, March 6 and can be emailed to cjsweebe@gmail.com. This is a carousel. Use Next and Previous buttons to navigate The early steps of creating a countywide public transit system have arrived in Midland County. Midland County commissioners approved a resolution to support the submission of a grant award to the state Tuesday to fund a study which could potentially result in the merger of Dial-A-Ride and County Connection of Midland. This item, among all other agenda business items, was approved during the Midland County board of commissioners regular meeting on Tuesday morning in the County Services Building. All seven commissioners were present for the vote. Dial-A-Ride and County Connection have begun discussions on evaluating transit services on a county-wide basis to determine if collaboration on an operational level, up to and including the formation of a transit authority for Midland County, would have a positive benefit for all residents. The Michigan Department of Transportation's (MDOT) Passenger Transportation Division recommended a budget of $65,000 in the Section 5304 Federal Transit Planning funds, according to the approved resolution. This includes a required 20% match provided by the State of Michigan to allow Dial-A-Ride and County Connection to conduct a feasibility study on a possible collaboration of transit operations. Midland City Council approved a grant application for the feasibility study on Monday, Feb. 14. At that time, Mayor Maureen Donker said the study was needed for those who cannot drive. She also said the landscape of public transit is changing and that Midland should catch up. With the Tuesday approval by Midland County, the grant request will be sent to MDOT. The board also approved another grant agreement with MDOT. County Connection is eligible for $170,000 in funding designated for operating and mobility management expenses from the state after this new business item was approved Tuesday. In other business, the board approved a request to waive county policy as it pertains to sealed bids for the purchase of Avalon Technologies Solution. One Midland County resident, Kelly Bax of Coleman, said she doesn't support the sealing of bids, rather she would like bids to be public for transparency. The purchase costs $160,000, which will come from general capital improvements. The board reappointed Christopher Lauckner to serve a second term on the advisory council of Region VII Area Agency on Aging. The term is from April 1, 2022 through the spring of 2025. The meeting also featured a presentation from representatives of the We Hear You Coalition task force to update the board on survey and assessment results that the task force has gathered. Presenting were Midland Area Community Foundation representatives Sharon Mortensen and Alysia Christy, City Council member Diane Brown Wilhelm, and Perry Holmon. The board met in a closed meeting following the regular meeting to discuss "labor negotiations." The next Midland County board of commissioners meeting will take place at 9 a.m. on Tuesday, March 15 in the Midland County Services Building, which is located at 220 W. Ellsworth Street. This is a carousel. Use Next and Previous buttons to navigate It was around noon Saturday when Denise Wittbrodt Fry heard the smoke alarm start ringing. Moments later, she was fleeing a flaming house in her pajamas with bare feet through the snow. She and her husband, the only ones at home at the time, escaped safely. It was just going so fast, she said of the fire at 2516 Parsons Court, south of Bay City Road. We were going to grab a fire extinguisher, but we didnt have time. Wittbrodt Fry ran across the street to her mothers house to call 911. By the time the fire department got there, it was two-thirds of the way gone, she said. This wasnt an indictment of the department, which quickly responded, but rather a reflection of how quickly the fire overtook the house. Along with everything that she, her husband Patrick, and children Mia and Alex Hinkley owned being lost, their three cats also perished in the blaze: Misae, whom the family had for almost 12 years, and 16-week-old kittens Shadow and Namma. They ran under a bed, Wittbrodt Fry said. My husband tried to get to them and busted out two windows for them. It just went up so quick, she added about the fire that claimed the house the family had rented since 2016. Fry said the three pets were part of their family and they are grieving them. We are going to find a way to honor them, she said. Its unknown why the fire started, and the Midland Fire Marshal is investigating and reportedly checking for gas leaks and other possible causes. The fire started in the kitchen area. I have no idea, Fry said about the origin of the flames, noting that her family was on the opposite side of the house from where the fire began. She is thankful her 9-year-old daughter and 14-year-old son werent home at the time of the fire. They lost everything, said Wittbrodt Frys brother, Adam Wittbrodt, who started a GoFundMe for the family. The family didnt have renters insurance. Adam Wittbrodt said he is thankful they are safe and said the things can be replaced over time. The American Red Cross assisted the family with a few nights at an Auburn hotel. The hotel has since offered them a discounted rate for a longer stay. Wittbrodt Fry said her son, who is on the autism spectrum, needs routine. They have tried to have him stay at the hotel, but he wants to be somewhere familiar, so he stays with his grandmother for the immediate time. Because of her sons autism, he has loud stimming (self-stimulating behaviors often involving movements or sounds), which doesnt allow for apartment or duplex living, limiting the familys options. She said they have tried apartments in the past. Its been disrupting to neighbors, she said. The family received a donation for clothes for Mia. Patrick needs pants size 32x32, socks for shoe size 10. Alex needs XL sweatpants with open bottoms and large socks for shoe size 2EE. While Wittbrodt Fry doesnt want to ask for herself, she needs 2X size hoodies and size 16 pants. All the family has, beside the donations, is the clothing they were wearing at the time of the fire. Weve had a wonderful amount of support that has made us feel like were going to be OK, Wittbrodt Fry said. Among the familys needs, they are seeking a three-bedroom home for rent around $750 a month and clothing. This is all so surreal, she said Tuesday. Our whole life was in that house. Were so out of place, it doesnt seem real. So far, $6,555 of a goal of $40,000 has been donated to the family's GoFundMe at https://bit.ly/3K6YHJZ. Director of Content and Operations Spencer McKee is OutThere Colorado's Director of Content and Operations. In his spare time, Spencer loves to hike, rock climb, and trail run. He's on a mission to summit all 58 of Colorado's fourteeners and has already climbed more than half. Palestine, TX (75801) Today Partly cloudy skies early will give way to cloudy skies late. A stray shower or thunderstorm is possible. Low 71F. Winds SSE at 5 to 10 mph.. Tonight Partly cloudy skies early will give way to cloudy skies late. A stray shower or thunderstorm is possible. Low 71F. Winds SSE at 5 to 10 mph. Juba, South Sudan (PANA) - A peacekeeper is in stable condition a day after being shot during an attempted ambush on a UN convoy in South Sudan, the UN Mission in the country, UNMISS, and the World Food Programme (WFP) reported on Tuesday Photo: (Photo : Getty images ) Moms shared their experiences in trying to feed their babies diagnosed with tongue-tie. The feeding experience. In an interview with BBC, the two moms said that breastfeeding a child with tongue-tie was painful, and the simple procedure to treat it was also a struggle by itself. Tongue-tie is a condition when a tongue movement is restricted by a membrane (frenulum). It connects the underside of the tongue to the floor of the mouth. The frenulum is loose enough for most babies to allow the tongue to move freely. However, when the membrane is tight, it limits tongue function. This is when experts call the condition tongue-tie. About 10% of newborn babies in the UK are affected by the condition. Tongue-tie and breastfeeding Clare Sinton, a mother of two, told BBC that breastfeeding a tongue-tied baby is "excruciating, unbearable, helpless." She said that it felt like someone was "dragging barbed wire or blades through her nipple." Sinton has breastfed his elder son for 19 months, so he knew what breastfeeding felt like. She suspected that her newborn might have a posterior tongue-tie, but the midwife could not confirm it. She recalled that she was crying with every feed. She said that it felt like her baby had a beak, "like a turtle clamping down on me." She was in constant pain and dreaded her newborn's feeding time. Some babies with the condition find it difficult to latch in the breast. Tongue-tie could be resolved through a simple procedure. However, some parents who seek private treatment could shell out 400 (around USD 537) to avoid waiting in line for the procedure. Some parents abandon breastfeeding altogether. Feeling beaten by her newborn's feeding, Sinton found a specialist in Cardiff. After a short assessment, the doctor clipped it. She said she felt better immediately. A few weeks later, she said they were breastfeeding successfully. Katharine Sharlot had a similar experience. After she gave birth, the midwife to her that the tongue movement looked fine. Sharlot went through six weeks of painful breastfeeding. She was later referred to a breastfeeding counselor and the NHS. Read Also: Day Care in Japan Offers 24 Hours Support to Single Moms After the procedure, she felt relieved at first, but later, the problem returned. She sought the help of a private midwife, who said that the hospital had missed the tie or it may have reattached; hence it was divided again. The procedure solved things, but her baby was three months old then. She said that if not for her previous experience, the support of the breastfeeding counselor, and the intervention of the private midwife. More research and support on tongue-tie and breastfeeding. Dr. Paul Mannix, clinical director at North Bristol NHS Trust for women and children's health, said that mothers must get early support in breastfeeding, including training the midwives on latching issues and spotting tongue-tie. He apologized that the women's experience did not reflect such intervention. The National Childbirth Trust (NCT), the UK's largest parent charity, has also called for more research for the best care of babies with suspected tongue-tie. Related Article: How to Spot if Your Baby is Not Getting Enough Breast Milk Photo: (Photo : TORE KRISTIANSEN/AFP via Getty Images) The real Leviev family has launched a lawsuit against Simon Leviev, the notorious "Tindler Swindler" featured in the Netflix documentary film that exposed his modus for scamming women on the dating app. Guy Ophir, the lawyer for the billionaire family, confirmed in a statement that the lawsuit is just the start. His clients, led by patriarch Lev Leviev, will also go after those capitalizing on their prestigious name in the diamond trade. The "Tinder Swinder" claimed that he was the son of the diamond magnate, but his real name was Shimon Hayut. According to NBC News, the Leviev family filed the lawsuit in Tel Aviv, where Hayut is currently based. Chagit Leviev, the real daughter of the diamond magnate, also said that they would ensure Hayut will get "the sentence he deserves" for exploiting their family's good name in his con. Read Also: 'Grandparent Scam' Popping up in Maryland; Police Issues Warning to Residents Impersonation, Misrepresentation, and Trademark Breach Documents obtained from the lawsuit cited that Hayut took photos of Lev and Ayelet Leviev to photoshop his image in the shot. He then used the fixed photo to present himself as a member of the billionaire family to mislead his victims, mostly women who fall for his "generosity" and his high-class lifestyle. The family is also going after Hayut for defamation, trademark breach, and invasion of privacy. They condemned Hatyu for his "despicable actions" that brought shame and humiliation to the family name. As presented in the Netflix documentary that launched on the streaming platform on Feb. 2, 2022, Hayut convinced women to open credit cards or take out bank loans for him under the pretense that he could not do it himself because his life was at risk. Since his "family" is in the diamond trade, Hayut told his victims that he has many enemies worldwide. The documentary implied that Hayut was involved in a Ponzi scheme and his girlfriends had no idea they were taken for a ride. Three of the women he fooled on Tinder detailed how they were scammed in the Netflix film, but there are allegedly more victims, including the woman who is supposed to be the mother of Hayut's only child. "I'm Not a Monster" In 2019, Hayut was convicted to 15 months in prison for forgery, fraud, and theft, but he was released after five months. However, he has not yet been tried in court for impersonating the Leviev family until this lawsuit, yet his representatives said he is confident this case will be dropped. Hayut also defended how he was portrayed in the Netflix documentary. He said he's just a regular single guy who wants to meet women on the Tinder dating app. He insisted that he was not the monster that the show and its viewers created. The "Tinder Swindler" also denied being a con-man and said that the viewers should not judge him because they personally do not know him. Despite his legal troubles and his ban from all dating apps, Hayut is set to work in a dating show. He's also dating a model from Israel. Related Article: Tinder Date Rushes to Be With Young Mom for the Birth of Her Newborn on 4th Date Photo: (Photo : Getty images ) The Food and Drug Administration (FDA) said that the infant who recently died due to Cronobacter sakazakii infection had consumed Abbott Nutrition's Similac PM 60/40 with lot code 27032K800. Similac PM was not included in the list of products recalled last February 17. The previously recalled products included Similac, Alimentum, and Elecare formula, as posted at the Sturgis Michigan facility. The case is under investigation, and the cause of the infant's Cronobacter sakazakii infection has yet to be determined, Abbott stated on its recall website. In the USA Today, Abbott expressed its sympathies to the families affected by the deadly infection. The FDA and Centers for Disease Control and Prevention (CDC) now have four incidences of Cronobacter sakazakii infections in infants and one complaint of Salmonella Newport. The patients were all hospitalized, and the Cronobacter may have contributed to the death of the two infants. According to the FDA, they are working with Abbott Nutrition to assess the impact of the recall. They are also studying production capacity at other Abbott facilities that produce some of the impacted brands. Abbott and FDA are also working on safe resumption of milk production at the Sturgis facility. Read Also: Home COVID-19 Test Kits Contain Toxic Chemicals, Poison Centers Warn Abbott Products Recalled Abbott had recently recalled the following products: Similac PM 60/40 Lot # 27032K80 (can) / Lot # 27032K800 (case) Similac, Alimentum, and EleCare powdered infant formulas with the following multidigit number on the bottom of the container: the first two digits of the code are 22 through 37; and The code on the container contains K8, S.H., or Z2; and The expiration date is 4-1-2022 (APR 2022) or later. The recently recalled Similac PM were distributed in the United States and Israel, FDA said. Dangers of Cronobacter sakazakii The CDC warned that Cronobacter sazakii could naturally be found thriving in very dark places. It thrives in dry foods such as powdered milk, infant formula, herbal teas, and starches. It can also be found in wastewater. Although Cronobacter illnesses are rare, CDC usually receives two to four infection complaints per year. The germ, however, is frequently lethal to infants, the elderly, and people with immunocompromising conditions. Cronobacter also causes seizures, sepsis, or severe meningitis in infants. Meanwhile, the recall increased the availability concerns of formula milk which had an out-of-stock level of 25 percent as of February. Parents have seen store shelves with less milk formula supply. Parents find themselves scouring several stores for Alimentum formula. Abbott has increased round-the click shift to prepare more formula milk to address the milk shortage concerns. Related Article: Cryptic Pregnancy: College Student Gives Birth a Week After Learning She Was Pregnant Photo: (Photo : Getty images ) A mom from Georgia is raising awareness and positivity after learning that her one-year-old son, Locklan, was diagnosed with uncombable hair syndrome (UHS), a rare genetic condition that around 100 people worldwide. In an interview with Good Morning America, Katelyn Samples, the boy's mother, said she learned about her son's condition when a stranger messaged her on Instagram after seeing a photo of her youngest son, Lockland Samples. The stranger asked if her son has been diagnosed with uncombable hair syndrome. Uncombable Hair Syndrome Uncombable hair syndrome (UHS) is a condition that normally causes dry, frizzy hair that could not comb flat. The rare hair starts growing at the age of three and may show up until the age of 12. Scientists say that they know of only 100 cases in the world. However, doctors warn that they might be more cases that doctors do not diagnose because the condition goes away in childhood. Symptoms of UHS show as early as the age of three in kids with strawberry-colored or blond-silvery hair. A child with UHS may grow a normal amount of hair. However, it grows more slowly. The hair stands out from the scalp and grows in a different direction. Combing it flat against the scalp is simply impossible. Although the hair is more fragile than in people with no condition, constant brushing and grooming the hair may likely cause more damage. Other symptoms that kids with UHS have included having coarse hair texture, dry hair, white-colored hair, kinky hair, and patchy baldness on the scalp. Its hair shaft, when viewed under a microscope may have a triangular or kidney-shaped form. Doctors say that there is no cure for UHS, but it will go away at the start of puberty. To take care of the hair, doctors suggest the use of soft brushes and avoiding harsh hair treatments. Read Also: Parents in the UK Share the Challenges of Having a Baby with Tongue-tie Soft and fuzzy hair Katelyn first noticed that something was different with Lockland's hair when at five months, his hair was growing straight up and it is so soft and fuzzy. The mom thought nothing of it until a stranger messaged her about the syndrome. Fearing the worst, she researched online whatever she could learn about UHS. Katelyn was relieved that Lockland's condition was solely cosmetic. After learning about her son's condition, she also reached out to other parents around the world who share the same condition with her son. So far, Katelyn said that Locklan's hair has low maintenance as they only wash it once a week The mom said that Locklan has earned a little celebrity status because of his hair. A lot of people would ask their permission to touch it. On the other hand, there are also people who would make rude, mean, or sarcastic comments about his son. Some haters would say his hair is crazy, and that he looked like he stuck his finger in the socket. Katelyn said that her biggest message is to celebrate what makes you stand out and make a difference. Related Article: Day Care in Japan Offers 24 Hours Support to Single Moms (Click on image to Greatly Enlarge) Last Friday Patently Apple posted a report titled "Ukraine's Minister of Digital Transformation Urges Apple's CEO to take action and stop selling products and services in the Russian Federation." Our report published the full letter sent to Tim Cook by Ukraine's Minister, Mykhailo Fedorov. With the Russian Ruble crashing in value with strengthened sanctions, Apple has halted sales of its products on its Russian online Store. Apple did the same thing in late November when Turkey's currency crashed. The Turkish currency had fallen 45% compared to the U.S. dollar. In such circumstances it's like a falling knife and Apple can't be sure what to sell a product for if it can't count on a stable currency. In that same light, Apple has also limited Apple Pay services in Russia as well. While the situation is unlikely to change for some time due to the ongoing aggression by Russia, Apple is taking this moment in time to support Ukraine. The Russian news agency Tass reported on Apple's press release published today: "We have paused all product sales in Russia. Last week, we stopped all exports into our sales channel in the country. Apple Pay and other services have been limited. RT News and Sputnik News are no longer available for download from the App Store outside Russia. And We have disabled both traffic and live incidents in Apple Maps in Ukraine as a safety and precautionary measure for Ukrainian citizens." The company repeated their CEO's message tweeted last week. I am deeply concerned with the situation in Ukraine. Were doing all we can for our teams there and will be supporting local humanitarian efforts. I am thinking of the people who are right now in harms way and joining all those calling for peace. Tim Cook (@tim_cook) February 25, 2022 Bloomberg noted in their report this afternoon that "Apple said it will continue to evaluate the situation and that it is in communication with governments on the actions that its taking." Pauls Valley, OK (73075) Today Variable clouds with scattered strong thunderstorms. Damaging winds, large hail and possibly a tornado with some storms. Low 61F. Winds SE at 10 to 15 mph. Chance of rain 70%.. Tonight Variable clouds with scattered strong thunderstorms. Damaging winds, large hail and possibly a tornado with some storms. Low 61F. Winds SE at 10 to 15 mph. Chance of rain 70%. Everyone has a creative side. But, if you arent using pro-grade apps to bring your ideas to fruition, then your creativity probably isnt being adequately communicated. Which poses a challenge since the most respected creative software titles almost exclusively from Adobe CC come with a very steep learning curve. 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A cargo ship that was carrying thousands of luxury cars has sunk off the Portuguese Azores archipelago, nearly two weeks after it caught fire. The ship, named Felicity Ace, was transporting around 4,000 cars such as Porsches and Bentleys. The vessel was on its way to Rhode Island in the United States from the German port of Emden when the fire broke out. All of its crew members were evacuated when the fire broke out on February 16. Joao Mendes Cabecas, the captain of the nearest port on the island of Faial, told Reuters that no oil leak had been reported so far but said there were fears the fuel tanks could be damaged while the vessel lies at the bottom of the Atlantic at a depth of around 3,500 metres (2.17 miles). Portugal's navy said no one was hurt by the fire and that the 22 crew members were taken to a hotel after the navy, four merchant ships sailing in the area and the Portuguese Air Force completed the evacuation. Volkswagen said the damage to the vehicles was covered by insurance which could cost around $155m (116m) according to Reuters. Bentley confirmed that 189 of its cars were onboard the ship and Porsche said it had about 1,100 of its models onboard. One customer tweeted to say his Porsche was on board the abandoned ship. Another tweeted that his had been reordered. Source: BBC Disclaimer : Opinions expressed here are those of the writers and do not reflect those of Peacefmonline.com. Peacefmonline.com accepts no responsibility legal or otherwise for their accuracy of content. Please report any inappropriate content to us, and we will evaluate it as a matter of priority. Featured Video The Government of Ghana has completed the piloting of its flagship YouStart programme and says it is ready to be rolled out in April this year. According to Finance Minister, Ken Ofori-Atta, the youth entrepreneurship programme when rolled out will be a vehicle for supporting young entrepreneurs to gain access to capital, training, technical skills, and mentoring to enable them to launch and operate their own businesses. Addressing attendees at a business pitch event as part of the pilot phase of the programme on Wednesday, March 2 2022, he said the programme is expected to remove the primary impediment to the growth of enterprise in Ghana, improve access to credit and incorporate the broader vision of the Ghana Beyond Aid agenda under the Ghana CARES Obaatan Pa programme. I believe that addressing youth unemployment through a coordinated approach and at the same time devoting resources to build on Ghanas human capital would ultimately support and sustain our vision of transforming Ghana Beyond Aid. As a country, we will take our destiny into our own hands and determine our economic fortunes without leaving anyone behind when this vision manifest. So today, government is acting with a plan that gives our people the confidence to pursue their ambitions. Our strategy is a simple one, back hardworking people, create local businesses and support existing ones. Governments policy direction to pursue our vision is to create an enterprise-driven economy. In this regard, government will continue to strengthen the links between education and job market stakeholders and provide access to finance, skills, and markets for our young entrepreneurs, so that the private sector is well resourced to create jobs for our teeming youth, he added. The programme will be implemented by the Ghana Enterprises Agency (GEA), the National Entrepreneurship and Innovation Programme (NEIP), and partner financial institutions at the cost of GHS 10 billion for the next three years. This Minister Ofori-Atta said will help government accelerate job creation and ultimately create additional one million jobs for Ghanaians in the next three years. Specifically, YouStart will support youth-led enterprises with soft loans of up to GH50,000 to help start-ups (in particular by young graduates and school leavers) and small businesses to expand; starter packs (soft loans tied to equipment acquisition) of up to GH50,000 for individuals and GH100,000 for associations and groups; and a standardized loan package of between GH100,000 to GH400,000 at concessional rates for SMEs from financial institutions. It will also provide skills development, entrepreneurial support, and business advisory service to young businesses, provide access to competitive credit and starter packs and create access to markets for businesses including portals to facilitate digital linkages between youth-led enterprises and other businesses and relevant government agencies. Present at the event were the Deputy Minister for Finance, Dr John Ampontuah Kumah and other government officials from the Ministry of Finance as well as representatives from GEA and NEIP. Source: Peacefmonline.com Disclaimer : Opinions expressed here are those of the writers and do not reflect those of Peacefmonline.com. Peacefmonline.com accepts no responsibility legal or otherwise for their accuracy of content. Please report any inappropriate content to us, and we will evaluate it as a matter of priority. Featured Video President Nana Addo Dankwa Akufo-Addo has announced government's decision to cut down the expenditure of ministries, departments and agencies by 20 percent. This, he said, was a way to contribute towards the recovery of the economy from the shocks of the global pandemic - coronavirus. The move, President Akufo-Addo furthered will help government save some money. We have to make concerted efforts as partners to hasten our recovery from COVID-19 by finding intelligent ways of bringing everyone on board to contribute their quota no matter what, he said. Government on its part is implementing a policy of cutting the budgets of ministries, departments and agencies by 20% this year as its contribution, he added. President Nana Addo Dankwa Akufo-Addo made this known while speaking at the 2022 National Labour Conference at Kwahu in the Eastern Region on Monday, February 28, 2022. He indicated that it's about time Ghanaians are fully involved in the payment of taxes, hence, the introduction of a tax on all electronic transactions, popularly known as the E-Levy. We cannot continue to allow less than 10%, specifically 7.8%, that is, 2.4 million people of the population to carry the direct tax burden of 30.8 million people. We must provide an opportunity for every Ghanaian to contribute towards nation building, President Akufo-Addo stated. But the announcement of the E-Levy in the 2022 budget has been fraught with several controversies, with many Ghanaians, including the Minority in Parliament kicking against it. The E-Levy bill was subsequently withdrawn from parliament and currently, the E-Levy has been reviewed downwards to 1.5% from 1.75%. The bill is yet to be re-laid before parliament after its withdrawal. Meanwhile, government through the information ministry is organising town hall meetings to discuss the Electronic Transaction Levy (E-Levy). The exercise will also give government feedback on reactions from citizens on the proposed levy and how best to implement it. Finance Minister, Ken Ofori-Atta, has also warned of dire consequences for the Ghanaian economy if the E-Levy is not passed. Ken Ofori-Atta urged Ghanaians to support the implementation of the E-Levy. Source: ghannaweb.com Disclaimer : Opinions expressed here are those of the writers and do not reflect those of Peacefmonline.com. Peacefmonline.com accepts no responsibility legal or otherwise for their accuracy of content. Please report any inappropriate content to us, and we will evaluate it as a matter of priority. Featured Video The management of Consolidated Bank Ghana Ltd (CBG) led by the Managing Director, Daniel Wilson Addo, has donated GHS 100,000 to the Appiatse Support Fund to help with the reconstruction of the community. This Follows a huge explosion on January 20, 2022, along the Tarkwa Bogoso-Ayamfuri road when a truck carrying explosives to a gold mine crashed with a motorcycle. The crash claimed the lives of 13 people, flattened many houses completely, damaged vehicles, leaving many inhabitants with various injuries, and social and economic challenges. Presenting the cheque to Appiatse Support Fund Mr Daniel Addo explained that the Bank has an obligation to extend a helping hand when a challenge of this nature befalls a community. He said, We are here to add our contribution to establish a new township for Appiatse as part of reaffirming our brand tagline, We Stand With You. This brand promise puts a social responsibility on us to stand with our communities. Mr. Addo further mentioned that CBG is aligned with the support funds vision of building a model community. We identify with your pillars of building a green, and environmentally-friendly township that serves as a model for building townships in Ghana. Receiving the donation, chairperson of the 5-member committee, Rev. Dr. Joyce Aryee, expressed appreciation to CBG saying, Thank you CBG for coming out to support the fund to rebuild Appiatse community and victims of the explosion. We call on mining firms, corporate Ghana and individuals to come on board and support. Rev. Dr Aryee further called on Ghanaians to assist with donations to the Fund to support the victims and rebuild the community. Other members of the CBG delegation were Nana Ama Poku Deputy Managing Director (DMD) Corporate Resources and Angela Forson Director, Corporate and Institutional Banking. The CBG donation is to support the Government in the rebuilding of the community, as well as the rehabilitation of the about 900 victims who are lucky to have escaped the disaster. The Appiatse Support Fund is expected to coordinate the mobilization of resources to reconstruct the community. Source: Peacefmonline.com/Ghana Disclaimer : Opinions expressed here are those of the writers and do not reflect those of Peacefmonline.com. Peacefmonline.com accepts no responsibility legal or otherwise for their accuracy of content. Please report any inappropriate content to us, and we will evaluate it as a matter of priority. Featured Video Following the closure of nominations and an eventful beverage industry tour, Global Media Alliance, organizers of the prestigious Ghana Beverage Awards, have officially opened the polls for voting for the most coveted award category, Product of the Year. The voting exercise scheduled from March 1st to 18th this year would provide the opportunity for beverage companies and individuals to vote for their favorite product to emerge the ultimate winner. The product of the year category features beverages such as Coca Cola, Verna Natural Mineral Water, Alomo Bitters, Bel Aqua Active, Blue skies Fruit Juice and Vitamilk. Speaking, Chief Executive Officer for Global Media Alliance, Ernest Boateng, lauded the GBA Secretariat for a successful industry tour. I must commend the GBA Committee for visiting the various companies during the Industry Tour to properly access the information which was provided by the companies upon the submission of their entries and also to familiarize themselves with their production processes. Undoubtedly, this tour plays a critical role in the selection of winners for the 18 keenly-contested categories, he said. He further spelt out the voting modalities whiles urging the general public to vote massively for their favourite product in the category. We have now officially opened the polls to allow the public to vote for their favourite beverage product. Individuals and beverage companies can cast their vote for their favourite product in the Product of the Year category via the GBA website which is www.ghanabeverageawards.com or via the USSD code *711*101# across all networks. Since the introduction of the process of voting as part of the processes for adjudging the ultimate winner, we have witnessed a year on year increase in the number of votes accrued by the ultimate winner. It is on the back of this that we are urging individuals and the beverage companies to vote massively for their preferred product in this category, he stated. Ghana Beverages Awards, currently in its sixth year, is organized under the theme Inspiring Excellence in Ghanas Beverage Industry. Since inception, it has championed the cause of increasing local beverage consumption whiles promoting the highest standards of practice within the beverage industry. GBA is proudly supported by the Food and Beverage Association of Ghana (FABAG), Consumer Protection Agency (CPA), Food Research Institute (FRI) under CSIR, Perception Management International (PMI),Ministry of Trade and Industry, Ministry of Tourism, Arts & Culture and the Ghana Tourism Authority (GTA).It is partnered by Citi FM, Happy FM, YFM, Akonoba FM, Neesim FM Bolga, Neesim FM Tamale, eTV Ghana, Business and Financial Times, Daily Guide and Ghanaweb on the media front. Source: Peacefmonline.com/Ghana Disclaimer : Opinions expressed here are those of the writers and do not reflect those of Peacefmonline.com. Peacefmonline.com accepts no responsibility legal or otherwise for their accuracy of content. Please report any inappropriate content to us, and we will evaluate it as a matter of priority. Featured Video The German Government has handed over a special operational vehicle for transporting detective dogs to the Narcotic Control Commission to support the fight against drug trafficking and crime. The customised Mercedes Benz Sprinter vehicle, worth 77,000, is to facilitate the deployment of the K9 team of the Narcotic Control Commission for operations. It can convey eight detective dogs with their technical handlers at a go and can run on an air-conditioner, even when the engine is off, to keep the dogs calm. The Minister for the Interior, Ambrose Dery, received the vehicle in Accra on March 1, 2022, at a ceremony attended also by the acting Director-General of the Narcotic Control Commission, Mr Kenneth Adu-Amanfoh, and some officials of the ministry. The Deputy German Ambassador to Ghana, Mr Helge Sander, said the gesture was part of the German Government's support to Ghanas security sector towards the fight against drug trafficking. Over the years, he said, the German Government had supported the training of officials of the Narcotic Control Commission and other security agencies, including the Ghana Immigration Service, the Ghana Armed Forces and the Ghana Police Service. Commitment Mr Dery said the support would strengthen the relationship between Ghana and Germany. He said the government was committed to ensuring that drug traffickers were prevented from using West Africa as their transit point. The government, he said, was committed to dealing with the drug menace to overcome the challenge it posed to the country. He said in addition to a three-unit accommodation provided recently by the government to house the K9 dogs, the vehicle would complement the management of the dogs and their operations. The German Government, through the Federal Criminal Police Office (BKA), has provided technical and logistical support to the Narcotics Control Commission over the years including the donation of a 250kVA capacity generator plant, dogs, and a three-unit prefabricated dog kennel while the KBA has been training some officers of the commission, particularly the detective dog handlers of the K9 Unit. Mr Dery said he was optimistic that the support would strengthen the commissions drug law enforcement operations in the country. He said the K9 Unit had become an integral part of the commission's enforcement operations at the airport, seaport and highway interdiction operations. "The presence of the detective dogs, at least, is deterrent enough to ward off potential criminals, promoting a sense of safety and security among people," he said. Source: graphiconline.com Disclaimer : Opinions expressed here are those of the writers and do not reflect those of Peacefmonline.com. Peacefmonline.com accepts no responsibility legal or otherwise for their accuracy of content. Please report any inappropriate content to us, and we will evaluate it as a matter of priority. Featured Video Ghanas response to the Russia-Ukraine crisis should not be misconstrued to mean the country is supporting the Western countries that are against Russia, the Director of Academic Affairs at the Ghana Armed Forces Command and Staff College, Professor Vladimir Antwi-Danso, has said. The accomplished researcher in international political economy, conflict, security and terrorism explained that Ghanas position was in line with its foreign policy on multilateralism, which states that anytime the country wants to take part in international discussions, it must do so in line with the multilateral organisation it belongs to the United Nations (UN). Since the reign of former President Kwame Nkrumah, Ghana has had four main pillars on which its foreign policy hinges Pan-Africanism, non-alignment, good neighbourliness and multilateralism, which is the UN that we belong to. Multilateralism teaches that anytime there is going to be war, we should let the UN declare it. It is because of this principle that when the United States of America (USA) went to war against Iraq, we supported the UN when it declared that war as illegal. So it is our multilateralist principle in foreign policy that has taken a sway in our response to the Ukrainian issue. Ghana has not deviated in doing so, he stated. Background On February 24, Russia launched a devastating attack on Ukraine. In a pre-dawn TV address on that day, President Vladimir Putin declared that Russia could not feel "safe, develop and exist" because of what he claimed was a constant threat from modern Ukraine. Airports and military headquarters were hit first, then tanks and troops rolled into Ukraine from Russia. Since then, lives have been lost and there are many, including some Ghanaians who have left Ukraine. Last Sunday, the Ministry of Foreign Affairs and Regional Integration held a press conference to talk about the security situation in Ukraine and the safety of Ghanaians there. The sector Minister, Ms Shirley Ayorkor Botchwey, speaking at the conference, said the country unreservedly condemned the unprovoked attack on the sovereignty and territorial integrity of a UN member state. Since then, some people have taken that submission to mean the country was supporting the West against Russia. Role of Ghana In an interview with the Daily Graphic last Monday, Prof. Antwi-Danso, who is a product of the Leningrad State University, Russia, said Ghana could help bring an end to the war between Russia and Ukraine by continuing to support multilateralist (UN) actions or gather like-minded smaller sovereign countries and lead them to take a position on the issue, which would then be tabled at the UN. The last option, he said, was for Ghana, using its neutralist position, to play the role of a big mediator by calling President Putin and the Ukrainian President, Volodymyr Zelenskyy, to broker peace. This is the most difficult of the three because you need to have the respect of the international community and the wherewithal to be able to do that. But we can do it. Ghana is now a member of the UN Security Council and it is also respected on the African continent. Dr Nkrumah, on his own, wanted to end the Vietnam War, Prof. Antwi-Danso stated. Global effort Globally, he said, a multilateralist approach from the UN, using mediatory processes, as enshrined in the UN Charter, could have helped broker peace. However, he explained, since most of the superpower nations that belonged to the UN and international organisations such as FIFA and the International Olympic Committee had aligned themselves against Russia, that approach could be extremely difficult to start. Faced with that, he said, the UN could continue to call for calm heads. One other big broker could be China. The UN should be able to persuade China, which has similar problems and feelings against the West and is seriously aligned to Russia, to wade into the affair, he advised. Impact Touching on the repercussions of the crisis on the world, Prof. Antwi-Danso said the sanctions being imposed on Russia would have a ripple effect on the whole world. The sanctions are deterrence measures, and in deterrence, if you allow the person to grow wings, it hits back, he said. He cited, for instance, the stock market that was tumbling and increasing oil prices around the world as some of the global biting effects. Appropriateness On whether it was right for Russia to invade Ukraine, he said in international law, the invasion was wrong, but in security terms, there was nothing like morality or evil. If, as a country, you feel your security is threatened, you deal with it. People behave according to their security concerns, and it doesnt matter whether the person is a dictator or a democrat. In security, there is nothing like a moral or evil country. Putin is doing what he has done not because he is evil but because America would have done same if it too felt its security was threatened. So if you say Putin is a dictator and that is why he is doing what he did, that is wrong. He did that because of security concerns for his country. Americas security concerns took it far away to Afghanistan, he said.. Lessons for Africa Prof. Antwi-Danso asked smaller sovereign countries in Africa to come together to form alliances, just like the Non-Aligned Movement. Through that, he said, they could call off the bluff of the superpowers and also not become their prey. Sustaining global peace Prof. Antwi-Danso called on NATO to stop its eastward expansion and also liquidate itself, especially now that there was no Cold War. He also called on Ukraine to rescind its notion of joining NATO. Source: graphiconline.com Disclaimer : Opinions expressed here are those of the writers and do not reflect those of Peacefmonline.com. Peacefmonline.com accepts no responsibility legal or otherwise for their accuracy of content. Please report any inappropriate content to us, and we will evaluate it as a matter of priority. Featured Video Ghana has been advised to adopt Climate-Smart Agriculture (CSA) approach to increase agriculture production, ensure food security, and build climate resilience. The African continent has also been encouraged to diversify the sector to ensure food sufficiency. A latest report released by the Intergovernmental Panel on Climate Change (IPCC) on climate science indicates that there are some major transformative steps needed to be taken to address the vulnerability climate change poses to the agricultural sector. According to the report by the IPCCs Working Group II on climate change impacts, adaptation and vulnerability, agriculture production on the continent slowed by 34 percent. Commenting on the Findings, Dr Shaibu Baanni Azumah, an Agriculture Economist, told the Ghana News Agency that climate change impacts, which had been aggravated by the COVID-19 pandemic, were real in Ghana and the whole of Africa and had dire implications on food systems and the economies too. African leaders, he noted, had not prioritized measures to ameliorate the impact of climate vulnerability. We are not food secured because we are not self-sufficient in the production and consumption of maize and rice for instance, which are very important food commodities for most countries. Climate change impacts is also having a toll and playing a major role in it, he said. As we speak in Ghana, we have a deficit of more than 50 percent in terms of rice production alone. What that means is that, in terms of our consumption pattern, we can only take care of about 40 percent. About 60 percent of the population will not have it. So, we must either import or we try to find ways by which we can produce to make up for this deficit. He said although CSA had been captured under Ghanas updated Nationally Determined Contribution, it was yet to be implemented under its flagship project -Planting for Food and Jobs. Dr Azumah proposed to the government to invest in the production and distribution of improved seeds, intensification and scientific approaches where nature-based solutions, such as the use of agriculture byproducts, often discarded, to be used to produce organic compost to improve soil fertility. For instance, global prices of chemical fertilizer have increased between 2020 and now, and because of the surge of COVID-19, our ability to integrate organic fertilizer will reduce the cost and strengthen our fragile soils, especially in the northern part of Ghana, he said. Source: GNA Disclaimer : Opinions expressed here are those of the writers and do not reflect those of Peacefmonline.com. Peacefmonline.com accepts no responsibility legal or otherwise for their accuracy of content. Please report any inappropriate content to us, and we will evaluate it as a matter of priority. Featured Video Some people online have expressed anger after footage emerged of a group of Nigerian governors' wives celebrating the first lady's birthday, apparently in Dubai. Aisha Buhari's birthday was on 17 February, when she turned 51, but the video has only just emerged. It is not clear when it was filmed. A group of women, who local media say are wives of local politicians, can be seen carrying a large box and flowers, while singing Happy Birthday To You. There is also a cameraman in the background. Some people have questioned how the attendees paid for their travel to Dubai. "How many of them would have embarked on this trip with their personal funds?" one critical tweeter questioned. Others felt it was tone deaf for the women to travel to celebrate the first lady's birthday, when the country is facing so many problems. "So much insensitivity truly sad", one person wrote. "No fuel in Nigeria for the common man but Aisha and her husband can enjoy life outside of Nigeria while citizens suffer!" the journalist Jackson Ude wrote. The footage does not show if President Muhammadu Buhari himself was present. The BBC has contacted the authorities for comment but they have not yet responded. Moment Governors' Wives Visited Aisha Buhari With Cake, Flowers In Dubai Although, the First Lady Aisha Buhari's birthday was last month, and a quiet one, video has surfaced of how some governors' wives recently visited her in Dubai to mark it. pic.twitter.com/SWczffqTcU Punch Newspapers (@MobilePunch) March 2, 2022 Source: BBC Disclaimer : Opinions expressed here are those of the writers and do not reflect those of Peacefmonline.com. Peacefmonline.com accepts no responsibility legal or otherwise for their accuracy of content. Please report any inappropriate content to us, and we will evaluate it as a matter of priority. Featured Video The government is to augment the Metro Mass Transit Limited (MMTL) fleet with 600 buses. The Minister of Transport, Mr Kwaku Ofori Asiamah, said the move was part of measures to revamp the operations of the MMTL. "Currently, value for money assessment is being undertaken for the supply of 300 Hyundai buses from Korea and additional 200 buses from China," he told Parliament on Monday, March 1, 2022. He was responding to a question by the National Democratic Congress (NDC) Member of Parliament (MP) for Adaklu, Mr Kwame Governs Agbodza, who asked how many buses had been procured for the MMTL since 2017, how much they cost and how it was funded. Details of support The Transport Minister said the MMTL was established with an objective to provide intra-city, inter-urban and rural-urban bus services in the country. The policy framework for the financing and operations of the MMTL was that the government would provide support for the acquisition of buses to enable the company to provide relatively cheaper and affordable mass transportation services to the public as a necessary social service, Mr Asiamah said. Mr Speaker, a total of 100 new intercity buses have so far been supplied to the MMTL at a total cost of $17.5 million. This was financed by the government. We have also signed a contract with VDL Bus Roeselare for the supply of 100 intercity buses, spare parts and training services, the Transport Minister said. Mr Asiamah added that under the same contract, 50 broken down VDL buses at MMTL would be repaired to augment the fleet. This project is also being financed with a 25.49 million mixed credit facility from the government of Belgium and Belfius Bank SA/NV. The first batch of 45 buses are in production and expected to be delivered by the second quarter of this year, the Minister of Transport stated. Keta Landing Beach Responding to a question on the status of the Keta Landing Beach, Mr Asiamah indicated that the government was implementing a number of interventions, part of efforts to develop the Volta Lake as a preferred mode of transport. Those, he said, included the removal of tree stumps on the navigable routes to reduce frequent boat accidents on the lake and improve safety. He said tree stumps between Dambai and Dambai Overbank, Yeji to Mankango, Dambai to Njare, Yeji to Aworjakope crossings, among others, had been removed. Additionally, Mr Asiamah stated that a feasibility study for a proposed Volta Lake Improvement Project had been completed with support from the Korean Exim Bank. Facilities to be provided under the project include supply of five vessels, integrated management system (IMS), construction of a slipway and a total of 10 ferry landing sites with reception facilities at Yeji, Makango, Kojokrom, Kete-Krachi, Dambai, Dodoikope, Kpando Torkor, Agordeke, Akinetic and Kwela Dwayne. Mr Speaker, the ministry under the Transport Sector Improvement Project (TSUI) is currently undertaking a feasibility study for the overall development of the Volta Lake Transport System, he added. He indicated that the objective of the study was to develop the Volta Lake as a viable and competitive transport link while facilitating the development of railway links and connecting missing road links (bridges) along that corridor and the hinterland. Wa Airport On the question of why the Wa Airport was no longer being patronised by commercial airlines much like the Kumasi and the Tamale airports, the minister said the rehabilitation of the Wa Airport was completed in 2019. That paved the way for African World Airlines (AWA) to start operations in October 2019, he said. However, Mr Asiamah said, AWA suspended operations to the airport due to some safety concerns relating to the flight approach path, coupled with the outbreak of the COVID-19 pandemic. Consequently, he explained that the Ghana Civil Aviation Authority had conducted a series of Obstacles Limitation Surface (OLS) Standards analyses to define the limits to which objects might penetrate the airspace of an airport. Based on the above, it was realised that some masts were penetrating the OLS surfaces, thus breaching the required standards. Mr Speaker, to remedy the above breach, the ministry together with key stakeholders took the necessary measures to have all the masts removed by their respective owners as well as other tall trees since July 19, 2021, he stated. Now, airlines could safely operate into the Wa Airport without any significant safety hazard on the approach, Mr Asiamah said. Passion Air commenced operations to Wa Airport in December 2021 and operates three weekly flights to Wa, he added. Source: graphiconline.com Disclaimer : Opinions expressed here are those of the writers and do not reflect those of Peacefmonline.com. Peacefmonline.com accepts no responsibility legal or otherwise for their accuracy of content. Please report any inappropriate content to us, and we will evaluate it as a matter of priority. Featured Video March 2, 2022, marks a decade of the enactment of Ghanas Mental Health Act, 2012 (Act 846), a legislation considered as among the best anywhere in the world. The first legislation in Ghana to make mention of persons with mental illness was the Prisons Ordinance of 1876 in the then Gold Coast. It considered such persons as criminals to be incarcerated in prisons. Then the Lunatic Asylum Ordinance was passed in 1888 to legitimise the Victoriabourg Castle Asylum established in 1887 and to recognise such persons as requiring special custodial care. This enabled the building of the Gold Coast Central Asylum inaugurated in 1906, which eventually came to be known as the Accra Psychiatric Hospital. The Lunatic Asylum Ordinance was slightly amended in 1940. In 1965, the Easmon Commission recommended a review of the 1888 Lunatic Asylum Ordinance. The review started in 1969 and was passed as the NRCD 30 of 1972. This decree regarded persons with mental health conditions as being medically ill and not criminals but it laid no emphasis on their human rights. Efforts at amendment in 1994 and 1996 did not go through. Enactment process Mental health workers, recognising the poor state of mental health care with attendant human rights abuses, have for long, felt the need for a review of the 1972 law NRCD 30. In 2001 WHO recommended that all countries should enact mental health laws and those which had should review them if they were older than 10 to 20 years. Ours was 29 years old. The Cabinet was approached in 2003 and approval was given. A committee was formed in 2004. WHO trained local experts and also provided consultants from various countries, including Zimbabwe, Canada, the United Kingdom (UK), and Switzerland to support the drafting of a bill. The draft was completed in 2006. The enactment got stalled for various reasons. Many people did not see the need for a law in mental health when there was no law in child health or general health care. Others felt we would be creating a parallel structure to the Ghana Health Service (GHS), and many more reasons. These protests got to the parliamentarians who, for a solution, went to other countries to learn of their system. After their tour they agreed the proposed mental health law was in order. Meanwhile, mental health workers and advocates, both within and outside the country, stepped up their advocacy and lobby. Articles were written and published in the papers, others organised signatures of 6,000 people all over the world advocating the passage. Anas Aremeyaw Anas documentary on the rot at the psychiatric hospitals got then President Atta Mills to visit to see things for himself. He saw and was touched. On March 2, 2012, Parliament passed the bill into an Act and on May 31, same year, the then President signed it into a law, the Mental Health Act, 2012 (Act 846), as a major milestone in mental health care. In June, the law was gazetted and six months later, it came into force. Impact The enactment of the Act gave birth to the Mental Health Authority as an agency under the Ministry of Health to be responsible for mental health care in the country, to decentralise and spread mental health services all over the country. Now, every health facility can provide some level of mental health care, every district hospital has a psychiatric unit, every regional hospital has provision for admission of persons with mental illness requiring admission, more mental health workers have been trained, from 12 psychiatrists in 2012 to 51 in 2022 with about 20 doctors in training who will all come out in three years to add to the numbers. Modern medicines are now used and are more readily available than in the past. Mental health care has improved in quality and treatment gap has correspondingly reduced. There are regional mental health coordinators helping with ensuring mental health care in the regions. Mental health awareness has increased, human rights of patients are being observed, quality rights are now part of mental health care and there is an increasing confidence in orthodox mental health care. There is now less stigma and discrimination. Chaining and flogging of patients at prayer camps have reduced. We have more NGOs and advocates in mental health. What is left to be achieved? The success of the law, from the beginning, was tied to three things the establishment of the Mental Health Board, the passage of the legislative instrument and the establishment of the mental health levy. The first board was formed one and half years after the law was passed, the second board lived for only one year and was dissolved alongside other boards in January 2021 and since then we do not have a board. The mental health levy, which was supposed to provide funding to the mental health fund, is yet to be established, leaving a huge gap in funding. To date, we do not have the review tribunal and visiting committees to help with human rights enforcement and this is a major problem. Persons with severe mental illness are still roaming the streets. In spite of the law saying mental health care should be free, patients still pay at the psychiatric hospitals. The establishment of the levy will ensure enough funding to finance the care and the charges at the hospital will cease. Lessons learnt and way forward We have learnt that we need to implement the law in full and that includes establishing the levy. The levy will provide funding for all services. We all need to own mental health care. We have a collective responsibility in this enterprise. We need to persist in our new paradigm of community mental health care rather than institutional care. We are grateful for the governments plan to build two new psychiatric hospitals in the middle and northern belts of the country, redevelop Accra Psychiatric Hospital and Pantang Hospital. The future is bright for mental health but the levy must be established; and in the short term, the mental health board must be formed. The writers are Chief Executive, Mental Health Authority & Head of Communication, Mental Health Authority. Source: graphiconline.co Disclaimer : Opinions expressed here are those of the writers and do not reflect those of Peacefmonline.com. Peacefmonline.com accepts no responsibility legal or otherwise for their accuracy of content. Please report any inappropriate content to us, and we will evaluate it as a matter of priority. Featured Video The Government of Ghana is employing the application of digital technology to stimulate the growth and transformation of the Ghanaian economy, and, thereby, help ensure that every Ghanaian derives maximum benefit from this process, Communication and Digitalization Minister, Mrs. Ursula Owusu-Ekuful has said. According to her, the Akufo-Addo led government for the past five years has taken the necessary digital decisions that have provided the necessary results to stimulate the economy on several levels adding that, the future outcome would be to enhance coordination, and provide significant benefits to citizens. For Ghana, we are intensifying our digital transformation drive with the ultimate goal of improving lives pursuant to the Sustainable Development Goals and we can only do this by ensuring that the required frameworks are in place. The Government of Ghana through the Ministry of Communications and Digitalization is playing a pivotal role in the development of a robust framework to support the digitalization of the economy in a manner that benefits every citizen. But we are mindful of the fact that we cannot do it alone and have to build systems that are capable of being linked up to those developed by our neighbors. We are building fiber to our borders and are active in continental initiatives such as the Smart Africa Alliance. We are also determined to make the African Continental Free Trade Area (AfCFTA) work, clear in our minds that digital technology holds the key to uniting our fragmented and uncoordinated trade infrastructure and systems on the continent she made this known at the Global Standards Symposium (GSS-20) organized by the International Telecommunication Union (ITU) which happened in Geneva in Switzerland. Digital ESG Platforms She further explained government is working tirelessly to ensure that Ghana and its neighboring countries successfully ensure the establishment of the Environmental, Social, and Governance (ESG) digital platform.5 This she says would help to serve as standards that are incorporated by socially-conscious5 investors to evaluate the sustainability and societal impacts of investments in5 companies across the Africa continent. In addition, she underscored the need for such digital advancement, explaining it would enable purpose-driven companies and organizations to address the challenges and opportunities presented by the wholesale shift in how value is defined, measured and shared across the value chain. In Ghana, we have decided not to be naive about the political economy of all these powerful shifts. Whilst we acknowledge the power of digital-enabled ESG standards to create a fairer, more prosperous, world, we also know that in the past we have, as a country and a continent, been marginalized in the creation of similar systems, such as the internet. She added, We believe that our best bet is to partner with our continental neighbours to establish our own digital ESG platforms and networks. We are building systems that speak to our unique reality in the quest to build a fairer, more prosperous, continent. Ghana is a pioneer in the adoption of the AfCFTA Caravan platform, and its supply chain digitization derivative known as ProPer the Proof of Origin and Product Electronic Registries. The Global Standards Symposium (GSS) provided a high-level forum for discussion and coordination which was opened to both ITUmembers and non-members. This years edition was chaired by H.E. MsNeleLeosk, Ambassador-at-Large for Digital Affairs, Ministry of Foreign Affairs, Estonia. The theme for the Symposium was International standards to enable the digital transformation and achieve the sustainable development goals (SDGs). Source: Peacefmonline.com/Ghana Disclaimer : Opinions expressed here are those of the writers and do not reflect those of Peacefmonline.com. Peacefmonline.com accepts no responsibility legal or otherwise for their accuracy of content. Please report any inappropriate content to us, and we will evaluate it as a matter of priority. Featured Video The Dean of the University of Ghana School of Law, Prof Raymond Atuguba, has described the yet-to-be introduced Electronic Transactions Levy (E-Levy) as "smart", yet "horrible and wicked". According to him, although the E-Levy if passed into law would broaden the tax bracket to sustain the economy, government must be honest with Ghanaians on the state of the economy in order to win public support. The starting point for passing the E-Levy is for government to stop lying to the citizenry, come clean and confess that they thought the job of managing the economy was simple, but now they know better. Plead with the people of Ghana that we have limited options now, he said at a forum organized by Solidare Ghana on Monday. He added that although there were several options of taxation, the E-Levy was nonetheless a smart way in respect of the ease, speed and cost of collecting revenue. The first step is to pass the E-levy immediately and implement it effectively. To prevent the collapse of the economy and a return to the stronghold of the IMF, we have no choice but to pass it. As horrible and wicked as it is, it is the only way to save our economy from collapse in the short term, Prof Atuguba said. It is true that theres other means of taxationbut there are a few considerations. Ease, speed and cost of collection. If u analyse all of these, to be honest with you, the government was smart to arrive at the very tax that will stop the economic crisisthey did a very good job of identifying exactly at this critical moment of economic collapse, the one tax that can save us. If you look at the size of the tax that will come in, the ease of collection, the reduced cost of collection, it must be E-Levy, he said. He noted however, that in order for Ghanaians to accept the tax, government must come clean on the difficulties it is facing in managing the economy and Ghanaians being empathetic would reason with government. Meanwhile, President Nana Addo Dankwa Akufo-Addo has described the proposed E-Levy as an innovative fiscal measure which will help equitably improve the countrys tax collection. I believe strongly that it is in the public interest that it should be enacted into law. We cannot continue to live forever on foreign savings, he said at the National Labour Conference (NLC) organised by the Ministry of Employment and Labour Relations in Kwahu Nkwatia in the Eastern Region on Monday. Source: graphiconline.com Disclaimer : Opinions expressed here are those of the writers and do not reflect those of Peacefmonline.com. Peacefmonline.com accepts no responsibility legal or otherwise for their accuracy of content. Please report any inappropriate content to us, and we will evaluate it as a matter of priority. Featured Video Outspoken Editor-in-Chief of the Insight newspaper, Kwesi Pratt says Ghana's economy has become extremely worse to the extent that even to serve a stranger a chilled bottle of beer, the nation will have to first go for a loan. According to Mr. Pratt, affording a beer is no more a luxury in Ghana. To him, Ghana doesn't have the wherewithal to buy even a bottle of beer for a visting Diplomat or Head of State. Detailing Ghanaians on the state of the economy, Mr. Pratt was extremely worried about the President Akufo-Addo's governance stressing now, ''should a Head of State visit us and is thirsty for beer, we have to borrow before we can buy one bottle of beer''. He added; ''As we talk today, if President of Togo, Faure Gnassingbe visits us and wants to drink tea, we have to use loan to make the tea for him. That is the reality. No, but that is the truth. That is how graphic you can paint the picture. When he comes and even desires to eat konkonte, we have to go for loan.'' Aside giving a stranger a bottle of beer becoming a problem for Ghana, Mr. Pratt also lamented that except the country borrows, the President cannot have petrol in his vehicle to move around. ''If an incident has happened at Nima and if the President must move from Flagstaff House to Nima, we can't buy petrol into his car if we don't go for a loan. 128 percent of your total national revenue is expended on two-line items; public sector emoluments and debt servicing. How much is left to buy petrol into his (President) car," he stated. In his candid opinion, if only Ghana will progress, there must be a change of attitude and better way of managing the economy. Source: Ameyaw Adu Gyamfi/Peacefmonline.com/Ghana Disclaimer : Opinions expressed here are those of the writers and do not reflect those of Peacefmonline.com. Peacefmonline.com accepts no responsibility legal or otherwise for their accuracy of content. Please report any inappropriate content to us, and we will evaluate it as a matter of priority. Featured Video A seven-member Supreme Court panel has set 4 May 2022 as date for judgment in the case filed by two Minority MPs and a Ghanaian citizen challenging the approval of salaries for the First and Second Ladies of Ghana. The panel is headed by Chief Justice Anin Yeboah. The Professor Yaa Ntiamoa-Baidu Committee submitted the report of its recommendations, dated 18 June 2020, to President Akufo-Addo as required by the 1992 constitution. This was in fulfilment of the Article 71 provision of the 1992 constitution which enjoins every sitting president to set up a committee before the end of his or her four-year mandate to make recommendations on emoluments for Article 71 office-holders. The five-member committees report recommended, among other things, the payment of a salary equivalent to a cabinet minister who is a member of Parliament to the First Lady while her husband is in office, and the payment of a salary equivalent to 80% of the salary of a minister of state who is an MP if the spouse served one full term as president, or 100% of the salary of a minister of state who is an MP if the spouse served two or more full terms as president. With second ladies, the committee report recommended the payment of a salary equivalent to a cabinet minister who is not a Member of Parliament to a second lady while her husband is in office and, once he leaves office, the payment of a salary equivalent to 80% of the salary of a minister of state who is not an MP if the spouse served one full term as vice-president, or 100% of the salary of a minister of state who is a member of Parliament if the spouse served two or more full terms as vice-president. The reliefs sought The two MPs, Dafeamekpor Rockson-Nelson and Dr Clement Abaasinat Apaak and the citizen, Frederick Nii Commey, are seeking a total of eight reliefs from the Supreme Court. The reliefs are first, a declaration that upon a true and proper interpretation of Article 71(1) of the 1992 Constitution of Ghana, the Professor Yaa Ntiamoa-Baidu Committee appointed by the President under Article 71(1), only had jurisdiction to make recommendations in respect of salaries, allowances payable, facilities and privileges of Article 71 office holders under the 1992 Constitution. The second is a further declaration that upon a true and proper interpretation of Article 71(1) of the 1992 Constitution of Ghana, the Prof Ntiamoa-Baidu Committee had no jurisdiction, mandate or authority to make any recommendations in respect of salaries, allowances payable, facilities and privileges of persons other than persons specified under Article 71 of 1992 Constitution. Third, a declaration that upon a true and proper interpretation of Article 71(1) of the 1992 Constitution, the Prof Ntiamoa-Baidu Committee exceeded its jurisdiction, mandate and authority when it purported to make recommendations in respect of privileges, facilities, salaries and allowances payable to the 1ST and 2nd Ladies of the Republic of Ghana. The fourth relief is a further declaration that the recommendations of the Committee, to the extent that it pertains to the 1st and 2nd Ladies of the Republic of Ghana, are null, void and of no effect. Their fifth prayer to the Supreme Court is a declaration that upon a true and proper interpretation of the Constitution, 1992, spouses of the President and the Vice President are not Article 71 office holders for the purposes of receipt of wages and emoluments. As their sixth relief, the applicant is seeking an order declaring the recommendations in respect of privileges, facilities, salaries and allowances payable to the 1st and 2nd Ladies of the Republic of Ghana as unconstitutional and void. The seventh and eighth reliefs sought are an order restraining the President of the Republic of Ghana or any other arm, ministry, department or agency of the executive, from implementing any recommendations of the Prof Ntiamoah-Baidu Committee which pertains to the 1st and 2nd Ladies of the Republic of Ghana and any further Order(s) or direction(s) as this Honourable Court may deem necessary. In court When the case was called today 1 March 2022, at the Supreme Court, lawyer for the applicants, Nii Kpakpo Samoa Addo, and the deputy Attorney General, Diana Asonaba Dapaah, told the Court that they have set out four joint memorandum issues that the Court may give attention to. The Supreme Court adopted the issues and set same down for determination on the 4 May 2022. Joint issues The joint issues are; whether or not the Plaintiffs have a cause of action in respect of the recommendations of the Ntiamoah-Baidu Committee. Secondly, whether or not upon a true and proper interpretation of Article 71 of the 1992 Constitution, the Prof. Ntiamoah-Baidu committee exceeded its mandate and authority in making recommendations in respect of privileges, facilities, salaries and allowances payable to the President and Vice Presidet to include salaries to be paid to the 1st and 2nd Ladies of the Republic of Ghana. Thirdly, whether or not the Parliament of Ghana breached Article 71 of the 1992 Constitution in determining the privileges, facilities, salaries and allowances payable to the President and Vice President to include salaries, to be paid to the 1st and 2nd Ladies of the Republic of Ghana. The last of the joint agreed issues is whether or not upon a true and proper interpretation of Article 71 of the 1992 Constitution of Ghana, the Prof. Ntiamoah-Baidu Committee created another public office holder contrary to Article 71 of the Constitution by recommending that facilities, privileges and benefits payable to the President and Vice President of the Republic of Ghana should include salaries paid to the respective spouses of the President and Vice President. Source: asaaseradio.com Disclaimer : Opinions expressed here are those of the writers and do not reflect those of Peacefmonline.com. Peacefmonline.com accepts no responsibility legal or otherwise for their accuracy of content. Please report any inappropriate content to us, and we will evaluate it as a matter of priority. Featured Video Seasoned Journalist, Kwesi Pratt Jnr. has registered his intense displeasure with the governance system of the Akufo-Addo administration. Mr. Pratt, speaking on Peace FM's 'Kokrokoo' programme Tuesday morning, bewailed the way and manner that Ghana is degenerating due to the inability of the President and his officials to identify the real problems of the country. According to him, the politics of the country's Gross Domestic Product with regard to whether it is increasing or decreasing isn't the fundamental problem but rather the poor management of the nation's resources and revenues. To him, the leaders have missed the plot, asking how does the politics of GDP ''resolve the concrete problem of our inability to benefit from the mining, from the extractive sector of the economy?'' Citing the gold sector where he noted the country has as less as 3 percent of shares, Mr. Pratt was of a firm belief that until the leaders focus on solving the real problems, the populace will continue to cry. He also condemned suggestions by some critics that the country should return to the International Monetary Fund (IMF) to help resolve Ghana's economic problems. "From the time of Adam and Eve, what country in this world has gone to IMF and had its monetary affairs going well? There is none. So, what's the sense in going to the IMF?'' he snapped. Mr. Pratt strongly opined that there are great intelligent men and women in Ghana who have requisite knowledge in economics and can help diagnose the country and proffer the right solutions to end the sufferings of Ghanaians whose expertise, he asked the government, to utilize. ''Why can't we rely on our own departments of economics in the various Universities, our think tanks [authentic Ghanaian think tanks]? Why don't we let them meet and give us insight?...Why can't we build national consensus on the state of the economy? How come we find homegrown solutions to the economy?'', he further asked. Looking at the way forward to Ghana's development, he stressed ''we have to change. We have to change the fundamentals of the economy. We have to restructure our economy". He added; "We have to build a self-reliant national economy within the context of a continental union government. That is the way forward. There is no other way. If what Guggisberg and co did is how we are also doing it, then we are going nowhere. We will remain here and keep crying everyday." Source: Ameyaw Adu Gyamfi/Peacefmonline.com/Ghana Disclaimer : Opinions expressed here are those of the writers and do not reflect those of Peacefmonline.com. Peacefmonline.com accepts no responsibility legal or otherwise for their accuracy of content. Please report any inappropriate content to us, and we will evaluate it as a matter of priority. Featured Video Majority Leader in Parliament Osei Kyei-Mensah-Bonsu has said that Parliament will listen to the Dome-Kwabenya Member of Parliament Sarah Adwoa Safo on why she absented herself from Parliament for more than fifteen days. The Leader of the Government Business told TV3s Benjamin Aidoo in an interview on Monday, February 28, said after he was asked when the Gender Minister was returning to Ghana that In the course of the week she may come down hopefully. Asked again whether she will be punished for absenting herself from Parliament for more than fifteen days, the Suame lawmaker said where we are, our orders have adequate provisions to deal with some of these matters but it depends on whatever excuse she has if it is plausible. Which is why the orders provide that a person who absents himself or herself for more than fifteen days in the meeting is unable to provide plausible justification for the absence, then the committee of Privileges could propose sanctions, so it depends on the information she is coming with. Some members of the New Patriotic Party (NPP) believe Adwoa Safo is sabotaging the government. For instance, the MP for New Juabeng South, Michael Okyere Baafi, said she is making the work of the government in Parliament difficult. All the problems the government is facing are attributable to Adwoa Safo. Clearly, her intention and posture show that she wants to sabotage NPP, he said on Kumasi-based Hello FM. The MP for Assin Central, Kennedy Agyapong also revealed that the Chief of Staff, Akosua Frema Osei-Opare gave him 120,000 to be deposited into the bank account of Adwoa Safo for her to attend to Parliamentary duties to work for the government. The Chief of Staff called me and I went, I swear my mothers grave, Chief of Staff gave me 120,000 and deposited into Adwoa Safos Fidelity Bank account. I took the money there into the Fidelity Account, ask her personal assistant if what I am saying is not the truth, a furious Kennedy Agyapong said. He added Now we are in opposition, the way Adwoa Safo is treating the party, it is clearly showing that we are in opposition and this shouldnt be tolerated at all, he told Asaase Radio on Tuesday, February 22. Mr. Agyapong had raised issues against the conduct of Sarah Adwoa Safo. He said that the Minister of Gender, Children and Social Protection has failed in life for requesting that she should be made a Deputy Majority Leader in Parliament. He wondered why a cabinet minister will now want to occupy a position that is below the rank of a Minister. Speaking on her rampant absence from Parliament, Mr Agyapong, who has two children with her, said: She says she wants to be Deputy Majority, that woman has failed in life. A whole cabinet minister now demanding that she should be made a Deputy Majority Leader before she comes, she should go to hell. You dont come to Parliament and you are on TikTok dancing? Dome Kwabenya is not for Apostle Kwadwo Safo, get it straight. I am very furious because people are insulting me because I went there to campaign for her. Mike Oquaye the Speaker, the man that I respect very well, I campaigned against his son because Adwoa used my kids, calling me and begging me to help her. And now everybody is insulting me for doing that but I have not regretted it, she is very responsible when it comes to the kids, he said on GTV Monday, February 21. Asked how many days she has been absent from Parliament, he answered: More than 15 days and the law says 15 days. Asked again whether Ghanaians should expect her seat to be declared vacant, he said: Why not? She should go and contest on TikTok. Source: 3 news Disclaimer : Opinions expressed here are those of the writers and do not reflect those of Peacefmonline.com. Peacefmonline.com accepts no responsibility legal or otherwise for their accuracy of content. Please report any inappropriate content to us, and we will evaluate it as a matter of priority. Featured Video Former Central Regional Chairman of the largest opposition National Democratic Congress (NDC), Bernard Allotey Jacobs, has jabbed his former political party for petitioning the Commonwealth of Nations to investigate what it says is human rights violations against its members by the Akufo-Addo government. Some persons with political affiliation to the NDC are facing prosecution over their utterances and actions. Cases The cases are that the "Fix The Country" activist, Oliver Barker-Vormawor, is currently facing charges of treason felony for threatening to stage a coup in Ghana. If this E-Levy passes after this cake bullshit, I will do the coup myself. Useless Army! he posted on Facebook on February 9. He was arrested on Friday, February 11, 2022 with the Police stating the post contains a clear statement of intent with a possible will to execute a coup in his declaration of intent to subvert the Constitution of the Republic of Ghana. His lawyers led by Anthony Akoto Ampaw, on February 14, urged the court to grant him bail but he (Barker-Vormawor) was thrown out of the court after he put up a behavior that the Magistrate found to be rude. Also, persons like Stephen Kwabena Opuni, NDC National Chairman Samuel Ofosu Ampofo, Anthony Kwaku Boahen, Cassiel Ato Forson among others are all currently being prosecuted. NDC Petition The NDC General Secretary, Johnson Asiedu Nketia described the prosecutions as persecution and harrassment of the members of the NDC. "The conduct of the government of Ghana in this matter has been dreadful leaving no doubt the government is bent on a conviction regardless of the quality of the evidence," he said. At a press conference on Monday, he indicated their petition to the Commowealth was necessitated by the "harassment, criminal persecution and human rights violations" against some leading members of the NDC including its National Chairman, Samuel Ofosu Ampofo. "There are some practices that are not in accordance with good governance and the principles of the Commonwealth so we have petitioned them to take the appropriate action," he added. NDC Is a Revolution Party Speaking on Peace FM's 'Kokrokoo', Bernard Allotey Jacobs explained why the members of the NDC are calling for a coup in Ghana. According to him, the NDC, from history, has proven to be a party that enjoys revolution, so it comes with no surprise to hear them make clarion calls for the overthrow of the government. Giving a brief history about the governing New Patriotic Party (NPP) and largest opposition National Democratic Congress (NDC), he narrated that the NPP has a tradition whereas the NDC has always been revolutionary. This, to him, is why the NDC members' utterances are on the lines of staging a coup d'etat. "The NPP is still keeping the UP tradition but we should all know that the NDC has no tradition but came out of a revolution. It's not a tradition; it's a revolution. Revolution is not tradition but people want to sow that revolutionary seed to make to look as if it's a tradition. So, it's like some people in that revolutionary . . . belief is that every time we are in opposition, we have to say there should be a coup d'etat because that is the tradition. "So, if you believe that the revolution is a tradition, then don't be surprised that NDC elements will come face-to-face with Ghanaians and tell Ghanaians there should be a coup d'etat because that's where they are coming from," he said. He advised the party to stop making coup statements saying, "if they say Ghana is insecure, then they are the cause of it". He added; "Ghana is for all of us . . . We should all contribute to help secure our country . . . Please, Ghana is our own! Yes, I have that belief that you're coming from this tradition but, you see, you shouldn't be careless in your presentations. Because by calling for a coup that Ghana is ripe for a coup, it sunk(s) into people's minds.'' Source: Ameyaw Adu Gyamfi/Peacefmonline.com/Ghana Disclaimer : Opinions expressed here are those of the writers and do not reflect those of Peacefmonline.com. Peacefmonline.com accepts no responsibility legal or otherwise for their accuracy of content. Please report any inappropriate content to us, and we will evaluate it as a matter of priority. Featured Video Chief Executive Officer of the Atta Mills Institute and former deputy General Secretary of the National Democratic Congress(NDC), Samuel Koku Anyidoho has instituted a legal action against his 'friend' Nana Kwabena Bobie Ansah. He has also sued a serial NDC activist popularly known as 'JM Ba Kwadwo' for allegedly making certain damning allegations against him. Confirming the suit on Okay FM's 'Ade Akye Abia' programme, he explained that efforts to have his friend retract and apologize has proved futile hence the legal action against him. "The said allegations were not authored by Nana Kwabena Bobie Ansah but he re-produced the allegations on a programme on a station described as "Pendream TV". A Youtube video clip was circulated in the name of a certain JM Ba Kwadwo," he revealed. According to Koku, open threats were issued verbally against him in the video clip including a brazen notice of plans to attack him. "Also, I am widely accused of having a hand in the death of late President John Atta Mills, which sad event occurred on 24th July 2012. I am also accused of going to shrines with some pictures of former President John Dramani Mahama he took at a dinner with the sole aim of using foul means to end his life. "All that I'm asking the court is for Nana Kwabena Bobie Ansah and JM Ba Kwadwo to prove their wild allegations against me, failure to do so, damage to the tune of one million Ghana cedis should be awarded against them." Mr. Anyidoho, prior to the suit, had also petitioned the Ghana Police Service for an official inquest into the death of late President Atta Mills. According to him, the call is premised on the need to clear his name and save his reputation. Koku also requested the police to investigate wild and damaging utterances shared in a youtube video and which was distributed by the Accra FM host, Kwabena Bobie Ansah. Source: Isaac Kwame Owusu/Peacefmonline/[email protected] Disclaimer : Opinions expressed here are those of the writers and do not reflect those of Peacefmonline.com. Peacefmonline.com accepts no responsibility legal or otherwise for their accuracy of content. Please report any inappropriate content to us, and we will evaluate it as a matter of priority. Featured Video Board Chairman of the National Theatre, Nana Fredua Agyeman Ofori-Atta, has slammed the National Democratic Congress (NDC) for hopping to the Commonwealth Nations to investigate Ghana under suspicions of human rights abuses. The NDC has petitioned the Commonwealth Nations to monitor the human rights situation in Ghana as well as what they say is criminal persecution of its members. According to the party's General Secretary, Johnson Asiedu Nketia, who announced the petition to the press on Monday, February 28, it was necessary to send the petition to the international entity because of the "harassment, criminal persecution and human rights violations" against some NDC leading members including their National Chairman, Samuel Ofosu Ampofo. "There are some practices that are not in accordance with good governance and the principles of the Commonwealth so we have petitioned them to take the appropriate action," he added. But Nana Fredua, sharing dissenting views on the petition, ridiculed the NDC for going to the Commonwealth Nations. He wondered how the NDC would have the audacity to petition an international body to report human rights violations when they have a track record of abusing the people's rights and criminally pursuing innocent Ghanaians. Although this, he said, is not to justify human rights encroachment by any government including the governing New Patriotic Party (NPP), he finds it ridiculous that the NDC are crying about rights infringement which, to him, is not even the reality in Ghana under the leadership of President Nana Addo Dankwa Akufo-Addo. "They think everyone in Ghana is a kid. They think the wise people in Ghana are not many . . . I feel they have disgraced themselves and the entire nation," he said while making submissions on Peace FM's ''Kokrokoo''. Source: Ameyaw Adu Gyamfi/Peacefmonline.com/Ghana Disclaimer : Opinions expressed here are those of the writers and do not reflect those of Peacefmonline.com. Peacefmonline.com accepts no responsibility legal or otherwise for their accuracy of content. Please report any inappropriate content to us, and we will evaluate it as a matter of priority. Featured Video Thank you for reading the Philadelphia Tribune. You have exhausted your free article views for this month. Please press the "subscribe" button below and see our introductory price of $0.10 per week for 10 weeks. Otherwise, we look forward to seeing you next month. Sullivan Wins 6-Max Event 2nd Straight Year at Harrahs Cherokee; Davis Binks Main March 02, 2022 Connor Richards Editor & Live Reporter U.S. The World Series of Poker (WSOP) Circuit Harrahs Cherokee in North Carolina wrapped up this week and saw Mark Davis of Birmingham, Alabama winning Event #12: $1,700 Main Event to earn his first gold Circuit ring and a massive payday of $334,678. The latest WSOP Circuit stop consisted of 16 ring events with buy-ins ranging from $250 to $1,700 to generate $6.4 million in prize money. The Main Event generated the largest prize pool of the series, $2.1 million, with 1,402 entrants. Davis defeated Adam Ney after entering heads-up play with a significant chip disadvantage. Davis was able to hang on and eventually took the chip lead from Ney, who was eliminated when his pocket deuces couldnt hold up against the ace-nine of Davis. For his second-place finish, Davis earned a cash of $206,844. Mark Davis WSOPC Harrahs Cherokee Main Event Full Results Place Player Hometown Prize 1 Mark Davis Birmingham, AL $334,678 2 Adam Ney Atlanta, GA $206,844 3 Chris George Rockwell, GA $157,423 4 Scott Dobbs Covington, GA $120,760 5 Kevin Morris Elmira, NY $93,376 6 Dale Roesel Hixson, TN $72,783 7 Nicholas Power Mcdonough, GA $57,192 8 Pawley Thomas Fayetteville, NC $45,309 9 Todd Bartlett Dallas City, IL $36,191 Other players who cashed in the Main Event include Will Jaffe (20th - $16,016), Eric Salazar (38th - $6,107), Kenneth Aldridge (73rd - $3,844) and all-time ring leader Maurice Hawkins (87th - $3,504). Albrinck Wins Third Ring An early highlight of the series occurred in Event #2: $400 NLH when Cincinnati's Brad Albrinck got through a massive field to win $141,330 and his third career WSOP Circuit ring. The event attracted a total of 3,334 entrants and generated an impressive $1.1 million in prize pool money, making it the largest event of the series and the only tournament outside of the Main Event to generate seven figures. Albrink defeated Michael Suggs of Carmel, Indiana during heads-up play after dominating a final table that he entered as chip leader. Suggs earned $86,958 for his runner-up finish, while other players at the final table included Joshua Dean (3rd - $65,732), Raymond Brint (4th - $51,787) and Daniel Vo (5th - $38,591). Brad Albrinck Albrinck, who has $1.4 million in tournament earnings, according to The Hendon Mob, got his first gold ring in 2013 when he took down the WSOPC Horseshoe Cincinnati Main Event for $221,994. Just a few years later, the Cincinnatian won the 2016 WSOP Harrahs Cherokee Main Event to earn his biggest WSOP score to date worth $275,877. It feels really good to get back on a big score, its been a long time coming, Albrinck said after his most recent victory. Sullivan Wins 6-Max Event Back-to-Back Later in the series, Russell Sullivan of West Columbia, South Carolina earned his fourth ring by winning Event #6: $400 NLH 6-Max for $44,390, giving him back-to-back victories in the only 6-max event of the series. The 6-max tournament attracted 721 runners to generate $237,930 in prize money. Richard Myers finished in second for $27,436, ahead of Casteel Veasley (3rd - $19254), Kevin Blewitt (4th - $13,723), Ryan McAllister (5th - $9,935) and Nicholas Drake (6th - $7,308). Sullivans third ring came just months after he took down Event #5: 6-Max No-Limit Holdem at the 2021 WSOP Circuit Harrahs Cherokee for $43,132, just shy of the score he received with his latest victory. Russell Sullivan Sullivan, a business owner and regular on the Circuit scene, dedicated his latest ring to his wife, who he said: has backed and been behind me with everything including my business. My wife and three beautiful children were here for a few days which was absolutely amazing, without their support I wouldnt be able to do this, I wouldnt be winning any rings. Little Continues Hot Streak Closing out the WSOP Circuit stop, Timothy Little of Hyattsville, Maryland won the second Seniors Event of the series to earn his second ring and $27,186. Little took down the $250-buy-in tournament after defeating Michael Musselwhite during heads-up play, who earned $16,804. Little, who has $1.1 million in tournament earnings, has had a fantastic run of cards the last six months that included a third-place finish worth $210,004 in Event #43: Double Stack No-Limit Hold'em, which was eventually won by Anthony Denove for $446,983. Timothy Little Just weeks ago, Little finished fourth in the 2022 WSOP Circuit Isle Casino Pompano Park Main Event to earn $69,842. Little earned his first Circuit ring in 2015 at WSOP Circuit Horseshoe Baltimore when he took down Event #12: $365 No-Limit Hold'em Turbo for $11,844. A full list of winners at 2022 WSOP Circuit Harrahs Cherokee is available below. The next stop on the WSOP Circuit will be at The Bicycle Casino in Los Angeles from March 5-16. 2022 WSOPC Harrah's Cherokee Ring Winners Tournament Entries Prize Pool Winner Hometown Prize Event #1: $400 NLH Double Stack 475 $156,750 Charles Hepler Lexington, NC $30,629 Event #2: $400 NLH 3,334 $1,100,220 Brad Albrinck Cincinatti, OH $141,330 Event #3: $400 NLH 706 $232,980 Robert Bourkney N Collins, NY $42,410 Event #4: $400 NLH Seniors 781 $257,730 David Gore Marietta, GA $45,608 Event #5: $600 NLH 430 $221,450 Jack Shea Pfafftown, NC $44,492 Event #6: $400 NLH 6-Max 721 $237,930 Russell Sullivan West Columbia, SC $44,390 Event #7: $400 Pot-Limit Omaha 353 $116,490 Braxton Moore Knoxville, TN $24,732 Event #8: $400 NLH Monster Stack 2,264 $747,120 Rush Smith Atlanta, GA $106,113 Event #9: $400 NLH 452 $149,160 Richard Vielhak Smyrna, GA $29,602 Event #10: $1,100 NLH 387 $377,325 Raul Garza Alton, TX $74,995 Event #11: $250 NLH Ladies 196 $39,200 Barbara Smith Chattanooga, TN $9,450 Event #12: $1,700 Main Event 1402 $2,124,030 Mark Davis Birmingham, AL $334,678 Event #13: $400 NLH 396 $130,350 Albert Peterlin Durham, NC $26,744 Event #14: $400 NLH 543 $179,190 Cristian Tuica Lawrenceville, GA $33,799 Event #15: $250 NLH Seniors 763 $152,600 Timothy Little Hyattsville, MD $27,186 Event #16: $400 NLH Double Stack 658 $217,140 Lonny Weitzel Texarkana, TX $40,234 *Images courtesy of WSOP. Mikolaitis Denies Memukuls Amazing Super MILLION$ Comeback March 02, 2022 Matthew Pitt Editor Dominykas Mikolaitis sat down at the GGPoker Super MILLION$ final table with a colossal chip lead, one so vast that his stack contained almost twice as many chips as anyone else. Unsurprisingly, Mikolaitis walked away with the title of champion and with the $428,624 top prize in tow, but it was almost a completely different story. You see, Mikolaitis navigated his way to the heads-up stage of this $10,300 tournament here he found himself up against "Memukul" of Austria. Memukuls stack at the final table was a mere 517,616 or 10.4 big blinds. Compare that to Mikolaitis 7,330,865 (146.6 big blinds) final table stack and you can see why it was surprising to see the Austrian at the business end of the event. Heres how the final table went down. Don't Miss GGPoker's Special GGMasters Overlay Edition Super MILLION$ Season 2 Episode 32 Final Table Results Place Player Country Prize 1 Dominykas Mikolaitis Poland $428,624 2 Memukul Austria $330,514 3 Manuel "OPPikachu" Fischer Austria $254,861 4 Andras Nemeth Hungary $196,525 5 Stephen Chidwick Austria $151,541 6 Dalton "morgota" Hobold Brazil $116,854 7 Yuri Dzieivelevski Brazil $90,107 8 Pandora-box Hong Kong $69,482 9 Weiran Pu China $53,578 Stephen Chidwick was another short stack when the final table action commenced. However, he doubled through Mikolaitis with ace-king versus ace-queen. "Memukul" then won a coinflip with jack-ten versus Andras Nemeths pocket sevens to climb to a shade under 1.1 million chips, but he still had plenty of work to do. Weiran Pu was the first of the nine finalists to bow out. Pu saw Nemeth make it 132,000 from the button and decided to three-bet all-in for 532,700 from the small blind with ace-six. Nemeth called with king-queen and won the hand courtesy of improving to two pair by the river. Be Both Hunter and Prey in GGPoker's $30M Guaranteed Bounty Hunter Series Hong Kongs "Pandora-box" was the next player out of the door, crashing out in eighth-place for a $69,482 addition to their bankroll. Their exit hand began with a raise to 126,000 with ace-king from the hijack, Mikolaitis three-bet to 354,000 on the button with ace-four, which Pandora-box called. Pandora-box check-called a tiny 150,000 continuation-bet on the king-high flop, leading to a deuce on the turn, which gave Mikolaitis a gutshot draw to a wheel. Pandora-box check-called a 288,000 bet on the turn, and the river came a five, gifting Mikolaitis his unlikely straight. Pandora-box checked again and called off their 1,021,218 stack when Mikolaitis set them all-in. Ace-king was not kind to Yuri Dzivielevski either because his lost to the ace-seven of Mikolaitis. Dzivielevski min-raised to 120,000 on the button with ace-king, and Mikolaitis called in the big blind with ace-seven. Both players checked the queen-seven-four flop, leading to an ace on the turn. Mikolaitis check-raised a 241,875 bet to 600,000, and Dzivielevski called. A jack on the river was greeted by a shove from Mikolaitis, and Dzivielevski called off his stack, which was essentially a pot-sized bet. Dzivielevskis fellow Brazilian, Dalton "morgota" Hobold was the next out of the door and was the first finalist to reel in a six-figure haul. Hobold had less than ten big blinds when Dzivielevski crashed out and only eight big blinds when he three-bet shoved with pocket jacks from the big blind after Manuel "OPPikachu" Fischer opened in the cutoff. Fischer called with ace-six, spiked an ace on the flop and reduced the player count by one. The final five became four when Chidwick ran out of steam. Mikolaitis min-raised to 140,000 from under the gun with ace-nine and instantly called when Chidwick ripped in his 642,125 stack on the button with ace-eight. Both player paired their kicker on the flop but Chidwick was still behind. No help arrived on the turn or river, and the United Kingdoms biggest poker winner fell by the wayside. Win a 2022 WSOP Main Event Seat NOW on ClubGG! Two-time Super MILLION$ champion Andras Nemeth was the next player heading to the showers. Nemeth was down to 11 big blinds when he three-bet shoved his ace-four of clubs over the top of small blind raise from Memukul. The latter called and showed a pair of nines in the hole, which held on a double-paired board. Heads-up was set soon after when Fischer busted. Fischer had only a few hands early lost a massive coinflip with pocket nines against the ace-jack of Memukul. He lost the rest of his stack, all 12 big blinds to the same player when his ace-trey failed to get there against king-five in a battle of the blinds. Mikolaitis held a lead of more than two-to-one going into heads-up against the player who started the evening with a shade over ten bigs. Memukul almost drew level at one stage, but the epic comeback was not meant to be. The final hand took place at the 100,000/200,000/25,000a level, and saw Memukul limp for 200,000 before calling all-in for 2,703,592 when Mikolaitis set him all-in. It was ace-jack for Memukul against the dominated ace-five, but Mikolaitis turned a wheel to take down the latest edition of the Super MILLION$. PN Podcast: Joe Stapleton Talks EPT Prague, Tom Wheaton on BetMGM March Poker Mania March 02, 2022 Chad Holloway Executive Editor U.S. In the latest PokerNews Podcast, Sarah Herring and Chad Holloway talk about Eugene Katchalov escaping Ukraine amid the Russian invasion, more drama from Hustler Casino Live, and welcome guest Tom Wheaton to come talk about the upcoming BetMGM March Poker Mania set to run March 20-27. They then recap the trio of ARIA High Roller tournaments, offer highlights from the 2022 Wynn Millions $1,600 Mystery Bounty, and chat with Joe "Stapes" Stapleton about the return of the European Poker Tour (EPT) and upcoming EPT Prague. Time Stamps Tell us who you want to hear from. Let us know what you think of the show tweet about the podcast using #PNPod, and be sure to follow Sarah Herring and Chad Holloway on Twitter. Subscribe to the PokerNews Podcast on Apple Podcasts here! Check Out Past Episodes of the PN Podcast Here! Sharelines PokerNews Podcast: @TomWheaton_ talks @BetMGM March Poker Mania; @Stapes on upcoming #EPTPrague. Would you like to receive breaking news notifications from The Post and Courier? Sign up to receive news and updates from this site directly to your desktop. Breaking News Columbia Breaking News Greenville Breaking News Myrtle Beach Breaking News Aiken Breaking News N Augusta Breaking News Click on the bell icon to manage your notifications at any time. Since its opening more than 35 years ago, the 434-room hotel in the heart of downtown has kept the name "Charleston Place." That's been true, even as other brand names were added to it. First, it was "The Omni," then "Orient Express" and, most recently "Belmond." As of March 1, the hotel has dropped Belmond from its name and it's now The Charleston Place, an independently and locally owned and managed property. The transition comes about five months after businessman and philanthropist Ben Navarro, via his company Beemok Hospitality, bought Charleston Place for $350 million, promising multimillion-dollar renovations and a long-term vision for the anchor property. Along with its name change, Charleston Place now has an updated website and a new logo, created by local design firm SDCO Partners. Beemok said the logo is meant to resemble the "bud of a giving tree." Coming next is more than $100 million worth of renovations to the hotel. Work is expected to begin in about a year, in early 2023, and will involve redesigns of the lobby, courtyards, guest rooms, suites, spa, restaurants, bars, retail, meeting spaces and pool. Beemok has said it will be reimagining "nearly all aspects of the hotel." Employees from all departments gathered Tuesday morning in the hotel's courtyard to celebrate the transition. Casey Lavin, president of Beemok Hospitality, thanked them all for their support over the months leading up to the official change. "This is an important journey we couldn't do without you," Lavin said. The property's new leaders have some "audacious goals," said managing director Bob Megargle, who joined Charleston Place in November. He'd previously managed a Four Seasons in San Francisco. "We are now about to write the best chapter of this hotel," Megargle said. Members of the "quarter-century club" the 43 employees on staff who have worked there 25 years or more were asked to do the honors of hoisting a flag with The Charleston Place's new logo. After that flag was raised above the hotel's Market Street entrance, miniature replicas were passed out to the crowd, which poured from the courtyard out onto Market Street where a jazz band led as they paraded around the block and back into the courtyard. Bob Benke recalled standing in the same area for Charleston Place's ribbon cutting in 1986. At that time, the once-controversial project was a catalyst for development downtown. Benke was first hired as an assistant banquet manager. He's been with the property ever since and is now capital project manager. "Now, we're having a rebirth," Benke said. To mark the transition, the hotel has been decorated in new greenery and, underneath the chandelier in the lobby, a large sculpture of two hands holding a tree has been installed. Paper leaves and pens are set out with an invitation for people to write their favorite memory from Charleston Place. Other programming this month will stem from themes of growth, greenery and spring. The hotel will host the plant truck operated by Sullivan's Island-based Haegur this upcoming weekend, a plant workshop later this month and a community concert with the Charleston Symphony Orchestra on March 20. Beemok has said to expect more seasonal programming, special decor and events throughout the year. An Upstate-based butcher shop soon will have five locations in the Charleston area. New York Butcher Shoppe plans to open at the end of March or early April at 1108 Oakland Market Blvd. in the Market at Oakland Shopping Center, giving it a second location in Mount Pleasant, according to spokeswoman Anna Tindal. In addition to select cuts of beef, chicken, pork, veal and lamb, the shop will offer frozen and fresh prepared dishes and sides along with a selection of wines, local beer and specialty items such as cheeses, exotic sausages and international groceries. The Greenville-based New York Butcher Shoppe chain has nine locations in South Carolina, including three in its home town. Others are on Daniel Island and the Isle of Palms and in Summerville, Columbia and Indian Land near Charlotte. The other Mount Pleasant site is on Ben Sawyer Boulevard. The Market at Oakland venue will make 10. Another will open in May in Lexington. Seven others are in Alabama, Florida, Georgia and North Carolina. Another will open in March in Crabapple, north of Atlanta. The new East Cooper store will be open 10 a.m.-7 p.m. Monday through Saturday and noon-6 p.m. Sunday. It also will be the company's ninth corporate-owned location. Others, including the Nexton Square location in Summerville that opened last fall, are franchise operations. Springing back The Charleston Farmers Market is ready to reopen. The new season starts March 5 on Marion Square. It's open 8 a.m.-2 p.m. through Nov. 26. It will be closed March 26 to prepare for the Cooper River Bridge Run. It also will be closed April 2 for the event, which stages its "Finish Festival" in Marion Square. The market features Lowcountry growers with fresh produce, plants, herbs and cut flowers. Attendees also will find breakfast and lunch vendors, artisans, crafters, live performers and community groups and activities. For more information, go to charlestonfarmersmarket.com. New sprout A North Charleston floral business that started 10 years ago as a mobile vendor broke ground March 1 for a new three-story building that will house the shop and include upstairs apartments. Roadside Blooms will occupy 2,640 square feet on the ground floor of a new building with four apartments at 4491 Durant Ave. near the entrance to the Mixson neighborhood. Shop owner Toni Reale is partnering with investor Brady Quirk-Garvin on the new building. Reale started the business in 2012 as a one-woman shop, operating out of a 1971 British ice cream truck. Now at 4610 Spruill Ave., beside The Station, Roadside Blooms has grown to 12 employees. Reale hopes to be in the new location by the end of the year or by the end of January 2023. Dollars and cents A new discount store is now welcoming customers in North Charleston. Dollar General recently opened at 6240 Rivers Ave. The shop offers essential household items as well as home decor and an expanded party preparation selection. In addition, customers will find fresh fruits and vegetables, including lettuce, tomatoes, onions, apples, strawberries, potatoes, sweet potatoes, lemons, limes, salad mixes and other items. As part of the opening, the company will donate 100 new books to a nearby elementary school. The donation is through a partnership with the Kellogg Co. to give away more than 100,000 books across the U.S. to celebrate new Dollar General store openings. In addition, nonprofits and libraries within a 15-mile radius of the new store can apply for Dollar General Literacy Foundation grants. New gem A new jewelry shop is now open on the Charleston peninsula. Hart, by jewelry designer Hart Hagerty, can be found at 650 King St. The shop offers ready-to-wear pieces, including topknot tassel earrings, beaded intention bracelets and custom charm jewelry. Necklaces can be ordered for pick-up the next day. Hours are 10 a.m.-4 p.m. weekdays. The store opened in December, but it was only by appointment. Stretching out A new yoga studio is now open in downtown Charleston. Grayce Body & Breath can be found at 359 King St., above housewares shop Williams-Sonoma. The studio is a project of mother-daughter duo Erin Gray and Daisy Gray Moses. "The GRAYCE method is based on our mission strong body, still mind, soft heart," said Gray, both founder and head yoga teacher. "Our goal is to teach our students how to create strength and stillness within, and how to move in a sustainable, biomechanically thoughtful way while doing it." It's open seven days a week. Free community classes are offered at 4 p.m. on the fourth Friday of each month for residents of Charleston County. For more information or to book classes, go to grayceyoga.com. Driving in A new car dealership recently rolled into the Charleston suburbs. Goose Creek Mitsubishi is now open at the former site of Mitsubishi Motors at 208 S. Goose Creek Blvd., across the street from Infinger Furniture. Baton Rouge, La.-based Smith Holdings LLC bought the nearly 3-acre property in December for more than $2.1 million, according to Berkeley County land records. The 5,400-square-foot property includes a showroom, office space, parts rooms and four service bays. The commercial real estate firm NAI Charleston represented the seller, NWB Properties LLC, of Mount Pleasant. Bellcore Commercial represented the buyer. Wheels and deals A South Florida automotive dealer recently opened its first pre-owned location in South Carolina in Charleston. AutoNation Inc. of Fort Lauderdale now operates a 31,500-square-foot, used-car dealership at 2250 Savannah Highway in West Ashley. It's the company's 11th site in the U.S. for pre-owned sales after it signed a 10-year lease that expires in 2031. The lease includes five, five-year extension options. The new site's name is AutoNation USA, the brand for its used-car shops. The company, under the AutoNation-only name, has nine new vehicle dealerships and one collision repair center in South Carolina. Two are in Columbia. The rest are in the Hilton Head/Hardeeville area. The company's used-car sites offer a "1Price Pre-Owned" plan to make used-car purchases haggle-free. It also will buy cars, with no purchase necessary, on the same day. Plans call for 130 pre-owned stores across the nation by the end of 2026. The West Ashley dealership is open 9 a.m.-9 p.m. Monday through Saturday. COLUMBIA The city of Columbia is set to repeal three gun-control measures that were struck down by a judge last year as in conflict with state law. While at least one policymaker feels the city should work to pass updated rules aimed at curbing guns that comply with state law, city decisionmakers could opt to leave the issue behind and not endure more legal wrangling. City Council postponed a vote to repeal the ordinances March 1 at the request of city attorney Teresa Knox. Councilman Howard Duvall said city leaders had to hold off on repealing the ordinances until new language could be drafted to replace the nullified provisions. It wasn't immediately clear whether city leaders might consider new gun measures in the wake of the 2021 court ruling that nullified the current rules. While Mayor Daniel Rickenmann bemoaned the court decision striking down the city ordinances when he was a council member and mayoral candidate in 2021, he said March 1 it might not make sense to continue to pursue something that had been struck down in court. Knox, the city attorney, didn't publicly address council members before the vote was deferred March 1. The capital city in 2019 with the backing of then-Mayor Steve Benjamin passed a series of gun ordinances making it illegal to possess firearms within 1,000 feet of a school; allowing gun seizures from people under an extreme risk protection order, commonly known as a red flag law; and a rule that added buildings where homemade firearms known as ghost guns are constructed to be subject to the citys nuisance laws. Council members in 2019 spent months carefully crafting the gun ordinances to comply with the law, Duvall said. The city should work with its attorneys on substitute rules aimed at curbing guns that could stay on the books particularly the provision recognizing the construction of ghost guns as a public nuisance, he said. "We use the nuisance laws to protect the society from all sorts of things, including sex shops and bars that are illegal and things like that," Duvall said. "So I think that is a municipal authority. And I think we ought to be able to reconstitute (the ordinance) that so that we're stating that." One of Duvall's new colleagues wasn't convinced to continue pursing the regulations. Councilman Joe Taylor, who filled Rickenmann's council seat representing District 4, agreed. "The city attorney's advised us that that ordinance has been ruled unconstitutional and therefore it needs to be repealed," Taylor told The Post and Courier. "Rather than get back into state and national political questions, we need to fill the positions we've got available in the city and take care of city business." After Columbia passed the gun-control rules, S.C. Attorney General Alan Wilson sued the city in 2020, arguing that state law doesn't allow local governments to regulate firearms. A judge sided with Wilson in 2021, nullifying the local rules. The city appealed in September 2021, Richland County court records show. Columbia joined cities throughout the country in 2020 in suing the federal government in an effort to slow the rise of ghost guns. After state lawmakers passed a bill in 2021 allowing open carry of firearms, Columbia passed a local rule banning open carry during public events and in public parks and government buildings. COLUMBIA Parents are getting restless that Richland School District One is keeping its mask mandate when other large districts across the state and other districts in the region have dropped their requirements. There is no indication when that will change even after Richland Two and Charleston County school districts, a pair of the bigger districts in South Carolina, dropped their requirements in the past few days. "They're just completely ignoring us," said Allie Mood, who has a kindergartner and second grader in Richland One schools. "Our kids are being used as political pawns." The 22,000-student district in the heart of Columbia is the last of the state's 10 largest school districts to mandate masks, a check of district policies found. The Richland One policy is set to continue until at least April, the board chairwoman said last week, though the district sent a masking survey to parents March 1. No other district in Richland or Lexington counties has a mask mandate. The state ended the requirement for masks on all school buses. Richland One's continued mask mandate was the focus of parent comments during a Feb. 22 board meeting, but the board of the state's ninth-largest district did not debate its policy. "Masking should be a personal choice that a family makes in the best interest of their child," one parent with three children in the district told the board during the public comment period. Board Chairwoman Cheryl Harris told meeting attendees that the issue was likely to come up again for action in April when district Superintendent Craig Witherspoon would bring a new recommendation to the board. The Richland One academic year ends on June 3. "We are asking that he continues to follow the science and (Centers for Disease Control and Prevention) guidelines," Harris said during the meeting. Harris did not return calls March 1. District spokeswoman Karen York said in a statement the district is reviewing mask requirements after the CDC rolled back calls for masks in schools in communities with low to medium risk of COVID spread. The district sent a survey March 1 to parents asking if they wanted a mask-optional policy despite Richland County being in the CDC's high-risk category for COVID spread based on new cases and hospitalizations. The board meets again March 8. "Our priority continues to be protecting the health and safety of our students and staff, York said. Not all parents are upset about required masking. One mother said at the meeting last week that she believed the district has not had as many school closures as others in the Midlands because of its mask policy. "Our children didn't miss school, our parents were able to go to work," she said. Still, Harris' statement that a decision might be close to two months away did not sit well with some parents. Leah Richardson is upset that her kindergartner is spending her first year in school in a mask. "What's making me livid is that you see everyone else walking around with no masks on," she said in an interview. "And they're not giving us any reasons." Jessica Rourke, who has two young children in Richland One schools, said making kids wear masks for hours on end as pandemic restrictions lift is a "form of abuse." "The rest of the nation is moving on," she said. "It's time for us to move on." Meanwhile on March 1, Richland County Council voted to extend its emergency requirement through the end of April. The ordinance requires those 11 and older to wear masks inside most businesses in unincorporated areas of the county, including restaurants and grocery stores. COLUMBIA Richland County Council voted once again to uphold masking requirements as the county remains classified as an area of high transmission for COVID-19. The council voted March 1 to extend its emergency requirement through the end of April. The ordinance requires those 11 and older to wear masks inside most businesses in unincorporated areas of the county, including restaurants and grocery stores. "The reality of the situation on the ground is the people should be able to choose whether to wear a mask or not," Councilman Joe Walker said before casting his vote against the extension. "We continue to mandate and mandate and mandate. At what point do we accept it's an endemic and not a pandemic anymore and allow people to make a choice." Councilwoman Gretchen Barron pointed to guidance by state and federal health officials recommending the wearing of masks indoors in public places due to the county's high transmission rate. The county reported 482 new cases of COVID-19 the week of Feb. 21-27, according to data from the S.C. Department of Health and Environmental Control. Health officials deem an area to have a high transmission rate if there are more than 100 positive cases of the virus per every 100,000 residents. Richland is one of 25 S.C. counties with a high risk of COVID spread, according to the latest Centers for Disease Control and Prevention data. The CDC recommends wearing masks inside businesses and schools in high-risk counites. "We need to continue to mask to keep each other safe," Barron said. "At some point, yes, we do need to put a sunset to this. I'm just not sure that time is now." Violators of the ordinance face fines of $25 for individuals and $100 for businesses whose employees dont comply. County Administrator Leonardo Brown told council members six mask citations have been issued in the county since its last extension of the ordinance in January. With seven council members voting to keep the mandate in place, Richland County continues as the only area government body to hold on to mask requirements along with Richland One School District. Educators urged lawmakers not to impose state-level bans on classroom lessons that are in five critical race theory bills being considered in the House during a public hearing on the bills on March 1. The educators asked lawmakers to let districts handle cases where teachers overstep in sharing their political beliefs or compelling students to believe in certain political ideologies, since districts already have protocols in place to deal with such incidents. They also warned lawmakers that the proposed legislation would have a chilling effect on all educators and limit how they can teach history or talk about current events. Im here today to ask you to trust the system, said Patrick Martin, a Charleston English teacher. Trust teachers, trust students and trust parents. This is the second time House legislators have heard public testimony about the critical race theory bills. Most of those who addressed lawmakers during the first five-hour meeting on Feb. 16 spoke against the bills, but support was more mixed this time at an equally long hearing. Some whod signed up to speak left before they were called, as the meeting stretched from the afternoon into the night. Chairwoman Rep. Rita Allison, R-Lyman, repeatedly admonished her colleagues not to debate speakers. Each of the five bills would make permanent a broader version of the state's current one-year ban on partisanship curriculum. Donate to our Investigative Fund to support journalism like this Our public service and investigative reporting is among the most important work we do. Its also the most expensive reporting we do. We cant do it without your support. Donate Now Since the bills first came before the House Committee on Education and Public Works in January, lawmakers and the public have been divided over what critical race theory is. It originated as a legal theory to explain systemic racism in American society, but in recent years conservatives have used the term to describe a range of conversations about race, sex and gender, which is the definition used in the Republican-sponsored bills. Democratic lawmakers who pressed speakers for examples of critical race theory in the classroom were given an assortment of definitions ranging from a teacher asking a student for his pronouns to a teacher telling a girl to write a profile on a transgender woman as part of an assignment on someone who made a difference in the world. Kelly Wood, the mother of a South Carolina K-12 student, told lawmakers she was concerned after discovering last week that her child had access to a book about sexuality and gender through a reading app on the school Chromebook. She said the book, This Book is Gay, was pornographic. When youre talking about inclusivity and tolerance, you run the risk of becoming too tolerant, she said. Sign up for our Education Lab newsletter. Email Sign Up! Some parents also objected to social and emotional learning programs, which they described as critical race theory by another name. Melanie Shull, one such parent, said the programs may seem positive on the surface but they push a social agenda and add too much to teachers already burdensome workload. Their real job is being ignored while our children are struggling in basic subject areas, she said. Christi Dixon, who runs the Berkeley County Moms for Liberty group, also described social and emotional learning programs as divisive. Acknowledging disparities in education, Dixon said the way to eliminate them is for schools to focus on what students have in common, not race. Constantly looking at things through a racial lens, youre going to find what youre looking for, she said. We need to find common ground and move beyond that. Patrick Kelly, an AP Government teacher who is also a lobbyist with the Palmetto State Teachers Association, said hes never been upset when a parent has brought a concern to him hes more concerned when he doesnt hear from families. Kelly said the testimony has shown schools can do more to involve parents. He agreed that some of the incidents that have been shared, like an instance in which students were instructed to wear black in mourning after the election of former President Donald Trump, shouldnt have happened in a classroom. But Kelly implored lawmakers not to ban all discussion of current events because a handful of the states 55,000 teachers might misstep. Youre going to neuter effective instruction in this state, he said. As at the first hearing, several speakers who opposed the bills lamented the incomplete history education they received as children. Audrey K. Starks Lane, a Charleston mom, said she was in her 30s when she learned about the Orangeburg Massacre, where South Carolina State University students protesting segregation were shot by law enforcement, or about the role Briggs v. Elliott played in desegregating the nations schools. Lane said she wants to see more of the states history reflected in classrooms, not less. There are children who want to know more, and Im not just talking about Black children, Lane said. They want to know what has happened in this state because it helps them when theyre interacting with each other. The committee plans to hear public testimony for a final time on March 8. Speakers can submit written testimony or sign up to speak by emailing Ginger.Lee@schouse.gov. NORTH CHARLESTON As Russia's violent invasion has forced hundreds of thousands of refugees to flee Ukraine, a Charleston-area nonprofit is responding with a team trying to ensure those who've been displaced have access to clean water. Water Mission, a Christian engineering charity, has sent five rapid responders to Ukraine's neighboring countries, including Poland, Moldova and Romania. The team will assess the water, sanitation and hygiene needs of the thousands of people fleeing to safety. The mission also has a group of nine people on standby, prepared to serve as the nonprofit's second wave of responders. As with most tragedies, the first few days of Water Mission's Ukrainian response efforts have involved connecting with the United Nations and other aid organizations to coordinate public health needs. Right now, it's understanding what's happening and what the needs are," Water Mission CEO George Greene IV said. The charity organization is using its unique experience to respond to the devastation in Eastern Europe. Water Mission was established in 2001 by Greene's parents, Molly and George Greene III, who previously ran an environmental laboratory in West Ashley. The nonprofit's past life has enabled it to build connections with labs in Europe. Because waters near Ukraine could become polluted with radioactive contaminants, the organization began reaching out to foreign laboratories that could offer assistance. Weve started connecting with European labs who can fast-track water-quality testing," George Greene IV said. Four of the responders are from the U.S., hailing from Charleston, Washington, D.C., Texas and Washington state. The fifth team member, Craig Williams, is Water Mission's disaster-response manager based in Denmark. Williams has video-recorded updates from the relief efforts in the eastern region of the world. On March 1, Water Mission shared a recording on its social media channels of Williams stationed in Otaci, Moldova, where he spoke about a number of disaster-response initiatives shaping up in the town. A nearby church had opened its doors to keep people warm. Residents were offering transportation to refugees. "It's very inspiring to see the people mobilize and help," Williams said in the video. While many of those fleeing Ukraine have plans for where they will travel next, many refugees left their homeland still unsure of their future. "There are still those who are too traumatized to think past having got across the border," Williams said. "They've left their sons and husbands behind." Moldova is in dire need of transportation, trauma counseling for refugees and assistance in coordinating relief efforts, Williams said. "If things get worse in Ukraine, this town is going to get an over-surge of people it won't be able to cope with," he said. The Water Mission team will soon head to southern Moldova, where a refugee camp is being developed. "The borders are experiencing increasing delays sometimes over two days with people waiting in sub-freezing temperatures," said Gregg Dinino, spokesman for Water Mission. Around 660,000 people have fled Ukraine to neighboring countries in the past six days, according to the United Nations. Water Mission is well-equipped to assist. The organization is serving close to 1 million refugees in Northern Uganda and Tanzania. In those countries, Water Mission brought over water-treatment systems. The European countries currently receiving Ukrainian refugees are mostly equipped with proper water and sanitation infrastructure. Water Mission may be able to partner with local governments to assist in other ways, Greene said. "Thats very much a positive thing," Greene said. "If you dont have to bring your own treatment system, it makes things easier. This is part of The Post and Couriers Daily Digest series in which one of our food reporters asks a local to describe a day of eating in detail. Jai Jones lives on James Island. My days usually start relatively early with a drive downtown to run around Colonial Lake, or when Im staying closer to my James Island home, a walk on the West Ashley Greenway. After a walk on the Greenway, I often stop by Normandy Farm Artisan Bakery for coffee with a ham and cheese croissant. On a weekend, Im usually catching up on writing for my food blog, Jai Eats, or editing photos later in the morning at a coffee shop around town. Most recently, Ive spent that time at Babas since I love its peanut mocha, often along with a slice of banana bread. Ill usually run into someone I know while there, so its a nice time to catch up with friends as I get work done. For lunch, one of my go-to stops for the last decade has been Hannibal's Kitchen for crab rice. I still remember the first time I had that dish, and it still is as good as it was on that day 10 years ago. If Im not there, a drive down Huger Street to Berkeleys is likely to happen for its Philly cheese steak. The house-made cheese whiz makes that sandwich really special. Im a huge beer fan, and its been a lot of fun seeing the brewery scene evolve here in Charleston. With that said, a local brewery is often next on my list. Munkle Brewing Co. is one of my most frequently visited breweries in town, known for its traditional Belgian-style beers. Munkle often has great pop-ups serving food outside, from First Name Basis wood-fired pizza to BlackOut Burger, so its a nice way for me to discover new pop-ups (and revisit a few favorites) in Charleston. By now its time for dinner. Chubby Fish has a special place in my heart and is always such an incredible experience. You may have to wait for a table, but its absolutely worth it. The menu is always evolving, but whole fish is a must, along with crudo and oysters. Id also suggest ending the meal with the Not Fried Chicken from Life Raft Treats (an ice cream drumstick that really looks like fried chicken). Outside of that, a trip to Park Circle to Jackrabbit Filly for karaage (Japanese fried chicken) or pulling up to the bar at Lewis Barbecue for the El Sancho Loco sandwich are in my normal rotation. After dinner, a nightcap cocktail from The Gin Joint or a glass of wine from Graft Wine Shop usually ends the night. Mike Woodel reports on Georgetown County for The Post and Courier. He graduated from the University of South Carolina in 2018 and previously worked for newspapers in Montana and South Dakota. McDonald's announced plans to hire more than 5,000 new employees across some of its Carolinas-based restaurants. From Feb. 28 to March 4, participating restaurants are hosting on-the-spot-interviews. The Upstate accounts for one fifth of the potential new hires for the fast-food chain, with 1,000 new employees to be hired locally. Across North and South Carolina, 350 McDonald's are owned and operated by a cooperative of more than 50 local business owners. Job openings vary based on the restaurant but crew and management positions are available. The benefits, according to a company release, include "flexible schedules, paid time off, healthcare benefits, free employee meals and competitive wages." McDonald's will also offer up to $2,500 in tuition assistance for employees who work at least 15 hours per week for 90 days. The participating restaurants can be found in the following areas: Greenville Spartanburg Anderson Columbia Florence Myrtle Beach Charleston Asheville, N.C. Charlotte, N.C. McDonald's owner and operator Cari Sepulveda said in a statement that she hopes the "coordinated efforts" between her restaurants and others across the Carolinas "will make it accessible for applicants across our region to stop by their local McDonald's to apply and receive an on-the-spot interview. Sepulveda owns 13 restaurants in Greenville, Spartanburg and Gaffney. According to a CNBC article from July 2021, McDonald's announced that workers at its 650 company-owned locations would get a 10 percent raise on average by the end of June 2021. "Entry-level employees will make $11 to $17 per hour, and shift managers will make $15 to $20 an hour, based on location. The company says that means the average wage for employees at company-owned restaurants will be $15 per hour by 2024," Willem Marx wrote for CNBC. The majority of McDonald's locations are owned and operated by franchisees and not the corporation itself. McDonald's leadership "encouraged franchisees that manage the 13,000 or so other restaurants to do the same for their roughly 800,000 employees," Marx wrote. Milliken scout donation The Textile Division of Milliken & Company donated 200 Daisy and Brownie uniforms to the Girl Scouts of South CarolinaMountains to Midlands out of recycled material. The uniforms were made out of recycled post-consumer plastic bottles and will be used by girls in kindergarten through third grade throughout the Upstate and Midland regions of South Carolina. We want every single girl out there to have the opportunity to participate in Girl Scouts, and this really helps with some families that have financial challenges right now due to so many things, said Lora Tucker, CEO of Girl Scouts of South CarolinaMountains to Midlands. We want to eliminate that barrier to ensure that our girls are able to get Girl Scout uniforms. Currently, the Girl Scouts of South CarolinaMountains to Midlands Council serves 22 counties and has around 5,000 active members, according to Tucker. The council serves girls from kindergarten through 12th grade. Milliken & Company provided the fabric for new uniforms that were released nationwide. It is made using recycled post-consumer plastic bottles in order to make the uniforms more sustainable, according to a news release. Spartanburg's Denny's releases TikTok-inspired menu On Feb. 24, Denny's, the diner chain headquartered in Spartanburg, released its "Social Stars Influenced Menu," inspired by the brands of TikTok creators. The meals are for a limited time and can be found at all Denny's locations nationwide from Feb. 24 to June 21. Denny's is pairing with 24 creators on the video-sharing app. Three of the meals inspired by six of the creators are: The Get That Cookie Dough Pancakes by Jenny Solares , who has 1.8 million followers, and The Enky Boys , who have over 14.9 million followers. The chocolate chip pancakes are drizzled with cream cheese icing and are served alongside eggs, hash browns and a choice of bacon or sausage. by , who has 1.8 million followers, and , who have over 14.9 million followers. The chocolate chip pancakes are drizzled with cream cheese icing and are served alongside eggs, hash browns and a choice of bacon or sausage. The Jala-Bac Burger by Jonathan Chavez , who has 1.4 million followers, and Elise Osafo , who has 363,400 followers, is a beef burger with white cheddar cheese, bacon, mayo, lettuce, tomato and pickles on a brioche bun topped with jalapeno and served with fries. by , who has 1.4 million followers, and , who has 363,400 followers, is a beef burger with white cheddar cheese, bacon, mayo, lettuce, tomato and pickles on a brioche bun topped with jalapeno and served with fries. The Clearly Very Fruity Pancakes by Elliott Norris, who has 1.1 million followers, and Matt Taylor, who has 5.7 million followers, is a stack of pancakes with a drizzled blueberry sauce and topped with strawberries and bananas. The meal is served alongside eggs, hash browns and a choice of bacon or sausage. Thats all for this week. Email your thoughts, tips, releases and newsy bits to smirah@postandcourier.com. During the first year of the COVID-19 pandemic, the number of opioid overdose deaths in South Carolina increased by nearly 60 percent, according to the S.C. Department of Health and Environmental Control. State health officials said highly potent drugs like fentanyl helped contribute to the tidal wave of overdoses. The mental stress of the coronavirus pandemic may have contributed to the rise, as well, they said. The latest data from the state health agency shows that from 2019 to 2020, the total number of all drug overdoses increased by 53 percent, going from 1,131 in 2019 to 1,734 in 2020. That number is even higher for opioid-related drug overdoses, which accounted for 1,400 deaths in 2020 compared to 876 in 2019 a 59 percent rise. "We lost more lives than ever before to substance use" in South Carolina, said Sara Goldsby, director of the state Department of Alcohol and Other Drug Abuse Services. South Carolina's overdose death data aligns with the nation, which saw a 31 percent increase in drug overdose deaths in the same period. The latest data from the Centers for Disease Control and Prevention shows over 100,000 people died of an overdose from April 2020 to April 2021. The data also shows prescription drugs, opioids and synthetic opioids like fentanyl are largely responsible for a majority of the overdose deaths in the state. Fentanyl, which is easy to traffic into the U.S., can be extremely dangerous in small amounts and accounted for nearly 80 percent of all opioid-involved drug overdoses in the state from 2019-2020. Officials from the state health agency also say adults aged 35 to 44 had the highest rates of drug overdose deaths during this period. This age group also had the highest rates of drug overdoses nationwide. "While we cannot directly correlate these overdose deaths to the stress and emotional toll these individuals may have experienced due to the COVID-19 pandemic, South Carolinas overdose death data follows national trends that substance misuse has increased since the onset of the COVID-19 pandemic, Dr. Brannon Traxler, DHEC's public health director, said in a press release. Charleston and Horry counties each saw 197 overdose deaths that year the highest in the state. While the numbers for drug overdoses are significantly higher than previous years, Charleston County Coroner Bobbi Jo O'Neal says the actual number of overdose deaths in South Carolina and the U.S. is likely much higher. She said an overall lack of resources and funding for frequent autopsies and toxicology testing for medical examiners is part of why the death numbers are likely low. O'Neal also serves as the president of the International Association for Coroners and Medical Examiners, an organization composed of officials who perform official autopsies across the United States. She said the same problem is occurring in other states. "If medical legal death investigation offices across the country were all funded well, I think (the number of reported drug overdoses) would be higher," O'Neal said. Horry County Deputy Coroner Michelle McSpadden agreed. McSpadden said overdose deaths in the county increase every year, but it is possible for coroner and medical examiners offices to rule an overdose as a natural death if there are no physical signs that point towards an overdose or if the person's family fails to disclose a history of substance abuse. McSpadden said families often won't report a history of substance abuse because of the stigma that drug use disorders carry, causing many coroners to report potential overdoses as natural deaths. Kingstree, SC (29556) Today Partly cloudy skies. A stray shower or thunderstorm is possible. Low 63F. Winds light and variable.. Tonight Partly cloudy skies. A stray shower or thunderstorm is possible. Low 63F. Winds light and variable. RTHK: New Zealand arrests 46 in global paedophile probe New Zealand authorities arrested 46 people as part of an international operation into tens of thousands of accounts possessing and sharing child sexual abuse material online, Europol said on Wednesday. The arrests were part of a probe launched in 2019 after an online service provider's report indicated "a large number of offenders used the platform to exchange particularly disturbing child abuse images", Europe's law enforcement cooperation agency said. The report included references to "imagery depicting sadistic acts of sexual abuse of infants and children", a Europol statement said. The operation, led by New Zealand's interior ministry, saved 146 children across the world, it said. The investigation identified more than 90,000 online accounts worldwide and information was shared with relevant national authorities, Europol said. The agency said 100 suspects were identified across the European Union while 836 cases were opened internationally. Two cases in Austria and Hungary, found suspects abusing their own children, aged six and eight respectively. The children have now been "safeguarded", Europol said. Another probe in Spain discovered a suspect owned and shared child sexual exploitation material and had also filmed naked and sexual images of adults without their permission. Several investigations continue in EU states. (AFP) This story has been published on: 2022-03-02. To contact the author, please use the contact details within the article. Press Release March 1, 2022 Reopening of cockpits 'will do away' e-sabong - Tolentino MANILA - Senator Francis 'Tol' N. Tolentino said that allowing the reopening of cockpits nationwide will gradually put an end to the operations of online sabong in the country. Tolentino made the remarks on Tuesday in a speech before members of the Vice Mayors' League of the Philippines during their First Quarter Regular National Executive Board Meeting held at the Sofitel Philippine Plaza in Pasay City. Tolentino believed that allowing the resumption of traditional local cock derbies will somehow lure gamblers away from betting online--in which the betting platform being used is usually attached with their respective bank accounts. "I raise this issue, because if you will now allow the operations of your local cockpits, at hindi po tupada kundi po sabungan, it will do away with operations little by little of online sabong," said Tolentino. The senator noted that unlike the traditional cockfighting which has cultural significance and dates back during the pre-colonial period, the e-sabong business has led to various 'deleterious effects' in the society, as the Senate continuous with its ongoing probe over the mysterious disappearances of close to three-dozen game fowl enthusiasts along the vicinity of arenas being used in online sabong operations. Tolentino explained that since most of the areas in the country are now placed under Alert Level 1, members of the Vice Mayors' League--being head of their respective city/municipal councils--can ask the Inter-Agency Task Force (IATF) to clarify if traditional cockfights can now resume following the recent relaxation of COVID-19 health protocols. "With almost the entire country under alert level 1, can the vice mayors--Sangguniang Pambayan, Sangguniang Panlungsod--now issue a resumption license to all cockpits nationwide? Siguro po iyan ang tatanungin natin sa IATF," said Tolentino. The chairman of the Senate Committee on Local Government also stressed that should traditional cockfighting be finally allowed by IATF, the operators as well as the respective local government units (LGUs) where the cockfight arenas are located must ensure the strict implementation of minimum-standard health protocols to avert another surge in COVID-19 infections. Tolentino added that game fowl tournaments must be done only on a weekend basis and within a specified operating hours. The local council--which is headed by the vice mayor--of every city and municipality is the one tasked with granting permits to operate to licensed cockfighting operators in their respective localities. But unlike traditional cockfight derbies, LGUs have little discretion on e-sabong operations, since its being solely handled at present by the Philippine Amusement and Gaming Corporation (PAGCOR). Last week, Tolentino questioned the supposed legal authority of PAGCOR to grant e-sabong operators license to operate, since "games of numbers" like cockfighting are not included in the supposed mandate covered by the country's gambling regulatory body under Presidential Decree No. 1869 and as amended by Republic Act No. 9487. Charleston-area residents rallied for peace in Ukraine on March 1 as Russian forces escalated attacks on civilian areas during the sixth day of its invasion of the neighboring country. Approximately 200 residents thronged Charleston City Hall as blue-and-yellow lights bathed the government building and surrounding streets. They wore Ukrainian colors, waved Ukrainian flags and carried signs supporting the embattled nation. Mayor John Tecklenburg encouraged them to continue chanting "Save Ukraine" before the bells at St. Michael's Episcopal Church rang out, bringing silence to the crowd. Tecklenburg quoted the Rev. Martin Luther King Jr. Injustice anywhere is a threat to justice everywhere," drawing parallels to the crisis in Europe. "The war in Ukraine is a threat to peace and justice everywhere," Tecklenburg said. He condemned the "horrific, evil and illegal war" Russian President Vladimir Putin is waging against Ukraine. He said he was angered by Putin's actions, but uplifted by the courage shown by Ukrainian President Volodymyr Zelenskyy and his people. Local clergy also offered words of prayer for the nation. The Rev. Cress Darwin of Second Presbyterian Church asked that God "save us from ourselves." "In the midst of this invasion, as we witness again the horrible violence of war, we asked you to rescue those who are vulnerable, to shelter and comfort those who are afraid, to fill soldiers with decency and honor, and to turn politicians towards diplomacy," Darwin said. Rev. Al Zadig from St. Michael's Church said the invasion was personal congregants had for several years visited Ukraine to help the victims of Chernobyl, site of the planet's worst nuclear disaster. "Satan is still doing his age-old violent work," Zadig said. "As we look at this war, make no mistake about it: We are seeing the face of evil. We are seeing the face of Satan." Charleston musician Roman Pekar told his fellow Ukrainians in an emotional speech that they needed to build a community of unity. He also asked residents to donate to humanitarian causes in Ukraine. Many of those who attended the rally were Ukrainian. They spoke of heartbreak and shock as loved ones back home are forced to either flee their country or take up arms against the advancing Russian army. Day six of the biggest ground war in Europe since World War II found Russia increasingly isolated, beset by tough sanctions that have thrown its economy into turmoil and left the country practically friendless, apart from a few nations like China, Belarus and North Korea. Britains Defense Ministry told The Associated Press it had seen an increase in Russian air and artillery strikes on populated urban areas over the past two days. It also said three cities Kharkiv, Kherson and Mariupol were encircled by Russian forces. In Kharkiv, Ukraine's second-largest city with a population of about 1.5 million, at least six people were killed when the regions Soviet-era administrative building on Freedom Square was hit with what was believed to be a missile. Overall death tolls from the fighting remained unclear, but a senior Western intelligence official estimated that more than 5,000 Russian soldiers have been captured or killed. Ukraine has given no overall estimate of troop losses. Amanda Ford, a Charleston resident, said she was "ashamed" that the United States did not help Ukraine sooner, calling it a battle for freedom. "As Americans, what do we stand for?" she asked. Aleksandr Pavlichenko and his wife, Maka Aptsiauri, helped organize Tuesday's rally outside city hall. Aptsiauri is from the Republic of Georgia, which was invaded by Russia in 2008, a war that fractured the former Soviet country. Pavlichenko is Ukrainian and has family members fighting in the war, Aptsiauri said. Aptsiauri said in an interview at the couple's store, Euro Foods Bakery & Cafe in West Ashley they were heartbroken for the Ukrainian people. "This is a rally for peace," Aptsiauri said. "It's not about the Russian people. It's about Russian politics and Putin." The Associated Press contributed to this report. Editor's Note: This story has been updated to correct the names of Al Zadig and Roman Pekar. A prominent prosecutor has accused Circuit Judge Carmen Mullen of using her position to help disgraced attorney Alex Murdaugh hide details about his insurance coverage and finances at a time when he was being sued in connection with a fatal boat crash. First Circuit Solicitor David Pascoe made the allegations in a formal complaint to state judicial officials requesting an investigation into Mullens conduct. He cited a recent deposition in which Mullen was accused of allowing a multimillion-dollar wrongful death settlement involving Murdaugh to remain hidden from court records in 2019 while he was battling other litigation. Pascoe wrote that the testimony showed that Mullen signed off on the settlement knowing it would not be filed, which prevented the people suing Murdaugh in connection with the boat crash from learning about the payout and his insurance coverage. Whats more, Mullen reportedly did so just one month after recusing herself from cases stemming from the February 2019 boat crash that killed 19-year-old Mallory Beach. Beach was riding on Murdaugh's boat and his son Paul was allegedly driving. Paul Murdaugh faced criminal charges in the crash. Pascoe also asked the Office of Disciplinary Counsel and Commission on Judicial Conduct to reopen an investigation into a prior complaint he had filed against Mullen in 2019, alleging improper communications, conflicts of interest and other issues. Pascoe publicly tangled with Mullen during that period over her handling of cases resulting from the Statehouse corruption probe, which the solicitor oversaw as special prosecutor. "Judge Mullens pattern of alleged conduct threatens to erode public trust in our judiciary," he wrote in the Feb. 25 letter, first reported by The State newspaper. "Impropriety and dishonesty by members of our States judiciary cause real harm to all South Carolinians. When wealthy and politically connected individuals are treated as a privileged class by members of the judiciary, it erodes public trust in government and the fair administration of the law." Mullen could not be reached for comment by phone or email on March 1. Pascoes letter references a separate complaint filed against Mullen by Eric Bland, who represents the sons of Murdaughs former housekeeper, Gloria Satterfield, who died after a fall at Murdaughs Colleton County hunting lodge in 2018. Its the handling of the settlement in that case thats sparked the new complaints against the judge. Bland acknowledged sharing information from the recent deposition with South Carolina Bar officials but declined to elaborate on the matter in an email except to say, "This is just very sad for our legal profession and clients in general." Bland conducted the deposition that Pascoe cited in his letter. Murdaugh is accused of swindling Satterfield's sons out of a $4.3 million settlement they were supposed to receive after settling insurance claims related to their mothers death. It's one of several allegations against the scion of a powerful legal family in Hampton County, who has been accused of stealing millions of dollars from his clients settlement amounts. He has been suspended from practicing law and stuck in the Richland County jail since mid-October as a wave of criminal investigations and civil lawsuits bear down on him. The settlement figure in the Satterfield case was detailed in the May 2019 order that was never filed in court, and none of that money made its way to Gloria Satterfields sons, Bland and his law partner, Ronne Richter, have said. The attorneys had indicated that the unfiled order appears to bear Mullen's signature, and their suspicions were recently confirmed in a deposition given by Chad Westendorf, a Palmetto State Bank official who served as the Satterfield estate's personal representative at the time. The Post and Courier obtained a copy of the deposition transcript, labeled "rough draft," which took placed Feb. 22 at Bland's law office. Westendorf testified that he took on the role at Murdaugh's urging and he knew little about the case or his expected duties at the time. Murdaugh had also reportedly urged Satterfield's sons to hire attorney Cory Fleming to represent them in the case, neglecting to mention that Fleming was his longtime friend, college roommate and the godfather to his son Paul. In his testimony, Westendorf described the May 2019 settlement hearing attended by him, Fleming and the judge. During the hearing, Mullen consented to the settlement order being filed at a later, unspecified date, he testified. According to Westendorf's testimony, Fleming told the judge, "We're not going to file it because of publicity over the boating accident," and she said, "OK." During the deposition, Bland also questioned Westendorf about the circumstances surrounding Alex Murdaugh's name being removed from the settlement order's caption, or title, which identifies the parties involved. Bland asked if he had heard anything about Murdaugh's name being omitted because he didn't want the lawyer for the Beach family finding out "that this kind of money was being paid from his homeowners insurance carrier?" Westendorf testified that he had heard Fleming make a comment to that effect to the judge during the settlement conference, and that Mullen had replied: "I understand." Westendorf also indicated that he testified before a grand jury and had been interviewed by State Law Enforcement Division agents and the FBI about the episode. Mullen, who graduated in the same University of South Carolina law class as Alex Murdaugh and Fleming, had recused herself just a month before the settlement order was signed from cases stemming from the boat crash that claimed Beach's life. Paul Murdaugh was allegedly driving the boat when it crashed in Beaufort County, and he faced criminal charges of boating under the influence. Paul Murdaugh was still awaiting trial when he and his mother, Maggie, were killed in a shooting at the family's hunting lodge in June 2021. Their deaths remain unsolved. Mark Tinsley, an attorney representing Beach's family and some of the other victims of the boat crash, said he didnt think Mullens actions were altogether odd. Though she had recused herself from the case he brought, the Satterfield familys settlement wasnt being contested, so the job was more procedural. And Tinsley said its not unusual for judges to sign off on settlements knowing they wont be filed right away because delays sometimes crop up. She likely would have expected the settlement funds to be held in a trust account until the order was filed, since thats standard procedure, he said. Tinsley said he believes that Mullens actions arent what enabled Murdaugh to allegedly divert the funds. Instead, Tinsley said, it was Murdaughs ability to influence the other side of the case through Westendorf and Fleming. Still, South Carolina's rules for judges set out a high standard for their conduct. They are instructed to avoid even the appearance of impropriety. The state's legal watchdogs have already taken action against two of the attorneys involved in the Satterfield matter: Murdaugh and his longtime friend Fleming have both been suspended from practicing law while investigations into their conduct are completed. Fleming has settled a lawsuit with the Satterfields, agreeing to pay back all the legal fees he earned from the case. He admitted in a statement that he made material mistakes in the case, but he blamed Murdaugh for deceiving him. SUMTERVILLE, Fla. A wrongful death lawsuit filed in federal court claims a 22-year-old Charleston man who died last year in a Florida prison was pepper sprayed, placed in a restraining chair and denied food, water and medication. Charleston attorney Mark Peper, along with a law firm in Miami, filed the lawsuit in the U.S. District Court for the Middle District of Florida on Feb. 28 on behalf of the estate of Davon Gillians. It alleges both prison and government officials have refused to meet with Gillians family or provide them with information about the mans death, which was ruled a homicide. The suit names six correctional officers and the warden at the Coleman federal correctional institution, a low-security federal prison in Sumterville, Fla., about 50 miles northwest of Orlando. Gillians was one of nearly 2,000 men housed at the facility. The lawyers representing Gillians' estate were told the FBI and Department of Justice are investigating the death. A spokeswoman with the FBI field office in Tampa would neither confirm nor deny the existence of an investigation. Neither Justice Department officials nor leaders with the federal Bureau of Prisons responded to The Post and Courier's requests for comment. Gillians landed in federal prison after being arrested Jan. 5, 2018, on one count of being a convicted felon in possession of a firearm, according to an indictment filed the same day in the U.S. District Court for the District of South Carolinas Charleston office. He was given a nearly four-year prison sentence, meaning he wouldve been released this year. Gillians was previously convicted in Charleston County Circuit Court in July 2016 of armed robbery, manufacturing or distributing cocaine and unlawfully carrying a firearm, records show. Allegations against officials at the Florida prison were pieced together through interviews with inmates after employees refused to talk, Peper said. The lawsuit states Gillians died in a hospital days after corrections officers removed him from his assigned cell on May 16 for "unknown reasons." The inmate at no point resisted the removal, according to the suit. One of the corrections officers named in the suit is accused of physically assaulting Gillians, "punching him and ultimately choking him" to the point of unconsciousness. Officers then strapped Gillians in a restraint chair and left him in solitary confinement, according to the suit. The inmate was diagnosed with sickle cell disease, which he managed with daily medication. But prison officials are accused of trapping him in the restraint chair for nearly two days, depriving him of food, water and his medicine. They placed him in a single cell on May 18 with an inmate who lived alone "due to his mental health issues and propensity for violence," according to the suit. Officers didnt intervene after Gillians new cellmate attacked him, purposefully ensuring hed be injured, the suit alleges. The officers then used "large amounts of pepper spray" to try and extract Gillians and the other inmate from the cell. They lifted Gillians, who was in clear medical distress, by his arms and legs. Gillians asked for water, but officers denied the request, according to the suit. They once again placed Gillians in solitary confinement, strapping him to the restraint chair and leaving him without food, water and medical attention, the suit alleges. Other inmates heard Gillians cry out for food and state he couldnt feel his legs, had urinated on himself and was concerned he was going to die, according to the lawsuit. Gillians went into cardiac arrest shortly after going back inside solitary confinement. Medical workers took him to a hospital, where he ultimately died on May 19. The medical examiner determined his cause of death to be a vaso-occlusive crisis a complication from sickle cell disease worsened by pepper spray use and prolonged restraint, the suit states. The examiners autopsy report has not been provided to Gillians family due to an "ongoing criminal investigation," the suit said. A second, private autopsy performed on the man revealed abrasions to Gillians arms and chest and internal bleeding throughout his body, some of which were consistent with being restrained, according to the lawsuit. Both autopsy reports help corroborate the inmates account of what happened to Gillians last year, Peper said. North Augusta, SC (29801) Today Scattered thunderstorms early, then partly cloudy after midnight. Low 62F. Winds light and variable. Chance of rain 40%.. Tonight Scattered thunderstorms early, then partly cloudy after midnight. Low 62F. Winds light and variable. Chance of rain 40%. Charleston County schools are mask-free today, and thats just the latest good news on the pandemic front. The Centers for Disease Control and Prevention said last week that healthy, vaccinated people in more than two-thirds of the country can ditch their masks for now, since cases of COVID-19 are dropping like a rock. The leader of MUSCs Epidemiology Intelligence Project reports that the number of local infections is dive-bombing low. In mid-January, Charleston, Berkeley and Dorchester counties were seeing 416 new cases per 100,000 people every day. Six weeks later, the number is down to 12 per 100,000 people. The percentage of COVID tests coming back positive is 11% statewide, and 8.5% in the Charleston metro area. In January, those numbers were orbiting 30%. Basically, all that means the latest surge in the pandemic is petering out, just in time for everyone to worry about Russia trying to start World War III. But thats another story. The Charleston County School Boards decision to end its mask mandate two weeks before it was scheduled to expire is one of the most significant and optimistic local developments, as it allows kids to get back to some much-needed semblance of normal with minimal risk. And it frees up some time for dozens of people who've been protesting these mandates as an affront to "freedom." No, Russian troops invading a country is an affront to freedom; masks are mildly inconvenient. Anyway, MUSC epidemiologist Michael Sweat acknowledges theres no guarantee how this plays out, but he hopes COVID-19 might, as the Spanish flu did a century ago, eventually turn into a less-deadly seasonal variant. Even better, clinical trials are underway for nasal vaccines that could fight the coronavirus before it gets into the body. All thats hopeful news, which we could really use. Of course, the ideal is for more people to get vaccinated. And that's the not-so-good news. After a year of availability, only slightly more than half of eligible South Carolinians are fully inoculated with the vaccine. Which, to be sure, doesnt prevent you from catching the coronavirus ... it just makes you far less likely to suffer serious symptoms. Like, for instance, death. None of this is helped by a few doctors usually among the smartest members of our community who allow politics to creep into science. As Avery Wilks recently reported, the S.C. Board of Medical Examiners hasn't disciplined any physicians for spreading COVID misinformation despite getting about 20 such complaints since this madness began. That includes various doctors prescribing horse dewormer that also was suggested by some con man. And, in one case, a patient says his doctor repeatedly downplayed the threat of the pandemic and even claimed COVID vaccines were meant to kill people and thin the Earths population. As a local medical professional notes, somebody had to be last in his or her med school class. Now, everyone is entitled to their own opinion no matter how asinine but the problem here is that most people rightly rely on doctors for life-and-death information. That information should be based on science, not baloney spewed by a cable "news" entertainer. Because there are real consequences. If people choose to take medical advice from a Facebook meme, well, thats Darwinism. If they get it from their doctor, thats a different story. This particular patient told Wilks his doctors counsel had him worried about getting a vaccine booster. You know, based on the possibility that there really is a multinational conspiracy to pull a Thanos and wipe out a large swath of the population. Thats dangerous and crazy, if true. COVID-19 has killed nearly 1 million people in the United States alone. Hundreds of millions of doses of the vaccines have led to reactions that resulted in death in an exceedingly rare number of cases (despite some shady study that counts people who were hit by a bus or succumbed to old age a month after getting a shot). The S.C. Board of Medical Examiners probably hasnt disciplined any of these doctors because they fear for their own jobs, seeing as how state lawmakers and, of course, Attorney General Alan Wilson continue to wax poetic about the sacrosanct doctor-patient relationship that cant be interfered with. Except when these knuckleheads (some of whom apparently dont know where babies come from) try to legislate their medical expertise into state law. Sorry, but nothing about political science implies any proficiency in actual science. But some folks at the Statehouse have no reservations about setting medical policy based on the whims of their most misinformed voters. Thats the really bad news. See, were battling two pandemics here, and both can infect anyone. And, unfortunately, theres no vaccine for propaganda. Syndicated and guest columns represent the personal views of the writers, not necessarily those of the editorial staff. The editorial department operates entirely independently of the news department and is not involved in newsroom operations. Editorials represent the institutional view of the newspaper. They are written and edited by the editorial staff, which operates separately from the news department. Editorial writers are not involved in newsroom operations. A protestor waves a Ukrainian flag as he takes part in a demonstration outside a NATO leaders virtual summit at NATO headquarters in Brussels, on Friday, Feb. 25, 2022. U.S. President Joe Biden and his NATO counterparts agreed Friday to send thousands of troops, backed by air and naval support, to protect allies near Russia and Ukraine. Mark Carlson/AP COLUMBIA Trump advisor-turned-conservative media personality Richard "Ric" Grenell has joined his former boss in backing Katie Arrington as she seeks to unseat Rep. Nancy Mace in the Republican race for South Carolina's 1st Congressional District. In a statement March 2, the former director of National Intelligence under President Donald Trump called Arrington a staunch defender of the nation's security who fully subscribes to Trump's "America First" mentality. "As our nations adversaries grow emboldened and the world sees the weak leadership of Joe Biden, I cannot stress enough how important it is to send people to Washington that understand we must put America First," Grenell said in a media statement. The endorsement comes days after Trump announced he would be hosting a March 12 rally in Florence in support of Arrington as well as S.C. lawmaker Russell Fry, who is challenging incumbent Republican congressman Tom Rice for the GOP nomination in South Carolina's 7th Congressional District. It also comes nearly a week after Arrington blamed the Russian invasion of Ukraine on "weak boned" members of Congress who voted to certify the results of the 2020 presidential election in favor of the winner, Democrat Joe Biden. Rice, who voted to impeach Trump for his role in inciting the Jan. 6 riots at the U.S. Capitol, voted not to certify the results. However, Mace did, drawing criticism from the former president alongside threats of a primary challenge. Arrington celebrated the endorsement in a statement. "Ric has been a steadfast hand in ensuring the safety and security of America, and his commitment to the America First agenda during his time with President Trump was a pivotal force in helping reestablish America's standing on the world stage," she said. Sign up for updates! Get the latest political news from The Post and Courier in your inbox. Email Sign Up! Grenell, the first openly gay man to serve in a president's Cabinet, has deep ties in Republican politics. He served as a State Department spokesperson under then-President George W. Bush and later, as a foreign policy advisor to presidential candidate Mitt Romney in 2012. Under Trump, Grenell served as U.S. ambassador to Germany, as well as special presidential envoy for Serbia and Kosovo peace negotiations. Since leaving the White House, Grenell has reprised his role as a cable news pundit at the conservative outlet Newsmax, where he has provided a withering foil to the Biden administration's foreign policy in the Middle East and Eastern Europe. He has also maintained a high profile in conservative politics, commanding a 20-minute time slot at the Conservative Political Action Conference's annual convention on Feb. 25 where he ripped Biden's leadership on the international stage. "Right now we have political appointees at the State Department who are inept," he said in his speech. "There's no other way to say it. We have witnessed an appalling waste of diplomatic capital these past four weeks as the Biden team hyped a bloody war, shifting U.S. troops around Europe, stoking paranoia in the West, destroying the Ukrainian economy and utterly failing to deter Vladimir Putin. " Grenell's endorsement comes one day after Arrington received the endorsement of Rear Admiral John Polowczyk, who served as the White House supply chain lead on the Corona Virus Task Force under Trump. Mace, meanwhile, has netted endorsements from several former high-profile members of Trump's administration, including former United Nations ambassador Nikki Haley and one-time Trump chief of staff Mick Mulvaney. The endorsements come one month after Arrington, a former Department of Defense official, settled a lawsuit against her former employer over what she says were false allegations of illegally sharing top-secret information during her time in Washington. Mace has consistently emphasized in social media posts and in campaign communications that she could be trusted with national security matters while Arrington could not. "It's important that we have leaders who can be trusted with our nation's secrets, and understand that serious times call for serious leaders making serious decisions and being careful with the information they receive," Mace said in a recent video posted to her Twitter page. COLUMBIA Lawmakers in the South Carolina House and Senate have introduced several bills to divest from Russia following its violent incursion into Ukraine. In the Senate, Minority Leader Brad Hutto, D-Orangeburg, introduced two bills March 1 condemning the Russian invasion and divesting public funds within the South Carolina Retirement System from Russian holdings. The move puts South Carolina on a list of several other states currently evaluating their pension plans' exposure to Russian assets. "We can't stand by and watch this take place without speaking up," Hutto said on the Senate floor. In the House, chief majority whip and congressional candidate Russell Fry, R-Surfside Beach, introduced legislation to divest state assets from Russia, alongside legislation to prevent the sale and distribution of Russian-made spirits in South Carolina. The efforts are part of the wide-scale protests against the Russian government seen around the world in which bars and restaurants stopped serving Russian vodka in favor of spirits made in Ukraine or in other countries. It was not immediately clear how Fry's ban would be enforced. He said that like any bill, the state would figure out how to implement it. "You create a law and you get it done," Fry said in an interview. "I think the the overwhelming message at this point is showing the world that we stand with the people of Ukraine against this Russian aggression. Whatever ways big and small South Carolina could put their best foot forward, we should consider that." Sign up for updates! Get the latest political news from The Post and Courier in your inbox. Email Sign Up! The legislation in the House and Senate is part of a series of actions and statements made by political leaders in the Palmetto State around the war in Ukraine. Before Russia invaded, state Rep. Beth Bernstein, D-Columbia, appeared with Republican U.S. Rep. Joe Wilson at a press conference at the S.C. Statehouse condemning Russian actions in the region. State lawmakers have made numerous speeches from the floor of the House and Senate condemning the Russian government and expressing solidarity with Ukraine since the invasion began on Feb. 24. On Feb. 28, Gov. Henry McMaster held a brief ceremony outside the Governor's Mansion to light up the structure in the colors of the Ukrainian flag, saying, "the whole world is watching." The March 1 legislation is the first example of the state taking steps toward material actions against the Russian government. It is not immediately clear how significant South Carolina's investments in Russia are, but the total figure likely represents only a fraction of the state's more than $39 billion investment portfolio. According to the Retirement System Investment Commission's most recent annual report, the Palmetto State's retirement system is invested in Russian bonds. The country is also a relatively small trading partner, with minimal trade both in and out of the state. While South Carolina exports goods such as auto parts and metals to Russia, Russian trade constitutes just 3.4 percent of South Carolina's exports in a given year, and less than 1 percent of its imports. In terms of trade, the 2021 value of imports to South Carolina from Russia was $599.9 million, ranking 19th largest import partner by value, according to the Commerce Department. The 2021 value of exports to Russia was $459.8 million, ranking 15th largest export partner by value, the department said. David Wren contributed to this report. Andrew Breitbart died 10 years ago today at the unreasonably young age of 43. The site named after him has posted the tribute below. The 59 speakers begin with Justice Clarence Thomas. Justice Thomass moving remarks come straight from the heart. Andrew was something like the proverbial force of nature and a genius a few times over. He seemed to have time for everyone. It is unbelievable how many of us he befriended, affected, supported, nurtured, and influenced in his few years, all while doing his own work. As Boswell said of Johnson, his death made a chasm, which not only nothing can fill up, but which nothing has a tendency to fill up. I traveled to Israel in a small group with Andrew and Larry Solov (then his attorney, now his successor running Breitbart) in 2007 on a bloggers tour led by Fern Oppenheim. I dont think I had ever heard of Andrew before the trip, yet it didnt take long to get a bead on him. Thanks to Ferns efforts, our third day included a meeting with Benjamin Netanyahu in Tel Aviv (photo nearby). Later that day we also took a low-flying chopper ride from a point near Tel Aviv down the border between Israel and the West Bank to Sderot and Gaza. Our small group sat together for dinner around a table at a restaurant that evening at the end of a long day. Andrew was multitasking, pulling his shift on the Drudge Report. He was eating dinner, reading messages from reporters seeking links to their stories, instant messaging with John Podhoretz, and making himself the life of the party, all at the same time. I learned in the course of the trip that it was Andrew who changed my life in 2004, linking to our Sixty-First Minute post early that afternoon with the screaming siren on Drudge. He confided that Matt Drudge did not like the sites that had sprung up online, but that he (Andrew) was a fan. JOHN adds: Like probably a million others, I considered Andrew a friend. My most vivid memory of him is from a CPAC of around 11 years ago. My wife and I attendedI guess I was covering the event for Power Lineand we brought along our youngest daughter, then 14. We attended a speech by Andrew that drew a big crowd. I dont recall what the announced topic of the speech was, but I dont think Andrew ever got to it. He went on one riff after another; you could call it stand-up comedy, but Ive never seen a comedian that funny. At one point Andrew recalled how he rollerbladed up to a crowd of left-wing protesters at a Koch event in Palm Springs, delivered a stemwinder and led them off to a nearby bar or restaurant, ending the protest. When he mimed rollerblading on the stage, my daughter fell off her chair laughing. She had never seen anything like it. Later we tracked Andrew down and he generously made his time available to a 14 year old girl, as he seemingly did for everyone. She never forgot it. For her, it was the beginning of a career in activism that continues to this day. Andrew Breitbart touched more lives than he knew. I am adding these thoughts to Scotts review of last nights State of the Union, posted below. The only suspense last night was about whether Biden could remain upright long enough to complete the speech. After four days of rest, he made it through the hour, although by the last third he was slurring, omitting and mangling words on the Teleprompter. Relieved Democrats will hail this as a masterful performance. As to content, it was mostly the same spending wish list that is familiar from past SOTUs by Democratic presidents. Since money is free in Democrat Land, why not pass out a few trillion more dollars? I doubt that anyones opinions were swayed by Bidens legislative litany. To me, the most striking aspect of the speech was how often Biden seemed to be echoing Donald Trump. Thus, Biden has suddenly become the America First president: Theres been a law on the books for almost a century to make sure taxpayers dollars support American jobs and businesses. Every administration, Democrat and Republican, says theyll do it, but we are actually doing it. We will buy American to make sure everything from the deck of an aircraft carrier to the steel on highway guardrails is made in America from beginning to end. All of it. All of it. *** Theres something happening in America. Just look around, and youll see an amazing story. The rebirth of pride that comes from stamping products Made in America. The revitalization of American manufacturing. Companies are choosing to build new factories here, when just a few years ago, they would have gone overseas. No mention, of course, of anything Donald Trump may have had to do with this. And after two years of accusing the Trump administration of being soft on COVIDBiden, to his everlasting disgrace, claimed that every American death from COVID was President Trumps faultthe masks are coming off just in time. Just in time for the SOTU, to start with; I noticed a total of three people still wearing masks. And, more important, just in time for the midterms. Suddenly Biden echoes Donald Trump, Ron DeSantis and other formerly-excoriated Republicans: its time to get back to normal! Because of the progress weve made, because of your resilience and the tools that we have been provided by this Congress, tonight I can say we are moving forward safely, back to more normal routines. *** Just a few days ago, the Centers for Disease Control and Prevention issued new mask guidelines. Under these new guidelines, most Americans in most of the country can now go mask free. *** Thanks to the progress we have made in the past year, Covid-19 no longer need control our lives. Biden paid tribute to the importance of COVID vaccines: We know how incredibly effective vaccines are. We will never give up on vaccinating more Americans. Now, I know parents with kids under 5 are eager to see their vaccines authorized for their children. Actually, the vaccines have not proved to be incredibly effective. But for this purpose, the salient point is that Biden never mentioned Operation Warp Speed, the Trump administration, or the manner in which the vaccines were developed in record time before he took office. Biden must hold some kind of record for mean-spiritedness. Is this Donald Trump talking? Or maybe Ron DeSantis: Its time for America to get back to work and fill our great downtowns again with people. People working from home can feel safe and begin to return to their offices. Were doing that here in the federal government. The vast majority of federal workers will once again work in person. Our schools are open. Lets keep it that way. Our kids need to be in school. The science has changed, dont you know. And it will continue changing between now and November. Remember when defunding the police was the order of the day? Living in a metro area where that actually happened, it is hard to forget. But once again, Biden channels the pro-law and order Trump: We should all agree: The answer is not to defund the police. Its to fund the police. Fund them. Fund them. Fund them with resources and training. Resources and training they need to protect their communities. At this point, I said to my companions: the only thing we are missing is border security! But we didnt have to wait long: Folks, if we are to advance liberty and justice, we need to secure our border and fix the immigration system. And as you might guess, I think we can do both. At our border, weve installed new technology like cutting-edge scanners to better detect drug smuggling. Weve set up joint patrols with Mexico and Guatemala to catch more human traffickers. Were putting in place dedicated immigration judges in significant larger number so families fleeing persecution and violence can have their cases heard faster and those who dont legitimately here can be sent back. No mention of how and why the border became insecure on January 20, 2021. Of course, Biden didnt mean a word of it: America First, stand up to China, advance the interests of the middle class, support law enforcement, secure the border. The Democrats are, and will remain, the party of globalists and tech oligarchs. But the fact that Biden felt obliged to invoke these themes testifies to the power of the populist Trump agenda. A digital technology firm, Africarare, has announced plans for commercialisation of virtual land (Ubuntuland) that marries creativity, cryptocurrency and commerce in its metaverse. The company, in a press statement on Tuesday, said interested parties can buy, sell and rent property and other digital assets in Ubuntuland. Firstly, virtual land will soon be available to purchase and develop, with MTN, Africas largest multinational mobile telecommunications company joining Africarare with an upcoming 1212 village (144 plots of real estate) secured in Ubuntuland, the statement read. It said Africas first metaverse is set to unlock African creativity and connect Africa to the global digital economy. Established in October 2021, Africarare, headquartered in South Africa, is the first South African metaverse to launch housing digital land with roots in the African continent. According to the statement, the digital firm said there will only ever be 204, 642 plots of land available for trading in this space, and that it would be made up of different village sizes in various community hubs. The land is positioned and priced according to a tiered value system, it said. According to the statement, landholders will be able to customise their 3-D land spaces, such as hosting shops, producing resources, renting virtual services and developing games or other applications. It said designated spaces will serve the community for work, play and wellness purposes, including state-of-the-art meeting rooms, online therapy rooms (with optional anonymity), concert stages, film festival spaces, meditation lounges and other dynamic interactive environments. Also, the firm stated that renowned South African artist, Norman Catherine, has developed a unique collection of avatars for the metaverse, which will shortly be available to purchase. It said the Normunda tribe is based on the artists signature lexicon that has fetched record prices in galleries around the world. An avatar is a 3-D graphical representation of a user or the users character or persona in the space. Available packages The firm said the currency in Ubuntuland will be the $UBUNTU token, and that it is built on the Ethereum blockchain and would be available later this year. Everything in Africarare can be bought, sold or traded using $UBUNTU tokens, including buying, developing, selling or renting plots or villages in Ubuntuland, and the in-world purchases of digital goods and services, the statement read. It said the valuation of the token will be calculated according to what users invest, build ,play and trade inside the metaverse. The statement explained that two art galleries will feature in Africarare, and would be dedicated to showcasing Africas prolific creativity. It noted that the Mila gallery (Swahili for tradition), which has already opened, will host curated collections by some of Africas foremost artists, while the Inuka gallery (Swahili for rise) will feature works by emerging African artists later this year. Both galleries will stage various exhibitions on an ongoing basis with art pieces being sold as NFTs (non-fungible tokens), the statement said. In the Africarare marketplace, creators and developers can trade in-world assets such as land, avatars, avatar additions and other goods and services that are and will be available in Ubuntuland, the company said. It said the marketplace will focus on four main areas: Art, Ubuntuland, Avatars & Skins and Digital Services, adding that users will also be able to trade on secondary platforms such as Opensea and others. It explained that the Central Hub land area is reserved for Africarare custom made experiences, ranging from art to education, including experiences like galleries, live performances, stand-up comedy, video content channels, film festivals, safaris and more. Mic Mann, Co-founder and CEO of Africarare was quoted to have said Africarare will connect Africa to this booming arena of the global economy, stimulate growth and create multiple new jobs such as digital designers, creators and architects . Advertisements Similarly, Shayne Mann, Co-founder of Africarare said the space will enable South African artists to showcase their talent to the world and monetize their distinctive creations. With Africarare being built on collaborative partnerships, the possibilities for commercialisation are endless, the official said. Bernice Samuels, MTN Group Executive, said it is an exciting moment for the company as it leads businesses on the continent to enter the metaverse marketplace. This is exactly what our Ambition 2025 strategy is premised on leveraging trends that amplify consumers digital experiences and engagement, he said. The February 12 FCT area councils election was a setback for the APC, Nigerias ruling party. Since coming to power in 2015, the party had recorded near-total success in the two previous elections. Council elections are held in the Nigerian capital every three years. In 2016, the APC won five of the six councils Abaji, AMAC, Bwari, Gwagwalada, Kuje, and Kwali and lost Gwagwalada to APGA, an opposition party. In 2019, it won four, taking Gwagwalada and retaining Abaji, AMAC, and Kwali, while losing two Kuje and Bwari to the main opposition PDP. However, in the latest election, last month, APC recorded its worst performance in the FCT polls under President Muhammadu Buhari as it shared the councils 50-50 with PDP. Each of the council areas in Abuja has ten wards except for AMAC which has 12, making a total of 62 wards. For the ward councillorship positions, PDP won 42 while APC won 20 in the latest elections, whereas in 2019 the PDP had 27 and the APC 35. However, the most significant of APCs misfortune in the council polls was losing AMAC (Abuja Municipal Area Council) to PDP, which also won Kuje and Bwari. AMAC is the most developed and cosmopolitan council, which hosts the city centre, including the enclaves of the countrys super-rich and base of power. The Presidency, National Assembly, Supreme Court, Federal Secretariat, headquarters of ministries, departments, and agencies, headquarters of the armed forces, police, secret services, diplomatic missions and a host of other consequential national and international establishments are located in AMAC. For a party that did not win any council in 2016, winning two and then three in 2019 and 2022 respectively showed how steadily the PDP was recovering and gaining ground against the ruling APC in the Nigerian capital. When PDP lost all in 2016, it was still a time the APC had just come to power, with a high public acceptance and sentiments that the PDP had caused the countrys woes having ruled for 16 years. It is against that background that the FCT election has been seen as an Abuja-limited referendum on the performance of the APC government of President Muhammadu Buhari. It is a signal, said Yunusa Yusuf, a native Abuja public commentator, arguing that the Abuja election was a measure of public opinion on the performance of the APC administration. There is hunger in the land. The same people that voted in the previous elections were the same that voted in the February election. The president is trying but the problem was our leaders, he added. In Abuja, not much has changed in the area of public service delivery. Services such as water supply, streetlights, waste management, traffic management have remained either perfunctorily delivered or not delivered at all, especially in areas other than the city centre, many of them also in AMAC. READ ALSO: Instead of reducing the gap between the city centre, commonly called town, and the surrounding less developed neighbourhoods, often called satellite areas, the dualism that defines Abuja is deepening. A dualism, in geography and development, refers to the existence of two separate economic and social sectors within a space. A dual society, like Abuja, typically has rural, impoverished, and neglected parts surrounding a more developed and advanced part. However, a local APC official in Abaji, Mohammed Bako, said APCs fortune dwindled because of internal manipulations that resulted in the fielding of unpopular candidates. Our leaders, from the federal secretariat to the local level gave tickets to unpopular candidates, Mr Bako said. That was why we lost so much, including AMAC, which covers the Villa (the Presidency). The National Assembly has concluded the voting stage of the Constitutional amendment. The process which lasted over five hours on Tuesday, saw lawmakers of both chambers consider 68 amendments to the Constitution. PREMIUM TIMES reported the entire voting process. Prior to the consideration and voting, the wife of the Vice President, Dolapo Osinbajo, joined the lawmakers at the Senate and later the House of Representatives to witness the proceeding as well as solicit support for the gender and affirmative action bills which were all eventually rejected. The Senate President, Ahmad Lawan, had explained the voting process to the lawmakers before it began. Bills that pass in the Senate and fail to pass at the House of Representatives are dead, and vice versa, he told his colleagues. Below is a compiled list of the amendments and how the lawmakers voted. This reflects the current status of the bills irrespective of how it was voted for in each chamber. 1. Financial autonomy for local governments Passed. 2. Administrative autonomy for local governments Passed. 3. Bill to change the name, Afikpo North and Afikpo South Local Government Areas of Ebonyi State Passed. 4. Bill to change the name of Kunchi Local Government Area of Kano State Passed. 5. Bill to change the names of Egbado North and Egbado South Local Government Areas of Ogun State Passed. 6. Bill to change the name Barikin Ladi Local Government Area of Plateau State Rejected. 7. Bill to correct name Atigbo Local Government Area of Oyo State Passed. 8. Bill to correct the name of Obia/Akpor Local Government Area of Rivers State Passed. 9. Financial Independence for State Houses of Assembly and State Judiciary Passed. 10. Bill to compel persons to obey or comply with legislative summons Passed. 11. Inauguration of members-elect of the National and State Houses of Assembly Passed. 12. Bill to institutionalise legislative bureaucracy in the Constitution Passed. 13. Overriding presidential veto Rejected. 14. Overriding Executive Veto in Respect of Money Bill Rejected. 15. Procedure of Removing Presiding Officers of the Legislature Rejected. 16. Life Pension for Presiding Officers of the National Assembly Rejected. Advertisements 17. Establishment of Federal Revenue Court and the Revenue Court of a State Rejected. 18. Bill to Strengthen the Judiciary for timely dispensation of justice Rejected. 19. Timelines for the determination of civil and criminal cases Rejected. 20. Retirement age and pension rights of judicial officers of Superior Courts of Records Passed. 21. Bill to delete the reference to the provisions of the Criminal Code, Penal Code, Criminal Procedure Act, Criminal Procedure Code or Evidence Act Passed. 22. Bill to exclude the period of intervening events in the computation of time for determining pre-election petitions, election petitions and appeals therefrom Passed. 23. Virtual/remote court proceedings Rejected. 24. Bill to expand the Interpretation of Judicial Office to include Courts or Tribunals created by an Act of the National Assembly or a State House of Assembly Passed. 25. Post call qualification of the secretary of the National Judicial Council Passed. 26. Bill for an Act to Alter the Constitution of the Federal Republic of Nigeria, 1999 to Permit Public Servants to Engage in Healthcare Education, Production and Services beyond Farming; and for Related Matters Passed 27. Fair hearing in the process of recommendation of removal of judicial officers by the State Judicial Service Commission Passed. 28. Inclusion of judges of the National Industrial Court in the composition of Election Tribunal Rejected. 29. Devolution of Power: to move airports from Exclusive Legislative List to the Concurrent Legislative List Passed. 30. Devolution of Power: to move Fingerprints, Identification and Criminal Records from the Exclusive Legislative List to the Concurrent Legislative List Passed. 31. Devolution of Power: to delete prisons in the Exclusive Legislative List and re-designate it as Correctional Services in the Concurrent Legislative List Passed. 32. Devolution of Power: to move Railway from the Exclusive Legislative List to Concurrent Legislative List Passed. 33. Devolution of Power: to allow states to generate, transmit and distribute electricity in areas covered by the national grid Passed. 34. Devolution of Power: Value Added Tax on the Exclusive Legislative List Rejected. 35. Special Seat for Women in the National and State Houses of Assembly Rejected. 36. Expansion of the Scope of Citizenship by Registration Rejected. 37. Affirmative Action for Women in Political Party Administration Rejected. 38. Qualification to become an Indigene of a State in Nigeria Rejected. 39. Bill to empower RMAFC to enforce compliance with remittance of accruals into and disbursement of revenue from the federation account and streamline the procedure for reviewing the revenue allocation formula Passed. 40. Bill to enhance the Independence of Certain Bodies Passed. 41. Removal of transitional lawmaking Powers from the Executive Arms of Government Passed. 42. Immunity for Legislative and Judicial Arms of Government Rejected. 43. Domestication of treaties Passed. 44. Timeline for presentation of Appropriation bill by president and governors Passed. 45. Timeline for president and governors to submit names of ministerial nominees and commissioners Passed. 46. Bill to include Presiding Officers of the National Assembly in the membership of the National Security Council Passed. 47. Establishment of State Security Council Passed. 48. Legislative powers to summon presidents and governors Passed. 49. Bill to reduce the period which the president or governor may authorise withdrawal of monies from CRF Passed. 50. Bill to Replace the Consolidated Revenue Fund of the Federation with the Consolidated Revenue Fund of the Federal Government Passed. 51. Bill to establish the Office of the Accountant-General of the Federal Government separate from the Office of the Accountant-General of the Federation Passed 52. Timeframe for the Conduct of Population Census Passed. 53. Bill to establish the Office of the AttorneyGeneral of the Federation and of the State separate from the Office of the Minister of Justice or Commissioners for Justice of the state in order to make the Offices AttorneysGeneral Independent and Insulated from Partisanship Passed. 54. State of the Nation and State of the State Address by the President and Governor Passed. 55. Bill to include former heads of the National Assembly in the Council of State Passed. 56. Termination of tenure of elected officials after change of political party Passed. 57. Bill to enhance existing provisions on the formation of political parties Passed. 58. Independent candidacy Passed. 59. Diaspora voting Rejected. 60. Office of the Mayor for FCT Rejected. 61. Appointment of an FCT Minister from the FCT Rejected. 62. Bill to correct the error in the definition of the boundary of the Federal Capital Territory, Abuja Passed. 63. Free, Compulsory and Basic Education Passed. 64. Bill to further define Acts that Constitute Torture, Inhuman or Degrading Treatment Rejected. 65. Food security Passed. 66. Bill to reflect the objectives and functions of NSCDC Passed. 67. Bill to establish the National and State Councils of Traditional Rulers to advise the President and Governors on Matters Related to Customs, Security and Public Order Rejected. 68. Reserved Quota for Women Rejected. At least 200 bandits have been killed in Niger State in the past three days in security operations, an official has said. The states Commissioner for Local Government, Community Development, Chieftaincy Affairs and Internal Security, Emmanuel Umar, said this on Wednesday. Mary Noel-Berje, the media aide to Governor Abubakar Bello, in a statement said Mr Umar spoke at a press briefing at Government House, Minna on the directive of the governor. According to her, Mr Umar said many commanders of the terrorists were killed in the operations, pointing out that the eliminated terrorists belonged to the camps of Ali Kawajo, Yello Janbros, Kachalla Halilu and Bello Turji. The commissioner added that the success recorded was due to a new approach evolved in the joint security operations and the collaboration of traditional leaders, community leaders and members . He said over 60 motorcycles, unspecified number of cows and arms were recovered from the terrorists, adding that the arms have been handed over to the security agencies. The commissioner said the security agencies, however, recorded two deaths and many injured officers, whom he said are receiving treatment at a government facility. He on behalf of Governor Abubakar Sani Bello sympathis9ed with the families of the security operatives that were killed and their agencies saying that their sacrifices is appreciated and will not go unrewarded. While commending the security agencies, community leaders and members of the affected communities for their collective efforts towards annihilating the terrorists, cautioned the general public to be vigilant as some of the terrorists who escaped with bullet wounds are taking shelter in some communities. He passionately appealed to the public to report any strange persons within their environment while re-iterating governments determination to win the war. We are appealing to the general public that this fight is not for government alone, it is for us all, we will not rest, until we chase them out of our land, and will continue trailing those tthat have escaped as well ensure that we do everything possible for them to pay, for the destruction that they have causing our people, the statement said. The Nigerian Governors Wives Forum (NGWF) has confirmed that the viral video showing its members celebrating Aisha Buharis birthday in Dubai is real. The forum, however, says though the celebration held in Dubai, it was a coincidence as that was not the main reason its members travelled to the UAE city. The position of the NGWF was contained in a statement by the wife of the Ekiti State Governor and chairperson of the forum, Bisi Fayemi, on Wednesday. Mrs Fayemi, who was in the video, stated that the Nigerian First Ladys birthday coincided with an official trip which some wives of governors were part of. Many Nigerians have criticized the video that shows Mrs Fayemi holding a cake while leading the other women to present a cake to Mrs Buhari during the latters 51st birthday in Dubai. Mrs Buhari, Nigerias first lady, spends a lot of time in Dubai, sometimes being in the middle-eastern city for several weeks, allegedly on taxpayers funds. Although her office is not recognised by the Nigerian constitution, the federal government allocates funds for the running of the First Ladys office including its retinue of aides. The governors wives also travelled for the trip at a time millions of Nigerians are unable to get petrol for their vehicles and generators, with many spending hours at filling stations. The fuel situation adds to the worsening economic situation in a country where about half of the population live below the poverty line and millions of people are unemployed. In their statement Wednesday, the governors wives were unapologetic about their trip and the Dubai celebration, saying both were necessary. For the avoidance of doubt and in the interest of the public, the Nigerian Governors Wives were on the entourage of the First Lady of Nigeria who was on an official trip to the UAE, Mrs Fayemi wrote in the statement. The trip coincided with the birthday of HE Aisha Buhari. On the morning of her birthday, which was February 17th, the delegation of Governors Wives paid a private visit to present a cake and flowers. After the brief presentation, we proceeded to attend the scheduled meetings for the day. Mrs Fayemi said the governors wives were dismayed to see footage of the visit interpreted to mean Governors Wives left Nigeria for the sole purpose of celebrating HEs birthday. Read full statement below: PRESS STATEMENT Our attention has been drawn to a social media post shared on the 1st of March 2022 suggesting that some Nigerian Governors Wives were in Dubai to surprise the First Lady of Nigeria Dr. Aisha Buhari on the occasion of her birthday on the 17th of February 2022. For the avoidance of doubt and in the interest of the public, the Nigerian Governors Wives were on the entourage of the First Lady of Nigeria who was on an official trip to the UAE. The trip included visits to Dubai Expo 2020, and tours of the Dubai e-learning center, Dubai Youth Hub and meetings with foundations and agencies in UAE who are interested in investing in education, health and technology in Africa, with priority given to women and young people. The trip coincided with the birthday of HE Aisha Buhari. On the morning of her birthday, which was February 17th, the delegation of Governors Wives paid a private visit to present a cake and flowers. After the brief presentation, we proceeded to attend the scheduled meetings for the day. We were therefore dismayed to see footage of the visit interpreted to mean Governors Wives left Nigeria for the sole purpose of celebrating HEs birthday. This is not true and we find this assumption scandalous. We are all dedicated to supporting our spouses as well as our First Lady, and we would never be a party to anything that will bring embarrassment to them and ourselves. Our key learnings from our visit to the various agencies in Dubai and the briefings we received points to the need for Nigeria to scale up investments in education, science and technology and provide more opportunities for young people, who are the key to the future. We will continue to address these issues in our own work as well as advocate for increased commitments in these areas from our leaders. HE Erelu Bisi Fayemi Chair, Nigeria Governors Wives Forum. The Ooni of Ife, Enitan Ogunwusi, and the Alaafin of Oyo, Lamidi Adeyemi III, on Tuesday held a closed-door meeting in Ibadan with the Minister of Interior, Rauf Aregbesola, in respect of his rift with Bola Tinubu, a National Leader of the All Progressives Congress (APC). The News Agency of Nigeria (NAN) reports that the meeting was conveyed to resolve the lingering strained relationship between the two prominent Yoruba political leaders- Mr Tinubu and Mr Aregbesola. NAN gathered that the meeting, held at a private residence of the Alaafin of Oyo in Ibadan, lasted for about two hours. The meeting was said to be a first step toward finding a lasting reconciliation between the two politicians. A source told journalists that after consultations, the leaders agreed to move to the next stage of the meeting, which would be held at a later date. NAN reports that Mr Aregbesola, had in the build-up to February 2022 Governorship primaries of the APC in Osun, allegedly disparaged Mr Tinubu for taking sides with Governor Gboyega Oyetola of Osun. A source told journalists in Ibadan that Mr Aregbesola had asked the traditional rulers to resolve his feud with Mr Tinubu, who is eyeing the presidential ticket of the APC in 2023 election. The source said: Rauf Aregbesola came before the Ooni; after he entered, Oba Adeyeye Ogunwusi joined shortly. Nobody was allowed to enter. Nobody was briefed. They later finished and entered their cars. All those photos you see online were taken by their aides. However, details of the meeting were still unknown as at the time of filing this reports. NAN also gathered that the Nigeria Supreme Council for Islamic Affairs (NSCIA) had waded into the rift. This is with a view to finding amicable solutions to the feud between Aregbesola and his political mentor, Tinubu, the source said. (NAN) The National Assembly on Tuesday passed five bills on devolution of powers. They were part of the 68 amendment bills proposed by the joint committee of the Federal legislature on constitution review. The bills seek to give states control of some sectors by removing them from the Executive list to the Concurrent list. The lawmakers, however, rejected one of such bills the Value Added Tax (VAT) bill. The bill for an Act to Alter Part I of the Second Schedule to the Constitution of the Federal Republic of Nigeria, 1999 to include Value Added Tax on the Exclusive Legislative List, was borne from the feud between the Federal Inland Revenue Service (FIRS) and the Rivers State Governor, Nyesom Wike, in 2021, over rights to collect Value Added Tax. The former had made moves to legally own the rights. It also approached the National Assembly and asked that it include the collection of VAT in the exclusive legislative list an amendment to the Constitution. During the voting process at plenary, the bill recorded a low number of votes below the required number needed for it to pass. PREMIUM TIMES reported the voting process. At the Senate, 41 lawmakers voted in favour of the legislation while 44 voted against. And at the House of Representatives, 209 members voted against and it only 91 voted in favour of the legislation. Fives bills passed Some of the legislations on devolution of powers that passed at the National Assembly include a bill to move airports from exclusive legislative list to concurrent legislative list. At the Senate, the bill had 84 senators vote in favour of it and only two voted against it. At the House of Representatives, 283 voted for it while 30 voted against. Another bill passed is the bill to move fingerprints, identification and criminal records from the exclusive legislative list to the concurrent legislative list. While 86 senators voted for the bill, three voted against it. The legislation was also passed at the House. Another bill to delete prisons in the Exclusive legislative list and re-designate it as Correctional Services in the Concurrent Legislative list received overwhelming votes from the lawmakers. At the Senate, 86 lawmakers voted for it while two voted against. At the House, 280 members voted for the bill and 12 voted against. The bill that seeks to move the Railway from the Exclusive Legislative List to Concurrent Legislative List also scaled through at the Senate. A total of 90 lawmakers at the Senate voted in favour of the legislation; there was no opposition. Their counterparts at the House voted in favour of the legislation as well. The federal lawmakers also passed the bill that seeks to allow states to generate, transmit and distribute electricity in areas covered by the national grid. A University of Ibadan lecturer, Biliki Babarinde, on Wednesday asked a Grade A Customary Court in Ibadan to dissolve her 20-year-old marriage with Sikiru Adekola, a professor. She alleged maltreatment and promiscuity against her estranged spouse. Ms Babarinde, doctorate degree holder, who teaches at the universitys Department of Library, Archival and Information Studies, Faculty of Education, told the court that the marriage had broken down irretrievably. She said that the marriage was contracted on March 2, 2002 and had produced three children. The plaintiff urged the court to restrain Mr Adekola from harassing, molesting and intimidating her and also to grant her the custody of the three children. She also urged the court to order Mr Adekola to bear full responsibility for the payment of school fees, books, feeding and medical expenses of the children. Ms Babarinde also urged the court to order Mr Adekola to pay N100,000 monthly for feeding the children and N120,000, also monthly, as their wardrobe allowance. At the Wednesday proceeding, Mr Adekola told the court that he was not opposed to the dissolution of the marriage. Mr Adekola who teaches at the Department of Early Childhood and Educational Foundation, Faculty of Education, also at the University of Ibadan, spoke through his counsel, Yusuf Anikulapo. Mr Anikulapo told the court, however, that he had filed an application challenging the jurisdiction of the court. Objecting to the move, Olufemi Adegboroye, counsel to Ms Babarinde, said Mr Adekola raised some new points in his counter-affidavit that were not in the originating summons. He told the court that he was just served with the counter-affidavit and required time to respond to it and subsequently asked the court for an adjournment. The courts president, R. Gbadamosi, adjourned the case till April 11 for a hearing of the preliminary objection. (NAN) Kano State Attorney-General and Commissioner of Justice, Musa Lawan, has barred journalists from covering the trial of Abdulmalik Tanko, the teacher suspected to have kidnapped and killed his five-year-old pupil, Hanifa Abubakar. Mr Lawan said the decision is to enable operatives of the State Security Service (SSS) to testify before the court. He also directed reporters to vacate the corridor of the court premises until after the first session (security testimony). Mr Tanko and one of his alleged accomplices, Hashimu Isyaku, have pleaded guilty to criminal conspiracy but denied four other charges in the murder trial. However, the other suspect, Fatima Jibrin, denied all the charges at the previous sitting The suspects were arraigned at state High Court No. 6 before judge Usman Na-Abba. They were charged with criminal conspiracy, kidnapping, concealing/keeping in confinement a kidnapped person and culpable homicide, offences contrary to Sections 97, 274, 277 and 221 of the Penal Code. The judge, Mr Naabba, had fixed March 2 and 3 for the commencement of the hearing and ordered the accused to be remanded at a correctional centre. Hanifa was allegedly kidnapped and murdered by Mr Tanko, who was her teacher, and the other suspects. The police in Anambra State said they have rescued two persons abducted recently in the state by gunmen. The men were said to have been abducted when the gunmen attacked a filling station along Ekwulobia/Isuofia Road in Aguata Local Government Area of the state. The police spokesperson in Anambra State, Tochukwu Ikenga who disclosed this in a statement on Wednesday, said the gunmen attacked the fuel station on Monday. He said the gunmen fired sporadic shots, causing panic in the area. The spokesperson said the police, while responding to a distress call, rescued the abducted victims at about 9 p.m. the same day. On the receipt of the information, the Commissioner of Police immediately ordered the tactical teams of the command comprising of police mobile force, counter terrorism unit, special forces and other units to complement the existing security deployment in the area. During a hot chase by the police, the hoodlums abandoned the abducted victims and fled, he said. Mr Ikenga said during a shootout with the gunmen, a man identified as Sabatine Nwabueze was hit by a stray bullet. The man died in his car, he said. The operatives recovered the corpse and deposited it at the mortuary, he said. Calm has been restored in the area, according to the police. The police said they recovered a white Toyota hilux truck and an ash-coloured Lexus 330 SUV during the operation There have been renewed gun attacks lately in Anambra and other South-east states. Suspected cultists on Saturday killed several persons at a funeral ceremony in a community in Anambra. The Oyo State government has restated its commitment to total eradication of Female Genital Mutilation (FGM) and other harmful traditional practices in the state. The Commissioner for Women Affairs and Social Inclusion, Kafilat Olayiwola, stated this on Wednesday during the pre-mobilisation meeting for the launch of a programme to end FGM. The News Agency of Nigeria (NAN) reports that FGM involves the partial or total removal of external female genitalia or other injury to the female genital organs for non-medical reasons. Mrs Olayiwola, therefore, said that the state government, in collaboration with relevant stakeholders, would intensify sensitisation against FGM. She recalled that a pre-mobilisation meeting organised by UN Childrens Fund (UNICEF) B-Field Office in Akure was held at the state secretariat, Agodi, Ibadan. She, however, stressed the need for the public to play its parts by sensitising and creating awareness for others to know the implications of FGM. According to her, the theme of the programme is Movement for Good to Eliminate Female Genital Mutilation (FGM) in Nigeria. She said that 13 out of 33 local government areas are presently campaigning for the elimination of FGM. The state government has inaugurated technical committees on FGM in some of the local government areas, while a great number of traditional and religious leaders have publicly denounced the practice. The commissioner further stated that about 310,260 women and girls who were at risk of FGM received gender-sensitive prevention, protection and response services through routine healthcare services. In addition, over one million survivors of FGM were provided with appropriate psycho-social support services such as mentoring and monitoring, quarterly review meeting, establishment of surveillance teams in communities with other necessary actions. ALSO READ: 22 communities declare end to FGM in Imo Ibrahim Sesay who spoke on behalf of UNICEF, said the global movement for the elimination of FGM followed an evaluation that was done by the childrens fund in the year 2021 as part of efforts to end the practice in Nigeria. Mr Sesay said: we are to look at the whole local government areas in Oyo State and make the programme a statewide engagement. We want to make sure that the cutting stops with the support of the whole society; We are looking at mobilising one million people across every segment of the society and relevant stakeholders to be part of the movement. The movement will be launched in two locations simultaneously, one in the Southwest and another in the Southeast. He, therefore, urged the Oyo State Government to implement the Child Rights Law and the Violence Against Persons Prohibiting Law accordingly to prosecute offenders, saying that legal protection for children and women must be enforced. (NAN) Suspected cultists who allegedly attacked and killed several mourners during a funeral on Saturday in a community in Anambra State have been arrested. The Commissioner of Police in the state, Echeng Echeng, disclosed this while speaking with reporters during his visit to the Catholic Bishop of Onitsha Archdiocese, Valerian Okeke. Mr Echeng said the visit was to seek the collaboration of the cleric and his counsel in tackling the growing insecurity in the state. He said the police were leaving no stone unturned to ensure that the perpetrators would be made to face the weight of the law saying nobody has the right to take the life of another. Every life is precious, nobody has the right to take away somebodys life. I can assure you that the command is on top of that situation because we have made some arrests and (we) hope to expand on those arrests, the police commissioner said in a video clip posted on Facebook by the Anambra State Broadcasting Service on Wednesday. When contacted, the police spokesperson in the state, Tochukwu Ikenga, confirmed the arrests, but said the command would not reveal the details until investigations and arrests were concluded. We are still working on them. We dont want to disclose what we are doing, but some persons are already in (our) custody and they have been helping us with information, Mr Ikenga told PREMIUM TIMES, Wednesday morning. He said the police were working with other security agencies to apprehend other fleeing suspects. Once we are done with that, I will get back to you (on the number of persons arrested), he added. Background The suspected cultists invaded the funeral ceremony, during the lying-in-state of the deceased, and opened fire on mourners, killing an unspecified number of people. The assailants pushed down the casket, forcing the corpse to roll out. Ozor Chukwuka, 34, a suspected cult leader whose funeral was being held during the attack, was said to have been gunned down by a rival cult group in December. In a viral video, apparently shot after the attack, over 10 bodies were seen on the ground at the burial venue. Many voices were heard in the video, crying and raining curses on the attackers. The Bayelsa State Government on Wednesday claimed it has uncovered a plot to destabilise and blackmail it through misrepresentation and false reports. The government, however, said it would not be distracted from governance and the development of the state by unfounded allegations by political opponents. Ayibaina Duba, Commissioner for Information, Orientation and Strategy in the state, told the News Agency of Nigeria (NAN) that resorting to falsehood against the state government for political gains would not be tolerated. The government would seek redress in court against those behind it, he said. Mr Duba said that attempts to cause disaffection between the state government and the people of Bayelsa would fail as the people were already feeling the impact of the two-year-old administration across several sectors. According to him, the orchestrated false reports, allegedly carried out by a certain politician, sought to set a selfish political agenda. He said the reports were aimed at distorting and destroying reality in order to tarnish the administrations image. The mischievous analyst named some of the projects that the administration has done in a failed attempt to talk the projects down. We urge him to visit the neighbourhoods where the 20 newly-constructed internal roads in the state capital are located to hear the views of residents there. It is likely that their commendation for the governor will wake him up from self-delusion, Mr Duba said. Mr Duba said the government is committed to working for the people and the development of Bayelsa. He dismissed allegations that the state legislators are docile, adding that members of the state executive council had been invited by the House of Assembly for scrutiny. Mr Duba said legislators had also visited project sites as well as monitored implementation of appropriated funds. (NAN) Nigerias foreign affairs ministry has announced that it expects to receive the first batch of evacuees from Ukraine on Thursday. This was announced through a press statement by Gabriel Aduda, the ministrys permanent secretary. According to Mr Aduda, the chartered flights (Air Peace, Max Air) will depart on Wednesday, March 2, to pick up Nigerian evacuees back home. He added that the Nigerian embassies in Hungary, Poland, Romania and Slovakia have received 650, 350, 940 and 150 persons respectively from Ukraine. On the routes and capacity for the air lifts, Mr Aduda noted that Max Air will lift 560 persons from Romania while Air Peace will lift 364 persons from Poland and 360 from Hungary. The Nigerian government had on Monday announced that it will begin evacuation of Nigerians fleeing Ukraine from Wednesday. Geoffrey Onyeama, Nigerias minister of foreign affairs, made this known at a meeting with Femi Gbajabiamila, speaker of the House of Representative. There are over 5,000 Nigerian students in Ukraine, the Nigerian embassy in Ukraine has ascertained. Russia launched a military attack on Ukraine on Thursday and has sustained it despite sanctions by the U.S. and its allies. Five days into the crisis, the situation remains tense with major Ukrainian cities like Kyiv and Kharkiv already targeted. Russia, however, says it is only targeting military facilities. Russia and Ukraine have commenced unconditional talks at the Ukranian-Belarusian border. The UN human rights office says at least 136 civilians, including 13 children, have been killed since Russia invaded Ukraine last week. Liz Throssell, spokesperson for the UN human rights office, said 400 others were wounded. Ms Throssell noted that the real toll is likely to be much higher, adding that 253 of the casualties were in the Donetsk and Luhansk regions in eastern Ukraine. A coalition of 229 women groups has condemned the National Assembly for rejecting all gender bills during the voting on the amendments to the 1999 Constitution on Tuesday. The groups, in a statement, described as sad the lawmakers decision to deny women the opportunity of inclusion and representation in governance by voting against the gender bills. The National Assembly, they said, has spoken loud and clear that it does not want progress for society for mothers, aunties, sisters, wives, and for daughters. Some of the groups listed in the unsigned statement are Action Aid Nigeria, African Womens Initiative (AWI) and Amnesty International Nigeria. Others are EiE Nigeria, UN Women and 1. Stand to End Rape (STER) The lawmakers , on Tuesday, voted on 68 bills that seek to alter the Constitution. PREMIUM TIMES reported the voting process as well as how the lawmakers voted on each bill. Of the 68 legislations, about five bills sought to promote more opportunities for women in political parties, governance and the society at large. All the bills were rejected. In a statement sent to PREMIUM TIMES, the groups said the proposed gender bills that were rejected are targeted at addressing the current gender imbalance across the legislative arm of governments across the country whilst reducing the under-representation of women in political office. They also said the lawmakers have chosen to deny women basic human rights rights enjoyed by every Nigerian except women. They said the men of the ninth assembly have reinforced the discrimination and political bias against women as enshrined in the constitution by: -Denying citizenship to a foreign-born husband of a Nigerian woman. (While it allows Nigerian mens foreign-born wives to be awarded automatic citizenship); -Denying Nigerian women indigeneity through marriage; -Denying 35 per cent appointed positions for women and settling for 20 per cent; Denying women affirmative action in party administration and leadership; and -Denying specific seats for women in the National Assembly. The men of the ninth assembly, by their actions, have taken us backwards. Their actions undermine the importance and relevance of womens contribution to the governance of Nigeria including the key role women play to bring victory to political parties in elections at all levels across the country. They also voted against diaspora voting!, part of the statement reads. They, therefore, demanded that all gender bills be reconsidered for they will benefit not just women but Nigeria as a whole. More women in governance will only bring progress, and respect for Nigeria in the committee of nations. We cannot, in 2022, be negotiating the rights of women and the sanctity of the dignity of girls. We call on the National Assembly to re-present these bills as a matter of urgency and ensure that they are passed, the statement said. The groups have also planned to stage a protest at the National Assembly on Wednesday (today) to drive home their demands. The prices of crude oil on Wednesday hit $113 a barrel, the highest since June 2014, amid supply fear following Russias invasion of Ukraine. Brent crude futures rose by as much as $8 and touched as high as $113.02 a barrel, the highest since June 2014, before easing to $111.75 at 0804 GMT. U.S. West Texas Intermediate (WTI) crude futures were up $7.24, or 7 per cent, to $110.67 a barrel, after earlier hitting the highest since August 2013, Reuters reported. The concerns about Russias invasion of Ukraine have spurred fear among oil investors that global supplies could be affected. Russia is the worlds second-largest oil producer, mostly selling its crude to European refineries, and the largest supplier of natural gas to Europe, providing about 35 per cent of the latters supply. On Tuesday, the International Energy Agency announced that its member countries have agreed to release 60 million barrels of oil from their emergency reserves to ease any supply shortfall caused by the Russia-Ukraine conflict. We are prepared to use every tool available to us to limit the disruption to global energy supply as a result of (Russian) President (Vladimir) Putins actions, White House spokeswoman Jen Psaki was quoted by Reuters as saying in a statement on Tuesday. OPEC and its allies have agreed to meet today for critical talks on monthly output for April 2022. OPEC is expected to continue raising its overall production by 400,000 barrels a day for April as it continues to revive output halted during the pandemic, according to Bloomberg. Reuters quoted the Westpac economist, Justin Smirk as saying Trade disruptions are starting to get peoples attention. Issues around trade finance and insurance thats all impacting exports from the Black Sea. The supply shocks are unfolding, he said. Reuters also quoted a York Harbor trader as saying People are not touching Russian barrels. You may see some on the water right now, but they were bought prior to the invasion. There wont be much after that. President Muhammadu Buhari has approved $8.5 million for the immediate evacuation of about 5,000 Nigerians caught in the Russia Ukraine war. The News Agency of Nigeria (NAN) reports that majority of the affected Nigerian citizens are currently taking refuge in Poland, Romania, Hungary and Slovakia. The Minister of State for Foreign Affairs of Nigeria, Zubairu Dada, alongside the Humanitarian Minister, Sadiya Farouk, made this known to State House correspondents at the end of the virtual meeting of the Federal Executive Council (FEC). The meeting was presided over by Vice-President Yemi Osinbajo at the Council Chamber of the Presidential Villa, Abuja, on Wednesday. Mr Dada disclosed that the approval came after a joint memo presented to the Council by both the ministries of foreign affairs and humanitarian affairs, disaster management and social development. He stated that Air Peace and Max Air airlines had been contracted to provide three aircraft and run as many shifts as possible to facilitate the evacuation. The minister said those to be evacuated include 940 from Romania, 150 from Slovakia and 350 from Poland who had registered for evacuation. On the approved amount, Mr Dada said: The ministry of humanitarian affairs wrote a memo to the president seeking funding to enable us to conduct this exercise. The memo was in the tune of $8.5 million which Mr President has graciously approved. That provision entails arrangement to evacuate no less than 5,000 Nigerians. Whatever happens, you can rest assured we are going to run any number of shifts that it will be involved. Dont forget, it will also involve taking care of those Nigerians that (who) may decide not to come back. It also includes some assistance for the feeding that may have been done by the missions under whatever arrangements. Even the missions themselves are also in dire situations. So, its a whole gambit of activities that are involved. The minister confirmed that the amount would be released immediately to enable the operations to commence today (Wednesday). On students trapped in Ukrainian cities now in the hands of Russians, Mr Dada said: We want to believe the Russian armed forces will obey the rules of engagement. They know the rules about civilians that are caught up in situations such as this. We want to assume they will respect international laws and ensure that no harm comes to them. Dont forget that even our missions in Ukraine have had to be evacuated. So if for any reason any Nigerian is left behind, we are very prayerful, we are hopeful that no harm shall come to them once, of course, they are in some shelters or whatever place they are hiding. Dont forget we had also summoned both the Russian and Ukrainian ambassadors to our ministry, and we did emphasize the need for their troops to ensure that they do not do anything that will harm the lives of innocent citizens. We have seen video clips making the rounds about the alleged treatments that had been meted out to black people who were on queues and in buses and all that. All these we have brought to the attention of the ambassadors and we have expressed our displeasure at this development and demanded that they do something about this. Advertisements (NAN) The House of Representatives has asked the Inspector General of Police, Usman Akali and the Chief of Army Staff, Faruk Yahaya, to deploy personnel to raid kidnappers hideouts in Anambra State. It also asked the Chief of Air Staff, Isiaka Amao, to provide aerial support for the operation. The resolution followed a motion of urgent public importance moved by Roland Igbakpa (PDP, Delta) on Wednesday during plenary. Moving the motion, Mr Igbakpa informed his colleagues of the abduction of Steady Idisi and Emmanuel Ifie, by men suspected to be members of the Indigenous People of Biafra (IPOB) He stated that the two victims were reported to have been kidnapped in Anambra State and taken to Orsumoghu forest. Mr Igbakpa added that Mr Idisi, who is from Ovo, Ehtiope East LGA of Delta State, was kidnapped on February 20 while travelling to Port Harcourt from Asaba, the Delta State capital. He said Mr Idisi and his friend were abducted by suspected IPOB militants at Orsumoghu in Ihiala LGA of Anambra State. Mr Igbakpa also disclosed that Gab Ofoma, a businessman from Nnewi in Anambra State, was killed on the same highway on the same day. Narrating an account of an escapee from the den, Mr Igbakpa said there are over 100 kidnapped victims in the hideout. There is electricity, generators, SUV vehicles, and is like a City of its own, where evil reigns. By the same account, over 100 persons are held captive in that camp and are killed intermittently at the pleasure of the bandits, he said. He said, a properly coordinated and concerted inter-agency intelligence-driven efforts by the police, army and other security agencies in the form of a Joint operation to continually raid the entire area, as was done in the past, is critical at this point to address this menace in order to dislodge the bandits and release their victims. Contributing to the motion, the Minority Leader, Ndudi Elumelu (PDP, Delta), blamed the APC-led government for the insecurity in the country. Since the APC-led government came into power, there has been an increase in brutalising of Nigerians in making sure that our people who should be in the farm to produce food do not have the opportunity to do that, he said. The debate dovetailed to partisan matter, as the Majority Leader, Ado Doguwa (APC, Kano), attacked the main opposition party, PDP. . I want to remind the minority leader that we are running a federal democracy. We have the federating units. Of course, every federating unit has its constitutional responsibility. But I want to believe even the state governors in the south, do have the same responsibility to protect the lives and property of the people they govern. Whether you control the police or not, I assume the governors in the south are the chief security officers of their respective states. What are your governors doing? Consequently, the House resolved that the Committees on Army, Police and Air Force ensure compliance and report to the House in two weeks. The Federal High Court in Abuja, on Wednesday, slated May 23, for judgement in a suit filed by Attorneys-General of the 36 states against the Nigerian Financial Intelligence Unit (NFIU) from implementing its guidelines on the administration of local government funds. Inyang Ekwo, the judge, adjourned the case after lawyers to parties in the suit made their final submissions. In the suit, the Attorney-General of the Federation (AGF) and the NFIU and the Nigeria Union of Local Government Employees are defendants. The NFIU had issued some guidelines in May 2019 to whittle down the overbearing influence of state governments in the administration of local government allocations. It aimed to reduce crime vulnerabilities created by cash withdrawal from local government funds throughout Nigeria effective from June 1, 2019. The guidelines limited the cumulative amount that can be withdrawn from a local government account to not more than N500,000 daily. But the plaintiffs (state governments) argued that it was in breach of financial autonomy of the various states as enshrined in the Nigerian constitution. Hearing At the hearing on Wednesday, the counsel for the Attorneys-General, Omonsoya Popoola, said the state governments are not subject to the control of the NFIU. Mr Popoola told the court that going by the operation of the State Joint Local Government Account, the states are regulated by legislations passed by the State Houses of Assembly not the NFIU. He urged the court to declare that the NFIU lacks the statutory powers to make guidelines for the regulation, monitoring and operation of the State Joint Local Government Accounts. But the AGF represented by Tijjani Gazali, a Senior Advocate of Nigeria (SAN) said the NFIU has not encroached on the powers of the states or local governments. There is nothing wrong or unconstitutional about the NFIU guidelines as they do not usurp the powers of the plaintiffs, Mr Gazali, acting Director, Civil Appeals at the Federal Ministry of Justice, Abuja, told the court. He argued that it is clear from the provisions of the NFIU Act, especially Section 23 (2) (a) and Section 28 (2) and Section 31 of the NFIU Act, that the unit has the power to make the guidelines. Similarly, counsel for the NFIU, Arthur Okafor, also a SAN, said the agency acted within its statutory powers to prevent abuse of office and other forms of financial crimes that might arise at the local government level. Backstory In 2019, the Nigerian Governors Forum (NGF) approached another Federal High Court judge, John Tsoho, who is the current Chief Judge of the court, to stop the NFIUs guidelines from being implemented, but Mr Tsoho declined the request. Amid complaints by the governors, another federal judge in Uyo, Akwa Ibom State, refused to restrain the NFIU from pushing through with its guidelines. PREMIUM TIMES reported how the NFIU on May 6 issued the Guidelines to Reduce Vulnerabilities Created by Cash Withdrawals from Local Government Funds throughout Nigeria. The guideline mandates that state and local government joint accounts be operated solely as transit accounts from which funds will be distributed directly to the accounts of the local governments. Banks were directed to ensure the full implementation of the guidelines with effect from June 1, 2019. Wednesdays court hearing came barely 24 hours after the National Assembly passed a bill abolishing the state joint local government account and provide for a special account where all allocations due to the local government councils, from the federation account and state government shall be paid. In the bill, each local government council is to create and maintain its own special account to be called Local Government Allocation Account into which all the allocations will be paid. The legislation also mandates each state to pay to local government councils in its area of jurisdiction such proportion of its internally generated revenue on such terms and in such manner as may be prescribed by the House of Assembly. For the bill to become a law, however, it has to receive the endorsement of at least 24 state Houses of Assembly. Advertisements The Senate on Wednesday considered a bill to amend the 2022 budget. The amendment in the bill is to make provision for N106.1 billion for Capital Expenditures and N43.9 billion for recurrent without increasing budget deficit. The bill, sponsored by the Senate Leader, Yahaya Abdullahi (Kebbi North), scaled second reading. President Muhammadu Buhari, had in February, explained the need to remove all capital projects that were replicated in the 2022 Appropriation Act. He disclosed that 139 out of the 254 projects in the budget totaling N13.24 billion had been identified for deletion. He requested that an additional provision for N2.557 trillion be appropriated by the National Assembly to fund the petrol subsidy in the 2022 Budget Framework which was revised to provide fully for PMS subsidy. Mr Buhari also asked the National Assembly to reinstate four capital projects totaling N1.4 billion in the Executive proposal for the Federal Ministry of Water Resources; and N22 billion cut from the provision for the Sinking Fund to retire mature loans needed to meet governments obligations under already Issued Bonds. The bill had been considered and passed when Niger senator, Binos Yaroe, raised a point of order drawing the attention of the Senate to the fact that he, and other lawmakers do not have a copy of the bill they had just considered. He also accused the Senate President, Ahmad Lawan, of frustrating his opinion by passing the bill before allowing him to raise his point of order. We are supposed to have a copy of the bill according to our Standing Rule study it before considering it. The bill was read for the first time yesterday. And I was here and I dont have a copy of the bill. How can we amend the bill if we have not received it? He was quickly interrupted by Mr Lawan who asked the Senate Leader to provide an explanation. In his reaction, Mr Abdullahi explained that the legislation came in form of a letter from the president and contained all the details. These details, he said, were contained in the votes and proceedings of the previous sitting which he hoped the entire Senate had studied prior to the second reading. The letter was in the votes and proceeding. It was not a substantive bill, it was a letter. We took note of the content of that letter and drafted it into an amendment bill which will now be going to the Appropriations Committee for further workThey dont come in the form of a substantive bill. I listed the areas that the Executive complained about and requested the Senate to intervene. We are now alerting the committee to look into those areas, he said. Mr Lawan thereafter, asked that his colleagues (who are not part of the committee), to trust the panel to do a good and thorough job. Deliberation Leading the debate, Mr Abdullahi gave key highlights of the amendment to include 11 areas such as funding to cushion the impacts of the recent suspension of the Petroleum Motor Spirit subsidy removal; and addressing the adverse implications that some changes made in the 2022 Appropriation Act could have for the successful implementation of the budget. Others include, Restoring the provisions made for various key projects in the 2022 budget proposal to ensure that critical projects that are cardinal to the administration are implemented and to ensure that those nearing completion do not suffer setback due to reduced funding and reinstating the N25.18 billion cut from the provision for the Power Sector Reform Programme. A few other areas are: re-instating the four Capital Projects totaling N1.42 billion in the Executive Proposal for the Federal Ministry of Water Resources; restoring the N3 billion cut from the provision made for payment of mostly long outstanding Local Contractors Debts; and transferring the National Assemblys expenditures totaling N16.59 billion in the Service Wide Vote to National Assembly Statutory Transfer provision. The amendment he said, seeks the reinstatement of the N22.0 billion cut from the provision for Sinking Fund to retire Mature Loans; reinstatement of cuts made from provisions for the recurrent spendings of Nigerias Foreign Missions; restoration of reductions in provisions for allowances payable to personnel of the Nigerian Navy and Police Formations and Commands; and removal of all capital projects that were replicated in the 2022 Appropriation Act; following the identification of 139 out of 254 such projects totaling N3.24 billion for deletion from the budget. In his contribution, Gabriel Suswam (PDP, Benue) bemoaned the high tax expenditure in the 2022 budget. Advertisements Tax expenditures are waivers that are given to individuals or companies. If you look at the tax expenditure in 2022, it is about N1 trillion and totally unnecessary. It is not just what the president has sent here, let us consider those areas that can help them save money, because we might decide to step down those tax expenditure, he said. After the second reading, the bill was referred to the Committee on Appropriation for further work. The Committee was given one week to report back to the chamber in plenary. The Federal Executive Council (FEC) has approved a revised National Gender Policy to promote gender equality, good governance and accountability across the three tiers of government in the country. The Minister of Women Affairs, Pauline Tallen, made the disclosure when she briefed State House correspondents on the outcome of the Council meeting, presided over by Vice-President Yemi Osinbajo, in Abuja on Wednesday. The approval came a day after the National Assembly failed to pass about five bills aimed at promoting more opportunities for women in politics, governance and in the society at large, while voting on the proposed amendments to the 1999 Constitution. According to the minister, the policy represents a set of minimum standards expected of Nigerian government to meet its mandate for gender equality, good governance, accountability and being socially responsive to the needs of its vulnerable group. She said: Today, the Ministry of Women Affairs presented a memo on the National Gender Policy to the Federal Executive Council. This memo is a revised National Gender Policy 2021 2026. It represents a set of minimum standards expected of Nigerian government to meet its mandate for gender equality, good governance, accountability and being socially responsive to the needs of its vulnerable group. Equity remains the foundation of the core principles of agenda 2030 which says Leave no one behind. I want to put on record that Mr President has done so much to support women through numerous pro-woman projects. This memo today that has been approved by council has gone again to clearly state the fact that Mr President is committed to make a difference as far as women issues are concerned. This has also come at the right time. Im sure youre all aware that the whole month of March is set aside by the international community to United Nations to celebrate activities that concern women and womens contribution towards national development. The minister thanked the president on behalf of all Nigerian women for ensuring the approval of the policy at this time as we celebrate the International Womens Day. On National Assemblys rejection of the bill which sought extra legislative seats for women, and Affirmative Action for Women in Political Parties Administration, Mrs Tallen urged Nigerians to pray for the members of Parliament, describing their action as show of shame. She threatened to mobilise Nigerian women to strategise during the 2023 election. I urge all Nigerians to help us pray for the men that killed this bill yesterday in the National Assembly, she said. The News Agency of Nigeria (NAN) reports that bills failed to garner the required number of votes to scale through during the clause-by-clause consideration at the ongoing constitution amendment at both chambers in the National Assembly on Tuesday. The lawmakers had voted against the bill to create special seats for women in the national and state assemblies They also voted against a bill which seeks provision for affirmative action for women in political parties administration. Mrs Tallen maintained that the decision to turn down the proposed legislations was unfortunate. She, however, expressed optimism that there would be light at the end of the tunnel. It clearly shows that the men that were against the bill dont have any respect for women, its clear. But I am not generalising, not all the men in the National Assembly. We have the figures, 72 men in the House of representative voted in support of the bill. So, Im not generalising. We are saying that, for those that dont believe in it, we will continue to intensify advocacy for them to believe in gender equality, and the role that women can play when they are on the decision table to make Nigeria better. I want to assure you, that all hope is not lost. I have reassured Nigerian women that we should not be daunted, we should remain resilient. And we have already put in place strategies. Advertisements Last night we all met the key civil society organisations and other women activists. We are strategising with the female members in both Houses of National Assembly. And I want to assure you, that Nigeria women will not give up, well keep pushing until we achieve the affirmative action. Meanwhile, the Minister of Humanitarian affairs, Disaster Management and Social Development, Sadiya Umar-Farouk, disclosed that the Council approved the National Policy for the Protection and Assistance of Trafficked Persons and the Protocol for Identification, Safe Return and Rehabilitation of Traffic Persons in Nigeria. These memos are very essential to what the NAPTIP does, that is the National Agency for the Prohibition of Trafficking in Persons, and they will help to guide our work and action as regards to the protection and assistance of trafficked persons, she said. Laolu Akande, the media aide to the Vice-President, also told the correspondents that the Council approved N1.19 billion for the supply and installation of two sets of complete high-capacity passenger security screening systems for the Murtala Mohammed International Airports, Lagos and Nnamdi Azikiwe International Airport in Abuja. There was also approval gotten by the Aviation Minister for the supply and installation of airfield ground lightning materials for the Murtala Mohammed International Airport, Lagos, and the Nnamdi Azikiwe International Airport, Abuja and also the Mallam Aminu Kano International Airport, Kano at the sum of N2,329,961,099.60, he added. (NAN) The All Progressives Congress (APC) has approved a zoning committee, ahead of the March 26 National Convention. John Akpanudodehe, the National Secretary, APC Caretaker and Extra-ordinary Convention Planning Committee (CECPC), said this in a statement on Wednesday in Abuja. Mr Akpanudodehe said that Governor AbdulRahaman AbdulRazak of Kwara State would head the committee which has Deputy President of the Senate, Ovie Omo-Agege, as Deputy Chairman. He named other members to include Nkem Okeke, the Anambra Deputy Governor who would serve the Secretary, as well as Etim Nyong, Mustapha Salihu, Teslim Folarin and Sadeeq Sule-Iko Sami. Mr Akpankudohede said the committee was expected to submit its report to the APC leadership on March 7. Kaduna State Governor, Nasir El-Rufai, had said last week that positions earlier held by the north will now go to the south and vice versa. In the zoning list seen by PREMIUM TIMES, the position of the National Chairman was zoned to the North-central which comprises Benue, Kogi, Kwara, Nasarawa, Niger, and Plateau States). (NAN) The Japanese government on Wednesday donated 859,600 doses of AstraZeneca COVID-19 vaccines to Nigeria. The donation was made through the COVID-19 Vaccines Global Assess Facility, COVAX. Speaking at the handover ceremony in Abuja, the Executive Director of the National Primary Health Care Development Agency (NPHCDA), Faisal Shuaib, said the Japanese government also donated 175 Solar Direct Drive (SDD) refrigerators to aid COVID-19 response in the country. Mr Shuaib said today also marks the one-year anniversary of the first COVID-19 vaccine delivered to Nigeria. I am pleased to inform you that the Government of Japan through the COVAX facility has donated 859,600 doses of AstraZeneca vaccine and 175 Solar Direct drive Refrigerators to aid COVID-19 response in Nigeria, he said. Mr Shuaib said the vaccines bolster the global effort to defeat the coronavirus pandemic and demonstrate the ongoing commitment of the global community to ensuring Nigeria receives the vaccines it needs. He said the SDD refrigerators will be useful because of their advantages in independent and uninterrupted power source for vaccine storage. We have since deployed the SDDs to 24 states of the federation based on vaccine coverage, equity and making sure we reach the last mile, he said. One year after Mr Shuaib said today marks one year Nigeria received its first shipment of COVID-19 vaccines through COVAX. He said the country has so far received 67,973,250 doses of COVID-19 vaccines including 2,100,000 doses out of the Johnson and Johnson (J&J) vaccines procured by the government. He said about 96.9 per cent of the vaccines received were through the COVAX facility. While more than 47 million doses are in the pipeline from now to the end of the year. The vaccines include AstraZeneca, Moderna, Pfizer and J&J donated by GAVI and different countries including United States, United Kingdom, Slovenia, Finland, Greece, Iceland, Spain, Italy, France, Norway, Canada, Germany Ireland, Switzerland, India, and Japan, he said. Nigeria had on March 2,2021 received its first shipment of 3.94 million doses of the Oxford-AstraZeneca COVID-19 vaccine through the COVAX facility. As of today, Nigeria has successfully vaccinated 17,914,944 eligible persons with the first dose, representing 16 per cent of the eligible population targeted for vaccination in the country. Commitments Speaking at the handover ceremony, Japanese Ambassador to Nigeria, Matsunaga Kazuyoshi, said the donations were made as part of its commitment to ensure vaccine equity around the world. Mr Kazuyoshi said the Japanese government is honored to be a part of this global vaccination effort in Nigeria by providing 859,600 doses of vaccines. He noted that the SDD refrigerators will ensure stable delivery of vaccines to vaccination sites, with the necessary temperature controls. He said these efforts are key to ensure vaccines get to the people who need them. These vaccines will help save lives, protect livelihoods, and heal economies currently affected by the pandemic. In our interdependent world, Japan and Nigeria are united, beyond borders so we must work together to ensure we are all protected, he said. In his remarks, WHO country representative, Walter Mulombo, said the donation of the COVID-19 vaccines to Nigeria, which began one year ago, has proven to be beneficial. Mr Mulombo said the country has witnessed an increase in the number of people protected from the severity of the deadly virus. This is yet another example of how the world is working together to defeat COVID-19, he said. Advertisements The United Nations General Assembly Wednesday approved a non-binding resolution condemning Russia for the invasion of Ukraine and demanding an immediate withdrawal, Al-Jazeera reported. The vote saw 141 countries in favour, five against and 35 abstaining. People in Ukraine desperately need peace and people around the world demand it, UN chief Antonio Guterres said in an interview after the vote. Russia last week vetoed a draft UN Security Council resolution that condemned its invasion of Ukraine. Seven days into Russias invasion of Ukraine, both countries are billed to continue talks on Thursday in Belarus, Russian news agencies cited Moscows negotiator Vladimir Medinsky as saying. The first round of talks ended on Monday with no agreement except to keep talking. Also, Russias Foreign Minister Sergey Lavrov, in an exclusive interview with Al Jazeera, said Ukraine has the capability and the technology to manufacture a nuclear weapon The mission is clear to disarm Ukraine and not deploy and manufacture any weapons that threaten Russias security. Mr Lavrov added that Russia had made its requests clear. President Putin has repeatedly expressed our position, which our delegation conveyed in the talks with Ukraine in Belarus: Crimea is part of Russia; recognising the Luhansk and Donetsk Peoples Republics within the borders of the regions of Luhansk and Donetsk; the eradication of Nazism as was the case with Nazi Germany, he said. Ukraines emergency services said on Wednesday that more than 2,000 civilians had been killed since the invasion began last Thursday. Olajide Omokore has denied buying cars and houses for a former petroleum minister, Diezani Alison-Madueke, and other officials of the Nigerian National Petroleum Corporation (NNPC). The businessman, who has been reported to be an ally of Mrs Alison-Madueke, made the denial on Tuesday while testifying in his trial on money laundering and procurement fraud charges at the Federal High Court in Abuja. Mr Omokore, who maintains that his relationship with Mrs Alison-Madueke was not beyond official, denied buying houses for the former minister. Mrs Alison-Madueke, who fled the country shortly after leaving office as the petroleum minister in May 2015, also has pending corruption charges against her at the Federal High Court in Abuja. The Economic and Financial Crimes Commission (EFCC) is prosecuting him and his co-defendants on nine charges of criminal diversion of about $1.6 billion proceeds petroleum products belonging to the federal government. Mr Omokore and his co-defendants face allegations of underhand dealings in connection to the Strategic Alliance Agreement (SAA) existing between his firms and the NNPC on OMLs 26, 30, 34 and 42. He is standing trial alongside two of his companies, Atlantic Energy Brass Development Limited and Atlantic Energy Drilling Concepts Limited, and others. The other co-defendants include a former Managing Director of the Nigerian Petroleum Development Company (NPDC), Victor Briggs. The rest are, a former Group Executive Director, Exploration and Production of the Nigerian National Petroleum Corporation (NNPC), Abiye Membere; and a former Manager, Planning and Commercial of the NNPC, David Mbanefo. EFCCs spokesperson, Wilson Uwujaren, said in a press statement on Wednesday that Mr Omokore opened his defence testifying as the first defence witness (DW1) on Tuesday. Denials Led in evidence by his counsel, Rafiu Lawal-Rabana, a Senior Advocate of Nigeria (SAN), Mr Omokore told the court that the allegations that he purchased houses, for Ms Alison-Madueke, former minister of petroleum resources, and cars for officials of NNPC, and politicians were untrue. The defence lawyer specifically asked Mr Omokore if he and his firms gave out a penthouse located as House 22 and 21 in Admiralty, Ikoyi, and Belevista Estate in Ikoyi, was true. Responding, Mr Omokore said: My answer is simple. There was nothing like that. I did not do anything like that. There is no document to that effect. I did not give anything to Diezani as alleged. There is nothing between me and the minister that was more than official. I did not conspire with anyone. I had a facility of about $100million (dollars) in Florida. Even here, the generators I am using in my office, two of them, First Bank gave me as one of their best customers. So, how can anyone say that I defrauded the government? For what? NNPC official did get cars from me He also claimed that he did not buy cars for any officials of the NNPC. Buying cars is part of my philanthropic gesture. I buy cars for people, churches, NGOs, and my friends, Mr Omokore said, but quickly added, I never gave any car to Mbanefo (co-defendant and ex-NNPC official). He added: I gave a car to the King of Obosi who is my friend, and Mbanefo happens to be from Obosi. I am the Enyimba of Obosi and up till today I go to the palace for meetings. My company is a very big company and I gave them instructions that I wanted to gift a car to my friend, the king of Obosi for the chieftaincy title he conferred on me. My companys management then gave the car to kabiyesi. It was in the papers. The local television in Anambra carried it. Mbanefo is from Obosi, and we met at the palace. The company gave the car to Mbanefo to give to the Igwe. Asked whether it was true that he also provided a car gift to Abiye Membere (5th defendant), the witness answered in the affirmative, but added that the gift had nothing to do with the Strategic Alliance Agreement (SAA) between his company and the NNPC. He said the gift was rather for Mr Mbanefos 50th birthday. Engr Membere has been my friend since a very long time, even when he was in Exxon Mobil. Our relationship dates back to ages. I went to his village three weeks ago for the burial of his mum. About 10 years ago he buried someone and I was there. We are family friends. He buys gifts and perfumes for me. I gave the car to him during his birthday. I did that for his birthday which was a milestone, his 50th birthday. Membere did not even know we were delivering a car to him. It was a surprise. It has nothing to do with the SAA. I never met with him on the SAA. I met with the DMD. He had nothing to do with the SAA. It was after we had signed the SAA that his 50th birthday came. Cross-examination by co-defendants lawyers Mr Omokore was cross-examined by the lawyer representing his two firms Atlantic Energy Brass Development Ltd and Atlantic Energy Drilling Concept Limited (the second and third defendants respectively), Adeniyi Adegbonmire, a SAN. Advertisements Fielding questions from the lawyer, Mr Omokore said he and his Atlantic Energy gave out more than 100 cars to different people before the SAA was signed. Asked whether he knew Kola Aluko as one of the directing minds of Atlantic Energy Drilling Concept, he answered in the affirmative. Also asked if Mr Aluko could give instructions to the company without asking or clearing from him, the witness responded: yes, he was the managing director. The 4th defendants lawyer, Olaniran Obele, asked Mr Omokore whether he gave a car gift to the 4th defendant, Briggs. No, I did not, Mr Omokore replied, adding that it was not true that he gave car gift to Mrs Nneka Briggs, the wife of the 4th defendant. Prosecutions cross-examination The prosecuting counsel, Rotimi Jacobs, also a SAN, cross-examined Mr Omokore earlier in the proceedings. In response to a question on whether he was one of the directors and shareholders of Atlantic Energy Drilling Company, M Omokore said yes, but added that he could not remember specifically the percentage of his shares in the company. The judge, Nnamdi Dimgba, adjourned until Thursday for continuation of cross-examination. Sometimes silence can be golden in strategic communication. Weighing a situation very carefully before venturing a statement is essential, rather than the haste for justification that unnecessarily escalates a crisis. Spokespersons should realise that PR is not about issuing boisterous and confrontational releases but the creation of channels of mutual understanding, in a way that strengthens and further builds relationships. Beyond theory, strategic communication doesnt seek publicity in whatever ways through the media. It considers the dynamics of the environment, the target audiences, their behaviours, and trending issues for effective messaging. Creative thinking is crucial in strategic communication, towards offering better ideas, and sound judgment in responding to issues in the most responsible manner. Sometime in 2021, my mother was denied boarding on a Air Peace plane going from Ilorin to Abuja, even though she was among the first set of passengers who arrived the airport very early that morning. Apart from frustrating her attempt to board the aircraft, the airline further charged exorbitantly for the use of the same ticket for the next days flight. I was so bitter that I posted her plight on Facebook. As usual, while some friends expressed concern about the situation, others had contrary views. Meanwhile, the notorious sponsored social media hecklers and agents provocateur descended on the issue on the platform, spewing their routine ethnic chauvinism and religious bigotry, while misinterpreting a simple case that could be effectively addressed by the customer care service of the airline. However, a few hours after my post, one Mrs Olubunmi Korede, who I later learnt was the Air Peace Manager at the airport, reached out to my siblings and later called me privately and narrated what had really transpired that day: We discovered that Mama came early but was on the wrong queue at a counter of another airline. By the time she realised the mistake, the Air Peace Counter had been closed. We deeply regret what happened, especially to an innocent aged mother. Not only that, the Manager also personally received Mama the following day at the airport and courteously processed her travel, while still offering the airlines apologies for the incident of the previous day. That single episode influenced my loyalty to Air Peace, which then became my preferred airline on some routes. Therefore, it was quite shocking when the same airline was reported to have treated His Majesty, the Emir of Kano, Aminu Ado Bayero, unfairly by not enabling him and his entourage the opportunity of taking a connecting local flight from Lagos to Kano, after having initially created a situation that led to the delay of his international flight, on another Air Peace aircraft, from Banjul to Lagos. I also developed an interest in the business model of the owner of the airline, Allen Onyema, a Nigerian to the core, who strongly believes in a united and prosperous nation devoid of the divisive sentiments that are unfortunately attendant upon a prejudicial national outlook. During the inaugural Spokespersons Communication award, Air Peace, as a corporate citizen, was honoured for its nationalistic no-city-left-behind initiative, which connects various Nigerian cities by air, and its various citizen engagement efforts and conversations. The expansion of its different routes across diverse national and international spaces has equally been a big relief to its teeming users, in a manner that has favourably coupled with the airlines huge reductions of its fares to make them highly affordable. The activities of Air Peace also strengthen and enhance the economy of many of its beneficiary cities/states, as it truly connects Nigerians within Nigeria, giving access to safe and best-in-class air connectivity. It was, therefore, not surprising that during the faceoff between the airline and the government of the United Arab Emirates (UAE), over the discriminatory international airport slot and frequency allocation to it, the Federal Government of Nigeria stood firmly behind the Onyema-led business organisation, in supporting ones own against injustice. While retaliating the ill treatment of Air Peace in Dubai, the Buhari administration had also cut down on the frequency and slots allocated to Emirate Airlines in Nigeria, to mirror the stringent measures meted out to the Nigerian carrier in the Arab country. The UAE eventually capitulated to the demands of the government and rescinded its decision to deny Air Peace the stipulated number of slots and frequencies that would have indicated reciprocity and fairness in the bilateral air service agreement between Nigeria and the UAE Therefore, it was quite shocking when the same airline was reported to have treated His Majesty, the Emir of Kano, Aminu Ado Bayero, unfairly by not enabling him and his entourage the opportunity of taking a connecting local flight from Lagos to Kano, after having initially created a situation that led to the delay of his international flight, on another Air Peace aircraft, from Banjul to Lagos. It has been argued that the same airline created the initial problem that led to the one thereafter, and that if the Banjul flight had left on time, His Majesty and his entourage would have made it to the other flight in good time, without the need for assistance. It was reported that the protocol service attendant upon the Emir and his entourage had pleaded with the airline management to delay the take-off of the local flight as respect for the Emir, which the airline however declined. The Chief Protocol Officer to the Emir, Isa Bayero had thereafter written a letter of complaint to the Nigerian Civil Aviation Authority (NCAA), seeking punitive actions against Air Peace Airline for what he tagged as disrespect to the emir and the people of Kano State. The so-called leaked memo from the Palace to the NCAA, which has attracted all the unnecessary bickering and unwarranted attacks between aides and supporters of both the Emir and Air Peace Airline, ought to have been handled more professionally and strategically from the outset of the situation. The leaked letter subsequently attracted needless attacks and counterattacks between the admirers of the Emir of Kano and supporters of Air peaces stance on the ensuing imbroglio. It is unfortunate that many are not aware of the enviable qualities and personality of the Emir of Kano. A graduate of Mass Communication from Bayero University, the Emir had worked in the aviation sector as a spokesperson and a Flight Officer, where he earned respect as a customer-friendly, empathetic, and cultured official. An urbane and cosmopolitan personality, whose mother was a princess of Ilorin in Kwara State, Aminu had held top traditional titles in Kano, the most populous and heterogeneous city in Nigeria, before ascending to the throne of his forebears. With friends from different backgrounds and classes, the unassuming and humble Emir has consistently demonstrated great awareness of and sensitivity in dealing with people of sundry multicultural identities and religious beliefs, which have earned him tremendous respect for his capacity to engage with diversity in a positive manner. The so-called leaked memo from the Palace to the NCAA, which has attracted all the unnecessary bickering and unwarranted attacks between aides and supporters of both the Emir and Air Peace Airline, ought to have been handled more professionally and strategically from the outset of the situation. Traditional institutions deserve respect and aides of revered personages like Emirs need to be a lot more mindful of the statements they make on behalf of their principals, particularly in terms of the tone and language of communications that could ultimately become public documents, which can either enhance or tar reputations. On the other hand, Air Peace needs to be aware of the position it has attained as a respected national brand, which is a no fly-by-the night or spurious enterprise that should yield to egocentric displays that could stoke unnecessary controversy. I am of the mind that the airline has grown to become a Nigerian business for Nigerians, which should not see itself as a regional powerhouse that can engage in some form of chest-beating or the other. Sometimes silence can be golden in strategic communication. Weighing a situation very carefully before venturing a statement is essential, rather than the haste for justification that unnecessarily escalates a crisis. Spokespersons should realise that PR is not about issuing boisterous and confrontational releases but the creation of channels of mutual understanding, in a way that strengthens and further builds relationships. Yushau A. Shuaib, the author of Crisis Communication Strategies, blogs at www.YAShuaib.com, and can be reached through yashuaib@yahoo.com No doubt, the challenges plaguing Nigerias tertiary education system are multi-faceted. Addressing them does not appear to be simple. It is taxing, and requires funds indeed. A lot of funds. The most prominent avenue through which the Tertiary Education Trust Fund (TETFund) raises funds to prosecute its statutory intervention projects and programmes in Nigerian tertiary institutions is through the Education Tax known as EDT. According to a recent post on TETFunds website, the intervention agencys main source of income is the two per cent education tax paid from the assessable profit of companies registered in Nigeria. The Federal Inland Revenue Services (FIRS) collects this tax on behalf of the Fund. EDT is the magic wand for TETFund. It is through the instrumentality of the EDT that many Nigerian universities, polytechnics and Colleges of Education (CoEs) are now wearing a new look. The EDT is what TETFund deploys to construct Senate buildings, lecture theatres, science laboratories, students hostels, and staff offices, among other facilities in public tertiary institutions. One will not be exaggerating to also assert that nothing but the EDT is what facilitated the establishment of TETFunds Centre of Excellence, academic publishing centres, and research centres in several public universities, polytechnics and CoEs, across the country. How about the National Research Fund (NRF) through which TETFund awards research grants to Nigerian academics, lecturers and researchers? It is certain that the EDT is the enabler. In short, it is through the aid of the EDT that the lost glory and fortunes of many Nigerian tertiary institutions are either restored or salvaged through robust and aggressive infrastructural development on campuses. Nevertheless, the failure of registered companies (in the past) in meeting their EDT obligation appears to be constraining TETFund from accessing funds to fulfill their mandate. A former Executive Secretary of TETFund, Dr Abdullahi Bichi Baffa, sometime in 2016 alleged that over 50 per cent of registered companies in the country are evading the two per cent EDT imposed by the Federal Government, thereby putting the agency in a difficult situation. Fast forward to 2022, the administration of the incumbent TETFund helmsman, Professor Elias Sulaiman Bogoro, seems to have tackled the age-long crises of inadequate EDT. It is gratifying to note that the amount received by TETFund as EDT has risen in recent years. In 2021, for example, the intervention agency received N189 billion. Professor Bogoro, recently announced this at TETFunds 2021 Education Development Tax, EDT, Forum in Jos. The forum, organised in collaboration with the Federal Inland Revenue Service (FIRS), aimed at improving EDT in the country. The event tagged Improving EDT Collection in the Post Pandemic Era, had participants from various higher institutions of learning and other government organisations. Bogoro, who was represented by Irene Erivwo, the Director Strategic Planning and Development of TETFUND, said that the figures generated in the year under review were far lower compared to previous years. He, however, explained that the advent of COVID-19 pandemic had grossly affected the revenue generation in the nation, hence the need for deeper collaboration towards scaling up the generation of EDT. Over the years, TETFUND has been recording improvement in the education tax collection. For example, in 2013, the Fund had an EDT of more than N270 billion and since then FIRS has been striving to achieve the annual EDT targets in spite of the obvious challenges. In 2021, the fund received an EDT of N189 billion, which was considerably lower than the previous years. COVID-19 pandemic, no doubt, affected economic activities globally and this had negative effect in the EDT collection for 2021. We are equally aware that economic activities were seriously slowed down and, in some cases, halted from March 2020 when lockdown was imposed and movement within the country restricted. This affected the performance of industries and companies, which invariably affected the EDT collection for 2021, he said. Bogoro, who said the forum was an annual event, added that it would avail TETFUND and FIRS the opportunity to barnstorm on ways to improve the EDT collection. He said that the forum created an opportunity for the enhancement of the existing working relationship between the two organisations. This forum is a yearly platform where the Fund and FIRS engage in strategic discussion on EDT collection. It has become necessary for us to increase our drive in EDT collection to enable the Fund meet up with the challenges and its commitment to the development of our tertiary education system. It is worrisome that the EDT collection for 2021 was far below the target set for the year, hence the need for such a forum to address these issues, he added. Advertisements Bogoro, however, noted that TETFUND had recorded significant impact on infrastructural development, adding that the National Research Fund, NRF, has increased from N5 billion to N7.5 billion in 2020 and N8.5 billion in 2021. The Executive Secretary added that the Fund funded the establishment of centres of excellence each in twelve selected institutions between 2020 and 2021. He said that it has started a capacity building programme for beneficiary institutions aimed at improving the global competitiveness and visibility of universities, entrepreneurship and skills development for polytechnics and pedagogy skills and curriculum development for colleges of education. Muhammad Nami, the Executive Chairman of FIRS, described the forum as timely, adding that it would foster relationship and create opportunity for exchange of ideas toward the actualisation of their mandates. Represented by Dr Dick Irri, the Coordinating Director, Compliance Support Group of FIRS, Nami acknowledged that 2021 was indeed a challenging year. He, however, said that it had put modalities on ground, including the deployment of a home-grown technology and that more taxes would be collected in 2022. He maintained that the newly developed software known as Taxpromax, would enable taxpayers file and pay taxes with ease. The steady increase in the EDT portends good omen for TETFund, and also, hundreds of Nigerian tertiary institutions that are beneficiaries of the intervention agencys milk of human kindness. No doubt, the challenges plaguing Nigerias tertiary education system are multi-faceted. Addressing them does not appear to be simple. It is taxing, and requires funds indeed. A lot of funds. Rahma Olamide Oladosu writes from Abuja and can be reached through: oladosurahma@gmail.com. An intentional and most effective strategy, however, would be the development of viable partnerships, way ahead of the planning and preparation of the transition/implementation strategies. Therefore, it is important that settlors do not see themselves as competitors but rather as collaborators in addressing pertinent issues. I also recommend collaborations with broader stakeholders such as civil society organisations (CSOs) and development organisations The Petroleum Industry Act (PIA), which was signed into law in August 2021, is a game-changer for the oil industry. All-encompassing, it aims at establishing good governance, best practices, and ease of doing business in the oil and gas industry, by attempting to clarify roles and responsibilities of officials and institutions, regulate midstream and downstream activities, improve environmental compliance, transform the Nigerian National Petroleum Corporation (NNPC) into a commercially viable enterprise, and restructure the management of host communities relations. Chapter Three of the Act introduces the Host Community Development Trust (HCDT), a component that has generated comments from a wider range of stakeholders than the other components. Against the backdrop of previous restiveness within the region, and the work that many of us have undertaken there, this chapter is particularly of interest and focus to me. In restructuring the management of host communities relations, the PIA mandates the creation of the HCDT, a trust for the benefit of the host communities to which oil and gas operators (described as settlors) are obliged to make annual contributions based on three per cent of their yearly operating expenditure. The HCDT is expected to improve the quality of life of the host communities populations, and improve accountability in the management of development funds. From the PIA, it is obvious that one of the gains expected from the HCDT is sustainable community development, as indicated by the degree of interest shown in Participatory Needs Assessment and Community Development Plans to deliver such. However, preliminary reviews of the Act have revealed some obvious gaps in its provisions. High on the list of the key gaps is the absence of a provision for the direct management of grievances/conflicts on a day-to-day basis among the entities critical to the HCDT i.e., the settlors and the host communities. Instead, the PIA has assigned this role to the Nigerian Upstream Petroleum Regulatory Commission (NUPRC), which is overseeing the implementation of the HCDT. Curiously, there is no role for state governments, who are the custodians of security in their respective states where oil and gas operations take place, and to whom settlors routinely turned for help in the past. Another key gap relates to collaborations and partnerships. Although the Act empowers the Trust to receive grants, donations, gifts and honoraria, it leaves no opportunities for development partnerships to evolve. The threat here is the potential for huge wastage of resources through duplication of community organisations and projects. Then, there is the risk of settlors overlooking their local content responsibilities due to the non-harmonisation of Nigerian Content Development and Monitoring Board (NCDMB) guidelines within the Act. Lastly, the Act awards executive functions to an ad hoc committee, which may not be executable for programme and project delivery. Since the Act has allowed only the settlor to establish the leading organs of the HCDT and provide all its guidelines and control framework, it is therefore incumbent on the oil and gas operators to find means of addressing these gaps. This is the immediate way to minimise or eliminate potential grave issues that may cause serious operational challenges in managing the HCDT, and to ensure a smooth transition and successful implementation in the long run. Except NUPRC provides more operational guidelines and/or there are amendments to the Act. Before the PIA, some oil and gas operators, especially the international oil companies (IOCs), operated Global Memorandums of Understanding (GMoUs) with their host communities. These companies may find transitioning to the PIA a bit easier because, indeed, there are aspects of Chapter Three which mirror those prior terms of host community engagement. For others, the task may appear a tad daunting, especially when faced with the deadline of compliance instituted by the Commission. Nevertheless, the key to overcoming and achieving success for all companies, irrespective of experience, would be the consideration and application of a strategy with keen focus on the design, development, and institutionalisation of a suit of organisational governance policies, processes and procedure guidelines. The people in the host communities, who constitute the core of the PIA Chapter Three activities and around whom all interventions in the HCDT would revolve, should be at the core of executing this strategy effectively. It also important to note the lessons learnt successes and mistakes from the GMOU model to mitigate potential risks in implementing the HCDT. The gaps in the HCDT should also be considered and work should go towards addressing them through the HCDTs Constitution. While policies, processes, and procedures should be prepared on the basis of global performance standards, as typified by the International Financial Corporation (IFC) performance standards on environmental and social sustainability, the Equator Principles, and the United Nations Sustainable Development Goals (SDGs). An intentional and most effective strategy, however, would be the development of viable partnerships, way ahead of the planning and preparation of the transition/implementation strategies. Therefore, it is important that settlors do not see themselves as competitors but rather as collaborators in addressing pertinent issues. I also recommend collaborations with broader stakeholders such as civil society organisations (CSOs) and development organisations who have had years of on-ground experience working within the communities in the Niger Delta. An organisation like the Foundation for Partnership Initiatives in the Niger Delta (PIND), for example, has experience in supporting the implementation of initiatives under the GMOU and comes with a pedigree in designing, facilitating, and monitoring needs-driven, locally-owned and locally-implemented sustainable community development initiatives. With the deadline fast approaching, I anticipate a scramble. And for those of us on the development side of the industry, who have invested a lot and worked hard for a long time in keeping the Niger-Delta stable, one can understand our apprehension that if things are not done well, we can have a lot of issues unraveling. Nobody really has a silver bullet for solving the complex and interconnected issues in the Niger Delta region and not one organisation or individual can do it alone. Only by leveraging everyones strength and experience can we all achieve the success we desire. Tunji Idowu is the Executive Director of the Foundation for Partnership Initiatives in the Niger Delta (PIND). Governor Ifeanyi Okowa of Delta State said his administration will establish a Bureau of Public Service Reforms to enhance quality and result-oriented service in the state. The governor spoke through Emma Okafor, his Senior Special Assistant domicile in the Office of the Head of Service, who led a delegation to the Bureau of Public service Reforms on Wednesday in Abuja. Mr Okowa underscored the importance of reform in the overall growth and development of human endeavour, saying his administration would key into the federal governments reform programmes. According to him, it is imperative to initiate reforms that will entrench prudence, accountability and transparency in governance. The governor said he would partner with the BPSR to ensure a smooth take-off of the bureau in Delta. Responding, the Director-General of Bureau of Public Service Reforms, Dasuki Arabi, said the agency was established to facilitate the building of the public service into a highly functional, professional, customer-focused and result-oriented institution. Mr Arabi listed the Intergraded Payroll and Personnel Information System and Treasury Single Account as numerous reforms brought by the Federal Government that had proven to be beneficial. He said the state stood to gain a lot with the bureau, adding that the agency would facilitate its smooth take-off in the state. Mr Arabi said the bureau would encourage states to key into the reform agenda of the Federal Government. According to him, Ogun, Lagos, Kaduna and Gombe states have joined the Open Government Partnership to drive the reform of their public service. As a bureau, we are always open to working with all government agencies to see how we can render support, he said. (NAN) Cross River State Government has started to impound commercial vehicles not painted in the state colours and without a bold security number inscription. Uqua Edet, the states Commissioner for Transportation, told the News Agency of Nigeria (NAN) that the decision became necessary, following an increase in security challenges in the state. It would be recalled that in 2018, Jude Ngaji, the then Security Adviser to Governor Ben Ayade, had given a directive that all commercial vehicles be painted in the state colours of blue and White. The commercial transport operators were also required to get a security number that should be boldly inscribed on their vehicles. The transport commissioner, Mr Edet, told NAN that several meetings were held with commercial transport operators in the state on the issue with the deadline shifted many times to show consideration to the operators claim that they were going through hard times. It is important for us to know that the security challenge is growing every day. People are complaining of kidnappers and robbers using unpainted minibuses, taxis and even tricycles, known as keke. Recently, the State Security Council met and a directive was given and it wrote officially to me that all commercial vehicles in the state should be painted in the states colours. We met with the operators and gave them until February15, which has elapsed again, even though there was constant public service announcement to this effect. Having given them that window for over three weeks, we decided to set up a team that works with the security apparatus of the state to ensure that any unpainted commercial vehicle is impounded, he said. He added that the penalty for disobedience of the directive was impoundment of the vehicle after which the operator would pay the expenses of the security operatives that made the arrest. Reacting to the directive, Ekpenyong Ewa, chairman of the Tricycle Association of Nigeria, Cross River chapter, admitted that the state government had given transporters over three years to comply. Mr Ewa said some of the operators obeyed the directive but many refused. With the state colours and security numbers, the state government will be able to track vehicles in the case of any crime. Anybody that does not want to spray his vehicle with the state colours and security number knows what he is planning; there are many cultists, robbers and kidnappers parading as transporters, he said. (NAN) Governor Ifeanyi Ugwuanyi of Enugu State on Tuesday lifted the ban on tricycles, motorcycles and tippers earlier restricted in some parts of the state. Mr Ugwuanyi lifted the ban during a security meeting between him and leaders of the Association of Tricycle Riders Transport Union, Enugu State, Motorcycle Transport Union of Enugu State, Nkanu East/West branches and the Enugu State Tipper Union of Nigeria. Recall that the state government had, on February 25, banned the operations of tricycles, motorcycles and tipper trucks in Nkanu East and West local government area, as well as some selected communities in Enugu South Local Government Area. This followed the recent killings in the affected local government areas during the just concluded council elections in the state. Lifting the ban, Mr Ugwuanyi urged the leaders of the associations to do all they could to religiously fulfil their promises so that they restore the security and confidence of their passengers. He directed the Attorney General and Commissioner for Justice, Miletus Eze to immediately prepare an Executive Order vacating the ban. Earlier, the leaders of the various unions had revealed that hoodlums had infiltrated their associations to perpetrate criminal activities in the state to tarnish their image. They also disclosed that there were some among them who used their means of livelihood for criminal activities to the detriment of their collective image and fortunes. ALSO READ: Police order strict enforcement of ban on commercial tricycles in Enugu Speaking at the meeting, the State Chairman of the tricycle union, Benjamin Ikah, said the association would not fold its arms and watch its long-built reputation in Enugu State being damaged by some criminals. He added that the association would support the efforts of the security agencies in the state to fish out the bad ones in their association. Mr Ikah condemned the activities of those who used tricycles for criminal activities in the state. He promised that they would leave no stone unturned in ensuring that those using tricycles for criminal activities were fished out. He appealed to Governor Ugwuanyi to temper justice with mercy. Also speaking, the President, Enugu State Tipper Union of Nigeria, Andrew Nweke, expressed dismay that the union had been infiltrated by criminals. Mr Nweke assured Mr Ugwuanyi that the union would cooperate with security agencies to fish out the bad ones among their members. (NAN) The Anambra House of Assembly has urged Governor Willie Obiano to rehabilitate the Ogbaukwu Cave and Waterfalls in Owerre-Ezukala, Orumba South Local Government Area, for tourism purposes. The resolution followed a motion raised by Emmanuel Nwafor, representing Orumba South State Constituency, under Matters of Urgent Public Importance, at the plenary on Tuesday. Mr Nwafor, in a motion, said that the cave was one of the largest caves in Nigeria. It calls for concern that the deplorable condition of the cave has turned it to a danger zone instead of a recreational facility for tourist attraction. Tourism is one of the major revenue drives for most developed nations. I strongly believe that if the state government can rehabilitate this cave for tourism purposes, it will create employment and generate revenue for the state, he said. Supporting the motion, Pete Ibida, representing Njikoka ll State Constituency, said that countries like Kenya made so much revenue from tourism. I urge Governor Obiano to invest in the cave and make it a modern tourist institution so that people will travel from all over to enjoy our natural endowment. Governor Obiano should also prioritise the rehabilitation of this cave as a parting gift to the people of the state, Mr Ibida said. Ejike Okechukwu, representing Anaocha State Constituency, advised the state government to develop tourism as a means of diversifying the state economy. Such diversification would attract foreign investors and exchange, Mr Okechukwu said. The Speaker, Uchenna Okafor, urged the governor to direct the state commissioners for tourism and diaspora, and any other relevant agency to rehabilitate the Ogbaukwu Cave and Waterfalls for tourism purposes. The House sympathised with the people of Ebenebe Community in Awka North over the recent killings at a burial ceremony. The House, however, urged residents to be security conscious at all times. (NAN) Jonah Onuoha, a don, said on Tuesday that Russia could sustain its attacks on Ukraine in spite of the sanctions imposed against it by the U.S. and its allies. Mr Onuoha, who is the head of the Political Science Department, University of Nigeria, Nsukka (UNN), said this in an interview with the News Agency of Nigeria (NAN), in a reaction to the raging conflict between the two eastern European countries. He, however, said the intervention of neutral parties could help bring about a ceasefire and give room for negotiations towards sustainable peace in the area. The don said the neutral countries could assure Russia that Ukraine would not join North Atlantic Treaty Organisation (NATO) as well as prevail on Ukraine to suspend every move to join NATO. The bone of contention of Russia as far as the invasion of Ukraine is concerned is that Ukraine indicated interest to join NATO which Russia sees as a threat, with Ukraine being a neighbouring country. Russia believes if Ukraine were to join NATO, it would provide the opportunity for western countries to attack it. If Russia is assured that Ukraine would not join NATO, it will pull out its military forces in Ukraine the next minute and that will end the war, he said. The political science lecturer said imposing sanctions on Russia would not solve the problem or achieve the desired results now because Russia has a strong economy and is among the worlds superpowers. Whatever sanctions are placed against Russia, it will take time before the country begins to feel the full effect. Russia does not see any sanction imposed against it as anything so significant that it will panic and pull out from Ukraine. World leaders should give priority to how to reach a cease-fire agreement between Russia and Ukraine, rather than focusing attention on placing sanctions that may not have the desired effect. If this war is allowed to continue, Russia might overrun Ukraine and the casualty rate might be too high for Ukraine, he said. The Ukrainian President Volodymyr Zelenskyy, Monday, officially signed an application for Ukraines membership in the European Union, according to a post from his verified Facebook page. (Zelenskyy) has just signed a historic document Ukraines application for European Union membership, tweeted Andrii Sybiha, the deputy head of the presidents office. He added that Ukraines prime minister and head of parliament also signed a joint statement. The signing of the document occurred hours after Mr Zelenskyy had released a video appealing to the EU for membership and calling on Russian forces to go home. The Ukranian leader urged the EU to allow Ukraines immediate entry under what he described as a new special procedure, on which he did not elaborate. Our goal is to be with all Europeans and, most importantly, to be equal, he said. I am confident that it is fair. I am confident we have deserved it. I am confident that all this is possible, he added. Speaking at a news conference on February 15 amid rising tensions, Russian President Vladimir Putin said Moscow did not want a war in Europe but demanded that the issue of Kyivs relationship with NATO be resolved in its entirety immediately. Mr Putin, who made the remark after talks with German Chancellor Olaf Scholz, said Russia had been informed by Western powers that its neighbour would not join the transatlantic military alliance in the near future. But he warned that was not a satisfactory assurance. (NAN) A mother, Chigozie Onuobu and her three children have been burnt to death in Ebonyi State, Nigerias South-east, during a fire incident in their home. The incident occurred on Tuesday in Aguabata Echara, Ikwo Local government area of the state. It was gathered that the fire occurred at night while the woman and her children were sleeping in their thatched house. The cause of the fire could not be ascertained at the time of filing the report. Samuel Okoro, a relative of the woman, confirmed the incident. Mr Okoro, who said he visited the scene upon hearing of the incident, said he suspected arson. I dont think it was not deliberate. There was no trace of bush burning around the building. Moreover, they have a separate kitchen where they cook. ALSO READ: Fire razes shops in Ladipo market The woman is my cousin. The man (her husband) married two wives but the first wife is not living with them in the same compound, he said. Continuing, Mr Okoro said, I was told that when some people called the husband of the deceased on the development, he nearly fainted. However, when we asked about him, the people said they didnt know his whereabouts. Maybe they felt we wanted to beat the man or express our anger. But we will go back, especially when the burnt bodies are still there. The police spokesperson in the state, Loveth Odah, could not be reached immediately for comments, as she was said to be in a meeting. A married man, Kazeem Oladimeji, reportedly drank the popular insecticide known as Sniper and died inside his car after allegedly killing his female lover. The two bodies were found inside his car by a roadside close to his residence at the Muren area of Ibafo in Ogun State. Witnesses said the man visited his lover three days ago at an apartment he rented for her in the Bariga area of Lagos. The couple reportedly engaged in a fierce argument after which Mr Oladimeji hit the lady on the head with a stick and she passed out. Mr Oladimeji reportedly rushed her into his vehicle, drove to his private residence at Ibafo where he dropped a suicide note for his wife. He then drank the insecticide and went back into his car The car, with the plate number LSD 992 HH, had a helmet on the dashboard suggesting that the owner might be an engineer or a contractor. There was also a Redeemed Christian Church of God sticker pasted at the back. The duos decomposing bodies were discovered two days after they died. A video of passersby shouting and peeping through the vehicles glass windows was shared on social media. Contacted, the Ogun state Police Public Relations Officer, Abimbola Oyeyemi, confirmed the incident adding that it was a case of murder and suicide and not sex romp as widely speculated. I have also seen the video where people were speculating that the two of them died after a sex romp. That is not the case, in fact, the case was reported in a police station at Bariga because the girls neighbour saw the man while (he was) rushing the lady into his car. Their body had been deposited at a mortuary. That was a clear case of murder and suicide. Budding trees and blooming flowers. The return of robins, loons and other migrating birds. The return of bees, butterflies and frogs. Melting snow and lake ice. Longer days and light in the evening. Shedding the winter garments. The myriad scents of flowering trees and plants. Vote View Results DISTRICT 3 FIRE DEPARTMENT/PHOTOIntegrity Towing on Route 22 was destroyed in a fire that began Sunday afternoon. Beekmantown Fire Chief Darryl Menard said when his department first arrived, the fire was already spreading, but nobody was injured. PORTLAND, Ore., March 2, 2022 /PRNewswire/ -- Allied Market Research recently published a report, titled, "Business Analytics Software Market by Component (Software and Service), Deployment Model (Cloud and On-premise), Application (Customer Analytics, Supply Chain Analytics, Marketing Analytics, Pricing Analytics, Risk & Credit Analytics, and Others), Enterprise Size (Large Enterprises and SMEs), and Industry Vertical (IT & Telecom, Retail & E-Commerce, BFSI, Manufacturing, Healthcare, Government, Education, and Others): Global Opportunity Analysis and Industry Forecast, 2021-2030 ". As per the report, the global business analytics software industry was pegged at $61.10 billion in 2020, and is expected to reach $177.00 billion by 2030, growing at a CAGR of 11.2% from 2021 to 2030. Major determinants of the market growth Increase in adoption of business analytics software by organizations and rise in demand for cloud-based business analytics software among SMEs have boosted the growth of the global business analytics software market. However, high implementation costs of business analytics software and dearth of skilled workforce hinder the market growth. On the contrary, trends such as social media analytics and text analytics and rise in need to gain insights for business planning would open new opportunities for the market players. Download Report Sample (237 Pages PDF with Insights) at: https://www.alliedmarketresearch.com/request-sample/3216 Covid-19 scenario: The Covid-19 pandemic severely affected the market due to sudden decline in demand for business analytics software. As governments of many countries implemented lockdown in several countries and halted international travel to curb the spread of virus, several businesses took a hit. Following the recovery from the pandemic, the market is expected to get back on track. The adoption of work from home culture has positively affected the demand for cloud-based business analytics software. This will continue post-pandemic. Get detailed COVID-19 impact analysis on the business analytics software: https://www.alliedmarketresearch.com/request-for-customization/3216 The service segment to manifest the highest CAGR through 2030 By component, the service segment is estimated to portray the highest CAGR of 12.1% during the forecast period. This is due to rise in data size and complexity. However, the software segment held the largest share in 2020, accounting for more than half of the global business analytics software market, as they help business enterprises by providing better management tools than existing ones. The customer analytics segment dominated the market By application, the customer analytics segment held the largest share in 2020, contributing to nearly one-fourth of the global business analytics software industry, due to rise in consumer behavior analytics trends and rise in competitiveness of modern business world. However, the risk & credit analytics segment is projected to manifest the highest CAGR of 13.8% during the forecast period, owing to improving risk detection and decision-making capabilities of business analytics solutions. North America held the lion's share By region, the global business analytics software market across North America held the largest share in 2020, accounting for nearly one-third of the market. This is due to rise in awareness in regards to business analytics solutions. However, the market across Asia-Pacific is expected to register the highest CAGR of 11.0% during the forecast period, owing to rise in digitization among companies and increased digital transformation of the region. For Purchase Enquiry: https://www.alliedmarketresearch.com/purchase-enquiry/3216 Major market players Adobe Fair Isaac Corporation Google LLC. IBM Corporation Microsoft Corporation Oracle Corporation Qlik Salesforce.com, Inc. SAP SE SAS Institute Inc. Access AVENUE- A Subscription-Based Library (Premium on-demand, subscription-based pricing model) at: hthttps://www.alliedmarketresearch.com/library-access Avenue is a user-based library of global market report database, provides comprehensive reports pertaining to the world's largest emerging markets. It further offers e-access to all the available industry reports just in a jiffy. By offering core business insights on the varied industries, economies, and end users worldwide, Avenue ensures that the registered members get an easy as well as single gateway to their all-inclusive requirements. Avenue Library Subscription | Request for 14 days free trial of before buying: https://www.alliedmarketresearch.com/avenueTrial Similar Reports: Wi-SUN Technology Market Expected to Reach $10,590 Million by 2030 Application Transformation Market Expected to Reach $25.37 Billion by 2027 Tag Management System Market Expected to Reach $1,722 Million by 2027 About Us: Allied Market Research (AMR) is a full-service market research and business-consulting wing of Allied Analytics LLP based in Portland, Oregon. Allied Market Research provides global enterprises as well as medium and small businesses with unmatched quality of "Market Research Reports" and "Business Intelligence Solutions." AMR has a targeted view to provide business insights and consulting to assist its clients to make strategic business decisions and achieve sustainable growth in their respective market domain. Pawan Kumar, the CEO of Allied Market Research, is leading the organization toward providing high-quality data and insights. We are in professional corporate relations with various companies and this helps us in digging out market data that helps us generate accurate research data tables and confirms utmost accuracy in our market forecasting. Each and every data presented in the reports published by us is extracted through primary interviews with top officials from leading companies of domain concerned. Our secondary data procurement methodology includes deep online and offline research and discussion with knowledgeable professionals and analysts in the industry. Contact: David Correa 5933 NE Win Sivers Drive #205, Portland, OR 97220 United States Toll Free: +1-800-792-5285 UK: +44-845-528-1300 Hong Kong: +852-301-84916 India (Pune): +91-20-66346060 Fax: +1-855-550-5975 help@alliedmarketresearch.com Web: https://www.alliedmarketresearch.com Follow Us on: LinkedIn Twitter Logo: https://mma.prnewswire.com/media/636519/Allied_Market_Research_Logo.jpg SOURCE Allied Market Research NEW DELHI, March 2, 2022 /PRNewswire/ -- Breakthrough India's Pan-Asia Summit 'Reframe' kick-started today with an insightful discussion on what it will entail to end Gender-Based Violence in the next 10 years. The 3-day Pan-Asia summit 'Reframe' has brought together non-profit organizations, industry experts, thought leaders and media to discuss ways to create a future without Gender-based Violence. The summit aims to develop specific areas of advocacy for concrete guidance on prevention and redressal of Gender-based Violence and Gender Based Discrimination (GBD). Breakthrough has been working on addressing violence & discrimination against women and girls for over 2 decades by focusing on transformation of patriarchal norms and narratives across India. The organization enables young change makers to transform themselves and others by building their leadership in making violence unacceptable. Sohini Bhattacharya, in her welcome address, said, "The aim of this regional summit is to co-create a future agenda in the Asian context, including setting priorities, sharing of strategies for achieving and measuring progress on preventing Gender-Based Violence and Discrimination. Leveraging the opportunity provided to us with the launch of Generation Equality Forum, in 2020, advancing a shared agenda on Gender-based Violence specifically for Asia is important for two reasons. While national level advocacy is important to move national level commitments aligned to SDG goal 5, regional coalitions and partnerships play a central role to align efforts and resources at a regional level. It also enables strengthening the roll-out and implementation of a multi-sectoral response to urgently address gender-based violence; with a particular focus on women and girls in all their diversities across this vast and diverse region." The surge of violence has disproportionately affected those who were already most likely to experience GBV those facing intersecting and compounding oppressions on the basis of gender, race, class, ability, sexual orientation and other characteristics. Adolescent girls, in particular, have faced a range of issues that are likely to increase their risk of facing GBV across their lifetimes, including being pulled out of school, being refused access to sexual and reproductive health information and services, and being forced to marry early, which are all risk factors for later GBV. Ten million more girls are at risk of becoming child brides by 2030. Wangshu Lian, an LGBTI activist with Common Language and Chinese Lala Alliance, said, "Building agency and leadership are two critical components at the heart of combatting Gender-Based Violence. Feminist civil society organizations supporting marginalized communities should be empowered with agency and technical know-how to tackle Gender-Based Violence. Additionally, funding needs to be prioritized for these organizations to drive social change." "The experiences of the last two years during the pandemic have worsened long-standing gender discriminations. But I think there is recognition that gender-based violence is a pandemic too even though they keep referring to it as the shadow pandemic. But there is recognition that COVID-19 has increased the vulnerability of women, girls and LBTQ+ people to violence and abuse. Some violence has moved out of physical spaces into online ones, with increased reported in cyberstalking, bullying and sexual harassment. Equally, the GBV that women, including transgender persons and girls are facing appears to be more severe and sustained, perhaps reflecting the intensity of lockdowns and increased difficulty in escaping abuse," added Ms. Bhattacharya. Sarah Knibbs, Deputy Regional Director, UN Women Regional Office for Asia and the Pacific, in her address remarked, "We really need bold actions to make progress towards gender equality and to see those gains in everyone's life. Globally, data suggests that 1 in 3 women experiences violence. The best way to end Gender-Based Violence is to prevent it from happening by addressing the root and structural causes of it." Working with youth is the best path for sustained progress towards gender equality in eradicating gender-based violence." An Oxfam International analysis in 70 countries over 40 years has found that the most vital and consistent factor driving policy change has been feminist activism. Feminist movements and organizations have changed the way we think about GBV, drawing attention to the issue and stirring hearts and minds globally, while also deepening our understanding of its root causes and the interventions that are most effective in addressing it. Such organizations has been facing tremendous pressures from authoritarian regimes and regulations world over." Zharin Zhafrael - Co Director Musawah, said, "Organizing a structural movement is key to addressing Gender-Based Violence. GBV needs to be tackled at all levels to build a gender-equal society. Egalitarian law and favourable family conditions are critical for economic empowerment of women in the Arab world." World Health Organization's (WHO) regional estimates suggest that South Asia and South-East Asia regions have the highest rate of intimate partner violence (IPV) in the world, at 43 percent and 33 percent respectively. Four South Asian countries (Bangladesh, India, Pakistan and Nepal in order of prevalence) feature among the top fifteen countries with the highest national prevalence of physical intimate partner violence as reported by the Demographic and Health Surveys. The summit is particularly significant in this context and will pave way for a gender-equal world. Meera Devi - Bureau Chief, Khabar Lahariya - Chambal Media, said, "The voices of women and those from marginalized communities should reach the government. More often than not, their voices are silenced and they are left without any help. Making their voices heard is one way of empowering them. And this will help us significantly in addressing Gender-Based Violence." SOURCE Breakthrough India PRAGUE, March 2, 2022 /PRNewswire/ -- Zentiva is a major developer and producer of high-quality and affordable medicines in Europe. Zentiva will donate 100,000 packs of medicines to humanitarian aid programs targeted at helping the citizens of Ukraine. The medicines will include life-saving hospital medicines, cardiovascular medicines, pain medication, and anti-infectives. The Company is working with governmental organisations and NGOs, as they respond to the urgent requests from the Ukrainian government and Ukrainian citizens as they cross the borders into the EU. "There is an urgent need for medicines and requests are coming in very fast. Zentiva has large manufacturing operations in the Czech Republic (Prague) and Romania (Bucharest) so we can help by responding quickly to support the citizens of Ukraine and their need for medicines. We are in close contact with several governments to be ready to support and have pledged 100,000 packs of medicines", said Sona Porubska Head of Zentiva Corporate Affairs. The donation plan is part of a broader set of activities being undertaken by the Company to provide support to Ukrainian citizens, including the Zentiva Ukraine team, their families, and our partners in the country. About Zentiva Zentiva is a producer of high-quality affordable medicines serving patients in Europe and beyond. With a dedicated team of more than 4,700 people and a network of production sites - including flagship sites in Prague, Bucharest, and Ankleshwar - Zentiva strives to be the champion of branded and generic medicines in Europe to better support people's daily healthcare needs. At Zentiva it is our aspiration that healthcare should be a right and not a privilege. More than ever, people need better access to high-quality affordable medicines and healthcare. We work in partnership with physicians, pharmacists, wholesalers, regulators, and governments to provide the everyday solutions that we all depend on. Visit us at www.zentiva.com. Media Contact Mounira Lemoui Head of Communications ZENTIVA GROUP, a.s. U Kabelovny 529/16, Dolni Mecholupy, 102 00 Prague 10 Mobil: (+420) 727 873 159/ E-mail: [email protected] Logo - https://mma.prnewswire.com/media/1757203/ZENTIVA_Logo.jpg SOURCE Zentiva OXFORD, England, March 2, 2022 /PRNewswire/ -- Adam Caller, Founder and CEO of Tutors International, today donated 1000 to the Save the Children Ukraine Appeal. Says Caller: "We at Tutors International have been deeply moved by the stories coming out of Ukraine and feel strongly that if every UK company gave something, we could help Ukrainian children in their battle to survive." "Let's work together to save children in crisis", urges Adam Caller "Dig deep", to help Ukraine's children asks Adam Caller Caller continues: "Those children who have not been forced to flee the country as refugees are living in fear, many forced to shelter in inhospitable conditions such as basements and bomb shelters, often in sub-zero temperatures." Dig Deep Caller goes on to say: "Many people are sympathetic to the Ukrainian plight but there's no doubt that for many, distance breeds apathy and because it's not happening to us, in our own backyard, we turn a blind eye to the injustices happening. However, we must bear in mind that this is happening now, in the 21st century, in Europe's seventh-largest country. The very least that company directors can do to help is to dig deep into their financial coffers and donate generously." "Every 100 donated enables the purchase of either ten school-in-a-bag kits, six family hygiene packs or one month's food supply for two families," Caller points out. He entreats company directors to join him in his attempt to deliver lifesaving aid to the 3.5 million vulnerable Ukrainian children and their families as soon as possible. About Tutors International Tutors International provides an unparalleled private tutoring service that matches the right private home tutor with the right child, in order for the student to fully reach their personal potential and academic excellence. Delivering an international private tuition service for children of all ages at different points in their educational journeys, Tutors International is founded on a commitment to finding the perfect tutor to realise the specific goals and aspirations of each student. Tutors are available for residential full-time positions, after-school assistance, and homeschooling. Founded in 1999 by Adam Caller, Tutors International is a private company based in Oxford, a city renowned for academic excellence. Our select clientele receives a personally tailored service, with discretion and confidentiality guaranteed. Contact Details Web: www.tutors-international.com Email:[email protected] Phone: +44 (0) 1865 435 135 Tutors International Clarendon House 52 Cornmarket Street Oxford OX1 3HJ UK SOURCE Tutors International MINNEAPOLIS, March 2, 2022 /PRNewswire/ -- Aleran Software announced today it is opening its first office outside of Minnesota in San Diego. "San Diego's at the epicenter of the new manufacturing and B2B tech growth engine," said Aleran Software CEO Alex Sayyah. "The days of industry pessimism and tolerance for good-enough operations have transitioned into a manufacturing sector that is surging with real value, with real operations that deliver that value fast. San Diego's and Southern California's resurgence and re-shoring, coupled with new generations of software that's nimble and streamlined make this the place to be." San Diego provides a logical hub for Aleran in Southern California. The San Diego IT sector saw three-year revenue growth of 188% entering 2020. Meanwhile, nearby Los Angeles reached $2.8 billion in sales of industrial space from January to August 2021, the highest of any U.S. market, followed by the Inland Empire with $2.3 billion in sales. San Diego itself is a center for advanced manufacturing companies, with nearly 3,150 manufacturing companies currently supporting more than 110,000 jobs. Computer and electronic product manufacturing lead San Diego and North County's manufacturing industry, employing 12,746 people. Aleran will initially be based at 600 B Street, Suite 300. Aleran's Chief Marketing Officer, Vice President of Business Development and Corporate Development, Senior Director of Inside Sales and members of the sales team will be based from the new location, with CEO Alex Sayyah working from both Minneapolis and San Diego. The majority of Aleran's new California team have joined the company in the past year. About Aleran Aleran Software is an A.I.-driven, unified commerce platform that automates and streamlines sales order management and B2B and B2C e-commerce so manufacturers, retailers, distributors and sales agencies can sell remotely, scale their businesses, and increase revenues. Aleran's headless software platform allows you to integrate with your business-critical systems and offers complimentary solutions to get you on the same page as your channel partners. For more information, visit us at: www.aleran.com, follow us on LinkedIn, or contact [email protected]. Contact: Chris Gale at [email protected] SOURCE Aleran Software Nearly three quarters of Americans overall (72%) say a spacious yard would be at the top of their wish list if they were looking for a new home. That desire reflects a cultural shift in how Americans view their yards. Even more so, they're willing to invest in their yards, and are using them more for everyday activities, including as work-from-home office space. Nearly a quarter of Americans who have a yard (24%) are spending more time in their yards now than before the pandemic. "What we are seeing with Americans is greater reliance on the backyard as an extension of the home. It's not just a place that looks pretty it's a place to live and do daily activities such as working, dining and relaxing," said Kris Kiser, President and CEO of the TurfMutt Foundation. "They've discovered that 'backyarding' is a better way to live and there's no turning back. They are also willing to hire professionals and invest money into yard improvements." People are enjoying extra time outside, too. Nearly a quarter of Americans who have a yard (24%) are spending more time in their yards now than before the COVID-19 pandemic. And they are really enjoying the extra time outside. Over 3 in 5 Americans who have a yard (63%) say they have enjoyed doing more activities in their yard since the pandemic began. Younger adults (68% age 18-54 vs. 52% age 65+) and parents of kids under 18 (73% vs. 58% who are not parents of kids under 18) are more apt to feel this way. Who's spending all that time outside? Older millennials - 32% of adults ages 35-44 who have a yard are the spending more time in their yard now compared to pre-pandemic. Parents - 30% of those with a yard who are parents of kids under 18 are spending more time out in their yard now compared to pre-pandemic and are more likely than those without kids under 18 to say they are doing so (21%). How Americans use their yard has likely changed. For one, the outdoor office trend is here to stay with many Americans using their yards as makeshift offices for their jobs. Stats show: Nearly 2 in 5 Americans who have a yard (58%) say they have spent time doing work for their job in their yard during the pandemic. Men are more likely to use their yards while doing work for their jobs, with 63% of men compared to 53% of women with yards saying they worked outdoors in their yard during the pandemic. Among those with a yard, parents of kids under 18 are also more likely (71%) than their counterparts without kids under 18 (52%) to have used the yard to get work done during the pandemic. The yard has also become a place to de-stress, with more than two thirds of Americans who have a yard (69%) saying doing yard work, such as mowing, trimming or planting, is one of the ways they like to de-stress these days. This is especially true among parents of kids under 18 as they are more likely than their counterparts without kids under 18 to cite this (76% vs. 65%). A vast majority of Americans who have a yard (84%) plan to invest in their yard in 2022, including: 67% say they'll purchase plants/trees/flowers/vegetables to plant themselves 39% report they will purchase items to maintain or improve their grassy areas 23 % say they will install or update hardscaping themselves. And the outlook looks bright for the landscaping industry. About a third (33%) of those with a yard plan to hire a professional to do landscaping or hardscaping in 2022. Other yard improvements planned for 2022 include installing a fence (19%) or a shed (15%) and adding a swimming pool (10%). Among those with a yard: Adults ages 18-44 are more likely than those ages 45+ to say they plan to invest in their yard in 2022 by hiring a professional to do landscaping or hardscaping, 43% compared to 26% of those age 45+. Nearly a third of those ages 18-44 (31%) will install or update hardscaping themselves, 27% will install a fence, 21% will install a shed and 18% plan to put in a swimming pool. Parents of kids under 18 (73%) are more likely than their counterparts (63%) to say they plan to invest in their yard in 2022 by purchasing plants, trees, flowers, or vegetables to plant themselves. Parents of kids under 18 are also more likely than those without kids under 18 to purchase items to maintain or improve grassy areas on the lawn (44% vs. 36%), and more likely to hire a professional to do landscaping or hardscaping (47% vs. 26%). Given the unprecedented return to the outdoors, the available outdoor power equipment also has kept in step with products for every need and individual scenario, says the TurfMutt Foundation, and powered in a variety of ways including battery/electric, gasoline, propane, solar and hybrids. This survey was conducted online within the United States by The Harris Poll on behalf of the TurfMutt Foundation from February 1-3, 2022 among 2,012 U.S. adults ages 18 and older, among whom 1,728 have a yard. This online survey is not based on a probability sample and therefore no estimate of theoretical sampling error can be calculated. For complete survey methodology, including weighting variables and subgroup sample sizes, please contact Ami Neiberger, [email protected]. Media contacts and to request a copy of Harris Poll results or additional photos: Ami Neiberger, Four Leaf PR on behalf of the TurfMutt Foundation, 703-887-4877, [email protected] Debbi Mayster, Four Leaf PR on behalf of the TurfMutt Foundation, 240-988-6243, [email protected] About TurfMutt TurfMutt was created by the Outdoor Power Equipment Institute's (OPEI) TurfMutt Foundation and has reached more than 70 million children, educators and families since 2009. Through classroom materials developed with Scholastic, TurfMutt teaches students and teachers how to "save the planet, one yard at a time." TurfMutt is an official USGBC Education Partner and part of their global LEARNING LAB. TurfMutt is an education resource at the U.S. Department of Education's Green Ribbon Schools, the U.S. Department of Energy, the U.S. Environmental Protection Agency, Green Apple, the Center for Green Schools, the Outdoors Alliance for Kids, the National Energy Education Development (NEED) project, Climate Change Live, Petfinder and the U.S. Fish and Wildlife Service. In 2017, the TurfMutt animated video series won the coveted Cynopsis Kids Imagination Award for Best Interstitial Series. TurfMutt's personal, home habitat is featured in the 2017-2020Wildlife Habitat Council calendars. More information is available at www.TurfMutt.com. SOURCE TurfMutt Foundation ROLLING MEADOWS, Ill., March 2, 2022 /PRNewswire/ -- Arthur J. Gallagher & Co. (NYSE: AJG) will be hosting its regularly scheduled quarterly management meeting on Wednesday, March 16, from 8:00 a.m. until approximately 10:30 a.m. CT. This quarter's meeting will take place virtually via conference call. During the call, the company's operating and financial leaders will present background information and commentary on the company's business operations and financial outlook, and will take questions from the investment community. The conference call will be broadcast live through Gallagher's website at www.ajg.com/irmeeting, and a conference call replay will be available at the same link through March 23, 2022. Any information distributed in conjunction with this meeting will be available on March 16 at 7:30 a.m. CT at https://www.ajg.com/March16materials. Arthur J. Gallagher & Co. (NYSE:AJG), a global insurance brokerage, risk management and consulting services firm, is headquartered in Rolling Meadows, Illinois. The company has operations in 68 countries and offers client service capabilities in more than 150 countries around the world through a network of correspondent brokers and consultants. Contact: Raymond Iardella VP Investor Relations (630) 285-3661/ [email protected] SOURCE Arthur J. Gallagher & Co. Choosing the right medication to treat these conditions can be difficult as every person's body and genetic make-up is different. Because the process of finding the right drug can be painful, frustrating, and time consuming, doctors need tools to assist in determining which medications and dosages are best to handle psychiatric conditions such as depression, anxiety, and ADHD as well as other medical conditions. Finding the right drug can also be dangerous as nearly five percent of deaths in the U.S . are due to drug toxicities. "It's really an extraordinary tool that provides confidence that the right medication has been selected the first time" GENETWORx Laboratories identified this gap in healthcare services back in 2013 and began bridging that gap with pharmacogenetic or PGx testing that assists doctors in finding the right medications and right dosage the first time based on a patient's DNA. Also called "personalized medicine," PGx testing is now in the spotlight with a bill recently introduced in the U.S. House of Representatives called the Right Drug Right Dose Now Act which seeks to accelerate education and use of pharmacogenetic (PGx) testing to help prevent adverse drug reactions and to facilitate the integration of drug response-related genomic information into patient care. "Without knowing which medication will be the optimal choice for a given patient, it can be trial and error for a physicianthey pick a medication based on their past experience or drug prescribing information in the hope that the patient's body responds effectively to it. Personalized medicine using PGx testing in conjunction with other diagnostic tools takes much of the guesswork out of medication effectiveness," said Dr. Stacey Blankenship, PharmD., of GENETWORx Laboratories. According to Dr. Blankenship, knowing a person's genetic makeup through PGx testing helps identify drugs that the body can breakdown and metabolize. The metabolism of a drug can have important consequences on its therapeutic effect or its toxicity. For instance, whether the drug will be metabolized by the body too quickly or too slowly to be effective," she said. According to a recent National Institutes of Health study, pharmacogenetic testing "has the potential to decrease morbidity, decrease treatment-emergent side effects, improve treatment response, decrease inpatient admissions and readmissions due to lack of efficacy or side effects, and cost of care for the patient and his or her family." PGx testing is non-invasive utilizing a simple swab of the patient's cheek. It can be utilized by any patient who takes medication for both psychiatric and medical illnesses. Physicians are utilizing GENETWORx PGx testing to inform their medication decisions for patients who are scheduled for surgery, for geriatric patients on multiple medications in assisted living facilities, and for many other medical illnesses as well as for behavioral health diagnoses. Further, Medicare may cover the test for many conditions as do numerous private insurers. "It's really an extraordinary tool that gives the provider and the patient additional confidence that the right medication has been selected the first time," said Blankenship. For more information on PGx testing, ask your doctor. Providers or patients can also click here or call 855-488-2618. GENETWORx is a fully integrated CAP accredited laboratory which is certified according to the Clinical Laboratory Improvement Amendment (CLIA) for high complexity molecular testing. The company is a full molecular and clinical diagnostics laboratory with an expansive test menu including infectious disease and genetic testing. GENETWORx offers PCR and antigen COVID-19 testing for organizations and individuals and has performed over 8.5 million COVID-19 tests since the pandemic first began with turnaround times among the lowest in the nation. The laboratory also offers an all-in-one combination influenza/COVID-19/RSV test, a PCR saliva test, and antibody testing. GENETWORx drive-up COVID-19 testing is also available through TestNowandGo locations in New York City, Virginia, Phoenix, Boston and Philadelphia. GENETWORx provides a full range of pathogen testing to healthcare facilities nationwide. Please visit Genetworx.com for further information and follow us on Linked In. For media interviews contact: Terri C. Malenfant at [email protected]. SOURCE GENETWORx DENVER, March 2, 2022 /PRNewswire/ -- Bad Ass Coffee of Hawaii, a leading coffee franchise renowned for its premium sourcing, roasting, and quality 100% Hawaiian coffees and international blends, unveils new prototypes that emphasize franchisee and customer flexibility, including double drive-thru lanes and streamlined order pickups. Debuting this year is the brand's freestanding full cafe with drive-thru model, spanning approximately 1,650 1,800 square feet, that is slated to open in Hendersonville, Tennessee in late Q3 2022. As an evolution of this model, that is gaining vast interest among prospective franchisees, the brand is set to rollout a freestanding double drive-thru model, spanning 500-740 square feet, with pickup windows and no interior cafe seating by Q4 2022. Store model flexibility will play a key role in adapting to various market-dependent real estate options, fueling the brand's overall franchise growth strategy as it aims to open 150 locations over the next five years. Franchisees will have the ability to select a store model that works best for their desired location with full build-out and design support from the Bad Ass Coffee of Hawaii team. Traditional in-line store with cafe (and drive thru with end-cap locations) (and drive thru with end-cap locations) Freestanding single or double-drive thru kiosk with pickup windows and no interior cafe seating (outdoor seating optional by location) (outdoor seating optional by location) Freestanding full-cafe with drive-thru and exterior seating Non-traditional kiosk: grocery, shopping malls, airports, transportation centers, etc. (square footage dependent on location and limited menu offering) "Flexibility is a big driver for accelerating our franchise expansion," said Scott Snyder, CEO of Bad Ass Coffee of Hawaii. "With a roster of buildout models, we're able to better address consumer needs and give our franchisees the freedom to open a Bad Ass Coffee model that makes sense in their desired market. In site selection, we understand a one-size-fits all model doesn't work. We're confident our roster of store models enables us to provide solutions to franchisees while also offering our customers the most convenient and enjoyable environment possible." Bad Ass Coffee of Hawaii is entering a new era of growth following its acquisition by Colorado-based Royal Aloha Coffee Company in 2019. During the last three years, the company has re-launched the national brand with a new logo, packaging, and restaurant design, resulting in a revived 32-year-old brand with a cult following. Bad Ass Coffee of Hawaii was born on the Big Island of Hawaii in 1989 with the dream of sharing American-grown, premium Hawaiian coffee from Kona, Ka'u, Maui, Moloka'I, and Kauai with coffee lovers everywhere. In addition to premium Hawaiian coffees, Bad Ass Coffee of Hawaii serves up a full menu of popular blended drinks, signature lattes, cold brews, teas, innovative foods with a Hawaiian twist, and branded merchandise. With rapid expansion underway, the brand has set aggressive expansion plans to open 150 new locations over the next five years, with territories available nationwide. "We have aggressive growth plans to expand our franchise network on the mainland and to re-establish a strong presence in Hawaii," said Snyder. "It's an exciting time to be part of this brand as we embark on this next chapter of our history. In addition to new store models, we are also pursuing multi-channel growth of our brand through grocery, hospitality, and online sales channels." Bad Ass Coffee of Hawaii is looking to partner with qualified and engaged individuals seeking single and multi-unit opportunities. The brand offers an affordable, highly scalable opportunity with strong profit-potential. Franchisees can expect a total investment range between $304,500 - $620,000. As International Franchise Association VetFran members, veteran franchisees who join will receive a $10,000 discount off the initial franchise fee. For more information on Bad Ass Coffee of Hawaii franchise opportunities, visit badasscoffeefranchise.com or call 833-205-2224. About Bad Ass Coffee of Hawaii Bad Ass Coffee of Hawaii was born on the Big Island of Hawai'i in 1989 and is dedicated to sharing premium Hawaiian coffees "with a kick" from the Hawaiian Islands through 20-plus franchise locations with additional 70 shops in various stages of development. Today, Bad Ass Coffee of Hawaii stores also serve popular blended drinks, teas, food, along with other international premium coffees and sell popular branded merchandise with exceptional service and the Aloha Spirit. Bad Ass Coffees are available in franchise stores, online and will soon be available through grocery, hospitality, and specialty retail channels. The Bad Ass Coffee of Hawaii brand and franchise is owned by Royal Aloha Franchise Company, LLC. For more information, visit badasscoffee.com and connect on Facebook and Instagram @badasscoffeeofhawaii. Franchise information is available at badasscoffeefranchise.com. SOURCE Bad Ass Coffee of Hawaii "We are excited Francoise has joined BlueGrace's executive team. She brings with her extensive strategic and organizational knowledge, proven leadership, and a fresh perspective for building cross-functional teams," said Bobby Harris, Chief Executive Officer of BlueGrace Logistics. "Finding the right CPO can catapult your organization to the next level. I am confident we found the right fit in Francoise and look forward to working together." Caraguel comes to BlueGrace having served as Executive Vice President and Chief Human Resources Officer across diverse industry backgrounds ranging from private equity to pharmaceuticals. As a strategic and result-driven multilingual executive, Caraguel's global leadership has led to positions in Europe, Africa, and Latin America. Most recently, she led joint human resources activities, including DE&I strategy, for cloud-based communications and collaboration platform providers PGi and TPx Communications across 25 global locations, servicing 2,000 employees. (Both PGi and TPx Communications are companies within the Siris Capital Group.) Previously, in her work with Johnson and Johnson as well as Pfizer (France), where she served as Chief Learning Officer, Caraguel created and implemented programs for upwards of 122,000 employees. "I am thrilled to join BlueGrace and leverage my expertise in developing and implementing people-centric solutions that help propel businesses forward, while maintaining an agile company culture," said Francoise Caraguel, Chief People Officer at BlueGrace Logistics. "My passion lies in the people function and talent management, both of which drive competitive advantage." Caraguel holds a Master's in Business (Agility) Administration from INSEAD Business School, one of the most rigorous international business programs in the world, requiring students to speak two languages upon entry and three upon graduation. Adding a Chief People Officer of this caliber reinforces BlueGrace's commitment and vision to grow exponentially by constantly improving stakeholder experience, including employees. An executive hire of this importance will reverberate across the entire organization, impacting current employee relations as well as future leadership hires. About BlueGrace Logistics BlueGrace Logistics offers customizable transportation management solutions as a full-service Third-Party Logistics (3PL) provider that helps businesses manage their freight spend through industry leading technology with a large network of established carriers to customers across the country. BlueGrace is based in Tampa where CEO Bobby Harris was named one of Florida's most influential executives in transportation for 2020. With 12 offices strategically located in major transportation hubs across the U.S., BlueGrace serves over 10,000 customers annually through its proprietary technology platform, BlueShip, that has connectivity with more than 250,000 carrier suppliers. BlueGrace is part of the technology portfolio of Warburg Pincus, a leading global private equity firm. For more information on BlueGrace, visit www.mybluegrace.com. SOURCE BlueGrace Logistics NEW YORK, March 2, 2022 /PRNewswire/ -- David Mathison, CEO of the CDO Club and CDO Summit, today named "All 2020 U.S. CDOs" as U.S. Chief Digital Officer of the Year 2020, in recognition of the challenges facing CDOs during that turbulent year The CDO Club is the world's largest community of C-suite digital, data, analytics, and technology leaders. CDO Club CEO David Mathison with the award. Mathison presented the award after the panel on "Practical Digital and Data Transformation: Lessons Across Industries" at the Alation Global CDO Summit on Wednesday, March 2, 2022 "2020 was the most turbulent year in the ten years since I founded the Chief Digital Officer community," said Mathison. "CDOs across all industries and sectors faced the challenge of their lifetimes, from civil unrest to the pandemic. Chief Digital Officers delivered, making radical changes in real time while keeping their primary businesses running. They helped the country move from "in-hospital" treatments to telemedicine, from schoolhouses to remote learning, and helped us cope with everything from supply chain issues to personal protective equipment," he continued. "In the past, we've given this award to just one individual per year, but that would be unfair to all the CDOs who made heroic sacrifices during that perilous year. Therefore, I am delighted to present, for the first time ever, this award to all those who were employed as Chief Digital Officers in the U.S. in 2020," said Mathison. The event marked the ten-year anniversary of the CDO Summit, the first-ever event produced specifically for CDOs and CAOs, which held its inaugural event on February 28, 2013 at Thomson Reuters in New York City. Previous U.S. Chief Digital Officer of the Year award winners include Atif Rafiq, President, Commercial & Growth for MGM Resorts International (2019), Fred Santarpia, Chief Digital Officer at Conde Nast (2018); Thomas Hjelm, Chief Digital Officer at NPR (2017); Linda Boff, Chief Marketing Officer at GE (2016); Adam Brotman, Chief Digital Officer at Starbucks Coffee Company (2015); Rachael S. Haot, Chief Digital Officer of New York City and New York State (2014); and Teddy Goff, Digital Director at Obama for America (2013). U.K. Chief Digital Officer of the Year award winners have included Bertrand Bodson, Chief Digital and Marketing Officer at Sainsbury's Argos (2016); Tanya Cordrey, Chief Digital Officer at Guardian News and Media (2015); and Mike Bracken, Chief Digital Officer at U.K.'s Government Digital Service (2014). The EU Chief Digital Officer of the Year award winner was Patrick Hoffstetter, former Chief Digital Officer at Renault (2016). Australian CDO of the Year award winners include Clive Dickens, former Chief Digital Officer at Seven West Media (2017); and Rebekah Horne, former Chief Digital Officer at Network Ten (2016). About the CDO Club The CDO Club is the world's largest community of C-suite digital and data leaders. Its registered members receive access to breaking news, original research, career development support, and networking opportunities. Visit: http://CDOClub.com. About the CDO Summit The CDO Summit addresses the challenges and opportunities arising from big data, the cloud, digital disruption, and social and mobile media. CDO Summit gatherings include the very best digital and data strategists and practitioners on Earth, speaking in intimate, collegial, and supportive environments designed to encourage networking, learning, and knowledge-sharing. Visit CDOSummit.com. Media Contact: Jill Scarpulla Marketing Communications Manager CDO Club Email: [email protected] Phone: +1 516 434-1667 Website: http://CDOClub.com SOURCE CDO Club BOCA RATON, Fla., March 2, 2022 /PRNewswire/ -- Aaron Kleinhandler, along with equity partners SJ Partners, LLC, Northcreek Mezzanine, and Everside Capital Partners, LLC have made an equity investment into CentralBDC, LLC, a Boca Raton, Florida based Outsourced Business Development Company that provides lead management services to auto dealerships nationwide. The new Company will be named CentralBDC, Enterprises, LLC (CentralBDC). CentralBDC is the automotive industry's fastest growing outsourced BDC Company. CentralBDC's proprietary technology coupled with its highly trained and motivated employees currently support many of the largest dealerships and dealership groups nationwide as their full-service BDC for sales, equity-mining, appointment setting and customer service. Its management team has over 50 years of experience in the automotive industry. Benjamin Shamsizadeh will continue to help lead the Company as President and will be joined by Aaron Kleinhandler who will become the Company's new CEO. "I was looking to find a collaborative partner to help take us to the next stage of growth, and I believe I found that in Aaron and the teams from SJ, Northcreek, and Everside," says Benjamin Shamsizadeh, the Founder of CentralBDC. "I am eager to help continue leading the business and see tremendous value in leveraging their experience to guide our growth strategy." Enterprise Bank & Trust provided a senior term loan. "I am thrilled to be partnering with Benjamin and the rest of the CentralBDC team," says Aaron Kleinhandler who led the investment. "CentralBDC is well positioned to capitalize on a massive market and strong underlying demand tailwinds for our services. We believe that their technology-enabled, highly scalable delivery model is differentiated from smaller competitors and will allow the business to capture an outsized share of the growing market." "The partnership with Aaron and Benjamin is an exciting new phase for CentralBDC," adds Scott Johnson, founder of SJ Partners. "This is our second investment with Aaron. Under Aaron's leadership, that previous investment, Spectrio, experienced enormous growth from startup to approximately $40M in EBITDA driven by 38 add-on acquisitions. We now see an opportunity to deliver solutions to a much larger set of clients and to continue growing the organization to better meet the needs of those clients as well as serving as a platform to acquire others in this exciting space." About Aaron Kleinhandler Aaron Kleinhandler is the Founder of Audio Messaging Solutions, LLC and its successor Spectrio, LLC a 10-time member of the Inc. 5000. He has worked in the tech enabled B to B services sector for over 25 years. During his career, Aaron has worked with Institutional Investors including The Riverside Company, Abry Partners, Bertram Capital, and The Jordan Company. His platforms have acquired over 45 add on acquisitions and delivered impressive results to his investors. About SJ Partners LLC SJ Partners is a leading lower middle market private equity firm that, for over fifteen years, has focused on the acquisition of consumer and services companies. It works closely with portfolio company management and maintains a group of highly qualified operating partners. It has won numerous awards including being named ACG NY Champions Firm of the Year. For more information, visit www.sjpartners.com About Northcreek Mezzanine Northcreek is a Small Business Investment Companhy ("SBIC") currently investing out of Fund III, our $195 million 2019 vintage-year fund. Northcreek provides creatively structured mezzanine debt and equity investments to middle market companies. Northcreek works with management teams, business owners and private equity groups to provide the capital needed for a variety of purposes including the acquisition or buyout of a business, capital for growth including acquisition of equipment, product lines and/or personnel, and capital to deleverage a balance sheet. As a financial partner to over hundreds of businesses, the principals of Northcreek have developed a strong and valued reputation as a trusted and reliable financial partner. Learn more at NorthcreekMezzanine.com. About Everside Capital Partners, LLC: Everside Capital Partners, LLC ("Everside"), an SEC Registered Investment Adviser, is a New York based asset management firm focused exclusively on the lower middle market (defined as businesses with $3-20 million in EBITDA). The firm is led by a team with extensive backgrounds in credit, direct investing and origination from top global institutions and manages over $800 million in assets. For more information contact: Aaron Kleinhandler: [email protected] Benjamin Shamsizadeh: [email protected] SOURCE CentralBDC DOWNERS GROVE, Ill., March 2, 2022 /PRNewswire/ -- Chief Collision Technology, part of Vehicle Service Group (VSG) and Dover (NYSE: DOV), and a leading provider of collision technology repair solutions, has expanded its network of Paintless Dent Repair ("PDR") shops across the United States. Each shop is carefully monitored by Chief Hail Solutions to meet Chief's strict quality standards in tech training and customer service. With its expanded network, Chief now offers an all-in-one solution for insurance companies and others with large volumes of vehicles, such as dealerships and fleet managers, while eliminating the cost and training required to staff a CAT site. Whether the hail event is small or large, Chief's team of hail damage experts can set up a hail site at no cost and manage all aspects of repair, including: Providing an initial assessment of hail damage using Chief's exclusive product, Constellation TM , the industry's first touchless mobile 3D hail damage scanning system; , the industry's first touchless mobile 3D hail damage scanning system; Scheduling a PDR at various sites as needed and monitoring time, cost estimates and repairs; Assuring proper repairs for all vehicles that meet OEM standards; Confirming all repairs (large and small) are completed for all customers; and Ensuring diagnostic scanning and ADAS calibration are completed and documented as needed. "We know the hassle and expense associated with monitoring hail sites and the need for honest, quality PDR repairs, and we're pleased to now be able to provide customers with a solution," said Bob Finkle, Brand Manager with VSG. "Insurance companies, dealership and fleet managers can now call Chief's PDR Network and have us on site within 48 hours of the hail event, to handle all the necessary paperwork, repairs and reporting. We're well equipped to take this responsibility on and glad to provide relief to our already busy customers." Those interested in working with Chief's PDR Network can get more information at chieftechnology.com/hailsolutions. About Chief Collision Technology: Chief is a collision technology leader that provides modern body shops the tools, technology and training needed to perform accurate repairs, including repairs after a hail storm as part of its Chief Hail Solutions. For 50 years, Chief's innovative technology solutions have helped shops identify, diagnose, and repair the damage and document that the vehicle was returned to the original manufacturer's specifications. Chief Collision Technology is one segment of the Vehicle Service Group companies, which is a part of Dover Corporation's Engineered Products sector. For more information, visit chieftechnology.com . About Vehicle Service Group: As an operating company of the Dover Corporation, Vehicle Service Group (VSG) offers the world's premier brands in vehicle lifting, wheel service, collision repair and aftermarket OEM equipment. With over 90 years of experience, we design, test, manufacture, sell and support our products with one thing in mind, our customer. About Dover: Dover is a diversified global manufacturer and solutions provider with annual revenue of approximately $8 billion. We deliver innovative equipment and components, consumable supplies, aftermarket parts, software and digital solutions, and support services through five operating segments: Engineered Products, Clean Energy & Fueling, Imaging & Identification, Pumps & Process Solutions and Climate & Sustainability Technologies. Dover combines global scale with operational agility to lead the markets we serve. Recognized for our entrepreneurial approach for over 65 years, our team of over 25,000 employees takes an ownership mindset, collaborating with customers to redefine what's possible. Headquartered in Downers Grove, Illinois, Dover trades on the New York Stock Exchange under "DOV." Additional information is available at dovercorporation.com . Vehicle Service Group Contact: David Fischmer (812) 265-9543 [email protected] Dover Media Contact: Adrian Sakowicz, VP, Communications (630) 743-5039 [email protected] Dover Investor Contact: Andrey Galiuk, VP, Corporate Development and Investor Relations (630) 743-5131 [email protected] SOURCE Dover AURORA, Colo., March 2, 2022 /PRNewswire/ -- Today, Children's Hospital Colorado experts will be available to answer reporter questions in response to President Joe Biden's comments about youth mental health in the State of the Union. On Tuesday, the White House released a national strategy to improve the mental health system across the country. Children's Hospital Colorado applauds the Biden Administration for elevating this issue during the State of the Union and identifying policies that can have an immediate and demonstrable impact on children, youth and families. During the State of the Union, President Biden remarked that children have had their lives and education "turned upside down." Although tremendous problems persist across the youth mental health system, policy and funding solutions exist. Children's Hospital Colorado calls on the Colorado congressional delegation and the U.S. Congress to move promptly and advance youth mental health legislation. Ron-Li Liaw, MD, Mental Health-In-Chief at Children's Hospital Colorado states, "We simply can't keep up with the unprecedented need, and a new level of support is required. We are experiencing a literal deluge of kids engaging in serious self-harm and attempting to take their own lives on a daily basis. President Biden's plan could be just the help we need to turn the tide on this crisis." Heidi Baskfield, JD, Vice President of Population Health and Advocacy at Children's Hospital Colorado states, "The Biden plan is historic and demanding of praise. The national strategy requires thoughtful design and thorough implementation to avoid becoming a symbolic policy gesture." In response to the skyrocketing demand for youth mental health services between 2019 and 2021, Children's Hospital Colorado declared a youth mental health state of emergency in May 2021 and six months later, released "Emergency Response: The Children and Youth Mental Health Policy Playbook" with federal, state and local mental health policy recommendations. In 2021, Children's Hospital Colorado had more than 6,500 emergency department behavioral health visits of kids in crisis across its pediatric system, and that's just the tip of the iceberg. If you would like to interview Dr. Liaw or Ms. Baskfield, please contact Elizabeth Whitehead at [email protected] or 720-777-6388. Additional Resources: ABOUT CHILDREN'S HOSPITAL COLORADO Children's Hospital Colorado is one of the nation's leading and most expansive nonprofit pediatric healthcare systems with a mission to improve the health of children through patient care, education, research and advocacy. Founded in 1908 and recognized as a top 10 children's hospital by U.S. News & World Report, Children's Colorado has established itself as a pioneer in the discovery of innovative and groundbreaking treatments that are shaping the future of pediatric healthcare worldwide. Children's Colorado offers a full spectrum of family-centered care at its urgent, emergency and specialty care locations throughout Colorado, including an academic medical center on the Anschutz Medical Campus in Aurora, hospitals in Colorado Springs, Highlands Ranch and Broomfield, and outreach clinics across the region. For more information, visit www.childrenscolorado.org or connect with us on Facebook , Twitter , Instagram and YouTube . Children's Hospital Colorado complies with applicable Federal civil rights laws and does not discriminate on the basis of race, color, national origin, age, disability, or sex. ATENCION: si habla espanol, tiene a su disposicion servicios gratuitos de asistencia linguistica. Llame al 1-720-777-9800. CHU Y: Neu ban noi Tieng Viet, co cac dich vu ho tro ngon ngu mien phi danh cho ban. Goi so 1-720-777-9800. http://www.hhs.gov/civil-rights/for-individuals/section-1557 Media Contacts: Elizabeth Whitehead, Children's Hospital Colorado [email protected]; 720-777-6388 SOURCE Children's Hospital Colorado CHICAGO, March 2, 2022 /PRNewswire/ -- Codal was named the 2021 BigCommerce Agency Partner of the Year at the annual 2021 BigCommerce Partner Awards - Americas in Austin, Texas. The award recognizes the year's leading agency partner for delivering "extraordinary and innovative work for BigCommerce merchants." Codal name 2021 BigCommerce Partner of the Year The award represents a significant achievement for Codal. Codal's unique processcombined with BigCommerce's cutting-edge technologyhas enabled businesses across all industries to embrace omnichannel eCommerce, headless architecture, and other game-changing strategies. Codal is proud to be recognized for delivering superior eCommerce solutions to a diverse group of clients. The agency is currently collaborating with BigCommerce on a number of groundbreaking projects, while also recruiting new talentincluding the best UX designers, engineers, and product managers working today. "BigCommerce has long been a trusted partner and ally to our agency," said Codal CEO Keval Baxi. "We strive to launch and support the most innovative eCommerce solutions for our clients, including omnichannel, headless, and other enterprise eCommerce projects. And for our team to be recognized for that work is incredibly fulfilling." Codal also received the 2021 User Experience & Design Award, which highlights powerful online store design that leads to stronger customer engagement, conversions, and sales. Many of Codal's clients leverage the BigCommerce platform to power their next-generation eCommerce experiencesas it provides the necessary scale, security, and flexibility to maximize internal efficiencies and exceed customer expectations. "Codal's partnership with BigCommerce is really meaningful to our Global eCommerce team, but the thing that makes BigCommerce so great to work withbesides the flexibility of the platform itselfis the partner support for both pre-sales and project delivery," said Ryan Bloms, Codal's eCommerce Partner Manager. "Anytime we partner with BigCommerce on a merchant opportunity, I know that we have a significant chance of determining a winning solution for the merchant's project. And that BigCommerce support continues from pre-sales all the way through project launch and beyond." This is the fourth annual installment of the BigCommerce Partner Awards. Both agency and technology partners are recognized every year. Award recipients are determined by a team of BigCommerce judges and selected based on their "commitment to customers, the impact of their solutions, and the exemplary use of the BigCommerce platform." About Codal Codal is a UX design and development agency that specializes in enterprise eCommerce solutions for businesses across all industries. With more than a decade of experience, over 200 professionals on staff, and partnerships with industry leaders like BigCommerce, we know how to bring out the best in every brand that we work with. Our clientele ranges from manufacturers, to retailers, to specialty brandsbut our mission has always remained the same: To empower brand visibility, enhance customer experiences, and streamline operations by delivering the most elegant eCommerce solutions possible. About BigCommerce BigCommerce is a leading software-as-a-service (SaaS) eCommerce platform that empowers merchants of all sizes to build, innovate, and grow their businesses online. BigCommerce provides merchants sophisticated enterprise-grade functionality, customization, and performance with simplicity and ease of use. Tens of thousands of B2B and B2C companies across 150 countries and numerous industries use BigCommerce to create beautiful, engaging online stores. Headquartered in Austin, BigCommerce has offices in San Francisco, Sydney, and London. Contact: Julie Woon +1 312-219-8691 [email protected] SOURCE Codal BALTIMORE, March 2, 2022 /PRNewswire/ -- Leading national energy solutions provider CPower Energy Management ("CPower") today announced human resources (HR) professional William Bennett, III as its new Vice President of People and Culture. Bennett will drive CPower's leadership, talent and engagement initiatives --- including its diversity, equity and inclusion (DEI) strategies --- to ensure the company is achieving its vision of driving a clean and dependable energy future. Bennett has more than 20 years experience in HR management in an array of industries including technology, energy, retail, government contracting, hospitality and healthcare. He joins CPower from Novetta, where he led the HR evolution of the company including the corporate compliance, employee engagement, talent and performance functions, to name a few. Prior to joining CPower, Bennett led HR strategic initiatives at Culmen International, Orange Business Services, GDIT, Sunrise Senior Living, Inc. and Sunoco, Inc. Bennett holds a Master of Science in HR Management from Holy Family University and a Bachelor of Science in Business Administration from American University. Bennett is also SHRM-CP and HRCI PHR certified. "The foundation of a successful company is a work environment where team members thrive and are appreciated for the impact of their contributions. It is evident that CPower encourages career development and supports the achievements and diverse perspectives that each team member brings, while empowering them to know that the actions they take today will create a better future for tomorrow. I look forward to contributing my expertise to ensure CPower continues on its growth trajectory," said Bennett. "Our growth and exceptional customer experience starts with team members who love what they do and work as a high-performing team. William knows how to operate as both a company advocate and employee champion. We are excited for the passion, energy and drive he brings to elevate our people initiatives and help ensure that our core values are reinforced in everything we do," said Shelley Schopp, Senior Vice President, CPower. Following a record-breaking 2021, CPower now manages more than 5.2 GW of Distributed Energy Resources (DER) capacity for nearly 2,000 customers at more than 12,000 sites across the U.S. Paying its customers approximately $230 million in grid revenue last year, the company has the highest-rated customer service in the industry as well as 96% average customer retention. For more information on Careers at CPower, visit: https://cpowerenergymanagement.com/careers-at-cpower/. About CPower Energy Management CPower Energy Management is a leading, national energy solutions provider guiding customers towards a clean and dependable energy future. We manage more than 5.2 GW of customer capacity across the U.S., forming virtual power plants that are good for the grid and great for the community. CPower maximizes the value of our customers' electricity loads, facility assets and distributed energy resources while delivering flexibility, capacity and other ancillary services to the grid. With more than two decades of experience, we've grown to offer more than 55 local energy programs, partnering with grid operators and utilities to serve more than 12,000 sites, delivering approximately 7,000 metric tons of CO2 reductions in 2020 alone. CPower is based in Baltimore, Maryland and is owned by LS Power, a development, investment and operating company focused on the power and energy infrastructure sector. For more information, visit: http://www.cpowerenergymanagement.com. SOURCE CPower Energy Management All four holes intersected high-grade REE mineralization over significant widths above the 0.5% TREO (total rare earth oxide) mineral resource lower cut-off from near surface to a maximum vertical depth of 200 metres. The Company expects to receive additional assay results from the 2021 Wicheeda REE Deposit resource expansion and delineation campaign in the coming days and weeks. Luisa Moreno, President and Director of Defense Metals commented: "We are encouraged by the results of these initial four drill holes that have not only returned exceptionally high grade REE intervals but have also expanded mineralization beyond the mineral resource pit shell. We look forward to being able to release results as they are received from the remaining 25 diamond drill holes in the coming days and weeks. The 2021 drilling is expected to contribute to the expansion and upgrading of mineral resources we so recently demonstrated in our positive Wicheeda REE Project PEA." Drill hole WI21-33 (-80o dip / 350o azimuth), the first hole of the 2021 drill program, intersected mineralized dolomite carbonatite to a depth of 201 metres downhole returning assays of 3.17% TREO over 196 metres (Table 1, and Figure 1); including higher grade intervals of 3.63% TREO over 50 metres near surface, and significantly 4.29% TREO over 55 metres at depth expanding high-grade REE mineralization 32 metres beyond the current mineral resource pit shell. Drill hole WI21-33 was collared near the northern drilled extent of the Wicheeda REE Deposit and was designed to expand and further delineate inferred resources at depth where the final hole WI19-32 of the Company's highly successful 2019 drill campaign yielded assays of 3.76% TREO over 75 metres1. Table 1. Wicheeda REE Deposit 2021 Diamond Drill Intercepts Hole ID From (m) To (m) Interval (m) TREO2 (%) Ce 2 O 3 (%) La 2 O 3 (%) Nd 2 O 3 (%) Pr 2 O 3 (%) Sm 2 O 3 (ppm) Gd 2 O 3 (ppm) Eu 2 O 3 (ppm) Dy 2 O 3 (ppm) Tb 4 O 7 (ppm) Ho 2 O 3 (ppm) WI21-33 (350/-80) 5.00 201.00 196 3.17 1.52 1.07 0.37 0.13 382 42 14 81 181 4 including 5.00 55.25 50.25 3.63 1.74 1.26 0.41 0.14 396 52 16 84 181 6 including 146.00 201.00 55.00 4.29 2.07 1.48 0.47 0.17 489 52 18 112 232 5 WI21-34 (040/-55) 3.00 117.00 114.00 2.97 1.46 1.02 0.33 0.11 323 23 9 58 134 2 including 3.00 70.00 67.00 3.84 1.89 1.34 0.41 0.15 379 29 11 69 160 3 WI21-35 (080/-55) 1.20 121.00 119.80 3.87 1.87 1.34 0.43 0.15 434 52 17 88 200 6 WI21-36 (108/-80) 1.10 174.00 171.90 2.35 1.14 0.79 0.28 0.09 294 35 11 59 134 4 including 1.10 35.65 34.55 3.45 1.66 1.21 0.38 0.13 374 37 13 72 170 4 including 136.00 174.00 38.00 3.02 1.46 1.05 0.33 0.12 337 40 13 68 157 4 Drill hole WI21-34 (-55o dip / 040o azimuth), drilled northeast to intermediate depths below WI19-32 intersected mineralized dolomite carbonatite to a depth of 117 metres downhole grading 2.97% TREO over 114 metres; including a higher grade near surface interval averaging 3.84% TREO over 67 metres (Figure 2). Resource delineation drill holes WI21-35 (-55o dip / 080o azimuth) and WI21-36 (-55o dip / 080o azimuth), drilled on section under 2019 drill hole WI19-31 that returned 4.57% TREO over 83 metres, established continuity of significantly REE mineralized dolomite carbonatite at depth with WI21-35 yielding 3.87% TREO over 120 metres; and WI21-36 intersecting a mixed-country rock bearing interval grading 2.35% TREO over 172 metres; including higher grade near surface and at depth intervals of 3.45% TREO over 35 metres and 3.02% TREO 38 metres, respectively (Figure 3). About the Wicheeda REE Property The 100% owned 2,008-hectare Wicheeda REE Property, located approximately 80 km northeast of the city of Prince George, British Columbia, is readily accessible by all-weather gravel roads and is near infrastructure, including power transmission lines, the CN railway, and major highways. The Wicheeda REE Project yielded a robust 2021 PEA that demonstrated an after-tax net present value ([email protected]%) of $517 million, and 18% IRR3. A unique advantage of the Wicheeda REE Project is the production of a saleable high-grade flotation-concentrate. The PEA contemplates a 1.8 Mtpa (million tonnes per year) mill throughput open pit mining operation with 1.75:1 (waste:mill feed) strip ratio over a 19 year mine (project) life producing and average of 25,423 tonnes REO annually. A Phase 1 initial pit strip ratio of 0.63:1 (waste:mill feed) would yield rapid access to higher grade surface mineralization in year 1 and payback of $440 million initial capital within 5 years. Methodology and QA/QC The analytical work reported on herein was performed by ALS Canada Ltd. (ALS) at Langley (sample preparation) and Vancouver (ICP-MS fusion), B.C. ALS is an ISO-IEC 17025:2017 and ISO 9001:2015 accredited geoanalytical laboratory and is independent of the Defense Metals and the QP. Drill core samples were subject to crushing at a minimum of 70% passing 2 mm, followed by pulverizing of a 250-gram split to 85% passing 75 microns. A 0.1-gram sample pulp was then subject to multi-element ICP-MS analysis via lithium-borate fusion to determine individual REE content (ME-MS81h). Defense Metals follows industry standard procedures for the work carried out on the Wicheeda Project, with a quality assurance/quality control (QA/QC) program. Blank, duplicate, and standard samples were inserted into the sample sequence sent to the laboratory for analysis. Defense Metals detected no significant QA/QC issues during review of the data. Within drill holes WI21-34 and WI21-36 occur two zones of poor core recovery averaging 13-15% over an interval of 9.15 metres between 89.95 and 99.1 metres, and 35.65 an d44.80 metres, respectively. Drill core from these intervals was combined into a single 9.15 metre composite for assay. The returned assay results of 1.27% TREO (WI21-34) and 1.84% TREO (WI21-36) are consistent with assays results above and below in the drill holes and as a result are considered reasonable and reliable. Defense Metals is not aware of any other drilling, sampling, recovery, or other factors that could materially affect the accuracy or reliability of the data referred to herein. Qualified Person The scientific and technical information contained in this news release as it relates to the Wicheeda REE Project has been reviewed and approved by Kristopher J. Raffle, P.Geo. (BC) Principal and Consultant of APEX Geoscience Ltd. of Edmonton, AB, a director of Defense Metals and a "Qualified Person" as defined in NI 43-101. Mr. Raffle verified the data disclosed which includes a review of the sampling, analytical and test data underlying the information and opinions contained therein. 1 The true width of REE mineralization is estimated to be 70-100% of the drilled interval. 2 TREO % sum of CeO2, La2O3, Nd2O3, Pr6O11, Sm2O3, Eu2O3, Gd2O3, Tb4O7, Dy2O3 and Ho2O3. 3 Independent Preliminary Economic Assessment for the Wicheeda Rare Earth Element Project, British Columbia, Canada, dated January 6, 2022, with an effective date of November 7, 2021, and prepared by SRK Consulting (Canada) Inc. is filed under Defense Metals Corp.'s Issuer Profile on SEDAR (www.sedar.com). About Defense Metals Corp. Defense Metals Corp. is a mineral exploration and development company focused on the acquisition, exploration and development of mineral deposits containing metals and elements commonly used in the electric power market, defense industry, national security sector and in the production of green energy technologies, such as, rare earths magnets used in wind turbines and in permanent magnet motors for electric vehicles. Defense Metals owns 100% of the Wicheeda Rare Earth Element Property located near Prince George, British Columbia, Canada. Defense Metals Corp. trades in Canada under the symbol "DEFN" on the TSX Venture Exchange, in the United States, under "DFMTF" on the OTCQB and in Germany on the Frankfurt Exchange under "35D". 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. Cautionary Statement Regarding "Forward-Looking" Information This news release contains "forwardlooking information or statements" within the meaning of applicable securities laws, which may include, without limitation, statements relating to advancing the Wicheeda REE Project, drill results including anticipated timeline of such results/assays, the Company's plans for its Wicheeda REE Project, expanded resource and scale of expanded resource, expected results and outcomes, the technical, financial and business prospects of the Company, its project and other matters. All statements in this news release, other than statements of historical facts, that address events or developments that the Company expects to occur, are forward-looking statements. Although the Company believes the expectations expressed in such forward-looking statements are based on reasonable assumptions, such statements are not guarantees of future performance and actual results may differ materially from those in the forward-looking statements. Such statements and information are based on numerous assumptions regarding present and future business strategies and the environment in which the Company will operate in the future, including the price of rare earth elements, the anticipated costs and expenditures, the ability to achieve its goals, that general business and economic conditions will not change in a material adverse manner, that financing will be available if and when needed and on reasonable terms. Such forward-looking information reflects the Company's views with respect to future events and is subject to risks, uncertainties and assumptions, including the risks and uncertainties relating to the interpretation of exploration results, risks related to the inherent uncertainty of exploration and cost estimates, the potential for unexpected costs and expenses and those other risks filed under the Company's profile on SEDAR at www.sedar.com. While such estimates and assumptions are considered reasonable by the management of the Company, they are inherently subject to significant business, economic, competitive and regulatory uncertainties and risks. Factors that could cause actual results to differ materially from those in forward looking statements include, but are not limited to, continued availability of capital and financing and general economic, market or business conditions, adverse weather and climate conditions, failure to maintain or obtain all necessary government permits, approvals and authorizations, failure to maintain community acceptance (including First Nations), risks relating to unanticipated operational difficulties (including failure of equipment or processes to operate in accordance with specifications or expectations, cost escalation, unavailability of materials and equipment, government action or delays in the receipt of government approvals, industrial disturbances or other job action, and unanticipated events related to health, safety and environmental matters), risks relating to inaccurate geological and engineering assumptions, decrease in the price of rare earth elements, the impact of Covid-19 or other viruses and diseases on the Company's ability to operate, an inability to predict and counteract the effects of COVID-19 on the business of the Company, including but not limited to, the effects of COVID-19 on the price of commodities, capital market conditions, restriction on labour and international travel and supply chains, loss of key employees, consultants, or directors, increase in costs, delayed drilling results, litigation, and failure of counterparties to perform their contractual obligations. The Company does not undertake to update forwardlooking statements or forwardlooking information, except as required by law. SOURCE Defense Metals Corp. KANSAS CITY, Mo., March 2, 2022 /PRNewswire/ -- Conexon Connect , the internet service provider formed by rural fiber-optic network design and construction management leader Conexon , has been selected by Georgia electric membership corporation (EMC) Flint Energies to deliver high-speed fiber internet access for unserved and underserved residents in the EMC's middle Georgia service territory. Conexon will support the design and construction of a robust, nearly 3,000-mile fiber network spanning nine counties within Flint's service territory. This network will enable Flint to leverage fiber-optic technology to strengthen its electric system while facilitating the deployment of smart grid efficiencies and capabilities. Smart grid technology will offer the EMC benefits such as improved power outage response times, better load balancing, and more efficient electricity delivery. Conexon Connect will lease excess fibers of the network to meet the critical need for high-speed internet among rural Georgia residents with fiber to the home. The project targeting unserved and underserved EMC members will make Connect, powered by Flint Energies, service available to approximately 31,000 homes, businesses, and institutions across Crawford, south Houston, Macon, Marion, Muscogee, Peach, Schley, Talbot, and Taylor counties. "The collaboration between Flint Energies and Conexon offers multiple advantages," Conexon Partner and Conexon Connect CEO Randy Klindt said. "The state-of-the-art infrastructure improvements that smart grid delivers will provide Flint with operational efficiencies and benefits, while the Connect partnership gives Flint Energies an opportunity to assist in meeting the broadband needs of unserved and underserved members. We're proud to be part of another Georgia project and look forward to working with the Flint team." Flint's nearly $90 million fiber network is expected to be completed within four years. The lightning-fast fiber-optic network will offer members access to symmetrical (same upload and download speeds) gigabit internet capabilities among the fastest and most robust in the nation. Additionally, it will provide reliable, clear phone service. "Flint is strengthening its overall electric system through a fiber backbone that gives us smart grid operational benefits that will enhance our ability to continue offering exceptional service to members," Flint Energies CEO Jeremy Nelms said. "That initiative allows us to also meet the pressing needs of our unserved and underserved members for high-speed internet. We believe the time for us to act is now, and we're thrilled to have found partners like Conexon and Conexon Connect to make this happen." Conexon and Conexon Connect work with electric cooperatives committed to serving their members with fiber broadband. With its clients, the company has designed more than 200,000 miles of fiber, builds more than 50,000 miles of fiber annually, and has connected more than 500,000 rural Americans to fiber to the home. About Conexon Connect Conexon Connect is the internet service provider (ISP) arm of rural fiber broadband design and construction management leader Conexon. The subsidiary was formed to operate and manage cooperative fiber-to-the-home networks. Connect leverages Conexon's decades of co-op operations, fiber-optic design and construction, telecommunications, federal and state lobbying and customer experience management expertise to successfully launch and operate projects. The Connect approach is to work with electric cooperatives to launch and deploy high-speed fiber-optic networks the gold standard of communications transmission enabling them to offer world-class fiber broadband to their members. In partnership with Georgia EMCs, Connect will deliver fiber internet access to approximately 188,400 rural homes and businesses across the state. About Conexon Conexon works with Rural Electric Cooperatives to bring fiber to the home in rural communities. The company is comprised of professionals who have worked in electric cooperatives and the telecommunications industry, and offer decades of individual experience in business planning, building networks, marketing and selling telecommunications. Conexon offers its electric cooperative clients end-to-end broadband deployment and operations support, from a project's conception all the way through to its long-term sustainability. It works with clients to analyze economic feasibility, secure financing, design the network, manage construction, provide operational support, optimize business performance and determine optimal partnerships. To date, Conexon has assisted more than 200 electric cooperatives, 60 of which are deploying fiber networks, with more than 500,000 rural Americans connected to fiber to the home. The company has secured nearly $2 billion in federal, state and local grants and subsidies for its clients. Cindy Parks 913-526-6912 [email protected] SOURCE Conexon Connect MONTEVIDEO, Uruguay, March 2, 2022 /PRNewswire/ -- Reflecting its commitment to its Uruguay-based clients and the wider Latin America region, preeminent immigration firm Fragomen announced today that it has established a presence in Uruguay. The new office is the firm's twelfth office in the region and is located in Montevideo, Uruguay. With more than ten years of experience supporting a wide range of clients in a variety of sectors, Maria Ines Menvielle will lead Fragomen's operations in Uruguay and will be supported on the ground by a team of immigration professionals. "This is an exciting time for our Latin America practice and for the wider firm," said Federico Solis, Managing Partner for Latin America and the Caribbean at Fragomen. "We have long represented a dynamic range of clients in Uruguay and we are excited to offer truly local support while expanding our services in the region." The Uruguay office adds to Fragomen's already robust presence in the region, which includes offices in Argentina, Brazil (Sao Paulo, Rio de Janeiro), Chile, Colombia, Costa Rica, Guatemala, Mexico, Panama, Peru and Venezuela. "Montevideo is an increasingly critical hub for businesses in the region and it was important for us to respond to client and business needs and establish a presence on the ground in Uruguay," said Leonor Echeverria, Partner. "We're looking forward to collaborating with our colleagues to make the Uruguay office a resounding success." Fragomen in Uruguay is affiliated with Immigration Specialists Uruguay S.A.S. About Fragomen Fragomen is a leading firm dedicated exclusively to immigration services worldwide. The firm has more than 4,700 immigration professionals and support staff in more than 55 offices across the Americas, EMEA and Asia Pacific. Fragomen offers immigration support in more than 170 countries. Fragomen's professionals are respected leaders in the immigration field, and the firm is regularly recognized as a leading firm for its percentage of minority and female attorneys. The firm also supports all aspects of global immigration for both corporate and private clients, including strategic planning, quality management, reporting, case management and processing, compliance program counseling, representation in government investigations, government relations, complex matter solutions and litigation. Fragomen is a longtime leader in the immigration technology space and continues to lead the way in the digitization of the immigration journey. It created Fragomen Technologies Inc., a Fragomen subsidiary focused on the nexus of law and technology, in order to further enhance its technology offerings. These capabilities allow Fragomen to work in partnership with individuals and corporate clients across all industries to facilitate the transfer of employees worldwide. For detailed information about Fragomen, click here. SOURCE Fragomen PHILADELPHIA, March 2, 2022 /PRNewswire/ -- The 8th Annual Teach Music Week will be celebrated Monday, March 21st through Sunday, March 27th. This annual week-long holiday invites musicians, music schools, music stores and other music organizations to offer a free lesson or class to new students (both kids & adults). This year, over 1,000 locations in fifteen countries will participate including the U.S., Australia, Brazil, Canada, Croatia, India, Ireland, Japan, Malta, Mexico, New Zealand, Nigeria, Netherlands, Philippines, Switzerland and United Kingdom. Children experiencing the joys of musical instruments, very often for the first time, at Musical Instrument Petting Zoo events hosted by Keep Music Alive. For more information on Teach Music Week, Kids Music Day and our musical instrument petting zoo events please visit www.KeepMusicAlive.org 8th Annual Teach Music Week March 21-27 - Partners include Alfred Music, Casio, Conn-Selmer, D'Addario Foundation, Kala Brand Music, Les Paul Foundation, Music Nomad, Musicology, Music & Sound Retailer, Remo Percussion, Taylor Guitars and Music & Arts. Visit www.TeachMusicWeek.org for participating locations offering a free music lesson or class in your community. Teach Music Week is celebrated annually during the 3rd week of March to coincide with national Music in Our Schools Month. Anyone interested in learning to play an instrument is encouraged to seek out a participating location or musician friend to help get them started. Teach Music Week also invites public, private and charter schools to schedule activities that will encourage more students to sign up for music, band and chorus classes. Vincent James, co-founder of Keep Music Alive states: "We all know that the biggest hurdle to doing something is often just getting started. With Teach Music Week, we are hoping to inspire a new generation of musicians who will continue reaping the many benefits of playing music, long after the month of March is over." Keep Music Alive is honored to welcome the following music brands and organizations as partners for the 8th Annual Teach Music Week: Alfred Music, Casio, Conn-Selmer, D'Addario Foundation, Hungry For Music, Kala Brand Music, Musicology, Music & Sound Retailer, REMO Percussion, Spirit of Harmony Foundation & Taylor Guitars. Together, they are helping to share the Teach Music Week message, inspiring more children and adults to begin their musical journey. Music & Arts, the largest music lesson provider in the country, will participate in Teach Music Week by hosting a free group guitar lesson for kids 8 to 13 years old on Saturday, March 26th at participating stores with over 230 locations nationwide. RSVP to Attend: https://events.musicarts.com/events/free-group-guitar-class-for-beginners-277720859567?source=LGOABBNA. Individual locations from additional chains participating this year include Long & McQuade, Kindermusik, Gymboree Play & Music, Music Together and the legendary School of Rock. Keep Music Alive is also grateful for grant support received from the Les Paul Foundation and the Music Nomad "One for Music" Program. For more information or to find participating locations, please visit www.TeachMusicWeek.org or call or email (610) 874-6312, [email protected] Keep Music Alive is a national 501(c)(3) non-profit on a mission to help more kids (and adults) reap the educational, therapeutic and social benefits of playing music. To support this mission, they created two international music holidays: Teach Music Week (3rd week in March) and Kids Music Day (1st Friday in October). Each year, Keep Music Alive partners with hundreds of music school and retail locations to celebrate by offering free music lessons and holding numerous community events including open houses, student music performances, instrument petting zoos, community jams, instrument donation drives and more. For more information, please visit www.KeepMusicAlive.org. Music in Our Schools Month is a registered trademark owned by the National Association for Music Education (www.NAfME.org). Media Contact: Vincent James [email protected] 610-874-6312 SOURCE Keep Music Alive ROSEAU, Dominica, March 2, 2022 /PRNewswire/ -- The financial markets are not immune to cyber scams and hacking. 2021 was a record-breaking year for the digital currency markets, amounting to $14 million in stolen crypto. Brokers are doing their utmost to ensure the safety of users' funds, but the scams are continuously evolving. Global Solution, a leading multi-asset broker, has recognized the need to improve security in this industry and has pro-actively updated its security policies for 2022, to combat the potential risks and further strengthen trust with its clients. "We believe that security is the supreme feature to be considered when trading in financial markets," stated Gwenyth Herrares, Global Solution spokesperson. " Global Solution has always strived to make trading trouble-free and straightforward by providing our users an optimal and secure trading environment. We have taken this commitment to the next level by further reconditioning and upgrading our security policies for 2022. Our mission has always been to establish a reliable trading infrastructure, to allow our clients to trade without any reservations." Security is paramount Global Solution is a versatile online trading broker providing high-quality services and opportunities to traders. The broker is a one-stop platform for utilizing a diverse range of financial assets, including forex, stocks, cryptocurrencies, indices, and commodities. Moreover, Global Solution keeps traders updated with the latest market events, via live market data and financial news. Most importantly, this broker has clearly displayed all of the implemented security and privacy policies, risk disclosure statements, and terms & conditions, creating a transparent and well-protected environment. "Global Solution was established with the purpose of prioritizing the needs of traders," explained Herrares. "Our top-technology trading platform and robust security policies show our devotion to maintaining the global-level standards. We will continue improving our services in the future as well, to prepare our partner traders best for the changing dynamics of financial markets." About Global Solution With more than 200 tradable assets, low spreads, and fast execution, Global Solution currently enables a seamless trading experience to its customers. The broker incorporates multiple financial instruments and presents competitive trading conditions, breaking entry barriers for traders from around the world. Moreover, Global Solution integrates a technologically advanced trading platform, its WebTrader, to give users secure and smooth access to the financial markets. The brand's dedicated customer support and solid security network make it a top choice for trading in a pre-eminent environment. SOURCE Global Solution GREENFIELD, Mass., March 2, 2022 /PRNewswire/ -- The registered nurses of Baystate Franklin Medical Center, represented by the Massachusetts Nurses Association, will share their experiences, and urge Baystate Health to value nurses, protect patients and keep care local during a March 9 virtual community forum hosted by Greenfield City Council President Sheila Gilmour and the Western Massachusetts Area Labor Federation. Virtual Community Forum When: 6 p.m. to 7:30 p.m. on Wednesday, March 9. Where: A virtual forum hosted on Zoom and shared on social media. The public and media are welcome to attend. How: A link to join the forum is available at www.massnurses.org/BFMCForum. "This is an important event for our community," said Greenfield City Council President Sheila Gilmour. "The nurses and all Baystate employees are such an essential part of our community, and this forum gives all of us an opportunity to hear from them about how things have been these past couple years." "We encourage the public to attend this forum and learn what it has been like to care for patients at Baystate Franklin Medical Center during the uncertainty and danger of this pandemic," said Donna Stern, RN in the BFMC mental health unit and MNA Co-Chair. "While Baystate Franklin staff have put our lives on the line to care for our community, corporate executives have not invested in local nurses and other healthcare workers. Baystate needs to step up and fix the recruitment and retention problems that are making it difficult for us to provide the quality care our patients deserve." "Our community deserves a transparent discussion about what is happening inside their hospital, and what staff and patients need right now," said Suzanne Love, RN in the BFMC emergency department and MNA Co-Chair. "We are proud of the dedication of all BFMC staff over the last two years. We could not have persevered and kept ourselves and our patients safe without the support of all hospital staff and the community." At the end of 2021, BFMC nurses began negotiating a new MNA contract, their first since the COVID-19 pandemic began. Nurses are concerned about the approach Baystate Health is taking so far in negotiations, as executives refuse to commit to long-term staffing protections and have not agreed to make the improvements necessary to boost nurse recruitment and retention during these challenging times. As a result, the nurses teamed with Gilmour and WMALF on the March 9 community forum and launched a petition that can be found at www.massnurses.org/BFMCpetition. The community petition reads, in part, "Exhausted by the lack of respect and basic decency from their employer, more and more nurses have been driven out of BFMC and the nursing profession. These are our family, friends, and neighbors. They live in our communities and have our full support. "WE, the undersigned, demand that Baystate's corporate executives address recruitment and retention so the hospital can have the staff we desperately need to provide safe, quality care. Executives must stop focusing on generating profits and giving themselves excessive pay and bonuses. They must value BFMC nurses, protect patients and keep care local!" MassNurses.org Facebook.com/MassNurses Twitter.com/MassNurses Instagram.com/MassNurses Founded in 1903, the Massachusetts Nurses Association is the largest union of registered nurses in the Commonwealth of Massachusetts. Its 23,000 members advance the nursing profession by fostering high standards of nursing practice, promoting the economic and general welfare of nurses in the workplace, projecting a positive and realistic view of nursing, and by lobbying the Legislature and regulatory agencies on health care issues affecting nurses and the public. SOURCE Massachusetts Nurses Association LAS VEGAS, March 2, 2022 /PRNewswire/ -- DelveInsight's Hip Replacement Devices Market Insights and Forecast report provides the current and forecast Hip Replacement Devices Market, upcoming innovation in the devices, individual market shares, challenges, drivers and barriers, market trends, and key competitors in the Hip Replacement Devices Market. Some of the salient features from the Hip Replacement Devices Market report: As per DelveInsight analysis, in terms of revenue share, North America is predicted to register the fastest growth in the Hip Replacement Devices market. is predicted to register the fastest growth in the Hip Replacement Devices market. Key Hip Replacement Devices companies proactively working in the market include Zimmer Biomet, Stryker Corporation, Smith & Nephew, DePuy Synthes, Exactech, Inc., Corin, Microport Scientific Corporation, Merete GmbH, DEDIENNE SANTE, Amplitude, Surgival, MatOrtho Limited, Auxein Medical., Advin Health Care, Meril Life Sciences Pvt. Ltd., United Orthopedic Corporation, DJO, LLC, Medacta International, Conformis, B. Braun Melsungen AG, and others. and others. DelveInsight analyzes that the Global Hip Replacement Devices Market was valued at USD 8.82 billion in 2020, and is expected to grow at a substantial CAGR of 5.04% during the forecast period from 2021 to 2026. Hip Replacement Devices market size is anticipated to reach USD 11.83 billion by 2026. in 2020, and is expected to grow at a substantial of during the forecast period from 2021 to 2026. Hip Replacement Devices market size is anticipated to reach by 2026. In February 2021 , MicroPort Orthopedics launched HA Coated Collared Hip Stem and Cemented Collared Hip Stem, Expanding its Hip Stem Portfolio. launched and Expanding its Hip Stem Portfolio. In July 2020 , Conformis announced the US commercial launch of the Cordera Match Hip System. announced the US commercial launch of the In March 2020 , DePuy Synthes received CE Mark for BI-MENTUM Dual Mobility System for hip replacement in patients with a higher risk of dislocation. To pick on the latest highlights related to Hip Replacement Devices, get the snapshot of the key highlights entailed in the Hip Replacement Devices Report Hip Replacement Devices Overview Hip Replacement Devices are the prostheses used to replace the damaged hip cartilage and bone caused due to musculoskeletal disease or aging. Hip replacement surgery is also known as hip arthroplasty is performed to remove the damaged bone and cartilage of the hip and replaced it with prosthetic components. During hip replacement, a surgeon removes the diseased or damaged parts of the hip joint and inserts the artificial joint. The damaged sections are removed from the hip joint and are replaced with constructed metal, ceramic, and very hard plastic-like devices aka Hip Replacement Devices. There are various Hip Replacement Devices such as hip implants, hip revision implants, total hip replacement implants, among others. Hip Replacement Devices Market Insight North America is expected to dominate the overall Hip Replacement Devices market during the forecast period. This domination is due to the existence of a well-established reimbursement scenario for hip arthroplasty in the region. In addition, the presence of proper and advanced healthcare facilities, and the rising prevalence of the obese population in the region is also a factor driving the market in the region. In the Hip Replacement Devices product segment, the total hip replacement system is expected to hold the largest market during the forecasted period. This is due to the integration of novel technologies such as 3-D printing and Artificial Intelligence (AI) solutions in order to simplify surgical procedures and increase the Hip Replacement Devices market penetration. For instance, in 2019, RSIP Vision, a global leader in artificial intelligence (AI), computer vision, and image processing technology, announced a new AI-based total hip replacement solution that provides a precise, automated 3D structure of the patients' hip for physicians to better plan surgery. Furthermore, the Asia-Pacific region has the future potential growth for the Global Hip Replacement Devices. This is due to the rising osteoporosis leading to hip fractures in the region. Also, improving healthcare infrastructure, increasing per capita healthcare expenditure, high rate of obesity among the Asian population are expected to drive the Hip Replacement Devices market. Click here to understand more about the Hip Replacement Devices Market Forecast @ Hip Replacement Devices Future Assessment Hip Replacement Devices Market Dynamics The significant rise observed in hip replacement surgery is owing to the burgeoning prevalence of osteoarthritis across the globe is giving rise to an increase in the market for Hip Replacement Devices. In addition, osteoporosis is also considered to be a leading cause of hip fractures among the population which will directly boost the demand for Hip Replacement Devices. Furthermore, shifting preferences for minimally invasive hip replacement surgeries as compared to the traditional procedure is also likely to spur the Hip Replacement Devices market. This is mainly because of the advantages such as less damage to the soft tissues, leading to a quicker, less painful recovery associated with the minimally invasive surgeries. Also, improving healthcare infrastructure, increasing per capita healthcare expenditure, rising disposable income, high rate of obesity, and rising old age population coupled with an increasing number of musculoskeletal disorders will also contribute to the growth in the Hip Replacement and Replacement devices market. Additionally, the presence of key players such as Zimmer, Stryker, DePuy Synthes, and Exactech, Inc. is also a driving factor for the Hip Replacement Devices market. Hence, all the aforementioned factors are anticipated to contribute to the direct growth of the Global Hip Replacement Devices during the forecasted period. However, on the contrary, there are certain factors such as few product recalls, and stringent regulations for the devices as these implants are classified under the class III category by the US FDA is likely to impede the Hip Replacement Devices market growth. Also, the demand for Hip Replacement Devices is primarily affected by the outbreak of the COVID- 19 pandemic. The government imposed lockdowns to curb the spread of the virus leading to restrictions in movement and a decrease in regular check-ups. Owing to the COVID-19 pandemic situation, various forms of elective procedures were temporarily stopped in contrast to the COVID-19 affected patients that were given utmost priority leading to a decrease in Hip Replacement Devices market growth. To gain a better understanding of the COVID-19 impact on Hip Replacement Devices, get a snapshot of the COVID-19 Impact On Hip Replacement Devices Scope of the Hip Replacement Devices Market Report Coverage : Global Global Study Period: 2021-2026 2021-2026 Market Segmentation By Product Type - Total Hip Replacement System, Partial Hip Replacement System, Hip Revision System, and Hip Resurfacing System - Total Hip Replacement System, Partial Hip Replacement System, Hip Revision System, and Hip Resurfacing System Market Segmentation By Fixation - Cemented and Non-Cemented Cemented and Non-Cemented Market Segmentation By End-User - Hospitals, Orthopedic Clinics, And Others - Hospitals, Orthopedic Clinics, And Others Market Segmentation By Geography - North America , Europe , Asia-Pacific , and Rest of World - , , , and Rest of World Key Hip Replacement Devices Companies - Zimmer Biomet, Stryker Corporation, Smith & Nephew, DePuy Synthes, Exactech, Inc., Corin, Microport Scientific Corporation, Merete GmbH, DEDIENNE SANTE, Amplitude, Surgival, MatOrtho Limited, Auxein Medical., Advin Health Care, Meril Life Sciences Pvt. Ltd., United Orthopedic Corporation, DJO, LLC, Medacta International, Conformis, B. Braun Melsungen AG, and others. Zimmer Biomet, Stryker Corporation, Smith & Nephew, DePuy Synthes, Exactech, Inc., Corin, Microport Scientific Corporation, Merete GmbH, DEDIENNE SANTE, Amplitude, Surgival, MatOrtho Limited, Auxein Medical., Advin Health Care, Meril Life Sciences Pvt. Ltd., United Orthopedic Corporation, DJO, LLC, Medacta International, Conformis, B. Braun Melsungen AG, and others. Porter's Five Forces Analysis Product Profiles Case Studies KOL's Views Analyst's View Delveinsight Analysis: The Global Hip Replacement Devices Market was valued at USD 8.82 billion in 2020, growing at a Compound Annual Growth Rate (CAGR) of 5.04% during the forecast period from 2021 to 2026 to reach USD 11.83 billion by 2026. Know more about which MedTech player is set to emerge as the trendsetter @ Key Hip Replacement Devices Companies Analysis Table of Contents 1 Hip Replacement Devices Market Report Introduction 2 Hip Replacement Devices Market Executive summary 3 Regulatory and Patent Analysis 4 Hip Replacement Devices Market Key Factors Analysis 5 Hip Replacement Devices Porter's Five Forces Analysis 6 COVID-19 Impact Analysis on Hip Replacement Devices Market 7 Hip Replacement Devices Market Layout 8 Hip Replacement Devices Market Global Company Share Analysis Key 3-5 Companies 9 Hip Replacement Devices Market Company and Product Profiles 9.1 Zimmer Biomet 9.2 Entropy 9.3 Smith & Nephew 9.4 Exactech, Inc. 9.5 DePuy Synthes (Johnson & Johnson) 9.6 Corin 9.7 Microport Scientific Corporation 9.8 Conformis 9.9 B. Braun Melsungen AG 9.10 Medacta International 10 Project Approach 11 KOL Views 12 DelveInsight Capabilities 13 Disclaimer 14 About DelveInsight Learn more about the report offerings @ Hip Replacement Devices Outlook Related Reports Skin Grafting Devices Market DelveInsight's 'Skin Grafting Devices Market Insights, Competitive Landscape and Market Forecast2026' report delivers an in-depth understanding of Skin Grafting Devices and the historical and forecasted Skin Grafting Devices market trends in the US, EU5, Japan, market drivers, market barriers and key Skin Grafting Devices companies involved like Zimmer Inc, Aesculap, Inc, B. Braun Company, Exsurco Medical, PFM Medical, Rudolf Storz, AYGUN Surgical Instruments Co. Inc, Desoutter Medical, LUTZ blades, Spiggle & Theis, and many more. 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Take a look at the posts below MedTech Industry Roars Back as FDA Approvals Soar The New Buzz of Transcranial Stimulation Devices in the Neurological Disorders Market Medical Devices Market Blooms as the Key MedTech Companies Continue to Bring-In Innovation Wearable Devices : Weighing the Potential Benefits and Pitfalls of the Innovative Wearable Products Market Heats Up as Managing Benign Prostatic Hyperplasia Through Devices Gains Traction About DelveInsight DelveInsight is a leading Business Consultant, and Market Research firm focused exclusively on life sciences. It supports Pharma companies by providing comprehensive end-to-end solutions to improve their performance. Connect With Us at LinkedIn | Facebook | Twitter Contact Us Shruti Thakur [email protected] +1(919)321-6187 www.delveinsight.com SOURCE DelveInsight Business Research, LLP BROOKFIELD, Wis., March 2, 2022 /PRNewswire/ -- Hydrite, an integrated manufacturer and supplier of chemicals and related services, is pleased to announce their plans to expand its Waterloo, IA facility with the help of tax benefits awarded through the Iowa Economic Development Authority (IEDA) High Quality Jobs tax credit program. Hydrite Waterloo, IA facility (PRNewsfoto/Hydrite Chemical Co.) Hydrite's plans include increased manufacturing and warehouse space, and the expansion of their transportation fleet. The project represents a $21 million capital investment over the next 3 years, and is expected to create 20 jobs at a qualifying wage of $20 an hour. The expansion will bring the workforce total to 158 employees at the Waterloo location. The Waterloo site is Hydrite's only location in Iowa and is the company's largest facility. The High Quality Jobs (HQJ) program provides qualifying businesses assistance to off-set some of the costs incurred to locate, expand, or modernize an Iowa facility (www.iowaeda.com/grow/high-quality-jobs/). Grow Cedar Valley worked with Hydrite to make application to the Iowa Economic Development Authority (IEDA) Board for the High Quality Jobs tax credit program. The IEDA board announced award of the tax benefits on February 18, 2022. Additional incentives came from the city of Waterloo, and Hawkeye Community College in Waterloo, IA will provide job training. "Hydrite has found success in Waterloo completing multiple expansions at their location over the years, most recently in 2017," says Noel Anderson, Community Planning and Development Director at City of Waterloo. "We are especially pleased to bring these additional good paying jobs to Waterloo." Kevin Honkamp, President of Hydrite, commented, "We understand the foundation of a great workplace relies on building blocks that are fundamental in company culture. Our core values and expectations focus around Integrity, Innovation, Quality, People, and Responsible Growth. We see these key attributes not only in our culture at Hydrite but throughout the people in the state of Iowa. We appreciate the long-term partnership and look forward to contributing to the community in the future." As a company with a strong commitment to their customers and employees, Hydrite continues to invest in people, training, research, technology, and sustainability to offer products and systems that help deliver and provide creative solutions. To learn more, visit www.hydrite.com or call 262-792-1450. About Hydrite Chemical Co. Hydrite, a family-owned company established in 1929, is one of the largest independent providers of chemicals and related services in the United States. Headquartered in Brookfield, Wisconsin, Hydrite has a network of manufacturing facilities, warehouses, and laboratories located in Illinois, Wisconsin, Iowa, Indiana, California, and Texas, with nearly 1000 employees in more than 25 states. Hydrite owns and operates a private fleet of over 255 units including tractors, van trailers, tankers, and railcars. Hydrite offers expertise in chemical distribution and manufacturing, food and dairy sanitation, organic processing, liquid sulfites, foam control, and water treatment chemistries. With over 5,000 items in its product portfolio, Hydrite's dedicated chemists, engineers, and technical service staff have extensive knowledge and experience to solve the most challenging formulation problems. Hydrite has a strong commitment to quality and customer responsiveness, and offers superior products and innovative solutions. Media Contact Judy Allen 262-792-1450 [email protected] SOURCE Hydrite Chemical Co. PHILADELPHIA, March 2, 2022 /PRNewswire/ -- Callan Family Office has launched with the objective of providing highly-customized solutions to meet the financial needs of ultra-high-net-worth families, foundations, and endowments. The fully independent firm, led by former top executives with Abbot Downing, will leverage the investment insight, research, and educational resources of Callan LLC, a leading independent investment consulting firm that serves institutional and investment advisor clients with over $3 trillion in assets under advisement. Callan Family Office aims to deliver a superior experience in investment management, thoughtful personalized advice, and holistic financial planning with a focused, high-touch approach to ultra-high-net-worth families and their foundations and endowments across the country. Jack Ginter, former president of storied family office Abbot Downing and former head of Wells Fargo Private Bank, will lead the firm as Chief Executive Officer and Founding Partner. Amy Jucoski, former Abbot Downing senior director of planning and former senior director of advice for the Eastern and Northeast divisions of Wells Fargo Private Bank, will join Callan Family Office as Head of Legacy and Wealth Planning and Founding Partner. "There have been a lot of changes in the wealth management industry in the past decade as the large banks and brokerages have reprioritized their focus away from this space, presenting an opportunity for a new entrant," Ginter said. Through its services agreement with Callan, Callan Family Office has full access to over 45 years of industry research, education, and sophisticated investment guidance applied by Callan in servicing its institutional investor clients. "As an independent firm, we are fully focused on delivering precise and objective counsel to the ultra-high net worth market segment," said Jucoski. "We are strategically building our service offering to optimize the opportunities associated with significant wealth. We look forward to providing a clear path forward to meet the multidimensional needs of our clients with expertise, integrity, transparency, and original thinking." About Callan Family Office Independently owned and operated, Callan Family Office (www.CallanFamilyOffice.com) was founded by experienced wealth professionals to provide investment management, thoughtful personalized advice, and holistic financial planning to ultra-high-net-worth families, foundations, and endowments. The firm's principals have spent their careers serving ultra-high-net-worth clients and institutions. Callan Family Office has agreements with Callan LLC to use the Callan tradename in providing investment advisory services to the ultra-high net worth market segment and to access Callan's institutional quality research, education, and investment guidance experience. Callan Family Office and Callan LLC are independent, unaffiliated investment advisory firms separately registered with the Securities and Exchange Commission under the Investment Advisers Act of 1940. CONTACT: Michaela Morales JConnelly 973 224 7152 [email protected] SOURCE Callan Family Office PHOENIX , March 2, 2022 /PRNewswire/ -- Item 9 Labs Corp. (OTCQX: INLB) (the "Company") the first true vertically integrated cannabis dispensary franchisor and operator that produces premium, award-winning products announced today that Shane Evans, founder of Massage Heights, has been appointed to its Board of Directors. "Adding Shane to our Board of Directors brings an invaluable level of experience in the wellness and franchise industries to both our Item 9 Labs and Unity Rd. brands," says Andrew Bowden, CEO of Item 9 Labs Corp. "Her guidance will strengthen our position as the first national, vertically integrated U.S. cannabis franchisor and will be key as we grow the Unity Rd. franchise network." Currently, the Company's cannabis dispensary franchise brand, Unity Rd., has a franchise partner-owned shop operating in Boulder, Colorado, as well as a shop with a Local Alliance Partner in Oklahoma City. Unity Rd. has signed agreements with nearly 20 entrepreneurial groups who are in various stages of development across Maine, Michigan, New Jersey, Virginia and more. With 20-plus podium finishes in Arizona marijuana competitions, Item 9 Labs is a trusted source for premium cannabis products. Starting with intentionally grown flower, the Item 9 Labs product catalog spans 100-plus products across five core categories, including several active cannabis strains, cannabis vape products, premium concentrates and Orion vape technology. The Company plans to expand Item 9 Labs products alongside the Unity Rd. franchise network to offer franchise partners front-of-the-line access to a reliable, high-quality supply chain and consumers the national product consistency they have come to expect from franchises. To accelerate national growth, Item 9 Labs Corp. is actively seeking dispensary acquisitions in key markets nationwide. The Company plans to convert the cannabis retail stores into Unity Rd. shops, train the local team and sell the business to new and existing Unity Rd. franchise partners. About Shane Evans Evans has been heavily involved in the health and wellness sector for more than two decades. She co-founded Massage Heights in 2004 and began franchising the concept in 2005. Under her leadership, the spa franchise grew to more than 120 retreats throughout North America. Today, she continues to support Massage Heights as Vice Chairwoman on the Board of Directors. "Shane's success in franchising has been inspiring to watch," said Item 9 Labs Corp.'s Chief Franchise Officer, Mike Weinberger, who has been in franchising for 20 years. "Her experience leading and developing a fast-growing franchise concept brings tremendous value to the development of our Unity Rd. franchise." Evans is also the Co-owner of several Massage Heights retail locations; Co-owner of the supply chain, Summit Franchise Supply, LLC; Co-owner of The Gents Place, an ultra-premium men's grooming franchise brand; and is on the Board of Directors of the Massage Heights Family Fund, a 501c3 crisis fund for team members in need. She has also been a dedicated member of the Young Presidents Organization (YPO) alongside Bowden since 2015, serves on the International Franchise Association's (IFA) Franchise Relations Committee and is an active member of the Franchisor Forum. Evans has been recognized as one of the franchise industry's top female founders and has been featured in several national business media outlets as well as franchise trade publications. "I have always been extremely passionate about being involved in organizations that are making a difference in their industry and communities alike," shared Evans. "Item 9 Labs Corp. is bringing high-quality alternative medicine to those who need it, while also opening the door to cannabis entrepreneurship through the franchise model. I am looking forward to applying my experience to help further solidify the Company's position as a leader in the space and continue paving its path of exponential growth." In January 2022, the Company added two additional independent directors, Eric C. Kutscher, Pharm. D., M.B.A., F.A.S.H.P., and Lawrence X. Taylor, who have a combined experience of 55 years across patient-centered healthcare, leadership, M&A and strategic planning. Their appointments alongside Evans strengthens Item 9 Labs Corp.'s leadership and positive momentum across cannabis and franchising. For more information on Item 9 Labs Corp. and its brands, visit https://investors.item9labscorp.com/. About Item 9 Labs Corp. Item 9 Labs Corp. (OTCQX: INLB) is a vertically integrated cannabis operator and dispensary franchisor delivering premium products from its large-scale cultivation and production facilities in the United States. The award-winning Item 9 Labs brand specializes in best-in-class products and user experience across several cannabis categories. The company also offers a unique dispensary franchise model through the national Unity Rd. retail brand. Easing barriers to entry, the franchise provides an opportunity for both new and existing dispensary owners to leverage the knowledge, resources, and ongoing support needed to thrive in their state compliantly and successfully. Item 9 Labs brings the best industry practices to markets nationwide through distinctive retail experience, cultivation capabilities, and product innovation. The veteran management team combines a diverse skill set with deep experience in the cannabis sector, franchising, and the capital markets to lead a new generation of public cannabis companies that provide transparency, consistency, and well-being. Headquartered in Arizona, the company is currently expanding its operations space by 640,000+ square feet on its 50-acre site, one of the largest properties in Arizona zoned to grow and cultivate flower. For additional information, visit item9labscorp.com. Forward-Looking Statements This press release contains forward-looking statements within the meaning of the safe harbor provisions of the Private Securities Litigation Reform Act of 1995. Such statements involve risks and uncertainties, including, but not limited to, risks and effects of legal and administrative proceedings and governmental regulation, especially in a foreign country, future financial and operational results, competition, general economic conditions, proposed transactions that are not legally binding obligations of the company and the ability to manage and continue growth. Should one or more of these risks or uncertainties materialize, or should underlying assumptions prove incorrect, actual outcomes may vary materially from those indicated. Important factors that could cause actual results to differ materially from the forward-looking statements we make in this news release include the introduction of new technology, market conditions and those set forth in reports or documents we file from time to time with the SEC. We undertake no obligation to revise or update such statements to reflect current events or circumstances after the date hereof or to reflect the occurrence of unanticipated events. Media Contact: Item 9 Labs Corp. Jayne Levy, VP of Communications Email: [email protected] Investor Contact: Item 9 Labs Corp. 800-403-1140 Email: [email protected] SOURCE Item 9 Labs Corp. Janus Kinase (JAK) Inhibitors Market 2022-2026 : Scope The janus kinase (JAK) inhibitors market report covers the following areas: Janus Kinase (JAK) Inhibitors Market 2022-2026 : Segmentation By application, the market has been segmented into autoimmune disorders and oncology. The autoimmune disorders segment will have significant market share growth during the forecast period. The growth is attributed to the increasing prevalence of autoimmune indications such as rheumatoid arthritis and psoriatic arthritis. By geography, the market has been segmented into North America, Europe, Asia, and Rest Of World (ROW). North America will account for the highest market share growth during the forecast period. Learn more about the contribution of each segment of the market, Download a Free Sample Report Janus Kinase (JAK) Inhibitors Market 2022-2026 : Drivers and Challenges The increasing number of awareness campaigns about various diseases is one of the key factors driving the global janus kinase (JAK) inhibitors market growth. For instance, the Rheumatology Research Foundation recognized May as the National Arthritis Awareness Month in the US. The availability of alternative therapies is one of the key challenges faced by the global janus kinase (JAK) inhibitors market growth. Alternative therapies such as TNF inhibitors and interleukin inhibitors have dominated the treatment landscape of autoimmune disorders such as rheumatoid arthritis, psoriatic arthritis, psoriasis, and ulcerative colitis. The efficacy of these biologics has increased the adoption of alternative therapeutics. Janus Kinase (JAK) Inhibitors Market 2022-2026 : Vendor Analysis The market is fragmented, and the degree of fragmentation will accelerate during the forecast period. To make the most of the opportunities, market vendors should focus more on the growth prospects in the fast-growing segments while maintaining their positions in the slow-growing segments. We provide a detailed analysis of around 25 vendors operating in the Janus Kinase (JAK) inhibitors market, including AbbVie Inc., Alexion Pharmaceuticals Inc., Astellas Pharma Inc., AstraZeneca Plc, Bristol Myers Squibb Co., CTI BioPharma Corp., Eli Lilly and Co., Galapagos NV, Gilead Sciences Inc., Incyte Corp., Novartis AG, Pfizer Inc., Reistone Biopharma Co. Ltd., Sierra Oncology Inc., and Teva Pharmaceutical Industries Ltd. among others. Subscribe to our "Lite Plan" billed annually at USD 3000 that enables to download 3 reports/year and view 3 reports/month. Janus Kinase (JAK) Inhibitors Market 2022-2026 : Key Highlights CAGR of the market during the forecast period 2022-2026 Detailed information on factors that will assist janus kinase (JAK) inhibitors market growth during the next five years Estimation of the janus kinase (JAK) inhibitors market size and its contribution to the parent market Predictions on upcoming trends and changes in consumer behavior The growth of the janus kinase (JAK) inhibitors market Analysis of the market's competitive landscape and detailed information on vendors Comprehensive details of factors that will challenge the growth of janus kinase (JAK) inhibitors market vendors Related Reports: New Drug Delivery Systems Market by Route of Administration and Geography - Forecast and Analysis 2022-2026 Myocardial Infarction (MI) Therapeutics Market by Product and Geography - Forecast and Analysis 2022-2026 Janus Kinase (JAK) Inhibitors Market Scope Report Coverage Details Page number 120 Base year 2021 Forecast period 2022-2026 Growth momentum & CAGR Accelerate at a CAGR of 17.24% Market growth 2022-2026 USD 12.05 billion Market structure Fragmented YoY growth (%) 16.72 Regional analysis North America, Europe, Asia, and Rest of World (ROW) Performing market contribution North America at 50% Key consumer countries US, Canada, UK, Germany, and France Competitive landscape Leading companies, competitive strategies, consumer engagement scope Companies profiled AbbVie Inc., Alexion Pharmaceuticals Inc., Astellas Pharma Inc., AstraZeneca Plc, Bristol Myers Squibb Co., CTI BioPharma Corp., Eli Lilly and Co., Galapagos NV, Gilead Sciences Inc., Incyte Corp., Novartis AG, Pfizer Inc., Reistone Biopharma Co. Ltd., Sierra Oncology Inc., and Teva Pharmaceutical Industries Ltd. Market Dynamics Parent market analysis, Market growth inducers and obstacles, Fast-growing and slow-growing segment analysis, COVID 19 impact and future consumer dynamics, market condition analysis for the forecast period, Customization purview If our report has not included the data that you are looking for, you can reach out to our analysts and get segments customized. Table Of Contents : 1 Executive Summary 1.1 Market overview Exhibit 01: Executive Summary Chart on Market Overview Exhibit 02: Executive Summary Data Table on Market Overview Exhibit 03: Executive Summary Chart on Global Market Characteristics Exhibit 04: Executive Summary Chart on Market by Geography Exhibit 05: Executive Summary Chart on Market Segmentation by Application Exhibit 06: Executive Summary Chart on Incremental Growth Exhibit 07: Executive Summary Data Table on Incremental Growth Exhibit 08: Executive Summary Chart on Vendor Market Positioning 2 Market Landscape 2.1 Market ecosystem Exhibit 09: Parent market Exhibit 10: Market Characteristics 3 Market Sizing 3.1 Market definition Exhibit 11: Offerings of vendors included in the market definition 3.2 Market segment analysis Exhibit 12: Market segments 3.3 Market size 2021 3.4 Market outlook: Forecast for 2021-2026 Exhibit 13: Chart on Global - Market size and forecast 2021-2026 ($ million) Exhibit 14: Data Table on Global - Market size and forecast 2021-2026 ($ million) Exhibit 15: Chart on Global Market: Year-over-year growth 2021-2026 (%) Exhibit 16: Data Table on Global Market: Year-over-year growth 2021-2026 (%) 4 Five Forces Analysis 4.1 Five forces summary Exhibit 17: Five forces analysis - Comparison between 2021 and 2026 4.2 Bargaining power of buyers Exhibit 18: Bargaining power of buyers Impact of key factors in 2021 and 2026 4.3 Bargaining power of suppliers Exhibit 19: Bargaining power of suppliers Impact of key factors in 2021 and 2026 4.4 Threat of new entrants Exhibit 20: Threat of new entrants Impact of key factors in 2021 and 2026 4.5 Threat of substitutes Exhibit 21: Threat of substitutes Impact of key factors in 2021 and 2026 4.6 Threat of rivalry Exhibit 22: Threat of rivalry Impact of key factors in 2021 and 2026 4.7 Market condition Exhibit 23: Chart on Market condition - Five forces 2021 and 2026 5 Market Segmentation by Application 5.1 Market segments Exhibit 24: Chart on Application - Market share 2021-2026 (%) Exhibit 25: Data Table on Application - Market share 2021-2026 (%) 5.2 Comparison by Application Exhibit 26: Chart on Comparison by Application Exhibit 27: Data Table on Comparison by Application 5.3 Autoimmune disorders - Market size and forecast 2021-2026 Exhibit 28: Chart on Autoimmune disorders - Market size and forecast 2021-2026 ($ million) Exhibit 29: Data Table on Autoimmune disorders - Market size and forecast 2021-2026 ($ million) Exhibit 30: Chart on Autoimmune disorders - Year-over-year growth 2021-2026 (%) Exhibit 31: Data Table on Autoimmune disorders - Year-over-year growth 2021-2026 (%) 5.4 Oncology - Market size and forecast 2021-2026 Exhibit 32: Chart on Oncology - Market size and forecast 2021-2026 ($ million) Exhibit 33: Data Table on Oncology - Market size and forecast 2021-2026 ($ million) Exhibit 34: Chart on Oncology - Year-over-year growth 2021-2026 (%) Exhibit 35: Data Table on Oncology - Year-over-year growth 2021-2026 (%) 5.5 Market opportunity by Application Exhibit 36: Market opportunity by Application ($ million) 6 Customer Landscape 6.1 Customer landscape overview Exhibit 37: Analysis of price sensitivity, lifecycle, customer purchase basket, adoption rates, and purchase criteria 7 Geographic Landscape 7.1 Geographic segmentation Exhibit 38: Chart on Market share by geography 2021-2026 (%) Exhibit 39: Data Table on Market share by geography 2021-2026 (%) 7.2 Geographic comparison Exhibit 40: Chart on Geographic comparison Exhibit 41: Data Table on Geographic comparison 7.3 North America - Market size and forecast 2021-2026 - Market size and forecast 2021-2026 Exhibit 42: Chart on North America - Market size and forecast 2021-2026 ($ million) - Market size and forecast 2021-2026 ($ million) Exhibit 43: Data Table on North America - Market size and forecast 2021-2026 ($ million) - Market size and forecast 2021-2026 ($ million) Exhibit 44: Chart on North America - Year-over-year growth 2021-2026 (%) - Year-over-year growth 2021-2026 (%) Exhibit 45: Data Table on North America - Year-over-year growth 2021-2026 (%) 7.4 Europe - Market size and forecast 2021-2026 - Market size and forecast 2021-2026 Exhibit 46: Chart on Europe - Market size and forecast 2021-2026 ($ million) - Market size and forecast 2021-2026 ($ million) Exhibit 47: Data Table on Europe - Market size and forecast 2021-2026 ($ million) - Market size and forecast 2021-2026 ($ million) Exhibit 48: Chart on Europe - Year-over-year growth 2021-2026 (%) - Year-over-year growth 2021-2026 (%) Exhibit 49: Data Table on Europe - Year-over-year growth 2021-2026 (%) 7.5 Asia - Market size and forecast 2021-2026 - Market size and forecast 2021-2026 Exhibit 50: Chart on Asia - Market size and forecast 2021-2026 ($ million) - Market size and forecast 2021-2026 ($ million) Exhibit 51: Data Table on Asia - Market size and forecast 2021-2026 ($ million) - Market size and forecast 2021-2026 ($ million) Exhibit 52: Chart on Asia - Year-over-year growth 2021-2026 (%) - Year-over-year growth 2021-2026 (%) Exhibit 53: Data Table on Asia - Year-over-year growth 2021-2026 (%) 7.6 Rest of World (ROW) - Market size and forecast 2021-2026 Exhibit 54: Chart on Rest of World (ROW) - Market size and forecast 2021-2026 ($ million) Exhibit 55: Data Table on Rest of World (ROW) - Market size and forecast 2021-2026 ($ million) Exhibit 56: Chart on Rest of World (ROW) - Year-over-year growth 2021-2026 (%) Exhibit 57: Data Table on Rest of World (ROW) - Year-over-year growth 2021-2026 (%) 7.7 US - Market size and forecast 2021-2026 Exhibit 58: Chart on US - Market size and forecast 2021-2026 ($ million) Exhibit 59: Data Table on US - Market size and forecast 2021-2026 ($ million) Exhibit 60: Chart on US - Year-over-year growth 2021-2026 (%) Exhibit 61: Data Table on US - Year-over-year growth 2021-2026 (%) 7.8 UK - Market size and forecast 2021-2026 Exhibit 62: Chart on UK - Market size and forecast 2021-2026 ($ million) Exhibit 63: Data Table on UK - Market size and forecast 2021-2026 ($ million) Exhibit 64: Chart on UK - Year-over-year growth 2021-2026 (%) Exhibit 65: Data Table on UK - Year-over-year growth 2021-2026 (%) 7.9 Germany - Market size and forecast 2021-2026 - Market size and forecast 2021-2026 Exhibit 66: Chart on Germany - Market size and forecast 2021-2026 ($ million) - Market size and forecast 2021-2026 ($ million) Exhibit 67: Data Table on Germany - Market size and forecast 2021-2026 ($ million) - Market size and forecast 2021-2026 ($ million) Exhibit 68: Chart on Germany - Year-over-year growth 2021-2026 (%) - Year-over-year growth 2021-2026 (%) Exhibit 69: Data Table on Germany - Year-over-year growth 2021-2026 (%) 7.10 France - Market size and forecast 2021-2026 - Market size and forecast 2021-2026 Exhibit 70: Chart on France - Market size and forecast 2021-2026 ($ million) - Market size and forecast 2021-2026 ($ million) Exhibit 71: Data Table on France - Market size and forecast 2021-2026 ($ million) - Market size and forecast 2021-2026 ($ million) Exhibit 72: Chart on France - Year-over-year growth 2021-2026 (%) - Year-over-year growth 2021-2026 (%) Exhibit 73: Data Table on France - Year-over-year growth 2021-2026 (%) 7.11 Canada - Market size and forecast 2021-2026 - Market size and forecast 2021-2026 Exhibit 74: Chart on Canada - Market size and forecast 2021-2026 ($ million) - Market size and forecast 2021-2026 ($ million) Exhibit 75: Data Table on Canada - Market size and forecast 2021-2026 ($ million) - Market size and forecast 2021-2026 ($ million) Exhibit 76: Chart on Canada - Year-over-year growth 2021-2026 (%) - Year-over-year growth 2021-2026 (%) Exhibit 77: Data Table on Canada - Year-over-year growth 2021-2026 (%) 7.12 Market opportunity by geography Exhibit 78: Market opportunity by geography ($ million) 8 Drivers, Challenges, and Trends 8.1 Market drivers 8.2 Market challenges 8.3 Impact of drivers and challenges Exhibit 79: Impact of drivers and challenges in 2021 and 2026 8.4 Market trends 9 Vendor Landscape 9.1 Overview 9.2 Vendor landscape Exhibit 80: Overview on Criticality of inputs and Factors of differentiation 9.3 Landscape disruption Exhibit 81: Overview on factors of disruption 9.4 Industry risks Exhibit 82: Impact of key risks on business 10 Vendor Analysis 10.1 Vendors covered Exhibit 83: Vendors covered 10.2 Market positioning of vendors Exhibit 84: Matrix on vendor position and classification 10.3 AbbVie Inc. Exhibit 85: AbbVie Inc. - Overview Exhibit 86: AbbVie Inc. - Business segments Exhibit 87: AbbVie Inc. - Key offerings Exhibit 88: AbbVie Inc. - Segment focus 10.4 Astellas Pharma Inc. Exhibit 89: Astellas Pharma Inc. - Overview Exhibit 90: Astellas Pharma Inc. - Product / Service Exhibit 91: Astellas Pharma Inc. - Key news Exhibit 92: Astellas Pharma Inc. - Key offerings 10.5 AstraZeneca Plc Exhibit 93: AstraZeneca Plc - Overview Exhibit 94: AstraZeneca Plc - Product / Service Exhibit 95: AstraZeneca Plc - Key news Exhibit 96: AstraZeneca Plc - Key offerings 10.6 Bristol Myers Squibb Co. Exhibit 97: Bristol Myers Squibb Co. - Overview Exhibit 98: Bristol Myers Squibb Co. - Product / Service Exhibit 99: Bristol Myers Squibb Co. - Key offerings 10.7 CTI BioPharma Corp. Exhibit 100: CTI BioPharma Corp. - Overview Exhibit 101: CTI BioPharma Corp. - Product / Service Exhibit 102: CTI BioPharma Corp. - Key offerings 10.8 Eli Lilly and Co. Exhibit 103: Eli Lilly and Co. - Overview Exhibit 104: Eli Lilly and Co. - Business segments Exhibit 105: Eli Lilly and Co. - Key offerings Exhibit 106: Eli Lilly and Co. - Segment focus 10.9 Galapagos NV Exhibit 107: Galapagos NV - Overview Exhibit 108: Galapagos NV - Business segments Exhibit 109: Galapagos NV - Key offerings Exhibit 110: Galapagos NV - Segment focus 10.10 Incyte Corp. Exhibit 111: Incyte Corp. - Overview Exhibit 112: Incyte Corp. - Business segments Exhibit 113: Incyte Corp. - Key offerings Exhibit 114: Incyte Corp. - Segment focus 10.11 Novartis AG Exhibit 115: Novartis AG - Overview Exhibit 116: Novartis AG - Business segments Exhibit 117: Novartis AG - Key offerings Exhibit 118: Novartis AG - Segment focus 10.12 Pfizer Inc. Exhibit 119: Pfizer Inc. - Overview Exhibit 120: Pfizer Inc. - Product / Service Exhibit 121: Pfizer Inc. - Key news Exhibit 122: Pfizer Inc. - Key offerings 11 Appendix 11.1 Scope of the report 11.2 Inclusions and exclusions checklist Exhibit 123: Inclusions checklist Exhibit 124: Exclusions checklist 11.3 Currency conversion rates for US$ Exhibit 125: Currency conversion rates for US$ 11.4 Research methodology Exhibit 126: Research methodology Exhibit 127: Validation techniques employed for market sizing Exhibit 128: Information sources 11.5 List of abbreviations Exhibit 129: List of abbreviations About Us Technavio is a leading global technology research and advisory company. Their research and analysis focus on emerging market trends and provides actionable insights to help businesses identify market opportunities and develop effective strategies to optimize their market positions. With over 500 specialized analysts, Technavio's report library consists of more than 17,000 reports and counting, covering 800 technologies, spanning across 50 countries. Their client base consists of enterprises of all sizes, including more than 100 Fortune 500 companies. This growing client base relies on Technavio's comprehensive coverage, extensive research, and actionable market insights to identify opportunities in existing and potential markets and assess their competitive positions within changing market scenarios. Contact Technavio Research Jesse Maida Media & Marketing Executive US: +1 844 364 1100 UK: +44 203 893 3200 Email: [email protected] Website: www.technavio.com/ SOURCE Technavio PORTLAND, Ore., March 2, 2022 /PRNewswire/ -- Although many parts of Portland are safe for driving, accidents can happen anywhere at any time. According to the most recent data released by the Oregon Department of Motor Vehicles, there are about 50,000 accidents in the state every year. More than half of those crashes also involve an injury or death. Elements that can make an intersection more dangerous The statistics for Portland are not much different. In 2019, there were more than 10,000 accidents in Portland, which accounts for almost 20% of reported crashes in Oregon. So what are the most accident prone areas in Portland? Using data from the City of Portland, the attorneys at D'Amore Law Group conducted a study and compiled a list of the most dangerous intersections in the city. To determine the rank of each intersection, the study took several data points into consideration: number of crashes, collision rate, and the total value of all crashes. They then measured each of these points for five consecutive years, from 2015 to 2019. Based on their data, the 10 most dangerous intersections in Portland are: Rank Intersection Minor Injuries Moderate Injuries Serious Injuries Deaths Collision Rate 1 SE 122nd Ave. & Stark St. 104 11 6 2 0.80 2 SE 122nd Ave. & Division St. 104 5 1 1 0.70 3 SE 82nd Ave. & Powell Blvd. 123 21 2 0 0.69 4 SE 148th Ave. & Stark St. 63 11 0 1 0.79 5 SE 148th Ave. & Powell Blvd. 40 11 2 2 0.82 6 (Tied) NE 82nd Ave. & Glisan St. 58 12 6 1 0.67 6 (Tied) SE Foster Rd. & I-205 Northbound Ramp 63 13 0 0 0.97 7 NE 99th Ave. & Glisan St. 72 4 0 0 0.98 8 SE 92nd Ave. & Holgate Blvd. 38 6 5 2 0.73 9 SE 122nd Ave. & Powell Blvd. 76 8 2 0 0.70 10 SE Division St. & I-205 Southbound Ramp 65 10 1 0 0.70 (Source: City of Portland High Crash Network Streets and Intersections) These intersections are the most dangerous for all travelers, whether they are driving a car, biking, or walking. There are several elements that make these intersections dangerous. However, Attorney Tom D'Amore believes that there are certain patterns. "All intersections carry the potential to be incredibly dangerous," he says in the study. "However, not all intersections are equal." In fact, Tom suggests that there are three factors that affect the safety of any given intersection: design elements, maintenance issues, and external factors. One example of this in the study is the prevalence of poor road conditions. "Poorly maintained roads are one of the most significant contributing factors to many Oregon car accidents," Tom states, listing potholes, defective lights, and pooling water as some common issues. In addition, he points out that intersection design and location play a role in Oregon's deadly crashes. "As the amount of traffic increases, so too does the chance for a serious accident. Similarly, if there are several bars located near an intersection, the likelihood of a DUI accident increases." With this information, Tom hopes to help warn Portland residents of potentially dangerous areas and bring the causes of these accidents to light. To read more about the study, click here. CONTACT: D'Amore Law Group 1050 SW 6th Ave #1100 Portland, OR 97204 503-222-6333 damorelaw.com SOURCE D'Amore Law Group CHICAGO, March 2, 2022 /PRNewswire/ -- The Citizens Utility Board (CUB) on Wednesday alerted consumers about the twelfth straight month of high heating prices and warned them of harmful myths about their natural gas bills. CUB urged consumers to visit a free online resource, CUBHelpCenter.com. It explains why gas prices are high, offers safety and efficiency tips, outlines a customer's rights against disconnection and arms people with information about energy assistance. About 80 percent of Illinois homes heat with natural gas, and this has been their most expensive winter since the cold season of 2008-09. Illinois' natural gas utilities file new supply pricescalled the Purchased Gas Adjustment (PGA)each month. In March, the utilities continue to charge extremely high prices, including Nicor Gas, Illinois' largest gas utility, which saw a 24 percent increase from February, and a 94 percent increase from March 2021: Ameren Illinois 68.881 per therm (Up about 76 percent from March 2021 .) .) MidAmerican Energy $1.0029 per therm (Up about 115 percent from last March.) per therm (Up about 115 percent from last March.) Nicor Gas 68.00 per therm (Up about 94 percent from last March.) North Shore Gas 63.45 per therm (Up about 56 percent from last March.) Peoples Gas 60.08 per therm (Up about 87 percent from last March.) Note: You cannot switch to another utility. Utility service territories are geographic: Your utility is determined by where you live. Gas utilities are not allowed to profit off supply pricesthey pass those costs from gas producers and marketers onto customers with no markup. State regulators annually review the utilities' gas-management procedures to ensure the companies did a reasonable job with their gas purchases, given market conditions, to hold down costs for consumers as much as possible. For 12 months now, natural gas supply prices have been elevated, sparked at first by record-low temperatures that hit the nation last February, causing cascading effects to gas supply and distribution systems in the South that were not properly weatherized, just as demand went up. A number of other factors have contributed to the spike, including declining gas production, exploration and well construction. The war in Ukraine may also contribute to elevated prices going forward. The price spike also has sparked misinformation. CUB identified key myths about the high bills. Myth: The high gas bills are just a result of supply and demand. Fact: High supply prices are only part of the story. In Illinois, overly aggressive spending and rampant rate hikes by Peoples Gas, Nicor Gas and Ameren Illinois also are contributing to skyrocketing gas bills this winter. While utilities cannot profit off gas supply, they have increased and profited off another part of the bill: Delivery, what they charge to deliver gas to homes. CUB is working to eliminate the "Qualified Infrastructure Plant" surcharge from Ameren, Nicor and Peoples Gas bills. The charge, which went into effect thanks to a law the General Assembly passed in 2013, allows gas utilities to sidestep the traditional regulatory process and rake in revenue more quickly, leading to rapidly rising heating bills. The charge on Peoples Gas bills is now more than $13 a month, on averageon track for more than $150 a year. Also, Ameren Illinois received a $76 million gas rate hike in 2021, and Nicor has increased delivery rates by 77 percent, or $500 million, since 2018. That includes its $240 million increase in Novemberthe largest gas hike in Illinois history. The parent companies of these utilities raked in billions of dollars in combined profits in 2021. Myth: The high gas prices are the result of environmental policy. Fact: This price spike has nothing to do with environmental policy. The high gas prices began last year as a result of volatile weatherrecord coldthat has become more frequent as climate change gets worse. Plus, price spikes like this in the market happen periodically, as a consequence of the business model of the fossil fuel industry. Far from causing the problem, clean energy policiesincluding strong efficiency provisions that help reduce utility billsare trying to combat the causes of the spike. Myth: You can't get your gas shut off in the winter. Fact: Although there are regulations that prevent disconnections during the winter months, they are not applicable to every account and/or circumstance. Do not assume you are protected just because it is cold. It's vitally important that customers having difficulty paying their gas bills contact their utility to learn about energy assistance available and to work out a consumer-friendly plan to pay your bills and stay connected. Keep the lines of communication open. Myth: Alternative gas suppliers can guarantee savings for consumers this winter. Fact: In Northern Illinois, suppliers may try to use the headlines about high prices to lure you into a bad deal. Remember, suppliers are impacted by the same market conditions that are causing utility supply rates to go up. If an offer from a supplier seems too good to be true, there's a good chance it is. The alternative supplier market has been plagued by bad deals and rip-offs, so if you shop for another supplier, be careful. The most reliable way to soften the blow of these high prices is to practice energy efficiency at home. CUB is Illinois' leading nonprofit utility watchdog group. Created by the Illinois Legislature, CUB opened its doors in 1984 to represent the interests of residential and small-business utility customers. Since then, CUB has saved consumers more than $20 billion by helping to block rate hikes and secure refunds. For more information, call CUB's Consumer Hotline at 1-800-669-5556 or visit CUB's award-winning website, www.CitizensUtilityBoard.org. SOURCE Citizens Utility Board SAINT PAUL, Minn., March 2, 2022 /PRNewswire/ -- Metro State University, the Twin Cities nationally recognized urban university, is proud to announce that it has again been recognized as a National Center of Academic Excellence in Cyber Defense (NCAE-CD).This is the fourth time Metro State has earned the prestigious distinction. Created by the National Security Council (NSA) and the Department of Homeland Security (DHS), the National Centers for Academic Excellence in Cyber Defense Program identifies and honors universities that offer bachelor's and graduate degree programs that complete in-depth assessments and meet rigorous cyber defense requirements. Metro State is the only Twin Cities to offer comprehensive programming in cybersecurity, including a NCAE-CD-endorsed cybersecurity bachelor's degree, a master's degree in cyber operations, and an accelerated combined bachelor's and master's program in cybersecurity operations. In 2018, Metro State opened the MN Cyber Institute, which includes Minnesota Cyber Academy and Minnesota Cyber Range.The Cyber Academy provides students with the skills, knowledge and credentials needed to succeed in information technology and cybersecurity.The Cyber Range, the first and only one in Minnesota, is a world-class cybersecurity simulation lab and training facility that puts students technically and mentally in the crosshairs of hyper-realistic security threats. "Metro State has worked tirelessly with local, state and national leaders in government, information technology, education, and cybersecurity to build a program that is today the nation's most innovative interdisciplinary cybersecurity curriculum of its kind," said Kyle Swanson, dean of Metro State's College of Sciences. "We are honored to once again receive this recognition, and we are so very proud of our students who have committed to protecting our nation's critical digital infrastructure." Data obtained by Metro State suggests the number of cybersecurity job openings in Minnesota will grow by 28% over the next decade. Additional information on Metro State's cybersecurity program can be found at www.metrostate.edu. About Metro State University Founded in 1971, Metro State University, a member of Minnesota State, is the Twin Cities public, urban, comprehensive state university providing lifelong learning and competitive academic and professional degree programs at the bachelor, master and doctoral levels. The University currently offers more than 50 undergraduate programs and more than 25 graduate degrees. Metro State ranks 39th in the nation and first in Minnesota on CollegeNet's Social Mobility Index, which measures colleges' and universities' success in elevating students from low-income strata into the middle class within five years of graduation. To learn more, visit www.metrostate.edu. Contact: Patty Gibbs For Metropolitan State University 651.269.7687 [email protected] SOURCE Metro State University WASHINGTON, March 2, 2022 /PRNewswire/ -- Media accreditation now is open for the launch of the fourth SpaceX Crew Dragon spacecraft and Falcon 9 rocket that will carry astronauts to the International Space Station for a science expedition mission. This mission is part of NASA's Commercial Crew Program. The earliest targeted launch date for the agency's SpaceX Crew-4 mission is Friday, April 15, from Launch Complex 39A at NASA's Kennedy Space Center in Florida. The launch will carry three NASA astronauts Mission Commander Kjell Lindgren, Pilot Robert Hines, and Mission Specialist Jessica Watkins, to the space station as well as ESA (European Space Agency) astronaut Samantha Cristoforetti, who will serve as a mission specialist. This is the first spaceflight for Hines and Watkins. It is the second trip for Lindgren and Cristoforetti. Following a crew handover period, astronauts from NASA's SpaceX Crew-3 mission are scheduled for return to Earth in April aboard their SpaceX Crew Dragon Endurance. Media accreditation deadlines for Crew-4 launch are as follows: U.S. media and U.S. citizens representing international media must apply by 4 p.m. EDT Sunday , March 20. , March 20. International media without U.S. citizenship must apply by 4 p.m. Sunday, March 13 . All accreditation requests should be submitted online at: https://media.ksc.nasa.gov COVID-19 safety protocols for this event will be communicated closer to the date of the event. For questions about accreditation, please email: [email protected]. If you have special logistical requests, such as space for satellite trucks, tents, or electrical connections, please send your request to: [email protected] by Friday, April 1. For other questions, please contact Kennedy's newsroom: at 321-867-2468. Para obtener informacion sobre cobertura en espanol en el Centro Espacial Kennedy o si desea solicitar entrevistas en espanol, comuniquese con Antonia Jaramillo: 321-501-8425. For launch coverage and more information about the mission, visit: https://www.nasa.gov/commercialcrew SOURCE NASA "So keeping the front porch and entry hallway cleani.e. the nosehelps keep the rest of the house clean." According to the report, wildfire smoke contains fine particulate matter and potentially toxic combustion products. Epidemiological studies consistently show associations between exposure and adverse respiratory health outcomes (Liu et al. 2015; Kondo et al. 2019). Bob Geng, MD, an allergist/immunologist at Rady Children's Hospital-San Diego and an assistant clinical professor at UC San Diego School of Medicine, echoed the warnings in the UN's report. "There are a variety of different irritants and chemicals that are released from wildfires, and those agents have a significant impact on our health in a multi-organ system fashion," Geng said. "These can all contribute to significant adverse events that have immediate and potentially long-term consequences." Geng said he often sees an uptick in respiratory issues during wildfire outbreaks near his practice in San Diego. "There are usually a number of acute concerns, such as patients calling in with worsening symptoms from their allergies or asthma. These patients often need to use more immediate rescue or symptomatic medications during these times," Geng said. Keith Matheny, MD, FARS, an ENT surgeon at Collin County Ear Nose and Throat in Dallas, TX, said it's a point of concern even for those far from hotbeds of wildfire activity like California. "If we're talking about a 50 percent increase in wildfires in 80 years, the general air quality in the atmosphere will continue to deteriorate during that time," Matheny said. "So, it's something for everyone to be aware of, especially those who have underlying chronic conditions such as asthma or COPD, that we need to do all we can to protect our bodies." Matheny recommends staying indoors and using strong air filtration systems during wildfire outbreaks. He also said dangerous particles can potentially enter the respiratory tract through the nose, making it the entry point not only for bacteria and viruses but also particles in the air which contain allergens and irritants released by the fires. Both physicians underscored the importance of nasal hygiene becoming a routine in the general population to help potentially decrease the impact on the respiratory system. "The hairs in the nose and mucus tend to trap a lot of particles, which can gradually mobilize from front to back in the nose and end up in the throat or potentially even in the lungs," Matheny said. "So keeping the front porch and entry hallway cleani.e. the nosehelps keep the rest of the house clean." Geng and Matheny both recommend maintaining nasal hygiene with standard procedures such as washing out the sinuses, but they also highlighted a new device for nasal cleansing that they recommend to patients called NasoClenz. It includes anatomically designed nasal applicators used with a proprietary gel to clean the skin and hair in the front part of the nose. In the setting of smoke with particles being inhaled through the nose, they believe cleaning with NasoClenz could prove to be helpful. Geng said for patients who have underlying nasal inflammation, the proprietary NasoClenz gel helps to lubricate while cleansing, which he feels might help alleviate symptoms that can be exacerbated by wildfires. Dr. Gail Lebovic, CEO of Silicon Valley Innovations and inventor of NasoClenz said, "We live in a world where our respiratory system is increasingly exposed to harmful materials in the air including smog, smoke from wildfires, allergens and of course germs. The nose plays a central role in our health and, in my opinion, has been underestimated in its importance as a direct gateway into our body." Lebovic envisions a world where everyone incorporates nasal hygiene into their daily personal hygiene routine much like brushing your teeth or washing your hands. Likewise, Matheny recommends using NasoClenz frequently especially during times of heightened wildfire activity and allergy season. "It's a good daily practice for anyone, and certainly those who are living in areas with a lot of wildfires or environmental pollutants," Matheny said. The product is currently available at NasoClenz.com. About Silicon Valley Innovations Silicon Valley Innovations' mission is to create technologic solutions that help people lead happier, healthier lives. The company was founded by Dr. Gail Lebovic, a surgeon, inventor, entrepreneur, and internationally recognized expert on breast reconstruction and surgical options after cancer. With more than three decades of experience in the medical device industry, Dr. Lebovic and her team are committed to creating unique devices that solve significant health problems. To learn more about Silicon Valley Innovations, visit svi-inc.com. Contact: Liz Dowling, (415) 388-2794 Dowling & Dennis PR [email protected] SOURCE Silicon Valley Innovations "OmniTRAX is committed to operate safely and responsibly in the communities we serve, and AMPS Traction's innovative technology is an important addition to our fleet and an important step for our industry," said OmniTRAX CEO Dean Piacente. "We are thankful to Governor DeWine and Ohio EPA for their commitment to clean air and the grant program that has made this emission-saving equipment upgrade possible in our Ohio operations." NSR was selected as a grantee from the $75M Diesel Mitigation Trust Fund, overseen by Ohio Environmental Protection Agency. The Fund, in its fourth year of grants, awards eligible applicants with grants that support the demonstratable improvement of air quality. The new AMPS Traction battery electric locomotive is projected to reduce NSR emissions by 77%, thereby removing 4.2 tons of nitrogen oxide from the atmosphere. The EPA's national and regional rules to reduce emissions of NO2 and NOx help state and local governments meet the National Ambient Air Quality Standard (NAAQS). Based in Cuyahoga County, NSR serves rail customers in the greater Cleveland area. The NSR was one of seven grantees awarded for projects that reduce emissions from aging diesel vehicles and equipment. About OmniTRAX, Inc. As one of North America's largest and fastest growing private railroad and transportation management companies, OmniTRAX's core capabilities range from providing transportation and supply chain management services to railroad and port companies, to providing intermodal and industrial switching operations to railroads, ports and a diverse group of industrial companies. Through its affiliation with The Broe Group and its portfolio of managed companies, OmniTRAX also has the unique capability of offering specialized industrial development and real estate solutions, both on and off the rail network managed by OmniTRAX. More information is available at omnitrax.com. About The Broe Group Founded in 1972, The Broe Group is a private, multi-billion-dollar investment group with diversified holdings in real estate, rail, infrastructure, energy, agriculture, water, healthcare and technology throughout 37 North American states and provinces. Its deep operational knowledge derived from owning and operating multi-billion-dollar businesses and the global economic insights gleaned from serving its vast Fortune 500 clientele are strategic differentiators. The Broe Group's entrepreneurial focus enables it to find true value wherever it resides. For more information, visit broe.com. About AMPS Traction: AMPS Traction has been a leader in industrial battery conversion technologies since 1998. Conversions include rail applications, terminal tractors, and other off highway equipment. AMPS Traction continues to provide customers with services from general engineering support to complete vehicle manufacturing. www.ampstraction.com SOURCE OmniTRAX ASHBURN, Va., March 2, 2022 /PRNewswire/ -- PlayCyber by Katzcy will bring 1,000 women together, from across the globe, for a 24-hour+ virtual event where they will play a variety of cyber games and learn about careers in cybersecurity. Taking place during Women's History Month, WICKED6 Cyber Games ( https://www.wicked6.com/ ), an annual event for the Women's Society of Cyberjutsu , will take place March 2324, 2022. 24-Hour+ Virtual Global Event Focused on Increasing the Number of Women in Cybersecurity WICKED6 Esport Athletic Wear Available "We're so excited to bring WICKED6 to a global audience of women in celebration of Women's History Month," stated Jessica Gulick, CEO of Katzcy. "Increasing the number of women in cybersecurity is both a global challenge and imperative." "Events like WICKED6 are essential to support women and girls interested in careers in cyber," says Mari Galloway, CEO and founding board member for the Women's Society of Cyberjutsu (WSC). "As a 501(c)(3) nonprofit cybersecurity community dedicated to bringing more women and girls to cyber, we're excited that this year's event is reaching a global audience." Keynote speaker Ann Johnson, VP of Security, Compliance, & Identity at Microsoft, will kick off WICKED6 on Wednesday, March 23, starting at 4:00 PM ET. The "follow the sun" agenda will provide live programming with region-specific speakers and presentations, allowing for networking in native languages. Speakers include Dr. Amelia Phillips, BAS Program Lead, Cybersecurity & Forensics at Highline College; Deidre Diamond, Founder of CyberSN; Dr. Reem Faraj AlShammari, Head of Gender PMO in the Diversity & Inclusion Council at Kuwait Oil Company; Veronica Ikpa, Information Security Analyst at MainOne; and Bobbie Stempfley, Vice President & Business Unit Security Officer, Dell Technologies. The 24-hour+ event will conclude with a finale beginning on Thursday, March 24, at 4:00 PM ET. WICKED6 has launched a new apparel line that is available from its official store at https://www.wicked6.com/shop . Jerseys, hoodies, polos, and leggings are available for fans and players to help support the Women's Society of Cyberjutsu. A variety of cyber games will be provided for all skill levels and include Capture the Flag (CTF) challenges, Attack and Defend, Jeopardy competitions, and more. Prizes will be awarded throughout the event. WICKED6 is supported by an Advisory Board comprised of cybersecurity industry professionals. Sponsors and partners of the event include SimSpace Corporation , Microsoft , Archon Clothing , OODA Loop, The CyberWire , U.S. Cyber Range of Virginia Tech , Raices Cyber Org , and ICS Village . Sponsorships are available at https://www.wicked6.com/#sponsor . About Katzcy Katzcy is a social impact company committed to helping build a diverse and high-performing tech and cybersecurity community through impactful marketing strategies for tech firms and skill-oriented tech competitions for the workforce. As a certified Woman-Owned Small Business (WOSB), Katzcy is dedicated to growth, innovation, and progress. Through our PlayCyber line of business, Katzcy hosts epic life-changing games such as US Cyber Games , MVP Vibe Fest , and more. About Women's Society of Cyberjutsu The Women's Society of Cyberjutsu is a national 501(c)(3) nonprofit that promotes training, mentoring, and more to advance women and girls in cybersecurity careers. The WSC community includes information security professionals, IT professionals, programmers, computer scientists and engineers, as well as women wanting to explore and join the field. Recognizing the importance of encouraging girls to embrace a future in STEM-related professions through its Cyberjutsu Girls Academy, WSC provides a unique hands-on curriculum focused on securing information technology. Media contact: Beth Mayhew [email protected] 703-651-2667 SOURCE Katzcy Press Release March 2, 2022 Dispatch from Crame No. 1226: Sen. Leila M. de Lima on DFA's laudable UNGA vote against the Ukraine invasion 3/2/22 I commend the Department of Foreign Affairs (DFA) for the vote at the United Nations General Assembly (UNGA) signifying the Philippines' condemnation of the Russian invasion of Ukraine. The DFA is all the more to be praised for this action in light of contrary pronouncements from non-foreign service officials of the Duterte Administration saying that the Philippines should stay neutral on Russia's military adventurism in Ukraine. Of course, the Philippines cannot stay neutral on this barbarous invasion of a peaceful nation without forfeiting its place in the international community that is the United Nations. Unprovoked and without justifiable cause, Russia's premeditated attack on Ukraine violates the UN Charter and constitutes the crime of aggression which is a crime against humanity. No nation that upholds the values enshrined in the UN Charter and that calls for an international rules-based regime should remain standing on the sidelines while a powerful nation rolls its tanks into, and bombs the cities of a weaker one. I laud the DFA for its resounding affirmation that staying neutral does not bode well for our standing in the global community as it goes against our commitments to uphold the fundamental ideals of peace, freedom and justice. We should proclaim unequivocally to the world, as the DFA has, that powerful nations should not act as bullies against their smaller neighbors. We should be clear that there is no room for blackmail using superior might and overwhelming force to intimidate, coerce, and threaten sovereign nations as they charter their own course in the international stage as chosen by their people. In addition to the DFA's UNGA statement, the Philippines should categorically call on Russia to stop its invasion of Ukraine. The Russian army should withdraw from Ukraine immediately and leave its people in peace. Ukraine is no longer part of Russia, and longs for its own future as a sovereign nation in its own right. No country can stop another from choosing its own path. I offer my prayers for the people of Ukraine, and for the enlightenment of the Russian leadership to end this war. (Access the handwritten version, here: https://issuu.com/senatorleilam.delima/docs/dispatch_1226) With AI and data at its core, OrthoGrid technology redefines orthopedic navigation and improves the surgeon's efficiency, accuracy, and reproducibility. "Surgeons are risk-averse decision makers," says Richard Boddington, co-CEO of OrthoGrid. "They spend most of their time interpreting information so they can make decisions that ensure reproducible outcomes for their patients. AI provides them with the most efficient way to interpret all that information in real-time, which is the true transformation we are delivering in orthopedic surgery." The last technology innovation cycle in orthopedic navigation integrated robotics as an extension of an optical tracking system that is a few decades old. Its automated robotic arm solves an execution issue that is mechanical in nature, holding a cutting block or saw, primarily receiving information, not processing it. These expensive systems still require pin placement, manual registration, pre-operative imaging, a dedicated operator, and extensive training with certification. Not taking away from their enduring promise, robotics, as is, has difficulty meeting the value equation demanded by the evolution of orthopedic surgery environments such ambulatory surgical centers. Today's new technology innovation cycle centers on artificial intelligence. Data-driven AI powered technology actively responds to and enhances the surgeon's performance throughout every phase of surgery. In comparison, OrthoGrid AI automatically registers a patient's specific anatomy, identifies instruments and implants, and processes the data in accordance with the surgeon's established workflow. All of this occurs seamlessly in real time and without any delay. "Our new Hip AI platform is experiential," says Edouard Saget, co-CEO of OrthoGrid. "As my good friend and orthopedic surgeon Stefano Bini told me a month ago, 'Good AI is obvious! And that makes it sticky.' It's hard to explain that patient-specific anatomy will be automatically registered, and all the information you want to see will be processed instantly, the way you expect to see it. It just needs to be experienced." OrthoGrid's applications are carefully designed to be intuitive and effective for all stakeholders. This intuitiveness stems from the company's belief that healthcare technology must answer the value equation of quality over cost. "The differentiating element of OrthoGrid's platform is that it integrates seamlessly with what I already do. It elevates what I've spent years perfecting and is helping me take my surgical practice to a new level. It's a smart digital partner committed to enhancing my performance without asking me to compromise on time, invasiveness, or cost," says Brian Gladnick, MD, orthopedic surgeon at the Carrell Clinic in Dallas, Texas. Digital transformation is omnipresent in healthcare. Although OrthoGrid is innovating on a different track, technology is integrative by nature. "OrthoGrid's AI-powered virtual guide wire trajectory already integrates with their soon to come augmented reality in my trauma cases," concludes Erik Kubiak, MD, Vice Chair of Orthopedic Surgery at University of Nevada Las Vegas. About OrthoGrid Systems, Inc. OrthoGrid is a MedTech company and the leader in the digital transformation of orthopedic surgery. Using data, deep research and collaboration with surgeons, we create intuitive and efficient digital platforms that enhance orthopedic surgery on every level. OrthoGrid's future plans include the release of its Trauma AI applications. For more information about OrthoGrid or to request a software demo, visit www.OrthoGrid.com. SOURCE OrthoGrid Systems, Inc. FORT WORTH, Texas, March 2, 2022 /PRNewswire/ -- Paragon Energy Solutions, a company focused on providing safety-related parts and components to the nuclear industry, has signed a teaming agreement with Reuter-Stokes, a Baker Hughes business. The agreement encompasses joint marketing and project development and execution in the growing nuclear small modular reactor (SMR) and advanced reactor markets. Paragon's safety-related digital and analog signal processing solutions will pair with Reuter-Stokes' nuclear-detection technology to provide a holistic nuclear instrumentation solution that is also more efficient and comprehensive. To provide the best design for each client, the technology can be customized to a user's specific application. Doug VanTassell, President & CEO of Paragon stated, "This new teaming will actively address the needs of the SMR market, and place greater focus on the unique needs of next-generation reactors. We are pleased to be in a place to better serve our customers and ensure they have a reliable, cost-effective, and high-performing neutron monitoring system." "Our partnership with Paragon is an example of how, investing for growth, we're strengthening our customer proposition, supporting the nuclear industry's latest clean energy technology, and helping to extend our footprint across the sector," said Rod Martinez, vice president of Reuter-Stokes. About Paragon Energy Solutions For more than 30 years, Paragon has provided an unmatched level of commitment to tackling the nuclear industry's most difficult challenges. Dedicated to quality, safety, reliability, and carbon-free energy, the company delivers premium products to nuclear energy facilities with proven reductions in direct costs, parts inventory, improved process efficiency, and obsolescence solutions. www.paragones.com or (865) 966-5330. Follow Paragon on LinkedIn or Twitter. About Reuter-Stokes Reuter-Stokes, a Baker Hughes business, designs and manufactures mission-critical measuring devices for precise radiation measurement, pressurized and boiling water reactor monitoring, UV flame detection, and downhole sensors for directional drilling. Based in Twinsburg, Ohio, Reuter-Stokes offers more than six decades of ongoing expertise in the design, manufacturing, and installation of its extensive portfolio of gamma and neutron detection technologies. As an industry leader, the company provides innovative technologies and services, including extensive research, development, and production of high-quality detectors for a broad range of radiation monitoring applications. SOURCE Paragon Energy Solutions, LLC DALLAS, March 2, 2022 /PRNewswire/ -- Dallas-based healthcare AI company, Pieces Inc, has announced the launch of a GPT-3 enabled version of their clinical AI software, Pieces Predict. GPT-3, a natural language model developed by the AI research and development company, OpenAI, is being deployed first within the Pieces reLOS application, an administrative use case focused on resource prioritization and optimizing hospital length of stay. The software helps hospitals identify and prioritize clinical, operational and social barriers that would otherwise prolong a patient's hospitalization. As part of its explanatory mode, Pieces reLOS generates a note summary for multidisciplinary huddles that briefly explains the circumstance of the patient's hospitalization, including current clinical issues and administrative tasks needed for discharge. GPT-3 helps render this AI-generated summary into a context that is faster and easier to interpret by hospital staff. "The GPT-3 capability enables Pieces to correspond with nurses, doctors, social workers and care managers on a whole different level, in a 'human-like' way, improving the speed and ease of communication," says Ruben Amarasingham, MD, CEO of Pieces, Inc. "The field of real-time healthcare predictive analytics is moving away from numbers alone as a primary mode of communication to one that can now include increasingly supple and subtle prose. We are excited about the possibilities ahead." Pieces has built security, privacy and human-in-the-loop oversight features specifically around the GPT-3 component of the platform. "As an industry, we need to approach natural language models in medicine with a certain level of caution and circumspection," says Yukun Chen, PhD, VP of AI at Pieces. "For us this means focusing on administrative use cases and a fairly substantive level of technology safeguards, human oversight and supervision. Eventually, we see this work playing a greater role in deeper clinical use cases, conversational AI and more sophisticated patient-related interactions." U.S. hospital stays cost the broader health system at least $377.5 billion per year . In today's value-based care environment, hospitals are under increasing pressure to avoid patient harm and maintain quality while also lowering costs and staff burnout. Reducing hospital length of stay is an important indicator of a hospital's success in achieving these goals. Hospital sites interested in early adoption or learning more can sign up here. About Pieces Predict Pieces Predict is a cloud-based clinical decision support system that works across healthcare settings to improve outcomes for patients. Pieces insights are made available through the electronic health record or through a Predict web interface. The web-interface provides immediate access to Predict predictions, clinical insights, patient summaries and effectiveness, value and ROI reporting. About Pieces Pieces, Inc. is a healthcare artificial intelligence and technology company that connects health systems and the community to address clinical and social determinants of health through community networks and intelligent software and services. Our solution interprets patient information in real-time and connects health systems and community-based organizations to support healthier outcomes, both inside and outside of hospital walls. Using cloud-based artificial intelligence with clinically-based natural language processing (NLP) and physician-supervised machine learning, our tools help streamline clinician workflows and improve patient outcomes. Combined, our solutions, Pieces Predict and Pieces Connect, create a comprehensive and unique solution for connected community health. Media Contact: Todd Stein for Pieces Todd Stein Communications 510-417-0612 [email protected] SOURCE Pieces, Inc. 5G Enterprise networks have proven to be game changers for businesses and are set to have a market value of US$ 14 billion by 2028. These future-ready 5G networks will be enabled by open standards-based architectures and will be able to handle dense environments required for seamless indoor coverage. STL's Garuda small cell radio is ideal for small, medium and large enterprises, supporting more than 30 concurrent user devices per radio. ASOCS' CYRUS, a fully virtualized O-RAN CU/DU enterprise solution, delivers standalone and 5G connectivity in a single software stack. VMware Edge Compute Stack is an edge computing solution that helps to build, run, manage, and protect edge-native applications at the Near and Far Edge. The combination of STL, ASOCS and VMware offers a powerful on-premise fully virtualized and open RAN 5G solution on general purpose servers; this solution can be hosted alongside enterprise IT infrastructure on general purpose commercial off-the-shelf (COTS) servers, seamlessly blending with an enterprise's existing infrastructure. In December 2021, STL & ASOCS had jointly demonstrated the 5G enterprise use-case as a part of the O-RAN Alliance annual plugfest, including the interoperability of Garuda with ASOCS' Distribution Unit/Centralised Unit. Speaking on the collaboration, Gilad Garon, ASOCS CEO, said: "Our strong partnership with STL and VMware brings a strong end-to-end Private 5G enterprise network solution which we already see being adopted in Smart Manufacturing and the digital transformation to Industry 4.0. With our CYRUS virtual RAN solution along with STL's Garuda and computation at the edge with VMware, enterprises will be able to easily deploy and manage 5G networks with high high-performance level, security, and flexibility." Commenting on the solution, Muneyb Minhazuddin, vice president of edge strategy, VMware, said: "We are delighted to associate with STL and ASOCS to bring the 5G enterprise networks solutions to provide compelling benefits to businesses. VMware Edge Compute Stack provides a purpose-built, integrated VM and container-based stack that enables organizations to deploy and secure edge-native apps at the far edge. It will complement STL's Garuda and ASOCS' CYRUS in paving the way for more seamless 5G enterprise connectivity." Speaking on the collaboration, Chris Rice, CEO, Access Solutions, STL, said: "This collaboration is a testament to the benefits of open networking principles - bringing three partners together to offer a very powerful solution to address various 5G Enterprise opportunities, globally. Enterprises will now be able to leverage a robust, secure 5G network that is easy to scale and upgrade and drives greater levels of service efficiency." About STL - Sterlite Technologies Ltd: STL is a leading integrator of digital networks providing All-in 5G solutions. Our capabilities across wireless connectivity, optical networking, software, and services, place us amongst the top 5G RAN vendors by Gartner. These capabilities are built on open-source and converged architectures helping telcos, cloud companies, citizen networks, and large enterprises deliver next-gen experiences to their customers. STL partners with service providers globally in achieving a green and sustainable digital future in alignment with UN SDG goals. STL has a strong global presence in India, Italy, the UK, the US, China, and Brazil. Read more, Contact us. stl.tech |Twitter | LinkedIn | YouTube SOURCE Sterlite Technologies Ltd. (STL) BEACHWOOD, Ohio and NEW YORK, March 2, 2022 /PRNewswire/ -- Stratos Wealth Enterprises, a Stratos Wealth Holdings ("Stratos") company, today announced the purchase of a controlling interest in NSC Asesores ("NSC"), a premier wealth management and investment firm headquartered in Mexico City, with more than $4 billion (U.S.) in client assets, from an affiliate of the leading Swiss wealth manager Julius Baer Group Ltd. ("Julius Baer"). Stratos companies collectively oversee $23.3 billion in assets under advisement. The Stratos investment provides NSC, one of the oldest and largest wealth management firms in Mexico, an experienced partner with a national footprint in the United States, allowing it to develop its capabilities and talent in Mexico and expand into other growth markets. Lou Camacho, COO of Stratos Wealth Holdings and President of Stratos Wealth Enterprises, said, "Looking forward to a more globalized financial services industry, we see incredible opportunities to work with the NSC leadership as we partner to enhance its historic strength in Mexico and in other markets with emergent wealth management demand." NSC's founder and CEO Claudio Nunez, said, "More than 30 years ago, I founded NSC with a belief that independent and objective financial advice for our clients would drive incredible growth for our team and our clients. As we look ahead to the next 30 years, we are excited to collaborate with Stratos and Julius Baer in support of our strategic objectives in Mexico and around the world." Nancy Andrefsky, CFO of Stratos Wealth Holdings, said, "The strength of the NSC team and the firm's financial foundation make this deal the right opportunity to expand internationally." Stratos now holds 50.1 percent of the Mexican wealth management firm. Julius Baer will maintain a 19.9 percent holding and NSC's managing partners own the remaining 30 percent of the firm. Jeff Concepcion, the founder and CEO of Stratos, said, "We have long monitored the high-growth Latin American market for an opportunity generating similar success there as we've seen in the United States over the past several years. We are very impressed with our new NSC partners and are confident that we will see years of significant growth together within the Mexican and broader Latin American audience." The financial terms of the deal were not disclosed. About Stratos Wealth Holdings Stratos Wealth Holdings is a family of companies focused on supporting the growth and success of financial advisors across business models and affiliation structures. Stratos companies include Stratos Wealth Partners, Stratos Wealth Advisors, Stratos Wealth Enterprises, and Fundamentum. Stratos includes a national network of over 350 experienced financial advisors and financial planning practitioners working across 26 states throughout the country. Stratos Wealth Partners, Ltd., an SEC Registered Investment Advisor, manages over $10.33 billion in advisory assets, and advises through LPL Financial, over $8.28 billion in brokerage and third party managed assets for a total of $18.61 billion as of December 31, 2021. Fundamentum, LLC, an SEC Registered Investment Advisor, manages over $1.25 billion in advisory assets as of December 31, 2021. Stratos Wealth Advisors, LLC, an SEC Registered Investment Advisor, manages over $2.59 billion in advisory assets as of December 31, 2021. Stratos Wealth Management DBA LPL Financial, an SEC Registered Investment Advisor, manages over $451 million in advisory assets, and advises through LPL Financial, over $382 million in brokerage and third party managed assets for a total of $833 million as of December 31, 2021. About NSC Asesores Founded in 1989, NSC provides comprehensive investment advisory and financial planning services to high-net-worth individuals, families, multi-generation family offices, business owners, trusts, estates, and charitable organizations in Mexico and internationally. About Emigrant Partners, LLC Emigrant Partners, LLC ("EP") is the capital partner of Stratos and supported Stratos in evaluating the NSC transaction and financing the acquisition. EP is the largest non-voting, passive, minority, long-term capital partner in the U.S. wealth management space with 17 partner firms collectively advising on over USD $88 billion of client assets. EP is wholly owned by Emigrant Bank, the nation's largest family-owned bank, which has more than USD $1 billion in capital and $7 billion in assets. About Julius Baer Group Ltd. Julius Baer, headquartered in Zurich, is the leading Swiss wealth management group and a premium brand in this global sector, with a focus on advising sophisticated private clients. At the end of 2021, assets under management amounted to CHF 482 billion. Bank Julius Baer & Co. Ltd., the renowned Swiss private bank with origins dating back to 1890, is the principal operating company of Julius Baer Group Ltd., whose shares are listed on the SIX Swiss Exchange (ticker symbol: BAER) and are included in the Swiss Leader Index (SLI), comprising the 30 largest and most liquid Swiss stocks. Julius Baer is present in over 25 countries and more than 60 locations globally. NOTE: This document is for informational purposes only and is not an offer to sell, or solicitation of an offer to purchase, any security, product or fund. The information does not constitute investment advice and should not be relied upon as such. Certain information herein is forward-looking in nature and may be subject to change. Information is as of February 22, 2022 unless otherwise specified, with no obligation to update. Media Contacts: For Stratos Kevin Elvington (440) 505-5608 stratoswealthpartners.com [email protected] For NSC (+55) 52.51.43.99 [email protected] For Emigrant Partners James F. Haggerty, President and CEO PRCG | Haggerty LLC (212) 683-8100 [email protected] For Julius Baer Media Relations, tel. +41 (0) 58 888 8888 Investor Relations, tel. +41 (0) 58 888 5256 SOURCE Stratos Wealth Enterprises MINNEAPOLIS, March 2, 2022 /PRNewswire/ -- An increase in social media use among teens and young adults during the COVID-19 pandemic may be linked to an increase in tic severity, according to a small preliminary study that will be presented at the American Academy of Neurology's 74th Annual Meeting being held in person in Seattle, April 2 to 7, 2022 and virtually, April 24 to 26, 2022. Tics are sudden, uncontrollable movements and sounds often prompted by an irresistible urge to produce them. They are the defining feature of chronic tic disorders, including Tourette syndrome, which is a neurodevelopmental disorder that begins in childhood. "Given the known increases in social media use during the pandemic, as well as the parallel increase in tic disorders that we have seen in our clinic, we investigated whether there was any correlation between social media use and tic symptoms," said study author Jessica Frey, MD, at the University of Florida in Gainesville, Florida, and a member of the American Academy of Neurology. The study involved 20 teens and young adults ages 11-21 who were experiencing tics. Participants completed a survey which examined time spent on social media, how often they experienced tics, the severity of those tics, and overall quality of life. Quality of life refers to an individual's view of their physical and mental health. Of the group studied, 65% of the participants reported using social media an average of six hours per day, with 90% of the participants reporting they used social media more during the pandemic than previously. In addition, the survey showed that 85% indicated their tic frequencies worsened during the pandemic, and 50% noted that social media had negatively impacted their tics. Researchers found a significant correlation between an increase in tic severity and reduced quality of life with increased social media use during the COVID-19 pandemic. For example, researchers asked participants to rank their tic severity using a scale of zero to six with zero being least severe and six being most severe. On average, those who reported no increase in social media use ranked their tic frequency during COVID-19 as four. Those who reported increased social media use ranked their tic frequency during COVID-19 as five. Participants also ranked their quality of life on a scale of zero being excellent and six being their worst week ever, with three meaning no change. Those who increased their social media use reported scores of 2.5, while those who reported low use of social media had scores of 1.5. However, researchers did not find a link between social media use and how often a person had tics either at the time of the survey or since the start of the pandemic. "Our results have begun to shed light on the impact that the COVID-19 pandemic and increased social media use may be having on teens and young adults with tic disorders," said Frey. "More research is needed to better identify the exact stressors that are leading to more severe tics so we can work to reduce stressors for those who are experiencing them." Researchers plan to enroll an additional 60 participants in their study to further explore these associations. A limitation of this study was patients reported their own symptoms. Also, changes in the character and complexity of tics were not assessed. Learn more about tic disorders at BrainandLife.org, home of the American Academy of Neurology's free patient and caregiver magazine focused on the intersection of neurologic disease and brain health. Follow Brain & Life on Facebook, Twitter and Instagram. When posting to social media channels about this research, we encourage you to use the American Academy of Neurology's Annual Meeting hashtag #AANAM. The American Academy of Neurology is the world's largest association of neurologists and neuroscience professionals, with over 38,000 members. The AAN is dedicated to promoting the highest quality patient-centered neurologic care. A neurologist is a doctor with specialized training in diagnosing, treating and managing disorders of the brain and nervous system such as Alzheimer's disease, stroke, migraine, multiple sclerosis, concussion, Parkinson's disease and epilepsy. For more information about the American Academy of Neurology, visit AAN.com or find us on Facebook, Twitter, Instagram, LinkedIn and YouTube. SOURCE American Academy of Neurology SANTA BARBARA, Calif., March 2, 2022 /PRNewswire/ -- The Texas Department of Housing and Community Affairs (TDHCA) will directly assist homeowners affected by COVID-19 through its Homeowners Assistance Fund (HAF) program. Texans will qualify and receive funds through Mortgage Relief , an online application portal created by Yardi. The HAF was established under the American Rescue Plan Act of 2021 and the State of Texas will administer approximately $842 million in HAF funding. Yardi will provide software and general program services to TDHCA for administering the HAF Program. Yardi Mortgage Relief is built on the successful Rent Relief solution used by many state and local agencies across the country to disburse emergency rental assistance funds. (PRNewsfoto/Yardi) Yardi Mortgage Relief is built on the successful Rent Relief solution used by many state and local agencies across the country to disburse emergency rental assistance funds . The innovative components of Yardi's Mortgage Relief solution and robust team were deciding factors for TDHCA. "The Yardi Mortgage Relief technology offers features and benefits that are unique, including built-in payment distribution that is proven capable to serve the large number of homeowners we expect to assist here in Texas," said Monica Galuski, director of bond finance and chief investment officer at the TDHCA. "We are honored to be selected by Texas Department of Housing and look forward to the opportunity to help Texas homeowners recover from the adverse impact of the pandemic. The Yardi Mortgage Relief platform is an end-to-end solution that will expedite disbursement of funds to eligible homeowners in Texas. Yardi has offices in Dallas & Austin and we look forward to helping TDHCA with the very important HAF program," said John Pendergast, senior vice president at Yardi. Learn more about Yardi's innovative and comprehensive homeowner assistance fund management solutions by visiting https://www.homemortgagerelief.com/ . State housing agencies seeking to expedite and streamline their relief efforts can contact Yardi at (800) 866-1144 to set up a private demonstration. About TDHCA The Texas Department of Housing and Community Affairs is the state agency responsible for affordable housing, community and energy assistance programs, colonia activities, and regulation of the state's manufactured housing industry. The Department currently administers $2 billion through for-profit, nonprofit, and local government partnerships to deliver local housing and community-based opportunities and assistance to Texans in need. About Yardi Yardi develops and supports industry-leading investment, compliance and property management software for all types and sizes of real estate companies and housing authorities. Established in 1984, Yardi is based in Santa Barbara, California, and serves more than 10,000 clients worldwide with more than 7,500 employees. For more information on how Yardi is Energized for Tomorrow, visit yardi.com . SOURCE Yardi This kind of diverse collaboration is key to the nation's short- and long-term advancement of progressive ideas. Tweet this Woolpert is a global leader in the collection and processing of high-resolution topographic and bathymetric lidar and imagery, acoustic hydrographic services and marine survey. The international architecture, engineering and geospatial (AEG) firm specializes in delivering geospatial data and innovative hybrid technologies to defense and federal intelligence communities. In 2021, Woolpert augmented its capabilities by acquiring two geospatial firms, AAM and Optimal GEO, and earning a patent for developing revolutionary new topo-bathy lidar technologies. Last month, the firm acquired eTrac Inc., a vessel-based hydrographic survey and marine technology firm. Florida, Woolpert has supported state, local and federal government projects for decades, helping agencies solve their most important infrastructure, maritime and hydrographic challenges. Woolpert President and CEO Scott Cattran said the Hub, which is Woolpert's sixth Florida office, will serve as his new office and that of several senior vice presidents to support the firm's expansion in the region and the state. Woolpert's work at the Hub also will contribute to SPID's Grow Smarter strategy to elevate education, equity and entrepreneurship. "This kind of diverse collaboration is key to the nation's short- and long-term advancement of progressive ideas and real-world solutions," Cattran said. "Woolpert has worked with several SPID partners and has found success within this type of setting, from joint ventures to research and development teams to public-private-academic partnerships, and we are looking forward to what we can all accomplish within this dynamic ecosystem." About Woolpert Woolpert is the premier architecture, engineering, geospatial (AEG) and strategic consulting firm, with a vision to become one of the best companies in the world. We innovate within and across markets to effectively serve public, private and government clients worldwide. Woolpert is an ENR Top 150 Global Design Firm, recently earned its sixth-straight Great Place to Work certification, and actively nurtures a culture of growth, inclusion, diversity and respect. Founded in 1911 in Dayton, Ohio, Woolpert has been America's fastest-growing AEG firm since 2015. The firm has more than 1,600 employees and 60 offices on four continents. For more, visit woolpert.com. CONACT: Jill Kelley, [email protected], 937-531-1258 SOURCE Woolpert DUBLIN, March 2, 2022 /PRNewswire/ -- The "Global Metal Packaging Market 2022-2026" report has been added to ResearchAndMarkets.com's offering. The publisher has been monitoring the metal packaging market and it is poised to grow by $22.63 bn during 2022-2026 progressing at a CAGR of 3.01% during the forecast period. The report on the metal packaging market provides a holistic analysis, market size and forecast, trends, growth drivers, and challenges, as well as vendor analysis covering around 25 vendors. The report offers an up-to-date analysis regarding the current global market scenario, latest trends and drivers, and the overall market environment. The market is driven by the increasing launch of new food and beverage products in metal cans and sustainability with metal packaging. The metal packaging market analysis includes the end-user segment and geographic landscape. The metal packaging market is segmented as below: By End-user Food packaging Beverage packaging Personal care packaging Others By Geography North America APAC Europe South America MEA This study identifies the rising focus on improving the shelf life of products as one of the prime reasons driving the metal packaging market growth during the next few years. The report on metal packaging market covers the following areas: Metal packaging market sizing Metal packaging market forecast Metal packaging market industry analysis The publisher's robust vendor analysis is designed to help clients improve their market position, and in line with this, this report provides a detailed analysis of several leading metal packaging market vendors that include Amcor Plc, Ardagh Group SA, Ball Corp., COFCO Corp., Crown Holdings Inc., Greif Inc., Kian Joo Can Factory Bhd, MAUSER Corporate GmbH, Silgan Holdings Inc., and Sonoco Products Co. Also, the metal packaging market analysis report includes information on upcoming trends and challenges that will influence market growth. This is to help companies strategize and leverage all forthcoming growth opportunities. The study was conducted using an objective combination of primary and secondary information including inputs from key participants in the industry. The report contains a comprehensive market and vendor landscape in addition to an analysis of the key vendors. The publisher presents a detailed picture of the market by the way of study, synthesis, and summation of data from multiple sources by an analysis of key parameters such as profit, pricing, competition, and promotions. It presents various market facets by identifying the key industry influencers. The data presented is comprehensive, reliable, and a result of extensive research - both primary and secondary. The market research reports provide a complete competitive landscape and an in-depth vendor selection methodology and analysis using qualitative and quantitative research to forecast the accurate market growth. Key Topics Covered: 1. Executive Summary Market Overview 2. Market Landscape Market ecosystem Market Characteristics Value chain analysis 3. Market Sizing Market definition Market segment analysis Market size 2021 Market outlook: Forecast for 2021- 2026 4. Five Forces Analysis Five Forces Summary Bargaining power of buyers Bargaining power of suppliers Threat of new entrants Threat of substitutes Threat of rivalry Market condition 5. Market Segmentation by End-user Market segments Comparison by End-user Food packaging - Market size and forecast 2021-2026 Beverage packaging - Market size and forecast 2021-2026 Personal care packaging - Market size and forecast 2021-2026 Others - Market size and forecast 2021-2026 Market opportunity by End-user 6. Customer landscape Overview 7. Geographic Landscape Geographic segmentation Geographic comparison North America - Market size and forecast 2021-2026 - Market size and forecast 2021-2026 APAC - Market size and forecast 2021-2026 Europe - Market size and forecast 2021-2026 - Market size and forecast 2021-2026 South America - Market size and forecast 2021-2026 - Market size and forecast 2021-2026 MEA - Market size and forecast 2021-2026 Key leading countries Market opportunity by geography 8. Drivers, Challenges, and Trends Market drivers Market challenges Market trends 9. Vendor Landscape Competitive scenario Vendor landscape Landscape disruption Industry risks 10. Vendor Analysis Vendors covered Market positioning of vendors Amcor Plc Ardagh Group SA Ball Corp. COFCO Corp. Crown Holdings Inc. Greif Inc. Kian Joo Can Factory Bhd MAUSER Corporate GmbH Silgan Holdings Inc. Sonoco Products Co. 11. Appendix For more information about this report visit https://www.researchandmarkets.com/r/67p2rv Media Contact: Research and Markets Laura Wood, Senior Manager [email protected] For E.S.T Office Hours Call +1-917-300-0470 For U.S./CAN Toll Free Call +1-800-526-8630 For GMT Office Hours Call +353-1-416-8900 U.S. Fax: 646-607-1907 Fax (outside U.S.): +353-1-481-1716 SOURCE Research and Markets WASHINGTON, March 2, 2022 /PRNewswire/ -- Top Design Firms, a top resource for buyers looking to find the right service providers, conducted in-depth research and found that the main digital marketing goal of small businesses is expanding their brand awareness (19%) or generating more website traffic (19%). The study also found that almost half (49%) of small businesses are advancing their social media marketing efforts as post-COVID trends recognize a surge in daily social media usage. 21% of small businesses with under $1 million in revenue plan to invest more in social media in 2022. Increasing website traffic and brand building are the biggest digital marketing goals small businesses have for 2022. Top Design Firms conducts a survey on more than 1,000 small business owners and managers to have a look at the trends in the digital marketing space. The report gauges how small businesses approach the evolving online marketing landscape, their goals, and perceptions on what platforms or tools are worth using. 2022 Digital Marketing Trends for Small Businesses Take a look at our team's newest findings: Building brand awareness (19%) and increasing website traffic (19%) are the two most important marketing goals for small businesses followed by revenue generation (17%) and converting leads to customers (15%). 80% of companies have an in-house marketing team. Only 11% of companies making over $50 million work with an outside marketing agency and are more likely (30%) to have an in-house marketing team. work with an outside marketing agency and are more likely (30%) to have an in-house marketing team. Nearly half (49%) of all respondents plan to invest more in social media in 2022. Sarah Chern, the Marketing Director at Virtudesk , a virtual assistant company, commented on how social media use has impacted businesses looking to connect with audiences. "It is not new to us that a lot of studies revealed that social media users have been more active and are spending longer time browsing when the pandemic started," Chern said. She expands on this to discuss the benefits of social media in marketing, "When you post about your brand on social media, you are exposing your brand to a wide variety of audiences." Take a deeper dive into the results of the study and see what else small businesses focus on. Check the full report here . About Top Design Firms Top Design Firms is a directory of design, marketing, and development companies from around the world. Launched in 2003, Top Design Firms was recently acquired by Clutch, the leading ratings and reviews platform for IT, marketing, and business service providers. Media Contact Morgan Flores Senior Manager of Content Strategy & SEO (202) 350-4344 [email protected] SOURCE Top Design Firms NEW YORK, March 2, 2022 /PRNewswire/ -- Irrevocable Settlement Method Election On February 28, 2022, NRF Holdco, LLC (the "Company") irrevocably elected that all future exchanges of its 5.375% Exchangeable Senior Notes due 2033 (the "Notes") will be settled pursuant to cash settlement, as permitted by the indenture governing the Notes (the "Indenture"). Under this settlement method, the Company will satisfy its exchange obligation in cash for each $1,000 aggregate principal amount of Notes. Change in Control On February 28, 2022, CWP Bidco LP, a Delaware limited liability partnership ("Buyer"), an affiliate of Highgate Capital Investments, L.P. and Aurora Health Network, purchased from DigitalBridge Operating Company, LLC, a Delaware limited liability company ("Seller"), a subsidiary of DigitalBridge Group, Inc. (f/k/a Colony Capital, Inc.), pursuant to that certain Purchase and Sale Agreement dated as of September 6, 2021 between Seller and Buyer, all of the Company's membership interests and the Company became a wholly owned subsidiary of Buyer (the " Acquisition "). As a result of the Acquisition, the effective date of a Change in Control and an Additional Shares Change in Control (each as defined in the Indenture) occurred on February 28, 2022. The Company has provided written notice of the Change in Control to the holders of the Notes and informed them of their right to require the Company to repurchase their Notes in connection with the Change in Control. SOURCE Highgate LONDON, March 2, 2022 /PRNewswire/ -- Leading international investment group, Abingdon Global Assets, has announced an ambitious strategy to acquire commercial property in Asia, with Thailand's hospitality, tourism sector identified as offering unique opportunities for investors. Buyers' market COVID-19 has changed the face of international tourism, leaving a substantial deficit in Thailand's GDP. As reported by Statista.com, as of January 2021 approximately 29.4 percent of Thailand's mid-range hotels and almost 27 percent of the budget sector were 'severely' affected by the pandemic. This serious level of disruption has created a buyers' market with many opportunities to acquire valuable commercial real estate in the hospitality, tourism sector at considerably eased prices. Thailand's tourism industry is crucial to the economy, accounting for 11% of the country's GDP (prior to the pandemic), with international tourists contributing the lion's share. TDRI stats show that in 2019 Thailand received almost 40 million tourists and in 2021 the number dropped to fewer than 300,000. With the reopening of the borders and admittance of vaccinated tourists, 2022 is expected to see in excess of 3.4 million visitors. GDP to rise by 2023 In line with other industry experts, Abingdon Global Assets' analysts expect to see an uptick in the Thai economy in 2022. The Thailand Development and Research Institute (TDRI) recently issued a report predicting economic growth to be between 3.0-3.5%, as compared to 0.8% in 2021 and 2020's deficit of -6.1% due to the COVID-19 pandemic. The Thai economy's GDP is expected to reach pre-pandemic levels as soon as 2023. Revitalising Thailand's Tourism Sector The Bank of Thailand's whitepaper, "Revitalising Thailand's Tourism Sector", outlines a range of measures under consideration to help Thailand's revitalise its tourism industry and adapt to the normal and ensure a steady flow of International tourists, as this group comprises the smallest number but generates the most income. About Abingdon Global Assets The company has a robust investment portfolio that has a major focus on investing in commercial real estate and private equity investments designed to contribute to the economic growth of the sectors and countries they invest in. SOURCE Abingdon Global Assets LONDON, March 2, 2022 /PRNewswire/ -- The Global Brand Awards is an annual event held by Global Brands Magazine (GBM), an international publication headquartered in the UK. The award aims to recognise global brands achieving excellence in performance across a broad range of sectors while keeping its readers updated on key trends surrounding the branding world. The Absa Bank (Mauritius) was evaluated based on customer service, satisfaction, digital innovation, strategic relationships and new business development. Commenting on NBB winning the awards, ShivKumar (CEO) of Global Brands Magazine said, "We are so impressed by Absa Bank's ability to innovate and adopt digital trends in their banks. Absa Mauritius has managed to take the company and the group to new heights. From constant innovation to setting the benchmark for customer satisfcation, Absa Bank has proved to us time and again that under the right leadership, anything is possible. We congratulate them for another succesful year and hope they continue to be trendsetters in the Banking sector." Commenting on winning the awards, Sandeep Mohapatra, Head of Digital Transformation of Technology, said, " Absa Mauritius recently won two prestigious awards from the Global Brands Magazine - namely "Best Digital Bank" and "Most Innovative Bank" in Mauritius -, hence reinforcing our belief in the bold digital transformation journey Absa has embarked on. We are honoured and humbled to have been recognised on a global stage, which certainly gives us a lot of credibility amongst our peers and customers. We, at Absa Mauritius, believe in bringing possibilities to life through unique digital innovations that get things done for our customers; pushing digital boundaries to become customer-obsessed is at the core of our focus. We have introduced several industry-first and ground-breaking initiatives, including Abby, an AI-powered Personal Digital Banker, available in the form of a humanoid robot and self-service kiosk at all our branches. Abby was further extended to WhatsApp, making us the first and only bank on the island to offer banking services via the app. We are also the only bank to provide seamless digital onboarding across all our customer segments, including Retail, Offshore, Wealth International, Corporate and Business Banking/SMEs. The onboarding platform is powered with avant-garde tech that enables Digital KYC, Optical Character Recognition and Chat as well as Co-browsing features like customer support. We have converged all customer segments onto one mobile super-app, be it Retail, Business Banking and International Customers, thereby helping our clients experience banking-on-the-go without the hassle of managing multiple apps. Additionally, we introduced contactless cards and a cardless ATM withdrawal feature powered via QR code, enabling our customers to enjoy a safe and easy cash withdrawal experience. For our corporate clients, we have introduced Absa Access, a single sign-on platform enabling them to manage their finances with speed and intelligence. It offers access to multiple products on one dashboard, allowing greater visibility of their business portfolio. Furthermore, our Trade Management Online (TMO) is a state-of-the-art platform for corporates to proceed remotely with all international trade requirements." About Absa Bank Absa Bank (Mauritius) Limited is part of Absa Group Limited, an African financial services group that aims to be the pride of the continent. Absa Group Limited is listed on the Johannesburg Stock Exchange in South Africa and is one of Africa's largest diversified financial services groups with a presence in 12 countries across the continent and around 42,000 employees. We're committed to finding local solutions to uniquely local challenges and everything we do is focused on adding value. To this end, we offer our clients a range of retail, business, corporate and investment, and wealth management solutions as well as ensure a positive impact in all the countries in which we operate. We're a truly African brand, inspired by the people we serve and determined to always be Brave, Passionate and Ready so that we can make our continent proud About Global Brands Magazine Global Brands Magazine (GBM) has been at the forefront, bringing news, views and opinions on brands shaping the future of their industry. The UK-based magazine provides its readers with the latest news and information on 'best-in-class brands across the globe. Each year, GBM develops a series of awards for companies that stand out, having a unique vision, exceptional service, innovative solutions and consumer-centric products among their industry leaders. About Global Brand Awards Global Brand Awards honours brands for their excellence in performance and rewards companies across different sectors for the quality of their services. The Brand Awards highlight the accomplishments of organisations that have performed remarkably well in finance, education, hospitality, automotive, lifestyle, education, real estate, technology, and more. Global Brand Awards recognise vital players who progress towards excellence by providing a platform to acknowledge their efforts. In addition, GBM strives to create awareness concerning the significance of such organisations and rewards them for their notable efforts with the ultimate global recognition. Check out the below links for our social media shout out: Facebook: https://bit.ly/35GqDpo Linkedin: https://bit.ly/3hsb5bo Instagram: https://bit.ly/3IzZSBy Twitter: https://bit.ly/35I2tul SOURCE Global Brands Publications Limited CALABASAS, Calif., March 1, 2022 /PRNewswire/ -- American Homes 4 Rent (NYSE: AMH) (the "Company"), a leading provider of high-quality single-family homes for rent, today announced that members of the Company's management team will participate in a roundtable discussion at the 2022 Citi Global Property CEO Conference on Tuesday, March 8, 2022 at 1:30 p.m. Eastern Time. A live audio webcast of the presentation will be available on the Company's website at www.americanhomes4rent.com under the "For Investors" tab. A replay of the webcast will be available through March 22, 2022. About American Homes 4 Rent American Homes 4 Rent (NYSE: AMH) is a leader in the single-family home rental industry and "American Homes 4 Rent" is a nationally recognized brand for rental homes, known for high-quality, good value and resident satisfaction. We are an internally managed Maryland real estate investment trust, or REIT, focused on acquiring, developing, renovating, leasing, and operating attractive, single-family homes as rental properties. As of December 31, 2021, we owned 57,024 single-family properties in selected submarkets in 22 states. Additional information about American Homes 4 Rent is available on our website at www.americanhomes4rent.com. Contacts: American Homes 4 Rent Investor Relations Nicholas Fromm Phone: (855) 794-2447 Email: [email protected] American Homes 4 Rent Media Relations Megan Grabos Phone: (805) 413-5088 Email: [email protected] SOURCE American Homes 4 Rent REDWOOD SHORES, Calif., March 2, 2022 /PRNewswire/ -- Reichman Jorgensen Lehman & Feldberg LLP (RJLF), an elite majority women-owned trial boutique, announced that attorneys Ariel C. Green and Jaime F. Cardenas-Navia have been promoted to partner effective January 1, 2022. "Ariel and Jaime are extremely talented trial lawyers who have demonstrated an undeniable commitment to our clients and the firm," said Jennifer Estremera, RJLF's Deputy Managing Partner. "We are delighted to welcome them to our partnership." Ariel C. Green Jaime F. Cardenas-Navia "The term 'rising star' is used so often these days, but Ariel and Jaime truly exemplify what it means to be a star trial lawyer," said Courtland Reichman, the firm's Managing Partner. "They are both extremely smart and strategic attorneys who know their way around the courtroom, present well before judges and jurors, and provide fierce advocacy for our clients. We are all very proud of their many accomplishments and look forward to their continued growth in the firm." Ariel C. Green is a partner in RJLF's Silicon Valley office. As a trial lawyer focused on complex commercial and intellectual property disputes, Ariel brings her passion for storytelling to her trial practice and crafts themes that resonate with judges and juries. Notably, she served with the RJLF trial team that secured a $236 million patent infringement verdict for Densify against tech giant VMwarea verdict recognized in The National Law Journal's 2021 "Verdicts Hall of Fame" (7th largest verdict in past five years). Ariel also helps oversee RJLF's pro bono practice. She currently provides pro bono representation to June and Angie Provost of Provost Farm, an agriculture operation and activism hub founded to preserve the ancestral legacies of South Louisiana's Black and Brown farmers. The Provosts' years-long dispute in fighting for their land and livelihood was featured in The New York Times' award-winning "1619" series. She has also represented voters who opposed racial and partisan gerrymandering in Georgia. Ariel clerked for the Honorable Judge John A. Kronstadt of the U.S. District Court for the Central District of California and the Honorable Judge Raymond C. Fisher of the U.S. Court of Appeals for the Ninth Circuit. She earned her J.D. from Stanford Law School and bachelor's degrees in biology, chemistry, and philosophy along with a master's in public affairs from the University of Missouri. Jaime F. Cardenas-Navia is a partner in RJLF's New York office. He is a trial attorney with extensive experience representing plaintiffs and defendants in patent infringement disputes involving a broad range of complex technologies, including consumer productslike smartphones, tablets, cameras, printers, and scannersalong with nutritional formulations, solar panels, cloud computing, and others. His achievements have earned him recognition as a Super Lawyers "Rising Star" in intellectual property litigation. Most recently, Jaime navigated two plaintiff-side patent infringement litigations from discovery through pre-trial in the Northern District of California. In upcoming jury trials, where Jaime will lead examination of several witnesses, the damages demand in each case is expected to exceed $100 million. Other recent successes include securing the denial of an inter partes review at the institution stage, crafting a novel legal theory in response to a double patenting motion, and obtaining a clean sweep in a claim construction matter. Jaime also maintains an active pro bono practice. He has litigated negligence and breach of contract claims in state and federal court to obtain a favorable settlement for a Detroit-based artist and a reversal on appeal of the denial of social security disability benefits for a minor. During law school, Jaime interned at the Court of Appeals for the Federal Circuit in the chambers of Judge Jimmie V. Reyna, and at the International Trade Commission in the Office of General Counsel. He is a graduate of the Georgetown University Law Center and earned joint degrees in engineering and economics from Swarthmore College. About Reichman Jorgensen Lehman & Feldberg LLP Reichman Jorgensen Lehman & Feldberg LLP (RJLF) is an elite national trial firm that handles high-stakes commercial litigation, intellectual property, and white collar disputes. The firm is majority women-owned and rejects the billable hour in favor of fee arrangements that align client interests. RJLF's attorneys are diverse, exceptionally credentialed, and passionate about trial advocacy. From offices in Silicon Valley, New York, Washington, D.C., and Atlanta, the firm tries cases and argues appeals throughout the country. For more information, visit www.reichmanjorgensen.com. Contact : Jennifer Estremera [email protected] (650) 623.1407 SOURCE Reichman Jorgensen Lehman & Feldberg LLP Continued Execution 2,400% YoY Revenue Growth 49% Growth in Gross Margins Over Q2 Reduced Losses, Positioned for further Growth Earnings Conference Call Wednesday 2 March 2022 at 11am EST LAS VEGAS, March 1, 2022 /PRNewswire/ - Australis Capital Inc. (CSE: AUSA) (OTC: AUSAF) ("AUSA", "AUDACIOUS", or the "Company"), today announced that the Company has filed its financials and management discussion and analysis for the three-month period ending December 31, 2021, its fiscal third quarter of fiscal 2022 (the year ending March 31, 2022). The Company's results are filed on www.sedar.com. Terry Booth, CEO of AUDACIOUS, commented, "The third quarter saw us expand internationally through our partnership with Green Triangle Health ("GTH"), where we have already started generating revenues. Our partner is exceptionally well-connected, which is translating into commercial arrangements with major regional and international distributors. In the U.S., we continue to make good headway too, with an important partnership with First Americans of the Saint Regis Mohawk Tribe, which sees us move into New York well ahead of statewide commencement of adult use sales, providing us with a significant early mover advantage. Our partnership with PBR has seen us launch our Wreck Relief brand, which is now starting to generate online sales, and our Provisions and LOOS brands continue to do very well in California, in part through our partnership with EAZE, the world's largest legal cannabis delivery company." Jon Paul, CFO of AUDACIOUS, added, "The third quarter was an important pivot for us, as we spent heavily towards future growth opportunities while moving further from our past. We successfully launched the AUDACIOUS brand at our highly trafficked booth at MJBizCon and the Roll-Up Launch Event featuring Machine Gun Kelly. We had our first sales in California while also investing heavily in key raw materials to expand our capacity for future quarters. We began funding our relationship with PBR and built inventory in Wreck Relief for the Q4 release. Even with loss of revenue from past fintech and consulting lines, we still grew sales over Q2 and have multiple opportunities for even faster sales growth in the quarters ahead." Financial Highlights Q3 Fiscal 2022 Income Statement 3 months ended 3 months ended Change Year Over Year 3 months ended Change Q3 Over Q2 Pro Forma 31-Dec-21 31-Dec-20 30-Sept-21 31-Dec-21 $ $ % $ % $ Revenue 2,371,218 90,378 2,623% 2,271,830 4.4% 2,940,876 Gross profit (loss) 1,843,437 (166,048) n.a. 1,233,766 49.4% Operating expenses 6,164,519 4,898,793 25.8% 5,637,907 9.3% Loss from operations (4,321,082) (5,064,841) -14.7% (4,404,141) -1.9% Outlook In the months ahead, AUDACIOUS will continue to execute on its strategy with further growth in its current markets and anticipates entering new jurisdictions, including New York, New Jersey, and others, as well as further expansion of its product line portfolio. Additionally, the Company will be pursuing multiple initiatives to increase production volume, further driving growth. The Company is following rigorous financial discipline and anticipates reducing certain operating expenses in the coming months. Additionally, following conversations with the regulators in Nevada, the Company is confident the license transfers relating to the GT acquisition will be completed shortly, following which the Company can consolidate the GT results, further boosting growth. 3Q 2022 Financial Highlights Total revenues of $2.37 million , an increase of 2,623% year-over-year from $90,378 in the third fiscal quarter of 2021 and even grew 4% compared to the second quarter of fiscal quarter of 2022. During the quarter under review, the Company recorded its first billings in California , offset by lower kiosk income as the Cocoon business is wound down. Furthermore, as the Company had commenced exiting its investment in Body and Mind, no further consulting fees were generated from this relationship. , an increase of 2,623% year-over-year from in the third fiscal quarter of 2021 and even grew 4% compared to the second quarter of fiscal quarter of 2022. During the quarter under review, the Company recorded its first billings in , offset by lower kiosk income as the Cocoon business is wound down. Furthermore, as the Company had commenced exiting its investment in Body and Mind, no further consulting fees were generated from this relationship. Gross profit for the fiscal second quarter of 2022 was $1.84 million compared to a gross profit loss of ( $166k ) in the comparable period of 2021 and increased by 51% from the second fiscal quarter of 2022. The increase in gross profit is predominantly from stronger utilization rates in the Company's high-margin ALPS business and management fees from Green Therapeutics. compared to a gross profit loss of ( ) in the comparable period of 2021 and increased by 51% from the second fiscal quarter of 2022. The increase in gross profit is predominantly from stronger utilization rates in the Company's high-margin ALPS business and management fees from Green Therapeutics. Operating expenses increased to approximately $6.16 million , or by 25.8%, as compared to the same period in the prior year, well below the recorded revenue growth rate of over 2,400% for the same period, showing the leverage built into the business as commercial activity increases. Cost increases driving this revenue growth were increases in personnel with the acquisition of ALPS and key management, the Company's successful rebranding as Audacious launched at MJBizCon, annual governance meeting costs, and investment in the relationship with the Professional Bull Riders (PBR) association. , or by 25.8%, as compared to the same period in the prior year, well below the recorded revenue growth rate of over 2,400% for the same period, showing the leverage built into the business as commercial activity increases. Cost increases driving this revenue growth were increases in personnel with the acquisition of ALPS and key management, the Company's successful rebranding as Audacious launched at MJBizCon, annual governance meeting costs, and investment in the relationship with the Professional Bull Riders (PBR) association. A 16% reduction in operating loss was recorded $(4.3) million as compared to $(5.1) million for the prior year, with growth in margins offsetting increased operating costs. Q3 Highlights and Subsequent Events LDA Funding securing growth capital The Company announced a term sheet on staged funding with LDA Capital, a U.S. based investment firm. Subsequent to the quarter, the Company announced it had closed its financing facility with LDA, bringing, initially, up to $10 million in funding, with the option to extend the facility with an additional $10 million . Much of the facility will be used towards working capital for high growth activities and initiatives. in funding, with the option to extend the facility with an additional . Much of the facility will be used towards working capital for high growth activities and initiatives. MJBizCon The Company hosted a booth at MJBizCon in October 2021 . MJBizCon is the largest industry trade show. At the event, the Company was able to showcase its products and operations to a broad audience of industry professionals, consumers, capital markets professionals, investors and potential partners. At the event, the Company signed an LOI with Thailand based Golden Triangle Health (GTH), a spinoff of $400m+ public Thai food company Instant Produce PCL. . MJBizCon is the largest industry trade show. At the event, the Company was able to showcase its products and operations to a broad audience of industry professionals, consumers, capital markets professionals, investors and potential partners. At the event, the Company signed an LOI with based Golden Triangle Health (GTH), a spinoff of $400m+ public Thai food company Instant Produce PCL. Excellent start to global activities GTH partnership in Thailand Subsequent to the quarter, the Company completed a definitive agreement with GTH, pursuant to which the Company will acquire, in stock, 25% of GTH. GTH is a spin off from $400M+ Thai public company NR Instant Produce PCL ("NRF"), who sell ethnic foodstuffs around the globe. Through NRF, GTH can access major distribution channels, ensuring wide availability of AUDACIOUS products, increasing brand awareness and sales opportunities. Bringing APIS to a new and significant audience - Priva partnership ALPS signed a partnership with Priva, the global pre-eminent environment control company for the horticultural industry. With over 12,500 projects worldwide, Priva is exceptionally well positioned to help market ALPS' APIS solution to its customers. Speeding up high-quality cultivation The AUDACIOUS ACHIEVE series At MJBizCon, the Company announced the launch of its turn-key all-in grow solution, the AUDACIOUS ACHIEVE series. The ACHIEVE facilities benefit from faster time to market, enabling customers to start generating revenues more quickly, especially through the Company's QuickGrow solution, which are prefab grow solutions ready to be installed. The Company has received significant interest in its ACHIEVE series and the first projects are under development. From the desert to the arctic ALPS develops profitable facilities anywhere - Pure Harvest $1.4M Kuwait deal ALPS, thew world leader in sustainable agriculture greenhouse design, entered a contract with Pure Harvest of the United Arab Emirates for project work concerning a large greenhouse facility in Kuwait , in itself a partnership between Pure Harvest and TCS, the largest public grocery chain in the Middle East . The Company indicates it anticipates further projects with Pure Harvest, a leading innovator in the region for project work concerning a large greenhouse facility in , in itself a partnership between Pure Harvest and TCS, the largest public grocery chain in the . The Company indicates it anticipates further projects with Pure Harvest, a leading innovator in the region Making waves in California - Herbs + EAZE The Company launched its LOOS brand in the California market through its pending acquisition of the Herbs dispensary in San Jose , and an accompanying partnership with EAZE, the world's largest legal cannabis delivery company with over 2 million registered customers. The Company also launched a limited product line under its Provisions brand in California . First batches of both brands sold out in short order, with LOOS products ranking second in popularity in California in their category, achieved without advertising or a large marketing spend. market through its pending acquisition of the Herbs dispensary in , and an accompanying partnership with EAZE, the world's largest legal cannabis delivery company with over 2 million registered customers. The Company also launched a limited product line under its Provisions brand in . First batches of both brands sold out in short order, with LOOS products ranking second in popularity in in their category, achieved without advertising or a large marketing spend. PBR partnership off to successful start As part of its partnership agreement with PBR, the Company launched its CBD infused pain relief brand, Wreck Relief, on Thursday February 10th . The launch was successful and customer orders are coming in through the Company's eCommerce site www.wreckrelief.com. . The launch was successful and customer orders are coming in through the Company's eCommerce site www.wreckrelief.com. As the PBR Spring Season has kicked off, we've been seeing an increase in traffic to our website. In less than one week, close to 2,000 unique users visited our site from all over the United States . . On March 5 , Wreck Relief will be providing product samples and will be taking orders at the highly attended PBR Global Cup in Arlington Texas . , Wreck Relief will be providing product samples and will be taking orders at the highly attended PBR Global Cup in . License applications The Company announced it is applying for a variety of licenses in several jurisdictions, including Ohio , New Jersey and New Mexico . , and . Award streak continues The Company's Tsunami brand won the inaugural NuWu cup in Las Vegas for best extract, further validating the exceptional quality of the AUDACIOUS product line. Conference Call Details The Company will be hosting a conference call to discuss its results for the quarter on Wednesday, March 2, 2022, at 11am ET. Conference call details Canada: 1.647.794.4605 North American Toll Free: 1.888.204.4368 Webcast URL: https://produceredition.webcasts.com/starthere.jsp?ei=1532386&tp_key=0ca289c8c0 Confirmation #: 5701328 A replay of the call will be available until March 9, 2022. The replay can be accessed as follows: Encore Replay Canada: 1.647.436.0148 Encore Replay North American Toll Free: 1.888.203.1112 Encore Replay Entry Code: 5701328 About AUDACIOUS AUDACIOUS is a next-generation MSO growing the cannabis industry of tomorrow from the ground up, led by industry pioneer Terry Booth and an accomplished management team with proven industry track records. With operations that range from providing industry-leading sustainable cultivation design and optimization to retail storefronts, growing flower in-house, and manufacturing award-winning brands, AUDACIOUS has products and solutions for everyone. Quickly expanding through innovative partnerships and collaborations, AUDACIOUS is forging the inclusive cannabis community of tomorrow, today. Learn more about AUDACIOUS here. AUDACIOUS common shares trade on the CSE under the symbol "AUSA" and on the OTCQB under the symbol "AUSAF." "Terry Booth" ________________________________ Terry Booth Chief Executive Officer Forward-Looking Statement This press release contains "forward-looking information" within the meaning of applicable securities legislation. All statements, other than statements of historical fact, included herein is forward-looking information. Generally, forward-looking information may be identified by the use of forward-looking terminology such as "plans", "expects" or "does not expect", "proposed", "is expected", "budgets", "scheduled", "estimates", "forecasts", "intends", "anticipates" or "does not anticipate", or "believes", or variations of such words and phrases, or by the use of words or phrases which state that certain actions, events or results may, could, would, or might occur or be achieved. In particular, this press release contains forward-looking information in relation to; the impact of the changes to U.S. federal and state statutory developments with respect to the cannabis industry and the opportunities this may present for the Company; and the Company's current liquidity. This forward-looking information reflects the Company's current beliefs and is based on information currently available to the Company and on assumptions the Company believes are reasonable. These assumptions include but are not limited to the ability of the Company to successfully satisfy the conditions to closing the proposed transaction; the ability of the Company to successfully execute on its plans for the Company and GT; legal changes relating to the cannabis industry proceeding as anticipated. Forward-looking information is subject to known and unknown risks, uncertainties and other factors that may cause the actual results, level of activity, performance or achievements of the Company to be materially different from those expressed or implied by such forward-looking information. Such risks and other factors may include, but are not limited to: general business, economic, competitive, political and social uncertainties; general capital market conditions and market prices for securities; the actual results of the Company's future operations; competition; changes in legislation affecting the Company; the timing and availability of external financing on acceptable terms; lack of qualified, skilled labour or loss of key individuals; risks related to the COVID-19 pandemic including various recommendations, orders and measures of governmental authorities to try to limit the pandemic, including travel restrictions, border closures, non-essential business closures, service disruptions, quarantines, self-isolations, shelters-in-place and social distancing, disruptions to markets, economic activity, financing, supply chains and sales channels, and a deterioration of general economic conditions that could limit the Company's ability to obtain external financing. A description of additional risk factors that may cause actual results to differ materially from forward-looking information can be found in the Company's disclosure documents on the SEDAR website at www.sedar.com. Although the Company has attempted to identify important factors that could cause actual results to differ materially from those contained in forward-looking information, there may be other factors that cause results not to be as anticipated, estimated or intended. Accordingly, readers should not place undue reliance on forward-looking information. Readers are cautioned that the foregoing list of factors is not exhaustive. Readers are further cautioned not to place undue reliance on forward-looking information as there can be no assurance that the plans, intentions or expectations upon which they are placed will occur. Such information, although considered reasonable by management at the time of preparation, may prove to be incorrect and actual results may differ materially from those anticipated. Forward-looking information contained in this press release is expressly qualified by this cautionary statement. The forward-looking information contained in this press release represents the expectations of the Company as of the date of this press release and, accordingly, are subject to change after such date. However, the Company expressly disclaims any intention or obligation to update or revise any forward-looking information, whether because of new information, future events or otherwise, except as expressly required by applicable securities law. The CSE has neither approved nor disapproved the contents of this news release. Neither the CSE nor its Regulation Services Provider (as that term is defined in the policies of the CSE) accept responsibility for the adequacy or accuracy of this release. AUSTRALIS CAPITAL INC. Condensed Interim Consolidated Statements of Financial Position (Unaudited in Canadian Dollars) Notes December 31, 2021 March 31, 2021 $ $ Assets Current Cash and cash equivalents 655,597 3,531,357 Accounts receivable 4 3,803,803 1,696,656 Inventory 659,395 473,185 Prepaid expenses 418,273 470,479 Current portion of deposits 1,303,734 649,464 Current portion of annuity receivable - SubTerra 59,576 66,070 Loans receivable 2,386,414 - Marketable securities held for sale 5 2,890,022 12,803,638 Land held for sale 6 - 4,151,551 12,176,814 23,842,400 Non-current Investment in ALPS technology solution APIS 8 3,034,309 1,130,233 Property, plant, and equipment 9 2,122,250 298,258 Right-of-use assets 9 754,156 1,097,361 Intangible assets 11 13,287,857 14,227,461 Goodwill 11 15,057,796 15,057,796 Derivative financial instrument NCI call option 8 7,320,630 7,320,630 Annuity receivable SubTerra 679,492 672,998 Long-term deposits 10 3,219,387 4,130,168 Other assets acquisition deposit 7 14,797,896 14,677,674 TOTAL ASSETS 72,450,587 82,454,979 Liabilities Current Accounts payable and accrued liabilities 17 5,448,113 5,915,674 Deferred revenue 8,858 17,813 Current portion of lease liability 12 438,641 459,895 Provisions 10 - 1,029,014 5,895,612 7,422,396 Non-current Contingent consideration payable 8 3,698,980 3,698,980 Lease liability 12 369,991 686,191 Loan payable 15 - 747,115 Deferred tax liability 3,205,244 3,205,244 TOTAL LIABILITIES 13,169,827 15,759,926 Shareholders' equity Share capital 13 112,002,679 104,617,900 Treasury shares 7,13 (11,367,770) (11,367,770) Exchangeable shares reserve 13 10,383,426 11,114,175 Reserves 13 14,173,098 9,640,106 Accumulated other comprehensive income 323,717 234,035 Accumulated deficit (71,303,420) (52,937,270) Equity attributable to owners of the Company 54,211,730 61,301,176 Non-controlling interest 8 5,069,030 5,393,877 TOTAL SHAREHOLDERS' EQUITY 59,280,760 66,695,053 TOTAL LIABILITIES AND SHAREHOLDERS' EQUITY 72,450,587 82,454,979 AUSTRALIS CAPITAL INC. Condensed Interim Consolidated Statements of Financial Position (Unaudited in Canadian Dollars) Three months ended December 31, Nine months ended December 31, Notes 2021 2020 2021 2020 Revenue $ $ $ $ Revenue-Services 1,993,131 8,430 5,137,007 43,102 Revenue-Kiosks 94,522 35,181 315,787 71,510 Revenue-Consulting 283,565 46,767 918,617 143,368 2,371,218 90,378 6,371,411 257,980 Cost of goods sold (527,781) (256,426) (2,229,669) (484,534) Gross profit (loss) 1,843,437 (166,048) 4,141,742 (226,554) Operating expenses Wages and benefits 1,183,865 3,451,617 3,825,604 5,097,118 Share-based payments 13 1,097,784 (1,263,126) 3,759,580 391,507 Selling, general and administrative 14 3,476,327 2,557,961 7,415,624 4,137,737 Depreciation and amortization 9,11 406,543 152,341 1,281,555 496,355 6,164,519 4,898,793 16,282,363 10,122,717 Loss from operations (4,321,082) (5,064,841) (12,140,621) (10,349,271) Other income (expense) Gain on asset disposal (83,460) 82 (83,496) 138 Loss on investment in associate - (427,739) - (1,282,451) Gain (loss) on sale of marketable securities (142,217) - (180,880) - Loss on settlements - (3,000,000) (237,338) (4,025,477) Loss on true-up provision - - - (1,615,835) Loss on impairment - intertangle assets - (7,684,824) - (7,684,824) Loss on remeasurement of land held for sale - (2,250,241) - (2,250,241) Net change on investment at fair value through profit or loss 5 (275,278) (796,163) (6,202,654) (992,718) Other income - 70 - 483 Other expense merger and acquisition costs - (118,311) - (286,846) Foreign exchange gain (loss) 323,052 (88,989) 214,362 (87,192) Income tax expense (77,596) - (77,596) - Interest and other expense (184,599) (12,712) (94,436) (23,195) Interest expense - leases (4,616) (4,880) (33,670) (38,685) Interest income 62,259 26,460 145,332 86,120 (382,455) (14,357,247) (6,550,376) (18,200,723) Net loss (4,703,537) (19,422,088) (18,690,997) (28,549,994) Other comprehensive income (loss) Foreign currency translation (175,046) 6,010 89,682 (247,153) Share of OCI from investments in associates - 144,441 - (51,976) Total comprehensive loss (4,878,583) (19,271,637) (18,601,315) (28,849,123) Net loss attributable to: Shareholders of the Company (4,714,729) (19,422,088) (18,366,150) (28,549,994) Non-controlling interest 11,192 - (324,847) - Net loss (4,703,537) (19,422,088) (18,690,997) (28,549,994) Total comprehensive loss attributable to: Shareholders of the Company (4,889,775) (19,271,637) (18,276,468) (28,849,123) Non-controlling interest 11,192 - (324,847) - Total comprehensive loss (4,878,583) (19,271,637) (18,601,315) (28,849,123) Net loss per share attributable to shareholders of the Company Basic and diluted (0.02) (0.11) (0.08) (0.17) Weighted average number of shares outstanding Basic and diluted 247,284,636 176,512,309 239,885,621 172,937,978 SOURCE Australis Capital Inc. According to Bank of America Private Bank research, women in the U.S. are starting and growing their own businesses at record rates; they own an estimated 13 million businesses, or four out of every ten; employ over 9 million people; generate $1.9 trillion in annual revenues, nearly five times the national average; and are a catalyst for change. "We know women entrepreneurs lack the access to resources they need to manage and scale a successful business a need that is even more acute for women of color," said Sheri Bronstein, chief human resources officer at Bank of America. "We continue to receive feedback from participants about how the skills they've gained are propelling them forward benefiting them, their families, their businesses and employees and their communities and we're thrilled to expand the program further to reach more women small business owners." "Aspiring entrepreneurs who participate in the Bank of America Institute for Women's Entrepreneurship at Cornell are getting the best of both worlds: learning from Cornell faculty about the concepts and tools for success in their new ventures, and encouragement from a growing startup community that is inclusive and supportive," said Martha E. Pollack, president of Cornell University. The instructor-led classes and limited class size provide women the opportunity to learn new skills while connecting with a vibrant network of entrepreneurs and social innovators. Through coursework that draws on curricula from across Cornell's schools, these lessons include Creating Your Venture; Laying the Legal Building Blocks; Assessing and Obtaining Financial Resources; Growth Leadership for Women Entrepreneurs; Product Development and Digital Marketing; and Communication, Negotiation and Persuasiveness. Bank of America's long-standing partnerships with the Tory Burch Foundation, Vital Voices, the Cherie Blair Foundation, Kiva and Cornell University have helped 75,000 women from more than 140 countries grow their businesses. As part of its journey to provide assistance to women entrepreneurs, the company recently launched The Bank of America Access to Capital Directory, which provides women-owned businesses with a significant resource to help them understand the capital landscape. In 2021, the bank increased its target for equity investment in minority-focused funds to $350 million, including capital to under-represented minority and women entrepreneurs. Bank of America At Bank of America, we're guided by a common purpose to help make financial lives better, through the power of every connection. We're delivering on this through responsible growth with a focus on our environmental, social and governance (ESG) leadership. ESG is embedded across our eight lines of business and reflects how we help fuel the global economy, build trust and credibility, and represent a company that people want to work for, invest in and do business with. It's demonstrated in the inclusive and supportive workplace we create for our employees, the responsible products and services we offer our clients, and the impact we make around the world in helping local economies thrive. An important part of this work is forming strong partnerships with nonprofits and advocacy groups, such as community, consumer and environmental organizations, to bring together our collective networks and expertise to achieve greater impact. Learn more at about.bankofamerica.com, and connect with us on Twitter (@BofA_News). For more Bank of America news (NYSE: BAC), including dividend announcements and other important information, visit the Bank of America newsroom and register for news email alerts. Reporters may contact: Eliza Murphy, Bank of America Phone: 1.347.603.6845 [email protected] SOURCE Bank of America Corporation For nearly three decades, Crown Appraisal Group has provided commercial real estate appraisal, market study, litigation support, appraisal review, construction monitoring, and other services to over 200 bank, mortgage correspondent, CMBS lender, property owner and other clients annually in Ohio and across the United States. BBG named Crown Appraisal Group founder and owner Andrew Moye, MAI, AI-GRS, ASA, and owner Donald Miller II, MAI, AI-GRS, as Manager Directors of the Columbus office. Dan Schiavoni, MAI, AI-GRS, was named as a Director. Twenty-two people from Crown will be joining BBG as part of the acquisition. BBG's latest acquisition is located in one of the country's fastest-growing commercial real estate hubs, Columbus, Ohio. Its reputation as an attractive site for company headquarters and operational facilities was recently boosted by Intel's plans to build a multi-billion-dollar semiconductor plant near Columbus. Crown's knowledge of the Columbus and the Ohio markets as a whole is unrivaled. BBG CEO Chris Roach, MAI, CCIM, commented on the acquisition, "We are thrilled to welcome Andy, Don, Dan and their colleagues to BBG. Crown is a highly respected provider of valuation services. The firm's capabilities, clients, and core competency in multi-family commercial real estate appraisal are highly complementary to BBG. We see immense upside for the Crown team and BBG by having them join our firm." "It was important to us that we find a partner that shares our vision and would help shepherd the business through its next evolution. Our team is very pleased to join BBG. By stepping onto the platform, we will benefit from BBG's economies of scale, geographic coverage, expertise, resources, technology, and expanded service lines to support clients across the country," said Mr. Moye. "Our team is known for a fast-paced, high-efficiency approach, so we are excited to hit the ground running with BBG." About BBG BBG offers comprehensive due diligence services including valuation, advisory, assessment, desktop evaluation, energy services, cost segregation, zoning, and ALTA surveys. Headquartered in Dallas, the firm has 48 offices in key US markets and serves more than 2,800 clients. As one of the Big Five national commercial real estate valuation firms, BBG has achieved a reputation for personal attention, on-time delivery and deep expertise in multi-family, office, retail and industrial sectors. For more information about BBG, please visit www.bbgres.com. Media Contact Marc Weinstein Ascent Communications [email protected] (908) 967-9958 SOURCE BBG ZURICH, March 2, 2022 /PRNewswire/ -- BC Platforms (BCP), a global leader in healthcare data management and analytics, today announced expansion of its R&D operations in Singapore, which spearheads precision medicine activities in the Asia Pacific region, including China and Japan. The company also announced a research partnership with Singapore Health Services (SingHealth), Singapores largest public healthcare group. SingHealth has joined BCPs BCRQUEST global data network, in a research partnership to accelerate the genetic understanding and clinical research of diseases prevalent in Asian cohorts, including cancer and cardiovascular diseases. The core strategy of BCP is to develop privacy and security driven technology for trusted research infrastructure. This will then enable a safe build up cohort studies representing Asia's rich multi-ethnicity, which is of value for life science research as well as clinical decision making. The Company's award-winning Trusted Research Environment (TRE) platform will support life sciences researchers, enabling secure and truly federated access to data custodians' data. Nino da Silva, Deputy Managing Director, BCP, said, "At BCP, our mission is to accelerate the translation of research into global clinical practice through the faster generation of translatable, actionable, research insights. Singapore is a top-quality hub as a life sciences leader in Asia, and we have been active here since 2019. We are consistent in executing according to our strategic commitments and are now ramping up our activities in this key market. We are building a gateway to Asia with a focus on developing next generation Trusted Research Environments for healthcare data. We encourage health systems to invest in consenting and data infrastructure as it provides strong foundations underpinning personalized medicine and ultimately improves outcomes for patients." Niko Hurskainen, Chief Technology Officer, BCP, who will lead the R&D Center in Singapore, commented, "Asian real-world data is under-represented in global life science research. Through our collaborations in the region with national healthcare systems we will enable researchers to have secure access to good quality, carefully curated, data from Asia, to help build novel medical diagnostics and treatments. While TRE R&D leadership stays at the heart of the TRE concept in the UK, our Singapore R&D Centre, which is fully integrated with local healthcare and research institutions, will be core to our continued effort to deliver leading locally relevant user experiences on top of leading data management, scalability and privacy capabilities. Additionally, we see the region as a great location for building and scaling our global R&D organisation to support a global customer base." Professor Yeo Khung Keong, Deputy Group Chief Medical Informatics Officer (Research), SingHealth, commented, At SingHealth, our vision is Defining Tomorrows Medicine. We are very glad to be partnering BC Platforms to strive towards this. By embarking on a data partnership with BC Platforms, we aim to expand the reach of our cardiac research collaboration globally to gain deeper insights into cardiovascular diseases, which currently account for nearly 30 per cent of all deaths in Singapore, to improve care outcomes. With BC Platforms R&D investment into Singapore, we hope to leverage this partnership to strengthen translational research capabilities for the region to enable greater patient access to more effective treatments and cures. The company has been steadily building up its presence in Asia, as part of its mission to deliver industry-leading interpretation services on genomics related insights, including pharmacogenomics in clinical practice in Asia and around the world. Singapore is the fastest growing market in Asia, with strong governmental commitment to facilitate genomics related research and innovation using genomic and clinical data. The company's Singapore R&D Centre will support recent Asia-based collaborations including with Japan's Mitsubishi Space Software, announced Feb 2022, and Thailand's Bumrungrad International Hospital (BIH) , announced October 2021. About BC Platforms BC Platforms is a global leader in providing a powerful data and technology platform for personalized medicine, accelerating the translation of insights into clinical practice. Our technology drives the infinite loop between personalized care and research discoveries, leveraging latest science, deep technical expertise, strategic partnerships, and harmonized, diverse data collections. Our high performing genomic data discovery and analytics platform enables flexible data integration, secure analysis, and interpretation of molecular and clinical information. Additionally, BC Platforms has developed a Global Data Partner Network BCRQUEST.com, which allows us to access real-world data equivalent to approximately 22 million patient lives, including longitudinal clinical data in addition to 500k patients' genetic data, across 14 countries in Europe, North and South America, Asia and Africa, providing rich data for pharmaceutical and medical research and development. Founded in 1997 from an MIT Whitehead project spinoff, the Company has a strong scientific heritage underpinned by over 20 years of working in close collaboration with a network of leading researchers, developers, and industry partners. BC Platforms has global operations with its headquarters in Zurich, Switzerland, research and development in Espoo, Finland, and presence in London, Boston and in Singapore. For more information, please visit www.bcplatforms.com or follow us on LinkedIn @BC Platforms . Contact information: Nino Da Silva BC Platforms AG [email protected] Katja Stout Scius Communications [email protected] SOURCE BC Platforms NEW YORK and MINNEAPOLIS, March 2, 2022 /PRNewswire/ -- Today, Breakthru Beverage Group and J.J. Taylor Companies announced they have signed an agreement for Breakthru to acquire and integrate J.J. Taylor's Minnesota beer business into Breakthru Beverage. The move enhances Breakthru's Minnesota beer portfolio and further strengthens the company's Midwest position as they continue to expand service capabilities to customers and supplier partners. Expected to close later this spring, the deal also brings enhanced operational capabilities to Twin Cities beer distribution as Breakthru consolidates its beer portfolio into J.J. Taylor's state-of-the-art 600,000 square-foot warehouse. "There's great synergy between our companies in Minnesota. This combination will dramatically enhance operations in the Twin Cities and reinforces our commitment to this market as we deploy our full suite of best-in-class capabilities and digital resources to help supplier and customer partners better reach their target consumers and drive results," said Tom Bene, Breakthru Beverage Group President and CEO. "This is another strong step in our overall growth agenda, where we remain focused on strengthening our position throughout the United States and Canada." Upon completion of the acquisition, Breakthru will begin migrating its beer portfolio to the J.J. Taylor warehouse which will enhance the company's operational expertise as demand for beer increases in the summer season. The company will have a well-rounded portfolio of more than 65 domestic, imported and local and national craft beer brands. "We are pleased with the sale of our Minnesota business to Breakthru and are confident the newly combined team will continue our legacy of 'First Choice' service in the Twin Cities," noted John Taylor, J.J. Taylor Companies Chairman, President and CEO. Breakthru intends to rely on the passion and well-established expertise of the J.J. Taylor teamincluding Chris Morton and Bob Thies, who will assume leadership roles once the deal is closedwith the goal of expanding their associate salesforce to become the best and easiest distributor to work with in the state. At this time, both Breakthru's Minnesota operations and J.J. Taylor will remain focused on business as usual, with the transaction expected to close this spring, subject to usual and customary closing conditions. About Breakthru Beverage Group Breakthru Beverage Group is one of the leading alcohol wholesalers in the United States and the largest broker in Canada representing a full total beverage alcohol portfolio of spirits, wine and beer. Breakthru is committed to diversity, equity and inclusion and supports a wide range of notable organizations as well as local charitable initiatives across its North American footprint. Across all markets, Breakthru aligns a nimble and insightful approach to sales, marketing and operations. Family ownership is active in the business and committed to being stewards of heritage and champions of innovation. For more information, visit www.BreakthruBev.com. About J.J. Taylor Companies, Inc. J.J. Taylor Companies, Inc. is the First Choice beer wholesaler for its Employees, Customers, and Suppliers. With a world-class portfolio and a people-centric approach, the Company has earned a reputation as an industry leader for its ability to mix innovation with reliable execution. J.J. Taylor has won awards from every major supplier; including "Craft Distributor of the Year." Family owned and operated since 1958. Learn more at www.JJTaylor.com SOURCE Breakthru Beverage Group SAN FRANCISCO, March 2, 2022 /PRNewswire/ -- Capital Clarity, a leading technology-focused investment bank, announced that it served as exclusive financial advisor to F2 Healthcare in its acquisition by Meduit Inc., a portfolio company of NexPhase Capital. Meduit , one of the nation's fastest-growing revenue cycle solutions (RCM) companies, has acquired F2 Healthcare , a tech-enabled Medicare bad debt solutions provider addressing missed reimbursements and regulatory reporting. The acquisition of F2 Healthcare enables Meduit to expand service offerings and deliver a more complete array of RCM tools to hospitals, health systems, and physician groups to ensure their financial health. "Millions of dollars in missed revenue every year can be returned to healthcare organizations through our technology solutions," said Dave Frank, F2 Healthcare Founder & CEO. "We are optimistic about the future of F2 Healthcare as a part of Meduit and are pleased to have selected Capital Clarity as our exclusive financial advisor in this process." "We anticipate even greater demand for the leveraging of advanced tools and technologies to support providers' revenue cycle processes," added John Cooper, Managing Partner at Capital Clarity, "F2 Healthcare is a prime example of the application of advanced technology and talent to ensure solid returns for healthcare providers, helping them recover every dollar of missed reimbursement." Financial terms of the acquisition were not disclosed. About F2 Healthcare F2 Healthcare , founded in 2012, F2 Healthcare provides technology-enabled Medicare bad debt solutions that address missed reimbursements and regulatory reporting. Combining regulatory expertise, collaborative customer services and technology-driven analytics, F2 Healthcare serves over 250 hospitals in 25 states. About Capital Clarity Capital Clarity , offers a refined approach to investment banking that emphasizes long-term partnership with investors and management teams. Our leadership team has a combined experience of 80 years in financial advisory, mergers & acquisitions, corporate development and private equity. We combine advisory expertise with deep industry knowledge and long-standing buyer and investor relationships to create successful outcomes for our clients. Healthcare IT is among Capital Clarity's areas of focus and expertise. Capital Clarity Contacts: John Cooper Managing Partner [email protected] (415) 683-0339 Susan Blanco Managing Partner [email protected] (415) 320-1582 SOURCE Capital Clarity, LLC Related Links https://www.capital-clarity.com CHAPEL HILL, N.C., March 2, 2022 /PRNewswire/ -- TradePending, a provider of vehicle valuation and merchandising software solutions to car dealerships, announced today that it has acquired AutoAPR, a provider of website engagement tools for the automotive, power sports, RV, and marine industries. Financial terms of the transaction were not disclosed. TradePending is backed by The Capstreet Group ("Capstreet"), a Houston-based lower middle market private equity firm. Founded in 2016 and headquartered in Charlotte, NC, AutoAPR offers lead generation website plug-in tools for auto dealers that help consumers understand what they can afford. Hundreds of auto dealers around the country use AutoAPR's website tools to help customers generate personal payment estimates, find vehicles in dealers' current inventory that fit with their budgets, view their credit ratings, and schedule test drive appointments. AutoAPR's founders Dan Mayer, CEO, and Daniel Congrove, CTO, and their employees will join the TradePending team. "We partnered with Capstreet last year to create a foundation for a new platform to fast track innovation in the automotive software industry, and our acquisition of AutoAPR is our first step towards that goal," said Brice Englert, CEO of TradePending. "TradePending and AutoAPR pair very well together. We both share the same end goal of arming both the dealership and end-consumer with better information about the car buying process, with a similar mission and vision to provide transparency and help dealerships grow their businesses." "Joining TradePending is truly a great opportunity for our employees and customers to be part of a fast-growing company dedicated to improving the automotive buying process," said Dan Mayer, CEO of AutoAPR. "With similar target customers, TradePending's team can immediately begin selling our products and expand our reach. We couldn't be more excited to join the TradePending family." "Today's consumers are entering the most competitive car buying market in decades, and we believe dealers that can demystify the process will have an advantage," said Adrian Guerra, Partner at Capstreet. "This is a synergistic combination that Capstreet expects will benefit both companies, with many cross-selling opportunities ahead. We welcome the AutoAPR team, and look forward to supporting TradePending's ongoing growth." About TradePending TradePending's mission is "simple automotive," bringing dealers and consumers together across North America. SNAP, the Company's disruptive trade-in tool, brings transparency, elegant data visualizations, powerful mobile usability, and high-quality leads. SNAP Offer empowers dealers to configure their trade-in offers to match their inventory sourcing strategy. Superlatives improves how dealers merchandise their inventory by using real-time market data to show what makes each vehicle valuable and unique in a dealer's local market. The TradePending API provides industry partners with proprietary market data to power their own products and services. https://www.tradepending.com About The Capstreet Group Founded in 1990, Capstreet invests in lower middle market software, tech-enabled services, and industrial business services companies. With over 45 platform investments and over 200 add-on acquisitions since inception, Capstreet's investment strategy is focused on utilizing its Capvalue FrameworkTM to accelerate growth and profitability, and creating long term sustainable businesses. The majority of Capstreet's investments have been with founder- or entrepreneur-owned businesses. For more information, visit the Capstreet website, www.capstreet.com. Contact: Lambert & Co. Jennifer Hurson, 845-507-0571, [email protected] or Caroline Luz, 203-656-2829, [email protected] SOURCE TradePending PHILADELPHIA, March 2, 2022 /PRNewswire/ -- Children's Hospital of Philadelphia (CHOP) announced today that it has received a donation of $650,000 from the Lilabean Foundation for Pediatric Brain Cancer Research (LBF) to support "Project Accelerate," a program within the Children's Brain Tumor Network (CBTN) to advance the pace of translational research and the discoveries of new treatments for children and young adults with brain tumors. CBTN is a multi-institutional brain tumor research program with its operations housed at the Center for Data Driven Discovery in Biomedicine (D3b) at CHOP. "Brain tumors are the leading cause of disease-related death in children in countries around the world, yet no drug has been developed specifically to treat pediatric brain tumors," said Adam Resnick, PhD, Co-Director of the Center for D3b at CHOP and Scientific Co-Chair of CBTN. "With the support of the Lilabean Foundation, we are one step closer in identifying new treatment strategies that lead to new clinical trials and ultimately cures for brain tumor patients." In what began as only four member sites devoted to data sharing in 2013, CBTN is now a global consortium of 28 institutions throughout Europe, Asia, Australia and the U.S., who together are establishing a new standard of care for patients by sharing data, resources and expertise to accelerate and improve discoveries. Collectively, they created the first, and now largest, clinically annotated biorepository with real-time query abilities with the opportunity to unlock and analyze specimens to understand their molecular structures. However, the windfall of data has posed a capacity challenge. CBTN's boost in funding from LBF will allow CBTN to hire more data engineers and bioinformaticians to increase its capacity to process and empower the data for use in research worldwide. "We are honored to support Project Accelerate and the CBTN team as we work together towards safer, more effective treatments for children like my daughter Lila," said Nicole Giroux, Founder and Executive Director of LBF. "This will be the first time that this much data about pediatric brain tumors will be available instantly to researchers, which has the potential to change the landscape of pediatric brain tumor research and care, as well as help find the answers for each child with a brain tumor," said Dr. Resnick. The Lilabean Foundation is a CBTN Executive Council member and to date has funded more than $2 million for childhood brain cancer research over the span of 10 years. Based in Washington, DC, LBF was founded in 2012 by Nicole Giroux in honor of her daughter, Lila, who was diagnosed with a low-grade glioma at 15 months old. Since her diagnosis, Lila has been on many different chemotherapy regimens, and the Giroux family has seen firsthand the urgent need for research to inform safer treatment options. The Lilabean Foundation's mission is to fund critical childhood brain cancer research and raise awareness of the severity of the disease. The funding is complementary to recent funding from the Childhood Cancer Data Initiative of the National Cancer Institute, part of the National Institutes of Health. About Children's Hospital of Philadelphia A non-profit, charitable organization, Children's Hospital of Philadelphia was founded in 1855 as the nation's first pediatric hospital. Through its long-standing commitment to providing exceptional patient care, training new generations of pediatric healthcare professionals, and pioneering major research initiatives, the 595-bed hospital has fostered many discoveries that have benefited children worldwide. Its pediatric research program is among the largest in the country. The institution has a well-established history of providing advanced pediatric care close to home through its CHOP Care Network, which includes more than 50 primary care practices, specialty care and surgical centers, urgent care centers, and community hospital alliances throughout Pennsylvania and New Jersey, as well as a new inpatient hospital with a dedicated pediatric emergency department in King of Prussia. In addition, its unique family-centered care and public service programs have brought Children's Hospital of Philadelphia recognition as a leading advocate for children and adolescents. For more information, visit http://www.chop.edu. CONTACT: Jennifer Lee Children's Hospital of Philadelphia M: 610-800-6592 [email protected] SOURCE Children's Hospital of Philadelphia COLUMBUS, Ohio, March 2, 2022 /PRNewswire/ -- Columbus State Community College announced a partnership with Uwill, the leading mental health and wellness solution for colleges and students. Uwill's proprietary technology connects students with a team of licensed counselors based on their unique needs and preferences. Designed to complement campus counseling services, the platform allows campuses to increase capacity and eliminate waitlists, while supporting the diverse needs of students. "Because so many of our students balance work and family commitments along with their studies, it's important to provide a counseling solution that meets them where they are," said Diana M. Wisse, Ph.D., Executive Director of Student Affairs at Columbus State Community College. "This partnership is about making therapy available to our students anywhere, at any time so they have the support they need to continue on their educational journey." Columbus State Community College is launching this new teletherapy solution at a time of increasing mental health challenges on campuses nationwide. Prior to 2020, up to 60 percent of college students reported experiencing significant anxiety, and according to recent research, more than eight in 10 college students have seen their mental health negatively affected over the past two years. "In many ways, community colleges and their students have borne the brunt of the turmoil of the past two years," said founder and CEO of Uwill, Michael London. "Now more than ever, it's critical for institutions like Columbus State Community College to ensure that students have the mental health support they need to navigate the path to success in postsecondary education." Uwill's proprietary technology leverages artificial intelligence to immediately connect students with available counselors who meet their unique needs and preferences. The only secure, student-focused teletherapy platform, Uwill offers all modalities of teletherapy (video, phone, chat, message), 24/7/365 emergency access, live events and more. Uwill partners with more than 100 institutions worldwide including Boston College, Lac Courte Oreilles Ojibwe College, Xavier University and the Michigan and Massachusetts state school systems to ensure their online mental health and wellness environment meets student needs. About Uwill Uwill has become the leading mental health and wellness solution for colleges and students. Utilizing its proprietary technology and counselor team, the company offers users an immediate connection to an available therapist while considering all their preferences. Uwill's secure environment facilitates video, phone, chat and message sessions. In addition, Uwill offers 24/7/365 emergency assistance, and instructor-led events to complement therapy. Its proprietary tool, Ucollaborate, allows for seamless coordination of care and full transparency with campus health centers. Uwill has been described by mental health advocates as the most effective and cost-efficient way to support students. Clients include University of North Carolina at Chapel Hill, American Public University System and Merrimack College. Uwill is the teletherapy education partner for NASPA (Student Affairs Administrators in Higher Education). For more information, visit uwill.com SOURCE Uwill NEW YORK, March 2, 2022 /PRNewswire/ -- Consciously Unbiased, an organization advancing belonging in the workplace, partnered with Untapped AI, an AI platform managing sustainable individual and organizational change, to release a new playbook uncovering unique insights into the American workers' experience during the ongoing pandemic. The playbook, "Reversing The Great Resignation: Shifting Employee Values & How Leaders Can Close The Gap" is available to download here . Insights from Untapped AI's platform found that two-thirds of employees' values are now misaligned with their company's values. The result has been that workers' values have changed more quickly than the values of the companies they work for. This playbook gives companies the strategies to address increasing resignation rates by bridging the gap between what employees want and what companies think their employees want. "Ultimately, people are companies' biggest competitive advantage," says Ashish Kaushal, founder of Consciously Unbiased. "Based on the unique data uncovered by UntappedAI in the playbook, we've created a roadmap for how companies can truly listen to their workers and transform workplace culture to better match American workers' values today." According to Untapped AI, the pandemic has sparked a shift in what employees' value most. For example, there has been a 32% increase in employees wanting more autonomy as compared to before the pandemic, a 57% increase on the importance of flexibility, a 35% increase in levels of employee resilience, and a 38% increase in employee-led activism. Moreover, Gen Z is twice as likely to be involved in employee activism then other employees, such as speaking up, demanding better conditions, and holding companies accountable for ethical behavior. Overall, 55% of American workers are more likely to quit if they don't get the conditions they're seekingsuch as flexibility, autonomy, better pay, etc. "This is a 'mind the gap' moment. The misalignment between individual and organizational values has never been so great," says Kendal Parmar, CEO of Untapped AI. "This playbook is crucial to help to realign these values and prevent the exodus of great talent." The playbook breaks down how companies can adapt workplace culture with real-world strategies to better align with employee values. It offers action steps to prioritize emotional intelligence across leadership teams and policy decisions, truly listen to their employees' workplace experiences, embrace and define flexibility, transform the way productivity is measured, build a feedback culture, recognize your employees right now, leverage the resiliency of your workforce, support employee activism, and infuse your company mission with purpose. Consciously Unbiased offers Microprogressions, or small action steps that help build inclusion and lead to a big impact over time. "The ripple becomes a tidal wave if you have everyone making small steps together that can help shift real culture change," says Caron Evans, Director of Research & Insights at UntappedAI. "Rising employee activism, such as joining a union or refusing to tolerate inequities, means companies must be responsive if they want to keep their people. Right now is a moment in time where small acts can become really powerful." Tune in to the Consciously Unbiased LinkedIn Live segment with Ashish Kaushal, the founder of Consciously Unbiased, and Kendal Parmar, CEO of Untapped AI, as they talk about the findings in the playbook on Wednesday, March 9, 2022, at 12pm ET. For an alert when the session is live, follow Consciously Unbiased on LinkedIn . About Consciously Unbiased Consciously Unbiased is a minority-owned and majority-women-owned organization advancing belonging in the workplace. It brings immersive experiences and training programs to organizations that connect employees' hearts and minds to spark real change. The company also taps into the power of storytelling with subscription content that challenges employees to work on one or more Microprogressions per month until it becomes a habit; enhancing teams' commitment to building diversity, inclusion, and belonging. It also donates any profits generated from Consciously Unbiased merchandise sales and corporate sponsorships to various charities that support, educate and promote diversity and antiracism in the workforce. Learn more at https://consciouslyunbiased.com/. About Untapped AI Untapped AI is an enterprise platform accelerating acts of change in global organizations. Their clients include Disney, JPMorgan Chase, and Accenture. Untapped AI enables employees to increase their capacity to manage and build resilience in order to thrive in the ongoing, inevitable changes happening continuously at work. Leveraging the best of a human (EQ) and the best of AI, they deliver the 'hard, messy' part of change. Their unique human/AI programs help CEOs navigate change with bottom-up, grassroots data analytics. Their programs achieve increased employee engagement: employees are five times more likely to stay and twice as likely to get promoted. Learn more at https://www.untapped.ai/ . SOURCE Consciously Unbiased DALLAS, March 2, 2022 /PRNewswire/ -- Trial lawyer Randy Johnston joins rare company among some of the very best lawyers in North Texas with his selection for D Magazine's inaugural Best Lawyers in Dallas Hall of Fame. A well-known courtroom talent and widely acknowledged and respected expert on legal ethics, he's also a published poet, songwriter and avid guitar player. So, while Mr. Johnston may be one of just 50 attorneys selected for the prestigious Hall of Fame, it's not surprising that he's the only one to memorialize the honor in song. " every once in a while, there's a pat on the back," Mr. Johnston's song reads. "Someone recognizes you've been on the right track. That you've done good work, helping clients who needed you. That the years that have passed have not defeated you. So, thank you, D Magazine, for calling my name. Along with all the others in your Best Lawyers Hall of Fame." For video of Mr. Johnston performing the ballad, click here. "It's really a great feeling," said Mr. Johnston, co-founder of Dallas-based Johnston Tobey Baruch. "I am very proud to be named among some of the most talented legal professionals in this region." The Best Lawyers in Dallas Hall of Fame is published in D Magazine's March edition. Mr. Johnston handles cases involving professional malpractice and breaches of fiduciary duty, as well as a wide range of business disputes. In both his legal career and his art, he warns people of scammers who commit business or partner fraud, stockbroker/investment fraud, and accounting and money management malpractice on consumers. He is also Board Certified in Civil Trial Law by the Texas Board of Legal Specialization and has been featured among D Magazine's annual Best Lawyers in Dallas list since 2013. About Johnston Tobey Baruch: Johnston Tobey Baruch is a dynamic law practice based in Dallas. Its trial and appellate attorneys have a broad range of litigation, arbitration and appellate experience. They are pioneers in the handling of legal and accounting malpractice, investment fraud and business disputes. They also have an enviable track record with insurance bad faith matters, commercial litigation and fiduciary litigation, as well as civil, family and criminal appeals for many prominent Texas companies and individuals. For more information, visit johnstontobey.com. Media Contact: Mark Annick 800-559-4534 [email protected] SOURCE Johnston Tobey Baruch SAN DIEGO , March 2, 2022 /PRNewswire/ -- DOGTV is launching a new series on March 3, 2022 spotlighting 'The Dog Chef' Kevyn Matthews and his work preparing healthy food for pooches. 'The Dog Chef' is a 10-episode series of shows that highlight Matthews' work with celebrities and everyday pet owners to create nutritious food that promotes canine health and enrichment. Kevyn Matthews owns The Dog Chef cafe in Baltimore, where he makes fresh food, treats and froyo for dogs. Matthews has a four year-old Doberman named Heidi and also fosters dogs for Baltimore area rescues. The first episode, "Healthy Food is Pretty," airs on March 3 and will feature Matthews visiting Marcy Hopkins, whose dog suffers from severe allergies. Matthews helps create recipes that help the dog feel better and improve its quality of life. Future episodes help dogs with such issues as irritable bowel syndrome, bad breath and heart problems. Matthews said the creation of the show has been extremely rewarding for him, as he has had the chance to help dogs and their owners across the country. "When I started my mission, I set out to feed my own dog the right way," Matthews said. "I had no idea it would take me on a journey that could teach the whole world feed their pets properly. This show was a fun way to do what I do best, connect with dog people who love their dogs so much that they're inspired to become the chef their dog wants them to be. DOGTV now boasts hundreds of fun, educational and entertaining programs for pet parents, including shows like Road Dogs, The Happy Puppy with Dr. Courtney Campbell, Be Active with Laura Nativo and Tricks for Treats with Chrissy Joy. Additionally, the network recently started airing its first full-season series, Paws for Love, with more season-long programming coming out in the next few weeks. Beke Lubeach, General Manager and Chief Marketing Officer of DOGTV, said the new content will be a great tool for pet parents to help their pets adapt to a "new normal." "The shows for pets are designed to help keep them calm and engaged during the day, and promote their overall well-being," she said. "So now is a great time for us to introduce even more content for their enjoyment. And it's also an opportunity for DOGTV to become an even more valuable resource to pet parents by providing them with informative, engaging programs as well." DOGTV is now available in the US, Mexico, Brazil, Portugal and S. Korea via cable and satellite providers and Direct To Consumer through their app available on Roku, AppleTV, Amazon FireTV, iOS and Android devices everywhere. The channel also has a robust online and social media presence as well. "We want pet owners everywhere to be able to access the beneficial programming that DOGTV provides," she said. "Our pets provide so much joy to us especially in difficult times like we've seen the past couple of years. It's important for pet parents to be able to provide their pets with the kind of enriching activities that improve their overall quality of life." DOGTV's approach toward pet enrichment is based on more than 60 scientific studies. The channel's content is focused on behavior and how visual stimuli can impact it, ways to help dogs counter anxiety and stimulation and enrichment through music and sound. About DOGTV DOGTV is a 24/7 channel with programs scientifically developed to provide the right company for dogs when left alone. Through years of research by some of the world's top pet experts, special content was created to meet specific attributes of a dog's sense of vision and hearing and supports their natural behavior patterns. The result: a confident, happy dog, who's less likely to develop stress, separation anxiety or other related problems. To learn more about DOGTV or follow us on social media, please visit: Website: www.dogtv.com Facebook: https://www.facebook.com/dogtv Instagram: https://www.instagram.com/dogtv/\ YouTube: https://www.youtube.com/user/DOGTVWORLD Contact: Ron Levi 408.769.3747 | [email protected] SOURCE DOGTV CHICAGO, March 2, 2022 /PRNewswire/ -- According to the new market research report "Electrophysiology Market by Product (Lab Devices (3D Mapping, Recording), Ablation Catheters (Cryoablation, RF), Diagnostic Catheters (Conventional, Advanced, Ultrasound)), Indication (AF, AVNRT, WPW), End User (Hospitals, ASCs) - Global Forecasts to 2027", published by MarketsandMarkets, the global market is projected to reach USD 11.6 billion by 2027 from USD 6.8 billion in 2021, at a CAGR of 9.4% during the forecast period of 2022 to 2027. Browse in-depth TOC on "Electrophysiology Market" 181 Tables 44 Figures 280 Pages Download PDF Brochure: https://www.marketsandmarkets.com/pdfdownloadNew.asp?id=200003281 The growth of the global electrophysiology market can be attributed to factors such as technological advancements; new entrants in the market; growing investments, funds, and grants; and an increased incidence of target diseases and procedures. Emerging markets are also expected to offer high growth opportunities for players operating in this market. However, factors such as the high cost of electrophysiology products, inadequate reimbursement, unfavorable healthcare reforms in the US, cost-intensive requirement for clinical data for new product launches, and the availability of alternative technologies are expected to restrain the growth of this market in the coming years. The reuse & reprocessing of devices and lack of skilled and experienced electrophysiologists are some of the challenges in this market. The growth of the market is also expected to slow temporarily during the forecast period due to the COVID-19 pandemic. The Electrophysiology Laboratory Devices segment accounted for the largest share of the global Electrophysiology market, by product type, in 2021 On the basis of product, the global market is broadly classified into EP diagnostic catheters, EP ablation catheters, EP laboratory devices, access devices, and other products. The EP laboratory devices segment commanded the largest share of 57.0% of the electrophysiology market in 2021. This segment is estimated to grow at a CAGR of 10.6% during the forecast period. The large share of this segment can be attributed to the increasing focus of market players on the launch of technologically advanced 3D mapping systems, increasing public-private funding for the development of novel electrophysiology recording systems, the rising number of RF ablation procedures, the cost-effectiveness of RF ablation procedures as compared to other ablation techniques, and increasing availability of these products in major markets. Electrophysiology laboratory devices are most commonly used by clinicians or physicians to diagnose and treat complex cardiac arrhythmias during electrophysiology tests. EP laboratory devices comprise capital-intensive equipment used by electrophysiologists to conduct complex diagnostic and therapeutic procedures for heart diseases. Based on the type of product, the EP laboratory devices market is segmented into 3D mapping systems, EP recording systems, RF ablation systems, intra-cardiac echocardiography (ICE) ultrasound imaging systems, EP X-ray systems, and other electrophysiology laboratory devices (MRI systems and EP remote magnetic and robotic navigation systems). Request Sample Pages: https://www.marketsandmarkets.com/requestsampleNew.asp?id=200003281 Electrophysiology Ablation Cathers accounts to have the second-largest share of the gobal electrophysiology market are expected to register a growth rate of 8.8% during the forecasted period of 2022 to 2027. On the basis of product, the global electrophysiology market is broadly classified into EP diagnostic catheters, EP ablation catheters, EP laboratory devices, access devices, and other products. The cryoablation EP catheters segment commanded the largest share of 38.0% of the EP ablation catheters market in 2021. EP ablation catheters are used to treat various types of arrhythmia such as atrial fibrillation, atrial flutter, supraventricular tachycardias (SVT), and Wolff-Parkinson-White syndrome. These catheters are used by an electrophysiologist in a catheterization laboratory or a specialized EP laboratory to perform ablation procedures related to arrhythmia. The EP ablation catheters market is further segmented into cryoablation EP catheters, radiofrequency ablation catheters, laser ablation systems, and microwave ablation systems. The Atrial Fibrillation segment, by indication type, accounted for the largest share of the global Electrophysiology market in 2021 On the basis of indication type, the market is segmented into atrial fibrillation, atrioventricular nodal reentry tachycardia (AVNRT), Wolff-Parkinson-White (WPW) syndrome, atrial flutter, and other indications. Atrial fibrillation (AF), also known as AFib, is one of the most common types of arrhythmia, resulting in irregular and rapid heart rhythms. It occurs when rapid electric signals cause the upper chamber of the heart to contract quickly, due to which atria are unable to pump blood into the ventricles normally, resulting in blood clots. People suffering from atrial fibrillation are more prone to major heart-related complications, including strokes and heart failure. Nearly one in every six strokes is caused by AFib (Source: National Clot Alliance). Atrial fibrillation accounted for a major share of 36.0% of the global electrophysiology market in 2021. This is mainly due to factors such as the increasing prevalence of atrial fibrillation, the growing number of ablation procedures related to atrial fibrillation, rapid growth in the aging population across the globe, and the development of advanced cardiac mapping systems for the early diagnosis of atrial fibrillation. Speak to Analyst: https://www.marketsandmarkets.com/speaktoanalystNew.asp?id=200003281 On the basis of End Users, hospitals & cardiac centers segment accounted for the largest share of the global Electrophysiology market, in 2021. On the basis of the end user segment, the market is segmented into hospitals & cardiac centers and ambulatory surgery centers. The hospitals & cardiac centers segment holds the largest share of the market (92.53%) in 2021. The large share of this end user segment is attributed to several factors, such as the presence of big cath labs and electrophysiology labs in hospitals, a rising prevalence of CVDs, and an increased number of ablation procedures. The availability of state-of-the-art facilities for the diagnosis, treatment, and management of diseases, as well as trained personnel, has ensured demand for hospital-based care. More screening and diagnostic procedures are conducted in hospitals than in other medical facilities, contributing to the large share. The emergence of advanced electrophysiology products, coupled with the demand for minimally invasive procedures, is accelerating the adoption of electrophysiology devices in hospitals. The hospital & cardiac centers segment includes both government & private hospitals and cardiac centers that provide treatment to patients with cardiac diseases. Almost all electrophysiology procedures are carried out in the electrophysiology (EP) laboratory or catheterization laboratory (cath lab) of hospitals or cardiac centers. The Asia Pacific market is expected to grow at the highest CAGR during the forecast period On the basis of region, the Electrophysiology market is segmented into North America, Europe, Asia Pacific, Latin America, and the Middle East & Africa. The Asia Pacific region is expected to register the highest growth during the forecast period. The Asia Pacific is segmented into China, India, Japan, South Korea, Australia, and the Rest of Asia Pacific, including Malaysia, Taiwan, Singapore, and New Zealand. China and India are expected to account for the highest growth rate. Changing lifestyles and eating habits, increasing stress, and rising habitual smoking & drinking in these countries have resulted in growing health-related problems such as obesity, heart disease, and other chronic diseases. Factors such as large population, increasing geriatric population, the growing incidence of chronic diseases, rising healthcare spending, healthcare reforms for infrastructural development, increasing demand for advanced technologies, the growing emphasis of prominent players on emerging markets, and less stringent regulations are also fueling the demand for electrophysiology devices in this region. However, the high cost of advanced products, inadequate infrastructural capabilities to comply with the latest cardiac resynchronization technologies, and a lack of awareness about health-related issues are expected to hamper the growth of this market. Many end users in this regional segment have controlled budgets and opt for low-cost products, which is another major factor limiting the market growth. Prominent players in the Electrophysiology market include Abbott (US), Medtronic (Ireland), Boston Scientific Corporation (US), Koninklijke Philips N.V. (Netherlands), GE Healthcare (US), Siemens Healthcare GmbH (Germany), Stereotaxis, Inc. (US), Merit Medical Systems (US), Atricure Inc. (US), APN Health, LLC (US), Osypka Medical (Germany), Japan LifeLine Co., Ltd. (Japan), Johnson & Johnson (US), Biotronik (Germany), MicroPort Scientific Corporation (China), and Acutus Medical, Inc. (US). Browse Adjacent Markets: Medical Devices Market Research Reports & Consulting Browse Related Reports: Cardiac Mapping Market by Product (Contact Mapping Systems (Electroanatomical Mapping, Basket Catheter Mapping), Non-contact Mapping Systems), Indication (Atrial Fibrillation, Atrial Flutter, AVNRT), Region - Global Forecast to 2024 https://www.marketsandmarkets.com/Market-Reports/cardiac-mapping-market-89853405.html Catheters Market by Type (Cardiovascular (IVUS Catheter, Guiding Catheter, Balloon Catheter), Urology catheter (Dialysis, Foley, Intermittent Catheter), Intravenous Catheter (Central Venous Catheter)), & End User (Hospital) - Global Forecast to 2025 https://www.marketsandmarkets.com/Market-Reports/catheters-market-6247803.html About MarketsandMarkets MarketsandMarkets provides quantified B2B research on 30,000 high growth niche opportunities/threats which will impact 70% to 80% of worldwide companies' revenues. 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Contact: Mr. Aashish Mehra MarketsandMarkets INC. 630 Dundee Road Suite 430 Northbrook, IL 60062 USA: +1-888-600-6441 Email: [email protected] Research Insight: https://www.marketsandmarkets.com/ResearchInsight/electrophysiology-market.asp Visit Our Web Site: https://www.marketsandmarkets.com Content Source: https://www.marketsandmarkets.com/PressReleases/electrophysiology.asp SOURCE MarketsandMarkets NAZARETH, Israel, March 2, 2022 /PRNewswire/ -- Elgan Pharma, a late-stage clinical biopharmaceutical company focusing on innovative treatments for critical conditions in neonates, announced today outstanding results from a Phase III study evaluating the safety and efficacy of ELGN-GI, a proprietary enteral insulin formulation for the treatment of intestinal malabsorption, that causes feeding intolerance in preterm infants. The study results indicate an unprecedented improvement in gastrointestinal (GI) function and a reduction in related complications, including reduction in time until life threatening central line can be removed, reduction in hospital stay and a reduction in the number of life-threatening necrotizing enterocolitis (NEC) events. ELGN-GI was well tolerated, and no drug-related adverse effects were observed. The findings were recently published in JAMA Pediatrics. "Feeding intolerance is a common condition among preterm infants due to immaturity of the gastrointestinal tract," commented Prof. Hans van Goudoever, former Division Chair of Pediatrics, Emma Children's Hospital Amsterdam UMC, Professor of Pediatrics and since 2022 Dean at the University of Amsterdam and Chief investigator of the ELGN-GI program. "Feeding intolerance prolongs dependence on parenteral nutrition which, in turn, is associated with increased risk of short- and long-term life-threatening complications. We are very excited to see the positive results of this trial, showing multiple clinical benefits for ELGN-GI in improving intestinal maturation and the wellbeing of preterm infants. I trust that ELGN-GI holds the potential to improve the lives of premature infants and neonates suffering from short bowel syndrome." "One out of ten babies is born premature. The challenge that faces us is developing new therapies for unique unmet medical needs of this special population," said Miki Olshansky, CEO of Elgan Pharma said. "We are confident that ELGN-GI will be an important therapy for premature infants given its remarkable consistent clinical data across several trials to date. We look forward to initiating our second Phase III trial for ELGN-GI in the second half of 2022 towards registration." "In addition, we are on track to launching a Phase IIb clinical trial for ELGN-EYE, our second product candidate, for the treatment of pre-term infants' retinopathy of prematurity. In the past decades, there has been a lack of novel drugs specifically addressing infant health, and we are excited to be pioneers and propel this important underserved population forward with two promising additions," added Ms. Olshansky. About the Phase III Study The Phase III randomized, double-blind, placebo-controlled, multicenter study evaluated the safety and efficacy of ELGN-GI in preterm infants, born at 26-32 weeks, and weighing at least 500g. The study enrolled 303 infants across 46 sites in the US, Europe and Israel. Participants were randomized to receive either low-dose ELGN-GI (400 IU/mL, n=110), high dose (2000 IU/mL, n=95), or placebo (n=98), treatment was administered for up to 28 days. The primary endpoint was days to full enteral feeding (FEF), defined as intake of at least 150 ml/kg/day for 3 consecutive days (marking significant reduction in life-threatening risks). Additional secondary outcomes were the number and percentage of infants reaching full enteral feeding within 6, 8, and 10 days of intervention, time to achieve an enteral intake of 120 mL/kg/day for three consecutive days, the number of days receiving parenteral nutrition, and growth rate. Main Results: Time to achieve full enteral feeding was significantly reduced in infants receiving either low-dose ELGN-GI (10.0 [7.021.8] days; n=94; p=.03) or high-dose ELGN-GI (10 [6.015.0] days; n=82; p=.001) compared to infants receiving placebo (14.0 [8.028.0] days; n=85). The proportion of infants who achieved full enteral feeding in the first 6, 8, and 10 days of intervention was significantly higher in both active-treatment groups compared to the placebo group. In addition, time to achieve an enteral intake of 120 mL/kg/day for three consecutively days was significantly reduced in both active-treatment groups compared to the placebo group. The number of days receiving parenteral nutrition (intravenous nutrition) was significantly lower in the high-dose group compared to the placebo group. Necrotizing enterocolitis (Bell stage 2 or 3) occurred in seven (6%) infants in the low-dose group, four (5%) infants in the high-dose group, and ten (10%) infants in the placebo group. In the most fragile, susceptible gestational age population of under 28 weeks, the difference between groups is even more pronounced; the percentage of infants with NEC dropped from 19.6% in the placebo group to 12.2% in the low-dose group and to 4.3% in the high-dose group. The percentage of infants with late-onset sepsis (LOS) was reduced from 15% in the placebo group to 12% (20% reduction) in the low-dose group, and 11% (26% reduction) in the high-dose group. Overall, percentage of subjects with severe adverse events was reduced from 18.6% in placebo to 12% (36% reduction) in the low-dose group and to 11.4% (39% reduction) in the high-dose group. Reduction in severe complications and hospitalization all contribute to substantial reduction in hospital staff burden and associated costs. None of the infants developed serum insulin antibodies, further establishing treatment safety. About ELGN-GI ELGN-GI is a proprietary formulation of recombinant human insulin tailored for neonatal use, delivered orally and compatible with infants' nutrition. ELGN-GI improves gastrointestinal function, increases absorptive surface area and enhances adaptation, thereby reducing the need for intravenous feeding and life-threatening complications. The novel formulation results in a highly soluble insulin powder for reconstitution, which allows for accurate, low doses, appropriate for preterm babies. It is compatible with both Mother's Own Milk (MOM) and infant formulas and contributes to gut rehabilitation with no systemic exposure to insulin. About Gastrointestinal Complications in Preterm Infants Preterm birth is a leading cause for infant mortality and morbidity, leading to a lengthy hospitalization and various morbidities. A major hurdle impeding healthy growth of preterm infants in the initial stages of treatment is immaturity of the gut leading to malabsorption of nutrients. It can also trigger life-threatening complications such as gut atrophy and NEC. Currently, there is no approved treatment for preterm intestinal malabsorption. Current management is by invasive, intravenous nutrition (parenteral nutrition), that bypasses the gastrointestinal tract. However, this leads to a high risk of infection, an increased burden on the liver and growth failure. Every year, an estimated 15 million babies are born preterm (before 37 completed weeks of gestation), amounting to more than 10% of births worldwide. Preterm birth complications are the leading cause of death among children under 5 years of age, responsible for approximately 1 million deaths in 2015. In addition, premature birth is responsible for various morbidities, including retinopathy of prematurity (ROP) and other vision impairments, lung complications and intestinal malabsorption leading to various gastrointestinal complications, in particular Necrotizing enterocolitis (NEC). Necrotizing enterocolitis (NEC) is the most common life-threatening gastrointestinal emergency experienced by premature infants in the newborn intensive care unit (NICU). It is a devastating gastrointestinal disease that is associated with severe sepsis, intestinal perforation, and mortality of up to 30% of babies with the condition. Approximately 12% of low birth weight babies suffer from NEC, and those who survive are often prone to short bowel syndrome and other complications leading to significantly impaired growth and poor long-term neurodevelopment. The hospitalization time of premature babies born before week 32 is 50-70 days. NICU hospitalization alone easily exceeds $5000 per day in the US, and the annual cost of NICU stays in the US alone is estimated to be over $26 billion. About Elgan Pharma Elgan Pharma is a clinical stage, neonatology-focused biotechnology company, dedicated to developing safe, tailored therapies to address medical complications and developmental challenges that are common in babies born prematurely. The company's two leading programs are ELGN-GI for the treatment of preterm infant intestinal malabsorption and ELGN-EYE for treatment of preterm infants' retinopathy of prematurity, the number one cause of childhood blindness worldwide. The Company was established in the NGT3 technological incubator. Media contact: Tsipi Haitovsky Global Media Liaison +972-52-598-9892 [email protected] SOURCE Elgan Pharma According to a study by KPMG , nearly 80 percent of insurance Chief Executive Officers in the insurance industry say that COVID-19 has "turbo-charged" progress around creating a more seamless digital customer experience. One of the critical insurance processes that have historically excluded digital methodologies is inspections. Rather than relying on time-consuming and costly physical inspections, adopting digital solutions can help solve the challenges of an ever-changing industry exacerbated by the pandemic. Truepic Vision enables Equifax insurance customers to adopt such digital solutions for a more efficient claim and underwriting process, without worrying about the risk of fraud that otherwise comes with relying on unverified photos and videos. "Our partnership with Truepic underscores our commitment to meeting the ongoing needs of our insurance customers and helping them to solve new challenges in today's rapidly evolving digital landscape," commented Joy Wilder Lybeer, Chief Revenue Officer and Senior Vice President of Global Partnerships at Equifax United States Information Solutions (USIS). "When it comes to virtual inspections, risk is all in the viewfinder - making new photo and video authentication and verification solutions critical to the claims and underwriting process." Truepic's patented technology verifies digital media and associated data including pixels, time, date, location, orientation and more from the moment of capture. All verified information is cryptographically sealed to certify and protect from tampering in real-time before media reaches the intended recipients. By verifying the integrity of images and associated data, Truepic brings greater trust to the visual sources businesses use to make underwriting decisions. This enables insurance carriers to make faster and better decisions while also providing a better experience for their insured, as the solution integrates seamlessly with a user's smartphone. "Truepic and Equifax are committed to identifying and stopping fraud through various channels, particularly in visual media," said Craig Stack, Founder, and President of Truepic. "Two key areas that are top-of-mind for all organizations: improving customer experience and driving down costs. Together with Equifax, we look forward to helping insurance customers do just that." To learn more about Equifax identity and fraud solutions, visit Equifax.com . To learn more about Truepic, click here. About Equifax Inc. At Equifax (NYSE: EFX ), we believe knowledge drives progress. As a global data, analytics, and technology company, we play an essential role in the global economy by helping financial institutions, companies, employers, and government agencies make critical decisions with greater confidence. Our unique blend of differentiated data, analytics, and cloud technology drives insights to power decisions to move people forward. Headquartered in Atlanta and supported by more than 13,000 employees worldwide, Equifax operates or has investments in 24 countries in North America, Central and South America, Europe, and the Asia Pacific region. For more information, visit Equifax.com . ABOUT TRUEPIC Founded in 2015, Truepic develops the world's most secure camera technology for mobile devices. Truepic is the pioneer of secure media provenance through its patented Controlled Capture technology, which empowers viewers to make better-informed decisions through high integrity photos and videos. The Truepic team is dedicated to restoring trust in every pixel of consequence, with the goal of having a shared sense of visual reality across the internet. FOR MORE INFORMATION Kate Walker for Equifax [email protected] Victoria Banaszczyk for Truepic [email protected] SOURCE Equifax Inc. DUBLIN, March 2, 2022 /PRNewswire/ -- The "Europe's Carbon Border Adjustment Mechanism: Prospects for Russian Suppliers, Russia's Potential Response" report has been added to ResearchAndMarkets.com's offering. The European green policy is not only about some ideology but also about charging suppliers of goods for high carbon footprints. The launch of the Carbon Border Adjustment Mechanism (CBAM) is nearing and getting more real. In July 2021, the European Commission published framework conditions of the CBAM implementation. It poses a serious threat to Russian exports. The new carbon regulation will add serious extra costs to exports of Russian businesses to the EU. Apart from prospects of paying extra fees, the CBAM has sharply intensified discussions in Russia about mechanisms of climate regulation and policies in the field of carbon emissions that Russia should implement. The new report by the National Energy Security Fund elaborates on the following issues: Main parameters of the CBAM. Reorganization of the Emissions Trading System. The CBAM launch schedule. The suggested carbon fee collection mechanism. Possible consequences of the CBAM for Russia . Initial estimations of potential losses. Main industries in the risk zone. . Initial estimations of potential losses. Main industries in the risk zone. Russia's reaction to the CBAM. Formation of Russia's negotiation position. Suggested variants of minimization of CBAM implications and feasibility of such measures. reaction to the CBAM. Formation of negotiation position. Suggested variants of minimization of CBAM implications and feasibility of such measures. Potential beneficiaries of the CBAM in Russia . Formation of the carbon footprint reduction services sector in Russia . Utilizers, foresters and financiers. . Formation of the carbon footprint reduction services sector in . Utilizers, foresters and financiers. Main climate policy regulators in Russia . Key figures. Positions of relevant ministries and agencies. . Key figures. Positions of relevant ministries and agencies. Formation of the regulatory framework of Russia's new climate policy. The analysis of new decrees, laws and strategies. Creation of the system to monitor greenhouse gas emissions of enterprises. new climate policy. The analysis of new decrees, laws and strategies. Creation of the system to monitor greenhouse gas emissions of enterprises. Prospects of the introduction of carbon payments in Russia . A pilot project of a low-carbon cluster in the Sakhalin Region. . A pilot project of a low-carbon cluster in the Sakhalin Region. Medium-term forecast of developments. Key Topics Covered: INTRODUCTION CBAM AS NEW ECONOMIC REALITY The history of carbon border regulations Main parameters of CBAM CBAM as an instrument of discrimination Consequences of CBAM for Russia THE POSITION OF RUSSIAN REGULATORS ON LOW-CARBON DEVELOPMENT ENFORCEMENT Formation of the legal framework of the new climate policy Climate issues in Russia's National Security Strategy National Security Strategy Development of CBAM response measures Actions of Russian regulators in the CBAM context MAIN BENEFICIARIES OF CBAM IN RUSSIA Utilizers Foresters Financiers CONCLUSION For more information about this report visit https://www.researchandmarkets.com/r/b2x4fo Media Contact: Research and Markets Laura Wood, Senior Manager [email protected] For E.S.T Office Hours Call +1-917-300-0470 For U.S./CAN Toll Free Call +1-800-526-8630 For GMT Office Hours Call +353-1-416-8900 U.S. Fax: 646-607-1904 Fax (outside U.S.): +353-1-481-1716 SOURCE Research and Markets LOS ANGELES, March 2, 2022 /PRNewswire/ -- Today, Exer Urgent Care opened its 27th Southern California location and third in Orange County, expanding into the city of Costa Mesa. Located within the 17th Street Promenade, the new center is staffed by ER-trained doctors and medical personnel, providing convenient, affordable and high-quality medical care at a fraction of the cost of an ER. Exer helps alleviate the overcrowding of local hospital ERs with neighborhood facilities offering more comprehensive medical services than traditional walk-in clinics, including COVID-19 testing, x-ray, labs and diagnostics. "We couldn't be more thrilled to bring an Exer Urgent Care location to the city of Costa Mesa as we continue to expand our convenient, comprehensive and affordable healthcare services throughout Orange County," said Rob Mahan, CEO, Exer Urgent Care. "As the COVID-19 pandemic continues to evolve and health remains at the forefront of our minds, it is our top priority to meet the needs of local communities with an unparalleled patient experience from ER-trained doctors." Exer Urgent Care is Southern California's fastest-growing urgent care company servicing a whole range of minor-to-major healthcare needs. Responding to the community's need for pandemic-related care, Exer features an in-house PCR lab with COVID-19 rapid test (antigen) results available by end of day and PCR test results available by end of next day. Telehealth platform, VirtualCARE by Exer , allows patients real-time access to a medical provider via video chat and patient portal offers access to test results as well as discharge and other health information. Exer Costa Mesa is open seven days a week from 9 a.m. to 9 p.m., with the last patient registered at 8:30 p.m. Exer accepts most PPO, some HMO and Medicare, and offers affordable payment options for those with minimal or no health insurance. For more information about Exer Urgent Care visit ExerUrgentCare.com and follow @ExerUrgentCare on Instagram, Twitter, and Facebook. Exer serves the greater Los Angeles regions and has expanded to Orange County. Clinics are located in: San Fernando Valley, San Gabriel Valley, Santa Clarita, South Bay, Ventura, Central Los Angeles, Orange County and the Westside. For a full list of the 27 Exer clinic locations visit exerurgentcare.com/locations/ . ABOUT EXER URGENT CARE: With 27 Southern California locations, Exer Urgent Care is designed to get you better. With the peace of mind that comes from easy access to highly-trained ER doctors, Exer services a whole range of minor-to-major healthcare needs in a convenient, high-quality and affordable environment. With on-site pharmacy, in-house PRC lab featuring next day COVID-19 testing results, x-ray and more, Exer can treat 80 percent of the cases seen in an ER for a fraction of the cost. VirtualCare by Exer provides patients real-time access to an Exer provider with no appointment necessary via video chat with a smartphone, tablet, or computer. Exer believes healthier people make for healthier communities. Exer is here to make healthcare work better, feel betterand deliver better resultsfor everyone. Now let's get you better. For more information on Exer Urgent Care, visit ExerUrgentCare.com. SOURCE Exer Urgent Care AKRON, Ohio, March 2, 2022 /PRNewswire/ -- FirstEnergy Corp.'s (NYSE: FE) electric companies in Ohio The Illuminating Company, Ohio Edison and Toledo Edison are urging residential customers experiencing financial hardship to contact their utility as soon as possible to establish an affordable payment arrangement or obtain assistance before shut-offs for nonpayment resume without winter season restrictions beginning April 15. In a heartfelt message to customers, FirstEnergy employees are speaking out about personal experiences that fuel their passion to help customers who may find themselves seeking financial assistance for the first time. The video, "We're Customers Just Like You," features four FirstEnergy Customer Service and Human Services employees who want customers to know they are dedicated to helping them get through challenging times. "Many of our customers are unaware of the various utility bill assistance programs available to them, which often prevents them from taking advantage of income-based financial assistance for which they are eligible," said Michelle Henry, senior vice president of Customer Experience at FirstEnergy. "Our dedicated Customer Service team is eager to walk customers through this process, and our hope is that customers will hear our employees' stories and feel more comfortable reaching out to us for assistance." Programs in which FirstEnergy's Ohio customers may be eligible to participate include: The Percentage of Income Payment Plan (PIPP): Allows customers to pay a set percentage of their income toward their electric bill, regardless of the balance. Customers who pay on time and in full each month can have their outstanding balance eliminated in 24 months. To be eligible, customers must have a household gross yearly income at or below 150% of federal poverty guidelines and must meet other criteria. To apply, call 1-800-282-0880 or visit www.energyhelp.ohio.gov. Allows customers to pay a set percentage of their income toward their electric bill, regardless of the balance. Customers who pay on time and in full each month can have their outstanding balance eliminated in 24 months. To be eligible, customers must have a household gross yearly income at or below 150% of federal poverty guidelines and must meet other criteria. To apply, call 1-800-282-0880 or visit www.energyhelp.ohio.gov. Home Energy Assistance Program (HEAP): Provides eligible customers with cash grants for home heating bills and emergencies through HEAP, which is available year-round, and Emergency HEAP Winter Crisis Program, which is available through March 31, 2022 . Customers must have gross income below 175% of federal poverty guidelines. Call the Ohio Development Service Agency at 1-800-282-0880 or visit www.energyhelp.ohio.gov for more information. Provides eligible customers with cash grants for home heating bills and emergencies through HEAP, which is available year-round, and Emergency HEAP Winter Crisis Program, which is available through . Customers must have gross income below 175% of federal poverty guidelines. Call the Ohio Development Service Agency at 1-800-282-0880 or visit www.energyhelp.ohio.gov for more information. 2-1-1 Helpline: This nationwide resource and information helpline identifies locally available programs that may assist customers with utility bills or other needs. For more information, dial 211, text your ZIP code to 898211 or visit the 211 website. Specific customer assistance programs are also available for each utility: The Illuminating Company The Ohio Fuel Fund grant is a company-funded program that provides a one-time annual benefit to an eligible customer's electric account. The grant can only be used for electric usage, security deposits and reconnection charges. Customers can apply at CHN Housing Partners at 2999 Payne Ave., Suite 134, or Step Forward in Greater Cleveland at 1801 Superior Ave., both in Cleveland , or call 216-350-8008 to learn more. is a company-funded program that provides a one-time annual benefit to an eligible customer's electric account. The grant can only be used for electric usage, security deposits and reconnection charges. Customers can apply at CHN Housing Partners at 2999 Payne Ave., Suite 134, or Step Forward in at 1801 Superior Ave., both in , or call 216-350-8008 to learn more. The CEI Co-Op Fuel Fund is an emergency hardship fund designed to help residential customers restore or maintain electric service. The program funding is provided by The Illuminating Company customers and employees. Customers can apply at the Cleveland Salvation Army, located at 2507 E. 22nd St. in Cleveland , or call (216) 861-8185 to speak with a representative. Ohio Edison Ohio Edison Project Reach is an emergency hardship fund designed to help residential customers restore or maintain electric service. The program funding is provided by Ohio Edison customers and employees, and the distribution of funds is administered by Salvation Army offices located throughout Ohio Edison's service area. To find an agency, please visit www.firstenergycorp.com/ReachAgencies. Toledo Edison Toledo Edison Neighbors Helping Neighbors is an emergency hardship fund designed to help residential customers restore or maintain electric service. The program funding is provided by Toledo Edison customers and employees. Customers can apply at the Salvation Army office in Toledo , located at 620 N. Erie St. in Toledo , or call (419) 241-1138 to speak with a representative. To apply or learn more about other utility bill assistance programs, visit www.firstenergycorp.com/billassist and click on "Search Assistance Programs." Residents are also encouraged to contact their utility's customer service team at 1-800-589-3101 (Illuminating Company), 1-800-633-4766 (Ohio Edison) or 1-800-447-3333 (Toledo Edison), Monday through Friday, from 8 a.m. to 6 p.m. FirstEnergy Ohio utility residential customers also can manage their electric bills through the Equal Payment Plan (EPP). With EPP, customers can make consistent monthly payments to avoid seasonal highs and lows in their electric bills. In addition to payment options, FirstEnergy offers a Medical Certification program. Customers with severe health problems may have a licensed physician certify in writing that a termination of electric service would be especially dangerous. The medical certification will postpone the termination of electric service for 30 days. The certification is designed to provide the customer with additional time to pay their past-due balance. The customer is still responsible for the past-due amount and will be given the opportunity to pay the balance in monthly installments. FirstEnergy also offers a program called Third Party Notification where a relative, friend, clergy or social service agency can be notified along with the customer if electric service is about to be disconnected. The third party is not obligated to pay the overdue bills but can help make payment arrangements for the customer who might have difficulty paying. The Illuminating Company serves 750,000 customers across Ashtabula, Cuyahoga, Geauga, Lake and Lorain counties. Connect with The Illuminating Company at www.illuminatingcompany.com, on Twitter @IlluminatingCo and on Facebook at www.facebook.com/IlluminatingCo. Ohio Edison serves more than one million customers across 34 Ohio counties. Follow Ohio Edison on Twitter @OhioEdison, on Facebook at www.facebook.com/OhioEdison, and online at www.ohioedison.com. Toledo Edison serves nearly 315,000 customers in northwest Ohio. Follow Toledo Edison on Twitter @ToledoEdison or on Facebook at www.facebook.com/ToledoEdison. FirstEnergy is dedicated to integrity, safety, reliability and operational excellence. Its 10 electric distribution companies form one of the nation's largest investor-owned electric systems, serving customers in Ohio, Pennsylvania, New Jersey, West Virginia, Maryland and New York. The company's transmission subsidiaries operate approximately 24,000 miles of transmission lines that connect the Midwest and Mid-Atlantic regions. Follow FirstEnergy online at www.firstenergycorp.com. Follow FirstEnergy on Twitter: @FirstEnergyCorp. SOURCE FirstEnergy Corp. "Tory's impressive leadership with Schlotzsky's has helped propel the brand forward," said Joe Guith, Restaurant Category President, Focus Brands. "Moe's Southwest Grill has incredible potential to continue to grow and evolve, and with Tory's operations-centric mindset and proven track record for successful brand management, we are excited about what's next for the brand." During his tenure as Schlotzsky's Chief Brand Officer, Bartlett introduced two new prototypes as well as overhauled the menu to streamline operations and maximize kitchen efficiency. The brand also had a record number of new deal signings in 2021, adding an additional 124 restaurants to the pipeline. Bartlett brings over 30 years of experience in the restaurant industry having worked in leadership roles at Tin Lizzy's and Hooters prior to joining Focus Brands. About Focus Brands Atlanta-based Focus Brands is a leading developer of global multi-channel foodservice brands. Focus Brands, through its affiliate brands, is the franchisor and operator of more than 6,000 restaurants, cafes, ice cream shoppes, and bakeries in the United States, the District of Columbia, Puerto Rico, and over 50 foreign countries under the brand names Auntie Anne's, Carvel, Cinnabon, Jamba, Moe's Southwest Grill, McAlister's Deli, and Schlotzsky's, as well as Seattle's Best Coffee on certain military bases and in certain international markets. Please visit www.focusbrands.com to learn more. Contact: Abby Leary [email protected] SOURCE Moe's Southwest Grill LUXEMBOURG, March 2, 2022 /PRNewswire/ -- Gen II Luxembourg Services, SARL ("Gen II"), a wholly-owned subsidiary of Gen II Fund Services, LLC, a leading independent private equity fund administrator, announced today the successful completion of the firm's International Standard on Assurance Engagements (ISAE) 3402 Type I Report in the areas of fund accounting, transfer agency, and depositary services. The ISAE 3402 is an internationally recognized auditing standard issued by the International Auditing and Assurance Standards Board (IAASB). A service organization's auditor's examination, in accordance with the standard, represents an in-depth audit of a service organization's control objectives and activities. These activities often include controls over information technology and related processes. A leading international accounting firm conducted an independent audit to examine the design and effectiveness of Gen II's controls. The ISAE 3042 Type I report demonstrates to Gen II clients and the private equity community the quality of back-office controls at Gen II and that the firm has adequately described its internal controls and processes that are in place to achieve client objectives. "The successful completion of a fund administrator's ISAE 3402 Type I Report is imperative for private fund sponsors and their Limited Partners to satisfy their operational and due diligence assessments, and we're proud to receive this report on our control environment," said Norman Leben, Managing Principal and Co-Founder, Gen II. "This recognition validates the completeness of our internal quality controls, which along with our world-class technology and staff, enable us to provide the highest-level service and expert guidance for which Gen II is known." About Gen II Gen II is a global fund administrator with more than $700 billion of private fund capital under administration. As the second largest private equity fund administrator in the United States, Gen II focuses solely on the alternative asset management space, including private equity, real estate, credit managers, fund-of-funds, and emerging managers. The company provides private fund sponsors with a best-in-class combination of experienced people, streamlined processes, and proprietary technology solutions to help GPs manage their operational infrastructure, reporting, and investor communications. For more information, please visit www.gen2fund.com. Contact: Philip Nunes BackBay Communications 617.391.0792 [email protected] SOURCE Gen II Fund Services, LLC PARIS, March 2, 2022 /PRNewswire/ -- GLEAMER , a French medtech company pioneering the use of artificial intelligence technology in the practice of radiology, announced today that the United States Food and Drug Administration has cleared its BoneView AI software for use by U.S. healthcare specialists to aid in diagnosing fractures and traumatic injuries on X-rays. In a U.S. study recently published by Boston University School of Medicine, BoneView was shown to help detect and localize fractures over the entire appendicular skeleton, rib cage, thoracic and lumbar spine, improving sensitivity and specificity, while reducing reading time. BoneView received the CE mark class 2a certification in the European Union in March 2020 and has been widely adopted in more than 300 institutions across 13 countries. GLEAMER developed BoneView to aid radiologists, orthopedic surgeons, emergency physicians, rheumatologists, family physicians and physician assistants, all of whom read X-rays in clinical practice to diagnose fractures in their patients. BoneView detects fractures in X-ray images and submits them to radiologists for final validation, providing healthcare professionals with a safe, reliable, time-saving and user-friendly tool. The BoneView AI algorithm is cleared as a CADe/CADx (computer assisted detection and diagnosis) by the FDA and highlights regions of interest with bounding boxes around areas where fractures are suspected so radiologists can prioritize reading those X-rays. The Study conducted between July 2020 and January 2021, used images acquired in the US from multiple centers on instruments from a wide variety of manufacturers and involved readers from Boston University School of Medicine (MA), Stony Brook University Renaissance School of Medicine (NY), and Massachusetts General Hospital - Harvard Medical School (MA). Results showed that BoneView AI assistance provided a 10.4 percent improvement of fracture detection sensitivity and shortened the radiograph reading time by 6.3 seconds per patient. The BoneView AI algorithm's standalone performance for fracture detection had an AUC of .97. Across the six types of specialists participating in the Study, the combination of AI and health professionals' interpretations lowered the false negative rate (undetected fractures) on X-rays by 29 percent, while reducing reading time by 15 percent on exams specifically selected for their difficulty. BoneView also improved the specificity of fracture detection by radiologists and non-radiologists involving many anatomical locations, including foot/ankle, knee/leg, hip/pelvis, hand/wrist, elbow/arm, shoulder/clavicle, rib cage and thoracolumbar spine. "BoneView can change everything about the way X-ray reading is done today," said Christian Allouche, CEO and co-founder of GLEAMER. "In the value-based U.S. health care system, providers tell us they want to improve the radiographic diagnostic process which accounts for a huge part of their workload and optimize patient management. We are delighted and proud to offer clinicians and patients BoneView AI for this state-of-the-art advancement in radiology and patient care." Traumatic skeletal injuries are a leading source of consultation in emergency departments, representing one-third of annual visits. Fracture interpretation errors can represent up to 24 percent of harmful diagnostic errors seen in the ER and are more common during the evening and overnight hours, most likely related to non-expert reading and fatigue. "Radiologists' workload has doubled in the past two decades, and despite technological progress, they must analyze hundreds more images every day, requiring the readings to be highly reliable," explained Ali Guermazi, MD, PhD, Chief of Radiology at VA Boston Healthcare System and Professor of Radiology and medicine at Boston University School of Medicine, and leader of the U.S. study. "The assistance of AI should allow us to improve the specificity of the complementary exams prescribed after the radiography, to avoid delays in care, and to direct patients into the right therapeutic pathway. Our study was focused on fracture diagnosis, and a similar concept can be applied to other diseases and disorders." To date, BoneView has analyzed more than three million images around the world and is deployed in more than 13 countries across Europe, the Middle East, Asia-Pacific and North America. More than 3,500 radiologists and emergency physicians now rely on BoneView in their clinical routines. The solution is now available in the U.S. directly via GLEAMER and through other platforms including Fujifilm, Aidoc, Ferrum Health, Blackford Analysis. About GLEAMER GLEAMER's first globally available AI software, BoneView, recently received clearance by the U.S. Federal Food and Drug Administration and CE mark class 2a certification in Europe. Studies by world-leading radiologists and academic medical doctors have shown that BoneView improves detection of fractures in X-ray images, providing healthcare professionals with a safe, reliable, time-saving second reading. GLEAMER develops a suite of AI solutions for Radiology that encapsulate medical-grade expertise. The company wants to support imaging users to secure diagnoses for all patients and at all times, while improving efficiency. GLEAMER's AI Companions are directly integrated in the users' usual reading environment and act as an automated and transparent second reading to improve diagnostic accuracy in X-ray imaging. GLEAMER's solutions are currently being used across 13 countries in more than 300 institutions. For more information: www.gleamer.ai Media Contact Ivy Cohen Ivy Cohen Corporate Communications [email protected] (212) 399-0026 SOURCE Gleamer DUBLIN, March 2, 2022 /PRNewswire/ -- The "Growth Opportunities for Communications, Collaboration and Contact Center Solutions in the Financial Services Industry" report has been added to ResearchAndMarkets.com's offering. An important pillar of the global economy, the financial services industry is experiencing rapid and substantial transformation. Contact center, unified communications and collaboration technologies have risen in prominence as financial services institutions have needed to connect a workforce that is more widely distributed than ever before and adopt new business models to address rapidly evolving customer needs and interaction preferences. This study leverages the input of IT decision makers from a global survey conducted in November through December 2021, which was analyzed in 2021. IT decision maker participants spanned across global regions, and business sizes. The survey focused on the current state of adoption among various unified communications, collaboration and contact center tools, key investment drivers and future investment plans, perceived benefits of those tools, top challenges that financial services organizations face, the current and future state of hybrid work, as well as future office and real estate plans. The financial services sector encompasses a rage of business types, from commercial and consumer lending, investment, insurance collections and more. As such, the industry is comprised of a diverse mix of worker roles across back office and frontline staff, including industry-specific and general business roles. Growth opportunities abound for providers that can address this diversity with impactful solutions that can meet the requirements of today while bridging the chasm to meet the future goals and objectives of financial services organizations. This study leverages empirical data to show leaders of financial services organizations how their business stack up with their peers as well as shows providers how their financial services customers can get ahead of the curve and remain the forefront for sustained growth. Key Topics Covered: 1. Market Overview Why Financial Services? Why Now? Financial Services Industry Overview Financial Services Industry in the Spotlight Frontline Workers in the Financial Services Industry 2. Digital Transformation in the Financial Services Industry IT/Telecom Decision Maker Perspectives Current Stage of Digital Transformation Strategy Hurdles to Purchasing Transformative Technologies Top Priorities for Digital Transformation Investment Digital Transformation Success Measurement Departments Driving the Adoption of Digital Solutions Transformative Technologies Investment Factors 3. Unified Communications, Collaboration and Contact Center Adoption in the Financial Services Industry IT/Telecom Decision Maker Perspectives Communication & Collaboration Tools Used Today Communication & Collaboration Tools Deployment Strategies Number of Contact Center Agents in the Organization Type of Interaction Channels Employed Factors Preventing Contact Centers from Meeting Goals and Objectives Technologies Used to Improve Contact Center Performance and Workforce Engagement IT/Telecom Decision Maker Perspectives Technologies Used / Planned for Frontline Workers Tools Used Most Often by Frontline Workers Satisfaction with Technologies Used by Frontline Workers Factors Preventing Frontline Workers Empowerment 4. Work from Home and Remote Work in the Financial Services Industry IT/Telecom Decision Maker Perspectives Impact of COVID-19 on the Organization Workforce Working from Home Percent of Agents Moved to Work-from-home Since the Start of Stay-at-home Provisions Changes to Remote Agents Post-pandemic Covid-19 Impact on Technologies for Remote Workers IT Challenges in Supporting Remote Work Workplaces and Workspaces in the Financial Services Industry 5. IT/Telecom Decision Maker Perspectives Covid-19 Impact on Physical Office Space AND Real Estate Workplace Evolution over Next Year Future Investment in Open Offices 6. Future Investment Plans in the Financial Services Vertical IT/Telecom Decision Maker Perspectives Future Investment Prioritization CX Priorities over the Next Two Years Key Drivers for Investing in Communication & Collaboration 7. Vertical Industry Trends Disruption in the Banking and Insurance Industries Best Practices in Delivering Value to Verticals and Frontline Workers 8. Conclusion Growth Opportunities for Technology Providers 9. Appendix Research Objectives Research Methodology Sample Distribution - Country 10. IT/Telecom Decision-maker Survey - Respondent and Organization Profile Respondent Profile - Decision-Making Authority Respondent Profile - Familiarity with IT Budget Respondent Profile - IT/Telecom-Related Purchase Involvement Organization Profile - Size of Organization Organization Revenue List of Exhibits Legal Disclaimer For more information about this report visit https://www.researchandmarkets.com/r/c0w726 Media Contact: Research and Markets Laura Wood, Senior Manager [email protected] For E.S.T Office Hours Call +1-917-300-0470 For U.S./CAN Toll Free Call +1-800-526-8630 For GMT Office Hours Call +353-1-416-8900 U.S. Fax: 646-607-1907 Fax (outside U.S.): +353-1-481-1716 SOURCE Research and Markets DUBLIN, March 2, 2022 /PRNewswire/ -- The "Global Functional Cosmetics Market by Functionality (Conditioning Agents, UV Filters, Anti-Aging Agents, Skin Lightening Agents), Application (Skin Care, and Hair Care), and Region (North America, APAC, Europe, MEA, South America) - Forecast to 2026" report has been added to ResearchAndMarkets.com's offering. The functional cosmetics market is projected to reach USD 4.1 billion by 2026, at a CAGR of 5.2% from USD 3.2 billion in 2021 Functional cosmetics are those components in the cosmetic product formulation that impart pharmacological properties or other direct effects in the cure, diagnosis treatment, mitigation, or prevention of diseases. They are used in cosmetics to provide functional properties when applied to the skin. The growth of the functional cosmetics market is dependent on high spending power on cosmetics and the desire to look beautiful. Accelerating demand for anti-ageing, skin whitening, and sun protection products is one of the factors driving the growth of the market The rise in global warming and increase in temperature is affecting the skin epidermal layer. The harmful radiation from the sun destroys the epidermal layer leading to water loss and dryness in the skin, thus, destroying the cell and further causing pigmentation disorder, skin cancer, wrinkles, blemishes and sunburns among others. To protect the skin from such effects, people are getting more conscious to use a variety of products to treat their skin and avoid such situations of their skin getting damaged with the environmental effects. There is a surge in the use of sun protection products with a variety of options to suit every skin's need. From varying SPF (sun protection factor) to additional benefits like pigmentation control, sun protection products are gaining momentum. The desire for even-toned and light-coloured skin is the major factor driving the demand for skin whitening/lightening products. Skin whitening products are gaining importance in the Asia-Pacific region with India, China and Japan leading the way. This is because, in these regions particularly, fair skin is associated with beauty, youth and prosperity. The rising standard of living of the middle-class population, strong economic growth and increased per capita spending on beauty products are the key parameters that are increasing the global demand for these products. Conditioning agent is estimated to be the largest functionality in the functional cosmetics market between 2021 and 2026 The conditioning agents for skin can influence the homeostatic process of repair and growth by augmenting the skin's renewal mechanism. The conditioning agents used in hair have fairly no effect on growth and neither can help in cellular repair. These agents can help in temporarily improving the cosmetic appearance of damaged hair which further needs to be reapplied as the removal occurs. The market for this segment is driven by the increasing population and rising per capita spending on cosmetics in Asia-Pacific and Europe. However, the market for conditioning agents in North America is projected to register relatively low growth due to the increasing government regulations in the region. Skincare was the largest application for the functional cosmetics market in 2020 The functional cosmetics used in skincare applications basically cater to problems such as protection from harmful sun rays, wrinkles, blemishes, acne, ageing, and frown lines, among others. Skincare products are widely in demand all across the world due to the common need of humans to look good. The essence of bright and glowing skin is a major thriving factor for the growing demand for beauty and skincare products. An increase in male-specific cosmetic products and a growing population in the Asia-Pacific region is expected to boost the demand for skincare cosmetic products, thereby increasing the demand of functional cosmetics used in these products. North America is estimated to be the third-largest functional cosmetics market in 2020, in terms of value North America was the third-largest functional cosmetics market in 2020. The market in the region has a moderate-to-high growth rate owing to the maturity level of the industrial sector in the region. North America is a diversified market for petrochemicals due to the presence of many major chemical companies in the region. Intense competition among the major players in the market has led to price stabilization in the past few years. The improving international economic scenario is contributing to the rising demand for functional cosmetics in various end-use industries in the region. The market in the US and Mexico is expected to witness significant growth during the forecast period. Premium Insights High Growth Expected in Emerging Economies During Forecast Period Asia-Pacific to be Fastest-Growing Region in Functional Cosmetics Market During Forecast Period to be Fastest-Growing Region in Functional Cosmetics Market During Forecast Period Germany Accounted for Largest Share in Europe Market Skin Care to Dominate Functional Cosmetics Market Across Regions India to be Fastest-Growing Functional Cosmetics Market During Forecast Period Market Dynamics Drivers Increasing Demand for Multifunctional Ingredients Accelerating Demand for Anti-Aging, Skin-Whitening, and Sun Protection Products Restraints High Cost of Organic Products Opportunities Shifting Focus Toward Male-Specific Cosmetics Porter's Five Forces Analysis Value Chain Analysis Raw Materials Ingredient Manufacturing End-Use Product Patent Analysis Introduction Approach Document Type Insights Legal Status of Patents Legal Status of Functional Cosmetics Patents Jurisdiction Analysis Maximum Patents Filed by Companies in China Top Applicants Macroeconomic Indicators COVID-19 Impact Companies Mentioned Adeka Corporation Ashland Inc. Basf Se Clariant Ag Cp Kelco Dupont Eastman Chemical Company Emery Oleochemicals Group Evonik Industries Ag Gattefosse Givaudan Sa Innospec Inc. Kao Corporation Koninklijke Dsm N.V. Lucas Meyer Cosmetics Momentive Performance Chemicals Inc. Nouryon Sederma Seppic Sa Sonneborn LLC Stepan Company Symrise Ag United-Guardian, Inc. Vantage Specialty Chemicals For more information about this report visit https://www.researchandmarkets.com/r/yewhk4 Media Contact: Research and Markets Laura Wood, Senior Manager [email protected] For E.S.T Office Hours Call +1-917-300-0470 For U.S./CAN Toll Free Call +1-800-526-8630 For GMT Office Hours Call +353-1-416-8900 U.S. Fax: 646-607-1904 Fax (outside U.S.): +353-1-481-1716 SOURCE Research and Markets Key Points Covered in the Label and Package Printing Market Report: Am I engaging with the right suppliers? Which KPIs should I use to evaluate my incumbent suppliers? Which supplier selection criteria are relevant for ERP Software? What are the ERP Software category essentials in terms of SLAs and RFx? Key Global Suppliers in the Label and Package Printing Market: Smurfit Kappa Group Plc Essentra Plc Quad/Graphics Inc Get Quick Access to the Key Global Suppliers Profiled Extensively in This Report The Label and Package Printing Market report evaluates suppliers based on provision for applicable insurance policy, real-time analysis, pipeline software solutions, and conduct pipeline surveys. In addition, suppliers are also shortlisted based on business needs, technical specifications, operational requirements, security compliance, regulatory mandates, legal requirements, quality control, change management procedures, pricing models, penalty clauses, SLA nuances, acceptance criteria, and evaluation criteria. Request a Report Sample to Gain Comprehensive Insights at Label and Package Printing Market: https://www.procurement.spendedge.com/report/label-and-package-printing-sourcing-and-procurement-intelligence-report Related Trending Topics: Subscribe to our "Free Limited Period Starter Procurement Plan" to get the following: View 6 full reports View 800+ report samples Pre-order upcoming reports Dedicated account manager Subscribe Now for FREE! About SpendEdge: SpendEdge shares your passion for driving sourcing and procurement excellence. We are the preferred procurement market intelligence partner for 120+ Fortune 500 firms and other leading companies across numerous industries. Our strength lies in delivering robust, real-time procurement market intelligence reports and solutions. Contact SpendEdge Anirban Choudhury Marketing Manager Ph No: +1 (872) 206-9340 https://www.spendedge.com/contact-us SOURCE SpendEdge DUBLIN, March 2, 2022 /PRNewswire/ -- The "Global Smart Bags Market - Global Industry Size, Share, Trends, Opportunity and Forecast, 2016-2026Segmented By Product Type, By Technology, By Distribution channel, By Region" report has been added to ResearchAndMarkets.com's offering. Global smart bags market is expected to show robust growth registering an impressive CAGR in the forecast period, 2016-2026 on the account of surging demand of the product following the recent developments. Future growth of the consumer towards business and leisure travelling is expected to drive the growth of the global smart bags market in the upcoming five years. Moreover, involvement of technologies like internet connectivity, RFID pockets, and USB connection, etc. is further supporting the growth of the global smart bags market in the next five years. The luggage industry overall is booming on the backbone of the latest innovation like tracking system, automated locking, and Bluetooth features further creating a lucrative growth for global smart bags market in the future five years. New market players are actively investing in the technical advancements and their incorporation in the luggage bags making them appropriate for smart travels, this consistent advancement along with start-up fundings and private investments is expected to propel the growth of global smart bags market in the forecast period. Smart bags are the technologically influenced commodity for the consumers. It is an application-specific design that is intelligent enough to carry out various functions like USB charging, built-in weighing scales, TSA-approved lock and anti-theft features. GPS enabled designs are able to transmit their location through smart phones and GPS systems. Latest innovations of adding solar panels on the smart bags helps in charging the power banks, powering the whole bluetooth and GPS systems. RFID technology incorporated in the smart bags stores data about the required items and has emergency services that sends alerts via text messages to three pre-registered emergency numbers in case of any threat or emergency situations. Laptop bags are anticipated to dominate the market with largest amounts of revenue share in the upcoming five years. The market growth can be attributed to rapidly increasing consumers. Surge in the demand for the laptop bags for the adult generation as well as young teenage generation is expected to drive the growth of the market segment, that would influence the growth of global smart bags market in the next five years. Bag packs are expected to register significant growth on the backbone of rapidly increasing number of tech-savvy travelers. Technologically advanced features like GPS, power bank charging, RFID technology are all favorable tech for solo or group travelers, thereby enunciating the demand from the consumers and driving the growth of the global smart bags market in the forecast years. Market players are actively involved in the research and technological development in the product developments. The advanced technology has made it possible for the industry to provide excellent services through smart bags. Further advancement would aid the market value and brand establishment in the future five years. New market players may focus on the research and development to provide options that satisfies the consumer demand as well as benefits the market players in building their brand value. Other competitive strategies include mergers & acquisitions and new product developments. Holding the major shares of the global smart bags market are Barracuda, Inc. Samsonite IP Holdings S.A.R.L Horizn Studios GmbH TraxPack LLC Modobag Delsey S.A. Planet Traveler USA Away Com INC Neit Products Ltd RIMOWA GmbH & Co Distribution KG Report Scope: Years considered for this report: Historical Years: 2016 - 2019 Base Year: 2020 Estimated Year: 2021 Forecast Period: 2022 - 2026 Smart Bags Market, By Product Type Bag Packs Duffel Bags Handbags Laptop Bags Others Smart Bags Market, By Technology USB Charging Connectivity RFID Blocking Technology Others Smart Bags Market, By Distribution Channel Specialty Store Supermarket & Hypermarket Apparel & Footwear Store Online Others Smart Bags Market, By Region North America United States Canada Mexico Europe Germany France United Kingdom Italy Spain Asia-Pacific China Japan India South Korea Australia Middle East & Africa & South Africa Saudi Arabia UAE Kuwait South America Brazil Argentina Colombia For more information about this report visit https://www.researchandmarkets.com/r/qg6k35 Media Contact: Research and Markets Laura Wood, Senior Manager [email protected] For E.S.T Office Hours Call +1-917-300-0470 For U.S./CAN Toll Free Call +1-800-526-8630 For GMT Office Hours Call +353-1-416-8900 U.S. Fax: 646-607-1904 Fax (outside U.S.): +353-1-481-1716 SOURCE Research and Markets DUBLIN, March 2, 2022 /PRNewswire/ -- The "Stand Mixer Market Forecast to 2028 - COVID-19 Impact and Global Analysis By Type, End User, and Distribution Channel" report has been added to ResearchAndMarkets.com's offering. The stand mixers market was valued at US$ 1,826.01 million in 2021 and is projected to reach US$ 2,581.23 million by 2028; it is expected to grow at a CAGR of 5.1% from 2021 to 2028. Increasing consumption of beverages, bakery products, and confectionaries in many countries around the world is positively impacting the growth of the stand mixers market. Also, owing to the increase in population and surge in consumer buying power in many developing economies, the processed food market is growing at a faster rate. Therefore, the growing processed food industry would fuel the demand for stand mixers in the coming years. Based on type, the global stand mixers market is bifurcated into tilt-head and bowl-lift. In 2020, the tilt-head segment held a larger share of the stand mixers market. In tilt-head mixers, the tilting head allows easy access to the bowl and easy removal of the mixing extensions. Tilt head mixers can handle firm doughs. Also, they are more powerful than mixing by hand or using a hand mixer. Therefore, it is preferred by a casual chef. In 2020, Europe held the largest revenue share of the global stand mixers market. The significant growth in the processed food industry make Europe a lucrative market for stand mixers. High consumption of food products such as baked goods, dairy products, and snacks in the region creates demand for stand mixers. Focus on various strategies, such as new product innovation and product launch, by players operating in the region further provides opportunities for market growth. De' Longhi Appliances S.r.l.; The Whirlpool Corporation; Koninklijke Philips N.V.; Breville; SMEG S.p.A.; Hobart; Ankarsrum Kitchen AB; Wonderchef Home Appliances Pvt. Ltd.; Kenwood Limited; Hamilton Beach Brands, Inc.; and Panasonic are a few of the key players operating in the global stand mixers market. Market players are highly focused on the development of high-quality and innovative product offerings to fulfill the customer's requirements. Reasons to Buy Highlights key business priorities in order to assist companies to realign their business strategies. The key findings and recommendations highlight crucial progressive industry trends in the global stand mixer market, thereby allowing players to develop effective long-term strategies. Develop/modify business expansion plans by using substantial growth offering developed and emerging markets. Scrutinize in-depth the market trends and outlook coupled with the factors driving the market, as well as those hindering it. Enhance the decision-making process by understanding the strategies that underpin commercial interest with respect to products, segmentation and industry verticals. Key Topics Covered: 1. Introduction 2. Key Takeaways 3. Research Methodology 4. Stand Mixer Market Landscape 4.1 Market Overview 4.2 Porter's Five Forces Analysis 4.3 Ecosystem Analysis 4.4 Expert Opinion 5. Stand Mixer Market - Key Market Dynamics 5.1 Market Drivers 5.1.1 Increasing interest in domestic baking and cooking is leading to a greater adoption of stand mixers 5.1.2 Growing commercial application sector 5.2 Market Restraints 5.2.1 Availability of substitute products 5.3 Market Opportunities 5.3.1 Increasing awareness about stand mixers in developing countries can lead to proliferation of the market 5.4 Future Trends 5.4.1 Use of colorful appliances in kitchen remodeling 5.5 Impact Analysis 6. Stand Mixer - Global Market Analysis 6.1 Stand Mixer Market Overview 6.2 Stand Mixer Market -Revenue and Forecast to 2028 (US$ Mn) 6.3 Market Positioning 7. Stand Mixer Market - Geographic Analysis 8. Company Profiles 8.1 De'Longhi Appliances S.r.l. 8.1.1 Key Facts 8.1.2 Business Description 8.1.3 Products and Services 8.1.4 Financial Overview 8.1.5 SWOT Analysis 8.1.6 Key Developments 8.2 The Whirlpool Corporation. 8.2.1 Key Facts 8.2.2 Business Description 8.2.3 Products and Services 8.2.4 Financial Overview 8.2.5 SWOT Analysis 8.2.6 Key Developments 8.3 Koninklijke Philips N.V. 8.3.1 Key Facts 8.3.2 Business Description 8.3.3 Products and Services 8.3.4 Financial Overview 8.3.5 SWOT Analysis 8.3.6 Key Developments 8.4 Breville 8.4.1 Key Facts 8.4.2 Business Description 8.4.3 Products and Services 8.4.4 Financial Overview 8.4.5 SWOT Analysis 8.4.6 Key Developments 8.5 SMEG S.p.A. 8.5.1 Key Facts 8.5.2 Business Description 8.5.3 Products and Services 8.5.4 Financial Overview 8.5.5 SWOT Analysis 8.5.6 Key Developments 8.6 Hobart 8.6.1 Key Facts 8.6.2 Business Description 8.6.3 Products and Services 8.6.4 Financial Overview 8.6.5 SWOT Analysis 8.6.6 Key Developments 8.7 Ankarsrum Kitchen AB 8.7.1 Key Facts 8.7.2 Business Description 8.7.3 Products and Services 8.7.4 Financial Overview 8.7.5 SWOT Analysis 8.7.6 Key Developments 8.8 Wonderchef Home Appliances Pvt. Ltd. 8.8.1 Key Facts 8.8.2 Business Description 8.8.3 Products and Services 8.8.4 Financial Overview 8.8.5 SWOT Analysis 8.8.6 Key Developments 8.9 Kenwood Limited 8.9.1 Key Facts 8.9.2 Business Description 8.9.3 Products and Services 8.9.4 Financial Overview 8.9.5 SWOT Analysis 8.9.6 Key Developments 8.10 Hamilton Beach Brands, Inc.. 8.10.1 Key Facts 8.10.2 Business Description 8.10.3 Products and Services 8.10.4 Financial Overview 8.10.5 SWOT Analysis 8.10.6 Key Developments 9. Appendix For more information about this report visit https://www.researchandmarkets.com/r/ie9qmy Media Contact: Research and Markets Laura Wood, Senior Manager [email protected] For E.S.T Office Hours Call +1-917-300-0470 For U.S./CAN Toll Free Call +1-800-526-8630 For GMT Office Hours Call +353-1-416-8900 U.S. Fax: 646-607-1907 Fax (outside U.S.): +353-1-481-1716 SOURCE Research and Markets DUBLIN, March 1, 2022 /PRNewswire/ -- The "Substrate-Like PCB Market Forecast to 2028 - COVID-19 Impact and Global Analysis By Line/Space, Inspection Technologies, Application" report has been added to ResearchAndMarkets.com's offering. The substrate-like PCB market is projected to reach US$ 4,718.6 million by 2028 from US$ 1,494.9 million in 2021; it is expected to grow at a CAGR of 17.8% from 2021 to 2028. The substrate-like PCB market is growing with the increasing acceptance of these components among OEMs, smart consumer electronics, and wearable devices. The market for these PCBs is also growing due to the demand for effective connectivity solutions and the growing trend of miniaturization. The current market is primarily reliant on the demand and sales of high-end smartphones. According to industry analysts, there is a growing emphasis on shrinking electronic packaging to minimize their power consumption and improve functionality. All of the miniaturized components must be organized in a small space, which is impossible with traditional printed circuit boards (PCBs). This constraint is driving the demand for substrate-like PCBs. The increasing demand for consumer electronics, such as smartphones, tablets, smart bands, fitness bands, and wearables, is driving the global substrate-like PCB market. The rising uptake of substrate-like PCB by various smartphone manufacturers, such as Apple and Samsung, and investment for product development by key players are supporting the growth of this market. Upon the onset of the COVID-19 pandemic, China and other manufacturing majors had to discontinue the production of substrate-like PCBs in February 2020 and March 2020. This disturbed the demand-supply balance and influenced the prices worldwide. European countries represent huge market opportunities for the adoption of substrate-like PCBs due to the high purchasing power of individual customers, and the surge in the development and commercialization of advanced technologies such as 5G and IoTs. However, upon the outbreak of COVID-19, the manufacturing of PCB devices has seen a sharp decline in European countries, and the automotive and other industries were under stress till Mid-2021. In addition, disruptions in raw material and electronic component supply from China will further aggravate the manufacturing distress worldwide. All these factors are expected to have a direct impact on a substrate like PCB market growth in European countries, as well as in the world. The substrate-like PCB market is segmented on the basis of line/space, inspection technologies, application, and geography. Based on line/space, the market is segmented as 25/25 and 30/30 m, and less than 25/25 m. In 2021, the 25/25 and 30/30 m segment led the substrate-like PCB market with a larger share. Based on inspection technology, the market is segmented as automated optical inspection, direct imaging, automated optical shaping. In 2021, the automated optical inspection segment led the substrate-like PCB market and accounted for the largest share. Based on application, the market is segmented into consumer electronics, automotive, medical, industrial, military, and others. In 2021, the consumer electronics segment held the largest share of the substrate-like PCB market. Geographically, the market is broadly segmented into North America, Europe, Asia Pacific (APAC), the Middle East & Africa (MEA), and South America (SAM). In 2021, APAC accounted for a significant share of the global market. The key players operating in the global substrate-like PCB market and profiled in the market study include AT & S Austria Technologie & Systemtechnik Aktiengesellschaft; Compeq Co., Ltd.; DAEDUCK ELECTRONICS Co., Ltd.; IBIDEN; KINSUS INTERCONNECT TECHNOLOGY CORP; Korea Circuit; SAMSUNG ELECTRO-MECHANICS; TTM Technologies Inc.; Unimicron; and Zhen Ding Tech. Group Technology Holding Limited. Reasons to Buy Save and reduce time carrying out entry-level research by identifying the growth, size, leading players and segments in the global substrate-like PCB market Highlights key business priorities in order to assist companies to realign their business strategies The key findings and recommendations highlight crucial progressive industry trends in the global plastic to fuel market, thereby allowing players across the value chain to develop effective long-term strategies Develop/modify business expansion plans by using substantial growth offering developed and emerging markets Scrutinize in-depth global market trends and outlook coupled with the factors driving the market, as well as those hindering it Enhance the decision-making process by understanding the strategies that underpin commercial interest with respect to client products, segmentation, pricing and distribution Key Topics Covered: 1. Introduction 2. Key Takeaways 3. Research Methodology 4. Substrate-like PCB Market Landscape 4.1 Market Overview 4.2 PEST Analysis 4.2.1 North America 4.2.2 Europe 4.2.3 Asia Pacific 4.2.4 ROW 4.3 Ecosystem Analysis 4.4 Expert Opinion 5. Substrate-like PCB Market Key Market Dynamics 5.1 Market Drivers 5.1.1 Surge in Demand for Substrates-like PCB in Consumer Electronics and Automotive Industry 5.1.2 Increasing Demand for Miniaturization and Modularization in Consumer Electronics Industry 5.2 Key Market Restraints 5.2.1 Fluctuating Raw Material Prices 5.3 Key Market Opportunities 5.3.1 Increasing Adoption of 5G Technology by Smartphone Manufacturers 5.4 Future Trends 5.4.1 Growing Adoption of Substrate-like PCB in Medical and Industrial Equipment 5.5 Impact Analysis of Drivers and Restraints 6. Substrate-like PCB Market - Global Analysis 6.1 Substrate-like PCB Market Overview 6.2 Substrate-like PCB Market Revenue and Forecast to 2028 (US$ Million) 6.3 Market Positioning - Five Key Players 7. Substrate-Like PCB Market Analysis - By Line/Space 7.1 Overview 7.2 Substrate-Like PCB Market Revenue Breakdown, By Line/Space, 2020 and 2028 7.3/25 and 30/30 m 7.3.1 Overview 7.3.2/25 and 30/30 m: Substrate-Like PCB Market - Revenue and Forecast to 2028 (US$ Million) 7.4 Less than 25/25 m 7.4.1 Overview 7.4.2 Less than 25/25 m: Substrate-Like PCB Market - Revenue and Forecast to 2028 (US$ Million) 8. Substrate-Like PCB Market Analysis - By Inspection Technologies 8.1 Overview 8.2 Substrate-Like PCB Market Breakdown, By Inspection Technologies, 2020 & 2028 8.3 Automated Optical Inspection 8.3.1 Overview 8.3.2 Automated Optical Inspection: Substrate-Like PCB Market - Revenue and Forecast to 2028 (US$ Million) 8.4 Direct Imaging 8.4.1 Overview 8.4.2 Direct Imaging: Substrate-Like PCB Market - Revenue and Forecast to 2028 (US$ Million) 8.5 Automated Optical Shaping 8.5.1 Overview 8.5.2 Automated Optical Shaping: Substrate-Like PCB Market - Revenue and Forecast to 2028 (US$ Million) 9. Substrate-Like PCB Market Analysis - By Application 9.1 Overview 9.2 Substrate-Like PCB Market Breakdown, By Application, 2020 & 2028 9.3 Consumer Electronics 9.3.1 Overview 9.3.2 Consumer Electronics: Substrate-Like PCB Market - Revenue and Forecast to 2028 (US$ Million) 9.4 Automotive 9.4.1 Overview 9.4.2 Automotive: Substrate-Like PCB Market - Revenue and Forecast to 2028 (US$ Million) 9.5 Medical 9.5.1 Overview 9.5.2 Medical: Substrate-Like PCB Market - Revenue and Forecast to 2028 (US$ Million) 9.6 Industrial 9.6.1 Overview 9.6.2 Industrial: Substrate-Like PCB Market - Revenue and Forecast to 2028 (US$ Million) 9.7 Others 9.7.1 Overview 9.7.2 Others: Substrate-Like PCB Market - Revenue and Forecast to 2028 (US$ Million) 10. Substrate-Like PCB Market - Geographic Analysis 11. Substrate Like-PCB Market- Impact Analysis of COVID-19 11.1 Overview 11.2 North America 11.3 Europe 11.4 Asia-Pacific 11.5 Rest of the World 12. Industry Landscape 12.1 Overview 12.2 Market Initiative 12.3 New Development 13. Company Profiles 13.1 Compaq Manufacturing Co., Ltd 13.1.1 Key Facts 13.1.2 Business Description 13.1.3 Products and Services 13.1.4 Financial Overview 13.1.5 SWOT Analysis 13.1.6 Key Developments 13.2 DAEDUCK ELECTRONICS CO., LTD 13.2.1 Key Facts 13.2.2 Business Description 13.2.3 Products and Services 13.2.4 Financial Overview 13.2.5 SWOT Analysis 13.2.6 Key Developments 13.3 Ibiden Co, Ltd 13.3.1 Key Facts 13.3.2 Business Description 13.3.3 Products and Services 13.3.4 Financial Overview 13.3.5 SWOT Analysis 13.3.6 Key Developments 13.4 Kinsus Interconnect Technology 13.4.1 Key Facts 13.4.2 Business Description 13.4.3 Products and Services 13.4.4 Financial Overview 13.4.5 SWOT Analysis 13.4.6 Key Developments 13.5 SAMSUNG ELECTRO-MECHANICS CO, Ltd 13.5.1 Key Facts 13.5.2 Business Description 13.5.3 Products and Services 13.5.4 Financial Overview 13.5.5 SWOT Analysis 13.5.6 Key Developments 13.6 AT & S Austria Technologie & Systemtechnik Aktiengesellschaft 13.6.1 Key Facts 13.6.2 Business Description 13.6.3 Products and Services 13.6.4 Financial Overview 13.6.5 SWOT Analysis 13.6.6 Key Developments 13.7 Zhen Ding Tech. Group Technology Holding Limited 13.7.1 Key Facts 13.7.2 Business Description 13.7.3 Products and Services 13.7.4 Financial Overview 13.7.5 SWOT Analysis 13.7.6 Key Developments 13.8 Technologies Inc 13.8.1 Key Facts 13.8.2 Business Description 13.8.3 Products and Services 13.8.4 Financial Overview 13.8.5 SWOT Analysis 13.8.6 Key Developments 13.9 Korea Circuit 13.9.1 Key Facts 13.9.2 Business Description 13.9.3 Products and Services 13.9.4 Financial Overview 13.9.5 SWOT Analysis 13.9.6 Key Developments 13.10 Unimicron Technology Corp 13.10.1 Key Facts 13.10.2 Business Description 13.10.3 Products and Services 13.10.4 Financial Overview 13.10.5 SWOT Analysis 13.10.6 Key Developments For more information about this report visit https://www.researchandmarkets.com/r/j91xa8 Media Contact: Research and Markets Laura Wood, Senior Manager [email protected] For E.S.T Office Hours Call +1-917-300-0470 For U.S./CAN Toll Free Call +1-800-526-8630 For GMT Office Hours Call +353-1-416-8900 U.S. Fax: 646-607-1904 Fax (outside U.S.): +353-1-481-1716 SOURCE Research and Markets LONDON, March 2, 2022 /PRNewswire/ -- Despite global terrorist attacks increasing to 5,226 in 2021, deaths declined slightly by 1.2%. The Ukraine conflict is likely to drive a rise in traditional and cyber terrorism, reversing previous improvements in the region. conflict is likely to drive a rise in traditional and cyber terrorism, reversing previous improvements in the region. Terrorism in the West declined substantially, with attacks falling by 68%. The US recorded its lowest score since 2012. Sub-Saharan Africa accounted for 48% of global terrorism deaths. The Sahel is home to the world's fastest growing and most-deadly terrorist groups. Myanmar had the largest rise in terrorism with deaths increasing 20 times to 521 deaths in 2021. had the largest rise in terrorism with deaths increasing 20 times to 521 deaths in 2021. Islamic State (IS) replaces the Taliban as the world's deadliest terror group in 2021, with 15 deaths per attack in Niger . . Terrorism has become more concentrated, with 119 countries recording no deaths, the best result since 2007. In the West, politically motivated attacks overtook religious attacks, which declined by 82%. There were five times more political attacks than religious attacks. Terrorists are using more advanced technologies including drones, GPS systems and encrypted messaging services. The 2022 Global Terrorism Index (GTI) reveals that despite an increase in attacks, the impact of terrorism continues to decline. In 2021, deaths from terrorism fell by 1.2% to 7,142, while attacks rose by 17%, highlighting that terrorism is becoming less lethal. Two thirds of countries recorded no attacks or deaths from terrorism the best result since 2007 while 86 countries recorded an improvement on their GTI score. The number of deaths has remained approximately the same for the last four years. The Index highlights that terrorism remains a serious threat, with Sub-Saharan Africa accounting for 48% of total global deaths from terrorism. Four of the ten countries with the largest increases in deaths from terrorism were also in sub-Saharan Africa: Niger, Mali, the DRC and Burkina Faso. Following military defeats in Syria and Iraq, IS shifted its attention to the Sahel, with deaths from terrorism rising ten times in the region since 2007. The Sahel has become the new epicentre of terrorism. Terrorism in the region is compounded by high population growth, lack of adequate water and food, climate change and weak governments. Adding to the complexity, many criminal organisations are representing themselves as Islamic insurgencies. The annual Global Terrorism Index, now in its ninth year, is developed by leading international think tank the Institute of Economics and Peace (IEP) and provides the most comprehensive resource on global terrorism trends. The GTI uses a number of factors to calculate its score, including the number of incidences, fatalities, injuries and hostages, and combines it with conflict and socio-economic data to provide a holistic picture of terrorism. The Index shows that terrorism is becoming increasingly concentrated, contracting into countries already suffering from violent conflict. Conflict zones accounted for 97% of all deaths. The ten countries most affected by terrorism are all in conflict zones. Only 44 countries recorded a death from terrorism in 2021, compared to 55 countries in 2015. The largest increase in terrorism was in Myanmar, where deaths rose 23 times from 24 to 521, followed by Niger, where deaths doubled, increasing from 257 in 2020 to 588 in 2021. Mozambique had the largest drop in terrorism deaths, falling by 82% to 93. The success was largely driven by counter-insurgency operations against IS by Mozambican forces, with support from Rwanda and the Southern African Development Community. Also on a positive note, counter insurgency has significantly decreased Boko Haram's activities, with the organisation recording only 64 attacks in 2021. Deaths dropped by 92% from 2,131 in 2015 to 178 in 2021. The decline of Boko Haram contributed to Nigeria recording the second largest reduction in deaths from terrorism in 2021, with the number falling by 47% to 448. Ukraine is likely to see an uplift in terrorism. In the 2014 crisis, the country recorded 69 terrorist attacks. Of serious concern are the knock-on effects of cyber terrorism to other countries. In addition to cyberattacks on the Ukraine, Russia has been credited with attacks on many other countries. It is possible that the threat of cyber terrorism will rise globally alongside the escalation of the Ukraine conflict. The Ukraine conflict is likely to reverse gains in Russia and Eurasia, which recorded the largest improvement on the GTI in 2021, followed by North America. The MENA region has improved substantially, moving up two places from the least peaceful region in 2018. For the second year in a row, South Asia is the region most impacted by terrorism, while Central America and the Caribbean region recorded the lowest impact. Steve Killelea, Founder & Executive Chairman, IEP: "Terrorism is becoming more centred in conflict zones, underpinned by weak governments and political instability, while in Europe and the US politically motivated terrorism has overtaken religiously motivated attacks. As conflict in the Ukraine dominates global attention it is crucial that the global fight against terrorism is not sidelined. Terrorist activity in the Sahel is increasing substantially, and is driven by Islamic militias." "The decline of terrorism in the West coincided with the COVID-19 pandemic. Restrictions on freedom of movement, travel and the immediate threat to personal health may explain some of the fall. Once the emergency measures are removed there is the possibility of an uptick in terrorism activity." As technology has advanced so has its use by terrorist groups. This includes missiles and drones, which extend the reach of their attacks and reduce their casualties. Affordable smartphones, social media and encryption are other technologies that also extend their networks, making the spread of propaganda and recruitment easier. The report identifies IS and its affiliates as the world's deadliest terrorist group in 2021, despite deaths attributed to the group declining slightly from 2,100, to 2,066 deaths. The worst attack of 2021 occurred when an IS suicide bomber detonated two bombs at Afghanistan's Kabul International Airport, resulting in 170 deaths and more than 200 injuries. Jamaat Nusrat Al-Islam wal Muslimeen, who operate in the Sahel, is the world's fastest growing terrorist organisation and was responsible for 351 deaths in 2021, a 69% increase. The world's most lethal terrorist group was the Islamic State of West Africa, where in Niger each attack averaged 15 deaths. Attacks in the West have declined significantly, dropping by 68% in 2021, from the peak in 2018. In total there were 113 attacks in Europe in 2021, and seven attacks in the US. The US recorded a significant improvement in the impact of terrorism, recording its lowest GTI score since 2012. There were three attacks by Islamic extremists in Europe, the lowest amount since 2014. Over the last three years in the West there has been a significant shift in the instigators of terrorism. Acts of religious terrorism declined by 82% in 2021, and have been overtaken by politically motivated terrorism, which now accounts for five times as many attacks. Most attacks which are driven by a left or right ideology are perpetrated by individuals or groups with no formal affiliation to a recognised organisation. The targets of these attacks are often similar, typically government organisations or political figures, and the motivations are similar. Both cohorts are radicalised online and hold the existing system in contempt. Attacks in the UK halved in 2021 to 12, the lowest number since 2008, with only one being religiously motivated. The US recorded seven attacks, with five being politically motivated and the remaining two unclassified. France recorded seven attacks down by 72% from the 25 recorded in 2020. The conditions most closely associated with terrorism vary depending on the social and economic factors of a country. There is a clear link with political terror and a lack of acceptance of basic human rights for the majority of countries. For OECD countries, there is a strong relationship between increased terrorism and social inequalities, as well as easier access to weapons and higher militarisation. For other countries, weak institutions, group grievances and political terror are significant factors in driving terrorism. The full GTI 2022 report and interactive map are available at: visionofhumanity.org Follow: @GlobPeaceIndex Like: facebook.com/globalpeaceindex Contacts: Global Terrorism Index press office at H+K Strategies: [email protected] Global Terrorism Index (GTI) The GTI by the Institute for Economics & Peace provides a comprehensive summary of the key global trends and patterns in terrorism over the last 14 years. The report ranks 163 countries (99.7 per cent of the world's population) according to the impact of terrorism. The indicators include the number of terrorist incidents, fatalities, injuries and hostages. The GTI report is produced using data from Terrorism Tracker and other sources. Terrorism Tracker provides event records on terrorist attacks since 1 January 2007. The dataset contains over 60,500 terrorist incidents for the period 2007 to 2021. Institute for Economics & Peace The Institute for Economics & Peace (IEP) is the world's leading think tank dedicated to developing metrics to analyse peace and to quantify its economic value. It does this by developing global and national indices, including the annual Global Peace Index, calculating the economic cost of violence and understanding Positive Peace which is the attitudes, institutions and structures that create and sustain peaceful societies. Logo - https://mma.prnewswire.com/media/792052/IEP_Logo.jpg SOURCE The Institute of Economics and Peace PORTLAND, Ore., March 2, 2022 /PRNewswire/ -- Knapsack, the SaaS design system platform, raised $5.5M funding led by Gradient Ventures . This round also included Parade Ventures , Crosslink Capital , Founder Collective , and Slack Fund . "Design systems play a central role in democratizing the way we create and contribute to the apps and websites that make up digital ecosystems," said Chris Strahl, CEO and Co-Founder of Knapsack. "Knapsack provides the infrastructure organizations need to realize both efficiency and quality gains made possible by building with reusable UI patterns." The funding will be used to hire world-class talent, accelerate the development of new products and features, and scale awareness and usage of Knapsack to new audiences. "The pandemic threw digital products to the forefront of our lives. From healthcare to workplace collaboration, we depend on digital products daily. Yet, how we build these experiences remains incredibly outdated," said Wen-Wen Lam, Partner at Gradient Ventures. "By making code more accessible to non-technical disciplines, Knapsack empowers everyone to build digital products." Design systems continue to be a priority for companies' that prioritize the digital experiences they provide to their customers. In a recent report, Forrester found 65% of companies are already using design systems, and believes that number will continue to increase as more businesses become aware of the efficiency, quality, and innovation benefits design systems deliver. With an effective design system in place, designers and developers significantly reduce time spent on mundane work and focus the majority of their time on the quality and innovation that impacts a companies' market share and bottomline. To learn more about Knapsack's funding and its vision for the future of digital product design and development, visit www.knapsack.cloud/blog/future-of-design-systems . About Knapsack Knapsack unites design, code, and content in a central source of truth for your entire product team. Their revolutionary design system platform was built to support collaboration between design and engineering partners, and to help teams build better products. Knapsack was founded in Portland, Oregon but is a remote company. For more information, visit www.knapsack.cloud . About Gradient Ventures Gradient Ventures helps founders build transformational companies by investing in and connecting early-stage startups with resources, innovation, and technical leadership. Backed by Google, the fund focuses on helping founders navigate the challenges in developing new technology products, using the latest best practices in recruiting, marketing, design, and engineering so that great ideas can come to life. Gradient was founded in 2017 and is based in Palo Alto, California. For more information, visit www.gradient.com . Related Links https://www.knapsack.cloud SOURCE Knapsack ST. PAUL, Minn., March 1, 2022 /PRNewswire/ -- GRIP Molecular Technologies, Inc. ('GRIP') (www.GRIPMolecular.com), an early-stage diagnostic company, announced that it has been accepted into Blue Knight, a joint initiative between Johnson and Johnson Innovation JLABS ('JLABS') and the Biomedical Advanced Research and Development Authority (BARDA). Through Blue Knight, GRIP will receive fee assistance towards its JLABS residency at JPOD @ Boston, located at the Cambridge Innovation Center's (CIC) location in Kendall Square, Cambridge Massachusetts. GRIP is developing a novel graphene-based electronic biosensor technology that aims to provide rapid, simultaneous, lab-grade accuracy detection of an array of infectious diseases, anytime, anywhere, by any user. Using GRIP's disposable cartridge and a standard cell phone, the device will provide results in minutes using easy to gather samples, e.g. nasal or saliva. Unlike other diagnostics, GRIP's first product aims to simultaneously and accurately detect a wide variety of upper respiratory infection pathogens, including Influenza, COVID-19, RSV and other common diseases, with one sample and one test that takes minutes to perform. The GRIP platform technology eliminates the need for multi-step chemical-based sample preparation and the wires, batteries, chargers, and other equipment associated with today's diagnostic tests. The samples are gathered, immediately mixed with a solution and injected into the GRIP cartridge. When the cartridge is brought into proximity with a standard cell phone, the results are automatically displayed and can be securely transmitted to a clinician to make treatment decisions virtually. New pathogens are expected to be readily added to the panel of diseases the single-use cartridge can detect to address new disease threats. As part of Blue Knight, GRIP will gain access to the Johnson & Johnson Innovation ecosystem through physical residency and virtual opportunities, as well as customized programming and dedicated mentorship from BARDA and the Johnson & Johnson Family of Companies. According to Edward Gillen, GRIP's CEO, "GRIP is at the intersection of biology, electronics and digital health. We have synergistically assembled a variety of relatively new technologies in a unique manner to put lab-grade diagnostics literally into the hands of the end user in a way that the results can be immediately shared with others to facilitate rapid diagnosis and the application of appropriate therapy. We view admittance into Blue Knight as further recognition of the potentially transformative impact the GRIP diagnostic technology could have on healthcare." About GRIP Molecular: GRIP Molecular was founded in 2019 with the mission of transformatively enhancing healthcare by putting actionable diagnostic results directly into the hands of the end user. The patent-protected technologies they utilize have yielded extraordinary levels of diagnostic performance in carefully controlled experiments. GRIP is preparing to initiate clinical validation of these performance results later this year. For more information about GRIP Molecular and associated investment opportunities please contact: Richard G. Minicus Chief Financial Officer GRIP Molecular Technologies, Inc. [email protected] SOURCE GRIP Molecular - First of two acquisitions to create StateHouse Holdings - OAKLAND, Calif. and TORONTO, March 1, 2022 /PRNewswire/ - Harborside Inc. ("Harborside", or the "Company") (CSE: HBOR) (OTCQX: HBORF), a California-focused, vertically integrated cannabis enterprise, today announced that it completed the previously announced acquisition of UL Holdings Inc. ("Urbn Leaf"), a leading California cannabis retailer with a dominant position in southern California. The Company is also pleased to announce that Ed Schmults has been appointed as Chief Executive Officer ("CEO") and a director of Harborside, effective immediately. Pursuant to the terms of the definitive agreement announced on November 29, 2021, Harborside acquired 100% of the equity interests of Urbn Leaf through the issuance of 60,000,000 subordinate voting shares ("SVS"), and the restructuring and assumption of debt (the "UL Acquisition"). In addition to acquiring Urbn Leaf, Harborside is also working to complete the previously announced acquisition of LPF JV Corporation ("Loudpack") (the "Loudpack Acquisition"). Both the UL Acquisition and the Loudpack Acquisition were overwhelmingly approved by Harborside shareholders at a special meeting of shareholders held on February 22, 2022. The Loudpack Acquisition is expected to close on or around March 15, 2022. Harborside will officially be renamed StateHouse Holdings Inc. ("StateHouse") shortly after the closing of the Loudpack Acquisition (the "Name Change"). "Today's milestone gets us one step closer to the creation of StateHouse, a new leader in California's cannabis sector," said Matthew Hawkins, Chairman of the board of directors (the "Board") and previously interim CEO of Harborside. "We are grateful to the entire Urbn Leaf team that worked with us to finalize this transaction, including its seasoned CEO, Ed Schmults, who has been appointed as CEO and a director of Harborside." "This sets a strong course forward as we navigate a competitive and evolving cannabis market in California," said Mr. Schmults. "The combined assets of Urbn Leaf and Harborside provide an excellent opportunity for shareholders, and set the stage for the addition of Loudpack. We believe that StateHouse will be one of the largest and most sophisticated cannabis platforms in the state of California with superior retail, brands, processing, manufacturing, distribution and cultivation. This is a resilient platform for growth as a consolidator of California's cannabis industry and supports enhanced career and business opportunities for everyone in the StateHouse ecosystem." The appointment of Ed Schmults to the Board fills a vacancy created by the previously announced resignation of Alexander Norman. Mr. Schmults has more than 30 years of experience in global branded consumer products, omnichannel retail, product development, finance, operations, IT, and green and socially responsible businesses. He held CEO roles at FAO Schwarz and Wild Things Gear, and COO roles at Patagonia and Red Envelope, following a position in investment banking at Goldman, Sachs & Company. Harborside also announced that Will Senn has been appointed Chief Corporate Development Officer of the Company. Mr.Senn, who was named one of the top 100 most influential people in the cannabis industry by High Times, founded Urbn Leaf in 2017 and has been involved in several cannabis ventures over the last 16 years. He also created a number of successful industry trade associations, including the United Medical Marijuana Coalition, Patient Care Association and the Global Alliance for Cannabis Commerce. Concurrent with the closing of the UL Acquisition, the Company entered into lock-up agreements with certain shareholders of Urbn Leaf (the "Urbn Leaf Locked-Up Shareholders") in respect of the SVS received by such shareholders (the "Urbn Leaf Lock-Up Agreements"). Pursuant to the Urbn Leaf Lock-Up Agreements, the Urbn Leaf Locked-Up Shareholders have agreed not to sell, assign or otherwise transfer the SVS received. The restrictions lapse in three installments, with each one-third of the SVS released from the restrictions six months, 12 months and 18 months from today, respectively. ATB Capital Markets Inc. and Stoic-Solidum Advisory acted as financial advisors to Harborside. Aird & Berlis LLP and Cassels Brock & Blackwell LLP acted as Canadian legal counsel and Duane Morris LLP acted as United States legal counsel to Harborside. PI Financial provided a fairness opinion on the UL Acquisition to Harborside. PGP Capital Advisors, LLC acted as financial advisor and Burns & Levinson LLP acted as United States legal counsel to Urbn Leaf. For the latest news, activities, and media coverage, please visit the Harborside corporate website at http://www.investharborside.com or connect with us on LinkedIn and Twitter. About Harborside: Harborside Inc., a vertically integrated enterprise with cannabis licenses covering retail, major brands, distribution, cultivation, nursery and manufacturing, is one of the oldest and most respected cannabis companies in California. Founded in 2006, Harborside was awarded one of the first six medical cannabis licenses granted in the United States. Today, the company operates eleven major dispensaries covering Northern and Southern California and one in Oregon, as well as a manufacturing facility in Oakland, California, distribution facilities in San Jose and Los Angeles, California and an integrated cultivation/production facility in Salinas, California. Harborside is a publicly listed company, trading on the CSE under the ticker symbol "HBOR" and the OTCQX under the ticker symbol "HBORF". The Company continues to play an instrumental role in making cannabis safe and accessible to a broad and diverse community of California and Oregon consumers. Cautionary Note Regarding Forward-Looking Information This news release contains "forward-looking information" and "forward-looking statements" (collectively, "forward-looking statements") within the meaning of the applicable Canadian and United States securities legislation. All statements, other than statements of historical fact, are forward-looking statements and are based on expectations, estimates, and projections as at the date of this news release. Any statement that involves discussions with respect to predictions, expectations, beliefs, plans, projections, objectives, assumptions, future events or performance (often but not always using phrases such as "expects", or "does not expect", "is expected", "anticipates" or "does not anticipate", "plans", "budget", "scheduled", "forecasts", "estimates", "believes" or "intends" or variations of such words and phrases or stating that certain actions, events or results "may" or "could", "would", "might" or "will" be taken to occur or be achieved) are not statements of historical fact and may be forward-looking statements. In this news release, forward-looking statements include, among other things, statements relating to StateHouse becoming one of the largest and most sophisticated cannabis platform in the state of California, enhanced career and business opportunities following the UL Acquisition and Loudpack Acquisition, timing to complete the Loudpack Acquisition and the Name Change, and the benefits and synergies created by the UL Acquisition and the Loudpack Acquisition, including with respect to production, manufacturing, distribution and cultivation capabilities, product offering and StateHouse's position in the California cannabis market following the completion of such transactions. These forward-looking statements are based on reasonable assumptions and estimates of management of the Company at the time such statements were made. Actual future results may differ materially as forward-looking statements involve known and unknown risks, uncertainties, and other factors which may cause the actual results, performance, or achievements of the Company to materially differ from any future results, performance, or achievements expressed or implied by such forward-looking statements. Such factors, among other things, include: whether the Company will receive additional voting support agreements for matters to be considered by shareholders at the Meeting; implications of the ongoing COVID-19 pandemic on the Company's operations; fluctuations in general macroeconomic conditions; fluctuations in securities markets; expectations regarding the size of the cannabis markets where the Company operates; changing consumer habits; the ability of the Company to successfully achieve its business objectives; plans for expansion and acquisitions; political and social uncertainties; inability to obtain adequate insurance to cover risks and hazards; employee relations; the presence of laws and regulations that may impose restrictions on cultivation, production, distribution, and sale of cannabis and cannabis-related products in the markets where the Company operates; and the risk factors set out in the Company's management discussion and analysis for the period ended September 30, 2021 and the Company's annual information form dated December 13, 2021, which are available under the Company's profile on www.sedar.com. Although the forward-looking statements contained in this news release are based upon what management of the Company believes, or believed at the time, to be reasonable assumptions, the Company cannot assure shareholders that actual results will be consistent with such forward-looking statements, as there may be other factors that cause results not to be as anticipated, estimated or intended. Readers should not place undue reliance on the forward-looking statements and information contained in this news release. The Company assumes no obligation to update the forward-looking statements of beliefs, opinions, projections, or other factors, should they change, except as required by law. The Company, through several of its subsidiaries, is indirectly involved in the manufacture, possession, use, sale, and distribution of cannabis in the recreational and medicinal cannabis marketplace in the United States. Local state laws where the Company operates permit such activities however, investors should note that there are significant legal restrictions and regulations that govern the cannabis industry in the United States. Cannabis remains a Schedule I drug under the US Controlled Substances Act, making it illegal under federal law in the United States to, among other things, cultivate, distribute or possess cannabis in the United States. Financial transactions involving proceeds generated by, or intended to promote, cannabis-related business activities in the United States may form the basis for prosecution under applicable United States federal money laundering legislation. While the approach to enforcement of such laws by the federal government in the United States has trended toward non-enforcement against individuals and businesses that comply with recreational and medicinal cannabis programs in states where such programs are legal, strict compliance with state laws with respect to cannabis will neither absolve the Company of liability under United States federal law, nor will it provide a defense to any federal proceeding which may be brought against the Company. The enforcement of federal laws in the United States is a significant risk to the business of the Company and any proceedings brought against the Company thereunder may adversely affect the Company's operations and financial performance. This news release does not constitute an offer to sell, or a solicitation of an offer to buy, any securities in the United States. The Company's securities have not been and will not be registered under the United States Securities Act of 1933, as amended (the "U.S. Securities Act") or any state securities laws and may not be offered or sold within the United States or to U.S. Persons unless registered under the U.S. Securities Act and applicable state securities laws or an exemption from such registration is available. The CSE has neither approved nor disapproved the contents of this news release. Neither the CSE nor its Market Regulator (as that term is defined in the policies of the CSE) accepts responsibility for the adequacy or accuracy of this release. SOURCE Harborside Inc. Market Scope The hard asset equipment online auction market covers the following areas: Hard Asset Equipment Online Auction Market Sizing Hard Asset Equipment Online Auction Market Forecast Hard Asset Equipment Online Auction Market Analysis Vendor Landscape The market structure is expected to remain fragmented during the forecast period. Vendors are deploying different organic and inorganic growth strategies to compete in the market. Absolute Auctions and Realty Inc., Alex Lyon and Son Sales Managers and Auctioneers Inc., AllStar Auctions Inc., Auction Technology Group, Bar None Auction, Bidadoo Inc., BPI Auctions Ltd., Bruce Schapansky Auctioneers Inc., Euro Auctions UK Ltd., Hess Auction Group, J.J. Kane Associates Inc., Joey Martin Auctioneers LLC, KAR Auction Services Inc., MachineWeb Inc., NetBid Industrie-Auktionen AG, Proxibid Inc., Ritchason Auctioneers Inc., Ritchie Bros. Auctioneers Inc., Sullivan Auctioneers LLC, TBAuctions B.V., Terra Point LLC, WCA Inc., and WorldNet Auctions Inc., among others, are some of the few key vendors competing to maintain their market position in the market. View more about the market's vendor landscape highlights with a comprehensive list of vendors and their offerings. Key Market Segmentation Segmentation by type: Construction: The construction segment will contribute largely to the overall market growth during the forecast period. The growth is attributed to the significant increase in the investments in infrastructure projects owing to the rapidly rising population and growing regulatory support from various government bodies for building projects. Transportation Agriculture Others Request a FREE Sample of this report for more highlights into the market segments. Regional Market Outlook North America will contribute 55% of the market growth during the forecast period. The growth of this region can be attributed to the significant increase in investments in infrastructural activities in countries such as the US and Canada. If we look at the country-wise market growth, the US will contribute the highest market growth. Download our FREE sample report for more key highlights on the regional market share. Latest Trends and Drivers in the Hard Asset Equipment Online Auction Market Market Driver: Shift in preference toward online auctioning from conventional auctioning: Online auction is convenient to bidders in terms of time, place, and cost and provides transparency to bidders. Some websites also offer a preview of the equipment to be auctioned. Bidders can bargain with sellers or auctioneers during the auction, which makes the process easy. Market Trend: Emergence of AI-based online auctions: AI-based online auctions help reduce administrative costs, as several processes can be automated. Some vendors are also focusing on developing voice-search technology. Such factors are expected to positively impact the growth of the market in focus during the forecast period. Find additional information about various other market drivers & trends mentioned in our FREE sample report . Need More? Are You Looking for Information Not Covered in This Report? Want to understand more about the various research methodology? Evaluate a specific segment or region in detail Identify key suppliers, customers, or other market players Analyze market regulations Tailor this report according to your needs. Get it done with our USD 1000 worth of free customization. Speak to Our Analyst Now ! Related Reports: Security Advisory Services Market by End-user and Geography - Forecast and Analysis 2021-2025 Product Life Cycle Management Market by Deployment and Geography - Forecast and Analysis 2021-2025 Hard Asset Equipment Online Auction Market Scope Report Coverage Details Page number 120 Base year 2021 Forecast period 2022-2026 Growth momentum & CAGR Accelerate at a CAGR of 21.55% Market growth 2022-2026 USD 2.12 billion Market structure Fragmented YoY growth (%) 20.88 Regional analysis North America, Europe, APAC, Middle East and Africa, and South America Performing market contribution North America at 55% Key consumer countries US, China, Germany, UK, and France Competitive landscape Leading companies, Competitive strategies, Consumer engagement scope Key companies profiled Absolute Auctions and Realty Inc., Alex Lyon and Son Sales Managers and Auctioneers Inc., AllStar Auctions Inc., Auction Technology Group, Bar None Auction, bidadoo Inc., BPI Auctions Ltd., Bruce Schapansky Auctioneers Inc., Euro Auctions UK Ltd., Hess Auction Group, J.J. Kane Associates Inc., Joey Martin Auctioneers LLC, KAR Auction Services Inc., MachineWeb Inc., NetBid Industrie-Auktionen AG, Proxibid Inc., Ritchason Auctioneers Inc., Ritchie Bros. Auctioneers Inc., Sullivan Auctioneers LLC, TBAuctions B.V., Terra Point LLC, WCA Inc., and WorldNet Auctions Inc. Market dynamics Parent market analysis, Market growth inducers and obstacles, Fast-growing and slow-growing segment analysis, COVID-19 impact and recovery analysis and future consumer dynamics, Market condition analysis for the forecast period Customization purview If our report has not included the data that you are looking for, you can reach out to our analysts and get segments customized. Table of Contents Executive Summary Market overview Market Landscape Market ecosystem Market Sizing Market definition Market segment analysis Market size 2021 Market outlook: Forecast for 2021-2026 Five Forces Analysis Five forces summary Bargaining power of buyers Bargaining power of suppliers Threat of new entrants Threat of substitutes Threat of rivalry Market condition Market Segmentation by Product Type Market segments Comparison by Product Type Construction - Market size and forecast 2021-2026 Transportation - Market size and forecast 2021-2026 Agriculture - Market size and forecast 2021-2026 Others - Market size and forecast 2021-2026 Market opportunity by Product Type Customer Landscape Customer landscape Geographic Landscape Geographic segmentation Geographic comparison North America - Market size and forecast 2021-2026 Europe - Market size and forecast 2021-2026 APAC - Market size and forecast 2021-2026 Middle East and Africa - Market size and forecast 2021-2026 South America - Market size and forecast 2021-2026 US - Market size and forecast 2021-2026 China - Market size and forecast 2021-2026 Germany - Market size and forecast 2021-2026 UK - Market size and forecast 2021-2026 France - Market size and forecast 2021-2026 Market opportunity by geography Drivers, Challenges, and Trends Market drivers Market challenges Impact of drivers and challenges Market trends Vendor Landscape Overview Vendor landscape Landscape disruption Industry risks Vendor Analysis Vendors covered Market positioning of vendors Absolute Auctions and Realty Inc. Alex Lyon and Son Sales Managers and Auctioneers Inc. Euro Auctions UK Ltd. Hess Auction Group MachineWeb Inc. Proxibid Inc. Ritchason Auctioneers Inc. Ritchie Bros . Auctioneers Inc. WCA Inc. WorldNet Auctions Inc. Appendix Scope of the report Inclusions and exclusions checklist Currency conversion rates for US$ Research methodology List of abbreviations About Us Technavio is a leading global technology research and advisory company. Their research and analysis focus on emerging market trends and provides actionable insights to help businesses identify market opportunities and develop effective strategies to optimize their market positions. With over 500 specialized analysts, Technavio's report library consists of more than 17,000 reports and counting, covering 800 technologies, spanning across 50 countries. Their client base consists of enterprises of all sizes, including more than 100 Fortune 500 companies. This growing client base relies on Technavio's comprehensive coverage, extensive research, and actionable market insights to identify opportunities in existing and potential markets and assess their competitive positions within changing market scenarios. Contact Technavio Research Jesse Maida Media & Marketing Executive US: +1 844 364 1100 UK: +44 203 893 3200 Email: [email protected] Website: www.technavio.com/ SOURCE Technavio HONOLULU, March 1, 2022 /PRNewswire/ -- Gov. David Ige announced that the state is ending the travel quarantine and the Safe Travels Hawaii program after the current emergency period ends on Mar. 25. Beginning at 12:01 am, Mar. 26, passengers arriving from domestic points of origin will not have to show proof of a COVID-19 vaccination or a pre-travel negative test result. Incoming passengers will also no longer be required to create a Safe Travels account or provide travelers information and trip details. Travelers arriving in the State of Hawaii now through Mar. 25, are still subject to Safe Travels requirements. International passengers will continue to follow the requirements that were put in place by the federal government. In addition, beginning on Mar. 26, state/county employees and visitors to state facilities will no longer be required to provide vaccination status or negative COVID test results. "We started the Safe Travels program to protect the health, lives, and livelihoods of the people of Hawaii. The program put in place safety protocols that included a multi-layered screening and testing approach that kept our communities safe during the COVID-19 surges that endangered the most vulnerable of our citizens," said Gov. Ige. "Right now, we are seeing lower case counts, and hospitalizations are coming down." "We thank our entire state who came together, made tremendous sacrifices, and overcame the greatest challenge our society has faced in recent history. We thank Governor Ige, the state Department of Health, and all of our partners across the islands, for your leadership and guidance. Most of all, we thank all of you our small business owners, essential workers, working parents, kupuna, and most especially our keiki for your compassion and resilience to see us to this significant turning point. The ability for us to now see life beyond COVID is a testament to your collective work." Mayor Derek S. K. Kawakami, Kauai County. "This pandemic has tested all of us in extraordinary ways," said Honolulu Mayor Rick Blangiardi. "I want to thank the Governor, the State Department of Health and General Hara for guiding us to this landmark point in time. But most importantly, I want to thank our residents who did all they could to demonstrate a genuine concern for taking care of themselves, their families, and their communities. I am so proud of the way we stood together over the last two years through one of the most trying times in history. The resilience of our entire state was remarkable, and it is a great credit to who we are as a people." Mayor Rick Blangiardi, City and County of Honolulu. "Mahalo to Governor Ige, Lieutenant Governor Green, the Hawaii Department of Health, and everyone who has helped to keep Hawaii safe during the pandemic. Hawaii has the lowest COVID-related death rate in the nation because of this vigilance. Hawaii is the nation's only island state, and our geographic isolation means our considerations are different from the other states. COVID-19 is still out there, and I ask for continued patience from everyone." Mayor Michael Victorino, Maui County. "We are excited to be moving collectively, as an island and a state, toward a new chapter for Hawaii. Our community has worked extremely hard over the past two years to keep each other safe, and it is because of them we are able to begin shifting from response to recovery. Although COVID still remains a threat, we are confident in the will of our residents to continue doing what they know is right for all of us." Mayor Mitch Roth, Hawaii County. In the meantime, the state's mask mandate will remain in place for now. While all states have announced the end to their mask mandates, several major counties have kept them in place. For example, Pennsylvania has no mask mandate, but as of yesterday, Philadelphia does. "Many states dropped their mask mandates earlier in the pandemic, only to have to reinstate them once the Delta variant surged. Hawaii maintained its mask mandate and our consistency helped to keep COVID case numbers and hospitalizations as low as possible during the surge. It is also one of the reasons Hawaii has the second lowest death rate in the country," said Gov. Ige. "We are watching disease activity closely across the state, the country, and globally, and we will adjust accordingly to keep our entire community healthy from keiki to kupuna." About HTUSA Hawaii Tourism United States (HTUSA), managed by the Hawaii Visitors and Convention Bureau, is contracted by the Hawaii Tourism Authority (HTA) for marketing management services in the continental U.S. The HTA, the state of Hawaii's tourism agency, was established in 1998 to ensure a successful visitor industry well into the future. Its mission is to strategically manage Hawaii tourism in a sustainable manner consistent with the state of Hawaii's economic goals, cultural values, preservation of natural resources, community desires, and visitor industry needs. For more information about the Hawaiian Islands, visit gohawaii.com . SOURCE Hawaii Visitors and Convention Bureau HONOLULU, March 1, 2022 /PRNewswire/ -- Governor David Ige announced today that Hawai'i's Safe Travels program for domestic travelers will come to a close on Friday, March 25, 2022. Beginning Saturday, March 26, 2022, individuals arriving from the continental United States will not be required to create a Safe Travels account, show their COVID-19 vaccination status, or take a pre-travel test when traveling to the Hawaiian Islands. "Safe Travels is one part of a multi-layer approach to COVID safety. The program played a key role in keeping Hawaii's residents safe before vaccinations were widely available, and during the surges we've seen through this pandemic," said John De Fries, Hawai'i Tourism Authority President and CEO. "Bringing the Safe Travels program to a close reflects the progress we have made as a state, and Governor Ige's decision is a good balance of maintaining reasonable health precautions while reopening our society and economy." Passengers arriving to Hawai'i on direct international flights must still adhere to federal U.S. entry requirements, which include showing proof of an up-to-date vaccination document and negative pre-travel COVID-19 test result taken within one day of travel. For more information, visit www.hawaiicovid19.com/travel. "The Safe Travels program was an immense undertaking that would not have been possible without the collaboration and support of our fellow government agencies and numerous visitor industry partners who worked tirelessly to serve our communities in this effort, from the dissemination of travel requirements globally, to testing and screening, the call center response and check-ins with quarantined individuals, and the airlines which stepped up to pre-clear their passengers at the point of departure," De Fries said. "We would like to especially thank the hundreds of kamaaina who worked as Safe Travels screeners, patiently working with travelers to ensure their compliance with our health measures." Hawai'i's statewide indoor mask mandate remains in place until further notice. On the county level, the County of Kaua'i, County of Maui, and County of Hawai'i have repealed their COVID-19 Emergency Rules. The City and County of Honolulu's Safe Access O'ahu program will end on Sunday, March 6, 2022. De Fries added, "The recovery of Hawai'i's travel market and economy will be a gradual process, and HTA will continue to work diligently to educate visitors about the responsibility that they share with our residents to malama (care for) our home." About the Hawai'i Tourism Authority The Hawai'i Tourism Authority is the State of Hawai'i agency responsible for strategically managing its support of the tourism industry. Established in 1998 to support Hawai'i's leading industry and largest employer, HTA continually strives to help ensure tourism's sustainability and the benefits it brings to residents and communities statewide. For more information about HTA, please visit www.hawaiitourismauthority.org. Follow updates from HTA (@HawaiiHTA) on Facebook, Instagram, Twitter and its new YouTube Channel. SOURCE Hawaii Tourism Authority NEW YORK, March 2, 2022 /PRNewswire/ -- Healthcare Trust, Inc. ("HTI"), a public, non-traded, real estate investment trust, with ownership of 54 serviced enriched senior living communities, announces the expansion of a strategic operational relationship with two leading senior housing operators, Senior Lifestyle Corporation and Jaybird Senior Living, effective March 1, 2022. Addington Place of Jupiter Management oversight of 13 HTI-owned communities operated under the "Addington Place" brand across Georgia, Michigan and Florida are added to the 11 properties Senior Lifestyle currently operates for HTI. This brings the total number of HTI properties operated by Senior Lifestyle to 24. Seven HTI owned properties located in Illinois, Kansas and Missouri, also operated under the "Addington Place" brand are now managed by Jaybird Senior Living. This expanded relationship brings the total number of HTI-owned communities managed by Jaybird Senior Living to 25. "HTI carefully selects relationships with operators who share our philosophy and values," said John Rimbach, President of Healthcare Facilities of HTI's advisor. "Senior Lifestyle and Jaybird both demonstrate each day, through their culture and customer service delivery, that their values are more than words on a page. They strive to execute on them daily, in all they do, and we're delighted to be expanding our relationships with these two prominent senior living companies." "We're a privately-owned operator and have led with our values of hospitality, excellence, appreciation, respect and teamwork every day since our founding in 1985," said Jon DeLuca, CEO at Senior Lifestyle. "We're so pleased to be expanding our relationship with HTI and to have our operating philosophy and hardworking team recognized with the trust of HTI and the residents and families we serve." "We have a saying at Jaybird that we hate to say no. Our team prides itself on going above and beyond with a spirit of compassion, positivity, and honesty. When we bring this mindset into our relationships with residents and our partners like HTI, it has a positive effect on everyone and on outcomes," said Kevin Russell, Founder and Chairman at Jaybird Senior Living. About Healthcare Trust, Inc. Healthcare Trust, Inc. is a publicly registered real estate investment trust focused on acquiring a diversified portfolio of healthcare real estate, with an emphasis on seniors housing and medical office buildings, located in the United States. Additional information about HTI can be found on its website at www.healthcaretrustinc.com. About Senior Lifestyle Corporation Senior Lifestyle, founded in 1985, is a privately-owned business that is based in Chicago, Illinois. Since 1985 Senior Lifestyle has been dedicated exclusively to serving seniors and their families. Senior Lifestyle is an owner, operator and developer of senior living communities. With a portfolio of more than 130 communities, located throughout the United States, Senior Lifestyle offers independent living, assisted living, memory care and skilled nursing for the luxury, moderate and affordable segments. Senior Lifestyle has been routinely recognized as a leader in the delivery of innovative life enrichment programs, hospitality services and personalized care. To learn more about Senior Lifestyle, visit www.seniorlifestyle.com. About Jaybird Senior Living Founded in 2004, Jaybird Senior Living is a leader in the senior living industry. Jaybird focuses on delivering unparalleled lifestyle experiences to the communities it owns or operates. The takes a disciplined entrepreneurial approach to business and innovation in the day-to-day management of its next generation aging communities and our team of professional individuals and compassionate caregivers are there each day to make sure the mothers and fathers in our care enjoy an extraordinary living experience in an exceptional environment. Learn more about Jaybird Senior Living at www.jaybirdseniorliving.com. Important Notice The statements in this press release that are not historical facts may be forward-looking statements. These forward-looking statements involve risks and uncertainties that could cause actual results or events to be materially different. The words "anticipates," "believes," "expects," "estimates," "projects," "plans," "intends," "may," "will," "would" and similar expressions are intended to identify forward-looking statements, although not all forward-looking statements contain these identifying words. These forward-looking statements are subject to risks, uncertainties and other factors, many of which are outside of HTI's control, which could cause actual results to differ materially from the results contemplated by the forward-looking statements. These risks and uncertainties include the potential adverse effects of the ongoing global COVID-19 pandemic, including actions taken to contain or treat COVID-19, on HTI, HTI's tenants, HTI's operators and the global economy and financial markets and that the information about rent collections may not be indicative of any future period, as well as those risks and uncertainties set forth in the Risk Factors section of HTI's Annual Report on Form 10-K for the year ended December 31, 2020 filed on March 29, 2021, and all other filings with the SEC after that date, as such risks, uncertainties and other important factors may be updated from time to time in HTI's subsequent reports. Further, forward looking statements speak only as of the date they are made, and HTI undertakes no obligation to update or revise any forward-looking statement to reflect changed assumptions, the occurrence of unanticipated events or changes to future operating results, unless required to do so by law. CONTACT: [email protected] SOURCE Healthcare Trust, Inc. PORTLAND, Ore., March 2, 2022 /PRNewswire/ -- Allied Market Research recently published a report, titled, "Heat Exchanger Market by Type (Shell and Tube, Plate and Frame, Air-Cooled, Microchannel Heat Exchanger, and Others), End-user Industry (Chemical, Petrochemical, Oil & Gas, HVACR, Food & Beverages, Power Generation, and Others), and Material of Construction (Carbon Steel, Stainless Steel, Nickel, and Others): Global Opportunity Analysis and Industry Forecast 20212030." According to the report, the global heat exchanger industry was pegged at $16.7 billion in 2020, and is expected to reach $28.3 billion by 2030, growing at a CAGR of 5.5% from 2021 to 2030. Drivers, restraints, and opportunities- Rise of oil & gas demand and growing industrialization in developing economies have boosted the growth of the global heat exchanger market. However, several issues in the system such as leakage and pressure drops hinder the market growth. On the contrary, increase in demand for petrochemicals and rapid expansion of nuclear power plants are expected to open lucrative opportunities for the market players in the coming years. Download Sample PDF (287 Pages PDF with Insights): https://www.alliedmarketresearch.com/request-sample/2049 Covid-19 scenario: In the initial days of the pandemic, several industries have stopped their operations and the global supply chain was disrupted. The sales of the heat exchanger were also impacted due to the paused manufacturing of the heat exchanger. The oil and gas industry has been severely affected by the COVID-19 outbreak. Crude prices have dropped in 2020 as a result of resumed overflow production. However, sustained upstream activities have had no influence on heat exchanger demand. Furthermore, import and export activities were severely hampered, thereby impacting industries that use heat exchangers and, thus, impacting the global heat exchanger market. The COVID-19 pandemic has had a rapid and drastic impact on the global automotive sector. However, a drop in automotive sales resulted in a drop in radiator sales, which had a significant influence on the heat exchanger market. The shell and tubesegment to dominate by 2030- Based on type, the shell and tube segment accounted for nearly one-third of the global heat exchanger market share in 2020, and is anticipated to retain its dominance throughout the forecast period. This is attributed to its various advantages such as ease of application in higher operating temperatures and pressures, low price as compared to plate type coolers, and others. Shell and tube heat exchangers are a preferred choice owing to the ease of servicing and their compatibility for use with different types of seawater coolants. Moreover, this segment would showcase the fastest CAGR of 5.9% by 2030. The report also includes analysis of plate and frame, air-cooled, microchannel heat exchangers, and others. Get detailed COVID-19 impact analysis on the Heat Exchanger Market: https://www.alliedmarketresearch.com/request-for-customization/2049?reqfor=covid The chemical segment held the lion's share in 2020- Based on end-user industry, the chemical segment held the lion's share in 2020, contributing to nearly one-fourth of the global heat exchanger market, and is expected to continue its lead during the forecast period. This is owing to their ability to withstand the continuous chemical reactions and their application in a complex series of processes such as cooling, heating, condensing, separation, evaporation, and others. The oil and gas segment, however, would showcase the fastest CAGR of 6.1% by 2030. The report also includes an analysis of the Hvacr, petrochemical, power generation, and food & beverage segments. North America to portray the highest CAGR through 2030 By region, the global heat exchanger marketacross North America is expected to register the highest CAGR of 5.9% during the forecast period, owing to rising upstream activities, chemical industry, and oil & gas refineries, which in turn are expected to increase the demand of heat exchanger in the region. However, the market across LAMEA held the largest share in 2020, accounting for more than one-third of the market. This is due to numerous factors such as a large consumer base including oil & gas refineries, chemical industry, food industry, sugar industries, and others. Schedule a FREE Consultation Call with Our Analysts/Industry Experts to Find Solution for Your Business @ https://www.alliedmarketresearch.com/connect-to-analyst/2049 Major market players Alfa Laval, Accessen Group Chart Industries Thermofin Gmbh Hisaka Works . Ltd. . Ltd. Xylem Koch Industries, Inc. API Heat Transfer Danfoss A/S Exchanger Industries Limited Interested in Procure Data? Visit Here: https://www.alliedmarketresearch.com/heat-exchanger-market/purchase-options Access AVENUE- A Subscription-Based Library (Premium on-demand, subscription-based pricing model) at: https://www.alliedmarketresearch.com/library-access Avenue is a user-based library of global market report database, provides comprehensive reports pertaining to the world's largest emerging markets. It further offers e-access to all the available industry reports just in a jiffy. By offering core business insights on the varied industries, economies, and end users worldwide, Avenue ensures that the registered members get an easy as well as single gateway to their all-inclusive requirements. Avenue Library Subscription | Request for 14 days free trial of before buying: https://www.alliedmarketresearch.com/avenueTrial Similar Reports We Have: India Heat Exchangers Market is expected to reach $890.0 million by 2026, registering a CAGR of 8.6% from 2019 to 2026. Thermal Power Plant Market is projected to reach $1,820.7 billion by 2030, growing at a CAGR of 3.2% from 2021 to 2030. Shale Gas Processing Equipment Market is projected to reach $13.5 billion by 2026, growing at a CAGR of 14.8% from 2019 to 2026. Captive Power Generation Market is projected to reach $823.1 billion by 2030, growing at a CAGR of 5.3% from 2021 to 2030. 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Pre-Book Now with 10% Discount: Pyrolysis Gasoline: Global Opportunity Analysis and Industry Forecast, 2020-2030 Power Generation Market: Global Opportunity Analysis and Industry Forecast, 2020- 2027 Ring Main Unit (RMU) Market: Global Analysis and Industry Forecast, 2022-2030 Nuclear Electric Power Generation Market: Global Analysis and Industry Forecast, 2022-2030 Waste Heat Recovery Market: Global Analysis and Industry Forecast, 2022-2029 Brazed Plate Heat Exchangers Market: Global Analysis and Industry Forecast, 20212030 About us: Allied Market Research (AMR) is a full-service market research and business-consulting wing of Allied Analytics LLP based in Portland, Oregon. Allied Market Research provides global enterprises as well as medium and small businesses with unmatched quality of "Market Research Reports" and "Business Intelligence Solutions." AMR has a targeted view to provide business insights and consulting to assist its clients to make strategic business decisions and achieve sustainable growth in their respective market domain. We are in professional corporate relations with various companies and this helps us in digging out market data that helps us generate accurate research data tables and confirms utmost accuracy in our market forecasting. Allied Market Research CEO Pawan Kumar is instrumental in inspiring and encouraging everyone associated with the company to maintain high quality of data and help clients in every way possible to achieve success. Each and every data presented in the reports published by us is extracted through primary interviews with top officials from leading companies of domain concerned. Our secondary data procurement methodology includes deep online and offline research and discussion with knowledgeable professionals and analysts in the industry. Contact us: David Correa 5933 NE Win Sivers Drive #205, Portland, OR 97220 United States Toll Free: 1-800-792-5285 UK: +44-845-528-1300 Hong Kong: +852-301-84916 India (Pune): +91-20-66346060 Fax: +1-855-550-5975 [email protected] Web: https://www.alliedmarketresearch.com Follow us on: LinkedIn Twitter SOURCE Allied Market Research The 2022 Rachael Ray Foundation ProStart Grow Grant program will provide $5,000 grants for up to 25 ProStart schools or schools with culinary arts programs that are looking to become a ProStart school. To-date, the program has provided $590,000 to schools that have demonstrated a strong need to engage and educate high school students interested in exploring restaurant and foodservice careers. Schools have from March 1-31, 2022, to submit applications for the current round of funds. "We are excited to support another round of Grow Grants for high schools that are cultivating the next generation of food industry professionals through the ProStart Program," said Rachael Ray, award winning television personality and philanthropist. "The needs are great as these local programs often face challenges related to outdated equipment and kitchen spaces, curriculum and certification costs, and more. I am truly proud of our partnership with the NRAEF's ProStart Grow Grant program to back educators who are giving high school students the tools and training to support their culinary dreams." ProStart, a two-year technical education program focused on culinary arts and restaurant management, is offered at more than 1,750 schools across the country with over 140,000 students enrolled. Funding from the Rachael Ray Foundation will offer schools the opportunity to upgrade or purchase new resources, build up their classrooms and supplies, and support teachers with whatever they need to help their students learn career-building skills in the restaurant, foodservice, and hospitality industry. "ProStart Grow Grants have proven to be one of the best investments we've made in the future of high school culinary arts and restaurant management programs, and we are excited to provide assistance to another 25 schools this year thanks to The Rachael Ray Foundation," said NRAEF president Rob Gifford. "Past funding rounds have helped schools join the ranks of ProStart programs, kick off farm to table endeavors, and renovate their education spaces. I can't wait to see what this year's winners are able to achieve for their ProStart students." Over the past 15 years, more than 260 scholarships have been provided by Rachael Ray's Yum-o! organization and the Rachael Ray Foundation, totaling over $2.2 million in support to NRAEF scholarships, ProStart, and the Restaurant Employee Relief Fund. "These funds have been invaluable to our program," said Katelyn Owen, an educator at West Rowan High School in Mt. Ulla, North Carolina, which received a 2019 Rachael Ray Foundation ProStart Grow Grant. "Our program was at a standstill and unable to grow due to our lack of funding. Our space had deteriorated over the years, leaving our room and equipment very dated. Students were not able to relate or get experience in a kitchen that they could relate to the current industry. We now have a fully renovated space that allows our students to thrive and be creative in our farm to table program, as well as get experience and spark interest in today's industry." The NRAEF will facilitate the 2022 grant process by accepting applications from all current or onboarding/incoming ProStart schools for the 2022-2023 academic year. Each school will submit a complete application and, if selected, will be required to sign an agreement about joining ProStart for the next school year or return the funds. Applicants have through March 31, 2022, to complete their submissions for the NRAEF's consideration by clicking here. Learn more about ProStart here. About the National Restaurant Association Educational Foundation (NRAEF): As the philanthropic foundation of the National Restaurant Association, the National Restaurant Association Educational Foundation's (NRAEF) mission of service to the public is dedicated to enhancing the industry's training and education, career development and community engagement efforts. The NRAEF and its programs work to Attract, Empower and Advance today's and tomorrow's restaurant and foodservice workforce. NRAEF programs include: ProStart a high-school career and technical education program; Restaurant Ready partnering with community based organizations to provide "opportunity youth" with skills training and job opportunities; Military helping military servicemen and women transition their skills to restaurant and foodservice careers; Scholarships financial assistance for students pursuing restaurant, foodservice and hospitality degrees; and the Restaurant & Hospitality Leadership Center (RHLC) accredited apprenticeship programs designed to build the careers of service professionals. For more information on the NRAEF, visit ChooseRestaurants.org. About The Rachael Ray Foundation The Rachael Ray Foundation (RRF) is a private foundation that is fully funded by the proceeds from the sale of Rachael Ray Nutrish. RRF was launched by Rachael in 2016 to better support the causes she cares for most such as helping animals in need. Additionally, RRF works with organizations that support the mission of Yum-o!, Rachael's 501c3, in order to bolster and amplify their efforts through additional funding. Yum-o! empowers kids and their families to develop healthy relationships with food and cooking. It also teaches families to cook, feeds hungry kids, and funds cooking education, among other initiatives. SOURCE National Restaurant Association Educational Foundation THE WOODLANDS, Texas, March 2, 2022 /PRNewswire/ -- Huntsman Corporation (NYSE: HUN) today announced that it has filed an investor presentation with the U.S. Securities and Exchange Commission in connection with its 2022 Annual Meeting of Stockholders ("Annual Meeting"). The presentation is available at https://voteforhuntsman.com/ or on the investor relations section of the Company's website. Highlights of the presentation include: Huntsman has successfully executed a transformational strategy that is delivering superior performance, exceeding expectations and producing a higher margin, differentiated and sustainable portfolio 2021 was the best year in Huntsman's history with the strongest profit and margin performance it has ever achieved with its current portfolio, demonstrating that the Company's strategy and execution are working. Anchored portfolio on megatrend-driven, differentiated products demand addressing customer needs for innovation, sustainability and reduced carbon footprints and exited volatile commodity businesses by combining large-scale divestitures, including approximately 40% of its portfolio over the last five years, with strategic bolt-on acquisitions. Drove margin improvement across business lines through relentless focus on pricing, cost and prioritizing 'value over volume', achieving half of the Company's $240 million cost optimization and synergy program ahead of schedule. cost optimization and synergy program ahead of schedule. Clear path to deliver more than 300 basis points of incremental adjusted EBITDA margin within the next 36 months, meeting target of 18-20% margins by 2024. Transformed balance sheet created ability to balance growth with capital return through growth investments, accretive M&A, raised dividends and share repurchases. Huntsman has a refreshed and fit-for-purpose Board uniquely qualified to oversee its differentiated and downstream focus and drive further transformation Huntsman completed an extensive Board refreshment plan, appointing eight new independent directors since 2018, and implemented corporate governance enhancements, including the appointment of Cynthia Egan as Non-Executive Vice Chair and Lead Independent Director and new Committee Chairs, all of whom will be women. as Non-Executive Vice Chair and Lead Independent Director and new Committee Chairs, all of whom will be women. Led by independent directors with highly relevant experience at global institutions, with the right mix of expertise, experience and diversity to effectively oversee the Company's transformation. Ensured alignment and accountability through shareholder friendly and peer leading corporate governance profile, including multi-year Board refreshment plan, enhanced shareholder rights, Board-level environmental oversight through the Sustainability Committee and compensation alignment with shareholders. Implemented a multi-year incentive compensation plan to align top 80 leaders with the delivery of 2021 Investor Day targets. Starboard's campaign is unnecessary, unwise and risks value destruction Starboard has repeatedly endorsed Huntsman's financial targets, capital allocation and portfolio transformation, demonstrating there is no misalignment with Huntsman's objectives and strategic initiatives. Starboard's nominees lack critical expertise, add no incremental value, are not truly independent of Starboard and voting for them would risk losing integral expertise already represented on the Huntsman Board. Starboard destroyed value at GCP Applied Technologies, the only chemicals company whose board Starboard ever controlled, including a series of failed promises and vast underperformance. Huntsman repeatedly attempted to avert Starboard's pointless proxy fight, despite Starboard's lack of engagement. Huntsman shareholders who need assistance in voting their shares may call toll-free Huntsman's proxy solicitor, Innisfree M&A Incorporated, at (877) 750-0926. Advisors: BofA Securities and Moelis & Company LLC are serving as financial advisors to Huntsman. Kirkland & Ellis LLP is serving as legal advisor to Huntsman. About Huntsman: Huntsman Corporation is a publicly traded global manufacturer and marketer of differentiated and specialty chemicals with 2021 revenues of approximately $8 billion. Our chemical products number in the thousands and are sold worldwide to manufacturers serving a broad and diverse range of consumer and industrial end markets. We operate more than 70 manufacturing, R&D and operations facilities in approximately 30 countries and employ approximately 9,000 associates within our four distinct business divisions. For more information about Huntsman, please visit the company's website at www.huntsman.com. Social Media: Twitter: www.twitter.com/Huntsman_Corp Facebook: www.facebook.com/huntsmancorp LinkedIn: www.linkedin.com/company/huntsman Forward-Looking Statements This press release includes "forward-looking statements" within the meaning of Section 27A of the Securities Act of 1933 and Section 21E of the Securities Exchange Act of 1934. These forward-looking statements include statements concerning our plans, objectives, goals, financial targets, strategies, future events, future revenue or performance, capital expenditures, plans or intentions relating to acquisitions, divestitures or strategic transactions, including the review of the Textile Effects Division, business trends and any other information that is not historical information. When used in this press release, the words "estimates," "expects," "anticipates," "likely," "projects," "outlook," "plans," "intends," "believes," "forecasts," "targets," or future or conditional verbs, such as "will," "should," "could" or "may," and variations of such words or similar expressions are intended to identify forward-looking statements. These forward-looking statements, including, without limitation, management's examination of historical operating trends and data, are based upon our current expectations and various assumptions and beliefs. In particular, such forward-looking statements are subject to uncertainty and changes in circumstances and involve risks and uncertainties that may affect the Company's operations, markets, products, prices and other factors as discussed in the Company's filings with the Securities and Exchange Commission (the "SEC"). In addition, there can be no assurance that the review of the Textile Effects Division will result in one or more transactions or other strategic change or outcome. Significant risks and uncertainties may relate to, but are not limited to, ongoing impact of COVID-19 on our operations and financial results, volatile global economic conditions, cyclical and volatile product markets, disruptions in production at manufacturing facilities, timing of proposed transactions, reorganization or restructuring of the Company's operations, including any delay of, or other negative developments affecting the ability to implement cost reductions and manufacturing optimization improvements in the Company's businesses and to realize anticipated cost savings, and other financial, operational, economic, competitive, environmental, political, legal, regulatory and technological factors. Any forward-looking statement should be considered in light of the risks set forth under the caption "Risk Factors" in our Annual Report on Form 10-K for the year ended December 31, 2021, which may be supplemented by other risks and uncertainties disclosed in any subsequent reports filed or furnished by the Company from time to time. All forward-looking statements apply only as of the date made. Except as required by law, the Company undertakes no obligation to update or revise forward-looking statements to reflect events or circumstances that arise after the date made or to reflect the occurrence of unanticipated events. SOURCE Huntsman Corporation NEW YORK, March 2, 2022 /PRNewswire/ -- Industrial control system (ICS) vulnerability disclosures grew a staggering 110% over the last four years, with a 25% increase in the second half (2H) of 2021 compared to the previous six months, according to new research released today by Claroty , the security company for cyber-physical systems across industrial, healthcare, and enterprise environments. The fourth Biannual ICS Risk & Vulnerability Report also found that ICS vulnerabilities are expanding beyond operational technology (OT) to the Extended Internet of Things (XIoT), with 34% affecting IoT, IoMT, and IT assets in 2H 2021. The report presents a comprehensive analysis of ICS vulnerability data from Team82 , Claroty's award-winning research team, along with trusted open sources, including the National Vulnerability Database (NVD), the Industrial Control Systems Cyber Emergency Response Team (ICS-CERT), [email protected], MITRE, and industrial automation vendors Schneider Electric and Siemens. "As more cyber-physical systems become connected, accessibility to these networks from the internet and the cloud requires defenders to have timely, useful vulnerability information to inform risk decisions," said Amir Preminger, vice president of research at Claroty. "The increase in digital transformation, combined with converged ICS and IT infrastructure, enables researchers to expand their work beyond OT to the XIoT. High-profile cyber incidents in 2H 2021 such as the Tardigrade malware, the Log4j vulnerability and the ransomware attack on NEW Cooperative show the fragility of these networks, stressing the need for security research community collaboration to discover and disclose new vulnerabilities." Key Findings ICS vulnerability disclosures grew 110% over the last four years , demonstrating heightened awareness of this issue and the growing involvement of security researchers shifting toward OT environments. 797 vulnerabilities were published in 2H 2021, representing a 25% increase from 637 in 1H 2021. , demonstrating heightened awareness of this issue and the growing involvement of security researchers shifting toward OT environments. 797 vulnerabilities were published in 2H 2021, representing a 25% increase from 637 in 1H 2021. 34% of vulnerabilities disclosed affect IoT, IoMT, and IT assets, showing that organizations will merge OT, IT, and IoT under converged security management. Therefore, asset owners and operators must have a thorough snapshot of their environments in order to manage vulnerabilities and reduce their exposure. showing that organizations will merge OT, IT, and IoT under converged security management. Therefore, asset owners and operators must have a thorough snapshot of their environments in order to manage vulnerabilities and reduce their exposure. 50% of the vulnerabilities were disclosed by third-party companies and a majority of these were discovered by researchers at cybersecurity companies , shifting their focus to include ICS alongside IT and IoT security research. In addition, 55 new researchers reported vulnerabilities during 2H 2021. , shifting their focus to include ICS alongside IT and IoT security research. In addition, 55 new researchers reported vulnerabilities during 2H 2021. Vulnerabilities disclosed by internal vendor research grew 76% over the last four years. This demonstrates a maturing industry and discipline around vulnerability research, as vendors are allocating more resources to the security of their products. This demonstrates a maturing industry and discipline around vulnerability research, as vendors are allocating more resources to the security of their products. 87% of vulnerabilities are low complexity, meaning they don't require special conditions and an attacker can expect repeatable success every time. 70% don't require special privileges before successfully exploiting a vulnerability, and 64% of vulnerabilities require no user interaction. meaning they don't require special conditions and an attacker can expect repeatable success every time. 70% don't require special privileges before successfully exploiting a vulnerability, and 64% of vulnerabilities require no user interaction. 63% of the vulnerabilities disclosed may be exploited remotely through a network attack vector, indicating that the need for secure remote access solutions, which accelerated due to the COVID-19 pandemic, is here to stay. through a network attack vector, indicating that the need for secure remote access solutions, which accelerated due to the COVID-19 pandemic, is here to stay. Claroty's Team82 continues to lead the way in ICS vulnerability research , having disclosed 110 vulnerabilities in 2H 2021 and more than 260 vulnerabilities to date. , having disclosed 110 vulnerabilities in 2H 2021 and more than 260 vulnerabilities to date. The leading potential impact is remote code execution (prevalent in 53% of vulnerabilities), followed by denial-of-service conditions (42%), bypassing protection mechanisms (37%), and allowing the adversary to read application data (33%). followed by denial-of-service conditions (42%), bypassing protection mechanisms (37%), and allowing the adversary to read application data (33%). The top mitigation step is network segmentation (recommended in 21% of vulnerability disclosures), followed by ransomware, phishing and spam protection (15%) and traffic restriction (13%). To access the complete set of findings, in-depth analysis, and additional steps to defend against improper access and risks, download the Biannual ICS Risk & Vulnerability Report: 2H 2021. Acknowledgements The primary author of this report is Chen Fradkin, security researcher at Claroty's Team82. Contributors include Rotem Mesika, security research team lead; Nadav Erez, director of innovation; Sharon Brizinov, vulnerability research team leader; and Amir Preminger, vice president of research at Claroty. Special thanks to the entire Team82 for providing exceptional support to various aspects of this report and the research efforts that fueled it. Team82's newly launched Slack channel is available as well for additional discussion and insight into the report. Join here. About Claroty Claroty empowers organizations to secure cyber-physical systems across industrial (OT), healthcare (IoMT), and enterprise (IoT) environments: the Extended Internet of Things (XIoT). The company's unified platform integrates with customers' existing infrastructure to provide a full range of controls for visibility, risk and vulnerability management, threat detection, and secure remote access. Backed by the world's largest investment firms and industrial automation vendors, Claroty is deployed by hundreds of organizations at thousands of sites globally. The company is headquartered in New York City and has a presence in Europe, Asia-Pacific, and Latin America. To learn more, visit www.claroty.com . SOURCE Claroty BOSTON, March 2, 2022 /PRNewswire/ -- COVID-19 is a double sword. COVID pushes businesses to adopt technologies quicker to improve production as well as management efficiency, in order to survive. COVID-19, on the other hand, catalyzes an ongoing issue the semiconductor shortage that has had a substantial influence on a wide variety of businesses in recent years, including the RFID industry. Impinj, one of the leading UHF chip suppliers, stated in its Q3 2021 earnings call that semiconductor crisis has resulted in cost increases across the entire supply chain, from wafers to components, assembly, packaging, and shipping, and that the cost increases are too large for them to absorb at this time, and that they have no choice but to pass on the costs to their customers in order to maintain their margin model. Despite the price hike, the business claims that demand for chips is still high - demand for endpoint ICs for UHF RFID tags exceeded shipments by more than 50% in Q3 alone. According to the company, both 200 mm and 300 mm wafers are in short supply for endpoint ICs, and the Demand will continue to outstrip supply, through 2022. When will this semiconductor shortage crisis end? Let's look at the source of chips the Si wafers. Shin-Etsu, SUMCO, Siltronic, Globalwafers, and SK Siltron are the top five players in the Si wafer business. Shin-Etsu is the world's largest silicon wafer manufacturer, with a 29.4 percent market share, followed by Japan's Sumco (21.9 percent), GlobalWafers (15.2%), Siltronic (11.5 percent), SK Siltron (11.4 percent), and Soitec (5.5 percent). A number of Chinese companies compete in the silicon wafer market. When these companies' situations and responses to the crisis are examined, we can see that the crisis is far from over. For example, GlobalWafers stated in an interview elsewhere that the company won't be able to meet the wafer demand until 2024. The CEO, Doris Hsu, said "We have clear order visibility for 2023 and it should be okay into 2024. We do not see any signs of things slowing down in 2023 or 2024." This is because the worldwide expansion is moving at a snail's pace. Over the next two years, the company plans to invest US$800 million in boosting production efficiency at its 12-inch fabs, including those in the United States, in order to increase production capacity. Last year, the business attempted to buy German wafer supplier Siltronic for $4.98 billion USD, but the deal fell through, and the funds will now be utilized to expand production. The firm announced in February 2022 that "the new manufacturing lines are planned to ramp up in H2 2023 and to be expanded on a quarterly basis." Sumco, a Japanese wafer provider, would invest 201.5 billion yen ($ 1.75 USD) in a new production foundry in Japan's Saga Prefecture, adjacent to current facilities. Building and equipment installation will begin this year, with full operation set to commence in 2025. The factory will be operational in stages beginning in H2 2023. According to Mayuki Hashimoto, the business's CEO, despite expanding its capacity, the company will only begin to raise output in H2 2023, and it will not be entirely wrapped up until 2025. Faced with high demand, the corporation will raise prices by 10% this year, with more price increases expected over the next few years until reaching a peak in 2024. Shin-Etsu, the world's largest supplier of Si wafers, said on an earnings call last month that wafer supply will remain tight for years. In 2022 and 2023, the corporation will lease some current production capacity. The new facilities will not be operational until at least 2024. To summarize, despite the fact that all of the major wafer suppliers are investing in capacity expansion (particularly for 300 mm wafers) to meet rising demand, none of them expect the tight supply situation to change in the next 1-2 years. In today's RFID technology, the Si chip is critical. RFID is utilized in a wide range of industries, including personnel identification, contactless card transactions, and tracking commodities ranging from retail clothes to industrial parts. COVID-19 propels the RFID industry forward. The RFID industry has been rebounding well since 2021, according to IDTechEx's "RFID Forecasts, Players, and Opportunities 2022-2032" market research study. We would predict even higher growth if there were no chip shortage problem. The chip shortfall is expected to endure until 2023/early 2024, according to IDTechEx. IDTechEx has studied the RFID market for almost 20 years. Our latest version of the RFID market research report, "RFID Forecasts, Players and Opportunities 2022-2032", provides a comprehensive overview covering passive RFID (for UHF, HF, and LF frequencies), battery assisted passive, active RFID, and chipless RFID technologies, players, and markets. This report presents an unbiased analysis of primary data gathered through our interview with key players throughout the value chain (many of whom supply data to us under non-disclosure agreements that allow us to aggregate the data into a total) as well as secondary data from all available sources, and it builds on our expertise in the RFID industry. This report gives extensive forecasts and depth that no other source can match. About IDTechEx IDTechEx guides your strategic business decisions through its Research, Subscription and Consultancy products, helping you profit from emerging technologies. For more information, contact [email protected] or visit www.IDTechEx.com. Media Contact: Natalie Moreton Digital Marketing Manager [email protected] +44(0)1223 812300 Social Media Links: Twitter: https://www.twitter.com/IDTechEx LinkedIn: https://www.linkedin.com/company/idtechex/ Facebook: https://www.facebook.com/IDTechExResearch SOURCE IDTechEx In technical product support, Ricoh Japan is using TeamViewer's secure remote connectivity solution to remotely connect to the customers' computers. The support staff can then help clients to set up the connection between computer and printer or multifunctional devices. Many of these issues, that previously required a visit from an on-site technician, can now be solved remotely. As a result, the response time for service requests decreased by an average of two hours per case. As the next step, Ricoh is working on embedding TeamViewer's software directly into the printers. This will enable clients, as well as the customer support staff, to access the printing devices directly. The expected outcome is to provide even more advanced remote support to the customers. Training-on-the-job: Ensuring knowledge transfer with Augmented Reality Nevertheless, not all issues can be fixed remotely, and sometimes the visit of an on-site technician is inevitable. When working locally on a customer's device such as a Ricoh printer or copier, junior engineers can easily seek AR-based remote support through TeamViewer's solution Assist AR via smart phones and smart glasses and solve the specific problem together with a remotely connected senior Ricoh engineer. The senior employee can share the view of the junior colleagues on-site and enhance their field of vision with virtual instructions or markers. This enables Ricoh Japan to maintain its high level of customer satisfaction, even with less senior engineers. At the same time, the solution ensures the seamless knowledge transfer between senior and junior engineers. Switch to remote training: reduced travel costs and increased attendance rate Ricoh Japan has always provided extensive training programs for their employees. When it came to training for the printers, employees from all over Japan used to gather in Tokyo or Osaka for the training, because of the equipment required. However, due to the pandemic, the company was required to change its training process. Using TeamViewer's remote connectivity solution, the participants are now able to remotely access and operate the training PCs and participate in the sessions from their offices or from home. Thus, Ricoh Japan could achieve the same training effect as in the former on-site courses. Furthermore, travel costs were reduced by more than 6m Yen (ca. 46.000 ) in a year, and the participation rate in the training sessions increased due to easier access and less travel efforts. TeamViewer as a partner for digitalization of processes along the entire value chain Fumiharu Suzuno, S&S Division, Technical Center, Software Technical Support Department, CS Technical Support Group, at Ricoh: "At Ricoh, we are currently transforming into a truly digital service company. We are therefore constantly looking for ways to strengthen our support with the goal to ensure that our customers can make the most of our products. Our business relation with TeamViewer has continously grown and they have greatly supported us on our digital transformation journey with cutting-edge and high performaning as well as easy-to-use and extremely scalable solutions leveraging remote connectivity and Augmented Reality." Sojung Lee, President APAC at TeamViewer: "The various use cases we enable at Ricoh Japan are great examples of how TeamViewer supports companies in digitalizing their entire value chain. Significantly decreasing response time in customer support, establishing new ways of training and onboarding, and ensuring proper knowledge transfer in times of global shortage of skilled workforce are tangible results of the value that our products bring to both our clients and their customers." About TeamViewer TeamViewer is a leading global technology company that provides a connectivity platform to remotely access, control, manage, monitor, and repair devices of any kind from laptops and mobile phones to industrial machines and robots. Although TeamViewer is free of charge for private use, it has more than 625,000 subscribers and enables companies of all sizes and from all industries to digitalize their business-critical processes through seamless connectivity. Against the backdrop of global megatrends like device proliferation, automation and new work, TeamViewer proactively shapes digital transformation and continuously innovates in the fields of Augmented Reality, Internet of Things and Artificial Intelligence. Since the company's foundation in 2005, TeamViewer's software has been installed on more than 2.5 billion devices around the world. The company is headquartered in Goppingen, Germany, and employs around 1,500 people globally. In 2021, TeamViewer achieved billings of around EUR 548 million. TeamViewer AG (TMV) is listed at Frankfurt Stock Exchange and belongs to the MDAX. Further information can be found at https://www.teamviewer.com/. About Ricoh Ricoh is empowering digital workplaces using innovative technologies and services that enable individuals to work smarter from anywhere. With cultivated knowledge and organizational capabilities nurtured over its 85-years history, Ricoh is a leading provider of digital services and information management, and print and imaging solutions designed to support digital transformation and optimize business performance. Headquartered in Tokyo, Ricoh Group has major operations throughout the world and its products and services now reach customers in approximately 200 countries and regions. In the financial year ended March 2021, Ricoh Group had worldwide sales of 1,682 billion yen (approx. 15.1 billion USD). For further information, please visit www.ricoh.com Press Contact Jon Stotts PR Americas and Analyst Relations Manager, TeamViewer Phone: 646-961-3497 E-Mail: [email protected] SOURCE TeamViewer NEW YORK, March 2, 2022 /PRNewswire/ -- CB Insights today named Index Cooperative to its second annual Blockchain 50 , which showcases the 50 most promising blockchain and crypto companies in the world. The 2022 Blockchain 50 cohort has raised $17.1B in aggregate funding across over 200 deals since 2016 and includes startups at different investment stages of development, from early-stage companies to well-funded unicorns. "2021 was the year blockchain entered our mainstream vocabulary," said Brian Lee, SVP of CB Insights' Intelligence Unit. "It powers some of our most innovative and cutting-edge technologies. Last year, we saw incredible success from the Blockchain 50 winners. This year, included among the winners we have 31 unicorns, 41 mega-rounds, and representation from 15 countries. We're excited to follow their journeys and see their success in 2022." "We're delighted to be recognized by CB Insights," said Mike Taormina, Head of Institutional Business at Index Cooperative. "This is a testament to the innovative decentralized products that blockchain technology enables." Through an evidence-based approach, the CB Insights research team selected the Blockchain 50 from a pool of over 3,000 companies, including applicants and nominees. They were chosen based on several factors, including data submitted by the companies, company business models and momentum in the market, and Mosaic scores , CB Insights' proprietary algorithm that measures the overall health and growth potential of private companies. The Index Cooperative powers decentralized products that help users access cost-effective, passive exposure to key crypto themes like decentralized finance, the Metaverse, and data/blockchain infrastructure. The Cooperative's flagship product, the DeFi Pulse Index ($DPI), is a basket of DeFi governance tokens for protocols such as Uniswap, Aave, Compound, SushiSwap, and Yearn. Users can self-custody the product and mint/redeem tokens in exchange for the underlying components. Since its founding in late 2020, the Index Cooperative has made considerable progress: Product Suite: Index Cooperative partnered with third-parties such as Scalara (formerly DeFi Pulse ), MetaPortal, Bankless, and Titans of Data, which designed the methodology for the DeFi Pulse Index ($DPI), the Metaverse index ($MVI), the Bankless DeFi Innovation Index ($GMI), and the Data Economy Index ($DATA), respectively. Index Cooperative partnered with third-parties such as Scalara (formerly ), MetaPortal, Bankless, and Titans of Data, which designed the methodology for the DeFi Pulse Index ($DPI), the Metaverse index ($MVI), the Bankless DeFi Innovation Index ($GMI), and the Data Economy Index ($DATA), respectively. Technology: The product suite is deployed on both Ethereum Mainnet and the Polygon ecosystem and is powered by Set Protocol's infrastructure. The product suite is deployed on both Ethereum Mainnet and the Polygon ecosystem and is powered by Set Protocol's infrastructure. Category leadership: The Total Value Locked held in Index Cooperative products represents over 85% of the aggregate on-chain index market. In addition, the number of unique wallets holding Index Cooperative products has grown 176% over the last twelve months. The Total Value Locked held in Index Cooperative products represents over 85% of the aggregate on-chain index market. In addition, the number of unique wallets holding Index Cooperative products has grown 176% over the last twelve months. Strategic investors: Index Coop's $10mm Treasury diversification during Summer 2021 included strategic investors Sequoia, 1kx, Galaxy Digital, Wintermute, 1confirmation, Defiance Capital, LD Capital, White Star Capital, Assembly Capital, and Laconia Capital. Index Coop's $10mm Treasury diversification during Summer 2021 included strategic investors Sequoia, 1kx, Galaxy Digital, Wintermute, 1confirmation, Defiance Capital, LD Capital, White Star Capital, Assembly Capital, and Laconia Capital. Custodial Asset Support: Select Index Cooperative products are supported by global custodians Coinbase Custody, BitGo, Fireblocks, and Komainu, offering high-net-worth individuals and institutions a higher degree of security for digital storage. Select Index Cooperative products are supported by global custodians Coinbase Custody, BitGo, Fireblocks, and Komainu, offering high-net-worth individuals and institutions a higher degree of security for digital storage. Market Maker Relationships: In September, Index Cooperative partnered with Wintermute, one of the largest market-making firms globally, to provide institutional-grade liquidity for the Index Cooperative product suite. In September, Index Cooperative partnered with Wintermute, one of the largest market-making firms globally, to provide institutional-grade liquidity for the Index Cooperative product suite. Exchange Listings: Index Cooperative's products are available across many decentralized exchanges such as Uniswap and Sushiswap, as well as aggregators such as Matcha and 1inch. The DeFi Pulse Index ($DPI) is also listed on the centralized exchange KuCoin. Index Cooperative's products are available across many decentralized exchanges such as Uniswap and Sushiswap, as well as aggregators such as Matcha and 1inch. The DeFi Pulse Index ($DPI) is also listed on the centralized exchange KuCoin. Team: The Index Cooperative team grew its decentralized community of contributors from across the globe. 2022 Blockchain 50 Investment Highlights: Unicorns: 31 of the 50 companies (62%) are valued at or above $1B as of their latest funding round. 31 of the 50 companies (62%) are valued at or above as of their latest funding round. Funding trends: These 50 companies raised $13.2B in equity funding in 2021 across 83 deals (excluding token sales). These 50 companies raised in equity funding in 2021 across 83 deals (excluding token sales). Mega-rounds: In 2021, there were 41 mega-round ($100M+) equity investments to this year's Blockchain 50, nearly half of the total deal count. In 2021, there were 41 mega-round ($100M+) equity investments to this year's Blockchain 50, nearly half of the total deal count. Global representation: This year's winners are based in 15 countries, with 44% of the companies based outside of the US. After the US (28 companies), the UK is home to the second most Blockchain 50 companies (5), followed by Canada , France , Singapore , and Switzerland (all at 2). This year's winners are based in 15 countries, with 44% of the companies based outside of the US. After the US (28 companies), the UK is home to the second most Blockchain 50 companies (5), followed by , , , and (all at 2). Top investor: Coinbase Ventures is the most active investor in this year's Blockchain 50, having invested in 16 of the 50 companies. Andreessen Horowitz is second with 14 companies, followed by Paradigm at 13. About CB Insights CB Insights builds software that enables the world's best companies to discover, understand, and make technology decisions with confidence. By marrying data, expert insights, and work management tools, clients manage their end-to-end technology decision-making process on CB Insights. To learn more, please visit www.cbinsights.com. CB Insights Press Contact: [email protected] About Index Cooperative The Index Cooperative is a decentralized community powering crypto index products that can be purchased on a blockchain. Index Cooperative products provide one-token exposure to popular crypto themes such as decentralized finance, the Metaverse, and the Web3 data economy. As of March 1st, 2022, Index Cooperative products have an aggregate Total Value Locked (TVL) of approximately $200mm. Index Cooperative Press Contact: [email protected] SOURCE Index Cooperative SAN FRANCISCO, March 2, 2022 /PRNewswire/ -- InspectHOA, a company revolutionizing the homeowners association (HOA) component of real estate transactions, today announced a $3.1 million Seed funding round led by SVQUAD, with additional investment from Inventus Capital Partners, DevRev CEO and co-founder Dheeraj Pandey, and other prominent angel investors. This is the first outside investment in the company, which started operations in 2020. Difficulty obtaining information about HOAs is the most inefficient part of the real estate closing process. Real estate transactions are routinely thrown off-track or delayed because of missing, late, or wrong HOA information. InspectHOA's powerful mix of industry expertise and technology takes care of the entire HOA process, allowing title companies, lenders, and institutional investors to close on time and create happier outcomes for their clients. InspectHOA has the largest HOA database in the market and a tech-enabled process for obtaining new HOA information. The company facilitates thousands of transactions per month. Its clients include Better, EasyKnock, Endpoint, Homeward, Spruce, and others across the title, lender, and investor space. The new capital comes at a pivotal time of growth for InspectHOA and will help fund new product development and hiring efforts to increase its market adoption and revenue. The company has experienced 10x revenue growth in 2021 and expects to quadruple its revenue in 2022. HOAs were created to connect communities, but because they are often community-run and not tech-enabled, quickly gathering accurate and up-to-date information is incredibly hard to do," said Vishrut Malhotra, co-founder and CEO of InspectHOA. "We constantly hear from our clients that HOAs not only extend the transaction time but involve complexity, numerous follow-ups, and chasing of multiple parties. This creates risk and inefficiency and ultimately can throw a transaction off track. We have the biggest HOA database in the industry, and we have a tech-enabled team that can quickly and efficiently chase down missing or new information." "The effortless efficiency our technology delivers to customers makes them feel in control of the transaction's outcome; empowered by a job well done; relieved that they no longer have to carry the HOA burden; and appreciated because they are creating more happy outcomes for their customers," added Anton Tonev, co-founder of InspectHOA. "Given the digital transformation happening across all verticals, InspectHOA is solving multiple critical problems in the very large HOA market. HOAs are one of the few areas of real estate transactions that still need to be automated and standardized. This is also a terrific beachhead market, opening billions of dollars of future monetization potential. InspectHOA has great traction with title companies, lenders, and investors, and we couldn't be more excited to be part of their journey." said BV Jagadeesh from SVQuad. "InspectHOA has been an instrumental partner in mitigating risk and creating efficiencies in our acquisition process. They are the solution to a historical problem that title companies and other vendors also face in every transaction. They consistently provide accurate and prompt service, proactively communicate, resolve issues completely, and recommend relevant process efficiencies and automations to create additional efficiencies." says Scott Young, VP of Property Management at EasyKnock. Additional angel investors include Rahul Chaudhary (Co-founder of Treebo Hotels), Tushar Garg (Co-founder and CEO of Flyhomes), Elvin Guri (Managing Partner and CEO of Empower Capital), Kanav Hasija (Co-founder of Innovaccer), Karan Kumar (Director Sales at Talend), Oktay Kurbanov (Partner at Climate Finance Partners), Nitin Malhotra (Board Member at IIT BHU), Hristo Manov (Chairman of the Board of Teach For Bulgaria), Plamen Monovski (Director at Ledger Capital). About InspectHOA InspectHOA was co-founded by Vishrut Malhotra (CEO), Anton Tonev (Head of Business Development), and Atin Hindocha (Head of Operations). Its mission is to ensure HOAs never get between a buyer and their dream home. InspectHOA works with clients like title and escrow companies, lenders, real estate lawyers, iBuyers, and other real estate investors. By handling the HOA-related part of the real estate transaction, the company helps transactions close faster, which means buyers can quickly move into their dream homes. The company plans to launch solutions for HOAs in the first half of 2022. The company has a presence in the US, Bulgaria, and India. To learn more, visit https://inspecthoa.com/ . Contact: Anton Tonev +1-347-837-6126 [email protected] SOURCE InspectHOA DUBLIN, March 2, 2022 /PRNewswire/ -- The "Inspection Management Software Market with COVID-19 Impact by Component (Solution and Services), Deployment Mode, Organization Size, Vertical (Aerospace and Defense, Healthcare and Life Sciences) and Region - Global Forecast to 2026" report has been added to ResearchAndMarkets.com's offering. The inspection management software market is expected to grow from USD 7.6 billion in 2021 to USD 13.1 billion by 2026, at a Compound Annual Growth Rate (CAGR) of 11.5% during the forecast period. Inspection management software market is rapidly gaining acceptance worldwide by hospitals, enterprises and corporates. It aids in quality control, lowers manufacturing costs, eliminates scrap losses, and identifies the root causes of defective work. The solution segment is expected to hold a higher market share during the forecast period Inspection management software also includes visual platform which is a complete rounds with asset pins in the same screen as the digital floor plans, making it easy to find each stop within an inspection, automated inspection schedules which helps to make recurring inspection schedules that generate assigned work orders on a daily, weekly, monthly, and annual basis, custom rounds helps to create customized rounds with specific instructions and asset information for each of your buildings and floors, form builders helps to create custom inspection checklists and forms in minutes, address corrective measure helps to create and complete associated work orders in the field, documenting that the failed inspections have been corrected, inspection reporting allows to track inspection progress across the portfolio and drill down into specific programs and buildings. The on-premises segment is expected to hold a higher market share during the forecast period In this deployment method, all the information gets stored within enterprise premises. The on-premises deployment mode offers high speed, scalability, flexibility, and security but lacks in the remote access of stored data. The market share of the on-premises deployment mode is anticipated to steadily grow in the coming years due to its advantages. It is witnessing growth due to the ownership of private individual data and the digital rights management associated with the digital assets of enterprises. The telecom vertical is expected to witness huge opportunities due to the need comply with government regulations. To meet the telecom-specific requirements for hardware, software, and services, powerful inspection management software is required. It will contribute to address critical service challenges by increasing visibility of service quality and user experiences. In the telecommunications industry, streamlining device inspections is critical to reducing downtime. Exo is a quality assurance and inspection solution provider company. TIA condition assessments, post-modification, due diligence, as built and weld inspections, non-destructive foundation mappings, and rebar scans are all included in Exo inspection solution.it also has Aerial Inspections (UAV/Drone Inspection). North America to dominate the inspection management software market in 2021 In North America, there is certification launched by Bureau Veritas to IATF 16949, which indicates the commitment to quality and readiness to compete in today's complicated, fast expanding industry. IATF 16949 helps drive customer satisfaction, create a culture of continuous improvement, detect, and mitigate risk in the automotive industry. The manufacturing industry has undergone tremendous changes, with digitized processes designed to meet increased demand, market dynamics, and disruptive innovation. This has increased the requirement for industrial processes to use inspection management software and integrate it into numerous operational domains via business process automation. The high usage and adoption of AI, cloud computing, big data, and 3D printing technologies are driving the North America market. Key Topics Covered: 1 Introduction 2 Research Methodology 3 Executive Summary 4 Premium Insights 4.1 Attractive Growth Opportunities in the Market 4.2 Inspection Management Software Market, by Component (2021 Vs. 2026) 4.3 Market, by Organization Size (2021 Vs. 2026) 4.4 Market, by Deployment Mode (2021 Vs. 2026) 4.5 Market, by Vertical (2021 Vs. 2026) 4.6 Market Investment Scenario 5 Market Overview and Industry Trends 5.1 Introduction 5.2 Market Dynamics 5.2.1 Drivers 5.2.1.1 Availability of Vast Features Including Creating Forms, Checklists, Scheduling, Recording, and Tracking a Task 5.2.1.2 Creating Estimation, Invoices, Quality Control of Raw Materials 5.2.1.3 Need to Detect Faulty Products in Production 5.2.1.4 Need of Accuracy, Cost-Saving, Auditing of a Product 5.2.1.5 Growing Need for Streamlining Business Process Flows in Inspections Activities 5.2.2 Restraints 5.2.2.1 High Cost of Installation and Technical Issues Within Inspection Management Software 5.2.2.2 Safety and Security Issues Within the Production Process 5.2.3 Opportunities 5.2.3.1 Rapid Growth of Ar, Iot, and Cloud Technologies in Operations 5.2.3.2 High Demand for Smes Toward Inspection Management Software 5.2.4 Challenges 5.2.4.1 Data Integrity and Security Concerns 5.2.4.2 Lack of Adequate Resources and Inadequate Software Training Tools 5.3 Case Study Analysis 5.4 Porter's Five Forces Analysis 5.5 Ecosystem 5.6 COVID-19 Driven Market Dynamics 5.6.1 Drivers and Opportunities 5.6.2 Restraints and Challenges 5.7 Supply Chain Analysis 5.8 Pricing Analysis 5.9 Patent Analysis 5.10 Technological Analysis 5.11 Regulations 5.12 Trends/Disruptions Impacting Buyers 6 Inspection Management Software Market, by Component 6.1 Introduction 6.1.1 Components: Market Drivers 6.1.2 Components: COVID-19 Impact 6.2 Solution 6.3 Services 7 Inspection Management Software Market, by Deployment Mode 7.1 Introduction 7.1.1 Deployment Modes: Market Drivers 7.1.2 Deployment Modes: COVID-19 Impact 7.2 On-Premises 7.3 Cloud 8 Inspection Management Software Market, by Organization Size 8.1 Introduction 8.1.1 Organization Size: Market Drivers 8.1.2 Organization Size: COVID-19 Impact 8.2 Large Enterprises 8.3 Small and Medium-Sized Enterprises 9 Inspection Management Software Market, by Vertical 9.1 Introduction 9.1.1 Verticals: Market Drivers 9.1.2 Verticals: COVID-19 Impact 9.2 Aerospace and Defense 9.3 Automotive 9.4 Consumer Goods and Retail 9.5 Energy and Utilities 9.6 Healthcare and Life Sciences 9.7 Manufacturing 9.8 Telecom 9.9 Transport and Logistics 9.10 Other Verticals 10 Inspection Management Software Market, by Region 11 Competitive Landscape 11.1 Introduction 11.2 Market Ranking 11.3 Historical Revenue Analysis of Top Vendors 11.4 Company Evaluation Quadrant 11.4.1 Star 11.4.2 Emerging Leader 11.4.3 Pervasive 11.4.4 Participant 11.5 Competitive Scenario 11.5.1 Market New Product Launches 11.5.2 Market Deals 11.5.3 Inspection Management Software Other Developments 12 Company Profiles 12.1 Key Players 12.1.1 Sap 12.1.2 Oracle 12.1.3 Siemens 12.1.4 Dassault Systemes 12.1.5 Ptc 12.1.6 Hexagon 12.1.7 Wolters Kluwer 12.1.8 Ideagen 12.1.9 Autodesk 12.1.10 Veeva Systems 12.1.11 Etq 12.1.12 Gensuite 12.1.13 Intelex 12.1.14 Iqs 12.1.15 Mastercontrol 12.1.16 Metricstream 12.1.17 Penta Technologies 12.1.18 Pilgrim 12.1.19 Plex 12.1.20 Reachoutsuite 12.1.21 Cority 12.1.22 Compliancequest 12.1.23 Omnex Systems 12.1.24 Field Eagle 12.1.25 Moonvision 12.1.26 Thrive Technologies 12.1.27 Sparta Systems 12.1.28 Aras 12.1.29 Assurx 12.1.30 Qualityze 13 Adjacent/Related Market 14 Appendix For more information about this report visit https://www.researchandmarkets.com/r/5kbri6 Media Contact: Research and Markets Laura Wood, Senior Manager [email protected] For E.S.T Office Hours Call +1-917-300-0470 For U.S./CAN Toll Free Call +1-800-526-8630 For GMT Office Hours Call +353-1-416-8900 U.S. Fax: 646-607-1904 Fax (outside U.S.): +353-1-481-1716 SOURCE Research and Markets SAN DIEGO, March 2, 2022 /PRNewswire/ -- The Greater San Diego Association of REALTORS (SDAR) recently formed partnerships with real estate associations in Canada and Mexico to pioneer innovative business opportunities beyond the U.S. border. With over $50 billion in home sales made to foreign buyers in the past year, SDAR is helping members seize a share of this market by making it easier to connect with international clients buying property in San Diego. "REALTORS embody what it means to be a good neighbor and we are excited to extend that philosophy to our professional partners in Canada and Mexico," said SDAR President Chris Anderson. "These connections will help our members stay at the forefront of San Diego's real estate industry and generate new business abroad." SDAR continues to add more services and benefits for its growing membership to provide all the resources they need to be successful. The newly formed international partnerships are part of SDAR's larger effort to expand business opportunities for its members. SDAR recently signed reciprocity agreements with Canada's national real estate association and local associations in Vancouver and Baja California to work collaboratively with prospective clients, share housing data, and uphold the highest standards of practice. The Canadian Real Estate Association (CREA), the Real Estate Board of Greater Vancouver (REBVG), and the State Council of Real Estate Professionals of Baja California (CEPIBC) will partner with SDAR to create new opportunities for REALTORS to connect with foreign buyers looking to purchase real estate in San Diego, as well as earn commissions from referring local buyers to properties outside of the United States. "We recognize that we are one integrated region, with many purchases of San Diego properties by Mexican buyers and vice versa," said CEPIBC President Lilia Ruth Sastre Ibarra. "Our arrangement will help REALTORS conduct cross-border business more efficiently and in the continuous search to professionalize the sector, we look forward to joining efforts in terms of training, market updates, and sharing best practices." As international home sales rebound toward pre-pandemic levels, buyers in Canada and Mexico are making investment in the San Diego region. In 2021, Canada emerged as the top country of origin among international home buyers in the U.S., accounting for eight percent of foreign purchases, while Mexico came in second with seven percent. Conversely, Mexico and Canada were also the top countries of interest among U.S. clients seeking to purchase property aboard. The steady return of international travel and economic recovery set up the potential for agents and brokers to grow their client base and referral business by connecting buyers and sellers on both sides of the border. "As Chair of the Board of Directors for the Real Estate Board of Greater Vancouver, I am absolutely delighted to have signed a reciprocity agreement with the San Diego Association of REALTORS -- the very first such agreement we have ever executed," said Taylor Biggar, Chair of REBVG. "We look forward to many years of mutually beneficial collaboration between our associations, all designed to benefit our respective members." In addition to these partnerships in North America, SDAR has signed similar agreements with real estate associations in Brazil, Colombia, Costa Rica, Ecuador, India, Japan, Nicaragua, Panama, Peru, South Korea, and Singapore with several more countries to be announced soon. For more information, contact SDAR at (858) 715-8000 or visit. The Greater San Diego Association of REALTORS is the largest trade association in San Diego County and one of the largest local REALTOR associations in California. We help our members, who adhere to a code of ethics and professional standards, sell more homes. We also help people realize the dream of home ownership, and we are dedicated to protecting private property rights. You can follow SDAR on Facebook, Twitter, Instagram and LinkedIn. SOURCE Greater San Diego Association of REALTORS TROY, Mich., March 2, 2022 /PRNewswire/ -- Goldfish Swim School Franchising, LLC , the premier learn-to-swim franchise concept, announces four of its standout franchisees Scott Payne, Dana Schuchardt, Amy Strozier and Alex Tyler as recipients of the International Franchise Association's (IFA) prestigious Franchisee of the Year Award. The annual recognition honors a select group of franchisees who have demonstrated excellence within the franchise community. Goldfish Swim School tops the list with the most franchisees recognized on this year's list of winners. The Franchisee of the Year Award, sponsored by IFA's partner Paychex, recognizes leading franchisees who exemplify at least one of IFA's " Open for Opportunity " core pillars: Community, Workforce, Diversity, Equity, and Inclusion, and Veterans. The winners are presented during the association's annual convention award ceremony, Feb. 29 - March 1 in San Diego, California. "To have four of our franchisees recognized with this prestigious award is a testament to the caliber of individuals we've welcomed into the Goldfish Family," said Chris McCuiston, CEO & Co-Founder of Goldfish Swim School. "Their passion and commitment to the brand has not gone unnoticed, and to see them accept these awards among franchising's greatest players is a true honor. From embracing our core values, to volunteering to take on new projects, to adding more schools to their portfolios, they've helped set the foundation for continued growth and opportunity while committing to our brand's lifesaving mission." Goldfish Swim School Franchisee Winners: Consistent among all Goldfish Swim School franchisees is a commitment to the brand's core values Creating a Golden Experience, Providing Wow! Customer Experience, Treating People with Integrity, Compassion & Trust, Meeting & Exceeding Expectations so you see Extraordinary Results and Making a Big Deal Out of Life's Accomplishments by Remembering to Celebrate. The leading swim school franchise brand looks to its franchisees to incorporate these guiding principles into the daily operations of their swim schools, as well as in their communities. Consistently outranking its competition, Goldfish Swim School continues to prove itself as a top-rated and most established swim school franchise in the space. Today, with 125-plus locations open and more than 120 in development, the brand is on track for strategic franchise expansion across North America. Riding this wave of success, the company is looking for qualified and engaged individuals seeking multi-unit opportunities who are involved with their community, have a passion for water safety and are hungry to dive into the world of franchising. For more information on Goldfish Swim School and its franchise opportunity, please visit https://www.goldfishswimschool.com/franchise-opportunities/ or call 248-801-1850. About Goldfish Swim School Founded by husband and wife team Chris and Jenny McCuiston, Goldfish Swim School provides swim lessons and water safety instruction to infants and children ages four months to 12 years. Classes are offered by specially trained instructors in a safe, child-friendly and fun environment using their research-based philosophy called The Science of SwimPlay. Headquartered in Troy, Michigan, Goldfish Swim School was established in Birmingham, Michigan in 2006, and opened its first franchise location in 2009. Recently, the brand was recognized by Entrepreneur in its Franchise 500 ranking, Franchise Times' Fast & Serious List, and Inc. Magazine's Top 5000. Goldfish Swim School is currently in the process of expanding franchise opportunities throughout North America, with more than 125 schools open, and an additional 120+ in development in more than 30 states and Canada. Media Contact: Kelly McNamara, Fishman Public Relations, (847) 945-1300, [email protected] SOURCE Goldfish Swim School This is the philosophy behind Hello Gorgeous , the first premium line of rose-and-vodka craft cocktails inspired by the French lifestyle. Designed to give young women a more refined, healthier drinking experience that helps them feel confident and in control, Hello Gorgeous encourages slowing down, being mindful, and redefining what we consider beautiful by expressing your true self. An elevated French craft cocktail for sophisticated socializing This isn't your sorority-party spiked seltzer. Hello Gorgeous creates a more elegant culture around craft cocktails that, like the French, emphasizes quality at every touchpoint. From its premium spirits sourced in the South of France to its resources that guide women on how to engage in more mindful drinking that centers around appreciation and treating your body well, Hello Gorgeous helps women build a healthy relationship with drinking and a healthier relationship with themselves. A new class of premium craft cocktails Hello Gorgeous is an entirely new class of premium craft cocktails that fuses authentic French rose (harvested from a family-owned vineyard in Provence) and top-grade French vodka with natural botanical flavorings and genuine French mineral water. Bubbling with the rich, dynamic flavors of flowers and fruits native to the South of France including elderflower, peach, and clementine, each refreshing rose-vodka cocktail is a full-bodied blend of superior craftsmanship. Helping women lead more a mindful, genuine lifestyle Creating a new category of premium cocktails is about more than just high-quality ingredients. Hello Gorgeous wants to help women get into the mindset of the idyllic French Riviera lifestyle, where self-judgment is put aside, and each day includes moments of enjoying and appreciating small, simple pleasures. Hello Gorgeous encourages this way of thinking and living through its core principles: Effortless Beauty, Mindful Drinking, and A Healthy Lifestyle At just 145 calories each, Hello Gorgeous craft cocktails are low in sugar and gluten-free. Choose from two exceptionally delicious natural flavors: Clementine & Peach blends a mild citrus zest with just a touch of sweet blends a mild citrus zest with just a touch of sweet Grape & Elderflower is crisp and fruity with a subtle floral tinge Hello Gorgeous is joie de vivre, bottle and chilled. Available March 2022 www.siphellogorgeous.com For More Information: Tractenberg & Co. Jackie Sands-Kirchner | [email protected] Emily Lanzillo | [email protected] SOURCE Hello Gorgeous The frequency and scale of cyberattacks on energy facilities is rising, and many countries are seeking new and efficient methods for protecting critical resources such as water, electricity and gas, as well as the facilities that produce, dispense and store energy. According to a report of the World Economic Forum, published in 2020, cyberattacks on critical infrastructure facilities ranks 5 th in terms of level and number of threats. This high threat level prompted the two governments to acknowledge the urgent need to invest resources to minimize the danger and the scope of potential damage. The climate crisis also highlights the need to recruit the most accomplished researchers to develop products and services to deal with the effects of climate change. In order to protect energy facilities, the consortium will promote projects focusing on all manufacturing stages, as well as storage and energy distribution. The consortium provided a detailed work plan based on comprehensive research by American and Israeli researchers. Dr. Rami Puzis, Department of Software and Information Systems Engineering, BGU, said, "ICRDE aims to promote joint R&D for protection from energy-related cyberthreats and will encompass the following categories: establishing a database of cyber-physical system (CPS) attacks on energy facilities and simulation of these attacks in a controlled research environment; development of technology and advanced tools for monitoring and correlating the information technology (IT) and the operational technology (OT) layers of Industrial Control Systems (ICS) to protect energy infrastructures from attacks. Joint teams will develop, assess, and incorporate new technologies developed by the consortium members, transforming them into cybersecurity solutions for Israel and the US." Members in the consortium include Israeli and American companies as well as government and research institutions. Activities will be led by BGU alongside Arizona State University. Among the US partners: Georgia Institute of Technology, Nexant, Delek US, Duquesne Light Company, Schweitzer Engineering Laboratories and the MITRE corporation. The Israeli partners include the following companies: Otorio, RAD, SIGA OT Solutions, Arava Power, DK Innovation and Meptagon. Josh Peleg, CEO of BGN Technologies, added, "Choosing BGU to lead the binational Israel-US consortium for cyber-protection of energy infrastructure is another validation of BGU's leadership both in the cyber and energy arenas. We look forward to a fruitful research collaboration between the industry and the Israeli and US research institutions consortium members, leading to invention, development and marketing of vital solutions, now and in the coming years, for cyber-protection of essential infrastructure." Dr. Eitan Yudilevich, Executive Director of the BIRD Foundation, said, "We congratulate BGU, Arizona State University and all the partners in the Israel-US consortium for winning the US-Israel Energy Center grant, and for the impressive organization leading to a successful launch of activities. We believe that the products of this collaboration between Israeli and American innovation will have significant impact on the ongoing efforts against cyberthreats on energy infrastructure in both countries." Establishment of the Energy Center was authorized in 2018 by the Secretaries of Energy of both countries, under the law for strategic collaboration between the US and Israel. The Center is funded equally by the US Ministry of Energy and by the Israeli Ministry of Energy along with the Israeli Innovation Authority. The consortium for protecting energy facilities is part of a larger energy-related collaboration, focusing on four fields of operation: fossil energy and gas; energy storage; cybersecurity of essential infrastructure; and energy-water interfaces. The Energy Center consortia include Israeli and American partners in each of the four fields. Israeli and American universities lead the various consortia. In Israel - BGU (energy-water and cybersecurity of essential facilities); The Hebrew University (fossil energy); and Bar-Ilan University (energy storage). In the US Luisiana University (fossil energy); University of Maryland in College Park (energy storage); Arizona State University (cybersecurity of essential facilities); and Northwestern University (energy-water). About the BIRD Foundation The BIRD Foundation is the Israel-U.S. Binational Industrial Research and Development Foundation. BIRD manages and operates the U.S.-Israel Energy Center since its inception, in 2018. BIRD works to encourage and facilitate cooperation between U.S. and Israeli companies in a wide range of technology sectors and offers funding to selected projects. The Foundation supports projects without receiving any equity or intellectual property rights in the participating companies or the projects, themselves. BIRD funding is repaid as royalties from sales of products that were commercialized as a result of BIRD support. The Foundation provides funding of up to 50% of a project's budget, beginning with R&D and ending with the initial stages of sales and marketing. The Foundation shares the risk and does not require repayment if the project fails to reach the sales stage. About BGN Technologies BGN Technologies is the technology transfer company of Ben-Gurion University, the third largest university in Israel. BGN Technologies brings technological innovations from the lab to the market and fosters research collaborations and entrepreneurship among researchers and students. To date, BGN Technologies has established over 100 startup companies in the fields of biotech, hi-tech, and cleantech, and has initiated leading technology hubs, incubators, and accelerators. Over the past decade, BGN Technologies has focused on creating long-term partnerships with multinational corporations such as Deutsche Telekom, Dell-EMC, PayPal, and Lockheed Martin, securing value and growth for Ben-Gurion University as well as the Negev region. For more information, visit the BGN Technologies website. Media Contacts: Tsipi Haitovsky, Global Media Liaison, BGN Technologies +972-52-598-9892 | [email protected] Ehud Zion Waldoks, Deputy Spokesperson, International Media, Ben-Gurion University +972-54-677-5564 | [email protected] SOURCE BGN Technologies DUBLIN, March 2, 2022 /PRNewswire/ -- The "Israeli Tech Online Database" directory has been added to ResearchAndMarkets.com's offering. The database provides the most comprehensive, accurate, updated data, research and insights on Israel's High-Tech, Startups, Private Equity and Venture Capital. The Digital database charts the connections and provides detailed profiles of ~20,200 Israeli high-tech companies (around 9300 of them currently active); thousands of VC funds, PE firms, angel investors, accelerators & incubators; hundreds of multinational R&D centers in addition to featuring profiles of more than 36,000 C-level executives, all daily updated and verified. This Database is a subscription-based service for Israeli and foreign entities wishing to touch base with Israeli venture capital and hi-tech industries. Among it's clients you will find strategic & financial investors, foreign and local VC funds, Family offices, Angels, CVC, PE funds, Fund of Funds, Incubators & Accelerators, service providers, NGO's, government entities, multinational corporations, academy, technology transfer companies, start-ups, research institutions, entrepreneurs and more. For each entity/person profile, the subscription provides information on their core technology, business description, financing rounds, management team (including contact details - email, phone number, current and previous positions, and short biography), portfolio companies, and more. The subscription also provides various search options; you can either use the Quick Search to find a specific company (startup, VC fund, incubator etc.) or use the Advanced Search to search for startups in a specific sector, stage developing a specific technology, branch or main address and many other search criteria. In addition, in the MEMBERS ZONE the subscriptions provides special reports about all Financing Rounds taking place in Israel, a list of startups actively Seeking Capital, list of Recently Added Seed Companies, Recent Exits and more. Companies Mentioned A selection of companies mentioned in this report includes: eToro Ltd. Tipalti Solutions Ltd. Rapyd Financial Technologies Ltd. Snyk Ltd. Pagaya Technologies Ltd. Gong.io Ltd. Wiz Inc. Deel Inc. Next Insurance Inc. Melio Payment Inc. Vast Data Ltd. Papaya Global Ltd. StoreDot Ltd. Armis Security Ltd. OwnBackup Ltd. Cybereason Labs Ltd. Forter Ltd. Celsius Network Ltd. Cato Networks Ltd. HoneyBook Event Planning Ltd. Yotpo Ltd. Via Transportation Ltd. Trax Solutions Retail Ltd. Transmit Security Ltd. Fireblocks Ltd. Redis Labs Ltd. NSO Group Technologies Ltd. (Q Cyber) Landa Corp. (Landa Digital Printing) Autotalks Ltd. AppsFlyer Ltd. For more information about this directory visit https://www.researchandmarkets.com/r/ib2unq Media Contact: Research and Markets Laura Wood, Senior Manager [email protected] For E.S.T Office Hours Call +1-917-300-0470 For U.S./CAN Toll Free Call +1-800-526-8630 For GMT Office Hours Call +353-1-416-8900 U.S. Fax: 646-607-1904 Fax (outside U.S.): +353-1-481-1716 SOURCE Research and Markets MORRISTOWN, N.J., March 2, 2022 /PRNewswire/ -- Jersey Central Power & Light (JCP&L), a subsidiary of FirstEnergy Corp. (NYSE: FE), is urging residential customers experiencing financial hardship to contact the company as soon as possible to establish an affordable payment arrangement or obtain assistance before the winter utility disconnection moratorium is lifted and shut-offs for nonpayment resume beginning March 15. In a heartfelt message to customers, FirstEnergy employees are speaking out about personal experiences that fuel their passion to help customers who may find themselves seeking financial assistance for the first time. The video, "We're Customers Just Like You" features four FirstEnergy Customer Service and Human Services employees who want customers to know they are dedicated to helping them get through challenging times. "Many of our customers are unaware of the various utility bill assistance programs available to them, which often prevents them from taking advantage of income-based financial assistance for which they are eligible," said Michelle Henry, senior vice president of Customer Experience at FirstEnergy. "Our dedicated Customer Service team is eager to walk customers through this process, and our hope is that customers will hear our employees' stories and feel more comfortable reaching out to us for assistance." Assistance to qualifying JCP&L customers is available through the following programs: Lifeline: Offers a $225 annual benefit to persons who meet the PAAD eligibility requirements, or who receive Supplemental Security Income (SSI). For additional information, call 800-792-9745. Offers a annual benefit to persons who meet the PAAD eligibility requirements, or who receive Supplemental Security Income (SSI). For additional information, call 800-792-9745. Universal Service Fund (USF): Helps eligible residential customers maintain electric service by offering a monthly bill credit up to $180 per month for electric and gas combined. The USF Fresh Start program now provides forgiveness of overdue balances regardless of previous participation in the USF program. Apply for USF and LIHEAP online at www.nj.gov/dca/dcaid or call 800-510-3102 to have an application mailed to you or to find an application agency near you. Helps eligible residential customers maintain electric service by offering a monthly bill credit up to per month for electric and gas combined. The USF Fresh Start program now provides forgiveness of overdue balances regardless of previous participation in the USF program. Apply for USF and LIHEAP online at www.nj.gov/dca/dcaid or call 800-510-3102 to have an application mailed to you or to find an application agency near you. The Home Energy Assistance Program (HEAP): Helps eligible residential customers with their heating and cooling bills and makes provisions for emergency heating system services and emergency fuel assistance within the program. Apply for USF and LIHEAP online at www.nj.gov/dca/dcaid or call 800-510-3102 to have an application mailed to you or to find an application agency near you. Helps eligible residential customers with their heating and cooling bills and makes provisions for emergency heating system services and emergency fuel assistance within the program. Apply for USF and LIHEAP online at www.nj.gov/dca/dcaid or call 800-510-3102 to have an application mailed to you or to find an application agency near you. The Weatherization Program: Includes the installation of home energy measures that can help reduce energy bills. Weatherization programs include Comfort Partners, sponsored by the New Jersey Board of Public Utilities. For additional information, visit www.njcleanenergy.com and click on "Residential," or call 800-915-8309. Includes the installation of home energy measures that can help reduce energy bills. Weatherization programs include Comfort Partners, sponsored by the Board of Public Utilities. For additional information, visit www.njcleanenergy.com and click on "Residential," or call 800-915-8309. Payment Assistance for Gas and Electric (PAGE): Aids low- to moderate-income households who are experiencing economic hardship and struggling to pay their electric and natural gas bills. Customers with zero or low income are encouraged to apply for the Universal Service Fund (USF) or Home Energy Assistance Program (HEAP) in addition to the PAGE grant. For more information, visit www.NJPowerOn.org or call 732-982-8710. Aids low- to moderate-income households who are experiencing economic hardship and struggling to pay their electric and natural gas bills. Customers with zero or low income are encouraged to apply for the Universal Service Fund (USF) or Home Energy Assistance Program (HEAP) in addition to the PAGE grant. For more information, visit www.NJPowerOn.org or call 732-982-8710. New Jersey SHARES: Offers an annual benefit of $700 for households who are having difficulty paying their electric bills. The fund helps those who need assistance because of an illness, job loss or other problem that has created a financial hardship but are not eligible for other income or age-based programs. Customers denied LIHEAP, USF and PAGE may be eligible for a NJ SHARES Smart Utility Assistance grant. For additional information, call 866-657-4273 or visit www.njshares.org. Offers an annual benefit of for households who are having difficulty paying their electric bills. The fund helps those who need assistance because of an illness, job loss or other problem that has created a financial hardship but are not eligible for other income or age-based programs. Customers denied LIHEAP, USF and PAGE may be eligible for a NJ SHARES Smart Utility Assistance grant. For additional information, call 866-657-4273 or visit www.njshares.org. 2-1-1 Helpline: This nationwide resource and information helpline identifies locally available programs that may assist customers with utility bills or other needs. For more information, dial 2-1-1, text your ZIP code to 898211, or visit the 2-1-1 website. JCP&L residential customers also can manage their electric bills through the Equal Payment Plan (EPP). With EPP, customers can make consistent monthly payments to avoid seasonal highs and lows in their electric bills. In addition to payment options, FirstEnergy offers a Medical Certification program. Disconnection of electric service resulting from overdue bills can be delayed up to 90 days if it is determined that the loss of electric service would be especially dangerous to the health of a permanent member of a customer's household. An appropriate health care professional must complete and sign a Medical Certification Form for the eligible customer. To apply or learn more about other JCP&L programs, visit firstenergycorp.com/billassist and click on "Search Assistance Programs" or call 1-800-662-3115 to speak with a customer service representative Monday through Friday, from 8 a.m. to 6 p.m. JCP&L serves 1.1 million customers in the counties of Burlington, Essex, Hunterdon, Mercer, Middlesex, Monmouth, Morris, Ocean, Passaic, Somerset, Sussex, Union and Warren. Follow JCP&L on Twitter @JCP_L , on Facebook at www.facebook.com/JCPandL, or online at www.jcp-l.com FirstEnergy is dedicated to integrity, safety, reliability and operational excellence. Its 10 electric distribution companies form one of the nation's largest investor-owned electric systems, serving customers in Ohio, Pennsylvania, New Jersey, West Virginia, Maryland and New York. The company's transmission subsidiaries operate approximately 24,000 miles of transmission lines that connect the Midwest and Mid-Atlantic regions. Follow FirstEnergy online at www.firstenergycorp.com. Follow FirstEnergy on Twitter: @FirstEnergyCorp. SOURCE FirstEnergy Corp. NEW HAVEN, Conn., March 2, 2022 /PRNewswire/ -- The Knights of Columbus today announced that Knights and their families, as well as communities around the world, have rapidly responded to a call for contributions to its Ukraine Solidarity Fund, and supplies are already arriving in Ukraine and Poland to assist displaced families and refugees. On Friday, Feb. 25, the Knights committed $1 million for immediate distribution to support Ukrainians impacted by the recent Russian invasion of their country. The organization also launched the Ukraine Solidarity Fund, pledging to match all funds raised up to an additional $500,000. As of March 2, the Ukraine Solidarity Fund has raised over $747,000, for a total of more than $2.2 million in assistance. One-hundred percent of donations are being used to assist internally displaced persons and refugees from Ukraine. In a video message to the more than 1,800 Knights of Columbus in Ukraine on Feb. 25, Supreme Knight Patrick Kelly said, "Some of the proudest moments in the Order's history have come amid the adversity of war. We are called 'Knights' for a reason. There is a reason we count Patriotism among our guiding principles. The hour is upon us." The relief funding is already being used to provide supplies and assistance to those in need in both Poland and Ukraine. Through extensive local connections with churches and communities, as well as networks of local Knights and volunteers, essential resources and services are reaching families within hours of donations being received. Funds are being used to provide shelter, food, medical supplies, clothing and religious goods, as well as other humanitarian needs as identified, both directly in Ukraine and through refugee sites in Poland . and through refugee sites in . Knights in Poland have established tents at the Polish-Ukrainian border to distribute food and water to refugees, continuing the spirit of the Order's "Everybody Welcome, Everything Free" campaign in Europe at the start of the 20th century. have established tents at the Polish-Ukrainian border to distribute food and water to refugees, continuing the spirit of the Order's "Everybody Welcome, Everything Free" campaign in at the start of the 20th century. The Knights are working with both the Latin and Greek Catholic Church in Ukraine , with dioceses and councils in Poland , and with international humanitarian aid agencies to address needs quickly and effectively. , with dioceses and councils in , and with international humanitarian aid agencies to address needs quickly and effectively. Polish Knights have established collection sites in Krakow, Radom and Tomaszow Lubelski, where they are gathering and packaging medical supplies, warm clothing, and necessities. On Tuesday morning, March 1 , an initial semi-load of provisions, warm clothing, and medical supplies arrived in Lviv, Ukraine , where it was met and unloaded by Ukrainian Knights. , an initial semi-load of provisions, warm clothing, and medical supplies arrived in Lviv, , where it was met and unloaded by Ukrainian Knights. Anticipating a request from the Polish Bishops' Conference, Knights in Poland have created a database of parishioner homes and parish centers that will host refugees. have created a database of parishioner homes and parish centers that will host refugees. Polish Knights and their families have already received and housed wives and children sent by some Ukrainian Knights across the border. Local leaders of the Knights of Columbus in Ukraine , including the state deputy, state secretary and a district deputy, have been appointed part of an "Anti-Crisis Committee," established by the Archdiocese of Lviv to coordinate and distribute humanitarian aid. , including the state deputy, state secretary and a district deputy, have been appointed part of an "Anti-Crisis Committee," established by the Archdiocese of Lviv to coordinate and distribute humanitarian aid. Based on the Knights' success in collecting and delivering relief supplies into Ukraine , a number of organizations and companies in Poland have asked to partner with the Knights of Columbus going forward. For additional information about the Knights of Columbus Ukraine Solidarity Fund and how to donate, please click here: kofc.org/secure/en/donate/ukraine.html About the Knights of Columbus In 1882, Blessed Michael McGivney, a young parish priest in New Haven, Conn., founded the Knights of Columbus to serve the needs of a largely immigrant Catholic community. What began as a small fraternal benefit society has since grown into one of the world's leading international charitable organizations, with 2 million members in more than 16,000 local councils. During the past year, Knights around the world donated more than 47 million service hours and $150 million for worthy causes in their communities. The Knights of Columbus also offers extensive life insurance products to members and their families. Knights of Columbus Insurance currently has more than $116 billion of life insurance policies in force and was named by Forbes as one of America's Best Insurance Companies 2022. In addition, the Knights provides investment services in accord with Catholic social teaching through Knights of Columbus Asset Advisors, which holds nearly $30 billion in assets under management. Based on the founding principles of charity, unity and fraternity, the Order remains committed to strengthening Catholic families and parishes and to practicing faith in action through service to all in need. To learn more or to join the Knights of Columbus, please visit kofc.org/join. SOURCE Knights of Columbus BREA, Calif., March 2, 2022 /PRNewswire/ -- LaiFug, a manufacturer focusing on pet home products, was founded in 2015, and its products have been sold to 3 million customers in over a dozen countries worldwide. LaiFug is currently approaching its 7th birthday and recently launched a customer appreciation festival to express gratitude to all its customers for their love and support for LaiFug. The festival begins with the sale of products of all categories during the second week of March. From March 7 to March 13 , customers will be able to purchase LaiFug's most popular items at discounts of up to 20% on the official LaiFug website, with various discounts on other products as well. In addition, LaiFug will have a special page on its official website, called the Fan Club, for users to discuss LaiFug products and brands, where they can feel free to post any feedback or suggestions about products and brands, or contact LaiFug directly if users have more comments they wish to leave on the LaiFug blog. LaiFug will also find on the First Three LaiFug users who comment in the Fan Club. They will receive a complete set of LaiFug pet products, tailored to their pet type. LaiFug strongly believes that the trust of its customers has laid the foundation for its success today, and that the foundation started from day one. Since its foundation in 2015, LaiFug has been fulfilling its mission to connect pet products with home furnishings with its multi-functional LaiFug memory foam dog bed as well as to create a global brand. LaiFug dog bed is one of the most popular dog beds on Amazon and currently keeps a 5-star rating of over 5,700 on Amazon. Since its debut in 2015, the LaiFug memory foam dog bed has attracted a lot of attention. "In the past, I just wanted to save money and buy cheap beds, but they never lasted until I found LaiFug," said a customer from the U.S. on Amazon. Similar comments can be found in almost all of LaiFug's other dog bed categories. LaiFug's various pet products have served more than 3 million adorable pets to date. Devoted to its mission of connecting to the home furnishings and creating a global brand, LaiFug has been listening to its customers feedback. After realizing the great demand for quality dog beds, LaiFug introduced several dog bed products to meet the needs of all customers. For example, the LaiFug Jumbo Orthopedic Memory Foam Double Pillow Dog Bed is available in 3 color options and 2 sizes. The suede cover is durable, chewable and removable for cleaning, and the cover can be purchased separately even if it is accidentally damaged. The LaiFug mattress is made of memory foam and high-density support foam laminated to provide both enough softness for your pet to sleep comfortably and enough thickness and support to prevent your pet's bones from deforming. Also the extra-large size and pillows of various heights can accommodate multiple pets resting together at the same time, and the dense waterproof fabric protects the sponge well for long-term use. The minimalist appearance and ultimate comfort reflect LaiFug's art of balancing aesthetics and practicality. Over the past six years, LaiFug has always been listening to its customers. Having inspired by them, LaiFug has further expanded to products in other segments, including pet toys, pet clothes, wooden pet houses and so on, to meet their needs and provide all-round comfort and beauty in everyday life. To celebrate and commemorate success of the first seven years and to look forward to many prosperous years ahead, LaiFug has also recently upgraded its brand concept to become closer to its customers and to create more value. Looking forward, LaiFug remains committed to continuing its legacy of always putting customers first and fulfilling its mission of creating a global brand by providing all-round comfort and beauty for pets as well as becoming a leader in the pet home products industry. About LaiFug Making pets feel loved. Founded in 2015, LaiFug is a leading manufacturer of pet products sold to over 3 million customers in the United States and Europe. Since its foundation, LaiFug has been maintaining a 40% compound growth rate for five consecutive years. While LaiFug has grown into a global company with a wide range of products offered to meet the diverse needs of its customers, it has remained deeply committed to the pet sector and its focus on the value of pet home products has remained constant. SOURCE LaiFug TAIPEI and TEL AVIV, Israel, March 2, 2022 /PRNewswire/ -- AI chipmaker for edge devices Hailo today announced its partnership with AITg (part of WPG Holdings), a leading global semiconductor distributor, to promote and support Hailo's products in Taiwan and the Greater China region. The agreement with AITg will enable Hailo to expand its presence in key Asian markets, extending its reach to customers in sectors such as smart retail, smart cities, smart homes, industry 4.0, and more. The agreement is part of Hailo's strategy to strengthen partnerships with existing customers in Taiwan and China, while expanding further into other Asia-Pacific markets to enable companies from a wide array of industries to accelerate AI computing performance at the edge. Hailo will continue to offer its innovative product line to customers in the region, including its specialized AI processor for edge devices, the Hailo-8, as well as its M.2 and Mini PCIe high-performance AI acceleration modules. "AITg's strong relationships with vendors and customers in China and Taiwan will assist us in strengthening our presence in these key regions, where demand for Edge AI solutions is growing rapidly," said Orr Danon, CEO of Hailo. "Customers from a wide variety of industries seek to empower their devices with AI to improve their flexibility, scalability, versatility and energy efficiency. We are proud to work with AITg to bring unmatched edge processing solutions to existing customers and new ones, further expanding our robust AI offerings across the globe." "We are excited to work with a leading AI chip company such as Hailo to leverage the vast potential of their innovative AI solutions at the edge," said Jackie Hsu, CEO of AITg. "Our experience in guiding customers in new technology adoption and demand creation, coupled with Hailo's powerful AI solutions, will bring significant value to customers in Taiwan and China." The Hailo-8 delivers unprecedented performance to edge devices. Featuring up to 26 Tera Operations Per Second (TOPS), the module is built with an innovative architecture that enables edge devices to run sophisticated Deep Learning applications that could previously only run on the cloud. Hailo-8's advanced structure translates into higher performance, lower power, and minimal latency, enabling enhanced privacy and better reliability for smart devices operating at the edge. About Hailo Hailo, an AI-focused, Israel-based chipmaker, has developed a specialized Artificial Intelligence (AI) processor that delivers the performance of a data center-class computer to edge devices. Hailo's AI processor reimagines traditional computer architecture, enabling smart devices to perform sophisticated deep learning tasks such as object detection and segmentation in real time, with minimal power consumption, size, and cost. Supported by its Hailo-8 M.2 and Mini PCIe high-performance AI acceleration modules, the Deep Learning processor is designed to fit into a multitude of smart machines and devices, impacting a wide variety of sectors including automotive, industry 4.0, smart cities, smart homes, and retail. About AITg AITg is a professional IC distributor. AITg offers best technical and logistic support for vendors and customers in the regions of China and Taiwan. AITg offers turnkey reference solutions and supports customer's customized application design activities. Focused applications include mobile, PC, IOT, Network, LCD TV, Power and related accessories (like TWS headset and keyboard). About WPG WPG Holdings is the largest electronics distributor in Asia and the world*, headquartered in Taipei, Taiwan (TSE:3702). WPG is operating through four leading semiconductor components distributors ( WPIg , SACg , AITg , and YOSUNg ) and serves as a franchise partner for about 250 worldwide suppliers. With 5,000 staff in 80 sales offices around the world, WPG achieved US$27.81 billion in 2021 revenue (Unaudited). WPG , the first holding company in semiconductor components industry, has the global operation, local flexibility, and long-term development in the Asia-Pacific Market. Under the new manufacturing trend, we are committed to transform into a Data-Driven enterprise and build an online digital platform - WPG DADAWANT . We are positioned as a LaaS (Logistics as a Service) provider to advocate smart logistics and assist our customers in facing the challenges of smart manufacturing. (*Source: Ranked No. 1 by Gartner Research Mar. 2021.) Hailo Press Contact Garrett Krivicich Headline Media [email protected] +1 786 233 7684 AITg Press Contact Thomas Chen Sr. Product Manager [email protected] +886 2 2191 0098 SOURCE Hailo Tundraland and its team of over 200 employees will continue to grow with the strong support of Leaf Home, which has recently been recognized as the largest home improvement company in the nation. Leaf Home currently operates more than 150 locations across North America and earned $1.1 billion in revenue in 2020. With a commitment to improving homes, lives, and the communities they serve, Tundraland is a premier company specializing in industry-leading remodeling products, including bath remodels, shower systems, replacement showers, walk-in tubs, and outdoor decks. The company is A+ Better Business Bureau accredited, is top-rated and an elite service provider through Home Advisor, and is committed to leadership training through its internal program, Tundraland University. In addition to adding new employees and processes, the acquisition of Tundraland expands Leaf Home's exterior home solutions product line to include decking. "We're excited to welcome Tundraland to the Leaf Home family. Like us, their dedicated team understands how overwhelming a home upgrade can be and is dedicated to making customers happy," said Jeff Housenbold, President and CEO of Leaf Home. "Their brand integrity, reputation, and commitment to the Wisconsin community are unmatched. We're looking forward to sharing best practices, expanding our products, growing both businesses, and adding more impact to customers' lives." "The Tundraland team is in great hands with Leaf Home. They understand our culture, the talent we have on staff, and the opportunities we can harness within our business," said Brian Gottlieb, CEO of Tundraland. "Their enhanced capabilities will take our employees to the next level of their careers, and I look forward to watching them thrive." Leaf Home continues expanding its footprint and overall growth trajectory through this acquisition, proving it's the acquirer of choice within the home improvement industry. About Leaf Home Leaf Home is a leading technology-enabled provider of home solutions on a mission to transform home hassles into personal peace of mind. Leaf Home's experienced, dependable specialists provide end-to-end services directly to consumers through its core brands; LeafFilter Gutter Protection, Leaf Home Safety Solutions, Leaf Home Water Solutions, and Leaf Home Enhancements. With its corporate headquarters in Hudson, Ohio, Leaf Home delivers seamless, transformative home solutions for safer, easier, and more comfortable living every day. Live Comfortable. Live Safe. Live Happy. For more information, visit www.leafhome.com. Contact: [email protected] SOURCE Leaf Home TUCSON, Ariz., March 2, 2022 /PRNewswire/ -- Learning A-Z , a Cambium Learning Group company, announces today its continued collaboration with UNICEF Kid Power to carry on the Learning A-Z Donation Challenge. This challenge enables students to apply social-emotional learning (SEL) concepts learned in the classroom by giving back to communities in need. From February 28 to March 25, Learning A-Z students will be able to donate the stars they earn by reading books, taking quizzes, and completing assignments in Learning A-Z's online platforms, to provide healthy meals and clean water to those in need across the globe through UNICEF Kid Power. The classroom that donates the most stars will win the opportunity to co-author a book with Learning A-Z that will be shared with platform users around the world and an audience of over 12 million students and teachers. "On average, students and classrooms that participate in the Donation Challenge read more than three times as many books as non participating students," said Lisa O'Masta, president of Learning A-Z. "The ability to make a real-world impact through intentional donation allows students to embody empathy and social awareness, two qualities that are at the forefront of social-emotional learning. We're thrilled to be collaborating with UNICEF Kid Power again to bring genuine impact both to the classrooms we serve and communities around the world." Participating students will earn stars by engaging in literacy-building activities such as reading books or taking quizzes using the following Learning A-Z online instructional resources: Raz-Plus, Raz-Kids, Headsprout, Science A-Z, Vocabulary A-Z, and Writing A-Z. Students can convert the stars they've earned into virtual coins to help families without adequate access to food and clean water. The 2021 collaboration between Learning A-Z and UNICEF Kid Power proved to be a huge success. Students made a total of 386,570 donations through the contribution of almost 3.3 billion stars, the highest number donated to date. The donations, funded by Learning A-Z, provided 255,395 meals to families across the United States and 1.62 million days of clean water to communities around the globe through UNICEF Kid Power. "The Learning A-Z donation challenges in collaboration with UNICEF Kid Power have reaffirmed how truly amazing children are, and how much they want to advocate for others in the world," said Wendy Zachrisen, Senior Director of Strategic Planning and Operations at UNICEF Kid Power. "Through this challenge, children convert their compassion into action by unlocking real-world impact for families in need. Teachers have shared what a positive impact participating in past Learning A-Z donation challenges has had on their students, who felt so proud and empowered by what they had accomplished." The February/March Donation Challenge will be the first of two in 2022, with the second to follow this fall. To learn more about the donation drive, please visit the Learning A-Z Donation Challenge . About Learning A-Z Learning A-Z delivers pre-K6 solutions that inspire curiosity, ensure comprehension, and instill the joy of learning in elementary students. Its award-winning digital products, which include Reading A-Z and Raz-Kids, are used by more than 12 million students in more than 170 countries. Learning A-Z is a Cambium Learning Group company. For information, please visit www.learninga-z.com or find us on Facebook or Twitter . About UNICEF The United Nations Children's Fund (UNICEF) works in more than 190 countries and territories to pursue a more equitable world for every child. UNICEF has helped save more children's lives than any other humanitarian organization, by providing health care and immunizations, safe water and sanitation, nutrition, education, emergency relief and more. UNICEF USA advances the global mission of UNICEF by rallying the American public to support the world's most vulnerable children. Together, we are working toward a world that upholds the rights of all children and helps every child thrive. For more information, visit www.unicefusa.org . About UNICEF Kid Power UNICEF Kid Power, a program of UNICEF USA, is a free interactive video platform that helps children discover how their everyday activities such as moving and learning can make a difference in the world. As children interact with Kid Power Up videos, they unlock critical support that UNICEF and its partners distribute to children who need extra support in our global and local communities. To learn more, visit www.UnicefKidPower.org . To make even more impact (beyond the partnership between Learning A-Z and UNICEF Kid Power), sign up for free at unicefkidpower.org/learninga-z . About Cambium Learning Group Cambium Learning Group is the education essentials company, providing award-winning education technology and services across the K-12 space. With an intentionally curated portfolio of respected global brands, Cambium serves as an education leader, helping millions of educators and students feel more universally seen, valued and supported. In everything it does, the company focuses on the elements that are most essential to the success of education, delivering simpler, more certain solutions that make a meaningful difference right now. To learn more, visit www.cambiumlearning.com or follow Cambium on Facebook, LinkedIn, Twitter and Medium. The Cambium family of brands includes: Cambium Assessment, Lexia Learning, Learning A-Z, Voyager Sopris Learning, ExploreLearning, Time4Learning and Kurzweil Education. Media Contact: Erin McCreadie [email protected] SOURCE Learning A-Z DENVER, March 2, 2022 /PRNewswire/ -- WeedTube , the video sharing platform for cannabis content, is launching a petition to gain 1,000,000 signatures to demand that Instagram end its strict censorship of cannabis-related content and update its Community Guidelines to treat all legally operating cannabis businesses equally. Cannabis industry professionals and enthusiasts alike are encouraged to sign the petition to call for Instagram to update its regulations, as well as host a "roundtable" discussion with cannabis industry leaders on how to best navigate moving forward in a fair and equal way. Click here to sign the petition. Cannabis has been legalized for adult use in 18 states and medically in 36 states, yet Instagram continues to suspend and delete the pages of licensed and legal cannabis companies for violation of their vague and outdated policy prohibiting "attempts by individuals, manufacturers and retailers to purchase, sell or trade" marijuana. This policy is not enforced equally , with large multi-state corporations being allowed to promote their products and locations, while smaller, independent operators lose access to their Instagram pages, which are essential marketing tools in 2022. The petition is being led by WeedTube who lost access to their Instagram account in November for the second time . "We hope this petition can start a dialogue between Instagram and the legal cannabis industry to develop best practices so that we can promote our businesses in a safe and professional manner," said WeedTube Co-Founder and Creative Director Arend Richard. Richard, whose YouTube channel was deleted in 2018 with nearly 200k subscribers due to cannabis content, has become an advocate for ending online cannabis censorship. About WeedTube WeedTube is the video-sharing platform developed in response to the online social media censorship of cannabis. In 2018, YouTube deleted the channels of cannabis enthusiasts at an unprecedented rate, so a group of deleted creators crowdfunded from the cannabis community to create a platform that embraces cannabis, and offers cannabis businesses commercial-style advertising. Since then, millions of people have joined WeedTube to watch, sesh, and share with their favorite cannabis content creators without the risk of deletion. Contact: Julia Ruiz [email protected] 540.842.6285 SOURCE WeedTube FRISCO, Texas, March 2, 2022 /PRNewswire/ -- DFW-based host agency, Levarte Travel, today celebrated its first anniversary with major achievements. Despite the challenging era of its founding, Levarte was recently awarded Elite Sapphire Status with ALG Vacations, and Delta Diamond Medallion Status with Delta Vacations. These significant milestones are just the beginning for the new agency. "Levarte is the product of 40-plus years of industry expertisewe live and breathe travel, like our members," said founder and CEO, Lori Speers. "Our mission, lifting professionals up through a career in travel, powers us to think bigger. That starts with expanding our sponsorships, building up our extensive training programs, and providing more tools for our members of every level to succeed in their business." In addition to the award statuses earlier this year, Levarte has been recognized as a Premier Agency Member by the Cruise Lines International Association (CLIA), making it one of only 30 host agencies out of 8,000 in North America to earn this distinction. With this membership, Levarte can offer exclusive benefits to its travel advisors, including customized training, access to member-only events, and reduced pricing on CLIA's Individual Agent Membership. Levarte specializes in training both new advisors and supporting experienced travel business owners with higher education certifications, competitive membership benefits, and a community of passionate travel professionals. With three levels of memberships to choose from, Levarte travel advisors have a robust set of tools to help them start or continue their career. Looking ahead to 2022, Levarte will focus on building its personalized business support for members, and offering additional marketing tools and training certifications to help members grow their travel advisor brands. "I'm so proud of our members' success and their dedication to making dreams come true for clients," said Speers. "I wake up every day excited about where we're headed." Levarte Travel helps individuals who dream of turning their passion for travel into a successful career. Learn more and join Levarte Travel by visiting www.levartetravel.com . About Levarte Travel Levarte Travel provides resources for travel enthusiasts to turn their passion into a thriving business. Led by travel industry veteran and CEO, Lori Speers, Levarte Travel enables independent advisors to achieve financial freedom, explore the world through fun and unique experiences, and create unforgettable memories for clients. Media Contact Nicole Boyd 9722590298 [email protected] SOURCE Levarte Travel "Leasing activity at 1410 Broadway and 1441 Broadway has been phenomenal, and is a testament to the recent upgrades and continued investment in both assets by ownership. With the addition of these three new leases, we completed over 50,000 square feet of lease transactions in Q4 of 2021. The new tenants, along with Tortazo's new space at 1441 Broadway , show the unmatched resiliency and enduring appeal of our submarket transformation, and New York City overall," said Joseph Giannola, L.H. Charney's President and Chief Operating Officer. "Our focus on procuring retail activation with distinctive brands like 10000 and Barney Brown has been a resounding success, and will continue to play an important role in attracting prospective office tenants. Our retail amenities and flexible spaces have been well-received by the market, and we are delighted to welcome Northwell Health to the new age of office space." L.H. Charney and Colliers will now focus on leasing the remaining spaces at both 1410 and 1441 Broadway. Availabilities at 1410 and 1441 Broadway range from smaller suites of 4,300 square feet to full floors from 15,000 to 22,000 square feet, with the potential for up to 40,000 contiguous square feet. All vacancies will be white boxed, pre-built or built to suit to meet the evolving demands of the next generation of office users. L.H. Charney recently completed a major capital improvement program by TPG Architecture at 1410 Broadway, including a full renovation and modernization of the lobby, common areas, restrooms and elevators featuring "lobby boost" technology. Integrating art and cultural initiatives into the visitors' everyday experience, the renovated lobby and common areas feature the paintings of a renowned, international artist with contrasting museum-quality light boxes showcasing the rich history of the building and NYC's textile community. The renovations are part of a forward-thinking design approach catering to modern tenants seeking more unique, engaging and inspiring spaces for their business. To meet the anticipated demand of TAMI tenants heading north in search of higher-quality space offerings, the Colliers leasing team of Rick Doolittle and JP Howard have expanded their team accordingly, adding industry veteran Michael Joseph and his partner G. Taylor Bell to promote and enhance the ongoing repositioning of both assets. "We are incredibly excited to be joining the agency team and representing L.H. Charney," said Mr. Joseph. "We are extremely confident that prospective tenants in today's market will be drawn to the one-of-a-kind opportunity available at 1410 and 1441 Broadway. These high-quality sister assets provide tenants with the flexibility and growth potential that smaller, entrepreneurial tenants require, while allowing them to stay within the L.H. Charney family. The personalized service of a family-owned landlord that embraces the incubation of innovative tenants and provide creative short-term solutions is highly attractive feature for this type of tenant." About L.H. Charney : L.H. Charney Associates is a privately held Real Estate development company headquartered in New York City. Founded by the late Leon H. Charney in 1981, the company's flagship holdings include 10 Times Square (also known as 1441 Broadway) and 1410 Broadway in NYC, both of which are self-managed by Charney Management Company which is overseen by L.H. Charney President and Chief Operating Officer Joseph Giannola. Fusing the boutique service and personal touch of a family business with the institutional stability of a 40-year legacy and track record, L.H. Charney is committed to providing businesses with commercial space exemplifying the best of New York. For more information, visit lhcharney.com SOURCE L.H. Charney Associates SACRAMENTO, Calif., March 2, 2022 /PRNewswire/ -- The California Association of Health Facilities, representing skilled nursing providers, is calling on the state to provide a living wage for certified nursing assistants (CNAs) in nursing homes. The "Drive to 25" campaign is intended to stem a crippling workforce shortage that is threatening access to skilled nursing care. CAHF is requesting the Medi-Cal program establish a nursing home CNA minimum wage that will grow to $25 per hour by 2025. Fifty one percent of direct care staff, the backbone of care delivery in nursing homes, are eligible for public assistance according to a report by the California Labor and Workforce Development Agency. "For too long skilled care workers have been overlooked, overworked and underpaid," said CAHF CEO Craig Cornett. "This reform is focused 100 percent on strengthening and developing the nursing home caregiver workforce and will not enrich facility operators." Cornett noted almost 80 percent of the state's direct care workforce is comprised of women. Fifty percent are immigrants and many are single mothers. "A living wage will help workers, increase caregiver retention and benefit resident care," he added. The Medi-Cal reimbursement level has never adequately provided for the sickest, poorest and often oldest Californians. Medi-Cal reimburses the average nursing home $250 a day to provide an individual 24 hours of care. By comparison, the state pays the average In Home Support Services worker about $130 a day to cover one 8-hour shift to support an IHSS resident in their own home. Skilled nursing facilities (SNFs) in California are nearly 100 percent government supported. Most SNFs receive 66 percent of their funding from the Medi-Cal program (the rest comes almost exclusively from Medicare). These government payments provide funding for wages for nursing staff (RNs, LVNs, CNAs, etc.), support staff (janitorial, housekeeping, food service, and office support), and payment for operating expenses including utilities, supplies, food and rent. Under the proposal, SNFs will pay a specified minimum wage with Medi-Cal covering the costs of approximately two thirds of the wage increases. The rest will be covered by facility funds. The Medi-Cal share of this cost will be funded as a direct pass-through from the state to facility employees. The new "CNA living wage" will not be discretionary but required to be paid to all CNAs. www.cahf.org Contact Deborah Pacyna SOURCE California Association of Health Facilities Having held various executive positions within Kemin, Bro was most recently General Manager for Kemin Crop Technologies, a business unit dedicated to bringing environmentally friendly pest control and plant health technologies to the agricultural industry to ensure that future generations have access to a healthy, sustainable food supply. During that time, she successfully led the team and business from its initial concept stage into a fast-growing and sustainable business for the multinational ingredient company. "The EMEA market represents one of the top business growth opportunities for Kemin, and we're thrilled to have Marsha leading our Food Technologies EMEA business unit," said Giuseppe Abrate, Global Group President Food. "I'm confident that Marsha's experience in business development, strategic marketing and general management will elevate our business and help grow our presence in the EMEA market." Established nearly two decades ago, Kemin's food technologies business focuses on keeping products safe, maintaining high quality and appealing to consumers. It offers Kemin customers a wide range of plant-based extracts, antioxidants, antimicrobials and functional proteins, and specializes in solutions that address shelf life, flavor, color, food safety and yield enhancement solutions. "I am honored to be appointed to this leadership position within our food technologies business and look forward to working with the team as we advance our innovative technologies and grow into the next phase of our business," said Bro. "With increased consumer focus on the protein segment and needs within the bakery market, our growth continues in current regions and will expand into new regions. Kemin Food Technologies EMEA doubled its market share over the last four years by providing label-friendly shelf-life and food safety solutions, making it an exciting time for the team to continue its success and growth strategy." Born in Iowa, USA, Bro earned both her bachelor's and master's degrees from Drake University. She, along with her spouse and three children, have relocated to Italy. About Kemin Industries Kemin Industries (www.kemin.com) is a global ingredient manufacturer that strives to sustainably transform the quality of life every day for 80 percent of the world with its products and services. The company supplies over 500 specialty ingredients for human and animal health and nutrition, pet food, aquaculture, nutraceutical, food technologies, crop technologies, textile, biofuel and animal vaccine industries. For over half a century, Kemin has been dedicated to using applied science to address industry challenges and offer product solutions to customers in more than 120 countries. Kemin provides ingredients to feed a growing population with its commitment to the quality, safety and efficacy of food, feed and health-related products. Established in 1961, Kemin is a privately held, family-owned-and-operated company with more than 3,300 global employees and operations in 90 countries, including manufacturing facilities in Belgium, Brazil, China, India, Italy, Russia, San Marino, Singapore, South Africa and the United States. Media Contact: Kelly De Vadder, Marketing Director, [email protected], +32 14 28 36 64 SOURCE Kemin Industries COLLEGE PARK, Md., March 2, 2022 /PRNewswire/ -- COVID-19 was a test like no other for global businesses. Some failed. But many others persevered, adapted and thrived. In the midst of it all, the Center for Global Business (CGB) at the University of Maryland's Robert H. Smith School of Business organized Maryland Business Adapts to celebrate five Maryland-based exporting companies for their resilience in the pandemic. This virtual networking and learning event in 2021 included special guests Ben Cardin, U.S. senator for Maryland, and Kelly Schulz, Maryland state secretary of commerce, and Anthony Roche, McCormick vice president for Human Resources Global Functions. Now, with the pandemic still disrupting global trade, CGB is organizing a second annual event, aimed at recognizing even more Maryland businesses who have found ways to adapt and who are willing to share those discoveries with others. The Maryland Business Adapts 21/22 initiative celebrates the adjustments that Maryland's small exporters companies made during the pandemic, while providing insights for peers on topics like minimizing business risk of their global operations or preparation for sudden operational changes. "Even during turbulent times, Maryland's small export businesses have demonstrated remarkable resilience. They understand how to respond rapidly to volatile conditions and how to manage international risk," says Rebecca Bellinger, executive director of the Center for Global Business. "We're inviting them to share their insights and their stories, so that their stories can serve as valuable lessons for other companies and for our students as they progress into global careers." This year's event will take place in Baltimore on June 3 and will celebrate the following companies: Amethyst Technologies: The technical services company is a prime contractor to the U.S. Army, USAID, CDC, NIH, FDA, and Department of State working in Africa, the Middle East and the United States. It works in global health, diagnostics, research and vaccine manufacturing. Early in the pandemic, Amethyst established a clinical laboratory in Frostburg, Md., initially performing 25 COVID-19 tests per day, and quickly grew. It now performs 4,000 clinical laboratory tests per day, including molecular testing, chemistry, immuno assays, toxicology, and hematology in addition to SARS-CoV-2 testing. ClearMask: The ClearMask team designed the world's first and only FDA-cleared and CE-marked transparent surgical mask. They have sold over 18 million masks worldwide since April 2020. Their transparent masks are an equitable, accessible, and safe alternative to traditional masks that improve human connection while providing assured protection. In a 2021 JAMA Surgery study, 100% of patients preferred the ClearMask over traditional masks and providers who wore the ClearMask were perceived as better communicators, having more empathy and eliciting greater trust. The team is proud to improve communication by bringing the ClearMask to hospitals, schools, national and local governments, and businesses all over the globe. Coherent Technical Services: CTSi needed to integrate new capability into an aircraft platform in Canada, and that meant sending a team of six to Canada for a period of weeks. But with COVID-era restrictions, the team couldn't cross the border. To stay on schedule, the firm needed a way to communicate with the aircraft, test its systems, and install updated software remotely. So, it built the Mobile Test Cart (MTC), a support tool that helps with deployment and maintenance of a CTSi developed mission system onboard multiple aircraft platforms. The MTC provides all the tools necessary for both onsite and remote-located engineers to perform installation verification and functional checkout of the mission system, system troubleshooting, and periodic maintenance, including software updates. Orbis Technologies: Pandemic effects hit Orbis Technologies hard. Between March and September of 2020, over 20% of its staff quit and 20% of its client projects were canceled. Its revenue fell $4M from 2019 to 2020. The company was forced to reimagine its value proposition to its clients and employees. The company pivoted from being just a software company to providing a complete collection of software and services, becoming a full-service content management company. The impact was immediate the firm acquired two strategically important small businesses in less than 10 months and achieved revenue that surpassed pre-pandemic levels by 2021. It expanded its client base to 400 clients in 37 countries in 2021, from 90 clients in 12 countries in 2020. Its staff grew over the year as well, to 150 from the previous 90. WSC: The company provides technology products and services that simulate the components and systems found in power and process plants. Building these replica simulators used for training and engineering requires a fair amount of in-person design, development and testing. Restrictions on travel and social distancing meant that mission-critical projects required alternate approaches to retain schedule commitments. Projects were performed respecting international quarantine periods, and some of the projects shifted to the use of a single customer representative working in isolation in the WSC facility while a supporting engineering team worked off-site via web-enabled technology. Although some projects were delayed in testing and delivery, the firm says its focus on advancing web-based and cloud simulation technology and its commitment to customer service, overall positioned it well for long-term growth. During the event, the companies will be further recognized with an award from the center and an opportunity to share in-depth their strategies and takeaways. And their insights will continue to inform and instruct others beyond the roundtable talk. The center will produce open-source case studies for classroom use that highlight these companies' practices during the pandemic. "This is a great opportunity for companies to participate in a collaborative process where people can share ideas and be celebrated for their innovative strategies," Bellinger says. She says she hopes this Adapts event marks the start of a new yearly collaboration. "Every year there are going to be trends, events and challenges that companies have to adapt to," says Bellinger. "This initiative can help bring people and companies together to share some of the best strategies to move forward." Key partners of the initiative include the U.S. Commercial Service Baltimore, the Maryland Department of Commerce and the Maryland/DC District Export Council. To find out more information about Maryland Business Adapts 21/22 and register to attend visit the event webpage. This event is supported in part by CIBE, a Title VI grant administered by the U.S. Department of Education. About the University of Maryland's Robert H. Smith School of Business The Robert H. Smith School of Business is an internationally recognized leader in management education and research. One of 12 colleges and schools at the University of Maryland, College Park, the Smith School offers undergraduate, full- and part-time MBA, executive MBA, online MBA, specialty master's, PhD and executive education programs, as well as outreach services to the corporate community. The school offers its degree, custom and certification programs in learning locations in North America and Asia. Contact: Greg Muraski, [email protected]. SOURCE University of Maryland's Robert H. Smith School of Business Provisional Patent Filed on Non-Racemic Ibogaine Mixtures VANCOUVER, BC, March 2, 2022 /PRNewswire/ - Mind Cure Health Inc. (CSE: MCUR) (OTCQX: MCURF) (FRA: 6MH) ("MINDCURE" or the "Company"), a leader in advanced proprietary technology for mental health care and research in psychedelics, announced today that it has developed a number of non-racemic mixtures of ibogaine and has filed a provisional patent for these mixtures and their therapeutic use in treating a range of central nervous system (CNS) disorders. These novel enantiomerically enriched mixtures of ibogaine and pharmaceutical compositions thereof are being developed with a view to treating CNS disorders more safely and effectively than current compositions and methods. "MINDCURE is actively on course, further advancing our proprietary synthesis processes, and developing a series of mixtures from our fully synthetic ibogaine, serving as a key catalyst and important step in our pre-clinical development program towards Good Manufacturing Practice ("GMP") certification of ibogaine and the ability to scale and manufacture a global supply of fully synthetic ibogaine for research partners," said MINDCURE's President and CEO Kelsey Ramsden. "The filing of this additional provisional patent representing our novel ibogaine program (MC-808), is another significant milestone within a comprehensive strategy that is fundamental to securing solid intellectual property protection and future commercial success," Ramsden added. MINDCURE is currently on schedule and expects to have GLP supply available for research partners by the end of Q2 2022 and GMP towards year end. The Company also announces it has granted a total of 315,000 stock options to certain employees pursuant to the terms of the Company's long term incentive plan ("Plan"). The stock options are exercisable: 300,000 at a price of $0.195 per share and 15,000 at a price of $0.15 per share, and are subject to the terms of the Plan. About Mind Cure Health Inc. MINDCURE is a life sciences company focused on innovating and commercializing new ways to promote healing and improve mental health. The company is developing digital therapeutics technology and researching psychedelic compounds to support access to safe, evidence-based psychedelic-assisted therapies globally. Learn more at mindcure.com , and follow us on LinkedIn , Facebook , Twitter , and Instagram . On Behalf of the Board of Directors Kelsey Ramsden, President & CEO Phone: 1-888-593-8995 The Canadian Securities Exchange ("CSE") has neither approved nor disapproved the contents of this news release. Neither the CSE nor its Market Regulator (as that term is defined in the policies of the CSE) accepts responsibility for the adequacy or accuracy of this release. Forward-Looking Information Certain information regarding MINDCURE and its business presented in this news release may constitute "forward-looking information" within the meaning of applicable securities laws. Forward looking information generally can be identified by the use of terms and phrases such as "anticipate", "believe", "could", "estimate", "expect", "feel", "intend", "may", "plan", "predict", "project", "subject to", "will", "would", and similar terms and phrases. Forward-looking information is based on a number of key expectations and assumptions made by management of MINDCURE, including, without limitation: the considerations and outcome of the strategic review; COVID-19 pandemic impact on the Canadian economy and MINDCURE's business, and the extent and duration of such impact; no change to laws or regulations that negatively affect MINDCURE's business; no unanticipated expenses, costs or detrimental consequences of the strategic review process will arise; the continuation of the Company's core strategic objectives, including the development and launch of the iSTRYM product as well as the development of synthetic ibogaine, so as to preserve and enhance the value of the Company's current business and operations; and the expected cash runway of the Company's business. Forward-looking information is provided for the purpose of presenting information about management's current expectations and plans relating to the future and readers are cautioned that such statements may not be appropriate for other purposes. Forward-looking information inherently entails known and unknown risks and uncertainties about the future and actual results and involves significant risks and uncertainties and should not be read as a guarantee of future performance or results as actual results may differ materially from those expressed or implied in such forward looking information. Although MINDCURE has attempted to identify important factors that could cause actual results, performance or achievements to differ materially from those described in forward-looking information presented, there may be other factors that cause results, performance or achievements to differ from those anticipated, estimated or intended. Accordingly, readers should not place undue reliance on any forward-looking statements as no forward-looking information can be guaranteed. Except as required by applicable securities laws, forward-looking statements speak only as of the date on which they are made and MINDCURE does not undertake any obligation to publicly update or revise any forward-looking information, whether as a result of new information, future events, or otherwise. SOURCE Mind Cure Health Inc. VANCOUVER, BC, March 2, 2022 /PRNewswire/ - Deep-South Resources Inc. ("Deep-South" or "the Company") (TSXV: DSM) reports that the legal counsel of the Ministry of Mines and Energy of Namibia ("Ministry") have failed to file their defense affidavit as ordered by the High Court of Namibia on November 25, 2021. The Ministry's counsels stated that they have discovered new documents, which are not part of the record of proceedings. The Ministry's counsel has requested an extension to file those documents. The legal counsel has filed a joint status report with the court on February 28, 2022. Deep South's legal counsel recorded in this status report that the Ministry's counsel previously indicated that a complete record had been filed. Since the beginning of the procedures, the Ministry has failed providing any evidence supporting the decision of the Minister to not renew the Haib Copper licence EPL 3140. Deep-South's legal counsel vigorously oppose the extension request and requested that the judge ensure a just and speedy determination of the case. The Court will hold another hearing on March 3, 2022. The latest request of the Ministry will be considered at that hearing. The Company will provide regular updates in this regard and any other matter concerning this situation. About Deep-South Resources Inc Deep-South Resources is a mineral exploration and development company Deep-South growth strategy is to focus on the exploration and development of quality assets in significant mineralized trends and in proximity to infrastructure in stable countries. In using and assessing environmentally friendly technologies in the development of its copper project, Deep-South embraces the green revolution. 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 release. Caution Regarding Forward-Looking Information Information contained in this news release which are not statements of historical facts may be "forward-looking information" for the purposes of Canadian securities laws. Such forward-looking information involves risks, uncertainties and other factors that could cause actual results, performance, prospects and opportunities to differ materially from those expressed or implied by such forward looking information. The words "believe", "expect", "anticipate", "contemplate", "plan", "intends", "continue", "budget", "estimate", "may", "will", "schedule", "understand" and similar expressions identify forward-looking information. These forward-looking statements relate to, among other things: the Minister's refusal to renew the Company's Licence, the Company's intention to contest the Minister's decision before the Courts of Namibia and the outcome of such proceedings. Forward-looking information is necessarily based upon a number of estimates and assumptions that, while considered reasonable by Deep-South, are inherently subject to significant technical, political, business, economic and competitive uncertainties and contingencies. Known and unknown factors could cause actual results to differ materially from those projected in the forward-looking information. Factors and assumptions that could cause actual results or events to differ materially from current expectations include, among other things: political risks associated with the Company's operations in Namibia; the failure of the Namibian Government to comply with its continuing obligations under the Act to allow for the renewal of the Licence; the impact of changes in, or to the more aggressive enforcement of, laws, regulations and government practices; the inability of the Company and its subsidiaries to enforce their legal rights in certain circumstances. For additional risk factors, please see the Company's most recently filed Management Discussions & Analysis available on SEDAR at www.sedar.com. There can be no assurances that forward-looking information and statements will prove to be accurate, as many factors and future events, both known and unknown could cause actual results, performance or achievements to vary or differ materially from the results, performance or achievements that are or may be expressed or implied by such forward-looking statements contained herein or incorporated by reference. Accordingly, all such factors should be considered carefully when making decisions with respect to Deep-South, and prospective investors should not place undue reliance on forward looking information. Forward-looking information in this news release is made as at the date hereof. The Company assumes no obligation to update or revise forward-looking information to reflect changes in assumptions, changes in circumstances or any other events affecting such forward-looking information, except as required by applicable law. SOURCE Deep-South Resources Inc. BALTIMORE, March 2, 2022 /PRNewswire/ -- Morgan State University's School of Global Journalism & Communication seeks submissions for its 2021 Vernon Jarrett Medal of Journalistic Excellence Award, an annual honor recognizing exemplary reporting, in broadcast or print, on the Black condition. This year's submissions must be related to reporting about the impact racial reckoning has had in helping to close the social/racial wealth gap for Black people in America. The school invites entries from any U.S. media organizations which were published online, in newspapers, magazines or were broadcast during the period of Jan. 1 to Sept. 30, 2021. The award winner will also receive a $10,000 grant funded by the Open Society Foundations. The deadline for entries is March 31. The award ceremony is scheduled for April 21 at the National Press Club in Washington, D.C. A jury of five members from the School of Global Journalism & Communication's Board of Visitors will review the applications and nominate three finalists. A three-member panel of judges chosen from the board will select the winner, who will receive the Jarrett Medal and a $10,000 prize. On the recommendation of the judges, a runner-up prize may be awarded. Entries may be emailed to [email protected]. An organization may not submit more than three nominations. No more than five stories/reports may be included in a single entry. There is no application fee. Entries should include a nomination letter and short bio about the nominee. The Vernon Jarrett Medal of Journalistic Excellence is awarded annually in recognition of exemplary reporting on the Black condition. It is named for the late Vernon Jarrett, a pioneering African-American journalist who was the first African-American columnist at the Chicago Tribune and creator of the NAACP's Act-So program, which encourages academic excellence among black youth. He also was a founding member and a former president of the National Association of Black Journalists. The inaugural award was presented in 2015. Previous medal winners are: Errin Haines, The 19th, and Adam Serwer, The Atlantic (both 2020); Audra D.S. Burch, The New York Times (2019); Helen Ubinas (2018) and Mesa Dean (2017), both from the Philadelphia Media Network; Kirsten West Savali, a writer, cultural critic and associate editor of The Root, (2016), and Stacey Patton, a reporter for The Chronicle of Higher Education (2015). The Vernon Jarrett for Medal Journalistic Excellence is funded by a grant from the Open Society Foundations. About the School of Global Journalism & Communication The School of Global Journalism & Communication was created in July 2013 and led by founding Dean DeWayne Wickham, a former columnist for USA TODAY and a founding member and former president of the National Association of Black Journalists. The current Dean, Jacqueline Jones, a veteran reporter and editor, has worked at several newspapers across the country, including New York Newsday, The Philadelphia Daily News and The Washington Post. She a member of National Association of Black Journalists, as well as a former national board member of the organization. The school is dedicated to giving voice to people who struggle to contribute to the public discourse that shapes the nation and the world through innovative teaching, cutting-edge research and exemplary service to Maryland, the nation and the world. The school seeks to instill in students the skills, knowledge and training necessary to become effective communicators and to add to the diversity of thought in the media. About Morgan State University Morgan State University, founded in 1867, is a Carnegie-classified doctoral research institution offering more than 100 academic programs leading to degrees from the baccalaureate to the doctorate. As Maryland's Preeminent Public Urban Research University, Morgan serves a multiethnic and multiracial student body and seeks to ensure that the doors of higher education are opened as wide as possible to as many as possible. For more information about Morgan State University, visit www.morgan.edu. Media Contact: Sarita Edwards 443-885-3330 [email protected] SOURCE Morgan State University LISLE, Ill., March 2, 2022 /PRNewswire/ -- New Cosmos USA, Inc. the premier manufacturer of natural gas alarms, is announcing their national push to spread awareness of the critical importance of natural gas alarms to prevent deadly explosions. In the US, these gas explosions occur every two days in homes, businesses, and communities. Through this campaign, New Cosmos aims to make strides in educating the public, fire services, utilities, and legislatures to ultimately save lives and protect property. Founded in Japan in 1960, New Cosmos Electric Co., Ltd. developed the first ever residential natural gas alarm to the world, helping to save countless lives in Japan. Now, marketed in the United States under the DeNova Detect brand, the company's natural gas alarm product offerings continue to be the most reliable and economical solution to defend against the possibility of dangerous gas leak explosions. New Cosmos' alarms are battery-powered and easily installed, for optimal placement near the ceiling to detect rising natural gas. Using state-of-the-art sensor technology, residents are alerted eleven minutes sooner, which means more escape time on average when compared to traditional alarms. In an effort to educate the public, legislatures, fire services, and utilities, New Cosmos USA, Inc. was recently featured in a segment on the news program, Viewpoint with Dennis Quaid. This program is currently airing nationally on PBS, educating and inspiring audiences to take action. The segment explores harrowing stories of natural gas explosions, and details on how DeNova Detect products provide utility companies and residents a natural gas alarm solution they can trust to protect themselves and their property. "Through our partnership with Viewpoint, we're able to further our goal of informing a wider audience about the natural gas dangers in their home and community," said Ron Lazarus, COO of New Cosmos USA, Inc. "Your home should be your safe haven, and we want to remind residents that we have proven options to help protect them, offering safety and peace of mind." Featuring commentary from community leaders, New Cosmos' Viewpoint segment highlights the need for collaboration between government, public service, and corporations to ensure safety for all residents. Notable participants in the Viewpoint segment include New Cosmos USA, Inc. COO Ron Lazarus, Vice President of Consolidated Edison (Con Edison) Company of New York Marc Huestis, Chief of Sun Prairie Fire Department (WI) Chris Garrison, and Illinois 32nd District Senator, Craig Wilcox. While all discuss the critical importance of natural gas alarms, each offers a unique perspective and shares a common goal of protecting the public. New Cosmos USA, Inc. is also active in the legislative process across the US, promoting the introduction of Bills and updated safety codes to prevent the loss of life due to devastating natural gas explosions. Recently testifying in front of the Tennessee State House of Representatives along with Tennessee House Representative London Lamar in support of Bill HB1831 (the "Fuel Gas Detector Act"), Lazarus encouraged passage of this bill and informed the House of the availability and rationale for natural gas alarms and how vital they are to saving lives. "Thankfully, residents know how important it is to install smoke and carbon monoxide detectors in their homes," said Lazarus. "Natural gas and the danger it poses is usually an afterthought, but we're aiming to change that by educating residents about natural gas and how they can protect themselves and their communities." To further reinforce their commitment to raising awareness and providing solutions for natural gas safety, the New Cosmos USA, Inc. team presented at the Public Service Commission of Wisconsin (PSC) Conference. At the conference, New Cosmos USA, Inc. educated public service and utility leaders about the destruction that natural gas explosions can cause, and how natural gas alarms can drastically reduce lives lost while providing peace of mind to residents. Additionally, in solidarity with communities, New Cosmos USA, Inc. donated $25,000 worth of DeNova Detect natural gas alarms to Edgewood, MD, in support of those who have suffered from a tragic natural gas explosion, which resulted in an individual's hospitalization and the destruction of three row homes. Within the coming weeks, New Cosmos USA, Inc. will work with the Joppa-Magnolia Volunteer Fire Company to distribute these alarms to Edgewood residents. To learn more about the dangers of natural gas explosions, see how New Cosmos' life-saving technology can prevent potential catastrophic losses, and to view New Cosmos' segment in Viewpoint with Dennis Quaid, please visit www.DeNovaDetect.com About New Cosmos USA, Inc. New Cosmos Electric Co., Ltd. has been a leading global supplier of gas detectors and gas alarm systems for more than 60 years. New Cosmos Electric formed a wholly owned subsidiary - New Cosmos USA, Inc., in 2019. New Cosmos USA is headquartered in Lisle, IL, and has developed the DeNova Detect brand to provide gas alarms to some of the largest utility companies in the U.S. today. We are the leading supplier of residential methane detectors in the global market and our mission is to protect people and property with innovative gas safety products. Our team remains committed to deliver cutting-edge safety solutions to our customers in order to detect and protect what matters most. For more information on DeNova Detect's life and property saving natural gas alarms, and to purchase your own, please visit: www.DeNovaDetect.com. SOURCE New Cosmos USA, Inc. TOKYO, March 2, 2022 /PRNewswire/ -- Nippon Express (India) Private Limited (hereinafter "NX India"), a group company of Nippon Express Holdings, Inc., became the first Japanese forwarder to open a logistics center in the cargo area of Indira Gandhi International Airport in Delhi, India, on Thursday, January 20. Logo: https://kyodonewsprwire.jp/img/202202257805-O1-90Mmldz0 Photo: https://kyodonewsprwire.jp/prwfile/release/M103866/202202257805/_prw_PI2fl_Nx5XU1cZ.jpg NX India had previously brought cargo collected from its customers directly to airlines or held it in temporary storage at an NX India warehouse in Delhi. By opening a logistics center in the cargo area about 200 meters from the adjacent airport cargo terminal, NX India is now better able to satisfy the needs of its customers, providing temporary storage coordinated with the flights to be used for shipments, timely delivery to airlines, smooth customs clearance, and sorting and repacking. The two companies that comprise the NX Group's India business -- NX India, focused on import, export and other international transport, and NX Logistics (India) Private Limited, engaged in domestic transport -- provide a full lineup of transport-related services, including air and ocean cargo import/export, customs clearance, domestic transport, warehousing, and domestic/international removal services, through a network spanning 80 business locations in 32 cities across India. Going forward, the NX Group, formerly the Nippon Express Group which renamed its corporate group name following transition to a holding company system in January, will continue utilizing its networks and functions to enhance services to meet the increasingly sophisticated and diversified logistics needs of its customers. Profile of facility - Name: New Delhi Airport Transit Warehouse, Nippon Express (India) Private Limited - Address: Unit No N 15&16, ACLC-2, Near New Customs House, IGI Airport, New Delhi -37 - Warehouse area: 509 m2 Nippon Express website: https://www.nipponexpress.com/ Official LinkedIn account: NX GROUP https://www.linkedin.com/company/nippon-express-group/ SOURCE Nippon Express Holdings, Inc. "GOES-T's launch is the culmination of innovative engineering, science and strong teamwork between NASA, NOAA and Lockheed Martin," said Jagdeep Shergill, Lockheed Martin's GOES-R chief engineer and program manager. "With the impact climate change has on weather patterns around the world, the work of satellites like GOES-T is more crucial than ever before, to help keep people safe now and in the future." GOES-T will be renamed GOES-18 when it reaches geostationary orbit. Once operational, GOES-18 will take GOES-17's place tracking atmospheric rivers, floods, wildfires, drought, and other severe weather and climate phenomena over the West Coast of the United States. Advanced Monitoring of Weather, Oceans and Climate As climate change continues to drive more frequent and severe environmental impacts, the GOES-R satellite series of which GOES-T is the third uses sophisticated technology to put information in the hands of those who need it most, when they need it. Before it starts collecting and sharing critical weather data, the satellite's journey to space began in Littleton, Colorado, where it was designed and built by Lockheed Martin engineers. Based on Lockheed Martin's novel A2100 satellite bus design, the spacecraft features two high-tech instruments built by the company's Advanced Technology Center in Palo Alto, California: Geostationary Lightning Mapper (GLM) , which is a first-of-its-kind operational lightning mapper flown into its orbit, tracking lightning across the U.S. in real-time. By collecting data on the frequency, location and extent of lightning discharges, GLM allows meteorologists to quickly identify intensifying storms and take appropriate action. In 2020, GLM captured a lightning megaflash nearly 500 miles long that broke the world record for longest lightning flash. , which is a first-of-its-kind operational lightning mapper flown into its orbit, tracking lightning across the U.S. in real-time. By collecting data on the frequency, location and extent of lightning discharges, GLM allows meteorologists to quickly identify intensifying storms and take appropriate action. In 2020, GLM captured a lightning megaflash nearly 500 miles long that broke the world record for longest lightning flash. Solar Ultraviolet Imager (SUVI), focuses on space weather and measures the sun in extreme ultraviolet wavelength range and provides solar images. SUVI is essential to understanding active areas on the sun and predicting solar events that may disrupt power utilities, communication or navigation systems here on Earth. Over its 10-year operational lifetime, GOES-T can produce over a terabyte of data per day and monitors severe weather continuously, supporting NOAA's mission to provide weather data to save lives. What's After Lift Off? Now that it's in space, GOES-T will undergo an on-orbit checkout of its instruments and systems before beginning official operations in January 2023. In addition to severe weather monitoring, it will do things like: Identify volcanic eruptions, even ones under the ocean, like the recent event near Tonga Measure land and sea surface temperatures to track drought conditions and warming oceans Provide early alerts to emergency responders for wildfires, including those caused by lightning strikes Observe solar flares that could impact telecommunication on and around Earth With three of the four GOES-R weather satellites now launched, GOES-U, the last satellite in the series, is in production and planned for a 2024 launch. Beyond the GOES-R series, Lockheed Martin looks forward to continued partnership with NASA and NOAA as they look ahead to future weather and climate missions. More About the Mission For over 50 years, Lockheed Martin has built and launched more than 120 weather and environmental spacecraft for our government's civil and military agencies. NOAA's present-day GOES-R Series is a collaborative acquisition and development effort between NOAA and the National Aeronautics and Space Administration (NASA) to develop, launch and operate weather satellites. NOAA operates the GOES satellites and produces and distributes data and information to users worldwide, while NASA oversees the acquisition of the spacecraft and instruments, in addition to the management of the launch through NASA's Launch Services Program. Lockheed Martin is designing, building, testing, flying and envisioning advanced spacecraft that will enable future mission success and inspire the next generation of explorers. Check out additional GOES-T facts, imagery and b-roll. About Lockheed Martin Headquartered in Bethesda, Maryland, Lockheed Martin (NYSE: LMT) is a global security and aerospace company that employs approximately 114,000 people worldwide and is principally engaged in the research, design, development, manufacture, integration and sustainment of advanced technology systems, products and services. Please follow @LMNews on Twitter for the latest announcements and news across the corporation, and @LMSpace for the latest Space-related updates. SOURCE Lockheed Martin Award recipients were vetted and judged on further sustainability, social responsibility, taste, authenticity, and their dedication towards humanizing and reforming American Food culture. The winners were recognized by Alice Waters and Rene Redzepi, legendary chef of Noma, with a congratulatory video where Redzepi noted: "I believe it is our collective efforts that can turn the tide and ensure our shared earth will survive. You are the champions of the future, and you are leading the way." Good Food Award recipients, many of whose products are not typically available in the Bay Area were prominently displayed on shelf at the Good Food Shop in San Francisco's Ferry Building (within The Epicurean Trader storefront) for two-full weeks this past January. The Good Food Foundation Awards Ceremony takes place on Friday, March 4, and the event is preceded by the San Francisco Good Food Mercantile on Thursday, March 3, 2022. Learn more about the Good Food Foundation and view the complete list of 2022 Good Food Award winners here. About North Country Smokehouse As one of America's few remaining, family-owned smokehouses, North Country's mission is to hand craft premium, artisanal smoked meats through culinary excellence, exceptional animal care standards, and respect for the land. Located in the heart of New England, their authentic charcuterie features only the best hand-selected, natural ingredients, and small batch smoking process over embers of local hardwoods. The NCS product line features smoked bacon, ham, sausages, and deli meats, as well as unique offerings like smoked chicken, and Cajun Pork Tasso. Voted America's Best Bacon by Men's Journal, New England's Best Meat by Yankee Magazine, and The Best Bacon in America by Food & Wine, North Country is noted for balancing taste with time honored tradition and modern food trends. Visit ncsmokehouse.com for more information. MEDIA CONTACT Alicia Baker North Country Smokehouse; Brand Manager 603.542.8323 ext. 214 [email protected] SOURCE North Country Smokehouse OTTAWA, Ontario, March 2, 2022 /PRNewswire/ -- Novotech officially announced that they have achieved 5G for Enterprise Branch Specialization from Cradlepoint, the global leader in cloud-delivered LTE and 5G wireless network edge solutions. The 5G for Enterprise Branch Specialization identifies and recognizes partner organizations that are leaders in positioning and selling Cradlepoint's 5G for business solutions by meeting a series of sales, technical, and business proficiency criteria. Novotech becomes Canada's first 5G Certified Partner By receiving the specialization, Novotech will gain access to a comprehensive portfolio of 5G solutions to meet the business imperatives of availability, interoperability, security, and manageability. Novotech is the first in Canada to receive this specialization. "It's incredibly important that we lead the IoT space with emerging technology and become experts in that arena. Training and specializations are an important part of the process," says Steve Shock, VP of Marketing. "The addition of Novotech to our 5G for Enterprise Branch Specialization program is another important step in leading the path to 5G for business," said Eric Purcell, Senior Vice President of Global Partner Sales at Cradlepoint. The new Cradlepoint 5G portfolio includes specific capabilities like combining LTE, Gigabit-Class LTE, and 5G in a single wireless WAN; supporting all 5G spectrums, interoperating with existing customer SD-WAN and router infrastructures, and simplifying the entire network management lifecycle. Together, Cradlepoint and Novotech are committed to leading the evolution of 5G, and is both the first and best choice for customers in this space. For more information on our new 5G specialization please visit https://novotech.com/novotech-cradlepoint-5g-certified/. For more on Cradlepoint's 5G for Enterprise Branch Specialization and the Cradlepoint Partner Program, please visit https://cradlepoint.com/partners/for-partners/. About Novotech Novotech is a leading distributor of IoT products, services, and solutions. They work with world's most advanced IoT manufacturers. Established in 2001, Novotech has headquarters in Ottawa, Ontario, with offices throughout Canada and the United States. For more information visit www.novotech.com. About Cradlepoint Cradlepoint is a global leader in cloud-delivered LTE and 5G wireless network edge solutions for branch, mobile, and IoT networks. More than 22,000 businesses and government agencies around the world rely on Cradlepoint to keep critical sites, points of commerce, field forces, vehicles, and IoT devices always connected and protected. Founded in 2006, Cradlepoint is a privately held company headquartered in Boise, Idaho, with a development center in Silicon Valley and international offices in the UK and Australia. Media Contact Steve Shock 6132801900 [email protected] SOURCE Novotech Technologies ATLANTA, March 2, 2022 /PRNewswire/ -- While college may seem like a distant dream to families with children in Pre-K, the time to start saving for college is now. That's why, for the fifth year, the Path2College 529 Plan and the Department of Early Care and Learning (DECAL) have partnered to award four Georgia Pre-K students with money for college through the state's Path from Pre-K to College Sweepstakes. Four children across the state will win a $1,529 contribution to a Path2College 529 Plan. "Four lucky children will win money for their college savings, and we hope this will be the catalyst for many Georgia families to begin saving for college. Saving small amounts over time helps to build a solid financial foundation for higher education pursuits," said Georgia Student Finance Commission President Lynne Riley. Winners will be chosen in four regions of the stateMetro Atlanta, Southeast, North and South Georgia. The winner's Pre-K program will also win $1,529. "I hope families of children enrolled in Georgia's Pre-K Program will enter this year's Pre-K to College Sweepstakes sponsored by the Path2College 529 Plan," said DECAL Commissioner Amy M. Jacobs. "Pre-K is the beginning of a journey that will lead to a child's future job, career, and dreams. The winners of the sweepstakes can use the funds to help ensure that those dreams come true." Parents, legal guardians or grandparents with children enrolled in one of Georgia's Pre-K Programs for the 2021-2022 school year may submit entries online at www.path2college529.com/PreK between March 1-31, 2022. For more information about the Path2College 529 Plan or to open a college savings account, please visit www.Path2College529.com or call (877) 424-4377. To learn more about the Path2College 529 Plan, its investment objectives, tax benefits, risks, and costs please see the Plan Description at path2college529.com . Read it carefully. Investments in the Plan are neither insured nor guaranteed and there is the risk of investment loss. Check with your home state to learn if it offers tax or other benefits such as financial aid, scholarship funds or protection from creditors only available for investing in its own 529 plan. Consult your legal or tax professional for tax advice.If the funds aren't used for qualified higher education expenses, a 10% penalty tax on earnings (as well as federal and state income taxes) may apply. TIAA-CREF Tuition Financing, Inc. (TFI), Plan Manager. TIAA-CREF Individual & Institutional Services, LLC, Member FINRA, distributor and underwriter for the Path2College 529 Plan. SOURCE Path2College NEW DELHI, March 2, 2022 /PRNewswire/ -- According to the study undertaken by Astute Analytica the Global Oleochemicals Market was valued at US$ 27,294.7 Million in 2021 and is forecasted to reach US$ 39,849.2 Million by 2027. The market is expected to register a CAGR of 6.5% during the forecast period 2022-2027. In terms of volume, the market is anticipated to register 6.2% CAGR during the forecast period 2022-2027. Global Oleochemicals Market is driven by the growing adoption of oleochemicals in pharmaceutical and cosmetic industry, increasing demand for sustainable and biodegradable products and increasing government regulation regarding the use of environmentally friendly products. Request a Sample Report of Oleochemicals Market: https://www.astuteanalytica.com/request-sample/oleochemicals-market Oleochemical products are organic compound which are derived from naturally stirring oils and fats from animal and vegetable sources. The formation of basic oleochemicals substances including fatty acids, fatty alcohols, fatty amines, fatty acid methyl esters (FAME) and glycerol's are by several chemical and enzymatic reactions. These oleochemicals exhibit low toxicity, are biodegradable and environment-friendly, also they also act as an intermediary in the pharmaceutical, rubber, paint and lubricant industries. Fatty acids are the largest application for oleochemicals due to the high demand for applications in the pharmaceutical and food industries, waxes, lubricant, paints and coatings. Thus, oleochemicals market is expected to experience huge growth and is speeding up the industrial structure and transformation in the demand for oleochemicals in the marketplace. The increasing government regulation regarding the use of environmentally friendly products boosts the market demand over the forecast period. Moreover, the rising demand for oleochemicals in the pharmaceutical and cosmetic industry for manufacturing of various lotions, creams, baby care products, soaps and food additives and so on is also acting as a major growth-inducing factor. Also, increasing concerns regarding the effect of petrochemicals on the environment have prompted the use of bio-based and sustainable chemicals as their properties help build a product which is better for the environment and which can be manufactured from renewable raw materials. Furthermore, factors such as fluctuating prices of raw materials and inconsistent supply of key feedstock inhibit the market growth of oleochemicals market. Market Segmentation The fatty acids segment is estimated to have the highest market share during the forecast period Based on product type, the oleochemicals market is segmented into fatty acids, fatty acid methyl ester, fatty amine, glycerol esters, alkoxylates, fatty alcohols, glycerin, triacetin, specialty esters and others. The fatty acids segment dominated the market with 42.2% share in 2021. The segment is further estimated to project the significant growth of almost 6.2% during the forecast period. Factors such as the increase in demand from pharmaceutical & personal care products manufacturers to use oleochemicals in the form of fatty acids for manufacturing of soaps and detergents, lubricants, surfactants and pharmaceuticals are the few factors that strengthen the market share of fatty acids in the global market. The healthcare & pharmaceuticals segment is projected to grow at a fastest CAGR during the forecast period Based on application, the oleochemicals market is categorized into industrial, food & beverages, healthcare & pharmaceuticals, consumer goods, paints & inks, personal care & cosmetics, polymer & plastic adhesives, soap and detergents, textiles and others. The soap and detergents segment dominated the market as oleochemicals are frequently used by soaps & detergent to enhance the formation of foams in detergents for dishwashing and fabrics as they are attractive due to its biodegradability. The growth in the healthcare and pharmaceuticals segment is due to rising number of pharmaceutical manufacturers as its usage increased in medicines and thus forecasted to grow at the fastest CAGR. Direct segment dominated the Global Oleochemicals Market Share in 2021 Based on sales channel, the oleochemicals market is bifurcated into direct and indirect. The direct segment is estimated to have the highest market share during the forecast period. Direct sales channel is being utilized in order to have improved relationships with customers. Also, the rise in number of direct sales channel option in delivery of oleochemicals at end-use facilities further promote the demand for direct sales channel, which drives the market growth globally. The indirect segment is expected to grow at the fastest CAGR of 7.5% over the forecast period. Asia-Pacific is projected to have the largest market share in the Global Oleochemicals Market Asia Pacific is projected to have the maximum hold in the global oleochemicals market by 2027. Also, Asia-Pacific is estimated to grow at the fastest CAGR of 6.9% during the forecast period owing to the positive outlook of the pharmaceutical and personal care sectors in India, China and Indonesia. Moreover, with the rising preference for improving manufacturing sector along with the higher concentration of the market players are expected to further drive the market growth in the region. Europe is estimated to grow at a second-leading region in the global oleochemicals marketplace. Company Profile Emery Oleochemicals is a Malaysian oleochemicals producing company which specializes in bio-based polyols, bio-lubricants, esters, bio-pesticides, plastic additives, fatty acids, fatty alcohols, glycerin, natural-based chemicals, natural-based agrichemicals, sustainable chemicals, global specialty chemicals manufacturer, sustainability, glycerin manufacturer, specialty chemicals R&D, value-added chemicals, customizable specialty chemical solutions and high-quality specialty chemicals. The company primarily aim to pioneer proprietary technology, in-depth market insights and superior technical knowledge in order to provide customize products to specific application needs in the growing sectors. FGV Holding Berhad is a Malaysia based global agriculture and Agri-commodities company which produces oil-palm and rubber plantation products, oleochemicals and sugar products. The company mainly focuses on the plantation sector, logistics & support business (LSB) sector and sugar sector. It further focuses on product development in order to have a competitive edge in the market. The company has a track record of making value for their customers which helps them to expand their profitable businesses with world-class execution globally. It further focuses on product development in order to have a competitive edge in the market. FGV Holding Berhad hold a revenue of US$ 3,481.8 Million in 2020. based global agriculture and Agri-commodities company which produces oil-palm and rubber plantation products, oleochemicals and sugar products. The company mainly focuses on the plantation sector, logistics & support business (LSB) sector and sugar sector. It further focuses on product development in order to have a competitive edge in the market. The company has a track record of making value for their customers which helps them to expand their profitable businesses with world-class execution globally. It further focuses on product development in order to have a competitive edge in the market. FGV Holding Berhad hold a revenue of in 2020. IOI Corporation Berhad is a palm oil producer company that majorly deals in the oil business which includes the upstream plantation in both Indonesia and Malaysia . IOI Corporation Berhad mainly focuses on providing products and services of superior quality in order to satisfy customer needs without compromising on the quality of the product. Plantation segment holds the highest share in terms of business revenue. Request Free Sample Copy @ https://www.astuteanalytica.com/request-sample/oleochemicals-market Competitive Landscape Global Oleochemicals Market is highly competitive in order to increase their presence in the marketplace. Some of the key players operating in the global market include KLK Oleo, Kao Corporation, IOI Group, Wilmar International, Cargill, Oleon, Ecogreen Oleochemicals, Corbion N.V, Evonik Industries AG, Godrej Industries and Emery Oleochemicals among others. Segmentation Overview Global Oleochemicals Market is segmented based on product, application, sales channel and region. The industry trends in global oleochemicals market are sub-divided into different categories in order to get a holistic view of the global oleochemicals market. Following are the different segments of the Global Oleochemicals Market: By Product Segment of the Global Oleochemicals Market is Sub- Segmented into: Alkoxylates Fatty Acid Methyl Ester Fatty Amines Glycerol Esters Fatty Acids Fatty Alcohols Glycerine Triacetin Specialty Esters Others By Application Segment of the Global Oleochemicals Market is Sub- Segmented into: Consumer Goods Food & Beverages Healthcare & Pharmaceuticals Industrial Paints & Inks Personal Care & Cosmetics Polymer & Plastic Additives Soap and Detergents Textiles Others By Sales Channel Segment of the Global Oleochemicals Market is Sub- Segmented into: Direct Indirect By Region Type Segment of the Global Oleochemicals Market is Sub- Segmented into: North America U.S. Canada Mexico Europe Western Europe UK Germany France Italy Spain Rest of Western Europe Eastern Europe Poland Russia Rest of Eastern Europe Asia Pacific China India Japan Australia & New Zealand & ASEAN Rest of Asia Pacific Middle East & Africa (MEA) UAE Saudi Arabia South Africa Rest of MEA South America Argentina Brazil Rest of South America Directly Purchase a copy of report with TOC @ https://www.astuteanalytica.com/request-sample/oleochemicals-market For Additional Information OR Media Enquiry, Please Mail Us At: [email protected] About Astute Analytica Astute Analytica is a global analytics and advisory company which has built a solid reputation in a short period, thanks to the tangible outcomes we have delivered to our clients. We pride ourselves in generating unparalleled, in depth and uncannily accurate estimates and projections for our very demanding clients spread across different verticals. We have a long list of satisfied and repeat clients from a wide spectrum including technology, healthcare, chemicals, semiconductors, FMCG, and many more. These happy customers come to us from all across the Globe. They are able to make well calibrated decisions and leverage highly lucrative opportunities while surmounting the fierce challenges all because we analyze for them the complex business environment, segment wise existing and emerging possibilities, technology formations, growth estimates, and even the strategic choices available. In short, a complete package. All this is possible because we have a highly qualified, competent, and experienced team of professionals comprising of business analysts, economists, consultants, and technology experts. In our list of priorities, you-our patron-come at the top. You can be sure of best cost-effective, value-added package from us, should you decide to engage with us. Contact us: Aamir Beg BSI Business Park, H-15,Sector-63, Noida- 201301- India Phone: +1-888 429 6757 (US Toll Free); +91-0120- 4251598 (Rest of the World) Email: [email protected] Website: www.astuteanalytica.com Follow US: LinkedIn | Twitter SOURCE Astute Analytica The OneTouch Verio Flex meter earned the top position for its low price, as well as its affordable test strips. The meter's color range indicator sets it apart from competitors and requires a small sample of blood and offers a compact design. The OneTouch Verio Flex meter with ColorSure technology instantly shows people with diabetes when their blood glucose numbers are in or out of range so it's easier to know when to act, and together with the OneTouch Reveal mobile app one of the most downloaded diabetes apps globally1 helps them track and trend their blood sugar levels from their wireless device and easily share results with their healthcare team and loved ones. "Being rated the 2022 Best Standard Glucose Meter by Forbes Health highlights our focus on consumer experience, through ensuring our OneTouch Verio Flex meter is easy to use and affordable," said Brian Heald, Head of Product, LifeScan. "When the meter is connected with the OneTouch Reveal mobile app, there are even more insights to help people manage their diabetes. The app automatically detects and notifies patients of high and low patterns to help avoid them in the future." Forbes Health editorial content is based on thorough research and guidance from the Forbes Health Advisory Board. The Forbes Health editorial team rated 29 standard glucose meters outlined in the American Diabetes Association Consumer Guide, considering factors like cost, required blood sample size, special features, and smartphone compatibility to determine the best glucose meters of 2022. View the full list here: https://www.forbes.com/health/body/best-glucose-meters/#best-glucose-meters-award-2022-lifescan About the OneTouch brand made by LifeScan LifeScan is a global leader in blood glucose monitoring and digital health technology and has a vision to create a world without limits for people with diabetes and related conditions. More than 20 million people and their caregivers around the world count on LifeScan's OneTouch brand products to manage their diabetes. Together, LifeScan and OneTouch improve the quality of life for people with diabetes with products and digital platforms defined by simplicity, accuracy, and trust. www.LifeScan.com and www.OneTouch.com Treatment decisions should be based on the numerical result and healthcare professional recommendation. 1 Data on file. SOURCE Lifescan, Inc. DALLAS, March 2, 2022 /PRNewswire/ -- DeliverFund, a Dallas-based nonprofit intelligence organization that leverages cutting-edge technology in the fight against human trafficking in the United States and abroad, announced that it provided support to California's seventh annual anti-human trafficking enforcement operation that involved simultaneous human trafficking operations among local, state, and federal law enforcement agencies. The Los Angeles Regional Human Trafficking Task Force-led effort resulted in 413 arrests, with 30 suspected traffickers and exploiters arrested and 72 victims recovered, 7 of whom were minors. DeliverFund joined with more than 80 participating federal, state, local law enforcement agencies and task forces from across California in the week-long statewide effort from February 6-12, 2022, assisting law enforcement in multiple trafficking cases, numerous traveler cases, and numerous child exploitation cases. Declared "widely successful" by participating law enforcement, the primary goal of Operation "Reclaim and Rebuild" was to disrupt the human trafficking market in Southern California. In San Luis Obispo County, DeliverFund personnel directly assisted the San Luis Obispo County Anti-Human Trafficking Task Force, where investigators from multiple agencies and task forces joined together to better address the supply and demand side of the trafficking market as well as underage sexual exploitation market by finding traffickers, including pimps. This close collaboration accounted for 7% of the arrests directly related to trafficking from the statewide operation, and 2 female victims were also offered services. Over 100 escort ad contacts were conducted by the investigative team. "Our partnership with DeliverFund ensured that our tri-county operation was successful, meeting our objective to disrupt and dismantle trafficking activity and to rescue victims from their traffickers," said San Luis Obispo County District Attorney Dan Dow. "Our community is safer today because of the assistance that DeliverFund has provided to our enforcement team. Our local operation led to the arrest of three individuals who were attempting to purchase a 13-year-old child for sexual exploitation and six other arrests for trafficking-related crimes." "DeliverFund has the largest, analyst-curated human trafficking database in the United States, and we've reduced the time it takes to identify a victim and persons of interest from several weeks to mere hours," said DeliverFund Senior Targeting Analyst Shane Erickson. "We are using the same technology that human traffickers use to scale their business to tear down their networks in real time. This enables law enforcement to investigate and prosecute individuals at scale." By identifying and arresting their captors and seeking successful prosecutions, DeliverFund and law enforcement partners observed a total disruption of the human trafficking market from the central coast of California into Southern California during Operation Reclaim and Rebuild. Having that technology is critical, as the traffickers rely on the internet to seek opportunities to exploit the most vulnerable, particularly teenagers. By understanding where in cyberspace these criminals prowl, specially-trained cyber detectives were able to pose as vulnerable teenagers to interact with suspects on social media and intercept their exploitation attempts. The technology is also used to help investigators pinpoint physical locations where trafficking would likely take place, keeping enforcement efforts highly focused and efficient. "This highlights the benefit of the public-private partnership model in counter human trafficking operations," said DeliverFund Chief of Operations Michael Fullilove. "DeliverFund's methodology and technology allow us to rapidly identify human trafficking victims and map human trafficking networks. When combined with the expertise, professionalism and authorities of our law enforcement partners, we collectively have a greater impact freeing more victims, arresting more traffickers and dismantling more human trafficking networks." Reclaim and Rebuild also provides rescued victims with much-needed services through various Department of Children and Family Services Agencies and county and other non-governmental victim service providers. The Los Angeles Regional Human Trafficking Task Force oversaw the coordinated effort, emphasizing that, while major events like the Super Bowl increases sex trafficking activity, it's a year-round problem that needs and deserves day-in and day-out attention. About DeliverFund Dallas-based DeliverFund is a nonprofit, private intelligence organization that leverages cutting-edge technology and analytics to fight human trafficking globally. It's International Human Trafficking Analysis Center (iHTAC) serves as the centralized, all-source, shared knowledge and deconfliction platform for the collection, analysis, and dissemination of human trafficking intelligence. Founded by veterans from military special operations and the CIA, DeliverFund also trains law enforcement officers in the use of specialized technology and targeting methodologies to ensure they can assist victims of human trafficking and bring their traffickers to justice. SOURCE DeliverFund DUBLIN, March 1, 2022 /PRNewswire/ -- The "Ad Fraud Detection Tools Market Forecast to 2028 - COVID-19 Impact and Global Analysis By Type and End User" report has been added to ResearchAndMarkets.com's offering. The global ad fraud detection tools market is expected to grow from US$ 252.92 million in 2021 to US$ 762.89 million by 2028; it is estimated to grow at a CAGR of 17.1% during 2021-2028. Due to the growing fraudulent activities on advertisements, many companies adopt advertising fraud detection/prevention tools for several benefits, such as optimizing spending on the advertisement, proactive monitoring of campaigns, and maximizing campaign return on investment (ROI). As per observation, advertisers collectively lost US$ 42 billion on ad spend during 2019 due to fraudulent activities, a 21% increase from the previous year, i.e., 2018. It is also predicted that by 2023, the total amount of loss due to ad fraud will reach approximately US$ 100 billion. Thus, with an ad fraud detection solution/tools, companies can reclaim the spend that is rightfully their own, ensuring better, more accurate, and lucrative results from their campaigns. Similarly, integrating an ad fraud solution/tools with existing platforms for managing advertising campaigns makes it easier to monitor campaigns proactively. Using an integrated solution, marketers can quickly inspect advertising metrics and check ad fraud detection notifications simultaneously. For instance, Anura Script can collect information about visitors using JavaScript to immediately capture hundreds of data points about a visitor to determine if the visitor is real or fake. Also, better marketing campaigns and optimization on spending on an advertisement helps in maximizing advertising ROI for marketers. For instance, according to the Anura Solutions article of March 2021, past data from other Anura clients indicates that the average rate of ad fraud in affiliate marketing campaigns is about 40%. This means that for every US$ 1 million spent, affiliate marketing campaigns are losing US$ 400,000 with no return on investment. The time wasted on managing fake deals, potential chargebacks, brand reputation issues, and Telephone Consumer Protection Act (TCPA) compliance issues, and the cost of ad fraud can demolish a company's marketing ROI. Thus, an integrated ad fraud solution can identify fraud in actual time so the company can eliminate it immediately, which helps companies maximize advertising ROI since companies are not spending money on fraudulent impressions, clicks, or actions. Impact of COVID-19 Pandemic on Global Ad Fraud Detection Tools Market In 2020, with the COVID-19 outbreak scenario, the national lockdown of each and every country has increased the market span of digital technologies. More number of people are now using one or many digital platforms for several reasons, such as work from home (WFH), online transactions via their banks' digital apps, or via mobile/digital money wallets. And with this, advertising frauds are also increasing through just a single click. It had led to various revenue losses for the company. For instance, data from matchseries.com shows that global losses from ad fraud in 2020 reached a total of US$ 35 billion, while a Campaign Asia report published in December 2020, found that ad fraud is stealing 20% of the world's online ad spending. These figures help illustrate the extent of the problem that ad fraud creates for businesses, and the vast array of different ad platforms and options that are available to firms means the level of wastage can vary considerably. It is not only SMEs that fall victim to such significant amounts of fraudulent traffic, many of the world's biggest companies are also being affected. Therefore, ad fraud detection tools were also been adopted by more businesses. Thus, the global ad fraud detection tools market had positive growth in 2020. In 2021, however with the increased reliance on digital marketing and with a spike in spending and engagement on online video and connected TV(CTV), there has been a significant rise in fraudulent traffic since mid-October 2021, according to the latest data released by DoubleVerify. DoubleVerify identified two specific streaming fraud schemes (LeoTerra and CelloTerra) that have increased activity over this quarter Q4 in 2021. For instance, CelloTerra is a mobile fraud scheme that runs background ads and fakes CTV traffic which has tripled its false CTV devices and impressions in Q4 2021. Therefore, the need for ad fraud detection tools will be there in 2021 and in the coming years. Adjust GmbH; AppsFlyer Ltd.; Branch Metrics, Inc.; FraudScore; Interceptd (App Samurai Inc.); Machine Advertising Limited; Perform[cb], LLC; Scalarr Inc.; Singular Labs, Inc.; TrafficGuard Pty Ltd; and ADEX (Samoukale Enterprises Limited) are among the key companies operating in the ad fraud detection tools market. Reasons to Buy Save and reduce time carrying out entry-level research by identifying the growth, size, leading players and segments in the ad fraud detection tools market. Highlights key business priorities in order to assist companies to realign their business strategies. The key findings and recommendations highlight crucial progressive industry trends in the ad fraud detection tools market thereby allowing players across the value chain to develop effective long-term strategies. Develop/modify business expansion plans by using substantial growth offering developed and emerging markets. Scrutinize in-depth Global market trends and outlook coupled with the factors driving the market, as well as those hindering it. Enhance the decision-making process by understanding the strategies that underpin commercial interest with respect to client products, segmentation, pricing and distribution. Key Topics Covered: 1. Introduction 2. Key Takeaways 3. Research Methodology 4. Ad Fraud Detection Tools Market Landscape 4.1 Market Overview 4.2 PEST Analysis 4.2.1 North America 4.2.2 Europe 4.2.3 APAC 4.2.4 MEA 4.2.5 SAM 4.3 Ecosystem Analysis 4.4 Expert Opinion 5. Ad Fraud Detection Tools Market - Key Market Dynamics 5.1 Market Drivers 5.1.1 Surge in Digital Advertisement 5.1.2 Growth in Managing & Monitoring Advertising Campaigns 5.2 Market Restraints 5.2.1 Complexities in Using Ad Fraud Detection Tools 5.3 Market Opportunities 5.3.1 Rising Use of Ad Fraud Detection in SMEs 5.4 Future Trends 5.4.1 Increase in Use of AI and ML to boost Ad Fraud Detection 5.5 Impact Analysis of Drivers and Restraints 6. Ad Fraud Detection Tools Market - Global Analysis 6.1 Ad Fraud Detection Tools Market Global Overview 6.2 Ad Fraud Detection Tools Market - Global Revenue and Forecast to 2028 (US$ Million) 6.3 Market Positioning - Five Key Players 7. Ad Fraud Detection Tools Market Analysis - By Type 7.1 Overview 7.2 Ad Fraud Detection Tools Market Breakdown, By Type, 2020 and 2028 7.3 Website 7.3.1 Overview 7.3.2 Website: Ad Fraud Detection Tools Market Revenue and Forecast to 2028 (US$ Million) 7.4 Mobile 7.4.1 Overview 7.4.2 Mobile: Ad Fraud Detection Tools Market Revenue and Forecast to 2028 (US$ Million) 8. Ad Fraud Detection Tools Market Analysis - By End User 8.1 Overview 8.2 Ad Fraud Detection Tools Market Breakdown, By End User, 2020 and 2028 8.3 E Commerce 8.3.1 Overview 8.3.2 E Commerce: Ad Fraud Detection Tools Market Revenue and Forecast to 2028 (US$ Million) 8.4 Travel 8.4.1 Overview 8.4.2 Travel: Ad Fraud Detection Tools Market Revenue and Forecast to 2028 (US$ Million) 8.5 Finance 8.5.1 Overview 8.5.2 Finance: Ad Fraud Detection Tools Market Revenue and Forecast to 2028 (US$ Million) 8.6 Gaming 8.6.1 Overview 8.6.2 Gaming: Ad Fraud Detection Tools Market Revenue and Forecast to 2028 (US$ Million) 8.7 Others 8.7.1 Overview 8.7.2 Others: Ad Fraud Detection Tools Market Revenue and Forecast to 2028 (US$ Million) 9. Ad Fraud Detection Tools Market - Geographic Analysis 10. Ad Fraud Detection Tools Market- COVID-19 Impact Analysis 10.1 Overview 10.1 North America 10.2 Europe 10.3 APAC 10.4 MEA 10.5 SAM 11. Ad Fraud Detection Tools Market - Industry Landscape 11.1 Overview 11.2 Market Initiative 11.3 New Product Development 11.4 Merger and Acquisition 12. Company Profiles 12.1 AppsFlyer Ltd 12.1.1 Key Facts 12.1.2 Business Description 12.1.3 Products and Services 12.1.4 Financial Overview 12.1.5 SWOT Analysis 12.1.6 Key Developments 12.2 Adjust GmbH 12.2.1 Key Facts 12.2.2 Business Description 12.2.3 Products and Services 12.2.4 Financial Overview 12.2.5 SWOT Analysis 12.2.6 Key Developments 12.3 Branch Metrics, Inc 12.3.1 Key Facts 12.3.2 Business Description 12.3.3 Products and Services 12.3.4 Financial Overview 12.3.5 SWOT Analysis 12.3.6 Key Developments 12.4 FraudScore 12.4.1 Key Facts 12.4.2 Business Description 12.4.3 Products and Services 12.4.4 Financial Overview 12.4.5 SWOT Analysis 12.4.6 Key Developments 12.5 Interceptd (App Samurai Inc.) 12.5.1 Key Facts 12.5.2 Business Description 12.5.3 Products and Services 12.5.4 Financial Overview 12.5.5 SWOT Analysis 12.5.6 Key Developments 12.6 Machine Advertising Limited 12.6.1 Key Facts 12.6.2 Business Description 12.6.3 Products and Services 12.6.4 Financial Overview 12.6.5 SWOT Analysis 12.6.6 Key Developments 12.7 Perform[cb], LLC 12.7.1 Key Facts 12.7.2 Business Description 12.7.3 Products and Services 12.7.4 Financial Overview 12.7.5 SWOT Analysis 12.7.6 Key Developments 12.8 Scalarr Inc 12.8.1 Key Facts 12.8.2 Business Description 12.8.3 Products and Services 12.8.4 Financial Overview 12.8.5 SWOT Analysis 12.8.6 Key Developments 12.9 Singular Labs, Inc 12.9.1 Key Facts 12.9.2 Business Description 12.9.3 Products and Services 12.9.4 Financial Overview 12.9.5 SWOT Analysis 12.9.6 Key Developments 12.10 TrafficGuard Pty Ltd 12.10.1 Key Facts 12.10.2 Business Description 12.10.3 Products and Services 12.10.4 Financial Overview 12.10.5 SWOT Analysis 12.10.6 Key Developments 12.11 ADEX (Samoukale Enterprises Limited) 12.11.1 Key Facts 12.11.2 Business Description 12.11.3 Products and Services 12.11.4 Financial Overview 12.11.5 SWOT Analysis 12.11.6 Key Developments 13. Appendix For more information about this report visit https://www.researchandmarkets.com/r/cvodpg Media Contact: Research and Markets Laura Wood, Senior Manager [email protected] For E.S.T Office Hours Call +1-917-300-0470 For U.S./CAN Toll Free Call +1-800-526-8630 For GMT Office Hours Call +353-1-416-8900 U.S. Fax: 646-607-1904 Fax (outside U.S.): +353-1-481-1716 SOURCE Research and Markets DUBLIN, March 1, 2022 /PRNewswire/ -- The "Intravascular Ultrasound Devices Market Forecast to 2028 - COVID-19 Impact and Global Analysis By Type; Modality; End User" report has been added to ResearchAndMarkets.com's offering. The global intravascular ultrasound (IVUS) devices market is expected to grow from US$ 608.97 million in 2021 to US$ 1,012.37 million by 2028; it is estimated to grow at a CAGR of 7.5% from 2021 to 2028. Key factors such as the high prevalence of coronary artery diseases coupled with the increasing focus of numerous countries on building robust healthcare infrastructure will contribute to the expansion of the intravascular ultrasound devices market. However, product recalls and dearth of trained technicians restrains the market growth. Due to the COVID-19 pandemic, the demand for intravascular ultrasound (IVUS) devices has increased. According to the American College of Cardiology (ACC), around 40% of the COVID-19 recovered patients develop cardiovascular conditions. North America and Asia Pacific regions are the major contributors to the market growth, owing to a few factors such as the rise in the need of IVUS procedures during PCI procedures and increase in the adoption of IVUS systems in hospitals and diagnostic centers. Intravascular Ultrasound (IVUS) is a diagnostic method performed to get a real-time view of the inside of a coronary artery. IVUS is a catheter-based medical imaging methodology that provides medical professionals to check the level of stenosis, which is the degree of thickening or narrowing of an artery. This procedure delivers a visual image of the lumen or the inside of the artery, and the atheroma, which is the membrane or the cholesterol-loaded white blood cells, that is hidden inside the artery wall. Physicians usually image the lining of an artery using IVUS in preparation for or during an arthrectomy or angioplasty. IVUS is additionally used to view the results of the procedure and in the placement of stents. Intravascular ultrasound devices are equipped with medical imaging technologies. They use ultrasound transducers on the catheter tip to carry imaging of the interior of blood vessels. The utilization of intravascular ultrasound devices in various applications will bring immense growth prospects for the market players. The rising prevalence of cardiovascular diseases eventually boosts the growth of the intravascular ultrasound (IVUS) devices market. Reasons to Buy Save and reduce time carrying out entry-level research by identifying the growth, size, leading players and segments in the Intravascular Ultrasound (IVUS) Devices Market. Highlights key business priorities in order to assist companies to realign their business strategies. The key findings and recommendations highlight crucial progressive industry trends in the global Intravascular Ultrasound (IVUS) Devices market, thereby allowing players across the value chain to develop effective long-term strategies. Develop/modify business expansion plans by using substantial growth offering developed and emerging markets. Scrutinize in-depth global market trends and outlook coupled with the factors driving the market, as well as those hindering it. Enhance the decision-making process by understanding the strategies that underpin security interest with respect to client products, segmentation, pricing and distribution Key Topics Covered: 1. Introduction 2. Key Takeaways 3. Research Methodology 4. Intravascular Ultrasound (IVUS) Devices Market - Market Landscape 4.1 Overview 4.2 PEST Analysis 4.2.1 North America PEST Analysis 4.2.2 Europe PEST Analysis 4.2.3 Asia Pacific PEST Analysis 4.2.4 Middle East And Africa PEST Analysis 4.2.5 South And Central America PEST Analysis 4.3 Experts Opinion 5. Intravascular Ultrasound (IVUS) Devices Market- Key Market Dynamics 5.1 Market Drivers 5.1.1 Increase in Geriatric Population 5.1.2 Rise in Cardiovascular Diseases 5.2 Market Restraints 5.2.1 Product Recalls and Dearth of Trained Technicians 5.3 Market Opportunities 5.3.1 Increasing R&D Along with Improving Healthcare Infrastructure 5.4 Future Trends 5.4.1 Increasing Product Approvals and Launches 5.5 Impact Analysis 6. Intravascular Ultrasound (IVUS) Devices Market- Global Analysis 6.1 Global Intravascular Ultrasound (IVUS) Devices Market Revenue Forecast and Analysis 6.2 Global Intravascular Ultrasound (IVUS) Devices Market Revenue Forecast and Analysis 6.3 Market Positioning of Key Players 7. Intravascular Ultrasound (IVUS) Devices Market Analysis By Modality 7.1 Overview 7.2 Global Intravascular Ultrasound (IVUS) Device Market Share by Application 2021 & 2028 (%) 7.3 Virtual Histology IVUS 7.3.1 Overview 7.3.2 Virtual Histology IVUS Market Revenue and Forecast to 2028 (US$ Million) 7.4 iMap IVUS 7.4.1 Overview 7.4.2 iMap IVUS Market Revenue and Forecast to 2028 (US$ Million) 7.5 Integrated Backscatter IVUS 7.5.1 Overview 7.5.2 Integrated Backscatter IVUS Market Revenue and Forecast to 2028 (US$ Million) 8. Intravascular Ultrasound (IVUS) Devices Market Analysis By Product 8.1 Overview 8.2 Global Intravascular Ultrasound (IVUS) Device Market Share by Product 2021 & 2028 (%) 8.3 Equipment 8.3.1 Overview 8.3.2 Equipment Market Revenue and Forecast to 2028 (US$ Million) 8.4 Accessories 8.4.1 Overview 8.4.2 Accessories Market Revenue and Forecast to 2028 (US$ Million) 8.4.2.1 Catheters 8.4.2.1.1 Overview 8.4.2.1.2 Catheters Market Revenue and Forecast to 2028 (US$ Million) 8.4.2.2 Guidewires 8.4.2.2.1 Overview 8.4.2.2.2 Guidewires Market Revenue and Forecast to 2028 (US$ Million) 8.4.2.3 Others 8.4.2.3.1 Overview 8.4.2.3.2 Others Market Revenue and Forecast to 2028 (US$ Million) 9. Intravascular Ultrasound (IVUS) Devices Market Analysis By End User 9.1 Overview 9.2 Global Intravascular Ultrasound (IVUS) Device Market Share by End User 2021 & 2028 (%) 9.3 Hospitals and Clinics 9.3.1 Overview 9.3.2 Hospitals and Clinics Market Revenue and Forecast to 2028 (US$ Million) 9.4 Diagnostic Centers 9.4.1 Overview 9.4.2 Diagnostics Centers Market Revenue and Forecast to 2028 (US$ Million) 9.5 Academic and Research Centers 9.5.1 Overview 9.5.2 Academic and Research Centers Market Revenue and Forecast to 2028 (US$ Million) 10. Global Intravascular Ultrasound (IVUS) Devices Market - Geographic Analysis 11. Impact of COVID-19 Pandemic on Global Intravascular Ultrasound (IVUS) Devices Market 11.1 North America: Impact Assessment of COVID-19 Pandemic 11.2 Europe: Impact Assessment of COVID-19 Pandemic 11.3 Asia-Pacific: Impact Assessment of COVID-19 Pandemic 11.4 Middle East and Africa: Impact Assessment of COVID-19 Pandemic 11.5 South and Central America: Impact Assessment of COVID-19 Pandemic 12. Intravascular Ultrasound (IVUS) Devices Market-Industry Landscape 12.1 Overview 12.2 Growth Strategies in the Intravascular Ultrasound (IVUS) Devices Market (%) 12.3 Organic Developments 12.3.1 Overview 12.4 Inorganic Developments 12.4.1 Overview 13. Company Profiles 13.1 Koninklijke Philips N.V 13.1.1 Key Facts 13.1.2 Business Description 13.1.3 Products and Services 13.1.4 Financial Overview 13.1.5 SWOT Analysis 13.1.6 Key Developments 13.2 GE Healthcare 13.2.1 Key Facts 13.2.2 Business Description 13.2.3 Products and Services 13.2.4 Financial Overview 13.2.5 SWOT Analysis 13.2.6 Key Developments 13.3 Siemens AG 13.3.1 Key Facts 13.3.2 Business Description 13.3.3 Products and Services 13.3.4 Financial Overview 13.3.5 SWOT Analysis 13.3.6 Key Developments 13.4 Boston Scientific Corporation 13.4.1 Key Facts 13.4.2 Business Description 13.4.3 Products and Services 13.4.4 Financial Overview 13.4.5 SWOT Analysis 13.4.6 Key Developments 13.5 Infraredx, Inc 13.5.1 Key Facts 13.5.2 Business Description 13.5.3 Products and Services 13.5.4 Financial Overview 13.5.5 SWOT Analysis 13.5.6 Key Developments 13.6 Terumo Corporation 13.6.1 Key Facts 13.6.2 Business Description 13.6.3 Products and Services 13.6.4 Financial Overview 13.6.5 SWOT Analysis 13.6.6 Key Developments 13.7 Axle International 13.7.1 Key Facts 13.7.2 Business Description 13.7.3 Financial Overview 13.7.4 Products and Services 13.7.5 SWOT Analysis 13.7.6 Key Developments 13.8 Conavi Medical Inc 13.8.1 Key Facts 13.8.2 Business Description 13.8.3 Products and Services 13.8.4 Financial Overview 13.8.5 SWOT Analysis 13.8.6 Key Developments 13.9 Canon Medical Systems 13.9.1 Key Facts 13.9.2 Business Description 13.9.3 Products and Services 13.9.4 Financial Overview 13.9.5 SWOT Analysis 13.9.6 Key Developments 13.10 Abbott 13.10.1 Key Facts 13.10.2 Business Description 13.10.3 Products and Services 13.10.4 Financial Overview 13.10.5 SWOT Analysis 13.10.6 Key Developments 13.11 ACIST Medical System 13.11.1 Key Facts 13.11.2 Business Description 13.11.3 Products and Services 13.11.4 Financial Overview 13.11.5 SWOT Analysis 13.11.6 Key Developments 14. Appendix For more information about this report visit https://www.researchandmarkets.com/r/uegmjl Media Contact: Research and Markets Laura Wood, Senior Manager [email protected] For E.S.T Office Hours Call +1-917-300-0470 For U.S./CAN Toll Free Call +1-800-526-8630 For GMT Office Hours Call +353-1-416-8900 U.S. Fax: 646-607-1907 Fax (outside U.S.): +353-1-481-1716 SOURCE Research and Markets MEXICO CITY, March 2, 2022 /PRNewswire/ -- Globcash, one of Mexico's leading operators of pawn stores, will go public in mid-March in BIVA and open 300 new locations. The company has designed an ambitious growth and expansion plan that will take it to open hundreds of new stores throughout Mexico over the next 24 months. Moreover, the company intends to increase its size and capabilities inorganically via M&A operations in both the United States and Mexico. This is the message that Globcash's CEO, Roberto Aramburo, and his management team will convey to members of the investment community next Thursday, in a stock market event which will be broadcast live from Mexico City. Globcash's Initial Public Offering (IPO) - under the ticker GLOBC (GLOBC: MM) - represents a milestone for the Mexican stock market, which has not seen a bell ring for almost two years. "We are proud to be the first Mexican company to go public in years. We are committed to the profitability of our shareholders, to the society that welcomes us, and to the excellence I learned from our founder and president, Mr. Jose Trinidad Aramburo Sarabia," explained Roberto Aramburo. He has led the institution since 2015 and guided it through a massive process of expansion. Globcash has been growing steadily over the past ten years, including 2020, when the COVID-19 pandemic barely impacted it. As of September 2021, it had posted total revenues of over 33,4 million USD, with an EBITDA of over 13 percent, or 4,2 million. The company, founded in 1985, operates 194 pawn stores in Mexico under the brand Casa Mazatlan. It is currently present in the Mexican states of Sonora, Sinaloa, Durango, San Luis Potosi, Veracruz, Baja California Sur, Nayarit, Michoacan, Oaxaca, Tabasco, Yucatan, Quintana Roo, Campeche and Chiapas. It also operates 22 locations in Guatemala, where it has been present since 2008. In addition, it plans to expand in the southern United States, and specifically Arizona and Texas. Globcash's business is robust in a defensive sector with limited risk exposure. Its model allows the company to offer non-bank loans without requiring credit history or proof of income from its customers. Clients deposit physical collateral in exchange for the loan, which is granted on preferential terms and with flexible repayment terms. Thirty percent of its inventory, which exceeds 2,4 million USD, comprises gold and silver reserves, the leading financial instruments of refuge in times of economic contraction. More than 13 million people resort to pawning as one of their main financing options in Mexico. Glocash provides a speedy and convenient source of financial solutions, especially for unbanked, underbanked, or credit-challenged customers. Globcash, through Casa Mazatlan, has a 2.9 percent share and is one of the top three private players in the Mexican pawn market. The company comes to BIVA with a solid financial position, including zero exposure to financial debt and steady cash flow generation. The company has never resorted to bank loans or debt issuance in its history. Moreover, Globcash is heavily investing in developing a mighty and significant technological presence and is working on digitizing the pawn industry. "We want to help bankarise Mexico's underbanked population. For almost 40 years, we have helped finance the needs of the country's rural communities and smaller urban centers," Aramburo explained. "We are proud of the work we do to support Mexico's entrepreneurs outside major cities, and we stand strong with our people," he said. SOURCE Globcash CAMBRIDGE, Mass., March 2, 2022 /PRNewswire/ -- Peak Support is excited to announce the hire of its first Chief People Officer, Brenda Poquette. Brenda is bringing over 25 years of Human Resource experience to Peak Support, with most of these years spent within the global BPO space. Prior to her role at Peak Support, Brenda served as Vice President of Human Resources at Startek, a customer service outsourcing organization. Before her time at Startek, Brenda served as Vice President of Human Resources at Support.com, a customer and technical support solutions company, for 7 years. Brenda, also, was Executive Director of Human Resources, Talent and Training Development at Brake Masters Corporation. "Brenda is an exceptional leader who brings deep Human Resources expertise to Peak Support," says Jonathan Steiman, Peak Support's founder and CEO. "We couldn't have found a better fit. She will be able to jump in immediately and build us the HR operation we need for our next phase of growth." "As an individual I have an opportunity to make a difference every day. Joining a group of individuals who believe in a people centric organization allows me to deliver on this opportunity," Brenda said. "I am excited to join a team who believes in themselves, who excel in what they do, and who ultimately care about the people they support." "In every conversation with Brenda, it is clear that she puts people first in everything she does," says Hannah Steiman, Chief Operating Officer at Peak Support. "That, combined with her deep industry experience, makes her a perfect fit for Peak Support. We are absolutely delighted to have her on the team." Based in Cambridge, Massachusetts, Peak Support is a rapidly growing services provider dedicated to providing exceptional support to high-growth companies. We offer a wide array of services including customer support, sales operations, and business process outsourcing. Our global delivery model enables us to provide service from the Philippines and the U.S. We hire the best agents in the business and we are relentlessly dedicated to helping our clients succeed. In the last year, Peak Support surpassed 1,000 employees across the U.S and the Philippines and reached number 1,035 on the Inc. 5,000 list. Peak Support has been certified as a Great Place to Work and was recognized as a Top Global BPO by Clutch. Company Name: Peak Support Address: 678 Massachusetts Ave #901 City: Cambridge State: MA Zip Code: 02139 Phone Number: (866) 620-5538 Email: [email protected] SOURCE Peak Support CHICAGO, March 2, 2022 /PRNewswire/ -- Disruption Potential opportunity worth USD 119 Bn is expected to open up in Connected Mobility and Telematics value chain, owing to the developments in autopilot, data monetization, government regulations, and aftermarket channels. As per the sources, >90% of cars will be connected by 2026, creating huge revenue opportunities for OEMs, ISPs, TSPs, software developers, etc. With advanced ADAS, connectivity, the number of ECUs is expected to grow to 150-200. This would create opportunities for hardware suppliers, semiconductor manufacturers. According to MarketsandMarkets analysis, Adoption of electrification and telematics and stringent emission standards is expected to pave the way for connected vehicles and Mobility-as-a-Service in the coming years. Connected mobility and telematics industry is expected to showcase a revenue of USD 16 -18 Bn by 2025, ~60% of which is expected to come from light duty vehicles. Connected car market is estimated to showcase a potential of USD 53 -55 Bn by 2026, driven by safety regulatory standards, autonomous vehicles, and emergence of 5g infrastructure, etc. Insurance and diagnostics services are expected to hold significant potential in the connected car market. Unknowns & Adjacencies Currently, businesses have low access to primary intelligence to clarify some unknowns and adjacencies in these opportunity areas What will be the role of connected infrastructure in electric and autonomous cars development? How connected cars would impact the demand for sensors & electronics - cameras, radars, LiDAR's, ECUs? How connectivity in cars would drive the adoption of telematics insurance/UBI in the coming years? How growing electrification in off-highway industry will impact the adoption of connectivity in the off-highway industry? What potential does data monetization market hold as the penetration of connected cars is expected to reach more than 90% globally by 2026? How developments in high-speed trains create revenue pockets for connected and telematics service providers in railway industry? Some of the growth problems encountered by connected mobility and telematics companies are: Customer prioritization and assessing unmet needs: What are the disruptions in our clients' businesses? How can we support them for our own growth? Who are the most potential customers expected to be benefitted going forward- OEMs, ISPs, TSPs, data centers, etc.? What are the key unmet needs of customers? Who are the key stakeholders in different settings? Which new solutions/services that are expected to witness higher adoption in the coming years? Where to play: Which applications areas should we focus on? Should it be on-/off- highway/locomotives etc.? Which regions should we place our bets on? Should we continue with developed countries or do developing countries offer more growth opportunities? Building a compelling Right-to-Win (RTW): For M&A, which are the right targets for us? Should we target OEM or aftermarket platforms for connected car solutions/services? Should we enter new markets directly or through partners? How can we differentiate from top players? What is their right-to-win vs ours? Key uncertainties/perspectives which industry leaders seek answers to: For connected mobility and telematics companies: Which are the most promising telematics services in on- & off-highway segments in the coming years? What will be the impact of increasing investments in high-speed rails on adopting telematics in railways? How would automotive telematics impact the insurance industry for estimating insurance premiums and analyzing driver behavior? Why is fleet management gaining popularity among heavy-duty/off-duty vehicles over light-duty vehicles? Which telematics services would showcase the highest demand in L4/L5 autonomous vehicles? What would be the acceptance of services like EV charging station maps, remote diagnostics, etc., in the future? For Companies in Adjacent markets: How would the growing connected car market impact the V2X market in the coming years? How will the insurance services market see a successive increase with the growth of MaaS as more vehicles will be integrated and connected in the near future? How the automotive sensors market value will be impacted by the increasing adoption of automation/connectivity in automobiles? How will connected car software development companies get benefitted from increasing penetration of connected cars globally? How will data centers /OEMs manage the huge amount of data generated by connected cars for storage/analysis/refinement etc.? How will data centers /OEMs manage the huge amount of data generated by connected cars for storage/analysis/refinement etc.? Therefore, MarketsandMarkets research and analysis focuses on high growth and niche markets, which will become ~80% of the revenues of the automotive players in the next 5-6 years. Register for Whitepaper: https://www.marketsandmarkets.com/practices/pdfdownload.asp?p=connected-mobility-telematics About MarketsandMarkets MarketsandMarkets provides quantified B2B research on 30,000 high growth niche opportunities/threats which will impact 70% to 80% of worldwide companies' revenues. Currently servicing 7500 customers worldwide including 80% of global Fortune 1000 companies as clients. Almost 75,000 top officers across eight industries worldwide approach MarketsandMarkets for their painpoints around revenues decisions. Our 850 fulltime analyst and SMEs at MarketsandMarkets are tracking global high growth markets following the "Growth Engagement Model GEM". The GEM aims at proactive collaboration with the clients to identify new opportunities, identify most important customers, write "Attack, avoid and defend" strategies, identify sources of incremental revenues for both the company and its competitors. MarketsandMarkets now coming up with 1,500 MicroQuadrants (Positioning top players across leaders, emerging companies, innovators, strategic players) annually in high growth emerging segments. MarketsandMarkets is determined to benefit more than 10,000 companies this year for their revenue planning and help them take their innovations/disruptions early to the market by providing them research ahead of the curve. MarketsandMarkets's flagship competitive intelligence and market research platform, "Knowledge Store" connects over 200,000 markets and entire value chains for deeper understanding of the unmet insights along with market sizing and forecasts of niche markets. Contact: Mr. Aashish Mehra MarketsandMarkets INC. 630 Dundee Road Suite 430 Northbrook, IL 60062 USA: +1-888-600-6441 Email: [email protected] SOURCE MarketsandMarkets CHICAGO, March 2, 2022 /PRNewswire/ -- Lab Automation Industry Disruptions Potential opportunity worth USD 2.5 Bn is expected to open up in lab automation space by 2027, owing to the open-source device placements and vendor neutral software tools, which are poised to be the next big trend. As per the sources, >90% of cars will be connected by 2026, creating huge revenue opportunities for OEMs, ISPs, TSPs, software developers, etc. With advanced ADAS, connectivity, the number of ECUs is expected to grow to 150-200. This would create opportunities for hardware suppliers, semiconductor manufacturers. According to MarketsandMarkets analysis, There is ~USD 6.3 Bn worth of incremental revenue expected within the lab automation space by 2027, with lab workstations, information management SOLUTIONS, e-notebooks, and robotics being the key drivers. worth of incremental revenue expected within the lab automation space by 2027, with lab workstations, information management SOLUTIONS, e-notebooks, and robotics being the key drivers. Lab automation market is estimated to grow at a healthy CAGR of ~6% in the coming 5 years, driven by continued integration & digitalization of lab workflow, and stringent pharma quality regulations. Adjacent end-use markets hold a potential of over USD 10 Bn in automated lab solutions, with clinical research, clinical diagnostics, and omics research being the major contributors. Unknowns & Adjacencies Currently, businesses have low access to primary intelligence to clarify some unknowns and adjacencies in these opportunity areas Adoption levels of automation in NGS & PCR workflow is low. Currently it ranges between 30-40% globally, however, in developed countries it is approaching 50%. As automation reduces TAT, helps in minimization of errors and provides reproducible results, it is largely used in clinical testing applications. Bioinformatics, AI, & other digital tools are largely used in clinical settings vs research as former demands data analysis for clinical decision making. Increasing focus on generic products, biosimilars & biologics to drive greater demand for clinical research & OMICS researchers. Adjacent markets such as high throughput screening, AI based screening, and integrated robotic solutions to provide lucrative growth opportunities owing to current lag between technology evolution curve vs data analysis & storage demand among key customers. Some of the growth problems encountered by robotics & digital solution providers are: Customer prioritization and assessing unmet needs: What are the disruptions in our clients' businesses? How can we support them for our own growth? Who are the most potential customers going forward? Should we prioritize industrial labs & CROs over diagnostic & research labs or contract testing labs? What are the key unmet needs of customers/non-customers? Who are the key stakeholders in different technology portfolio? Do vendor selection criteria differ by these? Which new product features should be added to the existing tools? Where to play: Which applications areas should we focus on? Should it be OMICS research, drug discovery, clinical diagnostics, or others? Which regions should we place our bets on? Should we continue with developed markets or do developing geos offer more growth opportunities? Building a compelling Right-to-Win (RTW): For M&A, which are the right targets for us? Should we target robotics companies or AI/digital solution providers? Should we enter new markets directly or through partners? How can we differentiate with respect to competition? What is their right-to-win vs ours? Key uncertainties/perspectives which industry leaders seek answers to: For technology companies: What is the major technology/product segments driving adoption of automated solutions (Robotics, automation, etc.) in lab space? What are the prominent product segments (traditional or standalone) that is poised to become obsolete in the next 5 years? Can robotic workflow become affordable for routine manufacturing & diagnostics, or will it continue to be used in OMICS research & epidemiology research alone? What is the level of automation & workflow integration that would be desirable among industrial & academic researchers by end of decade? How can industrial customers optimize manufacturing processes to be more agile while achieving complete automation with minimum manual intervention? What regulatory policies can help strategize and achieve volumetric growth? How can institutionalized collaboration be leveraged in emerging markets to achieve the same? What can be more cost-effective strategies to support technology upgradation or infrastructure modernization among cost-sensitive customers? For Companies in digital solution providers: What are the regulations surrounding data privacy and security? What are current unmet data/digital needs w.r.t automated or robotics or technology integration portfolio being used by key customers? Is brand exclusivity important for digital tools or are users open to adopt brand or technology neutral digital tools? What are the prominent customer groups those could be prioritized for short-term revenue growth? Which machine learning approaches can be used to address data limitations so that AI-based algorithms and AR/VR be used for drug discovery and clinical research? How are companies handling unmet customer needs w.r.t rapid data management needs w.r.t to current data analysis & archiving capabilities? When can a 100% AI integration into genomics or clinical research be expected? What will be the impact of automation on genomics and drug discovery market? Therefore, MarketsandMarkets research and analysis focuses on high growth and niche markets, such as robotics, automated workstations, software tools, and related markets, which will become ~80% of the revenues of the players in the lab automation ecosystem over the next 5-6 years. Download PDF Now to get more insights into Lab Automation Industry Disruptions About MarketsandMarkets MarketsandMarkets provides quantified B2B research on 30,000 high growth niche opportunities/threats which will impact 70% to 80% of worldwide companies' revenues. Currently servicing 7500 customers worldwide including 80% of global Fortune 1000 companies as clients. Almost 75,000 top officers across eight industries worldwide approach MarketsandMarkets for their painpoints around revenues decisions. Our 850 fulltime analyst and SMEs at MarketsandMarkets are tracking global high growth markets following the "Growth Engagement Model GEM". The GEM aims at proactive collaboration with the clients to identify new opportunities, identify most important customers, write "Attack, avoid and defend" strategies, identify sources of incremental revenues for both the company and its competitors. MarketsandMarkets now coming up with 1,500 MicroQuadrants (Positioning top players across leaders, emerging companies, innovators, strategic players) annually in high growth emerging segments. MarketsandMarkets is determined to benefit more than 10,000 companies this year for their revenue planning and help them take their innovations/disruptions early to the market by providing them research ahead of the curve. MarketsandMarkets's flagship competitive intelligence and market research platform, "Knowledge Store" connects over 200,000 markets and entire value chains for deeper understanding of the unmet insights along with market sizing and forecasts of niche markets. Contact: Mr. Aashish Mehra MarketsandMarkets INC. 630 Dundee Road Suite 430 Northbrook, IL 60062 USA: +1-888-600-6441 Email: [email protected] SOURCE MarketsandMarkets WILLIAMSPORT, Md., March 2, 2022 /PRNewswire/ -- Potomac Edison, a FirstEnergy Corp. (NYSE: FE) subsidiary, is urging residential customers experiencing financial hardship to contact the company as soon as possible to establish an affordable payment arrangement or obtain assistance before the winter utility disconnection rules are lifted and shut-offs for nonpayment resume beginning March 31. In a heartfelt message to customers, FirstEnergy employees are speaking out about personal experiences that fuel their passion to help customers who may find themselves seeking financial assistance for the first time. The video, "We're Customers Just Like You" features four FirstEnergy Customer Service and Human Services employees who want customers to know they are dedicated to helping them get through challenging times. "Many of our customers are unaware of the various utility bill assistance programs available to them, which often prevents them from taking advantage of income-based financial assistance for which they are eligible," said Michelle Henry, senior vice president of Customer Experience at FirstEnergy. "Our dedicated Customer Service team is eager to walk customers through this process, and our hope is that customers will hear our employees' stories and feel more comfortable reaching out to us for assistance." Assistance to qualifying Potomac Edison customers is available through the following programs: The Community Energy Fund: A needs-based program aiding qualifying residential customers who need emergency help paying their electric bill, while funds are available. The company matches donations from customers 50 cents on each dollar, up to the program limits. The distribution of funds is administered by local administering agencies in Potomac Edison's service territory, including: A needs-based program aiding qualifying residential customers who need emergency help paying their electric bill, while funds are available. The company matches donations from customers 50 cents on each dollar, up to the program limits. The distribution of funds is administered by local administering agencies in Potomac Edison's service territory, including: Allegany County Department of Social Services at 301-784-7000 Religious Coalition of Emergency Human Need at 301-631-2670 Human Service Program of Carroll County , Inc. at 410-857-2999 , Inc. at 410-857-2999 Garrett County Community Action Committee, Inc. at 301-334-9431 The Maryland Energy Assistance Program (MEAP): A federally funded program administered by the Department of Human Services and the Office of Home Energy Programs. MEAP provides financial assistance with home heating bills. Payments are made to the utility on the customer's behalf. A federally funded program administered by the Department of Human Services and the Office of Home Energy Programs. MEAP provides financial assistance with home heating bills. Payments are made to the utility on the customer's behalf. The Electric Universal Service Program (EUSP): A state-funded program administered by the Department of Human Services and the Office of Home Energy Programs that helps income-eligible electric customers pay their monthly electric bills and/or past-due bills. A state-funded program administered by the Department of Human Services and the Office of Home Energy Programs that helps income-eligible electric customers pay their monthly electric bills and/or past-due bills. The Utility Service Protection Program (USPP): A federally sponsored program administered by the Department of Human Services and the Office of Home Energy Programs. This program is designed to protect income-eligible families from utility turn-offs during the heating season. To apply for MEAP, EUSP or USPP, visit mydhrbenefits.dhr.state.md.us, call the Maryland Department of Human Services at 1-800-332-6347, or visit a local administering agency. A copy of your recent Potomac Edison electric bill will be needed when applying. Potomac Edison residential customers also can manage their electric bills through the Average Payment Plan (APP). With APP, customers can make consistent monthly payments to avoid seasonal highs and lows in their electric bills. In addition to payment options, Potomac Edison offers a Medical Certification program. Disconnection of electric service resulting from overdue bills can be delayed up to 30 days if it is determined that the loss of electric service would be especially dangerous to the health of a permanent member of a customer's household. An appropriate health care professional must complete and sign a Medical Certification Form for the eligible customer. Potomac Edison also offers a program called Third Party Notification where a relative, friend, clergy or social service agency can be notified along with the customer if electric service is about to be disconnected. The third party is not obligated to pay the overdue bills but can help make payment arrangements for the customer who might have difficulty paying their bill. For more information about any of these programs, including how to qualify, visit firstenergycorp.com/billassist and click on "Search Assistance Programs." Potomac Edison's Customer Service team is also available to answer questions at 800-686-0011, Monday through Friday from 8 a.m. to 6 p.m. Potomac Edison serves about 257,000 customers in seven Maryland counties. Follow Potomac Edison at www.potomacedison.com, on Twitter @PotomacEdison, and on Facebook at www.facebook.com/PotomacEdison. FirstEnergy is dedicated to integrity, safety, reliability and operational excellence. Its 10 electric distribution companies form one of the nation's largest investor-owned electric systems, serving customers in Ohio, Pennsylvania, New Jersey, West Virginia, Maryland and New York. The company's transmission subsidiaries operate approximately 24,000 miles of transmission lines that connect the Midwest and Mid-Atlantic regions. Follow FirstEnergy online at www.firstenergycorp.com. Follow FirstEnergy on Twitter @FirstEnergyCorp. SOURCE FirstEnergy Corp. Press Release March 2, 2022 De Lima: Alleged involvement of cops in cases of missing sabungeros warrants public attention, serious investigation Re-electionist Senator Leila M. de Lima stressed that the alleged involvement of police personnel in the case of missing sabungeros, which remains unsolved, requires public attention and a serious investigation. De Lima, a social justice and human rights champion, maintained that the ballooning number of abducted or missing sabungeros should be addressed and acted upon swiftly, considering that authorities are being dragged into the issue. "Bakit hindi na tayo nagulat na inuugnay na naman ang mga tiwaling pulis sa pagkawala nitong mga sabungero?" she asked. "These series of disappearance of people involved in gambling warrants public attention and a serious investigation, especially now that there are allegations of state forces being involved (again)," she added. Alias Berto, a sabungero who wished to hide his identity for now, shared in a radio interview that he and his fellow sabungeros were made to choose between "kulong o patay" by the supposed members of PNP Provincial Intelligence Branch in Laguna who wrongly accused them of selling the match in a derby in Sta. Cruz last 2020. He recalled that the armed cops also arrested his financer and confiscated the latter's jewelries and money. "Inilabas nila kami, sabi po sa amin ano ba gusto nyo? Kayo papipiliin namin: kulong o patay? Siyempre sa amin po, kahit sinong tao pipiliin po ang kulong. Akala ko po ang ikakaso lang sa amin ay illegal gambling, kinasuhan po kami ng drugs," Berto claimed. ' Citing records from the Directorate for Investigation and Detective Management, the PNP reportedly said its ongoing investigation has recorded seven complaints against police personnel linked to e-sabong activities from January 1 to February 21 this year. According to PNP, police officers have been dismissed or suspended as administrative complaints have been filed against them following involvement on the issue. The lady Senator from Bicol said there is a possibility that such practice, which is reminiscent of the "nanlaban" narrative of the PNP, has been happening for ages, but was not given enough attention. "We have seen this before. Too many murderous times. Poor drug suspects. Activists. "Nanlaban." Summarily executed. By police officers or their agents. This is the result of the impunity and violence propagated by this sindikato regime which has no regard for human life and the rule of law," she said. As long as impunity remains a state policy, De Lima said that summary killings, forced disappearances, abductions, and crimes that should have long been buried in the darkest period in Philippine history but were resurrected by the Duterte regime, "will continue to haunt us." "Hindi tayo dapat masanay na lang sa mga ganitong pangyayari. Maging mapagbantay tayo hangga't mapanagot ang mga salarin. We do not want this to drag on in the next six years," she added. RICHMOND,Va., March 2, 2022 /PRNewswire/ -- ChildFund applauds President Biden and his administration for highlighting in last night's state of the union address the importance of tech platform accountability for keeping children and youth safe online. In his speech, President Biden outlined his Unity Agenda, which included tackling the mental health crisis, particularly among children. He acknowledged the toll that the COVID-19 pandemic has had on young people "whose lives and education [have been] turned upside down," but noted that children were struggling before the pandemic with "bullying, violence, trauma and the harms of social media." He then recognized Facebook whistleblower Francis Haugen, who was in attendance and was given a standing ovation for her courage in standing up to Big Tech. Biden stated, "We must hold social media platforms accountable for the national experiment they are conducting on our children for profit. It's time to strengthen privacy protections, ban targeted advertising to children, and demand tech companies stop collecting personal data on our children." The administration released a detailed fact sheet ahead of the address to outline further details of its strategy to keep children safe online, including " prioritizing safety by design standards and practices for online platforms, products, and services." The fact sheet also states, "The President believes not only that we should have far stronger protections for children's data and privacy, but that the platforms and other interactive digital service providers should be required to prioritize and ensure the health, safety and well-being of children and young people above profit and revenue in the design of their products and services." ChildFund continues to lead the fight against the online sexual exploitation and abuse of children (OSEAC). Each day, more than 175,000 children go online for the first time, and reports of online sexual exploitation and violence have skyrocketed in the last few years. This crisis has been further exacerbated by the pandemic that forced millions of the world's children online for education and social interaction during lockdown and ongoing school closures. In 2021, there were 29.3 million reports of online child sexual abuse materials, including nearly 85 million videos, files and images. Children are online more and with less supervision than ever, and it is imperative that tech companies take responsibilitiy for the platforms they have created, which are designed to be addictive and, in many cases, heighten online dangers from cyberbullying and harassment to child sexual exploitation and trafficking. The U.S. lags behind other countries such as the U.K. and Australia, which have already instituted strict data and privacy restrictions and strong legislation around internet safety. The time is now for decisive action and leadership in the fight against OSEAC. ChildFund's senior director for External Engagement, Erin Kennedy, says, "We welcome the commitment from President Biden last night. The online abuse of children has been ignored for far too long. When young people learn how to drive, we support them with instructions and adult-supervised practice to learn how to safely navigate a vehicle. But when children go online, we have no such guardrails. Illegal and exploitative images that show or encourage child sexual abuse continue to traumatize child victims and leave parents scared and confused. I hope this is the start of a national commitment to raise awareness about OSEAC and hold the technology companies and platforms enabling this horrific abuse accountable." Kennedy stresses that while regulation is one side of the solution, it is also important to work with parents, children, teachers and communities to raise awareness of this crime in all spaces where children and caregivers gather. These words from the president and the outlined agenda are a positive step in the right direction toward the ultimate goal of ending OSEAC for good. The U.S. Congress should follow the lead of the president to center children's health and safety online. ChildFund fully supports these and any future measures the administration takes to keep children safe online. Children all over the world have been victimized and are suffering inaction can no longer be tolerated. For more information about OSEAC and how ChildFund is responding to this threat, visit https://www.childfund.org/oseac/. About ChildFund Founded in 1938, ChildFund works throughout Asia, Africa and the Americas including the United States to connect children with what they need to grow up healthy, educated, skilled and safe, no matter where they are. Last year, we reached 16.2 million children and family members in 24 countries. About 200,000 Americans support our work by sponsoring individual children or investing in ChildFund programs. Find out more at www.ChildFund.org. SOURCE ChildFund International WASHINGTON, March 2, 2022 /PRNewswire/ -- The March 4 "Transcending the Israel Lobby at Home & Abroad" conference at the National Press Club is sponsored by the American Education Trust, publisher of the Washington Report on Middle East Affairs and the Institute for Research: Middle Eastern Policy (IRmep). The March 4, 2022 program will be: 8:00 AM Registration and Middle East Books & More opens in Holeman lounge. 9:00 AM Dale Sprusansky: Conference organizer welcoming remarks in the ballroom. Stream to Zoom registered participants begins. 9:05 AM Speech by Dr. Walter L. Hixson: Why are we here today? 9:20 AM Keynote by Dr. Hanan Ashrawi: What, if any, policies have changed since the Trump administration, and new hope for Palestine's future. 10:10 AM Morning break. 10:40 AM Speech by Paul Noursi: The victorious battle for the First Amendment against Virginia's anti-boycott bill (HB 1161). 11:00 AM Presentation by Jeanne Trabulsi: The fight against Israeli propaganda in Virginia textbooks and an Israeli human rights violator. 11:45 AM Presentation by Edward Ahmed Mitchell: How American groups working for human rights can take measures against joint Israel/lobby espionage and infiltration operations. 12:30 PM Lunch. 1:15 PM Presentation by Rev. Don Wagner: The widespread influence of Christian Zionism and growing backlash inside American churches. 2:00 PM Keynote Gideon Levy: The nature of democracy and human rights in Israel. 2:50 PM Speech by John Kiriakou: Israel's negative, disproportionate and widespread influence on the U.S. national security state. 3:20 PM Afternoon break. 3:40 PM Speech by Radhika Sainath: The Israel lobby's ongoing attacks on freedom of speech across the U.S. and successful legal challenges. 4:30 PM Panel presentation by Sut Jhally: Whether American news organizations are getting better or worse in the quality, balance and accuracy of their Middle East reporting. Roger Waters: The positive impact of artist boycotts targeting Israel and how to educate fans. 5:30 PM Closing Remarks: Delinda Hanley of the Washington Report on Middle East Affairs, and Grant F. Smith of IRmep, 5:30-7 PM Networking Reception. For information, visit IsraelLobbyCon.org . Tickets for the conference are available at Eventbrite . Tell your state or federal representative to request a free ticket . Students may apply for free admission . News media can apply for credentials . SOURCE Institute for Research: Middle Eastern Policy CHICAGO, March 2, 2022 /PRNewswire/ -- According to the new research report, the "Radar Systems Market by Application, Platform (Air, Marine, Unmanned, Land, Space), Frequency Band, Type, Component, Range, Dimension, Technology, & Region (North America, Europe, Asia Pacific, Middle East & Africa and Latin America) - Forecast to 2026", published by MarketsandMarkets, the market is estimated to be USD 32.5 billion in 2021 and is projected to reach USD 41.0 billion by 2026, at a CAGR of 4.8% from 2021 to 2026. Growth of this market can be attributed to the rise in trade of radar systems, developments in the defense sector, and national security sector. Ask for PDF Brochure: https://www.marketsandmarkets.com/pdfdownloadNew.asp?id=207283650 Major players in the radar systems market include SAAB AB (Sweden), Raytheon Technologies (US), Mitsubishi Electric (Japan), Thales Group (France), Northrop Grumman Corp. (US), Aselsan AS (Turkey), and Lockheed Martin (US). Other key players in the market are Hensoldt AG (Germany), Telephonics Corp. (US), and Src, Inc. (US). The report covers various industry trends and new technological innovations in the radar systems market for the period, 2018-2026. Radar systems in Unmanned Surface Vessels (USVs) Unmanned surface vessels (USVs) are being adopted by many defense as well as research organizations for the detection of ships & aircraft, obstacles, etc. One of the important factors responsible for the successful adoption of USVs is the high-tech radar systems used in them. For unmanned surface vessels, a special type of radar system that is smaller and can be operable remotely is used. The latest innovation in this field is Kongsberg's Sounder USV which uses this type of radar system for facilitating advanced mission autonomy. Land section of platform segment of Radar systems market is projected to witness a higher CAGR during the forecast period Land platform that uses radar systems includes commercial & military land equipment. The market for land is expected to grow from USD 8,470 million in 2021 to USD 10,754 million in 2026, at the highest CAGR 4.9%. Single band frequency segment is estimated to be the largest share in Radar systems market Single band frequencies are further classified as radio waves which include UHF/VHF-bands; microwave, which is subsegmented into L-band, S-band, C-band, X-band, Ku/Ka-band, and others; and millimeter band. The single band frequency segment is projected to grow from an estimated USD 26,248 million in 2021 to USD 33,027 million by 2026, at a CAGR of 4.7% Defense Application segment is estimated to account for the largest share of the radar systems market during the forecast period The defense application is further segmented into perimeter security, battlefield surveillance, military space assets, and air defense. This segment is projected to reach USD 15,794 million by 2026, at a CAGR of 4.9%. Browse in-depth TOC on "Radar Systems Markethttps://www.marketsandmarkets.com/Market-Reports/routing-market-207011132.htmlhttps://www.marketsandmarkets.com/Market-Reports/refrigeration-coolers-market-250448757.html" 527 Tables 83 Figures 388 Pages Inquiry Before Buying: https://www.marketsandmarkets.com/Enquiry_Before_BuyingNew.asp?id=207283650 Long Range Radar segment projected to lead the radar systems market during the forecast period Long-range radar are considered to have an instrumental range of 150 km and above. Air surveillance systems, military radar, air mapping systems, weapon control systems, and missile guidance systems can function with the help of long-range radar. Companies such as L&T Defence offer long-range radar with simultaneous modes of operations supporting multi-mission capabilities for land and sea operations and weapon deployments. Lockheed Martin Corporation (US) offers TPS-59, a radar system that covers a range of 740 km. The long range radar segment is projected to grow from an estimated USD 12,849 million in 2021 to USD 16,270 million by 2026. Europe region accounts for largest market share in Radar systems market Europe is the largest market for radar systems in terms of demand as well as presence of key radar systems manufacturers. The region accounted for a total share of 33.8% of the global Radar systems market in 2020. Europe has many countries that invest a good amount of money in defense This results in a high requirement of radar systems in the Europe. Europe market of Radar systems is expected to grow from USD 11.0 billion in 2021 to USD 14.2 Billion by 2026 at the highest CAGR of 5.2% during the forecast period. Related Reports: C4ISR Market by Solution (Hardware, Application Software & Services), Platform (Airborne, Land, Naval, Space), Application, End User (Defence & Space, Homeland Security, Commercial), Installation, and Region - Forecast to 2026 Aircraft Wire and Cable Market by Type (Wire, Harness, Cable), Application (Power Transfer, Data Transfer, Flight Control System, Avionics, Lighting), Aircraft Type, Conductor Material, Insulation Type, End User and Region - Forecast to 2026 About MarketsandMarkets MarketsandMarkets provides quantified B2B research on 30,000 high growth niche opportunities/threats which will impact 70% to 80% of worldwide companies' revenues. Currently servicing 7500 customers worldwide including 80% of global Fortune 1000 companies as clients. Almost 75,000 top officers across eight industries worldwide approach MarketsandMarkets for their painpoints around revenues decisions. 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Contact: Mr. Aashish Mehra MarketsandMarkets INC. 630 Dundee Road Suite 430 Northbrook, IL 60062 USA: +1-888-600-6441 Email: [email protected] Research Insight: https://www.marketsandmarkets.com/ResearchInsight/radar-system-market.asphttps://www.marketsandmarkets.com/ResearchInsight/weather-forecasting-services-market.asphttps://www.marketsandmarkets.com/ResearchInsight/precision-guided-munition-market.asp Visit Our Web Site: https://www.marketsandmarkets.com Content Source: https://www.marketsandmarkets.com/PressReleases/radar-system.asphttps://www.marketsandmarkets.com/PressReleases/aircraft-antenna.asphttps://www.marketsandmarkets.com/PressReleases/agricultural-robot.asp SOURCE MarketsandMarkets Ram Truck Brand In 2009, the Ram Truck brand launched as a stand-alone division, focused on meeting the demands of truck buyers and delivering benchmark-quality vehicles. With a full lineup of trucks, the Ram 1500, 2500/3500 Heavy Duty, 3500/4500/5500 Chassis Cab, ProMaster and ProMaster City, the Ram brand builds trucks that get the hard work done and families where they need to go. Ram is the number one brand in new vehicle quality and is the only truck-exclusive brand to ever finish first in J.D. Power's Initial Quality Study (2021), which tracks new vehicle performance over the first three months of ownership. In the same study, Ram Heavy Duty models also scored best, making Ram the number-one truck brand in new vehicle quality among large heavy-duty pickups. In addition, the latest J.D. Power APEAL study - which rates the emotional bond between customers and their vehicles named the 2021 Ram 1500 as the best vehicle in the large light-duty pickup category. This marks the second straight year Ram 1500 has received top honors. The 2022 Ram 1500 lineup includes the Know & Go mobile app featuring an immersive experience for customers who want to learn more about their vehicles. Ram continues to outperform the competition and sets the benchmarks for: 1,075 lb.-ft. of torque with Cummins Turbo Diesel Towing capacity of 37,090 lbs. with Ram 3500 Segment first 1,000 lb.-ft of torque with Cummins Turbo Diesel Payload of 7,680 lbs. with Ram 3500 Most luxurious: Ram Limited with real wood, real leather and 12-inch Uconnect touchscreen Best ride and handling with exclusive link coil rear and auto-level air suspensions Most interior space with Ram Mega Cab The most cargo space available in any traditional full size cargo van Most capable full-size off-road pickup Ram Power Wagon Ram 1500, America's most powerful half-ton diesel pickup with 480 lb.-ft. of torque, achieves an unsurpassed 33 mpg highway and delivers up to 1,000 miles of range on a single tank of fuel Ram 1500 TRX is the quickest, fastest and most powerful mass-produced pickup truck in the world Most awarded light-duty truck in America Highest owner loyalty of any half-ton pickup Ram is part of the portfolio of brands offered by leading global automaker and mobility provider Stellantis. For more information regarding Stellantis (NYSE: STLA), please visit www.stellantis.com. Follow Ram and company news and video on: Company blog: http://blog.stellantisnorthamerica.com Media website: http://media.stellantisnorthamerica.com Ram Truck brand: www.ramtrucks.com Facebook: www.facebook.com/RamTrucks Instagram: www.instagram.com/ramtrucks Twitter: www.twitter.com/RamTrucks and @StellantisNA YouTube: www.youtube.com/RamTrucks, https://www.youtube.com/StellantisNA SOURCE Stellantis "The IND acceptance and anticipated start of our global clinical studies, represent important milestones in our Company's growth and validation of our internally developed small molecule discovery platform," said Mai-Jing Liao, Ph.D., CEO of RedCloud Bio. H002 was developed with RedCloud Bio's proprietary small molecule drug discovery platform. The platform combines computational approaches, including computational chemistry and artificial intelligence (AI), with structural pharmacology that differentiates interactions between drug candidates and disease-causing mutations of target proteins at an atomic level. "TKIs can afford an important therapeutic option for NSCLC patients. However, emergence of resistant mutations to successive generations of therapeutics can compromise TKIs' efficacy," noted Dr. Liao. "The C797S mutation, in combination with several other mutations, has emerged as one of the most common mechanisms for on-target resistance to third-generation EGFR TKIs such as osimertinib. These combinations have been found in seven to fifteen percent of third generation TKI-treated NSCLC patients." H002 has demonstrated potential in overcoming resistance in C797S mutations. The compound has also shown significant inhibitory effects on wide spectrum of single, double and triple EGFR mutants in laboratory studies. High bioavailability and favorable tissue distribution as well as a wide therapeutic window have also been observed in preclinical studies. Studies have demonstrated that H002 has high selectivity, a wide spectrum and potent anti-tumor activity against various EGFR activating mutations, as well as favorable safety profiles. RedCloud Bio expects to develop H002 as a next-generation EGFR inhibitor, targeting high unmet medical needs in EGFR-mutated NSCLC, including emerging drug resistance to existing EGFR TKI. About RedCloud Bio RedCloud Bio is an innovative biotech company integrating novel technologies to advance small molecule drug discovery and development. The Company has laboratories in Shanghai, Beijing and Xiamen with drug discovery platform integrating structural pharmacology, computational chemistry approaches and AI technologies, and with developing global clinical development capabilities. RedCloud Bio has accumulated structural data and algorithm models covering clinically important targets, and has built an innovative pipeline targeting tumor resistance, rare and other critical diseases with high unmet medical needs, using its core technology platform. The Company's lead therapeutic candidate, H002, is a small molecule compound addressing EGFR activating mutations, and is expected to enter global clinical trials. The compound is a promising candidate as a next-generation TKI with unique clinical differentiation for NSCLC. For information, contact [email protected] / Tang He, [email protected] SOURCE RedCloud Bio Under the terms of the agreement Rocket VR Health will leverage its virtual reality therapy platform to co-develop a VR digital therapeutic solution based on population-specific well-researched care interventions created by Massachusetts General Hospital. This Digital Therapeutic Solution is intended to help with distress management in blood cancer patients undergoing hematopoietic stem cell transplantation (HCT) in an in-clinic setting. HCT can be used to treat certain types of cancer, such as leukemia, myeloma, and lymphoma, and other blood and immune system diseases that affect the bone marrow. Sid Desai, Co-Founder and CEO commented: "This research partnership is instrumental to our company's development and we are thrilled to be collaborating on innovative research with leading oncologists at one of the top research hospitals in the world." The research will study the effects of daily Virtual Reality Therapy's effect on patients during their entire hospital stay. The average hospital length of stay for patients with hematologic malignancies who undergo HCT is approximately 28 days. During this intense hospitalization period, patients can't leave their rooms as their immune system is weakened while their bone marrow is re-generated. As a result, with no contact with the outside world, these patients endure significant short-term and long-term distress that affects their quality of life (QOL) and their physical and psychological well-being - both in the near term and long-term. The treatment being developed consists of 7 modules integrating psychoeducation, therapy and relaxation exercises offered over a 4-week period in beautiful virtual reality (VR) environments designed to be self-administered by patients while they are in their transplant rooms after an initial assistance and on-boarding help from a nurse or other healthcare professional. The immersive environments, imagery, sounds and music included in the Rocket VR Health platform allow patients to access the outside world virtually while being confined to their hospital room. About the company Rocket VR Health is a healthcare technology company that is developing evidence-based virtual reality therapies that enhance the quality of life of cancer patients, their families and their caregivers. With the company's platform cancer centers can provide mental health support at scale and offer virtual therapy to patients whether they are in the hospital or at home. Rocket VR Health digital interventions take clinically validated treatment modalities and transform them into fully-immersive virtual treatments that make psychosocial care for cancer more effective, accessible, and data-driven. Learn more: https://www.rocketvr.health Contact us: [email protected] Follow us on Facebook, Twitter and Instagram: @RocketVRHealth About the Massachusetts General Hospital Massachusetts General Hospital, founded in 1811, is the original and largest teaching hospital of Harvard Medical School. The Mass General Research Institute conducts the largest hospital-based research program in the nation, with annual research operations of more than $1 billion and comprises more than 9,500 researchers working across more than 30 institutes, centers and departments. In August 2021, Mass General was named #5 in the U.S. News & World Report list of "America's Best Hospitals." SOURCE Rocket VR Health TORONTO, March 2, 2022 /PRNewswire/ - Russel Metals Inc. (TSX: RUS) announces that it is donating $100,000 to the United Nations High Commission for Refugees Canada (UNHCR) UN Refugee Agency, to provide immediate support to the humanitarian efforts in Ukraine for those Ukrainians forced to flee their homes. "The people of Ukraine are in immediate need of our support," said John Reid, President and CEO of Russel Metals. "This is an urgent situation, and we are joining the global efforts to support this critical need." About Russel Metals Inc. Russel Metals is one of the largest metals distribution companies in North America with a growing focus on value-added processing. It carries on business in three segments: metals service centers, energy products and steel distributors. Its network of metals service centers carries an extensive line of metal products in a wide range of sizes, shapes and specifications, including carbon hot rolled and cold finished steel, pipe and tubular products, stainless steel, aluminum and other non-ferrous specialty metals. Its energy products operations carry a specialized product line focused on the needs of energy industry customers. Its steel distributors operations act as master distributors selling steel in large volumes to other steel service centers and large equipment manufacturers mainly on an "as is" basis. If you would like to unsubscribe from receiving Press Releases, you may do so by emailing [email protected]; or by calling our Investor Relations Line: 905-816-5178. SOURCE Russel Metals Inc. NEW YORK, March 2, 2022 /PRNewswire/ -- Safehold Inc. (NYSE: SAFE) (the "Company") announced today that it has commenced an underwritten public offering to sell 1,750,000 shares of its common stock. The Company intends to grant the underwriters in the offering a 30-day option to purchase up to an additional 262,500 shares of its common stock. Morgan Stanley, BofA Securities, Goldman Sachs & Co. LLC, and J.P. Morgan will act as joint book-running managers for the public offering. Concurrently with the completion of the public offering, Safehold will sell to iStar Inc. (NYSE: STAR) in a private placement a number of shares of common stock equal to 64.93% of the total number of shares of common stock sold in the offering and the concurrent private placement (excluding any shares sold pursuant to the underwriters' option to purchase additional shares) or, if less, shares of common stock with an aggregate purchase price of $185 million at the public offering price per share, subject to rounding. The Company intends to use the net proceeds from the public offering and concurrent private placement to make additional investments in ground leases, to repay outstanding borrowings under the Company's revolving credit facility and for general corporate purposes. This press release does not constitute an offer to sell or the solicitation of an offer to buy shares of common stock, nor shall there be any sale of these securities in any jurisdiction in which such offer, solicitation or sale would be unlawful prior to registration or qualification under the securities laws of any such jurisdiction. The public offering is being made pursuant to an effective shelf registration statement and a preliminary prospectus supplement and accompanying prospectus filed by the Company with the Securities and Exchange Commission ("SEC"). Before you invest, you should read the preliminary prospectus supplement and accompanying prospectus and other documents the Company has filed with the SEC for more complete information about the Company and the public offering. You may obtain these documents for free by visiting EDGAR on the SEC website at www.sec.gov. The Company or any underwriter or any dealer participating in the public offering will arrange to send you the preliminary prospectus supplement and accompanying prospectus if you request it by contacting Morgan Stanley & Co. LLC, Attention: Prospectus Department, 180 Varick Street, Second Floor, New York, New York 10014; BofA Securities, 200 North College Street, 3rd Floor, NC1-004-03-43, Charlotte, NC 28255-0001, Attention: Prospectus Department or by email [email protected]; Goldman Sachs & Co. LLC, Prospectus Department, 200 West Street, New York, NY 10282, telephone at (866) 471-2526 or by emailing [email protected]; and, J.P. Morgan Securities LLC, Attention: Broadridge Financial Solutions, 1155 Long Island Avenue, Edgewood, NY 11717, telephone: 1-866-803-9204 or email: [email protected]. About Safehold: Safehold Inc. (NYSE: SAFE) is a publicly traded REIT that originates and acquires ground leases in order to generate attractive long-term risk-adjusted returns. Company Contact: Jason Fooks, Senior Vice President of Investor Relations & Marketing, T 212.930.9400, [email protected] SOURCE Safehold PALO ALTO, Calif., March 2, 2022 /PRNewswire/ -- Salt Security , the leading API security company, today released the Salt Labs State of API Security Report, Q1 2022 . In its latest version, the bi-annual report found that 95% of surveyed organizations have experienced an API security incident in the past 12 months. Despite the dramatic increase in attacks and incidents, these organizations, all of whom are running production APIs, remain unprepared for API attacks, with 34% of respondents lacking any kind of API security strategy. This lack of defense presents significant business risk to enterprises in the form of slowed business innovation, compromised consumer confidence, and disruption to modernization efforts. The State of API Security Report pulls from a combination of survey responses and empirical data from the Salt SaaS cloud platform. Attempted attacks against Salt customers, blocked by our platform, grew steeply malicious API traffic increased 681% compared to a 321% increase in overall API traffic. Understandably, 62% of survey respondents acknowledged slowing down the rollout of a new application because of API security concerns. "To thrive today, every company must be a software company, and APIs reside at the heart of their application innovation. Digital businesses have emerged as the leaders of our modern economy, and at the same time, they've become the leading targets for bad actors," said Roey Eliyahu, co-founder and CEO, Salt Security. "We're seeing API attacks accelerating significantly year over year. Even more concerning, the pace of growth in API usage and attacks continues to outpace enterprise readiness and defenses. Organizations must invest the time and effort to understand the API attack landscape and the critical capabilities needed to protect their most vital assets." With nearly every survey respondent (95%) identifying an API security incident in their production APIs, the need to devise a robust API security strategy is urgent. Salt customers also experienced increasing frequency in attacks, with 12% enduring an average of more than 500 attacks every month. "APIs present an attractive attack vector, despite organizations' best efforts to validate APIs before releasing them into production," said Michael Isbitski, Technical Evangelist, Salt Security. "Given the inability of traditional security and API management platforms to protect against sophisticated attacks that target the unique business logic of APIs, it's no surprise that attackers continue to be successful, keeping enterprises at risk." Security concerns top the list of worries about API strategies, at 40% Survey respondents have a variety of concerns about their companies' API programs, with 40% citing security as their leading worry. Insufficient investment in pre-production security takes the top spot, at 22%, and another 18% of respondents are concerned that the program doesn't adequately address runtime or production security. Insufficient investment in fleshing out requirements and documentation is the leading concern for 19% of respondents. Most enterprises are unprepared for an API attack Highly publicized security incidents and pleas from security professionals to implement API security protections have not been enough to drive the majority of organizations to adopt effective API security strategies. Among survey respondents, 34% have no strategy in place, and slightly more than a quarter (27%) have just a basic strategy. Only 11% have an advanced strategy that includes dedicated API testing and protection. Findings also support the notion that budget and skills gaps play a role in this lack of preparedness. Lack of expertise or resources (35%) and budget constraints (20%) are the top obstacles for implementing an optimal API security strategy. An overreliance on "shift left" practices continues to fail the enterprise With runtime protection being fundamental to effective API protection and 95% of respondents having experienced an API security incident within the last year, "shift left" tactics for API security are proving inadequate. This issue is magnified as IT teams continue to be divided over "ownership" of API security. More than half of survey respondents say the primary responsibility sits with developers, DevOps, or DevSecOps. Only 31% of respondents put the responsibility of API security onto AppSec or InfoSec teams. WAFs and API Gateways continue to miss API attacks Reliance on traditional security and API management tools, such as web application firewalls (WAFs) and API gateways, has left many organizations with a false sense of security. With 95% of respondents having experienced an API security incident in the last year, the fact that 55% are relying on alerts from gateways and 37% are using WAFs to identify attackers shows the gap in capabilities. Reliance on log file analysis (45%) for API security is similarly ineffective by the time log files are parsed through, attackers are long gone with the valuable data and payloads they sought. Stopping API attacks remains top criterion for an API security platform For the third time in a row, more respondents (42%) cited stopping API attacks as the most important capability they seek in an API security platform. Identifying which APIs expose personal identifiable information (PII) and sensitive data follows as a close second (41%). The ability to harden APIs over time came in third (38%), and meeting compliance or regulatory requirements came in fourth (36%). Additional findings from the State of API Security Report: The risk of "zombie" or outdated APIs tops the list of API security concerns, with 43% of respondents citing it as their top worry. Account takeover came in second, with 22% focused on that risk as their biggest concern. API changes are on the rise 9% of respondents update their APIs every day, 31% do so weekly, and 24% update less often than every month. 94% of exploits within the Salt customer base happen against authenticated APIs. 86% of respondents lack the confidence that they know which APIs expose sensitive data. 85% of respondents noted that their current tools are ineffective in stopping API attacks. 83% of respondents lack full confidence in their API inventory. API security is improving how security teams work Although organizations are highly disparate in their perspective on who should bear responsibility for API security, collaboration and shared input between Security and DevOps teams are rising. More than a third of respondents (34%) say that security teams collaborate more with DevOps as a result of addressing API security, and another 30% state that DevOps seeks input from security teams to shape API guidelines. Another 25% of organizations are embedding security engineers within DevOps teams in response to the challenge. The survey also found that more security teams are highlighting the OWASP API Top 10 list of threats 61% in this report vs. 50% six months ago, a positive change for improving API security practices across an organization. The State of API Security Report, Q1 2022 was compiled by researchers from Salt Labs , the research division of Salt Security, utilizing survey data from more than 250 security, application and DevOps executives and professionals in addition to anonymized and aggregated empirical data from Salt Security customers obtained through the Salt Security API Protection Platform . As part of its ongoing commitment to education, Salt Security will host the industry's first API Security Summit on March 3, 2022, to equip the community to better address growing API security challenges. To register, click here . To learn more about Salt Security or to request a demo, please visit https://content.salt.security/demo.html . About Salt Security Salt Security protects the APIs that form the core of every modern application. Its API Protection Platform is the industry's first patented solution to prevent the next generation of API attacks, using machine learning and AI to automatically and continuously identify and protect APIs. Deployed in minutes, the Salt Security platform learns the granular behavior of a company's APIs and requires no configuration or customization to pinpoint and block API attackers. Salt Security was founded in 2016 by alumni of the Israeli Defense Forces (IDF) and serial entrepreneur executives in the cybersecurity field and is based in Silicon Valley and Israel. For more information, please visit https://salt.security . Press Contacts Salt Security Dex Polizzi Lumina Communications for Salt Security [email protected] SOURCE Salt Security SEOUL, South Korea, March 2, 2022 /PRNewswire/ -- Seegene Inc. (KQ 096530), South Korea's leading molecular diagnostics company, today announced the appointment of Richard S. Creager, Ph.D., as the CEO of its United States subsidiary, Seegene Technologies. Dr. Creager brings decades of real-world in vitro diagnostics business and molecular diagnostics (MDx) experience to the role, in which he will execute business strategies in the U.S. Dr. Creager holds a Ph.D. in Microbiology from the University of Pittsburgh School of Medicine. As a former chief science officer and executive officer for Beckman Coulter, he has a diverse experience in developing new products, technologies and business models for diagnostic, laboratory services and B2B companies. With Dr. Creager's expertise in organizational design, talent management, product development, program management, and quality & design control systems, Seegene expects him to help create momentum to expand and strengthen its business in the U.S. and replicate its success story seen in other global MDx markets. The company has been under the global spotlight as an early assay provider during the COVID-19 pandemic thanks to its unique multiplexing capabilities and automated assay development system. However, its presence has been relatively limited in the U.S., the world's largest molecular diagnostics market, until now. Dr. Creager will closely collaborate with Seegene Headquarters to foster new growth drivers and deliver on the company's global strategy and mission as a molecular diagnostics platform company, through product development, M&A, and strategic alliances. "I have supported many companies in solidifying the strategic direction of their molecular diagnostics technologies," said Dr. Creager. "Seegene is, by far, one of the most outstanding companies I've seen in terms of diagnostics assay technology. I am thrilled to help Seegene build upon its worldwide success by establishing a leading enterprise in the US." SOURCE Seegene Inc. HOUSTON, March 2, 2022 /PRNewswire/ -- As airstrikes cause extensive damage and people flee Ukraine in large numbers, Sewa International volunteers in Europe have helped more than 3,200 individuals in the past six days to cross the border to reach safety. Sewa volunteers are working with another 3,680 people who have registered for evacuation through the Sewa helpline. International students in a bus, pictured in an unidentified place, and gathered near one of the border posts. Sewa International Europe's initiatives under the Global Sewa Movement to help the stranded in Ukraine. Over 250 Sewa volunteers spread across many countries in Europe are coordinating relief efforts in eighteen Ukrainian cities. Working closely with Hindu Swayamsevak Sangh (HSS) volunteers, Sewa units in Ukraine, Finland, Poland, Romania, Hungary, and Denmark are fielding calls from stranded students and others seeking help and directing them to a volunteer who lives close to them for further assistance. "The situation on the ground is as challenging as it can get. Sewa and HSS volunteers are taking calls from people in distress and working 24 x 7 to help them evacuate. More than 35 Sewa volunteers are working on the ground in Ukraine. We are seeing an increased call volume as the war intensifies," a Sewa volunteer from Ukraine, deeply involved in coordinating the relief work, explained over a WhatsApp call. Sewa is helping people to reach Ukraine's western border by bus, train, or other modes of transport. They are distributing food packets, establishing temporary shelters, or working with local hotel owners to provide fleeing students a place to stay until they leave for their home country. Heightened Fear "After a student from India was killed in shelling in Kharkiv, the second largest city in Ukraine and an epicenter of the current war, there has been a heightened fear among students. Due to the danger posed by the war to civilian lives in the city, helping people leave Kharkiv has been our top priority. In nearly 80 percent of the situations, we have been able to help the caller when they call the Sewa help number for the first time," Heramb Kulkarni, a Sewa volunteer from Finland said. As per reports, about 9,400 students from India are in Ukraine and seeking help to leave the country. According to the United Nations Refugee Agency, over 660,000 people, mostly women and children, have left Ukraine within five days of the beginning of the war. Students stranded in Ukraine are facing multiple challenges, including threat to their lives, non-cooperation from local officials, not being allowed to cross the Ukrainian border, lack of food, and money. To register for assistance, Sewa is asking people to complete an online form at -- https://bit.ly/SewaUkraineHelpline. More information related to Sewa's Ukraine relief efforts can be accessed at https://linktr.ee/sewaeurope, https://www.facebook.com/SewaEuropeOfficial, or https://www.instagram.com/sewaeurope. About Sewa International Sewa International (www.sewausa.org) is a 501 (c)(3) Hindu faith-based charitable nonprofit that works in the areas of disaster recovery, education, and development. Sewa has 43 Chapters across the USA and serves regardless of race, color, religion, sex, age, disability, or national origin. CONTACT: Vidyasagar Tontalapur 1 - 720-526-9939 Viswanath Koppaka 1- 404-304-0563 Email: [email protected] Web: http://www.sewausa.org SOURCE Sewa International LOS ANGELES, March 2, 2022 /PRNewswire/ -- Southern California Gas Co. (SoCalGas) has kicked off the assembly of its award-winning H2 Hydrogen Home in Downey, a state-of-the-art demonstration project designed to show the resiliency and reliability of a hydrogen microgrid. The company took delivery of the modular, prefabricated H2 Hydrogen Home, which is the first of its kind in the United States and will show how carbon-free gas made from renewable electricity can be used to fuel clean energy systems of the future. The home will act as a miniature microgrid storing and providing resilient, low-carbon power when energy is needed and demonstrate how such an energy system could be constructed on a larger scale to power residential neighborhoods and businesses. "For the past decade, SoCalGas has invested in hydrogen research and development, recognizing it as a critical component of our transition to net-zero emissions," said Maryam Brown, SoCalGas President. "The H2 Hydrogen home brings many of the technologies that we helped pioneer together under one roof in a unique showcase of how California might power resilient communities and businesses in the future." "The H2 Hydrogen Home is a tangible example of the cutting-edge technologies and clean energy systems that we will need to meet our net-zero carbon goal by 2045," said California Assemblymember Cristina Garcia. "As we shift toward a future of renewable electricity in California, we will rely on a variety of energy solutions, including hydrogen and advanced fuel cells to create a more resilient grid. I am proud that this first in the nation example will be showcased in the 58th district." "From our days as the home of the Apollo Space Systems, we in the City of Downey have been proud to be at the forefront of new and developing technologies," said Downey Councilmember and former Mayor Claudia M. Frometa. "Now we are excited to be a part of this historic moment in furthering the development of green hydrogen." The H2 Hydrogen Home features a nearly 2,000 square-foot home, solar panels, a battery, an electrolyzer to convert solar energy to hydrogen and a fuel cell to supply electricity for the home. Hydrogen will also be blended up to 20% with natural gas and used in the home's tank-less water heater, clothes dryer, and gas stove, fireplace and BBQ grill. The home will function and feel exactly like a regular home but use reliable and clean energy 24 hours a day, 7 days a week, 365 days a year, by drawing power from solar panels on sunny days and converting excess energy into clean hydrogen, which can be stored and then converted back into electricity with an on-site hydrogen fuel cell when solar or batteries cannot provide enough energy. The home is also being constructed to LEED Platinum standards. The materials for the home were delivered this week by clean Class 8 trucks powered by hydrogen and electric power supply systems that only emit water. The featured participants included two Hyundai XCIENT Fuel Cell trucks, part of a California Air Resources Board (CARB) and California Energy Commission (CEC) project called "NorCal ZERO" to deploy or supply 30 trucks in Northern California by early 2023, as well as two Kenworth T680s equipped with the Toyota fuel cell electric system, which are being demonstrated as part of the CARB Port of Los Angeles "Shore to Store" (S2S) project. SoCalGas is on the cutting edge of clean energy technology, leading the nation in the march toward net zero through innovative hydrogen projects. In March 2021, it became the largest gas distribution utility in North America to set a net zero target for greenhouse gas emissions in its operations and delivery of energy by 2045. Hydrogen is set to play a critical part in SoCalGas' and California's energy future, particularly in transitioning hard-to-decarbonize sectors such as dispatchable electric generation, heavy industries, and heavy-duty transportation. In all, SoCalGas has more than 10 major pilot projects related to hydrogen innovation that are leading the charge to build a cleaner future. Just last week, SoCalGas proposed to develop what would be the nation's largest green hydrogen energy infrastructure system to work toward decarbonizing those sectors in the L.A. Basin. The proposal, called Angeles Link, could displace up to 3 million gallons of diesel per day, helping to eliminate hazardous air pollutants, and could allow natural gas power plants in the region to convert to green hydrogen. Last summer, Fast Company named the H2 Hydrogen Home one of its world-changing ideas for 2021. The project is set to be completed as soon as summer 2022. For more information on the project, click here. For B-roll and photos of the project, click here. About SoCalGas Headquartered in Los Angeles, SoCalGas is the largest gas distribution utility in the United States. SoCalGas delivers affordable, reliable, and increasingly renewable gas service to 21.8 million consumers across 24,000 square miles of Central and Southern California. Gas delivered through the company's pipelines will continue to play a key role in California's clean energy transitionproviding electric grid reliability and supporting wind and solar energy deployment. SoCalGas' mission is to build the cleanest, safest and most innovative energy company in America . In support of that mission, SoCalGas is committed to the goal of achieving net-zero greenhouse gas emissions in its operations and delivery of energy by 2045 and to replacing 20 percent of its traditional natural gas supply to core customers with renewable natural gas (RNG) by 2030. Renewable natural gas is made from waste created by dairy farms, landfills, and wastewater treatment plants. SoCalGas is also committed to investing in its gas delivery infrastructure while keeping bills affordable for customers. SoCalGas is a subsidiary of Sempra (NYSE: SRE), an energy services holding company based in San Diego. For more information visit socalgas.com/newsroom or connect with SoCalGas on Twitter (@SoCalGas), Instagram (@SoCalGas) and Facebook . About Hyundai Motor Company Established in 1967, Hyundai Motor Company is present in over 200 countries with more than 120,000 employees dedicated to tackling real-world mobility challenges around the globe. Based on the brand vision 'Progress for Humanity,' Hyundai Motor is accelerating its transformation into a Smart Mobility Solution Provider. The company invests in advanced technologies such as robotics and Urban Air Mobility (UAM) to bring about revolutionary mobility solutions, while pursuing open innovation to introduce future mobility services. In pursuit of sustainable future for the world, Hyundai will continue its efforts to introduce zero emission vehicles equipped with industry-leading hydrogen fuel cell and EV technologies. More information about Hyundai Motor and its products can be found at: http://worldwide.hyundai.com or http://globalpr.hyundai.com or http://trucknbus.hyundai.com/hydrogen/en. About Toyota Toyota, creator of the Prius hybrid and the Mirai fuel cell vehicle, is committed to building vehicles for the way people live through our Toyota and Lexus brands, and directly employs more than 48,000 people in North America (more than 39,000 in the U.S.). Over the past 60 years, Toyota has assembled nearly 43 million cars and trucks in North America at the company's 13 manufacturing plants. By 2025, the company's 14th plant in North Carolina will begin to manufacture automotive batteries for electrified vehicles. Through our more than 1,800 North American dealerships (nearly 1,500 in the U.S.), Toyota sold more than 2.6 million cars and trucks (more than 2.3 million in the U.S.) in 2021, of which more than a quarter were electrified vehicles (hybrids, plug-ins and fuel cells). About Kenworth Kenworth Truck Company is the manufacturer of The World's Best heavy and medium duty trucks. With an excellent heritage of quality, innovation and technology, Kenworth has played an essential role in the development of trucks that are more fuel efficient, productive and economical to operate. In addition to the demonstration of class 8 hydrogen fuel cell powered Kenworth T680s, Kenworth's Driving To Zero Emissions program features the Kenworth T680E, K270E and K370E battery electric vehicles designed for local pickup and delivery, drayage and short regional haul applications. Built on proven platforms with superior visibility, reliability, maneuverability and driver comfort, the EV models combine state-of-the-art zero emissions powertrains with comprehensive PACCAR charging solutions and infrastructure support to drive to zero emissions with confidence. To learn more about how Kenworth is Driving To Zero Emissions, visit the program's website (www.kenworth.com/innovation/zero-emissions). SOURCE Southern California Gas Company LOS ANGELES, March 2, 2022 /PRNewswire/ -- Birch Creek Development, LLC ("Birch Creek") is pleased to announce a significant investment in its leadership team as it moves to grow its footprint in utility scale solar and storage. Birch Creek, an industry leading renewable energy development platform, is adding to its already impressive expertise in the areas of solar development and project finance with the addition of new, key team members. "This marks a critical stage in the growth of our company," said Dan Siegel, CEO of Birch Creek. "With 30 projects successfully developed since 2019 and nearly 5 GWs in the pipeline, we're focused on execution in what will be an exceptionally busy time ahead. That goal can only be achieved if we first invest in our team and I believe this group of highly-capable industry veterans will act as a cornerstone in that effort," Siegel said. Among the recent additions, Jon Buttles joins Birch Creek as Chief Financial Officer. Buttles was CFO for Cypress Creek Renewables, LLC from 2014 to 2019, a critical period of scaling which led to significant growth. Max Whitacre has joined as Executive Vice President of Project Finance, bringing more than a decade of experience working in renewable energy. Whitacre previously held a similar role with Green Street Power Partners. Both join CEO Dan Siegel, formerly Senior Vice President of Renewable Energy at U.S. Bank and Chief Operating Officer Chris Norqual, formerly Vice President of Market Development at Cypress Creek, bringing depth of experience in developing, financing and owning utility scale solar projects. "I'm thrilled to take part in this next phase of Birch Creek by applying my experience scaling development platforms to an opportunity that already has a track record, pipeline and world class team," said Jon Buttles, Birch Creek CFO. "With its robust pipeline and proven track record, Birch is uniquely positioned to make a meaningful impact on the renewable energy revolution currently underway. I'm proud to be joining such a talented team and look forward to helping accelerate Birch's growth and influence," EVP Max Whitacre said. In addition, Birch Creek has also made important investments in its development and finance teams. Peter Bruno joins as Vice President of Development after spending seven years in various development roles with Cypress Creek. Dan Edelstein, previously Birch Director of Development, has also advanced into the role of Vice President of Development. Lisa Ladesich joins as Development Coordinator, previously at Pine Gate Renewables. Will Mihill joins as Vice President of Finance, previously at Twain Financial Partners. Allie King joins as In House Counsel after spending several years as an attorney with Nelson Mullins Riley & Scarborough LLP and Dufour Conapinski Ha LLP focused on a range of business and financial transactions in the renewable energy industry. Birch Creek, formed as a utility scale solar development platform in 2019, focuses on the development and financing of utility scale solar and storage projects in the United States. Since 2019, the company has placed 315 megawatts (MW) in service and recently completed financing for an additional 315MW. Birch Creek has 4.9 gigawatts (GW) of utility scale solar and storage pipeline in various stages of development across MISO, PJM, Texas and the Southeast. Birch Creek has 9 employees and is based in Los Angeles. Birch Creek Company Highlights Birch Creek Development ("Birch") is a utility-scale solar developer with 4.9 GW of active solar and storage development pipeline across MISO, PJM, Texas , and the U.S. Southeast , and the U.S. Southeast Birch was founded in 2019 as a joint venture partnership between the founding members of Cypress Creek Renewables, Irradiant Partners, and Pine Gate Renewables Since inception, Birch has placed 28 projects in-service, totaling 315 MW. Birch recently completed NTP financing on an additional 6 projects, or 226 MW Birch is focused on the execution of near term greenfield and varying stage acquisition opportunities totaling more than 2 GW, while monetizing mature projects Birch has recently grown its internal team to 9 employees with extensive industry experience, while continuing to develop new strategic partnerships spanning project development, finance, EPC and O&M services Media Contact: David Jones Email: [email protected] SOURCE Birch Creek Development, LLC SAN FRANCISCO, March 2, 2022 /PRNewswire/ -- The global solid oxide fuel cell market size is expected to reach USD 4.0 billion by 2028, according to a new report by Grand View Research, Inc. The market is expected to expand at a CAGR of 42.2% from 2021 to 2028. Growing expenditure in infrastructure and industry development is anticipated to have a positive impact on the global solid oxide fuel cell (SOFC) market over the projected period. Installers and system providers usually hold stock of significant equipment in the inventory. However, manufacturers face bottlenecks and shortages due to limited production in countries severely affected by the COVID-19 pandemic. Furthermore, upcoming SOFC-based large-scale projects are expected to witness delays in commissioning due to disruptions in the supply chain and halting of on-site construction activities. Key Insights & Findings from the report: In terms of revenue, the stationary segment accounted for a prominent share in the market in 2020. It is projected to expand further at the fastest CAGR over the forecast period. Transportation is predicted to be the second-largest application segment by 2028. In 2020, North America accounted for over 45% of the global revenue share and will expand further at a significant CAGR from 2021 to 2028. accounted for over 45% of the global revenue share and will expand further at a significant CAGR from 2021 to 2028. Germany led the Europe regional market with a revenue share of more than 67% in 2020. led the regional market with a revenue share of more than 67% in 2020. Government funding and aggressive mergers and acquisitions between companies for alternative energy technologies contribute to heavy investments in Europe . Read 70-page market research report, "Solid Oxide Fuel Cell Market Size, Share & Trends Analysis Report By Application (Stationary, Portable, Transportation), By Region (Europe, North America, Asia Pacific), And Segment Forecasts, 2021 - 2028", published by Grand View Research. Solid Oxide Fuel Cell Market Growth & Trends The rising awareness about alternative sources of energy is one of the major factors encouraging market growth. Increasing carbon emission levels is a global issue, and government authorities worldwide are supporting technological advancements to tackle the issue by providing research funding and drafting supportive policies and plans. The global SOFC market is highly competitive owing to the ongoing technological advancements developed by the existing vendors and new entrants. Market players are concentrating on strengthening their relations with system installers due to their strong local presence and close ties with clients, which, in turn, is likely to help enhance geographical presence. Solid Oxide Fuel Cell Market Segmentation Grand View Research has segmented the global solid oxide fuel cell market based on application and region: Solid Oxide Fuel Cell Application Outlook (Volume, Thousand Units; Capacity, kW; Revenue, USD Million, 2017 - 2028) Stationary Portable Transportation Solid Oxide Fuel Cell Regional Outlook (Volume, Thousand Units; Capacity, kW; Revenue, USD Million, 2017 - 2028) North America U.S. Europe Germany France U.K. Asia Pacific China Japan South Korea Rest of World List of Key Players of the Solid Oxide Fuel Cell Market Bloom Energy Mitsubishi Power Ltd. Cummins Inc. Ceres General Electric FuelCell Energy Inc. Ningbo SOFCMAN Energy Kyocera Corp. AVL NGK Spark Plug Co., Ltd. Check out more related studies published by Grand View Research: Thin Film Battery Market - The global thin film battery market size is projected to reach USD 5.2 billion by 2027, expanding at a CAGR of 35.52%, according to a new report by Grand View Research, Inc. Growing demand from applications, such as medical tracking and smartwatches, is likely to boost the market growth. Thin-film battery has high demand owing to its small size and low weight. Moreover, it does not contain harmful chemicals and is resistant to explosion and fire. Furthermore, growing product demand to provide power for small form-factor devices is a major driving factor for the market growth in the medical and wearables applications. - The global thin film battery market size is projected to reach by 2027, expanding at a CAGR of 35.52%, according to a new report by Grand View Research, Inc. Growing demand from applications, such as medical tracking and smartwatches, is likely to boost the market growth. Thin-film battery has high demand owing to its small size and low weight. Moreover, it does not contain harmful chemicals and is resistant to explosion and fire. Furthermore, growing product demand to provide power for small form-factor devices is a major driving factor for the market growth in the medical and wearables applications. Dye Sensitized Solar Cell Market - The global dye sensitized solar cell market size is expected to reach USD 231.1 million by 2027, according to a new report by Grand View Research, Inc., expanding at a CAGR of 12.4% from 2020 to 2027. Increasing concerns regarding the negative environmental impacts, along with fossil fuel-based electricity generation farms, are projected to drive the global market. - The global dye sensitized solar cell market size is expected to reach by 2027, according to a new report by Grand View Research, Inc., expanding at a CAGR of 12.4% from 2020 to 2027. Increasing concerns regarding the negative environmental impacts, along with fossil fuel-based electricity generation farms, are projected to drive the global market. Global Fuel Cell Market - The global fuel cell market size is expected to reach USD 33.09 billion by 2027, exhibiting a CAGR of 15.5% over the forecast period, according to a new report published by Grand View Research, Inc. The rise in demand for unconventional energy sources is a key factor driving the growth. Browse through Grand View Research's Renewable Energy Industry Research Reports. About Grand View Research Grand View Research, U.S.-based market research and consulting company, provides syndicated as well as customized research reports and consulting services. Registered in California and headquartered in San Francisco, the company comprises over 425 analysts and consultants, adding more than 1200 market research reports to its vast database each year. These reports offer in-depth analysis on 46 industries across 25 major countries worldwide. With the help of an interactive market intelligence platform, Grand View Research Helps Fortune 500 companies and renowned academic institutes understand the global and regional business environment and gauge the opportunities that lie ahead. Contact: Sherry James Corporate Sales Specialist, USA Grand View Research, Inc. Phone: 1-415-349-0058 Toll Free: 1-888-202-9519 Email: [email protected] Web: https://www.grandviewresearch.com Grand View Compass | Grand View Pipeline Follow Us: LinkedIn | Twitter SOURCE Grand View Research, Inc. NEW YORK, March 2, 2022 /PRNewswire/ -- Two years after the Covid pandemic first disrupted daily life in the United States, women are continuing to see a significant impact on their lives, particularly via financial barriers and workplace hurdles. According to a new survey released today by Laurel Road , a digital banking platform of KeyBank with specialized offerings for healthcare and business professionals, women continue to leave the workforce, perceive themselves to be underpaid or financially disadvantaged, and struggle with mental health burdens related to work-life balance in higher proportions than men. Yet, many women are making career moves to make up for lost ground in 2022 and either plan to ask for a raise or are willing to switch jobs for the pay they feel they've earned. The fifth-annual survey from Laurel Road exploring financial literacy and management among 1,000 U.S. college-educated adults, found that of those women who lost annual income in 2021, the average percentage was 41%, up from 33% in 2020, and BIPOC women lost even more an average of 47% of their annual income. As well, almost three-quarters (73%) of women still felt they have been disproportionately impacted by events related to COVID-19, a decrease of only 4 percentage points from 2020. BIPOC women are even more likely to agree (84%), a decrease of only 1 percentage point from 2020. In addition, nearly 7 in 10 (69%) employed, college-educated women felt they were underpaid with respect to their current value to their company, significantly higher than the 53% of employed college educated men who said the same. What's encouraging is that women are looking to make up for lost ground: 54% of women and 59% of BIPOC women stated they think they will ask for a raise in 2022. "Although women disproportionately faced setbacks from the pandemic, whether it be delaying their own professional growth because of childcare responsibilities or experiencing a greater loss of income, our study found that they're also seeking new careers or preparing to ask for a raise to elevate their financial future," said Alyssa Schaefer, General Manager & Chief Experience Officer at Laurel Road. "Our hope is that these findings institute change by serving as a conversation starter on the challenges women face as a result of the pandemic, both at home and in the workplace, while also providing women the tools they need to continue to feel empowered to achieve mental wealth, encouraging generations to come." The Great Resignation Continues Women are quitting their jobs at higher rates than men as the coined Great Resignation continues to sweep the U.S. In fact, 34% of women and 35% of all surveyed BIPOC women reported leaving their jobs in 2021, compared to 30% of men. Only 10% of women reported doing so involuntarily. And women continue to explore ways to change their employment situations, with nearly 1 in 3 (31%) female respondents noting that it was at least somewhat likely they'd leave their current job in the next year, including 43% of BIPOC women. When asked what would inspire them to leave their current job for another, women stated higher pay (68%), remote work (34%), a better work-life balance (34%) and better management (21%) as the top reasons. Women, Especially Women of Color, Feel Employers Can Still Do More to Narrow Pay Gap The survey showed that 44% of women do not feel their employers have been successful in narrowing the pay gap, with almost half (48%) of BIPOC women agreeing that their company isn't doing all it can to lessen the gender pay gap. Unfortunately, this doesn't stop with just a paycheck. The survey found 42% of women feel that women at their company are less financially empowered than men overall, with 49% of BIPOC women indicating they feel this way. Childcare Impacts Respondents Across the Board When asked about navigating work and childcare responsibilities, 51% of dads reported they feel childcare responsibilities during COVID-19 impacted their ability to work in one way or another, while only 46% of moms felt the same. Interestingly, this reflects a significant decrease for men from 2021, when 72% of dads indicated childcare responsibilities had impacted their work in the last year. There was a slight increase for women from 2021, when 42% of moms reported feeling the impact of childcare at work last year. The top impact of childcare responsibilities for women (23%) has been delaying their own professional growth because of childcare responsibilities, while men report that they've felt the impact on both their professional growth (19%) and the need to reduce work hours (19%) equally. When it comes to what they're looking for in an employer, 27% of dads and 31% of moms reported that they are more likely to pick a job based on an employer's support for them as a caregiver or parent. Women Are Assessing Financial Goals to Make Money Moves As the pandemic wears on, more than 3 in 4 (76%) women reported feeling like they are behind schedule when it comes to financial security goals, compared to 73% who felt they were behind in 2021. When asked in which ways they felt behind, women identified retirement savings (50%), investments (32%) and salary (24%) as the goals they are most behind on. To discuss these issues further and bring to light ways women can achieve financial empowerment, Laurel Road will be bringing together personal finance and mental health experts for The Luminary event on March 10. Follow Laurel Road on Instagram for further updates. Methodology This survey was conducted by Wakefield Research among 1,000 nationally representative college educated US adults, with oversamples to 1,000 female respondents and 500 female BIPOC respondents, between February 7th and February 15th, 2022, using an email invitation and an online survey. Quotas have been set to ensure reliable and accurate representation of 1,000 nationally representative U.S. college-educated adults. The margin of error was +/-3.1% for the main sample and female oversample and +/-4.4% for the 500 female BIPOC oversample. About Laurel Road Laurel Road is a digital banking platform and brand of KeyBank that provides tailored offerings to support the financial wellbeing of healthcare and business professionals. Laurel Road's banking and lending solutions, including Laurel Road CheckingSM and savings accounts, Laurel Road Student Loan Cashback Card, Student Loan Refinancing, Mortgages, Personal Loans and more, provide our members with a simplified, personalized experience that helps them better navigate their financial journey and achieve life's goals. Additionally, Laurel Road has reimagined banking and financial management for physicians and dentists through Laurel Road for Doctors, a tailored digital experience made up of banking, insights and exclusive benefits to provide the financial help and peace of mind they need through each career stage. Since 2013, Laurel Road has helped thousands of professionals with undergraduate and postgraduate degrees consolidate and refinance more than $9 billion in federal and private school loans. For more information, visit http://www.laurelroad.com. Laurel Road is a brand of KeyBank National Association. All products offered by KeyBank N.A. Member FDIC. NMLS # 399797. Equal Housing Lender. 2021 KeyCorp All Rights Reserved. Laurel Road is a federally registered service mark of KeyCorp. About KeyCorp KeyCorp's (NYSE: KEY) roots trace back 190 years to Albany, New York. Headquartered in Cleveland, Ohio, Key is one of the nation's largest bank-based financial services companies, with assets of approximately $170.3 billion at December 31, 2020. Key provides deposit, lending, cash management, and investment services to individuals and businesses in 15 states under the name KeyBank National Association through a network of more than 1,000 branches and approximately 1,400 ATMs. Key also provides a broad range of sophisticated corporate and investment banking products, such as merger and acquisition advice, public and private debt and equity, syndications and derivatives to middle market companies in selected industries throughout the United States under the KeyBanc Capital Markets trade name. For more information, visit https://www.key.com/. Media Contact: KWT Global for Laurel Road 610-908-9874 [email protected] SOURCE Laurel Road TAMPA, Fla., March 2, 2022 /PRNewswire/ -- Tampa General Hospital has been named one of the top 100 hospitals in the United States, according to Newsweek. The 1,041-bed academic medical center was recently ranked as one of the news magazine's World's Best Hospitals 2022. Tampa General is the top-ranked Tampa Bay area hospital and one of only three Florida hospitals to appear in the nation's top 100 on Newsweek's list. "Our entire Tampa General team is focused on our vision to be the safest and most innovative academic health system in America," said John Couris, president and CEO of Tampa General. "It is because of the unwavering commitment of our team members and physicians to providing world-class, compassionate care that we are ranked as one of the top hospitals in Florida and top 100 in the nation by Newsweek. I am deeply grateful on a daily basis to be working with such a dedicated and outstanding group of health care professionals." The World's Best Hospitals 2022 ranking lists the best hospitals in 27 countries: U.S., Germany, Japan, South Korea, France, Italy, United Kingdom, Spain, Brazil, Canada, India, Australia, Mexico, The Netherlands, Austria, Thailand, Switzerland, Sweden, Belgium, Finland, Norway, Denmark, Israel, Singapore, Saudi Arabia, United Arab Emirates and Colombia. The countries were selected based on multiple comparability factors, including standard of living/life expectancy, population size, number of hospitals and data availability. Hospitals were selected based on three data sources: Over 80,000 medical experts doctors, hospital managers, health care professionals in 27 countries were invited to participate in the online survey. Participants were asked to recommend hospitals in their own country as well as in other countries. Recommendations for a participant's own employer/hospital were not allowed. doctors, hospital managers, health care professionals in 27 countries were invited to participate in the online survey. Participants were asked to recommend hospitals in their own country as well as in other countries. Recommendations for a participant's own employer/hospital were not allowed. Results from patient experience surveys publicly available data from existing patient surveys was used to analyze patient experience. Patient surveys are typically conducted by insurance companies among patients after hospitalization. Examples of survey topics include general satisfaction with the hospital, recommendation of the hospital and satisfaction with medical care. publicly available data from existing patient surveys was used to analyze patient experience. Patient surveys are typically conducted by insurance companies among patients after hospitalization. Examples of survey topics include general satisfaction with the hospital, recommendation of the hospital and satisfaction with medical care. Medical key performance indicators (KPIs) were collected on a variety of public sources for most countries. KPIs differed between the countries. Examples of included data are quality of care for specific treatments, data on hygiene measures and patient safety and data on number of patients per doctors and per nurse. According to Nancy Cooper, Newsweek's Global Editor in Chief, "the goal of this study is to provide the best data-based comparison of hospital reputation and performance across countries. We hope this will be useful not only to patients and families seeking the best care for themselves and loved ones, but also to hospitals as they benchmark themselves against their peers during a period of unprecedented change." Newsweek compared scores between hospitals in the same country because different sources for patient experience and medical KPIs were examined in each country. The U.S. ranking listed 414 hospitals in total that participated. ABOUT TAMPA GENERAL HOSPITAL Tampa General Hospital, a 1,041-bed non-profit academic medical center, is one of the largest hospitals in America and delivers world-class care as the region's only center for Level l trauma and comprehensive burn care. Tampa General Hospital is the highest-ranked hospital in the market in U.S. News & World Report's 2021-22 Best Hospitals, and one of the top 4 hospitals in Florida, with five specialties ranking among the best programs in the United States. The academic medical center's commitment to growing and developing its team members is recognized by two prestigious 2021 Forbes magazine rankings America's Best Employers by State, third out of 100 Florida companies and first among health care and social organizations and 13th nationally in America's Best Employers for Women. Tampa General is the safety net hospital for the region, caring for everyone regardless of their ability to pay, and in fiscal 2020 provided a net community benefit worth more than $182.5 million in the form of health care for underinsured patients, community education and financial support to community health organizations in Tampa Bay. It is one of the nation's busiest adult solid organ transplant centers and is the primary teaching hospital for the USF Health Morsani College of Medicine. With five medical helicopters, Tampa General Hospital transports critically injured or ill patients from 23 surrounding counties to receive the advanced care they need. Tampa General houses a nationally accredited comprehensive stroke center and its 32-bed Neuroscience Intensive Care Unit is the largest on the West Coast of Florida. It also is home to the Jennifer Leigh Muma 82-bed Level IV neonatal intensive care unit, and a nationally accredited rehabilitation center. Tampa General Hospital's footprint includes 17 Tampa General Medical Group Primary Care offices, TGH Family Care Center Kennedy, TGH Brandon Healthplex, TGH Virtual Health and 19 outpatient Radiology Centers. Tampa Bay residents also receive world-class care from the TGH Urgent Care powered by Fast Track network of clinics, and they can even receive home visits in select areas through TGH Urgent Care at Home, powered by Fast Track. As one of the largest hospitals in the country, Tampa General Hospital is first in Florida to partner with GE Healthcare and open a clinical command center that uses artificial intelligence and predictive analytics to improve and better coordinate patient care at a lower cost. For more information, go to www.tgh.org. Media Contact: Beth Hardy Senior Communications Specialist (813) 844-7322 (direct) [email protected] SOURCE Tampa General Hospital GREENSBORO, N.C., March 2, 2022 /PRNewswire/ -- Tanger Factory Outlet Centers, Inc. (NYSE: SKT) announced today that it will participate March 7-8, 2022 in the Citi Global Property CEO Conference. The roundtable presentation by Stephen Yalof, President and Chief Executive Officer, is scheduled for 5:00 PM Eastern time on Monday, March 7, 2022. A live audio webcast can be accessed at investors.tangeroutlets.com. A replay will be available through Friday, March 18, 2022 and can also be accessed via the company's website. About Tanger Factory Outlet Centers Tanger Factory Outlet Centers, Inc. (NYSE: SKT) is a leading operator of upscale open-air outlet centers that owns, or has an ownership interest in, a portfolio of 36 centers. Tanger's operating properties are located in 20 states and in Canada, totaling approximately 13.6 million square feet, leased to over 2,700 stores operated by more than 600 different brand name companies. The Company has more than 41 years of experience in the outlet industry and is a publicly-traded REIT. For more information on Tanger Outlet Centers, call 1-800-4TANGER or visit the Company's website at www.tangeroutlets.com . Contact: Cyndi M. Holt Senior Vice President, Capital Markets [email protected] SOURCE Tanger Factory Outlet Centers, Inc. "TD Home Access Mortgage reduces barriers that often slow the rate of homeownership in Black and Hispanic communities." Tweet this "The current housing market is highly competitive, making it exceedingly difficult for potential homebuyers, especially people of color, to contend if they have limited financial resources for a down payment or closing costs," said Michael Innis-Thompson, Head of Community Lending and Development at TD Bank. "This mortgage offering is designed to ease that burden, provide more equity in the home lending process, and make the dream of homeownership more attainable for Black and Hispanic families." The product launch is particularly relevant, as a recent TD survey found 46% of respondents consider saving for a down payment to be a roadblock to purchasing their first home, including 44% and 45% of Black and Hispanic homebuyers, respectively. TD Home Access Mortgage is offered in several communities across TD's retail footprint, which spans from Maine to Florida. Qualifying borrowers must meet credit and income parameters and reside in one of the participating markets, but they are not required to be first-time homebuyers. Borrowers can use the product for both purchase and refinance transactions, and for various property types, including single-family residences, condos, and owner-occupied multi-family units. TD Home Access Mortgage is the latest offering the Bank has introduced to accelerate affordable home lending and increase inclusivity across its consumer product suite, including: Enhancing TD Bank Right Step Mortgage product by expanding FICO score requirements, DTI and Loan to Value qualifications Reducing secured card entrance deposit from $500 to $300 to Reducing home equity loan minimum from $25k to $10k to Launching TD Essential Banking, a low-cost, no overdraft fee deposit account Launching FNMA Refi NOW, which offers higher DTI flexibility "TD Home Access Mortgage is very much aligned with the Bank's ongoing commitment to continually expand our product suite to meet the needs of communities within our footprint," says Innis-Thompson. "This product addresses the need to reduce barriers that so often slow the rate of homeownership in Black and Hispanic communities. And it also demonstrates our dedication to extending our culture of care and inclusion to our product design, finding meaningful and sustainable ways to support our customers." About TD Bank, America's Most Convenient Bank TD Bank, America's Most Convenient Bank, is one of the 10 largest banks in the U.S., providing more than 9.5 million customers with a full range of retail, small business and commercial banking products and services at more than 1,220 convenient locations throughout the Northeast, Mid-Atlantic, Metro D.C., the Carolinas and Florida. In addition, TD Bank and its subsidiaries offer customized private banking and wealth management services through TD Wealth, and vehicle financing and dealer commercial services through TD Auto Finance. TD Bank is headquartered in Cherry Hill, N.J. To learn more, visit www.td.com/us . Find TD Bank on Facebook at www.facebook.com/TDBank and on Twitter at www.twitter.com/TDBank_US and www.twitter.com/TDNews_US . TD Bank, America's Most Convenient Bank, is a member of TD Bank Group and a subsidiary of The Toronto-Dominion Bank of Toronto, Canada, a top 10 financial services company in North America. The Toronto-Dominion Bank trades on the New York and Toronto stock exchanges under the ticker symbol "TD". To learn more, visit www.td.com/us . SOURCE TD Bank DUBLIN, March 2, 2022 /PRNewswire/ -- The "The Arctic: Breakthrough Territory or White Hole?" report has been added to ResearchAndMarkets.com's offering. The Arctic project is turning into one of the main economic initiatives of the Russian government. The Cabinet hopes that the Arctic development will facilitate national economic growth. The reasoning is simple: production of hydrocarbons requires manufacturing of corresponding machinery and equipment; the produce must be transported, which implies the construction of a new Arctic fleet. Consequently, it may develop into international cargo transit via the Northern Sea Route (NSR). However, the reality is as severe as the climate in this region. Plans to build vessels fall behind schedule, while Russian shipbuilding capacities are already not sufficient. The NSR did not attract the transit cargo even after the Suez Canal was blocked, because the ice breaker assistance is expensive and because there is no corresponding infrastructure. Mineral production projects are also rather ambiguous - LNG production in the Arctic is already the reality with new projects in the making, but in the sphere of oil production the situation is not very optimistic. Meanwhile, many projects are openly subsidized by the government; they even compete with each other for financial assistance of the state. This situation vividly demonstrates the effective lobbyism of certain companies. The most remarkable method of lobbyism is to make sure that a particular project is stipulated by some state program related to the Arctic development - the number of such documents is constantly growing. Thus, the interests of corporations become tasks of state importance that bureaucrats have to take into account and implement. As a result, the Arctic topic becomes surrounded by various strategies and roadmaps; the structure of state regulation of this region becomes complicated amid constant reforms in the so-called development institutions. All these factors only draw the state into the Arctic case stronger and stronger, and nobody raises questions about the economic expediency of many of these projects in the near future. In the new report, you will find out: How the structure of state regulation of the Arctic has changed and what the outcome of the latest reshuffle in the government is. How do top Arctic bureaucrats struggle for key regulatory mechanisms and powers? The role of relevant ministries, agencies and government commissions. How do new official programs and plans describe Arctic development? How realistic are they? What beneficiaries are behind each of these documents? Main corporate projects in the Arctic; their prospects and level of state support. Development of the Northern Sea Route and the Arctic fleet; the struggle of Rosatom (NSR operator) for state budget resources. Medium-term prospects of the Arctic megaproject. Key Topics Covered: Introduction Development of the Arctic in Official Programs and Plans of the Government The State System Regulating the Arctic Projects of Companies LNG Projects of Novatek Projects of Rosneft in the Arctic Projects of Gazprom Neft Pechora LNG Shtokman Project Development of the Northern Sea Route, Programs of Arctic Shipbuilding Medium-Term Forecast of Developments For more information about this report visit https://www.researchandmarkets.com/r/tmvbvj Media Contact: Research and Markets Laura Wood, Senior Manager [email protected] For E.S.T Office Hours Call +1-917-300-0470 For U.S./CAN Toll Free Call +1-800-526-8630 For GMT Office Hours Call +353-1-416-8900 U.S. Fax: 646-607-1904 Fax (outside U.S.): +353-1-481-1716 SOURCE Research and Markets ATLANTA, March 2, 2022 /PRNewswire/ -- Renovation will soon be underway at the Grady Ponce De Leon center, an HIV/AIDS clinic providing various medical and support services for people living with HIV/AIDS, due to investment from The Innovate Fund. The Innovate Fund, a New Markets Tax Credits (NMTC) Community Development Entity, provided $12.5 million to assist in the rehab of the facility's five existing operational floors. The Innovate Fund The facility, which treats one out of seven persons living with AIDS in Georgia, is located in the epicenter of the HIV epidemic, Atlanta, GA, where some neighboring zip codes have rates of HIV/AIDS that are six to eight times higher than the national average. The renovated facility will provide improved treatment facilities for dental, ECHO, infusion, imaging, lab, pharmacy, and social support services. Shannon Sale, the Executive Vice President and Chief Strategy Officer at Grady Health System, said the renovated facility will provide better service to current patients and support new people seeking treatment. "The Ponce Center has not been significantly revamped or updated since the early days of the HIV/AIDS crisis in the 1990s," Sale said. "Since then, everything from perception, to treatment and technology, to floor plan designs have significantly changed. Grady Health is a leader in the global battle against HIV and needs facilities to match that leadership." The Innovate Fund Program Manager, Emma Wyatt said, "We are proud to assist in the financing of such an impactful project providing frontline care and supporting services for people living with HIV/AIDS. The Innovate Fund prioritizes investments, such as the Grady Ponce project, that improve health and wellness outcomes for our nation's most vulnerable populations." Special acknowledgement is extended to U.S. Reps. Sanford Bishop and Drew Ferguson of Georgia for their support of the NMTC program at the federal level. Without the NMTC, vital projects such as this would not be undertaken. About The Innovate Fund The Innovate Fund and its affiliates are designated Community Development Entities under the provisions of the Community Development Financial Institutions Fund, which since their inception have been awarded $327 million in allocation of New Markets Tax Credits. The Innovate Fund's mission is to service and provide investment capital for operating businesses and real estate development projects in low-income communities across Tennessee, Georgia, North Carolina, and South Carolina. The Innovate Fund's partners are the Greenville Local Development Corporation and Tax Advantage Group by Cherry Bekaert. About Greenville Local Development Corporation Founded in 1979, Greenville Local Development Corporation (GLDC), a 501(c)(3) non-profit, was established by a group of committed community and business leaders in Greenville, S.C., to address obstacles faced by businesses and community-based organizations in obtaining conventional financing. Since inception, GLDC has been working to provide financial assistance, real estate development coordination, and strategic guidance for economic development projects and business expansions. About Tax Advantage Group by Cherry Bekaert Headquartered in Richmond, Va., Tax Advantage Group by Chery Bekaert (TAG) is one of the country's most successful consulting firms specializing in New Markets Tax Credits, helping nonprofit and for-profit organizations access capital and transform communities. Since 2004, TAG has played an instrumental role in securing funding for more than $1.7 billion for community projects across the United States. In addition, TAG provides compliance and asset management services on $530 million of NMTC assets. Media Contact: Emma Wyatt 2764518194 [email protected] SOURCE The Innovate Fund LAKE MARY, Fla., March 2, 2022 /PRNewswire/ -- The Internal Audit Foundation, part of The Institute of Internal Auditors (IIA), announced today that it has awarded $60,000 in grants to nine universities to support curriculum development, student recruitment, mentorship initiatives, teaching assistants, and scholarships. The grants are part of the Foundation's commitment to enabling the internal audit profession of the future. "Without the collective generosity of our donors and partners worldwide, the Foundation's work in support of the profession would not be possible," said Carrie Summerlin, executive director of The Internal Audit Foundation and vice president of strategy and innovation at The IIA. The Foundation provides funding for academic programs, grants, and outreach activities that encourage students to pursue a career in internal auditing - and support educators who are actively teaching internal audit-related curriculum. This year's academic grant recipients include: Texas A&M University Chulalongkorn University Thailand University of Pretoria South Africa Bentley University Louisiana State University Seattle University Georgia State University University of Texas at El Paso Kennesaw State University "As a Center of Excellence at Kennesaw State University, we have been fortunate with prior IAF grants to promote and grow our program. We look forward to partnering with the Foundation to continue to grow the profession through educational and professional activities," said Brad A. Schafer, PhD, CIA, Kennesaw State University. "The grant provided to Chulalongkorn University supports pursuing the Certified Internal Auditor (CIA) credential by funding a multi-session study group for students currently engaged in internal audit education at the university," said Pornanong Budsaratragoon, CIA, Associate Professor, Chulalongkorn University. To learn more about the Foundation, please contact Carrie Summerlin. Media contact: Chris Almonte [email protected] +1-407-937-1349 About the Internal Audit Foundation The Internal Audit Foundation, supported by the generosity of its donors, advances the practice of the profession by executing global research to explore issues impacting the profession and funding academic initiatives that support the pursuit and promotion of internal audit education within institutions of higher education. About The Institute of Internal Auditors The Institute of Internal Auditors (IIA) is an international professional association that serves more than 210,000 members and has awarded 180,000 Certified Internal Auditor (CIA) designations worldwide. The IIA is recognized as the internal audit profession's leader in standards, certification, education, research, and technical guidance throughout the world. SOURCE The Institute of Internal Auditors WASHINGTON, March 2, 2022 /PRNewswire/ -- The National Hispanic Corporate Council, the premier resource for corporate America on elevating Hispanic strategies, launches The Latino DEI Collective as a new initiative to amplify, develop, and elevate Hispanic leaders in diversity, equity, and inclusion roles. Through a national platform and programming, The Latino DEI Collective will: Amplify the contributions of executive leaders by supporting Latinos/as currently in Chief Diversity Officer and/or senior executive DEI leadership roles. Develop and mentor emerging leaders in management by preparing them for senior DEI leadership opportunities. Cultivate new leaders by building a talent pipeline for the next generation of DEI champions. We would like to recognize the following individuals for their vision, thought leadership, and contributions towards the development of this community: Salvador Mendoza , VP, Diversity & Inclusion, NBCUniversal , VP, Diversity & Inclusion, Jorge Quezada , VP, People & Culture, Granite Construction* , VP, People & Culture, Monica Diaz , AVP, Talent Development, D&I, Royal Caribbean Group , AVP, Talent Development, D&I, Jon G. Munoz , Chief DEI Officer, Booz Allen Hamilton * , Chief DEI Officer, Ann Anaya , SVP & Chief DEI Officer, AmerisourceBergen * , SVP & Chief DEI Officer, * Andres Gonzalez , VP, Chief EDI Officer, Froedtert Health* VP, Chief EDI Officer, Javier Barrientos , Head of Diversity, Equity, Inclusion US, Takeda , Head of Diversity, Equity, Inclusion US, Cesar Lostaunau , Director, Growth Markets/D&I, Century 21 Real Estate , Director, Growth Markets/D&I, Eduardo Arabu, Executive Director, The National Hispanic Corporate Council *Denote appointment to the Advisory Board Special recognition for the generous contributions and sponsorship by Booz Allen Hamilton, Comcast NBCUniversal Telemundo Enterprises, Froedtert Health. Granite Construction, and Takeda. "With the growing U.S. Latino demographics, there is an opportunity to elevate Latinos in DEI roles along with increasing investments for the development of talent, customers, suppliers, community relations to maximize corporate performance. On behalf of the NHCC Board of Directors and its corporate members, I am delighted to convene leaders to support this ecosystem to advance Latino strategies." said Eduardo Arabu, Executive Director, NHCC. To fully optimize this initiative, we need your feedback, engagement, and support including participation in our upcoming Collective meetings. About The Latino DEI Collective The Latino DEI Collective's mission is to amplify, develop, and elevate Hispanic leaders in diversity, equity, and inclusion roles. This national platform serves as an ecosystem that offers opportunities to amplify the contributions of Latinos in corporate America, build a pipeline of emerging Hispanic talent, provide in-culture learning and mentoring opportunities, and cultivate a network of Hispanic professionals. The Collective is powered by NHCC. Learn more: The Latino DEI Collective. Follow via LinkedIn. About NHCC Founded in 1985 as a learning organization for corporate America by corporate America, The National Hispanic Corporate Council is a collaborative community for Fortune 1000 members that provides access to Hispanic talent and consumer resources to optimize corporate performance. We offer strategy development for the U.S. Hispanic talent and consumer segment with a population of 60 million and $2 trillion purchasing power. NHCC convene leaders to Connect Learn. Share. Network. to elevate your organization's talent, consumers, suppliers, community relations, and ERG strategies. Learn more: NHCC. Follow: Facebook, Twitter, and LinkedIn. CONTACT: Eduardo Arabu, 202-528-7229, [email protected] SOURCE National Hispanic Corporate Council Planned-Unit Development Application Garners Unanimous Approval FREDERICK, Md., March 2, 2022 /PRNewswire/ -- On February 17, The City of Annapolis's Planning Commission unanimously voted to approve the planned-unit development application for The Village at Providence PointA National Lutheran Community (Providence Point). After five rounds of public hearings and more than a decade of work, Providence Point is on its way to becoming the newest continuing care retirement community (CCRC) in Annapolis, Maryland. Located at the intersection of Spa Road and Forest Drive, Providence Point is slated to include 272 independent living apartments and 30 cottages, along with 48 health care suites. "It is time for us to celebrate this major milestone and begin our next chapter," Cyndi Walters, National Lutheran Communities & Services' (NLCS) president and chief executive officer said. "This would not have been possible without the unwavering support of future residents and our incredibly dedicated staff and project team." The project first began in 2011 under the helm of NLCS' Former President & CEO Larry Bradshaw, who retired in August 2021, but has continued to spearhead Providence Point as an advisor. "While this has been a challenging journey, we always believed in this vision for Providence Point and how it will serve older adults and the greater Annapolis community," Bradshaw said. "This has finally become a reality because of the collaboration between our project team, the City of Annapolis and community members." On the 175-acre site, approximately 124 acres will be preserved in perpetuity through conservation easements and restricted deed covenants. The project features numerous green initiatives including, one-to-one reforestation, prioritization of specimen trees, 62,000 square feet of green roofs, 79 micro-bioretention facilities, stream restoration, and 15,300 square feet of porous pavement driveways. NLCS joined the project in March of 2011, when it was a proposed mixed-used development formerly known as Crystal Spring Annapolis and the CCRC was known as The Village at Crystal Spring. In 2016, NLCS took over as the developer and announced in early 2017 that development plans would focus exclusively on the CCRC, dropping all other mixed-use components. That same year NLCS unveiled the new name for the project, The Village at Providence Point, paying homage to the historical name of Annapolis. About National Lutheran Communities & Services (NLCS) Based in Frederick, Maryland, NLCS is a not-for-profit, faith-based ministry of the Evangelical Lutheran Church in America's (ELCA) Delaware-Maryland, Metropolitan Washington, D.C. and Virginia Synods, serving people of all beliefs. With over 130-years' experience, NLCS honors, inspires and supports choice and opportunity in partnership with older adults. Entities affiliated with National Lutheran include The Village at Rockville in Rockville, Maryland, The Legacy at North Augusta in Staunton, Virginia, The Village at Orchard Ridge and myPotential at Home in Winchester, Virginia, The Village at Augsburg in Baltimore, Maryland (also affiliated with Lutheran Church Missouri Synod), The Village at Providence Point in Annapolis, Maryland (subject to Maryland Department of Aging approval). For more information, visit www.nationallutheran.org. Photo(s): https://www.prlog.org/12907361 Press release distributed by PRLog SOURCE National Lutheran Communities & Services Thirstie data found that Wealthy Small Families make up nearly one quarter of online core spirits sales with a 22% share. They are followed by Single Suburbanites who also made a significant share of sales with 21%. On the heels of Thirstie's inaugural Digital Consumer Insights report, the company analyzed purchasing patterns of over 5,000 consumers of legal drinking age who purchased Core Spirits across the U.S. through Thirstie powered branded storefronts from December 2020 - December 2021. When assessing online sales for the sub-categories, Thirstie found that Wealthy Small Families dominate most, including gin (29%), rum (32%), and vodka (23%). However, Small Middle Class Families have the largest share of Whiskey with 28%. The data report also explained that Retirees make-up a significant share of the consumer base for rum and vodka (25% and 21%, respectively), while Single Suburbanites make up a large portion of gin purchases (20%). Since the launch of its enterprise e-commerce solution in 2017 , Thirstie has focused on arming beverage alcohol suppliers and brands with first-party data. By providing brands with consumer data and insights, Thirstie has enabled hundreds of alcohol brands to drive significant retail revenue through their digital storefronts. "Through the implementation of innovative technology and solutions, Thirstie is transforming the beverage alcohol industry to be on par with, and surpass other CPG sectors," said Devaraj Southworth, Thirstie's CEO & Co-Founder. "Central to this evolution is data. Providing liquor brands with true data intelligence on their consumers and their category is something that will undoubtedly continue to propel our industry forward." Key learnings from Thirstie Digital Consumer Insights: Core Spirits include: Higher price points don't deter online buyers: Consumers in all persona segments for core spirits show a willingness to purchase premium items and checkout with multiple items in their shopping cart. Suburban Families have a well-stocked bar: Suburban families, both Wealthy Small Families and Small Middle Class Families, play a significant role in the online shopping audience for core spirits. Age plays a significant factor in driving specific online category sales: Young single consumers prefer the varying flavor profiles of gin. Older consumers will gravitate to vodka or rum. For the full report, visit thirstie.com/datainsights This report was compiled by Thirstie Data Intelligence who analyzed purchasing patterns of over 5,000 consumers of legal drinking age who purchased Core Spirits (storefronts that feature Whiskey, Vodka, Rum and Gin) across the U.S. through Thirstie powered branded storefronts from Dec. 2020 - Dec. 2021. For complete report methodology, please contact [email protected] About Thirstie Thirstie, a New York based technology company connects brands with consumers. Its offerings include white-label e-commerce, consumer adoption and data intelligence solutions for Beverage Alcohol brands. Founded by Devaraj Southworth and Maxim Razmakhin in 2014, Thirstie helps brands to power consumer interactions in an industry three-tier compliant system. For more information about Thirstie, please visit www.thirstie.com or follow us on LinkedIn @Thirstie or Twitter, @AreYouThirstie. SOURCE Thirstie ENGLEWOOD, Colo., March 2, 2022 /PRNewswire/ -- International Women's Day is celebrated on March 8 each year to honor the social, economic, cultural, and political achievements of women. The day also marks a call to action for accelerating women's equality, which Toastmasters International is a proud champion of. Women hold prominent positions throughout the organization, and currently for the first time in Toastmasters' 98-year history the majority of the Board of Directors' Executive Committee is female. Toastmasters Highlights Five Inspirational Females on International Womens Day "No matter where you go in the world, you'll notice one common denominator: Women are the glue that holds society together," says Margaret Page, of British Columbia, Canada, Toastmasters' 2021-22 International President. "We are the networkers, the organizers, the hand holders, the community builders. In honor of International Women's Day, let's take a moment to shift focus back on ourselves by recognizing and reflecting on our talents and achievements. We bring out the best in the world and we have the power to bring out the best in ourselves, too." With International Women's Day occurring March 8, Toastmasters honors these five inspirational females from around the world: Farzana Chohan is an architect, author, and organizational leadership expert in Missouri . Through her thought leadership, public speaking, and consulting engagements, she's active in a variety of women-empowering endeavors, including Leadership IN Women, an advocacy initiative to raise awareness of women leaders in non-traditional STEM (science, technology, engineering, and math) fields. is an architect, author, and organizational leadership expert in . Through her thought leadership, public speaking, and consulting engagements, she's active in a variety of women-empowering endeavors, including Leadership IN Women, an advocacy initiative to raise awareness of women leaders in non-traditional STEM (science, technology, engineering, and math) fields. Allison Coffin , Ph.D. , is an associate professor of integrative physiology and neuroscience at Washington State University , in Vancouver, Wash. Coffin is also a founder of Science Talk, a nonprofit organization for science communicators. Its focus is to support professional science communicators and increase awareness of the impact of science on society. , is an associate professor of integrative physiology and neuroscience at , in Coffin is also a founder of Science Talk, a nonprofit organization for science communicators. Its focus is to support professional science communicators and increase awareness of the impact of science on society. Nirmala Lilly is the president and CEO of India -based Infinity Hospitality Services, a firm specializing in tourism industry consultancy and training. Lilly ardently believes in mentoring and leads her state's chapter of the Women's Indian Chamber of Commerce & Industry, a nonprofit that advocates for women by pressing for policy change, fostering networks, and offering business development assistance. is the president and CEO of -based Infinity Hospitality Services, a firm specializing in tourism industry consultancy and training. Lilly ardently believes in mentoring and leads her state's chapter of the Women's Indian Chamber of Commerce & Industry, a nonprofit that advocates for women by pressing for policy change, fostering networks, and offering business development assistance. Patricia Mensah-Larkai is an administrator for the Ghana Border Commission, which manages the country's internal and international boundaries. She also serves as the city of Accra's governor for World Speech Day, giving the opportunity for unexpected voices to be heard. The event celebrates live public speaking activities every year in more than 100 countries. is an administrator for the Ghana Border Commission, which manages the country's internal and international boundaries. She also serves as the city of governor for World Speech Day, giving the opportunity for unexpected voices to be heard. The event celebrates live public speaking activities every year in more than 100 countries. Arlyne Simon , Ph.D., is a platform architect in Intel's Health and Life Science group and a biomedical engineer by training. Through her education startup, Abby Invents, the Oregon woman creates science-oriented picture books and other materials to inspire young students to create inventions. Abby Invents has been praised by Purdue University , Science magazine, and the National Inventors Hall of Fame. For more information on these five women and their achievements, read Ruth Nasrullah's "International Women Have Their Day" in the Toastmaster magazine. On March 8, Toastmasters is hosting Celebrating Women in Leadership, a free webinar in honor of International Women's Day. The webinar will feature three inspiring female leaders as panelists and will be moderated by Verity Price, a South African woman who is the 2021 Toastmasters' World Champion of Public Speaking. Click here to register for the webinar. To schedule an interview with a successful female Toastmasters leader, email [email protected]. About Toastmasters International Toastmasters International is a worldwide nonprofit educational organization that empowers individuals to become more effective communicators and leaders. Headquartered in Englewood, Colo., the organization's membership exceeds 300,000 in more than 15,800 clubs in 149 countries. Since 1924, Toastmasters International has helped people from diverse backgrounds become more confident speakers, communicators, and leaders. For information about local Toastmasters clubs, please visit www.toastmasters.org. Follow @Toastmasters on Twitter. SOURCE Toastmasters International Senior living continues to be a core sector for Township Capital Tweet this About Woodlands at Hillcrest Woodlands at Hillcrest is the newest senior living community in Lincoln, opening its doors in 2018. The community offers modern luxury services to residents including transportation, a variety of classes and wellness programs, personal housekeeping, laundry and linen services and state-of-the-art amenities. The Lincoln market has seen high absorption, proven by Woodlands currently occupation of 94%. About Township Capital, LLC Township Capital, LLC is a leading co-GP real estate investment firm headquartered in Beverly Hills, CA. Founded by CEO Matthew Gorelik in 2014, the firm has experience investing across all major property types with a specialty in student housing, senior living, multifamily, and industrial. For more information on Township Capital, visit townshipinc.com About Lloyd Jones Lloyd Jones LLC is a real estate investment firm with 40 years in the industry under the continuous direction of Chairman/CEO, Christopher Finlay. Based in Miami, the firm specializes in multifamily and senior housing investment, development, and management. It has recently added a hotel acquisition division. Investment partners include private and institutional investors and family offices around the world. To learn more about Lloyd Jones, visit lloydjonesllc.com SOURCE Township Capital Toxic Exposure grant health care eligibility and improve the disability benefits process for all veterans who served in areas of known toxic exposures. WWP specifically advocated for passage of comprehensive legislation that has been introduced in the Senate S. 3003, the Comprehensive and Overdue Support for Troops (COST) of War Act; and the House H.R. 3967, the Honoring Our Promise to Address Comprehensive Toxics (PACT) Act. grant health care eligibility and improve the disability benefits process for all veterans who served in areas of known toxic exposures. WWP specifically advocated for passage of comprehensive legislation that has been introduced in the Senate S. 3003, the Comprehensive and Overdue Support for Troops (COST) of War Act; and the House H.R. 3967, the Honoring Our Promise to Address Comprehensive Toxics (PACT) Act. Mental Health ensure the U.S. Department of Veterans Affairs (VA) is a leader in evidence-based treatment and research, and a key coordinator of community-wide efforts to prevent veteran suicide. ensure the U.S. Department of Veterans Affairs (VA) is a leader in evidence-based treatment and research, and a key coordinator of community-wide efforts to prevent veteran suicide. Women Warriors continue to support the growing population of women veterans by expanding access to gender-specific care, fostering ongoing connection and support, and improving coordination of care and benefits for survivors of military sexual trauma (MST). continue to support the growing population of women veterans by expanding access to gender-specific care, fostering ongoing connection and support, and improving coordination of care and benefits for survivors of military sexual trauma (MST). Long-Term Care and Support promote the use and success of VA's long-term care programs for younger veterans, including those who have suffered traumatic brain injuries (TBI) during their service. promote the use and success of VA's long-term care programs for younger veterans, including those who have suffered traumatic brain injuries (TBI) during their service. Caregivers ensure the Program of Comprehensive Assistance for Family Caregivers (PCAFC) continues to support veterans who require great care and attention. ensure the Program of Comprehensive Assistance for Family Caregivers (PCAFC) continues to support veterans who require great care and attention. Financial Security modernize and improve VA's systems of support and better recognize how financial security is an important factor in veterans' success after their service. Read WWP's full written testimony and learn more about the group's 2022 Legislative Priorities. "Your actions to address these important issues will have a particularly strong impact on the post-9/11 generation of veterans," Linnington said. "WWP stands by as your partner in meeting the needs of all who served and all who support them." To illustrate the need for Congress to act on these veterans' issues, Linnington highlighted the findings in WWP's latest Annual Warrior Survey, which was released last week. For example, the survey found 98% of warriors reported some exposure to hazardous or toxic substances during military service, and 73% of those deployed in Operations Enduring Freedom, Iraqi Freedom, and New Dawn reported serving near a burn pit. Moreover, Linnington pointed out that the 2021 AWS found only 56.6% of warriors reported receiving mental health care at a VA Medical Center, despite the prevalence of PTSD (75%), anxiety (74%), and depression (72%). Learn more about WWP's 2021 Annual Warrior Survey and how it helps inform WWP's programs and legislative priorities. About Wounded Warrior Project Since 2003, Wounded Warrior Project (WWP) has been meeting the growing needs of warriors, their families, and caregivers helping them achieve their highest ambition. Learn more. SOURCE Wounded Warrior Project The Kennedy Company was founded in 1976, by Mr. David R. Kennedy, a physicist educated at University of London. While he was employed on the Saturn Rocket Project at the Space Technology Centre in Huntsville, he worked on developing innovative acoustic barriers for NASA. The Kennedy Company's 7 acres cutting-edge Technology Park in Scottsboro, Alabama will soon house multiple manufacturing and R&D facilities focusing on Trivitron's core segments Medical Imaging, IVD, ICU and Cardiology Equipment & Consumables. Commenting on the acquisition, Dr. GSK Velu, Chairman & Managing Director, Trivitron said, "We are immensely pleased to welcome The Kennedy Company into the Trivitron Group. We intend to further strengthen the robust foundation created by Mr. David Kennedy and his team with Trivitron's global presence, infrastructure, and robust manufacturing. With this acquisition, Trivitron will now have a manufacturing and R&D presence in India, USA, Finland, Turkey, China and Austria.'' Mr. Satyaki Banerjee, CEO Medical Imaging, Trivitron commented, "By augmenting the manufacturing experience of the Kennedy team with deep technical know-how and regulatory focus of Trivitron, we can offer the widest selection of Radiation Protection and Medical Imaging Products globally." "We are delighted to join the Trivitron Group. I am confident that this merger will benefit both of us and the greater Huntsville area provides the perfect backdrop to expand skilled manufacturing," said Mr. David R. Kennedy, Founder, The Kennedy Company. Post integration, the new entity would become a part of Trivitron Healthcare Americas, operating as Kennedy Vinyl for the existing X-ray Shielding and Acoustic Noise Control business and Kennedy Radiology for Radiation Protection Products manufactured in the USA. The organization would be led by Mr. Sesh Sarathy, who spearheaded Trivitron Group's M&A efforts in North America, as President, Sales and Business Development, and Mrs. Sarah Kennedy Precise, who's been a part of the Kennedy team for more than two decades, as President, Operations. To know more visit www.trivitron.com and www.kennedyvinyl.com. For media queries, Mr. Amit Arora ([email protected]) or +919871007298. SOURCE Trivitron Healthcare Pvt Ltd RESTON, Va., March 2, 2022 /PRNewswire/ -- Satelles, Inc. (www.satelles.com), innovative provider of highly secure satellite-based time and location services, today recognizes two reports published last month by the U.S. National Institute of Standards and Technology (NIST), the government entity responsible for maintaining the national standards for time and frequency in the United States in coordination with the United States Naval Observatory. The reports confirm Satellite Time and Location (STL) as a source of resilient time and describe its benefit as an element of the agency's recommendation for a resilient timing architecture. "These well-researched and expertly prepared reports articulate the urgent and important requirement for having reliable timing sources beyond GPS," said Dr. Michael O'Connor, CEO of Satelles. "It's great to have STL categorized as one of the limited number of technologies available today with the performance specifications and operational characteristics to immediately meet the needs of critical infrastructure providers." The first NIST report, "An Evaluation of Dependencies of Critical Infrastructure Timing Systems on the Global Positioning System (GPS)" (NIST Technical Note 2189), calls attention to the critical need for reliable time signals that are resilient to outages of GPS. It underscores that need by closely examining the timing requirements and dependencies of three critical infrastructure sectors that rely the most on precise time synchronization. The report describes multiple technologies that are available today to solve this critical need, including STL, a resilient, alternative PNT service from low Earth orbit (LEO) satellites that enterprise customers rely on as a primary timing source. Specifically, NIST identifies STL as a resilient public access time distribution technology capable of microsecond accuracy. In confirming this finding, NIST states that "Due in part to the success of GPS, which has at least indirectly led to the demise of eLoran and other systems, only a small number of free public access time distribution systems remain that are under U.S. control." The report refers to STL as a commercial alternative. A February 2020 presidential executive order encouraging the responsible use of positioning, navigation, and timing (EO 13905) includes multiple directives emphasizing PNT resilience, technological diversity, and urgency of action. "A Resilient Architecture for the Realization and Distribution of Coordinated Universal Time to Critical Infrastructure Systems in the United States" (NIST Technical Note 2187), is an essential deliverable from the executive order. The second report from NIST fulfills an important part of the agency's obligation under the executive order to make available a GPS-independent source of Coordinated Universal Time (UTC) to support critical infrastructure owners and operators in the private and public sectors. The comprehensive architecture defined by NIST comprises technical descriptions and recommendations for bolstering national resilience by having multiple ways to realize and distribute UTC in the U.S. NIST's architecture classifies STL as an indirect distribution source for UTC(NIST), meaning that critical infrastructure-protective applications can obtain accurate and reliable timing without using GPS by incorporating STL into a plan that comports with the responsible use of PNT. The agency based its findings on a thorough technical evaluation showing that STL is a reliable source of timing that is highly consistent with UTC(NIST) and is based on a signal that is resilient to regional outages of GPS. "It is important for our customers to have the assurance that STL is fully capable of indirectly distributing UTC with a solution that's available right now," said Christina Riley, Vice President of Commercial PNT at Satelles. "Such a capability is not only a vital element of NIST's architecture to realize and distribute UTC but also a way for Satelles to help ensure the survivability and resilience of our national critical infrastructure." Visit satelles.com/nist for more information about NIST reports that detail the performance of STL and collaborations between Satelles and NIST. About Satelles Satelles provides secure time and location signals from low Earth orbit (LEO) that are resilient to regional outages of the Global Positioning System (GPS) and other Global Navigation Satellite Systems (GNSS). Satelles' Satellite Time and Location (STL) service safeguards against devastating attacks to GPS/GNSS capable of disrupting or disabling electrical grids, wireless communications networks, financial systems, and other private and public infrastructure in ways that seriously imperil the safety and security of our society. Available anywhere on the planet, the STL service delivers assured positioning, navigation, and timing (PNT) via a satellite broadcast signal that is stronger and more secure than other solutions. The company delivers assured PNT at levels of stability, reliability, and trust required by commercial enterprises and government entities across a range of critical infrastructure, IoT, and cybersecurity applications. Satelles partners with device manufacturers to incorporate STL signal support into today's latest equipment, bringing the benefits of Satellite Time and Location to customers around the world. Satelles Media Contact Kirk Vespestad Satelles, Inc. [email protected] +1 (703) 282-1800 Corporate Website: https://www.satelles.com/ Twitter: https://twitter.com/satellesinc LinkedIn: https://www.linkedin.com/company/satelles/ This press release was issued through 24-7PressRelease.com. For further information, visit http://www.24-7pressrelease.com. Source: Satelles, Inc. SOURCE Satelles, Inc. As of March 1, approximately 660,000 residents have fled into neighboring countries. So far, Ukraine's Health Ministry reports that more than 350 civilians have been killed, including 14 children. Observing events as they unfolded, Dharma Master Cheng Yen, the founder of Tzu Chi, highlighted the plight of refugees to Tzu Chi volunteers worldwide on February 28: "Looking at them fleeingsome carrying young children on their backs, holding them in their hands, older ones holding smaller oneslarge families are escaping in crowds. We do not know what their destination is." Currently, Dharma Masters at the Global Tzu Chi Foundation Headquarters' Jing Si Abode in Taiwan are chanting a portion from the sacred Lotus Sutra called the "Universal Gate Chapter on Avalokitesvara Bodhisattva." It is believed to bring peace and harmony to the world. Yet, Master Cheng Yen has invited the global community to contribute their goodwill and blessings to those suffering as a result of this crisis: "Only when the heart is peaceful and peaceful can this man-made disaster be quelled." At the same time, Tzu Chi volunteers in Europe have connected with local agencies and partners along the Polish-Ukrainian border. It's currently estimated that more than half of refugees noted have crossed into Poland. With this great need, we are planning donations of humanitarian relief items that will provide immediate physical comfort, including but not limited to emergency goods, medical supplies, DA.AI Technology eco-blankets, and food. Reflecting on Tzu Chi's past support of people who are displaced, Powen Yen, the Chief Executive Officer of the Tzu Chi Charity Foundation, noted refugee crises extending from Syria and recently Afghanistan. In both instances, where the threat of danger was high, Tzu Chi sent humanitarian aid where possible to comfort those seeking safety and refuge. While it is difficult to predict what will happen next, Tzu Chi volunteers continue to monitor the situation and are assessing its humanitarian relief efforts accordingly. Regardless, Tzu Chi USA calls on the public to contribute to our fundraiser, "Love & Compassion for Ukraine." Donations will go to support the above relief items, but also send a clear message to those seeking refuge: in the face of crisis, you are not alone. Donations are accepted in the following ways: online: donate.tzuchi.us/ukraine by mobile app, Tzu Chi Connect: tzuchi.us/app by check: made payable to "Tzu Chi" and mailed to the Tzu Chi chapter nearest you. See the list at tzuchi.us/offices About Us The Buddhist Tzu Chi Foundation is a global non-profit humanitarian organization founded in 1966 by a Buddhist nun named Dharma Master Cheng Yen in Taiwan. Its missions of medicine, charity, education, and humanistic culture has brought relief to 127 countries and counting. In 1989, Tzu Chi USA was established and now has 62 offices across the US. The heart of Tzu Chi is embedded in its name: in Chinese, "tzu" means compassion and "chi," relief. Media Contact: [email protected] SOURCE TZU CHI In order to support the humanitarian efforts underway in Ukraine, Medicom will be sending over $250,000 worth of medical products from North America and Europe. In addition, the company is launching a fundraiser among its nearly 2,000 employees and will match every dollar donated. The funds raised will be donated to Doctors Without Borders and used primarily to improve access to health care and medication. "For the past few days, our thoughts have been with our colleagues in Kyiv and with the Ukrainian people. In keeping with our mission to protect, we decided to help the caregivers involved in the humanitarian efforts and their patients," said Guillaume Laverdure, Chief Operating Officer of Medicom. Medicom's customers and partners who wish to support medical humanitarian aid operations in Ukraine can visit the Doctors Without Borders website at https://www.msf.org. About the Medicom Group The Medicom Group is one of the world's leading manufacturers and distributors of high-quality, single-use, preventive and infection control products for the medical, dental, industrial, animal health, laboratory, retail and health and wellness markets. Medicom was named one of Canada's Best Managed Companies for 2021 and received a Mercure Award at the Mercuriades 2021. Medicom distributes infection control products under the Medicom, Ritmed, Kolmi, Hopen, Ocean Pacific and Hedy brands. Medicom subsidiaries include Kolmi-Hopen in France, Medicom Asia in Hong Kong, United Medical Enterprise in the U.S.A., KHM Engineering in Singapore and Medicom HealthPro Limited in the U.K. Medicom has extensive experience in responding to the demand for personal protective equipment in the event of a pandemic. Medicom was founded in 1988 in response to the urgent need for medical gloves for healthcare professionals during the global HIV crisis. Since then, the company has been a reliable supplier of infection control solutions during multiple epidemics, including avian flu, SARS, H1N1 and Ebola, as well as the COVID-19 pandemic. For more information about Medicom and the company's comprehensive portfolio of infection control solutions, including an extensive range of medical face masks, please visit Medicom.com , follow us on Twitter @MedicomGlobal or visit our pages on Facebook or LinkedIn. SOURCE AMD Medicom Inc. The market is highly fragmented due to the presence of numerous small and large vendors. These players compete against each other to meet the needs of consumers and expand their market presence. Vendors are also competing against each other in terms of pricing strategy, service, quality of food, menu variation, as well the calories intake per serving. BRF SA, Campbell Soup Co., Conagra Brands Inc., Dr. August Oetker Nahrungsmittel KG, Fleury Michon SA, General Mills Inc., Gits Food Products Pvt. Ltd., Godrej Agrovet Ltd., Greencore Group Plc, Haldiram Foods International Pvt. Ltd, ITC Ltd., Massa Leve, McCain Foods Ltd., MTR Foods Pvt. Ltd., Nestle SA, Nomad Foods Ltd., Premier Foods Plc, The Kraft Heinz Co., Tyson Foods Inc., and VH Group are some of the dominant players in the market. Although the growth of the organized retail sector, a significant rise in new product launches, and the increasing demand for on-the-go foods due to busy work schedules will offer immense growth opportunities, need for adherence to stringent regulations and guidelines, fluctuating prices of raw materials, the growing health concerns about diabetes and obesity will challenge the growth of the market participants. To make the most of the opportunities, market vendors should focus more on the growth prospects in the fast-growing segments, while maintaining their positions in the slow-growing segments. Technavio presents a detailed picture of the market by the way of study, synthesis, and summation of data from multiple sources. Our ready to eat food market report covers the following areas: Ready To Eat Food Market 2022-2026: Segmentation Ready To Eat Food Market is segmented as below: Product Frozen Ready-to-heat Ready-to-cook Geography APAC North America South America MEA Europe The frozen food segment accounted for the highest market share in the market. The segment is mainly driven by the increasing consumption of frozen foods. Besides, the convenience offered by frozen foods coupled with the rising number of working women will foster the growth of the segment. The market growth in the segment will be significant during the forecast period. Similarly, North America will offer significant growth opportunities for market players during the forecast period. The increasing demand for on-the-go foods, especially among the millennial population is driving the growth of the regional market. Also, changing demographics, such as the increase in spending power, will propel the market for ready to eat food products in North America. The US is the key market for ready to eat food in North America. Market growth in this region will be slower than the growth of the market in the South American, APAC and MEA regions. Download a Free Sample for highlights on the growth contribution from other segments in the region. Ready To Eat Food Market 2022-2026: Key Highlights CAGR of the market during the forecast period 2022-2026 Detailed information on factors that will assist ready to eat food market growth during the next five years Estimation of the ready to eat food market size and its contribution to the parent market Predictions on upcoming trends and changes in consumer behavior The growth of the ready to eat food market Analysis of the market's competitive landscape and detailed information on vendors Comprehensive details of factors that will challenge the growth of ready to eat food market vendors Related Reports: Ready-To-Eat Popcorn Market by Product and Geography - Forecast and Analysis 2022-2026 Food Sweetener Market by Type and Geography - Forecast and Analysis 2022-2026 Ready To Eat Food Market Scope Report Coverage Details Page number 120 Base year 2021 Forecast period 2022-2026 Growth momentum & CAGR Accelerate at a CAGR of 7.15% Market growth 2022-2026 USD 71.69 billion Market structure Fragmented YoY growth (%) 6.63 Regional analysis APAC, North America, South America, MEA, and Europe Performing market contribution North America at 36% Key consumer countries US, China, Japan, Germany, and UK Competitive landscape Leading companies, competitive strategies, consumer engagement scope Companies profiled BRF SA, Campbell Soup Co., Conagra Brands Inc., Dr. August Oetker Nahrungsmittel KG, Fleury Michon SA, General Mills Inc., Gits Food Products Pvt. Ltd., Godrej Agrovet Ltd., Greencore Group Plc, Haldiram Foods International Pvt. Ltd, ITC Ltd., Massa Leve, McCain Foods Ltd., MTR Foods Pvt. Ltd., Nestle SA, Nomad Foods Ltd., Premier Foods Plc, The Kraft Heinz Co., Tyson Foods Inc., and VH Group Market Dynamics Parent market analysis, Market growth inducers and obstacles, Fast-growing and slow-growing segment analysis, COVID 19 impact and future consumer dynamics, market condition analysis for the forecast period, Customization purview If our report has not included the data that you are looking for, you can reach out to our analysts and get segments customized. Table Of Contents: 1 Executive Summary 1.1 Market overview Exhibit 01: Executive Summary Chart on Market Overview Exhibit 02: Executive Summary Data Table on Market Overview Exhibit 03: Executive Summary Chart on Global Market Characteristics Exhibit 04: Executive Summary Chart on Market by Geography Exhibit 05: Executive Summary Chart on Market Segmentation by Product Exhibit 06: Executive Summary Chart on Incremental Growth Exhibit 07: Executive Summary Data Table on Incremental Growth Exhibit 08: Executive Summary Chart on Vendor Market Positioning 2 Market Landscape 2.1 Market ecosystem Exhibit 09: Parent market Exhibit 10: Market Characteristics 3 Market Sizing 3.1 Market definition Exhibit 11: Offerings of vendors included in the market definition 3.2 Market segment analysis Exhibit 12: Market segments 3.3 Market size 2021 3.4 Market outlook: Forecast for 2021-2026 Exhibit 13: Chart on Global - Market size and forecast 2021-2026 ($ billion) Exhibit 14: Data Table on Global - Market size and forecast 2021-2026 ($ billion) Exhibit 15: Chart on Global Market: Year-over-year growth 2021-2026 (%) Exhibit 16: Data Table on Global Market: Year-over-year growth 2021-2026 (%) 4 Five Forces Analysis 4.1 Five forces summary Exhibit 17: Five forces analysis - Comparison between 2021 and 2026 4.2 Bargaining power of buyers Exhibit 18: Bargaining power of buyers Impact of key factors in 2021 and 2026 4.3 Bargaining power of suppliers Exhibit 19: Bargaining power of suppliers Impact of key factors in 2021 and 2026 4.4 Threat of new entrants Exhibit 20: Threat of new entrants Impact of key factors in 2021 and 2026 4.5 Threat of substitutes Exhibit 21: Threat of substitutes Impact of key factors in 2021 and 2026 4.6 Threat of rivalry Exhibit 22: Threat of rivalry Impact of key factors in 2021 and 2026 4.7 Market condition Exhibit 23: Chart on Market condition - Five forces 2021 and 2026 5 Market Segmentation by Product 5.1 Market segments Exhibit 24: Chart on Product - Market share 2021-2026 (%) Exhibit 25: Data Table on Product - Market share 2021-2026 (%) 5.2 Comparison by Product Exhibit 26: Chart on Comparison by Product Exhibit 27: Data Table on Comparison by Product 5.3 Frozen - Market size and forecast 2021-2026 Exhibit 28: Chart on Frozen - Market size and forecast 2021-2026 ($ billion) Exhibit 29: Data Table on Frozen - Market size and forecast 2021-2026 ($ billion) Exhibit 30: Chart on Frozen - Year-over-year growth 2021-2026 (%) Exhibit 31: Data Table on Frozen - Year-over-year growth 2021-2026 (%) 5.4 Ready-to-heat - Market size and forecast 2021-2026 Exhibit 32: Chart on Ready-to-heat - Market size and forecast 2021-2026 ($ billion) Exhibit 33: Data Table on Ready-to-heat - Market size and forecast 2021-2026 ($ billion) Exhibit 34: Chart on Ready-to-heat - Year-over-year growth 2021-2026 (%) Exhibit 35: Data Table on Ready-to-heat - Year-over-year growth 2021-2026 (%) 5.5 Ready-to-cook - Market size and forecast 2021-2026 Exhibit 36: Chart on Ready-to-cook - Market size and forecast 2021-2026 ($ billion) Exhibit 37: Data Table on Ready-to-cook - Market size and forecast 2021-2026 ($ billion) Exhibit 38: Chart on Ready-to-cook - Year-over-year growth 2021-2026 (%) Exhibit 39: Data Table on Ready-to-cook - Year-over-year growth 2021-2026 (%) 5.6 Market opportunity by Product Exhibit 40: Market opportunity by Product ($ billion) 6 Customer Landscape 6.1 Customer landscape overview Exhibit 41: Analysis of price sensitivity, lifecycle, customer purchase basket, adoption rates, and purchase criteria 7 Geographic Landscape 7.1 Geographic segmentation Exhibit 42: Chart on Market share by geography 2021-2026 (%) Exhibit 43: Data Table on Market share by geography 2021-2026 (%) 7.2 Geographic comparison Exhibit 44: Chart on Geographic comparison Exhibit 45: Data Table on Geographic comparison 7.3 North America - Market size and forecast 2021-2026 - Market size and forecast 2021-2026 Exhibit 46: Chart on North America - Market size and forecast 2021-2026 ($ billion) - Market size and forecast 2021-2026 ($ billion) Exhibit 47: Data Table on North America - Market size and forecast 2021-2026 ($ billion) - Market size and forecast 2021-2026 ($ billion) Exhibit 48: Chart on North America - Year-over-year growth 2021-2026 (%) - Year-over-year growth 2021-2026 (%) Exhibit 49: Data Table on North America - Year-over-year growth 2021-2026 (%) 7.4 Europe - Market size and forecast 2021-2026 - Market size and forecast 2021-2026 Exhibit 50: Chart on Europe - Market size and forecast 2021-2026 ($ billion) - Market size and forecast 2021-2026 ($ billion) Exhibit 51: Data Table on Europe - Market size and forecast 2021-2026 ($ billion) - Market size and forecast 2021-2026 ($ billion) Exhibit 52: Chart on Europe - Year-over-year growth 2021-2026 (%) - Year-over-year growth 2021-2026 (%) Exhibit 53: Data Table on Europe - Year-over-year growth 2021-2026 (%) 7.5 APAC - Market size and forecast 2021-2026 Exhibit 54: Chart on APAC - Market size and forecast 2021-2026 ($ billion) Exhibit 55: Data Table on APAC - Market size and forecast 2021-2026 ($ billion) Exhibit 56: Chart on APAC - Year-over-year growth 2021-2026 (%) Exhibit 57: Data Table on APAC - Year-over-year growth 2021-2026 (%) 7.6 Middle East and Africa - Market size and forecast 2021-2026 and - Market size and forecast 2021-2026 Exhibit 58: Chart on Middle East and Africa - Market size and forecast 2021-2026 ($ billion) and - Market size and forecast 2021-2026 ($ billion) Exhibit 59: Data Table on Middle East and Africa - Market size and forecast 2021-2026 ($ billion) and - Market size and forecast 2021-2026 ($ billion) Exhibit 60: Chart on Middle East and Africa - Year-over-year growth 2021-2026 (%) and - Year-over-year growth 2021-2026 (%) Exhibit 61: Data Table on Middle East and Africa - Year-over-year growth 2021-2026 (%) 7.7 South America - Market size and forecast 2021-2026 - Market size and forecast 2021-2026 Exhibit 62: Chart on South America - Market size and forecast 2021-2026 ($ billion) - Market size and forecast 2021-2026 ($ billion) Exhibit 63: Data Table on South America - Market size and forecast 2021-2026 ($ billion) - Market size and forecast 2021-2026 ($ billion) Exhibit 64: Chart on South America - Year-over-year growth 2021-2026 (%) - Year-over-year growth 2021-2026 (%) Exhibit 65: Data Table on South America - Year-over-year growth 2021-2026 (%) 7.8 US - Market size and forecast 2021-2026 Exhibit 66: Chart on US - Market size and forecast 2021-2026 ($ billion) Exhibit 67: Data Table on US - Market size and forecast 2021-2026 ($ billion) Exhibit 68: Chart on US - Year-over-year growth 2021-2026 (%) Exhibit 69: Data Table on US - Year-over-year growth 2021-2026 (%) 7.9 China - Market size and forecast 2021-2026 - Market size and forecast 2021-2026 Exhibit 70: Chart on China - Market size and forecast 2021-2026 ($ billion) - Market size and forecast 2021-2026 ($ billion) Exhibit 71: Data Table on China - Market size and forecast 2021-2026 ($ billion) - Market size and forecast 2021-2026 ($ billion) Exhibit 72: Chart on China - Year-over-year growth 2021-2026 (%) - Year-over-year growth 2021-2026 (%) Exhibit 73: Data Table on China - Year-over-year growth 2021-2026 (%) 7.10 Germany - Market size and forecast 2021-2026 - Market size and forecast 2021-2026 Exhibit 74: Chart on Germany - Market size and forecast 2021-2026 ($ billion) - Market size and forecast 2021-2026 ($ billion) Exhibit 75: Data Table on Germany - Market size and forecast 2021-2026 ($ billion) - Market size and forecast 2021-2026 ($ billion) Exhibit 76: Chart on Germany - Year-over-year growth 2021-2026 (%) - Year-over-year growth 2021-2026 (%) Exhibit 77: Data Table on Germany - Year-over-year growth 2021-2026 (%) 7.11 UK - Market size and forecast 2021-2026 Exhibit 78: Chart on UK - Market size and forecast 2021-2026 ($ billion) Exhibit 79: Data Table on UK - Market size and forecast 2021-2026 ($ billion) Exhibit 80: Chart on UK - Year-over-year growth 2021-2026 (%) Exhibit 81: Data Table on UK - Year-over-year growth 2021-2026 (%) 7.12 Japan - Market size and forecast 2021-2026 - Market size and forecast 2021-2026 Exhibit 82: Chart on Japan - Market size and forecast 2021-2026 ($ billion) - Market size and forecast 2021-2026 ($ billion) Exhibit 83: Data Table on Japan - Market size and forecast 2021-2026 ($ billion) - Market size and forecast 2021-2026 ($ billion) Exhibit 84: Chart on Japan - Year-over-year growth 2021-2026 (%) - Year-over-year growth 2021-2026 (%) Exhibit 85: Data Table on Japan - Year-over-year growth 2021-2026 (%) 7.13 Market opportunity by geography Exhibit 86: Market opportunity by geography ($ billion) 8 Drivers, Challenges, and Trends 8.1 Market drivers 8.2 Market challenges 8.3 Impact of drivers and challenges Exhibit 87: Impact of drivers and challenges in 2021 and 2026 8.4 Market trends 9 Vendor Landscape 9.1 Overview 9.2 Vendor landscape Exhibit 88: Overview on Criticality of inputs and Factors of differentiation 9.3 Landscape disruption Exhibit 89: Overview on factors of disruption 9.4 Industry risks Exhibit 90: Impact of key risks on business 10 Vendor Analysis 10.1 Vendors covered Exhibit 91: Vendors covered 10.2 Market positioning of vendors Exhibit 92: Matrix on vendor position and classification 10.3 Campbell Soup Co. Exhibit 93: Campbell Soup Co. - Overview Exhibit 94: Campbell Soup Co. - Business segments Exhibit 95: Campbell Soup Co. - Key news Exhibit 96: Campbell Soup Co. - Key offerings Exhibit 97: Campbell Soup Co. - Segment focus 10.4 Conagra Brands Inc. Exhibit 98: Conagra Brands Inc. - Overview Exhibit 99: Conagra Brands Inc. - Business segments Exhibit 100: Conagra Brands Inc. - Key news Exhibit 101: Conagra Brands Inc. - Key offerings Exhibit 102: Conagra Brands Inc. - Segment focus 10.5 Dr. August Oetker Nahrungsmittel KG Exhibit 103: Dr. August Oetker Nahrungsmittel KG - Overview Exhibit 104: Dr. August Oetker Nahrungsmittel KG - Product / Service Exhibit 105: Dr. August Oetker Nahrungsmittel KG - Key offerings 10.6 Fleury Michon SA Exhibit 106: Fleury Michon SA - Overview Exhibit 107: Fleury Michon SA - Business segments Exhibit 108: Fleury Michon SA - Key offerings Exhibit 109: Fleury Michon SA - Segment focus 10.7 General Mills Inc . . Exhibit 110: General Mills Inc . - Overview . - Overview Exhibit 111: General Mills Inc . - Business segments . - Business segments Exhibit 112: General Mills Inc . - Key offerings . - Key offerings Exhibit 113: General Mills Inc . - Segment focus 10.8 McCain Foods Ltd. Exhibit 114: McCain Foods Ltd. - Overview Exhibit 115: McCain Foods Ltd. - Product / Service Exhibit 116: McCain Foods Ltd. - Key offerings 10.9 Nestle SA Exhibit 117: Nestle SA - Overview Exhibit 118: Nestle SA - Business segments Exhibit 119: Nestle SA - Key news Exhibit 120: Nestle SA - Key offerings Exhibit 121: Nestle SA - Segment focus 10.10 Nomad Foods Ltd. Exhibit 122: Nomad Foods Ltd. - Overview Exhibit 123: Nomad Foods Ltd. - Product / Service Exhibit 124: Nomad Foods Ltd. - Key offerings 10.11 Premier Foods Plc Exhibit 125: Premier Foods Plc - Overview Exhibit 126: Premier Foods Plc - Business segments Exhibit 127: Premier Foods Plc - Key offerings Exhibit 128: Premier Foods Plc - Segment focus 10.12 The Kraft Heinz Co. Exhibit 129: The Kraft Heinz Co. - Overview Exhibit 130: The Kraft Heinz Co. - Business segments Exhibit 131: The Kraft Heinz Co. - Key offerings Exhibit 132: The Kraft Heinz Co. - Segment focus 11 Appendix 11.1 Scope of the report 11.2 Inclusions and exclusions checklist Exhibit 133: Inclusions checklist 11.3 Currency conversion rates for US$ Exhibit 134: Currency conversion rates for US$ 11.4 Research methodology Exhibit 135: Research methodology Exhibit 136: Validation techniques employed for market sizing Exhibit 137: Information sources 11.5 List of abbreviations Exhibit 138: List of abbreviations About Us Technavio is a leading global technology research and advisory company. Their research and analysis focus on emerging market trends and provides actionable insights to help businesses identify market opportunities and develop effective strategies to optimize their market positions. With over 500 specialized analysts, Technavio's report library consists of more than 17,000 reports and counting, covering 800 technologies, spanning across 50 countries. Their client base consists of enterprises of all sizes, including more than 100 Fortune 500 companies. This growing client base relies on Technavio's comprehensive coverage, extensive research, and actionable market insights to identify opportunities in existing and potential markets and assess their competitive positions within changing market scenarios. Contact Technavio Research Jesse Maida Media & Marketing Executive US: +1 844 364 1100 UK: +44 203 893 3200 Email: [email protected] Website: www.technavio.com/ SOURCE Technavio SAN FRANCISCO, March 2, 2022 /PRNewswire/ -- UserZoom, the pioneer of the Digital User Experience (UX) Insights category, today announced a strategic growth investment from Thoma Bravo, a leading software investment firm. The investment, which values UserZoom at $800 million, is expected to be used to accelerate innovation and growth for UserZoom's proprietary platforms. UserZoom founders and management, as well as current investor Sunstone Partners, will remain significant shareholders. For businesses in today's digital economy, delivering exceptional digital experiences is a primary competitive differentiator, impacting conversion, acquisition, retention, engagement, and loyalty. Meeting the constantly evolving needs of consumers requires the ability to surface high-quality insights directly from the end-users at speed and scale throughout the product lifecycle. UserZoom's proprietary UX Insights System offers an all-in-one platform, participant recruitment engine and professional services that provide the in-depth quantitative and qualitative insights essential to testing, measuring and improving digital product experiences. UserZoom uses advancements in AI/ML and embedded research best practices to offer both quality and speed, ensuring end users and customers remain at the forefront of digital innovation. The UX Insights system also incorporates UserZoom's pioneering QXscore, a standardized score for measuring the user experience (UX) of a company's digital properties, products, and services over time, and relative to competitors. By combining user and customer attitudes and behaviors into a single score on a 100-point scale, UserZoom aligns experience performance to strategic business KPIs and surfaces opportunities for improvement, de-risking the product development process. UserZoom has over 1,000 clients globally, including nearly half of the Fortune 100. The company also enables SMBs just getting started on their research journey, allowing them to start small and scale. UserZoom recently experienced the strongest period of growth in its history with 12 consecutive quarters of record revenue. In addition, the company added over 100 employees in 2021. With the investment from Thoma Bravo, UserZoom will be able to further develop its innovative product offerings, increase its existing customer base, and expand its geographic footprint, while maintaining and driving sustained growth. UserZoom will benefit from the operating capabilities, capital support and deep sector expertise of Thoma Bravo one of the most experienced and successful software investors in the world. "This investment from Thoma Bravo reinforces the strength of our industry leading insights solution and our ability to empower businesses by gathering, combining and extracting high-quality, actionable data-driven UX insights that help them quickly build and deliver enhanced digital experiences," said Alfonso de la Nuez, Co-CEO and Co-Founder of UserZoom. "In 2021, we made significant strides in expanding our footprint in key industries and geographies, and we are excited to partner with Thoma Bravo to accelerate our growth." "We've had the pleasure of building a relationship with UserZoom and its management team for many years," said A.J. Rohde, Senior Partner at Thoma Bravo. "We've seen Alfonso and his team pioneer the user experience insights category and build the foundation for what we believe will become one of the most important digital experience research and testing companies in the world. We are excited to support them in accelerating that vision and help them scale." "Businesses are operating in a world where high-quality digital experiences are imperative to attract and retain customers," said David Tse, a Vice President at Thoma Bravo. "UserZoom's team has enabled companies around the world to harness, measure and leverage digital experience insights to continually provide market-leading products, and we look forward to helping them achieve even greater success." The transaction is expected to close by March 2022, subject to customary closing conditions. UserZoom is being advised on the transaction by Houlihan Lokey and Gunderson Dettmer LLP. Thoma Bravo is being advised by DBO Partners and Goodwin Procter LLP. Inquiries: UserZoom: Sophie Chesters [email protected] +44 (0) 7577-984518 Thoma Bravo: Megan Frank Thoma Bravo Communications [email protected] (212) 731-4778 or Abigail Farr Finsbury Glover Hering [email protected] (646) 957-2067 About UserZoom: UserZoom is the leading Digital User Experience Insights System. Its all-in-one platform, participant recruitment engine and professional services provide the in-depth quantitative and qualitative insights essential to testing, measuring and improving digital product experiences at speed and scale throughout the product development lifecycle. UserZoom helps businesses connect insights to their most important performance metrics, so they can make confident, customer-focused decisions that drive growth and deliver competitive advantage. With operations in North America and Europe, the company helps global brands such as Google, Oracle, Aetna, Santander, Kimberly-Clark, and half of the Fortune 100 raise the bar for an outstanding digital experience. To learn more, visit www.UserZoom.com . About Thoma Bravo: Thoma Bravo is one of the largest private equity firms in the world, with more than $91 billion in assets under management as of September 30, 2021. The firm invests in growth-oriented, innovative companies operating in the software and technology sectors. Leveraging the firm's deep sector expertise and proven strategic and operational capabilities, Thoma Bravo collaborates with its portfolio companies to implement operating best practices, drive growth initiatives and make accretive acquisitions intended to accelerate revenue and earnings. Over the past 20 years, the firm has acquired or invested in more than 350 companies representing over $155 billion in enterprise value. The firm has offices in Chicago, Miami and San Francisco. For more information, visit www.thomabravo.com . SOURCE UserZoom ALISO VIEJO, Calif., March 2, 2022 /PRNewswire/ -- UST, a leading digital transformation solutions company, today announced its qualification to offer services in support of the RISE with SAP solution. RISE with SAP brings together what businesses need to pursue their digital transformation objectives and accelerate their move to the cloud while benefitting from the ability to begin their journey from their unique starting point. UST partners with SAP to help customers transform their businesses with the software and services they need to achieve greater speed, agility, and integration. "At UST, we focus on helping our customers adopt standard best practices and reduce technical debt while leveraging the latest digital technologies," said Chris Botha, Senior Vice President and Global SAP Leader, UST. "UST is well-positioned to support its clients accelerate their digital business transformation and take their business-critical elements into the cloud with flexibility and innovation with RISE with SAP." UST developed a portfolio of industry-leading tools, platforms, apps, and accelerators to drive value and differentiation for businesses adopting RISE with SAP. These include: UST Rapid Readiness: A proven eight-stage, a pre-preparation framework for SAP S/4HANA that enhances the SAP Activate methodology and ensures that business drivers and pain points are mapped to capabilities for SAP S/4HANA Cloud. This also helps align landscape and cloud strategy while leveraging UST's happiness approach to human-centric digital development, all of which results in a clear roadmap for standardization, innovation, and a transformation business case. A proven eight-stage, a pre-preparation framework for SAP S/4HANA that enhances the SAP Activate methodology and ensures that business drivers and pain points are mapped to capabilities for SAP S/4HANA Cloud. This also helps align landscape and cloud strategy while leveraging UST's happiness approach to human-centric digital development, all of which results in a clear roadmap for standardization, innovation, and a transformation business case. UST Fast Start : An upgrade and cloud migration trial offering which enables enterprises to reduce risk in their migration to SAP S/4HANA Cloud. The offering allows UST to upgrade and migrate businesses to our cloud as a trial, accelerating the ultimate journey to SAP S/4HANA Cloud. : An upgrade and cloud migration trial offering which enables enterprises to reduce risk in their migration to SAP S/4HANA Cloud. The offering allows UST to upgrade and migrate businesses to our cloud as a trial, accelerating the ultimate journey to SAP S/4HANA Cloud. UST Evolve: Rapid migration of SAP ERP Central Component environments to SAP S/4HANA Cloud has become an essential component to most transformation journeys. UST Evolve is a hybrid migration framework leveraging UST accelerators and IP to accelerate the transformation. As a partner qualified to provide services for RISE with SAP, UST works with SAP from the start to address a customer's unique needs to help ensure its success. UST Global is a partner in the SAP PartnerEdge program. The SAP PartnerEdge program provides the enablement tools, benefits and support to facilitate building high-quality, disruptive applications focused on specific business needs quickly and cost-effectively. About UST For more than 22 years, UST has worked side by side with the world's best companies to make a real impact through transformation. Powered by technology, inspired by people, and led by our purpose, we partner with our clients from design to operation. We identify their core challenges and craft disruptive solutions that bring their vision to life through our agile approach. With deep domain expertise and a future-proof philosophy, we embed innovation and agility into our clients' organizationsdelivering measurable value and lasting change across industries and worldwide. Together, with over 29,000 employees in 30 countries, we build for boundless impacttouching billions of lives in the process. Visit us at ust.com. SAP and other SAP products and services mentioned herein as well as their respective logos are trademarks or registered trademarks of SAP SE in Germany and other countries. Please see https://www.sap.com/copyright for additional trademark information and notices. All other product and service names mentioned are the trademarks of their respective companies. Media Contacts, UST: Tinu Cherian Abraham +1 (949) 415-9857 Neha Misri +91-9284726602 [email protected] Media Contacts, U.S.: S&C PR +1-646.941.9139 [email protected] Media Contacts, U.K.: FTI Consulting [email protected] SOURCE UST CHICAGO, March 2, 2022 /PRNewswire/ -- Vehicle Acquisition Network (VAN) will be releasing a significant update to their platform; this new feature will be achieved through their new Chrome extension. Dealers can expect to see the extension in play during the NADA Conference and Expo in Las Vegas on March 10, 2022. Vehicle Acquisition Network's (VAN) latest Chrome extension will provide dealers with an innovative and effective way to interact with VAN and other platforms such as Facebook from a single browser. Additionally, this new feature will allow dealers to seamlessly add notes, content information, and view items at a glance directly on the VAN platform. "Currently, there is a disconnect, and we want to integrate them, eliminating the process of having the dealers going back and forth," said CEO Tom Gregg. "Integrating VAN into the native websites is going to allow dealers to save time and work more efficiently within the VAN platform." About VAN: Vehicle Acquisition Network (VAN) offers an alternative, affordable solution for dealers sourcing private party vehicles by identifying sellers and developing new relationships with untapped consumers in their market. The Vehicle Acquisition Network team will be at NADA in Las Vegas from March 10-13, 2022. Be sure to visit booth 1864W to learn how our VAN experts help dealers efficiently source private party vehicles. Media Contact: Kaila Smith Idea Meet Plan [email protected] SOURCE Vehicle Acquisition Network, Inc. SANTA MONICA, Calif., March 2, 2022 /PRNewswire/ -- Veo , the first profitable micromobility company, today announced the opening of its second corporate headquarters in Santa Monica, Calif. The Santa Monica office, located on the Third Street Promenade, will help facilitate Veo's continued growth along the West Coast. The company will maintain its headquarters in Chicago, where it has operated since 2017. Veo entered the Santa Monica market in July 2021, when it was selected to participate in the city's second shared mobility program and today operates over 700 vehicles in the market. The fleet includes the Cosmo Pedal, the micromobility industry's first Class 2 e-bike with throttle assist, and the Astro 4 stand-up e-scooter, equipped with industry-first safety features, including turn signals and lights designed specifically for night riding. Veo also offers Santa Monica residents Veo Access, a discounted fare program for riders who qualify for local, California State, or federal assistance programs. The company operates micromobility fleets in more than 30 cities nationwide and currently has approximately 200 employees. Veo plans to expand its workforce by another 300 people throughout 2022, most of whom will be in the Santa Monica area. "Our expansion across the U.S. has been steady and intentional. When we began operating in Santa Monica, the birthplace of shared mobility, we were committed to developing a long-term, collaborative partnership with the city focused on responsible business practices," said Candice Xie, Veo CEO. "As we expand in the western half of the U.S., Santa Monica was the clear choice to establish our second headquarters given the city's role as a micromobility model for cities globally." Veo takes a fundamentally different approach to expansion than its competitors. It has grown at a responsible pace, collaborating with local partners to create environments where micromobility vehicles can be operated responsibly and ensuring every program is financially viable for the long term. This model has resulted in a 225% revenue increase for Veo in 2021 and continues to attract the attention of high-profile markets. "Downtown Santa Monica has been the center of innovation in Southern California for more than 30 years, earning the moniker Silicon Beach because of the concentration of technology start-ups and other ground-breaking businesses. Veo's addition reinforces our district's commitment to developing solutions to the challenges of today to bring about a better tomorrow," said Mackenzie Carter, Interim Executive Director of Downtown Santa Monica, Inc. "Veo's dedication to providing people of all ages and income levels with convenient, environmentally friendly transportation options is something we embrace, and we are thrilled to welcome them to the Third Street Promenade." Another contributing factor to Veo's success is that unlike competitors, the company designs and develops its own bikes and scooters specifically for shared use and improved safety. Later in 2022, Veo will introduce new vehicle types and will make significant enhancements to the existing devices in its product line. About Veo Veo is bringing the next generation of shared electric bikes and scooters to cities and universities around the world. Founded in 2017 by two Purdue University graduates, Veo operates from a set of values that distinguish us in the industry. We are grounded in financial responsibility: Veo partnered with select cities to achieve profitability before scaling. Our in-house design and manufacturing process enables us to constantly innovate and provide cities with vehicle fleets that are made to last. We develop collaborative, long-term partnerships with cities and universities so we can work together toward a sustainable, safe, and equitable transportation future. Learn more at www.veoride.com. SOURCE Veo REDDING, Calif., March 2, 2022 /PRNewswire/ -- According to a new market research report "Veterinary Diagnostics Market by Product (Consumables, System & Software), Technology (Immunodiagnostics, Hematology, PCR), Animal Type (Canine, Feline, Ruminant, Poultry), End User (Reference Lab, Veterinary Hospital, Point of Care Testing) Global Forecast to 2029", published by Meticulous Research, the veterinary diagnostics market is expected to grow at a CAGR of 9.5% from 2022 to 2029 to reach $9.58 billion by 2029. Download Free Sample Report Now @ https://www.meticulousresearch.com/download-sample-report/cp_id=5123 The demand for animal-derived food products, such as meat, milk products, and eggs, is expected to increase in the coming years. According to the FAO, feeding a world population of 9.7 billion would require raising the overall agri-food production by around 5070% by 2050. However, agricultural productivity has been declining in recent years, largely due to declining resources, particularly less cultivable lands. Hence, the demand for animal-derived food products is expected to increase worldwide. This increased demand for animal-derived food products can be met by increasing the number of animals by adopting better reproductive strategies and improving health coverage based on newer veterinary diagnostic technologies. In addition, governments worldwide are focusing on increasing awareness about animal diseases by undertaking initiatives related to diagnosis. Furthermore, governments are working with domestic and international partners to promote animal health products. These initiatives help educate decision-makers, regulatory agencies, reference laboratories, and other end users regarding the importance of veterinary diagnosis. For instance, to the IAEA's COVID-19 response launch, the Zoonotic Disease Integrated Action (ZODIAC) initiative was established in June 2020 to help countries prevent pandemics caused by bacteria, parasites, fungi, or viruses that originate in animals and can be transmitted to humans. ZODIAC will establish a global network to help national laboratories in monitoring, surveillance, early detection, and control of animal and zoonotic diseases such as COVID-19, Ebola, avian influenza, and Zika. Impact of COVID-19 on Veterinary Diagnostics Market SARS-CoV-2 (the virus that causes COVID-19) infections have also been reported in a small number of animals worldwide, mostly in animals that had close contact with a person infected with the virus. At this time, routine testing of animals was not recommended. State and local animal health and public health officials are working with USDA and the U.S. Centers for Disease Control and Prevention (CDC) to determine whether animals should be tested for SARS-CoV-2. In June 2020, the United States Department of Agriculture's (USDA) National Veterinary Services Laboratories (NVSL) announced the first confirmed case of SARS-CoV-2 infection in a pet dog (German shepherd) in New York state. This is the first dog in the United States to test positive for SARS-CoV-2. Presently, there is no evidence that animals play a significant role in spreading SARS-CoV-2 to humans. However, reports from infected mink farms in the Netherlands and Denmark suggest that in these environments, there is the possibility for the spread of SARS-CoV-2 from mink to humans. Speak to our Analysts to Understand the Impact of COVID-19 on Your Business: https://www.meticulousresearch.com/speak-to-analyst/cp_id=5123 The CDC, USDA, and state public health and animal health officials in several countries are working to conduct active surveillance of SARS-CoV-2 in pets, including cats, dogs, and other small mammals, that had contact with a person infected with COVID-19. The animals are being tested for SARS-CoV-2 infection and observed to find whether these animals develop antibodies for this virus. Although testing of animals uses the same techniques as those used for humans, the National Veterinary Services Laboratories (NVSL) and other laboratories incorporate animal-specific reagents to preserve needed supplies for testing of humans. For instance, in April 2020, IDEXX Laboratories, Inc. (U.S.) launched the IDEXX SARS-CoV-2 (COVID-19) RealPCR Test for pets in response to the growing evidence that in rare cases, pets living with COVID-19 positive humans can be at risk of SARS-CoV-2 infection. Thus, the research on SARS-Cov-2 in animals is limited, but several studies are underway to learn more about COVID-19 infections in animals. These studies would lead to the development of various assays and kits for testing, which is expected to increase the adoption of veterinary diagnostic products. Veterinary Diagnostics Market Overview The overall veterinary diagnostics market is segmented on the basis of product (consumables, system & software), technology (immunodiagnostics, PCR), animal type (canine, feline, ruminant, poultry), end user (reference lab, veterinary hospital, point of care testing) and geography. The study also evaluates industry competitors and analyzes their market shares at the global and regional levels. Based on technology, the immunodiagnostics segment is estimated to account for the largest share of the overall veterinary diagnostics market in 2022. The large share of this segment is attributed to its features, such as rapid, convenience, and accuracy for detecting and quantitation of targets. The continuous development of new biomarkers & their cost-benefits and the adoption of automated platforms for ELISA is also expected to drive the adoption of this technology. Based on product type, the consumables segment is estimated to account for the largest share of the overall veterinary diagnostics market in 2022. The large share of this segment is attributed to the growing incidences of foodborne and zoonotic diseases, its frequent and repetitive usage, and the commercial availability of a diverse range of reagents and consumables for various diseases and animal health screening. In addition, the emergence of various POC tests and assays is expected to create significant growth opportunities in the veterinary diagnostic consumables market. Quick Buy Veterinary Diagnostics Market Research Report: https://www.meticulousresearch.com/Checkout/66325521 Based on animal type, the companion animal segment is estimated to account for the largest share of the overall veterinary diagnostics market in 2022 and is expected to register the fastest growth rate during the forecast period. The large share of this segment is attributed to the increasing number of pet ownerships in developed countries and rising pet healthcare expenditure. Based on the end user, the reference laboratories segment is estimated to account for the largest share of the overall veterinary diagnostics market in 2022. The large market share of this segment is attributed to the increasing preference for diagnostic services offered by reference laboratories and the increasing number of product developments through strategic alliances between laboratories and companies. The report also includes an extensive assessment of the product portfolios, geographic analysis, and key strategic developments adopted by leading market participants over the past four years. The veterinary diagnostics market has witnessed several new product launches, approvals, partnerships, agreements, and acquisitions in recent years. For instance, in September 2021, Heska Corporation (U.S.) acquired Biotech Laboratories U.S.A. LLC (U.S.), a developer of rapid assay diagnostic testing. This acquisition was aimed at enabling Heska to expand its product portfolio and enter into the rapid assay point of care diagnostics market. Similarly, in July 2020, Zoetis Inc. (U.S.) acquired Fish Vet Group (U.K.) from Benchmark Holdings, PLC (U.K.) to develop and commercialize fish vaccines and offer services in vaccination and diagnostics for aquaculture. Some of the key players operating in the global veterinary diagnostics market are IDEXX Laboratories, Inc. (U.S.), Zoetis Inc. (U.S.), Thermo Fisher Scientific Inc. (U.S.), Heska Corporation (U.S.), Bio-Rad Laboratories, Inc. (U.S.), bioMerieux S.A. (France), INDICAL BIOSCIENCE GmbH (Germany), Agrolabo SpA (Italy), Neogen Corporation (U.S.), IDvet (France), and GD Animal Health (Netherlands) among others. To gain more insights into the market with a detailed table of content and figures, click here: https://www.meticulousresearch.com/product/veterinary-diagnostics-market-5123 Scope of the Report: Veterinary Diagnostics Market, by Product Consumables Systems Software Veterinary Diagnostics Market, by Technology Immunodiagnostics ELISA Other Immunodiagnostic Technologies Note: Other immunodiagnostic technologies include lateral flow assays, rapid immunoassays, and allergy-specific immunodiagnostic tests. Molecular Diagnostics PCR Other Molecular Diagnostics Technologies Note: Other molecular diagnostic tests include microarrays and genetic testing. Clinical Chemistry Urinalysis Hematology Other technologies Note: Other Technologies comprises agar gel immunodiffusion, virus neutralization test, and hemagglutination inhibition Veterinary Diagnostics Market, by Animal Type Companion Animals Canines Felines Other Companion Animals Note: Other companion animals comprise rabbits and parrots Livestock Animals Ruminants Swine Poultry Other Livestock Animals Note: Other livestock animals comprise equine and fish Veterinary Diagnostics Market, by End User Reference Laboratories Veterinary Hospitals Point of Care Testing Veterinary Diagnostics Market, by Geography North America U.S. Canada Europe Germany France U.K. Italy Spain Rest of Europe (RoE) (RoE) Asia-Pacific (APAC) (APAC) Japan China India Rest of APAC (RoAPAC) Latin America Middle East & Africa Download Free Sample Report Now @ https://www.meticulousresearch.com/download-sample-report/cp_id=5123 Amidst this crisis, Meticulous Research is continuously assessing the impact of COVID-19 pandemic on various sub-markets and enables global organizations to strategize for the post-COVID-19 world and sustain their growth. Let us know if you would like to assess the impact of COVID-19 on any industry here- https://www.meticulousresearch.com/custom-research Related Reports: Veterinary Practice Management Software Market by Delivery Mode (On-Premises, Cloud), Practice Type (Companion Animals, Mixed Animals, Food Producing, Equine), End User (Hospitals, Referral/Specialty, Ambulatory Services) - Global Forecasts to 2028 https://www.meticulousresearch.com/product/veterinary-practice-management-software-market-1432 Livestock Diagnostics Market by Product (Consumables {Influenza, Foot and Mouth Disease}, System, Software), Technology (Immunodiagnostics {ELISA}, Molecular diagnostics {PCR}), Animal Type (Bovine, Swine, Poultry), and End Users - Global Forecasts to 2028 https://www.meticulousresearch.com/product/livestock-diagnostics-market-5085 Veterinary Immunodiagnostics Market Size by Product (Analyzers, Consumables), by technology (ELISA, Radioimmunoassay, Rapid tests, and others), by animal type [Livestock (Cattle, Pigs, Poultry) and Companion (Feline, Canine, Equine)], by application (Infectious diseases, autoimmune disorder, endocrinology and oncology, and bone and mineral diseases), and by End-user - Global Forecasts to 2022 https://www.meticulousresearch.com/product/veterinary-immunodiagnostics-market-size-2022/ About Meticulous Research Meticulous Research was founded in 2010 and incorporated as Meticulous Market Research Pvt. Ltd. in 2013 as a private limited company under the Companies Act, 1956. Since its incorporation, the company has become the leading provider of premium market intelligence in North America, Europe, Asia-Pacific, Latin America, and the Middle East & Africa. The name of our company defines our services, strengths, and values. Since the inception, we have only thrived to research, analyze, and present the critical market data with great attention to details. With the meticulous primary and secondary research techniques, we have built strong capabilities in data collection, interpretation, and analysis of data including qualitative and quantitative research with the finest team of analysts. We design our meticulously analyzed intelligent and value-driven syndicate market research reports, custom studies, quick turnaround research, and consulting solutions to address business challenges of sustainable growth. Contact: Mr. Khushal Bombe Meticulous Market Research Inc. 1267 Willis St, Ste 200 Redding, California, 96001, U.S. USA: +1-646-781-8004 Europe : +44-203-868-8738 APAC: +91 744-7780008 Email- [email protected] Visit Our Website: https://www.meticulousresearch.com/ Connect with us on LinkedIn- https://www.linkedin.com/company/meticulous-research Content Source: https://www.meticulousresearch.com/pressrelease/258/veterinary-diagnostics-market-2029 SOURCE Meticulous Market Research Pvt. Ltd DALLAS, March 2, 2022 /PRNewswire/ -- VolunteerNow announces the 15th annual Hearts of Texas Luncheon, which showcases the importance of volunteerism in the community, on Friday, April 28, 2022, at noon at the Omni Hotel in Downtown Dallas. Celebrating 50 years of transforming lives through volunteers, the luncheon is chaired by Charles Knight and Peter Jacobson, with The Hoglund Family as honorary chair. In honor of the organization's milestone anniversary, five extraordinary organizations will be recognized with the 2022 VolunteerNow Lifetime Achievement Award: Lyda Hill Philanthropies founder Lyda Hill has a passion for volunteering and technology and has used her thought leadership and resources to support VolunteerNow. In addition, she has provided transformational support for the development of VOLY.org, VolunteerNow's easy-to-use volunteering platform. Most recently, in recognition of VolunteerNow's 50 th anniversary, Lyda Hill Philanthropies awarded the organization a $250,000 challenge grant, which matches dollar-for-dollar all donations directed towards a $500,000 capital campaign through 2023. founder has a passion for volunteering and technology and has used her thought leadership and resources to support VolunteerNow. In addition, she has provided transformational support for the development of VOLY.org, VolunteerNow's easy-to-use volunteering platform. Most recently, in recognition of VolunteerNow's 50 anniversary, Lyda Hill Philanthropies awarded the organization a challenge grant, which matches dollar-for-dollar all donations directed towards a capital campaign through 2023. Hillcrest Foundation supported VolunteerNow's building campaign and was an early investor in the development of VOLY.org, leveraging their knowledge of the nonprofit needs in North Texas to help the organization create and sustain the platform. supported VolunteerNow's building campaign and was an early investor in the development of VOLY.org, leveraging their knowledge of the nonprofit needs in to help the organization create and sustain the platform. The Meadows Foundation has supplied property and financial support for the permanent home of VolunteerNow, allowing the organization to focus on supporting nonprofits and volunteers in a great collaborative space. has supplied property and financial support for the permanent home of VolunteerNow, allowing the organization to focus on supporting nonprofits and volunteers in a great collaborative space. JCPenney is the cornerstone donor to VolunteerNow's three Discount Depot stores in Dallas and Fort Worth . These stores allow the agency to provide needed new clothing and household items at a deeply discounted price to local nonprofits. Profits from Discount Depot also financially support the organization's mission of volunteerism. is the cornerstone donor to VolunteerNow's three Discount Depot stores in and . These stores allow the agency to provide needed new clothing and household items at a deeply discounted price to local nonprofits. Profits from Discount Depot also financially support the organization's mission of volunteerism. Texas Instruments has been a staunch proponent of corporate volunteerism for many years, and has provided their top executives as VolunteerNow board members, leveraging their technology and business acumen. Additionally, the Ruth Collins Sharp Altshuler Award for exceptional use of volunteers will be awarded to Equest. The Equest mission to enhance the quality of life for children and adults with diverse needs by partnering them with horses to bring hope and healing through equine assisted activities and therapies is one that VolunteerNow greatly admires. A luncheon highlight will include keynote speaker Wes Moore, New York Times best-selling author, entrepreneur, and United States Army combat veteran. Moore will share his remarkable personal story of overcoming adversity through focusing on education, embracing personal responsibility and emerging as an inspirational leader. "This year's Hearts of Texas luncheon will be a wonderful commemoration of VolunteerNow's five decades of transforming lives through volunteers," said Tammy Richards, CEO of VolunteerNow. "In addition to hearing Wes Moore's truly inspirational story, we are extremely honored to recognize five organizations whose unwavering support throughout the last fifty years have ensured our place as one of the largest and most innovative volunteer centers in the country. We hope the community will join us as we salute VolunteerNow's history and celebrate our exciting future." Sponsorships and tickets for the 15th annual Hearts of Texas Luncheon are available now. Sponsorships range from $2,500 - 50,000; Patron level tickets, with seating for two, are $500; and individual tickets are $200. Visit https://www.volnow.org/heartsoftexas or contact Cami Alexander, [email protected] or 214.783.2539, for sponsorship and ticket information. About VolunteerNow With 50 years of experience, VolunteerNow transforms lives through volunteerism and community engagement. In a typical year, VolunteerNow mobilizes more than 310,000 volunteers who give 1.6 million hours to 3,500 local nonprofits, driving a $46 million economic impact. VOLY.org, powered by VolunteerNow, is the 24/7 connection between volunteers and local service opportunities. As a national thought leader in volunteerism and one of the largest volunteer centers in the country, VolunteerNow provides a wide range of programs and services that build capacity for school districts, nonprofits, and municipalities. volnow.org SOURCE VolunteerNow COLUMBUS, Ohio, March 2, 2022 /PRNewswire/ -- White Castle, America's first fast-food hamburger chain and a family-owned business for 101 years, is launching a new companywide philanthropy program to give its 10,000+ team members more input on the recipients of its charitable donations. Recognizing that local nonprofits were among the hardest hit during the pandemic, White Castle will ask each of its restaurant markets to raise money for the charitable causes most important to their respective team members and communities. White Castle announces new giving program that focuses on local causes and organizations in need Tweet this White Castle team members in the St. Louis area raised $22,239.07 for CHADS Coalition for Mental Health, a nonprofit offering programs to advance the awareness and prevention of depression and suicide. White Castle introduced this new program, called "District Charity of Choice," as a pilot in 2021 as part of its 100th birthday celebration. The company's restaurant operations are divided geographically into a few dozen districts. Each district worked with team members to identify local causes they wanted to support. For a few weeks during the year, the restaurants invited customers to round up their check to the nearest dollar, with the additional money going to the selected local charities. All combined, White Castle's 350 restaurants raised more than $1.1 million for 48 different charities. That's in addition to the more than $1.1 million White Castle raised as part of its companywide round-up programs to benefit Autism Speaks in late 2020 and 2021. The District Charity of Choice program was so well-received by customers, team members and, of course, the nonprofits, that the company decided to continue it in 2022 and beyond. "As a family-owned business through four generations of leadership, we are always looking for organizations and causes in our communities that can benefit the most from our support," said Erin Shannon, White Castle corporate relations manager and 4th generation family member. "So we have developed this new corporate giving program in a way that not only benefits local communities but also empowers our team members to make a difference, too." The 48 nonprofit recipients of White Castle's charitable donations in 2021 included everything from food banks, homeless shelters and humane societies to after-school programs, mental illness advocacy groups, and emergency shelters for domestic violence victims. White Castle team members also donated thousands of volunteer hours to these organizations. The 101-year-old White Castle has a long history of philanthropy, starting with its founder E.W. "Billy" Ingram. Billy felt strongly that the company should invest in the future of others and give back to the communities where they operated. In 1949, he created what's now known as the Ingram-White Castle Foundation as a mechanism to support worthy projects and programs. In 2005, White Castle introduced its "Castle Shares" program to encompass both the Ingram-White Castle Foundation's grantmaking and White Castle's corporate philanthropy. Every year, the two entities combined donate more than $2 million to charitable causes, community groups and nonprofit organizations. "Our pilot program in 2021 was a great success, and our 10,000 team members are eager to raise even more in 2022!" Shannon added. More about White Castle's Castle Shares initiatives can be found at whitecastle.com/castle-commitments/castle-shares. About White Castle White Castle, America's first fast-food hamburger chain, has been making hot and tasty Sliders as a family-owned business for 101 years. Based in Columbus, Ohio, White Castle started serving The Original Slider in 1921. Today White Castle owns and operates more than 350 restaurants dedicated to satisfying customers' cravings morning, noon and night and sells its famous fare in retail stores nationwide. The Original Slider, named in 2014 as Time magazine's "Most Influential Burger of All Time," is served alongside a menu of creatively crafted Sliders and other mouthwatering food options, including White Castle's Impossible Slider, named by Thrillist in 2019 as the "Best Plant-Based Fast Food Burger." White Castle's commitment to maintaining the highest quality products extends to the company owning and operating its own meat processing plants, bakeries and frozen-food processing plants. In 2021, 100 years after the first Slider was sold, Fast Company named the fast-food pioneer one of the "10 Most Innovative Dining Companies." White Castle is known for the legendary loyalty of its team members, more than 1 in 4 of whom have worked for White Castle for at least 10 years, and also for its faithful fans ("Cravers"), many of whom compete each year for entry into the Cravers Hall of Fame. The official White Castle app, available at iTunes App Store or Google Play, makes it easy for Cravers to access sweet deals and place pickup orders at any time. They can also have their orders delivered using one of White Castle's delivery partners. For more information on White Castle, visit whitecastle.com. SOURCE White Castle In October 2016 a 688-class submarine entered the shipyard for a planned 6-month overhaul. This ship finally completed its overhaul and left the shipyard in October of 2021 more than five years later . In the meantime, the next submarine scheduled for that dry dock slot sat, waiting at the pier for 4 years completely inoperable because its dive certification had lapsed . With a 35-year planned service life, that ship is going to go more than a decade between operational deployments due to the delays in starting its overhaul. These are not isolated cases between 2008 and 2018 the submarine force lost 10,363 operational days at an added cost of more than $1.5 Billion, according to GAO Report 19-229. This National Security problem also keeps getting worse. Just last year, according to Pacific Submarine Force Commander Rear Admiral Jeffrey Jablon, the fleet lost nearly 1,500 submarine operational days to idle time. According to the Commander of Fleet Forces Command, Admiral Daryl Caudle, "I don't have enough capacity. I don't have enough dry docks, and I don't have enough shipyards." The Bartlett Maritime Plan is a proactive immediately actionable public-private-partnership designed to solve this problem and to restore National Security. The plan includes building American Naval Shipyard in Lorain, OH and American Naval Depot in Lordstown, OH and training a ready workforce in greater Northeast Ohio/Northwest Pennsylvania to staff these urgently required new maintenance facilities. While there is an exceptionally challenging shortage of skilled trades personnel along the Nation's Ocean coasts, there is an abundant, ready pool of skilled trades personnel and apprentice candidates along the North Coast. Bartlett Maritime has partnered with the Metal Trades Department, AFL-CIO to develop this entirely new workforce. Capital for this project will be provided by an innovative and unique public-private-partnership between Bartlett Maritime Corporation and both the State of Ohio and the US Navy, applying existing federal and state laws. The Goldman Sachs Public Sector and Infrastructure Banking group has been retained to advise in the establishment of the project capital structure. Squire Patton Boggs, through its Cleveland, OH and Washington, DC offices, is providing outside legal counsel to Bartlett Maritime Corporation to support development and execution of the Bartlett Maritime Plan. Submarines to be overhauled at American Naval Shipyard at Lorain will require buoyancy assistance through the St. Lawrence Seaway. Fincantieri Marine Group's Bay Shipbuilding of Sturgeon Bay, WI will develop and build the Oceangoing Transit Carriers (patent pending) for this project, basing this new vessel on an existing vessel type now built at Sturgeon Bay. Commenting on the project, Dario Deste, President and CEO of Fincantieri Marine Group here in the U.S., stated, "We believe this plan represents a potential 'win-win' for the Navy and for numerous Midwest communities, specifically in northeastern Ohio and western Pennsylvania. We support this plan, and we are keenly interested in partnering in any way possible." Lordstown, OH Mayor Arno Hill and Lorain, OH Mayor Jack Bradley will each discuss what these projects will mean to their communities. US Navy Submarines are currently built by General Dynamics Electric Boat in Quonset Point, RI and Groton, CT and by Huntington Ingalls Industries Newport News Shipbuilding in Newport News, VA. The 4 existing Naval Shipyards are in Portsmouth, VA; Kittery, ME/Portsmouth, NH; Bremerton, WA and Pearl Harbor, HI. The new facilities proposed in the Bartlett Maritime Plan will collaborate with these 6 shipyards, not compete with them providing the additional industrial capacity and capability which is so desperately required to restore the US Navy's attack submarine force to full operational readiness. RSVPs are requested at [email protected]. Media Contact: Edward Bartlet, 216-379-0033, [email protected] SOURCE Bartlett Maritime Corporation Wireless fire detection system market - Scope The wireless fire detection system market covers the following areas: Wireless fire detection system market - Drivers & Challenges The integration of smoke detectors with IoT and big data is one of the key drivers supporting the wireless fire detection system market growth. The increase in concerns about fire safety has prompted the guidelines to be set by the US Fire Administration. Fire detectors must now be installed inside every bedroom, outside each sleeping area, and on each level of the home, including the basement, and one carbon monoxide detector on each level and in each sleeping area. Photoelectric detectors tend to be more commonly used in homes, as they are quick to detect smoke coming from burning fabrics and furnishings. Moreover, smart smoke detectors are programmable and can be easily connected to Wi-Fi networks in homes and commercial spaces. With the rapid development of fire detectors, IoT, and big data technologies, the concept of smart smoke detectors has come to force, leading to the adoption of smoke detectors. However, the high installation and maintenance cost of wireless fire detection systems is one of the factors hindering the wireless fire detection system market growth. For instance, the labor charge for the installation of wireless fire detection systems is high. This is due to the complexity of networks and the need to develop sophisticated tools to counter a fire situation. Moreover, the vendors need to regularly upgrade their solutions and develop new technologies due to the requirements for more responsive, accurate, and sophisticated systems. They are spending a large amount of money developing these advanced technologies, which increases the cost of procurement for residential enterprises and government agencies. Thus, the high installation and maintenance cost of wireless fire detection systems is expected to limit the growth of the market during the forecast period. To know more about drivers & challenges - Download a free sample now! Wireless fire detection system market - Segmentation Analysis The wireless fire detection system market analysis segmentation by end-user (industrial, commercial, and residential) and geography (APAC, North America, Europe, South America, and the Middle East and Africa). 50% of the market's growth will originate from APAC during the forecast period. China and Japan are the key markets for the wireless fire detection system market in APAC. Market growth in this region will be faster than the growth of the market in other regions. Increased awareness toward using fire safety compliance across end-user industries will facilitate the wireless fire detection system market growth in APAC over the forecast period. during the forecast period. and are the key markets for the wireless fire detection system market in APAC. Market growth in this region will be faster than the growth of the market in other regions. Increased awareness toward using fire safety compliance across end-user industries will facilitate the wireless fire detection system market growth in APAC over the forecast period. The wireless fire detection system market share growth by the industrial segment will be significant for revenue generation. The industrial sector primarily includes manufacturing facilities such as pharmaceutical, oil and gas, and others. The growth of these industries will directly impact the adoption of wireless fire detection systems across industrial facilities. The growing number of initiatives in capacity expansion and the increase in industrial manufacturing facilities in developing countries are positively impacting the demand for wireless fire detection systems in industrial settings Subscribe to our "Lite Plan" billed annually at USD 3000 to join a community, who are eligible to view 3 reports monthly and download 3 reports annually. Related Reports: Sensor Patch Market -The sensor patch market share is expected to increase by USD 4.31 billion from 2021 to 2026, at a CAGR of 35.19%. Download a free sample now! Traffic Sensors Market -The traffic sensors market share is expected to increase by USD 210.75 million from 2021 to 2026, and the market's growth momentum will accelerate at a CAGR of 9.14%. Download a free sample now! Wireless Fire Detection System Market Scope Report Coverage Details Page number 120 Base year 2021 Forecast period 2022-2026 Growth momentum & CAGR Accelerate at a CAGR of 6.37% Market growth 2022-2026 USD 122.98 million Market structure Fragmented YoY growth (%) 5.55 Performing market contribution APAC at 50% Competitive landscape Leading companies, competitive strategies, consumer engagement scope Companies profiled BNB Security and Automation Solutions Pvt Ltd, Carrier Global Corp., Ceasefire Industries Pvt. Ltd., Detectomat GmbH, Electro Detectors Ltd, EMS-CHEMIE HOLDING AG, EuroFyre Ltd, Halma Plc, HOCHIKI Corp., Honeywell International Inc., Johnson Controls International Plc, JSE Infratech Pvt. Ltd., Keystone Fire Protection Co., Napco Security Technologies Inc., Robert Bosch GmbH, Siemens AG, Tyco International PLC, VRF Ltd., Zeta Alarms Ltd., and Apollo Fire Detectors Ltd. Market Dynamics Parent market analysis, Market growth inducers and obstacles, Fast-growing and slow-growing segment analysis, COVID 19 impact and future consumer dynamics, market condition analysis for forecast period, Customization purview If our report has not included the data that you are looking for, you can reach out to our analysts and get segments customized. Key Topics Covered: 1 Executive Summary 1.1 Market overview Exhibit 01: Executive Summary Chart on Market Overview Exhibit 02: Executive Summary Data Table on Market Overview Exhibit 03: Executive Summary Chart on Global Market Characteristics Exhibit 04: Executive Summary Chart on Market by Geography Exhibit 05: Executive Summary Chart on Market Segmentation by End-user Exhibit 06: Executive Summary Chart on Incremental Growth Exhibit 07: Executive Summary Data Table on Incremental Growth Exhibit 08: Executive Summary Chart on Vendor Market Positioning 2 Market Landscape 2.1 Market ecosystem Exhibit 09: Parent market Exhibit 10: Market Characteristics 3 Market Sizing 3.1 Market definition Exhibit 11: Offerings of vendors included in the market definition 3.2 Market segment analysis Exhibit 12: Market segments 3.3 Market size 2021 3.4 Market outlook: Forecast for 2021-2026 Exhibit 13: Chart on Global - Market size and forecast 2021-2026 ($ million) Exhibit 14: Data Table on Global - Market size and forecast 2021-2026 ($ million) Exhibit 15: Chart on Global Market: Year-over-year growth 2021-2026 (%) Exhibit 16: Data Table on Global Market: Year-over-year growth 2021-2026 (%) 4 Five Forces Analysis 4.1 Five forces summary Exhibit 17: Five forces analysis - Comparison between 2021 and 2026 4.2 Bargaining power of buyers Exhibit 18: Bargaining power of buyers Impact of key factors in 2021 and 2026 4.3 Bargaining power of suppliers Exhibit 19: Bargaining power of suppliers Impact of key factors in 2021 and 2026 4.4 Threat of new entrants Exhibit 20: Threat of new entrants Impact of key factors in 2021 and 2026 4.5 Threat of substitutes Exhibit 21: Threat of substitutes Impact of key factors in 2021 and 2026 4.6 Threat of rivalry Exhibit 22: Threat of rivalry Impact of key factors in 2021 and 2026 4.7 Market condition Exhibit 23: Chart on Market condition - Five forces 2021 and 2026 5 Market Segmentation by End-user 5.1 Market segments Exhibit 24: Chart on End-user - Market share 2021-2026 (%) Exhibit 25: Data Table on End-user - Market share 2021-2026 (%) 5.2 Comparison by End-user Exhibit 26: Chart on Comparison by End-user Exhibit 27: Data Table on Comparison by End-user 5.3 Industrial - Market size and forecast 2021-2026 Exhibit 28: Chart on Industrial - Market size and forecast 2021-2026 ($ million) Exhibit 29: Data Table on Industrial - Market size and forecast 2021-2026 ($ million) Exhibit 30: Chart on Industrial - Year-over-year growth 2021-2026 (%) Exhibit 31: Data Table on Industrial - Year-over-year growth 2021-2026 (%) 5.4 Commercial - Market size and forecast 2021-2026 Exhibit 32: Chart on Commercial - Market size and forecast 2021-2026 ($ million) Exhibit 33: Data Table on Commercial - Market size and forecast 2021-2026 ($ million) Exhibit 34: Chart on Commercial - Year-over-year growth 2021-2026 (%) Exhibit 35: Data Table on Commercial - Year-over-year growth 2021-2026 (%) 5.5 Residential - Market size and forecast 2021-2026 Exhibit 36: Chart on Residential - Market size and forecast 2021-2026 ($ million) Exhibit 37: Data Table on Residential - Market size and forecast 2021-2026 ($ million) Exhibit 38: Chart on Residential - Year-over-year growth 2021-2026 (%) Exhibit 39: Data Table on Residential - Year-over-year growth 2021-2026 (%) 5.6 Market opportunity by End-user Exhibit 40: Market opportunity by End-user ($ million) 6 Customer Landscape 6.1 Customer landscape overview Exhibit 41: Analysis of price sensitivity, lifecycle, customer purchase basket, adoption rates, and purchase criteria 7 Geographic Landscape 7.1 Geographic segmentation Exhibit 42: Chart on Market share by geography 2021-2026 (%) Exhibit 43: Data Table on Market share by geography 2021-2026 (%) 7.2 Geographic comparison Exhibit 44: Chart on Geographic comparison Exhibit 45: Data Table on Geographic comparison 7.3 APAC - Market size and forecast 2021-2026 Exhibit 46: Chart on APAC - Market size and forecast 2021-2026 ($ million) Exhibit 47: Data Table on APAC - Market size and forecast 2021-2026 ($ million) Exhibit 48: Chart on APAC - Year-over-year growth 2021-2026 (%) Exhibit 49: Data Table on APAC - Year-over-year growth 2021-2026 (%) 7.4 North America - Market size and forecast 2021-2026 - Market size and forecast 2021-2026 Exhibit 50: Chart on North America - Market size and forecast 2021-2026 ($ million) - Market size and forecast 2021-2026 ($ million) Exhibit 51: Data Table on North America - Market size and forecast 2021-2026 ($ million) - Market size and forecast 2021-2026 ($ million) Exhibit 52: Chart on North America - Year-over-year growth 2021-2026 (%) - Year-over-year growth 2021-2026 (%) Exhibit 53: Data Table on North America - Year-over-year growth 2021-2026 (%) 7.5 Europe - Market size and forecast 2021-2026 - Market size and forecast 2021-2026 Exhibit 54: Chart on Europe - Market size and forecast 2021-2026 ($ million) - Market size and forecast 2021-2026 ($ million) Exhibit 55: Data Table on Europe - Market size and forecast 2021-2026 ($ million) - Market size and forecast 2021-2026 ($ million) Exhibit 56: Chart on Europe - Year-over-year growth 2021-2026 (%) - Year-over-year growth 2021-2026 (%) Exhibit 57: Data Table on Europe - Year-over-year growth 2021-2026 (%) 7.6 South America - Market size and forecast 2021-2026 - Market size and forecast 2021-2026 Exhibit 58: Chart on South America - Market size and forecast 2021-2026 ($ million) - Market size and forecast 2021-2026 ($ million) Exhibit 59: Data Table on South America - Market size and forecast 2021-2026 ($ million) - Market size and forecast 2021-2026 ($ million) Exhibit 60: Chart on South America - Year-over-year growth 2021-2026 (%) - Year-over-year growth 2021-2026 (%) Exhibit 61: Data Table on South America - Year-over-year growth 2021-2026 (%) 7.7 Middle East and Africa - Market size and forecast 2021-2026 and - Market size and forecast 2021-2026 Exhibit 62: Chart on Middle East and Africa - Market size and forecast 2021-2026 ($ million) and - Market size and forecast 2021-2026 ($ million) Exhibit 63: Data Table on Middle East and Africa - Market size and forecast 2021-2026 ($ million) and - Market size and forecast 2021-2026 ($ million) Exhibit 64: Chart on Middle East and Africa - Year-over-year growth 2021-2026 (%) and - Year-over-year growth 2021-2026 (%) Exhibit 65: Data Table on Middle East and Africa - Year-over-year growth 2021-2026 (%) 7.8 US - Market size and forecast 2021-2026 Exhibit 66: Chart on US - Market size and forecast 2021-2026 ($ million) Exhibit 67: Data Table on US - Market size and forecast 2021-2026 ($ million) Exhibit 68: Chart on US - Year-over-year growth 2021-2026 (%) Exhibit 69: Data Table on US - Year-over-year growth 2021-2026 (%) 7.9 China - Market size and forecast 2021-2026 - Market size and forecast 2021-2026 Exhibit 70: Chart on China - Market size and forecast 2021-2026 ($ million) - Market size and forecast 2021-2026 ($ million) Exhibit 71: Data Table on China - Market size and forecast 2021-2026 ($ million) - Market size and forecast 2021-2026 ($ million) Exhibit 72: Chart on China - Year-over-year growth 2021-2026 (%) - Year-over-year growth 2021-2026 (%) Exhibit 73: Data Table on China - Year-over-year growth 2021-2026 (%) 7.10 Japan - Market size and forecast 2021-2026 - Market size and forecast 2021-2026 Exhibit 74: Chart on Japan - Market size and forecast 2021-2026 ($ million) - Market size and forecast 2021-2026 ($ million) Exhibit 75: Data Table on Japan - Market size and forecast 2021-2026 ($ million) - Market size and forecast 2021-2026 ($ million) Exhibit 76: Chart on Japan - Year-over-year growth 2021-2026 (%) - Year-over-year growth 2021-2026 (%) Exhibit 77: Data Table on Japan - Year-over-year growth 2021-2026 (%) 7.11 UK - Market size and forecast 2021-2026 Exhibit 78: Chart on UK - Market size and forecast 2021-2026 ($ million) Exhibit 79: Data Table on UK - Market size and forecast 2021-2026 ($ million) Exhibit 80: Chart on UK - Year-over-year growth 2021-2026 (%) Exhibit 81: Data Table on UK - Year-over-year growth 2021-2026 (%) 7.12 Germany - Market size and forecast 2021-2026 - Market size and forecast 2021-2026 Exhibit 82: Chart on Germany - Market size and forecast 2021-2026 ($ million) - Market size and forecast 2021-2026 ($ million) Exhibit 83: Data Table on Germany - Market size and forecast 2021-2026 ($ million) - Market size and forecast 2021-2026 ($ million) Exhibit 84: Chart on Germany - Year-over-year growth 2021-2026 (%) - Year-over-year growth 2021-2026 (%) Exhibit 85: Data Table on Germany - Year-over-year growth 2021-2026 (%) 7.13 Market opportunity by geography Exhibit 86: Market opportunity by geography ($ million) 8 Drivers, Challenges, and Trends 8.1 Market drivers 8.2 Market challenges 8.3 Impact of drivers and challenges Exhibit 87: Impact of drivers and challenges in 2021 and 2026 8.4 Market trends 9 Vendor Landscape 9.1 Overview 9.2 Vendor landscape Exhibit 88: Overview on Criticality of inputs and Factors of differentiation 9.3 Landscape disruption Exhibit 89: Overview on factors of disruption 9.4 Industry risks Exhibit 90: Impact of key risks on business 10 Vendor Analysis 10.1 Vendors covered Exhibit 91: Vendors covered 10.2 Market positioning of vendors Exhibit 92: Matrix on vendor position and classification 10.3 Apollo Fire Detectors Ltd. Exhibit 93: Apollo Fire Detectors Ltd. - Overview Exhibit 94: Apollo Fire Detectors Ltd. - Product / Service Exhibit 95: Apollo Fire Detectors Ltd. - Key offerings 10.4 Ceasefire Industries Pvt. Ltd. Exhibit 96: Ceasefire Industries Pvt. Ltd. - Overview Exhibit 97: Ceasefire Industries Pvt. Ltd. - Product / Service Exhibit 98: Ceasefire Industries Pvt. Ltd. - Key offerings 10.5 Electro Detectors Ltd Exhibit 99: Electro Detectors Ltd - Overview Exhibit 100: Electro Detectors Ltd - Product / Service Exhibit 101: Electro Detectors Ltd - Key offerings 10.6 EMS-CHEMIE HOLDING AG Exhibit 102: EMS-CHEMIE HOLDING AG - Overview Exhibit 103: EMS-CHEMIE HOLDING AG - Business segments Exhibit 104: EMS-CHEMIE HOLDING AG - Key offerings Exhibit 105: EMS-CHEMIE HOLDING AG - Segment focus 10.7 Halma Plc Exhibit 106: Halma Plc - Overview Exhibit 107: Halma Plc - Business segments Exhibit 108: Halma Plc - Key offerings Exhibit 109: Halma Plc - Segment focus 10.8 HOCHIKI Corp. Exhibit 110: HOCHIKI Corp. - Overview Exhibit 111: HOCHIKI Corp. - Business segments Exhibit 112: HOCHIKI Corp. - Key offerings Exhibit 113: HOCHIKI Corp. - Segment focus 10.9 Honeywell International Inc. Exhibit 114: Honeywell International Inc. - Overview Exhibit 115: Honeywell International Inc. - Business segments Exhibit 116: Honeywell International Inc. - Key news Exhibit 117: Honeywell International Inc. - Key offerings Exhibit 118: Honeywell International Inc. - Segment focus 10.10 Johnson Controls International Plc Exhibit 119: Johnson Controls International Plc - Overview Exhibit 120: Johnson Controls International Plc - Business segments Exhibit 121: Johnson Controls International Plc - Key news Exhibit 122: Johnson Controls International Plc - Key offerings Exhibit 123: Johnson Controls International Plc - Segment focus 10.11 Robert Bosch GmbH Exhibit 124: Robert Bosch GmbH - Overview Exhibit 125: Robert Bosch GmbH - Business segments Exhibit 126: Robert Bosch GmbH - Key news Exhibit 127: Robert Bosch GmbH - Key offerings Exhibit 128: Robert Bosch GmbH - Segment focus 10.12 Siemens AG Exhibit 129: Siemens AG - Overview Exhibit 130: Siemens AG - Business segments Exhibit 131: Siemens AG - Key news Exhibit 132: Siemens AG - Key offerings Exhibit 133: Siemens AG - Segment focus 11 Appendix 11.1 Scope of the report 11.2 Inclusions and exclusions checklist Exhibit 134: Inclusions checklist 11.3 Currency conversion rates for US$ Exhibit 135: Currency conversion rates for US$ 11.4 Research methodology Exhibit 136: Research methodology Exhibit 137: Validation techniques employed for market sizing Exhibit 138: Information sources 11.5 List of abbreviations Exhibit 139: List of abbreviations Fire detectors are increasingly being used with the increasing focus on safety across homes. Photoelectric and ionization smoke detectors are widely used in residential properties. In a residential setting, photoelectric alarms are more responsive to smoldering fires, whereas ionization detectors are better for flaming fires. About Us Technavio is a leading global technology research and advisory company. Their research and analysis focuses on emerging market trends and provides actionable insights to help businesses identify market opportunities and develop effective strategies to optimize their market positions. With over 500 specialized analysts, Technavio's report library consists of more than 17,000 reports and counting, covering 800 technologies, spanning across 50 countries. Their client base consists of enterprises of all sizes, including more than 100 Fortune 500 companies. This growing client base relies on Technavio's comprehensive coverage, extensive research, and actionable market insights to identify opportunities in existing and potential markets and assess their competitive positions within changing market scenarios. Contact Technavio Research Jesse Maida Media & Marketing Executive US: +1 844 364 1100 UK: +44 203 893 3200 Email: [email protected] Website: www.technavio.com/ SOURCE Technavio AVENTURA, Fla., March 2, 2022 /PRNewswire/ -- WM Partners, a certified diverse-owned private equity firm focused on investing in lower-middle market companies and driving value creation in the health and wellness sector, today announced the promotions of several members of the investment team: Vanessa Gabela to Managing Director, Eli Minski to Senior Vice President, Jonathan Tarich to Vice President, Anibal Montes to Senior Associate and Director of Environment, Social and Governance ("ESG"), and Leon Lacs to Associate. "We are excited to promote these individuals for their significant contributions to the firm and to our portfolio companies, said Jose Minski, Co-founder. "Their continued dedication, value and leadership, positions our firm for the future and we are very proud of their achievements." "These individuals have had invaluable impact in advancing WM Partners' strategy particularly executing on successfully closing our second fund over its cap, executing on acquisitions, and creating value at the firm and portfolio companies. We want to congratulate each of them on their well-deserved promotions," added Ernesto Carrizosa, Executive Managing Director and Partner. Vanessa Gabela, Managing Director joined WM Partners in early 2016. She is a member of the investment team and a member of the ESG Committee. She was one of the first hires of the firm and has been instrumental in the growth of the firm. Vanessa will continue to lead investor relations and fundraising as well as strategic firm initiatives. She has more than 18 years of finance and private equity experience. Prior to joining WM Partners, Vanessa was Director of Investor Relations at a middle-market private equity firm in New York City. Vanessa received an M.B.A. from MIT Sloan School of Management and a B.A. in International Relations from Wellesley College. Eli Minski, Senior Vice President, joined WM Partners in 2015 and is a member of the investment team and one of the first employees of the firm. Eli will continue to lead the deal team and has been involved with all acquisitions since the firm's founding and portfolio monitoring. Prior to joining WM Partners, Eli worked as cash manager and treasury analyst at Nutranext, LLC. Eli received an M.B.A. from Babson College and a B.S.M. in Finance from Tulane University. Jonathan Tarich, Vice President, joined WM Partners in 2016 shortly after the formation of the firm's first fund. He is a member of the investment team and has been involved with all acquisitions since the firm's founding as well as supporting the deal team on pipeline execution and portfolio monitoring. Prior to joining WM Partners, Jonathan worked in real estate. Jonathan graduated Cum Laude with a B.S. in Biology from the University of Florida. Anibal Montes, Senior Associate & Director of ESG joined WM Partners in 2019. He is a member of the investment team and supports the firm's fundraising and investor relations team. He also leads the firm's and portfolio companies' ESG integration. Prior to joining WM Partners, he worked at J.P. Morgan Private Bank in New York City, where he covered Financial Sponsors in the U.S. and ultra-high net worth clients in Latin America. Anibal graduated from Georgetown University's McDonough School of Business with a B.S.B.A double major in Finance and Accounting. Leon Lacs, Associate, joined WM Partners in 2020. He is a member of the investment team and supports the deal team by identifying, evaluating, and executing investment opportunities, as well as monitoring existing portfolio companies. Prior to joining WM Partners, Leon worked at Sunlight Financial in New York City. Leon graduated from the University of Florida where he earned an M.A. in International Business and B.S. in Finance. He is also a CFA charterholder and a member of the CFA Society of Miami. About WM Partners WM Partners is a middle-market private equity firm specializing in buyout investments in the health and wellness sector. WM Partners seeks to acquire small and medium size businesses with attractive growth prospects and generate sustainable, long-term value through its operational expertise in the health and wellness sector, and strategic business approach working in collaboration with experienced management teams. WM Partners is certified as a diverse-owned firm by the National Association of Investment Companies and is a signatory of the UN Principles for Responsible Investment and the ILPA Diversity in Action Initiative. WM Partners is based in Aventura, FL. More information about WM Partners is available at www.wmplp.com. For media inquiries about this press release, please contact: WM Partners, LP Vanessa Gabela Email: [email protected] SOURCE WM Partners SHANGHAI, March 1, 2022 /PRNewswire/ -- WuXi Biologics ("WuXi Bio") (2269.HK), a global CRDMO service company, today announced that the company has won the 2022 CMO Leadership Awards in all six core categories (i.e., capabilities, compatibility, expertise, reliability, quality and service). 2022 marks the consecutive fifth year for the company receiving this distinctive achievement. Besides these CMO awards, WuXi Biologics received additional recognition as the CHAMPION in its Capabilities category, applauding for the company's robust capabilities in offering end-to-end biologics solutions which outperformed the industry standards. In the past decade, Outsourced Pharma and Life Science Leader's CMO Leadership Awards worked with Industry Standard Research (ISR) to conduct the Contract Manufacturing Quality Benchmarking survey. For the 2022 Awards, more than 86 global contract manufacturers were assessed by 23 performance metrics, covering all sizes of companies from both Pharma and Biopharma industries. "WuXi Biologics is very honored to receive the CMO Leadership Awards in all six core categories for the fifth straight year and the CHAMPION designation for the first time in its Capabilities category." said Dr. Chris Chen, CEO of WuXi Biologics. "This honor speaks for the trust and confidence our global customers have in us. It reconfirms our determination to serve our worldwide clients with our world-class quality system, excellent execution, customer focused flexibility and reliability. We are committed to enabling our partners in delivering life-saving treatments quickly and effectively to the markets, with the aim of benefiting patients worldwide." About WuXi Biologics WuXi Biologics (stock code: 2269.HK) is a global Contract Research, Development and Manufacturing Organization (CRDMO) offering end-to-end solutions that enable partners to discover, develop and manufacture biologics from concept to commercialization for the benefit of patients worldwide. With over 10,000 skilled employees in China, the United States, Germany, Ireland and Singapore, WuXi Biologics leverages its technologies and expertise to provide customers with efficient and cost-effective biologics discovery, development and manufacturing solutions. As of the end of 2021, WuXi Biologics is supporting over 480 integrated client projects, including nine in commercial manufacturing. WuXi Biologics views Environmental, Social, and Governance (ESG) responsibilities as an integral component of our ethos and business strategy, and we aim to become an ESG leader in the biologics CRDMO sector. Our facilities use next-generation biomanufacturing technologies and clean energy sources. We have also established an ESG committee led by our CEO to steer the comprehensive ESG strategy and its implementation, enhancing our commitment to sustainability. For more information about WuXi Biologics, please visit: www.wuxibiologics.com. Contacts Media [email protected] Investors [email protected] SOURCE WuXi Biologics Related Links http://www.wuxibiologics.com Citibank has confirmed it has more exposure to Russia than was first thought, adding to concerns over the level of write-offs western banks might have to take. The US bank said yesterday it has nearly US$10bn of assets and funding commitments in Russia, with the country ranking 21 out of its top 25 countries where it has exposure. This included US$1bn of cash held with the Bank of Russia, and US$3.4bn of other counterparties in addition to loans and commitments of US$5.4bn, said the bank. Analysts were speculating that all or nearly all of this might have to be written off due to the new sanctions imposed on Russia after its invasion of Ukraine. In a statement, the bank said: "Citi continues to monitor the current RussiaUkraine geopolitical situation and economic conditions and will mitigate its exposures and risks as appropriate." Shares in European banks took a tumble yesterday as investors fretted about the repercussions of the sanctions, which saw some Russian banks lose access to the SWIFT international payment system and the closing of the Moscow Stock Exchange. Analysts said banks in Italy, Austria and France were the most vulnerable among European lenders with a combined exposure of around US$50bn. Frances Societe Generale, Italys UniCredit and Austrias Raiffeisen in particular had all notably continued to do business even after Russia annexed Crimea in 2014. JPMorgan has estimated the total exposure of western banks to Russia at US$90bn, with Italian banks accounting for around US$25bn and Austrian US$18bn while UK banks were on the hook for a relatively modest US$3bn. Austrian bank Raiffeisen has seen its share price almost halve in just over a fortnight as the situation in Ukraine has deteriorated. A sample from Maori Reef, posted by ECR last month on Twitter. ECR Minerals PLC (AIM:ECR)s latest drill results at the Maori Reef project in Victoria, Australia, have unearthed what the company described as very encouraging gold grades. The results from hole BH3DD019, which was drilled at the north end of the project, identified four mineralised zones, with the best intercepts showing grades of up to 9.5 grams per tonne. I am delighted to report that our team of geologists headed by Adam Jones are reporting some very encouraging gold grades at hole BH3DD019, said ECR chairman David Tang. Furthermore, the epizonal mineralisation identified through the drilling work and assay results correlates with nearby deposits at Costerfield, Nagambie and Whroo mine and this is assisting with our understanding of the regional gold trend as we work towards identifying a possible ore resource. "As outlined below, following COVID-19 delays the assay results are now starting to flow back to us, and I look forward to announcing further results in the coming weeks. Highlight gold results from the hole included 0.5 metres at 9.5 grams per tonne, 0.8 metres at 4.96 g/t, 0.3 metres at 4.59 g/t, and 0.6 metres at 6.15 g/t. The company noted that geological logging of visible stibnite in holes drilled into the Maori Reef which it says also correlates well with expectations of reportable gold. Stibnite, arsenopyrite and gold mineralisation collectively identifies with an epizonal style of mineralisation which is typical of the nearby deposits such as Costerfield, Nagambie and Whroo, ECR added. Bitcoin and Ethereum both made marginal gains as crypto activity in Russia and Ukraine is behind the current rally. Bitcoin climbed slightly, rising 1.20% to US$43,893, maintaining its price above the key support level of US$40,000. Ethereum was up by 1.47% to US$2,946 as it pushes towards US$3,000. Naeem Aslam, a market analyst at avatrade, believes a flurry of activity in Russia and Ukraine is the reason behind the Bitcoin rally. Trading Russian rouble and Bitcoin made a new high. Traders believe that people in Russia and Ukraine are actually behind the current rally in Bitcoin. Cryptocurrency exchanges, such as Coinbase and Binance, have thus far resisted calls to freeze accounts with Russian addresses, but that could change should the situation in Eastern Europe worsen. Aslam also believes however that the rally may be short-lived, especially if the US catches wind that cryptocurrency is being used to bypass sanctions. If the US begins to see that Russians are using Bitcoin as a means of avoiding sanctions, it is highly likely that the US may push for a coordinated action to ban Bitcoin, Aslam said. Banning bitcoin under that scenario will bring much higher volatility in the Bitcoin price. It may rock the whole financial market because many companies have massive balance sheet exposure in Bitcoin, Aslam added. In other news, Colorado looks set to become the first US state to accept tax payments in the form of cryptocurrency in what is another step toward the widespread adoption of digital tokens. The governor said it will accept crypto payments converted into a dollar value which would be deposited into the states treasury. While Bitcoin and Ethereum have edged higher, the same cannot be said for the entire market, where performance has been hit and miss. XRP is down 1.44% to US$0.7637 while Cardano is down 1.88% to U$0.9507. Solana, however, has pushed back above US$100, up 4.95%, while Terra is also up 4.51% to US$92.87. More than 1bn worth of investor cash is locked up in Russian stocks after a collection of investment funds blocked withdrawals from the chaotic Russian market. JPMorgan Chase & Co (NYSE:JPM), Danske Bank and Schroders PLC (LSE:SDR) are ampng groups that have suspended funds operating in Russia, after the countrys stock market closed on Monday having lost a third of its value in a day on the back of the countrys invasion of Ukraine. JPMorgan Asset Management has frozen funds including its Russia Equity fund and Emerging Europe. "Due to the escalating conflict between Russia and the Ukraine, local market trading conditions are not currently operating as they normally would do and accordingly, we are unable to manage the fund in accordance with the investment objective and policy, UK funds COO Andrew Lewis said in a letter to Emerging Europe Investors earlier this week. "We understand that being unable to deal in the fund is frustrating and we will take the decision to lift this suspension as soon as we consider it is in the best interests of existing shareholders to do so." British-based Shroeders, which holds a 305mln stake in Russia through its own Emerging Europe fund, stopped customers from withdrawing money. The actions are likely to mirror those expected by Vladimir Putin, who is planning to temporarily stop investors from selling Russian assets. Schroders' Emerging Europe fund was down 33% between 16 February and 25 February when it temporarily closed the fund, while JPAM's equivalent fund fell more than 35%. OPEC+ oil producers resisted calls to increase output beyond initial plans for a modest increase in barrels per day production, as oil prices hit a seven-year-high. Sources told Reuters the group, which includes Russia, did not mention Ukraine at its latest meeting to determine production. Crude oil prices topped US$110 this week, as Russias invasion of Ukraine added upward pressure to already stretched oil prices. Currently the group, comprised of OPEC, Russia and allied producers, had been increasing output by 400,000 barrels per day each month since August, after caps were put on production during the COVID-19 pandemic. "Current oil market fundamentals and the consensus on its outlook pointed to a well-balanced market, and that current volatility is not caused by changes in market fundamentals but by current geopolitical developments," OPEC+ said in a statement. Sources told Reuters that the group, which also includes US ally Saudi Arabia, did not mention the ongoing issue in Ukraine. On Monday, the International Energy Organisation, led by the US, agreed to release 60mln barrels in oil reserves, equivalent to about 12 days worth of Russian exports, barely putting a dent in the price of oil. The decision will be met with dismay by the West, with OPEC+ still due to make 2.6 million bpd of cuts by the end of September. ASOS PLC (AIM:ASC) has become the latest high-profile company to sever connection with Russia. The online fashion flogger had already suspended sales in Ukraine following that countrys invasion by Russian forces and now it has halted sales to Russia. The company said continuing to sell clothes to Russian customers was "neither practical nor right". A (translated) message on Asoss Russian website said it apologised to its Russian customers but now and until further notice we cannot process orders from customers in Russia. ASOSs priority is the safety of its colleagues and partners in Ukraine and Russia. Immediately following the invasion, ASOS suspended sales in Ukraine as it became impossible to serve customers there. Against the backdrop of the continuing war, ASOS has decided that it is neither practical nor right to continue to trade in Russia, and has, therefore, today suspended our sales there. Our thoughts are with the people of Ukraine and all those affected in the region, the company said in a statement. FinnCap Group PLC provided some succour for investors in Europa Oil & Gas Holdings PLC after Norwegian giant DNO ASA opted not to sell Europa a promising Irish gas exploration licence. The broker was quick to restate and flag up risked-net asset value (NAV) and a price target of 6.7p. Thats more than double the current share price. Clearly, DNO has had a change of heart about the attractiveness of this licence/prospect following the surge in European natural gas prices, commented finnCap, which is Europas broker. However, Finncap added: The surge in European gas pricing should only improve the chances of finding a partner to fund drilling on this prospect. Create your account: sign up and get ahead on news and events NO INVESTMENT ADVICE The Company is a publisher. You understand and agree that no content published on the Site constitutes a recommendation that any particular security, portfolio of securities, transaction, or investment strategy is... In exchange for publishing services rendered by the Company on behalf of Australian Gold and Copper Ltd named herein, including the promotion by the Company of Australian Gold and Copper Ltd in any Content on the... Volt Resources Ltd (ASX:VRC) has received firm commitments from professional and sophisticated investors for a placement to raise $2 million (before costs) through the issue of 181,818,181 fully paid ordinary shares at $0.011 per share. The graphite producer and battery anode material developers chairman, Asimwe Kabunga, has provided his own confidence in the company, subscribing for 45,454,546 fully paid ordinary shares for an additional $500,000 on the same terms as the placement, subject to shareholder approval, for a total commitment of $2.5 million. The issue price of $0.011 is a 44% discount to the 15-day VWAP of the trading price of Volts shares prior to the stock being placed in a trading halt on February 28, 2022. I am very pleased with the level of support from existing shareholders and new investors with this capital raising. Once again Volts chairman, Asimwe Kabunga, has shown his strong commitment to the company through his cornerstone participation in the capital raising, managing director Trevor Matthews said. The Volt board welcomes all new shareholders and looks forward to a long and successful association. We have a lot of activities in progress and I look forward to providing further updates to shareholders in due course. Work activities The money raised will be utilised to advance activities at Volts projects including: Aurumin Ltd (ASX:AUN) is expected to complete the acquistion of the Sandstone Gold Project within a week, now that all conditions precedent under the Share Purchase Agreement (SPA) with Middle Island Resources Ltd (ASX:MDI) (MDI) have been satisfied or waived. The sale will see MDI secure a further 3.6% of AUN through subscription via a sub underwrite of the rights issue. MDI accepted the opportunity to sub-underwrite AUN's rights issue on a priority basis but capped at $1 million and is expected that pursuant to the sub-underwriting, it will acquire 3.6% of AUN to augment the circa 21.5% it is to acquire under the SPA at completion. MDI is confident the sale will complete. I would like to thank all of MDI and AUN shareholders for their support for this sale. MDI is pleased to have conditionally secured a further 3.6% of AUN by supporting the rights issue, Middle Island executive director Brad Marwood said. A significant step forward for AUN The 784,000-ounce Sandstone Gold Project comes with an existing mineral resource and substantial infrastructure. The project is around 520 kilometres northeast of Perth and is on a sealed highway between the mining towns of Mt Magnet and Leinster in the East Murchison Mineral Field of Western Australia. It contains indicated and inferred mineral resources of 22 million tonnes at 1.1 g/t gold for 748,300 ounces, with a granted tenure covering 112 square kilometres, including two granted mining licences and a non-operating 500,000 tonnes per annum carbon-in-leach (CIL) processing plant. Read: Aurumin snaps up Sandstone, records high-grade gold at Mt Dimer and assesses Mt Palmer in busy quarter Create your account: sign up and get ahead on news and events NO INVESTMENT ADVICE The Company is a publisher. You understand and agree that no content published on the Site constitutes a recommendation that any particular security, portfolio of securities, transaction, or investment strategy is... In exchange for publishing services rendered by the Company on behalf of Volt Resources Ltd named herein, including the promotion by the Company of Volt Resources Ltd in any Content on the Site, the Company receives... Tlou Energy said it had agreed on a conversion price with the Botswana Public Officers Pension Fund (BPOPF) for the loan note for Lesedi, releasing the funds to move ahead with the project. Should BPOPF convert the note, the company will issue a maximum of 115,772,900 shares, it said in a statement. The announcement came alongside a half-year update, a period during which Tlou said it delivered all of the important targets it had been speaking about 'for many years'. Namely, this meant signing the 10Mw power purchase agreement with BPC, a first in Botswana, and securing funding to start the development of the Lesedi power project. In a statement alongside the figures, Tlou added that Lesedi was just the start with the potential to develop this project into hundreds of MW's of power with our existing independently certified gas reserves and contingent resources. The potential opportunity is enormous Our results for the half-year were in line with expectations. Importantly, we now have funding that allows us to progress the development of the Lesedi project. During the period we were delighted to get our field operations back to normal post-pandemic. Losses for the six months to end December 2021 were US$1.27mln (US$1.07mln) with cash and equivalents of US$4.29mln at the period end. WH Ireland hailed the potential of Alien Metals Ltd (AIM:UFO, OTC:ASLRF)s Hancock Project in Western Australia after the latest drill results. The broker believes Hancock could eventually develop to become a low capital and operating cost deposit at 62% iron. Material that is greater than 60% iron is known as direct shipping ore, or DSO. It is described thus because it can be mined and transported directly for export without the need for a costly processing phase. It is one of the most highly prized and sought-after bulk commodities. At a US$100 per tonne of iron ore, Hancock could be capable of providing significant cash flow to Alien, said WHI. The spot price is currently around US$140 a tonne. The extension potential of these iron ore ridges suggests that resources of high-grade material can be enhanced and either the scale or potential mine life at Hancock increased, the broker added. Earlier, the mining exploration and development company reported on completed drills at the end of 2021 today, with high-grade assays found in several zones. Shares in Alien Metals were down 1.02% in midday trading, changing hands at 0.0075p. Global Energy Ventures Ltd (ASX:GEV) has appointed Mats Fagerberg in a new business development role as the company looks to expand its European footprint. Fagerberg will take up the role in early March 2022 and will focus on further developing relationships with strategic partners and projects in Europe that can benefit from GEVs compressed hydrogen export supply chain. He has extensive experience including as commercial director with Avenir LNG, where he played a key role in the establishment of Avenirs small-scale LNG business, and as a Partner with Affinity (Shipping) LLP in London, where he helped establish and lead Affinity Energy Infrastructure (AEI), which specialises in end-to-end energy infrastructure solutions. Commercial business unit in Europe In response to increasing interest in GEVs compressed hydrogen supply chain, the appointment of Mats is the first step in the development of a commercial business unit to be based in Europe, a more mature end-user market in terms of scale and adoption, GEVs managing director and chief executive officer Martin Carolan said. Hydrogen will play a systemic role in the energy transition across Europe, with the European Commission forecasting hydrogen to represent 25% of the EUs total energy demand by 2050 supported by policies such as the European Green Deal to invest over 1 trillion euros in funding various clean energy and climate change initiatives. In 2021, the company received increasing levels of interest in our approach to using compression to make green hydrogen accessible to the European demand centres. Such demand now warrants a senior appointment with strong regional relationships and the expertise to source and advance new energy infrastructure projects that can benefit from the feasibility studies advancing in Australia for our cost competitive solution. Mats will also work closely with Rotterdam-based Per Roed, GEVs chief technical officer, who has taken responsibility of our technical program and is now advancing discussions in Europe with prospective technical and project partners. Fagerberg will be based in Portugal, where hydrogen is central to the countrys net-zero strategy and is a future low-cost supply centre for renewable hydrogen. GEV will also open a corporate office in Norway in July 2022, where it will establish further technical and commercial resources as required to service the European market. MGC Pharmaceuticals' Ron Lipsky talks to Proactive London and says 'we're very positive about our half year results that we recently released'. The biotech firm announced solid half yearly results supported with strong revenue - with increased sales revenue, primarily underpinned by solid demand for ArtemiC. Recently ArtemiC Rescue food supplement was granted import approval in India, opening a potentially significant new market for the bio-pharma company. ArtemiC Rescue which helps alleviate symptoms associated with Coronavirus (COVID-19) was approved by Indian regulators for import, distribution, marketing, and sales. Last month peaceful protestors in Ottawa were frozen out of global financial networks. This month, the aggressive wagers of physical war in Ukraine, the Russians, have been frozen out Two disparate groups with nothing at all in common, save that they angered some of the most powerful forces in liberal progressivism today. And whether Republicans like it or not, liberal progressives are now firmly into control of the worlds financial system. Or are they? What happens to crypto is likely to test that hypothesis, as it did with the Canadian truckers, and is now doing again with the Russian oligarchy. President Putins been courting sanctions like these for years. Indeed, theres a palpable sense at large that he had it coming, never mind if theres is any justification for his grievances in Ukraine. You cant just go around very publicly poisoning your opponents and expect to retain any modicum of popularity. Of course, sanctions themselves arent new. Whether or not theyve ever been any good is another matter. They were used against Mussolini in 1935, and busted. They were used against South Africa and Rhodesia in the 1970s, and busted. And theyve been used against President Putin before, and been ineffective. The onset of the digital age has changed things, though. Now, with a few strokes on a keyboard its possible to freeze the financial capabilities of shops selling coffee to Canadian truckers and the foreign-held assets of Central Bank of Russia. No matter how big or small you are, those that control the financial system can come for your money. And thats never been possible before. Not in quite the same way. Could Italys Central Bank have been targeted in the 1930s in the same way as Russias is now? In fact, as Mussolini merrily invaded Abyssinia and simultaneously sent arms and succour to the nationalists in Spain - all while under sanctions from the League of Nations - the Italian economy was able to chug along quite nicely. In part that was because Mussolini had balanced his budget in the 1920s, nationalized banks, and was largely able to insulate his country from the Great Depression. But President Putin has to a degree followed this model. The general understanding is that the Russian budget can be balanced when oil is above US$40 per barrel. So perhaps the timing of this incursion into Ukraine isnt so much about the end of the Winter Olympics, but the sustained strength in oil that weve witnessed over the past few months. Putin also controls huge swathes of the Russian economy in the same way Mussolini did. His weakness is Russias huge overseas holdings of foreign currency reserves, now forfeit and held in electronic limbo in a manner without historical precedent. But if hes prepared to take that hit, Putin may find himself in a stronger position than most Western strategists appreciate. We know that one thing Russia doesnt lack is energy supplies, so therell be no issues there. The ruble has collapsed on foreign exchange markets, but the rubles been on the floor before. You only need to skim the pages of a 20th century history book to know that the Russian people have been through far worse than this. Russia also has grain, and if it has Ukraine, it has even more grain. So, food will be available. GDP will likely take a big hit. But unlike the West, Russia doesnt measure success in economic terms like GDP growth. Foreign policy and cultural identity remain important in a way that is only a distant memory in the corridors of power in the West that are now stalked by the liberal progressives. Russia also has a powerful friend in China, and a way forward there in contemplating a completely separate economic order, that might be established along the old fault lines of the cold war. Will crypto also help Russia swerve sanctions? It might, to a degree. We saw Canada move to neutralize the platforms when the truckers started honking their horns in Ottawa, but individual wallets are harder to control. Some argue that Iran and North Korea have already developed the ability to circumvent the US-dominated global financial system by using crypto. Russia is certainly taking such an option seriously, which is why there have been official requests from Ukraine to shut down Russian crypto accounts. But crypto is also being used to provide funding to Ukrainians. And unlike the funds that flowed to the truckers in Ottawa, which became subject to preventative legal measures, neither the Canadian nor any other government is showing an inclination to stop that flow. Theres a question of scale here, too. The Canadian Truckers were fairly easy to reign in. They were truckers, not financiers, and were simply trying to make a point about vaccine mandates, a global concern, but legally speaking a domestic Canadian issue. What they were not was ex-KGB operatives with a lifetimes experience of misdirecting, misleading and plundering, and with decades of experience of global power-broking on their CVs. Sending in the Mounties, freezing bank accounts and threatening crytpo platforms may work on recalcitrant populations in the West, but its not going to impress President Putin much. When the sanctions were stepped up a gear, he reminded the world, without batting an eyelid, that he has a considerable nuclear arsenal. Within the space of a few weeks, this issue of who controls the financial system has moved from the sanctioning of a few truck drivers to the threat of nuclear Armageddon. And this may not be coincidence at all. Instead, could it be that the cracks we are seeing in the system now, the constant crises that seem to dominate the global agenda, are in fact a series of ongoing signs that the liberal progressive order is after all beginning to lose control of the global financial system? The rise of bitcoin is one thing. Seizing the assets of a foreign central bank is another. Any non-aligned power is going to look at that, and extract at least a good part of its assets from the Western financial system purely on a matter of prudence. They can seize your money if you sell coffee to Canadian truckers. They can seize your money if you wage aggressive war against another country. Between those two groups you could fit almost the entire world. And the entire world certainly does not want to have its money seized. Its no wonder gold is punching up towards US$2,000, and its no wonder the propaganda war is revolving as much around crypto as it is about information. What we are talking about is nothing less than the future of money itself. "We also have an impressive new gold target at Knaften which we plan to drill-test with a few holes," the Gungnir CEO added Gungnir Resources Inc has outlined its plans in Sweden for 2022 with nickel as a key driver and provided exploration highlights from 2021. In a statement, Jari Paakki, Gungnir CEO, commented: "Our plan for 2022 is to build upon Gungnir's 2021 high-grade nickel results which were some of the top, near-surface nickel drill intercepts reported in the junior-sector last year. "We are planning to allocate more than three-quarters of our available exploration funds on nickel, with most of the planned drilling directed at our Lappvattnet nickel project targeting further high-grade nickel shoots. We also have an impressive new gold target at Knaften which we plan to drill-test with a few holes." Planned 2022 Exploration Program: 75% or more of available exploration funds on nickel with up to 4,000 metres of drilling planned The company intends to fund its exploration activities by financings in 2022, the details of which would be announced by a separate news release Anticipated start late spring as conditions allow At Lappvattnet, expanded drilling to test for further high-grade nickel shoots along strike, down-plunge and down-dip of 2021 drill holes, plus the "twin" north EM conductor At Knaften Gold, initial testing of new IP anomalies (area has not seen any previous exploration); drill permits and approvals pending At Rormyrberget, evaluate and prioritize targets; timing of drilling to be determined Project Highlights from 2021: Lappvattnet Nickel: Phase one drill program covered just 20% of the total strike length of Lappvattnet Consistent shallow drill hits of high-grade and wide zones of nickel mineralization, including: 3.19% Nickel over 4.25 metres within a 10.4-metre interval grading 1.51% Nickel in drill hole LAP21-02 (from 45 metres) 2.62% Nickel over 5.65 metres within a 14.0-metre interval grading 1.40% Nickel in drill hole LAP21-05 (from 60 metres) 1.74% Nickel over 10.00 metres in drill hole LAP21-13 (from 21 metres) 36.00 metres grading 0.93% Nickel in drill hole LAP21-04 (from 49 metres) Outlined a near-surface untested "twin" electromagnetic (EM) conductor 100 metres north of the Lappvattnet nickel resource Knaften Gold: Target: bedrock source of one of the largest gold-in-till anomalies in Sweden Expanded the property to cover entire favourable host rock, a 4 km x 5 km intrusion Completed induced polarization (IP) geophysical survey over parts of the expanded area which outlined very significant IP chargeability anomalies (up to 40 mV/V) within the intrusion Rormyrberget Nickel: Outlined untested EM targets outside of the nickel resource Gungnir also said its nickel sulphide resources in Sweden include Lappvattnet and Rormyrberget. In 2020, the company updated both resources which collectively total 177 million pounds of nickel. The properties are accessible year-round with good transportation and industrial infrastructure including shipping facilities and are located about an hour drive from Boliden's mill complex. Lappvattnet: Inferred Resource of 780,000 tonnes grading 1.35% nickel for 23.1 million lbs (10.5 million kg) of nickel Rormyrberget: Inferred Resource of 36,800,000 tonnes grading 0.19% nickel for 154 million lbs (70 million kg) of nickel Gungnir Resources is a Canadian-based TSX-V listed mineral exploration company with gold and base metal projects in northern Sweden. The company's assets include two nickel-copper-cobalt deposits, Lappvattnet and Rormyrberget, both with updated nickel resources, and the Knaften project which hosts a developing intrusion-hosted gold system, and VMS (zinc-copper) and copper-nickel targets, all of which are open for expansion and further discovery. Contact the author at jon.hopkins@proactiveinvestors.com The company was established to take advantage of the demand for a wide range of commodities, which will benefit from the drive toward electrification Electric Royalties Ltd (TSX-V:ELEC, OTC:ELECF) has updated on half of its royalty portfolio, which includes a graphite mine project in Madagascar, which is advancing towards a resumption of output, amid the backdrop of rising clean energy metal prices. The company has a growing portfolio of 18 royalties, including one that currently generates revenue. The firm was established to take advantage of the demand for a wide range of commodities, which will benefit from the drive toward electrification. The company has a royalty on the Graphmada mine in Madagascar, which was in continuous production for 20 months before being placed on care and maintenance during the outbreak of the pandemic. "Exploration work completed during the past year indicates a renewed focus and intention to bring the mine back into production. Moreover, clean energy metal prices have jumped significantly over the past year and we expect that trend to continue as additional countries commit to net zero policies. With all of the capital being invested in our assets this year and metal prices as they are, we believe that it should be an eventful year in terms of progress," Electric Royalties CEO Brendan Yurik said in a statement. Elsewhere, at the Authier lithium project in Quebec, where it has a royalty, owner Sayona Mining recently completed the acquisition of North American Lithium (NAL) and plans to release a study on restarting this historical producer with the Authier asset forming an integral part of production, the company also noted. "Drilling is underway on our Cancet, Seymour Lake and Chubb lithium assets," added Yurik. "Excellent final metallurgical results have been received for the Battery Hill manganese royalty, and we are very keen to see the results of the upcoming PEA, as we believe this may be a very significant royalty for Electric Royalties," he said. Electric Royalties is a royalty company established to take advantage of the demand for a wide range of commodities, namely lithium, vanadium, manganese, tin, graphite, cobalt, nickel, zinc and copper, which will benefit from the drive toward electrification of a variety of consumer products such as cars, rechargeable batteries, large scale energy storage, renewable energy generation and other applications. Contact the writer at giles@proactiveinvestors.com Create your account: sign up and get ahead on news and events NO INVESTMENT ADVICE The Company is a publisher. You understand and agree that no content published on the Site constitutes a recommendation that any particular security, portfolio of securities, transaction, or investment strategy is... In exchange for publishing services rendered by the Company on behalf of Silver Bullet Mines Corp. named herein, including the promotion by the Company of Silver Bullet Mines Corp. in any Content on the Site, the... Goldshore Resources CEO Brett Richards joined Steve Darling from Proactive to share news the company has again encountered gold mineralization from their drill program at the Moss Lake Gold Deposit in Northwest Ontario. Richards telling Proactive the results include 58.85m @ 6.30 g/t Au from 103.3 metres. The company also saw mineralization that remains open to the north and will require further drilling to define the northern edge of the system. Richard said the company is looking to accelerate drilling and the plan is to have 5 to 7 rigs active after the spring break-up. United Nations, March 2 : The US is expelling a Russian national who is working with the UN Secretariat, a United Nations spokesperson has said. "I can confirm that the US Mission to the United Nations informed the Secretariat on Feb 28 (of) its decision to take action under Section 13b of the UN-UN Headquarters Agreement with respect to a staff member in the Secretariat," said Stephane Dujarric, spokesman for UN Secretary-General Antonio Guterres, Xinhua news agency reported. "We regret that we find ourselves in this situation, but are engaging with the host country in line with Section 13b of the agreement," he said. The spokesman refused to give any more details "in deference to the privacy of the individual concerned and the sensitivity of the matter". He said the US decision is strange as the work contract for the staff member concerned was scheduled to end on March 14. The US on Monday announced the expulsion of 12 staff members of the Russian Permanent Mission to the UN. In a statement, the US Permanent Mission to the United Nations described the 12 Russian diplomats as "intelligence operatives" who have abused their privileges of residency in the United States "by engaging in espionage activities". Russia's permanent representative to the United Nations, Vassily Nebenzia, on Monday regretted the US decision. Nebenzia said the expulsion is a hostile step taken by the United States and "yet another gross violation" of the UN-US Headquarters Agreement and of the Vienna Convention. The US decisions to expel 12 Russian diplomats and one UN staff member from Russia came amid Russian military operations in Ukraine. New Delhi, March 2 : Prime Minister Narendra Modi has spoken with President of the European Council, Charles Michel and expressed his anguish over the deteriorating situation and humanitarian crisis in Ukraine. He reiterated India's appeal for cessation of hostilities and a return to dialogue. The Prime Minister stressed that the contemporary global order was anchored on international law, UN Charter and respect for territorial integrity and sovereignty of all states. Modi welcomed the talks between the two parties and stressed upon the importance of ensuring free and uninterrupted humanitarian access and smooth movement of all people. He also spoke about efforts being made by India to send urgent relief supplies, including medicines, to the affected areas. Meanwhile, India is sending Air Force C-17 transport aircraft to Romania on Wednesday to bring Indian citizens from stranded in Ukraine, said Foreign Secretary Harsh Vardhan Shringla on Tuesday. The aircraft will take off from its home base in Hindon Air Force Station near Delhi. The war has reached to Ukraine capital city Kiev and second largest city Kharkiv. Further, countries embassies, including Indian Embassy, based in Kiev are moving Lviv amid intensified bombing. Over next three days, 26 flights have been scheduled to operate. "Tomorrow morning at 4am, C-17 will fly to Romania to evacuate the students," Shringla said. Expressing deep concerns, Shringla said that so far 12,000 Indians have been brought out of Ukraine which is 60 per cent of total Indians in Ukraine. He also confirmed that no one is left in Kiev as of now. The Foreign Secretary said that Indian nationals had been advised in Kiev to head to western parts and exit from there whenever they can. They can go towards Hungary, Slovakia, Romania, Poland and Moldova. 7700 nationals have exited through these routes, he informed. Modi has expressed deep anguish over killing of Indian student and we have not just reiterated and demanded in Delhi, envoys of Russia and Ukraine but also in those countries through diplomatic and military channels for safe passage of Indians, said Foreign Secretary. -- The story has been published from a wire feed without any modifications to the text New Delhi, March 2 : The Delhi government may soon increase the circle rate that decides the purchase and sale of properties. The government had planned to increase the rates last year but a decision towards that was not taken due to the Covid situation. A rise in the circle rate will increase the cost of buying a house and other properties in Delhi. However, the circle rate will not be increased in all the areas of the national capital. There is a plan to increase the circle rate only in some posh areas of the city. The rate could be increased up to 30 per cent in these areas. Currently, a proposal for a change in circle rate has been sent to the Delhi Revenue Minister. Later, it would be placed before the Delhi cabinet for approval. The circle rate in Delhi was changed eight years ago in 2014. The Delhi government is of the view that the cost of land in the national capital has increased significantly in the last eight years. In view of this, now preparations are being made to increase the circle rate in Delhi. The Delhi government says that due to the continuously improving infrastructure in Delhi, land rates have increased significantly in many areas. While the government is preparing to increase the circle rate, on the other hand, efforts are being made to strengthen the infrastructure. In this sequence, the Delhi government has talked about getting rid of pothole-free roads within a month. PWD Minister Manish Sisodia during a review meeting gave orders to the PWD officials, and said that the Delhi government is committed to provide better facilities to the citizens of Delhi and this includes better roads. During the meeting, Sisodia directed the officials that all stretches of roads falling under PWD Delhi should be inspected and the places where the roads require patchwork and repairs should be completed within a month. He directed the officials that the road repair work should be done in a better way without any delay and if any delay is found in the work or any defect is found then action will be taken against the engineers concerned. The government also said that PWD Delhi will soon launch a mobile application so that citizens of Delhi can get better facilities and their complaints should be done immediately. Through this application, citizens of Delhi will be able to complain about bad roads. New Delhi, March 2 : Delhi Police have taken serious cognizance of its personnel bringing "outside or political influence" for their transfers and postings in the department. The department has issued instructions recently to curb this practice that has become increasingly common among the police personnel in the national capital. "A large number of written recommendations from various political persons are being received for transfer or postings of officers and men. The time has come to put an end to this practice in the interest of our uniformed and disciplined force," Police Commissioner Rakesh Asthana said in an order accessed by IANS. Under section 13 of Delhi Police rules, he said, the police officers of all ranks are forbidden from approaching officials of other departments or non officials for support in pressing individual claims in the matter of promotion, transfer, punishment, appeal or any other matter connected with their service. "Any violation of this rule shall be punishable under Section 21 of the Delhi Police Act, 1978," he added. Now as per the procedure laid down by the Delhi Police chief, if any request or recommendation regarding transfer or posting of any police personnel is received by police headquarters or any office, a copy of such letter will be placed on the police personnel's personal file." A copy of the said letter shall be forwarded to the concerned disciplinary authority and his reporting officer. If such letters are received repeatedly, a departmental enquiry for major punishment may be initiated," the procedure read. It was also found that in several cases, oral recommendations are being received. Taking note of it, the Commissioner in the order said even in those cases, a mention of this fact should be made on writing in the personal file of the police personnel giving details of the caller, date and time of request. Although the order existed earlier, it has been amended to meet with the challenges of present day policing, Delhi Police PRO Suman Nalwa told IANS. The present order superseded a previous standing order issued ten years back in October, 2012. She said that several of the standing orders are being reviewed and amended since they were made more than 10-15 years back and this order is one among many that has been amended. Stressing the need to dissuade the practice of bringing outside influence on the senior echelons of the police, Commissioner Asthana, however, said this may be due to the fact that "our men do not find enough opportunities to air their grievances and get redressal. "We should encourage them to send requests through their immediate superiors rather than through political persons," the Commissioner added. Public Relations Officer (PRO) Nalwa further informed IANS that a mechanism of Open House discussion, directly with the Commissioner, was started last year where any police personnel can share his or her grievances with the police chief. It may be mentioned here that, according to the Delhi Police annual report, as many as 469 police personnel were added to the 'doubtful integrity' list in 2021. "A total of 318 police personnel, including 13 Inspectors, 29 Sub-inspectors, 52 ASIs, 80 Head Constables and 143 Constables, were placed under suspension for various commissions and omissions," the report read. As per the report, the Vigilance Unit of the Delhi Police maintains a close watch on the activities of the officers and men in order to enforce integrity and probity in the ranks. (Ujwal Jalali can be reached at ujwal.j@ians.in) Lucknow, March 2 : Samajwadi Party president Akhilesh Yadav has questioned why top BJP leaders are not talking about rising prices in their election speeches. He also questioned the BJP's claims that Chief Minister Yogi Adityanath worked 24 hours a day for the welfare of the poor and the youth. He said that if the claim was correct then why his government failed to fill up 11 lakh jobs lying vacant in various government departments for the last five years. "There senior leaders are addressing voters daily, but none of them talk about rising prices of essential commodities," he said in a statement. Akhilesh said the BJP claimed to have provided free LPG cylinders to people. "But what their (BJP) leaders do not tell is the fact that when cylinders were given to the poor, their refill cost was Rs 400 and today, a cylinder refill costs about Rs 1,000." Akhilesh, while addressing meetings in Ballia on Tuesday evening, recalled how the district played an important role in every revolution that has taken place in India and said this election was no different. Accusing the ruling BJP of having taken people of the state for a ride by promising the moon and then failing to deliver, he said, "The BJP practices 'chhal' (deceit) but this time, "the contest here is between 'chhalia' and Ballia". He said that in the sixth phase of polling on Thursday, the BJP will be cut to size by the voters. Akhilesh further said that the BJP excelled in making false promises, making people dream and telling lies. Photo taken on March 1, 2022 shows armed personnel in Donetsk. (Photo by Victor/Xinhua/IANS) Image Source: IANS News People are seen in a bomb shelter in Donetsk, March 1, 2022. (Photo by Victor/Xinhua/IANS) Image Source: IANS News Moscow/Kiev, March 2 : Fighting continues as Russia's 'special military operation' in Ukraine has entered the seventh day, while reportedly, a new round of peace talks is to take place. A massive Russian airstrikes hit the centre of Ukraine's second-largest city of Kharkiv on Tuesday, as rockets struck residential areas and buildings of the regional state administration, Xinhua news agency reported citing Ukraine's State Service for Emergencies. The agency reported Russia's attack on the Kiev TV tower which had killed five people and injured five others. Russia would strike the information warfare and psychological operation center of the Ukrainian Armed Forces as well as technological facilities of the Ukrainian Security Service in Kiev with high-precision weapons, Russian Defence Ministry spokesman Igor Konashenkov told a regular briefing on Tuesday. Russian Defence Minister Sergei Shoigu vowed to continue the military operation in Ukraine until achieving the main goal of defending Russia from Western threats. "The main thing for us is to protect Russia from the military threat posed by Western countries that are trying to use the Ukrainian people in the fight against our country," Shoigu said during a video conference with senior defence officials. Since the military operation started on Thursday, the Russian Armed Forces had destroyed 1,325 Ukrainian military infrastructure objects, Konashenkov said. In addition, 395 tanks and other armoured combat vehicles, 59 multiple launch rocket systems, 179 field artillery guns and mortars as well as 286 units of special military vehicles had been destroyed, he added. The access of Ukrainian troops to the Sea of Azov had been completely blocked, Konashenkov told reporters. Meanwhile, Ukrainian Foreign Minister Dmytro Kuleba called on foreign ministers of Poland, France and Germany to increase sanctions pressure on Russia and provide more weapons and financial support to Ukraine. Amid the deadly conflict, Russian and Ukrainian delegations held on Monday their first round of negotiations in search of a solution to the crisis in Belarus' Gomel region, with no clear breakthrough. The second round of the peace talks could reportedly take place on Wednesday, TASS news agency reported citing sources. Belarusian President Alexander Lukashenko did not rule out the possibility of a meeting between Russian and Ukrainian presidents if progress was to be made in the negotiations, Xinhua reported citing BelTA news agency. But Kremlin spokesman Dmitry Peskov said that it was too early to talk about such a meeting. Latest updates on Russia-Ukraine War San Francisco, March 2 : Meta-owned Facebook, which has already blocked access to RT and Sputnik within the European Union and Ukraine, now said it will demote all Russian state media across Facebook and Instagram around the world. According to Engadget, Meta's president of Global Affairs Nick Clegg said the company was making Russian state media "harder to find" on Facebook and Instagram. "We are demoting content from Facebook Pages and Instagram accounts for Russian state-controlled media outlets," Clegg was quoted as saying during a call with reporters. "We have also begun to demote posts that contain links to Russian state-controlled media websites on Facebook over the past few days," Clegg added. On the call, Clegg called the move "unprecedented," and noted that Meta has received requests from a number of governments to suppress Russian state media. So far, the company has only blocked the pages entirely in the European Union -- following a ban from lawmakers -- and inside of Ukraine. In addition to demoting content, Clegg said Facebook will also add labels to all links to Russian state media websites that are shared on its platforms to "provide more information to people before they share them or to let them know that they lead to state-controlled media websites". Facebook Pages and Instagram accounts controlled by state media will also have labels, the report said. The labels, which are expected to roll out in the coming days, will appear on any link to Russian state media and will warn that Facebook believes the publisher is "partially or wholly under the editorial control of the Russian government". Facebook's head of Security Policy Nathaniel Gleicher added that the company will be on the lookout for new websites or links created to evade the policy. Facebook's latest update comes after several days of crackdowns on Russian state media from major tech companies. Haveri : , March 2 (IANS) The devastated family members of Naveen Shekarappa Gyanagoudar, who died in the shelling in war-torn Ukraine, are hoping that the deceased young man's body would be brought back to India at the earliest. The family members till now have not got any specific inputs from the authorities on when their son's body would be brought back to the country. Harsha, the brother of deceased Naveen, said on Wednesday said, "No one is confirming whether the body will be brought back. His body should be brought back to us. His friends are coming back alive and we are coping with the news of death," he said. Shekarappa, Naveen's father, stated that he had lost his son and he wanted the government to bring back other boys alive to India. "Thousands of students are stuck in Ukraine, they are assets of our country. They should be brought back safely," he said. Chief Minister Basavaraj Bommai has stated that he has appealed to the external affairs ministry on the recovery of the body in two or three days if it is not possible immediately. The body of Naveen is lying in a war zone, which has made things complicated for the authorities. This news has deepened the grief of the family and relatives of Naveen. Rajashekara Gouda, the maternal uncle of Naveen blamed the system resulting in his death. "Naveen has scored 97 per cent in II PUC (12 class). He could not get a medical seat under the government quota. The family could not pay a donation and he had to go to Ukraine to fulfil his dream of becoming a doctor," he said. Gouda said that Naveen had collected information from his friends and went to Ukraine to study medicine. He used to call every day and comforted his parents that nothing would happen to him. Naveen's father Shekarappa also expressed his anguish that because of caste and donation his son had to pay with his life. He has urged the government to bring back the body of his son. Naveen was a topper at school and scored 606 marks out of 626 in SSLC (Class 10) examination. The deceased boy was supposed to take 8th semester exams in June. He was also planning to take up an internship. He had gone to Ukraine after II PUC. Prime Minister Narendra Modi, Chief Minister Basavaraj Bommai, former CM B.S. Yediyurappa has personally spoken to the family of deceased Naveen and assured that all efforts would be made to bring back the body to India. Brussels, March 2 : Conflict should end before Ukraine's application to join the European Union (EU) is discussed, European Commission President Ursula von der Leyen said here. "Today, the European Union and Ukraine are already closer than ever before. There is still a long path ahead. We have to end this war. And we should talk about the next steps," von der Leyen said while addressing the European Parliament plenary on Tuesday. Ukrainian President Volodymyr Zelensky on Monday signed an official appeal for the EU, asking for an accession of Ukraine via a new special procedure, Xinhua news agency reported. During the plenary on Tuesday, Zelensky, who was invited to make a speech from Kiev via video link, expressed his gratitude that the EU countries were unified in supporting Ukraine but regretted that it came after a high price was paid. European Council President Charles Michel responded by pledging to look at the "symbolic, political and legitimate request" seriously, while admitting the process will be difficult. Members of the European Parliament on Tuesday adopted a resolution that called on the EU institutions to work toward granting Ukraine EU candidate status, and stated that such procedure should be in line with proper EU terms. The resolution was approved by 637 votes in favour, 13 against with 26 abstentions. Moscow, March 2 : Russian President Vladimir Putin signed a decree introducing temporary economic measures to ensure the country's financial stability, the Kremlin announced. These measures will be taken in response to anti-Russian sanctions by the US, other countries and international organisations, according to the decree. Among the measures, Russia will ban the outflow of foreign currencies in an amount exceeding the equivalent of $10,000 starting Wednesday, Xinhua news agency reported. Effective since Wednesday, restrictions regarding transactions of securities, real estate and loans will be imposed on foreigners associated with countries that have taken anti-Russian actions. On Monday, Putin inked a decree introducing "special economic measures" to cushion the impact of a new wave of Western sanctions amid Russia's special military operation in Ukraine. Tallinn, March 2 : Visiting Secretary General of the North Atlantic Treaty Organisation (NATO) Jens Stoltenberg has stressed diplomatic efforts to solve the ongoing Ukraine crisis. Stoltenberg made the remarks at a joint press conference on Tuesday with Estonian Prime Minister Kaja Kallas and visiting British Prime Minister Boris Johnson at the Tapa Army Base in northern Estonia. He called for an immediate stop of the war in Ukraine, pullout of Russian forces and the engaging of diplomatic efforts, Xinhua news agency reported. "Over the last weeks, in response to Russia's attacks on Ukraine, we have increased our defensive presence in the air, on land, and at sea," he noted. There are "over 100 jets at high alert operating from 30 different locations and over 120 ships from the Baltic Sea to the Mediterranean," Stoltenberg said, adding that Britain, the US and other allies are deploying thousands more troops to the eastern part of the alliance. "For the first time in our history, we are deploying the NATO response force," said the NATO chief, who termed NATO as a defensive alliance that does not seek conflict with Russia. The second round of peace talks between Russia and Ukraine could take place on Wednesday, the TASS news agency reported Tuesday citing sources. The first round of the negotiations, which lasted about five hours, concluded on Monday in Belarus' Gomel region, with no clear breakthrough. For his part, Johnson said that he wanted to be "crystal clear" that "we will not fight Russian forces in Ukraine" and "our reinforcements, like the reinforcements here in Tapa, are firmly within the borders of NATO members." On the number of reinforced troops, the British prime minister said "we will always keep things under review." He also termed the "no-fly zone" on Russian aircraft over Ukraine as a very big step that "simply is not on the agenda of any NATO country." More than 900 members of the Royal Welsh infantry regiment of the British Army and nearly 200 Danish troops together with their vehicles and equipment will be joining NATO Battlegroup Estonia at Tapa Army Base, the Estonian Public Broadcasting reported on Tuesday. Estonian President Alar Karis met with Stoltenberg at Tallinn airport earlier on the day. Stoltenberg also made a trip to Poland with a visit to Lask airbase on Tuesday. Latest updates on Russia-Ukraine War Moradabad : , March 2 (IANS) An 18-year-old girl and her mother, 38, travelling on board the Lucknow Mail train were allegedly molested by a man. The accused was later arrested at the Moradabad station. The arrest was made after the girl informed her father in Lucknow over the phone and he informed the railway ministry, the UP Police and the Superintendent of Police about the incident via tweet. The information was passed on to the Railway Protection Force (RPF) and Government Railway Police (GRP) who swung into action, traced the train's location and nabbed the accused at the Moradabad railway station late in the night. The accused allegedly misbehaved with the RPF personnel. "He has been sent to jail after being produced in court," said GRP inspector Sudhir Kumar. The accused was identified as Aditya Singh, 27, a resident of Ayodhya, said Kumar. New Delhi, March 2 : Deeply concerned about the Russian invasion of Ukraine, Apple has halted sales of all of its products in Russia. The tech giant has also removed media outlets RT and Sputnik from the App Store. Apple said that it has "stopped all exports into our sales channel in the country" in response to the Russian invasion, adding that it will continue to evaluate the situation. "We have taken a number of actions in response to the invasion. We have paused all product sales in Russia. Last week, we stopped all exports into our sales channel in the country. Apple Pay and other services have been limited," the company said in a statement late on Tuesday. The company said that RT News and Sputnik News are no longer available for download from the App Store outside Russia. "We have disabled both traffic and live incidents in Apple Maps in Ukraine as a safety and precautionary measure for Ukrainian citizens," said Apple. Vice Prime Minister of Ukraine, Mykhailo Fedorov, last week urged Apple CEO Tim Cook to stop supplying products and services to Russian users as a response to its invasion of Ukraine. In an open letter posted on Twitter, Fedorov said he has contacted Cook to block the App Store for people in Russia. "I've contacted @tim_cook, Apple's CEO, to block the Apple Store for citizens of the Russian Federation, and to support the package of US government sanctions!," he said. "I appeal to you to stop supplying Apple services and products to the Russian Federation, including blocking access to the App Store!" added Fedorov who is also the Minister of Digital Transformation of Ukraine. Fedorov had asked Cook to stop App Store services for Russian users too. Latest updates on Russia-Ukraine War New Delhi, March 2 : US President Joe Biden has condemned Russian President Vladimir Putin's invasion of Ukraine -- and warned of further measures to punish Russia, CNN reported. "Tonight, I say to the Russian oligarchs and corrupt leaders who have bilked billions of dollars off this violent regime, no more," Biden said during his State of the Union address on Tuesday as he announced a new task force under the US Justice Department to investigate Russian oligarchs. "We are joining with our European allies to find and seize their yachts, their luxury apartments, and their private jets. We are coming for your ill-begotten gains," he said, CNN reported. The US is also closing its airspace to Russian aircraft, joining a number of countries that took similar measures this past week, "further isolating Russia," Biden said. He then added, referring to Putin: "He has no idea what's coming." "Putin has unleashed violence and chaos. But while he may make gains on the battlefield -- he will pay a continuing high price over the long run," Biden said. Biden noted that Putin's aggression had only made the world's democracies strengthen their resolve to counter rising autocracies. "Six days ago, Russia's Vladimir Putin sought to shake the foundations of the free world, thinking he could make it bend to his menacing ways. But he badly miscalculated," Biden said. "He thought he could roll into Ukraine and the world would roll over. Instead he met a wall of strength he never imagined. He met the Ukrainian people", CNN reported. New Delhi, March 2 : The Ukraine military says Russian paratroopers have landed in its besieged second-largest city Kharkiv, BBC reported. Russian troops have parachuted into Kharkiv stepping up an attack on Ukraine's second-largest city which saw dozens of civilian killings in bombings Tuesday. According to the Ukrainian military, the aerial assault began just as air raid sirens were starting to sound in Kharkiv and the surrounding region. The statement adds that the Russian troops attacked a regional military hospital, and that fighting is ongoing, BBC reported. Kharkiv has been the epicentre of much of the violence seen in Ukraine in recent days. On Tuesday, a missile struck the local government headquarters of Ukraine's second-largest city around 08.00 local time, sending a massive fireball into the sky and burning cars and nearby buildings. Another strike occurred later on Tuesday in one of Kharkiv's residential neighborhoods. Ukrainian President Zelensky later called the attack a war crime. At least 17 people were killed in Kharkiv on Tuesday, and dozens wounded, according to emergency officials. Some pundits have speculated that the artillery strikes on residential communities could be an effort by Russia to weaken the Ukrainian resolve to fight, BBC reported. The smaller southern city of Kherson has also fallen to Russian forces, local Ukrainian officials say. The frontline cities of Kharkiv, Sumy and Mariupol are still holding out against the Russian invasion. Meanwhile, the huge convoy of Russian armoured vehicles is now about 15 miles north-west of the capital Kyiv New Delhi, March 2 : Mexico won't be taking part in the international pile-on to sanction Russia over its invasion of Ukraine, as President Andres Manuel Lopez Obrador has said, he seeks to keep his country on peaceful terms with all nations, RT reported. "We are not going to take any sort of economic retaliation because we want to maintain good relations with all the governments of the world," Lopez Obrador told reporters. He added that remaining neutral will put Mexico in a position to "talk with the parties in conflict". The Mexican leader's position on the Ukraine crisis marks a novel diplomatic strategy as other nations around the world -- including former Warsaw Pact nations such as Bulgaria and Romania -- join the US in trying to punish Russia. Choosing neutrality could strain Mexico's close relationship with Washington, but Lopez Obrador has been critical of US foreign policy. Even as it tries to avoid alienating its dominant trading partner, the US, Mexico also aims to maintain economic ties with Russia and Moscow's Latin American allies. Russia's Lukoil this year bought into an offshore oil project in Mexico, and Lopez Obrador said on Monday that his country will keep its airspace open for Aeroflot's flights to Mexico City, RT reported. Mexican Tourism Minister Miguel Torruco was widely criticized this week for posting a Twitter message offering "warm greetings" to Aeroflot and noting that "tourism is synonymous with peace, friendship and understanding between peoples". He added that Russian tourist visits to Mexico more than doubled last year to over 75,000. Varanasi, March 2 : Varanasi will now witness an unusually large congregation of leaders from various political hues as the district goes to polls in the final and seventh phase on March 7. With 54 Assembly constituencies, including eight in Varanasi, going to polls in the seventh and last phase of UP elections, political parties have stepped up their poll campaigns in Varanasi which is the centre of faith for millions of people. Prime Minister Narendra Modi, who is also the MP from Varanasi, is scheduled to be here on March 4 and 5 to campaign for BJP candidates. Union Home Minister Amit Shah has already spent two days campaigning and interacting with party workers. On March 3, Samajwadi party chief Akhilesh Yadav, TMC chief and West Bengal Chief Minister Mamata Banerjee, along with RLD chief Jayant Chaudhary will be in Varanasi to address a public meeting in Shivpur and are likely to hold a road show in Varanasi South Assembly seat. Congress and AAP leaders are also expected to be in Varanasi for campaigning in the next three days. The Varanasi South Assembly seat - a stronghold of the BJP for over two-and-a-half decades - is set to witness an interesting contest. The BJP had won the seat in consecutive elections. This time, the BJP has fielded UP minister Neelkanth Tiwari and the Samajwadi Party has given ticket to Kishan Dikshit. The Congress and the BSP have fielded Mudita Kapur and Dinesh Kasaudhan, respectively. Locals predict a direct contest between SP and BJP here. "Unemployment is a major issue among educated youths. The BJP government could not create employment opportunities for them," said Pratish Kapoor, a student. The BJP has also fielded two UP ministers - Ravindra Jaiswal from Varanasi North constituency and Anil Rajbhar from Shivpur Assembly constituency. SP has fielded Ashfaq Ahmad Dablu against Jaiswal while Gularana Tabassum is Congress candidate from Varanasi North. Anil Rajbhar is facing a tough challenge from SP-SBSP alliance candidate Arvind Rajbhar in Shivpur where the BSP has fielded Ravi Maurya. The BJP has fielded Tribhuvan Ram on Ajagara (reserve) seat, where he is facing challenge from BSP's Raghunath. The SP-SBSP alliance has fielded Sunil Kumar. In Cantt, the Congress has fielded former Varanasi MP, Rajesh Mishra, and the BJP has given ticket to MLA Saurabh Srivastava, while the SP has fielded Puja Yadav. In Rohania, BJP-Apna Dal(S) alliance has fielded Sunil, while SP-Apna Dal(K) has fielded Abhay Patel. All major political parties, including BJP, SP, BSP, Congress and AAP have fielded candidates in all eight Assembly constituencies of Varanasi. In the 2017 Assembly elections, the BJP and its ally Apna Dal(S) and the previous ally SBSP, had won all eight seats (BJP-6, Apna Dal-1 and SBSP-1). "Leaders of all political parties know the importance of Varanasi in the politics of eastern UP is crucial. Therefore, leaders of different parties have to camp and campaign in and around Varanasi in order to woo voters," said Prof Ramesh Dixit, a political scientist. Bengaluru, March 2 : Karnataka Chief Minister Basavaraj Bommai said Wednesday that he has requested the Indian Embassy in war-torn Ukraine to recover the body of Naveen Shekarappa Gyanagaudar, who died in the shelling by the Russian Army in Kharkiv province of Ukraine. Speaking to reporters here, he said, "We have got photos of the body of Naveen. The dress is similar and Naveen's friends have sent them from Ukraine. They have taken the photos after the shelling was stopped. I will speak to the Union Minister for External Affairs S. Jaishankar and also to the Indian embassy in Ukraine regarding serious attempts to recovery of Nveen's body. "I have requested the Indian embassy to first recover the body and then they can transport it later. I have sent the photos to the Ministry of External Affairs, the confirmation is yet to be made by them. The evacuation operation has been intensified by the Indian government. As many 26 aircrafts will be pressed into service in the coming two-three days to bring back Indian students. "I will try to push as many students from Karnataka as possible," CM Bommai said. The students have been asked to come to safe zones from war zones from different locations. Since it is a war zone, clarity on anything is difficult. The Indian government has spoken to the Ukrainian government towards moving Indian students to safer zones, he said. CM Bommai further stated that a plan has been made for evacuation. The directions are being given to the Indian students for group movement. The instructions are given in this regard. Slowly, the students will be taken out from the war zone, he revealed. He said that the first priority of the government is to bring back the body of deceased Naveen. "Then we will definitely compensate the family. The family members are demanding that their son's body must be brought back. We are trying hard," he said. He came down heavily on the opposition Congress and said that during the time of the UPA government there were many war situations, but not a single person was brought back to India. "Our country has taken up a massive evacuation operation that no other country has taken up. 26 flights carrying Indian students are arriving in 72 hours. Evacuation exercise is continuously happening," he stated. Earlier, Harsha, the brother of deceased Naveen, stated on Wednesday that no one was confirming to the family when the body of his brother will be brought to India. "His body should be brought back to us. His friends are coming back alive and we are coping with the news of death," he said. Shekarappa, Naveen's father said that he had lost his son and he wanted the government to bring back other boys alive to India. "Thousands of students are stuck in Ukraine, they are assets of our country. They should be brought back safely," he said. Chennai, March 2 : With only two days left for the indirect elections to the Mayor post in corporations, chairperson posts in Municipalities and president posts in town panchayats to be held on March 4, the AIADMK is trying hard to keep its flock together. The party was in for a shock after nine of the 11 councillors elected for the Sivakasi corporation crossed over and joined the DMK on Tuesday in Chennai in the presence of Revenue minister KKSSR Ramachandran and Industries minister Thangam Thennarasu. The newly formed Sivakasi corporation has 48 wards of which DMK won 24, AIADMK 11, Congress 6, while BJP, MDMK, and VCK won one seat each in the corporation. Independents won 4 seats. The switching of sides of AIADMK councillors even after DMK, Congress, MDMK, VCK alliance having an absolute majority has left the AIADMK leadership worried. A senior leader of the AIADMK who is also a former minister while speaking to IANS said: "It is time we rework on our strategy. Losing election is not the issue. There is despair among the cadres and middle-level functionaries of the party that there is a leadership crisis in the party. Once it is sorted out things will be smooth and safe." Sources in the DMK told IANS that several AIADMK councillors and district-level functionaries are approaching the ruling party for switching over. There are indications that more AIADMK office-bearers will leave the party from Salem, Erode, Dindigul, and Coimbatore districts. Several AIADMK councillors are disillusioned by the fact that all the 21 corporations were lost to DMK-led front in the urban local body elections. Dr Uma Maheswari, Political analyst and Professor of political science in a private college in Chennai while speaking to IANS said: "The AIADMK is facing a crisis and that is for certain but there is no major erosion in its vote strength. The party has to sort out the leadership issues and they need strong leadership to tackle this. Otherwise, more leaders and party functionaries will go out of the party searching greener pastures." There are reports of the former interim general secretary of AIADMK, V.K.Sasikala trying her hand to take control of the party. With the exit of 9 AIADMK councillors to DMK and several district-level functionaries of the party opening a green channel to switch stands, the call for Sasikala to come back to the party fold will grow louder. Another factor confronting the AIADMK is the growth of BJP in several areas where the former was strong. In Chennai corporation, the BJP could muster several votes at the expense of the AIADMK. The party without strong leadership will lose its ground in the days to come. New Delhi, March 2 : The Indian logistics industry has entered a robust phase of Cloud-enabled digital transformation in the pandemic and DTDC, which is one of the preferred courier brands in India with the largest network of delivery destinations, is now batting for the Blockchain-based technology to further boost the supply chain ecosystem. DTDC is already heavily invested in Big data analytics and Internet of Things (IoT) where complex data sets are analysed to improve supply chain performance, revenue and customer analytics. The company has also enabled big data analytics to its middle management to increase its branch level delivery performance in the last mile sector. IANS spoke to Santosh Abbimane, Chief Financial Officer and Chief Transformation Officer at DTDC on how Blockchain technology can transform the logistics supply chain networks. Here are excerpts from an interview: Q: Tell us about your digital transformation journey before the pandemic? Did Covid play the role of a catalyst in accelerating your digital transformation journey? A: Our digital transformation journey has been undertaken in multiple waves starting from the conventional SAP ECC implementation for financial accounting. Then DTDC started the first digital wave by supporting a startup called Shipsy (LLama Logisol Pvt Ltd). With this move we moved to digital first and last mile processes. This included transforming not only DTDC but also the now more than 13,000 franchisees of DTDC and other partners in our ecosystem, a count of over 50,000. This was followed by moving to an online communication suite, completing the commercial lifecycle by implementing SAP sales cloud, SAP BRIM for revenue management and SAP BPC for consolidation, EKA another startup for T&E as well as digitizing P2P processes. In the latest wave we have also implemented DWHs in multi cloud environments that have improved operations and yield management, audit etc. RPA tools where data across distributed processes are required and ML/AI tools to improve productivity. Not only are we using ML/AI operations but also for training staff including "Smile Ambassadors" our last mile. The DTDC retail app and smile code-based delivery -- first started by DTDC -- was a huge success in the post pandemic era. IOT based application ensuring temperature-controlled vaccine movement without refrigerated trucks was a first in India as well. Q: Post data centre migration, what are some more of the future problems you are looking to solve? A: We are targeting to improve in the areas such as Integrating functional views via Data Lake warehouse setups, Machine Learning and Artificial Intelligence guided route optimization. We are investing heavily on Intelligent automation for Infrastructure managed services, Application Performance Monitoring, Dynamic Application Security Testing to protect and improve the security of our customer data. Our focus is also on Integrating IOT applications including vehicle tracking, track and trace, etc. Extending IOT applications for the farm to fork to add value to agriculture and food processing sectors etc. are also key focus areas. We are also working on sustainability initiatives and automation to improve our carbon footprint. Q: How are you using big data & analytics to cater to the digital needs of your customers better? A: One area where we have seen incredible impact has been in the democratization of data. Standard reports are in pull mode, but they can be linked to more complex analysis when required. We have invested in Big data analytics where complex data sets are analyzed to improve supply chain performance, revenue and customer analytics. All our senior management teams in various functional areas are utilizing big data analytics to improve sales targets, customer retention, operational efficiency, and financial performance. Furthermore, we have enabled big data analytics to our middle management to increase our branch level delivery performance in the last mile sector. Q: How will the logistics landscape look five years from now? For example, cold chain monitoring devices leverage IoT to provide real time temperature data for example. What other path breaking ideas are in store? A: Looking at the larger picture, one essential issue is that currently supply chains are still distributed. Manufacturing, Inventory, storage (both information and goods), transportation and distribution systems are discrete and have varying degrees of integration. We will see closer integration across all stages of supply chains. For example, if you own the warehouse responsible for flow of goods, there could be occasions where suppliers fail to deliver goods intact or on time, leading to potential time-consuming disputes and punitive legal recourse measures. Blockchain technology will avoid such scenarios as it would allow you to negotiate smart contacts with suppliers that clearly define terms, conditions and the mode of functioning between the two parties, while further mandating intelligent data collection and control via sensors of all goods to generate critical information on the state of goods and the time of delivery which is an IOT use case as well. Further, use of IOT for temperature-controlled product movement is already here and DTDC is using it. Use of IOT in the Health care sector will evolve from monitoring to active management to being the preferred delivery mechanisms for therapeutics. I also believe the IOT involvement will be seen most in farm to fork items even in cost sensitive markers and lower down the value chain. Supply chains will evolve and use IOT and wireless communications will help for tracking the choke points. AI/ML will sharpen their forecasting models and help both manufacturers and service providers to plan better: Unmanned mobile robots in warehouses are a limited reality, they will soon become ubiquitous Drones for online fulfilment - Predictive models combined with new-age fleets could lead to minimal fulfillment time. Blockchain technology could emerge as the new operating system for supply chain networks that combines B2B connectivity with software apps. Q: One of the key trends emerging is that of green logistics. Can you tell us how digitization and cloud technology can aid the logistics sector to reduce their carbon footprint? The world is now entering the Fourth Industrial Revolution which will feature major technological advances in artificial intelligence, robotics, cloud computing, 3D printing, and more. The logistics sector has to a large extent adopted Cloud computing -- large-scale, shared IT infrastructure available over the Internet -- as the engine enabling these technology advancements. These advancements, are in turn, driving cloud uptake. The biggest advantage is to automate and use off the shelf programs across some of the service providers and available on the hyper-scaled platforms. In a country like India, monitoring solar installations (on say roofs of large hubs) and electricity storage and integrating them with alternate but temporary modes of carbon-based power sources (DG sets) are key requirements for 24x7 operations. Where solar installations are currently sub optimal monitoring electricity usage, DG set back up efficiency etc. can provide an important pathway to a greener process. Logistics applications allied with AI/ML route predictions and sensors on Electric Delivery vehicles could ensure that vehicle routes are scheduled to be back in the base for recharging at the right time. Using applications on cloud to automatically monitor heavy vehicle movements and hence driver movements via alerts, are a good way to improve fuel efficiency and consumption. Q: What did cloud technology enable you to do better? A: AWS allowed us to move to cloud for a reasonable cost, in a phased manner while improving performance of the applications. Thus, we could be sure of what we were getting for the price we are paying incrementally. The opportunity to fine tune operations for optimizing cost was a significant advantage. The active partnership of the AWS teams in working with us for scaling and realising savings has been a key factor that enabled us to move many applications to the cloud. We also found cost effective analytics solutions to democratize our data consumption. In short, AWS provided a scalable platform for our business applications enabling faster delivery, improved security, faster app start up and portability. From a core logistics perspective, our entire first and last mile applications are on AWS along with the reporting and dashboards related to the same. Currently most of our SAP stack includes SAP ECC, SAP BRIM and SAP BPC. We are also using AWS for Revenue Analytics and First and Last mile commercial payout computations. Q: What are the must have qualities for today's successful CIO/CTO to stay ahead of the curve? The baseline for any CIO/CTO must be to work with the business teams on understanding the outcomes required and focus on delivering them. This sounds easier than it is when one has to consider TCO and ROI metrics. However, the key contribution of a CIO/CTO is to work with functional teams to push the boundaries on what can be delivered to the customer. e.g. in logistics B2B (corporate) customers are asking for the same standards that are in B2C (say an e-com process). The expectations are simply not the same anymore. We are living in a world where technology is constantly evolving and as are customer expectations, hence the CIO / CTO must try and stay ahead of the curve to be effective. The only way to do so is be a digital change agent. Last but not the least, to borrow a phrase from Thomas Friedman, work with internal customers to ensure that AI is not seen as artificial intelligence but as an Intelligent assistant. San Francisco, March 2 : Tech giant Google has announced $15 million towards relief efforts in Ukraine, in the wake of recent military invasion into the country by Russia. The aid includes $5 million from employee matching campaigns and $5 million in direct grants. The remaining $5 million is raised from advertising credits. "The Russian invasion of Ukraine is both a tragedy and a humanitarian disaster in the making," Kent Walker, President, Global Affairs at Google, wrote in a blogpost. Walker added that Google teams are working round the clock to support people in Ukraine through "products, defending against cybersecurity threats, ensuring high-quality, reliable information". Further, the company has also launched an SOS alert on Search across Ukraine. "When people search for refugee and evacuation information, they will see an alert pointing them to United Nations resources for refugees and asylum seekers," Walker said. The tech giant has temporarily disabled some live Google Maps features in Ukraine, including the traffic layer and information about how busy places are, to help protect the safety of local communities and their citizens. It has also added information on refugee and migrant centres in neighbouring countries. The company said its security team is alert on Russia-backed hacking and influence operations. "While we have not seen meaningful changes in the levels of malicious activity in this region overall, our Threat Analysis Group (TAG) has seen threat actors refocus their efforts on Ukrainian targets," Walker said. The company said they have identified "the attackers behind the GhostWriter threat group targeting Ukrainian government and military officials" and have "blocked these attempts". The company said it has increased Google account security protections. Google's Advanced Protection Programme and Project Shield has been activated to protect user accounts as well as 100 Ukrainian websites, including local news services. Moreover, to curb the spread of misinformation and disrupt disinformation campaigns online, Google has "blocked YouTube channels connected to Russia Today and Sputnik across Europe". Earlier Google had indefinitely paused the monetisation of Russian state-funded media such as RT across its platforms. Besides, the tech giant has also significantly limited recommendations globally for a number of Russian state-funded media outlets and "removed hundreds of channels and thousands of videos for violating its Community Guidelines". Google is also ensuring help, including physical security support, paid leave, assistance options and reimbursement for housing, travel and food for its employees forced to leave their homes. Google will also comply with any sanction requirements, according to Walker, who said it has curtailed products like Google Pay in Russia. But services like Search, Maps and YouTube remain currently active. Previously, other tech giants such as Meta, Apple, Twitter and Microsoft have also announced similar actions in relation to their business in Russia. Latest updates on Russia-Ukraine War Seoul, March 2 : South Korea said on Wednesday that the Ukraine crisis could have negative impacts on smaller companies and the country's exports of tech products as it has joined global efforts to impose sanctions against Russia. The government also said the country's grain imports from Ukraine have faced strains while there have been no problems with its energy imports from Russia, Yonhap news agency reported. "There are high concerns that the negative fallout of the Ukraine crisis could become gradually visible across sectors," the government said. Last week, the United States announced sweeping export controls against Russia over Moscow's invasion of Ukraine, which require companies to receive a license from Washington for tech-related items using US technology and software before they can be shipped to Russia. The Foreign Direct Product Rule (FDPR) aims to block Russia's access to global high-tech products and other major items. South Korea was not included in a list of 32 nations, including the European Union, Britain and Japan, which will be exempt from the FDPR. South Korea is seeking to receive an exemption from Washington's FDPR on concerns that the measure could affect major South Korean exporters, including leading chipmakers Samsung Electronics Co. and SK hynix, as they use US technology and software. "The government will make efforts to swiftly reach an agreement with the US over the exemption as early as possible through high-level consultations," South Korea's Trade Minister Yeo Han-koo told the news agency during his trip to Mexico. South Korea said if the Ukraine crisis is protracted, Korean small firms' business operations may hit a snag amid spikes in commodity prices and increased volatility in the financial market. The government is closely monitoring the development of the Ukraine turmoil on concerns that it could disrupt energy supplies and affect imports of raw materials. The country heavily relies on imports for most of its energy needs. The government said it has additionally secured 165,000 tons of edible corn from countries in Eastern Europe as it has become uncertain whether South Korea will be able to import the planned 180,000 tons of corn from Ukraine. Latest updates on Russia-Ukraine War New Delhi, March 2 : The financial services company Religare Enterprises on Wednesday announced the company has become debt-free after repaying Rs 185.5 crore to its subsidiary Religare Finvest. "We are pleased to announce that REL is completely debt free now. As a holding company, REL is providing the necessary growth capital to all its businesses and REL is all set to expand in new BFSI verticals, having synergies with existing businesses," Rashmi Saluja, Chairperson of the company said in a regulatory filing to the exchanges on Wednesday. The company said it will enter new sectors such as Asset Reconstruction, Alternate Investment Funds, Insurance Broking, Digital Wealth Management. These new verticals are expected to have a "multiplier effect" in Religare Group's businesses and financial performance, it said in the filing. Further, the company, in the same filing, said it is in the process of creating a "war chest" to grow the new ventures organically and inorganically. War chests are funds typically earmarked for a specific purpose, action or campaign or in case of contingency. Reacting to the company becoming debt-free and its plan to foray into new verticals, its shares rose 3 per cent to Rs 126.45 at 12.47 p.m.. Mumbai, March 2 : Comedian Amit Tandon all set for a unique unscripted homegrown comedy special at the National Centre for the Performing Arts, proceeds of which will go to an NGO which works towards providing access to basic healthcare and education to the underprivileged, with a special focus on the eradication of child marriage and adolescent girl child trafficking from the society. Speaking about the same, Tandon says, "In such trying times, it's upon us individually to stand by one another. This is a small initiative on part of my team and I, to lend support to the scores of NGOs like Unbound Futures Foundation who are battling such societal menaces single-handedly." "The idea here is to come together as a society and help raise some funds for an NGO working tirelessly towards an important cause, and also try to bring smiles on people's faces while we're at it. I feel responsible as a thought leader/influencer for spreading awareness about these problems that everyone knows about, but no one works towards barring a few non-governmental bodies." He added: "This is my small way of helping out in my own capacity, and I hope that I manage to get a good response on this initiative so that more and more of such non-profit events can be planned and executed by other comedians of our country as well!" Tandon's latest outing is with the television show called 'Goodnight India'. The show airs on Sony Sab TV, everyday of the week. Chennai, March 2 : Actor Suriya on Wednesday offered a joint prayer along with his fans for the safe return of Indians stuck in Ukraine, which is currently battling an invasion by Russia. Speaking after the launch of the trailer of his upcoming film, 'Etharkkum Thunindhavan', which is scheduled to hit screens on March 10, Suriya said, "Even as we celebrate this moment here, a lot of innocent people and children from India are in Ukraine. They all have to return home safely. "They say that there are around 15,000 people more left there. Finding transportation there is a challenge. Our government is doing everything but when we watch pictures and video clips, our heart flutters. "We have lost a dear brother yesterday. I have faith in joint prayers. Let us all pray together that without any loss of life, everybody must safely come back home," the actor said and offered a joint prayer with his fans. After the brief prayer, Suriya said," I believe our prayers will facilitate their safe return to our homeland." Patna, March 2 : The Nitish Kumar government's clean image has suffered a jolt after senior RJD leader Bhai Virendra on Wednesday alleged that more than 1,800 contractors associated with the rural development projects did not make GST payment to the government. "The Ministry of Rural Development has paid full amount of the projects to contractors without deducting GST. The top officials including engineers of the department have passed the bill and sanctioned the payment to contractors. We have learnt that 1,832 contractors have benefited from this scam," Bhai Virendra said. "I believe that these contractors have duped the government of crores of rupees in connivance with top officials and the related minister of the department. It needs thorough investigation to find out the nexus between contractors, officials and the minister," he said. Reacting to it, Jayant Raj, the Rural Development Minister informed the House that he is directing the officials to look into it. The opposition leaders were not satisfied with the Minister's reply and created a huge uproar inside the assembly. Following that, Parliamentary Affairs Minister Vijay Kumar Chaudhary intervened and ensured that a fair investigation will be done in a time bound manner to find out the lapses. "In case of GST being not paid by the contractors, our government will force them to pay the same to the department," Chaudhary said. Chennai, March 2 : Tamil Nadu school education minister Anbil Mahesh Poyyamozhi on Wednesday said that the board exams for Class 12 students will commence from May 5. He said that exams for Class 11 students will be conducted from May 9 and those for Class 10 on May 6. The minister, while speaking to mediapersons said, "The public exams for Class 12 students will take place from May 5 to May 28. The Class 11 public examinations will be held from May 9 to May 31 and public examinations for Class 10 students will be held from May 6 to May 30." He also said that the practical exams for Class 10, 11, and 12 will commence from April 25. It may be noted that public exams were not held for the past two years due to the pandemic. Poyyamozhi also said, "Tentatively the public exam results for Class 12 students will be announced on June 23. Class 10 students will get their results on June 17 and results for Class 11 students will be announced on July 7." The minister said that the results may either be announced slightly earlier or later than these dates. The state education minister said, "I would like to reiterate what the Chief Minister has said to the students to take up the examinations. Let them study with joy and write the exams for their satisfaction." Poyyamozhi also said that final exams for Class 6 to 9 in government-aided and matriculation schools following the state common board syllabus will be held from May 5 to May 13. Imphal, March 2 : A security personnel was killed and 11 others were injured on Wednesday when their vehicle met in an accident due to mechanical failure in northern Manipur's Tamenglong district, officials said. Election Department officials said that the accident occurred when the security personnel, as part of their election-related duty, were on their way to an area in Tamenglong district, where the second phase of Assembly election would be held on March 5. The officials said that Lalawmpuia, a Mizoram Armed Police personnel, died on the spot and the 11 injured, eight of them seriously, were airlifted to Imphal and are under medical treatment in the hospitals. The Mizoram Armed police personnel are part of the central forces deployed in the two-phases of Manipur Assembly polls. According to the officials, the driver of the vehicle lost control near the Tamenglong college as the road was very narrow. The first phase of Manipur Assembly election was held on Monday and the counting of votes would take place on March 10. San Francisco, March 2 : US based automaker Jeep, owned by Stellantis, has revealed the first images of its upcoming electric SUV and confirmed that it will launch in 2023. According to The Verge, Jeep has been slower to embrace electrification as compared to many of its rivals. The automaker has released plug-in hybrid versions of its Wrangler and Grand Cherokee SUVs and plans an off-roading version of the Grand Cherokee, the Trailhawk, which also comes with a hybrid motor. But the unnamed SUV coming out next year will be Jeep's first purely battery-electric vehicle, the report said. The automaker recently announced that it would release "zero-emission" versions of all of its vehicles by 2025, along with plug-hybrid variants. The new Jeep EV would fall within the comprehensive plan last year by Stellantis, the multi-national conglomeration that formed last year when Fiat Chrysler merged with the French PSA Group, to electrify the lineups at most of its brands. That includes EV versions of the Ram 1500 pickup truck and an electric Dodge muscle car. On Tuesday, Stellantis also teased the upcoming Ram 1500 truck with images showing off the vehicle's lighting setup. The image appears to be just a design sketch, leaving open the possibility that Ram has yet to settle on a final form of its upcoming electric truck. Ram is also making an electric ProMaster delivery van that will be incorporated into Amazon's fleet starting in 2023, the report said. Both the Jeep EV and Ram 1500 EV will likely use Stellantis' STLA platform, which is one of the four platforms used by the automaker for its upcoming lineup of EVs, it added. New Delhi, March 2 : US special representative for Afghanistan, Thomas West has said that the Biden Administration has "not made any decision" to recognise the Islamic Emirate of Afghanistan (IEA). West has said that the US wanted to see a representative government established in Afghanistan, Khaama news agency reported, citing an interview by TOLO news. The pledges that Afghanistan made to the international community must be held, West asserted during the interview. The US envoy expressed concern about Afghan women, in particular the women activists being detained, and called for an immediate end of the detention, the Afghanistan based news agency reported. "The US is worried about a possible increase in Daesh and Al-Qaida activities in Afghanistan. ISIS is a common enemy of Kabul and Washington," West was quoted as saying. West was concerned about the nature of the Taliban's campaign against the ISIS. It comes as the IEA has repeatedly acknowledged that it has intensified operations against the ISIS in Afghanistan and that the terror group is not a threat in Afghanistan. The IEA has not been recognised by any country, however the Taliban's interim government's acting FM Amir Khan Motaqi has said that they are closer ever to legitimisation as counties are busy interacting with them, the news agency reported. New Delhi, March 2 : A large number of students from various parts of India, including from the Northeastern states are still stranded in war-hit Ukraine. One medical student from Nagaland arrived here on Wednesday at the Indira Gandhi International airport here in a special aircraft. The girl student hails from Dimapur in Nagaland and is a daughter of a medico. "I walked for two days to reach Poland along with other Indian friends," the visibly relieved student told this journalist. She requested anonymity. "It's good to be home," she said, adding that it's a challenging time for all, but all Indian students are putting up a brave fight. The special aircraft arrived here at around 1000 hours on Wednesday and the student was received at the airport by Nagaland Government officials led by Senior Public Relations Officer (PRO) Koulie Mere. Deputy Resident Commissioner Wennyei Konyak accorded her a warm welcome at the Nagaland House, 29 Dr APJ Abdul Kalam Road. The Nagaland government is organising her flight to Dimapur Thursday (March 3). Meanwhile, from Mizoram two nuns working with Missionaries of Charity Rosela Nuthangu and Ann Feda are still stranded in Ukraine, sources said. Naveen Shekharappa Gyanagoudar, 21, a medical student from Karnataka died due to the shelling in Kharkiv, in eastern Ukraine on Tuesday, the Indian government confirmed. "With profound sorrow we confirm that an Indian student lost his life in shelling in Kharkiv this morning. The Ministry is in touch with his family. We convey our deepest condolences to the family," tweeted Ministry of External Affairs (MEA) spokesperson Arindam Bagchi. Around 20,000 Indians, including a large number of students chiefly in medical institutions resided in Ukraine before the commencement of the military conflict on February 24. Nearly 60 per cent of them, that is around 12,000, have left Ukraine and over 2,000 have been brought to India," officials said. India's Foreign Secretary Harsh V. Shringla said: "Of the remaining 40 per cent of Indians in Ukraine, roughly half remain in the conflict zone in Kharkiv, Sumy area and the other half have either have reached the western borders of Ukraine or are heading towards the western part of Ukraine. "...They are generally out of conflict areas," the Foreign Secretary said. More than 9,000 Indian nationals have been brought out of Ukraine while a considerable number are now in safer areas Of the two nuns, Sister Feda has been working in Kyiv, the capital of Ukraine. Sister Ann Feda reportedly took her first oath in 1998 to become a nun to join the Missionaries of Charity order and was sent to Ukraine in 2015, according to her elder brother Dengdailova, also a chairman of the St Mary's Parish church in Aizawl. A senior Mizoram state government Home ministry official also said there was no information of any other Mizos being in Ukraine. There are a good number of medical students studying in Ukraine from Tripura and other Northeastern states as well, sources said. (Nirendra Dev is a senior journalist and author of books 'The Talking Guns: North East India' and 'Godhra - Journey of a Prime Minister'.) Latest updates on Russia-Ukraine War Srinagar, March 2 : A Central Reserve Police Force (CRPF) trooper committed suicide by shooting himself on Wednesday in Jammu and Kashmi's Srinagar district. Police sources said constable Anand Lal of 29 CRPF battalion shot and killed himself with his service rifle in the Sanat Nagar area of Srinagar city. "A case has been registered in this incident. "The reason behind the trooper taking the extreme step is being investigated," sources said. Hyderabad, March 2 : All India Majlis-e-Ittehadul Muslimeen (AIMIM) on Wednesday celebrated 64th anniversary of its revival with party leader Akbaruddin Owaisi hoisting the party flag at Darussalam, the party headquarters here. With party chief and Hyderabad MP Asaduddin Owaisi busy in the campaigning for ongoing Assembly elections in Uttar Pradesh, his younger brother and party leader in the Telangana assembly did the honours in the presence of party legislators, leaders and workers. Speaking on the occasion, Akbaruddin Owaisi recalled how his grandfather Maulvi Abdul Wahed Owaisi strove hard to protect the rights of Muslims and other minorities enshrined in the Indian Constitution by reviving the party on this day in 1958 with a new party constitution. He said undeterred by the atmosphere of fear and misery among the Muslims in the aftermath of Police Action in 1948, he took up the onerous task of organising the community and gave it a new hope. Akbaruddin Owaisi paid rich tributes to his grandfather and father and former MP Sultan Salahuddin Owaisi and said it was due to their hard work and sacrifices that AIMIM grew into a major political force today and is now expanding across the country. The AIMIM legislator said without the sacrifices of Abdul Wahed Owaisi and Sultan Salahuddin Owaisi, AIMIM would not have built a chain of medical and educational institutions and would not have reached to this stage. Dismissing the allegation of AIMIM's critics that it is a communal party, he read out a resolution that was passed at the first public meeting of the party on March 2, 1958, which condemned communal politics and stressed on the need for Hindu-Muslim unity. Claiming that the party strongly believes in the nation's secular democracy, Akbaruddin Owaisi said it continued to protect and enhance its quality by effective representation from local to national level. He made it clear that the assets built by the party over last six decades are owned by Muslims of Deccan and that Asaduddin Owaisi and other leaders are mere custodians of these assets. Akbaruddin Owaisi listed out the achievements of the party during last six decades and also the help rendered by it to victims of riots and natural calamities in various parts of the country. He also mentioned the works undertaken by the party to help poor during Covid-19 pandemic. He claimed that no other political party in the country can show even one per cent of the work undertaken by AIMIM in the areas of education and healthcare. AIMIM was working to build leadership in other states of the country to raise the voice of the oppressed and try to solve the problems of poor and weaker sections of society. Akbaruddin Owaisi slammed Narendra Modi government for failing to fulfill its promises of creating jobs and for delivering 'acchey din'. He voiced concern over the hatred being spread across the country in the name of 'Hijab'. "Every Indian has right to wear what he or she likes. Similarly, Muslim women and girls have right to wear hijab," he said. Referring to recent attack on Asaduddin Owaisi in Uttar Pradesh, Akbaruddin Owaisi said the history of the party show that its leadership is not scared of such attempts. Stating that Muslims are equal partners in the country, he said AIMIM was leading the democratic fight to ensure that Muslims get their due rights enshrined in the Constitution of India. He slammed the so-called opposition parties which need votes of Muslims but are not willing to work for their upliftment. Lucknow, March 2 : These women are not contesting to fulfil their political aspirations -- they are contesting in their quest for justice. They are essentially homemakers and their campaign does not focus on Pakistan-Kabristan or Ram temple-Krishna Janmabhoomi. Their appeal is simple -- "vote for me to ensure justice for my kin". Neha Tiwari, who is contesting the Kalyanpur seat in Kanpur on a Congress ticket, is the sister of Bikru widow Khushi Dubey, who is languishing in jail since the past one and a half years. "I have contested this election so that I can raise my voice on political forums to ensure the release of my sister who was married for just three days when the Bikru massacre took place and she was arrested. We have been trying to secure her release but have failed and politics seems the only option," says Neha. Rajkumari Chandel, a Congress candidate from Hamirpur, is also seeking justice for her husband and former MP and former MLA, Ashok Singh Chandel. Chandel is serving a life sentence after being convicted in 2019 for the murder of five persons during a shootout in 1997. "My husband has been falsely framed in the case. I hope to get justice for him," she says. Another wife seeking justice through the ballot is Maharaji Prajapati in Amethi. Maharaji is the wife of former minister Gayatri Prajapati and is contesting on a SP ticket. Maharaji and her daughter Sudha have never spoken about political issues or party issues in their campaign. The two have sought justice for Gayatri Prajapati who has been convicted in a rape case and have wept uncontrollably in almost every election meeting. "My husband distributed blankets to all of you every winter but now he has not been given blankets in this harsh winter. If you vote for me, I can hope to get justice for him," she has been saying. In Unnao, Congress candidate, Asha Singh, is the mother of a rape survivor. Former BJP MLA Kuldeep Sengar has been convicted in the case and is presently lodged in Tihar jail. When the Congress announced a ticket for Asha Singh, Sengar's family put out a video message questioning Priyanka Gandhi Vadra's decision. Asha Singh, in her campaign, wants death sentence for Kuldeep Sengar but a sizeable section of voters in the constituency feel that the former MLA has been framed by his rivals. Two women, who have not contested elections but continue to seek justice for their kin in these elections. Seema Singh is the mother of Sara Singh, whose husband Aman Mani Tripathi has been charged with her murder. Aman Mani is contesting as a BSP candidate from Nautanwa in Maharajganj. Seema Singh has been pleading with voters to defeat the man who is charged with her daughter's murder. Joining her is Nidhi Shukla, whose sister, Madhumita Shukla, was murdered in 2003 by Aman Mani's parents -- Amar Mani Tripathi and Madhu Mani Tripathi. Both are serving a life sentence in the Gorakhpur jail. "The BSP has done wrong by giving a ticket to Aman Mani Tripathi. His father Amar Mani Tripathi was a BSP minister when he got my sister killed. The people should right this wrong by ensuring the defeat of Aman Mani who brazenly killed his own wife in 2015," says Nidhi. New Delhi, March 2 : Russian troops have seized Kherson, a provincial capital in the southern coastal part of Ukraine, the Defense Ministry announced in a briefing on Wednesday, RT reported. It also confirmed strikes on what it claimed to be part of Ukraine's psyops infrastructure, including a TV tower in Kiev. Kherson is a strategically important city, and a vital port on the Black Sea and on the Dneper River. The ministry stated that civilian infrastructure in Kherson is operating normally, with no shortages of food or other items of necessity reported. It said the city's government and Russian military were engaged in talks on how to ensure order and public safety in the area, RT reported. Russian forces in Ukraine had attacked more than 60 additional military locations, pushing the total number of destroyed elements of Ukrainian military infrastructure to over 1,500, ministry spokesman Igor Konashenkov reported. Among the targets of Russian strikes was a TV tower in Kiev, the official confirmed. The Defense Ministry claims it was part of the military infrastructure used by Ukraine to wage psychological warfare. It was hit accurately by a precision munition that left nearby buildings undamaged, the spokesman said. The Russian military announced its intention to attack a Ukrainian military psyop center and what it called relevant "technological sites" several hours before the strike on the tower. The Ukrainian side said five people were killed and five others injured in the attack, which also reportedly disrupted some television broadcasts in the country. Capturing this southern city of almost 300,000 people would be a major victory for the Russian military, BBC reported. It would be the biggest city to fall into Russian hands and strategically it would be a vital base for the military as it seeks to push further inland and west along the coast to the big port city of Odesa. Kherson is itself an important Black Sea port and an industrial centre. Controlling Kherson means controlling a major water source too. Ukraine dammed the North Crimean canal after Russia seized the Crimean peninsula, so most of the fresh water supply into Crimea was cut off, causing water shortages in the annexed region, BBC reported. One of the first targets of Russia's military invasion was in unblocking that waterway and restoring water supplies to Crimea. Russian vehicles entered Kherson's city centre overnight. Mayor Igor Kolyikhayev said this morning the city needed a miracle. Mogadishu, March 2 : The Somali National Army (SNA) has said that its forces killed ten al-Shabab terrorists in the ongoing security operations in Lower Jubba in the southern part of the country. The SNA commanders leading the operation told the state-owned Radio Mogadishu on Tuesday that some of the militants were also wounded in the sting operation conducted in Yontoy, Raynerow and Farbulay locations. "Ten al-Shabab terrorists were killed and some wounded and captured in special security operations conducted by the SNA in Yontoy, Raynerow and Farbulay of Lower Jubba region on Tuesday," Xinhua news agency reported. The latest onslaught on the militants came hours after the security forces repulsed an attack on their military base in Hudur town in Southwest State early Tuesday, killing five al-Shabab militants. There was no immediate comment from the terror group which has intensified its near-daily attacks during the electoral process. Prime Minister Mohamed Roble on Tuesday held a meeting with senior security and African Union Mission in Somalia (AMISOM) commanders where he directed them to enhance security in the country. During the meeting, Roble instructed the officials to intensify the counter-terrorism measures in the country and maintain stability in the capital ahead of the elections of parliamentary speakers and the presidential elections. Press Release March 2, 2022 De Lima lauds DFA UNGA vote vs Ukraine invasion Re-electionist Senator Leila M. de Lima commended the Department of Foreign Affairs (DFA) for voting in favor of a United Nations General Assembly (UNGA) Resolution condemning the recent Russian invasion of Ukraine. De Lima also lauded DFA for taking a firm stand on the issue and not siding with the non-foreign service officials of the Duterte Administration who earlier pronounced that the Philippines should stay neutral on Russia's military adventurism in Ukraine. "I commend the Department of Foreign Affairs (DFA) for the vote at the United Nations General Assembly (UNGA) signifying the Philippines' condemnation of the Russian invasion of Ukraine," she said. "I laud the DFA for its resounding affirmation that staying neutral does not bode well for our standing in the global community as it goes against our commitments to uphold the fundamental ideals of peace, freedom and justice," she added. In a statement at the emergency special session of the UN General Assembly, the Philippines joined the chorus of nations calling for an end to hostilities, saying, "Mr. President, the Philippines votes Yes to the UNGA resolution and expresses explicit condemnation of the invasion of Ukraine." Crisis between the two countries has intensified following Russian President Vladimir Putin's order to deploy troops to two breakaway regions in eastern Ukraine. By not staying neutral, De Lima said that the Philippines is proclaiming unequivocally to the world that powerful nations should not act as bullies against their smaller neighbors. "We should be clear that there is no room for blackmail using superior might and overwhelming force to intimidate, coerce, and threaten sovereign nations as they charter their own course in the international stage as chosen by their people," she said. De Lima maintained that Russia's premeditated attack on Ukraine, which is unprovoked and without justifiable cause, violates the UN Charter and constitutes the crime of aggression which is a crime against humanity. "No nation that upholds the values enshrined in the UN Charter and that calls for an international rules-based regime should remain standing on the sidelines while a powerful nation rolls its tanks into, and bombs the cities of a weaker one," she said. In addition to the DFA's UNGA statement, De Lima pointed out that the Philippines should categorically call on Russia to stop its invasion of Ukraine. "The Russian army should withdraw from Ukraine immediately and leave its people in peace. Ukraine is no longer part of Russia, and longs for its own future as a sovereign nation in its own right. No country can stop another from choosing its own path," she said. "I offer my prayers for the people of Ukraine, and for the enlightenment of the Russian leadership to end this war," she added. Jammu, March 2 : The parents of students stranded in Ukraine on Wednesday carried out a protest in J&K's Jammu city appealing for early evacuation of their children from the war-torn country. Officials said the administration was in touch with the families of 32 students belonging to the Jammu division who are stranded in Ukraine. Officials said nine evacuation flights have so far brought back around 2,000 Indians stranded in Ukraine since February 26. "As many as 31 evacuation flights will be operated till March 8 to neighbouring countries of Ukraine and 6,300 Indians will be brought back in those flights", officials said. Anxious parents staged the protest outside the local Press Club. The parents said their worries have increased after a student from Karnataka was killed in firing in Kharkiv city of Ukraine. The parents carried placards saying their children need prayers of their countrymen for their safety. San Francisco, March 2 : Apple CEO Tim Cook has said that the tech giant will match employee donations two-to-one in an email sent to employees addressing the ongoing crisis in Ukraine. Cook mentioned that Apple will do so retroactively for donations made since February 25, reports The Verge. "I know I speak for everyone at Apple in expressing our concern for all of those affected by the violence. With each new image of families fleeing their homes and brave citizens fighting for their lives, we see how important it is for people around the world to come together to advance the cause of peace," Cook said in the email, which was obtained by the website. "Apple is donating to humanitarian relief efforts and providing aid for the unfolding refugee crisis. We are also working with partners to assess what more we can do. I know that many of you are eager to find ways to support as well, and we want to help amplify the impact of your donations," Cook wrote in the email. "Starting today, Apple will match your donations at a rate of 2:1 for eligible organisations, and we will make this retroactive for donations to those organisations since February 25. Please visit the Employee Giving Portal to learn more," he added. Cook said that Apple is working to support their teams in Ukraine and across the region. "In Ukraine, we have been in contact with every employee, assisting them and their families in any way we can. For our Ukrainian team members located outside of the country that may need support, please contact (email redacted). And for any employee who needs any support, please visit the People site for available resources," Cook wrote. The Apple CEO mentioned that the company has paused all product sales in Russia. Last week, Apple stopped all exports into its sales channel in the country. Apple Pay and other services have been limited. RT News and Sputnik News are no longer available for download from the App Store outside Russia. And Apple has disabled both traffic and live incidents in Apple Maps in Ukraine as a safety and precautionary measure for Ukrainian citizens. Bengaluru, March 2 : Former Karnataka Chief Minister and JD(S) leader H.D. Kumaraswamy on Wednesday said he was surprised with the statement of Union Minister for Parliamentary Affairs Pralhad Joshi that 90 per cent of Indians who study abroad fail to pass qualifiers in India. "Union Law and Parliamentary Affairs Minister! What is the secret behind stating that you don't want to discuss the expenditure incurred for MBBS study here and Ukraine. Your statement has led to many suspicions," he said. Joshi said in Belagavi that 90 per cent of Indians who study MBBS abroad fail to pass qualifiers in India. He further said that this is not the right time to debate why students are moving out to study medicine. His statement came at a time when one of the Karnataka students, Naveen Shekarappa Gyanagoudar, who was pursuing his MBBS course in Ukraine, died in shelling by the Russian forces in Kharkiv. Kumaraswamy chided, "How many lives will be sacrificed for the anarchy created by the National Entrance and Eligibility Test (NEET)? The death of Naveen has questioned the authenticity of NEET. The medical education is confined to the rich and it really sucks blood out of the poor." "The Union Government which boasts of being a 'Vishwa Guru' and launching a 'National Education Policy' should contemplate about this with a clean heart. It is difficult for the students of the government schools to crack NEET. Being aware of such a fact, 'tuition shops' are proliferating," he opined. "NEET is a death warrant for the parents of students. The tragic death of Naveen, who went to pursue MBBS in Ukraine has revealed the shameful facet of NEET. It is injustice imposed upon the poor under the garb of eligibility," Kumaraswamy said. Former Prime Minister H.D. Deve Gowda on Wednesday said he has written to the Prime Minister on the situation in Ukraine. "We have many political parties in India. We should not give the impression that we are divided. Many Indians are there in Ukraine and the government has the responsibility to bring them back. Students from our states are also in distress and they are stuck. I have spoken to the nodal officer and no negligence should take place in this matter. The death of Naveen has increased tension among parents who have sent their children to Ukraine," he said. Windhoek, March 2 : Namibia has confirmed cases of typhoid fever in the capital district, Minister of Health and Social Services Kalumbi Shangula said Wednesday. "Following the report of the first case in January, nine contacts, including three close contacts, were traced and tested for typhoid fever. Among the three close contacts, two tested positive," the minister told a press briefing, Xinhua news agency reported. "Cases of typhoid fever have been reported previously in Namibia, especially in Kavango East and Kavango West regions due to the use of river water," Shangula said. "Windhoek district in Khomas recorded only one case of typhoid fever in the past five years." He said typhoid fever, a serious public health problem throughout the world, is transmitted through food and water contaminated by faeces and urine of an infected person. Polluted water is the most common source of transmission. "The public is urged to remain calm and comply with the control measures put in place to contain and prevent further spread of the infection," Shangula said. The minister told the briefing that a hepatitis E outbreak in Namibia has ended. Hepatitis E virus was first detected in Namibia in December 2017, when the first cases were reported in Windhoek's informal settlements. The outbreak later spread to the rest of the country, with 8,090 cases reported by August 2021. Hyderabad, March 2 : Police in Telangana's Nirmal town on Wednesday arrested Nirmal Municipal Council vice-chairman Sajid Khan, who was absconding after he was booked for allegedly raping a minor girl. His driver Jaffer and conduit Anuradha were also arrested by the police. Nirmal DSP Upendra Reddy said Khan has been booked under POCSO for kidnap and rape of the 15-year-old girl. Khan was absconding since February 27 when he and two others were booked on a complaint by the victim. The police officer said the accused was also involved in some other cases. He said the police will open a rowdy sheet against him. Ruling Telangana Rashtra Samithi (TRS) had suspended Khan from the party on Monday, a day after police registered a case against him under Protection of Children from Sexual Offences Act (POCSO). The accused allegedly raped the 15-year-old girl in Hyderabad last month. The victim told police that the accused took her there along with the help of Anuradha, who is the owner of the house where the girl's family resides. The victim, a class 8 student, had approached a child helpline and through them lodged a complaint against the municipal vice chairman. After medical examination of the victim and preliminary investigation, a case under section 376 of the Indian Penal Code and relevant sections of POCSO was booked against him. The house owner and car driver were also booked in the case. The victim told the police that she was taken to Hyderabad on the pretext of a function and the accused perpetrated the crime at a hotel. The girl later revealed this to her parents, who approached the child helpline and subsequently the police to lodge a complaint. Gurugram, March 2 : A 44-year-old woman was found dead with no injury marks on her body on Wednesday morning in Kanhai village of Gurugram, police said. Police recovered the body after they were alerted by the deceased's neighbours about the incident. Meanwhile, the woman's live-in partner Surender has been absconding, which has prompted the police to suspect his role in the incident. The deceased, identified as Kamla, was from Delhi, and used to live with her live-in partner and one son at a rented accommodation in Kanhai village. The police said her husband had gone missing four years ago and since then she was residing with Surender. In its initial investigation, police received information from neighbours, who were alerted by the deceased's son on Wednesday who was reportedly not present at the house when the incident took place. Upon receiving the information, a police team accompanied by a forensic team was rushed to the spot to collect evidence for further investigation. Meanwhile, the body was sent for post mortem. Initial probe suggests that the woman's live-in partner went missing after her death, which has prompted the police to suspect his role in the murder. Police have launched a search operation to nab him. However, the police are investigating the matter to ascertain the reason behind the incident. "In connection with the incident, an FIR has been registered against an unknown person. The cause of death will be known after an autopsy," Subhash Boken, spokesperson of the Gurugram police told IANS. Chennai, March 2 : Well-known Tamil music director Arrol Corelli and his wife Reetha have been blessed with a baby boy. The music director, who has scored music for films like director Myskkin's 'Thupparivalan' and director Rajkumar's 'Annanukku Jai', took to social media to make the announcement. He said, "It's a boy! Elated to share with our extended family that we delivered our baby on 22/02/2022! Both mom and the boy are doing well! We look forward to all your love and blessings!" The music director had first made the announcement that they were expecting their child in January this year. Mumbai, March 2 : For Domee Shi, the director of the upcoming animated coming-of-age fantasy comedy 'Turning Red', the film reflects her relationship with her mother and a lot of instances from her childhood have found their way in the film's narrative. Drawing parallels between the film's lead character Mei Lee and herself, the director said, "'Turning Red' is inspired by my own relationship with my mother. I was born in Chongqing, China, and immigrated to Toronto, Canada, when I was two years old. And like Mei Lee in the movie, I am an only child." "I was always very, very close with my parents, especially my mom, since my dad had to go away often for work and we were like two peas in a pod. We literally did everything together. We commuted to downtown just work and school together, we went on vacations together", Shi added. 'Turning Red', a Disney and Pixar joint production presents a wild journey of its lead character Mei Lei, who has to overcome her biggest weakness triggered by her emotions that turn her into a giant Red Panda. The film, written by Domee Shi and Julia Cho and produced by Lindsey Collins features voice talents like Rosalie Chiang, Sandra Oh, Orion Lee, Ava Morse, Maitreyi Ramakrishnan, Hyein Park, Wai Ching Ho and James Hong. 'Turning Red' will be available to stream on Disney+ Hotstar from March 11 in English, Hindi, Tamil, Telugu and Malayalam. New Delhi, March 2 : With the pandemic fuelling demand for new skillsets, there has also been an increasing demand for Executive MBA (EMBA) degrees to accelerate as well as in many cases reinvent careers of working professionals. While India has no dearth of full-time MBA programmes, there is scarcity of programmes catering to experienced professionals, who started their professional journey in roles especially in the IT industry which did not require an MBA education. Most of the participants in these programs have achieved success in a functional area and would like to accelerate their careers by focusing on managerial and strategic roles or would like to become entrepreneurs. Educational institutions are also introducing specialised courses to cater to the increasing demand. The most recent entrant in the space is Hyderabad based Mahindra University. The University has launched an Executive MBA (EMBA) Programme, designed for experienced professionals and business owners in partnership with the reputed Frankfurt School of Finance & Management, Germany. As the first post-graduate offering of the University's School of Management, the programme is targeted at people with 5 to 15 years of work experience. It also allows students to continue to work while pursuing the two-year programme. The applicants will have to undergo a mandatory two-week international residency in Germany at the Frankfurt School of Finance & Management. The residency will include teaching sessions by faculty at the partner school, industry visits, guest speakers, cultural experiences etc. Dr Yajulu Medury, Vice Chancellor, Mahindra University states that the Executive MBA program with its fine blend of theoretical and practical knowledge will provide an opportunity for functional experts to lay down strong managerial foundations enabling them to graduate to senior managerial roles and C-suite positions. Dr Ramakrishna Velamuri, Professor & Dean, School of Management, Mahindra University is of the opinion that the EMBA programme will enable experienced professionals to obtain rigorous management education without having to leave their jobs or business, representing a huge saving in terms of opportunity costs. The fee for this course is Rs 24 lakh. Application deadline is June 30 with classes beginning on September 3. The university is also offering several scholarships valued at 25 per cent of the fee for Officers from the Armed Forces, Police, Para-military forces, Central and State Government Employees, Domicile of J&K and North-Eastern States and for women. San Francisco, March 2 : Tesla CEO Elon Musk has said that no one was watching US President Joe Biden after the president did not mention Tesla during his State of the Union speech, media reports say. "Nobody is watching the State of the Union," Musk said in an email to CNBC. Biden touted the combined $18 billion investments by Ford and GM to build electric vehicles. Tesla, an electric vehicle giant, was not mentioned in Biden's address to the nation, the report said. Musk did not immediately return CNBC's follow-up requests for comment. Musk later tweeted directly to Biden saying "Tesla has created over 50,000 US jobs building electric vehicles and is investing more than double GM + Ford combined". Musk, who also runs space exploration company SpaceX, has an estimated net worth of over $235 billion, according to Forbes. Musk previously told CNBC in an email exchange that "Biden has pointedly ignored Tesla" while noting that if he was ever invited to a White House event that the administration had "nothing to worry about. I would do the right thing". Musk has yet to attend a Biden White House meeting with other corporate leaders, including those featuring executives from Ford and GM. March 02 : Yash Raj Films (YRF) today announced its most awaited film, Pathaan starring Shah Rukh Khan, Deepika Padukone, and John Abraham. The announcement of the film was done with a grand teaser featuring the lead actors, which immediately went viral. However, with the announcement of the film, the Republic Day 2023 will now witness three major films clashing with each other. More interestingly, the actors of one film will clash with themselves in another film on the historic day next year. Along with the first teaser of Pathaan, YRF has also unveiled the release date of the film January 25, 2023. Interestingly, Hrithik Roshan and Deepika Padukone starrer Fighter, an aerial action entertainer, was the first film to occupy the slot of Republic Day 2023. Next, Dinesh Vijans Maddock Films announced that their film Tehran starring John Abraham will also hit the cinemas on Republic Day next year. The triangle has become even more interesting, as now Shah Rukh will clash with Hrithik and John, Deepika with clash with herself, John will also clash with himself, and Siddharth Anand will stand against himself. While Pathaan and Fighter both stars Deepika as the female leads, Pathaan and Tehran both stars John. On the other hand, Siddharth Anand is the director of both the filmsPathaan and Fighter. Hence, it will be a rare case that a directors two films will release on the same day. However, trade analysts believe that the three-way clash is unlikely as not only two big filmsPathaan and Fighter are big-screen entertainers, all the three films are from the same genreaction thrillers. It is also unlikely that a directors two films, and an actors two films will release on the same day. Now it has to be seen which two films will back out and opt for new dates. Helmed by Siddharth Anand, and produced by Aditya Chopra of Yash Raj Films, Pathaan will mark Shah Rukh Khans comeback to films after almost four years. Directed by Siddharth Anand again, Fighter stars Hrithik Roshan, Deepika Padukone and Anil Kapoor. The film is produced by Siddharth under his banner Marflix and Viacom18 Studios. The action thriller Tehran will be helmed by Arun Gopalan and backed by Dinesh Vijans Maddock Films. Hyderabad, March 2 : An 18-month-old girl was rescued on Wednesday within four hours of her abduction from government-run Niloufer children's hospital. Swift action by the police with the help of CCTV footage reunited the girl with her mother. According to police, J. Madhavi, a resident of Shahbad in Rangareddy district, complained about her daughter Uvika going missing when she brought her to the hospital for checkup. The woman told police that she was standing in a queue at a counter in an outpatient block and within a few minutes, she noticed that her daughter was missing. She immediately alerted the police. Nampally inspector Khaleel Pasha said they scanned the footage from CCTV cameras in the hospital and found a woman coming out of the hospital with a child. The police showed footage to Madhavi, who identified the child as her daughter. Police teams were immediately set out to trace the kidnapper and rescue the child. A team traced the woman near toddy compound in Attapur area. The team rescued the girl and arrested the woman. The police released one of the CCTV footages, which show the woman sitting in an auto rickshaw along with the child. The police official said the case was solved within four hours. They were questioning the woman to probe the motive behind the kidnap. Meanwhile, Niloufer Hospital superintendent Dr Murali Krishna denied reports that two children died at the hospital due to negligence by hospital staff. He said one baby, who was born premature and was admitted in the intensive care unit, died due to complications as his organs were not fully developed. The baby weighed one kg on birth in Nagarkurnool district and was brought to Niloufer in critical condition on February 28. The superintendent said the preliminary investigation found that there is no truth in the allegation of negligence. He said premature babies have 50 per cent mortality. Chennai, March 2 : Two persons including a woman were arrested by Customs officials for trying to smuggle in gold into India, said Commissioner of Customs, Chennai International Airport. According to Customs, a woman, Shakti Jeyakrishnan who had arrived here from Dubai was intercepted by officials. On checking her, four bundles of gold paste found concealed in her innerwear. The bundles were recovered. The officials also arrested Nagoor Gani waiting outside, to receive the gold. Gold, weighing 880 grams and valued at Rs 40.55 lakh, was seized. New Delhi, March 2 : In a distress call, the Indian Embassy in Ukraine has directed all stranded citizens to leave the second most populous city, Kharkiv under all circumstances by 6 p.m. (Ukrainian time, IST 9.30 p.m.) on Wednesday. The embassy stated: "Urgent advisory to all Indian nationals in Kharkiv. For their safety and security they must leave Kharkiv immediately. Proceed to Pesochin, Babaye and Bezlyudovka as soon as possible." It reiterated, "Under all circumstances they must reach these settlements by 1800 hours (Ukrainian time) today." Kharkiv, a largely Russian-speaking city near the Russian border, has a population of around 1.4 million. It has been found that Russian troops have landed in Kharkiv and are engaged in heavy fighting with Ukrainian forces. Russia shelled Kharkiv damaging various installations. Further, videos are circulating online of an apparent attack on the regional police and intelligence headquarters in Kharkiv. "Practically there are no areas left in Kharkiv where an artillery shell has not yet hit," Anton Gerashchenko, adviser to the Ukrainian interior minister, said in a statement posted on Telegram. However, Russia says it is only targeting Ukraine's military infrastructure, air defence and air forces with high-precision weapons. It was in Kharkiv where an Indian student was killed on Tuesday morning in shelling. Naveen Shekharappa Gyanagoudar, a 21-year-old medical student from Karnataka, was standing in the queue for food in Kharkiv on Tuesday morning when he was killed. Naveen was a final year medical student at the Kharkiv National Medical University. He was from Karnataka's Haveri and lived near a prominent government building that was blown up by Russian soldiers. The war between two countries has entered into the sixth day after Russian President Vladimir Putin called for military operation. IANS sk/skp/ Hyderabad, March 2 : Inching towards its release, 'Radhe Shyam' is one of the most-awaited pan-India movies. As the makers have unveiled the trailer, the buzz around the Prabhas-starrer has increased markedly. The producers of 'Radhe Shyam', who unveiled a visually splendid release trailer on Wednesday, took to their social media websites to write, "Love. Destiny. Action. Presenting the curtain-raiser video of #RadheShyam." As the trailer establishes the lavish, picturesque visuals from Italy, Georgia, and Hyderabad, the VFX seems to be rich, creating much anticipation. Introduced as the world's magnificent palmist, Prabhas looks dapper as Vikramaditya. With a few glimpses of other roles in the upcoming love saga, Prabhas is challenged by Jagapathi Babu in one of the scenes, as he asks Vikram to take a look at his hand for another time. "I don't have the habit of seeing for the second time", Vikram says in rather a serious tone. A lot more drama, high-octane action sequences, and richly carpentered VFX scenes add to the hype for the trailer. While each frame in which the lead pair is shown, depicts the beautiful chemistry they share, the trailer hints at the disastrous fate they will share. The multi-lingual love story is set in Europe in the 1970s and explores a very novel and different concept, as seen in 'Radhe Shyam's promotional videos. Prabhas plays Vikramaditya, while Pooja Hegde plays Prerana. Sachin Khedekar, Priyadarsi Pulikonda, Bhagyashree, Jagapathi Babu, Murli Sharma, Kunaal Roy Kapoor, Riddhi Kumar, Sasha Chettri, Sathyan, and others will appear in key roles. Gulshan Kumar and T-Series presents 'Radhe Shyam', which is bankrolled under UV Creations production. Directed by Radha Krishna Kumar and edited by Kotagiri Venkateswara Rao, the film is slated for global release on March 11. New Delhi, March 2 : Russia is working to create a safe passage for the stranded Indian nationals in conflict zones in Ukraine, said the Russian Ambassador-designate Denis Alipov on Wednesday. The Indian Embassy in Ukraine has sounded urgent alerts to stranded Indian nationals to leave Kiev and Kharkiv urgently under all circumstances. "We are working intensely on creating the corridors, securing a safe passage for the Indian nationals stuck in those areas so that they can travel and be taken safely to Russian territories," Alipov said. The Russian Ambassador-designate reiterated that they will do everything possible to ensure the safety of Indian students in those areas of intense conflict. He also expressed sympathy for the family of Indian student Naveen Shekharappa Gyandagoudar who died in the shelling on Tuesday morning. He announced that they will investigate his death. Naveen, a 21-year-old medical student from Karnataka, was standing in the queue for food in Kharkiv when he was killed in a shelling. He was a final year medical student at the Kharkiv National Medical University. He was from Karnataka's Haveri and lived near a prominent government building that was blown up by Russian soldiers. As war has intensified in Kharkiv streets, the Ambassador-designate said that they are in touch with the Indian authorities regarding stranded citizens in Kharkiv and Sumy and others areas in the north-east of Ukraine. "Our country is working on the ways and means to launch some operation and to provide humanitarian corridors, so that people have the secure passage to safety on the Russian territory," he said. He also lauded India's decision at the United Nations Security Council. India abstained from voting on the UNSC resolution condemning Russian aggression in Ukraine and committed to dialogue. "We are very much grateful to India for its balanced position displayed at the UN. As I said, India understands the depth of the current crisis and not just the face value of it -- the depth and reasons and sees the whole situation in all its complexities. We hope that India will continue to demonstrate such an approach," he said. He also said that India and Russia defence deals will not be delayed and deliveries of S400, a mobile long-range surface-to-air missile (LR-SAM) system, will not face "any obstacles". "Sanctions don't interfere in the deal in any way, whether previous sanctions or newly imposed," he said. The war between the two countries has entered into the sixth day after Russian President Vladimir Putin called for military operation on February 24. -- The story has been published from a wire feed without any modifications to the text Bengaluru, March 2 : The Karnataka government move to recommend the deportation of Kannada actor and social activist Chetan Ahimsa is likely to be opposed by the progressive and Dalit organisations. Though the ruling BJP is keeping mum on the issue, sources have confirmed that the police has sent a recommendation to the home secretary in this regard. The sources stated that the recommendation is being made on the premise of actor Chetan causing disturbance in the society and affecting the peace. However, progressive organisations and pro-Dalit outfits with whom Chetan has identified strongly, are likely to question and stage protests against the move. Chetan was recently arrested after he retweeted his message slamming a sitting judge on his previous judgment, who has been part of the larger bench constituted to look into the petitions filed in connection with the hijab row. He was extended a warm welcome by hundreds of activists on his release. After coming out from prison in Bengaluru, Chetan announced that there was nothing wrong in his tweet. Judges, MLAs, MPs and bureaucrats are public servants and they can be questioned and no one can assume that they are unquestionable. He also declared that he will continue to question the system. In a democracy, questioning is not only a right, but also a responsibility. He said that in this country, people talk so cruelly about minorities, is it not provocation? Why are they not arrested? The police has reportedly recommended Chetan's deportation on the basis of a case lodged in Basavanagudi police station against him for using abusive language against a community. He stoked a controversy by passing remarks on Brahminism. Chetan, basically from Mysuru, grew up in the US and is also an American citizen. Chetan is presently acting in two Telugu movies and a Kannada film. His other movie is ready for release. The producers of these films are worried over his possible deportation. Film industry sources say that the producers have invested about Rs 15 crores on him. Chetan said that he had no idea about the government's proposal. The matter has not come to his or his advocate's notice. Chetan is equally disliked by both the ruling BJP and the opposition Congress. At a time when the Congress took out a massive protest march demanding implementation of the Mekedatu project, Chetan had opposed and protested the construction of a balancing reservoir at Mekedatu. He maintained that construction of dams and reservoirs are detrimental to the environment and are only executed to fill the coffers of contractors and politicians. New Delhi, March 2 : The National Disaster Response Force (NDRF) has joined the efforts being undertaken by the Government of India under 'Operation Ganga' to evacuate Indian students from Ukraine. The NDRF has provided relief material including blankets, sleeping mats, and solar study lamps etc, to Indian students. The relief material was sent through a flight that left for Poland on Wednesday morning and another on an Indian Air Force (IAF) flight that left for Romania this afternoon. The officials in the force further said that they will be sending more relief materials to other neighbouring countries of Ukraine where the Indian nationals are coming from the war torn country. Meanwhile, giving update on 'Operation Ganga', Minister of External Affairs S. Jaishankar said, "Six flights have departed for India in the last 24 hours. Includes the first flight from Poland. Carried back 1,377 more Indian nationals from Ukraine." Indian embassy officials in Warsaw (Poland) have identified a new entry point at the border for Indian nationals stuck in western Ukraine. According to the latest advisory issued by the Indian Embassy, the Indians presently stuck in Lviv and Ternopil and other places in western Ukraine may travel at the earliest to 'Budomierz' border check-point for relatively quick entry into Poland. "Alternatively, they are advised to travel south to transit via Hungary or Romania", the advisory reads further. The officials also said that Indians stuck or residing in western part of the war torn Ukraine should avoid the Shehyni-Medyka border crossing which continues to be congested. The Indian Embassy has also deployed its officials in Medyka and Budomierz border check-points to receive all evacuees and facilitate their travel to India. Mumbai, March 2 : After a successful release in the US, the Channing Tatum-starrer 'Dog' is all set to arrive in Indian cinemas on March 11. The American-comedy drama road film portrays the bond between a former Army Ranger and a Belgian Malinois dog. Tatum, who is known for films like 'Magic Mike', '21 Jump Street' and 'Dear John' has returned to the silver screen after five years and has co-directed this film along with partner Reid Carolin. The film is based on Carolin's script on a 2017 HBO documentary, 'War Dog: A Soldier's Best Friend'. The film tells the aftermath of war involving heroic veterans, PTSD, traumatic injuries, personal and family post-combat conflict, and also the trauma-related anxiety effects on a service dog. Directed by Reid Carolin and Channing Tatum, 'Dog' features Channing, Q'orianka Kilcher and Ethan Suplee. New Delhi, March 2 : The Centre on Wednesday informed the Supreme Court that 96.8 percent of India's adult population have been administered with first dose of the Covid vaccine and 81.3 percent have been administered the second dose. Additional Solicitor General Aishwarya Bhati, representing the Centre, submitted before a bench of Justices L. Nageswara Rao and B.R. Gavai that 177,50,86,335 (177.5 crore) total vaccines have been administered. In the adult population, 96.8 percent of the population (90,92,27,350) has been covered with the first dose, and 81.3 percent of the population (76,35,65,779) has been covered with the second dose. For the population between 15-18 years of age, 74 percent (5,47,94,459) have been covered with the first dose, and 37.1 percent (2,74,87,370) with the second dose. The precaution dose numbers for the adult population amount to 2,00,11,377. The figures are based on data collated on February 28. The top court was hearing a plea by Jacob Puliyel challenging vaccine mandates issued by various state governments and seeking direction to also disclose post vaccination data regarding adverse events. Advocate Prashant Bhushan, representing Puliyel, a formermember of the National Technical Advisory Group on Immunisation, contended that a person's fundamental right to not take vaccine cannot be eclipsed by the government only by saying that person not taking vaccine will pose a clear threat to public health. Bhushan said: "Even, I had Covid. But, I have not taken the vaccine. I have decided not to take the vaccine, come what may." He insisted that adverse effects of Covid vaccination are not known, and questioned why governments are issuing vaccine mandates restricting people from entering public spaces by making vaccination mandatory. "If one was infected with Covid (and got cured), that person gets better natural immunity against the infection," said Bhushan. At this, Justice Gavai said: "Can we go into this area. We do not possess basic knowledge". The bench reminded Bhushan that the plea questions whether state governments can take such decisions in connection with the vaccination. It added that science is a matter of opinion and Bhushan may have presented one opinion, but they can be contested. "Your opinion may not be shared by others," added the bench. Justice Rao reiterated: "We are not experts in the medical field. Don't take us deep into the scientific issues." Bhushan added that people are being mandated to take those vaccines, whose phase 3 trial data is not available, and also the material presented to drug control authority is not presented to the public. He said: "Where is the question of informed consent?" Bhushan asked, just because the company which had submitted data to the regulator asks the data not to be disclosed, it cannot be disclosed. He said there is no study canvassing on long-term effects of vaccination on health and pointed out that vaccines are being made mandatory for child care institutions, and ICSE board made it mandatory for children to sit in the exams. He pressed that the court must exercise its power of judicial review upon any such arbitrary directive and strike down such vaccine mandates. Concluding the arguments, Bhushan said the petition has three prayers: one on vaccine mandates, on disclosure of data on clinical trials, and the need to revamp the system to report adverse events. Bhati submitted that Centre has taken a decision not to make vaccination mandatory and against the backdrop of vaccination data, she added that the whole aspect of challenging the vaccination has paled into insignificance. At this, the bench pointed out that Bhushan has not challenged the vaccination but he has challenged mandatory vaccination. The hearing in the matter will continue next week. On January 31, Solicitor General Tushar Mehta, representing the Centre, informed the top court that nobody is losing jobs due to non-vaccination. Latest updates on Coronavirus (COVID-19) -- The story has been published from a wire feed without any modifications to the text Bengaluru, March 2 : One of the flagship events of the Karnataka government, "Bengaluru India Nano" having "Nano for Sustainable Future" as its theme, scheduled to be held from March 7-9, will be inaugurated by Chief Minister Basavaraja Bommai. Addressing a press meet on Wednesday, C.N. Ashwath Narayan, Minister for IT/BT and Science & Technology, told that the annual event is being conducted virtually for the first time. Over 10 countries including Israel, Japan, Germany, Canada will be participating and the event is being organised in association with 5 leading industries, including IESA, TIE Bangalore and others, he said. Dr C.N.R. Rao, Bharat Ratna awardee scientist and Honorary Chairperson of State Vision Group for Nano Technology, and Rajeev Chandrashekhar, Union Minister of State for IT/BT will be present, he added. "The 12th edition of the 'Bengaluru India Nano' summit focuses on nano-medicine, nano-photonics, nano-textiles, hydrogen technology among others. 75 eminent speakers, 2500 delegates, 25 sessions, and over 4000 attendees are expected to participate", Minister Narayan elaborated. For the first time, programmes like "nanotech quiz" and "nano for young" have been introduced with the objective of sensitising young minds about futuristic nanotechnology. Around 650 students belonging to 23 states and 5 Union Territories have already registered for the quiz event. Sessions that will be held on the final day are designed in a tutorial model keeping students in mind, he told. On the occasion, the "Nano Excellence Award" by the Government of Karnataka will be presented to 5 young researchers, who are pursuing a PhD in Nano Technology. During the event, Dr C.N.R. Rao sponsored awards will also be presented. "This Summit will bring academia, industry, experts, entrepreneurs, startups into one platform. Further, it also allows collaborations with foreign countries and interactions on startups, large industries, MSMEs, Venture Capital, etc are part of the event," Narayan said. Prof Navakanta Bhat, Chairman, State Vision Group for Nano-Technology, said, the integration of nanotech, life sciences, and health sciences has resulted in revolutionary innovations like mRNA vaccine and many such innovations are in the pipeline to be unleashed. March 02 : Ever since Shibani Dandekar and Farhan Akhtar had tied the knot on February 19, they have been treating their fans and followers with memories from their fun-filled wedding ceremonies. Recently, Shibani shared some pictures with Farhan from a photoshoot post-wedding, which sparked off rumours that she was pregnant. On Wednesday, the newlywed dismissed all rumours. Taking to her Instagram handle, Shibani had recently posted a series of pictures from a photoshoot with Farhan. The pictures, which were from a party they hosted for their close friends, sparked rumours of her pregnancy. On Wednesday, she shared a video on her Instagram stories in which she flaunted her abs. In the video, she was seen moving with Emily Melis song I Am Woman, and wrote, I am woman! I am NOT pregnant. It was the tequila, and added laughing-out-loud, rolling eyes and woozy face emojis. In the video, Shibani can be seen in a grey bra top and black shorts. She tied her hair in a top bun. Image Source: Instagram/shibanidandekar Shibani Dandekar makes fun of her pregnancy rumours Recently, when Shibani shared several photos with Farhan, and captioned the post as, "The Akhtars @faroutakhtar," netizens were quick to react. One of them wrote, "Looks like she is pregnant," while another asked her, "Are u pregnant???" Another straight away congratulated them, "Congratulations for the little one." Another netizen commented, "She is 3-4 months pregnant. Short notice p shadi ki vjah pta chl gayi (Got to know the reason behind their wedding in a short notice)." Farhan and Shibani got married in Khandala. Post their wedding, Shibani changed her name to Shibani Dandekar Akhtar on social media, and added Mrs Akhtar to her Instagram bio. Recently, Farhans producer friend Ritesh Sidhwani hosted a party for the newlyweds in Mumbai, which was attended by the whos who of Bollywood. Shibani was dressed in a blue knee-length satin dress, while Farhan was in casuals. The party was attended by Deepika Padukone, Kareena Kapoor, Aamir Khan, Farhans father Javed Akhtar and Shabana Azmi, Zoya Akhtar, the Dandekar sisters, Anusha and Apeksha, and filmmaker Farah Khan among others. Shivamogga : , March 2 (IANS) Hindu activists in Karnataka have launched a movement on social media demanding ticket for one of the family members of Harsha, the Bajrang Dal activist from Shivamogga, who was killed by a gang of miscreants, from the ruling BJP to contest assembly election. The campaign is growing stronger day by day and the ruling BJP is miffed about the turn of events. The Hindu activists have slammed the government for reaping political gains and doing precious little for the grassroots workers who pay with their lives fighting for Hindutva cause. The netizens are demanding Shivamogga city assembly segment ticket from BJP, presently represented by Rural Development and Panchayati Raj Minister K.S. Eshwarappa. Sriram Sena Founder Pramod Muthalik has issued a strong statement that the BJP should not corner Hindutva activists, whose backing the party needs to win elections. Fans of Harsha and hundreds of Hindu activists are urging and demanding the BJP to provide a ticket to contest election rather than giving assurances. The Opposition Congress, using the opportunity, challenged the ruling party to prove its commitment to Hindutva by giving a ticket to the mother of Harsha. Eshwarappa explained that he is ready to give up his constituency to a family member of Harsha, if the party decides. He maintained that he did not have qualms about giving up a seat. Through the online campaign, more than Rs 60 lakh has been collected in the account of Harsha's mother. Harsha, a fierce Hindu activist, was murdered in Shivamogga on February 20 leading to widespread violence in the district. The case made national headlines and the government said it is more than what meets the eyes. The police have arrested 10 persons in this connection and curfew orders were in place for seven days. The Shivamogga city finally returned to normalcy from Monday (Feb 28). New Delhi, March 2 : Union minister General (Retd) V.K. Singh on Wednesday visited Budomierz on the Poland- Ukraine border where he met the stranded Indian students and distributed food and water to them. These students will be facilitated entry into Poland soon from where they will be sent to India. After meeting with the Indian students there, Singh said that though they are exhausted, the students are relieved that efforts are being made to bring them back to their motherland. "Goes without saying that the morale of the students is high and I am impressed by their resilience, Jai Hind," Singh tweeted. Singh, one of the special envoys appointed by the government to oversee the evacuation process, visited Budomierz to take stock of the situation along with India's Ambassador to Poland, Nagma Mallick. Officials at the Indian Embassy in Warsaw (Poland) have identified a new entry point on Poland border for the Indian nationals stuck in western Ukraine. The Embassy officials said that the Indian nationals, including students, stuck or staying in Lviv and Ternopil and other places in western Ukraine may travel at the earliest to the Budomierz border check-point for a relatively quick entry into Poland. "Alternatively, they are advised to travel south to transit via Hungary or Romania," the officials said. They also advised the Indian nationals to avoid the Shehyni-Medyka border crossing, which continues to be congested. The Indian Embassy has also deployed its officials in Medyka and Budomierz border check-points to receive all the evacuees and facilitate their travel to India. Meanwhile, another speacial envoy of the government, Union minister Kiren Rijiju, has reached Kosice in Slovakia near the border with Ukraine to oversee the evacuation of stranded Indians. India's Ambassador to Slovakia, Vanlalhuma, and Pankaj Phukan, the first secretary in the Indian Embassy in Brussels, have also reached there to facilitate the evacuation mission under 'Operation Ganga'. New Delhi, March 2 : The Indian Embassy in Ukraine issued a second advisory within an hour asking Indian nationals in Ukraine to leave Kharkhiv any how by 6 p.m. on Wednesday. "If you are not able to get train, bus or any other means of transport, leave Kharkiv on foot by 6 p.m. (Ukrainian time), Indian Embassy in Ukraine told stranded Indian citizens in an "urgent advisory" on Wednesday. Russia shelled the second most populous city of Ukraine, Kharkiv damaging various installations and fighting has now reached the streets. "For their own safety and security, they must leave Kharkiv immediately, repeat immediately in the light of the deteriorating situation," the embassy stated. They should proceed to Pisochyn, Babai and Bezlyudivka as soon as possible for their safety. "Those students who cannot find vehicles or buses and are at railway station, can proceed on foot to Pisochyn (11 km) Babai (12 km) and Bezlyudivka (16 km)," said the embassy. "Proceed immediately", said the embassy in a distress call. "Under all circumstances Indians must reach these settlements by 1800 hrs (Ukrainian time, IST 9.30 p.m.) today," it reiterated. The embassy issued a similar advisory an hour ago, urging stranded citizens to leave. Ministry of external Affairs spokesperson Arindam Bagchi said that advisory issued by the Indian embassy for nationals to leave Kharkiv by 6 p.m. local time was given on the "basis of information from Russia." He added that they should take any method to leave, including "on foot". "We have issued this advisory based on inputs from Russian side. We haven't chosen the time. We haven't chosen the location," MEA spokesperson said Kharkiv, a largely Russian-speaking city near the Russian border, has a population of around 1.4 million. It has been found that Russian troops have landed in Kharkiv and are engaged in heavy fighting with Ukrainian forces. Videos are circulating online of an apparent attack on the regional police and intelligence headquarters in Kharkiv. "Practically there are no areas left in Kharkiv where an artillery shell has not yet hit," Anton Gerashchenko, adviser to the Ukrainian interior minister, said in a statement posted on Telegram. However, Russia says it is only targeting Ukraine's military infrastructure, air defence and air forces with high-precision weapons. It was in Kharkiv where an Indian student was killed on Tuesday morning in shelling. Naveen Shekharappa Gyanagoudar, a 21-year-old medical student from Karnataka, was standing in the queue for food in Kharkiv on Tuesday morning when he was killed in a shelling. Naveen was a final year medical student at the Kharkiv National Medical University. He was from Karnataka's Haveri and lived near a prominent government building that was blown up by Russian soldiers. The war between two countries has entered into the seventh day after Russian President Vladimir Putin called for military operation. Hyderabad, March 2 : Telangana's Industries, Commerce, and Information Technology Minister K. T. Rama Rao on Wednesday claimed that Telangana is the "most successful startup" of independent India. He said the latest statistics released by the Central Ministry of Statistics and Programme Implementation show that Telangana's Gross State Domestic Product (GSDP) and per capita income grew by 130 per cent and 125 per cent, respectively, in the last seven years. Addressing the annual session and leadership summit of the Confederation of Indian Industry (CII)Awith the theme 'India@75: Catalyzing Change for New India', he pointed out that Telangana's per capita income which was Rs 1,24,000 in 2014 has now gone up to Rs. 2,78,000. Similarly, the GSDP, which was Rs.4.9 lakh crore, increased to Rs 11.54 lakh crore. "This shows how the state has been able to do exceedingly well," he said. He quoted the Reserve Bank of India (RBI) report to say that Telangana is the fourth largest contributor to India's GDP. KTR, as the minister is popularly known, said Telangana was able to make tremendous progress with innovation in its policies, infrastructure and inclusive growth. "The state has set new benchmarks and emerged as a model for the country," he said. Under the new industrial policy TSiPASS, the state has so far given 18,000 clearances with investments to the tune of Rs. 2.3 lakh crore and direct job potential of 16 lakh. He said the growth was achieved despite bifurcation blues in some areas, demonetisation, and Covid-19 pandemic. Telangana spent extensive money on ramping up infrastructure. The installed power which was 7000 MW in 2014 has gone up to 16,000 MW. It is the only state in the country providing 24x7 free power to small and marginal farmers, he said. The state spent $7 billion on Mission Bhagiratha to ensure drinking water to every household. Under the project, 1.40 lakh km long pipelines were laid to provide drinking to 10 million households. Drawing inspiration from this project, the central government launched 'Har ghar jal', he said. Telangana also conceptualised and completed world's largest lift irrigation project Kaleshwaram in 4 years, lifting water from Godavari river to a height ranging from 32 metres above sea level to 612 metres above sea level using 137 MW pumpsets. He claimed that the state also showcased inclusive growth as it did not let down agriculture. The contribution of agriculture to GSDP increased from 16 per cent to 21 per cent. By ramping up its food production, Telangana replaced Punjab as India's granary. The state under leadership of Chief Minister K. Chandrasekar Rao also launched innovative schemes like Rythu Bandhu under which every farmer gets Rs 10,000 per acre each year as farm input subsidy. The state is spending Rs 15,000 crore annually on this scheme benefiting 62 lakh farmers. "No other leader in any state or at the centre implemented this kind of scheme. This has inspired the government of India to launch PM Kisan," he said. KTR said while growing industrially, the state ensured that the environment is not affected. Telangana ranks number one in the country in improving green cover. The green cover has increased from 24 per cent to 31.7 per cent thanks to a massive plantation programme taken up by the state government. New Delhi, March 2 : The Supreme Court on Wednesday agreed to examine a plea seeking registration of FIRs and disqualification of candidates belonging to various political parties, for offering freebies amid the ongoing polls in five states. Advocate Barun Kumar Sinha mentioned the plea before a bench presided over by Chief Justice N.V. Ramana. The bench, also comprising Justices A.S. Bopanna and Hima Kohli, said: "Election bribing is taking place everywhere. It is not for a particular state." After hearing brief submissions, the bench agreed to list the matter on Thursday. The petition has been filed by Surjit Singh Yadav, Vice President of NGO Hindu Sena, seeking a direction to disqualify candidates fielded by the Congress, and Samajwadi Party in Uttar Pradesh and also the candidates representing Aam Aadmi Party in Punjab in this year's Assembly election. The plea said: "An offer or promise by a political party, its leader, candidates set up in the elections, may be declared to be indulging in corrupt practices and bribery in terms of provisions of Section 123 (1)(b) of the Representations of People Act, 1951 and the candidates set up by such political parties may be declared disqualified from contesting the election in that state." The petitioner said he has come across the offer of freebies made by the leaders of Congress, Samajwadi Party and Aam Aadmi Party during Assembly elections, 2022 which are being held in Uttar Pradesh, Uttarakhand, Punjab, Goa, and Manipur. The plea urged the top court to issue directions to register FIRs against the political parties for inducing voters by making offer of gift, goods, money from the public exchequer, if they are voted to form the government in the states of Uttar Pradesh, Uttarakhand, Punjab, Goa and Manipur respectively for an offence committed under Section 123(1)(A) of Representation of People Act, 1951. "The petitioner has witnessed in last five years that registered political parties to induce the voter in their favour have been making offer/promise of freebies like free water, fee electricity, free Wi-Fi, free gifts like bicycle, laptop, mobile phones etc., if voted to form the government," said the plea. The plea questioned whether a political party or its leaders can make public announcement during election campaign or prior to election campaign or offer, which is to be fulfilled at the cost of public money. "It further requires consideration by this court that in the event of involvement of public money to fulfil an offer or promise, it would not attract Section 123(1)(a) of the Representation of People Act, 1951," it added. Patna March 2 : The Bihar Assembly saw a huge uproar on Wednesday as Leader of Opposition Tejashwi Yadav slammed the Rashtriya Swayamsevak Sangh (RSS) for promoting leaders to create hatred in the society. "A leader of BJP (Hari Bhushan Thakur) advocated withdrawing voting rights from Muslim people. If that would be possible, leaders like Shahnawaz Hussain and Chief Secretary Amir Subhani will lose the voting rights," he said in presence of Chief Minister Nitish Kumar, and Ministers Vijay Kumar Chaudhary and Shahnawaz Hussain. "I worked under Chief Minister Nitish Kumar in the RJD-JD-U coalition government... he said that the RSS is an extremely dangerous institution and I am quoting his statement. It is extremely shocking that Nitish Kumar is not condemning the statement of that BJP MLA. Is he not powerful enough to ask his alliance partner to sack that leader responsible for giving a statement against the unity and sovereignty of the country. "During the freedom struggle, people of all religions - Hindus, Muslims, Sikhs, Christians, Jains, Buddhists - were fighting for the country but RSS did not. This institution does not believe in our tricolour flag. Hence, it has not hosted even once in its headquarters in Nagpur. Lal Krishna Advani, who is having RSS ideology, came to Bihar to achieve his communal goal and Lalu Prasad Yadav not only destroyed his goal but arrested him as well. We are the army of Lalu Prasad Yadav in Bihar... no one has the power to withdraw voting rights from Muslims," Tejashwi Yadav added. Following his speech, there was chaos in the house. Deputy Chief Minister Tar Kishore Prasad raised objection to taking the name of the RSS. "RSS is a cultural and nationalist institution of the country. People like me feel proud as we are associated with it," he said. Los Angeles, March 2 : With Ukrainian President Volodymyr Zelensky emerging as a global hero, global rights management company Eccho Rights has licensed 'Servant of the People', the 2016 television series created by and starring him. 'Variety' reports that the rights have been sold to Channel 4 in the U.K., MBC in the Middle East, ANT 1 in Greece and PRO TV in Romania. Eccho Rights managing director Fredrik af Malmborg shared this news and said his company stood "in solidarity with our friends and partners in Ukraine". He added: "It is our position that the best support the global television industry can offer to Ukraine today is to share this story." Three seasons of the political comedy series, presented by Zelensky's production house Kvartal 95, were aired on the Ukrainian 1+1 channel and was adapted into a feature film after its successful first season in 2016. The Belarusian TV channel, Belarus-1, has been airing it since November 2019. Nicola Soderlund, managing partner at Eccho, said: "The series is a comedy but also an important document of where Zelensky comes from. His fictional president is a normal man, who grows into his role as a heroic and adored leader." Soderlund added: "While the real world scenario facing Zelensky and the Ukrainian people is far more grim and appalling than the comedy of the series, there are obvious parallels with the real world situation, and 'Servant of the People' is a fascinating, important and historic piece of television." In a classic case of fiction prefacing reality, Zelensky plays the lead character, Vasyl Petrovych Holoborodko, an absent-minded high school history teacher who is elected President of Ukraine after his profane rant about corruption in the country is recorded by one of his students, who uploads the footage to YouTube and turns him into an Internet sensation. Holoborodko's students launch a crowdfunding campaign for his candidacy in Ukraine's presidential race against his wishes, eventually propelling him to political victory. New Delhi, March 2 : Delhi on Wednesday reported a marginal decline in fresh Covid infections at 325, against 344 cases reported on the previous day, as well as one more death, according to the Health Department bulletin. The Covid infection rate in the city stands at 0.81 per cent, while the number of active cases has reduced to 1,653. With recovery rate continuing at 98.50 per cent, the death rate stands at 1.40 per cent, while the active rate has come down to 0.08 per cent. With 440 patients recovering in the last 24 hours, the total number of recoveries has gone to 18,32,781. A total of 1,222 Covid patients are being treated in home isolation at present. The number of Covid containment zones has also declined to 4,526 in the city. The fresh infections and deaths have pushed the city's tally to 18,60,561, and the death toll to 26,127. Meanwhile, a total of 40,284 new tests -- 37,206 RT-PCR and 3,078 Rapid Antigen - were conducted in the last 24 hours, taking the total to 3,64,63,174. Out of 4,075 vaccines administered in the last 24 hours, 547 were first doses and 3,113 second doses, while 415 were precaution doses were also administered. The total number of beneficiaries vaccinated so far stands at 3,14,01,632, according to the bulletin. Pune, March 2 : Four labourers suffocated to death while cleaning a clogged septic tank at a residential complex in Loni Kalbhor on the outskirts of the city, police said here on Wednesday. The tragedy occurred at the Kalamvak Vasti's Malhar building around 11.30 a.m. when the four workers descended into the septic tank. Officials said that while two of the men went inside first, the other two followed to assist them, but following a commotion, they were pulled out. The deceased are identified as Rupesh Kamble, Padmakar Waghmare, Krishna Jadhav and Sikandar Kasabe, and it is suspected that the asphyxiation may be due to inhaling poisonous gases accumulated inside the septic tank, is the cause of death. The Loni Kalbhor Police have registered an accidental case and are probing the incident. The bodies of the four deceased have been sent for autopsy, the reports of which are awaited, before they will be handed over to their families. Locals said it was not immediately clear whether the conservancy workers wore masks or safety gear for the work in septic tanks, considered a high-risk job as they are filled with toxic gases. London, March 2 : The International Automobile Federation (FIA) has taken the decision to allow Russian and Belarusian drivers to compete under a neutral flag, following an extraordinary meeting of the World Motor Sport Council. The meeting, announced by FIA president Mohammed Ben Sulayem to discuss "the ongoing crisis in Ukraine", concluded with the decision that Russian and Belarusian drivers would be allowed to compete in top-level motorsport, so long as they do so under a neutral flag. "As you know, the FIA is watching the developments in Ukraine with sadness and shock and I hope for a swift and peaceful resolution to the present situation," the FIA president said in a statement. "We condemn the Russian invasion of Ukraine and our thoughts are with all those suffering as a result of the events in Ukraine. I would like to stress that the FIA, together with our promoters, proactively acted on this matter last week and communicated accordingly on the Formula 1, Formula 2, WTCR and the International Drifting Cup. An updated version of the different FIA International Calendars will be presented to the WMSC meeting in Bahrain for approval," he said. Russian/Belarusian drivers, individual competitors and officials to participate in international/zone competitions only in their neutral capacity and under the "FIA flag", subject to specific commitment and adherence to the FIA's principles of peace and political neutrality, until further notice "We stand in solidarity with Leonid Kostyuchenko, the President of the Federation Automobile d'Ukraine (FAU) and the wider FIA family in the country. The measures taken today recognise the authority of the FAU in Ukraine and are also aligned with the recommendations recently made by the International Olympic Committee," Ben Sulayem said. Earlier, the International Paralympic Committee (IPC) said on Wednesday that Russian and Belarusian athletes can compete as neutrals at the Winter Paralympics in Beijing starting March 4 -13, despite calls to ban them after Russia's invasion of Ukraine. New Delhi, March 2 : The Ukrainian security service of Ukraine has detained a man who "facilitated" the Russian missile attack on Ivano-Frankivsk Airport. The Office of the Security Service of Ukraine in the Ivano-Frankivsk region said the "traitor" arrived in Ivano-Frankivsk on 22 February. He settled in a motel near the airport, Ukrainska Pravda reported. On February 23, on the eve of the Russian missile strike on Ukraine, he passed information about the location of a military facility to Russia. As a result of missiles hitting the airport, its infrastructure was destroyed. After the strike at the airport, the man reported the result of the strike to Russia, the Security Service claimed. The infiltrator was detained while he was trying to commit another crime to reduce Ukraine's defence capabilities. The Security Service of Ukraine has emphasised that the man will be sentenced to 15 years in prison on the charge of "high treason", the report said. On February 24 in Ivano-Frankivsk, there were explosions near the airport, after which the building containing fuel and oil materials caught fire. New Delhi, March 2 : A television tower was reportedly struck in the city of Lisichansk in eastern Ukraine on Wednesday amid an ongoing Russian military offensive in the country. Several videos purportedly filmed in the city captured thick black smoke billowing from the area around the tower after what appears to have been a missile strike, RT reported. Lisichansk is located in the western part of Ukraine's Lugansk region. According to 2019 data, the city, which is currently under Kiev's control, is populated by more than 97,000. On Wednesday, the Russian Defense Ministry confirmed that it had hit a TV tower in the Ukrainian capital of Kiev a day earlier. The strike, which was carried out with high-precision weapons, was aimed at thwarting "information attacks" by Ukraine and didn't affect any residential buildings, ministry spokesman Igor Konashenkov said. The Kiev authorities have claimed that at least five people were killed and as many injured in the attack. Amid the turmoil following the conflict in Ukraine, and the actions and reactions of global powers presaging tensions and realignment for years to come, and raising questions about whether the West miscalculated Russian intentions, it is worth remembering the words of a prominent statesman who had declared that "it cannot be in accordance with the interest of the safety of Russia that Germany should plant itself upon the shores of the Black Sea." A Russian apologist? No, it was Winston Churchill in 1939. Of course, the Germany he was referring to was Adolf Hitler's Nazi regime, which had just kicked off World War II a month before, but the same sentiment persists for Russia, be it in connection with any other power, say NATO. Students of contemporary international relations may recall the extent that Russia negotiated -- and succeeded -- in keeping control over its sprawling naval base at Sevastopol, which fell in Ukraine, following the dissolution of the Soviet Union. It is debatable if Russia's actions now or earlier in Ukraine, or say, Georgia nearly a decade back, or in Chechnya even earlier, or the contrary stance to some policies of the US and its allies are good or bad (morally, that is -- and this is a sentiment more cited than followed in international politics), or if it is on the "right path" under Vladimir Putin, but it is important to know what and how its political leaders think, and what they want? And is Putin's Russia different from that of Boris Yeltsin, or the erstwhile Soviet Union, or even Tsarist Russia? For this, we need to head back to Churchill's speech, which is more famous for his referring to Russia, and its actions, as a "riddle wrapped in a mystery inside an enigma". The British statesman, who was yet to become Prime Minister, however, provided a solution for understanding Russia's dynamics, motivations and intentions: "... but perhaps there is a key. That key is Russian national interest," he had said. And it is this Russian interest, which has persisted since its appearance as a major European power at the beginning of the 18th century under the Tsar Peter, and persisted since then under the Tsars, the Commissars, and the post-Soviet rulers down to President Putin, that governs Russia's actions. The first, and foremost, interest is security. No country would like an adversary on the border, and while Europe, after centuries of conflict, including the all-encompassing devastation of the Second World War, created a durable inter-state institution (European Union) that prevents any attack on members by other members. The US was luckier, being on a continent by itself, and within two decades of its formation, formulating a strategy, the Monroe Doctrine, that regarded the entire Western hemisphere as its sphere of influence, not open to any other power -- as Arbenz's Guatemala, Castro's Cuba, Allende's Chile, the Sandinistas in Nicaragua, and Venezuela under Chavez and Maduro, among others, found out. Others, like Russia, are not so lucky. While the Cold War saw the NATO and Warsaw Pact groupings facing each other, the latter is now a historical footnote, but NATO, which was founded to accomplish the three-fold objective of "Keeping the Germans down, the Americans in, and the Russians out", continues to flourish. It also incorporates all the Warsaw Pact countries as well as many of those whose presence in the European security architecture has been absent for centuries till now. As these comprise those formerly in the Soviet Union -- no matter how incorporated and how unhappy -- and bordering Russian territory, Russian apprehensions can be understood. And with decades of the West, especially the US, taking "advantage" of a weakened Russia to advance its own interests -- the NATO expansion, the interventions in former Yugoslavia, the invasion of Iraq, and subsequent interventions in Libya and Syria, the US withdrawal from the landmark Anti-Ballistic Missile Treaty, and then recently, the Intermediate Range Nuclear Forces treaty covering Europe, the "colour revolutions" in a number of former Soviet states across Eurasia, and so on, it seems fairly evident that Russia would retaliate eventually. Here, it must be stressed that attempting to understand the motivations and perceptions that influence any country's actions or govern its response to other countries' actions do not necessarily mean endorsing them. But, ignoring or overlooking them is "strategic blindness" that a number of thinkers have always warned against. Did the West fail on this count? (Vikas Datta can be contacted at vikas.d@ians.in) Latest updates on Russia-Ukraine War -- The story has been published from a wire feed without any modifications to the text New Delhi, March 2 : Russia's Foreign Minister Sergei Lavrov has warned that a Third World War 'will be nuclear and destructive' as the fallout of his nation's invasion of neighbour Ukraine intensifies, Daily Mail reported. In a thinly veiled threat for NATO not to get involved in Ukraine, Lavrov said that any future world war would be fought with nuclear weapons- a statement that comes just days after President Vladimir Putin warned that any country sending troops to Ukraine would be met with severe consequences, the report said. The Foreign Minister went on to claim that Moscow was ready to enter a second round of negotiations aimed at achieving peace in Ukraine, and accused Kiev of deliberately delaying the process at the request of the United States. "We are ready for the second round of negotiations, but the Ukrainian side is delaying (the process) at the behest of the Americans," said Lavrov. A Russian source close to the negotiations said that the second round of talks was supposed to take place later on Wednesday close to the Belarusian-Polish border after an initial attempt at diplomacy concluded on Monday. Lavrov this morning also sought to justify the invasion of Ukraine by saying Russia's forces "will not allow Ukraine to obtain nuclear weapons". Latest updates on Russia-Ukraine War -- The story has been published from a wire feed without any modifications to the text Patna, March 2 : Leader of the Opposition in the Bihar assembly Tejashwi Yadav has claimed that Chief Minister Nitish Kumar is running an opportunistic government and it has been proven through the mud slinging at the leaders of all the four alliance partners. Nitish Kumar is not running a Sarkar (Government) but a circus in Bihar, he added. "JD-U national president Rajiv Ranjan Singh alias Lalan Singh said that the alliance between his party JD-U and the BJP is based on circumstances. A former minister from the BJP quota had levelled corruption charges at current land reforms minister Ram Surat Rai who is also from the BJP. Several ministers openly say that officials are not listening to them. The Speaker (Vijay Kumar Sinha) of the Bihar Vidhan Sabha claimed that the SHO of a police station in his home district was not listening to him. Jitan Ram Manjhi is challenging the liquor ban decision of Nitish Kumar and has levelled allegations against senior officials for drinking liquor after 10 p.m. every day. A BJP leader, Hari Bhushan Thakur, is threatening Muslims and the chief minister is silently watching them. He is not running a Sarkar but a circus," Tejashwi said. He also gave the example of Mullah Nasiruddin (a character from folklore) in the Bihar Vidhan Sabha during the discussion on the Governor's speech. "Mullah Nasiruddin purchased one kg of meat and asked his begum (wife) to cook it. While the cooking process was underway, Mullah Nasiruddin went to the market to eat paan. Until then, delicious meat was cooked. As he had not returned home, his wife tasted the gravy of the meat. As it was delicious, she ate the one kg meat. When Mullah Nasiruddin returned home and asked his wife to serve the meat, she served an empty plate. When Mullah Nasiruddin asked where the meat was, she blamed a cat for eating the entire meat. Mullah Nasiruddin caught the cat and put it on the weighing scale. The cat was exactly 1 kg. Then Mullah Nasiruddin asked his wife, "If it is meat then where is the cat and if it is a cat then where is the meat. The speech of the Governor is similar to the story of Mullah Nasiruddin. If he (Governor) claimed that the state is running on the development path then why is unemployment so high in Bihar and youth are migrating to other states in the search of jobs? Why did Niti Aayog declare that Bihar is at the bottom on every front? If crime is under control, why is the NCRB saying that crime is high in the state? Why is the constitution under threat? Why are farmers not satisfied with this government?" Tejashwi asked. Following the allegations of Tejashwi Yadav, chief minister Nitish Kumar said that the crime graph in Bihar has come down significantly. "As far as cognizable crimes are concerned, Bihar is in the 25th position. Comparing to 2020, the 11.14% murders, 33.16% riots, 11.90% kidnapping for ransom and 4.4% dowry murder, reduced in Bihar in 2021," Kumar said. "We are increasing numbers in the police force to maintain law and order. At present, there are 115 police personnel for every one lakh people. We are increasing this by a large number of recruitments. There are 25000 women cops in Bihar which is the highest in the country," Kumar said. "We are working hard in all sectors. During the pandemic, we have carried out a huge vaccination programme across the state and given booster doses as well. We have given Rs 4 lakh compensation to the family members of 11 lakh deceased who lost their lives due to corona in the state," Kumar said. New Delhi, March 2 : Africans and non-Ukrainians fleeing Russias attack on the country should be assisted equally, Ukraines Foreign Minister said Wednesday, CNN reported. "Africans seeking evacuation are our friends and need to have equal opportunities to return to their home countries safely," Dmytro Kuleba tweeted on Wednesday. "Ukraine's government spares no effort to solve the problem," Kuleba wrote. It's the first time the Ukraine's government has acknowledged the crisis on the border. Non-Ukrainians, particularly from Africa, have been subjected to racism as they have tried to flee. People trying to leave Ukraine for their home countries told CNN they have been segregated and denied transportation out of the country by officials at the border. Some have allegedly been beaten in racist attacks. One Nigerian medical student, Rachel Onyegbule, told CNN that she and other foreigners were ordered off the public transit bus at a checkpoint between the Ukrainian and Polish border, adding that it then drove away with only Ukrainian nationals on board. In a statement to CNN, Human Rights Watch said: "It is imperative that Ukrainian authorities issue crystal-clear guidance to all border posts that foreigners should not be singled out and hindered in their efforts to seek equal safety across the border. All civilians leaving the country should be treated humanely by authorities." New Delhi, March 2 : The mayor of Kiev has warned the residents that Russian forces are moving in on Ukraine's capital and has urged people to stay indoors and prepare to defend the city, BBC reported. "The enemy is massing forces closer and closer," said mayor Vitaliy Klitschko, adding that there was now fighting on the capital's outskirts. "We are preparing and will defend Kyiv (Kiev)! I call on all Kyivans not to lose their fortitude". So far Kiev has resisted Russian incursion attempts. An armoured Russian convoy stretching 40 miles is approaching from the city's north, and analysts believe it could be there to provide support for an invasion attempt from the west, BBC reported. Military expert Dr Jack Watling says the timing and manner of the Russian attack on Kiev is critical. "If the Russians commit to a major assault [in Kiev] and they haven't broken the back of the resistance, it will be very bloody and their troops might break," says Watling, a research fellow in land warfare and military Sciences at the Royal United Services Institute, BBC reported. He says Russians will want to "whittle down" the resistance before they commit their forces. Watling says there is evidence of low morale among Russian troops, citing lost and confused advance units - and their initial surprise at coming under fire from Ukrainians. "We have heard reports of them damaging their own equipment because they don't want to go in to fight," he said. But he says the effect of low morale will diminish as Russian troops come together to fight in larger formations, as their mission becomes clearer and as Ukrainians begin to run out of ammunition, BBC reported. New Delhi, March 2 : The Supreme Court on Wednesday junked an appeal by an accused challenging his conviction in a 42-year-old murder case, on the ground that as out of six accused, five have died during the pendency of the appeal, therefore he should be acquitted. A bench of Justices Indira Banerjee and V. Ramasubramanian said: "We find no grounds to interfere with the concurrent findings of the trial court and the High Court. The fact that the trial/appeal should have taken years and that other accused should have died during the appeal cannot be a ground for acquittal of the appellant. The appeal is thus dismissed." In April 1980, Brahmpal Singh was shot dead in a dispute over the price of a buffalo. In August 1983, the trial court convicted six accused persons, including Karan Singh, for murder and sentenced them to undergo life imprisonment. In 2018, a division bench of the Allahabad High Court dismissed an appeal filed by Singh, along with other accused, challenging their conviction. Singh was granted bail by trial court on June 13, 1980, and he was taken into custody on September 9 after the dismissal of his appeal by the high court. However, while the appeal was pending before the high court, five out of six accused persons died. Singh moved the top court challenging the high court order. The bench said: "The appellant's presence has been proved by two eye witnesses. It has been proved by the eye witnesses, that the appellant carried a riflea. The prosecution was required to prove its case beyond reasonable doubt, which it has done, and not beyond all iota of doubt." Counsel for the accused argued that the prosecution failed to prove his client's guilt beyond reasonable doubt and there were clear discrepancies in evidence visible on the face of the record, therefore the appeal should be allowed. But the bench noted: "The tenor of the evidence of the doctor who conducted the post mortem tends to support the case of the prosecution witnesses that all the accused persons, who were present, carrying arms had fired." Dismissing the appeal, the bench said the fact that one of the injured witnesses may not have mentioned Singh, does not demolish the evidence of the other witnesses. New Delhi, March 2 : The Indian Embassy in Ukraine has warned the country's students in Kharkiv to immediately leave the city. However, this seems to be difficult as after trudging for miles these students are finding that the doors of the trains passing through the Kharkiv railway station remain closed. They are not able to catch trains to reach the borders of the countries bordering Ukraine. Ashutosh Chauhan, a resident of Madhya Pradesh's Bhopal, stranded at Kharkiv's railway station, told IANS, "All the students here are leaving by themselves. To my knowledge, there are about 1,500 students who are stranded in Kharkiv." "We left our hostel at 6 in the morning. The hostel was about 14 km away from the railway station. Two trains have passed through the station but the doors were not opened. There is no one to help. We are making our own arrangements." Apart from the Indian students, there are also citizens of Ukraine queued up outside the station, he said. "We have brought food packets with us. There is constant shelling. Explosions can be heard constantly from here." The death of Indian student Naveen Shekharappa on Tuesday has triggered further panic among the students in Ukraine and their parents in India. Meanwhile, the Russian Ambassador to India has assured that an inquiry will be conducted into the death of the Indian student. Another student Inzamam, a resident of Bihar, was stuck in Kiev for the past several days. Now, after several attempts, he has been able to catch a train and get out of Kiev. "I have come from Kiev to the western side, from here the borders of Romania, Poland and Slovakia are not too far. There is a lot of danger for the students trapped in Kharkiv and Kiev," Inzamam told IANS. "There is no food available on the Poland border and it is freezing cold here. I am facing a lot of trouble. It is easy to go through the Romania and Slovakia border. So I will now try to come back to India through the Romanian border," he added. The Government of India is constantly trying to evacuate the students from the war-torn country. Several flights have reached Delhi with the students, yet there are many who are still stranded in Ukraine. India has deployed three IAF C-17 planes to bring back stranded people from the countries bordering Ukraine. Meanwhile, the embassy issued a second advisory within an hour asking Indian nationals in Ukraine to leave Kharkiv anyhow by 6 p.m. (9.30 p.m. IST) on Wednesday. "If you are not able to get a train, bus or any other means of transport, leave Kharkiv on foot by 6 p.m. (Ukrainian time)," the embassy has said in an "urgent advisory". Russia shelled the second most populous city of Ukraine, Kharkiv damaging various installations and the fighting has now reached the streets. "For their own safety and security, they must leave Kharkiv immediately, repeat immediately in the light of the deteriorating situation," the embassy stated. "They should proceed to Pisochyn (11 km), Babai (12 km) and Bezlyudivka (16 km) as soon as possible for their safety." New Delhi, March 2 : The Supreme Court on Wednesday directed the Odisha government to complete the process of declaration of the traditional elephant corridor as a conservation reserve aligned with the provisions of the Wildlife (Protection) Act. It also asked the state government to implement a Comprehensive Wildlife Management Plan before permitting any mining activity in the eco-sensitive zone. A bench of Justices L. Nageswara Rao and B.R. Gavai said: "The State of Odisha is directed to implement the Comprehensive Wildlife Management Plan as suggested by the Standing Committee of NBWL (Standing Committee of National Board for Wildlife) before permitting any mining activity in the eco-sensitive zone." "The state is also directed to complete the process of declaration of the traditional elephant corridor as conservation reserve as per Section 36A of the Act expeditiously. The mining operations of 97 quarries shall be permitted only thereafter." The Advocate General for Odisha submitted before the top court that mining operations will be permitted only after implementation of the Comprehensive Wildlife Management Plan. He added that compliance of Section 36A of the Act for declaration of the elephant corridor as conservation reserve is in the advanced stage of consideration by the government. Additional Solicitor General Aishwarya Bhati, appearing on behalf of Union Ministry of Environment, Forest & Climate Change, submitted that it has no objection to the operation of stone quarries outside the eco-sensitive zone if the requirement of Section 36A and the conditions in Comprehensive Wildlife Management Plan are complied with. The matter reached the Supreme Court, after the Odisha government challenged a National Green Tribunal (NGT) order to stop stone quarrying activities in the vicinity of Similipal-Hadgarh-Kuldiha-Similipal Elephant Corridor. The lease holders of stone quarries moved the top court challenging the NGT order. The Odisha government's Forest and Environment Department on January 29, 2001, issued a notification that area comprising of portions of Mayurbhanj, Balasore, Bhadrak and Keonjhar was declared as an elephant reserve - Mayubhanj (Similipal-KuldihaHadgarh) Elephant Reserve, under the Centre's "Project Elephant". The total area of the elephant reserve was shown as 3,213.81 sq km and the core area was 845 sq km of the existing Similipal Sanctuary. The state government had opposed stopping mining activity in the area which does not fall within the eco-sensitive zone. Its stand was opposed by an NGO contending environmental clearances for any project that falls within 10 km boundary of the national parks and sanctuaries has to be subject to the recommendations of the NBWL. New Delhi, March 2 : The Ministry of Home Affairs (MHA) on Wednesday approved the proposal for continuation of the seven existing programmes under the umbrella scheme 'Relief and Rehabilitation of Migrants and Repatriates' till March 31, 2026 with a total outlay of Rs 1,452 crore. The approval will ensure that assistance under the umbrella scheme continues to reach beneficiaries through MHA. The scheme enables migrants and repatriates, who have suffered on account of displacement, to earn a reasonable income and to facilitate their inclusion in mainstream economic activities. These schemes provide economic relief to the displaced families of Pakistan Occupied Areas of Jammu and Kashmir and Chhamb, Sri Lankan Tamil refugees, Brus lodged in relief camps in Tripura and to enhance relief to 1984 anti-Sikh riot victims. With these schemes, the financial assistance and other facilities will be continued to provide economic reliefs to the families of affected civilian victims of terrorist violence including militancy, insurgency, communal, Left Wing Extremism violence and cross border firing and victims of mine and IED blasts on Indian Territory while the 'grants-in-aid' to the Central Tibetan Relief Committee (CTRC), the officials of the MHA said. Besides, the government is also providing 'Grants-in-Aid' to the government of West Bengal for infrastructure development in 51 erstwhile Bangladeshi enclaves in India, situated in Cooch Behar District and for resettlement of 922 returnees from erstwhile Indian enclaves in Bangladesh, the officials added. With an aim to modernize and upgrade Immigration and Visa services, the Ministry of Home Affairs (MHA) on February 25, approved the continuation of the Immigration Visa Foreigners Registration Tracking (IVFRT) Scheme till March 31, 2026, with a financial outlay of Rs 1,364.88 crore. Considering the significance of necessary infrastructures at borders with the neighbouring countries, the MHA on February 21, this year also extended the Border Infrastructure and Management (BIM) scheme till March 31, 2026 with an outlay of Rs 13,020 crore. New March 2 : Prime Minister Narendra Modi will chair a high-level meeting on evacuation of stranded Indian nationals from war-torn Ukraine later on Wednesday. However, the Prime Minister has not spoken to Russian President Vladimir Putin yet on the safe passage of Indian nationals stranded in the conflict zones, as per the Ministry of External Affairs. If the Prime Minister talks to the Russian President, it will be informed, MEA spokesperson Arindam Bagchi said in response to a question. Modi has spoken to his Romanian and Slovak counterparts and thanked them for their country's assistance in evacuating Indian citizens from Ukraine over the past few days. He particularly appreciated Romania's gesture to allow Indian citizens from Ukraine into the country without visas, and for permitting special evacuation flights from India. "The Prime Minister has been speaking to the leaders of many countries. We will share with you whenever such talks take place," Bagchi said. New Delhi, March 2 : Shares of SBI Life Insurance Company and HDFC Life Insurance Company rose sharply on reports of a possible delay in the much-awaited initial public offering (IPO) of Life Insurance Corporation of India. SBI Life shares settled 5.7 per cent higher at Rs 1,120, whereas HDFC Life 7.0 per cent up at Rs 560. In an interview with Hindu BusinessLine, Union Finance Minister Nirmala Sitharaman said if "global considerations" warrant any delay, she wouldn't mind looking at it again. LIC had on February 13 filed the Draft Red Herring Prospectus (DRHP) with capital markets regulator SEBI, looking to sell the Centre's 5 per cent equity stake in the company via IPO route. The Centre aims to offload a total of 316 million equity shares to investors through the public offering of the 6.32 billion outstanding shares, the DRHP document showed. The Centre wishes to conclude the IPO by the end of FY22, and it would like to cash in on the LIC IPO to meet its revised divestment estimate. The current fiscal's divestment target was revised to Rs 78,000 crore from the Budget estimates of Rs 1.75 lakh crore. New Delhi, March 2 : Russia has informed the International Atomic Energy Agency (IAEA) that its military forces have taken control of the territory around Ukraine's Zaporizhzhia Nuclear Power Plant (NPP), Director General Rafael Mariano Grossi said on Wednesday. In an official letter to the Director General dated March 1, the Permanent Mission of the Russian Federation to the International Organizations in Vienna also said personnel at the plant continued their "work on providing nuclear safety and monitoring radiation in normal mode of operation. The radiation levels remain normal." Earlier on March 1, Ukraine informed the IAEA that all its nuclear power plants remained under the control of the national operator. In an update this morning, the State Nuclear Regulatory Inspectorate of Ukraine (SNRIU) said it maintained communications with the country's nuclear facilities and that the NPPs continued to operate normally. The Zaporizhzhia plant is the largest of Ukraine's NPP sites with six out of the country's 15 nuclear energy reactors. In a letter addressed to the Director General and received on March 1, the Acting Chief State Inspector of SNRIU has requested IAEA to provide immediate assistance in coordinating activities in relation to the safety of the Chornobyl NPP and other nuclear facilities. The Director General will be holding consultations and maintain contacts in order to address this request. The Director General has repeatedly stressed that any military or other action that could threaten the safety or security of Ukraine's nuclear power plants must be avoided. He also said that operating staff must be able to fulfil their safety and security duties and have the capacity to make decisions free of undue pressure. The IAEA continues to closely monitor developments in Ukraine, with a special focus on the safety and security of its nuclear power reactors. The IAEA remains in constant contact with its counterpart and will continue to provide regular updates on the situation in Ukraine. Latest updates on Russia-Ukraine War Vijaywada, March 2 : Vice President M. Venkaiah Naidu on Wednesday emphasized the need for revisiting our history textbooks with an Indian perspective in order to instil a sense of pride in our glorious cultural heritage among the younger generation. Addressing the 75th anniversary celebrations of Sir C R Reddy Educational Institutions at Eluru in Andhra Pradesh, he reminded the students that India was once known as a 'Vishwa Guru' and called upon them to revisit our roots and protect and preserve our traditions and culture. Emphasizing the need to re-establish ourselves, he urged everyone to strive hard to develop India into a powerful country that is free from hunger and corruption with no discrimination against anybody. "Everything cannot be left to the government alone, rather, individuals, industry, philanthropists and civil society - all must come together to bring about the desired change," he said. Stressing the need for value based education, the Vice President said that education should be treated as a mission for the promotion of the nation. Highlighting the role of a 'Guru' in Indian tradition, he asked the students to always remember the contribution of their teachers in their lives. Talking about ethics in politics, Naidu urged the people to select and elect their representatives on the basis of 4Cs -- Character, Calibre, Conduct and Capacity to strengthen democracy, and discourage the other 4Cs "caste, cash, community and criminality. Praising the National Education Policy (NEP-2020) for its focus on education in the mother tongue, he noted that one must learn as many languages as possible, but primacy should be given to build a strong foundation in the mother tongue. Underscoring the need to transform teaching methodologies to make universities thriving hubs of knowledge and innovation, he appealed to all the states and educational institutions to implement NEP-2020 in letter and spirit. Sharing his success mantra with the students, the Vice President emphasized the need for dedication, perseverance, hard work, discipline, self-belief and a strong will to achieve excellence and reach one's goal. "Please remember that be it studies or sports, a champion is not made in a day," he added. He also urged educational institutions to give equal importance to studies, sports, co-curricular and recreational activities and the young students should follow the spirit of service in line with the age old Indian philosophy of 'share & care'. Recalling the contribution of Cattamanchi Ramalinga Reddy, the distinguished educationist and the then Vice-Chancellor, Andhra University, the Vice President said that people will forever remain grateful to him for his work in furthering the cause of education in Andhra Pradesh. He also lauded Sir CR Reddy for his efforts to ensure education for all sections of the society and urged the youth to take inspiration from his life and build an India that will be free from every type of discrimination. New Delhi, March 2 : China will maintain normal trade relations with Russia despite international sanctions, Chinese Foreign Ministry spokesman Wang Wenbin has said. "China and Russia will continue to carry out normal trade cooperation following the spirit of mutual respect, equality and mutual benefit," he said, RT reported. According to the spokesman, China's position is to oppose any "illegally imposed" unilateral sanctions, believing that "sanctions are not an effective solution to solve problems". During an earlier press conference, the spokesman had stated that China's stance on the conflict in Ukraine has not changed. Replying to a question about humanitarian aid, he said China is "ready to play a constructive role in easing the situation in Ukraine". Speaking on Monday at an emergency UN session, China's permanent representative Zhang Jun said that it's possible to resolve the conflict between Russia and Ukraine through direct dialogue and negotiations, RT reported. Earlier this year, Russian President Vladimir Putin and his Chinese counterpart Xi Jinping issued a joint declaration calling for a halt to NATO expansion, which Moscow was opposed to and has tried to mitigate through obtaining security guarantees from the US-led military bloc. New Delhi, March 2 : Russian ship groups are deployed in the Black Sea operational area, which includes the Odessa region. This was reported by the Armed Forces of Ukraine. The military noted that in the area of Odessa and the Gulf, the invaders are preparing for a naval landing operation. Their ships line up on the high seas in order to land soldiers on the Black Sea coast in the future, NV reported. It is also known that the Russian forces demanded that the civilian vessel HELT, which sailed under the flag of Panama to Chornomorsk, enter the dangerous zone of the Black Sea. This ship was supposed to become a human shield between the defenders of Ukraine and the Russian forces, the report said. According to eyewitnesses, enemy ships can be seen from the shore with the naked eye. Journalist and transport expert Alexander Velmozhko tried to recognise them by their silhouettes. In his opinion, this is a project 1135 patrol ship and a small anti-submarine project 1124. However, he does not exclude that there are other enemy ships from another point on the coast or further along the horizon. "They hold defiantly in the territorial waters of Ukraine," Velmozhko noted and added that "these ships are clearly visible, but they do not have missile weapons and are outdated as combat units". Colombo, March 2 : Thirty-two Sri Lankan nationals who were stranded in Ukraine have been evacuated through four separate borders, Lankan Foreign Ministry sources said on Wednesday. The Foreign Ministry had earlier announced that it was engaged in the evacuation of approximately 40 Sri Lankan nationals, including two students, via the Ukraine-Poland border. The efforts have been facilitated by the Sri Lanka Embassies in Warsaw (Poland) and Ankara (Turkey), which are concurrently accredited to Ukraine. The Foreign Ministry is also monitoring the status of Sri Lankan nationals in countries which share land borders with Ukraine. After Russia launched military operations in Ukraine on February 24, the Foreign Ministry had instructed the Sri Lankan Embassy in Ankara, which is concurrently accredited to Kiev, to take appropriate measures to coordinate the safe passage of the remaining Sri Lankans in Ukraine. Meanwhile, the Foreign Ministry had also announced that the Sri Lankan Embassy in Moscow, which is concurrently accredited to Belarus, is continuing to be in contact with the approximately 1,600 Sri Lankan nationals, including 1,556 students studying in over eight universities and higher education institutes in Belarus. "Sri Lanka's Ambassador in Moscow is in direct contact with the relevant university authorities, student and parent groups, as well as other concerned institutions in Belarus, with regard to the safety and welfare of the Sri Lankan students," the Foreign Ministry stated. New Delhi, March 2 : The National Disaster Response Force (NDRF) on Wednesday sent relief material to Ukraine. "The India's disaster mitigation force has provided relief material including blankets, sleeping mats, and solar study lamps etc for the people of Ukraine", the Ministry of Home Affairs said. The officials in the MHA further said that these relief materials were sent through a flight that left for Poland on Wednesday morning and another on an Indian Air Force (IAF) transport aircraft C17 that left for Romania in the afternoon. They also said that they will send more relief materials if directed by the government. According to the Ministry of External Affairs, it was estimated that nearly 17,000 Indian nationals have left Ukraine since the initial advisories were issued. Fights under Operation Ganga have been increased and during the last 24 hours, six flights have landed in India taking the total number of flights to 15. Out of these, eight flights were from Bucharest, five from Budapest and two from Rzeszow. Union Minister Gen V.K. Singh on Wednesday visited the Budomierz on the Poland-Ukraine border and met the stranded Indian students and distributed food and water to them. These students will be facilitated entry to Poland soon and will be sent to India. Singh who visited Budomierz on Poland-Ukrain border to take stock of the situation on the border along with India's Ambassador to Poland, Nagma Mallick as the Indian authorities have planned to evacuate the stranded Indian nationals from Western Ukraine. The officials of the Indian Embassy in Warsaw (Poland) have identified a new entry point at Poland border for the Indian nationals stuck in western Ukraine. Meanwhile, other Union Minister and Special Envoy Kiren Rijiju has reached Kosice airport near the Ukraine border in Slovakia to oversee the evacuation of stranded Indians. New Delhi, March 2 : As Russia intensifies its battle to take control of Ukraine, Bitcoin on Wednesday soared to $44,000, pushing the total cryptocurrency market cap to cross $2 trillion. With the recent gains, Bitcoin now has a higher market cap than the rapidly-declining Russian currency ruble. Bitcoin has a market cap of approximately $835 billion while the ruble has a market cap of around $626 billion. The crypto market was last at $2 trillion in August 2021. In the last week since the Russia-Ukraine war started, Bitcoin has jumped nearly 14 per cent and ethereum 12 per cent, according to CoinGecko data. Terra's LUNA token had a stratospheric rise, climbing nearly 70 per cent during the last week, and is now trading at approximately $94. Solana's SOL and other layer 1 tokens like Avalanche's AVAX and Polkadot's DOT also responded well, reports CoinDesk. Similar to volatility, Bitcoin's trading volume across major exchanges reached the highest level since the December 5 price crash, according to CoinDesk data. Earlier, the global crypto market lost nearly 10 per cent of its value as Russia invaded Ukraine on Thursday. Over $200 billion worth of its global market value was wiped out. The most-hit cryptocurrencies were Ethereum, Cardano, Avalanche, and Polkadot, along with Dogecoin and Shiba Inu. Some traders, however, expected the price bounce to be short-lived amid geopolitical uncertainty. Latest updates on Russia-Ukraine War New Delhi, March 2 : Around 17,000 Indian nationals have left war-torn Ukraine through its different borders since the Indian Embassy in Ukraine issued advisories, the Ministry of External Affairs said on Wednesday. Ministry spokesperson Arindam Bagchi said, "We now estimate that nearly 17,000 Indian nationals have left Ukraine borders since our advisories were issued in the last week of January." He further said that the Embassy in Kiev has been asked to set up a temporary office in Lviv to facilitate border crossing by Indian nationals. Bagchi said that a mechanism has been established for issuing emergency certificates to those who lost their Indian passports, which will help many Indian students. The MEA spokesperson said that "substantial segment of our Embassy team is now at Lviv for this purpose". "We are exploring options to reach eastern Ukraine to assist the evacuation of citizens who are stuck there. We are seeing if our teams can reach there, it's not easy because the route is not open all the time," Bagchi said. He also expressed deep condolences over the death of Chandan Jindal, an Indian student from Barnala in Punjab, who died in Ukraine of natural causes. Bagchi added that an advisory has been issued by the Indian Embassy urging Indian nationals to leave Kharkiv by 6 p.m. local time based on "information from Russia", adding that they should take any method to leave, including "on foot". "We have issued this advisory based on inputs from the Russian side. We haven't chosen the time. We haven't chosen the location," he said. New Delhi, March 2 : Congress MP from Punjab, Manish Tewari on Wednesday questioned the state leaders for doing nothing for the students stranded in Ukraine. He said, "I am appalled, great leaders of @INCPunjab Congress are nowhere to be seen/heard when thousands of our children are in jeopardy. Is it only Punjab MPs who have to do heavy lifting?" He asked where are leaders like Charanjit Singh Channi, Navjot Singh Sidhu, Sunil Jakhar and Harish Chaudhary and said, -- is power is be all and end all to them? "Reason to be in public life is public service. Elections are not beginning and end of Politics. Can't you see the videos, hear the cries of our children? Is this your Punjab Model? I hang my head in shame at your sheer callousness. Wake up gentleman, there is a life beyond elections," he added. The MP from Punjab called upon Minister of State for External Affairs Meenakshi Lekhi and requested her to sensitise the government about need to further augment and reinforce evacuation efforts of Indian nationals stuck in war zones in Ukraine especially our kids in Kharkiv -- far from the western borders of Ukraine. Amritsar MP Gurjeet Singh Aujla informed that 1,100 of our children are stuck at Kharkiv railway station. Ukrainians are not allowing them to board trains out of Kharkiv. They are prioritising their own citizens in evacuation. They need urgent help, he said. Bengaluru, March 2 : Karnataka Congress opposition leader Siddaramaiah on Wednesday charged that "Prime Minister Narendra Modi is using even the name of the Ganga for the evacuation operation in war-torn Ukraine so that it helps the BJP during the ongoing Uttar Pradesh elections. I just hope Ganga river forgives the sins of the BJP leaders." In 2011, more than 15,000 people were evacuated from Libya at short notice. But the laxity of the BJP government has taken a toll of the safety of Indian students in Ukraine during the current crisis. Why could the BJP government not do what the previous governments could do? Had the BJP acted swiftly, Naveen would still be alive with us and we also could have saved 20,000 students from trauma, Siddaramaiah stated. It is unfortunate to see that BJP leaders at the Centre are jumping to improve their public relations during the time of the Ukraine crisis. BJP leaders consider every crisis as an opportunity for more publicity, he claimed. The ongoing uncertainty in Ukraine is highly worrying, particularly for the safety of the Indians stranded there. There were sufficient warnings by Russia about the invasion and many indications of an impending crisis since November 2021, he noted. The unfortunate death of an Indian student, Naveen, a native of Haveri, due to shelling by Russia has exposed the under preparedness of the BJP government and failure to assess the impact by the Ministry of External Affairs, he charged. According to the MEA, about 20,000 students were studying in Ukraine. The government had a lot of time to evacuate these students between the outbreak of hostilities in early January this year till the start of the military conflict in late February, he said. The build up of Russian troops around Ukraine started as early as November 2021. Why was there a lack of response by the government to issue advisories for the students to leave Ukraine and make necessary arrangements to fly them back to India? Why did the government start the process only after the outbreak of hostilities, Siddaramaiah questioned. India issued the first advisory on February 15 asking for details of Indians residing in various parts of the country, whereas many other countries had carried out this exercise a month before. It is not new for India to conduct evacuation of its citizens from conflict areas, he said. The news reports by domestic and international media houses, about the humanitarian crisis and plight of Indian students, are very disturbing. Students, especially in the conflict zone, are facing difficulties even for a single meal, he maintained. They are being attacked by locals and the army for money and food. Many are forced to walk hundreds of kilometres to reach border countries. Students are under immense stress due to lack of food, water and shelter. The panic among the parents of these students is equally disturbing, he said. All possible initiatives should be taken to alleviate the stress of their parents. India, before and after Independence, has influenced the world to promote order and peace through its 'Soft Power'. Many Indian leaders had put in great efforts to maintain stable and friendly relations with the European countries, and the BJP government should leverage India's position to protect Indian students and ensure their well-being till they are evacuated, he said. Negotiations should be actively pursued to prevent any further attacks on civilians, avert a humanitarian crisis and for early restoration of peace. More efforts should be made to evacuate all Indians as soon as possible. Arrangements have to be made to ensure the availability of food, water and safe shelter for Indian students in the conflict areas, Siddaramaiah added. Latest updates on Russia-Ukraine War Srinagar, March 2 : A panch (village council member) was shot dead by militants in J&K's Kulgam district on Wednesday, police said. Police sources said militants shot Muhammad Yaqoob Dar in Kulpora Srandoo village of Kulgam. "He sustained several injuries. He was rushed to district hospital Kulgam where doctors declared him dead on arrival," a source said. Sources added that the area has been cordoned off for searches. New Delhi, March 2 : In response to JNU student and activist Sharjeel Imam's bail application in connection with the violence in North-East Delhi in 2020, the Delhi Police said that his speeches spread falsehood about genocide in Assam and instigated a particular religious section to disrupt the access to the Northeast region of the country from Central India. The police submitted that due to the sensitivity of the case, it is requested that the accused may evade the process of law and threaten public witnesses, adding that the accused may indulge in such crime again if granted bail, therefore the "bail application of the present applicant/accused is strongly opposed". The police was responding to the notice issued by the Delhi High Court on the bail application of Sharjeel Imam, accused in a case related to making alleged inflammatory and instigating speeches during the anti-CAA protests in the national capital. Through his speeches, he was also spreading falsehood about genocide in Assam, the police statement contended. Various FIRs have been registered against Imam, including for making alleged inflammatory speeches at Jamia Millia Islamia on December 13, 2019, and at Aligarh Muslim University on December 16, 2019. He has been in judicial custody since January 2020. In September 2020, the main chargesheet was filed by the Special Cell of Delhi Police. The chargesheet was filed in little less than 200 days of filing an FIR to investigate the "conspiracy" angle behind the riots that rocked North-East Delhi in February 2020. Clashes between the citizenship law supporters and protesters had spiralled out of control, leaving at least 53 people dead and around 200 injured. New Delhi, March 2 : India's merchandise exports in February 2022 rose to $33.81 billion, higher by 22.36 per cent on a year-on-year basis, preliminary data showed on Wednesday. Exports in February 2021 stood at $27.63 billion. According to the data furnished by the Commerce and Industry Ministry, last month's exports rose by 21.88 per cent over February 2020. "Value of non-petroleum exports in February 2022 was $29.70 billion, registering a positive growth of 18.04 per cent over non-petroleum exports of $25.16 billion in February 2021 and a positive growth of 22.23 per cent over non-petroleum exports of $24.30 billion in February 2020," the ministry said. "Value of non-petroleum and non-gems and jewellery exports in February 2022 was $26.60 billion, registering a positive growth of 18.31 per cent over non-petroleum and non-gems and jewellery exports of $22.48 billion in February 2021 and a positive growth of 24.98 per cent over non-petroleum and non-gems and jewellery exports of $21.28 billion in February 2020." As per the data, India's merchandise imports last month increased by per cent to $55.01 billion over $40.75 billion in February 2021, a rise of 34.99 per cent. Besides, last month's exports rose by 45.12 per cent over February 2020. "Value of non-petroleum imports was $39.96 billion in February 2022 with a positive growth of 26 per cent over non-petroleum imports of $31.72 billion in February 2021 and a positive growth of 47.33 per cent over non-petroleum imports of $27.12 billion in February 2020. "Value of non-oil, non-GJ (gold, silver & Precious metals) imports was $31.61 billion in February 2022 with a positive growth of 31.66 per cent over non-oil and non-GJ imports of $24.01 billion in Feb 2021 and a positive growth of 42.31 per cent over non-oil and non-GJ imports of $22.21 billion in Feb 2020." Aizawl, March 2 : The top brass of the Mizoram Rural Bank (MRB), one of the top performers among the 43 Regional Rural Banks (RRBs) in India, have met Mizoram Governor Hari Babu Kambhampati at the Raj Bhavan and apprised him about the performance of the bank and its future missions. The MRB delegation was led by its Chairman Vadde Jaya Chandra and General Manager C. Ramdinsanga. While appreciating the progress and success of MRB, the Governor expressed his concern that most of the people in the state are still unaware about the various social security schemes that are freely available and are being implemented through the banks. According to an official statement, the Governor requested the bank officials to concentrate on creating awareness about schemes such as the Pradhan Mantri Suraksha Bima Yojana, an accident insurance scheme that provides one year of accidental death and disability coverage. Kambhampati also mentioned other Central government welfare schemes that are not being availed by the people of Mizoram due to poor awareness campaigns. The Governor urged all the banks in Mizoram to double their efforts in financial literacy and education of the beneficiaries on Central government's welfare schemes and advised the bank officials to rope in the assistance of NGOs, including the Young Mizo Association and churches in this regard. According to the MRB officials, the bank has 97 branches across 11 districts in Mizoram, having over nine lakh accounts (75 per cent) in the mountainous state with a population of around 12 lakh. The bank reported Rs 38.55 crore net profit in the 2020-21 financial year, which is the second highest among all RRBs in the northeast region after the Tripura Gramin Bank, its officials claimed. A senior MRB official said that till January this year, the credit-deposit ratio of the bank stood at 58.39 per cent. The market share of MRB in the total deposits in Mizoram for 2020-21 stood at 29.88 per cent, and in the same period, the market share of MRB to the total advances in the state stood at 33.86 per cent. The MRB is also the best performing bank in Mizoram in terms of social security schemes, as per the ranking of the State Level Bankers' Committee. The MRB has also prepared its vision 2023 to establish 300 customer service points. For adoption of one village in each of the 11 districts of the state to achieve 100 per cent financial inclusion, 11 villages have already been adopted in Phase 1, and under the Model Village Scheme Phase II, another 11 villages would be adopted. Hyderabad, March 2 : Reiterating his claim that Telangana Chief Minister K. Chandrasekhar Rao has his roots in Bihar, state Congress chief A. Revanth Reddy on Wednesday alleged that Telangana has become slave in the hands of a group of IAS and IPS officers of Bihar origin. He told a news conference that the Chief Minister appointed IAS and IPS officer of Bihar origin on key posts and entrusted each of them 6-8 departments to, what he called "loot the state". Revanth Reddy, who is also a member of Parliament, said that while hundreds of people of Telangana laid down lives for separate state, local officials were totally ignored in appointments. He said this had caused heartburn among those who actively participated in Telangana movement. He claimed that the appointment of officials from Bihar posed a grave danger to the very identity of Telangana. Reddy alleged that Chief Minister appointed Somesh Kumar to the post of Chief Secretary though the latter was not eligible for the top post. He said IPS officer Anjani Kumar was made Director General of Police by sending the incumbent DGP on leave. Noting IAS officials Rajat Kumar, Arvind Kumar, Jayesh Ranjan and Sandeep Kumar Sultania, who all hail from Bihar, were each holding charge of several key departments, he asked how the Chief Minister found only these officials eligible among 157 IAS officers and 139 IPS officers in the state. Revanth Reddy alleged that Chief Minister KCR had colluded with what he called the 'Bihar gang' for wrongdoings. He claimed that Somesh Kumar was rewarded with the post of Chief Secretary for deleting 30 lakh voters from the list of voters when he was the Commissioner of Greater Hyderabad Municipal Corporation (GHMC). The Congress leader also claimed that Dharani portal was together developed by the Chief Minister and Somesh Kumar to allow irregularities in land administration so that those close to the TRS government get thousands of acres of land. He blamed the 'flawed' system for the killing of two realtors in Hyderabad on Tuesday. The Congress leader referred to Bihar minister Sanjay Kumar Jha's statement criticising him for stating that KCR has roots in Bihar. "This shows how deep are his roots in Bihar," said Revanth Reddy. He claimed that KCR in an interview had revealed that his ancestors had come from Bihar. Reacting to reports that KCR has hired the services of political strategist Prashant Kishor, the Congress leader said this was another proof of 'Bihar gang' conspiring to loot Telangana. Jaipur, March 2 : The 15th edition of Jaipur Literature Festival, to be held at Hotel Clarks Amber here from March 5 to 14, will focus on Ukraine-Russia conflict, climate change, new world order, along with art, travel and history, among others. Addressing a press conference here, Sanjoy K. Roy, Managing Director at Teamwork Arts, said, "We are delighted to be back on-ground with the Jaipur Literature Festival weaving its magic again. This year's programme celebrates the diversity of literature and offers a wide range of topics, including the Ukraine-Russia conflict, climate change, new world order, art of fiction, poetic imagination, travel, science, history etc." The 15th edition will also feature 15 Indian languages and have specific sessions on Rajasthani heritage and culture, he added. State Tourism Minister Vishvendra Singh said, "I am delighted that the Jaipur Literature Festival is returning on-ground in the Pink City. I believe that the Festival will provide an exceptional platform for both Indian and global authors and thought leaders to engage and strengthen our literary heritage and culture. "I look forward to warmly welcoming all the authors, speakers, artists, musicians and visitors to Jaipur and the state of Rajasthan for the Festival." Apurv Kumar, Managing Director, Clarks Group of Hotels, the venue for the offline event, said, "We are indeed privileged that the 15th edition of the Jaipur Literature Festival is being held at Hotel Clarks Amer. It is quite well-known that Clarks has always been associated with this mega literary event. "We used to host the evening music stages. This time both the literary sessions as well the Jaipur Music Stage in the evening will be held here. It is only appropriate to point out that this festival is one of the biggest events in the state and to my mind, it is a great tourism event. A large number of visitors from India as well as other countries come for this iconic festival." The Festival will showcase a variety of sessions exhibiting the dialects of Rajasthan-centric literature. At one session, poet and litterateur Chandra Prakash Deval will discuss languages, literature, poetry and music of the desert state with writer and poet Anukrti Upadhyay. The rich oral, linguistic and literary traditions of Rajasthan find their voice in a variety of dialects, although Rajasthani still awaits official recognition in the schedule of Indian languages. Rajasthan has long been a dynamic cultural centre and home to prestigious art forms. At a session on the treasures at the Jaipur Court, author Vandana Bhandari and historian Giles Tillotson will be in conversation with historian Rima Hooja to discuss the magnificent treasures commissioned and collected over centuries by the Jaipur Court. A panel discussion will be held with historians Yashaswini Chandra and Rima Hooja, discussing the powerful warrior king Maharana Pratap and his legendary horse Chetak. Together they will explore the legend of the resilient pair. New Delhi, March 2 : Around 17,000 Indian nationals have left war-torn Ukraine's borders since the Indian Embassy in Ukraine issued advisory, the Ministry of External Affairs said on Wednesday. "We now estimate that nearly 17,000 Indian nationals have left Ukraine's borders since our advisories were issued in the last week," MEA spokesperson Arindam Bagchi said. He said that the Embassy in Kiev has been asked to set up a temporary office in Lviv to facilitate border crossing by Indian nationals. He also said that a mechanism has been established for issuing emergency certificates to those who lost their Indian passports which will also help many Indian students. The MEA spokesperson said that "substantial segment of our embassy team is now at Lviv for this purpose. Location of the other segment of the embassy team is dynamic". "We are exploring options to reach eastern Ukraine to assist the evacuation of citizens who are stuck there. We are seeing if our teams can reach there, it's not easy because the route is not open all the time," he said. He expressed deep condolences for death of Chandan Jindal who died of natural causes. About urgent evacuation, Bagchi said that advisory issued by the Indian Embassy for nationals to leave Kharkiv by 6 p.m. local time was given on "basis of information from Russia". He added that they should take any method to leave, including "on foot". "We have issued this advisory based on inputs from Russian side. We haven't chosen the time. We haven't chosen the location," he said. New Delhi, March 2 : The economic sanctions imposed by the US on Russia amid ongoing conflict with Ukraine are expected to slow down the production of Russia's Sputnik vaccines in India. The Russian Direct Investment Fund (RDIF), promoter of vaccine, is Russia's sovereign wealth fund and investor in Sputnik coronavirus vaccines, is among the sanctioned. India is the second largest manufacturer of the vaccines after Russia and also the largest market for the vaccines. The RDIF has partnered with Serum Institute of India, Gland Pharma, Hetero Biopharma, and other Indian pharmaceutical companies to manufacture vaccines in India. Indian companies had planned to produce at least 1,152 million doses of Sputnik V per year. However, the blocking of certain Russian banks' access to the SWIFT international payment system may hamper the process of payments which, in turn, can lower down the production in India. Meanwhile, the RDIF has said that it and its international partners believe that only diplomacy can end this conflict and save human lives. "From day one, the Russian Direct Investment Fund has been focused on people and improving their quality of life. RDIF helped protect millions of people in over 70 countries through its humanitarian mission to fight coronavirus infection. RDIF supports restoration of peace and hopes negotiations between representatives of Russia and Ukraine are successful. RDIF and its international partners believe that only diplomacy can end this conflict and save human lives," it said. "Sputnik is manufactured in India by Hetero and Serum Institute of India and distributed by Dr. Reddy's Labs. So the supply across India should not suffer. However the sale so far has been very modest (just 1.2 million out of the 1.8 billion doses of vaccine administered so far). How the sanctions will impact Sputnik's sales in 29 countries where it has been approved is yet to be seen. The approvals from WHO for Sputnik V will surely take longer or even may not come depending on how strongly does WHO come down on the invasion," Pavan Choudary, Chairman, Medical Technology Association of India (MTaI) told IANS. Sputnik V has been authorised in 71 countries with a total population of over 4 billion people. Latest updates on Russia-Ukraine War Latest updates on Coronavirus (COVID-19) -- The story has been published from a wire feed without any modifications to the text New Delhi, March 2 : The Russian forces are preparing for a provocation at the Belarus-Ukraine border from the territory of Ukraine, as per sources in the Security Service of Ukraine. Several options are being considered, including a potential shelling of border points by saboteurs wearing Ukrainian army uniforms, missile strikes on Belarusian cities, and blowing up the oil refinery in Mozyr, in Gomel Oblast, the Ukraine Security Service sources said, Ukrainska Pravda reported. There are also reports that unknown persons in Kherson on buses are urging people through a loudspeaker to take to the streets, allegedly to get free bread. Henadiy Laguta, Head of Kherson Regional State Administration, on said right now in the city, unidentified people in Kherson are on buses urging people through a loudspeaker to go outside. They do this under the guise of distributing free bread. "I would like to inform you that the regional and local authorities do not carry out such actions. It could be provocation by the invaders." Russian military equipment is in front of the regional state administration building in Kherson, and the railway station and seaport are under the control of the Russians, Ukrainska Pravda reported. -- The story has been published from a wire feed without any modifications to the text New Delhi, March 2 : Prime Minister Narendra Modi spoke on phone on Wednesday with Russian President Vladimir Putin on the situation in Ukraine, and sought safge passage for Indians in the country. The two leaders reviewed the situation, especially in the city of Kharkiv where many Indian students are stuck, and discussed the safe evacuation of Indian nationals from the conflict areas, an MEA statement said. This came as the Indian Embassy in Ukraine asked all Indians in Kharkiv to leave the city by any means, including on foot, by 6 p.m. (local time). The MEA said that around 17,000 Indian nationals have left the war-torn country since the Indian Embassy in Ukraine issued its advisory. MEA spokesperson Arindam Bagchi said that the Embassy in Kyiv has been asked to set up a temporary office in Lviv to facilitate border crossing into neighbouring European countries by Indian nationals. He also said that a mechanism has been established for issuing emergency certificates to those who lost their Indian passports. "A substantial segment of our embassy team is now at Lviv for this purpose. Location of the other segment of the embassy team is dynamic," he added. "We are exploring options to reach eastern Ukraine to assist the evacuation of citizens who are stuck there. We are seeing if our teams can reach there, it's not easy because the route is not open all the time," the spokesperson said. -- The story has been published from a wire feed without any modifications to the text United Nations, March 2 : Ukraine on Wednesday expressed its sympathies over the death of an Indian student killed in Kharkiv during the Russian shelling of the city on Tuesday. Ukraine's Permanent Representative to UN, Sergiy Kyslytsya, said at the General Assembly Emergency Session, "Ukraine regrets that a student from India became an example of this challenge by the Russian armed forces and we offer our deepest sympathies to India and the relatives of the student. "The Ukrainian and foreign citizens have become hostages of the Russian armed aggression against Ukraine." Naveen Shekharappa Gyanagoudar, a 21-year-old student from Karnataka at the Kharkiv National Medical University, was killed on Tuesday. There were an estimated 18,000 Indian students in Ukraine and some have gone to Hungary, Poland, Romania and Moldova. Several thousand Indian citizens have been evacuated from those countries to India under "Operation Ganga" launched by the Indian government. Russia's Permanent Representative Vasily Nebenza, however, denied that Russian forces were shelling civilian areas. Belarus' Permanent Representative alleged that 100 Indian students who tried to enter Poland were beaten by that country's security forces and sent back. Guwahati/Shillong, March 2 : Around 50 students out of over 230 students of three northeastern states - Assam, Tripura and Meghalaya, who were stranded in war-torn Ukraine, have returned to India so far, ministers and officials said on Wednesday. Assam Chief Secretary Jishnu Barua has directed the district administrations to reach out to parents of students stranded in Ukraine. An official in Guwahati said that the Assam government so far prepared a list of 160 such students and the process of evacuating them has been going on in coordination with the External Affairs Ministry. He said that four more students from Assam arrived in New Delhi on Wednesday, taking the total number of returnees from Ukraine to 32. Thanking the Prime Minister's Office and the MEA, Meghalaya Chief Minister Conrad K. Sangma, in a tweet, said that 12 students from his state studying in Ukraine have reached India safely, six are on way to Delhi and nine are enroute to the border. Another Eleven students have reached safely in neighbouring countries and will be flown back to India soon, the Chief Minister said. Tripura Chief Secretary Kumar Alok said that District Magistrates and Sub-Divisional Magistrates in all the districts have physically contacted family members of 33 students who are studying in Ukraine. He said that five students have reached India and 24 have crossed the Ukraine border and are on their way to India while four are still in Ukraine but they remained safe. The Centre is making all arrangements for them, he added. The state governments of most of the northeastern states are in constant touch with the MEA to safely evacuate the stranded students and other citizens of these states in Ukraine. The government is trying to bring back Indians stranded in war-torn Ukraine by asking them to cross into neighbouring countries from where they are flown back by special aircraft to the country. Latest updates on Russia-Ukraine War Hyderabad, March 2 : Telangana Police on Wednesday claimed to have busted a conspiracy to assassinate state Cabinet Minister V. Srinivas Goud with the arrest of eight accused. Four of the accused were arrested from the residence of BJP leader and former MP A.P. Jithender Reddy in New Delhi. Police also seized two weapons and some rounds from the accused. Cyberabad Police Commissioner Stephen Ravindra announced the arrests at a news conference here on Wednesday night. He said the accused had offered Rs 15 crore to a person with criminal record for killing the minister. The Police Commissioner said Jithender Reddy's driver Thapa and personal assistant Raju provided shelter to the accused in the servants quarter at the former MP's house. Ravindra said they were probing the role of Jithender Reddy in the case. Police hope to gather more details after further questioning of the accused. The former MP had tweeted on Tuesday that his personal driver Thapa and social activist Ravi Munnur were abducted from his residence on the night of February 28. He had filed a complaint with the police. The Police Commissioner said Raghavendra Raju, Munnur Ravi, Amrinder Raju, and Madhudushan Raju had fled from Mahabubnagar to Visakhapatnam and from there to Delhi as the police had already learnt about the conspiracy from their associates during investigation of a case. He said two persons, Farooq and Hyder Ali, were attacked on February 25 near Suchitra area by Nagraj and others. They, however, escaped and lodged a complaint with police. A case of attempt to murder was registered at Petbasheerabad police station. During the investigation of the case, police learnt that Yadaiah, Nagraj, and Vishwanth came from Mahabubnagar and tried to kill Farooq and Hyder Ali. The accused were arrested on February 26. During his confession before police, Nagraj said that Raghavender Raju, along with some others, hatched a murder conspiracy and named Raghavendra Raju, Ravi, and Madhusudhan Raju. Police took up investigation, which finally led them to servant quarter at Jithender Reddy's house in Delhi. Police served notice to the accused under Section 160 of Criminal Procedure and brought to Hyderabad. The investigations revealed that Raghavendra Raju had approached Farooq to kill the minister and offered Rs 15 crore. Since Farooq had revealed this plan to Hyder Ali, Raju and his associates tried to eliminate them. New Delhi, March 2 : The price of a bushel of wheat surged to levels not seen in more than a decade on Wednesday as investor anxiety surrounding potential supply shortages due to the conflict between Russia and Ukraine stretched to its seventh day, MarketWatch reported. Wheat futures for May delivery on the Chicago Mercantile Exchange surged to $10.28 a bushel, the highest since 2014, according to analysts at Commerzbank, who noted that it rose by its expanded 75 cent-limit, having climbed by its 50-cent limit on Tuesday. "Both Ukraine and Russia are large producers of wheat, together accounting for around 30 per cent of the world's wheat exports, so this is one of the channels where the direct economic impact is acute," said strategists at Deutsche Bank led by Jim Reid, in a note to clients. Ukraine announced at the start of the week that its key Black Sea ports would remained closed until the Russian invasion ends, "meaning that no wheat shipments can be sent from Ukraine by sea for an indefinite period", said Carsten Fritsch, commodity analyst at Commerzbank, MarketWatch reported. "Furthermore, shipping companies are no longer accepting orders for deliveries from or to Russia. And in any case, virtually no buyer is likely to be willing at present to order wheat from Russia. This means that up to 30 per cent of global wheat exports are now more or less cut off from the market," said Fritsch. He added that the Ukraine war may make it difficult to plant spring grains, reducing next season's supply and sufficient alternative suppliers would be hard to find. Corn and soybean oil futures prices have also been surging, MarketWatch reported. Latest updates on Russia-Ukraine War New Delhi, March 3 : Over 4,000 Indian students will be evacuated from Romania, said Civil Aviation Minister Jyotiraditya Scindia. Addressing a virtual press conference from Romania, he said that over 4,000 students will be evacuated in the next three days. He said that six flights were operated from Bucharest to India on Wednesday. Similarly, six flights each will be operated on Thursday and Friday. On Wednesday, 1,300 students will leave for India on Wednesday. Furthermore, he said that flights will also be operated from Suceava, Romania. Scindia, one of the four ministers who reached Bucharest is one of the special envoy of the government to oversee evacuation efforts of Indian students. He will be leaving for Siret border between Romania and Ukraine on Thursday. Scindia will be staying there for the next two days to oversee the evacuation process. India has launched Operation Ganga to evacuate its nationals from Ukraine. According to an estimate, total 18,000 student are stranded in war-torn Ukraine. However, Foreign Secretary Harsh Vardhan Shringla on Tuesday said that so far, 12,000 Indians have been evacuated from Ukraine, which is 60 per cent of the country's total population in the war-ravaged nation. -- The story has been published from a wire feed without any modifications to the text United Nations, March 3 : The UN General Assembly on Wednesday voted overwhelmingly to censure Russia's invasion of Ukraine, while India abstained on the vote "in view the totality of the evolving situation". The 141 votes that the resolution -- more than two-thirds of those voting -- received was a diplomatic blow to Moscow. Only five countries voted against the resolution, while 35 abstained and 12 absented themselves. "India has been deeply concerned over the rapidly deteriorating situation in Ukraine and the ensuing humanitarian crisis," India's vote, Permanent Representative T.S. Tirumurti said while explaining India's vote. He said: "India supports the international community's call for an immediate ceasefire. We also support safe humanitarian access to conflict zones. We remain firm in our conviction, that differences can only be resolved through dialogue and diplomacy." This was the fourth abstention by India on a vote on the Ukraine issue at the UN -- the other three at the Security Council where India is an elected member. Stymied by the Russian veto at the Council on a resolution condemning Russian invasion and demanding the withdrawal of its troops, the Council voted on Sunday to refer the issue to the General Assembly. The resolution does not carry the same teeth as a Council resolution would have, but it has moral and political weight, scoring a diplomatic victory for the US and their allies -- but most of all for Ukraine. The 141 votes were 41 more than the 100 votes that a similar resolution on Russia's takeover of Crimea in 2014. The resolution was somewhat softened by saying it "deplores" Russia rather than condemn it to get broader support. UN Secretary-General Antonio Guterres said after the vote: "The message of the General Assembly is loud and clear: End hostilities in Ukraine -- now. Silence the guns now. Open the door to dialogue and diplomacy -- now." "The brutal effects of the conflict are plain to see. But as bad as the situation is for the people in Ukraine right now, it threatens to get much, much worse. The ticking clock is a time bomb," he said. Tirumurti spoke of Prime Minister Narendra Modi's efforts to promote diplomacy to end the Ukraine crisis. He said: "We remain firm in our conviction, that differences can only be resolved through dialogue and diplomacy. Prime Minister Modi has unequivocally conveyed this in his discussions with world leaders including of the Russian Federation and Ukraine. He underscored the urgent imperative for humanitarian access and movement of stranded civilians." "We therefore sincerely hope that the second round of talks between the Russian Federation and Ukraine will lead to a positive outcome," he added. "India urges that all member states demonstrate their commitment to the principles of the UN Charter to international law in respect of sovereignty and territorial integrity of all states. Keeping in view the totality of the evolving situation, India decided to abstain," he said. The UAE, which had abstained along with India and China at the Security Council, however, voted for the resolution at the General Assembly. Pakistan, Bangladesh and Sri Lanka also abstained, while Nepal, Bhutan and the Maldives voted for the resolution. Bhutan's vote was a surprise as it has a special relationship with India and coordinates its foreign policy decisions with it. Among the former Soviet republics, Kyrgystan, Kazakhstan, Armenia and Tajikstan abstained. Reflecting the sentiments of some of those abstaining, South Africa's Permanent Representative Mathu Joyini said her country abstained because the resolution would have driven a deeper wedge between the parties while it should have welcomed the talks between Russia and Ukraine and given more prominence to the role of the UN. Tirumurti said that because of the humanitarian situation: "India has already dispatched humanitarian assistance to Ukraine. This includes medicines, medical equipment and other relief material. We are sending more such tranches in the coming days." Expressing "deepest condolences" to the family of Naveen Shekharappa Gyanagoudar, the Indian student killed on Tuesday in Kharkiv, "and to that of each and every innocent civilian who has lost his or her life in this conflict", Tirumurti said that India "demands safe and uninterrupted passage for all Indian nationals, including our students who are still stranded in Ukraine, particularly from Kharkiv and other cities in the conflict zones". "We have reiterated this demand to both the Russian Federation and Ukraine," he said while thanking the neighbouring countries for helping with the evacuation of Indian students. (Arul Louis can be reached at arul.l@ians.in and followed @arulouis) Latest updates on Russia-Ukraine War -- The story has been published from a wire feed without any modifications to the text Dundo Airport, Dundo, Angola [ DUE / FNDU ] If you are planning to travel to Dundo or any other city in Angola, this airport locator will be a very useful tool. This page gives complete information about the Dundo Airport along with the airport location map, Time Zone, lattitude and longitude, Current time and date, hotels near the airport etc... Dundo Airport Map showing the location of this airport in Angola. Dundo Airport IATA Code, ICAO Code, exchange rate etc... is also provided. Dundo Airport Info: Dundo Airport IATA Code: DUE Dundo Airport ICAO Code: FNDU Latitude : -7.40049 Longitude : 20.8186 City : Dundo Country : Angola World Area Code : 502 Airport Type : Medium Dundo Airport Address / Contact Details : Dundo Airport (DUE), Dundo, Angola Airport Type : Public Owner : Government Timezone : Africa/Luanda Dundo Airport Timezone : GMT +01:00 hours Current time and date at Dundo Airport is 02:12:07 AM (WAT) on Thursday, May 5, 2022 Looking for information on Dundo Airport, Dundo, Angola? Know about Dundo Airport in detail. Find out the location of Dundo Airport on Angola map and also find out airports near to Dundo. This airport locator is a very useful tool for travelers to know where is Dundo Airport located and also provide information like hotels near Dundo Airport, airlines operating to Dundo Airport etc... IATA Code and ICAO Code of all airports in Angola. Scroll down to know more about Dundo Airport or Dundo Airport, Angola. Dundo Airport Map - Location of Dundo Airport Load Map Angola - General Information Country Formal Name Republic of Angola Country Code AO Capital Luanda Currency Kwanza (AOA) 1 AOA = 0.002 USD 1 USD = 405.538 AOA 1 AOA = 0.002 EUR 1 EUR = 430.106 AOA More AOA convertion rates Tel Code +244 Top Level Domain .ao Nearest Airports to Dundo Airport Closest airports to Dundo, Angola are listed below. These are major airports close to the city of Dundo and other airports closest to Dundo Airport. Nearest airport to Dundo Airport and Dundo is Chitato Airport - (4.88 Km / 3.03 Miles) Following are the nearest airports to Dundo and Dundo Airport. Distance between the two airports is given in bracket. Lukapa Airport - (116.07 Km / 72.12 Miles) Saurimo Airport - (258.07 Km / 160.36 Miles) List of 38 airports in Angola along with Angola airport codes This page provides all the information you need to know about Dundo Airport, Angola. This page is created with the aim of helping travelers and tourists visiting Angola or traveling to Dundo Airport. Details about Dundo Airport given here include Dundo Airport Code - IATA Code (3 letter airport codes) and ICAO Code (4 letter airport codes) Coordinates of Dundo Airport - Latitude and Longitude (Lat and Long) of Dundo Airport Location of Dundo Airport - City Name, Country, Country Codes etc... Dundo Airport Time Zone and Current time at Dundo Airport Address and contact details of Dundo Airport along with website address of the airport Clickable Location Map of Dundo Airport on Google Map. General information about Angola where Dundo Airport is located in the city of Dundo. General information include capital of Angola, currency and conversion rate of Angola currency, Telephone Country code, exchange rate against US Dollar and Euro in case of major world currencies etc... DUE - Dundo Airport IATA Code and FNDU - Dundo Airport ICAO code Waco Kungo Airport, Waco Kungo, Angola [ CEO / FNWK ] If you are planning to travel to Waco Kungo or any other city in Angola, this airport locator will be a very useful tool. This page gives complete information about the Waco Kungo Airport along with the airport location map, Time Zone, lattitude and longitude, Current time and date, hotels near the airport etc... Waco Kungo Airport Map showing the location of this airport in Angola. Waco Kungo Airport IATA Code, ICAO Code, exchange rate etc... is also provided. Waco Kungo Airport Info: Waco Kungo Airport IATA Code: CEO Waco Kungo Airport ICAO Code: FNWK Latitude : -11.4264 Longitude : 15.1014 City : Waco Kungo Country : Angola World Area Code : 502 Airport Type : Small Timezone : Africa/Luanda Waco Kungo Airport Timezone : GMT +01:00 hours Current time and date at Waco Kungo Airport is 02:12:07 AM (WAT) on Thursday, May 5, 2022 Looking for information on Waco Kungo Airport, Waco Kungo, Angola? Know about Waco Kungo Airport in detail. Find out the location of Waco Kungo Airport on Angola map and also find out airports near to Waco Kungo. This airport locator is a very useful tool for travelers to know where is Waco Kungo Airport located and also provide information like hotels near Waco Kungo Airport, airlines operating to Waco Kungo Airport etc... IATA Code and ICAO Code of all airports in Angola. Scroll down to know more about Waco Kungo Airport or Waco Kungo Airport, Angola. Waco Kungo Airport Map - Location of Waco Kungo Airport Load Map Angola - General Information Country Formal Name Republic of Angola Country Code AO Capital Luanda Currency Kwanza (AOA) 1 AOA = 0.002 USD 1 USD = 405.538 AOA 1 AOA = 0.002 EUR 1 EUR = 430.106 AOA More AOA convertion rates Tel Code +244 Top Level Domain .ao This page provides all the information you need to know about Waco Kungo Airport, Angola. This page is created with the aim of helping travelers and tourists visiting Angola or traveling to Waco Kungo Airport. Details about Waco Kungo Airport given here include Waco Kungo Airport Code - IATA Code (3 letter airport codes) and ICAO Code (4 letter airport codes) Coordinates of Waco Kungo Airport - Latitude and Longitude (Lat and Long) of Waco Kungo Airport Location of Waco Kungo Airport - City Name, Country, Country Codes etc... Waco Kungo Airport Time Zone and Current time at Waco Kungo Airport Address and contact details of Waco Kungo Airport along with website address of the airport Clickable Location Map of Waco Kungo Airport on Google Map. General information about Angola where Waco Kungo Airport is located in the city of Waco Kungo. General information include capital of Angola, currency and conversion rate of Angola currency, Telephone Country code, exchange rate against US Dollar and Euro in case of major world currencies etc... CEO - Waco Kungo Airport IATA Code and FNWK - Waco Kungo Airport ICAO code MF Supply in Lodi, NJ "Its a whole different business for us now. Supplying certified and compliant products is something we have been doing for years, so it was a natural product extension for us. We are extremely proud to help industry stay safe & stay open!" - Robin Lieberman MF Supply spent years building a strong position as a leading stocking distributor, sourcing expert, and supply chain partner in New Jersey. However, the COVID-19 pandemic put the company, along with the manufacturers it serves in unfamiliar territory as the virus prompted closures of businesses across myriad industries. Seeking a solution to the unprecedented need to protect workers, MF Supply looked to the New Jersey Manufacturing Extension Program (NJMEP) as a partner in solving the crises. The end result was a resounding success, as MF Supply President Robin Lieberman told NJMEP in a recent article featured on the not-for-profit companys website. According to Lieberman, MF Supply took advantage of NJMEPs COVID-19 Supply Chain form to connect with manufacturers in New Jersey that could provide Personal Protective Equipment (PPE). The database created by NJMEP also included companies in need of PPE to continue to operate. Through new connections that MF Supply forged through stocking, distribution, and sourcing, the company decided to pivot its business, expanding into the personal safety space. In the article, Lieberman stated that before the pandemic, "We werent really in the safety space. Supplying certified and compliant products is something we have been doing for years, so it was a natural product extension for us. More importantly, though, the opportunity to help the manufacturing industry function during a time of crisis was an incredible honor." Moreover, Lieberman credits the collaboration for MF Supplys growth over the past year, telling NJMEP, "Our business has grown and added headcount by pivoting directions. A lot of that happened, frankly, because of the information we received from NJMEP." At the time of the interview, MF Supply added sales above $500,000, retained employees, and even added to its workforce. Today, MF Supply is a leading New Jersey supplier of PPE & safety supplies for manufacturers and industry, in addition to maintaining its position as a leading provider of fasteners and electronic hardware. Products available through MF Supply include KN95 respirator masks, 3-ply surgical masks, N95 respirator masks, digital thermometers, hand sanitizers, disinfectant wipes, medical isolation, and surgical gowns, and protective gloves and goggles. "Its a whole different business for us now," Lieberman told NJMEP. "We are extremely proud to help industry stay safe and stay open." MF Supply is a leading supplier of Fasteners and Electronic Hardware, serving manufacturers in diverse industries, including electronics, aerospace, industrial, medical, military, machine shop, and instrumental. MF Supply acts as an extension of each manufacturers purchasing department providing sourcing expertise and technical assistance. To learn more, visit https://www.mfsupply.com. Their rapid growth is a testament to their innovative positioning and ability to forge relationships across a large and fragmented industry. As they continue to transform the car wash industry, were excited to become a partner with them. EverWash, the US leader in car wash membership and subscription management, today announced they have closed on a $6M Series B investment from Spring Mountain Capital. The round will be used to continue to scale the EverWash network of car washes, widely implement recently acquired OmniX Labs technology, expand marketing for the consumer-facing brand, and grow the Philadelphia-based team. This funding round comes on the heels of a $5M growth capital financing from Toronto-based Flow Capital, that was announced September 2021. EverWash offers consumers unlimited car washes at a low monthly price at in-network car wash providers and a user-friendly app to check-in at the neighborhood carwash. The tech company provides car wash partners with a tech-enabled membership platform, staff training, customer service, marketing support, and more. Were thrilled that the team at SMC have recognized the value and growth opportunities that we offer for our car wash partners, said Scott Caplan, Co-CEO of EverWash. The ability to solidify customer relationships at scale and build recurring revenue is a game-changer for these wash operators. This investment will be integral to the next chapter and help us grow what is already the nations largest network of car washes. Car washes are a $15 billion industry in the US and growing the percentage of drivers that report getting regular car washes skyrocketed from just 48% in 1994 to more than 77% in 2019. It is also a highly fragmented industry, with no one player holding more than 5% market share nationwide. EverWash has built the largest and fastest-growing network of independent and largely local operators, with more than 800 partner locations. Scott and the rest of the EverWash team have created a powerful solution in an overlooked sector, said Raymond Wong, Managing Director and Head of Growth Equity at Spring Mountain Capital. Their rapid growth is a testament to their innovative positioning and ability to forge relationships across a large and fragmented industry. As they continue to transform the car wash industry, were excited to become a partner with them. ## About EverWash EverWash is the industrys fastest-growing car wash network, with more than 800 participating locations across the United States. EverWashs team of membership experts provides ongoing sales, marketing, and customer support to partner washes, while the EverWash App gives customers the ability to sign-up for and manage their membership anytime and anywhere. Learn more by visiting EverWash.com. About Spring Mountain Capital Spring Mountain Capital is an investment management firm that focuses on alternative asset investing. The SMC Growth equity team focuses on providing expansion capital to companies capitalizing on breakthrough innovations, paradigm shifts, or fundamental market or behavioral changes. SMC invests in two sectors of the U.S. economy undergoing the most change and with the highest growth potential: enterprise technology and healthcare companies. For more information, visit: smcgrowthcapital.com. We are grateful for the generosity of the Ken Pribil Jr. Foundation, whose ongoing support has helped my colleagues and I pursue promising areas of research and explore new treatment options for angiosarcoma, says Dr. Antonescu. The Ken Pribil Jr. Foundation recently made its eighth annual Sarcoma Research Grant, matching its 2020 grant in the amount of $10,000, to support angiosarcoma research being performed at Memorial Sloan Kettering Cancer Center (MSK) in New York, NY. This grant fulfills the organizations mission of commemorating the life of Kenny Pribil Jr., from Rockville Centre, NY, who died at age 19 of a high-grade angiosarcoma, through annual grants that support sarcoma research. With the addition of this 2021 Ken Pribil Jr. Sarcoma Research Grant, the Ken Pribil Jr. Foundation has supported sarcoma research with over $65,000 in grants to research facilities in the New York area. This 2021 Ken Pribil Jr. Sarcoma Research Grant supports the research of Cristina Antonescu, MD, Director of Bone and Soft Tissue Pathology at MSK and one of the leading experts in angiosarcoma, a sarcoma subtype that derives from the inner lining of the blood vessels. Her research is focused on the molecular mechanisms driving these tumors, how and why resistance begins, and genetic underpinnings that can be used to target angiosarcoma. We are grateful for the generosity of the Ken Pribil Jr. Foundation, whose ongoing support has helped my colleagues and I pursue promising areas of research and explore new treatment options for angiosarcoma, says Dr. Antonescu. We also extend our thanks to the foundations donors. Their gifts have a direct impact on our efforts to improve the lives of people with cancer. Since its inception in 2006, the Ken Pribil Jr. Foundation has given research grants to benefit sarcoma research at various institutions, including the Childrens Hospital at Montefiore in the Bronx, NY. The foundation has also supported business-focused undergraduate study with college scholarships and plans to give its 22nd scholarship to a graduating student from South Side High School in Rockville Centre, NY, in June 2022. The Ken Pribil Jr. Foundation is a 501(c)(3) tax-exempt nonprofit organization operating in New York State. To learn more, visit: http://www.kenpribiljr.org. Hanover Research, a leading provider of market intelligence and analytics, has released a new report. The Top Five Trends Disrupting B2B Businesses in 2022, to help business leaders and their teams identify and address key challenges. Businesses have had to change the way they operate in the last few years. Every time we adjust to a new normal a new variant, shortage, or delay arises. Businesses that fail to adapt and respond quickly are falling behind, says Anil Prahlad, chief research officer, Hanover Research. This research report will help companies understand how to plan for and react to the most pressing challenges in the year ahead. Key trends identified in the report include: Supply Chain Issues and Economic Disruptions Put a Focus on Agility Companies Will Lean on Customer Data and Feedback to Secure Their Loyalty Businesses Will Manage Market Risk by Focusing on Core Markets With Mergers and Acquisitions on the Rise, Businesses Will Need to Balance Growth and Risk B2B Companies Will Embrace Omnichannel Strategies that Align with Customer Needs The report found that successful businesses are developing quick-response strategies and operations to become more agile and mitigate risks brought on by external variables. Our work with a diverse range of industries nationwide gives us unique insight into the challenges they face and solutions that have the biggest impact says Vineeta Mooganur, chief growth officer for corporate, Hanover Research. What differentiates successful organizations is that they have a deeper understanding of their customers and what drives loyalty and have embraced agile business models. This enables them to adapt to change, drive growth, and maintain have more loyal customers loyalty, and increased employee morale, even in turbulent times. This report can serve as a roadmap to navigating the current economic environment. by providing data-driven insights and actionable takeaways. To access the full report, click here. About Hanover Research Founded in 2003, Hanover Research is a global research and analytics firm that delivers market intelligence through a unique, fixed-fee model to more than 1,000 clients. Headquartered in Arlington, Virginia, Hanover employs high-caliber market researchers, analysts, and account executives to provide a service that is revolutionary in its combination of flexibility and affordability. Hanover was named a Top 50 Market Research Firm by the American Marketing Association from 2015 to 2021 learn more about Hanover Research, visit http://www.hanoverresearch.com Bob Webster (BS Mathematics) is a retired munitions and weapons systems analyst with the Department of Defense (both Army and Navy). A life-long fascination with meteorology and climatology inspired him to examine the belief that civilizations continued use of fossil fuels to power the global economy constitutes an existential threat to humanity. The result of that examination is his recently completed book, Looking Out the Window, that uses The Scientific Method to examine global records to gain a better perspective and understanding of the relationship between changing atmospheric CO2 and global climate change. From the books back cover, The hot dry seasons of the past few years have caused rapid disintegration of glaciers in Glacier National Park, MontanaSperry Glacierhas lost one-quarter or perhaps one-third of its ice in the past 18 years If this rapid rate should continuethe glacier would almost disappear in another 25 years Born about 4,000 years ago, the glaciers that are the chief attraction in Glacier National Park are shrinking so rapidly that a person who visited them ten or fifteen years ago would hardly recognize them today as the same ice masses. Do these reports sound familiar? Typical of frequent warnings of the dire consequences to be expected from global warming, such reports often claim modern civilizations use of fossil fuels as being the dominant cause of recent climate warming. You might be surprised to learn the reports above were made nearly thirty years apart! The first in 1923 prior to the record heat of the Dust Bowl years during the 1930s. The second in 1952 during the second decade of a four-decade cooling trend that had some scientists concerned that a new ice age might be on the horizon! Did the remnants of Sperry Glacier disappear during global warming of the late 20th century? According to the US Geological Survey (USGS), today Sperry Glacier ranks as a moderately sized glacier in Glacier National Park. What caused the warmer global climate prior to 4,000 years ago before Glacier National Parks glaciers first appeared? Are you aware that during 2019 the National Park Service quietly began removing its Gone by 2020 signs from Glacier National Park as its most famous glaciers continued their renewed growth that began in 2010? Was late 20th-century global warming caused by fossil fuel emissions? Was it really more pronounced than early 20th-century warming? Or was late 20th-century warming perfectly natural, in part a response to the concurrent peak strength of one of the strongest solar grand maxima in contemporary history? These and other questions are addressed by Looking Out the Window. Be a juror in the trial of carbon dioxide in the court of public opinion and let the evidence inform your verdict. Published by Page Publishing and guided by The Scientific Method, Bob Websters book seeks to gain a better understanding of the extent to which the theorized relationship between fossil fuel use and future catastrophic global climate change is supported by the evidence in nature. This examination covers various timeframes beginning with geologic evidence a half-billion years ago, ice core evidence spanning 800,000 years, and recorded evidence from the late 19th century to 2020. Written in a way that is interesting, clear, and requires no special scientific knowledge, this book reveals the true nature of climate change from a perspective free of bias or agenda. Readers who wish to experience this well-written work can purchase Looking Out the Window at bookstores everywhere, or online at the Apple iTunes Store, Amazon, Google Play, or Barnes and Noble. For additional information or media inquiries, contact Page Publishing at 866-315-2708. About Page Publishing: Page Publishing is a traditional, full-service publishing house that handles all the intricacies involved in publishing its authors books, including distribution in the worlds largest retail outlets and royalty generation. Page Publishing knows that authors need to be free to create, not mired in logistics like eBook conversion, establishing wholesale accounts, insurance, shipping, taxes, and so on. Pages accomplished writers and publishing professionals allow authors to leave behind these complex and time-consuming issues and focus on their passion: writing and creating. Learn more at http://www.pagepublishing.com. A Halo of Light for Children: a potent story that explores what happens when someone dies. A Halo of Light for Children is the creation of published author Ann L. Atkinson, a native of Washington, DC, and a licensed mortician. Atkinson shares, Children in grades K-6 may not understand casket, death, dying, and funerals. Most children at that age see Grandpa or Grandmas body in the casket at the funeral home. The first thing they do is try to wake them upas if they are asleep. Writing this book was designed to help these children understand what a funeral is; it is a celebration of life for the person who lived, like going to a big birthday party for the living. This is a celebration of the life of the person who died. Another fact that a child can relate to is placing their clothes in a drawer. Unlike clothes, a casket is a big box that the body goes into before it is buried or put into a cemetery ground. There is a cemetery for animals, as well as people. If your goldfish died, you could bury it in the backyard and say a prayer. It does not mean you did not love your goldfish because it died. You will remember that particular fish or cat until you get another one. The difference is no one else can replace the loved one that died. You will not get another grandparent, but you will always love them and have memories of them in your heart. If we believe and truly love, we know that they have gone to a place that values them always and they have gotten a halo just to fit their head. Published by Christian Faith Publishing, Ann L. Atkinsons new book is a heartfelt story that will help parents and guardians discuss the loss of a loved one with their little ones. Atkinsons background in the field of after-death care is a helpful resource of experience when it comes to exploring the inevitability of death with young readers. Consumers can purchaseA Halo of Light for Children at traditional brick & mortar bookstores, or online at Amazon.com, Apple iTunes store, or Barnes and Noble. For additional information or inquiries about A Halo of Light for Children, contact the Christian Faith Publishing media department at 866-554-0919. The ARCH group is looking forward to sharing and learning from the talented team at Greene Tool. ARCH Cutting Tools Corp., an ARCH Global Holdings LLC Company (ARCH), today announces the acquisition of Greene Tool Systems, Inc., of Dayton, Ohio. Greene Tools Systems, established in 1986, has developed a reputation for unmatched customer service, technological innovation and prototyping, and world-class quality control. Solving customers most challenging cutting tool applications and dedication to quality are the cornerstones of Greene Tools culture, said Jeff Cederstrom, Division President ARCH Cutting Tools. Tom Green has built a strong business designing and manufacturing highly innovative custom tooling and left a legacy of satisfied customers. The ARCH group is looking forward to sharing and learning from the talented team at Greene Tool. Tom Greene, President of Greene Tool Systems, said It was time for me to retire and my employees agreed. Joining the ARCH family made sense because their broad product offerings complement our expertise in engineered cutting tools. They offer national sales coverage with a skilled sales force. The more people from ARCH we met, the more I was convinced that this was a good move for both companies. They match our culture, business philosophy and people-centric way of doing business. My goal was to retire without my employees and their families having to worry about their future security. Everyone at ARCH understood my goal and far exceeded it. The next design I am working on is a tool to remove sand from between my toes. We are extremely excited to announce the acquisition of Greene Tool and welcome all the Greene colleagues and customers to the ARCH family of companies, said Jack Serda, ARCH Chief Financial Officer. Having developed a relationship with Tom over the past several years, it became very evident there was strong cultural alignment between our organizations. The acquisition of Greene Tool is an ideal fit for ARCH Cutting Tools as their technical capabilities further expand our national customs and specials business. About ARCH Cutting Tools ARCH Cutting Tools Corp., an ARCH Global Holdings LLC Company (ARCH) based in metro Detroit, is recognized as a world leader in high-performance solid round and indexable cutting tools. With manufacturing facilities located throughout the United States, the companys engineering and machining facilities are dedicated to the betterment of precision machined parts, products, tools, and related supply chain processes. ARCH Cutting Tools combines the expertise of leading American manufacturing professionals and expanding technologies to serve the medical, aerospace and defense, and industrial markets. Jim Funari - StratusLIVE Co-Founder and CEO StratusLIVE is excited to support the critical work of AHF with a modern fundraising and online giving solution that will allow their organization to scale responsibly and nimbly, says Jim Funari, StratusLIVE Co-Founder and CEO. StratusLIVE, the leading provider of cloud-based solutions for nonprofits, foundations, and workplace federations, announced today that The Army Historical Foundation recently selected its nonprofit customer relationship management (CRM), StratusLIVE 365, and online giving platform, StratusLIVE Ignite, to support their mission to honor the American Soldier. Kerri Kline, the foundations VP of Operations, described the importance of engaging Americans in the campaign to build and support the National Museum of the United States Army as the Museums official foundation. The Army's history is our nation's history, so our foundation works hard to involve grateful Americans from across the country in our mission to preserve and honor the service of the American Soldier," said Kline. The foundation also makes every effort to find and stay connected to our nation's 10 million Army veterans and Soldiers, and their families, as our mission is especially personal for them. We look forward to fostering and maintaining these important relationships with the help of StratusLIVE." Part of the foundations work is to ensure the history, heritage, lessons, and legacy of the U.S. Army is preserved for future generations. With online engagement tools such as StratusLIVE Ignite, the foundation is well-equipped to appeal to the needs of todays donors and propel the foundation's important mission forward. After the U.S. Army opened the doors to the National Museum of the United States Army in November 2020, the foundation saw an opportunity to further streamline and strengthen its CRM tools for keeping in touch with members and recruiting new supporters. Kelly Isom, Director, Data Services, led the efforts for an all-in-one solution that would provide a CRM system, fuel community engagement through an online registry, and allow for powerful analytics and third-party integrations. Isom stated, Our organization seeks to educate future Americans to fully appreciate the sacrifices that generations of American Soldiers have made. With the implementation of StratusLIVE 365 and Ignite, we will be better positioned to serve and honor the needs of our donors, honorees, and constituents. StratusLIVE is excited to support the critical work of AHF with a modern fundraising and online giving solution that will allow their organization to scale responsibly and nimbly, says Jim Funari, StratusLIVE Co-Founder and CEO. About StratusLIVE StratusLIVE, an industry leader of Software for Social Good, empowers organizations to drive change and increase impact through its Nonprofit CRM and Online Giving Platforms. StratusLIVE 365 and StratusLIVE Ignite seamlessly integrate throughout the entire philanthropic organization, enabling greater visibility into donor insights. With a wide array of product features from enterprise-class relationship management, business intelligence, and analytical marketing to virtual giving, volunteering, Peer-to-Peer campaigns, and more, nonprofits engage more effectively with donors across a wide range of fundraising and development strategies. StratusLIVE, headquartered in Virginia Beach, Virginia, with products built on the Microsoft Dynamics 365 platform and aligned with the Nonprofit Common Data Model, has empowered enterprise nonprofits, federations, and foundations across the United States since 2010. Visit StratusLIVE.com to learn more. J. Brenda, a retired practical nurse/dental assistant, has completed her new book A Winter Day with Pauly Penguin and Oskar Snowman: a delightful tale of friendship that centers around two stuffed toys that sit together to watch the world. Once upon a time, in a little suburb in Ohio, there were two good friends who really loved the winter season, writes Brenda. Pauly, a stuffed penguin, and his pal Oskar, a fluffy snowman. They sat next to each other on a little bench on the front porch of a cute little gray house. The two little stuffed toys were set on the bench in November when it started to snow so they could watch the world go by in their favorite season of the year. They loved watching the dog walkers picking up the doggy poo. Pauly laughed a lot at that. Oskar the Snowman loved watching the cars spinning and sliding about. Published by Page Publishing, J. Brendas adorable tale came to the author when she passed by a house with a stuffed penguin and snowman sitting together decorating a porch and began to write a short story about them in her mind. Thus, the adventures of Pauly and Oskar were born, and now readers of all ages can join along with them as they view the world and keep each other company. Readers who wish to experience this magnificent work can purchase A Winter Day with Pauly Penguin and Oskar Snowman at bookstores everywhere, or online at the Apple iTunes Store, Amazon, Google Play, or Barnes and Noble. For additional information or media inquiries, contact Page Publishing at 866-315-2708. About Page Publishing: Page Publishing is a traditional, full-service publishing house that handles all the intricacies involved in publishing its authors books, including distribution in the worlds largest retail outlets and royalty generation. Page Publishing knows that authors need to be free to create, not mired in logistics like eBook conversion, establishing wholesale accounts, insurance, shipping, taxes, and so on. Pages accomplished writers and publishing professionals allow authors to leave behind these complex and time-consuming issues and focus on their passion: writing and creating. Learn more at http://www.pagepublishing.com. Lane College President Dr. Logan Hampton discusses Black History at Old Country Store's Lunch & Learn event, which was also held in partnership with Jackson-Madison County Bicentennial. Black History is our story, our collective story the triumphs, victories and contributions. Brooks Shaws Old Country Store recently celebrated Black History Month with guest speaker Lane College President Dr. Logan Hampton, who encouraged attendees to commit to working together to make the future brighter. The program is the first in the restaurants Lunch & Learn series and was presented in celebration of the Jackson-Madison County Bicentennial, running from August 2021 through August 2022. Hampton discussed the historical context of soul food and shared the history of Lane College and how several of its students were a part of the local civil rights movement (including those known as the Freshman Four) to desegregate the whites only lunch counter at the F.W. Woolworths store on October 27, 1960. It is because of a group of Lane students who made it possible for us to vote, shop, eat and sit wherever we want in Jackson, Tennessee, Hampton said. They understood that God was on their side. In sharing the story of Lane College Founder Bishop Isaac Lane who was born in slavery and a self-taught educator who raised $240 to build a school in 1882, Hampton emphasized how racial unity helped move the school and community forward. Bishop Lane continued to preach when his churches were burned down, and with the help of some good white and Black people, he rebuilt, Hampton said. Hampton recognized the Shaw family for acknowledging Black History Month. Clark was a freedom fighter for justice, Hampton said of the restaurant's late owner. When many would have just ignored history, he determined we must learn from the past so that it wouldnt be repeated. Hampton attended the unveiling of the Old Country Stores exhibit, Faith - Courage - Sacrifice - Freedom, in February 2020 which tells the story of Lane College students Shirlene Mercer, Ernest Brooks Sr., Henry Moses, Kimmie Davis and others, who sat at the whites only lunch counter at the F.W. Woolworths store (formerly located where Jackson City Hall now stands). The exhibit includes three of the original chairs from that Woolworths store in the 1960s, and is also the very place where the original founder Brooks Shaw met his wife, Anne. Old Country Store owner Juanita Shaw said, Theres no better time for the community to come together, unify and learn. Attendees had lunch in special Black History-themed boxes that the store ordered for the event. African Americans couldnt go into restaurants and buildings, so they would have to pack their lunches in shoeboxes. When I learned this, it was new to me. We want our guests to be able to share the information on the outside of the box with their friends and family about how things used to be, she said. Several local dignitaries attended the Lunch & Learn including Madison County Mayor Jimmy Harris and former Madison County Sheriff David Woolfork. Im glad Old Country Store started the Lunch & Learn series, and its important that the first one is for Black History Month. I enjoy listening to President Hampton; he always delivers well-thought out speeches. Woolfork added, Weve come a long way, and we still have a ways to go, he said. Woolfork is the first Black and longest serving sheriff in Madison County and is the second Black sheriff elected in the state of Tennessee. In his speech, Hampton emphasized the importance for everyone to learn and share Black History. Black History is our story, our collective story the triumphs, victories and contributions, he said. Theres a lot of creativity that runs within the rich DNA of black and brown talent. Therefore, I am creating a house that provides a support system for talent who may not have the necessary resources to scale their business to the next level. Worldly, a creative house curated by Jason Harvey to empower design talent of color, is excited to announce the launch of its first-ever collaboration with designer John Byrd-Olivieri. Entitled Eden on Hush, the new collection is a rich blend of Harveys and Byrd-Olivieris style of avant-garde cirque, streetwear, theatrical costumes, and grand classicism. Launching March 23, 2022 in Atlanta, GA; a city known for its creative influence in music, film, and now fashion, Worldly embodies the celebration of culture, empowerment, and society and also serves as a house to uplift, mentor, and propel young design talent while building a support system for the next generation of black and brown fashion designers. Worldly is pushing fashion forward with making a conscious effort to create a space for talented designers who may lack the necessary resources to scale their brand. With a commitment to spearhead diversity in the fashion industry, Harvey is focused on building partnerships with his community to make brands developed under the Worldly umbrella accessible to a wider audience. Expanding beyond just fashion, the brand philosophy is based on positive change and fashion's influence on the world all of which is impactful, thoughtful and connected. Worldly looks to embrace the fashion industry while creating an intersection between diversity, spirituality, and empowerment, stated Harvey, CEO and Founder of Worldly. Theres a lot of creativity that runs within the rich DNA of black and brown talent. Therefore, I am creating a house that provides a support system for talent who may not have the necessary resources to scale their business to the next level. Designed by Harvey and Byrd-Oliveiri, Eden on Hush is a collection of 20-25 looks and will exemplify fine craftsmanship and exemplary tailoring. Paradoxically, it is both designers' inspiration from their vibrant heritage that allows them to conjure up the innovation that defines their expression of art and fashion in this manner today. The debut collection under Worldly will feature a variation of jewel tone hues with culturally-infused silhouettes of bold oversized sets, dramatic wide-leg pants, alluring yet classic silk dresses, high-end construction, and statement-making outerwear . Eden on Hush is made to order and will be available for purchase on http://www.hellaworldly.com beginning March 23rd. For the latest news around Worldly, please follow on Instagram at @hellaworldly. ### ABOUT JASON HARVEY Growing up in Memphis, Tennessee, Jason Harvey was inspired by the strains of blues, soul, and rock 'n' roll. His earnest and humble roots were shaped by his family, a far cry from the reflection of a high-octane maximalism life thats often represented in public. Spending time at Morehouse College shined a light on Black power coming from within; not as something that was granted to him by someone else. Harvey strongly believes that art is about offering people a way to express their identity, something he feels is more important today than ever before. He has done so in his career thus far, with his steep career trajectory paved with opportunities as creative director, producer, designer, and artist. Some of his most notable endeavors include producing the YouTube childrens show, Grans, and co-creating Yevrah luxury footwear that was showcased at Art Basel in Miami, FL. ABOUT JOHN BYRD-OLIVIERI John Byrd-Olivieri is the head designer and creative director for the celebrated Byrd-Olivieri Atelier. It was from a young age that Byrd-Olivieri recognized that his passion for life and innate desire to create was firmly rooted in fashion and design. With over 10 years of experience, Byrd-Olivieri has been taught by some of the best tailors and seamstresses in the nation. Byrd-Olivieri has won several accolades for his craftsmanship and design aesthetic from some of the nations fashion elites and has been featured in several fashion publications around the country. He has constructed garments for product lines such as The Art of Yevrah, Gyslene, and Hidden Luxury, with many more to come. David and Justice Ivy, a father and daughter writing team, have completed their new book GREED": a riveting tale that details how in 1977, on the gritty streets of the South Bronx, buildings were going up in smoke all over the city at a time when arson was the answer to everything. David and Justice Ivy write, In the 1960s, due to the notions of White supremacy, people of color in the Deep South were treated as second-class citizens and were driven from their homes by unsatisfactory economic opportunities and harsh segregationist laws. Many African American families fled the Southern states and headed North, where they took advantage of the needs for industrial workers that first arose during the Great Migration. Factory job wages in the urban North paid typically three times more than what Blacks could expect to make working in the South as sharecroppers. Published by Page Publishing, David Ivys and Justice Ivys exciting work explores how Greed told the story of life and death, while heroin filled the veins of those who tried to escape the horrors of the world through a delusive feeling of euphoria. By the early 1980s, crack, a very potent form of cocaine, surfaced on the streets of New York, and with it came a profitable curse that conveyed death and destruction everywhere it went. Together, David and Justice Ivy have created a crime-thrilling urban novel filled with drama and suspense with a gritty depiction of life in the inner city that they hope you will enjoy. Readers who wish to experience this eye-opening book can purchase GREED" at bookstores everywhere, or online at the Apple iTunes Store, Amazon, Google Play, or Barnes and Noble. For additional information or media inquiries, contact Page Publishing at 866-315-2708. About Page Publishing: Page Publishing is a traditional, full-service publishing house that handles all the intricacies involved in publishing its authors books, including distribution in the worlds largest retail outlets and royalty generation. Page Publishing knows that authors need to be free to create, not mired in logistics like eBook conversion, establishing wholesale accounts, insurance, shipping, taxes, and so on. Pages accomplished writers and publishing professionals allow authors to leave behind these complex and time-consuming issues and focus on their passion: writing and creating. Learn more at http://www.pagepublishing.com. In Loving Memory: A Story of Love, Loss, and Living On: an emotionally raw biography that explores love, loss, and what comes after. In Loving Memory: A Story of Love, Loss, and Living On is the creation of published author Diana Monique Soriano, a ten year veteran of the United States Army who has since gone on to earn three college degrees, including a masters in human resources. Soriano shares, This book is a reflection on finding my soul mate at a young age and then losing him to the war in Afghanistan. It will describe my relationship with Bobby Pagan, our deployment to Afghanistan, being notified that he was killed in action, the healing process, and a snippet of how life has been after his loss. My book will deliver a clear insight on what it is like to lose a loved one to war, the events that took place after the casualty report was received, and the journey through healing as I have lived on without my significant other. This book will depict some very painful memories but will also entail a beautiful love story that unfortunately had a tragic end. When my fiance was killed in action, I went through the motions, but I was numb and in utter shock. When I was finally ready to accept and face my loss, I felt so alone because people felt uncomfortable discussing the topic. I want to take my readers on my journey through my eyes, have them feel the raw emotions that I felt throughout the process, and show them what I went through. I also want to shed light on my experience of grief and mourning. I want people who have lost a loved one to know that they are not alone and that there is no time limit on grieving. If that concept alone can bring some sort of comfort to someone, then Id have accomplished my mission in sharing my story. I pray that this book somehow touches the heart of others, especially those who have experienced a loss like I have. There are no words that can ever make it any better, but know that you are not alone. Published by Christian Faith Publishing, Diana Monique Sorianos new book is a heartfelt reflection on life that provides a deeply personal look into the authors most private moments. Soriano shares in hopes of reaching others who seek comfort following a significant loss to the dangers of war. Consumers can purchase In Loving Memory: A Story of Love, Loss, and Living On at traditional brick & mortar bookstores, or online at Amazon.com, Apple iTunes store, or Barnes and Noble. For additional information or inquiries about In Loving Memory: A Story of Love, Loss, and Living On, contact the Christian Faith Publishing media department at 866-554-0919. We are thrilled to bring this much needed housing inventory to Southern California where a lack of supply, especially for middle class families looking to own, has been a challenge, says Brent Herrington, president and CEO of DMB Development. DMB Development, a Scottsdale-based developer specializing in large-scale communities in the Western U.S., announces groundbreaking for Silverwood, an expansive master-planned project in Hesperia previously known as Tapestry and Rancho Los Flores. Located in Californias Inland Empire and entitled for more than 15,000 homes, the 9,000+ acre community is expected to bring more than $7 billion in capital to the region including infrastructure investments during the next 25 years of development. We are thrilled to bring this much needed housing inventory to Southern California where a lack of supply, especially for middle class families looking to own, has been a challenge, says Brent Herrington, president and CEO of DMB Development. We are also excited to develop an entire new community in an environmentally responsible way, taking advantage of the spectacular setting ideally creating a place where families can grow and thrive. Silverwood will offer a broad range of lot and home sizes for first time and move-up buyers, with estimated prices starting in the $300,000s. The first phase under construction in the community will include more than 2,000 detached homes, with a target opening date of early 2024. The 700,000 square feet of retail and commercial space include a library, post office, fire stations, public schools and walkable, well-planned town squares with stores. 4,900 acres of open space is planned and will include parks, amphitheaters and 167 miles of trails. Silverwood seeks to evoke a welcoming small-town California feel, enabling walkability and neighborly ties while celebrating its connection to nature. Plus, it will include several sustainable elements such as solar power for all homes and businesses along with a new state-of-the-art wastewater plant, and extensive use of recycled water for landscaping. Located just 19 miles from San Bernardinos major employment centers via I-15, Silverwood is uniquely situated at around 3,200 feet of elevation in the Mojave River Valley. The location will offer views of the mountains in the Angeles and San Bernardino National Forests. We believe Silverwood will benefit the community of Hesperia by offering a unique lifestyle alternative in the Mojave River Valley, said John Ohanian, general manager of Silverwood. Plus, the project will create local jobs and bring development dollars by improving roads and other needed projects. Over the next 25 years, more than $1.6 billion dollars will be invested to improve the regions infrastructure and services, including more than $160 million to help improve the local roads including major improvements to Ranchero Road to the north. Hesperia Venture I LLC, the owner of the property and affiliate of Schlegel Capital LLC, acquired the Silverwood site in 2012 and assembled a team to plan and entitle the site. Financing is led by Beaumont Partners, a real estate private equity investment group. ### About Silverwood Silverwood is a 9,366-acre lifestyle community planned in Hesperia, Calif. within Californias Inland Empire. Entitled for more than 15,000 homes, 700,000 square feet of retail and commercial space, and 4,900 acres of open space, Silverwood seeks to evoke a welcoming small-town California feel, enabling walkability and neighborly ties while celebrating its connection and proximity to nature and outdoor living. The site is situated at approximately 3,200 feet of elevation connecting views of the surrounding mountains in the Angeles and San Bernardino National Forests to the rolling hills and low-lying pasture lands along the Mojave River. Over half of the total land has been reserved for parks and natural open space, offering access to a variety of outdoor and recreational pursuits, including the Pacific Crest Trail and Silverwood Lake. The Silverwood project team includes DMB Development, Schlegel Capital, and Beaumont Partners. Over the next 25 years of development, more than $1.6 billion dollars will be invested to improve the regions infrastructure and services. For more information about Silverwood, please visit http://www.silverwoodcalifornia.com. About DMB Development DMB Development is a nationally recognized developer of large-scale planned communities, with operations in California, Arizona, Hawaii, and Texas. Company chairman Drew Brown was one of the three founders of DMB Associates in 1984. DMB Development was spun off from DMB Associates in 2017 to pursue new development opportunities. The company is owned by long-time members of DMBs senior management team, led by Brent Herrington, President & CEO. About Beaumont Partners The Beaumont Group of Companies seek to create significant shareholder value through investing in or alongside specialist operating partners with unique talent and a true edge in their strategy and market niche. The Beaumont principals have formed programmatic investment partnerships and platforms across multiple specialized real estate investment strategies and services over the past 30 years. About Schlegel Capital Schlegel Capital is a multi-faceted family office managing the affairs of the Schlegel family, including operations of several private equity operating companies across the logistics, renewables, and durable goods sectors, among others. The firms holdings include over 12,000 acres of real estate and over one million square feet of commercial and industrial space in the Southern and Western US. Drinkmate, a leader in the home carbonation category, today announced that the company will be attending this years International Housewares Tradeshow held at McCormick Center in Chicago from March 5-7, 2022. Attendees of this years show are invited to visit company management and representatives at Booth L12608. Formerly the International Home + Housewares Show, The Inspired Home Show is North Americas largest housewares trade show! We connect not only buyer to seller, but also product to lifestyle and the industry to the consumer mindset. Every year, more than 52,000 home and housewares professionals from more than 130 countries converge upon Chicago to discover new housewares products and industry trends, meet face-to-face with executives from top retail and manufacturer brands, and gain the insights, leads and exposure to jump-start a successful year. Drinkmate and Jones Soda, the original craft soda known for its unconventional flavors and user-designed label artwork, have joined forces to bring the popular Jones Soda flavors to syrups, exclusively for Drinkmate machines. Jones Soda syrups for Drinkmate will feature the companys premium syrups, made with pure cane sugar and high quality ingredients. The first line of syrups will include Orange Cream, Cream Soda, Green Apple, and Berry Lemonade. We are excited to once again meet with our retail and industry partners in person in Chicago, and present the latest innovation and collaborations at Drinkmate, said Douglas Wang, CEO of Drinkmate. At the show, Drinkmate will be showcasing the new Arctic Blue countertop model, the new instaFizz stainless carbonation cup, and introducing a high end stainless steel model that will be released later this year. Drinkmate will also be featuring new lines of premium Jones Soda syrups that provide carbonated beverage lovers the ability to expand their flavor options while enjoying delicious carbonated water, beverages, and cocktails. Drinkmate is the first and most versatile soda maker that allows users to add syrup prior to carbonation for the best taste without diluting the fizz. We are very excited to partner with Jones Soda, and believe this partnership will bring a fun, convenient and eco-friendly at-home soda solution to our customers. Our relationship with Drinkmate gives us a new and innovative way to engage with loyal fans and consumers, while also exposing the brand to a new audience. Reinforcing our brand promise as The Peoples Craft Soda, this convenient home-based solution provides consumers another unique way to enjoy our signature flavors, while also reinforcing the relevance and the strength of the Jones name in the marketplace, said Eric Chastain, President and COO of the Jones Soda Beverage Division. About Drinkmate Drinkmates mission is to allow consumers to get creative in discovering new beverages, drink healthier and have fun, while reducing plastic bottle waste. Its proprietary technology allows the consumer to carbonate any kind of beverage safely and quickly. Based in Ann Arbor, Michigan, the company serves as the global headquarters for the Drinkmate brand with operations in Asia, Europe and the Americas. For more information, please visit http://www.Drinkmate.us About Jones Soda Co. Headquartered in Seattle, Washington, Jones Soda Co. (OTCQB: JSDA) markets and distributes premium beverages under the Jones Soda and Lemoncocco brands. A leader in the premium soda category, Jones Soda is made with pure cane sugar and other high-quality ingredients, and is known for packaging that incorporates ever-changing photos sent in from its consumers. Jones' diverse product line offers something for everyone - pure cane sugar soda, zero-calorie soda and Lemoncocco non-carbonated premium refreshment. Jones is sold across North America in glass bottles, cans and on fountain through traditional beverage outlets, restaurants and alternative accounts. For more information, visit http://www.jonessoda.com or http://www.myjones.com or http://www.drinklemoncocco.com. I was in awe of the resilience of the people. They had been under such a traumatic, dominating, fearful climate with the guerilla group that occupied the area. Local coffee shop owner Serina Roy has kept true to her vision of supporting small coffee growers globally with the recent purchase of five eco-washers to be distributed to farmers in Colombia. As the owner of Dublin Roasters Coffee in Frederick, Maryland, Serina is always looking for ways to give back to the community, both locally and abroad. She is especially committed to finding ways to make the farms where she sources her beans more sustainable and eco-friendly. Following a visit to Colombia, Serina found herself impassioned to help the communities there. She explains, I was in awe of the resilience of the people. They had been under such a traumatic, dominating, fearful climate with the guerilla group that occupied the area. She goes on to say, when that fear was taken away, they thrived and the appreciation for life was palpable. For Serina, helping small coffee growers in Colombia by giving them the tools to be more sustainable was a perfect solution. Eco-washers make huge steps towards making these farms environmentally friendly by reducing the amount of water necessary to produce coffee from 20 liters to just 600 ml per kilo. This is accomplished through a process that brushes the mucilage, a gelatinous substance produced by the plant, from the beans rather than using water alone to rinse it off. The mixture of water and mucilage pulp is then used as a fertilizer or compost material, further decreasing waste byproducts. Without eco-washers, the coffee is de-pulped and put through a lengthy fermentation process, requiring the large fermentation vats to be filled with water, drained, and refilled multiple times over several days. The purchase of the eco-washers was thanks to a clean water grant in Colombia, given to Serina by the Rotary Club of Frederick, in partnership with the Coffee Quest. Serina couldnt be happier about the grant, explaining, Our Dublin crew was honored to facilitate the process of funding with both the Rotary Club of Frederick and the Coffee Quest in Colombia to provide this water sustainability project. The purchase of the eco-washers will go a long way towards helping coffee growers in Colombia reduce their water usage and waste, as well as improving the harvesting process and the taste of their finished products. About Dublin Roasters Coffee Dublin Roasters is a unique coffee shop in Frederick, Maryland with a comfortable, inviting atmosphere. Owner Serina Roy, with over 20 years of experience in the industry, has always sought ways to give back to the community, as well as supporting small coffee growers by sourcing raw coffee beans from farms across Colombia, India, Ecuador, Vietnam, Brazil, Honduras, and Guatemala. Dublin Roasters features over 80 varieties of coffee, specializing in handcrafted, organic, artisan coffees. Serina welcomes tours of her on-site roasting facility. The Research Park at Embry-Riddle supported over 700 jobs in 2021, according to a recent economic impact study. (Photo: Embry-Riddle/Daryl Labello) Embry-Riddle and its Research Park are creating high-paying jobs by incubating transformative ideas. We are honored to serve as a pipeline for new talent into the aerospace and aviation industries. - Embry-Riddle President P. Barry Butler Embry-Riddle Aeronautical Universitys Research Park generated $137 million of total economic impact in Florida last year a 50% increase from numbers reported in 2019 according to an independent study conducted by The Washington Economics Group, Inc. By achieving a 50% increase in economic impacts in only three years, Embry-Riddle and its successful Research Park are fulfilling our vision to advance innovation and new business opportunities, said Mori Hosseini, chairman and CEO of ICI Homes, who also serves as Embry-Riddles Board of Trustees chairman. We are indebted to the State of Florida for their continuing support of Embry-Riddles efforts to promote economic progress and improve quality of life for all Floridians. The universitys Research Park generates significant economic activity that supports $14 million in tax revenues for federal, state and local governments, the economic impacts study concludes. Targeting high-growth sectors, the Research Park also supports more than 700 jobs overall, both directly and indirectly up nearly 40% from 2019, when 503 jobs were supported. The cornerstone of the Research Park, the John Mica Engineering and Aerospace Innovation Complex (MicaPlex) has directly created more than 120 high-paying jobs, with an average salary over $78,000, spread throughout 22 advanced-technology companies that inhabit the space. Those firms have already attracted more than $46 million in outside investment. Embry-Riddles Research Park, founded in 2017, remains a significant economic engine for Volusia County and the state of Florida, as it continues to serve as a supplier of high-skilled talent to the aviation and aerospace industries and align its efforts to those of policymakers and economic development executives. Embry-Riddle President P. Barry Butler reflected on the Research Parks early days, which aligned with the beginning of his tenure at the university. As a go-to hub for aerospace innovation and entrepreneurship, Embry-Riddle and its Research Park are creating high-paying jobs by incubating transformative ideas, Butler said. We are honored to serve as a pipeline for new talent into the aerospace and aviation industries, and are excited to help Volusia County position itself as a leader in the booming commercial space arena. Looking ahead, Embry-Riddles capital spending plans for the Research Park from 2022 through 2026 will support 106 additional jobs and generate an additional $83 million in total economic impact. The park will also continue to offer internship opportunities for students, which then create full-time employment opportunities upon graduation and incentivize talent to stay in Volusia County. The last comprehensive economic impact study of the universitys three campuses was conducted in 2020, finding that Embry-Riddles total economic impact reached nearly $2.4 billion. Nearly $2 billion of this impact was in the state of Florida mostly in Volusia County where the university supported nearly 14,850 jobs. Since 2020, Embry-Riddle has continued to thrive, as evidenced by increased enrollment and ongoing construction projects to improve and expand the universitys programs and facilities. One such project is the addition of a 10,000-square-foot production space to the Research Park. Expansions to the Prescott Campus, including a new student union, residence halls, wind tunnel facility and improved flight line, will soon begin. And on the Daytona Beach Campus, record enrollments have led to the expansion of virtual reality technology to support and streamline a booming Aeronautical Science program, as well as the construction of a new residence hall in 2021 and a new parking garage this year. Downtown Sarasota Condo Development | Location Map The immense growth and opportunity in this market is staggering. This condo project not only answers a need but does so in one of the most desirable areas in the city. ERES Capital, LLC, the full-service private equity investment and development division of ERES Companies, announced a new condominium development coming to downtown Sarasota, Florida. The land for the condominium project has closed and development plans are moving forward. Located at 1351 Fruitville Road, Sarasota, Florida, the luxury condominiums will meet the rapidly growing housing demands of downtown Sarasota. Weve opened a regional office in Sarasota for a reason, says ERES Companies President and Co-Founder Tom Bradley. The immense growth and opportunity in this market is staggering. This condo project not only answers a need but does so in one of the most desirable areas in the city. The condominium development project is situated in downtown Sarasotas Rosemary District, a block off Tamiami Trail and less than a mile from Bayfront Drive and the John Ringling Causeway. The site is surrounded by numerous amenities including upscale hospitality options, restaurants, Whole Foods, the Sarasota Library, the Van Wezel Performing Arts Hall, and the Sarasota Opera House. We couldnt have found a better location that bridges the gap from the progressive and burgeoning Rosemary District to an easily walkable, downtown Main Street says ERES Capital Managing Director Dean Schmitt. The views of downtown, city lights, Rosemary District and Sarasota Bay will all be captured from multiple perspectives within the building. For more information on the forthcoming development, contact Tom Bradley at +1 941.248.7235 or tom.bradley@erescompanies.com. ABOUT ERES CAPITAL ERES Capital, LLC, a division of ERES Companies (ERES), is a full-service real estate private equity investment and development platform operating in both domestic and international markets. Co-Headquartered in Denver, CO, New York, NY and Sarasota, FL, the group possesses a strong focus on fast-growing secondary and tertiary geographies and typically seeks unique, off-market opportunities across multifamily, hospitality, industrial and education verticals that can earn above average returns for investors. For more information, visit http://www.EREScapital.com. Fairfield Inn & Suites Charlotte University Park Celebrates Grand Opening "FFI Charlotte University held their highly anticipated celebration at the 535 Collins Aikman drive location with a seasonal theme of Fall in Love with Fairfield Inn & Suites" Fairfield Inn & Suites by Marriott has celebrated the grand opening of the new Fairfield Inn & Suites Charlotte University Research Park location, complete with a ribbon cutting ceremony and fundraiser. The hotel is conveniently situated within minutes of many notable locations, including The University of North Carolina at Charlotte, the Charlotte Motor Speedway, and PNC Music Pavilion. Leisurely travelers can take advantage of local restaurants and breweries surrounding the property. Fairfield Inn & Suites Charlotte University Research Park features 104 rooms with suites available, complimentary hot breakfast, free on-site parking, high-speed internet, fitness center, outdoor swimming pool, digital key, and Marriott Bonvoy Points Packages. Opened for business in August of 2020, the property was officially acquired by Brandt Hospitality Group in July of 2021. Based out of Fargo, North Dakota, Brandt Hospitality Group holds an ever-growing portfolio of hotels across the United States. To learn more about Brandts extensive background, visit their website. Charlotte University Research Park held their highly anticipated celebration at the 535 Collins-Aikman Drive location with a seasonal theme of Fall in Love with Fairfield Inn & Suites. The event included the awarding of three gift baskets, as well as donations made by Chilis. Mirror-Mirror, and Small Cakes. Fairfield Inn & Suites Charlotte University Research Park is a part of the Marriott Bonvoy family. Members are invited to unlock extraordinary experiences with member rates, free nights, mobile check-in and more. For more information about this property, please visit our website. Receive updates by liking us on Facebook. ### About Brandt Hospitality Group Brandt Hospitality Group is comprised of hospitality industry leaders, many of which have worked for over 20 years developing, acquiring and operating hotels. Today we work together under a new flag with a similar purpose: Driving Growth Through Inspired Service. We are growing our business, growing our people, and growing our relationships with our guests, clients and franchise partners.' About Fairfield by Marriott Fairfield by Marriott is designed to deliver a seamless stay through trusted service and warm, inviting spaces. In addition to complimentary Wi-Fi and hot breakfast, Fairfield offers thoughtfully designed rooms and suites that provide separate living, working and sleeping areas. With over 1,000 properties around the globe, Fairfield is proud to participate in Marriott Bonvoy, the new name of Marriotts travel program replacing Marriott Rewards, The Ritz-Carlton Rewards, and Starwood Preferred Guest (SPG). The program offers members an extraordinary portfolio of global brands, experiences on Marriott Bonvoy Moments and unparalleled benefits including earning points toward free hotel stays and nights toward Elite status recognition. To enroll for free or for more information about the program, visit MarriottBonvoy.com. For more information or reservations, visit http://www.fairfieldinn.com, become a fan on Facebook or follow @FairfieldHotels on http://www.twitter.com/fairfieldhotels. A Vote For Susanna, feels modern. Called [a]n engaging work of narrative nonfiction by School Library Journal, the story is told by a grandma in 1934 who remembers the saga of Susanna Salters heroic defiance of a cruel joke. On March 2, 2022, classrooms and libraries will celebrate the National Education Associations (NEA) Read Across America (RAA) day. Several women mayors will share the compelling, true story of Susanna Salters shocking election with students. Karen M. Greenwalds non-fiction picture book, A Vote For Susanna, The First Woman Mayor (Albert Whitman) has stuck a chord with women mayorsespecially since one third of major US cities have yet to elect one (Forbes). Irvine, California Mayor Farrah N. Khan explains, it is the story of so many of us that have broken barriers to be elected Mayors. As the first woman of color and Muslim Mayor for our city and region, being the first is just the beginning, its keeping the door open so others can have a seat at the table too. From a band of bullies to the cruelty of gender bias, and an 1887 city choosing between politics, party, and its destiny, A Vote For Susanna, feels modern. Called [a]n engaging work of narrative nonfiction by School Library Journal, the story is told by a grandma in 1934 who remembers the saga. Susanna Salters heroic defiance of a cruel joke cemented the first state law granting women election rights and made her an international symbol of hope for equity. One-hundred thirty-five years later, Salters media coverage feels contemporary. Instead of listing notable credentials, global papers initially detailed Salters weight, hair, and dishwashing skill. In a 2020 viral TikTok video, Mayor Treva Hodges, PhD., Charlestown, Indianas first woman mayor, revealed sexism shes faced. Gee, what do I call you? Mrs. Mayor? Because Mayor doesnt just feel right with you being a woman a male vendor explained. Well sir, Hodges replied, if titles are that important to you, you can call me Dr. Mayor. On March 2nd, Mayor Hodges will read A Vote For Susanna at four local events. Greenwald will join one over Zoom. The mayor plans to share her own related experiences with her young audiences. Thanks to a partnership with Ivy Tech Community College, Mayor Hodges will also distribute 110 copies of the book to students. Twice elected Vancouver, Washington Mayor Anne McEnerny-Ogle calls A Vote for Susanna, an appealing true-life story that inspires all of us to aim higher while demonstrating the actions of how to reach those heights. Greenwald joined Vancouvers first ever woman mayor on a taped reading of the book for first graders. Hodges also finds the book instructional, Susannas story is a wonderful tale of success in the face of adversity. Karen Greenwalds translation of Susannas win into a childrens book helps us remind our young girls and boys that everyone can stand up to bullies. Its inspiring to see. ABOUT THE AUTHOR Karen M. Greenwald, author of A Vote for Susanna, The First Woman Mayor (Albert Whitman), has won international awards for STEM creative, writing, video, rebranding, and self-promotion. Bylined credits include online, print magazines, and The Washington Post. A Vote For Susanna earned impressive reviews from School Library Journal and Kirkus Reviews. It spent eight months on four of Amazons Hot New Releases lists for kids. A Mighty Girl included the book on their 2021 Books of the Year list. Greenwald and her book were featured on Kansas NBC affiliates GoodDay Kansas!, at National Womens History Museum events, and Wichitas Kansas Day celebration. Greenwald co-founded #SunWriteFuna writing contest that raises money for kidlit charities. Before launching her strategic branding boutique, Greenwald worked as an attorney. Learn more at: http://www.karengreenwald.com Twitter: @karenmgreenwald Media Contact: Liza Fleissig pr@lizaroyce.com Our GenH2 team has deep roots in NASA and the Space Coast and we are thrilled to establish our headquarters here and continue to growth with the community and local residents GenH2, a premier provider of hydrogen infrastructure, announced today that the company will receive a financial incentive from the North Brevard Economic Development Zone to induce the build-out of its new global headquarters campus located at 5120 S. Washington Avenue, Titusville, Florida. The finished facility will be approximately 100,000-square-feet. Per the agreement, GenH2 has also committed to creating 100 new full-time jobs by the end of 2025. GenH2, which was founded by hydrogen infrastructure visionary and leader Cody Bateman, is focused on the mass production of infrastructure equipment necessary for the transition to a clean energy economy. GenH2 technology will allow safe onsite production, storage, and distribution of pure liquid hydrogen, making the product accessible for everyday use. The company plans to renovate two existing buildings on the site, and finish demolishing a third structure, to build a 10.5-acre campus for the companys global headquarters. GenH2, which purchased the facility in September 2021, has stated its plans to invest nearly $12 Million in the purchase and renovation of the buildings, and a total of $35 million in a multi-phase renovation and buildout program. Our GenH2 team has deep roots in NASA and the Space Coast and we are thrilled to establish our headquarters here and continue to growth with the community and local residents, said Rusty DiNicola, Chief Operating Officer of GenH2. We are grateful for the support of Brevard County and the North Brevard Development Zone as well as the extensive support of the City of Titusville and the State of Florida, as we continue to grow our team and our leadership in the liquid hydrogen infrastructure industry. Welcome to the community, GenH2! expressed Brevard County District 1 Commissioner Rita Pritchett, who represents the area where the companys headquarters will be located. This is an opportunity to facilitate new clean energy technology in North Brevard, and is a great investment which should help with the economic stability of the county. The new GenH2 campus, when complete, will include the following: Global headquarters building Advanced research and development laboratory Light manufacturing center for assembly of hydrogen storage tanks Observation deck and outdoor walking trails A hydrogen technology visitor center and gallery open to the public Educational and training classrooms for community engagement For more information, please visit http://www.GenH2.com. About GenH2 GenH2 is an industry leader in hydrogen infrastructure solutions. The Titusville, Florida-headquartered technology company was founded by Cody Bateman, who is widely recognized as a visionary and expert in this industry. The GenH2 team includes former NASA researchers and developers who possess decades of experience researching, engineering, and producing hydrogen solutions. GenH2 is focused on the mass production of infrastructure equipment necessary for the transition to a clean energy economy. GenH2 technology will allow safe onsite production, storage, and distribution of pure liquid hydrogen, making the product accessible for everyday use. GenH2s innovative approaches include filling station solutions and servicing systems to make clean hydrogen readily available on-site for a host of end-use applications; the company has plans to deliver its product to hundreds of locations across the country in the coming years. Learn more about GenH2 at http://www.DiscoverHydrogen.com. About the North Brevard Economic Development Zone The North Brevard Economic Development Zone is a special dependent district, created by the local governments of Brevard County (Florida) and the City of Titusville as a tool for stimulating business development in the northern area of the county. This area, which is home to NASA's Kennedy Space Center and the Cape Canaveral U.S. Space Force Station, was adversely affected in 2011 by the termination of NASA's Space Shuttle program. To counter this impact, the Zone was created that same year with a tax increment financing mechanism to facilitate job growth and new capital investment in the area. Based upon the number of new jobs and the amount of capital investment that has occurred in the north Brevard area since 2011, the Zone and the City of Titusville were recognized in 2019 by the Southern Economic Development Council (SEDC) - the oldest and largest regional economic development association in North America - as the winner of the SEDC's annual Community Economic Development (CEDA) Award for the best overall economic development program in the category of cities between 40,000 and 100,000 in population. Learn more at http://www.NBEDZ.org. Georgia United Credit Union President/CEO Debbie Smith Its an honor to serve and represent Georgia United in this capacity, said Georgia United President and CEO Debbie Smith. Georgia United Credit Union is proud to announce their President and CEO Debbie Smith was elected to the Class C CUNA Board of Directors. The CUNA Board of Directors represents credit unions of all sizes and geographical locations. Debbies term begins on February 28, 2022, and will run through the 2025 CUNA Annual General Meeting. Debbie has been with Georgia United for more than 20 years, serving in several executive roles before being appointed CEO in 2013. Debbie brings over 30 years of experience in organizational, people and cultural development, strategy and policy development, cost reduction and a storied history in civic and community work. Debbie has also been an advocate of the credit union philosophy for many years, serving on the Credit Union Advisory Board since 1984. Its an honor to serve and represent Georgia United in this capacity, said Georgia United President and CEO Debbie Smith. This opportunity is only possible with the confidence and support of the Georgia United Board of Directors, members and team members. I look forward to collectively creating positive and impactful differences for credit unions of all sizes. I am humbled for this opportunity and will be forever grateful. ABOUT GEORGIA UNITED CREDIT UNION: Georgia United Credit Union has had the honor of serving Georgia families and impacting the communities they serve for over 60 years. Headquartered in Duluth, Georgia United is ranked as one of the states largest credit unions with over $1.8 billion in assets and serves more than 170,000 members with innovative digital banking solutions and full-service branch locations. As a leader in the financial industry, Georgia United has been recognized by Forbes as a Best-In-State Credit Union for three consecutive years and an Atlantas Top Workplace seven years in a row. As a purpose driven organization, they are passionate about supporting causes and impactful programs that enrich the lives of their members, team members and communities. Visit gucu.org to learn more. Panasonic Solar Partnership Green Home Systems, a national leader in solar and energy storage technology, announced that it has entered into a strategic supply agreement with Panasonic, a top manufacturer of solar battery storage and energy services. As part of the agreement, Green Home Systems will offer Panasonic l next generation evervolt 360 Mono black on black panels for residential customers. Who is Panasonic? Panasonic is the best solar panel in the market today with high efficiency and triple warranty that will cover not only production but also replacement. In their own words on Panasonic.com, technology should move us all forward. It should enable us to create abundance out of scarcity, power the things that make our lives easier, and energize our perpetual ambition for progress. Starting with this mindset, we invest in technological innovation that will inspire and amaze, focusing on five important areas. The 5 important areas Panasonic mentions are smart mobility, sustainable energy, immersive experiences, integrated supply chain, and consumer lifestyle. Regarding the area of sustainable energy, Panasonic states, For nine consecutive years, Panasonic has been recognized as a leader in sustainability. Weve been a pioneer in solar photovoltaic panels, electric vehicle batteries and data center battery-backup solutions, as well as new technologies like hydrogen fuel cells. Robbie Hebert, Managing Director of Green Home Systems shares, We are always proud to enter into a partnership with leaders in the solar industry, but we are especially excited to announce our partnership with Panasonic. As a company that not only supplies solar but believes in the mission to create a renewable world, we believe that Panasonic will be a partner that shares our beliefs and will always stay on the cutting edge of technology to help propel that mission forward. Green Home Systems will be able to offer products starting March 1st. Click here to learn more about Panasonic. The Immigration & Compliance Practice of global law firm Greenberg Traurig, LLP is celebrating its 10th anniversary in its New York, New Jersey, and Philadelphia offices. Over the last decade, the New York, New Jersey, and Philadelphia team has grown to nearly 20 attorneys and business professionals serving a wide range of clients, from Fortune 500 companies to universities and entrepreneurs. Known by clients for their out-of-the-box thinking and hands-on approach, the Immigration & Compliance group in New York, New Jersey, and Philadelphia is called upon to assist in developing immigration strategies in a broad array of circumstances, to respond to complex Requests for Evidence (RFEs) and Notices of Intent to Deny (NOIDs), and to appeal denied cases. The group has developed employer compliance programs for Department of Labor-related filings including H-1B visas and Program Electronic Review Management (PERM) certifications as well as I-9 employment eligibility verification. The attorneys develop and conduct nationwide I-9 compliance trainings and policy manuals for human resources personnel, advise on best practices for E-Verify employers, provide guidance on avoiding immigration-related unfair employment practices claims, and have defended and minimized penalties in immigration-related government audits. The team regularly collaborates with the firms labor, employment, and tax attorneys to provide strategic planning on immigration issues within a global framework. The Immigration & Compliance group in the New York, New Jersey, and Philadelphia offices is considered a go-to industry leader for EB-5 applications. The team has processed over 7,000 petitions, representing $3,500,000,000 in foreign direct investment (FDI). They have represented clients in EB-5 matters representing close to $12 billion in deal structuring. These projects include one of the largest development projects in U.S. history, as well as hotels, mixed-use retail developments, malls, condominiums, and residential development. Our team delivers concierge service to clients with international employees and interests, Kate Kalmykov, who chairs the group in the New York, New Jersey, and Philadelphia offices, said. We are grateful for the trust our clients have placed in us as their business partners and friends, and we look forward to celebrating this milestone with them. An anniversary is an opportune time to reflect on past successes and future opportunities. As we have always done, we will focus our efforts on delivering superior client service and helping clients achieve their business objectives while also giving back and supporting our local communities, Shareholders Jennifer Hermansky and Nataliya Rymer said in a joint statement. The team has worked on several pro bono projects and is involved in several charitable organizations including Hebrew Immigrant Aid Society (HIAS) Pennsylvania and Council of Jewish Emigre Community Organizations (COJECO). In celebration of the anniversary, the group shared a short highlight video on social media that can be viewed here. Additional celebrations will follow over the course of the next 12 months. Members of the team regularly comment on business immigration topics for major business publications including the Real Deal, the Wall Street Journal, and Law360. They have appeared on numerous TV programs related to immigration law including CNN, the Stoler Report, Vietface TV, and China Business Network. They are prolific writers and have been published in immigration practice handbooks for the American Immigration Lawyers Association and ILW, and in news periodicals that include the New Jersey Law Journal, USA Today, GlobeSt.com, and the Commercial Observer. In addition, the group regularly contributes to the EB-5 Insights Blog and the Inside Business Immigration Blog. Some of their recent thought leadership includes: Webinar: New Issues in I-829 Adjudications: A Reexamination of Source of Funds Issues Post I-526 Approval PLI Article: Immigration Changes and Considerations in a Nearing Post-Covid-19 World Webinar: Celesq CLE Program: Immigration Options for Foreign Nationals who are Extraordinary, Outstanding and in the National Interest New Jersey Law Journal Article: 2021: Immigration Year in Review Webinar: Celesq Program: Immigration Changes and Considerations in a Nearing Post-COVID-19 World Webinar: Greenberg Traurigs Kate Kalmykov and Nataliya Rymer Speak on Practising Law Institutes CLE Webinar New Jersey Law Journal Article: Immigration Changes and Considerations in a Nearing Post-COVID-19 World Webinar: EB-5 Judicial and Regulatory Update Virtual Conference: 2020 Wealth, Tax Planning & Immigration Virtual Expo New Jersey Law Journal Article: A Review of Immigration Changes in 2020 Webinar: Impact of COVID-19 on Immigration Compliance and Employment of Foreign Nationals About Greenberg Traurigs Immigration & Compliance Group: Greenberg Traurigs Immigration & Compliance Group is a multidisciplinary business immigration practice representing businesses, organizations, and individuals from around the world on a wide range of immigration-related matters. The group has achieved international recognition for legal advocacy, results-oriented service, and responsiveness to its clients. The team is composed of active thought leaders who write regularly for Greenberg Traurigs Immigration blogs: Inside Business Immigration and EB-5 Insights. About Greenberg Traurigs Immigration Compliance Blog: Greenberg Traurigs Immigration Compliance blog addresses the latest developments affecting employers, including the E-Verify program, Form I-9 compliance, Department of Labor issues (H-1B, H-2B and LCA), identity fraud in the workplace, electronic forms I-9s, EB-5 investor regional center compliance, and ICE worksite enforcement audits. About Greenberg Traurigs EB-5 Insights Blog: Greenberg Traurigs EB-5 Insights blog addresses the broad range of challenges and opportunities presented by the EB-5 program, including the immigration, tax, and securities compliance issues integral to creating and maintaining successful Regional Centers and projects. About Greenberg Traurig: Greenberg Traurig, LLP has more than 2400 attorneys in 42 locations in the United States, Europe, Latin America, Asia, and the Middle East. The firm, often recognized for its focus on philanthropic giving, innovation, diversity, and pro bono, reported gross revenue of over $2 Billion for FY 2021. The firm is consistently among the top firms on the Am Law 100, Am Law Global 100, NLJ 250, and Law360 (US) 400. On the debut 2022 Law360 Pulse Leaderboard, it is a Top 15 firm. Greenberg Traurig is Mansfield Rule 4.0 Certified Plus by The Diversity Lab and net carbon neutral with respect to its office energy usage. Web: http://www.gtlaw.com. Hill & Smith Inc. applauds and fully supports the incredible work of the ATSS Foundation, the charitable arm of the American Traffic Safety Services Association (ATSSA). Founded in 1988, the ATSS Foundations mission is to promote roadway safety through charitable giving and public awareness programs, plus supporting families of fallen or permanently disabled workers. The need for funds is paramount to continue their goal to make zero roadway deaths a reality. To help support this worthy cause, Hill & Smith Inc. donated a Smart Cushion TL-3 Crash Attenuator to be auctioned off to the highest bidder with 100% of the proceeds going directly to the Foundation. The auction ran from January 19 February 2, 2022, with the winning bid going to Dale Cooper from D&M Traffic Services in Santa Clara, California for $28,000. We were eager to run this auction in support of the Foundation to bring awareness to their important cause and raise funds for roadway worker families affected by unspeakable loss. We couldnt be happier with the success of the auction, the partnership with the Foundation, and the auction winner, D&M Traffic Services, says Gary Lallo, President and CEO of Hill & Smith Inc. Lori Diaz, Director of the ATSS Foundation, thanked Hill & Smith Inc. for conducting the auction and donating the proceeds. We appreciate the support of companies such as Hill & Smith that share our vision and support our mission to advance roadway safety and to support the families whose lives are forever changed by work zone tragedies, Diaz said. Hill & Smiths generosity in auctioning this roadway safety item and donating all proceeds helps us with important programs like the Roadway Worker Memorial Scholarship, which assists the dependents of roadway workers killed or permanently disabled in work zone incidents. It also supports youth programs, the National Work Zone Memorial, and the Marty Weed Engineering Scholarship. Most of all, efforts such as the Hill & Smith auction help spread the word about The ATSS Foundation and its efforts to advance roadway safety and work toward the day when we have no more work zone tragedies and no more deaths on our roadways. The auction winner, Dale Cooper, was publicly announced with a check presentation to the ATSS Foundation at the ATSSA Convention and Traffic Expo in Tampa, Florida on February 13th. To learn more about holding an auction or other ways to give to the ATSS Foundations, please visit their website at https://foundation.atssa.com. Hill & Smith Inc. is a subsidiary of Hill & Smith Holdings PLC, headquartered in the United Kingdom, and is a member of the HS Roads & Security business segment. Hill and Smith Holdings PLC is an international group with leading positions in the niche markets of infrastructure and galvanizing. Hill & Smith Inc. is an industry leading American-based manufacturer of a wide range of transportation safety products, including the MASH-compliant impact attenuator, the Smart Cushion, the MASH-compliant portable steel barrier, Zoneguard, and the Work Area Protection product lines of Smart Work Zone Systems, message and arrow boards, and traffic control products. In an increasingly digital world, attorneys prove indispensable in navigating complex privacy regulations and eDiscovery. With so much at stake, businesses need to choose their legal counsel carefully. A NYC area legal technology and cybersecurity expert explains how to select a business attorney in a new article on the eMazzanti Technologies website. The informative article first asserts that every company will eventually need a lawyer. The author then urges readers to consider three important selection criteria, including having experience relevant to the business and access to a network of resources. He then asserts that lawyers need to demonstrate their ability to navigate securely in the digital space. He concludes with a few additional questions to ask relating to communication and fees. In an increasingly digital world, attorneys prove indispensable in navigating complex privacy regulations and eDiscovery, stated Almi Dumi, CISO, eMazzanti Technologies. With so much at stake, businesses need to choose their legal counsel carefully. Below are a few excerpts from the article, How to Select a Business Attorney for the Long Haul. No matter how carefully they conduct business, every company will eventually need a lawyer. And the best time to select a good business attorney is before a problem arises. Developing a long-term partnership with a reputable attorney helps businesses prevent lawsuits, protect intellectual property, and build a strategic advantage. Experience Relevant to Your Business For an attorney to effectively guide you through the legal matters related to your industry, they need to be familiar with that industry. For instance, a law firm with a client base dominated by large high-tech companies might not prove the right legal partner for a small manufacturing business. Access to a Network of Resources Like doctors, lawyers tend to specialize in certain areas. For instance, a lawyer might focus on real estate law or patent law. Consequently, a single lawyer or law firm may not have the in-house expertise to handle all your legal needs. Ability to Navigate a Digital World Securely As the business world moves increasingly digital, lawyers need to demonstrate their ability to meet you in the digital space. Consider the amount of sensitive information they will hold related to your business. Make sure to ask the right law firm cybersecurity questions to determine their ability to safeguard your information assets. Long-term Partnerships Drive Strategic Success Many of the same criteria that companies use to select a business attorney also apply to business information technology partnerships. Like the right lawyer, a managed services provider should know the industry, provide a range of key services, and support clients through good times and bad. eMazzanti Technologies has a long history of helping its clients thrive in a competitive marketplace by providing them with proactive technology solutions. Whether managing a seamless cloud migration or providing round-the-clock network security, they deliver the services business leaders need to be successful. Have you read? Secure and Flexible Law Firm Collaboration Technology Law Firm Cybersecurity Questions to Ask Your Attorney About eMazzanti Technologies eMazzantis team of trained, certified IT experts rapidly deliver increased revenue growth, data security and productivity for clients ranging from law firms to high-end global retailers, expertly providing advanced retail and payment technology, digital marketing services, cloud and mobile solutions, multi-site implementations, 247 outsourced network management, remote monitoring, and support. eMazzanti has made the Inc. 5000 list 9X, is a 4X Microsoft Partner of the Year, the #1 ranked NYC area MSP, NJ Business of the Year and 5X WatchGuard Partner of the Year! Contact: 1-866-362-9926, info@emazzanti.net or http://www.emazzanti.net Twitter: @emazzanti Facebook: Facebook.com/emazzantitechnologies. I am absolutely excited to be working with the experts at EMA and look forward to providing my own expertise to make a positive impact on the cyber and information security industry, working together for a safer tomorrow. Enterprise Management Associates (EMA), a leading IT and data management research and consulting firm, today announced that noted security expert and author Ken Buckler has joined the firm as a research analyst in the information security, risk, and compliance management practice area. In this role, Buckler will specialize in endpoint security and provide his breadth and depth of experience across a multitude of security topics. We are extremely excited to bring a professional of Kens caliber to the security team at EMA, said Chris Steffen, managing director of information security, risk, and compliance management at EMA. Kens expert practitioner experience in the public sector space makes him an incredible resource for EMA and our clients. Bucklers 15 years in the industry spans consulting, architecture, integration, and development services for federal and commercial clients, including the Department of Veterans Affairs, the Defense Information Systems Agency, and the Census Bureau. He specializes in data analytics and enterprise security architecture design and integration for global networks as large as 650,000 endpoints and servers. Buckler has written three books on cybersecurity: "Death by Identity Theft," "Cyber Security Rules to Live By," and "Hacking of the Free." In addition, he frequently writes white papers and blog posts. Buckler presented his research on leveraging open-source intelligence for early warning detection of cyber threats at the 2013 Recorded Future Users conference (RFUN). A graduate of Mount Saint Mary's University in Emmitsburg, Maryland, Buckler's education in computer science includes data structures and algorithms, artificial intelligence, and internet history and security. He holds a CompTIA Advanced Security Practitioner (CASP) certification. I am absolutely excited to be working with the experts at EMA and look forward to providing my own expertise to make a positive impact on the cyber and information security industry, working together for a safer tomorrow, said Buckler. Those interested in scheduling a briefing or research project with Buckler can contact an EMA business development manager at +1.303.543.9500 or sales@emausa.com About EMA Founded in 1996, EMA is a leading industry analyst firm that specializes in providing deep insight across the full spectrum of IT and data management technologies. EMA analysts leverage a unique combination of practical experience, insight into industry best practices, and in-depth knowledge of current and planned vendor solutions to help their clients achieve their goals. Learn more about EMA research, analysis, and consulting services for enterprise line of business users, IT professionals, and IT vendors at http://www.enterprisemanagement.com. Press Release March 2, 2022 Bong Go stresses need for gov't to ensure safety of Filipinos in Ukraine Amid the escalating Russia-Ukraine conflict, Senator Christopher "Bong" Go underscored the need for the government to protect the safety of Filipinos in Ukraine, majority of whom are in the capital Kyiv, and nearby areas. "We are, without a doubt, living in tumultuous times. That means it is imperative now more than ever to be proactive and safeguard the future of Filipinos and our nation," Go said. "Our primary priority is to get our kababayans out of danger as quickly as possible," he stressed. Senator Go lauded the efforts of the Department of Foreign Affairs in mobilizing all resources to evacuate Filipinos. Operations are underway to move affected Filipinos to safety from Ukraine to neighboring countries and ultimately back home. To date, 40 Filipinos have been transported safely to Poland, Hungary and Moldova with 6 Filipinos already repatriated. The senator advised Filipinos in Ukraine to exercise care and be aware of their surroundings, to be vigilant, and to keep in touch with the Philippine Embassy Team in Lviv or the Consulate General in Kyiv if they require assistance. He also urged the government to mitigate the adverse economic impact of the international conflict on the country through the timely provision of fuel subsidies to transport drivers and the agricultural transport sector, especially since oil prices have already surpassed $100 per barrel. Meanwhile, noting the large number of Filipinos living abroad, Go reiterated the need to enhance and strengthen policies and measures that would protect their safety. "One of these (measures) is President Rodrigo Duterte's gift to overseas Filipino workers, the newly enacted law establishing the Department of Migrant Workers. The passage of Republic Act No. 11641, which I authored and co-sponsored, has been a long time coming, since it is one of President Duterte's declared priority legislative initiatives during his term," he said. "The DMW will devote the government's resources to safeguarding the rights and interests of Filipinos abroad. The bill also tackles the significant issues that migrant workers have faced as a result of the ongoing epidemic, with many of them losing their employment and were repatriated," Go explained. Under the new Act, all government agencies involved in foreign employment and migration will also be reorganized and their tasks will be streamlined. Finally, the senator noted that given the uncertainties of these times, there is a pressing need to secure the welfare of the country and ascertain sustainability of the development brought by the Duterte Administration. To ensure that future generations of Filipinos benefit from the government's initiatives and policies aimed at ensuring a comfortable life for all, Go assured that the Duterte administration is intent in ensuring an honest, peaceful, credible and free elections this coming May. "As he approaches the end of his term, it is undeniable that President Duterte's commitment to fulfilling his promise of providing a comfortable life for all has resulted in significant improvements in the lives of our people. However, the government could not have done it without the Filipino people's cooperation, which is why we appreciate their continued support," Go remarked. "As for me, my trust in and loyalty to the President and the country are unwavering. As my mentor, I am one with him in serving the Filipinos, regardless of our position in the government. We love our country, and we feel that only by serving it can we give back to the land and the people that nurtured us and made us who we are today," he ended. La Adelita Tequila "Were honored to shine a light on women who share our passion for amazing tequila and making the world a better place," says Chris Radomski, Founder of La Adelita Tequila In honor of Womens History Month, La Adelita Tequila is celebrating their brand legacy with new programs named for Las Adelitas, the women who fought bravely in the 1919 Mexican Revolution. The Adelita Army is a Brand Ambassador Program that empowers female tequila enthusiasts and hospitality professionals who embody strength, power, and bravery. La Adelita Tequila will increase their grant contribution to support the professional advancement of Adelita Army members and will also donate a portion of each bottle sold to charity. La Adelita Tequila is founded on the artisanal legacy and commitment that goes into producing every bottle we make, says Chris Radomski, Founder of La Adelita Tequila. We battle the elements every day to farm our estate-grown agave at some of the highest elevations in Jalisco. The statue in our village square commemorates the sacrifices made by Las Adelitas, and in particular, the amazing women of our region who fought to preserve their community in Capilla de Guadalupe. Were honored to shine a light on women who share our passion for amazing tequila and making the world a better place. La Adelita Tequila is a single estate Terroir Tequila, sourced entirely from blue agave parcels in the Jalisco Highlands. Like estate wine, La Adelita owes its beautifully smooth character and distinct flavor profile to careful selection and expert craftsmanship honed over many generations. Extremely labor-intensive, single estate tequila accounts for only 2% of all production and is prized for its expressive character. The history of La Adelita dates to 1885, when the family of Don Antonio Faustino de Aceves y Casillas built the town of Hacienda La Capilla in the shadow of the Cerro Gordo mountains. Planted in ancient volcanic soils at 7,300 feet in the heart of the Jalisco Highs sub-region, blue agave thrives in this area. La Adelitas single estate plantings are still farmed by the descendants of Don Antonio, who aspire to create the purest tequila through time-honored traditions. Prior members of La Adelita Army range from female Mixed Martial Arts competitors to bartenders. To apply to join La Adelita Army, visit La Adelita Army Brand Ambassador Program. Please contact Katherine Dolecki, katherine@gregoryvine.com and Elodi Bodamer, elodi@gregoryvine.com for all press queries, including team interviews, sample requests, and cocktail recipes. About La Adelita Tequila La Adelita Tequila is a partnership of multi-generational distillers, jimadors and renowned vintners from Mexico to California, working together to craft an authentic selection of single estate tequilas in the Jalisco Highlands. The original Terroir Tequila, La Adelita is made from the worlds finest blue agave hand-harvested at over 7,300 feet. The brand name honors the courageous women who fought in the Mexican Revolution, known as Las Adelitas, commemorated through the brands ongoing support of female spirits enthusiasts and trade. La Adelita Tequila is available in the following expressions: La Adelita Blanco (SRP: $42); La Adelita Reposado (SRP: $47); La Adelita Anejo (SRP: $54); La Adelita Black Anejo Cristalino (SRP: $72); and La Adelita Extra Anejo (SRP: $125). For more information, please visit http://www.LaAdelitaTequila.com and follow us on Instagram: @LaAdelitaTequila. Lavaca-Navidad River Authority joins the Texas Purchasing Group Registered vendors can access bids, related documents, addendum and award information. Today, Lavaca-Navidad River Authority has officially joined the Texas Purchasing Group to help simplify their bid and RFP distribution process. The Texas Purchasing Group is one of bidnet directs regional purchasing groups which offers participating local government agencies an e-procurement solution. Lavaca-Navidad River Authority invites all vendors to register online with the Texas Purchasing Group to access its upcoming solicitations by visiting http://www.bidnetdirect.com/texas/lavacanavidadriverauthority. With the Texas Purchasing Group, vendors register to access one centralized location with opportunities from over 50 participating agencies throughout Texas. By posting upcoming solicitations to the regional purchasing group, rather than their website, Lavaca-Navidad River Authority hopes to make it easier for more vendors to access their documents. They also hope to expand the reach of their solicitations to a more diverse vendor pool. Unlike the prior process of only publishing bids to a webpage, the Texas Purchasing Group provides a method to track all bid activity, including the details of vendors who have received or downloaded a bid. Lavaca-Navidad River Authority is looking to widen bid distribution and increase vendor competition, says Jill Crenshaw, Director of Administrative Services of Lavaca-Navidad River Authority. Posting the bid for an entire regional community of vendors to see will help us reach more variety of qualified local suppliers. We like that with the Texas Purchasing Group we can quantifiably track the level of diversity. Lavaca-Navidad River Authority invites all local vendors to visit http://www.bidnetdirect.com/texas/lavacanavidadriverauthority and register to receive access to its upcoming solicitations as well as the upcoming bids and RFPs from 50 other public agencies participating on the Texas Purchasing Group. Registered vendors also gain access to a team of experienced customer service support representatives and can upgrade their service to receive customized bid alerts, advanced notice of term contract expiration, and notification of a recently posted addendum. About Lavaca-Navidad River Authority: The Lavaca-Navidad River Authority (LNRA) is a regional water provider and owns, operates and manages Lake Texana and its associated operating facilities, property, and recreation centers. The LNRA provides and delivers surface water to municipal and industrial customers including the City of Corpus Christi, Formosa Plastics, Inteplast, the City of Point Comfort, and the Calhoun County Port Authority. In addition to the water-based operations, the LNRA also owns, operates, and manages the Brackenridge Recreation Complex that includes Brackenridge Park & Campground, Texana Park and Campground, and the Main Event Center at Brackenridge. About bidnet direct: bidnet direct, powered by mdf commerce, is a sourcing solution of regional purchasing groups available at no cost to local government agencies throughout the country. bidnet direct runs regional purchasing groups, including the Texas Purchasing Group, across all 50 states that are used by over 1,600 local governments. To learn more and have your government agency gain better transparency and efficiency in purchasing, please visit http://www.bidnetdirect.com/buyers "Our inaugural apprentices displayed tremendous dedication by committing themselves to grow and develop their careers over the past two years." Fullerton Grounds Maintenance (FGM), a leading provider of landscape services in central and northern New Jersey for over 25 years, announced the completion of its inaugural two-year apprenticeship program in conjunction with the National Association of Landscape Professionals (NALP). The apprentices were awarded certificates in Landscape Management. Our inaugural apprentices displayed tremendous dedication by committing themselves to grow and develop their careers over the past two years, said FGM owner Scott Fullerton. I am excited to see what they accomplish and to continue investing in mentorship and hands-on training. Program graduates Everett White, Will Fullerton and Mark Galindo completed 2,000 hours of on-the-job training and 144 hours of online classroom instruction. Each spent one-on-one time with FGM owner Scott Fullerton and other executive managers to gain a deeper knowledge of various aspects of the landscaping industry. I am proud of all the hours of work I put in to receive my certification, said Everett White, 33. I am grateful to be part of a company that gives its employees the skills to shape our career and look forward to advancing within FGM. FGM is one of three landscape companies in New Jersey to offer this career shaping program to its employees. The apprenticeship program provides hands-on career training provided by an experienced mentor. Participants can also earn college credit (paid for by FGM) and a landscape management certification that can be used anywhere in the United States. About Fullerton Grounds Maintenance Fullerton Grounds Maintenance, based in Kenvil, New Jersey, has been a leading provider of landscape services in central and northern New Jersey for over 25 years. Fullerton Grounds Maintenance's mission is to deliver unparalled services both in attention to detail and scope and to provide a highly personalized customer service experience. We are honored to be selected for four categories this year as both a firm and individual. Mack International is a premier boutique C-suite executive search and strategic management/human capital consulting firm serving the family office, family investment firms and family business enterprise clients on a national and international basis. Clients range from first generation business enterprise owning wealth creators through multi-generational families of six or more generations. Clients also include multi-client family offices and select investment and wealth management firms that serve family office and ultra-high net worth clients. The firm and its founder, Linda Mack, were recently selected as finalists in the following four individual and firm categories for the 2022- 9th Annual Family Wealth Report Awards: Leading Individual Service Product Provider Women in Wealth Family Office Outstanding Contribution to Wealth Management Thought Leadership Family Office Management Consultancy The annual Family Wealth Report Awards program recognizes the most innovative and exceptional firms, teams and individuals serving the family office, family wealth management and trusted advisor communities in North America. The Family Office Management Consultancy category acknowledges firms providing consulting services that help families think strategically about their objectives to effectively achieve success and sustainability. The Leading Individual Service Provider category recognizes exceptional individuals working in the private client world. Women in Wealth Management cites women in private banking who are an inspiration both to clients and colleagues. Outstanding Contribution to Thought Leadership is awarded to individuals making significant impact to thought leadership in wealth management. Commenting on being selected a finalist for these prestigious awards, Linda Mack said, It is our privilege to be part of the FWR awards and applaud the outstanding achievements of so many esteemed colleagues in the industry. We are honored to be selected for four categories this year as both a firm and individual. We love what we do and are committed to continuously serving as trusted advisors to our clients. The recognition for sharing our insights and ideas as consultants and thought leaders in the industry, gives us great confidence that our efforts are aligned with best-in-class providers in wealth management. We are thrilled and looking forward to celebrating in person this year. Stephen Harris, ClearView Financial Medias CEO, and publisher of Family Wealth Report was first to extend his congratulations to all finalists. He said: This year we had a record number of registrations and submissions for this program: more than 500 submissions in nearly 70 categories. The firms and individuals in the 9th Family Wealth Report program are worthy competitors and the ones that have reached the Finalist stage are truly outstanding. These awards are judged by an expert panel of more than 40 judges and finalists are selected on the basis of entrants submissions and their response to a number of specific questions, focusing on both qualitative and quantitative performance metrics. These awards recognize the very best operators in the private client industry. The judging process is rigorous and independent, and all conflicts of interest are avoided, ensuring that these awards truly reflect excellence in family wealth management. Winners will be announced on 4 May 2022 at the Gala Ceremony at the Mandarin Oriental Hotel in Manhattan, New York. About Mack International LLC Mack International is the premier, boutique retained executive search and strategic management/human capital consulting firm serving national and international clients in the family office, family business enterprise and the investment and wealth management industries on national and international basis. Founded in 2002, the firm has achieved an exceptional track record of success as evidenced by its unmatched industry expertise, in-depth market knowledge and unparalleled track record of success. Founder and President, Linda C. Mack has established proprietary methodologies such as the Mack 360 and is credited for having coined the term expert generalist in the industry. About ClearView Financial Media Ltd (ClearView) ClearView Financial Media was founded by Chief Executive, Stephen Harris in 2004, to provide high quality need to know information for the discerning private client community. London-based, but with a truly global focus, ClearView publishes the Family Wealth Report group of newswires, along with research reports and newsletters, while also running a pan-global thought-leadership events program. With teams based in New York, London, Singapore, Switzerland, South Africa and Malaysia, the company is one of the fastest-growing media groups serving the financial services sector. Northeast Delta HSA to unveil Prescription Drug Takeback Box in Richwood "Studies show that many people store their controlled prescriptions, which plays a significant factor in contributing to misuse and abuse," Dr. Sizer said. Northeast Delta Human Services Authority (NEDHSA) is set to unveil a Prescription Drug Takeback Box in Richwood on Wednesday, March 2. This is being done as part of a cooperative endeavor agreement with the Town of Richwood through the agencys Louisiana State Opioid Response (LaSOR) grant. The dropbox was purchased by NEDHSA and will be located at 2710 Martin Luther King Drive, Richwood, La. 71202, with 24/7 security. Anyone can put unwanted medications in the dropbox with no questions asked. The contents are collected and destroyed by the Drug Enforcement Administration. NEDHSA Executive Director Dr. Monteic A. Sizer said medication dropbox initiatives have proven to be an "effective weapon in helping to combat the opioid crisis and ultimately help people overcome the stigma they have towards behavioral and primary health services." "Studies show that many people store their controlled prescriptions, which plays a significant factor in contributing to misuse and abuse," Dr. Sizer said. "Dropbox placements throughout the community with 24/7 access, in conjunction with the outreach education from our Prevention and Wellness Department, allows for immediate disposal, drastically reducing the opportunity for misuse and abuse within the home and community at large." Dr. Sizer said helping keep our communities safe by disposing of unwanted, unused, or expired medications is just one of many ways NEDHSA is "working to break the cycle of addiction and substance use disorder that plagues our region." According to the Centers for Disease Control and Prevention, more than 841,000 prescription drug overdoses have occurred in the United States since 1999. Town of Richwood Mayor Gerald Brown said he looks for this relationship to provide a simple and safe drug deactivation program for "our community and perhaps be the launching point for more partnerships and programs between our two entities." "My hope is that a takeback box will help citizens easily rid their homes of unneeded medicationsthose that are old, unwanted, or no longer neededthat too often become a gateway to addiction," Brown said. The relationship between NEDHSA and the Town of Richwood has grown through the years as the agency has provided evidence-based prevention services to the middle school and introduced its Generation Rx program to the town. NEDHSA's LaSOR team has also facilitated Narcan training and distribution with the Richwood Police Department, and the dropbox placement is another step towards combating the opioid epidemic. NEDHSA is also using this as another opportunity for the agency to provide further service following a recent Rise Above Stigma town hall with parish residents. NEDHSA's Rise Above Stigma initiative aims to help increase access to behavioral health support services, provide mental health awareness, and offer other culturally and linguistically appropriate training for the twelve-parish communities in northeast Louisiana. In December, NEDHSA hosted town halls in Region 8 as part of its Rise Above Stigma work, and in those meetings, it was realized that many were not aware of the agency's resources and how to access them. Dr. Sizer said the information that the community spoke of is one of the reasons the takeback box is in Richwood. "We took the information and turned it into action." Dr. Sizer said. "In addition to the dropbox, we're reintroducing them to our resources, clinical services, and technology, such as our mobile app and our 24/7/365 crisis hotline that they can dial at any time - day or night. We also have prevention and wellness programs operating in the parish and will soon have our mobile health unit there providing mental health, addiction, and primary health care screenings." For more information, contact Public Information Director DeRon Talley by emailing deron.talley@la.gov. We're working harder and smarter this year to meet the needs of employers and job seekers in North Dallas; serving them will propel our office to even greater heights in 2022. Recognizing the exceptional performance and dedication of their inside sales team, Owners/Strategic-Partners, Amy Linn and Julie Vicic, are pleased to announce that their North Dallas office was named the winner of PrideStaff's 212 Degree Award. This annual award is given to offices that continually go above and beyond, providing extra effort and contributions to deliver the highest level of client service, while expanding the reach of their local office. The 212 Degree Award was presented at PrideStaff's Annual Conference, an in-person, three-day event held at the Grand Hyatt Atlanta in Buckhead. Despite the challenges of an ongoing pandemic, chronic talent shortages and an increasingly complex regulatory environment, the North Dallas team had an amazing year resulting in the receipt of multiple awards at this year's gala event. In addition to the 212 Degrees Award, Linn and Vicic were also honored with a Mile High Award for their extraordinary achievements. Eight-year Dallas (North) veteran, Victoria Burke, who has since been promoted to Owner/Strategic-Partner to launch the Dallas Downtown office, received a B.O.S.S. Award for exceeding annual sales quotas. Following the awards ceremony, Linn shared the credit with her entire team. "I'd like to thank my business partner, Julie, as well as our incredibly talented staff, for helping us earn this recognition," said Linn. "Every internal team member plays a unique part in driving our success whether they're visiting clients, following up with candidates, or performing quality control checks. Each of us has a distinct role, but we all focus on the things our clients and candidates value most. It's this shared focus, combined with a daily commitment to living out PrideStaff's mission, that has allowed us to earn this distinction. We're working harder and smarter this year to meet the needs of employers and job seekers in North Dallas; serving them will propel our office to even greater heights in 2022." "The North Dallas team continually raises the bar when it comes to adding value to their services, strengthening partnerships and delivering exceptional experiences for employers and job seekers in their market," said Co-CEO, Tammi Heaton. "Through the combined efforts of every staff member, they have sustained exceptional levels of financial performance in a very competitive environment. Over the years, their hard work has helped them build a great reputation in their market, introducing PrideStaff Financial and G.A. Rogers & Associates divisions to their first location, and opening a successful second location in downtown Dallas as well. I'm honored to present this award to the North Dallas office, and excited to see what they do next." PrideStaff is the only nationwide commercial staffing firm in the U.S. and Canada with over $100 million in annual revenue to earn ClearlyRated's coveted Client and Talent Best of Staffing 10-Year Diamond Awards 3 years in a row. The 10-year Diamond Award is an achievement earned by less than .5% of all staffing firms in the industry. For more information about PrideStaff North Dallas, please contact Amy Linn or Julie Vicic at 972.661.1616. About PrideStaff PrideStaff was founded in the 1970s as 100% company-owned units and began staffing franchising in 1995. They operate over 85 offices in North America to serve more than 5,000 clients and are headquartered in Fresno, CA. With 40 plus years in the staffing business, PrideStaff offers the resources and expertise of a national firm with the spirit, dedication and personal service of smaller, entrepreneurial firms. PrideStaff is the only nationwide, commercial staffing firm in the U.S. and Canada with over $100 million in annual revenue to earn ClearlyRateds prestigious Best of Staffing Diamond Awards nine years in a row, highlighting exceptional client and talent service quality. For more information on our services, or for staffing franchise information, visit our website. Propark is in the midst of exciting growth. Through the acquisition of Pilgrim Parking, were continuing to expand our nationwide portfolio. Propark Mobility announced today that the company has purchased Boston-based Pilgrim Parking, significantly enhancing its footprint in the region. Pilgrim Parking is a celebrated and well-known Boston institution, said Richard DiPietro, Proparks President. The acquisition of this longstanding brand is a dramatic statement of growth for Propark in this marketplace, which is one that we have wanted to expand in for many years. For 57 years, Pilgrim Parking has been providing services to a variety of businesses in the Greater Boston area. The company currently has over 30 locations, with 250 employees and a fully-staffed administrative office in the City of Boston. As part of the acquisition, 100 percent of employees from Pilgrims locations are being retained, along with the companys branding and existing service ideals. Pilgrim Parking has time-honored relationships that we intend on maintaining and growing by carrying out the same exceptional service that our clients have enjoyed for years and, in some cases, decades, said Mark Braconnier, Pilgrim Parkings President. Pilgrim is now powered by Proparks extensive back-office capabilities and proprietary technology platform, allowing us to provide enhanced value and optimized results for these important partnerships, which is more important than ever in 2022. This acquisition comes on the heels of Propark Mobilitys purchase of Houston-based Sovereign Services in January. The addition of Pilgrim Parking marks a 130% growth in market presence for Propark in the City of Boston, resulting in a total portfolio exceeding 50 separate operations in the city. Propark is in the midst of exciting growth, said David Schmid, Propark Chief Investment Officer. Through the acquisition of Pilgrim Parking, were continuing to expand our nationwide portfolio. This is a major focus for us this year, as were actively seeking new partnerships and acquisition opportunities with parking companies. About Propark Mobility Propark Mobility is one of the countrys largest privately-owned parking companies, providing full-service parking and mobility services at more than 600 hospitality, healthcare, commercial and off-airport locations, in over 100 cities across the United States. For more information, please visit http://www.propark.com. On February 15th, all RANDYS full-time employees were awarded these units to provide an economic interest in the business, aligning objectives to stay focused on the core values of the company and to support RANDYS in continuing to build a best-in-class organization, including supporting its dedicated employees. RANDYS introduced the new Team Ownership Program (TOP) in order to share the organizations success in ways that truly impact the well-being of its employees it grants an economic interest in the growth of the business. The Team Ownership Program is another way that RANDYS rises above a competitive labor market in the industry. We are tapping into the mentality of an owner, says Kevin Kaestner, RANDYS Worldwide President & CEO. The mindset where being diligent about every detail pays off, where knowing a job well done impacts the collective good of everyone in the company, and where a strong company bottom line equates to a strong personal bottom line. We want to continue to embrace the values that got us where we are today. RANDYS is celebrating our 40th anniversary this year and a number of our employees have been with us for 20+ years, so it was easy to look inward and see the value of our team members. TOP ensures that everyone has the opportunity to benefit from the success, growth, and value creation of the organization. The program aligns employees outlook with the companys mission to continue to grow RANDYS and attract world-class talent to the organization. The Team Ownership Program really does further establish RANDYS as a world-class employer and is really unheard of in our industry, or anywhere for that matter. This program is in addition to RANDYS existing industry-leading benefits package says Kelli Schnurman, Director of Human Resources. There are very few companies where all employees have the opportunity to directly benefit from the growth of a company. This Team Ownership Program is supported by one of the most lucrative employee referral programs in the industry. RANDYS Refer A Friend program provides a generous incentive to both the employee and the referral that signs on with the company. These programs are designed to attract, retain, and grow the RANDYS family of brands. These programs illustrate the value that RANDYS places in its current employees along with the objective of attracting great talent interested in growing with the company. When you join RANDYS you get more than a paycheck, you also have the opportunity to personally benefit from the growth of the entire company. RANDYS Worldwide began in 1982 and is a leading provider of highly engineered aftermarket drivetrain, undercar, and suspension products. RANDYS distributes its branded products through a family of industry-leading brands nationwide through its strategically located distribution sites offering opportunities in all sectors of sales, manufacturing, marketing, operations, and distribution. Find out more about career opportunities at RANDYS Worldwide at http://www.randysworldwide.com/careers. Rare Cannabinoid Company is donating a CBDV and CBD oil tinctures and gummies to the Autism Summit Giveaway. CBD and CBDV show potential for helping autism symptoms in scientific studies. One in 44 American children has been identified to have autism spectrum disorder. Rare Cannabinoid Company, a leading CBD and hemp cannabinoid company in the United States, has announced its support for the Autism Summit this April in the form of sponsorship and donation of CBD and CBDV oil products. One in 44 American children has been identified to have autism spectrum disorder, said company co-founder Jennifer Carlile, citing a recent CDC report. Autism affects so many people; the expert speakers at this free virtual event can educate and help in so many ways, she said. People with autism have different ways of thinking, communicating, understanding, being, and feeling. This spectrum of differences can make it more difficult for them to communicate and interact socially with others. Autistic people may also exhibit repetitive behaviors, agitation, irritability, and suffer from sleep deficits. A number of recent studies on CBD for autism have shown positive results on symptoms. CBD oil is well known for promoting calm, balance, and stress resilience. Meanwhile, a less-known cannabinoid, CBDV (cannabidivarin), is also making headlines for research into CBDV and autism. What is CBDV? Like CBD, CBDV is extracted from hemp and is not intoxicating, which means that it doesn't get people high. CBDV benefits include social, behavioral, and memory support. Other potential CBDV effects have been documented in animal and human research on seizures, autism and Rett syndrome (which also falls under the autism umbrella). This 2019 rodent study on CBDV and autism reports the data provide preclinical evidence in support of the ability of CBDV to ameliorate behavioral abnormalities resembling core and associated symptoms of ASD. Several other studies on CBDV and autism look at how CBDV may normalize brain function and affect brain excitation and inhibition. Rodent studies on Rett syndrome (a form of autism) found CBDV improved sociability, memory, cognitive, neurological, and motor function. This study says "Cannabidivarin completely rescues cognitive deficits and delays neurological and motor defects" in a mouse model of autism. CBDV is also currently being studied in 100 children with autism spectrum disorder. Meanwhile, studies on CBD for autism continue to show positive results. In this 2018 study on CBD and autism, 80% of children given CBD oil saw a decrease in problematic behaviors, according to their parents. In a separate 2018 study, about 70% of autistic participants taking CBD oil had fewer instances of self-injury and rage attacks and a similar amount slept better. For links to ten recent preclinical and clinical studies on CBDV and CBD oil for autism, see this article: CBD Oil for Autism: Can CBD or rare cannabinoid CBDV help? While people can easily buy CBD online and in stores, it is much harder to find CBDV for sale. In fact, Rare Cannabinoid Company is the first and only company manufacturing and selling a finished CBDV oil product. Customers were asking for pure CBDV as all the CBDV for sale was either full spectrum CBD oil with slightly higher trace amounts of CBDV or a CBDV isolate powder that they would need to heat, mix with a carrier oil, and formulate themselves, said Carlile. Our CBDV oil tincture contains 500 mg CBDV in certified organic MCT coconut oil, she said. This is a high concentration of CBDV without anything else. In addition to its sponsorship commitment to the Autism Summit, Rare Cannabinoid Company is donating multiple bottles of the following products to the summits Giveaway of more than $10,500 worth of prizes: Please note that these products are not intended to diagnose, treat, cure or prevent any disease, or for use by people under the age of 18. Always consult a doctor before taking any new supplements. Sign up for the Giveaway here. The Autism Summit takes place April 1 through 4, 2022. Held virtually, the event will bring together psychologists, researchers, speech and occupational therapists, nutritionists, educators, advocates and more autism experts. They offer free talks on topics including sensory solutions, social skills, executive function and motor skills, mental health and anxiety, and much more. Get your free pass to the Autism Summit here. Rare Cannabinoid Company is an American company based in Hawaii. It is the premier rare cannabinoid product manufacturer, producing tinctures and gummies of cannabinoids CBDA, CBD, CBDV, CBC, CBG, CBN and THCV as well as terpene-only tinctures for relaxation and discomfort relief. The company's mission is to help people create their own personalized cannabinoid and terpenes blends for their specific needs. For example, THCV (tetrahydrocannabivarin) acts like a stimulant and appetite suppressant. THCV oils and gummies are best taken in the morning for energy, exercise support and may aid weight loss. Effects can be heightened with a full spectrum CBD or CBD booster. Meanwhile, CBG (cannabigerol) is the best cannabinoid for relieving discomfort, soreness, and inflammation after exercise and supports healthy joints. This makes CBG oils and gummies ideal for post-work out aches and pains. They can be taken with CBD gummies or oils or Relief terpenes for added comfort. At night, CBN gummies and oils promote relaxation and sleep. CBN effects can be heightened with Relax terpenes and CBD. The brand's entire apothecary line of cannabinoid gummies and oils can be mixed-and-matched in this way for customized care as each cannabinoid offers unique health and wellness benefits. Cannabichromene, or CBC oil, elevates mood by raising levels of the brain's "bliss" molecule anandamide. Cannabidiolic acid, or CBDA oil, is good for nausea and immune support. Rare Cannabinoid Company creates new products as more rare cannabinoids become available and customers show interest in them. They will soon be launching a Support+ oil containing CBDA, CBGA (cannabigerolic acid), and full spectrum Hawaiian CBD. For safety and transparency, all products are made in a cGMP-certified facility and are third-party lab tested with results online and via QR code. The specialist brand grew out of its sister company, Hawaiian Choice, a luxury lifestyle Hawaiian CBD brand established in 2017. Hawaiian Choice uses broad spectrum Hawaiian CBD and infuses its products with organic terpenes and Hawaiian fruits, essential oils or honey. Both brands oils, topicals and gummies can be found in more than 250 locations across the United States, by prescription in Brazil, and Hawaiian Choice is sold in Japan. Brick-and-mortar stores interested in stocking either brand can receive information and request a wholesale account at wellnessorders.com. I am honored to take on the role of Executive Vice President of such a storied company, one that continues to innovate in an ever growing industry. Im looking forward to hitting the ground running with the team to further the successes of our unique brands in the United States and beyond. Disaronno International LLC, Wine Enthusiasts 2021 Wine Star Awards Spirits Brand/Distiller of the Year, is proud to announce the appointment of Robert Cullins as their new Executive Vice President. Robert brings an impressive three decades of international leadership and experience within the beverage alcohol industry to his new role with Disaronno International LLC. I am honored to take on the role of Executive Vice President of such a storied company, one that continues to innovate in an ever growing industry, says Cullins. Im looking forward to hitting the ground running with the team to further the successes of our unique brands in the United States and beyond. Roberts 30-year-long career showcases his incredible leadership and expertise having worked with Montenegro Americas as Managing Director, where he established the first foreign entity outside of Italy for Gruppo Montenegro and forged strategic distribution partnerships throughout the United States. In addition, Robert served as the Chief Executive Officer of Stoli Group based in Luxembourg, where he directed the strategic, financial, and operational platforms for the portfolio. Furthermore, Robert held past positions as Executive Vice President/Managing Director for Shaw Ross International Importers, the import division of Southern Glazers Wine & Spirits of America in Miami, Florida and was a founding partner and Managing Director of Santa Teresa USA. He has also worked with Diageo, where he held positions of Sales Development Manager in Hong Kong, Vice President/Commercial Director in Tokyo, Senior Vice President/Commercial Development Manager in Latin America and was the President of Americas Duty Free. With a strong focus on innovation, Disaronno International LLC has seen exciting growth. Noteworthy developments have included the launch of the bold and contemporary Irish whisky brand, The Busker, which includes the full range of Irish Whiskey styles; the introduction of a Disaronno line extension with Disaronno Velvet Cream Liqueur; the relaunch of Tia Maria Cold Brew Coffee Liqueur; and innovative product launches with Tia Maria Matcha and ENGINE GIN. About Disaronno International LLC Disaronno International LLC is a subsidiary of Illva Saronno SpA, a leader in the global wine and spirits business. Disaronno International LLC has always centered on the values of heritage, innovation, and quality. The companys heritage dates back to 1525 with the creation of Disaronno Originale, and today has grown to include 7 distinct brands with 31 unique products. Disaronno International LLC is the exclusive importer and marketer of Disaronno Originale the worlds favorite Italian liqueur, Disaronno Velvet, The Busker Irish Whiskey, Tia Maria Coffee Liqueur, Tia Maria Matcha, ENGINE Gin, Rabarbaro Zucca Amaro, Duca di Salaparuta & Corvo, and Florio Marsala. For more information, visit http://www.disaronnointernational.com. The Sherwood Ford Service Center is partnering with Super Socks to collect socks for Hope Mission in March Sherwood Ford, an Edmonton-area dealership located in Sherwood Park, is partnering with Super Socks this month to collect socks for Hope Mission. For people in need, something as basic as a good pair of socks can make all the difference. Hundreds of people are on their feet for several hours each day, often without access to laundry or new socks. Sherwood Ford recognizes this critical need, and as part of its ongoing community mandate to give back in meaningful and helpful ways, the dealership wants to make a difference with its charity sock collection campaign in March. Socks are a basic daily necessity that many people do not have the means to purchase, said Sherwood Ford Service Manager, Damon Egan. The Sherwood Ford Service Center will be collecting socks throughout the month of March for donation to Hope Mission. Community members can donate socks or make a donation toward the purchase of meals and operations. We are happy to collect new pairs of socks at the dealership, too. Anyone who steps up to help the cause will receive a 10% discount on our service center, said Egan. Drivers who are interested in giving back to their community are encouraged to schedule a service appointment this month and make a donation to the cause. Hope Mission is a not-for-profit Christian social care agency that has served the Edmonton community since 1929. Originally a soup kitchen, Hope Mission was established by Reverend Harold Edwardson to help the hundreds of people struggling with unemployment and homelessness during the depression. Today, Hope Mission continues to provide critical services for impoverished and homeless men, women and children in Alberta. Super Socks is a well-established fundraising sock company. For every pair of socks that the company sells, it donates a portion of its profits to local charities. Sherwood Ford is a local dealership that has served the community since 1936. The dealership aims to provide annual assistance to charities and organizations in the community. Previous charitable campaigns from Sherwood Ford include: Racing For a Cure in support of Stollery Childrens Hospital. Adopt-A-Pet-Athon for Second Chance Animal Rescue Society. Stuff-A-Giant-Truck for Strathcona Christmas Bureau. Food Drives for Strathcona Food Bank / Edmonton Food Bank. Community members who would like to learn more about the event should contact the dealerships Digital Operations Manager, David van der Leek, at 780-449-3673. Drivers can learn more and schedule a service appointment on the dealerships website, sherwoodford.ca. Syncfusion, Inc., the developer solutions company of choice and the provider of the Bold suite of business intelligence solutions, today announced that CEO Daniel Jebaraj has been accepted into the Forbes Technology Council, an invitation-only community for world-class CIOs, CTOs, and technology executives. I am grateful to have the opportunity to join the Forbes Technology Council, said Jebaraj. The ability to connect with other leaders in the Forbes community is invaluable, and the interactive exchange of ideas by the Council members will allow me to share innovative concepts and industry best practices with my colleagues at Syncfusion and to improve our products for our customers benefit. Jebaraj was vetted and selected by a review committee based on the depth and diversity of his experience. Criteria for acceptance include a track record of successfully impacting business growth metrics, as well as personal and professional achievements and honors. "We are honored to welcome Daniel into the community," said Scott Gerber, founder of Forbes Councils, the collective that includes the Forbes Technology Council. "Our mission with Forbes Councils is to bring together proven leaders from every industry, creating a curated, social capital-driven network that helps every member grow professionally and make an even greater impact on the business world." As an accepted member of the Council, Jebaraj has access to a variety of exclusive opportunities designed to help him reach peak professional influence. He will connect and collaborate with other respected local leaders in a private forum and at members-only events. Jebaraj will also be invited to work with a professional editorial team to share his expert insights in original business articles on Forbes.com and to contribute to published Q&A panels alongside other experts. Finally, Jebaraj will benefit from exclusive access to vetted business service partners, membership-branded marketing collateral, and the high-touch support of the Forbes Councils member concierge team. About Syncfusion, Inc. Syncfusion is the enterprise technology partner of choice for software development, delivering a broad range of web, mobile, and desktop controls coupled with a service-oriented approach throughout the entire application lifecycle. Syncfusion has established itself as the trusted partner worldwide for use in mission-critical applications. Syncfusion recently launched Bold BI and Bold Reports, both part of its enterprise embedded business intelligence and analytics suite. Now added to the suite is BoldSign, a comprehensive e-signature platform and development kit. Founded in 2001 and headquartered in Research Triangle Park, N.C., Syncfusion has more than 26,000 customers, including large financial institutions, Fortune 100 companies, and global IT consultancies. Purchasing car insurance through the internet is becoming more popular than ever. The benefits that drivers gain are unquestionable, said Russell Rabichev, Marketing Director of Internet Marketing Company. Compare-autoinsurance.org has launched a new blog post that explains the benefits of purchasing online car insurance. For more info and free auto insurance quotes, visit https://compare-autoinsurance.org/the-main-reasons-why-should-you-buy-a-car-insurance-policy-online/ In the past years, buying an online car insurance policy has become popular among people that want to save time. Purchasing car insurance online is simple and has multiple advantages for those that choose this method of getting an insurance policy. Persons that choose to purchase an online policy can enjoy the following benefits: Convenience. For many years, drivers had no other choice than to go from one insurance company's physical location to another in order to get quotes. This method was time-consuming and inefficient. Drivers could have spent hours to obtain several insurance quotes from a few insurance companies. Thanks to the internet, drivers can sit in the comfort of their homes while browsing and comparing different insurance offers. To purchase an online policy, drivers will simply choose the offer they want and complete an online form with their personal details and vehicle details. After the policy is paid, the drivers will receive their online policies in their email addresses. Its practical. Digital policies are impossible to lose and they can be printed on paper. The majority of states accept digital proof of insurance, so drivers that get pulled over by a cop can show him that they have insurance by simply opening their phones. Avoid pushy agents. There are many insurance agents that have a good reputation and will try to obtain the best insurance deals that can suit the needs of their customers. However, there are several agents that will try to convince people to buy more expensive and unnecessary coverage, just to get a larger commission when closing the deal. Multiple offers in one place. Drivers can obtain that with the help of a brokerage website. After entering the zip code on a brokerage website, drivers will need to complete an online questionnaire with accurate and real information about their personal details, vehicle details, and driving record. After that, drivers will get multiple insurance offers from various insurers that sell policies in their areas. Policy customization. Back in the day, drivers had to spend hours in an agency in order to simulate different situations and explore all the options in order to get an insurance deal. However, online questionnaires that can be found on various sites and brokerage websites can be easily customized and different insurance plans can be simulated in several minutes. Savings. Drivers can save some money if they choose to purchase their policy from the internet. Not having to deal with a middleman can help the insurers make some savings. For additional info, money-saving tips and free car insurance quotes, visit https://compare-autoinsurance.org/ Compare-autoinsurance.org is an online provider of life, home, health, and auto insurance quotes. This website is unique because it does not simply stick to one kind of insurance provider, but brings the clients the best deals from many different online insurance carriers. In this way, clients have access to offers from multiple carriers all in one place: this website. On this site, customers have access to quotes for insurance plans from various agencies, such as local or nationwide agencies, brand name insurance companies, etc. Tropos Technologies appoints European-based Sevic Systems SE as its strategic supply partner for the Tropos Motors ABLE vehicle platform. We are thrilled that Tropos has selected us as its partner and together we will become a leading supplier of electric vehicles to the North American industry at large, said Alexander Brillis, General Manager of Sevic. Tropos Technologies (Tropos), a leading supplier of eLSVs (electric low speed vehicles) has entered into a strategic partnership with Sevic Systems SE (Sevic), a premier European supplier of electrified vehicles. With this partnership, Tropos will transition away from its current Asia-centric supply chain to Sevics European supply chain for the Tropos Motors ABLE vehicle platforms. These new vehicles will be available for North American distribution in the second calendar quarter of 2022. The North America LSV market continues to move towards electrification, motivated by stringent government regulations for emissions reduction, broader availability of charging infrastructure, increasing fuel costs and the explosive growth of the last-mile delivery market sector. This is driving fleet operators and LSV distributors to focus on solutions that deliver zero-emissions and reduce overall operating costs. The partnership between Tropos Technologies and Sevic, sets a new benchmark standard for quality and durability, ensures a flexible, high-performance vehicle platform, and accelerates fleet access to the Tropos Motors ABLE vehicle platforms. Sevic brings industry and technical experts, global supply chain resources, commercial operations, and local manufacturing across Europe, and has been supporting the movement to electrified solutions across the globe. Together, Sevic and Tropos Technologies set a new benchmark for quality and durability, ensure a flexible, high-performance vehicle platform, and expand access to the Tropos Motors ABLE vehicle platforms. The partnership with Sevic enhances the Tropos strategic vision to be the market leader of flexible and cost-effective commercial utility vehicle and fleet solutions and moves our supply chain to Europe and North America, said John Bautista, CEO of Tropos Technologies. This partnership is ideally timed with our next phase of production in North America and will enable us to integrate high-caliber components into our manufacturing line, while offering best-in-class technology across a myriad of industry solutions. We are thrilled that Tropos has selected us as its partner and together we will become a leading supplier of electric vehicles to the North American industry at large, said Alexander Brillis, General Manager of Sevic. Working with us has inherent advantages because of our innovative solutions, European manufacturing and R&D capabilities together with our partner Milara Inc. About Tropos Technologies, Inc. and Tropos Motors Tropos Technologies, Inc. is a Silicon Valley-based OEM that manufacturers and distributes all-electric, street-legal vehicles, specializing in utility e-LSVs electric low-speed vehicles and trucks under the Tropos Motors brand. These vehicles are designed for corporate, fleet, first-responder, agriculture, last-mile delivery, and construction applications. Tropos employs the latest EV technology, experienced engineering, and modern design aesthetics. The Tropos Motors ABLE is a full line of durable, versatile, and available eCUVs (electric Compact Utility Vehicles). The Tropos Motors product line is capable of handling large payloads and towing capacities and can operate in extremely tight quarters with a short wheelbase and turning radius. Tropos Motors eCUVs can be operated indoors, outdoors, and off-road. Available in countless configurations, their trucks are ready to work as hard as you do, no matter the job. For more information, please visit http://www.troposmotors.com. About Sevic: Sevic Systems SE designs, engineers and manufactures compact fully electric utility vehicles in Europe that are adaptive, flexible and cost effective. The vehicles use a smart architecture with interchangeable cargo structures and are ideally made for last mile solutions and help companies reduce maintenance, labor and operating costs. Cargo boxes for last mile deliveries, custom boxes for postal services, flatbeds for municipalities and many more custom solutions are available. Sevic is strategically based in the industrial heart of Germany and has gained important experience from various success stories in the mobility sector. The manufacturing plant in Bulgaria/Europe is a state-of-the-art facility which is operated in a joint venture with Milara International Ltd., a global leader in robotics manufacturing. Sevic holds the global intellectual property rights for their vehicles. For more information, please visit https://sevic.com/en. Contacts for Media Inquiries: Sevic Andre Schmidt c/o Dederichs Reinecke & Partner pr@sevic.com Tropos Motors Kristal Ferchau Kristal@troposmotors.com ### Any statements contained in this document that are not historical facts are forward-looking statements as defined in the U.S. Private Securities Litigation Reform Act of 1995. Tropos Technologies and BIB Technologies undertake no obligation to publicly update or revise any forward-looking statements. All forward-looking statements are subject to various risks and uncertainties that could cause actual results to differ materially from expectations. SoCal Aero Club Logo The Southern California Aero Club has a long history of recognizing thought leaders in aeronautics through the Howard Hughes Memorial Award and providing incentive for the future through a robust reinvestment in scholarship programs for California students preparing for a career in aerospace. Valence Surface Technologies announces that it has established support for the Southern California Aero Club via a corporate sponsor partnership. Valence is headquartered in Southern California and is committed to being engaged as a good corporate citizen. This partnership with the Aero Club builds upon the legacy of Howard Hughes and ensures the company is positioned as a strong advocate for aerospace and thought leadership. Valence Chief Executive Chris Celtruda comments; The Southern California Aero Club has a long history of recognizing thought leaders in aeronautics through the Howard Hughes Memorial Award and providing incentive for the future through a robust reinvestment in scholarship programs for California students preparing for a career in aerospace. Valence is pleased to establish this partnership and will be actively engaged to enhance our access to top talent and relevant program content as we continue to grow The Southern California Aero Club dates to 1908 and has a mission to promote the aviation and space market space in California and to promote engagement on a national level for commercial, government and educational interests. The Aero Club was the steward for the Hughes Flying Boat prior to its transfer to an Oregon aviation museum. The Howard Hughes Memorial Award was established by the Aero Club and the Hughes estate to recognizes leaders that have promoted excellence in aviation. This culminates with a recognition at the annual HHMA dinner, recipient inscription on the HHMA trophy and receipt of a silver medallion made from ore extracted from the Hughes Nevada mines. Valence Surface Technologies is an ATL Partners and BCI portfolio company focused on surface treatment technologies, with over ten operating locations in North America. Valence is positioned as the largest independent provider of mission critical chemical processing, painting, coating and plating services to over 2000 customers. Over 1000 Valence employees are deployed every day to ensure that customer expectations for responsiveness, quality and product delivery are exceeded. Summer is the perfect time for students to recover credits required for graduation or explore subjects that can help them discover future careers, said Carol DeFuria, President & CEO of VHS Learning. VHS Learning has opened registration for its summer 2022 courses. The summer program begins June 15 and offers more than 30 online high school courses for credit recovery and enrichment. Courses are either eight weeks or four weeks long and are instructor-led and include NCAA-approved options. Eight-week courses begin on June 15. Four-week courses are offered in two sessions. The first series of four-week courses starts June 15. The second series begins July 18. The summer program offers core math, science, social science, history and English courses as well as a variety of electives for enrichment topics such as CAD, college planning skills, cybersecurity, and writing college application essays. In summer 2022, for the first time, Spanish 1 will also be offered. Students in grades 7-12 are eligible to enroll in the summer courses. Summer is the perfect time for students to recover credits required for graduation or explore subjects that can help them discover future careers, said Carol DeFuria, President & CEO of VHS Learning. One advantage of the asynchronous courses offered by VHS Learning is that students can complete their work at whatever time, day or night, that suits them. This flexibility enables students to meet work and other summer commitments while achieving their academic goals. VHS Learning has a 25-year reputation for educational quality. Summer courses are taught by certified high school teachers and 81% of VHS Learning teachers possess a masters degree or higher. VHS Learning course design and delivery standards were the model used by the National Education Association (NEA) when they created the first standards for online learning, and in 2019, in collaboration with the international nonprofit Quality Matters, VHS Learning helped update the National Standards for Quality (NSQ) in three areas: Online Courses, Online Teaching, and Online Programs. Our program is well-established as a quality leader in the online education industry, DeFuria continued. For more than 15 years weve offered summer options to high schools nationwide, and this summer, once again the teachers and staff at VHS Learning are looking forward to helping students earn credit and stay on track. About VHS Learning VHS Learning is a nonprofit organization with over 25 years of experience providing world-class online programs to students and schools everywhere. Offering more than 300 unique online courses for high school credit, including 24 AP courses, credit recovery, and enrichment courses, VHS Learning is accredited by Middle States Association Commission on Elementary and Secondary Schools (MSA-CESS), Accrediting Commission for Schools, Western Association of Schools and Colleges (ACS WASC), and Cognia. Courses are approved for initial eligibility by NCAA. For more information about VHS Learning please visit https://www.vhslearning.org/ and follow on Twitter at @VHSLearning. # # # Last week, more than 1,000 people signed a letter issued by PEN International decrying Russia's invasion of Ukraine. Over the weekend, several hundred Russian publishing professionals issued their own public condemnation of the invasion. Many Russian publishers too have stood together to criticize Putin's horrible war. The letter reads, in translation: We, Russian book publishers, booksellers, editors, translators, critics, illustrators, designers, typesetters, proofreaders, printers, librarians, and booksellers, protest against the war unleashed by the Russian authorities in Ukraine. The war must cease immediately, and the initiators and participants of the military aggression must be stripped of their ranks and titles and brought to justice. Books are one of the main forms of preserving and transmitting human experience. And all this experience accumulated over the centuries teaches us: war is a crime, and the value of human life is unconditional. War must be stopped! The letter was signed by representatives from numerous independent bookstores and publishing houses, including Bumkniga, Chuk i Gik -- the publishing house of the Pushkin Foundation -- Sinbad, Alt Graph, Jaromir Hladik Press, Pollen Press, Corpus, Cloudberry, White Crow and several others. Despite the war, some Russian publishers are still trying to do business with Ukrainian publishing houses. Svetlana Feldman of the Ukrainian publishing house Acca, based in Kharkov, reports that a representative from a Russian publishing house had reached out to her as bombs rained down on her city to renew rights for a medical dictionary. Feldman's reply (translated) read: '"F@ck you, Russian publisher." Sorry. That's our meme." The meme echoes the reply Ukrainian border guards gave to a Russian warship which demanded their surrender on the first day of the war. Russia's Eksmo Takes Some Blame Eksmo is the largest general trade publisher in Russia, publishing some 10,000 titles a year and is responsible for approximately 30% of total book sales annually. Today, Evgeny Kapyev, general director of Eksmo issued an open letter, addressing the Russian invasion of Ukraine, in which he notes that publishers could have done more to foster greater "mutual understanding." The publishing house is banned from operating in Ukraine as a result of it having been accused by by the Ukrainian State Committee of Television and Broadcasting of disseminating propaganda. In an interview with PW in November 2021, Kapyev said the publishing house was free of political influence. Kapyev's open letter, published today, reads in full: Dear publishers, authors, translators! These days the world is going through an enormous, dreadful tragedy. War and its victims are unjustifiable, and further conflict escalation can cause irreversible consequences. Our employees, authors, collaborators, and I personally, have relatives in Ukraine, and these are the most horrible and desperate days for many Russians as well as for the Ukrainians. Our children exchange messages with their Ukrainian friends those, who have to hide in the Kyiv and Kharkov basements and bomb shelters and cant understand what a mess those adults have made, how they could possibly get to this point. In my opinion, we publishers - are also responsible for what has happened. We are one of those responsible for the development of humanity ideas and mutual understanding. And the fact that for many people, still using weapons to settle an argument, rather than words, is our dramatic deficiency. And it means that as the general director of the largest Russian publishing house, I didnt do my best to prevent this situation. I hope and I pray for the soonest peaceful resolution of the current situation, but we have to learn our lesson and build more cultural bridges to forever eliminate the use of weapons in a controversy. Evgeny Kapyev General Director of Eksmo Publishers Georgia Publishers Condemn Attack In addition, the Georgian Publishers Association has published its own letter protesting the invasion. The letter is referencing the year 2008 when Georgia was attacked by Russia and its capital Tbilisi was bombed. The letter from the Georgia's Publishers and Booksellers Association states: We, Georgian Publishers and Booksellers - the citizens of Georgia - who have experienced the devastating consequences of Russian imperialism and aggression, express our unconditional support for the fight of the Ukrainian people against Putin's Russia. We comprehend that this process requires enormous sacrifice and is associated with the human tragedy for every Ukrainian, but we strongly believe that this war will lead to the defeat of the evil empire. Georgian people express their full support for the unity and sovereignty of Ukraine through large-scale demonstrations in all major cities of Georgia. We condemn the militaristic aggression of the Russian Federation against an independent European country. We stand where the civilized world stands, we stand by the brave, admirable warriors - for humanism, education, equality, freedom and a peaceful future. Solidarity and victory to Ukraine! On a side note, Russia's 2008 attack on Georgia took place prior to that year's Frankfurt Book Fair. As was then customary, the Georgian Publishers Association's booth in Frankfurt was just across an aisle from the official Russian stand. Tensions ran high and during the fair, the Georgian publishers engaged in their own protest of Russia's attack by tearing the pages out of books theyd taken off the Russian stand, and symbolically bombing the Russians with paper airplanes made out of their own books. This article has been updated with new information. In her new graphic memoir Time Zone J, Julie Doucets cartoon avatar comments, I had vowed never to draw myself again. The real-life Doucet, renowned as a pioneer of autobiographical comics since her earliest days as a 1990s zine maker, echoes the sentiment. I just cant believe I did that! she says. I had a story I wanted to tell, and I really did try to put it on paper in so many different ways, but it didnt work out. The only way was to tell it in a comic book. In Time Zone J, to be published in April by Drawn and Quarterly, Doucet floods her pages with dense collage-style artwork and loosely flowing word balloons to share a 1989 story from her journals about her long-distance relationship with a young French soldier referred to as the hussar. After a long, intimate correspondence, the two finally meet in Paris to explore whether they have a future together. The free-associating narrative also touches on Doucets friendships, the DIY art scene of the late 1980s, and the choices shaping her young-adult life. When she draws herself into the comic, however, its as her present-day self examining her past. Doucet says she was driven to tell the story because it means so much to her. It was so special, she says. [Time Zone J] is about our love affair, but its also a story about having an affair when youre young and your feelings are very true and sincere. Born in Montreal, Doucet grew up reading comics, largely thanks to her mothers love of classic European comics like Herges Tintin. She studied fine arts at Cegep du Viex Montreal and University of Quebec, focusing on printmaking. The graphic techniques of printing fascinated her, but she found the critical tastes of the time limiting. Most of what I had seen around was very illustrative rather than abstract and conceptual [art strategies], which I loved, she explains. But the big star at the time was Joseph Beuys, [a prominent German conceptual artist who died in 1986,] who was so far away from what I was doing that people told me I should be illustrating childrens books. That wasnt what I wanted to do. Feeling that there wasnt a place for her in the fine art world, Doucet dropped out. In 1987, shortly after quitting art school, Doucet launched her influential comic series Dirty Plotte, initially a photocopied, hand-stapled zine She was inspired by art students she had met who were drawing comics and by women cartoonists like the French bande-dessinee artist Claire Bretecher. Dirty Plotte quickly attracted attention in the indie comics scene for frank, high-energy, wildly funny and brutally honest stories from Doucets life. Doucets cartooning style evolved into a gleefully anarchic, instantly recognizable look, with big-headed caricatures storming through urban landscapes cluttered with detail. Naturalistic autobio pieces about dating, partying, apartment life, and navigating the art world, rubbed shoulders with surrealist dream diaries and outrageous fantasies of sex and violence, raunchy cartoon animals, and visuals of bodies melting like Dali clocks. I sold them at bookstores and record stores and comic book stores, Doucet recalls. Discovering Factsheet Five, a massive zine review magazine that was indispensable in the self-publishing community of the 1990s, was a turning point for her comics. Through it, she found new places to publish, and made contact with such celebrated minicomics creators as John Porcellino, who was inspired by Dirty Plotte to publish his seminal King-Cat Comics. A friend in Montreal introduced Doucet to Weirdo, the alternative comix magazine founded by underground comix artist R. Crumb. At that time, I didnt know much about American comics, she admits. She submitted to Weirdo, and editor/cartoonist Aline Kominsky-Crumb sent back a postcard offering to publish her work. Weirdo published what became one of Doucets most famous stories, Heavy Flow, in which a rampaging giant Julie floods a city with menstrual blood. Through anthology comics such as Weirdo and Wimmens Comix, an equally influential anthology of women underground comix artists, Doucet reached a wider audience of alt-comics readers and underground art fans in both Canada and the U.S. In 1991, Doucets Dirty Plotte won the Harvey Award for Best New Talent and became a full-sized comic book series published by Canadian publisher Drawn & Quarterly. Doucet moved to New York City in the same year, hoping to connect with other publishers. Of course, nowadays, with computers, youre not as trapped as you used to be, she says. Her experiences during this time inspired some of her most acclaimed comics, later collected in My New York Diary, which won the 2000 Firecracker Award. In her New York stories, Doucet explores the Manhattan art scene of the period, her relationship with her live-in boyfriend at the time, her wildest frustrations and fantasies, and her efforts to find herself as an artist. But at the same time, life in New York wore her out. It was too big, too much of a big city for me, she says. After about a year in New York, Doucet moved to Seattle. The comics scene was very friendly, and such nice surroundings: good cafes and tiny cinemas. I have good memories from that time, she says. Doucet experimented with drawing comic strips and published the first book collection of her work, Leve Ta Jambe Mon, Poisson Est Mort! (Lift Your Leg, My Fish Is Dead!), through Drawn & Quarterly. But after a few years, I got homesick. I just needed to speak some French. I went back to Montreal for one year, but I just couldnt take it, and I didnt want to go back to the States. So the next move was going to Europe. When her German publisher invited her to Berlin, she accepted. While there, she published her first book in French, Ciboire de criss. It was very difficult for me [in Germany], Doucet recalls. But I didnt want to go back to Montreal, so I ended up staying for two years. Around 1998, Doucet moved back to Montreal and ended Dirty Plotte with Issue 12. I really was tired by that point, she says. Tired of the format. It was a lot of work, a lot of little squares. At the time there, was not as much room to experiment and there werent many women around. It was hard to make comics when it wasnt fun to do it, and I wasnt making millions on it, so I was working all the time, Doucet recalls. It took tons of energy, and I didnt have any art drive left to do anything else. It drove me crazy. Thats why it was nice to quit and spend a year or two doing anything else but comics. Since then, Doucet has periodically returned to comics. The Madame Paul Affair, about life in a cheap apartment with eccentric neighbors, was serialized in the Montreal alt-weekly Ici. 365 Days: A Diary covers a year in Doucets life from 2002 to 2003. But shes also taken time to explore other forms of art, especially printmaking, collage, and sculpture. Her books Long Time Relationship and the French-language J comme Je combine media, telling personal stories through illustrative prints and text collage, respectively. Doucet has also written poetry, produced animation (including My New New York Diary, a recursive, self-referential collaboration with Michel Gondry in which her comic-book world and real self interact) and shown art in gallery shows. Renowned internationally, shes become a local fixture on the Montreal art scene. Asked if there are personal stories she finds difficult to tell, Doucet laughs and says, Yes, and theyre not told. She has a reputation with being brutally honest about her own life, but over the years shes grown more protective of friends who feel uncomfortable about being included in her work. For them, [the experiences] were not necessarily good memories, she says. So now Im extremely careful about not putting anyone in my books who doesnt want to be in them. Time Zone J took two years to write and draw. Now that its complete, Doucet has no specific plans for her next artistic focus. Its difficult to get started on something else, she says. Shes taking woodworking lessons and thinking about the fact that most of her comics work has been in black and white. I would like to experiment with color for once, if possible, she says. But I dont have a story to tell yet. While Cincinnatis Blue Manatee Literacy Project was able to surmount the obstacles posed by a two-year pandemic, it is unable to withstand the vagaries of a hot market for retail space in the Queen City. Amanda Kranias, who operates the BMLP in tandem with Kevin Kushman, announced on Wednesday that the 1,200 square-foot bricks-and-mortar bookstore will close on March 13, as the buildings owner did not renew the lease as he intends to pursue other commercial plans. Kranias and Kushman intend, however, to maintain BMLPs online presence as they consider a search for another space to lease. While the bricks-and-mortar chapter may be closing, for now, Kranias wrote, the BMLP literacy mission continues. We remain active in support of school partners, community engagement, program support and as a source of books via our online presence. Our relationships with publishers and the publishing industry remain intact. Our access to titles and ability to support your purchase of books from an enterprise dedicated to our community's children remains. The Blue Manatee launched in 2011 as a childrens bookstore by its founder, Dr. John Hutton, who closed it three years ago to pursue other interests, including Blue Manatee Press, which publishes children's books. Kranias and Kushman reopened it in 2019 as the Blue Manatee Literacy Project and incorporated it as a nonprofit organization that sells both adult and childrens books. Its mission, Kranias told PW during an interview earlier this year, is to make a difference in Cincinnati by getting books into the hands of under-resourced children. For every book sold by BMLP, a book is donated to one of the citys 35,000 students lacking a book at home. Recalling the successes of the last three years since she and Kushman launched BMLP, Kranias wrote: Our Buy a Book / Give a Book flagship program has donated over 50,000 new books to children and partner programs across the region. We have initiated reading programs and resourced numerous others to support K-6 students as they tackle the reading challenge, often with significant obstacles to overcome. Most notably, we partnered with Literacy Network of Greater Cincinnati in 2021 to launch the Queen City Book Bank, a permanent reading resource hub, that will scale to provide 350,000 books annually to K-6 students most in need of home libraries and the recognition that they deserve the opportunity to thrive as confident and proficient readers. This story has been updated for clarity. Nick Beilenson, former publisher of Peter Pauper Press, died on February 22 of complications from Covid-19. He was 85. Born and raised in Mount Vernon, N.Y., Beilenson attended Harvard University, earning a BA and a JD. He married Evelyn Loeb of New York City in 1959. In 1981, Beilenson and Evelyn took over his family's publishing business, Peter Pauper Press, which was founded by his parents in 1928. Partnering with Evelyn and later his son, Laurence, he transformed and expanded the company, producing gift and humor books, stationery products, journals, planners, and children's books. As a publisher for almost three decades, Beilenson was committed to continue his parents' publishing legacy of quality and value, with products offered at ''prices even a pauper could afford.'' Prior to taking over Peter Pauper Press, Beilenson was a corporate attorney and civil rights activist, and founded Westchester Residential Opportunities, a nonprofit that pressured enforcement of the Federal Fair Housing Act and integration of Westchester County neighborhoods. More than 50 years later, WRO continues to promote equal, affordable, and accessible housing opportunities for all Westchester residents. Evelyn Beilenson passed away in October 2021. Five Purdue project bids have been accepted by the U.S. Department of State as part of its Diplomacy Lab initiative. Purdues partnership with the State Department to support the Diplomacy Lab program began in fall 2021. This collaborative endeavor will see teams of Purdue students supervised and led by a faculty member to conduct research in areas of interest relevant to the State Departments affairs. Topics cover a wide array of international issues and challenges, including climate change, sustainable development, human rights, economic policy and global health. The Purdue Policy Research Institute (PPRI) coordinates Purdues activity with the Diplomacy Lab. Purdues five accepted project bids are: "Strategies for Identifying Mis-/Disinformation" Bethany McGowan, associate professor, and Matthew Hannah, assistant professor, Purdue University Libraries and School of Information Studies Mis-/disinformation provides openings for malicious acts that reduce public trust and sow confusion. To tackle this, McGowan and Hannah are developing strategies for identifying mis-/disinformation. This Diplomacy Lab project is offered as a capstone this spring and will draft a report for the State Department to identify mis-/disinformation online. The student team currently engaged in this research project will create a policy report as well as a social listening dashboard that functions as a software application. The State Department plans to integrate the Purdue team's results into the training material for its watch officers. "Recruitment of Native Hawaiians" "Recruitment of Hispanic/Latinx Americans in California" Both project bids from C. Robert Kenley, professor, College of Engineering Kenleys studies of recruitment of Native Hawaiians and Hispanic/Latinx Americans has seen its scope expanded from two to four areas of interest due to significant student interest, adding Native Americans and African Americans. These studies are offered in Kenleys spring course, SYS 40000, as a part of Purdue Systems Collaboratory's Undergraduate Systems Certificate Program. Student teams will create a plan to recruit members of ethnic minority groups by providing specific recommendations to increase the number of their respective applicants for positions within the State Department. "Where are the Freely Associated States (FAS) Students?" Anne Traynor, associate professor, College of Education Where are the Freely Associated States (FAS) Students? involves an interdisciplinary team of undergraduate students and a doctoral student mentor. Once the student team concludes its research training and information-gathering phase, the team will produce a report about Micronesian college students locations, choice processes and study majors. The team also will formulate postgraduation plans that can be used by U.S. embassies and EducationUSA to better tailor educational counseling to future U.S. postsecondary students from the island nations of Micronesia, the Marshall Islands, and Palau, in addition to designing outreach programs. "Explore BIM and GIS Integration for US Embassies" Cory Clark, associate professor, Purdue Polytechnic Institute Clarks research is scheduled to commence in fall 2022. More information on this project, including summary updates, will be available in due course. The menu of projects available for fall 2022 will be available in March. General queries regarding the Diplomacy Lab initiative or the application process should be directed to Krista Kelley, operations manager at PPRI, at kokelley@purdue.edu. To learn more about Purdues partnership with the Diplomacy Lab program, read this earlier Purdue Today story. Launched by the Department of State in 2013, Diplomacy Lab enables the State Department to course-source research related to foreign policy challenges by harnessing the efforts of students and faculty experts at colleges and universities across the United States. Diplomacy Lab underscores the departments commitment to engage the American people in the work of the State Department and the need to broaden the departments research base in response to a proliferation of complex global challenges. The Purdue Policy Research Institute catalyzes and leverages extant policy-relevant transdisciplinary research among members of the Purdue research community, facilitates enduring connections among local and global actors, and generates impact on policymaking and beyond. The institute is guided by the principle that policy development must consider the interdependencies among technological, economic, ethical and social factors. Together with collaborators in academia and the public and private sectors, PPRI inspires the development of nonpartisan policies that solve pressing global challenges. The Black Student Union held a town hall meeting featuring John Gates, Vice Provost for Diversity and Inclusion and clinical professor in the Published: 1 March 2022 Estimated Reading Time: 10 minutes. Reflecting on his boyhood in Fife in Before the Oil Ran Out, Ian Jack, former editor of the Independent on Sunday, explained that, as a result of his fathers part in Scotlands heavy industrial workforce, the past sustained us in a physical as well as a mental sense so much so that for me the past sometimes seemed inseparable from the present. In the first week of March 1979, Scotland was grappling with the very past that sustained Jacks five million compatriots. Whilst Ian Jacks Scotland of human and mechanical activity expressed as a great national movement of carbon particles was waning by March 1979, it was already becoming a nation of consumers rather than producers, deindustrialised but still eager for the fruits of industrialisation. For William Knox, the Seventies saw the destruction of the once all-powerful sectarian masculine culture of the skilled worker and its replacement by a culture which was more democratic, less misogynist and anti-Catholic. Come Referendum Day, Scotland was forced to contend with both its past and future and confront what it actually meant to be Scottish in modern Britain. For Gordon Brown, the most famous of Raith Rovers supporters, the referendum was a once-in-a-generation opportunity for real change north of the border. As 2,384,439 Scots cast their verdict on the next chapter of Scotlands national story, the future Prime Minister cautioned that to be swayed now by the scaremongering and false fears peddled by the money men of the No campaign would be like scoring an own goal in the last few seconds of a big match. As Scots awaited the official announcement of the referendum result on Friday 2 March, the broadsheet and tabloid press speculated on whether the Governmentwhich had attempted to ease the Assemblys passage by removing some 90,000 ballots from the electoral register to take account of duplications, the dead, convicted prisoners and those still under 18had won its gamble. Per the age-old adage, the Liverpool Echo forecast that bad weather in Scotland and Wales (where Tom Jones and The Goon Shows Harry Secombe proclaimed their support for an Assembly) could seriously affect the Yes vote, by discouraging floating voters from casting their ballots. Likewise, whilst the Belfast Telegraph offered a hard-hitting evaluation of the devolution scheme, comparing it to how Northern Ireland had been governed from 1921 to 1972, the Daily Mirrors polling-day coverage, which featured alongside an article about a policemans ear being bitten off in a pub fight in East London, centred on two topless models. The spread, unamusingly titled the stark choices, forecast that the two women, Sian Adey-Jonesa former Miss Wales who would later appear in 1985s A View to a Kill, Sir Roger Moores final appearance as James Bondand Helen Ferguson would get an overwhelming Yes vote for their assemblies. When the result was announced, it was clear that, as Jim Callaghan later wrote of Wales, the valleys were deaf to the sound of our music and rejected the blandishments by a huge majority. Dubbed the man who has to get his sums right by Glasgows resident tabloid, the Daily Record, Ronald Fraser, a retired civil servant paid 500 to be the referendums Chief Counting Officer, collated the results from each region by telephone from New St Andrews House. Whilst Fraser retained overall control of the conduct of the referendum, he appointed the Chief Executives of the Regional Councils as the Returning Officers, with Donald McNaughton presiding over the Grampian count and Alexander McNicoll, a solicitor for Lothian Regional Council, overseeing counting in the Lothians. The Highlands generated late drama as industrial action by civil servants working an overtime ban delayed the announcement of its result until the afternoon. With the Lossiemouth-born Chief Counting Officer now expecting to receive the result between 4 and 5pm, it was a race to the wire to verify and report the Highlands decision before civil servants clocked off at 4.30pm. In addition to industrial action, ballots in the far north also had to contend with inclement weather. One ballot box was flown the 100 miles to the Highland count in Inverness in a specially chartered helicopter. Instead of reaching Fort William by road before travelling on to Inverness with the regions other ballots, the ballot papers of 18 voters from Glen Etivewhich hit the big screen in the twenty-third James bond picture Skyfallwere flown from a hotel in Ballachulish to Inverness, arriving earlier than if they had made the journey by road. New St Andrews House, the Brutalist administrative centre of the Scottish Office in Edinburghs St James Centre witnessed a unique moment of political theatre as Ronald Fraser announced the result. Commencing with the ringing of an antique school janitors handbell five minutes prior to the declaration, Frasers announcement was witnessed by the Scottish Secretary, Bruce Millan, and over 200 journalists, with correspondents travelling from as far afield as South Africa, East Germany, China, Canada and Bulgaria to report the result. One observer, who remarked that New St Andrews House had seen nothing like it since it was first occupied in 1974, distinctly remembered that six Parisian students who were studying devolution, chattered excitedly in French throughout Frasers announcement. Whilst the BBC broadcast a six-hour-long, up-to-the-minute results programme, viewers in the Grampian Region (which took in Aberdeen, Aberdeenshire and Moray in North East Scotland) were unable to watch the Grampian result being announced after BBC technicians at the Beach Ballroom in the Granite City walked out. Despite the significance of the occasion, having discovered that a BBC employee from Glasgow would man the camera at the count, local technicians astonished officials by simply switching off the television lights and unplugging their equipment. Whilst Scotland had voted with a small majority (of just over 77,000 votes) for Yes on a turnout of 63.8 per cent, the Assembly had been torpedoed by failing to reach that all-important target of 40 per cent of the overall electorate voting for Yes (the notorious Cunningham Amendment). In all, of the 2,384,439 Scots who voted (over 100,000 more than had cast their ballot at the 1975 Common Market referendum), some 1,230,937 voted Yes, a little over 32 per cent of the electorate. Two academics estimated that devolutionists would have needed over 270,000 extra votes to have secured an Assembly. As Tam Dalyell remarked, the Scotland Act was comparable to the Sultan of Turkeys battleship, ingenious in many ways except that it would not float. A week after Referendum Day, the National Museum of Antiquities made its annual visit to the Scottish Office to update its main entrance halls Scottish History exhibition. As John Gibson, the Scottish Office historian, recorded, to the amusement of civil servants, the archivists replaced a medieval wooden carving of St Andrew cheerfully shouldering his cross with a broken sword from the Battle of Flodden Field in 1513, where, as Sir Walter Scott wrote, shiverd was fair Scotlands spear and broken was her shield. Whilst six of the twelve regions voted Yes in March 1979, none of the counting areas crossed the 40 per cent threshold, with Central coming closest with 36.4 per cent, followed closely by Fife just one per cent behind. Two of the closest results were in the Highlands. Just under 1700 votes brought about a Yes win, and in the Lothians, where Yes campaigners had an even smaller advantage of just 800 votes. With devolutionists failing to overcome the apathy (and often outright hostility) to the Assembly in Labour areas across East Central Scotland, Yes-supporting George Robertson, the Labour MP for Hamilton who had been born in the police station on Islay and would end up as Secretary-General of NATO, remarked that it was like walking through treacle trying to keep Scotland interested in the constitution after the Winter of Discontent. In and around Edinburgh, there was a clear distinction across the city in how enthusiastically different areas voted for devolution: Craigmillar, a predominantly working-class area of post-war social housing schemes, polled 45 per cent, whilst Morningside, one of the citys most prosperous neighbourhoods and the home of Muriel Sparks Miss Jean Brodie, voted 75 per cent for Yes. In an interview with the Independent Radio Newss Peter Allen as he left New St Andrews House, Bruce Millan, the mild-mannered Secretary of State for Scotland, conceded that the Governments weakened position after the Winter of Discontent may have played a big part in the result. As was also the case with the 2016 EU referendum, Millan was ahead of his time in his assessment that the devolution saga demonstrated the limitations of the referendum as a method of enacting constitutional change, as campaigners had struggled to ensure that people really vote on the issue and dont take other things into account. Likewise, in an interview with the short-lived Bulletin of Scottish Politics in 1981, John Smith shared his frustration that, despite Scots irritation with English superiority and dominance within the Union, too many had decided to spurn the one body which could help to redress the balance. For Smith, Scotland had demonstrated an unfortunate reluctance to even consider a change, with too many organisations taking fresh stock and deciding that after all, they had quite a cosy relationship with St Andrews House. Whilst he shared Smiths frustration that the Assembly had not come into being, Malcolm Rifkind, one of the few prominent Tory Yes campaigners, believed, with some justification, that devolutionists had made a fundamental misjudgement in thinking that there had been an irresistible demand for devolution. The following weekend, unsurprisingly, saw rampant speculation about how the Labour Government would respond to Thursdays ballot. For John Desborough, the Chief Political Correspondent at the Daily Mirror, the Government had a sizeable task on its hands and did not have parliamentary arithmetic on its side. Writing on Saturday 3 March, Desborough reported that, in addition to the STUC having urged the Government to go ahead with an Assembly regardless of not reaching 40 per cent for Yes, the Welsh and Scottish Nationalists who were now planning to vote against the Government in any future Vote of No Confidence, represented Callaghans surest chance of staying in office. Whilst not quite urging Scots to Rejoice, Rejoice, the Leader of the Opposition, Margaret Thatcher, told the Conservative Local Government conference in London that yesterday was a great day for the United Kingdom and accused the Government of having, with total cynicism, attempted to whip up emotions which just werent there. Whilst speculation continued through the weekend, the Daily Mirror dubbed devolution Jims crown of thistles and forecast that, despite Jims sunny if not saintly persona, the SNP, who have been losing ground spectacularly in recent years, would now have a new grievance to feed on and rebuild their strength. Despite some half-hearted efforts by scunnered Yes campaigners to secure an Assemblywith the SNP claiming that Scotland Said Yes and the formation of the eccentric Scotland-UN pressure group, which protested to the United Nations Commission on Human Rights in Autumn 1980the political battle for devolution shifted to the House of Commons as the SNP aligned itself with the Conservatives in the infamous 28 March 1979 No Confidence vote, in which Callaghans Government lost by a single vote. Whilst the Prime Minister recognised that such a volume of opinion in favour of an Assembly could not sensibly be disregarded, he announced on 22 March that the Government would fulfil its obligation to lay an Order repealing the Scotland Act before the House of Commons, despite Jim Sillars warning that there was growing sourness and bitterness in Scotland that a simple majority had been enough in general elections and the 1975 Common Market referendum, which had involved a transfer of sovereign of far greater magnitude than devolution. In a sense, whilst the Governments future was limited, you might argue that the SNP made a strategic error in presenting Jim Callaghan with such a fate too soon, despite his delay of nearly three weeks in offering the SNP talks to address the devolution problem. Much to Callaghans chagrin, the SNP presented the Conservative Party with the prime opportunity to unite like with unlike in a strange alliance of those opposed to Devolution voting with those in favour. 1979, then, was not the nation-enhancing moment of democratic empowerment that many claimed the Scottish Parliaments opening in 1999 later was. However, 1 March 1979 was a moment without parallel in Scotlands recent history. It presented the nation with genuinely divergent paths, between the status quo and a future with a national legislature deciding on issues important to Scots in Scotland for the first time in nearly three centuries. Whether a stepping-stone to independence or not, the Scottish Assembly would have given Scots far greater political autonomy, without weakening the essential fabric of the Kingdom, and perhaps might have spared the country much of the psychodrama that arose from the next eighteen years of Conservative Government. Above all, and for the Scotland Acts many faults, it was also a remarkable demonstration of courage by a seriously beleaguered government to stake its very survival on delivering an Assembly. Forty-three years on from the countrys first devolution referendum, the Labour Party in Scotland faces a similar dilemma to the one that confronted it in 1979. Whilst Boris Johnsons Government is increasingly unpopular in Scotland, Sir Keir Starmers commitment to a constitutional commission to offer Scots a positive alternative to the uncertainty and divisiveness of separatism and a broken status quo threatens to, as Harold Wilson memorably put it, take minutes and waste years. It could fail to capture Unionists who are reluctant to support full-blooded federalism and Nationalists who will tolerate nothing short of independence. As the partys future leader, John Smith, once said of the Scotland Act, Labours methodical but complex offering lacked the simplicity of both the nationalist argument of be proud and free, independence will cost you nothing and give you everything and of the Unionist solution (which Boris Johnson has now adopted) which urged Scots to wrap yourself up more tightly in the Union Jack, and all will be well. In June 1976, a year before his still unresolved murder in Cairo, Egypt, David Holden, the Chief Foreign Correspondent for the Sunday Times, argued that devolution would allow the Scots and the English to discover new ways of living together and may well be just the challenge needed to reawaken Britain from its depressing slumbers. For any future Labour government, reembracing Holdens challenge and reconciling the estranged nations which Stanley Baldwin once called blood brother, remains a pressing and fear-insolvable dilemma. The task demands sensitivity and gumption and a Prime Minister of Jim Callaghans courage, governing ability and political nous, for it is critical to the endurance of a fragile and unloved Union. Tom Chidwick is the Manager of the Mile End Institute and a contemporary historian. This essay originally appeared in Tides of History and is reproduced with their kind permission. Jamie Dornan said his role as an amnesiac in The Tourist, premiering Thursday on HBO Max, required him to forgo his normal method of preparation for roles. ADVERTISEMENT "It was the opposite of how you usually work," Dornan told UPI in a recent Zoom interview. Dornan, 39, said The Tourist required him to block out any information about his character, even scripts he'd read in advance. Dornan plays The Man, who wakes up with no memory after an automobile accident in the Australian Outback. "I've never had to focus more on just staying totally present and naive to everything going on around you," Dornan said. He said he normally prepares extensive backstory for roles, such as his recent role in the Oscar-nominated Belfast, or his role as a killer in the Irish drama, The Fall. In one regard, The Tourist relieved Dornan of the pressure he often faces when preparing for roles. He said he normally struggles to forget the backstory he prepared so that he doesn't telegraph it on screen. "As people, we don't walk around going, 'I wonder if somebody's going to ask me about the time I was 5 years old,'" Dornan said. "So it was trying to live in the present without having any idea of your past." The Man makes an impact on the local law enforcement that helps him. Before she meets The Man, officer Helen Chambers (Danielle Macdonald) is struggling at home. FOLLOW REALITY TV WORLD ON THE ALL-NEW GOOGLE NEWS! Reality TV World is now available on the all-new Google News app and website. Click here to visit our Google News page, and then click FOLLOW to add us as a news source! Helen's fiance, Ethan (Greg Larsen), criticizes her for sneaking fast food -- in the guise of trying to help her. Macdonald, 30, said helping The Man empowers Helen to stand up for herself at home, too. "Going along this journey with The Man is a big wakeup call for her," Macdonald said. "She is very affected by both of these people [The Man and Ethan] and it's about finding her own voice among that." Though Australian, Macdonald said she rarely gets to play Australian characters. She starred in the Sundance hit Patti Cake$ as a New Jersey rapper, and a Southern beauty pageant contestant in Dumplin', for example. Macdonald said The Tourist reflected the Australian sense of humor with which she grew up. She said certain slang, like "carrying on like a pork chop," are uniquely Australian. "I know what it means because I grew up with it, but I don't know how to explain it to someone else," Macdonald said. Dornan filmed The Tourist six months after finishing Belfast, in which he played an Irish father working in England to support his wife and son in Belfast. Dornan said he valued the time between the film and the series. "I think you needed that break in-between because they were so different," Dornan said. "I think if I'd gone from one straight into the other, it would've been really crazy." As HBO Max viewers binge The Tourist, Dornan will join his Belfast cast and crew at various awards shows. They attended the SAG Awards on Sunday, at which the Belfast ensemble was nominated and co-star Ciatriona Balfe was singled out for a nomination. Critics Choice and the Oscars are upcoming. The Critics Choice Awards nominated Dornan for Best Supporting Actor, and he is included in Best Acting Ensemble, among 11 nominations. Belfast is nominated for seven Oscars, and Dornan will attend to support nominees Kenneth Branagh, Ciaran Hinds and Judi Dench, as well as producers and sound designers. Dornan said he is grateful the 2022 season is able to hold awards in person by following vaccination and COVID-19 testing guidelines. Dornan said he worried he would have to attend awards shows by Zoom. "You really want that release," Dornan said. "You finally get to just go and have fun and celebrate together." All six episodes of The Tourist premiere Thursday on HBO Max. "The Real Housewives of New Jersey" star Joe Gorga is opening up about his drama with his niece Gia Giudice. ADVERTISEMENT Gorga, the husband of "The Real Housewives of New Jersey" star Melissa Gorga and the brother of "RHONJ" star Teresa Giudice , appeared on Tuesday's episode of "Watch What Happens Live," where he discussed his tension with Gia, 21, over her dad, Teresa's ex-husband, Joe Giudice. Teresa and Joe Giudice split in 2019 after 20 years of marriage. The pair had pleaded guilty to fraud in 2014 and both served prison sentences, which Gorga has publicly blamed Joe Giudice for. "The Real Housewives of New Jersey" Season 12 has shown Gorga and Gia clash over Gorga's feud with Joe Giudice. In a February episode, Gorga called Joe Giudice the "devil" during a fight with Gia, who defended her dad. Gorga appeared on "Watch What Happens Live" with his wife, Melissa Gorga, where he defended his stance against Joe Giudice. "Can I clarify something? I never really speak about Joe Giudice, ever," he said. FOLLOW REALITY TV WORLD ON THE ALL-NEW GOOGLE NEWS! Reality TV World is now available on the all-new Google News app and website. Click here to visit our Google News page, and then click FOLLOW to add us as a news source! "There's a ton of articles about me with him, about my wife, and I wonder if they ever yell at him for anything." Gorga said his anger with Joe Giudice stems from wanting to protect Teresa. "Before that day, my sister's telling me they're going through a divorce and she's telling me all these things that he was saying to her," Gorga said of the episode with Gia. "So I'm sitting there and I'm thinking about all this, and then we had that episode a couple days later, so I explode." "That's my sister," he added of Teresa. "I'm trying to protect her." Gia previously said on WWHL that she was "a little surprised" by Gorga's reaction during their confrontation. By Elizabeth Kwiatkowski, 04/20/2022 ADVERTISEMENT FOLLOW REALITY TV WORLD ON THE ALL-NEW GOOGLE NEWS! Reality TV World is now available on the all-new Google News app and website. Click here to visit our Google News page, and then click FOLLOW to add us as a news source! Which couples are still together and which MAFS couples have broken up and divorced? And where are they now? 's first thirteen seasons featured a total of 49 couples who got married at first sight -- so which couples are still together, who broke up and divorced, and where are they all now?Each season of -- which premiered in the United States seven years ago and is based on a Danish series -- features couples (previously three couples, but four couples on Seasons 8 and 9, and five couples beginning with Season 10) being matched together by relationship experts and agree to marry when they first meet.Complete strangers become husband and wife in a matter of minutes, and the couples' lives are then documented by TV cameras over the course of the next four to eight weeks (eight weeks, in the case of 's most recent seasons).The couples typically enjoy their first night together in a hotel after exchanging vows -- with some couples deciding to consummate their marriage immediately -- and then embark on a honeymoon, move in together, and simply attempt to deal with the struggles of daily life as man and wife.At the end of the extreme marriage experiment, each couple must decide whether they'd like to stay married or get a divorce on "Decision Day."has experienced very mixed results over the years. While a significant number of couples decide to stay together and continue their new marriage at the end of their season, the real world seems to hit them hard after the cameras leave, resulting in the couple splitting up only months later.Do cast members see a different side of their spouses once cameras are gone, or do the romances naturally fizzle over time?Some couples are still together to this day and are extremely happy. Jamie Otis and Doug Hehner from Season 1, for example, have had two children.Several other couples have also had children -- including Ashley Petta and Anthony D'Amico Shawniece Jackson and Jephte Pierre Danielle Bergman and Bobby Dodd Deonna McNeill and Greg Okotie , and Jessica Studer and Austin Hurd However, there are also relationships that ended badly. Jessica Castro from Season 2, for instance, accused Ryan De Nino of alleged death threats, and she went on to file a restraining order and lawsuit against him.Some couples have also never even made it to "Decision Day" and ended their marriage prematurely, including Season 4 couple Heather Seidel and Derek Schwartz as well as Season 6 couple Molly Duff and Jonathan Francetic Are the remaining couples now lovers, friends or enemies?! What about early season couples like Cortney Hendrix and Jason Carrion, Jaclyn Methuen and Ryan Ranellone, Vanessa Nelson and Tres Russell, Sonia Granados and Nick Pendergrast, and Lillian Vilchez and Tom Wilson?And how about more recent season couples like Danielle DeGroot and Cody Knapek Sheila Downs and Nate Duhon Jaclyn Schwartzberg and Ryan Buckley Dave Flaherty and Amber Martorana , and Tristan Thompson and Mia Bally Keith Dewar and Kristine Killingsworth , and AJ Vollmoeller and Stephanie Sersen Click thelink below to see photos of each couple and find out! BEGIN GALLERY >> Elizabeth Kwiatkowski is Associate Editor of Reality TV World and has been covering the reality TV genre for more than a decade. HISTORY announced new shows from stars Pierce Brosnan and Ray Liotta on Wednesday. Brosnan will host History's Greatest Heists with Pierce Brosnan and Liotta will executive produce Five Families. ADVERTISEMENT History's Greatest Heists will use re-enactments and visual effects to show audiences how historic thieves pulled off their heists. The Wilcox train robbery of 1899 and Boston's Great Brink robbery of 1950 are subjects of episodes. "Great heist stories are thrilling, and when well told, have the ability to bring the viewer along as almost a co-conspirator to the crime itself," Brosnan said in a statement. Brosnan has several heist films on his resume including The Thomas Crown Affair and After the Sunset. Five Families profiles New York's Genovese, Gambino, Bonnano, Colombo and Lucchese crime families. Selwyn Raab's book Five Families: The Rise, Decline and Resurgence of America's Most Powerful Mafia Empires provides the basis for the series. Liotta starred as Henry Hill in the mafia movie Goodfellas and played twin Moltisanti brothers in last year's Sopranos prequel The Many Saints of Newark. "Whether it's power, money, status or living by your own rules at a time when the American Dream seemed out of reach for so many, there's a reason why there's so much public intrigue around the mafia," Liotta said in a statement. The Offspring have announced a new North American tour in support of their latest album, Let the Bad Times Roll. ADVERTISEMENT The Let the Bad Times Roll tour will begin on April 26 at the Cal Coast Credit Union Open Air Theatre in San Diego before it wraps up on May 22 at The Rave/Eagles Club in Milwaukee. The Offspring will be joined by special guests Radkey and Blame My Youth on select dates. Tickets go on sale Friday starting at 10 a.m. local time through LiveNation. The Offspring released Let the Bad Times Roll in April 2021. The album includes the single "Coming for You" and a new version of "Gone Away." Here is the full list of dates for The Offspring's upcoming 'Let the Bad Times Roll' tour April 26 -- San Diego, Calif., at Cal Coast Credit Union Open Air Theatre April 27 -- Phoenix, Ariz., at Arizona Federal Theatre FOLLOW REALITY TV WORLD ON THE ALL-NEW GOOGLE NEWS! Reality TV World is now available on the all-new Google News app and website. Click here to visit our Google News page, and then click FOLLOW to add us as a news source! April 29 -- Salt Lake City, Utah., at The Union Event Center April 30 -- Denver, Colo., at Fillmore Auditorium May 3 -- Dallas, Texas, at South Side Ballroom May 4 -- Houston, Texas, at Bayou Music Center May 6 -- Tampa, Fla., at Seminole Hard Rock Hotel and Casino May 7 -- Jacksonville, Fla., at Daily's Place May 8 -- Atlanta, Ga., at Tabernacle May 10 -- Raleigh, N.C., at Red Hat Amphitheater May 11 -- Baltimore, M.D., at Pier Six Pavilion May 12 -- Asbury Park, N.J., at Stone Pony Summer Stage May 15 -- Boston, Mass., at House of Blues May 17 -- New York, N.Y., at Pier 17 May 18 -- Pittsburgh, Pa., at Stage AE May 20 -- Detroit, Mich., at The Fillmore Detroit May 21 -- Chicago, Ill., at Byline Bank Aragon Ballroom May 22 -- Milwaukee, Wis., at The Rave/Eagles Club Robert M. Meisner is the Principal Attorney of The Meisner Law Group, based in Bingham Farms, Michigan, which provides legal representation for condominiums, homeowner associations, individual co-owners and developers throughout Michigan, including Grand Traverse, Leelanau, and Emmet Counties. His book, Condo Living 2: The Authoritative Guide to Buying, Owning and Selling a Condominium is available at www.momentumbooks.com. He can be reached at 800-470-4433 or bmeisner@meisner-law.com. Visit the firms blog at www.meisner-law.com/blog. To celebrate Black History Month and recognize the impact of Black artists on the music industry, The Red & Black asked University of Georgia students about their favorite Black artists and how theyve not only impacted the industry but their own lives as well. Ukrainian pop music could be heard across the University of Georgias North Campus Wednesday afternoon as UGA community members gathered for a rally in support of Ukraine. Decked in yellow and blue and carrying signs in both English and Ukrainian, the demonstrators voiced opposition to Russian President Vladimir Putins Feb. 24 invasion and expressed support for those affected by it. People gathered in Harmony Parking lot in Brattleboro on Friday, April 22nd for a street festival and parade in celebration of Earth Day. According to Nancy Braus of 350 Brattleboro, the goal was to celebrate the ways in which the community is working towards climate justice and to empower Brattleboro, VT (05301) Today Showers early, then partly cloudy overnight. Low 46F. Winds light and variable. Chance of rain 40%.. Tonight Showers early, then partly cloudy overnight. Low 46F. Winds light and variable. Chance of rain 40%. The West Virginia Division of Highways is ready to pull the trigger on potholes; with a two-fold strategy for before and after asphalt plants open in each region of the state. Submitted photo The holiday season has long been completed, but that doesn't stop Hallmark from continuing the Christmas spirit. A new movie for the channel was filming in West Hartford on March 1. According to spokesperson for the city of West Hartford Renee McCue, a scene from the forthcoming Hallmark film, "The Ghost of Christmas Always" was filming on 34 Foxcroft Road in West Hartford. In a synopsis of the film provided by McCue, the film provides a new take on the classic, "A Christmas Carol." The film tells the story of Katherine Marley, a ghost who is "spending her afterlife working for the Department of Restoring Christmas Spirit as a Ghost of Christmas Present." Marley's job is to visit earth every Christmas to help a soul rekindle its love of Christmas. When she is assigned to help a man named Peter, Marley cannot figure out why his Christmas spirit needs help. What Marley does discover that she and Peter "just might be fated for each other." McCue said in an email that the West Hartford location isn't the only one in the area the production is using as a backdrop. "The majority of the movie is filmed in Hartford at the Bushnell Park carousel," she said. While there is no information available yet on when the film will air, the Hallmark production joins a host of other movies to have filmed in the state over the past year. In 2021, Hartford played host to the film, "A Holiday in Harlem" that premiered during Hallmark's "Countdown to Christmas" in November. Hallmark also filmed "Next Stop, Christmas" and "Sugar Plum Twist" in Connecticut in 2021, both of which debuted during the network's "Countdown to Christmas" movie series. As the Russian invasion of Ukraine turned more deadly Tuesday, with military strikes targeting civilian areas, calls are increasing for NATO and the U.S. to declare a no-fly zone over Ukraine to blunt Russias attacks. If NATO imposed a no-fly zone, it would essentially enable any of its members, including the U.S., to shoot down Russian aircraft that enter Ukrainian airspace. The idea, endorsed by Ukraine's President Volodymyr Zelensky, would only further escalate the conflict and could result in war between the U.S. and Russia, Connecticuts two Democratic senators warned Tuesday. The Russians will not obey a declared no-fly zone over Ukraine and immediately U.S. jets and Russian jets will be shooting at each other, U.S. Sen. Chris Murphy, D-Conn., said during an online news conference. President Joe Biden has declined to send groups troops into Ukraine to fight Russia but has sent military aid to Ukraine and imposed sanctions against Russia. White House press secretary Jen Psaki said this week that a no-fly zone would require implementation by the U.S. military and would put the U.S. in a place where were in a military conflict with Russia, which the president doesnt want. Murphy said he hasnt encountered many people in the Senate who support the idea and noted the opposition spans the political spectrum. I oppose it. Marco Rubio opposes it, he said, referring to his Republican colleague from Florida. I dont think its a serious idea. The U.S. and allies have imposed no-fly zones during conflicts in the past including over Iraq after the Persian Gulf War. But Murphy said Russias military prowess makes it untenable in the case of Ukraine. The Iraqi military and air force is not the Russian military and air force, he said. In a separate online news conference Tuesday, U.S. Sen. Richard Blumenthal, D-Conn., also said he opposed the idea. The president has said there will be not be troops on the ground or in combat in Ukraine and I think that policy makes sense, certainly for right now, Blumenthal said. The risks of a wider nuclear confrontation are very high if the United States engages in a no-fly zone. Blumenthal was joined by Myron Melnyk, a Ukrainian-American who lives in New Haven, and his virtual guest for Bidens State of the Union address Tuesday night. Melnyk, who has friends and family in Ukraine, urged U.S. officials to do more to help Ukraine. You start a war, and you control a war with air superiority and that is something right now the Russian forces have, said Melnyk, a U.S. Army veteran. It would be ideal if we could initiate and enforce a no-fly zone. Of course, that does have risks, as we know, but it would certainly even the odds. My personal opinion is that things are going to get a lot harder and a lot worse, he added. julia.bergman@hearstmediact.com Support local journalism We are making critical coverage of the coronavirus available for free. Please consider subscribing so we can continue to bring you the latest news and information on this developing story. A man wrapped in an Ukrainian national flag watches news on his mobile phone as he sits at Maidan Independence Square in Kyiv as Russia's ground forces invaded Ukraine from several directions, Feb. 24, 2022. The crisis in Ukraine has exposed how the Association of Southeast Asian Nations (ASEAN) once again is divided as it fails to confront a pressing security challenge head on and through a forceful and unified voice. Already riddled with divisions over Chinese aggression in the South China Sea, the damming of the Mekong, the ethnic cleansing of the Rohingya, and the 2021 coup detat in Myanmar, ASEAN, through its toothless response to the Russian invasion, yet again is proving inept in collectively addressing a security issue with potential implications for Southeast Asia. One would think that with the exception of Myanmar, whose junta totally relies on Moscow for arms and diplomatic support, that Southeast Asian condemnation of Russia would not be so fraught. At the member-state level, the responses to Ukraine have ranged from Myanmars unabashed endorsement of the invasion to more tepid ones from other ASEAN states, and to remarkably forceful ones issued by the city-state of Singapore. The response from Myanmar was beyond the pale, with the ruling generals stating that Russias invasion is an appropriate measure to preserve its sovereignty. In failing to condemn Russias invasion of Ukraine, most Southeast Asian states are acting in a way that ignores their long-term security interests and, for the most part, out of sheer diplomatic timidity. Russian President Vladimir Putin attends the virtual ASEAN-East Asia Summit, hosted by Brunei, via a video link at his residence outside Moscow, Oct. 27, 2021. Credit: Sputnik via Reuters The stakes Southeast Asia is comprised of small and medium-sized states who rely on international law, the doctrine of sovereign equality and the principles on the United Nations that forbid the use of force to alter borders or interfere in the domestic politics of another sovereign state. Russias actions and justification for war have set a very dangerous precedent. Thats pretty cut and dry. And yet, the ASEAN states have largely equivocated, each for its own reason. Singapore has been far ahead of the rest of its partners in the bloc. It immediately condemned Russias attack on Ukraine. The Lion City has since announced a swath of sanctions, including banking, SWIFT correspondence, the freeze on high-tech exports and travel bans. It remains to be seen if Singapores sovereign wealth funds will follow the lead of Norway and divest themselves of Russian assets. Singaporean Foreign Minister Vivian Balakrishnan has made clear whats really at stake in the crisis on the other side of the globe. We cannot accept one country attacking another without justification, arguing that its independence was the result of historical errors and crazy decisions' Unless we as a country stand up for principles that are the very foundations for the independence and sovereignty of smaller nations, our own right to exist and prosper as a nation may similarly be called into question, he said. Brunei and the Philippines belatedly condemned the attack. Indonesia has done so in its own way without assigning blame to Russia, and making clear that it would not impose any sanctions on Moscow. Refugees try to stay warm after fleeing the Russian invasion of Ukraine, at the Medyka border crossing in Poland, Tuesday, March 1, 2022. Credit: AP A joint statement put out by the ASEAN foreign ministers on Feb. 28 made no mention of Russias invasion of a sovereign state, let alone its targeting of civilians and effort to capture Ukraines main cities. The statement called on both sides to exercise maximum restraint, ignoring that one side was fighting for its very existence as a sovereign state. This was an exercise in diplomatic cowardice. As with the coup in Myanmar, many governments in Southeast Asia expected the invasion of Ukraine to be over in a blink, too fast for them to be forced to make a stand. But that hasnt happened. President Vladimir Putin planned a blitzkrieg attack, the quick encirclement of cities and an immediate Ukrainian government surrender. The Russians never expected the Ukrainians to put up such stiff resistance or the international community to be galvanized in norm-shattering ways. While the Ukrainians have fared relatively well in the opening days of the war, the Russians have been changing their tactics: they are moving more deliberately and their supply lines are tighter. Theyre aware that the losses suffered thus far are unsustainable. More importantly, Russian forces and mercenaries are now targeting residential areas and other non-military targets in a much more systematic way, including government buildings, hospitals, and communications centers, according to news reports. Air power, which Moscow barely resorted to in the early days of the invasion, is being used more and more as the Russians deplete their supply of precision-guided munitions. The Russians are now using gravity bombs, cluster munitions and thermobaric bombs, greatly increasing the likelihood of civilian casualties. Putin has no shortage of men and equipment that he will throw at Ukraine to install a neutralized vassal state. Body bags returning home do not particularly affect him. This is going to be a long drawn-out conflict. Civilians cross a river on a blown up bridge on Kyivs northern front on March 1, 2022. Credit: AFP Chinas response Of course, all of this has a bearing on China. Beijing continues to back Moscow, despite some apparent misgivings as the war threatens to be a bloody affair, and one that is roiling international energy markets. Beijing agrees that Ukraine is a sovereign state, but it also agrees that the European country has limited sovereignty because of choices it has made and Russias "legitimate security concerns." Beijing has clearly betrayed its oft-stated commitment to the inviolability of state sovereignty, something that all countries in Southeast Asia should note. Through speaking out of both sides of its mouth and through its actions, China has thoroughly embraced Russias doctrine of limited sovereignty. China also blames the war on Washington and Brussels with their Cold War mentality. It has promised to maintain normal trade with Russia and will not support international sanctions on Moscow. With Russia being forced out of the SWIFT financial network, Russia will become more dependent on the Chinese-run alternative, the Cross-Border Interbank Payment System, though it will force Russia to rapidly increase the amount of Chinese yuan that it uses in trade. The liberal international order The countries in Southeast Asia, meanwhile, must be prepared for a conflict in Ukraine that will last years. They need to understand that Russia is willing to raze entire cities so President Vladimir Putin does not have to humiliatingly seek a negotiated settlement. States have to be sober in their assessment that, having entered this conflict with maximalist aims, there is no off-ramp for Putin, who is far more likely to escalate the conflict than accept defeat. Which is why Southeast Asias equivocation is so baffling. The international response to Russias illegal invasion should remind everyone why President Vladimir Putin hated and feared the liberal international order so much, and reinforce why it is in the interest of Southeast Asian states to begin to act in ways that support their long-term security. Zachary Abuza is a professor at the National War College in Washington and an adjunct at Georgetown University. The views expressed here are his own and do not reflect the position of the U.S. Department of Defense, the National War College, Georgetown University or BenarNews. Nearly three dozen people, a majority of them Ukrainian, protest against Russias invasion of their homeland outside the Russian Embassy in Kuala Lumpur, Feb.28, 2022. Malaysia will bar a Russian oil tanker on a U.S. blacklist from docking at any of its ports in coming days, the transport ministry announced Tuesday, saying it did not want to breach Washingtons sanctions over Moscows invasion of Ukraine. European Union officials, meanwhile, urged non-aligned Malaysia to back a U.N. General Assembly resolution denouncing the Russian military strike and that is due for a vote soon. The Russian tanker Linda is named among several Russian assets sanctioned by Washington, in a United States Treasury document dated Feb. 22, 2022. The ship is scheduled to arrive at Malaysias Kuala Linggi International Port, on the west coast of Peninsular Malaysia on March 7, according to MarineTraffic, a website that uses satellite-based data to track movements of ships worldwide. The vessel called the Linda a.k.a. Lady M, cited in media reports published early this week, is allegedly included in sanctions by a foreign country against the Russian Federation, the Malaysian Transport Ministry said in a statement. MOT wishes to inform that the port operator of the vessels destination in Malaysia has made the decision to decline its request to dock at Kuala Linggi International Port (KLIP) in order not to violate any sanctions as it is the operators prerogative, the ministry said. The Linda is due to arrive at the Kuala Linggi port on Saturday, March 5, the statement said. The ministry will keep reviewing the situation for further action as may be required according to current government policies, the MOT added. The route of the Russian-flagged oil tanker Linda, which left a port in Oman on Dec. 12 and was more than 200 miles from Banda Aceh, Indonesia as of 12:30 a.m. (Malaysia time) , March 2, 2022. Credit: MarineTraffic.com Meanwhile several European Union (EU) ambassadors in Malaysia are urging similar action from the government during a vote in the U.N. General Assembly, likely on Wednesday, on a resolution condemning Russia for launching its invasion of Ukraine on Feb. 24. The French, German and other EU ambassadors said that Malaysia, as a non-aligned country, should back the resolution in its own interest. [M]alaysia, like Ukraine, is not a party to any alliance, which means that at the end of the day, the only defense and the ultimate defense of Malaysia lies in the respect of the principles that I just emulated; territorial integrity, sovereignty, political independence, the right to make their own choices, Roland Galharague, Frances ambassador to Malaysia, said at a press conference. Additionally, Malaysia had supported a similar resolution when Russia invaded Crimea in 2014, he said. Malaysia voted in favor of the resolutionand we think that this time, were not talking about Crimea, were talking about the whole of the country, the French envoy said. The political independence of Ukraine is being violated and the right of Ukraine to choose its security arrangements is being violated, he told reporters. Also present at the press conference were the Ukrainian and German ambassadors to Malaysia. In neighboring Thailand, 18 diplomats from Western nations, including Michael Heath, the U.S. Charge d' Affaires, met with the Thai Senates foreign relations committee on Monday to talk about Ukraine. Don Pramudwinai, Thailands foreign minister, said the cabinet discussed the Ukraine situation during its weekly meeting on Tuesday. Thailand has to adjust its approach because condemnation by several parties doesnt help. Thailand has to find a point which makes the situation go in the right direction. We have to brainstorm how to. We have to support dialogue and it must go on without stalemate, he said. Thailand is lucky to be a friend of all people in the world and we can talk. We have channels to talk with the EU, Russia, Ukraine and the U.S., but we have to make it flow naturally, no need to take action. But Kobsak Chutikul, a retired Thai envoy and advisor to the Senates foreign relations committee, did not flinch in stating that Russia was in the wrong as he urged Thailand to act accordingly. Thailand should take principled stand. At stake are not only the security concerns on the European continent, but an assault on the principles of sovereignty and territorial integrity that have held together a post-World War II and post-colonial world, he told BenarNews. The world will be a more dangerous place if we do not uphold sovereignty and territorial integrity of all nations. We cannot go back to a world divided into spheres of influence where there are no constraints on the powerful carving up territory. BenarNews is an RFA-affiliated online news service. Press Release March 2, 2022 Bong Go lauds achievements of the administration as PRRD's term nears end Senator Christopher "Bong" Go commended the achievements of the administration led by President Rodrigo Duterte, noting that such feats would not have been possible if not for the hard work and synergy demonstrated by government officials, particularly the Cabinet members, amid the crises and challenges that confronted the country. Go made the remarks during President Duterte's Talk to the People address on Monday, February 28. "Tama po ang Pangulo sa kanyang mga papuri para sa kanyang Cabinet officials. Kung hindi dahil sa kanilang maigting na kooperasyon at pagtutulungan, hindi po natin makakamit ang mga tagumpay ng administrasyong ito sa gitna ng anumang dagok o krisis na ating pinagdaanan," said Go. The senator also praised Duterte, stressing that the latter's strong leadership and political will were crucial to the success of the administration's efforts to provide a comfortable life for all Filipinos. "Kinokomendahan ko rin po ang Pangulo sa kanyang pamumuno. Napakahalaga po ng kanyang ipinakitang political will para magawa ng kanyang gabinete ang kanilang mga tungkulin at mapabilis ang kanilang trabaho," he added. During the briefing, Duterte lauded Department of Transportation Secretary Arthur Tugade, who reported on his department's initiatives and accomplishments. "Your passion for achievement has always been there," the President told Tugade. "I said I'm awed actually. I'm happy for the country that I got you," he added. Duterte likewise commended vaccine czar Secretary Carlito Galvez Jr., Department of Education Secretary Leonor Briones, and Department of Trade and Industry Secretary Ramon Lopez. As his term nears its end, Duterte remarked that it is important for the public to know that his Cabinet members have done their best for the sake of the country. "'That's what I can show the people -- that through you, we were able to deliver all these things that we see now," said the President. "At least, you have left something on your own. You have left a legacy," he added. Earlier, Go stated that Duterte did his best in serving the nation and that he will continue to do so till the end of his term, ensuring that no time is lost in serving the Filipino people. Go added that the President will continue to serve the Filipino people while he facilitates a smooth transition of power to the next elected top leader of the nation. "He will definitely continue to work until the last day of his term," emphasized the senator. Duterte was sworn in as the 16th President of the Philippines on June 30, 2016. Several say theyd volunteer to help Ukrainians fend off Russias invading forces. Sa-nguan Monlakhon, a retired soldier from the Thai Deep South, stands in line at the All Seasons Building, which houses the Ukrainian Embassy, in Bangkok, March 2, 2022. Sa-nguan Monlakhon, a former Thai soldier, despises bullies. That is why he wants to sign up to join the international brigade of Ukraines military, after the countrys president said he would welcome citizens from across the globe to join the Ukrainian peoples armed resistance against invading Russian forces. I want to join the force because of my democratic ideology. I hate bullying, the 44-year-old ex- soldier who was formerly stationed in Thailands troubled far-southern border region, told BenarNews, referring in this case to Russia as the bully. I have six years of experience fighting the [separatist] insurgency in the Deep South as a ranger lots of experience. To take over the former territory of the USSR is a declaration of war that no one agrees with. Sa-nguan is among scores of Thai citizens who have phoned the Ukrainian Embassy in Bangkok, including around 40 who have shown up there to express interest in volunteering to join the former Soviet republics armed resistance against the invasion, according to an embassy official. Sa-nguan, a native of Nong Bualampoo province in northeastern Thailand, quit his combat job 10 years ago because he had young children and his wife was worried for his safety. Now Im single again. So I came here to apply for a position, he said, referring to standing in line outside the Ukrainian embassy to sign up to fight alongside the Ukrainian army. However, the Thai government is perturbed by this kind of show of solidarity with Ukraine because it is concerned about its own citizens safety. There is a lot of concern if there will be Thai people traveling to fight in Ukraine. [We are] afraid they will be harmed, [in] which [case] we have to take care of them, Tanee Sangrat, spokesman for the Thai foreign ministry, told BenarNews, an RFA-affiliated online news service. Hundreds of Thai citizens have also sent the embassy emails to apply to sign up for the international section of Ukraines territorial armed forces, according to a Facebook group created about the endeavor. This was after the Ukrainian Embassy here posted a notice on its premises appealing to foreign volunteers to enlist in the international legion of the territorial defense force. Before it was taken down, the sign said all volunteers with military experience who want to join the defense of Ukraine, Europe and world can come fight side by side with the Ukrainians . On Feb. 27, three days after Russia launched the invasion, Ukrainian President Volodymyr Zelenskyy said that any world citizen who wanted to join the fight against an unjustified criminal and cynical intrusion was welcome in Ukraine, according to a statement from the Ukraine Crisis Media Center that cited the countrys Ministry of Defense. A Thai official working at the Ukrainian Embassy in Thailand said there were many inquiries about the embassy notice. As many as a hundred called in about it Wednesday, the official at the embassy told BenarNews on the condition of anonymity as she was concerned for her safety. The embassy source said there were no details on how applicants should go about arranging their trip to Ukraine. The Embassy does not know the details about qualification, compensation, or schedule because no detailed directions are available yet, she said. Initially, we asked applicants to submit a passport copy and their CV [curriculum vitae]. If they could eventually go, they would have to pay about U.S. $1,000 for the journey. Not everyone wants to fight, though, because participating in a war is a dangerous proposition, and, some believe, morally wrong. For instance, in Ukraine, the Russian attack has killed more than 2,000 civilians and destroyed hospitals, kindergartens and homes, according to the countrys emergency service, news agencies reported. Among the casualties were 21 dead children and 55 wounded ones, according to Ukraines ombudswoman, Reuters reported. On the other side, Moscow says nearly 500 Russian troops have been killed during the invasion of Ukraine, Agence France-Presse reported. A Thai man who wished only to be identified as M. for security reasons, said he was applying to serve in Ukraine, but in a humanitarian capacity. He said he had had taken a few military training courses but had never enlisted and would never take up arms. I feel pity of the people there. Ukrainian people have to pay for the price of the governments, M. told BenarNews. They dont deserve this. I want to help them with humanitarian work. He acknowledged, though, that his family is worried about his plan and does not want him to take risks. If I make it [through the crisis] I will take it as a good change in my life, he said. If not, I take the risk of becoming a prisoner of war. BenarNews is an RFA-affiliated online news service. As hundreds of Chinese nationals tried to get evacuated from Ukraine on the seventh day of the Russian invasion, one Chinese national living in Odessa who turned citizen journalist when the war started said he won't be leaving any time soon. Artificial intelligence expert Wang Jixian started posted his first-hand accounts of the war, including seeing a friend shot by invading Russian troops, and parents trying to hold back tanks with their bare hands. But his outspoken videos cursing out Russian troops were out of step with the Chinese Communist Party (CCP)'s official stance on the Russian invasion, and have been deleted or blocked from social media platforms in China by government censors. He has also been the target of online abuse from Little Pinks, an online army of troll-commentators who enforce the CCP line on China's tightly controlled internet. "I'm not really thinking about Ukraine, but that my company is here, and my investment is here," Wang told RFA, when asked about the accusations that he had "betrayed China," and is "a lackey of the United States." "Don't come and burn down my house and kill my neighbors," Wang said. "There's little girl who lives near me ... and an uncle who walks the dog downstairs and buys groceries every day. They don't deserve to die." "Before the war, people worked in hair salons and restaurants, and then they went out of their way [to defend themselves]. That's what I saw," he said. He said he won't be leaving. "I don't want to die. I want to live, but the tanks are coming." 'I think he's a hero' Wang said he hadn't previously held a particularly good opinion of president Volodymyr Zelensky or his government, whom he later praises in his videos. "Before this war started, I was very annoyed by Zelensky, and ... there were a lot of things I was dissatisfied with," he said. "But when the troops and the tanks were here, in the cities, I saw a president who said 'I'm your president and I'm here for you.'" "I think he's a hero, and so do my neighbors." Wang said many Chinese nationals are having trouble leaving, even if they want to. "I'll tell you what evacuation is like," he said. "We got a message from the embassy telling us what time to assemble in Kyiv, but , a friend of mine was at the Azov camp, which had just been bombed: the bridge has been bombed, the ground bombed and the highway broken up, and he didn't have a car, so how was he supposed to get there?" "I also have a buddy in Kharkov, but he would be able to get out of there if you gave him a tank," Wang said. Wang's claims were backed up by messages posted in recent days to a WeChat group of more than 250 Chinese nationals stranded in Ukraine, all of whom are trying to find a way to leave. Wang said he plans to hang on in Odessa and keep filming the war, despite the death threats coming from his own compatriots. "I'm staying here on this battlefield, with a visible, tangible enemy," Wang said. "On that other battlefield, I can't see where my enemies are, they are all people I don't know, and they want to kill me, or settle accounts with me afterwards?" "I'm surrounded by tanks right now, so how would I be afraid of them?" Russia's Chinese mouthpiece Renmin University journalism graduate Lu Nan, who recently signed a letter condemning the Russian invasion, said Chinese state media have been using a lot of content from Russian media reports. "For example, footage of Russian and Ukrainian soldiers working together to protect the Chernobyl nuclear power plant," Lu said. "Official [Chinese] media have pretty much become the mouthpiece of the Russian media." He said the CCP's shadowy "public opinion management" operations were encouraging pro-Russian comments on social media, creating a general expectation that Russia will win the war. "They only allow one voice to exist, so all of the comments are supportive of Putin, and least on the surface, which is a result of [the CCP's] taking sides," Lu said. "No dissenting voices are allowed to appear." Journalist Zhang Feng said Wang's videos have been blocked in China because the CCP doesn't want its people to see the true situation on the ground. "A lot of websites have been deleting [posts] on this topic and they are dampening [reports and commentary] on social media, purely to make sure that Chinese people can't see how Ukraine is fighting and winning, for example, civilians beating back tanks." "That kind of thing would have a huge impact in China, and they want to avoid popularizing those values," Zheng said. Repeated calls to the Chinese embassy in Kyiv and to the consulate general in Odessa went unconnected on . Bankrolling Russia The Cyberspace Administration of China, which is in charge of controlling online content in China, hadn't responded to a request for comment by the time of writing. Current affairs commentator Si Ling said China had likely been taken aback by the resistance to the Russian invasion, and could be reappraising its economic ties with the two nations. "China was likely hoping that ... Russia will sell Ukraine's important strategic resources to China at a lower price," Si told RFA. "Ukraine is very concerned about China ... because the Chinese government has consistently refused to condemn the Russian invasion." He said that now looks unlikely. "The idea that Ukraine can be quickly annexed by Russia has now been completely shattered," Si said. "It may be difficult to achieve good trade cooperation between China and Ukraine in future, and it's very unlikely that Ukraine will sell so much grain to China ... or at quite such mutually beneficial prices." Joseph Cheng, former politics professor at Hong Kong's City University, said Beijing could also start bankrolling Russia. "China claims to have US$3 trillion in foreign exchange reserves, and I believe there will be no problem with lending to Russia," Cheng said, adding that the last oil and gas supply contract came amid international sanctions after Russia invaded Crimea in 2014. "Russia lowered its asking price under the international situation, so I believe China will also look for similar opportunities this time around," Cheng said. China is a major buyer of Ukrainian corn, barley and sunflower oil, with Ukrainian imports accounting for nearly 30 percent of total corn imports in 2021, according to Chinese customs figures. Translated and edited by Luisetta Mudie. Pyongyang told party members to be ready to mobilize if World War III breaks out. A man rests near the Monument to the Foundation of the Workers' Party in Pyongyang, North Korea, in this file photo. North Korean authorities waited days to tell the nation about Russias invasion of Ukraine, first informing only members of the ruling Korean Workers Party in private meetings, who later spread the word, government officials told RFA. In North Koreas one-party state, membership in the Workers Party is reserved for the privileged or for exemplary soldiers who complete long mandatory stints in the armed forces. The Russian military began its large-scale invasion of Ukraine on Feb. 24, but it wasnt until two days later that Pyongyang told the party members. Yesterday, each regional party committee in the province informed all the party members that our strong ally Russia was at war, an official from the northwestern province of North Pyongan told RFAs Korean Service Feb. 27. International relations are strained with Russia at war, so the regional party committee demanded that everyone be ready to be mobilized at all times, the source said. The Soviet Union helped establish North Korea in 1948 after occupying the northern half of the Korean peninsula following Japans defeat in World War II, installing as leader the grandfather of current leader Kim Jong Un. Under Vladimir Putin, Russia moved in 2000 to revitalize ties with Pyongyang that had fallen off with the USSRs collapse. The central party leaders delivered the Ukraine news to each provincial party committee, ordering them to tell party members at their weekly meeting, where they confess political errors and reaffirm their commitment to be loyal to the country and its leaders. The news came privately during self-criticism on Saturday, said the source. The party members were told to be ready to mobilize at any time. The party members were not surprised, but still wondered why the authorities were keeping news of the invasion private, according to the source. The party members, of course, already knew from their Chinese acquaintances that war had begun, but they were more interested in what caused Russia to invade Ukraine, the source said. After the news was broken to party members in the northeastern province of North Hamgyong, it began spreading rapidly among the public, a resident there told RFA. They not only stated that Russia is at war, they also ordered us to be prepared to enter into war immediately under any circumstances, said the second source. In response, some residents showed a radical reaction, saying they wish that war would break out and this disgusting system we are living under would come to an end, the second source said. The second source said that some residents recognize the hypocrisy of the government siding with Russia while it invades an independent country. The authorities are always quick to criticize the United States as an aggressor, repeatedly asserting the independence of Korea, and the U.S. interference in our internal affairs, the second source said, referring to Washingtons military presence in South Korea, which North Korea considers to be an occupation of its sovereign territory. That is why they are watching the governments stance on the Russian invasion of Ukraine. The state-run Korea Central News Agency (KCNA) reported Monday that a spokesperson for North Koreas Ministry of Foreign Affairs blamed the U.S. and other Western countries for war breaking out in Ukraine. The U.S. and the West, in defiance of Russia's reasonable and just demand to provide it with legal guarantee for security, have systematically undermined the security environment of Europe by becoming more blatant in their attempts to deploy attack weapon system [sic] while defiantly pursuing NATO's eastward expansion, the spokesperson said according to KCNAs English version of the report. Having devastated Iraq, Afghanistan and Libya, [they] are mouthing phrases about respect for sovereignty and territorial integrity over the Ukrainian situation which was detonated by themselves. That does not stand to reason at all, the spokesperson said. Though it was the first official statement on Ukraine by Pyongyang, two days earlier a commentary published on the website of the Ministry of Foreign Affairs blamed Washington and its allies for high-handedness and arbitrariness that are shaking international peace and stability at the basis, as rendered in the English version of the commentary. Penned by Researcher Ri Ji Song, its said that the U.S. was disregarding Russias demands for security and unilaterally expanding NATO to cause an imbalance of military power in Europe. The U.S embellishes its own interference in internal affairs of others as righteous for peace and stability of the world, but it denounces for no good reason self-defensive measures taken by other countries to ensure their own national security as injustice and provocation, wrote Ri. Translated by Claire Lee. Written in English by Eugene Whong. Analysts say the moves will deprive the regime of money it uses to repress its people. An exodus by international energy companies in response to concerns over repressive military rule in Myanmar, coupled with EU sanctions on a key junta-controlled oil and gas firm, is expected to reduce the regimes tax revenue to a trickle and threaten its grasp on power. Thirteen months to the day that the military seized power from Myanmars democratically elected National League for Democracy (NLD) in a Feb. 1, 2021, coup, the country is facing an existential crisis, observers said Tuesday. Authorities have arrested more than 9,430 people and killed nearly 1,590 mostly while cracking down on peaceful anti-coup protests. The junta, meanwhile, has ignored calls to end violence in the country, prompting condemnation and sanctions from the global community. In addition to the general turmoil, junta mismanagement has left Myanmars economy in shambles and foreign investment is flowing out of the country. Since December, five major players in the countrys key energy sector have announced their departure, including Frances Total, U.S.-based Chevron, Australias Woodside, Japans Mitsubishi and Malaysias Petronas. And on Feb. 21, the EU announced it is adding the junta-controlled Myanmar Oil and Gas Enterprise (MOGE) to its sanctions list, citing the situation in the country. Speaking to RFAs Myanmar Service on Tuesday, Soe Thura Tun, the minister of power and energy for the shadow National Unity Government (NUG), said the developments of the last two months in Myanmars energy sector are sure to have a devastating impact on the juntas tax revenue, which accounts for its main source of foreign income. Since March last year, NUG has put pressure on these companies not to pay the junta. I have met with diplomats several times since then and talked about this matter and now its coming into fruition, he said. The legitimacy of a government and a parliament supported by our people has risen while the legitimacy of the military junta is falling. It certainly strengthens the movement that is trying to establish a federal democracy. Shortly after the coup last year, the group Justice for Myanmar said that the junta received about U.S. $1.5 billion in foreign revenue from the oil and gas industry between 2020 and 2021. The military is said to be using this money to buy weapons to crack down on pro-democracy civilians. In a statement following the EU sanctions announcement last week, Justice for Myanmar applauded the decision as a historic victory for the people of Myanmar and those around the world who are campaigning to cut the junta off from millions of dollars in tax revenue. Ko Ye, spokesman for the Blood Money Campaign, which seeks to shut down junta access to foreign income and international business, told RFA that the EU sanctions on MOGE will have serious economic and political consequences. Its a fact that MOGE is the biggest foreign exchange earner. With that money, the military bought weapons, and we have now made it impossible for anyone to feed MOGE, he said. The junta can do little without foreign income. Cutting off the main cash flow into the juntas coffers will surely hurt it politically and financially. A signboard for TotalEnergies EP Myanmar is seen past a shuttered gate in Yangon, Jan. 22, 2022. AFP Filling the gap Junta Deputy Information Minister Maj. Gen. Zaw Min Tun told RFA on Tuesday that the regime is in talks with other large companies to replace those that have announced they will depart. We have other companies that want to work here. There are Thai companies who want to step in where Chevron and Total operated and we are also talking to other companies, he said. The oil and gas industry is crucial for every country. So, what we can say is that we will continue to work with those who want to work with us, choosing the best possible way for Myanmar. We, MOGE, have specific plans to continue. But an economist in Myanmar, who spoke on condition of anonymity, citing fear of reprisal, told RFA that the hits to the sector are likely to have a damaging effect on the juntas revenue. The junta will of course try to replace it, but the attempts to do so will not work immediately because theres a lot of work to be done [to fill the gap], he said. According to foreign media reports, Thai government subsidiary PTT Exploration and Production Public Co., Ltd., (PTTEP) has plans to immediately take over operations at the Yadana gas project in Tanintharyi region when Total and Chevron depart. Vicky Bowman, the director of the Myanmar Center for Responsible Business, told RFA it is unclear how large of an effect the EU sanctions on MOGE will have, but noted that they will not apply to companies such as PTTEP. However, she said that there are no plans to replace exploration in the A-6 gas field off the coast of western Myanmars Rakhine state, where Total and Woodside had operated until recently. I think the most significant effect is that the Myanmar regimes gas revenues may be lower than before, as there are no investors yet to fill in the withdrawal from the A-6 offshore gas field, she said. Natural gas will not generate any more revenue in the future [until new investors are found]. While the five energy companies have left or are planning to leave Myanmar, PTTEP, South Koreas POSCO, Indias ONGC, Japans Nippon Oil and Chinas state-owned CNPC are still operating in the country. Reported by RFAs Myanmar Service. Translated by Khin Maung Nyane. Written in English by Joshua Lipes. This is proof of the effort to eradicate Muslim traditions in Xinjiang, a Uyghur exile says. Children play soccer in front of a gate with a mural depicting Uyghur musicians at the International Grand Bazaar in Urumqi in northwestern China's Xinjiang region, as seen during a government organized trip for foreign journalists, April 21, 2021. The Chinese governments move to shut down more than 150 Uyghur cultural research and language organizations is another indication of the cultural eradication of the mostly Muslim community, those once involved in the organizations and Uyghur artists said. The Civil Affairs Bureau of the Xinjiang Uyghur Autonomous Region (XUAR) on Feb. 22 issued a notice of revocation of registration certificates and seals of the legal representatives of social organizations, according to Chinese media reports published and information on the websites of the Xinjiang Production and Construction Corps and the Urumqi (in Chinese, Wulumuqi) municipal government. The list issued by the bureau includes 160 organizations devoted to researching traditional Uyghur culture and to the teaching of foreign languages, including the Uyghur Classical Literature and Muqam Research Association, Dolan Farmer Painters Association, Atlan Vocational Training School, Intil Language School and Miraj Vocational Training School. This policy of elimination the Chinese government is carrying out or, in its own words, this war on terror is a war against the Uyghurs, said Kasimjan Abdurehim, who founded the Atlan Vocational Training School. This is proof, he added. We can see the cancellation, the elimination, of these Uyghur-run schools and organizations on the list as one small piece of evidence that the policies of the Chinese government continue to operate at ever-new highs. Kasimjan, who now lives in the United States, pointed out that most of the social organizations, research centers and schools on the list were founded by Uyghurs. He said the campaign to close Uyghur cultural institutions began at least four years ago. As part of this process, theyve already used all sorts of pretexts to deal with the leaders of these schools and organizations, he said. Today, were seeing the results of this in this list. The issuance of the list also makes clear that the new Xinjiang Communist Party Secretary Ma Xingrui will follow the same path as previous Chinese leaders in the region concerning the repression of the Uyghurs, he said. Authorities had already revoked the certification of the vocational school, registered in 2013, and the separate Atlan Language School, registered in 2006, Kasimjan said. The Atlan School, which taught foreign languages and computer programming to Uyghur youths, had branches in different prefectures across Xinjiang, he said. More than 100,000 students took classes from 2006 to 2017. At the time, authorities said it was because Kasimjan, the schools legal representative, left the region to live with his family in the U.S. At the end of 2017, after I came to the United States, it was the language training school that [the authorities] said would have its registration revoked if the legal representative didnt come back and show himself, Kasimjan said. Its managed directly by the Urumqi Municipal Department of Education [which] gave the school written permission to operate. The recent regionwide deregistration announcement that lists the two schools was only a formality, he added. One piece of clear evidence China has repressed the Uyghurs and other Turkic minorities in Xinjiang through forced labor, forced displacement and cultural obliteration. Authorities have purged Uyghur society of intellectuals, prominent businessmen, and cultural and religious figures, imprisoning many of them in a vast network of internment camps, as part of a campaign, purportedly, to prevent religious extremism and terrorist activities. The U.S. Congress and the parliaments of other Western countries have declared that such actions constitute genocide and crimes against humanity. The inclusion of the Uyghur Classical Literature and Muqam Research Society on the list of deregistered organizations caught the attention of Uyghur musicians who live in exile. The European Uyghur Ensemble has performed Uyghur muqam, a musical mode and set of melodic formulas that guide improvisation and composition in Uyghur music, and other repertoires in countries across Europe. Ensemble members Kamil Abbas, based in the Netherlands, and Muhtar Abdukerim Janbaz, based in Sweden, denounced the closure of the Muqam Research Society as one piece of clear evidence of the ongoing elimination of Uyghur culture. Now, Ive heard this news that they have shut down this great research society, Abbas said. Im really shocked to hear this. How can they look at something so important and just eliminate it? Abbas criticized the authorities elimination of cultural relics like the Twelve Muqam, a quintessential Uyghur work comprising 12 sets of ancient music that include sung poetry, stories, and dance, and is protected internationally. He noted that Uyghurs have made significant contributions to the development of muqam, which was listed as a UNESCO Intangible Cultural Heritage in 2005, and recalled how he performed it as a violinist while employed in the XUAR Opera Troupe in Urumqi in the 1980s and 1990s. Uyghur artists have worked hard to develop muqam, Abbas said. Muhtar Abdukerim Janbaz, who learned Uyghur folk music from the playing of master Abdurehim Heyit, and is a self-taught performer of muqam, also criticized the closure of institutions devoted to Uyghur classical music research, such as the Muqam Research Society, as a great loss for Uyghur culture. The disappearance of a place where muqam can be researched, negotiated, and presented to the descendants, of a place where standards can be preserved, is unfortunate and distressing for our people and, we can say, for the world, he said. Translated by RFAs Uyghur Service. Written in English by Roseanne Gerin. Guterres says he expects access to investigate claims of abuse of Muslim Uyghurs United Nations Secretary General Antonio Guterres speaks during the 11th emergency special session of the 193-member U.N. General Assembly on Russia's invasion of Ukraine, at the United Nations Headquarters in Manhattan, New York City, New York, U.S. February 28, 2022 UPDATED at 11:26 A.M. ET on 2022-03-02 U.N. Secretary-General Antonio Guterres on Monday again called on China to allow outside officials to visit Xinjiang to observe how the government is treating Uyghur Muslims there. I recently returned from a visit to China, where I expressed my expectation that the current discussions will allow for a credible visit by the high commissioner to China, including Xinjiang Autonomous Region, Guterres said during his opening remarks on the first day of the 49th session of the Human Rights Council. High Commissioner Michelle Bachelet is scheduled to update the council on March 7 on her attempts to ascertain the situation Xinjiang, a spokesperson from her office told Voice of America (VOA). China has drawn international condemnation for its treatment of the Muslim community, including well-documented allegations that hundreds of thousands of Uyghurs have been detained in concentration camps and forced to work at Chinese factories. Various legislative bodies have accused China of committing a genocide against Uyghurs in Xinjiang. China disputes the charge, claiming the camps are vocational training centers designed to expand economic opportunities. It defends its policies by arguing they are related to its counterterrorism efforts. In an address to the Human Rights Council, U.S. Secretary of State Antony Blinken said that in China, "the government continues to commit genocide and crimes against humanity in Xinjiang against predominantly Muslim Uyghurs and other minority groups." He also urged Bachelet to release her report on the situation there without delay. China stuck to its long-held stance that accusations of genocide and other rights abuses against Uyghurs in Xinjiang were lies. The door of Xinjiang is open, and we welcome people from all countries to visit Xinjiang and have exchanges, Chinas Foreign Minister Wang Yi said while addressing the session over video. The so-called genocide, forced labor and religious repression, are lies that are completely fabricated. Dolkun Isa, president of the World Uyghur Congress, a Munich-based Uyghur rights activist group, commended Guterres for urging China to allow Bachelet to visit Xinjiang. But he said Wang Yis comments were insincere. Wang Yi is only paying lip service to the mounting international pressure over Chinas ongoing genocide of Uyghurs entering their fifth year, Dolkun Isa told RFAs Uyghur Service. China has continued to play games to intentionally delay a meaningful visit by the high commissioner since 2019. Only an unconditional and unfettered visit to all the concentration camps, forced labor camps, prisons, survivors and victims of Uyghur families in East Turkestan by the high commissioner is meaningful and credible, he said, using the name for Xinjiang favored by those who believe it should be independent from China. VOA reported that Uyghur rights groups doubted the situation in Xinjiang would change, even if U.N. officials are allowed to visit. Abdulhakim Idris, the executive director for the Washington-based Center for Uyghur Studies, told VOA that Bachelet has not pressed the Uyghur human rights situation forcefully enough since coming to office in September 2018. Idris said that sources told him that she disregarded documents and reports detailing the situation in China. Every year Uyghurs hoped that on behalf of the U.N., Bachelet would say something about the Uyghurs dire human rights situation, Idris told VOA. All these years, Bachelet had been careful not to anger China, thats why she has been delaying this urgent report. Bachelets office disputed the accusation. Ever since allegations of human rights violations in Xinjiang emerged, the U.N. Human Rights Office has been consistently gathering, documenting and analyzing the information that has come to our attention, the office told VOA. The office also told VOA that it has been working to ensure a Xinjiang visit would not be superficial. At the opening of the Human Rights Council last September in Geneva, Bachelet said that she regrets not making progress on efforts to seek meaningful access to the Xinjiang Uyghur Autonomous Region. "In the meantime, my office is finalizing its assessment of the available information on allegations of serious human rights violations in that region, with a view to making it public, she said. Translated by Alim Seytoff for RFA's Uyghur Service. Written in English by Eugene Whong. CLARIFICATION: The updated version adds comments by U.S. Secretary of State Antony Blinken. Some see parallels in the conflict to Vietnams relationship with China. A man reads a Vietnamese newspaper featuring front-page coverage of the Russian invasion of Ukraine, at a stall in Vietnam's capital Hanoi, Feb. 25, 2022. Two groups of Vietnamese scholars, attorneys, and representatives from civil society organizations voiced support for Ukraine in its fight against Russias invading army, striking a markedly different tone than their government, which has largely been silent on the war. In a letter to Nataliya Zhynkina, Ukraines top diplomat in Vietnam, three dozen Vietnamese declared themselves to be freedom lovers and urged Ukrainians to resist Russia in defense of their young democracy, which emerged from an authoritarian past. Among the signatories were members of the Civil Society Forum, Nguyen Trong Vinh Club, Le Hieu Dang Club, Lap Quyen Dan, and Vietnam Independent Writers Initiative. They noted that while Vietnam is a communist country, many Vietnamese believe that independence and democracy values that Ukrainians are protecting are important. The letter and a second one a group of attorneys wrote to Russia President Vladimir Putin circulated among closed groups on Facebook. They stand in sharp contrast to the Vietnamese governments overarching passivity to the conflict. As Russias closest partner and ally in Southeast Asia, Vietnam issued a tepid call for restraint, after the invasion, although state media have been extensively covering the conflict, without much of their usual pro-Russia bias. News reports include quotes from Ukrainian President Volodymyr Zelenskyy and points of view of both nations and their allies. Mac Van Trang, an expert on sociopolitical issues in Vietnam, told RFA that he had signed the letter to Zhynkina because Vietnam can relate to Ukraines plight: a small country defending itself against a much larger one. China occupied and colonized Vietnam for years and initiated the 1979 war between the two nations. China also took Vietnams Paracel Islands and Johnson Reef in the South China Sea from Vietnam, Trang noted. Therefore, when witnessing Russia, led by Putin, threatening, harassing and bringing tanks, cannons, and missiles to invade Ukraine in order to establish a puppet government and turn Ukraine into its vassal state, we found this war to be unjust and meaningless, he said. As they are bravely defending their sovereignty, independence and freedom, the government and people of Ukraine are great examples for us to admire and learn from, he added. We have to support them. The group of lawyers in Vietnam in their open letter to Putin also called for an end to what they said was an unjust war. Attorney Tran Dai Lam told RFA that the great losses and horrible consequences of war that the Vietnamese had experienced during past conflicts prompted him to sign the letter. Our Vietnamese people have been through a lot of wars and along with them were death, economic destruction, and consequences for the future, he said. As a result, I dont want to see Ukrainian and Russian people fire at each other. Ukrainian children are innocent, and they should not bear the devastating consequences of war like what we, Vietnamese people, had experienced, he said. By sending troops into Ukraine, Russia breached international law, Lam said. He said he feared Vietnam would face a similar threat from China in the future. In my viewpoint, Russia invades Ukraine, and this is an unjust war, he said. Russia has violated international laws and conventions. I strongly denounce Russias act of invasion of Ukraine. Stupid and narrow-minded The two letters also criticized Vietnamese who support Putins actions in Ukraine. Given invasion threats from China, as Vietnamese people, they should have empathized with Ukrainian people instead of supporting Putins invasion, Trang said about the pro-Russia stance of several Vietnamese groups. How stupid and narrow-minded they are! One day when China attacks or invades part of our waters or islands in the East Sea [South China Sea], what basis and arguments could we then use to talk about our legitimate protection of our fatherland? Vietnamese in general seem split about Russias actions. Huong Giang, who is living in Russia, told RFA that war between Russia and Ukraine broke out because of the countrys different viewpoints. In general, I dont want that because the two nations are at war with one another, and the people in the crossfire will suffer damages, she said. But Trung Tho, who lives in Ha Tinh province, called Russia a democratic, peaceful nation and until now a defender of peace. Ukraine is so close to Russia but takes sides with the USA to oppose Russia, he said. How can Ukraine be right? The fact that Ukraine lets the USA and Western nations deploy weapons is clearly to destroy Russia. Netizen Nguyen Le Minh, who also supports Russia and Putin, wrote on his Facebook account that Putin is aggressive, its OK. Russia cannot accept a neighboring country that joins other nations in turning its back on Russia, retired Vietnamese General Nguyen Thanh Tuan wrote on Facebook. Russia cannot be betrayed many times, so it needs to take measures prevent and eliminate the risk of bringing war to the country, he said. Major General Le Van Cuong, former director of the Institute of Strategy and Science at Vietnams Ministry of Public Security, told Nghe An newspaper on Monday that Putins actions in Ukraine did not amount to an invasion. President Putin announced first that Russia was not invading, was not taking any land from Ukraine; second, that Russia was not attacking the Ukrainian people because Ukrainians and Russians are the same people, sharing the same ancestors and blood, he said. I believe such an announcement is reasonable and that Putin has done exactly what he said. Meanwhile, Vietnams major airlines are ready to repatriate citizens on flights from most countries bordering Ukraine, after the Civil Aviation Authority of Vietnam (CAAV) requested on Monday that they submit plans to bring back Vietnamese citizens living and working in the Eastern European nation. Three major carriers Vietnam Airlines, VietJet Air, and Bamboo Airways have issued plans to fly to six destinations to pick up Vietnamese citizens: Warsaw, Poland; Bucharest, Romania; Budapest, Hungary; Bratislava, Slovakia; Minsk, Belarus; and Moscow. According to the government, about 7,000 Vietnamese citizens and legal entities live and operate in Ukraine. Reported by RFAs Vietnamese Service. Translated by Anna Vu. Written in English by Roseanne Gerin. The European Union has unveiled a proposal to ban Russian oil imports by the end of the year, impose more banking sanctions against Moscow, and cut off some Russian broadcasters in Europe saying that the Kremlin has to pay dearly for its aggression Ukraine. With Russia intensifying its attacks on eastern Ukraine on May 4, the EU said that its sixth round of sanctions against Moscow will comprise phasing out the importation of Russian crude and refined oil products by the end of the year despite pushback from some of the bloc's members, including Slovakia and Hungary. "We will phase out Russian supply of crude oil within six months and refined products by the end of the year," the head of the bloc's executive European Commission, Ursula von der Leyen, told the European Parliament in Strasbourg. Live Briefing: Russia's Invasion Of Ukraine RFE/RL's Live Briefing gives you all of the major developments on Russia's invasion, how Kyiv is fighting back, the plight of civilians, and Western reaction. For all of RFE/RL's coverage of the war, click here. "This will be a complete import ban on all Russian oil, seaborne and pipeline, crude and refined," she said, adding that "[Russian President Vladimir] Putin must pay a high price for his brutal aggression." Von der Leyen, however, conceded that getting unanimity on oil sanctions will not be easy. The commission chief, however, conceded that getting unanimity on oil sanctions will not be easy. The measures require approval from all 27 EU countries to take effect and soon after von der Leyen's announcement, Hungary, Slovakia, and Bulgaria announced that they would seek exemptions from the embargo voicing concerns about energy security. Hungary and Slovakia are heavily dependent on Russian energy imports. The Czech Republic, meanwhile, said it would seek a temporary exemption period of two or three years in order for pipeline capacities to be increased. Ukrainian Foreign Minister Dmytro Kuleba said EU countries blocking an oil embargo would be "complicit" in Russia's crimes in Ukraine. Whatever their arguments are, if they oppose (the) oil embargo, it means one thing: they play on the Russian side. They share responsibility for everything Russia does in Ukraine, full stop, Kuleba said in a video posted on Twitter. Von der Leyen also proposed that Sberbank, Russias largest bank, and two other major banks be disconnected from the SWIFT international banking payment system. The EU will also ban three Russian state-owned broadcasters, she said, without naming the channels directly. "They will not be allowed to distribute their content anymore in the European Union, in whatever shape or form, be it on cable, via satellite, on the Internet or via smartphone apps," von der Leyen told EU lawmakers. According to a document seen by RFE/RL, the package also contains a list of 58 individuals sanctioned over Russia's military action in Ukraine that includes the Patriarch of Russia's Orthodox Church, a close ally of Putin's. Von der Leyen also proposed launching a recovery package for Ukraine to help it rebuild after the war. "This package should bring massive investment to meet the needs and the necessary reforms," von der Leyen said. "Eventually, it will pave the way for Ukraine's future inside the European Union." The European Union accounts for nearly a half of Russia's crude and refined oil products. But the Kremlin, in a first reaction to Brussels' announcement, put on a brave face, warning that the embargo is a "double-edged sword" and that EU consumers will pay the price. "The cost of these sanctions to the citizens of Europe will grow by the day," spokesman Dmitry Peskov said on May 4. Peskov said the Kremlin was looking at "various options" for its response to the new sanctions. In Washington, U.S. President Joe Biden said he was "open" to imposing more sanctions on Russia and would be discussing measures with allies from the Group of Seven (G7) leading industrialized nations in the coming days. On the battlefront, Moscow deployed 22 battalions near Izyum, an eastern city, in a bid to push into the Donbas region, the British Defense Ministry said in its daily bulletin on May 4, adding that Russia's apparent goal is capturing the cities of Kramatorsk and Severodonetsk in the east, "despite struggling to break through Ukrainian defenses." A Russian battalion usually consists of 700-800 soldiers. According to the British intelligence bulletin, capturing the two cities "would consolidate Russian military control" of northeastern Ukraine. In neighboring Belarus, the armed forces began "surprise" large-scale drills on May 4 to test their combat readiness, the Ukrainian Defense Ministry said. Mariupol Mayor Vadym Boychenko said there was "heavy fighting" at the Azovstal plant on May 4 and said city officials had lost contact with Ukrainian forces inside. Boychenko told Ukrainian television that Russian forces were attacking with heavy artillery, tanks, and warplanes, and said warships off the coast were also involved. Russian troops are on the territory of the plant, according to David Arakhamia, a member of the Ukrainian delegation that has held now-stalled peace talks with Russia. "Attempts to storm the plant continue for the second day. Russian troops are already on the territory of Azovstal," Arakhamia said, citing the commander of the Azov Regiment, which is defending the plant with other Ukrainian troops. He contradicted Boychenko, saying Ukrainian authorities have contact with the defenders at the plant. The commander announced the storming of the plant by Russian troops the day before and called again for the evacuation of civilians. Boychenko said on May 3 that more than 200 civilians were still holed up with fighters in the sprawling plant. In his video address, Kuleba denied that Azovstal was under Russian control. On May 4, Peskov denied Ukrainian reports that Russian troops had stormed the Avozstal steel plant soon after the latest group of civilians made it out of the sprawling complex. "There is no storming," Peskov told reporters, contradicting claims by Ukrainian soldiers inside the steelworks. "The order was publicly given by the supreme commander-in-chief to cancel the assault," Peskov said, referring to a statement Putin made on April 21 that called off a direct assault on Azovstal because it would result in too many Russian casualties. Instead, forces should seal off Azovstal so tightly that "even a fly can't get out," Putin said. With reporting by RFE/RL's Rikard Jozwiak, Reuters, AP, and AFP KYIV -- Russia and Ukraine will discuss a cease-fire at a second round of talks on March 3 as Russian military forces continue to press their bombardment of Kharkiv and lay siege to two Ukrainian ports. Live Briefing: Russia Invades Ukraine RFE/RL's Live Briefing gives you all of the major developments on Russia's invasion, how Kyiv is fighting back, the plight of civilians, and Western reaction. For all of RFE/RL's coverage of the war, click here. The second round of talks aimed at ending the fighting are to be held in the western Belarusian region of Brest, but there appeared to be little common ground between the two sides. Ukrainian President Volodymyr Zelenskiy told Reuters and CNN that Russia must stop bombing Ukrainian cities before meaningful talks on a cease-fire could start. Vladimir Medinsky, who is an aide to Russian President Vladimir Putin, said on March 2 that in addition to a cease-fire, the issue of a humanitarian corridor in Ukraine will also be discussed. The Ukrainian presidency confirmed its delegation was "on its way" to the venue. The plans for holding another round of talks came as Moscow's isolation deepened when most of the countries in the world lined up against it at the United Nations to demand it withdraw from Ukraine, and the prosecutor for the International Criminal Court (ICC) opened an investigation into possible war crimes. The nonbinding resolution, which "deplores" Russia's "aggression against Ukraine," was supported by 141 of the UN General Assembly's 193 members. Thirty-five members, including China, abstained, and five countries, including Russia, Syria, and Belarus, voted against the resolution. Meanwhile, Russia's Defense Ministry on March 2 gave its first casualty estimates since launching the unprovoked invasion. It said 498 of its soldiers have died since the war started last week. Ministry spokesman Igor Konashenkov also said in a video statement posted on Twitter that another 1,597 Russian soldiers had been wounded since February 24. The numbers could not be independently verified and there was no immediate comment from Ukraine, which has said Russia's casualty numbers are close to 6,000. According to figures released by Ukraine's General Staff on March 2, Russia had also lost 30 airplanes, 31 helicopters, and 211 tanks. Updated figures relating to Ukrainian troop losses were not released, although Ukraine recently placed the number in the hundreds. WATCH: Residents of Melitopol, a city in southern Ukraine, gathered to protest the arrival of Russian troops on March 2 as Moscow continues its military invasion for the seventh day. Russian forces continue to bombard Kharkiv and other Ukrainian cities, but Ukraine's armed forces say that in some areas of the country the tide has turned and its forces have gone on the offensive for the first time. As the war entered its seventh day on March 2, no major Ukrainian city had fallen, although experts have warned that Moscow appeared to be turning to devastating shelling of built-up areas before entering them. But the General Staff of the Ukrainian armed forces announced that in some areas Ukrainian troops "are beginning to seize the initiative from the Russian occupiers." "The enemy is trying to maintain the fighting capacity of their units, realizing that the 'easy walk' did not work," the General Staff said in a statement. "It tries to avoid direct encounters not only with the Ukrainian army, but also with civilians who block the movement of its columns. Russian propaganda ceases to operate in Ukraine and the 'liberators' realize that no one was ready to welcome them here." The UN human rights office said it has recorded 136 civilian deaths, and more than 870,000 people are estimated to have fled Ukraine, according to the UN refugee agency. Ukraine's State Emergency Service has said that more than 2,000 civilians died in the first week of the war. That figure has not been independently confirmed. U.S. Secretary of State Antony Blinken said the human costs of Russia's invasion of Ukraine were already staggering" as he announced plans to travel to Belgium, Poland, Moldova, and the Baltics to reaffirm Washington's support for Ukraine. Hundreds have been killed or wounded, and Russia has launched attacks on buildings and cities that "aren't military targets," he said. "The humanitarian consequences will only grow in the days ahead." He plans to assess the humanitarian situation in Poland, which has taken in about half the more than 870,000 people who have fled Ukraine. With fighting going on multiple fronts across the country, Britains Defense Ministry said Mariupol, a large port city on the Azov Sea, was encircled by Russian forces, while the status of another port, Kherson on the Black Sea, remained unclear. Russia claimed to have taken control of Kherson, which would make it the biggest city to fall yet in the invasion. But Pentagon spokesman John Kirby said it was "still a very contested fight" and the United States was "not in position to call it either way." Mariupol Mayor Vadym Boychenko said the attacks there had been relentless. "We cannot even take the wounded from the streets, from houses and apartments today, since the shelling does not stop," he was quoted by the Interfax news agency as saying. Speaking at a briefing, Kirby said Russian forces were advancing, but "we don't believe they are in the city center." There is "every indication that Mariupol will be defended," he said. Kirby said a convoy of hundreds of tanks and other vehicles appeared to be stalled roughly 25 kilometers from Kyiv and had made no real progress in the last couple of days. "We still assess that convoy, but more broadly speaking, the northern push by the Russians down towards the south towards Kyiv, remains stalled," Kirby said. In Kyiv, Mayor Vitali Klitschko said Russian troops had surrounded the Ukrainian capital and plan to strangle it through a blockade. Klitschko told Current Time on March 2 that Ukrainian troops continue to disrupt such attempts by the Russian troops and have been finding sabotage groups operating in Kyiv. "At this moment, our guys are returning a proper response to them. Even the groups that reach Kyiv's outskirts are being kicked several kilometers back, he said, adding that "we will do everything we can" to break any blockade. The Ukrainian military has control of the town of Makariv in the Kyiv region, said Valeriy Zaluzhniy, commander of the armed forces. The target of the heaviest Russian bombardments appeared to be the northeastern city of Kharkiv, where the city center was targeted by missile strikes. Regional Governor Oleh Synyehubov said on the morning of March 2 that at least 21 people had been killed and 112 wounded due to shelling over the previous 24 hours. On March 2, regional officials reported that Kharkiv's city council was struck by a missile, a day after the city's administration building was hit in an attack. Ukrainian President Zelenskiy described that attack as a "war crime," and in a new video released on March 2 said Russian forces wanted to "erase our country, erase us all." WATCH: Rescue operations were under way on March 2 in Irpin, near the Ukrainian capital, after an attack blamed on Russian forces hit a residential area: Synyehubov said that overnight air strikes had caused multiple fires but that Ukrainian forces continued to hold the city. "All attacks have been pushed back. The Russian enemy suffered heavy losses," Synyehubov was quoted by dpa as saying. Reports from Kharkiv said that Russian airborne troops had landed in the city on March 2 and that Russian forces attacked a military medical center. The Ukrainian Interior Ministry said apartment blocks had been damaged by shelling and that the regional headquarters of the national police and Karazin National University were targeted. "There is nowhere in Kharkiv where shells have not yet struck," Interior Ministry adviser Anton Herashchenko. WATCH: Russian soldiers have been seen looting grocery stores and banks in several Ukrainian cities. Security camera footage posted on social media showed Russian soldiers grabbing food and trying to steal a safe. In televised remarks on March 2, Russian Defense Ministry spokesman Igor Konashenkov said that "the Russian divisions of the armed forces have taken the regional center of Kherson under full control." However, an adviser to Zelenskiy disputed the claim, saying that street fighting was continuing as of midday on March 2. "The city has not fallen. Our side continues to defend," Oleksiy Arestovych said in a live-streamed presidential briefing. WATCH: A Ukrainian man was filmed taking back Ukrainian flags that had been confiscated by Russian troops in the southern city of Kherson on March 2, and then waving them in front of a row of Russian tanks parked on the central square. Early on March 2, the city council said much of Mariupol was without water and electricity as a result of massive shelling. The city is a key target of joint Russian and separatist forces from Ukraine's eastern Donetsk region. Russian forces also continue to mass outside the Ukrainian capital, Kyiv, where Russian missiles struck the city's television tower located near a Holocaust massacre site on March 2: At least five people were killed in that attack and more explosions were reported later that evening in Kyiv and surrounding areas. A massive convoy of artillery and armored vehicles that had extended more than 65 kilometers continues to position itself within striking distance of the capital in what Ukrainian officials see as an attempt to surround and take control of the country's largest city. Zelenskiy expressed outrage on Twitter that the Russian missile strike on the TV tower had struck so close to the Babyn Yar memorial center, which was dedicated just last year to mark the 80th anniversary of the infamous mass slaughter of Jews, Roma, Soviet prisoners of war, and others by the Nazis during World War II. Shortly after reports of the attacks, Zelenskiy spoke by phone with U.S. President Joe Biden. "The American leadership on anti-Russian sanctions and defense assistance to Ukraine was discussed. We must stop the aggressor as soon as possible. Thank you for your support!" Zelenskiy said on Twitter. A White House official said the two leaders spoke for about 30 minutes. During his first State of the Union address, delivered in Washington on March 1, Biden addressed Russian President Vladimir Putin's invasion of Ukraine at length. "Six days ago, Russia's Vladimir Putin sought to shake the foundations of the free world, thinking he could make it bend to his menacing ways," Biden said. "But he badly miscalculated. He thought he could roll into Ukraine and the world would roll over. Instead, he met a wall of strength he never imagined. He met the Ukrainian people." In an interview with Reuters and CNN on March 1, Zelenskiy said Russia must "first stop bombing people" before peace talks could make any headway. WATCH: There were emotional farewells at Kyiv's main train station as more people fled the Ukrainian capital. Emergency services reported that at least 10 people were killed in the attack, which came after dozens were killed by Russian shelling a day earlier. Moscow has repeatedly claimed that it is not targeting civilian areas during what it calls its "military operation" in Ukraine. On February 28, the office of the prosecutor of the ICC, the global criminal court, announced that it was launching an investigation into possible war crimes committed in Ukraine both before last week's invasion by Russia, which in 2014 illegally annexed Ukraine's Crimean Peninsula, and since the current invasion began on February 24. The court already has conducted a preliminary probe into crimes linked to the violent suppression of pro-European protests in Kyiv in 2013-14, as well as allegations of crimes in Crimea following its annexation by Russia. On March 1, Canada petitioned the ICC to probe alleged war crimes and crimes against humanity committed by Russian forces in Ukraine. "We are working with other ICC member states to take this significant action as a result of numerous allegations of the commission of serious international crimes in Ukraine by Russian forces," Canadian Foreign Minister Melanie Joly said in a statement. "The ICC has our full support and confidence. We call on Russia to cooperate with the court." With reporting by Reuters, AP, AFP, and dpa KALININGRAD, Russia -- Igor Pleshkov owns a concrete factory in this Russian Baltic Sea exclave encircled by European Union members Lithuania and Poland. As tensions burn red hot between Russia and the West over Moscows military invasion of Ukraine, he is worried. What will come next is hard to say, he shrugged. The situation is changing every minute -- for the worse. Like Pleshkovs factory, most businesses in the region of about 1 million people, depend on imports for raw materials, spare parts, and equipment. Residents are nervously watching the unfolding political situation and the alarming collapse of the value of ruble. What can we expect? Pleshkov said. It will be a catastrophe, complete collapse. Within a week, every housewife will be feeling it. Businesses are already feeling it now, he added. Since Moscows unprovoked attack on Ukraine, Western countries have imposed waves of unprecedented sanctions, including shutting some Russian banks out of the SWIFT financial-transactions system. Most European countries have closed their airspace to Russian planes. Flights from Kaliningrad to Moscow since February 27 have been flying over the Baltic Sea to the Leningrad region before turning sharply south. The new route has added about 40 minutes to the flying time, making it a two-hour journey. So far, prices have been stable, at about 2,600 rubles ($22) each way. But without government intervention that may not last, said Solomon Ginzburg, head of Regional Strategy, a local think tank. The flight time has increasedbecause of the northeastern bend, he said. That costs money. It is easy to calculate that ticket prices will rise 35 to 40 percent. In a video posted to Instagram on March 1, Kaliningrad Governor Anton Alikhanov attempted to head off such fears. If ticket prices rise, we have already spoken to the federal government, and we will ask for additional support so that tickets wont become significantly more expensive and will continue to be affordable, he said. 'I'll Have To Take The Loss' Passenger rail links between the exclave and the rest of Russia pass through Lithuania under a 2003 agreement with the EU. Lithuanian Prime Minister Ingrida Simonyte said on February 27 that no changes to that agreement were under consideration. Nonetheless, imports brought into the region by truck are already being affected. In fact, local businesspeople say, the region has been under economic pressure at least since January, when tensions flared between Belarus and neighboring Poland and Lithuania over a migrant crisis along their borders. Hundreds of trucks bound for Kaliningrad got hung up at the border, and the delays never eased up. In some places it is better and in others it is worse, said Leonid Stepanyuk, vice president of the DSB-Transport trucking firm. One of my trucks got through the border in five days, another in seven, and yet another in 10. The situation is best on the Russian-Latvian border, he added. It is worse on the Lithuanian-Belarusian border. A trucker who asked to be identified only as Sergei told RFE/RL that he had recently returned from Russia after spending 12 days at the Salcininkai-Benyakoni border crossing between Belarus and Lithuania. He spent the entire time living in his truck. Of course, it was hard, he said. I was able to buy food and I have a refrigerator in the truck. The Belarusians brought food -- they cook it at home and sell it in portions. You could ask them to bring you water too. Earlier, Id make the trip to Moscow about three times a month, he added. That is normal. This time it took me 20 days to go to [the western Russian city of] Bryansk and back. Pyotr, a Kaliningrad entrepreneur who asked to be identified only by his first name, imports furniture from Poland. For him, as the value of the ruble declines, each day is lost money. On February 28, the ruble declined from 19 Polish zloty to 30, costing him 360,000 rubles ($3,300). I have more than 40 orders of furniture sitting ready in Poland now, he told RFE/RLs North.Realities. They were supposed to be shipped last week, but now they are saying it left on [March 1]. The Poles refused to load it right way because they were waiting for their president to announce sanctions against Russia. They are in shock themselves -- just in one city there are 70 factories working almost exclusively for Russia. In the end, on March 1, I lost more money because of the exchange rate, he said. The furniture is all prepaid, so I have to sell it for the old price. I cant retroactively raise the prices. Ill have to take the loss. Suppliers 'Acting Emotionally' Analyst Ginzburg says that Kaliningrads dependence on imports makes it an economic target, saying the regions poultry farms are 90 percent dependent on eggs imported from the Netherlands and the United States while the agriculture sector is 80 percent dependent on imported seed. And what about Avtotor? he asked, mentioning the regions largest automobile producer, which employs more than 2,000 people directly and claims on its website to contribute a total of 30,000 jobs to the region. In my view, it will simply shut down. The company assembles cars for BMW, Kia, Hyundai, and foreign companies. Construction-sector companies complained to the website New Kaliningrad that suppliers in Lithuania, acting emotionally, have been refusing to accept orders from Russia. Concrete-plant owner Pleshkov has had similar experiences with his suppliers in Poland. Today they refused to ship spare parts from a warehouse in Poland, he said on March 1. They just informed us that they werent going to ship, even though everything is already paid for. He added that he has a front loader, also paid for, sitting in a warehouse in Belgium. It is being checked to see if it counts as dual-use equipment, he said. Written by Robert Coalson based on reporting from Kaliningrad by RFE/RL North.Realities correspondent Yulia Paramonova. Russian soldiers have been seen looting grocery stores and banks in several Ukrainian cities. Security camera footage posted on social media showed Russian soldiers grabbing food and trying to steal a safe. Ukrainian officials say that invading Russian soldiers are running out of fuel and were sent into Ukraine with only three days of rations, although that could not be independently verified. A Ukrainian man was filmed seizing back Ukrainian flags which had been confiscated by Russian troops in the southern city of Kherson on March 2, and then waving them in front of a row of Russian tanks parked on the central square. The show of defiance came amid disputed Russian claims it was now in full control of the city on the seventh day of their invasion of the Ukraine. In a video posted on social media voices of local residents can be heard chanting with the protester the traditional patriotic slogan Glory to Ukraine! Residents of Melitopol, a city in southern Ukraine, gathered to protest the arrival of Russian troops on March 2 as Moscow continues its military invasion for the seventh day. Shots can be heard in the background of an amateur video shot by a protester who says, "They are trying to intimidate us." The shots appear to be fired into the air by Russian forces in an attempt to disperse the protest, while demonstrators remain defiant. I do acting for the awards and CASH MONEY! Birthday girl Rebel Wilson's funniest and most inspiring quotes NTDI CEO Cedric Knight speaks as part of a panel discussion at the Feb. 24 IWV Economic Outlook Conference in Ridgecrest. Written By Joe Schulz served as the reporter of the Green Laker in 2019 and 2020, before being hired as a reporter for the Commonwealth in October 2020. He is from Oshkosh and graduated from UW-Oshkosh in December 2020 with a bachelor's degree in journalism. | News featured popular urgent Dr. David Almand--Longtime leader in areas medical community retires this month Special Photo Dr. and Mrs. David Almand are shown here with their family two daughters, Jennifer Almand Vance and Marsha Almand Love; one son, Russell Almand; and sons-in-law Nick Vance and Luke Love. The Almands also have seven grandchildren. Special Photo David and Elaine Almand have been married for 45 years. Dr. Almand traces his familys connection to Conyers back to 1800. After more than 40 years practicing medicine in Conyers, Dr. David Almand will see his last patients March 9. A beloved doctor, mentor and leader in Rockdale Countys medical community, Almand is about to enter the next stage of his life retirement. An internal medicine specialist, the doctor says he will just have to see how life adjusts. Im excited, but it is an unusual thing to say youre planning not to work, he said. Im generally up early and am a busy person, so I dont sit around much. I have some household projects planned and want to do some traveling to see my children. I think Im going to take the time to sit down and write my life history because my grandchildren have not grown up with me like I did my grandparents. Part of that history will include those grandparents and the boyhood memories of times spent at their Conyers home on West Avenue, which was a dirt road at the time. He spent many happy days with Frank Sr. and Sadie Almand and while he didnt live in Conyers at the time, he felt strong ties to the community ties that would someday lead him back here to raise his own family and build a thriving medical practice. My dad was a native of Conyers, Frank Almand Jr., the doctor said. His dad was Frank Almand Sr... My Almand family goes back in Conyers to 1800. The first family that moved here to this area moved here from 1800-1801. So I am living where my family has been for more than 200 years... That has been a neat thing to me to live in an area where my familys heritage has been for hundreds of years. His mother, Hattie, was a Spivey and her father, Harry Spivey, was a circuit preacher who preached at churches in the area before he died in the 1950s. Almand grew up in Decatur, graduating in 1970 from Towers High School. He went to Mercer University in Macon, graduating with a bachelor of science degree in 1974, before enrolling at Bowman Gray School of Medicine, which is now Wake Forest School of Medicine. He got his medical degree in 1978, and completed his internal medicine residency at North Carolina Baptist Hospital, which is now Wake Forest Medical Center. Almand worked in Winston-Salem, N.C., for seven years before moving to Conyers and opening his practice, David Almand, M.D. The practice grew to become Conyers Internal Medicine and then Internal Medicine Associates of Rockdale (IMAR) and is now Piedmont Physicians at Wellbrook. He said many area residents know the practice as IMAR. When Almand opened his medical practice in Conyers in 1981, the new hospital had just been completed. Since then, he says he has seen Rockdale Hospital grow from a simple community hospital into a medical complex with multiple additions. In the early 1980s, he said there were only a few physicians in town, but now there are 100s I wouldnt know a number. We basically provided routine medical care here, but if you needed specialty services, you would go toward Atlanta, Almand said. Now much of that is offered here. Weve become a community that offers a wider range of medical services than we did to begin with. But working in a smaller community did have special advantages. I have patients Ive taken care of 40 years and long-term relationships with many people, the doctor said. Almand said he was around 10 or 12 when he decided he wanted to become a doctor. That goal never changed, he said, adding that he always liked science, so he became the first and only doctor in his family. He met Elaine, his wife of 45 years, when they were both growing up in Zion Baptist Church near Stone Mountain. The Almands are the parents of two daughters and one son. Jennifer Almand Vance and her husband, Pastor Nick Vance, live in Landrum, S.C., where he is the minister at Grace Baptist Church. They have three children, Elijah, 17; Chloe, 15, and John, 14. Marsha Almand Love and her husband, Pastor Luke Love, live in West Bend, Wis., where he is the minister of the First Baptist Church of West Bend. They have four children, Alyssa, 13; Logan, 9; Levi, 7 and Lincoln, 3. The Almands son, Russell is working on his masters of theology in Old Testament at Dallas Theological Seminary in Dallas, Texas, and will finish this spring. Dr. and Mrs. Almand have long been active in Philadelphia Baptist Church, which moved from Conyers to Rutledge about 12 years ago. Almand teaches Sunday School, serves as a deacon and is the church pianist. He began playing the piano in church when he was just a young teenager and thought when he got busier with his career in medicine, it might not be possible to continue playing, but says it has always worked out and he continues serving his church in that way. He said his faith has given him an opportunity to be an encouragement to people. My Christian faith has taught me how to care for people more individually and to be able to be someone who could be a pointer, someone who points toward good choices and the Christian faith and so forth, he said. I have, of course, accumulated many Christians as patients, so I have the opportunity to encourage them and I see over and over what Im teaching in Sunday School and then I find someone who needs that during the week and I can say that God instructed me and prepared me to be able to minister to people as I go about seeing them from day to day. Almand is a member of the Christian Medical Association and says while his office is predominately Christian, he has learned a lot about interacting with people when one is not in a Christian environment. He seeks opportunities to share his faith as an encouragement to others. I get reminded its like a pilot has been given a plane full of people to carry and its his responsibility to do that, Almand said. God has given me a schedule of people to see today and has something for me to tell them. I dont always know what that is. Its not like everything is a beacon of light...God has given me many opportunities along the way. To be educated and be a good helper and encourager to people and Im thankful for that. I dont count myself as a special person from that or that I have a special ability no one else has, but Im thankful that through my job, I can be Gods instrument to do things. The way he has lived his life and practiced medicine has made an impression on many people through the years. The memory that stands out when I think of David is when we first met and how that experience made such an impact on our lives, Dr. Elizabeth de Give said. When my husband Jim and I first met David, we interviewed with him after his advertisement for a new medical partner to join his solo practice and we came as a pair. He was open-minded to meet us and consider us both even when another possible candidate contacted him. Obviously, we all thought it was a good fit and agreements were made. Because his current office was too small for all of us when we started, Jim or I saw patients either in the morning or the afternoon, and we all shared Davids office, sitting around a folding table next to his desk. De Give goes on to tell how Almand soon worked with the landlord to get a new and bigger building to allow the practice to grow, which it did. She said working with Almand as she and her husband were new to the medical field allowed them to learn from him how to practice community medicine. De Give said she, her husband and the other doctors who worked with him over the years owe their success to Almand. She said he served as an example in how to practice medicine, as well as how to live. Almand has been a leader in the areas medical community, having previously served as chief of staff of Rockdale Hospital and medical director at Westbury Health and Rehab in Conyers. He has been a guide to each one of the providers who joined our practice, helping in so many different ways for which we will always be thankful, she said. ...His many patients would list his greatest contribution to be his many years of providing excellent and compassionate medical care, living his faith by example and that he will be greatly missed. De Give tells how Almand always began staff meetings with a word of prayer. She said he wanted to be involved in medical missions and that when his daughters were old enough, he took a leave of absence to travel to Chad with his family to serve on the mission field a short time. Unfortunately, he contracted malaria and de Give said he had to return home, but even then he continued to send medical supplies to Chad. Almand is one of the main reasons Dr. Grace Loy joined the staff at IMAR. I will never forget my first meeting with David when I first interviewed at Internal Medicine Associates of Rockdale in 2002, fresh out of residency, Loy said. He impressed upon me as an honest, caring physician who walks the Christian path. Almand and Dr. Fred A. Levin, M.D. opened the doors to their respective practices within a week and 100 feet of each other in July 1981. With few initial patients, I had plenty of time to cross the parking lot and visit and become acquainted with a physician I grew to admire and highly respect, said Levin, the former president of East Atlanta Gastroenterology Associates. Over the 37-plus years during which our practices expanded, I found in David the qualities that one seeks in a practitioner astuteness, compassion and altruism. My trust in David never faltered. I had assumed we may retire approximately around the same time; however, David outlasted me by three-and-one-half years. Jason Anderson was a student at Emory University in 1998 when he first met Almand, who had decided that year to take him as a preceptor and offer a mentoring experience. On arriving to his office that morning, I saw a Bible on the corner of his desk, Anderson said. Intrigued, I asked him if he read it. He said confidently that he did and that it was very important to him. Following graduation, I was offered a job as the physicians assistant and in the years to follow, I saw firsthand how much that book meant to him for he modeled its lessons in everyday life. He saw his patients each day as divine appointments God had seen fit for him to minister to that day. Loving, kind, compassionate care was not just in keeping with a Hippocratic oath made years ago, but from a deeper allegiance to the love of God. Anderson said he was always amazed at how many names Almand could recall in patient care through the years and the stories connected to those names, as well as the work they did, who their relatives were and so much more about them. He said the doctor approached each day with a smile and always had a story to share from his latest Bible devotion. He was called doctor and certainly could have boasted in his accomplishments and knowledge, but instead humbly faced each day with conviction that the source of his strength came from God, Anderson said. He often said, We may give the medicine, but only God makes it work. Colin Shah, Chairman of the Gem & Jewellery Export Promotion Council, India (GJEPC) commented below the impact of the US sanctions imposed on Russia, which could affect the Indian diamond industry, as per a note sent by the GJEPC to Rough&Polished. Russias partly state-owned diamond mining company ALROSA is one of the worlds biggest diamond producers, accounting for approximately 30% of global diamond output, the note said. India directly imports around 10% of Alrosas total rough diamond output, however, most Russian diamonds end up in India for cutting and polishing after passing through trading centres. According to GJEPC, the Russia-Ukraine conflict has led to US sanctions on Russia, and this might affect the Indian diamond business. Indian diamond companies might face difficulties in making payments for rough diamonds sourced from ALROSA as Russia has been banned from the SWIFT financial network. This impacts the five major Russian banks, including state-backed Sberbank and VTB, the country's two largest lenders. Delayed payments are expected to impact rough supplies by 2-3 weeks, resulting in scarcity of rough from Russian allocations. However, GJEPC has received a letter from ALROSA dated 28th February stating that ALROSA is ready to address the concerns related to day-to-day operations due to the US restrictions imposed on ALROSA last week. The letter also states that ALROSAs settlements with foreign partners continue as usual as there are no restrictions on the Companys transactions in dollars, euros, or other currencies. Diverse banking partners, allow the company to operate normally without any delays. ALROSA has assured that they are running their business as usual and they have all the necessary resources to ensure normal operation in the current circumstances. They will be fulfilling all their obligations to their clients in any part of the world. For remittances to ALROSA, Russia, GJEPCs advice is to consult bankers and proceed cautiously with their approval only if they are confident that the transfer to ALROSA will go through. Direct payment in rouble is possible where the clients have relations with Russian banks in India or if their bankers can have an arrangement with those banks (provided they are not on the SWIFT ban list). However, payment in rouble is not a viable option due to volatility and illiquidity in the exchange market. Indias diamond industry is 100% import-dependent, and any shortage in rough would have a severe impact on manufacturing activity and employment in the sector. This will also have a huge impact on total gem & jewellery exports, as diamonds account for more than 50% of the exports. Aruna Gaitonde, Editor in Chief of the Asian Bureau, Rough&Polished Roanoke Rapids, NC (27870) Today Scattered thunderstorms early, then partly cloudy after midnight. Low 59F. Winds light and variable. Chance of rain 50%.. Tonight Scattered thunderstorms early, then partly cloudy after midnight. Low 59F. Winds light and variable. Chance of rain 50%. Julie Thompson, pictured second from the left, was sworn in Tuesday night as the new superintendent of the Roanoke Rapids Graded School District. She is pictured with her husband, Scott, left, son Alex and Halifax County Judge Turner Stephenson. Danvers, MA (01923) Today Cloudy skies this evening will become partly cloudy after midnight. Slight chance of a rain shower. Low 46F. Winds NNW at 5 to 10 mph.. Tonight Cloudy skies this evening will become partly cloudy after midnight. Slight chance of a rain shower. Low 46F. Winds NNW at 5 to 10 mph. Sanford, NC (27330) Today A few clouds. A stray shower or thunderstorm is possible. Low around 60F. Winds light and variable.. Tonight A few clouds. A stray shower or thunderstorm is possible. Low around 60F. Winds light and variable. Washington Gov. Jay Inslee will lift the most of the states indoor masking requirements earlier than he originally planned as a result of new guidance from the federal government. We are turning a page in our fight against the COVID virus, Inslee said during a Monday news conference. This new page will be based more on empowering individuals and families in protecting themselves, rather than based on government restrictions. Those restrictions which required masks be worn in most public indoor settings, including restaurants, bars, grocery stores, child care centers and gyms were originally slated to expire March 21. Mondays announcement that those restrictions would instead expire March 12 was made in tandem with the governors of California and Oregon, and just days after CDC officials said masks were no longer necessary for most people. King County, which notably did not to commit to lifting its indoor mask requirements after Inslee announced last month that the states would expire March 21, also said that its indoor masking restrictions would end March 12. Washington has seen a marked decline in new COVID cases, hospitalizations and deaths since the omicron surge peaked in late January. New cases are down 67% over the last two weeks, while hospitalizations and deaths are down 39% and 35%, respectively. Last week, the Seattle P-I published an article that outlined how Washington state and King County coronavirus guidance would change after March 21. Now, were updating that article to include the latest information from state and King County officials. Where are masks still required? After March 11, masks will still be required statewide in health care facilities, congregate living spaces and on public transit. That includes hospitals, doctors' and dentists' offices, pharmacies, long-term care facilities, jails, prisons, taxis and ride-share vehicles. Local governments and individual businesses statewide are also free to continue enforcing mask requirements, if they choose. Where are masks not required? After March 11, masks will no longer be required statewide for most indoor spaces, including K-12 schools, child care centers, restaurants, bars, libraries, places of worship, gyms, grocery stores and retail establishments. Whats new with schools? The state will no longer require masks in its K-12 schools, but individual districts can still impose masking restrictions for their students and staff if they choose. Seattle Public Schools the states largest school district said it plans to keep masking requirements in place until further notice despite the governors announcement. Masks are also no longer required on school buses statewide. That requirement was originally put in place by the federal government, but was stricken when the CDC announced its most recent guidance last week. Inslee said more nuanced coronavirus policies for schools will be announced next week. What about vaccine verification? Proof of vaccination or a negative COVID-19 test are no longer required for large events statewide. King County also terminated its vaccine verification policy for indoor establishments and large outdoor events. However, individual businesses and venues across the state can still enforce such policies if they choose to. Will these restrictions be brought back if the states outbreak worsens? Its possible. If a new, more transmissible variant emerges, its likely that state and local health officials would consider reinstating restrictions. Inslee spokesperson Mike Faulk affirmed this in an email. "[The] governor has said that if we face another significant variant that is overwhelming our hospitals and putting lives at risk, he would implement measures that are proven to work at curbing infection," he said. "Masks are proven to work at curbing infection." The current consensus among the nations top health officials is that we should treat COVID-19 like the weather. If it looks like its going to rain, consider wearing a raincoat. If it looks like hospitalizations and deaths are rising, consider requiring masks or other restrictions. And so on. A state appeals court on Tuesday revived a lawsuit against San Francisco by a woman whose son was shot to death with a gun stolen from the car of a city police officer. Officer Marvin Cabuntala had brought the handgun, his personal firearm, along in his car while driving to a training session in August 2017. Guns were not allowed at the session, but Cabuntala said afterward he felt it was part of his job to bring a weapon in case something happened at a jail that was next to the site. He left the loaded gun in his car, then drove home and left it inside the vehicle, though not in a lock box or the trunk. That night, someone broke into the car and stole the gun, which was used several days later to shoot 23-year-old Abel Esquivel as he was heading for his familys home in the Mission District. Esquivel had been walking home from the Central American Resource Center, where he worked as an intern. Three men were later arrested and charged with his murder. A lawsuit against the city by Esquivels mother, Mayra Perez, was dismissed by Superior Court Judge Ethan Schulman, who said the off-duty officer had not been acting in the scope of his employment when he left his gun in the car. But the First District Court of Appeal said Tuesday that Cabuntala had been carrying the gun on an assignment connected with his work and that a jury could decide that his careless action in leaving the weapon in the car was work-related. Firearms are critical to police officers ability to perform their jobs, even when they are not in active use, Justice Mark Simons said in a 3-0 ruling reinstating the suit. He said a jury could reasonably find the officers failure to safely secure his weapon is not so unusual or startling that it would seem unfair to include the loss resulting from it among other costs of the employers business, quoting language from a 1995 state Supreme Court decision. Cabuntala was a veteran officer designated by the Police Department as a specialist assigned to emergencies such as hostage-taking and riots. The court quoted him as saying he considered himself on the job at all hours, every day. The department provided him with a gun and also approved his possession of a personal secondary firearm, which he carried both on and off duty. The court said the August 2017 training session was located in another county, took place on a hot day, lasted eight hours, and required officers to run long distances wearing protective gear. Cabuntala said he had previously suffered from heat exhaustion and was hot and tired when he drove home. Although the officer was not required to carry a weapon to or from the session, the court said, a jury could infer Cabuntala thought he might be called on to use the gun in an incident at the jail. Drought Map Track water shortages and restrictions across Bay Area Check the water shortage status of your area, plus see reservoir levels and a list of restrictions for the Bay Areas largest water districts. In the events that followed, Simons wrote, jurors could also reasonably find a connection between the departments enterprise of policing and the risk that one of its officers would negligently fail to secure a department-approved, secondary firearm upon returning home from work. Jurors could therefore conclude, the justice said, that he was acting within the scope of his employment. The court said Schulman could consider other arguments by the city to dismiss the suit, including whether the officers failure to secure the gun or to remember he had left it in the car were the primary causes of the theft and killing, rather than his work for the Police Department. The city could also ask the state Supreme Court to review the ruling. Bob Egelko is a San Francisco Chronicle staff writer. Email: begelko@sfchronicle.com Twitter: @BobEgelko California Attorney General Rob Bonta announced an investigation into the social media company TikTok on Wednesday, saying the company promoted itself to young people and caused them physical and mental harm. Bontas office said the investigation also involves attorneys general from Florida, Kentucky, Massachusetts, Nebraska, New Jersey, Tennessee, Vermont, and other states. Our children are growing up in the age of social media and many feel like they need to measure up to the filtered versions of reality that they see on their screens, Bonta said in a statement announcing the investigation. We know this takes a devastating toll on childrens mental health and well-being. But we dont know what social media companies knew about these harms and when. Our nationwide investigation will allow us to get much-needed answers and determine if TikTok is violating the law in promoting its platform to young Californians. The probe is also looking at if the company is violating state consumer protection laws. Asked in an email about the harms it was referring to, Bontas office said, There is a mounting body of evidence on the physical and mental health harms associated with the use of social media, particularly to children and teens. Social media use has been associated with anxiety, depression, eating disorders, and suicidal ideation, among other impacts. The purpose of the investigation is to find out more about how using TikTok affects the health of young users, and any methods the company uses to increase engagement, the attorney generals office said. TikTok replied rapidly to the probe. We care deeply about building an experience that helps to protect and support the well-being of our community, and appreciate that the state attorneys general are focusing on the safety of younger users, a company spokesperson said in an email. We look forward to providing information on the many safety and privacy protections we have for teens. The state attorney generals office announced a similar investigation last year into Meta, formerly Facebook, for promoting Instagram to young people, claiming the company ignored the products health effects. Meta did not immediately respond to an emailed request for comment. The company paused plans to launch a version of Instagram for children in September after dozens of attorneys general raised concerns about its potential effects. Bontas office is not the only state-level effort to protect children online. A bill in the state Legislature called the California Age-Appropriate Design Code Act, co-written by Oakland assemblywoman Buffy Wicks, would require a business that creates goods, services, or product features that are likely to be accessed by a child to follow specific standards and consider the best interests of children who might come into contact with the products. Drought Map Track water shortages and restrictions across Bay Area Check the water shortage status of your area, plus see reservoir levels and a list of restrictions for the Bay Areas largest water districts. As both a legislator and a mom, I see these protections as a necessity to safeguard our kids experience in the digital world, said Wicks. Social media platforms often nudge children into risky behaviors, expose them to strange adults, recommend harmful material, and encourage compulsive behavior. Its absolutely critical that tech companies take inventory and redesign their products with child safety front of mind, and that they remain fully transparent about their efforts to enact age-appropriate terms and policies. The issue of social medias impact on children has been at the forefront of public discussion, particularly since a large Wall Street Journal Investigation last year showed what Facebook already knew about the effects of its products on young people. The whistle-blower that provided that documentation, former employee Frances Haugen, was a guest of President Joe Biden during his Tuesday night State of the Union speech. Facebook and Instagram are flawed products designed to addict and amplify the worst in our children and ourselves. Haugen tweeted last night They are buying their profits on the backs of our kids mental health. Chase DiFeliciantonio is a San Francisco Chronicle staff writer. Email: chase.difeliciantonio@sfchronicle.com Twitter: @ChaseDiFelice The battle for an open San Francisco Assembly seat is turning increasingly chippy between former San Francisco Supervisor David Campos and Supervisor Matt Haney a sign of how precious every vote will be in what likely will be a low-turnout April 19 runoff to replace David Chiu. On Tuesday, a Sacramento judge ruled that Campos, currently on leave from his job as chief of staff for San Francisco District Attorney Chesa Boudin, cannot identify himself as a civil rights attorney on the ballot, but must instead be identified as criminal justice administrator. In response to a lawsuit filed by Campos opponent, San Francisco Supervisor Matt Haney, Sacramento County Superior Court Judge Shelleyanne Chang said that Campos proposed ballot designation met the standard of misleading the voter and must be changed. Haney cheered the ruling, saying that ballot designations matter because as candidates, it is the one thing that appears alongside our name to tell voters what our current principal profession is. Campos ballot designation should not be civil rights attorney because that is clearly not his current job, and to list it as such would be inaccurate and violate election law, Haney said in a statement. Campos shrugged off the ruling Tuesday. We are actually pleased with the final outcome of designation, he said. I think whats really telling here is that Supervisor Haney is essentially questioning the fact that he doesnt think that fighting against anti-Asian hate is a civil rights issue or fighting to free people who were wrongly convicted is a civil rights issue or that fighting police misconduct is a civil rights issue, Campos said Tuesday in an interview. Ballot designation challenges are relatively common, especially in tight races, but the dispute is just another sign of how salty this campaign has become. University of San Francisco political science Professor James Taylor said the ruling was a win for Haneys campaign and subtly enabled it to highlight Campos ties to Boudin, who faces a recall June 7. Campos did not state that he is on leave from his job as Boudins chief of staff in his official ballot statement. Other analysts have said, however, that mentioning Boudin carries risks for both candidates, as the district attorney is popular with some progressive voters that both are seeking to court. Haneys campaign succeeded in redefining the opponents occupation, and raising the specter of a misleading campaign and Boudin in the process, Taylor said Tuesday. While battles over ballot designations might seem like insider politics fodder, the description of a candidate can carry outsize importance in a tight race, said David McCuan, a professor of political science at Sonoma State University. Haney received only 726 more votes than Campos out of 93,778 cast in the Feb. 15 primary, according to the latest count. When voters are confronted with a lot of information, they look for shortcuts, and a ballot measure designation provides the ultimate shortcut, McCuan said. In a negative race, (voters) may be pulled in lots of different directions, so mobilization cues that shortcut the decision-making process are huge. The difference between Campos old and new ballot designations are marginal, McCuan said, only in the sense that civil rights attorney is generally considered more positive. But those margins will be important in a race where only maybe one-third of eligible voters may turn out. The Haney campaign disputes that the race will be that close. On Tuesday, it released an internal poll of 500 likely voters conducted by David Binder Research that showed Haney leading by 17 points. The Feb. 21-27 survey had a margin of error of plus or minus 4.9 percentage points. (There has not been any public polling of the race.) The poll found that supporters of philanthropist and businessman Bilal Mahmood, a first-time candidate who received 22% in the primary, support Haney by a 68% to 15% margin. Mahmood endorsed Haney on Thursday for the April race. Over the past few days, Campos has increasingly tried to steer the conversation toward the Tenderloin, the embattled neighborhood that is part of Haneys current district. A 30-second online ad by the Campos campaign that recently began running shows grim scenes of drug use and homelessness in the neighborhood while stating that since Haney took office, over 384 people have died on the streets of the Tenderloin from drug overdoses and neglect. The ad closes with the line, Do you want the supervisor in charge of the Tenderloin in charge of anything? Campos regularly refers to Haney as the supervisor from the Tenderloin. Haneys district also includes better-off neighborhoods like South Beach. Drought Map Track water shortages and restrictions across Bay Area Check the water shortage status of your area, plus see reservoir levels and a list of restrictions for the Bay Areas largest water districts. Haneys campaign pointed to a letter signed by Tenderloin merchants and residents that asked Campos to take down his negative advertising. By singling out the Tenderloin, the letter signers which included the executive director of the Tenderloin Merchants and Property Owners Association contend you are ostracizing and degrading an entire community for your own political gain. Campos responded on Twitter: Your privilege is not just showing its screaming. Of course voters should hear about your record in the Tenderloin. Governing is not tweeting - it is doing. And what you have done (or not done) should be front and center in this campaign. In an interview Tuesday, Campos said he was not intending to denigrate the Tenderloin. The native of Guatemala pointed out that he grew up as an undocumented immigrant in South Central Los Angeles, where I was terrified to go outside for fear of being shot. For me, it is consistent with the fact that I have dedicated my life to fighting for those people that Im now speaking out for whats happening in the Tenderloin, Campos said. I think that whats happening to this community is a travesty. And saying that it is a travesty is not an attack on that community. Taylor said that negative campaign ads tend to work in national and state level politics, but at the level of neighborhoods, in a city where neighborhoods matter, an ad blaming a single politician for its condition might backfire and alienate voters throughout the city. The two have not yet had the opportunity to challenge each other on these and other issues in a one-on-one debate since emerging as the top-two finishers in the Feb. 15 special election. (They debated multiple times as part of a four-candidate field in the months leading up to that election.) The campaigns are considering an April 8 debate, but plans are still being finalized, both campaigns confirmed Tuesday. This race is devolving into such a junk-food contest that what is happening is that a few votes could matter one way or another, McCuan said. They are slugging each other. Joe Garofoli is The San Francisco Chronicles senior political writer. Email: jgarofoli@sfchronicle.com Twitter: @joegarofoli Paul Chinn/The Chronicle 2018 Google is requiring workers in the Bay Area and other U.S. regions to return to the office part-time on April 4. The mandatory return date, originally slated for last fall, was repeatedly delayed by coronavirus variants and surges in cases. With cases dropping and masks mandates ending in California, around 30% of Bay Area workers have already returned and the company recently restored signature perks like shuttle buses and free food. Last week, the University of California celebrated a record-breaking number of applicants for its 2022-2023 school year, with gains among traditionally underrepresented racial and ethnic groups. But does having a diverse applicant pool translate into diverse enrollment? The Chronicle analyzed historical enrollment data and found that increased applications have only led to a small rise in the representation of Black and Latino students who enroll as freshman, and those groups remain highly underrepresented compared to their proportion of the college age population. The data show that this is largely explained by the drop in Black and Latino representation through the admissions funnel from application to admittance and enrollment. And in the case of Latino students, a sizable portion opt to enroll at a California State University school over one at the University of California (UC). The University of California publishes data on the race and ethnicity of applicants, admits and enrollees across all nine UC undergraduate schools. We only analyzed data on incoming freshmen who live in California because the UC system did not provide demographic data on non-California applicants for the 2022-2023 cycle. California freshmen tend to make up at least two-thirds of applicants, admits and enrollees. Preliminary figures for the upcoming 2022-2023 school year show system-wide freshman applications from California residents grew by 4,000 from last year to over 132,000 (a 3.2% increase). This growth is driven primarily by increases in Latino and Asian applicants 3.9% and 4.6%, respectively. Freshmen applications from Black Californians grew 2.6%, slightly less than the overall increase, and the number of white applicants fell 1.3%. Back in January of 2021, the university also announced a jump in freshman applications for the current 2021-2022 school year. Applications from Black and Latino Californians grew by 21.6% and 12.1%, respectively, from the previous year, compared to an overall growth of 13.0%. This spike was likely due to the unprecedented drop in applications in the previous cycle, after the pandemic limited in-person learning and on-campus activities. Several months later, the university made a similar announcement, this time for admissions: Thousands more underrepresented students received acceptance letters than in the previous year, with the number of admitted Black and Latino Californians increasing by 15.6% and 8.6%, respectively, compared to an overall freshman admissions increase of 5.3%. Diversity among admitted students had reached an all-time high. Rounding out the admissions process is enrollment, and in this too, the UC system made significant gains in Black and Latino representation. The percent increases in Black and Latino freshmen from California were 13.5% and 12.0%, respectively much more than the overall enrollment increase of 4.4%. Still, Black students made up just 4.4% of the overall 2021 freshman class, which is just slightly up from 3.7% in 2011. According to estimates from the Census Bureaus American Community Survey collected from the Minnesota Population Center, 6.2% of Californians between the ages of 18 and 24 are Black almost two points higher than the share of Black freshmen enrolled at a UC school. Hispanics make up about 49% of the 18-to-24-year-old California population, compared to 25% of Latinos among UC freshmen (The Census Bureau collects data on whether people identify as Hispanic, while the UC collects data on Latino identification). White students are also underrepresented among UC freshmen, according to these estimates 28% of Californians between 18 and 24 years old are non-Hispanic white, compared to 19% among the student body. Asians are the only group with higher representation in UC enrollment than in the California college population, by about 20 percentage points. One of the major causes of Black and Latino underrepresentation is the diminishing share of Black and Latino students in the funnel from application to enrollment. Latino students make up nearly 40% of California applicants and admits in 2021, comprising the largest proportion among the four demographic groups. But when it comes to enrollees, they are the second most represented group, at 33%, behind Asians who make up 39%. The rates also fall among Black Californians: they make up 7% of applicants, 5% of admitted and 5% of enrolled in 2021. Asians are the only group for which the percentages increase, from 31% of applications to 39% of enrollment, becoming the most represented racial group among incoming freshmen. Each year since 2016, Latino applicants outnumbered Asian applicants among California freshmen, but by the start of the fall semester, there were more Asians enrolled than Latinos. Where a student chooses to enroll is their choice, which often involves deciding between multiple campuses within and outside of the UC system, UC communications strategist Joanna McWilliams told The Chronicle in an email. According to data on enrollment destinations, 48% of Asian or Pacific Islander students who were admitted to a UC school in 2020 chose to enroll, compared to less than 40% of admitted Black, Hispanic and white students. Drought Map Track water shortages and restrictions across Bay Area Check the water shortage status of your area, plus see reservoir levels and a list of restrictions for the Bay Areas largest water districts. Among Hispanics, while the largest share of admitted students enrolled in the UC system, over a quarter opted to attend the states other public university system, California State University, which has tuition costs that are considerably less than at the UC system. The pandemic, which economically impacted Hispanic and Black Americans more than others, may have led students to consider more affordable options than a UC education. The Chronicle also examined representation gaps between applications and enrollment at each of the nine UC undergraduate schools and found the biggest differences among Latino, Black and Asian students at the Los Angeles, Riverside and Berkeley campuses. At UCLA, for instance, Latinos made up 34% of California applicants in 2021, but only 26% of enrolled Californians a gap of eight percentage points. Among Asian and white freshmen, these differences were positive, meaning there were disproportionately more Asians and whites enrolling at UCLA than applying. According to a 2017 study from the Urban Institute, most UC campuses have large gaps between its student demographics and the population demographics of its surrounding region. The study found that the share of Black students at each of the nine undergraduate campuses is smaller than the share of Black residents who live in each schools nearby areas. Latino students were underrepresented at seven UC schools. At the Berkeley campus, for instance, Latino representation was 24 percentage points lower than among residents who live within about a 2-hour drive from the school. Black students represented a share that was four points lower than the population demographics, while Asian and white students made up a larger portion by 24 points and one point, respectively. Nami Sumida is a San Francisco Chronicle data visualization developer. Email: nami.sumida@sfchronicle.com Twitter: @namisumida Facing a massive shortfall and state oversight, the San Francisco school board set to work on balancing the districts budget Tuesday, approving nearly 300 staff cuts, or about 3% of full-time positions, while also directing $32.9 million in bonuses and raises to teachers and substitutes next year. Yet the board also voted against a staff and state fiscal expert recommendation to also plan to send pink slips to 47 teacher aides, a decision that could leave the district on the hook to pay for staff even if theyre not needed because of declining enrollment or decisions made about staffing at each school site. The weighty financial decisions came amid a board in transition, with President Gabriela Lopez and board members Alison Collins and Faauuga Moliga recalled by voters in the recent special election. Moliga stepped down a day after the vote, while Lopez and Collins will be removed from office on March 11. Mayor London Breed has been interviewing possible replacements and is expected in the coming days to name the three appointees who will fill the vacancies. Despite the pending replacements, the board is under a tight timeline to approve the layoff notices to teachers and other staff, which must go out by March 15. The approved list includes 151 teachers, counselor and social workers, as well as 51 top-level managers and 62 other staff. The layoffs are part of a plan to make $50 million in cuts to schools sites, in part to address a loss of 9,000 students since 2014. Just after 11:30 p.m., the board voted 4-2 against layoff notices for teacher aides, which state fiscal expert Elliott Duchon said could put the district in dire financial straits and at greater risk of state takeover. You have an obligation to be solvent, Duchon said. The fact of the matter is you are funded by taxpayer monies, and you have to live within your means. Duchon noted that the layoff numbers and cuts recommended by staff, including the layoff notices to teacher aides, were a worst-case scenario, based on a lack of information on state funding for education and what each school decides in terms of staffing based on projected revenue. You have a lot of staff, and you have to make cuts, he said referencing the declining enrollment. There is not another way to meet your budget obligations. The district faces a $125 million shortfall next year, and the layoffs are part of a budget-balancing package required by the state, which appointed a fiscal expert in October to oversee the process, out of a total budget of about $1.1 billion. I know from personal experience that this whole process leaves us weary and deflated, Superintendent Vincent Matthews said in a statement Wednesday. A layoff notice is not the same as an actual layoff and hopefully most employees who receive a March 15 notice will not be given a final notice. Critics have urged the district to keep cuts away from classrooms, saying reductions should come from central office or other spending, although the state fiscal expert supported the districts position that the shortfall was too deep, and enrollment losses require action. We cant abandon our teachers who signed on for the pandemic, said one parent during public comment, adding the wealth in San Francisco and in a state with a budget surplus should be able to prevent layoffs. We cant abandon teachers, period. United Educators of San Francisco President Cassondra Curiel said all the layoffs were unnecessary. There is no financial reason to get rid of these vital educators, who provide essential instruction, services, and programs to students and their families, she said in a statement Wednesday. We saw a small victory last night with the 47 paraeducators saved, and we will continue to fight until every notice has been rescinded. Board member Matt Alexander criticized a lack of information on whether there was wasteful upper management positions to cut and urged board members to vote against the potential layoffs of the teachers aides. Board members Collins, Lopez, Alexander and Mark Sanchez voted against the recommended layoff notices for teachers aides. District officials, however, said the elimination of aide positions were based on lower demand for those jobs and those workers would likely be placed in other classroom support positions where there is greater demand and need. Duchon said that voting against the layoff plan likely would put the district at risk of not being able to submit a balanced budget plan to the state. We have an opportunity right now to try and get toward solvency, said Vice President Jenny Lam. As a governor of this board, I cannot support the continued path toward state takeover and ultimately bankruptcy. Any layoff notices issued will likely have a greater impact on schools with a disproportionate number of low-income students and students of color, given the teachers there typically have lower seniority and therefore would be the first laid off based on union contracts. Drought Map Track water shortages and restrictions across Bay Area Check the water shortage status of your area, plus see reservoir levels and a list of restrictions for the Bay Areas largest water districts. District officials said 301 would be the maximum number of positions cut and that it was likely that those numbers would be reduced in the coming months as more is known about the state budget. Laying off employees is the last thing I want to do, said Kristin Bijur, head of district human resources. These numbers represent people who have worked so hard for SFUSD students and families before, during and after the pandemic. Pandemic or not, I see how hard you work. Several speakers during public comment urged Collins and Lopez to abstain from voting on the potential layoffs, bonuses and cuts, given the overwhelming vote to remove them from office. These commissioners should resign, following the example of commissioner Moliga, out of respect for the voters, said Jeremy Gribler, a math teacher at Lowell High School. On Tuesday, the Board of Supervisors approved a plan to forgive a $26.6 million loan made to the district, which advanced funding from the 2018 Proposition G parcel tax to help cover promised teacher salary increases while the measure was tied up in litigation. The district was expected to pay that money back after winning the court battle, but as long as it adopts a balanced budget certified by the state, the loan will be forgiven, officials said. Our public schools are in a tough spot right now, and theres a lot of work that needs to be done, said Breed in a statement. Forgiving this loan is not only the right thing to do but it is absolutely necessary as the School District struggles with a significant budget deficit. The district has already included the funding in its budget plan, meaning it will not help address $50 million in cuts at school sites outlined in the boards budget balancing plan. The proposed cuts and staff reductions also include teachers in the Junior Reserve Officers Training Corps, which could result in those courses being cut at several high schools based on lack of demand for the program, district officials said. The board also approved an agreement with the teachers union, which will give teachers up to $10,000 in bonuses, including a guaranteed $2,000 stipend for every teacher. The nearly $33 million package will be paid for using money raised under the Proposition G parcel tax as well as a pause on teacher sabbaticals and a year suspension of an extra preparation period for Advanced Placement teachers. Jill Tucker is a San Francisco Chronicle staff writer. Email: jtucker@sfchronicle.com Twitter: @jilltucker A Bay Area man admitted this week that an organization and website he runs, Goyim TV, was linked to recent drops of antisemitic flyers tossed in neighborhoods around the Bay Area and other parts of the country. The website drew scrutiny after a popular Bay Area yoga teacher was fired after her employer grew fearful that she shared the views of her boyfriend, Jon Minadeo, of Petaluma. Kelly Johnson was fired from her job as a yoga instructor at Hella Yoga in Berkeley and Yoga Hell in Petaluma because of her relationship with Minadeo. The Anti-Defamation League said Goyim TV was responsible for at least 74 antisemitic propaganda distribution incidents in 2021. Johnson said she does not share Minadeos views and that she and Minadeo were pursuing legal options in response to her firing, which she said was unjust. In an interview with The Chronicle on Monday, Minadeo acknowledged that recent antisemitic flyers distributed over the past two months in the Berkeley hills, the Pacific Heights neighborhood of San Francisco, Palo Alto and Marin County came from Goyim TV, but said he was not personally involved in their distribution. At least some of the flyers alleged a Jewish conspiracy in the U.S. government response to COVID. Similar flyers have been reported in other parts of the country including Los Angeles and cities in Florida, Colorado, Texas and Wisconsin, where Goyim has dropped banners reading Vax the Jews and staged other antisemitic events. After hundreds of the flyers were stuffed in plastic sandwich bags with rice to weight them down and randomly distributed in the Berkeley hills about two weeks ago, the Berkeley Police Department and City Council condemned the incident as the result of a small, fringe white supremacist extremist group that targets Jewish communities as well as other minority groups throughout the Bay Area. The Anti-Defamation League describes Goyim TV as an arm of Goyim Defense League, a loose network of individuals connected by their virulent antisemitism. It says the group has five or six primary organizers who serve as the groups public face along with dozens of supporters and thousands of online followers. Drought Map Track water shortages and restrictions across Bay Area Check the water shortage status of your area, plus see reservoir levels and a list of restrictions for the Bay Areas largest water districts. The ADL said Minadeo leads the organization and that it frequently refers to Jews as controlling the government, the media and other institutions, calls the Holocaust fiction and has said that the Jews were responsible for the 9/11 terrorist attacks. In its latest campaigns, as depicted in news accounts as well as on Goyim TV, the group contends that COVID is fake, vaccines and tests are useless and part of a conspiracy and that the governments response to the virus has been controlled by Jews. In one video, Minadeo, who streams video under his moniker Handsome Truth, accuses a woman giving out free COVID tests of promoting the agenda against Americans. The firing of Johnson, Minadeos girlfriend, came after the studios owner, who said his mother is Jewish, said he feared that Johnson had adopted Minadeos antisemitic opinions. Michael Cabanatuan is a San Francisco Chronicle staff writer. Email: mcabanatuan@sfchronicle.com Twitter: @ctuan Mixed martial arts legend Cain Velasquez, charged with attempted murder for allegedly shooting at a man accused of molesting a young relative, did not enter a plea at his scheduled arraignment Wednesday in San Jose. Velasquezs attorney, Alexandra Kazarian, requested the arraignment be delayed until Monday morning. Wearing a jail-issued gray jail shirt and red pants, Velasquez stood in a doorway behind several other people. He did not speak. Velasquez is accused of shooting a man as he attempted to kill another man facing charges for molesting one of Velasquezs close family members, the Santa Clara Countys District Attorneys Office said. Dozens of fans, friends and relatives showed up to lend their support to Velasquez during the brief hearing before Santa Clara County Superior Court Judge Shelyna Brown. Several wore T-shirts reading #FREECAIN. Several stood and waved as he was escorted from the courtroom. Velasquez faces 10 charges, including attempted murder, six counts of assault with a deadly weapon, firing into an occupied vehicle and possession of a loaded firearm with intent to commit a felony. He was held without bail in Santa Clara County jail. The sad tragedy is that Mr. Velasquez chose to take the law into his own hands, endangering the public and everyone in the truck, District Attorney Jeff Rosen said in a statement Wednesday. This act of violence also causes more pain and suffering to his family. Rosens office said Velasquez was attempting to kill Harry Goularte, 43, who faces felony charges for allegedly molesting a child under the age of 14. Goularte was on his way to pick up an electronic monitoring bracelet after being released from custody when the attack occurred, officials said. The child Goularte is accused of molesting was believed to be Velasquezs relative. The person who was shot, Goulartes stepfather, was expected to survive, officials said. Velasquez, 39, was arrested Monday after officers responded to reports of a shooting at the intersection of Monterey Road and Bailey Avenue in South San Jose, officials said. The incident began in Morgan Hill at about 3 p.m. when Velasquez drove to Morgan Hill in his pickup truck to target Goularte, Santa Clara County prosecutor Aaron French said. Goularte got into the car with his stepfather driving and his mother in the back seat. Drought Map Track water shortages and restrictions across Bay Area Check the water shortage status of your area, plus see reservoir levels and a list of restrictions for the Bay Areas largest water districts. An 11-mile, high-speed chase ensued in which Velasquez allegedly followed the victims truck through San Jose, officials said. Velasquez then rammed his truck into theirs and fired a handgun multiple times into the truck, officials said. A woman in the victims truck called 911, and officers arrested Velasquez near Madrone Avenue in San Jose without incident. Police recovered a legally registered semiautomatic handgun in Velasquezs truck. Velasquez was born in Salinas. He retired from professional MMA in 2019 after claiming UFC heavyweight titles in 2010 and 2012. French called Velasquezs actions extremely reckless, saying they put many people in and out of the car he was shooting at in danger. Its unfortunate that he took the case into his own hands rather than waiting for the criminal justice system, he said. Michael Cabanatuan and Jessica Flores are San Francisco Chronicle staff writers. Email: mcabanatuan@sfchronicle.com, jessica.flores@sfchronicle.com Twitter: @ctuan, @jesssmflores Filipa Ioannou/The Chronicle San Francisco police said they were investigating a stabbing death that occurred Tuesday morning in the citys Tenderloin District. Officers were called to Sixth Street at 8:37 a.m. following reports that a person had been stabbed, the Police Department said in a news release. East Oakland Council Member Treva Reid said Tuesday that she is running for mayor becoming the third council member to make a run for the top job. Reid is a newcomer to city politics. She was elected to the City Council in 2020 and took office in 2021, stepping into the position her father held for almost 24 years. Reid said she is running because of her love of Oakland and its people, and that she leads from a place of loving and caring for people. I am intentional in how I show up in that passion and fierce commitment and drive to make sure people have what they need and have the best quality (of) life and are able to thrive in life, Reid said. Reids entrance into the race signals a political battle among city leaders as Oakland grapples with public safety and skyrocketing homelessness. In September, Councilmember Loren Taylor, an ally of Reids, announced his run and Councilmember Sheng Thao, a progressive, announced in November. Allyssa Victory, an attorney for Communications Workers of America Local 9415, and Derrick Soo, an unhoused activist in East Oakland, have also announced their candidacy for the November election. Greg Hodge, a former Oakland school board member, and Derreck Johnson, a former restaurant owner, both said theyre jumping into the race. Candidates will likely focus on crime, public safety and homelessness. Since the election is still months away, a top candidate has yet to emerge, said Larry Kamer, the CEO of the Kamer Group, a public affairs consulting group. Right now, it feels like a free for all, Kamer said. I dont think anybody has got a lock on it. Kamer said that Reids name recognition due to her fathers long tenure in the city is an advantage. It still carries a lot of weight, he said. But Reid said her own accomplishments and experience make her suitable for the top job. Prior to joining the council, Reid was a senior aide to State Sen. Nancy Skinner when Skinner was an assembly member. She was also an associate for California Assembly District 18 on the Alameda County Democratic Central Committee and worked as a state policy adviser for Black Women Organized for Political Action. Reid said she decided to run for mayor when the City Council voted last June to invest less money in the Oakland Police Department than what Mayor Libby Schaaf proposed, though they still increased the police departments two-year budget by $38 million. Reid and Taylor voted against the budget. Reid said that as mayor, she wants to be in charge of the $3.85 billion to deliver equitable investment to the city. The mayor proposes the city budget and the City Council approves the budget. Her experience as a single mother define her leadership style and priorities, she said. In 2013, her 20-year-old son was shot and killed. Drought Map Track water shortages and restrictions across Bay Area Check the water shortage status of your area, plus see reservoir levels and a list of restrictions for the Bay Areas largest water districts. Her trauma from his death is what too many families are enduring. People have been crying out for us to deliver more and not less resources, Reid said. We need a mayor who will lead from that perspective of lived leadership (and) certainly legislative experience. As mayor, Reid said she would invest more in police academies to boost department staffing, add 911 dispatchers and workforce training programs. Reid said that as mayor would also encourage more affordable housing by streamlining the permit process for those projects. She also wants to work with the state and federal government to launch more home ownership opportunities for low-income people. What we do should be a reflection of who we say we are, Reid said. Our town should feel that deeper investment of love and how we deliver ... on resources, how we deliver on our response and how we show up. Sarah Ravani is a San Francisco Chronicle staff writer. Email: sravani@sfchronicle.com Twitter: @SarRavani There was a time when it was shocking for The Chronicles food section to venture to the East Bay. In fact, when former dining critic Wade Holland reviewed restaurants in Moraga and Berkeley in the 70s, he got in trouble with the publisher; he was fired within six months for refusing to stick to S.F. Those days, of course, are long over. The East Bay has been driving food culture locally and nationally for decades now with restaurants such as Chez Panisse. More recently, Oaklands identity as a high-profile dining destination has reached a tipping point. Its become the most interesting place to eat in the Bay Area, with compelling, creative food: chile-laced celery salad at Daytrip, tender brisket at Horn, nutty fried tofu sandwiches at Lion Dance Cafe. But theres much, much more to the East Bay. And since the start of the pandemic, the population of many East Bay cities has grown significantly. Its why today, The Chronicles food and wine team is dedicating nearly a dozen stories and guides to the food and drink scene here. Our new associate restaurant critic, Cesar Hernandez, is providing the backbone of this issue: lists of the best burgers, best pizza and best tacos to eat in the area. Plus: Did you know that theres a robust scene of Mexican and Central American regional specialties here on Facebook Marketplace? Hernandez did the work of finding stand-out options, from crisp and cheesy pupusas to smoky charcoal-grilled beef tacos. Restaurant critic Soleil Ho is still covering the area too, updating their guide to the best restaurants in the East Bay. Thats not all: Ho has picks for the best restaurants in the Tri-Valley. Yes, the Tri-Valley! There are gems in Dublin, Pleasanton and Livermore, including Malaysian, Guyanese and good ol Californian fare. Speaking of Livermore, the city is perhaps better known for wine or at least it wants to be known for it. Senior wine critic Esther Mobley dives into why the wine growing region hasnt gotten the recognition it thinks it deserves. If youre wondering which wines are actually worth trying, she has a guide to that as well. Further south in the East Bay, reporter Janelle Bitker makes the argument that were all sleeping on the Filipino food here. Sure, Daly City is a local stronghold of the cuisine, but with about 100,000 Filipinos living in Alameda County, theres a ton for locals to eat without crossing the bridge. Finally, writer Ferron Salniker, who grew up in Oakland, looks at the city's long-running, family-owned restaurants. Due to gentrification and displacement, many have been forced to close. Yet theres also a group of second-generation owners who have adapted and are determined to keep their family businesses running. This is just the beginning of what we plan to cover in the greater Bay Area. More guides, stories and delectable food and drink tips will come. In the meantime, dive in and eat. The best Mexican and Central American food is on Facebook Marketplace Tijuana-style tacos! Sonoran tortillas! Salvadoran pupusas! They're all available, if you know how to find them The family works together to get orders out ready for customers on Feb. 26, 2022. Pupuseria Magi has used Facebook Marketplace and Instagram to advertise during the pandemic. Felix Uribe / Special to The Chronicle Go to Story The East Bay's must-eat tacos Quesabirria, fried fish tacos, flour tortillas and other delectable tacos to eat, according to critic Cesar Hernandez Quesabirria drizzled with peanut salsa at Tacos Mi Reynita in Oakland. Andria Lo/Special to The Chronicle Go to Story Can Livermore finally get people to take its wine seriously? The region has always been in the shadows of Napa and Sonoma. The tide, though, is hopefully turning at last Sixth generation winemaker Steven Mirassou of Livermore's Ghielmetti Vineyards hopes the region can attract even more visitors. Stephen Lam/The Chronicle Go to Story Where to get an exceptional burger in the East Bay Lacy and smashed, charbroiled and thick, zesty and Thai the East Bay has it all The bacon burger from Phila Burger Station in Richmond. Santiago Mejia/The Chronicle Go to Story How Oakland's family restaurants are adapting amid gentrification It's hard to stay open these days, but these locals are keeping their parents' businesses alive Kesete Yohannes opened Asmara in 1985. Now his sons are leading a new chapter for the beloved restaurant. Andria Lo/Special to The Chronicle Go to Story All about the Bay Area's great unsung Filipino food destination No need to cross the bridge to Daly City for crispy lechon or fluffy pan de sal Pork sisig photographed at Parekoy Lutong Pinoy in San Leandro, California Friday, Feb. 25, 2022. Stephen Lam / The Chronicle Go to Story The best restaurants in the Tri-Valley Livermore, Dublin, Pleasanton and Danville have so many gems. Here's where to go A spread of juicy buns from 88 Bao in Dublin. Soleil Ho Go to Story Drink this: Eight outstanding wines from Livermore The underdog region has plenty to celebrate, writes senior wine critic Esther Mobley Some of Esther Mobley's top recommended wines from Livermore Valley. Esther Mobley / The Chronicle Go to Story The top pizza in the East Bay Fancy wood oven pizza, crisp square slices and lots and lots of cheese The grandma pizza at San Leandro's Bluebird Pizzeria. Stephen Lam/The Chronicle Go to Story The very best East Bay restaurants Where to splurge on fine dining, indulge in brisket or nosh on spiced rice, as recommended by critics Soleil Ho and Cesar Hernandez Fremont's Afghan Awasana Kabob House is one of the top places to eat in the East Bay right now. Stephen Lam/The Chronicle Go to Story Serena Dai is The San Francisco Chronicles senior food & wine editor. Email: serena.dai@sfchronicle.com. Twitter: @ssdai I first found out about the bounty of Latino food in the East Bay on Facebook Marketplace through a pupusa. Pale white from rice flour, it had a snappy exterior and a lacy edge of crispy cheese coins that flowered due to a sear on the plancha. Salvadoran cuisine tends to avoid heat, but this pupusa came with curtido (pickled vegetables) and little baggies full of faintly sweet, tangy and unexpectedly spicy tomato sauce. It came from the home kitchen of Jaime and Noemi Romero, who run Pupuseria Magi out of their Richmond apartment, and I had to know how many others were like them, selling standout dishes from home. Just go on Facebook Marketplace, Jaime Romero instructed. Indeed, that night when I scrolled through the listings, I found far more than I had anticipated and food that was different from other stuff Id come across while researching where to eat in the East Bay. There was an abundance of regional-specific food from Mexico and Central America: freshly fried carnitas from Michoacan; Guatemalan garnachas; Tijuana-style tacos al carbon (charcoal); flour tortillas from Sonora and much, much more. One of my favorite tacos in the East Bay comes from Carnitas El Canelo, a Richmond home operation where the Graciano and Garcia family make giant Pueblan tacos on blue tortillas. The market really opens up when you know where and how to look. My search started with looking up Mexican food thats harder to get locally, such as handmade flour tortillas, tostadas raspadas and tacos al vapor. Then I limited listings for food that I could pick up in the East Bay. Even then, finding the best food can be a challenge for many because most of the listings are in Spanish. Some listings havent been updated for months, and other promising listings are actually dead ends. Felix Uribe/Special to The Chronicle But once the Facebook food creators finally respond, its like going down a scrumptious rabbit hole one where immigrant resourcefulness turned a spurned social media site into a tool to find and share Latino delicacies. Cue the Jefferson Airplane song. The scene started, in part, much like the rest of the Bay Areas cottage food and home cooking scene: People needed to make money, and cooking made sense. Not unlike pop-ups, its a symptom of the difficulty of running and operating a restaurant, which requires knowledge of bureaucracy and access to enough money to navigate the pricey Bay Area real estate market. About a decade ago, Jaimes kidney illness put a financial strain on his family because it impacted his ability to work. To supplement their income, the family decided to make pupusas. Noemi had plenty of experience since her mother used to run a pupuseria in El Salvador, where she spent her childhood making pupusas. More than anything it was out of necessity, to make rent, to pay bills, says Jaime. The family comes from Puerto El Triunfo, a small municipality about two hours away from the capital city, San Salvador. They moved to the Bay Area in 2017, and that same year they began selling pupusas from their Richmond apartment. Part of their strategy to spread the word was a Facebook Marketplace listing saying pupusas for sale. Felix Uribe / Special to The Chronicle Felix Uribe / Special to The Chronicle The Graciano and Garcia family standing in front of the logo to their taqueria. Right: Tacos dorados being plated. Photos by Felix Uribe / Special To The Chronicle The Graciano and Garcia family standing in front of the logo to their taqueria. Right: Tacos dorados being plated. Photos by Felix Uribe / Special To The Chronicle In the early days, they would set up in front of their apartment and customers could order in person; they pivoted during the pandemic to only taking pedidos (pre-orders). If youre in Richmond, you might drive by a white sign with red letters saying PUPUSAS TO-GO, with the number listed next to it. Or you might have come across their Yelp page, which one of their customers started a few years ago. Most of their clientele, though, comes from Facebook Marketplace. Similar to the Romeros, Maria Marquez, who migrated from Obregon, Sonora, started vending through Marketplace after she lost her house-cleaning job in 2020. She started with one of her familys heirlooms: flour tortillas. It was a natural extension of growing up in Sonora, where flour tortillas are king and some of her most cherished memories are making tortillas with her mom. She posted a listing on the Marketplace advertising her Sonorense tortillas, describing them as flour tortillas, 100% homemade by hand. She would post photos of tortillas with scorch marks in Ziploc bags next to containers of frijoles puercos, beans spiced with chorizo and chiles. In addition to tortillas, she added carne asada kits, expanding her menu with another Sonoran delicacy, grilled beef. She also occasionally sold tamales with sweet corn, salsas and barbacoa. The business is now doing well; the reception to her tortillas inspired Marquez to start a taqueria earlier this year called Tacos Mama Cuca. She sets up in front of her Oakland apartment. While she works the plancha, her husband grills meat. The business blossomed from a supplemental income to a career. Felix Uribe / Special to The Chronicle Felix Uribe / Special to The Chronicle Saturday service at Pupuseria Magi involves a lot of pupusas and spicy curtido (pickled vegetables). Photos by Felix Uribe / Special To The Chronicle Saturday service at Pupuseria Magi involves a lot of pupusas and spicy curtido (pickled vegetables). Photos by Felix Uribe / Special To The Chronicle Yet what started out of necessity for many also became a way to connect with community. When married couple Eduardo Osuna and Danahis Rodriguez started home-cooking operation Tacos Osuna in March 2021, their first customers were other homesick Sinaloenses. The couple, who wanted to share the coastal vibes of Mazatlan, Sinaloa, offer specialties such as agua de cebada (a horchata-like drink made with barley instead of rice) and chorreadas (sope-like dish with pork lard, cheese and carne asada thats a classic late-night snack in Mazatlan). Marquezs first customers were neighbors and people from Sonora, who missed the flavors of their hometown and found her listings on Facebook. On a chilly Oakland evening, I witnessed Marquez quip and reminisce with another migrant from Sonora. They extolled their home soil as a paradise where charcoal-grilled beef and flour tortillas were plentiful. They argued about specifics of the regions cuisine, debating the size of tortillas and names of dishes. A simple carne asada taco and flour tortillas (causes) people to remember memories and experiences of our Sonora, without even being there, Marquez says. Felix Uribe/Special to The Chronicle Some chefs soon realized that there was an audience beyond fellow immigrants. Pupuseria Magis customer base grew to include both Salvadoran and Mexican people, so the Romeros adjusted to accommodate varying tastes. For Salvadorans, they offer the option of corn masa or the less common rice-based flour for pupusas. In El Salvador, rice became a popular alternative for a crisper pupusa, possibly due to a corn shortage in the 70s that caused Salvis to use masa alternatives. Then for Mexican customers, they introduced spicy peppers. And Marquez found a following from folks in the greater Bay area. Her tortillas are smooth and stretchy with an ethereal quality, and since theyre made with vegetable shortening, they absorb flavors beautifully. Dominic Prado even uses her tortillas for his popular Oakland taqueria Tacos El Ultimo Baile. The potential of a wider audience for the food has inspired some of these food vendors to pursue bigger ambitions, like a restaurant or truck. When Tacos Osuna first started, it was based out of the couples home. Now, they rent the driveway of an East Oakland house and set up the taqueria under a formation of brown canopies. Osuna works the plancha and constructs the tacos while someone else grills and Rodriguez takes orders. The couples kids help too, making sweet corn bread and pies. Word of mouth and the launch of their Instagram started to bring other interested folks. Osuna sees working from home as a means to an end. God willing, well open a lonchera or taqueria down the line, he says. Felix Uribe/Special to The Chronicle Theres another reason they want to formalize the operation more: The law, as it often is, is slow to catch up with this phenomenon. It is technically legal to run a home restaurant or pop-up from home, also known as Microenterprise Home Kitchen Operation (MEHKO), but the county has to opt-in to the law and offer permits, which Alameda County does. But with fees and home-kitchen inspections, applying for a MEHKO permit can be tedious, and its scope is narrow, capping operations at 30 meals per day and gross annual sales of $50,000. Where to go Pupuseria Magi: Rice flour pupusas, revuelta (mixed) and chicharron pupusas Richmond. Order by calling this number (510) 325-9454. Carnitas El Canelo: carnitas tacos, potato tacos dorados and aguas frescas. Richmond. Find by messaging on Instagram. Tacos Osuna Estilo Mazatlan: chorreada, tacos and papa loca. Oakland. Find by messaging on Instagram. Tacos/Tortilleria Mama Cuca: tortillas, tacos, lorenza and caramelo. Oakland. Find by messaging on Instagram. See More Collapse About three years ago, someone called the health department on the Romeros. Health inspectors arrived and informed them that what they were doing was illegal. They were left with a warning and started back up a few months later, needing the income. The biggest hurdle to opening a restaurant, though, is still money. In the Bay Area it is estimated to cost over $500,000, depending on square footage and city, and a used food truck could cost anywhere from $50,000 to $100,000. So for now, only the most dedicated food hunters will find these scrappy vendors who will continue to work under-the-radar and pursue their dreams of opening their own restaurant or truck. I want to share a piece of Sonora with people, Marquez says. Being able to bring and share a piece of our land (Sonora) through each taco...for me, thats marvelous. Cesar Hernandez is The San Francisco Chronicles associate restaurant critic. Email: cesar.hernandez@sfchronicle.com Twitter: @cesarischafa Its lunchtime at Totos Grill in Hayward, and a few parents chat in Tagalog as they char skewers of marinated pork at the communal grill for their kids at home. They know to ask the staff to pull out the good stuff isaw, squiggly chicken intestines. Over in Union City, crowds form outside Toppings Too for huge portions of golden fried lechon, steak covered with gravy, and turmeric-tinged java rice. In San Leandro, families eagerly await platters of sizzling sisig at Parekoy Lutong Pinoy, mixing up the crispy pork with raw egg yolk as soon as it hits the table. These Filipino restaurants are just a taste of whats available in the East Bay and the options keep growing. The scene even rivals that of Daly City, which has long been propped up as the best place in the Bay Area to find Filipino food. So although people usually say Daly City is where people should get Filipino food in the region, thats not the only answer. You might even say the East Bay is the great unsung destination for Filipino eats in the Bay Area. Stephen Lam / The Chronicle Stephen Lam / The Chronicle Pork sisig is finished with a raw egg yolk at San Leandro restaurant Parekoy Lutong Pinoy (left). The restaurant loads up its creamy peanut stew known as kare-kare with fresh vegetables. Photos by Stephen Lam / The Chronicle Pork sisig is finished with a raw egg yolk at San Leandro restaurant Parekoy Lutong Pinoy (left). The restaurant loads up its creamy peanut stew known as kare-kare with fresh vegetables. Photos by Stephen Lam / The Chronicle Nobody gets enough credit, said Gemma Ballesteros, who grew up in the East Bay and opened her Filipino-inspired bakery Marleys Treats in Hayward in 2020. Theres a lot out here. Its just a matter of finding it. About 100,000 Filipinos live in Alameda County, primarily in the southern swath from San Leandro to Fremont, according to census data. Union City is often referred to as the East Bays Little Manila, with Filipinos making up 20% of the population. By contrast, Daly Citys population is about 30% Filipino. If theres still doubt about whether this slice of the East Bay is an important center of Filipino culture, just look to the big Filipino chains. Beloved fast-food giant Jollibee and mango cake bakery Red Ribbon both touched down in Union City before expanding to Hayward in 2019. And Gerrys Grill, one of the biggest restaurant chains in the Philippines, has just one Bay Area location: Union City. Alex Retodo, owner of the Lumpia Co. in Oakland, said he doesnt understand why the East Bay isnt hyped as a must-visit Filipino food hub like Daly City. Perhaps its because people just dont think to drive from Oakland or San Francisco to Union City to eat after all, Union City is 20 miles from downtown Oakland, whereas Daly City is just 10 miles from downtown San Francisco. The diversity of the Filipino options in Union City is worth the drive, though, from homey turo-turo spots where customers choose slow-cooked stews out of steam tables to hip newcomers that bake purple crinkle cookies with ube, the Filipino purple yam. If I have a day off and I want to take someone and educate them with a food tour, Im going to Union City. Im going to Hayward, Retodo said. Samantha Laurey / The Chronicle Samantha Laurey / The Chronicle Ube cheesecakes and upside-down halo halo are some of the main attractions at Cafe 86 in Union City (left). The Southern California-born chain offers a long list of beverages, some flavored with Filipino ingredients like calamansi. Photos by Samantha Laurey / The Chronicle Ube cheesecakes and upside-down halo halo are some of the main attractions at Cafe 86 in Union City (left). The Southern California-born chain offers a long list of beverages, some flavored with Filipino ingredients like calamansi. Photos by Samantha Laurey / The Chronicle Retodo grew up with Hayward and has seen how Filipino food culture has grown since the 80s. He remembers just a handful of Filipino spots in those early days; instead, families shared trays of lumpia and barbecue sticks at church festivals. They rolled it all by hand at moms house for a whole week to sell thousands of lumpia in a three-day weekend, he said. That happened in almost every church because food was our language for building friendships with other people. That unofficial food economy evolved into catering operations, which turned into restaurants. Small markets selling shrimp paste and dried mangoes eventually gave way to big Filipino grocery stores in Union City like Seafood City, which added a Hayward location in 2019. The East Bays best Filipino restaurants specialize in classics done right, such as the creamy peanut stew known as kare-kare and breakfast plates brimming with tocino, a sweet cured pork. But that may explain another reason why they dont have strong name recognition: It can be hard to know where to go. Many of these spots have been around for decades, and their owners tend to be older Filipino immigrants who dont bother with websites or social media, said bakery owner Ballesteros. Stephen Lam/The Chronicle That might be why Helen Minor, co-owner of Parekoy Lutong Pinoy, said she hasnt noticed much change in terms of Filipino food in San Leandro since she moved there 21 years ago. Old-school spots close because the owners retire, and then a new family picks it up and reopens under a new name. There are exceptions to the perceived lack of change; namely, her own restaurant, which opened in 2016. Parekoy immediately earned a rave review from then-critic Luke Tsai in the East Bay Express for the restaurants phenomenal pork sisig, which gets its sour notes from the Filipino citrus calamansi. Minor said business took off from there, and she sees diners from all over the Bay Area thanks to word of mouth. While Parekoy has achieved destination status, there are other Filipino restaurants worth checking out nearby, too. A couple of miles away, Tapsilog Express churns out quick Filipino breakfast plates of meat, rice and a runny egg all day. A couple of miles from there, Filipino-slash-pizza restaurant Fresh Pizza tops cheesy pies with sisig. (It works.) And a couple miles from there, Pistahan serves not only a popular all-you-can-eat buffet but expertly fries items to order, like crackling, fatty pork knuckle known as crispy pata. Classic spots tend to serve traditional halo-halo for dessert, but the East Bay also has options for modern Filipino sweets like warm ube pan de sal, a Filipino roll stuffed with creamy leche flan at Marleys Treats. Earlier this year, Southern Californias Cafe 86 also entered the Union City scene with ube-flavored cheesecakes and drinks. Owner Ginger Lim-Dimapasok said the lines havent stopped since she opened the doors. Stephen Lam/The Chronicle When Lim-Dimapasok began scouting spaces for Cafe 86s first Bay Area location, she went to Daly City. Its where everyone told her to look except her sister, who lives in Union City. Lim-Dimapasok recalled driving through Daly City and South San Francisco, then crossing the bridge into the East Bay and realizing she had never really considered the area before. Once we did go there, it felt right, she said. It felt homey, like the Philippines. 10 Filipino spots to try in the East Bay Cafe 86 This small cafe chain from Southern California serves a variety of teas, coffee and sweets starring Filipino ingredients, with an emphasis on ube. Try the ube truffles and upside-down halo halo, an ube-forward twist on the highly textured shaved ice dessert. 34391 Alvarado-Niles Road, Union City. cafe-86.com Isla Restaurant Isla is a top choice for trying Kapampangan-style food, a Spanish-influenced subset of Filipino cuisine via the Kapampangan people. There are a la carte options, like the skinless, crispy version of the sweet sausage known as longanisa, as well as huge family-style combo platters served on banana leaves. 5720 Mowry School Road, Newark. www.myislarestaurant.com Gerry's Grill One of the biggest chains from the Philippines, Gerry's Grill serves a wide variety of traditional dishes. Popular options include crispy pata and beef kare-kare, a creamy peanut stew. This is also one of the few East Bay Filipino restaurants with outdoor seating. 31005 Courthouse Drive, Union City. gerrysgrill.com/usa/ Maharlika No need to agonize over a menu here - you're ordering fried chicken. Maharlika has earned a decades-long reputation as the East Bay's best Filipino fried chicken, making a favorite catering option for parties. 3671 Thorton Ave., Fremont. 510-794-5128 Marley's Treats A homegrown modern Filipino bakery, Marley's gets creative with ube, pandan and leche flan. While the flan-topped ube cheesecake tarts are the best-seller, don't miss the ube pan de sal stuffed with flan, which manages to be less sweet but still rich. 838 B St., Hayward. marleystreats.com Parekoy Lutong Pinoy The pork sisig, a sizzling, savory-sour platter of crispy pork, is Parekoy's biggest hit for good reason. Count on anything else crispy and porcine as a safe bet. 14807 E. 14th St., San Leandro. parekoylutongpinoy.com Pistahan The all-you-can-eat buffet loaded with stews from chicken adobo to pork blood-heavy dinuguan is a popular choice. But you can also order something freshly fried off the menu, such as lumpia or crispy pata. Either way, there's plenty of seating in the cozy dining room. 13876 Doolittle Dr., San Leandro. 510-346-0000 The Original Luisa and Son Bakeshop A typical Filipino bakery, Luisa and Son sells bags of fluffy pan de sal, cheese-topped sponge cakes and whole egg pies. Try the ube macapuno ensaimada, a spiral-shape pastry with swirls of purple yam and chunks of young coconut. 4128 Dyer St., Union City. luisaandson.com Toppings Too Huge portions of classic Filipino meats, including crispy fried pork belly known as lechon and the sweet cured pork known as tocino, draw a loyal following to this tiny spot. There are only a few seats, so expect to order takeout and walk across the street to the park. 3910 Smith St., Union City. 510-429-1058 Toto's Grill At this Filipino street food spot, you grab skewers, pay and cook them yourself at a giant communal grill. Intestines are popular, as are nostalgic items like fish cakes, but the tastiest is the pork marinated in soy sauce, garlic and brown sugar . 21933 Foothill Blvd., Hayward. totos-grill.com See More Collapse Cafe 86 joins a flourishing Filipino baked goods scene in this part of the East Bay. Vallejo-born Starbreads steaming hot senorita bread is available in Newark. Valerios Tropical Bakeshop serves turon, crispy fried banana spring rolls, and bibingka, the baked mochi-like rice cake, in Union City and Hayward. Manilas Original Luisa and Son Bakeshop is a treasure trove of sweet breads flavored with ube, coconut and pandan in Union City. In the future, Retodo predicts Oakland will become the center for modern, next-generation Filipino food, building on the success of places like FOB Kitchen and his Lumpia Co. As for cities like San Leandro, Hayward and Union City, he sees more growth for both classic and innovative restaurants than in already-crowded Daly City. When you have more potential market, more businesses will keep moving in, he said. I think the East Bay is going to have the most (Filipino) shops in America. But to me, as far as the essential everyday needs, theyre already all there. Janelle Bitker is a San Francisco Chronicle staff writer. Email: janelle.bitker@sfchronicle.com Twitter: @janellebitker When Steven Kent Mirassou decided to open a winery in Livermore in 1996, he sensed that he was investing in a hidden gem before it got discovered, kind of like the viticultural equivalent of buying Apple stock in 1980. Livermore seemed to have everything a vintner could want. The ground here is packed with gravel a soil type coveted by winegrowers, found also in Bordeaux. The climate seemed ideal for winegrowing, with wind gaps funneling through the valley, pushing fog and cool air from the San Francisco Bay toward Tracy, and keeping vineyards at an optimal temperature. Whats more, Livermore has a great story, with a history of grape growing dating to the nineteenth century. It would only be a matter of time, Mirassou figured, before the word got out. But alas: A quarter-century later, Livermore Valley still hasnt taken off as a fine wine region. With some notable exceptions, like the ultra-successful Wente Vineyards, few of the valleys 50-some wineries enjoy widespread name recognition. Buyers in other parts of the country know Napa and Sonoma, but theyve often never heard of Livermore wine country, according to local sommelier Jeremy Troupe-Masi. After all this time, Livermore wineries still cant get the respect they believe theyre due. Stephen Lam/The Chronicle Ive been somewhat frustrated by the lack of progress, said Mirassou, who makes some of the valleys best wines at his Steven Kent Winery. Livermore has still not gotten what it deserves in visibility. Now, a series of initiatives is in the works that might finally elevate Livermores reputation, including a new organization for marketing the valleys wines and a program that will assist small producers to improve wine quality. To the vintners who are investing in these changes, its a thrilling time for Livermore. Maybe, they feel, the valley is on the verge of hitting the big time at last. But other vintners are getting tired of waiting around for Livermore wine to happen. Among them is Collin Cranor, the owner of Nottingham Cellars, one of the most promising wineries to open in Livermore in the last 15 years. Exasperated by the rising cost of doing business and the continuing low visibility, Cranor is in the process of moving most of his business to a nearby area thats already built a reputation for itself: Napa. Cranor recognizes that big changes are afoot in Livermore. Theyve got a 25-year plan to reinvent this appellation, he said. But I dont have 25 years to wait to hopefully turn the corner. Ill be working construction again. Stephen Lam/The Chronicle Every Livermore vintner has a theory about whats to blame for the regions slow path toward recognition. Its the location in deep East Bay suburbia. Its the communitys failure to coalesce around a signature varietal, the way that Russian River Valley claimed Pinot Noir and Napa Valley claimed Cabernet Sauvignon. Its the fact that Bay Area folks still see Livermore as a cow town, as Wente Vineyards viticulturist Niki Wente puts it, even as a handful of destination restaurants, bars and boutique hotels are now starting to emerge. Of course, even local winemakers admit that the problem also has to do with the fact that some Livermore wines havent been very good. Fifteen years ago, maybe four or five wineries were making wine that I would drink, said Mark Clarin, winemaker at McGrail Vineyards, one of the areas top producers. Thats changing, he noted: Now its 20. The truly hideous wines have gone away. An ardent fan base mostly Alameda County residents knows this, and is quick to defend Livermore whenever the region is omitted from Bay Area wine conversations. As a wine writer, Ive never received so many passionate emails about a single region. Cranor, the Nottingham vintner, compared it to the fan base of the Oakland As: a very vocal and very proud minority. Still, despite the gradual improvements and the love from locals, Mirassou insisted that Livermore wines ought to be better. Its not as if everybody is maximizing quality, he said. One challenge is that many Livermore wineries are run by weekend hobbyists or tech-industry retirees, rather than by professionally trained winemakers. Its great that theres a low barrier to entry, Mirassou said, but it also excuses a certain lack of ambition. Stephen Lam/The Chronicle Mirassou is nothing if not ambitious. His top wine, a Cabernet Sauvignon blend called Lineage, sells for $185. Lately, hes also been bullish on Cabernet Franc, which he believes grows exceptionally well in Livermore; he started a dedicated Cab Franc brand called Lautre Cote ($98). Mirassou has emerged as a kind of Robert Mondavi-type figure: Like that famous Napa Valley vintner, he sees it as his mission to elevate the regions reputation both by producing great wines himself and by helping his neighbors produce better wines. That has led Mirassou and other Livermore leaders, notably the Wente family, to back an initiative called the Livermore Valley Quality Alliance. The new nonprofit has hired a winemaker from Napa, Julie Schreiber, who will advise Livermore wineries on how to improve their wines. The organization will also hold educational seminars. Its a rare and remarkable resource for California wineries: a dedicated consultant and training program, for a minimal fee. Yet Clarin, of McGrail Vineyards, says its merely an official version of what other wine regions already do informally. Maybe Napa doesnt have a quality alliance, but they share information and hold each other to a higher standard, he said. The Quality Alliance is launching on the heels of the formation of a Wine Heritage District essentially a body for marketing the regions wines. Because of the way its able to collect dues, the Wine Heritage District has the potential to increase Livermores existing marketing budget by more than 20%. Theres hope that this bump can provide that long-awaited push to the big time. Weve never had the budget to market ourselves properly, said Heather McGrail, owner of McGrail Vineyards. Im hoping for a renaissance. But Cranor said that for his business, the new efforts may be too little, too late. Stephen Lam / The Chronicle Stephen Lam / The Chronicle Livermore Valley is home to more than 50 wineries, left, yet only a few, like Wente Vineyards, have gained widespread acclaim. At right, bottles from Steven Kent Winery, one of the most ambitious producers in the region. Photos by Stephen Lam / The Chronicle Livermore Valley is home to more than 50 wineries, left, yet only a few, like Wente Vineyards, have gained widespread acclaim. At right, bottles from Steven Kent Winery, one of the most ambitious producers in the region. Photos by Stephen Lam / The Chronicle Like Mirassou in the 1990s, Cranor and his father were drawn to Livermore because they saw a rare opportunity. When they first started making Livermore Valley wine in 2007, Cranor said, he could buy great Cabernet Sauvignon grapes for $1,500 per ton, whereas grapes he perceived to be of similar quality cost $5,000 per ton in Napa. (Those grape prices would typically translate to bottle prices of $15 and $50, respectively.) We just saw tremendous potential, said Cranor. Gravelly soils, warm days, cool nights, hillsides all the things you get really excited about as a winemaker, but instead of paying Rutherford prices youre paying Lodi prices. The prices, though, did not stay low. Along with the rest of the Bay Area, Livermore saw its real estate market explode in the years following 2007. As land prices rose, some vineyard owners sold their parcels to housing or commercial developers, resulting in a decrease in overall grape acreage. (An unstable grape market, with wildly fluctuating prices during the last five years, was also partly responsible, Niki Wente said.) That dynamic drove fruit prices up to the point where, according to Cranor, top-quality Livermore grapes were approaching Napa- and Sonoma-level prices. (Not all Livermore fruit is that expensive; Mirassou estimates the regions average Cabernet Sauvignon price is around $1,100 per ton.) And it still wasnt getting any easier for wineries like Nottingham to charge more money for their bottles. The price pressure was going up, and the marketability was remaining the same, Cranor said. If he was going to have to charge Napa prices for his wines, Cranor figured, he might as well be in Napa. So he went. Last year, Cranor started leasing a production facility there and buying Cabernet Sauvignon grapes from pedigreed Napa Valley vineyards like Georges III, owned by famed viticulturist Andy Beckstoffer. He bottles the wines under a new brand called Grape Culture, whose prices range from $90 to $150. Stephen Lam/The Chronicle Cranor hasnt entirely abandoned Livermore hes still making some Livermore-grown wine, and the Nottingham tasting room in Livermore remains open. But the simple fact of moving some of his production and sourcing to Napa has already provided a huge boost for the business. It sucks, because we still love Livermore, Jeremy Troupe-Masi, the sommelier who is also Nottinghams general manager. But having that Napa Valley on a label instantly gets people interested. Nottinghams semi-defection hasnt deterred other Livermore vintners from their push toward the big time, but it does raise a worrying question: What if other promising wine brands leave Livermore or decide not to start a business here in the first place? As that possibility lingers, the local industrys leaders point to various solutions. Heather McGrail said Livermore needs a wealthy outside investor to come in and make a big splash, similar to the role that flashy Daou Vineyards has played in Paso Robles. Mirassou is still advocating that more wineries make Cabernet Franc, which he believes will be better suited to withstanding the most extreme effects of climate change than Cabernet Sauvignon. Niki Wente simply wishes there were more wine grapes grown in Livermore, period. She estimated that the Livermore Valleys total vineyard acreage is around 3,000 right now, a decrease of about 25-40% from recent years. The more buy-in we have from people who own the land, the better, Wente said. Despite it all, theres a renewed sense of hope in the air in Livermore and a conviction that the Quality Alliance and the Heritage District are, at the very least, steps in the right direction. After 26 years of this, I feel less like Sisyphus in 2022 than I ever have, Mirassou said. Esther Mobley is The San Francisco Chronicles senior wine critic. Email: emobley@sfchronicle.com Twitter: @Esther_mobley Not all school districts in the Bay Area are following the states advice to lift school mask mandates in the coming days. California will no longer require unvaccinated residents to wear masks in most indoor public settings. Many students across California will get to walk into class without a mask on March 12, but those at San Francisco public schools wont be among them. For the newest COVID news, see our live updates. Latest updates: London Breed pressures S.F. schools on mask mandate despite public support: Mayor London Breed is pressing leaders at the San Francisco Unified School District to lift mask requirements at K-12 schools with the rest of the state on March 12. "I talked with the superintendent yesterday, expressed my strong desires to see the masks removed in schools," she told ABC7 News during a press briefing Tuesday. "He has to work with the union to figure out a solution." The district has stated that it will keep the indoor mask mandate in place until the end of the school year to protect teachers, staff, and students from vulnerable communities. While 69% of children between the ages of 5 to 11 in San Francisco are vaccinated, rates vary widely by race and ethnicity: just 29% of Black children and 48% of Hispanic children are fully vaccinated compared to 81% of Asian and 64% of white children. A statewide poll conducted in the first two weeks of February by the UC Berkeley Institute of Governmental Studies found 74% of registered voters in the Bay Area want to continue seeing face coverings in schools. Two vaccine shots offered little protection against omicron, study finds: The first two doses of the Pfizer and Moderna vaccines offered limited protection against the omicron coronavirus variant, according to a large scale study published Wednesday in the New England Journal of Medicine. The study, which was conducted in the United Kingdom between Nov. 27 and Jan. 12 as omicron rapidly crowded out delta, found that the effectiveness of the Pfizer vaccine in preventing symptomatic COVID-19 infection fell from 65.5% to about 8.8% six months after patients completed their primary vaccine series. Protection with the Moderna vaccine fell from 75.1% to 14.9% over the same period. Booster shots of either vaccine restored protection levels back to initial levels, the researchers found, but that protection also started to wane after two months. Our findings support maximizing coverage with third doses of vaccine in highly vaccinated populations, they said. Analysis of the shots ability to ward off more serious illness is expected later, but will likely show substantively higher levels of protection. Bidens push to test to treat COVID already underway: A central part of President Bidens new COVID strategy the so-called test to treat initiative to enable pharmacies, long-term care facilities and community health centers to test patients and give out antiviral pills on the spot if they test positive is already happening at many Bay Area health care providers. But some caution that overly rapid administration of the drugs could gloss over critical steps. Read the full story here. FDA warns against three at-home rapid tests: The U.S. Food and Drug Administration today issued a safety communication warning people not to use three brands of rapid home coronavirus tests because they were not authorized for distribution or use. The kits include the Celltrion DiaTrust COVID-19 Ag Rapid Test in green and white packaging; the SD Biosensor STANDARD Q COVID-19 Ag Home Test, which is packaged in a white and magenta box; and the ACON Laboratories Flowflex SARS-CoV-2 Antigen Rapid Test (Self-Testing), packaged in a dark blue box. The FDA is concerned about the risk of false results when using this unauthorized test, the agency said in a release. The tests are widely available online, as well as in some physical pharmacies like Walgreens and CVS. Russia helped spread COVID misinformation in the U.S.: Much of the misinformation around COVID-19 vaccine safety and other coronavirus mitigation measures in the United States can be attributed to Russian actors on social media, according to a comprehensive study by researchers at Stanford University. Fake social media accounts generated during the pandemic in Russia, China and Iran targeted right-leaning influencers, wellness influencers, longtime anti-vaxxers, and various fringe groups to spread conspiracy theories and bad-faith information about the virus to deepen the crisis. In addition to using mainstream social media platforms, they also zeroed in on online forums and alternative outlets such as Gab, Parler and Telegram to fuel resistance to mask mandates and life-saving vaccines. The accounts in the network posted a series of memes, articles, and messages that appeared aimed to exacerbate existing social and political tensions in the United States, including around the Biden administrations response to COVID-19 and the vaccine rollout. The authors urge the operators of online platforms to remain vigilant as high-harm misinformation is not going away and must be met with a collective, resilient, and dynamic response. S.F. tourism shows signs of a post-pandemic rebound: San Francisco saw around 14.8 million visitors to the city last year, up 25% from 2020 the year the COVID pandemic took hold of the world according to the San Francisco Travel Association. But thats still down 44% from a record-high 26.2 million visitors in 2019. Spending by tourists increased to $3.1 billion last year, up from $2.8 billion the year before. But that was still down significantly compared to the $10.3 billion recorded in 2019, according to the travel association. BA.2 cases doubling every week in the U.S.: The number of new COVID-19 infections attributed to the BA.2 omicron sub-variant of the coronavirus is doubling in the United States every week, according to federal data. The highly contagious strain made up more than 8% of all new cases last week, the latest report from the Centers for Disease Control and Prevention shows. That is up from 4.4% in the previous seven-day period, and 2% the week before that. The parent omicron strain and its sub-variants now make up 100% of the new cases sequenced nationwide, having successfully edged out the delta and alpha variants of the virus. While public health officials do not expect another surge, new studies of BA.2 known as stealth omicron show that the lineage is more transmissible than the original omicron and may slow down efforts to resume normalcy. Florida governor berates students for wearing masks at public event: Gov. Ron DeSantis chided a group of high school students for wearing masks at a press conference at the University of South Florida on Wednesday. You do not have to wear those masks, DeSantis said, shaking his head, in a video clip captured by WFLA and shared widely on social media. Please take them off. Honestly, its not doing anything. Weve gotta stop with this COVID theater. So if you wanna wear it, fine, but this is ridiculous. At least two of the students hesitantly removed their masks when prompted by the Republican governor, according to the video. The Tampa region, where DeSantis was speaking, is classified as having high community coronavirus transmission, for which the Centers for Disease Control and Prevention recommends universal indoor masking. Hillsborough School Superintendent Addison Davis responded to DeSantis outburst by praising the students who kept their masks on: It is a student and parents choice to protect their health in a way they feel most appropriate. We are proud of the manner in which our students represented themselves. U.S. may see up to 9,100 more COVID-19 deaths in March: Ensemble forecasts used by the Centers for Disease Control and Prevention predict that the number of newly reported COVID-19 deaths in the United States will likely decrease over the next four weeks, with 3,800 to 9,100 new deaths likely reported in the week ending March 26. The national ensemble predicts that a total of 971,000 to 986,000 COVID-19 deaths will be reported by this date. State-level data forecast that California could see about 600 or more additional deaths in the same period. Biden unveils new COVID strategy, signaling new phase of pandemic: President Biden on Wednesday announced a new strategy for dealing with COVID-19 long-term, a plan that emphasizes moving beyond the restrictions that have come to define daily life the last two years. Read the full story here. COVID can infect penis and testicles, causing erectile dysfunction: The coronavirus can reach the male genital tract, causing testicular pain, erectile dysfunction, reduced sperm count and quality, and decreased fertility, according to a new pre-print study from Northwestern Medicine. Scientists made the unexpected discovery utilizing a PET scan, which is specially designed to reveal sites of infection spreading over time in a whole-body scan. They said they expected to see the virus in the lungs and high up in the nose near the brain because people were experiencing loss of taste and smell. But the signal that jumped out at us was the complete spread through the male genital tract, said lead investigator Thomas Hope, professor of cell and developmental biology at Northwestern University Feinberg School of Medicine. We had no idea we would find it there. Clinical studies suggest 10% to 20% of SARS-CoV-2-infected men have symptoms related to male genital tract dysfunction, the report says. Even if this is only a small percentage of the infected, it represents millions of men who may suffer from a negative impact on their sexual health and fertility, Hope said. Stanford set to ease mask mandate on most of university campus: Following updated indoor masking guidance from the Santa Clara Public Health Department, Sanford University today announced that with certain exceptions, face coverings will no longer be required but will continue to be strongly recommended on-site, regardless of vaccination status. In classrooms, masks will continue to be required through the beginning of the spring quarter, which starts on March 28, but individuals will be permitted to remove face coverings when speaking. Unvaccinated people should continue to wear masks indoors, and masks will also be required in specific settings such as health care and child care facilities, as well as on public transit. We expect that some members of our community will choose to continue masking in meetings and other indoor settings, wrote Provost Persis Drell in an email to the campus, according to the Stanford Daily. Drought Map Track water shortages and restrictions across Bay Area Check the water shortage status of your area, plus see reservoir levels and a list of restrictions for the Bay Areas largest water districts. Russias invasion of Ukraine could lead to new virus outbreaks, warns WHO: The Russian assault on Ukraine, which has led to the displacement of hundreds of thousands of people, could lead to new coronavirus outbreaks, officials from the World Health Organization said during a briefing Wednesday. Infectious diseases ruthlessly exploit the conditions created by war, said Dr. Bruce Aylward, a senior advisor at the WHO. Refugees are at higher risk for potential COVID-19 outbreaks, he said, especially with three major oxygen plants and key medical supplies in Ukraine now inaccessible due to the invasion. Ukraine, which has a low vaccination rate in part because of a targeted misinformation campaign by its adversary, was already struggling to control the virus before the war broke out. Low rates of testing since the start of the conflict mean there is likely to be significant undetected transmission coupled with low vaccination coverage, said WHO Director-General Tedros Adhanom Ghebreyesus. This increases the risk of large numbers of people developing severe disease. CDC no longer recommending universal COVID-19 contact tracing: The Centers for Disease Control and Prevention said this week they were no longer recommending universal contact tracing and case investigations for COVID-19, encouraging health departments to focus instead on high-risk settings. The CDC said factors including high enough levels of vaccine- or illness-induced immunity, the increased use of at-home tests and the high volume of reported cases contributed to the decision to relax contact tracing. Biden announces new COVID initiatives: President Biden announced during his State of the Union address Tuesday that the federal government will launch a Test to Treat Initiative a program meant to reduce the time between a persons positive COVID-19 test result and the moment they receive treatment such as antiviral pills and monoclonal antibodies. The initiative will also include steps to educate the public about new treatments, inform health care providers about new treatments and deliver antiviral pills to long-term care facilities. Biden administration expanding delivery of antiviral pills, at-home tests: The federal government and Pfizer have been working together to fast-track the production and delivery of antiviral pills to treat COVID-19, President Biden said during his State of the Union address Tuesday. Roughly 1 million pills will be made available this month at select pharmacy clinics and more than 2 million will be available in April, officials said. Starting next week, households that have already ordered COVID-19 tests from the government can order four more tests for free. The government had delivered more than 270 million free tests by March 1. Bay Area lags in office return compared to other major metros: After a sharp dip in January due to the omicron COVID-19 surge, more Bay Area residents are returning to their offices to work. But at 25% of its pre-pandemic baseline, the attendance rate in the San Francisco metropolitan region lags behind other areas as of mid-February, according to the Office of the Controllers latest reopening report. By comparison, weekly office attendance is close to about 50% of its baseline in Austin, 35% in Los Angeles, 32% in New York, and 28% in San Jose. Hotel occupancy in San Francisco has recovered to December levels, with about 45% of available rooms in use, but still remains far below the 80% pre-pandemic average. The average rate of an overnight stay has edged back up to $200, down from about $310 in 2019. Contra Costa County hits booster milestone, but still a long way to go: Contra Costa County this week hit a milestone in the administration of COVID-19 vaccine boosters, with 50% of eligible residents now having gotten a booster shot, county health officials said Tuesday. While were glad that number is on the rise, that number is still too low for our comfort, health services director Anna Roth told county supervisors. We still have a long way to go. Boosters significantly reduce the likelihood of COVID infection and hospitalization compared to the primary vaccine series most Americans got two shots of mRNA vaccine for their primary series which are already very protective against hospitalization and death. Booster uptake has lagged in the region, state and nation, with just 50% to 68% of eligible residents in most Bay Area counties having been boosted. People 12 and older whove been fully vaccinated are eligible for boosters. Those five to 11 years old are not yet eligible for boosters because not enough time has passed since their first two shots; this group only became eligible for their initial shots in November, and boosters are given at least five months after the second shot. Alameda County aligns with state to drop mask mandate for the unvaccinated, will decide this week on masking in schools: Alameda County is the latest Bay Area jurisdiction to align with state guidance that allows unvaccinated residents to go maskless in most indoor public settings starting Tuesday. Other Bay Area counties have taken the same tack. Alameda County is still considering whether it will also align with the states policy to lift indoor mask requirements for K-12 schools on March 12. California announced both masking changes Monday. Counties and school districts can choose to keep indoor masking in schools but so far in the Bay Area, only San Francisco Unified School District has announced plans to retain its local school mask mandate. Sonoma County COVID trends going in the right direction despite high case count: Sonoma County officials said that coronavirus metrics were improving in the region as the omicron winter surge continues to wane. Things are going in the right direction, Dr. Sundari Mase, the countys health officer, told a Board of Supervisors meeting Tuesday. That is good news. However, she said there has been a decline in demand for testing and encouraged people to report the results of at-home antigen tests to the county database so the public health department could continue to accurately monitor COVID-19 trends. We still have a very high case-volume, Mase said. Sonoma County is averaging around 20 daily cases per 100,000 residents, down from a peak of 228 cases per 100,000 in early January. Its significantly higher than where we were before last November before the omicron surge, she cautioned. Mase also said the county will sunset its recommendation that students wear masks outdoors while at school and would follow Californias guidelines for allowing schools to lift the indoor mask mandate for vaccinated individuals. Hawaii to end Safe Travels COVID safety program: Hawaii Gov. David Ige said Tuesday that Hawaiis Safe Travels program, which allowed people coming into the state to bypass quarantine requirements, would end March 25, Hawaii News Now reported. The program requires temperature screenings at Hawaiian airports and a mandatory five-day quarantine, unless incoming travelers presented proof of vaccination or a negative COVID test within 72 hours of their departure times. After anxiously awaiting Gov. Gavin Newsoms announcement about the mask mandate in schools, districts across the Bay Area have received an answer but not all are following in the states footsteps. California joined Oregon and Washington in lifting school mask mandates, officials announced Monday. The requirement will end March 12 across the state, and all nine Bay Area counties Alameda, Contra Costa, Marin, Napa, Santa Clara, Solano, San Mateo, San Francisco and Sonoma have announced they will adopt the state guidance. However, individual school districts may choose to keep mask requirements in place in counties that adopt the looser state guidelines. The Chronicle contacted the largest school districts in each of the Bay Areas nine counties to inquire whether their policies will change. Some have not yet decided, and some did not immediately respond. Here is a roundup of what is known so far. This list will be updated as more information becomes available. Alameda County Oakland Unified: Masks are still required indoors. The district will determine whether to keep, modify or remove its mask mandate after receiving guidance from the countys health department. Fremont Unified: Masks are still required indoors. The district will determine whether to keep, modify or remove its mask mandate after receiving guidance from the countys health department. Pleasanton Unified: Masks will no longer be required indoors for students, regardless of vaccination status, beginning Monday, March 14. Contra Costa County San Ramon Valley Unified: Masks will no longer be required indoors for students, regardless of vaccination status, beginning Monday, March 14. Staff are also not required to wear masks indoors after March 11. Walnut Creek: Masks will no longer be required indoors for students beginning March 14. Mount Diablo Unified: Masks will not be required for students or staff after March 11 no matter their vaccination status, according Theresa Harrington, a spokesperson for the district. District officials are encouraging face coverings for anyone who wants to continue wearing a mask and encouraging people who are eligible to get vaccinated and a booster shot. Marin County Novato Unified: Masks will no longer be required for students and staff indoors, regardless of vaccination status, come March 14. Tamalpais Union High: Masks will no longer be required indoors for students or staff, regardless of vaccination status, as of March 14. Napa County Napa Valley Unified: Masks will no longer be required for students and staff indoors, regardless of vaccination status, as of March 14. St. Helena Unified: Masks will no longer be required for students and staff indoors, regardless of vaccination status, as of March 14. San Francisco San Francisco Unified: Come March 12, masks will be voluntary for middle and high schools and April 2 for all school sites. San Mateo County San Mateo Union High: Masks are still required for students and staff, regardless of vaccination status. South San Francisco Unified: Masks will still be required indoors for students and staff. District officials plan to discuss possible changes to the indoor mask policy at their board meeting on March 10, Superintendent Shawnterra Moore said in a statement. Drought Map Track water shortages and restrictions across Bay Area Check the water shortage status of your area, plus see reservoir levels and a list of restrictions for the Bay Areas largest water districts. Santa Clara County Palo Alto Unified: Masks are no longer required indoors for students or staff as of March 14, but the district will be watching closely to see if the Santa Clara County Public Health Department imposes any additional restrictions. San Jose Unified: Masks are no longer required but are strongly recommended for both students and staff, beginning March 14. Cupertino Union: Masks will be strongly recommended but not required for students and staff effective March 14. Solano County Vacaville Unified: Masks will no longer be required beginning March 14, regardless of vaccination status, for both students and staff. Fairfield-Suisun Unified: Masks will no longer be required for students indoors, regardless of vaccination status, come March 14. An update on staff will be expected soon. Sonoma County Petaluma Joint Union: Masks will no longer be required for students indoors, regardless of vaccination status, come March 14. Vaccinated staff will have the option to forgo masks. Napa and Sonoma counties: Officials in the largest districts have not yet provided responses. Chronicle staff writer Jessica Flores contributed to this report. Annie Vainshtein is a San Francisco Chronicle staff writer. Email: avainshtein@sfchronicle.com Twitter: @annievain The recent recall of three San Francisco school board members had nothing to do with the slow reopening of schools due to COVID (something they had no control over anyway); it was always part of the fight against desegregating Lowell High School and a group of parents maintaining what they perceive to be an advantage for their children at the expense of the public school system generally. I should not have to explain the basic math of so called elite public high schools, but if one school cherry-picks all the highest grade-point-average students from across the system into one school in order to justify offering a wider selection of Advanced Placement courses than the rest, the average GPA of all the other schools will go down and they will be penalized for it as a consequence. We can call it elite, but Lowell is really about compounding and perpetuating inequality. Lowells message is essentially, Because weve refused to invest in your education up till now, we will use your low academic performance to justifying continuing to de-invest in your future. Wiley Jackson, San Francisco Reimagine S.F. offices Regarding Mayor Breed wants office workers to return to S.F., but not everyone is on board (SFChronicle.com, Feb. 28): Both policymakers and companies need to think bigger. I appreciate Mayor London Breeds leadership throughout this pandemic, but I dont believe we should ask workers to come back to offices just to subsidize a downtown that was already struggling to maintain relevance before shelter-in-place. COVID-19 accelerated changes in the nature of work that were already bound to happen, and imploring workers to return is only a stopgap. San Francisco needs to rethink what the Financial District can offer to its residents, workers and tourists besides high-rise after high-rise of offices. They just arent needed anymore. Daniel Lilly, San Francisco PG&Es costly analysis Regarding PG&E seeks hikes for fire prevention (Bay Area & Business, Feb. 28): PG&E now sees the undergrounding of wires, once viewed as prohibitively expensive, as more cost-effective than allowing its equipment to keep starting fires. So, disruption, destruction and death are just the price of doing business. But hey, thats gotten a bit too expensive; maybe we should look into this safe system idea. Look no further than our investor-owned utility for proof of the amorality of corporations. William Raffetto, Moraga I stand against war I stand with the people of Ukraine, who have done nothing to provoke Vladimir Putins war on their homeland. I stand with the courageous Ukrainian civilians fighting back with home-made Molotov cocktails and small arms. I especially stand with the Russian citizens who are risking their lives by demonstrating against the war their leader has caused. This is the end of Russia as a member of the world community. It is pointless to speculate about what is in the mind of Putin. Now he is threatening nuclear war. Various writers have called it hypocrisy that some Americans are protesting against the war when the U.S. has a long history of military actions against sovereign countries. That is true but irrelevant. The fact that I am a U.S. citizen doesnt define me. I stood against the war on Iraq, and my father was opposed to the war on Vietnam. I oppose unjust, illegal and immoral wars no matter what. We are citizens of the world. Scott Serata, Oakland Go with numbers Regarding New board can do it the right way, (Open Forum, Feb. 28): Why not take a page from New York and use numbers to name schools? There is no human being that everyone can agree is without some failing, large or small. Barbara Bella, San Francisco Last month would have marked Abraham Lincolns 213th birthday. So how do we remember our 16th president? As evidenced by the recent controversy surrounding San Francisco school renamings, that answer is evolving. But all historians can unequivocally say, A lot! One biographer asserts that there are some 16,000 books on Lincoln more books than on any other historical figure except Jesus Christ. Despite this flood of ink, however, Lincolns importance to the Bay Area remains relatively uncelebrated. After San Francisco exploded overnight from the 1849 Gold Rush and California gained statehood in 1850, a regional tug-of-war broke out over where to connect the new state by railroad to the rest of the country. The much smaller federal government of that pre-income-tax era was land rich but cash poor and so states competed fiercely for grants over what little infrastructure funding existed. Both the North and South wanted a transcontinental line, but only one route was feasible in practice, given the scarcity of funds. The South wanted a line to extend its cotton kingdom to the Pacific. In May 1853, future Confederate president Jefferson Davis, weak-willed President Franklin Pierces eminence grise, persuaded him to appoint South Carolina plantation heir James Gadsden as minister plenipotentiary to Mexico in order to buy land to connect New Orleans to Southern California. The 1854 Gadsden Purchase, a strip of land where Tucson, Ariz., and southern New Mexico lie, was just that acquisition. The North, meanwhile, wanted to extend its free market economy with a northern line. Rail networks had begun to spread in the late 1840s to connect Northeastern and Midwestern cities. In 1850, Stephen Douglas, Lincolns lifelong political rival, engineered through Congress the Illinois Central Railroad Act, a huge right-of-way federal land grant that linked the Gulf of Mexico to Chicago, which was emerging as a central rail hub. The wily Douglas saw his Illinois Central Act as a double win: Not only did the new railroad to the gulf reap financial benefits for the nearby Mississippi plantation he had inherited from his first wife, it also endeared him to the South, a region critical to his presidential hopes. Douglas ran against Lincoln in 1860. Amoral about slavery and accepting of the 1857 Dred Scott decision (that Black people had no rights which the white man was bound to accept), Douglas administration would have been unbothered by a southern route. Lincoln, meanwhile, saw railroads as a way to improve the entire nation and the lives of its citizens, and his team dubbed their skilled-with-an-ax candidate the railsplitter. After he returned to law practice in Illinois in 1849 from his sole congressional term, he argued many railroad cases, including a landmark 1855 taxation case for the Illinois Central. At an 1859 pre-presidential campaign stop at Council Bluffs, Iowa, the ever-curious Lincoln the only president with a patent to his name peppered an engineer with questions about the best route to California. The engineer pointed across the Missouri River to the village of Omaha, Neb., and proposed a route from there along the 42nd parallel through the Sierra Nevada to connect back to Chicago and points east. Which region would prevail in the battle for a transcontinental route? The election determined the outcome. Lincoln ultimately codified the engineers route into law after his victory by signing the Pacific Railroad Act on July 1, 1862. The what-ifs of history are always speculative. It is reasonable to assume that had Douglas or another pro-southern candidate been elected instead of Lincoln, the country would have lurched forward, polarized but with its union and the institution of slavery intact. A southern rail line would have hastened the development of Southern California at the Bay Areas expense and brought with it a very different cultural ethos. As it was, Lincolns route enabled Northern California to remain dominant for another half century. The pueblo of Los Angeles would have to await the advent of the automobile for its moment. California was present in Lincolns thoughts on April 14, 1865, the last day of his life. On an afternoon carriage ride with his wife, Mary, they mused about future travel to Europe or California. Hours earlier, Lincoln had urged a congressman planning a visit to the Golden State to tell the miners that he had not forgotten them or their interests and that he looked to California gold to redeem this nation from its great debt of four years of war. Had John Wilkes Booth not cut short Lincolns life that evening, we can almost picture the railsplitter accepting the honor of driving in the Golden Spike at Promontory, Utah, in 1869, or making a maiden transcontinental trip with Mary that would have undoubtedly ended with an appearance in San Francisco. As it is, Lincolns fame transcends time and place. Always melancholic, Lincoln lamented to his law partner after one of many setbacks in the early 1850s how hard it is to die and leave ones country no better than if one had never lived for it. In troubled times then and now, we in the Bay Area, the country and the entire world are all the better that he triumphed. Richard M. Hills is a historian, attorney and former San Francisco planning commissioner. The company will occupy 67,000 square feet of a 250,000-square-foot facility in Scannell Logistics Park. The Olive Branch distribution hub will be Nobles largest warehouse operations. WASHINGTON Two Bay Area lawmakers are leaders in the movement to not embroil the U.S. military in needless conflict. But what happens to that argument when a war breaks out in Europe? As Russia has invaded Ukraine in an unprovoked assault, Democratic Reps. Barbara Lee of Oakland and Ro Khanna of Fremont both say the lessons of past U.S. entanglements are more important than ever. They say they intend to keep President Biden to his word that American troops will not be sent to Ukraine to fight Russia. But they also say the politics of war have changed considerably over the past 20 years against entering conflicts, with the American public and its representatives more wary of committing forces. In 2001, Lee was famously the lone vote in Congress against an authorization to go to war days after the Sept. 11 terrorist attacks. But over the years, as the wars in Afghanistan and Iraq dragged on, support has swelled in Congress for her position that military force should be used in limited fashion. Now shes a leading voice of a broader movement to repeal those authorizations and limit new ones that has grown to include Khanna. So far, Biden has made clear he has no intention of sending troops into Ukraine in the face of ongoing Russian aggression. Instead, he has rallied international support for punishing sanctions and economic consequences, including on Russian President Vladimir Putin himself. Lee praised that effort, saying that it signals the president is committed to diplomacy first. I think that the Biden administration has really approached it in a very strategic and very robust but very careful manner, Lee said. I mean, the fact that they brought really the entire world together, especially our European allies in a very focused and strategic diplomatic initiative, shows that they believed and still believe that diplomacy is the way to find a sustaining and lasting peace within the context of global security. Thus far, there are no strong calls for the U.S. military to intervene. But Biden has sent thousands of troops to Europe to support NATO allies in the region, and he has made clear that the U.S. will commit military force if any of those members of the alliance are attacked by Russia. Some experts fear that Putin could try to escalate the situation or provoke the West, and Ukrainian leadership has also asked the West for stronger support, including a no-fly zone over the country, which would require U.S. military enforcement. The U.S. has rejected such calls for now. Let me be clear, our forces are not engaged and will not engage in a conflict with Russian forces in Ukraine, Biden said at Tuesdays State of the Union address. Our forces are not going to Europe to fight in Ukraine, but to defend our NATO allies in the event that Putin decides to keep moving west. ... As I have made crystal clear, the United States and our allies will defend every inch of territory of NATO countries with the full force of our collective power. Every single inch. But Lee said she and other members of Congress will hold Biden to that, and she joined a letter with 44 other lawmakers of both parties to Biden reminding him that if force is needed, the Constitution requires congressional approval. She noted the 2001 vote came just days after Sept. 11 when emotions were at their peak, which led to hasty decisions. Thats why she has sought to prepare in advance of such heated moments. The day after Biden was inaugurated as president, Lee co-led a letter to Biden with key House committee chairs laying out the parameters they believe should limit any future authorization of force, drawing lessons from the open-ended authorization after 9/11 that has been used by subsequent administrations to justify military activity all over the world. The criteria they laid out included placing a limited time frame on the authorized force; spelling out clear objectives, targets and countries for the invasion; laying out transparency provisions; and a statement that the authorization is only for necessary and appropriate action. You cant give a blank check, you cant just authorize the use of force in perpetuity, Lee said. I think Congress has learned its lesson from that, and I dont believe that would happen again. ... We over the last 20 years have educated members of Congress in terms of roles and responsibilities. Those two decades also brought new generations of lawmakers, including Khanna, who have come of age and into their political careers against the backdrop of Americas long wars in Iraq and Afghanistan. Lee noted that many of the most vocal advocates of limited use of the military are veterans who served in those wars themselves. Khanna has advocated for reducing defense budgets and has helped build broad coalitions in Congress to pull U.S. support for the Saudi-led war in Yemen that has caused humanitarian disaster. He told The Chronicle that doesnt mean he wouldnt support any military action, but that activism like his should keep the U.S. focused on only necessary conflict. I am opposed to misguided wars but Im not opposed to just wars, such as World War II or the war to defeat ISIS, Khanna said. We have to be prepared militarily, obviously, to defend our NATO allies. ... That is very different than some of the endless wars that the U.S. was involved in that were not in our interest. Khanna said the U.S. pulling out of Afghanistan last year, though it had its strategic and humanitarian failings, ultimately has freed the U.S. military to be able to address real threats in the future. He hopes that progressives who share his views about unnecessary war see that, as well. I think progressives have to be very clear-eyed on the threat that Putin poses to the international order, or the threat of an expansionist China and the persecution of the Uyghurs, Khanna said. We need to have a 21st century national security strategy that is focused on what it will take to keep us safe from these two threats. And, frankly, our not being bogged down in Afghanistan or Iraq will allow us to focus on the real national security challenges. Lee agreed that military engagement is sometimes necessary, noting her fathers long service in the Army. But, she said, thats the last option. You exhaust your diplomatic means, sanctions, every tool that we have in our toolbox short of the use of force we should move forward on, Lee said. Im not a pacifist, but I certainly know that violence begets violence and I know that the more you escalate, its harder to de-escalate, and so our focus has always been preventing the use of force. Tal Kopan is The San Francisco Chronicles Washington correspondent. Email: tal.kopan@sfchronicle.com Twitter: @talkopan SACRAMENTO California could soon join a growing chorus of governments that are pulling investments from Russia to protest the countrys unprovoked war against Ukraine. Gov. Gavin Newsom on Monday echoed the calls of legislators urging the states largest public retirement funds for government employees to stop transactions with Russian-based companies and financial institutions, citing war atrocities. In a letter to the administrators of the pension funds for state workers, teachers and university employees, Newsom urged the systems to stop purchasing debt from Russian entities and to stop the flow of any state funds into the country. Russias brazen and lawless military assault on Ukraine demands our support for the Ukrainian people and exacting an immediate and severe cost upon the Russian government in response to its continuing aggression, Newsom wrote. California has a unique and powerful position of influence given the states substantial global investment portfolio. Combined, the states three largest pension funds hold about $1.5 billion in financial instruments that are tied to Russias financial markets, including stock in corporations, debt and other investments, his letter states. Newsoms demand comes a day after more than 20 state legislators announced their support for a bill that would require California, including state agencies and pension funds, to divest from Russian assets and financial institutions and prohibit state contracts for any companies conducting business with Russia. The bill by Sens. Dave Cortese, D-San Jose, and Mike McGuire, D-Healdsburg, would also urge private companies operating in California to divest from Russian businesses and Russian government institutions. As a state, it is our responsibility to ensure we are not fueling this global crisis that has caused tremendous human suffering, Cortese said in a statement. California must continue to vehemently denounce Russias violent invasion of Ukraine and put pressure on Russia to end this unjustified and reckless attack. If the state were its own country, California would have the worlds fifth largest economy, in terms of gross domestic product. Legislators said the state should take advantage of that clout and the roughly $970 billion in assets controlled by state pension funds to put additional pressure on Russias battered economy. Newsoms letter doesnt go as far as the bill legislators have proposed, both in terms of the push to unload existing investments in Russian companies or urge private companies to boycott the country. Instead, the Democratic governors letter urges Californias pension fund administrators to halt further transactions with Russian firms; it doesnt directly call for divestment. Newsoms administration said hes asked the pension funds to assess divestment options, but does not want the state to sell off any assets in a way that would benefit Russia. Newsom asked the pension administrators to respond to his request within 10 days, and to assess how any moves could impact current and future retirees. But any decisions about whether to divest would have to be made by the boards of the three pension systems: the California Public Employees Retirement System, California State Teachers Retirement System and University of California Retirement Plan. CalPERS, the largest pension fund in terms of assets, declined to comment on Newsoms letter. Marcie Frost, the funds CEO, said in a statement that CalPERS supports the people of Ukraine and stressed that investments in Russia total less than 1% of its total portfolio. We are monitoring current events and will take action as appropriate to protect the interests of our members, Frost said. Dustin Gardiner is a San Francisco Chronicle staff writer. Email: dustin.gardiner@sfchronicle.com Twitter: @dustingardiner San Francisco voters will decide in June whether to reform the citys relationship with trash-hauler Recology and enshrine new paid-leave requirements for large employers. The Board of Supervisors voted unanimously Tuesday to send the two measures to the June 7 ballot, when the local electorate will also consider primary races for various offices and the potential recall of District Attorney Chesa Boudin. Championed by Supervisor Aaron Peskin and Mayor London Breed, the Recology ballot measure came after the waste management giant was linked to the wide-ranging City Hall corruption scandal involving former Public Works Director Mohammed Nuru and other officials. Under a settlement last year with city lawyers who were investigating the Nuru scandal, Recology agreed to pay San Franciscans nearly $95 million to reimburse them for overcharges. Attorneys alleged that Nuru took bribes from the company and that he recommended a 14% rate increase that should have been 7%. Recology had underreported its expected revenue when applying for a rate increase, but even after the company disclosed a revenue error to Nurus department, the overcharges continued for two years, attorneys said. If approved, the June ballot measure would put the San Francisco controller, instead of the Public Works director, in charge of monitoring Recologys local rates and proposing new ones. The measure would also give the city the power to cancel Recologys decades-long monopoly on San Francisco trash collection without going back to the ballot. Peskin told his fellow supervisors all of whom co-sponsored the ballot measure that it would represent the first major change to the 1932 ordinance governing city trash collection. Nurus actions had clearly demonstrated the need for reform, Peskin said, calling the citys current rate-setting process with Recology fundamentally broken. Peskin noted that Controller Ben Rosenfield is investigating whether Recology owes San Franciscans even more money than what it has already reimbursed city customers. What was broken here? It wasnt just that Mohammed Nuru ... was corrupt, Peskin said. It actually speaks to a much larger systemic corruption that has permeated this entire government. It didnt just take one person. It took a lot of people. This entire government was guilty of either being complicit or being corrupt. Recology did not respond to a request for comment. Additionally, the board agreed to let voters decide on another June ballot measure that would require large companies to offer up to 80 hours of paid leave during certain public health emergencies. The paid-leave requirement would apply to companies in San Francisco that have more than 100 employees worldwide. Companies would have to provide the leave to workers affected by a health emergency related to infectious diseases, or to employees affected by extremely poor air quality if theyre a member of a vulnerable population who primarily works outdoors. Supervisor Gordon Mar, who sponsored the ballot measure, said he was trying to preserve pandemic employment protections that had expired under a city emergency law and would now need voter approval. Drought Map Track water shortages and restrictions across Bay Area Check the water shortage status of your area, plus see reservoir levels and a list of restrictions for the Bay Areas largest water districts. In holding up essential workers as heroes, we have not always held up their humanity, their human needs and rights to safe workplaces and working conditions, Mar said. Supervisors decisions on the Recology and paid-leave measures came two weeks after they voted to put a $400 million bond on the same ballot that would fund a series of transportation-related projects in the city. The transportation bond would help upgrade Munis 20-year-old train control system, install some dedicated transit lanes, replace aging traffic signals and build new infrastructure to support pedestrians and bicyclists, among other initiatives. Supervisors unanimously supported that bond again Tuesday when they took their second of two required votes to put it on the June ballot. J.D. Morris is a San Francisco Chronicle staff writer. Email: jd.morris@sfchronicle.com Twitter: @thejdmorris Editors note: This story has been updated to reflect that Recology reported a revenue error to the Public Works department. Supervisor Dean Preston wants to close a loophole that is allowing a property owner in the Western Addition to raise rent on a family by 182% over five years. On Tuesday Preston introduced legislation that would limit rent increases for residents formerly protected by rent control. The law would apply in situations where a unit goes from rent control to one that is government subsidized. The legislation comes as about 20 units at the Frederick Douglas Haynes housing complex in the Western Addition, half of which are occupied, lost their rent control protection. The units are part of a 104-unit affordable housing complex. While 84 of the units have project-based Section 8 vouchers, the remaining units were previously subject to rent control, but are now exempt because of a law that exempts federally funded affordable housing complexes from rent control. Because the property recently went through a $100 million recapitalization and renovation paid for with Low-Income Housing Tax Credits, rent control doesnt apply to the building. Instead tenants must pay 30% of their income. The property is owned by HumanGood, a nonprofit. In a city with a $13 billion budget, in the midst of having necessary conversations about reparations to the Black community, it is unconscionable that the city wants to pay the bill for long-overdue repairs in subsidized housing by imposing rent hikes on long-term African-American residents, said Supervisor Preston. We can, and we must, do better. Among the residents facing rent increases are Patricia and Leroy Beasley. They live in the apartments with their daughter and grandson and have seen their post-construction rent jump 36%, from $1,408 to $1,921 a month. And thats just the beginning: the family has been notified it will see $513 annual increases for five years a total of $2,565 bringing their rent for the three-bedroom place to $3,973 a month by 2026. Patricia Beasley, who worked for the city for 39 years before retiring in 2011, said she was shocked to learn that her apartment was not protected by rent control. Her husband was a property manager before retirement. The family, city natives, moved to the complex in 1977. Drought Map Track water shortages and restrictions across Bay Area Check the water shortage status of your area, plus see reservoir levels and a list of restrictions for the Bay Areas largest water districts. In a statement to The Chronicle, HumanGood said the company is proud of our renovated Frederick Douglas Haynes community in San Francisco, which serves low-income seniors and families in the heart of San Franciscos Fillmore District. We completed construction of the project in January 2022, and all residents have returned to their homes in the renovated community, the group said. It added that the property is HUD regulated and that the tenants had lost their attempts to argue that the units are subject to rent control. J.K. Dineen is a San Francisco Chronicle staff writer. Email: jdineen@sfchronicle.com Twitter: @sfjkdineen A coalition of more than 30 nonprofit organizations and businesses will launch an effort Wednesday to create housing and shelter projects in San Francisco stocked with drug rehab and other services to help homeless people get off the streets. The alliance joins a growing number of efforts launched in recent years to reduce homelessness, and comes as the city faces dueling housing and addiction crises and growing frustration over what to do about them. The coalition, called Urban Vision Alliance, is beginning its push by providing financing and planning support to the Salvation Army as it adds 1,500 beds over the next several years where unhoused people can get stabilized before being routed into permanent housing. The Salvation Armys expansion will emphasize transitional housing, particularly for those struggling with substance abuse, so they are clean and sober and employed before moving into homes of their own. This model is geared more toward abstinence from all drugs and medication rather than the more common harm-reduction model used in San Francisco, which aims to quickly place people in permanent supportive housing, where counseling services are on site and residents can undergo drug treatment at their own pace. This housing first approach has long been the accepted standard around the Bay Area. But with the housing crunch worsening in recent years, theres been more openness to cheaper transitional housing, which means giving unhoused people temporary places to live while they work on their problems. Theres also been discussion in San Francisco of adding more abstinence-based rehab approaches, despite studies showing they have a greater failure rate than harm reduction, with the idea that all techniques should be available as the city confronts a deadly opioid crisis. By connecting private, public and nonprofit organizations that might not otherwise team up, the people behind the Urban Vision Alliance coalition think they can generate new strategies to combat all types of homelessness and raise the money to finance a wide range of programs. We think we need all approaches including emergency shelter, transitional housing, permanent supportive housing, affordable housing, said the organizations CEO Gabriel Baldinucci. We also think we need different forms of treatment that range from harm reduction for some to abstinence for others. Its based on the individual needs of a person. This all about building a diverse coalition of organizations that can expand different housing types and different program types. Baldinucci said the organization has so far assembled $7.8 million in pro-bono and discounted services, including architectural help. Most of that is committed to the Salvation Army effort and to another coalition member, DignityMoves, which is developing shelter cabins in San Francisco. Theo Ellington, director of homeless initiatives at the Salvation Army, said his organization was proud to be part of the alliance. We definitely need more transitional housing in San Francisco, and I think the tide is turning toward that, he said. People are fed up. We need to try different approaches. We cant let up. The Salvation Armys expansion will be through its year-old Way Out program. And though it emphasizes more of an abstinence form of rehab than the citys more prevalent harm reduction model letting people wean off drugs at their own pace, with great flexibility toward relapses the difference in the program, as with many, is slim. Steven McCormick, 29, is just finishing a year in the Way Out program that would be expanded with Urban Vision Alliances aid, and he said it has given him new life. He is nearly done with suboxone treatment for his fentanyl addiction, working as an attendant at a counseling program for people coming out of incarceration, and planning to go to community college to study graphic design. Drought Map Track water shortages and restrictions across Bay Area Check the water shortage status of your area, plus see reservoir levels and a list of restrictions for the Bay Areas largest water districts. One abstinence aspect of the program is the expectation that he is dope-free before he can move into permanent housing. On the other hand, some full-on abstinence rehab programs might not allow medically assisted treatment like the suboxone hes been taking. Im now looking at housing, and I would have never gotten to this point if I hadnt gotten clean, he said. I think we need more of this kind of program. Another member of the coalition is Beyond Homeless, which produced a documentary called Beyond Homeless: Finding Hope in 2021 outlining the severity of homelessness in San Francisco and suggesting the wide of solutions promoted by Urban Vision Alliance. Mary Theroux, founder of Beyond Homeless and producer of the film, told The Chronicle she wants to get a groundswell of support for new approaches, including being more proactive on helping people move out of supportive housing into independence. We ought to be helping people in supportive housing to achieve their full potential, she said. Some people wont be able to live without support, but many will. Thats why you need a full range of approaches. Urban Vision Alliance will host a panel discussion Wednesday at 5 p.m., which can be viewed for free on Zoom, to explain its plans. Among the panelists will be Baldinucci and state Sen. Scott Wiener, D-San Francisco, who is quoted in the Urban Vision Alliance announcement of its push as calling the organizations approach exactly the type of community initiative we need to help achieve the important goal of ending street homelessness. Kevin Fagan is a San Francisco Chronicle staff writer. Email: kfagan@sfchronicle.com Twitter: @KevinChron Bay Area product Thomas Knapp, 55, has lived in Ukraine for less than a year. But he's ready to die for his new home. As an air raid siren echoed in the background, Knapp told SFGATE that he has spent most of the last few days indoors under a strict curfew in downtown Kyiv. Such restrictions have been common since Russian President Vladimir Putin launched an invasion on Ukraine on Feb. 24. Those who venture outside without military attire or the yellow armband of a civilian volunteer risk arrest or even being shot on sight. Image courtesy Thomas Knapp Hearing the bombs fall in a place hes come to love has devastated Knapp. "Im emotionally spent, Im physically spent, I'm spiritually spent. Im so angry words cant even describe, said Knapp, who was born in San Francisco and worked in Silicon Valley for years. That fury has driven him to take up arms in defense of his new community: This week, he joined a civilian territorial defense battalion, a voluntary military unit. Because he doesn't speak Ukrainian and can't understand orders when his battalion is in a fire fight, Knapp has been paired with an English-speaking veteran of the 2014 annexation of Crimea by Russia. Now armed with an AK-47, Knapp and his group are preparing for the incoming Russian forces. I'm learning as I go here, actually, because I'm just an entrepreneur, he said. Knapp briefly stopped in the middle of the call when he heard a bomb. Its loud, one just went off, its like a sonic boom, you can feel it. These are huge bombs. You hear them, even if its 3 to 4 kilometers away. The sound is becoming familiar, but no less terrible. It gets in your head, and you start to have nightmares, he said. We need more ammunition, we need more guns, we need lethal and nonlethal supplies, medical supplies. With the bombs falling on the outskirts of the city, Knapp said he was safe for now, as Russian forces had yet to reach the city center where his flat is. While he hasnt been in a firefight, he and the rest of his battalion are bracing for violence. From what his new comrades have told him, there are fates worse than death. I'm not afraid of dying, he told SFGATE. I'm afraid of ending up in a Russian gulag. I'm afraid of being caught. God's truth. Knapp, an American citizen, grew up in the Bay Area, moved to West Germany for part of his childhood, then moved back to attend San Jose State. Five months ago, he sold his home of 15 years in San Joses Willow Glen neighborhood and moved to Ukraine to found a global marketing company. Hes the father of four daughters who live in the United States. After relocating to Ukraine on a three-year residency card, he's fallen in love with the country, where he's found a higher quality of life for less money than in the Bay Area. He has a girlfriend and many friends he said he hopes to keep for life. Staying in Ukraine when the invasion began was a wrenching decision, knowing he was leaving his daughters behind. As we spoke, Knapp got a text: Dad, please be safe. Please come home. I miss you so much. I hope to see you soon. Dad, I need to be in your arms again, not through a screen, please. But he cant bring himself to abandon the country hes so quickly come to see as his home. When you make a friend in Ukraine, you make friends for life, he said. The Russian invasion of Ukraine began Thursday, Feb. 24, with massive air and missile strikes and ground troops moving in from the north, east and south. Read "What to know as Russian forces target Kyiv" on SFGATE. Editor's note: This story was updated at 9:55 a.m., March 2, to clarify in a photo caption that Ukraine was part of the former USSR. Globally, all professional industries were profoundly impacted by the pandemic in one way or another. Q4 2021 hedge fund letters, conferences and more Yet, for most, the logistical implications of the lockdowns proved particularly challenging to overcome. After a lifetime of traditional, face-to-face communications provided the foundation upon which business was conducted - colossal shifts in process and procedures were necessary to remain afloat. The legal system was no exception, and both courts and law firms have had to grapple with a rapid acceleration towards modernized ways of conducting their business of the day. Like many sectors, the legal industry had already begun moving towards modernized tech, but at a snail's pace. Everything changed when COVID-19 came to town. The Rise Of Virtual Courts With in-person attendance no longer an option and case backlogs already an issue, the court system had no choice but to modernize in response to the pandemic quickly. By adopting modern, digital conferencing technologies, virtual court participation by both legal professionals and citizens became possible. These changes, brought about more rapidly by necessity due to COVID-19, have begun to alter the state of access to justice in America. For example, according to a report from Thomson Reuter on the pandemic's impact on state and local courts, a significant 42% of respondents felt that virtual hearings had improved access to justice this included 49% of municipal and county court participants, where civil case backlogs are a continual challenge. On the other hand, in this same report, 23% of people felt that virtual court hearings decreased access to justice; however, this figure could primarily be due to disparities in access to the technology and internet connectivity necessary to enable attendance. Lower-income households cannot always access the technology or reliable internet connections required to attend a court proceeding virtually. Moreover, according to a 2020 study by BroadbandNow, an estimated 42 million Americans currently have no access to high-speed broadband. The internet is an increasingly vital component for allowing access to essential services, such as health, employment, educational resources, and virtual court proceedings. So, while the shift towards virtual court is necessary and largely modernizes the system and its accessibility for the better, it isn't without its difficulties. Factoring In The Digitally Excluded Nevertheless, for those Americans living in rural areas who do have access to adequate internet connections, virtually attending court or law firm appointments means that they can avoid driving for many hours, missing work, and potentially forfeiting earnings. Last year, the US Senate passed the Infrastructure Investment and Jobs Act, providing $42.5bn of broadband network funding for remote areas. This development will inevitably improve access to justice for more Americans. What began as a temporary solution to a short-term problem is now shaping a new era in court proceedings and its operational approach. Video conferencing will allow for virtual participation and hybrid proceedings in which some attendees are physically present and some are not. Digital Evidence Management Another ongoing challenge for the legal system has been collecting, submitting, and safe storage of evidence. In recent years, the rapid increase of multimedia evidence has been overwhelming for many courts and legal businesses. Body cameras and mobile footage, audio files, and hard drive contents are just examples of digital evidence sources that have forced the legal system to redesign how evidence is gathered and stored. The pandemic sent the need for an efficient response into overdrive. The pandemic conditions forced courts and legal businesses to adopt technological tools that would vastly improve the efficiency and flexibility of a wide range of daily tasks. As a result, these tools are revolutionizing the legal process, with tasks relating to digital evidence, e-filing, and documentation platforms all working towards a fundamentally streamlined digital experience. Camila Lopez, Co-Founder of People Clerk, a legal technology company helping Americans prepare and file small claims lawsuits from home, says, The digital transformation of the sector dramatically improves the efficiency and accessibility of legal processes. In the relatively near future, we can expect to be able to file a small claims lawsuit, for example, and have the process unfold through to trial without having to go to a courthouse at any stage. E-Filing Is The New Norm Just as video conferencing allows citizens and legal professionals to meet with each other and attend court virtually, e-filing is also significantly altering everyday legal processes. Through e-filing, courts can receive vital digital records with low-to-no human interaction required. E-filing also eliminates the overwhelming storage requirements that have put such a strain on courts and legal businesses. These technological advancements create more efficiency and accuracy for the legal system, promoting greater accessibility and boosting productivity. Law Firm Workflow Transformations The traditional workflow and accessibility of legal business are forever changed by advancements in technology and the rapid shift towards automation and digitization in response to the pandemic. Document automation allows for greater efficiency across the board. With the online era of information at our fingertips, access to essential legal information is easier than ever before information that significantly assists both the public and legal professionals. Online communities are also now in abundance, giving the public access to free legal advice from their own homes. Social media use has also heightened amongst the legal profession since the pandemic, with many utilizing leading platforms such as LinkedIn for collaboration, networking, and debating. Many legal apps are also gaining traction, providing services such as creating wills and trusts. The legal workflow will no longer survive with clear divisions between departments and other providers. Instead, seamless, integrated teams will perform collaboratively and provide high consumer value as they do. A New Era For The Legal Industry Thanks mainly to the pandemic conditions, the necessity for rapid digital transformation is creating a new era for the legal industry. Traditionalists may remain hopeful that these changes are temporary. Still, the digital age is here to stay, and the court system and legal industry must embrace these ongoing technological advancements moving forwards the benefits are already on display. The potential for further system improvements is virtually limitless. Copyright 2022 Entrepreneur.com Inc., All rights reserved The plan for Kavitha Herle and her family was to camp for just one night last week in Pinnacles National Park. They wanted to do an evening hike and to gaze up at stars and constellations in an otherwise ink-black sky. Herle, a teacher from Mountain View, booked the tent cabin the week before, when the weather was warm and beautiful. So when she showed up last Wednesday with her husband, their two teenage sons and their Chihuahua, Coco, nobody had thought to pack gloves or thick socks or a space heater. They were in for a surprise. The night before, a rare snowfall had blanketed most of the park. According to park staff, Pinnacles has seen snow only a few times in the past decade. Courtesy of NPS / Casey Henninger and Dan Brogden While the park commonly frosts, the low elevation and proximity to the ocean make actual snowfall a rare treat, a staff member posted on Instagram, along with photos of a snowman and a few snow-capped scenes. Fortunate visitors, staff and condors in the park that day were treated to a brief but exciting Pinnacles Winter Wonderland! Located east of the Salinas Valley in Central California, about two hours south of San Francisco, Pinnacles receives only a fraction of the visitors welcomed by places like Yosemite and Joshua Tree national parks (which also have seen some pretty epic snow days). This landscape is far more accustomed to extreme heat, having been formed by the eroded remnants of an ancient volcano. About 23 million years ago, the San Andreas fault split a volcanic field near present-day Lancaster into two pieces, and the Pacific Plate headed north carrying the pinnacles, which have now traveled 195 miles and remain on the move via plate tectonics. It was these geologic wonders, combined with the caves, canyons and Indigenous artifacts, that led President Theodore Roosevelt to declare Pinnacles a national monument in 1908. And those same attributes combined, of course, with the parks famous California condors paved the way for President Barack Obama in 2013 to declare Pinnacles Californias newest national park. Courtesy of Gavin Emmons The parks climate is similar to the Mediterranean, with hot, dry summers and chilly, wet winters. And like the desert, on winter nights the temperature can drop into the low 20s. Snow tends to fall at the higher elevations between mid-December and January, but the lower elevations of Pinnacles where its campgrounds are situated almost never see snow. And regular visitors definitely know that. There was enough snow in the shadows to allow me to make this tidgy snowman during this mornings wander, Instagram user Tim Huntington wrote in a post. The small, unlikely snowman stands in the foreground, with the parks iconic red-gray spires artfully blurred in the distance. Although there are occasionally light flakings in the wintertime, its been more than a decade since the park saw a significant snowfall, according to Pinnacles Division Leader Richard Moorer. When Moorer who has been with Pinnacles since 2021 showed up to work last Wednesday morning, he saw the park dusted with snow for the first time. He snapped a photo and sent it to family members on the East Coast, just to say, Look! It actually does snow here! Although park staff put out a call for social media users to post their own wintertime Pinnacles snow photos, nobody responded with images. Perhaps the events are just that rare? Courtesy of Gavin Emmons I was working at the park in January of 1974 when there was a significant snowfall, one Instagram user commented. Took the power out in much of the area. After the Herle family showed up unprepared to face the elements, they purchased wood and built a roaring campfire outside of their tent cabin. As the sun set and the temperature plummeted into the 20s, their extremities went numb. Eventually they pried themselves away from the warmth of the fire and occupied the tent cabin, where a small heater placed inside by the park service was no match for the frigid night. Courtesy of Gavin Emmons In our sleeping bags, our toes were frozen because it was so cold, Herle says. In the morning, the plan had been to build another fire, but everyones fingers were too cold to make it happen. Despite the discomfort, the Herles found the scene quite lovely. Frost had formed on everything: the car windows and windshields, the top of the tent cabin and even the glistening blades of grass. Yay, we don't have to go to Tahoe, one of the boys told his mother. We can see snow here! Courtesy of Gavin Emmons I have a confession: Until earlier this week, I had yet to try a Freebirds World Burrito in a ... not altered state. Ordinarily Id be reluctant to say it, especially to a stranger. But standing in line waiting to help create my version of the most storied of all West Coast college campus burritos, I couldnt help but strike up a quick conversation with the guy next to me. We talked about why the stripped down build-a-burrito counter is so revered even after decades of other, sometimes lesser, sometimes more popular, imitations have found their way into our collective food vernacular. Maybe its all in the introduction. He was the first one to admit that he was a regular mostly past midnight for years before he sampled the food in the light of day with all his faculties intact. I looked on as he expertly ordered a regular chicken burrito stuffed with extras I didnt recognize from the sparse menu that hangs behind the counter. He said hes still trying to come up with the perfect custom-built bundle of joy. Images via Yelp users Greg W., Iris F. and Sophia W. A UCSB rite of passage This devolved into recalling late-night shenanigans. Reminiscing on missed connections and near-altercations after being sprung haplessly and happily out of whatever Isla Vista bar on the edge of the UC Santa Barbara campus. Unlike the choreographed construction of the intoxicating-in-their-own-right mix of beans and rice, pan-seared veggies and meats hot off the grill, my exaggerated tales of late-night entitlement, I discovered, werent so special at all. A night of possibility behind you, but one foil-wrapped, rum-soaking, gut-busting morsel dead ahead. For many, Freebirds has been a kind of salvation, if not a blurry rite of passage, for decades. I couldve gone on, but it was the very reasonable hour of 11:35 a.m. on a weekday. And it was my turn to make an attempt at a proper mix of toppings: cheese, a little more. Pico de gallo, nice. Mild and hot sauce, yes, both, please. Hold the sour cream. And guac. Yeah, no, just a tiny bit ... perfect. My burrito folded and swaddled, I asked my new friend, Do you think it holds up in the light of day? Oh, absolutely, yes, he replied, smiling as he gestured to his brown paper to-go bag. I cant wait. Photo By Andrew Pridgen 35 years later, Freebirds draws a crowd at all hours From Freebirds veterans to first-timers, they continue to line up. By noon, there were a handful of patrons out the door as others approached from farther down Embarcadero Del Norte. While the rest of the busy arterial campus boulevard has its share of grub-and-go offerings, both of the local and national chain variety, it is Freebirds all stucco facade, bleached-wood exterior seating, faded-picture wall of fame, darkened grout and chipped floor tile that still stands out among them as an original. Opened in 1987 by UCSB roommates Mark Orfalea and Pierre Dube, the restaurant known for its extended hours and not-so-secret secret menu started as a chicken joint for dorm dwellers. Legend has it Orfaleas aunt suggested he take the leftovers, marinate them and make burritos. The place got so busy the burritos had to be built assembly line-style, a practice that started with San Francisco's Taqueria La Cumbre in 1969. Freebirds' version, simplified to spirit undergrads in and out quickly, became a piece of living Isla Vista history. Image via Yelp user Richie D. Private equity firm leaves original location alone While the original Freebirds operates in the same space today as it did 35 years ago, autonomous and still owned by Orfalea, the businesss name, along with several satellite locations, were sold to the restaurant arm of the Bahamas-based private equity firm Tavistock Group in July 2007. As of July 2021, that Freebirds World Burrito chain had exploded to include 55 locations in Texas, now with interiors the parent company refers to as modern industrial farmhouse, a look most associated with an HGTV-style flipped kitchen. And the streamlined assembly line that launched the Texas burrito behemoth and other fast-casual household names? Well, the original Freebirds also deserves a little credit, at least according to the standalone California restaurants most loyal patrons. Oh, yeah, compared to Chipotle, I mean, come on, said Christian Ramirez, a Goleta local stopping in for a chicken bowl and daring to say that c-word out loud. Its not even close. Freebirds is miles ... hundreds of miles ahead. Its made right in front of you. Its the first, the best. Julia Campos, who was in line with Ramirez, agreed. Theres a lot of great Mexican places in Santa Barbara, she said, But its still if you want Freebirds, you got to have Freebirds. Image via Yelp users Dora L. & Michael L. First time, long time, Freebirds still delivers something good A Bay Area-based lunch patron was eager for his first bite even in the daytime hours. Ive never been, said Lafayette resident John Porcella. My sister lives down here, and we just got into town. We said we were hungry; she said, Freebirds. John Viesca, who said he commutes from Simi Valley to work in Santa Barbara, came on a co-workers suggestion to grab a quick lunch. He admitted it was a bit of a drive over, and they were short on time, but he was eager nonetheless. Its my first time here, but I can already tell its going to be worth it, he said. You look at them preparing and cooking everything. Its fresh. Its out in the open. As I left, the parting words of Ventura County resident Matt Figueroa, the guy who I shared a moment of nostalgia with in line, came through a little clearer: Everyone remembers their first, right? he recalled. For me, it was spring 2006. I was visiting friends going to college here. Out drinking. The late night. The line around the block. I remember stepping through that door and seeing it for the first time. This is always always the original. Now, whenever Im in the area and even sometimes when Im not, I take a break and come here. It reminds me of something good. The adoptive parents of California brothers Orrin and Orson West, who have been missing over a year, have been arrested on suspicion of killing the toddlers. Trezell West, 35, and Jacqueline West, 32, were arrested by Bakersfield police Tuesday and are currently booked into the Kern County Jail. They have both been charged with two counts of second-degree murder, two counts of willful cruelty to a child and making a false report of an emergency, jail records show. "This morning I'm saddened to announce that the investigation has revealed that Orrin and Orson West are deceased," Kern County District Attorney Cynthia Zimmer said at a press conference Wednesday. "The investigation has also revealed that they died three months before their adoptive parents reported them missing." The bodies of Orrin and Orson have not been found. Zimmer declined to provide further details, pending the Wests' criminal trial. "This is not the outcome that we and so many others had hoped and prayed for," Bakersfield police Chief Chief Greg Terry said. Who are Orrin and Orson West? The case has roiled the small community of California City, a desert town in Kern County. Orrin and Orson went missing shortly before Christmas 2020, and the disappearance baffled investigators and family alike. The West brothers are the adopted sons of Trezell and Jacqueline West. When they went missing, Orrin was 4 and Orson was 3. The couple say they began fostering Orrin and Orson in 2018 and officially completed the adoption process in 2019. They also have four other children, two of whom are adopted and two more that are biological, who were taken into protective custody after the boys disappearance. At the time of their disappearance, both boys were about 3 feet tall and weighed about 40 pounds. They were last seen wearing black sweaters and dark-colored sweatpants. When did they go missing? The boys were reported missing by the Wests on the evening of Dec. 21, 2020. According to Trezell West, Orrin and Orson were playing outside their home at 10717 Aspen Ave., where they had moved from Bakersfield in September. Jacqueline was inside wrapping Christmas presents, and Trezell said he was outside collecting firewood. I realized that I left the back gate open and I panicked and came inside the house, searched the house, me and my wife, Trezell West told 23ABC. Once that didnt pan out, I got in the van, I looked down the street in both directions, it was getting dark, getting cold." West says he then drove around the neighborhood looking for the boys until the sun began to set. At that point, he says Jacqueline decided it was time to call the police and report the boys missing. What did police find at the scene? In short, nothing. Police K-9s caught the boys scent inside the house but not outside. Searches of the home and the Wests vehicle yielded nothing of note. Weve looked everywhere possible in a house we could possibly look, California City police Chief Jon Walker told KGET at the time. We brought in search dogs, cadaver dogs, any dog you can think of has been in that house and has not had any kids anywhere in the house. Walker said a canvass of the neighborhood turned up an odd detail: No neighbor could ever recall seeing the boys outside the West home. After repeated searches of the property, including digging up the backyard, Walker told reporters shortly after their disappearance that foul play could not be ruled out in the boys disappearance. The home is now boarded up and vacant; the Wests relocated back to Bakersfield, which is also where Orrin and Orson's biological mother lives. She has assisted in the search. Whats next in the case? Trezell and Jacqueline West are due in court for a hearing at 8 a.m. Thursday. They are currently being held without bail and are expected to be arraigned tomorrow. Zimmer said they have already been indicted by a grand jury, and the case will proceed next to a criminal trial. UPDATED: A previous version of this article had some incorrect information regarding masking policy at District Health Department # 10 offices. This story has been updated to reflect the correct information at 4:03 p.m. on March 4, 2022. MANISTEE COUNTY Starting March 3, many state employees will no longer be required to wear masks at work as Michigan continues to report declining COVID-19 infections. The Office of the State Employer announced the changes Monday in an email to the states 46,000-plus workers. Masking may still be mandated for some employees, such as those working inside prisons and state psychiatric hospitals. That may be true for some state employees located in Manistee. Employees at District Health Department #10 offices will still be required to wear masks, as well as everyone in common areas and clinical settings, according to Jeannine Taylor, public information officer for DHD#10. Taylor said that masking will be required until DHD#10 Health Officer Kevin Hughes deems it appropriate to do so, according to Taylor. More changes to policies may be coming in the following weeks, Liza Estlund Olson, director of the office, wrote. We look forward to seeing more of the smiles of our coworkers as we continue with our work. The announcement that relaxed a nearly two-year-old mandate came three days after the federal government released new guidelines saying people in counties where the coronavirus poses a low or medium threat to hospitals can stop wearing masks. Only about 10% of Michigans population lives in 17 counties that are considered high risk, meaning people there should still wear a mask indoors in public. The new guidance now puts most local counties in the medium to the low threat categories. Both Manistee and Benzie counties are considered to be a medium threat, meaning most people will not need to wear masks indoors regardless of vaccination status. However, it is still recommended for certain groups, just not mandated for everyone. Michigan had already rescinded its mask mandate for crowded indoor places, including schools, as of Feb. 16. DHD #10 guidance aligns with MDHHS and the Centers for Disease Control. As for guidance in the Benzie-Leelanau health district, Health Officer Lisa Peacock said the following: The move to ease up on universal masking reflects current conditions at this phase of the coronavirus pandemic, including widespread immunity through vaccination and prior infection as well as better access to testing and treatments." However, Peacock still recommended masks for certain groups. Regardless, there may be groups of people who want to or should continue wearing a mask, including anyone with underlying health conditions, those who live with someone with high risk factors, anyone who is immunocompromised, as well as those who just feel safer wearing a mask," Peacock said. The CDC lays out the following guidance for counties in the medium threat category: If you are at high risk for severe illness, talk to your healthcare provider about whether you need to wear a mask and take other precautions; Stay up to date with COVID-19 vaccines; and Get tested if you have symptoms. "People may choose to mask at any time. People with symptoms, a positive test or exposure to someone with COVID-19 should wear a mask, according to the guidance. The AP noted that the governor's administration has given individual state departments and offices the discretion and flexibility to determine if workers should come into the office. Updates in your inbox The Manistee News Advocate is providing all COVID-19 news free to all readers as a public service. For more stories like this and others, sign up for our newsletters. The Associated Press contributed to this report. Grant Marek/SFGATE San Francisco's Bernal rock sported a fresh new paint job on Monday in support of Ukraine after Russia invaded the country last week. The colorful rock near the top of San Francisco's Bernal Heights Park which has been anonymously painted mostly by neighbors to resemble everything from a poop emoji to an avocado to a Santa hat now features a horizontal, bicolor design of blue and yellow, mirroring the Ukrainian flag, with the words "Stop Putin" scrawled across the front, referencing the man responsible for the invasion: Russian President Vladimir Putin. The side and the back of the rock both feature Russian phrases that translate to "Glory Ukraine" and "Russian ship - go fk yourself!" a nod to the Ukrainian border guards stationed on a small, rocky Black Sea outcropping known as Snake Island who responded such when asked by a Russian naval ship to surrender on the first day of the Russian invasion last week. A recent assassination plot against Ukrainian President Volodymyr Zelensky was foiled over the weekend and the Chechen servicemen sent from Russia were "destroyed," a Ukrainian security leader said Tuesday. Oleksiy Danilov, secretary of Ukraine's National Security and Defense Council, said during a broadcast marathon airing on Ukrainian TV channels that officials were recently tipped off about how a unit of Kadyrovites, elite Chechen Special Forces, were on their way to kill Zelensky. After Ukrainian officials were told by Russia's Federal Security Service (FSB), the Chechen Special Forces were killed on Saturday on the outskirts of Kyiv, Danilov said. "We are well aware of the special operation that was to take place directly by the Kadyrovites to eliminate our president. And I can say that we have received information from the FSB, who today do not want to take part in this bloody war," Danilov said. "And thanks to this, the 'Kadyrov' elite group was destroyed, which came here to eliminate our president." While Chechen leader Ramzan Kadyrov confirmed on his Telegram channel Monday that two servicemen died and six others were injured, neither the Chechens nor the Kremlin have publicly responded to Ukraine's claims that Kadyrovites were sent to kill Zelensky and were eliminated. The response to the alleged assassination plot comes as Russian forces continue their deadly assault on key Ukrainian cities, prompting some locals officials to warn Wednesday that their cities were near the breaking point. Kyiv endured more overnight attacks, while Russian forces faced stiff resistance from Ukrainian military and civilian defenders throughout the country. Nearly 680,000 Ukrainians had fled the country as of Tuesday, according to the U.N. High Commissioner for Refugees, in what might eventually be "Europe's largest refugee crisis this century." In the United States, President Joe Biden put the invasion at the center of his first State of the Union address Tuesday night, hailing a unified international backlash that has made Russia "more isolated from the world now than it has ever been." Zelensky and Biden spoke hours before the address about sanctions against Russia as well as U.S. defense assistance to Ukraine during the invasion. Biden called out Russian President Vladimir Putin for having "badly miscalculated" how Ukraine and the world would respond to the invasion. "He thought he could roll into Ukraine - and the world would roll over. Instead, he met with a wall of strength he never anticipated or imagined," Biden said. "He met the Ukrainian people." The Ukrainian president has posted videos from Kyiv, where he's leading the country's military response, and has been joined by government officials, military members and civilian defenders in protecting the capital. Zelensky has said that he has become the Kremlin's "target No. 1," with his family as "target No. 2." "They want to destroy Ukraine politically by destroying the head of state," he said in an address last week. Zelensky, who told CNN and Reuters on Tuesday that he hasn't seen his family in recent days, noted that Ukraine is "iconic" and deserves to be defended against Russia and Putin. "Ukraine is the heart of Europe, and now I think Europe sees Ukraine is something special for this world," he said from a bunker. "That's why [the] world can't lose this something special." According to the Ukrainian newspaper Ukrayinska Pravda, Putin instructed Kadyrov, the Chechen leader, to carry out the plot last month. "The task of the Chechens was defined as the cleansing of Kyiv, the physical liquidation and preventive work with Ukrainian leaders," the newspaper wrote. Danilov said he was thankful for members of Russia's Federal Security Service who tipped Ukrainian officials about the assassination plot. The Ukrainian Ministry of Defense claimed over the weekend that the Ukrainian military had defeated a special unit of the Chechen National Guard. Among those killed was Gen. Magomed Tushaev, commander of the 141st motorized regiment of the Chechen National Guard, reported Ukrayinska Pravda. Danilov clarified on Ukrainian TV that the Kadyrovites were divided into two groups, and the one that was "destroyed" was tracked down in Hostomel, near the airport. "Another group is now, so to speak, under fire," he said. - - - The Washington Post's David L. Stern contributed to this report. Former national security adviser John Bolton has rejected a claim from a Newsmax host who asserted that the behavior of President Donald Trump deterred the Russians from invading Ukraine. Bolton emphasized that Trump "barely knew where Ukraine was." Speaking with the conservative network Monday night, Bolton sat back as host Rob Schmitt listed Trump accomplishments that the broadcaster claimed helped block Russia from attacking Ukraine. All the while, the pro-Trump network displayed a chyron that read, "Trump was tough on Russia." But Bolton, who has become a vocal critic of Trump, denied that his former boss was tough on Russia, claiming that Trump complained about any sanctions on Russian oligarchs in the United States. Then Bolton, who said Trump "did not" do a better job with Russia than President Joe Biden, went one step further about Trump's knowledge of Ukraine. "The fact is that he barely knew where Ukraine was," he said. Taylor Budowich, a spokesman for Trump, did not immediately respond to a request for comment Tuesday. Budowich told the Hill in a statement that Bolton was fired "because he believes anything less than war is not enough." "President Trump ensured peace during his administration and ended wars, making Bolton irrelevant," Budowich said. Bolton's comments come as Russian forces continue to bear down on Ukraine. A 40-mile-long Russian convoy approaching Kyiv had "stalled," perhaps to regroup, a senior U.S. defense official said, but other forces gathered menacing strength on Tuesday, six days into the conflict in Ukraine. While fighting continues across the country, nearly 680,000 Ukrainians have fled since the start of the Russian invasion, according to the United Nations high commissioner for refugees, Filippo Grandi. Trump has faced criticism since he recently described Putin as "smart," "savvy" and a "genius" for sending military forces into Ukraine. Trump has continued to champion Putin at the expense of Biden, who defeated Trump in the 2020 presidential election. In an interview with Fox News host Laura Ingraham last week, Trump incorrectly seemed to think that the United States had decided to go to war with Russia. After he was corrected by Ingraham, Trump said, "Oh, I thought you said we were sending people in." As the war has unfolded in Ukraine, Trump has sought to rewrite some of the history surrounding his support of the country and the North Atlantic Treaty Organization. In a statement Monday, Trump repeated some of the same falsehoods he said during his presidency regarding his backing of Ukraine and NATO, The Washington Post's Glenn Kessler wrote. "With Trump, it's hard to know if he's willfully ignorant or if he has simply swallowed his own spin," Kessler wrote. Contrary to the former president's statements, Trump wanted to leave NATO, according to Bolton's 2020 memoir. Bolton wrote that he had to convince Trump not to quit NATO in the middle of a 2018 summit, despite his repeated wishes to leave the alliance. Bolton continued to debunk some of Trump's falsehoods on Newsmax, a Trump-friendly channel that appeals to far-right conservatives. Schmitt repeated some of what Trump has promoted as his achievements before asking Bolton about Trump's "very tough stance against Russia." "I'm surprised you don't think that he would have handled it better than Joe Biden," the host said. "He did not," Bolton replied, touching on several instances in which Trump failed to enforce sanctions or was forced into imposing sanctions. "In almost every case, the sanctions were imposed with Trump complaining about it, saying we were being too hard." During the interview, Bolton claimed that Trump once asked then-White House Chief of Staff John Kelly whether Finland was part of Russia. The former national security adviser emphasized that the narrative on Newsmax regarding the Ukraine invasion was a departure from reality. "It's just not accurate to say that Trump's behavior somehow deterred the Russians," he said. As Schmitt tried to interrupt him, Bolton continued, "I think the evidence is that Russia didn't feel their military was ready." Toward the end of the interview, Bolton flatly stated, as he has since he left the Trump administration, that Trump "was not fit to be president." "He was not competent to be president," he said. Schmitt replied, "You worked for him, though." Bolton acknowledged that he worked for Trump "because I wanted to try ... to help protect American national security." "I jumped at the chance, there's no doubt about it," he said. Bolton doubled down on his position Tuesday, telling Vice that Trump "and his own political failure" played at least a small role in the invasion of Ukraine. "To the extent that there was an unnatural environment created, it made it that much easier for Putin," he said. "I don't think it was dispositive, but it was a factor, that's for sure." The Russian military is branching out from relying heavily on guided missiles in its bombardment of Ukraine, firing more artillery, rockets and other weapons that can be difficult to aim precisely and cause devastating carnage in civilian areas, military experts said. The shift comes as the Pentagon assesses that Russia is pivoting to siege warfare in the cities of Kharkiv and Chernihiv, and could do so in the capital, Kyiv. Such tactics are notoriously horrifying, trapping civilians under fire as an invading force encircles a city and prevents food, ammunition and medical supplies from entering. Military analysts said that Russia's initial battle plan appeared nonsensical and haphazard, with Russian soldiers launching a ground invasion after a brief bombardment that primarily struck military targets but failed to knock out all Ukrainian air defenses. Invading forces, operating with little logistical support and air cover, appeared to expect little resistance, but instead have clashed with Ukrainians in bloody fights. Russian commanders appear to be reconsidering their approach, analysts and U.S. government officials said. "I'm seeing reorganization," said Michael Kofman, the director of Russian studies at CNA, a Virginia-based think tank. "They're coalescing into larger units, they're pulling up logistics and they're starting to use more artillery and air power." A senior U.S. defense official, speaking on condition of anonymity to discuss the Pentagon's current assessments, affirmed Tuesday that it does appear Russia is "regrouping." Russian forces have begun frequent use of a multiple rocket-launch system that can employ unguided cluster munitions and thermobaric rounds, made at least one flight with a Su-34 bomber, and built a 40 mile-long column comprising hundreds of tanks and other armored vehicles north of the capital, Kyiv, Russia's primary objective. When Russia launched its invasion Thursday, it fired more than 100 missiles into Ukraine, primarily at airfields and other military targets. The initial salvo included a mix of cruise missiles fired from ships and Iskander ballistic missiles that are reasonably accurate, said Rob Lee, a former Marine Corps infantry officer who is now a senior fellow with the Foreign Policy Research Institute. As of Tuesday, the Russians had launched a total of about 400 missiles - which have guidance systems and are relatively precise, experts say. But as they have faced stiff resistance from Ukrainian forces, Russia has begun to employ rocket systems and other methods in the northeastern city of Kharkiv, around which some of the heaviest fighting has occurred. On Tuesday, an explosion appeared to a rock a government center and nearby intersection as cars sat in traffic, according to video of the attack. It wasn't clear what caused it. Ukrainian President Volodymyr Zelensky has condemned the shelling, calling it a "war crime." The rocket launcher fires rapid volleys of unguided munitions, and can carry cluster munitions, which indiscriminately disperse small "bomblets" upon detonation to inflict maximum casualties. Amnesty International accused the Russian military on Monday of killing civilians, including children, with the rounds, which are condemned by the majority of the international community. Oksana Markarova, Ukraine's ambassador to the United States, told reporters Tuesday that Russia also has used a "vacuum bomb," a colloquial name given to thermobaric weapons due to the way they suck in oxygen from the surrounding air upon detonation to produce a larger explosion. The Pentagon has stopped short of confirming reports about the specific types of ordnance being used by Russian forces in Ukraine, while acknowledging it is assessing the situation. Lee, with the Foreign Policy Research Institute, said that Russian President Vladimir Putin and his advisers will have difficult days ahead if they cause major destruction. While Russia leveled residential areas in Syria and Chechnya in earlier conflicts, it is not clear that Putin is comfortable doing so in a nation whose history is closely intertwined with Russia's when it could have political fallout for him, he said. "If you're going to go into cities, you have to be prepared to destroy them, and that's going to mean that a lot of Russians die, and a lot of civilians die," Lee said. "I don't know if they're really going to be willing to massacre all these civilians." It's been challenging for the Pentagon and independent observers to thoroughly assess what weapons and tactics Russian commanders are employing, even as imagery of battle damage and explosions circulate widely online. In one example, a video of a missile hitting a high-rise apartment building drew international attention, but it now appears the damage may not have been caused by Russia. Jeffrey Lewis, who studies missile warfare in California at the Middlebury Institute of International Studies at Monterey, said his team assessed it was most likely an errant surface-to-air missile. "We can't tell whether it is Ukrainian or Russian, but the former would be more likely," Lewis said, given the strike's location. Lewis said Russia's initial strikes "looked pretty accurate," as Iskander missiles tend to be. He predicted that Russia will shift next to using more rocket artillery. Kofman, with CNA, said the Russian plan so far has "not made any sense," putting rank-and-file soldiers in combat with few resources as the Russian air force is largely "missing in action." The senior U.S. defense official at the Pentagon said Tuesday that the United States believes rank-and-file Russian soldiers are now coping with fuel and food shortages. Lee said he has been left wondering whether the Russians are experiencing shortages of specific weapons. He cited Krasnopol laser-guided artillery rounds, which have been used in Syria in conjunction with drones to spot targets, improve accuracy and assess battle damage, he said. The haphazard planning raises questions, too, as to whether Putin withheld his invasion plan from military staff officers for too long to effectively coordinate, Lee said. He doubted that rank-and-file Russians soldiers are ready for a more aggressive fight, citing videos in which civilians have taunted them and stopped their vehicles without being killed. Malcolm Chalmers, deputy director general at RUSI, a London think tank, said that many observers thought Russia would have done better in dominating the skies, and the fact that Ukraine continues to fly jets and Turkish-made drones exposes a weakness in the Russian military. Chalmers said Russia has an advantage with its rockets and artillery, but he predicted that plans to take large cities will prove particularly difficult. "It takes a lot of personnel. You can bomb a city to smithereens but there are lots of place to hide, to go underground," he said. "They will have to fight block by block if the resistance continues." - - - The Washington Post's Karla Adam in London contributed to this report. As Russian military forces headed his way, Maksim Chmerkovskiy broadcast to his 1.1 million Instagram followers from a balcony in Ukraine's capital. "I'm in Kyiv," the "Dancing With the Stars" alum told them last week, "contrary to what I probably should have done a while ago." In a pair of videos taken from that balcony, Chmerkovskiy implied he regretted not fleeing Ukraine earlier but that, as sirens blared from the street below, he was clear about his new plans. "I want to go back home," he said. So began Chmerkovskiy's five-day odyssey to escape his native Ukraine, where he lived until age 14, when his family immigrated to the United States. He had been back in his homeland working on "World of Dance UA," a reality competition series, CNN reported. Since broadcasting from that Kyiv balcony, Chmerkovskiy has updated his followers with near-daily dispatches. For several days, he was stuck in the capital as Russian military forces closed in and attacked the city. As he was heading into a bomb shelter on Thursday, Chmerkovskiy posted a four-minute-long video. The update wasn't much; he said he was safe, still in Kyiv and optimistic. "I do know that, at the very least, I have a chance. I have a passport, and I have a way out." On Friday, he was still stuck in the capital. Chmerkovskiy reported that people were telling him it was too dangerous to try to head west to safety. By Sunday, he reported to his followers that he was tired and stressed. Then, late Monday, he told them he had made it onto a train headed for Poland's capital. "We're heading to Warsaw (hopefully). Train to Lviv was not an option," Chmerkovskiy wrote in an Instagram Story. "The situation at the train station is insane. AT first it feels manageable, but it gets A LOT worse when it comes time to actually board the train. Long story but all I can say now is that I'm a big man with nothing but a backpack it's TRAUMATIZING." The train was packed. Chmerkovskiy wrote that he had squeezed into a cabin meant for three people but then housing four adults and seven children. The car, designed for as many as 30 people, was holding more than four times that number. "People everywhere. It's sweaty and claustrophobic," he wrote in the note. Chmerkovskiy said that, at one point in his journey, he had watched a young boy say goodbye to his father. "What finally broke me is when I was watching an eight-ish year old boy, hysterically crying and not wanting to let go of his father. Verbatim: 'if you stay I want to stay too because if they kill you I won't be able to help.' " On Tuesday, Chmerkovskiy popped back on Instagram to tell everyone that, after a 23-hour train ride and 36 hours without sleep, he had escaped to Warsaw. Chmerkovskiy said he had witnessed a lot on his journey - including Russian attacks on civilians - but he said it wasn't the time to get into that. "I won't be able to express myself. I'm already tearing up and choking," the champion dancer said. " ... I'm scared, I'm confused. I'm terrified. And I've just lived through some [stuff] that I'm going to need a lot of therapy for." Chmerkovskiy called Russian President Vladimir Putin a "maniac" and thanked everyone who had helped him flee, saying he was "overwhelmed with gratitude." On Thursday, at the start of his effort to leave Ukraine, Chmerkovskiy wrote an Instagram caption that accompanied one of the videos he recorded on the Kyiv balcony. He wrote that, after decades of living in America, he had just been getting over some of the "old [post-traumatic stress disorder]" feelings he experienced growing up in Ukraine. With Russia's invasion, those were coming back. "I literally only just forgot about those 'always on the edge' feelings and actually started worrying about things like bbq grills," he wrote. "I'm crying as I'm typing this because all man deserves to worry about 'bbq grills' and not ... war." Before Chmerkovskiy made it out of Ukraine, his wife, Peta Murgatroyd, who was also a longtime professional on "Dancing With the Stars," kept vigil on her own Instagram. In recent days, she posted a video of a lavender candle in front of a family photo, one of several she rotated during the five days her husband was trapped. On one of her husband's posts, she left a comment promising he would once again only have to worry about cooking things on the grill. "I love you. You will be home soon I promise," she told him. "Think about how many bbq's we are [going] to have." WASHINGTON - Senior Biden administration officials are preparing to dramatically expand the number of Russian oligarchs subject to U.S. sanctions, aiming to punish the financial elite close to President Vladimir Putin over his invasion of Ukraine, according to three people briefed on internal administration deliberations. Officials at the White House and Treasury Department are working on producing a list of names that is expected to overlap in part with the lineup of Russian oligarchs who were newly subjected to sanctions by the European Union on Monday, the people said. For instance, the White House is weighing imposing new sanctions on Alisher Usmanov, the owner of an iron and steel conglomerate who Forbes has estimated to be worth more than $15 billion, the people said. The people spoke on the condition of anonymity to reflect internal deliberations not yet made public. Usmanov was placed under sanctions by E.U. officials Monday. The U.S. sanctions would also probably include travel restrictions and the seizure of overseas assets that could run into the billions. The U.S. is also expected to announce new sanctions on Belarus and Russian defense firms as soon as Wednesday, according to two other people familiar with the matter, who spoke on the condition of anonymity to reflect matters not yet made public. Belarus has prepared to join the Russian invasion, according to U.S. intelligence officials. America's sanctions are expected to be more complicated than those imposed by the E.U., targeting not just the individuals but also their family members and companies they own, according to a White House official, who also spoke on the condition of anonymity to reflect internal deliberations. President Joe Biden said in his State of the Union address on Tuesday night that the U.S. would join with Europe to "seize their yachts, their luxury apartments, their private jets." The Department of Justice on Wednesday also announced the creation of "Task Force KleptoCapture" to coordinate prosecutors and other federal investigators in the effort to prosecute sanctions against "corrupt Russian oligarchs." The task force will be led by a prosecutor with the U.S. Attorney's Office for the Southern District of New York and include leadership from the FBI, U.S. Secret Service, Department of Homeland Security, and Internal Revenue Service, among other federal agencies. "Tonight, I say to the Russian oligarchs and the corrupt leaders who built billions off this violent regime - no more," the president said. "We're coming for your ill-begotten gains." A Treasury spokeswoman declined to comment. Usmanov's company Metalloinvest, a mining firm, said in a statement that it considers the sanctions against him to be "ungrounded and unfair." Usmanov also released a statement accusing the E.U. of "false and defamatory allegations damaging my honour, dignity and business reputation." The additional sanctions represent one part of the unprecedented campaign of economic measures against Russian oligarchs tied to the Kremlin. In the past week alone, Western leaders have announced a series of punitive measures targeting the network of business executives and politically connected donors who are widely regarded as critical allies of the Russian president. In addition to the sanctions released Monday by the E.U., Western leaders vowed this week to create a new "transatlantic task force" of law enforcement to help identify, and freeze, the assets of Russian oligarchs in violation of those sanctions. Russia's billionaires control roughly 30% of the nation's wealth - compared with roughly 15% in Germany and the United States - and have about as much financial wealth stashed in offshore foreign accounts as the entire Russian population has in Russia itself, according to a 2017 paper released by the National Bureau of Economic Research. Many of them have served at high levels of Putin's government, or played an instrumental role in providing financing either for the Russian president personally or the Kremlin's efforts abroad, according to E.U. officials. The U.S. sanctions measures work by adding the Russian officials, business executives, companies and other groups to a list of "specially designated nationals," maintained and published by the Treasury Department. Any entity or person appearing on that list will see their U.S. assets frozen, and Americans are generally barred from financial transactions with them. A Washington Post investigation in 2021 based on a trove of financial records showed how existing U.S. sanctions hit their Russian targets. But it also underscored their limits, demonstrating how Russian money continues to move around the global financial system, often through secret accounts. "It's hard to express how massive a sea change this is for Western policy. The sanctions against these oligarchs are unprecedented in their scope and size; many of them were presumed to be untouchable," said Paul Massaro, an anticorruption adviser to congressional lawmakers. "It will shake the rogue Putin regime to its core." But the West's attempts to punish Russia's financial elites face major logistical hurdles and carry the risk of further retaliation from the Kremlin. Some experts said they also might drive Russia's business elites to be more, not less, supportive of Putin - while also potentially inadvertently hitting oligarchs who have opposed Moscow's aggression in Ukraine. At least in the United States, the effort to freeze or seize assets of Russians close to Putin is also likely to be stymied by a U.S. legal structure that allows anonymous actors, often using illicit funds, to form companies and purchase real estate and other assets under a strict veil of secrecy, said experts and transparency advocates. Further complicating matters is that some of the oligarchs oversee global operations the United States and European Union may be uneasy about undermining. Typically, sanctions on foreign business elites lead to the seizure of their assets and of corporate holdings. But that can have a major impact on business operations involving commodities important to the world economy. Punitive measures could also hit Russian owners in the country's gas-export sector, which the U.S. and Europe have generally sought to exempt from sanctions. "If the goal is to both trap their ill-gotten gains while peeling them off President Putin, it's not clear it has always worked that way," said Adam Smith, a partner at Gibson Dunn and a former Obama administration sanctions official. "The record of sanctioning oligarchs is mixed." In 2017, Congress mandated that the Treasury Department provide a list of Russian oligarchs, though not that those oligarchs be subjected to sanctions. A Treasury spokesperson later said that the resulting unclassified list, published in 2018, was derived from a Forbes ranking of wealthy Russians. But with a U.S. military response off the table, the momentum behind the sanctions effort has become unstoppable. The European Union on Monday unveiled a broader list of Russian officials newly placed under sanctions that included Usmanov, the mining magnate; Mikhail Fridman, the owner of a conglomerate that includes one of Russia's biggest banks; and Nikolay Tokarev, CEO of a major Russian oil and gas company. A spokesman for Fridman strongly disputed the allegations that he had supported Putin as "malicious and deliberate falsehoods . . . the product of historical fantasies and conspiracy theories dreamt up by private individuals with their own agendas." Fridman, who was born in western Ukraine, said he opposes the war, Reuters reported on Sunday. Oleg Deripaska, another Russian billionaire the United States placed under sanctions in 2018, joined Fridman in rejecting the war effort. Metalloinvest, the mining company owned by Usmanov, also said the company will not be affected by the E.U. impositions because the sanctions against Usmanov "are of a personal character." Tokarev did not respond to a request for comment sent through his company, Transneft. More sanctions may be on the way. A bipartisan group of lawmakers wants the Biden administration to impose sanctions on the "Navalny 35," a list of Putin allies identified by a group tied to Russian dissident Alexei Navalny. That would amount to a dramatic expansion in the number of individual Russian business elites targeted for sanctions. Rep. Tom Malinowski, D-N.J., one of the sponsors of that legislation, told The Post he has spoken in recent days with the administration and congressional leadership about reviving the expanded list of sanctions. Malinowski said he is also studying legal changes that could allow oligarchs' confiscated assets to be given to Ukraine to assist in that country's reconstruction, something he said is illegal under current law. Senate Finance Committee Chair Ron Wyden, D-Ore., has also called for changing disclosure rules among private equity firms, hedge funds and venture capital funds so they would have to disclose potentially substantial amounts of offshore money. Wyden has pushed the Treasury Department to take that step, although it is unclear how much Russian money is held in these kinds of firms. "In a war partly about morale on both sides, seeing Russian oligarchs' yachts seized and sold at auction - seeing police at their villas, at their luxury apartments - will give Ukrainians and Russians who hate Putin a huge boost," Malinowski said. "This is one of the ways in which we can weaken the support structure of this regime. . . . The more we can make the sanctions feel like a shock and awe campaign, the better." Key to the sanctions effort will be the new international task force - details of which remain vague - to identify and track where Russian oligarchs are parking their assets. Without that information, the sanctions can be evaded given that the oligarchs' finances may go undetected. Treasury is working to implement a law passed by Congress in January 2021 to put an end to anonymous shell companies that can be used for illicit ends by requiring companies registered in the United States to disclose their owners to the federal government. The law exempted 23 types of entities from the requirement, including investment funds and venture capital fund advisers. But the Treasury Department regulation that would implement the law has not been enacted, meaning any anonymous shell companies owned or controlled by Russians can still benefit from a veil of secrecy. Transparency advocates have praised the beneficial ownership effort, though they have noted that many more measures are needed, including accountability for law firms that help set up offshore companies and trusts that do not report suspicious activities to law enforcement, as well as stronger measures that would require art dealers and others to know their true customers' identities. They also noted that the Treasury Department agency implementing the rule, the Financial Crimes Enforcement Network, needs a large funding boost, which has been held up amid debates in Congress over a longer-term government spending bill. "We need to take stock of our own role in enabling corrupt leaders from around the world to steal from state coffers and enjoy their illicitly obtained wealth here," said Shruti Shah, president of the Coalition for Integrity, which advocates for anticorruption measures. But the appetite in Congress may be materializing for those kinds of changes. "Many of us on the Hill have said to the administration, 'If there are any legal authorities that you need to strengthen your hand in going after the oligarchs, let us know,'" Sen. Chris Van Hollen, D-Md., said. "Because we do want to move quickly." - - - The Washington Post's Tony Romm contributed reporting to this story. By Lorraine Gabbert San Jose Spotlight Councilmember Sylvia Arenas is recommending San Jose break with its sister city in Russia, adding its voice to international efforts to isolate the country over the ongoing conflict in Ukraine. Her proposal will be heard by the city's Rules Committee on Wednesday. "Ending our city's formal diplomatic relationship with Russia's municipal government in Ekaterinburg sends a clear message," Arenas said in a statement. A sister city is a long-term partnership between two communities in two countries, according to Sister Cities International. Sister cities were initially created in the 1950s to foster peace, but can also promote tourism, trade, educational and cultural exchanges and projects. San Jose has at least 8 sister cities, including Okayama, Japan and Dublin, Ireland. San Jose is joining the state and federal government by standing in solidarity with Ukraine during the ongoing Russian invasion. City Hall is lit in the now familiar blue and yellow of the Ukrainian flag and will remain so through March 6. Arenas' proposal also directs San Jose's lobbyists in Washington, D.C. to advocate for further sanctions on Russia and to provide military supplies to Ukraine. "We have all watched in horror as Vladimir Putin and the Russian government unleashed unspeakable terror upon a peaceful nation," Arenas said, "whose sole mistake appears to be yearning for freedom while living near the Russian border." Ukrainian forces continue to fight Russian invaders nearly a week into the conflict. National media reports say a Russian military convoy north of the capital of Kyiv stretches approximately 40 miles. San Jose has already adopted two of Arenas' requests: for City Hall to be lit in blue and yellow and for the city to support and coordinate with San Jose's Ukrainian community. San Jose is home to more than 4,000 Ukrainian people. More than 20,000 Ukrainians live in the Bay Area. Mayor Sam Liccardo said San Jose stands with the people of Ukraine who are suffering unimaginable atrocities and fighting for their freedom. San Jose's Office of Racial Equity is collaborating with the Red Cross, Ukrainian Consulate in San Francisco and Ukrainian immigrant-led nonprofits and faith-based groups. "We pray for the strength and safety of our Ukrainian neighbors and refugees during this critical time," Liccardo said in a statement. Nova Ukraine, a nonprofit headquartered in Palo Alto, is raising awareness about the conflict and providing humanitarian aid. "Even months from now, Ukraine will need support," Director Igor Markov told San Jose Spotlight. "So many family members suffered. We want to make sure people with relatives and with Ukrainian roots feel they're not forgotten... and that Silicon Valley stands with Ukraine." Markov said there's been fighting and bombing where his aunt and uncle live in Ukraine. Air sirens go off regularly to keep them on alert. "It's unbelievable," he said. State Sens. Mike McGuire and Dave Cortese co-authored legislation aimed at adding financial pressure on Russia by divesting state public funds from the country following the unprovoked war. "We all must mobilize to stop Russia in its tracks," McGuire said in a statement. "California has unique and remarkable economic power in this circumstance. As the fifth largest economy in the world, we must use this power for good." The bill calls on state agencies, including pension funds CalPERS and CalSTRS, to immediately divest from Russian assets. California has more than $1 billion in Russian investments primarily in its pension funds, according to a statement. Legislators are also asking private companies based in California to divest their investments in the Russian economy, and they will block awarding state contracts to any company that is conducting business with Russia. Cortese, chair of the Senate Labor, Public Employment and Retirement Committee, said in a statement the state has a responsibility to ensure it's not fueling this global crisis that has caused tremendous human suffering. He said the state is following the foreign policy lead of the national government to divest and freeze assets. Cortese would like state financial and security businesses to follow suit, and divest their assets from Russia. "The state has I think as much a reputation as any state or nation in the world to stand for freedom, human rights and democracy," he told San Jose Spotlight."It's really important for us to make a statement." Copyright 2022 Bay City News, Inc. All rights reserved. Republication, rebroadcast or redistribution without the express written consent of Bay City News, Inc. is prohibited. Bay City News is a 24/7 news service covering the greater Bay Area. Copyright 2022 by Bay City News, Inc. Republication, Rebroadcast or any other Reuse without the express written consent of Bay City News, Inc. is prohibited. Use bear-resistant garbage cans. It's the first piece of advice on a list of things residents should do to keep Tahoe bears wild. Bear boxes are a common installation in front of homes throughout the Tahoe Basin because they are effective. They prevent bears from accessing human food and garbage the gateway drug, so to speak, before a bear's quest to find food leads it farther into human turf, into garages and houses. But in the Tahoe Keys the neighborhood thats been in the national news because Hank the Tank and other resident bears have been so active, breaking into at least 28 homes since the fall bear boxes were prohibited by the property owners association until last year. Homeowners didnt want to feel as if they were surrounded by a wall-of-steel, stated an article published by the Tahoe Keys architectural control committee in a March 2020 edition of the Keys Breeze newsletter. The Tahoe Keys is a lakefront subdivision in South Lake Tahoe with more than 1,500 luxury homes and townhouses. The development is known for its shallow lagoons and canals that connect the houses to Lake Tahoe. It was built in the late 50s and 60s, and its construction destroyed both the largest wetland in the Sierra Nevada and the largest tributary into Lake Tahoe. The grievances about bears breaking into peoples homes is the latest in a long history of environmental disasters centered at the Tahoe Keys. Bears have increasingly become a big problem in the Tahoe Keys, ripping holes in garage doors, opening sliding glass doors and destroying kitchens. The property owners association noted a bear den was found under the pavilion. But instead of bear boxes, the Tahoe Keys Property Owners Association advised residents to use trash cans with lock tops, to stop feeding pets outside and to delay putting garbage cans on the street until the early morning hours just before trash pickup. The bears persisted. A year later, in the April 2021 Keys Breeze newsletter, new rules were printed: bear boxes are allowed, but each box must get a stamp of approval by the architectural control committee. Now, according to the most recent edition of the Keys Breeze, the association is considering a new design for a bear-proof garbage can. Its called a tote enclosure, made of steel with a 65-gallon capacity and wheels, easier to store inside the garage, away from public view. The Tahoe Keys Property Owners Association did not respond to multiple requests for comment. The Tahoe Keys is one of those neighborhoods that feels like an endless cul-de-sac. Set back with a good-sized buffer from the main thoroughfares of South Lake Tahoe, its not a neighborhood that youd stumble upon randomly. Most of the time, it feels pretty quiet here. Homes sell for an average of $1.7 million, according to December 2021 figures. Despite the quiet streets, when historians look back, they say the Keys are one of Tahoes biggest environmental disasters. In the early 1960s, the lake still appeared clear and blue from the shore, wrote Charles R. Goldman, the founder of the Tahoe Environmental Research Center at UC Davis, in a 1989 essay titled Lake Tahoe: Preserving a Fragile Ecosystem. But development for Incline Village at the north end of the lake and destruction of 100 Upper Truckee marsh acres by dredging for the Tahoe Keys development were followed by an algal bloom at the south shore and massive plumes of sediment from various disturbed watersheds, Goldman continued. With these highly visible signs of disturbance, the forces of conservation tightened their battle lines. Rich Pedroncelli/ASSOCIATED PRESS According to Michael J. Makley, author of the book Saving Lake Tahoe: An Environmental History of a National Treasure, the Tahoe Keys crisis could have been averted had the Forest Service possessed more foresight. About 750 acres of the Upper Truckee River marsh the largest wetland in the Sierra Nevada, and the site of multiple Washoe ethnographic sites were offered to the Forest Service for $75,000. But the Forest Service declined the offer. Forest Service representatives rejected the offer because they saw no reason to acquire a swamp, Makley wrote. Instead, a private corporation named Tahoe Keys, Inc., bought the marshland in December 1956 for $201,476 and immediately began to excavate the land, digging 150-foot-wide boating canals, according to Makley. In the early 1960s, the Dillingham Corporation acquired the Keys subdivision, which was then projected to be worth $150 million. The effects of the development were devastating, Makley wrote. The Upper Truckee River was once a meandering waterway with grasses to filter sediment before the water reached Lake Tahoe. When the Tahoe Keys were built, the Upper Truckee was funneled into an artificial channel that led to massive amounts of debris reaching the lake. Inside the canals, invasive weeds began to grow in the water. The water in the Tahoe Keys is dark from all of the weeds swirling at the surface. Conditions worsen in the summer, when longer days and warmer temperatures provide fuel for aquatic weeds to multiply. The weed problem began in the 1970s, when a vessel dubbed the Tahoe Keys Dragon was dispatched to cut back the underwater growth, almost like mowing an aquatic lawn. But cutting back the weeds never stopped the problem; the fragments of the plants actually spread the growth. In recent years, the issue has gotten out of control. The invasive aquatic weed infestation has proliferated inside Tahoe Keys marina experts say about 90% of the 172 acres of lagoons are infested. And now the weeds are marching across the threshold of the marina and spreading into Lake Tahoe. George Rose/Getty Images Last month, Lake Tahoe regulatory officials approved the use of herbicides, as part of a controlled test, to combat the overwhelming infestation of aquatic weeds that proliferate inside the Tahoe Keys. The Tahoe Keys Lagoons Aquatic Weed Control Methods Test may start as early as this spring and will measure the effectiveness of herbicides, along with multiple other treatment methods, to find a way to knock down the infestation before conditions deteriorate even more. The test will mark the first time herbicides will be used in Lake Tahoe. There are more exotic problems stemming from the Tahoe Keys. In 2013, fish biologists from the U.S. Forest Service discovered gigantic goldfish in Lake Tahoe, measuring 4 to 8 inches long and weighing several pounds. Historians, including Makley, say the goldfish were likely released in the Tahoe Keys, where warm, shallow waters incubated the invasive fish until they could swim into Lake Tahoe. As Lake Tahoes waters warm, invasive species can more easily breed in the near shore and travel to other parts of the lake, said Sarah Muskopf, a fish biologist for the Forest Service, in a 2013 article. Were most concerned about marinas, canals and wetlands that are closely connected to Lake Tahoe. The Tahoe Keys development ultimately destroyed about 11% of Tahoes wetlands, which play a critical role in filtering sediment and protecting the clarity of the water, Tahoe historian David Antonucci wrote in a recently self-published e-book about the geologic and social history of Lake Tahoe. All told, the Tahoe Keys was an environmental disaster of monstrous proportions that appeared in the early resort development boom era, Antonucci wrote, and continues to be an open infected wound in Lake Tahoes gut. Last week, Fish and Wildlife officials said their attempts to trap the severely food-habituated bears have been thwarted by vandalism. When they do succeed in trapping the bears, officials have few options for what to do next. After DNA evidence confirmed that multiple bears were raiding Tahoe Keys properties, officials said they would not euthanize the bears. Relocating the animals or keeping them in captivity with an accredited facility are the remaining options for animals that pose a threat to human residents and property. According to the California Fish and Wildlife Department, multiple bears have forcefully entered at least 28 homes in the Tahoe Keys, with extensive damage documented in 33 separate cases since August. The outcry in response to news reports about the bears its leading hero is dubbed Hank the Tank has overwhelmed local authorities. Bears target neighborhoods and homes throughout the Lake Tahoe Basin, but the sheer number of cases reported in the Tahoe Keys is above and beyond what most neighborhoods experience. The environmental cost of building this lakefront neighborhood was high from the start, and Tahoe is still paying. From an aquatic weed infestation to an urbanized bear invasion, it seems as if nature is now striking back. Across the globe, national governments and corporations have made sharp rebukes of Russia for its invasion of Ukraine. In the Bay Area, tech companies have also taken measures to sanction Russia and ensure their platforms aren't being used as strategic tools of war. Here's how each of these major companies has responded. For days, the only public response to the war was a vague tweet from CEO Tim Cook expressing his deep concern with "the situation in Ukraine," despite pleas from Ukraine's Vice Prime Minister Mykhailo Fedorov to block the Apple Store for citizens of the Russian Federation. The inaction drew condemnation in a Washington Post op-ed. On Tuesday, the company announced a series of measures as a result of the invasion. All sales of Apple products are paused in Russia, Apple Pay services have been limited, RT News and Sputnik News, which are owned by the Russian state, have been removed from the App Store and live traffic updates have been disabled in Apple Maps. Google In a company-wide announcement today, Google laid out a list of initiatives it is taking to aid Ukraine and sanction Russia. Google is providing $15 million in donations, along with $5 million in advertising credits for humanitarian and intergovernmental organizations. They've also disabled some live Google Map features (traffic, busyness levels), amped up their monitoring of hacking attempts, enabled an account protection program for high-risk users in Ukraine and blocked YouTube channels connected to Russian state-funded media. Meta Facebook's parent company Meta took a major step yesterday by restricting access to Sputnik and RT across the EU. They've also added safety features to allow users to lock profiles for privacy purposes and made encrypted one-to-one chats available on Instagram for adults in Ukraine and Russia. The company has also honed in on a network of coordinated fake profiles spreading misinformation, and established a special operations center staffed by native Russian and Ukrainian speakers. Twitter Despite a plea from Ukraine to disable Russia's verified account (which received over 223,000 likes), the account is still active and tweeting about... pancakes. Twitter has taken multiple measures, though, including pausing advertisements in Ukraine and Russia so as not to distract users looking for safety information. The company has also pledged to match donations from employees and is labeling tweets that contain content from state-affiliated media. Airbnb While many tech companies have made adjustments to their platforms for those still within Ukraine, Airbnb is attempting to assist those who are fleeing the country by offering free, temporary housing to 100,000 Ukrainian refugees. Salesforce Salesforce hasn't made any large public announcements, but CEO Marc Benioff posted an emotional tweet about his great-grandfather Isaac Benioff, who was born in Kyiv. Salesforce Tower has also been lit up in the yellow and blue colors of the Ukrainian flag. Uber In 2017, Uber announced a partnership with Russian tech company Yandex to work in tandem on ride-hailing operations in the country. In response to the war, three Uber representatives on the Yandex company's board resigned in protest and Uber will accelerate its separation from the Russian company. Additionally, Uber service has been stopped in Ukraine for safety purposes. Tesla/SpaceX After a Ukrainian tweet asking for support from Elon Musk, the controversial CEO sent Ukraine an undisclosed number of Starlink terminals, which allow access to satellite internet in an attempt to counter service disruptions in the country. Amazon Amazon has pledged a $5 million donation to humanitarian groups on the ground in Ukraine, as well as stating that it will match up to an additional $5 million in donations from employees. Amazon has also added donation buttons to its homepage. Snap The social media company behind Snapchat, whose augmented reality platform was initially founded by a Ukrainian company, have pledged $15 million in humanitarian aid, halted advertising sales to Russian and Belarusian entities and ceased running ads in Ukraine, Belarus or Russia. A layer of fog measuring 2,000 feet deep spread across nearly the entire San Francisco Bay Area on Wednesday morning, bringing a dramatic weather shift after several warm, sunny days, the National Weather Service said. The fog rolled in ahead of a storm system that's expected to arrive in the region late Wednesday into Thursday morning. "Were seeing the marine layer reform ahead of this front that's coming in," said Cindy Palmer, a meteorologist with the weather service office in Monterey. "The fog will clear in most places this afternoon, but were still going to be cloudy because there are a lot of high clouds. Its not going to turn into this great, sunny day." The first rain is forecast to hit Sonoma County, likely between 10 p.m. and midnight and continuing overnight. The system is unlikely to reach the rest of the Bay Area until Thursday morning. This system dropping down from the Gulf of Alaska is weak but much anticipated, as it's expected to bring the first widespread rain to the Bay Area since the last similar event on Jan. 7. The drought-ridden region has experienced a prolonged period of mostly dry weather for more than a month. Downtown San Francisco is expected to record a quarter of an inch, Oakland two-thirds of an inch and San Jose under a quarter of an inch. Higher terrain across the region could see up to two-thirds of an inch, and the wettest spots could see up to an inch. Palmer said the highest rainfall totals are expected south of the Bay Area, from Santa Cruz southward. "The system is cutting off parts of the Bay Area and swinging across central and southern California," she explained. In San Francisco, the first two months of 2022 were the driest January and February in the city ever, with records going back to the Gold Rush. In a typical year, the downtown gauge records 8.2 inches of rain between Jan. 1 and Feb. 28. This year, only 0.65 inch fell in January and February, about 8% of average, the National Weather Service said. There's hope that March will bring some storms before California moves into its typical dry season. Sharon, PA (16146) Today Cloudy skies this evening will become partly cloudy after midnight. Areas of patchy fog. Low near 45F. Winds light and variable.. Tonight Cloudy skies this evening will become partly cloudy after midnight. Areas of patchy fog. Low near 45F. Winds light and variable. Wood chips flew through the air over the weekend as woodcarvers from near and far descended upon the Shippensburg Fairgrounds to showcase thei Crime Man sentenced to term in prison for delivery of meth, resisting officers Garrett Norman Grigg A man that brought drugs out of the area into Mason County to be distributed was sentenced to serve at least 8 years and 4 months with the Michigan Department of Corrections with a maximum of 30 years Tuesday in 51st Circuit Court. Garrett Norman Grigg, 25, received a sentence by Judge Susan Sniegowski for pleading guilty to three counts of resisting and obstructing an officer and a count of delivering or manufacturing methamphetamine. As Mason County Assistant Prosecuting Attorney Beth Hand and Griggs defense attorney, Tracie Dinehart, reviewed the pre-sentencing report, they argued their respective side of the scenario in the delivery of drugs. He came to the Ludington area and then began staying in a hotel room with his then-girlfriend, Amber Sanders. Amber Sanders indicated that she allowed him to stay with her, and that (Grigg) asked to take several trips to the Bay City area She realized that the defendant was going to the Bay City to pick up drugs in order to bring them back to here to the Ludington area. Sanders pleaded guilty to a single count of delivery/manufacturing methamphetamine in February 2021, and she was sentenced to two years of probation in April 2021. Hand said Grigg was the leader of the incident. He was the one procuring the drugs, and he was the one distributing them, she said. Dinehart argued that Sanders wasnt forced to drive Grigg nor was he the so-called leader across the state, but Sniegowski sided with Hand. In looking at all the circumstances here, in the pre-sentencing report, it was Grigg was the one that was setting up the trips across the state to get the drugs and bring them back here, Sniegowski said. That does put him in position of being a leader in that situation. Grigg was out of prison on probation from a charge of criminal sexual conduct third degree at the time of the offense, Hand said. Grigg is already serving a sentence at Oaks Correctional Facility in Manistee on a charge of attempted criminal sexual conduct third degree (person 13 through 15). That case was in Genesee County, and he was sentenced to a year and 6 months to 5 years on June 24, 2020. Dinehart sought credit for extended time served in this case because he went to Genesee County to face the charges there after being released from the Mason County Jail. He was arrested on May 7, 2020, and according to this, bonded out on May 9, 2020, she said. At which point he was taken directly to Genesee County where he was serving time on an alleged probation violation related directly to this charge. And ultimately, in June of 2020, entered into MDOC where has sat since that day. He has been incarcerated for upward of 19 months on these particular charges. Because time served in prison cant be used as credit, Dinehart asked the court to sentence on the lower end because of the time in prison. Im not trying to minimize Mr. Griggs behavior, she said. Im asking the court to look at the situation as a whole. Dinehart said when Grigg was arraigned on a previous file in the case, COVID-19 halted transportation from Genesee County to Mason County. On the current file in the case, the pandemic limited transportation from MDOC. There were a lot of moving parts at that time, she said. Grigg said he is making changes since he started his incarceration. I made a lot of impulsive and irrational decisions under the influence of these drugs, he said. Im not trying to minimize, justify or make any excuses. The things that I did were wrong, and I take full responsibility and accountability. Ive been addressing and actively seeking help Im not claiming to be reformed or that Ive got it all figured out, because I dont. I have made real efforts of progress. On the trio of counts of resisting and obstructing an officer with a second offense notice, Sniegowski sentenced Grigg to concurrent 24-30 months with credit for three days served, $198 in fines and costs. Grigg was sentenced to a concurrent term of 100 months to 30 years in prison with credit for three days and $68 in court costs. Try out LudingtonDailyNews.com for only 99 per month for the first 3 months, $9.99 a month after. Unlimited website access 24/7 Unlimited e-Edition access 24/7 The best local, regional and national news in sports, politics, business and more! With a Digital Only subscription, you'll receive unlimited access to our website and e-Edition. Our digital products are available 24/7 and are accessible anywhere, anytime. Quint Digital Media Limited, a digital media group, proclaimed on Tuesday that it has entered into a binding term sheet with the Adani Group. Adani Group will buy a minority stake in Quintillion Business Media. "The proposed transaction with the Adani Group is only for QBM which is a digital business news platform and not in relation to other digital media/ media tech properties owned by Quint Digital viz. The Quint, Quintype Technologies, thenewsminute and Youthkiawaaz," stated Quint Digital in a stock exchange filing without quantifying the stake Adani was taking. Adani Media Ventures intends to lead the path for new age media across different platforms. The adoption of technology and the increased ability of our nation to consume information has dramatically transformed the way media is expected to disseminate authentic information. This is exactly what Adani Media Ventures aims to do. I have had the privilege of working with QBMs talented, credible and diverse team. This relationship between AMV and QBM marks a strong beginning of Adani Groups foray into Indian media, said Sanjay Pugalia, CEO, Adani Media Ventures Limited. QBM is a business and financial news firm and operates a leading business news digital platform in India. QBMs main content is based on the Indian economy, international finance, corporate law & governance and business news, amongst others through its platform Bloomberg | Quint. We are delighted to welcome the Adani Group as an investor in QBM. Given the proven execution record of the Adani group, their support to fulfill the ambitions of QBM will lay the foundation for accelerating the growth of the business and scale of QBMs high quality content for the Indian audiences, said Anil Uniyal, CEO, QBM. Last year, there were media reports claiming that Adani is looking to acquire a Delhi-based media house, which many speculated to be NDTV. Meanwhile, Bloomberg Media and Quintillion Media on Tuesday proclaimed the restructuring of their partnership in India. The companies have ended their equity joint venture in favor of a new content license agreement. Bloomberg Media and Quintillion Media will no longer co-produce content but will continue to distribute Bloomberg content in India through a license agreement We have valued our relationship with the Quintillion Media team. While we have mutually decided to shift the focus of our work together, Bloomberg Media remains committed to our presence in India and look forward to a continued relationship with Quint," stated M Scott Havens, CEO, Bloomberg Media Our joint venture with Bloomberg Media was the embodiment of resilient energy. Our digital-only premium subscription product has quickly become the market leader. Even as our terms of engagement with Bloomberg Media have changed, we look forward to imparting a new energy and spirit to the new website," said Raghav Bahl, Co-founder, Quintillion Media. With Tuesday's move, Adani is set to face off with Reliance which owns India's Network18 that runs several business TV news channels and online platforms. Adani Group has a market capitalization of over $150 billion, comprising seven publicly listed firms which are in the businesses of operating airports and ports, power generation and transmission, coal and gas trading. The National Association of Software and Services Companies (NASSCOM), in collaboration with Capgemini, today announced the findings of a research study on the adoption of Industry 4.0 in Indias manufacturing sector. Titled, India Industry 4.0 Adoption: A Case to Mature Manufacturing Digitalization by 2025, the report sheds light on the maturity of digitalized manufacturing in India, and recommends a focus on increasing investments, scaling up foundational technology readiness, and enhancing capabilities. These recommendations, cites the report, will help facilitate globally connected smart factories that will enable Indias manufacturing sector to become an intelligent industry and achieve the national growth target of $1.1tn by FY26. Global Industry 4.0 evolution drivers From comprising 5% of manufacturing IT spend in 2011, to 20% by 2021, Industry 4.0 has witnessed over a decade of transition since 2011. It has also grown by 9.6 times during the same period, from $10.5 billion in 2011 to $103 billion in 2021, driven by business growth, resilience and sustainability needs. According to the report, investments in Industry 4.0 have grown by approximately 10X in the last decade and are expected to grow to $200+ bn by 2025. Countries such as US, UK, China, India and Brazil are expected to supplement this with new investments, amounting to a total of $100+ bn. This investment will predominantly be in digital technologies like IoT, AI/ML, IT-OT integration, robotics, and human-machine interfaces. These will account for almost 40% of all manufacturing technology spend. Servitization, integrated customer and employee experience, and an urgent need for flexible operations and business agility are set to be the biggest drivers of Industry 4.0 in the next decade. Sharing her thoughts, Debjani Ghosh, President, NASSOM, said, Industry 4.0 has reached a tipping point in Indian manufacturing, with a strong desire to boost investments in the next two years to create exceptional customer experiences and long-term business models. Moving forward, it will be fascinating to watch how ready the Indian manufacturing industry is to adopt and scale Industry 4.0, which is largely determined by the use cases selected, the capacity to scale Proofs of Concept, and the alignment of IT and OT capabilities. Commenting on the potential of Industry 4.0 to build interconnected factories of the future, Ananth Chandramouli, Managing Director and Head of the India Business Unit, Capgemini, added: It is evident that by 2025, more than two-thirds of the Indian manufacturing sector will embrace Intelligent Industry 4.0 and will become an Intelligent Industry. . This research shows that this decade is going to experience an amalgamation of Digital Insider (sensors and embedded software in products), Digital Continuity (creating and managing virtual worlds) and Digital Convergence (digitalization of core processes in an extended ecosystem). Enterprises will begin to concentrate on new business models, and on understanding the needs of end customers so that they can innovate new products and become truly intelligent. In India, we have seen that manufacturers today are talking about holistic digital transformation. India Industry 4.0 spend in discrete and process manufacturing segments With accelerated investment in foundational tech like Cloud and IoT, the Indian manufacturing sector has started pivoting to digitalization, cites the report, with $5.5 - $6.5 billion spent on Industry 4.0 in FY21. This accounts for nearly 50% of the annual technology spend by Indian manufacturers. 75% of this is led by discrete manufacturers in Auto, Electricals, and Electronics, while Chemicals and Pharma are leading the process manufacturing segment. MSMEs (Micro, Small and Medium Enterprises) in India account for 33% of the manufacturing output and 45-50% of exports, across textile, food processing, chemical, and electrical or equipment. The research shows that while the sector is facing challenges around scaling up Industry 4.0 solutions, financing, and leadership constraints are presenting opportunities to mitigate these challenges. The report highlights digital solutions to aide growth could include cloud and SaaS-based solutions to outsource non-core activities and minimize upfront or fixed costs; a reduction in the cost of quality inspection and rework/defects with AI-based computer vision; and big data analytics to minimize risk impact. Investment focus for the next two years is key The report concludes that Industry 4.0 is at an inflection point in Indian manufacturing. Theres an urgent need to increase investments in the next 2 years and drive a rapid shift from proof-of-concept to a more ROI driven, outcome-based deployment. Over the next 18-24 months, enterprises in the sector need to prioritize investments across emerging connectivity tech, big data analytics, central and remote-controlled monitoring, and process automation. These new investments will consist of a combination of scaling-up existing IoT and Cloud deployments for rapid PoC-to-production of new use cases and industrial automation. Contact verification company Truecaller on Monday said it has inked a partnership with Tanla Platforms to enable Indian businesses to deliver messages with rich media content, a move that could see it take on WhatsApp for business service. "Truecaller Business Messaging will be exclusively powered by Tanla's Wisely CPaaS platform," the companies said in a joint statement. Wisely is a blockchain-enabled CPaaS platform, secured by e2e cryptographic encryption. The partnership aims to help businesses communicate with their customers with relevant messages. Tanla Platforms, a Communications-as-a-platform solutions provider, has signed an agreement with Truecaller at the Mobile World Congress (MWC 2022), which is being held at Barcelona (Spain). The Hyderabad-based company would offer its Blockchain-based Wiesely platform to provide secured transmission of Truecallers business messages. Truecaller, which verifies contacts and blocks unwanted communication, has a base of 30 crore active monthly users. The solution will help enterprises connect with their customers with content that matters. It overcomes the drawbacks of traditional communication solutions and has the potential to transform the digital engagement landscape, Nami Zarringhalam, Co-founder of Truecaller, said. Solicitation and Human-Trafficking Charges Filed Anti-Human Trafficking Task Force Operation SLO County Anti-Human Trafficking Task Force Makes Nine Arrests During Operation Reclaim and Rebuild Author: District Attorney Date: 3/1/2022 4:15:43 PM District Attorney Dan Dow announced today that Operation Reclaim and Rebuild was a success in San Luis Obispo County between February 6 and February 12, 2022. San Luis Obispo Countys Anti-Human Trafficking Task Force enforcement effort resulted in disrupting criminal trafficking networks with the arrest of nine individuals in San Luis Obispo County over three days of enforcement operations. This year marked the fourth year that the San Luis Obispo County Anti-Human Trafficking Task Force has participated in the annual Operation Reclaim and Rebuild led by the Los Angeles Regional Human Trafficking Task Force. The statewide operation included more than 80 participating federal, state, and local law enforcement agencies, and task forces from across California focused on combatting human trafficking in southern California. San Luis Obispo Countys effort resulted in the following arrests and prosecutions: Three individuals were arrested for contacting a 13-year-old minor with the intent to commit a sexual offense (California Penal Code 288.3). They are due to be arraigned in Superior Court, Department 1 on March 24, 2022. WILLIAM THOMAS FELAND (DOB: 04/28/1956) (booking photo) LUIS H GONZALEZ (DOB: 08/19/1977) (booking photo) ROBERT M WALLS, JR (DOB: 10/24/1977) (booking photo) Four individuals were arrested for solicitation of prostitution (California Penal Code 647(b)). They are due to be arraigned in Superior Court on June 1, 2022. JOSEPH RICARDO ARMAS (DOB: 11/20/1989) (booking photo) ALEX ALEJANDRO LOPEZ (DOB: 10/24/1991) (booking photo) NEIL JAMES MILLER (DOB: 03/05/1986) (booking photo unavailable) JAMES DARREN WORMLEY (DOB: 11/17/1975) (booking photo) Two individuals were arrested for pimping (California Penal Code 266h). These cases are active ongoing investigations. "The demand for prostitution creates a lucrative cash market that traffickers fill with victims many who are children even in our beautiful community," said District Attorney Dan Dow. "Our local anti-human trafficking enforcement operations are designed to reduce the demand for commercial sex that leads to exploitation of minors and adults every day in our community. A warning to those thinking about purchasing sex: please stop and consider that one million kids are trafficked for sex each year and you are making it more widespread."* The San Luis Obispo County Anti-Human Trafficking Task Force was formally established by District Attorney Dan Dow shortly after his election in 2014. This operation by the Task Force was directly aimed at disrupting networks of human trafficking for the purpose of commercial sexual exploitation occurring on the central coast, identifying and assisting survivors of trafficking, and reducing the demand for trafficking and exploitation of minors by identifying and prosecuting would-be purchasers. We are thankful for the efforts of each of our partner agencies in this years operation, including: San Luis Obispo County Sheriffs Office Special Operations Unit & Special Victims Unit; DeliverFund; California Highway Patrol Investigative Services Unit; Federal Bureau of Investigation (FBI) Santa Maria Field Office; Ventura County Sheriffs Office Special Crimes Unit/Human Trafficking Team; San Luis Obispo County Probation Department; California Department of Justice Fresno and Sacramento Sexual Predator/Human Trafficking Teams; San Luis Obispo Police Department; San Luis Obispo County District Attorney Bureau of Investigations; and the San Luis Obispo County District Attorney Christopher G. Money Victim Witness Assistance Center. Our partnership with DeliverFund ensured that our tri-county operation was successful, meeting our objective to disrupt and dismantle trafficking activity and to rescue victims from their traffickers, said San Luis Obispo County District Attorney Dan Dow. Our community is safer today because of the assistance that DeliverFund has provided to our enforcement team. Our local operation led to the arrest of three individuals who were attempting to purchase a 13-year-old child for sexual exploitation and six other arrests for trafficking-related crimes. It is important to note that a criminal complaint contains charges that must be proven in a court of law by proof beyond a reasonable doubt. Every defendant is presumed innocent until proven guilty. A copy of the charging documents can be found here . Please contact Assistant District Attorney Eric J. Dobroth at 805.781.5819 with any questions. *Statistic above reported by UNICEF. ### To continue, please log in, or sign up for a new account. We offer one free story view per month. If you register for an account, you will get two additional story views. After those three total views, we ask that you support us with a subscription. A subscription to our digital content is so much more than just access to our valuable content. It means youre helping to support a local community institution that has, from its very start, supported the betterment of our society. Thank you very much! Save Log in , register or subscribe to save articles for later. Normal text size Larger text size Very large text size Australias largest construction company, CIMIC, has been accused of underpaying hundreds of workers, subcontractors and banks in its troubled Middle East operations by more than $500 million in a scandal administrators warn could lead to criminal prosecution. Formerly called Leighton Holdings, CIMIC is behind some of Australias landmark infrastructure and buildings including the $16.8 billion WestConnex motorway in Sydney, the Clem Jones Tunnel in Brisbane, Melbournes Westgate Tunnel, the Royal Adelaide Hospital and Sydneys Star Casino. Over the years, the media-shy organisation has been caught up in a series of high-profile international bribery and corruption scandals, corporate governance issues and shareholder class actions. But its Middle East business has caused it the most headaches. The situation is a humanitarian disaster, says Fatima Almass Al-Hamad, a judicial guard appointed in July 2020 by the courts as administrator of Leighton Contractors Qatar (LCQ), a business that was owned by CIMIC and a local partner. With no salary and no health insurance, the workers are struggling to survive and cannot support their families in Qatar or in their home countries, she says. The Sydney Morning Herald, The Age and ABCs 7.30 spent the past two months speaking to former blue-collar workers, former managers and executives, contractors and suppliers in the Middle East and elsewhere who have been caught up in the scandal. Advertisement Some workers, who spent years with the company, are stranded in cramped rooms in labour camps, afraid to leave the premises because their visa and IDs have expired, and unable to return home because they have run out of funds. They have been waiting up to a year for months of unpaid wages and end of service entitlements after being made redundant or having resigned. At least four workers attempted suicide. Affected workers are from all over the world, including Australian expats. Its a really unreal situation, Australian Michael Albrecht tells the joint media investigation. Albrecht was a project director in the Middle East and was made redundant last year. He is owed three months wages and end of service entitlements accrued over his 13 years in the Middle East. I never thought Id see this type of thing. And CIMIC is fully aware of what is happening here. Leighton Contractors Qatar is now being investigated by the administrator over a number of alleged breaches of Qatari legislation. This goes back a number of years and under Qatari law this could result in criminal prosecution, says Al-Hamad. They paid to get rid of a headache The victims say things got worse in 2020 when CIMIC announced a $1.8 billion writedown of its joint venture operations in the Middle East, BIC Contracting (BICC) and flagged its withdrawal from the region. Advertisement A year later, CIMIC announced the sale of its 45 per cent stake in BICC for a nominal sum to local construction firm SALD Investment. BICCs other shareholder Riad Alsadek sold to SALD for a similar nominal sum. Documents reveal the sale price was 1 dirham (37) for both parties but that CIMIC would inject $US130 million into the BICC business as part of the sale agreement. They effectively paid to get rid of a headache, law and governance academic Helen Bird says. SALD would be assigned management control of BICC, effective immediately. But critics of the deal say this provided a fig leaf for CIMIC to use to distance itself from the unfolding mess. CIMIC has still not sold its stake in BICC. CIMIC was sent a series of detailed questions which it declined to answer. In a statement, it said CIMIC continues to actively work with the acquirer of BICC to ensure BICC meets its statutory obligation to its employees. It said BICC was continuing to make significant progress on paying its employees end of service entitlements and at all times meets its continuous disclosure obligations. In previous statements, it has said the transaction does not increase CIMICs announced financial exposure to the Middle East. It also said that BICC has never been and is not currently controlled by CIMIC. Advertisement However, an internal 2016 shareholder agreement includes clauses that suggest CIMIC called the shots at the joint venture up until the announced sale. It picked the managing director and selected the majority of the board. Please help us, for gods sake Each week Albrecht and more than 100 former employees co-ordinate and write to CIMIC calling on the company to intervene and resolve the illegal behaviour and pay them what is owed. To date, their letters have not been answered. In November, at least 100 former employees decided to go public after failing to get answers from the company. They wrote to CIMICs CEO and chairman on LinkedIn in the hope their pleas for help would be heard. Some of the comments were deleted. They have written to ASIC, the Fair Work Ombudsman and the Australian Ambassador to the UAE, Heidi Venamore, asking for help. Advertisement In the letter to Venamore they say: we find ourselves at the centre of a deep David and Goliath crisis involving high-level corporate misconduct, blatant violation of the UAE labour and other laws and extreme personal financial and personal hardship due to over seven months of unpaid salaries and associated end of service benefits dating back to March 2021. The letter included the names of 150 employees as well as the deleted LinkedIn comments. Please help us for gods sake, was one of the posts. To date, they have been offered no help. Albrecht said despite promises made by CIMIC in a statement to the ASX on December 20, 2021, that it was actively working with the acquirer to ensure that BICC meets its commitments to its employees, hundreds of people are still not paid. The place has been abandoned. And people have been left, he said. [The Middle East] hasnt been a healthy business for many years. And now the way out is just to throw everybody on the scrap heap. It doesnt matter whether youre an employee, whether youre a subbie, a supplier, a local bank, its were out of here and we will see you later. Dozens of former workers, including Albrecht, have reported the situation to the local courts. So far, 34 cases have been heard in Dubai and the plaintiffs have received judgments in their favour requiring BICC to pay overdue salaries, end of service benefits and compensation. Advertisement The Australian sharemarket held steady throughout Thursdays session as strong gains from miners and oil giants kept the market in positive territory for a fifth day in a row. The ASX200 finished up 0.5 per cent or 34.7 points to 7151.4 points. The Russia-Ukraine crisis is placing pressure on oil supply, pushing fuel prices to record heights. The materials and energy sectors - which were up by 2.63 and 2.56 per cent respectively - led the gains as a result. Commodity prices are soaring in the wake of the Ukraine crisis. Credit:Bloomberg But consumer staples and healthcare companies dragged the index, down 2.26 and 1.32 per cent. AMP Capital chief economist Shane Oliver said the market had bounced back decently since the steep 3 per cent drop last Thursday, during which investors reeled from news that Russia had invaded Ukraine. Its had a good recovery, Mr Oliver said. Its almost back up, but not quite. Russias war on Ukraine is pushing up commodity prices, which is in turn lifting the index and will continue to do so, he added. Thats helping the energy sector, particularly, but also the materials and resources generally. However, it was Pointsbet that made the greatest gains today with a 18.21 per cent increase to its share price. Whitehaven Coal gained more than 10 per cent to $3.96. Liontown Resources climbed 6.95 per cent. On the other side of the spectrum, healthcare players Polynovo and InvoCare were two of the worst performers of the day, losing 6.4 per cent and 4.4 per cent. Platinum Asset Management was the second-worst performer of the day, down 5.2 per cent. This masthead and ABCs 7:30 Report also revealed in a joint investigation that Australias largest construction company, CIMIC, was being accused of underpaying hundreds of workers in its Middle Eastern operations to the tune of more than $500 million. While the ASX-listed construction giants share price fluctuated somewhat across Thursdays session, it ended the day unchanged. Meanwhile, record-high commodity prices and demand for Australian grain has lifted agriculture players GrainCorp and Elders by 1.8 per cent and 1.2 per cent respectively. Nasdaq-listed tech giant Atlassian has paused software sales to Russia in response to the Ukraine war. We are not terminating the relationships and obligations we have to our existing small business customers in Russia, it said in a statement on its website on Thursday. We believe focusing on businesses with positions of power and influence is the best way to live our mission and values. FICTION Harsh Times Mario Vargas Llosa Faber & Faber, $39.99 Mario Vargas Llosa is one of the better writers alive, though not because of books such as this. This meta-novel about political atrocities in Guatemala by the Peruvian Nobel Prize winner sports a narrative line of such bewilderment and confusion that it would be scarcely more intelligible if the characters names were Churchill, Hitler and Stalin. We begin intelligibly enough with the head of United Fruit, the roughneck Jewish chap who introduced the banana to the American breakfast table, seeking the savvy advice of a wizard of manipulation. He concocts the idea that they should persuade the Americans the democratically elected President of Guatemala, Jacobo Arbenz, is a communist and that the CIA should lead a coup that will ensure that United Fruit will flourish tax-free and everyone will be covered in bloodshed when Arbenz is replaced by the insipid Carlos Castillo Armas. There is always something dumbfounding when a great writer such as Mario Vargas Llosa disappoints. Credit:Fiorella Battistini Also important is the psycho-sadist Johnny Abbes Garcia and a thick-necked, thick-headed American ambassador, John Amiel Peurifoy. Then theres the fact that President Armas becomes the lover of the female star of the book who is known as Miss Guatemala and who happens to be fictional as well as a character of vast allegorical suggestiveness. She is at least vivid and vivacious when she appears. Byron Baes certainly makes the Byron area look unbelievably appealing. But anyone wanting a glimpse of the reality of life for the average resident will have to look elsewhere: the focus is squarely on a small subset of self-described influencers whose livelihoods depend on the packaging of their lifestyles as infinitely grammable, desirable and monetisable. They all live impossibly glamorous lives in which work seems to consist of little more than striking up a Blue Steel pose while draped in linen and standing against a backdrop of rolling green hills. The central drama in the series, which was inspired by an infamous Vanity Fair article and originally pitched by Vice writer Julian Morgans, revolves around the attempts of two outsiders, Jade and Sarah, to join this supposedly tight-knit crew. Sk8r boy: Cai Leplaw, photographer, model and genuine local. Credit:Yael Stempler/Netflix At a series of big group events a fashion show, a photography exhibition, a house party and, hilariously, a mermaid-themed fundraiser to save the coral reefs people flirt, fight, fall in and out of love, all while quietly spruiking their personal brand. Its like MAFS meets Shark Tank and it is utterly bingeable crack TV, and just about as wholesome. But how much of it is real, and how much is scripted? With any reality or docusoap show, its a real balance trying to keep light producer hands on things, says Paul Franklin. But if you handle it right [you] set a scene, set the characters, and then the scripts up to them. Saskia Wotton, who appears in the show with partner Dave Frim, says the main cast were more acquaintances than besties before the series began. But this drew us together, she says. I think weve now become a really good friendship group. The drama, though, is pretty much 100 per cent organic, she insists. You never knew what you were walking into, she says. It wasnt scripted, so sometimes youre a bit nervous: Whats gonna happen when were all together? Sarah Tangye, a Gold Coast-based musician who records under the name St James, had been toying with the idea of moving to Byron for a while when a producer reached out via Instagram. The idea of being part of the show and exposing her music to a massive audience was all the nudge she needed. I had no idea how much of it was going to be real and how much was going to be scripted, she says, adding its not scripted. Its sort of art imitating life, and life imitating art. It was odd because your feelings and emotions and reactions are all filmed in real time. Jade Kevin Foster and Hannah Brauer in a crystal egg. Hmm. Credit:Netflix Tangyes struggle to be accepted is a main storyline. She is interested in two guys, ends up dating one of them, but has reason to doubt his sincerity. Its a storyline straight out of The Bachelorette but, she insists, it was all real. It was incredibly isolating, she says of being the outsider. It was certainly challenging being filmed when youre feeling incredibly vulnerable, to not be in your comfort zone and not be around people you know and trust and to not know who you can trust. Despite that, if theres a second season (and its rumoured that all the cast were signed up to four-season deals, so odds are there will be), Tangye says shed be back. As for the finished show, she says, I really just hope that people can see it for what it is, and find things to relate to with us, laugh with us, cry with us and just kind of be along for the ride. Were just really hoping to subvert peoples expectations, she adds, if their expectations are the worst. Welcome to the Baebourhood Jade Kevin Foster The self-proclaimed most-followed Australian male influencer on Instagram misses no opportunity to let us know he has 1.2 million followers. He is one of two recent arrivals from the Gold Coast. Sarah Tangye The other blow-in is fellow Sarah Tangye, a musician who records as St James. Though she calls the Gold Coast home, she was formerly half of Melbourne-based duo Elle. Sarah Tangye, aka St James Credit:Yael Stempler/Netflix Nathan Favro Though framed as one of the locals, Favro is in fact from Sydney via the Gold Coast, where he is a part-owner of a couple of businesses. Hes also a serial reality star, having been on The Bachelorette in 2015 and Bachelor in Paradise in 2018. Elias Chigros A model who lives in the area but is originally from Melbourne, Chigros (aka Elias Black) dabbles in restoring classic motorbikes and cars and was on the first season of Love Island Australia. Simba Ali Spiritual healer (aka fire twirler) Ali is another escapee from Melbourne, where he used to live the corporate life and was called Sim Khaira. He teaches the lizard walk and says the secret of becoming a healthy and high performing physical specimen lies in comprehensively flossing and nourishing our bodies. OK. Cai Leplaw, Jessica Johansen-Bell, Simba Ali, Saskia Wotton Credit:Paul A. Broben/Netflix Alex Reid Formerly Kyle Sandilands personal assistant, Reid is now a director of two companies in the social media brand influencer space. He was on Sevens singing show All Together Now and calls Sydney home. Saskia Wotton and Dave Frim Wotton was a fashion sales director and moved to Byron from Brisbane about five years ago. Frim, originally from Sydney, has been there for a decade. He sells hats and plans to launch a boutique airline. Cai Leplaw A genuine local, Leplaw is a photographer and model who lives in Mullumbimby and studied and worked for years in Berlin and Paris. Hannah Brauer Her parents set up homewares brand Bisque Traders in 2000; she is now co-creative director, in charge of fashion. Based in Bangalow, they have just opened a second store in Byron itself. Jessica and Lauren Johansen-Bell Jess is the owner of Bangalow-based fashion label Johansen. Sister Lauren is a model. Elle Watson Watson describes herself as a socially and environmentally conscious woman in business and aims to infuse her life with meaning by being of service to the collective. Elle Watson Credit:Paul A. Broben/Netflix Byron Baes is on Netflix from March 9. The police officer who killed an Aboriginal man in the outback town of Yuendumu in 2019 has insisted at his murder trial that the shooting was justified because local man Kumanjayi Walker had first stabbed him in the shoulder. The way I was trained was, if someone was threatening us with an edged weapon, our first response was to go for our firearm, unless that was impossible ... You only draw your firearm if youre prepared to pull the trigger, Constable Zachary Rolfe told the court as he took the stand for the first time on Wednesday. Constable Zachary Rolfe (third from left) has taken the stand in his own defence. Credit:Zach Hope Asked how many times officers are supposed to fire, Constable Rolfe said: The training was always: you shoot until the threat is incapacitated, no matter how many rounds that takes. Mr Walker stabbed Constable Rolfe, 30, in the shoulder with scissors during an attempt at arrest, and even the prosecution acknowledges that the officer was not criminally responsible for the first of three rounds he fired into the 19-year-olds back and torso. I thought they were escort planes waiting for other machines to take-off, but I soon realised there was more to it than that. Suddenly, all the native population on the foreshore came tearing inland. My native maid-servant, greatly agitated, demanded that I should go bush. I hurried away, even though there was an air-raid shelter at my own home, and, when I realised the danger, I took cover in a tiny dell between some oleander shrubs in the grounds of my sisters home, she said. From this refuge I was able to see some of what took place. It was all incredibly quick. I suppose the whole attack was over in 20 minutes. Those eight fighter planes tore round at a terrific speed, dived, one by one, on their objectives, and the rat-tat of their machine-guns was followed by a spectacular display of fireworks. They used incendiary bullets, like this, said the woman, displaying a brass cartridge case nearly an inch in diameter. One of the six large aircraft, which included two Flying Fortresses and a Liberator, destroyed during the Japanese air-raid on Broome on March 3, 1942. Credit:Australian War Memorial They left a trail of smoke behind them and set fire to everything they hit in a few minutes. The whole of the harbour was covered by a pall of thick, black smoke, through which it was impossible to observe what was going on. The waters of the harbour were soon filled, I learned afterwards, with people from damaged craft. a refugee woman supporting her husband in the deep water... he was machine-gunned and killed in her arms As far as I know, they attacked nothing but military objectives, although I learned afterwards that some of the victims left swimming in the harbour were machine-gunned. One man said he saw a refugee woman supporting her husband in the deep water. He was machine-gunned and killed in her arms. A woman, with a month-old baby in her arms, was urged to jump from a craft and swim for it. She did, and was picked up a considerable time later by a rescue boat, after the raiders had gone. REFUGEE CHILDREN KILLED Those Dutch refugees were absolutely marvellous, said the woman. They were left with nothing but the clothes in which they stood, but they endured the ordeal without a tear, without a word of complaint. One Dutchman left Java with six children and a brave wife. After the raid at Broom he was left with a wounded wife and two children. Another man lost his wife and two children. One Dutchman brought down one of the raiding planes with an A.A. gun. Another was brought down by a four-engined bomber. I left Broome in a mail plane about an hour after the raid said the woman. We landed at Port Hedland and waited while our pilot went back to Broome to do some rescue jobs. After the actual raid, three of the planes came back and circled high overhead to survey the damage, she added. Additional details of the raid on Broome by Japanese fighter aircraft were given to-day by Mr. G. M. Litster, a master mariner, who has been a resident of Broome for 26 years. A fourth residential tower will be built in the controversial Waterloo South precinct as part of the NSW governments plan for 3000 new homes in one of the states biggest urban renewal projects. After years of stalemate over the future of the Waterloo social housing estate, the government wants to get it moving, with a final version released on Thursday that includes an extra tower. An artists impression of the Waterloo South development, which is now on public exhibition by the state government. The revamped precinct will include 3012 homes, of which 847 or 28 per cent will be social housing, nearly 100 more units than at present. Another 227 units are earmarked as affordable housing for low-income workers, with the remainder private homes. The government took over planning responsibility for the site last year amid a stand-off between the City of Sydney council, which wanted more social and affordable housing, and the states Land and Housing Corporation. It was the warning residents hoped they would never receive. After watching the waters of the Hawkesbury River rise rapidly Sydneys north-western outskirts throughout Wednesday afternoon, tens of thousands of people were urged to evacuate their homes shortly before 6pm on Wednesday. SES assist as vehicles are stranded at Mulgoa Road. Credit:Wolter Peeters NSW Deputy Premier Paul Toole said it was his worst fear having to tell people in the area, who were affected by severe floods last March, to flee at night, as weather conditions deteriorated across Sydney. The Bureau of Meteorology had warned major flooding was possible for the Hawkesbury and Nepean rivers at North Richmond, Windsor and Penrith from Wednesday afternoon and into Thursday. Some families will have to wait weeks to cash in the $500 before- and after-school care vouchers promised by the NSW government because of onerous paperwork, overwhelming demand and a backlog of applications. On Wednesday, 28 per cent of centres in the sector had been given the green light to accept the vouchers, up from 11 per cent on Monday, umbrella body Network of Community Activities said. Centres could begin applying for Service NSW approval from February 7. Parents may not be able to use their before- and after-school care vouchers for weeks. Credit:Sun Herald Since parents were able to apply for the vouchers from Monday, vouchers have been granted for 63,000 children, the NSW Department of Customer Service said. Families whose children attend The After School Klub (TASK) centres were this week told the club is still in the queue for registration for the vouchers. Please note it may be months before there is a secure system in place to help families use these Outside School Hours Care (OSHC) services, the company told parents. As Australias tourism and aviation industries emerge from the depths of a two-year pandemic, events in Ukraine threaten to further disrupt international travel. On Wednesday, Emirates celebrated the return of the high-capacity Airbus A380 to Brisbane in what the airlines divisional vice-president for Australasia, Barry Brown, described as a vote of confidence in the Australian travel sector. An Emirates A380 back on Brisbane soil on Tuesday night. Credit:Brisbane Airport Corporation But potential turbulence lies ahead, with Russias violent invasion of Ukraine presenting another obstacle to one of the industries most directly and devastatingly affected by the COVID-19 pandemic. All we can do is sit back and watch the geopolitical landscape unfold on that one what happens with the sanctions and so forth and thats really a little out of our control, Mr Brown told Brisbane Times. Parents are being told to pick up their children in some parts of Queensland and a Lockyer Valley town is being evacuated as rumbling thunderstorms and rain have returned to south-east Queensland on Thursday. Queensland Annastacia Palaszczuk said Queenslanders have woken up to unsettled weather conditions across the entire south-east. She said residents in Grantham were being evacuated as a precaution because of rising water levels in the Lockyer Valley town. Better to be safe than sorry, she said. Ms Palaszczuk said areas including Moreton Bay, Sunshine Coast, the Wide Bay region and up to Bundaberg were a concern. Some of Brisbanes most popular tourism and leisure attractions are beginning to reopen after the river that acted as a magnet for visitors threatened their very survival. After a second full day of cleaning up, riverside businesses are still counting the costs of the weekends devastating flood, with the Queensland Cultural Centre, including the museum, library and art galleries to remain closed until further notice. Debris at Mr Percivals at Howard Smith Wharves on Wednesday. Credit:Tertius Pickard/AP Most of Howard Smith Wharves, which was evacuated on Monday after a pontoon carrying a crane broke free of its mooring, reopened on Wednesday. Popular bar Mr Percivals, which juts out over the river and bore the brunt of the torrent, opened its doors at 5pm. On Sunday nights before Parliament sits, Anthony Albaneses leadership group, plus senior portfolio holders and tacticians, gather in his office for dinner. They are an eclectic bunch different factions, life experiences and dietary requirements. Katy Gallagher is vegetarian, Mark Butler is vegan, Kristina Keneally is ketogenic, Tony Burke is coeliac, so food is a mixture of takeaway and bring your own. The point of the gatherings is to talk about the week ahead and to toss around ideas. Credit:Illustration by Dionne Gain The point of the gatherings, as Albanese keeps reminding them, is not to lock in decisions on issues because that is done by shadow cabinet and caucus but to talk about the week ahead and to toss around ideas. It can get willing. Albanese, said to be an active participant in robust discussions, seldom objects so long as it is respectful and constructive. What those dinners have done, as well as provide insights into Albaneses management style, is strengthen the bonds and increase the trust between his frontbenchers and with him. It has also built unity. Several senior government officials and ministers, including one who later tested positive to the coronavirus, spent three hours in a high-level meeting with Prime Minister Scott Morrison before he was diagnosed with COVID-19. The Prime Minister has taken daily rapid antigen tests since developing a cough on Sunday, a spokesman said. Mr Morrison also took a test before each public engagement and meeting on Tuesday including a National Security Committee of Cabinet meeting and a press conference. These tests were taken as a precaution because the Prime Minister had developed a minor cough. All tests returned a negative result, his spokesman said. Mr Morrison developed a fever and flu-like symptoms later in the day. He took two rapid antigen tests before a scheduled 8pm event for Ukraine at the Sydney Opera House and got one positive and one negative result. Tens of thousands of Sydneysiders were ordered to get out now or put on evacuation alert late on Wednesday evening, as senior government members used the rain deluge to bolster a $1.6 billion plan to raise the Warragamba Dam wall. NSW Deputy Premier Paul Toole said the authorities worst fears had been realised, issuing an urgent warning to anyone affected by the floods in March last year to leave their homes immediately. Warragamba Dam was spilling 600 gigalitres by Wednesday evening. Credit:Water NSW We do not want to see those situations where people are on the roofs of their houses waiting to be rescued. We do not want to see those situations that we have seen in the north of the state, he said. If you were affected by floods in 2021, get out now. With heavy rainfall predicted to continue into Thursday, flooding could exceed levels seen last year, Mr Toole said, while residents of North Richmond near the Redbank dam were being evacuated because the dam would likely fail. Flood-hit residents are running out of food, medicine, drinking water and fuel across the Northern Rivers as the death toll from the disaster rose to four victims. The latest modelling suggests the flood reached its peak at Ballina on Wednesday while continuing to fall upstream at Lismore, the focal point of the disaster. However, the receding water is being slowed by king tides and water still emptying from the upper catchments. Water levels are dropping and clean up has begun after severe flooding hits Lismore in northern NSW in the worst flood ever recorded. Credit:Elise Derwin Tens of thousands of residents remain homeless and others are cut-off, some without drinking water and sewage services, and there are widespread outages of online payment systems. Four deaths have been confirmed in the Lismore area, including community leader Marge Graham, 82, a long-time country music identity found dead in her South Lismore home on Tuesday. The other victims are Lorraine Hyman and Stuart Bock. The fourth victim has not been identified. Queen Victoria market stallholders are worried major events are being favoured over small businesses after receiving word they will be relocated for this weeks Melbourne Fashion Festival and the Melbourne Food and Wine Festival later this month. Traders in the Queen Victoria markets E Shed will have to relocate or shut on Thursday for the opening night gala of the Melbourne Fashion Festival and for up to four weeks for the food festival. Market management says large events are a good way to attract potential new customers. Jenny Pyke owner of The Hat Project stall at the Queen Victoria Market. Credit:Justin McManus But Jenny Pyke, owner of The Hat Project stall, said she and other traders were the victims of the markets focus on major events. Sydneys rental market has been described as a chronic failure, with the citys vacancy rate dropping to its lowest level since November 2017. Freshly opened international borders have heaped further pressure on an already strained rental market, where the vacancy rate fell to 1.7 per cent in February (down from 1.9 per cent in January), according to Domains latest Rental Vacancy Rate Report. The tightest rental market in Sydney was in the Camden region, which recorded a vacancy rate of 0.2 per cent. Credit:Janie Barrett Sydney followed the national trend, with vacancy rates falling in most capital cities to a national rate of 1.1 per cent. Hobarts vacancy rate is still the tightest in Australia, staying steady at a record-low 0.2 per cent, while Adelaide at 0.3 per cent and Perth and Canberra at 0.5 per cent were also at their lowest recorded point. Domain chief of research and economics Dr Nicola Powell said Australia was on the verge of a rental crisis. NSW Fair Trading has imposed restrictions on serial underquoters after complaints about the unlawful practice tripled last year, but industry experts say more needs to be done. Fair Trading received 329 complaints of underquoting last year amid the states booming property market more than triple the 97 complaints received in 2020 and issued 91 fines totalling more than $200,000, up from 16 penalties totalling $35,200 in 2020. Complaints of underquoting tripled last year in the booming property market, with about 70 per cent deemed to be verifiable complaints. Credit:Jessica Shapiro In a first for NSW, Fair Trading minister Eleni Petinos announced this week that restrictions had been imposed on serial underquoters, such as requiring repeat offenders to have comparable pricing for every new listing signed off by at least two licensed agents. It was not specified at what point an agent would be deemed a serial underquoter. To date, the restriction has been imposed on two individuals and five associated businesses, including McGrath Real Estate Agencies in Hurstville, Revesby and Brighton-Le-Sands. The two principals and businesses entered into the year-long undertaking in November after proactive inspections by Fair Trading found another agent at the offices had allegedly underquoted at least 30 properties. While announcing the start of Russias invasion of Ukraine last week, Vladimir Putin issued a simple request to the members of Ukraines military. In short: give up before the war had even started. I urge you to immediately lay down arms and go home, Putin said in a remarkable display of chutzpah. As if he were offering the Ukrainians a generous offer, he added: I will explain what this means: the military personnel of the Ukrainian army who do this will be able to freely leave the zone of hostilities and return to their families. Putins remark was as revealing as it was brazen, providing the world a thunderbolt of insight as Russian troops entered into a neighbouring country where many citizens cherish their independence. As he launched his attack, Russian President Vladimir Putin told Ukrainian troops to surrender and get out of the way. Credit:Russian Presidential Press Service Rather than a dogged defence of their homeland, the Russian President expected Ukrainians to quickly wilt when confronted by a stronger invading force. That, after all, was what had happened when Russian troops stormed into Crimea in 2014 and South Ossetia, a breakaway region of Georgia, in 2008. Tampa: Florida Governor Ron DeSantis, a fierce opponent of coronavirus mask and vaccine mandates, grew visibly annoyed and admonished a group of students for wearing face masks at a news conference on Thursday AEDT. DeSantis, a Republican, approached the students and asked them to remove their masks as they waited for him at the news conference at the University of South Florida in Tampa. Florida Governor Ron DeSantis Credit:AP You do not have to wear those masks. I mean, please take them off. Honestly, its not doing anything. Weve got to stop with this COVID theatre. So if you wanna wear it, fine, but this is ridiculous, he said, letting out an audible sigh and shaking his head. DeSantis is running for reelection and is considered to be a potential 2024 GOP presidential candidate. SABA:-- Four main topics for Saba were elaborated on and discussed during a session with the Executive Council, Island Council, and the delegation of the First Chamber of the Dutch Parliament, the Senate, on Monday, February 28. The Senators listened attentively to the presentations about livelihood, renewable energy, economy/tourism/nature/agriculture, and finances. The delegations posed many questions that were answered by members of the Executive Council and Island Council. The session, which was held at the Eugenius Johnson Center in Windwardside, was opened by Island Secretary Tim Muller. He said it was important for Saba to use the momentum of the visit of the 13 Members of the Senates Permanent Committee for Kingdom Relations in fostering the relations with the Netherlands, to exchange information, and to put a dot on the horizon. Island Governor Jonathan Johnson elaborated on how Saba coped during the COVID-19 pandemic with a hard-hit local economy, an initial hard lockdown, a highly successful vaccination program, stringent measures at the border, and financial support from the Dutch Government. Poverty Gideon Wilson of the Community Development Department gave a presentation about poverty on Saba, its challenges, and its ramifications. Many people are living under or near the poverty threshold. People living in poverty tend to end up deeper in the cycle. Most clients when they cant pay their rent, they take an advance on their salary or go to a loan shark, and they get into even deeper problems. People are stigmatized. The social workers listen and assist the clients so they can get out of the cycle, he explained. Councilman Vito Charles said that people were living in great stress with several jobs trying to survive, a situation that also affected children in these families. With the very high cost of living on Saba, people are having difficulties making ends meet, Charles said. Councilman Eviton Heyliger said that many persons living in social housing had trouble paying the rent at the end of the month, that they ended up being behind on payments and often were too proud to say this. Commissioner Rolando Wilson said the regulations at the National Social Affairs and Labor (SZW) unit were too bureaucratic and insufficiently effective. As local government, we feel the duty to help people struggling with poverty, so we created our own Community Development Department, said Wilson. Councilman Carl Buncamper said the focus at the SZW unit was too much on the process instead of on the impact of poverty that people were facing. There needs to be more flexibility so people can get the support they need, he said. We hired our own social workers because we saw that the SZW unit was not doing enough. Structures were put in place without our involvement. A one-size-fits-all was implemented that doesnt benefit the people that need help. Establishing the social minimum is key and this has still not happened. It is a long-time discussion and we need a dot on the horizon so people can live a dignified life, said Commissioner Bruce Zagers. Asked by the delegation how Saba wanted to achieve that, Zagers responded that a higher minimum wage, a higher pension, a realistic onderstand, affordable electricity, telecom, and water were needed, as well as the establishing of the social minimum. SEC presentation Mark Zagers, Dexter Johnson, and David Leonce of Saba Electric Company (SEC) gave a presentation about the Saba Energy Strategy, the plans to add 1to 3MW in additional renewable energy, combined with additional energy storage, grid intelligence and modernization, energy efficiency, and a conservation program, and electric vehicles. At the same time, SEC faces challenges such as high fuel prices, the lack of capital for investments, and a small consumer base while trying to keep the electricity tariffs as low as possible. The fixed rates have been subsidized for three years due to the crises, but it is not structural and slated to end this July. Policy Advisor Courtney Hassell gave an introduction to Sabas economic development, where the island wants to go, the economic challenges that it faces, and how to move forward. She announced the start of the economic impact assessment. Poor banking services, high costs, the too stringent conditions to get a mortgage, the absence of a postal code, the lengthy immigration process for working permits all have an adverse on doing business on Saba. Tourism Master Plan Director of Tourism Malinda Hassell gave a presentation in which she mentioned the presentation of the Tourism Master Plan this summer, the challenges of the tourism industry, the slow recovery during the pandemic, Saba as a green destination, and the dependency on the hub St. Maarten. She mentioned the importance of connectivity and the need of having a sufficient airlift. She said that there were currently only 124 hotel rooms which are not enough for the demand. The opening of the new Arawak Hotel later this year and the renovation of the now-closed Scouts Place in the future should alleviate the shortage of capacity. Policy Advisor Justin Simmons-De Jong gave a presentation on the efforts to invest in agriculture and nature. The local production of fresh produce increases food security at lower prices and promotes peoples health. To preserve nature, the restoration of the coral reef is taking place and erosion is being tackled by, among other things, promoting responsible animal husbandry, the removal of wild goats, and reforestation. Financial challenges Head of the Finance Department of the Public Entity Saba Maureen Hassell spoke about Sabas sound financial management and the financial challenges. The free allowance is too low to cover the operational costs of a government that has seen an increase in tasks and responsibilities. The large portion of incidental funding, as opposed to structural funding, makes it hard to manage, to plan ahead and it creates a lot of risks. There is great uncertainty of funding. We go from year to year, not knowing whether we get the funding. Our very core of government is funded through incidental funding, said Hassell. The lack of structural funding makes it impossible to present a realistic budget and there is no financial space to implement a new policy. Commissioner Zagers pointed out that in six years, the free allowance increased less than the US $1 million: in 2016 it was the US $8.9 million, and in 2022 US $9.8 million. He said Saba needed a substantial increase in the free allowance. We have been a responsible partner. Raising the free allowance sends a message that if you achieve things, you get things, Zagers said, referring to Sabas steady accomplishments in sound financial management over the years. Warm welcome Leader of the Senates delegation Paul Rosenmoller said the entire Committee was very passionate about contributing to the solid relations in the Kingdom. He said that while these relations have a long history, there were always challenges and room for improvement. We want to talk about how we as Senate can contribute to solving those challenges, to make things better for the islands, and to improve the relations in the Kingdom. We want to listen and to learn from you. Rosenmoller thanked Saba for a warm welcome. We are always impressed by your hospitality, he said. For some Members, it was their visit to Saba, while some had already been here a few times and others many times. He said a visit of the delegation of 1.5 days was obviously too short and that the Committee would certainly be back. After a visit to the location of the new harbor at Black Rocks where they received an update about the project from Commissioner Zagers, Policy Advisor Zelda Meeuwsen, and Rijkstrainee Hester van Halen, the Senates delegation interacted with members of the community in a meet & greet. The delegation left for St. Eustatius in the late afternoon. ~ Government supports the stance taken by Heineken Regatta. ~ PHILIPSBURG: --- The Government of St. Maarten joins the European Union and its stance against Russia and its decision to invade Ukraine. Prime Minister Silveria Jacobs made the announcement at the Council of Ministers' press briefing on Wednesday. Jacobs said the decision taken by Russia would also affect St. Maarten since the country is part of the European Union through the Kingdom. The Prime Minister said that St. Maarten joins the Kingdom in condemning these acts of aggression against the people of Ukraine. Jacobs said that St. Maarten must implement the EU and United Nations sanctions that were imposed on Russia while the technical details and legal aspects are being finalized in Brussels in order for the national implementation can take place. Jacobs said that the EU in Brussels is busy with the fine print on the technical aspects of how they would support Ukraine. On Tuesday, the Heineken Regatta has taken the decision not to host Russian and Belarusian teams during this years Heineken Regatta on St. Maarten, in order to maintain the integrity among its competitors. Asked about the decision taken by the Heineken Regatta Jacobs said that the government of St. Maarten supports the decision taken by the committee. She said that organizations around the world have barred Russian and Belarusian participation thus the government of St. Maarten supports the move made by the St. Maarten Heineken Regatta seeing what is being played out in the public since the Russian invasion of Ukraine. Asked what decisions were taken by the government of St. Maarten regarding the yachts that belong to Russian billionaires in St. Maarten waters. Jacobs said for now the EU sanctions do not mention vessels for the moment therefore there is no legal basis to take measures against Russian yacht owners. The Prime Minister said that since the legal and technical aspects are being finalized in Brussels prior to national implementation. Locally she said a national decree would have to be put in place before anything can be done physically or literally. While these matters are not yet finalized Prime Minister Jacobs said the matter is very fluid and that St. Maarten is updated daily through its foreign affairs department. PHILIPSBURG:--- The Parliament of St. Maarten will be meeting on Thursday to discuss the amended petition that was sent on February 17th, 2022 by the Coharis Law Firm to the Special Rapporteur on Contemporary Forms of Racism, Racial Discrimination, Xenophobia, and Related Intolerance and The Working Group of Experts On People of African Descent. Based on the information provided to SMN News, members of parliament were not informed that a second petition was filed on their behalf. They were only made aware when the news broke in Curacao by the lawyers representing St. Maartens Parliament. Prior to the submission of the petition to the United Nations, the Prime Minister of St. Maarten Silveria Jacobs was not informed. On February 25th Jacobs responded to the petition that was published on this website via a press release in which she said that the submission of the petition was premature, and dialogue was needed at all levels prior to approaching the United Nations. On Wednesday SMN News asked the Prime Minister if the petition has had any negative effects on Kingdom Relations with St. Maarten and how much it has affected the ongoing negotiations with the Kingdom partners on the removal of the conditions placed on St. Maarten in exchange for liquidity support and the removal of the 12.5% on salary cuts. Jacobs said that she believed that open dialogue and transparency should always be at the forefront regarding decisions that are taken. While not divulging too much on her disappointment since the government of St. Maarten is working on building a better relationship with the Kingdom through the newly appointed Dutch State SecretaryAlexandra van Huffelen. Jacobs said everyone in government including the coalition partners knows that the government of St. Maarten is at a new threshold in building a relationship with the new state secretary. She said the relationship that is currently being built shows that much more understanding and that the Kingdom is willing to meet St. Maarten halfway thus she believes that the government of St. Maarten is making headway when it comes to the Kingdom Relations. Jacobs said when it comes to anything that has to do with the rights of the people of St. Maarten she will support that however, she would be the one to have that dialogue as needed, she made clear that St. Maarten is in discussions on the liquidity support and the try and alleviate the measures that were imposed on St. Maarten and its people and for her government that is their priority at this moment and certainly St. Maarten have to be strategic in their discussions while being open and transparent. She said that the government of St. Maarten including the Parliament of St. Maarten should put the needs of its people first when making decisions. The Prime Minister made clear that the petition was submitted on behalf of the parliament of St. Maarten and there is a committee that was set up by parliament to handle such matters. Edith (Edi) Marie Smith, daughter of the late Glen Lester and Dorothy Jane Allison, was born in Youngstown, OH on Friday, October 11th, 1963, and she departed this life on Saturday, April 30th, 2022, having attained the age of 59 years. In addition to her parents, she was preceded in death b There are so many interesting solar system facts, here are some of our favorites. With so many interesting solar system facts, we've narrowed them down to 25 of our favorites. Our solar system consists of the sun and everything that orbits that sun, like the eight (once nine) planets we all know from elementary school. But the main planets, as diverse and fascinating as they are, are just the beginning. Earth's neighbors in space include comets, asteroids, dwarf planets, mysterious moons and a host of strange phenomena that are so out-of-this-world they elude explanation. Scientists have discovered ice-spewing volcanoes on Pluto, while Mars is home to a truly "grand" canyon the size of the United States. There may even be a giant, undiscovered planet lurking somewhere beyond Neptune. Read on for some of the strangest facts about the solar system. 1. The solar system is really, really big The solar system is incredibly big. (Image credit: ANDRZEJ WOJCICKI via Getty Images) NASA's Voyager 1 spacecraft was launched in 1977. More than three decades later, in 2012, it became the first human-made object to enter interstellar space by crossing the heliopause, or the edge of the heliosphere. That's the boundary beyond which most of the sun's ejected particles and magnetic fields dissipate. But, according to NASA, "if we define our solar system as the Sun and everything that primarily orbits the Sun, Voyager 1 will remain within the confines of the solar system until it emerges from the Oort cloud in another 14,000 to 28,000 years." Related: Voyager 2's trip to interstellar space deepens some mysteries beyond our solar system 2. Even just our neighborhood is really, really big Did you know that all of the planets in the solar system could fit between Earth and our moon? (Image credit: Jeremy Horner via Getty images) Depending on how carefully you do the calculations and how you arrange them, all of the planets in the solar system could fit in between Earth and its moon. The distance between the Earth and the moon varies, as does the diameter of each of the planets they're wider at their equators, so Saturn or Jupiter or both would have to be tilted sideways for this to work, according to news site Slate. But imagine lining them all up, pole to pole. They'd just barely squeeze in between us and our closest companion in space, blocking out the sky with their rings and gas giant bulk as they did so. (Of course, in all practicality we'd have other problems to worry about, too. Our little moon creates vast tides on Earth already the gravitational perturbation from our new proximity to Jupiter alone would keep any of us from admiring the view.) The moon is the farthest from Earth that we've ever sent humans, and it's both mind-bogglingly distant and incredibly close depending on how you think about it. Eight enormous planets could fit between here and there, and yet according to NOAA, the distance from Earth to the sun is more than 390 times the distance from the Earth to the moon. Scientists use an approximation of the Earth-to-sun distance, also known as one astronomical unit or AU, to compare distances within the solar system. Jupiter is about 5.2 AU from the sun, and Neptune is 30.07 AU from the sun or approximately 30 times as far from the star as Earth 3. Uranus spins sideways Uranus appears to roll around the sun like a ball, rotating on its side. This composite image of the two hemispheres of Uranus was obtained with Keck Telescope adaptive optics and the north pole is at 4 o'clock. (Image credit: Lawrence Sromovsky, University of Wisconsin-Madison/W.W. Keck Observatory) Uranus usually appears in classroom solar system models as a featureless blue ball, but this gas giant of the outer solar system is pretty weird on closer inspection. First, the planet rotates on its side, appearing to roll around the sun like a ball, according to NASA's Uranus guide. The most likely explanation for the planet's unusual orientation (about 90 degrees sideways compared to the other planets) is that it underwent some sort of titanic collision in the ancient past. Uranus' tilt causes what NASA considers to be the most extreme seasons in the solar system. For about a quarter of each Uranus year (or 21 Earth years, as each Uranus year is 84 years long), the sun shines directly over the north or south pole of the planet. That means for more than two decades on Earth, half of Uranus never sees the sun at all. Scientists monitor these extreme seasons on Uranus and expected that the 2007 equinox on the planet might cause unusual weather. But it was seven years later that the atmosphere erupted into wild unpredicted storms, making Uranus more of a puzzle than ever. 4. Jupiter's moon Io has towering volcanic eruptions Io has hundreds of active volcanoes. Here, an impressive eruption was captured by NASAs Galileo spacecraft during a flyby. (Image credit: NASA/JPL/DLR) Compared to Earth's peaceful moon, Jupiter's moon Io may come as a surprise. The Jovian moon has hundreds of volcanoes and is considered the most active moon in the solar system, sending plumes of sulfur up to 190 miles (300 kilometers) into its atmosphere. According to a statement from NASA, Io's volcanos emit one ton (more than 900 kilograms) of gases and particles into the space near Jupiter each second. Io's eruptive nature is caused by the immense forces the moon is exposed to, nestled in Jupiter's gravitational well and its magnetic field. The moon's insides tense up and relax as it orbits closer to, and farther from, the planet, generating enough energy for volcanic activity. Scientists are still trying to figure out how heat spreads through Io's interior, though, making it difficult to predict where the volcanoes exist using scientific models alone. 5. Mars boasts a volcano bigger than the entire state of Hawaii Olympus mons is the biggest volcano ever discovered in the solar system. This artists illustration depicts what the shield volcano looks like on Mars. (Image credit: MARK GARLICK/SCIENCE PHOTO LIBRARY via Getty Images) While Mars seems quiet now, gigantic volcanoes once dominated the surface of the planet. This includes Olympus Mons, the biggest volcano ever discovered in the solar system. At 374 miles (602 km) across, the volcano is comparable to the size of Arizona. It's 16 miles (25 kilometers) high, or triple the height of Mount Everest, the tallest mountain on Earth. By volume, according to NASA, Olympus Mons is 100 times larger than Earth's largest volcano, Hawaii's Mauna Loa. Scientists speculate that volcanoes on Mars can grow to such immense size because gravity there is much weaker than it is on Earth. In addition, while Earth's crust constantly moves, the Martian crust likely does not (although the debate among researchers continues). The Hawaiian islands were formed as a hot spot in the mantle created a chain of volcanoes in the crust cruising by above it, so if the surface of Mars isn't moving, a volcano could build-up for longer in one spot. 6. Mars' largest valley could eat the Grand Canyon for breakfast Valles Marineris on Mars is more than 10 times as long as Earths Grand Canyon. (Image credit: NASA/JPL-Caltech/USGS) At 2,500 miles (4,000 km) long, the immense system of Martian canyons known as Valles Marineris is more than 10 times as long as the Grand Canyon on Earth. Valles Marineris escaped the notice of early Mars spacecraft (which flew over other parts of the planet) and was finally spotted by the global mapping mission Mariner 9 in 1971. And what a sight it was to miss Valles Marineris could stretch from coast to coast of the entire United States! The lack of active plate tectonics on Mars makes it tough to figure out how the canyon formed. Some scientists think that a chain of volcanoes on the other side of the planet, known as the Tharsis Ridge (which includes Olympus Mons), somehow bent the crust from the opposite side of Mars. That cataclysmic force activated cracks in the crust, vast amounts of sub-surface water that emerged to carve away rock, and glaciers that crunched new pathways into the canyon system. 7. Venus is swept by super-powerful winds that some hope could harbor life Venus is a hot hellish planet. This computer illustration shows the rocky surface of Venus and the clouds of sulphuric acid. (Image credit: MARK GARLICK/SCIENCE PHOTO LIBRARY via Getty Images) Venus is a hellish planet with a high-temperature, high-pressure environment on its surface. Bone-dry and hot enough to melt lead, it's not exactly a welcoming environment (and has probably always been inhospitable to life). When heavily shielded Venera spacecraft from the Soviet Union landed there in the 1970s, according to NASA each lasted a few minutes or, at most, a few hours before melting or being crushed beyond their ability to function. But even above its surface, the planet has a bizarre environment. Scientists have found that its upper winds flow 50 times faster than the planet's rotation. The European Venus Express spacecraft (which orbited the planet between 2006 and 2014) tracked the winds over long periods and detected periodic variations. It also found that the hurricane-force winds appeared to be getting stronger over time. A 2020 study that thrilled some astrobiologists detected phosphine, a possible sign of decaying biological matter, high in the Venusian clouds. Could they be a sign of life? Not without sufficient water, claim follow-up studies that firmly reject the possibility of life in Venus' dry windy atmosphere. 8. There is water everywhere Water ice exists all over the solar system. This artists illustration shows what Mars would look like with lakes of water. (Image credit: gremlin via Getty Images) Water was once considered a rare substance in space. In fact, water ice exists all over the solar system: It's a common component of comets and asteroids, for starters. Water can be found as ice in permanently shadowed craters on Mercury and the moon, although we don't know if there's enough to support prospective human colonies in those places. Mars also has ice at its poles, in frost and likely below the surface dust. Even smaller bodies in the solar system have ice: Saturn's moon Enceladus, and the dwarf planet Ceres, among others. NASA scientists suspect Jupiter's moon Europa may be the most likely known candidate for extraterrestrial life because, against all expectations, there is likely liquid water below its cracked and frozen surface. Europa, much smaller than Earth, may host a deep ocean that researchers suggest could contain twice as much water as all of Earth's oceans combined. But we know that not all ice is the same. A close-up examination of Comet 67P/ChuryumovGerasimenko by the European Space Agency's Rosetta spacecraft, for example, revealed a different kind of water ice than the kind found on Earth. 9. Spacecraft have visited every planet A montage of images captured by NASAs Voyager 2 spacecraft. (Image credit: NASA/JPL) We've been exploring space for more than 60 years, and have been lucky enough to get close-up pictures of dozens of celestial objects. Most notably, we've sent spacecraft to all of the planets in our solar system Mercury, Venus, Earth, Mars, Jupiter, Saturn, Uranus and Neptune as well as two dwarf planets, Pluto and Ceres. The bulk of the flybys came from NASA's Voyager 1 and Voyager 2, which left Earth more than four decades ago and are still transmitting data from interstellar space. Between them, the Voyagers clocked visits to Jupiter, Saturn, Uranus and Neptune, thanks to an opportune alignment of the outer planets. 10. Spacecraft could bring contaminants to inhabitable (or inhabited) locations in the solar system We havent found evidence of life elsewhere in the solar system. But as we learn more about life that exists in extreme environments on Earth such as hydrothermal vents on the ocean floor, more possibilities open up for where they could be found on other planets. (Image credit: Ralph White via Getty Images) So far, scientists have found no evidence that life exists elsewhere in the solar system. But as we learn more about how "extreme" microbes live in underwater volcanic vents or frozen environments, more possibilities open up for where they could live on other planets. Microbial life is now considered likely enough on Mars that scientists take special precautions to sterilize spacecraft headed to the planet. NASA chose to crash its Galileo spacecraft into Jupiter rather than risk it contaminating the potentially habitable oceans of Europa. 11. Mercury is still shrinking Mercury is the smallest planet in our solar system. It has short years, long days and extreme temperatures. (Image credit: NASA/Johns Hopkins University Applied Physics Laboratory/Carnegie Institution of Washington) Mercury is already the smallest planet in the solar system (excluding the dwarf planet Pluto, of course), and the second-densest after Earth. And it's only getting smaller and denser. For many years, scientists believed that Earth was the only tectonically active planet in the solar system. That changed after the Mercury Surface, Space Environment, Geochemistry and Ranging (MESSENGER) spacecraft did the first orbital mission at Mercury, mapping the entire planet in high definition and getting a look at the features on its surface. In 2016, data from MESSENGER revealed cliff-like landforms known as fault scarps. Because the fault scarps are relatively small, scientists are sure that they weren't created that long ago and that the planet is still contracting 4.5 billion years after the solar system was formed. 12. There are mountains on Pluto In July 2015 NASAs New Horizons spacecraft sent back impressive images of Pluto and its moons. (Image credit: NASA/Johns Hopkins University Applied Physics Laboratory/Southwest Research Institute/Lunar and Planetary Institute) Pluto is a tiny world at the edge of the solar system, so scientists assumed the dwarf planet would have a fairly uniform, crater-pocked environment. That changed when NASA's New Horizons spacecraft flew by in 2015, sending back pictures that altered our view of Pluto forever. Related: Destination Pluto: NASA's New Horizons mission in pictures Among the astounding discoveries were icy mountains that are 11,000 feet (3,300 meters) high, indicating that Pluto must have been geologically active as little as 100 million years ago. But geological activity requires energy, and the source of that energy inside Pluto is a mystery. The sun is too far away from Pluto to generate enough heat for geological activity, and there are no large planets nearby that could have caused such disruption with gravity. 13. Pluto has a bizarre atmosphere NASAs New Horizons spacecraft captured this image of Pluto when it was 120,000 miles (200,000 kilometers) away from the dwarf planet. Plutos atmosphere can be seen as a blue haze. (Image credit: NASA/Johns Hopkins University Applied Physics Laboratory/Southwest Research Institute) Pluto's observed atmosphere broke all the predictions. Scientists saw the unexpected haze extending as high as 1,000 miles (1,600 km), rising higher above the surface than the atmosphere on Earth. As data from NASA's New Horizons mission flowed in, scientists analyzed the haze and discovered some surprises there, too. Scientists found about 20 layers in Pluto's atmosphere that are both cooler and more compact than expected. This affects calculations for how quickly Pluto loses its nitrogen-rich atmosphere to space. NASA's New Horizons team found that tons of nitrogen gas escape the dwarf planet by the hour, but somehow Pluto can constantly resupply that lost nitrogen. The dwarf planet is likely creating more of it through geological activity. 14. Rings are much more common than we thought Saturn isnt the only body in the solar system with rings. (Image credit: SCIEPRO/SCIENCE PHOTO LIBRARY via Getty Images) We've known about Saturn's rings since telescopes were invented in the 1600s, but it took spacecraft and more powerful telescopes built in the last 50 years to reveal more. We now know that every planet in the outer solar system Jupiter, Saturn, Uranus and Neptune has a ring system. But the rings differ from planet to planet: Saturn's spectacular halo, made in part of sparkly, reflective water ice, is not repeated anywhere else. Instead, the rings of the other giants are likely made of rocky particles and dust. Rings aren't limited to planets, either. In 2014, for example, astronomers discovered rings were around the asteroid Chariklo. 15. Jupiter's Great Red Spot is shrinking Jupiters Great Red Spot is the largest storm in the solar system but it wont hold the title forever as the anticyclonic storm is shrinking. NASAs Juno spacecraft captured this image of the infamous storm during a flyby in 2019. (Image credit: NASA/JPL-Caltech/SwRI/MSSS.) Along with being the solar system's largest planet, Jupiter also hosts the solar system's largest storm. Known as the Great Red Spot, it's been observed in telescopes since the 1600s and studied from modern instruments like NASA's Juno, which recently provided evidence that the storm is hundreds of miles tall (and likely fed by winds from thousands of miles below, too). The storm has been a raging conundrum for centuries, but in recent decades another mystery emerged: the spot is getting smaller. In 2014, the storm was only 10,250 miles (16,500 km) across, about half of its historic size. The shrinkage is being monitored in professional telescopes and also by amateurs. Amateurs are often able to make more consistent measurements of Jupiter because viewing time on larger, professional telescopes is limited and often split between different objects. Related: Best telescopes 2022: Top picks for viewing planets, galaxies, stars and more 16. Most comets are spotted with a sun-gazing telescope Comet ISON appears from the bottom right of the image and sweets up towards the upper right. The striking image was captured by the ESA/NASA Solar and Heliospheric Observatory with an image of the sun at the center from NASAs Solar Dynamics Observatory. (Image credit: ESA/NASA/SOHO/SDO/GSFC) Comets used to be the province of amateur astronomers, who spent night after night scouring the skies with telescopes. While some professional observatories also made discoveries while viewing comets, that began to change with the launch of the Solar and Heliospheric Observatory (SOHO) in 1995. Since then, the spacecraft has found more than 2,400 comets, which is a pretty productive side-mission for a telescope meant to observe just the sun. These comets are nicknamed "sungrazers." Many amateurs still participate in the search for comets by picking them out from raw SOHO images. One of SOHO's most famous observations came when it watched the breakup of the bright Comet ISON in 2013. 17. There may be a huge planet at the edge of the solar system Planet Nine is a theoretical planet that could explain the movements of some objects in the Kuiper Belt. (Image credit: MARK GARLICK/SCIENCE PHOTO LIBRARY via Getty Images) In January 2015, California Institute of Technology astronomers Konstantin Batygin and Mike Brown announced based on mathematical calculations and simulations that there could be a giant planet lurking far beyond Neptune. Several teams are now on the search for this theoretical "Planet Nine," and research suggests it could be located within the decade. This large object, if it exists, could help explain the movements of some objects in the Kuiper Belt, an icy collection of objects beyond Neptune's orbit. Brown has already discovered several large objects in that area that in some cases rivaled or exceeded the size of Pluto. (His discoveries were one of the catalysts for changing Pluto's status from planet to dwarf planet in 2006.) But scientists are pursuing another theory, too: that "Planet Nine" could in fact be a grapefruit-sized black hole, warping space similarly to the way a gigantic planet would. And yet another team suggests that the weird movements of the far-flung Kuiper Belt occupants could be the collective influence of several small objects, not an undiscovered planet or black hole at all. 18. Neptune is too hot Neptune is approximately 30 times as far from the sun as Earth. (Image credit: NASA JPL) Neptune is roughly 30 times as far from the sun as Earth, and it gets correspondingly less heat and light. But it radiates far more heat than it's taking in and has far more activity in its atmosphere than planetary scientists would suspect, especially compared to nearby Uranus. Uranus is closer to the sun and yet radiates about the same amount of heat as Neptune, and scientists aren't sure why. Winds on Neptune can blow up to 1,500 miles per hour (2,400 km/h). Is all that energy coming from the sun, from the planet's core, or gravitational contraction? Researchers are working to find out. 19. Earth's Van Allen belts are more bizarre than expected The Van Allen belts were discovered in 1958. The large bands of radiation surround Earth and expand and contract according to solar activity. (Image credit: NASA/Van Allen Probes/Goddard Space Flight Center) Earth has several bands of magnetically trapped, highly energetic charged particles surrounding our planet, known as the Van Allen belts (named after the discoverer of the phenomenon.) While we've known about the belts since the dawn of the space age, the Van Allen Probes (launched in 2012) have provided our best-ever view of them. They've uncovered quite a few surprises along the way. We now know that the belts expand and contract according to solar activity. Sometimes the belts are very distinct from one another, and sometimes they swell into one massive unit. An extra radiation belt (beyond the known two) was spotted in 2013. Understanding these belts helps scientists make better predictions about space weather or solar storms. 20. What happened to Miranda? Uranus moon Miranda has one of the most diverse landscapes among extraterrestrial bodies. (Image credit: NASA/JPL/USGS) One of the most bizarre moons in the outer solar system is Miranda, a shadowy moon of Uranus observed only once when Voyager 2 got a glimpse in 1986. Miranda hosts sharp ridges, craters and other major disruptions on its surface that would usually be the result of volcanic action. Tectonic activity could cause that kind of surface, but Miranda is much too small to generate that kind of heat on its own. Researchers think that gravitational pull from Uranus could have generated the push-pull action needed to heat, churn and contort Miranda's surface. But to know for sure, we'll need to send another spacecraft to check out the moon's unobserved northern hemisphere. 21. Saturn's yin-yang moon Saturns moon Iapetus exhibits extreme differences in brightness across the surface depending on which side faces the sun. (Image credit: NASA/JPL/Space Science Institute) Saturn's moon Iapetus has a very dark hemisphere that always faces away from the planet and a very light hemisphere that always faces toward Saturn. Most asteroids, moons and planets are relatively uniform across their surfaces, but Iapetus sometimes shines brightly enough to be spotted by Giovanni Cassini's telescope in the 1600s, and then dims down by several magnitudes when oriented in the other direction. Current research suggests that Iapetus, also known as Saturn VIII, is made mostly of water ice. As the moon's darker side faces the sun, scientists hypothesize, water ice sublimated away from that area, leaving darker rock behind. That could have created a positive feedback loop, as dark material heats up more than bright, reflective ice: as the darker, warmer side of the moon lost its ice, it became easier to heat up each time it faced the sun, hastening the loss of more ice. 22. Titan has a liquid cycle, but it's definitely not water Titans lakes are filled with methane and ethane and possibly a layer of water. (Image credit: MARK GARLICK/SCIENCE PHOTO LIBRARY via Getty Images) Another weird moon in Saturn's system is Titan, which hosts a liquid "cycle" that moves material between the atmosphere and the surface. That sounds a lot like Earth's water cycle, but Titan's immense lakes are filled with methane and ethane, possibly over a layer of water. Researchers hope to use data from the international Cassini mission to tease out some of Titan's secrets before designing a submarine that might one day plumb the depths of the mysterious moon. 23. Organics molecules are everywhere Organic molecules have been found in many other places in the solar system including Comet 67P/Churyumov-Gerasimenk. Here, the jagged landscape of the nucleus of comet 67P/Churyumov-Gerasimenk was captured in an image taken by ESAs Rosetta spacecraft. (Image credit: ESA/Rosetta/NAVCAM) Organics are complex carbon-based molecules found in living things, but which can be created by non-biological processes too. While organic molecules are common on Earth, they can unexpectedly be found in many other places in the solar system too. Scientists have found organics on the surface of Comet 67P, for example. The discovery bolstered the case that organic molecules to jump-start life on Earth could have been brought to the surface from space. Organics have also been found on the surface of Mercury, on Saturn's moon Titan (which gives Titan its orange color) and on Mars 24. Saturn has a hexagonal-shaped storm Saturns northern hemisphere is home to a strange hexagonal-shaped storm that has been raging for decades. (Image credit: NASA/JPL-Caltech/SSI/Hampton) Saturn's northern hemisphere has a raging six-sided storm nicknamed "the hexagon." This hexagon, a towering multilayered storm, has been there for decades, if not hundreds of years. The strange storm was discovered in the 1980s but was barely visible until the Cassini mission flew by between 2004 and 2017. Images and data from Cassini reveal the storm to be 180 miles (300 km) tall, 20,000 miles (32,000 km) wide and composed of air moving at about 200 mph (320 km/h). 25. The solar atmosphere is much hotter than the sun's surface The temperature of the sun varies between each layer of the atmosphere. (Image credit: NASA/SDO) While the sun's visible surface the photosphere is 10,000 degrees Fahrenheit (5,500 degrees Celsius), its upper atmosphere has temperatures in the millions of degrees. It's a large temperature differential with little explanation. Related: How hot is the sun? NASA has several sun-gazing spacecraft on the case, however, and they have some ideas for how the heat is generated. One is "heat bombs," which happen when magnetic fields cross and realign in the corona. Another is when plasma waves move from the sun's surface into the corona. With new data from the Parker Solar Probe (which recently became the first human-made object to touch the sun) coming in all the time, we're closer than ever to unlocking the mysteries at the heart of our solar system. Welcome To SpoilerTV We bring you a comprehensive and up to date spoiler service on all the major US TV shows and Movies. You can find specific show content by clicking the menu system at the top of the screen. We scour the Internet for spoilers as well as posting our own exclusive spoilers (Scripts, Casting Calls, Set Photos etc) as well as recaps and other fun articles and polls. We hope you enjoy your stay. This is a carousel. Use Next and Previous buttons to navigate MUKACHEVO, Ukraine - Russian forces laid siege to key urban areas across Ukraine on Wednesday, advancing on the strategic port city of Kherson and bombarding Kharkiv, the nation's second-largest city, while facing fierce resistance and resupply challenges in other areas. Russian state media, citing defense officials, said Moscow's troops were in control of Kherson, setting the stage for an advance toward Odessa, a major prize on Ukraine's Black Sea coast. But a spokesperson for the Ukrainian Defense Ministry said that "the battle continues." Kherson's mayor said Russian troops had visited his office to discuss how the city's 300,000 residents could move about. Still, the mayor wrote on Facebook, "the flag above us is Ukrainian." Images of bombs ripping through civilian infrastructure on the seventh day of fighting prompted a new round of intense criticism of Moscow, with the U.N. General Assembly voting 141 to 5 to condemn Russia's actions, with 35 abstentions. "This is shameful," Secretary of State Antony Blinken told reporters in Washington, describing the carnage including a hospital scene where children receiving cancer treatment were moved to the facility's basement while explosions sounded overhead. At the General Assembly session in New York, Russia's ambassador to the United Nations, Vasily Nebenzya, dismissed critics as peddlers of "lies" and repeated earlier statements by Russian President Vladimir Putin that the goal of the invasion was to "demilitarize and de-genocide" Ukraine. Ukrainian and U.S. officials described Russian forces as being bogged down in many parts of the country, facing fuel and food shortages, except for substantial advances in the south. "They have lost a sense of momentum," said Pentagon spokesman John Kirby. A massive Russian convoy of tanks and combat vehicles was still struggling to make its way to Kyiv, the capital, stalled by attacks by the Ukrainian military, low morale among Russian troops and botched planning, Western defense officials said. But U.S. officials cautioned that Moscow probably would bounce back from early setbacks and continued to maintain the upper hand against Ukraine's outgunned and less-experienced military. Russian forces were locked in a fierce battle to take Chernihiv, a strategic northern city on a highway that links the Russian border and Kyiv. The United Nations has recorded the deaths of more than 130 civilians, including 13 children, since the start of fighting last week, most of them due to shelling and rocket fire. The actual toll is probably far higher, the Office of the U.N. High Commissioner for Human Rights said. Already, more than 900,000 Ukrainian refugees have fled the country, the U.N. refugee agency said, with more than half a million of them going to Poland. The grim humanitarian picture contributed to the lopsided vote at the U.N. General Assembly, where resolutions are nonbinding but seen as a reflection of the overall will of the international community. Russia's negative vote was backed only by Belarus, North Korea, Eritrea and Syria. Even some countries who sided with Russia during a similar vote in 2014, following the annexation of Crimea, abstained on Wednesday, including Armenia, Bolivia, Cuba, Nicaragua, Sudan and Zimbabwe. Speaking in Superior, Wis., President Joe Biden said the vote shows that the majority of the world is opposed to Putin's invasion. "More than 80 years ago, another dictator tried to finally resolve the issue of another people," Ukrainian Ambassador to the United Nations Sergiy Kyslytsya said, referring to German leader Adolf Hitler. "He failed when the world responded in a resolute and united manner." Also Wednesday, the International Criminal Court opened an investigation into possible war crimes in Ukraine after referrals from 39 countries - including several European nations, as well as Canada, Colombia, Australia and New Zealand. Neither Russia nor Ukraine are parties to the statute that created the ICC, which is based in The Hague. But the organization's prosecutor, Karim Khan, said the court has jurisdiction to investigate because Ukraine has accepted ICC jurisdiction in the past. The Russian government said 498 service members had died in the Ukraine war and 1,597 had been wounded, conceding for the first time the high death toll of just a week's fighting. There was no way to verify the toll, and Russian officials often understate casualty figures. Defense Ministry spokesman Igor Konashenkov said 572 service members had been captured. The Pentagon has said it does not have a reliable estimate of the number of Russian and Ukrainian troops who have been killed. Russia continued to shift toward what human rights groups have warned are deadly siege tactics that Moscow has used in other war zones, including Syria. The United States believes that Russian forces will increasingly rely on artillery fire as they draw nearer to population centers and begin siege tactics in earnest. The flow of weaponry to Ukraine increased this week when Germany opened its stockpiles and Australia said it would provide Kyiv with about $70 million in "lethal military assistance," including missiles and unspecified weapons. On Wednesday, Ukraine announced that it had received a shipment of Turkish drones, which is what it has used in recent days to damage advancing Russian armored columns. Turkey, which is trying to maintain stable relations with both Russia and Ukraine, did not comment on the shipment. Kirby said Ukrainians were delivered military aid within the past day, but he did not describe what was included and how it was delivered. He also said the United States is delaying a test of the Minuteman III intercontinental ballistic missile that was planned for this week, a decision intended "to demonstrate that we are a responsible nuclear power." The move came days after Putin ordered his nuclear forces on alert, with U.S. officials seeking a measured response to avoid escalation. Ukrainian officials across the country reported an intensifying Russian barrage on Wednesday, including against civilian areas. In Mariupol, in southern Ukraine, the city council accused Russia of shelling houses, hospitals and a hostel for migrants. The city - a strategic location that could allow Russia to create a land bridge from southern Russia, through Ukraine, to Crimea, which Moscow controls - was still under Ukrainian control Wednesday, the city council said. The northeastern city of Kharkiv, home to 1.5 million people, continued to come under heavy bombardment as rockets and missiles hit buildings and supplies of food ran short. Blinken criticized the Russian siege and appealed to common links between the Russian and Ukrainian people, noting that Kharkiv is "one of the largest Russian-speaking cities in Europe." A member of an international monitoring mission to Ukraine was killed in Tuesday's shelling in Kharkiv, according to the group overseeing the mission, the Organization for Security and Cooperation in Europe. Maryna Fenina was slain "while getting supplies for her family in a city that has become a war zone," the organization said in a statement. British Defense Secretary Ben Wallace told Sky News that the Ukrainians appear to have succeeded in delaying and disrupting the initial invasion with strategic attacks on vehicles and equipment. "We've seen footage, we can't verify, but we've seen footage of Ukrainians using UAVs [unmanned aerial vehicles] to attack petrol train convoys, to go after logistical lines - we've seen lines blown up - all the things you and I think of when it comes to resistance," he said. "When any army on the move takes longer to do things, your logistical supply chain is stretched. If you're given enough rations for two days and it takes you six, you've suddenly got a problem. And I think what we've seen is a lot of those issues are coming to bear." Others said it was too soon to say how long the Russian ground offensive would be delayed. The Pentagon remains puzzled by a Russian lack of cohesion. Moscow massed multiple military elements for the invasion - including infantry, air power, tanks and artillery - yet it has not effectively used them to complement one another in a strategy known as combined arms, Kirby said. But that could change as Russia incrementally adds forces; more than 80% of the combat power it deployed to the border had entered Ukraine as of Tuesday, the Pentagon has said. Russian forces "are receiving needed supplies and reinforcements that may facilitate much more rapid and effective operations in the coming 24-72 hours," said an assessment by the Institute for the Study of War. The Russian effort around Kyiv, the institute added, "remains poorly organized, however, with elements of many different battalions combined into what seem to be ad hoc groupings rather than operating under standing regiment or brigade headquarters." "Russian logistical and operational failures around Kyiv will be difficult to remedy quickly and will likely continue to cause friction and reduce the effectiveness of Russian operations even as supply issues are addressed and reinforcements come into the fight," the assessment said. "It remains too early to evaluate the likely effective combat power the added Russian troops will bring." - - - Stern reported from Mukachevo, Hudson and Horton from Washington, and Fahim from Istanbul. The Washington Post's Karla Adam in London and Robyn Dixon in Moscow contributed to this report. This is a carousel. Use Next and Previous buttons to navigate STAMFORD At least two hundred people Tuesday evening crowded outside Stamford Government Center on Washington Boulevard calling for peace in Ukraine on the sixth day of Russias invasion of the country. The Ukrainian flag was raised alongside the U.S. and Connecticut flags in front of the government center, and demonstrators sang Ukraines national anthem while holding signs with messages such as Glory to Ukraine and Help David. Stop Goliath. Other demonstrators held a long blue-and-yellow banner the colors of Ukraines flag along the sidewalk as people in cars drove by honking their horns. The crowd chanted No more war and Pray for Ukraine in English and other phrases in Ukrainian. Some wore t-shirts with the saying, I am Ukraine. Olha Boiko, 27, who grew up in Ukraine, cried as she spoke about her family members who are in the country and Russias battering of beautiful cities. Its very hard, Boiko said. We just want peace, she added, and a free country. Mayor Caroline Simmons said Ukraine faces an unjustified, illegal war of aggression. I encourage everyone in our community to stand up for Stamfords Ukrainian community and the people of Ukraine, Simmons said, adding that residents can donate to Americares, the Red Cross and other organizations. As a city, we will continue to partner with community and religious leaders and share more information on ways you can help Ukrainians here and abroad. She described Stamfords Ukrainian-American population as a vibrant and cherished part of our community. The Ukrainian-American community has a notable presence, with the citys Glenbrook neighborhood being home to the Ukrainian Catholic cathedral Saint Vladimirs as well as a School of Ukrainian Studies and the Ukrainian Museum and Library of Stamford. Ulyana Yosypiv, the principal of the Ukrainian school, spoke at Tuesdays rally. Never did we imagine that in the 21st century we would have to explain to our children what war is not in the sense of historic events but as a reality, Yosypiv said. How am I to explain to my students that their families are in grave danger, that they may be shot and killed simply because we are living peacefully on our own land? The Very Rev. Ihor Midzak of Saint Vladimirs urged the crowd to remember the power of prayer. This gathering shows support to our brothers and sisters who are hunkering down in bomb shelters, who are hunkering down in basements, who are hunkering down in bombed-out buildings, who are fleeing, who do not know what awaits them, Midzak said. They are scared, they are fearful and they are angry rightfully so. However, this unity, and also from all of our elected officials, is a message, a very powerful message, that they are not alone. And we thank you for that. Sharon Lewis of the United Jewish Federation of Greater Stamford, New Canaan and Darien said she was in awe of the bravery of the Ukrainian people of innocent, perfectly peaceful people until they needed to stand up for their nation, and they did. No one should doubt the resolve of the Ukraine, she said. Also joining Simmons were members of Stamfords delegation to Hartford as well as Lt. Gov. Susan Bysiewicz. Bysiewicz called the invasion an attempt to restore tyranny and despotism over democracy. I just want to say, she added, that the governor and I have been very vocal in our support for the Ukrainian community, and we are supportive of President (Joe) Biden and our allies across the globe that have very quickly put sanctions upon the Russians. brianna.gurciullo@hearstmediact.com STAMFORD Stamford students and teachers will be able shed their masks inside school buildings for the first time in about two years. The Board of Education voted on Tuesday night to suspend the districts policy on mask wearing, clearing the way for masks to become optional for both students and staff. Members of the board only seemed to disagree on how to properly move forward, as some supported repealing the policy entirely. But that resolution, first introduced by member Joshua Esses, failed to garner five or more votes. A separate resolution, which called for the mask policy to be suspended, won unanimous approval. Esses said he would rather take away power from the Department of Public Health and get rid of the policy entirely. But he still supported the second resolution, which essentially ends the mask mandate. I look forward to not talking about masks again, he said. Board president Jackie Heftman agreed. I think we all echo that sentiment, she said. Superintendent Tamu Lucero announced last week that the school district would consider allowing students and staff to go mask-less inside school buildings as early as this Wednesday. On Monday, she said that would also apply to masks on school buses. The states mask mandate for schools was lifted Monday due to decreasing numbers of COVID-19 cases across the state, leaving local school boards with the authority to decide if they want to continue the mandate or not. Many school districts opted to shift to optional masking starting Monday. Initially, Stamford Director of Health Jody Bishop-Pullan had proposed March 15 as the end of the mask mandate. A number of factors including the decreased spread of the COVID-19 virus, and lower hospitalization and death rates have led city school officials to consider eliminating the mandate sooner. However, the school district and city Department of Health recommend that staff and students continue to wear masks. In recent weeks, the mask debate has heated up in Stamford. Parents and students protested the mandate outside Stamford Government Center, while Board of Education members seemed open to ending the practice. Many of the parents at the protest said children are less likely to become severely ill if they contract COVID-19, and said students are suffering emotionally by the mask requirement during the school day. ignacio.laguarda@stamfordadvocate.com Milton, PA (17847) Today Cloudy skies this evening will become partly cloudy after midnight. Low 47F. Winds NNW at 5 to 10 mph.. Tonight Cloudy skies this evening will become partly cloudy after midnight. Low 47F. Winds NNW at 5 to 10 mph. Bucharest City Hall has announced on Wednesday that Municipality Directorates were requested to update their staff with military obligations, this action having no connection with the war in Ukraine. According to a press release sent by the Bucharest City Hall to AGERPRES, "at the request of the National Administration of State Reserves and Special Problems - The Bucharest Special Problems Service, which is subordinated to the Government, Department for Emergency Situations (DSU), Statistics and Strategies - Financial Procurement and Emergency Situations sent on February 28, 2022, to all directorates with the Bucharest City Hall the request to update the staff list with military obligations". "Establishing these documents is a legal attribute of all state institutions. (...) This action of City Hall has no connection with the events at our country's border and was not initiated by the Bucharest General Mayor," the quoted document specifies, Agerpres.ro informs. The Bucharest Municipality reminds that last year the Supreme Council for Country's Defence (CSAT) approved through Decision No. 0015/25.02.2021 the Plan to Mobilize the National Economy for Defence, valid through the period of 2021-2024, and based on this and other legal provisions the select directorate with the City Hall has the obligation of establishing and updating for the specified period the documents for the mobilization at the work place for its own staff. A car carrying eight Ukrainian refugees, including three children, was involved in a car accident in the town of Beclean, Bistrita-Nasaud County on Wednesday at around 03:00hrs. Beclean is crossed by National Road 17, the main road connecting Moldavia and Transylvania.The Bistrita-Nasaud County Ambulance Service reported that a car with conscious, stable persons of Ukrainian nationality was involved in the accident, and first responders went to the scene.For its part, the Bistrita-Nasaud Emergency Management Inspectorate reported that eight people, five adults and three children were involved in the accident, with one person arriving at the hospital, a woman who had a minor head injury.Beclean Mayor Nicolae Moldovan told AGERPRES that, according to his information, there were three children in the car, four women and the driver, who allegedly fell asleep at the wheel.Following the accident, the refugees stayed for a few hours at a boarding house in Beclean, after which they drove away to Germany, according to the mayor. The martyr hero Liviu Cornel Babes, who set himself on fire, 33 years ago, on the Bradul slope in central Poiana Brasov in protest against the communist regime, was commemorated on Wednesday by his family, representatives of the associations of revolutionaries and of the authorities, through a religious ceremony and wreath laying. The ceremony was organized, at the cross on the Slope Bradul and at the commemorative plaque of the Church of St. John the Baptist in Poiana Brasov, by the Association of Fighters, Injured and Descendants of heroes "Brasov-December 1989" in collaboration with the Association "November 15, 1987 - Brasov" and the Brasov Branch of the Association of Former Political Prisoners of Romania. On 2 March 1989, Liviu Cornel Babes set himself on fire on the Bradul slope, in front of several hundred Romanian and foreign tourists, in protest against the oppressive policy of the Ceausescu regime. He was an electrician at the Trustul de Prefabricate and, in his spare time, an amateur plastic artist. At the base of the slope, engulfed in flames, the man collapsed, under the eyes of those present, after, before self-arson, he displayed on the trunk of a tree the text "Stop Murder, Auschwitz = Brasov". He died on the same day, a few hours later, from the severe burns he has suffered, Agerpres.ro informs. 33 years after this gesture, Brasov still does not have a monument dedicated to the martyr hero. Mayor Allen Coliban announced last year that funds for its implementation will be put in the local budget. Money for the contest of solutions and the works of execution of the monument were allocated from the budget for the current year under the conditions in which, in 2021, the realization of these stages of the project was not successful. The chair of the Romanian Rowing Federation, Elisabeta Lipa, stated, on Wednesday, that she is born in Siret, a village of Ukrainians in the north of Suceava County, and that she shudders at what is happening at the border in the context of the armed conflict started by Russia in Ukraine. "I am thinking of the poor people, what they're going through... I want one thing, that in the 21st century we have no wars, that we prove love and solidarity because no-one is an emperor of the land and people. Because you take nothing with you when you go. My village is a village of Ukrainians; I was speaking just yesterday with the priest in the village and he told me that relatives, acquaintances came... he's accommodating them in the houses, in the church. It's something I have never imagined that we will live in our time. I can't say that I have relatives in Ukraine [e.n. - Elisabeta Lipa is of Ukrainian ancestry], because the relatives were lost in time. But the fact that many villagers go and shop in Ukraine, that says it all," said Lipa, Agerpres.ro informs. Elisabeta Lipa believes that the decision to forbid Russian athletes from participating in international competitions is not normal, because "athletes have no fault, sport stops wars... the athletes are faultless, they're educated, disciplined, they fight in the spirit of fair play, which is something I would like to see done by those who started this catastrophe - it's hard for me to even say the word war," she added. Romanian Energy Minister Virgil Popescu discussed with the President of the Republic of Azerbaijan Ilham Aliyev, in Baku, on Wednesday about cooperation in the field of energy and the supply of Europe with Azerbaijani gas, according to the Romanian minister's post on Facebook. "Today [Wednesday - ed.n.] I had a discussion with Ilham Aliyev, President of the Republic of Azerbaijan. It was emphasized in the discussion that the relations between the two states are based on the principles of strategic partnership and, in this regard, the importance of the Joint Declaration on Strategic Partnership was noted. President Aliyev expressed his confidence that my visit will contribute to the expansion of energy cooperation between our countries," Popescu said, Agerpres.ro informs. The discussion also focused on the relations between Azerbaijan and the EU, and the Azerbaijani President emphasized the successful development of these relations and noted that the signing of documents on the strategic partnership between Azerbaijan and 9 other EU Member States is a good indicator in this regard. "As a representative of the Government of Romania, I thanked him for his enormous efforts to implement the Southern Gas Corridor and for his significant contribution to the security of Europe's gas supply. I also conveyed that the second phase of the development of the Southern Gas Corridor would be a remarkably valuable contribution to strengthening Europe's energy security. Romania reiterates its intention to include the transport infrastructure provided by the Romania-Bulgaria Interconnector and the BRUA gas pipeline in the plan to expand the Southern Gas Corridor to the Balkans and Central Europe," the government official went on to say. Virgil Popescu also conveyed to the Azerbaijani President that he welcomed the expansion of the activity of the Azerbaijani company SOCAR in our country and communicated the openness to run joint investment projects in the field of energy both in Romania and in Azerbaijan. The first Blue Dot type center in Romania, installed at the border crossing point of northern Sighetu Marmatiei, with the support of UNICEF, comes to the aid of refugees, as part of Ukraine support campaign, the chairman of the Maramures County Council, Ionel Bogdan, informed on Wednesday evening. "In this center, which has been operational since last night, are operating the NGO representatives who wanted to offer support for Ukraine, but also volunteers, citizens that expressed their intention of lending a hand to Ukrainian refugees. Through the Blue Dot center Ukrainian refugees are offered integrated services, such as pick-up, epidemiological triage, food assurance and strict necessity products, transportation and housing in spaces identified in the county of Maramures. Volunteers from this center can also offer psychological therapy, first-aid regarding hygiene, health and nutrition, basic legal counseling, referral services for cases of violence or health issues," Ionel Bogdan said, Agerpres.ro informs. "Together with the UNICEF executive we discussed about the organization plan of the Maramures Emergency Command and analyzed the current situation of Ukrainian refugees crossing the border, for whom we arranged a special camp, on the Municipal stadium in Sighetu Marmatiei," Ionel Bogdan specified. The Blue Dot type Center, installed on the Sighetu Marmatiei Border Crossing Point has become operational on Wednesday afternoon, in the presence of the UNICEF executive director, Catherine Russell. The Minister of Foreign Affairs, Bogdan Aurescu, hails the adoption, by the General Assembly of the United Nations, meeting in an extraordinary emergency session, of the resolution calling for an end to the aggression against Ukraine with a large majority of 141 UN member-states. According to the Romanian Ministry of Foreign Affairs (MAE), Romania co-sponsored this important resolution, together with another 95 UN member-states. MAE shows that five UN member-states have voted against the resolution, among which the Russian Federation and Belarus, Agerpres.ro informs. The resolution reaffirms support for the sovereignty, independence, unity and territorial integrity of Ukraine, in the limits of its internationally recognized borders. The text decries in the firmest terms the Russian Federation's aggression against Ukraine, contrary to article 2, paragraph 4 of the UN Charter, and asks the Russian Federation to immediately cease the use of force against Ukraine and to abstain from other threats to use force against UN member states, MAE mentions. The document adopted by the UN General Assembly requests the immediate, complete and unconditional withdrawal of Russian military forces from Ukrainian territory and the abandonment of the decision of the Russian Federation regarding some areas in the Donetsk and Luhansk regions of Ukraine. The member-states of the UN decry the involvement of Belarus in the illegal use of force against Ukraine. Furthermore, the resolution addresses an appeal to respecting the Minsk Agreements and the use of relevant international working formats (Normandy Format and the Trilateral Contact Group). The document places emphasis also on the humanitarian aspects, requesting the granting of unhindered, fast and safe access to humanitarian assistance for persons in need in Ukraine, and insists on the protection of civilians, including humanitarian staff and persons in vulnerable situations, as well as respect for human rights. Furthermore, it emphasizes the need to offer protection to medical staff in the exercise of their duties, to medical vehicles and equipment, including hospitals and other specialty facilities. The flagrant infringements of international humanitarian law and abuses in the realm of human rights provoked by the aggression against Ukraine are condemned. The resolution asks the coordinator of the UN's emergency humanitarian aid coordinator to present, within 30 days of the resolution's adoption, of a report regarding the humanitarian situation in Ukraine and the response of the international community. MAE recalls that Romania co-sponsored, together with 82 countries, a similar draft resolution initiated by the United States of America and Albania, as members of the UN's Security Council, that was voted for by 11 of 15 members of this UN body, but rejected following the Russian Federation's veto. Your browser does not support the video tag. The Minister of Foreign Affairs, Bogdan Aurescu, appealed, on Wednesday, to the democratic community for firm support for Ukraine and vulnerable democracies during the emergency meeting of the Governing Council of the Community of Democracies on the situation in Ukraine, according to a release from the Ministry of Foreign Affairs (MAE). Minister Aurescu hosted and presided over the emergency meeting of the Governing Council of the Community of Democracies (CoD) on the situation in Ukraine - Solidarity in a time of War on Democracy, in the context of Romania exercising the Presidency of the Community of Democracies (2019-2022). MAE shows that Minister Aurescu condemned, in the firmest terms, the unprovoked, illegal and unjustified military aggression of the Russian Federation on Ukraine, including the decision of President Putin to raise the alert level of Russian nuclear forces. The head of Romanian diplomacy emphasized that, through the condemnable acts, the Russian Federation has infringed all its international commitments, firstly the UN Charter, bringing fundamental damages to the international order based on democratic norms, foundations, values and principles, Agerpres.ro informs. In this context, Minister Aurescu also emphasized the role of the Community of Democracies to promote and defend fundamental rights and freedoms, emphasizing the necessity to approach in this multilateral forum the ways by which democratic states all over the world can support and encourage the young Ukrainian democracy, as well as the democratically elected leaders to overcome this unprecedented crisis. The Minister of Foreign Affairs appealed to cooperation, solidarity and firm commitments in the support of peace, in order to demonstrate that democracies are stronger when they cooperate. The head of Romanian diplomacy emphasized that, in order to discourage the aggressor Russian state, firm measures are necessary at the international level, as well as powerful measures at the national level. Minister Bogdan Aurescu also reiterated the solidarity commitment of Romania and the Romanian people towards Ukraine and the Ukrainian people in front of Russian Federation aggression, both by condemning this aggression in all international forums and introducing sanctions, as well as support at the national level. Thus, Minister Bogdan Aurescu emphasized that Romania joined UN states and co-sponsored the resolutions of the UN Security Council and of the UN General Assembly to condemn the armed aggression of Russian against Ukraine. He also recalled that, as the holders of the Presidency of CoD, Romania supported the Statement of the Governing Council Members by which this aggression was firmly condemned and support was expressed towards Ukraine. The head of Romanian diplomacy emphasized that Romania has joined the powerful sanctions imposed by the international community on Russia, including the closing of propaganda publications of Russia in the European Union and Romania. Minister Aurescu also highlighted the humanitarian support and solidarity granted by Romanian authorities and citizens to Ukrainian citizens that left Ukraine due to the armed conflict. Furthermore, he highlighted the constant support granted by Romania to the citizens of a large number of other states which are passing through Romania, as well as the members of several diplomatic missions. In what regards Romania's contribution to the effort of the international community to support Ukraine, the Romanian minister pointed out that Romania has decided, on March 1, to establish in Romania a logistical facility, a regional hub that would allow the collection and transport of international donations in humanitarian aid to Ukraine and towards Ukrainians. Minister Bogdan Aurescu reconfirmed the firm support of Romania for the sovereignty, independence and territorial integrity of Ukraine, as well as for respecting international law. "This is the fight of our generation and a real test on our democracies. The Community of Democracies must stand and uphold our values and principles," said the Romanian minister. Miniser Aurescu made a firm appeal to the states of the democratic community to defend and protect the other vulnerable states ahead of a possible aggression. The head of Romanian diplomacy reiterated the appeal to unity, determination and pro-active action in order to allow the restoration of peace, liberty and international order based on norms. Community of Democracies Secretary General Thomas E. Garrett underlined that democracies worldwide must unequivocally show they stand with Ukraine, as the brute force of two dictatorships seeks to destroy democracy and the rule of law in the geographic center of Europe. The leader of the Belarus opposition, Sviatlana Tsikhanouskaya, spoke of the Lukashenko's regime support toward Russia's aggression and said: "Let me be clear: our nation is against the war. Belarusians do not want this war and protest against it." The meeting was attended by Foreign Affairs Ministers and other dignitaries of member-states of the CoD Governing Council. The European Union Advisory Mission Ukraine (EUAM Ukraine) facilitated an ad-hoc meeting of representatives of the Romanian and Ukrainian customs authorities, which took place at the northern Sighetu Marmatiei Border Crossing Point (RO) - Solotvino (UA), informs a press release of the Romanian Customs Authority. "In the context of the working visit made by Bogdan-Lari Mihei, President of the Romanian Customs Authority, to the customs offices located at the common border between Romania and Ukraine and, respectively, the Republic of Moldova, on March 1, 2022, the European Union Advisory Mission Ukraine (EUAM Ukraine) facilitated an ad-hoc meeting of the representatives of the Romanian and Ukrainian customs authorities, which took place at the Border Crossing Point Sighetu Marmatiei (RO) - Solotvino (UA)," the release reads. According to the cited source, the purpose of the meeting was to facilitate the crossing of the two states' common border, on the one hand, of the Ukrainian refugees arriving in Romania, and on the other hand, of the transports of humanitarian aid destined for Ukraine, Agerpres.ro informs. "Bogdan-Lari Mihei, President of the Romanian Customs Authority, and Oleksandr Shchutskyi, State Customs Service of Ukraine, First Deputy Head, together with representatives of the customs authorities of the two states, but also of the European Union Advisory Mission Ukraine (EUAM Ukraine) agreed on the following: to analyze the possibility of simplifying procedures at border crossing points located at the common border, to organize high-level meetings between the Romanian and Ukrainian customs authorities, both in Bucharest and in Kyiv, as soon as the situation in Ukraine allows; to strengthen the cooperation between the two customs authorities, by drawing up a bilateral Memorandum of Understanding," the release further mentions. The General Inspectorate of the Border Police (IGPF) informs that the border authorities in Hungary informed the Territorial Inspectorates in Oradea and Sighetu Marmatiei that, starting with March 2, 15:45 (Romania time), at the Hungarian-Romanian border, entry to Hungarian territory is allowed only for citizens of third party states (including Ukrainian citizens or other persons coming from Ukraine)which fulfill the entry conditions to the Schengen Area. According to a release of the IGPF, sent to AGERPRES, the previous disposition that allowed entry using all kinds of documents that could establish identity to Hungary of citizens of third party states that come from Ukraine is annulled, Agerpres.ro informs. "Presently, in the border crossing points with Hungary there is a high wait time, following the fact that a large number of cars, persons and freighters are coming to conduct border crossing control formalities upon exiting Romania. We mention that formalities at the border with the Hungary are done jointly with the authorities in the neighboring country, meaning that opening additional control lanes is done in agreement and depending on the personnel allotted by the Hungarian Police. The Hungarian authorities were contacted to dispose joint measures to speed up traffic," IGPF mentions. The quoted source announced that the Romanian Border Police has supplemented the personnel scheduled for verifying travel documents and thus disposed all the measures in its competence to ensure operative control. "The Hungarian border authorities request that entry conditions to the Schengen Area be fulfilled, that's what they informed us today, around 15:00 hrs. Thus all third party citizens that enter the Schengen Area must have the right to enter, biometric passport or a visa in the old model passport. The same goes for children," said, for AGERPRES, Chief Inspector of the Oradea Territorial Inspectorate of the Border Police, Marin Bondar. President Klaus Iohannis on Tuesday evening had a telephone conversation with French President Emmanuel Macron, whom he thanked for the deployment of French troops to Romania. "Telephone conversation this evening with President Emmanuel Macron, whom I thanked for the deployment of troops who arrived to Romania. The consolidation of NATO'S Eastern Flank is supported by France, our strategic partner. Together we are stronger," Iohannis wrote on Twitter.Other 235 French servicemen and technical means, from the 27th Alpine Chasseurs Battalion from Annecy, headed by Colonel Vincent Minguet, arrived at the 57th Air Base Mihail Kogalniceanu, joining the 40 military recently arrived to Romania, the National Defence Ministry (MApN) announced. The Ministry of Foreign Affairs (MAE) confirmed, on Wednesday evening, the reception of a Verbal Note from the Embassy of the Russian Federation in Bucharest (registered with MAE on March 2), by which the latter informs on unspecified, unfounded actions by which the social and property rights of Russian citizens residing in Romania were allegedly infringed. According to MAE, the Embassy requested the Ministry of Foreign Affairs take measures to cease and prevent these actions, Agerpres.ro informs. The note did not present the characteristics of a protest note, MAE informs. "As the said Verbal Note contained no concrete information regarding cases of infringement, MAE requested immediately, by phone, on March 2, 2022, the Russian Federation Embassy present some examples or data to help understand the situation and to establish the eventual necessary demarches. Until this time, the requested details were not received by MAE," informs the Foreign Affairs Ministry. Distinctly from the case presented, MAE informs that it had received previously, through a Verbal Note of the Embassy of the Russian Federation, a request for support to facilitate access to Romania of some freight transporters registered in the Russian Federation, in transit from Ukraine to third-party destinations. In this case, according to usual practice, MAE promptly informed the relevant authorities to dispose the necessary demarches and to grant full support. "In conclusion, MAE holds no concrete data about the situation signalled by the Embassy of the Russian Federation. MAE believes that the Embassy's demarche, done in general parameters and without offering concrete examples and evidence to support the statements, as well as mentioning it in mass media by the representatives of the Russian diplomatic mission are of a nature to disinform public opinion. MAE recalls that the Verbal Note is the usual way and the most commonly used method of written diplomatic correspondence, especially between accredited diplomatic missions and the Ministry of Foreign Affairs of the accrediting state," MAE shows. The head of Moroccan diplomacy Nasser Bourita, in a telephone conversation on Wednesday with his Romanian counterpart, Bogdan Aurescu, expressed his special appreciation for the operative and efficient way in which the Romanian authorities have managed and are managing all the problems generated by the flow of people on the Romanian border, in the context of the crisis in Ukraine. "Minister Bourita expressed his thanks in particular for Romania's support in facilitating the safe evacuation of Moroccan citizens from Ukraine, who particularly appreciated the way in which they were treated and assisted by the Romanian authorities. From the beginning of the crisis to the present, over 1,700 Moroccan citizens have benefited from the support of the Romanian authorities, at the Romanian-Ukrainian border," informs the Ministry of Foreign Affairs in a press release sent to AGERPRES. The two officials agreed to continue the operational coordination between the Romanian and Moroccan authorities for the safe transit of Moroccan citizens on Romanian territory and to get them home as soon as possible, Agerpres.ro informs. Referring to the excellent traditional relations between the two countries, in the context of the anniversary of 60 years of diplomatic relations in 2022, the two ministers reiterated their desire to deepen political dialogue, at all levels, and to develop cooperation on all levels. Representatives of the Orthodox cult in Maramures and Satu Mare counties continue to provide support to refugees, consisting of food and accommodation, and also provide transportation for those intending to leave Romania for another destination, priest Adrian Dobreanu, responsible for Media Communications from the Orthodox Episcopate of Maramures and Satmar, informed on Wednesday. According to him, the team of volunteers and priests who are in Sighetu Marmatiei, Halmeu and Petea Customs immediately offer support to women, children and the elderly according to the needs of each person.On Tuesday until late in the evening, the parish of Barsana commune accommodated 56 people (women with children) and provided transport to Italy for 16 Ukrainians. Also, 40 students were transported to Bucharest by train, the cost of tickets being covered by Barsana Parish and Breb Parish.In Oncesti, with the first involvement of the parish priest Ioan Tomoiaga, 45 people were accommodated in two boarding houses: 30 medical students in Ukraine, originally from Morocco, and 7 mothers with children in another boarding house, and transport for 8 students to Bucharest was provided.Petrova Monastery accommodated 21 people; Sighet - Campu Negru Parish accommodated 16 people; the Orthodox parishes of Mara, Vadul Izei - Sugau and Stramtura - Valea Satului provided diapers, sanitation products, milk powder and other necessary items for 100 children.The "Assumption of the Blessed Virgin" Orthodox Parish in Sighetu Marmatiei offered 200 sandwiches for refugees and the Barsana Orthodox Parish offered 650 sandwiches, water and fruit.Also, parents Vasile Dunca and Cosmin Petrovai, ministers at the "St. Joseph the Confessor" Orthodox Parish in Sighet VII, volunteered to distribute food and food to refugees.Priest Vasile Grigor from the parish of Sighetu Marmatiei, with the support of some people, bought pampers, powdered milk and sanitary products, as well as bandages, bandages and garlands for the volunteers of the Ukrainian army.The volunteer members of the "We Give and We Give Ourselves" Association, coordinated by priest Dan Sidau, selected the food at the Multipurpose Hall in Sighetu Marmatiei. Also, young people from the Sighet Archdiocese (high school and college students) do volunteer shifts, 6 by rotation at 12-hour intervals.Also, the Romanian Orthodox Archdiocese of Viseu is involved in various social-missionary activities which consist in the transport of refugees from Ukraine, from Sighet to Petea Customs in Satul Mare and Baia Mare counties.Believers from the Certeze Orthodox Parish, Oas Archdiocese, donated 2,000 pairs of new thick socks at Halmeu Customs in Satu Mare County. Prime Minister Nicolae Ciuca said on Thursday that together with a governmental delegation he would go to Warsaw for the joint meeting of the Governments of Romania and Poland, underscoring that the meeting had a special relevance both for the bilateral relations and for discussing the security issue in Eastern Europe, following the Russian armed forces' invasion in Ukraine. "Tomorrow we'll go to Warsaw to carry out the joint government meeting. I wish to mention that it is an activity that has been planned way ahead. The activity has a special relevance for strengthening the bilateral relations between Romania and Poland and, of course, it has a special relevance for what it means discussing the security issue in Eastern Europe following the Russian armed forces' invasion in Ukraine," Nicolae Ciuca said in the beginning of the Government meeting on Wednesday. Prime Minister Nicolae Ciuca received on Wednesday at the Victoria Palace Jyotiraditya Scindia, the Minister of Civil Aviation of India - special envoy of Indian Prime Minister Narendra Modi - who is in Romania to organize the repatriation of Indian students evacuated from conflict zones in Ukraine, says a government release. "Minister Scindia handed over to Prime Minister Nicolae Ciuca a letter addressed by Indian Prime Minister Narendra Modi. On the same occasion, he brought the message of thanks of the prime minister and the 1.3 billion inhabitants of India for the support provided by the Romanian side to the Indian students. India has so far managed to extract from Ukraine 11,000 of its approximately 20,000 students. Currently, about 3,000 students are in Bucharest and are waiting for the 6 planes which they are to be repatriated with. Also, 1,000 students are hosted in the Siret area and are also to be repatriated," it said. In the same context, Prime Minister Nicolae Ciuca said that India can count on Romania in order to repatriate its citizens arriving from the areas affected by the Russian military aggression, Agerpres.ro informs. Moreover, the Romanian prime minister stressed the good relations of Romanian-Indian friendship, as well as the level of trade and Indian investments in Romania. President Klaus Iohannis had a phone call on Wednesday with the Portuguese Prime Minister, Antonio Costa, whom he thanked for Portugal's decision of deploying 174 soldiers in Romania. "During today's phone call with the Portuguese Prime Minister, Antonio Costa, I thanked him for Portugal's decision of being part of our shared efforts of consolidating the Eastern Flank and deploying 174 soldiers in Romania," the head of state wrote on Twitter, Agerpres.ro informs. He said that he discussed with the Portuguese PM about the Ukrainian refugees, "how to coordinate and help them". European Commission President Ursula von der Leyen and UN High Commissioner for Refugees Filippo Grandi will be in Bucharest on Thursday for meetings with President Klaus Iohannis. According to the Presidential Administration, the head of the state will receive Ursula von der Leyen at the Cotroceni Palace at 10:00. The two will have one-on-one talks and official talks, and will deliver joint press statements at the end, Agerpres.ro informs. Next, President Iohannis has a meeting with the UN High Commissioner for Refugees Filippo Grandi scheduled at noon. Prime Minister Nicolae Ciuca is meeting, Wednesday evening, starting at 21:30 hrs, European Commission President Ursula von der Leyen. On Thursday, the President of the European Commission, Ursula von der Leyen, will be welcomed to the Cotroceni Presidential Palace by President Klaus Iohannis. Agerpres.ro informs. According to the Presidential Administration, the head of state will welcome Ursula von der Leyen at 10:00 hrs. The two will have tete-a-tete talks and official talks, at the end of which they will have joint press statements. Romania's ambassador to the United States of America, Andrei Muraru, announces that through the fundraising campaign initiated by the diplomatic mission, 100,000 dollars were raised for the Ukrainian refugees. "We gathered over 100,000 dollars in a few days for the Ukrainian refugees. The support we received from the Romanians and Americans is amazing! Thank you all from the bottom of my heart!" Muraru wrote on Facebook, on Wednesday. He says that the fundraising's next target is for 200,000 dollars, Agerpres.ro informs. The ambassador appreciates that the funds will be used for acquiring food, clothing, medicine and cleaning products and for offering shelter, heating and necessary equipment, as well as psychological, educational support and asylum for Ukrainian refugees. "Romania's embassy in the United States is organizing, together with Romanian United Fund, a fundraising for those that fled the way of the Russian artillery and tanks," Andrei Muraru wrote on that date. The servicemen with the Multinational Brigade South-East in Craiova are joining the blood donation campaign conducted by the Ministry of National Defence and the Health Ministry for injured Ukrainian servicemen which arrive in military and civilian hospitals in Romania. According to a release of the Multinational Brigade South-East, the first action of this kind will take place on Thursday, at the Regional Center for Blood Transfusions in Craiova, Agerpres.ro informs. The blood donation campaign of the Romanian servicemen is part of Romania's support plan for Ukraine. "The Minister of National Defence, Vasile Dincu, has participated, on Monday, February 28, in the extraordinary meeting of Defence minister of European Union member-states, in videoconference format. The discussions of the reunion regarded the situation in Ukraine, following the unjustified and unprovoked attack of Russian on an independent and sovereign state, an unprecedented provocation on the European security architecture. The Ministers of Defence debated on the urgent needs, in view of coordinating assistance granted to Ukraine by the member-states. Regarding the support of Romania for Ukraine, the Minister of National Defence highlighted the decision of the Government regarding the donation of munitions, fuel, military protective gear, but also food, water and health materials, which are added to the contributions sent previously, as a response to Ukraine's request, through the European Civil Protection Mechanism. Furthermore, the Minister of Defence mentioned the decision that regards ensuring medical treatment for wounded Ukrainian servicemen in military and civilian hospitals in Romania, as well as the blood donation campaign started for them. At the same time, the Romanian official appreciated the mobilization of the civil society in support of Ukrainian refugees," informed, on Monday, the Ministry of National Defence, in a press release. The flow of refugees from Ukraine through the border crossing point of southeastern Isaccea has remained constant in the last 48 hours, and several convoys of humanitarian aid have arrived in the area, brought after initiatives from several areas of the country. Approximately 1,600 persons, including 1,300 Ukrainian citizens, have crossed the border crossing point in Isaccea, the number of travelers being similar to the one from the previous day, after on Sunday, at the same point, 2,200 people crossed, the Coast Guard spokesman, Andrei Ene, declared for AGERPRES. The situation of people from Ukraine has sensitized many people, so that humanitarian convoys have also arrived in Isaccea. Apart from food and other products that are offered, refugees are informed about accommodation possibilities in various locations in the area or in other counties in the country. Many Ukrainians that arrived in Romania are not making long term plans and wish to return home. Among women and children there are very few men, Agerpres.ro informs. "The church allowed us to leave. I am with my family, I have 6 children, she is my woman and these are my children. We move forward, to Poland. We have friends that are waiting for us and want to help us. Thank you for helping us and that you are not letting us out in the streets," said Vitali Moldovan, from the city of Ismail. According to the data from the Coast Guard, approximately 8,600 persons from Ukraine have crossed the Danube via ferry through Isaccea, starting with February 24. Wizz Air announces it would support Ukrainian refugees, offering 100,000 free tickets for all flights to continental Europe, taking off from the countries around Ukraine (Poland, Slovakia, Hungary, Romania), according to a press release sent to AGERPRES on Wednesday. Moreover, Wizz Air understands that many refugees have already started migrating and might be blocked in other locations. The airline will also offer an aid tariff worth 29,99 euro for all other flights (except to the UAE, Iceland and the Canary Islands, where the special rate is 69,99 euro). The 100,000 free seats and the aid rate will be available all through the month of March. Passengers must supply the Ukrainian passport/ID number at the moment of booking and present the Ukrainian passport/ID upon check-in, Agerpres.ro informs. The indicated number of tickets (100,000) at the price of zero euro is applied until the availability limit for selected flights with departure in March 2022. A cabin luggage is included (maximum 40x30x20 cm). A troller bag and each checked in luggage piece are subject to additional fees. The price is applied only to bookings made on https://wizzair.com/#/rescue. In other places, the transformation from winter to spring is noted by the bloom of the first crocus or the arrival of the first robin. Around these parts, spring is heralded by the battering and frying of the first fish. With spring comes Lent, and with Lent comes fish fries. It is an annual ritual as sacred and as inviolate as Spring Training. In St. Louis, you dont have to look far to find a fish fry. They are more common than Starbucks, more ubiquitous than McDonalds. But as much as we love supporting all of the local churches, Elks clubs, and American Legion and VFW posts, you dont actually have to go to them to have delicious fried fish. You can make your own fish fry at home. Its easy and its fun. Your house may smell like the kitchen of a fish-and-chips restaurant, but its easy and fun. I fried up what is technically called a mess of fish, with all the fixings (which are technically called fixins). It tasted like a Friday night at Our Lady, Star of the Sea. Fish fry fish comes battered and fried, breaded and fried, and baked. I battered and breaded mine, but I did not bake it because it is a fish fry, not a fish bake. I understand the difference in calories, but thats not the point. The fish-fry fish that is battered and fried is usually going to be cod, though the technique also works with any number of other types of firm, white-flesh fish: haddock, pollock, halibut or even striped bass. But cod is cheap and plentiful, which makes it the ideal fish for a fry. The problem with battered fish is the batter. Under the wrong circumstances, it can be too thick and even bready. So I turned to the writings of J. Kenji Lopez-Alt, who is either a science-minded food writer or a food-minded science writer. As Id hoped, he had a couple of suggestions for making batter that is as light as air. And you do that by filling it with air, or at least carbon dioxide. He slowly mixes beer into this batter, which traps little bubbles of carbon dioxide in it. If you dont want beer, soda water will do the same trick. He also keeps the beer (or soda water) ice cold, because colder liquid holds carbonation better. I put my beer in a bowl of ice water for an hour before cooking to make it as cold as possible. In addition, I mixed the cold beer with ice water, instead of regular water, because colder liquid also keeps gluten from forming and gluten makes the batter thick. It took just a little more effort than the unfussy way of frying battered fish, but I think it was worth it. My fish was as good as anything Ive ever had at a fish-and-chips restaurant or my nearest VFW hall. Breading is easier, of course, so I also breaded some catfish fillets. I did this two ways, once after first soaking them in milk and once without the soak. Breaded Catfish Yield: 2 to 4 servings Common wisdom holds that the milk makes catfish taste less fishy, and, in this case, the common wisdom is correct. I highly recommend soaking your catfish in milk, and it wont even add any time to your cooking process. Simply put the catfish in the milk when you begin to heat the oil, and youll be fine. I used hot oil for the side dishes, too. There is a simple but effective trick to making French fries that are delicately crisp on the outside and creamy smooth inside: Fry them twice. Its as simple as that. The first time, fry your hand-cut fries at 325 degrees for a few minutes. That basically cooks the fries all the way through, though the texture is soft. Then, fry them again at 375 degrees for just a couple of minutes. This step cooks the outside again until it becomes crispy without overcooking the interior. With a liberal sprinkling of salt, the fries will be some of the best youve ever had. Good fish fries, though, dont limit themselves to French fries. The best fish fries also offer hush puppies. Hush puppies are one of those great American dishes: cornmeal with a bit of onion, moistened with buttermilk and fried in oil. Nothing else is quite like them. The ones I made were lighter than most, probably because the batter is made with both baking powder and baking soda. They puffed up enchantingly when they hit the hot oil, and they quickly cooked into golden balls of delicious fried cornmeal. The French fries looked at them with envy. The natural condiment with fried fish is tartar sauce; nothing else gives a satisfyingly sharp pop of contrasting creaminess to fried fish. You can buy it in a jar, and it will be fine. You can make it yourself, and it will be fabulous. Its actually a complex little sauce complex in flavors, I mean. Mayonnaise is enlivened with minced shallot and emboldened with the addition of capers and chopped cornichons. Parsley adds a rounding note, sugar mellows the vinegar from the cornichons, and salt and pepper season it to perfection. It all comes together in a matter of minutes, yet it makes your carefully fried fish taste even better. Of course, a fish isnt a fish fry unless there is also coleslaw. Without coleslaw, it isnt a fish fry, its just some fried fish. I made a batch that emphasizes the cabbage, not the mayo. But the other ingredients (carrots, caraway, mustard, vinegar and sugar) also keep the cabbage from tasting too cabbagy. It was just the way I like it. If you want more mayo, by all means add more mayo. After all, its your fish fry. Stay up to date on life and culture in St. Louis. Sign up! * I understand and agree that registration on or use of this site constitutes agreement to its user agreement and privacy policy. Dr. Ngozi Ezike, who helped guide the states response to the COVID-19 outbreak, will leave her post as Illinois top public health official days after the second anniversary of a pandemic being declared, a significant departure as Gov. J.B. Pritzkers administration attempts to move on from coronavirus restrictions. Ezike joined the administration in early 2019 as director of the Illinois Department of Public Health, typically a low-profile, bureaucratic role. But she became a familiar and, for many, calming presence on TV and computer screens in homes across Illinois in spring 2020 as she appeared with Pritzker at his daily briefings during the early days of the pandemic. I ran for office; she did not. But throughout the crisis she has stood by me every step of the way, Pritzker said Tuesday during a news conference at Rush University Medical Center to mark the end of his statewide mask mandate. I am not putting it lightly when I say that she has had one of the hardest jobs in the world. As a public face of Pritzkers coronavirus response, Ezike provided a dose of empathy along with the days grim statistics and repeated pleas for social distancing, mask wearing and hand-washing. The governor came to rely on her not just for medical guidance but also for help communicating with Spanish-speaking Illinois residents. There was perhaps no better display of Ezikes sincerity than a news conference in October 2020, early in the states second COVID-19 surge, when she began to cry and briefly paused her remarks as she encouraged Illinois residents to fight the fatigue and keep doing their part to slow the virus. I have watched Dr. Ezike mourn the loss of every one of the more than 32,000 Illinoisans who have died from COVID-19, Pritzker said Tuesday. No number of sleepless nights and endless days could wear down her commitment to think first and foremost of Illinois most vulnerable. The governor said he is loath to accept Ezikes departure, which takes effect March 14, but hopes the doctor will be able to get a good nights sleep and precious time with her husband and her four kids. Ezike wiped away tears as Pritzker designated March 1 Dr. Ngozi Ezike Day. She received a standing ovation from Rush workers attending the news conference. I am so blessed to have been able to bring some measure of comfort to Illinoisans, to quiet some of the chaos and to infuse some calm, Ezike said. Im proud to be an example that empathy and strength can exist in the same body and in the same breath. Im glad that I served as a role model to young girls, girls of color, little Black girls, that they can be leaders in any field, said Ezike, the first Black woman to lead the states public health department. And Im proud to show our young boys, as well, the future men of our society, examples of women in leadership. Before being named public health director in 2019, Ezike was medical director at the Cook County Juvenile Temporary Detention Center. Ezike, a board-certified internist and pediatrician, earned her medical degree at the University of California at San Diego. She took the top job at the Department of Public Health after the agency had come under scrutiny for its role in handling a deadly outbreak of Legionnaires disease at a veterans home in downstate Quincy during Republican Gov. Bruce Rauners administration. Under Ezike, the agency again faced tough questions from lawmakers, particularly Republicans, about how it addressed a coronavirus outbreak that tore through the state veterans home in LaSalle in November 2020. Ezikes assistant director, Amaal Tokars, will take over as interim director. Tokars, who is not a medical doctor, has a Ph.D. in leadership and policy from Northern Illinois University and was previously the director of the Kendall County Health Department and president of the Northern Illinois Public Health Consortium. Ezike was not without her detractors as decisions over confronting the pandemic divided Illinois and the rest of the nation, and frequently became a target of scorn for those who believed the governor was overstepping his authority by issuing orders that curbed personal freedoms in an effort to slow the virus. Republican state Sen. Darren Bailey of Xenia, a candidate in the GOP primary for governor who mounted an unsuccessful legal challenge of Pritzkers COVID-19 restrictions, called Ezikes departure good news for students, businesses, and people across Illinois in a message on his campaign Twitter account. The announcement that Ezike is leaving came as the number of COVID-19 patients in Illinois hospitals had dropped below 1,000 the past three days for the first time since early August, before Pritzker reinstated the statewide mask mandate. As of Monday night, there were 958 COVID-19 patients in the states hospitals, down from 3,805 at the end of January and from an all-time high of 7,380 on Jan. 12. State health officials reported 40 more fatalities Tuesday, bringing the average daily number of deaths over the past week to 53. The statewide death toll stood at 32,803 since the beginning of the pandemic. At Tuesdays news conference, Ezike thanked her family including her husband and daughter, who attended Tuesdays event, for tolerating the absences, the last-minute changes in plans, the endless multitasking and the ever-present cellphones. Now, its time to make you my priority and give back a portion of the encouragement and support that you have lavished on me, Ezike said. Julie Pryde, administrator of the Champaign-Urbana Public Health Department, thanked Ezike for working closely with local health departments during the pandemic. As Pryde got choked up about the toll the pandemic has taken on her community, Ezike rushed up to hand Pryde a tissue. Thats so typical, Pryde said. Im struggling, Im on the verge of tears in front of everyone, and who comes to the rescue? Dr. Ezike. Ezike said she has no announcements at all in terms of what the next steps are, but told the Tribune during a brief interview after her formal remarks that shes excited of the unknown. I know that Illinois will be in good stead, with me or without me, Ezike said. But Im excited to embark upon a new chapter. ST. LOUIS COUNTY A U.S. Navy medical team ended a one-month mission at BJC Christian Hospital on Wednesday, and average daily COVID admissions in the regions hospitals tumbled past a key threshold, both signs of the coronavirus continued recession here. Sarah Droege, an emergency room manager at Christian Hospital, said that before the Navy arrived, the hospital was in probably one of our darkest moments. At one point, the emergency department even took over a waiting room from the radiology department. Our volume just skyrocketed, said Droege, from Troy, Illinois. We could not keep up with the volume of patients that were coming in. At the peak in January, the state reported almost 4,000 COVID-19 patients in its hospitals 1,000 more than last winters peak and 1,500 more than the delta-variant-driven summer wave. Hospitals across the region were scrambling. Eleven requested emergency aid from the federal government in January. But the U.S. Department of Health and Human Services told area officials then that it could only send help to one. The team of 44 doctors, nurses and therapists arrived at Christian, off Interstate 270 between Spanish Lake and Black Jack, in the midst of a snowstorm. After training over the weekend, they started work on Jan. 31 in the COVID-19 ward, intensive care unit, the emergency room and throughout the hospital, said Lt. Cmdr. Josh Corbridge. Corbridge, 40, a 10-year Navy veteran from Utah, was working as a health care administrator in Monterey, California, when he was called to St. Louis County. Most of the team came from Washington or California and had never been to St. Louis before, Corbridge said. On days off, some went to the Gateway Arch, St. Louis Blues games or visited the aquarium. It made permanent staff feel good, Droege said, for outsiders to come in and recognize how hard they were working and validate the difficulty of the situation. Patients were more severely ill than some of the Navy personnel were used to, Droege said. Many patients in the area have underlying issues like diabetes or heart conditions that put them at risk of more serious illness. They came at a good time, said Droege, the emergency room manager. Things were starting to dwindle down, but it was just such a breath of fresh air. Kelly Wesley, a charge nurse in the emergency department, said usually the department sees about 120 patients per day. During the surge, including patients with COVID-19 and those with other ailments, it saw about 200. Casey Ballard Jr., a travel nurse from Lawrence, Kansas, who is working in Christian Hospitals emergency department, said he has never, never come close to seeing that volume. But by February, case numbers were dropping precipitously. On Wednesday local hospitals reported a seven-day average of 38 new COVID-19 admissions, down from more than 200 in mid-January the first time in three months that the daily average fell below 40, a threshold at which officials warned hospitals could get overwhelmed. And total virus patients tumbled on Wednesday to 203 across area BJC HealthCare, Mercy, SSM Health and St. Lukes Hospital facilities down from 1,444 in mid-January. The data, which is provided by the St. Louis Metropolitan Pandemic Task Force, lags two days. That all made early Wednesday morning something of a celebration at Christian Hospital. Dozens of U.S. Navy doctors, nurses and respiratory therapists gathered in a room off the hospital lobby for a sendoff by hospital leadership. Later, hospital staff lined one of the front hallways of the hospital and applauded as the Navy personnel departed. Youve gone through a couple ice storms, said Rick Stevens, the hospitals president. You have completed your mission. In Missouri, 55% of the population is fully vaccinated, compared with 65% nationwide, according to the U.S. Centers for Disease Control and Prevention. On Wednesday, the state reported 779 new cases on average each day over the past week and 72 deaths, according to a Post-Dispatch analysis of state data. Concerned about COVID-19? Sign up now to get the most recent coronavirus headlines and other important local and national news sent to your email inbox daily. Sign up! * I understand and agree that registration on or use of this site constitutes agreement to its user agreement and privacy policy. TUESDAY, March 1, 2022 (HealthDay News) -- Women who enter menopause early may be more likely to develop dementia later in life, new research indicates. During menopause, production of the female sex hormone estrogen drops dramatically and a woman's periods come to an end. While women typically enter menopause in their early 50s, many do so earlier either naturally or due to a medical condition or treatment such as a hysterectomy (removal of the uterus). This large study found that women in the U.K. who entered menopause before age 40 were 35% more likely to develop dementia later in life than women who started menopause around age 50. Whats more, women who entered menopause before age 45 were 1.3 times more likely to develop dementia before their 65th birthday, the new study showed. Women with early menopause may need a close monitoring of their cognitive decline in clinical practice, said study author Dr. Wenting Hao, a Ph.D. candidate at Shandong University in Jinan, China. The higher risk for dementia may be due to the sharp estrogen drop that takes place during menopause, Hao said. Estrogen can activate cellular antioxidants such as glutathione, reduce ApoE4, the most common genetic risk factor in the pathogenesis of dementia, and reduce amyloid plaque deposition in the brain, she explained. The build-up of amyloid plaques in the brain is one of the hallmarks of Alzheimer's disease, the most common type of dementia. This doesnt mean that women who start menopause early are powerless against dementia, Hao said. Dementia can be prevented, and there are a number of ways women who experience early menopause may be able to reduce their risk of dementia, he said. This includes getting regular exercise, participating in leisure and educational activities, not smoking or using alcohol, and maintaining a healthy weight, she said. For the study, researchers compared age at menopause and dementia diagnosis among 153,291 women (average age: 60) who were part of the UK Biobank, a large database of genetic and health information on people living in the United Kingdom. They looked for all types of dementia, including Alzheimers. Postmenopausal women are at greater risk of stroke than pre-menopausal women, and stroke may cause vascular dementia, but the study found no link between age at menopause and the risk of this type of dementia. While women who entered menopause early were at higher risk of dementia, those who entered menopause at age 52 or later had similar rates of dementia as women who started menopause at age 50 or 51, the study showed. The new findings held after researchers accounted for other factors that may boost dementia risk, including age at last exam, race, education, cigarette and alcohol use, body fat, heart disease, diabetes, income and leisure and physical activities. The study did not include information on whether women had a family history of dementia or if women entered menopause early for natural or medical reasons, which could affect the findings. The findings were presented Tuesday at a meeting of the American Heart Association held in Chicago and online. Research presented at medical meetings is typically considered preliminary until published in a peer-reviewed journal. These findings are consistent with other studies showing a greater risk of dementia among women with premature or early menopause, said Dr. Stephanie Faubion, medical director of the North American Menopause Society and director of the Mayo Clinic Center for Women's Health. The early loss of estrogen is linked with an increased risk of multiple adverse long-term health outcomes, and dementia is just one of them, said Faubion. Others include heart disease, brittle bone disease, osteoporosis, mood disorders, sexual dysfunction and early death. There may be a role for hormone replacement therapy, she said. In addition to suggesting monitoring of these women, replacing estrogen is a key strategy and has been shown to mitigate dementia risk (and other risks) in women with premature or early menopause, Faubion said. For years, hormone replacement therapy was widely prescribed to treat symptoms of menopause and lower risk for heart disease, osteoporosis and dementia. This all changed when the landmark Women's Health Initiative study showed that taking estrogen and progestin after menopause may increase women's risk for stroke, heart disease, blood clots and breast cancer. (Estrogen helps with menopause symptoms like hot flashes and vaginal dryness, and progestin is added to protect against uterine cancer in women who still have a uterus.) Today, hormone replacement therapy may be prescribed in the lowest dose for the shortest amount of time to maximize benefits and minimize potential risks. More information The Alzheimer's Association offers tips on preventing dementia. SOURCES: Wenting Hao, MD, PhD candidate, Shandong University, Jinan, China.; Stephanie Faubion, MD, MBA, director, Center for Women's Health, Mayo Clinic, Rochester, Minn., and Jacksonville, Fla., and medical director, North American Menopause Society; March 1, 2022, presentation, American Heart Association meeting, Chicago Originally published on consumer.healthday.com, part of the TownNews Content Exchange. WEDNESDAY, March 2, 2022 (HealthDay News) -- People who've had COVID-19 may have long-term immune protection against new variants of the virus, but researchers say vaccination remains the best safeguard against reinfection. Their small new study analyzed blood samples from 24 people whose COVID infections ranged from symptom-free to severe enough to send them to the hospital. While those who had mild or no symptoms didn't always have SARS-CoV-2-specific antibodies in their blood, all 24 had patrolling immune cells called memory B cells that produced SARS-CoV-2 antibodies when exposed to the virus. "We think these results give us real reason for optimism," said senior author Dr. Bill Messer, an assistant professor of molecular microbiology and immunology at Oregon Health & Science University. "The current variants of concern are not likely to truly escape the immune system of people who have recovered from infection," Messer said in a university news release. As long as 11 months after infection, these memory B cells not only appeared to react to the original virus, but also recognized so-called variants of concern. The findings were recently published in the Journal of Infectious Diseases. But researchers said it's not possible to say for sure whether the B-cell response they discovered would actually provide an effective immune response against virus variants. Messer stressed that vaccination offers the best protection against reinfection, and also offers the best protection against serious illness or death for people who have not had COVID. "We probably don't have enough longitudinal data at this point," said study lead author Zoe Lyski, a graduate student in Messer's lab. "These data do allow us to think optimistically about handling the variants. It suggests that if someone is exposed to a variant of concern, the memory B cells generated by vaccination or natural infection are poised to respond." More information There's more on COVID-19 reinfection at the U.S. Centers for Disease Control and Prevention. SOURCE: Oregon Health & Science University, news release, Feb. 28, 2022 Originally published on consumer.healthday.com, part of the TownNews Content Exchange. U.S. Sen. Rand Paul has promised to wage a vigorous review into the origins of the coronavirus if Republicans retake the Senate and he lands a committee chairmanship. Paul spoke to supporters at a campaign rally Saturday in Kentucky. The libertarian-leaning Republican is seeking a third term this year in Kentucky. He says hes in line to assume a committee chairmanship if the GOP wins Senate control after the November election. With that power, he promised to get to the bottom of where this virus came from. U.S. intelligence agencies remain divided on the origins of COVID-19 but believe Chinas leaders didnt know about the virus before the start of the pandemic. WEDNESDAY, March 2, 2022 (HealthDay News) -- Though they're on the front lines of the COVID-19 pandemic, U.S. health care workers' paychecks don't always adequately reward those efforts. Wages for health care workers actually rose less than the average across all U.S. employment sectors during the first and second years of the pandemic, according to a new study that also reported a nationwide decline in the number of health care workers. The research was done by investigators from Indiana University, the University of Michigan and the nonprofit Rand Corporation in Santa Monica, Calif. "While federal programs provided financial assistance to hospitals and institutions, it is important to focus on the effect of the pandemic on health care employment levels and wages, especially if we want to prevent such shortages in the future," said study co-author Christopher Whaley, a policy researcher at Rand. He spoke in an Indiana University news release. For the study, the researchers analyzed federal data covering 95% of all U.S. jobs during 2020 and the first six months of 2021. Overall, wages increased 6.7% in 2020 and 6.9% in 2021, compared to 5% and 1.5%, respectively, for health care workers. Meanwhile, the number of health care-related jobs fell from 22.2 million in 2019 to 21.1 million in mid-2020, a 5.2% drop. The largest decreases were in dental offices (10%) and skilled nursing facilities (8.4%). While employment levels in most health care sectors rebounded to pre-COVID levels last year, employment at skilled nursing facilities was 13.6% lower in 2021 than in 2019. The findings -- recently published in JAMA Health Forum -- are important for planning for and responding to ongoing and future public health crises, the researchers said. They said though employment declines in the health care sector have received extensive media coverage, nationwide employment and wage evidence had been scarce. "These findings provide a data-driven picture of employment levels by various health care settings and can help guide decision-making not only around the current health care shortage but also during a future crisis," said study co-author Kosali Simon, a professor of public and environmental affairs at Indiana University Bloomington. More information For more about the COVID pandemic's impact on health care workers, visit the Chicago School of Professional Psychology. SOURCE: Indiana University, news release, Feb. 25, 2022 Originally published on consumer.healthday.com, part of the TownNews Content Exchange. WEDNESDAY, March 2, 2022 (HealthDay News) -- It looks like coronavirus variants can hide out in the human body much like some of their viral cousins do, making it hard for infected people to get rid of the virus entirely, researchers report. Successive variants have appeared since the original version of SARS-CoV-2 triggered the global pandemic, and vaccines and antibody treatments have proven less effective against some of these variants. Our results showed that one can have several different virus variants in ones body," said Kapil Gupta, a senior research associate in biochemistry at the University of Bristol in the U.K. "Some of these variants may use kidney or spleen cells as their niche to hide, while the body is busy defending against the dominant virus type. This could make it difficult for the infected patients to get rid of SARS-CoV-2 entirely." Gupta is lead author of one of two new studies recently published in the journal Nature Communications. The international team of researchers found that the virus can evolve distinctly in different cell types and adapt its immunity in the same infected person. They focused on the function of a specific pocket in the SARS-CoV-2 spike protein and concluded that it plays an essential role in the virus' ability to spread. An incessant series of variants have completely replaced the original virus by now, with Omicron and Omicron 2 dominating worldwide, said team leader Imre Berger, a professor of biochemistry at University of Bristol. Researchers analyzed an early variant discovered in Bristol dubbed BrisDelta. It had changed its shape from the original virus, but the pocket we had discovered was there, unaltered," Berger explained. BrisDelta represents a small subpopulation in samples from COVID patients, but it appears to infect certain cell-types better than the virus that dominated the first wave, researchers noted. In a related study, researchers created synthetic, safe versions of the virus (virions) to determine how the pocket drives infection. They found that the spike protein on the virus changes shape after binding with a fatty acid. This makes it less visible to the immune system. It appears that this pocket, specifically built to recognize these fatty acids, gives SARS-CoV-2 an advantage inside the body of infected people, allowing it to multiply so fast," said study author Oskar Staufer. "This could explain why it is there, in all variants, including Omicron. Staufer is a joint member of the Max Planck Institute in Heidelberg, Germany, and the Max Planck Center in Bristol, U.K. Intriguingly, the same feature also provides us with a unique opportunity to defeat the virus, exactly because it is so conserved with a tailor-made antiviral molecule that blocks the pocket, he added. A company founded by the researchers is working to develop antiviral drugs that target the pocket. More information For more on COVID-19 variants, go to the U.S. Centers for Disease Control and Prevention. SOURCE: University of Bristol, news release, March 1, 2022 Originally published on consumer.healthday.com, part of the TownNews Content Exchange. WEDNESDAY, March 2, 2022 (HealthDay News) -- If you're a parent using Similac, Alimentum or EleCare infant formulas, here's updated facts on the ongoing product recall. As the U.S. Food and Drug Administration investigates, Abbott Nutrition has recalled certain powdered formulas made at its Sturgis, Mich., facility. The products have been linked to bacterial infections in five babies. All had to be hospitalized and two died, possibly due to their infections. The illnesses occurred in Minnesota, Ohio and Texas between Sept. 16, 2021, and Jan. 4, 2022. The recalled formula products were sold across the United States and in some other countries, according to the FDA. To identify them, look at the lot code, a multidigit number on the bottom of the container. Do not use products if: The first two digits of the code are 22 through 37. The code on the container contains K8, SH or Z2. The expiration date is 4-1-2022 (APR 2022) or later. In addition to these products, Abbott Nutrition has recalled Similac PM 60/40 with a lot code of 27032K80 (can) / 27032K800 (case). You can also go to the company's website and enter the lot code of products you have to see if they are included in the recall. The five reported cases of bacterial infections include four involving Cronobacter sakazakii, and of Salmonella Newport. Cronobacter bacteria can cause severe, life-threatening infections (sepsis) or meningitis (an inflammation of the membranes that protect the brain and spine). Cronobacter infections are rare but are especially high risk for newborns, the FDA said. Salmonella can cause gastrointestinal illness and fever called salmonellosis. Symptoms of Cronobacter and Salmonella infection include: poor feeding, irritability, temperature changes, jaundice, grunting breaths, abnormal body movements, lethargy, rash or blood in the urine or stool. If your infant is experiencing such symptoms, contact your childs health care provider to report them and to receive immediate care, the FDA advised. Infant formula is the only source of nutrition for many newborns and infants, and the recall may affect the availability of certain types of infant formula, the agency noted. It said it is working with Abbott Nutrition on the safe resumption of production in Sturgis, assessing production capacity at other Abbott facilities and asking other infant formula makers about their production capacity. The FDA said parents and caregivers should not make or feed homemade formula to infants, because recipes for them have not been evaluated by the agency and may lack nutrients vital to an infants growth. If your regular formula is not available, contact your childs health care provider for recommendations on changing feeding practices, the FDA said. If you get infant formula through WIC (the Special Supplemental Nutrition Program for Women, Infants, and Children), do not throw the formula out. Instead, take it to the store for a refund/exchange or call Abbott Nutrition at 800-986-8540. WIC recipients should be able to obtain a different brand of similar formula. Contact your local WIC clinic for further assistance, the FDA said. More information For more on infant formula, go to the American Academy of Pediatrics. SOURCE: U.S. Food and Drug Administration, news release, Feb. 28, 2022 Originally published on consumer.healthday.com, part of the TownNews Content Exchange. WEDNESDAY, March 2, 2022 (HealthDay News) -- Can the size of a blood pressure cuff throw off your reading? Yes, claims a new study that found an ill-fitting blood pressure cuff could make the difference between being accurately diagnosed with high blood pressure or not. Blood pressure cuffs come in different sizes, and guidelines say health care providers should use the cuff that best fits a patient's arm. In reality, though, many offices and clinics use one "regular"-size cuff for all adults. In the new study, researchers wanted to see how well that works. The answer was, not very. They found that when they used a regular-size cuff on patients with larger arms, it often produced measurements that were far from accurate. Among patients with "extra-large" arms, the cuff overestimated systolic blood pressure (the top number in a reading) by an average of 20 points. That could easily move a person with normal or mildly elevated blood pressure into "high" territory, said researcher Dr. Tammy Brady, an associate professor at Johns Hopkins University School of Medicine in Baltimore. "I don't think we expected it to make that big of a difference," she said. "Up to 20 [points] is pretty striking." In fact, the study found, 39% of study participants were misdiagnosed with high blood pressure because of an undersized cuff. On the other hand, loose cuffing underestimated blood pressure in adults with smaller arms. When those patients had their reading taken with a regular-size cuff, it trimmed 4 points from their systolic pressure, on average. While that was less dramatic than the effect of a tight cuff, it still made a significant difference: Loose cuffs, the study found, would have missed high blood pressure in 22% of study participants. "It's likely that many clinicians don't know how important this is," Brady noted. Dr. Willie Lawrence, chair of the American Heart Association's National Hypertension Control Initiative Advisory Committee, agreed. Accurately measuring blood pressure, both in health care settings and at home, is "fundamental," Lawrence said. And that takes specific steps, which include using the proper cuff size. "People still don't understand how important that is," Lawrence said. He said the new findings "provide very valuable information for all of us who manage blood pressure." Brady presented the results Tuesday at an AHA conference being held in Chicago and online. Studies released at meetings are generally considered preliminary until they are published in a peer-reviewed journal. The findings are based on 165 adults who had their blood pressure measured using a regular-size cuff and, for those with larger or smaller arms, a cuff that actually fit. Of the participants, 39 had an "extra-large" arm circumference, between 16 and 22 inches. When their blood pressure was taken with a cuff that fit, the average systolic reading was 124 mm Hg -- below the cutoff for diagnosing high blood pressure. But when a regular size cuff was used, that number jumped to 144 mm Hg -- which is considered stage 2 high blood pressure. The opposite was true for people with a small arm circumference of about 8 to 10 inches. When their blood pressure was measured with a regular cuff, the systolic reading averaged 119 mm Hg. With a correctly fitted cuff, that increased to 123 mm Hg. Systolic blood pressure is considered "elevated" when it goes above 120 mm Hg, while a number between 130 and 139 mm Hg is considered stage 1 high blood pressure. Cuff size is just as important for home blood pressure monitoring, both Brady and Lawrence said. Some home monitors come with a cuff that fits a wider range of arm sizes, Brady said. There are also monitors with extra-large cuffs -- though, Brady noted, they can cost much more than other devices. Cuff size is not the only concern, though. Brady said that people using home monitors need to be aware of positioning (sitting upright, feet on the floor, arm supported at chest level) and timing (taking measurements after using the bathroom, and after sitting quietly for five minutes). "Everyone needs to recognize how important these steps are," Brady said. Lawrence recommended that patients bring their home monitor to their next doctor's appointment, to make sure they are using it correctly and getting accurate readings. More information The American Heart Association explains how to use home blood pressure monitors. SOURCES: Tammy Brady, MD, PhD, associate professor, pediatrics, and vice chair, clinical research, Department of Pediatrics, Johns Hopkins University School of Medicine, Baltimore; Willie Lawrence, MD, medical director, Center for Better Health and Cardiovascular Wellness, Spectrum Health Lakeland, Benton Harbor, Mich., and chair, National Hypertension Control Initiative Advisory Committee, American Heart Association, Dallas; American Heart Association's Epidemiology, Prevention, Lifestyle & Cardiometabolic Health Conference 2022, Chicago, presentation, March 1, 2022 Originally published on consumer.healthday.com, part of the TownNews Content Exchange. BELLEVILLE A 34-year-old Belleville man has been arrested and charged with possessing child pornography. The St. Clair County Sheriff's Department began an investigation into Garrett W. Pelch in December after receiving a tip through the Illinois Attorney Generals Office of Internet Crimes Against Children (ICAC) Task Force. Task force officials told deputies they had received a hotline report of possible child pornography being transferred and possessed at an address in the sheriff's jurisdiction. On Monday, deputies searched Pelch's house in the 800 block of Deer Run Road in unincorporated Belleville. They seized computer equipment and arrested Pelch. During the search, "evidence of alleged child pornography was discovered," police wrote in a statement. Pelch was charged with one count of possessing child pornography with a victim under the age of 13 and six counts of of possessing child pornography with a victim under the age of 18. He was in police custody at the St. Clair County Jail on Tuesday. Bail had been set at $150,000. Police said there are no known victims in the case, but asked that anyone with children who have been in contact with Pelch to contact investigator Chris Hoernis at 618-825-5779. Shake off your afternoon slump with the oft-shared and offbeat news of the day, hand-brewed by our online news editors. Sign up! * I understand and agree that registration on or use of this site constitutes agreement to its user agreement and privacy policy. A former De Soto police officer who is facing assault charges accusing him of choking a handcuffed suspect filed a retaliation lawsuit against his department Wednesday in U.S. District Court in St. Louis. James A. Dalys lawsuit says De Soto police Chief Jeff McCreary violated Dalys freedom of speech when McCreary demanded he remove a sign in his yard. The suit says the information and/or decorations ... were directly related to a matter of public concern, to wit race relations in the greater St. Louis community. The sign was a cross containing a slur against Michael Brown, an 18-year-old Black man shot to death by a police officer in Ferguson in 2014. Browns death set off months of protests and unrest. Dalys suit says the sign did not interfere with his work performance or otherwise create a disruption or an inappropriate workplace environment, and was not so egregious as to result in a forfeiture of plaintiff Dalys First Amendment right to the expression of free speech. The suit also says Daly, of Imperial, faced retaliation for raising concerns to supervisors on behalf of a female De Soto employee who said shed been sexually harassed at work. McCreary could not be immediately reached for comment. Daly is currently facing a felony charge and two assault misdemeanors in Jefferson County Circuit Court. Charging documents say that on Sept. 30, 2020, Daly grabbed a handcuffed man by his hand and throat and pushed him down to a bench, where he choked him. Another former officer, Bethany Zarcone, was accused of kneeing the man in the groin, and a third officer, Allayna Campbell, was accused of deleting photos of the arrestee at the behest of a supervisor and charged with tampering with physical evidence. In September, Zarcone pleaded guilty to a misdemeanor assault charge and was sentenced to probation. She also agreed to cooperate in the investigation against Daly. Jefferson County Prosecutor Trisha Stefanski said her office dropped a case against Campbell after she surrendered her Missouri peace officers license and is cooperating with authorities on Dalys criminal case. Shake off your afternoon slump with the oft-shared and offbeat news of the day, hand-brewed by our online news editors. Sign up! * I understand and agree that registration on or use of this site constitutes agreement to its user agreement and privacy policy. JEFFERSON COUNTY A man from Jefferson County was sentenced to 50 years in federal prison for sexually exploiting an Illinois minor and producing child pornography, prosecutors said Tuesday. Earl G. Rice Jr., 63, met the girl on a dating app and traveled from his home in Dittmer to Belleville on Valentine's Day in 2018. He then took her to a Super 8 motel, court records show. Rice engaged in sex acts with the minor and took pictures with his cellphone, prosecutors said. A jury found Rice guilty in October of child enticement, travel with the intent to engage in sex with a minor and producing sexually explicit images of her. He was sentenced Friday. Serious crimes deserve serious punishment, and we are very satisfied with the 50-year sentence imposed on Earl Rice. Nothing could be more important than keeping children safe from sex offenders, said U.S. Attorney Steven D. Weinhoeft in a statement announcing the sentence, adding that parents should be vigilant about monitoring their children's online activity. Shake off your afternoon slump with the oft-shared and offbeat news of the day, hand-brewed by our online news editors. Sign up! * I understand and agree that registration on or use of this site constitutes agreement to its user agreement and privacy policy. Updated with new details from police on when the shooting occurred. ST. LOUIS A man was found dead Tuesday morning in the 4900 block of Goodfellow Boulevard from what police said was a puncture wound. Police received a call for help near Interstate 70 and Goodfellow, and arrived about 9:30 a.m. Tuesday to find the wounded man lying on the ground. He was pronounced dead at the scene, which is in the Walnut Park West neighborhood. The city's homicide division is investigating the death. Anyone with information on the incident is asked to call police at 314-444-5371. Those who want to remain anonymous and are interested in a reward can contact CrimeStoppers at 866-371-TIPS (8477). ST. LOUIS A St. Louis man will serve up to 22 years in prison after pleading guilty in two separate homicide cases. Ricardo Jones, 36, pleaded guilty Monday in separate killings in St. Louis in December 2019 and March 2018. Circuit Judge Teresa Burke accepted Jones' pleas to reduced charges and sentenced him to concurrent 22-year terms. His sentence includes time already served. Jones admitted beating and fatally shooting Bryan Scroggins on Dec. 21, 2019, after holding him and three others at gunpoint in the 5700 block of Kingsbury Place. Jones also admitted fatally shooting Xavier Everett, 23, on March 28, 2018, in the 4700 block of St. Louis Avenue. Shake off your afternoon slump with the oft-shared and offbeat news of the day, hand-brewed by our online news editors. Sign up! * I understand and agree that registration on or use of this site constitutes agreement to its user agreement and privacy policy. ST. LOUIS A St. Louis man found guilty in December of killing his half-brother in 2020 was sentenced Wednesday to 16 years in prison. Circuit Judge John Bird sentenced Keenen Chambers-King, 28, in the June 21, 2020, fatal shooting of Lorenzo Chambers-Harris. Prosecutors said Chambers-King fired at least 11 shots at his 32-year-old half-brother during a fistfight outside a home in the 5200 block of Vernon Avenue. Chambers-King stood trial in December on charges of second-degree murder and testified that he killed Chambers-Harris in self-defense. The shooting stemmed from a fight over Chambers-King's gun that his half-brother and others took while Chambers-King was passed out from drinking at a house party, a prosecutor said in court. A jury in December found Chambers-King guilty of armed criminal action and a lesser count of voluntary manslaughter. The jury recommended 10 years for voluntary manslaughter and six years for armed criminal action. The judge ran those sentences consecutively, noting that Chambers-King shot Chambers-Harris about a dozen times. "Your brother started out that night trying to protect you," Bird told him. Editor's note: An earlier version of this story had an incorrect last name of the victim and misidentified his relationship to the defendant. It also incorrectly reported the location of the party. The story has been updated. Shake off your afternoon slump with the oft-shared and offbeat news of the day, hand-brewed by our online news editors. Sign up! * I understand and agree that registration on or use of this site constitutes agreement to its user agreement and privacy policy. JEFFERSON CITY The Missouri House gave preliminary approval Wednesday to legislation allowing female prison inmates to remain with their infant children while they are behind bars. In an emotional debate, lawmakers say the proposal will reduce recidivism and keep families together after a mother is released from lockup. This is truly a feel-good bill, said a tearful Rep. Bruce DeGroot, an Ellisville Republican who sponsored the measure. The proposal allows inmates who give birth in prison to stay with their children in the facility for up to 18 months. The program does not determine custody rights and screens out any offenders with histories of violence or child abuse. Supporters say the program will reduce recidivism among female inmates. When they get out, they dont come back, DeGroot said. Rep. Kimberly-Ann Collins, D-St. Louis, said the idea would have life-changing effects on incarcerated women and their children. This is something thats very near and dear to my heart. My biological mother, who I have not met yet, conceived me in prison. Thats how I ended up in foster care, said Collins, who was raised by a cousin. This is more than just a feel-good bill. This is historic, said Rep. Rasheen Aldridge, D-St. Louis. DeGroot said the design and regulation of the program is at the discretion of the Department of Corrections, but currently the idea is to retrofit a wing of an existing womens prison to service about seven women and their babies. The estimated cost of the program is about $1 million. According to a nonpartisan fiscal analysis, 26 women gave birth while in prison in 2020. Eleven of the new mothers had drug offenses; six had nonviolent offenses. One had a sex offense, and seven had violent offenses. The analysis also raises questions about liability for the prison system. These prisons are not built for babies. They are institutional buildings built of concrete and steel with heavy locking doors, heavy furniture and numerous features that could constitute a dangerous condition for a baby, the analysis said. Further, these prisons house violent offenders who have already admitted to or been proven guilty of committing bodily harm on others. There are only so many mitigating actions the department can take to make a prison baby-safe and still maintain the security of the facility, the analysis added. Despite the potential pitfalls, the proposal brought out a wide coalition of support, including criminal justice and anti-abortion advocates, medical and social service organizations, and people involved in other states nursery programs. Allowing children to develop secure attachments as infants, advocates said, has also proven to decrease mental health issues such as anxiety and depression later in life. The legislation, House Bill 1897, needs an additional vote in the House before it moves to the Senate for further debate. Originally posted at 12:20 p.m. Wednesday, March 2. Get Government & Politics updates in your inbox! Stay up-to-date on the latest in local and national government and political topics with our newsletter. Sign up! * I understand and agree that registration on or use of this site constitutes agreement to its user agreement and privacy policy. CLAYTON County Council Chair Rita Days says plans for a recreational facility in north St. Louis County are close but wont release details about the project. And she isnt making any promises that shell soon end a monthslong delay to approve the countys share of funding to pay for the Americas Center expansion. Days push to identify and secure funding for the rec center has caused the County Council to delay for months a vote on the $105 million county bond issue. In prepared remarks during a council meeting Tuesday, Days said she was responding to political pressure over the delays and had a team working feverishly to get this project across the finish line. Some of you may have asked why the delay in passing this legislation, but that is the reason why I am giving you an update this evening, Days said. We are close, she added. The city of St. Louis already has issued bonds to pay for its half of the $210 million expansion, which is underway. Days has insisted the regions tourism agency, the St. Louis Convention and Visitors Commission, reneged on a 2019 deal to build the North County rec center. Under the agreement reached with Days predecessor on the council, the late Hazel Erby, the money for the new rec center is supposed to come from a percentage of excess, or unobligated, hotel taxes. But County Budget Director Paul Kreidler has told the County Council that there wont be any excess hotel tax revenues for at least three years because of the pandemic, which cut hotel revenues and tax receipts beginning in 2020. CVC President Kitty Ratcliffe has said the agreement was only to help fund the facility, not design and build it. Ratcliffe said the agency went above and beyond when it paid for a study, released in September, that suggested an indoor track facility. The study, which was released two years after the 2019 agreement, proposed an indoor, 200-meter track facility that could host multiple events, including NCAA-level tournaments, year-round for 4,000 to 5,000 spectators. But it did not make recommendations for other details, including a proposed site, architectural concepts or an estimated cost. Since the CVC study, Days said Tuesday, she put together a team to get this done, and in four months I have experts doing site control, concepts and now arranging financing, she said. The CVC study, she said, was part of a history of delays to proposed projects for majority Black areas. Efforts to bring resources to the Black community are often met by studies, analysis, delays, and needs assessments, Days said. And Days complained that she felt the pressure to release the CVC bonds and or face significant challenges politically and a well-funded opponent. Days, who was elected to succeed Erby on the council in 2019, is running for reelection this year to a full four-year term. Jennings Councilman Terry Wilson is challenging her in the August primary. But Days revealed no other details about possible plans for the facility. The Post-Dispatch previously reported that the University of Missouri-St. Louis was under consideration as the site for the potential recreation complex, and that Days had privately sought for the county to fund the facility restructuring the $105 million special bond issue to add $80 million more in debt to pay for the new rec center. In an interview Wednesday, Days said both the UMSL location and the bond financing were still on the table. But she refused to provide any more details. I dont want to put out something that might change next week, Days said. When I come out and say something I want to make sure that were clear about what is going on, that Im sure about the plan, Im sure about the location. Asked about the political pressure she faced, Days said she was responding to an editorial in the St. Louis American, the Black-owned regional weekly that focuses on issues affecting African Americans. The editorial called Days delay of the convention center bonds vanity-driven leverage to leave her name on a new building, that cost the regions tourism industry, including thousands of Black workers. Asked about the team she mentioned, Days said it included UMSL officials and St. Louis NAACP President Adolphus Pruitt, who had advocated for the 2019 CVC agreement. Asked if there was anyone else on the team, Days told a reporter that there were. But she refused to name them. They just dont want you calling them, Days said. Youll be asking specific questions and thats information were just not ready to release yet. This is a difficult project at best, and we want to make sure that when we do come out with information that its accurate and final. Originally posted at 2:30 p.m. Wednesday, March 2. Get Government & Politics updates in your inbox! Stay up-to-date on the latest in local and national government and political topics with our newsletter. Sign up! * I understand and agree that registration on or use of this site constitutes agreement to its user agreement and privacy policy. CLAYTON Promises by the regions transit agency not to use any St. Louis County funds for the Loop Trolley were not enough for the County Council, which on Tuesday approved a nonbinding resolution to ensure no county money will ever go to support the revival of the dormant system. The council voted unanimously in support of a resolution by Councilman Mark Harder, R-7th District barring the use of any county funds that go to Bi-State Development Agency for the operation, maintain or in any way fund the trolley. The resolution is largely symbolic and wont interfere with Bi-States current plans to take over and restart the trolley as soon as this summer using revenues already generating by the sales tax district along the 2.2-mile line. The system also is in line for a $1.26 million federal grant that must be approved by the East-West Gateway Council of Governments. In a letter Tuesday, Bi-State CEO Taulby Roach sought to assure the council the transit agency wouldnt need to put any funding from the county or the city of St. Louis toward the trolley, which would be on a reduced operating profile. Harder said he was taking him (Roach) at his word but wanted the council to make it clear. I just want to make it clear to Bi-State ... that we will not contribute as a county, he said. I think we owe it to the taxpayers of St. Louis County not to feed this train ride again. Bi-State, which runs Metro Transit, agreed on Feb. 19 to take over operation of the line on a contract basis at the request of Roach and St. Louis Mayor Tishaura O. Jones, who chairs the board of the trolleys sales tax district. County Executive Sam Page also has endorsed the plan. Page was not at the council meeting. Spokesman Doug Moore said in a statement the executive has said many times he does not support any new county funds going to the Loop Trolley. Trolley backers argue the line needs to resume service to avoid repaying federal money that helped build the $51 million line, or risk efforts to get other federal money in the future. The Federal Transit Administration had given local officials until Tuesday to submit a plan to resume trolley service beginning June 1 or face efforts to reclaim as much as $37 million. While I will concede that this project has been fraught with significant issues, the prospect of a default is untenable for the region, Roach said in his letter Tuesday. It is in this circumstance that we are trying to run the project on a minimal basis, with more reasonable objectives and operating plans. 911 and GrandPads The council on Tuesday also gave unanimous final approval to two bills using a total $6.2 million in federal pandemic funds from the American Rescue Plan Act. Page is expected to sign both bills into law, which advanced without opposition. One plan uses $4.2 million for a new 911 emergency dispatch system to upgrade one installed in 2011. Overhauling the St. Louis County Police Departments computer-aided dispatch, or CAD, was among suggestions by an outside consultant, Teneo, that reviewed county and city of St. Louis police departments. The council also approved another $2 million to continue the GrandPad program, which loaned thousands of tablets to homebound seniors isolated during the pandemic. The program, which was paid for through past pandemic aid, is set to expire in March. Mask mandate Tuesdays meeting was the first in more than six weeks in which the council chambers was open to the public. The council had been meeting by video conference in response to the surge in COVID-19 cases spurred by the omicron variant. The reopening came after the county lifted a mask mandate Monday. Page had announced the move last week, citing recent public health officials recommendations that face coverings no longer needed to be required as COVID-19 numbers declined from the winter. But Councilman Tim Fitch, R-3rd District, an opponent of mask mandates, argued Tuesday that Page couldnt lift the order alone without another council vote. The council had approved the mask mandate Jan. 5 in a similar 4-3 vote along party lines, after months of debate and turmoil over previous mask orders. Fitch had argued the mandate was illegal under a state law placing limits on public health measures without legislative approval. On Tuesday, he said that the law required another council vote, even if he didnt recognize the order as valid. Whether I like it or not the council voted 4-3 to pass it, Fitch said So its in effect until this council says its not. Councilwoman Lisa Clancy, D-5th District, said Fitchs move was tacit acknowledgement that there is a mask mandate in place. But she voted with the Republicans, she said, to support the guidance from the countys public health department that masks could be recommended only. Councilwoman Shalonda Webb, D-4th District, said she was just glad it was over with. I dont want to vote or talk about it anymore, she said. Originally posted at 9:45 p.m. Tuesday, March 1. Get Government & Politics updates in your inbox! Stay up-to-date on the latest in local and national government and political topics with our newsletter. Sign up! * I understand and agree that registration on or use of this site constitutes agreement to its user agreement and privacy policy. When was the last time you read the Preamble of the Constitution? It starts We The People , remember? When you read it did you absorb the ideals it espoused or were they just words? It seems that our states Republican legislators are determined to rewrite it as it relates to any issue they (or the citizens in their respective districts) dont personally agree with, particularly Medicaid expansion. Instead, Missouri has morphed the preamble into: We the people of the divided state of Missouri do not have representatives who are the least bit interested in upholding the wishes of the majority of the states constituents. Justice, domestic tranquility, and providing for the common defense be damned. They are not concerned with the general welfare and have no plans to attempt to secure the blessings of liberty to anyone but themselves. They should be ashamed. We have discussed and reported ad nauseam the current history of our Medicaid expansion since the voters approved it in 2020: The governor included the cost in his 2021 budget; Republican state legislators refused to fund it; the governor then removed it from the budget; and after a court determination, was required to advance it anyway. Of course, upgrading the states antiquated computer system took months, resulting in lengthy delays in processing the applications. As of early February, there was a backlog of 73,000 cases pending. With the 64,210 cases that have been processed, that is still less than half of the 275,000 people whose eligibility was projected. Now the legislators want a new constitutional amendment asking voters to reverse their decision. They have advanced a bill to have the programs finances reviewed annually by the General Assembly. Justifiably, Medicaid eligibility is normally reviewed annually. But imagine if the financing of your employee health insurance or Medicare was continuously reviewed by the people whod refused to fund it originally. Many people could find themselves in limbo eligible for coverage, but not covered. Only those people whose income is below 138% of the federal poverty level are potentially eligible anyway. The 2022 income limit in a one-person household is currently $13,590. Try living on that. People will argue that Medicaid recipients didnt pay into any system as did the majority of workers and Medicare beneficiaries. (In 2022, age-eligible citizens who never paid in can still buy Medicare at the base rate of $647.50 a month without drug coverage.) I would counter that everyone in the state pays some sort of taxes sales, gasoline, etc. so stop judging. In August 2020, Tod Palmer of television station KSHB in Kansas City wrote an article detailing the rural versus urban percentages of Medicaid beneficiaries based on MoHealthNets report. (The Census Bureau uses the density of the population to make the urban versus rural delineation.) Missouri has 114 counties and one independent city (St. Louis), the latter of which is classified as urban. Of these counties, only 14 are considered urban. At the time of Palmers piece, 18.3% of the states rural population was enrolled in Medicaid compared with 13.8% of urban residents. Yet, 67% of rural voters rejected Medicaid expansion in the November 2020 election. Well see what percentage of rural residents have filed for benefits since the expansion. Like petulant little children, our legislators continue to offer bills that diminish the lives of the less fortunate, stomping their feet when being told no and searching for ways to ignore the voters will. From their perch in Jefferson City, they look down with judgmental eyes at the people below. Its doubtful that any of them lack health insurance, yet they deny the same to their constituents. A great many medical facilities have closed in Missouri, partially due to a lack of funding. Yet those people in rural areas most determined to re-legislate Medicaid expansion are the ones suffering from the lack of availability of health care. Medicaid would provide preventive screening such as mammograms and colonoscopies that could save lives. It would provide prescriptions for chronic illnesses like high blood pressure, thyroid diseases, and even some diabetic supplies. Bottom line: If people dont want Medicaid, then dont file. Just dont deny coverage for those who do. And maybe send the legislators a copy of the Preamble. Janet Y. Jackson is a Post-Dispatch columnist and Editorial Board member. The idea behind charter schools seemed noble in the beginning: Break the mold, innovate with different teaching techniques, and see if there might be a better way to educate kids than the traditional public school model. But too often in Missouri, charter districts have proven to be little more than get-rich-quick schemes for organizers who reward themselves with generous salaries even while student proficiency levels continue to sag. The whiff of impropriety is again in the air, this time involving Kairos Academies in St. Louis. Charter schools are public schools. Although they are managed independently of traditional school districts, they are supposed to remain fully accountable to the public for every tax dollar they spend, for every teacher and administrator they hire, and for every student who excels or fails. Kairos Academies seems determined to break that mold, too. As the Post-Dispatchs Blythe Bernhard reports, the charter schools founders have created a separate entity, Kairos Academies Vanguard, to handle the bulk of the schools staffing and financial management. Unlike the school, however, Vanguard argued that it didnt have to share certain information with the public. Millions of dollars are being funneled through Vanguard without the proper accountability procedures that apply to other taxpayer-funded entities. Thats unacceptable and of dubious legality, particularly regarding Missouris Sunshine Law, as the states charter-school sponsoring commission warned last month. Kairos Academies has been under scrutiny pretty much since the day it was founded in 2019, largely because its two founders were only 25 at the time. One of them was Jack Krewson, son of then-Mayor Lyda Krewson. At the same time she was working to shore up the flagging St. Louis Public Schools, her son was working to siphon off its students to feed his own venture. Also helping was a hefty infusion from the Opportunity Trust, an education-reform group that helped install Marcus Robinson, the unqualified and still uncertified superintendent of the Normandy School District. Since his arrival, with an annual salary of $215,000, Normandys performance has dropped and is now tied as the lowest-ranked district in the state. Although Kairos proficiency levels are better than Normandys (but still failing badly), the charter district has pushed the envelope further by scheming to avoid levels of transparency and accountability that the law requires of all public schools, including charters. Schemes like this one to spin off a nonprofit organization are trying to do what a lot of corporations do, said Elad Gross, a St. Louis lawyer and transparency maven. Folks are using those same Wall Street-type practices to avoid liability and public transparency. Republican lawmakers, seemingly driven to support anything that helps weaken public education, seem uninterested in tightening charter school oversight. But Kairos example should rankle even the most cynical lawmaker because it defies the entire idea of enforcing full accountability for every taxpayer dollar being spent. Editor's note: This editorial has been updated to correct the status of the state's charter-school sponsoring commission. President Joe Biden held his politically divided audience rapt Tuesday night as he blasted Russian President Vladimir Putin and his corrupt entourage of billionaire oligarchs while cheering Ukraines heroic fight for freedom. The standing ovation Bidens words received from both sides of the aisle worked wonders to reassure Americans that, despite mountainous political differences at home, the state of this union is strong when it comes to defying tyranny and extremism. For far too long, the knee-jerk reaction of both parties has been to find fault with anything and everything the president from the opposing party says or does. During Tuesdays State of the Union address, Biden found more than one way to elicit enthusiastic support from his Republican counterparts. In other words, all is not lost, even for a president whose election prompted an insurrection in the very chamber where he addressed Congress. Biden made a bold choice by splitting in significant ways from the extreme left of his own party and appealing to moderates on the other side. Switching from Ukraine, he turned to crime and public security at home, making clear exactly where he stands: We should all agree: The answer is not to defund the police. The answer is to fund the police with the resources and training they need to protect our communities. Interrupted by GOP applause, Biden repeated himself three times, Fund them. Fund them. Fund them with resources and training. The far left was not amused. Rep. Rashida Tlaib of Michigan issued a bizarre Democratic response to Biden. Rep. Cori Bush of St. Louis complained that Biden omitted any reference to saving Black lives. She tweeted that police funding yielded increased fatal police shootings in 2021, adding, Defund the police. Invest in our communities. Bush tweeted on Feb. 24 her opposition to both military escalation and inhumane sanctions against Russia, putting her in odd alignment with incoherent isolationist Republicans like Sen. Josh Hawley. That wasnt lost on Republican Rep. Liz Cheney of Wyoming, who told the Ripon Society: I think one of the real challenges that we have faced in our party has been a growing sense of isolationism. Now we see it on the Democratic side, as well. But those people in our party who are advocating for the United States to withdraw from the world, who are advocating that somehow the United States shouldnt lead in the world anymore are only leaving a void for Russia, China, Iran and North Korea to fill. Moderate Republicans still have plenty to disagree with in Bidens agenda, but both sides should find common ground in the presidents closing words: Now is our moment to meet and overcome the challenges of our time. And we will, as one people. One America. The United States of America. If theyve got a problem with that, the nation really is in big trouble. Regarding Ukrainians return from abroad to fight Russian invasion (Feb. 27): Several years ago, my boys in high school were in a robotics competition in St. Louis. It was an international competition, with teams from all across the globe: Taiwan, Mexico, Israel, England, etc. One day at lunch, I was waiting for the light to change at the crosswalk and was behind the Ukrainian girls robotics team. I asked how their team was doing, did they enjoy it, and I asked what they thought of America. The tallest girl, blond and blue-eyed, stepped right up to me, shoved a finger in my face, and told me This ees a great country! Regarding Trump at CPAC rally: I got you out of wars (Feb. 27): Republican pundits are correct when they say the Ukrainian invasion wouldnt have happened if Donald Trump were president, but they are wrong as to why that is. In my opinion, the reason is because Russian President Vladimir Putin viewed Trump as an ally trying to achieve a similar agenda as his. Putin is an anti-democracy dictator. As president, I believe Trump undermined basic democratic principles that ultimately led to the Jan. 6, 2021, attack on the Capitol. Trump suggested pulling out of NATO, which would benefit Putins goal of weakening the alliance. Trump also shared classified information with Russian officials, received Russian assistance for his campaign and tried to deplete Ukraines resources through the extortion attempt that led to his first impeachment. After Joe Biden became president, Putin lost a yes-man, and Putin became more isolated in his fight against NATO. Putin no longer had Trumps unstable hold on democracy, nor does he have an American president trying to increase Ukraines vulnerability. Putin is now desperate because he lost the American president who fed into his vanity. Putin would prefer a weak and gullible American president who would yield to him. If Trump was so tough on Russia like many on the right claim, then why did Putin assist with Trumps presidential campaign? Amanda Michenfelder Glendale In January 2022 the U.S. Navy had an unexpected opportunity to demonstrate that its damage control capabilities and training were still as good as ever. An F-35C landing on the nuclear-powered carrier Vinson ran into problems during the approach and crashed into the rear of the ship. The pilot ejected safely and was picked up by a helicopter while the carrier damage control teams extinguished the fire that broke out in the rear of the carrier under the flight deck. Damage was assessed and quickly repaired within 45 minutes and flight operations resumed. There were several other aircraft waiting to land on the Vinson and the quick damage control response enabled those aircraft to land on the Vinson rather than diverting to an airbase. Although the navy has had few opportunities to use its aircraft carrier damage control capabilities since the 1970s, its training and techniques did keep up with advances in aircraft and ship design. This includes the possibility of a carrier being damaged far from any other carrier or land base. Until the 1970s carrier task forces often contained two or more carriers, providing landing options for operations on the high seas. During World War II the navy put over a hundred carriers into service and that provided needed redundancy late in the war when Japan used Kamikaze suicide aircraft tactics against American invasion fleets attacking Japanese positions and ships far from any allied-controlled land bases. Since the 1970s there have been a lot of close calls on carriers, as in fires breaking out on the flight or hangar decks below the flight deck. Such fires were quickly extinguished before they could cause structural damage and disrupt flight operations. There were still disasters on smaller warships, especially during the 1980s and after the 1990s. The U.S. and British navies shared their experiences in such matters and modified ship designs or damage control procedures as needed. Non-carrier damage control skills continued to be maintained and saved several frigates and destroyers that would otherwise have sunk. After World War II the mishaps that badly damaged carriers were all operational, because armed and fueled jets can have accidents while on the flight deck or during landing operations. This made it clear that no matter how safe the aircraft became in the future, there was still the possibility of an accident shutting down carrier flight operations for hours. The retirement of all smaller non-nuclear carriers meant carrier task forces would contain a single carrier, making damage control tech and training more important than ever. One of the major advances in damage control training was the adoption of computer game software customized to represent what damage control teams would face in a major disaster. This enabled damage control teams to get realistic training in situations that could never be recreated just for training. A new generation of officers and sailors grew up with commercial game software of similar detail and realism and took to the new damage control versions. The simulations were also used to examine ship, especially carrier, designs for hidden vulnerabilities that could cause major problems if there was an explosion or large fire on the flight or hangar deck below the flight deck. This sort of scrutiny began before World War II and made American carriers less vulnerable to out-of-control fires because fuel storage and pipes were not built to handle battle damage. There was a similar situation with aircraft. Japanese fighters were more maneuverable early on but also more vulnerable to battle damage, especially in fuel tanks. American aircraft had self-sealing fuel tanks and some armor to protect key aircraft elements, like the pilots. by Austin Bay March 2, 2022 Russian President Vladimir Putin -- he's crazy and delusional. For many troubling reasons, this diagnostic narrative has emerged as a common media theme, a narrative to help explain in personal terms Russia's senseless invasion of Ukraine and Putin's irrational threat to wage nuclear war. From the right (e.g., Fox News, the Wall Street Journal and The Epoch Times), from the left (CNN, MSNBC, The New York Times, etc.), from the street (Ukrainian women crossing the Polish border), people express doubts about Putin's mental state. It's an insistent topic, one with characteristics of a weaponized narrative employed in "narrative warfare." A weaponized narrative can create psychological vulnerabilities in an adversary's population. We've seen Putin weaponize narratives. But can a weaponized narrative create vulnerabilities in a specific adversary? Former Secretary of State Condoleezza Rice told Fox News Putin employs "an ever-deepening, delusional rendering of history ... always a kind of victimology" and that "he is descending into something I haven't personally seen before." That's serious deterioration. Perhaps we've physical clues. Instead of the hard cheeks and macho chest (see Putin the Stud photos circa 2008), doctors note Vlad 2022's cheeks puff like a man taking steroids. Weaponized speculation: Does he suffer from terminal cancer? With his time running out, he ignites a war to achieve his obsession? Shades of Greek drama, but the poets are dramatizing tragedy wrought by obsessed human beings. Time and again obsessed, powerful despots seize the bloody initiative, pursuing empire or Lebensraum nach Osten or a global caliphate. These destructive actors perpetually scourge humanity. I personally believe Putin is delusional and his delusions have spurred insanity. For years I've seen the former KGB colonel as a cunning, calculating, disciplined and narcissistic fanatic driven by a vision of the Russian empire reborn. He seeks to control the core components of the Romanov empire and the Soviet Union: Russia, Ukraine, Belarus and Khazakstan -- the RUBK as I've called it since the late 1990s. RUBK, like Rubik's Cube, a puzzle Putin swears to solve and piece together with the force of his will, no matter the desire of others. Now the force of his will is expressed by dropping cluster bombs on Ukrainian neighborhoods. A dispute persists over the precise translation of Putin's April 25, 2005, lamentation over the demise of the Soviet Union. Did he say that the USSR's demise was "a major geopolitical disaster of the (20th) century" or that it was the "greatest geopolitical catastrophe of the century"? The BBC and NBC News chose "catastrophe." Both translations confirm the USSR's collapse appalled Putin. Definitely a scarred psyche, though twisted psyche and soul seem more apt. Putin suffers two historical ills: revanchism and irredentism. By mobilizing Russian ethnonational sentiments, Putin intends to recover what he regards as lost territories (irredenta) that by God and by history (or myth) belong to Mother Russia. Moreover, outsiders (the U.S., NATO) seek to deny Mother Russia what is Hers. Since the mid-1990s these tropes and claims of Russian victimhood have fired Putin's propaganda. He propagandized his own people. claiming he must act to protect "cut off" Russians and secure "Russian rights" in lost regions (former Soviet territories). He invoked these justifications in 2008 during the Russo-Georgia War. In Russian Army military exercises from around 2016 on the enemy was called "The Western Coalition," deliberately incriminating NATO. Agreed, Putin doesn't act alone. Russian Army generals and Putin's coterie of billionaire Russian oligarchs encouraged his delusions or at least failed to curb them. No one wants to be the naysayer who tells the obsessed leader he can't achieve his goals. The generals and oligarchs signed off on fighting the slow war of attrition Russia has waged in Ukraine since 2014. Vlad did succeed in annexing Crimea. Ukraine, however, continues to resist the conventional invasion Putin launched in February. Why escalate to tanks and air attacks and airborne assaults? Why gamble now? Is the terminal illness plot something other than my fiction? A fact: Antiwar protests, many led by the parents of Russian conscript soldiers, have occurred in over 30 Russian cities. Russian oligarchs and mafiya types value their money. Sanctions will ultimately squeeze oligarch accounts and even seize laundered cash. Britain and other countries are moving to seize real estate assets owned by Russian oligarchs. Denying Russia's banks market access has already trashed the ruble. Oligarchs must choose between their money and Putin. The best way out of this stupid, murderous war -- for Russians, for Ukrainians, the rest of the world, including greedy oligarchs -- isn't more sanctions or more war. The way out for the oligarchs is a Kremlin coup toppling Putin. The gallows humorists call it a nine-millimeter solution -- a bullet to the insane man's head. Who does the deed? Leave that to the oligarchs and embarrassed generals. The price of flour in Libya went up 31 percent the day after the Russian invasion of Ukraine began ten days ago. These two countries account for 30 percent of world wheat exports and Libya gets all of its annual 1.35 million tons of wheat and barley imports from Russia and Ukraine. Other sources, mainly in the Americas and Australia, are available but they are much farther away, meaning higher shipping costs in addition to the shortage-related price increases. Before the civil war Libya produced most of the grains it needed but economic and transportation disruptions have halted most of that. Russia has been providing military and economic assistance to Libya for decades, mainly because of the good relation with Libyan dictator Kaddafi. That relationship ended when Kaddafi was killed during the 2011 uprising. There was no unified government to replace the dictatorship then and there still isnt. Russia tried to maintain its embassy in Tripoli but finally closed it in October 2013. Russia kept tabs on Libyan developments via its embassies in other Arab nations, particularly Egypt. The Libyans could not agree on a new government and by 2015 there were two major factions, one in the capital Tripoli and backed by the UN and the other in the east, based in Tobruk. The primary dispute between the two factions was support of Islamic political parties and some Islamic terrorist groups. In Most of Libya, especially the east, that attitude was not acceptable and the growing number of Islamic terror groups in Libya had become a major threat to most Libyans. The most effective opponent of the Islamic terrorists was a former Libyan army officer, Khalifa Haftar, who fled Libya in the 1980s after incurring the wrath of dictator Kaddafi. Now an American citizen, he returned to eastern Libya in 2013, revived some of the units of the Kaddafi-era military and began taking control of military bases from militias and Islamic terrorists. Eastern tribes rallied to Haftar, who had organized the most effective counterterrorism effort in the country. Haftar had the support of most Arab states, especially Egypt and the UAE. Egypt has a vulnerable border with Libya that was being used by Islamic terror groups to move people in and out as well as smuggle weapons into Egypt. Egypt provided a land route to Libya for supplies and weapons for the LNA, largely paid for by the UAE and other Arab oil states. Russia also backed Haftar and by 2016 Haftar was making regular visits to Russia to discuss cooperation against the Islamic terrorists in Libya. In January 2017 the Russian government visited Haftar when the Russian aircraft carrier Kuznetsov and its escorts arrived off the coast of eastern Libya. The carrier sent a helicopter to nearby Tobruk and picked up Khalifa Haftar and two other senior officers, all in uniform, and took them to the carrier. The visit to the Kuznetsov was captured on video and broadcast. The video showed the event treated as an official visit with sailors in dress uniforms lined up and a band playing the Libyan national anthem. What impressed the Russians was Haftars long-range plan for uniting Libya, holding elections and allowing the Libyan economy to thrive once more. Russia began providing military assistance, in the form of advisors and technicians to repair and restore a lot of Russian tanks, artillery and aircraft that were still intact but out of action because of a lack of repairs and new parts. Russia and Arab allies also helped Haftar with logistics. Haftar forces were effective and loyal because Haftar took care of them and minimized friendly casualties. The Russian and Arab support enabled the LNA to pacify 90 percent of Libya and by early 2019 Haftar was closing in on Tripoli, where the UN-backed GNA (Government of National Accord) was barely able to maintain order in Tripoli and two other eastern cities dominated by Islamic militias who openly feuded with each other and barely tolerated the GNA. By mid-2019 the LNA offensive was working its way towards taking Tripoli when Turkey showed up with an offer the GNA couldnt refuse; military intervention against the LNA. In return the GNA would sign a treaty with Turkey granting some offshore rights Libya didnt have. The GNA did not have the authority to sign such deals but its patron the UN did little more than protest as Turkey began moving in weapons and troops, especially 10,000 Syrian Arab mercenaries, to halt the LNA advance. By February 2020 the LNA agreed to a ceasefire. This held and led to a peace deal in which the GNA and eastern HoR (House of representatives) governments agreed to merge and carry out national elections. Part of the deal was Russia and Turkey withdrawing their troops. Russia began doing so but the Turks did not. The Russian force was much smaller (about 1,200 Wagner Group military contractors and Russian technicians for maintaining equipment) that the 12,000 Turkish troops and Arab mercenaries. Russia had another reason for pulling out most its personnel, it could no longer afford it. That was the result of economic sanctions imposed after the 2014 Russian attack on Ukraine. That operation escalated into a larger operation recently and Russia is now burdened with even heavier sanctions. This will probably lead to the departure of all Russian military personnel. The Turks are now the major obstacle to Libyan unity and elections. Russia also has forces in Syria, where it is an ally of Turkey. March 1, 2022: The GNU (Government of National Unity) officially refused to recognize a vote taken today by the HoR (House of Representatives). The HoR represents more Libyans than the Tripoly based GNA (Government of National Accord). The GNA and HoR are in the process of merging but that process, and the long-sought national elections, are currently blocked by a dispute within the GNU between the newly elected president, former interior minister Fathi Bashagha and the original Prime Minister Abdul Hamid Dbeibah, whose term of office ended in December. This dispute has been going on since January and the UN has not taken sides so far. Dbeibah turned out to be corrupt and willing to accept the Turkish presence in Libya. Dbeibah and members of his cabinet refuse to cede power to Bashagha, who is backed by the eastern HoR faction and its military forces (the LNA), which still control most of Libya. Bashagha believes he can organize national elections in 14 months, unless the UN backs Dbeibah or does nothing to block interference from Dbeibah. Bashagha had backed Turkish intervention in 2019 and 2020, but turned against the Turks when the Turks indicated they were not leaving Libya. The December 24 elections did not happen and there are disagreements in Libya and the UN over a new date for national elections. The UN also wants to replace many of the local officials in the GNU. In late 2020 the UN brokered the creation of the GNU, yet another temporary government to unite Libya. The Turks, Russians, GNA , HoR and LNA (Libyan National Army) agreed to withdraw their forces as part of a late 2020 ceasefire/national unification plan. This agreement called for national elections to be held by the end of 2021. That did not happen, mainly because of the continued presence of Turkish forces and disagreements over the new constitution and who can run for office. The Turks realize they dont have to fight to remain in Libya, just disrupt and delay any efforts, like elections or a UN condemnation, to force them to leave or fight to stay. February 28, 2022: The United States, France, Germany, Italy and Britain are pressuring all factions in Libya to condemn the Russian invasion of Ukraine. Most Libyans prefer to remain neutral, because Russia has been helpful to Libya and the only foreign power that tried to use force to block the Turkish 2020 intervention. The UN-backed GNU (Government of National Unity) government refused to recognize the Russian sponsored independence of Donetsk and Luhansk in eastern Ukraine and condemned the subsequent Russian invasion of Ukraine. February 27, 2022: There are hundreds of Libyans living in Ukraine and all of them have been advised to leave. The Libyan embassies in Ukraine and Slovakia are organizing the evacuation, which includes all embassy personnel and 200 Libyans have already reached the Slovak border, which is south of the Polish border and easier to get to because there is Russian military activity along the Polish border. PARIS--(BUSINESS WIRE)-- Regulatory News: Getlink (Paris: GET): The Board of Directors, meeting on 23 February 2022 under the chairmanship of Jacques Gounon, resolved to convene the ordinary and extraordinary General Meeting of Getlinks shareholders on 27 April 20221. The Board of Directors agreed the financial resolutions to be proposed to the shareholders at the General Meeting as well as those relating to the unchanged remuneration of the Chief Executive Officer, the Chairman and the Directors. It is proposed that shareholders vote on a dividend of 0.10 per share. In view of the rules on the independence of directors set out in the Afep-Medef Code applicable to Getlink, the Board of Directors has decided not to propose the renewal of the terms of office of Patricia Hewitt nor Jean-Pierre Trotignon (twelve years tenure). The Board of Directors warmly thanks Patricia Hewitt and Jean-Pierre Trotignon for the quality of their involvement in the work of the Board of Directors and its committees. The Board of Directors has decided to propose to the shareholders General Meeting the renewal of the terms of office as Directors of Corinne Bach, Elisabetta De Bernardi di Valserra, Carlo Bertazzo, Bertrand Badre and Jacques Gounon, whose terms of office expire at the end of the General Meeting, for a period of four years, as well as the renewal of Perrette Reys term of office for a period of one year. Subject to the renewal of his term of office as Director by the General Meeting, the Board of Directors will decide on the renewal of Jacques Gounon's term of office as Chairman of the Board of Directors. In addition, in order to maintain strong credentials in geostrategic issues and British public affairs, the Board has decided to propose to the General Meeting the appointment of Lord Ricketts, a former UK Ambassador to France and a member of the UK House of Lords, as a member of the Getlink Board of Directors for a period of four years. As an extension of its commitment to energy transition, the Board has decided to propose to the General Meeting the appointment of Brune Poirson as a member of the Getlink Board of Directors for a period of four years. Brune Poirson, a French former minister who has always been committed to sustainable development, will bring to the Board of Directors her expertise, particularly in environmental matters. She will contribute to expanding the Board's work on the Group's sustainable development strategy and related action plans. In the same vein, the Board of Directors has decided to propose a resolution to shareholders for a Say on Climate advisory vote on Getlink's ambition and targets for the transition to carbon neutrality. Subject to public health conditions at the relevant time, the combined General Meeting will be held in person on 27 April 2022 at 10:00 a.m. (CET) in Marcq-en-Barul (Lille, France). *************** BRUNE POIRSON Born in 1982 in Washington D.C., of French and American nationality, and a graduate of the London School of Economics, the IEP at Aix and the Kennedy School at Harvard, Brune Poirson began her career in London, within the Foundation for Innovation of Great Britain, then joined the French Development Agency as a development coordinator in New Delhi, on a project for the distribution of drinking water in shanty towns. After some time as the director of sustainable development and social responsibility for one of Veolia's subsidiaries in Delhi, she joined a green start-up incubator in Boston. Brune Poirson was for three years French Secretary of State for Ecological Transition and the first French woman to be elected Vice-President of the United Nations Environment Assembly. Brune Poirson is Chief Sustainable Development Officer and a member of the executive committee of the French hotel group Accor. LORD RICKETTS Born in 1952, a British national and with an MA degree from Pembroke College Oxford and honorary doctorates from the University of Kent (DCL) and the University of Bath (DLL), Peter Ricketts, Baron Ricketts of Shortlands, began his career at the UK Foreign and Commonwealth Office (FCO) in 1974. He was posted to the UK delegation to NATO in Brussels before becoming assistant private secretary at the FCO to the then Foreign Secretary Sir Geoffrey Howe in 1983, then First Secretary at the Embassy in Washington (USA) in 1985, Head of Division in Hong Kong in 1990, advisor for European and Economic Affairs in the French Embassy in 1995 and deputy political director in 1997. In 2000, he was appointed chairman of the Joint Intelligence Committee, then in 2001 political director of the FCO. From 2003 to 2006, he was the UK Permanent Representative to NATO. In 2006, he became Permanent Under Secretary of the FCO, and in 2010, National Security Adviser to the UK government. From 2012 to January 2016, he was the UKs ambassador to France and Monaco. A member of the UK House of Lords, chairman of the Normandy Memorial Trust (Voluntary Association) (UK), Vice Chairman of the Royal United Services Institute, London, Peter Ricketts is a member of the Board of Directors and a member of the nomination, remuneration and governance committee of ENGIE. 1 The notice of meeting will be published in the BALO (the French legal gazette) on 2 March 2022 and will be available on the Company's website. View source version on businesswire.com: https://www.businesswire.com/news/home/20220301006039/en/ For UK media enquiries contact John Keefe on + 44 (0) 1303 284491 Email: [email protected] For other media enquiries contact Romain Dufour on +33(0)1 4098 0464 For investor enquiries contact: Jean-Baptiste Roussille on +33 (0)1 40 98 04 81 Email: [email protected] Michael Schuller on +44 (0) 1303 288749 Email: [email protected] Source: Getlink FILE PHOTO: Models of oil barrels and a pump jack are displayed in front of a rising stock graph and "$100" in this illustration taken February 24, 2022. REUTERS/Dado Ruvic/Illustration By David Gaffen NEW YORK (Reuters) -Oil surged relentlessly beyond $110 a barrel on Wednesday, extending its rally since Russia invaded Ukraine seven days ago, on expectations that the market will remain short of supply for months to come following sanctions on Moscow and a flood of divestment from Russian oil assets by major companies. The market rallied into the close of trading on heavy volume, with global benchmark Brent crude ending the day at its highest close since June 2014, while U.S. crude's settlement was its highest since May 2011. The oil rally has been dramatic, with Brent gaining over 15% this week alone as the West responded to Moscow's invasion with numerous sanctions, which have targeted financial transactions and banks, designed to hammer Russia's economy. While the energy sector was not specifically targeted, the sanctions have hampered exporting capabilities from Russia, whose oil exports account for about 8% of global supply, or 4 million to 5 million barrels per day, more than any nation other than Saudi Arabia. "It increasingly looks like the market is pricing in a supply disruption to at least part of the nearly 4 million barrels per day of oil that is sold into the U.S. and EU," said Andrew Lipow, president of Lipow Oil Associates in Houston. Brent crude futures peaked at $113.94 a barrel during the session, before settling at $112.93, up $7.96, or 7.6%. U.S. West Texas Intermediate (WTI) crude futures hit a high of $112.51 a barrel, and closed $7.19, or 7%, higher at $110.60. "Demand destruction - through still higher prices - is now likely the only sufficient rebalancing mechanism," said Goldman Sachs analyst in a note. Relief in the form of more supply is unlikely in the near-term. The Organization of the Petroleum Exporting Countries and allies - which include Russia - stuck to their long-term plan to boost output by just 400,000 barrels per day at a brief meeting on Wednesday. Even as the producer group, known as OPEC+, has increased output for the last several months, member states are routinely falling short of their targets, widening a gap that can only be filled by dipping into stockpiles. Current worldwide demand has roughly reached pre-pandemic levels, and there is inadequate supply, causing large countries to dip into their stockpiles to make up for the shortfall. Refiners and other buyers of oil are scrambling. Prominent grades of crude oil traded worldwide, such as those in the North Sea and the Middle East, are at record premiums above Brent. At the same time, the key Russian Urals grade is being discounted at $18 lower than the benchmark - and prospective sellers are still finding little interest in Russian oil. On Wednesday, Russia's Surgutneftegaz was unable to sell 880,000 tonnes of Urals oil from Russian ports, following cancellations of other proposed sales. Adding fuel to the fire, the White House on Wednesday said it was "very open" to the possibility of targeting Russian oil-and-gas with sanctions. That could drive prices even higher, analysts said, until consumers start to balk at the rising costs. The United States has attempted to thread the needle between actions that will hurt global oil markets and those aimed at Russia. On Wednesday, the U.S. imposed new export curbs on specific refining technologies, intended to hurt Russia's oil refining sector down the road. Trade in Russian oil was already in disarray as producers postponed sales, importers rejected Russian ships and buyers worldwide searched elsewhere for crude as Western sanctions and pullouts by private companies squeezed Russia. On Wednesday, merchant trader Trafigura said it had frozen its investments in Russia, a day after numerous global oil majors announced plans to divest of their Russian investments, including Exxon Mobil, BP and Shell. U.S. oil inventories continued to decline, meanwhile. The key Cushing, Oklahoma crude hub's tanks were at their lowest since 2018, while the U.S. strategic reserves dropped to a near 20-year low - and that was before another release announced by the White House on Tuesday in tandem with other industrialised nations. [EIA/S] That release of 60 million barrels of oil agreed by International Energy Agency member countries failed to reassure the market and prices extended their rally. "Given the 100 million bpd oil demand market, 60 million barrels satiates slightly over half a day of demand...and barely gets the market past lunchtime," wrote RBC Capital Markets analyst Michael Tran. (Additioanl reporting by Sonali Paul in Melbourne and Muyu Xu in Beijing; Editing by Marguerita Choy and Kirsten Donovan) HUNTER ARMY AIRFIELD, Ga. The Fort Stewart soldiers ordered last week to Europe on a short-notice deployment to deter Russian aggression will become the first unit to draw heavy armored weapons including tanks from the Armys prepositioned stocks on the Continent, commanders said Wednesday. Roughly 3,800 soldiers of the 1st Armored Brigade Combat Team of the 3rd Infantry Division crammed months of training into mere weeks last month after they were notified they could be called on short notice to Europe as Russia amassed an invasion force around Ukraine, Army Maj. Gen. Charles Costanza said, as dozens of soldiers boarded planes bound for Germany. After Russia launched its attack on Ukraine last week, the entire brigade was ordered to Hohenfels, Germany, where it will gather its weapons and vehicles and train before potentially deploying to bolster NATO defenses on its eastern flank. These soldiers were all out shooting gunnery just two weeks ago, Costanza, the 3rd ID commander, told reporters at Hunter Army Airfield, an extension of Fort Stewart in Savannah, Ga. They were out and we had a little bit of indication that potentially they would deploy so we started preparing a little bit early. But they literally came right off the gunnery range about a week ago, packed containers, and then started getting on airplanes. On Wednesday, at least two flights carried more than 200 troops with the brigade's 3rd Battalion, 69th Armored Regiment from the airfield, where soldiers anxiously awaited their flights in the installation's deployment terminal. Some sent last-minute texts, checked their rifles or joked around before marching onto a Germany-bound plane. The deployment is a first for the Army a short-notice of a heavy armored brigade combat team that uses mechanized vehicles such as tanks, self-propelled artillery, and Bradley Fighting Vehicles. It comes just seven months after the brigade returned from a nine-month deployment to South Korea. Soldiers said the two deployments are incomparable. Units had months to prepare and train for their mission to Korea, where they spent much of the deployment training alongside South Korean forces. There was no way to prepare specifically for this mission, said Capt. Troy Makulec, a company commander with 1st Brigades 3rd Battalion, 69th Armored Regiment. We took our entire training glide path that we had templated for the next three or four months and we essentially crammed it down into 20 days for the whole brigade, he said. A lot of people put in a ton of hours planning and preparing for that and executing it. The soldiers took right to it, especially considering the circumstances not knowing if they would soon be boarding planes for Europe, Makulec said. I mean, they went out there and they nailed it, he said. The bulk of the unit has never deployed into combat before, said the 29-year-old captain, who in his eight years in the service was never deployed into a war zone. Though President Joe Biden has said repeatedly that he will not send American service members into Ukraine, Makulec and other soldiers said this deployment feels more like a combat mission than a typical training rotation. For Sgt. 1st Class Joshua Cooner, a tank platoon sergeant with 15 years of Army experience including combat deployments to Iraq, this mission has a different feel to it than his past deployments primarily because he didnt spend months training for a specific mission. Our inability to predict all of this caused us to basically focus on the things we could do immediately to get us prepared, said Cooner, a member of 3-69 Armor that left Hunter on Wednesday. We did a [training regimen] that would normally take anywhere from 12 to 21 days, and we were able to accomplish all that within five. So those condensed timelines lead to more stress in the short term, but feel like a better training scenario for the mission we may face whatever that is. Cooner, 35, said it was difficult to leave his wife and three school-aged daughters again so shortly after returning from Korea. The short notice actually might have made it simpler on the family, he said. You know this isn't a new thing deploying away from the family, Cooner said. Even though there is all the uncertainty of everything around this deployment, honestly, I think, for me, and for my family, it was almost easier because we didn't have a lot of time to like think, you know, were leaving in three months, then two months. That countdown. This scenario is almost like ripping off the Band-Aid and being like, OK, well, we're going, thats it. But neither Cooner nor anyone else knows how long the brigade will be in Europe. The unit was ordered to prepare to stay six months, but with the Russian invasion continuing in Ukraine and fears among NATO allies that Russian President Vladimir Putin could turn his forces on a NATO country, Costanza and other officials cautioned 3rd Brigades deployment could be extended or shortened. The Pentagon has already extended a deployment to Europe for the 1st Brigade Combat Team of the 1st Infantry Division, another heavy armored brigade, which was set to return in the coming weeks to Fort Riley, Kan. Meanwhile, the unit scheduled to replace the 1st ID brigade the 3rd Armored Brigade Combat Team of the 4th Infantry Division will deploy to Europe in the coming weeks. That will give the United States three heavy brigades on the Continent for the first time in decades. The significance of that much American firepower in Europe was not lost on U.S. soldiers, Costanza said, calling the move appropriate considering Russias actions. Our NATO allies and partners are in a position that we need that much [power] forward deployed, the general said. Cooner and Makulec said they had been watching Russias attack on Ukraine, though the soldiers are mostly focused on their own roles, for now. Once in Germany, that means pulling thousands of vehicles and heavy weapons from the pre-set equipment, known as Army Prepositioned Stocks-2. The stocks are meant to field massive amounts of firepower rapidly to American forces in the case of a major conflict in Europe. While the plans, which have never been executed, date back to the Cold War, the equipment is modern gear almost identical to the weapons with which 1st Brigade, 3rd ID has been training at Fort Stewart, Costanza said. The general said the equipment is in surprising very, very good condition and soldiers should easily adjust to their new tanks and vehicles. We know there'll be some challenges as we start to shoot the vehicles and everything else, he said. Of course, were going to find some issues and challenges but its all in a really good shape right now. Soldiers have been conducting tabletop exercises and dress rehearsals to prepare to draw their new gear in Germany, officials said. Using the prepositioned stock for the first time in Europe poses a really interesting challenge, Makulec said. However, he expects his soldiers would quickly adapt to any subtle differences in their gear. These are the same types of platforms that we have organic to our unit, so there's no big change in training, the captain said. It's just a matter of getting to know the individual quirks of your vehicle just like everyone's car has individual quirks. I think it's going to be a really interesting experience to take those vehicles out and shoot them. Cooner concurred. Im excited about this, the sergeant first class said. Its awesome to see this team come together to go and support our allies and, hopefully, deter aggression. Knowing were going to have three armored brigade combat teams in Europe just a huge force is really cool, especially as a tanker, and it shows our unified strength. I think most of us are pretty excited about that and ready to go. KAISERSLAUTERN, Germany Soldiers of the 1st Armored Brigade Combat Team, 3rd Infantry Division were scheduled by Bavarias governor to receive a traditional white sausage brunch following their arrival in Nuremberg, Germany. Bavarian governor Markus Soeder exchanged fist bumps with 200 soldiers as they disembarked from their plane Tuesday. On the tarmac, he delivered a welcome speech in which he thanked troops for their commitment to NATOs defense. NATO is a guarantor of security and peace in the world, Soeder said. We are thankful for the close friendship. God bless you. Soeder ordered 4,000 sausages to be served at the Grafenwoehr Training Area, where the soldiers will be housed, the Bavarian Broadcasting Channel reported. The training area is the U.S. Armys largest in Europe. It wasnt immediately clear what day the brunch would be served. The governors staff is coordinating with Army officials at Grafenwoehr, a spokeswoman for Soeder told Stars and Stripes on Wednesday. The short, plump sausage known as weisswurst is a Bavarian specialty, traditionally made from a mixture of finely minced veal and back bacon. It is usually served with stone-ground mustard, a large salted pretzel and a Bavarian wheat beer. The brigade, based at Fort Stewart, Ga., is expected to provide 3,800 of the 7,000 service members deployed to reassure allies and bolster NATOs defensive posture following Russias full-scale invasion of Ukraine. The temporary deployments add to the more than 80,000 U.S. troops already in Europe on rotational or permanent orders, U.S. Army Europe and Africa said Wednesday. The soldiers will train with the 7th Army Training Command at Grafenwoehr. More than 20 additional aircraft with reinforcement personnel are slated to follow in the coming weeks. A Coast Guard icebreaker is laying claim to a world record, with crew members saying they sailed a little farther south than anyone else before them. On Friday, the USCGC Polar Star reached a southern latitude of 78 degrees, 44 minutes and 1.32 seconds in Antarcticas Bay of Whales, according to a Coast Guard statement Tuesday. The crew of the Polar Star is working with Guinness World Records to get official confirmation of the achievement, the statement said, without stipulating how long the process would take. The current mark was set in 2017, when the Russian expedition vessel Spirit of Enderby reached a latitude of 78 degrees, 44 minutes. A second of latitude equals 101 feet. The Spirit of Enderby also is sometimes referred to as the Professor Khromov. The purported new world record was made possible because of a gradual melting of the Ross Ice Shelf. The Polar Star came within 500 yards of the shelf during its voyage, the Coast Guard statement said. The ships crew of about 160 sailed in waters that were previously part of the ice shelf and therefore were not navigable, the Coast Guard said. Officials added that parts of the ice mass are as much as 12 nautical miles from the positions depicted on official charts because of the melting. A survey by the Polar Star of nearly 400 nautical miles of the area will likely result in updates to those charts, the Coast Guard statement said. In 1908, the British explorer Ernest Shackleton gave the Bay of Whales its name because of the numerous whales he and his crew saw there. Three years later, Norwegian explorer Roald Amundsen established a base camp in the bay, from which he set out on his successful endeavor to become the first person to reach the South Pole. Years later, U.S. Navy Rear Adm. Richard Byrd established Little America in the Bay of Whales and went on to explore more than 60% of Antarctica. The crew of Polar Star is proud to follow in the footsteps of legendary Antarctic explorers like Shackleton, Amundsen and Byrd, Capt. William Woityra, commanding officer of Polar Star, said in a statement. Even today, more than a century later, we carry on that legacy of exploration, reaching new places and expanding human understanding of our planet. The Polar Star, the United States only active heavy icebreaker, arrived in Antarctica last month after a nearly three-month journey from Seattle. That was the aging vessels 25th journey to the continent. It was there to support Operation Deep Freeze, an annual mission to resupply American scientists doing research near the South Pole. MCLB-ALBANY, Ga. (Tribune News Service) Through conflicts and wars across the globe, floods, a tornado and hurricane close to home, and base realignments and closures over the years, Marine Corps Logistics Base Albany has played a critical role in defending the country for seven decades. On Tuesday, the military installation and community celebrated the 70th anniversary of the base, which was established as the Korean War raged. "The basic fundamentals really haven't changed, sustaining and maintaining the Marine Corps," Col. Michael J. Fitzgerald, the commanding officer of the base, said during an interview following a Tuesday ceremony. "What has changed is the technology." A small group of Marines set up in temporary buildings in Albany on March 1, 1952, with the establishment of Marine Corps Depot of Supplies. After two name changes, it took its current name on Nov. 1, 1978. Today, MCLB-Albany is one of six commands under Marine Corps Installations East, headquartered at Camp Lejeune in North Carolina. The primary tenant command, Marine Corps Logistics Command, is headquartered at MCLB-Albany and is responsible for maximizing materiel readiness and sustainment during peace, war and contingency operations. "From the Korean War to the present today, what this base does matters around the world," Fitzgerald said. "It has impacts around the world. "As recent world events have shown us, the world is not nice. We have to be prepared for the future." Some of the work at the base includes taking a truck or Humvee that has seen hard service, tearing it down to its individual components and putting it together like new. During the Iraq War the base quickly mobilized to protect vulnerable vehicles with armor to protect the personnel riding in them from improvised explosive devices. "At first they had thin-skinned vehicles built for the Cold War," Fitzgerald said. Protective armor was produced and shipped to help protect the equipment in use, and the military personnel riding in it, until more beefed-up vehicles were manufactured and deployed. The mission of the base is done with a small contingent of active-duty military personnel and the "civilian Marines" local employees and contractors who make up the bulk of the work force. There are a total of about 5,000 who work at the facility. "Ninety-five to 98 percent of the work force are civilian Marines," Fitzgerald said. "This base and the community are one and the same. The community and the base have grown over the years into one unit." During the ceremony, the audience heard the recitation of accolades from members of Congress, Department of Defense officials and proclamations from Albany Mayor Bo Dorough and the Dougherty County Commission. Some of those statements noted the natural disasters the base has dealt with and cited the base for continuing its vital mission in the wake of those strikes while also lending a helping hand in the community to save lives and aiding in recovery. MCLB-Albany is on the cutting edge in terms of technology and innovation and is posed to become the first "net-zero" base through partnerships with the Albany Procter & Gamble plant to provide energy through a biomass generator and with Dougherty County, which provides methane released during the breakdown of waste at its landfill. The $20 million methane generator plant was completed in September 2011. In another partnership, the base became home to a 44-acre solar farm, with 150 acres leased to Georgia Power Co. for production of power for the company's customers. The base also is bringing in green cars and charging infrastructure and serves as the site of several pilot projects, including a 5G smart warehouse currently being developed. "The base's unique size, in that it is smaller, allows the Marine Corps to invest in future technology to secure tax funds, and then it is expanded to the rest of the Marine Corps," Fitzgerald said. "It is efficient and effective with the least cost to the public." During the 2019 fiscal year, MCLB-Albany had an estimated $1.7 billion economic impact on southwest Georgia, and its 3,600 acres is home to some 40 tenant organizations, including the Georgia Army National Guard, Albany Veterans Affairs Community-Based Outpatient Clinic and Naval Facilities Engineering Command. "We have a rich history with the Marine base here," Dougherty County Commission Chairman Chris Cohilas, who attended the ceremony, said during a telephone interview. "It's one of our prime assets. I'm very proud it is a prime asset not just for the region but our nation. To see what it has been in terms of Department of Defense status is pretty important." (c)2022 The Albany Herald, Ga. Visit The Albany Herald, Ga. at www.albanyherald.com Distributed by Tribune Content Agency, LLC. CAMP FOSTER, Okinawa The provost marshals office arrested a 46-year-old man Wednesday on suspicion of trespassing onto this Marine Corps base. The unidentified man, barefoot and muddy in a black and white track suit, attempted to climb a black, steel fence within the base grounds and apparently injured himself. He was spotted climbing into a fenced-off area opposite the 3rd Dental Battalion building on Foster, a Marine Corps base, at about noon Wednesday. We do not have his name. He was spotted by a person that was working at a building and looked out the window and saw him and stopped him, Cpl. Chandler Schmidt of the provost marshal told Stars and Stripes by phone Wednesday. A spokesman for the Okinawa police said the officers on scene had not yet filed a report on the incident. I dont think his act was based on political beliefs or anything like that, the spokesman said Wednesday. Government spokespeople in Japan typically speak to the media on condition of anonymity. In October, Toshiko Taira, 49, of Uruma city, was arrested while riding a bicycle around Foster. She hopped a fence to get on base, a spokesman from Okinawa Police Station told Stars and Stripes at the time. Taira had no valid reason for being on the base in Ginowan, according to police. "She hasnt told us why she entered," the spokesman said. A conviction for trespassing on a U.S. military installation in Japan carries up to a year in prison or a fine of less than $18, according to Japanese law. Stars and Stripes is making stories on the coronavirus pandemic available free of charge. See more stories here. Sign up for our daily coronavirus newsletter here. Please support our journalism with a subscription. FORT WORTH, Texas A federal appeals court denied the Biden administration's attempt to reinstate the U.S. Navy's COVID-19 vaccine requirement Monday, more than a month after a federal judge in Fort Worth initially halted the mandate. The mandate, which required all active-duty Navy service members to be fully vaccinated by Nov. 28, is being challenged by a group of U.S. Navy SEALs and other Naval special warfare personnel. The group says the mandate violates their religious freedom and that they have unjustly been denied religious exemptions from receiving the vaccine. Their lawsuit is against President Joe Biden, the Department of Defense, the Secretary of Defense and the Secretary of the Navy. In early January, U.S. District Judge Reed O'Connor of the Northern District of Texas signed a preliminary injunction blocking the mandate while the case reaches a final judgment. On Monday, the U.S. Court of Appeals for the Fifth Circuit denied the Department of Defense's emergency stay request, which would have allowed the mandate to go into effect as the case goes through courts. "[Evidence] suggests that the Navy has effectively stacked the deck against even those exemptions supported by Plaintiffs' immediate commanding officers and military chaplains," the three-judge panel said. First Liberty Institute, a nonprofit interest law firm based in Plano, is representing the SEALs and other personnel in the suit. "Our military should be welcoming service members, not forcing them out because of their religious beliefs," said Mike Berry, director of military affairs for First Liberty Institute. ___ 2022 Fort Worth Star-Telegram. Visit at star-telegram.com Distributed by Tribune Content Agency, LLC. (Tribune News Service) A group of five "foreign nationals" was briefly detained after entering the Truman Annex of Naval Air Station Key West early Wednesday morning, according to the Navy. Federal agents initially suspected they were trespassing on the base, but they released them by noon after being unable to reach that conclusion, Navy spokeswoman Danette Baso Silvers said. They were interviewed by agents with the Naval Criminal Investigative Service, and each of them was issued a federal magistrate summons, which means they either pay a $250 fine or argue their case in court, Baso Silvers said. The government is not releasing their nationalities, but Silvers said everyone in the group is in the country legally. They do not live in Key West, she said. According to Baso Silvers, they entered the base through the Fort Zachary Taylor Historic State Park side of the complex around 7 a.m. and left moments later. They were taken into custody by Key West police when they exited the base. After NCIS agents interviewed the members of the group, the agents had no reason to conclude they intentionally entered the base, Baso Silvers said. Truman is one of the Navy's seven annexes spread across the Lower Keys. The bases include nearly 30 miles of shoreline. Since the fall of 2018, four Chinese nationals have been arrested on charges of taking photographs of military facilities in Key West. Miami Herald/FLKeysnews.com staff writer Gwen Filosa contributed to this report from Key West. (c)2022 the Florida Keys Keynoter (Marathon, Fla.) Visit the Florida Keys Keynoter (Marathon, Fla.) at www.keysnet.com Distributed by Tribune Content Agency, LLC. Stars and Stripes is making stories on the coronavirus pandemic available free of charge. See more stories here. Sign up for our daily coronavirus newsletter here. Please support our journalism with a subscription. (Tribune News Service) Kansas Sen. Roger Marshalls resolution blocking a Biden administration order requiring healthcare workers to get vaccinated against COVID-19 passed the U.S. Senate on Wednesday after Democrats didnt have enough senators present to vote it down. Called a resolution of disapproval, the legislation would block a rule implemented by the U.S. Department of Health and Human Services that requires every employee, volunteer and contractor working at a healthcare facility that accepts Medicaid and Medicare to get the COVID-19 vaccine unless they have a medical or religious exemption. The Biden Administrations mandate is about fulfilling their desire to control every aspect of our lives, and its a slap in the face to the hard-working men and women who never took a day off in the front-line fight of the COVID-19 battle, Marshall said in a speech on the Senate floor, a stethoscope wrapped around his neck. The resolution passed 49-44. In order to take effect and block the administrations rule, which was upheld by the U.S. Supreme Court in January, the resolution would also have to be approved by the House of Representatives and signed by President Joe Biden. Both actions are unlikely. The effort is the latest in Marshalls crusade against vaccine mandates in Congress many of which have come up short. While he was able to secure an amendment to a military funding bill that barred dishonorable discharge for refusal to get vaccinated for COVID-19, several of his attempts to defund Bidens vaccine mandates have failed. Marshall was critical of the Biden administration rule because of staffing shortages in hospitals and nursing homes, particularly in rural areas. Kansas Attorney General Derek Schmidt sent a letter to Gov. Laura Kelly in February asking her to seek a waiver to prevent the rule from being enforced in rural hospitals. Schmidt is challenging Kelly in the Kansas gubernatorial race this year. Missouri Attorney General Eric Schmitt led a legal effort against the rule all the way to the U.S. Supreme Court. The justices decided to allow the rule to go into effect, saying the U.S. Department of Health and Human Services was allowed to set rules to protect patients health and safety. Oregon Sen. Ron Wyden cited the Supreme Court opinion and said that Marshalls resolution was outside of the mainstream. He argued that an anti-mandate agenda can easily become an anti-vaccine agenda and that Marshall, Indiana Sen. Mike Braun and Utah Sen. Mike Lee had already crossed the line. Everybody is concerned about sitting in a room with a doctor or a nurse who may be contagious, who is unvaccinated, Wyden said. Marshall dismissed arguments about the Supreme Court ruling, saying that it focused on whether the Department of Health and Human Services had the ability to impose the rule, not on the rules merits. That does not mean it is a good rule or a beneficial condition to place on these facilities given everything I have laid out here today, Marshall said. As such, the fight against this harmful rule continues here on the Senate Floor but also throughout our nations federal judicial system. Marshall, who is an OB/GYN, said several times that he believed the rule should be struck down because the vaccine does not prevent transmission of COVID-19, as seen by the wave of breakthrough cases involving Delta and Omicron variants. Studies have shown that while the vaccine provides some protections against transmission, it fades over time. Researchers also found that the vaccine still significantly works to prevent severe illness and death from the virus. The vote comes as politicians have moved to loosen COVID-19 precautions across the country. Already, governors in Democratic-leaning states have lifted mask mandates and other restrictions, shifting their approach toward the limiting the spread of the virus. This week the Centers for Disease Control loosened mask guidelines. In his State of the Union address, Biden requested that Congress allocate another $30 million in COVID-19 funding to prepare against any future variants. 2022 McClatchy Washington Bureau. Visit mcclatchydc.com. Distributed by Tribune Content Agency, LLC. CAMP FOSTER, Okinawa Shoppers looking for yogurt at the Foster commissary one day in late January were met with a notice posted above the Greek Gods brand in the dairy case. The shelf life for the honey strawberry flavor in 24-ounce plastic containers was about to expire. This item has been inspected by veterinary personnel and is of wholesome quality, flavor and appearance, the paper read. Veterinary personnel? The notice caused a minor stir on social media. Army veterinarians care for military pets and working dogs, but they are also food safety experts capable of extending the life of food products on commissary shelves. A veterinary food inspector extended the expiring yogurts shelf life at the Foster commissary by one week. Enlisted personnel are generally split between animal care and food safety, but officers in the U.S. Army Veterinary Corps are trained and licensed to do both and often take on supervisory roles at their installations. Veterinary Services only extend the shelf life of food products that are safe and of the highest quality, Col. Matthew Levine, commander of Public Health Activity-Japan, told Stars and Stripes in an email Monday. Our stringent inspection and assessment programs only allow us to extend the shelf-life if it poses no health risks to our community. Food inspections have been routine duty for the Veterinary Corps in Japan since World War II. Army veterinary food inspectors came ashore in the invasion force, according to a unit history on the health activity website. Veterinary inspectors U.S. soldiers and Japanese employees overseen by Army warrant officers are involved with Defense Department food supplies from the warehouse to the commissary. They check product temperatures, food handling practices, cleanliness, expiration dates and product recalls, senior food safety officer Chief Warrant Officer 3 Marques Walker wrote in the same email. They inspect imported food at Defense Department warehouses before it reaches commissary shelves. Then they make food safety and quality assurance inspections and daily walk-throughs in those commissaries. Enlisted veterinary food inspectors receive eight weeks of advanced training at the U.S. Army Medical Center of Excellence in San Antonio, Walker said. They also study food microbiology, chemistry, deterioration, preservation and packaging technology. Levine did not say how often an inspector has extended a products shelf life in Japan, but he said the practice is routine. Still, some shoppers wont touch expired food. No, I would not feed my children anything thats shelf life has been extended, Marine Cpl. Bryannah Gray, a California native and mother of two infants, told Stars and Stripes while shopping at Foster on Friday. Petty Officer 1st Class Patrick Glenn, 25, of Tenino, Wash., said Tuesday he doesnt really buy much dairy except for coffee creamer, which lasts months, but if a product still tastes good, he is not going to let it go to waste. Being a fleet sailor, sometimes, what we got is what we got, right? Glenn said. FORT SHAFTER, Hawaii The Navy is out of compliance with a state emergency order to drain fuel from its Red Hill facility because the firm contracted to oversee the work is not free of Navy influence, the Hawaii Department of Health said Monday. It is critical that the work to defuel Red Hill is done safely and that the third-party contractor hired to oversee that work will operate in the interests of the people and environment of Hawaii, Kathleen Ho, the health departments deputy director of environmental health, said in a news release. The Health Department issued the emergency order on Dec. 6 in the wake of widespread petroleum contamination found in the Navys water distribution system used by more than two dozen military housing communities on and near Joint Base Pearl Harbor-Hickam. The Navy chose Simpson Gumpertz & Heger, a privately held firm based in Waltham, Mass., to drain the fuel tanks. The Health Department in a letter to the Navy and Simpson Gumpertz on Friday contested the parameters of the contracting relationship between the service and firm. The Navy notified the state that it only considered engineering firms with limited to no Navy contracts, the Health Department letter states. While the Navys effort to engage a contractor with little or no prior connection to the Navy is critical to preserve the contractors independence, this independence can only be maintained if that contractor remains free from overriding direction and control by the Navy, the letter states. The department is primarily concerned that the contractors work will be solely based on information provided by the Navy and that state health officials will not be included in discussions and site visits, according to the letter. The Navy began complying with most of the provisions of the order, but contested the mandate to drain all fuel from the vast, underground storage facility built during World War II. It now holds roughly 150 million gallons of fuel. The Navy has traced the contamination of one of its wells to jet fuel stored at the facility. The Navy will work cooperatively with the Hawaii Health Department to address its concerns over contracting so that the assessment can proceed, Rear Adm. Charlie Brown, the Navys chief of information, said in a statement Tuesday. The Navy is focused on ensuring the safety and health of those impacted from the November 2021 contamination, he said. The Navy continues to take proactive measures that will position it to make informed and environmentally-protective longer-term decisions. Under the emergency order finalized on Jan. 3, the Navy was required to submit a workplan and implementation schedule, prepared by a qualified independent third party approved by the Department to assess the facility operations and system integrity to safely defuel the Bulk Fuel Storage Tanks. The Health Department laid out its objections to the Navy contract in its letter. The contract language does not describe any structure or protections necessary to establish the independence of the contractor, the letter states. The Health Department objected to frequent close oversight by the Navy of the contracted work. For example: the proposed evaluation will only be based on information provided by the Navy, the DOH is not included in any discussions or site visits to ensure that our concerns will be addressed, and the number of opportunities (weekly meetings) that the Navy will have to provide comment on the progress or findings from the work being performed suggests the Navy will have a great deal of influence over the work in progress, the letter said. Because Simpson Gumpertz is not able to act independently, the Navy is in violation of the Emergency Order, the Health Department said in its news release. According to the timeline submitted by [Simpson Gumpertz] and the Navy, work has already begun, the news release said. The Navy is proceeding at its own risk and without DOH approval. (Tribune News Service) Residents of Ford Island, Hale Moku and Hokulani can resume drinking and cooking with their tap water, according to the Hawaii Department of Health, which lifted its drinking water advisory for those zones on the Navy's water system today. Fifteen more zones on the Navy's water system are still awaiting clearance from DOH. Residents of Red Hill Housing and Pearl City Peninsula received clearance last month. There are more than 900 homes in the zones cleared by DOH today, according to the Navy's flushing plan. "DOH and EPA oversaw months of work to provide individuals and families in Zones A2 and D1 with assurance of safe drinking water, " according to a DOH press release. "This included overseeing flushing operations to confirm that the Navy followed flushing and testing protocol to verify that contamination was removed from the drinking water system." DOH said that one water sample collected from Zone A2, which includes Ford Island, and two samples collected from Zone D1, which includes Hale Moku and Hokulani, tested above the screening level for total petroleum hydrocarbons during initial sampling. The homes in those zones were reflushed and resampled, with all test results coming back below the threshold, according to DOH. "Through the tremendous efforts of hundreds of Navy personnel, along with DOH, Environmental Protection Agency, and our fellow military service partners, the Navy has officially restored safe drinking water to two additional zones, making a total of four out of 19 zones with amended health advisories, " said Vice Adm. Yancy Lindsey, commander of Navy Installations Command, in a press release. "This week, the Interagency Drinking Water System Team expects to deliver more water sampling packages to DOH for review and approval." Ford Island houses all branches of the military, though is predominantly Navy. It also includes Ford Island Child Development Center. Hale Moku and Hokulani also houses predominantly Navy residents. The zone also includes Pearl Harbor Kai Elementary School and two child development centers Center Drive and Kids Cove 24/7. DOH also said today that the water at Manana Marine Corps Housing is safe to drink. The Honolulu Board of Water Supply began supplying water to the neighborhood in mid-November through an emergency connection just prior to the Navy's water contamination emergency. The Navy's water system was having "booster pump issues." "Complaints of water quality from Manana Housing coincided with increasing complaint calls from other areas of the Navy water system, " according to DOH. "As Manana housing was not receiving water from the Navy water system at the time of the incident, a separate investigation was completed." DOH said the water for Manana housing will be switched back to the Navy's water system. DOH issued a "do not drink " advisory for all residents on the Navy's drinking water system, which serves Joint Base Pearl Harbor-Hickam and surrounding neighborhoods, in late November after the Navy and state health department were flooded with calls from residents reporting a fuel odor coming from their tap water. The Navy later confirmed that jet fuel from its Red Hill tank farm had leaked into its Red Hill drinking water shaft. That shaft was taken offline and the Navy is working to clean up the contamination. All of the water on the Navy's drinking water system is currently coming from Waiawa shaft, a separate well, which has been tested and shown to be clean. (c)2022 The Honolulu Star-Advertiser Visit The Honolulu Star-Advertiser at www.staradvertiser.com Distributed by Tribune Content Agency, LLC. TOKYO Japan and Russia, sparring publicly over Russias week-old invasion of Ukraine, have revived a dispute over Pacific territory left over from World War II. A Japanese Foreign Ministry official on Monday compared the Russian invasion to its occupation of four islands north of Hokkaido that Japan calls the Northern Territories and Russia the Southern Kuriles. I understand that Russia occupying Northern Territories and Russian militarys invasion happening in Ukraine now are both against international law, Hideki Uyama, director-general of the European Affairs Bureau of Japans Ministry of Foreign Affairs, told the House of Councilors Budget Committee, the Asahi newspaper reported Tuesday. Japan joined other nations Monday in sanctioning Russias central bank over the war in Ukraine. Prime Minister Fumio Kishida announced the sanctions after telling Ukrainian President Volodymyr Zelenskiy that Japan would stand by his country. In response to Uyamas comments, Russias Embassy in Tokyo tweeted Monday that Japans Ministry of Foreign Affairs had forgotten history. The Kuril Islands, including the Southern Kuriles, were transferred to our country as a result of World War II on legal grounds in accordance with the Allied decisions, the embassy wrote. The embassy followed up with another tweet that its possession of the islands was punishment for Japan's aggression and its alliance with Nazi Germany. Japan has come to support the Nazi government twice in less than 100 years, the embassy wrote. They once supported the Hitler administration, and this time the Ukrainian administration. Japan and Russia never signed a peace treaty after World War II. The status of the islands, which were captured by the Soviets at the end of the war, has been a sticking point for more than seven decades. Meanwhile, former Japanese foreign and defense minister Taro Kono tweeted Shame on you on Tuesday after Russias mission to the U.N. claimed in a tweet the previous day that no evidence shows its military destroyed civilian infrastructure in Ukraine. Kono then retweeted a photograph of the Tokyo Skytree, a 2,080-foot broadcasting and observation tower, lit up in Ukraines blue and yellow national colors. Stars and Stripes reporter Hana Kusumoto contributed to this report TOKYO A Japanese-owned cargo ship is undergoing repairs in Turkey days after a rocket attack in the Black Sea off Ukraines coast, according to a cabinet minister in Japan. One of the 20 Filipino crewmen aboard was injured but the bulk carrier Namura Queen left the area under its own steam after Fridays attack. The ship is the property of an overseas subsidiary of a Japanese firm but flies a Panamanian flag, Minister of Land, Infrastructure, Transport and Tourism Tetsuo Saito told reporters Tuesday. The Ukraine Infrastructure Ministry attributed the strike to Russia, Reuters reported Friday. Nikko Kisen, a firm based in Ehime prefecture in western Japan, is the ships registered owner, according to VesselFinder.com. A company representative declined comment when reached by phone Tuesday by Stars and Stripes. The vessel is in port at Yalova, Turkey, east of Istanbul on the Sea of Marmara, according to MarineTraffic.com. It was anchored east of Odessa, Ukraine, when the projectile slammed into the aft portion of its superstructure, according to FleetMon.com. Both sites specialize in tracking ships. Photographs online show a breach in the structure and smoke wafting from the vessel. In response to the incident, Saito said the ministry alerted the shipping industry and international shipping businesses to secure the safety of their ships in waters near Ukraine. The Namura Queen was struck while its crew waited to load corn, TV Asahi reported on Saturday. The ship, built in 2020, was the second commercial vessel struck by a projectile following the invasion of Ukraine by Russian military forces on Feb. 24. The Yasa Jupiter, a Turkish bulk carrier flagged by the Marshall Islands, was struck that day off Odessa and slightly damaged, according to Reuters and Splash247.com. Stars and Stripes is making stories on the coronavirus pandemic available free of charge. See more stories here. Sign up for our daily coronavirus newsletter here. Please support our journalism with a subscription. CAMP HUMPHREYS, South Korea New COVID-19 cases among the U.S. military in South Korea are on the rise as the daily number of new cases in the country itself surpassed 200,000 Wednesday for the first time during the pandemic. U.S. Forces Korea counted 164 new cases over a seven-day period ending Monday. Of those, 28 were recent arrivals in South Korea and 136 were infections acquired locally, according to an update Wednesday on the commands website. USFKs weekly total is 45 cases more than the previous week and two more than it confirmed between Feb. 8-14. The command is responsible for approximately 28,500 U.S. troops. Meanwhile, South Korean health officials recorded 219,241 new cases across the country Wednesday. The new record exceeds Tuesdays 138,989 infections and the previous daily record of 171,451 cases on Feb. 23. Gyeonggi, South Koreas most populous province, accounted for over 68,600 of Wednesdays cases. Seoul, the capital city, reported the second highest number, 46,933. USFK has banned off-duty travel to Seoul, as well as trips to saunas, bathhouses, clubs and bars. Around 86.5% of the countrys population of 51 million people is fully vaccinated and 61.4% received a booster shot as of Tuesday. South Korean Prime Minister Kim Boo-kyum described March as a likely turning point for the pandemic. This month is a very critical period, Kim said Wednesday during a meeting at the Central Disaster and Safety Countermeasure Headquarters. The government will continue to keep faith sent by the people towards the governments anti-epidemic prevention measures. There is a chance for more positive cases during spring, when people are expected to gather in groups, Kim said. The medical system is capable of handling more cases in the days ahead with around 50% of the countrys hospital beds occupied, he said. We recently saw that the number of confirmed cases have been about doubling every week while the coronavirus spread is getting fast towards a tipping point, Kim said. The fact is that the number of severe cases and deaths have been increasing in accordance with it. South Korean President Moon Jae-in in a public speech Tuesday lauded the countrys economic growth of 4% last year as the pandemic raged. The mature civic awareness of our people was a key factor in our ability to pass through the COVID-19 tunnel, he said. North Korea identified the hegemonic policy of the United States and its allies as the root cause of Russias invasion of Ukraine, according to a Monday statement from the communist regimes Foreign Ministry. North Korea through public statements defended Russias motives throughout the weeks leading up to the large-scale operation on Feb. 24. Its pronouncement Monday came five days after Russian President Vladimir Putin sent Russian troops into Ukraine. The U.S. and the West, in defiance of Russia's reasonable and just demand to provide it with legal guarantee for security, have systematically undermined the security environment of Europe by becoming more blatant in their attempts to deploy attack weapon system while defiantly pursuing NATO's eastward expansion, said the Foreign Ministry statement published by the state-run Korean Central News Agency. The "greatest danger the world faces now is high-handedness and arbitrariness from the U.S., whose unilateral and double-dealing policy remains a barrier to world peace, the statement said. Russia aligns itself with North Korea and lends diplomatic influence to the regime. Russia and China previously lobbied the U.N. Security Council to lift sanctions against Pyongyang, according to multiple news reports. World leaders have denounced Russias assault on Ukraine, which by Tuesday had claimed 536 civilian casualties, including 136 killed, according to the U.N. human rights office. U.N. Secretary-General Antonio Guterres, in a speech during an emergency meeting of the Security Council last week, urged Putin to stop your troops from attacking Ukraine and give peace a chance. In the name of humanity bring your troops back to Russia," Guterres said. "In the name of humanity to not start what may be the most devastating war since the start of the century." The U.S. imposed its own sanctions on Russia following the invasion and lobbied other countries for more, including those targeting Russian banks and oligarchs with ties to Putins inner circle. The European Union on Monday froze assets belonging to Putin and Russian Minister of Foreign Affairs Sergey Lavrov, and imposed sanctions against Russias finance, energy, technology and transportation industries. The union also placed a ban on Russian flights over its airspace. "With these additional sanctions, we are targeting all who are having a significant economic role in supporting Putins regime, and benefit financially from the system, EU High Representative for Foreign Affairs and Security Policy Josep Borrell said in a press release Friday. These sanctions will expose the wealth of Putins elite. Those who enable the invasion of Ukraine will pay a price for their action. President Joe Bidens administration also expanded his sanctions against Russia. The Treasury Department announced Thursday it would target Russias two largest financial institutions, Sberbank and VTB Bank, to drastically affect their fundamental ability to operate. During his State of the Union address Wednesday, Biden announced the U.S. was banning Russian flights over the countrys airspace. I am announcing that we will join our allies in closing off American airspace to all Russian flights, further isolating Russia and adding an additional squeeze on their economy, Biden said. choi.david@stripes.com Twitter: @choibboy Stars and Stripes is making stories on the coronavirus pandemic available free of charge. See more stories here. Sign up for our daily coronavirus newsletter here. Please support our journalism with a subscription. TOKYO Japans capital city reported nearly 2,000 fewer COVID-19 cases on Wednesday than a week prior, resuming a pattern of week-over-week declines after two days. Tokyo confirmed 12,693 new infections Wednesday, 880 more than the previous day but 1,874 less than Feb. 23, according to public broadcaster NHK and metropolitan government data. Another 31 people in Tokyo died of causes related to COVID-19, NHK reported. U.S. Forces Japan on Tuesday evening reported 82 new COVID-19 cases, including three awaiting confirmation, at 10 installations over the previous 24 hours. None are hospitalized or considered serious, according to the commands daily update. USFJ last reported 102 new cases on Friday. USFJ on Tuesday followed the government of Japans lead and relaxed the quarantine period to three days for new arrivals or travelers returning to Japan, provided they are fully vaccinated, including a booster shot, and test negative three times prior to arrival, at the airport and three days later. USFJ also relaxed the mask mandate on U.S. military installations for fully vaccinated personnel who may go without a mask outdoors while maintaining social distance, according to USFJ spokeswoman Lt. Col. Brooke Brander. Masks are required for the entire U.S. military population while off base in Japan. Yokosuka Naval Base, homeport of the U.S. 7th Fleet south of Tokyo, accounted for most of USFJs new infections, 38, followed by 11 at Marine Corps Air Station Iwakuni near Hiroshima and 10 at Yokota Air Base in western Tokyo. Another 11 installations reported zero new cases, including nine on Okinawa. MCAS Iwakuni reported 20 new infections Tuesday, according to a base news release on Wednesday. The air station reported 156 cases of the coronavirus respiratory disease in February, about 16% of the 987 cases it announced in January. U.S. Army Japan, headquartered at Camp Zama southwest of Tokyo, reported 16 people tested positive for COVID-19 between Feb. 23 and Wednesday, according to an Army news release. Six were close contacts of another infected person and 10 developed COVID-19 symptoms, according to the release. Kadena Air Base on Okinawa reported 120 total cases on Wednesday, according to an update of its website. It last reported 76 total on Tuesday. Okinawa prefecture reported 966 new cases Wednesday, down from 1,029 the previous day, according to the prefectural Department of Public Health and Medical Care. The department reported another 19 new cases in the U.S. military population. Stars and Stripes reporter Mari Higa contributed to this report. WASHINGTON (Tribune News Service) Russian President Vladimir Putins high-profile demonstration last month of nuclear weapons systems was rescheduled and completed to coincide with the invasion of Ukraine, the head of U.S. Strategic Command told a congressional hearing. Putin participated in the latest exercise and one in October 2019 that showed a high-level of readiness across Russias strategic nuclear forces and was intended to serve as a visible message to the U.S. and NATO, Admiral Charles Richard said in prepared testimony to a House Armed Services subcommittee Tuesday. The 2019 event was Russias largest strategic nuclear exercise since the collapse of the Soviet Union and notable for the size and scope of the nuclear forces involved and strategic messaging. The exercises include command and control operations with participation of the entire nuclear triad, an ICBM combat training launch and long-range aviation cruise missile launches, Richard said. Putin set his nuclear arsenal on a special regime of high alert combat duty in the midst of his invasion of Ukraine, citing aggressive statements from the opposing nations. Gen. Glen VanHerck, the head of U.S. Northern Command, said in his prepared testimony that Russia is the primary military threat to the homeland, and their focus on targeting the homeland has provided the model other competitors are beginning to follow. He said Russia has invested significant resources to modernize all three legs of its nuclear triad in an effort to ensure its ability to deliver unacceptable damage on our homeland during a conflict. He cited the December 2019 deployment of the worlds first intercontinental ballistic missiles equipped with a hypersonic glide vehicle. The new weapons are designed to glide at extremely high speeds and maneuver at low altitudes to complicate our ability to detect and track, VanHerck said. In the next few years, Russia seeks to field a new heavy-lift ICBM that Putin claims will be able to deliver nuclear warheads to North America from both northern and southern trajectories and circumvent tracking by U.S. ground-based radars. Work also continues on Russias Skyfall nuclear-powered intercontinental cruise missile and the nuclear-armed Poseidon autonomous underwater vehicle, or drone, Richard said. 2022 Bloomberg L.P. Visit bloomberg.com. Distributed by Tribune Content Agency, LLC. Diplomats trying to salvage a landmark nuclear deal with Tehran wrangled around the clock over sticking points to an agreement that could bring Iranian oil back to the global market at a critical time for the world economy. European and U.S. officials blew past their goal to clinch a deal in February and are now warning only days remain to reach a deal after more than 10 months of negotiations in Vienna. Russias invasion of Ukraine has raised the diplomatic stakes. What we want now is an agreement in Vienna. Its now the time to decide, German Chancellor Olaf Scholz said Wednesday at a news conference with his Israeli counterpart in Jerusalem. Oil has surged to $110 a barrel since Russias military campaign began and OPEC+, a group of top oil exporting nations plus Russia, offered little significant relief at a low-key meeting on Wednesday, sticking to a preset plan for a modest supply increase. If the nuclear talks collapse, crude could jump even more because many traders have been expecting a return of Iranian barrels to global markets this year. Iran, which holds the worlds No. 2 natural gas and No. 4 crude reserves, could probably raise exports by around 1 million barrels a day within months of any deal, according to traders. The sticking points that remain in Vienna are few but significant. Negotiators worked overnight on Irans demand that monitors from the International Atomic Energy Agency end their investigation into its past atomic activities. Western diplomats rejected that bid, citing the watchdogs independence. The agency holds a key board meeting on March 7, where Iran could face diplomatic censure over its lack of cooperation with investigators trying to determine the origin of uranium particles detected at several undeclared sites. Safeguards are a fundamental part of the non-proliferation system and are separate, U.K. negotiator Stephanie Al-Qaq wrote on Twitter. We will always reject any attempt to compromise IAEA independence. The only way for the IAEA to bring the Iran probe to an early conclusion is if Iran boosts cooperation, the agencys director general, Rafael Mariano Grossi, said Wednesday at a press briefing. Grossi said he remains optimistic that a solution can be found that doesnt undercut the independence of his agency. At the Munich Security Conference last month, Israeli Defense Minister Benny Gantz said it was essential that the IAEA continue to investigate Iran in the event of a revived deal, which Israel opposes. Meanwhile, Iranian President Ebrahim Raisi spoke with his Russian counterpart Vladimir Putin this week. Tehrans hardline government has cultivated its ties with China and Russia and wants to develop longterm strategic alliances with the east, even if it reaches a deal with world powers over the nuclear program. In addition to the IAEA investigation, negotiators remain bogged down over Irans demand for a U.S. commitment that it wont again abandon the 2015 nuclear agreement, which capped Tehrans activities in exchange for sanctions relief. The Trump administration unilaterally ditched the accord four years ago and applied economic penalties, prompting Iran to retaliate by enriching uranium close to the levels needed for a bomb. The standoff fueled conflicts in the Persian Gulf, and led to attacks on shipping in waterways key to global commerce. If the negotiators fail to bridge the remaining gaps, the best fall back option is a moratorium that averts a perilous cycle of escalation, said Ali Vaez, who directs Iran research at the International Crisis Group. Iran could offer to freeze its most worrisome activities in exchange for partial sanctions relief, he said. - - - Bloombergs Gwen Ackerman, Ben Bartenstein, Patrick Sykes and Iain Rogers contributed to this report. WASHINGTON Congressional lawmakers on Tuesday called for the immediate passage of a multibillion-dollar emergency spending package to aid Ukraine and warned time was running out to deliver security and humanitarian assistance as Russian forces closed in on the countrys capital city of Kyiv. Frustrated by plans to fold the aid to Ukraine into a larger government funding bill next week, Rep. Doug Lamborn, R-Colo., urged his fellow lawmakers to move faster on the request from the White House to send at least $6.4 billion to the war-torn country. What I've heard is that we're going to wait a week and deal with it, Lamborn said during a House Armed Services Committee hearing about U.S. national security objectives. Aren't there civilians who are going to be dying in Ukraine? Aren't there soldiers who are taking up arms who are going to die? Isnt there property that's going to be destroyed? Isn't there going to be hunger in Ukraine? Why in the world can we wait a week to deal with this? Russia launched a large-scale invasion of neighboring Ukraine last week after months of amassing more than 150,000 troops on Ukraines borders. During the hearing Tuesday, Lamborn pressed Mara Karlin, the assistant secretary of defense for strategy, plans and capabilities, to help push other lawmakers into swift action on the bill. We could have passed this last night on a voice vote, he said. It's wrong for us to wait a week to do this. Do you have any influence? Can you talk to anybody and say, 'Let's bring this up today?' Let's get this going. There are people dying in Ukraine right now. There's a 40-mile convoy of Russian tanks and armor going to Kyiv. Karlin said officials at the State and Defense departments are moving quickly to deliver supplies and support to Ukraine, including $350 million in ammunition, Javelin anti-tank missiles, Stinger air-defense systems and other emergency military aid that the White House authorized last weekend. The emergency spending package for Ukraine awaiting congressional approval would provide $3.5 billion to the Pentagon and $2.9 billion to the State Department and U.S. Agency for International Development for humanitarian assistance. In the Senate, Sen. Rick Scott, R-Fla., a member of the Senate Armed Services Committee, also urged his fellow senators to begin immediate consideration of the emergency aid bill and detach it from long-term government funding legislation still being drafted. The larger bill needs to pass by March 11 to keep federal agencies open and avoid a shutdown. Russias blatant act of war demands a strong and immediate response in the form of aid for Ukraine from the United States, Scott said in a statement Tuesday. While some may find it convenient to just stitch these issues together, doing so needlessly delays delivery of critical aid and military resources to the people of Ukraine as they fight for the survival of their democracy. Much of the requested assistance for the Defense Department would fund increased operating costs for the growing number of American troops in Europe, which has surged from about 80,000 to about 100,000 during the Ukraine crisis, Karlin said. Some of the aid money will also be used to replenish U.S. weapons stocks that the Biden administration has tapped into three times to supply Ukraine since last fall, she said. This will help fill some of the material that the military services have been able to facilitate the transfer of to Ukraine, Karlin said. Rep. Elissa Slotkin, D-Mich., told Karlin to seize a rare time of bipartisan unity to demand more military assistance for Ukraine and specify what the Pentagon needs to bolster Ukraines ability to defend itself against the Russian assault. You have an absolutely unique moment where the U.S. Congress has bipartisan agreement on giving you what you need and were not getting an ask. Ask us for things, she said. Rep. Adam Smith, D-Wash., chairman of the House Armed Services Committee, defended the pace of congressional deliberations, noting a ton of money is flowing out of the United States of America right now to help the people of Ukraine that does not require congressional action. Congress needs to look at whether or not we need to send more money, whether or not we need to give [the Biden administration] authority to do that. And that's perhaps why we're waiting to make sure that we do this right, he said. But while we're waiting to pass congressional legislation, it is not the case that nothing is happening. WASHINGTON Russias invasion of Ukraine is prompting congressional lawmakers to reconsider the U.S. security structure in the Baltics, where leaders have long sought permanent American military bases in their countries. Having a U.S. flag there a permanent one is a deterrence, Rep. Don Bacon, R-Neb., a member of the House Armed Services Committee and co-chairman of the Baltic Caucus, said Tuesday during a committee hearing. Russia will know they're not just going into the Baltics but they are attacking U.S. forces when they do so. I think it will have a reassuring effect for the Baltics, who are very small. Estonia, Latvia and Lithuania, the only former Soviet republics to join NATO and the European Union, are considered by military experts to be the alliances most vulnerable flank. The Baltic states are connected to the alliances main territory through a 40-mile sliver of land called the Suwalki Gap and fear they could easily be cut off from Europe by Russian forces, according to retired Lt. Gen. Ben Hodges, who led the U.S. Army in Europe from 2014 to 2017. In a news conference last month with Defense Secretary Lloyd Austin, Lithuanias Minister of Foreign Affairs Gabrielius Landsbergis reiterated his countrys request for long-term American forces to boost security there. Lithuania and Latvia border Belarus, where Russian President Vladimir Putin stationed 30,000 troops before launching a full-scale attack on Ukraine last week from Russian and Belarusian territory. We need to make sure that [Putin] sees that his actions are creating a response in the Baltic region ... and we are reinforced, we are strengthened, and we do not allow him to even think about looking [in our direction], Landsbergis said. The U.S. has maintained a 500-troop battalion on rotation in Lithuania since 2019 but Congress appears ready to deepen engagement in the region. Along with Bacon, Rep. Mike Rogers of Alabama, the top Republican on the House Armed Services Committee, said establishing permanent American basing in the Baltics, as well as Romania and Poland, would show serious U.S. commitment to safeguarding NATOs eastern flank. I think it would send a great message to our NATO allies that we are going to do everything in our power to protect our NATO allies and their borders, Rogers said. I think the best way to do this is to enhance our position there The Baltics are very vulnerable. Last week, NATO activated its response force for the first time as Russian troops advanced on three fronts into Ukraine, including an intensifying move on the capital city of Kyiv. Rep. Elissa Slotkin, D-Mich., said Russias unbelievable decision to strike its neighbor despite years of U.S. efforts to ease tension with the Kremlin has changed how the U.S. should think about its military presence in Europe. I couldnt agree more with my colleagues who have talked about putting more force in, she said. We need to be doing more and obviously China is watching everything that we do. We have to completely reevaluate deterrence and how we reestablish it. Some senators said they are also reconsidering the post-Cold War security order in Europe. The U.S. Army sharply reduced the number of troops on the ground after the fall of the Soviet Union and, in 1997, NATO signed an agreement with Russia agreeing not to establish permanent bases in new member countries in the Eastern Europe. Sen. Jeanne Shaheen of New Hampshire, the second-highest ranking Democrat on the Senate Armed Services Committee and co-chairwoman of the Senate NATO Observer Group, said the U.S. is closely working with the Baltics to coordinate a response to the war in Ukraine. As the United States explores additional options to both support Ukraine and bolster efforts to reinforce European security from Putins malign ambitions, we should carefully consider the U.S. force posture in the region, she said in a statement. Putin has long lamented the collapse of the Soviet Union and suggested in a speech last week that all former members of the Soviet Union were infected with a virus of nationalist ambitions. The Baltics were annexed into Soviet territory during World War II and gained independence in 1991. Sen. Deb Fischer, R-Neb., said she is open to reconsidering the nature of U.S. military structure in Eastern Europe given the immense shifts in the geopolitical environment, according to her spokesperson. An aide for Sen. Tim Kaine, D-Va., said he is also amenable to reevaluating U.S. base locations. Mara Karlin, the assistant secretary of defense for strategy, plans and capabilities, told the House Armed Services Committee on Tuesday that the Defense Department will be reexamining its global defense posture in the wake of Russian aggression. We recognize this dynamic situation now requires us to give it another fine-tooth look, to see whats necessary to ensure that weve got deterrence of Russia and that we can absolutely 150% say that NATO is safe and secure, she said. Were looking at what sort of troop presence whether its rotational or permanent is necessary given this current security environment, both in the near term and frankly, and in the long term. (Tribune Content Agency) Under direction from the White House, the Federal Aviation Administration has banned all Russian aircraft from U.S. airspace. No Russian airliners or private jets will be allowed to land in or fly over the United States. President Joe Biden announced the closure Tuesday evening during the State of the Union address. The move in response to Russia's invasion of Ukraine follows earlier bans in Europe and Canada. The UK banned Russian flights from its airspace on Thursday, the first day of the invasion. The European Union and Canada followed Sunday. The Russian Civil Aviation Authority took reciprocal action against those countries, closing its own airspace to the airlines of 36 countries as of Monday. And for safety reasons no airlines can fly over or close to the war itself, including Ukraine, Belarus and eastern Russia. In 2014, Russian-backed forces took over eastern parts of Ukraine and in the conflict that ensued shot down a Boeing 777 operated by Malaysia Airlines with a surface-to-air missile, killing all 298 people on board. The Canadian ban forced Russian carrier Aeroflot to cancel some flights to the United States that would typically fly over Canada. On Sunday, an Aeroflot jet from Miami to Moscow nevertheless entered Canadian airspace. The Canadian air traffic control authority told Reuters that Aeroflot had declared the flight as a "humanitarian" mission, a designation that requires special handling by air traffic control under normal circumstances. Transport Canada, the country's aviation regulator, said on Twitter that it has launched a review of the airspace violation. "We will not hesitate to take appropriate enforcement action and other measures to prevent future violations," the agency said. With most of the western world now closed to Russian planes, the country's commercial aviation sector will be confined largely to domestic services. And with Russian airspace closed to them, western airlines will have to fly longer routes to some international destinations that typically fly over the Russian polar region. (c)2022 The Seattle Times Visit The Seattle Times at www.seattletimes.com Distributed by Tribune Content Agency, LLC. COLUMBIA, S.C. (Tribune News Service) Moments before he boarded Marine One on Wednesday morning, President Joe Biden told reporters it was "too early to say" if Russia is committing war crimes in Ukraine. But about an hour later, U.S. Sen. Lindsey Graham held a press conference of his own in Washington, where he said what the president would not. "It's been hard to sleep at night watching war crimes unfold on television and just feeling frustrated you can't do more," South Carolina's senior Republican senator said during a news conference in Washington. Standing alongside U.S. Rep. Victoria Spartz, R-Indiana, Graham announced his plans to introduce a Senate resolution calling for Russian President Vladimir Putin and his military regime to be held accountable for carrying out war crimes and crimes against humanity during its invasion of Ukraine. "The whole international community needs to condemn this," said Spartz, who is also a Ukrainian-born American. "This is criminal. This is pure killing of individuals. It's not a war." Graham also said he wants the United States to support a case being pushed by Ukraine in international court. Ukraine, which is the second-largest country in Europe, has filed a case against Russia in the United Nations' highest court. In the order, Ukraine accused Moscow of planning a genocide and has also asked the international court to intervene to bring a stop to the ongoing invasion and also order Russia to pay reparations. Graham's resolution would support the complaint filed by Ukraine in the International Criminal Court against Putin. "This is a legitimate complaint in our eyes and we ask the ICC to investigate," Graham said Wednesday. Graham's resolution condemns the ongoing violence, war crimes, crimes against humanity and human rights abuses and encourages nations to take actions to investigate war crimes and crimes against humanity committed by the Russia. Graham cited the use of cluster bombs by the Russian military and had a message for Russia's military leaders carrying out Putin's orders. "You can find yourself in the Hague if you drop cluster bombs on civilians, if you use vacuum bombs, (and) you have a scorched earth policy to get the Ukranian people to submit to your will," Graham said. "If the United States Senate supports the Ukrainian complaint, I believe other nations will join," Graham added. "It will be the first step in decades to make the consequences of his actions real to Putin. Reporters on Wednesday asked President Joe Biden whether Russia is committing war crimes in its invasion. "We are following it very closely. It's early to say that," Biden said. However, the president said Russia is intentionally targeting civilians. "It's clear they are," Biden said. (c)2022 The State (Columbia, S.C.) Visit The State (Columbia, S.C.) at www.thestate.com Distributed by Tribune Content Agency, LLC. WASHINGTON Senior Biden administration officials are preparing to dramatically expand the number of Russian oligarchs subject to U.S. sanctions, aiming to punish the financial elite close to President Vladimir Putin over his invasion of Ukraine, according to three people briefed on internal administration deliberations. Officials at the White House and Treasury Department are working on producing a list of names that is expected to overlap in part with the lineup of Russian oligarchs who were newly subjected to sanctions by the European Union on Monday, the people said. For instance, the White House is weighing imposing new sanctions on Alisher Usmanov, the owner of an iron and steel conglomerate who Forbes has estimated to be worth more than $15 billion, the people said. The people spoke on the condition of anonymity to reflect internal deliberations not yet made public. Usmanov was placed under sanctions by E.U. officials Monday. The U.S. sanctions would also probably include travel restrictions and the seizure of overseas assets that could run into the billions. The U.S. is also expected to announce new sanctions on Belarus and Russian defense firms as soon as Wednesday, according to two other people familiar with the matter, who spoke on the condition of anonymity to reflect matters not yet made public. Belarus has prepared to join the Russian invasion, according to U.S. intelligence officials. Americas sanctions are expected to be more complicated than those imposed by the E.U., targeting not just the individuals but also their family members and companies they own, according to a White House official, who also spoke on the condition of anonymity to reflect internal deliberations. President Joe Biden said in his State of the Union address on Tuesday night that the U.S. would join with Europe to seize their yachts, their luxury apartments, their private jets. The Department of Justice on Wednesday also announced the creation of Task Force KleptoCapture to coordinate prosecutors and other federal investigators in the effort to prosecute sanctions against corrupt Russian oligarchs. The task force will be led by a prosecutor with the U.S. Attorneys Office for the Southern District of New York and include leadership from the FBI, U.S. Secret Service, Department of Homeland Security, and Internal Revenue Service, among other federal agencies. Tonight, I say to the Russian oligarchs and the corrupt leaders who built billions off this violent regime no more, the president said. Were coming for your ill-begotten gains. A Treasury spokeswoman declined to comment. Usmanovs company Metalloinvest, a mining firm, said in a statement that it considers the sanctions against him to be ungrounded and unfair. Usmanov also released a statement accusing the E.U. of false and defamatory allegations damaging my honour, dignity and business reputation. The additional sanctions represent one part of the unprecedented campaign of economic measures against Russian oligarchs tied to the Kremlin. In the past week alone, Western leaders have announced a series of punitive measures targeting the network of business executives and politically connected donors who are widely regarded as critical allies of the Russian president. In addition to the sanctions released Monday by the E.U., Western leaders vowed this week to create a new transatlantic task force of law enforcement to help identify, and freeze, the assets of Russian oligarchs in violation of those sanctions. Russias billionaires control roughly 30% of the nations wealth compared with roughly 15% in Germany and the United States and have about as much financial wealth stashed in offshore foreign accounts as the entire Russian population has in Russia itself, according to a 2017 paper released by the National Bureau of Economic Research. Many of them have served at high levels of Putins government, or played an instrumental role in providing financing either for the Russian president personally or the Kremlins efforts abroad, according to E.U. officials. The U.S. sanctions measures work by adding the Russian officials, business executives, companies and other groups to a list of specially designated nationals, maintained and published by the Treasury Department. Any entity or person appearing on that list will see their U.S. assets frozen, and Americans are generally barred from financial transactions with them. A Washington Post investigation in 2021 based on a trove of financial records showed how existing U.S. sanctions hit their Russian targets. But it also underscored their limits, demonstrating how Russian money continues to move around the global financial system, often through secret accounts. Its hard to express how massive a sea change this is for Western policy. The sanctions against these oligarchs are unprecedented in their scope and size; many of them were presumed to be untouchable, said Paul Massaro, an anticorruption adviser to congressional lawmakers. It will shake the rogue Putin regime to its core. But the Wests attempts to punish Russias financial elites face major logistical hurdles and carry the risk of further retaliation from the Kremlin. Some experts said they also might drive Russias business elites to be more, not less, supportive of Putin - while also potentially inadvertently hitting oligarchs who have opposed Moscows aggression in Ukraine. At least in the United States, the effort to freeze or seize assets of Russians close to Putin is also likely to be stymied by a U.S. legal structure that allows anonymous actors, often using illicit funds, to form companies and purchase real estate and other assets under a strict veil of secrecy, said experts and transparency advocates. Further complicating matters is that some of the oligarchs oversee global operations the United States and European Union may be uneasy about undermining. Typically, sanctions on foreign business elites lead to the seizure of their assets and of corporate holdings. But that can have a major impact on business operations involving commodities important to the world economy. Punitive measures could also hit Russian owners in the countrys gas-export sector, which the U.S. and Europe have generally sought to exempt from sanctions. If the goal is to both trap their ill-gotten gains while peeling them off President Putin, its not clear it has always worked that way, said Adam Smith, a partner at Gibson Dunn and a former Obama administration sanctions official. The record of sanctioning oligarchs is mixed. In 2017, Congress mandated that the Treasury Department provide a list of Russian oligarchs, though not that those oligarchs be subjected to sanctions. A Treasury spokesperson later said that the resulting unclassified list, published in 2018, was derived from a Forbes ranking of wealthy Russians. But with a U.S. military response off the table, the momentum behind the sanctions effort has become unstoppable. The European Union on Monday unveiled a broader list of Russian officials newly placed under sanctions that included Usmanov, the mining magnate; Mikhail Fridman, the owner of a conglomerate that includes one of Russias biggest banks; and Nikolay Tokarev, CEO of a major Russian oil and gas company. A spokesman for Fridman strongly disputed the allegations that he had supported Putin as malicious and deliberate falsehoods . . . the product of historical fantasies and conspiracy theories dreamt up by private individuals with their own agendas. Fridman, who was born in western Ukraine, said he opposes the war, Reuters reported on Sunday. Oleg Deripaska, another Russian billionaire the United States placed under sanctions in 2018, joined Fridman in rejecting the war effort. Metalloinvest, the mining company owned by Usmanov, also said the company will not be affected by the E.U. impositions because the sanctions against Usmanov are of a personal character. Tokarev did not respond to a request for comment sent through his company, Transneft. More sanctions may be on the way. A bipartisan group of lawmakers wants the Biden administration to impose sanctions on the Navalny 35, a list of Putin allies identified by a group tied to Russian dissident Alexei Navalny. That would amount to a dramatic expansion in the number of individual Russian business elites targeted for sanctions. Rep. Tom Malinowski, D-N.J., one of the sponsors of that legislation, told The Post he has spoken in recent days with the administration and congressional leadership about reviving the expanded list of sanctions. Malinowski said he is also studying legal changes that could allow oligarchs confiscated assets to be given to Ukraine to assist in that countrys reconstruction, something he said is illegal under current law. Senate Finance Committee Chair Ron Wyden, D-Ore., has also called for changing disclosure rules among private equity firms, hedge funds and venture capital funds so they would have to disclose potentially substantial amounts of offshore money. Wyden has pushed the Treasury Department to take that step, although it is unclear how much Russian money is held in these kinds of firms. In a war partly about morale on both sides, seeing Russian oligarchs yachts seized and sold at auction - seeing police at their villas, at their luxury apartments - will give Ukrainians and Russians who hate Putin a huge boost, Malinowski said. This is one of the ways in which we can weaken the support structure of this regime. . . . The more we can make the sanctions feel like a shock and awe campaign, the better. Key to the sanctions effort will be the new international task force - details of which remain vague - to identify and track where Russian oligarchs are parking their assets. Without that information, the sanctions can be evaded given that the oligarchs finances may go undetected. Treasury is working to implement a law passed by Congress in January 2021 to put an end to anonymous shell companies that can be used for illicit ends by requiring companies registered in the United States to disclose their owners to the federal government. The law exempted 23 types of entities from the requirement, including investment funds and venture capital fund advisers. But the Treasury Department regulation that would implement the law has not been enacted, meaning any anonymous shell companies owned or controlled by Russians can still benefit from a veil of secrecy. Transparency advocates have praised the beneficial ownership effort, though they have noted that many more measures are needed, including accountability for law firms that help set up offshore companies and trusts that do not report suspicious activities to law enforcement, as well as stronger measures that would require art dealers and others to know their true customers identities. They also noted that the Treasury Department agency implementing the rule, the Financial Crimes Enforcement Network, needs a large funding boost, which has been held up amid debates in Congress over a longer-term government spending bill. We need to take stock of our own role in enabling corrupt leaders from around the world to steal from state coffers and enjoy their illicitly obtained wealth here, said Shruti Shah, president of the Coalition for Integrity, which advocates for anticorruption measures. But the appetite in Congress may be materializing for those kinds of changes. Many of us on the Hill have said to the administration, If there are any legal authorities that you need to strengthen your hand in going after the oligarchs, let us know, Sen. Chris Van Hollen, D-Md., said. Because we do want to move quickly. - - - The Washington Posts Tony Romm contributed reporting to this story. Stillwater, OK (74074) Today Strong thunderstorms likely. Damaging winds, large hail and possibly a tornado with some storms. Low 59F. Winds ESE at 10 to 20 mph. Chance of rain 100%.. Tonight Strong thunderstorms likely. Damaging winds, large hail and possibly a tornado with some storms. Low 59F. Winds ESE at 10 to 20 mph. Chance of rain 100%. Changes to the SunCommercial's back end processing means the e-edition is getting a facelift. The biggest change is the e-edition, by default, is now presented in Text view. Whakatane business people are expressing their pain and frustration with the Governments Covid response. Around 18 members of the Whakatane hospitality and retail business community attended a meeting at The Comm on Friday, organised by Epic Whakatane, to voice their concerns with East Coast MP Kiri Allan. Allan was there to talk about the new subsidies that were being offered to small businesses as of this week but fielded questions instead about public confusion over continually changing rules, lack of access to Rapid Antigen Testing and when the Government were going to lift vaccine restrictions. The Comm general manager Ashley Stewart watns to know when the Government is going to drop vaccine passes for bars and restaurants. "Youve eased up on all the definitions for isolation and when you have to get tested and everything else, but when are you going to drop the vaccine passes because its killing us. "Ive been in hospitality for 20 years and I havent seen it this bad before, ever. For example, when December 3 [when New Zealand moved into the traffic light system] hit we lost 90 percent of our December bookings. I lost another one last month. "Ive got 18-year-olds standing at the door to check people in and theyre getting abuse hurled at them. And its not their fault." Allen says the Government plans to begin lifting the mandates once New Zealand moved past the Omicron peak. Data modelling shows this is expected to be sometime in March, however, Allan says she is not yet able to confirm a timeline for when that will happen. The public health experts are still deeming it a necessary measure to have in place, she says. Jana Marxen from Distinct Fashion Concepts, in Ohope, wants to know how to access Rapid Antigen Tests in Whakatane because the pharmacies in town did not have any in stock. Ive got some ordered for my business, but theyre not going to be here until March 10. Radio 1XX owner Glenn Smith, who also attended the meeting, assured Ms Allan that there were supply issues for rapid antigen tests in the Eastern Bay. Yesterday, Edgecumbe pharmacy, which is the designated destination for Whakatane for critical workers, did not have any in stock. They were waiting for them. Allan says there were stocks in New Zealand now and she had been assured that pharmacies across the country should be carrying rapid antigen tests now. If theyre not, thats the first Ive heard about it. As soon as I leave here, I will get on the blower and get that sorted. Owner of bicycle shop Full Cycle, Michaela Wellauer expresses concern that people are confused about who should be isolating. Were going through very swift transitions, and I totally take that, but theres very clear guidance as to when you need to stay home and isolate. Were doing a lot of publicity about it. The Government announced last week that as of Monday, for the next six weeks, businesses who could show a 40 per cent drop over seven days could receive support payments of $4000 a fortnight, plus $400 for each full-time employee, capped at 50 employees or $24,000. Theres going to be a lot less people floating around at the moment, while we go through the peak of this particular component of the pandemic, and then were going to come out, says Allan. So, whilst were in this state, well make this funding available every two weeks for the next six weeks and we will continue to assess that as we go through this Omicron response. I really want to hear from you guys about whats going on, whether you think that weve missed something, are there variations or ways that this support that weve designed isnt getting to you? Mrs Wellauer wants clarification on eligibility for the new subsidy. Ive read [the information] about eligibility but its as clear as mud. Its hard to work out if you are eligible or not. Allan says the finance minister had been working with Inland Revenue to put out a more detailed and comprehensive criteria, which was released on Thursday. The rules are designed with the majority at heart, but weve seen since we made the announcement on Tuesday that theres a whole range of situations that require a bit of nuanced thinking." She urges business owners that if the support did not assist them to contact her directly. I know that youve probably suffered a significant loss over the course of a year. We're trying to make sure we get the net as wide as possible." -Local Democracy Reporting is Public Interest Journalism funded through NZ On Air Cyber crime is on the rise and small-to-medium sized companies with an online presence are just as at risk as large, multinational corporations and Goverment departments. Despite a barrage of large-scale online cyber attacks targeting New Zealand businesses over the past year many owners of small-to-medium sized businesses consider investing in cyber security a nice-to-have rather than an essential aspect of future-proofing their business. The team of cyber security experts at SEQA believe this view is short-sighted. Cyber attacks and security weaknesses can lead to a number of potentially damaging outcomes for businesses, including the loss of productivity, revenue, customers, and brand reputation, says SEQA founder and director Mark Keegan. If you have a digital presence you are at risk of a cyber attack. SEQA are taking the guesswork out of keeping businesses secure online with their new innovative and affordable Information Technology (IT) Health Check service. The service makes performing regular security reviews easy for small-to-medium sized businesses by designing a testing programme that fits the specific needs of each business, be it complexity, data sensitivity, industry risk level, or budget. Whether their focus is on securing the highest quality food products to customers or delivering digital services, our IT Health Checks are the ideal, low-cost solution to help business owners quickly determine their cyber health and the likelihood of experiencing a cyber attack, says Mark. Typical of many Kiwi small-to-medium sized businesses Harraways Oats has a reputation for quality. Founded in 1867, they have undergone the natural progression from a paper-based company to one reliant on the internet to process orders, communicate with suppliers, and keep detailed financial records. When news broke about the Waikato District Health Board security breach in early 2021, they knew it was time to review their IT networks. We faced the reality of what it would cost the business if our systems went down for an hour, a day, or longer, not to mention what this would do to our reputation if our customer data was released, explains Harraways CEO Henry Hawkins. Henry Hawkins. SEQA undertook a rapid, independent, and thorough security assessment of all our technology assets exposed to the internet and summarised their recommendations in a comprehensive action plan. We were surprised to find that many of our vulnerabilities related to gaps in our policies. With the support of SEQA we were able to have a good three-way discussion with our IT provider to address the more complex issues they identified in a clear, concise way that we couldnt have done ourselves. In contrast, Pikselin is a company born out of the digital era, providing specialist expertise in web design for over 26 years. Cyber security has always been an integral part of our business operating model, says Pikselin managing director, Steve Barnard. Steve Barnard. But more recently it became apparent that we needed third party verification to give our customers greater assurance that we take cyber security seriously. Providing independent validation of Pikselins cyber readiness is underpinned by regular auditing of their policies, processes, and procedures. SEQA sets clear benchmarks for us to achieve in the medium to long-term enabling us to operate a continuous improvement programme, says Steve. By recognising the varying security needs of individual businesses, SEQAs IT Health Checks can extend from a broad-brush view of a companys total exposure to the internet to a deep-dive investigation into problem areas. Our IT Health Check service provides small-to-medium sized businesses with access to world-class information security services and solutions that fit their needs, says Mark. The IT Health Check service can be extended to a more comprehensive assessment to suit complex IT businesses. Construction is progressing on the Bay of Plentys biggest roading project the Takitimu North Link - with earthworks underway on Stage One between Tauranga and Te Puna. Aerial photos show the progress of significant works at key sites at Bethlehem and Wairoa Valley. The earthworks follow enabling works and site investigations which started on the $655 million project last year. The rate of growth in the Western Bay of Plenty, combined with existing safety, access and congestion issues means Takitimu North Link is a huge investment in the region. It will give people better access to safer and more reliable travel options to provide greater choice in how they move about. The project is the 12th New Zealand Upgrade Programme project in construction providing better and safer travel choices for growing communities. Transport Minister Michael Wood, accompanied by Labour MP Angie Warren-Clark, observed the construction at Wairoa Valley last week. The visitors were hosted by Fulton Hogan and HEB Joint Venture Project Director Tony Gallagher and Te Tiriti partnership roopu (group) representatives, Chairman of Ngati Pango hapu, Mr Henare Mason, and Wayne Beilby (Ngati Pango), who welcomed the manuhiri to the whenua. Fulton Hogan/HEB Joint Venture Project Director Tony Gallagher with Transport Minister Michael Wood on site at the Bay of Plentys biggest roading project the Takitimu North Link. "Our contractors, have been really busy between Bethlehem and Wairoa Valley and its exciting to see such good progress that really shows the scale of the project," says Waka Kotahi NZ Transport Agency director of regional relationships, David Speirs. "Takitimu North Link will change the landscape of one of our critical routes to and from Tauranga, providing an alternative route to SH2, moving trucks away from local roads and supporting urban growth. "The team is currently undertaking erosion and sediment control installation, enabling works, earthworks, archaeological investigations, early-stage earthworks and ground improvements. "People will notice big changes where site clearance is happening. A haul road at Wairoa Road in the valley is now complete." Main work areas are at Bethlehem (Smiths Farm, Richard Way, Cambridge Road, Harrison Road), Wairoa Road and Valley, Te Mete Road, Clarke Road, and Minden Road, at Te Puna. Aerial view in the Smiths Farm area looking East towards Cambridge Road, Bethlehem. At its peak, its expected between 350400 people will work on Takitimu North Link Stage One, with around 4500 people involved in various aspects of the project over its five-year construction period. Fulton Hogan/HEB Joint Venture was awarded the construction contract for the Stage One project in December 2021 and Bloxam Burnett & Olliver (BBO) will support the delivery. Stage Two of the project, between Te Puna and Omokoroa, will be route protected under the New Zealand Upgrade Programme. Designation is scheduled to be lodged in 2022 and applications for resource consents will be submitted. Prime Minister Jacinda Ardern says she is saddened and angered by the protesters' actions today, and that parliament's grounds have been desecrated. Ardern has addressed media, after an afternoon that has seen fires lit, explosions and objects thrown at police as an anti-vaccine mandates protest sparks violent scenes. There have been multiple arrests, vehicles have been towed away and some protesters have suffered injuries. Some set fire to protesters' tents arousing concern that gas canisters would explode, and some large blasts were heard. Watch the media briefing here: Police were able to take back much of the ground the protesters have been occupying for the past three weeks. Ardern said she was angry and deeply saddened to see Parliament desecrated in the way seen today, including the children's playground being set alight. She says it demonstrated why the government refused to engage with the group. "It was an illegal occupation, they engaged in hostile, violent and aggressive behaviour throughout the occupation, and today that has culminated in the desecration of this Parliament's grounds. I am absolutely committed we will restore those grounds and we will not be defined by one act by a small group of people." Asked about those who have been throwing projectiles at police, including LPG bottles thrown on flames and cobblestones hurled at officers, she said there were "words I cannot use in this environment for what I saw today". She said while the events today did not surprise her - considering the anger protesters had already expressed in the past few days - Ardern said it did sadden her. She said anyone still throwing projectiles should "put down their weapons long enough for police to arrest them". Ardern said there was a place for peaceful protest in this country, but "this is not the way that we engage and protest". She said peaceful protest was the way to send a message, this by comparison is "a way to end up before the courts". Asked if protesters will be able to return overnight or tomorrow, Ardern said police will be present at Parliament. She said the commissioner wished to make the point that there will be a substantial police presence in Wellington, and locals should be assured that while this had been a distressing period, police will continue to make their presence felt and keep them safe. Ardern said she knew that in planning for today's operation, police expected there would be "hostility, resistance and violence". "They planned for that because that is what they and Wellingtonians have experienced for several weeks now." She said while they planned for it, it was another thing entirely to witness it. "To our frontline police and emergency and fire services, you have our deep admiration and our thanks. You have been calm but resolute in trying to bring this occupation to a conclusion. It has come at great risk to your personal safety. Thank you for putting others before yourselves." She said she has spoken to the police commissioner and there have been various injuries sustained by officers, but she will leave it to him to go into more detail. Ardern says the fires created in the front of Parliament, including at the war memorial are causing more distress than what the police would have done today. She said she believed the force that was used was used to keep others safe. She said police have been mindful of the presence of children throughout the occupation, and there were other agencies present should there be a situation where children were left unsupervised or uncared for, such as if parents were arrested. Ardern said it was almost impossible to comprehend that people would stand opposed to efforts to slow down the spread of a disease, when it has infected 20,000 and put more than 400 in hospital in just one day. She said while many have seen disinformation and dismissed it as conspiracy theory, a small portion has believed it and acted on it in a violent way. "This cannot stand." Ardern said this afternoon's events were an attack on frontline police, an attack on Parliament, and an attack on New Zealanders' values, and it was wrong. "Our country will not be defined by the dismantling of an occupation. In fact when we look back on this period in our history, I hope we remember one thing. Thousands more lives were saved in the past two years by your actions as New Zealanders than were on that front lawn of Parliament today. "The sacrifices we were all willing to make to look after one another, that is what will define us, no protest, no fire, no placards will ever change that. Today the police will restore order and tomorrow your government will work hard to get us safely back to the normality everyone deserves." Ardern said there was nothing to suggest that security settings as a country needed to change in response to the protest. She said it was estimated there were about 270 protesters who were causing the acts of violence and destruction seen today. "That demonstrates it only takes a relatively small group of people who are committed to destruction to cause it, should they so choose. But it also demonstrates it was not a large group who were engaging in those acts either. "We are not going to dismiss some of the underlying causes of what we have seen, but nor will we excuse it." She said work will be done to address how misinformation and disinformation led to what was seen today, but the government "will be at pains to ensure that it never becomes an excuse for the violent acts that it resulted in". "It's a dangerous place when citizens are led into spaces where they believe so deeply in conspiracy theory that they react with such violence." Ardern acknowledged there have been for a long time a group of New Zealanders who have been living on the margins and have subscribed to other conspiracy theories, and "this happens to be the current rallying cry". Ardern says finding a solution to disinformation and misinformation is not about taking away people's ability to have differing opinions or debate, to take different positions. "People should of course always have that freedom of thought and view and perspective and in New Zealand we've celebrated that, but when the debate you're having is no longer based on fact, where does that take you? That is the challenge we have." RNZ Get website access for only 99 per month for the first 3 months, then $8.50 a month after. Cancel anytime! Unlimited website access 24/7 Unlimited e-Edition access 24/7 The best local, regional and national news in sports, politics, business and more! With a Digital Only subscription, you'll receive unlimited access to our website and e-Edition. Our digital products are available 24/7 and are accessible anywhere, anytime. Current Print Subscribers will be prompted to either login to their current site user account or to create a new one. A confirmation email will be sent when a new user account is created, which must be confirmed within three days in order to provide uninterrupted online access through your Print Subscription. 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Rosemary OHara is the former editorial page editor of the South Florida Sun Sentinel. She now edits The Invading Sea, the opinion arm of the Florida Climate Reporting Network, a collaborative of news organizations across the state focusing on the threats posed by the warming climate. She lives in Dunedin. Thank you for Reading! Please log in, or sign up for a new account and Purchase a Subscription to continue reading. Fuldagap BHPian Join Date: Apr 2011 Location: -- Posts: 132 Thanked: 449 Times Re: Impact of the Russia-Ukraine war Quote: Theyota Originally Posted by Sir, I was expecting someone to contest my post with your above point of view. People who do not have the guts to take a stand claim to be non aligned and thats what I sometimes feel India has become since its independence. Now even if we want to take a side, it will take decades for us to get out of our dependence on Russian weapons. All I want to say is, while I understand certain part of Russias reasons for this tragedy, America does not deserve the hate shown by many in this thread. India's non alignment is a sign of brilliant diplomacy and vision rather than lack of guts. We had a huge nation to feed and grow rather than give in to the pressure and join a certain side. India earned a name for itself being non aligned. USA helped Pakistan a lot during wars even then we came out brilliantly. We are a hefty nuclear power since Indira Gandhi's time. There is no room for being gutless. Our policies have always been to avoid confrontation and war situations. It is very easy to go to war and occupy say POK. The repercussions are what senior policy makers take care of. Avoiding war is indeed a behemoth task. As Alvin Toffler famously used to say "you may not be interested in war but war is interested in you". Not only is India capable of doing what other war mongering nations do to other geographies or other individuals, it is brilliantly capale to do so. However, everytime good sense prevailed and we kept ourselves from indulging in what those nations do. USA is not only a war mongering nation, it actively helped terrorism become a giant evil. You name one dictator and USA and Britain were behind making the individual what he was. Saddam? Osama? Gaddafi? You can go on naming such tyrrants and organisations. Daesh is at the helm of such organisations, who made it? USA actively helped Pakistan against India but still India showed guts and kicked ass not once but several times and the thing is still continuing at our LOC. It is not the guts that make USA go to war, it is their nation's interests and along with they take most NATO members. They are a giant economy which has grown mostly based on wars. It is a legitimised plunderer if you may. Being party to such a plunder for a nation as great as India would not only be shameful in the current scenario, it will be shameful for the designers of the country who we now refer to as freedom fighters of the Independence Struggle. I will reiterate, it is easier to go to war or take sides than to stand alone and preach or practice peach. That does not mean safeguarding our borders or our interests. People are making mockery of Zelensky being a stand up comedian and what not. Come on, a stand up comedian who is absolutely new into politics, leading from the front against Putin. Gotta give him the due. He would have fled by now if were a coward or a plain puppet. Ukraine and Zelensky might be helpless now but they are just pawns in the Great Game. The worst of war crimes come to mind after Hitler, the napalms in Vietnam, the nukes in Japan, killing of innocent civilians by beer popping so called drone operators of the US army in the middle east, in the name of killing terrorists. If India had become party to say NATO, we would be seeing bases all around our own land and we be treated like cattle class in our own land. Thank your forefathers, that hasn't happened yet. Also, we don't have as many enemies or as much interests that we want war mongering to take place. To take care of our neighbouring enemies, we have enough guts militarily and diplomatically. During Manmohan's time, Chinese incursion had taken place exactly like the one that took place during Modi's time. At that time they had 'invaded' 16 Kms into our lands. Not a shot was fired from any side, not a single violent action was reported. Three days later the Chinese had to retreat every single inch of those 16 Kms. Wisdom should tell us whether that was better than engaging the Chinese in say a skirmish or not. Despite Russia being an ardent supporter of India since decades we haven't openly supported Russia in anything that we feel is not right. That is diplomacy, not gutlessness. European nations believed in their own beliefs and plundered the world, made whole nations slaves. India was ruled for more than 200 years. Beliefs are a tricky thing. India doesn't believe in making things worse for the world. We are not China or Hitler's Germany. We are big country, seen as a clourful country that spreads peace and cultural harmony. Our armed forces and related agencies are as powerful as they should be, that doesn't mean they want to go to war to show 'guts'. To remind you, it was Russia that failed Hitler and stopped the Blitzkrieg. Had Putin not been cornered in the current fiasco of Ukraine joining NATO despite arduous attempts from Russian side to talk, the current invasion would not have taken place. Russian arms are not crappy. They are some of the finest weapons that are produced. Be it small arms, marine equipments/vessels, sub marines, missile systems or aircrafts, the Russian ones are state of the art. Kalasnikovs/Dragunovs still give their western counterparts a run for their money. Try holding a SVD Dragunov if you can ever get your hands on and you won't ever want to let it go. Couldn't be said for any other American rifle. American weapons are tools, Russian ones are majorly an extension of the soldier's body. Their weapon systems be it a small rifle are not made as a community project rather they are built for the intended purpose with zero tolerance to show off. The same can't be said for any other weapon in their category yet. Marine vessels/submarines, compare theirs to western ones, no room for bullshit in the Russian ones. The reliability is superior to any other system across categories. Board a submarine or any other marine vessel, you can clearly see a huge difference between Russian and American equipment and that is, Russian vessels have room for equipment and the purpose, the American equipment gives way to human comfort. The Russians gave us the Mig-25 Foxbat, that says volumes about how they helped us among many other tech and equipment that was built to last and did not come with inbuilt bugs like with western equipment. I was about to write a short para on our armed forcesas well, including the coast guard but it will not suffice and is not relevant here. Anyone who thinks it is gutlessness that makes India not take sides has a lot to learn about India. Small politicians may have hampered the image but the greatness of the country has room for everyone. Don't know why people don't understand that and that too here. This is a platform of petrolheads, arguably the most level headed people. Moreover, the Indian economy has taken leaps and bounds to reach the top. In terms of PPP we attained the no. 3 position in 2011. It could be an unending writeup so am ending this post with one quote (this does not even remotely signify any hatred towards USA in the current scenario or otherwise) America is a mistake, a giant mistake. Sigmund Freud Sir with total respect to your sentiments and point of view, here are my two cents.India's non alignment is a sign of brilliant diplomacy and vision rather than lack of guts. We had a huge nation to feed and grow rather than give in to the pressure and join a certain side. India earned a name for itself being non aligned. USA helped Pakistan a lot during wars even then we came out brilliantly. We are a hefty nuclear power since Indira Gandhi's time. There is no room for being gutless. Our policies have always been to avoid confrontation and war situations. It is very easy to go to war and occupy say POK. The repercussions are what senior policy makers take care of. Avoiding war is indeed a behemoth task. As Alvin Toffler famously used to say "you may not be interested in war but war is interested in you".Not only is India capable of doing what other war mongering nations do to other geographies or other individuals, it is brilliantly capale to do so. However, everytime good sense prevailed and we kept ourselves from indulging in what those nations do.USA is not only a war mongering nation, it actively helped terrorism become a giant evil. You name one dictator and USA and Britain were behind making the individual what he was. Saddam? Osama? Gaddafi? You can go on naming such tyrrants and organisations. Daesh is at the helm of such organisations, who made it?USA actively helped Pakistan against India but still India showed guts and kicked ass not once but several times and the thing is still continuing at our LOC.It is not the guts that make USA go to war, it is their nation's interests and along with they take most NATO members. They are a giant economy which has grown mostly based on wars. It is a legitimised plunderer if you may. Being party to such a plunder for a nation as great as India would not only be shameful in the current scenario, it will be shameful for the designers of the country who we now refer to as freedom fighters of the Independence Struggle. I will reiterate, it is easier to go to war or take sides than to stand alone and preach or practice peach. That does not mean safeguarding our borders or our interests.People are making mockery of Zelensky being a stand up comedian and what not. Come on, a stand up comedian who is absolutely new into politics, leading from the front against Putin. Gotta give him the due. He would have fled by now if were a coward or a plain puppet.Ukraine and Zelensky might be helpless now but they are just pawns in the Great Game.The worst of war crimes come to mind after Hitler, the napalms in Vietnam, the nukes in Japan, killing of innocent civilians by beer popping so called drone operators of the US army in the middle east, in the name of killing terrorists.If India had become party to say NATO, we would be seeing bases all around our own land and we be treated like cattle class in our own land. Thank your forefathers, that hasn't happened yet. Also, we don't have as many enemies or as much interests that we want war mongering to take place. To take care of our neighbouring enemies, we have enough guts militarily and diplomatically.During Manmohan's time, Chinese incursion had taken place exactly like the one that took place during Modi's time. At that time they had 'invaded' 16 Kms into our lands. Not a shot was fired from any side, not a single violent action was reported. Three days later the Chinese had to retreat every single inch of those 16 Kms. Wisdom should tell us whether that was better than engaging the Chinese in say a skirmish or not.Despite Russia being an ardent supporter of India since decades we haven't openly supported Russia in anything that we feel is not right. That is diplomacy, not gutlessness.European nations believed in their own beliefs and plundered the world, made whole nations slaves. India was ruled for more than 200 years. Beliefs are a tricky thing. India doesn't believe in making things worse for the world. We are not China or Hitler's Germany. We are big country, seen as a clourful country that spreads peace and cultural harmony.Our armed forces and related agencies are as powerful as they should be, that doesn't mean they want to go to war to show 'guts'.To remind you, it was Russia that failed Hitler and stopped the Blitzkrieg. Had Putin not been cornered in the current fiasco of Ukraine joining NATO despite arduous attempts from Russian side to talk, the current invasion would not have taken place.Russian arms are not crappy. They are some of the finest weapons that are produced. Be it small arms, marine equipments/vessels, sub marines, missile systems or aircrafts, the Russian ones are state of the art. Kalasnikovs/Dragunovs still give their western counterparts a run for their money. Try holding a SVD Dragunov if you can ever get your hands on and you won't ever want to let it go. Couldn't be said for any other American rifle. American weapons are tools, Russian ones are majorly an extension of the soldier's body. Their weapon systems be it a small rifle are not made as a community project rather they are built for the intended purpose with zero tolerance to show off. The same can't be said for any other weapon in their category yet. Marine vessels/submarines, compare theirs to western ones, no room for bullshit in the Russian ones. The reliability is superior to any other system across categories. Board a submarine or any other marine vessel, you can clearly see a huge difference between Russian and American equipment and that is, Russian vessels have room for equipment and the purpose, the American equipment gives way to human comfort.The Russians gave us the Mig-25 Foxbat, that says volumes about how they helped us among many other tech and equipment that was built to last and did not come with inbuilt bugs like with western equipment.I was about to write a short para on our armed forcesas well, including the coast guard but it will not suffice and is not relevant here.Anyone who thinks it is gutlessness that makes India not take sides has a lot to learn about India. Small politicians may have hampered the image but the greatness of the country has room for everyone. Don't know why people don't understand that and that too here. This is a platform of petrolheads, arguably the most level headed people.Moreover, the Indian economy has taken leaps and bounds to reach the top. In terms of PPP we attained the no. 3 position in 2011.It could be an unending writeup so am ending this post with one quote (this does not even remotely signify any hatred towards USA in the current scenario or otherwise) Last edited by Axe77 : 1st March 2022 at 22:13 . Reason: Some edits on tone, choice of certain words. Also trimming quoted text. Drivers Backup Driver Genius can detect and quickly backup drivers installed on the system. It can compress the backup drivers.... Drivers Restore You no longer need to install drivers one by one after reinstalling your Operating System. Just one click.... Drivers Update Are you still using an old or beta version drivers? Those faulty drivers may cause compatibility problems... Windows Degrade Don't like Windows 8? 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A cargo ship that caught fire while sailing through the Atlantic with thousands of luxury cars onboard has sunk to the bottom of the ocean, taking an estimated $401 million worth of vehicles to a watery resting place. The Felicity Ace was transporting almost 4,000 Volkswagen Group vehicles from Germany to a port in Rhode Island when a fire broke out on February 16. The 22-person crew was evacuated, and the fire was eventually put out on February 25. But what remained of the Felicity Ace never made it to shore. The ship sank around 220 nautical miles off the coast of Portugal's Azores Islands yesterday while being towed to safety by salvage crews after being hit by rough seas and leaning 45 degrees to its starboard side. "The weather was pretty rough out there," Pat Adamson, a spokesperson for the Felicity Ace's operator, MOL Ship Management, told Bloomberg. "And then she sank, which was a surprise." Among the lost cargo were 189 Bentleys, about 1,100 Porsche cars, and an unspecified number of Audis. There were also VW and Lamborghini models on the vessel, 2,200 tons of fuel, 2,200 tons of oil, and materials such as metallic parts, plastics, electrical wires, and paint. The water where it sank is close to 10,000 feet deep. Tugboats are using water cannons to disperse a small stain of oil residue at the site where the Felicity Ace sank. There's also some wreckage in the area. A navy ship carrying divers and clean-up equipment will return to the location once it's resupplied. Customers who lost vehicles in the incident are being contacted by their dealers. Angus Fitton, vice president of PR at Porsche Cars North America, told The Associated Press, "We are already working to replace every car affected by this incident and the first new cars will be built soon." Exactly what caused the fire is unknown, but it's suspected to have been a lithium battery from one of the electric vehicles. OnePlus 10 Pro's global release date has been teased, unveiling that the Chinese phone maker is working on an OxygenOS 13 for its flagship device. OnePlus 10 Pro Global Release Date The flagship device of the Chinese phone maker, the OnePlus 10 Pro, has already been launched in China. However, fans of the smartphone in other parts of the world are still waiting for its global release, if ever there will be. This time around, as per a news story by Slash Gear, the One Plus 10 Pro is releasing across the globe this 2022. The OnePlus flagship mobile device is reaching various parts of the world, including India, Europe, and North America before March comes to an end. As such, fans of the phone in the United States and the United Kingdom are expected to have their hand on the latest OnePlus flagship this month. The OnePlus 10 Pro first saw the light of day during the CES 2022 event. Shortly after that, it debuted in China without giving any details regarding its global release. However, three months since its launch in the Chinese market, the all-new flagship device is reaching its customers in other parts of the globe. OnePlus 10 with OxygenOS 13? It is worth noting that the OnePlus 10 was released in China sporting the ColorOS 12.1 of its parent company, OPPO. On the other hand, previous phones of OnePlus ran with an Oxygen OS. The change in the operating system comes after the merger between two Chinese tech giants, OnePlus and OPPO, which then made the former a sub-brand of the latter. Thus, both OxygenOS and Color OS have joined forces as well. However, it turns out that the latest flagship from OnePlus is releasing globally while running the upcoming OxygenOS 13. Read Also: Snapdragon 8 Gen 1 PLUS Rumored to Release 'Early,' Replacing Qualcomm's Flagship Chipset on Android Phones OnePlus Confirms OxygenOS 13 According to a recent report by GizChina, the merger between both Oppo and OnePlus has some observers assuming that the Oxygen OS is coming to its end, which will be completely replaced by Color OS. However, OnePlus announced during the Mobile World Congress Barcelona 2022 that the Chinese tech giant is still working on Oxygen OS 13. OnePlus clarified that both Oxygen OS and ColorOS now carry the same codebase, but the two mobile operating systems still have a massive distinction in their overall experience. Related Article: OPPO Find X5 Launch Date Unveiled, Sporting Hasselblad Cameras Like OnePlus Flagships This article is owned by Tech Times Written by Teejay Boris 2021 TECHTIMES.com All rights reserved. Do not reproduce without permission. Kia America decided to work with Currently app, an on-demand charging service in the United States developed by SparkCharge. Thanks to the new partnership, Kia EV drivers can now take advantage of SparkCharge's advanced Roadie Charging System, a portable fast DC electric vehicle charger offered by the mobile charging network. "The relationship with our customers does not end after delivery. In fact, that is just the beginning," said Greg Silvestri, the current Kia Vice President of Service Operations. Kia America x Currently App Silvestri said, via Electrek's latest report, that the new partnership will allow Kia America to enhance its commitment to its overall EV adoption. Also Read: Tesla 4680 Batteries: Panasonic to Begin Production by 2024; Twice the Size, Five Times the Capacity The collaboration is expected to offer complimentary EV charging that connects to Kia America's larger Plan S business strategy. Greg added that the automaker believes that a better EV charging experience will also lead to easier EV ownership. The new partnership of the two companies is now rolling out the EV charging perks in the three major cities of California. After that, the on-demand EV charging service is expected to expand to other metropolitan areas. What makes the new collaboration more interesting is that it will allow consumers to use the electric car charging service for free within two months. Other Partnerships of Kia Aside from its latest collaboration with the Currently app, The News Market reported that Kia America also partnered with Electrify America, one of the largest EV charging networks across the globe. This partnership offers 1,000 kWh to all EV6 owners for free. Just like with the Currently app partnership, its collaboration with Electrify America is also one of its major efforts as its transition to full EV making. If you want to see further details about Kia's partnership with Electrify America, you can visit this link. In other news, a new Tesla Cybertruck prototype was identified, revealing that the electric pickup truck might have a bed cover. On the other hand, Lucid Motors decided to decrease its 2022 EV production capacity. For more news updates about Kia Motors and other giant automakers transitioning to EV manufacturing, always keep your tabs open here at TechTimes. Related Article: Free Tesla Charging Guide: Here are the Locations Where You Can Charge Your EV For 0$ This article is owned by TechTimes Written by: Griffin Davis 2021 TECHTIMES.com All rights reserved. Do not reproduce without permission. Apple stopped selling its iPhones, Macs, and all of its physical products in Russia following its invasion of Ukraine, the Cupertino-based tech giant confirmed in its latest statement. As per a news story by The Verge, the latest move by the iPhone maker is not its first response to the Ukraine conflict. In fact, Apple has previously limited the access of its users in Russia for Apple Pay as it follows the sanctions against Russia. On top of that, the tech giant also confirmed in its statement that apps of some media outlets in Russia are no longer downloadable outside of the Russian nation. Apple Stops Selling Products in Russia The Cupertino tech giant specifically said in its statement that it has already" stopped all exports into our sales channel in the country" since last week, which the firm says is its response to the "Russian invasion of Ukraine." The Verge confirmed in its report that both iPhone and Mac are currently listed as unavailable in the online store of Apple in Russia. However, its website is still accessible in the region. In addition to that, Apple products could no longer be added to carts on its Russian website. Apple and Russia According to a recent report by NPR, Apple's flagship smartphone, the iPhone, ranks as the third best-selling mobile device in the Russian region, it lags behind other phone makers, such as Xiaomi and Samsung. Meanwhile, Gene Munster from the investment company, Loup Ventures, told NPR that the latest move of the Cupertino tech giant is "shocking," saying that "it's pretty unheard of for a company to stop selling its products." He further noted that Apple is known to distance itself from various political issues. Munster went on to share that he estimates that Russia holds at least 2 percent of the global earnings of Apple. Thus, the sales of the Cupertino giant in the largest country in the world account for over $7 billion. Read Also: Russia Sandworm Hackers Built a Firewall Called 'Cyclops Blink' and it Raises Alarms on Cybersecurity Apple and Russia-Ukraine Conflict Apple further said that it "stands with all of the people who are suffering as a result of the violence," noting that the tech giant is calling for peace. Thus, on top of that, the tech giant said that it is also extending a helping hand to those affected by the conflict by "providing aid for the unfolding refugee crisis." Related Article: Russia-Ukraine Invasion Map Uses Twitter Post Updates! Here's How CIR's Tech Works and How To Use It This article is owned by Tech Times Written by Teejay Boris 2021 TECHTIMES.com All rights reserved. Do not reproduce without permission. Windows 11 adoption rates have slowed down a bit after growing early on in the year, as well as late last year shortly after its launch. According to Digital Trends, the percentage of Windows 10 users who installed the 21H2 update went up to 21%, while the percentage of Windows 11 users dropped to 20% last February. The data comes from the firm AdDuplex, who sampled a total of 60,000 PCs running either Windows 10 or 11. This drop in Windows 11 adoption is a contrast to January, where usage of Microsoft's new OS increased to 19.3% from 16.1%. In total, Windows 10 adoption (with the 21H1 update) is still the leader at 27% across the North America, Western Europe, and Asia Pacific regions, while Windows 11 remains lagging at 19.3% despite being billed as the "better" version ahead of its release. It is safe to say that Windows 11 isn't even near the halfway point of its life cycle, so these numbers can still go up. However, it's also not likely the kind of numbers Microsoft is hoping for, considering how adoption of the OS grew since launch. January 2022 was home to a major milestone for the new OS, for instance. In a report by Windows Central dated January 26th, it was revealed that people are adopting Windows 11 two times faster than Windows 10, specifically the adoption of the OS via a free Windows 10 upgrade. This was a continuation of the growth that the OS experienced dating to last year. However, it seems to be that only private entities are upgrading right now, as most companies have been increasingly holding off on it. ComputerWorld reports that a lot of enterprises have committed to waiting until 2023 at the very least before they broadly adopt Windows 11, mostly citing a reason a lot of people already know: the steep system requirements. Read Also: Windows 11 On 'Unsupported' Devices Will Still Get Updates--For Now Why Is Windows 11's Adoption Rate Slowing Down? It is no secret that Windows 11 had a relatively controversial launch. This is due to just how steep the system requirements have been overall, aside from a few problems that are keeping the OS walled off even to those who want it. By now, you should know that Windows 11, for an operating system, is quite demanding on hardware-far more demanding than its predecessor ever was. One of the biggest moot points is its TPM 2.0 requirement, which restricts access to the OS to those whose hardware is quite new (newer hardware has this feature turned on by default). In short, if your PC is older than, say, seven years, you cannot upgrade to the new OS. But that's not even the worst part, as per users. When Microsoft unveiled Windows 11, one of the biggest features was the native integration of Android apps. This means that you don't have to use software like BlueStacks anymore. But if you want to run native Android apps on your desktop, you cannot have a CPU older than AMD's Ryzen 2000 series (released in 2018), or Intel's 8th generation CPUs (released in 2017). Furthermore, the feature also recommends 16GB of RAM, when most people likely only have 8GB or even less. Only time will tell if Microsoft will relax the system requirements, but this is the challenge that Windows 11's user adoption rate faces as of the moment. Related Article: Microsoft WIndows 11 'Your Phone' Feature Shows Recently Opened Android Apps This article is owned by Tech Times Written by RJ Pierce 2021 TECHTIMES.com All rights reserved. Do not reproduce without permission. Anonymous just announced that it has allegedly shut down Russia's space agency announcing that they no longer have control over their "spy satellites." Dmitry Olegovich Rogozin, the Director-General of Roscosmos, has denied these claims and even said that the group was just "petty swindlers." Russia's Director General of Roscosmos Said Information Isn't True As per a tweet by Rogozin, it was noted that the "scammers gave the information and petty swindlers" is not actually true and that all of the space activity control centers of the country are currently operating quite normally. Rogozin has also previously noted that the Russian orbital group, space industry, and the Russian International Space Station segment are all protected directly from cybercriminals. This clarification after Anonymous noted that it was able to breach more than 300 websites. Russian Troops Offered $53,000 to Give Up Tanks Anonymous even said that they had offered troops more than $53,000 in order for them to give up their tanks. To add, the offer to purchase tanks directly from Russian soldiers started to emerge after Russia reportedly refused to open up its very own stock market. According to the story by The Sun, Russia initially announced that it would be delaying its opening for a few hours before announcing that it would remain closed for the entire day. The publication states that media coming from Ukraine are reporting that the hacker community claims to have collected more than $10.3 million offering $51,000 for each tank that is surrendered. Anonymous Announces RUB 1,225,043 in Bitcoin Allocated to Soldiers The advice given by Ukraine is that Russian troops wave a white flag while also using the password called "million" to show that the collective's terms are accepted. Ukraine's Ministry of Defense has also noted that amnesty will be given to forces that decide to surrender. As per Anonymous, "RUB 1,225,043 in Bitcoin" has been collected to help Russian soldiers who don't want to die and live with their families and children. The Ministry of Digital Transformation and Mykhailo Fedorov, along with the Ukrainian Vice Prime Minister, has announced the creation of a Telegram channel for the whole IT Army of Ukraine. Read Also: Cybersecurity Experts Advice US Businesses, Organizations to Brace for Cyberattacks Amidst Russia's Attack on Ukraine Ukraine Announces Need for Digital Talents As per Fedorov, they need digital talents, and all operation tasks will be given through the channel. In addition, he announced that tasks will be available for everyone and that they are also continuing to fight when it comes to the cyber front. Back to Anonymous, the hacking collective announced that the Russian state-owned media outlet RT was taken down. To add, Anonymous announced that they had hacked 300 websites that belonged to state media outlets, government agencies, and banks. Related Article: Fake Videos Start Spreading Amidst Russia's Invasion of Ukraine: Footage Even Comes from Video Games This article is owned by Tech Times Written by Urian B. 2021 TECHTIMES.com All rights reserved. Do not reproduce without permission. (Photo : Unsplash/ henry perks) Google Maps Google announced that users would no longer be able to edit Maps in Ukraine, Russia, and Belarus. The search giant also stated that it would delete all places and contributions submitted by users from Feb. 23, including videos, photos, and business information in those three countries. Google Maps Blocks Editing Option Google said that it came to a decision out of an abundance of caution after people across social media networks that the Russian military has been relying on Google Maps pins created by users to coordinate airstrikes on Ukraine. According to Engadget, there are posts on social media sites like Twitter with screenshots of Google Maps showing pins labeled " " which means "farm" in Ukrainian. People were reportedly claiming that tags created by users saying "agriculture" or "farm" created on Feb. 28 matched the locations of the missile strikes on cities in Ukraine, including Kharkiv and Kyiv. Also Read: SpaceX's Starlink Internet Banned in Russia, Citizens May Face Fines However, Google also stated that some of the users' edited versions marking certain locations in Ukraine as "farms" were made in 2021. Even so, it's disabling user contributions to Google Maps since the Russian invasion had started, according to Observer. A Google spokesperson said that out of an abundance of caution, they are removing user contributions like videos, photos, reviews, and business information and all user-submitted places from Google Maps in Russia, Ukraine, and Belarus since the invasion started, and are temporarily blocking new edits from being created. Last week, the search giant also removed live traffic data on Google Maps in Ukraine to protect the locations of fleeing locals. The company blocked the YouTube channels of Russian state-owned media outlets RT and Sputnik across Europe, following the European Commission's announcement that it would ban what "Kremlin's media machine" in the EU. Other tech giants had also responded to calls to limit their services in Russia and to block the country's media outlet. Facebook removed fake accounts spreading Russian disinformation and restricted Sputnik's and RT's access to its site. Apple stopped all product sales in Russia and disabled all traffic data in Ukraine after the country's Vice Prime Minister Mykhailo Fedorov sent a request. Credit Card Giants Blocks Russia Aside from tech giants, credit card giants have decided to halt their services in Russia. Visa and Mastercard have blocked Russian financial institutions from their networks in response to sanctions targeting Russia after its invasion of Ukraine. Last week, Russia launched an attack on Ukraine, forcing the United States and governments around the world to impose a series of sanctions aimed at cutting off Russia from the global financial system, according to CNBC. The United States added several Russian individuals and financial institutions on the Specially Designated Nationals, its name for its sanctions list. It blocks companies from the United States from doing business with any individual or entity on the list. Mastercard said it had blocked several financial institutions from its payment network without naming companies or individuals. Visa has also stated that it has blocked those on the sanctions list, saying that it was taking action to make sure that it follows the sanctions. Both Visa and Mastercard also pledged $2 million toward humanitarian relief funds for Ukraine. Related Article: Apple Takes Russia to Court Over App Store Alternative Payments Issue This article is owned by Tech Times Written by Sophie Webster 2021 TECHTIMES.com All rights reserved. Do not reproduce without permission. A high-speed space junk that weighs around three tonnes will soon reach the far side of the moon. Researchers concluded that it might make an impact, creating a massive hole in the Earth's natural satellite. This space event is expected to happen this coming Friday, Mar. 4. As of the moment, the rocket debris is going at around 5,800 mph. Once it reaches the moon's far side, it will no longer be visible to various Earth-based telescopes. Experts said it would take weeks or months before satellite images could confirm the massive collision. High-Speed Space Junk To Moon's Far Side According to NBC News' latest report, once the giant space junk collides with the moon, it is expected to create a massive hole that can be between 33 feet to 66 feet. At first, Elon Musk's SpaceX said that the lunar debris was from one of their rockets. Also Read: NASA is Planning to Put a Nuclear Reactor on the Moon | How You Can Help However, the independent space agency corrected this information, explaining that it is not a Falcon rocket. Bill Gray, an asteroid tracker expert, said that it might be from a Chinese rocket that was sent to gather moon samples back in 2014. However, the Chinese government rejected this statement, saying that the rocket used back then had already re-entered the Earth's atmosphere, causing it to burn up. Will It Be Destroyed Before Hitting the Moon? As of the moment, NASA and other space agencies haven't confirmed if they will try to destroy the space junk before it hits the moon. Since it is so close to making an impact on the planet's natural satellite, the collision will likely happen. "The effect will be the same. It'll leave yet another small crater on the moon," said Jonathan McDowell, a space expert at the Harvard and Smithsonian Center for Astrophysics, via NBC South Florida. Right now, the moon is covered with small and massive craters from various space debris and asteroids. In other news, Australia's space junk effort was recently announced. This program was expected to turn debris into fuel. Meanwhile, Utah researchers claim that Earth's space junk rings could happen. For more news updates about space debris and other space topics, always keep your tabs open here at TechTimes. Related Article: Space Garbage Problem Has Become Bad Enough, It Could 'Trap' Humans On Earth This article is owned by TechTimes Written by: Griffin Davis 2021 TECHTIMES.com All rights reserved. Do not reproduce without permission. Kim Kardashian and the controversy of Marilyn's dress: she only wore it for a few minutes and with her butt in the air Lucas Price, of La Cocina de Luz, teaches attendee Hannah Kiermayr how to cut tortillas into zig-zag chips for the soup during Mondays Locals Lunch at the Ah Haa School. (Photo by Eva Thomas/Telluride Daily Planet) Designer, mentor, philanthropist ... Carla Zampatti was many things, but archivist failed to make the list of her achievements. Following the shock death on April 3 last year of the woman who built an empire on sleek evening wear and trim suiting for the Australian woman, Sydneys Powerhouse Museum is honouring her with a retrospective exhibition to open on November 25. Now it just has to find some clothes. Powerhouse trustee Kellie Hush in the designers home, with models wearing vintage Carla Zampatti. Credit:Louie Douvis As fabulous as Carla was at keeping pieces, she didnt keep everything, says fashion authority Kellie Hush, trustee for the Powerhouse and an adviser to the Carla Zampatti business. Weve got big gaps in the archive. I like to think that she wore her samples to death. The Powerhouse already has 60 pieces ready for the show, having been invited by Zampatti to raid her closets before her death at age 78, one week after she was knocked unconscious in a fall at an outdoor Opera Australia performance on Sydney Harbour. Nearly 5000 overseas and interstate travellers are expected to arrive at Perth Airport on Thursday as Western Australias international border finally reopens two years into the pandemic. The first flights to welcome non-Australian residents quarantine-free were due to touch down from Dubai and Singapore at 11.20pm Wednesday and 12.05am Thursday, respectively, followed by a second flight from Singapore at 5.25am. Perths borders will finally reopen to the rest of Australia and the world on Thursday. Credit:Getty Images Federal Opposition Leader Anthony Albanese is expected to be among the first interstate passengers to arrive as domestic flights with the east also resume. WA Premier Mark McGowan said 27,814 people had been approved to enter the state from March 3, which follows about 50,000 returning residents and family members re-entering since February 5, when interstate border rules were relaxed slightly and quarantine reduced to seven days. Q&A host Stan Grant took the extraordinary step of expelling a member of the audience from the studio on Thursday night after the young man, named Sasha, expressed support for the Russian invasion of Ukraine. The young man, identified only as Sasha, said he was someone who comes from the Russian community here in Australia as he began his question for the panel. He said he had been pretty outraged by the narrative created by our media depicting Ukraine as the good guy and Russia as the bad guy. Believe it or not, there are a lot of Russians here and around the world that support what Putin is doing in Ukraine, myself included. Sasha then went on to claim that Ukrainians had been responsible for the deaths of 13,000 ethnic Russians living in the country since 2014. Where was your outpouring, or even concern, for those thousands of mostly Russians, he asked. After discussing Sashas question, the conversation then moved on to the Lismore floods, but around 10 minutes later, Grant returned his attention to Sasha. Something has been bothering me, I have to admit, since we had Sasha, he said. People here have been talking about family who are suffering, and people dying, and I understand you wanted to ask your question about is there some reasoning for this. But you supported whats happening, hearing that people are dying. And can I just say Im not comfortable with you being here. Could you please leave. The audience broke out in applause at that point, and as Sasha protested, Grant stood firm. You can ask a question but you cannot advocate for violence, he said. I should have asked you to leave then, its been playing on my mind, but I do have to ask you to leave. Read more: Please leave: Stan Grant ejects pro-Putin audience member from Q&A set Three Victorians are in hospital with suspected cases of Japanese encephalitis after health authorities discovered a massive outbreak at pig farms across Australias south-east that had gone undetected for weeks. Japanese encephalitis is generally harmless but in the fewer than 1 per cent of cases where symptoms do develop, one patient in three will die. A vaccine is available, but there is no treatment. Piggeries in NSW, Victoria and Queensland have been infected with Japanese encephalitis. Credit:Graham Tidy Globally, the mosquito-borne virus, which spreads between waterbirds, pigs and humans, kills about 17,000 people a year, but it has never been seen south of Cape York. Experts say the deadly disease was brought here by the warming climate and is now here to stay. We never expected to see it in southern regions of Australia. This has taken a lot of us by surprise, said Associate Professor Cameron Webb, an expert in the virus, based at the University of Sydney. In dropping his planning reforms less than a fortnight after announcing them, Treasurer Tim Pallas has crudely exposed the mindset of the people who run our state as well as the cost of doing business in Victoria. The Treasurers media release on Tuesday which axed the reforms boasted about what the state had stood to gain: $7 billion in economic uplift, tens of thousands of jobs and faster planning approvals that would have shaved up to six months off the permit process. Victorian Treasurer Tim Pallas. Credit:Joe Armao And in a startling contrast with the hyperbole that usually makes up political media releases, Pallas was telling the truth. The proposed reforms, which were the outcome of three years work by bureaucrats, industry and the Commissioner for Better Regulation and Red Tape (truly her title), would have delivered real benefits to the Victorian economy. The powerful nurses union has called on Anthony Albanese to commit to ensuring aged care homes have a registered nurse on site at all times, as recommended by the Aged Care Royal Commission, but the Labor leader will not reveal his policies. Australian Nursing and Midwifery Federation secretary Annie Butler said it was not good enough that Mr Albanese was yet to commit to 24/7 registered nurses ahead of the federal election due by May, despite signing an ANMF pledge supporting the unions campaign. Opposition Leader Anthony Albanese is under pressure to reveal his aged care policies. Credit:Alex Ellinghausen We know from our members, there are many places that dont have an RN on at night, or theyre off site somewhere theyre [available] on a phone call, for three or four nursing homes, Ms Butler said. The ANMF is the nations largest union with more than 310,000 members and is campaigning for mandated 24/7 registered nurses, along with higher pay, funding transparency and an increase to minimum care minutes. BOSTON, March 1, 2022 -- Liberty Mutual Insurance has completed the acquisition of State Auto Group, a super-regional property and casualty insurance holding company headquartered in Columbus, Ohio that distributes personal and small commercial coverages in 33 states through approximately 3,400 independent agents. More than 2,000 State Auto employees will join Liberty Mutual's Global Retail Markets US business unit. Through the mutual transaction and merger, originally announced in July, Liberty Mutual adds $2.3 billion in premium and becomes the second-largest carrier in the independent agent channel. Under the terms of the agreement which received all required regulatory approvals State Automobile Mutual Insurance Company members became mutual members of Liberty Mutual Holding Company Inc. and Liberty Mutual acquired all of the publicly held shares of common stock of State Auto Financial Corp. for $52 per share in an all-cash-deal of approximately $1 billion. The companies will continue to operate as separate businesses throughout most of 2022. "Across Liberty Mutual and State Auto, we have a shared commitment to the Independent Agency channel and being the carrier of choice for independent agents," said Liberty Mutual President & COO, Global Retail Markets US, Hamid Mirza. "We are closely aligned in how we put people first, strive to make things better, and behave with integrity every day. Together, we'll be a leader in both the personal lines and small commercial insurance markets, helping policyholders when they need it most and giving our people more opportunities to grow and thrive." With the completion of the acquisition, Liberty Mutual also confirms the immediate appointment of Kim Garland as president of State Auto. Garland was most recently the company's senior vice president of personal and commercial lines and managing director of State Auto Labs. He added, "We bring together two organizations of passionate, driven, and talented individuals. Our combined strength allows us to significantly expand our relationships with independent agents and brokers, and make more strategic investments in the independent agent channel to continue driving profitable growth." Waller Helms Advisors LLC and Goldman Sachs & Co. LLC acted as financial advisors and Skadden, Arps, Slate, Meagher & Flom LLP acted as legal advisor to Liberty Mutual in the transaction. Houlihan Lokey Capital, Inc. acted as financial advisor and Kirkland & Ellis LLP acted as legal advisor to the Special Committee of Independent Directors of State Auto Financial Corp. in the transaction. Keefe, Bruyette & Woods, a Stifel Company, and BofA Securities, Inc. acted as financial advisors and Squire Patton Boggs (US) LLP acted as legal advisor to the Special Committee of Independent Directors of State Auto Mutual in the transaction. About Liberty Mutual Insurance At Liberty Mutual, we believe progress happens when people feel secure. By providing protection for the unexpected and delivering it with care, we help people embrace today and confidently pursue tomorrow. In business since 1912, and headquartered in Boston, today we are the sixth largest global property and casualty insurer based on 2020 gross written premium. We also rank 71 on the Fortune 100 list of largest corporations in the U.S. based on 2020 revenue. As of December 31, 2021, we had $48.2 billion in annual consolidated revenue. We employ over 45,000 people in 29 countries and economies around the world. We offer a wide range of insurance products and services, including personal automobile, homeowners, specialty lines, reinsurance, commercial multiple-peril, workers compensation, commercial automobile, general liability, surety, and commercial property. For more information, visit www.libertymutualinsurance.com. Media Contact: Glenn Greenberg 617-574-5874 [email protected] SOURCE Liberty Mutual Insurance RLE International Going To Kansas City, Kansas City Here We Come March 1, 2022 Kansas City $7.5 million KANSAS CITY, Mo.,-- Global engineering and design company RLE International announced today it will establish a new Modification and Engineering Center in, investingand creating 85 high-paying jobs. RLE's state-of-the-art facility will provide complex engineering, design, and build solutions for automotive and mobility clients. "Missouri is a global leader in innovation and advanced manufacturing, which support our robust automotive industry and many others," said Governor Mike Parson. "Our state is proud to welcome RLE as a valuable addition to an already vibrant automotive sector in Kansas City. These 85 new high-paying jobs will strengthen the region's economy as well as provide life changing opportunities for Missouri families." RLE International is involved in the development of new vehicles with a wide range of customers. The company helps manufacturers and start-ups develop, refine, and test electric vehicles from initial vision to production. RLE's new facility, a low-volume production Modification Center, will be located within Hunt Midwest's SubTropolis. Known for its security and eco-friendly environment, SubTropolis is the world's largest underground business complex. It also provides controlled temperature and humidity levels, in addition to railroad and highway access. "Our team at RLE International offers an upfront innovation strategy to transform customers' base vehicles to a range of design variants, right from ideation, through design and development, and into low-volume production," said Robert Kokx, President of RLE USA. "With the addition of our Mod Center, we can offer a 'one-stop shop' solution to our clients. We are truly excited to join forces with the talented people Kansas City has to offer and together take on our new possibilities." New positions at RLE's facility will include Plant Manager, Operations Manager, Engineering Manager, Quality Manager, IT systems engineer, production supervisors, human resource generalists, and more. The 85 new jobs will pay an average annual salary of more than $67,000, which is well above the county average wage. A list of employment opportunities are available on RLE's website. "This expansion is another example that our emphasis on a skilled workforce and favorable business climate is making a difference for our economy," said Department of Economic Development Acting Director Maggie Kost. "Collaborative efforts statewide continue to attract leading companies who are strengthening key sectors, creating jobs and improving the lives of Missourians. We're grateful for the teamwork that helped secure this significant investment, and look forward to welcoming RLE to Kansas City." "As the second-largest auto hub in North America, the KC region is a key location for RLE International as the company continues to innovate and grow within the industry," said Tim Cowden, President and CEO of the Kansas City Area Development Council. "The $19 billion transportation manufacturing industry in KC allows companies, including RLE, to streamline supply chain operations and lower operating costs." "As America's crossroads, Kansas City, Missouri is excited to welcome RLE," said Steven Anthony, Executive Director of Business Development for the Economic Development Corporation of Kansas City. "Our location, availability of skilled talent, and our business climate will serve RLE very well. We look forward to welcoming them to our community." "Missouri is a leader in the automotive and mobility sector, and we are thrilled to welcome RLE to Missouri," said Subash Alias, CEO of Missouri Partnership. "They are an innovative company, creating life-changing jobs for Missourians. We look forward to their success and growth in Missouri." About Missouri Partnership Missouri Partnership is a public-private economic development organization focused on attracting new jobs and investment to the state and promoting Missouri's business strengths. Since 2008, Missouri Partnership has worked with partners statewide to attract companies that have created 29,000+ new jobs, $1.5 billion+ in new annual payroll, and $4 billion+ in new capital investment. Some recent successful projects that led to major investment in Missouri include Accenture Federal Services LLC, Amazon, Casey's, Chewy, Inc., Square, Swift Prepared Foods, USDA, and Veterans United. Media Contact: Janelle Higgins 314.541.4911 janelle@missouripartnership.com SOURCE Missouri Partnership Art critic Ruben Hernandez shares his views on the art form of haute couture, which highlights on the limitations and expansion of clothing. Conway, AR (72032) Today Cloudy this evening with thunderstorms developing after midnight. Low 63F. Winds E at 5 to 10 mph. Chance of rain 80%.. Tonight Cloudy this evening with thunderstorms developing after midnight. Low 63F. Winds E at 5 to 10 mph. Chance of rain 80%. [March 02, 2022] UST Accelerates Digital Business Transformation for Enterprises with RISE with SAP - The achievement validates UST's global services capabilities that help enterprises unlock business value by leveraging SAP solutions. BENGALURU, India, March 2, 2022 /PRNewswire/ -- UST, a leading digital transformation solutions company, today announced its qualification to offer services in support of the RISE with SAP solution. RISE with SAP brings together what businesses need to pursue their digital transformation objectives and accelerate their move to the cloud while benefitting from the ability to begin their journey from their unique starting point. UST partners with SAP to help customers transform their businesses with the software and services they need to achieve greater speed, agility, and integration. "At UST, we focus on helping our customers adopt standard best practices and reduce technical debt while leveraging the latest digital technologies," said Chris Botha, Senior Vice President and Global SAP Leader, UST. "UST is well-positioned to support its clients accelerate their digital business transformation and take their business-critical elements into the cloud with flexibility and innovation with RISE with SAP." UST developed a portfolio of industry-leading tools, platforms, apps, and accelerators to drive value and differentiation for businesses adopting RISE with SAP. These include: UST Rapid Readiness: A proven eight-stage, a pre-preparation framework for SAP S/4HANA that enhances the SAP Activate methodology and ensures that business drivers and pain points are mapped to capabilities for SAP S/4HANA Cloud. This also helps align landscape and cloud strategy while leveraging UST's happiness approach to human-centric digital development, all of which results in a clear roadmap for standardization, innovation, and a transformation business case. A proven eight-stage, a pre-preparation framework for SAP S/4HANA that enhances the SAP Activate methodology and ensures that business drivers and pain points are mapped to capabilities for SAP S/4HANA Cloud. This also helps align landscape and cloud strategy while leveraging UST's happiness approach to human-centric digital development, all of which results in a clear roadmap for standardization, innovation, and a transformation business case. UST Fast Start : An upgrade and cloud migration trial offering which enables enterprises to reduce risk in their migration to SAP S/4HANA Cloud. The offering allows UST to upgrade and migrate businesses to our cloud as a trial, accelerating the ultimate journey to SAP S/4HANA Cloud. : An upgrade and cloud migration trial offering which enables enterprises to reduce risk in their migration to SAP S/4HANA Cloud. The offering allows UST to upgrade and migrate businesses to our cloud as a trial, accelerating the ultimate journey to SAP S/4HANA Cloud. UST Evolve: Rapid migration of SAP ERP Central Component environments to SAP S/4HANA Cloud has become an essential component to most transformation journeys. UST Evolve is a hybrid migration framework leveraging UST accelerators and IP to accelerate the transformation. As a partner qualified to provide services for RISE with SAP, UST works with SAP from the start to address a customer's unique needs to help ensure its success. UST Global is a partner in the SAP PartnerEdge program. The SAP PartnerEdge program provides the enablement tools, benefits and support to facilitate building high-quality, disruptive applications focused on specific business needs quickly and cost-effectively. About UST For more than 22 years, UST has worked side by side with the world's best companies to make a real impact through transformation. Powered by technology, inspired by people, and led by our purpose, we partner with our clients from design to operation. We identify their core challenges and craft disruptive solutions that bring their vision to life through our agile approach. With deep domain expertise and a future-proof philosophy, we embed innovation and agility into our clients' organizationsdelivering measurable value and lasting change across industries and worldwide. Together, with over 29,000 employees in 30 countries, we build for boundless impacttouching billions of lives in the process. Visit us at ust.com. SAP and other SAP products and services mentioned herein as well as their respective logos are trademarks or registered trademarks of SAP SE in Germany and other countries. Please see https://www.sap.com/copyright for additional trademark information and notices. All other product and service names mentioned are the trademarks of their respective companies. Media Contacts, UST: Tinu Cherian Abraham +1 (949) 415-9857 Neha Misri +91-9284726602 media.relations@ust.com Media Contacts, U.S.: S&C PR +1-646.941.9139 media@scprgroup.com Media Contacts, U.K.: FTI Consulting UST@fticonsulting.com Logo: https://mma.prnewswire.com/media/1422658/UST_Logo.jpg [ Back to the Next Generation Communications Community's Homepage ] Van Buren, AR (72956) Today Thunderstorms likely. Rainfall will be locally heavy at times. A few storms may be severe. Low 64F. Winds ESE at 10 to 15 mph. Chance of rain 100%. 1 to 2 inches of rain expected.. Tonight Thunderstorms likely. Rainfall will be locally heavy at times. A few storms may be severe. Low 64F. Winds ESE at 10 to 15 mph. Chance of rain 100%. 1 to 2 inches of rain expected. Students don face coverings as they wait in line to enter for the first day of in-class learning since the start of the pandemic at Garden Place Elementary School, Monday, Aug. 23, 2021, in north Denver. Staff Reporter Nyamekye Daniel has been a journalist for five years. She was the managing editor for the South Florida Media Network and a staff writer for The Miami Times. Daniel's work has also appeared in the Sun-Sentinel, Miami Herald and The New York Times. Associate Editor Brent Addleman is an Associate Editor and a veteran journalist with more than 25 years of experience. He has served as editor of newspapers in Pennsylvania and Texas, and has also worked at newspapers in Delaware, Maryland, New York, and Kentucky. Every so often, I tell Rick, I have an idea. According to my husband, these simple words give him cold chills. You see, Rick is a man who loves his daily routine. He enjoys knowing what to expect and changes are not, shall we say, welcomed with open arms. Am I about to tell him that I want to host an event in our home, go visit my mother, or move the furniture around? He doesnt know whats coming, but he is always confident that his routine is about to be rocked in one way or another. Read more Instant unlimited access to all of our E-Editions and content on thechronicleonline.com. The Chronicle E-Edition Newsletter emailed to you each week, the night before the paper hits the street! This subscription is for NEW or RENEWING online subscribers. (The charge will appear as "Country Media Inc." on your credit card statement) Last November, 61-year-old GuiYing Ma was sweeping a Queens sidewalk when a man approached. According to reports, the two had a verbal dispute and the man attacked Ma with a large rock. The attacker, 33-year-old Elisaul Perez, who had at least 11 prior arrests on his record, was charged with assault and harassment. The attack left Ma with multiple lacerations and permanent brain damage, and she was placed on a ventilator and a feeding tube. Last week, her family confirmed that she had died from complications from her injuries. Ma came to New York from Liaoning, China, in 2018 and is survived by her husband, son, and grandchildren. She is at least the fourth person of Asian descent in New York City to die as a result of violence against the AAPI community in recent months. Other victims include Christina Yuna Lee, who was followed into her Chinatown apartment and stabbed to death in February; Michelle Go, who was pushed onto subway tracks in January; and Yao Pan Ma, who was attacked last year while collecting cans on an East Harlem street and later died from his injuries. From 2019 to 2020, the number of hate crimes against AAPI community members in major cities across the country has increased by a staggering 150 percent. The crimes have stoked fear, anxiety, and unrest within the citys AAPI communities. Yet, to the outrage of many, not all of these crimes are classified as hate crimes, as prosecutors face barriers to proving racist motives behind attacks against Asians. Its unclear whether Mas attacker will be charged with a hate crime, though authorities did report the initial attack to the NYPD Hate Crime Task Force. In their responses to Mas death, many leaders have explicitly condemned anti-Asian violence. We recommit to protecting our Asian communities and every community from hatred and violence, New York City mayor Eric Adams wrote on Twitter. On Facebook, New York State attorney general Letitia James wrote: These hateful acts of violence against our Asian communities must come to an end. #Stop AsianHate. On a GoFundMe page for Mas memorial, her family wrote that she will be remembered as an outgoing, friendly and kind individual who took care of everyone, and insisted on giving to others even when she had very little to give. This is the temporary subscription pass for users returning from the Vision Data subscription process. Your subscription will be updated within 24 hours, after your information is verified. Please click the button below to get your pass. Click the image to the left and log in to get your exclusive reader perks. Patrick J. Buchanan is the author of Nixons White House Wars: The Battles That Made and Broke a President and Divided America Forever. To find out more about Patrick Buchanan and read features by other Creators writers and cartoonists, visit the Creators website at www.creators.com. Meet Trooper! Trooper is 5-years-old. His favorite activities include sleeping, going on walks and sticking his head out of the car sunroof. T Matthew Moon, left, special agent in charge of the criminal division, FBI, addresses the media outside of Beverly Hills City Hall to talk about the arrest of three gang members in Los Angeles, on Feb. 28, 2022. (Mel Melcon/Los Angeles Times/TNS) A 3rd Man Gets Prison for Beverly Hills Heist of $500,000 Watch By Lila Seidman From Los Angeles Times LOS ANGELESA third gang member was sentenced to federal prison Monday in connection with an armed robbery of a $500,000 watch at a Beverly Hills restaurant where one diner was struck by gunfire. Marquise A. Gardon, 41, received five years for his role in the brazen heist carried out in March 2021 at an upscale Italian restaurant on North Canon Drive, according to the U.S. attorneys office. Earlier this month, two menMalik Lamont Powell, 21, and 18-year-old Khai McGheewere each sentenced to 12 years for their part in the robbery, which was carried out in broad daylight. Gardon pleaded guilty in September to conspiracy to interfere with commerce by robbery and using a firearm in a crime of violence, according to court documents. The same month, Powell and McGhee, also known as Cameron Smith, pleaded guilty to three felony robbery and weapons charges. U.S. District Court Judge John Walter handed down the three sentences. About two weeks ago, he called the crime outrageous and unacceptable as he sentenced Powell and McGhee. All three men are documented members of the Rollin 30s Crips gang, according to court documents. Authorities said five suspects were involved in the March 4 robbery at the Italian restaurant Il Pastaio. The robbers drove into the wealthy neighborhood that day, scouted out victims and keyed in on jeweler Shay Belhassen as he sat outside the restaurant frequented by celebrities. The men held up Belhassen at gunpoint and stole his half-million-dollar watch designed by Richard Mille, according to court filings. While one of the robbers pressed the gun against his head, Belhassen struggled for control of the weapon and wrested it away. The gun fell to the ground, and one of the robbers picked it up, fired twice in different directions in the crowded restaurant and struck a woman who was sitting nearby in the leg, according to an FBI affidavit. The weapon was left behind at the restaurant, authorities said. Powell was connected to the robbery through his black BMW, which was used as the getaway car, authorities said. His cellphone was also in the area at the time, and his social media accounts featured images of guns and high-value wristwatches, according to prosecutors. Hours after the robbery, Powell discussed the stolen watch in a series of Instagram messages, referring to the piece by name and writing about his efforts to sell it quickly. After the attack, a bloodstain on Belhassens shirt was found to match McGhees DNA, and prosecutors said McGhee was featured in Powells Instagram feed. Belhassen told the Los Angeles Times after the robbery that he doubted whoever had the jewelry would try to sell it any time soon, in part because of the attention paid to the theft. Its a very rare watch, so whoever is going to be offered it is going to know they are being offered stolen stuff, he said. Belhassen offered a $50,000 reward for its return. Prior to the blatant daytime theft, security camera footage showed Gardon getting out of the back seat of Powells car and getting into the drivers seat. And about 30 minutes before the robbery, surveillance video captured a woman, referred to as a scout in the court affidavit, walking around high-end watch and jewelry stores on Rodeo Drive. Two other suspects involved in the theft have not been identified, police said. 2022 Los Angeles Times. Visit latimes.com. Distributed by Tribune Content Agency, LLC. There is a quote that says, To appreciate the beauty of a snowflake, it is necessary to stand out in the cold. These days, you might get away with appreciating it in the palm of your hand in the warmth of your home, thanks to an inadvertent invention from more than 100 years ago. Not many people know that the inventor of the snow globe was actually a designer of surgical instruments. Erwin Perzy, a Viennese man credited with designing and patenting the first snow globe as we know it, was looking for a way to improve the lamp used for medical surgery, originally called the Schusterkugel (or shoemakers lamp in German), which various craftsmen had been using to enhance the lighting for their work. Inventor Erwin Perzy, at age 25 in this photo. (Original Wiener Schneekugel e.U.) In 1900, he found that putting glass shavings as glitter inside a water-filled glass globe to boost the light didnt work because they fell too quickly. He then tried using semolina. It failed as far as enhancing the light, but the way it suspended in the water and floated gently back down reminded him of snow falling. Perzy had been interested in toys and toy making, and when he put a ceramic figurine of the Mariazell Basilica (a baroque church in the Austrian region of Styria) into the semolina Schusterkugel and gave it to a friend who then ordered more in order to sell to the visiting pilgrims at his stall, the snow globe was born. Perzy mainly focused on religious themes, and many well-to-do Austrians wanted a piece of this novel art in their homes. Perzys firm became a success. In 1908, he was honored for his invention by Emperor Franz Joseph I. Stephansdom, or St. Stephens Cathedral, a Vienna landmark. (Christian Stemper/WienTourismus) The Stephansdom snow globe produced by the Perzy family. (Original Wiener Schneekugel e.U.) Snow Globe Craze However, several more developmentsthanks to new materials and production processeshad to happen before the snow globe occupied a spot in every family home. News of this new object had reached across the pond to the Americans. In the 1950s, the snow globe craze really hit the United States after several exhibitions at the Nuremberg International Toy Fair. In Europe, the small glass sphere had become the Christmas present to get for Roman Catholic children, but U.S. buyers managed to convince the Perzy firm to branch out from its mainly religious themes. Disney, tourist landmarks, Christmas scenes, and different worlds began to appear in the snow globe. Tiny soldiers were put inside to boost civilian morale during World War II, and the post-war tourist boom placed snow globes in every tourist gift shop in the country. Walt Disneys earliest snow globe dates back to 1959, with a tiny figurine of Bambi. The Perzy snow globe was forever immortalized in the 1941 classic film Citizen Kane in its dramatic opening sequence where it falls from the dead mans hand to the floor and shatters into pieces. This certainly wouldnt be the case today with most other snow globes, as plastic or plexiglass came to replace glass in the making of the globes. Other changes brought on by new materials included injection molding of figures and even the snow itself being replaced by plastic flakes, as well as glycol being mixed with water to increase the viscosity. This made snow globes even more accessible and cheaper to produce; places such as Hong Kong and China could now mass-produce them. Viennas Ferris wheel. (Paul Bauer/WienTourismus) A snow globe of Viennas Stephansdom and Ferris wheel. (Original Wiener Schneekugel e.U.) Family Business Despite all this, the original Wiener Schneekugelmanufaktur (a Vienesse snow globe manufactury) has kept its tradition alive as a family business. Perzys grandson, Erwin Perzy III, only recently retired and his daughter, Sabine Perzy II, is now in charge. In cheap imitations, the snow drops after only a few seconds. In our models, depending on size, it can take up to two minutes, Sabine said. Semolina might have been replaced by a secret concoction of plastic and wax, but the exact composition is a closely guarded family secret known only to Erwin Perzy III and Sabine. Sabine Perzy II carries on the family business. (Wibke Carter) Erwin Perzy III at work. (Original Wiener Schneekugel e.U.) Old casting molds. (Wibke Carter) So what about the ornaments inside? They used to be made by hand, cast out of pewter, milled, and carved by Erwin Perzy himself, but now theyre made in small batches drawn using a program and produced by 3D printers. There are more than 350 models of Perzy snow globes, from the Vienna Ferris wheel to the Stephansdom and characters from the latest Disney movies to purple dragons or red glitter shoes all occupy a place. However, what sets the Perzy snow globe apart is the customizability, as tailor-made orders make up 20 percent of total sales. The most illustrious custom ordered Perzy snow globes might be those created for former U.S. presidents, including Bill Clinton and Ronald Reagan. A manifestation of these strange times also lives on in the Vienna snow globe, thanks to Sabine, who came up with the idea of putting a roll of toilet paper in the snow globe during the pandemic. She had the inspiration when she saw that even bakers were making bread in the shape of a toilet paper roll to make fun of the strange phenomenon of stockpiling the bathroom necessities during 2020. These particular snow globes sold very well, with her customers appreciating the humor encapsulated in a snowy setting as a memento. We have also made snow globes for many famous movies, snow globes with industry logos, and giveaway snow globes for large corporations, she said. They even have Japanese corporate customers. The car manufacturer Mitsubishi has ordered hundreds of thousands of snow globes over the years. Some models take half a year to make. We once had a customer who wanted her own home in a snow globe as a present to her husband for their 50th wedding anniversary, Sabine said. The United States is showing support for Taiwan amid growing threats from Beijing. A delegation has arrived on the island for talks among top current and former officials. Triggered by Russia-Ukraine escalation, Japans former prime minister suggests his country consider a nuclear sharing program, inspired by NATO. Details on a highly sophisticated Chinese hacking tool has come outafter it had escaped public attention for years. Global supply chains take another hit. Russias invasion sparked new airspace bans on both sides of the conflict, impacting a fifth of the worlds air cargo. And China is at the frontline. As the United States sanctions Russia, China is buying more from the country. At the same time, Beijing is stepping up its oil purchases from yet another sanctioned nation. Have other topics you want us to cover? Drop us a line: chinainfocus@ntdtv.org And if youd like to buy us a coffee: https://donorbox.org/china-in-focus Subscribe to our newsletter for more first-hand news from China. For more news and videos, please visit us on Gettr and Twitter. NOTICE Persons attempting to find a motive in the narrative will be prosecuted; persons attempting to find a moral in it will be banished; persons attempting to find a plot in it will be shot. BY ORDER OF THE AUTHOR This warning famously graces the opening page of Mark Twains Adventures of Huckleberry Finn, setting readers up for a narrative of gritty humor and grinning irony. Since Mr. Twain did not order readers away from attempting to find a theme, we propose that though this American epic is full of pariahs, vagabonds, and rapscallions, it is also a story about kings. In the whole catalog of conjured heroes from Homer to Hemingway, not one is quite as kingly as Huckleberry Finn. And there never was such a king, either. Huck has royal poise, a regal demeanor, as he presides in straightforward fashion over his empire of mud and water. It is not the kingdom, remember, that makes the kingit is the inspired soul that assumes a kingly view and vantage. Hucks soul is as perceptive and receptive as a kings, and at the same time, his soul resonates with our own on a primal level. This is the very thing that reminds us that weall of us, like Huckare called to be kings. We are kings with Huckleberry Finn in the most elemental and existential sense as inheritors of the earth and caretakers of those amenities and subjects within our borders. Mark Twains novel gives us a kingly character: Huckleberry Finn. The Adventures of Huckleberry Finn, 1884, by Mark Twain. (Public Domain) Humanitys Sovereignty We are all kings, for as Huck points out regarding kings, everything belongs to them, and we, too, have been given the wealth of the world to command. Ancient myths and histories attest to the ancient kingship of our race. Even nursery rhymes such as R.L. Stevensons Happy Thought concur: The world is so full of a number of things, Im sure we should all be as happy as kings. The question of kingship is one of the reasons that Adventures of Huckleberry Finn is important for the common reader, for it explores the kingship of the common man. We are all overseers of a vast realm of sunsets and seas, of trees and towns, and all the things placed within our power of knowledge and action. The world is our oyster. If our spirits are attentive and appreciative enough, we are kings indeed. Drawing of Huckleberry Finn by E.W. Kemble, from the original 1884 edition of the book Adventures of Huckleberry Finn. (Public Domain) Huckleberry Finn demonstrates this truth in his adventures, reminding us of what we all ought to know full well, but are often forgetful of: We are all empowered with the grace to observe, experience, and appreciate the rich goodness of creation, while reckoning the works of man true or false, right or wrong, lawful or unlawful. Such reckonings demand a type of wisdomwisdom that Huck has, if he has nothing else. But what else should a king really possess other than wisdom? Wisdom is perhaps the first characteristic that comes to mind as proper for a kingthe wisdom of Sollermun, as Huck and his friend Jim call him. Huckleberry has a natural intelligence, which is very different from Tom Sawyers imagination. That is to say, Huck sees things as they are, with a power that goes beyond mere sight. In short, Huck has vision. As T.S. Eliot says of his fellow Missourian in his introduction to an edition, [Huckleberry Finn] sees the real world; and he does not judge ithe allows it to judge itself. And Jim approves: Did ole King Sollermun do anything less with dat chile dat he uz gwyne to chop in two? Is there anyone among us today who could be so wise as to allow the world to settle itself? Huckleberry Finn and Jim on the raft, by E.W. Kemble, in the 1884 edition of Adventures of Huckleberry Finn. (Public Domain) Huckleberry is too prudent and too solicitous to get in the way of such universal laws and natural processions. He pulses with love of the land, authority over the waters, and consideration for his fellows. Nowhere else can you find a sunrise described with such admiration and attention as by his clumsy eloquence. Nowhere else can you learn the terror of a river than from one who fearlessly stems its whirling eddies with a corncob pipe between his teeth. Nowhere can you find amusement and consideration for the follies and virtues of men and women than from his unsophisticated yet profound musings. As kings ourselves, we should not shy away or close ourselves off from such mysteries. Hucks majestic quality of witnessing the complexities of life and honestly turning them over in his mind bespeaks a type of ownership over them. He is the perfect blend of monarchical impassivity and childlike interest. If there is any element of tragedy (or comedy, for that matter) in this genre-defying tale, it is that the rafting philosopher-king is supremely unconscious of his sceptered sway. Discernment in Looking at Men While Huck appreciates the richness of creation, he knows that man is another thing: He knows fraud when he sees it. A stretch of his odyssey down the Mississippi involves two down-on-their-luck charlatans who brazenly pose themselves to the savvy youth as no less than a king and a duke. Their thin pantomime is intended to overwhelm the victims of their freeloading, but Huck quickly deciphers that they are low-down humbugs and keeps it to himself. He is too dispassionate to interfere with such deceptions, and too desirous of keeping peace in his domain. It is only when their scams go so far as to make a body ashamed of the human race that Huck interferes, invisibly meting out justice, and casts the riches they intended to steal beyond their grasp. There is only so much hogwash that can be tolerated, and even kings have to fuss with the parlyment from time to time and take care of people and things. (LR) Huck, the Lost Dauphin (as he calls himself), the Duke, and Jim, as illustrated by Achille Sirouy. (Public Domain) According to the wisdom of this noble river rat, there is little distinction between the prince and the pauper. When it comes to kings, after all, they just set around. Except maybe when theres a war; then they go to the war. But other times they just lazy around. Huck claims the independence of both the loafer and the lord. Kings is kings, and you got to make allowances. He is aware of his surroundings like any street urchin but regards them like any sovereign, like any steward. Huck is a straight-faced observer of truth, enthroned on high even in the wreck of his rags, impervious to the wiles that seduce or the lies that corrupt. Huckleberry Finn beholds the world as the world and acts accordingly. Can the same be said of us? Are we worthy successors of our crowns, we who seem bent on remaking the world in our own image? Can we claim wisdom, with the noise of the media and the milieu of modern culture? Have we lost the stewards connection, the skippers watchful eye and consequent affection for the world that has been placed in our care? Have we betrayed our kingdom, our kingship? Let us keep our eyes open and our spirts attentive with Huckleberrys. In considering the role of kingship in this book, we should consider whether we as a people have strayed too far from the river that is our realm. A trek with Huckleberry Finn down the river that is his kingdom is enough to awaken to our royal birthright as human beings. Alaska Airlines planes are parked at gates with Mount Rainier in the background at sunrise, at Seattle-Tacoma International Airport in Seattle on March 1, 2021. (Ted S. Warren/AP Photo) Alaska Airlines Suspending Russian Airline Partnership, Washington to Block Russian Planes From Airspace Alaska Airlines has announced that it is pausing ties with a Russian airline, noting that it is deeply concerned by the humanitarian crisis unfolding in Ukraine, as part of a concerted move by many companies around the world to isolate Russia for its initiation of war. We are temporarily suspending our partnership with the Russian airline S7, a fellow Oneworld member. Starting today, March 1, our guests will not be able to earn miles on S7. Our ongoing work to enable redemptions on S7 will also stop, the airlines said in a statement. Oneworld is an airline alliance founded in Feb. 1999. Alaska Airlines has also suspended the limited interline relationships with S7 and Aeroflot, the largest carrier in Russia. Interlining allows passengers of one airline to be ticketed on another alternate airline in cases like bad weather, etc. Other major airlines based in the United States have also announced the suspension of services to Russia. American Airlines, Delta Airlines, United Airlines, and courier company United Parcel Service (UPS) will no longer be flying over the Russian airspace. Washington has indicated that it will block Russian flights from its airspace. We will join our allies in closing off American air space to all Russian flightsfurther isolating Russiaand adding an additional squeezeon their economy, President Joe Biden said in the State of the Union address on March 1. The Federal Aviation Administration (FAA) has banned American air carriers and pilots from flying over Ukraine, Belarus, and certain portions of Western Russia. The European Union (EU), which already closed its airspace to Russian aircraft, has indicated that it was in discussions with the United States to extend the ban. The EU decision to ban all Russian-owned, Russian registered, or Russian-controlled aircraft was announced by European Commission head Ursula von der Leyen on Feb. 27. These aircraft will no more be able to land in, take off, or overfly the territory of the EU. This will apply to any plane owned, chartered, or otherwise controlled by a Russian legal or natural person. So let me be very clear. Our airspace will be closed to every Russian planeand that includes the private jets of oligarchs, von der Leyen said. Russia shut down its airspace to airlines from 36 nations, including the 27 member states of the European Union and the UK. London had earlier banned Aeroflot from UK airspace. The airline bans announced by Russia, the EU, and the UK, as well as multiple airlines in the United States, can have a negative impact on cargo transport. Russian carriers account for roughly 70 percent of flights between the EU and Russia. Airline companies that account for transporting around a fifth of the worlds air cargo are the ones affected by the flight bans, Frederic Horst, managing director of Cargo Facts Consulting, told Reuters. Global supply chains were already hard hit by shipping port disruptions while air freight rates were elevated due to a lack of passengers amidst the pandemic. With flights getting banned, air cargo transport could turn more expensive while further complicating the supply chain crisis. Alberta Premier Jason Kenney speaks at the United Conservative Party annual meeting in Calgary, Alta., on Nov. 20, 2021. (The Canadian Press/Larry MacDougal) Alberta to Ban Municipalities From Imposing Their Own COVID-19 Restrictions Public health is the responsibility of the province, not of municipalities, Premier Kenney says The Alberta government is moving to ban municipalities from enacting their own COVID-19 public health restrictions, including mask mandates. Premier Jason Kenney says his government will introduce legislation as early as next week to amend the Municipal Government Act (MGA), which will remove the ability of municipalities to enact their own separate public health restrictions. We are concerned that a patchwork of separate policies across the province could just lead to greater division, confusion, enforcement difficulty, with no compelling public health rationale, Kenney said at a press conference on March 1. And we certainly shouldnt allow political science to be substituted for public health science. As of March 1, Alberta has dropped almost all of its COVID-19 restrictions, including mask mandates in most settings. However, Edmonton continues to mandate masks for its residentsthe only municipality in the province to do so. The City of Edmontons Temporary Mandatory Face Coverings bylaw remains in place and requires all individuals 2 years of age and older to wear a face covering in Edmontons indoor public spaces and public vehicles until further action is taken, the city announced on March 1. If the legislation introduced by the Kenney government passes, the province will be in a position to override Edmontons mask bylaw. The new Mayor of Edmonton Amarjeet Sohi takes part in a swearing in ceremony in Edmonton Alta, on Oct. 26, 2021. (The Canadian Press/Jason Franson) Edmonton Mayor Amarjeet Sohi condemned Kenneys move as an overreach by the provincial government in a series of tweets following the premiers announcement. Such overreach, it goes beyond the mask bylaw, said Sohi in an audio post on March 1. It could restrict our ability to manage other areas, it could restrict other municipalities ability to make decisions that are in the best interest of the local citizens. It is stepping into an area that municipalities have done a pretty good job of, protecting the well-being of our citizens. The mayor also criticized the provincial government for encouraging and expecting municipalities to pass their own health and safety bylaws based on local realities earlier in the pandemic, then removing that same authority without first consulting them. It can affect all municipalities across the province if the GoA [Government of Alberta] decides to alter the MGA whenever they dislike a policy a municipality has in place, Sohi tweeted. When asked during the press conference about the decision to amend the MGA, Kenney stressed that public health is the responsibility of the provincial government, not of municipalities. We have shown flexibility for municipalities that at various times through COVID, brought in their own measures, and we wanted to demonstrate that flexibility, the premier said. Kenney added that he had indicated at a press conference on Feb. 8 that if municipalities decided to create separate COVID policies themselves, the province might intervene. Weve given them considerable notice, he said. The move to amend the MGA is not about disrespecting a choice to wear masks in public, Kenney said, but that it is for policy consistency. We absolutely respect the right of Edmontonians to wear masks and all Albertans to wear masks, he said. What Edmonton wants to do is not to respect the choice of people not to wear masks. So, what were embracing here is choice, and respect for those choices as opposed to a division for political reasons. Jeffrey Harmon may be the most unlikely person to become a key player in the television industry. We grew up on a potato farm in Idaho, he told American Essence. We had a tube TV that got three channels. We could get PBS with an antenna. Harmon didnt watch a lot of TV growing up. Instead, he and his brothers spent their teenage years selling potatoes door-to-door in Utah before moving on to the landscaping business. But when he studied marketing and advertising at Brigham Young University from 2006 to 2008, his thinking began to shift. I roomed with a few film majors, he said. Spending time with them opened up my thinking in a lot of ways. Harmon said he pioneered the YouTube ad agency Orabrush, Inc., which generated 20 million views for its clients in 2009, well before YouTubes popularity exploded. From there, Jeffrey and his brother Neal Harmon co-founded VidAngel, a service that gave parents the ability to filter explicit content on streaming video services like YouTube. Its like a remote that skips sexual scenes, rape, and swearing, Jeffrey said. Around that time, he and Neal began thinking that they could help make programming that didnt require censorship. While that may mean less business for VidAngel, it also meant the potential for a new, untapped market for stories that amplify light. We were inspired by Pixar, Jeffrey said. We began to seriously think that if they could do it, so could we. Neal (R) discusses projects with a member of the Angel Studios team. (George Frey for American Essence) Transformation Now, Jeffrey Harmon is the chief content officer at Angel Studios, which he co-founded with Neal in January 2021. Angel Studios uses a crowdfunding model to raise money to produce shows like The Chosen, the first multi-season show about the life of Christ and the Gospels. In Freelancers, a family-friendly sitcom, five friends try to make it as filmmakers, one terrible job at a time, according to the shows fundraising site. The Riot and the Dance, which features rapper Kanye Wests track about his Christian faith, Selah, is the first faith-based nature docuseries that explores the idea that humans are part of Gods plan, and not a poison to be ashamed of for living on this earth, according to an Angel Studios press release. The company then distributes this content via video-on-demand services. The studio also released a childrens show called Tuttle Twins, based on the best-selling series of books by Connor Boyack. The show follows lovable characters as they journey through time to teach kids about the countrys foundational principles of freedom, free-market capitalism, personal freedom, and more. Showrunner Daniel Harmonanother of the six Harmon brothers, not to be confused with the co-creator of the animated sitcom Rick and Mortysaid Tuttle Twins was made possible by we the people. Thousands of supporters have gotten behind us and invested their hard-earned dollars in this series, said Daniel, Angel Studios chief creative officer, in a press release. Jeffrey still marvels at how it all happened. We are the most unlikely people to be working in this space. The company bounced back after nearly going bankrupt. (George Frey for American Essence) Invention Born of Necessity The journey toward creating a new model for a film studio wasnt easy. In fact, VidAngel was embroiled in a four-year legal battle with Pixars parent company, Disney; Warner Bros.; and 20th Century Fox, among others. A federal bankruptcy court judge ruled that VidAngels service constituted altering content from the aforementioned companies. From there, Neal Harmon said, a $62.4 million settlement was whittled down to a $9.9 million payout. Most small companies dont survive a lawsuit with Disney, Neal said. VidAngel had only $2.2 million in the bank then, which would have sent the company into liquidation. Standing on the edge of an uncertain future, the Harmons asked their fans to help bring the company back from the brink of bankruptcy. We didnt have the money to fight this fight, Neal said. But, I said, well fight if you want us to. Over the following five days, 8,000 people donated $10 million to help keep VidAngel alive. Half of that went toward the companys legal battle. The other half funded Dry Bar Comedy, an online stand-up series that features hundreds of family-friendly stand-up comedy specials. Some investors were wary of the studio entering a saturated market like stand-up comedy, but Jeffrey said he stuck to his guns. One comedian told us that hed been waiting for a project like this to come out of LA or New York, Jeffrey said. He didnt expect it to come out of Provo, Utah. The Harmons quickly realized that they could use the same crowdfunding model to fund individual projects. They raised over $10 million for The Chosen and $1.5 million for the aforementioned faith-based nature documentary. The $4.6 million they raised for Tuttle Twins made it the most successful crowdfunded kids show in world history, according to the studios websitenot bad for a content distributor that, at the time, hadnt yet hit the one-year mark. Jeffrey and Neal first worked together to create an online service that gave parents the ability to filter out explicit content from streaming videos. (George Frey for American Essence) Its What the People Want Neal and Jeffrey could not affirm that Kanye West personally approved Selah, from his ninth studio album, Jesus is King, to be used to promote the nature documentary. But they feel that he had to believe in the project somehow to have approved the music licensing. Thats at least some sign of accomplishment, said Neal. That accomplishment is not an appraisal of what Angel Studios has done to this point; its an indication of what the Angel Studios community has accomplished. One of our advantages, Neal said, is that the projects we make are determined by our audience, via crowdfunding. Its a rigorous process. Very few projects make the cut, as they go through rounds of viewing and voting. Still, the Harmons bristled at the idea that their process could be called democratic. Instead, Jeffrey said that he thinks often of newspaper publisher Joseph Pulitzers efforts to crowdfund a pedestal for the Statue of Liberty. That was Americas first major crowdfunding project, he said. Pulitzer was feeling the pinch as the statue made its way from France to the United States, so he launched a fundraising campaign that was advertised through his newspaper, The New York World. Pulitzer promised to put the names of donors on the front page of his paper, Jeffrey said. In some sense, thats what were doing. The company is named after the angels who fund their projects, Neal said. And were just getting started. Our goal in the next five years is to see The Chosen reach a billion viewers. Once we build this thing, he continued, well help to distribute even more crowdfunded content. Its what the people want. This article was originally published in American Essence magazine. The Apple Inc. logo is seen in the lobby of New York City's flagship Apple store on Jan. 18, 2011. (Mike Segar/Reuters) Apple Halts Sale of All Products in Russia, Ford Suspends Operations Apple announced Tuesday that it will halt the sale of all of its products in Russia, while global users will no longer be able to download state-backed media outlets RT News and Sputnik News from its app stores in the wake of Moscows invasion of Ukraine. While Apple doesnt have any physical stores present in Russia, it does operate online. However, the tech giant has now halted the sales of all of its products, including Macs, iPhones, iPads, and other Apple devices, from its Russian website. Customers attempting to purchase any product from the website are instead told that delivery is unavailable when they attempt to put the item in their online shopping cart. Apple said in a statement on Tuesday that it has paused the sale of its goods in the country as a sign of solidarity with the people of Ukraine after Russia invaded on Feb. 24. We are supporting humanitarian efforts, providing aid for the unfolding refugee crisis, and doing all we can to support our teams in the region, Apple added. As well as RT News and Sputnik News no longer available for download from the App Store outside of Russia, Apple said it has also disabled both traffic and live incidents in its Maps in Ukraine as a safety and precautionary measure for Ukrainian citizens. We will continue to evaluate the situation and are in communication with the relevant governments on the actions we are taking. We join all those around the world who are calling for peace. The announcement from Apple comes shortly after Ukraines digital minister Mykhailo Fedorov, called on the companys CEO Tim Cook to stop supplying Apple services and products to the Russian Federation and block access to the Apple store. In 2022, modern technology is perhaps the best answer to the tanks, multiple rocket launchers and missiles, Fedorov wrote in a letter to Cook. I appeal to you and I am sure you will not only hear, but also do everything possible to protect Ukraine, Europe, and finally, the entire democratic world from bloody authoritarian aggression, Fedorov said. We are sure that such actions will motivate youth and active population of Russia to proactively stop the disgraceful military aggression. A file image of then Russian Prime Minister Dmitry Medvedev (R) listening to Sollers CEO Vadim Shvetsov (2nd R) as he visits Ford Sollers automobile plant in the city of Naberezhnye Chelny, the Russian Republic of Tatarstan on Dec. 2, 2014. (Dmitry Astakhov/AFP via Getty Images) Elsewhere on Tuesday, American automobile manufacturer Ford said it has suspended operations in Russia, effective immediately, until further notice. Ford is deeply concerned about the invasion of Ukraine and the resultant threats to peace and stability. The situation has compelled us to reassess our operations in Russia, Ford said, A string of companiesincluding Harley-Davidson, Nike, Dell, Exxon Mobil, and more have in recent weeks announced similar moves in the wake of President Vladimir Putins invasion of the former Soviet nation, leaving the country facing increasing isolation. Earlier this week Google, Twitter, and TikTok also imposed various restrictions on Russia and moved to block content from RT and Sputnik across Europe. People wait in line to drop off mail-in ballots at an early voting location in Phoenix, Arizona on Oct. 16, 2020. (Robyn Beck/AFP via Getty Images) Arizona House Passes Bill to Require Voters Prove Citizenship The Arizona House on Monday passed legislation that would ensure citizens are only registered to vote in the states elections and are able to prove their citizenship upon registration. Potential Arizona voters would be required under House Bill 2492 to present a form of identification within 30 days of registering to vote. It adds a requirement that voters include their date of birth and early voting number along with their signature on their return ballots. Voters currently just sign their name, and county officials compare that to signatures they have on file with verified voter registration documents. The bill if signed into law would also prevent an in-person voter from presenting two documents, such as a water or tax bill, if they do not have their identification. Voters would be required to include their place of birth and a verified residence address. Non-citizens should never be allowed to vote in American elections, yet shockingly nearly 12,000 people voted in the 2020 general election for federal office without any proof of U.S. citizenship, sponsor of the bill Republican Rep. Jake Hoffman told the Arizona Daily Independent. For years weve heard Democrats spin wild conspiracy theories about foreign influence on our elections, but today when they had the chance to prevent it, every single Democrat voted against preventing non-citizens from influencing our elections, he said. Republicans at the Capitol are fighting like hell to protect the integrity of Arizonas elections with bills like HB2492, so that voters can have confidence that every legally cast ballot matters, added Hoffman. I dont see whats wrong with this. I really dont, said Republican Rep. Walt Blackman of Snowflake. Because all its doing is protecting our election and the process. Democrats meanwhile say the measure is part of an effort to suppress voting in the battleground state. Democrats noted that a similar Texas law that passed last year has led to hundreds of valid mail ballot requests being rejected. Democratic Rep. Mitzi Epstein of Tempe said the rejection rate had jumped from 10 percent to 35 percent. It is a problem to take multiple pages of voting instruction and reduce it to voter ID, Epstein said. Thats not what this bill is. Hoffman said that the number of people using the federal form without providing proof of citizenship had jumped between 2018 and 2020. So clearly this is a trend that is increasing, Hoffman said. This bill ensures that there is maximum flexibility to provide documentary proof of citizenship, but we dont want foreign interference in our elections. The Associated Press contributed to this report. Members of the Arizona Senate Committee On Government voted to recommend passage of eight more election related bills to the full state Senate at a hearing in Phoenix on Jan. 31, 2022. (Allan Stein/The Epoch Times) Arizona State Senate Censures GOP Lawmaker Who Called for Political Rivals to Be Hung The Arizona State Senate on Tuesday voted to censure a Republican lawmaker after she called for her political opponents to be hung. The Senate voted 243 to censure state Senator Wendy Rogers, with 11 of the chambers 16 Republicans siding with the chambers 13 Democratic members who were in attendance. Lawmakers said Rogerss comments had damaged the reputation of the Arizona State Senate and accused her of engaging in conduct unbecoming of a senator. This included publicly issuing and promoting social media and video messages encouraging violence against and punishment of American citizens and making threatening statements declaring political destruction of those who disagree with her views, the state senate said. However, the censure has no practical effect and is more of a formal statement of disapproval from Senate members. The vote to censure Rogers came shortly after she gave a speech at the America First Political Action Conference (AFPAC) in Florida over the weekend. During her speech, the Republican lawmaker called for public hangings of her perceived enemies in the gallows. Ive said we need to build more gallows. If we try some of these high-level criminals, convict them and use a newly built set of gallows, itll make an example of these traitors who have betrayed our country, Rogers said on Feb. 25. She also called those in attendance at the event patriots and said she admires them while claiming that the events organizer, Nick Fuentes, had been de-platformed everywhere because he has been vocal in saying things that upset the media and the far left. I truly respect Nick because hes the most persecuted man in America, she said adding later that he was standing up to tyranny by creating AFPAC. Rogers, who was elected to represent Arizona Legislative District 6 in November 2020, also took aim at Ukrainian President Volodymyr Zelensky on Twitter, writing that he is a globalist puppet for Soros and the Clintons and that Macron, Ardern, Trudeau, Zelensky. they all report to the same Satanic masters. The West is trying to deplatform and debank Russia. This is just as wrong as invading Ukraine, she wrote in another tweet. After Tuesdays vote, Rogers called the censure an attempt to limit her freedom of speech and her right to express opinions with censorship or restraint. She also refused to issue an apology for her comments, while accusing GOP lawmakers of colluding with Democrats to tarnish her standing in the Senate. Freedom of speech is one of the most precious rights we have under heaven, and this censure is nothing more than an attempt to limit my speech. I represent hundreds of thousands of people and the majority of them are with me. And they want me to be their voice, Rogers said on Twitter. You are really censuring them. I do not apologize. I will not back down. And I am sorely disappointed in the leadership of this body for colluding with the Democrats to attempt to destroy my reputation, Rogers said. In the end, I rejoice in knowing I do and say what is right. And I speak as a free American, regardless of the actions of this corrupted process today. However, state Senate President Karen Fann said the censure wasnt about freedom of speech but about the specific comments made by Rogers. We do support First Amendment freedom of speech. We absolutely support it. We fight battles over it. But what we do not condone is members threatening each other, to ruin each other, to incite violence, to call us communists. We dont do that to each other, said Fann, a Republican. We, as elected officials, are held to a higher standard. State Sen. Lisa Otondo, (D-Yuma) said Rogers comments were not freedom of speech but instead amounted to bullying and dehumanization. The Epoch Times has contacted Senator Wendy Rogers and the Arizona State Senate for comment. Forensic technicians excavate a field on a plot of land referred to as a cartel "extermination site" where burned human remains are buried, on the outskirts of Nuevo Laredo, Mexico on Feb. 8, 2022. (Marco Ugarte/AP Photo) At Cartel Extermination Site; Mexico Nears 100,000 Missing NUEVO LAREDO, MexicoFor the investigators, the human footburned, but with some fabric still attachedwas the tipoff: Until recently, this squat, ruined house was a place where bodies were ripped apart and incinerated, where the remains of some of Mexicos missing multitudes were obliterated. How many disappeared in this cartel extermination site on the outskirts of Nuevo Laredo, miles from the U.S. border? After six months of work, forensic technicians still dont dare offer an estimate. In a single room, the compacted, burnt human remains and debris were nearly 2 feet deep. Uncounted bone fragments were spread across 75,000 square feet of desert scrubland. Twisted wires, apparently used to tie the victims, lie scattered amid the scrub. Each day, technicians place what they findbones, buttons, earrings, scraps of clothingin paper bags labeled with their contents: Zone E, Point 53, Quadrant I. Bone fragments exposed to fire. They are sent off to the forensic lab in the state capital Ciudad Victoria, where boxes of paper bags wait their turn along with others. They will wait a long time; there are not enough resources and too many fragments, too many missing, too many dead. At the Nuevo Laredo siteto which The Associated Press was given access this monththe insufficiency of investigations into Mexicos nearly 100,000 disappearances is painfully evident. There are 52,000 unidentified people in morgues and cemeteries, not counting places like this one, where the charred remains are measured only by weight. And people continue to disappear. And more remains are found. We take care of one case and 10 more arrive, said Oswaldo Salinas, head of the Tamaulipas state attorney generals identification team. Meanwhile there is no progress in bringing the guilty to justice. According to recent data from Mexicos federal auditor, of more than 1,600 investigations into disappearances by authorities or cartels opened by the attorney generals office, none made it to the courts in 2020. Still, the work goes on at Nuevo Laredo. If nothing else, there is the hope of helping even one family find closure, though that can take years. Thats why a forensic technician smiled amid the devastation on a recent day: She had found an unburnt tooth, a treasure that might offer DNA to make an identification possible. When Jorge Macias, head of the Tamaulipas state search commission, and his team first came to the Nuevo Laredo site, they had to clear brush and pick up human remains over the final 100 yards just to reach the house without destroying evidence. They found a barrel tossed in a trough, shovels and an axe with traces of blood on it. Gunfire echoed in the distance. Nearly six months later, there are still more than 30,000 square feet of property to inspect and catalog. The house has been cleared, but four blackened spaces used for cremation remain. In what was the bathroom, it took the technicians three weeks to carefully excavate the compacted mass of human remains, concrete and melted tires, said Salinas, who leads work at the site. Grease streaks the walls. Macias found the Nuevo Laredo house last August when he was looking for more than 70 people who had disappeared in the first half of the year along a stretch of highway connecting Monterrey and Nuevo Laredo, the busiest trade crossing with the United States. Jorge Macias (R), head of the Tamaulipas state search commission, uses a two-way radio while walking on a field on the outskirts of Ciudad Victoria, Mexico on Feb. 3, 2022. (Marco Ugarte/AP Photo) The area was known as kilometer 26, a point on the highway and the invisible entrance to the kingdom of the Northeast cartel, a splinter of the Zetas. There are small shops with food and coffee. Men sell stolen gasoline and drugs. Strangers are filmed with cell phones. The power poles lining the highway farther north have been blasted with large-caliber weapons. Most who disappeared here were truck drivers, cabbies, but also at least one family and various U.S. citizens. About a dozen have been found alive. Last July, Karla Quintana, head of the National Search Commission, said the disappearances appeared to be related to a dispute between the Jalisco New Generation cartel, which was trying to enter the area, and the Northeast cartel, which wanted to keep them out. Its not clear if the victims were smugglers of drugs or people, if some were abducted mistakenly or if the goal was simply to generate terror. The phenomenon of Mexicos disappearances exploded in 2006 when the government declared war on the drug cartels. For years, the government looked the other way as violence increased and families of the missing were forced to become detectives. It wasnt until 2018the end of the last administrationthat a law passed, laying the legal foundations for the government to establish the National Search Commission. There followed local commissions in every state; protocols that separated searches from investigations, and a temporary and independent body of national and international technical experts supported by the U.N. to help clear the backlog of unidentified remains. The official total of the missing stands at 98,356. Even without the civil wars or military dictatorships that afflicted other Latin American countries, Mexicos disappeared are exceeded in the region only by war-torn Colombia. Unlike other countries, Mexicos challenge still has no end: authorities and families search for people who disappeared in the 1960s and those who went missing today. President Andres Manuel Lopez Obradors government was the first to recognize the extent of the problem, to talk of extermination sites and to mount effective searches. But he also promised in 2019 that authorities would have all the resources they needed. The national commission, which was supposed to have 352 employees this year, still has just 89. And Macias state commission has 22 positions budgeted, but has only filled a dozen slots. There the issue isnt money; the difficulty is finding applicants who pass background checks. Disappearances are considered the perfect crime because without a body, theres no crime. And the cartels are expert at ensuring that there is no body. If a criminal group has total control of an area they do what we call kitchens, because they feel comfortable burning bodies openly, Macias said. In areas that are not theirs and where the other side could easily see the smoke, they dig graves. In 2009, at the other end of the border, a member of the Tijuana cartel confessed to having cooked some 300 victims in caustic lye. Eight years later, a report from a public university investigation center showed that what officially had been a jail in the border city of Piedras Negras, was actually a Zetas command center and crematorium. Perhaps the largest such site was yet another border setting near the mouth of the Rio Grande called the dungeon, in territory controlled by the Gulf cartel. The memory still stirs Macias. The first time he went he saw pelvis, skulls, femurs, everything just lying there and I said to myself, It cant be. Authorities have recovered more than 1,100 pounds of bones at the site so far. According to the Tamaulipas state forensic service, some 15 extermination sites have been found. There are also burial sites: In 2010, graves containing 191 bodies were found along one of the main migratory routes through Tamaulipas to the border. In 2014, 43 students disappeared in the southern state of Guerrero. Only three have been identified from pieces of burnt bones. Most of the extermination sites have been found by family members who follow up leads themselves with or without the support and protection of authorities. Such search groups exist in nearly every state. For the families, the discoveries inspire both hope and pain. It brings together a lot of emotions, said a woman who has been searching for her husband since 2014 and two brothers who disappeared later. Like thousands of relatives across Mexico, she has made the search for her loved ones her life. It makes you happy to find (a site), but at the moment you see things the way they are, you nosedive. The woman, who requested anonymity because of safety concerns, was present for the discovery of two sites last year. When she entered the Nuevo Laredo location with Macias, she could only cry. A few months earlier, she had found the site in central Tamaulipas where she believes her loved ones are. That day, accompanied by the state search commission and escorted by the National Guard, they entered the brush in search of a drug camp. Im not well psychologically after that, she said as she showed photos of the deep graves where burnt remains were buried, some wrapped in barbed wire. They recovered around a thousand teeth, she said. On a recent day in Nuevo Laredo, gloved hands sifted through the dirt, separating out bits of bone: a piece of a jaw, a skull fragment, a vertebra. The work is hard. The forensic technicians clear brush and then dig. Some days the temperature hovers around freezing, others its above 100 degrees. They wear head-to-toe white protective suits and are constantly guarded. A forensic technician holds a charred jawbone found during an excavation on a plot of land referred to as a cartel extermination site where burned human remains are buried, on the outskirts of Nuevo Laredo, Mexico on Feb. 8, 2022. (Marco Ugarte/AP Photo) Security is a concern, and so authorities have separated the search function from the investigationsthe cartels appear less concerned with those just looking for bones, though anything they find could eventually become evidence in a prosecution. Each day before dusk, they are escorted to a safe house and dont leave except to return the next day to the site. When cartel violence exploded in Tamaulipas in 2010, the capitals morgue had space for six bodies. In a single massacre that year, a cartel killed 72 migrants. In those days, the Interamerican Commission of Human Rights denounced serious negligence in Tamaulipass forensic work. Pedro Sosa, director of the states forensic services, said that their way of working changed radically in 2018 with the establishment of the identification team. But its not enough. A single forensic anthropologist in the whole state is not compatible with all of this work. It can take four months for the Nuevo Laredo remains to be cleaned, processed, and arrive to the genetic lab. It can take longer if something urgent emerges like in January of last year, when nearly 20 peoplemostly migrantswere incinerated in an attack near the border. Even if they manage to extract DNA, identification isnt assured because the profile will only automatically be crossed with a state database. A federal genetic database still doesnt exist. It could be years before even non-genetic information is added to one of the national databases. In 2020, the federal auditor said that that system had only 7,600 registered disappeared and 6,500 registered dead. Though the federal law calls for a system in which various databases can interact, that doesnt exist, said Marlene Herbig, of the International Committee of the Red Cross. Each state or federal database of fingerprints or genetic profiles is like an island, despite calls for bridges to connect them. No one can estimate how much money is needed or how many years it could take to see significant results in Mexicos efforts to locate and identify the disappeared. Herbig offered a clue: A similar effort mounted on the island of Cyprus took 10 years to identify 200 who disappeared in the conflict between Greece and Turkey during the latter half of the last century. And there are many thousands more missing in Mexico than there were in Cyprus. This issue is a monster, Macias said. By Maria Verza Audit Reveals LA Spending up to $837K to House Single Homeless Person Commentary The Los Angeles homeless problem is getting worse, up double digits again this year to about 41,000 people. Rather than implementing common sense solutions to address the problem, L.A.s politicians have chosen instead to use it as a pretext for implementing their progressive agenda, such as providing free, permanent government housing. The cost of this housing? As much as $837,000 per unit, according to a recent L.A. Controller audit. Many are not aware that Los Angeles homeless problem was exacerbated by a bizarre and disastrous decision by the progressive Ninth Circuit Court of Appeals three years ago. In the case of Martin v. City of Boise, the court ruled that a city may not enforce simple camping, vagrancy or loitering laws to remove people from sleeping on public property, such as sidewalks, beaches, and parks, unless the city can demonstrate that it provides sufficient homeless shelters. Otherwise, enforcement of such a law, the court ruled, would constitute cruel and unusual punishment. With its ruling the Ninth Circuit invented two radically new interpretations of the U.S. Constitution. First, that the Eighth Amendment prohibition against cruel and unusual punishment applies not just to sentences imposed for crimes but can be applied to the criminal law itself. Second, by requiring cities to provide housing for the homeless before it may enforce laws to protect the safety, security, and cleanliness of its public spaces, it effectively created a constitutional right to housing, a progressives dream previously thought achievable only via a constitutional amendment. Boise sought to appeal the decision to the U.S. Supreme Court, an effort supported by Los Angeles. However, Los Angeles did not oppose the ruling on the grounds that it misinterprets the Constitution, but rather simply because the ruling was unclear as to the guidelines for shelters that must be met (not surprising since courts are not supposed to be making new laws). The city agrees with a central tenet of Boise, that no individual should be susceptible to punishment for sleeping on the sidewalk at night, if no alternative shelter is available, L.A. City Attorney and mayoral candidate Mike Feuer said in explaining the citys support of the appeal. Unhoused individuals live out of cars and R.V.s in Los Angeles, Calif., on Jan. 20, 2022. (John Fredricks/The Epoch Times) Without a strong constitutional objection to the ruling (as should have been put forward), the Supreme Court refused to hear the case, and thus the ruling continued to apply to all states within the Ninth Circuit, including California. Since the ruling, Los Angeles police have been essentially hands off when it comes to enforcing any laws that would normally prevent homeless encampments on city sidewalks, beaches and parks. The city could have controlled the problem by enforcing the laws during the day only, which is permitted under the ruling, thus disrupting encampments, but instead took the police off the job entirely. And now the police have been partially defunded thanks to the Black Lives Matter defund the police campaign. Los Angeles also could have addressed the problem by quickly putting up inexpensive temporary shelters to enable it to enforce laws against the encampments, but it has not. As L.A. City Council candidate for the Venice Beach area, Mike Newhouse, notes, The U.S. military can put up a fully functioning city with amenities that pop up in a few days. If thats good enough for folks who are fighting for our country, why is it not good enough for folks who are trying to get off the streets? With no enforcement, the encampments have exploded, as havenot surprisinglythe number of homeless. The progressives would have you believe the increase is due to housing costs and income inequality, but the truth is, not unlike our border problem, if you allow it, they will come. Exhibit A: The neighboring city of Manhattan Beach has among the most expensive housing in the state, yet virtually no homeless problem. Why? Because they enforce the law. The progressives know this. They create the problem by allowing it, and then use the problem to impose progressive solutions. In this case, it is government-provided housing, rent control and eviction protections. A homeless encampment near the popular boardwalk area of Venice Beach, Calif., on June 9, 2021. (John Fredricks/The Epoch Times) Venice Beach is home to many of Los Angeles homeless encampments. Most of them are on or within a few blocks of the beach, among million-dollar homes, shops, and restaurants that rely on tourist dollars and beachgoers seeking to enjoy Californias natural beauty. As anyone who lives there knows, the vast majority of the homeless are addicts and/or mentally disturbed. Because they are allowed to live there, they have no incentive to seek the help they need or to try to reconnect with family or friends. Rather than quickly building temporary shelters, Los Angeles has embarked on a $1.2 billion plan, funded by a sales tax increase, to build 10,000 brand new, permanent apartments to house this ever-growing homeless population. Not surprisingly, the government-run construction project is not going according to plan. Rather than costing $120,000 per unit as budgeted, 14 percent will cost over $700,000 and some as much as $837,000 according to the audit. That is over twice the average price of a home in the United States! Why so much? Government mismanagement, naturally, including the decision to build much of the housing where the homeless currently live, which just happens to be in some of the most expensive areas of Los Angeles. One significant project is about a block from the beach in Venice, one of L.A.s biggest tourist destinations. The City Council is currently looking into converting a parking lot on the beach in Pacific Palisades, one of the areas most beautiful beaches, into homeless housing. Apparently, according to Los Angeles leaders, homeless are not only entitled to free housing, but free housing on the beach among $15 million homes! It is no wonder Los Angeles homeless problem gets worse and worse. Those occupying beach encampments have little concern of disturbance, and they might just be offered a new, $800,000 apartment. It pays to be homeless in L.A. Views expressed in this article are the opinions of the author and do not necessarily reflect the views of The Epoch Times. Researchers found that the Tasmanian tiger had extremely low genetic diversity. (Courtesy of The Tasmanian National Museum and Art Gallery) Aussie Scientists to Make Science Fiction Reality With $5 Million Dollar Donation An Australian university is moving to turn science fiction into reality and forwarding marsupial conservation efforts by bringing back to life the extinct Australian apex predator, the Tasmanian tiger. The tiger, also known as the thylacine or Tasmanian wolf, was once found widespread across Australia, but by the arrival of European settlement in the 18th century, was limited to mainly to the island of Tasmania where, over the next hundred years, it was hunted to extinction by colonialists. The last known creature died in captivity in 1936. The research will be made possible by a $5 million (US$3.6 million) donation from the Wilson Family Trust to the University of Melbourne and will enable the institution to set up the Thylacine Integrated Genetic Restoration Research (TIGRR) Lab to de-extinct the rare marsupial carnivore. Thanks to this generous funding, were at a turning point where we can develop the technologies to potentially bring back a species from extinction and help safeguard other marsupials on the brink of disappearing, Prof. Andrew Pask, from the School of BioSciences at the University of Melbourne said. A Tasmanian tiger (Thylacine), which was declared extinct in 1936, is displayed at the Australian Museum in Sydney, on May 25, 2002. (Torsten Blackwood/AFP via Getty Images) The funding will provide ten years of research for the TIGRR Lab and allow it to explore one of Pasks teams biggest breakthroughs, the sequencing of the thylacine genome, which provides the team with a complete blueprint on how to essentially build a thylacine. Pask said that the funding would enable the lab to move forward and focus on three areas, this includes improving their understanding of the thylacine genome, developing techniques to turn marsupial stem cells into an embryo and successfully implanting it into a uterus. While there are concerns of de-extinction while changing habitats and climates, Pask said the thylacine had the most compelling case for de-extinction. Of all the species proposed for de-extinction, the thylacine has arguably the most compelling case. This is because the Tasmanian habitat has remained largely unchanged, providing the perfect environment to re-introduce the thylacine, and it is very likely its reintroduction would be beneficial for the whole ecosystem, he said. The Tasmanian habitat has remained largely unchanged, providing the perfect environment to re-introduce the thylacine Australian researcher argue. New Harbour Southwest National Park Tasmania (Shane_Pedersen, iStock) One such hypothesized benefit is the potential benefit of helping control the spread of the viral Tasmanian devil facial tumour disease as the sick devils are no longer preyed upon by an apex predator allowing the infection to spread throughout the population. The university noted that there the research will also have immediate conservation benefits by advancing Australian researchers understanding of marsupials. Our work will lead to much-needed technological advances in this space, which include developing methods for creating marsupial stem cells to biobank species diversity and protect against species loss from events like Australias recent devastating bushfires. We can develop the technologies to potentially bring back a species from extinction and help safeguard other marsupials on the brink of disappearing, said Pask on Mar. 1. However, other research discussing de-extinction and conservation genetics have argued that genetic techniques are merely conservational biology and limited in their conservational function. A report by the American Museum of Natural History in 2017 has mentioned that some conservational researchers have argued that short-term demographic patterns of endangered and threatened species and the population is much more important. Though genomics, gene editing and animal cloning technologies of de-extinction are integral parts of conservation genetics, its an immediate contribution to solving the biodiversity crisis is limited, the authors argued. Pask said their research would undertake nine key steps to the de-extinction of the animal, of which the first and second stepmapping the thylacines genome and finding a closely related marsupialhave been done. HOBART, TAS OCTOBER 10: A Tasmanian Devil is released after being studied by Billie Lazenby of the Tasmanian Department of Primary Industries, Water and Environment after being captured in the wild to check for signs of the Devil Facial Tumor Disease October 10, 2005 near Fentonbury, Australia. (Photo by Adam Pretty/Getty Images) The lab is currently at the third and fourth steps, which entail finding all the genes in the stem cell of the chosen marsupial that will be added and removed to create the thylacine cell. Diversity will also be bio-banked and added into the cells, possibly by introducing variation. Steps 5 to 7 will involve technologies to change the stem cell into an embryo, which will be successfully implanted into a host cells uterus. The team is currently nominating dunnarts and Tasmanian devils as possible hosts. Steps 8 and 9 will involve the birth and care of the cloned Tasmanian Tiger. Marina Zhang Follow Marina Zhang is based in Melbourne and focuses on Australian news. Contact her at marina.zhang@epochtimes.com.au. The flu disappeared in Australia since the arrival of the CCP virus. (Pixabay) Australia Has Missed the Past Two Flu Seasons Australia has officially missed the last two flu seasons as the average of 163,015 cases of influenza a year plummeted to just 598 cases and zero deaths by the end of 2021. Just before the CCP virus arrived in Australia, the countrys National Notifiable Disease Surveillance System tracked 313,033 laboratory-confirmed cases of influenza and 953 deaths in 2019. But in 2020, there were 21,266 cases and 37 deathsalmost eight times lower than the five-year average. This figure fell further to 484 cases and zero deaths at the end of winter 2021. Australias latest influenza surveillance report said that notifications of influenza have remained low since April 2020, and remains at historically low levels in 2021. Despite no evidence of flu spreading in the community nor severe cases leading to hospitalisations, the Australian Technical Advisory Group on Immunisation (ATAGI) is pushing for Australians to get vaccinated against the flu and warned of a potentially severe flu season as winter approaches. Influenza epidemiology may be atypical this year, particularly in the context of COVID-19 and the return of international travel, ATAGI said in its latest statement in March. Some Northern Hemisphere countries have seen a concurrent surge of influenza and COVID-19 activity. Vaccination is the most important measure to prevent influenza and its complications. This comes as the Australian Department of Health has changed its recommendations around the co-administering of both the flu and COVID-19 vaccines. Last year, the advice was for people to wait at least seven days between taking a flu vaccine and a COVID-19 vaccine. Vaccination experts recommend waiting 7 days between getting a flu vaccine and a COVID-19 vaccine. Given this, it will be important to plan both vaccinations, according to ATAGIs guide from March 2021. However, this advice has been updated on Feb. 25, 2022, with the recommendation that influenza vaccines can be co-administered (i.e. on the same day) with a COVID-19 vaccine. Deputy Chief Medical Officer Michael Kidd had some recommendations about how to get both vaccines together. My advice is that you get one vaccine in one arm, the other vaccine in the other arm so that if you do get side effects, you know which vaccine has caused the redness or the swelling or the discomfort, he said. So, please, when its time, get your flu shot as well as of course, make sure that your COVID-19 shots and your boosters are up to date. The World Health Organisation (WHO) fears that the CCP virus pandemic has led to fewer visits to healthcare providers, and a subsequent fall in the number of people taking up vaccines for influenza and other diseases, prompting an alert from the WHO. Australia saw a drop in flu vaccination uptake last year, with just 33.3 percent getting inoculated. About 80 percent of those are over 65 years old. Meanwhile, studies in the northern hemisphere have found a potential causal link between the flu shot and getting some form of coronavirus infection. A study published in the Jan. 10, 2020, issue of the journal Vaccine found people were more likely to get some form of coronavirus infection if they had been vaccinated against influenza. The study, titled Influenza Vaccination and Respiratory Virus Interference Among Department of Defense Personnel During the 2017-2018 Influenza Season, noted: Receiving influenza vaccination may increase the risk of other respiratory viruses, a phenomenon known as virus interference, the study found. While seasonal influenza vaccination didnt raise the risk of all respiratory infections, it was in fact significantly associated with unspecified coronavirus and human metapneumovirus (hMPV10). Additionally, in October 2020, a data analysis by Prof. Christian Wehenkel, an academic editor for PeerJ, found there was a positive association between COVID-19 deaths and influenza vaccination rates in elderly people worldwide. In other words, areas with the highest vaccination rates among elderly people also had the highest COVID-19 death rates. Contrary to expectations, the present worldwide analysis and European sub-analysis do not support the previously reported negative association between COVID-19 deaths (DPMI) [COVID-19 deaths per million inhabitants] and IVR [influenza vaccination rate] in elderly people, observed in studies in Brazil and Italy, Wehenkel said. The results showed a positive association between COVID-19 deaths and IVR of people 65 years old. There is a significant increase in COVID-19 deaths from eastern to western regions in the world. Further exploration is needed to explain these findings, and additional work on this line of research may lead to prevention of deaths associated with COVID-19. Prime Minister Scott Morrison coughs at a press conference after a National Security Committee meeting at Parliament House in Canberra, Australia, on March 1, 2022. (AAP Image/Mick Tsikas) Australian Prime Minister Tests Positive for COVID-19 The Australian Prime Minister Scott Morrison has confirmed that he has tested positive for COVID-19. In a statement released on Tuesday evening, Morrison said that he was experiencing mild symptoms and would be working from home as he isolates for the following week. I am experiencing flu-like symptoms and will be recovering over the next week, Morrison said. The prime minister had been undergoing daily testing since Sunday when he began to feel unwell, all of which returned a negative result. After developing a fever late Tuesday, Morrison took a PCR test which returned a positive result. I am continuing to follow health guidelines and am isolating at home in Sydney, he said, adding that he was thankful his family have all tested negative, but will also isolate for seven days as per guidelines. The Australian prime minister has received the two-dose regime of the COVID-19 Pfizer vaccine and a third booster shot. Tonight I tested positive to COVID-19. I am experiencing flu-like symptoms and will be recovering over the next week. I had tested myself daily since Sunday, including this morning, with all tests returning a negative result. Scott Morrison (@ScottMorrisonMP) March 1, 2022 Morrison said he will continue to discharge all responsibilities as prime minister, including virtually chairing National Security and Expenditure Review committee cabinet meetings and focusing on the emergency response to the devastating floods in the states of Queensland and New South Wales. And ensuring we stand with each and every one of the affected communities both now and as the waters eventually recede, he said. I will also be focused on our urgent response to the tragedy unfolding in the Ukraine and Russias senseless aggression, staying in regular contact with our security and intelligence officials and our international partners, as well as working with the treasurer to finalise the budget, he said. Australian Prime Minister Scott Morrison arrives at Haneda airport in Tokyo, Japan, on Nov. 17, 2020. (Reuters/Issei Kato) Defence Minister Peter Dutton said Morrisons sickness was very mild and he was back up on Wednesday. So I think hes just going to work from home, but feels pretty good within himself and hopefully back on deck ASAP, he told Nines Today program. Dutton held a press conference with Morrison on Tuesday announcing further flood support from the Australian Defence Force and $70 million (US$50 million) in lethal aid to Ukraine. He tested negative for COVID-19 after conducting a Rapid Antigen Test on Wednesday. Other members of the federal government have offered their support for the Prime Minister on Facebook. Treasurer Josh Frydenberg, who recovered from COVID-19 in January, said Rest up, PM! while Victorian MP Gladys Liu said hope your COVID is mild like mine. Morrison was scheduled to join NSW Premier Dominic Perrottet on Tuesday night at the Sydney Opera House, where the iconic building was lit up in the colours of the Ukrainian flag. But, he pulled out at the last minute. Earlier in the day, he had said it was intended to send a very strong message of solidarity that Australia stood with Ukraine. Australian University Creates Special Scholarship Fund for Ukrainian Students Fleeing Conflict An Australian university is creating opportunities for Ukrainian students who have been affected by their homelands ongoing conflict with Russia via the establishment of a new scholarship fund, adding education to the list of aid ordinary Australians are offering to the war-torn nation. Charles Darwin University (CDU), situated in the Northern Territory in the north of Australia, has announced it has created the first Australian scholarship fund for Ukrainians that are resettling in Australia. The CDU Ukrainian Assistance Scholarship is intended to help pay for the living expenses, tuition fees, and textbooks for Ukrainian humanitarian visa holders. This is about showing support in a distressing time for Ukrainians, by creating more opportunities for these students to reach their full potential on their educational journey, CDU Vice-Chancellor Scott Bowman said in a university media release on March 1. This is just one small thing we can do as an educational institution to offer Ukrainian humanitarian entrants some tuition and financial support in the aftermath of the hardship and loss they are experiencing, Bowman said. The new scholarship fund will be a show of support for the people of Ukraine, to do what we can as a University and from Territorians. The scholarship fund will be financed through a staff fundraising campaign, the proceeds of which will be matched by Charles Darwin University in its donation. Any additional money raised by the campaign will go to humanitarian efforts in Ukraine. Ukrainian military vehicles move past Independence square in central Kyiv, Ukraine, on Feb. 24, 2022. (Daniel Leal/AFP via Getty Images) The scholarship fund is also open to donations from anyone who wants to support these disadvantaged students, businesses, government, and/or community, both Australian and international. CDU Global Director Joanne Chrystal said that the Northern Territory is welcoming for all students, both migrant and domestic and that the territory is one of the most multicultural places in Australia. She said that Ukrainian students who choose to come to CDU would have access to both counselling and a dedicated international student support team. We want to help as many impacted Ukrainians as possible to ensure they are supported as they study with us in the Northern Territory with their tuition fees and other expenses, Chrystal said in a university media release. The new Ukrainian Assistance Scholarship is not the universitys first scholarship for humanitarian entrants. CDU also offers the Charles See Kee Leadership Scholarship, which provides students who have resettled in Australia as humanitarian or refugee entrants with financial support. The scholarship intends to give these students the opportunity to undertake studies that will enhance their leadership and employment outcomes. Furthermore, CDU is no stranger to supporting the education of war refugees, as John Chol Deng Chol, who was forced to flee his home in South Sudan at age ten to escape civil war atrocities, demonstrates. John Chol Deng Chol received a bursary from the university in 2021 to finance his study of a Bachelor of Nursing at the university. People walk past signage for Australian universities in Melbournes central business district in Melbourne, Australia, on June 10, 2020. (William West/AFP via Getty Images) The CDU scholarship fund comes a week after the top Australian universities, the Group of 8 (Go8)a group consisting of Australias top 8 research-intensive universitiesannounced their approach to helping Ukrainian and Russian students currently in Australia. Our universities are offering access to peer support advisors, counselling services for domestic students, and establishing chat channels for international students currently studying offshore. We will monitor the situation closely and offer additional support as the situation evolves, Go8 Chief Executive Vicki Thomson said in a company media release on Feb. 24. Go8 universities introduced a range of social and financial support measures to aid international students during the COVID-19 pandemic and are well placed to provide further assistance during this current crisis. Thomson said that the Go8 universities have moved to act quickly to identify and contact their individual Ukrainian and Russian students as well as the relevant student clubs and societies, checking on their welfare and offering support. As tensions in the region build, our universities are mindful of the increasing pressure this will place on our Ukrainian and Russian students both here in Australia and studying offshore, Thomson said. We are extremely concerned for their welfare. Theyve already been through a tough two years, dealing with the challenges of the COVID-19 pandemic, and we can only imagine how difficult this situation must be for them. Ukrainian service members cross a destroyed bridge in Irpin, Ukraine, on March 1, 2022. (Anastasia Vlasova/Getty Images) The new CDU scholarship comes after the Australian federal government pledged $105 million (US$76 million) worth of aid for Ukraine in a press conference on March 1. The aid comes in the form of about $70 million (US$50 million) worth of weapons and around $35 million (around US$25 million) worth of humanitarian support (education support, shelter, food, medical care, and water). Belarusian President Alexander Lukashenko chairs a meeting, dedicated to the migrant crisis on the BelarusianPolish border, in Minsk, Belarus, on Nov. 16, 2021. (Nikolai Petrov/BelTA/Handout via Reuters) Belarus President May Have Shared a Map of Russias Invasion Plans Belarus President Alexander Lukashenko on March 1 appeared to stand in front of a map purported to show Russias plans to invade Moldovas breakaway region of Transnistria, during a meeting with security officials that was broadcast via state-run media. At todays security council meeting, Lukashenko showed what looks like an actual invasion map, Belarusian journalist Tadeusz Giczan wrote on Twitter on March 1. It shows Ukraine military facilities destroyed by missiles from Belarus, attacks directions. Also, Ukraine is divided into 4 sectors. The map appeared to show troop movements, including an apparent attack or occupation of what appears to be Transnistria from Odessa, a city in southwestern Ukraine. The Russian military reportedly has troops stationed in the area. During the broadcast, Lukashenko is heard telling the officials, They warned us, and literally six hours before the launch of the missiles, we discovered this, according to a translation. A tactical missile system was located here, right? he said. Someone off-screen then says: In the Mazyr area, referring to a city in Belarus. At todays security council meeting, Lukashenko showed what looks like an actual invasion map. It shows Ukraine military facilities destroyed by missiles from Belarus, attacks directions (everything agrees except Odessa-Transnistria). Also, Ukraine is divided into 4 sectors. pic.twitter.com/ueqBIFUbyM Tadeusz Giczan (@TadeuszGiczan) March 1, 2022 In the Mazyr area, Lukashenko said. We hit these rockets, these positions. And we havent seen them afterward. During the offensive of the Russians in Ukraine, we already didnt see them from the position. Thats why Im saying. Yes, we have made launches from the territory of Belarus, and I told, frankly, which positions we targeted. Sit down. Its not clear if Russia or Belarus, a staunch ally of Moscow, plans to invade Moldova, a country thats situated between Romania and Ukraine and isnt a European Union or NATO member. Transnistria, which isnt recognized by most countries, has long had a pro-Russian sentiment. In 2009, the breakaway regions parliament approved a new flag that looks nearly identical to the Russian tri-color flag. In the years since the fall of the Soviet Union, Russias leadership has considered Transnistria to have a special status, although Russia hasnt declared it an independent state. The European Union on March 1 imposed new sanctions on Belarus and Lukashenko, who has sometimes been called the last dictator of Europe, for aiding Russias invasion of Ukraine. Russian troops and armored units attacked Ukraine from Belarus after being stationed along the border for weeks. Ukrainian officials this week claimed Belarus sent its own military into the country as part of the invasion. Lukashenko denied any direct movement of troops, and a U.S. defense official told reporters this week that theres been no indication of Belarusian troops taking part in the invasion. Moldovan Embassy officials in Washington didnt respond by press time to a request by The Epoch Times for comment. White House Unveils New COVID-19 Strategy as US Moves to A More Normal Routine The Biden administration on March 2 unveiled a new COVID-19 strategy that President Joe Biden said would help get the United States back to a more normal routine. The 90-page National COVID-19 Preparedness Plan seeks to reduce severe illness while keeping schools and businesses open. It includes a test-to-treat program that would provide antiviral pills at pharmacies to people who test positive for the virus. If funded by Congress, it would also expand research at the National Institutes of Health and launch new centers of excellence across the country meant to help people with long COVID. This plan lays out the roadmap to help us fight COVID-19 in the future as we move America from crisis to a time when COVID-19 does not disrupt our daily lives and is something we prevent, protect against, and treat, the White House said. We are not going to just live with COVID. Because of our work, we are no longer going to let COVID-19 dictate how we live. During his State of the Union speech on March 1, Biden touted his administrations efforts to distribute vaccines, provide tests and masks, and purchase COVID therapeutics. He later added that new stockpiles of masks, tests, and pills hinge on Congress providing the funds we need. We provided free vaccines, treatments, tests, and masks, Biden said. Of course, continuing this costs money. I will soon send Congress a request. The vast majority of Americans have used these tools and may want to again, so I expect Congress to pass it quickly. Biden also promised to order more COVID tests that will be distributed for free. About half of the 500 million COVID-19 tests that Biden made available in January havent been claimed. White House COVID-19 coordinator Jeff Zients told reporters on March 2 that the Department of Health and Human Services had briefed Congress on the near-term cost of its new COVID plan and was still finalizing the long-term costs to relate in its request to Congress. Biden already signed into law the $1.9 trillion American Rescue Plan meant to address hardship from the pandemic. During his speech, Biden announced a new chief prosecutor for pandemic-related fraud under the Department of Justice meant to chase after those who stole billions of dollars from those relief funds. The administrations new COVID plan comes days after the Centers for Disease Control and Prevention relaxed its guidance for indoor mask-wearing to say that now more than 70 percent of the country is not at high risk. U.S. Trade Representative Katherine Tai testifies before the Senate Finance Committee on Capitol Hill in Washington, on May 12, 2021. (Pete Marovich/Pool via Reuters) Biden Administration Says Its Realigning Its China Trade Policy, But Offers Few Details The United States Trade Representative (USTR) said on March 1 that Washington is realigning its trade approach towards China, adding it is considering all existing tools, and potentially new ones, to combat Beijings harmful trade practices. But it offered little new information about how this would be achieved. In its new 2022 Trade Policy Agenda and 2021 Annual Report, the USTR said the administration is adopting a new, holistic, and pragmatic approach to our relationship [with China] grounded in the principles of our worker-centered trade policy. We are clear-eyed about Chinas doubling down on its harmful trade and economic abuses, the report added. However, besides stating that the strategy involved the United States enhancing cooperation with partners and allies, the USTR provided little detail on the specifics of the administrations approach. The report came amid growing pressure by lawmakers and industry groups who have asked the administration to clarify its trade policy with respect to the Chinese regime. It also came after the expiry of the phase one U.S.-China trade deal signed in January 2020, which resulted in Beijing falling far short of meeting its purchase commitments. The Trump administration launched the U.S.-China trade war in 2018 in response to a litany of unfair trade and economic practices engaged by Beijing, including its rampant theft of American intellectual property, forced technology transfer, and domestic subsidies supporting home-grown industries. Hundreds of billions of dollars in tariffs were levied on both sides as a result; the United States still has around $370 billion in tariffs on Chinese imports. The USTR has called attention to Beijings failure to meet the letter and spirit of World Trade Organization rules and obligations. On Feb. 16, the USTR issued a report detailing Chinas failure to meet key pledges under the phase one deal, such as the importation of at least $200 billion more of U.S. products and services in 2020-2021 than China purchased in 2017. The report stressed that Xi Jinpings regime continues to move away from tentative pro-market reforms undertaken by certain of his predecessors and continues to step up the regimes massive intervention in the Chinese economy. It emphasized Beijings heavy promotion of state-owned enterprises and national champions at the expense of foreign suppliers and manufacturers, which are denied access to critical sectors and markets, and the regimes outright banning of products from countries such as Australia, which has been subject to a range of trade restrictions after calling for an investigation into Beijings responsibility for the spread of COVID-19. U.S. Deputy Trade Representative Sarah Bianchi said last month that high-level conversations between Washington and Beijing over the regimes failure to meet its obligations under the phase one deal had been very difficult. Its not our goal to escalate here. But certainly were looking at all the tools we have in our toolbox to make sure theyre held accountable, Bianchi said on Feb. 1, without providing details. President Joe Biden delivers remarks about Russia's unprovoked and unjustified" military invasion of neighboring Ukraine in the East Room of the White House on Feb. 24, 2022. (Drew Angerer/Getty Images) Biden Says US Is Open to Banning Russian Oil Imports President Joe Biden said Wednesday that he is open to banning Russian oil imports to penalize Moscows invasion of Ukraine. Are you considering banning Russian oil imports? a reporter asked Biden on the White House lawn on Wednesday morning. Nothing is off the table, the president said. Following the start of Russias invasion of Ukraine, the United States and European Union hammered Russia, Russian leader Vladimir Putin, and top Russian banks with sanctions, while a number of private corporations, shipping firms, sporting leagues, and tech companies said they would refuse to do business in Russia. Critics of the Biden administrations policies have said that the United States should restart the Keystone XL pipeline construction and again renew drilling leases to ramp up domestic oil production, instead of relying on Russian oil. Currently, the United States obtains much of its crude oil from Canada, Mexico, and Saudi Arabia, but it still imported about 3 percent of its crude oil from Russia in 2021, according to the Wall Street Journal, citing the Lipow Oil Associates LLC in Houston. Biden also said Russia is targeting civilians in Ukraine but declined to say whether any war crimes were committed. Its clear they are targeting civilians, Biden told reporters in Washington. But when asked about the prospect of war crimes, he said, We are following it very closely. Its too early to say that. Biden also remarked that it is up to Ukrainian President Volodymyr Zelensky on whether to stay in Ukraine. Previously, Zelensky said he believes he is the No. 1 target for Russia and his family is No. 2, as U.S. officials said the initial phase of Russias invasion was designed to decapitate the Kyiv government. I think its his judgment to make and were doing everything we can to help him, Biden said. Kharkiv, Ukraines second-biggest city, with a population of about 1.5 million, came under bombardment again Wednesday, and a strike reportedly hit a hospital in the countrys north. Meanwhile, a 40-mile-long (64-kilometer) column of Russian tanks and other vehicles stood outside the capital, Kyiv, while invading forces pressed their assault on the strategic port cities of Kherson and Mariupol in the south. On Thursday afternoon local time, Russia also alleged its forces captured the southern Ukrainian city of Kherson, reported Reuters. However, Aleksiy Arestovych, an advisor to Ukrainian President Volodymyr Zelenskys office, said that the city has not fallen, our side continues to defend amid ongoing fighting, highlighting the opposing claims of military victories on both sides of the conflict. Ketanji Brown Jackson, nominee to be U.S. Circuit Judge for the District of Columbia Circuit, testifies during her Senate Judiciary Committee confirmation hearing in Dirksen Senate Office Building in Washington, on April 28, 2021. (Tom Williams/CQ Roll Call/file/Pool via Getty Images) Biden SCOTUS Nominee Hearings Will Begin March 21: Judiciary Chairman Durbin Committee hearings for President Joe Bidens Supreme Court (SCOTUS) nominee, Judge Ketanji Brown Jackson, will begin on March 21 and last four days according to Senate Judiciary Chairman Dick Durbin (D-Ill.). If confirmed, Jackson will replace outgoing Justice Stephen Breyer who at the end of February acceded to pressure from Democrats and liberals to retire while Democrats hold the White House. Amid a flurry of speculation and rumors before Breyer officially announced his retirement, White House press secretary Jen Psaki said that Biden would stand by his 2020 campaign promise to nominate a black woman to SCOTUS; though several women have sat on the panel, a black woman has not. Several conservatives have decried the move, which they have said puts a nominees race and sex ahead of their qualifications for the job. Sen. Josh Hawley (R-Mo.) promised that if the nominee is a woke activist, Democrats should expect a major battle in winning her confirmation. Minority Leader Mitch McConnell (R-Ky.) gave a similar warning, advising Biden not to let the radical left hijack the nomination process. On Feb. 25, Biden announced that Jacksonwho currently serves as a judge on the D.C. Circuit of the U.S. Court of Appealswas his pick to replace Breyer. In a dear colleague letter posted to Twitter on Wednesday, Durbin announced that Jacksons hearings will begin near the end of March. On Friday, President Biden announced the historic nomination of Judge Ketanji Brown Jackson to serve as an Associate Justice of the United States Supreme Court, Durbin said. Consistent with the Committees longstanding tradition, the hearings will last four days, which will provide Committee members with ample opportunity to question the nominee and other witnesses. Durbin then explained what the timeline will look like once hearings are underway. The hearings will begin on Monday, March 21, with statements from Committee members, the individuals who will introduce Judge Jackson, and Judge Jackson herself, Durbin said. Questioning of Judge Jackson will begin on Tuesday, March 22 and continue on Wednesday, March 23. The Committee will also meet in closed session on Wednesday, March 23 to discuss any matters relating to the nominees FBI background investigation. The Committee, Durbin hastened to add, does this for every Supreme Court nominee, regardless of whether the background investigation has raised concerns. The hearings will conclude on Thursday, March 24, with testimony from the American Bar Association (ABA) and additional outside witnesses. Written Questions for the Record (QFRs) will be due to the nominee by 5 p.m. on Thursday, March 24. As I have said from the time that Justice Breyer announced his retirement, the Committee will undertake a fair and timely process to consider Judge Jacksons nomination, Durbin concluded. I look forward to Judge Jacksons appearance before the Committee and to respectful and dignified hearings. Since the 1990s, SCOTUS confirmation battles have become increasingly partisan. Prior to 1991, almost every SCOTUS nominee was confirmed by vast, bipartisan margins. In 1991, then-Sen. Joe Biden led an effort to frame Clarence Thomas, who was nominated by President George H. W. Bush, as a sexual predator. Though he was confirmed by a vote of 5248, including the support of 11 Democrats, the battle marked a major turning point in the Senates approach to SCOTUS confirmation. A similar scene played out in 2018. After President Donald Trump nominated Brett Kavanaugh to fill Justice Anthony Kennedys seat, a California professor alleged that Kavanaugh had raped her at a party in the late-1980s. Though she had little evidence to back this claim, most Democrats considered it grounds to derail Kavanaughs confirmation. Like Thomas, Kavanaughs confirmation vote was the narrowest possible, with 50 senators supporting the nomination. Swing-voting Sen. Joe Manchin (D-W. Va.) was the only Democrat who voted to confirm Kavanaugh; Sen. Lisa Murkowski (R-Alaska) voted present. Republicans have also pushed partisan goals through the SCOTUS confirmation process. Following Justice Antonin Scalias unexpected death in 2016, President Barack Obama nominated Merrick Garland to fill the vacancy. Then-Senate Majority Leader Mitch McConnell (R-Ky.) demurred, saying that it was inappropriate to confirm a nominee so close to an election. Then in October 2020, Republicans pushed ahead with the confirmation of Amy Coney Barrett, who Trump nominated to replace the late Justice Ruth Bader Ginsburg. The move heavily frustrated Democrats and even Manchin, who had voted for Trumps first two nominees, opposed Barretts confirmation, citing the proximity to an election. No Republicans have yet said theyll vote for the judge, and at least one who voted for her in the past indicated he would not this time. Jacksons nomination means the radical Left has won President Biden over yet again, Sen. Lindsey Graham (R-S.C.), the top GOP member on the Senate Judiciary Committee, said in a statement. Graham, who supported Jackson in 2021, expressed his displeasure that the president didnt pick U.S. District Judge Michelle Childs, who hails from South Carolina. McConnell said the Senate must perform an exhaustive review of the nominee, calling it especially crucial as Americans families face major crises that connect directly to our legal system, such as skyrocketing violent crime and open borders. Given the increasingly partisan nature of these confirmation battles, it is likely that the hearings will involve tough scrutiny of the nominees voting record. At the same time, it will be critical for Democrats to win Manchins support for Jacksons confirmation; though he did not rule out voting for a nominee who is more liberal than him, he has not committed to any course either. Without Manchins support, Democrats will likely be unable to win Jacksons confirmation in the equally-divided Senate. Zachary Steiber contributed to this report. President Joe Biden is set to deliver his first State of the Union address Tuesday night, 9 p.m. ET. The Epoch Times and its sister media NTD will livestream the speech on this page. Bidens speech comes days after Russia launched its invasion of Ukraine, after which the United States announced sanctions against Russia. Where to Watch at 9 PM ET The Epoch Times website: https://www.theepochtimes.com NTD website: https://www.ntd.com Americas free-market economy played a key role in making it the worlds top wheat producer Do empires build trade routes or do trade routes build empires? Have the United States and Russia been locked in an economic rivalry since the 1860s? Was World War I triggered by international grain trade and the desire of Russia to control Constantinople? Oceans of Grain: How American Wheat Remade the World, by Scott Reynolds Nelson, examines these questions and much more. It is a study of grain, its trade routes, and the impact grain trading has had throughout history. Bread is the staff of life. Nelson follows it from prehistory to the present. Nelsons theme is simple: Food production drives history. Abundance or absence creates or destroys empires, fuels economic and technological growth, and drives world history. Grain is the most important food. Storable and transportable, it can also be used to create more food, especially meat. The two biggest breadbaskets are the Ukrainian and American plains. There were others, but none as productive. Nelson opens by showing how trading Ukrainian grain predated civilization, following oxcart trails across the Ukrainian steppes. Disease also followed these trails. Grain trading led to cities, which required food. Empires grew to ensure grain flowed. This led to bigger cities. These grew until reset by plague. The cycle then repeated itself. This pattern was followed from ancient Greece to Catherine the Greats Russia. Russia grew rich exporting its grain to Western Europe starting in the 18th century. Nelson also shows how the growth of the United States affected this cycle. It produced a source of grain rivaling and surpassing the production of the Russian plains. America was more productive not just because of its soil but also because its free-market economy encouraged innovation and productivity. Following the Civil War, America powered past Russia. Despite the longer supply chain, its grain was cheaper. The results are presented by Nelson. Grain dramatically dropped in price. Port cities exploded in importance. European nationsBritain, France, Germany, and Italyindustrialized, deemphasizing agriculture, using American and Russian grain to feed factory workers. Wars were won feeding troops imported grain. European grain powers, including Austria-Hungary, Russia, and the Ottoman Empire, lost wealth to American competition. Industrialized nations, especially Britain and Germany, became dependent on imported grain. Nelson asserts that pressure to protect food lines led to World War I. Oceans of Grain is provocative. Well-researched and readable, Nelson has written a book that will fascinate both professional historians and regular folk. Oceans of Grain: How American Wheat Remade the World, by Scott Reynolds Nelson (Basic Books, 2022). This article was originally published in American Essence magazine. Although BPA, BPS, and BPF share similar chemical properties, BPS and BPF are not safe alternatives for BPA, the study authors concluded in the paper. Laura Vandenberg, an endocrinologist at the University of Massachusetts, Amherst who was not involved in this study, told EHN that the finding in this study is pretty consistent with previous scientific evidence. Its not surprising that chemicals that are structurally similar to BPA are going to have similar effects on human populations, said Vandenberg, who spent almost the last two decades studying endocrine disruptors, including BPA and its replacements. Replacements for BPA A key ingredient in polycarbonate, a hard, clear plastic, and epoxy resins, which act as a protective lining in food and beverage packaging, BPA can be found in all corners of our lives shatterproof windows, eyeglasses, water bottles, metal food cans, water pipes, and medical supplies, to name a few. Although BPA does not stick around in our body, it is still a great health concern because were constantly being exposed to it, Vandenberg said. By mimicking estrogens, BPA molecules can forestall estrogen receptors, triggering a plethora of molecular pathways down to adverse health outcomes. Previous studies have linked BPA to heart diseases, obesity, diabetes, hypertension, brain and reproductive system damages, and childrens behavior problems. By design, most replacement bisphenols bear similar chemical structures as BPA to achieve parallel characteristics in products. While a BPA molecule looks similar to a batman symbol, the molecules of replacement bisphenols look like the batman symbol with antenna, said Vandenberg. Therefore, scientists are also finding comparable biological effects from these BPA replacements on our bodies. The bisphenols weve looked at have similar effects on the hearts, Glen Pyle, a biomedical professor at University of Guelph in Canada who was not involved in the study, told EHN. Pyles team investigates the molecular cardiology of BPA and its replacements in animal models. His research demonstrated that, with subtle mechanistic differences, both BPS and BPA can depress the ability of the heart to contract by disrupting the calcium flow inside the cell, sabotaging the hearts force. BPA and Bisphenol Regulation Despite sweeping concerns, the U.S. Food and Drug Administration still considers BPA safe at the current levels occurring in foods. As a result, BPA and its analogous replacements are still free-floating in the U.S., except for baby bottles, sippy cups, and infant formula packaging. Meanwhile, European regulators recently recommended slashing the recommended daily dose of BPA by 100,000, which would ensure the chemical cannot be used in any food contact products. A group of U.S. health professionals recently petitioned the FDA to revisit BPAs safety in light of the European findings and recommendations. The FDA really has ignored a lot of data on BPA, said Vandenberg. I think that its time for that to change. In addition to BPA, scientists are also racing to keep tabs on the health impact of BPA replacements, as they continue to emerge. The metaphor of Whack a Mole is really a very common one, said Vandenberg. It is frustrating. As for the BPA-free labels on products, Pyle said they mean not much, for the consumers as they often contain BPA-replacements. I think one of the simplest things we can do [to avoid bisphenols] is to reduce our use of plastics when its not necessary, he said. Huanjia Zhang never thought he would become a journalist in a foreign country. He grew up in Yantai, a cozy city on Chinas northeast coast. As a biology major at Gettysburg College, he studied salamanders. Wading through frigid ponds to hunt for salamander eggs, he unfolded a passion for science storytelling. After college, Huanjia worked at Childrens Hospital of Philadelphia researching the human microbiome. Now, he is a graduate journalism student at NYUs Science, Health and Environmental Reporting Program. In his spare time, he reads and cooks, then repeats. California Lawmakers Target Factory Farms and Slaughterhouses SACRAMENTOFactory farms and slaughterhouses that expand existing operations or build new facilities could face fines up to $10,000 per day under new legislation that could be heard in committee on March 21. Assemblymembers Adrin Nazarian (D-Van Nuys) and Alex Lee (D-San Jose), who authored Assembly Bill 2764, said putting a halt to commercial animal feeding operations and slaughterhouses would be a step forward in preventing inhumane cruelty on animals and workers, while minimizing environmental and health impacts. These operations have a notorious track record of poor working conditions where health and safety are sacrificed for the maximum profit. Although we cant and shouldnt replace it overnight, we can cease its expansion to give room for more worker and consumer-friendly operations to develop, Nazarian said in a statement. Two animal rights activist groups sponsored the billDirect Action Everywhere (DxE) and Compassion Bayechoed the lawmakers sentiments toward Californias agriculture industry. Cassie King, communications director of DxE, said instead of calling for welfare reform to the industry, the group believes bold and decisive legislation would stop the industry in its tracks and reverse it to create a plant based sustainable and humane food system in California that could lead the rest of the world. Cows at feeding time at Frank Konyn Dairy Inc., in Escondido, Calif., on April 16, 2020. (Ariana Drehsler/AFP via Getty Images) Since 2008, Californians have voted in favor of more animal rights within the industry. Proposition 2, the Farm Animal Confinement Initiative, which prohibits confinement for pregnant pigs, calves raised for veal, and egg-laying hens in a manner that does not all them to turn around freely, lie down, stand up, and fully extend their limbs, passed with 63 percent of the vote. And in 2018, Proposition 12 passed with 62 percent of the vote, which requires a minimum space requirement based on square feet for calves raised for veal, breeding pigs, and egg-laying hens. Additionally, Proposition 12 bans the sale of pork from hogs that fail to meet Californias minimum square-feet production standards. We know that this is quite bold, King told The Epoch Times. Its some of the strongest animal rights and environmental justice legislation we think that has been introduced in the country. But were hopeful that in a place like California with a history of calling for the protection of animals in our environment, that people will get behind it and that well see a lot of public support. Goats feed on hay at a farm in Pescadero, Calif., on April 26, 2019. (Justin Sullivan/Getty Images) Michael Formica, general counsel for the National Pork Producers Council, a trade association representing U.S. pork producers established in 1970, said if a moratorium is placed on factory farms and slaughterhouses in California, smaller meat processors throughout the state would see a significant impact. If they cant expand, then theyre out of business, and youve lost the ability of small processors to have any chance of competing, Formica told The Epoch Times. Formica also said California consumes tremendous amounts of meat proteins, especially the Latin and Asian populations, who make up about 55 percent of the states population. Californias Water Board estimates approximately 2,000 animal feeding facilities are currently operating within the state. According to the United States Department of Agriculture, California has three approved slaughterhouses. In 2020, Californias Department of Food and Agriculture reported farms and ranches received $49 billion in cash receipts for their output, with dairy, cattle, and calves making up 20 percent of the industry. If lawmakers halt factory farms and slaughterhouses, the statewide moratorium will take effect in January 2023, regulating Californias animal agriculture industry and directly impacting factory farms that sell meat, dairy, eggs, organs, or other products, and slaughterhouses that butcher livestock like chicken, turkeys, pigs, cattle, ducks, and sheep. People look at the Waymo car, formerly the Google self-driving car project, during the Las Vegas Convention Center during CES 2019 in Las Vegas on Jan. 9, 2019. (David McNew/AFP/Getty Images) Californian Companies Receive Permission For Self-Driving Car Services The California Public Utilities Commission (CPUC) has authorized two companies, Waymo and Cruise, to offer autonomous vehicle (AV) passenger services in the state. AVs refer to driverless vehicles. Earlier, the companies were permitted to provide passenger services under the Drivered Pilot program. This allowed Waymo and Cruise to carry out testing of their AV service but with prohibitions on ride-sharing and collection of fares. According to the new authorization issued on Feb. 28, the CPUC granted Drivered Deployment permits to Waymo and Cruise. This allows the companies to offer shared rides while collecting fares from passengers. Waymo can now offer Drivered Deployment services at certain parts of San Mateo and San Francisco counties, with driving speeds limited to 65 mph, while Cruise can provide services on selected public roads in San Francisco between 10 p.m. and 6 a.m., with a speed limit of 30 mph. Both companies will not be authorized to operate under heavy rain or fog. Under the Drivered Deployment categorization, safety drivers are required to be present inside the vehicles, ready to take control when the situation demands it. Autonomous vehicles are a breakthrough technology that hold the potential to improve safety for all road users, and issuing these permits allowing for fare collection and shared rides is an important and measured step toward the commercialization and expansion of the service, said Commissioner Genevieve Shiroma. As the technology is deployed, we will keep a close eye on the impacts of autonomous vehicles on safety, the environment, and on disadvantaged communities. The CPUC, which regulates the AV passenger service in the state, has adopted four goals for such services, which includes (a) ensuring the safety of passengers, (b) expanding the benefit for AVs to all Californians, including those with disabilities, (c) cutting down greenhouse gas emissions, toxic air contaminants, etc., and (d) providing more transportation options for citizens, specifically those in low-income and disadvantaged communities. 100s of riders have used #WaymoOne across San Francisco since we launched our Trusted Tester program in August 21, and we have 10s of thousands of riders on the waitlist. Well begin offering paid trips through the program in the coming weeks, Waymo said in a March 1 tweet. The company said that it has learned a lot from operating its AV commercial ride-hail service in Arizona and will apply them in San Francisco. Cruise had started offering free AV rides in February. The companys vice president for global government affairs, Prashanthi Raman, called the CPUC decision another positive incremental step forward. Cruise has requested CPUC for the next-level categorization, Driverless Deployment, permit which does not require the presence of a safety driver in the vehicle. Waymo is a self-driving car project from Google, also known as The Google Car, while Cruise is owned by GM. The Energy East pipelines proposed route is pictured as TransCanada officials speak during a news conference in this file photo. Amid Russias invasion of Ukraine, many are calling for greater Canadian energy security and less dependence on foreign imports, with a pipeline running from east to west being a key component of the strategy. (The Canadian Press/Jeff McIntosh) Calls Mount for More Pipelines to Bolster Canadas Energy Security, Help European Allies as Russia Invades Ukraine Blood on our hands from importing Russian oil, says energy analyst News Analysis Russias invasion of Ukraine is prompting renewed calls in Canada to bolster energy security, in particular by building oil and gas pipelines to supply the eastern provinces, and to play a greater role in supporting the energy needs of European allies. One would think that this would be the opportunity for Canada to pick up its game and begin the process of ensuring that we have energy security, by having a pipeline from east to west, and that we do not import anyone elses oil, said Dan McTeague, a former Liberal MP and president of Canadians for Affordable Energy, in an interview with The Epoch Times. It would also show that we are hoping to export our oil in a safe, responsible, environmentally effective manner that I think very few other nations can boast, he added. Energy analyst Jeff Kucharski, an adjunct professor at Royal Roads University, says energy security is fundamentally about ensuring stable, affordable, and sustainable supplies of energy. As one of the largest free market sources of global energy resources not controlled by state-owned enterprises, and with high environmental, social, and governance standards, Canada can contribute to global and regional energy security by cooperating with allies and partners to supply the energy and critical mineral resources they will need, Kucharski said in a Macdonald-Laurier Institute report titled The Evolution of Energy Security in the Indo-Pacific: Why Is It Important for Canada? On March 1, the U.S. benchmark West Texas Intermediate rose noticeably above US$100 a barrel to levels not seen since the heady days of 2014. After a slew of sanctions against Russia that forced its stock market to shut down and its currency to fall to a record low, Prime Minister Justin Trudeau on Feb. 28 announced a ban on imports of Russian crude oil. Canada hasnt actually imported any crude oil from Russia since 2019, and it doesnt import natural gas from that country either. What I would have expected the prime minister to do yesterday would be to redouble the effort to ensure this east-west corridor for pipelines to ensure that we have access to tidewater so that we can help Europe, McTeague said. Russian natural gas supplies to the European Union and indirectly the United Kingdom accounted for 32 percent of the regions total gas demand in 2021, according to the International Energy Agency. The IEA also notes that Russia is the worlds third-largest oil producer and the largest exporter, with around 60 percent of its oil exports going to Europe. Russian Energy Imports Statistics Canada data shows that Canada imported energy products worth $378.8 million from Russia in 2021, with Quebec accounting for 58.6 percent of the total and Newfoundland and Labrador 35 percent. The imports are mostly refined petroleum products like motor gasoline or diesel. Natural Resources Minister Jonathan Wilkinson followed up on Trudeaus announcement by tweeting on March 1 that all refined and other petroleum products from Russia will also be banned. We continue to monitor the supply situation closely with partner International Energy Agency countries and, if necessary, are prepared to act jointly to maintain security of supply in energy markets, Natural Resources Canada said in a Feb. 28 statement. In advocating for a ban on Russian energy imports, McTeague tweeted on Feb. 27, Enough with subsidizing Putins attack on Ukraine. We have blood on our hands. Quebecs ministry of energy and natural resources told The Epoch Times that its provincial imports do not include crude oil or gas and that its supply chain for these primary energy products is 100 percent North American and mainly transported via pipelines. Imports from outside North America are not part of our energy policies or strategy, though some businesses may choose to import rather than purchase locally. As stated by Premier Legault, we will fully support any measure taken by the federal government in the context of the conflict between the Russian Federation and the Ukraine, including import restrictions, press officer Genevieve Tremblay said. McTeague argues that there shouldnt be a distinction between importing raw product and importing processed product. TD Securities pointed out in a Feb. 27 note to clients that Russia brought in US$160 billion last year from its exports of natural gas and crude oil, and said that if the country is able to continue to export, the revenues brought in should be able to cover TDs estimate of what the Russian government and banking sector need in the short term. Displacing Russia From Global Energy Markets Given that Canada is the worlds fifth-largest natural gas producer, interim Conservative leader Candice Bergen lamented the countrys inability to get new pipelines built to tidewater to displace Russian natural gas. Reform the pipeline approval process, recognizing energy as vital to Canadian and European defence and security, Bergen said in action proposed on Feb. 26 to mitigate the medium- and long-term threat from Russia. The premiers of Alberta and Saskatchewan have both condemned Canada for importing Russian energy products and effectively financing the war on Ukraine. Alberta stands ready, willing and able to supply the energy needed to displace Russia from global markets. Message to Ottawa and Washington: stop helping Putin and OPEC by killing pipelines, Alberta premier Jason Kenney said in a Feb. 27 tweet. TransCanada, renamed TC Energy in 2019, cancelled its Energy East project in 2017. The proposed 4,500-kilometre pipeline would have carried 1.1 million barrels of crude oil per day from Alberta and Saskatchewan to refineries in Eastern Canada. TC Energy then confirmed termination of its Keystone XL project in June 2021, after halting construction work on Jan. 20, 2021, following U.S. President Joe Bidens revocation of the permit for the pipeline on his first day in office as president. Quebec was opposed to Energy East, which also faced significant regulatory and environmental assessment hurdles. It is tragic that Canada doesnt have the eastern or northern-bound pipeline export infrastructure capacity in place to support our NATO and European allies to send them oil and gas in these difficult times, said James Moore, former industry minister and now senior business adviser to multinational law firm Dentons, in a Feb. 24 tweet. The U.S. oil and gas industry also recognizes that a number of problems could be solved with pipelines built in Canada. EQT CEO Toby Rice told CNBC on Feb. 28 that Russias power comes from its ability to export energy and that New England is the only state that imports Russian natural gas. EQT is the largest natural gas producer in the United States, according to the companys website. Rice said what could be done immediately included approving the Keystone XL pipeline and new pipelines in New England. Lets activate the Keystone XL pipeline that will bring 800,000 barrels a day into our states from a trusted ally Canada, he said. These are things that are going to bring energy security to our shores. McTeague says the world has changed in the past week, since the Feb. 24 Russian invasion of Ukraine. Its time for technocrats, bureaucrats, and our politicians to smell the coffee. As it were, we seem to be more interested in the source of our coffee than we do the source of our oil that we tend to consume. Cast member Matt Damon signs autographs at a press conference for the film "Stillwater" at the 74th Cannes Film Festival in Cannes, France, on July 9, 2021. (Eric Gaillard/Reuters) Cannes Film Festival No Longer Welcoming Russian Delegations, Kremlin Connections The Cannes Film Festival has become the latest organization to announce a boycott against Russia in the wake of its invasion of Ukraine as dozens of companys across the globe seek to distance themselves from Moscow. The organization issued a statement on Tuesday stating that it would no longer be welcoming any Russian delegations or anyone connected to the Russian government to its 2022 edition in May unless the war of assault ends in conditions that will satisfy the Ukrainian people. As the world has been hit by a heavy crisis in which a part of Europe finds itself in a state of war, the Festival de Cannes wishes to extend all its support to the people of Ukraine and all those who are in its territory, the organization said. However modest as it is, we join our voices with those who oppose this unacceptable situation and denounce the attitude of Russia and its leaders. Cannes did, however, throw its support behind Russians who have taken risks to protest against the assault and invasion of Ukraine. Among them are artists and film professionals who have never ceased to fight against the contemporary regime, who cannot be associated with these unbearable actions, and those who are bombing Ukraine, the organization said. Loyal to its history that started in 1939 in resistance to the fascist and Nazi dictatorship, the Festival de Cannes will always serve artists and industry professionals that raise their voices to denounce violence, repression, and injustices, for the main purpose to defend peace and liberty. Elsewhere, The Venice Film Festival, said it was organizing free screenings of the film Reflection in Rome, Milan, and Venice, starting next week as a sign of solidarity with the filmmakers and the people of Ukraine. The film by Ukrainian filmmaker Valentyn Vasynovych, is set during the 2014 war in Ukraines eastern Donbas region and was presented in competition at the 78th Venice Film Festival 2021. The moves by Cannes and the Venice Film Festival comes after the European Broadcasting Union last week announced that Russia would not be allowed to participate in this years Eurovision Song Contest, which is set to take place in Turin in May. A string of other cultural festivals has also announced similar boycotts against Moscow while the global film and TV industry doubled down on its solidarity with Ukraine. This week, Disney, Sony, Warner Bros, Universal, and Paramount all announced they would no longer be releasing films in the country. Russia invaded Ukraine, a former Soviet nation, on Feb. 24 under President Vladimir Putins premise of a special military operation. On Tuesday, Ukraines Defense Minister Oleksiy Reznikov said that Russia was planning to launch a large-scale information and psychological operation against Ukraine in the near future in an effort to break the resistance of Ukrainians and the Ukrainian army with lies. Using tactics of total disinformation and intimidation of the civilian population, the enemy will try to sow panic and chaos, Reznikov said in a statement. Russian officials and state-run media outlets have not yet made any public comments on Reznikovs claims. Dr. Rochelle Walensky, director of the Centers for Disease Control and Prevention, leads President Joe Biden into the room for a COVID-19 briefing at the headquarters for the CDC in Atlanta on March 19, 2021. (Patrick Semansky/AP Photo) CDC No Longer Recommends Universal Contact Tracing, Case Investigation The U.S. Centers for Disease Control and Prevention (CDC) is no longer recommending universal COVID-19 case investigation and contact tracing, instead saying health departments should focus those efforts on specific high-risk settings. The Feb. 28 update to the CDC guidance comes nearly two years after Robert Redfield, the agencys previous director, told Congress that the United States needed as many as 100,000 people working as contact tracers to track the spread of the CCP (Chinese Communist Party) virus, which causes COVID-19. According to CDC, a contact tracer was expected to quickly locate and speak with individuals who tested positive for the virus, find out who they have recently been in close contact with, and then notify those people about their exposure and encourage them to enter a 14-day quarantine to prevent further transmission. The CDC now advises that state and local health departments should concentrate on high-risk congregate settings, such as long-term care facilities, jails and prisons, and homeless shelters. The updated guidance also states that case investigations should focus on cases and close contacts with exposures in the previous five days for those settings and groups at increased risk, such as those with underlying health conditions, pregnant women, and older adults. The updated guidance is in response to changes in the nature of the pandemic and the increasing availability of new tools to prevent transmission and mitigate illness, CDC spokesperson Kristen Nordlund said on March 1, The New York Times reported. The latest CDC data shows that the Omicron variant of the CCP virus has become the dominant strain in the United States, accounting for more than 95 percent of new infections for the week following the Presidents Day holiday. Compared with other variants, Omicron spreads more easily and generally causes less severe COVID-19 symptoms. Recent studies also suggest that Omicron may have an average incubation period of three days, shorter than any other variant. The incubation period is the amount of time between when someone is exposed to a virus and when symptoms begin to emerge. A paper published in December 2021 on Eurosurveillance, the scientific journal of the European CDC, describes an Omicron outbreak involving 80 attendees of a restaurant party in Norway. Most of those individuals were vaccinated and had received a negative antigen test result within two days before attending the event. Symptoms such as fever started to show about three days after the party. Researchers said this could indicate that Omicron is able to multiply so quickly that negative antigen test results become meaningless. Not only are children at high risk for severe adverse events from the COVID shots, but having healthy, unvaccinated children in the population is crucial to achieving herd immunity. December 30, 2021, Joe Rogan interviewed Dr. Robert Malone, the inventor of the mRNA gene transfer technology. YouTube and Twitter promptly deleted the interview and mainstream media published a rash of articles attacking Malone and Rogan in the most disparaging terms possible. In addition to censoring Malone, Google has also been caught red-handed manipulating search results such that Malones Rogan interview wont show up when searching for mass formation psychosis. That search term also wont give you any of the interviews given by psychologist Mattias Desmet, who was the first to use that term as a diagnosis for why so many are buying an obviously flawed, if not ridiculous, COVID narrative. In response to the obvious Big Tech censorship, Congressman Troy Nehls, R-Texas, entered the transcript of the podcast (the Joe Rogan Experience #1757) into the Congressional Record with the following statement: By deplatforming Dr. Robert Malone for voicing opposition and removing the interview, Twitter and YouTube are once again proving that they dont work for their users but for big Pharma, big media, and the elites. When we stray away from our core principles of freedom of speech, freedom of expression, and freedom of debate, democracy is lost. Today, I entered the transcript of the Joe Rogan Experience #1757 into the Congressional Record to preserve the podcast forever. Big Tech may be able to censor information on their own platforms, but they cannot censor the Congressional Record. Malone Permanently Banned From Twitter Malone had been permanently banned from Twitter the day before, December 29, 2021. He suspects his ban was triggered by one of the two last posts he made. One was a link to the Canadian COVID Care Alliances website, with the comment: Pfizer 6 month data which shows that Pfizers Covid-19 inoculations cause more illness than they prevent. Plus, an overview of the Pfizer trial flaws in both design and execution. The video, featured on the Canadian COVID Care Alliances website, reviews that Pfizer data. We will feature this excellent video later and go into far more details of how they exposed the fraud of Pfizers clinical COVID jab trial. The other tweet that might have triggered the ban was a post about how the World Economic Forum manages global media in a lockstep fashion. Either way, Malone was permanently banned from the social media platform either for highlighting Pfizers own science the very science were told to trust or highlighting the WEFs central role in the global censorship campaign. Mainstream Media Are Losing the Information War Interestingly, Rogan has become something of a key workaround to the universal mainstream media censorship. While Malone lost 512,000 followers on Twitter when they suspended his account, its rumored his interview with Rogan has garnered some 50 MILLION views across alternative free-speech platforms. As noted in a January 3, 2022, ZeroHedge article: nowadays when you make it on JRE, youve officially made it. Putting aside the obvious irony of Twitter attempting to ban somebody and the person in question going viral as a result, I also thought about how, despite the fact that Malones opinions put him at odds with the mainstream media Joe Rogan launched him past the usual media suspects and into the real mainstream [In] 2022, the mainstream media as we know it today (CNN, MSNBC, ABC, CBS, etc.) is going to be forced to change its narrative on COVID. The idea of the media being forced to change its tune on Covid is something I touched upon a couple of days ago when I wrote about the Omicron variant and how the media is creating a mass hysteria mountain out of a mole hill. But after listening to Dr. Robert Malones well reasoned arguments, delivered for three straight hours, concisely and calmly, it became clear to me that the entire mainstream media machine could wind up falling at the hands of content creators like Joe Rogan. Rogan generates so many views and has grown so quickly strictly because he allows open dialogue, civil discourse and approaches things with honest intent One issue for media and political elites to consider is the fact that Rogan has supporters on both sides of the aisle. These supporters watch him because he routinely touches on topics that are considered faux pas or irreverent Rogan has thrived, whether intentionally (bringing on people specifically because they are being censored) or unintentionally (shooting the shit with people he finds interesting), from the start, by shining light in the dark areas that the mainstream media refuses to discuss. While Malones Twitter feed has been erased, you can still follow him on Gab, GETTR and Substack. A Gab mirror with the last 400 tweets from Malones Twitter feed is also available. January 2, 2022, when Rogan joined GETTR, he urged his 7.8 million Twitter followers to join him there in case s**t over at Twitter gets even dumber. Cliff Notes From the Rogan Interview Many Rogan fans agree that Malones interview is among the best interviews Rogan has ever done. I know, many of you are saying to yourself, I dont have three hours to watch this interview. Well, let me encourage you to find the time. If 50 million people have watched this video, it is likely you could find the time. Trust me on this one. You wont regret it. It is such a pure joy and pleasure to listen to Malones relaxed, eloquent, masterfully precise language as he destroys the mainstream COVID narrative. You can watch it in bits and pieces, but this is clearly the best interview Malone has done and is on par with the Peter McCullough interview with Rogan a few weeks ago. If its not OK for me to be part of the conversation who can be allowed? ~ Dr. Robert Malone As explained by Malone, he has been involved in vaccine development and distribution for more than three decades, and played a crucial role in the development of the very technology that the Pfizer and Moderna COVID shots are based upon, so If its not OK for me to be part of the conversation who can be allowed? Malone asked. Indeed, as noted by Rogan, with its ban of Malone, Twitter basically banned one of the most qualified people in the world to talk about vaccines. Malone said he has attorneys looking at potentially filing some sort of lawsuit over the ban. Of course, mainstream media and fact checkers (now legally defined by recent Facebook litigation as opinion promoters) call him a liar for saying he invented the mRNA technology currently used, but his name on 10 patents proves otherwise. No one can dispute that I played a major role in this tech, Malone said. And virtually all other voices that have that background have financial conflicts of interest. I think Im the only one that doesnt. Im not getting any money out of this. Some of the cliff notes from Malones interview include the following: Government responses Malone believes the U.S. government is out of control and lawless in their COVID response and that their actions have resulted in, probably, half a million excess deaths. COVID jab mandates are explicitly illegal as the shots are experimental. Whats more, people are not getting the information they need to be able to make an informed decision about the risks theyre taking by participating in this experiment. Social psychology of the times Malone believes the irrational behavior were witnessing is the result of mass formation psychosis, a societal diagnosis first presented by Desmet at the end of 2021. Natural immunity Natural immunity is more robust than vaccine induced immunity, and people with natural immunity also have a higher risk of adverse events from the COVID jab. COVID jab risks Malone actually took the Moderna shot, thinking it might help with some long-COVID symptoms he was having after getting seriously ill with COVID-19 in February 2020. He says he suffered some side effects from the shot, but that those effects have since resolved.Malone expresses concern about post-jab myocarditis rates and the possibility of fertility problems. When it comes to reproductive health, he warns that the lipid nanoparticles in the COVID shots can have adverse effects on the ovaries.He also reviews how the SARS-CoV-2 spike protein can cause blood clots, regardless of whether they come from natural infection or the COVID jab, and how the spike protein can disrupt the blood-brain-barrier.Malone believes the reason some experience no or few adverse effects from the COVID shot has to do with phenotypic or genetic differences. He points out that diabetics and those with high blood sugar levels tend to be more affected by spike protein effects, for example. Suppression of early treatment Early treatment with drugs such as hydroxychloroquine or ivermectin is very effective and both drugs have also been safely administered for several decades. The Chinese anti-COVID protocol, obtained by Malone in February 2020, actually included hydroxychloroquine. When he got COVID-19, Malone also self-treated with femotadine (Pepsid). Hes now leading a clinical trial to assess its usefulness in the treatment of COVID. Narrative management and global coordination of censorship The Trusted News Initiative led by the BBC is central to the censorship campaign, according to Malone. It labels anyone who disagrees with the official narrative on vaccines as an anti-vaxxer, and suppresses anything that goes against approved sources such as Dr. Anthony Fauci and the World Health Organization.He also points out that Thomson-Reuters, which has ties to Pfizer, is a primary fact checker of Twitter. Since they in part decide whats allowed to be discussed on Twitter, Pfizer has this hidden influence as well (not to mention that James C. Smith, chairman of the Thomson Reuters Foundation, also has been a director at Pfizer and chair of their compensation committee since 2014). COVID jab efficacy Malone notes the window of effectiveness is ever shrinking, with some studies, such as one from Denmark, showing negative effectiveness against Omicron.According to Malone, were administering a mismatched vaccine and driving the B and T memory cells toward a virus that is no longer in circulation. His hypothesis for why the shots stop working so quickly is because of this original antigenic sin. He explains: Weve got a new pathogen [Omicron] but its got a series of overlaps with the old ones that weve seen before, and our immune system is biased to respond as if its the old one. Now, to make matters worse, were taking the spike protein only one of the proteins the dominant immunologically dominant protein and were jabbing everybody multiple times, and driving memory cells and effector cells to a virus that is not the one were encountering. So it could very well be that as youre taking more jabs, youre further skewing your immune response in a way thats dysfunctional for infection to Omicron When you see a signal this strong, its saying somethings going on you ought to pay attention to it in my opinion. References Guo Shuqing, Chairman of the China Banking Regulatory Commission, listens to a question during a press conference in Beijing on March 2, 2017. (Greg Baker/AFP/Getty Images) Chinese Leadership Says It Wont Join Sanctions on Russia, Trade Will Go on as Normal China wont be joining in Western sanctions against Russia over its invasion of Ukraine and opposes such unilateral measures, the countrys banking regulator said on March 2. Guo Shuqing, chairman of the China Banking and Insurance Regulatory Commission, claimed that Western sanctions on Russia dont have much legal basis. We wont join such sanctions and will keep up normal trade and financial exchanges with relevant parties, he told reporters during a press conference. China has remained Russias largest trading partner for 12 years, according to Chinese commerce authorities. The two neighboring countries have fostered increasingly close relationships in recent years, with total bilateral trade last year reaching a record $146.9 billion, marking a 35.9 percent jump from the previous year. At a summit with Russian President Vladimir Putin in early February, Chinese leader Xi Jinping expressed hope to raise the target to $250 billion within two years. Guo said that Western sanctions on Russia would have a minimal impact on the Chinese economy, now or in the future. The United States and its allies in Europe and elsewhere have announced a slew of sanctions against Moscow, including banning some big Russian banks from the SWIFT global payments system and limiting its central banks access to $640 billion in foreign currency reserves. A view of a destroyed bridge in Irpin, Ukraine, on March 1, 2022. Russian forces continued their advance on the Ukrainian capital as the invasion of its western neighbor entered its sixth day. (Anastasia Vlasova/Getty Images) The Russian ruble has since crashed, and Russias top bank is now quitting almost all of Europes markets amid intense pressure. Meanwhile, China is the only major country that has avoided publicly denouncing Moscows attack on Ukraine, and has consistently refused to characterize the move as an invasion. At a regular press briefing on March 2, Chinese foreign ministry spokesperson Wang Wenbin said Beijing firmly opposes unilateral sanctionsa position it has taken on Afghanistan, Venezuela, and Iran. In a sign that the Chinese Communist Party may be attempting to appease both sides, Chinas Foreign Minister Wang Yi held a call with his Ukrainian counterpart Dmytro Kuleba on March 1, during which Kuleba requested that China act as a mediator to make Russia cease its aggression. Still careful to avoid the invasion label, Wang had described the conflict as expanding warfare, noting that Beijing was deeply grieved to see the conflict between Ukraine and Russia and highly concerned about the damage done to civilians. He added that he supported international efforts to achieve a political settlement. Ukrainian Foreign Minister Dmytro Kuleba speaks at the General Assembly 58th plenary meeting in New York on Feb. 23, 2022. (Timothy A. Clary/AFP via Getty Images) While the Chinese readout didnt explicitly say Wang agreed that China would help mediate a ceasefire, the Ukrainian side suggested that he had. China is ready to make efforts to end the war through diplomacy, the Ukrainian Embassy in Finland wrote in a tweet following the call. Wang, it added, assured Dmytro Kuleba of Chinas readiness to make every effort to end the war on Ukrainian soil through diplomacy, including as a permanent member of the United Nations Security Council. Asked to clarify whether Beijing would take up the mediator role, the ministrys spokesperson has remained ambiguous. China will continue to play a constructive role in promoting the deescalation, he said at a March 2 press briefing. Meanwhile, the Russian state-controlled energy giant Gazprom signed a contract on Feb. 28 to design a pipeline to China, which would supply as much as 50 billion cubic meters of natural gas to the country annually via Mongolia. A Short Film That Packs Some Powerful Messages into Its Limited Runtime. PG | 13 min | Drama, Short | 2011 Short films can be very tricky to pull off successfully. While in feature films there is plenty of time to delve into numerous characters and their histories, as well as gradually let narratives unfold, with shorts you only have a limited time to pack in as much about these crucial elements as possible. Shorts that are too short but have intriguing storylines may also leave viewers feeling as though they were shortchanged (puns intended). On the other hand, productions that meander along and dont really go anywhere typically have people scratching their heads and wondering what else they could have done with the time they wasted. Well, it seems that award-winning Mexican director Alonso Alvarez got the formula for short film success right with his 2011 project, Crescendo. Things start off on a relatively drab notewere transported to the Holy Roman Empire in the 18th-century. As the main character, Maria Magdalena (Montserrat Espadale) narrates, we see a piano as she sums up her dire circumstances: My husband says that life is like a symphony. He tells me this every time he beats me because I am a sour note. Maria Magdalenas life is in turmoil (Montserrat Espadale) in Crescendo. (Metanoia Films) Maria, pregnant, catches yet another woman cheating with her alcoholic husband Adalric (Patrick Nuo) and it becomes quite evident that shes in an unhappy marriage. As she walks through her town, she goes on to describe how her first husband was a good man who died and that she also lost her mother shortly thereafter. As she mournfully gazes into the face of a passing child, she mentions that a couple of her previous children died as well. Interestingly, much of Marias exposition is narrated and is delivered in metaphors that have to do with musical symphonies. She likens her sorrow-filled life to being a discordant series of sour notes with little, if anything, to look forward to. This all culminates in a drastic decisionMaria intends to have an abortion since she doesnt want to bring a new child into her sad life. She visits a local mom-and-pop business that sells all sorts of medicinal products. After purchasing some kind of potent elixir that will kill the baby within her womb, she returns home and prepares to ingest it. But a dramatic event transpires that sets her on a new course. The birth of her child, Ludwig, possibly portends a different future. Will her sadness and suffering finally come to an end? (Hint: This particular Ludwig is rather special). Maria Magdalena (Montserrat Espadale) prepares to take a drastic measure in Crescendo. (Metanoia Films) One of the things that impressed me about this short film right off the bat was its excellent set design and costumes. It really nails the 18th-century aesthetics and you feel that youre actually there along with the films various characters. Another thing I appreciated was how its narrative started off painting an extremely bleak picture and eventually struck a much more hopeful tone. Admittedly, after watching the first half of the film, I began to wonder if it was all about women victimhood, which is obviously overdone in many Hollywood products. However, things gradually became brighter and the meaningful messages that the film carries came to the fore. A music teacher (Ali Landry Monteverde, R) may offer Maria Magdalena (Montserrat Espadale) the key to happiness in Crescendo. (Metanoia Films) This is a great film to show to teenagers because it shows that every action can have potentially severe consequences, and thus, should be considered more carefully. In these modern times of convenience and rash, knee jerk decision making, Crescendo shows us that sometimes its better to reconsider potentially catastrophic actions and instead choose life over deathits a powerful film that ends on an ultimately uplifting note. Crescendo Director: Alonso Alvarez Starring: Montserrat Espadale, Ali Landry Monteverde, Patrick Nuo Running Time: 13 minutes MPAA Rating: PG Release Date: October 14, 2011 Rated: 4 stars out of 5 Watch on Epoch Cinemavisit the link here. Follow EpochTV on social media: Facebook: https://www.facebook.com/EpochTVus Twitter: https://twitter.com/EpochTVus Views expressed in this article are the opinions of the author and do not necessarily reflect the views of The Epoch Times. Caroline Nicolls receives an injection of the Moderna COVID-19 vaccine administered by nurse Amy Nash, as she sits next to her husband Mark Nicolls who is waiting for his vaccine at the Madejski Stadium in Reading, England, on Apr. 13, 2021. (Steve Parsons - WPA Pool/Getty Images) COVID-19 Jab Compensation Claims to UK Government Top 900 The number of claims for the UKs vaccine injury scheme has risen as recipients allege they were left severely disabled by mRNA jabs. The Vaccine Damage Payment Scheme (VDPS) is a one-off tax-free payment of 120,000 ($160,000) if someone is proved to have been severely disabled or have died as a result of vaccination from diseases such as measles, mumps, and rubella (MMR), swine flu, and more. In December 2020, ministers agreed to add COVID-19 to the scheme, to demonstrate government confidence in the safety profile of any vaccine being used in the vaccination program. According to a recent FOI (Freedom of Information) request, the number of COVID-related claims submitted to the VDPS is currently 920. If accepted, this would cost the Government more than 110 million ($146 million). Claims relating to COVID-19 vaccines have not yet been medically assessed, therefore there have been no payments made to date, and no claims have been disallowed. Last year, it was revealed that the number of claims for the UKs vaccine injury scheme was set to increase. Claims are handled by the National Health Service Business Services Authority (NHSBSA), an arms length body of the Department of Health and Social Care. In the UK, Moderna, AstraZeneca, and Pfizer-BioNTech vaccines have been approved for use. All three have legal indemnity protecting companies from being sued for damages. But claimants may find themselves facing significant red tape making a claim. The governments high bar for acceptance requires that all eligible applicants in the UK must meet a strict 60 percent disablement criteria. The law firm Hausfeld represents more than 40 families and individuals in England including those who have experienced a range of severe health conditions and death following the COVID-19 vaccination. Partner Sarah Moore told the publication Payment Source that the scheme requires applicants to prove causation on the balance of probabilities, that is to show that it is more likely than not that the vaccination caused the injury reported. Furthermore, the sum of 120,000 ($160,000) has been criticized as being far too little to provide proper financial support. Taking an extreme case, a child might suffer significant neurological damagein a court case they might receive millions of pounds under the scheme they would receive 120,000, whichdepending upon their needs might fail to afford the care that they need for a single year, let alone a lifetime of high dependency, said Moore. Florida Gov. Ron DeSantis speaks at the Conservative Political Action Conference (CPAC) at The Rosen Shingle Creek in Orlando, Fla., on Feb. 24, 2022. (Joe Raedle/Getty Images) DeSantis Reacts to Bidens State of the Union Address PUNTA GORDA, FloridaFlorida Gov. Ron DeSantis reacted strongly to President Bidens State of the Union address, saying that most of the domestic issues the country is facing now are of Joe Bidens own creation. Its striking that so many of these problems have been created by Biden in his administration since hes been president, DeSantis told reporters at a March 2 press conference. Think about gas, he said. People are chafing at the pump because youve had a 40 to 50 percent increase in the price of gas. There is a reason for the hike, he added. They shut down the Keystone Pipelineno oil from Anwar, nothing on federal lands, he said, sounding exasperated. So, consequently, youre importing more from countries like Russia. Thats bad for consumers because theyre paying higher, but then its also bad for our national security. DeSantis, a Republican, said America was energy independent before Biden took office and blamed the administrations misguided policies. The Keystone Steele City pumping station, where the planned Keystone XL pipeline was to connect to, in Steele City, Nebraska, in a file photo. (The Canadian Press/AP/Nati Harnik, File) We were energy independent, and we should be energy independent, he said. Citing really misguided policies that have been done over the last year, he called it a huge problem. On Russian aggression against Ukraine, DeSantis did not hold back, calling President Vladimir Putin an authoritarian gas station attendant. Its a hollowed-out country, he said of Russia. except for the energy. And they have nuclear weapons, which makes them much more dangerous. DeSantis told reporters he believes Putin did not anticipate the resistance he has gotten from the Ukrainian people. Hes in a situation where his ideology is to reassemble some of the lost glory of what they had, he said, adding that by no means was the Soviet Union a glorious entity but, instead, one of the most evil regimes in modern history. There were a lot of deaths because of Soviet communism and Chinese communism in the 20th century, he said. [Putins] view is that the dissolution of the Soviet Union was a bad thing, and so hes being fueledbecause America is not serious about energy independence right now. Europe is not serious at all, and Europe is funding this guyso he has the ability now to go in and flex muscle. When then-Congressman DeSantis was in office during President Trumps administration, he said lots of weapons were sent to Ukraine so they could defend themselves. That has helped them put up a fight; I think they have done better than a lot of people thought, the governor said. Nevertheless, Russia is putting a lot of machinery inside of that country. Its going to be very difficult for Ukraine to keep them at bay indefinitely. He admires the spirit of the Ukrainian people, DeSantis said. But unfortunately this will likely end up with Ukrainians engaging in guerrilla warfare. Medics seen carrying dead bodies after rocket attack in Kharkiv, Ukraine on March 1, 2022. (Reuters/Screenshot via The Epoch Times) It will be like death by a thousand cuts, he said. Its going to end up very, very ugly over the next weeks and months. The only way to shut Putin down is to cut off his resources, the governor said. But in order to do that America would have to reverse the policies that Bidens put in place. I think Putin has miscalculated, and if you want to hold him accountable, the way to do it is to hit him where it hurts with energy, he said. Another way to cripple Putin would be to send a crushing blow to the oligarchs, who are propping him up. They wouldnt like it, DeSantis said. And so, if the oligarchy loses confidence in him, he would really be in a very difficult situation. He believes Putin made the decision to go into Ukraine after watching Bidens failures in Afghanistan. I think he sized that up, DeSantis said. I think President Xi in China is sizing that up; I think the Ayatollah in Iran is sizing that up. And, because of that, youre going to have a lot of turmoil over the next three, three-and-a-half years. Responding to a reporters question concerning Biden and prescription drug prices, DeSantis said Florida has had an application on the federal governments desk for over a year to allow purchasing from Canada. Weve gone through this Byzantine process, and the federal government has done nothing, he said. If they would just sign on the dotted line, we have warehouses ready we would be able to save tens of millions of dollars just for the state of Florida for our drug costs. Florida First Lady Casey DeSantis, left, is seen with her children and her husband, Florida Gov. Ron DeSantis, in an undated photograph. (Courtesy of Gov. Ron DeSantis Office) DeSantis said the relaxation of COVID-19 restrictions is a result of negative polling and politics. Science hasnt changed, he said. Fauci is in the witness protection program now and they dont want him out, he said, as many laughed at the reference. There has been no change in the underlying science. The ineffectiveness of those policies was apparent long ago. DeSantis admitted to dozing off as the late hour of the State of the Union address took its toll on the father of three. I confess I did fall asleep during it. But, you know, Ive got three kids under five, he said laughing. So a lot of times, by the time it gets past nine, were a little tired. Rep. Jim Jordan (R-Ohio) listens during a U.S. Senate Senate Health, Education, Labor, and Pensions Committee hearing in Washington on Sept. 23, 2020. (Stefani Reynolds/AFP via Getty Images) Durhams Latest Report Alleging a Sitting President Was Spied on Really Troubling: Rep. Jordan Ranking member of the House Judiciary Committee Rep. Jim Jordan (R-Ohio) says hes troubled by special counsel John Durhams latest filing, which alleges that President Donald Trump was spied on not only during his 2016 presidential campaign, but well into his presidency. Jordan said he knew that there was possible spying on candidate Trump, but now it appears that they continued spying on a sitting president well into his time in office. So between Election Day of [2016] and Inauguration Day on January 2017, but it appears they may have also continued this spying effort while he was president of the United States, Jordan told NTDs Paul Greaney. The executive office of the president is cited in Mr. Durhams latest filing, so that is really troubling if they, in fact, were spying on the sitting president. He talked about going right to the Clinton campaign, and then he referenced whats called Tech Executive-1. Its been reported this individuals name is Joffe. I thought the language was interesting. The goal was to create an inference or a narrative about President Trump and him being linked to Russia. But when you use that language, create a narrative, we used to call that framing someone and thats exactly what it looks like they were doing, and Durhams investigation is going right to the Clinton campaign. Jordan was referring to the court filing, which reads, Tech Executive-1 tasked these researchers to mine internet data to establish an inference and narrative tying then-candidate Trump to Russia. Former deputy to the acting director of national intelligence under Trump, Kash Patel, was also surprised by Durhams latest filing and echoed how troubling this claim is. The main thing that was new was what I call line of effort three. John Durham revealed in his latest pleading that Michael Sussmann, the indicted head Hilary Clinton lawyer from the Hillary Clinton campaign and for the DNC, retained a tech company to do a number of things. One of the things this tech company was supposed to do was mine for data to create a narrative and an inference that Donald Trump was somehow, had a relationship with Russia, Patel said during a Feb. 25 episode of Epoch TVs Kashs Corner. Durhams Feb. 11 court filing reads, The Governments evidence at trial will also establish that among the internet data, Tech Executive-1 and his associates exploited, was domain name system (DNS) Internet traffic pertaining to a particular healthcare provider, Trump Tower, Donald Trumps Central Park West apartment building, and the Executive Office of the President of the United States (EOP). Patel noted that the EOP isnt the White House, but consists of six component offices which are housed in the Eisenhower Executive Office Building, which shows how broad the covert effort was. The six offices in the EOP include the president, the vice president, the National Security Council, the National Economic Council, the trade representative counsel, and the White House counsel. What John Durham alleges is that Sussmann created a relationship with the tech company, the tech company then went out and got a sensitive arrangement to access Trump Tower, one of Donald Trumps residences, and the White House; specifically the Executive Office of the President, he said. This individual Tech Executive-1 was brought on by the DNC and Hillary Clinton campaign specifically to execute line of effort three and utilize the servers at the White House, Trump Tower, and Trumps office building to mine information that would show a narrative and inference that Trump was colluding or had a relationship with Russia. Thats in the pleading itself. The filing reads: Tech Executive-1s employer, Internet Company-1, had come to access and maintain dedicated servers for the EOP as part of a sensitive arrangement whereby it provided DNS resolution services to the EOP. Tech Executive-1 and his associates exploited this arrangement by mining the EOPs DNS traffic and other data for the purpose of gathering derogatory information about Donald Trump. The Twitter logo is displayed on the screen of a smartphone and a tablet in Toulouse, southern France on Oct. 26, 2020. (Lionel Bonaventure/AFP via Getty Images) Editor-in-Chief of the National Pulse Suspended by Twitter for Violating Its Hacked Materials Policy The editor-in-chief of The National Pulse, Raheem Kassam, has been suspended by Twitter for violating its hacked materials policy after he shared internal emails from Fox News. Early Tuesday morning, the journalist posted a photo on Twitter of an internal email, allegedly from Fox News correspondent Gillian Turners inbox, regarding Ukraine President Volodymyr Zelenskyys traceability. The email stated that the intelligence community is concerned about Zelenskyys traceability when he is using the internet and his phone to communicate with the people of Ukraine amid Moscows invasion of the country. It goes on to state that Fox News corporation has been told that the easiest way for Putin and the KGB to track and target Zelenskyy is through his mobile phone and internet use. Even if a phone is encrypted, the KGB can still track both cell phones and landlines, we are told, the email states. Sharing the image online early Tuesday morning, Kassam wrote, Fox News internal email appears to suggest their senior correspondent thinks the KGB still exists. Conservative writer Raheem Kassam stands outside the Westminster Arms pub in London, U.K., on Oct. 28, 2016. (Dan Kitwood/Getty Images) The KGB (Committee for State Security) was officially dissolved in Russia in December 1991 before being succeeded by the Foreign Intelligence Service (SVR) and later, the Federal Security Service (FSB). However, Kassam was swiftly notified by Twitter that his post had violated the platforms Distribution of hacked materials policy. We dont permit the use of our services to directly distribute content obtained through hacking that contains private information, may put people in physical harm or danger, or contains trade secrets, the Twitter notification reads. By clicking Delete, you acknowledge that your tweet violated the Twitter rules, the message from Twitter continues, adding that if you think weve made a mistake, submit an appeal to us. Please note that should you do so, your account will remain locked while we review your appeal. Kassam has since deleted the tweet but his account was temporarily restricted for 12 hours and he is only able to send direct messages to his Twitter followers after the so-called violation. However, his account will be fully restored after 12 hours following the deletion of the tweet that allegedly violated Twitters hacked materials policy. Kassam took to the social media platform and microblogging site GETTR to share his experience, telling his followers that he was currently suspended from Twitter for posting hacked material which is actually a primary source email sent to me by a Fox News insider. The journalist also referenced supporters of the Freedom Truck Convoy in Canada, who Kassam said has been doxxedmeaning they had private or identifying information about themselves published online. Remember, doxxing Trucker supporters didnt get people suspended. But posting Fox News emails does? Hmmm, he wrote. Kassam later told The Post Millennial that he considers Twitters allegation to be libellous and again pointed to Twitters alleged failure to act regarding so-called doxxing of individuals who donated to the Trucker convoy. Perhaps more critically, this suspension was enacted because we recently exposed a number of pro-war propaganda falsehoods. Well see because we will continue to press this until we get real answers, he said. Raheem Kassam told The Epoch Times: It will strike everyone as particularly appalling that Twitter seeks to defend a Fox News reporters silly e-mail to her colleagues, but not the rights of ordinary people to donate to causes like the Canadian truckers. When the latter were hacked and doxxed, Twitter allowed them to be abused. When I publish a leaked e-mail in jest, Im immediately suspended. What theyre alleging is both morally wrong and libelous, and they will hear about it. The Epoch Times has contacted a Twitter spokesperson for comment. The SWIFT logo is seen in this illustration taken on Feb. 25, 2022. (Dado Ruvic/Illustration via Reuters) EU Bans Russian Banks From SWIFT, Leaves Energy Trade Open The European Union on Wednesday formally excluded seven Russian banks from the SWIFT payment system as part of the blocs latest sanctions over Russias attack on Ukraine. Todays decision to disconnect key Russian banks from the SWIFT network will send yet another very clear signal to [Russian President Vladimir] Putin and the Kremlin, European Commission President Ursula von der Leyen said in a statement, adding that the latest sanctions are the largest ever to be enforced against any country in the EUs history. The measure, taking effect on March 12, excludes two of Russias biggest institutions, Sberbank and Gazprombank, because they handle most of the payments for oil and gas, which EU countries are still buying from Russia. The EU relies heavily on Russia for oil and gas and about 40 percent of gas consumption in the 27-member bloc comes from Russia. Expelled institutions added to the final list, which was unanimously adopted by member states on March 2, include the countrys second-largest bank VTB, Bank Otrkitie, Novikombank, Promsvyazbank, Bank Rossiya, Sovcombank, and VEB. The seven institutions have a 10-day transition period to wind down their SWIFT operations, the EU said in its official journal. Russias VEB said it was largely focused on domestic projects which were unaffected. For overseas-related businesses, it would use SPFS, a messaging system developed by Russias central bank. Sovcombank said SWIFT would not impact it because other sanctions had already blocked its ability to make overseas payments. Promsvyazbank said it was prepared for the disconnection from SWIFT and it would not have a significant impact on the banks operations. Removing banks from SWIFT, headquartered in Belgium, is a measure seen as drastic and unlikely just a week ago and is one of the most powerful tools Western authorities have used to punish Russia. SWIFT, or the Society for Worldwide Interbank Financial Telecommunication, allows easier communication for 11,000 banks in 200 countries to ensure payments can cross borders securely and quickly from one bank and end up in the account of another bank. About 50 percent of Russian banks are connected to SWIFT, the second-largest number of users after the United States, according to the Russian National SWIFT Association. The interbank messaging network is the backbone of the international financial transfer system and in February alone, it sent 385 million messages. On a daily basis, SWIFT processes transactions worth billions of dollars. Without SWIFT, Russian banks and the countrys central bank are effectively blocked from operating on a global scale, which means an added risk of a domino of defaults from issuers and the impossibility of conducting the most basic international operations. Only three countries have been banned from SWIFT: Iran since 2012, North Korea, and now Russia, albeit partially, as oil and gas exports, as well as other key commodities, remain in the system. However, Russian banks may bypass the SWIFT system and use other alternatives, mainly through a parallel system in China called CIPS, or the Cross-Border Interbank Payments System, which facilitates transactions in yuan. According to CIPS, at least 25 Russian banks conduct yuan transactions through their system. Using CIPS and other direct or indirect tools to bypass SWIFT has been an alternative for Iran and North Korea but doesnt solve the problem of access to reserves of the central bank nor does it truly mitigate the impossibility of conducting global transactions. The yuan is only used in 4 percent of global currency transactions, according to the Bank for International Settlements. Daniel Lacalle and Reuters contributed to this report. From NTD News A gas burner is pictured on a cooker in a private home in Bordeaux, in soutwestern France, on Dec. 13, 2012. (Regis Duvignau/Reuters) European Gas Prices Touch New Highs as Russia Supply Fears Grow LONDONEuropean and British gas prices soared on Wednesday, with a benchmark Dutch gas price hitting a record high as countries said EU sanctions against Russia could target gas shipments, while some cargos of Russian liquefied gas changed course. Britain on Monday ordered Russian-associated vessels be blocked from its ports while officials from some European Union countries have said the 27-country bloc is considering a ban on Russian ships. The European Parliament on Tuesday called for the EU to close its ports to Russian ships or ships going to or from Russia. Although the Parliament does not set sanctions and its vote on Tuesday was non-binding, traders said it showed the direction of travel for possible tightening of measures against Russia which supplies around 40 percent of the blocs natural gas. Not all countries get supply directly from Russia, but if countries such as Germany, the biggest consumer of Russian gas, receive less from Russia, they must replace this from elsewhere, for instance, Norway, which has a knock-on effect on available gas for other countries. The benchmark Dutch front-month gas contract at the TTF hub hit a record intra-day high of 185 euros a ton on Wednesday, just beating the previous high of 184.95 seen last December when Russian flows through the major Yamal pipeline began sending gas eastwards in reverse. The British front-month contract hit 384 pence a therm, its second highest ever level amid reports Russian cargos of liquefied natural gas (LNG) were being diverted away from UK ports. The price move today is not based on fundamental changes to the European gas balances, said Leon Izbicki, European Natural Gas Analyst at Energy Aspects. The main driver behind the sharp rise in the TTF is a perceived increase in the risk of European sanctions targeting Russian energy exports, he said. Despite the ongoing war in Ukraine, physical deliveries of gas from Russia to Europe through its various pipelines have so far remained largely unchanged. Even gas coming from Russia via pipelines through Ukraine have remained robust. Capacity nominations for supply to Slovakia from Ukraine via the Velke Kapusany border point were expected to hit their highest level so far in 2022, at 881,917 megawatt hours (MWh) on Wednesday. But traders and analysts said as the war and sanctions escalate so do the possibilities that this could change, which is causing the huge price gains. By Susanna Twidale ExxonMobil Pulling Plug on Oil and Gas Operations in Russia, Not Making Any New Investments ExxonMobil announced Tuesday that it will be pulling the plug on oil and gas operations in Russia and will not be making any new investments in the country amid the crisis in Ukraine. In a statement, the Texas-headquartered company said it has made the decision to stop operations as a sign of solidarity with the Ukrainian people. ExxonMobil supports the people of Ukraine as they seek to defend their freedom and determine their own future as a nation. We deplore Russias military action that violates the territorial integrity of Ukraine and endangers its people, the company said. We are deeply saddened by the loss of innocent lives and support the strong international response. We are fully complying with all sanctions. ExxonMobil operates the Sakhalin-1 project on behalf of an international consortium of Japanese, Indian, and Russian companies and has a 30 percent stake in the project. It is located off the northeastern coast of Sakhalin Island in the Russian Far East. The project is one of the biggest international investments in Russia and has made tens of billions of dollars for the Russian government. It is estimated to have 2.3 billion barrels of oil and 17.1 trillion cubic feet of natural gas in reserves, according to company data. ExxonMobil said that in response to recent events in Ukraine it was now starting the process of discontinuing operations and developing steps to exit the Sakhalin-1 venture. As operator of Sakhalin-1, we have an obligation to ensure the safety of people, protection of the environment and integrity of operations. Our role as operator goes beyond an equity investment, ExxonMobil. The process to discontinue operations will need to be carefully managed and closely coordinated with the co-venturers in order to ensure it is executed safely. Given the current situation, ExxonMobil will not invest in new developments in Russia. ExxonMobil did not give an exact timeframe as to when it would fully discontinue operations on the Sakhalin-1 project and it is unclear now what will happen with the multi-billion dollar oil and gas facility. The Epoch Times has contacted an ExxonMobil spokesperson for comment. ExxonMobils announcement comes after a string of other Western companies have paused businesses operations in Russia or unveiled plans to do so in the wake of the Moscow-led invasion of Ukraine. BP PLC, Shell, and TotalEnergies SE, a French company involved in major LNG projects in Russia have announced similar moves. Meanwhile, Norways biggest energy company Equinor ASA said it will be withdrawing from Russian joint ventures, collectively worth around $1.2 billion. Dozens more companies including Apple, Ford, Nike, Harley-Davidson, and Dell have announced similar plans to abandon their Russian operations after Moscows military invaded the former Soviet nation on Feb. 24. Social media platforms including Googles YouTube, Twitter, and TikTok have also moved to block content from state-backed media outlets, RT News and Sputnik. Ejnar Mikkelsen was like the Ernest Shackleton of Denmark. He was celebrated throughout the Scandinavian nation for exploring and mapping Greenland. It was a matter of Danish national interest, to preserve their hegemony over Greenland, to debunk potential American claims. Of course, explorers often died while on expeditions, as was the case with Shackleton (sort of). Mikkelsen and his Icelandic companion have good reason to worry that they too could come to a cold, premature end in Peter Flinths Against the Ice. To keep Greenland undivided, Denmark must prove it is one continuous land mass. Logically, that survey task has fallen to Mikkelsen. He was making progress in 1909 until his expedition partners mishap and subsequent frostbite forced them to return to the ship. An explorer like Mikkelsen cannot wait to get back on the ice, but he needs a volunteer from the shipbound crew to accompany him. Only Iver Iversen, the Icelandic mechanic, steps forward, because he is dazzled by Mikkelsens celebrity. They are in for a desperate and prolonged struggle to survive the harsh freezing weather, hunger, and the wild animals, most notably the polar bear. It is worth noting that they are the only creature considered to be above mankind in the food chain, because they like eating people (at least according to Picture of his Life, the documentary profile of nature photographer Amos Nachoum). Nikolaj Coster-Waldau as Mikkelsen and Joe Cole as Iver Iversen in Against the Ice. (Netflix) Exploration Adventure Essentially, Against the Ice is an old-fashioned extreme-nature adventure. Thanks to Mikkelsens relentless drive and Iversens inexperience, just about everything that could go wrong will go wrong. However, there are no villains in the film, just animals acting according to their natureand perhaps the occasional episode of temporary psychosis triggered by hunger and isolation. Flinth takes an earnest but conventional approach to the material. The fight-for-survival action sequences are energetic but never truly breathtaking. Likewise, the period costumes and set trappings for the scenes set in Denmark look nice, but it is hardly an immersive viewing experience. On the other hand, Nikolaj Coster-Waldau does some of his best work yet as Mikkelsen. It is a gritty performance that acutely conveys how easily determination hardens into obsession over time. Joe Cole also takes Iverson on a pretty compelling emotional journey through states of awe, panic, and exhaustion. Fortunately, they both have a great deal of screen presence, because they largely have to carry the film, as the only two people on-screen for extended periods of time. However, Coster-Waldaus fellow Games of Thrones cast-mate Charles Dance adds his usual steely arrogance as Neergaard, an opportunistic politician. (As one might expect from the historical and dramatic contexts, bears and sled dogs get more screen-time in Against the Ice than women.) Visual Effects Wanting The Arctic tundra looks great throughout the film, but some of the visual effects are a bit iffy, particularly those involving the ferocious polar bear attack. Mikkelsens episodes of temporary madness and hallucinations are also a bit awkward. They briefly hint the film will venture out into serious genre territory, in the tradition of The Lighthouse (starring Robert Pattinson and Willem Dafoe), but Flinth always quickly brings the drama crashing back down to earth. Flinth definitely captures grueling physical demands of Mikkelsens adventure, but the screenplay, adapted from the explorers book by Coster-Waldau and Joe Derrick, never elevates the material beyond an above average wilderness survival tale. Perhaps Coster-Waldau and company were too intimidated by Mikkelsens status as a national hero to develop more of an edge for the film. Theatrical poster for Against the Ice. (Netflix) Ironically, after all of Mikkelsens efforts to solidify Denmarks hold over Greenland, the provisional free Danish government in exile during the World War II occupation granted the American military rights to maintain in perpetuity what became Thule Air Force Base. Nevertheless, Mikkelsen remains a national hero. Flinth certainly inspires respect for all the punishing hardships and trials he and Iversen endured. Sturdily solid (but not extraordinary by any measure), Against the Ice starts streaming on March 2 on Netflix. Against the Ice Directors: Peter Flinth Stars: Nikolaj Coster-Waldau, Joe Cole, Charles Dance Running Time: 1 hour, 42 minutes MPAA Rating: TV-MA Release Date: March 2, 2022 Rating: 3 out of 5 A picture taken in 1971 shows a nuclear explosion in Mururoa atoll in French Polynesia in the South Pacific. (AFP/Getty Images) Former Nuclear Fallout Shelters a Grim Reminder Of Cold War Brinksmanship At the height of the Cold War, when Americas children were taught to duck and cover in the classroom, Sharon Packer was determined to make sure her family would survive a nuclear attack by the Soviet Union. I built my first bomb shelter when I was 8 years old. I dug a hole and worked with plywood so we could survive, Packer recalled decades later in an interview with The Epoch Times. It was as good a backyard fallout shelter as any other at the time, she said. Large enough to hold several people and deep enough to shield against lethal radiation. Packer, 82, a retired nuclear engineer in Salt Lake City, Utah, would spend many years as an adult building fallout shelters for a living. Fast forward to 2022 and its a whole new geopolitical playing field, she said. Gone is President Reagans Evil Empire, which envisioned the Soviet Union bent on bombing America into the Stone Age. Mutual Assured Destruction (MAD), then the prevailing doctrine of military strategy and national security policy, held there would be no winners in a nuclear war. As a result, the nations civil defense program fell by the wayside, Packer said. Ron Coleman, senior communications officer for Maricopa County Emergency Management in Phoenix, Ariz., displays the reinforced steel blast door to the agencys former underground fallout shelter on Feb. 24, 2022. (Allan Stein/The Epoch Times) In the past week, the Russian Federation has invaded neighboring Ukraine citing security concerns and to prevent the Western alliance NATO from moving further east. As the war intensifies, Russias President Vladimir Putin has placed the nation on high nuclear alert. Moscow reportedly has posted an online map of the capital citys extensive system of nuclear blast and fallout shelters in the event of a ballistic missile exchange with the West. Where are Americas shelters in the present crisis? In reality, most shelters were dismantled in the 1960s and 70s, said Packer, a member of The American Civil Defense Association (TACDA) board of directors. The nonprofit was formed in 1961 to educate the public on the need for a robust civil defense program with fallout shelters for every citizen. Unfortunately there are no, or very few, fallout shelters for civilians that we know of. In fact, this is the reason [TACDA] was created 60 years ago. The founders were concerned about the Cold War and the fact that there was no federal program for civil defense and no fallout shelters to protect the people, said association executive director Roseanne Hassett. Ron Coleman, senior communications officer for Maricopa County Emergency Management in Phoenix, Ariz., inspects a sanitation kit that was used in the agencys former fallout shelter built in 1956. (Below) Coleman shows how the shelter was built into the mountainside to shield against radiation from fallout. (Allan Stein/The Epoch Times) Most of the American public does not know or understand this, which is why we are trying so hard to educate and prepare them for civil defense, Hassett told The Epoch Times. In 1965, the nation had as many as 200,000 public and private fallout shelters in operation. Many of these shelters were simple basement rooms stocked with food, water, and medicine to last several weeks. Stanford University at one time had 56 designated fallout shelters on campus that had a maximum occupancy of nearly 50,000 people. While most shelters were designed to withstand the biological effects of atomic fallout to a greater or lesser degreenot a direct nuclear blast wavemany shelters have been shut down or turned into storage space in the years after the Cold War ended. At the Maricopa County Emergency Management (MCEM) building in Phoenix, Arizona, historic remnants of a large underground fallout shelter and dormitory built to preserve continuity of government serve as grim reminders of a world gone MAD. These artifacts include sealed cans of water, gas masks, medical supplies, toiletries, and other items to ensure survival for two weeks. Thats how long it would take for the worst radiation from fallout to dissipate. Emergency management director Robert Rowley demonstrates an old short wave radio used for receiving emergency broadcasts during the Cold War. (Allan Stein/The Epoch Times) The bunker was built in 1956 about 20 feet underground, protected by a reinforced steel door and concrete walls a foot thick to block lethal gamma radiation. The shelter was designed primarily to withstand fallout so that county officials could ride out a nuclear war, said MCEM senior communications officer Ron Coleman. Whoever survived until the radioactivity was back down to doable levels were de-facto rebuilders of society, Coleman told The Epoch Times. The fact is there was never a nationwide campaign to build fallout shelters for the general public. To be honest, we got a couple of calls this morning (Feb. 24) from people asking about fallout shelter locations given the situation in Ukraine. There are fallout shelters throughout the valleynot as many as there used to be. I dont know where they are. I think it varies by building, he said. If there were to be a nuclear attack, the agency would be in constant communication with the public from a central command location broadcasting what the next steps would be, Coleman said. Here, in Maricopa County, were an all-hazards organizationeverything from heat and wind storms to radiological events. The first thing we tell people is to tune in to local radio. We have a combination of tools including the old-fashioned emergency alert system, he said. The agency also has a wireless alert system for targeted areas and mobile care centers equipped with radiological detectors, he said. Most emergency management programs are the result of the original civil defense programs, Coleman said. MCEMs main focus today is on coordinated responses to flooding and forest fires which are common occurrences in Arizona, although the agencys response to a nuclear event wouldnt be any different, he said. In this file image Royal Australian Navy submarine HMAS Rankin is seen during AUSINDEX 21, a biennial maritime exercise between the Royal Australian Navy and the Indian Navy in Darwin, Australia, on Sept. 5, 2021. (POIS Yuri Ramsey/Australian Defence Force via Getty Images) It really depends on what the situation is. We promote general preparedness across the board whether its a house fire, a wildfire, or a larger scale event, Coleman added. Packer said unlike the United States, Russia remains vigilant and focused on civil defense, which only shows the country is committed to the belief that people can survive a nuclear war. Deterrence is real if you have a system like Russia has, Packer said. Packer said she also believes civil defense should be a central element of the nations common defense and if theres no push, Congress goes on to other things. When I was in elementary school, we were still doing duck and cover. We were talking a lot about those nuclear weapons. We were interested and it was real to us. I just kept looking at that and said, What do I need to do? Packer said. So, one day she decided to go outside in her familys back yard, dug a deep hole, and made a bomb shelter. Packer would go on to build many shelters for her customers and private citizens through a long-term business partnership with Utah resident and nuclear expert Paul Seyfried, who favors a large-scale civil defense program similar to Switzerlands. People take shelter from bombs in an underground station in Kyiv, Ukraine, on Feb. 25, 2022. (Sergei Supinsky/AFP via Getty Images) They have shelters, and we dont, Seyfried told The Epoch Times. Seyfried said in 2004 President Putin embarked on an ambitious program of civil defense, creating 250,000 new shelters for citizens throughout the Moscow area alone. Switzerland, a nation of 8.5 million inhabitants, on the other hand, has more than 7,000 sirens for warning the population in a broad range of possible emergency cases, including a nuclear accident, and bomb shelters to accommodate nearly every citizen, according to swissinfo.ch. The sirens are tested annually on the first Wednesday of February. The general alarm signal is sounded when there is a possible threat to the population. It signals to people that they should turn on the radio and follow the instructions of the authorities. Seyfried said the problem with Americas outdated civil defense program was you couldnt evacuate the cities in time. You have to have shelters where you live, where you work, and where you worship. Were unprepared, he said. According to the Federal Emergency Management Agency (FEMA), the fallout is most dangerous in the first few hours after the detonation when it is giving off the highest levels of radiation. A woman shows how to enter a family bomb shelter in Milwaukee in 1958. (AP Photo) It takes time for the fallout to arrive back to ground level, often more than 15 minutes for areas outside of the immediate blast damage zones, FEMA said in the March 2018 fact sheet. This is enough time for you to be able to prevent significant radiation exposure by following these simple steps, which is to get inside, stay inside, and stay tuned to emergency broadcast networks. Identify the best shelter location near where you spend a lot of time, such as home, work, and school. The best locations are underground and in the middle of larger buildings, the fact sheet added. Packer said the good news is that 90 percent of radiation from fallout will have decayed after seven hours and another 90 percent after two days. After two weeks, radiation levels are about 1/1000 of their initial potency, she said. A lot of people will survive a nuclear attack if they go to their basements, but they dont know that. There are just so many things that need to be taught, Packer said. Greg Abbott to Face Beto ORourke in Texas Governor Race After Primary Wins Republican Texas Gov. Greg Abbott will face Democratic former Congressman Beto ORourke in the November general election for governor after the pair won their respective primaries. Abbott, who received endorsement from former President Donald Trump and Texas Attorney General Ken Paxton, easily won his partys nomination for governor, as did ORourke, the states most prominent Democrat, who is seeking to become the first Democratic governor of Texas in nearly three decades. According to a race call from The Associated Press (AP), Abbott topped the 50 percent mark he needed to prevent a runoff, paving the way for him to seek a third term in office. Other gubernatorial candidates included businessman Don Huffines, who issued a statement conceding defeat to the governor before projected results were released, conservative commentator Chad Prather, and former chairman of the Texas GOP Allen West. The race was called by the AP shortly after 8 p.m. local time, with the Republican governor holding nearly 70 percent of the vote with more than 40 percent of ballots tallied. ORourke addressed his supporters in Fort Worth, where he flipped Texass largest red county while running against Republican Sen. Ted Cruz in 2018. This group of people, and then some, are going to make me the first Democrat to be governor of the state of Texas since 1994, he said. This is on us. This is on all of us. It marked the first primary of the 2022 campaign. ORourke announced his run for Texas governor on Nov. 15, 2021, saying that he wants to ensure the state has a governor that serves everyone, helps to bring this state together to do the really big things before us and get past the small, divisive politics and policies of Greg Abbott. It is time for change, he said in an interview with The Texas Tribune. ORourke also launched a 2020 presidential bid, but dropped out before primaries began. His campaign video criticized Abbotts extremist policies around abortion, or permitless carry, or even in our schools, claiming those policies only divide Texans and prevent Texans from working together on the truly big things. Abbott responded on his Twitter account at the time that ORourke wants to impose socialism. Abbott said ORourke would defund the police, kill good-paying oil and gas jobs, allow open border policies, support President Joe Bidens policies, and take your guns. From Beto ORourkes reckless calls to defund the police to his dangerous support of the Biden Administrations pro-open border policies, which have resulted in thousands of fentanyl deaths, Beto ORourke has demonstrated he has more in common with President Biden than he does with Texans, Abbott campaign spokesperson Mark Miner said in a statement. The last thing Texans need is President Bidens radical liberal agenda coming to Texas under the guise of Beto ORourke. The pair will now face off for the position in the Nov. 8 election. Harry Lee and The Associated Press contributed to this report. Growing Number of Jan. 6 Defendants Pushing for Trials Outside Washington, Alleging Jury and Judge Bias A growing number of people charged in relation to the Jan. 6, 2021, U.S. Capitol breach are asking judges to move their trials from Washington, asserting that the jury pool in the nations capital is predisposed to rule against them and has been subject to inaccurate media reports. Some defendants also say that the judges presiding over their cases are biased. Mr. Tanios is extremely concerned that he will not receive a fair trial in DC, Elizabeth Gross, an attorney representing George Tanios, wrote in a recent motion asking for a change of venue. Tanios was accused of contributing to the death of Brian Sicknick, a U.S. Capitol Police officer who media outlets such as The New York Times and Department of Justice officials have falsely claimed died from injuries inflicted by Jan. 6 protesters. The Washington medical examiners office stated in April 2021 that Sicknick died of natural causes a day after the incident. It will be impossible, in our view, for Mr. Tanios to select qualified, impartial, and truly unbiased jurors given (1) the incredible volume of remarkably negative pretrial publicity in DC about January 6; (2) the continuous stream of negative productions by DC media outlets about Mr. Tanios; and (3) the generalized trauma experienced by DC residents during and after the protest and violent attack on the U.S. Capitol, the motion reads. In many critical ways, DC and its residents are the alleged victims in every January 6 case because DC hosts the U.S. Capitol Building, many DC residents work for the Government, and DC is the epicenter of our Democracy, where the majority of residents are connected in some meaningful way to politics and political events. This trial must be held elsewhere. Another motion, this one from Deborah Sandoval, states that the overwhelming number of Democrat voters in Washington means it would be virtually impossible to come up with an unbiased jury. Denied Some defendants moved in 2021 for a change of venue, but those attempts were either denied or became null because they agreed to enter guilty pleas. David Fischer, an attorney for Thomas Caldwell, in July 2021 told the court that initial statements in the case from prosecutors contained misleading, inaccurate, and false informationprosecutors have since admitted to falsely stating that then-Vice President-elect Kamala Harris was at the Capitol when it was breachedand said jurors would be predisposed against his client because of the statements and dubious media coverage. The motion, which a number of co-defendants joined, was shot down by U.S. District Judge Amit Mehta, an Obama appointee. You havent put any evidence in front of me, not any kind of surveys, not any kind of polling data, nothing that would suggest that a jury pool in this city is predisposed to not fairly judging your client or any of these other defendants conduct, Mehta told Fischer, who responded that acquiring such data would require tens of thousands of dollars. Jonathon Moseley, an attorney for defendants including Oath Keepers member Kelly Meggs, took notice of Mehtas rationale. The attorney and some peers are working to complete four public opinion surveys before they file motions to change venues. A lot of the delay has been about coming up with the money and the cooperation plans for public opinion surveys to document the need for moving the trial, Moseley told The Epoch Times from the Conservative Political Action Conference, where he was looking to drum up volunteers and donations for the effort. The motions may include opinions offered by various judges from the bench as they sentenced Jan. 6 defendants. Normally, when the trial is over, and the judge is sentencing somebody, they may say here are the good things, here are the bad things, and talk about how horrible the crime was, but they dont normally do that when other people in the same situation are still waiting for trial, Moseley said. So here youve got a few people that have been sentenced. And the judges are condemning them when hundreds of people are still waiting for trial from the same incident. So youve got judges that have basically pre-judged all of these defendants in very public ways. Reffitt Trial Guy Wesley Reffitt is the first Jan. 6 defendant to go on trial. Jury selection began on Feb. 28. Reffitt was another defendant who sought a change of venue, but was rejected. U.S. District Judge Dabney Friedrich, a Trump appointee, sided with the government, which said the burden of proof needed to shift a trial location wasnt met. The defendants crimes were primarily committed against the seat of the government, in Washington, D.C. He deserves to stand trial for those crimes in the place he committed them, prosecutors said in a filing. They also said the news articles that would have allegedly influenced potential jurors were primarily from national media outlets, and few mentioned Reffitt by name. Many potential jurors have said that theyre familiar with some aspects of the breach, and some outright said they likely couldnt or wouldnt be impartial. Those up for a slot on the jury included a woman whose daughter works for the Department of Homeland Security and a man who once gave tours of the U.S. Capitol, Yahoo reported. Friedrich said that no one can come into this courtroom with a completely blank slate about Jan. 6, because it was reported so widely, but we dont want jurors who have formed an opinion of what happened that day. She also said jurors didnt need to guarantee impartiality, but that their views shouldnt be so strong that he or she cannot impartially judge guilt or innocence. Customers wearing masks shop in front of partially empty shelves at a supermarket during the COVID-19 outbreak in Hong Kong, on Feb. 28, 2022. (Tyrone Siu/Reuters) Hong Kong Residents Empty Supermarkets Ahead of City-Wide Lockdown HONG KONGHong Kong residents braced for a city-wide lockdown, emptying supermarkets and pharmacies, even as leader Carrie Lam called for calm on Tuesday and appealed for the public not to worry over a compulsory mass COVID-19 testing plan. The city reported 32,597 new coronavirus infections on Tuesday and a record 117 deaths in the past 24 hours. It has seen daily infections surge over 30 times from just over 100 at the start of February. The global financial hub has reported more than 230,000 coronavirus infections and more than 800 deaths since the pandemic began in 2020. Around 500 deaths have been in the past week. Hong Kong continues to stick to a COVID policy of dynamic zero, the same as mainland China, which seeks to curb all outbreaks at any cost instead of trying to live with the virus. The former British colony, which returned to Chinese rule nearly 25 years ago, has introduced its most draconian measures since the start of the pandemic in 2020. Mass testing for the citys 7.4 million residents is set to take place over nine days starting in the second half of March, the South China Morning Post (SCMP) reported, citing an unidentified source. The news sparked concerns many people will be forced to isolate and families with members testing positive would be separated. Officials are planning to test people three times over nine days, with the government still deliberating whether a lockdown would be on a district basis or citywide, the SCMP said. Exemptions would be made for those who buy food, seek medical treatment, or carry out urgent tasks. Hong Kongs stock market would continue to operate, Sing Tao newspaper reported, citing unidentified sources. Our intention is always to keep markets fully functioning whatever the prevailing environment, the stock exchange said in a statement. Lam had previously said she was not considering a city-wide lockdown. She also said earlier this year she had no plans for compulsory mass testing. On Tuesday, she appealed to the public not to fall prey to rumors to avoid unnecessary fears being stirred, saying the supply of food and goods was normal. Despite her comments, dozens of people queued to enter pharmacies and banks across the city, while many scoured empty shelves in grocery stores to stock up on whatever essentials they could. Streets and shopping malls in the heart of the densely populated citys Central financial district were eerily quiet in what would typically be a busy lunchtime period. Health experts from the University of Hong Kong said there were around 1.7 million people already infected as of Monday, with a peak of around 183,000 daily infections expected in the coming week. They said a plan for compulsory mass testing should take place in late April when case numbers were likely to be much lower. Lam, who inspected a mainland Chinese built isolation center on Monday. The Tsing Yi facility, located in the northwest of the city, would provide around 3,900 rooms for infected people with mild or no symptoms and others who need to isolate, she said. House Democrats Block Bill to Approve Keystone XL Pipeline, Promote American Energy Independence From Russia Matt Gaetz explains why he joined Democrats in opposition Legislation promoting U.S. energy independence from Russia has been blocked by House Democrats. House Republicans introduced the American Independence from Russian Energy Act on Feb. 28, a measure meant to authorize the Keystone XL pipeline, boost domestic oil and gas production, and prevent President Joe Bidens executive branch agencies from halting energy leasing on federal land and water, among other provisions. Yet on March 1, the legislation was shot down in a 221202 vote, almost entirely along partisan lines. Getting our pipelines expanded is huge, Rep. Bruce Westerman (R-Ark.), ranking member of the House Natural Resources Committee and a co-sponsor of the measure, told The Epoch Times. Were having to import Russian energy to the New England states because we dont have pipelines that can carry Pennsylvania natural gas up there. U.S. crude oil imports from Russia more than doubled in 2021, rising to an average of 209,000 barrels per day from a daily average of roughly 76,000 per day barrels in 2020, according to data from the Energy Information Administration (EIA). Raul Grijalva (D-Ariz.), chair of the House Natural Resources Committee, didnt respond to a request for comment by press time on his choice to vote down the legislation. Republicans on the floor voiced near-unanimous support for the measure, with Rep. Tom Cole (R-Okla.) describing U.S. reliance on Russian oil and petroleum products as unconscionable. By contrast, Rep. Jim McGovern (D-Mass.) said Republicans talk about energy independence, yet are the ones who have consistently voted against and opposed green and renewable energy here at home, which is the fastest way to achieve real energy independence. The 220 Democrats who voted the legislation down were joined by Rep. Matt Gaetz (R-Fla.), who said the measure could open up the northwest Florida coast to drilling, potentially impeding military testing and related missions that take place east of the Military Mission Line. Westerman told The Epoch Times that Gaetzs objection was a totally illegitimate concern. I dont know where he got the misinformation, but it talks about the Western Gulf [of Mexico], he said. It is not going to allow drilling around Florida. A spokesperson for Gaetz explained the congressmans concerns to The Epoch Times. Although the bill doesnt specifically authorize drilling near Gaetzs district, it keeps the president and his cabinet from freezing the new drilling lease sales on federal land or water. Any withdrawal of those federal holdings from drilling would have to be authorized by Congress. The spokesperson said this language could be used to undermine a September 2020 memorandum from then-President Donald Trump extending the drilling moratorium off Floridas northwest coast until 2032. The Congressionally approved moratorium is set to expire in June of 2022, the spokesperson said, referring to the original Gulf of Mexico Energy Security Act that made the area off-limits for drilling. It would be foolish to respond to Russias aggression by rendering America less capable to defeat Russia or anyone else, the spokesperson said. Protecting the Gulf Test Range is in Americas best interest. The spokesperson told The Epoch Times that Gaetz is on record as favoring more U.S. energy production to undercut Russia, drawing attention to a passage in Gaetzs 2020 book, Firebrand: Asias largest consumer of energy, China, is right next to Asias largest producer, Russia. They are building bridges to one another that could well imperil the free world. We can beat Russia and other fossil fuel foes just by keeping the price of oil perpetually low. Westerman, who said he supports an all of the above energy strategy that includes oil, gas, nuclear, solar, and wind, pointed out that greenhouse gas emissions fell during the Trump administration. I dont think Putin gives a rip about environmental goals, or anybodys economy other than his own, he said. The legislation instructs the secretary of the interior to immediately restart the oil and gas lease sales required by the Mineral Leasing Act, which Biden first froze through Executive Order 14008 in January 2021. In addition, it specifically instructs the secretary to hold at least four oil and gas lease sales in Wyoming, New Mexico, Colorado, Utah, Montana, North Dakota, Oklahoma, Nevada, and any other state in which there is land available for oil and natural gas leasing under the [Mineral Leasing] Act. The Epoch Times has reached out to three key bureaus and agencies of the Interior Department involved in mining and drilling authorizationthe Bureau of Land Management, the Ocean Energy Management Bureau, and the Office of Surface Reclamation and Enforcementbut didnt receive a response by press time. Democrats blocking the Act yesterday from even being considered demonstrates how unserious they are about truly addressing the crisis in Ukraine, Kathleen Sgamma, president of the Western Energy Alliance, a nonprofit energy industry association, told The Epoch Times in an email. We have the energy resources to starve Putin of revenue and lower prices for Americans if the president would just take action within his power now. For example, the government is holding up hundreds of federal permits in the Permian Basin, Americas most prolific oil region. Most are ready to go but are being held up for more climate change analysis. Representatives for the U.S. branch of Fridays for Future, the international climate movement started by Swedish teenager Greta Thunberg, didnt respond to a request for comment on the legislation by press time. In this undated photo, the Australian Federal Police (AFP) make an arrest for Operation Molto in the suburb of Ingle Farm in Adelaide, Australia. (AFP) Hundreds Arrested for Child Sexual Abuse Material in Global Operation A two-year international operation led by New Zealand that identified over 90,000 online accounts that possessed or traded child sexual abuse material was finalised on March 2, arresting hundreds of offenders and rescuing children from harm. Across the duration of the operation, authorities arrested 450 offenders in the United Kingdom, 117 in Australia, 46 in New Zealand as well as others from around the world. The multinational law enforcement effort also safeguarded 153 children, including; 79 in the United Kingdom, 51 children in Australia, 12 in Canada, six in New Zealand, four in the United States and one child in Europe. Dubbed Operation H internationally and called Operation Molto in Australia, the investigations began in 2019 when New Zealands Department of Internal Affairs (DIA) alerted international law enforcement agencies of a tip-off. A service provider had informed the DIA that tens of thousands of offenders were using a platform to share some of the most horrific and devastating child sexual abuse material. Agencies involved in the operation include the FBI, the Australian Federal Police (AFP), the Royal Canadian Mounted Police, the National Crime Agency (NCA) in the UK, Europol, and INTERPOL. The DIA described the investigated material as some of the most egregious investigators have uncovered. Seized electronic devices by the AFP for Operation Molto. (AFP) An AFP arrest for Operation Molto in Blacktown, Sydney, Australia. (AFP) Operation H Leader Tim Houston said the operation represented a major success of international efforts to undermine and disestablish the networks that seek to exploit children. I commend the ongoing support of our law enforcement partners domestically and across the world for their dedication and hard work, Houston said. This operation will have an impact on the global networks that deal in the most horrific and damaging material, and we are extraordinarily proud of the effect it will have on childrens lives around the world. He also noted the real-life consequences of these offences, as many people who view child sexual abuse material will later physically offend children. It is imperative that we are able to bring them to justice before they are able to do more damage, Houston said. This is not a victimless crime. AFP Assistance Commissioner Lesa Gale said the work of police across Australia in rescuing the children show that victims remain front of mind for law enforcement. Viewing, distributing, or producing child abuse material is a horrific crime. Children are not commodities, and the AFP and its partner agencies work around the clock to identify and prosecute offenders, Gale said. Operation Molto in Australia involved police agencies in every state and territory, with Victoria Police Cybercrime Division Detective Superintendent Jane Welsh warning parents that children can be groomed in a matter of minutes. I would urge parents to be vigilant and to proactively have conversations with your children about online safety, Welsh said. Sarah Blight, the deputy director of Child Sexual Abuse Threat at the UK NCA, said the operation was and continues to be hugely important. Work is very much ongoing across the country to disrupt more of these sexual predators, Blight said. Each month, the NCA and UK policing arrest around 850 suspects and safeguard over 1,050 children. The NCA is focusing on the most dangerous offenders. New Zealand Crimestoppers 0800 555 111 Australia Crimestoppers 1800 333 000 UK Crimestoppers 0800 555 111 Crimestoppers USA 1800 222 8477 A man arrives to sign up to join the Ukrainian armed forces (Stefan Rousseau/PA) Its the Right Thing to Do: Britons Sign up to Fight in Ukraine Britons signing up to fight alongside Ukrainians say they are doing it out of solidarity and because its the right thing to do. A steady stream of people, some with military experience and others who have never seen action, arrived at the Ukrainian embassy in west London on Tuesday to volunteer to fight against Russias invasion. They spoke of wanting to make a difference and feeling like they should be doing something to help. Ukrainian President Volodymyr Zelensky has announced the formation of an international legion to help defend his country and appealed to foreign volunteers to come forward, promising them arms to fight against Russian troops. Foreign Secretary Liz Truss said she would absolutely support British nationals who chose to go to help fight against the Russian invasion, though several of her Cabinet colleagues and Downing Street officials later effectively contradicted her, discouraging people from going. Liam Hawkins, 30, drove to the Ukrainian embassy from Deptford, south east London, to sign up to help refugees stuck at the border in a humanitarian capacity. Liam Hawkins (Stefan Rousseau/PA) The 30-year-old father told reporters: I havent slept since this invasion and I just cant stay at home with my babies and my missus and do nothing. Right is right and wrong is wrong, regardless of nationality or creed or whatever. Ive got a good life here in England, Ive got a good job, I make plenty of money. Sit there and count your money when this is going on next door? Doesnt mean nothing, so Im going to do the right thing. I know its dangerous, people are trying to talk me out of it, but I believe I can make a difference. Two former soldiers, Tom, 20, and Lukas, 21, who declined to give their last names, said they were definitely not worried about travelling to Ukraine to fight. Tom, who served in the Royal Tank Regiment for three-and-a-half years, said: When I get there, the training weve had will kick in. If I fall, I fall. At least I know that Ive fallen for doing something right. Former military personnel Tom, 20 (left), and Lukas, 21, say they are definitely not scared to fight in Ukraine (Sophie Wingate/PA) The duo, who plan to take their own military equipment and medical supplies, said they have not told their families and will simply leave a note when they go. Whether my family thinks its a good idea or not, it doesnt matter. The worlds bigger than just the UK and I know whats right and wrong, Tom said. Lukas, who travelled to London from near Manchester to sign up at the embassy, said he joined the Army at 16 but had no conflict experience. He said he wanted to go and help. Thats what people seem not to understand about soldiers, they say yeah they want to go out and fight. Technically we want to go out and help. Oliver Miller, 29, a mechanical engineering student from Chelmsford, Essex, who also had military experience, said he is hoping to go out and help somehow. Obviously, the conflict in Ukraine has been going on for a while, conflict with Russia dabbling in stuff they shouldnt has been going on for even longer. I dont want to sound cliched and cheesy, but sometimes its something you feel like you have to do. And quite frankly, I kicked myself over not doing anything about Donbas, and I know Ill kick myself if I dont do anything about this. He said he has not told his very supportive family and girlfriend. Not sure how supportive theyll be of this decision, we shall see. Thomas, who did not want to give his full name, said he wanted to support the close friends he made while living in Ukraine for 17 months. He spent time in various cities, including Kyiv, Lviv, Kharkiv and Mariupol, teaching and working as a techno DJ. I feel like I should be doing something because Im not there with them and I should be and Im just trying to work out what I can do. Asked if he would fight, he said he did not have any training. I barely know how to use a gun. Douglas Lambourne from London arrives to sign up (Stefan Rousseau/PA) If that helps them I will, but if I can do something which is more towards aid or in some format, then I can do whatever role that Im suited to. Andrew Duda, Wolverhampton branch chairman of the Association of Ukrainians in Great Britain, said he had had some phone calls from people in the UK wanting to travel to fight the Russians in Ukraine, but had referred them to the embassy in London. He said: Anybody that does want to fight, weve been told to advise them to contact the Ukrainian embassy in London. Im not sure what the procedure is once people get to the embassy, but thats what weve been told. The Ukrainian embassy in London could not be reached for comment. Matthew L. Perna, 37, took his own life on Feb. 25 after more than a year under the cloud of criminal charges from his visit to the U.S. Capitol on Jan. 6, 2021. (Background: Matt Perna/Flickr; Outside photos: Tayler Hansen/Twitter; center photo: Geri Perna) Jan. 6 Defendant Learned of Harsh New Sentencing Recommendation Shortly Before Taking His Own Life The U.S. Department of Justice sought two last-minute sentencing enhancements against defendant Matthew L. Perna that could have meant 41-51 months in prison for his 20 minutes inside the U.S. Capitol on Jan. 6, 2021, his attorney said. Attorney J. Gerald Ingram said he was confident the judge would have ruled against the U.S. Attorneys Office on the sentencing enhancements. When Ingram shared the news about the possible added prison time, he said he told Perna, I thought I had it under control. Matthew Perna was scheduled to be sentenced on April 1 on one felony and three misdemeanor charges. (Photo courtesy of Geri Perna) Perna, 37, worn down by more than a year of court hearings, mistreatment by the community, and fearing extended time behind bars, took his own life on Feb. 25 at his home in Sharon, Pennsylvania. He was scheduled to meet with Ingram the next day to talk more about sentencing. Perna will be buried Wednesday in Pennsylvania. He would have turned 38 in June. I feel horrible about the entire thing, Ingram told The Epoch Times. Ingram said the U.S. Attorneys Office was not fair to his client, and the sentence enhancers went far beyond anything Perna did on Jan. 6. The United States Attorneys Office for the District of Columbia, in my estimation, has been highly inconsistent in how they treat these people, said Ingram. This is not the way to heal America, Ingram said. I truly believe that the people that entered the Capitol should be held responsible, but I dont believe that they should be driven to suicide, nor do I believe that they should serve years in jail unless there is an egregious conduct that they displayed while in the Capitol. The government planned to ask U.S. District Judge John D. Bates to apply one sentencing enhancement from federal guidelines for causing or threatening to cause physical injury to a person, or property damage, in order to obstruct the administration of justice, Ingram said. This was apparently based on a short video clip shot by the media outlet Townhall that allegedly shows Perna throwing a metal pole. The clip might have been shown at Pernas sentencing. Prosecutors planned to seek sentencing enhancers against Matthew Perna because of a video allegedly showing him throwing a metal pole at the U.S. Capitol on Jan. 6, 2021. (Townhall-YouTube/Screenshot via The Epoch Times) The 5-second video clip shows a crowd gathered outside double doors at the Capitol. Someone had just sprayed a fire extinguisher at the crowd from inside a second set of interior doors. A man who appears to be Perna took a metal pole and threw it into the foyer between the sets of double doors. No one is visible in that space when the pole clanged to the floor. Shortly after, two people emerged from the interior doors and two rioters entered the foyer and picked things off the floor. Could Have Meant 51 Months in Prison Ingram said causing or threatening harm was never a part of the charges, nor was it brought up during plea negotiations. Under sentencing guidelines, this would add eight levels to Pernas base offense score under federal sentencing guidelines. Prosecutors also sought a sentence enhancement for substantial interference with the administration of justice. That refers to the U.S. Congress certification of Electoral College votes, which was delayed some six hours by rioting and unrest at the Capitol. The substantial interference enhancement would add three levels to Pernas sentencing score, which results in a sentencing range of 41 to 51 months in prison, Ingram said. Pernas potential prison time could have been as long as 71 months, but he pleaded guilty as part of an agreement with prosecutors. That reduced his potential exposure, assuming the judge accepted the governments recommendation. Matthew Perna was an accomplished photographer, with skills honed on his many world travels. He titled this photo Paradise. He took his own life on Feb. 25. (Matt Perna/Flickr) William Miller, public information officer for the U.S. Attorneys Office in Washington, said, No sentencing memorandum was filed in this case and so the government had not made a recommendation. Prosecutors had until March 24 to submit recommendations to the court for Pernas April 1 sentencing hearing. Miller said U.S. Attorney Matthew Graves would have no comment about the offices discussions with Ingram and Perna. Ingram said 18 U.S. Code 1512, under which Perna was charged with a felony, is much broader than actions alleged in the enhancement recommendation. The statute is broader in scope than the guideline enhancement, Ingram said. And even if that guideline enhancement applies, in my humble estimation, a five-hour delay (in certifying electoral votes) is not substantial interference. They Would Have Lost That Issue Substantial interference with the administration of justice in my mind is bribing a witness, creating fake evidence, suborning perjury; its not a five-hour delay in the certification of an election. Ingram said he believes Perna would have prevailed before the judge on the recommended enhancers. They would have lost that issue. We had a fair-minded judge, he said. If our judge had to decide that issue, he would have decided that issue against the government on the basis of the evidence they presented, which is that short video segment. According to court records, Perna and Stephen Ayres entered the Capitol at 2:47 p.m., staying inside for about 20 minutes. Congress had adjourned nearly 30 minutes beforehand due to rioting on the grounds. Vice President Mike Pence, who presided over the certification of Electoral College votes, departed the Capitol at 1:57 p.m. Vice President-Elect Kamala Harris left the Capitol in the morning. Perna admitted to FBI agents that in a moment of frustration, he tapped on a Capitol window with a metal pole. There is no allegation from the government that this caused any damage. Its not clear at what time Perna allegedly threw the metal pole, although it appears to be shortly before police forced the crowd out of the building. Later that day, Perna posted a video to Facebook that shows him talking with two other people about the events of the day. The result of Jan. 6, he said, was to show that Pence was a traitor. He also remarked, Its not over, trust me. Ingram said the proposed sentence was out of line with what Perna did at the Capitol. Relatives said Matthew Perna was a good photographer, but also had an artists eye for detail. On the day he died, he called his father to say what the sign in his 2010 photo says. (Matt Perna/Flickr) Thats three and a half years for someone whos never been in trouble, he said. All he did was go to the Stop the Steal rally, walk to the Capitol, because he was told by the speakers to do that. Then he entered the Capitol. All he did was wrongfully enter the Capitol. When Perna entered the Capitol with other protesters, they walked past two police officers, court records said. He appears on video inside the Capitol, wearing a red Make America Great Again sweatshirt and chanting, USA, USA, USA! The stipulated factual basis contains no reference to causing or threatening harm to either persons or property, Ingram said. Mr. Perna, unlike many of the other peoplewho were not charged with a felony, by the wayhe didnt have zip ties. He didnt have duct tape. He wasnt wearing body armor. He didnt have any walkie-talkies, communication devices. Once he entered, he stayed in the lobby, Ingram said. He did not enter the House chamber. He did not enter the Senate chamber. He did not enter any private office. Ingram said the decision to seek harsh sentence enhancers was a decision made at the management level of the U.S. Attorneys Office. This wasnt the line prosecutor that made these decisions, it was his supervisors. They gave him marching orders. And he had no choice but to do what they instructed him to do. Travelers walking past check-in counters at an international flight departure floor at Tokyo's Haneda airport, on Dec. 1, 2021. (Kazuhiro Nogi/AFP via Getty Images) Japan Raises Daily Entry Cap to 5,000, But Continues to Bar Entry of Foreign Tourists Japan lifted its entry ban on foreign nationals on Tuesday and raised the maximum daily number of entrants to 5,000, but foreign tourists will still be barred from entering the country. The Japanese government has been suspending new arrivals of foreign visitors since Nov. 30, 2021, to contain the spread of the Omicron variant, adopting the strictest border control measures among the Group of Seven developed economies nations. The Immigration Services Agency of Japan claimed that more than 400,000 people eligible for visas had been denied entry into the country as of Jan. 4. Of those, about 152,900 are students pursuing study in Japan, Kyodo News reported. Business groups and student representatives had previously called on the government to lift the entry ban on foreign nationals, saying that such restrictions harmed efforts to revive the economy and prevented international students from studying in Japan. Chief Cabinet Secretary Hirokazu Matsuno said on Monday that the government will gradually increase international traffic by reviewing infection situations in Japan and abroad, as well as the demand of Japanese nationals returning. According to the Foreign Ministrys statement, foreign nationals will now be allowed to enter the country, except for those entering Japan for tourism [purposes]. The daily entry cap will also be increased to 5,000 from the current 3,500, the ministry added. The ministry stated that all entrants will be subject to a seven-day home quarantine, but the quarantine requirement may be lifted if the third-day test result comes out negative. Travelers who have completed their third vaccination shots, and arriving from countries where the outbreak is under control, may be exempted from quarantine, it added. Japan reported 65,403 new COVID-19 cases on Tuesday, according to government data. Tokyos hospital bed occupancy rate for infected patients rose to 50.7 percent on Feb. 1. Officials previously said that an increase to 50 percent would warrant escalation to a full state of emergency, but the central government remains wary about declaring an emergency due to the low number of severely ill patients. Under a quasi-state of emergency, governors are allowed to shorten business hours and limit the serving of alcohol in the prefectures. New Toshiba Chief Executive Officer Taro Shimada (R) and current Chief Executive Satoshi Tsunakawa (L) attend an online press conference in Tokyo on March 1, 2022. (Toshiba Corporation via AP) Japans Toshiba CEO Steps Down Amid Restructuring Efforts TOKYOJapanese technology giant Toshiba has named a new chief executive as it seeks shareholder approval for a restructuring plan aimed at restoring its reputation and competitiveness. The company said Tuesday that its board had decided Taro Shimada, an executive officer, and corporate senior vice president, would replace Satoshi Tsunakawa as chief executive. Shimada was an executive at Siemens, both in Japan and the U.S., before joining Tokyo-based Toshiba Corp. in 2018, working in its digital operations. He faces the challenge of leading a restructuring plan thats drawn criticism from shareholders. In February, Toshiba said it plans to split into two companies, one focused on infrastructure and the other on devices. Shimada said he takes pride in being the first CEO with a background in digital technology and hopes that will be a plus for Toshibas energy business. I have been at Toshiba for only three years, but I love Toshiba, he said. When asked about how he hoped to win over critical shareholders, Shimada said he had learned while working in the U.S. about the importance of communicating as equals, referring to the expression put yourself in someone elses shoes. The restructuring proposal is still subject to shareholder and regulatory approval. An extraordinary shareholders meeting is set for March 24, when the plan will be put to a vote. Toshiba officials told reporters the management change was timed to happen before that, although it was unclear how that might help win over shareholders. Toshiba scrapped an earlier proposal for a three-way split that was unpopular with shareholders, including foreign funds. Approval for Tuesdays personnel changes, including the resignation of another board member and nominations of two others, will be sought in a shareholders meeting in June, Toshiba said. Toshiba was one of Japans most revered brands but it has been struggling since the Fukushima nuclear disaster in March 2011. A tsunami sent three reactors into meltdowns, spewing radiation over an area thats still partly a no-go zone. Toshiba is involved in the decommissioning effort, which will take decades. The companys reputation was also tarnished by an accounting scandal, which involved books being doctored for years. Tsunakawa just took the helm last year, when Nobuaki Kurumatani resigned as Toshiba president. Kurumatani had headed global fund CVC Capital Partners Japan operations and became Toshibas CEO in 2018. But Tsunakawa said he had accomplished his mission of handing over the leadership to the next generation and hoped Toshibas shareholders, customers and employees would agree with the proposed restructuring plan. He did not say how the company had dealt with dissent. I am confident I was able to hand over the leadership toward Toshibas evolution into the future, he told reporters in an online news conference. He defended the decision to appoint Toshiba people, not outsiders, to top positions, stressing that the company needs to change from within. This may be Toshibas last chance to fix its reputation and brand power as a technology company and win back trust, he said. Founded in 1875, Toshiba was a manufacturing pioneer for everything from electric rice cookers to laptop computers. It also invented flash memory, although that division was sold off as its fortunes tumbled. By Yuri Kageyama An act of heroism from a man paying his penance to society was recognized by authorities, following the devastating tornadoes that ripped through West Kentucky, destroying a candle factory last December. In the days and weeks after the disaster, Graves County Sheriffs Office learned of an inmate who was on work detail at the candle factory on Dec. 10, the night of the collapse, and how he had selflessly come to the rescue of others still trapped inside. Reportedly, one Mr. Marco Sanchez had been caught in the collapsed building, suffered a broken leg and cracked ribs, but managed to find a small void in the rubble, the Sheriffs Office stated in a press release. He then crawled to safety, despite his injuries. We learned that several people died in the rubble in very close proximity of where he had been trapped, they stated. Mr. Sanchez after freeing himself, with a broken leg and cracked ribs, unselfishly went and found tools and other items and returned and re-entered the rubble and render aid to those injured and freed several others, quite possibly saving human lives. Escaping, Sanchez along with several other injured people hitched a ride with a volunteer firefighter to the ER, where his leg was put in a cast. Then, on release, he turned himself in to a State Trooper, who told him that they werent in a position to take him in at the time. Mr. Sanchez later learned that the prison had been destroyed by the tornado, according to the sheriffs office. So, he took refuge at a shelter, before getting in contact with jail staff who took him back into custody. After learning of Mr. Sanchezs heroic act from witnesses, the Graves County Sheriffs Office informed McCracken Circuit Court sentencing judge Tim Kaltenbach of this; who then determined Mr. Sanchez had 14 days remaining on his sentence. And, on Feb. 22, 2022, the sheriffs office formally and publicly recognized Mr. Sanchez, stating: Mr. Sanchez had a lot of decisions to make that night. He could have made the decision to only save himself, but he didnt. His actions likely resulted in other lives being saved. The series of decisions he made over the next several hours were the right decisions and we applaud you for that sir. On Monday, March 1, the Sheriffs Office confirmed to The Epoch Times that Mr. Sanchez was that day released from the Graves County RC Center where he was being held. He will be needing a job and a place to live, stated the sheriffs office, who hopes someone will take a chance on Mr. Sanchez. He is a hard worker, as he has been assisting county government in moving offices since the tornado, and he is a very humble man, they added. We wish him the best and applaud him for his sense of humanity. Share your stories with us at emg.inspired@epochtimes.com, and continue to get your daily dose of inspiration by signing up for the Bright newsletter at TheEpochTimes.com/newsletter Russia's President Vladimir Putin (front) and Kremlin spokesman Dmitry Peskov attend a session of the Council of Heads of the Commonwealth of Independent States (CIS) in Sochi on Oct. 11, 2017. (Maxim Shemetov/AFP/Getty Images) Kremlin: Russian Economy Taking Serious Blows Top Russian officials acknowledged that Western sanctions have dealt serious blows to Russias economy as Moscow continues its attack on Ukraine. Russias economy is experiencing serious blows, Kremlin spokesman Dmitry Peskov told CNN and other news outlets on Wednesday. But there is a certain margin of safety, there is potential, there are some plans, work is underway, he added. Since Russia invaded its neighbor, the United States, European Union, and other countries have imposed harsh sanctions on Russias economy, including its Central Bank, Russian President Vladimir Putin, and its oligarchs. Data shows that the sanctions have contributed to the ruble losing 30 percent of its value in only a few days, while the Russian stock exchange has lost some 40 percent in less than a week of fighting. Other than sanctions, the United States, EU, the UK, Canada, and several other nations said they would deny Russia to use their respective airspaces, including for private and commercial planes. A number of Western companies, shipping firms, big tech companies, and more have said they will no longer do business inside Russia. For example, cards issued by several sanctioned Russian banks were unable to use Apple Pay and Google Pay this week, the Central Bank of Russia confirmed. Cards that were issued by VTB Group, Sovcombank, Novikombank, Promsvyazbank, and Otkritie cannot use pay services operated by Apple and Google, the bank said. There were reports online of travelers using Moscows transit system being unable to pay with the two services, causing mass confusion this week. The United States also pushed several Russian banks from SWIFT, a major international banking system. During a Tuesday night address, President Joe Biden said the United States would shut down American airspace to Russia and said additional measures would be imposed to further isolate Russia and [add] an additional squeeze on their economy. Russias Sberbank, meanwhile, said its subsidiaries in Europe had faced an exceptional outflow of funds and a number of safety concerns regarding its employees and offices, the group said in a statement. Moscow has responded with emergency measures aimed at preventing an economic meltdown, including preserving its foreign currency reserves and halting the flow of cash out of the country. Russias stock market was also closed on Monday morning and as of Wednesday, hasnt reopened. U.S. sanctions and other penalties did include a carve-out that authorizes energy-related transactions with the bank. However, those penalties do not impact Russias gold stockpile, which Putin has been accumulating for several years. The Associated Press contributed to this report. Students and parents wearing face coverings wait in line for the first day of the school year at Grant Elementary School in Los Angeles, Calif., on Aug. 16, 2021. (Robyn Beck/AFP via Getty Images) Los Angeles Unified to Negotiate With Teachers Union Before Dropping Mask Mandate Though California and Los Angeles County announced it would drop its indoor mask mandate for schools by March 12, the LA Unified School District (LAUSD) must negotiate with its local teachers union before it can lift its mandate. In recent months, schools across California have faced mounting pressure to lift indoor mask mandates from students and parents. However, the states largest school district cannot change its indoor mask requirement without first negotiating an existing contract with United Teachers of LA (UTLA). The agreement includes a requirement for enforced masking for the entire 20212022 school year. According to the agreement, either party can request to meet and bargain over potential changes to the mask requirement after Dec. 1. An LAUSD spokesperson told The Epoch Times on Feb. 28 the district acknowledges the state and countys mask updates and will remain engaged with our labor partners as they consider an updated masking policy. LAUSD Board of Education President Kelly Gonez said Feb. 28 any changes to the masking policy must be discussed with UTLA. Any changes in our policy on masking would be taken only in consultation with our labor partners, Gonez told the LA Daily News. We remain committed to ensuring a safe learning and working environment. However, a UTLA spokesperson told The Epoch Times that the LAUSD has not reached out about mask negotiations as of March 1. Students walk to their classrooms at a public middle school in Los Angeles, Calif., on Sept. 10, 2021. (Robyn Beck/AFP via Getty Images) In addition to negotiating with labor unions, Gonez said the district must review local COVID-19 case rates. Los Angeles has fortunately seen a decline in COVID rates after the record-setting Omicron rates, but there is still significant spread in our communities. We need to take this local context into account, Gonez said. The district had a 2.1 percent positive case rate among students, and a 1.7 percent case rate for teachers and staff, according to an LAUSD report on Feb. 11. UTLA President Cecily Myart-Cruz said in a Feb. 28 statement that while declining COVID rates are promising, educators agree with Governor Newsoms statement strongly recommending that masking stay in place in schools. LAUSD schools have been the safest and most well equipped in the country because educators and families united to demand critical health and safety protocols, Myart-Cruz said. These protocols, like indoor masking, have protected tens of thousands of educators and more than half a million students, along with their families. It is premature to discuss removing these health and safety measures while there are still many unvaccinated youth in our early education programs and schools. Some LAUSD parents expressed frustration that their children must remain masked despite the state and countys updated policies. LAUSD parent Sarah Peterson told The Epoch Times that she thought the situation revealed elected officials true priorities. COVID laid clear the real priorities and agenda of our elected public officials and unelected bureaucratslobbying money and personal power above children, Peterson said. Parents will never forgetnever. A child wears a face mask as they attend an online class at a learning hub inside the Crenshaw Family YMCA during the Covid-19 pandemic in Los Angeles, Calif., on Feb. 17, 2021. (Patrick T. Fallon/AFP via Getty Images) Kristina Irwin, who has three children in the LAUSD, told The Epoch Times she thought the LAUSD should follow the recommendations of the state and the Centers for Disease Control and Prevention (CDC). [District officials] should side with the CDC and all the other school districts if this is truly about following the science, Irwin said. If you rely on the science set on implementing the mask mandates, then you need to do the same to lift them. Otherwise, this is just about making up the rules as you go. Other parents argued masks inhibit student learning and social engagement. It is the natural state of children to show their faces and see faces. Smiling and giggling with friends is how many children communicate and build bonds, said a mom of two LAUSD students, who declined to provide her name. Masks have hampered socializations and learning for far longer than justifiable. The mom went on to say that vaccinations are highly effective at protecting adults as well as children that are at risk of severe symptoms, and kids are safer than congresspeople that will convene tonight unmasked. The LAUSD will enforce a COVID-19 vaccine mandate for students over 12 beginning in the fall. A spokesperson for UTLA didnt respond to a request for comment by press time. LONDON, U.K.China is a place that has thousands of years of history, but when looking at China today, many people only see the current communist regime. Luckily with Shen Yun Performing Arts, audiences around the world have been able to see how glorious and spiritual China was before the communist revolution. John Rickard travels to China frequently for business. He compared his experience of watching performing arts in China and commented that the difference with [Shen Yun is] its beautiful and had a message, which was lovely to see. While China has kept many of the surface elements of Chinese culture, the spiritual meaning behind those elements has been repressed and lost. Mr. Rickard commended New York-based Shen Yun on their effort in presenting the rich and vibrant culture of China to the world. I thought it was excellent. The color is stunning, its very attractive, the writing is beautiful as well, he said. He added that if Shen Yun was able to perform in China, he was sure that the people there would love it. Its a shame it doesnt spread. Ive been going to China quite a lotI love the people and the people are great! They would love this show, they really would, and I think they would all support the message behind it. I truly believe they would, Mr. Rickard said. From his experience in China, Mr. Rickard is aware of the censorship and the lack of free media. If you have a controlled media, then you cannot spread the truth of the word, and I speak to my friends in China, they just dont even know their own history sometimes, which is a great shame. I know more than they do and its their country, but its simply because they dont have a free press, he said. This is why the mission of Shen Yun is important. While the seven companies of Shen Yun are touring around the world, people outside of China are becoming aware of the magnificence of their own country before communism, as well as the current events happening inside the country that are being censored. If shows like this can go around the world, people do talk, and they do spread messages. I talk to my friends there and gradually you can spread the word to let them know it was different sometime before, and hopefully can change again, Mr. Rickard said. The stories are beautiful, and its interesting that you dare to touch on some of the more difficult elements of it. It was great that you were bold enough to do that, and its good that I think people should know, they should know more of whats going on, he added. One Shen Yun piece tells the story of Falun Gong, a practice that once prospered in China before the regime felt threatened by its popularity. Falun Gong is a meditation that benefits the mind and body, with practitioners abiding by the principles of truthfulness, compassion, and tolerance in their daily lives. I know whats been going on in China, but a lot of English people dont. You touched on subjects here that a lot of people wont be aware of, especially with some of the clampdown on Falun Gong. This show will explain just what is happening which is great, it needs to be known because its a beautiful country and people should be allowed to express their thoughts and beliefs which are completely harmless, and theyre beautiful thoughts and beliefs, so they should be allowed to prosper, said Mr. Rickard. Reporting by NTD and Maria Han. The Epoch Times is a proud sponsor of Shen Yun Performing Arts. We have covered audience reactions since Shen Yuns inception in 2006. Mardi Gras Saves the World Commentary Reports from Mardi Gras, New Orleans, Louisiana, March 1, 2022, are that lockdowns and mandates are done. It was madness on the streets, more than ever. Forget social distancing restrictions. This was nothing but mayhem on steroids or something much stronger. Anthony Fauci would not approve. As for the vaccine passports formally in effect in New Orleans, they are all but ignored. The party was canceled and banned last year but the revelry seemed twice as big as two years ago. The backlash has finally arrived, and rightly so. But heres whats interesting. Nationwide, both cases and deaths attributed to Covid are higher now than they were in lockdown from the summer of two years and one year ago. Hence, there is no scientific reason why Mardi Gras this year happened, complete with astonishing piles of trash on the streets today, and not last year. The difference is the realization that weve been trolled and very hard. What took place is the reaction to the action. So too nationwide. States and localities are unwinding Covid restrictions as fast as politically possible. It seemed for a time like vaccine mandates were going to spread from city to city, that masking would be permanent, that capacity restrictions would rule the day, that travel would be permission only. The longer this nonsense went on, the more powerless we all felt to do anything about it. There were always pockets of resistance, however, and they seemed to thrive as counterexamples. In the United States, South Dakota never shut down and seemed all the better for it. Georgia opened against the presidents wishes and no disaster befell the state. Florida opened completely, then Texas, then many others. The entire time, Sweden, once hated and now admired, was an imperfect but still meritorious example that not everyone had to go along. Those examples were the anomalies that raised profound questions about the prevailing orthodoxy (to use Thomas Kuhns language). And this is precisely why the major media mostly ignored them. But citizens did not: the conflict between locked down and open states led to a huge migration from the former to the latter. Now its rather obvious. Those jurisdictions that eschewed expert advice and sought another opinion are thriving. And therein lies a hint as to what needs to happen in the future: people must choose freedom over tyranny else we are doomed. Certainly there is nothing about prevailing ruling-class ideology that has changed. They claim, as an excuse to cover their perfidy, that the science has changed. In reality, it hasnt. Its been known for two years. What drove the reopening was not a change of mind by the expert class who did this to us but rather a dramatic shift in public opinion. The Failure and the Threat How confident can we be that this whole disaster will not repeat itself, whether in the name of stopping infectious disease or some other issues on the horizon? Sadly, we cannot be. There is a point to the internet slogan: It was never about a virus. No question that there has been more going on and that the impositions on our lives that occurred in these two years had a larger purpose, at least for some people. After all, it was Anthony Fauci who wrote in August 2020, five months after the lockdowns began, that: Living in greater harmony with nature will require changes in human behavior as well as other radical changes that may take decades to achieve: rebuilding the infrastructures of human existence, from cities to homes to workplaces, to water and sewer systems, to recreational and gatherings venues. In such a transformation we will need to prioritize changes in those human behaviors that constitute risks for the emergence of infectious diseases. Chief among them are reducing crowding at home, work, and in public places as well as minimizing environmental perturbations such as deforestation, intense urbanization, and intensive animal farming. Equally important are ending global poverty, improving sanitation and hygiene, and reducing unsafe exposure to animals, so that humans and potential human pathogens have limited opportunities for contact. Lets just say that he is no fan of Mardi Gras! This article is enough to reveal that there were bigger plans in place, such that aspects of lockdown would be retained and tweaked into permanency. And yet, for now, our existence wont be rebuilt. We can still attend crowded house parties. We can live in cities. We can still grow and cut down trees. Also, it looks like Fauci is not coming for your pets. What deserves credit for having blocked an even greater reset? Again, the answer is public opinion. The truckers, the protests, the polls, the anger evidenced in conversations with friends and colleagues, the online protests, the lawsuits, the people who picked up and left the lockdown states for open states, and every other metric that turned against the entire regime. This was also assisted by a swelling of wholly justifiable public fury that the pseudo-scientific nostrums foisted on the globe two years ago accomplished nothing and destroyed so many lives. Somehow all of this prevailed, despite pervasive censorship, media shaming, and every effort on the part of the ruling regime, which routinely demonized dissent. All this represents a massive change from that which allowed pandemic policies to go into effect in the first place. It was that initial fear that allowed for widespread acquiescence to dictates that hardly anyone would have thought possible only a few months earlier. We had rights and liberties and we assumed that there was some kind of structure in place that would prevent them from being taken away on the orders of government officials. Then one day, that structure failed. And it was because of fear. The courts stopped working due to fear. The schools closed due to fear. Even the churches shut as they evidently failed to adhere to the advice of Be not afraid. And much of this fear was sown not only by Fauci and his friends but by the echo-chamber media minions who know better than to broadcast any fundamental questions. What unraveled the restrictions and impositions was not success in crushing Covid, which is seasonal and was destined from the start to reach endemicity due mostly to exposure and resulting immunity, same as every similar virus in the history of humanity. What undid it was the force of mass resistance stemming from a seachange in public opinion that eventually adapted to the realities that were there from the very beginning. Its deeply tragic that it took nearly two years. And yet, here is the terrifying reality. The emerging narrative we are hearing is that the controls can be allowed to go away due only to vaccines and milder variants. And this is why all the regulations, powers, and laws that allowed this to happen must still exist. Indeed, nothing fundamental about that power has changed. The emergency powers at the federal and state leveland all over the worldstill exist. And the presumption that public officials can grab total power in the event of a crisis of their own declaration is still very much alive. You might have wondered what kind of law or regulation or legislation enabled lockdowns and mandates to begin with? Its a complicated question with deep roots. Saunter over to the CDC website and you find this page on the quarantine power. Here we find a long cruft of regulations, all stemming from the Public Health Service Act of 1944, amended many times through the decades. But if you consider the broadness of language even in the original legislation, you can see that they are ripe for abuse under the right conditions. The Surgeon General, with the approval of the Secretary [HHS], is authorized to make and enforce such regulations as in his judgment are necessary to prevent the introduction, transmission, or spread of communicable diseases from foreign countries into the States or possessions, or from one State or possession into any other State or possession. For purposes of carrying out and enforcing such regulations, the Surgeon General may provide for such inspection, fumigation, disinfection, sanitation, pest extermination, destruction of animals or articles found to be so infected or contaminated as to be sources of dangerous infection to human beings, and other measures, as in his judgment may be necessary. That might seem reasonable at first glance because it seems to pertain to international trade and doesnt apply to people. But keep reading. Regulations prescribed under this section shall not provide for the apprehension, detention, or conditional release of individuals except for the purpose of preventing the introduction, transmission, or spread of such communicable diseases as may be specified from time to time in Executive orders of the President upon the recommendation of the Secretary, in consultation with the Surgeon General. And here we have the qualifying case: Regulations prescribed under this section may provide for the apprehension and examination of any individual reasonably believed to be infected with a communicable disease in a qualifying stage and (A) to be moving or about to move from a State to another State; or (B) to be a probable source of infection to individuals who, while infected with such disease in a qualifying stage, will be moving from a State to another State. Such regulations may provide that if upon examination any such individual is found to be infected, he may be detained for such time and in such manner as may be reasonably necessary. That language has existed in law since 1944. So far as I know, the Public Health Service Act of 1944 has not been invoked in defense of lockdowns or federal powers; instead those were justified on generalized emergency powers. Still, Harvard law professor Jeannie Suk Gersen has written that: The fact that Congress specifically authorized detaining the infected may be read to implicitly disallow the wider (yet less restrictive) measure of ordering even the healthy to only leave their homes for essential purposes. But because the statute allows the executive branch to issue regulations that are necessary to prevent the spread of contagious disease across state lines, the statute is arguably broad enough to include a federal stay-at-home order. Sure, that would likely be struck down by courtssame as vaccine mandates and other features of lockdownbut courts take time to speak and act. Weve seen how this works. It took as much as a full year before courts started striking down federal and state impositions on freedom. It should not be this way. Further, there are many documents floating around the bureaucracies right now (we need a full audit of them all) that go much further and essentially presume that locking down is a power that government possesses and can be invoked any time an elected leader desires it to be so. Consider the plan hammered out in 2005 to deal with the Avian bird flu that never made the leap from animals to people. Good thing too: this plan was utterly egregious, however widely ignored. Here we find that a pandemic requires the leveraging of all instruments of national power, and coordinated action by all segments of government and society. It allows governmental authorities to limit non-essential movement of people, goods and services into and out of areas where an outbreak occurs. It insists that social distancing measures, limitations on gatherings, or quarantine authority may be an appropriate public health intervention. This may include limitation of attendance at public gatherings and nonessential travel for several days or weeks. Keep in mind that all of this existed in the CDCs administrative documents for the last 17 years! And consider this: this entire plan is still part of the powers that the CDC claims for itself right now. Nothing has changed. Its right here on the CDC website, exactly as it existed 17 years ago. If there is a web page that constitutes civilizations ticking time bomb, this is it. We wont be fully safe until the powers and all existing lockdown plans are completely taken away from public-health authorities. The efforts at reform should start with this 2005 document, which, so far as I know, was never voted in as part of law by any legislative body. Then in light of our experience in the last two years, the powers granted under the 1944 Public Health Service Act need to be gutted as well. Lockdowns and mandates are melting not because of any fundamental rethinking by public authority but because the people finally stood up to the outrageous bullying, the egregious attacks on normal social and market functioning, the threats made to peoples livelihoods and professions, and the incredible wreckage that resulted from a seemingly simple presumption that the best way to control disease spread is with controlling people rather than relying on long public-health experience. Consider that the powers and plans to do this still exist. They can do it again. Mardi Gras can be canceled again. You can be locked in your home. Your church, business, gym, and favorite watering hole can be closed. They have promised as much. This is what needs to change. If the experience of the last two years doesnt inspire a fundamental rethinking of the relationship between freedom and public health, nothing will. For anyone who cares about the future of freedom and civilization, this has to be a priority. From the Brownstone Institute Views expressed in this article are the opinions of the author and do not necessarily reflect the views of The Epoch Times. District Court Judge Shelley M. Richmond Joseph departs federal court in Boston, on April 25, 2019, after facing obstruction of justice charges for allegedly helping a man in the country illegally evade immigration officials as he left her Newton, Mass., courthouse after a hearing in 2018. (Steven Senne/AP Photo) Massachusetts Judge Might Face Prosecution for Allegedly Blocking ICE Arrest A Massachusetts judge might face prosecution after a federal appeals court on Feb. 28 declined to dismiss a case in which shes accused of blocking the arrest of an illegal immigrant. In a criminal case filed during the Trump administration, Newton District Court Judge Shelley Joseph is accused of impeding a federal immigration arrest of a defendant in her courtroom in 2018. Court papers say the judge blocked a U.S. Immigration and Customs Enforcement (ICE) agent from detaining a man who fled the court through a rear door. Her lawyers sought to argue that she should have immunity as a judge to allow the illegal immigrant to leave the courtroom, and that the prosecution was unconstitutional. However, the 1st U.S. Circuit Court of Appeals in Boston rejected an appeal to dismiss the case, saying it was premature. The three-judge panel said that absent an explicit statutory or constitutional right to avoid trial, she and her courtroom deputy, Wesley MacGregor, would need to face a jury first. The case is an apparently unprecedented prosecution that could chill other judges from refusing to assist federal officials, wrote U.S. Circuit Judge William Kayatta. He pointed out, however, that judicial immunity, assuming it applies in the judges criminal case, does not provide a right not to be tried that can serve as a basis for interlocutory review. The federal appeals court said it ultimately lacked jurisdiction to review the district courts decision denying Josephs motion to dismiss based on her asserted common-law defense of judicial immunity. Judge Joseph cannot obtain interlocutory review of her judicial immunity defense unless she can show that her claimed right not to be tried is explicitly grounded in a statute or the Constitution, wrote Kayatta. Joseph and her courtroom deputy stand accused of aiding Jose Medina-Perez, an illegal immigrantwho was arrested over a drug chargeto leave the courtroom, and therefore evade arrest by ICE. The individual had previously been deported from the United States and was prohibited from reentering the country, according to court documents. The indictment does not allege that Judge Joseph and Deputy MacGregor merely declined to enforce federal immigration law, court papers state. Instead, it alleges that they affirmatively interfered with federal officials attempts to enforce federal law. The court similarly rejected arguments that the U.S. Constitutions 10th Amendment bars federal immigration officials from forcing state officials to help enforce federal policy, saying that was a defense they could assert at trial. The case was first brought under then-U.S. Attorney Andrew Lelling, a Trump appointee who was succeeded by Rachael Rollins, an appointee of President Joe Biden. While she was Bostons district attorney, Rollins sued to block the Trump administration from carrying out immigration arrests at courthouses. The 1st Circuit in 2020 overturned an injunction she won barring just that, though the Biden administration in April 2021 said it would limit the arrests of migrants in or near courthouses. Reuters contributed to this report. Meta Says It Took Down Malicious Network Spreading Claims of Ukraine Being a Failed State and Western Betrayal Facebook parent Meta Platforms Inc. said it is rolling out more privacy and security measures to help people in Ukraine following the countrys invasion by Russia. What Happened Meta said in a blog post that in the last 48 hours, it has taken down a network of about 40 fake accounts, groups and pages across Facebook and Instagram that published claims about the West betraying Ukraine and the European nation being a failed state. The fake accountsoperated from Russia and Ukrainetargeted people in Ukraine across multiple social media platforms and through their own websites, Meta noted. Further, Meta said that a hacking group known as Ghostwriter used Facebook to target a handful of military and public figures in Ukraine amid Russias invasion. The hackers attempted to post YouTube videos portraying Ukrainian troops as weak and surrendering to Russia. The company added it has taken steps to secure the accounts that were targeted by the threat actor. Why It Matters Meta earlier said it added several safety features in Ukraine and also took action to prevent Russian state-owned media from monetizing advertisements on its platforms. The companys actions to block Russian propagandists and state-controlled media outlets were praised by Ukraines Vice Prime Minister Mykhailo Fedorov. Russia said on Friday that it was partially limiting access to Facebook and accused the platform of censoring Russian media. By Madhukumar Warrier 2021 The Epoch Times. The Epoch Times does not provide investment advice. All rights reserved. People watch a TV showing a file image of North Korea's missile launch during a news program at the Seoul Railway Station in Seoul, South Korea, on Jan. 30, 2022. (Ahn Young-joon/AP Photo) Nations Condemn North Koreas Unlawful, Destabilizing Ballistic Missile Launch Eleven countries have condemned North Koreas most recent ballistic missile launch, after Pyongyangs state media claimed that it had conducted an important test on Sunday for developing a reconnaissance satellite. U.S. deputy ambassador Jeffrey DeLaurentis issued a joint statement on Monday on behalf of 11 countriesthe United States, Albania, Brazil, France, Ireland, Norway, the United Kingdom, Japan, Australia, New Zealand, and South Koreaurging the U.N. Security Council to be unified in condemning North Koreas unlawful acts. DeLaurentis also mentioned that Australia, New Zealand, and South Korea were the latest countries to join the chorus of voices condemning the DPRKs action, which refers to North Koreas official name, the Democratic Peoples Republic of Korea (DPRK). The 11 nations urged all U.N. members to implement all Security Council resolutions that obligate North Korea to abandon its weapons of mass destruction and ballistic missile programs in a complete, verifiable, and irreversible manner. Japan and South Korea on Sunday claimed to have detected an apparent ballistic missile being launched from Pyongyangs east coast near Sunan. The South Korean military said that the missile flew to a maximum altitude of around 390 miles and a range of about 90 miles. North Korean state media later claimed that the country conducted a test for developing a reconnaissance satellite that could photograph a specific area on earth from space. The report did not specify if a missile was used in the test. This is the 10th ballistic missile launch so far this year, each one a violation of multiple Security Council resolutions. We condemn these unlawful and destabilizing actions in the strongest terms, the 11 nations said. They also urged North Korea to engage in diplomacy talks and reaffirmed their readiness for dialogue. North Korea also launched a Hwasong-12 intermediate-range ballistic missile on Jan. 30, which was seen as being a step closer to Pyongyang lifting its self-imposed moratorium on testing long-range intercontinental ballistic missiles. The nuclear-armed country previously said that it would consider restarting all temporarily suspended actions due to the United States not showing any signs of dropping its hostile policies. Earlier this year, the United States imposed sanctions on six North Koreans, one Russian, and a Russian firm it said were responsible for procuring goods from Russia and China for North Koreas weapons programs. Washington also urged the U.N. Security Council to follow through on the sanctions. Representatives from China and Russia blocked the proposal, claiming that additional time and proof were required to support it. New Mexico Downwinders Still Seeking Justice 77 Years After 1st Atomic Bomb Test Ask Bernice Gutierrez of Albuquerque, New Mexico, how old she is and shell bluntly tell you, Im as old as the bomb. Born just eight days before the United States detonated the first atomic bomb at the Trinity test site on July 16, 1945, Gutierrez has lived to see the terrible health effects of nuclear fallout radiation on her family. Theres no time frame for when you get cancer, she told The Epoch Times. It started with her maternal great-grandfather, who was diagnosed with stomach cancer, which proved to be fatal. My Mom had three types of cancer. She had skin, thyroid, and breast cancer. My one brother had thyroid cancer. His daughter had thyroid cancer. Another brother had prostate cancer, Gutierrez, 76, said. On and on it went. Without letup. Bernice Gutierrez (L) describes how cancer has impacted her family in her dining room in Albuquerque, N.M. Next to her is Tina Cordova, co-founder of the Tularosa Basin Downwinders Consortium, a grassroots organization whose aim is to raise awareness of the negative health effects of nuclear bomb testing. Gutierrezs daughter Eugenia had thyroid cancer 12 years ago. (Allan Stein/The Epoch Times) My sister has had three recurring bouts of thyroid cancer, Gutierrez said. My youngest brother has thyroid disease. And I also have had my thyroid removed on the recommendation of my endocrinologist. So Im also on thyroid medication. At last count, 41 family members have or have suffered from a radiation exposure illness. Of those, 23 have had cancer and seven have died from it. These are just the relatives Im aware ofthe ones I know that live here, Gutierrez said. A lot of us have thyroid issues. Brain tumors as well. Her husband, Toby Sr., got cancer. His sister never smoked or used tobacco but she died of lung cancer. Another sister had thyroid cancer, and another has lupus, an autoimmune disease. A brother who had prostate cancer now has thyroid disease. Its ongoing. It never ends, Gutierrez said. Members of the Gutierrez family in Albuquerque, N.M., (LR) Richard, Eugenia, Toby Sr., Bernice, and Toby Jr., who died of cancer on June 3, 2020. (Family photo) Bernice Gutierrez was just 8 days old living near Carrizozo, N.M., following the detonation of the first atomic bomb at the Trinity test site on July 16, 1945. Pictured with her are her mother, Eugenia, and father, Bonifacio. (Gutierrez family photos) On June 3, 2020, at the height of the COVID-19 pandemic, Bernice, a mother of three, lost her son, Toby Jr., 56, to a blood disorder that foreshadows leukemia. Her daughter, Eugenia, who was diagnosed with thyroid cancer at the time she gave birth to her second son has undergone three radiation treatments. Gutierrez said that people like herdownwinders, theyre calledfeel theyve been abandoned by their government, left without answers. The downwinders got their name for living downwind of atmospheric nuclear bomb tests during the 1950s and 60s. When Gutierrez heard about the Tularosa Basin Downwinders Consortium (TBDC), she decided to join in 2014 to help raise awareness of the negative health effects of radiation from Americas nuclear test program. The Cordova family of Tularosa, N.M., from the 1960s. Below, Tina Cordova and her cousin Ray are pictured at their first Holy Communion. (Courtesy of Tina Cordova). Tina Cordova of Albuquerque, co-founder of the organization in 2005, said she lost her father and other family members to cancerwhich she believes was caused by radiation exposure from the Trinity blast. Both of her great-grandfathers lived 45 miles from ground zero on July 16, 1945. They died of stomach cancer 10 years later. They were given morphine and were sent home to die. And they both died, Cordova said. Both of my grandmothers had cancer. My Dad died after having three different cancers. Cordova said there were families living as close as 12 miles to the Trinity test site in 1945; thousands more lived in a 50-mile radius. However, the government claims the area was sparsely populated. The bomb was a plutonium-based bomb, and it was packed with 13 pounds of weapons-grade plutonium, but only 3 pounds of the plutonium fissioned, the TBDC said in a fact sheet. The rest of the material went into the environment. With a half-life of more than 24,000 years, the remaining 10 pounds of plutonium was joined with the soil, sand, animal and plant life, and incinerated. The resultant fireball exceeded the atmosphere and penetrated the stratosphere, traveling more than seven miles high. Once the radioactive ash fell from the sky as fallout, it settled on everythingon the soil, in the water, and on the skin of every living thing, both human and animal, the TBDC said. In 1945, there were no grocery stores in the small villages surrounding the Trinity site. All the meat, dairy, and produce people consumed was either raised, harvested, or grown by them. It, too, was contaminated. A recent study by University of Arizona economist Keith Meyers found that radioactive fallout caused an estimated 340,000 to 690,000 deaths in the United States from 1951 to 1973. Cordova said the nuclear blast at Trinity poisoned vast quantities of cows milk in a 150-mile radius of the nuclear blast and was later consumed by familiesmen, women, and children. In time, her father developed oral cancer. Its really hard to describe to people what you go through when you have oral cancer, she said, but my Dad went through extensive surgery, had to have the lymph nodes removed from his neck, and extensive radiation. He had these beautiful, perfect teethnot a single cavity in his mouth. The radiation destroyed the circulation to his jaw and he ended up losing all his teeth. Tina Cordova of Albuquerque, N.M., as she appears as an infant in this photo with her grandmothers on the day she was baptized. Cordova is co-founder of the Tularosa Basin Downwinders Consortium, an organization that seeks to bring attention to the negative health effects suffered by people living near the Trinity atomic bomb explosion on July 16, 1945. (Tina Cordova) Physically, her father was an incredibly strong man who loved his horse, loved to hunt, fish, and worked hard. My Dad was such a hard worker, Cordova told The Epoch Times. While convalescing at home, her father insisted on doing landscaping in spite of the feeding tube that was still attached. If youll come and do the lifting, Im going to do this landscaping, Cordova recalled her father saying. I said, Dad, you still have this feeding tube.' He said, I dont care. I have to survive. And thats going to be part of it. So I would go every day and would carry the heavy bags of concrete and the heavy flagstone he couldnt lift, so he could work on that, Cordova said. Then, he got prostate cancer, which I said was a walk in the park after the first time [with cancer]. Then eight years later, her father developed a lesion on the side of his tongue that turned out to be cancer. My Dad didnt drink, didnt smoke, had no viruses, and developed two oral cancers. When I asked the doctors they said this just doesnt happen, but it happens here a lot. We see a lot of this, Cordova said. New Mexico resident Paul Pino, 67, says that all of the women in his family have had cancer or some other disease that he believes is attributed to exposure to atom bomb testing in New Mexico. (Allan Stein/The Epoch Times) In 1998, Cordova herself was diagnosed with thyroid cancer at the age of 39. The first thing the doctor asked her was when she had been exposed to radiation. Did she ever work with radioactive isotopes? Did she ever work in an X-ray lab? Did she have a lot of X-rays? I said no, no, no, but I lived 45 miles away from the Trinity test site and that was my exposure, said Cordova, whose younger sister is currently being tested for thyroid cancer. This is not an exaggerationall the women in my family, my aunts, my grandmothers, my cousins, were all on thyroid medicine. Everyone has thyroid diseases, primarily low thyroid. My Dads older sister just completed radiation for breast cancer. It just goes on and on, Cordova said. Her dad was 72 when he died. Cordova said it breaks my heart to see a man in his 60s be diagnosed with cancer, even though he didnt have risk factors or abuse his body. But in 1945, in the town where my Dad grew up, we didnt have running water and we didnt have electricity. My Dad and everybody else who lived in all these towns grew their own food and hunted, she said. Louisa Lopez of Socorro, N.M., listens as other downwinders of the Trinity test site in New Mexico talk about their experiences with cancer in their families. (Allan Stein/The Epoch Times) Tularosa at the time was home to a large irrigation ditch system from which many local residents would get their water, as well as from open rainwater cisterns. When I was a child, we were probably receiving regular doses of radiation, said Cordova, who fears for her other relatives who could be at risk for cancer. Luckily, none of them have shown any signsyet. And when I say yet, and its awful, we kind of live our lives that way. Because we always wonder whos going to be next? We dont ask if were going to get cancer, we ask when are going to get cancer? My generation is where this is coming home to roost now, Cordova said. She said the only legal avenue of recourse for the downwinders has been the Radiation Exposure Compensation Act (RECA). The legislation, established in 1990, provides lump-sum settlements of $50,000 to those who have suffered health issues related to exposure from atmospheric nuclear testing and $100,000 for uranium workers. Since 1991, RECA has paid out $2.5 billion in claims. Louisa Lopez, a member of the Tularosa Basin Downwinders Consortium, reviews on Feb. 25, 2022, a list of those who have died of cancer in Socorro County, N.M., following the detonation of the first atomic bomb at the Trinity test site on July 16, 1945. The United States conducted nearly 200 atmospheric nuclear weapons development tests from 1945 to 1962. Essential to the nations nuclear weapons development was uranium mining and processing, which was carried out by tens of thousands of workers, according to a RECA program summary. The program is set to expire on July 10. Two measures are currently pending in the U.S. Senate and House that seek to extend the federal program and increase cash benefits up to $150,000 for eligible downwinders. That limited amount of money, Cordova said, is still not enough, considering 9/11 first-responders can receive up to $1.25 million in personal compensation from the federal government. Paul Pino, 67, is another downwinder who grew up in Carrizozo, New Mexico, about 40 miles from the Trinity test site. Like Cordova and Gutierrez, Pino said he too has felt the impact of ionizing radiation exposure in the form of generational cancer and other serious diseases. Four members of his family were alive at the time of the bomb test, he said. All four have gotten sick. A replica of the atomic bomb tower that was used at the Trinity test site on July 16, 1945, stands at The National Museum of Nuclear Science and History in Albuquerque, N.M., on Feb. 26, 2022. (Below), a close-up view of a model of the bomb. (Allan Stein/The Epoch Times) His mother, Esther Pino, 78, died of cancer that began as skin cancer and spread to her bones. His older brother, Greg, 68, died of stomach cancer. She died a horrible death in terrible agony, Pino said. She was tough. She never complained about anything. That bone cancer was horribly painful. My big brother, he was in the CIA and Vietnam. He survived that. He ended up dying of stomach cancerfrom the radiation he probably got from the war with Japan. He was exposed at the ranch on July 16, 1945. He was a young man. Pino, with six siblings, said he believes World War II really started at Trinity. His sister twice had benign brain tumors removed. Another sister survived thyroid cancer. Recently, his daughter, 40, began to experience terrible itching in her legs. When she had it checked out, she found it was skin cancer. A model of the bomb casing that was used to house Fat Man, the atomic weapon that was dropped on Nagasaki, Japan, on Aug. 9, 1945. (Allan Stein/The Epoch Times) When I turned 67, I got in touch with my doctor and requested an early detection test for cancer, he said. They dont want to do it because its a lot of money. All these worries and thoughts are in your mind and you try to explain them to these doctors. They dont know whats going on. Pino said that while he appears healthy, he cant be sure for how long. Im very worried for my kids and my grandkids. All the females [in my family] have had thyroid problems, the young ones too. Louisa Lopez, 73, who lives near Socorro, New Mexico, about 28 miles away from the Trinity test site, said she lost her husband, Richard, to lymphoma in May 2020. Richard was pretty active with the downwinder group, said Lopez, a mother of four who joined the TBDC in 2014. I was interested in the fact that we had so many people dying of cancer in my community. A boy floats a candle-lit paper lantern on the river in front of the Atomic Bomb Dome during 70th-anniversary activities, commemorating the atomic bombing of Hiroshima at the citys Peace Memorial Park on August 6, 201 5, in Japan. The bomb instantly killed an estimated 70,000 people and thousands more in coming years from radiation effects. Three days later, the United States dropped a second atomic bomb on Nagasaki, which ended World War II. (Chris McGrath/Getty Images) One day, she was told that a high school friend had died of pancreatic cancer. I told myself, Im going to get hold of these people,' she said. She started organizing her efforts with the downwinders group in Socorro County and making a list of people who either passed from cancer or received treatments for cancer. Her list contains more than 100 people. I wanted to engage people here. I wanted them to care about why they were going through cancer. At first, I was having a hard time. They didnt want to speak against the government. They were afraid of losing their jobs, Lopez told The Epoch Times. They started seeing they were getting cancer, their kids were getting cancer, their parents were getting cancer. When I went to the funeral of my friend, I looked around and there were no old people. All the old people had died, and that scared me. I wasnt born at the time of the bomb, Lopez added. I was born in 1948. But Ive seen what its done to my community. On my Dads side, I had an aunt that had breast cancer. She died of breast cancer. On my Moms side, my grandmother died of stomach cancer. It didnt dawn on me until two or three years agothis thing went further. Im also frightened for myself. On my husbands side, theres a long history of cancer. Im happy Ive survived 73 years without anything [happening], but Im scared for my kids. A sign welcomes visitors to the Los Alamos Laboratory after they cross over the Omega Bridge in New Mexico. The photo was taken on June 14, 1999. (Joe Raedle/Getty Images) Lopez said that losing her husband was the worst thing shes ever had to face. Its tried her soul and tested her faith. You better say goodbye to your dad. This is it, she remembered telling her son the day his father died. My son didnt want to cry, but after he left [the hospital], I know he cried. All of us call [Richard] the million dollar man because thats what it will cost to pay his medical expenses, Lopez said. She is convinced his cancer started after he was exposed to contaminated soil while working as an excavator in the area. Cordova said that before and after the 1945 atom bomb test at Trinity, few people even knew what radiation was. Some people said they thought it had something to do with radios, which they didnt own. The nuclear program at Los Alamos, known as The Manhattan Project, was one of the best-kept secrets around, she said. We pledge allegiance to the same flag. We pay our taxes. We are hard-working American citizens, Cordova said. We have hearts and souls. We have children and grandchildren. And weve been treated like we dont count for anything. Bernice Gutierrez told The Epoch Times, I get angry. I get real angry over what the government has done to us. South Korean women clad in traditional costumes sing a song during a memorial service to pray for the Korean victims of the 1945 atomic bombing, before a monument at the Peace Memorial Park in Hiroshima on Aug. 5, 2015. (Kazuhiro Nogi/AFP/Getty Images) The proposed RECA legislation expands the designated areas of radiation effects following nuclear weapons tests to include Colorado, Idaho, Montana, New Mexico, and Guam, as well as additional areas in Arizona, Nevada, and Utah. Since 1990, the federal government under RECA has been compensating downwinders who lived close to the Nevada Test Site. Many downwinders in New Mexico believe the state has never been included or compensated due to poverty and ethnic makeup. Ideally, Cordova believes the new legislation should cover all related health care costs for downwinders and include a long-overdue apology. We were relegated to nothingness. There are things our government absolutely knew and things our government didnt know, she said. What they absolutely knew was there was going to be fallout produced and that it would be damaging to human health. They did not care. Newsom Grants Millions to Address Homeless Crisis After Encampment Fire Leaves One Dead A day after a homeless encampment fire in San Francisco left one dead last week, California Gov. Gavin Newsom announced how $50 million in state grants will be doled out to various communities in the state to help provide housing. California is taking on the unacceptable status quo with a historic response to house thousands of our most vulnerable community members at an unprecedented rate, and swiftly addressing the encampments that pose the greatest threat to health and safety, Newsom said in a statement on Feb. 24, a day after the deadly encampment fire in San Francisco. The grant will provide housing to over 1,400 individuals in 19 communities in such areas as Orange and Santa Barbara counties and the City of Los Angeles, currently living in encampments. Rewards for the counties and cities range from just over $300,000 to $5 million, and will rehouse between 18 to 200 individuals depending on the funding received, according to the governors office (pdf). The funds are intended to provide 55,000 new housing units and $2 billion extra through the California Blueprint, the 202223 state budget to assist with behavioral health housing and encampment rehousing, according to the Governors Office. The allocation of funds were granted on a competitive basis with each city and county applicants receiving scores based on prioritized encampments, safety and wellness, delivery of housing services, capacity of structures, personnel, and proposed budget, according to California Business, Consumer Services, and Housing Agency spokesperson Daniel Lopez. While only a select number of cities and counties received grants, Newsom has proposed more funds go towards encampments that can total $500 million through the 2022-23 state budget, according to Lopez. The state is seeking to clear 1,000 encampments by the end of 2022. According to the governors officenearly half of that amount has been accomplished since the fall. Newsom announced the grant after a fire outbroke near the Bosworth onramp on I-280 in San Francisco leaving three individuals injured and one dead. This tragedy is a devastating reminder of the dangers ten of thousands of unhoused Californians face every day, and the critical urgency we must bring to protecting the most vulnerable among us, Newsom said in a statement. However, some critics are not pleased with the handling of the homeless crisis in the state, claiming some lawmakers have failed to get the homeless population the help they need, even though $10.7 billion in funds were allocated through the state 2021-22 budget to provide 50 housing and homeless-related programs across the stateincluding Project Homekey. Reckless policies have made California into a state where homelessness is thriving, California GOP Chairwoman Jessica Patterson wrote on Twitter. Cities and counties that were awarded the grants include Santa Barbara County, San Bernardino County, City of Richmond, City of Fresno, City of Oakland, City of San Jose, Redwood City, Santa Cruz County, Orange County, City of Los Angeles, City of Petaluma, City of Tulare, City of Salinas, City of Eureka, City of Berkley, City of Long Beach, City of Vista, City of Rafael, and Marin County. Oil barrels are pictured at the site of Canadian group Vermilion Energy in Parentis-en-Born, France, on Oct. 13, 2017. (Regis Duvignau/Reuters) Oil Markets Hit Multiple Records as Russia Sanctions Bite, Disrupt Trade Flows Oil benchmarks are hitting multiple prices and spread milestones across several key markets as the fallout from severe sanctions on key exporter Russia sows confusion and panic among global crude oil traders, shipping firms, and importers. Brent crude topped $112 a barrel on Wednesday, the highest since 2014, shrugging off news that several developed countries plan to release a record 60 million barrels of strategic petroleum reserves to cool prices. The oil industry has been gripped by acute risk aversion in the finance and shipping sectors after several nations including the United States sanctioned multiple Russian entities following Russias invasion of Ukraine, though Washington has explicitly exempted energy products from the Russian measures. The price spread for Brent crude delivered between now and in 12 months is at $21.54 a barrel, the steepest on record, while Brents premium to Dubaithe price spread between sweet and sour gradeshit an all-time high of $13.05 a barrel on Wednesday, Refinitiv data showed. That has driven demand for Middle East crude, with benchmark prices Dubai, Oman, and Murban jumping to all-time highs of more than $10 a barrel above Dubai quotes on Wednesday, more than doubling from last month. The Ukrainian situation is mad. Prices are not controllable, another trader said. The wide spread between the benchmarks along with surging freight rates for oil tankers globally has also made it more expensive for Asian buyers to purchase oil from Europe, Africa, and the United States, narrowing their options. Buyers of Russian oil are facing difficulties in securing finance as major banks stopped issuing credit guarantees. Russian Urals crude oils discount to Brent is at its widest ever, while premiums for Russian ESPO and Sokol crudes exported to Asia have plunged. In addition, given the current situation including the difficulty of arranging ships required for cargo handling, we will not dare to purchase Russian crude oil, he said. Freight rates for oil tankers globally have also jumped, especially for those calling at ports in the Black Sea and Turkey, potentially disrupting exports of CPC Blend from Kazakhstan and Azeri Light from Azerbaijan. Freight rates for Middle East to Asia are higher too, so it depends which one is more painful, a Singapore-based trader said. Another senior oil trader said trading companies will probably have to use tankers that are put on long-term charter to ship these cargoes. Ship owners are having a ball, he said. Cut off from their usual supply sources, Asia and Europe are likely to step up imports from the Americas, traders and analysts said. However, offers of U.S. Mars and West Texas Intermediate crude for May delivery have more than tripled to $14 and $16 a barrel above Dubai quotes respectively, traders said, sidelining Asian buyers. The recent geopolitically-driven outperformance of Brent relative to WTI means that the North American benchmark has [to catch] up to do in order to shut the door on exports, given that U.S. balances are tight, particularly with Cushing approaching operational tank bottoms, RBC Capital analyst Mike Tran said in a note. Crude stocks at the Cushing, Oklahoma, storage hub have fallen to their lowest since September 2018. By Florence Tan and Gavin Maguire We are a Serbian company looking for wood pellets A1 quality, 6 to 8 mm, in 15kg bags, full truck orders. We need about 10 to 50 trucks/month, with certificate. Please, write us your offer. The logo of the Nord Stream 2 gas pipeline project is seen on a pipe at the Chelyabinsk pipe rolling plant in Chelyabinsk, Russia, on Feb. 26, 2020. (Maxim Shemetov/Reuters) Operator of Nord Stream 2 Fires All Employees After US Sanctions The operator of the Nord Stream 2 gas pipeline has terminated contracts with all its employees after it was hit with U.S. sanctions following Russias invasion of Ukraine. Nord Stream 2 AG was sanctioned by the United States last week after Russia recognized two breakaway regions in eastern Ukraine prior to its invasion of the country, which has prompted a wave of economic sanctions by the West. The company, which is registered in Switzerland, is owned by Russian state-owned gas giant Gazprom. Following the recent geopolitical developments leading to the imposition of U.S. sanctions on Nord Stream 2 AG, the company had to terminate contracts with employees. We very much regret this development, Nord Stream 2 AG told Reuters in an emailed statement. Switzerlands economy minister, Guy Parmelin, told Swiss radio service RTS on Feb. 28 that all 140 Nord Stream employees who worked for the company in the Swiss city of Zug had their contracts terminated. Two unidentified sources told Reuters that Nord Stream 2 AG is considering filing for insolvency. Nord Stream became insolvent because of last weeks U.S. sanctions, Silvia Thalmann-Gut, economics director in the Swiss canton of Zug where the company is based, told public broadcaster SRF, according to Agence France-Presse. Officials at Nord Stream 2 AG and Gazprom didnt respond by press time to a request by The Epoch Times for comment. The pipeline hadnt begun commercial operations because it was pending certification in Germany, which last week put the process on hold because of the escalating Ukraine crisis. The U.S. Treasury Departments Office of Foreign Assets Control issued an executive order on Feb. 23 that authorized the wind-down of transactions involving Nord Stream 2 AG or any entity in which Nord Stream 2 AG owns, directly or indirectly, a 50 percent or greater interest by March 2. President Joe Biden on Feb. 23 announced sanctions against Nord Stream 2 AG and its corporate officers in response to Russias actions in Ukraine. As I have made clear, we will not hesitate to take further steps if Russia continues to escalate, the president said in a statement announcing the measures. Through his actions, President [Vladimir] Putin has provided the world with an overwhelming incentive to move away from Russian gas and to other forms of energy. Reuters contributed to this report. Organizers Refile Petition to Recall Kevin de Leon LOS ANGELES, Calif.Organizers who launched a recall campaign against Los Angeles Mayoral Candidate and City Councilman Kevin de Leon last summer have refiled another notice of intent to recall, according to LA City Clerk records on Feb. 28. The same lead-organizer, Pauline Adkins, told The Epoch Times that over the last eight months, the frustrations have not changed; theyve increased. Adkins said the previous recall attempt failed not because of a lack of community support in District 14, but rather due to one of the proponents withdrawing from the effort. A recall effort must have five proponents to be valid. The notice of intent to recall lists the districts sprawling homeless issue as crimes against humanity. Adkins said theres been a homeless encampment outside of her home for the last year and that there has been an increase in drug dealing in her Eagle Rock neighborhood. And Ive got 10 kids less than 30 feet away, Im tired of it and he cannot be mayor, she said. De Leons office did not respond to a request for comment by press deadline, but last year he told reporters during a press conference that the recall was started by Trump supporters. From day one, I promised my constituents that I would partner with them to tackle our districts challenges with urgency, compassion, and common senseand that is exactly what we are doing. Nothing will derail our focus on saving lives as we fulfill our commitment to lift unhoused Angelenos off the streets and into housing as quickly as possible, de Leon said last year. But Adkins claims the dissatisfaction with de Leon is a bipartisan issue and that most of her community members lean liberal. Currently, de Leon is the only mayoral candidate that could face another recall attempt. De Leon was elected to the Los Angeles City Council in 2020 with slightly more than 52 percent of the vote. Recallers will have 120 days to collect roughly 20,500 signatures once the notice to recall is published, to trigger a recall election. In a still from a video, Cynthia Zimmer (C) of Kern County District Attorney's Office talks in a press conference in Bakersfield, Calif., on March 2, 2022. (Courtesy of Kern County District Attorney's Office via AP) Parents Indicted in Deaths of Two Missing Boys The adoptive parents of two small California boys who vanished in 2020 have been arrested in the killing of the children. Trezell West and Jacqueline West were arrested Tuesday on murder and other charges, Kern County District Attorney Cynthia Zimmer said Tuesday. Orrin West, 4, and his brother Orson, 3, were reported missing from the family home in the desert town of California City in December 2020. One of the questions that Im sure you would like to know is, have the bodies of Orrin and Orson been found, Zimmer said. And the answer to that is no, they have not been found. Both parents are charged with two counts of second-degree murder, two counts of willful cruelty to a child, and one count each of false report of an emergency, according to Kern County Superior Court online records. They were held without bail and face arraignment on indictment on Thursday, according to the records. The records did not indicate whether they have attorneys to speak on their behalf. The investigation involved searches in California City and Bakersfield, about 60 miles to the west, where the boys had lived before moving in September 2020. Like pale ghosts, a pack of white polar bears haunt a dilapidated, abandoned Soviet weather station on a small island in Russias Arctic far east. This sleuth of spooky bears might have gone unnoticed on Kolyuchin Island had David Kokh, a 41-year-old Moscow-based photographer, not set sail on his long-awaited voyage to Wrangel Island last September. He shared how the remarkable encounter, and subsequent photoshoot of a lifetime, transpired. We sailed along the coast and covered more than 1,200 miles of untouched landscapes, villages lost in time, spots with various fauna, and seas full of life, Kokh told The Epoch Times. One day, bad weather was expected, so our captain approached a small island, Kolyuchin, to take shelter from the storm. (The Epoch Times) That Arctic island, located off Russias northeastern coast, northwest of the Bering Strait between Alaska and Russia, is known for its polar weather station that operated during Soviet times, the photographer said. It was finally closed in 1992, but an abandoned village still stands on the island today. Kokh described feeling a childlike sense of excitement upon discovering the family of polar bears huddled amidst the dismal, depressing dwellings. The stormy wind, rain, and neglected buildings on the rocky shores all made everything appear super surreal, he said. Suddenly, we noticed movement in the windows of the houses. Someone took out some binoculars and we saw the heads of polar bears! The bears appeared like wraiths amidst eerie fog on the long-deserted island. It was the perfect setting, he added. Kokh was able to capture the wildlife on camera without disturbing them or exposing himself to danger by using his Mavic 2 Pro drone camera. The drone was equipped with low-noise propellers so as to not startle the enormous bears. He employed clever tricks and maneuvers with his drone to minimize the disturbance. I was nowhere near them so was not in any danger, he said. There were polar bears standing guard like sentinels; peering through windows, alone or in pairs; loitering on porches; and lounging on the lawns outsidemaking for a wildlife shoot of a lifetime. The bears walked around the houses, there was about twenty animals in sight at the same time, mostly males, Kokh said. The females kept to the side with their cubs, closer to the shores of the island. Besides the thrill of the encounter and satisfaction of capturing a rare and unique moment, Kokh was able to share the polar bear photoshoot with the world on his Instagram, where it went viral. The moment when I encountered the polar bears at the abandoned meteorological station in the Northern Chukotka was very special for me, pretty sure I will never forget it, he said. Im incredibly grateful I can share this moment with people from all around the world. Kokh believes that a photographers job is to tell a storyHis story, he adds, is one of the relationship between ourselves, wildlife, and nature. Share your stories with us at emg.inspired@epochtimes.com, and continue to get your daily dose of inspiration by signing up for the Bright newsletter at TheEpochTimes.com/newsletter Ukrainian President Volodymyr Zelenskyy speaks to the nation via his smartphone in the center of Kyiv, Ukraine, on Feb. 26, 2022. (Ukrainian Presidential Press Office via AP) Plot to Assassinate Zelensky Foiled, Top Ukrainian Official Says An assassination plot against Ukrainian President Volodymyr Zelensky by Chechens has been foiled, according to a top Ukrainian official. An elite group of Chechens had arrived in Kyiv, the Ukrainian capital, to assassinate Zelensky, Oleksiy Danilov, secretary of the National Security and Defense Council, said during a briefing, according to a Telegram post by Ukraines Center for Strategic Communications, a government office. We are well aware of the special operation that was to take place directly by the Kadyrovites to eliminate our president, Danilov said. The Kadyrovitesmade up of elite Chechen special forceswere allegedly sent to assassinate the Ukrainian president, and the group was split into two, according to Danilov. One unit was destroyed in Hostomel, a town northwest of Kyiv, and the other was under fire from Ukrainian forces. The senior Ukrainian official noted that authorities were tipped off by members of Russias Federal Security Service who dont support Russian President Vladimir Putins full-scale invasion of Ukraine, which Danilov described as a bloody war. The news came six days after Putin authorized a special military operation against Ukraine. Ukrainian troops inspect a site following a Russian airstrike in Kyiv, Ukraine, on Feb. 26, 2022. (AP Photo/Vadim Ghirda) Zelensky said during a Feb. 24 televised address that Russia has marked him as its top enemy. The enemy marked me as target number one, and my family as target number two, Zelensky said. A day earlier, the United States told U.N. human rights chief Michelle Bachelet that Russia had a hit list of identified Ukrainians to be killed or sent to camps. Zelensky turned down an evacuation offer from the United States on Feb. 26, according to the Ukrainian Embassy in the UK. The fight is here. I need ammunition, not a ride, Zelensky told the United States, according to the embassy. I am here. We are not putting down arms. We will be defending our country, because our weapon is truth, and our truth is that this is our land, our country, our children, and we will defend all of this. That is it. Thats all I wanted to tell you. Glory to Ukraine. Medics gather by a high-rise apartment block that was hit by recent shelling in Kyiv, Ukraine, on Feb. 26, 2022. (Genya Savilov/AFP via Getty Images) Rights groups have alleged violations of international war crimes law, including the targeting of civilians, as well as indiscriminate attacks on schools and hospitals, since Russia invaded Ukraine. The United Nations said civilian deaths have surpassed 100, and the death toll is likely to be considerably higher, as many reported casualties have yet to be confirmed. The Kremlin responded to accusations of committing war crimes on March 1, saying that it categorically denies the claims. President Joe Biden will address the nation before Congress Tuesday night. In Europe, Russia continues its invasion of Ukraine. Russian forces have fired at the Kyiv TV Tower and at the countrys largest public square. An NTD reporter in Ukraine spoke with civilians who are helping the defense. L: Rep. Henry Cuellar (D-Texas) speaks to reporters in Washington in a file photograph. (Kevin Dietsch/Getty Images) R: Democratic candidate Jessica Cisneros (TX-28) speaks during the 'Get Out the Vote' rally in San Antonio, Texas, on Feb. 12, 2022. (Brandon Bell/Getty Images) Progressive Cisneros and Centrist Cuellar Headed to Democrat Primary Runoff Rep. Henry Cuellar (D-Texas) will face Jessica Cisneros in a runoff for the Democrats nomination to Texas 28th congressional district after the first primary battle proved inconclusive. Texas 28th district, which includes San Antonio and runs parallel to the Rio Grande, is heavily Democrat-leaning. The district is dominated by Hispanic voters, who comprise around 80 percent of its population. Cuellar, who has broken with his party over issues like spending and abortion, has been the target of a great deal of criticism by progressivesparticularly members of the Squad, like Reps. Alexandria Ocasio-Cortez (D-N.Y.), Rashida Tlaib (D-Mich.), and Ilhan Omar (D-Minn.). Hoping to unseat Cuellar, who has represented the district for nearly 20 years, Ocasio-Cortez backed primary challenger and progressive Democrat Jessica Cisneros. In a primary battle on Tuesday, Cuellar won a plurality of the vote, and nearly defended his seat from Cisneros. However, a third candidate, community organizer Tannya Benavides, siphoned off enough of the vote to deny the majority to either Cuellar or Cisneros. Cuellar won 48.5 percent of the vote compared to Cisneros 46.8 percent; Benavides won 4.7 percent. Because a candidate must receive 50 percent of the vote to receive the primary nomination for the district, Cuellar and Cisneros will now head to a runoff election for the nomination. Writing on Twitter on Feb. 9, Ocasio-Cortez attacked Cuellars position on abortion and encouraged Democrats to vote for Cisneros instead. Cuellar is an anti-choice Democrat in a state where women and LGBTQ+ reproductive rights are under attack, Ocasio-Cortez wrote, referencing a Texas abortion law that imposes civil penalties for performing abortions after a heartbeat is detectable. This district has only gotten bluer, too, Ocasio-Cortez added. Its 2022. We really dont have to settle for rock bottom. Vote [Jessica Cisneros]. The endorsement, coming from a figure that many progressives see as an icon, apparently carried weight with many voters in the district. Perhaps also contributing to Cisneros narrow survival in the primary was the FBIs decision to raid Cuellars home as part of a larger investigation involving the former Soviet state of Azerbaijan. However, as the investigation is ongoing details on the exact reasons for the raid remain unclear. The FBI raid raised some eyebrows for its potential impact on the outcome of an election. In the past, the Justice Department has generally avoided carrying out such raids on candidates in advance of an election, making exceptions only for situations where they believe crime is ongoing or that the candidate will continue to break the law if they are not intercepted. Cuellar said in a video posted to Twitter that the legal system is a pillar of our democracy but insisted that the investigation will discover no wrongdoing on my part. Despite the investigation, which casts Cuellars campaign in a negative light, he said that he will not back down. Let me be clear: Im running for reelection and I intend to win, Cuellar said. Cuellar was originally sent to Congress by the district in 2004, and he has kept toward the center of the political aisle since first taking office. In August 2021, Cuellar joined a group of nine other moderate and centrist Democrats in opposition to the $3.5 trillion draft of the now-defunct Build Back Better (BBB) spending package. The group demanded that the $1.2 trillion infrastructure bill, which was far preferred by centrists, be passed on its own rather than being linked to the BBB, as House leadership planned to do and progressives demanded. Nevertheless, Cuellar did join his party in voting for the final draft of the bill, which had been reduced to $1.85 trillion. Cuellar is also one of the few congressional Democrats who still opposes abortion. In 2010, he expressed concerns that the Senates draft of the Affordable Care Actknown as Obamacarewould provide funding for abortions. On one occasion, he voted for legislation that would ban abortion after 20 weeks; while this falls far short of an outright ban on abortion, Cuellar is distinct in his opposition to a practice that has come to be ubiquitously supported by most of his party. More recently, Cuellar reaffirmed his opposition to the practice. He was the only Democrat who voted against the Womens Health Protection Act, which would have codified Roe v. Wade and forced states to provide abortions with few restrictions. The same bill died in the Senate after Sen. Joe Manchin (D-W. Va.) joined Republicans in filibustering the bill. Though progressives have bristled at Cuellars opposition to abortion, the attitude is largely in line with the views of his Hispanic constituentsmany of whom are members of the Catholic Church, which unilaterally opposes abortion. In a post on Twitter pinned with an attack ad on Cuellar, Cisneros implied that the long-serving congressman is in the hands of monied special interests. We dont have his lobbyists or his machine, Cisneros said. We have faith that our people deserve better. Im running for Congress because I believe in Medicare for all, reproductive rights, and good-paying union jobs. They put faith in their money. We put faith in our dreams, the progressive concluded. Cuellar, for his part, has attempted to portray Cisneros as an extremist for her heavily-progressive policy goals. We cannot have leaders that are uncompromising and extreme, Cuellar said in an ad countering Cisneros. I will always vote in the best interest of our constituents. Since the districts creation in the early 1990s, it has never sent a Republican to Congress. The district voted for Democrat presidential contenders in five out of its six most recent elections; the exception came in 2004 when a plurality of the districts voters chose to reelect President George W. Bush. In this blue stronghold, winning Democrats nomination all but guarantees victory in the general election. The May 24 runoff is shaping up to be a tight, hard-won nomination for either of the candidates: Cuellar will have to prove to his constituents that hes still the best fit for the job if he wants to keep his seat while Cisneros will have to convince the districts voters that a sharp leftward turn is needed. British Prime Minister Boris Johnson (L) and Ukrainian ambassador to the UK Vadym Prystaiko (R) leave Downing Street together to attend Prime Ministers Questions at the Houses of Parliament in London, on March 2, 2022. (Chris J Ratcliffe/Getty Images) Putin Has Committed War Crimes in Ukraine: UKs Johnson British Prime Minister Boris Johnson has accused Russian President Vladimir Putin of committing war crimes in Ukraine. At the Prime Ministers Questions in the House of Commons on March 2, Johnson said, What we have seen already from Vladimir Putins regime in the use of the munitions that they have already been dropping on innocent civilians, in my view, already fully qualifies as a war crime. He said the chief prosecutor of the International Criminal Court (ICC) is already investigating events in Ukraine and, I am sure the whole House will support that. The square outside the damaged local city hall of Kharkiv, Ukraine, on March 1, 2022. (Sergey Bobok/AFP via Getty Images) Johnson said Putin has gravely miscalculated. In his abhorrent assault on a sovereign nation, he has underestimated the extraordinary fortitude of the Ukrainian people and the unity and resolve of the free world in standing up to his barbarism. Later, a Downing Street spokesman told reporters, No one can be in any doubt that what were seeing daily, almost hourly now, are horrific acts that would certainly appear to be war crimes. The spokesman confirmed it was the first time Number 10 had explicitly stated that view. Ukrainian serviceman cross the destroyed bridge in Irpin, Ukraine, on March 1, 2022. (Anastasia Vlasova/Getty Images) Earlier in the day, the prime minister spoke to Ukraines President Volodymyr Zelensky, promising further support and weapons for the forces resisting Russian aggression. A Downing Street spokeswoman said Johnson condemned the abhorrent attacks on Ukraine in the recent hours and days. Sharing his disgust at the attacks on Ukraine, the prime minister said the UK was doing everything possible to support the Ukrainian people and their resistance, she said. UK government officials fear the Russian leader will unleash even greater force against Kyiv and other Ukrainian cities in the coming days. According to the latest intelligence update from Britains Ministry of Defence, heavy Russian artillery and air strikes have continued to target built-up areas, primarily focused on the cities of Kharkiv, Kyiv, Mariupol, and Chernihiv. Talking to BBC Breakfast, UK Defence Secretary Ben Wallace said Putin seems to know no limit to how much violence he is prepared to use to achieve his aims. Wallace said Russian forces could lay siege to Ukraines major cities. Thats one of the Russian doctrines, which is effectively surround a city, bombard it indiscriminately, and then eventually close in on a population that they hope to have broken, and indeed take over whats left of the city, he said. Wallace warned that an occupying force would face the kind of insurgency faced by the Soviets in Afghanistan or the West in Iraq. Invading a country with overwhelming force is one thing, occupying a people of 44 million who dont want you in it is a very different thing. PA Media contributed to this report. Penn. Gov. Tom Wolf speaks at the future site of the Crispus Attucks York African American History & Lecture Center which received $4 million in state funds through the Redevelopment Assistance Capital Program, in downtown York, Wolfs hometown, on Feb. 25, 2022. (Commonwealth Media Services) Republicans Urge Gov. Wolf: Unleash Pennsylvanias Immense Gas Reserves 'End your crusade against fossil fuels and recognize the gift of energy and production that exists beneath our feet.' Looking at the instability of the European energy markets, Pennsylvania House Republicans are urging Gov. Tom Wolf to unleash Pennsylvanias natural gas stores to power the world. The largest natural gas reserve in the United States is mostly underground, in Pennsylvania and West Virginia. If our region was its own country, wed be the eighth largest natural gas producing country in the world, Dan Weaver, president, and executive director of the Pennsylvania Independent Oil & Gas Association told The Epoch Times. That includes Pennsylvania, West Virginia, and Ohio. In one of many actions signifying an intentional move to renewable energy sources like wind and solar, President Biden signed an executive order on his first day in office, stopping the construction of the Keystone XL Pipeline. Without pipeline infrastructure, its tough to move large amounts of natural gas. U.S. West Coast refineries rely on imports of light sweet crude oil from other countries, including Russia, because access to U.S. produced light sweet crude oil is challenged by geography, transportation, and logistics, a recent posting at the American Fuel & Petrochemical Manufacturers website says. Resistance to pipeline construction is costing the United States its energy independence. For us to shut down or condemn producing oil and natural gas here in the United States, where we can control the environmental standards, and to ask for oil from other countries that dont have the same stringent standards as we do, is ludicrous, Weaver said. They shut down a pipeline on day one, and then six months later basically say, to people that dont like us very much, would you send us more oil? We have the ability to be completely energy independent, right under our feet, and still have the ability to help our allies in Europe by sending [liquified natural gas] over to them. The XL Pipeline is not the only roadblock to U.S. energy independence. Republican state Rep. Stan Saylor will soon introduce a resolution to ask New York Gov. Kathy Hochul and New Jersey Gov. Patrick Murphy to end their states policies banning the construction of any new natural gas pipelines. Policies that Saylor says have walled off Pennsylvanias natural gas from accessing markets in New England and forced New England states to rely on liquefied natural gas (LNG) imports from foreign nations, including Russia. Not only have anti-energy policies from President Joe Biden down to blue-state governors resulted in increased costs to consumers, but they mean that we as a country are helping to finance Vladimir Putins unprovoked war on Ukraine through oil and natural gas imports. Its unconscionable and outright shameful, Saylor said in a statement. I also urge Gov. Tom Wolf to call his fellow blue-state governors and urge them to reverse their pro-Putin pipeline bans. Our response, as a commonwealth and as a nation, to Russias aggressions toward a sovereign country must go beyond lighting up buildings in blue and gold and pulling Russian vodka from liquor store shelves. In addition to Saylors pending resolution, 15 Pennsylvania House Republicans signed a letter Tuesday demanding Wolf does everything in his power to support the growth and proliferation of Pennsylvanias natural gas and energy. You know of our immense potential, yet the State has been hamstrung by regulation, bans, time-intensive permitting, the Regional Greenhouse Gas Initiative, and further taxation, while you support energy means that cannot possibly power the needs of the 21st century. We must, through voice and actions, develop the energy resources we have, and encourage their use by all who share our values and need our energy to carry and support them into a free and prosperous future, the letter says. It calls the Pennsylvania Liquor Control Boards request to stop selling Russian-produced liquors a meek show of solidarity with the Ukrainian people with little effect on the Russian government, and suggests that Pennsylvania could have a meaningful impact on world events today. Just as the shallow oil and gas wells of Pennsylvania fueled the allies of the first World Wars, we should currently make use of our advanced production methods and technologies to provide LNG and other resources to Europe and abroad. Instead of Russian LNG tankers entering American ports and the ports of our allies, we should be exporting LNG to our friends across the world. The letter asks Wolf to join the legislature in making an actual impact on the situation in Europe. They ask Wolf to urge New York and New Jersey to allow construction of new natural gas pipelines and to call for an end to the natural gas development moratorium within the Delaware River Basin, something Wolf has supported in the past. If we truly care about the environment and our future energy, economic, and climate needs we would invest in domestic production instead of turning a blind eye to the standards of the Russian tundra, the letter says. If anything, we and our neighboring states should ban importation of Russian sourced energy instead of making energy extraction, production, and transportation more difficult within our borders. You must encourage the extraction and refinement of our resources for the betterment of the free world. End your crusade against fossil fuels and recognize the gift of energy and production that exists beneath our feet. We sincerely request that you join us in our efforts to ease the lives of the citizens of this State, the people of this nation, and of our allies abroad. The letter was written by state House Republican Rep. Daryl Metcalfe, chairman of the Environmental Resources and Energy Committee, and signed by state Reps. Mike Armanini, Stephanie Borowicz, Bud Cook, Joseph Hamm, Lee James, Ryan Mackenzie, Joshua Kail, Tim ONeal, Jason Ortitay, Kathy Rapp, Tommy Sankey, Paul Schemel, Perry Stambaugh, and Ryan Warner. It was also sent to the Pennsylvania Department of Environmental Protection. The Wolf administration did not respond to a request for comment in response to the letter or resolution. The administration spent part of Tuesday kicking off National Problem Gambling Awareness Month in Pennsylvania, and announcing initiatives to improve health care for birthing people and children through the perinatal period. Smoke rises from a Russian tank destroyed by the Ukrainian forces on the side of a road in Lugansk region on Feb. 26, 2022. (Anatolii Stepanov / AFP via Getty Images) Russia Says It Lost 498 Soldiers in Invasion, One Tenth of Ukraines Estimate For the first time since its invasion of Ukraine began last week, Russia disclosed its war casualties on March 2, with a defense ministry spokesperson saying nearly 500 military personnel have lost their lives in the conflict. Russian Defense Ministry spokesman Maj. Gen. Igor Konashenkov said that 498 Russian soldiers had been killed and 1,597 wounded as part of what Moscow continued to call a special military operation. Ukrainian authorities estimate the Russian death toll at more than 10 times the number cited by Konashenkov. Regretfully, among our friends participating in the special military operation, there are losses. 498 Russian military servicemen died while carrying out their warriors duty, Konashenko said. The spokesman said that the military is eliminating a real threat, which until recently emanated from Ukraine. He added that despite the wishes of the Ukrainian people the nation would have soon been used to stage NATO bases and nuclear weapons. According to Konashenkov, 2,870 Ukrainians had been killed and roughly 3,700 wounded to date. Russian forces have captured 572 prisoners of war, he added. Konashenkov described the Ukrainian death toll as being comprised of nationalists and military service members, suggesting that the total included civilians. In a near-unanimous vote, the United Nations voted on Feb. 2 to demand that Russia withdraw its forces from Ukraine. Representatives from Belarus, Cuba, North Korea, and Syria voted against the resolution. The vote took place as a Russian armored convoy drew closer to Kyiv, Ukraines capital. Elsewhere, the Russian forces bombarded residential areas along the lines of advance and say they have captured the Ukrainian cities of Kherson and Melitopol. Russia and Ukraine are scheduled to meet for the second round of talks in Belarus on March 3. The Russian military in the meantime launched another round of aerial strikes on Kharkiv, Ukraines second most populous city of some 1.5 million people. The strikes killed 21 people and wounded 112, according to Oleg Sinehubov, the head of the Kharkiv regional administration. Several Russian planes were shot down over Kharkiv, according to Oleksiy Arestovich, a top adviser to Ukrainian President Volodymyr Zelensky. Kharkiv today is the Stalingrad of the 21st century, Arestovich said, invoking what is considered one of the most heroic moments in Russian history, the five-month defense of the city from the Nazis during World War II. Russian attacks, many with missiles, blew the roof off Kharkivs five-story regional police building and set the top floor on fire, and also hit the intelligence headquarters and a university building, according to officials and videos and photos released by Ukraines State Emergency Service. The Associated Press contributed to this report. Vehicles of Russian state-controlled broadcaster Russia Today (RT) are seen near the Red Square in central Moscow on June 15, 2018. (Gleb Garanich/Reuters) Russian Broadcaster RT Will No Longer Be Available on Sky: UK Culture Secretary Russian state-owned broadcaster RT, formerly Russia Today, will no longer be available on Sky, UK Culture Secretary Nadine Dorries has said. She wrote on Twitter on Tuesday evening: Shortly, the French satellite which broadcasts Russia Today (RT) in both the EU and UK will be switched off. This means RT will no longer be available via Sky. Putins polluting propaganda machine will now have severely restricted access into British homes via our TV screens. Shortly, the French satellite which broadcasts Russia Today (RT) in both the EU and UK will be switched off. This means RT will no longer be available via Sky. Putins polluting propaganda machine will now have severely restricted access into British homes via our TV screens. Nadine Dorries (@NadineDorries) March 1, 2022 Since Russian forces invaded Ukraine last week, there have been calls for the Russian propaganda outlet to be banned in the UK. Sir Keir Starmer, leader of the main opposition Labour Party, labelled it Russian President Vladimir Putins personal propaganda tool which spreads lies and disinformation. Prime Minister Boris Johnson also criticised RT for peddling material that is doing a lot of damage to the truth and called for Britains broadcaster watchdog Ofcom to look at if it is infringing the rules of this country. Last week, Nadine Dorries asked Ofcom to review the operation of RT, which she said was demonstrably part of Russias global disinformation campaign. In response, Ofcom chief executive Dame Melanie Dawes told Dorries the regulator had already stepped up our oversight of coverage of these events by broadcasters in the UK. She said while broadcasters can cover issues from a particular perspective as long as balance is achieved, it would not be acceptable for any of our licensees to broadcast one-sided propaganda. On Monday evening, Ofcom announced it had opened 15 new investigations into the due impartiality of news programmes on RT. But Foreign Secretary Liz Truss warned that banning RT could lead to the BBC being banned in Russia. Asked on Monday if the UK would follow the EUs footsteps and ban Russian propaganda outlets, Truss told the House of Commons: We are looking at what can be done on RT but the reality is that if we ban RT in the United Kingdom, that is likely to lead to channels like the BBC being banned in Russia. What we want is the Russian population to hear the truth about what Vladimir Putin is doing, so theres a very careful judgment to be made, and that is something the Culture Secretary is looking at. PA Media contributed to this report. Russian Foreign Minister Warns: World War III Will Be Nuclear Russias foreign minister, Sergei Lavrov, warned Wednesday that a third world war would be nuclear and destructive amid his countrys invasion of Ukraine. The third world war will be nuclear and destructive President Biden is an experienced man and has previously stated that the only alternative to war are sanctions, Lavrov said in an interview with Al Jazeeras Arabic channel, without elaborating, according to Gazeta, other Russian media, and Reuters. Lavrov also alleged that Russia would be in real danger if Ukraine ever acquired nuclear weapons. There is no evidence that Ukraine was attempting to acquire nuclear weapons from the West, and Ukraine gave up its nukes in the early 1990s following the dissolution of the Soviet Union. Earlier this week, the specter of nuclear war was raised when Russian President Vladimir Putin ordered his countrys strategic deterrence forces, which operates some of Russias nuclear arsenal, to be on a heightened state of alert. Some analysts remarked that the order was meant to intimidate the United States and NATO so as they dont get involved in the Ukraine conflict. Russia, like the United States, possesses thousands of nuclear weapons, but both countries over the years have stressed that nuclear war would lead to the annihilation of both sides, or the military doctrine known as mutually assured destruction. Earlier this week, Biden was asked whether Americans should be worried about nuclear war. Biden responded, No. We are assessing President Putins directive. And at this time, we see no reason to change our own alert levels, White House press secretary Jen Psaki told reporters on Monday, adding that the United States will not attempt to escalate the rhetoric after Putins comments and order. We think provocative rhetoric like this regarding nuclear weapons is dangerous, adds to the risk of miscalculation, should be avoided, and we will not indulge in it, she added. On Thursday afternoon local time, Russia claimed its forces captured the southern Ukrainian city of Kherson, reported Reuters. However, Oleksiy Arestovych, an adviser to Ukrainian President Volodymyr Zelenskys office, said that the city has not fallen, our side continues to defend amid ongoing fighting, highlighting the opposing claims of military victories on both sides of the conflict. Ukraines State Emergency Service told The Associated Press on Wednesday that at least 2,000 civilians have been killed so far, although the number cannot be independently verified. And Kharkiv, Ukraines second-largest city, with a population of about 1.5 million, came under heavy fire again Wednesday. At the same time, satellite photos from Maxar show a huge convoy of Russian tanks and other vehicles spanning miles outside Kyiv. The International Atomic Energy Agency, the United Nations nuclear watchdog, said Russia had told the agency that its military had taken control around Ukraines largest nuclear power plant, but operations there were continuing normally. The Associated Press contributed to this report. Russian Oil Trade in Disarray Over Sanctions as Prices Blast Through $100/Bbl LONDONRussian oil trade was in disarray on Tuesday as producers postponed sales, importers rejected Russian ships and buyers worldwide searched elsewhere for needed crude after a raft of sanctions imposed on Moscow over the war in Ukraine. Numerous nations imposed sweeping sanctions against Russian companies, banks, and individuals following Russias invasion of Ukraine last week and global majors announced plans to leave multi-million-dollar positions in Russia. U.S., European and other governments exempted energy trade from sanctions to prevent already tight markets rallying further, but that has failed. Global benchmark Brent crude settled at nearly $105 a barrel on Tuesday, its highest since August 2014, as refiners, traders, and oil majors steer clear of Russia, out of an abundance of caution that they may unwittingly run afoul of sanctions somewhere. Russia is the second-largest exporter of crude worldwide, trailing only Saudi Arabia, as it ships out 4 million to 5 million barrels per day (bpd) of crude, along with 2 million to 3 million bpd of refined products. With demand already surging past pre-pandemic levels and major producers struggling to keep up, market players are increasingly fearful that prices will keep rising. The knock-on effects of sanctions were felt all across the oil market on Tuesday. Russias key Urals oil grade was bid at a discount of more than $18 below physical Brent crude, the primary worldwide benchmark, a record in the post-Soviet era. Even at that price, traders have been unable to find willing buyers. Nobody wants to buy, ship or store Russian oil, a trader of Russian oil said. In response to the severity of the disruption, the International Energy Agency (IEA) said it would coordinate a release of 60 million barrels of oil reserves from big consumers, with half coming from the United States. The market responded by rallying even more, seeing the release the equivalent to less than a days worldwide oil consumption as underscoring the worldwide supply crunch. Traders in futures markets aggressively pushed the price of current Brent contracts to more than $15 higher than contracts that will deliver oil six months from now. That was also a record, and indicative of growing worries about tight supply. [nL8N2V47B1] Shunning Russian Barrels Even non-Russian oil has been snagged in the turmoil. Five traders who spoke with Reuters said buyers were avoiding oil delivered by the CPC pipelinewhich delivers more than 1 million bpd from Kazakhstan, or over 1 percent of world supplybecause it can mix with Russian grades and terminates at a Russian port on the Black Sea, traders said. Its an important source of supply over a million barrels a day into a world which right now really needs that oil supply, Chevron Chief Executive Mike Wirth said in a Tuesday call with reporters. Chevron Corp has a 15 percent stake in CPC and a 50 percent stake in Tengizchevroil (TCO), which is developing crude oil fields in western Kazakhstan. Rival energy firms BP, Equinor and Shell have abandoned multibillion-dollar positions in Russia, and BP has already cancelled all of its fuel oil loadings from the Russian Black Sea port of Taman, sources familiar with the matter said. Exxon Mobil Corp said it was pulling U.S. employees from Russia, even though it has not said it will give up operations there. Buyers around the world were trying to secure supplies from elsewhere. State-run Indian refiner Bharat Petroleum Corp, which buys roughly 2 million barrels of Russian Urals monthly, is seeking more oil from Middle Eastern producers for April. Canada said on Monday it would ban oil imports from Russia. U.S. traders have started shunning Russian barrels, while Asian buyers were awaiting clarity from banks on whether they can transact with Russian sellers. The Malaysian government said a Russian-flagged oil tanker targeted by U.S. sanctions will not be allowed to call at Kuala Linggi port. European Union countries are considering a ban on Russian ships entering ports in the bloc. Britain said on Monday it would deny entry to British ports to all ships that are Russian owned, operated, controlled, chartered, registered or flagged. Russian Solutions Russia, meanwhile, is expected to boost supplies to China. Oil pipeline monopoly Transneft, which handles more than 80 percent of total oil produced in Russia, plans to increase supplies to China via the ESPO pipeline this month to 2.48 million tonnes from 2.22 million tonnes in February, according to TASS news agency. Some Russian oil companies have stopped banking with sanctioned lenders, including VTB and Sberbank , and switched to those that do not face restrictions, including Rosbank, Unicredit, and Raiffeisen, five people familiar with the matter told Reuters. By Ron Bousso, Julia Payne and Dmitry Zhdannikov Sarah Palin Moves for New Trial, Disqualification of Judge Who Preempted Jury Former Alaska Gov. Sarah Palin has moved for a new trial and is asking for the disqualification of a federal judge who preempted the jury in her defamation case against The New York Times. In a court filing, Palin through her lawyers wants U.S. District Judge Jed Rakoff, a Clinton nominee, disqualified and any rulings and orders he issued since Aug. 28, 2020, vacated. While the jury was deliberating, Rakoff on Feb. 14 ruled that Palin had failed to prove that NY Times employees acted with malicethe standard under Supreme Court precedentwhen they inserted language into a 2017 editorial that incorrectly linked the onetime vice presidential candidate to a 2011 mass shooting in Tucson, Arizona, where six people died and then-Rep. Gabby Giffords (D-Ariz.) was seriously wounded. The paper later removed the claim of incitement and said no connection to the shooting was ever established but didnt apologize to Palin. James Bennet, the editor who introduced the alleged link, admitted the claim didnt belong in the piece but said removing it didnt invalidate the argument presented in it. While the jury later decided in favor of the NY Times, several jurors acknowledged afterward that they were aware of Rakoffs ruling because they received news alerts on their phones. Palins lawyers are now asking for approval to interview jurors concerning their receipt of the push notifications, in addition to requesting Rakoffs disqualification and a new trial. The filing isnt yet supported by a memorandum of law. Palins lawyers have until March 15 to file one; the NY Times will then file a response. Palin told The Epoch Times in February that the judges decision was very strange, describing the move as taking the verdict from the jury. Rakoff previously tossed the case, but was overruled by an appeals court, leading to the trial. The judge, in an opinion published after Palins new filing, defended his latest decision. After reviewing all evidence adduced at trial in the light most favorable to Palin and drawing all reasonable inferences in her favor, the Court concluded that no reasonable jury could find by clear and convincing evidence that Bennet or The New York Times Co. knew at the time of publication that the allegedly libelous statements were false or that Bennet thought that the challenged statements were probably false but recklessly proceeded to publish them anyway, he said. The judge said he waited until closing arguments finished before ruling in favor of the newspapers motion to dismiss the case, and could have simply entered a judgment and dismissed the jury. But he allowed jurors to reveal their own verdict because an appeals court weighing whether to overturn his decision, he said, would benefit from seeing it. The verdict further validated the Courts legal conclusion, the judge said. The fact that at least some jurors became aware of his ruling before they finalized their verdict doesnt nullify the verdict; even if it influenced jurors, as the operative final judgment would still have been the same: dismissal of Palins claim as a matter of law, he concluded. Dave Paone contributed to this report. Russian and Ukrainian flags are seen on a table before the talks between officials of the two countries in the Gomel region, Belarus on Feb. 28, 2022. (Sergei Kholodilin/BelTA via Reuters) Second Round of RussiaUkraine Talks Pushed to March 3: Russian Official A second round of RussiaUkraine talks were pushed to March 3, a Russian negotiator said Wednesday. We are waiting for them tomorrow, Vladimir Medinsky, the head of the Russian negotiation, told Belarus state TV in Belovezha. Alexey Arestovich, adviser to the Ukrainian Presidential Office, had told Hromadske TV that the meeting was going to take place on March 2. The first round of talks took place in the Gomel region of Belarus, which shares borders with both Ukraine and Russia. Ukraine is attempting to secure a deal that would include a ceasefire about a week after Russia invaded the neighboring country. Dmytro Kuleba, Ukraines foreign minister, told reporters in Kyiv that Russias demands remain unchanged from when Russian President Vladimir Putin essentially declared the war. In an address just before the invasion, Putin announced a special military operation in Ukraine. The Russian president said he wanted to demilitarize and denazify Ukraine, as well as bring to trial those who perpetrated numerous bloody crimes against civilians, including against citizens of the Russian Federation. Ukraine has described the invasion as unprovoked and many countries around the world have taken Ukraines side, sending it military assistance and imposing penalties against Russia and Russian officials. Kuleba said Ukraine is ready for talks, for diplomacy. But we are not ready to accept any Russian ultimatums at all. When new talks will take place is unknown at the moment, he added. Dmitry Peskov, a spokesman for the Kremlin, said in Moscow that Russias delegation will be in place to await Ukrainian negotiators. Our delegation will be ready today to continue the discussion. I wont announce the place, you will find out it sooner or later, but I dont want to do it ahead of time, Peskov added. The initial talks ended without immediate results, though both sides indicated some common ground was reached on certain points. Russia shifted tactics on Tuesday, bombarding sites in Kyiv and Kharkiv, leaving dozens dead and many others wounded. Igor Konashenkov, a Russian defense official, said Russia captured the port city of Kherson in southern Ukraine, hours after a senior U.S. defense official told reporters on a call that Russia was in control of Berdyansk, another port city, and Melitopol, just off the southern coast. Senate Passes Measure That Would Block Enforcement of Bidens Health Care Worker Vaccine Mandate The U.S. Senate on March 2 approved a resolution that would block enforcement of the COVID-19 vaccine mandate for health care workers across the country. The chamber voted 4945 to approve the resolution, which was co-sponsored by many Republicans. No Democrats voted for the measure; all GOP members who voted did. Under the direction of President Joe Biden, federal health officials in 2021 imposed a vaccine mandate for health care workers employed at any facility that receives funding from Medicare or Medicaid. The mandate survived a legal challenge, with the Supreme Court ruling in January that it was within the powers granted by Congress. Critics say the justification for the mandatekeeping workers from getting COVID-19has been undermined by the waning effectiveness of the vaccines, particularly after the emergence of the Omicron virus variant. Make no mistake, this federal vaccine mandate is not about public health or scienceits about Joe Biden fulfilling his desire to control every aspect of our lives, and its a slap in the face to the hard-working men and women who never took a day off on the frontline fight against COVID-19, Sen. Roger Marshall (R-Kan.), a doctor, said in a statement after the vote. Marshall, one of the lead sponsors, said the passage of the resolution was a huge victory for all the health care workers who ran to the sound of the COVID battle. On the Senate floor before the vote, Sen. Mike Lee (R-Utah), who also voted for the measure, said the fight against vaccine mandates will not stop until freedom is restored. We will not stop until American moms and dads can provide for their families without kowtowing to President Bidens vaccine mandates, and without submitting to presidential medical orthodoxy in this or any future administration, he said. Sen. John Cornyn (R-Texas), another yes vote, said in a statement that nothing in the U.S. Constitution empowers the President to order particularly private employers to do anything. I encourage everybody to get vaccinated, I have been and will continue to encourage my constituents and friends and family to do so, he said. But thats their choice, not mine, and not President Bidens. Opponents of the measure argued that the mandate helps protect those cared for by nurses and other workers, including the elderlyone of the groups most vulnerable to COVID-19, the disease caused by the CCP (Chinese Communist Party) virus. My colleagues say every person is unique and there needs to be flexibility when it comes to vaccines. Colleagues, Im just fine with that. The fact is, the administration is allowing for medical and religious exemptions. Flexibility is written into the rule because thats just plain, old common sense, Sen. Ron Wyden (D-Ore.), who voted against the resolution, said on the floor, adding that vaccine requirements arent anything new for health care workers. The measure now heads to the House of Representatives. The lower chamber is controlled by Democrats, who as a whole have been supportive of harsh measures like mandates during the COVID-19 pandemic. A spokeswoman for House Speaker Nancy Pelosi (D-Calif.) did not respond to a request for comment. Sesame seeds are one of the most powerful healing foods on the planet. For thousands of years they have been used by traditional peoples for food and medicine. Chinese medicine suggests this ancient food may help relieve the epidemic of liver damage from modern drugs. Hepatotoxicity is liver damage caused by chemicals. Its a significant problem related to pharmaceutical use since the livers job is to clear chemicals from the body. That makes the liver particularly susceptible to injury from drug use. Hundreds of drugs contribute to liver toxicity even when used in correct doses. Its the number one reason drugs are withdrawn from the market. An editorial in the Journal of the Chinese Medical Association notes that in todays world, a hepatoprotectant is urgently needed. It also suggests the tiny sesame seed and its oil may well be that protector. Sesame oil is rich in an anti-inflammatory lignan known as sesamin. Lignans are a type of polyphenol found in many seeds, fruits, and vegetables. Sesamin is well known for its health benefits which include: Lowering cholesterol Lowering blood pressure Anticancer potential Anti-aging effects Regulating the immune system Lowering blood sugar Antithrombotic effects Antioxidant power Sesamin also protects against liver damage from alcohol and drug use. Several animal studies from Taiwan and Japan show that sesame oil reduces oxidative stress in the liver. Other studies show sesame oil can combat the harmful effects of acetaminophen on the liver. Each year acetaminophen causes more than 450 deaths from liver failure. Sesamin helps combat that damage by maintaining intracellular levels of glutathione, a potent antioxidant. Acetaminophen is known to reduce the livers store of glutathione. Sesamin also reduces the levels of free radicals and inhibits oxidation of fats. Not only does sesamin fight liver damage from pain relief products containing acetaminophen, like Tylenol, it actually provides better pain relief. Earlier GreenMedInfo reported that eating 40 grams of sesame seeds (about two tablespoons of tahini) was superior to Tylenol in reducing pain in those suffering from knee arthritis. A blind, placebo-controlled, parallel group study of 48 healthy Japanese subjects shows that oral doses of sesamin are safe and well tolerated. Sesame seeds and their oil have been used in the kitchen for thousands of years especially in Asia. The seeds come from a tropical plant called Sesamum indicum which may have originated in Africa. Today it is cultivated mostly in India, China and Mexico. In the Caribbean and southern U.S., sesame seeds are often known by their African name, benne. Sesame seeds can be black, white, yellow or red. They grow in pods which burst open when ripe. This is said to be the basis of the magic phrase open sesame in the Arabian Nights. Sesame seeds pack a wide array of other health benefits. They are a good source of copper, calcium, magnesium, manganese, phosphorous, vitamin B1 (thiamine) and zinc. They can be eaten whole, ground into tahini paste or processed into oil. Sesame oil contains polyunsaturated fats and is a source of omega-3 fatty acids. Sesame oil has a bold flavor and goes well with garlic and ginger in recipes and stir-frys. Because of its high antioxidant content, most sesame oil can be used for cooking. If you are going to cook with sesame oil, look for unrefined sesame oil which is not chemically processed. Dont use toasted sesame oil for cooking. The seeds are toasted before pressing giving it a deep gold color and rich, nutty flavor. It has a lower smoke point than unrefined sesame oil and can break down under heat. Reserve it as a finishing oil to add intense flavor in dressings and marinades. Republished from GreenMedInfo.com References [i] Namiki M. Nutraceutical functions of sesame: a review. Crit Rev Food Sci Nutr 2007;47:651e73. [ii] Chandrasekaran VR,Wan CH, Liu LL, Hsu DZ, Liu MY. Effect of sesame oil against acetaminophen-induced acute oxidative hepatic damage in rats. Shock 2008;30:217e21. [iii] Chandrasekaran VR, Chien SP, Hsu DZ, Chang YC, Liu MY. Effects of sesame oil against after the onset of acetaminophen-induced acute hepatic injury in rats. J Parenter Enteral Nutr 2010;34:567e73 [iv] Tomimori N, Tanaka Y, Kitagawa Y, Fujii W, Sakakibara Y, Shibata H. Pharmacokinetics and safety of the sesame lignans, sesamin and episesamin, in healthy subjects. Biopharm Drug Dispos 2013;34:462e73. South Korean President Moon Jae-in speaks during an on-line New Year press conference with local and foreign journalists at the Presidential Blue House in Seoul, South Korea, on Jan. 18, 2021. (Jeon Heon-kyun/Pool Photo via AP) South Korea Sanctions Russian Banks, Urges Local Institutions to Halt Trading in Russian State Bonds South Koreas government announced Tuesday that it will cut financial transactions with seven Russian banks as part of its economic sanctions against the Russian government, in response to Russias attack on Ukraine. The Finance Ministry stated that it will halt financial transactions with seven major Russian banks and their subsidiaries that the United States has sanctioned, local media Yonhap News Agency reported. These banks include Russian state development corporation VEB, state-owned financial institution Sberbank, PSB, VTB Bank, Bank Otkritie, Novikombank, and Sovcombank. The government also urged local public and financial institutions to stop trading in Russian state bonds issued from March 2. The new sanctions came just a day after the government announced a restriction on strategic item shipments to Russia and joined the international community in banning Russian banks from the SWIFT global interbank network. The strategic items include microelectronics, telecommunications items, sensors, navigation equipment, avionics, marine equipment, and aircraft components. The Korean government has strongly condemned Russias armed invasion against Ukraine. As a responsible member of the international community, the Korean government has decided to actively join the international communitys efforts, including economic sanctions, for a peaceful resolution of the situation, it stated. South Koreas Foreign Ministry noted that it will promote the additional release of strategic oil reserves to stabilize the international energy market, and will further review other measures, including diverting liquefied natural gas to Europe. The ministry added that South Korea will increase humanitarian assistance to Ukraine in coordination with the international community. Jeong Min-hyeon, an economist at the Korea Institute for International Economic Policy, said that blocking SWIFT will adversely affect trade financing, despite the fact that South Koreas overall imports of natural gas and oil from Russia stood at a rate of roughly 5 to 10 percent. The difficulties South Korean buyers of Russian commodities and other exporters go through with payment difficulties could lead to supply disruption and price increases, Jeong added. Thousands of banks as well as financial institutions around the world use the SWIFT system to settle cross-border payments. SWIFT, the Society for Worldwide Interbank Financial Telecommunication, is used by more than 11,000 financial institutions in over 200 countries and is regarded as crucial for financing international trade. Among the countries that have announced SWIFT sanctions on certain Russian banks are the United States, the European Union, Canada, France, Italy, the United Kingdom, Taiwan, and Japan. Mimi Nguyen Ly and Reuters contributed to this report. Supreme Court Declines to Hear Georgia Death-Penalty Appeal By Bill Rankin From The Atlanta Journal-Constitution The U.S. Supreme Court on Monday declined to consider Georgias standard that lawyers contend makes it all but impossible for intellectually disabled capital defendants to prove they are intellectually disabled. Georgia is the nations only state with the death penalty that requires defendants to clear the highest legal thresholdbeyond a reasonable doubtto prove their intellectual disability claims. The high courts decision lets stand the death sentence imposed in 2012 by a Newton County jury against Rodney Young for killing his ex-fiancees 28-year-old son. Youngs lawyers had tried unsuccessfully to convince jurors Young was intellectually disabled and thus ineligible for capital punishment. Young was convicted of the murder of Gary Jones, a former corrections officer, in March 2008. Jones was found in his home, bound to a chair. He had multiple skull fractures, and a bloody butcher knife and hammer was found next to his body. In their appeal, Youngs lawyers said their client was consistently identified as intellectually disabled at school. Young was held back in the fourth grade, took special education classes in high school and scored 440 out of 1600 on his SAT. In 1988, Georgia became the first state in the country to ban the execution of the intellectually disabled. Yet since then only one of the 379 capital defendants tried before a jury has been found guilty but intellectually disabled, according to academic research. In 2002, the U.S. Supreme Court found it unconstitutional to execute such defendants, saying doing so would violate the Eighth Amendments prohibition against cruel and unusual punishment. In that decision, the justices left it up to individual states to set their own burdens of proof for such claims. In an 81 decision issued last June, the Georgia Supreme Court declined to overturn the states beyond-a-reasonable doubt threshold. In a concurrence, Chief Justice David Nahmias wrote that of the many claims raised in Youngs appeal, he had the least confidence the majority opinions decision to uphold the onerous burden of proof for intellectual disability claims. Joined by Justices Michael Boggs and Nels Peterson, Nahmias noted that the U.S. Supreme Court had arrived at disparate outcomes in similar Eighth Amendment cases depending on the composition of justices. Nahmias wrote if Young appealed to the U.S. Supreme Court and it overturned Georgias law, he would obediently accept and forthrightly apply such a decision. But Nahmias correctly predicted that, if asked to decide Georgias burden of proof violates the Eighth Amendment, the U.S. Supreme Court as currently comprised would decline to do so. 2022 The Atlanta Journal-Constitution. Visit at ajc.com. Distributed by Tribune Content Agency, LLC. A Russian Su-24 takes off on a combat mission at Hemeimeem airbase in Syria on Oct. 22, 2015. (Vladimir Isachenkov/AP Photo) Sweden Scrambles Fighter Jets After Russia Allegedly Violated Airspace Swedish officials on Wednesday accused four Russian fighter jets of violating its airspace over the Baltic Sea. The jets, identified as two SU-27 and two SU-24 fighters, flew over Swedish airspace near Gotland Island, according to the Swedish Armed Forces. The incident occurred earlier on Wednesday. With the current situation as backdrop, we take this incident very seriously. Russias conduct is unprofessional and irresponsible, Swedish Air Force chief Carl-Johan Edstrom said in a statement. Swedens military scrambled its jets, which took photos of the Russian planes, according to the statement. This demonstrates that our readiness is good, Edstrom said. We were on-site to secure the territorial integrity and Swedens borders. We have complete control of the situation. Russia is believed to be using both the SU-24 and SU-27 planes in a bid to achieve air superiority over Ukraine. Other details about the incident were not made available. Russia has not publicly commented on the alleged airspace violation over Swedish territory. The Russian violation of Swedish airspace is of course completely unacceptable, Defence Minister Peter Hultqvist told the TT news outlet. It will lead to a firm diplomatic response from Sweden. Swedish sovereignty and territory must always be respected. Several days before, Swedish officials confirmed they would send military aid, including 5,000 anti-tank weapons to Ukraine. Its the first time that Sweden has sent weapons to a country at war since 1939when Sweden sent weapons to Finland after the Soviet Union invaded during the Winter War, analysts noted. Finland also said it would send military rifles and ammunition to Ukraines military, according to reports. Both Sweden and Finland, which are members of the European Union, do not belong to NATO, although they are close NATO partners. Since Russia began its invasion of Ukraine in late February, several Swedish politicians publicly mused joining the security organization, which would likely further fray ties with Moscow. Anything is possible at the moment and the signal from NATO countries is that a membership application can be processed in a very short time-span, Zebulon Carlander, defense analyst with the Society and Defense organization in Sweden, told the AFP news agency this week. Rihards Kols, who is in charge of the foreign affairs committee of Latvias Parliament, told the Financial Times: Their membership would only improve regional security and the ability to deter the aggressor. Whenever I met my Finnish and Swedish colleagues I always ask: When are you joining NATO? However, Russias Foreign Ministry last week said that Sweden and Finland could face serious military and political repercussions should they join NATO. Jorge Luis Borges received the Miguel de Cervantes Prize in 1980, the most important literary award in the Spanish language Its no secret that Jorge Luis Borges of Argentina is one of the most outstanding authors in literature. His unique stories, which explore eternity, pain, time, and metafiction, have made him an obligatory reference in this field. Despite his introverted character, the blindness from which he suffered in his last decades, and his undeniable inoffensiveness, Borges spent the last years of his life being canceled for his staunch defense of individualism by an academic and literary world increasingly committed to collectivist causes. Unlike the authors of the Latin American boom, made up of the Colombian Gabriel Garcia Marquez, Argentine Julio Cortazar, Mexican Carlos Fuenteswho would later withdraw his support from Castroismand Peruvian Mario Vargas Llosawho did the same as Fuentes and became a great classical liberalBorges never endorsed the Cuban revolution or expressed himself in favor of any movement that tried to enhance the figure of the collective over the individual. This was very clear to him from an early age. The most urgent of the problems of our time (already denounced with prophetic lucidity by the almost forgotten Spencer) is the gradual interference of the state in the acts of the individual; in the fight against this evil, whose names are communism and Nazism, Argentine individualism, perhaps useless or harmful until now, will find justification and duties, Borges wrote in Our poor individualism in Collected Works II. Borges received the Miguel de Cervantes Awardthe most important literary award in the Spanish languagefor his global work in 1980. However, despite being a candidate for the Nobel Prize in Literature for more than 20 years, he never received the recognition that was given during that time to the Chilean communist Pablo Neruda in 1971 or to Fidel Castros personal friend Marquez in 1982. Maria Kodama, the wife of the late Borges, said that on the occasion of an honorary doctorate being granted to him by the University of Chile in 1976, the writer scheduled a visit to the country, which was then ruled by the dictator Augusto Pinochet. When the Nobel authorities found out about the trip Borges was planning to make, they called him from Stockholm to try to dissuade him, to which the writer replied: Look, sir; I thank you for your kindness, but after what you have just told me my duty is to go to Chile. There are two things a man cannot allow: bribes or letting himself be bribed. Thank you very much, good day. Borges Fled From Politics Borgesthe author of such works as Ficciones (Fictions), El Aleph (The Aleph and Other Stories), and El Libro de Arena (The Book of Sand)always tried to dissociate himself from any kind of political struggle. However, he couldnt avoid being sincere every time he was asked in interviews about his ideological positions or his very determined anti-Peronism. I have never belonged to any party, nor am I the representative of any government I believe in the Individual, I disbelieve in the state. Perhaps I am nothing more than a peaceful and silent anarchist who dreams of the disappearance of governments. The idea of a maximum of the individual and a minimum of the state is what I would like today, said Borges, who declared himself to be a follower of Spencerian liberal anarchism, something very similar to what we know today as libertarianism. The Argentine writer wasnt forgiven for his anti-communism by leftist intellectuals and the press, and it earned himas it happens today with those who defend individual libertiesinsults and barbarities, for which he was forced to reflect on the matter. There are communists who maintain that to be anti-communist is to be fascist. This is as incomprehensible as saying that not to be Catholic is to be Mormon, Borges said. Curiously, his comment has held true over time, because decades later, communists (and collectivists in general) continue to cry fascist when anyone opposes their coercive policies that infringe on individual freedoms. Unlike most intellectuals of the time, Borges was one of the few who understood that Nazism and communism, far from being two opposing ideologies, were monsters of the same left-wing collectivist strand, which sought to make individuals submit to the absolute power of the state. You start with the idea that the state should run everything; that its better to have a corporation running things, and not have everything left to chaos, or to individual circumstances; and you get to Nazism or communism, of course. Every idea begins as a beautiful possibility, and then, well, when it gets old it is used for tyranny, for oppression, he wrote. Clearly, Borges wasnt the typical intellectual who smiled before governments to receive awards, money, and applause. He was, from the beginning, faithful to his ideas and criticizedas few didthe ineffectiveness of states to manage peoples lives. He always tried to create awareness in humanity about the importance of protecting the rights of the largest minority on the face of the earth: the individual. To me, the state is the common enemy now, he said. I would wantI have said this many timesa minimum of the State and a maximum of the individual. This article was originally published on FEE.org Recruits of the Azov far-right Ukrainian volunteer battalion take their oaths during a ceremony in Kiev, on Aug. 14, 2015. (SERGEI SUPINSKY/AFP via Getty Images) The Risks of Arming Ukraines Azov Battalion News Analysis In the Wests zeal to support Ukraine in its fight against the Russian invaders, some observers worry that Ukrainian neo-Nazi paramilitaries will benefit from U.S. supporta situation that would heighten security risks at home. On her Feb. 28 appearance on the Rachel Maddow Show, Hillary Clinton joined the growing number of those calling for the U.S. government to support a Ukrainian insurgency. It wouldnt the first time the U.S. government backed an armed insurgency to counter Russia, as Clinton noted. The Russians invaded Afghanistan back in 1980. [Afghanistan] had a lot of countries supplying arms and advice, and even some advisers, to those who were recruited to fight Russia. It didnt end well for the Russians, she said. There were other unintended consequences, as we know. But the fact is that a very motivated, and then funded and armed, insurgency drove the Russians out of Afghanistan. Clinton didnt describe those unintended consequences of supporting the mujahideen: An empowered Taliban replaced the Russian-backed Afghan government, turning the country into a terrorist hotbed that led to 9/11 and an ensuing 20-year war for America. Nevertheless, all indications are that the United States will be pursuing an insurgency strategy against Russia. The Army Times reported Feb. 28 that the United States is sending Stinger anti-aircraft missiles to Ukraine, and it was revealed in January that the CIA has been training Ukrainian paramilitaries since 2015 to prepare for the exact scenario of a Russian invasion. Former CIA officer Douglas London suggested last week that a CIA-backed insurgency effort could already be underway. U.S. and Ukrainian officials have long planned for this day. In all likelihood, a covert program to help organize the resistance to Russia already has communications infrastructure, intelligence collection capabilities, and operational plans in place, London, who worked in the CIAs clandestine service, wrote in Foreign Affairs. Supporting an insurgency is in the CIAs DNA The CIAs recent experience in supporting and fighting insurgencies in Afghanistan, Iraq, and Syria prepares it well for opposing Russias modern, conventional forces. Some analysts predict that the coming insurgency could last a decade, or longer. Citing an unnamed U.S. official, CBS reported March 1 that U.S. lawmakers were briefed on the matter that day. The U.K. foreign secretary estimated it would be a 10-year war. Lawmakers at the Capitol were told [Feb. 28] it is likely to last 10, 15 or 20 yearsand that ultimately, Russia will lose, CBS said. If the analysts projections hold true, one of the main insurgent groups in Ukraine would be the Azov Battalion, which has been battling Russian forces since helping overthrow Ukraines pro-Russian government in 2014. The Azov Battalions allegiance to the neo-Nazi ideology is well-documented, with its former commander once calling for Ukraine to lead the White Races of the world in a final crusade for their survival. More recently, Azov fighters were seen on a viral tweet from Ukraines national guard greasing their bullets with lard against the Kadyrov orcsto be used against the Muslim Chechens fighting for Russia. Arming Azov was once a cause for concern among U.S. lawmakers. In 2018, Congress inserted a provision in its defense spending bill that banned U.S. arms from going to Azov, which had already received U.S. training and weapons the year prior. But with Ukraine in desperate need of its best fighters to repel a Russian invasion, empowering the countrys far-right elements hasnt been an expressed concern for U.S. policymakers, said Bellarmine University professor Abigail Hall, a researcher on extremism and militarism. Indeed, Facebook has reportedly loosened its policies to allow for posts praising the neo-Nazi Azov fighters, while numerous other outlets have uncritically reported Azov propaganda, according to the media watchdog Fairness and Accuracy in Reporting (FAIR). When policymakers are talking about this, theyre brushing off these concernssaying, Yeah, well theres an emergency right now. And thats understandable in some ways, but there are risks, Hall told The Epoch Times. The Pentagon did not respond to queries about what, if anything, its doing to ensure that Azov doesnt receive U.S. weaponry. History suggests that governments have little control over their arms once delivered to a war zone, according to Hall, co-author of Tyranny Comes Home: The Domestic Fate of U.S. Militarism. In Syria, for example, the Obama administrations failed attempt to oust the countrys president, Bashar al-Assad, resulted in U.S. arms going to al-Qaeda affiliate Jabhat al-Nusra. This prompted Clinton, then-Secretary of State, to ponder during a 2012 interview with a CBS News reporter: We know al-QaedaZawahiriis supporting the opposition in Syria. Are we supporting al-Qaeda in Syria? The ongoing conflict in Yemen has also resulted in U.S. arms falling into the hands of al-Qaeda in the Arabian Peninsula (AQAP). Its safe to say that the U.S. doesnt have a particularly good track record of tracing where weapons go, once theyre dispersed, Hall said. As in the Middle Eastern conflicts, Ukraine has attracted fighters from the West, said Hall. But instead of jihadists, a Ukrainian insurgency is likely to bring an influx of neo-Nazis and other right-wing extremist groups that have ties to Azov. U.S. extremist groups have already allegedly traveled to Ukraine to train with Azov. The FBI said this during the prosecution of right-wing Rise Above Movement (RAM) members for allegedly assaulting protesters in 2017. According to an FBI agent who investigated that case, RAM members met with an Azov official in Europe in August 2018. The Azov Battalion is believed to have participated in training and radicalizing United States-based white supremacy organizations, the FBI agent said. According to the Site Intelligence Group Enterprise, U.S. neo-Nazi groups have been amplifying Azovs recent calls for foreign volunteers. An influx of human and physical capital would not only strengthen Azov in Ukraine; it could also heighten the domestic terrorism risk at home, said Hall. To the extent that this would provide an opportunity for individuals to gain combat experience and the potential to radicalize, then you could very well see those people coming back and integrating those types of tactics and tools into their existing or new domestic extremist groups here, Hall said. The notion that American participation in foreign conflicts could result in domestic extremism is far from theoretical. During the 1980s Contra War in Nicaragua, for example, Vietnam war veteran Thomas Posey started the Civilian Material Assistance (CMA) to assist the Contra rebels in their fight against the Russian-back government there. President Ronald Reagan reportedly called Posey a national treasure at one point. But after the Iran-Contra scandal, Posey was indicted for weapons smuggling. Though he beat the charges, Posey reportedly felt betrayed by the series of events. According to the work from extremism researcher JM Berger, Posey became radicalized, turning the CMA into a survivalist-type group opposed to the U.S. government and aimed at networking with white supremacist organizations across the country. Posey committed numerous crimes and hatched several terrorist plots in the early 1990s before being arrested for allegedly plotting to steal a cache of automatic weapons from the armory of the Browns Ferry Nuclear Plant in Alabama. Along the way, CMA also developed connections with Oklahoma City bomber Timothy McVeigh, with members training at the same San Saba, Texas, property as McVeigh, according to former CMA member and FBI informant John Matthews. With the Russian threat looming, Hall said its somewhat understandable that policymakers dont consider the complex, chain of events overseas that can lead to blowback at homesuch as in the cases of the 1980s Afghan insurgency and Contra War. But its in those times of emergency that you really need the appropriate checks and balances in place to understand exactly what your policies are doing, she said. The State Department did not respond to questions about its policies on Americans traveling to Ukraine to participate in the conflict against Russia. Chicago police officers patrol downtown as the city celebrates the Chicago Sky's WNBA title on Oct. 19, 2021, in Chicago, Illinois. (Scott Olson/Getty Images) Threefold Jump in Chicago Cops Facing Sack Over Civilian Complaints The number of Chicago police officers recommended to be fired over civilian complaints jumped threefold in 2021, according to a new report by the Civilian Office of Police Accountability (COPA). COPAthe main agency that investigates civilian complaints against Chicago police officerssuggested firing 59 officers in 2021, compared to 19 in 2020. Between 2017 and 2019, a total of 12 officers were looking at being fired. Chicago police chief David Brown acted on most termination suggestions from COPA since he took the helm in April 2020. In cases that he disagreed, his dissents were often overruled by Chicago Police Board, according to an Epoch Times review of records. In 2021, Brown opposed at least six sacking cases, five of which were later upheld by the board. The police board has the final say on disciplinary actions where the civilian office and police chief disagree, according to city ordinances. Once a sacking recommendation is final, the board conducts a quasi-judicial hearing, after which nine board members cast votes. An officer will be formally terminated if the majority of the members vote that way. Historically, about half of the officers who went through the hearing were fired. Just under a third (30 percent) would quit prior to the hearing, according to records. The number of Chicago police officers put forward for suspension also jumped significantly in 2021. COPA recommended a 1-to-29-day suspension for 132 officers in 2021, a 50 percent increase from the year before. As for over-30-day suspension suggestions, the number jumped threefold to 48 in 2021. Though the office ramped up disciplinary recommendations in 2021, it did not conclude more investigations that year. Instead, the number of investigations concluded dropped 29 percent compared to 2020, according to the report. COPA received 1,021 civilian complaints against officers under its jurisdiction in 2021. Nearly half alleged violations of Fourth Amendment rights, such as improper search or seizure. One in four alleged excessive use of force. The highest numbers of complaints came from the most violent neighborhoods on the South and West Side of Chicago, according to the report. Garfield Park, the West Side neighborhood that saw most homicides in 2021, also complained most about police officers that year. Each year, COPA completes around 200 to 300 cases, about half of which turned out to be either lacking evidence or unfounded, resulting in no disciplinary recommendations, according to the report. At the end of 2021, the office had 1,704 pending cases under investigation. The Toyota logo is seen at the Auto Shanghai show in Shanghai, on April 19, 2021. (Aly Song/Reuters) Toyota to Restart Japan Production After Halt Caused by Cyberattack on Supplier TOKYOToyota Motor Corp. will restart domestic production from Wednesday after a cyberattack on a supplier ground the automaking giants factories to a one-day halt, sparking concerns about vulnerability in Japan Inc.s supply chain. No information was available about who was behind the attack, or the motive. It came just after Japan joined Western allies in clamping down on Russia in response to the invasion of Ukraine, although it was not known whether the attack was related. Cybersecurity has emerged as a key area of concern in Japan, where government critics say responses to hacking threats have been hampered by a fractured approach, with an attack on a hitherto obscure supplier enough to bring one of the worlds mightiest manufacturers to a domestic standstill. Toyotas production lines will be switched back on at its 14 factories across the country on Wednesday, it said in a statement. Tuesdays suspension hit output of around 13,000 vehicles. Kojima Industries Corp., which provides plastic parts and electronic components to the automaker, said it had discovered an error at one of its file servers on Saturday night. After rebooting the server, it confirmed it had been infected with a virus, and found a threatening message, it said in a separate statement. The message was written in English, a Kojima spokesperson told Reuters, but declined to give further details. A system failure hampered communication with Toyota over parts orders and led to a suspension of production at the automaker, Kojima said. Top Tier Government ministers said they were following the incident closely. While big companies have cybersecurity measures in place, the government is worried about small or mid-level subcontractors, the industry minister, Koichi Hagiuda, told reporters on Tuesday. Underscoring those fears, a lower-tier maker of water pumps and other automotive parts, GMB Corp., said its server was also a target of unauthorised access suspected to be ransomware at the weekend. It was not clear when all operations would fully return to normal, it said. Reports of the powerful malware Emotet being used have increased since the first week of February 2022, according to the Japan Computer Emergency Response Team/Coordination Center, which provides information on cybersecurity. Emotet is used to gain access to a victims computer before then downloading additional malicious software, such as those designed to steal banking passwords, or ransomware which can lock a computer until an extortion fee is paid. It was not clear whether Emotet was used on the Toyota supplier. Toyota declined to comment on whether it had detected early signs of a potential cyberattack or whether Emotet was responsible for paralysing its operation. Kojima only supplies to Toyota and is a top-tier supplier of some parts, and a second-tier supplier of others, the Kojima spokesperson said. Toyotas operations in Japan encompass a supply chain of 60,000 companies across four tiers. Toyota said it would be able to resume operation by tapping into a back-up network between it and the supplier. It would take a week or two to fully restore the system, it said. In November 2020, Japanese videogame maker Capcom, which makes games including Resident Evil, said a ransomware attack had likely compromised personal information of up to 350,000 gamers, and some of its own financial data had been stolen. Honda Motor Co suspended some of its auto and motorcycle production globally in June 2020 after a suspected cyberattack. Toyota shares finished flat on Tuesday, underperforming a 1.2 percent gain in the broader market. By Satoshi Sugiyama, Maki Shiraki and Tim Kelly An Entertaining & Informative Episode 24 min | TV Music Series | 2022 Just as with food, literature, and visual art, music can be a unifying force that transcends borders and ideologies. Music can also be something that people engage in debates about, not just from the perspectives of music critics, but also the very musicians themselves. This very careful balance between egos, as well as how great musicians interpret music, is covered in a recent Piano Talks production titled Special Episode: Hermitage Piano Trio, hosted by celebrated pianist Janara Khassenova. Just as a little background for those who arent aware of Hermitage Piano Trio, they were formed by three Russian-American musicians who had already achieved success in their individual careers when they banded together in 2011. They officially formed in New York and include pianist Ilya Kazantsev, cellist Sergey Antonov, and violinist Misha Keylin. L-R: Janara Khassenova, Illya Kazantsev, Sergey Antonovand Misha Keylin in Special Episode: Hermitage Piano Trio | Piano Talks (NTD Productions) As stated on their website: The Trio is a champion of immense repertoire ranging from the works of the great European tradition to more contemporary American pieces. Hallmarks of the Hermitage Piano Trio is their impeccable musicianship, sumptuous sound, and polished skill, which have led to demand for many repeat performances. Against the backdrop of the picturesque city of Newport, Rhode Island, along the coastline of the New England region, Khassenova recently sat down with the Hermitage Piano Trio to talk with them. One of the first questions (and a logical one) that Khassenova asks the Trio is how they were affected by the governmental COVID-19 lockdowns. As travel was restricted and social distancing enforced, at least for the common people of the world, the musicians mention that recent times have been challenging. After all, the Trio had just been nominated for several Grammy Awards in 2020 when things quickly went into lockdown mode only a month later. The Hermitage Piano Trio makes it to the Grammy Awards in Special Episode: Hermitage Piano Trio | Piano Talks (NTD Productions) They also emphasize that they faced these numerous issues together and mention that there is nothing like sitting shoulder to shoulder with other musicians while you all play your different instruments in order to form the beautiful aural tapestries known as music. In other wordslive music can never be duplicated by recordings. Working as a group of accomplished and passionate musicians can also be a challenge in and of itself. As mentioned previously, musicians interpretations of music can be vastly different from one another. But as Keylin adroitly points out, to be successful (at least in a group), musicians must learn to play as one. That doesnt necessarily mean sacrificing anythingits more about listening and understanding each other. You can either have three superstars who compete with one another or three who work together to help make their combined music come out. Special Episode: Hermitage Piano Trio | Piano Talks (NTD Productions) One of the things that make this episode so enjoyable is that the interview is mixed with the Trio playing pieces by such famous pianists and conductors as German composer Johannes Brahms, and Russian composer Sergei Rachmaninoff. The backgrounds of each member in the Trio are also touched on and they talk about their various challenges, triumphs, and philosophical outlooks. All of these elements combine to make for a fascinating watch that is not only educational and inspiring but also contains some useful lessons for living a life of exceptional quality. Special Episode: Hermitage Piano Trio | Piano Talks Starring: Janara Khassenova, Misha Keylin, Sergey Antonov, Ilya Kazantsev Running Time: 24 minutes Release Date: Jan. 24, 2022 Rated: 4.5 stars out of 5 Watch on Epoch Cinemavisit the link here. Follow EpochTV on social media: Facebook: https://www.facebook.com/EpochTVus Twitter: https://twitter.com/EpochTVus Ian Kane is a filmmaker and author based out of Los Angeles. To learn more, visit DreamFlightEnt.com or contact him at Twitter.com/ImIanKane. Views expressed in this article are the opinions of the author and do not necessarily reflect the views of The Epoch Times. Ukrainian Foreign Minister Dmytro Kuleba speaks at the General Assembly 58th plenary meeting in New York on Feb. 23, 2022. (Timothy A. Clary/AFP via Getty Images) Ukraine Asks China to Make Russia Stop Its Armed Aggression China suggested on March 1 that it was up to the task of playing a mediator role between Russia and Ukraine, despite the communist regime continuing to object to calling Moscows attack an invasion, according to Ukrainian officials. Ukraines Foreign Minister Dmytro Kuleba, in a phone call with his counterpart Wang Yi on Tuesday, asked China to use its level of relations between Beijing and Moscow to force Russia to stop its armed aggression against the Ukrainian people, the Ukraine embassy in Finland wrote on Twitter on March 1, citing the Ukrainian foreign ministry. According to the embassy, Kuleba said Wang had assured him of Chinas readiness to make every effort to end the war on Ukrainian soil through diplomacy, including as a permanent member of the [U.N. Security Council.] A Chinese readout of the phone call did not show Wang making such a promise about diplomatic efforts through the U.N. body. Instead, the Chinese statement, citing Kuleba, said that Ukraine was ready to step up communication with the Chinese side and was looking forward to Chinas mediation effort for the ceasefire. Instead of calling Moscows attack an invasion, the Chinese readout said it was a conflict between Ukraine and Russia. On Feb. 25, China abstained from voting on a U.N. Security Council Resolution demanding that Moscow stop its attack on Ukraine. Three days later, China took Russias side again by voting against a decision by the U.N. Human Rights Council to hold an urgent debate on Russias invasion of Ukraine. So far, China has also refused to condemn Russias aggression in Ukraine. Russia and China now boast a no limits partnership after Russian President Vladimir Putin met with Chinese leader Xi Jinping on Feb. 4. According to a lengthy statement released following their meeting, there would be no forbidden areas of cooperation between the two sides. The Ukrainian statement also said that Wang had reaffirmed Chinas unwavering support for Ukraines sovereignty and territorial integrity. There was another significant discrepancy between what China and Ukraine said about the phone call. According to the Ukrainian statement, Kuleba said he told Wang about Russias shelling of civilian infrastructure and killing of civilians in Ukraine. However, the Chinese readout did not say either, but quoted Wang saying that he was concerned about the damage done to civilians. The call between Kuleba and Wang is the first communication to have been reported since Putin launched what he called a special military operation in Ukraine on Feb. 24. On March 1, Liz Throssell, a spokesperson for the U.N. High Commissioner for Human Rights, said that at least 136 civilians have been killed, among them 13 children, while 400 civilians have been injured, since the start of Russias invasion. These are only the casualties we were able to cross-check, and the real toll is likely to be much higher, Throssell stated. We stress the urgent need for an immediate cessation of hostilities. Latvia has also called on China to get involved in stopping Russias invasion. Andzejs Vilumsons, Lativas undersecretary of state at the Ministry of Foreign Affairs, told the Chinese ambassador to Lativa, Liang Jiangquan, during a phone call that China should use its influence bilaterally and at the U.N. Security Council to stop the ongoing aggression against Ukraine, according to a March 1 statement. Vilumsons told Liang that it was time for the whole international community to be united in its support of Ukraine, given the increasing use of indiscriminate weapons by Russian forces against civilian infrastructure and residential areas in Ukraine. Ukrainian nationals arrive by train from Kyiv, Ukraine at the main train station in Przemysl, Poland on Feb. 28, 2022. (Omar Marques/Getty Images) Ukraine Raises $270 Million Through War Bonds, Budgetary Systems Function Normally Ukraine issued war bonds on Tuesday for fighting off a Russian invasion, and has raised over 8.1 billion UAH ($270 million), the countrys ministry of finance revealed. In the time of military aggression of the Russian Federation, the Ministry of Finance offers citizens, businesses and foreign investors to support the budget of Ukraine by investing in military government bonds, Ukraines Ministry of Finance said in a LinkedIn post. The proceeds from the bonds will be used to meet the needs of the Armed Forces of Ukraine and to ensure the uninterrupted provision of the states financial needs under the war. The nominal value of one bond is 1,000 UAH (Ukrainian hryvnia) with a tenure lasting one year. The $270 million were raised at a weighted average yield of 11 percent. The Ukrainian government also issued two-month bills with a 10 percent annual yield, which is the same rate of a Ukrainian dollar-denominated bond maturing in 2023 was in February, before the Russian conflict. We had an investor call yesterday, and we see a lot of requests of how funds can support us, Yuriy Butsa, Ukraines debt chief, said to Bloomberg. Were looking at ways to attract not only in local currency, but also in dollars, euros. Ukraine is also in talks with the World Bank and the International Monetary Fund (IMF) for emergency help. Butsa claimed that the country was well-capitalized from western donors. Ukraines central bank had transferred roughly 19 billion UAH ($630 million) to its state budget last week. Despite the difficult conditions the country is facing due to the Russian invasion, Ukraines budgetary system functions in full scale, the finance ministry said. Along with the National Bank of Ukraine and the Treasury, the ministry of finance pledged to ensure that all necessary payments are settled. Ukraines central bank was forced to suspend its forex market on Feb. 24 due to the countrys ongoing conflict. Investors are only able to buy UAH and sell foreign currency but not the other way round. Though a part of its financial infrastructure is inactive due to war, Kyiv is able to raise funds through bond sales. The secondary trading of war bonds is active. War bonds were auctioned through primary dealers like Budapest-based OTP Bank Nyrt, Austrias Raiffeisen Bank International AG, and Citigroup Inc. Several governments have issued war bonds in the past. During the Second World War, the United States issued war bonds and encouraged citizens to invest in them as a matter of patriotic duty. Washington raised $185.7 billion via these bonds, with over 85 million Americans investing in them. Bond purchases are also an indication of how much faith people have in the governments potential to last beyond the conflict. Ukrainian Brewery Trades Beer for Molotov Cocktails in Fight Against Russia Invasion A Ukrainian brewery has traded in craft beer for Molotov cocktails in the fight against Russias military invasion. The Pravda brewery in western Ukraines main city Lviv, took to Instagram on Monday to appeal for donations for the materials needed to make the cocktails, which are typically bottles filled with flammable liquid such as petrol or alcohol. Thank you friends from around the globe for your willingness to help. Many of you commented on how to improve the design of the cocktails. Thanks! Rememberwe are a small but professional brewery and do a lot of research! Not just theorymany of us went thru [sic] the bloody street protests of 2014, the brewery wrote on Instagram alongside a photo of the apparent Molotov cocktails. Every cent will be used to bring the end of the enemy or help those who suffer. It comes after residents in the Ukrainian capital of Kyiv were told to make Molotov cocktails last month following Russias invasion. Make Molotov cocktails, neutralize the occupier! the Defense Ministry wrote on Twitter. We ask citizens to inform about the movement of [Russian] equipment! Make Molotov cocktails, neutralize the occupier! Peaceful residentsbe careful! Do not leave the house! the Defense Ministry wrote on Twitter, according to a translation. Yuriy Zastavny, the owner of the brewery, told Fox News on Monday that he and his staff decided to use their own chemical skills, and supplies to make the cocktails in an effort to help in the fight against Russian military troops, which invaded the country in February. Once we understand what can come through beerbecause its no time for beer, we need to get other things sorted outwe decided to make Molotov cocktails because we can use bottles, we can use the people, and it was a grassroots idea, Zastavny said. The owner said that Ukraine has frequently turned to Molotov cocktails during other uprisings and protests in the last few decades so its people are well aware of how to make them, adding that all empty bottles can be put to use for a good purpose. We know how to make them stick; we know how to make them light very well, he said. And we can unite, together, our theory of brewing and chemistry with the practice of using that eight years ago. On Tuesday, President Joe Biden addressed the ongoing Russian invasion of Ukraine, and condemned Russian President Vladimir Putins attack against the country as premeditated and unprovoked. During his first State of the Union speech, Biden referred to Putin as a dictator while vowing to continue sending aid to the country in addition to the sovereign loan guarantee of up to $1 billion the United States has already sent to help the countrys economy. Biden also announced in the speech the United States would be joining several other western nations in barring Russian aircraftincluding commercial and private flightsfrom entering U.S. airspace, in addition to sanctions the administration has already imposed on Russias finances. Ukrainians Have Been Defying Foreign Invaders for a Thousand Years. Their Courage Is No Surprise History shows Ukrainians are made of stern stuff. Vladimir Putin may very well come to regret his vile military invasion. Commentary Chicken Kiev may be a popular dish but as the world has learned in recent days, the word chicken does not describe the people of Kiev (often spelled Kyiv by Ukrainians). Far from it. The courage of Ukrainians in the face of Moscows vile military invasion is the stuff of legend already. We will be admiring it for many years to come, regardless of the outcome of this tragic episode in European history. The past few days have seen a spate of videos showing Ukrainians and their president defying an onslaught of Russian aggression, writes Miles Pattenden, a historian at the Australian Catholic University, in The Conversation. Who could fail to be moved by the video of a Ukrainian woman confronting an armed and jackbooted [Russian] soldier, telling him to put sunflower seeds in his pockets so at least sunflowers will grow where he dies? The title of Pattendens article is very revealing: Saint Olga of Kyiv is Ukraines Patron Saint of Both Defiance and Vengeance. Pattenden proceeds to note, Ukrainians are used to adversity and they have a special medieval role model who personifies their bravery in the face of hardship. The Mongol horde destroyed her tomb in Kyiv in 1240 but a Ukrainian Orthodox cathedral dedicated to her was consecrated there as recently as 2010. Any people who venerate the likes of St. Olga of Kyiv (d. 969) are a people to be feared. If Vladimir Putin had done his homework, he wouldnt have been surprised by the ferocious resistance to his belligerence. A fierce and proud woman who protected her young son and avenged her husbands death, writes Pattenden, she was a crucial figure in the consolidation of the medieval kingdom of Kyivan Rus as a political entity and in its peoples conversion to Christianity. Eleven centuries ago, when foreigners killed her husband, Olga retaliated with an ingenuity and brutality that was as merciless, bloody and complete as it gets. She taught the perpetrators a lesson that her descendants may be teaching Vladimir Putin as you read this. I for one certainly hope so. Ukrainians are made of stern stuff. They endured invasion by Lenins Bolsheviks a century ago, followed by forcible incorporation into the Soviet Union. They survived the Holodomor of the early 1930s, Stalins famine that killed six million Ukrainians to collectivize their farms. A thousand years ago, Kyiv was almost wiped out by a Mongol invasion alluded to in Pattendens article. It was in 1240 when the grandson of Genghis Khan, Batu, laid siege to Kyiv for nine days before seizing the city. Of that awful time, Derek Davison writes, Mongol warriors plundered the city of its wealth and burned nearly every one of its buildings to the ground. Of a pre-seige population of about 50,000, its believed that only around 2,000 survived, though how many were killed during the siege and how many were executed afterwards is not clear. Ukrainians know from painful experience just how important the virtue of courage is. They understand probably better than the average American that survival depends on it. They are proving before our eyes that its a virtue they still possess in admirable abundance. I am grateful for the example they are giving the world, and I pray for their success. I am also grateful for the courage of Russians who are in the streets of Moscow and other cities demanding an end to the violence. Having visited Russia seven times since 1985, I know the country is full of people of conscience who are ashamed by what Putins government has done. Its a risky thing for a Russian citizen to challenge an autocrat who silences opponents, but more and more are doing it anyway. In late April, I will speak in Prague, Czech Republic, to hundreds of young people from all over Europe. The event, sponsored by European Students for Liberty, is called LibertyCon Europe. In advance of it, and at the request of ESFL, I wrote an essay that will be distributed in hard copy to the attendees. The subject is courage. In tribute to Ukraine, I share a small portion of it here: In Prague where this essay is to be distributed, a young man named Jan Palach laid down his life to protest the Soviet invasion of his country. It was January 1969. Palachs supreme sacrifice will be remembered for centuries as a statement for freedom, an act of defiant courage, an inspiration for Czechoslovakias Velvet Revolution just 20 years later If you can say someday that when liberty was challenged, you rose to defend it and did not run for cover, your children and grandchildren will thank you. They will remember you as heroes for a noble cause. The French philosopher Voltaire wrote, So long as the people do not care to exercise their freedom, those who wish to tyrannize will do so; for tyrants are active and ardent and will devote themselves to put shackles upon sleeping men. As lovers of liberty, we must not sleep while our values are under siege. We must be people of courage! Thats how we will win. This article was first published on FEE.org Views expressed in this article are the opinions of the author and do not necessarily reflect the views of The Epoch Times. People take part in a demonstration outside the Russian Consulate General in Edinburgh on Feb. 26, 2022. (Lesley Martin/PA) UN General Assembly Calls for Immediate Withdrawal of Russian Forces From Ukraine Condemns Decision to Invade as 'Deplorable' The United Nations General Assembly approved on March 2 a resolution denouncing Russias invasion of Ukraine while calling for an immediate and peaceful withdrawal of all troops. The vote was 141 to 5, with 35 of the bodys 193 members abstaining. It was the first time the assembly convened an emergency session since 1997. Assembly resolutions arent legally binding, but they do have clout in reflecting international opinion. A Russian veto sank a similar resolution of the more powerful U.N. Security Council on Feb. 25, but the assembly allows no vetoes. Under special emergency session rules, a resolution needs the approval of a two-thirds majority of those countries voting, and abstentions dont count. In the resolution, the assembly condemned Russias Aggression against Ukraine, and reaffirmed the paramount importance of the U.N. in the promotion of the rule of law among nations. More than 90 countries co-sponsored the assembly resolution. It deplored Russias aggression in the strongest terms, and demanded an immediate withdrawal of all Russian forces from Ukraines internationally recognized borders. The three-page resolution also called on Russian leaders to reverse a decision to recognize two separatist parts of eastern Ukraineboth with sizable Russian or Russian-speaking populationsas independent. The measure condemns the Feb. 24, 2022, declaration by the Russian Federation of a special military operation in Ukraine. It expressed grave concern at reports of attacks on civilian facilities, residences, schools, and hospitals, as well as civilian casualties. The resolution also recognizes that the military operation inside Ukraine is on a scale that the international community has not seen in Europe in decades and that urgent action is needed to save this generation from the scourge of war. Countries that opposed the measure included Russia, Belarus, Cuba, North Korea, and Syria. Belarusian President Alexander Lukashenko, addressing the U.N. Security Council in a session on March 1, said that signs of the Wests preparations for war against his country and Russia were apparent. On the pretext of dealing with the migration crisis in neighboring countries, a military group was created ostensibly for protecting the border from an illegal influx of immigrants. That group exceeded 30,000, Lukashenko said, according to the BelTA news agency. The Ukrainian army launched exercises in the Polseye region for training its troops for an operation in the Belarusian direction and started arming nationalist groups with the same aim, he said. In public comments, Russian President Vladimir Putin has said that the key objectives of the days-old military operation are de-Nazification and disarming Ukraines military. Since the start of the conflict, Putin has increased the nuclear readiness of its forces, a decision which the U.N. General Assembly also condemned in its resolution. The Associated Press contributed to this story. The United States Flag and Texas State Flag are displayed at Murchison Rogers Park in El Paso, Texas, on June 24, 2021. (Patrick T. Fallon/AFP/Getty Images) Underage Teenagers Being Recruited Into Human Smuggling Operations, Texas Sheriff Warns A recent traffic stop in Texas has brought new attention to how Mexican cartels use underage teenagers to carry out human smuggling operations. The cartels convince underage teenagers to act as drivers and organizers in the illicit operations and tell them they wont suffer any real penalties, according to a statement from the Kinney County Sheriffs Office. This is frequently the case, as the U.S. Justice Department [DOJ] tends not to prosecute minors, the office said in a statement posted to Facebook on Feb. 28. When [the minors] turn 18, the cartels usually pressure them to transition to more dangerous work, like working as hitmen or drug smugglers and replace them with other children. Kinney County is an agricultural community in southwest Texas along the border with Mexico. According to the sheriffs office, at a traffic stop over the weekend on Ranch Road 3008, a deputy spotted another vehicle with a load of what appeared to be illegal aliens. About half a dozen illegal aliens, mostly from Mexico were crammed into the truck, which was driven by a 61-year-old Colombian driver, next to whom sat a 14-year-old boy who came from Mexico but was found to be living in Austin, Texas. It turns out the Colombian man was a subcontractor and driverand the 14-year-old was the shot-caller with the connections, the office said in the statement. The Colombian man told authorities that hed met the boy on a couple of occasions in an Austin laundromat, and at some point told him about how he was having health problems and that money was tight. He says the 14-year-old offered him $5,000 to make the trip with him. The U.S. Border Patrol later confirmed the mans allegations about who was in charge. It isnt clear what will happen to the teenager in the case. The sheriffs office noted that sometimes the DOJ will return underage smugglers to border cities far away from their homes, as a way to try to inconvenience them. For example, a Matamoros smuggler might be sent to Juarez, according to the statement. The Texas Department of Public Safety warned in 2011 that Mexican cartels were seeking to recruit Texas students as young as 11 to support their illicit smuggling operations, whether those involve drugs, humans, or weapons. Then-DPS director Steven McCraw told Reuters at the time that the drug gangs have a chilling name for the recruited young Texansthe expendables. These [Mexican] Cartels and their operatives are extremely violent, torturing and killing thousands of people in Mexico, the DPS stated at the time. They use transnational and Texas prison gangs to further their criminal operations in Mexico and the U.S. Expanding Canadian Hydrocarbon Production Could Hurt Russia Economically, Bergen says With Canada steadily increasing sanctions on Russia to respond to its invasion of Ukraine, the Conservative Party is calling for the government to use the countrys hydrocarbon resources to hurt Russia economically. Safety, security, sovereigntythose must be all top priorities for any government, and it should be Canadas priority especially now, said interim Conservative leader Candice Bergen during question period on March 1. The longer Canadian oil, gas, and LNG stay in the ground, the bigger Putins wallet gets, and the more countries like Ukraine and others will continue to be hurt and threatened by Russian aggression. More than ever, the world needs Canadian energy. Bergen asked Prime Minister Justin Trudeau if in that context he would change his stance toward Canadian hydrocarbons. Trudeaus government has pledged to reduce reliance on gas and oil and to shift to a green economy. Trudeau replied that his government has been there for the energy sectors of producing provinces and that it would continue to work to ensure that we are supporting workers in the energy industry, even as we ensure that were moving forward in ways that reduce carbon from our atmosphere and create a better future with good jobs for everyone. Were actually moving forward with the Trans Mountain Pipeline expansion, which the Conservatives couldnt get approved and couldnt get built, he said. The federal government purchased the Trans Mountain from Kinder Morgan in 2018. Bloc Quebecois Leader Yves-Francois Blanchet saw Bergens plea for the Canadian energy sector as opportunistic. Does the prime minister agree that in any circumstance, in particular the circumstances were witnessing in Ukraine, that it would be irresponsible to use the war and its humanitarian consequences as an opportunity to promote oil exports from Western Canada? he asked. Trudeau took a different tone when responding to Blanchet, seemingly leaving the door open to the possibility of helping Europe with energy. The fact is that Europe still relies very heavily on Russian oil and gas, and we as a world have to try to offer alternatives to Russia for Europe, Trudeau said. And we know that the global economy has to decarbonize, but we havent quite got there yet. But we will provide the resources necessary to help our European friends. Canada announced in recent days it was stopping Russian gas imports, which represented 3 percent of total imports in 2019. It also announced on March 1 that it intends to ban Russian-owned or registered ships and fishing vessels in Canadian ports and internal waters. Dan McTeague, gas price expert and president of Canadians for Affordable Energy, proposed such a measure on Feb. 28 in comments to The Epoch Times, noting that Russian vessels use Canadian waters to deliver 800,000 barrels of oil a day to the U.S. West Coast. He said the next thing for the government to do is to build a cross-country pipeline. Canadians are now realizing the absurdity of an oil-rich nation like Canada needing to import. Theres growing momentum that pollsters will soon clue in to that favours building continent-wide pipelines, he said. An unarmed Minuteman III intercontinental ballistic missile launches during an operational test in a file image. (U.S. Air Force/Senior Airman Ian Dudley via Reuters) US Delays Missile Test Launch in Attempt to Tone Down Russia Nuclear Tensions The United States has postponed a test missile launch to try to demonstrate it has no intention of getting into a nuclear war, the military said March 2. In an effort that we have no intention of engaging in any actions that could be misunderstood or misconstrued, the secretary of defense has directed that our Minuteman III intercontinental ballistic missile test launch, scheduled for this week, to be postponed, Pentagon spokesman John Kirby told reporters in Washington. The launch was going to be held by the Air Force. Military officials declined to say when or where it would have been held. Theres no new date at this time for the launch. Kirby said the move was aimed at demonstrating that we are a responsible nuclear power and that future test launches may or may not be canceled. Defense Secretary Lloyd Austin remains confident that the current nuclear posture is adequate to defend the United States and allies, he added, explaining why Americas nuclear deterrence levels werent altered. Russian President Vladimir Putin over the weekend placed his countrys nuclear deterrence forces on high alert, several days after his forces invaded Ukraine. Putin said the move stemmed from the aggressive statements that North Atlantic Treaty Organization were making with regards to Russia, in addition to the sanctions theyve imposed, which he described as illegal. Russian President Vladimir Putin visits a site in Moscow, Russia on Feb. 27, 2022. (Sergei Guneyev/AFP via Getty Images) U.S. Secretary of Defense Lloyd Austin (2nd L) participates in an honor cordon to welcome Bahrain Crown Prince Salman bin Hamad Al Khalifa (L) to the Pentagon in Arlington, Va., on March 2, 2022. (Alex Wong/Getty Images) Ukrainian officials said the announcement was aimed at putting pressure on them to accept a peace deal with poor conditions, which theyve vowed not to do. The United States had not taken any concrete action before Wednesday in response to the announcement, though officials decried the move. President Joe Biden on Monday told reporters that Americans should not be worried about the prospect of a nuclear war. Kirby said there are no indications at present to suggest Putin plans to launch nuclear weapons and called for Moscow to dial down its posture in response to America postponing the test launch. Both the United States and Russia have long agreed that nuclear deployment could have devastating consequences. And we both agreed, most recently this year, that a nuclear war cannot be won and must never be fought, Kirby said. Putins provocative rhetoric and possible changes to nuclear posture, he added, is unacceptable. Kirby spoke after Russian Foreign Minister Sergei Lavrov said a third world war will be nuclear and destructive. Military vehicles carrying DF-5B intercontinental ballistic missiles participate in a military parade at Tiananmen Square in Beijing on Oct. 1, 2019. (Greg Baker/AFP via Getty Images) US Faces Nuclear Threats From China, Russia as Never Before: US Admiral Adm. Charles Richard, head of the U.S. Strategic Command, said it has become imperative for the United States to have the capability to defend against Russia and China at the same time. Today, we face two nuclear-capable near-peers who have the capability to unilaterally escalate a conflict to any level of violence in any domain worldwide, with any instrument of national power, and that is historically significant, Richard told the House Armed Services Committee on March 1. He pointed out that while the need to deter both China and Russia at the same time was only at the level of major concern in April last year, the concern has now become a reality. That need is now an imperative. In April 2021, he told lawmakers at another congressional hearing (pdf) that the United States for the first time in history was on a trajectory to face two nuclear-capable, strategic peer adversaries at the same time. Months later, he said the United States was witnessing a strategic breakout by China, adding that the Chinese regimes explosive growth and modernization of its nuclear and conventional forces was breathtaking. Last fall, I formally reported to the secretary of defense, the PRCs [Peoples Republic of China] strategic breakout, Richard said. Their expansion and modernization in 2021 alone is breathtaking. China and Russia pose a threat to the United States now more than ever, as the two neighboring countries currently boast a no-limits partnership, according to a statement released following a meeting between Russian President Vladimir Putin and Chinese leader Xi Jinping on Feb. 4. Last summer, China reportedly tested nuclear-capable hypersonic missiles, prompting Joint Chiefs of Staff Chairman Gen. Mark Milley to say the tests were very close to a Sputnik moment. Additionally, there were reports that China was building hundreds of new nuclear silos. In November 2021, the Pentagon warned that China might have as many as 1,000 deliverable nuclear missiles by 2030. So far, China hasnt slowed down in its pursuit of hypersonic weapons, according to Gen. Glen VanHerck, head of the U.S. Northern Command. Theyre aggressively pursuing hypersonic capability, tenfold to what we have done as far as testing within the last year or so, significantly outpacing us with their capabilities, he said at the hearing. As for the current U.S. defensive posture, Richard said he felt quite confident. I am satisfied with the posture of my forces. I have made no recommendations to make any changes, he said. The nations nuclear command and control is in its most defended, most resilient lineup that its ever been in its history. However, Richard told lawmakers that its important to keep monitoring Chinas development. We dont know the endpoint of where China is going in terms of the capabilities its developing and the capacities that its developing, he said. While Im very confident were going to wind up with a very good strategy, I think it will need to be a question that we continue to ask ourselves as we see where China goes, as we see where others go. What are the overall capability and capacity that the United States requires in order to execute that strategy against a changing threat. Were going to have to ask that question much more frequently than we have in the past. US Response to China-Russia Axis: Building Alliances and Extending Sanctions Part 3 of the 3-part series 'The New Cold War' News Analysis As the worlds most influential countries unite in a harsh response to the Ukraine invasion, imposing crippling economic sanctions on Russia, the United States is attempting to break up the Beijing-Moscow axis, with possible sanctions on Chinese companies that continue to support Russia. The United States has responded to the growing threat from communist China by establishing a China Mission Center and by enlisting allies to contain the Peoples Liberation Army (PLA). The Central Intelligence Agency (CIA), Department of Defense, and Congress are unified in their stance against China and Russia. CIA Director William Burns identified China as the agencys top challenge and priority, warranting the establishment of a new China Mission Center. Last years U.S. defense policy bill of $768 billionthe largest in historyspecifically targets the threats from these two countries. The bill also underscores the need to combat disruptive technologies, particularly those being developed by China, such as hypersonic missiles, artificial intelligence (AI), and quantum computing. The bill also includes $7.2 billion for the Pacific Deterrence Initiative, which is consistent with the U.S. strategy of geographically isolating the Chinese military. Containment, partnerships, and alliances are words frequently used by U.S. lawmakers when discussing the need to cultivate allies to stand against the Chinese regime. Japan, South Korea, and Taiwan are beefing up their security to defend against Chinese aggression. The U.S. defense budget allocated money for joint training and patrols with these nations as well as Australia, the United Kingdom, New Zealand, India, and other European countries. The threat of the old USSR gave rise to the North Atlantic Treaty Organization (NATO). Today, NATOs mandate has expanded to cover China. Other U.S.-led alliances focused on containing China include the Five Eyes, the Quadrilateral Security Dialogue (the Quad), and AUKUS. Moving forward, the Biden administration plans to promote even greater connectivity between Western democracies, further expanding the U.S. network of allies. Washington is also prohibiting investment in many Chinese tech firms, while banning certain Chinese technology from the United States. A more comprehensive crackdown on Chinese technology could have several positive effects. First, it would hamper Beijings propaganda efforts, particularly through apps and social media. And second, it would decrease Chinas income, which would provide Beijing less money for military expansion. Moreover, halting technological investment between the two countries would prevent the regime from obtaining U.S. technology, stymying Chinas advancement. The White House has called China to condemn Russias invasion of Ukraine. So far, the Chinese Communist Party (CCP) has refused to refer to it as an invasion, and even abstained from a U.N. vote to force Russia to withdraw from Ukraine. The CCP has called on both parties to act with restraint and to reach a negotiated solution. In a recent statement, Beijing went so far as to say that it respects Ukraines sovereignty. In the beginning of the Ukraine crisis, it appeared that the CCP would support Russia and that economic sanctions against Russia would drive Moscow deeper into Beijings orbit. Now, however, the CCP seems to be backpedaling a bit, but remains to be seen how far it would go. Washington is expected to ask Beijing to join in sanctions against Russia. The White House on Feb. 24 banned U.S. chip sales to Russia and is preparing to put pressure on China to do the same. Cutting off Russias access to chips will severely hamper its ability to wage a modern war. China is Russias largest supplier, providing Russia with 70 percent of its chips through such firms as Semiconductor Manufacturing International Corp. (SMIC) and Lenovo Group Ltd. The U.S. ban extends to technology made with U.S. inputs, regardless of where the actual components are manufactured, impacting a wide array of Chinese companies. SMIC could potentially be targeted for U.S. sanctions if it continues to export to Russia. A security officer stands outside a building of Semiconductor Manufacturing International Corporation (SMIC) during its grand opening in Shanghai, China, on Nov. 22, 2001. (Reuters) President Joe Biden warned that Putin will be a pariah on the international stage. Any nation that countenances Russias naked aggression against Ukraine will be stained by association. Although Biden did not name China, his meaning was clear. If the CCP refuses to back away from its support of Russia, the United States will prepare additional sanctions that would squeeze China out of its lucrative trading arrangements with Europe and other Western countries. China remains the unknown factor in what may be a NATO versus Russia war. Consequently, the release of a U.S. national defense strategy document has been delayed, until it becomes clear if the United States will be fighting a war on one or two fronts. Analysts believe that the U.S. response to Russia will impact the CCPs behavior regarding Taiwan. At the same time, some believe that this Ukraine crisis will strengthen Western resistance toward Chinas rise. And while the CCP may be looking at the U.S. reaction to Russia to decide its next move, the United States can look at Moscows response to predict the CCPs behavior if similar sanctions and economic isolation are imposed on China. Read part I here and part II here. Views expressed in this article are the opinions of the author and do not necessarily reflect the views of The Epoch Times. Taiwan's Foreign Minister Joseph Wu (R) greets former Chairman of the Joint Chiefs Admiral Mike Mullen as the latter arrives at Taipei Songshan Airport in Taiwan on March 1, 2022. (Taiwan Ministry of Foreign Affairs via AP) US Stands Firm Behind Commitment to Taiwan, Delegation Tells Tsai Amid Ukraine Crisis The United States has sent a group of former senior defense and national security officials to assure Taiwan that it stands firm behind its commitments, amid the backdrop of Russian aggression in Eastern Europe. The five-member delegation met with Taiwan President Tsai Ing-wen on March 2 after arriving in Taipei a day earlier. The surprise two-day trip came as a sign of a beefed-up bilateral partnership amid looming threats from authoritarian powers Russia and China. I do hope by being here with you, we can reassure you and your people, as well as our allies and partners in the region, that the United States stands firm behind its commitments, said former U.S. Joint Chiefs of Staff Chairman Adm. Mike Mullen, in remarks at the Presidential Office. Referring to the escalating RussiaUkraine conflict, Mullen said continued peace and stability of the world have never been more important. We come to Taiwan at a very difficult and critical moment in world history. Now more than ever, democracy needs champions, the retired U.S. Navy admiral said, partially citing President Joe Biden. He said the latest move is in the pursuit of the continued and growing strength of the vital partnership with the democratic island. Former Chairman of the Joint Chiefs of Staff Adm. Mike Mullen speaks as Taiwan President Tsai Ing-wen listens during a meeting in Taipei, Taiwan, on March 2, 2022. (Taiwan Presidential Office via AP) Tsai said the crisis in Ukraine underscores the importance of cooperation and coordinated action among democratic countries. History teaches us that if we turn a blind eye to military aggression, we only worsen the threats to ourselves, Tsai said as she addressed the meeting. Now is the time for all democracies around the world to come together. Global Interest Russias invasion of Ukraine has sparked renewed attention to the Chinese regimes threat to forcibly annex Taiwan, which Beijing claims as its own territory. Concerns have mounted as to whether Taiwan will meet the same fate as Ukraine. Although Taiwan rejects such parallels, given the islands geographical advantages and global roles, Taipei has since stepped up its alert level, wary of the possibility that Beijing might take advantage of distracted Western allies. Maintaining peace and stability across the Taiwan Strait is not just a U.S. interest, but also a global one, Mullen said during the meeting, noting that Taiwan stands at the front lines of defending democracy. In a long-awaited Indo-Pacific strategy released on Feb. 11, the White House deemed the region as critical in countering growing aggression by Beijing. Kurt Campbell, White House coordinator for Indo-Pacific Affairs, said the United States wont take its eye off the region despite the Ukraine crisis, and it would engage simultaneously as it did during World War II and the Cold War. Its difficult. Its expensive. But it is also essential, and I believe that were entering a period where that is what will be demanded of the United States and this generation of Americans, Campbell said at a Feb. 28 virtual event. Without naming China, Mullen praised Tsais efforts of standing up against the leading challenges of the times, both in Taiwan and on the world stage. Whether itd be a global pandemic or corrosive disinformation and malign influence, [the government tackled them] without sacrificing core democratic values, he told Tsai on March 2. Tens of thousands showed up on the street to protest against pro-China media in Taiwan on June 23, 2019. (Chen Bozhou/The Epoch Times) The Taiwan Relations Act will mark its 43rd anniversary next month. Washington is required by the law to provide the island with the means to defend itself over matters of grave concern. Aside from selling military weapons, Biden has followed his predecessors in stepping up contacts between members of his administration and Taiwan officials. Mullen led a delegation that also included Meghan OSullivan, a former deputy national security adviser, Michele Flournoy, former undersecretary of defense, and Mike Green and Evan Medeiros, both of whom were senior directors for the Asia affairs office of the National Security Council. The group also was to meet with Taiwan Defense Minister Chiu Kuo-cheng. Chinese Foreign Ministry spokesperson Wang Wenbin on March 1 criticized Washingtons latest move, saying it was futile for the U.S. to send anyone to demonstrate its so-called support for Taiwan. In a separate visit, former U.S. Secretary of State Mike Pompeo and his wife are expected to arrive in Taiwan on March 2. Pompeo, who also served as CIA director, also will meet with Tsai and address a forum, according to Taiwans Foreign Ministry. The Associated Press contributed to this report. A child waves as she sits in a vehicle carrying residents evacuated from a public housing building, following the outbreak of the novel coronavirus, outside Hong Mei House, at Cheung Hong Estate in Hong Kong on Feb. 11, 2020. (Tyrone Siu/Reuters) US Warns Against Hong Kong Travel Over COVID-19 Restrictions and Children Separations The U.S. consulate on March 2 warned citizens not to travel to Hong Kong, citing the risk of parents being separated from children due to the local governments COVID-19 restrictions. The updated advice comes amid fears that Hong Kong may be bracing for a citywide lockdown as the local officials are under pressure from Beijing to contain its worst outbreak under the Chinese Communist Partys zero-COVID policy. Hong Kong reported a new daily record of 55,353 new cases, up from 32,597 a day earlier. Health authorities also recorded 117 deaths on Wednesday. The Travel Advisory is now at Level 4:Do Not Travel due to COVID-19 and COVID-19 related restrictions, including the risk of parents and children being separated, the U.S. Consulate General Hong Kong and Macau said in a statement. We especially want to note for families considering traveling to or residing in Hong Kong that in some cases, children in Hong Kong who test positive have been separated from their parents and kept in isolation until they meet local hospital discharge requirements, read the statement. The consulate cautioned U.S. residents that the risk regarding arbitrary enforcement of local laws in Hong Kong is the same as in other mainland cities. Following Beijings zero-COVID playbook, Hong Kong officials have placed people who tested positive, including children and infants, into quarantine facilities, with no visits from family members allowed. Last month, an 11-month-old baby who tested positive was isolated by herself in a public hospital, stoking fears among Hong Kongs parents that they could face a similar situation in the upcoming mass screening. The first mandatory testing of the citys 7.5 million residents will start this month. A Cathay Pacific aircraft comes in to land at Hong Kong International Airport on Aug. 11, 2021. (ISAAC LAWRENCE/AFP via Getty Images) The U.S. consulate also highlighted regimes zero-COVID policy severely impacts travel and access to public services. Currently, there are no direct flights from the United States to Hong Kong. Hong Kong authorities have banned all incoming flights from nine countries it deems high-risk, including the United States, the United Kingdom, and Canada, until at least April 20. All international arrivals are required to isolate for two weeks in hotel quarantine and one week at home, while arrivals from mainland China and Macao must quarantine for one week in hotel quarantine and one week at home, unless they have been overseas for more than two hours in the last 14-day period. International arrivals must clear six PCR tests in quarantine before being allowed out for self-isolation. Workers at the construction site of a COVID-19 isolation facility in Tsing Yi in Hong Kong on Feb. 25, 2022. (Louise Delmotte/Getty Images) The former British colony has banned dining in restaurants after 6 p.m., closed gyms and bars, and barred unvaccinated people from shopping malls and supermarkets. Despite the draconian measures, daily infections have ballooned from 100 at the begging of February to more than 55,000 on Wednesday. Health experts from the University of Hong Kong estimated that about 1.7 million people were already infected by Feb. 28, with the coming week expected to bring a peak of about 183,000 daily infections. Reuters contributed to this report. U.S. President Joe Biden gives his State of the Union address during a joint session of Congress at the U.S. Capitol in Washington on March 1, 2022. (Julia Nikhinson-Pool/Getty Images) US Will Bar Russian Planes from American Airspace: Biden At the State of the Union address on Tuesday, President Joe Biden announced that the United States will join several other western nations in barring Russian aircraftincluding commercial and private flightsfrom entering U.S. airspace. Six days ago, Russias Vladimir Putin sought to shake the very foundations of the free world, Biden said. He thought he could roll into Ukraine and the world would roll over. Instead, he met with a wall of strength he never anticipated or imaginedhe met the Ukrainian people. Yes, we the United States of America stand with the Ukrainian people, Biden continued. Throughout our history, weve learned this lesson: When dictators do not pay a price for their aggression, they cause more chaos. They keep moving, and the cost, the threats to America and to the world keeps rising. Thats why the NATO alliance was created, to secure peace and stability in Europe after World War II. The United States is a member along with 29 other nations. Biden continued, It matters. American diplomacy matters. American resolve matters. Biden asserted the often-repeated claim that the Kremlin is constantly attempting the intervene in U.S. politics: Putins latest attack on Ukraine was premeditated and totally unprovoked. He rejected repeated, repeated efforts at diplomacy. He thought the West and NATO wouldnt respond, he could divide us at home, in this chamber, in this nation. There is bipartisan consensus among members of Congress condemning the invasion and supporting efforts to impose tough sanctions on Russia. He thought he could divide us in Europe as well. But Putin was wrong, Biden said. We are ready, we are united, and thats what we didwe stayed united. We prepared extensively and carefully. We spent months building coalitions of other freedom-loving nations in Europe and the Americas to the Asian and African continentsto confront Putin. Now that hes acted, Biden continued, the free world is holding him accountable, along with 27 members of the European Union including France, Germany, Italy, as well as countries like the United Kingdom, Canada, Japan, Korea, Australia, New Zealand, and many otherseven Switzerland [which has historically remained neutral in conflicts]are inflicting pain on Russia and supporting the people of Ukraine. Putin is now isolated from the world more than he has ever been. Together, along with our allies, we are right now enforcing powerful economic sanctions. Were cutting off Russias largest banks and international financial system, preventing Russias central bank from defending the Russian ruble, making Putins $630 billion war fund worthless. Were choking Russias access to technology that will sap its economic strength and weaken its military for years to come. Tonight, I say to the Russian oligarchs and the corrupt leaders who built billions of dollars off this violent regime: no more. The U.S. Department of Justice, Biden announced, is assembling a dedicated Task Force to go after the crimes of the Russian oligarchs. Were joining with European allies to find and seize their yachts, their luxury apartments, their private jets. Were coming for you ill-begotten gains, and tonight, Im announcing that we will join our allies in closing off American airspace to all Russian flights, further isolating Russia and adding an additional squeeze on their economy. The ruble has already lost 30 percent of its value. Russian stock market has lost 40 percent of its value, and trading remain suspended. The Russian economy is reeling and Putin alone is the one to blame. Biden also vowed that the United States would not send troops to Ukrainewhich is not a NATO memberassuaging fears that the conflict could escalate into another world war. However, Biden said that troops will be deployed to NATO-allied nations bordering Ukraine. Our forces are not engaged and will not engage in the conflict with Russian forces in Ukraine. Our forces are not going to Europe to fight Ukraine, Biden said, but to defend our NATO allies in the event that Putin decides to keep moving west. For that purpose, we have mobilized American ground forces, air squadrons, ship deployments to protect NATO countries including Poland, Romania, Latvia, Lithuania, and Estonia. And as Ive made crystal clear, the United States and our allies will defend every inch of territory that is NATO territory with the full force of our collective power, every single inch. A worker looks out over a construction site in Melbourne, Australia, on March 30, 2020. (William West/AFP via Getty Images) Victorian Government Shelves Housing Tax Over Fears of a Scare Campaign The Victorian state government has scrapped a controversial $800 million (US$580 million) tax scheme to build social housing over fears that a mischievous scare campaign on housing affordability would do damage in this Novembers state election. The Victorian government on Feb. 18 announced the introduction of a 1.75 percent housing levy on all new developments with three dwellings or more from July 2024 to raise funds for building thousands of social and affordable homes. It said that less than 30 per cent of residential planning permits would be subject to the levy, and each year the government could gain $800 million to erect about 1,700 new social and affordable homes. However, leading industry bodies raised concern that the new tax would directly hit home buyers despite the government saying it had struck an agreement with the property sector to slash red tape in exchange for levy support. After a meeting on Feb. 28, Victorian Treasurer Tim Pallas announced that the government would no longer proceed with the levy and adjoining planning reforms in the parliament. They are done, they are dusted, they are finished, he told reporters on March 1. He said the complete change in the governments attitude was due to the negative response of the property industry and the dissemination of misinformation as part of a mischievous scare campaign. Theyve sought to mislead and confuse the community into this being a net cost on housing, he said. Its total nonsense, and the government is not going to put up with the scare campaign of that nature. The Andrews government also said it would not revisit the reforms package and levy after the upcoming state election, and Pallas acknowledged there were internal concerns in the Labor government that the disinformation campaign would cause damage at the ballot box. Were not interested in playing those games. Well get on and deliver social and affordable housing, he said. A great opportunity, I think, has been squandered here for people in most need who needed this industry to step up to the plate and think beyond their own immediate self-interest. A general view of the Lacrosse building in the Docklands in Melbourne, Australia, on June 16, 2017. (Scott Barbour/Getty Images) In the meantime, Danni Hunter, the Victorian executive director of the Property Council of Australia, a national lobby group representing property developers and owners, said it was incredibly disappointing for the government to abandon the reforms. However, she also refuted the criticism that the sector had gone back on its words on a pre-arranged agreement. The property industry and the Property Council has engaged with government in good faith this whole way through, she said. She said the peak body would have consented if the levy had been more reasonable at one percent to 1.25 percent. The Urban Development Institute of Australia (UDIA), an industry association that had previously noted that it had not been informed of the proposed tax before the government announced it, welcomed the governments decision to dump the levy. UDIA Victorias chief executive Matthew Kandelaars on March 1, said while the organisation hailed the decision to scrap the levy, but not the planning reforms. Its frustrating that the government has chosen to hold to ransom the improvement of inefficiencies within a state-sponsored planning system that would help to accelerate the Victorian economy out of the pandemic, Kandelaars said in a statement. The ultimatum was put to us, but it is a position we could never accept. Meanwhile, opposition leader Matthew Guy stressed that the government should have never put forward a new levy during the COVID-19 pandemic. Victorians dont want more taxes, he said. On the other hand, Victorian Greens party leader Samantha Ratnam said the government had shown that it considered the need of developers more important than solving the housing and homelessness crisis. Virginia Set to Become First State to Adopt Law Allowing Parents to Review Sexually Explicit School Material A Virginia bill (pdf) that requires schools to notify parents of sexually explicit content instructional materials and allows parents to review such content is heading to the desk of Gov. Glenn Youngkin, fulfilling one of his key campaign promises. If signed into law, the bill, which passed the state House on Feb. 28 and the senate on Feb. 9, would make Virginia the first in the nation to adopt a statewide measure for reviewing sexually explicit material in schools instead of leaving the decision up to local school administrators and school boards. Youngkin, in a written statement to the Washington Post, said: The passage of this bill, signals to schools that parents will not be silenced. Notifying parents is just commonsense, and I look forward to signing it when it reaches my desk. The measure came amid growing grassroots efforts in Virginia and other states campaigning against sexualized content in school and classroom libraries. The legislation requires the Virginia Department of Education (VDOE) to develop a model policy to which school boards must adhere. In addition, school boards have the discretion to adopt more comprehensive measures than the model policy. The VDOE model policy, due by July 31, 2022, is to include provisions to require schools to provide an alternative, nonexplicit instructional material, and related academic activities to any student whose parent so requests. School boards are required to adopt the related policies no later than Jan. 1, 2023. The bill defines sexually explicit content by reference to a section in the Virginia code. State Sen. Siobhan Dunnavant (R-Henrico), author of the bill, called the passing of the bill a win for parents in her tweet on March 1. Former Virginia Governor Terry McAuliffe vetoed a similar bill in 2016 and 2017. Some parents have welcomed the measure, but say more needs to be done about sexually-explicit content found in school bookshelves. Its good as a first step, but it doesnt address books on shelves at school libraries, only teacher-given class assignments, Fairfax County mother Stacy Langton told The Epoch Times. Fairfax County parent Stacy Langton protests outside the Luther Jackson Middle School in Falls Church, Va., before the Fairfax County Public Schools board meeting on Dec. 2, 2021. (Lisa Fan/The Epoch Times) In September, Langton protested the inclusion of books containing sexually exclusion in school libraries at a school board meeting. Her speech went viral, thrusting the issue, dubbed by some parents as porn books, into the national spotlight. Natassia Grover, a mother in neighboring Loudoun County in northern Virginia, agreed that while the new code was decent, it did nothing to close the loophole concerning sexualized content that features in materials that dont constitute instructional materials. Books on classroom shelves and in school libraries can and do continue to contain pornographic images and sexually explicit language and erotica, and there is nothing parents can do to stop their children from accessing it, Grover told The Epoch Times. Grover co-founded the nonprofit organization Parent and Child Loudoun (PACL) in 2018 to address concerns about sexually explicit content in public schools. According to the Code of Virginia, library materials are resources and not a part of instructional materials. On Jan. 27, a Virginia Senate committee blocked legislation that would require parental consent for students to check out sexually explicit books from school libraries. Virginia Senate is under Democratic control, whereas Republicans hold the majority in the House. Anne Miller, another mother in Loudoun County, said the governor kept his promises to parents and voters in Virginia. Governor Youngkin and his Administration are opening school doors back up to parents that have been kept out and in the dark for far too long, she told The Epoch Times. It is a great day for the children of Virginia! The new bill also highlighted that it was not enacting censorship measures, an allegation made by critics of the measure. The provisions of this act shall not be construed as requiring or providing for the censoring of books in public elementary and secondary schools, it stated. Similar legislation under review in the Tennessee legislature includes school library materials in the scope of the bill, and would hold public school employees criminally liable for possessing obscene materials harmful to minors on school premises. Visa headquarters in Foster City, Calif. on Aug. 28, 2019. (Justin Sullivan/Getty Images) Visa Collaborates With Fintech Firm Tribal: Report Leading payment processor Visa Inc. collaborated with payment and financing firm Tribal, Reuters reports. Visa looks to expand its offerings for small-and-medium-sized businesses in Latin America and the Caribbean. The partnership would expand credit lines, update encryption and safety measures, and improve card distribution. Tribal backed by investors including SoftBank Group Corp.s Latin America Fund, offers credit cards and payment options, including the usage of blockchain technology and stablecoins, to small businesses across Latin America. By Anusuya Lahiri 2021 The Epoch Times. The Epoch Times does not provide investment advice. All rights reserved. A logo of German carmaker Volkswagen is seen on a car parked on a street in Paris, France, on July 9, 2020. (Christian Hartmann/Reuters) Volkswagen Warns of Production Cuts as Ukraine Crisis Hits Suppliers HAMBURGEuropes largest carmaker Volkswagen on Tuesday warned of production cuts at some of its plants including the one in Wolfsburg as Ukraine-based suppliers have been facing difficulties delivering after Russias invasion. The company said it would likely be unable to produce at its Wolfsburg plant in the week of March 14 as a result, adding the factory would already produce less from the week of March 6. The group also said it had temporarily halted production of Volkswagen brand electric vehicles at its Zwickau and Dresden plants this week and could not rule out further production adjustments. A maze of crude oil pipes and valves is pictured during a tour by the Department of Energy at the Strategic Petroleum Reserve in Freeport, Texas, on June 9, 2016. (Richard Carson/Reuters) White House Issues Muted Call for Oil Companies to Ramp Up Production A White House official said on March 1 that U.S. oil and gas companies can and should boost domestic production, while dismissing the idea that the Biden administrations energy policies were preventing companies from doing so. Bharat Ramamurti, who serves as deputy director of the National Economic Council, told Bloomberg that crude oil prices are high, and if folks want to produce more, they can and they should. Ramamurti was responding to a question about U.S. energy production and criticism that President Joe Bidens clean energy policies have squeezed domestic drilling and contributed to soaring gasoline prices. As of the beginning of this year, there were 9,000 permits for oil and gas drilling that were currently going unused. So the idea that the federal government is restricting the ability of oil and gas companies to produce more I think is incorrect, Ramamurti said. Shortly after taking office, Biden put a freeze on new oil and gas leases on federal land and waters, axed the Keystone XL Pipeline project, and has pushed to decarbonize the U.S. economy, citing the imperative to fight climate change. Sen. Tom Cotton (R-Ark.), a frequent critic of Bidens energy policies, has called for new drilling leases and resumption of the Keystone pipeline, recommendations that White House press secretary Jen Psaki recently dismissed as a misdiagnosis of what needs to happen to curb high oil prices. The White House has largely focused on urging OPEC+ to ramp up production to cool prices, a strategy that has thus far borne little fruit. Another tactic has been coordinated releases of crude from strategic stockpiles. All 31 member countries of the International Energy Agency on March 1 agreed to release 60 million barrels of oil from their strategic reserves. But the move failed to reassure markets, and prices rose after the announcement. Petroleum pump jacks in the Kern River oil field in Bakersfield, Calif., on Nov. 9, 2014. (Jonathan Alcorn/Reuters) Surging energy prices, driven higher by fears that Russias invasion of Ukraine will lead to supply disruptions, are fueling calls to ramp up domestic oil and gas production, both to reinforce American energy independence and to support European allies. Recent polling carried out on behalf of the American Petroleum Institute (API), an industry lobby, showed that 84 percent of U.S. voters believe that producing natural gas and oil in the United States would boost security in America and for its allies around the world. Due to Americas energy resurgence over the past fifteen years, the United States is well-positioned to alleviate the growing energy crisis in Europe, Mike Sommers, president and CEO of API, wrote in a recent letter to Energy Secretary Jennifer Granholm (pdf). Europe is highly dependent on Russian energy, with Russia supplying around 27 percent of the European Unions crude oil, 41 percent of its natural gas, and 46.7 percent of its coal. Recent developments illustrate the importance of the government working collaboratively with industry to ensure U.S. energy and economic security, as well as that of our allies in Europe and around the world, Sommers said, referring to the war in Ukraine. He called on the Biden administration to urgently implement a series of policy recommendations, including clearly committing to the continued export of crude oil, natural gas, and refined petroleum products, swiftly approving all liquefied natural gas applications, and accelerating the issuance of lease sales. Oil prices surged on March 2 as supply disruptions mounted following sanctions on Russian banks amid the intensifying Ukraine conflict. Russian oil exports account for approximately 8 percent of global supply. A view of the Marathon Petroleum Corp.'s Los Angeles Refinery in Carson, on April 25, 2020. (Robyn Beck/AFP via Getty Images) White House Rejects Calls for Oil Drilling The United States and the rest of the world face a conundrum. Crude oil prices are above $100 for the first time in nearly eight years amid tight market conditions and Russias invasion of Ukraine. If the West were to impose embargoes on Russias oil and gas exports, which are an immense source of revenue for the Kremlin, energy prices would spike. JPMorgan Chase analysts estimate that the cost for a barrel of oil could average $110 in the second quarter, should the Ukraine-Russia conflict escalate further. But other Wall Street firms forecast that West Texas Intermediate (WTI) and Brent crude prices could easily top $120 barrel if the situation in Eastern Europe intensifies. This is where President Vladimir Putin maintains a systemic advantage over the worldwide economy, says Deputy National Security Advisor Daleep Singh. An employee works at a compressor station of Ukraines Naftogaz national oil and gas company near the northeastern Ukrainian city of Kharkiv on Aug. 5, 2014. (Sergey Bobok/AFP via Getty Images) Were not going to do anything which causes an unintended disruption to the flow of energy as a global economic recovery is still underway, Singh recently said at a White House news conference. This is the one area where Russia has systemic advantage in the global economy. But while some Ukrainian lawmakers urge countries to ban Russian energy products, global leaders have been apprehensive, choosing instead to impose sanctions on Putin, state-owned firms, the Central Bank of Russia, and the Ministry of Finance. Others purport that the United States could accelerate crude production to inject more supply into global energy markets. Industry observers aver that this would effectively bring down crude prices and hurt the Russian governments pocketbook. Today, oil and gas revenues account for more than one-third of Moscows federal revenues. White House press secretary Jen Psaki dismissed this recommendation, telling ABCs This Week that the proposal is a misdiagnosis. We need to reduce our dependence on foreign oil, on oil in general, and we need to look at other ways of having energy in our country and others, she said, adding that the United States needs to generate more solar and wind power. Biden warned the American people before the invasion that they would likely endure higher gasoline prices as a result of defending freedom in Kyiv. The national average price for a gallon of gasoline is $3.62 as of March 1, according to the American Automobile Association (AAA). Currently, the United States produces approximately 11.5 million barrels per day (BPD) of crude. This is down from the pre-COVID peak of 13.1 million BPD. Energy analysts purport that oil and gas firms have been hesitant to turn on the taps because of regulatory uncertainty stemming from the presidents green energy agenda. Other companies also want to maintain a strong balance sheet. Over the last several months, the White House has pursued other methods to diminish consumer pain at the pump. One of Bidens strategies has been to demand the Organization of the Petroleum Exporting Countries (OPEC) and its allies, OPEC+, to increase output. The cartel rejected this request, maintaining its post-pandemic modest approach to production. U.S. officials are negotiating with Iran to establish a new nuclear agreement. If approved, sanctions could be removed, and Tehran could pump millions of barrels of oil into global energy markets. The U.S. Department of Energy also released 50 million barrels of oil from the Strategic Petroleum Reserves (SPRs) late last year. In January, the federal government tapped another 25 million barrels from reserves. Reports suggest that the administration is considering repeating this action. However, industry observers have scoffed at these measures because EIA figures highlight that the country consumes between 17 and 20 million barrels a day. Even if a ceasefire agreement is established between Moscow and Kyiv, the bombardment of financial and economic sanctions on Russia and the fragility of Ukraine will keep the energy crisis stoked and oil well above $100 per barrel in the near-term and even higher if the conflict escalates further, says Louise Dickson, a senior oil market analyst at Rystad Energy, in a note on Monday. Is it time for the White House to give the go-ahead to drill, baby, drill? The area near National University after shelling in Kharkiv, Ukraine, on March 2, 2022. (Ukrainian State Emergency Service via Reuters) White House Discouraging Americans From Fighting in Ukraine The White House said it is discouraging American civilians from going to Ukraine to fight against Russian troops, coming after Ukrainian President Volodymyr Zelensky called for foreign fighters. Ukrainians have shown their courage and they are calling on every resource and lever they have to defend themselves. We applaud their bravery, however our travel advisory remains. U.S. citizens should not travel to Ukraine, deputy press secretary Karine Jean-Pierre said Wednesday when asked about whether the White House supports Americans going to the Eastern European country. Several days after Russia attacked Ukraine, Zelensky issued a statement via social media that citizens of the world are welcome to join the fight against Russia. This is not just Russias invasion of Ukraine. This is the beginning of a war against Europe, against European structures, against democracy, against basic human rights, against a global order of law, rules, and peaceful coexistence, he said. Ukrainian President Volodymyr Zelensky speaks at an emergency session of European Parliament in Brussels, Belgium, on March 1, 2022. (European Union/Screenshot via The Epoch Times) Last week, the U.S. Department of State issued Level 4: Do Not Travel advisory for Ukraine, coming about a day after Russia launched its invasion. Some reports have indicated that UK, European, and even Japanese individuals have tried to travel to Ukraine to fight Russian forces. UK Foreign Secretary Liz Truss has also expressed support for British citizens going to Ukraine. Some Americans have apparently also gone to Ukraine in recent days. I feel guilty to not go, Dax, 26, a veteran of the elite U.S. 82nd Airborne Division infantry who didnt give his full name, told Reuters. Canadian national Bryson Woolsey, who has no military training and is buying a plane ticket to Poland, told the outlet that he quit his job as a cook on Sunday after Zelensky made the appeal. I felt like I had to do something, said Woolsey, 33. Meanwhile, Zelensky and some Western officials called on U.S. and NATO forces to enforce a no-fly zone over Ukraine. The notion, however, was shot down by White House officials, including press secretary Jen Psaki, who noted that it would place NATO and the United States in direct confrontation with Russia. At the same time, Russias leadership has increasingly issued more and more threats about the possibility of a nuclear war breaking out. On Thursday morning, Russian Foreign Minister Sergei Lavrov, in an interview, warned that a potential World War III will be nuclear. Russian President Vladimir Putin, meanwhile, ordered his countrys nuclear deterrence forces to be on their highest alert, prompting critical comments from U.S. and EU officials. A general view shows an oil treatment plant in the Yarakta Oil Field, owned by Irkutsk Oil Company (INK), in Irkutsk Region, Russia, on March 10, 2019. (Vasily Fedosenko/Reuters) With Oil Prices Climbing, US and World Still Dependent on Russian Energy As Russias invasion of Ukraine continues, the global economys continued reliance on Russian oil and gas has prompted a wave of policy responses alongside pushback from U.S. lawmakers seeking to halt imports and boost domestic production. Brent crude, a key international benchmark, has surged since the invasion began on Feb. 24, rising from under $97 per barrel to more than $107 per barrel as of March 1. At 524 million tons in 2021, Russia produces more oil than any country other than Saudi Arabia and the United States. The International Energy Agency reports that top destinations for that oil include OECD Europe and China, which receive roughly 60 percent and 20 percent of Russian oil exports, respectively. The United States crude oil imports from Russia more than doubled last year, rising to an average of 209,000 barrels per day in 2021 from a daily average of roughly 76,000 barrels in 2020, according to data from the Energy Information Administration (EIA). In November 2021, Russia supplied 595,000 of the nearly 8.5 million barrels per day of crude oil and products imported by the United States, according to the EIAfully 7 percent of those imports. Sean Strawbridge, CEO of the Port of Corpus Christi, Texas, the countrys dominant crude oil export hub, said the United States imported more Russian crude to replace Venezuelan heavier crudes after Washington sanctioned Venezuelas state-owned oil company PDVSA. Many refineries along the U.S. Gulf Coast are designed to handle heavier crudes rather than the lighter ones coming out of the Permian Basin in the southwestern United States. What we hope to see is more American refineries retool, to be able to refine the lighter, sweeter crude, but those are more expensive feedstocks, said Strawbridge. He told The Epoch Times that current U.S. sanctions wont do much because they allow Russian oil and gas to continue flowing. On a webpage about the RussiaUkraine conflict, the IEA said the invasion has as of yet not resulted in a loss of oil supply to the market. IEA officials didnt respond by press time to a request by The Epoch Times for comment about whether thats still the case. On March 1, the United States and other IEA member nations agreed to release 60 million barrels of oil. U.S. Energy Secretary Jennifer Granholm said in a statement that the U.S. would release 30 million barrels from its Strategic Petroleum Reserve. Russia produces 11 million barrels of oil per day, and the United States consumes about 20 million barrels of oil per day. The world as a whole consumes roughly 97 million barrels of oil per day, meaning the release is equivalent to about 16 hours of global oil consumption. It doesnt move the needle, Strawbridge said. The IEA doesnt include the worlds most populous countries, China and India. India, long reliant on Russian arms, has neither sanctioned nor unequivocally condemned Moscow for its action in Ukraine. Neither has China, which recently entered into a 30-year gas pipeline deal with the country. Mexican President Andres Manuel Lopez Obrador has also held off on sanctioning Russia. We are not going to take any sort of economic reprisal because we want to have good relations with all the governments in the world. The Russian state energy company Lukoil recently moved to purchase a 50 percent stake in a Mexican offshore oil project. Canada has moved to ban Russian oil importsyet the country imports very little oil from Russia. In the United States, some lawmakers have called for strong energy sanctions against Russia as well as measures intended to spur domestic production. In a statement on Feb. 28, Sen. Joe Manchin (D-W.Va.) called on the Biden administration to take action immediately, up to and including banning crude oil imports from Russia. If there ever was a time to be energy independent, it is now, he said. Meanwhile, Sen. Tom Cotton (R-Ark.) has argued that the United States should reopen the Keystone XL pipeline and remove restrictions on domestic oil and gas production. White House press secretary Jen Psaki responded by calling Cottons recommendation on the Keystone pipeline a misdiagnosis during a Feb. 27 interview with ABC News George Stephanopoulos. During that interview, Psaki said sanctions on Russian energy are certainly on the table. We also want to do that and make sure were minimizing the impact on the global marketplace, and do it in a united way, she told Stephanopoulos. Strawbridge said: This administration has come out of the gate with their shoelaces tied together on their energy policy. Its now time for them to untie their shoelaces. Weve got to see more drilling. Reuters contributed to this reporting. Smoke and flames rise on the Economy Department building of Karazin Kharkiv National University during the shelling in Kharkiv, as Russia continues its invasion of Ukraine, on March 2, 2022. (Sergey Bobok/AFP via Getty Images) With Ukraine War, US Is Thrust Into Unprecedented Superpower Battle With China and Russia News Analysis As the Russian war machine trundled into Ukraine, the cacophony of international protest seemed to momentarily drown out the sound of Russian bombs falling on hospitals and kindergartens. The only thing louder than both that raucous displeasure and the sounds of the chaos and the death and the gore, was the silence of the Chinese Communist Party (CCP). For one week, the Russians have pushed their blundering conquest of Ukraine onward, making up for logistical errors such as tanks running out of gas and soldiers running out of food with sheer terror tactics including, reportedly, the blanketing of civilian infrastructure with illegal cluster munitions. Since then, the CCP has repeatedly refused to acknowledge that there is any invasion at all. Indeed, as the world was busy condemning the Russian warpath, the CCP was busy censoring voices critical of the invasion and supportive of Ukraine. As the West leveraged the most broad-ranging sanctions ever seen, the CCP lifted its own restrictions on wheat imports Russia, providing an economic assist to Russian President Vladimir Putin and his regime as they bombarded whole cities. The effects of Russias war on Ukraine will not be contained to Ukraine. Nor will the tripartite relationship between America, China, and Russia, ever be the same. The United States now faces the unprecedented challenge of deterring two global powers at the same time, at a time when Washington was hoping to charge full steam ahead in countering Beijings growing might in the Indo-Pacific. Many fear that the global strategic reality is forever changed. Yet no one knows exactly how this new balance of power, between three nuclear near peers, will be managed without catastrophic consequence. An Alliance Forged in Autocracy How did we get here? How did the international community allow the coalescence of regimes so seemingly intent on perpetuating mass murder? How did China and Russia come into one anothers arms, and what are the allies to do in the face of an apparently unified Eurasian hatred of the West? John Herbst, former U.S. ambassador to Ukraine, believes that this growing Eurasian alliance is the product of one overarching impulse: Enmity toward the rules-based international order. Right now, were in a period of four or five, six years of closer Chinese-Russian cooperation driven entirely by one factor: Their opposition to the world order that the U.S. helped create and maintain, Herbst said. The world order in which China, especially, has prospered. There have been [other] periods of cooperation, but they tend to be very brief, Herbst added. Smoke rises from a Russian tank destroyed by the Ukrainian forces on the side of a road in Lugansk region, Ukraine on Feb. 26, 2022. (ANATOLII STEPANOV/AFP via Getty Images) Herbst, speaking at a recent virtual event hosted by the Atlantic Council think tank, said that China and Russia historically had fraught ties. The last time the two nations were this close, he said, was when the CCP seized control of China in 1949. That partnership also deteriorated, and decades later the Chinese and Russians were fighting in the far east. To that end, he said that the current power structure, united against the West as it may be, was largely based on the individual personages of Putin and CCP leader Xi Jinping. I think its important to stress that the relationship between the two powers is unusually personalistic, based upon the ties at the very top, Herbst said. He added that, if Putin were to fail in his ambitions of toppling the lawful government of Ukraine, the failure would quickly reduce the cooperation between both nations. I dont think theres any doubt that Russia is less valuable an asset for China as a result of the things that took place over the last three or four days, Herbst said in reference to Russias many strategic failures, and alleged war crimes. That will be a difficult thing to accept, as it could be argued that top CCP officials contributed in their own way to the invasion of Ukraine. In the months leading up to Putins invasion of Ukraine, senior Biden administration officials held half a dozen meetings with top CCP, the New York Times reported. During these meetings, the Americans presented the Chinese with intelligence about Russias military buildup around Ukraine, and its intended use. At every meeting, CCP officials denied that an invasion was imminent. Chinese foreign ministry spokesperson Hua Chunying gestures during the daily Press conference at the Foreign Ministry in Beijing on Feb. 24, 2022. (Noel Celis/AFP via Getty Images) After one session, according to U.S. intelligence sources, the CCP delivered the American intelligence given to them to Russia, and promised Russian officials that China would take no action to impede Russian efforts in Ukraine. This should not have been a surprise to American intelligence. After all, Xi and Putin met 37 times before 2022, and their mutual understanding was made public in February. On Feb. 4, Xi and Putin announced that there would be no limits to their cooperation and that they would mutually denounce the expansion of NATO. The pair also inked new oil and gas deals worth nearly $118 billion. CCP leadership appeared to have held to that pledge, increasing diplomatic, economic, and military ties with Russia despite the knowledge that Russia would invade Ukraine. A move that some believe was premeditated. Rep. Ken Buck (R-Colo.) recently told EpochTVs China Insider program, I think they have coordinated and I think that China is in a better position letting Russia go first, to evaluate. China has designs on Taiwan, Buck said. And they want to see if the world imposes real sanctions on Russia, and how much it hurts Russian, and what really the willpower is to stop an aggressive nation from gaining further territory. Ukraine a Symbol of Authoritarian Betrayal As Putin commenced his war of aggression on Ukraine, CCP leadership went into propaganda overdrive, walking a tightrope of not openly backing either side. Russia had reasonable and legitimate security concerns, it claimed. This, despite its simultaneous claim that Ukraine had a right to sovereignty and territorial integrity. It has also refused to denounce Russias aggression, nor call the attack an invasion. After Putin ordered his troops to move in, CCP Foreign Ministry spokeswoman Hua Chunying said that the United States was the culprit of current tensions surrounding Ukraine, and that NATO expansion was irresponsible and immoral. We shouldnt be surprised that China has gone in this direction of supporting Russia for the most part, even if they wont come out and actively defend an invasion or even call it an invasion, said David Shullman, a senior director for the Atlantic Council. Russia is Chinas closest and most important strategic partner. Full stop. As such, Shullman said, the China-Russia relationship would likely deepen, at least until Putin was gone or otherwise rendered a liability to Beijing. This is not to say that nothing could turn the CCP against Russia. Indeed, the war in Ukraine demonstrates a profound willingness among top CCP leadership to betray those they profess to be aligned with. China had something of a strategic relationship with Ukraine, after all. Prior to Russias illegal annexation of Crimea in 2014, the CCP had been investing in a major port project in the region, which it reinvested in after Russia annexed the territory. Likewise, China and Ukraine had many lucrative arms deals over the years. Without Ukraine, in fact, China would not have been able to construct its two aircraft carriers, the jewels of its fleet. It was Ukraine that primarily built Chinas first such vessel in the 1990s, after much pressure and a need to stabilize its post-Soviet-collapse economy. To pour salt in the wound, the Ukrainian people are not likely to forget that Xi personally promised to never allow their nation to come under threat of nuclear invasion, though Putin and his officials have repeatedly beat their chests with jingoistic calls about the state of their nuclear arsenal. China pledges unconditionally not to use or threaten to use nuclear weapons against the nuclear-free Ukraine and China further pledges to provide Ukraine nuclear security guarantee when Ukraine encounters an invasion involving nuclear weapons or Ukraine is under threat of a nuclear invasion, a joint statement between China and Ukraine said in 2013. This photo taken on May 18, 2018 shows tugs guiding Chinas first domestically manufactured aircraft carrier, known as Type 001A, as it returns to port in Dalian in Chinas northeastern Liaoning province after its first sea trial. (AFP via Getty Images) The CCPs silence on Russias war of aggression could therefore be seen as something more than an emblem of hypocrisy. It is a mark of betrayalan enduring symbol that the CCP is not simply opportunistic, but deceitful and disloyal to those with whom it makes promises. And analysts suggests that even Russia wont be immune to this trait. The duplicitous Chinese will try to squeeze all kinds of concessions out of a weakened and ostracized Russia, Frank Lehberger, a Germany-based sinologist, recently told The Epoch Times. They do this always when they smell weakness no matter if you are a friend or an ally, he added. But Sarah Kirchberger, a senior fellow at the Atlantic Council, highlighted that Beijings tacit support of Moscow will come with growing reputational and economic costs, as it could itself face secondary sanctions for helping Russia. Certainly, China will be seen as some sort of accomplice of that [Russia], Kirchberger said. Facing such possible blowback, it is still unclear to what extent the CCP is comfortable with being seen as such an accomplice. So far, the regime appears to be treading carefully. While it lifted import restrictions on Russian wheat on the first day of the invasion, some Chinese institutions appear to be adhering to Western sanctions. Two of Chinas largest state-owned banks, Bank of China and the Industrial and Commercial Bank of China, restricted financing for purchases of Russian commodities on Feb. 25, following the announcement of a series of sanctions by the United States and allies. On March 2, Chinas top bank regulator announced that the regime would not take itself part in financial sanctions on Russia. The head of Chinas banking and insurance regulator said that sanctions lack a legal basis. On the same day, the Chinese regime appeared to shift its tone during a phone call between Ukraine and Chinese foreign ministers, wherein Ukraines Foreign Minister Dmytro Kuleba asked his Chinese counterpart to use Beijings influence over Moscow to stop Russia from further violence. While Beijings readout of the call did not say whether Chinese Foreign Minister Wang Yi agreed to the request, Ukraines statement said that Wang had assured Dmytro Kuleba of Chinas readiness to make every effort to end the war on Ukrainian soil through diplomacy, including as a permanent member of the United Nations (U.N.) Security Council. Over the past week, China has abstained from two votes at the U.N. Security Council and General Assembly, respectively, condemning Russias aggression. Taiwan in the Crosshairs Besides calibrating its own role in the crisis, Beijing is also watching the developments intently in a desire to preemptively gather support and intelligence for a CCP invasion of Taiwan, the self-ruled island it claims as its own, according to experts. Indeed, some analysts believed that the CCP may have used the opportunity to commence with aggression of some kind during Putins initial declaration of military operations. It was a bit of a risk that China would use this opportunity to go after Taiwan, Kirchberger, of the Atlantic Council, said. This has apparently not happened, and I think China may be hesitant to go down that road that Putin now apparently has chosen for himself. Kirchberger said that Western experts often tried to underscore the innate fragility of the Sino-Russian partnership. She worried that such arguments missed the essence of authoritarianism and its associated destruction completely. The fragility of Xi and Putins entente, she said, should not be mistaken for an inability to cause horrific damage on a global scale, and such should be considered in the case of Taiwan. The question is: How much harm can they do together, even if its just a very short term and very opportunistic type of cooperation, Kirchberger said. Because, if you look historically [at] how authoritarian countries have acted in unison, sometimes these alliances were very short term and ended abruptly, but they often caused great havoc. Look at the Hitler-Stalin cooperation, she added, noting the immense destruction caused in Europe through the non-aggression pact of Soviet Russia and Nazi Germany, which lasted less than two years. Russias President Vladimir Putin shakes hands with Chinas leader Xi Jinping during their meeting at Friendship Palace in Beijing, China on April 26, 2019. (Alexey Nikolsky/AFP via Getty Images) To that end, she expressed that the CCPs trepidation over using more aggressive means against Taiwan at this juncture could mean that its leadership understands the severity with which the West will unite against such threats, as is being demonstrated aptly on Russia. What happens now is that, for the first time, some parts of our societies that were convinced that China is so indispensable, and Russia also was so important a partner, are going to rethink that position, Kirchberger said. [Economic interdependence] cuts both ways. China is also extremely dependent on its export markets and access to the worlds markets. They would suffer terribly from these types of sanctions now being inflicted on Russia. To that end, Kirchberger hoped that one good thing would come of the carnage in eastern Europe: That China would learn from what it is witnessing that war with the West is just not worth it. The most important thing is that we are now teaching China what they can expect in terms of a reaction to a war on Taiwan, Kirchberger said. It doesnt pay to be the aggressor. Senator Marco Rubio (R-Fla.) agreed with the assessment. He said that the Western response to Ukraine was vital to deterring future CCP aggression in the Indo-Pacific . We know that Beijing is closely watching Russias invasion of Ukraine and weighing their own plans for expansion, specifically to overtake Taiwan, Rubio told The Epoch Times in an email. Beijing should be warned that attempting to seize another nation by force will lead to automatic international isolation. Like Kirchberger, he believed that there was a lesson to learn about the economic interdependencies of rival states. For him, however, the lesson suggested that preemptive action from the United States was needed. The United States must not lose sight that the Chinese Communist Party is the number one threat to our national security and the security of our allies, Rubio said. This crisis has once again proven that depending on a foreign adversary for critical goods is a grave mistake, and we should be doing everything possible to move manufacturing and supply chains out of China and back to American shores. K.T. McFarland, a former deputy national security advisor during the Trump administration, told EpochTVs China Insider that the United States must arm Taiwan and craft better alliances throughout Asia to ensure a collective defense in the event of CCP invasion. Its extremely important that the United States gives Taiwan the ability to defend itself, by itself, now, McFarland said. Dont wait until theres a problem. Looking Both East and West A problem is already developing, however. One that the United States arguably could have aborted in its embryonic stage, but which now has matured to bear its consequences upon the whole world. China and Russia are united in their antagonism of the United States and may be willing to jointly use their nuclear arsenals to challenge the West. This presents an immense difficulty for American and allied strategists, who have never in history contended with the need to deter and defend against two nuclear peers simultaneously. And the difficulty is immense. As China expands its arms to become a nuclear peer competitor with the U.S. and Russia, the U.S. will have to figure out how to deter two nuclear peers at once, which weve never had to do in our history, said Patty-Jane Geller, a policy analyst for the Heritage Foundation in November. Addressing this threat will require significant investment now and in future years to ensure the U.S. can maintain the strong nuclear deterrent that Americans have had the luxury of taking for granted. Commander of the United States nuclear arsenal, Admiral Charles Richard, spoke on the issue during March 1 strategic forces posture hearing before Congress. Were experiencing one of the largest shifts in global geostrategic power the world has ever witnessed, Richard said. Today, we face two nuclear capable near-peers, who have the capability to unilaterally escalate a conflict to any level of violence in any domain worldwide with any instrument of national power. That is historically significant. The strategic security environment is now a three-party nuclear near-peer reality, Richard added. A deactivated Titan II nuclear ICMB is seen in a silo at the Titan Missile Museum in Green Valley, Arizona, on May 12, 2015. (Brendan Smialowski/AFP/Getty Images) The comments follow months of increasing reports about the CCPs efforts to modernize and expand its nuclear arsenal despite international condemnation. The Pentagon estimates that the communist regime will have 1,000 nuclear weapons by 2030. Experts have repeatedly warned that the new nuclear capabilities will allow China to intimidate rivals, as well as give cover to increased conventional warfare. Richard described the CCPs strategic breakout as breathtaking, and said that the possibility that the United States could have to face both Russia and China in a conflict simultaneously was the greatest challenge the United States had ever faced. To meet the challenge, he said, the United States would need to improve its strategic readiness. I have previously emphasized our need to be able to deter two adversaries at the same time, Richard said. That need is now an imperative. The admiral said that every operational capability and plan in the United States toolkit was predicated on its strategic nuclear capabilities. Put simply, he said, no part of U.S. military strategy will work in the way that it was designed to work without nuclear dominance. The episode highlighted the challenge of the United States new strategic position: How to combat a dictator threatening nuclear war in Europe while also maintaining the appropriate readiness needed to deter a nuclear-armed CCP from conflict in the Indo-Pacific? Mira Rapp-Hooper, a White House director for U.S. Indo-Pacific strategy, said that the task was immensely difficult, but that it was possible, even with the ongoing war in Ukraine. There is a way that the resources we are sending to Ukraine right now are actually quite distinct from what we are trying to do on the Indo-Pacific strategy, Hooper said during a virtual event on Feb. 28. That does not mean that we wont feel moments of resource scarcity, but it does mean that we can plan both simultaneously. There are no easy paths forward. But, harnessing the cooperation of democratic nations worldwide may be the best chance the United States has to deter a more permanent shift in the balance of power towards Eurasia. To utilize that advantage, McFarland said during a recent interview with EpochTVs American Thought Leaders program, America would need to exploit the CCPs greatest weakness. China doesnt have allies, she said. China has vassals. 5,000 years of history, and China has vassals. What does the United States have that nobody else has? Allies. Friends. Like-minded countries. Treasury Secretary Janet Yellen pauses while testifying before a Senate Banking Committee hybrid hearing on oversight of the Treasury Department and the Federal Reserve on Capitol Hill in Wash., on Nov. 30, 2021. (Elizabeth Frantz/Reuters) Yellen Tells EUs Dombrovskis Further Strong Measures Needed on Russia: Treasury WASHINGTONU.S. Treasury Secretary Janet Yellen on Tuesday told European Commission Executive Vice President Valdis Dombrovskis that cooperation was needed on further strong measures in response to Russias invasion of Ukraine after unprecedented sanctions, the U.S. Treasury said. Secretary Yellen affirmed the United States support for Ukraines sovereignty, working together with our partners to hold Russia accountable, the Treasury said in a statement after a call between the U.S. and EU officials. By David Lawder NORWALK As Russia continues to storm Ukraine and displace thousands, the city of Norwalk is hosting a vigil in solidarity outside of City Hall Wednesday. Norwalk Mayor Harry Rilling condemned the attacks in a statement Tuesday. Russias attack on Ukraine is a despicable act of war and is totally unprovoked, Rilling said. Despite promises by Putin and the Russian Ambassador to the U.S. that there were no plans to attack, they did just that. My office stands ready to communicate with our Federal Delegates to provide support to our Ukrainian community in gathering updates on relatives in the war zone, he added. The vigil is scheduled for 5:30 p.m. at the flagpole outside of City Hall, 125 East Ave. Rilling said the Ukrainian and American flags are proudly flying on the flagpole. NORWALK The Norwalk Transit District will plan extra runs on the WHEELS Route 11 bus line to replace the Norwalk Commuter Shuttle that previously provided service Norwalk Community College students and staff, officials said. Norwalk Transit District CEO Kimberlee Morton presented a new proposal to the community college community on Monday that would add three more runs to the Route 11 bus line in the morning. The additional runs would cut wait times from 40 minutes to 20 minutes at the South Norwalk Metro-North train station. The presentation came about a month after the NCC community protested near the campus bus stop, demanding the transit district save the commuter shuttle. The ride between South Norwalk and Norwalk Community College takes about 20 minutes on Route 11 with only one addtional stop on Connecticut Avenue. The new runs would leave the train station at 7:36 a.m., 8:16 a.m., and 8:56 a.m. The bus previously departed from the train station only twice between 7:30 and 9 a.m. - at 7:56 a.m. and 8:36 a.m. Today was a real win for NCC students, said Robert Emigh, a professor at the college and chair of the Committee for Active and Responsible Environmental Sustainability (CARES) said in an email on Monday. While the shuttle bus will no longer operate, NTD did agree to a schedule that in the morning would limit commute wait time for NCC students at the South Norwalk train station. The shuttle service was suspended in March 2020 at the start of the COVID-19 pandemic, and it has not been brought back online. Morton will bring the proposal to the Norwalk Transit commissioners at their next meeting, scheduled for March 24. The district would then need to hire a new driver. Morton told the college community that she hoped to expand the service by the beginning of fall semester if not this summer, according to Emigh. Emigh said he and other in attendance at Mondays meeting appreciated Morton coming directly to campus to present her proposal. He also believes more students will take the bus as they see the convenience of the new schedule. Im very pleased that the transit district and the community college worked out a plan that will accommodate the students needs, Norwalk Mayor Harry Rilling told Hearst Connecticut Media. They rely on transportation from the train station to the college and any disruption in service would likely result in a disruption in their education. The additional runs are a permanent change to Route 11. Emigh said that Morton shared that the district may expand services in the afternoon some time in the future. Lexi Kleinman, president of the colleges Student Government Association, chaired the meeting that also included Paul Chenard, manager of transportation and planning for the Norwalk Transit District. The colleges Committee for Active and Responsible Environmental Sustainability and the transit district originally collaborated in 2009 to establish the shuttle, with service beginning in spring 2010. Nearly a quarter of the 5,083 students enrolled at the school rely on public transportation to get to class. emily.morgan@hearstmediact.com This is a carousel. Use Next and Previous buttons to navigate TROY A large crowd of flag-waving, shouting people lined overpasses that crossed Interstate 70 in Madison County on Tuesday to cheer on a convoy of about 100 trucks headed to Washington, D.C. The People's Convoy which left Adelanto, California for an 11-day trip to the U.S. Capitol passed through eastern Missouri and Illinois. A second group of truckers called the Freedom Convoy apparently disbanded from lack of participation. Arriving just before noon, it took more than 30 minutes for all of the trucks in the convoy to pass a single point. The stated goal of the group when they reach Washington is to ask for an end to all mandates related to the COVID-19 pandemic. The People's Convoy left Cuba, Missouri, at about 9:30 a.m. Tuesday. But some confusion prompted by changes in the announced convoy route through the area caused some people hoping to view the trucks to line up in the wrong spots. The region is crisscrossed with interstates, allowing different route possibilities for any journey. At about 11 a.m. Tuesday, more than 20 people with flags and signs stood on the Illinois 159 overpass waiting for the convoy. A police officer informed them the route had changed, and people scrambled to move to the new location. More than 200 people jammed the Illinois 4 overpass as it crossed Interstate 70 in eastern Madison County. Crowds also stood on overpasses carrying side road traffic across the highway. The atmosphere of the group was peaceful, upbeat and downright patriotic. Flags nearly outnumbered the people in the large crowd. On Illinois 4, Illinois State Police troopers stayed near the crowds to protect them from passing traffic. Illinois officials have released the state's first guidance aimed at addressing the connection between exclusionary school discipline practices and increased rates of incarceration, often referred to as the school-to-prison pipeline. Illinois Attorney General Kwame Raoul, along with the Illinois State Board of Education Superintendent of Education Dr. Carmen Ayala, announced the guidance on Tuesday for school districts to ensure that disciplinary policies do not violate civil rights laws. The guidance is a resource to ensure public K-12 schools and districts in Illinois meet their legal obligations under state and federal civil rights laws, the Raoul said in a press release. Under the law, schools must administer student discipline policies without discriminating on the basis of race, color, national origin, gender, disability, sexual orientation, gender identity and other protected characteristics. Raoul and Ayala urge schools to reevaluate punitive and exclusionary disciplinary policies, which rely on suspensions or expulsions and disproportionately impact students of color, the AG wrote, as well a students with disabilities and other marginalized students. Instead, Raoul and ISBE recommend that schools take a trauma-informed approach to school discipline and prioritize equity for all students. "Data shows that there is a connection between exclusionary school discipline policies and increased rates of incarceration," Raoul said in a statement. "School districts have a responsibility to ensure that disciplinary policies and practices do not disproportionately impact students of color. "Academic success should not depend on a students race, ethnicity, sex, gender identity or disability," Raoul continued. "I am proud to work with ISBE and look forward to partnering with the NEA to provide continued guidance that will help school districts craft equitable policies that give all students the opportunity to excel." Illinois law requires school boards and the governing bodies of charter schools to conduct annual reviews of discipline policies and their implementation. Raoul and ISBE are encouraging school boards to review disparities in discipline data and eliminate policies and practices associated with having a race-based disparate impact. This guidance addresses discipline policies, such as those that rely on suspension and expulsions or those based on hair and dress codes, which disproportionately impact students of color, the AG wrote. In addition, behavioral concerns have increased in some schools as students have faced personal trauma throughout the pandemic. Despite compromising less than 17% of the state's student population, 45% of students expelled from Illinois public schools in the 2019-20 school year were Black. Nationally, during 2017-18, students with disabilities received 20.5% of in-school suspensions and 24.5% of out-of-school suspensions, despite representing 13.2% of the total student enrollment, the attorney general found. Emerging data also show that LGBTQ+ students face harsher discipline outcomes than heterosexual and cisgender students, the attorney general wrote. These disparities cause real harms for vulnerable students, since exclusionary discipline is correlated with decreased academic achievement, increased likelihood of students dropping out of school and increased involvement with the juvenile justice system. "We have seen that the trauma and instability students have faced during the pandemic can affect students behavior, especially as they continue to re-acclimate to in-person learning," Ayala said in a statement. As educators, we need to engage with our students with more empathy and understanding than ever before. "Punitive and exclusionary discipline are not what students need to get back on track academically," Ayala continued. "We are proud to partner with the Attorney Generals Office to provide guidance on school discipline to support holistic, evidence-based practices that contribute to a safe and positive school culture for all students." Raoul urges students or parents who experience or witness discriminatory school discipline practices or policies to contact his offices Civil Rights Bureau by emailing civilrights@ilag.gov or by calling his Civil Rights Hotline at 1-877-581-3692, or to contact the ISBE Student Care Department by emailing studentcare@isbe.net. The Attorney Generals Civil Rights Bureau enforces state and federal civil rights laws prohibiting discrimination. Last weeks invasion of Ukraine by Russia has created a steady stream of Ukrainian refugees crossing the border into Poland, and a local couple is doing its part to help them. Michal Matras, who is a native of Pulawy, Poland, and his wife, Christine Brinley-Matras, have set up a Facebook group, Metro East Locals Supporting Ukraine (https://www.facebook.com/groups/1173178076549933), to help bring in donations for the refugees. The group, which formed on Monday, already had more than 1,300 members as of Tuesday afternoon. Im completely speechless about the response to this, Michal said. I thought it would be a little fundraiser and we might get $500, but Im amazed at how people are contributing and how generous everyone is. Christine is the owner of Brinley Orthodontics in Maryville. Michal, meanwhile, is a stay-at-home dad and takes care of the couples three children, ages 7, 4 and 2. When Russian President Vladimir Putin launched the invasion of Ukraine on Feb. 22, Michal knew he had to do something to help the Ukrainian people. I was born in Poland, and I came to the U.S. to go to school, and I went to Lindenwood University for a couple of years, Michal said. I bumped into my (future) wife about 15 years ago and now we live in Edwardsville. Im 100% Polish and my heart is always with them. I speak Polish and I try to teach my kids the language. We have a lot of Ukrainian friends in Chicago and back home in Poland. At first, Michal and Christine werent sure what the best method was to support Ukrainian refugees, but a plan quickly came together. I was talking to friends in my hometown, which is about 90 or 100 miles away from the Ukraine border, Michal said. Three or four days ago, I started asking what was going on and what was the situation in Ukraine. Watching it on TV, its just horrifying. I started getting pictures and videos from my friends and from my brother, who lives in Poland. My parents had been over here for three months, and they just went back home to Poland about a month ago. From talking to family and friends, Michal was able to get first-hand information about the situation at the border and the plight of the Ukrainian refugees. You can see pictures of hundreds of women and children all over the streets and theyre pretty much looking for any kind of help, Michal said. The situation is so critical as Russia is trying to close the border, and theyll jump into a car or bus, anything that is there to pick them up. The Polish government is helping a lot, but there are over 150,000 women and children crossing the border. A lot of businesses and private citizens, like my friends and my brother, have stepped up to help. Michal noted that his brothers and friends were among the Polish people who were taking an active role in aiding the refugees. They collect as much money as they can, and they drive up to the border with a car full of stuff and leave food there (for the refugees) and then they come back home with people who have come over from Ukraine, said Michal, who added that he may be traveling to Poland soon to help manage the group's effort. People are posting on Facebook saying, we can take two people or we can take four people. My brothers neighbor has taken in nine people. Using the connections of family and friends, both in Poland and in the U.S., Michal started making calls on Monday and they were able to collect several thousand dollars to send to Poland to help the refugees. The money is already in Poland (Tuesday) I transferred it there and its going to my brother and my friends, who have been in St. Louis multiple times, Michal said. One couple that is heavily involved with this are the godparents of my oldest daughter and they came here for the baptism. My brother is already taking the money to buy whatever those people need, and they need diapers, toothpaste and just about everything. Some of them crossed the border with nothing more than their kids, their passports and the clothes they were wearing. For Christine, the response of both Michals family and friends, and the response of donors on Facebook, is an example of what people can do when they work together. My husbands brother and his friends dont live too terribly far from the border, so they can move back and forth with the refugees, and a lot of those people have made it to his hometown, Christine said. People have been putting them up in their homes and using their own money to help them, but now its getting to the point that there is only so much that they can spend. Theyre trying to get the refugees into comfortable spots and make sure they have medicine and whatever else they need. We reached out to some friends who said they could contribute, and it just kept growing from there. While Michal and his friends in the United States cant be there physically to help the refugees, they want to do all they can to help them financially. These people are just hoping that theyre going to get lucky enough that they will find somebody nice enough to take care of them, Michal said. A lot of people are willing to help, but theyre running low on resources. I have friends and neighbors over here and it seems like they are all donating. There are not many Polish people in this area, so initially I thought, if we get $50, its cool, and if we get $5,000, its even better, but it keeps growing. If each person donates $25, that can go a long way to help those people. The Facebook group has quickly become a labor of love for Michal and his wife, and in terms of fundraising, it has already surpassed their wildest expectations. I havent slept much the last two nights, especially with the seven-hour time difference, but its worth it, Michal said. We opened a bank account (in Poland) just to make sure everything is safe and were not getting charged any fees. I know if you go through some of the big organizations, a lot of times you pay fees and some of the money gets lost along the way. But I have no doubt that all of this money is going to go to the right place. Through the Facebook group, money can be sent via Venmo to Christine (@cbrinley-matras), where it will go directly to those fleeing Ukraine. I didnt know what Venmo was, but my wife opened the Venmo account yesterday and we started collecting money through Venmo and PayPal, Michal said. I know a lot of older people that dont do Venmo, but were collecting checks and cash from them to donate. Weve also put in some of our own money to help and Im sure well do it again. Im getting so many messages from my friends in my hometown and theyre sending me pictures of what is happening in Ukraine. Its absolutely heartbreaking what is going on right now. Christine, like her husband, is stunned by the generosity of people willing to donate their money to help the Ukrainian people. I had never done Venmo until I set it up yesterday, but its probably the easiest way to send money. I created the Facebook group page so as these funds are distributed, we have a place to post it so people know where their money is going, Christine said. I thought it would just be a few friends, no big deal, and its grown incredibly in 24 hours. Michal noted that the plight of the refugees can be overshadowed by other images and stories of war coming out of Ukraine. You watch the coverage on TV and its talking a lot about war and destruction and people killing each other, but I wish they would focus more on the refugees, Michal said. Theyre not really showing whats going on at the border, and there are so many stories of kids being misplaced and women with kids walking 20 or 30 miles trying to find shelter. In most of the motels in Poland near the border, almost everything is being converted to a temporary place for these people to stay. The people that make it to my hometown arent starving because the Polish government is helping them, but there are so many stories of mothers with children that need help. Christine said its hard for her to imagine what its like for the Ukrainian refugees, who will have to rebuild their lives after arriving in Poland with little to nothing. Its frightening for them and a lot of them are scared to get off the bus because they dont know where theyre going from there, Christine said. Theyre on the street and its freezing cold, and they have nothing but what they are carrying. There are people at the border giving them food and blankets and stuff like that, but then they have to carry those things. Were trying to find a balance of giving them things or just giving them money so wherever they land, they can get what they need. South Hill, VA (23970) Today Showers and a possible thunderstorm during the evening will give way to partly cloudy skies after midnight. Low 59F. Winds light and variable. Chance of rain 80%.. Tonight Showers and a possible thunderstorm during the evening will give way to partly cloudy skies after midnight. Low 59F. Winds light and variable. Chance of rain 80%. In the history of modern society, leadership has been the greatest catalyst for human development. Every remarkable society or human civilization has been a product of leadership that is visionary, competent and wise. When leadership elevates its act, societies rise to their greatest heights; but when leadership fails, societies fall with it! In the past eight years, Anambra State has experienced a momentous rise under the visionary and competent leadership of Governor Willie Obiano. It has been widely whispered that the state is slowly rising to the fullness of its promise and the fulfillment of its destiny. But this should not come as a surprise, really. Obiano had made his ambitions clear from the beginning. For instance, in his Inaugural Address, Governor Obiano had declared that, the time has come to prove to ourselves that the entrepreneurial spirit for which our people are known all over the world can take firm roots at home; that together as one, we can be masters of our own house. Eight years after, the entire landscape of Anambra State speaks in loud affirmation that Willie Obiano has put the Anambra Dream within a touching distance! Obiano came with an Economic Blueprint which declared that his Vision was to make Anambra the 1st Choice investment destination and a hub for industrialization and commercial activities while his Mission was to create a socially stable business-friendly environment that would attract both indigenes and foreigners to seek wealth creating opportunities. Today, no one is in doubt that Anambra is a better place to live and pursue ones happiness. The performance indicators are there for all to see. In the past eight years, Governor Obiano had increased workers salaries even when Nigerias economy was in recession. He attracted massive investments into the agricultural sector which helped to bring down unemployment and crime, he built 18 solid bridges and 131 roads to open up industrial and agricultural clusters, he invested heavily in education and today, Anambra children are wining major academic laurels across the world and finally, he created an investment-friendly environment and in 2020 when COVID-19 made war on the world, Anambra was reported to have attracted $10.2m in foreign direct investments. In fact, the impact of Obianos Economic Blueprint is remarkable. In eight years that were marred by two recessions and a colossal slump in global oil earnings, Obiano grew Anambras subnational economy from N3.2trn to N4.2trn. Through his managerial competence, Anambra State led other states in Nigeria as the state with the lowest poverty rate, indicating a drop from 53% in 2010 to 14.8% in 2020. Anambra was also rated as the state with the lowest unemployment rate in Nigeria at 13.1% when the national average stood at 27%. Also under Obianos watch, Anambra joined Lagos and Rivers as the only states in Nigeria that could meet their operating obligations with funds from their Internally Generated Revenue (IGR) and earnings from Value Added Tax (VAT). And finally, under Obiano, Anambra was rated as the state with the best Fiscal Responsibility Index in Nigeria. The only state that beat her to the first position was Rivers State. These are not mere conjectures. They are verifiable facts. Obiano has had a tremendous impact. That should not be in doubt! However, what appears to be the ultimate game changer in Obianos stunning results is the success he recorded in getting the Federal Government to formally admit Anambra into Nigerias league of oil-producing states. In fact, it has been confirmed that the state would receive her first 13% derivation fund from the Federal Government this month. There is no telling the import of this revenue on the state when it finally drops. And when we remember that these resources shall be managed by Prof Chukwuma Soludo, it becomes clearer that Obiano is leaving Anambra State in the best possible position ever! That is impact! Beyond these impressive facts though, Governor Obiano has also woven a delicate tapestry that ensure that Anambra State emerges as a formidable economic power. A few things point us in that direction. They are; the International Conference Center Awka which is the largest single event center in Nigeria with a capacity to sit 10,000 people, the Anambra International Cargo and Passenger Airport Umueri which is rated among some of the best airports in West Africa today and of course, the brand new Awka City Stadium. Any serious thinker can see that Governor Obiano has creatively laid a foundation for the prosperity of Anambra State. Indeed, when you connect the dots between West Africas largest retail market in Onitsha, West Africas leading Auto City in Nnewi, Nigerias largest event center in Awka and West Africas most modern airport in Umueri, you will inevitably see the outline of a major economic corridor in Anambra State. This becomes even clearer when we add Golden Tulip Agulu Lake Hotel, Agulu which was started by Obianos predecessor but completed by him. The hotel is one of the most serene holiday resorts in South East Nigeria. Therefore, prospective investors can easily fly into Umueri Airport and lodge comfortably in Golden Tulip Agulu Lake Hotel and begin to make business inquiries in the state. That is the power of purposeful leadership the ability of a leader to connect the dots between people and events with opportunities. Again, that is impact! Happily, in response to Obianos visionary leadership, Anambras numerous industrialists and entrepreneurs have started taking parts of their businesses back to their home state. Obianos Aku Luo Uno call has struck a chord with the entrepreneurial pride of the people and they are moving back to help in building a new Anambra State. He has rekindled the Anambra pride and invoked the peoples passion for excellence. He has lit a candle in the corner of the peoples heart. Now they are fanning the flame into a glorious blaze! Indeed, in eight years of hard work, Governor Obiano has elevated Anambra State to an enviable status. Anambra has become a house on the hill which no attentive passerby can miss or ignore. Finally, that is impact! Some students in Ondo State tertiary institutions under the aegis of the National Association of University Students (NAUS) has taken over the busy Ibadan-Akure-Abuja highway in expressing their displeasure over the ongoing industrial strike embarked by the Academic Staff Union of Universities (ASUU). The blockage consequently has caused heavy vehicular jam along the highway. While many heavy duty trucks and passenger buses going to and fro Abuja, Lagos or Benin were seen stranded, some motorists journeying to nearby communities along the highway resorted to alternative untarred roads. While speaking, Former Student Union President of Federal University of Technology, Akure, Esedere Abraham, stated that until the industrial action by ASUU is called off, the protest wouldn't stop. Esedere, while saying that students should not bear the burden of any problem between ASUU and the Federal Government, on the other hand, Vice Chairman of NAUS, Ondo State chapter, Shittu Folarin, stated the students' move was to let the Federal government and ASUU have permanent resolution. Biden leads Congress in stirring message of solidarity with Ukraine WASHINGTON: It was an address by a man who appears absolutely clear that his greatest strength is in bringing people together. politicsRussianUkraine By AFP Wednesday 2 March 2022, 01:14PM US President Joe Biden delivers his first State of the Union address at the US Capitol in Washington, DC, yesterday (Mar 1). Photo: AFP As US President Joe Biden took his place at the front of the House of Representatives for his first State of the Union speech, his most pressing concern was to bring the chamber to its feet in a poignant gesture of solidarity with the people of Ukraine. The Ukrainian ambassador to the United States is here tonight, the president said as he launched into the 60-minute address, acknowledging the guest of honor, diplomat Oksana Markarova. Let each of us here tonight in this chamber send an unmistakable signal to Ukraine and to the world. Please rise if you are able and show that, yes, we the United States of America stand with the Ukrainian people. Tears in her eyes, Markarova struggled to compose herself in her spot alongside First Lady Jill Biden as lawmakers packed into the chamber for the annual keynote clapped and cheered with one voice. Sixty minutes later, the call for unity ended as it had begun, with the president seeking to galvanize the only nation on Earth that has always turned every crisis we have faced into an opportunity. As Ukraine entered its seventh day under attack from Vladimir Putins Russia, many of the lawmakers present echoed Bidens gesture, sporting the yellow and blue colours of the flag of Americas embattled ally. Biden was the ringmaster for numerous hearings of great import in that very building, a 19th century neoclassical shrine to Western liberal democracy at the east end of Washingtons National Mall. As he ran for president in 2020, the Democrat would often wax lyrical about his days in the Senate, talking up his record as a breaker of barriers and a reacher across the aisle. But the avuncular grin dropped away as Biden assumed the role he is less known for: policeman, enforcer, the autocrats worst nightmare. We are joining with our European allies to find and seize their yachts, their luxury apartments, their private jets, he said of Russias corrupt billionaires. We are coming for your ill-begotten gains, he warned them, earning a rare round of approving claps from the Republican benches. Togetherness The rare show of togetherness over the Ukraine crisis may have left less cynical Congress watchers hopeful for a more unified, productive relationship between Democrats and Republicans in the future. But lets not get ahead of ourselves. Genuine bipartisanship is something of a holy grail in deeply divided Washington, of course, and the wing of the opposition party loyal to Donald Trump for the most part could only blink, unmoved. There are still no shortage of conservatives in Washington - followers of the last White House occupant and more traditional establishment foreign policy hawks - who call Biden weak on foreign rivals like China and Russia. The administration needs to do much more, they argue, to secure US energy independence so that oil and gas-rich autocracies are unable to hold Americans to ransom. Colorado congresswoman Lauren Boebert, an unserious carnival barker to her critics but a darling of the far-right, eschewed the Ukrainian colors to turn up in midnight black shawl emblazoned with the pro-fossil fuel message drill baby drill. One of Bidens harshest critics yesterday though was not from the so-called MAGA caucus at all. Ukrainian-born US representative Victoria Spartz, who was embraced by many of her colleagues as she entered the chamber last night, had made a speech a few hours earlier that would have made for difficult listening in the Oval Office. Describing the plight of her 95-year-old grandmother, pinned down under the Russian aerial bombardment in northern Ukraine, Spartz accused Biden of doing nothing to help. It is not a war, its a genocide because we have a crazy man that believes that he has the whole world hostage, she said of Putin. And now that we have a president that talks about, talks about - and doesnt do things... Is he going to wait when millions die and then hes going to do more? Cabinet approves B1.4bn for Phuket medical centre PHUKET: The Cabinet has approved a budget of B1.411 billion to develop the international medical center to be built on state land at the northern end of the island. healthtourismeconomicsconstruction By The Phuket News Wednesday 2 March 2022, 05:44PM An artists impression of what the international medical hub centre will look like. Image: PR Phuket / file An artists impression of what the international medical hub centre will look like. Image: PR Phuket / file The Cabinet approved the budget allocation in principle to implement a project to upgrade Phukets health tourism to a world-class health tourism city, Thanakorn Wangboonkongchana, spokesman for the Prime Ministers Office, revealed yesterday (Mar 1). The amount of investment is B1,411.70 million to strengthen the readiness of the technology infrastructure system, medical science and medical service system and supporting the provision of modern international medical and public health services, he said. The budget is also to be used to develop Phuket City to be a center of high-value medical services through international tourism, he added. Vachira Phuket Hospital is the unit responsible for the project, Mr Thanakorn said. The development of a project to upgrade Phukets health tourism to a world-class health tourism city will be a model for health tourism It is part of the upgrading of the tourism industry for the high-income groups and health tourism, which is one of the 12 targeted industries to transform the countrys development in the next phase, Mr Thanakorn added. Details of the funding of the mega-project have yet to be fully explained in public, other than generic statements like those given by Mr Thanakorn, saying that the project will raise Phukets medical tourism to international standards, despite having four international hospitals on the island. The Treasury Department together with the Public Health Ministry in October 2020 vowed to splurge as much as B4 billion to develop the centre. In December that year, the Treasury Department officially handed over more than 141 rai in Mai Khao to the Ministry of Public Health so that an International Medical Centre can be built at the site. Deputy Prime Minister Prawit Wongsuwan presided over the handover ceremony, held at the Ministry of Finance headquarters in Bangkok. Also present to receive the land were Public Health Deputy Minister Dr Satit Pituthecha and Dr Kiattaphum Wongrajit, who at that time was the Public Health Permanent Secretary. The land, in total 141-2-64 rai (141 rai 2 ngan 64 talang wah), is to be developed into a medical service centre aimed at elevating health tourism to Phuket as part of plans to turn the island into a medical destination post COVID-19, Deputy PM Prawit said. Part of the plot has also been entrusted to Vachira Phuket Hospital for the creation of international-standard facilities for the treatment of the elderly, heart conditions and physical therapies covered under the national economic and social rehabilitation policy. Chalermong Sukontapol, Director of Vachira Hospital Phuket at the time, present at the ceremony in Bangkok, explained that the aim was for Vachira Hospital to establish a medical and public health service centre with comprehensive international-level services. called the International Health Plaza. The development is also to include an International Geriatric Care Center (Premium Long Term Care), a Hospice Care Center, a Jai Rak Center for heart conditions and the establishment of a comprehensive physical rehabilitation centre. The aim is to stimulate the economic value of Phuket and the country by providing local residents and tourists with access to standardised health services and providing a full range of services to community enterprises to sell local products and services, Deputy Health Minister Dr Satit. People in the area will enjoy greater employment and this in turn will distribute income throughout the community. This can serve as a model for health tourism to other regions, he added. It will take two years to construct. Phase 2 of the project will include the establishment of the southern branch of Bamrasnaradura Institute to create a Cancer Radiotherapy Centre and Tropical Medicine Centre. This will make high-tech services more accessible to people in the area, Dr Satit said. The origins and initial proponents of the multi-billion-baht project have been mired in obscurity. News of the project was first announced by the Phuket office of the Public Relations Department (PR Phuket) on June 19, 2020. Despite posting the first report of the project, PR Phuket denied breaking the news, instead crediting unnamed reporters. PR Phuket reported that the project was proposed by Former Governor of Phuket Phakaphong Tavipatana, along with Dr Chalermpong Sukhonthapol, Director of Vachira Phuket Hospital at the time, and Dr Thanit Sermkaew, chief of the Phuket Provincial Public Health Office (PPHO) at the time, and various sectors, which were not identified. The news was also posted on the same day that Narong Woonciew arrived on the island to take up the post of Phuket Governor, replacing mr Phakaphong, who was transferred to Phetchaburi province. Escaped Phuket prisoner recaptured PHUKET: Wardens have captured a prisoner who managed to escape Phuket Provincial Prison in Bangjo, Srisoonthorn, on Monday night (Feb 28). crime By Eakkapop Thongtub Wednesday 2 March 2022, 01:20PM Jamnien Phurub, 44, previously registered as a resident of Wichit, is back in custody. Photo: Phuket Provincial Prison Jamnien Phurub, 44, previously registered as a resident of Wichit, is back in custody. Photo: Phuket Provincial Prison How Janien managed to escape is still under investigation. Photo: Eakkapop Thongtub Jamnien Phurub, 44, previously registered as a resident of Wichit, is back in custody. Photo: Phuket Provincial Prison Jamnien Phurub, 44, previously registered as a resident of Wichit, was being held in remand pending trial for robbery when he escaped custody, Phuket Prison announced through a statement. A manhunt ensued, with Jamnien taken back into custody yesterday (Mar 1), the statement said. Jamnien was found hiding at a friends house in Baan Pru Sompan in Moo 8, Thepkrasattri. Jamnien has been returned to Phuket Provincial Prison while wardens investigate the nature of his escape, the statement concluded. Neutral on Russia-Ukraine: PM BANGKOK: Prime Minister Prayut Chan-o-cha has insisted Thailand will maintain its neutrality in the Russia-Ukraine conflict, a government source said. RussianviolencepoliticsdeathmilitaryUkraine By Bangkok Post Wednesday 2 March 2022, 09:34AM The first group of 38 Thai people evacuated from Ukraine pose for a photo before boarding a Thai Airways International flight in Bucharest, Romania. They are scheduled to arrive at Suvarnabhumi airport today (Mar 2). Photo: Foreign Ministry The source said a meeting of cabinet ministers yesterday (Mar 1) discussed the issue extensively following some 25 ambassadors based in Thailand pressuring the government to speak out against Russias invasion of Ukraine, reports the Bangkok Post. Prayut told the meeting that the long-standing relations between Thailand and Russia must be taken into account and Thailand must tread carefully, the source said. We need to be composed and make decisions carefully. Thailand must maintain a neutral stance and bring Thais in Ukraine back home quickly, the source quoted the PM as saying. Speaking after the cabinet meeting, Prayut said Thailand will adhere to Aseans stance on the conflict between Russia and Ukraine as the grouping has called for dialogue among parties concerned to resolve the Ukraine crisis. The prime minister was speaking yesterday after the 25 ambassadors met with the permanent secretary for the Foreign Ministry Thani Thongphakdi at the ministry on Monday. The ambassadors asked Thailand to speak out against the Russian invasion of Ukraine and support the United Nations General Assemblys (UNGA) resolution on the Ukraine crisis. After the meeting, David Daly, the European Union ambassador to Thailand, tweeted that the ambassadors visited the ministry to send a message that the Russian invasion of Ukraine breaches the UN Charter and that all UN members, including Thailand, should speak up to save our rules-based international order and vote for the UN Resolution. He was referring to the UNGAs resolution, which is expected to be put to a vote this week at the UN headquarters in New York. Asked by reporters to comment on the matter yesterday, Prayut insisted that Thailand has to follow Aseans stance on the matter. It is about the regional groupings decision. We need to keep a balance. But most importantly, we have been concerned about the safety of people in countries involved in the conflict. We also have to ensure Thais in those countries are safe. We also support the peace process to end the conflict and war. We need to tread carefully and act through Aseans mechanisms, Prayut said. On Saturday, Asean foreign ministers issued a statement calling for dialogue among parties concerned in the Ukraine crisis. We call on all relevant parties to exercise maximum restraint and make utmost efforts to pursue dialogue through all channels, including diplomatic means to contain the situation, the ministers said in the statement. Russia launched a military attack against Ukraine last Thursday after recognising the independence of the Eastern European countrys Donbas region held by Russia-backed separatists. We believe that there is still room for a peaceful dialogue to prevent the situation from getting out of control, the Asean ministers said. Asked what measures will be taken to deal with the impacts on Thailand if the conflict drags on, the prime minister said he held an urgent meeting with his deputies to instruct them to devise measures to respond to the situation. On Feb 17, Mr Thani welcomed Russian ambassador Evgeny Tomikhin who paid a courtesy call upon assuming his diplomatic role in Thailand. The two sides discussed a range of topics on bilateral relations between the countries, including plans to hold activities to mark the 125th anniversary of the establishment of diplomatic ties between Thailand and Russia this year. The Thai side also sought Russias support for a bid for a free trade agreement with the Eurasian Economic Union and asked Russia to send its highly placed delegates to attend the Asia-Pacific Economic Cooperation summit Thailand chairs this year. On Monday, Mr Tomikhin led a delegation including Russian Consul General to Phuket Vladimir Sosnov, to pay a courtesy visit on Phuket deputy governor Pichet Panapong, acting on behalf of Phuket governor Narong Woonciew. The topics discussed included the 125th anniversary of Thailand-Russia relations and plans to establish broader relations between Phuket and Russias Far Eastern federal district of Kamchatka. Outpatient service seen as the new normal BANGKOK: The Public Health Ministry sought public understanding about the newly launched Outpatient under Self-Isolation service yesterday (Mar 1) as it manages the transition of COVID-19 to an endemic disease. CoronavirusCOVID-19health By Bangkok Post Wednesday 2 March 2022, 09:47AM A man collects his medicine from a dispensing machine at Rajavithi Hospital yesterday (Mar 1) as the Outpatients under Self-Isolation system is being offered to people with COVID-19 who have mild or no symptoms. Photo: Somchai Poomlard It expects the new service will replace home isolation in most cases, reports the Bangkok Post. Dr Kiattiphum Wongrajit, the ministrys permanent secretary, said 95% of cases are now either asymptomatic or mild, meaning there is no need for most people who are infected to receive medical treatment at hospitals. Less than 1% of Omicron infections reach a moderate let alone critical level, he said. As such, the ministry aims to introduce the new service and make it mainstream. Dr Kiattiphum said the lack of information in previous stages of the pandemic made it necessary for those infected to be hospitalised, but the authorities have since adapted to the changed environment under the previously-prevalent Delta and now-dominant Omicron variants. We need people to change their mindset when it comes to the right medical treatment for COVID-19 as an endemic disease, he said. The ministry is now in the process of shifting its status, partly to reduce the governments financial burden, he noted. Over B130 billion has already been spent on treating over 2 million infected people since the outbreak began two years ago. Soon, the patients will bear these costs through such schemes as the B30 healthcare universal package or their insurance company, as is the case with other diseases, Dr Kiattiphum said. According to the ministry, the Outpatient under Self-Isolation service differs slightly from the Home Isolation (HI) system, which is suitable for asymptomatic patients or those with only mild symptoms and no additional risk factors. Under this service, patients will get prescription drugs depending on their condition, a transfer between facilities, and a one-time follow-up call within 48 hours. The cost of food and medical tools is not included, however. They should stay at home for seven days and monitor their symptoms, applying two ATK tests during that period. Dr Somsak Akkasilp, chief of the Department of Medical Services, said the service is an extra option, but the Home Isolation and Community Isolation schemes remain active. Phuket peaceful protests against war in Ukraine continue PHUKET: Anti-war protesters comprising Russians and Ukrainians gathered at Patong Beach to hold yet another peaceful demonstration today (Mar 2), calling for Russia to withdraw its troops from Ukraine and bring an end to the invasion that has so far cost at least 200 civilian lives, including children. RussianUkraine By The Phuket News Wednesday 2 March 2022, 02:39PM The protesters today carried signs emblazoned with slogans such as Stop Putin, Stop War, Hands off Ukraine, NATO should close the sky over Ukraine and Putin War Criminal. The protesters gathered at the white Patong Beach sign near the police box at the end of Bangla Rd. The site is popular among tourists to take photos. Police and soldiers were present to ensure the demonstration was held peacefully. Six days since Russian forces launched their invasion last Thursday (Feb 24), Prime Minister Prayut Chan-o-cha still has yet to publicly denounce the invasion in person, instead maintaining that Thailand is to remain neutral in what is referred to only as a conflict and crisis. The move to remain neutral comes as the invasion draws increasing condemnation by world leaders around the globe, bolstered by support of hundreds of thousands of people joining mass protests against the invasion worldwide. Of note, state news agencies themselves have called the incursion into Ukraine by Russian troops an invasion. Russian troops today have continued their assault on the Ukraine capital of Kyiv amid confirmed reports of the Russian military is using cluster bombs on civilian areas. The United Nations Human Rights Office (UNHRO) reported earlier today that at least 136 civilians have been killed, including 13 children, and 400 have been injured since Russia invaded Ukraine last week. The real toll is likely to be much higher, Liz Throssell, a spokesperson for UNHRO, told Reuters. Viewed of Thank you for reading! On your next view you will be asked to log in to your subscriber account or create an account and subscribepurchase a subscription to continue reading. News Curwensville Borough Property owner seeks building permit for condemned duplex CURWENSVILLE The owner of a duplex and property that is in the process of being condemned by Curwensville Borough asked council if he can request a building permit to make repairs to the structure. Matt Rowles, owner of the duplex at 315-317 Bloomington Ave., Curwensville, told council on Monday that he is requesting a permit be issued. He also stated he plans to pay delinquent property taxes in hopes of getting the Bloomington Avenue property rented or sold. Rowles also reported there are people who want to buy or lease the former Branding Iron and Spinelli garage on State Street that he also owns and he has had blueprints drawn up for those buildings so that he can obtain occupancy permits to allow new owners to refurbish and use them. Councilman Keith Simcox, who is also a member of the boroughs vacant property review board, told Rowles all three properties were submitted to borough Solicitor Heather Bozovich last year to begin the process to condemn the properties. Bozovich plans to file the paperwork Tuesday to begin the process. The borough is moving forward with plans to condemn the properties. You were told to take the information to your attorney who would submit it to the boroughs solicitor, Simcox said. Borough Secretary Terri Bracken, who is also a member of the vacant property review board, told Rowles he can sell the properties included in the condemnation process. Additionally, the person purchasing them must be made aware they are in the process of being condemned and noted the new owners do have to observe any deadlines set by the boroughs solicitor through the legal process. You must provide the solicitor with the bill of sale and proof of payment and they will have the same time frame, maybe up to 90 days, to fix them. We will need to see things in writing, Bracken said. Simcox told Rowles the vacant property review board had been asking him for more than a year to submit rehabilitation plans for his properties and none had ever been received. Rowles also inquired about the status of 628 Center St. another property recommended by the vacant property review board for condemnation. Code enforcement Officer Tom Carfley said the property has a number of borough code violations and has been the subject of a hearing at the district magisterial court. He told Rowles the deadlines set at the hearing by the judge were not met. Carfley reported a second hearing is scheduled for later this month for the same charges because Rowles pleaded not guilty. Carfley reported the vacant property review board took action at its February meeting to have an independent contractor or engineer examine any vacant properties that have code violations so that the board and property owner can have an independent review. The engineer will make a list of repairs to bring the property back into compliance and the list will be given to the owner, Carfley said. In August and November, council approved submitting several properties to the boroughs solicitor to begin the condemnation process after the vacant property review board recommended it do so because of the condition of the structures and no plans for remediation were provided by the propertys owners. Council approved a resolution Monday for the declaration of taking for the 315-317 Bloomington Ave. part of the condemnation process. Get full access to our electronic edition, website and print delivery! Note that you will need to create a site user account. If you do not already have one, to purchase an instant subscription. Local area rates are for Randolph, Chambers, Clay and Cleburne counties in Alabama THE SHORTHORN is accepting applications for summer & fall 2022 for: Writing and editing Photo and design Ad sales and marketing Web development Support staff Apply online & view job descriptions at: www.theshorthorn.com/jobs Current UTA students enrolled in at least six credit hours during the semester of employment and in good academic standing are eligible to apply for these paid positions. Some qualify for internship credit. From an office in the Press Corps of the Indiana Statehouse, the journalism majors of Franklin College's Pulliam School of Journalism work alongside the best reporters in the state, digging into the behind-the-scenes stories of Indiana politics. We're a student newsroom, but our work doesn't sit on a professor's desk. We create daily content for this website and 35 professional media partners around the state. City_news breaking featured Hundreds rallied in downtown Montreal in solidarity with Ukraine Hundreds of Montrealers gathered at Place du Canada on Sunday to demonstrate in solidarity with Ukraine as Russias president Vladimir Putin continues his military attacks on several Ukrainian cities. Ukrainian demonstrators joined by Montrealers have not ceased to speak out since Thursday denouncing Russias attack on Ukraine and urging Ottawa to act swiftly with more sanctions in defence of their homeland, following the start of the invasion Wednsday. Many demonstrators waved Yellow and Blue flags, while others carried signs with slogans such as Free Ukraine, Stop shedding innocent blood and Russian people against war. I am Russian born in Ukraine and I am against Putin, one demonstrator told The Suburban while standing next to a Ukrainian man whom she described as her brother. We want peace, no more war, he said. I was born in Ukraine and she was not and my heart bleeds. I am broken, but I want to be here to support, a young mother named Alona said to The Suburban while standing next to her daughter Mila who drew a heart and hand on a sheet with a blue and yellow background. A Kiev Native named Olga who attended the demonstration told The Suburban through sobs that she has family in Russia who called her to apologize as they do not stand by Putins actions against Ukraine while her family in Ukraine is too difficult to reach. My sister, my brother and my family, it is so difficult to contact them. We need to defend ourselves and we need as much support as possible. I have family and friends there, I have family around the world, we are all standing together united against this aggression. Its disgusting, its horrible and it hurts a lot, third generation Montrealer Roman who is a French teacher in an English school said to The Suburban. EAST ST. LOUIS Authorities have released the name of a man killed early Monday on Interstate 55. At about 1:57 a.m. Monday, Illinois State Police responded to I-55 northbound at milepost 5, near East St. Louis, for the report of a pedestrian struck by a vehicle. According to state police, Billy J. Herndon, 35, of Collinsville, was walking in the right lane of I-55 when he was truck by a 2018 Hyundai Elantra driven by Jeremy M. Tinch, 34, of Valley Park, Missouri. Herndon was fatally injured in the collision; Tinch was not injured. The incident remains under investigation. Europeans do not want to merge with Ukraine, and most Ukrainians and Russians do not want that merger either. Yet the Deep State has pressed for this fantasy until the horrible conflagration ignited. This is the so-called New World Order that leads nations into wars. In the United States and western Europe, the unelected officials who comprise the Deep State think they can force global alliances that are contrary to millennia of bonds and cultures. On Monday, Ukraine President Volodymyr Zelenskyy announced his new application to become a member of the European Union in defiance of Russia. Zelenskyy requested immediate admission into the EU at a time when millions were praying instead for a de-escalation in hostilities. The Deep State has wrongly promoted the European Union as a sort of one-world government whose purpose is to have as many members as possible without regard to the resultant conflicts. The United Kingdom voted to leave the EU after it repeatedly opposed Britains national interest. Ukraine does not qualify for membership in NATO or the EU. Yet both organizations are controlled by unaccountable bureaucrats who feel they do not need the consent of nations they purport to represent. European Council President Charles Michel encouraged Zelenskyys application by saying, It is a crucial moment to close the long-standing discussion once and for all and decide on Ukraine's membership in the EU. The EU thereby engages in global governance without regard to the sovereign national interests in Europe or the United States. President Bill Clinton promoted global government and described it as a web of institutions and arrangements that seek expanding NATO eastward. Russian President Vladimir Putin repeatedly warned that Russia and its allies would not allow the former Soviet republics of Ukraine and Georgia to join NATO, but Deep Staters in the U.S. pressed for that strategy anyway. Michel fanned the flames of war further on Monday by declaring on Twitter, #Ukraine and its people are family. Further concrete support is on its way. Ukraine is family, to Russia, in language, culture, ethnicity, religion, and geography. Attempts by European Deep Staters to bring Ukraine into the EU are merely incitement for Russia and its allies to prevent it. The United Nations estimates that 5 million refugees will flee Ukraine, more than 10% of its population. They are flooding into neighboring countries already struggling to meet the needs of their own citizens. This dwarfs the previous record for refugee migration into Europe, which was set in 2015 when 1.3 million Syrian, Afghan and other refugees sought asylum. Germany absorbed many of them. Neither European countries nor the United States really want the expected influx of refugees from Ukraine. So far, more than 520,000 Ukrainians have left with nothing more than a bag over their shoulder, expecting housing, food, and energy from the country they enter. Hungary had built a border fence against prior refugees, while Poland began construction of a border wall to block more asylum seekers from entering through Belarus. Europes initial enthusiasm for accepting refugees from Ukraine may wane if the numbers grow tenfold as some predict. Moreover, the European countries accepting the Ukrainian refugees are dependent on Russia for energy. If Europe had energy independence, then it would be far easier to address this crisis. Sen. Josh Hawley, R-MO, has introduced a bill for that. Biden and radical environmentalists should get out of the way so we could be supplying energy to our European allies instead of their dependency on Russia. World War I was caused by a web of entanglements and alliances that drew everyone and his neighbor into the worst war ever known. Nothing was accomplished by that war except to impoverish European countries and enable fascism to exploit the poverty left in the wake of that so-called Great War. Two days before Russian tanks rolled into Ukraine, John Kerry delivered a speech in Egypt on what he views as a much bigger crisis: a projected increase of 1.5 degrees Celsius in the earths temperature over the next 30 years. The former Democratic presidential nominee traveled to Egypt (by private jet, of course) as Joe Bidens Special Presidential Envoy for Climate. KYIV, Ukraine - The Ukrainian capital's streets remained largely empty Wednesday as civilians hunkered down inside their homes and in underground shelters amid ongoing fears of Russian attacks. Sirens warning of potential air attacks blared consistently through the city most of the morning and early afternoon. On main roads, defense forces have erected roadblocks using tree branches, tires, concrete blocks and old cars. At checkpoints every few hundred yards, volunteer men and women with yellow tape on their arms and rifles in their hands checked IDs. On one normally busy road near downtown, an abandoned burned-out car was smashed into a telephone pole. Tensions in the capital are rising as fears persist over a massive column of Russian forces pointed toward Kyiv from the north. U.S. defense officials said Tuesday that the 40-mile-long column of tanks and combat vehicles appeared stalled roughly 20 miles north of central Kyiv, as Russian forces grappled with fuel and food shortages. Britain's Defense Intelligence agency said Wednesday that "heavy Russian artillery and air strikes" have continued to target "built-up areas" in the last 24 hours, focusing primarily on the cities of Kharkiv, Mariupol and Chernihiv, in addition to Kyiv. In southern Ukraine, the mayor of Kherson called for safe passage to remove the wounded and the dead, writing on a messaging app: "We are all waiting for a miracle. We need it." The mayor and Ukraine's Defense Ministry said Russian troops have entered Kherson but denied reports from Russian state media that the vital port city had fallen. In the Black Sea port of Mariupol, the city administration reported Wednesday that a maternity hospital and dozens of residential buildings were hit, along with a school and a hostel for migrants, in more than 14 hours of Russian shelling. "The Russians staged a real bloody terror," the administration said. "Mariupol will not forget and will not forgive. Putin's fascists must be stopped!" In Kyiv, Mayor Vitali Klitschko urged residents to stay strong despite the shelling. "We are preparing and will defend Kyiv," he said in a video message. - - - The Washington Post's David L. Stern in Mukachevo, Ukraine, contributed to this report. Mac's ALTON Father-son duo Mac and Rob Lenhardt have opened a convenient community pit stop if you're headed out boating or picnicking, or just want to grab something quick or have it delivered. The Lenhardts opened Macs On 4th Market at 329 Belle St. carries local brands such as Duke Bakery, Joes Pizza and Boars Head meats and cheeses, as well as name brands, snacks, fountain and bottled drinks, ice cream, alcohol, cigarettes and more. Pick up and delivery are available; people can order online at www.macsdowntown.com/#market. EDWARDSVILLE A Sorento woman was charged with bribery and drug charges after allegedly offering sex to a Collinsville police officer to let her go. Amanda C. Stinnett, 33, of Sorento, was charged Feb. 28 with bribery, a Class 2 felony, and unlawful possession of a controlled substance, a Class 3 felony. Nicholas A. Raymer, 32, of the same address, was charged with unlawful possession of a controlled substance and retail theft under $300 (second subsequent offense), both Class 4 felonies. The cases were presented by the Collinsville Police Department. According to court documents, on Feb. 25 Stinnett allegedly offered sex to a Collinsville police officer in exchange for not arresting her on another charge. She also accused of having less than five grams of methamphetamine. Raymer allegedly had less than 15 grams of fentanyl and had taken merchandise valued at less than $300 from the Collinsville Rural King. It was noted Raymer has a prior conviction for retail theft out of Madison County in 2011. Bail for Raymer was set at $25,000. No bail was listed for Stinnett. Other felony drug-related charges filed Feb. 28 by the Madison County States Attorneys Office include: Chas S. McMahan, 28, of Cottage Hills, was charged with unlawful possession of methamphetamine, a Class 3 felony, and resisting a peace officer, a Class A misdemeanor. The case was presented by the Madison County Sheriffs Department. On Feb. 26 McMahan allegedly had less than five grams of methamphetamine and resisted arrest by a sheriffs deputy. Bail was set at $20,000. Timothy A. Minard, 39, of House Springs, Missouri, was charged with unlawful possession of methamphetamine, a Class 3 felony. The case was presented by the Collinsville Police Department. On Feb. 26 Minard allegedly had less than five grams of methamphetamine. Bail was set at $15,000. Shawn M. Morales, 34, listed as homeless out of Granite City, was charged with unlawful possession of methamphetamine, a Class 3 felony. The case was presented by the Granite City Police Department. On Feb. 26 Morales allegedly had less than five grams of methamphetamine. Bail was set at $10,000. Kaitlyn M. Lochmann, 31, of the 700 block of N. Wood River Avenue, Wood River, was charged with unlawful possession of methamphetamine, a Class 3 felony. The case was presented by the East Alton Police Department. According to court documents, on Feb. 27 Lochmann was found to be in possession of less than five grams of methamphetamine. Bail was set at $15,000. Jason T. Martin, 46, of OFallon, Missouri, was charged with unlawful possession of a controlled substance, a Class 4 felony. The case was presented by the Collinsville Police Department. According to court documents, on Feb. 26 Martin was found to be in possession of less than 15 grams of hydrocodone. Bail was set at $15,000. TreShawn M. Davis, 26, of East St. Louis, was charged Feb. 25 in an amended information with unlawful possession of methamphetamine, a Class 3 felony; and obstruction of identification, a Class A misdemeanor. The case was presented by the Collinsville Police Department and originally filed Feb. 23. According to court documents, on Jan. 5 Davis was found to be in possession of less than five grams of methamphetamine; and gave false information to a Collinsville police officer. This page requires Javascript. Javascript is required for you to be able to read premium content. Please enable it in your browser settings. Aviva shareholders are set to share a bumper payout of 4.75billion, as the British insurer tops up an existing 1billion share buyback scheme. Aviva, which planned to dole out at least 4billion to shareholders for the past year, saw its adjusted operating profit fall 10 per cent to 1.63billion after a softer performance across its UK life business. The group's total operating profit for 2021 came in at 2.26billion, against 3.16billion a year earlier. Optimistic: Aviva boss Amanda Blanc is upbeat about the group's prospects for 2022 The insurance and pensions giant announced a total dividend of 22.05p a share, up from 21p, with a 40 per cent hike in its 2022 dividend forecast. Aviva had pledged previously that it would dish out at least 4billion from disposals to investors, but came under pressure from activist investor Cevian, which was looking for 5billion. The group's 22,000 employees are also set to see a payday with 1,000 in Aviva shares provided to each as a 'thank you', bosses said today. Aviva also told investors on Wednesday it had snapped up wealth management group Succession Wealth for 385million. Succession Wealth has around 200 planners advising on 9.5billion worth of assets, and delivering advice to approximately 19,000 clients up and down the country. The firm said the acquisition would 'significantly' bolster its presence in the fast-growing UK wealth market, which is growing as more people seek out advice on savings and retirement funds. Aviva has raised 7.5billion from selling eight businesses across the globe since the appointment of Amanda Blanc as chief executive in July 2020. Results: Aviva saw its operating profit fall by 10% over the last year, fresh figures show 'Weve achieved a lot in the last year but were only just getting started,' Blanc said in a statement. She said Aviva had undergone 'significant strategic process', despite the drag on profits. Blanc added: 'We successfully completed the sale of eight non-core businesses, generating excellent value for our shareholders. 'Our financial position is strengthened and Aviva is now a much simpler, leaner business, focused on our core markets in the UK, Ireland and Canada.' Blanc remains upbeat about the group's outlook for 2022, estimating that shareholders will enjoy a dividend of around 870million. The group upgraded its cost savings target to 750million for the 2018-24 period. Cevian had been pushing Aviva to cut costs more aggressively. It saw general insurance gross written premiums rise 6 per cent to 8.8billion, which was the highest sum for over a decade. Aviva said it also saw a strong performance across its Savings and Retirement, Protection and Health and International Investments arms. Its annuity and equity release arms fared less well. Looking ahead, Aviva said: 'We are confident that our progress in 2021 brings the momentum we need for success in 2022 and beyond, capitalising on our strengths and the growth opportunities in our core markets of UK, Ireland and Canada.' Keith Bowman, Investment Analyst at interactive investor said: 'The insurer is returning 3.75billion to shareholders following the prior sale of various overseas businesses. Thats towards the upper end of analyst expectations.' He added: 'In all, Aviva remains a work in progress. Goals to become a simpler, more competitive, and more commercial company have headed its recent agenda. 'Overseas businesses which lack the relevant scale have been sold, with the focus very much on the UK, Ireland, and Canada. 'Less favourably, geographical diversity has been reduced, with profits from insurance operations vulnerable to natural events. 'On the upside, costs are still being tackled and the shares continue to offer an attractive dividend yield of over 5 per cent. For now, and with management now better focused, group finances strengthened and greater efficiency, analyst consensus opinion currently points towards a buy.' Aviva shares were up 1.06 per cent or 4.30p to 410.90p at 4.30pm. Russia's biggest lender is pulling out of Europe as Western sanctions plunge the countrys banking system into crisis. Sberbank, which had a UK subsidiary on Fleet Street in London, said it was with- drawing from almost all its European operations, blaming huge withdrawals of cash and threats to staff. The Moscow stock exchange has been shut this week but Sberbanks depositary receipts in London, which allow overseas investors to trade the stock more easily, plummeted another 78 per cent, and have lost more than 99 per cent of their value since Russia invaded Ukraine. Exit: Sberbank, which had a UK subsidiary on Fleet Street in London, said it was with- drawing from almost all its European operations, blaming huge withdrawals of cash and threats to staff The shake-up came after the European Central Bank ordered the closure of Sberbanks main European arm, in Austria, warning it was likely to fail after a flood of customers pulled out their money. Sberbank said it was no longer able to supply funds to its European subsidiaries but had enough capital and assets to pay all depositors. It said: The groups subsidiary banks have faced abnormal cash outflows and threats to the safety of employees and branches. The move comes after countries across the West have sanctioned Russian businesses, oligarchs and banks. In December, it had around 11billion of assets, and operated in countries including Croatia, Germany and Hungary. Its Swiss unit will not be affected. SPARKS [mdash] Mrs. Mattie L. Clements Martin, 93, of Sparks, Georgia, passed away at her granddaughter's home on April 25, 2022. Mrs. Martin was born on January 17, 1929 in Colquitt County to the late Ivey Lane Hart and Ola Gay Hart. She lived most of her life in Cook County and was of the remaining of SUPPORT LOCAL JOURNALISM! On your next view you will be asked to log in to your subscriber account or create an account and subscribepurchase a subscription to continue reading. Submitted photoFrom left to right, Sheila Massey Tucker, president of John B. Gordon Chapter 383 UDC; Jerger Elementary School second grade students Sophie Kornegay, Madison Lewis, Lawson Brown, and second grade teacher Shea McDougald display the Georgia items presented to them in recognition of Georgia Day Anthony Petrakis, 42, of Dawson Springs, swerved to miss an animal in the road and lost control of his vehicle on Feb. 25, causing him to exit the roadway and strike a concrete embankment, according to the Caldwell County Sheriffs Office. The sheriffs office said Petrakis was taken from the scene to a Madisonville hospital for treatment of nonlife-threatening injuries suffered in the crash. If we do not learn from history, it can happen here again Russia bombed a TV tower in Ukraines capital on Tuesday and rained rockets on the city of Kharkiv as Moscow intensified its bombardment of Ukrainian urban areas in a shift of tactics after its six-day invasion stalled. A U.S. official said a miles-long armoured column bearing down on the capital Kyiv had not made any advances in the past 24 hours, frozen in place by logistics problems, short on fuel and food, and perhaps pausing to reassess tactics. Russias defence ministry urged Kyiv residents to flee and said it would strike unspecified areas used by Ukraines security services and communications. Speaking in a heavily guarded government compound in Kyiv, Ukrainian President Volodymyr Zelenskiy said Russia must first stop bombing people before peace talks could make any headway. In a joint interview with Reuters and CNN, Zelenskiy also urged NATO members to impose a no-fly zone to stop Russias airforce, something the military alliance has ruled out. As Zelenskiy, unshaven and wearing simple khaki clothes, spoke, news came that a Russian missile had struck a TV tower near the Babyn Yar Holocaust memorial site in Kyiv, killing at least five people. Zelenskiy, who also spoke by phone for 30 minutes with U.S. President Joe Biden on Tuesday, said the artillery barrages on the eastern city of Kharkiv amounted to state terrorism. Biden and Zelenskiy discussed how Russia had intensified attacks on sites used by civilians, the White House said. The U.S. president is expected to highlight Western unity over Ukraine in his State of the Union address later on Tuesday. SHAMBOLIC President Vladimir Putin has drawn global condemnation and sanctions that have already sent the rouble into freefall and forced Russians to queue outside banks for their savings. The West has imposed heavy sanctions on Russia to shut off its economy from the global financial system, pushing international companies to halt sales, cut ties, and dump tens of billions of dollars worth of investments. But nearly a week since Russian troops poured over the border, they have not captured a single major Ukrainian city after running into far fiercer resistance than they expected. Looking at the Russian operation so far, theyre having tremendous problems with logistics and communications. The whole effort seems shambolic, Michael Kofman, an expert on the Russian military at Washingtons Wilson Center, wrote in a tweet. Many Western military analysts fear that Russia will now fall back on tactics which call for crushing bombardment of built-up areas before trying to enter them. A senior U.S. defence official, speaking on condition of anonymity, said: One reason why things appear to be stalled north of Kyiv is that the Russians themselves are regrouping and rethinking and trying to adjust to the challenges that theyve had. The Russians have been surprised not only by the scale of Ukrainian resistance but also by poor morale among their own forces, some of whom surrendered without a fight, the official said, without providing evidence. Russia still has more forces to throw into the fight, though. Russias Defence Minister Sergei Shoigu said the special military operation would continue until it had achieved its goals, defined by Putin as disarming Ukraine and capturing the neo-Nazis he says are running the country. Rocket strikes on Tuesday in Kharkiv, Ukraines second biggest city, killed at least 10 people and wounded 35, Ukrainian Interior Ministry adviser Anton Herashchenko said. Human rights groups and Ukraines ambassador to the United States have accused Russia of using cluster bombs and vacuum bombs, weapons condemned by many organizations. Moscow denies targeting civilians. Munitions experts who reviewed footage on social media of attacks on Monday said Kharkiv appeared to have been targeted by cluster bombs. High-rise buildings, schools, and kindergartens were among the buildings destroyed in those strikes, Interfax Ukraine reported, citing Ukraines defence ministry. In the south, Russia claimed to have completely encircled Ukraines Azov Sea coast. If confirmed, that would mean Russian forces invading from Crimea had joined up with separatists in the east and had cut off Ukraines main eastern port, Mariupol. Zelenskiy said Kyiv remained the main target. Some Kyiv residents have been sheltering in underground metro stations at night, there are long lines for fuel, and some products are running out in shops. APPEAL TO EUROPE In an emotional address to the European Parliament by video link on Tuesday, a day after he signed an official request to join the European Union, Zelenskiy urged the bloc to prove that it sided with Ukraine. Do prove that you will not let us go. Do prove that you are indeed Europeans and then life will win over death and light will win over darkness, he said. Russian Foreign Minister Sergei Lavrov told a Geneva disarmament meeting via video link that Ukraine had been seeking nuclear weapons. He did not provide evidence other than saying Ukraine still has Soviet nuclear technologies and the means of delivery of such weapons. More than 100 diplomats walked out of the hall in protest as his speech began, underlining Russias international isolation. Ukraines general staff said Russian losses included 5,710 personnel, 29 destroyed and damaged aircraft and 198 tanks, all figures that could not be verified. Russia has given no full account of its battlefield losses. I SAW WAR Moscow announced a ban on foreign companies selling assets to try to halt the flight of Western companies abandoning their Russian ties. Putin also issued a decree banning cash exports of foreign currency from Russia exceeding $10,000 in value. The rouble hit a record low on Tuesday, threatening the living standards of ordinary Russians. Most effective among the sanctions so far have been those on Russias central bank that prevent it from using its $630 billion foreign reserve war chest to prop up the rouble. With energy prices soaring, the U.S. and its allies agreed Tuesday to release oil reserves as buyers avoid Russian suppliers. More than 660,000 people, mostly women and children, have fled Ukraine to neighbouring countries such as Poland and Romania since the invasion began, the U.N. refugee agency said. At the Hungarian border crossing Tiszabecs, a mother cradled a baby in her arms after a four-day drive from Kyiv. I saw war, I saw rockets, said her older son Ivan, 15, who looked exhausted after the journey. His father had stayed behind to fight. SOURCE: REUTERS ALBANY - A group of semiconductor scientists and academics from New York state and across the United States have published a new report laying out their vision for a new federal computer chip manufacturing center being proposed in Albany as a counterweight to China's growing influence in the vital industry. The lab, known as the National Semiconductor Technology Center, would be paid for through a funding bill making its way through Congress that would provide $52 billion to grow the domestic chip manufacturing sector and fund cutting-edge research. The legislation, known as the CHIPS Act, is the work of U.S. Senate Majority Leader Chuck Schumer (D-N.Y.), who has said that when he wrote the bill, he envisioned the center being headquartered at Albany Nanotech, the state-run chip manufacturing center located across the street from the University at Albany. "There is only one place for this center to be," Schumer said during a January tour of Albany Nanotech with a top official from the Commerce Department, which would decide where the lab is located. "Guess what was on my mind when I wrote that (bill). A-L-B-A-N-Y." Albany Nanotech is also already in the early planning stages for a new building on its campus on Fuller Road in Albany that would eventually house some of the NSTC's cleanroom facilities should the lab be awarded to Albany. "New York has been preparing to meet this moment for decades," states the new report, which was authored by top officials at IBM, Albany Nanotech and other companies and schools that want to be part of the center. "Funded by $15 billion in public and private investment over two decades, Albany Nanotech is the most advanced publicly owned 300-millimeter semiconductor R&D facility in North America," the report continues. "Global industry leaders collaborate every day with state engineers and scientists on technological breakthroughs at this location." But when and if the funding is passed, the NSTC, and a complementary lab called the National Advanced Packaging Manufacturing Program, will likely have operations or "hubs" way beyond Albany. Packaging is a term used in the chip industry for the protective shell that surrounds the actual silicon chip and integrates it into a device such as a smartphone. "Success will result from partnerships with universities and academic institutions across state borders, and at times across national borders (with like-minded nations)," the report explains about the hub system, which would also include so-called centers of excellence that will be focused on specific chip technologies. The report's contributors also include scientists and executives from places like Massachusetts Institute of Technology, Rensselaer Polytechnic Institute, UCLA, Cornell University, Texas Instruments and Micron Technology, hinting at the broad coalition that IBM and New York have put together to try and establish the federal research centers in Albany. Passage of the CHIPS Act is expected to unleash tens of billions of dollars in funding for construction of new chip factories, or "fabs," in the United States since the bill provides up to $2 billion in funding for chip companies to build new domestic manufacturing facilities that can cost five times that amount. For instance, GlobalFoundries, headquartered in Saratoga County, is planning to build a second facility at its Fab 8 manufacturing campus there once the CHIPS Act passes. Most of the other major chipmakers, including those based outside of the U.S. like Samsung and Taiwan Semiconductor Manufacturing Co., are also planning new U.S. chip fabs as well. Samsung, TSMC and the world's largest chipmaker, Intel, have all chosen sites outside of New York state for their latest fabs, but U.S. Commerce Secretary Gina Raimondo said during a recent interview with Punchbowl News that Intel and others are waiting to deploy even more capital on U.S. fabs should the CHIPS Act pass. Raimondo said Intel has $100 billion to spend, five times as much as it plans to spend on two new fabs it wants to build in Ohio. That could be good news for New York, which has been trying to land an Intel fab somewhere upstate, possibly outside of Syracuse. "I'm quite sure there's a lot of private capital being held by these companies on the sidelines right now that will be immediately unleashed once this thing is passed," Raimondo said. WATERVLIET On the eve of war, Tom Raleigh, an observer for the Organization for Security and Co-operation in Europe (OSCE), didnt want to leave Ukraine. Even though for years he tallied and reported on the skirmishes between Ukrainians and Russian-backed separatists in eastern Ukraine, he was certain Russian President Vladimir Putin wouldnt dare invade the country. I volunteered to stay behind, hunker down and keep the phone line open, said Raleigh, who had lived since 2015 in Mariupol in southeastern Ukraine. The State Department said, you dont understand, this is not an option, you got to leave. Again, when I got on that plane, I didnt think (an invasion) was going to happen. When I got to New York, sitting and talking with my sister and brother-in-law, I said, its not going to happen. It did. And now the Watervliet native's worst fears are realized. Its awful, Raleigh said in a recent phone interview. Death and destruction, people going hungry, electricity in the middle of winter disrupted. The human misery, its incomprehensible to me. I cant even imagine it. The retired U.S. Army lieutenant colonel served with mechanized and airborne units from 1981 to 1995. He describes himself as a veteran the Cold War. The Army trained him as a Russian/Eurasian specialist; a military diplomat. He taught Russian at the U.S. Air Force Academy, then served as an assistant Army attache at the U.S. Embassy Moscow, where among other things he reported on the Yeltsin-Putin transition and the brutal Russian war in Chechnya. His last posting before retiring in 2004 was two years as military adviser to the U.S. ambassador to OSCE in Vienna, Austria. Ironically, he says, the only time he ever got shot at was when he was a State Department political-military officer at U.S. Embassy Baghdad between 2017-2011, where he survived three close calls on rocket attacks on the embassy compound. Raleigh returned to New York in the fall of 2011. He was in the private sector for a couple of years as railroader and then manager for CSX rail. From afar he witnessed Russias 2014 annexation of Crimea, and then the invasion of the Donbas in eastern Ukraine. In 2015 he joined the OSCE Special Monitoring Mission in eastern Ukraine, arriving in Donetsk in April 2015, shortly after Russian-backed separatists shot down the Malaysia Airlines flight over Ukraine. In Donetsk, and then in Mariupol, he served as a monitoring officer, assistant hub leader, and UAV operator for almost seven years. Our job was to observe what was always a tenuous cease-fire, said the 62-year-old, who is now back in Watervliet. We would go out on patrols and talk to people on both sides of the line of contact and those most affected by the war. We would report violations of the cease-fire, estimate shelling damage and make determinations where artillery or rockets were fired from. Then we would send that report to our headquarters in Kyiv and it would be forwarded to Vienna. He said they also referred people in need to those offering aid. Rarely, he said, would a civilian die. That's because, Raleigh said, what was going on in Ukraine, before the Russian invasion on Feb. 24, was model democracy. They had a free election, in which President Volodymyr Zelenskyy won by a landslide. The economy was thriving. Raleigh said Putin was not only upset by Zelenskyy's win, he still smolders over the crumbling of the Soviet Union. He never accepted the fall. Losing Ukraine, he cannot accept this, Raleigh said, citing the conditions in a divided Berlin and Germany during the Cold War. "In East Berlin ... economy is nothing, there is no vibrant life. It was a very dull place with horrible wages and stagnant economy. In West Germany, there is a thriving capital. This is the same with Russia and Ukraine. Its right next door to Putin and he cant wrap his mind around it. The results are in See the winners of each category of the 2022 Best of the Capital Region contest, as determined by popular vote. But Putin's initial move against Ukraine, the 2014 annexation of Crimea, "was kindergarten," he said, compared to what going on now. On a very human level this is a tragedy, he said. Ukrainians are fighting like hell. These guys, you look them in their eyes ... they are fighting for their lives right now. The Russian guys probably dont want to be there either. They are getting significant casualties. Raleigh also worries about what's happening in Mariupol, which is reportedly under heavy artillery fire. He thinks about the shoe-repair shop owner, who was fixing his favorite pair, whom he planned to give a bottle of whiskey for St. Patricks Day. He also thinks of his landlady. At the time of his departure on Feb. 13 with one suitcase, he tried to do his best to clean up the apartment for her. But now he wonders if it mattered, if the apartment is even still there or if he will ever return. I had friends there, he said. That was my little neighborhood. Its just awful. They are suffering horribly. ... Russian forces are operating all over the place. Unfortunately, he said, Putin was emboldened because the world tolerated prior Russian invasions: Chechnya in 1999, Georgia in 2008 and Crimea in 2014. But now it appears the West and some Russians are turning against him. It also appears, he said, that Putin is unstable, delivering rambling, nonsensical addresses. Raleigh is impressed by Russians taking to the streets to protest despite what he sees as heavy-handed police tactics, including pulling protesters into vans. The Russian people who took to the street knew it would happen, but they still went there, Raleigh said. Isnt that amazing? You see these guys, the riot police. They are so intimidating. They look like medieval knights with body armor and shoulder pads and they are wielding sticks. Its pretty brutal. Its meant to be that way. You go out and you risk getting your head bashed in. So come out again tomorrow. You could be the one dragged into one of those vans. Its exactly what it is, its physical intimidation. He also points to a letter from Russian Colonel-General Leonid Ivashov, chairman of the All-Russian Officers Assembly, that was reported by the New York Post. Titled The Eve of War, Ivashov warned Putin to abandon the criminal policy. He also contradicted Putin by saying that Moscow is not experiencing any "critical threats." A guy like that, who is anti-NATO, anti-U.S., who is a real nationalist and still in the Communist Party, writing a letter like that, I was amazed, Raleigh said. The problem is, once you start a war like that, you dont know where it will end. Thats why we should avoid them as best we can. The chances this could spiral out of control are very real. Thats a big concern. Finally, he says its also tragic how some American politicians are using Russia's invasion for political gain. What troubles me is that certain political leaders and media figures (are talking about whats happening in Ukraine) in a way that is not constructive or to score political points, Raleigh said. Back when I was a kid growing up in the Cold War, politics stopped at the waters edge. I would really like to see more of that. Note: This story was updated on Thursday morning. This is a carousel. Use Next and Previous buttons to navigate ALBANY Eight months after the state Republican Party anointed U.S. Rep. Lee Zeldin as its "presumptive nominee," the GOP solidified that endorsement on Tuesday by making the Long Island conservative its lone nominee for governor, despite a crowded field and consistent low polling by the candidates. Zeldin, a Republican from Suffolk County, easily won the nomination during the state Republican convention on Long Island, which focused heavily on the issues of crime and schools. "It's not just about getting past COVID," Zeldin said after pledging anti-mandate plans on his first day in office. "It's about restoring New York. It's about backing the blue unapologetically." Zeldin struck on familiar campaign topics for him: The promise to "save our state" from Democratic rule, cut taxes, strip down regulations, bolster law enforcement and rid schools of not only masks but education focused on the history of race in the country. He called masks for students "child abuse," said certain district attorneys should be fired, and suggested the state should mine its natural resources despite its likely violation with New York's climate policy. He also called for residents to show proof of identification to be able to vote. Zeldin walked into and out of the event to the popular rap song, "All I Do Is Win." His runningmate, New York Police Department Deputy Inspector Alison Esposito, said in accepting her nomination for lieutenant governor that it's "amazing to me that a false narrative and dangerous political rhetoric have turned the cops into enemies." Zeldin, a former state senator, focused most of his stump speech on COVID-19 and school policies, although a major part of his platform has been around the state's surging crime rates in recent years. He has faced substantial criticism from Democratic voters for his vote to not certify the results of the 2020 presidential election while in Congress. Zeldin previously told the Times Union he chose to not run for reelection for his district, in part, because he believed in his path to governor, which at the time of his declaration appeared to go through a scandal-plagued Gov. Andrew M. Cuomo. He said he also supports term limits. His district, redrawn by the Democratic majority in Albany, now leans blue, based on 2020 voting results. Zeldin took direct aim in his acceptance speech at Gov. Kathy Hochul, the lone Democrat to secure her party's nomination last month. He offered that he is the right candidate for the everyday New Yorker, arguing that while Hochul was on her way to raising $22 million in the latest filing period, she was heavily backed by big donors compared to his campaign that raked in $4.3 million. Zeldin said that nearly 20,000 of his donations were less than $100. But a Times Union review of the contributions shows that about 13,200 donors gave less than $100 in the filing period. Many people gave recurring, small donations that stacked up above $100. Other Republican candidates noted that despite Zeldin's early start, his frequent trips to every county in the state and the longtime backing of the state party, he has yet to lead to momentum in political polls. A Siena College poll that was released late last month indicated a majority of registered Republicans said they were unfamiliar with or had no opinion of Zeldin. Just over a quarter of Republicans said they had a favorable view of him in the February poll. Compared to his polling in May, prior to becoming the "presumptive nominee" of the GOP, Zeldin was known to a slight higher percentage of the polled voters and more favorable to a higher percentage nearly one-third of registered Republicans. Generally, though, his favorability numbers have stayed flat. Conversely, the February poll showed Republican candidate Andrew Giuliani, the son of former New York City mayor and attorney to former President Donald J. Trump, was favored by 47 percent of Republicans and unfavorable to 28 percent. The younger Giuliani has mounted a significantly shorter journey on the campaign trail and has brought in a relative blip in the amount of cash raised at $86,000. At the convention on Long Island Tuesday, Giuliani immediately drew comparisons to his father when soliciting support of the party. (His father, Rudy, was in attendance and slammed the Republican Party for not creating an open path for other candidates to get the party's nomination.) He stuck to topics of the Republican base, including that he would "end the war on cops." And he celebrated his lead in the polls, while quipping that "a majority of those voters are not in this room." Former Westchester County Executive Rob Astorino dug deep into Republican tropes, including making jokes about former Gov. Andrew M. Cuomo and President Joe Biden's son Hunter, who is frequently attacked by conservative media for his alleged ties to foreign business interests tethered to his father's diplomatic connections. Astorino said that the path for a Republican to win a statewide election against a Democratic incumbent in New York, last accomplished by Gov. George E. Pataki in 1994, was through the Westchester suburbs. He argued that Long Island, the home of Zeldin, will go the way of Republicans regardless, based on the successes there at the local level this past November. "I stand before you as the most viable general election candidate," Astorino said. He noted that even without the nomination to get automatically on the ballot, he will collect enough signatures and "there will be a primary." The most unpredictable element of the nominating convention for governor for the GOP was newcomer Harry Wilson, a 2010 candidate for state comptroller and a businessman seen to have a relatively more moderate bent. He presented himself in a similar light with the 2016 candidacy of Trump. "I've spent my entire career fixing failing organizations big, complicated messes that others said simply could not be saved," Wilson said. "Does that sound familiar?" He said he would operate as an outsider, slash regulations that do not "make the lives of New Yorkers better at a reasonable cost" and bring New York to be the lowest taxed state in the Northeast while providing "thousands of dollars in the pockets of middle-class New Yorkers." "I have no interest in being in politics; I have no interest in being governor," Wilson said. "I have a deep interest in fixing the state." Wilson, like Giuliani and Astorino, will have to collect enough signatures to get on the ballot for the June primary if he wants to challenge Zeldin's ticket. An earlier version of this story incorrectly stated the number of instances a person contributed $100 or less in the most recent filing to the gubernatorial campaign of U.S. Rep. Lee Zeldin. It is about 13,200. About 11,211 are a part of "unitemized" donors, according to the campaign. The local manslaughter case has sparked activist outcry and pro-police outrage . . . An upcoming decision will likely continue to anger locals on both sides of the debate. With an appeal bond already decided, here's the latest . . . In an eleven-page memo, prosecutors asked Judge J. Dale Youngs to sentence former Det. Eric DeValkenaere to four years in prison on his involuntary manslaughter conviction and nine years for armed criminal action. Prosecutors asked the sentences to run concurrently. Sentencing is scheduled for Friday. Read more via www.TonysKansasCity.com links . . . Prosecutors ask judge to sentence former Kansas City detective to 9 years KANSAS CITY, Mo. - Jackson County prosecutors have weighed in on the upcoming sentence of a former Kansas City detective. In an 11-page memo, prosecutors asked Judge J. Dale Youngs to sentence former detective Eric DeValkenaere to four years in prison on his involuntary manslaughter conviction and nine years for armed criminal action. Prosecutors recommend former KCPD Det. Eric DeValkenaere serve 9 years in prison A sentencing memorandum from the Jackson County Prosecuting Attorney's Office recommends a nine-year prison sentence for a former Kansas City, Missouri, police detective, Eric DeValkenaere who was convicted of two felonies last year in the shooting death of Cameron Lamb in December 2019. Developing . . . This morning post we take a peek at the last days of an iconic panty brand ahead of culture war transformation and then share more than a bit of community news, pop culture and top headlines. Check TKC news gathering . . . Kansas City Front Line Fights Against Fatigue Kansas City University receives $1.5 million grant to combat burnout Fighting burnout Funding will support KCU's efforts to address burnout in health care professionals at the beginning of their careers. Kansas City University was recently awarded over $1.5 million in federal funding. This funding comes in the form of a grant from the Health Resources and Services Administration (HRSA), an agency of the United States Health and Human Services (HHS) Administration. Tragedy And Driver Caution Independence police investigate after woman hit, killed by train Police in Independence are investigating after a woman was hit and killed by a Union Pacific freight train Tuesday.Authorities said the accident happened about 7:25 p.m. near 15th Street and Appleton Avenue.Police said officers are trying to determine why the woman was on the tracks. Kansas City-area historian condemns Russia's comparison of Ukraine to Nazi Germany KANSAS CITY, Mo. - As its invasion of Ukraine continues, Russia remains steadfast on its reasoning of why the invasion began in the first place. Russia's top diplomat compared Ukraine to Nazi Germany at a United Nations Human Rights meeting on Tuesday. Housing Hardship Exposed Contract for deed: The promise of homeownership that often leaves Midwest buyers out in the cold The contract for deed option is marketed as a way for people who can't get a conventional mortgage to realize the dream of owning a home. But more often than not, buyers do not end up as homeowners. And, most Midwestern states provide little, if any, consumer protection to prevent abuse. Sexy Shift Or Panty Politics?!? Victoria's Secret is leaning more into comfort - and women are taking notice At first glance, shoppers may be hard pressed to believe that Victoria's Secret's new lingerie lineup is actually from Victoria's Secret. In mid-February, the retailer unveiled its latest collection of bras and panties, known as Love Cloud. The line is focused on all-day comfort, with minimal frills, Victoria's Secret said. Republicans Spank MAGA GOP senators push back hard on Trump's praise of Putin Russian President 's invasion of Ukraine has revealed tensions within the Republican Party over how hard to push back on the aggression and how to respond to former 's glowing praise of Putin. Talker Legend Condemns Vlad Howard Stern Calls Putin a 'F-ing Animal': 'I Wish He Was Dead Like I Wish Hitler Was Dead' Howard Stern launched into a tirade against Vladimir Putin during Monday's episode of his SiriusXM radio show (via Yahoo). The host condemned members of the Republican Party for supporting Putin amid Russia's invasion of Ukraine, most notably Donald Trump. Veep Suffers Quote Criticism Kamala Harris mocked for 'terrifying' explanation of Ukraine crisis: 'A real inability to talk normally' Vice President Kamala Harris was mocked by critics on Tuesday for an eyebrow-raising response during a radio interview, where she was asked to explain the Ukraine crisis to listeners. Harris joined the "The Morning Hustle" to discuss the ongoing conflict in Ukraine, President Biden's nomination of Judge Ketanji Brown Jackson for the Supreme Court, and Biden's upcoming State of the Union address. Global Rebuke Worsens Ukraine conflict: Russia's Kharkiv attacks are war crimes, says Zelensky Ukrainian President Volodymyr Zelensky has accused Russia of war crimes after air strikes, including on a central square, in the country's second city. At least 10 people were killed and 35 hurt when the opera house, concert hall and government offices were hit in Freedom Square in Kharkiv. Lone Star Voting Translation 6 takeaways from the Texas primaries Two of the biggest names in Texas politics could be headed to overtime in their efforts to fend off primary challengers. Sneak Peek At Salacious Politics Hunter Biden the 'low-rent porn star': How his sex addiction created a media nightmare for Joe Biden While Joe Biden was wrapping up his final year as Vice President, his son Hunter Biden was cooking crack and shooting porn ahead of the family's most lucrative deal. CELEBRATE CAREER GOALS!!! Porn Wild Dear Angela: I want to be a porn star so I can have sex all day long Dear Maura: He is fixated on my best friend Dear Maura: MY boyfriend has been paying a lot of attention to my best friend lately. I don't know if anyone else notices this but it's obvious. I'm 25 and he's 27. We've been together for two years. For All Those Desperately Seeking Free Money City extends RebuildKC grant deadline By Abby Hoover The City of Kansas City, Mo., has once again extended the application period for its newest grant program. Residents and local organizations can take advantage of a unique opportunity to build better neighborhoods through the newly introduced ReBuild KC-Neighborhood Grants program, which will primarily use American Rescue Plan Act Coronavirus State & Local Fiscal Recovery Funds (ARP) to finance a variety of neighborhood improvements. Local Cuisine Redux Reservation for One: The Classic Cookie - In Kansas City For more than 30 years, The Classic Cookie has been a Waldo favorite for breakfast, brunch, and baked goods. Now, the neighborhood institution has gotten a refresh thanks to new owners Bryan Sparks and Hailey Allen. Don't panic, longtime patrons-the space is as charming as ever, although it now boasts a more modern look. Temps Spike Today . . . Record highs are possible Wednesday Hide Transcript Show Transcript NEXT FEW HOURS WILL HAVE TEMPERATURES SLIPPED TO THE 60'S, TNHE INTO THE 50'S BY 9:00. 55 BY 10:00 P.M.. NOTICE OTHEN SCOREBOARD, ZERO CHANCES OF RAIN. LOOKS LIKE A PRETTY NICE EVENING TO BE OUTSIDE, WALK THE DOG OR GETSHRE F AIR. Clean Bandit - Everything But You is the song of the day and this is the OPEN THREAD for right now. As always, some readers are put off by the angry conversation on this blog. Some of the comments are well-deserved, others are over the top. However . . . For tonight's post we take peek at COMMUNITY NEWS and stories that some inspire good vibes for night owls, insomniacs and VERY early risers. Check-it . . . Fabric Of Local Community Support for Ukraine felt at 'All Nations Flag Company' in Kansas City KANSAS CITY, Mo. - All Nations Flag Company in Kansas City, Missouri, makes American flags, those for branches of the United States military and every international flag. One has been of great interest to the community in recent days for the local business based in the River Market neighborhood. Peaceful Protest On The Plaza Photos: Ukrainian Club of Kansas City hosts rally on the Plaza Rally for Ukraine on the Plaza. // Photo by Jim Nimmo On Saturday, February 26, the Ukrainian Club of Kansas City hosted a rally in support of their home country at Mill Creek Park on the Country Club Plaza. With only two days to prepare, the organizers had hoped for 150 people, but an overwhelming 500 participants showed up to... KANSAS LEGEND IN PIX New book celebrates Kansas photographer Gordon Parks OVERLAND PARK, Kan. - A newly-released book highlights the groundbreaking life of Kansas-born photojournalist and filmmaker, Gordon Parks. "Grit and Grace: Gordon Parks," by Overland Park resident Ann Parr chronicles Parks' life from birth to death. He was born in Fort Scott, Kansas, in 1912. Democracy Stands For All Women's suffrage memorial backed by near entirety of Kansas Senate gets committee green light - Kansas Reflector TOPEKA - Nearly every state senator has signed on to a bill establishing a permanent memorial commemorating the Kansas suffragist movement in the state Capitol. Approved in October by the Capitol Preservation Committee after a pitch from the Kansas League of Women Voters, the memorial would rely solely on donations without access to state funding. Show-Me Acceptance Missouri House votes to ban hair discrimination in schools JEFFERSON CITY, Mo. (AP) - Black Missouri school children no longer could be discriminated against for wearing natural hair under a bill advanced Monday in the state Legislature. The measure is aimed at helping kids who wear protective hairstyles such as afros, braids and twists to school. Funding Suburban Life Lessons Olathe School District patrons vote to approve $298.3 million dollar no tax-rate bond issue KANSAS CITY, Mo. - The Olathe School District has big plans for the hundreds of millions of dollars in the no tax-rate bond issue voters approved Tuesday. More than 67% of voters said they wanted the improvements promised in the bond election. Courthouse Helps Youngsters Jackson County survey highlights need for access to feminine products KANSAS CITY, Mo. - The lack of access to feminine products is keeping some kids out of school. A recent study by the Jackson County Health Department shows how great the need is for young women in the Kansas City area. Local groups and legislators are also taking a stand to help. Show-Me Good Signs Missouri wastewater testing shows drop in COVID-19 levels Missouri's wastewater testing shows COVID-19 levels are dropping in the Kansas City area."We're leveling out at near all-time lows," said Marc Johnson, a researcher with the University of Missouri.It's a big change just weeks after the winter omicron surge."We're still detecting it almost everywhere, but at really low levels," Johnson said.Johnson has talked to KMBC every week for the past couple of months. Revved Up For Summer Monster Jam returning to Kansas City's Arrowhead Stadium KANSAS CITY, Mo. - Monster Jam is returning to Kansas City for another weekend of high-flying action and four-wheel excitement at Arrowhead Stadium. The event will take place on Saturday, June 18, at 7 p.m., and advance presale tickets are available Tuesday on Ticketmaster. Dolly Good Deeds Done Locally Thanks to Dolly Parton, kids in Independence are getting access to free books Kids in Independence are about to get access to free books, all thanks to Dolly Parton. The Independence School District announced a new partnership Tuesday with Dolly Parton's Imagination Library.Children living within ISD boundaries are eligible to receive free books mailed directly to their homes each month from the month they are born until age five. Teachable Moment Catholic school enrollment numbers bouncing back in Kansas City KANSAS CITY, Mo. - After experiencing a decline in enrollment due to COVID-19, the Catholic Diocese of Kansas City and St. Joseph says enrollment is rebounding. For the first time in 10 years, schools saw an enrollment increase in the diocese. Karen Kroh, Superintendent for schools at the Catholic Diocese of Kansas City and St. Faith In Our Community Kansas City Ukrainians, Russians unite in Prayer amid crisis in Ukraine On Sunday, Russians and Ukrainians came together in Kansas City for a Russian Bible study at First Church of Nazarene in Kansas City. And this is the OPEN THREAD for right now . . . Deets from a suburban tragedy continue to shock news watchers but recent revelations might help friends & family find some semblance of closure. Here's a shocking yet important passage . . . The night of the shooting, the victim's mother said she was awakened by the sound of the shots. Entering the room she found him still alive -- but barely. She said the last thing he did was raise his hand and point at Dustin Johnson, whose body was on the ground. Pointing, the victim said, "He did this," according to his mother. Read more via www.TonysKansasCity.com links . . . Lenexa double murder-suicide may have involved tracking device; search warrant executed LENEXA, Kan. - Lenexa police are now characterizing the death of three people early Sunday as a double murder-suicide. Law enforcement are executing a search warrant Tuesday at a residence in Belton in connection with this deadly shooting. Investigation into Lenexa fatal shootings leads police to search Belton home The investigation into the fatal shootings of three people in Lenexa, Kansas, led detectives to a Belton home Tuesday afternoon.The area around 170th Street and Bel Ray Boulevard was blocked off for a couple of hours as police executed a search warrant.Early Sunday, Lenexa police officers were called to a house on Laurelwood Street near 84th Street and found three people who had been shot. Developing . . . In celebration of Black History Month, which just ended, are four of Sherry Edington's great grandchildren, Malachi, Elijah, Dejaia and Rose, who got dressed up for the occasion. (Courtesy photo) Stay up to date on COVID-19 Get Breaking News Sign up now to get our FREE breaking news coverage delivered right to your inbox. Sponsored By: Dorsett Automotive Instant unlimited access to all of our content on triplicate.com. The Triplicate's E-Edition Newsletter emailed to you each week, the night before the paper hits the street! This subscription is for NEW or RENEWING online subscribers. (The charge will appear as "Country Media Inc." on your credit card statement) The point is to produce and have a space where community members from all walks of life can come in to celebrate, unwind or just simply connect with other people, said The Hoppy Vine co-founder Hector Martinez. Tucson, AZ (85741) Today Clear skies. Low 59F. WNW winds shifting to SE at 10 to 20 mph.. Tonight Clear skies. Low 59F. WNW winds shifting to SE at 10 to 20 mph. By Jeff Murphy, March 2, 2022 A longtime academic leader at Fort Hays State Unviersity in Kansas, Timothy R. Crowley will soon join the University of Central Missouri. WARRENSBURG, MO The University of Central Missouri is filling a vital position in the area of academic leadership with the appointment of Timothy R. Crowley, Hays, Kansas, as the Vice Provost for Academic Programs and Dean of Graduate Studies and Research. Crowley begins his new duties April 1. Crowley has served since June 2017 as Associate Provost for Academic Affairs at Fort Hays State University, where his duties have included curriculum management, serving as an accreditation liaison officer (ALO) for the Higher Learning Commission (HLC), providing leadership for the Honors College, General Education Program, Center for Civic Leadership, and Credit for Prior Learning (CPL) Program. He has also overseen department chair leadership development, program review, student success efforts, university strategic planning, and academic technology initiatives. We look forward to Tim joining us at UCM. He is deeply experienced in academic leadership and is committed to collegial shared governance. His success in growing and supporting graduate programs, leading accreditation efforts, and implementing strategic plans will allow him to immediately strengthen our ongoing efforts in these areas, said Phil Bridgmon, UCM provost and vice president for academic affairs. At UCM, Crowley will assume responsibilities that include providing leadership in working with faculty and staff in the areas of academic analytics, academic planning, assessment, graduate education and research, McNair Scholars, sponsored programs, student records/registrar, testing services, and undergraduate research. Crowley also will play a significant role in collaboration with colleagues campus-wide who will help prepare the university for HLC reaffirmation of accreditation in 2023-2024. This accomplishment validates the university as a whole and evaluates multiple aspects the institution related to academic offerings, governance and administration, mission, finances, and resources. I am excited to join the excellent UCM faculty and staff and help the institution advance towards its strategic goals. The future is bright for UCM and I am thrilled to join the institution at this exciting time under the leadership of President (Roger) Best and Provost Bridgmon, Crowley said. UCM is a forward-looking institution and is well positioned to provide its service area with the valuable learning opportunities and applied research that changes the lives of our students. Ann and I look forward to joining the UCM and Warrensburg communities and building new relationships in this next chapter of our lives. The longtime college educator began work in higher education in 1995 as a visiting Assistant Professor of Music at Texas A&M University, College Station, Texas. The following year he became an Assistant Professor of Music at Cameron University in Lawton, Oklahoma, where he went on to chair the department in 1998. Two years later, Crowley joined Fort Hays State as Associate Professor and Chair of the Department of Music and achieved the rank of professor in 2005. He was named Dean of the Graduate School/Assistant Provost for Internationalization in 2007; Assistant Provost for Academic Programs and Dean of the Graduate School in 2015; and Assistant Provost for Academic Programs and Student Success in 2016. He held this position until he assumed his current post as Associate Provost in 2017. In preparation for his university career, Crowley earned his Bachelor of Music (Performance), graduating summa cum laude from Bradley University, Peoria, Illinois, in 1990. He earned two degrees from the University of North Texas, Denton: Master of Arts in Music (Composition) in 1993, and a Doctor of Musical Arts (Composition) in 1995. In the city of Kupiansk, Kharkiv Region, local residents have gone out to protest against the Russian military, who captured their city. The relevant statement was made by the journalist, Andriy Tsaplienko, on Telegram, an Ukrinform correspondent reports. The video shows people attacking the invaders vehicles, holding Ukrainian flags and calling on Russians to go away. These are our streets; this is our city! they shouted. The Ukrainian flag was raised near the city council. Russian invaders brutally suppressed the protest, using smoke grenades and firing on the city. On February 27, 2022, Kupiansk Mayor Hennadii Matsehora, who was elected from the Opposition Platform For Life party in 2020, declared that he transferred his powers to Russian invaders. mk The Security Service of Ukraine has published a video showing the testimony of a captured Russian invader: he talks about atrocities in his army Russian officers kill their wounded subordinates. The SBU press service broke the news via Telegram, Ukrinform reports. "The captured Russian occupier tells about the atrocities in his army officers kill their wounded soldiers, leave their dead on the battlefield, and never notify relatives," said the SBU. The captured invader, among other things, says: We were sent to death. They don't even take their KIAs! They finish their own wounded! A week has passed, and no one even received a death notification." "This soldier was more fortunate than others he was taken prisoner in Ukraine. The invader weeps and asks his mother to apply to the Union of Mothers of Russia, hoping for a prisoner swap. The soldier also fears for the fate of his family, so he asks not them not to tell whole truth about the war in Ukraine, not to be targeted in persecution by the Russian special services," the ministry said. As reported, on February 24, Russian President Vladimir Putin announced the launch of Ukraine invasion. Martial law was imposed. President of Ukraine Volodymyr Zelensky signed a decree on general mobilization. The United Kingdom has said it will impose sanctions on Belarus for its role in Russia's invasion of Ukraine. That's according to Sky News, Ukrinform reports. "The Lukashenko regime actively aids and abets Russias illegal invasion and will be made to feel the economic consequences for its support for Putin. There will be nowhere to hide. Nothing - and no one - is off the table," UK Foreign Secretary Li Truss said. The Belarusian chief of the general staff, Major General Victor Gulevich, and three other deputy defense ministers will be sanctioned, along with two military enterprises. They are: Major General Andrei Burdyko, chief of logistics of the Belarusian Armed Forces, Major General Sergei Simonenko, chief of armament, and Major General Andrey Zhuk, deputy minister of defense. The individuals will be unable to travel to the UK and their UK-based assets will be frozen. Belarus had taken part in joint military drills with Russia in the run-up to the invasion, and some Russian troops have entered Ukraine from the Belarusian border. Ukraine also said today that 300 Belarusian tanks have amassed on the border. Announcing the measure, Foreign Secretary Liz Truss said: "We are inflicting economic pain on Putin and those closest to him. We will not rest until Ukraines sovereignty and territorial integrity is restored. Russian army colonel Viktor Isaykin was killed in the territory of Ukraine. Ukrayinska Pravda online media outlet reports this with reference to the Instagram account of Head of Russian Federations Republic of Mordovia Artem Zdunov. In particular, Zdunov writes that colonel Viktor Isaykin, 40, a ranking member of the military, carried out "military tasks" in the territory of Ukraine. As of the morning of March 1, the losses of Russian-occupation forces over the invasion of Ukraine totaled 5,710 people killed, 200 people taken prisoner, 29 planes and 29 helicopters, seven air defense equipment, 24 MLRS, and hundreds of military equipment. Russian president Vladimir Putin declared war on Ukraine on February 24 and launched a large-scale invasion. Russian troops have been shelling and destroying key infrastructure facilities. Missiles hit residential buildings. Martial law was imposed in Ukraine and general mobilization was announced. Ukraine officially filed a lawsuit against the Russian Federation at the UN International Court of Justice in The Hague. International Criminal Court Prosecutor Karim Khan initiated the start of the investigation into the situation in Ukraine. The Armed Forces of Ukraine, with the support of all Ukrainian people, courageously resist the Russian aggression. ol The Japanese government will impose sanctions on Belarus this week for its role in Russia's invasion of Ukraine. That's according to Prime Minister Fumio Kishida, Ukrinform reports citing Kyodo News. "Given Belarus' obvious involvement in Russia's invasion of Ukraine, we have decided to take sanction measures against individuals including President (Alexander) Lukashenko as well as entities, and implement export control measures. []These should be carried out as early as within this week," Kishida said in parliament. Japan, as the only country to have been subjected to atomic bombings, also emphasizes that nuclear weapons should never be used, amid fears that Russia could use them during the invasion of Ukraine. According to Kishida, the Japanese government plans to promote international calls for Russia to exercise restraint after Russian President Vladimir Putin on Sunday ordered to bring the country's deterrent forces to a state of heightened alert. Japan earlier supported the decision by Western countries to block Russian banks from accessing the SWIFT payment system. On February 24, Russian President Vladimir Putin announced the beginning of the invasion of Ukraine. Russian troops are shelling and destroying key infrastructure, conducting massive shelling of residential areas of Ukrainian cities and towns using artillery, multiple launch rocket launchers and ballistic missiles. Martial law was imposed in Ukraine and general mobilization was announced. Ukraine officially filed a lawsuit against the Russian Federation to the International Court of Justice in The Hague. Most Ukrainians believe that Ukraine will be able to repel the attack of the Russian Federation. According to the results of a poll conducted by the Sociological group "Rating", 88% of respondents believe that Ukraine will be able to repel Russia's attack. This figure is growing almost daily. Only 10% do not have such confidence. Belief in victory prevails in all regions of the country. The poll was conducted on March 1 among the residents of Ukraine aged 18 and older in all regions, except for the temporarily occupied territories of Crimea and Donetsk and Luhansk regions. The sample is representative by age, sex, and type of settlement. Sample population: 1,200 respondents. Survey method: CATI (Computer Assisted Telephone Interviews). Sample error does not exceed 2.8%. On February 24, Russian president Vladimir Putin announced the beginning of the invasion of Ukraine. Russian troops have been shelling and destroying key infrastructure facilities, conducting massive attacks on residential districts of Ukrainian cities and villages using artillery, multiple rocket launchers, and ballistic missiles. Martial law was imposed in Ukraine and general mobilization was announced. Ukraine officially filed a lawsuit against the Russian Federation at the UN International Court of Justice in The Hague. International Criminal Court Prosecutor Karim Khan initiated the start of investigation into the situation in Ukraine. The Armed Forces of Ukraine, with the support of all Ukrainian people, courageously resist the Russian aggression. ol Germany-based DHL, which is a world leader in logistics, has suspended shipments to Russia and Belarus after Russian troops invaded Ukraine. According to Ukrinform, this was stated in the company's press release. "Our inbound services to Russia and Belarus have been suspended, which is why we are also not accepting shipments to those countries until further notice," DHL said. It is noted that the company is closely monitoring the situation and will keep customers updated about any further developments. As reported, Russian President Vladimir Putin on February 24 declared war on Ukraine and launched a large-scale invasion. Russian troops are shelling and destroying key infrastructure, massively shelling residential areas of Ukrainian cities and towns, employing artillery, multiple-launch rocket systems, and ballistic missiles. Martial law was imposed in the country and general mobilization was announced. Ukraine has filed a lawsuit against the Russian Federation in the UN ICC in The Hague. Thousands of residents of Melitopol, Zaporizhzhia region, shout Go home at Russian soldiers who have occupied the town. Olha Haisumova, the head of the NGO Melitopol Conscious Community posted the video of the rally on Facebook. "Go home," "We are unarmed," "Leave our land," people chanted. Armed men were standing in the street near the building of the Security Service of Ukraine, seized by Russian soldiers. The protesters did not stop moving forward. The occupiers began firing into the air for several minutes. "Who are you shooting at? We are unarmed," civilians told the soldiers. People began to sing the anthem of Ukraine. Local residents are set to go to rallies every day. On February 24, Russian president Vladimir Putin announced the beginning of the invasion of Ukraine. Russian troops have been shelling and destroying key infrastructure facilities, conducting massive attacks on residential districts of Ukrainian cities and villages using artillery, multiple rocket launchers, and ballistic missiles. Martial law was imposed in Ukraine and general mobilization was announced. Ukraine officially filed a lawsuit against the Russian Federation at the UN International Court of Justice in The Hague. International Criminal Court Prosecutor Karim Khan initiated the start of investigation into the situation in Ukraine. The Armed Forces of Ukraine, with the support of all Ukrainian people, courageously resist the Russian aggression. ol 70 Japanese men, including 50 former members of Japans Self-Defense Forces and two veterans of the French Foreign Legion, have applied to join Ukraines fight against Russian invaders. According to Ukrinform, this was reported by Reuters with reference to the Japanese media. A spokesperson for the Ukrainian Embassy acknowledged receiving calls from people wanting to fight for Ukraine, but declined to give further details. As an example, the agency noted an office worker, Keiichi Kurogi, 39, who wanted to come to Ukraine to join the "International Legion." "When I saw photos of elderly men and women in Ukraine clutching their weapons and departing to the front, I felt I had to be with them," Kurogi said. The embassy declined Kurogis offer to fight, telling him that he lacked the necessary military experience. As Ukrinform reported, President Volodymyr Zelensky stated that Ukraine is creating an International Legion of Territorial Defense consisting of foreigners who wants to join the resistance to the Russian occupiers and to protect world security. On the night of March 1, Ukrainian air defense units destroyed two Russian Su-35S fighters in Kyiv region. On the night of March 1, a fierce air battle broke out in Kyiv region between a pair of MiG-29 fighters of the Air Force Tactical Aviation Brigade and a pair of Russian Su-35S aircraft. As a result of the air battle, the two Russian planes were destroyed. Along with air-to-air missiles, S-300 surface-to-air missiles of the local anti-aircraft missile brigade of the Air Command Center were fired on the occupiers, the Air Force Command of the Armed Forces of Ukraine posted on Facebook. Unfortunately, Ukraine's Air Force lost one MiG-29 as a result of this battle. The pilot is being searched, the Command informs. On February 24, Russian president Vladimir Putin announced the beginning of the invasion of Ukraine. Russian troops have been shelling and destroying key infrastructure facilities, conducting massive attacks on residential districts of Ukrainian cities and villages using artillery, multiple rocket launchers, and ballistic missiles. Martial law was imposed in Ukraine and general mobilization was announced. Ukraine officially filed a lawsuit against the Russian Federation at the UN International Court of Justice in The Hague. International Criminal Court Prosecutor Karim Khan initiated the start of investigation into the situation in Ukraine. The Armed Forces of Ukraine, with the support of all Ukrainian people, courageously resist the Russian aggression. ol In counter battles in the city of Kharkiv, the Armed Forces of Ukraine have smashed one of elite brigades of the Russian Armed Forces. The relevant statement was made by Advisor to the Head of the Ukrainian Presidents Office Oleksiy Arestovych at a briefing in the Office of the President of Ukraine, an Ukrinform correspondent reports. We are destroying the enemy. Our aviation and artillery forces are working, and working very skillfully. Yesterday was a day of air strikes near Kyiv, near Mykolaiv and across other cities. Our unit in Kharkiv counterattacked and defeated the enemys 200th brigade in counter battles. One of the best elite brigades of the Russian Armed Forces. Our soldiers are winning. The enemy will be defeated; victory will be ours, Arestovych told. In his words, Russian invaders are practically not using Kalibr missiles, as they are running out of stock. Meanwhile, the Iskander missile launchers were used to hit Kyiv, Zhytomyr and Kharkiv. Casualties are yet to be reported. According to Arestobych, the enemy tends to launch air strikes at night, as the Russian military are cautious about Ukraines anti-aircraft defense systems. mk A total of 21 children have been killed and 55 wounded since Russia initiated a full-scale invasion of Ukraine. The relevant statement was made by Ukrainian Parliament Commissioner for Human Rights Lyudmila Denisova on Telegram, an Ukrinform correspondent reports. The situation in Ukraine is remaining tense. As of 01:00 p.m., March 2, 2022, Russian occupiers continued using heavy weapons and killing civilians, Denisova wrote. In her words, since Russia launched a full-scale invasion of Ukraine, according to the data from various sources, a total of 21 children have been killed and 55 wounded. The infrastructure of Kyiv, Irpin, Kharkiv, Mariupol, Zhytomyr, Kherson and Zaporizhzhia Regions Vasylivka was destroyed in shelling launched by Russian invaders. Zhytomyr-based maternity house was damaged in a missile strike. According to Denisova, Russian troops continue to shell on civilians in Zaporizhzhia Region. Yesterday, at 09:00 p.m., Russian shells hit a school yard in Vasylivka, Zaporizhzhia Region. Kharkiv and Kherson are remaining under heavy shelling. Last night, after an air strike on the city of Zhytomyr, one child was killed and six children were wounded. They were rescued from basements in semi-destroyed houses, Denisova noted. Denisova stressed that the Russian military continue to cynically violate the fundamental rights of children, such as the right to life and the right to health, provided by the UN Convention on the Rights of the Child. Some of these deaths could have been prevented if the no-fly zone over Ukraine had been established, Denisova stressed. She called on the international community and international human rights organizations to support an initiative to close the sky over Ukraine for the enemys fighter aircrafts. Meanwhile, amid shelling, two triplets were born in a maternity house in Chernihiv. As long as such angels are born in Ukraine, we are invincible, Denisova noted. A reminder that, on March 2, 2022, Ukrainian Parliament Commissioner for Human Rights Lyudmila Denisova reported that Russian invaders are intentionally shelling health institutions and ambulance cars, violating the right of Ukrainians to life and health. Photo by Stas Yurchenko, Graty mk The Armed Forces of Ukraine have destroyed a Russian command post in the village of Dityatky near Chornobyl. This was reported by the Armed Forces press service via Telegram, as seen by Ukrinform. "The Armed Forces destroyed the orcs command post in the village of Dytiatky near Chornobyl. The Chief of Staff of the 36th Army of Russias Eastern Military District, Major General Sergei Nirkov, fled to Belarus. He left his men behind to be annihilated by our Army," the statement reads. Earlier, Mykhailo Podoliak, an adviser to the head of the President's Office, said that the Ukrainian military had lost control of the Chornobyl Nuclear Power Plant. The situation at the Chornobyl NPP, the Shelter confinement, and nuclear waste storage facilities remains unclear. On February 24, Russia launched a full-scale invasion of Ukraine. Since then, Russian troops have repeatedly violated the laws and customs of war by shelling civilians, including with proscribed weapons, using civilians as a "human shield," and the like. Ukraine has filed a lawsuit against the Russian Federation with the UN International Criminal Court in The Hague. ICC Prosecutor Karim Khan has initiated a full-fledged investigation into the situation in Ukraine. The Russian military threw grenades at civilians who came out to defend their village Vodiane in Zaporizhzhia region. Two people were injured. Chairman of the Enerhodar City Council Dmytro Orlov wrote on Telegram, Ukrinform reports. "Today at about 15:30 in the village of Vodiane, the occupiers threw a grenade, hitting two civilians. One man is in serious condition, another man was moderately injured. They were taken to the hospital in Kamianka," the report says. As reported, on February 24, Russian President Vladimir Putin declared war on Ukraine and launched a large-scale invasion. Russian troops have been shelling and destroying key infrastructure. Missiles hit residential buildings. Martial law was imposed in Ukraine and general mobilization was announced. Ukraine officially filed a lawsuit against the Russian Federation with the UN International Court of Justice in The Hague. iy The Russian troops left behind a batch of planning documents belonging to one of the units of the battalion tactical group of the 810th Separate Marines Brigade of the Russian Black Sea Fleet, which states that the war with Ukraine had been approved as early as January 18, while the operation to capture Ukraine was set to last from February 20 to March 6, as seen in the said plan. Thats according to the Military Law Enforcement Service of the Armed Forces of Ukraine, Ukrinform reports. "Thanks to the successful efforts of one of the units of the Armed Forces of Ukraine, the Russian invaders are losing more than their hardware and manpower. In panic, theyre leaving behind classified documents. Thus, we have at our disposal the planning documents of one of the units of the battalion tactical group of the 810th separate marines brigade of the Black Sea Fleet of the Russian Federation. Among the documents at our disposal are an operational map, a mission order, a table of call signs, tables of control signals, tables of covert control, a personnel list, etc.," the statement reads. As noted, based on the information received, the planning documents for the war with Ukraine had been approved on January 18, 2022, while the operation to capture Ukraine was to take place within 15 days, namely from January 20 to March 06. The enemy unit was to disembark from the Orsk landing vessel in the area of the Stepanivka-1 settlement and further act in accord with the military units of the 58th Army of the Russian Federation, namely with the 177th Separate Marines Regiment of the Russian Black Sea Fleet. The ultimate goal of these forces was to set up a blockade and take control of Melitopol. The press service stressed that the statements of Russian prisoners of war claiming they had not been aware of being sent to a war and that they thought they were going for a training mission were in fact a lie. They did know, they had been thoroughly planning and preparing. And we will say one thing to the Russian invaders: keep leaving behind your hardware and classified documents, we will need them all, the previous will be forwarded to our defenders, and the latter to The Hague," the press service said. As Ukrinform reported earlier, as of February 2, the Russian army has been losing an average of 1,500 servicemen per day. According to intelligence, the current losses amount to more than 7,000. im The Secretary of the National Security and Defense Council of Ukraine, Oleksiy Danilov, has confirmed earlier reports that from March 4, the Russian Federation intends to impose martial law across the country. The statement came as Danilov was speaking on the air of Ukraine 24 TV, answering questions about the possible application for martial law in Russia. "First, this is the data available to our intelligence that from March 4, the Russian Federation is set to indeed impose martial law in the country. Id like to see how Moscow and St. Petersburg, where theres a lot of intellegenzia, will react to this, as they understand what is happening in the Russian Federation. Today, if Putin lacks cannon fodder, he can take children hes drafting into the army to deploy here, into our meat grinder. I don't understand why hes doing this," Danilov stressed. He also noted that many Russians who hold positions in government dont understand what is going on in Putin's head. "Bombing our peaceful cities, bombing Kharkiv, bombing historic cities, killing children what were you even thinking to commit all this?" said Danilov. He also recalled the statement by Russian Foreign Minister Sergei avrov about the intention to remove nationalists from Ukraine. "Then I must say that 95% of the citizens of our country must be killed," Danilov said. im Sanctions against Russia must be tough, including an embargo on non-Russian energy exports. This was stated on Wednesday by the head of the Polish government, Mateusz Morawiecki, an Ukrinform correspondent reports. "I once again call on the European Commission to dare to embargo Russian coal," Morawiecki said. The Polish prime minister has noted that Poland wants to immediately stop receiving coal from Russia. As a result, Morawiecki held talks with Australian Prime Minister Scott Morrison on Wednesday to have Australian coal exported to Poland. The Polish prime minister also said that Poland was ready to impose an embargo on Russian coal at any moment, without waiting for an EU decision. At the same time, he added that the embargo is the competence of the European Commission, so Warsaw must receive assurances from Brussels that it would not face repercussions for taking this step. Russia has been waging a war of aggression against Ukraine since February 24. Russian troops violate the laws and customs of war, firing on civilians, including with proscribed weapons, using civilians as "human shields," and so on. Ukraine has filed a lawsuit against the Russian Federation with the UN International Court in The Hague. ICC Prosecutor Karim Khan has initiated a full-fledged investigation into the situation in Ukraine. im President of Ukraine Volodymyr Zelensky calls on the world community to recognize the Russian Federation as a terrorist state. "Kharkiv. A cruise missile strike on Europe's largest square, Freedom Square. Dozens of victims. This is the price of freedom. This is the morning of the people of Ukraine. Ukrainian Kharkiv and Russian Belgorod have always been close cities in many ways. Even the border between them was conditional. Only on the map, but definitely not in the soul. Now everything has changed. After the cruise missile that hit Kharkiv from Belgorod, the missile that hit the Freedom Square the face of our Kharkiv. This is terror against the city. This is terror against Kharkiv," President Volodymyr Zelensky said in his address, an Ukrinform correspondent reports. He stressed that there was no military target in Freedom Square in Kharkiv, as in other residential districts of Kharkiv, which were attacked by missile artillery. The President stated that the missile hitting the central square of Kharkiv was an outright and undisguised terror. Zelensky underscored that no one would forgive or forget that. "This attack on Kharkiv is a war crime. It is a state terrorism of the Russian Federation. After that, Russia is a terrorist state. Obviously, it must be official. We call on all countries to respond immediately and effectively to this criminal tactic of the aggressor, to declare that Russia is engaged in state terrorism. We demand full responsibility for terrorists at international courts," Zelensky urged. Russian president Vladimir Putin declared war on Ukraine on February 24 and launched a large-scale invasion. Russian troops have been shelling and destroying key infrastructure facilities. Missiles hit residential buildings. Martial law was imposed in Ukraine and general mobilization was announced. On the morning of March 1, Russian troops launched an air strike on the central square of Kharkiv. As a result of the air strike, at least 6 people were injured, including one child, the number of killed is being determined. ol | By Rose Kendig The Joint Steering Council of the University of Maryland Strategic Partnership: MPowering the State (MPower), a formal collaboration of the University of Maryland, Baltimore (UMB) and the University of Maryland, College Park (UMCP), has awarded funding to 17 targeted collaborative research seed grants led jointly by UMB and UMCP researchers. After a review and ranking of 52 submissions by faculty peers from both UMB and UMCP, the Steering Council awarded a total of $3 million to invest in the future and kick-start new research in critical areas of paramount importance to the state and the nation. The funding of projects ranges from $49,000 to $250,000 per award, for durations of six to 24 months. Gregory Ball, PhD The selected teams capitalize on the research expertise of UMB and UMCP and showcase collaboration across multiple colleges and schools. Teams consist of researchers from 12 schools and colleges, including UMCPs A. James Clark School of Engineering, College of Agriculture and Natural Resources, College of Arts and Humanities, College of Behavioral and Social Sciences, Robert H. Smith School of Business, College of Computer, Mathematical, and Natural Sciences, and College of Education, and UMBs schools of dentistry, law, medicine, pharmacy, and social work. The six targeted research areas are: Artificial Intelligence and Medicine; Cybersecurity and Homeland Security; Neuroscience and Aging; Pandemic Readiness, Resilience, and Mitigation; Racial and Social Justice; and Violence and Crime Reduction. These seed grant awards highlight the outstanding interdisciplinary and high-impact research that faculty in Baltimore and College Park are conducting to address the most complex challenges society is facing, said Gregory F. Ball, PhD, vice president for research at UMB and UMCP. My hope is that these grants strengthen current collaborations, promote new ones, and lead to future funding opportunities to support innovative and transformative research. A look at the winning projects: Artificial Intelligence (AI) and Medicine AI Discovery and Sensing for Biomarkers of Chronic Pain, Robert Ernst, PhD , professor, University of Maryland School of Dentistry, UMB, and Pamela Abshire, PhD, professor, A. James Clark School of Engineering, UMCP , professor, University of Maryland School of Dentistry, UMB, and Pamela Abshire, PhD, professor, A. James Clark School of Engineering, UMCP Applying Natural Language Processing to Electronic Health Records to Prevent Infections with Highly Antibiotic-Resistant Bacteria, Katherine Goodman, PhD, JD , assistant professor, University of Maryland School of Medicine, UMB, and Philip Resnik, PhD, professor, College of Arts and Humanities, UMCP , assistant professor, University of Maryland School of Medicine, UMB, and Philip Resnik, PhD, professor, College of Arts and Humanities, UMCP AI to Determine Alterations of 4-Dimensional Erythrocyte Flow in the Retina, Osamah Saeedi, MD , associate professor, University of Maryland School of Medicine, UMB, and Yang Tao, PhD, professor, A. James Clark School of Engineering, UMCP , associate professor, University of Maryland School of Medicine, UMB, and Yang Tao, PhD, professor, A. James Clark School of Engineering, UMCP Precision Therapy for Neonatal Opioid Withdrawal Syndrome (NOWS), Amber Beitelshees, PharmD, MPH , associate professor, University of Maryland School of Medicine, UMB, and Ritu Agarwal, PhD, Distinguished University Professor, Robert H. Smith School of Business, UMCP , associate professor, University of Maryland School of Medicine, UMB, and Ritu Agarwal, PhD, Distinguished University Professor, Robert H. Smith School of Business, UMCP Exploring the Hidden Links Between Cannabis and Cardiovascular Health Using Deep Learning, Jean Jeudy, MD , professor, and Timm-Michael Dickfeld, MD , professor, both from the University of Maryland School of Medicine, UMB, and Eleonora Tubaldi, PhD, assistant professor, A. James Clark School of Engineering, UMCP , professor, and , professor, both from the University of Maryland School of Medicine, UMB, and Eleonora Tubaldi, PhD, assistant professor, A. James Clark School of Engineering, UMCP Blended Reality Immersion for Geriatric Head Trauma: The BRIGHT Study, Mira Ghneim, MD, assistant professor, University of Maryland School of Medicine, UMB, and Donald Bolger, PhD, associate professor, College of Education, UMCP Cybersecurity and Homeland Security Tackling Terror in the Homeland: An Empirical and Legal Analysis of the Debate Over a New Domestic Terrorism Law, Michael Vesely, JD, senior research associate, University of Maryland Francis King Carey School of Law, UMB, and Michael Jensen, PhD, senior researcher, National Consortium for the Study of Terrorism and Responses to Terrorism (START), UMCP Neuroscience and Aging Predicting Clinical Features of Parkinson Disease Using Machine Learning Analysis of Mobility Data from a Wearable Sensor, Rainer von Coelln, MD , assistant professor, University of Maryland School of Medicine, UMB, and Michael P. Cummings, PhD, professor, College of Computer, Mathematical, and Natural Sciences, UMCP , assistant professor, University of Maryland School of Medicine, UMB, and Michael P. Cummings, PhD, professor, College of Computer, Mathematical, and Natural Sciences, UMCP A Patient Data-Driven Approach to Improve Counseling and Hearing Health, Ronna Hertzano, MD, PhD , professor, University of Maryland School of Medicine, UMB, and Matthew Goupell, PhD, professor, College of Behavioral and Social Sciences, UMCP , professor, University of Maryland School of Medicine, UMB, and Matthew Goupell, PhD, professor, College of Behavioral and Social Sciences, UMCP Ubiquitin-Proteasome System Mechanisms Underlying Abstinence-Dependent Methamphetamine Craving, Marco Venniro, PhD , assistant professor, University of Maryland School of Medicine, UMB, and Xuan Anna Li, PhD, assistant professor, College of Behavioral and Social Sciences, UMCP , assistant professor, University of Maryland School of Medicine, UMB, and Xuan Anna Li, PhD, assistant professor, College of Behavioral and Social Sciences, UMCP Noradrenergic Dysfunction Impairs Olfaction-Mediated Social Interaction in Alzheimers Models, Joseph Kao, PhD, professor, and Adam Puche, PhD, professor, both from the University of Maryland School of Medicine, UMB, and Ricardo Araneda, PhD, professor, College of Computer, Mathematical, and Natural Sciences, UMCP Pandemic Readiness, Resilience, and Mitigation Development of Vaccines Against Emerging Avian Influenza Viruses for Use in Humans and Poultry: A One-Health Approach to Prevent Zoonotic Virus Spillover Events and Support Pandemic Preparedness, Lynda Coughlan, PhD , assistant professor, University of Maryland School of Medicine, UMB, and Andrew Broadbent, PhD, assistant professor, College of Agriculture and Natural Resources, UMCP , assistant professor, University of Maryland School of Medicine, UMB, and Andrew Broadbent, PhD, assistant professor, College of Agriculture and Natural Resources, UMCP Viral and Host Determinants of SARS-CoV-2 Variant Replication, Matthew Frieman, PhD , associate professor, University of Maryland School of Medicine, UMB, and Margaret Scull, PhD, assistant professor, College of Computer, Mathematical, and Natural Sciences, UMCP , associate professor, University of Maryland School of Medicine, UMB, and Margaret Scull, PhD, assistant professor, College of Computer, Mathematical, and Natural Sciences, UMCP Scalable Manufacture of mRNA Vaccines for Agile Pandemic Response, Peter Swaan, PhD, professor, University of Maryland School of Pharmacy, UMB, and Don DeVoe, PhD, professor, A. James Clark School of Engineering, UMCP Racial and Social Justice Investigating Racial and Social Disparities in Health Outcomes Among Maryland Youth in Foster Care Exposed to Cross-State Air Pollution, Roderick Rose, PhD , assistant professor, University of Maryland School of Social Work, UMB, and James Archsmith, PhD, assistant professor, College of Agriculture and Natural Resources, UMCP , assistant professor, University of Maryland School of Social Work, UMB, and James Archsmith, PhD, assistant professor, College of Agriculture and Natural Resources, UMCP Disproportionality in Communication Impairments: Leveraging Technology to Provide Individualized Language Assessments of Bilingual Children, Michael Woolley, PhD, MSW, professor, University of Maryland School of Social Work, UMB, and Yi Ting Huang, PhD, associate professor, College of Behavioral and Social Sciences, UMCP Violence and Crime Reduction Comparing Firearm Violence from Trauma Units and Police, Kyla Liggett-Creel, PhD, LCSW-C, clinical assistant professor University of Maryland School of Social Work, UMB, and Gary LaFree, PhD, professor, College of Behavioral and Social Sciences, UMCP About the University of Maryland Strategic Partnership: MPowering the State The University of Maryland Strategic Partnership: MPowering the State is a collaboration between the state of Marylands two most powerful public research institutions: the University of Maryland, Baltimore (UMB) and the University of Maryland, College Park (UMCP). It leverages the sizable strengths and complementary missions of both institutions to strengthen Marylands innovation economy, advance interdisciplinary research, create opportunities for students, and solve important problems for the people of Maryland and the nation. Working together, UMB and UMCP achieve innovation and impact through collaboration. The University of Maryland Strategic Partnership Act of 2016 strengthened and formalized the structured relationship between UMB and UMCP, which began in 2012. The law deepens the alliance and enables UMB and UMCP to pursue even greater transformative change and impact, far surpassing what each institution could do independent of the other. The shipment consisted of around 8,000 thermal blankets and is destined for refugees fleeing Ukraine who have crossed the border to the Republic of Moldova. As of today, 65,099 refugees have crossed the border into Moldova from Ukraine since 24 February, and the number is steadily rising. In just a week more than 65,000 refugees arrived in Moldova. The welcoming attitude of the Government, NGOs and the Moldovans has been exemplary, said UNHCRs Representative in Central Europe, Roland Schilling, who is at the border. Most of the refugees are women, children and older persons. We are seeing increasing destitution and trauma. Some left home and carrying just small pieces of luggage, leaving everything else behind.. More help is needed, and it is on its way. We hope these relief items help Moldova to help refugees in this truly desperate situation. Todays airlift is the first shipment of a humanitarian aid supply pipeline being established by UNHCR. It is part of the agencys efforts to support national authorities of Moldova and provide the necessary humanitarian assistance to the people who have been forced to flee. Further shipments are expected to arrive to Moldova by land in the coming days. This includes urgent needed sleeping bags, more blankets, hygienic and baby kits, solar lamps and other relief items. UNHCR is working with the Government of the Republic of Moldova and other neighboring countries, and calling on them to keep borders open to those seeking safety and protection. The agency is leading the UN Refugee Response Plan at regional and local levels including in Moldova. All 23 United Nations agencies, programmes and funds in Moldova remain fully operational and are working with the Government of Moldova as well as with the UN Refugee Agency to support refugees from Ukraine. Humanitarian assessments continue and the UN is delivering support to refugees at the border and other temporary locations. We recognize the outpouring of generosity and solidarity showed by the citizens of Moldova and are humbled by this show of compassion and humanity, said Simon Springett, Resident Coordinator of UN Moldova. Part of the humanitarian shipment will be stored in a warehouse in Chisinau provided by the Government of Moldova, while about 2,000 blankets will be immediately transported to the Palanca border crossing point in South Moldova and distributed directly to refugees there. The UN Refugee Agency remains firmly committed to support all affected populations in Ukraine and countries in the region. END Link to B-ROLL footage: https://media.unhcr.org/Share/0ghh27eli4aj7u3lt11mlnxlcl652un6 For further information, please, contact: Erno Simon; [email protected] ; +36 30 657 03 23 Share on Facebook Share on Twitter A recent study from the Center for Hate and Extremism at Cal State San Bernardino reported that Los Angeles recorded the most hate crimes among large U.S. cities in 2021 a 71% jump in the incidents and the third-highest annual total in any U.S. city since the 1970s. (Dreamstime/TNS) Jennifer Ann Hancock was born Nov. 20, 1956, in Atlanta, to William Roy and Martha Jones Hancock. She went home to be with the Lord on Tuesday, April 26, 2022, in Gray. She was preceded in death by her father, William Roy Hancock, and her brother, Timothy Roy Hancock, as well as grandparents Union Springs, AL (36089) Today Some clouds. A stray shower or thunderstorm is possible. Low 66F. Winds light and variable.. Tonight Some clouds. A stray shower or thunderstorm is possible. Low 66F. Winds light and variable. In This Installment of Access the Experts Sam Hunter, Ph.D., professor in the College of Arts and Sciences, answers the question: Are terrorists creative and why do counterterrorism researchers care? About Hunter Sam Hunter is the lead of Strategic Operations in the National Counterterrorism, Innovation, and Education Center (NCITE) and is a professor in the Department of Psychology. He was awarded $85,000 from the Department of Homeland Security for his research in hindering malevolent creativity in 2020. Currently he serves as an Associate Editor of the Creativity Research Journal, and on the Editorial Boards of both Leadership Quarterly and The Journal of Creative Behavior. Access the Experts Access the Experts is an innovative partnership between the University of Nebraska at Omaha (UNO) and News Channel Nebraska (NCN), where viewers submit their questions to be answered by UNO faculty members. New segments of Access the Experts air every Tuesday at 6:46 A.M. The segment will re-air on Tuesday at 6:46 P.M., and Thursday at 6:46 A.M. and 6:46 P.M. If youre not sure how to tune in, visit News Channel Nebraskas website to view their coverage areas. View all segments on our Access the Experts page. Hong Kong, March 2 (UrduPoint / Pakistan Point News - 2nd Mar, 2022 ) :Overflowing hospitals, empty supermarket shelves and grim quarantine camps -- Hong Kong is in chaos battling a ballooning Covid outbreak in a business hub once renowned for its efficiency. Many locals are fuming at the government's failure to prepare after winning rare breathing room with two years of an economically painful but largely successful zero-Covid strategy. Other countries that deployed zero-Covid such as Australia, New Zealand and Singapore are now learning to live with the virus, but China remains committed to stamping it out and has ordered Hong Kong to do the same. The financial centre is now preparing to test its entire 7.4 million population and isolate everybody infected as it clings to the policy even as cases spiral out of control. Morgues are running full, ambulances are in short supply and patients are enduring long spells in basic quarantine facilities isolated from loved ones. Emily, a 40-year-old mother of two, is convinced her family became infected when they spent hours in queues for two rounds of compulsory tests last month after a case was discovered in their building. The results took 10 days and showed that all except the youngest child were negative. But by that point, the whole family were displaying symptoms. "I never thought I would harm my dearest when I was merely trying to cooperate with the government," she told AFP, asking to use just her first name. Hong Kong is now embarking on an audacious mass testing and isolation plan despite registering 190,000 infections in the last two months. That is more than three times the number recorded in Wuhan, where the virus first emerged in 2020 and was only brought under control by confining millions to their homes for weeks. The Omicron variant pummelling Hong Kong is also far more infectious but Chinese officials nonetheless appear adamant they can succeed. Liang Wannian, one of the key architects of China's lockdown strategy, arrived in Hong Kong on Monday as the city's health chief revealed Hong Kongers may be confined to their homes for part or all of the mass testing period. That revelation has prompted panic-buying in the last two days. Few details have emerged about what authorities will do with tens, possibly hundreds, of thousands of cases uncovered by mass testing. But city leader Carrie Lam has said they do not want people recovering at home. About 70,000 isolation units are due to come online in the coming weeks, some in requisitioned hotels and public housing blocks, others in hastily erected camps being built with Chinese help. Local experts however warn that the facilities are still a fraction of what is needed. "If we do not have a plan on how to quarantine the confirmed cases, then mass testing will not be useful at all," pandemic adviser Ivan Hung told reporters this week. Warsaw, March 1 (UrduPoint / Pakistan Point News - 2nd Mar, 2022 ) :Catholic charity Caritas Poland said it will take in 2,000 children from Ukrainian orphanages, with the first group of 300 arriving on Wednesday. "Our eastern neighbours are talking about a humanitarian catastrophe that is approaching fast," Caritas Poland director Marcin Izycki told PAP. "We have decided to respond to the crisis in Ukraine and provide shelter to the most vulnerable in our country," he said on Tuesday. The children will come mainly from orphanages in eastern Ukraine, which has been worst affected by Russia's assault on the country. The first group will be taken to Opole and Czestochowa in southern Poland and put up in charity centres and religious institutions. More than 660,000 people have fled Ukraine since Russia began its invasion last Thursday and a million more are estimated to be displaced within the country. The UN has warned of a humanitarian crisis and has called for $1.7 billion in urgent aid, estimating that some 12 million people will need support in Ukraine. (@FahadShabbir) The Hague, March 1 (UrduPoint / Pakistan Point News - 2nd Mar, 2022 ) :The International Court of Justice said Tuesday it would hold genocide hearings on March 7 and 8 over the war in Ukraine, as fighting intensifies. "The International Court of Justice, the principal judicial organ of the United Nations, will hold public hearings in the case concerning Allegations of Genocide under the Convention on the Prevention and Punishment of the Crime of Genocide (Ukraine v. Russian Federation) on Monday 7 and Tuesday 8 March 2022,", the court said in a statement. "The hearings will be devoted to the request for the indication of provisional measures submitted by Ukraine," the statement added. More than 660,000 people have already fled abroad, the UN refugee agency said, estimating that a million people are displaced within ex-Soviet Ukraine, which has a population of 44 million. The UN estimates that up to four million refugees may need help in the coming months and 12 million more will need assistance within the country. International Criminal Court prosecutor Karim Khan had already announced he was launching an investigation on the "situation in Ukraine" following Russia's invasion. "I am satisfied that there is a reasonable basis to believe that both alleged war crimes and crimes against humanity have been committed in Ukraine" since 2014, Khan said in a statement Monday. Russia has defied international bans, boycotts and sanctions to press ahead with an offensive it says is aimed at defending Ukraine's Russian speakers and toppling the leadership. Federal Minister for Education, Professional Training, National Heritage and Culture Shafqat Mahmood along with Minister of Culture of Uzbekistan Mr. Nazarbekov inaugurated the renovated corner of Uzbekistan, Tuesday at the Central Asian Link Passage at Pakistan Heritage Museum, Lok Virsa ISLAMABAD, (UrduPoint / Pakistan Point News - 2nd Mar, 2022 ) :Federal Minister for education, Professional Training, National Heritage and Culture Shafqat Mahmood along with Minister of Culture of Uzbekistan Mr. Nazarbekov inaugurated the renovated corner of Uzbekistan, Tuesday at the Central Asian Link Passage at Pakistan Heritage Museum, Lok Virsa. Speaking on the occasion, Federal Minister Shafqat Mahmood said, there were so many historical commonalities between our people and one of the most prominent dynasty that ruled our part of the world i.e. Mughal Dynasty came from Central Asia ( Farghana). He said a Memorandum of understanding has already been signed between two brotherly countries and soon we would exchange our cultural troops, artifacts, performers and actors to further cementing our cultural relations. He said that poets, writers, thinkers of both countries would interact to learn from each other experiences. Federal Minister Shafqat Mahmood expressed his gratitude to the Uzbek Culture Minister to visit Pakistan. While addressing the ceremony, the Culture Minister of Uzbekistan said culture and art play a key role to bring nations together. He also reiterated his resolve to further strengthen the cultural ties between both friendly countries. Darolutamide is a related, but structurally distinct, androgen receptor inhibitor which has demonstrated improved metastasis-free survival and overall survival in patients with nonmetastatic castration-resistant prostate cancer (CRPC). In an oral abstract presentation Dr. Smith presented the first results of the ARASENS trial which examined darolutamide in combination with docetaxel and ADT compared to docetaxel and ADT. Gov. Ron DeSantis hosted a news conference on the USF Tampa campus to announce a $20 million grant from the Florida Department of Education to Cyber Florida at USF to strengthen the states ability to fill high-demand careers in cybersecurity and information technology (IT). Joined by several USF and local high school students, the governor explained that Cyber Florida will work with regional partners to start training students in as young as in middle school helping build the skillset required to meet the cybersecurity needs of public sector agencies, businesses and industries. USF has been recognized as a leader in IT and in cyber. They even partnered with United States Special Operations Command, headquartered at MacDill Air Force Base, to help develop new technologies and programs that can improve our national defense, DeSantis told the audience at the Sam & Martha Gibbons Alumni Center. Multiple cybersecurity firms have attributed their recent decisions to relocate or create jobs in the Tampa Bay region in part due to USFs talent pipeline and the universitys collaboration with the military. We all know how important cybersecurity is and I think when you look around the world right now and everything thats taken place, theres a recognition that this is the new area of warfare and theres nothing more important for our country and our state than for people to be safe and secure, said Will Weatherford, chair of the USF Board of Trustees. One of the things we can do is to make sure we have strong cybersecurity. We are at risk at a strategic level, and we must do the things to get our students interested, enrolled and skilled in cybersecurity, said Mike McConnell, executive director of Cyber Florida. Cyber Florida, officially known as the Florida Center for Cybersecurity, was established by the Florida Legislature in 2014. In addition to enhancing the states cybersecurity workforce, it facilitates job creation with an emphasis on the defense, finance, health care, transportation and utility sectors. There are nearly 22,000 unfilled cybersecurity-related jobs in Florida. DeSantis says the new funding will be used to train new teachers and purchase training equipment to help middle school, high school and college students obtain credentials in cybersecurity. He hopes to see more than 300,000 students will be trained in IT and cybersecurity by 2024 more than double the number of students enrolled in similar programming today. In addition to USF, Cyber Florida will work with Florida International University to bolster cybersecurity training in K-12 schools in the Miami area. Grant Makes Annual Meeting of the Mississippi Historical Society Free to the Public: Event to be held in Hattiesburg Tue, 03/01/2022 - 07:40am The Mississippi Historical Society, with the support of a grant from the Mississippi Humanities Council, is opening its annual meeting free of charge to the public on Friday, March 11. The program will take place at the Historic Eureka School Museum at 410 E. 6th Street in Hattiesburg and is accessible online at https://www.mississippihistory.org/2022-annual-meeting. The University of Southern Mississippi (USM) is serving as a host for this event. The program begins at 9 a.m. with presentations on womens suffrage, African-American womens history, and civil rights journalism. A second session at 10:30 a.m. will focus on commemorating and preserving local African American history. Speakers include local attorney Glenda Funchess, Hattiesburg councilwoman Deborah Delgado, school historian Stella Mackabee, and Latoya Norman, director of Hattiesburgs African American Military History Museum. The Mississippi Historical Society will have an awards luncheon immediately afterward that costs $25 to attend. One of the highlights will be Ellie J. Dahmer receiving the Lifetime Achievement Award for her work to preserve the memory and accomplishments of her late husband, civil rights leader Vernon Dahmer, and her promotion of civil rights education. This Mississippi Humanities Council grant is supported with funding through the National Endowment for the Humanities; any views, findings, conclusions, or recommendations expressed in this program do not necessarily represent those of the National Endowment for the Humanities or the Mississippi Humanities Council. The Mississippi Historical Society, founded in 1858 and reorganized in 1890 and 19521953, encourages outstanding work in interpreting, teaching, and preserving Mississippi history. The society is a non-profit membership organization that works closely with the Mississippi Department of Archives and History. The society also publishes the online resource Mississippi History Now. Membership is open to anyone. Benefits include receiving the Journal of Mississippi History and Mississippi History Newsletter. Individual memberships are $35. For information on becoming a member of the Mississippi Historical society, call 601.576.6936 or visit the societys website, https://www.mississippihistory.org. On Tuesday evening, the Howard H. Baker Jr. Center for Public Policy hosted a public panel entitled What to Know about the Russia-Ukraine Crisis," featuring UT faculty familiar with issues surrounding Russias recent invasion of Ukraine. The panelists included Krista Wiegand, associate professor of political science and director of the Baker Centers Global Security Program, Catherine Luther, director of the School of Journalism and Electronic Media, Wonjae Hwang, associate professor in the department of political science, and Timothy Roberson, post-doctoral fellow in energy and environment at the Baker Center. The event began with each panelist giving a brief overview of the crisis, according to their field of expertise. This was followed by a brief Q&A session where they answered questions from both the in-person audience and the synchronous Zoom event. Wiegand began by giving some context to the situation in terms of geopolitics and explained that the invasion has probably been in the works for more than a few weeks, despite what it seems like on the surface. Even since the end of the Cold War, she explained that something like this was most likely inevitable. Since then, its been tenser and tenser between the west and Russia and at the same time eastern European states have joined NATO which was designed initially to balance or counter-russian aggression, Wiegand said. So you can see here this is a conflict that's been simmering for, definitely for the last 20 years, if not 30 years. She called the current situation a proxy war, explaining that although it is described as an issue with the possibility of Ukraine joining NATO, NATO is dominantly controlled by the United States. Therefore, this has more to do with power relations between NATO and the U.S. and Russia than anything else. This alliance is literally on Russias doorstep, so I would call this conflict a great power conflict, Weigand said. This is not, unfortunately, about Ukraine, and I feel bad, all of us feel very bad for Ukraine and the citizens of Ukraine but I would say that Ukraine is very much a pawn in a bigger power politics game. Hwang explained the dynamics of the United States sanctions on Russia and what they could do to resolve conflict. He said that the sanctions are historically drastic, so it is not a question if they are significant enough, but a question of whether or not they will actually work. The answer to the question, is it big enough to be effective in disrailing Russia from taking aggressive actions? Probably not, Hwang said. He stated that sanctions can often be perceived as military weakness or unwillingness to intervene militarily, and said that Russia could be taking the sanctions this way. In order for the sanctions to be effective, he suggested economically targeting pockets of people in political power, rather than the national economy. He also emphasized the importance of working with other countries. We have to have a less ambitious, harsh goal when imposing sanctions, Hwang said. We are making demands to Russia to take action, but if our demand is too ambitious then sanctions wont work. Roberson offered another economic view on the subject, explaining issues of sanctions and cutting off Russias resources. He said that because Russia dominates so much of the globes natural resource exports, it is nearly impossible for other European countries to break ties with the country completely. Theyre facing a political tradeoff between punishing Russia for this invasion by cutting off their natural gas markets or between keeping the lights on and keeping the heat on, and so far theyve chosen to keep the heat on, Robertson said. He said U.S. gas prices will continue to increase even though the U.S. sources much of its gas and oil from other western nations. Because there is so much global impact on oil prices and manufacturing, U.S. prices will keep rising. He named a few short-term and medium-term alternatives, like pulling from the U.S. strategic petroleum reserve and cutting gas taxes, but said the most effective option would be longer-term. You can think of renewable energy or nuclear energy or battery storage or electric cars as a solution to kind of lower gasoline demands and lower Russia's leverage over world natural gas and oil markets, Robertson said. Outside of the actual economic and geopolitical issues, misinformation has taken a toll on both Ukraine and Russia, explained Luther, an expert on international journalism and press-state relations. Russian media has been mostly supportive of Putins efforts, which causes obvious problems for citizens of both countries involved. Two of the main perpetrators of this misinformation have been the social media platform Telegram and the Russian channel RT. The pro-Kremlin channels are presenting themselves as open-source intelligence so theyre trying to present themselves as being legitimate, and unfortunately, the information spread on Telegram through these channels has also been picked up by users of other social media platforms, Luther said. She said the Ukrainian government has taken steps to mitigate this misinformation by flagging Telegram content regarding the invasion and calling it dangerous and information terrorism. Pro-Russian and anti-Russian platforms and news outlets are fighting to be at the center of the public eye. Truly what is happening in cyberspace is an information war, Luther said. In the Q&A portion of the panel, Wiegand emphasized her belief that the United States will not become involved militarily. She said on top of harsh sanctions and public condemnation, the U.S. can become involved by supporting Ukraines military. There's no way the U.S. will get involved in this conflict, Weigand said. Russia is a nuclear power, nuclear weapons country. The United States is too. We have never fought a war against Russia since 1940, or since they both got nuclear weapons. Mutual destruction is a major concern. We don't want to go that far. In order to educate students further on the invasion in Ukraine, the departments of history, modern foreign languages and religious studies will host a teach-in on the Ukrainian crisis Thursday, March 3 from 10:30 a.m. to 12 p.m. in the Student Union Plaza. Lincoln, RI (02865) Today Cloudy skies early, then partly cloudy after midnight. Slight chance of a rain shower. Low 49F. Winds NNW at 5 to 10 mph.. Tonight Cloudy skies early, then partly cloudy after midnight. Slight chance of a rain shower. Low 49F. Winds NNW at 5 to 10 mph. Lincoln, RI (02865) Today Cloudy skies this evening will become partly cloudy after midnight. Slight chance of a rain shower. Low 49F. Winds NNW at 5 to 10 mph.. Tonight Cloudy skies this evening will become partly cloudy after midnight. Slight chance of a rain shower. Low 49F. Winds NNW at 5 to 10 mph. Ukrainian refugees rest in the school building near the Polish-Ukrainian border in Medyka, Poland (ANSA) Ukrainian authorities say troops from Belarus have entered a region in northern Ukraine to join the Russian invasion of the country. The ongoing hostilities have led to a significant number of refugees and displaced persons. By Stefan J. Bos Some 100,000 desperate people have already entered Hungary, fleeing a nation in turmoil. Across the border, Ukraine is experiencing a barrage of attacks by the Russian army. Authorities say at least 70 Ukrainian soldiers have been killed in a Russian artillery strike on Ukraines north-eastern city of Okhtyrka. It comes as a massive convoy of Russian armor, stretching about 40 miles (64 kilometers), advancing Ukraine's capital Kyiv. Air raid sirens once again were heard in Kyiv with reports of Russian strikes on the outskirts and inside the city. And dozens of civilians were reportedly killed since Monday in Russian missile strikes on Ukraine's second city, Kharkiv. The President of Ukraine, Volodymyr Zelensky, has called the missile attack an act of "state terrorism" and accuses Russia of war crimes as residential areas are also attacked. Authorities say civilians, including allegedly 16 children, were killed. EU membership In an address to a special session of the European Unions parliament, President Zelensky appealed for membership of the bloc, saying it would be stronger with Ukraine in it. As the internationally condemned Russian invasion of Ukraine continued, the International Criminal Court's prosecutor announced he wanted to investigate Russia for possible war crimes. There were no signs of Moscow halting its operations, with local journalists in Kherson saying Russian troops almost surround the city. Russias foreign minister, Sergei Lavrov, even offered a new justification for Russia's invasion telling a United Nations conference to prevent Ukraine from acquiring nuclear weapons. But Britains prime minister Boris Johnson accuses Russia of "barbaric and indiscriminate" attacks and says he is ready to intensify economic sanctions on Russia for as long as it takes. The fighting escalated after Kyiv and Moscow held initial ceasefire talks in Belarus, which failed to end Europes most significant conflict since World War Two. People fleeing And that is why people here continue to flee towards Hungary as well as to other neighboring nations. Some have spoken about leaving behind everything they worked for as they cross this border with the last personal belongings they could grab. Many women and children are among the refugees as all Ukrainian men aged 18 to 60 have been mobilized to face an army of as many as 200,000 troops. Hungary says it will continue to welcome refugees here and participate in humanitarian aid. However, the government, which long maintained good ties with the Kremlin, says it will not send troops or arms to Ukraine, and Hungary wont allow lethal weapons to transit its territory. ELIZABETH URBAN is News Editor for The Vidette. Urban can be contacted at emurba1@ilstu.edu. Follow Urban on Twitter at @eliizabethurban. IF YOU SUPPORT THE VIDETTE MISSION of providing a training laboratory for Illinois State University student journalists to learn and sharpen viable, valuable and marketable skills in all phases of digital media, please contribute to this most important cause. Thank you. MARISSA HARVEY is a News and Features Reporter for The Vidette. Harvey can be contacted at mcharv1@ilstu.edu. Follow Harvey on Twitter at @marissaharvey16 IF YOU SUPPORT THE VIDETTE MISSION of providing a training laboratory for Illinois State University student journalists to learn and sharpen viable, valuable and marketable skills in all phases of digital media, please contribute to this most important cause. Thank you. President Joe Biden will host the leaders of the Association of Southeast Asian Nations for a special summit in Washington next month, the White House announced Monday. The meeting of the 10-member ASEAN will be held March 28-29 and is being billed by the White House as an opportunity to demonstrate the U.S. commitment to the bloc and a chance to mark 45 years of U.S.-ASEAN relations. It is a top priority for the Biden-Harris Administration to serve as a strong, reliable partner and to strengthen an empowered and unified ASEAN to address the challenges of our time, White House press secretary Jen Psaki said in a statement. The ASEAN nations are Brunei, Cambodia, Indonesia, Laos, Malaysia, Myanmar, the Philippines, Singapore, Thailand and Vietnam. ASEAN barred Myanmars military-installed government leadership from the last annual summit in October, instead restricting the nation's participation to non-political representatives. That policy is expected to remain in place for the March summit, according to a Biden administration official who was not authorized to comment publicly. The summit comes as Biden has sought to make relations in the Pacific a top foreign policy priority amid growing concerns about China as a military and economic adversary. Biden has criticized Beijing for human rights abuses against Uyghurs in northwest China, suppression of democratic protests in Hong Kong, military aggression against the self-ruled island of Taiwan and more. Biden participated in the October summit, where he announced more than $100 million in new U.S. spending in ASEAN countries on health programs, a new climate initiative, programs to assist with the economic recovery from the coronavirus pandemic and education programs. It marked the first time since 2017, when President Donald Trump participated in the summit, that a U.S. president took part in a meeting of the bloc. On this edition of Straight Talk Africa, host Hayde Adams and her guests discuss what it takes for young people to run for political office in Africa. Guests include Ayisha Osori, director of the Executive Vice President's Office at Open Society Foundations, Temi Ibirogba, sub-editor at The Republic, Maria Byrd, a correspondent for Channels TV and international affairs analyst Calvin Dark. Russian forces shelled multiple Ukrainian cities Wednesday. Plus, the Nigerian government says it will start to evacuate its citizens from Ukraine and a film takes looks back in the beginning of the 2014 Russo-Ukrainian conflict at the Donbas border region. Experts say the Russian invasion of Ukraine is likely to spur North Korea to take a bolder stance in pursuing its long-term goal of fracturing South Koreas alliance with the United States. Retired U.S. Army General James Thurman, commander of U.S. Forces Korea (USFK) from 2011 to 2013, said, North Korean leader Kim Jong Un will seize on the Ukraine-Russia crisis to test the alliance of the U.S. and South Korea. As Russias invasion of Ukraine raged into its sixth day on Wednesday, Ukrainians continue to fight alone to defend the capital of Kyiv, without the support of a military force from neighboring European countries or the U.S. President Joe Biden reiterated his promise not to send U.S. troops to defend Ukraine on February 24, the day when Russian President Vladimir Putin authorized a special military operation, essentially declaring war on Ukraine. Ukraine is not a member of NATO, the U.S.-led security alliance of European and North American countries, and it does not have a bilateral security treaty with the U.S. that guarantees U.S. defense against an attack on its territory. Testing the alliance The U.S. is, however, bound by a Mutual Defense Treaty that obliges it to help defend South Korea against an external aggression. Despite the treaty, experts are concerned that Russias invasion of Ukraine and Bidens decision not to send American forces to defend Ukraine could motivate Pyongyang to reinvigorate its efforts to weaken the alliance between the U.S. and South Korea. North Korea has long sought to break Seouls alliance with Washington. It views the U.S. military presence in South Korea, joint military exercises, and a security guarantee bolstered by U.S. nuclear force defense as hostile policy. We should expect the North to try to continue to break the alliance, David Maxwell, a senior fellow at the Foundation for Defense of Democracies, said. It may assess an opportunity and will surely use political warfare and influence operations to try to subvert the ROK government and the Koreans in the South to make them question the alliance and the U.S. commitment, he added. South Koreas official name is the Republic of Korea (ROK). Other experts contacted by VOA were less concerned about the U.S.-South Korean alliance. Michael OHanlon, director of research in foreign policy at the Brookings Institution in Washington, said, With 30,000 U.S. troops in ROK, I doubt North Korea would draw rash conclusions about taking aggressive steps toward South Korea. And Evans Revere, a former State Department official with extensive experience negotiating with North Korea, said, U.S. determination to defend its allies is stronger today than it has ever been precisely because of the Russian invasion of Ukraine. VOAs Korean Service contacted North Koreas U.N. mission for a comment on Bidens decision not to send American troops to Ukraine but did not receive a reply. Pro-alliance sentiment in Seoul deepened as the Ukraine crisis unfolded. A spokesperson for South Korean presidential contender Yoon Suk-yeol of the opposition People Power Party told VOAs Korean Service on Tuesday, The Ukrainian situation reaffirms the importance of alliances. The spokesperson continued, A Yoon Suk-yeol government will strengthen and advance the ROK-U.S. alliance into a comprehensive strategic alliance based on close communication and cooperation between the two countries. VOAs Korean Service contacted the office of South Koreas ruling Democratic Party presidential candidate Lee Jae-myung but did not receive a reply. Pro-alliance sentiment Cha Dong-gil, professor of the Marine Corps Military Studies at Dankook University in South Korea, told VOAs Korean Service on Monday that South Korea needs to rely on its alliance with the U.S. while building its own military strength. While the U.S. attention is focused on (Ukraine), Kim Jong Un could seize an opportunity, he added, and raise provocations to test the U.S. resolve to respond to its threats. Moon Hyung-woong is a 25-year-old job seeker whose girlfriend is in Ukraine. South Korea needs to maintain good relations with the U.S., he said. The withdrawal of U.S. forces from South Korea will pose threat to South Koreas national security. North Korea conducted its eighth missile test of the year on Sunday, calling the launch a test for developing a reconnaissance satellite. Hyungjin Kim in Seoul contributed to this report. The United States stands firm behind its commitments to Taiwan and allies in the region, a delegation of former senior U.S. defense and security officials sent by President Joe Biden said on Wednesday. Collaboration between the United States and Taiwan is stronger and more expansive than ever before, former chairman of the U.S. Joint Chiefs of Staff Mike Mullen said during his visit to the democratic island. Mullen is in Taiwan leading a delegation of former top officials sent by U.S. President Joe Biden. The trip is happening against the backdrop of Russia's invasion of Ukraine, which is being closely followed in Taiwan. "The United States will continue to oppose any unilateral changes to the status quo and will continue to support a peaceful resolution of cross-strait issues, consistent with the wishes and best interests of the people of Taiwan," Mullen told Taiwan President Tsai Ing-wen in a meeting broadcast live on Facebook. "I do hope by being here with you, we can reassure you and your people, as well as our allies and partners in the region, that the United States stands firm behind its commitments." Taiwan, claimed by China as its own territory, is on alert in case Beijing tries to use the opportunity to make a move on the island, though the government has reported no unusual Chinese maneuvers. Beijing has vowed to bring it under Chinese control, by force if necessary, and has increased its military and political pressure against Taiwan to try to force the island to accept China's sovereignty. Taiwan has vowed to defend itself if attacked. The delegation will also meet Taiwan Defense Minister Chiu Kuo-cheng. Mullen's delegation marks the first public visit of a group of former officials to Taiwan at Biden's behest since April 2021, when former U.S. Senator Chris Dodd and former deputy secretaries of state Richard Armitage and James Steinberg traveled there and met with Tsai. U.S. President Joe Biden said late Tuesday Russian leader Vladimir Putin "badly miscalculated" in his invasion of neighboring Ukraine and the thought that he could make the free world "bend to his menacing ways." Biden used the beginning of his State of the Union address to the nation to express support for Ukraine and outline the widespread, unified response from Ukrainian allies that has included sending weapons and aid to Ukraine and imposing strong economic sanctions against Russia. "Putin may circle Kyiv with tanks, but he will never gain the hearts and souls of the Ukrainian people," Biden said. "He will never extinguish their love of freedom. He will never, never weaken the resolve of the free world." Biden announced the closing of U.S. air space to all Russian flights and said the U.S. Justice Department is forming a special task force "to go after the crimes of Russian oligarchs." He reiterated that the United States will not be sending troops to fight in Ukraine, while stating that NATO allies would "defend every inch" of territory in member states. "The Ukrainians are fighting back with pure courage, but the next few days, weeks and months will be hard on them," Biden said. "Putin has unleashed violence and chaos, but while he may make gains on the battlefield, he will pay a continuing high price over the long run." Among the audience in the U.S. Capitol was Ukraine Ambassador to the U.S. Oksana Markarova. Many of the lawmakers in attendance wore forms of yellow and blue, the colors of the Ukrainian flag, to show their support. Ukrainian President Volodymyr Zelenskyy spoke with Biden by phone Tuesday about sanctions against Russia and defense aid for Ukraine. "We must stop the aggressor as soon as possible," Zelenskyy tweeted. Ukraine's second-largest city, Kharkiv, faced increased Russian shelling Tuesday, including a strike at the Kharkiv Regional State Administration building in the center of the city that Zelenskyy called "undisguised terror" and a war crime. A day after hours of talks with Russian officials yielded no resolution on Ukraine's demands for a cease-fire and a withdrawal of Russian forces, Zelenskyy again called for a halt in fighting to give negotiations a chance. "It's necessary to at least stop bombing people, just stop the bombing and then sit down at the negotiating table," Zelenskyy told Reuters and CNN in a joint interview in a heavily guarded government compound in Kyiv. A U.S. defense official told reporters that despite instances of Russian forces in some areas being slowed by logistical problems, the Russian military still has significant combat resources that have not yet been utilized in Ukraine. One closely watched situation is the approach of a kilometers-long Russian column that has been making its way toward Kyiv. The official said the U.S. assesses that since the invasion began last Thursday, Russia has launched more than 400 missiles, and that Ukraine's air and missile defense systems remain viable. International pressure on Russia continues, with Canada announcing Tuesday it will refer the situation in Ukraine to the International Criminal Court for a probe of war crimes and crimes against humanity committed by Ukraine. European Union foreign policy chief Josep Borrell said Tuesday that Russian shelling of civilian infrastructure that took place Monday in Kharkiv "violates the laws of war." Kremlin spokesman Dmitry Peskov dismissed allegations of war crimes and told reporters that "Russian troops don't conduct any strikes against civilian infrastructure and residential areas," despite extensive, mounting evidence of Kremlin attacks on homes, schools and hospitals documented by reporters. The United Nations General Assembly is also expected to vote Wednesday on a resolution calling for Russia to immediately withdraw its military forces from Ukraine and condemning Putin's move earlier this week to "increase the readiness" of Russia's nuclear forces. The resolution, which is non-binding but does signal international opinion, follows a failed effort at the U.N. Security Council where Russia used its veto power to block a similar resolution. In addition to sanctions that have directly targeted Russia's banking system and figures close to Putin, many companies have halted their Russian operations in response to the invasion. Exxon Mobil said it would exit Russia, joining other oil companies such as Shell and BP. Apple stopped selling iPhones and other products in Russia, while car maker Ford and airplane manufacturer Boeing announced they are suspending Russian operations. Reuters reported late Tuesday that Russian President Putin issued a decree banning cash exports of foreign currency from the country exceeding $10,000 in value with effect from March 2, according to a Kremlin statement. Also on Tuesday, Echo Moskvy, one of Russia's oldest radio stations that is critical of the authorities, was taken off the airwaves. The Associated Press confirmed that the blockage, along with threats to shutter the renowned station permanently, is a result of its coverage of the invasion. Ukraine's parliament said a Russian missile hit the television tower in Kyiv. Local media reported the attack caused several explosions and Ukrainian channels stopped broadcasting shortly thereafter. Ukrainian officials said five people were killed in the attack. Ukrainian Foreign Minister Dmytro Kuleba tweeted that it rekindles memories of the mass killing of Jews by Nazi SS troops and local collaborators during World War II. "Kyiv TV tower, which has just been hit by a Russian missile, is situated on the territory of Babyn Yar. On September 29-30, 1941, Nazis killed over 33 thousand Jews here. 80 years later, Russian Nazis strike this same land to exterminate Ukrainians. Evil and barbaric." The U.N. refugee agency said Tuesday that more than 677,000 people, most of them women and children, had fled Ukraine to neighboring countries since Thursday. It said it expects 4 million people could eventually flee Ukraine. Some information for this report came from The Associated Press, Agence France-Presse, and Reuters. This article has been updated to include additional confirmation and details of the problems facing Africans seeking to leave Ukraine. African workers and students seeking to flee Ukraine in the face of Russias invasion are complaining of being blocked from buses, trains and border crossing points while priority is given to Ukrainian citizens. An American official told VOA the U.S. is aware of the issue, saying that is a huge concern but that large numbers of Nigerians were able to leave Ukraine on Tuesday. Ukranian authorities are giving priority to Ukrainian women and children seeking to leave the country and it was not clear to what extent Africans were being treated differently from other foreigners. Ukrainian men of fighting age are not permitted to leave the country at all. Nevertheless, some Africans among the hundreds of thousands of people desperately trying to leave Ukraine are alleging racial discrimination, prompting denials from Ukrainian authorities and concern from the United States and international bodies. Augustine Akoi Kollie, a Liberian national studying medicine in the western Ukraine city of Ternopil, said he witnessed the disparities while waiting overnight Saturday to cross the border near Suceava, Romania. People stood shivering in long lines, clutching luggage and children, and "if a Ukrainian comes, you have to shift and make way for the Ukrainians to go to the front," Kollie told VOA. Although authorities called for women and children to be processed first, African women were left behind, he said. "It was racial discrimination," he said, "because if you say you are taking women and children, you have foreign students there who are females. So why are you not taking them?" Kollie also saw aggressive behavior, which one of his traveling companions captured on video while they waited at the border. The video clip, shared with VOA, shows a nighttime scene of several uniformed men shoving what Kollie called "foreign students," who were sitting on the ground and barely visible behind a parked vehicle. The men fired several shots into the air. His account dovetails with reports by other news media. A 24-year-old Nigerian doctor told The New York Times that she was stranded for over two days at the Ukraine-Poland border crossing at the Polish town of Medyka, with guards holding back foreigners while allowing Ukrainians to pass through. "They were beating up people with sticks, the doctor, Chineye Mbagwu, told The Times. "They would slap them, beat them and push them to the end of the queue. It was awful." The hashtag #AfricansinUkraine has been trending on Twitter, showing video clips of Black people appearing to be denied boarding on a train or pulled from seating. VOA has not been able to authenticate the videos independently. A VOA correspondent reporting from Ukraine said authorities there have prioritized Ukrainians for outbound buses and trains, making it harder for all foreigners to leave. A U.S. official, speaking on condition of anonymity, said that the United States has been tracking the story of the people of color leaving and that it has been a huge concern although Nigerians comprised the second largest group of foreigners to leave on Tuesday. I think there was no doubt there were problems for them, the official said. Everybody waited for days and discriminate against as they brought women and children forward. Ukraines minister of foreign affairs, Dmytro Kuleba, tweeted Tuesday: "Russias invasion of Ukraine has affected Ukrainians and non-citizens in many devastating ways. Africans seeking evacuation are our friends and need to have equal opportunities to return to their home countries safely. Ukraines government spares no effort to solve the problem." Disturbing reports The African Union released a statement Monday saying its top officials current chair Macky Sall, president of Senegal, and Moussa Faki Mahamat, African Union Commission chairperson were "particularly disturbed by reports that African citizens on the Ukrainian side of the border are being refused the right to cross the border to safety." "Reports that Africans are singled out for unacceptable dissimilar treatment would be shockingly racist and in breach (of) international law," the statement continued. The International Committee of the Red Cross could not confirm such reports, "but they are disturbing," the agency said in an email to VOA Tuesday. "Safe passage and the ability to seek safe haven is a right for everyone affected by conflict. The ICRC (is) working and responding to everyone affected by the fighting." The U.S. State Department has denounced any attempts at blocking Africans from leaving Ukraine. "We are aware of these media reports," a department spokesperson said Monday. "Any act of racial discrimination, particularly in a crisis, is inexcusable." The spokesperson said the department was "engaging closely with U.N. agencies on the ground to ensure that every single person crossing into neighboring countries is received equally and with the protection assistance their circumstances require." Meanwhile, the AU has commended efforts by its member states and embassies in neighboring countries to receive African citizens and their families trying to leave Ukraine. Nigerias ambassador to Romania, Safiya Ahmad Nuhu, told VOAs Hausa Service that more than 600 Nigerians have arrived in Bucharest "and there are many more on buses that are coming from the various entry points." "The Romanian authorities have been very helpful in terms of coordination, preparation and assistance," she added. "Its not even just the government but even individuals, organizations, universities, private individuals theyve all been so helpful in providing assistance." Kollie, the Liberian student, said once he and his two companions crossed into Romania, they were given blankets, plenty of food and transportation to the town of Timisoara, where theyre sharing a hotel room. He said new arrivals were told they would get help with food and lodging for 30 days. Exponential increase expected The United Nations anticipates that, with a sustained Russian assault, refugees will continue to pour over Ukraines borders. "Ive rarely seen such an incredibly fast-rising exodus of people," with numbers "rising exponentially hour after hour since Thursday," said U.N. High Commissioner for Refugees Filippo Grandi, addressing the U.N. Security Council on Monday. " We are currently planning for up to 4 million refugees in the coming days and weeks. Such a rapid increase would be a huge burden for receiving states." Already, the outward surge represents the largest displacement in Europe since the Balkan wars in the early 1990s, Grandi said. Then, more than 2 million people fled their homes, the U.N. refugee agency estimated at the time. Grandi said that amid the current crisis, more than 280,000 people have sought relief in Poland; in Hungary, 94,000; in Moldova, nearly 40,000; in Romania, 34,000; in Slovakia, 30,000 plus tens of thousands elsewhere in Europe. Grandi said "a sizeable number" also have relocated to the Russian Federation. The European Commission the European Unions executive arm earlier this week had discussed asking member nations to grant temporary asylum for Ukrainians for up to three years,The New York Times reported. Residents of Ukraine, which on Monday applied for EU membership, can currently stay for up to 90 days and travel visa-free within the bloc's countries. Asked by VOA about EU policy and provisions for Ukrainian and other refugees, the European Commission said in an email Tuesday that it would "soon propose (to) activate the Temporary Protection Directive to offer quick and effective assistance to people fleeing the war in Ukraine. The Commission stands ready to support its member states providing a safe haven for people fleeing Ukraine and is working on an overall contingency plan to respond to Russian aggression, which includes the protection of Ukrainian people. We are considering all courses of action to help member states process arrivals quickly and effectively. Until we present our proposal, we are unable to go into further detail." As for reported mistreatment of minorities, the commission said: "All people in need, regardless of their nationality, ethnicity, or their skin color, who are fleeing violence in Ukraine should be granted access to the EU." Contributors to this report include VOA Eastern Europe bureau chief Myroslava Gongadze, VOAs national security correspondent Jeff Seldin, Grace Alheri Abdu of VOAs Hausa Service, Ignatius Annor of the English to Africa Service, National Security Correspondent Jeff Seldin, and Betty Ayoub and Carol Guensburg of the Africa Division As Spanish Catholics prepare to give up meat on Fridays as part of the holy season of Lent, a government minister sparked a political row after suggesting eating less meat would be a good idea. Spain is Europes biggest exporter of ham and jamon as it is known in Spanish, is a national gastronomic icon, along with paella or Rioja wine. So, when Spain's consumer affairs minister, Alberto Garzon, recently suggested eating less meat would help combat climate change and that said industrial farms could cause pollution, it prompted a fiery national debate about farming methods. He voiced support for traditional livestock farming methods in which cattle or pigs are allowed to graze. That is sustainable; what isnt sustainable is these so-called mega farms, Garzon said in an interview with The Guardian, a British newspaper. They find a village in a depopulated bit of Spain and put in 4,000 or 5,000 or 10,000 head of cattle. They pollute the soil; they pollute the water and then they export this poor-quality meat from these ill-treated animals. The main opposition conservative Peoples Party seized on the dispute to try to win over disaffected voters in rural areas. Pablo Casado, leader of the Peoples Party, said in a speech earlier in February that voters needed more farming and less communism - a reference to Garzon's membership of the far-left United Left party which was linked to the Communist Party. The dispute created a breech in Spains coalition government between the moderate the center-left Socialists and their junior partners, the far-left Unidas Podemos. Spains government said last week that mega farms, which contain more than 10,000 animals, made up only 0.016% of all farms in the country. Anger As the debate heated up, angry farmers who were new seeking licenses to open new farms in Lorca, in Murcia, southeastern Spain, stormed the local council last month. Seven were charged with public order offenses and will stand trial later this year. In Lorca there are 2,040 farms, of which 663 are pork farms, the city council said. Another town in the Murcia region is Jumilla where 16 pig farms house 240,000 animals, according to the environmental group Save Our Land, or SOL. The groups Cati Rodriguez claimed that waste from the animals passes into the local water supply and contaminates the drinking water supply. We get our water supply from aquifers but there are such high levels of animal waste that it passes into the water supply. Tests carried out with Greenpeace last year found the level of nitrates was 50% per liter which is above the safe level for human consumption, she told VOA. She said the problem was not limited to Jumilla but existed across Spain. VOA contacted Cefusa, which is responsible for the farms in Jumilla. A spokesperson, who asked not to be named in accordance with company policy, said Cefusa strictly complies with current environmental legislation. We have adapted our facilities and our production model to the requirements established in the different environmental prevention regulations applicable at the regional, national and European levels in recent years, the spokesperson said. In the neighboring region of Castilla la Mancha, home to Miguel de Cervantes famously errant knight Don Quixote, there are 1.7 million pigs, according to Spanish government figures. Emiliano Garcia-Page, the Socialist regional president, has insisted that despite criticism from environmentalists, conditions in large industrial farms comply with European Union health and safety regulations. As if to prove his point, he invited Garzon to visit a farm. When you know how (these farms) work from the inside and how the agri-food industry works, you will see Spain has extraordinary levels of quality and guarantees. Otherwise, you are going to spend your life without being able to order a sausage or a steak, he said. Jamon not only holds a symbolic position in society but in economic terms, it is the country's second most important agricultural export after fruit and vegetables. In 2020, meat brought $6.09 billion in revenue compared with $7.88 billion from fruit and vegetables. Germany had long been the largest producer of pork in the European Union but an outbreak of African Swine Fever in 2020 meant Spain took over as the largest exporter to the lucrative Chinese market. There are several types of Spanish ham which is produced in different ways. At the top end of the market is jamon iberico de bellota, which is made from black pigs. They are allowed to graze for years in meadows and are fed on acorns and herbs. Jamon iberico de cebo is made from animals who are fed on animal fodder and cereals. Both are regarded as delicacies as well as jamon serrano. Processed ham is generally produced in industrial-scale farms in which hundreds, or thousands of animals are kept. Changing attitudes Attitudes towards the way animals are treated are changing in Spain. A survey published in January by the BBVA Foundation, associated with Spain's second largest bank, found most Spaniards polled reject their use in circuses, bullfights and for use to research cosmetics. Eight out of ten people said they considered animals should be respected, in the survey of 2,000 people. Animal rights organizations have carried out a series of high-profile undercover investigations to expose alleged abuse of animals on farms. The directors of Los Hermanos Carrasco, the company which controls a pig farm in Totana, in Murcia, are to stand trial accused of alleged animal cruelty and offenses against public health after an investigation by Igualdad Animal. They deny the allegations. Burkina Faso's six-year conflict with terrorist groups has spread to the southwest of the country and is beginning to spill into neighboring countries. The conflict is also sparking accusations of human rights abuses. Binta Sangare, whose name has been changed to protect her identity, says armed men entered her house one night in November, shouting and shining flashlights on her. She says they kidnapped her husband and disappeared into the night. She says, just after the men left, she heard gunshots and that seven people were killed that night. Local people found the bodies of six and the last one a few days later. Her husbands body was among them and later buried. She says the men who took her husband away were Burkinabe security forces. At her husbands funeral, they came again and detained people from the Fulani ethnic group, she says. They came to kidnap and kill without cause or investigation. That makes us scared every day, she told VOA. Burkina Faso has been battling armed groups linked to Islamic State and al-Qaida for six years. In the last year, the conflict has spread south. Reports of extrajudicial killings by Burkinabe forces known as the FDS have increased. Rights groups say there is a common misconception that Fulanis are behind many of the terror attacks and say Fulanis make up the majority of victims of pro-government forces. VOA spoke with seven witnesses in the southwest municipality of Djigoue, who said relatives were abducted or killed by security forces in November. Some alleged that government-backed civilian militia groups, or VDPs, have been involved in the deaths and disappearances. One witness, whose identity has also been protected, said the Dozos, a militia group, shot and killed his nephew. He says terror attacks have increased and security forces are relying on the Dozos to maintain security. He says the FDS are staying in their bases and letting the Dozos go out into the bush At first the FDS were accompanied by the Dozos, and they were interrogating all ethnic groups. But, since things are in [the Dozos] hands, they are only interested in the Fulani, he added. One Burkinabe human rights group The Collective Against Impunity and the Stigmatization of Communities says 17 people were murdered in Djigoue in November. In a VOA interview, the groups founder called on leaders to act. He urges them to suspend the operations of the VDPs and the armed civilians, adding that the group strongly hopes leaders take into account the international respect of human rights and the sacredness of human life. Human Rights Watch says the FDS which took power from a democratically elected government in January has carried out many extrajudicial killings since the conflict began. To the best of my knowledge, no one, no security force members have been held accountable for these very serious allegations of abuses in counter terrorism operations. The FDS did not respond to a request for comment. The URL has been copied to your clipboard The code has been copied to your clipboard. In his first State of the Union address, U.S. President Joe Biden touted his success in uniting much of the world against Russian President Vladimir Putins invasion of Ukraine. VOAs Senior Diplomatic Correspondent Cindy Saine reports. The URL has been copied to your clipboard The code has been copied to your clipboard. In his first State of the Union address, U.S. President Joe Biden on Tuesday night condemned Russian President Vladimir Putins invasion of Ukraine and rallied bipartisan support for the country. VOA's White House Bureau Chief Patsy Widakuswara has this report. In his first State of the Union address Tuesday night, U.S. President Joe Biden touted his success in uniting much of the world against Russian President Vladimir Putin's invasion of Ukraine. Biden said Ukraine is on the front line of the global battle between democracies and autocracies, and that democracy will prevail. With Putin ratcheting up attacks on major Ukrainian cities such as Kharkiv and Kyiv, Biden stood in the House chamber and told Americans the free world is united against Putin's aggression. "The free world is holding him accountable," Biden said. "Along with 27 members of the European Union, including France, Germany, Italy, as well as countries like the United Kingdom, Canada, Japan, Korea, Australia, New Zealand, and many others, even Switzerland are inflicting pain on Russia and supporting the people of Ukraine. Putin is now isolated from the world more than he has ever been." Biden said Putin badly miscalculated when he launched a full-scale invasion of his neighbor, meeting "a wall of strength he never anticipated or imagined" instead of a world that would "roll over." "He thought he could divide us at home in this chamber and this nation. He thought he could divide us in Europe as well, but Putin was wrong. We are ready, we are united, and that's what we did," Biden said. The U.S. leader listed some of the major actions the United States and other governments have taken in response to Russia's invasion, including sanctions against the country's financial system, a new U.S. Justice Department task force targeting Russian oligarchs, a ban on Russian flights within U.S. air space and direct support to Ukraine in the form of military, economic and humanitarian aid. "In the battle between democracy and autocracies, democracies are rising to the moment, and the world is clearly choosing the side of peace and security," Biden said. "This is a real test. It's going to take time. So let us continue to draw inspiration from the iron will of the Ukrainian people." Among the topics not discussed in the address was the chaotic departure of U.S.-led NATO forces from Afghanistan last August. But in the Republican response to Biden's speech, Governor Kim Reynolds of Iowa blasted the president for what she called his failure there. "The disastrous Afghanistan withdrawal did more than cost American lives; it betrayed our allies and emboldened our enemies," Reynolds said. Experts said in light of the current crisis, it makes sense that Biden devoted his foreign policy part of the speech to Ukraine, even though much there remains uncertain. "So now it's a moment where I think Biden thus far has proved a lot of his experience and value, but it all depends on how things play out in Ukraine," Brian Katulis, vice president of policy at the Middle East Institute, told VOA. Another expert told VOA the strong positive, bipartisan response Biden received on his Ukraine remarks will be noticed in Moscow. "And foreign policy wise, that's a very important signal," said Michael Kimmage, professor of history at the Catholic University of America and fellow at the German Marshall Fund. "Putin will be looking for any kind of division or vulnerability in American politics. I think everybody in the room, not just Biden, but everybody in the room knew this is not the moment to send that signal." President Biden again made clear the United States will not send troops into Ukraine, but vowed that he and the other members of the NATO alliance will defend NATO territory. "For that purpose, we have mobilized American ground forces, air squadrons, ship deployments to protect NATO countries including Poland, Romania, Latvia, Lithuania, and Estonia," Biden said. "As I have made crystal clear, the United States and our Allies will defend every inch of territory that is NATO territory with the full force of our collective power. Every single inch." China is positioning itself as a mediator between war-divided Russia and Ukraine so as to be seen as a global leader and earn points in the West, analysts say. At Ukraine's request, Chinese Foreign Minister Wang Yi talked by phone Tuesday with his Ukrainian counterpart, Dmytro Kuleba, China's state-run Xinhua News Agency reported. Ukraine is "open to a negotiated settlement" with Russia, Xinhua reported. Kuleba said his country "stands ready to strengthen communication with the Chinese side and looks forward to China's mediation in achieving a cease-fire," the report said. Helping to stop the war would make China seem more intent on establishing peace in Europe than on maintaining its post-Cold War friendship with Russia, which is unpopular in the West, experts say. A mediation attempt, they say, would also divert international attention from China's controversial goal of unifying with self-ruled Taiwan. China claims sovereignty over Taiwan and has not ruled out using force, if needed, to capture it. Any effort to stop the Ukraine war "improves China's position from being just a passive actor to showing some leadership role," said Carl Thayer, emeritus professor of politics at the University of New South Wales in Australia. "The longer it [China] stays quiet, the more it undermines the already hard work that China has put in to portray itself as a responsible global leader," he said. Western leaders have described China as an expanding military power in Asia and a threat to Taiwan, which is a democracy with strong support in Europe and North America. China has the world's largest population, at 1.4 billion; second-biggest economy, at $18.1 trillion; and the third-strongest armed forces after the United States and Russia. Chinese President Xi Jinping said last year that China would never "invade or bully others, or seek hegemony," Xinhua reported. When asked about Ukraine at a news conference last month, Chinese Ministry of Foreign Affairs spokesman Wang Wenbin said that respect for the sovereignty of all countries was China's "consistent and principled position." "This is an opportunity to demonstrate that China is not a revisionist power, that it respects international law, respects sovereignty. And if that was the case, then China would likely take a much stronger position on the Ukraine," said Stephen Nagy, senior associate professor of politics and international studies at International Christian University in Tokyo. Successful mediation would particularly help China "win kudos with Europe," Thayer said. That relationship, he said, could lead to more pan-Eurasian trade. In 2020, China was the third-largest partner for European Union exports and the largest partner for EU imports. Before the call between foreign ministers, China had avoided siding openly with Russia regarding its invasion of Ukraine despite its long, deepening friendship with Moscow. Russia is a former Cold War ally of China and was the anchor of the former communist-run Soviet Union. China shuns the word "invasion" in describing the Russia-Ukraine conflict. But it did not join Russia in vetoing a U.S.-backed U.N. Security Council resolution condemning the attack. Its U.N. ambassador has suggested that Ukraine form a "bridge" between the East and West China's state-run Xinhua News Agency on Wednesday lamented the spread of "jokes of bad taste" about the war in "some ill-intentioned media." Russia stepped up attacks on Ukrainian cities Wednesday as both sides indicated a willingness to resume talks aimed at ending the war. Ukrainian authorities say the attacks have killed more than 2,000 people in homes, hospitals and kindergartens. Authorities in southwestern Pakistan said Wednesday a roadside bomb explosion had killed at least three people, including a senior officer, and wounded 24 others. Initial police reports found the bomb was hidden in a motorbike, parked along a main road, and targeted a police convoy in central Quetta, the capital of Baluchistan province. A hospital spokesman, Waseem Baig, said several of the wounded victims were in critical condition and he feared the death toll could increase. At least 10 policemen were among the injured. There were no immediate claims of responsibly for the deadly attack. Outlawed ethnic Baluch militant groups and the Pakistani Taliban, also known as the Tehrik-i-Taliban Pakistan (TTP), routinely carry out attacks against security forces and civilians in Baluchistan. Last month, two major Pakistan army bases came under attack in the sparsely populated province and the ensuing clashes had lasted three days, killing nine soldiers and 20 assailants. The Baluch Liberation Army, or BLA, designated as a terrorist group by Pakistan and the United States, took responsibility for the simultaneous assaults. That attack came just days after militants ambushed and killed 10 Pakistani soldiers in one of the deadliest attacks in years in Baluchistan. The BLA claimed credit for the violence. The natural resources-rich province is at the center of a multi-billion-dollar mega development program funded by China under its Belt and Road Initiative. The China-Pakistan Economic Corridor or CPEC has built highways and a power plant in the country and the Chinese-operated deepwater Gwadar port on the Arabian Sea in Baluchistan. Baluch militants accuse Pakistan and China of exploiting resources of the province to justify their insurgency, saying they are fighting for the independence of Baluchistan. Western nations are paying Russia hundreds of millions of dollars every day for gas and oil imports, despite sanctions imposed on the country's banking and aviation sectors following its invasion of Ukraine. With around 40 percent of Europe's energy needs imported from Russia, leaders are scrambling to find alternatives, as Henry Ridgwell reports from Berlin. Camera: Henry Ridgwell The URL has been copied to your clipboard The code has been copied to your clipboard. While the U.S. joins its allies in sanctioning top Russian officials for the war in Ukraine, humanitarian advocates in the U.S. are urging the Biden administration to give immigration relief to Ukrainians present on American soil. VOAs immigration reporter Aline Barros reports. Authorities in Sydney, Australia are warning of a potential disaster Wednesday as torrential rains that have battered eastern Australia in recent days have triggered flash flood warnings in the countrys second-largest city. Evacuation orders have been issued for several areas in western Sydney with forecasters predicting the city will be hit with as much as 20 centimeters of rain between late Wednesday and early Thursday. Authorities say Warragamba Dam, the main water source for the city of 5 million residents, began overflowing Wednesday morning. The rains have inundated several towns and cities in the states of Queensland and New South Wales, leaving city streets and homes submerged under several centimeters of water. At least 13 people have been killed, four of them in the hard-hit town of Lismore, located nearly 800 kilometers north of Sydney, the capital city of New South Wales. The victims include a man in his 70s who was found in his flooded home, while the body of another man was found floating in the street in downtown Lismore. Emergency crews in Lismore and other towns have carried out numerous rescues of residents trapped in their homes by the rising floodwaters, with many desperately climbing onto rooftops waiting for help. Australias east coast summer has been dominated by the La Nina climate pattern, which is typically associated with greater rainfall. Hilary Bambrick, a professor and environmental expert Queensland University of Technology, says the current rains shows Australia is unprepared for the supercharged weather driven by climate change, despite decades of warnings from scientists. Some information for this report came from The Associated Press, Reuters, Agence France-Presse. The European Union has delivered weapons to Ukraine and slapped punishing sanctions on Moscow in some of its strongest actions against Russia in years. But it is unclear how Brussels will respond to Ukraines call for fast-tracked membership to the bloc. President Volodymyr Zelenskyys address to the European Parliament this week brought tears to the eyes of hardened lawmakers. They delivered Ukraines leader a standing ovation as he talked about how Ukrainians are fighting for their freedom and very lives. But we are fighting also to be equal members of Europe. I believe that today we are showing everybody thats exactly what we are. The European Union is going to be much stronger with us, thats for sure. Its just the latest plea from Kyiv to join the 27-member bloc. On Monday, Zelenskyy submitted a formal application for EU membership. Ukraine has always wanted to be part of the EU. Very early, on after independence, they moved in that direction. But its always been a struggle. Amanda Paul is senior analyst at the European Policy Center, a Brussels-based research group. But the moment now is very opportune. Its a serious situation in Ukraine. Ukrainians have shown themselves to be very brave, to be standing up for European security. So I think there will be a strong force from within the EU itself, from many member states to push this thing forward as quick as can be. Speaking to Euro News, European Commission chief Ursula von der Leyen echoed the sentiment of a number of EU leaders; saying over time, they belong to us, they are one of us, and we want them in. But some of Ukraines biggest champions, mostly eastern and central European states, want to speed up the membership process. EU leaders will reportedly discuss the topic at a summit in Paris next week. Europes older members appear to be more hesitant about delivering a speedy answer. Of course, the Ukrainians are European, they proclaim it, they have our values, Frances foreign minster, Jean Yves Le Drian, said this week. But he suggested, any membership decision would not be immediate. Ukraine has long aspired to join the bloc. When its former, pro-Russia president Viktor Yanukovych refused to sign a much looser association agreement with Brussels, popular protests in 2014 ousted him. Soon after Russia annexed the Crimea. Even fast tracked, EU membership can take years. It demands meeting a raft of regulations spanning sectors from the environment to rule of law and finance. Theres already a lineup of other candidates. Some arent so sure Ukraine can jump the line. Adding to potential hesitancy, some of the EUs newer members like Poland and Hungary have flouted EU standards on key areas like rule of law. But analyst Amanda Paul believes even offering an affirmative first nod to Ukraines future candidacy will make a difference as the Russian invasion stretches on. It will definitely be a massive psychological boost for Ukrainians and this can help them in the conflict as well. Obviously theyre fighting for their country first and foremost, and for themselves. But it will be a very strong signal that the European Union is 101 percent behind them. Just as much as delivering guns and planes, she said, it shows Europe is on Ukraines side as a future member of the bloc. The International Atomic Energy Agency has called on the parties in the Russia-Ukraine conflict to ensure the safety and security of Ukraine's nuclear plants. The director of the IAEA expressed concern about the plants Wednesday in remarks to a U.N. environmental conference in Kenya. In the past week, the Russian army reportedly has taken control of several nuclear sites in Ukraine, including Chernobyl, site of the 1986 nuclear meltdown that released high amounts of radiation into the atmosphere. On Tuesday, Ukraine's deputy environment minister, Roman Shakhmatenko, addressed the U.N. Environmental Assembly from Kyiv, speaking from what appeared to be a basement filled with people trying to escape Russian bombing. The audio was recorded from the livestream of the session. He warned that the nuclear safety of Europe is at stake. "We see a rise of the level of radiation in Chernobyl because their troops are moving there and there is a threat ... of Russian terrorist acts," Shakhmatenko said. During a briefing Wednesday morning, an IAEA official confirmed there were higher radiation levels at Chernobyl just after the Russians took over the site, but said the readings have since gone down to normal, harmless levels. The IAEA, however, says it remains worried about Ukraine's nuclear plants. In a statement, Director General Rafael Mariano Grossi said "any military or other action that could threaten the safety or security of Ukraine's nuclear power plants must be avoided." Grossi gave the statement from the IAEA Vienna office, adding, "Because any incidents could have severe consequences, aggravating human suffering and causing environmental harm." This is the second time in a week that the Ukraine conflict has intruded on the environmental conference, which was called to discuss ways of containing plastic pollution around the world. On Monday, the European Union denounced Russia's invasion of Ukraine. Russia said the government in Kyiv was to blame for the conflict. For full coverage of the crisis in Ukraine, visit Flashpoint Ukraine. For the latest developments of the conflict between Russia and Ukraine, all times EST: 11:32 p.m.: Ukrainian staff maintaining the decommissioned nuclear power plant at the site of the 1986 nuclear accident are hungry, exhausted and at increased risk of making errors while under the control of Russian military occupiers, officials with Ukraine's main nuclear regulatory agency say. VOA's Tatiana Vorozhko has the story. 10:58 p.m.: Read the US State Department's statement condeming Russia's "full assault on media freedom and the truth." 10:25 p.m.: The United States on Wednesday announced a comprehensive effort to identify and seize the assets of wealthy Russians who have supported the regime of Russian President Vladmir Putin, as part of its response to the Russian invasion of Ukraine. VOA's Rob Garver has the story. 9:34 p.m.: Sirens are heard in Kyiv as the Ukrainian news agency (UNIAN) reports several powerful explosions. A VOA correspondent in Kyiv confirms explosions could be heard in the city center, in the vicinity of the Druzhby Narodiv metro station. They have video. VOA correspondent got confirmation explosions could be heard in the city center (in the vicinity of Druzhby Narodiv metro station). 7:05 p.m.: Russia Media Regulator Moves to Block VOA -- Moscows media regulator threatened on Wednesday to block access to VOAs Russian news network. In a notice sent to VOA, the regulator Roskomnadzor said that the networks Russian-language site had 24 hours to remove content that Moscow deems illegal or be blocked. VOA Acting Director Yolanda Lopez said the network was aware of the media regulator's order but could not comply. In another sign of the importance all sides attach to how the war is reported to their publics, the European Union announced Wednesday a ban on broadcasts and websites affiliated with Russian state-funded media outlets RT and Sputnik for spreading disinformation. 5:57 p.m.: Citing the U.N. High Commissioner for Refugees Filippo Grandi, VOA's Margaret Besheer reports that the number of people that have left Ukraine over the past week in the face of Russia's invasion has now hit the 1 million mark. 5:26 p.m.: The U.S. Justice Department announced on Wednesday a "KleptoCapture" task force that would work to further strain the finances of Russia's oligarchs to pressure the country to cease its invasion of Ukraine, which began a week ago. The interagency law enforcement group would enforce sanctions, export restrictions and economic countermeasures designed to freeze Russia out of global markets, Attorney General Merrick Garland said in a statement. The task force's name comes from the word "kleptocracy," defined as corrupt individuals who misuse their powers to accumulate wealth at the expense of those they govern. 4:56 p.m.: According to VOA's Patsy Widakuswara, an International Criminal Court prosecutor has opened an investigation into possible war crimes and crimes against humanity in Ukraine. 3:47 p.m.: VOA has created a map of countries and organizations that have announced aid to Ukraine. 3:34 p.m.: The European Union has delivered weapons to Ukraine and slapped punishing sanctions on Moscow in some of its strongest actions against Russia in years. But it is unclear how Brussels will respond to Ukraines call for fast-tracked membership to the bloc, as VOAs Lisa Bryant reports. 3:17 p.m.: The Pentagons press secretary said Wednesday that Russia may be deliberately re-grouping and re-assessing its military progress in Ukraine so far, according VOAs Carla Babb. 2:55 p.m.: VOAs Patsy Widakuswara reports that the U.S. announced additional sanctions Wednesday. A statement released by the White House said, Today, the United States, in coordination with Allies and partners, is imposing additional economic costs on Russia and Belarus in response to President Putins brutal invasion of Ukraine. 2:28 p.m.: U.S. Secretary of State Antony Blinken is traveling to several European countries to consult with NATO leaders and other partners about Russias invasion of Ukraine, as VOAs Nike Ching reports. 2:20 p.m.: Russia escalated attacks on several Ukrainian cities Wednesday, even as the two sides expressed a willingness to resume talks aimed at ending the nearly week-old war. Seven days after the invasion started, Russia had not overthrown Ukraines government in the capital Kyiv as had been planned, VOA News reported. Moscow said it seized control of Kherson, a port city with a quarter million people on the Black Sea, a claim that was disputed by Ukrainian presidential adviser Oleksiy Arestovych. "The city has not fallen, our side continues to defend," he said. The most intensive airstrikes hit the northeastern city of Kharkiv, Ukraines second largest city and home to 1.5 million people. An attack destroyed a police building in the citys center, further reducing it to an area of ruined buildings and debris. Ukrainian authorities said Russian attacks killed 21 people in Kharkiv on Tuesday, and four more Wednesday morning. Heavy shelling also continued in the southern port city of Mariupol, where the wounded were unable to evacuate, according to the citys mayor. Ukraines emergency agency said Russias attacks have killed more than 2,000 at hospitals, kindergarten facilities and homes. Russias defense ministry put out its first report on casualties, saying 498 of its troops were killed in Ukraine, while more than 1,500 others were wounded. Kremlin spokesman Dmitri Peskov dismissed allegations of war crimes and told reporters that Russian troops dont conduct any strikes against civilian infrastructure and residential areas, despite extensive, mounting evidence of Kremlin attacks on homes, schools and hospitals documented by reporters. 1:58 p.m.: African workers and students seeking to flee Ukraine in the face of Russias invasion are complaining of being blocked from buses, trains and border crossing points while priority is given to Ukrainian citizens, VOA News reports. 1:50 p.m.: In Ukraine, tens of thousands of refugees continue to flee their country every day. Lesia Bakalets spoke with some of the women and children fleeing the Russian invasion. Anna Rice narrates the story. 1:27 p.m.: Russian artists and art groups are no longer welcome at many venues, VOA News reports. The invasion of Ukraine by Russian forces has ignited responses from arts and cultural institutions around the world, which are canceling performances by Russian artists, many of whom are supporters of Russian President Vladimir Putin. 1:09 p.m.: Leading Russian bank Sberbank said Wednesday that it was pulling out of European markets amid tightening Western sanctions, according to The Associated Press. The bank said its subsidiaries in Europe were facing an abnormal outflow of funds and a threat to the safety of employees and branches, according to Russian news agencies. They did not provide details of the threats. The U.S. and E.U. have levied sanctions on Russias biggest banks and its elite, frozen the assets of the countrys Central Bank located outside the country, and excluded its financial institutions from the SWIFT bank messaging system, AP reported. The sanctions and resulting crash of the ruble have left the Kremlin scrambling to keep the countrys economy running. For Putin, that means finding workarounds to the Western economic blockade. China wont impose financial sanctions on Russia, the countrys bank regulator said Wednesday. China is a major buyer of Russian oil and gas and the only major government that has refrained from criticizing Moscows attack on Ukraine, AP added. 12:37 p.m.: Russias advance on Ukraines capital Kyiv was stalled outside the city center, according to a senior U.S. defense official who spoke Wednesday with VOAs National Security Correspondent Jeff Seldin. There hasnt really been a lot of significant change on the ground since yesterday, he said, despite just over 80 percent of Russias combat capability staged inside Ukraine. 12:07 p.m. : U.N. Secretary-General Antonio Guterres released press remarks following the vote of the General Assembly on Ukraine Wednesday. "The message of the General Assembly is loud and clear, he said. End hostilities in Ukraine now. Silence the guns now. Open the door to dialogue and diplomacy now. He added, We dont have a moment to lose. 11:57 a.m.: The U.N. General Assembly voted overwhelmingly Wednesday to condemn Russias invasion of Ukraine, VOAs U.N. Correspondent Margaret Besheer reports. She noted that 141 countries voted in favor of the resolution, 35 countries abstained, and only five countries voted against it Russia, Belarus, DPRK, Syria and Eritrea. 11:27 a.m.: Four U.S. senators on Wednesday announced that they had written a formal letter to U.S. Treasury Secretary Janet Yellen expressing their concerns regarding the potential use of cryptocurrency to evade sanctions, according to VOAs Katherine Gypson. We write to inquire about the Treasury Departments progress monitoring and enforcing sanctions compliance by the cryptocurrency industry, the group said. Senators Elizabeth Warren, Mark Warner, Sherrod Brown, and Jack Reed noted that the issue has become even more urgent amid the sanctions imposed on Russia after their invasion of Ukraine. They said, Strong enforcement of sanctions compliance in the cryptocurrency industry is critical given that digital assets, which allow entities to bypass the traditional financial system, may increasingly be used as a tool for sanctions evasion. 11:19 a.m.: U.N. aid agencies are ramping up humanitarian operations in Ukraine as Russia's bombing of civilian residential areas and infrastructure escalates and civilian casualties mount, VOAs Lisa Schlein reported Wednesday. The Ukrainian government reports Russian airstrikes have killed hundreds of people and wounded more than 1,600. U.N. human rights office estimates are more conservative, but officials say the real toll is likely to be much higher than their monitors have been able to verify. A spokesman for the U.N. childrens fund, James Elder, is in Lviv in western Ukraine. He says the city is in utter turmoil, with thousands of people seeking to escape the fighting. Given the chaotic situation, he says it is not possible to know how many people, including children, are being killed. 11:02 a.m.: VOAs White House Bureau Chief Patsy Widakuswara reports that U.S. President Joe Biden announced on Wednesday the continuation of the national emergency with respect to Ukraine for an additional year. 10:47 a.m.: U.S. Secretary of State Antony Blinken visited a local Ukrainian church in Washington D.C. Wednesday morning and met with community leaders there, according to VOAs Nike Ching. 10:36 a.m.: The U.N. refugee agency on Wednesday said more than 874,000 Ukrainians have now left their homes as a result of Russias invasion. The military offensive in Ukraine has caused destruction of civilian infrastructure and civilian casualties and has driven many thousands of people from their homes seeking safety, protection and assistance, UNHCR says on its operational data portal, which tracks Ukrainian refugee movements and shows on a map where they are headed. UNHCR added, In the first few days, more than half a million refugees from Ukraine have crossed into neighboring countries, and there is a clear indication that many more people are on the move. They are in need of protection and support. As the situation continues to unfold, an estimated 4 million people may flee Ukraine in the coming weeks and months. 10:14 a.m.: VOAs photo gallery chronicles some of the latest developments following Russias invasion of Ukraine. 9:22 a.m.: The U.N. General Assembly will vote Wednesday on a resolution demanding that Russia immediately stop using force against Ukraine and withdraw its military from the country, and condemning Moscows decision to increase the readiness of its nuclear forces, The Associated Press reports. The 193-nation General Assembly met Tuesday for a second day of speeches about the war, with more than 110 member states signed up to speak. Unlike the U.N. Security Council, the General Assembly doesnt allow vetoes. And unlike Security Council resolutions, General Assembly resolutions arent legally binding, though they have clout in reflecting international opinion, AP states. VOAs U.N. Correspondent Margaret Besheer has been following developments. She reports that the General Assembly will resume its session at 10 a.m. Wednesday, eight more speakers will address the gathering, and then there will be a vote. 8:56 a.m: Just hours ago, 20 Ukrainian athletes and 9 guides safely arrived in Beijing to compete in the Paralympics, Canadian Broadcasting Corporation Olympics Reporter Devin Heroux tweeted. However, the death of Ukrainian biathlete Yevhen Malshev, who was reportedly killed this week during the Russian assault on Kharkiv, has raised questions. Heroux also tweeted part of this exchange between journalist Lee Reaney and the International Paralympic Committee about Malshevs death. 8:31 a.m.: Russias assault on Kharkiv, Ukraines second largest city, continued Wednesday, with a Russian strike hitting the regional police and intelligence headquarters, according to the Ukrainian state emergency service. Three people were wounded, The Associated Press reported. The strike blew off the roof of the police building and set the top floor on fire, and pieces of the five-story building were strewn across adjacent streets, according to videos and photos released by the emergency service. In Wednesdays strikes, four people died, nine were wounded and rescuers pulled 10 people out of the rubble, according to the service. Ukraines president Volodymyr Zelenskyy called the attack on Kharkiv undisguised terror, AP reported. 8:02 a.m.: Two panels of Harvard experts and scholars examined the historical roots of Russias invasion of Ukraine and assessed where the situation stands now, The Harvard Gazette reported early Wednesday in an online article titled Why peace in Ukraine isnt likely soon. Panel participants also examined whether the Wests tough financial sanctions will nudge Moscow toward a quick resolution. 7:28 a.m.: Ukrainian President Volodymyr Zelenskyy has become a major figure on the world stage in the days since Russian forces invaded his country, declaring his intention to remain in Kyiv, even as tens of thousands of Russian troops converge on the capital city. His notable answer to a U.S. offer to evacuate him and his family after the invasion began "The fight is here; I need ammunition, not a ride" has become an emblem of the Ukrainian people's fierce resistance to invading Russian troops. Zelenskyy's video addresses, delivered from the streets of Ukraine's threatened capital, and his calls on the European Union and other international bodies to support his nation's resistance to the Russian invasion, have put his face on screens all over the world. But until recently the former actor and comedian was not well-known outside his native country. 7:15 a.m.: Ukraines president on Wednesday tweeted that he is coordinating actions with Britains prime minister and expressed gratitude for continued support in his countrys fight against Russian forces. 7:09 a.m.: Stock markets in Asia and Australia were mixed Wednesday as the Russian invasion of Ukraine continues to cast a pall over the global economy, VOA News reports. 6:28 a.m.: Some of America's best-known companies including Apple, Google, Ford, Harley-Davidson and Exxon Mobil rebuked and rejected Russia for its invasion of Ukraine, under steady pressure from investors and consumers decrying the violence, Reuters reports. 6:10 a.m.: Russian officials said they were ready for another round of talks with Ukraine, even as Russian forces shelled multiple Ukrainian cities Wednesday, VOA News reported. Violence included shelling of the southeastern port city of Mariupol, and unconfirmed Russian military claims of seizing the southern city of Kherson Wednesday. Kremlin spokesman Dmitry Peskov said a Russian delegation was ready to hold a second round of talks with Ukrainian officials, after a first round earlier this week yielded only an agreement for further negotiations. Ukrainian Foreign Minister Dmytro Kuleba said Ukraine is also ready to engage in diplomacy, but not ready to accept any Russian ultimatums at all. He added that it was not yet known when a new round of talks would take place. Zelenskyy said Tuesday that Russia should first halt its fighting in order to give negotiations a chance. Its necessary to at least stop bombing people, just stop the bombing and then sit down at the negotiating table, Zelenskyy told Reuters and CNN in a joint interview in a heavily guarded government compound in Kyiv. 6:04 a.m.: An Indian student has been killed in the ongoing fighting in Ukraine according to Indias foreign ministry even as New Delhi ramped up efforts to rescue thousands of Indian students stranded in the war-torn country. The 21-year-old medical student was killed in the town of Kharkiv, Ukraines second largest city that is under attack from Russian forces. With profound sorrow we confirm that an Indian student lost his life in shelling in Kharkiv this morning. The Ministry is in touch with his family, the foreign ministry said Tuesday. The ministry said the Indian foreign secretary is calling in ambassadors of Russia and Ukraine to reiterate our demand for urgent safe passage for Indian nationals who are still in Kharkiv and cities in other conflict zones." 5:44 a.m.: The French Presidency of the European Union said on Wednesday the EU approved new sanctions against Belarus for its role in supporting Russias invasion of Ukraine. Certain sectors of the Belarusian economy, in particular the wood, steel and potash sectors, will be impacted the Twitter post said. The measures will be published in an official EU journal for entry into force, the statement added. 5:00 a.m.: In his first State of the Union address, U.S. President Joe Biden said Russian President Vladimir Putin badly miscalculated when he launched a full-scale invasion of Ukraine. He thought he could divide us at home in this chamber in this nation. He thought he could divide us in Europe as well, Biden said. But Putin was wrong. We are ready. We are united and thats what we did. The United States and its NATO allies will remain united, and freedom will prevail over tyranny, Biden said. VOAs State Department correspondent Cindy Saine reports. 4:30 a.m.: The Ukrainian Ministry of Foreign Affairs shared a video Wednesday showing first responders digging through debris after a Russian airstrike hit a maternity home in Zhytomyr, located in northern Ukraine, the department said. 3:25 a.m.: Russias Defense Ministry said Wednesday it has captured the southern Ukrainian city of Kherson, Russian state-owned news agency RIA reported. The Russian governments claim could not be independently verified. 3:00 a.m.: The British Ministry of Defence published its latest intelligence report Wednesday focusing on Russias invasion of Ukraine. Despite reports that Russian forces have moved into the center of Kherson, located in the south, Russias gains are limited, the report said. However, in the past 24 hours, Russian artillery and air strikes have been targeting Ukrainian cities including, Kharkiv, Kyiv, Mariupol and Chernihiv. 2:33 a.m.: Ukraines Defense Ministry shared a video Wednesday saying Russian missiles hit the national police building in Kharkiv, the country's second-largest city. 2:14 a.m.: In his first State of the Union address Tuesday night, U.S. President Joe Biden said Russian President Vladimir Putin badly miscalculated when he launched a full-scale invasion of Ukraine, meeting a wall of strength he never anticipated or imagined instead of a world that would roll over. VOAs State Department correspondent Cindy Saine reports: 2:04 a.m.: U.S. soldiers landed in Nuremberg, Germany, Tuesday to support the eastern flank of NATO after training at a U.S. military area in Bavaria at Grafenwoehr. 1:15 a.m.: In an official Republican response to the Democratic presidents State of the Union address, Republican Governor Kim Reynolds of the midwestern U.S. state of Iowa laid Russias invasion of Ukraine squarely at the feet of President Joe Biden and his approach to foreign policy. Read VOAs story for more: Shortly after the State of the Union address concluded Tuesday, U.S. President Joe Biden shared a photo of the U.S. Congress and said, The United States of America stands with the Ukrainian people. He called Russias invasion of Ukraine during his address unprovoked and premeditated. 12:30 a.m.: Russian stock exchange remains closed. The Moscow Exchange, Russias largest stock exchange, will remain closed on Wednesday marking a third consecutive day without trading. Russia halted trading on Monday as sanctions took hold and its currency, the ruble, dropped in value. However, funds with investments in Russia in other parts of the world continued to be traded and dropped in value wiping out millions of dollars. Russias central bank said a limited number of operations will be allowed on Wednesday for the first time, the Independent reported. Some information in this report came from The Associated Press, Reuters and Agence France-Presse. Scores of journalists arrested, at least two killed and several news outlets banned. Myanmars junta cracked down on the media at an alarming rate. And with militias across the country resisting military rule, reporting in Myanmar has become even more dangerous. The risks independent journalists must take are highlighted in a new film produced by a group of Myanmar filmmakers and reporters living in Bangkok. We are the journalists, we are the storytellers, we still need to talk about our stories. That was the idea, director and journalist Aung Naing Soe said at a screening for the Foreign Correspondents Club of Thailand in Bangkok in February. His film, Walking Through the Darkness, focuses on five journalists as they cover events from the February 1, 2021, overthrow of civilian rule, to mass protests and clashes with opposition forces. Those featured include a freelance reporter; an editor whose news agency relocated to a remote region where it covers fighting between rebels and military soldiers, and a photojournalist released from detention. They can represent each group of journalists in the country, Aung Naing Soe told VOA. The 31-year-old journalist partnered with Athan Myanmar, a pro-democracy and free expression organization founded by poet and activist Maung Saungkha, to make the film. Media under fire Nearly all those featured in the film appear anonymously because they still report from inside the country. Jail is a big risk for Myanmar media, with more than 120 people arrested since the start of the coup, and 47 still in custody, according to the monitoring group Reporting Asean. The media crackdown changed how journalists work, with many trying to keep a low profile. Its clearly different from how we could work before the coup. As a journalist, I would always carry a camera in my bag. Now we dont dare take a camera with us. We have to only use our phones, says one of the journalists featured in the film. Others recount how they moved news operations away from the main cities only to still face danger. Soe Ya, managing editor of Delta News Agency, says his team set up a media base in Lay Kay Kaw, near the Thai-Myanmar border. But the fighting soon caught up with them. While covering a barrage of missiles fired in the region on December 25, Soe Yas colleague, A Sai K, was killed. If we had just managed to pass through the rubber forest, we would have all survived together, Soe Ya says in the film. Aung Naing Soe hopes such accounts will help viewers understand the dangers and the drive of Myanmars media. It can help Myanmar people and other people from abroad to understand the risks that journalists are taking and that will encourage people to talk to journalists, share their stories and to create a better relationship between Myanmar journalists and their sources, he said. For some, the camera is viewed as a powerful tool. As a journalist, I cant hold a gun, I cant fight back, (but) I have a camera and microphone, I have my crew, said Ye Wint Thu during a panel discussion on Myanmar at the Foreign Correspondents Club event in February. The producer for Democratic Voice of Burma (DVB) took refuge in the jungle with a rebel force but continues to work. The junta revoked his stations license in early 2021. For Aung Naing Soe, the film represents the resilience of the countrys media. The military have stopped everything. Internet shutdowns, they plugged off DVB, but the people still keep going. They cannot stop us, he said. That would be my message: there are still people inside Myanmar, they are doing everything they can. With dozens of reporters detained or forced into exile, and widespread opposition to military rule, a new generation of citizen journalists has emerged. One, identified only as Shane to protect his identity, told VOA last month that he witnessed soldiers burn two men to death. Another recalled how junta forces pointed a gun at her chest to block her from reporting. A decade working as a journalist in Myanmar means Aung Naing Soe is acutely aware of restrictions media faced even before the coup. He was part of a news crew jailed for two months in 2017 for flying a drone too close to Myanmars parliament. We had a relative amount of better press freedom in Myanmar, especially between 2012-2020, he said. (But) we were fighting to get complete press freedom. This time is the worst time in the history of Myanmar. Media watchdogs agree. Reporters Without Borders (RSF) has said the military coup set press freedom in Myanmar back by 10 years. Walking Through the Darkness has been screened a handful of times in Thailand, but a date for wider release has not been set. Women's rights groups protested in Nigeria's capital Wednesday to demand greater representation of women in the country's parliaments. Lawmakers on Tuesday approved a bill that would set aside 20 percent of seats for women, but protesters say one-fifth is not enough. Some 200 women barricaded the entrance of the Nigerian National Assembly, holding up posters and banners and singing songs. The protesters, including market women, civil servants and various professionals, prevented lawmakers from entering their offices Wednesday. Protesters say they were not satisfied with Tuesday's vote to increase women's share of parliament seats at both the state and national levels to 20 percent nearly triple the current rate of seven percent. They want 35 percent of seats to be allocated to women. "We need new ideas, new minds and diverse views, which is why we are pushing for women," said Cynthia Mbamalu, an organizer of Wednesday's protest. "If we have women in government, there will be an assessment of policies and laws from both male and female lens and we are looking at issues that affect women, children and young people from a diverse perspective. We cannot expect development or things to change if decisions are made by the same kind of people." Hansatu Adegbite, who heads the Women in Business Initiative, also took part in the protest. "Women have to arise, enough is enough," she said. "I am appealing to every single woman in any sector, arise and let us take over this nation. It is about all of us and we are here to take over this nation once and for all." Nigeria's lawmakers began an exercise this week to review the country's national constitution of 1999. Women's representation in Nigeria's parliament, at around 4%, is among the lowest in the world. Activists say patriarchy and cultural biases are some factors influencing women's low participation in government. Lawmakers responded to the protesters after hours of demonstrations. Deputy chief whip Sabi Abdullahi promised the protesters that their demands will be reviewed. "The conversation we're having now is a good step and I want us to look at it as work in progress and as we talk, we understand the issues, I'm sure we can get somewhere," Abdullahi said. Africa has seen an increase in the number of women in parliament, but a European research group, the International Institute for Democracy and Electoral Assistance, says African countries are unlikely to reach the U.N. goal of gender parity in politics by 2030. Nigerian protesters said African countries like Senegal, Rwanda, South Africa, Tanzania and Botswana are getting more women involved in key economic and political positions. A police operation to end a three-week sit-in protest against COVID-19 vaccine mandates in New Zealands capital turned chaotic Wednesday. Protesters set fire to tents and other objects as they abandoned their encampment on Parliament grounds in Wellington, sending clouds of thick black smoke in the air and leaving behind piles of burned rubble after police doused the blazes. The fires scarred a large section of the grounds and destroyed a small childrens playground that had just opened a little more than two years ago. The protesters threw water bottles and other objects at the police as they fled the scene. At least three police officers suffered non-life threatening injuries. The operation began early Wednesday with police warning the protesters over loudspeakers that they were trespassing and urging them to pack up and leave. Police used pepper spray to disperse some of the protesters, who poured milk over their heads to clear their vision. At least 60 people were arrested in the operation. The Wellington sit-in emulated a massive anti-vaccine demonstration in the Canadian capital of Ottawa, complete with tents, portable toilets, food distribution points and childcare facilities, that shut down streets near the countrys Parliament for three weeks before it was broken up by police in mid-February. Prime Minister Jacinda Ardern said the protest had been fueled by misinformation and conspiracy theories, while also becoming a COVID-19 superspreader. New Zealand has reported just 146,920 confirmed COVID-19 cases and 56 deaths since the start of the pandemic, according to the Johns Hopkins Coronavirus Resource Center, due to the strict border controls and lockdowns imposed by Arderns government. But the Pacific nation of 5 million people has struggled recently with a major outbreak of new cases driven by the omicron variant, including a single-day record of 32,674 on February 28. Some information for this report came from The Associated Press and Reuters. Russia escalated attacks on Ukrainian cities Wednesday as the two sides claimed control of a strategic city and expressed a willingness to resume talks aimed at ending the nearly week-old war. Moscow said it had seized "complete control of Kherson, a port city of a quarter-million people on the Black Sea, a claim that was disputed by Ukrainian presidential adviser Oleksiy Arestovych. However, Kherson Mayor Igor Kolykhayev said there were Russian troops on the city's streets. "There were armed visitors in the city executive committee today," he said in a statement, according to a Reuters report. "My team and I are peaceful people -- we had no weapons and there was no aggression from our side." "I didn't make any promises to them ... I just asked them not to shoot people," he said in a statement, according to Reuters. If the claim is true, it would be the first sizable city to fall during the weeklong invasion. The most intensive airstrikes hit the northeastern city of Kharkiv, Ukraines second-largest city and home to 1.5 million people. An attack destroyed a building housing the police department in the citys center, further reducing it to an area of ruined buildings and debris. Ukrainian authorities said Russian attacks killed 21 people in Kharkiv on Tuesday and four more Wednesday morning. Heavy shelling also continued in the southern port city of Mariupol, where the wounded were unable to evacuate, according to the citys mayor. Ukraines emergency agency said Russias attacks have killed more than 2,000 people across the country. But nearly a week after the invasion started, Russia had not overthrown Ukraines government. Russias defense ministry put out its first casualties report, saying 498 of its troops were killed in Ukraine, while more than 1,500 others were wounded. Even though hours of talks Monday with Russian officials yielded no resolution on Ukraines demands for a cease-fire and a withdrawal of Russian forces, Ukrainian President Volodymyr Zelenskyy again called for a halt in fighting to give negotiations a chance. Kremlin spokesperson Dmitry Peskov said a Russian delegation would be ready to resume talks, while a Ukraine spokesperson told reporters that our delegation will be in place to await Ukrainian negotiators. Reports say talks could be held Thursday. "It's necessary to at least stop bombing people, just stop the bombing and then sit down at the negotiating table," Zelenskyy told Reuters and CNN in a joint interview in a heavily guarded government compound in Kyiv. U.S. intelligence indicates that Russia's efforts to move on key Ukrainian cities, including the capital of Kyiv, have made little to no progress in the past 24 hours. A senior U.S. defense official briefing reporters Wednesday on the condition of anonymity in order to discuss the intelligence said that Russian forces trying to take Kyiv are "stalled outside the city center." The forces, including a massive Russian convoy, have made "no appreciable movement," the official said, adding Russian advances on other key cities, such as Chernihiv and Kharkiv have also stalled. U.S. intelligence also suggested Russian forces currently moving to surround the city of Mariupol would face a tough fight there as well. Meanwhile, shipments of defensive aid continue to arrive, according to U.S. officials, who said deliveries have been made in just the last day. U.S. officials declined to comment on casualties, either civilian casualties or casualties among the Ukrainian and Russian forces, though the senior defense official cautioned the world should be "extremely skeptical of any information the Russian Ministry of Defense puts out there." The Pentagon on Wednesday also expressed concerns that Russian forces are getting more aggressive in their targeting, putting civilians and civilian infrastructure in greater danger. The senior defense official said the U.S. assesses that since the invasion began last Thursday, Russia has launched more than 450 missiles, but that Ukraines air and missile defense systems remain viable. The official said the lack of Russian progress around Kyiv, despite its superior firepower, could be attributed to a number of factors, including ongoing shortages of fuel and food, and a spirited defense by Ukrainian forces. "It has slowed because of resistance from the Ukrainians that has been effective and quite creative," the official said. "They have marshaled their assets quite well. The will to fight is very strong, in terms of their armed forces but also in terms of their civilian population." "We also believe they [Russia] have had morale problems that has led to less than effective operational success," the official added, cautioning that U.S. intelligence expects Russian forces will adapt in order to continue with the massive assault. The Pentagon also announced that it is postponing a nuclear missile test launch scheduled for this week. The decision comes days after Russian President Vladimir Putin's decision to put his nuclear forces on higher alert. Pentagon press secretary John Kirby said the decision to delay the test of a Minuteman III intercontinental ballistic missile was made by Defense Secretary Lloyd Austin. Kirby added that the U.S. would like to see Moscow reciprocate by taking the temperature down in the crisis over Ukraine. Another factor that may be helping the Ukrainians is continued support from NATO and the U.S. On Wednesday, U.S. Secretary of State Antony Blinken said the U.S. is imposing sweeping sanctions on Russias defense sector. "In total, 22 Russian defense-related entities will be designated, including companies that make combat aircraft, infantry fighting vehicles, missiles, unmanned aerial vehicles, electronic warfare systems the very systems now being used to assault the Ukrainian people, abuse human rights, violate international humanitarian law, Blinken said during a press conference. Blinken said the U.S. would also choke off Belarus ability to import key technologies by imposing export controls on Belarus to hold the Lukashenka regime accountable for being a co-belligerent in President (Vladimir) Putins war of choice. The top U.S. diplomat is leaving Thursday for a trip to Belgium, Poland, Moldova, Latvia, Lithuania and Estonia to continue extensive consultations and coordination with NATO allies and European partners. Were keeping the door open to a diplomatic way forward, Blinken said. If Russia pulls back and pursues diplomacy, we stand ready to do the same thing. In Poland, Blinken will discuss further security and humanitarian assistance to help refugees who have fled Ukraine. Economic pressure on Russia is also increasing, and President Joe Biden said nothing is off the table when a reporter asked Wednesday outside the White House if the U.S. would ban Russian oil and gas. In addition to sanctions that have directly targeted Russias banking system and figures close to Russian President Putin, many companies have stopped their Russian operations in response to the invasion. The U.N. refugee agency said Wednesday that at least 1 million people, most of them women and children, had fled Ukraine to neighboring countries since Thursday. It said it expects 4 million people could eventually flee Ukraine. VOA State Department Bureau Chief Nike Ching, national security correspondent Jeff Seldin, Pentagon correspondent Carla Babb, correspondent Jamie Dettmer, Islamabad Bureau Chief Heather Murdock and White House correspondent Anita Powell contributed to this report. Some information for this report came from The Associated Press, Agence France-Presse and Reuters. A Ukrainian camera operator killed in Russia's airstrike on a Kyiv TV tower is the first confirmed media fatality of the war. Yevhenii Sakun, who worked for LIVE TV, was killed along with four others in Tuesday's strike, Ukrainian police confirmed Wednesday. Ukrainian journalists and foreign correspondents covering the war paid tribute to Sakun on social media. The international community, including the Organization for Security and Cooperation in Europe (OSCE) and the Association for International Broadcasting (AIB), condemned the strike. "Broadcasting must not be attacked and illegitimately obstructed as it is vital to inform people about the situation in their country," Teresa Ribeiro, the OSCE media freedom representative, said on Twitter. AIB Chief Executive Simon Spanswick told VOA the strike "appears to be an attempt to prevent Ukrainian citizens men, women and children having access to critical news and information at a time when their lives are in mortal danger." Two rockets hit the tower and an area close to the Babyn Yar Holocaust memorial at 6 p.m. local time Tuesday and temporarily took several stations off air. The Kyiv Independent reported that eight channels resumed broadcasting about two hours after the attack. Ukraines foreign minister described the strike near Babyn Yar as barbaric, the Reuters news agency reported. Kremlin spokesperson Dmitry Peskov has denied allegations of war crimes, telling reporters, "Russian troops don't conduct any strikes against civilian infrastructure and residential areas." However, extensive damage to residential buildings and other civilian structures has been documented by media including the Associated Press. Media safety The safety of media and free flow of news must be protected during the conflict, media watchdogs say. "It is essential that media organizations in Ukraine are able to report on the situation," Spanswick told VOA in an email. "The AIB calls on Russia to guarantee the safety and security of all journalists and colleagues in media organizations in Ukraine." The Paris-based Reporters Without Borders estimates around 1,000 foreign correspondents traveled to Ukraine to cover the war. Two journalists working for the Danish newspaper Ekstra Bladet were evacuated this week after being fired on while on assignment. Reporter Stefan Weichert and photojournalist Emil Filtenborg Mikkelsen, who have worked in Ukraine for two years, were injured when their vehicle was shot at on Saturday. At the time, the journalists were traveling to the city of Okhtyrka to investigate a bombing. Weichert was shot in the shoulder and Filtenborg in the legs, Weichert said on Twitter after the attack. It is not clear who fired on the news crew. Warning that the injuries could have been fatal, RSF's Jeanne Cavelier called on all sides to "undertake to respect the security of journalists, who have an essential role to play in continuing to report the situation in the field." Separately, Poland on Monday detained Pablo Gonzalez, a Spanish freelancer covering the exodus of Ukrainians fleeing the war. He filed some stories for VOA in 2020 and 2021. Around 874,000 people have fled Ukraine, the AP reported. "I've rarely seen such an incredibly fast-rising exodus of people," U.N. High Commissioner for Refugees Filippo Grandi told the Security Council on Monday. Gonzalez, who contributes to Spain's Publico newspaper, was arrested and questioned in the Polish town of Rzeszow. Ukrainian security previously detained Gonzalez for several hours in Kyiv in early February. Ukraine at the time said Gonzalez was reporting from military zones in Donbas without the necessary accreditation, according to the Committee to Protect Journalists (CPJ). "Authorities should ensure that reporters can cover refugee movements and other vital stories of public interest without fear of prosecution, detention, or harassment," CPJ's Europe representative, Attila Mong, said in a statement. Russia has detained several journalists over their coverage of anti-war protests in Moscow and St. Petersburg. The State's Duma is also proposing a bill imposing heavy penalties for sharing information that "distorts the purpose, role and tasks" of Russian armed forces. Those convicted could face up to 15 years in prison, the Vienna-based International Press Institute reported. "It is not hard to see how this law could immediately lead to the criminalization of journalists reporting on military losses, on the human rights abuses and potential war crimes," the IPI deputy director, Scott Griffen, said in a statement. If passed, the law would add to the already challenging environment for Russia's independent media, Griffen said. The Russian media regulator has already issued warnings to several outlets over their coverage of the war, and on Tuesday took two stations off air. Editor's note: The seventh and ninth paragraphs have been updated to clarify that the rocket strikes did not directly hit the Holocaust memorial. This article has been further updated to note that Gonzalez filed a few reports for VOA in 2020 and 2021. Senate confirmation hearings for Supreme Court nominee Ketanji Brown Jackson will begin March 21 and end March 24, the Senate Judiciary Committee announced Wednesday. "As I have said from the time that Justice Breyer announced his retirement, the Committee will undertake a fair and timely process to consider Judge Jacksons nomination," Senate Judiciary Committee Chair Dick Durbin, D-Ill., wrote. "I look forward to Judge Jacksons appearance before the Committee and to respectful and dignified hearings." If approved by the Senate, the current federal appellate judge will make history as the first Black woman to sit on the countrys top court. At her 2021 confirmation hearing for the appellate court, she said, Ive experienced life in perhaps a different way than some of my colleagues because of who I am, and that might be valuable I hope it would be valuable if I was confirmed." During the 2020 presidential campaign, U.S. President Joe Biden promised to nominate an African American woman to the highest court. Jackson, a liberal whose nomination is supported by progressive groups, would replace another liberal, Justice Stephen Breyer, who intends to retire at the end of the current Supreme Court term. Since Russia's invasion of Ukraine last week, Chinese social media, usually a controlled space, is rife with conflicting comments about Ukraine. Censors have deleted thousands of posts many containing vulgar sexual remarks about Ukrainian women along with the accounts from which they originated. A wide variety of comments are emerging hourly on the chatting platform WeChat; the Douyin video app, or Chinese TikTok; and Weibo, the Chinese version of Twitter. Some social media users are asking the Chinese government to take advantage of the opportunity presented by the Ukrainian crisis to seize Taiwan. China regards the self-ruled island as a breakaway province, even though it has its own flag, currency, military and democratic institutions. The Chinese government has said it is ready to bring about a reunification with Taiwan, even if force is required. Chinese social media is also witnessing an outpouring of support for Russia and criticism of the U.S. over its support for Ukraine. A small number of people are asking why Russian President Vladimir Putin tried to interfere in the affairs of another country by urging Russian-speaking residents of Ukraine to revolt against their local governments. Significantly, some commenters are asking why the Chinese government did not stand by its ally Russia during a recent United Nations Security Council vote on a resolution to condemn Russia's attack on Ukraine. China, India and United Arab Emirates chose to abstain from voting, a neutral stance. Commenters have also ridiculed Ukraine for supposedly letting the U.S. make decisions for it. China's motives questioned Along with the posts that are vulgar or praise violence, the Chinese censors have been removing expressions of anti-war sentiment, including an open letter circulated by several academicians calling for an end to the war. "It is not an easy situation for the government. It cannot support the war. But it is also uncomfortable about intense parading of anti-war sentiment because this has implications on the political situation in Taiwan, Tibet and Hong Kong," said a Chinese university professor who asked not to be named. The state-controlled Global Times suggested in its Chinese-language edition that anti-Beijing separatists are behind some of the anti-war postings. "Some people surmise that clandestine 'Taiwan separatists,' 'Hong Kong separatists' and other forces are the ones making waves in public sentiment and public discourse on the Ukraine situation," wrote Sun Jiashan, a researcher at the Chinese National Academy of Arts. Yet the country's internet censor, the Cyberspace Administration of China (CAC), initially stayed on the sidelines of the debate, allowing some posts questioning Moscow's policy to remain up. This reflects a wider dilemma for Chinese authorities as their ally, Russia, supports and endorses a separatist movement in eastern Ukraine while carrying out an unprovoked attack on a neighbor. "China overall is following events but not taking a clear stand, and why should it? For China this war is a lose-lose proposition," said Francesco Sisci, a senior research associate at Renmin University of China in Beijing. "If Russia wins, it gets stronger, and China will feel the weight again of the northern neighbor. If it loses, China will be more isolated," Sisci told VOA. "Plus, it didn't trust Russia to begin with. Still, China's official stand is strongly anti-American, and [as seen] from Beijing, this war was set up by the U.S., which pushed Russia around." Nevertheless, the CAC and social media platforms have weeded out thousands of postings containing objectionable comments and videos. The agency said it was cracking down on "self-media" social media accounts held by independent content producers who share irresponsible political ideas. It also said it wants to control the distribution of information across all internet platforms to end "disruption to the order of internet broadcasts." Douyin said it had removed 3,500 videos and 12,100 comments related to the Russian invasion of Ukraine. It is investigating objectionable posts, such as those calling for the "capture of beautiful Ukrainian women," spreading inappropriate values, and harming the platform's atmosphere. Backlash in Ukraine Other postings suggest the Chinese government's posture has prompted anger toward Chinese students studying in Ukraine. Several of them have cited hostility from local residents and expressed concern for their safety. The Chinese Embassy in Kyiv initially asked its citizens to clearly identify their nationality while traveling in Ukraine. It later changed the order to say that they should stay indoors and not identify their nationality until further instructions are issued. "The Ukrainians are going through difficulties. We need to understand them and not provoke them," the embassy told Chinese citizens in Ukraine. The official Xinhua News Agency also joined the government in urging social media users to "discuss and present in a reasonable way" and criticized those who "spoke inappropriately." The U.N. General Assembly overwhelmingly condemned Russia's invasion of Ukraine Wednesday and called for its troops to immediately and completely withdraw, as Moscow's military bore down on several Ukrainian cities with airstrikes and troops. Of the 193 member states, 181 participated in the vote. Of those, 141 countries supported the resolution condemning Moscow and five were against it including Russia and a tiny group of its allies Belarus, Syria, North Korea and Eritrea. Thirty-five countries abstained, but their numbers do not affect the two-thirds majority needed for adoption. "The vote is a powerful message to the Russian Federation," Ukraine's U.N. Ambassador Sergiy Kyslytsya told reporters. Nearly 100 countries co-sponsored the measure, which mimics in tone the one that Russia vetoed in the Security Council last Friday, prompting the move to the General Assembly. "The message of the General Assembly is loud and clear," U.N. Secretary-General Antonio Guterres told reporters. "End hostilities in Ukraine now. Silence the guns now. Open the door to dialogue and diplomacy now." The European Union has worked hard to unify its 27 members and the rest of the international community against Russian President Vladimir Putin's aggression. "The Russian government stands increasingly alone. The world has stated that it must immediately stop the aggression, withdraw its troops, and abide by the rules of the U.N. Charter," European Union Ambassador Olaf Skoog said after the vote. "Russia has chosen aggression. The world has chosen peace." From Kyiv, Ukrainian President Volodmyr Zelenskyy welcomed the vote on Twitter, thanking those who voted in support of Ukraine and saying that they chose "the right side of history." U.S. Ambassador Linda Thomas-Greenfield appealed to nations ahead of the vote. "Now, at more than any other point in recent history, the United Nations is being challenged," Thomas-Greenfield said. "If the United Nations has any purpose, it is to prevent war, it is to condemn war, to stop war. That is our job here today. It is the job you were sent here to do not just by your capitals, but by all of humanity." The resolution "condemns" the February 24 declaration by Russia of a "special military operation" in Ukraine, and "deplores in the strongest terms" Moscow's violation of Article 2(4) of the U.N. Charter which says members shall refrain from "the threat or use of force against territorial integrity or political independence of any state." Kyslytsya told the international community that his country is fighting for its life against Russia's military machine. "They have come to the Ukrainian soil not only to kill some of us, not only to shift our cause and priorities, they have come to deprive Ukraine of the very right to exist," he told the assembly. Russia intensifies offensive It appeared unlikely the international condemnation would do much to change Moscow's calculus, as its offensive intensified Wednesday and civilians continued to flee to the borders seeking safety. The U.N. refugee agency estimates more than 874,000 people have fled Ukraine this week and says it is contingency planning for up to 4 million refugees. "The aim of our special operation is announced on the basis of Article 51 of the U.N. Charter, and will be achieved," Russia's envoy, Vassily Nebenzia, said ahead of the vote. "However, we are not carrying out strikes on civilian facilities and civilians. Don't believe fakes spread around the internet on this." Nations take a stance The overwhelming majority of nations that took to the podium in the general assembly this week expressed support for Ukraine's sovereignty, territorial integrity and independence. Many called for the reversal of Putin's decision to recognize two pro-Russian breakaway regions of Ukraine as independent states, as well as outrage that he has placed Russia's nuclear forces on alert. "Russia's war marks the dawn of a new era. It's a watershed moment," German Foreign Minister Annalena Baerbock told the meeting on Tuesday. "Yesterday's certainties are gone. Today, we face a new reality that none of us chose. It is a reality that President Putin has forced upon us." A series of smaller countries from all parts of the world offered a chorus of support for the resolution and the Ukrainian people. "Antigua and Barbuda fully support the resolution that is before the house and we call on all members, especially small island states, to recognize that this is protecting the principles of the [U.N.] Charter'" Ambassador Walton Webson said during Tuesday's debate. "Might is not right." "This is not a peacekeeping mission, but a war of aggression," Micronesia's ambassador emphasized, referring to a claim by Russian officials. "It is clear beyond any doubt who is the aggressor and who is the victim." Ambassador Jane Chigiyal added that Micronesia has severed its diplomatic relations with Moscow. "In the eternal and inspiring worlds of Bob Marley: Let us get up, stand up, stand up for the rights of all the people of Ukraine because today we are all Ukraine," Jamaica's envoy said. Myanmar, which is still represented at the United Nations by the ambassador of the pre-military coup junta, expressed solidarity with the people of Ukraine. Russian arms sent to the Myanmar military are fueling that country's instability and conflict. "The people of Myanmar are facing similar suffering resulted from the inhumane acts, atrocities, crimes against humanity committed by the Myanmar military," Ambassador Kyaw Moe Tun said Wednesday. Russian supporters scarce Moscow could not even muster support from some of its closest allies like Serbia, which voted to condemn the military offensive. Other countries that traditionally align with Moscow, including China, Iran, Nicaragua, Cuba and Pakistan, chose to abstain in the vote. But Russia did have a handful of supporters. Belarus has aided Russia's invasion, allowing it to amass troops in its territory and to launch missiles and forces from its territory into northern Ukraine. "We categorically reject accusations against Belarus that we are involved in unlawful use of force against Ukraine," Ambassador Valentyn Rybakov said. He said his president, Alexander Lukashenko, is "sparing no efforts" to get the two sides to talk. Reports say a second round of talks is expected to take place Thursday in a Belarussian border town between Russian and Ukrainian delegations. Moscow has given military support to Syrian president Bashar al-Assad's regime and civil war since 2015. At the general assembly, the Syrian envoy said the draft resolution is a "flagrant political hypocrisy." Russia has also tried to get international sanctions on North Korea for its illicit nuclear program eased and lifted. Pyongyang reciprocated at the general assembly by blaming the Ukraine situation on the United States. Uniting for peace resolution The General Assembly met this week under what is known as the Uniting for Peace resolution. It allows special meetings of the entire membership to be called when the U.N. Security Council is deadlocked on an issue and cannot exercise its mandate to maintain or restore international peace and security in this case, because of Russia's veto last Friday of a similar resolution. Although the council has historically been divided on many issues, Uniting for Peace has been invoked fewer than a dozen times since it was adopted in 1950, according to the Security Council Report, which tracks U.N. meetings. The last time was 40 years ago, in 1982, concerning Israel. U.N. aid agencies are ramping up humanitarian operations in Ukraine as Russia's bombing of civilian residential areas and infrastructure escalates and civilian casualties mount. The Ukrainian government reports Russian airstrikes have killed hundreds of people and wounded more than 1,600. U.N. human rights office estimates are more conservative, but officials say the real toll is likely to be much higher than their monitors have been able to verify. A spokesman for the U.N. childrens fund, James Elder, is in Lviv in western Ukraine. He says the city is in utter turmoil, with thousands of people seeking to escape the fighting. Given the chaotic situation, he says it is not possible to know how many people, including children, are being killed. "We know that thousands and thousands are at risk. And we know that more children, gut-wrenchingly are going to die or be injured in this unless fighting endsThere are tens of thousands of children in orphanages in Ukraine," said Elder. "Many of those are in major cities, which are under bombardment right now. So, we hold the gravest fears for all these children. Elder says UNICEF has been working on both sides of what is known as the contact line. This is the 500-kilometer zone separating Russian-backed territories in eastern Ukraine from the rest of the country. He says the agency aims to increase its support to tens of thousands of vulnerable people across the country. The World Health Organization representative in Poland, Paloma Cuchi, says the agency is preparing to help a potentially massive number of refugees arriving from Ukraine. Speaking from the Polish capital, Warsaw, she says arrivals who are injured will need treatment. She says there will be a need to prevent and treat people with communicable diseases such as tuberculosis. "We are seeing a need to provide assistance and vaccinations for COVID-19," said Cuchi. "We are seeing since there are many kids coming, we are also seeing that there is a need for routine vaccinations like measles or treating people with pre-existing conditionsyou know like diabetes, cancer, heart problems. Cuchi says a first shipment of medicines and medical supplies was expected in Poland Wednesday. She also says experts in mental health, as well as health interventions and emergency operations, also are being deployed. The World Food Program is launching a three-month emergency operation to provide food assistance for people fleeing the conflict. The WFP says it will scale up aid to reach up to 3.1 million people affected by the fighting inside Ukraine. It adds WFP staff will be on standby to assist refugees in neighboring countries. The U.N. refugee agency reports the number of Ukrainian refugees has increased by 114,000 since Tuesday and now stands at more than 874,000. The White House announced new sanctions Wednesday on Russia and Belarus over the invasion of Ukraine. The sanctions, which target the defense and oil sectors, will severely limit the ability of Russia and Belarus to obtain the materials they need to support their military aggression against Ukraine, project power in ways that threaten regional stability, and undermine global peace and security, the White House said. The new sanctions also will target entities associated with Russian and Belarusian militaries that make combat aircraft, infantry fighting vehicles, electronic warfare systems, missiles and unmanned aerial vehicles for Russias military. "The United States will take actions to hold Belarus accountable for enabling [Russian President Vladimir] Putins invasion of Ukraine, weaken the Russian defense sector and its military power for years to come, target Russias most important sources of wealth, and ban Russian airlines from U.S. airspace," the White House said. Additionally, the U.S. and its allies are seeking to restrict technology exports in the oil industry, hoping to degrade Russias status as a leading energy supplier over time. The United States and our allies and partners do not have a strategic interest in reducing the global supply of energy which is why we have carved out energy payments from our financial sanctions, the White House said. Some information for this report came from The Associated Press. Why do presidents give a State of the Union address? The U.S. Constitution, Article II, Section 3, Clause 1, requires the president "from time to time give to the Congress Information of the State of the Union, and recommend to their Consideration such measures as he shall judge necessary and expedient." Where and when does the speech take place? - The speech takes place in the House chamber in front of members of the House of Representatives, the Senate, Supreme Court, the Cabinet, the Diplomatic Corps and the Joint Chiefs of Staff. - A House concurrent resolution sets aside the day and time for a Joint Session for the president to deliver his remarks. - Until 1934, the Annual Message, as it was previously called, was delivered every December. Since then the address has been delivered in January or February. Who delivered the first State of the Union address? Delivered by George Washington on January 8, 1790, the speech was reportedly just 833 words long, the shortest address in U.S. history. Is it always delivered in-person? - No. In 1801 Thomas Jefferson sent written copies of his first address to both houses of Congress to be read by each chamber's clerks. - The practice of sending written copies to Congress continued for more than a century. Woodrow Wilson resumed the practice of delivering it in person in 1913. How has technology changed how the speech is delivered? - Calvin Coolidge gave the first radio broadcast of the address in 1923. - The first televised address was in 1947, by Harry Truman. - In 2002, George W. Bush's speech made history as the first address made available live on the Internet. When was the first opposition response? - The first official, televised opposition response to a presidents annual message occurred in 1966. - Since 1982, it has become customary for the opposition party, usually members of Congress, to provide responses. When did the tradition of inviting special guests begin? - Ronald Reagan was the first president to invite special guests to sit beside the first lady and recognize them during the speech, in 1982. What is a 'designated survivor'? - A designated survivor is appointed for every State of The Union address. This is a member of the president's Cabinet who will assume the presidency in the event of a catastrophic disaster that takes out the country's leaders and the line of succession. - The survivor, whose identity is kept secret, is selected several weeks before the president's speech. On the day of the address, they are taken to a secret location and remain under security until the president returns to the White House and other leaders disperse from the Capitol. Ukrainian President Volodymyr Zelenskyy has become a major figure on the world stage in the days since Russian forces invaded his country, declaring his intention to remain in Kyiv, even as tens of thousands of Russian troops converge on the capital city. His notable answer to a U.S. offer to evacuate him and his family after the invasion began "The fight is here; I need ammunition, not a ride" has become an emblem of the Ukrainian people's fierce resistance to invading Russian troops. Zelenskyy's video addresses, delivered from the streets of Ukraine's threatened capital, and his calls on the European Union and other international bodies to support his nation's resistance to the Russian invasion, have put his face on screens all over the world. But until recently the former actor and comedian was not well-known outside his native country. Zelenskyy, 44, took office in spring 2019, with 73.2% of the vote, defeating former President Petro Poroshenko. His election was a case of life imitating art, as Zelenskyy, prior to the election, had been best known for playing a high school history teacher who gets elected president of Ukraine in a hit television show called "Servant of the People." The premise of the show was that Zelenskyy's character rockets to popularity after a viral video captures him ranting against rampant corruption in Ukraine. In 2018, a new political party in Ukraine, named after Zelenskyy's television show, nominated the TV star for president on an anti-corruption platform similar to that of his fictional presidential character. Native of eastern Ukraine Zelenskyy was born in Kryvyi Rih, a city in a Russian-speaking region of south-central Ukraine which was, at the time, a part of the Soviet Union. Zelenskyy, who is Jewish, has said that his extended family suffered severely during the Holocaust. His grandfather lost his own father and three brothers to the Nazis, and he served in the Red Army during the war. Zelenskyy received a law degree from what is now Kryvyi Rih National University, but rather than pursue a legal career, he began working in comedy and was one of the founders of Kvartal 95, which became a successful television production company. Among Zelenskyy's more unusual accomplishments was his victory, in 2006, in the Ukrainian version of the television program "Dancing with the Stars," in which he was partnered with a professional dancer. Between 2009 and 2018, Zelenskyy had starring roles in a number of films, primarily romantic comedies. Zelenskyy married screenwriter Olena Kiyashko in 2003. They have a 17-year-old daughter and an 8-year-old son. All three are believed to be in Kyiv with Zelenskyy. Took office during conflict When Zelenskyy took office in 2019, his country was already five years into a low-level conflict with separatist militias in Luhansk and Donetsk, two provinces that make up a region commonly known as the Donbas. The militias, with support from Russia, controlled portions of both provinces and frequently traded fire with Ukrainian troops. In addition, Russia remained in disputed possession of Crimea, which it seized in 2014 and claims to have "annexed" as part of Russia. For many Americans, their first introduction to Zelenskyy came in 2019, when he was caught up in the events that led to the first impeachment of former President Donald Trump. Because of the ongoing conflict in Ukraine, U.S. lawmakers had approved $400 million in military aid for fiscal year 2019. Throughout the spring and summer of that year, the Trump administration refused to disburse the aid, without providing a clear reason why. Trump impeachment In a July 2019 conversation with Zelenskyy, which did not become public until months later, Trump replied to the Ukrainian president's request to be allowed to purchase more anti-tank weapons with the phrase, "I would like you to do us a favor, though." He proceeded to ask Zelenskyy to launch an investigation into the business dealings of the Biden family. At the time, Joe Biden was seen as a challenger to Trump in the 2020 U.S. presidential contest. Biden's son, Hunter, had served on the board of a Ukrainian natural gas company. The call was the basis for Trump's impeachment in the House of Representatives, with Democratic lawmakers charging that he had withheld aid from Ukraine to pressure Zelenskyy to damage his chief political rival. Zelenskyy said that he had not felt pressured, and made it clear that he did not want to become part of a political disagreement in the U.S. Low popularity Zelenskyy's performance in the days since Russia invaded his country has made him extremely popular internationally and, to the degree it can currently be measured, within Ukraine. Even opposition party politicians who regularly criticized him prior to the invasion have lavished praise on his efforts to rally the country. However, in the years following his initial election, Zelenskyy's popularity among Ukrainians had faded considerably. In a country where corruption remained a major problem, he was seen as having done too little to keep his promises about bringing integrity to the country's politics. In January, public opinion polling showed Zelenskyy with the support of only about 30% of the Ukrainian population. Discounted warnings of invasion Zelenskyy has also faced criticism for his apparent unwillingness to believe U.S. intelligence reports that Russian President Vladimir Putin was determined to invade Ukraine. In the weeks leading up to the invasion, Zelenskyy worked hard to build support among other leaders in Europe and around the world, hoping to pressure Putin to pull back troops. However, he frequently met U.S. warnings of an imminent invasion with public expressions of disbelief and even ridicule. Critics have said that his frequent insistence that Putin was bluffing and would not actually enter Ukraine may have left his citizens less prepared for the invasion than they might have been if he had taken U.S. warnings seriously. African workers and students seeking to flee Ukraine in the face of Russia's invasion are complaining of being blocked from buses, trains and border crossing points while priority is given to Ukrainian citizens. A VOA reporter in western Ukraine says that priority is being given to Ukrainians but that he has not seen evidence Africans are being treated differently from other foreigners. Nevertheless, some Africans among the hundreds of thousands of people desperately trying to leave Ukraine are alleging racial discrimination, prompting denials from Ukrainian authorities and concern from the United States and international bodies. Augustine Akoi Kollie, a Liberian national studying medicine in the western Ukraine's city of Ternopil, said he witnessed the disparities while waiting overnight Saturday to cross the border near Suceava, Romania. People stood shivering in long lines, clutching luggage and children, and "if a Ukrainian comes, you have to shift and make way for the Ukrainians to go to the front," Kollie told VOA. Although authorities called for women and children to be processed first, African women were left behind, he said. "It was racial discrimination," he said, "because if you say you are taking women and children, you have foreign students there who are females. So why are you not taking them?" Kollie also saw aggressive behavior, which one of his traveling companions captured on video while they waited at the border. The video clip, shared with VOA, shows a nighttime scene of several uniformed men shoving what Kollie called "foreign students," who were sitting on the ground and barely visible behind a parked vehicle. The men fired several shots into the air. His account dovetails with reports by other news media. A 24-year-old Nigerian doctor told The New York Times she was stranded for over two days at the Ukraine-Poland border crossing at the Polish town of Medyka, with guards holding back foreigners while allowing Ukrainians to pass through. "They were beating up people with sticks," the doctor, Chineye Mbagwu, told The Times. "They would slap them, beat them and push them to the end of the queue. It was awful." The hashtag #AfricansinUkraine has been trending on Twitter, showing video clips of Black people appearing to be denied boarding on a train or pulled from seating. VOA has not been able to authenticate the videos independently. A VOA correspondent reporting from Ukraine said authorities there have prioritized Ukrainians for outbound buses and trains, making it harder for foreigners including him, a white European national to leave. Ukraine's minister of foreign affairs, Dmytro Kuleba, tweeted Tuesday: "Russia's invasion of Ukraine has affected Ukrainians and non-citizens in many devastating ways. Africans seeking evacuation are our friends and need to have equal opportunities to return to their home countries safely. Ukraine's government spares no effort to solve the problem." Disturbing reports The African Union released a statement Monday saying its top officials current chair Macky Sall, president of Senegal, and Moussa Faki Mahamat, African Union Commission chairperson were "particularly disturbed by reports that African citizens on the Ukrainian side of the border are being refused the right to cross the border to safety." "Reports that Africans are singled out for unacceptable dissimilar treatment would be shockingly racist and in breach (of) international law," the statement continued. The International Committee of the Red Cross could not confirm such reports, "but they are disturbing," the agency said in an email to VOA Tuesday. "Safe passage and the ability to seek safe haven is a right for everyone affected by conflict. The ICRC (is) working and responding to everyone affected by the fighting." The U.S. State Department has denounced any attempts at racial bias. "We are aware of these media reports," a department spokesperson said Monday. "Any act of racial discrimination, particularly in a crisis, is inexcusable." The spokesperson said the department was "engaging closely with U.N. agencies on the ground to ensure that every single person crossing into neighboring countries is received equally and with the protection assistance their circumstances require." Meanwhile, the AU has commended efforts by its member states and embassies in neighboring countries to receive African citizens and their families trying to leave Ukraine. Nigeria's ambassador to Romania, Safiya Ahmad Nuhu, told VOA's Hausa Service that more than 600 Nigerians have arrived in Bucharest "and there are many more on buses that are coming from the various entry points." "The Romanian authorities have been very helpful in terms of coordination, preparation and assistance," she added. "It's not even just the government but even individuals, organizations, universities, private individuals they've all been so helpful in providing assistance." Kollie, the Liberian student, said once he and his two companions crossed into Romania, they were given blankets, plenty of food and transportation to the town of Timisoara, where they're sharing a hotel room. He said new arrivals were told they would get help with food and lodging for 30 days. 'Exponential' increase expected The United Nations anticipates that, with a sustained Russian assault, refugees will continue to pour over Ukraine's borders. "I have rarely seen such an incredibly fast-rising exodus of people," with numbers "rising exponentially hour after hour since Thursday," said U.N. High Commissioner for Refugees Filippo Grandi, addressing the U.N. Security Council on Monday. " We are currently planning for up to 4 million refugees in the coming days and weeks. Such a rapid increase would be a huge burden for receiving states." Already, the outward surge represents the largest displacement in Europe since the Balkan wars in the early 1990s, Grandi said. Then, more than 2 million people fled their homes, the U.N. refugee agency estimated at the time. Grandi noted that amid the current crisis, more than 280,000 people have sought relief in Poland; in Hungary, 94,000; in Moldova, nearly 40,000; in Romania, 34,000; in Slovakia, 30,000 plus tens of thousands elsewhere in Europe. Grandi said "a sizeable number" also have relocated to the Russian Federation. The European Commission the European Union's executive arm earlier this week had discussed asking member nations to grant temporary asylum for Ukrainians for up to three years, The New York Times and Reuters reported. Residents of Ukraine, which on Monday applied for EU membership, can currently stay for up to 90 days and travel visa-free within the bloc's countries. Asked by VOA about EU policy and provisions for Ukrainian and other refugees, the European Commission said in an email Tuesday that it would "soon propose (to) activate the Temporary Protection Directive to offer quick and effective assistance to people fleeing the war in Ukraine. The Commission stands ready to support its member states providing a safe haven for people fleeing Ukraine and is working on an overall contingency plan to respond to Russian aggression, which includes the protection of Ukrainian people. We are considering all courses of action to help member states process arrivals quickly and effectively. Until we present our proposal, we are unable to go into further detail." As for reported mistreatment of people of color, the commission said: "All people in need, regardless of their nationality, ethnicity, or their skin color, who are fleeing violence in Ukraine should be granted access to the EU." Contributors to this report include VOA's Eastern Europe Chief Myroslava Gongadze, Grace Alheri Abdu of the Hausa Service, Ignatius Annor of the English to Africa Service, and Betty Ayoub and Carol Guensburg of the Africa Division. A leader of a faction of the Movement for Democratic Change (MDC-T) says opposition parties in Zimbabwe are to blame for the continued dominance of the ruling Zanu PF party and as a result they should form a formidable coalition ahead of the 2023 general elections. Speaking to journalists in Bulawayo today, Thokozani Khupe, apologized for being part of a fragmented opposition, noting that the MDC would have romped to victory in the 2018 council, parliamentary and presidential elections had if parties were working together. Khupe said the opposition has over the years discouraged voters from taking part in crucial national polls due to its failure to meet the aspirations of the people of Zimbabwe. There are inspiring examples in the region for people to believe that change through an election is possible. We have examples in Zambia and in Malawi which demonstrated that change is possible when people come together and unite for a good cause. Similarly, the situation in our beloved country is pointing to the need for unity of purpose. Unity amongst opposition political parties is of paramount importance, as it will result in the formation of a formidable force to confront ZANU PF. The formidable force must start to speak with one voice, they must start to act with one voice and they must start to Vote with one voice. Khupe also said, It is high time as opposition parties we converge and mobilize citizens and together unite for a common course and that common course being a New Zimbabwe, a new Zimbabwe with Jobs, a new Zimbabwe with plenty of food because Zimbabwe used to be the bread basket of Africa, a new Zimbabwe with quality education and health, a new Zimbabwe where everyone will have a better life. We need to unapologetically preach the gospel of unity, in bars, in churches, in the villages and in the urban areas where we stay. Let us remind each other that future generations will not forgive us if we allow next years chance to slip away. It is a glorious chance that comes to us the ordinary people once in five years and we must make the most of it. Time has come for political parties students, womens movements, vendors, war veterans, the church, labour, transport operators and touts, the civic movement and other social networks to come together and challenge the ZANU PF regime. She pledged that her party will start working with other opposition groups ahead of the 2023 harmonized elections. We are henceforth going to be working with likeminded opposition political parties because we are stronger together and together we can deliver real change to the people of Zimbabwe and Yes We Can. As the MDC-T, we are today sending a message to the world that together we are stronger. Indeed, together we can. And together, we will go far. The hour has come for us to walk together every step of the way in our quest to deliver real change so that every Zimbabwean lives in a Zimbabwe where there is equal distribution of resources and opportunities in the spirit of devolution. The hour has come for citizens to converge and vote for change. Together we can make a difference. Khupe apologized for all her transgressions of the past, noting that all political leaders made mistakes in the quest for social, economic and political transformation in Zimbabwe. For the past 22 years, the journey and the struggle for democracy has not been easy. We have fallen in the process as well as erred in a number of occasions. I would also like to mention with a heavy heart that as politicians we have made mistakes in the past and it is important that when one makes a mistake they admit they have made a mistake and then use that mistake as a stepping-stone to success. Collectively, myself included, we have made mistakes and it is high time we acknowledge that and take note of our mistakes and use those mistakes to shape our future. Indications are that in the near future, Khupe is likely going to work with Nelson Chamisa, the leader of the Citizens Coalition for Change. Khupe was among people that recalled lawmakers and councilors who were linked to Chamisa, resulting in the holding of by-elections nationwide. Over 130 council and parliamentary seats are up for grabs in the March 26 by-elections. At the Instagram account of lauthentique I came across an image of a few very rare lounge chairs, I personally had not seen before as far as I remember. Designed by Mini Boga in the 1960s and manufactured by Taaru, India. The boxy frames of these lounge chairs are made from solid teak wood, and the joints and details show a real quality of craftsmanship. The chairs are sold by Studio Cadmium, A company in the south of the Netherlands, specialized in luxury 20th century design furniture, lighting and other objects from France, Italy and Brazil. They kindly provided me with some more images and more information about the chairs. Lounge chairs by Mini Boga for Taaru Studio Cadmium: The seat and back are made from thick bound rope which gives these chairs a very natural appearance. Extra comfort is provided with a seat and back cushion, which is held counterbalanced by a metal rod to the rear. The cushions are reupholstered in a beautiful light linen fabric. Each chair has a branded signature. Mini Boga established her furniture brand Taaru in New Delhi at a time when there was little modern design in India. Her simple forms are solid and have a softness and grace similar to contemporaneous Brazilian design. Inspired by craft traditions, her designs take on a functionalist and minimalist approach. She was the only one to offer her designers royalty for their design when all others simply copied foreign models from Bauhaus and international magazines. Michael K. Williams Photo: Paras Griffin/Getty Images for BET Update: March 2 at 1:30 p.m.: All four men charged in relation to Michael K. Williamss death pleaded not guilty during their arraignment in Manhattan federal court on Wednesday. The indictment charges each man with one count of narcotics conspiracy resulting in death. Original story follows. Manhattan authorities arrested four men on Wednesday in connection with the fatal overdose of Michael K. Williams. The actor, 54, was found dead in his apartment after overdosing on heroin-laced fentanyl on September 6, 2021. Irvin Cartagena, 39, Hector Robles, 57, Luis Cruz, 56, and Carlos Macci, 70, were allegedly involved in the drug-trafficking group that sold the narcotics to Williams in Brooklyn. Cartagena was identified in September 5 surveillance video of the alleged transaction, according to a release from the Department of Justice. Damian Williams, the U.S. attorney for the Southern District of New York, called overdose deaths a public health crisis in a press release on Wednesday afternoon. It has to stop. Deadly opioids like fentanyl and heroin dont care about who you are or what youve accomplished. Statement of U.S. Attorney Damian Williams on the arrests of four defendants in connection with the overdose death of Michael K. Williams pic.twitter.com/EtrtYTr7xF US Attorney SDNY (@SDNYnews) February 2, 2022 Each of the accused are charged with conspiracy to distribute and possess with intent to distribute fentanyl analogue, fentanyl, and heroin, which carries a mandatory minimum sentence of 5 years in prison and a maximum sentence of 40 years in prison, while Cartegena is additionally charged with Williamss death in connection with the narcotics conspiracy. The drug- trafficking group was linked to Williamss overdose during an investigation that began early last year. Authorities claim the men knew about the actors overdose death, but kept selling heroin-laced fentanyl to customers in Brooklyn and Manhattan. Pete Davidsons ferry is not involved. Photo: Getty Images Vulture dot com is no stranger to diving into important reality-TV investigations. And now, since the long-awaited, three-part Real Housewives of Salt Lake City season-two reunion began Sunday, February 27, its time for another. Captain Andy Cohen kicked off the icy gathering with a number of intros, featuring a thrilled Hi Baby Gorgeous signaling the iconic, no longer micless Lisa Barlow, who has in the span of 20 episodes managed to: say her (ex?) BFF Meredith Marks allegedly fucked half of New York, get in a bus fight with Jen Shah, allegedly pull out of a Vida Tequilacatered event that Whitney Rose got involved in re: her cousin Angie (who is most likely just a fictional character being played by Sarah Paulson), and allegedly call Heather Gay a Lego figure. But what might be the most shocking assertion to trickle out of Barlows dramatic arc this season is Gay, her castmate and second-half of Bad Weather, claiming that Barlow likes to front pictures on yachts. Heather accuses Lisa of fake posing on yachts so Lisa posts a few throwbacks of the times shes been on yachts lol #RHOSLC pic.twitter.com/VrudPHNXde Queens of Bravo (@queensofbravo) February 28, 2022 Its the life you pretend to have, Gay stated. I pay for my stuff, Barlow countered, adding, Are you insulting John Barlow? You know, I have dirt on you Lisa, and I hold it all back, but I wont hold it back any longer if you wanna go there, Gay threatened. Barlow called Gay a liar and this specific accusation so insane. But wait, theres more! Gay kept it going by saying We know you, we love you to Barlow and We want you to have all of that for yourself! Barlow flipped her bangs and responded: Do you want my K-1s? They argued until Gay got the last word in before commercial. I dont want to be friends with a caricature of some teen magazine she read in eighth grade that said How to Be a Cool Mean Girl, she burned her. As the reunion continues this Sunday, March 6, with part two, we have to ask: Do Lisa and RHONYs Sonja Morgan share the same boat? Shimon Hayut (Simon Leviev) Photo: TORE KRISTIANSEN/VG/EPA-EFE/Shutterstock Fake family is everything. Shimon Hayut, the subject of the Netflix documentary The Tinder Swindler, allegedly scammed several women out of millions of dollars by masquerading as Simon Leviev, the heir to the Leviev diamond fortune. Now his fake family members have decided theyve really had enough. The real Israeli diamond magnates are hitting the impersonator with a barrage of lawsuits including charges of making false representations as being the son of Lev Leviev and receiving numerous benefits (including material ones), cunningly and using false words, claiming to be a member of the Leviev Family, and that his family (Leviev) will pay and bear the costs of his benefits, per a lawsuit filed in Tel Aviv seen by NBC News. The Levievs are also going after Hayuts business liaisons, family attorney Guy Ophir said in a statement Monday: We will file a monetary suit against Simon and any other affiliate that will work with him, including some websites that have Joint ventures with Simon and/or have offered to buy cameos from him. Anyone that will try to capitalize from this scheme will be sued. The lawsuit is particularly ironic for Hayut, who sent a hostile voice message to one of the women he scammed in the documentary, claiming he would sue her for defamation. When the film was released February 2, Hayut was still reaping the benefits of his alleged scheme as a free man in Israel. However, after the film topped Netflix charts, the publicity began to topple Hayuts precarious lifestyle. Notably, the Tinder lothario was banned from multiple dating apps. Decatur, IL (62521) Today Cloudy skies this evening. A few showers developing late. Low 51F. Winds E at 5 to 10 mph. Chance of rain 30%.. Tonight Cloudy skies this evening. A few showers developing late. Low 51F. Winds E at 5 to 10 mph. Chance of rain 30%. First opera, now literature: Russia's war on Ukraine impacts on the arts in Italy. Fedor Dostoevsky has become the unlikely source of a controversy at a Milan university over its decision to drop a course on the 19th-century Russian novelist. The University of Milano-Bicocca informed the Italian writer Paolo Nori on Tuesday night that his course on the author of Crime and Punishment had been cancelled "to avoid any controversy, in a moment of high tension." An incredulous, emotional Nori read the contents of the email during an Instagram live video in which he slammed the university's decision as "ridiculous", saying "even dead Russians" are now the target of censorship in Italy. "Paolo Nori": Perche ha reso noto che l'universita #Bicocca di Milano ha deciso di annullare un suo corso di quattro lezioni sui romanzi di Fedor #Dostoevskij per "evitare ogni forma di polemica, soprattutto interna, in questo momento di forte tensione"pic.twitter.com/UzVt1tSUIp Perche e in tendenza? (@perchetendenza) March 2, 2022 News of his cancelled course spread rapidly on social media, with criticism directed at the university which soon found itself embroiled in the very thing it had sought to avoid: controversy. On Wednesday morning the university issued a statement underlining that it is "open to dialogue and listening even in this very difficult period that sees us dismayed by the escalation of the conflict." It confirmed that the course on Dostoevsky would in fact go ahead as originally planned and announced that the rector would be meeting Nori next week "for a moment of reflection." It is not the first time in recent days that the war in Ukraine has impacted the arts in Milan. Earlier this week the city's mayor Beppe Sala "ruled out" the return of Valery Gergiev to the podium at La Scala over the Russian conductor's refusal to condemn the invasion of Ukraine by his friend Vladimir Putin. This content is expired! Unfortunely this content is expired and cannot be viewed anymore; if You are the owner of this content please login to our Website, go to our access panel and enable this content again. Rome moves Ukraine embassy from Kyiv to Lviv. Italy has transferred its embassy in Ukraine from Kyiv to the western city of Lviv amid a worsening security situation as Russian troops advance on the capital. The Italian ambassador to Ukraine, Pier Francesco Zazo, has brought with him around 20 children, including six newborn babies, who had been taken in by the embassy in recent days as they had no safe place to stay. Italy's ambassador to Ukraine, Pier Francesco Zazo In a statement, Italy's foreign ministry said the move to Lviv was the taken in light of the "deteriorating security situation and the consequent impossibility of guaranteeing full functionality." Italy is the latest country to transfer its Ukrainian embassy 500 km west to Lviv over security concerns, following Australia, Canada, France, Japan, Israel and the UK. In an impassioned speech to the senate in Rome on Tuesday, Italian premier Mario Draghi paid tribute thanks to Ambassador Zazo and the embassy staff for "the spirit of service, dedication and courage shown in these dramatic days." An Italian who returned home to Italy with his family on Tuesday told news agency ANSA that Zazo "opened the doors of the embassy to us, along with dozens of other people, including many children. We were welcomed into the home of the ambassador who provided us with food and shelter. The man, who chose to remain anonymous, thanked Zazo and his staff for their help, adding that he hopes his Ukrainian friends "will be able to save themselves, and that this inhuman and meaningless war will end as soon as possible." "Never again war!" Pontiff appeals for peace in Ukraine. Pope Francis is calling for prayers and fasting for peace in Ukraine on 2 March, Ash Wednesday, the first day of Lent in the Christian calendar. The pope said it is "a day to be close to the suffering of the Ukrainian people, to be aware that we are all brothers and sisters, and to implore God for an end to the war." During his weekly general audience this morning the pope said he is "deeply grateful" to the people of Poland for being "the first to support Ukraine by opening borders, hearts and homes to Ukrainians fleeing war", reports the Catholic News Service. Francis noted that the priest reading the Polish translation of his remarks at the audience was in fact Ukrainian, the Italian bishops' newspaper Avvenire reports. "Right now his parents are in an underground shelter to defend themselves from bombs, in a place near Kyiv", the pope said. Thanking the Ukrainian friar for "continuing his duty here, with us", the pope remembered all those "who are suffering from the bombings, his elderly parents and many elderly people who are in the underground to defend themselves. We carry in our hearts the memory of these people. The pontiff continues to speak out against the Russian invasion of Ukraine, decrying the "diabolical and perverse logic of weapons", and appealing for the opening of humanitarian corridors for refugees fleeing the conflict. 2 March, Ash Wednesday, Day of prayer and fasting for peace in #Ukraine. #PrayTogether pic.twitter.com/JGOWqj3sDv Pope Francis (@Pontifex) March 2, 2022 Francis has also been using his Pontifex Twitter account to write messages in Ukrainian and English as part of a social media campaign to denounce war and to appeal for peace, accompanied by the hashtags #PrayTogether #Ukraine. On Saturday he spoke by phone to Ukraine's president Volodymyr Zelenskyy to express his "most profound pain for the tragic events" unfolding in the country, and during the Angelus the next day he said that his "heart is broken" by the war. On Friday the pontiff broke Vatican protocol by paying a surprise visit to the Russian embassy to the Holy See, to convey his opposition to Moscow's invasion of Ukraine. Earlier this week the Vatican secretary of state, Cardinal Pietro Parolin, said the Holy See is ready to "facilitate dialogue" between Russia and Ukraine, saying there is "a need to avoid any escalation, stop the violence and negotiate." Placeholder while article actions load Indias state of Uttar Pradesh is known for two things: Its size with 230 million citizens, the population is larger than Brazils and its poverty, as the second-poorest state; annual income is around half the national average. Wp Get the full experience. Choose your plan ArrowRight But since Prime Minister Narendra Modi came to power in 2014, it has also made global headlines for a darker superlative: crimes targeted against Muslims. Those only worsened when, three years later, the ruling Bharatiya Janata Party stormed to power in UP, and with it, Yogi Adityanath a saffron-robed Hindu monk-turned-chief minister with his own private militia. UP is now the incubator for some of Modis most pointed policies targeting Indias Muslim minority, who make up 14% of Indias 1.4 billion citizens. Modi has achieved a cult-like status as prime minister and remains a popular leader. His supporters say hes helped India get a seat at the global high table, while critics contend he has exploited existing divisions in society and deep-rooted religious hatred to cement his position. Advertisement But now his party finds itself on the backfoot in its heartland of UP, which is in the grip of a heated month-long election. Contentious agriculture laws that led to a year of protests by farmers (and a rare backdown by Modi), along with a devastating Covid wave that worsened an already dire unemployment rate, has the BJP looking at a significantly reduced majority when the result is declared on March 10. From laws targeting love jihad a reference to an alleged conspiracy of Muslim men luring Hindu women into marriage for conversion that criminalize inter-religious marriages, to raids on the homes of Muslims who protested against the federal governments controversial religion-based citizenship law, sectarianism is the new normal in UP. So-called cow vigilantes punish and sometimes kill people suspected of eating beef or killing cattle. (Hindus consider cows sacred.) It crosses borders, too. At a three-day gathering in December in the neighboring state of Uttarakhand, multiple speakers including a BJP member called for Muslims and Christians in India to be killed. And in the southern state of Karnataka, the BJP-led government is allowing schools to ban girls from attending if they wear a headscarf worn by some Muslim women known as a hijab. (The case is now before the Karnataka High Court.) The campaign is just as vicious online. In January, the names and photographs of more than 100 Muslim women were displayed on a fake auction site and put up for sale. It is no coincidence that these women many of them journalists, lawyers, academics and politicians have spoken out against Islamophobia in India. Advertisement Then in February came a tweet from an official ruling party account featuring a potent symbol of hate recognized across the world, featuring a caricature of a group of Muslim men being hung by a noose. Twitter removed the post from the verified handle of the Gujarat BJP, but its meaning had already been broadcast loud and clear. The tweet was linked to a Feb. 18 court judgment that sentenced 38 people to death for their roles in a series of bomb blasts in 2008 in the city of Ahmedabad, which killed 56 people and injured over 200. An unknown Islamic militant group, the Indian Mujahideen, had claimed responsibility for the attacks. Gujarat Modis home state has a history of tensions between Hindus and Muslims, who are a minority in India. The Indian Mujahideen said bomb attacks were carried out in revenge for the 2002 Gujarat riots, in which more than 1,000 people, mostly Muslims, died. Modi was chief minister of the state at the time and was denied a visa to the U.S. in 2005 over his role in the unrest. (A court absolved him of any involvement.) This rising tide of religious polarization in the worlds largest democracy and with it the tacit, if not open, support of Modis party has not gone unnoticed. From statements in the U.K.s House of Lords about the human rights situation to a report from the U.S. Commission on International Religious Freedom last year recommending that India should be designated a country of particular concern for engaging in and tolerating systematic, ongoing, and egregious religious freedom violations, the world is waking up to the reality of todays India. Advertisement Throughout all this, Modi and his colleagues have mostly been silent, as the hate speech and incitement ran its course. That silence matters. With economic discontent growing, the only card the BJP has is communalism and Hindu-Muslim polarization, said Zoya Hasan, professor emerita at the Center for Political Studies at Jawaharlal Nehru University. This singular obsession with a religious minority is dangerous, Hasan said. And the silence? It shows the impunity enjoyed by right-wing extremists who are emboldened as their provocative speeches and actions are never unequivocally condemned by the top leadership. India has fallen down on many democratic indicators. It is now an electoral autocracy according to the Sweden-based think tank V-Dem Institute, while U.S.-based Freedom House downgraded Indias status to partly free. Modis government, V-Dem noted, has used laws on sedition, defamation, and counterterrorism to silence critics. More than 7,000 people have been charged with sedition since the BJP assumed power, and most of the accused are critics of the ruling party. Advertisement In response to the Freedom House report, Indias Ministry of Broadcasting and Information refuted the findings and said the nation treats all its citizens with equality. Last month, it also rejected the World Press Freedom Index ranking, saying the methodology was questionable and lacked clarity. On media freedom, India is now ranked 142 out of 180 countries, slipping down from 133 in 2016, in the Paris-based Reporters Without Borders Ranking. It ranks third globally on internet shutdowns, down from first place, according to a report released in January by U.K.-based privacy and security research firm Top10VPN. Since 2019, when Modis government brought the countrys only Muslim-majority state of Kashmir under federal control, at least 35 journalists there have faced police interrogation, raids, threats, physical assault or fabricated criminal cases for their reporting, Human Rights Watch reported last month. New Delhi accepts none of these rankings and denies targeting any minority group. Somethings got to give. While India is sensitive to international criticism of its treatment of Muslims, it does little to address the problem. It is already a stretch for strategic partners like the U.S. to use the term shared values when it comes to New Delhi, while the big economic transformation Modi talks of is never going to happen when so many Indians are trapped in a politically driven cycle of sectarianism, poverty and joblessness. Its time to turn down the temperature. Advertisement More From Bloomberg Opinion: Indias Leaders Shouldnt Keep Playing With Fire: Mihir Sharma Indias Budget Equation Faces a Job Crisis: Andy Mukherjee Modis India Points to Peril of White Nationalism: Pankaj Mishra This column does not necessarily reflect the opinion of the editorial board or Bloomberg LP and its owners. Ruth Pollard is a columnist and editor with Bloomberg Opinion. Previously she was South and Southeast Asia Government team leader at Bloomberg News. She has reported from India and across the Middle East and focuses on foreign policy, defense and security. More stories like this are available on bloomberg.com/opinion 2022 Bloomberg L.P. GiftOutline Gift Article Placeholder while article actions load The global oil market is suffering whats starting to look like the biggest disruption since the 1990-91 Gulf War. A large chunk of Russian crude and refined products exports are not finding buyers now and signs point to even more trouble by next week. Brent and West Texas Intermediate crude have surged above $105 a barrel for the first time since 2014. In late trading in London on Tuesday, WTI was up more than 10% in one of the biggest one-day spikes ever. More importantly, yardsticks that measure the short-term tightness of the market are surging. The price gap between a barrel of Brent delivered now and one in one year has widened to a record of more than $23.50 a barrel, surpassing the level after Saddam Hussein invaded Kuwait almost 32 years ago. The situation calls for emergency measures, akin to those deployed by central banks during the 2008-09 global financial crisis, to overcome the supply shock. Here are six key points: Advertisement *First, a problem traders call self-sanctioning: Market participants are simply refusing to deal in Russian oil, even if Western governments allow it within the sanctions they have imposed on Russia for its invasion of Ukraine. The reasons include confusion about whats legally permitted, fears about reputational damage, or moral objections. Russia exports about 5 million barrels a day of crude, plus nearly 3 million barrels of refined products. Estimates of the potential losses are hard to come by, but oil traders believe exports are likely to suffer a notable drop by late next week, reflecting the collapse in demand by refiners. They all suggest that at least 2 million barrels a day of Russian oil exports (crude and refined products) are at risk, or about 25% of total. The situation is fluid, and some traders and executives are penciling larger losses, with some saying 30%-to-70% of seaborne Russian oil flows are failing to find buyers as of right now. If the later figures prove correct, the disruption could well surpass 5 million barrels a day. In the clearest sign yet that almost all buyers of Russian oil have left the market, the countrys flagship crude was offered on Tuesday at a record discount of $18.60 a barrel under the Brent benchmark. Even at that exceptional discount, several times larger than the usual couple of bucks difference, there were not a single bid for the barrels. Advertisement *The biggest obstacle to trading Russian oil is shipping. Sovcomflot, the state-controlled Russian company the worlds biggest owner of medium-sized tankers, called Aframaxes is being largely shunned. Other key tanker companies and managers, including Maersk Tankers and Torm, have announced they are, for now, not taking on new Russian oil shipping contracts. When a tanker from an adventurous owner comes available, it costs as much as 300% more than it did only a few days ago, making the trade prohibitively expensive. Beyond shipping, many banks are also refusing to deal in Russian oil, even if Europe and the U.S. gave general licenses on their sanctions to allow energy payments. *The International Energy Agency on Tuesday agreed to release 60 million barrels from its members strategic petroleum reserves, but thats not close enough to cover the potential drop in Russian oil exports if self-sanctioning continues. If the release intends to cover only 30 days, it equals 2 million barrels a day, matching what traders believe are current losses. But the losses may be larger. IEA members hold emergency stockpiles of 1.5 billion barrels so they can release far more oil, and quicker. The IEA should call on China and India to tap their emergency stockpiles, too. The lesson from this centurys financial crises is for authorities to use overwhelming measures. The emergency release is, however, a losing battle: the IEA is fighting an open-ended shortfall with a finite stockpile. Demand management is therefore crucial. Even at risk of bringing back the memories of Jimmy Carters cardigan, western leaders should encourage energy conservation now.*The U.S., Japan and Europe should use diplomatic pressure to convince Saudi Arabia and the United Arab Emirates to immediately increase production well above their OPEC+ current quotas. Its in the interest of Riyadh and Abu Dhabi to help to stabilize the market. So far, both Saudi Arabia and the UAE appear to be siding with Russia. If they do so, they will be on the wrong side of history. OPEC+ meets virtually on Wednesday, and is likely to stick to its plan to increase output by 400,000 barrels a day each month. Considering the current disruption, thats not enough.*While President Joe Biden didnt use its State of the Union speech to encourage American oil drillers to boost production, the U.S. shale patch needs to go into war footing. Many in the American oil industry would be tempted to snap back a we told you so! about forgetting about the domestic industry. Perhaps they are right, but this is the wrong time for recriminations. Get on with the job, and drill. At $100-plus a barrel, every U.S. shale producer is able to pay dividends, reduce debt and boost spending. The industry should not and this is crucial use this opportunity as a blank check; it must recognize that this is a moment of crisis. This is not a return to drill, baby, drill!*Finally, a nuclear deal with Iran would help to alleviate the crisis, guaranteeing the return of perhaps 500,000 barrels a day in a relatively short time frame, and another 500,000 barrels a day in six months or so. But a deal between Tehran and the U.S., Europe, China and Russia is uncertain, with diplomats racing against the clock in talks in Vienna this week. Iran appears to see the current oil shortage as leverage to extract further concession. Without an Iran deal, the outlook for the oil market would be eve more perilous. Currently, it feels like the chances of a deal are a coin toss. Advertisement More From Bloomberg Opinion: Theres a Better Solution for BPs Stake in Rosneft: Julian Lee All Is Not Quiet on Putins Home Front: Clara Ferreira Marques Pleas to Stop Buying Russian Oil Go Unheeded: Javier Blas (Adds latest prices) This column does not necessarily reflect the opinion of the editorial board or Bloomberg LP and its owners. Javier Blas is a Bloomberg Opinion columnist covering energy and commodities. He previously was commodities editor at the Financial Times and is the coauthor of The World for Sale: Money, Power, and the Traders Who Barter the Earths Resources. More stories like this are available on bloomberg.com/opinion 2022 Bloomberg L.P. GiftOutline Gift Article Placeholder while article actions load Texas held the first of the nations 2022 primary elections on Tuesday. The results arent all in as I write, and in Texas candidates must win 50% of the votes to avoid a two-candidate runoff for a nomination, so quite a few contests wont be settled until May. Still, everyone is going to be looking for indications of where the parties might be headed. The short answer? Unclear. Republicans and Donald Trump: The former president was active in Texas, endorsing six candidates for statewide office, 18 for U.S. House of Representatives, and six more for the state legislature. All of those candidates either won or advanced to runoffs. But Trump cant plausibly claim that his endorsements were decisive. He didnt back a single challenger. Most of his support went to incumbents, and incumbents in any office rarely lose primary elections. The rest were in open seats. I dont know whether he selected candidates because he knew they were likely to win, but I can say that open-seat primary elections, especially for down-ballot offices, are the ones in which high-profile endorsements are likely to have the most impact. Voters typically have little information on such elections, so an endorsement may be the best shortcut for choosing a candidate. And party actors may have little reason to choose one candidate over another and may be eager to find a reason to coalesce behind one of several choices. The two highest-profile races in Texas gave mixed evidence of Trumps clout. In both cases, he endorsed the incumbent. Governor Greg Abbott, who has been accused by some Republicans of being insufficiently conservative, drew two radical challengers and trounced them, receiving two-thirds of the vote (with counting continuing, as is the case for all the races here). On the other hand, the embattled (and indicted) Trump enthusiast Attorney General Ken Paxton failed to avoid a runoff, receiving just 43% of the vote. Hell take on George P. Bush, the son of former Florida Governor Jeb Bush and nephew of former President George W. Bush, who has been far more open to Trump than the rest of his famous family. Advertisement Trump did not endorse a congressional candidate in the suburban areas north and northeast of Dallas, where incumbent Van Taylor is falling just short of 50%, perhaps because Taylor voted for an independent commission to investigate the Jan. 6 attack on the U.S. Capitol. He also didnt get involved in the statewide race for railroad commissioner, where incumbent Wayne Christian is falling a bit short of 50%. In that one, shock value may have worked; it appears that the second runoff candidate will be Sarah Stogner, who made a sort-of-nude campaign video that won her some attention. Democrats: The headline races for those interested in the ideological split in the party were two U.S. House contests, each with a candidate backed by the prominent young New York progressive Representative Alexandria Ocasio-Cortez. They didnt wind up telling us much. In an open-seat district encompassing a thin slice of the state running from Austin to San Antonio, the very liberal ex-Austin city councilman Greg Casar easily won the nomination and will almost certainly be elected in November. But in a more competitive district stretching north from the Mexican border to part of San Antonio, it appears that AOC-backed Jessica Cisneros will need a runoff if shes to oust incumbent Henry Cueller despite an FBI raid on Cuellars Laredo home in the middle of the campaign. Cisneros had almost defeated Cuellar two years ago, but it appears that she may have lost a bit of ground since then. Advertisement Both of these contests seemed to demonstrate the candidates personal strengths more than the power of ideology. Casar entered the campaign with strong name recognition and local support in the largest part of his district. In the other race, in another sprawling district, Cisneros dominated in the areas in and near San Antonio while Cuellar was strongest near the border. Its possible that ideology had something to do with that, but its also a good reminder that part of politics involves people imposing stories for their own purposes to explain election results. And that goes for the Trump stories above. Its hard to know how Abbott or Paxton or anyone else would have done without a Trump endorsement, or had Trump endorsed a challenger. Theres nothing wrong with people trying to use elections to prove a point; thats just as legitimate a part of party politics and democracy as voting itself. But we dont always have to believe them. This column does not necessarily reflect the opinion of the editorial board or Bloomberg LP and its owners. Jonathan Bernstein is a Bloomberg Opinion columnist covering politics and policy. He taught political science at the University of Texas at San Antonio and DePauw University and wrote A Plain Blog About Politics. More stories like this are available on bloomberg.com/opinion 2022 Bloomberg L.P. GiftOutline Gift Article Placeholder while article actions load There are many ways in which Russian President Vladimir Putin has made the world a more dangerous, brutish and frightening place. One is by raising the potential for nuclear Armageddon. Two scenarios stand out. The first involves the short term; the other, the long. Wp Get the full experience. Choose your plan ArrowRight In the short term, were all hoping his latest nuclear threat is just a bluff. During the rant announcing his attack on Ukraine, Putin sent this not-too-subtle message to the West: Try to stop me and you will face consequences greater than any you have faced in history. [...] I hope you hear me. A couple of days later he ordered his countrys nuclear forces to adopt special combat readiness. Thats what the world has come to. The leader of a European nation in 2022 not only invades a smaller neighbor which did nothing to provoke him but threatens nuclear war in case things dont go his way. Advertisement Even if it is a bluff, its more frightening than anything since the Cuban Missile Crisis, for two reasons. First, there are questions about whether the man has become unhinged. Second, Russias nuclear policy under Putin has in fact incorporated the option of precisely the sort of tactical nuclear strike he was alluding to. Its defined as a limited (if that is the word) atomic attack to end a conventional conflict on Moscows terms. The Americans have dubbed this approach escalate to de-escalate. Even aside from the moral nihilism, the flaw in his assumptions is glaring. Nobody knows how to limit a nuclear conflagration. Other nuclear powers must react within minutes by retaliating or not, for themselves or on behalf of allies; or by preempting subsequent Russian strikes with their own assault on enemy arsenals. But even if the specter of tactical nukes passes, theres the long-term damage Putin has already caused. Thats because he has probably ruined any chance that the international community will ever drive or keep atomic warheads out of the hands of more and more dangerous people. Advertisement To grasp this part of his legacy, look at this letter drafted in 1994, before Putin was even in power. It was sent to the Secretary General of the United Nations and underwritten by the Permanent Representatives of the U.K., U.S., Ukraine and Russia. Signing for the latter was Sergey Lavrov, who is today Putins foreign minister. At the time, Ukraine, a former Soviet republic, had the third-largest nuclear arsenal about 1,900 warheads after the U.S. and Russia. The world feared that its bombs and those in the other shards of the USSR would be impossible to control and fall into the hands of terrorists. But in historys greatest disarmament triumph, Ukraine, Belarus and Kazakhstan agreed to give up their warheads and join the Treaty on the Non-Proliferation of Nuclear Weapons (NPT). In return, they got assurances outlined in that letter. Lavrov and the other signatories promised to respect the independence and sovereignty and the existing borders of Ukraine; [...] to refrain from the threat or use of force against the territorial integrity or political independence of Ukraine, [...] to refrain from economic coercion, and other good things. Advertisement So much for all that. Putin always parroted by Lavrov has broken every single guarantee his country gave in the Budapest Memorandum, as that 1994 deal was called. As Russian artillery rains on them today, Ukrainians are right to regret giving up their nukes. If they had kept them, Putin might have thought twice about invading in 2014, and certainly about assaulting the whole country now. Every aspiring or incumbent leader across the world has taken note from tin-pot dictators here to mullahs there, from aspiring superpowers to stateless terrorists. Putin has taught them that to disarm is a mistake, no matter what youre promised, because sooner or later youll encounter somebody, well, like him. Even before Putins latest aggression, the NPT was already in trouble. In force since 1970, it recognized the five countries that already had nukes but expected all others to forego their own arsenals in return for monitored access to civilian fission technology. But four more states have since built warheads; more are trying or thinking about it. Advertisement The treatys tenth Review Conference (RevCon in the jargon) has already been postponed four times and is now slated for August. Thanks to Putin, nobody expects anything anymore. The same goes for all other arms-control talks. The only such treaty left in force (called New START) will expire in 2026. And it covers only strategic (basically meaning intercontinental) weapons, not the tactical kind Putin is betting on. Meanwhile, China is arming as fast as it can. Just the other day, there was another echo of Lavrovs mendacity in 1994. In January, the five states recognized in the NPT as nuclear powers jointly declared that a nuclear war cannot be won and must never be fought. The wording harked back to a historic declaration by the U.S. and the Soviet Union in 1985 in retrospect almost an innocent and stable time. But this time the leader of one signatory country was Putin, who was already massing his troops around Ukraine for the invasion he denied even contemplating. With their lies, duplicity and bad faith, Putin, Lavrov and their coterie are doing everything in their power to lose the last, best hope on earth. Advertisement More From Bloomberg Opinion: Why Negotiations Are Both Futile and Necessary: Therese Raphael Putins War Shows West Must Clean Up Dirty Money: Paul J. Davies The Invasion of Ukraine Is a Tragic Sin: Leonid Bershidsky This column does not necessarily reflect the opinion of the editorial board or Bloomberg LP and its owners. Andreas Kluth is a columnist for Bloomberg Opinion. He was previously editor in chief of Handelsblatt Global and a writer for the Economist. Hes the author of Hannibal and Me. More stories like this are available on bloomberg.com/opinion 2022 Bloomberg L.P. GiftOutline Gift Article Placeholder while article actions load Russias invasion of Ukraine has set off the most dangerous struggle between Moscow and NATO allies since the Cold War. The conflict traces its roots to Ukraines decision to forge closer ties with the European Union and NATO, setting a course away from Russia, a nation with which it shares powerful social and cultural ties stretching back to the Middle Ages. In a speech days before ordering the assault, Russian President Vladimir Putin made clear that he considers Ukraines place to be in Russias fold -- a position it held from the days of the Russian Empire under Catherine the Great in the 18th century through the nations shared history in the Soviet Union. The invasion, which has become one of Europes gravest security crises since World War II, shows that Putin is determined to settle the matter by force. 1. How did this round start? Tensions have dominated relations between Moscow and Kyiv since Ukraines 2004 Orange Revolution marked its realignment in the direction of Europe. At the end of 2013, Moscow-backed Ukrainian leader Viktor Yanukovychs decision -- under Kremlin pressure -- to renege on a trade pact with the EU prompted mass demonstrations, which culminated in Yanukovychs overthrow in February 2014. Putin, who accused the U.S. and EU of instigating a fascist coup, responded with the most significant land grab in postwar Europe: the seizure and annexation of Ukraines Crimea Peninsula. The move, which drew rounds of U.S. and EU sanctions, gave Russia full control over the Sevastopol naval base, home to its Black Sea fleet. Russia went on to back separatist groups in Ukraine that proclaimed two independent republics in the eastern Donbas region along the Russian border. Ukraine has suffered since economically, with disrupted supply lines, lost revenue, and resources channeled to a war with the Russian-backed separatists. Advertisement 2. Was it always this way? Not always. Russia and Ukraine share a long common history, though the former dominated the latter in the days of the Russian Empire and Soviet Union. Russian and Ukrainian families share a longstanding level of kinship, even if the Soviets took it further with enforced codes of brotherhood between the two. Some Russian-speaking Ukrainians retain sympathy for the Kremlin, though a sizable majority of the nation of 41 million backs integration with the EU. Almost everybody, even those whose first language is Ukrainian, speaks and understands Russian. For his part, Putin, in his speech setting up the invasion, invoked his preferred notion that Russians and Ukrainians are one people. Its a core element in his claim, derided by Kyiv, that Ukraine is somehow not a real country; in an ad-hoc version of history, he asserted that it was completely created out of Russian imperial land by Soviet planners. Putins claim that Ukraine is a fiction ignores elements of the countrys national identity. For one, the 1930s famine, or Holodomor, that killed millions and that Ukrainians blame on Soviet leader Josef Stalin. In any case, linguistic and ethnic differences have always existed, including between the mainly Russian-speaking population in Ukraines east and the Ukrainian-speaking regions of the west near the border with Poland, Slovakia and Hungary. 3. How does Putin justify a full-scale invasion? Advertisement Putin and his allies increasingly began to accuse the Ukrainian government of genocide against Russian speakers in the Donbas breakaway regions, an unfounded allegation wholly rejected by Ukraine as well as U.S. and EU states. In fact, the fighting between separatists and the Ukrainian military, particularly in the year after the Crimea fallout, left an estimated 14,000 people dead. Russia and Ukraine consistently accused each other of not adhering to the Minsk accords, peace deals brokered by Germany and France that sought to end the violence and establish a political settlement. Fulfilling Minsk would have empowered the Russian-speaking breakaway territories through de-centralized authority, potentially giving the Kremlin veto power over national policy shifts such as joining the EU or the North Atlantic Treaty Organization. Days before the invasion, Putin effectively scuppered Minsk by officially recognizing the separatists self-styled republics. On Feb. 24, he justified the invasion by proclaiming an objective of demilitarization, presumably dismantling Ukraines military capability, rendering it incapable of defending itself -- and unable to join NATO. He said another aim was denazification of the country. 4. Why is Putin talking about Nazis? The Nazi reference was puzzling to outsiders. Russia has for years complained about political ultra-nationalism in Ukraine. To be sure, there is such a strain within Ukraine, and neo-Nazi paramilitary fighters have fought alongside the military. But Russia, whose complaint is tied to a history of Ukrainian nationalists collaborating with Germany in World War II in an effort to create an independent state, exaggerates the presence. Many read in Putins Nazi reference an implied threat to oust the Ukrainian government. It is led by President Volodymyr Zelenskiy, who is of Jewish heritage and dismisses allegations his government includes neo-Nazis. Advertisement 5. Is Putins real beef NATO? Since the collapse of the Soviet Union in the early 1990s, NATO, originally founded to protect Europe against Soviet attack during the Cold War, has expanded eastward into countries that were once within Moscows sphere of influence. Putin has made it clear that he views this as an encroachment on Russian interests and a historic betrayal by the U.S. and its allies, who, he claims, vowed not to expand the organization into the former Eastern Bloc. NATO leaders say no such promise was given and that the people of eastern European nations chose to join the alliance, eager to escape the embrace of their Cold War masters in the Kremlin. Ukraine in 2008 was promised eventual NATO membership. In reality, joining was always a distant prospect, a source of frustration for Ukrainian leaders in recent years. But Ukraines NATO ambitions -- as well as its aspirations for fast-track EU accession -- were a red line for Putin, who bemoaned the Soviet Unions collapse as a catastrophe. More stories like this are available on bloomberg.com 2022 Bloomberg L.P. GiftOutline Gift Article Placeholder while article actions load In wars and other crises, governments sometimes appeal to the patriotism of their citizens to cover financing gaps. So through history theyve sold so-called war bonds to raise funds rapidly for military operations or other emergencies. Ukraine quickly turned to the idea and tapped into global support in its fight against Russia, selling its first batch of war bonds on March 1 to raise money for the armed forces and civilians. 1. What are war bonds? Theyre debt instruments sold to finance military operations and production in wartime, sometimes alongside a propaganda campaign that promotes their direct purchase by individuals as a civic duty. They can also be sold to institutional investors, as was the case with Ukraines sale, which raised 8.1 billion hryvnia ($277 million). While they vary in structure, war bonds tend to have lower yields and longer maturities than other government debt, potentially stretching repayment over decades. Ukraines war bonds have similar characteristics to the debt it sells regularly in peacetime and will mature in one year. Advertisement 2. Why did Ukraine sell war bonds? The sale was part of a wider crowdfunding effort to capitalize on domestic and international support for Ukraine as it comes under heavy bombardment. The government is looking to sell more war bonds once it has fixed bottlenecks at the banks handling the sales, Yuri Butsa, the countrys debt chief, told Bloomberg TV. It may target foreign investors with bonds denominated in dollars or euros. The war bonds sold on March 1 yielded 11% and had a par value of 1,000 hryvnia, or about $33. After the Russian invasion, Ukraines outstanding bonds tumbled to trade at 30-35 cents on the euro and dollar -- well into distressed territory. By traditional metrics, the Kyiv government would struggle to sell regular bonds. Ukraines credit ratings were cut further into non-investment grade, or junk, territory as the invasion began, meaning many large institutional investors cant buy the debt. 3. How have war bonds been used through history? Advertisement The U.K. most famously sold National War Bonds to help fund its participation in World War I. They paid a yield of 5% and the sale was supported by a huge advertising campaign intended to inspire patriotic fervor. When they were redeemed almost a century later, they were still owned by 120,000 investors. The U.S. sold liberty bonds during World War I and defense bonds during World War II. They were recast as war bonds after the bombing of Pearl Harbor and were bought by over 84 million Americans. 4. Are there modern equivalents? Governments have used patriotic appeals to try to sell a wide range of novel debt instruments in difficult times. Italy sold bonds backed by revenue from the countrys national lottery in 2001 when it was the European Unions most indebted nation. Greece attempted in 2012 to sell diaspora bonds to draw in funds from citizens living abroad during the depths of that countrys debt crisis. In 2015, after the price of oil sank by half, Russia looked at selling bonds to ordinary people at the post office to plug its finances. In 2020, U.S. economic adviser Larry Kudlow proposed selling debt with a structure similar to war bonds to help support the economy through the coronavirus pandemic. In the end, the stimulus package was funded using regular Treasury bills. The EU mulled a sale of what became known as coronabonds during the pandemic, a controversial risk-sharing instrument. While that idea didnt fly, the blocs 27 members have embarked on their biggest-ever splurge in joint borrowing, known as the NextGenerationEU bond program. Advertisement 5. Are war bonds controversial? Yes. They can be volatile by nature since theyre often sold when a countrys economic and political fortunes -- or even its very existence -- are most unpredictable. Increasingly, investors need to be mindful of environmental, social and governance guidelines when dealing with such situations. Ukraines war bonds offer a way to lend money directly to the countrys embattled government and potentially reap an outsized return at the same time. Some retail investors scouring investment forums such as Reddit were trying to get in on the action. More stories like this are available on bloomberg.com 2022 Bloomberg L.P. GiftOutline Gift Article Placeholder while article actions load Hong Kong is bracing for a potential lockdown in March as the city struggles to contain its worst Covid-19 outbreak yet, with daily infections surging to five digits and deaths rising. While local officials say they havent made any firm decisions, residents are stripping supermarket shelves bare of supplies including fresh produce, meat, bread and over-the-counter medicines. Over the past two years the global financial hub has announced a series of unprecedented pandemic control measures to align with Chinas Covid Zero strategy, even as much of the rest of the world opts to live with the highly infectious but milder omicron variant. A stay-at-home order would be challenging to Hong Kongs people and economy for a variety of reasons. 1. What will the lockdown be like? Its not yet clear, but domestic media reports have indicated it may not be the strictest version, where residents arent allowed out of their homes at all. Advertisement According to local news outlet HK01, a limited four-day lockdown will be imposed at the start of a compulsory Covid-19 testing blitz between March 26 and April 3. Residents will have to stay at home for the first four days of the nine-day testing period, except from going to pharmacies or supermarkets, HK01 said. The population will be screened three times, Sing Tao Daily and other media including the South China Morning Post reported. The government is still deciding how widespread the lockdown will be and whether to halt public transport, according to the SCMP. Core businesses such as the stock exchange will be exempted, according to Sing Tao. In a statement March 1 confirming the government is assessing possible arrangements for a lockdown, it said Hong Kongs status as an international financial center would be taken into consideration in the mass testing. Those who provide necessary and emergency services, including tens of thousands of civil servants, cannot be grounded, the citys leader, Chief Executive Carrie Lam, said on Feb. 28. The government is considering other exceptions for police and frontline medical workers, and for such activities as going out for groceries and seeing a doctor, said Albert Au, principal medical and health officer of communicable disease at the Hong Kong health department. 2. Will it really happen? Advertisement Besides whats popped up in local media reports, Hong Kongs leaders have already been hinting about the possibility of a lockdown. Two weeks after insisting there were no plans for a wholesale lockdown, Lam changed tack at her Feb. 28 briefing. Citing health experts, she said limiting peoples movements is one of the most effective ways to curb community transmission while officials are carrying out city-wide testing. Secretary for Food and Health Sophia Chan told a radio program the government wouldnt rule it out. Au said many details related to the testing effort remain unconfirmed, but authorities would give residents time to prepare once they iron out a plan. Adding impetus is a surge in deaths to eight per 1 million people over 10 days through Feb. 28, one of the worlds highest rates, with the under-vaccinated elderly population bearing the brunt. 3. What does Hong Kong want to achieve? Like China, Hong Kong is one of the last places in the world still striving for Covid Zero, with harsh border restrictions and social-distancing rules in place aimed at containing or eliminating the virus. The approach worked for the majority of the pandemic, until omicron arrived and broke through Hong Kongs defenses. At the beginning of the outbreak, officials hoped the virus could be contained by isolating every infected person and their close contacts. But the approach quickly proved futile as the virus spread like wildfire and the city soon ran out of hospital beds and quarantine units. While the government is scrambling to create more isolation capacity using hotels and public housing estates, and is seeking Chinas help to build makeshift hospitals on eight sites, its also coming to terms with the reality and allowing some infected residents to isolate at home. Now they are trying to claw back lost ground. Officials hope the mass testing -- a measure used successfully on the mainland, though when cases are much lower -- will help them identify every infection hidden throughout the city, while the lockdown stops the virus from spreading further during the operation. Beijing has been pushing for Hong Kong to implement a lockdown for some time, but officials were resistant, people familiar with discussions between the two sides told Bloomberg News. Advertisement 4. Will it work? To leaders of Hong Kong, this approach is their best bet, but it will be difficult. One challenge is isolation capacity: The number of people projected to be in seven-day isolation in mid-March is more than 322,000, according to modeling by researchers at the University of Hong Kong, while the government had only identified some 70,000 potential isolation units. A lockdown could also trigger social turmoil given the citys sensitive political climate, where whole families are often crowded into tiny apartments, some without kitchen facilities. Mistrust of the government is widespread after the anti-Beijing unrest in 2019, which saw months of violent conflict between protesters and the police. In any case, it may not be necessary because the outbreak is projected to naturally ease in two months, with daily infections falling to just 211 by the end of April, according to the HKU study. Still, given Hong Kong is yet to have experienced an outbreak of this magnitude, and didnt prioritize vaccinating its older people, the death toll from this wave is likely to be high, despite the citys efforts over the past two years. 5. How have other places in the world carried out lockdowns? Advertisement China was the first to impose one in Wuhan in early 2020, and since then it has sporadically implemented some of the worlds strictest stay-at-home orders to rein in flare-ups. The nine-day lockdown being considered for Hong Kong would be relatively short, raising questions about its outcomes. Near the end of 2021, the central Chinese city of Xian banned more than 13 million residents from leaving their homes for a month without a special excuse, triggering a shortage of food and medical care. Families were told to designate one person to go out every other day for necessities. Rules are more relaxed in other places. Last year, Sydney, Australia imposed a lockdown of almost four months, where residents could go out to shop for necessities, exercise and carry out essential activities. They could also get takeout items like coffee. In Europe and other places that deployed pandemic lockdowns, residents were still allowed out to shop for groceries and exercise, with some exceptions. Bloomberg Opinions Matthew Brooker on Hong Kongs budget and lockdown anxiety, while Anjani Trivedi is worried Hong Kong is surrendering its future. More QuickTakes on what we know about omicron and Covid Zero. Hong Kong plummets in Bloombergs Covid Resilience Ranking. More stories like this are available on bloomberg.com 2022 Bloomberg L.P. GiftOutline Gift Article Placeholder while article actions load Hong Kong is bracing for a potential lockdown in March as the city struggles to contain its worst Covid-19 outbreak yet, with daily infections surging to five digits and deaths rising. While local officials say they havent made any firm decisions, residents are stripping supermarket shelves bare of supplies including fresh produce, meat, bread and over-the-counter medicines. Over the past two years the global financial hub has announced a series of unprecedented pandemic control measures to align with Chinas Covid Zero strategy, even as much of the rest of the world opts to live with the highly infectious but milder omicron variant. A stay-at-home order would be challenging to Hong Kongs people and economy for a variety of reasons. 1. What will the lockdown be like? Its not yet clear, but domestic media reports have indicated it may not be the strictest version where residents arent allowed out of their homes at all. The lockdown could be imposed to facilitate the mandatory Covid testing push that is set to begin after March 17. The citys 7.4 million people will be screened three times over nine days, with the stay-at-home order in place to maximize impact, Sing Tao Daily and other media including the South China Morning Post reported. The government is still deciding how widespread the lockdown will be and whether to take steps such as halting public transport, according to the SCMP. But core businesses such as the Hong Kong stock exchange will be exempted, according to Sing Tao. In a statement March 1 confirming the government is assessing possible arrangements for a lockdown, it said Hong Kongs status as an international financial center would be taken into consideration in the mass testing. Those who provide necessary and emergency services, including tens of thousands of civil servants, cannot be grounded, the citys leader, Chief Executive Carrie Lam, said on Feb. 28. The government is considering other exceptions for police and frontline medical workers, and for such activities as going out for groceries and seeing a doctor, said Albert Au, principal medical and health officer of communicable disease at the Hong Kong health department. Advertisement 2. Will it really happen? Besides whats popped up in local media reports, Hong Kongs leaders have already been hinting about the possibility of a lockdown. Two weeks after insisting there were no plans for a wholesale lockdown, Lam changed tack at her Feb. 28 briefing. Citing health experts, she said limiting peoples movements is one of the most effective ways to curb community transmission while officials are carrying out city-wide testing. Secretary for Food and Health Sophia Chan told a radio program the government wouldnt rule it out. Au said many details related to the testing effort remain unconfirmed, but authorities would give residents time to prepare once they iron out a plan. Adding impetus is a surge in deaths to eight per 1 million people over 10 days through Feb. 28, one of the worlds highest rates, with the under-vaccinated elderly population bearing the brunt. 3. What does Hong Kong want to achieve? Advertisement Like China, Hong Kong is one of the last places in the world still striving for Covid Zero, with harsh border restrictions and social-distancing rules in place aimed at containing or eliminating the virus. The approach worked for the majority of the pandemic, until omicron arrived and broke through Hong Kongs defenses. At the beginning of the outbreak, officials hoped the virus could be contained by isolating every infected person and their close contacts. But the approach quickly proved futile as the virus spread like wildfire and the city soon ran out of hospital beds and quarantine units. While the government is scrambling to create more isolation capacity using hotels and public housing estates, and is seeking Chinas help to build makeshift hospitals on eight sites, its also coming to terms with the reality and allowing some infected residents to isolate at home. Now they are trying to claw back lost ground. Officials hope the mass testing -- a measure used successfully on the mainland, though when cases are much lower -- will help them identify every infection hidden throughout the city, while the lockdown stops the virus from spreading further during the operation. Beijing has been pushing for Hong Kong to implement a lockdown for some time, but officials were resistant, people familiar with discussions between the two sides told Bloomberg News. 4. Will it work? To leaders of Hong Kong, this approach is their best bet, but it will be difficult. One challenge is isolation capacity: The number of people projected to be in seven-day isolation in mid-March is more than 322,000, according to modeling by researchers at the University of Hong Kong, while the government had only identified some 70,000 potential isolation units. A lockdown could also trigger social turmoil given the citys sensitive political climate, where whole families are often crowded into tiny apartments, some without kitchen facilities. Mistrust of the government is widespread after the anti-Beijing unrest in 2019, which saw months of violent conflict between protesters and the police. In any case, it may not be necessary because the outbreak is projected to naturally ease in two months, with daily infections falling to just 211 by the end of April, according to the HKU study. Still, given Hong Kong is yet to have experienced an outbreak of this magnitude, and didnt prioritize vaccinating its older people, the death toll from this wave is likely to be high, despite the citys efforts over the past two years. Advertisement 5. How have other places in the world carried out lockdowns? China was the first to impose one in Wuhan in early 2020, and since then it has sporadically implemented some of the worlds strictest stay-at-home orders to rein in flare-ups. The nine-day lockdown being considered for Hong Kong would be relatively short, raising questions about its outcomes. Near the end of 2021, the central Chinese city of Xian banned more than 13 million residents from leaving their homes for a month without a special excuse, triggering a shortage of food and medical care. Families were told to designate one person to go out every other day for necessities. Rules are more relaxed in other places. Last year, Sydney, Australia imposed a lockdown of almost four months, where residents could go out to shop for necessities, exercise and carry out essential activities. They could also get takeout items like coffee. In Europe and other places that deployed pandemic lockdowns, residents were still allowed out to shop for groceries and exercise, with some exceptions. Bloomberg Opinions Matthew Brooker on Hong Kongs budget and lockdown anxiety, while Anjani Trivedi is worried Hong Kong is surrendering its future. More QuickTakes on what we know about omicron and Covid Zero. Hong Kong plummets in Bloombergs Covid Resilience Ranking. More stories like this are available on bloomberg.com 2022 Bloomberg L.P. GiftOutline Gift Article Placeholder while article actions load Money is edging toward its biggest reinvention in centuries. Modern technology and even the coronavirus pandemic are pushing consumers to go cashless, and with alternative concepts like Bitcoin taking hold, central banks are acting quickly to ensure they dont fall behind. Their promise is a payment system that is safer, more resilient and cheaper than private alternatives. The central banks of the Bahamas, the Eastern Caribbean Currency Union and Nigeria have already become pioneers in central bank digital currency, or CBDC, while China, the euro area and others are experimenting in the field. The U.S. Federal Reserve and Bank of England, meanwhile, are proceeding far more cautiously. 1. What would central bank digital money be like? Not so different, at least on the surface, from keeping electronic money in a bank account and using cards, smartphones or apps to send that bank money into the world. The key difference is that central bank-provided money -- like cash -- is a risk-free asset. For example, a physical dollar bill is always worth one dollar. A dollar in a commercial bank account, while in theory convertible into paper cash on demand, is subject to that banks solvency and liquidity risks, meaning consumers might not always be able to access it, or could even lose it on rare occasions. CBDCs, like banknotes and coins, would be the direct liability of the central bank. Advertisement 2. How would this change payments? CBDCs could come in more than one form, but one goal of all of them would be to make payments happen faster. In the current system, commercial banks settle their net payments with one another using central bank money, but this process is typically not instantaneous for technological and operational reasons, and therefore opens up a credit risk during the duration of the settlement. 3. What does this have to do with cryptocurrencies? Aside from the potential technological design, not much. CBDCs are conceptually different from a cryptocurrency like Bitcoin, which is too volatile to be a store of value and insufficiently widely accepted to be useful for payments. Bitcoin is more in the realm of a speculative asset. A key appeal among Bitcoins supporters is its decentralization, meaning theres no central party that controls it, with transactions recorded on a publicly distributed ledger. CBDCs are controlled by a central bank. While some countries are experimenting with either full or partial use of distributed ledger technology, known as blockchain, for their CBDCs, its not a given that they will ultimately use it. The European Central Bank, for instance, has raised concerns about the environmental footprint of running a parallel blockchain infrastructure, and already has another system which it launched in 2018 that could be more suitable. Advertisement 4. What are the different kinds of CBDCs? There are two main tracks: wholesale and retail. In retail projects, CBDCs would be issued through what would effectively be accounts at a central bank for the general public -- or accounts at commercial banks working with the central bank. A CBDC-based system has no credit risk: funds are not on the balance sheet of an intermediary, and transactions are settled directly and instantly on the central banks balance sheet. A retail approach could be particularly helpful for consumers who dont have access to traditional banking services. Some countries, such as Denmark, have ruled that out, however, as it could leave banks vulnerable to depositors potentially fleeing to central bank accounts. Other central banks have said they will impose upper limits on holdings to prevent such financial stability risks. In wholesale projects, access to the digital currency would be limited to banks and other institutions to make payment flows within the existing financial system faster and cheaper, but with less disruption to the sectors overall structure. 5. Whos trying this? Advertisement According to the IMF, some 100 countries are at varying stages of CBDC exploration. India surprised the payments world by announcing that its central bank will issue a digital rupee as early as the coming financial year, while China rolled out its digital yuan to athletes and spectators before the 2022 Beijing Winter Olympics to test its appeal among foreigners. Some of the islands in the Eastern Caribbean that share a central bank have already launched their own digital currency, DCash. That was expanded to St. Vincent and the Grenadines last year after a volcano eruption forced thousands of people to be evacuated from their homes, and the roll-out was seen as an important part of rebuilding efforts. 6. Whos not? The Fed, for one, has been slow to warm to the idea of a digital currency, but it recently took a key step by publishing a 35-page discussion paper in which it outlined a series of potential benefits. Still, it made no firm conclusions on whether issuing such a currency was prudent and in any case said it wouldnt proceed without support from the White House and Congress. The Bank of Canada has also not found a pressing case for a digital currency yet, but continues to build the technical capacity to issue a CBDC, and monitor developments that could increase its urgency. Advertisement 7. What would the advantages be? If central banks can surmount the technical difficulties, digital currencies could allow for faster and cheaper money transfers within economies and across borders. They could also improve access to legal tender in countries where cash supplies are dwindling. An IMF paper said the new currencies could boost financial inclusion in places where private financial institutions find it unprofitable to operate, and generate more resilience in regions prone to natural disasters. ECB President Christine Lagarde has argued that a digital euro could become particularly important amid a rise in protectionist policies if these led to a disruption of Europes predominantly foreign payment services. For China, a digital currency offers a possible way to keep up with and control a rapidly digitizing economy. On the other hand, it could also give the government an extra tool for surveillance. 8. What are other downsides? Advertisement The risks of getting this wrong are significant, which is why most central bankers have to date trod with caution. Depending on the model of CBDC, central banks risk either cutting out commercial banks, a vital funding source for the real economy, or assuming the direct risks and complications of banking for the masses. Problems in managing a business thats new to them could undermine the public trust that they count on to let them pursue occasionally unpopular actions like interest-rate hikes. Also, some researchers have expressed doubts about whether current blockchain technology would be able to support a large volume of simultaneous transactions. A Peoples Bank of China official said its research showed that Bitcoins blockchain capacity fell well below peak demand, on Chinas 2018 Singles Day shopping gala, of 92,771 transactions a second. Other studies have found that Ethereum handles an average of 15 transactions a second, while Visa Inc.s network can handle 24,000. More stories like this are available on bloomberg.com 2022 Bloomberg L.P. GiftOutline Gift Article Placeholder while article actions load Suit filed over order Wp Get the full experience. Choose your plan ArrowRight on transgender care A Texas family and a psychologist filed a legal challenge Tuesday, asking a district court to block an order that directed state officials to investigate families for child abuse if they allow their children to medically transition genders. In a letter sent last week to state health agencies, Gov. Greg Abbott (R) noted that the Office of the Attorney General had determined that providing medical treatments such as puberty blockers and hormone therapy could legally constitute child abuse under Texas law. According to documents filed in Travis County district court, Jane Doe is an employee of the Texas Department of Family and Protective Services. Her 16-year-old daughter, Mary Doe, is transgender and has been receiving medical care from the same pediatrician for most of her life. Advertisement The day after Abbott issued his order, Jane Doe was placed on leave from the Department of Family and Protective Services, court documents say. Two days later, a child protective services investigator visited the familys home, court documents say, and interviewed both parents. They also interviewed Mary Doe separately from her parents. The Texas legislature considered two bills last year that would have banned gender-confirmation surgery, hormone therapy and puberty suppression treatments for Texass transgender children, but both died in the House. The plaintiffs, who are represented by the American Civil Liberties Union, the American Civil Liberties Union of Texas, Lambda Legal and the law firm Baker Botts, argue that Abbott has circumvented the legislative process in an attempt to legislate by press release. Advertisement Casey Parks Former campaign chief for congressman sentenced in theft: A former campaign manager for a veteran member of Congress was sentenced to two years in prison Tuesday after pleading guilty to two federal counts in a case saying he stole more than $1.4 million from the campaign. Jamie Schwartz, 42, admitted embezzling the money while working for the campaigns of Rep. Steve Chabot (R-Ohio) during 2011 to 2019. Schwartz apologized to Chabot and his staff before being sentenced in federal court, saying his life became a lie. Schwartz must repay the $1.42 million to the campaign, the Cincinnati Enquirer reported. Chabot, who is serving his 13th U.S. House term, said in 2019 that he had been the victim of "financial malfeasance." Associated Press GiftOutline Gift Article Danny Hong shows where the water reached up to him during flooding in his basement apartment in the Queens borough of New York last September. (AP) Researchers say individuals should respond to the hazard most pressing at the time and be prepared to move locations if necessary. Trusted local news has never been more important, but providing the information you need, information that can change sometimes minute-by-minute, requires a partnership with you, our readers. Please consider making a contribution today to support this vital resource that you and countless others depend on. How beautifully Chloe glows, flatteringly lit against plush red velvet drapes, this so-called Melbourne icon, on her first venture interstate in 135 years. At first it seems an odd proposition. The classic 19th century French nude now hangs at Hobarts MONA, a museum with a well-founded reputation for the contemporary and confronting. On holiday, if you like, from her usual spot at Melbournes historic pub Young & Jackson, where she has reigned for generations on the first floor in the bar that takes her name. Chloe, on holiday at MONA in Hobart. Credit:MONA It was MONA owner David Walshs idea to bring Chloe to Hobart so Tasmanians could savour a drink with her too. He declines to be interviewed about Chloe. Wise, perhaps: a 60-something man not known for his subtlety might get into strife discussing the merits (or otherwise) of a painting whose real-life model was just 17, and whose life ended tragically. Walsh defers to MONAs senior research curator Jane Clark, whose mission it was to lure Chloe to Hobart on his behalf. Partly, says, Clark, it was the boss setting his curators a test. MONA had managed to borrow the National Gallery of Victorias prized Picasso, Weeping Woman, in 2012, for its Theatre of the World exhibition, and has since borrowed from the British Museum and the V&A, and a host of state galleries. Right now as summer draws to a close, even amid the rainy maelstrom that is La Nina, only one song can help you grasp onto those final dredges of hot seasonal bliss, and that song is Paris Hiltons Stars Are Blind. Wait, what about LFOs Summer Girls? some of you might ask, or What about Lens Steal My Sunshine? Good options, but no. Stars Are Blind is the greatest ever summer song, no contest. I bet even Brian Wilson wishes he wrote Stars Are Blind, instead of messing around with vitamins and sleigh bells for 60-odd years. With its gentle lite-reggae lilt and Hiltons unforced coo, Stars Are Blind is the aural equivalent of a mai tai by the ocean on a balmy afternoon. Recorded and produced by songwriter Fernando Garibay, who was already responsible for Enrique Iglesias 1999 karaoke classic Bailamos and who later went on to record Lady Gagas Fame Monster and Born This Way, the song has retained its effortless charm since it debuted in June 2006. The Verdict on Paris Hiltons Stars Are Blind. While its always had its supporters (perhaps most famously Oscar winner Emerald Fennell, who used the song prominently in her 2020 hit Promising Young Woman) and even opened as high as No.7 on ARIAs singles chart, its also been forever maligned, the predictable potshots afforded to a song recorded by a world-famous socialite. Wanita, Australias self-crowned Queen of Honky Tonk, might not be as famous as Kasey Chambers but her fans are obsessive, lining the steps of her Tamworth house, Honkytonkville, with flowers when director Matthew Walkers award-winning documentary Im Wanita premiered in cinemas last year. On stage, she emanates the free spirit and extreme generosity for which she is known in her home town, the latter sometimes to her detriment. Her story, told in the film that follows her maiden trip to Nashville at the age of 46, edited for broadcast on the ABC, is more interesting than that of a road to stardom. Its an inspiring tale of a life lived on the edge. Ive never had any false aspirations that I would suddenly make it big or have a big comeback. I am not a f---wit, says Wanita with trademark bluntness. I could have gone to America at any given time. I was distracted. This movie was filmed during the most vulnerable years of my life, when I was trying to get out of the vocation that I hated. Good luck to sex workers, but I hated that job. Im Wanita: Tamworths Queen of Honky Tonk heads to Nashville. Credit: It was through sex work (that she has since quit), that the trip to record an album was funded. Realising a dream she had harboured since she was a Loretta Lynn-worshipping child, Wanita packed her cowboy boots and guitar, fellow musicians Gleny Rae Virus and Archer the Old Time Singsong Man, and, leaving behind a complicated home life with her beloved Turkish husband Baba (who has since died suddenly), hit the States. Influenced by The Beatles: Get Back, Walker was intent on simply observing whatever was to unfold. Wanita believed in herself so much, but she was saying that no one understood her, says Walker. So I said, Well, Ill listen and see if I can understand who you are. Lots of elements of the story fascinated me. A federal government directive that the offshore environment regulator ignore the oil and gas sectors massive indirect emissions but consider its economic benefits could open decisions to legal challenge. Resources minister Keith Pitt told the National Offshore Petroleum Safety and Environmental Management Authority he expected it to only consider the direct emissions from projects it assessed as later indirect, or scope 3, emissions were managed by countries that bought Australian oil and gas. Gas is good: Resources Minister Keith Pitt. Credit:Alex Ellinghausen In February, Mr Pitt wrote to NOPSEMA chief executive Stuart Smith listing his expectations of the independent regulator, which also included exercising its powers consistent with government policy and considering the economic and commercial environment. Environmental Defenders Office managing climate lawyer Brendan Dobbie said Mr Pitts expectation on emissions conflicted with NOPSEMAs legal obligations. Ill talk soon about Ukraine. About the women and children in bunkers willing themselves through the night by singing the national anthem; the man filmed apparently trying to stop a Russian tank with his bare hands in the northern city of Bakhmach; the young couple, Yaryna Arieva and Sviatoslav Fursin, who tied the knot in Kyiv as sirens wailed and then immediately took up arms to fight in the civilian resistance; the President, Volodymyr Zelensky, who fights for his nations sovereignty while making it clear he does not view the ethnic Russians in Ukraine as other. Sviatoslav Fursin and Yaryna Arieva at their wedding in Ukraine last week. Ill get back to Ukraine: first, some light relief via the latest cancel-culture controversy from the land of the free. Last week, the chair of Columbia Universitys department of psychiatry, Jeffrey Lieberman a renowned expert in schizophrenia tweeted about an American model of South Sudanese descent, Nyakim Gatwech, known as Queen of the Dark. Whether a work of art or freak of nature, shes a beautiful sight to behold, he said. Vatican City: Pope Francis has urged couples to have more children, rather than pets, and called for family-friendly government policies. So he raised eyebrows when he revamped the Vaticans family leave policy with a new benefit giving new dads a mere three days of paid paternity leave. The Vaticans policy sets out the benefits for Vatican employees who have children or must care for disabled family members. Pope Francis. Credit:AP Under the policy, mothers were already entitled to six months maternity leave at full pay, which they can extend by another six months at half-pay. Parents who adopt a child are entitled to a similar benefit. The new law sets out a three-day leave for new fathers at full pay. In contrast in Italy, fathers can take 10 days paid leave while mothers get five months. London: Queen Elizabeth II is returning to work after a COVID scare, Buckingham Palace said, ending more than a week of heightened concern about the health of Britains longest-reigning monarch after she tested positive for the coronavirus. The palace on Tuesday night (AEDT) said the monarch was feeling well enough to resume virtual engagements and other duties, including audiences with representatives from other countries. Queen Elizabeth II appears on a screen via videolink from Windsor Castle during a virtual audience to receive the Ambassador of Andorra, Carles Jordana Madero on March 1. Credit:Getty Elizabeth, 95, first tested positive for the coronavirus on February 20, with the palace describing her symptoms as mild. It was unclear where or from whom the Queen had contracted the infection, but several others in her residence at Windsor Castle, west of London, also tested positive, suggesting an outbreak there. It is six days since the Russian conquest of Ukraine began. Six long days where the Ukrainians have courageously defended their homeland against the behemoth that is the Russian military machine. Until this point, the ground combat, with battles large and small, has largely taken place outside of major populated areas. That is about to change. Currently, the war is split between two key areas, and two forms of military operations. The north and northeast front on one hand is slow and plodding. The southern front on the other seems to be seeing a more imaginative form of combined arms and joint force manoeuvre. But in both areas, there is an increasing focus on cities. On surrounding them and capturing them. In his recent book on urban warfare, British scholar Anthony King wrote that urban combat has become a central, maybe even defining form of warfare in the 21st century. In the 20th century, armies prepared to fight in the field. Today, it seems all but inevitable that they will fight in cities. Written just a year ago, these words are prophetic. The southern Ukrainian city of Mariupol is probably surrounded, according to the latest update from the British Ministry of Defence. CNN is reporting Russian military vehicles have entered Kherson, also in the south. It is very likely these cities will be the locations of urban combat. This may draw in Russian forces that might otherwise have been used to continue securing other areas in the south. ?? @modestomontoya menciono que el rol del Minam es fiscalizar a traves del @OEFAperu para que #Repsol siga los protocolos y restablezca las condiciones previas al derrame. Preciso que cada sector productivo tiene un responsable y en el caso de la pesca es el @MINPRODUCCION. pic.twitter.com/NGOXl54uuR Wilmington, DE (19810) Today Some clouds. Slight chance of a rain shower. Low 56F. Winds NNW at 5 to 10 mph.. Tonight Some clouds. Slight chance of a rain shower. Low 56F. Winds NNW at 5 to 10 mph. The train, which carried the fellow citizens, is already in Polish territory, having entered through the Dorohusk border checkpoint at 4:00 p.m. (local time). Upon arrival in Warsaw, the Embassy of Peru will provide accommodation and food to the fellow citizens. This group of compatriots joins the 7 nationals who have already managed to leave Ukraine. 2. To date, a total of 31 Peruvian nationals have managed to leave Ukraine, who if they wish will be repatriated to Peru on commercial flights a route that in current circumstances constitutes the fastest and most efficient exit for peace of mind of our compatriots and their families. 5. Moreover, permanent coordination is maintained with other Ministries of Foreign Affairs in the region to join efforts aimed at the repatriation of our compatriots. Tren con los peruanos repatriados de Ucrania llego a Lublin donde fue recibido por el equipo consular del Peru. Nuestros compatriotas siguen camino a Varsovia donde los esperan los funcionarios de nuestra Embajada. pic.twitter.com/VLstMc7GCJ Local top story hot WUSD board hears some better COVID-19 news The Watertown Unified School Districts Board of Education and perhaps, especially, district Superintendent Cassandra Schug, could be seen to heave a collective sigh of relief Monday. This exhalation came as she announced some rare good pandemic-related news to the board and two members of the public in attendance in person at the regular school board session for February. Within her message of good news came public notification that face masks will no longer be required on school buses in the district. We have seen a dramatic drop in our positive COVID-19 cases over the past month in our schools and our community, Schug said, adding that, last week, there was only one new COVID-19 case in the district. We have seen an increase in our attendance rates for students and for staff over the past month. Schug said the Watertown Public Health Department has been able to provide release letters in a timely manner, as they have been needed, for families as the districts number of cases has declined. So we are able to readmit students and staff quickly and efficiently, Schug said. We have provided additional options for release letters through the WUSD testing center and through providing our district nurse with testing information. Schug said the WUSD is still responding to the instructional and time impacts created by the surge of positive COVID-19 cases in January. We are continuing to experience staffing shortages for substitute teachers, custodial staff, bus drivers, crossing guards and paraprofessionals, but we have seen these numbers improve, she said. Supply chain shortages are continuing to impact food options/menus across the WUSD according to Schug. Schug sent a letter to district students, staff members and families Tuesday, outlining for them what has been taking place with COVID-19 of late and the Centers for Disease Control and Transportation Security Administrations masking mandate affecting Watertown school buses. This weekend the CDC provided revised guidance regarding face coverings and recommendations for schools and school buses, she said. In the updated guidance, the CDC clarified that the TSA mask mandate for public transportation will not now apply to public or private schools. The WUSD does not require face coverings, and now that there is not a federal mandate regarding face coverings on buses, Schug said face coverings will also no longer be required on school buses in the WUSD. Schug said that, although the changes she outlined had been positive Monday night, past months have been what she called, very challenging. We have a lot of catching up to do, but we are in a better spot than we were last month at this time, she said. Schug said the pandemic has led to some student behaviors and learning challenges being exacerbated by time out of school over the past two years. We are seeing some challenging behaviors and some learning challenges that we are working to address, she said. Staff is feeling the pressures of focusing on student learning and balancing that with student absences and planning for remote and in-person instruction. Staff is feeling pressures of not enough time and increased demands. The district is responding, in part, by this month implementing its online tutoring pilot program at Watertown High School and Riverside Middle School to help accelerate student learning. She also said the districts teacher planning day on Feb. 21 was productive for staff. And our sub incentives and recruitment measures have helped us address our staff fill rate. We are now seeing over 80% fill rates, she said. School district principals present for the meeting echoed the sentiment that the teacher planning day was much-needed. They thanked the board for granting it and said teachers were appreciative for it. Weatherford, TX (76086) Today Scattered thunderstorms early, then mainly cloudy overnight with thunderstorms likely. A few storms may be severe. Low 67F. Winds S at 10 to 20 mph. Chance of rain 60%.. Tonight Scattered thunderstorms early, then mainly cloudy overnight with thunderstorms likely. A few storms may be severe. Low 67F. Winds S at 10 to 20 mph. Chance of rain 60%. " " The yak (Bos grunniens) is as commonplace in the Himalayas as the cow (Bos taurus) is in Tennessee. hbieser/Pixabay For those adventurous travelers who make the trek up the peaks of the Himalayan mountains in Central Asia, it's not uncommon to spot a yak a herd animal that could pass for a large, hunchback cow donning a shaggy skirt and handlebar horns. These hardy, agile creatures can withstand temperatures as low as -40 degrees F (-40 degrees C), and their impressive lung capacity allows them to breathe easier than any hiker they'll encounter even when carrying out their duties as a pack animal. For the rest of us who forgo the climb, seeing a yak is still quite possible in the U.S., for example, small farms in Colorado and some of the northern coastal states are raising yaks in growing numbers. According to Jandy Sprouse, former president of the Colorado-based International Yak Association, they're becoming increasingly popular for their easy maintenance, nutritious food byproducts and valuable fiber. While yaks share the bovine family tree with cows, they are a different species altogether, and fossil records show they first appeared over 4,500 years ago in the Tibetan plateau. Most are now domesticated, but an estimated 10,000 to 15,000 still live in the wild in Tibet and Central Asia. No longer on the endangered species list, they unfortunately remain quite vulnerable due to the dwindling size of their habitat and increased hunting. Let's take a look at some fun facts that show why the highly versatile yak is such an important mammal: Advertisement 1. Yak Butter Is Huge in Tibet When it comes to providing useful food and goods, these shaggy bovines are a bit of a yak of all trades. Their super-nutritious milk is used to make a unique cheese that once dried, can be stored for years. But the thick, fatty yak butter is perhaps the most coveted sustenance in the sparse terrain. Mixed with black tea and salt, it creates po cha, known as Tibetan butter tea. The traditional drink is definitely an acquired taste, but it provides loads of vital calories. It's such a big part of the culture that the Dali Lama drinks it daily. The locals make sure none of the butter goes to waste it's also used to fuel lamps, bring shine to fur coats and create a base for traditional butter scuplture. Yak meat has long been another important source of nutrients, and it's slowly growing in popularity around the globe. Low in cholesterol and high in omega-3 fatty acids, it's a healthier alternative to red meat for us and for the land. Since they're quite efficient at absorbing nutrients, yaks only consume a third of the food that cows do. Advertisement 2. Their Fur May Just Become the Next Cashmere There's a new player in the world of luxury fashion: yak fiber. The outer layer is used to make anything from sturdy tents to rugs to the decorative saddles the yaks themselves wear on treks. But the most valuable prize is the super-soft undercoat. As yaks shed this ultrafine layer in the spring, the fiber is combed out and harvested to make warm, oh-so-soft clothing that rivals the luxury of cashmere. Advertisement 3. Their Poop Doesn't Stink It's not that they think they're better than everyone else, but when yaks are given sufficient access to water and forage to eat, their dung has little to no odor. That's a big perk for those collecting the dried excrement for fuel. The Tibetan plateaus don't have trees, making yak dung the only easily obtainable fuel. Advertisement 4. They're Gentle-natured and Intelligent Yaks are known to be friendly and even playful. They aren't typically aggressive toward humans, but like most mamas, they can get pretty protective of their young. They're also quite easy to train and are good at surviving harsh elements. The herd will cuddle up together during a snowstorm, always making sure to keep the calves safe in the middle of the pack. Advertisement 5. They Sound More Like a Pig than a Cow Despite their cow-like features, there's no mooing here. Known as the "grunting ox," yaks make a low grunting noise to communicate with each other or when they get excited and want to play. Otherwise, they're relatively silent creatures. Advertisement 6. They Have Large Lungs and Hearts Yaks are genetically built to survive in altitudes up to 20,000 feet (6,100 meters) topping the list of high altitude dwelling mammals. Their lungs are so unusually large that they require an extra pair of ribs a yak has 14 to 15 pairs of ribs instead of 13 like a cow just to support them. A greater lung capacity along with a greater number of red blood cells allows them to get enough oxygen out of the thin, mountain air. Advertisement 7. Female Yaks Rule the Herd The size of a yak herd tends to be relatively small, but it can range anywhere from 10 to 100 yaks. Female yaks, known as a dri or nak, tend to make up almost all of the herd. A few males may join them, but most either travel alone or with a few other bachelors until it's time to track down the females and make those adorable little calves. A vital part of Himalayan culture and economy, yaks have earned their reputation as highly adaptable and uniquely beautiful bovines. If you don't get to make the trip to Central Asia to see them in action, be sure to keep your eyes peeled for a local farm or that oh-so-luxurious sweater. Now That's Fun Mongolia celebrates their beloved yaks during the annual Mongolian Yak Festival. After tasting the numerous cheese varieties, you can kick back to watch yak wrangling, a yak rodeo and even a yak race. The views expressed by public comments are not those of this company or its affiliated companies. Please note by clicking on "Post" you acknowledge that you have read the TERMS OF USE and the comment you are posting is in compliance with such terms. Your comments may be used on air. Be polite. Inappropriate posts or posts containing offsite links, images, GIFs, inappropriate language, or memes may be removed by the moderator. Job listings and similar posts are likely automated SPAM messages from Facebook and are not placed by WFMZ-TV. YEREVAN, MARCH 2, ARMENPRESS. Candidate for President of Armenia Vahagn Khachaturyan says reducing corruption, increasing competitiveness, developing high technological economy and expanding the regional cooperation are important for the development of the economy. During the parliamentary debate over his candidacy, in response to the question what kind of an economic policy needs to be run for having a competitive state, Mr. Khachaturyan said its not a coincidence that when Armenias economic future was being discussed after the 2018 Velvet Revolution, he emphasized that only if the corruption decreases, competitiveness increases and alternative becomes more, that would be the best boost for the economic development. Now I repeat the same that corruption must decline, and competitiveness, alternatives must increase. These are the best tools that will contribute to Armenias economic development, he said. Talking about alternatives, he stressed that the country must think of alternatives. The problem is the following: we should have a high technological economy. We can understand everything under it. We have no alternative, we have lost the opportunity, which we had for becoming so, after the collapse of the Soviet Union. We have lost those technological, human, equipment potential which we had during the Soviet times. We must restore this. Our ministry was engaged with this work. There were some, very little achievements, he said. By saying alternatives, Khachaturyan means also expanding the regional cooperation, opening roads. These are the alternatives, the opportunities which will open a big path for our economys development, he added. YEREVAN, MARCH 2, ARMENPRESS. Presidential candidate Vahagn Khachaturyan says he believes that Armenia must seek to establish good-neighborly relations with its neighbors and the countrys development must be seen within this logic. Speaking in parliament during his confirmation hearing as president, Khachaturyan, the incumbent minister of high-tech industry, said Armenia must be able to live in peace with neighbors. Speaking and negotiating is a better way than arguing or fighting or showing force to anyone. We can show force with knowledge and skills, he said. Khachaturyan says the Pashinyan Administrations goal of opening an era of peaceful development is entirely acceptable for him, and that the President of Armenia must also work in this direction. This might be slightly masochistic of me, given I'm setting ourselves up to fail, but I thought it'd be worth making some pithy remarks about what might end up leading the pack. To see whether any of this holds water, We'll have all the latest news and opinions from 5pm on 8 March! Expect the unexpected More of an observation than a prediction it's been two years since the last Oliviers, which means a shed ton of nominees Be More Chill, The Prince of Egypt and Pretty Woman are eligible this time around. With that in mind, we wouldn't be surprised if the awards bolstered the maximum number of nominees to reflect the larger pool otherwise, there might be some eyebrow-raising upsets. A perfectly marvellous time for the Kit Kat Club Eddie Redmayne and Jessie Buckley Marc Brenner Two big stars, a lot of producers, an award-winning director highly sought after on both sides of the Atlantic, shed tons of five stars Cabaret has so much going for it from Tom Scutt's mighty transformation of an entire venue through to its Oscar-courting leads in the form of Eddie Redmayne and Jessie Buckley. If this isn't the big winner on Tuesday I'll eat my party hat. Play revivals Slimmer pickings this time around but it could well be the Almeida's Macbeth, a bonafide smash from director Yael Farber, coming in with the most clout. But you can't discount the National's two well-received revivals Under Milk Wood and The Normal Heart as well as the Young Vic's Hamlet, led by one Cush Jumbo (surely a guaranteed nomination for a leading performance nod). The stars will be out in force Buckley, Redmayne, Jumbo, Saoirse Ronan, Michael Sheen, Sutton Foster, Ben Daniels, James McArdle, Beverley Knight, David Harewood, Paapa Essiedu, Lennie James so many darn stars and that's without listing all those who appeared in Constellations! It'd be lovely to see some emerging talent Pi's Hiran Abeysekera, Spring Awakening's Amara Okereke, Gabrielle Brooks for Get Up, Stand Up! or Back to the Future's Hugh Coles for example nestled alongside the existing greats. Amara Okereke Marc Brenner The play's the thing Going by our chief critic Sarah's top shows of 2021, the show to beat here is James Graham's stand-out Best of Enemies expect a return being announced soon. Comedy hit Pride and Prejudice* (*sort of) may find its way into an alternative category, but wouldn't it also be brilliant to see Jack Holden's Cruise recognised. Other great plays include the Re:Emerge season, as well as ...and Breathe at the Almeida, or Life of Pi more on that below. Hiran Abeysekera (Pi) Johan Persson Let's talk about sets Scutt has a lot of competition in the design department namely WOSAward winner Christopher Oram with his space-defying ice bridge in Frozen, through to a spoiler-ific conclusion in Back to the Future. Throw in the incredible achievements at Life of Pi (a boat sinking on stage, a tiger, some amazing rainfall) or the transformation of the Piccadilly for Moulin Rouge! and you already have quite a crammed category. New musicals galore Deep breath The Drifters Girl, Lloyd Webber's Cinderella, Egypt, Pretty Woman, Back to the Future, Frozen, Get Up, Stand Up!, Be More Chill, Moulin it's been a busy year for fresh musicals. Of those, only two (Cinderella, Chill) are completely original and not either jukebox-y or based on existing movies, but you never know which way the Olivier voters might swing. Of those listed, only one Moulin has won out on Broadway could London repeat the events of Dear Evan Hansen, Hamilton or The Book of Mormon and recognise New York hits? Or will it be another In the Heights or Fun Home... The company of Moulin Rouge! ( Matt Crockett) The musical revival category is crammed Cabaret, Carousel, Anything Goes, Spring Awakening, maybe even Hairspray it's also a densely packed season for revivals. Of those listed, any has a very strong chance of winning though the continuing Cabaret adulation may see it through. This is all a shame it might give much-loved shows like The Last Five Years (a personal fave showing an emerging production, creative and casting team at the top of their game), that had smaller runs, less of a chance of getting into the fold. I am beginning to think David Mamet's significance as a playwright may have been a mirage, a product of a particular time and place when his telegraphic reports from the cultural frontline looked like wisdom. Certainly, once you peer around the sides of that terrific trio Sexual Perversity in Chicago, Glengarry Glen Ross, and American Buffalo, the fabric of his career begins to look surprisingly threadbare. The Woods, a two-hander from 1977, is a case in point. Mamet himself banned performances at one point, and this is the first British revival for 21 years. It wouldn't have been missed if it had stayed unperformed. This is Mamet in the raw, a summation of his vision of the archetypal relationship between men and women, all gulfs of misunderstanding and genetic predetermination. Ruth (Francesca Carpanini) and Nick (Sam Frenchum) are a young couple who have escaped the confines of the city to stay in his family's cabin in the woods. From the first there is a tension between them. Ruth never stops talking, describing her excitement at the escape, her joy at being with Nick, her sadness at losing her grandmother's bracelets on a fishing expedition. She muses on the fact that women couldn't run away to sea, that the Vikings killed their female young. This being a Mamet play, she also broods on the nature of appetite and why people chose to love people who are bad for them. That red flag is clearly raised over the head of Nick, who sits taciturn, his unease and barbed asides contrasting with her desire to "be still and content." He talks about his father who returned from the war, and fell down a well with a friend who claimed to have been abducted by Martians. He expresses his fear of the woods, and demands that Ruth tell him stories to cure his sleeplessness. The mood curdles still further as consensual sex turns to forced sex and to physical violence. All the while, as we watch the battle of the sexes unfold, with her desire for love contrasted with his more naked lust, the characters talk about the forest, the lake, the earth, making them carry heavy metaphorical significance. Their arguments are unedifying and endless. The phrase "nothing lasts forever" shoots through the text like a vein; there were points when I thought this play would. It's only 90 minutes long and takes place over a single night and the following morning, but there's a wearying circularity about it that makes it tedious, despite all the best efforts of the actors who both imbue their characters with more reality than the text suggests they deserve. Director Russell Bolam also tries his hardest, keeping things moving along, much helped by some realistic fights staged by Haruka Kuroda. Designer Anthony Lamble provides a gently faded set, with the cabin's old wallpaper just visible through the slats of the window on the porch where the action unfolds. But it's hard not to feel that all their care and attention would have been better lavished on a more insightful play that had rather more to say about the relationships between men and women than this stale and dated chamber piece. YEREVAN, MARCH 2, ARMENPRESS. Armenian health authorities lifted on Wednesday the mandatory indoor face mask requirement citing a stable epidemiological situation in the country. People will no longer have to wear face masks in enclosed public spaces, with the exception of medical facilities. However, health authorities still recommend wearing face masks in enclosed spaces. The regulation will come into force March 3. In the last 14 days, 11,775 cases of COVID-19 were recorded, a 69% drop compared to the previous 14 days. Quincy, IL (62301) Today Partly cloudy skies this evening will give way to cloudy skies and rain overnight. Low 53F. Winds E at 5 to 10 mph. Chance of rain 90%. Rainfall near a quarter of an inch.. Tonight Partly cloudy skies this evening will give way to cloudy skies and rain overnight. Low 53F. Winds E at 5 to 10 mph. Chance of rain 90%. Rainfall near a quarter of an inch. Senior Information Security and Risk Management Officer, Vienna Organization: OSCE - Organization for Security and Co-operation in Europe Country: Austria City: Vienna Office: OSCE Vienna Grade: P-4 Closing date: Thursday, 24 March 2022 Background: The OSCE has a comprehensive approach to security that encompasses politico-military, economic and environmental, and human aspects. It therefore addresses a wide range of security-related concerns, including arms control, confidence- and security-building measures, human rights, combating human trafficking, national minorities, democratization, policing strategies, counter-terrorism and economic and environmental activities. All 57 participating States enjoy equal status, and decisions are taken by consensus on a politically, but not legally binding basis. The OSCE Secretariat in Vienna assists the Chairmanship in its activities, and provides operational and administrative support to the field operations, and, as appropriate, to other institutions. The Department of Management and Finance (DMF) is responsible for managing the material and financial resources of the Organization. The objective of DMF is to provide efficient and effective management of non-staff resources in support of OSCE programmatic activities. It provides policy guidance on the management of OSCE financial and material resources and develops and maintains OSCE Financial Regulations and Rules and Financial Administrative Instructions. DMF consists of Budget and Finance Services, General Services Section, Information and Communication Technology Section and the Information Security and Co-ordination Unit. The Information Security and Co-ordination (ISC) Unit assists the Secretary General in her role as Chief Administrative Officer of the OSCE, to ensure efficient use of the Organizations financial and material resources. Specifically, ISC formulates and monitors an integrated control framework for the Organization through a formal risk assessment and mitigation process, supported by a comprehensive Common Regulatory Management System (CRMS) comprising regulations and instructions. Tasks and Responsibilities: Under the supervision and guidance of the Director for Management and Finance (D/DMF), as Senior Information Security and Risk Management Officer, you will be responsible for the following: Managing the OSCE-wide information security, and developing and maintaining an Information Security Management System; Establishing common information security policy, vision, objectives and principles across the OSCE; Protecting and managing the integrity, confidentiality and availability of information assets and information systems; Working with executive management to determine acceptable levels of risk for the OSCE; Managing the design and implementation of the program of risk assessment, security assurance (compliance) and security monitoring; Acting as focal point for information security and managing the development of information classification, implementation of ISO standards, cyber incident response arrangements including that of business continuity and disaster recovery; Managing the development, maintenance and publishing of OSCE information security guidelines; managing the development of the OSCE security incident and event management tools with forensic capability and appropriate incident response from cyber-attacks; ensuring that ICT strategy and architecture takes into account information security requirements while remaining responsive to business requirements; Collaborating on the approaches needed to secure the Organization; facilitating the sharing of advice and knowledge (expertise) across executive structures; guiding the utilization of common management tools; and overseeing all common information security investments; Overseeing the development and maintenance of an OSCE-wide documented risk management system; ensuring that the Common Regulatory Management System adequately addresses the needs of the OSCE and proposing enhancements through new or revised Financial Administrative Instructions or other policies based on needs identified through the risk management process and through various activities related to monitoring of internal controls; Performing other duties as required. For more detailed information on the structure and work of the OSCE Secretariat, please see https://www.osce.org/secretariat Necessary Qualifications: Second-level university degree with specialization in information systems, information security, computer science and/or business administration; a first-level university degree in combination with two years of additional qualifying experience may be accepted in lieu of the second-level university degree; At least eight years of relevant professional experience in a large public organization, and/or at a senior management level in a national or international organization or business enterprise; Experience in demonstrating thorough knowledge of the practical application of information systems, information security and awareness of financial management and programme budgeting theories; Experience in developing and maintaining Enterprise Risk Management Systems; Experience in advising on policy issues and priorities and formulating policy, plans and procedures; c8csX1i Dh7qKS Experience in organizing and delegating work and supervising staff; Excellent written and spoken communication skills in English; knowledge of another OSCE official language is desirable; Demonstrated gender awareness and sensitivity, and an ability to integrate a gender perspective into tasks and activities; Ability and willingness to work as a member of team, with people of different cultural, and religious backgrounds, different gender, and diverse political views, while maintaining impartiality and objectivity. Remuneration Package: Monthly remuneration is around EUR 7,800, with the actual monthly salary depending on post adjustment and family status. OSCE salaries are exempt from taxation in Austria. Social benefits will include possibility of participation in the Cigna medical insurance scheme and the OSCE Provident Fund. Other allowances and benefits are similar to those offered under the United Nations Common System. Please note that appointments are normally made at step 1 of the applicable OSCE salary scale. If you wish to apply for this position, please use the OSCEs online application link found under https://vacancies.osce.org/. The OSCE retains the discretion to re-advertise/re-post the vacancy, to cancel the recruitment, to offer an appointment at a lower grade or to offer an appointment with a modified job description or for a different duration. Only those candidates who are selected to participate in the subsequent stages of recruitment will be contacted. Please note that vacancies in the OSCE are open for competition only amongst nationals of participating States, please see https://www.osce.org/participating-states. The OSCE is committed to diversity and inclusion within its workforce, and encourages qualified female and male candidates from all religious, ethnic and social backgrounds to apply to become a part of the Organization. Candidates should be aware that OSCE officials shall conduct themselves at all times in a manner befitting the status of an international civil servant. This includes avoiding any action which may adversely reflect on the integrity, independence and impartiality of their position and function as officials of the OSCE. The OSCE is committed to applying the highest ethical standards in carrying out its mandate. For more information on the values set out in OSCE Competency Model, please see https://jobs.osce.org/resources/document/our-competency-model. The OSCE is a non-career organization committed to the principle of staff rotation, therefore the maximum period of service in this post is 7 years. Please be aware that the OSCE does not request payment at any stage of the application and review process. Additional Information Issued by: OSCE Secretariat Requisition ID: INF00000G Contract Type: International Contracted Grade: P4 Job Level: Senior Professional Job Type: Contracted Number of posts: 1 Location: OSCE Secretariat, Vienna Posting Date: Feb 24, 2022 Closing Date: Mar 24, 2022 Employee Status: Fixed Term Schedule: Full-time Education Level: Masters Degree (Second-level university degree or equivalent) Link to the organizations job posting: https://unjobs.org/vacancies/1645798881844 Implementation Assistant, Vienna, Austria Organization: IAEA - International Atomic Energy Agency Country: Austria City: Vienna Office: IAEA Vienna, Austria Grade: G-5 Closing date: Sunday, 20 March 2022 Implementation Assistant (NE)(G5) ( 2022/0139 (229510) ) Organization: NEFW-Section on Decommissioning and Environmental Remediation Primary Location: Austria-Vienna-Vienna-IAEA Headquarters Job Posting: 2022-02-18, 3:22:07 PM Contract Type : Fixed Term Regular Probation Period : 1 Year Organizational Setting The Division of Nuclear Fuel Cycle and Waste Technology (NEFW) comprises the Nuclear Fuel Cycle and Materials Section, the Waste Technology Section, the Decommissioning & Environmental Remediation Section and the Research Reactor Section. The Division seeks to support Member States in building their capacity to access technologies, to share good practices and to develop safe and effective approaches across all aspects of research reactors, nuclear fuel cycle, decommissioning, radioactive waste management and environmental remediation. The Decommissioning and Environmental Remediation Section (D&ERS) assists Member States with building their capacity to decommission any nuclear related facilities and environmental remediation of any sites contaminated with radioactive material, including NORM (Naturally Occurring Radioactive Material). It cooperates with other sections and especially with the two teams in WTS in charge of radioactive waste management (pre-disposal and disposal). Efforts are focused mainly on the elaboration and implementation of comprehensive and integrated decommissioning and environmental remediation policies and strategies, the development of supporting infrastructure, the promotion of good practices for sustainable, safe and cost-effective project planning, implementation and completion; enabling access to current scientific and technological developments, along with the provision of direct assistance through the technical cooperation programme. Main Purpose Reporting to the Supervisor and acting as a team member, the Implementation Assistant supports several professionals and manages the administrative arrangements related to the programme area. He/she independently processes all administrative actions related to the recruitment of experts, lecturers, consultants, training course participants and meeting participants. He/she ensures that the implementation of actions and tasks, such as training events, technical meetings, expert missions and consultancies, are done in accordance with established policies and procedures and quality standards. Functions / Key Results Expected Arrange travel for staff and non-staff as well as TC related activities for staff, consultants and meeting participants using the Agency Systems, such as AIPS Events Management, TRAC and TC-PRIME. Responsible for problem-solving regarding administrative arrangements according to the IAEA Financial Rules & Regulations. Schedule, coordinate, implement and follow-up on all activities involved in organizing internal/external meetings, seminars, workshops, Web-based meetings, and conduct eTraining Web-Ex meetings. c78vX1y Dh7qKS Initiate, process and follow-up on the recruitment of consultants using the applicable corporate systems and carry out all activities required to ensure timely payment (TALEO, iProc). Create, maintain and manage Excel files, lists and graphs; and input, retrieve and assemble data from databases using commercial or IAEA specific software applications to provide statistical values on Training courses/workshops participation, gender and geographical distribution. Act as focal point and support Administrative Assistant in coordinating activities by compiling and consolidating information from various systems and sources such as AIPS Dashboards, OBIEE reports, etc. related to the preparation of the yearly meeting plan the end of year Contribution in Kind, and carrying quality control on travel documents and correspondence. Act as Team Member providing back-up, guidance and support to other assistants as required and/or instructed by the Supervisor. Competencies and Expertise Core Competencies Name Definition Communication Communicates orally and in writing in a clear, concise and impartial manner. Takes time to listen to and understand the perspectives of others and proposes solutions. Achieving Results Takes initiative in defining realistic outputs and clarifying roles, responsibilities and expected results in the context of the Department/Divisions programme. Evaluates his/her results realistically, drawing conclusions from lessons learned. Teamwork Actively contributes to achieving team results. Supports team decisions. Planning and Organizing Plans and organizes his/her own work in support of achieving the team or Sections priorities. Takes into account potential changes and proposes contingency plans. Functional Competencies Name Definition Analytical thinking Gathers and analyses information, identifying critical relationships and patterns among data and proposes workable solutions. Client orientation Establishes effective relationships with clients to understand and meet or exceed their needs. Finds ways to ensure client satisfaction. Resilience Able to remain calm in emotionally charged situations. Accepts constructive feedback in a positive manner and is able to cope with setbacks. Required Expertise Function Name Expertise Description Administrative Support Correspondence and Written Communication Proven record of editing and quality check of official correspondence Administrative Support MS Office (Word, Excel, Outlook, PowerPoint) Proficiency in MS Office 2010 and the ability to use databases Management and Programme Analysis Project Management Practice in implementation of projects, inter alia, financial planning, financial monitoring, acceptance of contributions, etc. Administrative Support Travel and Visa Support Background in arranging travel and visa for staff and non-staff as well as TC related activities for staff, consultants and meeting participants Qualifications, Experience and Language skills Completed secondary education Minimum of five years of relevant work experience in a clerical/administrative position, some of it in an international organization. Knowledge of the administrative procedures and policies relating to IAEA meetings, highly desirable. High degree of accuracy and ability to pay attention to detail. Knowledge of and experience in using the IAEAs corporate system (AIPS, iProc, AIPS contacts online etc.) an asset. Excellent oral and written command of English. Knowledge of other official IAEA languages (Arabic, Chinese, French, Russian and Spanish) is an asset. English language test (level 2) to IAEA standard. Remuneration The IAEA offers an attractive remuneration package including a tax-free annual net base salary starting at EUR 48132 (subject to mandatory deductions for pension contributions and health insurance), 6 weeks annual vacation, pension plan and health insurance Appointment is subject to a satisfactory medical report. Recruitment will be on a LOCAL BASIS only. Outside applicants are required to supply to the IAEA or to authorize it to seek all information relevant to their suitability for employment by the IAEA. Testing may be part of the recruitment process. ------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------- Applicants should be aware that IAEA staff members are international civil servants and may not accept instructions from any other authority. The IAEA is committed to applying the highest ethical standards in carrying out its mandate. As part of the United Nations common system, the IAEA subscribes to the following core ethical standards (or values): Integrity, Professionalism and Respect for diversity. Staff members may be assigned to any location. The IAEA retains the discretion not to make any appointment to this vacancy, to make an appointment at a lower grade or with a different contract type, or to make an appointment with a modified job description or for shorter duration than indicated above. Link to the organizations job posting: https://unjobs.org/vacancies/1645356306764 YEREVAN, MARCH 2, ARMENPRESS. Iranian Minister of Industry, Mine, and Trade Reza Fatemi Amin will depart for the Armenian capital of Yerevan on March 3 to discuss the expansion of trade relations between the two countries, Mehr news agency reported. In this regard, an Iranian business delegation consisting of companies in the fields of home appliances, clothing, medicine, aquaculture and fisheries, food industry, furniture, industrial machinery, and medical equipment left for Armenia to attend the meeting on trade and investment opportunities. I was scanning the obituaries recently and ran across a familiar name. His picture, taken in his later years, did not ring a bell with me, mainly because Id not seen him in more than 60 years. But there he was, dead at 87 after a long and distinguished career in civil engineering. However, YEREVAN, MARCH 2, ARMENPRESS. The Minister of Foreign Affairs of Armenia Ararat Mirzoyan positively assesses the second meeting of the Armenian and Turkish special representatives held in Geneva. "I assess the second meeting of the representatives of Armenia and Turkey as positive. You can read everything in the statement made by the representatives. The parties reaffirmed that the process takes place without preconditions, that the end result of the process is the normalization of relations, and, of course, for us, the opening of the Armenia-Turkey border, ARMENPRESS reports Mirzoyan as saying, answering the question of MP from Civil Contract Party Sargis Khandayan. FM Mirzoyan mentioned that during the second meeting the discussion was much more specific than the during first meeting. "At the same time, I think we all understand that it is difficult to expect very tangible results even from the second meeting, a process that must provide solutions to the problems of centuries and decades," Mirzoyan concluded. Already praying daily for his home country, Rev. Mykhaylo Khomitskyy welcomes the additional support of Catholics hoping for peace in Ukraine. Already praying daily for his home country, Rev. Mykhaylo Khomitskyy welcomes the additional support of Catholics hoping for peace in Ukraine. For the second time in five weeks, Pope Francis has called upon Catholics around the world to unite Wednesday in a day of fasting and prayer for peace in Ukraine. The call from Pope Francis is very important because the war is not only between Russia and Ukraine, but it is also a war between good and evil, said Khomitskyy, priest at St. Basils Ukrainian Catholic Church in Winnipeg. Prayer is one of the most effective channels to stop the bloodshed in Ukraine. The Ukrainian-born priest, who has family in the eastern European nation, has led daily prayers at his St. James neighbourhood church since Russia invaded Feb. 24. Sometimes, hes joined by church members and others, hes praying in an empty church with parishioners watching via livestream. I know many of us are praying at the same time, but I know not everyone is able to come, he said of the daily prayers, held at 8 p.m. The worldwide day of prayer falls on Ash Wednesday, the beginning of Lent, when Christians are called to pray, fast and do good works in the six weeks leading to Easter, said Rev. Darrin Gurr, director of liturgy for the Roman Catholic Archdiocese of Winnipeg. Ukrainian Catholics follow a slightly different calendar; their first day of Lent fell on Feb. 28. This season is also special because its the first time Christians have been able to pray together in person during Lent or Easter after two years of lockdowns or gathering restrictions, said Gurr, priest at St. Gianna Beretta Molla Roman Catholic Church. As we come through the pandemic, were learning we are a global community, said Gurr, who planned to lead Ash Wednesday services at 10 a.m. and 5:30 p.m. We are mindful of each others struggles and blessings. Canadians of Ukrainian descent have felt that sense of community and support in recent weeks, said Archbishop Lawrence Huculak of the Ukrainian Catholic Archeparchy of Winnipeg. Having Pope Francis dedicate another day to pray for peace comforts Ukrainians Catholics in Canada and in Ukraine, says Huculak, who says it is always the responsibility of Christians to pray and advocate for peace and justice wherever people are suffering. The Free Press is committed to covering faith in Manitoba. If you appreciate that coverage, help us do more! Your contribution of $10, $25 or more will allow us to deepen our reporting about faith in the province. Thanks! BECOME A FAITH JOURNALISM SUPPORTER Click here to learn more about the project. We line ourselves up with human justice and for the right of people to vote, said Huculak, also metropolitan of the Ukrainian Catholic Church in Canada. For us, the issue is freedom and self-determination. In addition to attending prayers at local churches, Winnipeggers can log into a virtual national vigil for Ukraine at 12 noon (CST) Wednesday, organized by the Catholic social justice organization Development and Peace. I believe in the power of prayer, but I also believe in the power of people praying together, said Winnipeg-based staff Jason Cegayle, who will lead a portion of the prayers. Its giving the sense of the spirit of solidarity as we are connected with each other in faith. faith@freepress.mb.ca EDMONTON Alberta lifted almost all of its COVID-19 restrictions as Premier Jason Kenney says his government will propose a bill to stop municipalities from imposing their own. EDMONTON Alberta lifted almost all of its COVID-19 restrictions as Premier Jason Kenney says his government will propose a bill to stop municipalities from imposing their own. Kenney said the United Conservatives will quickly introduce legislation to amend the Municipal Government Act. If we have a patchwork of different policies across the province, it will create unnecessary division and confusion amongst the public, Kenney said in Red Deer on Tuesday. Having municipalities improvise their own policies when its not really their area of primary responsibility is, unhelpful and divisive. And finally theres no compelling public health rationale for it. Kenneys comments came just hours after the province lifted almost all of its remaining public health orders aimed at reducing the spread of COVID-19. There are no longer any caps on attendance at large events and no limits on public and private gatherings. Employers are no longer required to have staff work from home. Mandatory masking at indoor public places is also over, although face coverings are still required in critical areas, including at hospitals and on public transit. Isolation requirements also remain for people positive for COVID-19. Health Minister Jason Copping said declining hospitalizations and case numbers, as well as sustainable vaccination rates, allow for a safe relaxation of the rules. It appears that were heading toward the end of the fifth wave and moving to the endemic phase, said Copping. Alberta had fewer than 10,000 active COVID-19 cases on Monday and 1,224 people in hospital with the infection. There were 83 COVID-19 patients in intensive care, which accounted for about 80 per cent of expanded ICU capacity. Calgary no longer requires mandatory masking to match the provincial change, but Edmonton has kept its bylaw. City council is to review it March 8. Edmonton Mayor Amarjeet Sohi objected to Kenneys announcement. In earlier waves of the pandemic, Sohi said, the premier respected the autonomy of municipalities and encouraged them to take action. Todays announcement by the premier to take away the local governments ability to make our own decisions is deeply disappointing, Sohi said. The implications of such an overreach will go far beyond the mask bylaw. It is something that can affect all municipalities across the province if the government decides to alter the (Municipal Government Act) whenever they do not like a policy a municipality has in place. Sohi said the city is considering a legal challenge. Calgary Mayor Jyoti Gondek also questioned the premiers decision, particularly his call for unity and clarity in health policy, labelling it both an overreach and a little gong show. Why didnt we need unity and clarity and lack of confusion in the midst of the pandemic when our health-care system was being absolutely crushed by variants? said Gondek. This very premier said, Municipalities, I urge you to set your own guidelines. I urge you to create your mandates. You are best equipped to understand what is needed for your citizenry. That was then; this is now. In Edmontons downtown, Talat Jomha, owner of Pravda Hair, welcomed the end of restrictions but added: What I dont like is the idea that the province will say one thing and the city will say a different thing. It confuses everybody. Its hard for us to apply it in the salon here. I wish they had one thing across the board and everybody goes by the same rules. In Calgary, resident John Gittins said Alberta needs to keep an eye on and react if COVID-19 numbers and trends worsen again, but said its a good time to lift restrictions. Want to get a head start on your day? Get the days breaking stories, weather forecast, and more sent straight to your inbox every weekday morning. Sign Up I agree to the Terms and Conditions, Cookie and Privacy Policies, and CASL agreement. I agreed with (the mask mandate) when it was in, but its time we get on with our lives. Weve got to live with this thing now, said Gittins. We could go on indefinitely if we want to be absolutely 100 per cent perfect, but youve got to find a compromise. Megan Dornstauder said its nice to have a choice of mask or no mask, but said:, Im still cautious and Im going to be wearing my mask inside. And I wish they wouldve kept the mask bylaw in place for students in schools until the end of the school year to protect the teachers, protect the kids. With files from Fakiha Baig in Edmonton and Alanna Smith in Calgary This report by The Canadian Press was first published March 1, 2022. OTTAWA A judge has dismissed a groups bid to halt federal use of the Emergencies Act, saying the matter is moot because the Liberal government has already revoked the powers used to quell protests. OTTAWA A judge has dismissed a groups bid to halt federal use of the Emergencies Act, saying the matter is moot because the Liberal government has already revoked the powers used to quell protests. Federal Court Justice Richard Mosley ruled against Canadian Frontline Nurses and member Kristen Nagle, who asked for an injunction last month to stay federal use of the emergencies law and associated measures while their full case plays out. The organization opposes what it sees as unreasonable COVID-19-related mandates and restrictions that have been implemented by various governments. The group and Nagle, who supported the anti-government protests, ultimately want the court to rule that the Liberal government strayed beyond its jurisdiction in declaring a public order emergency, saying the move was unconstitutional. Police have said they used tools and authorities made available through federal invocation of the law to end the three-week occupation of Ottawa by protesters and many large trucks. The emergencies law allowed for direction to banks to freeze assets, and Canadian Frontline Nurses expressed concern that members were at risk of prosecution, or of having their accounts and credit cards restrained, even after revocation of the emergency orders, Mosley noted. Nagles evidence was, at best, speculative about the possible economic harms that might befall the organization and herself, Mosley said in his ruling. There is no evidence that she qualified as a designated person who might have been targeted for application of the financial measures. Some unidentified people at the protests in Ottawa had told her that their bank accounts were frozen after the Emergencies Act was invoked, Mosley said. Aside from the inadmissible hearsay aspect of this statement, it falls short of establishing clear and non-speculative irreparable harm, he added. In any event, before the groups stay motion could be heard, the proclamation of a state of emergency was revoked, as were all orders and regulations made pursuant to the proclamation, Mosley said in the ruling. As a result, the motion is moot and must be dismissed. Want to get a head start on your day? Get the days breaking stories, weather forecast, and more sent straight to your inbox every weekday morning. Sign Up I agree to the Terms and Conditions, Cookie and Privacy Policies, and CASL agreement. The question of whether the broader, underlying application for judicial review of federal use of the emergencies law may proceed to a determination on its merits, notwithstanding revocation of the proclamation and orders, will be decided at a later date on the basis of a fuller evidentiary record and submissions by the parties, the ruling said. This motion order does not address that question. Nothing in these reasons should be construed as a finding in relation to the merits of the underlying application and whether it may still be heard and determined. Mosley said the group and Nagle are not entitled to reimbursement of costs for a motion that was doomed to failure from the outset. However, he left the settlement of costs open until the broader case is concluded. The groups case is one of several before the courts seeking review of the federal use of the Emergencies Act. This report by The Canadian Press was first published March 2, 2022. About 80 health-care professionals from across the country are challenging Health Canada's decision to reject their applications to use restricted psychedelic drugs as part of training in psilocybin-assisted psychotherapy. About 80 health-care professionals from across the country are challenging Health Canada's decision to reject their applications to use restricted psychedelic drugs as part of training in psilocybin-assisted psychotherapy. The professionals including doctors, psychologists, clinical counsellors, social workers and nurses sent affidavits to Health Canada on Monday after the federal agency issued a letter of intent to reject their requests. They sought exemptions last year to use controlled substances in their practices under a section of the Canadian Drugs and Substances Act that allows for exceptions. "For the last two years, we haven't been able to train enough health-care practitioners to keep up with the demand of patients in need of psychedelic-assisted therapy," said Spencer Hawkswell, CEO of TheraPsil, an advocacy group that operates the training program the health-care practitioners are enrolled in. "We need emergency access. After a year of waiting, they're being told no, and that's unacceptable, because so many of them have patients, some of (whom) have died waiting for support. They could have been helped." Psychedelic-assisted therapy involves ingesting consciousness-altering substances including psilocybin, ketamine, LSD or MDMA (the active ingredient in ecstasy) in a clinical setting as part of more traditional psychotherapy. Hawkswell said hundreds of Canadians inquire about it every year because they are in palliative care, have become treatment resistant or are struggling with end-of-life distress. Others ask for the substances to treat their anxiety, depression, post-traumatic stress disorder or other illnesses. "There are only three practitioners on TheraPsils roster ... that are authorized to act as primary therapists and have undergone experiential training," says the affidavit filed by TheraPsil's lawyer Nicholas Pope. "Trained practitioners are clustered in only a few areas of Canada making them practically inaccessible to patients outside the local vicinity." In the document, Dr. Valorie Masuda of Victoria, B.C., who has received experimental training through a clinical trial, says "she has no additional capacity to take on any more patients, and she does not know of anyone else to whom she could refer a patient for assessment, support and treatment." Hawkswell said many Canadians are going underground to receive the therapy "and that's going to continue if we don't train therapists." Hawkswell and Yassie Pirani, a Vancouver-based registered clinical counsellor, say it is necessary for experts who support patients during their psychotherapy to experience the therapy itself. "The experiential component is absolutely essential," said Pirani, who is also one of the dozens noted in the affidavits submitted to Health Canada. "It's believed that by experiencing this non-ordinary state of consciousness first-hand, therapists ... are going to be better able to intervene and, more importantly, know when not to intervene, and help patients integrate their psilocybin experience." Pirani, who helps treat anxiety and depression, said the efficacy of psilocybin is "really exciting." There are medications doctors currently prescribe, for example, that can lead to irreversible sexual dysfunction, but "psilocybin has a lot less risk and this is known in the research." Health Canada recently amended its laws to allow physicians to request restricted psychedelic drugs for patients as part of their psychotherapy. TheraPsil's lawyer, Pope, said the requests take time and require "many hours from multiple health-care practitioners who are knowledgeable and properly trained to assess, support, and treat a patient." But there are not enough to meet the demand. Health Canada suggests in its letter that professionals requesting exemptions for training should enrol in a clinical trial already approved in which they could access psilocybin, or Therapsil can create its own clinical trial. Health-care practitioners already knew about the clinical trial before their request for exemption, Hawkswell said. "They have said that this clinical trial will not work either because of cost, because of location, because of the timing. Clinical trials cost potentially millions of dollars. "We've got dying patients right now." Health Canada says it has granted about 80 exemptions for patients suffering from end-of-life psychological distress, treatment-resistant depression and major depressive disorder. Hawkswell added that some have cancer, PTSD and chronic pain. Want to get a head start on your day? Get the days breaking stories, weather forecast, and more sent straight to your inbox every weekday morning. Sign Up I agree to the Terms and Conditions, Cookie and Privacy Policies, and CASL agreement. In 2020, TheraPsil represented 17 health-care practitioners who successfully challenged Health Canada's intent to reject their application. Hawkswell and lawyer Pope said they are ready to make a charter application if Health Canada does not retract its rejection. "You can't have patients' life, liberty and security infringed upon, and there's little to no evidence the exemption would cause harm to public safety," Pope said. This report by The Canadian Press was first published Feb. 28, 2022. ___ This story was produced with the financial assistance of the Facebook and Canadian Press News Fellowship HALIFAX Lawyers representing family members of the 22 people killed in Nova Scotias mass shooting said Wednesday that the public inquiry into the tragedy would lose credibility if the killers spouse and the RCMP arent forced to testify. HALIFAX Lawyers representing family members of the 22 people killed in Nova Scotias mass shooting said Wednesday that the public inquiry into the tragedy would lose credibility if the killers spouse and the RCMP arent forced to testify. In submissions Wednesday morning, Sandra McCulloch, the lawyer for 14 victims families, said that Lisa Banfield has crucial knowledge of what happened on April 18, 2020, during the first day and night of her spouses murderous rampage which carried on until the morning of April 19. Our clients are steadfast in their view that the commission cannot possibly create a trustworthy foundation for its work in the absence of tested evidence from Ms. Banfield, McCulloch told the three commissioners of the inquiry. The commission has tabled summaries about how the first night of the killings are thought to have occurred, beginning in the small enclave of Portapique, N.S., a community west of Truro. They include information drawn from Banfields statements to police, in which she said the rampage began after her spouse argued with her and assaulted her before she escaped into nearby woods. McCulloch asked the commissioners Wednesday to compel Banfield to appear and face cross-examination, saying her statements require elaboration and adding that her absence risks turning the inquiry into a non-starter for families of the shooters victims. Banfield, however, is facing a criminal trial for allegedly transferring ammunition to her spouse a case that is proceeding despite police saying she had no knowledge of the killers intent. One of Banfields lawyers, Craig Zeeh, said hell object to having her provide interviews to commission investigators, or to appear before the public inquiry, before her criminal matter is wrapped up. He said to do otherwise would put her in legal jeopardy. Her statements to police should suffice to inform the inquiry about what she knew of the killings in Portapique, he said. However, McCulloch told the inquiry there is a lack of clarity regarding details of a car drive the couple took in the hours before their argument on April 18, 2020. She also said there are significant concerns about Banfields account of the conflict with her spouse and her subsequent escape into the woods. The families lawyer said she has questions about Banfields account that at one point, she shed her coat while at the same time being bound at the wrist and constrained. The lawyer also said she wanted to know more about Banfields statement to police that she was handcuffed by her spouse and yet escaped from a vehicle he had placed her in. The commissioners lawyer, Emily Hill, said Wednesday that the requests by several families lawyers to hear Banfield is premature, adding that it would make more sense to subpoena Banfield in early April, after her trial is over. In the afternoon, the lawyer for the National Police Federation, Nasha Nijhawan, informed the inquiry that the union wants the commissioners to consider whether the officers who responded to the killings in 2020 would suffer trauma if forced to testify. According to the documents released at the inquiry, the first 911 call went out from Portapique at 10:04 p.m. on April 18, 2020, and the first Mounties arrived on scene shortly after 10:25 p.m. They began advancing toward the chaotic scene of burning buildings and dead bodies in the community, where 13 of 22 fatalities occurred. Family members lawyers have raised questions about the police response, ranging from the alleged lack of public warnings to the failure to contain the killer on the first night. However, Nijhawan said the Mounties involved have already been interviewed by commission investigators. She cited the commissions mandate, which is to be trauma-informed in its process and to carry out its investigations in a way that causes the least harm. All the RCMP members involved had suffered a potentially serious traumatic event, Nijhawan said. Several lawyers for the families said they would object to general arguments that could prevent police officers from being subpoenaed to testify. Joshua Bryson, who represents the family of a murdered couple, Joy and Peter Bond, told the commissioners it would be a poor precedent to exempt officers because of potential trauma. Police have a very difficult job, Bryson said. Part of a police officers job often (is) to testify regarding violent crimes. Want to get a head start on your day? Get the days breaking stories, weather forecast, and more sent straight to your inbox every weekday morning. Sign Up I agree to the Terms and Conditions, Cookie and Privacy Policies, and CASL agreement. To suggest that these members be disqualified from testifying is very concerning, and it acts as a bar for this commission to fulfil its mandate. Linda Hupman, a lawyer who represents relatives of Aaron Tuck, Jolene Oliver and Emily Tuck a family killed in Portapique concurred with McCulloch about the need to have Banfield testify. Anastacia Merrigan, a lawyer who represents the Transition House Association of Nova Scotia, which runs womens shelters, said its not appropriate to call Banfield to testify as a witness. Requiring Ms. Banfield to relive this trauma and to face the criticism, and the detailed testing of evidence causes other victims of intimate-partner and gender-based violence to fear the reporting process, she told the commission. The public inquiry is charged with determining the facts of Canadas worst mass shooting and with formulating recommendations to help prevent Canadian communities from suffering similar catastrophes. This report by The Canadian Press was first published March 2, 2022. OTTAWA - Canadas ambassador to the United Nations says a no-fly zone to protect Ukrainians from Russian aerial bombardment would need a buy-in from the Russians themselves to have any meaningful effect. OTTAWA - Canadas ambassador to the United Nations says a no-fly zone to protect Ukrainians from Russian aerial bombardment would need a buy-in from the Russians themselves to have any meaningful effect. Bob Rae said a no-fly zone "is obviously a wonderful thing if it happens, but it requires a degree of consensus that simply doesnt exist in this situation." Rae was speaking in an interview from New York earlier this week as calls intensified for NATO to close the skies above Ukraine to Russian war planes and helicopters. On Wednesday, the Russian aerial bombardment of Ukrainian cities continued, killing scores of civilians and forcing an estimated 870,000 people to flood into other European countries as refugees. The carnage continued one day after Ukrainian President Volodymyr Zelenskyy issued the latest of many pleas for a no-fly zone, this time in a television interview with NBC from what looked like a secure bunker somewhere in Kyiv. "As far as a no-fly zone is concerned it would have helped a lot. This is not about dragging NATO countries into war. The truth is everyone has long since been dragged into war and definitely not by Ukraine, but by Russia a large-scale war is going on," Zelenskyy said in subtitled Ukrainian, clad in a green T-shirt and showing a few days of beard growth. Zelenskyy said Ukrainians were ready to fight, but they could not fight alone. He said "that is why a no-fly zone to close the sky" is necessary. The United States, Britain and Canada have ruled out a no-fly zone as too provocative because it would essentially lead to an all-out air war between NATO forces and Russia. Defence Minister Anita Anand said Tuesday that "putting in place a no-fly zone would be a severe escalation on the part of NATO and it is not on the table at the current time." Russian President Vladimir Putin has also raised the stakes by saying his militarys nuclear arsenal is now on alert. That has not stopped some high-profile Canadians from taking to the airwaves and social media to push for a no-fly zone, including the former Canadian defence chief, retired general Rick Hillier, and former Conservative cabinet minister Chris Alexander, who also served as a senior UN representative in Afghanistan. No-fly zones have been enforced in the past with great success, said Rae, pointing to the landmark effort in 1991 in the skies over northern Iraq to protect Kurds from a genocidal regime in Baghdad ruled by the dictator Saddam Hussein. The United States, Britain and France patrolled the skies over northern Iraq, which kept Husseins war planes on the ground and left Kurdish Peshmerga fighters to wage a ground war for the survival of their people without having to endure hellfire from above. "Its important to remember that the successful no-fly zones have been carried out successfully because no one challenged the power of the country that was providing the air cover," said Rae. "For example, the Kurds in northern Iraq, the no-fly zone that was put in place was allowed to be maintained, because it was respected by Hussein, was respected by the Russians, respected by the Chinese, respected by the Saudis, respected by everybody." That simply is not the case today in Ukraine, said Rae. "One has to recognize what the risks of that would be," he said. On Wednesday, the UN General Assembly, in its first emergency session since 1997, voted by a wide margin to call on Russia to stop its attack and bring home its troops. The vote was 141 to 5 with 35 countries abstaining, and was non-binding but reflected widespread world condemnation. Cuba, a popular vacation spot for Canadian sunseekers, was one of the handful of countries that voted with Russia. Meanwhile, negotiators from Ukraine and Russia were preparing to meet Thursday for the second time to find a way to end the war, but there was no sign either side would be able to find common ground. In his recent televised interview, Zelenskyy questioned how meaningful talks could be held with Russia while his people were being bombed. Russias bombardment on Ukraine has included cluster bombs, a cruel weapon that has been banned under a UN convention that neither Russia nor Ukraine has signed. Cluster bombs are munitions that arbitrarily scatter tiny bomblets and have a decades-long reputation for maiming and killing civilians, including children. Some bomblets can lie unexploded for years, if not decades, and they have created generations of amputees in Asia and the Middle East, especially among children who are drawn to the often brightly coloured but deadly submunitions. Mines Action Canada, which advocated for the international treaty to ban cluster bombs, denounced their use by the Russians on Wednesday, saying their use has resulted in civilian casualties in multiple Ukrainian cities, and follows Russian use of the weapon in eastern Ukraine in 2014 and 2015 and in Syria in 2015. "Shopping mall parking lots, city streets and residential areas are now contaminated with unexploded submunitions. Canada can take action to help Ukrainian communities affected by cluster munitions by funding humanitarian mine action operators to carry out risk education and eventually clearance operations," Paul Hannon, the organizations executive director, said in a statement. "Risk education, which warns people about dangerous explosive remnants of war like submunitions, is an urgent need as most civilians in Ukrainian cities have never seen these weapons before. These life-saving messages can be shared during the conflict through social media, radio and television so there is no time to waste." Prime Minister Justin Trudeau spoke with Zelenskyy Wednesday to express solidarity and extend further support to the people in Ukraine. A readout of their call said Trudeau commended Zelenskyys "outstanding bravery and front-line leadership, calling it inspirational for Canadians and people around the world." Earlier Wednesday, Trudeau said he thinks Putin has been surprised by the strength and unity of Western sanctions against him and his country. Want to get a head start on your day? Get the days breaking stories, weather forecast, and more sent straight to your inbox every weekday morning. Sign Up I agree to the Terms and Conditions, Cookie and Privacy Policies, and CASL agreement. Trudeau said Putin likely never imagined that Germany would freeze its lucrative Nord Stream 2 pipeline project with Russia or decide to send anti-tank weapons and surface-to-air missiles to Ukraine. "For Germany to cancel Nord Stream, to talk about shipping weapons to Ukraine? These are things that I think have definitely taken aback the Russian system because we are so united in standing up, not just for Ukraine, but for the principles of democracy that matter so much." The decision to provide weapons marked a historic shift in German military policy that has its roots in consigning its Second World War aggression against Europe to the dustbin of history. Trudeau echoed what Finance Minister Chrystia Freeland said Tuesday that future sanctions against Russian business interests in Canada could cause some economic "collateral damage" domestically. He said he may look at compensating some businesses but added that allies in Europe will feel the economic effects of sanctions much more than Canada. This report by The Canadian Press was first published March 2, 2022. Nearly two years before he was arrested in the slaying of a 19-year-old employee at a city beer vendor, William Sampson received a pretty lucky break for his part in another beer vendor robbery, court records show. Nearly two years before he was arrested in the slaying of a 19-year-old employee at a city beer vendor, William Sampson received a "pretty lucky" break for his part in another beer vendor robbery, court records show. Sampson, 51, was one of three men arrested recently in the Feb. 15 killing of John Lloyd Barrion, who was shot during a late-night robbery at the Travelodge hotel beer store on Notre Dame Avenue. John Lloyd Barrion was killed during a late-night robbery at a Notre Dame Avenue beer vendor. (Facebook) John Lloyd Maaba Barrion, 19, who died after he was found injured at a beer vendor in Winnipeg early Tuesday morning, February 15, 2022. City police are investigating his death as a homicide. Winnipeg Free Press 2022 A family member told the Free Press Barrion was found in a staff-only area behind a protective shield, which has an opening to allow transactions. In April 2020, Sampson pleaded guilty to a single count of robbery in connection to two robberies committed on the same day at a Henderson Highway Shoppers Drug Mart and the beer vendor at the Four Crowns Inn on McPhillips Street. The Crown stayed more than a dozen related charges, and along with the defence, jointly recommended that provincial court Judge Ryan Rolston sentence Sampson to time served of 234 days, plus two years of probation. Frailties in the Crowns case and pandemic-related complications reduced the chance of prosecution had the matter gone to trial, Crown attorney Tim Chuddy told court. Court was told Sampson and a male co-accused entered the Shoppers Drug Mart shortly before 7 p.m., immediately walked behind a service counter and demanded a clerk open the cash register. The clerk complied and the two accused left the store less than a minute after they had walked in. Two hours later, the two men and a third accused getaway driver robbed the beer vendor at the Four Crowns Inn. Court was provided no details of the robbery. Police arrested Sampson in a room at the Windsor Hotel three days later. Rolston agreed to the joint recommendation, telling Sampson he was "pretty lucky" to receive such a light sentence. Defence lawyer Kristen Jones told court Sampson was born in Halifax, spent much of his childhood in foster care, and moved west in his mid-20s. He had worked in construction and as a cleaner and bar bouncer. Sampson and co-accused Ryan Jeron Smith, 40, are charged with second-degree murder in Barrions killing, as well as armed robbery, weapons charges and other offences. Want to get a head start on your day? Get the days breaking stories, weather forecast, and more sent straight to your inbox every weekday morning. Sign Up I agree to the Terms and Conditions, Cookie and Privacy Policies, and CASL agreement. A third accused, Robert Francis, 37, is charged with manslaughter and other offences. All three men remained in custody Tuesday. Barrion and his family immigrated to Winnipeg from the Philippines when he was a baby and dreamed of becoming a chef. He started working at the beer vendor four months ago and had recently completed his training and probationary period. Barrion, a Tec Voc High Shool graduate, shared his earnings with his parents. Ponz Mapuyan, whose sons were close friends with Barrion, said the Filipino and wider community have rallied to support Barrions family. A GoFundMe campaign set up in the familys name for funeral expenses had raised more than $15,000 as of Tuesday afternoon. "We never thought wed be creating a GoFundMe page for our best friend," fundraiser organizer Joshua Lim said in a message posted on the page. "The simplest and quickest way to describe him is that he was the light in the darkness inspiring everyone he met." dean.pritchard@freepress.mb.ca As he enters his final months as Winklers mayor, Martin Harder hopes residents in Manitobas fourth-largest city can begin healing from wounds inflicted by a bitter rift over pandemic measures. As he enters his final months as Winklers mayor, Martin Harder hopes residents in Manitobas fourth-largest city can begin healing from wounds inflicted by a bitter rift over pandemic measures. Harder, who has led the community for 16 years, has decided his fourth term will be his last. He will not seek re-election in October. While the pandemic has been a tumultuous time for most mayors, its been particularly testing for Harder, whos been at the helm of a city divided by COVID-19 public health orders and mandates. Winkler has been an epicentre of public opposition and protests against restrictions, face masks and vaccine mandates. Harder, 72, has seen relationships crumble, and he believes its going to take a significant amount of time to achieve unity. Winkler mayor Martin Harder, who has led the community for 16 years, has decided his fourth term will be his last. (Mike Deal / Winnipeg Free Press files) "The impact of COVID and whats left behind when COVID is over will take longer to heal than the disease," he said. Harder, first elected in 2006, said the pandemic has nothing to do with his decision to step aside. Hes proud of his work during the crisis, saying hes tried to bridge the gap between residents on opposing sides of COVID-19 measures. "Its been pretty divided. I have taken the approach that Im willing to listen to both sides," said Harder. "Im happy with where I am. I have no regrets." Hes disappointed some residents have pushed anti-restriction or anti-vaccine messages or chosen not to follow the rules. By health district, Winkler has Manitobas second-lowest vaccine uptake. Just 43.4 per cent of eligible residents had had two doses as of Tuesday. The impact of COVID and whats left behind when COVID is over will take longer to heal than the disease. Winkler mayor Martin Harder Harder feels hes spoken out about issues and been critical of the provincial governments COVID strategy when warranted. As Manitoba began to emerge from code red in January 2021, he didnt think it was fair non-critical retail was allowed to reopen, but restaurants and gyms had to remain closed. With his own money, he bought and put up signs stating "Be safe. Be Fair. OpenMB." Being a mayor amid the greatest public health crisis in a century hasnt been easy, and its been impossible to please everyone. A council vote or public comment can lead to flak from all sides or be perceived as an act of allegiance to one group over another. "Ive been called all kinds of things right wing, a liberal, a fence-sitter," said Harder. Brandon Burley, mayor of Morden, about a five-minute drive west of Winkler, has watched Harder handle the divide. Burley has been impressed by Harders ability to engage with both sides. Harder describes Winkler as a rounded livable community. (Mike Deal / Winnipeg Free Press files) "The pandemic has provided everybody in public office an opportunity to be disliked by the public," said Burley. "Its a tough region. Ive seen him handle those pressures with grace." Harders legacy isnt defined by the pandemic. Hes overseen massive industry and population growth in Winkler, located about 100 kilometres southwest of Winnipeg. Its population has boomed to 13,745 in 2021 from 7,943 in 2006, making it Manitobas fourth-biggest city. Its annual operating budget has more than doubled to about $20 million. Reflecting on how Winkler has evolved, Harder described it as a "rounded livable community," as he listed projects and infrastructure improvements of which hes proud. They include the Bethel Heritage Park, which features a fountain and pavilion that hosts concerts, the Buhler Active Living Centre, which offers health and wellness activities for residents aged 55 and over, and the twinning of Highway 32. Harder decided not to seek a fifth term after asking his longtime deputy, Henry Siemens, if he was interested in running for mayor. It was the same conversation they had before the 2018 vote. His influence has been undeniable in terms of the way hes been able to grow Winkler. (His departure) will leave a large hole in the city. Morden mayor Brandon Burley "I was concerned when I stepped down there would be no continuity," said Harder. This time, Siemens told him he was ready to run for the citys top job. "That was the deciding factor for me," said Harder. Harder doesnt know whats next for him. The married father and grandfather will remain in Winkler, where he has rental properties. Hes treated the role of mayor as a full-time job since 2011, when he sold his shares in Delmar Commodities, a grain company he founded in 1995. "His influence has been undeniable in terms of the way hes been able to grow Winkler," said Burley. "(His departure) will leave a large hole in the city." "Hes been steward of some tremendous growth," said Siemens, a councillor since 2006. "Hes done the absolute best he can (during the pandemic). Hes led with passion, wanting to do the right thing." chris.kitching@freepress.mb.ca Twitter: @chriskitching Before COVID-19 forced many office workers to stay home, Brad Parks sushi restaurant beneath Portage and Main sold meals to a bustling crowd every lunch break. Before COVID-19 forced many office workers to stay home, Brad Parks sushi restaurant beneath Portage and Main sold meals to a bustling crowd every lunch break. About two years into the pandemic, just a fraction of the original customer base has returned to the underground concourse and Park no longer expects Seoul Nami Sushi to fully recover. "For me, its all really unlucky because I purchased the business right before COVID and I had five, six normal months and then COVID I dont really see (a) future here in downtown," said Park. While restaurants at street level could more easily add takeout options through delivery services, he said scarce parking made quick pickups impractical for outlets in the tunnel system below the busy intersection. "Since COVID, its really hard for everybody All (our) customer (base is) office people but they are now working at home so, after COVID, its really hard to stay open," said Park. Seoul Nami Sushi owner Brad Park purchased the business months before COVID hit. (Ruth Bonneville / Winnipeg Free Press) The harsh reality of years of pandemic losses could lead city council to waive rental fees for some affected businesses. Under a new proposal, the city would waive six months of rent for eight retail businesses that rent space from the city, six of which are located in the underground concourse at 365 Main St. Another eligible business is based in the skywalk system, while the final one is located in the Cindy Klassen Recreation Complex. If council approves, the rent break would last from February to July 2022; refunds would be issued for amounts already paid. Park, whose business is included, welcomed the assistance. The city proposal also calls to reduce the lease termination notice required for his restaurant from 275 to 30 days, since he is trying to sell it. Julia Ryu, whose nearby Lotto Spot! kiosk would also be eligible for the rent break, said she has about 30 per cent of the customers she did before the pandemic. "Before, there were so many people around here all day. Since (COVID-19) started its like a ghost town around here," said Ryu. Lotto Spot! kiosk owner Julia Ryu says she has about 30 per cent of the customers she did before the pandemic. (Ruth Bonneville / Winnipeg Free Press) "Even though I work all day here from Monday to Friday, I cannot make rent," she said. At the concourse store Deals for Dollars, which would also receive the credit, business owner Jong Sung Jung said his customer base has dwindled to a fraction of pre-pandemic levels. "(During) COVID, my sales dropped down a big amount," said Jung. While he hopes his business will outlast the pandemic, he said concerns about crime and poverty have increased. Jung said his business has been broken into twice since the beginning of this year. He said people often sleep in a nearby stairwell, which is sometimes used as a bathroom by others. The area had a strong smell of urine on Tuesday. Besides dealing with a drop in sales, Deals for Dollars owner Jong Sung Jung Jung says his business has been broken into twice since the beginning of this year. (Ruth Bonneville / Winnipeg Free Press) He believes those challenges are why shoppers have stopped visiting the concourse. "Its very slow," said Jung. The rent subsidy will be considered by councils property and development committee on March 7 and would require full council approval. A city staff report said the extended absence of downtown workers has caused a "significant decline in sales" for those leasing businesses, with at least four retail units now vacant in the citys walkway system, which includes the underground concourse and the downtown skywalk. "In an effort to retain the existing retail tenants and not expand the inventory of vacant space the public service recommends that a rental waiver be approved," the report states. Since March 2020, many skywalk and concourse businesses have endured closures, followed by a long stretch of reduced walkway hours, it notes, warning that has put some rents out of reach. JOHN WOODS / WINNIPEG FREE PRESS Foot traffic in the underground concourse at Portage and Main has dwindled during the pandemic. (John Woods / Winnipeg Free Press files) "Requiring tenants to pay full market rent at a time when revenues are down could lead to small business bankruptcies and long-term vacancy issues within the citys inner-city retail portfolio," the report warns. The rent waiver would cost the city about $72,000 in lost fees, though other revenue is expected to offset that loss. Jen Zoratti | Next A weekly look towards a post-pandemic future delivered to your inbox every Wednesday. Sign Up I agree to the Terms and Conditions, Cookie and Privacy Policies, and CASL agreement. Coun. Cindy Gilroy, who heads the citys property committee, said she supports the motion. "Theres just not many people working downtown and we dont know when those numbers are going to come back. This would really relieve some of the people who are renting from us Some people are really, really struggling right now," said Gilroy. The councillor said the city and its taxpayers should also benefit by helping tenants stay put, since the pandemic has also made it a struggle to find new ones. "The six months will give us a little bit of time to help alleviate the stress of the business owners," she said. Joyanne.pursaga@freepress.mb.ca Twitter: @joyanne_pursaga YEREVAN, 2 MARCH, ARMENPRESS. On March 2, the Steering Committee Meeting of the Armenia/Council of Europe Action Plan for 2019-2022 took place in a hybrid format. Paruyr Hovhannisyan, Deputy Minister of Foreign Affairs of the Republic of Armenia and Verena Taylor, the Director of the Office of the Director General of the Council of Europe delivered opening remarks. High-ranking representatives of the agencies of the Republic of Armenia involved in the Action Plan, those responsible for their implementation at the Council of Europe Secretariat and the CoE Armenia Office participated in the discussions, ARMENPRESS was informed from the press service of the MFA Armenia. Deputy Foreign Minister Paruyr Hovhannisyan touched upon the period after the previous session of the Steering Committee in July 2020, noted the humanitarian issues as a consequence of the 44-day war in Artsakh, highlighted the importance of ensuring access to international assistance in Artsakh and the conditions necessary for the full realization of the fundamental rights and freedoms of the population. In this regard, the Deputy Foreign Minister reffered to the statements of the high-ranking leaders and various bodies of the Council of Europe, the resolution on the humanitarian and human rights consequences of the Artsakh war, adopted by the PACE in September 2021, and the Memorandum of the CoE Commissioner for Human Rights, published in November 2021. On behalf of the Government of the Republic of Armenia, the Deputy Foreign Minister expressed the gratitude to the donor countries of the Action Plan, in particular the European Union, Norway, Sweden, Austria, Switzerland, the United Kingdom, Germany, Ireland, Liechtenstein, as well as the Foundation for the Elimination of Violence Against Children and Human Rights Trust Fund. During the meeting, the results of the programs implemented with the Council of Europe in the fields of protection and promotion of human rights, rule of law and democratic governance were presented. The Armenian side reaffirmed its readiness to continue close cooperation in the implementation of the Action Plan. The participants exchanged views on the projects to be included in the Armenia-Council of Europe for 2023-2026. OTTAWA The federal government has short-changed Manitoba for more than a year, leaving a Senate seat unfilled as the Liberals enact unprecedented spending and legislation that curtails civil liberties. OTTAWA The federal government has short-changed Manitoba for more than a year, leaving a Senate seat unfilled as the Liberals enact unprecedented spending and legislation that curtails civil liberties. "For a province like Manitoba, having the full slate of senators in their seats could be important," said University of Waterloo political scientist Emmett Macfarlane. "To take over a year to fill a particular seat is less than ideal." In November 2020, Justice Murray Sinclair announced hed step down from the Red Chamber, effective Jan. 31, 2021. Thirteen months later, there is still no application deadline for any Manitoban who wants to fill his spot. The arms-length body that reviews applications from the public and suggest names to Prime Minister Justin Trudeau still hasnt been set up. "The government of Canada is working to establish the independent advisory board for Senate appointments, for Manitoba and other jurisdictions," wrote Privy Council spokesman Stephane Shank, who said more information will come "in due course." Macfarlane, a leading expert in Canadian governance, said that leaves Manitoba with less of a voice to weigh in on matters such as climate change policies and reforms to environmental regulations. The Senate exists to ensure the national legislature reflects regional and minority concerns, unlike the House of Commons which represents Canadians on a per capita basis. Thats why Manitoba has six Senate seats, instead of the three it would hold under a proportionate formula. Macfarlane said, in recent years, senators have returned to focusing on regional issues, as they had in the first decades of Confederation. Want to get a head start on your day? Get the days breaking stories, weather forecast, and more sent straight to your inbox every weekday morning. Sign Up I agree to the Terms and Conditions, Cookie and Privacy Policies, and CASL agreement. The Red Chamber drifted away from its regional lens after the Second World War, when premiers took on more of a role in negotiating with Ottawa and political parties used seats as patronage appointments for retiring staff and failed electoral candidates. In 2016, Trudeau started appointing senators with no party membership, instead allowing senator to form their own blocs not linked to party caucuses. Many of those groups explicitly call for representing regional concerns, as well as Indigenous and minority issues. Its through that lens the Senate has vetted large pandemic spending, as well as vaccine mandates and the recent use of the federal Emergencies Act. "Now theres an opportunity for individual senators to really represent their province or their region, in a way that is unencumbered from party discipline," Macfarlane said. dylan.robertson@freepress.mb.ca The Manitoba legislature can be a full house for the first time since the pandemic required physical distancing and most members to participate virtually. The Manitoba legislature can be a full house for the first time since the pandemic required physical distancing and most members to participate virtually. "It is much more effective to be in the assembly itself," Progressive Conservative government house leader Kelvin Goertzen said Tuesday. He credited the legislatures clerks and the Speakers office for the online set up that has allowed members to participate virtually, but said it cant replace in-person interaction "Its not the same as being there both in terms of interacting with your colleagues and being able to express the concerns of your constituents," said Goertzen. "I think it does have an impact on individual members ability to represent their constituents to be able to come to the assembly, look face to face at ministers, their critics and colleagues and express that in person," said the member for Steinbach who was interim premier after Brian Pallister resigned in August. (A byelection to fill Pallisters Fort Whyte seat will be held March 22.) NDP Leader Wab Kinew said his partys MLAs have been eager to return to the chamber, but virtual participation should continue in the event an MLA has to stay home to take care of young children or sick loved ones. Such an accommodation could reduce barriers and increase representation among MLAs, he said. The spring session officially resumes Wednesday. On Tuesday, members returned to the chamber for condolence motions to pay tribute to Thompson MLA Danielle Adams who was killed in a highway collision Dec. 9. (A Thompson byelection must be held by June 9). Goertzen said that on Wednesday, the house will debate the "unjust and unjustifiable" war in Ukraine. Progressive Conservative government house leader Kelvin Goertzen says he is looking forward to seeing his colleagues in person. (David Lipnowski / The Canadian Press files) Before it rises for the summer on June 1, it has a lot of legislation to deal with, said Goertzen, who is also justice minister. He says he alone has 14 to 16 bills before the house, including some from his previous role as legislative and public affairs minister. Electoral reform, making independent officers of the legislature more independent and reforming the police services act "to make it more reflective of todays world" are some of the bills the government plans to deal with, he said. The government will also have to answer for its spring budget during the estimates process, Goertzen said. This years budget, expected next month, will likely have a deficit, by including more help for people and businesses affected by the pandemic, Premier Heather Stefanson said. Her government aims to balance Manitobas books by 2028. Its proceeding cautiously in light of the pandemic and potential economic fallout from the war in Ukraine, she said. Want to get a head start on your day? Get the days breaking stories, weather forecast, and more sent straight to your inbox every weekday morning. Sign Up I agree to the Terms and Conditions, Cookie and Privacy Policies, and CASL agreement. Kinew said his party will focus on health care, education and the cost of living. "Well also be putting forward our plans to help ensure that theres a strong economic recovery in Manitoba," he said. And, on a day when the province allowed all MLAs to sit in the chamber and lifted the proof of vaccination requirement to access restaurants and other indoor venues, Kinew called for the government to lift pandemic restrictions that have limited media access to news conferences. The governments COVID-19 rules have regulated and restricted media questions and all but suspended the free and open scrums that are the "hallmark of legislative accountability," Kinew said. "If the governments getting rid of those restrictions when it comes to health-care facilities, and indoor public places, I hope they also get rid of all the restrictions on the media in Manitoba, because at the end of the day, the media are how you hear what your government is up to." with files from Danielle DaSilva, Dylan Robertson and The Canadian Press carol.sanders@freepress.mb.ca Manitobans who test positive for COVID-19 will no longer be legally required to isolate, as the province takes another step in returning the province to a "new normal." Manitobans who test positive for COVID-19 will no longer be legally required to isolate, as the province takes another step in returning the province to a "new normal." Public-health restrictions for indoor mask use will also disappear on March 15, deputy chief provincial public health officer Dr. Jazz Atwal announced Wednesday. Rather than requiring COVID-positive Manitobans to stay home, public health will only recommend they do so. The provinces public health order requiring isolation for people who test positive will be lifted March 15, says Dr. Jazz Atwal, deputy chief provincial public health officer. (Mike Deal / Winnipeg Free Press files) The change is because the province is "moving to (the) endemic stage" of its COVID-19 response, Atwal said. He said isolation orders are not in place for other types of infections, and we need to "learn to live with" COVID-19. "Its going to continue to be a part of our lives," Atwal said. But he said public-health messaging will stay the same: stay home when sick. "You shouldnt be out coughing in different locations. If youre sick, you should stay at home, regardless of what is causing that illness, until you recover from that illness," Atwal said. You shouldnt be out coughing in different locations. If youre sick, you should stay at home, regardless of what is causing that illness, until you recover from that illness. Dr. Jazz Atwal Current self-isolation rules require fully vaccinated Manitobans to stay home for five days after testing positive, even if they have no symptoms. If they do have symptoms, they must wear a mask in public places for an additional five days after isolation. The current rules require 10 days of self-isolation for Manitobans who arent fully vaccinated. Those who break the rules can be fined. Enforcement wont be possible once the order is lifted. Public health expects to release more guidance about the change, Atwal said. Free rapid tests coming Four million free COVID-19 rapid tests will soon be available at Manitoba grocery stores and pharmacies. Deputy chief provincial public health officer Dr. Jazz Atwal said the province is trying to make the rapid antigen tests more widely accessible so that people who are eligible for treatment can get tested and treated in a timely manner. click to read more Four million free COVID-19 rapid tests will soon be available at Manitoba grocery stores and pharmacies. Deputy chief provincial public health officer Dr. Jazz Atwal said the province is trying to make the rapid antigen tests more widely accessible so that people who are eligible for treatment can get tested and treated in a timely manner. The tests will be given out in packages of five tests per kit starting March 7; Manitobans will be able to pick up two kits per household at participating retailers a list of which will be posted on the provinces website, Atwal said. Manitoba is also distributing 18,000 free rapid tests to public libraries in Winnipeg and had announced it would give out tests via United Way Winnipeg. Currently, Manitobans must go to COVID-19 testing sites to pick up rapid tests or acquire them through a provincial small-business distribution program. Asked why the province is distributing them to grocery stores now, when self-isolation requirements are about to be lifted March 15 for COVID-positive Manitobans, Atwal said they hope more people will seek treatment after testing positive. Hopefully this turns into greater uptake of treatment, he said. Theres a limited window in which high-risk Manitobans can receive certain antiviral or monoclonal antibody treatment. Depending on the treatment, it must be administered within five to seven days of symptom onset. The first retailers to get the free tests, according to the province, will be: Coops (42 locations) Loblaw/Shoppers Drug Mart (59 locations) London Drugs (1 location) North West Company (29 Locations) Rexall (18 locations) Save On Foods (5 locations) Safeway, Sobeys and IGA (40 locations) Walmart (16 locations) https://www.gov.mb.ca/covid19/testing/rat.html Close Also as of March 15, the province will stop COVID-19 case investigations. Theyll still notify people who test positive, but wont try to figure out how they contracted the virus or who they might have transmitted it to, Atwal said. Self-isolation requirements for travellers who return to Manitoba were lifted Feb. 15. Saskatchewan has already lifted all COVID-19 restrictions, including self-isolation requirements. When asked about the change, Premier Heather Stefanson said COVID-positive Manitobans should still quarantine. Calling this a transition period in the pandemic response, she said Manitobans want to move on. "By all means, people can still wear masks if they want to, businesses can still require proof of vaccine if they want to," Stefanson said. "Its going to take a little while to get used to this." She said the province has followed modelling that shows hospitalizations continue to decline. "We work very closely with public health, and well continue to make decisions, but from what I see, and I said many weeks ago, that we need to learn to live with COVID and I think we need to continue in that direction," Stefanson said. RUTH BONNEVILLE / WINNIPEG FREE PRESS Premier Heather Stefanson. The virus is not at endemic levels yet, said Winnipeg medical microbiologist Dr. Philippe Lagace-Wiens. "I dont think were quite ready to be calling this disease fully endemic. Its certainly heading in that direction, but Im not quite convinced were there yet," he said. He noted redeployed hospital staff havent fully returned to their positions, hospitals are still operating at surge capacity and backlogged surgeries and diagnostic tests havent resumed. "Theres a lot of pressure on the hospitals, which tells me that were not yet in an endemic phase," he said, adding it would be more helpful to set targets for certain scientific indicators in order to lift restrictions, rather than setting a date of March 15. The NDP criticized the government for "pushing an artificial timeline," as leader Wab Kinew put it Wednesday. NDP health critic Uzoma Asagwara said its disappointing the government is removing the self-isolation requirement without implementing paid sick leave for all employees, without any real justification. "The government can set that tone and be a leader in that way for Manitobans," Asagwara said. Stay informed The latest updates on the novel coronavirus and COVID-19 delivered to your inbox every weeknight. Sign Up I agree to the Terms and Conditions, Cookie and Privacy Policies, and CASL agreement. Intensive-care physician Dr. Eric Jacobsohn said the decision to lift certain restrictions, including the self-isolation, mask, and proof-of-vaccine requirements, puts more of a burden on front-line nurses and doctors, and on the most vulnerable, immunocompromised Manitobans, at a time when the health-care system is still overrun. "It appears that the way these decisions are made is much more focused on individuals versus stepping back and looking at the vulnerable in society, and stepping back and saying, are we anywhere near salvaging what is an absolutely dire and distressed health-care system," Jacobsohn said. "It is about whats better for the community as a whole. We all agree that the days of lockdowns and business closures are long gone, but how can we all have an open society and allow the dysfunctional health-care system to survive?" With files from Danielle DaSilva katie.may@winnipegfreepress.com Manitoba politicians put aside their differences Tuesday to honour a rookie MLA who died in a northern highway collision in December. Manitoba politicians put aside their differences Tuesday to honour a rookie MLA who died in a northern highway collision in December. Family members of Danielle Adams were in the legislature to hear condolences from her colleagues. HO / THE CANADIAN PRESS FILES Danielle Adams died in a car accident near the northern Manitoba city. It marked the first time all MLAs were able to gather together in person since pandemic rules limited in-person attendance. The day was set aside for members to share condolences and their memories of the first woman elected to represent Thompson in the legislature, in 2019. Adams husband Bill Morris, oldest son Nic, 13, parents, step-parents and close friends were in the visitors gallery to hear them. Premier Heather Stefanson said Adams was a "strong advocate for northern Manitoba who cared deeply about her community." The premier recalled that when she was families minister, shed have to respond to questions from Adams, who was the NDP critic for child care, housing, poverty and disability issues. JESSICA LEE / WINNIPEG FREE PRESS Im a mom, I knew she was special This is a big confirmation today of how special she was to other people, even in the short time she was in the legislature, she made a big impact, said Jody Levy. "We do this job so we can make a difference in the lives of Manitobans," Stefanson said. "She leaves a lasting legacy we can all admire." NDP Leader Wab Kinew said Adams worked hard for her constituents and likely couldve been the MLA for Thompson for 30 years. if she hadnt died on a remote section of Highway 6 driving to Winnipeg on Dec. 9. Kinew talked about her devotion to her young family. He revealed that Adams had a learning disability, and how diligently she had to work to make sure that her communications were clear. He cited her inaugural speech in the legislature in which she talked about learning at an early age to stand up for people whove been marginalized, that "you have a duty to stand up and fight to change it." Jody Levy, Adams mother, who is a retired lawyer and NDP activist, used to take young "Dani" with her to political events. She said the condolences confirmed her daughters influence. "Im a mom, I knew she was special This is a big confirmation today of how special she was to other people, even in the short time she was in the legislature, she made a big impact." Levy, who moved to Vancouver Island, said her daughter had dysgraphia which affects a persons writing ability. She got help and managed it but heckling during question period would sometimes throw Adams off, her mom said. If there were less rancour in the house and more constructive dialogue, it would open the doors to a more representative government, said Levy. "As the house starts to become more polite and considerate. then thats going to help other people with learning disabilities come through the house and be able to be successful." Levy said shes heartbroken over the loss of her daughter, and that Adams supportive mother-in-law in Thompson is helping her grief-stricken son and grandsons cope. Want to get a head start on your day? Get the days breaking stories, weather forecast, and more sent straight to your inbox every weekday morning. Sign Up I agree to the Terms and Conditions, Cookie and Privacy Policies, and CASL agreement. Shes concerned that another family could lose someone on the remote northern highway that claimed Adams life. Local leaders have complained about inadequate snow clearing and raised questions about the ability of emergency services to respond. "I want something done so people can stop dying," said Levy. In a scrum with reporters Tuesday, Kinew said he has raised the familys concerns about safety on remote Highway 6 with the premier, northern leaders and cabinet ministers. "I know that Danielle, were she here with us, had the same situation occurred to one of her constituents, shed be fighting that way for them," Kinew said. A byelection in Thompson to fill Adams seat must be held by June 7. carol.sanders@freepress.mb.ca IS business as usual best for business in Manitoba? Manitobas government seems to think so. Opinion IS "business as usual" best for business in Manitoba? Manitobas government seems to think so. Last week it created an Economic Development Board of cabinet to attract investment and promote trade. In the highly competitive post-pandemic race for growth in a newly destabilized world with declining private-sector investment in the province, Manitoba announced it is launching wait for it a new government committee. This is not to say it will not do some good. It will, at the margins. But if Manitoba wants to leapfrog ahead, it needs a new approach to economic development with sharper tools, a brand boost and a new attitude. That is exactly what the final throne speech and budget of the Pallister government was putting in place. It included a new private sector-led investment and trade agency called Invest Manitoba, a venture capital fund and a tax competitiveness review. Each offered a new, different and, yes, conservative way to create jobs and growth. Together, they promised a significant departure from past economic development practice. Once advocated by the provinces business community, these initiatives are now either dead or dormant. The Stefanson government nixed Invest Manitoba in favour of a politician-led economic development board. It remains silent on creating a venture-capital investment fund, despite the province reaping only $5 million from just three private venture-capital deals in the first half of 2021 the least in the country, according to the Canadian Venture Capital Association. And it put tax competitiveness at the bottom of its first throne speech, signaling a lower priority. This is a miscalculation. Manitobas economy weathered the pandemic relatively well. Employment levels today exceed pre-pandemic levels. Last month, the unemployment rate was the lowest in the country on a yearly average basis. The built-in resilience of the provinces diversified economy, coupled with provincial and federal financial support for businesses and employees, worked. But a rebound is not a springboard. Manitoba is just back to where it was before; that does not guarantee it can get to where it needs to be. The inescapable reality is this: growth is essential to generate the revenue to pay for more health care, education and social services and, yes, balance the budget. Its why the Pallister governments last budget said this: "We will grow our way out of deficit and back into balance by investing in more jobs, tax relief and economic growth." The single biggest determinant of that growth is new private-sector capital investment. Three years ago, the province set a target to be in the top three provinces for growth in private capital investment. In 2018, Manitoba was third; in 2019, fifth; and in 2020, with the pandemic contraction, ninth. The province needs to focus relentlessly on private-sector investment to ensure this slippage does not turn into a slippery slope. Which brings us back to Invest Manitoba. This province has a slew of local or sectoral economic-development organizations, pursuing mostly different and unco-ordinated agendas. Unfortunately, the Pallister government itself contributed to this imbroglio by creating a new rural economic-development agency and economic-development secretariat within government, rather than tackling the jurisdictional problem at its core until its Invest Manitoba idea. The mandate of this now-defunct initiative was to market Manitoba abroad by creating a one-stop, single-window agency to funnel new investment into the province and promote trade out of the province. Crucially, it was to be led by the private sector, which knows best where and how to secure capital investment. Governments role was to get out of the way of that investment, by clearing the bureaucratic underbrush of regulatory roadblocks and red tape that prevented new capital from being capitalized on. It would not pick private winners with public money, but instead lean in with supporting infrastructure investments such as road or water and sewage projects. Want to get a head start on your day? Get the days breaking stories, weather forecast, and more sent straight to your inbox every weekday morning. Sign Up I agree to the Terms and Conditions, Cookie and Privacy Policies, and CASL agreement. Helmed by a private-sector board and armed with a new venture-capital fund, it was meant to have the independent drive, business savvy and financial tools needed to attract new investment and promote trade in the province. Most of all, it was to be the foundation of a new brand promise for Manitoba as the best place in Canada to invest, grow and live. In politics, being comfortable is easier than being bold. With the economic world around us changed since COVID-19 and the geopolitical world altering even more with the Russian invasion of Ukraine, reaching backwards for guidance is a risky strategy. The provinces announced approach gives up a breakthrough strategy for more of the same. It smacks of corporatism, not conservatism. Frankly, it would not be out of place in past NDP governments. A chance remains to recover from this missed opportunity. Manitobas first formal post-pandemic budget is coming soon. Perhaps then, Manitobans will find out whether "progressing together" is genuinely different or simply business as usual. David McLaughlin was Clerk of the Executive Council in the government of Manitoba in 2020-21. He was campaign manager for the PC Party of Manitoba in the 2016 and 2019 elections. Premier Heather Stefanson says its time for Manitobans to return to normal life. Its a mantra the premier has repeated several times in recent weeks, as the province winds down the last of its public-health restrictions. Premier Heather Stefanson says its time for Manitobans to return to normal life. Its a mantra the premier has repeated several times in recent weeks, as the province winds down the last of its public-health restrictions. As COVID-19 case counts fall and hospital admissions decline, Ms. Stefanson says its time for Manitobans to get their lives back. That is something everyone wants, but it is not going to occur magically overnight, not without strategic planning and supports from government. Hospital operations have been ravaged by the pandemic. Health-care staff, many of whom have worked double duty and have been redeployed to medical wards or intensive care units, are exhausted. Tens of thousands of elective surgeries, medical screening procedures and diagnostic tests have been cancelled or delayed. Hospitals are severely short-staffed in many areas. They cannot simply "return to normal" without a robust transition plan and significant government funding to repair the damage caused by the pandemic. MIKE DEAL / WINNIPEG FREE PRESS Manitoba Premier Heather Stefanson Nor can many businesses and not-for-profits pick up where they left off before the pandemic turned their operations upside down. Some have gone bankrupt, others have seen their bottom lines decimated by the pandemic, in large part from successive shutdowns or other government-mandated restrictions. Many face mountains of debt and severe staffing shortages. According to the Canadian Federation of Independent Business, close to two-thirds of Manitoba small businesses have taken on additional debt from the pandemic. Municipal governments have also been hard hit, as expenditures have soared and revenues plummeted over the past two years. The pandemics net impact on the City of Winnipeg is well over $200 million. Winnipeg Transit is still operating with only half its normal ridership. The premier and her Progressive Conservative government will have a chance to address those and other pandemic-related challenges when the legislative assembly resumes sitting this week for the first time since the house adjourned on Dec. 2. Returning to normal will not be as simple as flipping a switch and declaring that life is back to the way it was prior to the pandemic. Hospital capacity must be expanded, including hiring more staff and adding medical and ICU beds, so health-care facilities are better equipped to handle patient surges. A detailed plan, with specific targets, to reduce the massive surgical and diagnostic testing backlog must be unveiled. There is much work to be done before the province can declare a return to normal life. Businesses and not-for-profits require support to make the transition back to normal life. Kick-starting the economy should be one of governments top priorities as the house resumes sitting. Meanwhile, public schools and child-care centres require supports to ensure their facilities are better equipped to mitigate the spread of infectious diseases, including much-needed upgrades to air filtration systems. Municipalities require bridge funding to help them weather the fiscal storm. Infrastructure projects across the province (many of which were delayed during the pandemic) also need to be accelerated to help the province get back on track. There is much work to be done before the province can declare a return to normal life. The Stefanson government announced in its November throne speech that it has a "bold agenda" to invest in "critically important areas, such as health care, infrastructure and the economy." What government has not said is how much its prepared to spend in those areas, or where funding will be targeted. Many of those questions will be answered when government unveils its 2022 budget, expected in the coming weeks. Manitobans will learn then how much government plans to help the province return to normal life, and how much was simply wishful thinking on the part of Ms. Stefanson. Doctors are urging caution as the province lifts restrictions, estimating more than half of Manitobans could be at higher risk of developing a serious COVID-19 infection. Doctors are urging caution as the province lifts restrictions, estimating more than half of Manitobans could be at higher risk of developing a serious COVID-19 infection. Dr. Kristjan Thompson, president of Doctors Manitoba, said the pandemic is not over just because public-health restrictions have been lifted. "I dont want Manitobans to think that were out of the woods," he said Tuesday. "COVID-19 its a virus. It doesnt care about government policies, it doesnt care about orders. It is a virus that is deadly, it will continue to infect. It will continue to mutate and evolve." The organization, which represents more than 4,000 physicians in the province, set up a website (newcovidnormal.ca) so Manitobans can assess their own risk. The group advises people to gather gradually, in fresh air or well-ventilated spaces, on top of getting vaccinated and boosted. An advisory group of physicians used health data to estimate that more than half of Manitobans have a risk factor that gives them a higher chance of becoming severely ill or dying from COVID-19. Risk factors include underlying medical conditions, disabilities, obesity, smoking, age, and being Black, Indigenous or a person of colour. Vaccination reduces the risk. While hospital and intensive-care admission rates areon the decline, hospital capacity isnt back to pre-pandemic levels yet. Thompson, an ER physician at St. Boniface Hospital, didnt weigh in on what he described as "government policy decisions" that led to Manitoba following other provinces lead to lift all restrictions. Vaccine requirements have been lifted as of today, March 1, and indoor mask mandates will be lifted March 15. But he said medical and public-health advice remains the same, regardless of the orders in place. He said Doctors Manitoba still recommends people wear masks to reduce risk and it wants everyone to get vaccinated, including health-care workers. He said 99 per cent of physicians have been vaccinated. Stay informed The latest updates on the novel coronavirus and COVID-19 delivered to your inbox every weeknight. Sign Up I agree to the Terms and Conditions, Cookie and Privacy Policies, and CASL agreement. "I think were concerned that people are getting the wrong message. Im hearing from many patients and many folks and Manitobans who are saying they believe the pandemics over just because these protections are being lifted. But the end of restrictions and protections does not mean the end of the pandemic," Thompson said. The provincial government released data that shows declining hospitalization and intensive-care admission rates as part of its announcement about lifting restrictions. Those indicators may be on the decline, but hospital capacity isnt back to pre-pandemic levels yet. Thompson said hospitals are still operating over capacity and patient wait times are still high. As of last week, patients were waiting 11 hours in the emergency room to see a doctor, and he said ER patients who need to be admitted to hospital are still waiting many hours or even days for a hospital bed. "Our hospitals are still stretched and are still over-capacity. So, I think it behooves us to tread carefully and softly so that we can get on top of these numbers, address this surge in volume, and get back to pre-pandemic numbers," Thompson said. "Once the dust settles, I think we do need to look at our health-care system as a whole and understand why this happened and why our system is always filled to the brim." katie.may@winnipegfreepress.com At Beaurivage Bistro in Winnipeg, things are looking sunny in more ways than one during the Tuesday lunch rush. At Beaurivage Bistro in Winnipeg, things are looking sunny in more ways than one during the Tuesday lunch rush. Business owner George Chamaa has spent decades in the restaurant industry, serving Lebanese cuisine in the St. Boniface neighbourhood and now on Corydon Avenue over the years. He chats good-naturedly with diners here to pick up shawarma and salad as the March sun shines through the bistros windows. Chamaa mentions what he calls "post-pandemic prices" coming soon deals to signify what he hopes is the beginning of the end of whats been a painful two years for the industry. George Chamaa, owner of Beaurivage Bistro, mentions what he calls post-pandemic prices coming soon deals to signify what he hopes is the beginning of the end of whats been a painful two years for the industry. (Mike Deal / Winnipeg Free Press) He warmly welcomed the news staff no longer have to ask for proof of vaccination against COVID-19 from in-person diners. "When you interrogate a customer, youre putting a burden on the customer. You aggravate people," Chamaa told the Free Press, ringing up a bill. "I am not the police." The province has called the decision to end the requirement Tuesday for most businesses which had been in place since September a "new normal." All pandemic public health restrictions are expected to be lifted by mid-March. When you interrogate a customer, youre putting a burden on the customer. You aggravate people... I am not the police. George Chamaa, business owner Chamaa was happy to follow the provinces lead, but said hes not positive itll make an immediate difference in restaurant volume. "(People) are not going to go crazy, they will still be cautious." He plans, however, to gladly usher in the end of the public mask mandate when it comes. Chamaa said he hopes, by summer, things will feel the way they did in 2019. "I think were going see a major change. Im preparing for that major change By the time May, June comes in, were going to be full-blast," he said. "Because we need time to forget. Us, as humans, we forget very quick." Not every Manitoba business with dine-in options was so quick to drop proof of vaccination rules Tuesday. Among those to share on social media theyd still be asking customers for such info were Modern Electric Lunch, Pizzerio Gusto, Hargrave Street Market, Merchant Kitchen and Never Better Coffee. The brightly-coloured but unassuming Never Better sits nestled in the Riley Grae boutique on Corydon. Jordan Cayer said hed describe his coffee shop (which opened two months ago) as a "relaxed, unpretentious community space." Daniel Cox, a professional photographer and conservationist from Montana, said businesses have the right to decide what regulations they want. (Mike Deal / Winnipeg Free Press) That community concern drove him to decide staff would continue to ask those sitting in to provide proof of vaccination, even after the province dropped the mandate. He called it a "no-brainer." "At the heart of the decision, its less about politics for us although were not afraid to be political, because we stand by our beliefs pretty strongly. But the general thing is just (that) we want the maximum amount of people to feel safe in here," Cayer said. "I think its important for people to know the kind of people that run the businesses that theyre taking part in, and were not afraid to put ourselves out there in that regard. But its also not fully about that, its a little bit of both." The pandemics not over, Cayer said. Hell be reviewing the rules in his own shop week by week. He hasnt yet faced any push-back for the decision, adding hed likely look to how people in his life are taking the new relaxed rules to judge next moves rather than unofficial direction from the province. "Ive traditionally been a little bit of a Twitter doom-scroller when it comes to pandemic stats and all that, and I have been paying pretty close attention to the stats and hospitalizations," Cayer said. "But I dont find it reliable anymore, because I dont think that the testing that theyre doing is giving really good data for that." Ive traditionally been a little bit of a Twitter doomscroller when it comes to pandemic stats and all that, and I have been paying pretty close attention to the stats and hospitalizations." Jordan Cayer At Garwood Grill on Pembina Highway, the new rules spark discourse across a table of people waiting for their lunch. The Greek eatery has dropped the requirement diners show proof of vaccination against COVID-19, something the owner who asked not to be named said came after fears of negative retaliation from customers. "We do all feel that its too early to drop the mandate for (proof of) vaccines Were doing it just because we knew if we kept it, we would get a lot of backlash," she said. Daniel Cox, a photographer by trade, was visiting family for lunch before heading to Churchill on Tuesday afternoon. He supports the decision Garwood Grill and many other restaurants have made, and said businesses have the right to "the option to say: I want my place either COVID-free or I dont." Jordan Cayer, owner of Never Better Coffee, said the pandemics not over. Hell be reviewing the rules in his own shop week by week. (Mike Deal / Winnipeg Free Press) "I dont see any reason that an establishment shouldnt be able to put up their own regulations on the people that they want in there, and whether theyre vaccinated," Cox told the Free Press while waiting for his food order. On the other side of the table, a woman (who asked not to be named and declined to say whether she was vaccinated) said she hasnt gone out much in the two years since the pandemic began. The decision by the province to drop the proof of vaccine requirement influenced her decision Tuesday. "I came here and I said, this is about as normal as I have felt in 2 1/2 years," she said. malak.abas@freepress.mb.ca Want to get a head start on your day? Get the days breaking stories, weather forecast, and more sent straight to your inbox every weekday morning. Sign Up I agree to the Terms and Conditions, Cookie and Privacy Policies, and CASL agreement. OTTAWA The Canadian representative for the United Nations refugee agency, UNHCR, says its too early to begin resettling Ukrainian refugees who have fled Russian aggression in their country by the thousands. OTTAWA The Canadian representative for the United Nations refugee agency, UNHCR, says its too early to begin resettling Ukrainian refugees who have fled Russian aggression in their country by the thousands. Rema Jamous said the scale of displacement from Ukraine is daunting, as some 500,000 people have already fled to neighbouring countries seeking safety. If trends continue, the UNHCR estimates there could be as many as four million Ukrainian refugees and up to 12 million people inside Ukraine who will need relief and protection. Still, most people who left Ukraine hope to return home when it is safe to do so, she said. Were talking really, really early days for resettlement, Jamous said in an interview. People will always want to go home before they think about going anywhere else. Jamous colleagues have reported large numbers of women and children crossing the border out of Ukraine, she said. Vivid images of Ukrainians saying goodbye to their families while they take up arms against Russia to defend their homeland have also spread all over the world. That leaves hundreds of thousands of refugees camped out in neighbouring countries awaiting the outcome of the war. Youre going to see probably that people will stay close to the border area, Jamous said. The overwhelming majority of refugees around the world will stay close to home and they will wait in neighbouring countries for an opportunity to return to their countries of origin. Alexandra Rodionova lives in Aylmer, Que., but she said a part of her is still in Kyiv with her family. She immigrated to Canada in 1992, but her family and friends remain in Ukraine and plan to stay. Its very hard to tell or say what is the safest thing to do, Rodionova said in an interview. The Canadian Council for Refugees said one solution would be to allow Ukrainians to enter Canada without a visa, offering a safe haven until its safe to return home. A government should be facilitating them coming to find temporary safety in Canada, said executive director Janet Dench in an interview. The House of Commons immigration committee voted Tuesday to call on the government to implement visa-free travel from Ukraine to Canada. The vote passed without support of the Liberal members, who expressed concerns about domestic security if bad actors wished to enter the country. The government is not currently reviewing visa requirements for Ukrainians, the Houses foreign affairs committee heard Monday. The UNHCR said refugees inside and outside of Ukraines borders will need humanitarian support, as current resources are likely to be depleted quickly. We are looking at what could become Europes largest refugee crisis this century, UN High Commissioner for Refugees Filippo Grandi said in a written statement Tuesday. The United Nations appealed Tuesday to governments for US$1.7 billion to cover the humanitarian costs of the crisis, including US$550.6 million to help refugees who have fled to nearby countries. That money will be used to supply tents, heat, warm clothing, food and other essentials, Jamous said. In response, Canadas International Development Minister Harjit Sajjan pledged $100 million in humanitarian assistance. Thats in addition to the $25 million Canada has already allocated to Ukraine this year. The UNHCR has received reports that non-Ukrainians in the country have tried to flee violence only to be turned away by neighbouring countries or run into added difficulties while trying to escape. Many of them are students, and in some cases they are refugees already from elsewhere in the world. At this critical juncture in particular, we simply cannot discriminate on the basis of legal status or nationality. People are fleeing war, theyre literally fleeing for their lives, Jamous said. The Embassy of Ukraine in Canada sent out a bulletin disputing that there has been any discrimination based on race or nationality, including when it comes to the crossing of the state border by foreign citizens. Given the extreme security conditions, the first-come, first-served approach applies to all nationalities, with certain humanitarian exceptions allowed for women and children, the bulletin read. The Canadian Council for Refugees said Canada should be pressing governments to keep their borders open without discrimination. Its one of the fundamental principles of refugee law and obligations for countries, is to keep your borders open when refugees are fleeing. And that should be done without discrimination, said Dench. The government should also give special consideration to people who were already refugees in Ukraine, and are now fleeing violence from Russia, she said, particularly those who were already in the process of applying to come to Canada. The UNHCR will discuss resettlement options with countries like Canada at a later stage, but Jamous said typically the demand from people looking for a new home far outstrips the opportunities offered by governments. The agency prioritizes people for resettlement who are considered most at risk. Canada has already expedited existing immigration applications from Ukraine and has approved 4,000 since Jan. 19, Immigration Minister Sean Fraser said Monday. Dench said there is always a concern that when a new crisis emerges, it will displace the efforts toward other refugee situations. Want to get a head start on your day? Get the days breaking stories, weather forecast, and more sent straight to your inbox every weekday morning. Sign Up I agree to the Terms and Conditions, Cookie and Privacy Policies, and CASL agreement. We saw that with Syria, we saw that with Afghanistan, and the concern also emerges for Ukraine, she said. If many countries divert their resources and attention to responding to this displacement, what does that mean for others who have been waiting for many years? Fraser said in a written statement Tuesday that Canada will keep doing its part as a global leader in refugee resettlement. He repeated Canadas commitment to resettle 40,000 Afghan refugees, while ensuring Ukrainian citizens are able to come to Canada as safely and quickly as possible if they wish. Fraser promised more details about plans to bring Ukrainians to the safety of Canada in the coming days. This report by The Canadian Press was first published March 1, 2022. With files from Tobin Ng YEREVAN, MARCH 2, ARMENPRESS. The Russian delegation has left for the place of meeting with the representatives of Ukraine for negotiations, ARMENPRESS reports, citing TASS, BelTa agency informed, without providing details. According to earlier reports, the second round of consultations will be held in the area of Belovezhskaya Pushcha in the Brest region of Belarus. Winona, MN (55987) Today Partly cloudy skies early will give way to cloudy skies late. Low 41F. Winds light and variable.. Tonight Partly cloudy skies early will give way to cloudy skies late. Low 41F. Winds light and variable. The Baraboo School District will have to take some action to ensure a balanced 2022-23 school year budget. Preliminary budget forecasts were presented at the Board of Education meeting Monday and early indications show a potential deficit of slightly above $2.4 million. This figure is based on data collection by Yvette Updike, the Director of Business Services for the Baraboo School District, who presented the information. It is important to know that historically, at this time of the year when I have given a preliminary budget, this deficit is pretty high, said Updike. Theres a lot of things that are going to change between now and then (when the final budget is released). As of right now, $2.4 (million) with a lot of factors that could change. She said that she has not given a preliminary budget featuring a deficit over $2 million during her tenure with the district. In June, she will submit a preliminary budget that will need board approval by July 1. School board treasurer Tim Heilman commented that other school districts were experiencing the same prospective budgets. He said that the state legislature is putting a huge burden on individual communities, particularly when it comes to special education funding. There are school districts telling me that if they dont pass operational referenda, theyre cutting 10, 20, 30, 40 positions, said Heilman. There is no way around it. He, along with local resident Doug Mering, pointed out the states budget surplus and urged people to lobby legislators for more school funding. Our state has an incredible $3.7 million surplus, said Mering. Its prudent that we, as a state, make present-day investments where needed. One of those needs is public education. District employee healthcare and dental benefits were both projected high at 20 and 2 percent increases, respectively, by Updike. She projected a worst-case scenario and is hoping for lower increases. A lot of moving pieces right now just because of new hires, health insurance and other stuff, said Updike. We will continue to do our job of tapping into anything that we can to make sure its a balanced budget going into the 2022-23 school year. Other expenditures for the school district listed in Updikes presentation were employee compensation, where she cited a 4.7 percent increase in the consumer price index, and utilities. She also mentioned the transportation contract, which is in its third year and was capped by the district at a 2 percent increase per year. While not giving any prospective figures, Updike also mentioned the special education (Fund 27) and food service (Fund 50) funds and how they impact the overall budget. She said special education expenses and revenue must match while the food service funds need to produce a surplus at the end of a fiscal year. Revenue will include the school tax levy, which was not discussed during the presentation, as well as Equalization Aid, which is aid from the state for district operational expenditures. In 2021-22, Baraboo schools received just above $19 million from this. Updike projected an approximate 3.7 percent increase from that figure in 2022-23. The school district received almost $19 million from the tax levy in 2021-22. Another revenue source is reimbursement via Special Education Categorical Aid, which will increase to a 30 percent reimbursement rate of the total cost. When presenting the final prospective figures, Updike factored in funds that remain from the Elementary and Secondary School Emergency Relief Fund, which were disbursed via two passed federal laws. ESSER II funds are from a two-year aid package via the Coronavirus Response and Relief Supplemental Appropriations Act and ESSER III are from a three-year package through the American Rescue Plan Act. She did not give exact figures, but noted that the budget numbers did reflect these funds. In 2021-22, funds from these two laws totaled just above $5.7 million. In total, the prospective revenue total just over $48.5 million while prospective expenditures run just below $51 million. The district approved a balanced budget of just above $49 million last year, according to Updike. An Ontario, Wisconsin, man is facing felony charges after allegedly leading police on a six mile chase at speeds reaching over 110 mph through Elroy. Tyler King, 21, of Ontario is charged with felony attempting to flee or elude an officer, repeater. If convicted he faces up to three years and six months in prison or a fine of up to $10,000, or both. As King has a previous conviction for felony robbery with use of force with a five year period prior to this arrest he faces an additional four years in prison due to the repeater modification. According to the criminal complaint: At about 7:05 p.m. Jan. 30 Officer Hunter Teubert was parked in the parking lot of Picha Funeral Home when he observed a vehicle traveling on Academy Street with only one operating headlight. As the vehicle passed the windows were fogged up but Teubert was able to observe a white male driving the vehicle. Teubert pulled out and initiated a traffic stop. The vehicle pulled over and came to a complete stop for several seconds before the driver quickly accelerated and drove away at a high rate of speed with Teubert in pursuit. The vehicle travelled south on Academy Street at speeds of about 60 mph in a residential area. At the intersection of Academy and Highway 71 the vehicle pumped the brakes as if it was going to make a right turn before continuing. As the road switched to 2nd Main Street the vehicle took a right on Academy and Teubert was able to get close enough to read the license plate. The vehicle then took a right onto Nassau Street and ran the stop sign at the intersection of Nassau and Western while making a right onto Western. The vehicle failed to signal at each turn. The vehicle came to a complete stop at the stop sign on Highway 71, but then continued at speeds of about 98 mph while deviating from the right lane several times. As the vehicle entered Monroe County dispatch told Teubert there were no Monroe County Deputies in the area and Teubert was instructed to terminate pursuit. Later in the evening Deputy Rebecca Weber made contact with Tyler King and his girlfriend. The girlfriend stated King called her earlier that day while engaged in a high speed pursuit and King said he was traveling over 110 mph. King is scheduled for an initial appearance March 2 at the Juneau County Justice Center. Reach Christopher Jardine on Twitter @ChrisJJardine or contact him at 608-432-6591. Be the first to know Get local news delivered to your inbox! Sign up! * I understand and agree that registration on or use of this site constitutes agreement to its user agreement and privacy policy. A woman arrested for breaking into an occupied home while its residents slept was sentenced Thursday in Sauk County Circuit Court. April Dawn Watson, 42, of Wonewoc, appeared in court where Circuit Court Judge Patricia Barrett sentenced her to 30 days in jail with Huber release privileges for a count of felony bail jumping. The other two counts, as well as a felony burglary charge, were dismissed but read in, meaning they were considered in the sentencing. Watson was also sentenced to three years of probation in another burglary case and a year for a charge of felony bail jumping. Conditions of those terms of probation include requiring Watson to undergo an alcohol and other drug assessment, submit a DNA sample and seek or maintain full-time employment. According to the criminal complaint, a Sauk County Sheriffs deputy was called in September to check on a vehicle parked in the middle of Johnson Road near State Highway 33 in the town of Greenfield. As the car was being towed, a deputy received a call from a nearby landowner, who said that a woman later identified as Watson had been lurking in his backyard and had continued east along the highway after his dog barked at her. The deputy saw a patio and garage door were open on a nearby residence. There was a door open on one of the parked cars with items scattered around inside and cash on the floor of the garage. One of the homeowners said she had been asleep and heard movement, but assumed it was the other resident, who said she had a similar experience. They told the deputy that Watson likely gained access to the house via an unlocked patio door and went to the basement where one of them had been sleeping. They said Watson took cash from a nearby wallet before exiting to the garage. They found a jewelry box and a TV stand door left open. Watson was found in a field near the edge of the property. Upon arrest, deputies found a set of keys and $20 in random bills on Watson. Follow Bridget on Twitter @cookebridget or contact her at 608-745-3513. Be the first to know Get local news delivered to your inbox! Sign up! * I understand and agree that registration on or use of this site constitutes agreement to its user agreement and privacy policy. JUNEAU The Center for Disease Control and Prevention has updated its recommended indicators for monitoring the impact of COVID-19 on communities, changing from community transmission to COVID-19 Community Levels Low, Medium, or High. Dodge County is now considered to be at a Low COVID-19 Community Level. This new guidance places Dodge County in the Low COVID-19 Community Level, said Becky Bell, Director of the Dodge County Human Services and Health Department. This is certainly exciting news as Dodge Countys COVID 19 numbers are declining. I dont have a crystal ball so I cant predict whats next, but this certainly is a positive trend, she said in a phone conversation Tuesday afternoon. Community Levels will replace community transmission level, and this change will be reflected on the Dodge County COVID-19 Snapshot. As a community, masks are not recommended in Low or Medium COVID-19 Community Levels. When a community has reached a High COVID-19 Community Level, masks are recommended for indoor public settings, regardless of vaccination status, such as schools, businesses and other settings. Those who are immunocompromised or at high risk for severe disease are encouraged to talk with their health care provider about COVID-19 prevention strategies (e.g. masking, testing). Vaccination against COVID-19 is encouraged as well. The CDC will use COVID-19 Community levels to inform the implementation of prevention strategies in U.S. communities. COVID-19 Community Levels are determined based on three key metrics: 1. New COVID-19 hospital admissions per 100,000 population in the past seven days. 2. The average percent of staffed inpatient beds occupied by COVID-19 patients in the past seven days. 3. The number of new COVID-19 cases per 100,000 population in the past seven days. This new CDC guidance does not change current quarantine (if you are exposed) and isolation (if you test positive) guidance. The new Community Levels do not apply to health care settings such as hospitals and nursing homes. Instead, health care settings should continue to use community transmission rates and continue to follow CDCs infection prevention and control recommendations for healthcare guidance. At all levels, people can wear a mask based on personal preference, informed by personal level of risk, said Bell. People with symptoms, a positive test, or exposure to someone with COVID-19 should wear a mask. Concerned about COVID-19? Sign up now to get the most recent coronavirus headlines and other important local and national news sent to your email inbox daily. Sign up! * I understand and agree that registration on or use of this site constitutes agreement to its user agreement and privacy policy. Kalahari Resorts and Conventions in Wisconsin Dells, as well as its other nationwide locations, has implemented a program for hiring United States Army veterans. The U.S. Army Partnership for Youth Success (PaYS) is a program that guarantees soldiers five interviews and possible employment following service in the Army. On Jan. 31, Kalahari became one of over 1,000 employers who have partnered with the program since its inception in 2000, according to a press release from the Kalahari website. It allows us to bring those veterans in that have those skill sets that we at the Kalahari are looking for, said John Noga, a U.S. Army veteran and Kalahari Resorts and Conventions Wisconsin Dells Director of Human Resources. The leadership, the timeliness, the integrity and all those things that theyve learned already. It allows them to be able to choose how their skill set best translates into the company. Noga went on to give an example on how a former cook in the Army who aspires to a culinary arts career can be hired in a Kalahari restaurant to get experience outside of the service. He also said that other service people such as infantry men may not have skills that directly apply to work at Kalahari, but some basic skills such as attention to detail allows them to be put into positions where they can be successful. The PaYS program partners with a mix of private businesses, academic establishments and state and local governments to provide opportunities for former Army service people. We are thrilled to partner with the Armys PaYS program, said Kalahari Resorts and Conventions Owner and President Todd Nelson in the press release. My father was a veteran, and we understand the skills, discipline and work ethic that military service members can bring to our business. We see the Army as a reliable recruiting source for years to come. They really want to be able to give those veterans a good opportunity and a good chance, said Noga of Nelson and his family. Noga also talked about a recent convention at Kalahari on Feb. 22 that talked about high suicide rates for veterans because of their inability to find employment and housing. Noga said that while there are veterans who are employed at the Wisconsin Dells location, none have been hired through the program yet. However, he is optimistic because of the presence of the Army installation at Fort McCoy in Monroe County and the Volk Field military base in Juneau County, along with what he says is a good veteran population in the area. We are looking for longer term than just the temporary positions for spring and summer, said Noga. While the company can bring in any veterans, the PaYS program is geared toward recent Army veterans due to its goal of helping them discover where their skill set matches up outside of the service, according to Noga. Theyre biggest fear is stepping out of the uniform and not having something immediate that they can step into and be able to provide for their family or utilize their skill sets in the civilian sector, said Noga. The village of Lake Delton wants to reduce approval time on construction and other development projects, so Monday the board hired E-Plan Exam, a building code review service from Brookfield. Tim McCumber, the village assistant clerk-treasurer-coordinator, discovered E-Plan Exam at the League of Wisconsin Municipalities. E-Plan Exam does plan review work for the state of Wisconsin, according to McCumber. When we go through the entire process of approving a project, once its done and ready to get state plan approval, instead of shipping it to Madison, where theyre taking anywhere between two to three months to review, their company does this in about 15 days and we (the village) get a percentage of the fees they charge, said McCumber. Its a win-win from the village standpoint and also, the developers can get off the ground a little quicker. Prior to the contract with E-Plan Exam, developers paid the state directly for project approvals. Now, any developments through E-Plan Exam will generate a 10 percent fee for the village. The contract is of no cost to village taxpayers. Village board trustees Cary Brandt and Merije Ajvazi raised questions about the companys experience. Brandt asked about E-Plan Exams largest project to date and Ajvazis inquiry was regarding experience with tourist and hospitality communities. The company also does inspections in Door County, mainly in Sturgeon Bay. Waukesha is the site of their largest project to date, as Mattox said the company approved the plan for a 310,000-square foot apartment complex there. They also approved a 250,000-square foot Eaton factory in Waukesha. Mattox said the company currently employs ten staff members, with two full-time employees and eight part-timers. This was in response to a question by village trustee Leslie Bremer. Official approval of the contract is contingent on the passage of an ordinance revision. The village will vote on a modification to Chapter 57 of the villages Municipal Code on March 14. This will add commercial structures to the ordinance, which right now, covers family dwellings. David Adam, or DA, Mattox, the companys co-founder, presented the companys plans and answered village trustee questions regarding the company and projects it has been involved in. Mattox performed building oversight for the City of Milwaukee before co-founding E-Plan Exam. The two issues Mattox said E-Plan Exam looks to solve are back-log time with reviews sent directly to the state and staffing for building inspection, as he said there are not many people going into the trade. For years, there has been no other alternative for plan review for projects within the state of Wisconsin, said Mattox. Our program was basically built upon a lot of work myself and my business partner did for ages, which was to get the code to allow municipalities to do it at the local level. As of today, there are only 22 communities in the entire state that have the ability to do buildings of unlimited size. Mattox added that E-Plan Exam serves one-third of those communities. He guaranteed a 15-business day turnaround time for plan approval as well as a rerouting of revenue from the state to local levels. Lake Delton is slated for numerous unique projects in the future, and Mattox said E-Plan Exam is familiar with those and has performed inspections nationwide. In that process, we staff with licensed professional engineers, master plumbers, commercial building inspectors and fire chiefs to do those reviews, said Mattox. All inspections are done on behalf of the state of Wisconsin and maintain the level of enforcement from that of the state. He said the goal of E-Plan Exam is to speed up governmental operations with regards to project reviews. If they (the state) have an opinion, it automatically overrules us, said Mattox. Developers can still choose to have approvals done directly through the state. Mattox said the goal of E-Plan Exam is to streamline the process. With more Russian troops bearing down on Ukraine, a former NATO chief says Vladimir Putin is "going for broke" and the possibility of Europe seeing nuclear war is growing by the day. A huge blast was filmed outside a regional government building in the city of Kharkiv overnight with reports it was nearly struck by a Russian missile. The city has seen cars and buildings destroyed by shelling on Tuesday (local time) as Vladimir Putin again ramps up his assault across multiple cities. At least five people have been killed and five others injured in a suspected missile attack on Kyiv's TV tower, according to Ukraine's civil defence authority. Video released by Ukraine's UNIAN news agency showed a dark cloud of smoke rising from the scene after the steel-lattice tower was apparently struck by two missiles during Russia's siege of the city. The attack briefly caused disruptions to broadcasts but transmissions have been fully restored. Combination picture shows a monitor displaying a projectile (seen, top-left) striking near the regional state administration building in Kharkiv, Ukraine. Source: Reuters A view shows the area near the regional administration building, which city officials said was hit by a missile attack, in central Kharkiv. Source: Reuters Meanwhile a Russian missile has reportedly struck a holocaust memorial in Ukraine, prompting a haunting plea from the country's jewish president. "To the world: what is the point of saying 'never again' for 80 years, if the world stays silent when a bomb drops on the same site of Babyn Yar?" Volodymyr Zelensky tweeted, referring to the memorial. "At least 5 killed. History repeating" Former NATO chief makes chilling admission Russian leader Vladimir Putin has cited NATO (North Atlantic Treaty Organisation) and the potential for Ukraine to join the Western alliance as part of his motivation for launching the invasion. The man who used to help lead Europe's NATO alliance, has outlined a bleak scenario that could see a nuclear confrontation unfold on the continent. Story continues General Sir Richard Shirreff, former NATO Deputy Supreme Allied Commander for Europe, says it is clear Putin is "going for broke" as more Russian military equipment heads for Ukraine. While he said the Russian invasion has been fairly "incompetent" thus far, "we should expect the Russians to learn from this ... and we can expect them to lash out," he said in an extraordinary interview with ABC radio on Wednesday morning. General Sir Richard Shirreff, former NATO Deputy Supreme Allied Commander for Europe in 2016. Source: Getty "We can expect to see much greater use of indiscriminate artillery and shellfire," he added. The consequences of the likely path ahead lead to one very worrying scenario. Ukrainian president Volodymyr Zelensky has been calling on the US and NATO to implement a no-fly-zone over Ukraine a request the West has staunchly refused as it would require allied forces to shoot down Russian planes, ensuring it was dragged into conflict. "NATO is not prepared to do that," Sir Shirreff told RN Breakfast, but he believes it should prepare for conflict. "NATO is starting to get prepared, it has deployed the so-called NATO response force to eastern Europe, but essentially NATO has got to establish a very clear message to Putin that the red line and it is a hard red line, this isn't a red line that can be crossed and we say 'oh well, that's ok' is any Russian soldier, any form of Russian incursion, one boot across the NATO frontier in an aggressive posture and NATO is prepared to go to war. Map of NATO deployments in Europe. Source: Reuters "And that means ramping up significantly military capability on NATO's eastern flank. It means preparing for war on a scale that we haven't seen since the Second World War" That flank lies east of Russia, Belarus and Ukraine, stretching from Estonia, through Latvia, Lithuania, Poland, Slovakia, Hungary, Romania and Bulgaria. While he doesn't think a war of that nature is inevitable he said it will take a new "generational commitment" of deterrence from NATO to avoid it. "The reality is we are in a new world." The scenario that could lead to nuclear conflict "If Putin was tempted to make a grab for the baltic states to drive a corridor through Lithuania to (the Russian city of) Kaliningrad, that would precipitate war with NATO," Sir Shirreff warned. "If he does try it on, and NATO is at war with Russia, there is absolutely a possibility that this could go nuclear. Because Putin, the Russians, integrate nuclear thinking into every aspect of their military doctrine." He pointed to Russian military drills in the Baltic region where Russia has recently practiced grabbing territory while using Kaliningrad as their base. If that were to unfold in real life, Europe would face "nuclear blackmail" with Russian missiles capable of hitting cities such as Stockholm and Berlin. "That is the absolute nightmare scenario, I don't wan't to be alarmist about it. But the way to avoid it is by projecting strength now." Do you have a story tip? Email: newsroomau@yahoonews.com. You can also follow us on Facebook, Instagram, TikTok and Twitter and download the Yahoo News app from the App Store or Google Play. Langdon Mills Solar held an open house in Cambria Monday night to get information to citizens about project planned in eastern Columbia County, but officials were reluctant to answer questions. The open house was held at the Cambria Fire Hall Community room. Langdon Mills Solar is owned and operated by Samsung C&T America. Initially the project was set to be sited on up 4,000 acres of privately-owned agriculture land in the town of Courtland. Langdon Mills officials said the project is not scaled down but is currently set to use approximately 2,000 acres. Langdon Mills contractors and team members would not answer any questions from the Daily Register Monday night. Teresa Nicholson said questions must be emailed to a media representative. There was no response as of 5 p.m., Tuesday to questions emailed Tuesday morning. Michael Schonasky of Randolph attended the open house. He said he has concerns about the project, but supports solar energy. Im for the solar project, Schonasky said. Im for green sources of energy, but I dont want to look at it. Schonasky said Langdon Mills has offered to plant trees in the area to make the solar panels less visible. Im all for it if they can plant trees around the project, he said. The material provided Monday night included a statement from Samsung C&T Director of Renewable Energy Team Hanjoo Jun. Langdon Mills Solar is in the early stages of development in Columbia County Wisconsin, Jun said in a prepared statement. This solar project will bring multiple benefits to the local community and the state of Wisconsin. We are excited to bring this development to Wisconsin and look forward to being a partner in the community for years to come. There is a citizens group that has organized against the proposed solar project. Representatives from the group attended the open house looking for answers and handed out flyers about the group and their opposition to the project. The flyer said the proposed project could be operational as early as next year and listed concerns with the project. They included: Farmland landscape could be affected for over 30 years Risk of fire with limited access for firefighters due to a proposed 8-foot fence Obstruction of wildlife patterns Negative impact on property values Loss of crop production Loss of rich top soil after project is completed Some of these concerns are expected to be addressed by the Wisconsin Public Service Commission, which reviews solar project applications. Langdon Mills Solar will submit a full application once the design and layout have been completed. Langdon Mills expects the lifespan of the panels to be about 35 years. At a citizens group meeting in February, members believed the land lease contracts were for 30 years. Langdon Mills did not answer any questions about the length of the land leases for the solar project. Recently, in a similar project in Dane County a group opposed to a solar project has found a section in the state constitution which states agriculture land can only be leased for a maximum of 15 years. In Article 1, Section 14 states, All lands within the state are declared to be allodial, and feudal tenures are prohibited. Leases and grants of agricultural land for a longer term than fifteen years in which rent or service of any kind shall be reserved, and all fines and like restraints upon alienation reserved in any grant of land, hereafter made, are declared to be void. Opponents of the Dane County project have stated the 25-year land lease contracts should be classified as null and void due to the state constitution section. Langdon Mills did provide a list of local economic benefits to the project which include more than 150 construction jobs for Columbia County and 10 long-term employees when the project is completed. The project is expected to be operational in 2024 and could generate over 400 megawatts. Get local news delivered to your inbox! Subscribe to our Daily Headlines newsletter. Sign up! * I understand and agree that registration on or use of this site constitutes agreement to its user agreement and privacy policy. MADISON The first of two men convicted for robbing two Lake Delton stores in July 2020, was sentenced Tuesday in federal court to 8.5 years in prison, to be followed by three years supervised release and restitution of $2,554. Cortez Thurmond, 22, of North Chicago, Illinois, conspired with Deon Brown, of Zion, Illinois, to rob at gunpoint the Alpha Red Studio and then Gifts of the World on July 28, 2020. The men were recorded on video taking money from the stores and customers. During the robbery, Brown carried a firearm with an extended magazine and struck victim in the back of the head with it. The robbery, while short in duration, was extremely serious and left a lasting impact on the innocent victims of a senseless crime motivated by pure greed, Assistant U.S. Attorney Aaron Wegner wrote the court about the Gifts of the World robbery. A customer at the Gifts of the World wrote that she lived in fear for months after the robbery that Brown would come to her house and rob her again. Thurmond and Brown then robbed gas stations in southeast Wisconsin and Lake County, Illinois, before Thurmond was arrested in Kenosha in September 2020. Thurmond has prior convictions that have resulted in his imprisonment for much of his adult life. At 18, he was convicted for home invasion and sentenced to six years. In 2015, he was convicted of credit card fraud and sentenced to 21 months in prison. Two years later he was sentenced to seven years in prison for burglary but released on parole in December 2019. Within eight months he committed the Lake Delton robberies, Wegner wrote the court. Under the advisory sentencing guidelines, Thurmond faced 9.5 to 10 years in prison. Wegner asked District Judge James Peterson to sentence Thurmond to nine years in prison. Thurmonds attorney, Toni Laitsch, asked for a seven-year sentence for her client saying he was brought up by a grandmother as his mother was a drug addict and a criminal and Thurmond never met his father. Thurmond told Peterson that he was sorry for the harm he caused the stores and their customers; however, he didnt know Brown was carrying a gun until he read it in court documents. As to his lengthy criminal history, Thurmond said that he had made some bad decisions that I regret and I ask for leniency. Peterson asked Thurmond why he should believe that he is no longer a danger to the community after victimizing so many while committing crimes. Thurmond said he was homeless at the time of the Lake Delton robberies, was abusing drugs and had mental health issues. He needed money for his children and took it from others without thinking how it could impact them. However, now he understands that his children need him more and to just provide for them financially, they need him in his life. Peterson said he was initially ready to impose a 10.5-year sentence because of the violence involved in the two robberies. Instead, he decided to impose a lesser sentence that balanced the need for punishment for the offenses but also factor in his difficult upbringing and give him hope to live a better life for his childrens sake. Theres a saying that hurt people, hurt people, the judge said. Dont hand this down to the next generation. Break the chain of deprivation and destruction, Peterson said. Brown is to be sentenced on April 20 before Peterson. Thurmond and Brown were indicted in January in federal court in Milwaukee for allegedly robbing gas stations in Racine and Kenosha. They are scheduled for trial on April 27. After learning of those charges, robbery charges in Lake County were dismissed by the district attorney, Wegner said. Wisconsins Conservation Congress will hold its annual spring meetings online for a third straight year, giving residents an opportunity to weigh in on dozens of natural resources issues, including deer hunting and regulation of toxic chemicals. Conservation Congress chair Tony Blattler said the decision to forgo in-person meetings was in keeping with the Department of Natural Resources policy. The DNR has still got everything locked up, he said. We had to make this call already the first week of January. Created in 1934, the Conservation Congress is an independent citizen organization that advises the Natural Resources Board. The congress turned to online surveys in 2020 during the early days of the COVID-19 pandemic, abandoning the traditional spring hearings for the first time in its history but drawing record participation of nearly 65,000 people. Participation fell to just over 12,600 last year, only slightly above pre-pandemic levels. The COVID thing was so new and a lot of people were home, Blattner said. Last year a lot of people were back to work. Blattler said the biggest challenge has been electing new delegates, which was traditionally done at the spring meetings. The congress will again extend the terms of current delegates, though people interested in filling vacancies can apply through March 11. Thats really hurting us. We have quite a few vacancies, Blattler said. We could not come up with a secure way unless we came up with money we dont have. There are 16 advisory questions from the DNR related to Fisheries and Wildlife Management. There are also two advisory questions from the NRB and 45 advisory questions from the WCC. Residents can also recommend changes to natural resource issues by submitting citizen resolutions online. Citizen resolutions are due by March 11. Among the topics covered in this years questions are deer management strategies, deer farms and shooting preserves, stricter PFAS pollution standards, fish bag limits, a proposal to limit the states wolf population and another to ban the use of dogs for hunting wolves. Many of the changes would require new legislation. All questions are available to preview on the 2022 spring hearing webpage. The survey will go live at 7 p.m. on April 11 and remain open for 72 hours. Utilities behind some of Wisconsins largest solar generators say nothing in the state constitution prohibits the long-term leases that opponents claim are illegal. Opponents of a proposed 2,400-acre solar-plus-storage project in southeastern Dane County last month asked regulators to toss out the permit application on the grounds that the 25-year leases violate language in the constitution that appears to limit agricultural leases to 15 years. They say projects that depend on legally void leases arent in the best interest of ratepayers and should be stopped. Similar petitions were filed asking the Public Service Commission to revoke permits for two other large-scale projects, including one already operating in Iowa County. Attorneys for the WEC Energy Group and Madison Gas and Electric, which co-own the Iowa County solar farm and are seeking to buy the Dane County project for $649 million, say opponents misunderstand the constitution and that their outlandish interpretation would upend nearly 200 years of real estate law and invalidate leases for things like cell towers, billboards and mines. In responses filed Tuesday, the utilities asked the PSC to deny the petitions, which they called frivolous and unfortunate, and chided opponents for basing their reading on a one-page primer on agricultural lease law prepared by a former UW-Extension professor. The language in question comes from Article 1 of the Constitution, which states: All lands within the state are declared to be allodial, and feudal tenures are prohibited. Leases and grants of agricultural land for a longer term than fifteen years in which rent or service of any kind shall be reserved, and all fines and like restraints upon alienation reserved in any grant of land, hereafter made, are declared to be void. Utilities say opponents misconstrued the 174-year-old provision, which exists primarily to differentiate the American system of land ownership from that of medieval Europe, where people who farmed land were rarely allowed to own it and instead were given access in exchange for pledges of loyalty and service. That provision is intended to make land more easily transferable, not less, the utilities argue. Furthermore, they say it applies only to land leased for agricultural use. And while most of the land under lease is currently farmland, thats not how the utilities plan to use it. Citing tax code and a Supreme Court ruling, they argue that agricultural use basically means growing crops. There can be no dispute that the land dedicated to solar panels, batteries and related equipment will not be used to grow crops. Utilities say adopting the opponents interpretation would invalidate any long-term lease of any land that was agricultural at some time in the past, including an untold number of cell tower, wind turbine, billboard and mineral extraction leases. Attorneys for Invenergy, the developer of the Koshkonong Solar Energy Center west of Cambridge, accused opponents of grasping at straws and say they are trying to inhibit the free transfer of property rights the constitution aimed at preserving. They say the provision was intended to protect tenants from oppressive landlords, not to prevent land owners from voluntarily leasing out their land. The PSC has not indicated if it will consider the petitions, which are automatically denied after 30 days if no action is taken. In November the commission rejected a motion to dismiss the Koshkonong permit application on the grounds that the utilities and Invenergy were exploiting a legal loophole to avoid regulatory scrutiny. The project has sparked fierce opposition from neighbors and the nearby village of Cambridge, which wants to develop some of the farmland for future housing. With mask mandates lifting in Dane County and around the country, a Wisconsin health official on Wednesday urged people to follow new federal guidance recommending masks indoors when COVID-19 community levels are high. My view, my hope is that the age of mask mandates is sort of in the rearview mirror, and the enlightened age of mask critical thinking is ahead of us, said Dr. Ryan Westergaard, a chief medical officer with the state Department of Health Services. The Centers for Disease Control and Prevention last week released a three-tier classification of counties based on COVID-19 cases and hospital capacity. The agency said people in counties with high levels should wear masks indoors and those in medium-level counties who are at high risk for severe illness should talk about mask wearing with their doctors. Residents of low-level counties can generally forego masks, the CDC said. Dane County and 33 other Wisconsin counties had low levels as of last week. The state had 20 counties with medium levels and 18 with high levels, including Green County, south of Dane County. The CDC system can help individuals and organizations decide when to wear or require masks, Westergaard said. Given that some people remain at high risk for severe disease, when we gather together, we can be mindful of that, he said. Dane Countys indoor mask mandate expired Tuesday. The Madison School District also started letting students and staff go unmasked outdoors. The districts indoor mask requirement will remain until at least April 1, the end of spring break. Other Madison-area school districts have also loosened or dropped their requirements. UW-Madison is lifting its mask mandate when its spring break starts March 12. A mask requirement ended Tuesday for employees and visitors at most state buildings Tuesday, with the rule continuing at least until April 1 for workers in the departments of Corrections, Health Services and Veterans Affairs. With COVID-19 cases and hospitalizations down dramatically in Dane County, Wisconsin and the nation since the omicron variant peak in January, Westergaard said he is cautiously optimistic that were in a good place for this spring and summer. Easing mask rules could pose more risk, but Im not terribly concerned about that, he said, because most people have some protection through vaccination or recent infection. The fall could bring more spread of the coronavirus, however, like with other seasonal respiratory viruses such as influenza, he said. Also, more concerning COVID-19 variants could again emerge. Thats going to be an ever present risk, he said. #Wits100: New music hall for the good of the arts Wits University launches its centenary campaign with the opening of the new state-of-the-art Wits Chris Seabrooke Music Hall. The centenary event featured jazz, classical and contemporary music, including performances by Associate Professors Malcolm Nay (pianist) and Carlo Mombelli (bass), and lecturer and doctoral candidate Mrs Chantal Willie-Petersen (jazz), all in Wits Music in the Wits School of Arts. Professor Zeblon Vilakazi, Vice-Chancellor and Principal of Wits, says: It is a singular honour for me to be here with all of you as we gather to celebrate 100 years of one of South African historys true giants the University of the Witwatersrand and were doing this with the opening this magnificent music hall, set amidst a booming Braamfontein. Post-pandemic music to our ears Formerly a patch of ivy-entangled pavement where Joburgs first gold miners resided, the music hall reflects an innovative transformation into a contemporary and sophisticated space. Its foyer is a converted heritage building. We are delighted to open the Wits Chris Seabrooke Music Hall as the University launches its centenary campaign and after almost two years of lockdown when the arts have been amongst the hardest hit during the pandemic, says Dr Rene Smith, Head of the Wits School of Arts. The establishment of the music hall was enabled by its namesake, businessman and Wits alumnus, Mr Chris Seabrooke. Im absolutely delighted with the outcome. I think its beautiful, the acoustics are great and I know that a lot of people coming through Wits will get tremendous value from this being in place, says Seabrooke. One-of-a-kind acoustics The Wits Chris Seabrooke Music Hall is the only purpose-built live music hall with a modern acoustic design in Johannesburg. It is designed specifically for musical performances. While there are several venues in Johannesburg that can accommodate both staged and musical performances, this music hall is the only space of any size in the City that is exclusively designed to optimize live musical sound with modern acoustic design. The music hall features acoustic treatment of the highest quality and is suitable for a range of musical genres from acoustic music and electrified performances to chamber music and even minimal orchestra, says Dr Donato Somma, Head of Wits Music. Wits Music was established in 1921 as the School of Music at the University College of Johannesburg, which ultimately became Wits University. It is always a tough sell to convince people that music training is a resource-intensive, time-intensive process; that creativity needs resources to grow and flourish, says Somma. The University's support for us as a department within the Wits School of Arts has allowed generations of students and wonderful teachers to learn the craft of music. Braam arts revival Wits University is as much a part of Joburgs history as gold mining is. The Universitys Braamfontein Campus is part of the Citys cultural arc that spans Constitution Hill, via the Nelson Mandela Bridge, to Newtown. Wits is an anchor in this cultural precinct as it is home to the Wits Art Museum, the Origins Centre, the Wits Theatre Complex, the Planetarium and a host of other museums and cultural amenities. The Wits Chris Seabrooke Music Hall brings Wits a step closer to realising the arts precinct and cultural arc that is an important part of the revival of Braamfontein where the University has been entrenched for a century, says Professor Garth Stevens, Dean of the Faculty of Humanities at Wits. All that jazz In Wits centenary year and beyond, the public can enjoy the return of the free lunch hour concerts, now at the music hall, where Wits Music students practice performing. Postgraduate recitals in jazz and classical music and a round of public evening concerts are also in the pipeline. During the day the music hall serves as a teaching venue for performance students, and will also be used for composition recitals and ensemble classes. We are even hosting some of our Drama colleagues in our rehearsal venues this year, says Somma. Were now fundraising for the next phase, which is to build performance, practice and teaching venues so that Wits Music students can continue to benefit from an African and world-class music education. President Joe Biden speaks about the coronavirus pandemic in the East Room of the White House in Washington, Tuesday, Aug. 3, 2021. (AP Photo/Susan Walsh) Utica Common Councilperson Celeste Friend is drafting legislation aimed at regulating shooting ranges within the City of Utica. A Syracuse-area higher education leader has been appointed to serve as co-chair of the Central New York Regional Economic Development Council. Dr. Linda LeMura, president of Le Moyne College, succeeds longtime SUNY Oswego President Deborah Stanley as one of the council's two co-chairs. Stanley, who retired from SUNY Oswego at the end of 2021, is now the interim State University of New York chancellor. LeMura has been a fixture at Le Moyne. She was dean of the College of Art and Sciences from 2003 to 2007 and provost and vice president for academic affairs from 2007 to 2014. She was named president in 2014. "I look forward to building upon the excellent work of my predecessor, Deborah Stanley, and to working with my co-chair Randy Wolken and all those involved with the CNYREDC, including our Empire State Development colleagues in central New York and Albany," she said. New York has 10 regional economic development councils, an initiative that began under former Gov. Andrew Cuomo in 2011. Each council has two-chairs, one of whom represents higher education. Wolken, who is president of the Manufacturers Association of Central New York, has been co-chair of the central New York council since 2018. "I am very much looking forward to working closely with President LeMura as CNYREDC co-chairs and know that she brings to the table a wealth of knowledge about our regional economy," Wolken said. The Central New York Regional Economic Development Council is comprised of representatives from Cayuga, Cortland, Madison, Onondaga and Oswego counties. The council's main responsibilities include identifying and overseeing projects supported by state funds. The council has been tasked with selecting the winners of the Downtown Revitalization Initiative, a $100 million program that aims to improve downtown corridors. Auburn won a $10 million grant in 2018. Since the regional economic development council competition began in 2011, the central New York panel has won more than $839.5 million to support 873 projects. Online producer Robert Harding can be reached at (315) 282-2220 or robert.harding@lee.net. Follow him on Twitter @robertharding. Love 0 Funny 0 Wow 0 Sad 0 Angry 0 The business news you need Get the latest local business news delivered FREE to your inbox weekly. Sign up! * I understand and agree that registration on or use of this site constitutes agreement to its user agreement and privacy policy. Weather Alert ...The Flood Warning continues for the following rivers in Indiana... Wabash River from Lafayette to Montezuma. White River at Elliston and Edwardsport. .Multiple rounds of rain over the last few days is bringing minor flooding along lower portions of the White River and upper portions of the Wabash River. Additional rainfall Thursday evening through Friday evening should keep portions of the White and Wabash above flood stage through the weekend. PRECAUTIONARY/PREPAREDNESS ACTIONS... Motorists should not attempt to drive around barricades or drive cars through flooded areas. Be especially cautious at night when it is harder to recognize the dangers of flooding. Additional information is available at www.weather.gov/ind. This statement will be updated within the next 12 to 24 hours. && ...FLOOD WARNING NOW IN EFFECT FROM THIS EVENING TO EARLY SATURDAY MORNING... * WHAT...Minor flooding is occurring and minor flooding is forecast. * WHERE...Wabash River at Lafayette. * WHEN...From this evening to early Saturday morning. * IMPACTS...At 12.0 feet, High water affects a few low river cabins and county roads. * ADDITIONAL DETAILS... - At 8:30 PM EDT Wednesday the stage was 11.2 feet. - Recent Activity...The maximum river stage in the 24 hours ending at 8:30 PM EDT Wednesday was 11.2 feet. - Forecast...The river is expected to rise to a crest of 12.6 feet early tomorrow afternoon. It will then fall below flood stage Friday afternoon. - Flood stage is 11.0 feet. - http://www.weather.gov/safety/flood && Record number of IDEA grants aim to add to the cultural experience of W&M community Embracing values: The eight projects that were granted Innovative Diversity Efforts Awards (IDEA) for 2021-22, including an exhibit at Swem Library called "Strollin': A History of Black Greek Letter Organizations at William & Mary", cover and array of creative and innovative ideas aimed at adding to the cultural experience of all members of the university community. Photo by David Williard Photo - of - Hide Caption The Office of Diversity & Inclusion has granted Innovative Diversity Efforts Awards (IDEA) since 2011 to further support university-wide inclusion work at William & Mary, and in that time the initiative has grown from three projects to a high of eight this year. We had a record number of proposals, and we wanted to do all we could to try to provide partial funding to as many projects as possible, W&M Chief Diversity Officer Chon Glover said. What excites me about this group of projects is the diversity of the array of ideas and collaborations. There are workshops that focus on our full community faculty, staff, students and alumni. Project proposals were submitted in the fall by faculty and students across the university. This years projects include a Black alumni reunion, a sensory space for neurodivergent persons and a mentoring program for undergraduate women interested in careers in physics. Adding to the cultural experience of all members of our community is very important, and these creative and innovative ideas really make a difference, Glover said. As we embrace our values of curiosity, discovery and belonging, these projects really aid in that goal. We are grateful for the generous funding made possible through the Diversity Endowment. {{youtube:large|qCoCJaoSvro, Strollin': A History of Black Greek Letter Organizations at William & Mary}} Modern Languages Diversity Story Exchange Workshop Submitted by Angela Leruth, Department of Modern Languages & Literatures and the Committee on Diversity and Inclusion Narrative 4 is a global network of authors, educators and students that creates empathy through storytelling as a vehicle to foster positive change on difficult topics. This March 25 workshop will use the networks storytelling exchange methodology to help students understand that their voices, stories, actions and lives matter, and that they have the power to change, rebuild and revolutionize systems. The Sensory Space Submitted by Elizabeth Miller, Office of Community Engagement and the Neurodiversity Student Group The Office of Community Engagement has created a small private space for sensory processing and tools so neurodivergent people can more fully participate in their W&M experience. Located in the OCE suite in Blow Hall 314, The Sensory Space is open to anyone who needs a private adaptive space for sensory regulation. It includes a variety of features and tools to meet a diverse set of sensory needs. Black Alumni Reunion Submitted by Valerie Wilkins, Diversity & Inclusion Initiatives Alumni Association Scheduled for May 6-8, the Black Alumni Reunion Weekend will invite all alumni of Black and/or African descent to campus for a time of connection, rejuvenation and celebration. The weekend will provide opportunities for alumni to network with students and fellow alumni, celebrate contributions of Black alumni, celebrate the 35th anniversary of the Hulon Willis Association and for alumni who graduated prior to 2012 to participate in their own Donning of the Kente Ceremony. Strollin: A History of Black Greek Letter Organizations at William & Mary Submitted by Andre Taylor, Special Collections Exhibits Committee Beginning in February, an exhibit at Swem Librarys Botetourt Gallery and Theatre utilizing mixed media and traditional methodology tells the story of the triumphs and victories of Black Greek-Lettered Organizations and the opportunities they have allotted to the marginalized communities from which they developed. The exhibit, which runs through August 31, examines the origins of Black fraternities and sororities at William & Mary and why there was a need for them on campus. Faculty development: Optimizing Student Success by Integrating DEI in the Classroom, VIMS Workshop Series Submitted by Rochelle Seitz, VIMS Diversity and Inclusion Steering Committee The workshop series will provide professional development for faculty members at W&Ms Virginia Institute of Marine Science in two separate workshops to enhance each faculty members skill set for incorporating diversity, equity and inclusion into the curriculum. The workshop series will introduce VIMS faculty to methods for implementing cultural diversity into courses, adjusting course structure and content to elevate the work of underrepresented or minority scientists, addressing hidden biases and therefore optimizing student success in the classroom. Mentoring for Careers in Physics Pilot Program for Undergraduate Women Submitted by Chris Monahan and Ran Yang, Mentoring for Careers in Physics This pilot program launched in December will provide W&M physics undergraduates with mentoring, career development and networking opportunities through interaction with women working in STEM fields beyond academia. Students and mentors will work in 25 unique pairs to cultivate an educational experience that builds students scientific identity and sense of belonging within STEM and to provide them with professional tools, skills and knowledge to help them in their careers. The Melanin Scholars Retreat: Mentoring Black Women in Research Submitted by Aiesha Lee, William & Mary School of Education The Melanin Scholars Retreat was held Jan. 13-14 with the purpose of providing support to Black women faculty and doctoral students in the W&M School of Educations Counselor Education program. Specifically, 14 retreat attendees received support in cultivating their writing and research initiatives, making connections with other Black women in the field and engaging in and maintaining overall wellness. A research team is currently in the process of interviewing a group of participants about their experiences of the retreat with the hopes of gathering data that will be a worthwhile contribution to counselor education literature. Communal Quilt Project Submitted by Steve Prince, Muscarelle Museum of Art The Communal Quilt Project is an arts experiential initiative designed to work with all genders, ages and ethnicities in Williamsburg and surrounding counties and cities to create a giant quilt called the DOG Street Mile Communal Quilt. The purpose of this project is to create opportunities for the community to utilize the experiential nature of art making as a tool to get community members to tell their personal stories in a group context. The next workshop for the project will be held April 2 at W&Ms Highland. W&M prof couldnt travel to overseas lab, so makerspace students & staff built him one Christopher Del Negro, neuroscientist and professor of applied science at William & Mary, stands in his locomotion lab inside the university's Integrated Science Center. Photo by Danielle Desjardins Photo - of - Hide Caption Terrestrial animals move around for a variety of reasons, and the majority of that movement falls somewhere along a spectrum that ranges from wandering aimlessly to running for your life. Theres what well call simple exploration, said Christopher Del Negro, neuroscientist and professor of applied science at William & Mary. Its doing things like looking for food, looking for a mate. Youre just going around and looking for stuff. It's low-intensity locomotion. Then theres high-intensity locomotion, and thats more along the lines of there's a predator looming over me and I'm about to get killed. The difference sounds simple enough, but parsing the neural nuances of low- and high-intensity locomotion is a crucial step in understanding, and eventually curing, movement disorders like Parkinsons disease, explained Del Negro. Think about the brain as an hourglass, he said. The top of the brain has volition. It wants to make a movement. At the bottom, you have the spinal cord circuits that are in charge of execution. They carry out the movement. The skinny part of the hourglass is the midbrain -- and that's the part we're focused on. Del Negro and a team that includes undergraduate and graduate students, post-docs, senior scientists and faculty are working to better understand the largely unexplored circuits of the midbrain. The instruments in the lab were designed and built by W&M Makerspaces students and staff. This is breakthrough material were working on, Del Negro said. Were on the cusp of something really important. The job of the midbrain is to inhibit unwanted movements and to facilitate wanted movements, Del Negro explained. With Parkinsons, the midbrain stops functioning like it should and patients lose their ability to engage in voluntary locomotion. Patients also experience tremors, which are the failure to stop unwanted movements. There is no circumventing the midbrain, said Del Negro. Whether youre startled or just sauntering around anything that top, cauliflower-like part of your brain wants to do it has to go through the midbrain pathway to do it. Its like the brains Hampton Roads Bridge Tunnel. No matter what, youre gonna have to go through it. In order to study the neuroscience of the midbrain circuits, Del Negro turned to the Kiehn Lab at the University of Copenhagen, the worlds foremost experts in locomotor circuitries in mammals. He went on sabbatical to work in the lab in 2018. Then, in 2019, Del Negro was awarded a grant from the National Institutes of Health to further his partnership with the lab by collecting data there throughout the summer of 2020. Along came COVID-19 and the world went on lockdown. Del Negro was grounded and his research at a standstill. As the pandemic raged on, the clock on his grant funding was ticking. Thats when W&M Makerspaces Director Jonathan Frey made the mountain come to Muhammad. We needed to have a laboratory where we could assess both low-intensity and high-intensity forms of locomotion, Del Negro said. I went to Jonathan and told him I couldnt get to Denmark to do these experiments, so I just floated the idea of building a lab here. He and his students immediately kicked into gear and a month later, we had a fully equipped behavior locomotion lab for less than it would have cost me to go to Denmark. Frey, who has bachelors and masters degrees in electrical engineering, said the locomotion lab became a passion project for him, Small Hall Machine Shop Director Will Henninger and several students over the winter break. They designed and built four apparatuses to generate a range of high and low intensity locomotion in mice: an open field test, a hole board, a corridor and a precision treadmill. Each apparatus is outfitted with a slow-motion camera to capture the movement, which is then analyzed using artificial intelligence. Designing for mice presented its own unique challenges, Frey explained. He learned that mice are incredible jumpers and can reach heights of almost a foot, or roughly the wall height on an early hole board prototype. One thing I was not prepared for was how often mice poop when theyre in motion, Frey said. Its amazing. Were talking like once every five seconds. Thats one problem I never envisioned myself having to engineer my way out of. Del Negro is quick to credit his current research program to Freys ingenuity. Without the Makerspace and its director, this lab wouldnt exist, Del Negro said. Scientists like me, who dont have Jonathans expertise, have to go out and buy equipment, which is extremely expensive and hard to find. Its not like Peloton is out there selling mouse treadmills. Without their work and dedication, this research would not be happening. For students like Mai Ishikawa, a second-semester freshman at W&M, the experience of getting in on the ground floor of the new lab has been invaluable. She plans to become a pediatric physician and spends her spare time volunteering as a scribe at a local health clinic. Im so grateful to everyone who made this lab a reality, she said. Its such an incredible opportunity for students like me to be at the forefront of groundbreaking research like this research that will hopefully pave the way for clinical applications in the future. Beijing (Gasgoo)- Chinas autonomous driving startup, Nullmax, has partnered with local automotive electronics supplier BiTECH Automotive for autonomous driving development, the company announced on March 2nd. Photo credit: Nullmax The partnership specifies that the two companies will work together closely to develop automotive intelligence technologies and products. The partners will integrate Nullmaxs software algorithms with BiTECHs center controller products, creating a production-ready rich intelligent driving software/hardware integrated solution. The partners believed that given their different positions in the auto industry and their experience in eachs respective fields, their collaborated solutions would have more competitiveness and expansibility. Founded in 2016 in Silicon Valley and headquartered in Shanghai, Nullmax is devoted to developing technologies for autonomous passenger vehicles. The company has landed several mass productions projects with major OEMs and auto startups in China. Its products cover highway, valet parking, and urban scenarios. Scaled production of the companys ADAS drive/park solution will be completed in the first half of 2022. On the other hand, BiTECH Automotive designs and supplies onboard computers, smart cockpit, dashboards, onboard displays, and AR-HUD products to automakers, with a considerable market share in China. The company has served joint venture auto brands and domestic brands for years. Yazoo City is a small city and seat of Yazoo County situated in the west-central part of the US State of Mississippi. The city serves as the principal city of the Yazoo City Micropolitan Statistical Area and was named by the French explorer Robert La Salle as Riviere des Yazous in reference to the Yazoo tribe that lived in the area. At present, the most important industry in Yazoo City is a group of federal prisons. Geography Of Yazoo City Welcome Sign to Yazoo City, Mississippi. Editorial credit: Chad Robertson Media / Shutterstock.com Yazoo City is located around 64 km northwest of Jackson, the capital of the US State of Mississippi, on the banks of the Yazoo River, close to the Panther Swamp National Wildlife Refuge. The city has access to two bridges crossing the Yazoo River and is near Wolf Lake. Yazoo City is also known as the Gateway to the Delta because of its location as the western portion lies in the Mississippi Delta. The eastern part lies in the loess bluffs that characterize most of the eastern Mississippi. According to the United States Census Bureau, Yazoo City has a total area of 28 sq. km, of which 28 sq. km is occupied by land and only 0.26 sq. km is covered by water. The Climate Of Yazoo City The climate of Yazoo City is characterized by relatively high temperatures and evenly distributed precipitation throughout the year. According to the Koppen climate classification, the city experiences a humid subtropical climate, with springs and summers being the wettest seasons. Summers are wet, and high temperatures can lead to warm, oppressive nights. The coldest month is usually relatively mild, and winter precipitation is derived primarily from frontal cyclones along the polar front. In Yazoo City, the average temperature for the year is 18.3C. The warmest month, on average, is July, with an average temperature of 27.8C. The coolest month on average is January, with an average temperature of 8.3C. Most precipitation, on average, occurs in March, while most rain occurs in January and the least rain occurs in September. The Population Of Yazoo City Colorful homes in Yazoo City, Mississippi. Joseph/Flickr.com In 2020, Yazoo City was home to a population of 10,734 with a median age of 31.4 and a population density of 426.58 people per square km. The city's population has decreased by -5.87% since the most recent census, which recorded a population of 11,043 people in 2010. Most people in Yazoo City are Black or African Americans. In fact, there were 7.37 times more Black or African American residents in the city than any other race or ethnicity in 2019. The largest ethnic groups in Yazoo City are Black or African Americans representing 85.39% of the citys population, followed by non-Hispanic White at 11.73%, and Tow or more races at 1.55%. The minor ethnic groups in the city are the Hispanic community making up to 1.12% of the population, followed by Asians at 0.14%, and Native Americans at 0.06%. Nearly all Yazoo City residents are U.S. citizens, and as of 2019, only 0.69% of the residents were born outside the country. The most common birthplace for foreign-born residents of Mississippi is Mexico, then comes India, followed by Vietnam. The Economy Of Yazoo City The median household income in Yazoo City is $24,688, which represents a 3% annual growth as it was $23,970 in 2018. Although the income inequality (measure using the Gini index) is 0.455, which is lower than the national average, males have an average income that is 1.4 times higher than the average income of females. The economy of Yazoo City employs around 3,400 people of the city in different industries. The largest industries in the city are Manufacturing, Health Care & Social Assistance, and Public Administration, while the highest paying ones are Construction, Federal prisons, and Manufacturing. Brief History Of Yazoo City The Choctaw Nation sold their northwestern lands, including the area where Yazoo City was to be located, to the United States government by the 1820 Treaty of Doaks Stand. In 1823, the Mississippi Legislature created Yazoo County, and it was opened for White and African Americans to move in and settle. The city was founded as a planned community in 1826. It was called Manchester and renamed for the Yazoo Indians in 1839. Yazoo City became the county seat in 1848. During the Civil War, the city suffered severe damage caused by the conflicts between the Union troops and Federal forces. Yazoo City was rebuilt, but yellow fever struck the city and took more victims in 1878. In May of 1904, a fire destroyed much of central city, and later in 1927, the Great Mississippi Flood of 1927 struck the whole Delta causing damage, but Yazoo City was restored. The states first oil field was discovered nearby in 1939. A federal prison was built in the 1990s, contributing significantly to the economy. Tourist Attractions In Yazoo City Main Street One of Yazoo Citys outstanding features is the colorful block of Main Street, where the Main Street Hotel stands right amid colorful blocks. Panther Swamp National Wildlife Refuge Yazoo City is the nearest city to the Panther Swamp National Wildlife Refuge. Established in 1978, it is one of the seven refuges in the Theodore Roosevelt National Wildlife Refuge Complex in Mississippi. The refuge encompasses more than 156 sq. km and includes one of the most significant blocks of bottomland forest and is home to natural willow, water oaks, and other 200 species of neotropical migratory songbirds. It provides habitat for American alligators, whitetail deer, swamp rabbit, wild turkey, and many more. Sam Olden Yazoo Historical Society Museum Visitors can enjoy a trip to the Sam Olden Yazoo Historical Society Museum. Located in the Triangle Cultural Center in Yazoo City, the museum brings together the Countys diverse past displaying fossils dating back some 45,000 years ago to Native American relics. The museum features exhibits from the Civil War, introduces African American History, and the legendary trainman Casey Jones. This school was destroyed as a result of a fight not far from Kharkiv's city center on February 28. Man dies after shooting another man and himself in Cape Girardeau, investigators say Beijing (Gasgoo)- On March 2nd, Shanghai Jiading District authorities announced that, the Jiading-based Shanghai Chuzhen Intelligent Technology Co., Ltd. was granted a construction permission for its autonomous driving product manufacturing base in the district. Photo credit: Jiading District Wechat Platform The base is for Chuzhens 77GHz millimeter-wave radars. According to the announcement, the companys sales and R&D headquarters will settle in Anting, Jiading District. The manufacturing base takes up thirteen acres of land, with 17,316 square meters of structural area. The construction will cost RMB250 million and twelve months to finish. The factory will start operation six months after construction completes and reach its designed production capacity in twelve months, bringing in roughly RMB500 million yearly. The factory will recruit 70 talents, adding roughly a hundred new jobs after the construction finishes. Shanghai Chuzhen is a wholly-owned subsidiary of Chuhang Technology, a 77GHz millimeter-wave radar developer in China. The latters products and technologies can be applied to multiple ADAS functions, including BSD, FCW, ACC, and AEB. Chuhang Technology has profound relationships with esteemed higher education establishments and leading automotive companies in China. Currently, Chuhang Technology has landed over 30 vehicle model projects from 14 automakers, including Dongfeng Motor Corporation, Great Wall Motor, and BAIC BJEV. The next president of the Southern Baptist Convention, the largest protestant denomination in the U.S., will be Pastor Ed Litton. People vote on March 1, in Austin, Texas. Today Texans are headed to the polls to vote in the state's first primary of the 2022 midterm election season. Childline launches new campaign aimed at encouraging boys to talk about their mental health This article is old - Published: Wednesday, Mar 2nd, 2022 A new mental health campaign aimed at encouraging boys who are struggling to ask for help with their mental health, has been launched by Childline. The organisation has found boys are five times less likely to talk with the services trained counsellors about their mental health than girls, and even less likely to come to them when they have suicidal thoughts. New statistics from the NSPCC-run service show in 2020/21 they carried out 31,899 counselling sessions with girls about mental health issues compared to 5,622 with boys. And when it came to counselling sessions about suicidal thoughts and feelings, they delivered 11,719 with girls but just 1,592 with boys. Despite less boys talking to Childline about feeling suicidal than girls, the latest national data for registered deaths in England and Wales shows 122 boys aged 10 to 19 died by suicide. In the same year 52 girls took their life. In a bid to help encourage boys to talk about their mental health, Childline has launched its We All Feel It campaign, to support young males who are struggling to speak about their mental health and to help them before they reach crisis point. The campaign video features popular clips from the world of sports, social media and gaming to reflect the emotions some young people may struggle to articulate. It encourages boys in particular to use Childline to help them make sense of anything that has upset or worried them. Childline counsellors hear from boys who say they feel isolated in their experiences and are reluctant to reach out for help due to the stigma they feel around sharing their feelings. One young male aged 18 told Childline: Im worried because I feel so depressed all of the time and have been thinking about suicide more lately. I confided in someone at work that I wasnt doing very well mentally and they didnt reply to my message. I feel really embarrassed about telling them how I was feeling. In 20% of counselling sessions where boys mentioned if they had confided in anyone else, they said it was the first time they had spoken to anybody about their suicidal thoughts or feelings. An 18-year-old male told a counsellor: Ive had intrusive thoughts for as long as I can remember, and sometimes they can make me suicidal. I would love to speak openly about it with my mum, but weve never had that sort of relationship and I fear she wouldnt believe me or take me seriously. To be honest, I have no one in my life that I can speak to, so just putting down my thoughts alone is like a weight thats been lifted. Suicide is a complex issue and there is rarely one single factor or event that leads someone to take their own life. It is usually a combination of lots of different individual, community and societal factors interacting with each other to increase risk. Developed with creative agency Livity, the campaign aims to resonate with boys and remind them Childline is always there and ready to support them, with whatever they are experiencing, 24 hours a day. Alex Gray, Service Head of Childline said: At Childline, we know how hard it can be for children to speak out about their mental health. In particular, it can be really challenging for boys due to the pressures they feel around not showing emotion and appearing strong due to toxic masculinity. At Childline, we want to remind all children that sharing their mental health concerns with a trusted adult or a Childline counsellor is a brave thing to do and it will enable them to get the help and support they need. Talking about mental health issues early on can prevent things escalating and can save a young persons life. We hope that by putting the spotlight on male mental health we can help boys understand that they are not alone. Children and young people can contact Childline for free, confidential support and advice, 24 hours a day on 0800 1111 or at www.childline.org.uk. Latest redevelopment plans for Wrexham Coleg Cambria campus backed for approval This article is old - Published: Wednesday, Mar 2nd, 2022 The latest in a series of redevelopment plans for a college in Wrexham have been recommended for approval in a bid to improve teaching facilities. Coleg Cambrias Yale campus on Grove Park Road has undergone a major transformation in the last two years. Work carried out to date includes a 21m extension which features a restaurant, training academy, florist, coffee bar and hair and beauty salon. In July last year, the further education institution revealed more proposals for a three-storey building to provide general teaching and health and wellbeing training. The scheme, which would result in the demolition of the existing science teaching facilities, is due to be considered by councillors next week. And Wrexham Councils chief planning officer has advised that permission should be granted after highlighting the educational benefits it would deliver. In a report, Lawrence Isted said: The proposed development will be three-storey plus a basement and will be of a contemporary design. The new building will represent a significant enhancement of the education facilities provided in Wrexham. The fact that the site is located within a conservation area does not prevent modern/contemporary buildings from being erected provided they are of a high standard of design and do not harm the setting or appearance of other nearby buildings as well as the immediate locality. The application site is in a prominent corner location at the Chester Road/Powell Road junction, which is a key gateway into the town centre. The external appearance of the building is of a high standard of design that will enhance the appearance of this part of the site and representing a significant improvement over the form and appearance of the building it will replace. In documents submitted to the local authority, the college said the existing facilities were no longer fit for purpose. The new building would include an atrium, space for socialising, health facilities and a cafe on the ground floor. Study areas, teaching rooms and administration facilities have also been proposed on the first and second floors. The application will be considered by members of the councils planning committee at a meeting on Monday, March 7. By Liam Randall BBC Local Democracy Reporter Llywydd of the Senedd: Ukraine and its people very much remain in our hearts This article is old - Published: Wednesday, Mar 2nd, 2022 The Llywydd of the Senedd has said Ukraine and its people very much remain in our hearts in her St Davids Day message yesterday Presiding Officer, Elin Jones MS, said: I want to wish you all a happy St Davids day. Like Parliaments all over the world, our work over the past two years has been affected by the pandemic. Even in the depths of lockdown, democracy continued in Wales. The Senedds parliamentary ingenuity and commitment to its people meant that the Welsh Government was held to account over key decisions which affected the lives of every person in Wales. Today is a key milestone for us. For the first time in almost two years, all 60 Members can attend the Siambr again. As we enter a new phase in our Parliaments history, it is fitting that this St Davids Day, we pause and reflect on international events and how important our democratic structures are and how fragile they can be. Our thoughts inevitably turn to Ukraine and its heroic citizens who are enduring unimaginable hardships whilst fighting to protect and maintain their sovereign nation, their proud democracy and way of life. We think of the numerous historic and cultural links which Wales shares with Ukraine and of the respected Ukrainian community who have made Wales their home. Once again this evening, the Senedd will be lit in the blue and yellow colours of Ukraines flag as a sign of our solidarity with them. Ukraine and its people very much remain in our hearts. On this St Davids day, let us cherish what we have and reach out to others who need our support and love. Shanghai (Gasgoo)- HOZON Auto, the startup owning the NEV brand NETA, recently secured over 2 billion yuan ($316.22 million) in a new funding round, according to a local media outlet. NETA U Pro; photo credit: HOZON Auto This is the third round of HOZON Auto's series D financing. Main investors of the latest round include the CRRC-owned fund and Shenzhen Capital Group Co., Ltd., according to the report. In October 2021, HOZON Auto announced it had closed the D1 financing round with 4 billion yuan ($632.441 million) raised in total, 2 billion yuan ($316.22 million) of which were contributed by the Chinese Internet safety giant 360 Security. Then in December last year, HOZON Auto revealed the completion of the D2 funding round, which was backed by CATL, 360 Security, BAIC Capital, and other investors. The completion of the entire D round would value HOZON Auto at over 25 billion yuan ($3.953 billion), said the media channel. HOZON Auto is seeking to raise about $500 million before a potential listing in Hong Kong this year, Bloomberg reported in late January, citing people with knowledge of the matter. The rumored round would value the startup at around 45 billion yuan ($7.115 billion). The company could seek to launch its initial public offering as soon as the second half of 2022, the aforesaid people revealed. After being reached for a comment, HOZON Auto said the IPO issue should be in accordance with the company's announcement. Second home owners in Wales could face 300% rise in council tax This article is old - Published: Wednesday, Mar 2nd, 2022 Second home owners in Wales could face a massive 300% rise in council tax under new plans unveiled by the Welsh Government. The package of measures has today been announced today to help tackle the housing crisis. They include an increase to the maximum level of council tax premiums for second homes, as well as new local tax rules for holiday lets. The measures are part of a wider commitment to address the issue of second homes and unaffordable housing facing many communities in Wales, as set out in the Co-operation Agreement between the Welsh Government and Plaid Cymru. It is hoped the move to tackle second home owners will help to ensure people can find an affordable home in the place they have grown up. As part of the plans the maximum level at which local authorities can set council tax premiums on second homes and long-term empty properties will be increased to 300%, which will be effective from April 2023. Councils will be able to set the premium at any level up to the maximum, and they will be able to apply different premiums to second homes and long-term empty dwellings. Premiums are currently set at a maximum level of 100% and were paid on more than 23,000 properties in Wales this year. Local authorities opting to apply premiums have access to additional funding, and the Welsh Government has encouraged councils to use these resources to improve the supply of affordable housing. The criteria for self-catering accommodation being liable for business rates instead of council tax will also change from next April. Currently, properties that are available to let for at least 140 days, and that are actually let for at least 70 days, will pay rates rather than council tax. The change will increase these thresholds to being available to let for at least 252 days and actually let for at least 182 days in any 12-month period. The change is intended to provide a clearer demonstration that the properties concerned are being let regularly as part of genuine holiday accommodation businesses making a substantial contribution to the local economy. Both changes follow a consultation processes including businesses, the tourism industry and local communities. Rebecca Evans, Minister for Finance and Local Government, said the changes will give more flexibility to local authorities and provide more support to local communities in addressing the negative impacts that second homes and long-term empty properties can have. She continued: They are some of the levers we have available to us as we seek to create a fairer system. We will continue to make every effort to increase the supply and availability of houses, as shown by the 1bn of funding to build 20,000 low carbon social homes, contained in the budget I published at the end of last year. Designated Member Sian Gwenllian MS added: It is clear that we as a country are facing a housing crisis. So many people cannot afford to live in their local areas, and the situation has worsened during the pandemic. These changes will make a difference, enabling councils to respond to their local circumstances, and start to close the loophole in the current law. Its a first, but important, step on a journey towards a new housing system that ensures that people have the right to live in their community. Through the Co-operation Agreement, we are committed to introducing a package of measures to tackle the injustices in the housing market. Todays announcement is just one part of that wider package. Second homes are a symptom of a wider problem a market that treats property, not as a home, but as a way of making a profit. By working across the parties in the Senedd, we will introduce more measures, as soon as we can, to make house prices and rents genuinely affordable for people. However the measures have been condemned by the Welsh Conservatives who have blamed the housing crisis at ministers. Welsh Conservative and Shadow Minister for Housing, Janet Finch-Saunders MS said: It is deeply concerning that Labour ministers are pandering to their nationalist coalition partners and punishing aspiration and investment in Wales. The housing crisis is a direct result of years successive Labour-led governments failing to provide opportunities and build enough houses with housebuilding falling below levels before devolution. What we see is a Labour Government desperately trying to act long after the horse has bolted. This Labour Government is failing to tackle the root issues of the housing crisis failing to address the fact that, until recently there have been more empty homes in Wales than there are second homes. Labour ministers in Cardiff Bay need to get a grip, address the housing shortage in Wales and provide an environment where hard work can be rewarded. Shanghai (Gasgoo)- Sunwoda Electric Vehicle Battery Co., Ltd. (Sunwoda EVB) is ready to sign an agreement with the Zhuhai municipal government to build a power battery manufacturing base in the city of China's Guangdong province, according to an announcement issued on Tuesday by Sunwoda Electronic Co., Ltd. (Sunwoda), the parent of Sunwoda EVB. Photo credit: Sunwoda EVB The Zhuhai power battery base will feature a designed yearly production capacity of 30GWh. The project will involve a total investment of around 12 billion yuan ($1.901 billion), 10 billion yuan ($1.584 billion) of which will be poured in fixed assets. Upon completion of the construction, the facility will focus on the R&D, design, production and sale of power battery cells, battery modules, and battery systems. Moreover, Sunwoda EVB will set up a subsidiary, temporarily named Zhuhai Sunwoda New Energy Co., Ltd., to advance the implementation of the project. On the same day, Sunwoda also announced that Sunwoda EVB has received a statement from SAIC Motor, who designated the former as a power battery supplier for its vehicles under the ZS12MCE HEV project. As for the funding progress, Sunwoda EVB would secure 2.43 billion yuan ($385 million) from 19 investors, including Jiangsu Chehejia Automobile Co., Ltd. and Suzhou Weirui Investment, which are affiliated companies of Li Auto and NIO, Sunwoda announced last week. On Monday, Emergency Medical Technicians (EMTs) staged a protest in Los Angeles and Orange counties to demand better wages and working conditions. The workers are members of Local 370 of the International Association of EMTs and Paramedics (IAEP), a division of the National Association of Government Employees. The workers are employed by Care Ambulance Service, acquired in 2011 by the Falck group, a Denmark-based international EMT multinational and the largest ambulance and EMT service provider in the world. Cares purchase was part of a wave of purchases of ambulance services by hedge funds all over the world; Falck was acquired by Baltica Insurance Company in 1988. Falck operates in 29 countries across the world, in Europe and in the Americas. Its profits shot up by 12.5 percent in 2021, during the deadliest period so far of the coronavirus pandemic. The company now delivers a positive return to its owners, in the words of its financial report. A section of the pickets (Credit: IAEP Facebook page) Three-quarters of Falck/Care Ambulance drivers in Orange and LA County get paid $15 per hour, which became the state minimum wage for California on January 1. A news article on Mondays protest rallies in the Los Angeles Times quoted IAEP Local 370 President Ryan Walters, who described EMT workers at Care Ambulances as very young, often under the age of 21. Some people leave before they can even drink. He added, The company wants to hire people and use them up as fast as possible. Speaking at the Los Angeles rally across from City Hall, IAEP leader Phil Petit said: Fifteen dollars, the minimum wage [in California], is not enough money for the work that you guys do. [I]t is unacceptable, and it ends now. Local 370 has been in negotiations with Falck for more than a year. But Petit was not able to explain why wages have remained so low for EMTs and ambulance workers and did not present any strategy to fight to raise workers wages and improve working conditions, other than denouncing the company for refusing to bargain. According to the IAEP press release announcing Mondays protests, since negotiations began over 25 percent of Care Ambulance drivers have quit or retired because of low pay and management harassment. Despite non-response and slow-response fines from Orange and LA County authorities, Care, presumably under orders from Falck, continues to stonewall health care workers. A spokesperson for the ambulance service denied that its workers are resigning and retiring at a faster rate than at other ambulance services in Southern California. As of January, after months of negotiations, Care has yet to make a wage offer. Along with its high cost of living, California ranks 23rd out of 50 states nationwide for low EMT wages. So far, the IAEP negotiators are demanding that Cares wages be raised to the level of drivers in Compton, California ($18 per hour), which it frames as a way of protecting the companies by encouraging employee retention. It is without reservation that we, the representatives of IAEP Local 12-370, agree that without immediate action, this unit [Care] will undoubtedly fail to serve California, said a January 24th statement from the local. In other words, rather than mobilizing a struggle by EMTs for higher wages, the IAEP poses as a friendly adviser to Falck, Care and the state government. Well over 100,000 people demonstrated in Berlin on Sunday against the war in Ukraine. Many participants were shocked by the Russian attack and came to the demonstration to express their concern about an escalation of the conflict. They carried Ukrainian flags, peace signs and rainbow flags. I am here because I am deeply shocked that something like this is possible in the 21st century, said a member of the group Grandmas against the right. She was insanely angry at how much money and material is now being wasted on war that we could all need right now for climate protection and for a liveable future. Demonstration against the Ukraine war in Berlin on February 27. The banner reads, War is no solution. (Photo credit: WSWS Media) Another participant said, I am here to express my desire for peace. The war must stop no matter what. A social worker said that weapons must be laid down. We are all human beings, and we should not do this. No way, no how. There is no point in doing that. We have seen this in the past and it is catching up with us so madly. The fact that we havent learned from this is an incredible shame. But the demonstration was marked by misunderstanding and political confusion, which was exploited by the organisers to promote an aggressive pro-NATO policy against Russia. Verdi service union leader Frank Werneke declared that Germany had the responsibility to restore the peaceful order. Therefore, it must now react with tough sanctions, which should not be weakened because of the economic interests of corporations. Christoph Bautz, executive director of the pro-government organisation Campact, also spoke out in favour of tough sanctions. He declared the war in Ukraine a fight for democracy and our liberal value system. Waving flags alone would not help, but one had to respond in the only language Putin understood. Therefore, gas and oil imports must be stopped, even if that means shutting down industrial production. He did not discuss the consequences for jobs and housing costs in Europe. Climate activist and Green Party politician Luisa Neubauer sang from the same song sheet and called for a shift away from Russian gas, which was financing the war. Weapons alone are not enough, she declared, thus also backing the German governments arms deliveries to the Ukrainian army. The call for confrontation with Russia was accompanied by the complete concealment of the background to the attack on Ukraine. Not a word was spoken about NATOs illegal wars or the systematic encirclement of Russia. In the speeches, the enormous danger of a third world war, which is threatened by the escalation on the part of NATO, was largely ignored, as well as by many participants. Yet only a few hours before the demonstration in a speech in the Bundestag (federal parliament), Chancellor Olaf Scholz had announced that Germany would supply weapons to Ukraine, increase the deployment of troops to the Russian border and triple Germanys war budget for 2022. Governments in the US, Germany and the other NATO states are using the war against Ukraine to increase arms spending without precedent and drive the nuclear power Russia more and more into a corner. Their goal is to reduce the country to colonial dependence and annex its numerous natural resources. Only against this background can the war against Ukraine be understood. It is the product of the policy of the last 30 years, during which NATO encircled Russia more and more and waged countless illegal wars of aggression, among other things, in order to push back Russian influence. Now, NATO is reacting by threatening Russia with open war and amassing troops on the Russian border. The Russian attack on Ukraine must be rejected from the standpoint of international socialism. The demonisation of Russia, which was all-pervasive at the demonstration, on the other hand, serves to cloak NATOs previous aggression and justify future wars. The logic of this policy leads directly to a third world war. Representatives of the Sozialistische Gleichheitspartei (Socialist Equality Party, SGP) distributed a statement by the International Committee of the Fourth International (ICFI) at Sundays demonstration to lay the basis for a genuine anti-war movement that opposes the NATO warmongers as well as the Russian invasion. In the statement, Oppose the Putin governments invasion of Ukraine and US-NATO warmongering! For the unity of Russian and Ukrainian workers! states: Despite the provocations and threats by the US and NATO powers, Russias invasion of Ukraine must be opposed by socialists and class-conscious workers. The catastrophe that was set in motion by the dissolution of the Soviet Union in 1991 cannot be averted on the basis of Russian nationalism, a thoroughly reactionary ideology that serves the interests of the capitalist ruling class represented by Vladimir Putin. On this basis, NATOs war propaganda is rejected in the strongest terms and the historical context of the Russian attack is shown: As always, the US media projects on to whomever it confronts as an enemy the image of pure evil. This explains nothing. The present confrontation with Russia is the outcome of a geopolitical strategy pursued by the United States since the dissolution of the USSR 30 years ago. Its aim has been US global hegemony, using military power to offset economic decline. This has been the source of the numerous and unending series of wars launched by the US, involving the invasion and/or bombing of Iraq, Somalia, Serbia, Afghanistan, Libya and Syria. Based on this historical understanding of the conflict, the ICFI develops the only perspective that can prevent a world war: The danger of a catastrophe can only be averted by the action of the working class, within the US and throughout the world, on the basis of a revolutionary socialist program. The ICFI calls for an immediate end to the war. In opposing the invasion of Ukraine, we denounce the policies of US/NATO imperialism, whose claims to be defending democracy and human rights are blood-drenched with hypocrisy. This perspective now acquires crucial importance. Against the all-party coalition for rearmament and war against Russia, a genuine anti-war movement of the international working class must be developed, which makes common cause neither with the NATO aggressors nor with the nationalist Putin regime. We call on all those who wish to participate in such a movement to contact the World Socialist Web Site and take up the struggle for socialism. The number of active COVID-19 cases in New Zealand has passed 120,000. The size of the Omicron variant outbreak has expanded more than a hundredfold in the past month. There were 22,152 new infections reported today, following 19,566 yesterday. There are 405 people in hospital. The death toll rose to 61 last Friday, with five deaths recorded in a single day, the largest daily number in New Zealand during the pandemic. This is only the beginning. COVID-19 Minister Chris Hipkins said today that the number of people in hospital with the virus could reach 1,000 or 1,500. This would be challenging for health workers, he stated. The positivity rate is very high, with about one in five people in Wellington, the capital city, testing positive, indicating there are many undetected cases. Less than 60 percent of people over 12 have received a third dose of the Pfizer vaccine, and just over half of those aged 5 to 11 have received a single dose, leaving many without significant protection against Omicron. The explosion of cases was not inevitable. It is the outcome of the Labour Party-led governments decision in October last year to abandon its previous elimination policy. Since then, public health restrictions have been progressively lifted and the government has declared there will be no return to lockdowns. The government talks about Omicron washing over New Zealand in a wave, which will supposedly peak and then subside, causing minimal harm. In fact, as the entire pandemic has shown, allowing the virus to spread means there will be continuous waves. The virus can infect people multiple times, and mutate into new variants, continuing to cause large numbers of deaths, severe illness and disability. The only way to protect lives and peoples health is through a properly funded elimination strategy. Laboratories processing COVID tests have been overwhelmed with demand. Director-General of Health Ashley Bloomfield yesterday apologised for a delay in processing a backlog of 32,000 tests. Some people are waiting longer than five days for a result. In response to the crisis, the government sent over 9,000 tests to Queensland, Australia for processing over the weekend. Elspeth Frascatore, an emergency doctor in Auckland, wrote on the Spinoffwebsite that healthcare workers feel overwhelmed and unseen as politicians agitate for the removal of all public health restrictions. COVID is not finished with us. Its just getting started, she warned. As hospitalisations soar, Radio NZ reported yesterday that about 880 workers at the Counties Manukau District Health Board in working class South Auckland, 13.5 percent of all hospital staff, are off sick or isolating because a member of their household has the virus. Across Auckland, hospitals have drastically cut back on services and non-urgent procedures are being postponed. Thousands of workers herded into unsafe workplaces are being exposed to the virus, which is disrupting supply chains. The Countdown supermarket chain reports that nearly 1,000 workers around the country are infected, including 45 percent of staff at two Auckland distribution centres. New Zealand Couriers, a major delivery company, told the media today that half of its workforce in Auckland is not able to work, and the company has been forced to cut back to delivering only medical supplies and other essentials. COVID continues to spread like wildfire among younger people due to the criminal resumption of in-person learning. Minister Hipkins declared last Friday that one in five schools had cases and the government expects just about every school, every early childhood service will come into contact with the virus in a matter of weeks. The Ministry announced last week that schools no longer had to contact trace or inform parents that their child may be a close contact. The government is relying on the teacher unions, which support keeping schools open, regardless of how many people get sick, so that parents can remain on the job, making profits for big business. Some schools, however, are taking their own action. Last week, Henderson Intermediate closed for two weeks after having COVID cases in almost every class. Its principal Wendy Esera said to the New Zealand Herald: Were hearing all the time that everybodys going to get it ... well actually our attitude at our school is no, were not. We are going to do everything we can to keep our staff and our students and their families safe. Universities are being swamped with cases. Dr Bloomfield described the start of the university year as a nationwide super-spreader event. Some universities have moved to online learning. At Victoria University of Wellington (VUW), where in-person learning began this week, 850 students in halls of residenceabout 30 percenthave tested positive for COVID. The Tertiary Education Unions branch secretary Dougal McNeil, a member of the pseudo-left International Socialist Organisation, yesterday criticised VUW for not properly informing staff about the COVID situation, so that they could make individual decisions about whether to shift to online learning. The TEU, however, supported the governments wholesale reopening of education institutions. University of Wellington The ongoing anti-vaccination encampment outside parliament in Wellington is another super-spreader. As of Monday, 17 COVID cases were linked to the protest, including 3 that had to be hospitalised. The right-wing, religious and anti-science groups leading the protest have denounced vaccine mandates and other public health measures as tyranny, and demanded that the population live with the virus. Prime Minister Jacinda Ardern denounced the three-week occupation as a COVID camp and urged people to stay away for health reasons. Her government, however, backed by the pro-capitalist unions, has acceded to demands from the opposition parties and business interests for restrictions to be lifted more rapidly. Last Friday the government moved to phase three of its Omicron response plan. This means a shift to greater personal responsibility and looser restrictions. Only COVID cases and household contacts are required to isolate; other contacts of positive cases, such as work colleagues, do not need to. People can increasingly test themselves using rapid antigen tests (RATs) and are asked to log their positive results online, and to self-notify their contacts. In addition, Ardern announced that, from Friday this week, vaccinated New Zealanders entering the country from any part of the world will no longer be required to self-isolate for any period, provided they test negative for COVID. All these changes will further accelerate the spread of the virus. While the unions have suppressed opposition to the let it rip agenda, the crisis is pushing workers to fight back against unsafe conditions and low wages. Ten thousand healthcare workers, including laboratory workers processing COVID tests, voted to strike for 24 hours this Friday, and again on March 18. Yesterday, the countrys District Health Boards asked the Employment Court to impose an injunction to stop Fridays strike, ahead of negotiations with the Public Service Association scheduled to take place next week, facilitated by the Employment Relations Authority. The court has not yet made its decision. We urge Michigan educators, parents, students and workers to attend the Michigan Educators Rank-and-File Safety Committee meeting tonight, Wednesday, March 2 at 7 PM. Register here. Across the state of Michigan, school mask mandates are being lifted. On February 16, the Michigan Department of Health and Human Services signed onto the unscientific policy, advising that it was no longer recommending face masks indoors, including at schools. Many districts abruptly rescinded the requirement. The states largest school system, Detroit Public Schools Community District (DPSCD), along with Lansing, Ypsilanti and Flint, will retain the mitigation requirement, at least temporarily. However, DPSCD Superintendent Nicholai Vitti has indicated that masks may become optional by early to mid-March. Other districts, including Grand Blanc, Kearsley Community Schools and Dearborn Public Schools have summarily ended the mandate. The state is marching in lockstep with the CDCs capitulation to the Biden administrations edicts to live with the virus and normalize unending mass infections and deaths. Children walked back into schools mask-less on Monday as news broke that a preprint study found that the highly-touted Pfizer vaccine showed a major drop in efficacy among 5-11 year olds. Even more devastatingly, the CDC Data Tracker Demographics section has added 212 pediatric deaths in recent weeks, an increase of 10 deaths per day, bringing national childhood deaths to 1,430. Dearborn Public Schools, southeast of Detroit in Wayne County, Michigan, lifted its mask mandate on Wednesday, February 23, after the school districts midwinter break. The city, Michigans seventh-largest, has been one of the hardest hit by the pandemic, with 30,000 of its 110,000 people officially infected and 343 killed by COVID-19 since 2020. Casey, a parent of two and an educator, spoke to the World Socialist Web Site, explaining her outrage at sending unprotected children into schools. Aiming to alert other families to the dangers involved, she created placards describing the citys low vaccination rates and plastered them on her car, which she left in the parking area by the school. This act of protest prompted the school principal to call the police on her, not once but twice. Poster that Casey had in her car supporting the use of face masks. Casey explained, The first instance [of police harassment] was in Spring 2021. This was when face-to-face instruction started back up at Dearborn Public Schools. I parked in front of my childs school with signs on the car. I expressed my disagreement with reopening schools in-person. I returned a second day with signs on my truck. I had the vaccination rates listed, showing that they were very low. That evening, the police came to my house. He said he wanted to see what I was up to and to make sure it wasnt going to escalate. That was his word, escalate. I had a friend who taught there. Many were scared and didnt want to go back under those conditions. The Dearborn Federation of Teachers didnt do anything, they are very weak, but union members were supportive of me. The vaccination rates were low and it wasnt safe. Ive never heard of police going to someones home before for something like this. Then, last Wednesday, as children were returning from break, Dearborn Public Schools suddenly lifted its mask mandate, just weeks after the district reported some of its highest numbers of cases. Poster that Casey had in her car supporting the use of face masks. Casey decided to protest again. She said, I have a right to say my piece. I parked and left and walked home. I wasnt doing anything, just leaving a truck with signs on it. The principal called the police because she wanted to know what I was up to and if I was going to cause a disturbance. I put signs on the truck the first day, Wednesday. It was trash day, so I couldnt park on the street. So I tooted my horn and drove slowly, safely, in front of the school so that it would be seen. The principal saw me outside. When I went home, within 10 minutes, we received an email that masks were optional and not necessary. Right away, she must have gone into the building and sent that. They sent the police that day and I wasnt there. The second day he came and talked to me in front of the school, standing next to the vehicle. I had parents who gave me the thumbs up, but I also saw kids without masks. There were other people pretending not to see me. Id say it was about 55 percent no masks, 45 percent with masks. I believe, and I put it on my truck, that our teachers, elders and medically frail are worth the inconvenience of wearing masks. Perhaps the principal is upwardly mobile and wants to uphold the superintendent and higher-ups. So shes trying to stamp out any waves or complaints real quick. Poster that Casey had in her car supporting the use of face masks. But to send a policeman to my house? It is intimidating. I have a vested interest in the school, in the community and I had a right to be there. The right of free expression is at stake and the ability to do that without pressure... The root cause for what I did is the need to keep our children, teachers, elders and medically frail safe. They deserve to go to school and be safe. But for the ruling class the question is, Will the stock market go up or go down? The capitalists want to keep the economy going and prevent people from being aware of the dangers. I stand for science. They just want us to warehouse the students so that we continue to make the widgets. I support the Michigan Educators Rank-and-File Safety Committee because it is necessary for education. There has been so much misinformation. It is also important to have a support system, so that none of us are alone. The Michigan Educators Rank-and-File Safety Committee is meeting tonight, Wednesday, March 2 at 7 PM. Register here and invite your coworkers, family and friends to attend! Directed by Ryusuke Hamaguchi; co-written by Hamaguchi and Takamasa Oe Drive My Car is directed by Japanese filmmaker Ryusuke Hamaguchi. Adapted from a 2014 short story by Haruki Murakami, it is co-written by Hamaguchi and Takamasa Oe. The film also makes mention or includes portions of Samuel Becketts Waiting for Godot and Anton Chekhovs Uncle Vanya. Hamaguchis movie has had considerable success in the festival and awards circuit so far. Drive My Car had its world premiere at the Cannes Film Festival last year, where it gained three awards, including Best Screenplay. It has earned four Academy Award nominations, for Best Picture, Best Director, Best International Feature Film and Best Adapted Screenplay, and it also won Best Foreign Language Film at the Golden Globe Awards. Hidetoshi Nishijima and Toko Miura in Drive My Car In our view, the acclaim is vastly overblown. This nearly three-hour production may be striving for something real or serious but does not achieve it. Drive My Car is a largely gloomy and tedious work that does not tell us much, if anything, about contemporary life. That such a self-involved, trite film is heaped with praisefor example, a flat-out masterpiece enthralling from first scene to lastsays more about the preoccupations of certain social strata than it does about anything else. With the world on a knife-edge, this is what such people concern themselves with. The film begins with a 40-minute semi-prologue set in Tokyo. Actor and theater director Yusuke Kafuku (Hidetoshi Nishijima) is married to television screenwriter Oto (Reika Kirishima), whose inspirations arrive during sexual climax (Shed grasp a thread of a story from the edge of orgasm). This sets the tone for subsequent developments. Yusuke is currently working on Waiting for Godot, as he prepares to play the lead in a production of Uncle Vanya. Shortly after he is diagnosed with glaucoma and faces the possibility of losing his eyesight, his wife suddenly succumbs to a cerebral hemorrhage. The grief-stricken Yusuke is aware that Oto had many extramarital affairs, which were apparently important for her art. In one scene, he surreptitiously views his wife making love to a young, bad-boy celebrity actor Koji (Masaki Okada). What binds but also estranges the couple is the tragic loss of a daughter 20 years earlier. Sometime following his wifes death, Yusuke accepts a job directing another production of Uncle Vanya at an arts festival in Hiroshima. The cast will feature Japanese, Chinese and Korean actors speaking multiple languages, including sign language. But the veteran actor refuses to play Vanya this time, because Chekhov is terrifying When you say his lines, it drags out the real you. Instead, he casts the far too young Koji, his wifes former lover, in the role. Drive My Car (2021) Yusuke chooses to be lodged an hour away from the rehearsal venue, as a portion of his theatrical preparation involves listening to the deceased Oto on tape reciting the Chekhov work. Consequently, he must then accept the rules of the festival that he be driven to the theater and back each day. This brings the emotionally burdened artist into contact with a stifled, sullen driver, Misaki (Toko Miura), with whom he begins to develop a peculiar relationship. In a ponderous scene, both Yusuke and Misaki discover and articulate guilt feelings, respectively involving his wife and her mother. Neither revelation is especially earth-shaking or illuminating. The production of Uncle Vanya proceeds. We ultimately see Misaki in the audience while Yusuke performs. One critic argues that Drive My Cars brilliance lies in its celebration of the dirtiness of life, and how our greatest triumphs exist in simply carrying on.Under genuinely traumatic circumstances that might be the case. The filmmakers do not demonstrate that these are such circumstances or that merely enduring is the appropriate response to the protagonists difficulties. A sense of proportion is seriously lacking. The glumness and resignation of the central characters no doubt reflect something real about the Japanese middle class in particular, after years and years of political and cultural stagnation. However, impressionistically registering moods on the surface of society does not constitute artistic brilliance, and simply carrying on is not a triumph under any condition. Beckett and Chekhov had their serious limitations, but their work amounts to more than that. Drive my Car suggests that the filmmakers are overwhelmed by the immediate situation in Japan and too intellectually sluggish to seriously explore its social roots and trajectory. Neither the climactic sequence referred to above nor the film as a whole is made more tolerable by Eiko Ishibashis lugubrious score and Hidetoshi Shinomiyas shadowy cinematography. In fact, the most dynamic part of the film is its peripheral plot devicethe final staging of Uncle Vanya. Again, let us point to what various reviewers have said about this foolish, pretentious movie. One writes glowingly about Hamaguchis having explored the intricacies of grief and intimacyand having given an incredibly touching glimpse of real empathy. Another critics musing that theres little he [the filmmaker] couldnt capture about the life of the mind leads one to question the life of the mind that could make this assertion about such a dull, banal work. [H]aunting and true, melancholy and wise, writes another reviewer about Drive My Car. The film review aggregator Rotten Tomatoes registers a 98 percent approval rating for 169 reviews of the film. As we have previously argued on numerous occasions, one can shy away from the difficult task of examining the concrete conditions that have a bearing on important aspects of lifethats easy enough to do, and quite acceptable these daysbut the result is a cinema that marginalizes itself, renders itself largely insignificant. Drive My Car stands in contrast to mid-century Japanese cinema, one of the glories of postwar cultural life (Kurosawa, Mizoguchi, Ozu, Naruse, Ichikawa, Imamura and many others), which looked closely and audaciously into the sources and consequences of authoritarianism, war, violence and foreign occupation. Japanese filmmakers tackled major issues head on, demonstrating a moral fearlessness that, among other things, could mercilessly critique an officialdom that had led Japan into a cataclysm. Drive My Car It is revealing that the immense tragedythe August 1945 atomic bombing by the US militaryassociated with the setting for much of Drive My Car, Hiroshima, goes entirely unreferenced. In 1998, in an obituary for legendary Japanese filmmaker Akira Kurosawa (1910-1998), the WSWS commented: At his best Kurosawa demonstrated an extraordinary visual and intellectual vivacity. Whatever his limitationsand there are moments when his conceptions seem overmatched by his emotionsone feels that Kurosawa never shied away from any problem or dilemma. His is a cinema of towering, almost superhuman confrontations, whether in medieval forests or modern city streets. He created, as one critic puts it, dense fictional worlds, in which his fascination with human nature and social problems was given free range. In much more recent times, Miwa Nishikawas Under the Open Sky (2020) compassionately centers on a man who comes out of prison after a long sentence. The WSWS wrote that veteran actor Koji Yakusho gives a beautiful, nuanced performance as a tortured soul for whom Japanese society has no place. In its own fashion, Hirokazu Koreedas The Truth (2019) was also an intriguing work. Two valuable Asian or Asian-American films, Parasite and Minari, loomed large at the 2020 and 2021 Academy Awards ceremonies, respectively. Those last works were vibrant, complex and also amusing, peppered with plebeian humorand socially sharp. Drive My Car, by contrast, is a largely pointless film. Three people are confirmed dead in Lismore, with more bodies likely to be discovered as floodwaters recede and recovery crews continue rescue operations. At least nine people have died in Queensland amid warnings the states flood emergency is far from over, with more thunderstorms and rain predicted later in the week. Lismore service station on Monday February 28 (Credit: Facebook/Jen Sparkles) The CBD of Lismore, in northern New South Wales (NSW), was completely flooded on Monday after the Wilson River broke the citys 10 metre levee around 3 a.m.. Floodwaters peaked around 12 hours later at 14.4 metres, far exceeding the 12.15 metre height of the 1974 floods and the greatest recorded level of 12.46 metres in 1890. Some residents were forced to cut holes in the roofs of their houses to escape after the floodwaters rose above the level of doors and windows. Many waited on their rooftops for hours, with emergency services completely overwhelmed. The rescue effort in Lismore has been almost entirely carried out by individual volunteers, as a city with a population of 44,000 has been all but abandoned by the state and federal governments. To the extent that there has not been a mass casualty event in Lismore, it is solely the result of the selfless actions of ordinary people coming to the rescue of one another. On Monday, at least 50 boat owners turned up in response to a social media call from the desperately under-resourced State Emergency Service (SES), which has just seven boats in Lismore. At one point during the crisis, the SES received up to 374 emergency calls in half an hour. Around 45 Fijian abattoir workers rescued 60 residents from an aged care facility that was almost completely submerged. One of the workers, Apenisa Marau, said on 2GB Radio, It was really hard, and quite terrifying trying to get those elderly people out of their homes. Most of them were bedridden, in wheelchairs; some of them were just trying to stay afloat, Marau continued. We just tried to do what we can, since were going to be here for the next three years, we wanted to be a part of the community. Some residents cut holes in their roofs to escape rising floodwaters in Lismore (Credit: Twitter/@worldzonfire) The Fijian workers arrived in the region last year as part of the Pacific Labour Scheme, which provides business with cheap labour sourced from impoverished countries. The workers are denied the basic rights of citizenship or permanent residency and their temporary visas are tied to the companies that employ them. The heroic actions of these highly exploited workers, along with many other ordinary people, stands in complete contrast with the woefully inadequate preparation and response of the NSW, Queensland and federal governments. Twitter user Eddie Lloyd, a Lismore resident, posted today: Food has run out in the shops and water is due to run out this afternoon. Where is the PM? HELP. Also on Twitter, Ellena wrote yesterday: Major flood warnings were texted to Brisbane residents a day AFTER rivers were rising, and power was lost Sunday night with the next outage update due this Friday 9pm! We appreciate freak events cant be helped but weve been here before and expect better. Another Brisbane resident told the World Socialist Web Site: The government has not done anything to avoid this happening again. It rained exactly the same as it did last flood. Communication has been just as dismal as last flood. Everyone knows Brisbane floods. They changed the zoning so that places could be built on flood plains so developers could make money. The government relies on the people to pick up the bill for everything, the suffering, the loss of wages and houses. People whose homes have been severely damaged or destroyed have been offered a woefully inadequate $1,000 per adult and $400 per child one-off disaster recovery payment. NSW Premier Dominic Perrottet described the storm as a one-in-a-thousand-year event yesterday. While this claim was particularly outlandish, similar statements are made by governments in response to virtually every disaster in an attempt to excuse the inadequate official response and lack of preparation or timely warnings. Last year, NSW Premier Gladys Berejiklian claimed severe flooding in the state was a one in 100-year event. While Mondays rain and flooding was on a scale not previously recorded in Lismore, major flood events are not unusual. Despite this, the city was not included as a priority area for flood mitigation funding in a recent grant round administered by the National Resilience and Recovery Agency. Floodwaters are now rising in Ballina, around 40 kilometres east of Lismore, after the Richmond river burst its banks. Overnight, the towns hospital was evacuated and 55 patients moved to a nearby school, where a makeshift emergency department has been established. The intense low-pressure system responsible for record rainfall and flooding in Queensland and Northern NSW in recent days is now moving south, threatening further death and devastation of homes, businesses and infrastructure. The Bureau of Meteorology (BOM) has issued severe weather warnings for damaging winds and heavy rainfall, as well as abnormally high tides covering most of the NSW coastline, from Newcastle to Eden. Major flood warnings are in place from Greater Sydney to the South Coast. Across the state, more than 40,000 people have been ordered to evacuate, while at least another 300,000 are on high alert. Already today, a landslide at Kiama Heights on the South Coast has closed one lane of the Princes Highway, and hundreds of residents have been ordered to evacuate in parts of the southwest Sydney suburbs of Milperra, Chipping Norton and Liverpool. Warragamba Dam, in Sydneys southwest, reached capacity at about 3 a.m. today, and is expected to remain full for at least two weeks. As much as 250 gigalitres of water is expected to spill over today, after the dam began overflowing around 6 a.m.. This has evoked fears of a repeat of major flooding in Sydneys northwest just under a year ago when the dam filled and was discharging water into the Nepean river at a rate of 500 gigalitres per day. A young migrant worker from Pakistan was killed when he was trapped in his car in floodwaters in the citys northwest, and thousands of homes were severely damaged. The Nepean River is expected to pass the moderate flood level of 7.9 metres late this evening, while the Hawkesbury River may exceed the major flood level of 10.5 metres tonight and reach as high as 14 metres tomorrow. Amidst relentless pro-war propaganda in the press, the COVID-19 pandemic is still raging in France a little over a month away from the 2022 presidential elections. The total death toll is approaching 140,000. In the last seven days 1,427 people died from the virus. Over 2,500 remain on ventilators in French hospitals. Even though cases have continued to fall in France since the peak of over half a million cases on January 25 they remain high, the seven-day average is still above 54,000. This is equivalent to the peak of the devastating second wave in the winter of 2020 to 2021. Nonetheless, the Macron government is removing all but the most limited health restrictions. On February 28, the requirement to wear masks in indoor venues requiring the vaccination pass was removed. This primarily applies to theatres, cinemas, and museums. Public transport and indoor shops are the only places where masks remain mandatory. Emmanuel Macron [Sebastien Nogier, Pool via AP] There was also a further reduction in mandatory isolation for contact cases. Now only one negative antigen test after two days of isolation is sufficient for release. It is still the case that vaccinated individuals who test positive can be released after only five days of isolation and a negative antigen test. Antigen tests are unreliable and are only effective when patients are at their most symptomatic. As has been well known since the beginning of the pandemic, and has been shown in studies of the Omicron variant, individuals are infectious both pre- and post-symptomatically. The new policy therefore will mean the even earlier release of infectious individuals back to workplaces, schools, and throughout society. The latest rollback follows weeks cutting down what remained of health measures to combat COVID-19. On 16 February, nightclubs and concert venues reopened without capacity restrictions. On 2 February, the requirement to encourage remote work was also cancelled. Mandatory masks in French high schools have also been progressively dropped in the past three weeks. According to the National Institute for Demographic Studies, over 20,000 people have died from the Omicron-driven fifth wave of the virus in France. Fifty-five percent of victims had received at least two doses of the vaccine, bursting through the notion that a vaccine-only strategy is sufficient to protect human life. However, the same figures also show the necessity of combining mass vaccination with social distancing measures. In January 2022, the unvaccinated French population had 142 deaths per 100,000 compared to 10 deaths per 100,000 for those who had received a booster. This makes clear that the effectiveness of vaccines is indisputable. However, had a scientific zero-COVID policy been implemented then none of these deaths, including the 120,000 before the fifth wave, would have taken place. Children have experienced skyrocketing levels of infection during the Omicron wave. As a result of the conscious mass infection policy pursued in schools, 16 children aged between 0 and 9 years-old died from COVID-19 just in January and February 2022. Since the beginning of the pandemic, millions of unvaccinated children have been infected, 10 to 15 percent of whom will be victims of Long COVID. Even before the Russian invasion of Ukraine on February 24, Frances presidential candidates were muted on the pandemic, or where it was discussed, this was only to criticize the remaining health restrictions. Neither Macron, Blanquer, nor Veran, have made a statement on COVID-19 since a January 20 press conference. In early January, Macron sought to shift blame for the consequences of his own deadly pandemic policy onto the Frances small unvaccinated population, declaring, the unvaccinated, I really want to cover them in sh*t. Since then, Macrons government has pursued a rapid rollback of the limited health restrictions that were in place. In early January, right-wing Les Republicains candidate Valerie Pecresse stated that if she were president her only additional measure would be a lockdown of the unvaccinated. Pseudo-left La France Insoumise candidate Jean Luc Melenchon has scarcely mentioned the pandemic, except to attack Macrons limited measures from the right, notably by continuing his partys support for far-right anti-vaccine protesters. The far-right candidates have attacked what limited measures were in line with anti-vaccination activists and eugenicists. On January 19, Le Pen stated that vaccination of children is a form of abuse.' Fascistic candidate Eric Zemmour has also denounced this measure, also insisting that COVID-19 must be lived with as we have done for centuries with other respiratory diseases like influenza. Contrary to the anti-scientific claims coming from every section of the French ruling elite, it is not the case that society must learn to live with the virus. COVID-19 is not equivalent to influenza. It continues to have much higher mortality rate than the flu despite much more widespread vaccination coverage. It not only attacks the lungs, but also leads to inflammation of the heart, brain, and other vital organs. Amongst its known long-term effects are diabetes, cognitive decline, and a dramatically increased mortality rate from twenty diseases, including heart failure, at least one year after infection. The effects of wave after wave of mass COVID-19 infection on Frances 300,000 immuno-suppressed individuals will be catastrophic. With tens of thousands of daily infections in France and hundreds of thousands throughout Europe, the evolution of a dangerous new variant is only a matter of time. Vaccine effectiveness against infection and severe disease also declines over time. In these conditions, the roll back of the most basic measures to combat the virus, masking and proper isolation of infected cases leaves the population in France and internationally as sitting ducks for the next major variant. Nonetheless, the French ruling class is united in its aim to continue its mass infection policy, regardless of the cost in lives. Thus, in the third year of the pandemic and at nearly 140,000 deaths France faces a remarkable situation where, except for Zemmours openly fascistic program, no leading presidential candidate has any detailed outline of their pandemic policy for a presidential election little over a month away. This mix of silence and far-right agitation on the pandemic reflects the capitalist class intention to continue to rule with a policy of mass infection. The working class must also be aware that the current NATO-led war drive following the Russian invasion of Ukraine will be utilized by capitalist governments across the continent to divert attention away from pandemic and its impact on the population. Class tensions in France and across Europe have been massively accelerated by the COVID-19 pandemic. Much like its allies in Europe and across the Atlantic, large sections of the French ruling class sees an external war as a crucial tactic to suppress internal divisions. The unity of presidential candidates in embracing a policy of mass infection underlines the necessity of building an independent working-class movement to eliminate the pandemic and oppose the reckless drive to war. WSWS reporters interviewed students in the Paris suburbs on the wave of COVID-19 infections from December to February, driven by the Omicron variant. As European governments end all measures to limit infections, youth expressed their anger over the negligence of the government and their support for a policy of stopping transmission of the virus to put an end to the pandemic. They all have noted the flagrant contempt of President Emmanuel Macrons government for their health and the proper organization of their studies. Emilie, a high school student, explained: The health situation at school was really catastrophic during Christmas when the number of infections rose, leading to 15 absentees in our class. Despite the discontent of students, teachers and a protest from the lead teacher, in-person lessons went ahead anyway, supposedly because the students had masks and were not at risk. The health situation has not been dealt with seriously. A school in Strasbourg, eastern France, on September 2, 2021. (AP Photo/Jean-Francois Badias) Marjorie, a university student at Paris-IX, said: We are supposed to concentrate on our studies, but I wonder how is this possible, knowing that COVID is present in my class but that the class has not been shut down. Every day is the same We are constantly stressed out by our studies, not knowing even where that is leading. We feel oppressed by the government and ignored. During January, nearly all my fellow students caught COVID, the school became a real cluster of positive cases, remarked Celine, a high school student in Blanc-Menil, who described her condition as being in desperation at the governments public health announcements, which she called very illogical. All the students noted the incoherence of the Macron governments proposed health measures and criticized his refusal to introduce distance learning or even to halve class sizes in schools. French President Emmanuel Macron visits a call centre of the French Social security insurance dedicated to Covid-19 vaccinations, Monday, March 29, 2021 in Creteil, outside Paris. Marjorie said: The more we go forward in time, the more the governments measures appear crazy. For example, we have arrow-signalled passageways in our school. I dont think COVID circulates in a specific direction according to arrows. To my mind, it is useless to put arrows everywhere when everyone is confined to the same space for more than an hour. And whats more, the regulation that we cannot drink coffee standing is totally crazy. It is not as if COVID circulates only 5 foot 6 inches above the ground. These measures are ridiculous. Emilie recounted that when mass absences prevented the normal functioning of her classes, my main teacher went to complain to the administration demanding the closure of the class. He was told, It is not possible, the students are wearing masks. I really hope this situation will change. The girls also complained about the limited restrictive regulations on contact cases, i.e., students exposed to the virus. By limiting the number of youth declared as contact cases in school, Macron has kept a maximum number of youth in class to keep their parents at work making profits for the banks. This decision was taken with contempt for the health, education and even the lives of young people and their families. Why are we not contact cases when wearing a mask and sitting next to a student who has tested positive for COVID? The media and government themselves explain that surgical masks do not protect enough from COVID, noted Celine, who criticized the incoherence of the government in allowing even sick students to return to school and infect their friends in class. She said: I had a friend in class who had COVID the first week back in school. She was in quarantine for a week. However, after seven days her PCR test was still positive. The senior school administrator told her to come back, even if she still tested positive, because she was vaccinated. I think that this is not right to force her to return to school even if she was vaccinated. She still felt unwell and was extremely pale, but obliged to be in school. Marjorie described her feeling of suffocating on public transport, when everyone is squashed together like sardines at rush hour. The media talk a lot about COVID but never discuss the conditions that people endure during the rush hour Every day, students and workers have to get to school and work, obliged to use public transport. It has become a nightmare to use it, for fear of catching the virus. While in 2021 already 2 million children across the globe had lost at least one parent due to COVID-19, Marjorie emphasized the fear so many youth have of infecting their families. As regards her unease on public transport, she said: Personally, I have members of my family who are vulnerable. I just cannot even accept getting infected with COVID for fear of contaminating my sick family members. The pandemic is an indelible experience for a generation of youth, not only in France, but across the globe. After two years, Emilie affirms, We clearly see that COVID has changed the lives of all students. This brutal experience has given rise to an anger and growing opposition of youth and workers to the policies of the banks and the Macron government to eliminate all health measures aimed at stopping the transmission of the virus, except the use of masks by individuals, which is not even mandated. Emilie said, I think that mask wearing is insufficient. We must limit mass gatherings and it seems there are no longer any protective measures in open public spaces. Marjorie emphasized the example of China, which has stomped out the pandemic and thus better saved lives. Indeed, China has experienced new cases of COVID-19 imported from abroad but has not reported any deaths from COVID-19 since the end of 2020. From March 2020 to the present, China has only detected 29,000 cases, compared to the 42,000 cases detected in one day two days ago in France. Marjorie compared Chinas record to that of Macron, the president of the rich, saying; Take the example of China to illustrate the fact that it is not impossible to combat the pandemic, but that it is the government which decides to do nothing. In China, they put in place restrictions very early, isolated cases and reduced the virus circulation. However, in France and everywhere in Europe we are drowning in COVID cases. They only want to preserve their ratings and their economy. ATLANTA Besharam announced it is bringing the entire range of Fifty Shades of Grey products from Lovehoney to India. Resonating with the mission of Besharam in democratizing sex and pleasure, Lovehoney aims to bring sexual happiness and a fullfilling sex life to one of the largest customer bases for adult toys in the world. Besharam, Indias leading adult store for everything pleasure, kink, novelties and lingerie, showcases more than 120 brands from the most reputed companies worldwide, offering a premium platform. The name Besharam means "Shameless," but in essence Besharam is about speaking up and expressing yourself, without any fear or stigma from society. The brand's purpose has evolved over the years of existence from being an online safe place to access pleasure products, to now being the voice of millions of Indians who strive for equality and diversity, both in the bedroom and outside of it, the company said. In short, Besharam is about democratizing sex & pleasure. Raj Armani, the COO at Besharam, remarked, "Lovehoney, as company is the most perfect and real example of how an ecommerce business should be like, and as a brand, Lovehoney is the one-stop shop where consumers come in search of the perfect orgasm. Besharam since its founding years has aspired to be the Lovehoney for Indians in India and world ide, with the same flair but an extra level of mischief and a dash of wittiness. The partnership with Lovehoney is everything that a perfect Bollywood movie be about, brands that attract each other and a match made in heaven. We are more than excited to present the line of products from Lovehoney, primarily the Fifty Shades of Grey collection to India. "With its enormous appetite for fun, passion, pleasure and everything in between, Indians have embraced the stories, movies and products from FSOG and are asking for more," says Simon Smith, VP Business Development at Lovehoney Group. "We are grateful for this and happily oblige. We are looking forward to a long-term and successful partnership with Besharam. We appreciate the teams efforts and achievements to bring premium products to Indian customers and spread the mission of democratizing sexuality and pleasure." Washington is intensifying pressure on India to line up with the US-NATO war drive against Moscow over Russias invasion of Ukraine, undermining Indias precarious balancing act between its strategic partnership with the United States and its longstanding defence ties with Russia. India has long maintained close ties with Moscow as well as Washington, claiming it was thus preserving strategic autonomy while allying with Washington against China. Despite having secured high-tech US military equipment after being designated a major defence partner by Washington, India still substantially depends on Russian military supplies. According to a study by the Stimson Center, 86 percent of Indian military equipment is of Russian origin. Russian technology and material are also crucial for Indias civil nuclear program. And so US State Department spokesman Ned Price addressed India after it abstained in the voting at an emergency session of United National Security Council (UNSC) condemning Russian invasion in Ukraine, during a daily press briefing on Friday. He began, We share important interests with India. We share important values with India. And we know India has a relationship with Russia that is distinct from the relationship that we have with Russia. Of course, that is okay. T. S. Tirumurti, permanent representative of India to the United Nations, speaks during a meeting of the Security Council, Monday, February 28, 2022, at United Nations Headquarters. (AP Photo/John Minchillo) However, Price made clear Washington expects India to toe the US line against Russia: And again, we have asked every country that has a relationship, and certainly those countries that have leverage, to use that leverage in a constructive way. The next day, Republican Senator John Cornyn more explicitly expressed disappointment over Indias abstention in the UNSC vote against Russia. Cornyn is the co-chair of the Senate India Caucusthe US Senates only country-specific caucus, founded by Cornyn and then-Senator Hillary Clinton during the Bush administration, pointing to the significance Washington places on its military-strategic partnership with India. Cornyn said, Disappointing: India has avoided publicly denouncing Russia for its invasion of Ukraine, as New Delhi tries to balance a strategic relationship with Moscow and its role in an emerging coalition of democracies. Cornyn advocates close US relations with India. He has campaigned to intensify US military relations with India and to waive sanctions on India over its purchase of Russian S-400 air defence missile system. His comments on the Russian-Ukraine war indicate, however, that Washington could use sanctions to try to force India to support its war drive against Russia. Writing on February 24 in the US magazine Foreign Policy, Michael Kugelman, who directs work on South Asia at the Wilson Center think tank in Washington, said: Indias public statements on the current crisis [Russian-Ukraine war] have so far pleased Russian officials But Russian aggression in Ukraine poses major threats to Indian interests, from driving Moscow into Beijings arms to distracting Washington from countering Chinese power in the Asia-Pacific. On Sunday, India abstained from a procedural vote at the UNSC to call for a rare special emergency session of the UN General Assembly to discuss the Russian invasion of Ukraine. India joined China and the UAE in abstaining while Russia voted against. As such procedural votes are exempted from the UNSC veto, however, the special session of the UN General Assembly convened accordingly on Monday; a nonbinding resolution denouncing Russian aggression is set be voted on Wednesday. This is to be grist for the mill of NATO war propaganda against Russia. After Sundays UNSC vote, Indias Permanent Representative to the UN T. S. Tirmurti appealed for dialogue and de-escalation to avoid all-out conflict. It is regrettable that the situation in Ukraine has worsened further since the Council last convened on this matter, Tirmurti said, adding: There is no other choice but to return to the path of diplomacy and dialogue. Dialogue is the only answer to settling differences and disputes, however daunting that may appear at this moment. It is a matter of regret that the path of diplomacy was given up. We must return to it. However, sections of the Indian ruling elite are beginning to demand that India line up with Washington against Russia. Sashi Tharoor, a senior leader of the opposition Congress party, criticized Prime Minister Narendra Modis Hindu-supremacist government for not denouncing Russia. On Thursday, he tweeted: So Russia is conducting a regime change operation [in Ukraine]. How long can India, which had consistently opposed such interventions, stay silent? In The Wire, Susil Aaron criticized Indias abstention in the UNSC vote against Russia in an article titled Indias Abstention on Russia's Ukraine Invasion Will Shift Perceptions in Washington. Complaining that the Modi government underestimates how large Russia looms in the American political imagination, he lamented, New Delhi has alienated US, Europe and other allies at one go with this vote. While Modi calls for dialogue and tries to balance between Washington and Moscow, the NATO powers are rapidly moving towards war with Russia, using Ukraine as a pretext. In this context, they will not be satisfied with anything less than Indias total submission to their anti-Russian campaign. Over the 30 years since the dissolution of the Soviet Union by the Moscow Stalinist bureaucracy, Washington has systematically worked to establish its domination over all of Eurasia. NATO expansion into Eastern Europe to surround Russia was key to this agenda. Above all, it entailed decades of endless neo-colonial wars, from Iraq and Afghanistan to Libya and Syria, that cost millions of lives. The development of US-India strategic partnership for nearly two decades under successive Indian governments, both of Modis Hindu-supremacist Bharatiya Janatha Party (BJP) and the Congress, India has become a front-line state for US war preparations against China. Now, moreover, Washington is demanding India line up with it not only against China, but also against Russia. This exposes the political bankruptcy not only of the BJP and the Congress, but of the Congress partys Stalinist allies. Indias principal Stalinist parliamentary party, the Communist Party of India (Marxist) or CPM, reacted to the war in Ukraine in a brief Polit Bureau statement, expressing grave concerns at the armed conflict between Russia and Ukraine. Lamenting that it is unfortunate that Russia took military action against Ukraine, the CPM pleaded for an immediate cessation of armed hostilities and the establishment of peace. While criticizing NATO moves for steadily expanding eastward, contrary to the assurance given to Russia, including moving to integrate Ukraine into NATO, it wrote: The process of negotiations should be restarted and the earlier agreements reached by both the parties should be adhered to. What the Stalinists leave out is the growing preparations of the NATO powers for war, driven above all by Washington. This means covering up the danger that the provocations of Washington and its NATO allies could trigger a nuclear Third World War, with deadly consequences for billions worldwide. They aim not to mobilize the international working class but to lull it to sleep, hoping the Russian and Ukrainian capitalist governments will somehow resolve a dispute driven by Washingtons targeting of Russia and China. Contrary to Stalinist claims, the crisis developing over Russias invasion in Ukraine is not an isolated dispute, but a global imperialist-led drive to war in which the Indian ruling elite is politically complicit. The only way to prevent the eruption of such a war is to build an international anti-war movement of the working class, independent of Stalinist or nationalist parties, and mobilizing workers in India and across Asia in a struggle for socialism The United States and its NATO allies intensified their economic warfare against Russia through sanctions and restrictions Monday, accompanied by an increased inflow of anti-tank and anti-aircraft arms into Ukraine. The measures come as Russian forces continue to approach the Ukrainian capital of Kiev and amid widespread reports in the US and European press of intensified shelling of urban areas. French economic minister Bruno Le Maire declared, Were waging an all-out economic and financial war on Russia, pledging, We will cause the collapse of the Russian economy. The economic and financial balance of power is totally in favor of the European Union, which is in the process of discovering its economic power, he added. Members of Ukraines Territorial Defense Forces, volunteer military units of the Armed Forces, train in a city park in Kyiv, Ukraine, Jan. 22, 2022. (AP Photo/Efrem Lukatsky, File) Le Maire later told French news agency AFP he had misspoken, claiming it was inappropriate to use the term war to describe NATOs actions. Meanwhile, in a speech before the National Assembly, French Prime Minister Jean Castex declared his country would take the lead of a multinational battalion which will be deployed this week in Romania. Ahead of Bidens first State of the Union address Tuesday night, the United States announced that Russian aircraft would be banned from overflying the United States. Earlier on Tuesday, Maersk, MSC, and CMA CGM, the three largest global container shipping companies, announced that they are suspending deliveries to Russia, with the exception of humanitarian supplies. Britain and Canada also announced that that they are closing their ports to Russian ships. The UK added that the ban applies to any ship with Russian connections, while Canada said its action included fishing vessels operating in its territorial waters. Weve just become the first nation to pass a law involving a total ban of all ships with any Russian connection whatsoever from entering British ports, British Transport Secretary Grant Shapps said on Twitter. Also Tuesday, Ford and ExxonMobil announced they would be ending business activities in Russia, while Apple announced that it would shut down all operations in the country, including the end of Apple Pay and suspending all sales of its electronics. These actions were accompanied by the expansion of weapons shipments to Ukraine. On Monday, Finland announced it would send 2,500 assault rifles and ammunition to Ukraine, along with 1,500 anti-tank weapons. Sweden also announced the imminent arrival of 5,000 anti-tank-weapons. Canadian Foreign Affairs Minister Melanie Joly is heading to Poland today, according to Politico, to coordinate the shipment of 100 Carl Gustaf anti-armor rocket launchers, along with 2,000 munitions and other aid. On Monday, the European Unions high representative, Josep Borrell, said numerous countries were prepared to provide Ukraine with fighter jets. And Ukraines parliament said Monday that Poland was among the countries ready to provide Soviet-era MiG-29 fighters, Stars and Stripes reported. Polish President Andrzej Duda claimed the aircraft would not arrive by air, saying, We are not going to send any jets into Ukrainian airspace, meaning the aircraft would be delivered by land. On Friday, NATO Secretary-General Jens Stoltenberg announced the deployment, for the first time, of the alliances 40,000-troopstrong rapid response force, created in 2003. Yesterday, NATO Allies activated our defense plans, Stoltenberg said, adding that the alliances forces would be positioned on land, at sea, and in the air. The United States, Canada and European Allies have deployed thousands more troops to the eastern part of the Alliance, Stoltenberg continued. We have over 100 jets at high alert operating in over 30 different locations. And over 120 ships from the High North to the Mediterranean. Including three strike carrier groups. On Tuesday, Finlands parliament launched a debate about whether the country should officially join NATO. As part of the effort to flood Ukraine with weapons, the Biden administration has approved the immediate transfer of $350 million of weapons to Ukraine, including anti-tank weapons and anti-aircraft systems. We believe it is getting into the right hands, that they are actively using these systems, a senior defense official said Tuesday. Among the 5,500 US troops that have been sent to Poland, a significant number are deployed at the PolishUkrainian border, working to funnel arms into Ukraine. The Wall Street Journal reported that In Poland, for days, convoys of military transport trucks, escorted by police vehicles, have been headed over land to the Polish border with Ukraine, passing young Ukrainian men hitchhiking to join the fight. These shipments havent been hidden; rather, the Polish government has openly boasted of sending lethal aid to Ukraine. The Journal continued, More arms and ammunition are expected to flow through Polands overland routes, or those of neighboring countries, as Western governments shell out hundreds of millions of dollars to send Ukraines army fresh equipment. The Journal noted that The U.S. government authorized the export to Ukraine of $287 million in defense articles from 2015 through 2019including $129 million in ammunition and ordnance, $56 million in fire control, laser, imaging, and guidance equipment, and $54 million in firearms and related articles. There is one glaringly apparent contradiction to the new US Centers for Disease Control and Prevention (CDC) guidelines that weigh hospitalizations and bed occupancy more heavily than infections that no one in the mainstream media or political establishment bothers to raise. How can these new directives that lift measures to prevent infection during a pandemic that continues to rage and new COVID-19 variants on the horizon protect health systems? The guidelines are not a masking policy; instead, they are a fabricated risk-reduction adjustment based not on scientific merit but on political expediency that justifies the elimination of any remaining mitigation measures. Overnight, most of the country has become a low- to moderate-risk zone with recommendations that facemasks, which also function as a reminder of the ongoing health crisis and danger that the virus poses, were no longer required. Following the priorities of the Biden White House, the CDC wants to ensure all attention on infection statistics is wholly disregarded. With the pandemic once and for all forgotten, money-making can be continued without any impediments. Patrons stand in line to order at Philippe the Original restaurant in Los Angeles, on February 25, 2022. (AP Photo/Damian Dovarganes) In rapid succession, state after state is repealing indoor mask policies. The three Democratic Party-dominated states on the West CoastCalifornia, Oregon, and Washingtonhave joined forces and lifted obligatory mask requirements in schools affecting 7.5 million school-age children and their teachers and parents. New York, Massachusetts, Illinois, Wisconsin, Ohio, and North Carolina are also among the latest in a series of states that are quickly exiting COVID-19 restrictions. Not one of these governors has referenced the critical fact that in February 212 children died from COVID, representing 15 percent of all pediatric COVID deaths throughout the pandemic. In the last week of February, in five days, 84 more deaths were added to the statistics, underscoring the danger posed by the infection even for the youngest. Democratic Governor Kate Brown of Oregon, in a far too glib statement about the lifting of the mandate, said, Two years ago today, we identified Oregons first case of COVID-19. On the West Coast, our communities and economies are linked. Together, as we continue to recover from the Omicron surge, we will build resiliency and prepare for the next variant and the next pandemic. Next variant and next pandemic? The hypocrisy is intolerable. Endlessly, the press and their pundits have continued to flagrantly abuse the terms personal freedoms and assert meaningless declarations like to ensure our nations hospitals and health care systems can treat everyone. Even CDC Director Rochelle Walensky offered the following bald-faced lie when the guidelines were published: This updated approach focuses on directing our prevention efforts towards protecting people at high risk of severe illness and preventing hospitals and healthcare systems from being overwhelmed. She also lamented earlier, None of us know what the future may hold for us and this virus. We need to be prepared and ready for whatever comes next. We want to give people a break from things like mask-wearing when levels are low, and then have the ability to reach for them again, should things get worse in the future. When the Omicron surge washed over the country like a tsunami wave, the CDC director and Biden administration barely lifted a finger to save health care systems from a deluge of patients. On January 20, 2022, there were nearly 160,000 people admitted to hospitals, with almost 26,500 in ICUs. No objective measure was enacted to stem the tide of infections and spare hospitals. By comparison, on the worst day of last winters peak, January 14, 2021, there were 137,000 patients admitted, and just over 29,000 were in the ICUs. The reported COVID-19 death toll due to the Omicron wave has reached 165,000. Between January 12, 2022, and February 20, 2022, the seven-day average for COVID deaths remained more than 2,000 fatalities every day. At the time, high-level discussions were not on the necessity of shutting down the country and giving nurses and doctors much-needed respite from the onslaught. Instead, they were focused on ending real-time requirements of reporting in-hospital COVID deaths and metrics to the Health and Human Services Department (HHS). The daily death tolls are a constant reminder of the governments abject failure and must be pushed to the back pages. Repeatedly, it has been stated by epidemiologists that hospitalizations are a lagging indicator of infectionsmeaning that by the time the health systems become overwhelmed, community transmission is already very high and out of control. Implementing public health measures that place weight on the status of health care systems would be short of catastrophic if another wave of infections with a new variant of COVID-19 were to assail the country. What is the purpose of even calling the nations public health agency the Centers for Disease Control and Prevention when its guidelines obfuscate its stated doctrine and principles to control and prevent disease? The most obvious and only possible response is that the CDC is not concerned with the health and well-being of the population. It is functioning as a political entity within the state to enact and concretize the oft-stated policy of living with the virus, to protect a financial system that relies on the working class to produce the surplus-value. What has been the cost of disregarding all scientific measures to eliminate the virus so far? By all reliable trackers, reported COVID deaths in the US have surpassed 950,000. More than 80 million people have reportedly been infected. The CDC estimates that unconfirmed cases are twice as high, meaning that most likely two-thirds of the countrys population have been infected at some point. What is not clear is how many of these infections were breakthrough or repeat infections. Again, the CDC has failed to track or provide the data on these critical figures. The seven-day average of infections has declined to 60,000 new cases each day but is beginning to plateau again. The average death toll remains high at above 1,800 per day. Meanwhile, the BA.2 subvariant continues to grow in the US exponentially, and it now represents 8.3 percent of all cases. Yet only 65 percent of the population remain fully vaccinated with two doses, and less than 29 percent have been boosted. The seven-day vaccination average has declined to 350,000 per day, meaning the vaccination campaign has stalled. This has significant implications given the latest immune-evading variants. A report published in JAMA in January found that those who were 50 years of age and boosted had reduced their risk of death nearly 20-fold compared to those only being fully vaccinated but not boosted, based on data from Israel. In Peru, where the countrys population-based health metrics are tied to the persons national registration number, the risk reduction was 10-fold. But these were based on recent booster doses. It remains unknown whether additional jabs are required and at what intervals. Limited data did not show much benefit for second boosters unless the individual had significant co-morbidities or was immunocompromised. Additionally, Omicron-specific vaccines did not appear to work better against BA.1 or BA.1 subvariants than the current vaccines. Despite the criminal neglect demonstrated by the ruling elites in their response to the pandemic for the last two years, the understanding of the science behind the pandemic has risen exponentially. It is even more critical now to push for elimination. Professor Yaneer Bar-Yam, president of the New England Complex Systems Institute, recently stated that not only is elimination still viable, but it is also easier to do now. Instead, the ruling elites and their media mouthpieces are pushing the false notion that the virus is endemic and therefore no longer a subject of concern and best be forgotten regardless of the continued dangers it poses. Today, around 50,000 Sri Lankan health workers are beginning a two-day strike to press for their long-standing demands for higher wages and improved working conditions. Like successive regimes in the past, the government of President Gotabhaya Rajapakse has rejected any improvement. The health workers demands include the rectification of salary anomalies, higher transport and on-call duty allowancesfrom 3,000 rupees ($US15) to 10,000 rupeesincreased overtime rates, and improved promotion procedures. This strike was called by the Federation of Health Professionals (FHP), an alliance of 18 trade unions in the health sector, covering nurses, paramedics, public health inspectors, medical laboratory technologists and pharmacists. Health workers march in Jaffna on December 30 (WSWS Media) On February 7, more than 65,000 health employees launched an indefinite strike for the same demands. Tens of thousands of nurses also participated in that action, but are now legally barred from joining the current stoppage. In an attempt to break up the indefinite strike, the government unleashed repression. At the request of the attorney-general, the Colombo district court issued an enjoining order on the Government Nursing Officers Association (GNOA), barring its members from participating in the strike. President Rajapakse invoked the Essential Public Services Act (ESPA), criminalising health sector strikes. Bowing to the governments attacks, the FHP betrayed the workers, ending the strike in nine days without achieving any of the demands. FHP leader Ravi Kumudesh claimed it stopped the strike to give the government two weeks to address the issues. He appealed to Rajapakse to intervene and provide a solution. This flimsy justification for stopping the strike proved to be a cruel illusion. Facing growing anger among members over the continuous rejection of their demands, the FHP has been compelled to call stoppages again. At a press conference on February 24, Kumudesh appealed to the health minister to establish a technical committee to discuss the salary anomalies. He said the union alliance was ready to objectively, technically and theoretically explain its position in such a committee. Yesterday, Kumudesh warned: The federation will go for an indefinite strike from March 10 if the ministry fails to reach a settlement in three days. In other words, the FHP is demanding a technical committee to discuss the demands, not to grant them! Sri Lankan regimes, including Rajapakse governments, have used such committees and commissions to undermine workers struggles. The FHP is ready to collaborate in such a manoeuvre. Health workers from Kandy Hospital protesting last month (WSWS Media) The Health Workers Action Committee (HWAC) urges our brothers and sisters to reject this cynical ploy by the FHP. Health employees, like other workers who are coming into struggle to defend living conditions, need decent wage increases, improved working conditions and workplace safety, including from the dangerous COVID-19 pandemic. For its part, the government, far from being ready to grant workers demands, is continuing to intensify its repressive measures. Last week, Rajapakse extended his EPSA declaration for a further 10 days. This can be used to sack workers for violating its regulations and subject them to severe jail terms and fines. Last Friday, the Colombo district court extended the enjoining order on the GNOA until March 11, barring its members from joining the strike action. The GNOA has a membership of around 20,000 nurses. Its leader, Saman Rathnapriya, said union members would only participate in demonstrations during the current stoppage. Addressing a public meeting on Saturday, Rajapakse made threatening remarks against strikers. He said he did not expect any responsible party to carry out disruptive strikes and false propaganda. He demanded that the opposition, the people, and the government must work together to overcome the present challenges. The government has been engulfed in unprecedented economic turmoil, exacerbated by the global coronavirus pandemic. Far from addressing demands for wage increases or improved living conditions for workers and the poor, it is implementing austerity measures to impose the burden of the crisis on the backs of people. The country is on the edge of a debt default, without sufficient foreign exchange for essential purposes. It has no dollars to pay for oil, which is used for thermal power generation, so the population is suffering lengthy power cuts and transport has begun to grind to a halt. The price of essentials is increasing daily and shortages are rampant. Now the Ukrainian war crisis provoked by the US and European powers, and triggered by the Russian invasion, is threatening a wider conflict that will further deepen the economic crisis in every country. Without defeating the government and its big business policies to make the working people pay for the crisis, the working class cannot stop the assault being unleashed by the government. The trade unions are collaborating with the government against the health workers. Not a single union has issued a statement condemning the court orders against the nurses and the essential service decree banning strikes. The unions are in fact busy suppressing the struggles of their members. The pro-government Public Services Nurses Union and the opposition Janatha Vimukthi Peramuna-controlled All Ceylon Health Employees Union scabbed on the February 7 strike and are doing the same in the current stoppage. Several of our colleagues explained their attitude on the government and the unions. A nurse from Peradeniya Childrens Hospital expressed her disgust over the betrayal of the health workers strike by the FHP and the scabbing by other nurses unions. I am supporting the HWAC because I oppose trade unions activities to divide nurses and health workers. I trust health workers will learn from the betrayal of the trade unions of this struggle, she said. A nurse from Gampola hospital denounced the government for shedding crocodile tears about sick people only when health workers strike. We, the nurses must break from the isolation created by the unions and turn to joining other workers for a united struggle. I am calling for a collective fight against this repressive government. A radiographer from Kandy hospital said: The FHP leaders shut down the strike without even informing the members like us. Now they have called this token strike to divert the workers disgust toward them. Can anyone believe this token strike will win our demands after the betrayal of the indefinite strike? The FHP is deliberately discouraging the fighting spirit of the workers. At the beginning of the indefinite strike the HWAC warned about the attacks of the Rajapakse regime and role of the unions. We also elaborated a program for workers to fight. In our statement Mobilise the working class to support Sri Lankan national health strike, we said: Health workers must reject the FHPs illusion-mongering, and its bankrupt appeals to the Rajapakse government, and take the struggle for decent wages, working conditions, democratic rights and coronavirus-safe working into their own hands. Action committees must be built in every health institution with democratically elected representatives, independent of the trade unions and its bureaucrats. They must demand billions of rupees to overhaul and modernise the deteriorating health service, recruit more health employees and grant the required pay and working conditions in full. Action committees must reject the unions attempts to divide workers on the basis of grades and fight for the unity of all health workers and the working class as a whole. The HWAC emphasises that the fight to achieve these demands involves a political struggle against the capitalist profit system and for the reorganisation of the economy in the interests of the majority, not the wealthy few. This means the fight for a workers and peasants government based on socialist policies. Our statement also urged the Sri Lankan health workers to turn to the international working class and join the International Workers Alliance of Rank and File Committees. Health workers in the US, Turkey, Australia and New Zealand are in the forefront of similar struggles. It is urgent to fight for the program initiated by the Socialist Equality Party. We urge you to join us and build action committees. HWAC contact telephone number: 0773562327 Email: healthworkers-sl@wsws.org Spain has recorded almost 12,000 deaths during the sixth wave of the coronavirus pandemic, since mid-October 2021. More than a sixth of these fatalities occurred just in the week beginning February 14, when 2,003 people lost their lives. On Wednesday, February 16, Spain recorded a huge 444 deaths in a single day, the highest toll in almost a year. An average of nearly 300 people died across the country every day last week, as around 34,000 daily infections were recorded. Spain has suffered over 122,000 excess deaths since the pandemic began. Almost 11 million people have been infected with the coronavirus in totalnearly a quarter of Spains population. Over 1 million are currently estimated to be suffering with long COVID in Spain, including symptoms such as fatigue, breathlessness and cognitive dysfunction. People wearing face masks queue for a COVID-19 test at La Paz hospital in Madrid, Spain, Dec. 28, 2021. (AP Photo/Manu Fernandez, File) The 14-day incidence rate across the country still remains exceptionally high, at 613 per 100,000 people, well above the 500 per 100,000 bar that the Spanish government considers to be an indicator of a situation of very high risk. This in itself is a significant downplaying of the dangers posed by the virus: in mid-November, the PSOE-Podemos coalition doubled this threshold from 250 to 500 per 100,000, supposedly in response to the decreased risks posed by COVID-19 now that a large proportion of the Spanish population is vaccinated. In some regions, the incidence rate is between 800 and 1,000. Despite mass vaccination, the pandemic still claims thousands of lives a week and infects tens of thousands, giving the lie to the claim that widespread inoculation and the prevalence of the supposedly milder Omicron variant have made the virus harmless. Vaccination is a powerful tool in the fight against COVID-19, but it does not on its own suffice to prevent death and disease. The enormous death toll and the incalculable impact on the lives and health of Spains population are a direct result of the criminal policy of herd immunity pursued by the Socialist Party (PSOE)-Podemos government. It has refused to follow a scientifically guided policy to defeat the pandemic in Spain, and is now proceeding to eliminate even the most basic mitigation measures that are still in place. Following the example of European countries such as Norway, the Netherlands and the United Kingdom, which have recently lifted all or almost all of their pandemic-related health restrictions, PSOE Prime Minister Pedro Sanchez announced last week that even the requirement to wear masks in indoor spaces would soon be waived. In a press conference last Monday with Danish Prime Minister Mette Frederiksen, Sanchez said Spain would soon be in the same epidemiological situation as Denmark, which ditched all of its pandemic measures at the start of Februarythe first European country to do so. Referring to ending the use of masks indoors, Sanchez stated, It would be a good measure that Spanish society will appreciate. We hope that it can be done sooner rather than later. Meanwhile, the regional government of Catalonia announced that quarantines in schools would be ended after a positive coronavirus case as of Wednesday last week. It was also reported that schools would no longer have to record COVID-19 cases that had broken out on their premises, and parents would no longer have to tell school officials if their childs absence was due to the virus. Teachers will also no longer receive testing kits to ensure they are not infected with the disease. The PSOE-Podemos government has for months been waging a concerted propaganda campaign to depict the coronavirus as endemic and for it to be treated like seasonal influenza. The term endemic implies a predictable and controllable level of disease in a given geographic region. This definition has nothing in common with the current trajectory of the pandemic. The virus is far from under control, as a result of the refusal of the ruling class in Spain and internationally to implement the necessary measures to eliminate and ultimately eradicate the virus. Instead, a policy of letting it rip has been pursued in virtually every country bar China, leading to continued waves of entirely preventable death and disease. As a demonstration of the continuing severe and widespread impact of the pandemic, in mid-February it was reported that around 2.4 million people have had to take time off work during the sixth wave as a result of infection with or exposure to COVID-19. This is around 56 percent of total workplace absences since March 2020, when the pandemic first hit Spain in force. A record 678,000 absences were reported in December 2021. This all-time high was rapidly exceeded in January this year, when a staggering 1.7 million people were off sick. This represents roughly 12 percent of the Spanish workforce. Despite the appalling toll the pandemic has had on lives and health, 2021 was a bonanza year for the banks and big businesses in Spain. Last year, Spains largest companies reported record profits of over 53 billion, even as tens of thousands lost their lives, millions were infected and hundreds of thousands struggled to make ends meet after losing jobs or seeing their hours cut. Telephone operating companies made some of the biggest profits in 2021, at 8.137 billiona 414 percent increase on 2020. Banking companies in Spains Ibex 35 stock market index reported a collective profit of nearly 20 billion, compared to losses of around 5 billion the previous year. The energy sector was the other great beneficiary of the last year of the pandemic. Energy and petrochemical company Repsol recorded profits of around 2.5 billion, while gas supplier Naturgy made gains of 1.24 billion. At the same time, consumer utility prices reached record highs in December 2021, with electricity costing 360,02 per megawatt hour, forcing many workers to choose between heating their homes and putting food on the table over the winter. The record sums going into the coffers of Spains banks and businesses are a stark demonstration of the profits before lives strategy pursued by the PSOE-Podemos government. This anti-scientific and criminal policy has support across the entire political establishment, from the fascistic Vox party to the PSOE, Podemos and the various middle class groups which orbit them. Only an independent movement of the international working class, in irreconcilable opposition to Podemos and the PSOE, can stop this murderous policy of mass infection and save lives. On the afternoon of Thursday, February 24, the Corbynite left of the Labour Party committed collective political suicide. The rump of the Socialist Campaign Group (SCG) of Labour MPs died on their knees, cowering before party leader Sir Keir Starmers pro-NATO witch-hunt aimed at silencing anti-war sentiment in the working class. Seven days earlier just 11 Labour MPs and three peers, plus former party leader Jeremy Corbyn and Claudia Webbewho have both already had the party whip withdrawnhad signed an open letter from the Stop The War Coalition (STWC) opposing any war over Ukraine and calling for a negotiated settlement recognising the right of the Ukrainian people to self-determination while addressing Russias security concerns. The statement, published prior to the February 21 Russian invasion of Ukraine, condemned the British government for pouring oil on the fire, talking up the threat of war continually, sending arms to Ukraine and troops to Eastern Europe. It urged that NATO should call a halt to its eastward expansion and rejected the idea that NATO is a defensive alliance, citing its record in Afghanistan, Yugoslavia and Libya over the last generation, not to mention the US-British attack on Iraq. The Stop the War Coalition February 16 statement now only lists the names of two MPs in support, both of whom sit as Independents in Parliament. These are former Labour leader Jeremy Corbyn, who was booted out of the Parliamentary Labour Party over a year ago by Sir Keir Starmer, and Claudia Webbe, another former Labour MP. The 11 signatories already constituted only a third of the SCGs entirely notional membership of 35 MPs. On January 21, eleven other SCG MPs had announced a new group, still affiliated apparently to the SCG, which would try to pressure and steer Starmer rather than resist or remove him, according to a leak by the pro-Corbyn Skwawkbox. The SCGs holdouts, including Corbyns former Shadow Home Secretary Diane Abbott, former Shadow Chancellor John McDonnell, and SCG leader Richard Burgon, fell into line at the first direct challenge from Starmer, in a move ordered by no less than Prime Minister Boris Johnson. In parliament that day, Johnson told Starmer that he must remove the whip from the 14 members of the Labour Party who say that the aggressor in Ukraine is NATO. Starmer did as he was told, with chief whip Sir Alan Campbell sending a letter to the MPs threatening to expel them from the parliamentary party. Reports of how long it took these cowards to obey vary from one hour to as little as 30 minutes. The Blairites were ecstatic. One Labour source declared that the SCG members can be a mouthpiece for the Kremlin or a Labour MP, but not both. An hour after being told to, all these grandstanders have withdrawn their signatures. Let there be no doubt whose party this is now, said another. Just one day later, Starmer made his second attack, this time on the partys youth wing, Young Labour. The groups Twitter account was suspended until further notice, its funding cut and annual conference scrapped. Its crime was criticising Starmer for backing Nato aggression over the Ukraine crisis, declaring support for Stop The War and other pro-peace activists and calling on the UK to withdraw from NATO. Young Labour was accused of actions actively detrimental to the Partys core objectives: to promote Labour candidates and policies, and to win elections. A party source told The Mirror more bluntly, Young Labour is supposed to be a place for younger members to get away from factional rubbish Labour will no longer tolerate the selfishness of those who arent focused on winning the next election. Yesterday, Starmer made clear that the witch-hunt would continue to expand, targeting anyone who opposed Russias invasion while refusing to endorse NATOs own warmongering agenda. Let me be very clearThere will be no place in this party for false equivalence between the actions of Russia and the actions of Nato, he declared. The Corbynites are responsible for this witch-hunt and its intended consequencethe silencing and suppression of political opposition as NATO conducts a proxy war for regime change in Russia. The very next day, every single SCG MP was on message, tweeting necessary demands for the withdrawal of Russian troops shorn of a single word of criticism of NATO, the Johnson government, or even a caution against the threat of a wider war. None have made any protest against Starmers witch-hunt, even to defend themselves let alone Young Labour or the STWC. John McDonnell (WSWS Media) For several days, only McDonnell offered an apologia for withdrawing his signature from the open letter. He tweeted February 24, This is not the time for focussing on events in the Labour Party. Our focus should be on supporting and showing solidarity with the people of Ukraine & these courageous Russians demonstrating for peace. This was accompanied by an announcement that he would be joining a February 26 pro-Ukrainian demonstration in London, speaking alongside the notorious pro-NATO warmonger Paul Mason, who is in the forefront of Starmers McCarthyite offensive. A more degraded statement of apostasy is hard to imagine. McDonnell declares his solidarity with Ukrainians and Russians opposed to war by agreeing to abandon all opposition to the imperialist powers organised in NATO now funding and organising the Ukrainian regimes armed forces, while threatening a military offensive against Russia. As for the claim that events in the Labour Party are a distraction, McDonnell will fool no one. Starmers declared aim is to ensure that Labour is the party of NATO, which he is purging of all remaining dissent. McDonnells tweet unleashed a torrent of hostile comment. He was denounced as a spineless fraud, a careerist, a traitor, a liar and a scab. Others drew the necessary conclusion regarding both Labour and its supposed left wing: We expected better, Then we hoped for better, Now we know better, John; The SCG might as well disband Im ashamed I ever supported you; I initially gave Corbyn the benefit of the doubt, I thought he would shift the locus of political debate back to the left. As time went on, I realised how wrong I had been, and left the party; This is indeed not the time for focussing on Labour Party. It is the time to leave the Labour Party; I left the Labour Party some time ago, but I no longer expect to see calls from you for people to stay and fight. Theres nothing left in the Labour Party to fight for; This is a very good time to say @UKLabour is beyond broken. We have all wasted far too much time on it. Leave it to @Keir_Starmer and the rest of the war mongering, neoliberal maggots to fight over. It took until yesterday for anyone to demonstrate more unbridled political cynicism than McDonnell. Challenged on the BBCs Politics Live that Starmers threat to withdraw the whip was directed at her, Diane Abbott gave a loyalty oath: I am a loyal supporter of Keir Starmer, and it will never come to that. She declared of her signing the STWC letter, That was before Russia invaded Ukraine. That was a letter superseded by events and we were happy to take our names off Nobody wants to attack NATO. Having a debate around NATO strategy is one thing, attacking NATO is another Everybody in the Labour Party supports a defensive alliance. The abject capitulation of the SCG MPs blows apart the central perspective of the STWC and all Britains pseudo-left groups that some faction of the Labour and trade union bureaucracy will lead an anti-war campaign to convince British imperialism to pursue a less warlike foreign policy, one less subordinate to the US and more pan-European. In this spirit, Lindsay German, the STWCs national convener declared pathetically that she didnt agree with the Labour MPs decision because this will be the start of further attacks on the left over this and other issues, over a statement completely justified in terms of democratic debate and within the remit of free speech which is so lauded by Johnson and his Tories. Alex Callinicos of the Socialist Workers Party begged pathetically, We need people like Diane Abbott on platforms campaigning against this war, on the kind of basis that Stop the War has been laying out. Instead of the lefts persuading the pro-NATO warmongers of the error of their ways, it is they who now march in lockstep with Britain, the US and the European powers on the path to war. Corbyn as always has remained silent on the betrayal of the SCG MPs. And it would mean nothing even had he criticised them. They collectively make up his closest political supporters and are, moreover, only building on his own record of political capitulation to the Blairites agenda for war. Of all Corbyns retreats from his stated principles, none was more significant than the way the former head of the STWC was prepared to immediately accommodate himself to militarism in a way that set the tone for his five years as party leader. As the Socialist Equality Party explained : On every key issuewar in Syria, NATOs military build-up against Russia and the renewal of Britains nuclear weapons programmeCorbyn has given way to the dictates and demands of his right-wing critics Corbyn prepared for the Trident [nuclear missile] vote in July [2016] by abandoning his opposition to NATO membership and telling Labours conference, Were not going to divide and ruin ourselves as a party over this. He allowed Labour MPs their second free vote since taking office, and three-quarters (140 to 47) backed Tridents renewal. This volte-face has placed Britain in the front line, in Europe, of a potential nuclear war with Russia. In response to a question as to whether she would personally authorise a nuclear strike, Prime Minister Theresa May replied, Yes the whole point of a deterrent is that our enemies need to know that we would be prepared to use it It is thanks to Corbyn and his pseudo-left backers demobilisation of anti-war sentiment and sowing of political confusion on fundamental issues of perspective that Starmer and Johnson have been able to go so far in their criminal mission as joint heads of Britains Party of War. But the discrediting of Corbyn et al clears the path for a new mass anti-war movement to emerge based on the international working class and animated by a politically conscious struggle against capitalism and for socialism. Such a movement, led by the SEP and the International Committee of the Fourth International, will unreservedly oppose the invasion of Ukraine by Moscow, while remaining intransigently hostile to British, US and European imperialism and their ex-left political stooges. Even as the US conflict with Russia over the Ukraine intensifies, the Biden administration has deliberately stoked tensions with China by sending a delegation of former top-level US military and national security officials to Taiwan. The timing of the trip underscores its provocative character. It coincides with the passage of 50 years since former President Richard Nixon travelled to China and met with Chinese leader Mao Zedong in 1972, laying the basis for the establishment of diplomatic relations between the two countries. Half a century on, the US is engaged in a dangerous confrontation with China. When Washington subsequently established formal diplomatic relations with Beijing in 1978, it cut diplomatic relations with Taipei, removed all military forces from the island and downgraded contact with Taiwanese officials. De facto, the US recognised the One China policy that Beijing is the legitimate government of all China, including Taiwan. Taiwanese President Tsai Ing-wen, center, walks to her inauguration ceremony in Taipei, Taiwan, Wednesday, May 20, 2020 (Taiwan Presidential Office via AP) Biden, following on from Trump, has systematically undermined these longstanding diplomatic protocols and strengthened relations with Taipei. In the final days of the Trump administration, US Secretary of State Mike Pompeo ended all restrictions on official contact between Washington and Taipeian abrupt diplomatic shift that Biden has upheld with minor changes. Last year, a leak to the media revealed for the first time that the US military had Special Forces trainers on Taiwana fact that was confirmed by Taiwanese officials. While the current delegation stopped short of including serving US generals and officials, its make-up is an open declaration that the US will bolster its military ties with Taiwanan island that it acknowledges is part of China. Last year, Biden dispatched a US delegation to Taiwan led by former Senator Chris Dodd, but it included former State Department officials, not retired military and national security personnel. Included in the delegation that landed in Taipei yesterday is the former chairman of the US Joint Chiefs of Staff, Michael Mullen, who served between 2007 and 2011 under presidents Bush and Obama. Others are Meghan OSullivan, deputy national security adviser for Iraq and Afghanistan under Bush; Michele Flournoy, undersecretary of defence under Obama; and Mike Green and Evan Medeiros, who were both senior directors for Asia on the US National Security Council. While the delegation is described as unofficial, the Biden administration authorised and organised the trip, which will undoubtedly involve discussions not just of a general character but more specific military arrangements. As the ex-Pentagon chief, Mullen remains highly connected to the entire US military and national security apparatus, as are all the members of the delegation. Talks have been scheduled with top-level Taiwanese officials, including President Tsai Ing-wen and Defense Minister Chiu Kuo-cheng. Speaking at an online forum on Monday, White House Indo-Pacific policy coordinator Kurt Campbell declared that the trip would underscore US support for peace and stability in the region. In fact, by undermining the basis for its diplomatic relations with China, which hinged on the One China policy, the US is doing precisely the opposite. For the past decade, the US has ramped up its confrontation with China, not just over Taiwan, but on every front. Biden and Campbell were part of the Obama administration that launched the pivot to Asia, involving a military build-up and strengthening of alliances throughout the Indo-Pacific and efforts to undermine China economically and diplomatically. The anti-China offensive has accelerated under Trump and Biden. In his comments on Monday, Campbell issued a thinly-veiled threat that the US was prepared for war against both Russia and China. After noting that the US had historically had to sustain wars on two fronts, he declared: I believe that were entering a period where that is what will be demanded of the United States and this generation of Americans. The delegations visit to Taiwan coincided with a US military show of force. On Saturday, the guided-missile destroyer USS Ralph Johnson passed through the narrow strait between the Chinese mainland and Taiwan. A Chinese military spokesperson branded this as a provocative act. The Biden administration has stepped up the frequency of US warships transiting the Taiwan Strait to roughly monthly. Washington hypocritically accuses Beijing of expansionism and planning to forcibly reunify Taiwan with the mainland. The US points in particular to the flights of Chinese military aircraft through Taiwans extensive Air Defence Identification Zone (ADIZ). Yet the US asserts the right to routinely sail its warships and fly its warplanes close to the Chinese mainland, thousands of kilometres from the nearest American territory. Speaking on Tuesday, Chinese Foreign Ministry spokesperson Wang Wenbin condemned the presence of the US delegation on Taiwan. The will of the Chinese people to defend our countrys sovereignty and territorial integrity is immovable. Whoever United States sends to show support for Taiwan is bound to fail, he said. As the US delegation leaves today, former US Secretary of State Pompeo is due to arrive for a separate four-day visit, nominally as a private citizen. He is accompanied by Miles Yu, who acted as the main China policy planner and strategist for the Trump administration. Yu and Pompeo were instrumental in engineering Trumps strident anti-China strategy, which combined economic warfare with the inflaming of tensions over Taiwan and other regional flashpoints. Biden, who has declared that his administrations support for Taiwan is rock solid, has taken over where Trump left off, greatly heightening the danger that the conflict between NATO and Russia over the Ukraine will spread to the Indo-Pacific. On Monday, a spokesman for UK Prime Minister Boris Johnson said the sanctions against Russia we are introducing, that large parts of the world are introducing, are to bring down the Putin regime. Questioned by journalists surprised at his moment of unguarded honesty, Johnsons spokesman tried to reverse his comment, claiming, Were not seeking anything in terms of regime change. Downing Street later insisted that the official had misspoke. Whatever the denials, the UK and NATOs ambitions in the conflict with Russia are being stated ever more openly. Writing in the Telegraph Saturday, Defence Minister James Heappey said the Russian people must be empowered to see how little he [Vladimir Putin] cares for them. In showing them that, Putins days as President will surely be numbered. This aim is advanced under cover of the staggeringly hypocritical accusation that the Putin government is guilty of war crimes, a charge levelled by countries which have committed too many to list since the Russian Federation emerged from the dissolved Soviet Union in 1991. At the United Nations on Tuesday, Foreign Secretary Liz Truss accused Putin of violating international law, including the UN Charter and multiple commitments to peace and security. Speaking to the BBC earlier that morning, Conservative MP and former defence secretary Liam Fox said it may well be too late for Putin and perhaps [Russian Foreign Minister Sergey] Lavrov in terms of committing war crimes. But well be looking to see those with money, political influence and military influence in Moscow, whose side they actually take in this conflict. Its never too late for them to try to stop what is happening. And the world will be watching their individual actions. Tobias Ellwood, the Tory chair of the defence committee, wrote in the Telegraph, Triggering war crime investigations now will be another squeeze on Putin and his cronies. There is no statute of limitations. Putin is now 69. He will still be liable for them at 79, 89 and 99. The calculation that advisers, generals and soldiers have to make is how long will Putin last? How stable is this regime? If all the major war criminals of the past 30 years were sentenced tomorrow, Putin would have to squeeze his way into a dock already packed with imperialist officials and officers, many from the UK. The Johnson government and its allies are not in the slightest interested in upholding human rights or ending the war, only in using the reactionary Russian invasion of Ukraine as excuse to pursue their long-held plans to install a puppet regime in Moscow. As well as implementing crippling sanctions, it is stepping up its military involvement in the conflict, by means which threaten a direct confrontation between Russia and the NATO powers. On Sunday, Truss declared she would absolutely support people from Britain going to fight in Ukraine, if people want to support that struggle, I would support them doing that. Downing Street issued only the mildest of rebukes, repeating Foreign Office guidance that British citizens are currently advised not to travel to Ukraine. Defence Secretary Ben Wallace was more gung-ho, telling the Today programme, I dont think Liz Truss said we are supporting non-trained people to go and fight [I]f youre going to be a fighter there, first of all please try and comply with the Foreign Office advice, because it is dangerous. But secondly, be trained, have experience, dont be serving personnel. But fundamentally it is a dangerous situation, so if you are going to fight, be a professional, having had service. Scores of UK citizens, many with high-level military training and years of experience, are already making preparations to go, as breathlessly narrated by the corporate media. Mamuka Mamulashvili, commander of the volunteer Georgian National Legion, told Sky News he was aware of more than a hundred British volunteers, most with military backgrounds. The Mirror reports on a crack team of SAS veterans heading to Ukraine, funded by a country in Europe, still to be named, via a private military company. According to the paper, among them there are highly-trained snipers and experts in the use of anti-aircraft and anti-tank missiles. One is quoted as saying, A lot of ex-parachute regiment colleagues are also very keen to go. Many people are very keen to go, and it has had to be organised very quickly. The Times writes, More than 150 former paratroopers who served in Afghanistan are on their way to fight on the front line with Ukraine against Russia. One of them said Trusss comments had inspired him. British army commanders are apparently concerned about rumblings through back channels of some soldiers considering [going to Ukraine]. According to the Telegraph, Sir Chris Tickell, the armys second in command, has sent a letter to all soldiers warning them not to travel and risk reputational and presentational damage or a miscalculation. The participation of British citizens in the war in Ukraine creates a cover for undeclared special forces operations, provides a possible pretext for intervention and is a reckless provocation of a nuclear-armed power. Already the UK government is directly contributing substantial military equipment to the Ukrainian army. Heappey writes, The shoulder launched anti-tank missiles that we delivered just four weeks ago are now in wide use and have become a favourite of the brave Ukrainian warriors fighting on the front line. Johnson has directed the Ministry of Defence to send more and so we will. A government source told the Sun that Ukrainian President Volodymyr Zelensky has given the UK a shopping list with specific requests for military hardware during near daily phone calls, and we are working round the clock to get them into Ukraine. Prime Minister of Estonia Kaja Kallas, center, speaks during a joint press conference with Britain's Prime Minister Boris Johnson, left, and Jens Stoltenberg, Secretary General of NATO, after their talks regarding the invasion in Ukraine, at an airbase in Tallinn, Tuesday, March 1, 2022. (Leon Neal/Pool Photo via AP) At a press conference yesterday in the Tapa military base in Estonia, Johnson, Estonian Prime Minister Kaja Kallas and NATO Secretary-General Jens Stoltenberg took questions while stood in front of two battle tanks, one draped in the UKs national flag. Johnson boasted again of the 22,000 Ukrainian military personnel trained by the UK and the further military support it was providing. On the economic front, UK corporations are complementing government sanctions by cutting ties with the Russian economy. Oil company Shell has pulled out of Russian projects worth $3 billion. BP has incurred a $25 billion write-down selling its stake in Rosneft. The UKs biggest pension fund, the Universities Superannuation Scheme, is offloading all its Russian assets, worth 450 million, as is the Church of England, at 20 million. The Guardian referred to The great decoupling: how UK-based firms are unwinding exposure to Russia. This is matched with a cultural blockade beyond anything seen in the Cold War, designed to whip up anti-Russian hostility in the population. Renowned conductor Valery Gergiev has been forced to resign his position as honorary president of the Edinburgh International Festival. The Russian State Ballet of Siberia has been forced to call off its UK tour after theatres in Bristol, Wolverhampton, Northampton, Edinburgh, Bournemouth, Southend and Peterborough cancelled appearances. The UKs grossly misnamed culture secretary Nadine Dorries said she was glad to see the cancellations and called on other venues to take action. Many have. The Darlington Hippodrome, the Belgrade in Coventry, Blackburns King Georges Hall and Aldershots Princes Hall have all cancelled performances of the Russian State Opera. Not even Russian alcohol is exempt. Bars and hospitality firms including Nightcap Group and Arc Inspirations are removing vodka and other Russian alcohol products from their menus. But the crown for low-rent corporate Russophobia goes to price comparison website Compare the Market, which has pulled well-known adverts featuring a cartoon meerkat with a Russian name and accent. Yesterday, the UKs media regulator Ofcom announced it has opened 15 investigations into the broadcaster Russia Today, long a target of the British political and media establishment. If the station is found to have breached impartiality standards it could lose its licence to broadcast in the UK, the Guardian salivates. The paper notes, Although Ofcom is operationally independent from the government, its leadership is appointed by ministers, and it has come under substantial political pressure from both the Conservatives and Labour. Weather Alert ...The Flood Warning is extended for the following rivers in Indiana... White River at Edwardsport. White River at Elliston. Wabash River at Montezuma. .Multiple rounds of rain over the last few days will lead to minor flooding along lower portions of the White River and upper portions on the Wabash River. Additional rainfall later this week should keep portions of the White and Wabash above flood stage through Saturday. PRECAUTIONARY/PREPAREDNESS ACTIONS... Motorists should not attempt to drive around barricades or drive cars through flooded areas. Additional information is available at www.weather.gov/ind. This statement will be updated within the next 12 to 24 hours. && ...FLOOD WARNING NOW IN EFFECT UNTIL MONDAY EVENING... * WHAT...Minor flooding is forecast. * WHERE...Wabash River at Montezuma. * WHEN...Until Monday evening. * IMPACTS...At 18.0 feet, Montezuma agricultural levee is overtopped. Fourteen hundred acres of low bottomlands flood. * ADDITIONAL DETAILS... - At 10:45 AM EDT Wednesday the stage was 13.0 feet. - Forecast...The river will rise to 13.4 feet just after midnight tonight. It will then fall to 13.3 feet and begin rising again early tomorrow afternoon. It will rise above flood stage early Friday morning and continue to rise to 17.1 feet early Saturday afternoon. It will then fall below flood stage Monday morning. - Flood stage is 14.0 feet. - http://www.weather.gov/safety/flood && LOS ANGELESMale Power, the male-centric undergarment brand, has debuted the Sexagon collection, which aims to make you look sharp from every angle. This new trendy underwear is made from comfortable nylon spandex with a hexagonal imprint. It features plush elastic leg bands and a branded elastic waistband to let everyone know that youre wearing the latest from Male Power. Nickel-plated metal rings bring it all together. Sexagon features four basic styles: Mini Short, Strappy Ring Jock, Micro V-Thong and Posing Strap (G-string). All are available in multiple sizes, in grey or royal. For more information, visit MalePower.com. PAUL BISHOP'S ODYSSEY startedlike all great mysterieswith the arrival of an unsolicited package. The thick envelope bearing a Spanish postmark immediately struck Bishop as odd. The 63-year-old civil servant from Greater Manchester wasnt expecting any mail from Spain. He didnt even know anyone in Spain. And he certainly wasnt expecting what he found inside the package: A complete top set of false teeth. His own teeth, in fact. Teeth he had last seen 11 years ago on a boozy holiday to Spain. Teeth with a story to tell. Within hours, Bishop was a viral news sensation. He gave interviews to his local BBC news program, then national radio and TV stations. By February 10the day after he received the packageBishops story was everywhere . For a few days, the internet hummed with the story of Paul Bishop and his marauding teeth. Heres what happenedaccording to Bishop. Eleven years ago he was on a holiday in Spain celebrating a friends 50th birthday. One night, after a full day of drinking, he attempted to down what was left of his pint of cider. It did not go to plan. I washed it down in one but could feel it coming back up, Bishop told the Manchester Evening News . Bishop vomited the contents of his stomachand his top set of denturesinto a bin. That was the last time Bishop saw his teeth, until he received the mysterious package. A letter accompanying the teeth described how they had ended up on Bishops doormat. First, the dentures were found by Spanish waste collectors, who sent them to the Centro Nacional de Biotecnologia (CNB)one of Spains largest public research bodies. After years in storage, the dentures were discovered by a junior technician, who swabbed them for DNA. The technician looked up the DNA in a database and found a match: Senor Paul Bishop. Cross-referencing those records with the British Council in Altea led to Bishops address in Greater Manchester. Case closed. Or was it? From the moment I read of Bishops denture adventure, something about it didnt add up. How did Bishops DNA end up on a European database? Why was a national research organization swabbing items found in a bin? And who was this junior technician so determined to reunite queasy British tourists with their false teeth? Solving this mystery, it turned out, would require the help of a forensic DNA expert, three dentists, some stamp collectors, and Her Majesty Queen Elizabeth II. Well, the Buckingham Palace press office, to be more precise. I would come to realize that nothing could stand in the way of a good yarn once the viral news machine was underway. And the tooth, I would soon find out, was not exactly what it seemed. for the full story, here is the link - https://www.wired.com/story/false-teeth-viral-story/ President Joe Biden, seen here in a virtual meeting on February 22, in Washington, DC, will ban Russian aircraft from US airspace. More than 600 students poured onto the Southeast Community College Beatrice campus early Tuesday morning. On the bright, warm March day, 35 schools competed in a two-district FFA competition, spanning more than a dozen events. Annie Erichsen, an agriculture instructor at SCC-Beatrice and competition head organizer, said the event gives high school students the chance to build their vocational skills. They might be taking a vet science class or a floriculture class, Erichsen said. It allows them to take the skills they learned from a high school setting and compete in an event Plus, its also a chance to meet new people and have fun. Dustin Bruss, the agriculture teacher at Wilber-Clatonia, brought 52 students with him to the competition. This gives students an opportunity to showcase the skills and the knowledge theyve learned in the classroom and the lab, Bruss said. But also, its the networking. I mean you look around, and I see students from all different schools who are hanging out with each other, making new friends. I had some past students who are actually married to someone they met at this contest And the opportunities these kids are getting, getting their foot in the door either with college or industry leaders. Bruss attended SCC on a livestock judging team scholarship in the early 2000s. He said he brings a lot of what he learned from SCC to his classroom. One of his students, Trenton Kracke, said hes always enjoyed participating in the competition. When you throw competition into something, it helps you to hone your skills and focus more, Kracke, the secretary of Wilber-Clatonias FFA, said. But I think on a real person level, it helps with social skills. It helps with meeting people and how to talk to people. The competitions took place throughout most of SCCs campus. Outside the competing rooms, filled with nervous sweat and stuttered movement, the campus atmosphere mirrored that of a spring fair. Students gathered on dull, yellow grass to play Cornhole. Troopers from the Nebraska State Patrol showed up with a simulator which allowed people to experience the feeling of a vehicle rollover, emphasizing the importance of seat belts. Erichsen said the event, from the education to the fun, helps showcase SCCs campus and engage current SCC students. We use it as a recruiting activity for us, she said. But were also preparing our students that they might have to run an event like this one day. So we want to teach them soft skills and when they leave there, these are things that are going to make them successful in their communities Were pushing them out of their comfort zones and making them talk to people, interact with different people. Bruss said it is experience like that which give SCC students an advantage over others. He said he attended three other institutions of higher education in his time, but none of them left an impression on him like SCC. The experiences I got here were second to none, he said. What makes this place special is all the hands-on opportunities it gives you. Love 0 Funny 0 Wow 0 Sad 0 Angry 0 Summer Game Fest and Future Games Show Look to Replace Cancelled E3 2022 A Billings man is facing multiple charges of sexually abusing a child in 2021. Eric Joe Jaynes, 39, was charged Feb. 19 with one count of sexual intercourse without consent and two counts of sexual abuse of children in Yellowstone County District Court. He pleaded not guilty to all the charges at his arraignment Monday. Jaynes exchanged hundreds of Facebook messages dating back to June 2021 with a child who was 15 years old at the time, according to charging documents. In those conversations, Jaynes allegedly flirted with the child and discussed sexually explicit topics. Records of those messages also showed Jaynes allegedly grooming the 15-year-old for a relationship when the victim became an adult. I dont want to go to prison; please dont say anything to anyone, Jaynes wrote to the victim, according to court documents. A detective with the Yellowstone County Sheriffs Office obtained the Facebook records in October 2021 through a search warrant. That followed an interview with the child. In June of that same year, Jaynes is alleged to have met with the victim, who he groped during that meeting. Later that same day, Jaynes took the victim to his home, where charging documents say he raped the 15-year-old. The victims parents contacted law enforcement after learning what happened. District Court Judge Mary Knisely set Jayness bond at $105,000. As part of the conditions of his release, he will be required to be monitored by GPS. He has a tentative trial date set for June 6. As of Wednesday, he remained in custody at Yellowstone County Detention Facility. Because the victim was 15 years old at the time of the alleged rape, Jaynes could face four to 100 years in prison or a life sentence if convicted of sexual abuse of children. He could also be fined up to $10,000. A conviction for sexual intercourse without consent could have similar consequences regarding prison time, along with a $50,000 fine. Jaynes was previously charged in Yellowstone County District Court with felony theft. County prosecutors allege that in August 2020, Jaynes picked several parts off a stolen pickup truck. The value of the stolen truck parts were estimated to be $4,000. Jaynes pleaded not guilty to the charge, telling a Yellowstone County deputy that he bought the parts from a person named Jim Bob for $30. Love 2 Funny 1 Wow 0 Sad 3 Angry 34 Get local news delivered to your inbox! Subscribe to our Daily Headlines newsletter. Sign up! * I understand and agree that registration on or use of this site constitutes agreement to its user agreement and privacy policy. Bleecker Street has named Kyle Davies, a former executive with Paramount, as its new president of distribution, the company announced Wednesday. Davies will lead Bleecker Streets theatrical distribution strategies, planning and execution and manage the wider distribution team. He starts effective immediately and is based in Los Angeles. Hell be responsible for Bleeckers upcoming release slate, which includes Infinite Storm with Naomi Watts later this month, Montana Story with Haley Lu Richardson on May 13, and James Ponsoldts Summering on July 15, among others. Davies joins Bleecker Street from Paramount Pictures, where he most recently served as president of Domestic Distribution between 2016 and 2019. During his tenure, Davies was responsible for distribution strategy for films such as Rocketman, A Quiet Place, Mission: Impossible Fallout, Bumblebee, Arrival and Fences. Kyle has unparalleled relationships with exhibitors and a stellar track record in the theatrical distribution space. His perspective is very much in line with our business and he really is the perfect addition to our executive team, Bleecker Street CEO Andrew Karpen said in a statement. I couldnt be more excited to join the team at Bleecker Street and share the energy and opportunity that exists within their sophisticated and diverse slate of independent films. Ive always admired Bleeckers belief in the theatrical experience and approach in acquiring films for broad audiences. I look forward to being a part of their evolution, Davies added. Prior to Paramount, Davies was president of Worldwide Distribution for Relativity Media, where he led the companys evolution from a financing and producing entity into a full-fledged studio. Following the creation of joint venture company, Relativity EuropaCorp Distribution in 2014, his responsibilities expanded to oversight of both companies domestic and international distribution strategies. Story continues Davies initially served as EVP of theatrical distribution for Overture Films, handling the distribution of such releases as Law Abiding Citizen, Brooklyns Finest and The Visitor. He was named president of Theatrical Distribution in 2010 after Relativity acquired Overture Films marketing and distribution assets. Before joining Overture, Davies also had an earlier stint at Paramount Pictures as senior vice president of distribution following its purchase of DreamWorks, working on numerous films including Mission: Impossible III, Dreamgirls, Over the Hedge, Gladiator, Saving Private Ryan, American Beauty, Shrek and Shrek II. Other theatrical releases for Bleecker Street in 2022 include Mr. Malcolms List, A Love Song, 892 and Golda starring Helen Mirren. Both 892 and A Love Song were acquisitions out of Sundance, and the distributor also recently picked up Catherine Hardwickes Mafia Mamma starring Toni Collette, which will shoot this spring. In addition, the company recently entered an exclusive three-year output deal with Showtime Networks Inc. By Michelle Price and Sumeet Chatterjee WASHINGTON/HONG KONG (Reuters) - Faced with an unprecedented level of sanctions on Russia, global banks are taking a dim view of business with all Russian entities and dropping clients if there is even a slight doubt on their ties to that country, said bankers and lawyers. Over the past week, the United States, Canada, Britain and European allies have imposed a raft of sanctions on Russia in retaliation for its invasion of Ukraine, with Australia, Japan, Singapore, Taiwan and South Korea also introducing restrictions. The sanctions target multiple wealthy Russian elites, several major Russian banks, state entities and dozens of their subsidiaries, and some Russian banks' access to the international SWIFT messaging service, among other curbs. While global banks have extensive experience with sanctions and have invested billions of dollars in compliance programs in recent years, the curbs on Russia are unmatched in their scale, speed and complexity and may yet grow, said executives. To avoid falling foul of the rules and having assets and capital ensnared by new curbs, banks are adopting extreme caution in all of their dealings with Russian entities, actions that will likely exacerbate global trade disruptions, said bankers and lawyers. A senior Hong Kong-based Asia trade finance banker with a global lender said his compliance colleagues are asking more questions even if a financing deal involves a non-sanctioned Russian entity, directly or indirectly. In India, for example, which has not imposed sanctions on Russia with which it has strong trade ties, the banker said his firm had become "very, very cautious" about deals involving Russian firms, fearing Indian institutions getting caught in so-called secondary sanctions. Another senior banker at a large Asian bank said his firm was looking into whether they have enough compliance staff and technology to run checks on various sanctions imposed on Russia and whether they will be able to flag potentially risky deals. Story continues "It's not just managing risk from the existing sanctions, but also thinking about what more could possibly happen on that front," said the banker. "No one would like to sign a billion dollar trade finance deal only to be told a week later that the entity in Russia has also been added to the sanction list." Both the bankers and their peers declined to be named due to sensitivity of the matter. "Banks generally, and certainly the global banks, often tend to be very cautious and conservative with respect to sanctions, especially U.S. sanctions," said Charlie Steele, partner at Washington-based consultancy Forensic Risk Alliance and a former U.S. Treasury Department sanctions attorney. "There will be a high level of de-risking in this situation, given the very high priority that governments including but not only the U.S. are putting on these sanctions." 'SELF-SANCTION' Banks have already begun to act. Societe Generale SA and Credit Suisse Group AG have stopped financing commodities trading from Russia, Bloomberg reported on Sunday. State Bank of India, the country's top lender, will not process any transactions involving Russian entities subject to international sanctions imposed on Russia, Reuters reported on Monday. And even before Western allies unveiled their most severe sanctions over the weekend, major buyers of Russian oil were struggling to secure letters of credit from Western banks due to the market uncertainty, Reuters reported last week. "In time, other banks may well 'self-sanction' given the risks involved," Simon MacAdam, senior global economist, at Capital Economics wrote in a research note on Tuesday. The exposure to Russia so far disclosed by Western banks appears to be fairly modest. U.S. banks have an exposure of $14.7 billion, and Italian, French and Austrian banks' combined have an exposure of over $42.5 billion. Citigroup said this week its total exposure was nearly $10 billion. It is the speed at which sanctions could be widened, however, that is the top concern for banks. Executives fear Western curbs on Russia may follow those on Iran, which was eventually subject to "secondary sanctions" - restrictions on any entity that does U.S. dollar business with the underlying sanctioned entity. That would dramatically expand the number of restricted entities. And for bankers based in countries that have yet to jump on the sanctions bandwagon, the risk they might pose is another worry. Under U.S. sanctions, an entity that is 50% owned or more, directly or indirectly, by one or more blocked persons is itself also considered blocked, whether or not it is on the sanctions list. And with so many jurisdictions issuing sanctions, some of which differ, compliance teams are having to screen for exposure to sanctioned entities at multiple layers of the group, including the bank holding company, regional subsidiaries, local branches and other corporate vehicles, said bankers and lawyers. "This multifactor murkiness creates uncertainty in the system which is frankly an impediment to ordinary commerce taking place," said Jeff Cottle, partner at law firm Brown Rudnick specializing in compliance and white collar crime. (Additional reporting by Pete Schroeder and Katanga Johnson in Washington, and Matt Scuffham and David Henry in New York; Editing by Muralikumar Anantharaman) FILE PHOTO: A security guard's reflection is seen next to the logo of the Reserve Bank Of India (RBI) at the RBI headquarters in Mumbai By Nupur Anand MUMBAI (Reuters) - Indian banks are scrambling after bills for imports from Russia have started bouncing and payments for exports have been stuck in the wake of sanctions imposed by the west on Russia following its invasion of Ukraine. "Due to the various sanctions the payment settlements have halted and that's a concern for banks right now. This has been shared by lenders with the central bank and the industry body," said a senior banking source involved in the discussions. The Reserve Bank of India has met with select bankers and is trying to assess the exposure that lenders have to Russia and to Ukraine and the impact it may have on Indian banks, said another senior banking executive. The extent of the payments that are stalled is not clear at the moment and the regulator is trying to assess it. Russian exports to India stood at some $6.9 billion in 2021. Its exports to India include defense goods, mineral resources, fertilizers, metals and precious stones. India exported $3.33 billion worth of goods to Russia in 2021, mainly pharmaceutical products, tea and coffee. India, which has deep trade and defense ties with Russia, is yet to criticise long-standing arms supplier Russia publicly over Ukraine and has instead urged both sides to cease hostilities, causing frustration among its other allies including the United States. The Indian Banks' Association, an industry body, also met with select bankers on Monday to determine the impact of trade disruptions. For now, bankers have not sought IBA's help in reaching out to the regulator or the government, the first source said. RBI and IBA did not immediately respond to an email seeking comment. Meanwhile, banks have started contacting corporate clients to understand their exposure to Russia and to Ukraine to see if their business could be significantly impacted, resulting in delayed loan re-payments for banks. India's top lender, State Bank of India, along with several other banks have stopped processing any transactions involving Russian entities subject to international sanctions. (Reporting by Nupur Anand; Editing by Kim Coghill) By Krishna N. Das NEW DELHI (Reuters) - India's production and exports of Russia's Sputnik COVID-19 vaccines are expected to slow further following U.S. sanctions on Russia's sovereign wealth fund that promotes the shot globally, three Indian pharmaceutical industry sources told Reuters. The Russian Direct Investment Fund (RDIF) had billed India as one of Sputnik's biggest production hubs and markets, though local sales have stagnated at 1.2 million doses out of 1.8 billion doses of various vaccines administered in the country. RDIF, which has said the U.S. sanction this week could complicate its promotion of Sputnik shots, has deals with several Indian companies to make nearly 1 billion doses of it, though output has not risen beyond a few million doses. RDIF's main Indian distributor for Sputnik is Dr. Reddy's Laboratories and its manufacturing partners include Hetero and the Serum Institute of India (SII). Another Indian company, which was to make more than 100 million Sputnik doses but had held off production due to a lack of demand in India, has now decided to not manufacture it at all, said a person with direct knowledge's of the matter. The person declined to be named or identify the company. Another source at an Indian company said Sputnik sales were likely to be slow in the near future. RDIF and Hetero did not respond to requests for comment. The SII declined to comment. Dr. Reddy's, one of India's biggest drugmakers which has been selling its products in and around Russia for more than three decades, said it did not see any impact as Indian companies no longer import material from Russia to make Sputnik shots in India. "We have manufacturing capabilities in India and drug substance is not imported. Hence there is no impact," a spokesperson said in an email. "Overall, we are monitoring evolving developments closely and preparing accordingly." Some 4 million Sputnik doses, bottled in India using imported material from Russia last year, were exported around October. Last month, India sent 135,875 locally made doses of the single-dose Sputnik Light vaccine to Uzbekistan, according to India's foreign ministry. (Reporting by Krishna N. Das; Editing by Kim Coghill) Update: Netflix has suspended its streaming service in Russia amid the ongoing invasion of Ukraine. Given the circumstances on the ground, we have decided to suspend our service in Russia, a spokesperson said. Earlier: Netflix has paused all productions and acquisitions out of Russia in the wake of its invasion of Ukraine, according to a just-published report in Variety. Representatives at Netflix could not immediately be reached for comment from IndieWire. More from IndieWire Netflix reportedly had four Russian original projects in the works. One project affected is a crime thriller series currently in production that has now been put on hold. The neo-noir mystery series ZATO was set to be the streamers first original series filmed in Russia. The series is set around uncertainties in the aftermath of the fall of the Soviet Union. From directors Darya Zhuk and Stanislav Libin, ZATO was first announced in early February 2022. The streamer currently offers a robust slate of Russian film and TV series on its platforms globally and in the United States, including the popular animated kids program Masha the Bear, the drama thriller series To the Lake, sci-fi offering Better Than Us, and more. In the last week, Russia has been banned from major events and releases, with studios like Paramount, Warner Bros., Sony, Universal, and Disney all pulling soon-to-be-released theatrical titles from Russian distribution. Titles like WBs The Batman, Sonys Morbius, and Disney/Pixars Turning Red were put on pause as studios continue to assess the ongoing current events. Both the Cannes Film Festival and the Venice Film Festival made statements saying that they would not welcome any Russian delegates or attendees unopposed to Putins regime and the current government. Story continues The European Film Academy announced that it will exclude Russian films for consideration for its 2022 European Film Awards. Best of IndieWire Sign up for Indiewire's Newsletter. For the latest news, follow us on Facebook, Twitter, and Instagram. Click here to read the full article. FUNDRAISER Actors Jeremy Irons (House of Gucci), Sinead Cusack (Wrath of the Titans) and Greta Bellamacina (This Sceptred Isle) are set to take part in a charity fundraising event for Ukrainian refugees on Wednesday evening in London. The trio are set to give readings at the event, which will also include talks by journalist Misha Glenny and historian Sir Simon Schama about Putins Russia. More from Variety The Kiva Cello Quartet will also play. Funds will go to the Wonder Foundation, its Polish partners, Panorama and Pontes, and Moldovan food business incubator Katalyst, all of whom are providing services from housing and employment to food and assimilation to hundreds of Ukrainian families fleeing the war. An Evening for Ukraines Refugees takes place in Central London on Wednesday March 30. Tickets can be purchased here. DETENTION Viktor Marunyak, the elderly subject of Roman Bondarchuks IDFA winner and Ukraines 2016 Oscar entry Ukrainian Sheriffs, has been kidnapped by Russian forces. Marunyak appointed himself a sheriff in his East Ukrainian village in the absence of any real police or official authorities after the Russian invasion of Eastern Ukraine in 2014 and kept the peace between his neighbors about stolen chickens and provided advice on life and love wherever he could. Bondarchuk and his Ukrainian Sheriffs co-writer Darya Averchenko got in touch with Marunyaks daughter, who lives in Germany, when they heard the news of his abduction. They found out from her that Marunyak was initially taken away by the Russian military in mid-March. The soldiers tried to frighten Marunyak at first but then said that they just needed a place to spend the night, Averchenko told Variety. They returned with Marunyak and 25 soldiers spent the night in Marunyaks home. The next day, the soldiers moved to the village school and cultural center. Story continues They didnt touch him and told that if there are no provocations we wont oppress and we will leave the village soon, Averchenko says. But there are even more of them now, and they are no longer soldiers, but special forces. Matters evidently escalated after the special forces entered the village. Marukyaks sister reported that he was kidnapped on March 21 and that on March 23 he was brought in handcuffs to his house, Averchenko says. The issue appeared to be that Marunyak is an outspoken advocate of democracy and justice. The occupants planted grenades at his place, told him hell be taken to Russian jail for this for 20 years. Marunyak answered: We are in Ukraine here! The occupants told him: There will be Russia here from April 1. Then the Russian soldiers looted and destroyed his house, leaving his wife without any food, says Averchenko. Viktor is chronically ill, but they refused to take his medicine, Averchenko adds, saying that the situation has been brought to the attention of Ukrainian ombudsman Lyudmyla Denysova and Amnesty International. MEDIA PROJECT An international group of historians and journalists with leading Ukrainian media group Starlight Media have created a project called NEVERAGAIN.MEDIA, which compares the events in Russia and the actions of Vladimir Putin on the eve of the invasion of Ukraine to the situation in Nazi Germany and the actions of Adolf Hitler on the eve of World War II. The aim of the project, published in the English, Russian and Ukrainian languages, is to demonstrate using facts, that Russias aggression against Ukraine poses a real threat to the security of Europe and the world. The authors conclude that Putin is almost 100% repeating Hitlers steps and leading the world to a new global war. If the Russian dictator is not stopped in Ukraine today, the fighting will spread to Europe and the world tomorrow. The project is addressed to the Western media, politicians and ordinary citizens, in order to objectively analyze current events in Ukraine. The authors of the project also hope that the collected materials will reach Russians. DOCUMENTARY Argonons BriteSpark Films has been commissioned by U.K. broadcaster Channel 4 to make a 30-minute film about British member of parliament (MP) Johnny Mercers recent trip to Ukraines warzones. Soldier turned filmmaker Levison Wood (whose company Blackmane Media is partnering with BriteSpark for the film) flew with Mercer and director Neil Bonner to Lviv and Kyiv to document what is happening there. The film will be broadcast under the Dispatches banner. As well as documenting the evacuations of hundreds of thousands of women and children, the trio met Ukrainian resistance fighters. The filmmakers were invited to see the warzone for themselves by Ukrainian MPs. I want this film to communicate the amazing resilience and bravery of the people we met in Kyiv, said Mercer. I hope it will help my colleagues and the British public make the right decisions about how we can all support Ukraine to get through this conflict, which is our generations righteous fight. Porter, director of programmes at BriteSpark Films, said: Its a privilege to be collaborating with Johnny and Lev on this film. Their material, gathered in extraordinary circumstances, highlights the plight of the Ukrainian people from a totally unique perspective. Louisa Compton, head of news and current affairs and specialist factual and sport, added: In this film Johnny Mercer will bring us to the frontline of the biggest story of the moment. The on the ground reporting will be invaluable both for showing British viewers the reality of life as it is right now for Ukrainian people and for documenting the damage of Putins war to the civilian population. Bonner co-directs with Erica Jenkin (Stacey Dooley Back on The Psych Ward) while Wood and Porter executive produce for Blackmane and BriteSpark, respectively. Compton commissioned the film for Channel 4. K.J. Yossman DECREE Under martial law, Ukraine President Volodymyr Zelenskyy has decreed that all national channels will be combined together as a round-the-clock single platform. This is part of the unified information policy being implemented by the countrys National Security and Defense Council. Establish that, in a state of war, the implementation of a unified information policy is a priority issue of national security, which is ensured by combining all national television channels, the program content of which consists mainly of information and / or information and analytical programs on a single information platform for strategic communication round-the-clock news Marathon Single News #UArazom, the decision states. ACCREDITATION FIAPF, the International Federation of Film Producers Associations, has paused the accreditations of the Moscow International Film Festival and Message to Man International Film Festival until further notice, as both are financed by the government of the Russian Federation, whose actions are in violation of international norms, the organization said. FIAPF concludes there is no guarantee that the operation of these festivals will fully respect the entire set of values and rules of the FIAPF accreditation program, incl. in particular to act to bring together films of the world and give priority to the promotion of films. PLATFORM Film network Crew United has launched Filmmakers-for-Ukraine, an information site where Ukrainian filmmakers and their families can find help fast. The platform has the goal of informing people in a simple and up-to-the-minute way about offers of aid coming from all European countries. Besides Ukrainian filmmakers and their families the platform is also geared towards helping disadvantaged groups and minorities in Ukraine, such as BIPoC, LGBTQIA+, Roma, people with disabilities, children, and sick and elderly people. The platform provides people in Ukraine seeking help and people who wish to offer support with information on the issues of transport, shelter, work, medical assistance, food, clothing and contacts to psychological and legal aid. It also contains offers of assistance, fundraising campaigns, petitions and appeals from the film industry and an information page curated by film journalists containing sources of important documentary and feature films about Ukraine. CONCERT U.K. broadcasters ITV and STV and Livewire Pictures are teaming with the Disasters Emergency Committee (DEC) and the media and entertainment group Global to stage a two-hour fundraiser concert for the humanitarian appeal in Ukraine on March 29. While performers have not been announced yet, Concert for Ukraine promises to bring together names from the world of music for a unique event spreading a message of hope and support. The live show will be broadcast on primetime across ITV, STV, ITV Hub and STV Player. The show is produced by Livewire Pictures. Global is joining as media partner, and retail chain Marks & Spencer will be headline sponsors for the broadcast. All sponsorship and advertising revenue generated from the broadcast of the event, which is expected to raise over 3 million ($3.9 million), will be donated by ITV to the DEC appeal. The broadcast will combine music performances with short films recognizing the ongoing relief efforts and the plight faced by people affected by the conflict in Ukraine. Viewers will be able to donate money to the cause throughout the evening. ITV recently supported the DEC appeals for the Afghanistan crisis in Dec. 2021. Additionally, ITV has raised 60 million for Soccer Aid for UNICEFs global work since the show began. Katie Rawcliffe, head of entertainment commissioning at ITV, said Music is a very powerful tool when it comes to showing support and solidarity, and at ITV we are proud and privileged to be working with Livewire Pictures, Global, M&S and the DEC on such an important and necessary fundraising event. Bobby Hain, MD of Broadcast at STV, said: Weve seen time and time again that the generosity of STV viewers knows no bounds. As the crisis in Ukraine continues to intensify at an alarming rate, this event will be an opportunity for our audiences to come together through the power of music, show our whole-hearted support for Ukraine, and help make a difference to those affected through the work of DEC charities. Saleh Saeed, chief executive of the DEC, added: Funds raised by this concert will make a real difference to those affected by the conflict, sending a strong message of love and enabling DEC charities to help now with urgent aid as well as helping to rebuild lives in the months and years ahead. FESTIVAL CPH: DOX (March 23-Apr. 3) has added three more titles to its special program of Ukraine films. The Earth is Blue as an Orange (Iryna Tsilyk/Ukraine-Lithuania), Maidan (Sergei Loznitsa/Ukraine-The Netherlands) and This Rain Will Never Stop (Alina Gorlova/Ukraine-Germany-Latvia) join A House Made of Splinters (Simon Lereng Wilmont/Denmark-Ukraine), Novorossiya (Enrico Parenti and Luca Genari/Italy), Outside (Olha Zhurba/Ukraine-Denmark-The Netherlands) and Treasures of Crimea (Oeke Hoogendijk/The Netherlands) in the program. Niklas Engstrm, artistic director of CPH:DOX, said: Almost three weeks have gone since Putin started his terrible invasion of Ukraine and turned our world and worldview upside down. Like everyone else, CPH:DOX is of course very concerned about the current situation in Ukraine, and therefore we have chosen to expand our program and give more space to some of the many brave Ukrainian filmmakers who in recent years have created strong and important films with the conflict as a backdrop. All our thoughts go to Ukraine and the many refugees who are currently being forced to leave their homeland. FESTIVAL The upcoming Vilnius International Film Festival (March 24-April 3) has announced it will implement a total boycott of Russian cinema by refusing to screen any and all Russian films, as well as projects at its market side, in solidarity with Ukraine and welcoming the appeal made by the Ukrainian Film Academy for a total boycott. We must do everything we can to help our brothers and sisters in Ukraine, said the fests artistic director Algirdas Ramaska, who noted: With the boycott, the festival has taken a stand without any compromise. Films inspire us to define the difference between good and evil. Lets be curious, ask ourselves what our role in this tense world is, he added, underlining that Lithuania which was the first Soviet republic to declare independence in 1990 is not afraid to speak up. Nick Vivarelli FESTIVAL The San Sebastian International Film Festival has expressed solidarity with Ukraine and said it will not ban dissident Russian filmmakers from the festival. [O]ur selection processes evaluate films on an individual basis, never on the basis of their nationality, even when they come from countries with governments that violate fundamental rights, and we will continue to do so in these turbulent times, the festival said in a statement. We cannot make all the citizens of a country responsible for the decisions of their governments. Often, as is the case of the thousands of Russian citizens who have taken to the streets in protest against the war, these citizens not only disagree with their governments decisions, but also fight against them. Those Russian voices that oppose the aggression committed by their country will always have a place at the San Sebastian Film Festival. We would like to end by expressing our desire for the re-establishment of international law and peaceful stability in the zone with a view to guaranteeing the wellbeing of the Ukrainian population. K.J. Yossman LETTER Leading Ukrainian media organizations 1+1 media, StarLight Media, Media Group Ukraine and Inter Media Group alongside the Ministry of Culture and Information Policy of Ukraine and NGO Detector Media, have written an open letter to Ursula von der Leyen, president of the European Commission, and Vera Jourova, VP of the European Commission, calling on the ban of all Russian satellite channels in the EU and broadcast Ukrainian TV instead. Russian TV channels are justifying the Russian war against Ukraine in their multiple news stories, they are withholding the truth about the real scale of the military actions and their own losses, they are discrediting Ukrainian authorities and international partners, undermining with such actions democratic values and principles and questioning freedom of speech as the basis of European values, and also generating an enormous amount of fake news, thus deceiving their audience not only in the Russian Federation, but also in the EU countries and in the United States of America, the letter said. FESTIVAL The Tokyo International Film Festival, which in 2019 screened Ukrainian films Atlantis and The Painted Bird, has called for a peaceful resolution to the ongoing crisis in Ukraine. The Tokyo International Film Festival expresses its deep concern over this situation, in which peoples lives and their rich culture, including films, are now in jeopardy, the festival said in a statement on March 11. As an organization that aims to contribute to the promotion of global friendship and culture through cinema, the Tokyo International Film Festival feels the hardships of those affected by the crisis as our own and is committed to supporting the films and art produced by them, regardless of national borders. For these reasons, we strongly call for a peaceful resolution to this crisis as early as possible. The Tokyo International Film Festival will explore what measures should be taken at our 35th edition in October-November this year, the statement added. SANCTIONS The U.K. government has imposed sanctions on Russian oligarch Roman Abramovich, the owner of Premier League soccer club Chelsea FC. Abramovich had put the club up for sale recently, with net proceeds from the sale going to a charitable foundation in aid of Ukraine war victims. Under the terms of the sanction, Abramovich sees his assets frozen, a prohibition on transactions with U.K. individuals and businesses, a travel ban and transport sanctions imposed. Putins attack on Ukraine continues & we are witnessing new levels of evil by the hour. Today the Government has announced further sanctions against individuals linked to the Russian Government. This list includes Roman Abramovich, the owner of Chelsea Football Club, U.K. Culture Secretary Nadine Dorries tweeted on March 10. 1/ 4Putins attack on Ukraine continues & we are witnessing new levels of evil by the hour. Today the Government has announced further sanctions against individuals linked to the Russian Government. This list includes Roman Abramovich, the owner of Chelsea Football Club. Nadine Dorries (@NadineDorries) March 10, 2022 Our priority is to hold those who have enabled the Putin regime to account. Todays sanctions obviously have a direct impact on Chlesea & its fans. We have been working hard to ensure the club & the national game are not unnecessarily harmed by these important sanctions, Dorries said. To ensure the club can continue to compete and operate we are issuing a special licence that will allow fixtures to be fulfilled, staff to be paid and existing ticket holders to attend matches while, crucially, depriving Abramovich of benefiting from his ownership of the club. I know this brings some uncertainty, but the Government will work with the league & clubs to keep football being played while ensuring sanctions hit those intended. Football clubs are cultural assets and the bedrock of our communities. Were committed to protecting them, Dorries added. FUND The International Coalition for Filmmakers at Risk, the partnership established by the International Documentary Film Festival Amsterdam, the International Film Festival Rotterdam and the European Film Academy to act as the film communitys collective response to cases of filmmakers facing severe risk, has set up an emergency fund for filmmakers aimed at film practitioners directly in danger due to the ongoing war in Ukraine. The fund aims to help filmmakers with small grants of 500 ($544), 1,000 or 1,500 to cover temporary relocation expenses, legal and administrative fees and other minor but necessary expenses required during the current situation. Filmmakers at risk can reach out directly to the fund through contact@icfr.international. Financial contributions have been already pledged by Germanys key national and regional film funding bodies and by many individual donors. FESTIVAL Koreas Jeonju International Film Festival has condemned the Russian invasion of Ukraine. As a member of our community, and the international community, which has suffered from the infringement of sovereignty, Jeonju International Film Festival strongly condemns the Russian invasion of Ukraine. This kind of violence cannot be justified in any circumstance, the festival said in a statement. Jeonju International Film Festival strongly supports and respects Ukraines will to protect its sovereignty, territory, and democracy, and also supports the courage of local Russian filmmakers, artists, and people who have begun to speak out against the unilateral decision of the nation. We hope citizens in Ukraine stay safe, the statement added. FUNDRAISING Nordisk Film TV Denmark, a Banijay Nordic label, will produce fundraising concert Together for Ukraine, which will take place at City Hall Square in Copenhagen March 12 and will be shown on big screens across Denmarks major cities: Aarhus, Odense, Aalborg and Esbjerg. The concert will be broadcast live on DR1 and TV 2. Well-known Danish musicians will perform and viewers will have the chance to donate funds to aid agencies both before, during and after the event. Meanwhile, Banijay Benelux label TVBV will produce a fundraising show, in collaboration with ITV and NOS, for Giro555s Together in Action for Ukraine campaign to be broadcast on March 7 on SBS6, RTL 4 and NPO1. Hosted by Chantal Janzen and Rob Kemps, the show will also feature Dionne Stax, Britt Dekker and Hila Noorzai. DEATH Ukrainian actor Pasha Li was killed on March 6, during Russian shelling in Irpin. He was 33 years. Lee had enlisted in the Ukraine armys Territorial Defense Forces. Lee was a well-known film and dubbing actor, singer and composer. He was active in Kyivs Koleso theater and starred in films and commercials. Film credits include Valentyn Vasyanovychs The Pit (2006), Lyubomyr Levytskys Shadows of Unforgotten Ancestors, Zvychayna sprava (2012), also by Valentyn Vasyanovych, Oleksey Shaparevs The Fight Rules (2016) and Valentyn Shpakovs Meeting of classmates (2019) among others. One of his last works was television series Provincial (2021). ACTIONS The Polish Film Institute has condemned the Russian invasion of Ukraine and has called for specific actions to be taken. These include asking the Council of Europe to exclude Russia from Eurimages and to terminate its co-production agreements with it, and to exclude the Russian Federation from the European Convention on Film Co-production; the International Association of the Federation of Film Producers (FIAPF) to remove the FIAPF accreditation from the International Film Festival in Moscow; producers to terminate their cooperation with economic entities of the Russian Federation and not to transfer intellectual property rights to films in the territory of the Russian Federation; distributors not to license the distribution of films in the territory of Russia; Streamers and VOD platforms to ban content on their resources which was created or co-produced by Russian filmmakers; and festivals for the exclusion of films produced by or in co-production with the Russian Federation. We must realize that Ukraine, as a country attacked by a ruthless aggressor, facing the incredible atrocities of the Russian Federation, is now acting as a dam against the attack on the freedom of the whole of Europe. At this unprecedented moment in human history, we must show our resolve and solidarity with the entire Ukrainian nation, said a statement signed by Radosaw Smigulski, general director of the Polish Film Institute. Any support shown for Russia while its armed forces are occupying the territories of independent Ukraine is support for the criminal activities of the occupier. Maintaining neutrality at this point is also a silent consent to the destruction being done by the aggressor in our neighbours country, the statement added. SANCTIONS A group of Ukrainian artists, musicians, gallerists and cultural activists led by Minister of Culture and Informational Policy of Ukraine, Oleksandr Tkachenko, have called on the global arts community to impose cultural sanctions against Russia. The Russian Federation has purposefully and maliciously violated existing international standards and agreements, using culture as part of the propaganda toolbox. Cultural sanctions will limit propaganda methods and help the Ukrainian and global media show Russian people an accurate picture of the invasion, the group said in a statement. Tkachenko said: Cultural sanctions and worldwide ban of Russian art heritage will deprive the aggressor of another propaganda tool and social influence, thus encouraging the countrys all conscious influential artists to go to rallies against the war and stop Putins bloody policy. The group is asking for cancellation of all projects that involve the Russian Federation, including the ones with Russian funds; banning representatives of the Russian Federation from participation in international competitions, exhibitions, forums, music and film festivals and other cultural events; removing Russians from the supervisory boards and cultural partnerships, cancelling sponsorships and withdrawing organizational support; and eliminating coverage of Russian culture in the media. FESTIVAL The Czech Republics Karlovy Vary International Film Festival (KVIFF) will support Russian filmmakers critical of the regime but will ban anyone associated with the Russian state or governmental institutions. Via its distribution subsidiary Aerofilms, the festival will also organize special screenings of Vitaly Manskys Putins Witnesses, which won best documentary at KVIFF 2018, with the proceeds going to non-profit organization People in Need, which has mobilized extensive resources to support the people of Ukraine. The organizers of the Karlovy Vary International Film Festival unambiguously condemn the Russian invasion of Ukraine and express their unconditional support for the country, the festival said in a statement. We fully support the Ukrainian people who are at the moment defending peace and democratic values in their country, among whom are many filmmakers we welcomed in Karlovy Vary in the past. The Karlovy Vary film festival has always supported artists freedom of expression. Our countrys historical experience has taught us the importance of foreign support for cultural and artistic figures who gave the world an undistorted picture of actual conditions in our country. We want to be open to all artists whose work and public positions stand for democratic values and principles. We know that many Russian filmmakers have long been critical of the situation in Russia and of their countrys official policies and have been persecuted for their views. We will always support them. But we do not want to and wont accept anyone who is in any way associated with Russian state or governmental institutions or who stands in support of military aggression, the statement added. ADVERTISING Ascential Events Cannes Lions advertising festival has also joined the Russian boycott and will not accept submissions from the country. We stand together with our friends in Ukraine, and our many partners and community members in Russia who strongly oppose the actions of the Russian government, the festival said in a statement. Despite our desire to celebrate creativity from wherever it comes, we have made the decision not to accept submissions or delegations from Russian organizations into Cannes Lions or its associated awards programs. As an immediate action, Ascential and Lions will make a significant donation to humanitarian charities working in the affected region, the statement added. In addition, while we recognize that this is only a small gesture, we will welcome free of charge any and all Ukraine creatives who are able to attend Cannes Lions. Refunds on awards submissions for Ukraine agencies will also be honored. DISTRIBUTION A group of Russian distributors have issued a statement calling for the end of the war. We, Russian film distributors, each on our own behalf, appeal to everyone who has it in their power to end the barbaric war in Ukraine, and we call for reconciliation and an immediate cease-fire, the statement said. For many years we have been building bridges between people to help them learn to understand each other better. Our work is not just business, and its not just our job. Our work is to create and communicate culture. Our mission is for audiences in Russia to be able to watch films about life in other countries like Serbia, Thailand, France or Ukraine and for audiences across the globe to be able to watch films about Russia and its people. Any good film, no matter the subject or the country of origin, is ultimately about the fact that every persons life is a priceless gift. Life is full of wonderful, exciting things but war is not one of them. Despite our differences, we humans are one and the same species, and under no circumstances do we have the biological or moral right to kill one another! We call on all opposing sides to engage in a constructive dialogue, because there is no other alternative to violence. Stop the killing and destruction!, the statement added. The major Hollywood studios have paused film releases in Russia. Nick Holdsworth contributed to this report. STATEMENT Ukrainian director Oleg Sentsov (Rhino) has issued a powerful statement from the frontlines of the Russia-Ukraine war. In 2014, I was unlawfully imprisoned in Russia and sentenced to 20 years of imprisonment for fighting against Putin regime and annexation of Crimea. Back then, the whole film industry stood up to support me. And I am immensely grateful for it. Now Im asking you to support my country, Sentsov said. Exactly two weeks ago, my movie, which I shot after I was out, was released in Ukraine. For a week now, I have been standing in the trenches as a participant of the territorial defence of Kyiv, which is a part of the Armed Forces of Ukraine. Life has changed in an instant with the fall of the first bomb on the territory of Ukraine. Everything we knew about Hitlers invasion has now become real again. My motherland is mercilessly shelled from the land, sea and air. Russian bombs are falling on Ukrainian children. Millions are sitting in bomb shelters. Millions are suffering from being cold and lacking food. My country is being ruined, but our spirit is strong. We are going to fight until our victory. For this, we need your support. The support of intellectuals and artists who oppose Putins bloody regime. People who value human life more than anything. I request your support for the boycott of Russian cinematography in all dimensions, including film cooperation: co-production, distribution and festivals, as requested by the Ukrainian Film Academy. Please sign the petition! Stand with Ukraine! We will stop Putin together!, the statement said. Sentsov has also shared a video shot earlier this week, the location of which cannot be revealed for security reasons. DISTRIBUTION Banijay, one of Europes biggest production-distribution companies, announced Thursday that it is freezing new activity in Russia until further notice. It is believed that Banijay is also reviewing current contracts with Russian companies and will also be donating 100,000 ($114,000) to a charity to support efforts in Ukraine, the charity to be confirmed by the end of the week. Banijay is also encouraging its teams worldwide to explore fundraising avenues. As a sign of solidarity, all of Banijays social media handles are currently about to switch to our new B decked out in the distinctive blue and yellow of Ukraines national flag. The full Banijay statement: We are utterly saddened by the horrendous situation in Ukraine and our thoughts go to all those affected. As a vast global content production and distribution business, we, like most of the industry, have long historically had deals in-place across Russia. However, in light of recent events, we have taken the decision not to activate any new agreements in the region relating to production, distribution (sales and licensing) and general commercial matters, thereby freezing our activity there until further notice. A large question is how many more big European companies will rapidly follow Banijays example. FESTIVALS & MARKETS One of Spains biggest movie export platforms, the Malaga Festivals Spanish Screenings XXL, has barred Russian buyers and acquisition executives from attending its next edition, running over March 21-24. The move ends plans, announced to Variety in February, to pay flights and accommodation for a fulsome Russian delegation, drawn especially from its VOD platforms, after Spanish film and trade authorities had identified Russian streaming services as an export market priority. Following Russias devastating invasion of Ukraine, that gameplan has rapidly been dropped. The Malaga Festival, by common accord of the ICAA and ICEX, in reaction to the requests of the Spanish audiovisual sector, has decided not to invite companies from Russia to the Spanish Screenings XXL, the official market for Spanish film sales, the Festival announced Thursday evening in a statement. Without an invitation, Russian buyers will not only not see flight and accommodation paid for by the market but be barred from access to its in-person and online screenings. BAFTA The British Academy of Film and Television Arts (BAFTA) has joined the condemnation of the Russian invasion of Ukraine. BAFTA joins our fellow Academies across Europe and stands united with the Ukrainian Film Academy in condemning the Russian invasion of Ukraine, said BAFTA chair Krishnendu Majumdar. We stand in solidarity with all Ukrainian people bravely fighting for their country and we share their hope for a return to peace. Together with the Ukrainian Film Academy we want to express the importance of reading and sharing verified accurate information. We extend our support and unreserved gratitude to the journalists and filmmakers, many of whom are BAFTA members, who are bravely reporting and documenting the conflict and humanitarian crisis as it unfolds. Our thoughts are with them and their families as they continue this vital work. CRITICS Ukrainian film critics have appealed to the International Federation of Film Critics (FIPRESCI) to boycott Russian state funded films. We ask you to abstain from participating in any film or other event organized, hosted or funded, directly or indirectly, by Russian Federation, the critics said in a statement. We urge you not to take part online or otherwise in any film festivals and cultural forums in the Russian state as members of FIPRESCI. Otherwise, you will indirectly legitimize all the horrors Ukraine is withstanding now and struggling with hybrid Russian aggression it has been enduring for the last eight years. We are asking you not to be silent and vocally support Ukraine whenever its possible. We are calling out for our fellow members of FIPRESCI and literally everybody who is reading this to actively support Russias isolation until its troops leave territory of Ukraine within its borders according to the international law, the statement said. BELARUS The Belarusian film community has also condemned the Russian invasion of Ukraine. We, Belarusian film community, strongly condemn the Russian military aggression against Ukraine. We are outraged that the Russian aggressor uses our territory for launching deadly missiles to Ukraine, a statement from several noted filmmakers, film critics and festival programmers said. Many Belarusian filmmakers were welcomed and supported in Ukraine after the repressions we suffered in 2020. We express our strong solidarity with the brave Ukrainian nation that fearlessly fights for the freedom of their country. As art people we clearly see the difference between the good and the evil. There is no place for evil in real life. We demand Russian troops to leave the territory of Ukraine and Belarus. We demand to stop the war immediately, the statement added. Signatories include Volia Chajkouskaya, founder of Northern Lights Film Festival, producer, director; Aliaksei Paluyan, director, screenwriter; Mara Tamkovich, director; Igor Soukmanov, film critic, festival programmer; Andrei Rasinski, film critic, FIPRESCI member; Maria Yahorava, production manager; Julia Shatun, director; Andrei Kutsila, director; Nikolai Lavreniuk, producer; Vladimir Kozlov, writer/director; Anton Kaliaha, film critic and Taras Tarnalitsky, journalist. SCREENWRITERS A group of prominent Russian screenwriters have demanded peace. They include Anastasia Palchikova (Bolshoy), Roman Kantor (To the Lake, Netflixs upcoming Anna Karenina adaptation Anna K), Anna Kozlova (Flashmob), Captain Volkonogov Escaped co-writer and co-director Aleksey Chupov and Nataliya Meshchaninova (Arrhythmia) among hundreds of others. The Russian government has banned the word war. The word peace is still allowed, the screenwriters said in a statement. The peace of the Ukraine has been violently destroyed. The peace of the sovereign independent state is under attack. The peace of the Russian people has vanished, too. The government is pushing us into the world of terror, isolation, economic, cultural and human disaster. We, the screenwriters of Russia, demand to stop this military operation and find the words for dialogue and negotiation. Plenty of Russian people are desperately writing open letters demanding the Russian government to stop: stand up-comedians, directors, teachers, doctors, architects, beauty industry workers, designers, and more, the statement added. Many of those who signed the open letters have been fired; many have received threats of violence; thousands have been detained. We are sending our enormous love to the Ukrainian people. We demand peace! NETWORK The board of the European Womens Audiovisual network have also joined the global media industry condemnation of the war. Ada Solomon, executive president, wrote on behalf of the board: We, EWA Network, are strongly condemning the criminal actions of Putins regime. We stand for all filmmakers that are opposing the criminal regime in Russia regardless their nationality, because we are one nation: the film nation, the freedom of expression nation. There is a crucial moment in the history when we have to stay united in our fundamental credo in order to survive. Any filmmaker in need of anything is welcome to reach out at EWA Network contact@ewawomen.com and we will react instantly. Any financial support you would like to offer we encourage you to direct it towards the following organization indicated by our friends in the Molodist Film Festival in Kyiv: International Charitable Foundation Come Back Alive. We will keep you updated on other direct ways to support the innocent victims of this horrible war. United we survive. LICENSING Global rights management company Eccho Rights has licensed Servant of the People, the 2016 series created by and starring Ukrainian president Volodymyr Zelensky, to Channel 4 in the U.K., MBC in the Middle East, ANT 1 in Greece and PRO TV in Romania, in solidarity with Ukraine and Zelensky. Fredrik af Malmborg, managing director at Eccho Rights, said: Eccho Rights stands in solidarity with our friends and partners in Ukraine. It is our position that the best support the global television industry can offer to Ukraine today is to share this story. Three seasons of the series and feature film are available to license from Eccho Rights. Nicola Soderlund, managing partner at Eccho, said: The series is a comedy but also an important document of where Zelensky comes from. His fictional president is a normal man, who grows into his role as a heroic and adored leader. While the real world scenario facing Zelensky and the Ukrainian people is far more grim and appalling than the comedy of the series, there are obvious parallels with the real world situation, and Servant of the People is a fascinating, important and historic piece of television. Eccho Rights has also pledged a donation of 50,000 ($55,460) to the Ukrainian Red Cross Society, to help to assist victims of the war and have removed all Russian-owned and produced series from their catalogue. Servant of the People - Credit: Eccho Rights Eccho Rights ESTONIAN BOYCOTT The Estonian film industry has called for a boycott of films from warring Russia and Belarus and has asked all Estonian filmmakers to sign the Ukrainian Film Academys petition to declare a boycott of Russian cinema. The entire Estonian film industry calls on their government to implement extraordinary temporary measures to ban the production and distribution of state-sponsored audiovisual films from Russia and Belarus in Estonia, and to suspend cooperation in filmmaking and culture with their autocratic regimes until the war in Ukraine stops and the subsequent situation satisfies the international community, Estonian industry representatives said in a statement on Wednesday. As filmmakers, we are acutely aware that the situation for our fellow filmmakers in those countries will be markedly harder under the international boycott. Hence, we appeal to you, Russian and Belarusian friends and filmmakers. Muster all your strength and creativity and act decisively against the inhuman actions of your leaders! We encourage you to take collective responsibility for the fate of your countries and nations, the statement added. We support all the filmmakers of Russia and Belarus who oppose the regimes of Putin and Lukashenko. The statement also lauds an appeal by Belarusian filmmakers who have strongly condemned Russian military aggression against Ukraine and says that the Estonian film industry is doing its best to assist Ukrainian refugees in finding professional work and accommodation. Signatories to the statement include Estonian Filmmakers Association, Estonian Film Institute, Estonian Screenwriters Guild, Estonian Film Directors Guild, Estonian Documentary Guild, Estonian Society of Cinematographers, Estonian Film Industry Cluster, Estonian National Film Producers Union, Association of Estonian Film Producers, Baltic Film, Media and Arts School/Tallinn University, Department of Animation/Estonian Academy of Arts, Estonian Animation Association, Estonian Film Journalists Association, Estonian Association of Audiovisual Authors, Tallinn Black Nights Film Festival, Cinema Artis/Tallinnfilm OU, Cinema Tartu Elektriteater, Cinema Soprus, Cinema Vorgukuur, Estonian Film Museum/Estonian History Museum, The Association of Professional Actors of Estonia and Film Archive of the National Archives of Estonia. GAMING The European Games Developer Federation, an agglomeration of national trade associations representing game developer studios based in 19 European countries has condemned the Russian invasion of Ukraine. EGDF strongly condemns the Putin regimes military offence against Ukraine and calls for international support for Ukraine, its people and the Ukrainian game developer community, the body said in a statement. Ukraine has been, is and will be an important and essential part of Europe and European games culture. During recent years, we have celebrated a boom of local game developer studios in Ukraine building their own highly successful Ukranian games. Furthermore, for years Ukrainian game developers have helped to shape the European games industry across Europe. There are not nearly any national game developer community without Ukrainian members in the EU. The statement goes on to call on the EU to defend its core values of human rights, democracy and liberalism and to double down on being the land for the free. Best of Variety Sign up for Varietys Newsletter. For the latest news, follow us on Facebook, Twitter, and Instagram. Click here to read the full article. Irked by the sight of high school students wearing masks at his press conference Wednesday, Gov. Ron DeSantis encouraged them to remove the facial coverings, calling their use COVID theater. "You do not have to wear those masks, DeSantis said in video captured by WFLA News Channel 8, Tampas NBC station. Please take them off. Honestly, it's not doing anything. We've gotta stop with this COVID theater. So if you wanna wear it, fine, but this is ridiculous." DeSantis then shakes his head in apparent frustration before launching into the press conference at the University of South Florida, which he visited to tout $20 million in funding for cybersecurity training. At least two students removed their masks at the governor's request, according to the video. The Hillsborough County School District said the students were from Middleton High School in Tampa, Florida. "As always, our students should be valued and celebrated," Hillsborough Schools Superintendent Addison Davis said in a statement. "It is a student and parents choice to protect their health in a way they feel most appropriate. We are proud of the manner in which our students represented themselves and our school district. NEW: @GovRonDeSantis annoyed with USF students "You do not have to wear those masks. Please take them off. Honestly, it's not doing anything. We've gotta stop with this Covid theater. So if you wanna wear it, fine, but this is ridiculous."https://t.co/7j1Pb2hV53 @WFLA pic.twitter.com/ZIOyTHLOh3 Evan Donovan (@EvanDonovan) March 2, 2022 The governor has outlawed mask mandates in Florida schools. His remarks to the students is evidence of his disdain for even voluntary mask-wearing, and distrust of the science behind it. Story continues The Centers for Disease Control and Prevention released new mask guidance last week that no longer recommends indoor mask wearing for most people in many parts of the country places where the COVID-19 community level is considered low or medium. The CDC still considers much of Florida including the Tampa area where DeSantis was visiting Wednesday to have a high COVID-19 community level, though, and recommends everyone wear masks indoors in these areas when in public spaces. Health: To mask or not to mask? That is the question after CDC eases mask guidelines for fatigued nation Travel: Yes, masks are still required on planes and at airports despite new CDC mask guidelines Florida Gov. Ron DeSantis uses Russian invasion of Ukraine as opportunity to attack President Biden. DeSantis blames Biden for Russian invasion of Ukraine DeSantis also continued to blame President Joe Biden for the Russian invasion of Ukraine during the press event, while praising the country's fighters Wednesday and taking a dig at France. DeSantis said Russian President Vladimir Putin likely decided to invade Ukraine after witnessing how the U.S. withdrawal from Afghanistan played out. "I believe that the decision to go into Ukraine was one that was probably made last summer as he's watching what was happening in Afghanistan... how Biden handled that," DeSantis said during an event in Tampa. DeSantis has echoed Ukraine talking points adopted by many GOP leaders, blaming Biden for the invasion and calling for more energy production in the United States to limit the leverage Putin has because of the world's reliance on Russian oil and gas. The governor also touched on the Ukrainian resistance Wednesday. When you see people that are willing to fight, I mean its inspiring to see these people just grab rifles who are civilians and going out there and fighting to ward off the Russian Army," DeSantis said. "A lot of other places around the world, they just fold the minute theres any type of adversity. I mean could you imagine if they went into France, would they do anything to put up a fight? Probably not. Follow Herald-Tribune Political Editor Zac Anderson on Twitter at @zacjanderson. He can be reached at zac.anderson@heraldtribune.com This article originally appeared on Sarasota Herald-Tribune: Florida Gov. Ron DeSantis tells students to take off masks at event Ukraine has been thrown into chaos as Russia continues its invasion of the country, and its citizens have borne the brunt, forced to flee or hide out in temporary shelters to avoid the attacks. As the conflict continues, the travel industry has reacted, canceling cruises and tours that included Russia on their itineraries. But the ongoing turmoil has devastated people around the world and left them feeling desperate for help. Several organizations have stepped up to provide on-the-ground support to the people and animals of Ukraine, both inside the country and in surrounding areas, including offering everything from basic necessities like housing and food to psychological support. Here are a few organizations to learn more about and support to help the people of Ukraine. Ukraine Ty O'Neil/SOPA Images/LightRocket via Getty Images Airbnb Airbnb is offering free, short-term housing to up to 100,000 refugees who are fleeing Ukraine, funding the effort through the company, donations to the Airbnb.org Refugee Fund, as well as using the site's hosts. Local nonprofits are responsible for booking and coordinating stays for refugees, according to the company. People can donate to Airbnb's refugee fund or volunteer to host someone online. Find out more World Central Kitchen Founded by celebrity chef Jose Andres, World Central Kitchen provides meals in response to humanitarian, climate, and community crises. The organization is offering hot meals at border crossings in Poland as well as in surrounding countries where Ukrainian refugees have fled. The group is also supporting local restaurants in the Ukrainian cities of Odessa and Lviv. Find out more Donate: Here UNICEF The United Nations-based group provides access to basic services like water and sanitation, health care, schooling, psychosocial support, and emergency cash assistance. For the crisis in Ukraine, the group is setting up 26 Blue Dot hubs in six neighboring countries to provide assistance for fleeing families, which offer everything from psychosocial support to facilitating family tracing and reunification efforts for children who may have become separated from their families. Story continues Find out more Donate: Here UAnimals This Ukraine-based animal rights organization is helping rescue animals and provide support to shelters that are running out of food, money, and other resources. People can donate to help their efforts to reach shelters and the animals they support. Find out more Donate: Here Amnesty International This human rights organization investigates potential human rights abuses and lobbies governments and companies, ensuring people follow international law. In Ukraine, the group said it has received "reports of the use of indiscriminate weapons by the Russian army." Going forward, the group said it will monitor and investigate human rights violations as well as work to "defend individuals likely to be targeted, like human rights defenders, journalists, and LGBTI Ukrainians." Find out more Donate: Here Doctors Without Borders This organization, also known as Medecins Sans Frontieres, provides medical assistance all over the world, including in conflict zones. In Ukraine, the group has distributed kits to treat the wounded in Mariupol and has provided telemedicine training for trauma care for 30 surgeons from eastern Ukraine. Additionally, the group is trying to get essential staff and supplies into Ukraine. Doctors Without Borders is also sending teams to Poland, Moldova, Hungary, Romania, and Slovakia. Find out more Donate: Here Ukrainian Red Cross Ukraine Pau Venteo/Europa Press via Getty Images The Ukrainian Red Cross has conducted widespread relief efforts, including supporting fire brigades and the State Emergency Service of Ukraine as well as providing water, food, and hygiene items as well as first aid to people in need. Find out more Donate: Here Save the Children This nonprofit focuses on helping children and their families with aid, including food, water, hygiene kits, psychosocial support, and cash assistance. The group is currently working with migrants and asylum seekers in five reception centers in Romania and is assessing the needs in Poland and Lithuania. Find out more Donate: Here International Rescue Committee This group helps people recover from disasters and rebuild their lives. The International Rescue Committee is currently on the ground in Poland and is "working to scale up the support we provide to the government and local nonprofits to address the crisis and help meet the basic needs of people fleeing the conflict." Additionally, the group is lobbying to protect Ukrainians already in the U.S. by asking the Biden administration to provide Temporary Protected Status (TPS) for Ukraine. Find out more Donate: Here Alison Fox is a contributing writer for Travel + Leisure. When she's not in New York City, she likes to spend her time at the beach or exploring new destinations and hopes to visit every country in the world. Follow her adventures on Instagram. Russian President Vladimir Putin, left, is allies with Belorussian President Alexander Lukashenko. WASHINGTON When the Belarusian government said on Monday that over half the country's voters supported a constitutional amendment allowing authoritarian President Alexander Lukashenko to stay in power until 2035, opposition leaders and foreign election watchdogs immediately called it a sham. The Sunday vote which took place only days after Belarus' close ally Russia invaded their mutual neighbor Ukraine also expanded Lukashenko's ability to coordinate with the Russian military. On Tuesday, Lukashenko announced he would deploy more troops to the Belarus-Ukraine border. "Those are well-trained rapid deployment groups which are ready to stop any provocation and any military action against Belarus," Lukashenko said in a press conference. Belarus now hosts more than 30,000 Russian troops situated a little over 60 miles from Kyiv, Ukraine's capital. In one viral video, Lukashenko can be seen showing Belarusian troops battle maps that imply they'd join the Russian onslaught. An authoritarian and kleptocrat who has referred to himself as "Europe's last dictator," Lukashenko once held Russian President Vladimir Putin's government at arm's length to preserve his own autonomy. Now, many analysts point to his authoritarian government as the model vassal state Putin wishes to implement in Ukraine. Here's what to know about one of Russia's few allies in the conflict against Ukraine: Who is Alexander Lukashenko? Raised by a single mother in rural eastern Belarus, then a subset of the Soviet Union, Lukashenko secured himself financially by enlisting in the military and later managing a collective farm. He joined the Belarusian parliament in the late 1980s and made a name for himself by supporting the attempted coup against Soviet leader Mikhail Gorbachev by Soviet hardliners. How long has Lukashenko been president? In 1994, Lukashenko was elected president of Belarus after leading an ostensive anti-corruption initiative in the parliament. He has since consolidated power by suppressing independent media and arresting critics. Story continues Belarus' relationship with Russia Lukashenko has had a hot and cold relationship since the breakup of the Soviet Union. He initially signed onto a "union state" with the Russian Federation, then led by Boris Yeltsin. The two countries diverged after Putin came to power in 1999 because Lukashenko feared Russia would again come to dominate the country. Lukashenko has long been a critic of the European Union and liberal democratic states, a feeling that many European leaders reciprocate with him. "I am the last and only dictator in Europe. Indeed there are none anywhere else in the world," Lukashenko mocked during a 2012 Reuters interview after EU and U.S. officials lambasted his authoritarian crackdown at home. Pro-democracy movement rises after fraudulent election In 2020, Lukashenko faced the most significant challenge to his power. While in previous years the government had rigged the votes in presidential elections to little protest, a burgeoning pro-democracy movement had grown in the country in recent years. When pro-democracy activist and opposition leader Sergei Tikhanovsky was jailed during his run for president, his wife, Sviatlana Tsikhanouskaya, ran in his place. The opposition then rallied around her and galvanized a national campaign to defeat Lukashenko at the polls. The August 2020 election results showed that Lukashenko had won with 80.1% of the vote, a number immediately challenged within the country and from abroad. Protests broke out in Minsk, Belarus' capital, and across the country calling for Lukashenko's ouster. Tsikhanouskaya fled the country the next day with her children, fearing for their safety. Lukashenko then called in for security aid from Putin, who supplied security forces and technical support to crush street protests and jail the opposition. Related: Biden: Arrest of dissident journalist by Belarus 'a direct affront to international norms' Journalist captured, sparking global backlash In June 2021, Roman Protasevich, a popular Belarusian journalist who opposed Lukashenko and was living outside of Belarus, boarded a commercial flight from Athens, Greece, to Vilnius, Lithuania. While the plane was flying through Belarusian airspace, a military jet scrambled its flight path and ordered it to land due to a bomb threat. When the plane landed in Minsk, Protasevich was taken into custody on trumped-up charges. The government later released a video where Protasevich, who appeared brutalized, admitted to crimes against the government. The situation enraged the EU and U.S., which slapped sanctions on Belarus for interfering with a commercial flight on a European airline, Ireland's Ryanair, between the capitals of two EU members. The situation further isolated Belarus in Europe but brought Lukashenko closer to Putin, who was still supporting his government by suppressing dissent in the now solidly autocratic country. Follow Matthew Brown online @mbrownsir. This article originally appeared on USA TODAY: Belarus: Who is authoritarian President Alexander Lukashenko? As China avoids condemning Russia for its invasion of Ukraine, the US is bolstering its support for Taiwan A composite image of Chinese President Xi Jinping and Russian President Vladimir Putin. Xinhua/Ju Peng via Getty Images, Sergei Guneyev/SPUTNIK/AFP via Getty Images China appears unwilling to criticize Russia over Ukraine and said it opposed Western sanctions. Biden sent a delegation of former US officials to Taiwan after Russia invaded Ukraine. China claims Taiwan which has been self-governing for decades as its own, and recently increased military threats. The US bolstered its support for Taiwan in the wake of Russia's invasion of Ukraine, and China's apparent refusal to condemn it. A delegation of former US officials, sent by President Joe Biden, met Taiwanese President Tsai Ing-wen in Taipei on Wednesday, with retired Adm. Mike Mullen, former chairman of the Joint Chiefs of Staff, saying the US "will continue to oppose any unilateral changes to the status quo." China has long claimed the island nation of Taiwan, which has been self-ruling for decades, as part of its territory. In recent months, China amped up its threats to engage in military conflict if Taiwan continued to assert its independence. China has in recent years pressured multiple countries to cut diplomatic ties with Taiwan as well. "The attempt by the US to show support to Taiwan will be in vain, no matter who the US sends," Chinese foreign ministry spokesperson Wang Wenbin said on Wednesday. "The Chinese people are firmly determined and resolved to defend national sovereignty and territorial integrity." Biden dispatched the delegation to Taipei following Russia's invasion of Ukraine, which China is yet to condemn. China avoids condemning Russia over Ukraine China appears to be distancing itself from Russia over Ukraine, and has avoided outright condemnation. On Monday, Wang told reporters that China and Russia were "comprehensive strategic partners of coordination" a notable change from the Chinese foreign ministry's announcement just last year that the two countries were "better than allies." That being said, China appears keen to avoid angering Russia over Ukraine. Story continues In the run-up to the invasion, the Chinese foreign ministry blamed the US for provoking Russia and, on Wednesday, Wang refused to say whether China considered Russia's actions an "invasion." China has also said it opposes the sanctions on Russian entities and individuals introduced by the US, UK, and EU. China and Russia have long had strong political and economic ties, but Beijing may have an ulterior reason to avoid condemning the Ukraine invasion. A top Chinese state media editor wrote on WeChat last week that it was in China's interests to support Russia over Ukraine, as Beijing will need Moscow's support when it wants to force its hand on Taiwan independence. "In the future, China will also need Russia's understanding and support when wrestling with America to solve the Taiwan issue once and for all," wrote Ming Jinwei, a senior editor at the state-run Xinhua news agency. Many Taiwanese people live in fear of a Chinese invasion and in recent days the slogan "Today, Ukraine, tomorrow, Taiwan!" has spread widely across their social media, The New York Times reported. However, there has been some public opposition to the invasion of Ukraine inside China. On Monday, five professors from top Chinese universities wrote an open letter condemning Russia's invasion of Ukraine, marking a rare departure from China's pro-Russian online sentiment. "As a country that was once also ravaged by war ... we sympathize with the suffering of the Ukrainian people," they wrote. Read the original article on Business Insider A shooting put at least one man in the hospital, and left a portion of South 32nd Street cordoned off by police early Tuesday afternoon. Officers responded to the scene at Fourth Avenue South and 32nd around 1 p.m. As of 3:15, no arrests have been made in connection to the shooting. Emergency personnel found a 37-year-old man on the 400 block of South 32nd Street, who was promptly taken to a Billings hospital, according to a social media post from the Billings Police Department. Along with Billings Police and American Medical Response, Yellowstone County Sheriff's deputies also responded to what became an area buzzing with police activity. Within an hour, the entire block of 32nd between Fourth Avenue South and Fifth Avenue South was taped off by police. Investigators also fanned out around the neighborhood, searching alleyways and speaking with residents. By 2:30, the BPD crime scene investigation van was parked on 32nd to assist officers. A few blocks away along Fourth Avenue South, investigators were photographing bits of debris and inspecting a wrecked sedan. The Ford was left in the alleyway between 36th and 37th streets on the South Side. Police are asking residents to avoid the area while the investigation continues. Tuesday's shooting is the third report in which violence has led to a hospitalization on the South Side in just as many weeks. A man was taken to the hospital with stab wounds Feb. 19. A Billings man was arrested and charged with assault with a weapon. This past weekend, a South Side stabbing left a man hospitalized as well. Police are still investigating the incident. The shooting also comes on the day police Chief Rich St. John was due to speak with the public about recent crime trends, police behavior, increases in violence and other topics facing Billings police as of late. Violence has claimed the lives of five people in Billings so far this year, more than halfway toward equaling last year's nine reported homicides. Investigations are still ongoing into the shooting deaths of four people, two of whom were teenage boys. A BPD officer shot and killed a man in mid February who brandished a weapon that turned out to be a pellet gun. Officer Brett Hilde did not have his body cam activated at the time of the shooting, but police say the man pointed the pellet gun at multiple passersby and Hilde himself before the officer fired eight times, killing the man. Love 1 Funny 1 Wow 2 Sad 5 Angry 15 Get local news delivered to your inbox! Subscribe to our Daily Headlines newsletter. Sign up! * I understand and agree that registration on or use of this site constitutes agreement to its user agreement and privacy policy. The Greece police officer who raised concerns about how the town, department and Greece officials handled the October crash that led to the resignation of former Greece Police Chief Andrew Forsythe, intends to file a lawsuit. Casey Voelkl, an 18-year-veteran of the Greece Police Department, has filed a notice of claim against the department, town and others, including town supervisor Bill Reilich, claiming he was punished by town officials after he contacted an outside agency to investigate the Oct. 21 crash. Voelkl, who was promoted to the rank of deputy chief in 2015, was demoted to the rank of officer after the town completed an internal investigation on the crash and how the department handled the investigation and its aftermath. According to the unredacted report of the investigation led by Joseph Morabito, a retired deputy chief of the Rochester Police Department, although Voelkl was not physically at the scene early that morning, he appeared to be influenced in how he reacted because the incident involved the department's chief. Morabito, in his report, says that Voelkl bears the brunt of the responsibility for botching the investigation, telling others to "do what they saw fit" in how they handled the case. At the time of the crash, Voelkl was one of the department's two deputy chiefs. Casey Voelkl In the court filing, Voelkl alleges that the sole purpose of Morabito's report was to "destroy the unblemished career of an 18-year-member of the police department for whistleblowing to an outside agency." Forsythe in mid-December pleaded guilty to driving while ability impaired, admitting that he was intoxicated when he crashed early into a guardrail on the northbound lanes of Route 390 around 1:30 a.m. on Oct. 21. Forsythe initially told responding officers that he had swerved to avoid a deer and was trying to return to the nearest precinct station. That was a lie, District Attorney Sandra Doorley later determined. Story continues Shortly after Forsythe pleaded guilty in December, Doorley said that the DA's Office "had to play catch up and put together a case that was basically not investigated one iota by the Greece Police Department. Their actions that early morning hampered the investigation." Voelkl was asleep at his Brighton home when Forsythe crashed his department-issued sport utility vehicle. Deputy Chief Jason Helfer, according to both reports, drove by the crash site before police were officially informed of the accident, saw the damaged fleet vehicle and Forsythe, but did not stop or speak with anyone at the scene. Voelkl said he was awakened about an hour after the crash and was told by the responding officers that an unimpaired motorist had crashed and was not injured. Voelkl said that, in the middle of the night, he had no suspicions about the crash or how the responding officers handled the investigation. In the document, Voelkl says his suspension and demotion appeared to be retribution after he contacted the Monroe County District Attorney's Office roughly 2.5 days after the collision, with concerns about how the town, supervisor's office and police department were handling the investigation. Voelkl, in the filing, noted that after viewing the damaged SUV roughly 2.5 hours after the crash and speaking with Forsythe later that day, he felt that the chief was minimizing what had happened early on Mon. Oct. 21. The paperwork stated that in the hours after the accident, Voelkl and Deputy Chief Jason Helfer became "increasingly concerned about Forsythe's conduct after the incident, including his efforts to secure information about officers who had access to the impound lot, where the chief's damaged fleet vehicle was being held." Both Voelkl and Helfer who were the department's two deputy chiefs at the time, were also concerned whether an upcoming contested election "was having an impact on the lack of direction with respect to any follow-up investigation." "In sum, Officer Voelkl came to believe that politicians had taken control of the situation and instead of transparency and disclosure there would be subterfuge and cover-up" due to an upcoming contested election, the notice of claim read. In his eight-page report, Morabito recounted numerous instances where responding and supervising officers either failed in their basic investigatory duties for instance, not asking Forsythe whether he'd been drinking alcohol or had taken steps to cover the chief's tracks. Voelkl specifically told two subordinate officers at the scene not to take photos of the scene of the crash site, according to the town-issued report. He also failed to immediately contact an outside agency to investigate the crash and that Voelkl felt Forsythe remained in charge. He "failed to understand that in this type of situation, the chief is not in charge of the investigation involving himself," the town report read. Helfer was also criticized in the report, including how he drove by the crash site early on Oct. 21 and did not stop or notify anyone of the crash. He was later suspended for two days, but had already retired from the department in January before his suspension was issued the following month. In the notice, Voelkl also alleges that although he was qualified and in line to be promoted to chief in December 2020, when former chief Patrick Phelan retired, and in late October 2021, when Helfer became the department's acting chief, he was passed over. Both times, there was no lengthy vetting or selection process to determine the next chief. Contact Victoria Freile at vfreile@gannett.com. Follow her on Twitter @vfreile and Instagram @vfreile. This coverage is only possible with support from our readers. This article originally appeared on Rochester Democrat and Chronicle: Greece police officer threatens to sue town over Forsythe report Photo Illustration by Kelly Caminero/The Daily Beast/Getty Over a generation of cooperation in space between the U.S. and Russia could be winding down fast, in the wake of Russias invasion of Ukraine and the resulting economic sanctions imposed by much of Europe and the U.S. Dmitry Rogozin, the head of Russias space agency Roscosmos, has spent the last several days strongly suggesting that his country was gearing up to pull out of its commitment to the International Space Station soon, as well as nix its other partnerships with NASA and the European Space Agency. Roscosmos will reconsider its priorities and focus on achieving full import independence in matters of space instrumentation, Rogozin tweeted out on Tuesday. This follows a barrage of incendiary comments sent days before, in which Rogozin decried how new sanctions would affect the Russian space program, and effectively threatened that without Russia, the ISS would uncontrollably fall out of orbit and crash into the U.S., or even India or China. The temperature is rising for all sides involved, and some parties have already taken action. For instance, Germanys Max Planck Institute turned off the main instrument on Russias Spektr-RG research satellite. Russia is threatening to refuse the launch of more satellites from UK internet firm OneWeb. Europes joint Martian rover mission with Russia, ExoMars, is now very unlikely to launch this year, which would push the mission back to 2024 at the earliest. Cooperation is falling apart in areas where it can, John Logsdon, a space policy expert at George Washington University, told The Daily Beast. But the ISS is a place where both sides really depend on each other. The station is divided into two parts: the Russian side; and the NASA-led side that includes Europe, Japan, and Canada. There are currently four Americans, two Russians, and a German living in the ISS. There are also currently two NASA astronauts training with Roscosmos, and three Russian cosmonauts training with NASA. Story continues The International Space Station. NASA The entire stationincluding the Russian sidedepends on power from NASA-operated solar panels that adorn the spacecraft. And the ISS stays in orbit thanks to Russian Progress vehicles that are docked to the station and periodically fire their thrusters to maintain proper altitude. NASA continues working with all our international partners, including the State Space Corporation Roscosmos, for the ongoing safe operations of the International Space Station, the agency said in a statement to The Daily Beast. The new export control measures will continue to allow U.S.-Russia civil space cooperation. No changes are planned to the agencys support for ongoing in orbit and ground station operations. NASA said it expects no changes to upcoming crewed missions to and from the station. A breakup of the ISS partnership could go a few different ways. Its unlikely that Russia would entirely abandon the ISS. After all, it owns half of it and has poured billions of dollars into building out and maintaining those structures in space. Without the ISS, it loses a sustained human presence in orbit. Russia could just remove its modules from the ISS and operate them as part of a separate space station of some kind. Logsdon pointed out very little science is run in those modules, so a separation of the ISS wouldnt really impact any ongoing research. But as noted earlier, the country doesnt have a way to independently power them yet. Meanwhile, the U.S. and its partners would have to figure out how to keep the orbiting laboratory from crashing back to Earth. One option could be to use Northrop Grummans ISS resupply vehicle, Cygnus, to replace the Progress spacecrafts propulsion functions. Cygnus is being tested for that very purpose later this month. If that test is successful, then Russia could leave with fundamentally no technical or programmatic consequences for the U.S. side, said Logsdon. Northrop Grumman's Cygnus spacecraft as it approaches the ISS. NASA Elon Musk has suggested SpaceXs vehicles could do the job, toothough it would need some modifications. NASA eventually wants Boeings upcoming Starliner spacecraft to perform this task, but that vehicle has yet to fly successfully to the ISS, and is years behind schedule anyway. Beyond that, fitting solar electric thrusters to the station could be a good solution, Greg Autry, a space policy expert at Arizona State University, told The Daily Beast. NASA and space tech company Maxar are already working on that for the upcoming Lunar Gateway space station that would support future moon missions. Perhaps that hardware could be diverted or scaled up. Unfortunately none of these is a reliable, immediate solution. It would be very difficult for us to be operating on our own, NASA Associate Administrator Kathy Lueders told reporters Monday. A breakup in a couple years was already a possibilityRussia was only formally committed to the ISS until 2024, although most parties involved expected the country to renew its partnership for at least a few more years. Im sure the preferred outcome before the invasion was to maintain Russia as a partner through the whole lifetime of the ISS, said Logsdon. Because that's the way [the ISS] was designed. NASA currently wants to keep the ISS running until 2031. On Tuesday, however, Roscosmos told Russian news agency TASS: The issue of extending the [ISS] agreement in the current conditions causes our skepticism. Although Rogozin is no stranger to controversy and provocation, his comments suggest an accelerated exit is more than a distant possibility. Still, Autry is skeptical Russia would rashly pull out of the ISS any time soon. It would leave their human program without purpose, a huge blow to national prestige, he said. Going on their own is expensive and I doubt their own cosmonauts want to be totally dependent on Russian hardware at this point, referring to the abysmal quality control of Russias own space technologies. Theres the possibility that Russia would start working more closely with the Chinese (the two countries have already ironed out loose agreements for cooperating on the moon). But given Russias unreliability in both technical execution and political behavior, Im not sure China really wants them, said Autry. Playing junior partner on a China station is also a blow to their egos. What seems most likely is that NASA and Russia will continue to work together as needed through 2024 and possibly a few years beyond. But once a clean and orderly exit strategy is reached, the ISS will probably be the final major space partnership between Russia and the West. Im sure there are people at NASA who must be eager to get out of this dysfunctional relationship, where a drunk Dmitry Rogozin threatens to let the ISS drop on India or China, said Autry. That cant thrill those countries either. Read more at The Daily Beast. Got a tip? Send it to The Daily Beast here Get the Daily Beast's biggest scoops and scandals delivered right to your inbox. Sign up now. Stay informed and gain unlimited access to the Daily Beast's unmatched reporting. Subscribe now. President Zelensky says talks between Russia and Ukraine may be a waste of time while Moscow continues to attack Ukraine Ukrainian President Volodymyr Zelensky seen in Kyiv, Ukraine on February 28, 2022. Presidency of Ukraine / Handout/Anadolu Agency via Getty Images Ukrainian President Volodymyr Zelensky said it's unclear whether conversations with Russia were impactful. "It's important to stop bombing people," Zelensky said. Russia's attack on Ukraine has persisted despite the conversation. Inside the basement of a building at an undisclosed position in Kyiv, Ukrainian President Volodymyr Zelensky said "we'll see," when asked if correspondence between Ukraine and Russia Moscow was a "waste of time," as Russia continues to invade his country, according to a joint interview between Reuters and CNN. "You have to speak first of all. Everybody has to stop fighting and to go [back] to that point from where it began five, six days ago," Zelensky told reporters at the exclusive interview Tuesday. "It's important to stop bombing people and then we can move on and sit at the negotiation table." Officials from Ukraine and Russia sat down near the border of Ukraine and Belarus on Monday. Ukraine sought an immediate ceasefire while Russia sought Ukraine's "neutral status," according to ABC News. It's unclear when the two countries will meet again to continue discussions. "Negotiations are difficult. However, without any obligatory ultimatums already. Unfortunately, the Russian side is still extremely biased regarding the destructive processes it launched," Zelensky's advisor, Mikhail Podolyak, said on Twitter Monday. Zelensky later echoed the sentiment in a video address discussing the meeting on Monday: "So far, we do not have the result we would like to obtain." "We received some signals. When the delegation returns to Kyiv, we will analyze what we have heard, and then we will decide how to proceed to the second round of talks," Zelensky said during the video address. The fighting has gone on for six days after it began early in the morning on February 24, local time. Russian President Vladimir Putin's full-scale invasion which he calls a "special military operation" has killed hundreds and has displaced hundreds of thousands. "The synchronization of the shelling with the negotiation process was evident. I believe that Russia is trying to put pressure on us in such an unsophisticated way," the Ukrainian president also said Monday after the meeting. "Don't waste your time. We do not accept such tactics." Read the original article on Business Insider Editors at the Russian version of Wikipedia say the country's communications regulator has threatened to block the site. They shared a notice from Roskomnadzor, which claimed a page about the Ukraine invasion includes "illegally distributed information," such as the number of Russian military casualties and those of Ukrainian civilians and children, according to Reuters. The regulator demanded that editors remove that information from the article, which is called "Russian invasion of Ukraine (2022)." Roskomnadzor said that if editors don't comply, it will block all of Wikipedia in Russia. Currently, new and unregistered users aren't able to edit the article in order to protect it from vandalism. The article includes casualty estimates from both the Ukrainian and Russian governments, as Motherboard notes. As of Tuesday, it included claims from Ukraine that 352 civilians and more than 110 Ukrainian soldiers had been killed, while 1,684 civilians had been wounded. The country said Russia had sustained 5,710 Russian military casualties. Russia, however, claimed two of its soldiers and 200 Ukrainian soldiers have been killed. Editors of Wikipedia's Russian site may add more sources for the information, but one told Motherboard they likely won't respond to the threat otherwise. Roskomnadzor has issued several other warnings to the site over the years. "The invasion of Ukraine has resulted in the senseless loss of life and has also been accompanied by information warfare online," the Wikimedia Foundation said on Tuesday. "The spread of disinformation about the ongoing crisis affects the safety of people who depend on facts to make life-and-death decisions and interferes with everyones right to access open knowledge." It added that it's "working with affected communities to identify potential threats to information on Wikimedia projects, and supporting volunteer editors and administrators who serve as a first line of defense against manipulation of facts and knowledge." Story continues Since the start of the invasion, Russian regulators have restricted access to Twitter and Facebook. They have also demanded that tech companies remove restrictions on state media channels. Facebook, YouTube and TikTok all blocked RT and Sputnik in Europe. Twitter has placed labels on tweets from Russian state media outlets. Meanwhile, the former head of Yandex's news operations has accused the Russian search giant of censoring information about the invasion. In a note to his former colleagues posted on Facebook, Lev Gershenzon urged them to "stop being accomplices to a terrible crime" and, if they were unable to do anything else to change things, to quit. This article originally appeared on Outside On March 1, Yellowstone, the world's first national park, turns 150, and the park has decided to put Indigenous voices front and center as it plans a year of historic and cultural events. The move is part of a larger effort by the National Park Service and the American Indian Alaska Native Tourism Association, announced in October, to facilitate a "regular, robust, and meaningful" dialogue between associated Indigenous groups and the Park Service. "We've not always gotten the story right here in Yellowstone," said superintendent Cam Sholly on a recent press call, "and so we are focused on really making sure we're telling these stories right as stewards of these parks. We want to do better, together." For over 11,000 years, at least 27 Indigenous groups--among them the Crow, Shoshone, Blackfeet, Bannock, and Nez Perce--have called this area of Wyoming, Montana, and Idaho home, a history that was deliberately covered up when Yellowstone first became a national park in 1872. At the time, the government and railroad companies wanted to market the new preserve as an untrammeled, pristine wilderness, not as land that had been taken from its first hunter-gatherer inhabitants, who saw its mountain peaks and geysers as sacred. Indigenous peoples were forced out by the U.S. Army in order to make way for the government to execute its vision for what it thought a park should entail, and the now antiquated notion of what defines public lands took hold. This process erased countless Native peoples' narratives. The park is working to return bison to Indigenous groups. (Photo: NPS/Jacob W. Frank) This year the park is looking to begin righting the past by elevating Indigenous stories. From May 26 to September 30, a decommissioned building near Old Faithful will be transformed into the Yellowstone Tribal Heritage Center, a pilot project Sholly hopes to make permanent. "We envision a place where tribal nations can display their artwork and cultural items and interact with a large number of visitors directly," he said. In addition, the Eastern Shoshone and Northern Arapaho Tribes are hosting a large, intertribal gathering at the nearby Wind River Reservation that will be open to the public from June 1 to 3, sunrise to sunset. "Indigenous people are still here," states the event page. "Their cultural attachment to their homelands in and around Yellowstone must be honored and understood, and we must build consensus toward a future that includes more Tribal input and participation." Story continues Because the park will still be wrapped in winter on the official anniversary of Ulysses S. Grant signing the Yellowstone National Park Protection Act on March 1, 1872, many of this year's festivities will be spread out across warmer months. On May 6, Yellowstone National Park Lodges will host an event in the lobby of the Old Faithful Inn, with a speech from Sholly, said Rick Hoeninghausen, a spokesperson for Xanterra, the travel company that runs the lodges. The inn will also unveil its Native American Art Exhibit and Marketplace, which will run all weekend. "We have four Native American artists who we've worked with for many years who we've invited to exhibit in the lobby," said Hoeninghausen. The artists include Traci Rabbit and D.G. House. A portion of the proceeds will go to the American Indian College Fund. (The inn will also be offering a series of free tours of the Old Faithful area on May 6, taking place in a fleet of updated, historic yellow buses that once motored around Yellowstone in the 1930s.) From May 19 to 20, the University of Wyoming will be hosting a symposium on Yellowstone at the Buffalo Bill Center of the West, in Cody, Wyoming, one of the main gateway communities to the park. This two-day public event will feature keynote speakers and panel discussions designed to reflect on the park's storied past and focus on how it can adapt to modern and future values to become more accessible for generations to come. From August 23 to 28, to coincide with the National Park Service's 106th birthday in August, multiple Indigenous groups will collaborate on a tepee village near the base of the Roosevelt Arch so that visitors have an opportunity to meet and interact with Native people firsthand. A 2021 tepee installation at Roosevelt Arch (Photo: NPS/Jacob W. Frank) Beyond these events, the park is working to address its outdated bison-management plan; in January it announced that a greater emphasis will be put on increasing the live capture and transfer of the animals through the Fort Peck Indian Reservation and the InterTribal Buffalo Council to reconnect the animals to tribes. So far 200 bison have been relocated to 18 member tribes across the country. Throughout the year, the park will also be addressing infrastructure issues, and officials hope to use the anniversary to instigate conversations about the rapidly changing climate and the science behind what shapes this iconic region. The 15th Biennial Scientific Conference on the Greater Yellowstone Ecosystem will be hosted by Montana State University in Bozeman from May 15 to 18, with a goal of providing a "much-needed forum for knowledge-sharing" among noted speakers, park managers, researchers, and the public. Nothing can undo Yellowstone's dark and often violent history, but milestone anniversaries like these can serve as reminders to look back and educate ourselves in order to clear a path forward to a more inclusive future. "It's a time for us to reflect on the lessons of the past," said Sholly, "so we can protect and strengthen Yellowstone for the next 150 years." As Crow tribal member Scott Frazier, an artist who is the director of Project Indigenous and who leads Yellowstone student tours and ceremonial blessings on park wildlife, said on the press call: "In this time of struggle between human beings, these places are very important. To be able to come out and listen to nature and not a machine, and not cars, and not your boss. To come out and just sit and listen to nature is very healing. We are missing that in our world right now. We need more time in the trees." For exclusive access to all of our fitness, gear, adventure, and travel stories, plus discounts on trips, events, and gear, sign up for Outside+ today. (AFP via Getty Images) The House select committee investigating the 6 January insurrection has issued subpoenas to six attorneys connected with former president Donald Trumps failed 2020 campaign who promoted baseless claims of election fraud in the days leading up to the worst attack on the Capitol since 1814. In a statement, select committee chairman Bennie Thompson said the latest tranche of subpoenas was issued to aid the nine-member panels inquiry into attempts to disrupt or delay the certification of electoral votes and any efforts to corruptly change the outcome of the 2020 election. Two of the highest-profile recipients of these latest subooenas include one former elected official, ex-Kansas attorney General Phillip Kline, and a right-wing television host, Christina Bobb of One America News. Mr Kline, who served as the Sunflower States chief law enforcement officer from 2003 to 2007, was an active participant in many of the more than 60 failed lawsuits filed by Mr Trumps campaign and his allies in hopes of overturning the then-presidents loss to Joe Biden. But Mr Klines participation through a so-called election integrity group called the Amistad Project did not involve him doing any legal work because his law license has been suspended since 2013. Ms Bobb, who served as the Department of Homeland Securitys executive secretary before taking a job as an anchor and correspondent for the fringe right-wing cable network, served as a legal adviser to Mr Trumps campaign while covering the election challenges as a member of the media. She was also a major fundraiser for the Arizona senates privately funded sham audit of Maricopa County, Arizona election results. She was also reportedly involved in drafting a proposed executive order that would have directed federal agencies to seize voting machines. Also receiving subpoenas were Cleta Mitchell, a former Foley and Lardner partner who participated in Mr Trumps infamous phone call with Georgia secretary of state Brad Raffensperger, stop the steal attorney Kurt Olsen, and Kenneth Chesebro, a lawyer who drafted a memo advocating for the use of alternate electors to overturn the election, and Katherine Friess, a Washington, DC lawyer and lobbyist who reportedly corresponded with election conspiracy theorist Russell Ramsland, Trump attorney Rudy Giuliani, and ex-Trump national security adviser Michael Flynn and was also involved in drafting the voting machine executive order. The six individuals we've subpoenaed today all have knowledge related to those matters and will help the Select Committee better understand all the various strategies employed to potentially affect the outcome of the election, Mr Thompson wrote. He added that the select committee has spoken to hundreds of witnesses since it began its investigation law summer and said he and his colleagues expect all six to provide the panel with information. A day after Gov. J.B. Pritzker lifted the mask mandate at Illinois schools, a downstate attorney asked an Illinois judge to halt the COVID-19 masking requirement at Chicago Public Schools one of only a handful of districts in the state still enforcing the practice. Tom DeVore, who recently launched a bid for the states Republican nomination for attorney general, filed a motion Tuesday with Sangamon County Circuit Judge Raylene Grischow requesting a temporary restraining order, arguing the children of Chicago parents who filed a lawsuit against the governor and the Illinois Department of Public Health are suffering continuing harm. Each is being subjected to wearing a mask as a type of quarantine without being provided their rights of due process, DeVore said in the motion. While new federal COVID-19 guidance prompted Pritzker to halt the school mask mandate, CPS officials said universal masking still will be enforced as part of a COVID-19 safety agreement with the Chicago Teachers Union. DeVores latest effort to halt the CPS mask mandate also arrives after the Illinois Supreme Court last week declined to hear the case, vacating a prior temporary restraining order and sending the lawsuit challenging the mandate back to Grischow. On Tuesday, DeVore said the high court vacated the prior order halting the mask mandate because it wasnt needed anymore, after a bipartisan panel of lawmakers last month refused to renew the IDPH guidance, and an appellate court rendered the issue moot. While some of the CPS students whose parents filed the lawsuit were allowed in their classrooms without a mask last month, DeVore said his clients alerted him yesterday that has changed, and CPS has now forced their children to wear masks. CPS is still continuing to push the envelope on masks as long they can, said DeVore, who will take his case before Grischow at a March 10 hearing. CPS and CTU officials were not immediately available for comment Tuesday. Story continues But earlier this week, CPS CEO Pedro Martinez reminded families in a letter that universal masking is still required in all of its schools and offices for now. CPS is working with our labor and public health partners on how to preserve a safe, healthy learning environment for all as we transition into this new phase of the pandemic, Martinez said. Officials with the Illinois Federation of Teachers, one of the states largest teachers unions, which includes the CTU, said in a Tuesday statement that educators are grateful for Governor Pritzkers leadership throughout the pandemic ensuring that science, not politics, has informed guidance. It has been a long two years, but there is finally light at the end of the COVID tunnel, IFT President Dan Montgomery said, adding no one should be pressured into unmasking. These last two years have taught us that we must protect each other and that we all have a duty to protect our most vulnerable populations. By far the largest school district in Illinois, CPS enrolls nearly 340,000 students at 626 schools, with roughly 80% of students from low-income families, according to the Illinois Report Card for the 2020-2021 school year. Chicago Tribune reporter Tracy Swartz contributed. kcullotta@chicagotribune.com WISCONSIN RAPIDS A former Lincoln High School counselor was arrested Wednesday after police say an investigation found he had a relationship with a student. The Wisconsin Rapids Public School District was made aware of allegations of the relationship in late January. The district immediately notified Wood County Human Services, who contacted police, according to a news release from the Wisconsin Rapids Police Department. The counselor was placed on administrative leave effective Jan. 25, and the Wisconsin Rapids School Board accepted his resignation Feb. 14, according to the release. Police said they arrested the man after examining numerous text messages and interviewing the victim, who provided details about the alleged relationship. The former staff member is expected to be charged with two felony counts of sexual assault of a child by a school staff person, according to the police department. He is scheduled to make his next court appearance Monday, according to the Wood County Clerk of Courts office. In a letter to district families, Superintendent Craig Broeren said the school district will offer support and resources for any student or family member who wants help processing the news. Broeren said the district takes allegations of employee misconduct seriously and is committed to providing a safe environment. The district will continue to work with the police department, Broeren said, but will not release any more information. Contact USA TODAY NETWORK-Wisconsin reporter Melissa Siegler at msiegler@gannett.com. Follow her on Twitter at @Marie2Melissa. MORE: Wisconsin Rapids School Board candidates talk top district issues, COVID-19 protocols ahead of Feb. 15 primary election MORE: Two incumbents, two challengers advance in Wisconsin Rapids School Board primary election This article originally appeared on Wisconsin Rapids Daily Tribune: Former Wisconsin Rapids school counselor accused of sexual assault Participants of an unauthorized protest rally against of jailing of opposition leader Alexei Navalny shout, on January 23, 2021 in Moscow, Russia. Photo by Mikhail Svetlov/Getty Images Jailed Putin critic Alexei Navalny called on Russians to continue protesting the war in Ukraine. He urged Russians not to be a "nation of frightened silent people" on Putin's aggression. Putin has been accused of pulling the strings behind an attempt to assassinate Navalny in 2020. Top Kremlin critic Alexei Navalny urged Russians on Wednesday to continue protesting President Vladimir Putin and the increasingly brutal war he's launched against Ukraine. "Let's at least not become a nation of frightened silent people. Of cowards who pretend not to notice the aggressive war against Ukraine unleashed by our obviously insane czar," Navalny tweeted. He urged individuals "in Russia, Belarus or on the other side of the planet" to plan demonstrations and take to their main squares to protest on weekdays, weekends, and holidays. "Everything has a price, and now, in the spring of 2022, we must pay this price," he said. "There's no one to do it for us. Let's not 'be against the war.' Let's fight against the war." Since Russia launched its attack on Ukraine last week, Russians took to the streets to protest in major cities like St. Petersburg and Moscow and in dozens of other cities across the country. Protests are not limited to Russia, however, and have erupted in cities around the world as people rally behind Ukraine's resistance to Russia's aggression. Putin sold this conflict, in part, on the message that Russians and Ukrainians are "one people," making scenes of Ukrainian resistance to Russian troops especially glaring. Navalny was poisoned in August 2020 with the Soviet-era nerve agent Novichok, and flown to Germany for treatment. When he returned to Moscow, he was sentenced to two and a half years in prison over claims that he violated parole for a 2014 fraud conviction. Top rights groups have denounced the charges against Navalny as politically motivated. Story continues Putin has been accused of pulling the strings behind Navalny's attempted assassination. The Russian leader's opponents tend to wind up dead or imprisoned. "They say that someone who cannot attend a rally and does not risk being arrested for it cannot call for it," Navalny said. "I'm already in prison, so I think I can." Russian authorities have recently moved to extend Navalny's sentence by 15 years. Navalny's poisoning and imprisonment have prompted global condemnation, as well as sanctions from the US and other countries. There were mass protests in Russia over Navalny's detention. In comments to Insider last June, Navalny's top aide said Putin was "dumb" to throw the anti-corruption campaigner behind bars because it turned him into a symbol for people to rally behind. Read the original article on Business Insider Applications have closed for a guaranteed income pilot program that will give $500 monthly to young adults in three high-poverty Louisville neighborhoods. More than 1,000 people submitted applications, and 150 will soon be randomly selected to receive the funds, according to Metro United Way, a nonprofit administering the program. The pilot is modeled off similar guaranteed income programs that have sprung up in cities nationwide over the past few years. It was developed by Louisville Metro Government, Metro United Way and Russell: A Place of Promise, in partnership with Mayors For Guaranteed Income. $500 a month and no strings attached: Louisville launches guaranteed income program Here's what to know about guaranteed income and how the Louisville pilot will work. What is guaranteed income? Guaranteed income is a monthly cash payment given directly to individuals, with no work requirements or direction on how it can be spent. The payments provide flexibility, allowing recipients to spend the money on whatever they need, such as rent, child care, transportation or food. The money can also cover gaps left by other social safety net programs, according to Mayors For A Guaranteed Income, a network established in 2021 that provides financial and technical support for pilot programs. What is the difference between guaranteed income and universal basic income? Guaranteed income and universal basic income are similar but not the same. Both types of programs distribute recurring cash payments to residents. But while UBI is available to everyone equally, guaranteed income targets people who most face economic barriers with the goal of lifting them out of poverty. Who qualified for Louisville's guaranteed income program? YALift! Young Adult Louisville Income For Transformation is a yearlong pilot program that will give $500 monthly to up to 150 young adults, ages 18 to 24. Participants must live in one of three neighborhoods: California, Russell or Smoketown. Story continues Related: After Courier Journal investigation, changes underway for Louisville 'disconnected youth' The goal of the program is to make participants financially stable so they can pursue education, new careers or other opportunities, according to a fact sheet from Metro United Way. When will the funds be distributed? Metro United Way received 1,048 completed applications for the program. The organization will get a list of 150 randomly selected participants by March 14 and will work to get them set up in the program through April 9. Another 180 applicants will be selected for a control group, allowing agencies distributing the money to measure the program's success. The first payments are expected to be issued on April 30. How will the program be funded? The monthly payments will total $900,000 for 150 participants. Half of the funding will come from Metro United Way, with the other half from Mayors For A Guaranteed Income. Louisville Metro Government will put $100,000 toward administrative costs for the program. How is YALift different than other programs? Guaranteed income programs take various forms, though most are focused on providing assistance to people with low incomes and barriers to achieving wealth. One of the first programs to gain national attention was the Stockton Economic Empowerment Demonstration in Stockton, California, started in 2019 by then-Mayor Michael Tubbs. That program provided $500 per month to 125 randomly selected residents for 24 months. You might like: Why hundreds of housing vouchers meant to help Kentucky's homeless aren't being used Other programs created since then include: People's Prosperity Pilot in St. Paul, Minnesota, which focused on residents with babies, offering both guaranteed income and funds for a college savings account. Richmond Resilience Initiative in Richmond, Virginia, which provided income for 55 working families who earn too much to qualify for federal assistance but not enough to cover all living expenses. StepUp Durham in Durahm, North Carolina, which assisted 115 formerly incarcerated people for one year. Do guaranteed income programs work? Many programs are still in their pilot phases, but an analysis of SEED in Stockton found the payments reduced income volatility, enabled participants to find full-time employment and enhanced their perceived well-being. The analysis, conducted by a team of independent researchers, showed recipients consistently spent money from the program on food, utilities and transportation, among other necessary expenses. Less than 1% of tracked purchases were for tobacco and alcohol, according to the report. This story has been updated. Reach reporter Bailey Loosemore at bloosemore@courier-journal.com, 502-582-4646 or on Twitter @bloosemore. This article originally appeared on Louisville Courier Journal: What to know about Louisville's guaranteed income pilot program A Bismarck woman pleaded guilty to DUI and other charges Tuesday, adding to a history of drunken driving convictions dating to 2012. Rolanda Touche, 53, was charged in July after police saw her vehicle stopped in the eastbound lane of Rosser Avenue. She allegedly hit a police car parked behind her and then drove off. Police were able to stop her a few blocks away. She was uncooperative and agitated, and officers were unable to obtain a chemical breath test, according to an affidavit. Touche pleaded guilty to felony DUI and fleeing police, along with misdemeanor reckless endangerment and driving under suspension. Touches Tuesday appearance was the anniversary of her sons death. Defense attorney Justin Vinje asked South Central District Judge Douglas Bahr to allow Touche to travel in late April to Albuquerque, New Mexico, to attend a powwow, which holds cultural significance for her. Touche has had no issues on 24/7 monitoring since the July incident and will stay on the program until she is sentenced, Vinje said. Bahr, Vinje and Assistant Burleigh County State's Attorney Nick Baker agreed to defer sentencing until May. If the judge agrees, the plea agreement will put Touche behind bars for a year and on probation for two years. She must also pay a $2,000 fine and $525 in fees, and complete addiction evaluation and treatment. Touche pleaded guilty to DUI in May 2012 and in June 2020, and to actual physical control of a vehicle while impaired in September 2020, court documents show. Reach Travis Svihovec at 701-250-8260 or Travis.Svihovec@bismarcktribune.com Love 0 Funny 1 Wow 0 Sad 1 Angry 3 Be the first to know Get local news delivered to your inbox! Sign up! * I understand and agree that registration on or use of this site constitutes agreement to its user agreement and privacy policy. In the sense of rivalries, the Oregon Ducks dont have many outside of the Pac-12. While we know about the bad blood with Washington, Oregon State, and even USC, outside of conference play its hard to pinpoint a school that could be labeled as a rival to the Ducks other than maybe the Ohio State Buckeyes, or perhaps the Boise State Broncos, just due to past history. However, a new rivalry may be bubbling to the surface, at least from a recruiting standpoint. Mario Cristobal and the Miami Hurricanes are stepping up to the plate and taking on the Ducks head-on. After leaving Oregon last December, Cristobal went up against the Ducks in a few recruiting battles, notably losing 4-star OL Dave Iuli to Dan Lanning after the Washington product flipped to Oregon late in the process. Now, another highly-rated Washington recruit 5-star DL Jayden Wayne is up for grabs, and its the Ducks and Hurricanes who currently lead the way in his recruitment, according to On3s predictions. On3s Recruiting Prediction Machine shows a toss up between Oregon and Miami to land 2023 four-star DL Jayden Wayne. More: https://t.co/CguNnQYMlY pic.twitter.com/bK3WNWSRFd On3 Recruits (@On3Recruits) March 2, 2022 According to 247Sports, Wayne, who plays at Lincoln High School in Tacoma, is listed as the No. 4 DL in the 2023 class, and No. 30 player overall. Standing at 6-foot-5, 245 pounds, Wayne would be a massive addition to the Ducks defensive line and act as a centerpiece to Oregons 2023 recruiting class, should he choose the Ducks. As you can see, the Ducks currently hold a slight advantage in his recruiting, according to On3, with a 27.7% chance to land him. Miami is right behind them, with a 27.2% chance. We will see how his recruitment continues in the coming months, but Wayne is definitely someone to keep an eye on, as both teams will be fighting hard for him down the stretch. Story continues After losing Iuli late to the Ducks, you can guarantee that Cristobal wants a little bit of revenge. Well just have to see what Lanning has to say about that. List chris wilson facebook Cast member of the show Outback Wrangler on the National Geographic network, Chris Wilson, has died after his helicopter crashed in an isolated location of the Northern Territory of Australia Monday night. He was 34. Wilson was often seen traveling through the remote area in the show hosted by his colleague, Australian TV Host Matt Wright. The Fordham Company, which produces Outback Wrangler, has released a statement to confirm the devastating tragedy, Australia's ABC News reports. RELATED: Monster Croc Wrangler Star Matt Wright Remembers a Recent 'Close Call' with a Crocodile chris wilson facebook "Matt Wright, his family and team are absolutely devastated by the tragic accident yesterday in Arnhem Land," the statement read. "[They] are heartbroken by the loss of their best friend and highly respected colleague Chris 'Willow' Wilson." The statement continued, "Our love and thoughts are with Chris's wife Danielle and two little boys Ted and Austin. Matt Wright and his team are assisting authorities with their investigations as to what caused this awful incident." On Monday, Australian police were alerted of the aircraft crash shortly before 11 a.m., according to ABC News. The closest officers from Goulburn Islands were dispatched to the site on King River immediately following the report. It took several hours by boat to arrive at the location, the outlet reports. Never miss a story sign up for PEOPLE's free daily newsletter to stay up-to-date on the best of what PEOPLE has to offer, from juicy celebrity news to compelling human interest stories. Police confirmed the death of Wilson upon their arrival in the evening. However, his 28-year-old travel partner, who survived the incident, was transported to Royal Darwin Hospital and later airlifted to Brisbane in critical condition on Tuesday morning, according to the outlet. Outback Wrangler is a show that documented Wright, Wilson, and another cast member navigating their ways into the deep end of the country's Northern Territory via helicopters, airboats, and other adventurous vehicles where they often interact with and discover saltwater crocodiles. Story continues In 2020, Wilson and Wright had traveled as far as Indonesia to assist local authorities in removing a tire stuck around the neck of a 4-meter crocodile. RELATED: Would a Crocodile or a Great White Shark Win in a Fight? The passing of Wilson, who is described as a "crocodile wrangler" and "outback adventurer" on his Instagram page, was mourned by other local media industry members, including David Connolly, the general manager of the Tipperary Group of Stations. "We lost a great man and a good friend in Chris 'Willow' Wilson yesterday in a Heli accident. Our thoughts are with his young family," Connolly wrote on his Twitter account. "Willow was a born and bred Territorian and drove and chased and caught most things possible. Its so sad." According to the Australian Transport Safety Bureau, investigations into the crash are still underway. Wilson is survived by his wife Danielle and his two sons, Ted and Austin. Rockford Ald. Mark Bonne, D-14, right, before he was elected to City Council, fought to save the former chancery of the Catholic Diocese of Rockford from demolition. In this file photo, he is seen outside the building on Friday, May 17, 2019, in the Signal Hill neighborhood in Rockford. ROCKFORD An alderman who fought a losing battle to save the Catholic Diocese of Rockford's 90-year-old former chancery wants to make it easier to declare a property a historic landmark over the objections of a property owner. Spearheaded by Ald. Mark Bonne, D-14, the measure would repeal a 2004 amendment to the city's historic preservation ordinance that required a supermajority of the City Council to approve landmark status if an owner objects. Under Bonne's proposal, a simple majority would be all that is needed to confer historic landmark status to protect the historic character of a property even if the owner doesn't want it. From 2019: Preservationists gather in 'sorrow' as crane demolishes former chancery in Rockford "There are all kinds of property decisions City Council makes that owners don't agree with and dont require a supermajority," Bonne said. "It happens pretty much at every meeting." Rockford's Historic Preservation Commission recommended the change to City Council after Bonne made a Feb. 8 presentation about it. The measure could be considered by the full City Council next week. Ald. Tim Durkee, R-1, opposed the change saying that it could amount to a government "taking" of a property owner's rights, imposing regulatory and potential financial burdens. Durkee said that if there isn't a requirement for a supermajority there should be another way for the property owner to appeal a decision. Ald. Kevin Frost, R-4, said that the defeat of the chancery's application for landmark status was evidence that the current system which places a higher bar on taking what he considers the extraordinary step of infringing on property rights is working. "What is really the intent behind changing the ordinance?" Frost asked. "I think it's just being done because maybe some people are upset about what happened the last time." Story continues In that case, although a 7-6 majority of the City Council supported making the property a landmark over the Diocese's objection, the measure failed to garner the needed supermajority. The structure, which needed millions in repairs, was demolished in June 2019. Supporters of landmark status felt it could have been sold to a developer and turned into residential apartments while preserving the historic character of a building that had anchored a historic Rockford neighborhood. Pleas for the diocese to partner with residents or the city to redevelop the property were rejected. Frost said he was also concerned about the potential of the rule being applied to a residential home. Although there has not been an attempt to make a residential property historic over the objections of a homeowner, Frost said there is nothing to prevent it. Bonne led an effort to preserve Lincoln Middle School and have it designated a local historic landmark. He later joined other historic preservationists to fight an ultimately losing battle to save the Beaux Arts French architectural style Piety Hill chancery which had been Diocese headquarters until 2002 and where the bishop once lived. Bonne argued a simple majority was all that was needed for landmark status under the original historic preservation ordinance approved in 1978, nearly three decades before the requirement for a supermajority was introduced. And Bonne questions why Rockford requires a supermajority 10 of 14 votes to grant historic landmark status when other cities in Illinois with a historic preservation ordinance do not. "Why do we have something that is out of step with historic preservation in Illinois?" Bonne asks. "If we are serious about saving landmarks, why do we want to tie one hand behind the City Council's back?" Mayor Tom McNamara, while saying he is keeping an open mind on the proposal, said that at first blush he doesn't support changing the rules. Despite supporting the losing side of the chancery debate, McNamara draws a distinction between land use issues City Council typically presides over versus a historic landmark designation. McNamara said a higher threshold should be in place before adding regulatory and potential cost burdens on a property owner. "I look at it as a property right and having an additional threshold for someone to obtain this is probably a good thing," McNamara said. Jeff Kolkey: (815) 987-1374; jkolkey@rrstar.com; @jeffkolkey This article originally appeared on Rockford Register Star: Rockford Illinois could change historic preservation, landmark rules A firepit at The Four Seasons Rancho Encantado Santa Fe Courtesy of The Four Seasons Rancho Encantado Santa Fe Four Seasons Resort Rancho Encantado Santa Fe wants guests to get out of their rooms and go explore their surroundings. The luxury hotel is home to an exclusive adventure center, from which guides will lead guests through the stunning landscapes of northern New Mexico. And that includes taking guests to a secret hiking area on the "Journey to Abiquiu." Camino Encantado walk at the Four Seasons Resort Rancho Encantado Santa Fe Christian Horan/Courtesy of The Four Seasons Rancho Encantado Santa Fe Casita Patio at the Four Seasons Resort Rancho Encantado Santa Fe Courtesy of The Four Seasons Rancho Encantado Santa Fe Exterior of the Four Seasons Resort Rancho Encantado Santa Fe Christian Horan/Courtesy of The Four Seasons Rancho Encantado Santa Fe On the Journey to Abiquiu, guests will visit an area known as "Valley of Shining Stone," which offers hikers the chance to see a variety of hidden canyons and vistas, each filled with history, geology, ethereal rock formations, and quiet wonder. This area is on private land owned by Dar al Islam mosque. "It's gated and requires an access code," Hans Loehr, the hotel's experiences architect, tells Travel + Leisure. "We have a written agreement to visit." As Loehr explains, the site is only accessible by car. Intrepid guests will drive down a rough gravel road from Abiquiu, New Mexico. After a 45-minute drive, guests then take to a short but steep trail by foot. "It's considered a sacred place, hence the remote location and limited permits," Loehr says. "I am not aware of any other outfitter having a permit, most definitely no other resort." Loehr adds, "people visiting it should consider themselves lucky to even find it. Archaeologists estimate the construction of the site took place in the late 1300s, consisting of about 400 rooms. Due to the remoteness, we send two guides, one of [whom] is an archaeologist or geologist. It's a rewarding all-day adventure." The pool at The Four Seasons Rancho Encantado Santa Fe Courtesy of The Four Seasons Rancho Encantado Santa Fe A Guestroom at Four Seasons Resort Rancho Encantado Santa Fe Courtesy of The Four Seasons Rancho Encantado Santa Fe Story continues "The idea is to provide a guided, narrated, interpretive drive to Plaza Blanca with an experienced guide," Loehr says. "The 'Yogihiker' will take over once we reach the destination, Plaza Blanca, an area of stunning beauty, loved by Georgia O'Keeffe, with very limited access allowed." Plaza Blanca is near the historic village of Abiquiu and hidden in the foothills Courtesy of Dar al Islam Mosque, Abiquiu A short hike will bring the guests into the "gateway," where they will then take part in a smudging and intention-setting ceremony. This is followed by a hike through the White Place, yoga, and a Mandala meditation. Finally, guests will head back to the gateway for a delicious lunch. Guests can also try additional excursions at the Four Seasons' adventure center, including guided hikes, mountain biking, hot air balloon rides, and much more. Of course, guests can also head back to the resort to indulge in its spa, sit by the pool, or relax in their personal casita. Learn more about the hotel and all its adventurous offerings here. Tory Burch LLC has named Yves Coppin president of Europe and the Middle East, effective immediately. In this post, Coppin will be responsible for all aspects of the companys business in these markets. Based in Milan, he reports to Pierre-Yves Roussel, chief executive officer of Tory Burch. More from WWD Coppin joins Tory Burch from Celine where he was managing director for Greater China & APAC. Previously, he was president of China & APAC for Berluti and regional director for Moet Hennessy for APAC. He earlier was brand manager at Mars Inc. in France. Yves is a seasoned leader whose experience in our industry is matched by his track record of success. With his entrepreneurial mindset, global perspective and people leadership skills, he is an excellent addition to our team as we build on our success in Europe and the Middle East. I look forward to working with him, said Roussel. Coppin said: Tory Burch is an extraordinary company with beautiful designs, an innovative approach and a clear sense of purpose at the core. I have admired the brand and its success for years and am excited to work with Tory, Pierre-Yves and the team as we take the business in Europe and the Middle East to the next level. Coppin succeeds Stefano Sutter who left the company last September. Sutter had been in the role since February 2019. Burch, which was founded in 2004, has been making substantial inroads and investments in the Europe and Middle East. The company launched its first European flagship in London in 2010, and now has three stores in the city as well as boutiques across the continent, including Paris, Rome and Munich. It also has a robust and growing presence in the Middle East with stores in locations including Bahrain, Kuwait, Qatar and the United Arab Emirates. In addition to these boutiques, Burch has a rapidly growing e-commerce business in these regions with eight local websites and wholesale distribution in select department stores and specialty stores. Story continues FOR MORE STORIES: Tory Burch Receives Retail Excellence Award From Whartons Baker Retailing Center Tory Burch RTW Fall 2022 Fearless Fund Teams Up With Tory Burch Foundation and The Cru Chincoteague Pony Swim smanter/Getty Images After a two-year Covid-19 hiatus, Virginia's beloved Chincoteague Pony Swim will make its triumphant return in July. The Chincoteague Volunteer Fire Company announced that the month-long carnival, including the famous Pony Swim and auction, will take place on the Eastern Shore island for the first time since 2019. "We cannot hardly wait to see everyone, welcome everyone back, see the laughter and smiles on the kid's faces and see everyone meet up with their old friends for the Chincoteague Homecoming Week, smell the fritters frying, tasting those good pony fries, seeing the whirl of the Ferris wheel and just enjoying some good old fashioned, down-home Chincoteague fun," the fire company wrote. For 95 years, spectators from all over the country have gathered to watch "Saltwater Cowboys" round up the wild horses on Assateague Island and guide them across a small channel to the town of Chincoteague where some of the foals are auctioned off. This unique aquatic field trip serves two purposes: to raise money for the Chincoteague Volunteer Fire Department, and to thin the herd enough to ensure that their island home can continue to sustain them. A handful of foals will return to Assateague Island to help sustain and replenish the herd. WATCH: Willie Nelson Pens Open Letter Demanding More Protection for America's Wild Horse The carnival will take place every night during the month of July. The Pony Swim is currently scheduled for the morning of July 27, with the exact time depending on the tide. The auction is set for the follow day, July 28, at 8 a.m. For more information visit ChincoteagueChamber.com. All about cider Cider is fermented, alcoholic apple juice. Apples are pressed and yeast is added to the juice, explained Ali Griffin, marketing coordinator at Tieton Cider Works. It is stored for fermentation in sterile vats or casks. Once the juice is fermented to the desired dryness, yeast and solids are filtered out. Then the cider is ready to be bottled. Ciders taste from dry to sweet and can be still or carbonated. Ciders can be made from apple and pear juice. Other fruit juices and ingredients like honey or hops can be added to create different flavor profiles. Sara Rae Shields, Yakima Herald-Republic You are the owner of this article. A federal grand jury has indicted a Washburn-area farmer on a charge of federal crop insurance fraud. Kent Pfaff, 58, is to make his initial appearance Thursday in U.S. District Court in Bismarck. The Feb. 2 indictment states that between December 2019 and June 2020, Pfaff provided false crop insurance claim information to insurance companies and the U.S. Department of Agriculture's Risk Management Agency/Federal Crop Insurance Corp. to increase his payments. Pfaff is accused in court documents filed by U.S. Attorney Nick Chase of a fraud scheme known as shifting production. Under the scheme, a person will overstate production in some fields and understate production in others to manufacture or inflate claims to which they are not entitled, the document states. The indictment doesn't list a dollar amount involved in the alleged scheme. The charge against Pfaff is a felony punishable by up to 30 years in prison, a $1 million fine, and five years on supervised release. Pfaffs attorney, Gary Leistico, of St. Cloud, Minnesota, did not immediately respond to a Tribune request for comment. Reach Travis Svihovec at 701-250-8260 or Travis.Svihovec@bismarcktribune.com Love 3 Funny 2 Wow 3 Sad 0 Angry 6 Be the first to know Get local news delivered to your inbox! Sign up! * I understand and agree that registration on or use of this site constitutes agreement to its user agreement and privacy policy. Submit An Obituary Funeral homes often submit obituaries as a service to the families they are assisting. However, we will be happy to accept obituaries from family members pending proper verification of the death. Go to form Some things dont improve over time. Eleven years ago, I spoke with Stephen Gillers, then as now a law professor at New York University and one of the nations top authorities on judicial ethics, for a news story about whether Virginia Ginni Thomas, wife of Supreme Court Justice Clarence Thomas, had crossed legal or ethical lines through her partisan activities and dark-money fundraising on issues that come before the court. Gillers was measured. Ginni Thomas constitutional rights as a private citizen allowed her to do her politicking, he said, though he did suggest that fair-minded Americans could question her husbands impartiality given her activism. It was striking, then, to see what Gillers says in a recent investigative piece about Thomas in the New Yorker. He calls her conduct reprehensible. I decided to check back in with the professor. It seems we agree that Thomas has indeed crossed a line since we last talked, becoming more brazen in her norm-busting. Shockingly, that includes her involvement in the machinations to overturn President Joe Bidens election and organize the rally-turned-insurrection on Jan. 6, 2021. LOVE MAGA people!!!! she wrote that day on Facebook, before the Capitol ransacking. Without question, Thomas is the most partisan spouse of a justice in history. She trades on her influence in Washington, earning large sums with little if any public disclosure of the sources, or whether they have business at the court. Thats not good for the already tarnished standing of the Supreme Court, whose public approval is at its lowest level since Gallup began tracking it more than two decades ago. Laws cannot prevent Ginnis conduct, Gillers told me. We must rely on self-restraint and a decent respect for the court. For 240 years that worked. He went on: Ginni Thomas alone among the husbands and wives of the justices has shown utter disregard for the harm she inflicts on the court and the administration of justice in the service of her political goals, while benefiting from the fact that she is married to a justice. Otherwise, shed be ignored. In fairness, Thomas activism predates her marriage in 1987 and the justices confirmation in 1991. And its likely that Clarence Thomas comes to his far-right opinions independent of his wifes influence; even before they actually met, they were allies against proposals mandating more equitable pay for women. Yet the spouses of Ruth Bader Ginsburg and John G. Roberts Jr. quit practicing law to avoid any potential conflicts, and Jane Roberts resigned from leading an anti-abortion group. In late 2000, Thomas was at the Heritage Foundation vetting job-seekers for a George W. Bush administration even as the presidential election recount proceeded an impasse her husband helped decide in Bushs favor in the Supreme Courts 5-4 ruling. The Jan. 21 New Yorker piece, and another this month on both Thomases in the New York Times, were notable for the sheer detail about Ginni Thomas web of far-right connections and the overlap with the courts business. As the New Yorker reported, one group she chairs, Groundswell, includes Trump acolyte Stephen K. Bannon and says it wages a 30 front war on issues including voting rights, immigration, abortion and gun control all subjects that come before the justices. She is on the advisory board of the National Association of Scholars, which has filed an amicus brief against affirmative action at the court. And earlier, she was an undisclosed paid consultant to another group, the Center for Security Policy, that supported Trumps contested Muslim travel ban; Clarence Thomas was in the 5-4 majority that ultimately upheld the ban. Then theres Ginni Thomas involvement in the fight to keep Donald Trump in power. That effort is all but certain to spawn cases for the justices. Last month the court rejected Trumps bid to withhold records from the House committee investigating the insurrection. Only Thomas dissented. Heres what many stories left out: His wife had joined with other prominent conservatives in publicly condemning the committee as a political persecution of citizens who have done nothing wrong. Ethics and norms aside, no law limits Ginni Thomas activism. Federal law does require justices to recuse themselves in some circumstances involving real or perceived conflicts of interest. Yet while a litigant could move to have Thomas recuse, the decision whether to do so is his alone. So what to do? Some in Congress have called for amending the recusal law to somehow cover spouses. But as Gillers indicated, that is easier said than done. The best course is for journalists to continue shining a light on the norms-busters, in hopes they can be shamed. Ginni Thomas is a historical aberration. Shell be gone when Clarence is, Gillers said. Any solution may be worse than tolerating her mischief for a while longer. Were counting the days. Russian President Vladimir Putins brutal, lawless invasion of Ukraine is the consequence of the former KGB heads messianic vision and numerous Western miscalculations over the past two decades. President George W. Bush looked into Putins soul and mistakenly found him very straightforward and trustworthy. President Barack Obama saw a time to reset the U.S.-Russia relationship. President Donald Trump not only refused to criticize Putin but openly expressed admiration for him, while questioning NATOs reasons for being and undermining American intelligence efforts. Western Europes energy dependence on Russia and a series of high-level misreadings preceded the waves of Russian troops now trampling Ukrainian sovereignty. Whatever had masqueraded as a cold peace since the fall of the Soviet Union is now a new Cold War. Nor can there be doubt about who Putin is a smart and ruthless tactician with ambitions to reconstitute the failed Soviet Union. In an address just days prior to the invasion, the former spymaster spun a twisted narrative of disinformation to air old, new and fabricated grievances. In a fairy tale of hard-line Russian nationalism, paranoia and distorted history, Putin asserted that Ukraine should be part of a Russian-controlled republic to justify military action. Notably absent from Putins narrative was the popular will of Ukrainians. They desire to tilt away from Russia and toward the promise of closer economic ties to Western European economies, a choice that a despotic Putin despises. The NATO alliance and a broader international coalition of the willing must stand strong in a moment that is as consequential as the years preceding World War II. NATO must continue to be a firewall to unfettered Russian expansion, and the international community must provide military equipment, and economic and humanitarian support, so that Ukrainians can fight for their country. One analyst put it this way: Putins invasion is a war of choice, the worlds response a war of necessity. That response matters not just to Europe, but to Asia, as well. China and North Korea are watching and trying to determine whether the time is ripe for them to pursue their long-standing ambitions to enforce their authoritarian wills on their neighbors. U.S. troops must not set foot on the ground in Ukraine, which Putin would use as a provocation for full-scale world war, nor is there an appetite in the United States for that step. The world has roundly denounced Putins actions and must remain united in the cause of the sovereignty of borders despite inevitable economic and other hardships that will come from opposing Russian aggression. For Americans, our politics must end at the waters edge and push back against the authoritarian strains that fuel Putins aggression and dangerously infect European and American politics. Like Putin, authoritarianism knows no borders or bounds, and unity against it isnt optional. Putins calculation is that the world will grow weary and give up. The world has tried to flatter Putin, reason with him and otherwise coax him to be what he isnt. Like the fable of the scorpion and the frog, the world has been stung and we all now know who he is. The 19-year-old driver in last weekends triple-fatal crash in Richland that killed three young people from the Lower Yakima Valley is scheduled to go on trial on May 23 after pleading not guilty Thursday. She is out of custody after posting bond. North Dakota will get about $45 million under terms of nationwide legal settlements with drug companies to combat the opioid crisis. Four drug industry companies are preparing to distribute billions of dollars after finalizing settlements with most U.S. states and local governments, according to The Associated Press. Under the deals, drugmaker Johnson & Johnson is to contribute up to $5 billion over nine years while distributors AmerisourceBergen, Cardinal Health and McKesson are to provide a total of up to $21 billion over 18 years, AP reported. North Dakota will receive an initial, partial disbursement in the second quarter of this year, according to attorney general spokeswoman Liz Brocker. She did not immediately have the amount of the initial payment or the time period for receiving the total amount. The state will receive 85% of the proceeds through the Department of Human Services for opioid treatment, prevention and related programs, she said. Forty-four counties and 11 cities will receive the remaining 15%. Brocker did not immediately have a list of the localities. It's unclear how new spending limits on a governor-led panel that approves state agencies' funding requests between legislative sessions might affect the spending of North Dakota's settlement money. The Office of Management and Budget said it didn't have enough information yet to make that determination. Most of the money is required to be used to address the nations opioid addiction and overdose epidemic, which has been linked to more than 500,000 deaths over the last two decades, AP reported. The crisis has deepened during the coronavirus pandemic, with U.S. opioid-related deaths reaching a high of more than 76,000 in the 12 months that ended in April 2021, largely because of the spread of fentanyl and other synthetic drugs. North Dakota had a record 118 drug deaths in 2020, which public health and treatment professionals attributed to increasing fentanyl use and isolation amid the pandemic. The state's efforts to address the addiction crisis include increased funding for a treatment voucher program, grants to establish services in underserved areas, and the governor's creation of the Office of Recovery Reinvented to combat addiction. Exactly how much money flows to each state through the legal settlements depends on the population, the severity of the crisis there and how many local governments have agreed not to sue the companies, according to AP. The settlements from Johnson & Johnson and the three distributors are part of widespread legal action in the U.S. against multiple players in the opioid industry. Reach Jack Dura at 701-250-8225 or jack.dura@bismarcktribune.com. Love 0 Funny 0 Wow 0 Sad 0 Angry 0 Sign up for our Crime & Courts newsletter Get the latest in local public safety news with this weekly email. Sign up! * I understand and agree that registration on or use of this site constitutes agreement to its user agreement and privacy policy. Mothers are special. They give us life. They nurture us. And, they shape the way we think an Our directory features more than 18 million business listings from across the entire US. However, if we're missing your business, add your business by clicking on Add Your Business. Gas supplies to Hungary are uninterrupted, with cross-border pipelines forwarding the usual quantities in both directions, national energy and utility regulator MEKH told MTI on Tuesday. MEKH said that the pipeline with Ukraine was also operating regularly, adding however, that the interlink does not play a crucial role in Hungarys supplies. Hungarys Russian supplier is sending deliveries in line with the long-term contracts between the two countries, the regulator said. Hungarys supplies are ensured from several directions, with gas available through Slovakia, Austria, Croatia, Serbia, Romania in addition to Ukraine, MEKH said, adding that all interlinks could be used at full capacity. MEKH noted that Russian household gas supplies to Hungary were received through Serbia and Austria, rather than Ukraine, under a long-term agreement with Russia executed in September last year. The authority also said that the Hungarian network has capacity to receive nearly 212 million cubic metres of gas a day, four times the daily maximum consumption recorded this winter. Hungarys reserves amount to 1.59 billion cubic metres, 25% of the total storage capacity, MEKH added, and said it is a considerable amount at the end of the heating season. Members of the public via a Facebook group created to help people fleeing Ukraine on February 24 have already accommodated an estimated 10,000-15,000 refugees, news service 24 reports. Alexandra Gregor, the creator and one of the chief administrators of the Facebook group, told the website that the group attracted 100,000 members in its first four days. The group offers accommodation, transportation and other assistance to refugees fleeing the war. An increasing number of refugees are taking trains to Budapest, arriving at Nyugati station about once an hour. An estimated 105,000 refugees have fled to Hungary from Ukraine since February 24, according to police records. Update from Hungary Matters - Chief Security Advisor: 104,000 Arrivals From Ukraine so Far Some 104,000 people have arrived in Hungary from Ukraine so far, with the number of those directly fleeing war estimated at 80,000, Gyorgy Bakondi, the prime ministers chief security advisor said on Wednesday. Hungary is also sending unprecedented amounts of food and fuel to Transcarpathia, the western Ukrainian region with a sizeable ethnic Hungarian population, he said. The UN is projecting some 250,000 refugees arriving to Hungary before the end of the war, he noted. MTI Photo: Zoltan Balogh A pro-government commentator contrasts the tens of thousands of white and Christian genuine refugees from Ukraine, with those he calls illegal migrants coming from distant countries. A left-wing columnist finds such distinctions racist. In the first four days of Russias invasion, more than 85,000 individuals crossed the Ukrainian border into Hungary. There are as yet no reliable figures on how many stayed, and how many proceeded to other European countries. The Hungarian government opened additional border crossings and, in coordination with local councils, migrant aid organizations and churches, as well as some individuals who arrived with soup vans, offers food and temporary accommodation for anyone fleeing Ukraine, regardless of their nationalities. Magyar Nemzets Gyorgy Pilhal contrasts the real refugees from Ukraine with migrants who cross illegally and come from distant countries. The latter, he claims, mostly young men, often travel back to their countries of origin from Germany on vacation, while enjoying refugee status. The flood of refugees from Ukraine, by contrast, the pro-government commentator writes, consists of only women, children and elderly people, while men stay at home. As they come from a neighboring country, Hungary has the obligation to offer them asylum. Pilhal finds it sad that NGOs who help migrants coming from distant countries do not seem to bother much about white Christians coming from Ukraine. In Nepszava, Miklos Hargitai accuses the government of being ideologically biased and possibly even racist in their refugee policy. The left-wing columnist thinks that the only difference between mostly Christian migrants from Africa and refugees from Ukraine is the colour of their skin. Hargitai welcomes the governments efforts to help refugees from Ukraine but finds it strange for the government to suddenly start issuing a pro-refugee message. This opinion does not necessarily represent the views of XpatLoop.com or the publisher. Your opinions are welcome too - for editorial review before possible publication online. Click here to Share Your Story MTI Photo: Zsolt Czegledi Hungary supports an initiative by eight European Union member states aimed at Ukraines EU integration, Foreign Minister Peter Szijjarto said on Facebook on Tuesday. The Baltic states, Poland, the Czech Republic, Slovakia, Bulgaria and Slovenia proposed last weekend that the EU should recognise Ukraine as a candidate for membership and start accession talks as soon as possible. Hungarians do not want war, Szijjarto said, adding that Hungary would provide Ukraine with every assistance that promotes peace. Szijjarto said he had informed his Polish and Lithuanian counterparts about the governments decision. Hungary will make every effort to protect itself and its people against the war, and prevent that the country should drift into the conflict, he said. The country will however, take solidarity with Ukraine, and stand by its sovereignty and territorial integrity, he added. Hungary will accommodate people fleeing from the war, and urge the continuation of talks between Ukraine and Russia, Szijjarto said. The Transcarpathian Hungarian Cultural Association (KMKSZ) has thanked Hungarys government for supporting Ukraines candidacy for EU membership. In this situation this is of paramount importance for all citizens of Ukraine, it said. Photo courtesy: FM's Facebook page The National Bank of Hungary (NBH) on Tuesday said it is limiting the amount of repayable funds by Sberbank Magyarorszag to 7 million forints (EUR 18,900) per customer from March 2 to thirty days onwards to maintain the safe operation of the credit institution. NBH said it initiated the measure in order to enable Sberbanks Hungarian unit to comply with the legal provisions on liquidity and capital positions in Hungary in the coming period, after sanctions were imposed on the parent bank amid the Russian-Ukrainian crisis. The central bank and market regulator noted that it has appointed a supervisory commissioner to the bank from February 28. The decision was made to protect the capital and liquidity of the credit institution and the stakeholders in the operation of the institution. The supervisory commissioner shall take over the management of the bank from its board of directors and will ensure its proper functioning. The branches and account operations of Sberbank will be available from Wednesday as usual, the NBH said. The NBH said the current events have no effect on other members of the domestic financial system. It also noted that Sberbank Magyarorszags deposits are covered by the Hungarian National Deposit Insurance Fund (OBA). Sberbank Magyarorszag had total assets of 511 billion forints at the end of 2020, public records show. Client deposits stood close to 355 billion forints. A total of 4,002 refugees fleeing the war in Ukraine, 308 of them children, arrived in Budapest by train on Monday, Budapest police (BRFK) has said. The authorities have organised accommodation for 291 people including 66 children, BRFK said on police.hu on Tuesday. Many of the refugees were on their way to relatives or to further destinations, it said. BRFK is helping the refugees at the Nyugati and Keleti railway stations. They are in constant contact with the disaster management directorate, the migration authority, transport companies and aid organisations to help refugees obtain daily supplies, transport and accommodation, police.hu said. MTI Photo: Zoltan Balogh European energy security has faced serious challenges over the recent period, which may even be exacerbated by the Ukraine-Russia war, Peter Szijjarto, the minister of foreign affairs and trade, told a conference. Speaking at a Budapest conference on utility prices, the minister said that while the government was doing everything in its power to guarantee Hungarys security, the situation is spawning challenges beyond the immediate horrors of war. Energy supply is one of those challenges, Szijjarto said. Lack of energy resources would paralyse the economy and cut off heating in households, he said. This is not merely a Hungarian issue but a very serious challenge in the whole of Europe. Europe covers over 80% of its gas consumption from imports, half of which arrives from Russia, Szijjarto said. Currently, European gas reserves are less than 30% full, and gas prices have grown six-fold over the past 18 months, he said. The minister said the sanctions imposed on Russia have so far not impacted gas deliveries. He added that Hungary had supported the EUs sanctions against Russia. Szijjarto rejected the claims by Donald Tusk, the head of the European Peoples Party, who said that Hungary had vetoed the EUs proposal to exclude Russia from the international payment system SWIFT. Szijjarto called Tusk a notorious liar. We have condemned Russias military actions, expressed solidarity with Ukraine, and stand by its territorial integrity and sovereignty. We see European unity as of paramount importance, he said. The EU has failed to invest in infrastructure development and in opening new resources while it still had the opportunity to draft a much safer energy supply map, the minister said. Infrastructure development in eastern and southern Europe to reach new resources and increasing the ratio of sustainable energy resources in the supply mix are crucial to ensure energy security, and to preserve the utility price cuts introduced by the Hungarian government, Szijjarto said. Hungary has already connected its gas transport network with six of its seven neighbours, and will soon complete the same regarding the high-voltage electricity grid. The government has also contributed to setting up the LNG terminal in Croatia, and conducts advanced talks with Azerbaijan, Israel and Egypt on diversifying its energy imports, he said. Solar energy investments are also being fast-tracked, which will help the country attain its climate goals, Szijjarto said. MTI Photo: Tibor Illyes YORK -- Dr. Clark Roush, endowed chair for the performing arts, was recently notified of his appointment by Governor Pete Ricketts to the board of directors of the Nebraska Arts Council (NAC). Shari Hofschire, board chair for the council, sent a note of congratulations to Roush. I received the notification of your official appointment to the Nebraska Arts Council (NAC) Board of Directors and want to say how happy I am that you have agreed to serve on the board. I look forward to meeting you and working with you in the coming months. There are so many exciting things happening. Thank you for your willingness to serve! Roushs previous experiences with the NAC include writing two successful grants for the York Chamber of Commerce to bring the Omaha Symphony Chamber Orchestra to town. The York College Concert Choir performed with them both times under Roushs direction. Sue Roush, Clarks late wife, also served on the NAC board for two terms. I am excited to roll up my sleeves and help continue the marvelous work the NAC does throughout Nebraska, said Roush. They are a vital organization to the artistic lifeblood of the entire state. I anticipate meeting and enjoying like-minded people and look forward to reading, discussing, and voting on grant applications. Roush, who is in his 36th year directing the YC Concert Choir, has represented both the choral art and York College in state-wide events as a guest conductor and clinician through the years. His most recent invitation was for the Sing Around Nebraska event at the Grand Island site a few weeks ago where he directed approximately 160 elementary students. It is an honor to have this gubernatorial appointment, Roush commented. I wont be able to vote on any grant that would be a conflict of interest, but hopefully as I learn more about the various opportunities available, I can be a helpful resource for more grant funding to the York campus and community. The Indian automobile industry declared its results on March 1 where it displayed robust sales figures broadly for February. The automobile industry demonstrated some recovery from the difficulties triggered by semi-conductor shortages, fresh concerns have arisen over the Russian-Ukraine conflict which may worsen the global chip shortage. Both Ukraine and Russia play a key role in the global semiconductor supply chain. Russia is probably the largest producer and key supplier of rare metals like palladium which is essential for memory and sensor chips along with several other rare-earth metals, explains Hemal Thakkar, Director, CRISIL Research. The automotive industry, according to Thakkar, has a large dependence on semiconductors as a key component largely in the passenger vehicles and pick-ups segment. "The last 12 months have seen huge shortages in auto-grade semiconductors due to Covid related supply chain issues," Thakkar said. Also read: Actor Maniesh Paul buys new Mercedes-Maybach GLS600 SUV worth Rs 2.47 crore Ukraine supplies a large part of the USs semiconductor-grade neon gas which is integral in the chip-making process while Russia supplies about a third of the USs palladium supply, a rare metal that can be used to create semiconductors. "If the geopolitical tensions continue for long, they could have probable ramifications on the semiconductors industry which was already struggling to find ground," Thakkar said. The Moody's Analytics report notes that the crisis has the potential to extend the stress in the supply chain of semiconductors which are key to manufacturing autos and other electronic equipment in the Asia-Pacific region. Indian automakers which posted encouraging sales data for February 2022 riding on a demand surge are cautiously optimistic that as they enter into the new fiscal, the semiconductor availability will improve and they will be able to cater to the customer demand in full measure. Suzuki Motorcycle India registered overall 72,200 unit sales in February 2022, selling 58,603 units in the domestic market and exporting 13,597 units. Satoshi Uchida, Managing Director pointed out that despite the ongoing semiconductor availability constraints, the company continued to keep growth momentum in February. "We are experiencing a strong demand both from the domestic and the export market," he said. Also read: Boeing suspends operations, maintenance and technical support services for Russian airlines Mahindra Auto too clocked overall volumes for the month at 54,455 units, registering a growth of 89 percent and its highest-ever SUVs volume in February 2022 with the sale of 27551 vehicles. The passenger vehicles segment (which includes utility vehicles, cars, and vans) saw 27,663 vehicles sold in February 2022. Exports for the month were at 2,814 vehicles. In the commercial vehicles segment, Mahindra sold 20,166 vehicles in February 2022 with a growth of 119 percent. Veejay Nakra, Chief Executive Officer, Automotive Division, M and M said he expects demand to continue to remain strong as the Covid-19 situation eases further. "We continue to closely monitor the semiconductor-related parts supply and take corrective action as appropriate," said Nakra. The crisis of semiconductor shortage looms over the industry was evident in the monthly figures of Hyundai Motor India which reported a 14 percent decline in total sales at 53,159 units in February. The company had sold 61,800 units in the same month last year. "Domestic sales were down 14.6 percent to 44,050 units last month as against 51,600 units in February 2021. Exports declined by 10.7 percent to 9,109 units last month as compared to 10,200 units in the year-ago period," the auto major said. Similarly, TVS Motor Company registered sales of 2,81,714 units in February 2022 as against sales of 2,97,747 units in February 2021. Total two-wheelers registered sales of 2,67,625 units in February 2022 as against sales of 2,84,581 units in February 2021. Domestic two-wheeler registered sales of 1,73,198 units in February 2022 as against sales of 1,95,145 units in February 2021. "We are cautiously optimistic that the supply of semiconductors will improve in the coming months," the company said. Also read: Tesla offering free electric vehicle charging to people fleeing Ukraine The country's largest carmaker, Maruti Suzuki reported a marginal drop in total wholesales at 1,64,056 units in February 2022, which includes domestic sales of 1,37,607 units, sales to other OEM of 2,428 units, and its highest-ever monthly exports of 24,021 units. The company had sold 1,64,469 units in February 2021. According to Maruti Suzuki, the shortage of electronic components had a minor impact on the production of vehicles that are primarily sold in the domestic market. "The company took all possible measures to minimize the impact," MSI said. Tata Motors registered total sales of 77,733 in the domestic and international market for February 2022, compared to 61,258 units during February 2021, showing a growth of 27 percent over last year. Toyota Kirloskar Motor sold a total of 8,745 units in February 2022, registering a growth of 19 percent. Atul Sood, Associate Vice President, Sales and Strategic Marketing of TKM indicated that the overall sentiment in the market continues to remain positive with a steady surge in demand trends. With inputs from ANI Live TV #mute After Russia's invasion of neighbouring Ukraine, the U.S government on March 1 announced a ban on Russian flights from American airspace following similar moves by the European Union and Canada. "I am announcing that we will join our allies in closing off American airspace to all Russian flights, further isolating Russia and adding an additional squeeze on their economy," Biden said in his State of the Union address. The U.S. Transportation Department Federal Aviation Administration orders will take effect by the end of the day on March 2 and will suspend operations of all aircraft owned, certified, operated, registered, chartered, leased, or controlled by, for, or for the benefit of, a person who is a Russian citizen. Also read: Govt to send 26 evacuation flights in next 3 days to bring back stranded Indians This includes passenger and cargo flights, and scheduled as well as charter flights "effectively closing U.S. air space to all Russian commercial air carriers and other Russian civil aircraft," the Transportation Department said. Late on March 1, United Airlines said it had temporarily suspended flying over Russian airspace, joining other major U.S. carriers who have taken the step after Russian troops last week poured into Ukraine. United had been continuing to fly over Russian airspace to operate some flights to and from India in recent days. Delta Air Lines, American Airlines and United Parcel Service all confirmed this week they had halted flights over Russia. Also read: Tesla offering free electric vehicle charging to people fleeing Ukraine FedEx on March 1 did not respond to emails asking if it had stopped flying over Russia. United is cancelling two flights to India for March 1 and March 2 as it evaluates how it could continue to operate via a different route that does not use Russian airspace. White House officials had privately asked if the move would harm U.S. supply chains or have other negative impacts, sources said. Russian flights have been effectively barred from U.S. destinations for the most part in recent days because of bans on the use of Canadian and European airspace. Some foreign governments have privately questioned why the United States did not move faster to ban Russian planes as have some U.S. lawmakers. Russian President Vladimir Putin has asserted Ukraine committed "genocide" in the Donbass region of eastern Ukraine, without presenting evidence, and said the invasion, called a "special operation" by Russian officials, was therefore justified to end it. With inputs from Reuters Live TV #mute In an attempt to bring back Indian students stranded in Ukraine, SpiceJet will operate special evacuation flights from Kosice in Slovakia on March 3 and 4 and from Bucharest in Romania on March 4 and 6. The airline will use its Boeing 737 MAX aircraft for these special flights. SpiceJet will operate ferry flights to Kosice on March 2 and 3 from Delhi and to Bucharest from Delhi and Amritsar on March 4 and 5. The airline has already operated two evacuation flights under `Operation Ganga`. SpiceJet`s evacuation flight from Budapest with Indian students will be arriving at the Indira Gandhi International Airport in Delhi at 6.30 pm today. Also read: Watch: SpiceJet pilots heart winning speech on flight from Budapest to Delhi This comes after Prime Minister Narendra Modi on Monday deputed four Union Ministers to neighbouring countries of Ukraine to coordinate evacuations of stranded Indians amid ongoing Russian military operations in Ukraine. Other ministers deputed to manage evacuations include Union Minister of Civil Aviation Jyotiraditya Scindia in Romania and Molodova, Minister of Petroleum and Natural Gas Hardeep Singh Puri in Hungary and Minister of State in the Ministry of Road Transport Gen (Retd) VK Singh in Poland. This is the second evacuation flight being operated by SpiceJet under `Operation Ganga` after a special flight left last night for Budapest, Hungary from New Delhi. The airline is in discussion with the concerned authorities to operate more evacuation flights in the coming days. The Union government has launched `Operation Ganga` to bring back stranded students and Indian citizens from the conflict-torn Ukraine. Special flights are being operated by Air India and other airlines as part of the `Operation Ganga` mission. Earlier on Monday, the ministry of external affairs said that India has evacuated over 8,000 nationals since the initial advisories were issued by the country. With inputs from ANI Live TV #mute North Dakota is challenging the federal governments awarding of lucrative mineral rights under a Missouri River reservoir to the Mandan, Hidatsa and Arikara Nation, otherwise known as the Three Affiliated Tribes. The state attorney generals office said Friday that it notified the U.S. District Court in Washington, D.C., that it plans to intervene in the tribes lawsuit against the federal government. The Interior Department ruled in February that the tribes own the rights, in what has been a long-running dispute. At stake is an estimated $100 million in unpaid royalties and future payments certain to come from oil drilling. The government dammed the river in the 1950s, flooding more than a tenth of the tribes' reservation and creating the reservoir. A SpiceJet pilot is winning the hearts of the netizens because of the announcement he made on evacuating Indians. The SpiceJet flight was meant to bring back Indians from Budapest to New Delhi. The video was shared on SpiceJet's social media handle, where the pilot can be seen talking to the flight full of passengers. Talking to the passengers, the pilot said, "We are very happy to see all of you safe and sound and proud of each and every one of you for your courage and determination. You overcame the uncertainty, the hardship, the fear and have made it here safely. Now its time to go back to our motherland." Later on, the pilot went ahead and described the details of the flight mentioning the durations and stops the flight will take. The pilot's announcement ended with a proud 'Jai Hind' receiving the claps and cheers of the passengers on board. Also read: Boeing suspends operations, maintenance and technical support services for Russian airlines The SpiceJet flight was the first flight from the organisation to evacuate Indians under 'Operation Ganga'. More flights are in order to bring back Indians from the neighbouring countries like Romania and Slovakia. #SpiceJet just evacuated our stranded people on our first flight from #Ukraine. We are now en route back to #India. Their optimism made us hopeful of helping more Indians who are witnessing the war, through more SG flights. #EvacuationFlights #RescueIndians #HopeForPeace pic.twitter.com/gLdxhhlsax SpiceJet (@flyspicejet) March 2, 2022 'Operation Ganga' has been initiated by the Union government to return stranded students and Indian citizens back from the conflict-torn Ukraine. As part of the 'Operation Ganga', Air India and other airlines are flying special flights. India has evacuated almost 8,000 nationals, according to the ministry of external affairs, since the country's initial advisories were issued. Live TV #mute New Delhi: Ending months-long saga that kept the fintech platform BharatPe in headlines for all the wrong reasons, its Co-founder and Managing Director Ashneer Grover has finally quit minutes after receiving the agenda for upcoming Board meeting, saying that he was being forced to bid adieu to a company he had founded. In an emotionally-charged letter addressed to the Board of Directors, Ashneer Grover said that while they will not find a single act of impropriety against him, "I will not be participating in your charade". "Since you clearly believe you can run this Company better without me -- I am leaving you with this challenge. Build incrementally even half of the value I created so far -- I am leaving you with three times the funds I've utilised till date," said Ashneer. "I hereby resign as the Managing Director of BharatPe, effective immediately. I also resign as a Director of the Board. I will continue as the single largest individual shareholder of the Company," he added. The resignation came as top investors in the fintech platform declined to buy his 8.5 per cent stake in the company for Rs 4,000 crore as he had sought. Ashneer also lost an arbitration in Singapore he filed against the fintech platform for launching a probe against him. In the letter, Ashneer said that he has founded and built "BharatPe into what it is today, and this identity, none of you can take away from me". "I am the rebel slave who must be hung by the tree so none of the other slaves can dare to be like me ever again. Unfortunately, I refuse to walk that path and refuse to tolerate this continuous and shameful vilification of me and my family," he wrote. "I have been the one who founded this company and built it up to its enviable position today, no wonder you want to oust me for your vested interests. So when do we end this? We end this now," the letter stated. Ashneer and Shashvat Nakrani founded BharatPe in 2018. "With my efforts and hard work, the company has created a network of more than 1 crore (10 mn) shopkeepers who transact more than Rs 100,000 crore ($16 bn) annually and lent out more than Rs 4,000 crore ($0.5 bn) as loans. It is indisputable that BharatPe loans have helped lakhs of small businesses fight organised e-commerce and COVID," Grover wrote in his resignation letter. "With a team of less than five hundred on-roll employees, aggregate spending of less than $150 mn, and by raising $615 mn from ten of the marquee investors without using a single banker, the success story of BharatPe is for everyone to see," he continued. The fintech platform last week sacked his wife Madhuri Jain Grover over alleged financial irregularities during her tenure. She escalated the battle against BharatPe via social media, posting questions over the board's handling of the situation. BharatPe currently has 8 million merchants on its platform. "Am I perfect? As every other human being does, I am sure I have my follies. I have been told that I am too straight forward, headstrong, and have very demanding standards when it comes to work," Ashneer said in the letter. "Unfortunately, what has happened in the recent past seems to be a battle of egos being played to the gallery of the media under the charade of "good governance", he lamented. Live TV #mute New Delhi: Union Finance Minister Nirmala Sitharaman on Wednesday launched electronic bill (e-Bill) processing system that seeks to bring in broader transparency and expedite the process of payments. The move is a part of `Ease of Doing Business (EoDB) and Digital India eco-system`. The Finance Minister had announced this major e-governance initiative in the Union Budget 2022-23 presented in Parliament on February 1. Sitharaman said the e-Bill processing system will enhance transparency, efficiency and faceless-paperless payment system by allowing suppliers and contractors to submit their claim online which will be trackable on a real-time basis. The electronic bill processing system was launched at an event organised to mark the 46th Civil Accounts Day celebration. Referring to the critical role played by the Controller General of Accounts (CGA), the Finance Minister said the CGA has been managing public finance by adapting technology, thereby stopping the pilferage of public money and ensuring that benefits reach directly to citizens. In his address on the occasion, Finance Secretary TV Somanathan stated that on the one hand, the Public Financial Management System (PFMS) is a critical aid to financial administrators of the country, and on the other, it is the most important citizen-centric initiative, especially the new e-Bill system. Also Read: PM Kisan Yojana: Havent received 10th instalment yet? Check how to file a complaint Somanathan said that the new e-Bill system will reduce time lags further and will serve as a model for accounts towards digital India and Ease of Doing Business (EoDB). Also Read: India manufacturing PMI expands in February as output, new orders rise Live TV #mute New Delhi: Prime Minister Narendra Modi on Wednesday made a strong pitch for self-reliance in technology-related sectors, which play a key role in last-mile delivery of services and have immense potential for job creation. Addressing a webinar on Technology-enabled Development', the prime minister said science and technology was not an isolated sector as it was closely connected with the digital economy and based on advanced technology, which is now focusing on fast delivery and empowering citizens. Modi said telecommunication in general, and 5G technology in particular, can enable growth and offer job opportunities. Required spectrum auctions will also be conducted in 2022 to facilitate roll out of 5G mobile services within 2022-23, the prime minister said. Infrastructure advancement is related to technology, even public delivery systems are being connected to digital platforms. Technology will play a crucial role in building Aatmanirbhar Bharat (self-reliant India),? he said in a webinar attended by representatives of various government departments and also from the private sector. Modi stressed on speeding up efforts to bring in new technology in the communication sector. The server should be based in India, there should be less dependence on foreign countries. New security angles are getting associated when it comes to the communication sector, the prime minister said. He said the new initiatives that the government was undertaking need to focus on 'self-reliance' through technology. Budget 2022-23 has focused extensively on sunrise sectors like AI, Geospatial systems, drones, semiconductors, genomics, space tech, clean tech among others,? the prime minister said. Live TV #mute New Delhi: The RBI on Wednesday, February 27, cancelled the licence of Sarjeraodada Naik Shirala Sahakari Bank, Sangli, Maharashtra, as it did not have adequate capital and earning prospects. With cancellation of the licence, Sarjeraodada Naik Shirala Sahakari Bank Ltd has ceased to carry on banking business with effect from the close of business hours on Wednesday, the Reserve Bank said in a statement. The Commissioner for Cooperation and Registrar of Cooperative Societies, Maharashtra has also been requested to issue an order for winding up the bank and appoint a liquidator for the lender, it said. On liquidation, every depositor would be entitled to receive deposit insurance claim amount of his/her deposits up to a monetary ceiling of Rs 5 lakh from the Deposit Insurance and Credit Guarantee Corporation (DICGC). "As per the data submitted by the bank, more than 99 per cent of the depositors are entitled to receive full amount of their deposits from DICGC," the RBI added. Giving details about the licence cancellation, the RBI said Sarjeraodada Naik Shirala Sahakari Bank does not have adequate capital and earning prospects, and with its present financial position would be unable to pay its present depositors in full. "Public interest would be adversely affected if the bank is allowed to carry on its banking business any further," it said. Also Read: Fitbit recalls over 1 million of its Ionic smartwatches on burn hazard worries As on January 27, 2022, DICGC had sanctioned Rs 64.70 crore of the total insured deposits based on the willingness received from the concerned depositors of the bank. Also Read: Apple iPhone SE available at Rs 15,599 on Flipkart ahead of iPhone SE 3rd gen launch Live TV #mute New Delhi: As Russia intensifies its battle to take control of Ukraine, Bitcoin on Wednesday soared to $44,000, pushing the total cryptocurrency market cap to cross $2 trillion. With the recent gains, Bitcoin now has a higher market cap than the rapidly-declining Russian currency ruble. Bitcoin has a market cap of approximately $835 billion while the ruble has a market cap of around $626 billion. The crypto market was last at $2 trillion in August 2021. In the last week since the Russia-Ukraine war started, Bitcoin has jumped nearly 14 per cent and ethereum 12 per cent, according to CoinGecko data. Terra`s LUNA token had a stratospheric rise, climbing nearly 70 per cent during the last week, and is now trading at approximately $94. Solana`s SOL and other layer 1 tokens like Avalanche`s AVAX and Polkadot`s DOT also responded well, reports CoinDesk. Similar to volatility, Bitcoin`s trading volume across major exchanges reached the highest level since the December 5 price crash, according to CoinDesk data. Earlier, the global crypto market lost nearly 10 per cent of its value as Russia invaded Ukraine on Thursday. Over $200 billion worth of its global market value was wiped out. The most-hit cryptocurrencies were Ethereum, Cardano, Avalanche, and Polkadot, along with Dogecoin and Shiba Inu. Also Read: RBI cancels licence of Sarjeraodada Naik Shirala Sahakari Bank, Sangli Some traders, however, expected the price bounce to be short-lived amid geopolitical uncertainty. Also Read: After SBI, HDFC, BoB, Canara Bank increases fixed deposit rates; check latest FD rates Live TV #mute The US off-road brand Jeep has released images of its first electric SUV, which will be produced as part of the company's Dare Forward 2030 strategy. It is evident in the styling that the electric SUV is heavily influenced by Jeep's Compass SUV. Apparently Jeep is showing a "concept" version of their new electric car, but with first overseas showrooms only a year away, it's unlikely the production model will look any different from this. With its sharp horizontal LED Daytime Running Lights located above the main lighting unit, the design looks more modern than the Compass with split headlamps. In lower case, the sixth slat of the closed-off grille houses the "e" badge that recalls that of the Compass. Also read: Tesla offering free electric vehicle charging to people fleeing Ukraine The sides and wheel arches of the SUV are covered in thick layers of body cladding, while the bulge in the bonnet is black decal, and the pillars and roofline are black, giving the SUV a dual-tone appearance with its yellow body. Today, we revealed concept images of the first-ever 100% battery-electric Jeep SUV. This vehicle is our next step to the achievement of our brand vision of Zero Emission Freedom and will be launched early next year. More information to come! pic.twitter.com/079TeB0gKM Jeep (@Jeep) March 1, 2022 Despite being unconfirmed by Jeep, the new electric small SUV is expected to be based on the similar city SUV models from Alfa Romeo and Fiat, which will go into production in 2023 or 2024. Live TV #mute Tesla has started to offer free supercharging for electric vehicles in several countries around Ukraine for people fleeing the country following the Russian invasion. In an email to local owners, Tesla has announced that it is making several supercharger stations near the Ukrainian borders with those countries free to use for both Tesla and non-Tesla electric vehicles, said sources. "Beginning Monday, we are temporarily enabling free Supercharging for both Tesla and Non-Tesla vehicles at sites in areas impacted by the recent situation in Ukraine. Starting with Trzebownisko (Poland), Ko?ice (Slovakia), Miskolc (Hungary), Debrecen (Hungary)," the email reads. Also read: Worlds first electric Batmobile is ready for action, made by Vietnamese student "We hope that this helps give you the peace of mind to get to a safe location. As always tap any site on your car`s touchscreen to see current pricing. Safe travels," it added. When regions of the world are hit by natural disasters, Tesla has been known to offer free supercharging in those regions to give one less thing for people to think about when moving away from danger. For example, Tesla offered free Supercharging to owners on several occasions during hurricanes in the south of the US. Now for the first time, Tesla is doing it for not a natural disaster, but a human-made disaster. Russian President Vladimir Putin initiated a "military operation" last week that is now amounting to a large-scale invasion of neighbouring Ukraine. Ukrainian forces have been fighting back its much bigger neighbour, but the Russian military has advanced into several parts of the country. With inputs from IANS Live TV #mute Warsaw: The Embassy of India in Poland has issued an urgent advisory to Indian nationals in Ukraine saying Indians in Lviv and Ternopil in the western side of the country may travel to Budomierz border for quicker entry into Poland. "Indians presently in Lviv and Ternopil and other places in western Ukraine may travel at the earliest to Budomierz border check-point for a relatively quick entry into Poland," the Embassy of India in Poland said in a statement. Alternatively, they are advised to travel south to transit via Hungary or Romania, the embassy added. The advisory further stated that Indian citizens may avoid the Shehyni-Medyka border crossing which continues to be congested. Embassy of India in Warsaw, Poland issues an urgent advisory to Indian nationals in #Ukraine stating, "avoid Shehyni-Medyka border crossing which continues to be congested... Indians in Lviv&Ternopil in western Ukraine may travel to Budomierz border for quicker entry into Poland" pic.twitter.com/KKbouR6KkM ANI (@ANI) March 1, 2022 The Embassy of India in Poland said that it has officials deployed in Medyka and Budomierz border check-points who receive all evacuees and facilitate their travel to India. "Those who enter Poland from any other border crossing where Indian officials are not deployed may kindly travel directly to Hotel Prezydencki, ul. Podwislocze 48 in Rzeszow where all arrangements have been made for their stay and from where Operation Ganga flights to India are being operated regularly," the embassy said. It further said that the transportation charges will be paid at the hotel by the Embassy, in case the Indian student does not have the funds for this. After Russia`s forces launched military operations in Ukraine on February 24, the Government of India has launched "Operation Ganga" to bring back stranded students and Indian citizens from the conflict-torn Ukraine. 24x7 Control Centres have been set up to assist in the evacuation of Indian nationals through the border crossing points with Poland, Romania, Hungary and Slovakia. A dedicated Twitter Account (@opganga) has been set up to assist Operation Ganga. Live TV New Delhi: The Central Board of Secondary Education (CBSE) is all set tol conduct the Class 10 and Class 12 practical exams from today (March 2, 2022). The board has directed the schools to conduct the practical exams following the Covid-19 protocols. "To avoid crowding and social distancing, the school may consider splitting the group/ batch of students in subgroups of 10 students each. First group of 10 students may attend the lab work while the other is doing pen and paper work and vice-versa," a release by CBSE mentioned. The central board also said that for the Class 10 regular students, the internal exam would be conducted by the respective schools, however, the external examiners will be assigned to assess the practical exams of class 12 regular candidates. Board also asked the schools to upload the marks of practical exam on daily basis from March 2. "The uploading of marks shall be completed by last date of respective class. No extension of dates shall be considered by the board," read the official notification. ALSO READ | CGBSE Class 12 Exams 2022: Chhattisgarh Board higher secondary exams begin from today- Check guidelines here The students need to note that their marks will be computed on pro-rata basis based on the marks obtained in theory examination conducted by the board. Additionally, in view of the ongoing Covid-19 pandemic, students will be divided into batches of around 20 for the practical and internal examinations. It may be noted that there will be no separate practical exams for private students. For the private students of Class 12 who failed last year will have to appear in the practical exams. It may be noted that CBSE is also set to conduct the second-term board examination for Classes 10 and 12 in offline mode from April 26, 2022. CBSE Practical Exams 2022: Important guidelines - Students have been asked to strictly follow Covid-19 rules like wearing face masks, gloves, maintaining social distancing during examinations. - Students are advised to carry their own hand sanitizer. - To ensure social distancing CBSE has suggested that a batch of 10 students could be divided into two subgroups for the practical exams. - Students must carry the class 10, 12 admit cards to the exam centre to enter venue. - Candidates must reach the examination centre 30 minutes prior to the reporting time. - The banned items in the exam centre include mobile phones, electronic devices, headphones, and any other electronic gadgets. Live TV Thomas Jefferson once observed that fearless, independent newspapers were indispensable to the American experiment and to the peoples right to know. Without an informed citizenry to scrutinize, question and challenge governmental acts, the great goal of holding government accountable to the citizenry and the rule of law would surely fail. The U.S. Supreme Court embraced Jeffersons premises in its landmark ruling in The New York Times v. Sullivan (1964) by protecting the press from libel suits that would chill investigative journalism and bankrupt newspapers. The constitutionally protected right of the press to report on the affairs of government, however indispensable it is to American democracy, is not without limits. Every constitutional right, like every governmental power, is subject to limitations and regulations. As we have noted, the concept of absolute powers and rights is foreign to our constitutional arrangements. After the Sullivan ruling, questions arose about the imposition of legal limits on the crucial work of the press. After all, the central purpose of the First Amendments Free Press Clause was to prohibit prior restraint, that is, the exercise of governmental authority to prohibit the press from publishing without prior authorization. Would the prohibition on prior restraint apply to every conceivable publication, or could there be rare exceptions as, for example, in the area of reporting about national security and foreign relations? If so, what circumstances might justify prior restraint and thus lower the bar of protection afforded the press? The Supreme Court, in Near v. Minnesota (1934), told us that there are but few exceptions to the prohibition on prior restraint, including, wartime obstruction of recruitment, obscenity, incitements to riot or forcible overthrow of government, and words that may have all the effect of force. Chief Justice Charles Evans Hughes added another curious exemption: the press may not publish the sailing time of a troop vessel. Most readers understood this to mean that newspapers could not publish the time or location of a military attack which, obviously, would undermine the wartime interests of the United States. Later, President Richard M. Nixon, asserted that Hughes implied a broader meaning, that the press could not publish military secrets. Near thus became the starting point for most defenses of prior restraint. In 1971, Chief Justice Hughess phrase, the sailing time of a troop vessel, lay at the center of the most famous prior restraint case in American history: The New York Times v. United States, more popularly known as The Pentagon Papers Case. One of the most troubling issues confronting press coverage was the question of what should and should not be published about national security matters, including those periods when the United States was at war, or facing the threat of war. The court, for the first time, confronted the question in the context of the Vietnam War, the most contentious war in our history. The dramatic facts of the case focused the nations attention on the work of the judiciary in a way that seldom occurs. On June 12, 1971, the New York Times began publication of a 47-volume classified defense department study titled, History of the United States Decision Making Process on Vietnam Policy. The study, ordered by President Lyndon Johnson, was completed in 1968. This study became known as The Pentagon Papers, and was released to the Times and the Washington Post by Daniel Ellsberg, a former Defense Department official. President Nixon authorized Ellsberg to review sections of the papers as part of a national security project, but he did not authorize Ellsberg to release the study. The Times was eager to share the study with the American people, whom it believed had a right to know about the decisions behind the conduct of the Vietnam War. The Times first installment enraged the Nixon Administration, which claimed publication of the papers would undermine conduct of the Vietnam War. Citing Chief Justice Hughes, the administration argued in federal court in New York that the Times publications represented a national security exception to the prohibition on prior restraint. Publication of the Pentagon Papers was equivalent to the publication of the sailing time of a troop vessel. The federal court granted Nixons request for a temporary restraining order against the Times, which meant that the Times was prohibited from publishing its reports about the Pentagon Papers. Prior restraint had been imposed, despite constitutional protection furnished by the First Amendment. Americans wondered: Could the Free Press Clause be set aside by a presidential invocation of national security, a phrase vulnerable to abuse and exploitation by presidents eager to protect their own political and personal agendas? The Nixon Administration also sought an injunction against the Washington Post, but a federal court in Washington, D.C., rejected Nixons plea for an injunction, which produced a paradox in the world of journalism. The Post was permitted to publish the Pentagon Papers, but the Times was not. Appeals were quickly filed and, in record time, the cases were consolidated and heard by the Supreme Court on June 26. The court delivered its ruling on June 30, only 17 days after the first publication of the papers in the New York Times. We turn next week to the courts monumental decision in the Pentagon Papers Case. David Adler is president of The Alturas Institute. Love 0 Funny 0 Wow 0 Sad 0 Angry 0 New Delhi: As the war escalates between Russia and Ukraine, Russian Foreign Minister Sergey Lavrov on Wednesday warned that if a Third World War breaks out, it would be a devastating nuclear war. Zee News Editor-In-Chief Sudhir Chaudhary, in his show DNA, on Wednesday (March 2), analysed the strategy adopted by Russian President Vladimir Putin in this ongoing conflict with Ukraine. Russian Foreign Ministers statement on the possibility of a Third World War comes days after Putin ordered nuclear forces to be on high alert. Putin accused Western nations of taking "unfriendly" steps against his country. Notably, there are only 9 countries in the world that have nuclear weaponsRussia, USA, UK, France, China, India, Pakistan, Israel, North Korea among which Russia has the biggest arsenal of nuclear power. On Tuesday, Russia's nuclear submarines conducted war exercises in the Barents Sea, stoking concerns globally. Any such exercise carried out during a war is considered a sign of great danger. Nuclear weapons can be launched from all three modes sky, land and water and this recent exercise means that the Russian army is testing the readiness of its nuclear weapons. The big question, however, is whether Putin would actually launch a nuclear attack on Ukraine? We believe Putin is working on the strategy of escalation to de-escalation. This strategy entails making a conflict so dangerous suddenly that the world is forced to talk of peace. President Vladimir Putin is probably working on the same strategy. Russia is escalating the war currently and under this strategy, they may even allow the use of low-impact nuclear weapons because if nuclear weapons are used, then the big superpowers will be forced to negotiate peace with Russia. Russia is escalating the war and when the war is at its peak, perhaps it will shift to the strategy of de-escalating. Meanwhile, former Russian President and the deputy chair of Russia's security council Dmitry Medvedev warned today that the way America and Western countries are imposing economic sanctions on Russia, these decisions can make Russia more aggressive and lead to a new war. Live TV New Delhi: Congress leader Rahul Gandhi on Tuesday condoled the death of an Indian student in shelling in Ukraine's Kharkiv and called upon the Union government to draw up a strategy for the safe evacuation of all stranded Indians. The Ministry of External Affairs (MEA) confirmed the death in a tweet on Tuesday and said it was in touch with the family of the student. The student, Naveen Shekarappa Gyanagoudar, was a native of Chalageri in Karnataka's Haveri district. "Received the tragic news of Indian student Naveen losing his life in Ukraine. My heartfelt condolences to his family and friends. "I reiterate, GOI (Government of India) needs a strategic plan for safe evacuation. Every minute is precious," Rahul Gandhi wrote on Twitter. Received the tragic news of an Indian student Naveen losing his life in Ukraine. My heartfelt condolences to his family and friends. I reiterate, GOI needs a strategic plan for safe evacuation. Every minute is precious. Rahul Gandhi (@RahulGandhi) March 1, 2022 The Congress party expressed condolences to Gyanagoudar's family and friends. It also urged the government to expedite the evacuation of Indians stranded in war-torn Ukraine. "We are deeply saddened by the tragic news of the demise of an Indian student in Ukraine. Our heartfelt condolences to his family and friends. We once again urge GoI (Government of India) to ensure the speedy and safe evacuation of our people," it stated in a tweet. Congress general secretary Priyanka Gandhi Vadra too condoled the death of the student and asked the government to bring back the Indians stranded in Ukraine as soon as possible. "The news of the death of Indian student Naveen trapped in Ukraine is very sad. My deepest condolences to their families. May God give them courage in this time of sorrow. I request the government to make every effort to bring back all our students as soon as possible," she tweeted. Expressing sadness over the death, Congress chief spokesperson Randeep Surjewala alleged the BJP government at the Centre "has no evacuation plan" and that it has "abandoned" the youth. "Our deepest condolences to the family of the student from Karnataka who has died. This is the tragedy where the BJP Government has no evacuation plan. "The Modi Government has abandoned our young, Prahlad Joshi decries and insults our students in Ukraine. Only photo-op, no action," he said. He attacked Prime Minister Narendra Modi for campaigning in Uttar Pradesh assembly polls and asked whose responsibility is it to bring all Indians stuck in Ukraine back safely. "Modi Ji, What would you say to the family in Karnataka which lost their child due to the lack of sensitivity of your government? "In the midst of Ukraine-Russia war, the lives of around 20,000 Indians are in danger every moment and you are engaged in this (electioneering)? Whose responsibility is it to bring thousands of children back safely," Mr Surjewala posed. The MEA said the foreign secretary is calling in ambassadors of Russia and Ukraine to reiterate its demand for "urgent safe passage" to Indian nationals who are still in Kharkiv and in other cities which have become conflict zones. "Similar action is also being undertaken by our ambassadors in Russia and Ukraine," it said. The Kharkiv city is witnessing increasing fighting between the Ukrainian troops and Russian forces. Live TV Mumbai: Indian students in Ukraine may have miscalculated the gravity of the situation in that country although the Centre had issued an evacuation advisory for them before Russia actually launched an attack, senior BJP leader Devendra Fadnavis said on Wednesday. He was replying to a question whether there was a delay on the part of the Indian government in the evacuation of students stuck in Ukraine. "The Indian government had issued an advisory days before the actual attack took place on some cities in Ukraine. However, Indian students may have miscalculated the gravity of the situation although an advisory to evacuate the cities was in place," the former Maharashtra chief minister told reporters. The Union government has come under attack by the opposition parties after a student hailing from Karnataka got killed in Ukraine in the Russian attack. Live TV MOSCOW: Despite mounting international pressure and harsh sanctions, Russia on Wednesday sought to assure that these pressure tactics wont affect the deal to supply the S-400 air defence missile system to India. We don't foresee any obstacles as far as S-400 supply to India is concerned; We have routes to continue with this deal unobstructed. Sanctions, old or new, do not interfere in any way, Denis Alipov, Russian Envoy-designate to India said while addressing a press conference on the impact of sanctions in defence deal with India. The Russian envoy also said that Moscow remains highly grateful to India for its balanced stand at the United Nations as New Delhi fully understands the depth of the crisis. We are strategic allies with India. We are grateful to India for its balanced position displayed at the UN. India understands the depth of this crisis, Denis Alipov said. To a question about the safety of Indian nationals stranded in Ukraine, he said, We are working intensely on creating corridor and safe passage for Indians stuck in conflict zones in Ukraine. The Russian Ambassador-designate added, We are in touch with India on the safety of Indians in Kharkiv, Sumy & other conflict zones in Ukraine. We are in touch with the Indian authorities for Indians stranded in Kharkiv, and other areas of eastern #Ukraine. We have received India's requests for emergency evacuation of all those stuck there via Russain territory...: Denis Alipov, Russian Ambassador-designate to India pic.twitter.com/EgmN6LQd52 ANI (@ANI) March 2, 2022 Earlier in the day, Indian Air Force (IAF) Vice Chief Air Marshal Sandeep Singh said that the air force will not be significantly impacted by the US sanctions on Russia and India's relations with both countries remain strong. "We know the geopolitical situation is difficult (currently). Our relations with Russia will continue," Singh said at a press briefing here. Russia started its military offensive against Ukraine on February 24. Western nations, including the US, have imposed major economic and other sanctions on Russia following the offensive. When asked if US sanctions on Russia will impact the IAF, Singh said, "Things are still unfolding. Our position is very strong and our relations with both the countries have remained (strong) and you have seen that. "We are evaluating the situation. There will be certain difficulties, there is no doubt about it. But I think it should not affect us too much. I am confident that it won't affect us significantly," he added. Three aircraft have departed to evacuate stranded citizens, the Indian Air Force vice chief said. "We can operate four aircraft per day to evacuate Indians," he said. The IAF vice chief said the evacuation operations will run round the clock till all Indians are brought back. On the seventh day of Russia's invasion of Ukraine, Ukrainian President Volodimir Zelenskyy on Wednesday said almost 6,000 Russians have been in 6 days of the war. Reuters quoted Zelenskyy as saying even as the Russian airborne troops landed in Ukraines second-largest city of Kharkiv, which is under intense shelling for the past few days. Live TV New Delhi: The Ministry of External Affairs (MEA) on Wednesday (March 2) emphasised on stranded nationals to leave Ukraines city Kharkiv, which has seen intense shelling in past days, immediately, even if on foot. Here are the key points by MEA Spokesperson Arindam Bagchi during his media brief: 1. The advisory that has just been issued by our Embassy is on the basis of information received from Russia. We would urge all our nationals to leave Kharkiv immediately to safe zones or further westwards using any means available, including on foot, and keeping safety in mind. 2. Cities in eastern Ukraine remain an area of concern. Encouraging reports that some students were able to board trains out of Kharkiv last night, today morning...We've been in communication with Russian side regarding safe passage of our nationals from Kharkiv and other cities. 3. We now estimate that nearly 17,000 Indian nationals have left Ukraine borders since our advisories were issued in the last week of January. 4. On if PM Modi will speak to Russian President Vladimir Putin again tonight: "Prime Minister has been speaking to leaders of several countries. We share with you whenever such talks take place. I would not like to say anything beforehand," Bagchi said. 5. A mechanism for issuing emergency certificates to those who lost their Indian passports has been instituted. I think this will also help many Indian students. 6. Chandan Jindal, an Indian national in Ukraine's Vinnytsia lost his life due to natural causes. His family members are also in Ukraine. 7. In principle, we're always ready to help other countries. If we get a specific request on it, then our stand will be guided by it. If we get an opportunity like that, and we are able to do it, then we will definitely help. 8. Indian Air Force aircraft have joined Operation Ganga with the first C-17 flight from Bucharest (Romania) expected to return to Delhi later tonight. 3 more IAF flights will be undertaken today from Budapest (Hungary), Bucharest (Romania) and Rzeszow (Poland). 9. During the last 24 hours, 6 flights have landed in India, taking the total number of flights that have landed in India to 15 and the total number of Indians who have returned on these flights to 3,352. 10. As many as 15 flights are scheduled over the next 24 hours. Some of these are already actually en route. (With ANI inputs) Live TV Prime Minister Narendra Modi spoke on the phone with the Russian President Vladimir Putin on Wednesday. The two leaders reviewed the situation in Ukraine, especially in Kharkiv where many Indian students are stuck. They discussed the safe evacuation of the Indian nationals from the conflict areas. PM Modi also chaired a high-level meeting on Wednesday night on the Ukraine crisis amid Indias efforts to evacuate its citizens from the war-torn country, which is under attack from Russia. External Affairs Minister S Jaishankar, his Cabinet colleague Piyush Goyal and senior officials attended the meeting. PM Modi has held a series of meetings since Sunday to spearhead India's efforts to safely bring back its nationals, asserting that this is his government's top priority. Earlier in the day, the Indian embassy in Ukraine asked all Indian nationals to leave Kharkiv immediately to safe zones or further westwards. MEA Spokesperson Arindam Bagchi said that the advisory has been issued by our Embassy on the basis of information received from Russia. The external affairs ministry has assured that every Indian citizen will be brought back from Ukraine. It said that around 17,000 Indian nationals have left Ukraine through its different borders since the Indian Embassy in Ukraine issued advisories. Live TV New Delhi: Russia will probe the death of the 21-year-old Indian medical student in the Ukrainian city of Kharkiv, Russian Ambassador-designate to India Denis Alipov said on Wednesday (March 2), PTI reported. Naveen Shekarappa Gyanagoudar, hailing from Chalageri in the Haveri district of Karnataka, was a fourth-year medical student at the Kharkiv National Medical University, who died in intense shelling in Kharkiv on Tuesday. Speaking at a media briefing, Alipov said, "I want to express our sympathy to the family of Naveen Shekarappa Gyanagoudar and to the entire Indian nation over the tragedy. "Russia will do everything it possibly can to ensure the safety of Indian citizens in the areas of intense conflict...And a proper investigation of this unfortunate incident," the Russian envoy added. Thanking India for its "balanced" position on Russia's conflict with Ukraine, the envoy assured Moscow's support in the evacuation of stranded Indian nationals in Ukraine."We are strategic allies with India. We are grateful to India for its balanced position displayed at the UN. India understands the depth of this crisis," he was quoted as saying by ANI. Alipov informed that India has requested Russia for the emergency evacuation of its citizens stranded in Ukraine through Russian territory. Further, Alipov said that Russia is in touch with Indian authorities concerning the evacuation of Indian nationals stranded in Kharkiv and other areas of eastern Ukraine. "We have received India`s requests for emergency evacuation of all those stranded there through the Russian territory. We are actively working on all ways and means to launch such an operation and provide a humanitarian corridor for evacuation of the people there," he assured. Following Naveens death, India had asked the envoys of both Russia and Ukraine to ensure "urgent safe passage" to Indian nationals who remain in Kharkiv and other conflict zones. ALSO READ: Scored 97% in PUC, but my son couldn't secure medical seat in state: Father of Karnataka boy killed in Ukraine According to Naveen's friends, he had gone out to buy some groceries and was waiting in a line at a shop when he was hit, Foreign Secretary Harsh Vardhan Shringla had told on Tuesday, adding the circumstances are not absolutely clear. (With agency inputs) Live TV New Delhi: In an urgent advisory issued on Wednesday (March 2), the Indian embassy in Ukraine has asked its nationals to leave Kharkiv immediately due to the worsening situation in the Ukrainian city. In a new advisory, the Indian embassy tweeted, For their own safety and security, they must leave Kharkiv immediately, proceed to Pesochin, Babaye and Bezlyudovka as soon as possible. They must reach these settlements by 1800 hrs (Ukrainian time) today, the embassy added. India's advisory comes as Russia persists in its attack on the eastern Ukrainian city of Kharkiv. The Russian forces on Wednesday fired a cruise missile into the city council building in Kharkiv, the deputy governor of the region Roman Semenukha said, as per Reuters. Kharkiv has been witnessing intense shelling over the past two days, with 21 people killed on Tuesday, the news agency reported. An Indian national was among those killed in shelling in Kharkiv a day before. Russia will probe the death of the 21-year-old Indian medical student in Kharkiv, Russian Ambassador-designate to India Denis Alipov said on Wednesday. Naveen Shekarappa Gyanagoudar, hailing from Chalageri in the Haveri district of Karnataka, was a fourth-year medical student at the Kharkiv National Medical University, who died in intense shelling in Kharkiv on Tuesday. Meanwhile, under Operation Ganga, Union Minister of State for External Affairs V Muraleedharan said today that out of the 20,000 Indians who were stranded in war-torn Ukraine, 6,000 have been brought back to the country so far. "There were around 20,000 students/citizens who were stranded in Ukraine. Of them, 4,000 were brought back to India before February 24. Additional 2,000 students were brought back to India till Tuesday and efforts are on to evacuate the remaining Indians stuck there," he said. (With agency inputs) Live TV New Delhi: The Tamil Nadu government on Wednesday (March 2) relaxed more Covid-19 curbs, allowing political and cultural gatherings and increasing the number of people at weddings and funerals. The relaxations will come into effect from Thursday, an official release said. As per the official release, the decision to ease coronavirus curbs was taken considering a dip in daily Covid-19 infections. In Tamil Nadu, weddings and other related functions can be held with the participation of 500 people while the cap on people allowed at deaths and funerals is 250, from March 3 till March 31. Earlier, 200 people were permitted for weddings and 100 for funerals in the state. Tamil Nadu Chief Minister M K Stalin urged people to continue to follow Covid-19 protocols such as wearing masks and maintaining social distancing and get inoculated. On Tuesday, Tamil Nadu registered 348 new Covid-19 cases, pushing the total tally to 34,49,721. With two deaths, the coronavirus fatality toll reached 38,006. As many as 1,025 people were discharged in the last 24 hours, a bulletin said. (With agency inputs) Live TV New Delhi: Prime Minister Narendra Modi on Wednesday (March 2) said that India is able to evacuate its stranded nationals under Operation Ganga in Ukraine because of the countrys rising power. Addressing a poll rally in Uttar Pradeshs Sonbhadra, Modi said, It is due to India's rising strength that we are able to safely evacuate our nationals stuck in Ukraine, for which we are running Operation Ganga. The PM assured that India will leave no stone unturned in bringing back the stranded nationals from war-hit Ukraine. We're making all efforts to evacuate people stuck in Ukraine under Operation Ganga. 1000s of citizens brought back to India. To accelerate this mission, India has sent its 4 ministers there, will leave no stone unturned for the safe passage of Indians, the PM was quoted as saying by ANI. Attacking the Opposition, the PM said those who questioned the "valour of armed forces" and 'Make in India' cannot make the country strong. Sonbhadra district will go to polls in the last phase on March 7. The results of UP Assembly polls will be announced on March 10. Meanwhile, three Indian Air Force (IAF) aircraft, carrying tents, blankets and other humanitarian aid, have been deployed in service since Wednesday morning for evacuation of the Indian nationals in Ukraine amid Russian invasion. Under 'Operation Ganga', two IAF aircraft have taken off from Hindon airbase for Hungary and Romania, while one C-17 Globemaster took off at 4 am earlier today for Romania, ANI reported. The Opposition has upped its attack on the Central government since an Indian national was killed in Ukraine on Tuesday. Former Congress president Rahul Gandhi said the Government must tell how many students have been evacuated so far and how many are still stranded in Ukraine. "To avert further tragedy, the Government of India (GOI) must share: How many students have been evacuated. How many are still stranded in Ukraine. Region-wise detailed evacuation plan," Rahul Gandhi said on Twitter. "We owe a clear strategy and communication to the families involved," he added. (With agency inputs) Live TV Welcome Guest! You Are Here: Home Regional News East North Dakota needs to find a way to dump its investments in Russia and Russia-based companies. Its not a lot of money, but everything helps send a message to Russia after the invasion of Ukraine. The North Dakota Investment Board will meet Thursday to discuss the investments. Gov. Doug Burgum, in a statement Monday, made clear where he stands. We must do our part to limit the financial resources at Russias disposal to discourage these unprovoked and heinous acts of aggression, he said. The North Dakota Board of University and School Lands also has investments in Russia. Neither those nor the Investment Board's are large on a global scale, though combined with investments by other states, countries and companies it all adds up to a big boost to Russia. North Dakota's Retirement and Investment Office says the Legacy Fund has $8.5 million invested in Russia; theres $5.1 million from the pension pool invested; and $2.3 million from the insurance pool invested, for a total of $15.9 million. That's less than one-tenth of 1% of the total investment assets managed by the State Investment Board. The Department of Trust Lands has about $28.8 million invested in Russia-based companies. That adds up to less than 1% of total investments by that department. Still, its too much investment by the two entities in Russia. When the Investment Board meets Thursday, it must do everything possible to end Russian investments. The Department of Trust Lands and the Land Board must do the same. The Legislature has been pushing for more investment by the Legacy Fund in North Dakota. This is a chance to do so with money invested in Russia. The war will have a long-term economic impact if the U.S. and Europe keep the pressure on Russia. North Dakota wont be spared, but stopping Russian investments is still the right thing to do. That will show support for companies such as West Fargo-based Titan Machinery, which has a subsidiary in Ukraine. At the moment, the companys main concern is for the safety of its employees. The future of the subsidiary is at best uncertain. Gas prices have been rising and other costs will go up. What the rest of the world faces has no comparison to what Ukrainians are enduring. North Dakota can do its part to help Ukraine by ending Russian investments. Its the least we can do. Love 0 Funny 0 Wow 1 Sad 0 Angry 1 SRINAGAR: After nearly 32 months, schools will again reopen across Kashmir Valley from Wednesday (March 2, 2022) from classes 6 to 12th. First, it was due to security reasons, then the Covid-19 epidemic that kept kids away from the schools in the Valley. Syed Kasim a class 10th student along with his two brothers Syed Aasim and Syed Hamas remained busy the whole day preparing themselves to attend the school after a long interval. They were seen arranging their school bags and uniforms and making their shining hard their black shoes. The joy of meeting old friends and teachers can be easily seen on their faces. Kasim said, "It's really a joy for me. I have attended school when I was in 8th standard and now am in class 10th. I am excited to meet my friends and teachers. It's altogether a different experience to study in school class rather in a home attending the online class." His younger brother Syed Aasim said, "I have so much to share with friends. I missed them a lot, hope schools will now remain open all year." The youngest 10-year-old Syed Hamas said, "When I last attended the school, I was in the junior building. Now, I am grown up and will attend classes in the senior building. I was waiting since long for schools to open because studying in the senior building is something different. The order to reopen all schools was issued by the J&K State Disaster Management Committee after reviewing the Covid situation in the region. Not only kids but parents too seem happy. "It's a huge relief. I just can't believe schools will be reopening in Kashmir and our children will be back in classes," said a parent. Soon after the abrogation of Article 370 and 35A in August 2019, the schools were shut citing security situation. Then they were again closed after the Covid outbreak. However, colleges and universities partially resumed classes last year, but schools were not allowed to open due to the second Covid wave. In March 2020, schools in Kashmir opened after winter vaccination but were closed after one week. Similarly, in 2021 March, offline activities in schools happened just for one week. Now, as the covid pandemic chain is broken and the regular positive cases ratio is below 50 in Kashmir, the students hope that schools will remain open for the full session. For the first few weeks, it is not necessary for all students to come in uniform, the students can come in casual dress for 14 days till they arrange uniform. Some schools have even decided to celebrate the first week as a "week of joy" and many programs will be conducted during this week in schools to entertain the students. Live TV New Delhi: Pushpa: The Rise actress Rashmika Mandanna is riding high on the super success of her last release with Allu Arjun. The Saami Saami song from the movie also became a chartbuster adding one more feather in National Crush Rashmika's long list of achievements. The buzz these days is strong that Rashmika Mandanna is dating south star Vijay Deverakonda. Days after the Arjun Reddy star denied these rumours with a tweet, now Rashmika too has reacted to the same speculation about them tying the knot. As usual nonsense.. Dont we just da news! Vijay Deverakonda (@TheDeverakonda) February 21, 2022 In an interview with Mirchi9 Rashmika addressed the wedding rumour and her future plans. She said, "It is just a time pass rumour. I still have a lot of time for marriage. I will get married when the time comes. And for all those rumours written, I am like, let them be." Vijay Deverakonda and Rashmika Mandanna are often spotted dining out together. Their awwdorable chemistry has been the talk of the town ever since the duo featured in films like 'Geetha Govindam' and 'Dear Comrade'. Buzz has been there since long that two are a thing but the actors state that they are nothing more than 'just friends'. On the work front, Rashmika is happy with the response to her latest release and especially the chartbuster song 'Saami Saami'. With the massive success of Pushpa: The Rise, Rashmika has achieved waves of appreciation and praises from all across, and is rightfully touted as 'The Next Big Thing in Bollywood'. She will be making her big-ticket Bollywood debut with 'Mission Majnu' and 'Goodbye'. NEW DELHI: A photoshopped picture of 'Dabangg' co-stars Salman Khan and Sonakshi Sinha dressed as groom and bride has gone viral on the internet. The photo shows the Bollywood superstar looking extremely dashing in a beige blazer worn over a white shirt. Sonakshi makes a stunning bride in a red embellished saree, worn with 'chooda' and 'vermillion'. The photo shows Salman and Sonakshi exchanging rings. As soon as the photo surfaced on social media, it started trending and soon went viral on the internet. While their fans were super elated after seeing the photo, they knew it well that it was the result of poorly-done photoshop. Several fanclubs also shared the photo on Instagram and referred to it as 'wedding' photo of the two stars. Take a look at the viral photo below: Sonakshi Sinha and Salman Khan have worked together in films like 'Dabangg' series. In fact, she marked her acting debut opposite him in 2010 with 'Dabangg', which turned out to be the biggest grooser of the year. Sonakshi has starred in films like 'Rowdy Rathore', 'Son Of Sardaar', 'Holiday: A Soldier Is Never Off Duty', 'Lootera', 'Once Upon A Time In Mumbai Dobaara', 'R... Rajkumar', 'Action Jackson', 'Kalank' and 'Mission Mangal', among others. She was last seen in 'Bhuj: The Pride Of India', co-starring Ajay Devgn, Sanjay Dutt and Nora Fatehi. She will next be seen in the film 'Kakuda'. In terms of work, Salman Khan recently returned from Dubai, where he led the Da-Bangg tour. The actor's forthcoming projects include 'Kick 2', with Jacqueline Fernandez and 'Tiger 3' with Katrina Kaif. He also announced the second installment of 'Bajrangi Bhaijaan', last year. He was last seen as the host of the reality show 'Bigg Boss 15'. Salman is rumoured to be dating Iulia Vantur. The couple is often papped making joint appearances together. But they have never officially confirmed their relationship. On the other hand, Sonakshi Sinha is rumoured to be dating 'Notebook' star Zaheer Iqbal. Live TV Washington: Actor Joey King, known for her roles in the 'Kissing Booth' franchise and 'The Act', recently revealed that she has gotten engaged to her boyfriend, Steven Piet. The 22-year-old actor got engaged to Piet on February 2, she revealed on Instagram on Tuesday, sharing photos from the proposal. "I never knew happiness could be so powerful that it can take the air from your lungs, overwhelming every part of you that you can't help but feel your eyes well from the undeniable joy. I never knew that a persons presence and heart could feel like a real home. I never knew love could be so unquestionably beautiful. I never knew until you. The date was 2/2/22 when you asked me to marry you and made me the luckiest lady alive. I love you more than an Instagram caption could ever do justice. Hanging out with you forever sounds like a real dream, so let's do it," she wrote alongside a series of beautiful pictures. On his page, Piet wrote, "The weather was less than perfect. Cold. Windy. Perfectly imperfect to ask my best friend to spend a lifetime together. A lifetime of incredibly safe and vulnerable conversations. Holding hands on silent cab rides home, exhausted from great food and red wine. And oh, the laughter. The uncontrollable laughter." "You've unlocked a dimension of love in me that I never knew existed," he added.Piet served as a co-executive producer on King's 2019 Hulu limited series 'The Act', in which she played the real-life Gypsy Rose Blanchard, reported People magazine. Back in September 2019, Piet and King went public with their romance, stepping out for a fun date night at a Cinespia's screening of 'Harry Potter and The Chamber of Secrets' in Los Angeles. King, who previously dated 'Kissing Booth' co-star Jacob Elordi before breaking up in 2018, said in 2020 that she would never date another actor again. "No. I couldn't. I think that it`s awesome to date someone in your field, who gets it, but doing the same exact thing as somebody is tough. It's really tough," she said on SiriusXM's Howard Stern Show at the time. Live TV New Delhi: 7th Pay Commission latest news: Although the Narendra Modi government has not made any official announcements regarding the pending 18-months DA arrears and increase in fitment factor, media reports have been constantly igniting hope on the same for central government employees. According to reports in the media, the Modi government may announce a hike in the fitment factor of central and state employees which will in turn push the minimum wages of central employees higher. The central government employees unions have long been demanding for hiking minimum pay of Rs 18,000 to Rs 26,000 and fitment factor be raised from 2.57 times to 3.68 times. According to media reports, the fitment factor of central employees can be decided soon. This means that there will be a big increase in the basic salary of the government employees. If the government makes announcement regarding the hike in fitment factor of central employees, then their salary will consequently increase. In fact, with the increase in fitment factor, the minimum wage will also increase. Employees are currently getting salary under fitment factor on the basis of 2.57 percent, which if increased to 3.68 percent, there will be an increase of Rs 8,000 in the minimum salary of the employees. This means the minimum pay of the central government employees will be hiked from Rs 18,000 to Rs 26,000. Check out this assumptive salary calculation post the hike in fitment factor under 7th Pay Commission If the fitment factor is raised to 3.68, the basic salary of the employees will become Rs 26,000. Right now, if your minimum salary is Rs 18,000, then excluding allowances, you will be getting Rs 46,260 (18,000 X 2.57 = 46,260) according to the 2.57 fitment factor. Now, if the fitment factor is 3.68, then your salary will be Rs 95,680 (26000X3.68 = 95,680). The Union Cabinet had in June 2017 approved recommendations of the 7th Pay Commission with 34 modifications. The new scales of pay provided for entry-level basic pay going up from Rs 7,000 per month to Rs 18,000, while at the highest level i.e. Secretary, went up from Rs 90,000 to Rs 2.5 lakh. For Class 1 officers, the starting salary was at Rs 56,100. Central govt employees to get Rs 2 lakh as 18-months DA arrears in one go? Meanwhile, Several media reports have also been reporting that the Union Cabinet is contemplating to take the matter for discussion. A Zee Hindi report, quoting Shiv Gopal Mishra of the National Council of JCM, had previously mentioned that the DA arrears of Level-1 employees range from Rs 11,880 to Rs 37,554. Whereas, for Level-13 (7th CPC basic pay scale Rs 1,23,100 to Rs 2,15,900) or Level-14 (pay scale), the DA arrears in the hands of an employee will be Rs 1,44,200-2,18,200 that will be paid, quoted the reports. The report further adds that issues related to arrears were discussed between the National Council of JCM, Department of Personnel and Training (DoPT) and the Finance Minister. However, no concrete answer was received. The employees are still adamant on the demand and talks are on with the government reportedly. However, it is expected that soon this can be discussed with the Cabinet Secretary. According to the annual report of the Department of Expenditure, there are a total of 48 lakh central employees in the country and about 60 lakh pensioners. Live TV #mute New Delhi: Sex workers can now apply for Aadhaar Cards without residence proof or an identity card, provided they have a certificate issued by a gazetted officer of the health departments of the States. Sex workers can also apply for an Aadhaar Card if they have a certificate issued by an official working with the National AIDS Control Organisation (NACO), the Unique Identification Authority of India (UIDAI) told the Supreme Court on Monday, February 28. UIDAI informed the Supreme Court that no other domicile certificate will be asked from sex workers for issuing an Aadhaar card if they have the right certificate. Aadhaar Card has become one of the crucial documents required by Indian nationals for availing of several services offered by central and private companies. The document is also required to receive benefits under various state-sponsored schemes. An Aadhaar card contains the name, date of birth, biometric details, e-mail ID, and phone number, among others, of the cardholder. The 12 digit number is a digital identity of an Indian individual. UIDAI informed the Supreme Court that no other domicile certificate will be asked from sex workers for issuing Aadhaar cad if they have the right certificate. The authority will not ask for residential proof for issuing Aadhaar cards to sex workers. The matter was going in the Supreme Court since 2011. The Supreme Court was concerned about the lack of food security for lakhs of sex workers in India. The plight increased manifold with the pandemic. Also Read: 5 smartphone launches in March: OnePlus 10 Pro, iPhone SE 3, others to arrive in India UIDAI is a statutory authority established under the provisions of the Aadhaar (Targeted Delivery of Financial and Other Subsidies, Benefits and Services) Act, 2016. The agencys responsibilities include issuing the Aadhaar Card and making changes to the document. Also Read: Sensex plunges 778 points on escalating Russia-Ukraine tensions Live TV #mute New Delhi: Prime Minister Narendra Modi had released the 10th instalment under the Pradhan Mantri Kisan Samman Nidhi (PM-KISAN) Yojana in January 2022 via video conferencing. If farmers havent released the 10th PM Kisan instalment by now, they can file a complaint with the official authorities in a few simple steps. For the unversed, PM Kisan Yojana is a centre sponsored scheme aimed at providing a financial cushion to crores of poor and marginalised farmers in every nook and cranny of the country. Under the PM Kisan scheme, the Central government provides Rs 6000 annually. The sum is transferred directly to the bank accounts of the eligible farmers in three instalments of Rs 2000 each. So far, the Indian government has transferred more than Rs 20,000 crore directly into the bank accounts of above 9.5 lakh farmers in the country, according to a report by Economic Times. However, there are certain conditions that farmers are required to meet to receive the benefits. For instance, farmers are required to link their Aadhaar Card with PM Kisan accounts to receive the instalments of Rs 2000 in their bank accounts. Moreover, there can be several other factors due to which a farmer may have missed the instalment. Such farmers can visit the official PM Kisan website to find out what went wrong. Heres how to file a complaint if you havent received the PM KISAN instalment: - Eligible farmers are required to visit https://pmkisan.gov.in/ between Monday and Friday to file a complaint. - Farmers can also send file a complaint via email at pmkisan-ict@gov.in. or pmkisan-funds@gov.in. - Farmers can also register their complaints by calling the PM-Kisan Helpline No- 011-24300606/155261 or PM Kisans toll-free number 1800-115-526. Also Read: Aadhaar Card for Sex Workers: UIDAI eases rules; informs about special facility - Farmers can directly visit https://pmkisan.gov.in/Grievance.aspx to lodge a complaint. Also Read: India manufacturing PMI expands in February as output, new orders rise Live TV #mute About 100 Indian students stranded at the train station split into groups of 10 to board a train from the Ukrainian capital Kyiv to the city of Lviv where they would be safer, one of the students said on March 1. We realized no one is going to come to help us and it is up to us now, said 20-year-old Ashna Pandita over the phone as the train took them to the western city of Ukraine, about 80 km from the Poland border, where the fighting has been relatively less. We split into smaller groups and somehow managed to board the train," she added a day after the students from Taras Shevchenko National Medical University in Kyiv managed to escape from the back gate of their hostel and reach the Vokzal station, the capital's main train hub. Though they responded to an advisory from the Indian mission asking all students to make their way to the railway station for onward journey to the western part, the students alleged that officials had failed to provide any transportation to shift them to a safer location. Also read: DMRC to construct metro loop corridor with 4 metro stations under Central Vista project The advisory said Ukrainian railways are putting up special trains for evacuation but the reality on the ground was quite different, Ashna and her brother Ansh, who studies in the same college, said. The twins are from Ghaziabad. The group of 100 odd youths, including many women, were not allowed to board a train and Ukrainian guards thrashed some of them, they alleged. After they were pushed away from many trains, the students split into smaller groups and somehow managed to get on to the train to Lviv, where the officials of many embassies are stationed. The train was crowded and they could manage only standing space during the nine-hour journey. At least let us reach Kyiv, Ashna said tearfully, recounting their struggles to reach the station from a city that had run out of food and cash in ATMs and then the many hurdles to get on to a train. Left to their own devices, the students said they would either try to cross over to Poland or to the Hungary border, about 570 km from Lviv. On February 28, the train station was teeming with people. The Indian students sat huddled together, holding a large tricolour aloft so they could be recognized in the crowd and also so no one from the group got lost. The students had also issued a video appeal. Also read: Boeing suspends operations, maintenance and technical support services for Russian airlines "Indian embassy, we request you to evacuate us as soon as possible," Ansh Pandita said in the video as his friends looked on. Ashna, too, sent videos to family and friends at home. One showed a train with closed doors and shuttered windows. "This train didn't let us in. They closed the door on our faces. They pushed us out," she said. In another, students can be seen being pushed and chased away by guards. Back home in Ghaziabad, Ansh and Ashna's parents Anil and Sunita are frantic with worry. "My children are suffering. They have nothing to eat and the irony is that we can't do anything sitting here other than to appeal to the government to bring everyone back," Sunita said. Their worries have escalated after an Indian student from Karnataka was killed in shelling in Kharkiv city on the morning of March 1. "With profound sorrow, we confirm that an Indian student lost his life in shelling in Kharkiv this morning," the External Affairs Ministry said. The government is sending four Union ministers as the prime minister's envoys to Poland, Romania, Hungary, Slovakia, and Moldova to oversee the evacuation of Indians from Ukraine through its border crossings with these countries. With inputs from PTI Live TV #mute NEW DELHI: Bharatiya Janata Party (BJP) chief JP Nadda, who has been extensively campaigning for his party, has exuded confidence that his party will emerge victorious in the ongoing assembly elections in all major states, including Uttar Pradesh. Rejecting speculation that this election will not be a cakewalk for the ruling BJP in Uttar Pradesh, Nadda said that the party leadership remains confident of BJP winning 300 plus seats and Yogi Adityanath becoming the chief minister again. JP Nadda made these remarks while replying to some tough questions during an exclusive interview with Zee News Editor-In-Chief Sudhir Chaudhary in his popular prime time show DNA on Tuesday evening. During the interview, the BJP president spoke on the likely outcome of the keenly contested assembly elections, his partys performance, anti-incumbency, polarisation and the prospects of Yogi Adityanath becoming the chief minister again. When asked what if the BJP wins in UP but gets much fewer seats than before, will Yogi Adityanath would still become CM, Nadda said the party fought the elections under Yogi Adityanath and it remains confident of winning more than 300 seats. Nadda said no question of Yogi Adityanath not becoming UP CM arises but the final call will be taken by the BJP parliamentary board. When asked to comment on the likely outcome of these polls, Nadda said, The election is taking place in 5 states, we are in power in four, we are confident of retaining power. In Punjab, we are fighting on the maximum number of seats this time, we are about to improve our performance there. When quizzed about the Yogis popular 80 Vs 20 rhetoric which possibly saw the Muslims uniting and voting against BJP in the previous phases of polls, Nadda said, BJP never talks of division and disintegration, it talks of Sabka Saath, Sabka Vikas, Sabka Vishwas. We want to take everyone along. The BJP chief added, Our opponents have been spreading misinformation about us for a long time, trying to keep a section of the society separate from us, they are also successful, they are successful in elections, but our efforts are on. We never asked the religion of the beneficiaries of the Ayushmaan Bharat scheme. We always want to give rights to the poor. I hope sooner or later they will understand that BJP is working towards changing lives for the better. Replying to another question about BJP's social engineering failing against Akhilesh Yadavs social engineering in UP polls this time, Nadda said, The SP has always done social engineering. They are now with the RLD. They think it's Mathematics, they forget it's Chemistry actually. People no more vote on the directions of their 'thekedaars' (village heads, local leaders etc) anymore. They have their own thinking ability these days. They exercise their own will. The Congress and other parties have ruled by getting these thekedars in their favour, but it doesn't work anymore. People have their Chemistry set with PM Narendra Modi. When asked as to who would take the credit or the blame for the final poll outcome, Nadda said, We think collectively, we work collectively. We celebrate victories, we acknowledge defeats as well. PM Narendra Modi is the top leader of our party - we are using his popularity in every state. The Chief Ministers are implementing party and centre's development agenda in their respective states effectively. I have the responsibility of keeping the party cadre encouraged. In such a situation, if results come up in our favour, the credit would obviously go to PM Narendra Modi. If we fell short, I will be responsible. The BJP chief made these remarks just as the ongoing assembly polls, which began from western Uttar Pradesh, now enters the heartland of Purvanchal. It may be noted that CM Yogi Adityanaths own turf - Gorakhpur and the surrounding region - goes to the polls on March 3 in phase 6. In this phase, a lot will depend on how Mayawati-led BSP performs in the region that has traditionally been defined by Dalit and backward caste politics. In phase 6, polls will be held in UP in 57 assembly constituencies across 10 districts of Balrampur, Siddharthnagar, Maharajganj, Kushinagar, Basti, Sant Kabir Nagar, Ambedkar Nagar, Gorakhpur, Deoria and Ballia. Live TV KYIV: On the seventh day of Russia's invasion of Ukraine, Ukrainian President Volodymyr Zelenskyy on Wednesday said almost 6,000 Russians have been in 6 days of the war. Reuters quoted Zelenskiy as saying even as the Russian airborne troops landed in Ukraines second-largest city of Kharkiv, which is under intense shelling for the past few days. Ukraine's President Volodymyr Zelenskyy says almost 6000 Russians killed in 6 days of war: Reuters (file pic) pic.twitter.com/n3yF1AjC35 ANI (@ANI) March 2, 2022 The city mayor said at least 21 people were killed and 112 wounded in shelling in the last 24 hours. Earlier in the day, US President Joe Biden vowed to make Vladimir Putin pay a price for Russias invasion of Ukraine in his first State of the Union address. Announcing that the US is banning Russia from its airspace, Biden said the Russian president met with a wall of strength in Ukraine. Bidens comments come as Russian forces escalated their attacks on crowded urban areas Tuesday, bombarding the central square in Ukraines second-biggest city and Kyivs main TV tower. Despite pressure and sanctions, Russia said that it will pursue the Ukraine offensive until 'all goals' are achieved, the defence minister was quoted by AFP. Russian forces escalated their attacks on crowded urban areas Tuesday, bombarding the central square in Ukraine's second-biggest city and Kyiv's main TV tower in what the country's President called a blatant campaign of terror. "Nobody will forgive. Nobody will forget," President Volodymyr Zelenskyy vowed after the bloodshed on the square in Kharkiv. Meanwhile, a 40-mile convoy of hundreds of Russian tanks and other vehicles advanced slowly on Kyiv, the capital city of nearly 3 million people, in what the West feared was a bid by Russian President Vladimir Putin to topple the government and install a Kremlin-friendly regime. The invading forces also pressed their assault on other towns and cities, including the strategic ports of Odesa and Mariupol in the south. Day 6 of the biggest ground war in Europe since World War II found Russia increasingly isolated, beset by the sanctions that have thrown its economy into turmoil and left the country practically friendless, apart from a few nations like China, Belarus and North Korea. As the fighting in Ukraine raged, the death toll remained unclear. One senior Western intelligence official estimated that more than 5,000 Russian soldiers had been captured or killed. Ukraine gave no overall estimate of troop losses. The UN human rights office said it has recorded 136 civilian deaths. The real toll is believed to be far higher. Britain's Defence Ministry said it had seen an increase in Russian air and artillery strikes on populated urban areas over the past two days. It also said three cities - Kharkiv, Kherson and Mariupol - were encircled by Russian forces. Many military experts worry that Russia may be shifting tactics. Moscow's strategy in Chechnya and Syria was to use artillery and air bombardments to pulverize cities and crush fighters' resolve. Ukrainian authorities said five people were killed in the attack on the TV tower, which is a couple of miles from central Kyiv and a short walk from numerous apartment buildings. A TV control room and power substation were hit, and at least some Ukrainian channels briefly stopped broadcasting, officials said. The bombing came after Russia announced it would target transmission facilities used by Ukraine's intelligence agency. It urged people living near such places to leave their homes. Zelenskyy's office also reported a powerful missile attack on the site of the Babi Yar Holocaust memorial, near the tower. A spokesman for the memorial said a Jewish cemetery at the site, where Nazi occupiers killed more than 33,000 Jews over two days in 1941, was damaged, but the extent would not be clear until daylight. In Kharkiv, with a population of about 1.5 million, at least six people were killed when the region's Soviet-era administrative building on Freedom Square was hit with what was believed to be a missile. The Slovenian Foreign Ministry said its consulate in Kharkiv, located in another large building on the square, was destroyed in the attack. The entrance to the consulate was between a jewellery store and a bank. The attack on Freedom Square, Ukraine's largest plaza, and the nucleus of public life in the city ? was seen by many Ukrainians as brazen evidence that the Russian invasion wasn't just about hitting military targets but also about breaking their spirit. The bombardment blew out windows and walls of buildings that ring the massive square, which was piled high with debris and dust. Inside one building, chunks of plaster were scattered, and doors, ripped from their hinges, lay across hallways. Zelenskyy pronounced the attack on the square "frank, undisguised terror'' and a war crime. This is state terrorism of the Russian Federation, he said. In an emotional appeal to the European Parliament later, Zelenskyy said, ''We are fighting also to be equal members of Europe. I believe that today we are showing everybody that is what we are." Another Russian airstrike hit a residential area near a hospital in the city of Zhytomyr, Mayor Serih Sukhomlin said in a Facebook video. Ukrainians have so far used whatever they had to try to stop the Russian advance. On a highway between Odesa and Mykolaiv in southern Ukraine, residents piled tractor tires filled with sand and topped with sandbags to block convoys. Live TV How can you prevent DDoS attacks from plaguing your organization? In 2021, an attack targeted the Belgium Government, which is host of the European Union Headquarters. EU Parliament meetings were disrupted and 200+ Belgian government institutions were affected. This white paper explores: The growth and trends of DDoS attacks and how they impact businesses How to protect applications deployed in cloud, multi-cloud, datacenter, or hybrid environments 6 considerations of an effective DDoS defense of an effective DDoS defense And more Access this white paper for a comprehensive look at how you can protect yourself from DDoS attacks. Brussels: The European Commission on Wednesday proposed granting automatic temporary protection for up to three years to people fleeing the war in Ukraine, including a residence permit and access to employment and social welfare. European Union members Poland, Romania, Slovakia and Hungary all have land borders with Ukraine and the Commission said that more than 650,000 people have fled there since Ukraine was invaded by Russia on Feb. 24. Refugees will get temporary protection as soon as the proposal is approved by EU interior ministers, which the European Commission hoped would be done on Thursday. The protective measure, including access to housing and medical assistance, will be granted without having to go through lengthy asylum procedures. It can last for up to three years - unless the situation in Ukraine improves sufficiently for people to be able to return home and the scheme to end. "All those fleeing Putin`s bombs are welcome in Europe," European Commission chief Ursula von der Leyen said. "We will provide protection to those seeking shelter and we will help those looking for a safe way home." In practice, this means everyone, independently of their nationality, is to be allowed to enter EU countries. Temporary protection would apply to Ukrainian nationals as well as foreign nationals who are long-term residents in Ukraine and those who were already benefiting from international protection or asylum seeker status there. Those on short-term stays in Ukraine and who can safely go return to their country of origin will not be eligible for special EU protection including a residency permit. This will usually be the case for students, a Commission official said. Asked about social media reports that some African nationals suffered discrimination and hold-ups when trying to leave Ukraine or get into the EU, Commission officials said they had told border authorities that everyone should be let through. "We are making sure that there are safe passages for all who would like to cross the borders," European Council President Charles Michel said after meeting Polish Prime Minister Mateusz Morawiecki, not far from the frontier with Ukraine. Cities under siege across Ukraine are home to tens of thousands of African students studying medicine, engineering and military affairs. Many of those fleeing have met long waits at the border after harrowing journeys. Live TV India on Wednesday supported the international community's call for an immediate ceasefire after abstaining on a UN General Assembly resolution that strongly deplored Russia's aggression against Ukraine, the third abstention in less than a week by the country in the world body on resolutions on the escalating crisis between Moscow and Kyiv. The 193-member General Assembly Wednesday voted to reaffirm its commitment to the sovereignty, independence, unity and territorial integrity of Ukraine within its internationally recognized borders and deplores in the strongest terms Russia's aggression against Ukraine. The resolution was adopted with 141 votes in favour, five Member States voting against and 35 abstentions. The General Assembly broke into an applause as the resolution was adopted. The resolution required a 2/3 majority to be adopted in the General Assembly. The resolution also condemned Russia's decision to increase the readiness of its nuclear forces and deplores the involvement of Belarus in this unlawful use of force against Ukraine, and calls upon it to abide by its international obligations. The resolution urges the immediate peaceful resolution of the conflict between Russia and Ukraine through political dialogue, negotiations, mediation and other peaceful means. Delivering a statement after the vote, Indian Ambassador to the UN T S Tirumurti said that India has been deeply concerned over the rapidly deteriorating situation in Ukraine and the ensuing humanitarian crisis. "We remain firm in our conviction that differences can only be solved through dialogue and diplomacy," he said, adding that India supported the international community's call for immediate ceasefire. Tirumurti told the General Assembly that an Indian national has been tragically killed in Kharkiv due to the ongoing hostilities. "We express our deepest condolences to his family and to that of each and every innocent civilian who has lost his or her life in this conflict. "We demand safe and uninterrupted passage for all Indian nationals, including our students who are still stranded in Ukraine, particularly from Kharkiv and other cities in the conflict zones. Many member states share this concern," he said. Nearly 100 UN Member States co-sponsored the resolution titled Aggression Against Ukraine', including Afghanistan, Canada, France, Germany, Ireland, Kuwait, Singapore, Turkey, Ukraine, the United Kingdom and the United States. Live TV Birmingham: As the Russia-Ukraine fighting rages on, the world now fears that President Vladimir Putin might turn to the vast stockpile of nuclear weapons without any great concern? Ahead of the Russian invasion of Ukraine, Putin dropped some pretty big hints that he is prepared to cross that strategic Rubicon. Just days before ordering the military invasion of Ukraine, Russia and its closest ally Belarus were engaged in nuclear exercises. In announcing the invasion itself, Putin pointedly referred to Russia's standing as one of the most powerful nuclear powers in the world. The Russian President seemed to reserve the nuclear option as a response to a direct attack on our country. But he warned ominously that those who try to hinder us in Ukraine could face consequences greater than any you have faced in history. Russia, it was feared, might also take pre-emptive measures. In his broadcast to the Russian people on February 21, Putin also suggested falsely that the Ukrainian leadership was seeking to obtain its own nuclear arms. Anxieties over Putin's intentions were raised further shortly after Russia's invasion was launched. Russia's nuclear forces, Putin declared on February 27, had been placed on high alert. This, the Russian President claimed, was a response to aggressive statements against our country by senior officials of leading NATO nations countries. Speculation on that occasion focused on how the Russian leadership had become spooked by the severity of economic sanctions and slow progress on the battlefield. Was Putin's order a distraction, as described by Ben Wallace the UK defence secretary, or was it, more worryingly, indicative of the actions Putin might resort to if he was staring defeat in the face. Part of the answer to these questions lies in Russian military strategy. Known positions allow us to make certain assumptions about how Russia might use nuclear weapons. In this light, it is useful to differentiate between strategic and sub-strategic (tactical-operational) nuclear weapons. Strategic nuclear weapons fulfil two major roles. First, they act as a deterrent, as the ultimate guarantee of survival in the face of an existential threat to the Russian state, including a decapitating strike by another nuclear power. Second, this category of weapon helps Moscow wage war under favourable conditions. The mere threat of using strategic nuclear capabilities provides a powerful tool to keep unwanted parties out of a conflict, so allowing Russia to pursue active military operations by other means. Sub-strategic nuclear weapons, meanwhile, have played a changing role in Russian military doctrine. During the 1990s and early 2000s, these capabilities were at the centre of Russia's military posture as Moscow tried to compensate for the structural deficiencies of its conventional forces. Some Russian strategists suggested that limited nuclear use was a rational proposition. It would turn the tide in a war where NATOs conventional force superiority might otherwise have delivered victory to the alliance. The sweeping programme of defence reforms launched in 2008 restored Russia's conventional power and relegated the role of tactical-operational nuclear weapons. Recently a debate has emerged around the so-called escalate to de-escalate doctrine, according to which Russia might use tactical nuclear weapons early on in a conflict in order to achieve a quick victory. This hypothesis, however, rests on shaky grounds. Russian statements offer no definitive evidence that such a position actually exists in its military doctrine. It is also based on two false premises: that conventional force is inadequate (perhaps once the case, but no longer) and that nuclear retaliation is unlikely (this can never be assumed in the harsh world of nuclear deterrence). Two additional features of Russian military thinking are also worth noting. The first is the categorisation of war across four levels. These are armed conflicts of a limited scale (mainly applicable to civil wars) as well as local, regional, and large-scale wars, each of which sucks in different configurations of states and their allies. All involve higher stakes and call for growing military commitment. Second and related, the Russian military seems to be acting on the basis of a rather precise, yet static, escalation ladder. Nuclear use appears quite late in such a ladder and is inextricably linked with the risk of Armageddon. This is the one scenario that Russia is actually afraid of. Both these observations point to nuclear use as a last resort. Implications for Ukraine By alluding to a disproportionate nuclear escalation, Moscow wants to limit (or even reverse) western interference in Ukraine, in order to make the Russian war effort more sustainable. The west's most powerful weapon at present is sanctions rather than military intervention. This carries its own risks. If such measures were really to cause the near-term collapse of the Russian economy and threaten the very survival of the domestic order, the Russian elite might come to perceive that existential threat as making victory vital in Ukraine, at all costs. In these circumstances, a limited nuclear strike to demonstrate resolve or to break Ukrainian resistance would not be inconceivable. It is crucial, therefore, that sanctions remain geared toward ending Russia's war effort, not to unseating the Putin regime. But these scenarios remain far off. From a purely military perspective, today's war in Ukraine lies between the local and the regional level, according to the Russian taxonomy. Neither calls for the employment of tactical-operational nuclear weapons on Ukrainian targets. In the near future, the continued Ukrainian ability to resist the Russian invasion will more likely be met with an incremental increase of Russian personnel and conventional firepower, targeting civilian infrastructure. And beyond, we should not assume nuclear weapons come next. US officials have also warned of Russia's readiness to resort to chemical and biological warfare. The Russian military has plenty of unsavoury means to pursue victory in Ukraine. Live TV KYIV: The Ukraine military says Russian paratroopers have landed in its besieged second-largest city Kharkiv, according to BBC news service. The Russian troops have parachuted into Kharkiv stepping up an attack on Ukraine`s second-largest city which saw dozens of civilian killings in bombings on Tuesday. According to the Ukrainian military, the aerial assault began just as air raid sirens were starting to sound in Kharkiv and the surrounding region. The statement added that the Russian troops attacked a regional military hospital and that fighting is ongoing, BBC reported. Kharkiv has been the epicentre of much of the violence seen in Ukraine in recent days. At least 21 people have been killed and 112 wounded in shelling in the eastern Ukrainian city of Kharkiv in the last 24 hours, regional governor Oleg Synegubov said on Wednesday. The authorities have said that Russian missile attacks hit the centre of Ukraine`s second-largest city, including residential areas and the regional administration building. On Tuesday, a missile struck the local government headquarters of Ukraine`s second-largest city around 08.00 local time, sending a massive fireball into the sky and burning cars and nearby buildings. Another strike occurred later on Tuesday in one of Kharkiv`s residential neighbourhoods. Ukrainian President Zelensky later called the attack ''a war crime.'' At least 17 people were killed in Kharkiv on Tuesday, and dozens were wounded, according to emergency officials. Some pundits have speculated that the artillery strikes on residential communities could be an effort by Russia to weaken the Ukrainian resolve to fight, BBC reported. The smaller southern city of Kherson has also fallen to Russian forces, local Ukrainian officials say. The frontline cities of Kharkiv, Sumy and Mariupol are still holding out against the Russian invasion. Meanwhile, the huge convoy of Russian armoured vehicles is now about 15 miles northwest of the capital Kyiv. Live TV Kyiu: Ukraine`s besieged cities were bracing for more attacks on Wednesday as Russian commanders facing fierce Ukrainian resistance intensify their bombardment of urban areas in a push toward the capital Kyiv. Already shunned by the West over its nearly week-long invasion of Ukraine, Russia has shown no sign of stopping an assault that has included strikes on Kyiv and rocket attacks in the second city of Kharkiv. Dozens have been killed. Facing emboldened Ukrainian troops bolstered by citizens taking up arms, Russia has failed to capture a single city since its full-scale invasion began nearly a week ago. Western analysts say Russia has fallen back on tactics that call for devastating built-up areas before entering them. Hundreds of thousands of Ukrainians have fled the fighting as a miles-long Russian military convoy north of Kyiv advances toward the city. West of Kyiv, in the city of Zhytomyr, four people, including a child, were killed on Tuesday by a Russian cruise missile, a Ukrainian official said on Wednesday. Russian President Vladimir Putin has drawn global condemnation and sanctions that have sent the rouble to historic lows and forced Russians to queue outside banks for their savings. Putin ordered the "special military operation" last Thursday in a bid to disarm Ukraine, capture the "neo-Nazis" he says are running the country and pull it firmly into Russia`s orbit and away from the United States and its NATO partners. Ukraine, which is not a member of the military alliance, has called on NATO to implement a no-fly zone - a request rejected by the US, which fears stoking a direct conflict between the world`s two biggest nuclear powers. Washington and its allies have instead sent weapons to Kyiv, and Treasury Secretary Janet Yellen said the U.S. had agreed with partners to convene a task force "to freeze and seize the assets of key Russian elites". The move "will inflict financial pain on the powerful individuals surrounding Putin and make clear that no one is beyond our collective reach," Yellen said in a statement following a Tuesday call with Group of Seven officials. `STOP BOMBING PEOPLE` The West has imposed heavy sanctions on Russia to shut off its economy from the global financial system, pushing international companies to halt sales, cut ties, and dump tens of billions of dollars` worth of investments. Western countries have moved to ban Russian planes from their airspace, and US President Joe Biden was expected to announce a similar ban during his State of the Union speech on Tuesday night in Washington, a source familiar with the situation said. The heaviest Russian bombardment so far appeared to be around Kharkiv, a city near the border with Russia that is Ukraine`s second largest. A Russian strategic bomber fired 16 high-precision guided missiles toward a residential area of Kharkiv on Monday, Ukraine`s defence ministry said. "According to preliminary data, dozens of Kharkiv residents, including children, died from these airstrikes," the ministry said on its Facebook page. In Ukraine`s largely Russian-speaking city of Donetsk, in territory controlled by Russian-backed separatists, local authorities said three civilians had been killed by Ukrainian shelling. The self-declared Donetsk People`s Republic, recognised as independent by Moscow last week, was one of the transit points used by Russian forces that invaded Ukraine. Reuters was not able to confirm any of the incidents of reports of casualties. The United Nations` human rights chief says over 100 civilians have been killed in the invasion, but feared the real number of people is much higher. Russian and Ukrainian negotiators met over a ceasefire on Monday but talks broke down with no further rounds yet announced. Ukrainian President Volodymyr Zelenskiy said on Monday that Russia must "first stop bombing people" before talks could make any headway. Zelenskiy, who has been staying in a heavily guarded government compound in Kyiv, warns that the capital remains Russia`s main target. Residents have been sheltering in underground metro stations at night for fear of attacks. "We resist the invasive aggression," Zelenskiy wrote on Twitter late on Tuesday, after thanking Western leaders for their support. "Today, more than ever, it is important for us to feel that we are not alone." New Delhi: The United States government is mulling over imposing a ban on Russian flights from American airspace, government and industry officials told Reuters. The development comes after similar moves were taken by the European Union and Canada. According to the report, the precise timing is unclear but is expected within the next 24 hours, the sources said. Biden (US President) to ban Russian aircraft from US airspace, reports AFP News Agency quoting US media ANI (@ANI) March 2, 2022 Earlier, on Tuesday, United Airlines said it has temporarily suspended flying over Russian airspace, joining other major U.S. carriers who have taken the step after Russia`s invasion of Ukraine. The report also added that the White House has declined to comment on this development right now, but has held extensive talks with US airlines in recent days. United had been continuing to fly over Russian airspace to operate some flights to and from India in recent days. Delta Air Lines, American Airlines and United Parcel Service all confirmed this week they had halted flights over Russia. FedEx on Tuesday did not respond to emails asking if it has stopped flying over Russia. United is canceling two flights to India for Tuesday and Wednesday as it evaluates how it could continue to operate via a different route that does not use Russian airspace. White House officials had privately asked if the move would harm US supply chains or have other negative impacts, sources told Reuters. EU nations consider to ban Russian ships from ports Meanwhile, the European Union countries are also considering a ban on Russian ships entering the bloc's ports, aiming to tighten sea restrictions after a halt on air traffic, said officials. EU nations considering banning Russian ships from ports, reports Reuters quoting officials ANI (@ANI) March 1, 2022 On Monday, Britain already decided to deny entry to British ports to all ships that are Russian owned, operated, controlled, chartered, registered or flagged. The UK was followed by Canada on Tuesday, as the country said it would shut its ports to Russian-owned ships later this week, a day after it banned Russian crude oil imports. Additionally, Denmark's foreign ministry said EU foreign ministers discussed closing European ports to Russian ships on Sunday. "Denmark is actively working for the EU to make a common decision to close its ports to Russian vessels," the foreign ministry said in an emailed comment to Reuters. "We have already decided to close the Danish airspace to Russian aircraft. At the same time, we are open to looking at new initiatives in collaboration with our European partners." (With agency inputs) Live TV Moscow: Russia's invasion of Ukraine has entered its seventh day on Wednesday, with a huge deployment of Russian tanks and armoured vehicles surrounding the capital, Kyiv, and heavy shelling there and in other big cities. While the international community has announced several stringent measures to punish Russia for its invasion of Ukraine, Moscow has hit back saying, its key security demands have not been made by the West, especially the US that could have avoided the bloodshed. What are the key Russian demands in the war with Ukraine? In his first public comments since December about the brewing Russia-Ukraine crisis, Putin slammed the US and the West for not meeting his key demands to avoid a full-scale military conflict with Ukraine that has now threatened European security. Russias Foreign Ministry had released the eight-point draft treaty in December last year along with a warning that "ignoring its interests would lead to a military response similar to the Cuban missile crisis of 1962. 1. Russian leader put forward a highly contentious list of security guarantees that Moscow wants the West to agree to in order to lower tensions in Europe and defuse the crisis over Ukraine. In a joint news conference with Hungarian Prime Minister Viktor Orban following their meeting in the Kremlin, Putin said that the West has ignored Russia's demands that NATO not expand to Ukraine and other ex-Soviet countries. 2. Another key demand from Russia is that NATO should limit its deployment of troops and weapons to the alliance's eastern flank, in effect returning the allied forces to where they were stationed in 1997, before an eastward expansion, which would include much of eastern Europe, including Poland, the former Soviet countries of Estonia, Lithuania, Latvia, and the Balkan countries. 3. President Putin further said that Moscow wants a guarantee from Ukraine that it will not enter the US-led NATO. 4. Russia has also demanded that NATO rule out further expansion, including the accession of Ukraine into the alliance, and that it does not hold drills without previous agreement from Russia in Ukraine, Eastern Europe, in Caucasus countries such as Georgia or in Central Asia. 5. Moscow also calls for the two countries US & Russia - to pull back any short- or medium-range missile systems out of reach, replacing the previous intermediate-range nuclear forces (INF) treaty that the US left in 2018. Vladimir Putin has demanded that the West provide Russia with legal guarantees of its security. What is happening in Ukraine and how are NATO allies reacting? Day 7th of the biggest ground war in Europe since World War II has found Russia increasingly isolated. Western officials believe Russian President Vladimir Putin wants to overthrow Ukraine's government and replace it with a compliant regime, reviving Moscow's Cold War-era influence. The United States and European Union have levied sanctions on Russia's biggest banks and its elite, frozen the assets of the country's Central Bank located outside the country, and excluded its financial institutions from the SWIFT bank messaging system, but have largely allowed its oil and natural gas to continue to flow freely to the rest of the world. Sanctions experts expect Russia to try to mitigate the impact of the financial penalties by relying on energy sales and leaning on the country's reserves in gold and Chinese currency. Putin also is expected to move funds through smaller banks and accounts of elite families not covered by the sanctions, deal in cryptocurrency and rely on Russia's relationship with China. With Russia playing such an outsized role in global energy markets as the third-largest oil producer, the International Energy Agency's 31 member countries agreed on Tuesday to release 60 million barrels of oil from their strategic reserves, half of that from the United States, to send a strong message to oil markets, that supplies won't fall short due to the invasion. Canada's foreign minister, Melanie Joly, said Tuesday that her country will refer Russia to the International Criminal Court for crimes against humanity and war crimes over the Ukraine invasion. The move will speed up an investigation by the court's top prosecutor. The fighting in Ukraine The Russian military has shelled several key sites in Kyiv and in the country's second-largest city, Kharkiv, killing at least 11 people and wounding dozens of others. Among the major sites hit were Kyiv's main TV tower and holocaust memorial. Although Ukrainian forces still control Kharkiv and the coastal cities of Kherson and Mariupol, all three are encircled, according to the UK Ministry of Defense. What's happening in Ukraine's major cities? Russian shelling struck central Kharkiv's Freedom Square just after sunrise Tuesday, badly damaging a regional administration building and other structures, and killing at least six people and wounding dozens of others, Ukrainian officials said. It was the first time the Russian military hit the center of the city of 1.5 million people, though shells have been hitting residential neighbourhoods for days. Ukrainian President Volodymyr Zelenskyy blamed a Russian missile and called the attack a war crime, It's frank, undisguised terror. ... Nobody will forgive. Nobody will forget. Hours later, Russian shelling struck Kyiv's main TV tower and holocaust memorial, killing five people and injuring five others, according to Ukrainian officials. The blast knocked TV broadcasts off the air for a short time. Where is that massive Russian convoy? The Russian military convoy threatening Kyiv and its nearly 3 million residents is far bigger than initially thought, with satellite images showing it occupying much of a 40-mile (64-kilometre) stretch of road north of the capital. The convoy was no more than 17 miles (25 kilometres) from the city centre on Monday, according to satellite imagery from the Maxar company. How many people have fled Ukraine? The UN refugee agency said Tuesday that about 660,000 people have fled Ukraine for neighbouring countries since the invasion began. Agency spokeswoman Shabia Mantoo said, At this rate, the situation looks set to become Europe's largest refugee crisis this century. UN High Commissioner for Refugees Filippo Grandi has said the UN expects the total to reach 4 million in the coming weeks. Poland has seen the most refugees, with Hungary, Romania and Moldova also accepting tens of thousands. Germany's national train company issued a special free ticket for Ukrainian refugees to reach relatives. What's happening to the Russian economy? Sanctions are going to cause the Russian economy to collapse, French Finance Minister Bruno Le Maire told France Info radio on Tuesday. Nations have blocked some Russian banks from the SWIFT international payment system and are restricting Russia's use of its massive foreign currency reserves. Russia's central bank has taken drastic steps to prop up the plunging Ruble but foreign investment is flooding out of the country. Russian Prime Minister Mikhail Mishustin said Tuesday that the government had readied measures to temporarily restrict foreign investors from divesting Russian assets, saying the step would help them make a considered decision rather than succumb to political pressure of sanctions. Oil companies such as BP and Shell have pulled out of their stakes in Russian energy ventures. Norwegian Oil and Gas, an association for oil and supplier companies in the world's third-largest natural gas exporter, followed suit Tuesday by suspending two Russian companies. And the French energy conglomerate TotalEnergies said it wouldn't fund any new projects in Russia, but it stopped short of abandoning its holdings there. Apple announced that it stopped selling its iPhone and other products in Russia as part of a corporate crackdown over the invasion of Ukraine. Other major tech companies have also curtailed their business in Russia, but Apple's actions could particularly sting because its products are prized by many consumers and businesses. Live TV While it's fair to say most marketers are on-board with the importance of content marketing, there's still an aspect of marketing that doesn't get as much love: context marketing. Whether you know what context marketing means or not, I'm willing to bet you want to deliver the right campaigns to the right customers at the right time. Thats what context marketing is all about. Here, we're going to introduce the concept of context marketing and dive into strategies you can use to implement it into your overall marketing strategy. What is context marketing? Context marketing is the process of delivering marketing content such as blog posts, offers, emails, and advertisements to customers at a specific point in their buyers journey. Timing and specificity is critical for context marketing to work. My favorite context marketing definition is delivering the right content, to the right people, at the right time. Let me explain what I mean by context a little more, though. When you have context around something, you have a larger, more telling picture you know, those little details that lend more clarity to things that would otherwise be pretty general, unspecific, and, well, uninteresting. The best marketers leverage context about their audience, leads, and customers in their content marketing. They create audience profiles and buyer personas and use that information to create more effective marketing and advertising campaigns. Now that we have a basic understanding of context marketing, you might be wondering what the difference is between content marketing and context marketing. Lets take a look below. Content vs Context Marketing Content is the material you deliver to your customers: blog posts, articles, offers, newsletters, emails, campaigns, and advertisements. Context refers to the timing and circumstances surrounding your delivery of this content. A marketer using context would know more about a lead than her first name. They might also know what industry she works in, what kind of content she likes best, through which channel she prefers to consume content, whether she's currently using another solution to meet her needs, and whether her company has budget at this time of year. As a marketer, if you were asked to "market" to someone, and all you were given was a first name and the type of company your lead works at, wouldn't your first question be ... what else do we know about her? Probably, if you want to do your job way better. That's the idea behind context marketing: Using what you know about your contacts to provide supremely relevant, targeted, and personalized marketing. Why is context marketing important? Context marketing is important for many reasons, but there are two top ones that make its importance even more salient. Lets go over them below. Context marketing converts better. When you're creating marketing that's targeted at people's point of need, it stands to reason that marketing will perform much better for you, because you aren't delivering marketing content that's misaligned with their interests or stage in the buyers journey. Think about it: If you know that a B2B lead is getting a new budget in January and it's December, you're able to send her insanely targeted content that addresses her needs like, say, an offer for a custom demo of your product with a rep that specializes in the finance industry. That's content that she's pretty likely to convert on, especially if she's downloaded a buying guide and visited your product pages. Hot tip: Keeping track of your prospects activity using marketing automation software will make context marketing easier. Youll know which products your prospect is most interested in and how many times theyve visited your website. Context marketing increases retention. When you have context around your relationship with a contact, you're able to provide more personalized and relevant marketing content that's targeted to their needs. This is great for two reasons: Personalized and relevant marketing is the foundation for creating content people love and engage with. What's more, personalized and relevant marketing is typically not the kind of marketing that annoys people into clicking "unsubscribe". If they feel like youre out to solve their problems specifically, customers are much more likely to stay with you. Why not use the context around your relationships with your contacts to create marketing that they love and convert on? Lets take a look at how you can get started. How to Start Context Marketing Alright, how does this "context marketing" theory manifest itself? What would it look like for you, as a marketer? With the help of marketing automation software, here are some examples of where you'd actually use the principle of "context" in your marketing. 1. Create specific offers for specific posts and pages. One easy way you can start context marketing? Create offers that extend the value of your website. Bonus points if these offers answer a specific pain point or problem that a customer is trying to solve for when visiting that page. Most blog posts in HubSpots library feature an offer thats directly related to the topic of the article. For instance, in our blog post about creating a marketing plan, you can download a marketing plan template which is something that someone wanting to create a marketing plan might need. Come up with content offers that will benefit your readers and website visitors depending on the page theyre visiting. For instance, if you sell hiking shoes and youre writing a blog post about going on a solo hiking trip, you might feature an offer for downloading a solo hiking checklist. 2. Add smart calls-to-action (CTAs) to your website. You can take personalized offers to the next level by featuring smart calls-to-action. Lets say you have a variety of offers you want to use to convert traffic into leads, leads into qualified leads, and qualified leads into customers. To increase your lead conversion rates, you probably don't want leads visiting a case study webpage (typically an action you'd perform further along in your buyer's journey), and finding a CTA leading them to a blog post (which is meant for people earlier in the buyer's journey). However, not everyone who visits a case study page on your website is necessarily ready to talk to a salesperson. You don't want to turn them away, either, by offering a CTA that's too pushy. Fortunately, with smart CTAs, you can actually surface a CTA that automatically aligns with the visitor's stage in the sales cycle ... or any other host of criteria you want to set. Think industry, business type, location, and past activity/behaviors. For instance, if you have already downloaded an offer from HubSpot, you might see this CTA on certain social-media-related posts: But if you havent downloaded an offer before, youll see the default CTA: This type of smart content can help you capture your audiences information at all stages of their buyers journey. Hot tip: HubSpots marketing automation software lets you easily create a smart calls-to-action with little technical knowledge. 3. Create smart forms that shorten the conversion cycle. Smart forms know if someone has already filled out the form fields you're asking for. If you use smart forms, for instance, your site visitors won't see "First Name" and "Last Name" every time they fill out a form instead, they'll answer those questions once, and then never again. This will help you glean new information about your leads each time they fill out a form, instead of just more of the same stuff. It also helps you create a more seamless, personalized user experience that leverages prior interactions with your website as context. Heres one example from HubSpot Academy. This is what I see when Im logged into the HubSpot CRM: The form knows Im a current HubSpot customer and doesnt require me to create a new account. I only have to click one button: Start the Course. But this is what I see when Im not logged in: Ultimately, smart forms will help you gather even more context about your visitors, leads, and customers, and help increase conversion rates over time. Hot tip: You can easily create smart forms inside HubSpots marketing automation software. 4. Leverage dynamic email content and workflows. Your forms and offers aren't the only things that need to be smart. Your email database especially if you want to maintain your space in people's coveted inboxes needs to be segmented into highly targeted lists, as well. I happen to be subscribed to Grammarly emails on both my work and personal emails. Because I only use the Grammarly Chrome extension at work, I receive emails like this: In my personal account, however, I use Grammarlys web app regularly and review thousands of words for a personal project. Heres the email I get: Throughout the email, Grammarly prompts you to upgrade to the premium version and take advantage of its other tools. Because I dont use the Chrome extension in my personal email account, it includes a call-to-action to install the extension. Its delightful to receive an email that uses my account activity as context. Beyond email segmentation, your email lists need to be smart enough to know when to pull in a contact, and certain information you have in your database about that contact, into your email marketing campaigns. Remember, a great context marketer delivers the right content, to the right person, at the right time. So to send emails that are contextually relevant, you need to use their activity and background to deliver personalized content that delights them and prompts them to convert. Context Marketing Examples While context marketing may sound complicated, its actually quite simple in practice. In fact, as a customer, you may have seen or enjoyed context marketing yourself. Lets take a look at some examples. 1. Googles Product Ads Carousel Have you ever looked up a product on Google and see a carousel at the top (as opposed to just the plain search results)? The products you see are typically ads for the exact same thing you searched for. This is a prime contextual marketing example. Google uses your behavior and search query to deliver ads that are contextually relevant. Imagine if, when searching for instant coffee, Google delivers ads for french presses instead. While you might be interested in French presses and even searched for them before, youre looking for instant coffee right now. Thats why its important to answer for your customers specific pain points and queries, and to do so at the right time. And you dont have to be a highly sophisticated search engine to do so. Remember those offers we spoke about in the previous sections? That can function in the same way as Googles product carousels. 2. Asanas New Feature Pop-Up Theres no more powerful place to carry out contextual marketing than right within your own product, website, or store. Asanas example shows that you can upsell customers easily by marketing a new feature and prompting them to try it for free. This is an excellent example of contextual marketing because you wouldnt be interested in trying this new feature unless you were a current Asana user. For instance, if Asana had placed this pop-up on their homepage, they likely wouldnt have much success with it. But because it pops up after you log in, youre more likely to say, Sure, Ill try it. You can achieve something similar by instituting a website personalization campaign. When people visit your product page, for instance, they might see a popup to schedule a meeting with a salesperson. But when theyre on the blog, they might see a popup to subscribe. These simple changes can help you capture more leads and use the context from their activity to deliver an offer they wont resist. 3. LinkedIn Company Page Sidebar Ad When you visit a company page on LinkedIn, it provides a little sidebar ad that prompts you to find roles at that company that match your skills. LinkedIn does this because it knows that you might be open to opportunities even if you dont list it on your profile. And if youre looking at a company page, you might be interested in working at that firm. LinkedIn uses this context to deliver a relevant ad that you cant help but click on. Another reason this is such a great example is that it also lists a job title that relates to yours. So if youre a financial advisor and are looking at JP Morgan Chases company page, LinkedIn will automatically advertise financial advisor roles at the firm. Context Marketing is the Next Evolution of Content Marketing Without context, you risk reaching the wrong people at the wrong time. Begin using context in all of your marketing and advertising campaigns, and youll see an exponential increase in conversions, helping you exceed your lead acquisition goals and increase revenue at your company. Editor's note: This post was originally published in March 2013 and has been updated for comprehensiveness. 38bbc Here's what the US has committed so far: Release of $350m (263m) worth of weapons to Ukraine Supplies worth $54m (41m) in humanitarian assistance Removing selected Russian banks from the global Swift messaging system Restricting the Russian central bank from defending the rouble Joining a trans-Atlantic task force to freeze and seize oligarchs' assets Closing off US airspace to Russian owned and operated aircraft The White House has also asked Congress for an additional $6.4bn (4.8bn) in emergency assistance over the next few months. However, Biden again emphasised that the US would not send troops to engage with Russians in Ukraine. bbc 115/11/2021, Russia-Ukraine border: Nato warning over military build-up 2.25/11/2021, Russian troop build-up: View from Ukraine front line 3.30/11/2021 We have to wake up from this geo-political nap' says Polish PM 4.02/12/2021, Russia Ukraine: Lavrov warns of return to military confrontation nightmare 5.07/12/2021, Western leaders urge Russia to lower Ukraine tensions 5.10/01/2022, Russia has told the US that it has no intention of invading Ukraine, after officials from both countries met for high-stakes talks in Geneva 6. 14/01/2022,Ukraine blames Russia for widespread cyber-attack 7.19/01/2022, Ukraine tension: Blinken says Russia could attack at short notice 8.22/01/2022, UK must do more to support Ukraine - Commons Defence Chair 9. 24/01/2022, Russia risks 'a new Chechnya' if it invades Ukraine - PM 10, 26/01/2022, Russian invasion would change the world - Biden 11.26/01/2022, Kremlin media: Ukraine preparing to attack, not Russia 12. 28/01/2022, UK warned to bolster defences against cyber attacks 13.28/01/2022, Biden warns Russia may invade Ukraine next month 14. 28/01/2022, Ukraine crisis: US ignored Russia's security concerns, Putin says 15.30/01/2022,UK troops 'unlikely' to fight in Ukraine - Truss 16.01/02/2022, US and Russia clash over Ukraine at UN meeting 16.06/02/2022,Russia 70% ready to invade Ukraine, US sources say 17,10/02/2022,Truss in tense Moscow talks as UK pushes diplomacy 18, 10/02/2022, Ukraine accuses Russia of sea blockade 19, 11/02/2022,Macron meet Putin refused to take Russian Covid test 20,13/02/2022,US backs embassy evacuation as Ukraine urges calm 21, 14/02/2022, Olaf Scholz: Ukraine crisis a challenge for German leader 22, 14/02/2022,Ukraine seeks meeting with Russia within 48 hours 23, 15/02/2022,Still hope for Ukraine agreement, say US and UK 24,15/02/2022, Russia says troops are returning from near Ukraine 25, 15/02/2022, Russia does not want war, Putin says 26, 15/02/2022,Mixed signals from Russia over Ukraine, says UK PM 27,16/02/2022,Russian troops in assault positions - Wallace 28, 16/02/2022,Russia says footage shows military leaving Crimea 29, 16/02/2022,Biden: Human cost of Russia attack would be immense 30, 16/02/2022,Ukraine was never going to join Nato, says ex-MI6 chief 31, 16/02/2022, We don't see any troop withdrawal - Ukraine president 32, 16/02/2022,UK will judge Russia by its actions, says minister 33, 16/02/2022,Ukraine fears are hysteria, says Russian diplomat 34,17/02/2022,UK scraps rich foreign investor visa scheme 35, 18/02/2022,Russia demands hark back to Cold War, says Germany 36, 18/02/2022,As it happened: Biden: I am convinced Putin has decided to invade Ukraine 37,19/02/2022, I dance to cope, says Ukrainian amid invasion fear 38, 19/02/2022, Ukraine invasion would shock the world - PM, Putin planning biggest war in Europe since 1945 - PM 39, 21/02/2022,Putin announces Donetsk and Luhansk recognition 40, 21/02/2022, Ukraine breakaway regions move 'an ill omen' - UK PM 41, 22/02/2022, India begins evacuating citizens from Ukraine 42,23/02/2022,We expect a full-scale invasion of Ukraine - Truss 44, 23/02/2022, Putin tells Russians security is non-negotiable 45, 24/02/2022, Ukraine under attack Russian oligarchs and their families are facing severe repercussions from economic sanctions imposed on Russia. They are also calling for world peace and the safety of their Ukrainian brothers and sisters. That's so nice of them! Russian billionaire Mikhail Fridman is chairman of Alfa Bank, Russia's largest private bank. Recent sanctions against Alfa Bank are blocking it transacting with the United States. Fridman, who was born in Ukraine, wrote a letter to his staff saying, "I am deeply attached to Ukrainian and Russian peoples and see the current conflict as a tragedy for them both. This crisis will cost lives and damage two nations who have been brothers for hundreds of years. While a solution seems frighteningly far off, I can only join those whose fervent desire is for the bloodshed to end." In 2017 Fridman and the other owners of Alfa Bank sued Buzzfeed for publishing a report alleging financial ties and collusion between Putin, Donald Trump, and the bank's owners. Meanwhile, Russian aluminum tycoon Oleg Deripaska who says U.S. allegations about his ties to Paul Manafort were "very absurd" posted an urgent demand on Telegram for humanitarianism: "Peace is very important! Negotiations need to start as soon as possible!" From CNN: My artwork is in stark contrast to my hyper organized, type-A personality, says Heather Thurman, the owner and designer behind Babybird Home Decor. My design aesthetic is much more relaxed and abstract. I like things that are simple, effortless and comfortable. I do not like things that are contrived and pre-planned. That sense of unpredictability is evident in the subtle bursts of color found in Heathers coasters, magnets, planters and vases. Thats what drew me to alcohol inks, she says. The alcohol ink medium is fluid and harder to control than many other mediums. You have to allow it to go where it wants to and hang on for the creative ride. That creative ride took Heather, a Buffalo native, to New York City and back again before founding Babybird. She moved to New York at 19 to attend the Fashion Institute of Technology. I worked my way up the corporate ladder, she says. However, my priorities shifted after I became a mom, and I began to feel a pull back to my hometown. Moving back to Buffalo with her 3-year-old was the right move, she says, but also a stressful one. Creating art with alcohol inks became a version of self-care, and it started gaining recognition from friends and family, Heather says. I always dreamed of having my own small business and putting to use the business skills Id learned along the way. So, Babybird was born. Named after one of Heathers nicknames for her son, Babybird Home Decors creations are both beautifully vibrant and serene, and always functional. I like to take everyday objects, such as coasters, magnets and planters, and use them as a canvas to create artwork, she says. Art can be incorporated into our everyday living. Heather recently started a monthly workshop series and is also launching a wedding program featuring customizable favors and a centerpiece rental program. There is beauty and art in the simple things around us, she says, and I hope Babybird helps to remind us of that. Heathers favorites Sage statement vase How its created: I use Copic Inks on my vases and planters because of the range and depth of color. Diluting with alcohol, I use a pouring and painting technique, layering ink and alcohol and moving it with a heat gun to get the general shape and contrasts I am looking for. Once complete, all my pieces are sealed with three different products to ensure the artwork can withstand handwashing without damage. Why its a favorite: I am absolutely obsessed with the way flowers look in this vase. Its tall enough to be a little dramatic, but effortless enough to put any kind of flower in it since the color gives an abstract stem vibe. Blush-colored florals are one of my favorite looks and I cannot wait to see these on tables as centerpieces at weddings. Lavender magnets How its created: I use Copic Inks and Jacquard Pinata Rich Gold Ink. These little guys are tough because you dont have a lot of room for error, and there isnt a ton of space for the ink to flow. It took lots of practice with a heat gunmoving little drops of ink and alcohol around until I got just the aesthetic I was looking for. But in the end, I love how this color combination turns out. Why its a favorite: I love the ridges and the hints of gold on these magnets. Most importantly, I also took great care to test out the magnets themselves, because nothing irritates me more than what I call the slide of shame. When you receive a beautiful invitation on thick cardstock or your child makes you fridge-worthy artbut its seven layers of acrylic paintregular magnets do not cut it, and everything just slides shamefully down your fridge. I use extra-strength magnets to make sure that my magnets are not only pretty to look at but do their job. Denim mug How its created: In a similar fashion to the vases, I use a painting and pouring technique, layering the ink with alcohol. However, all mugs have a hint of gold for a little a.m. pick-me-up. These are also triple sealed to ensure that they can be handwashed. Why its a favorite: I love getting up early so I can enjoy the quiet before the house is up, but I need a cup of coffee in order to function. These are my go-to mugs because I love the soft lines and the hint of sparkle to get my day going on the right foot. BY JONATHAN D. EPSTEIN March 1, 2022 Space: It's the Final Frontier. And there's not enough of it. There's a good reason why developers across the Buffalo Niagara region are building new warehouses even before tenants are lined up: because they know the new space will get snapped up in a hurry. With demand high, Uniland Development Co., Kulback's Construction, Sonwil Distribution and Pinto Construction all have warehouse projects in the works. And the latest data from brokerage firm CBRE-Buffalo's annual market study showed why. Virtually all of the existing industrial, manufacturing and storage space in the Buffalo Niagara region is occupied, either by lease or ownership, the study found. Just over 1 million square feet is still available which sounds like a lot, but that's only 1.5% of the total inventory in the market. And it is 700,000 square feet less than a year ago. That's really tight record-setting tight. By comparison, the national rate is 3.2%. And Buffalo's regional peers are even higher 4.4% for Cleveland, 5.5% for Rochester and 6.9% for Pittsburgh. That means it is a lot easier for companies seeking to move or expand to do it in other places instead of Buffalo, simply because they can't find anything here. And it gives developers confidence to build on "spec," knowing the gamble will pay off. A Swiss packaging company, for example, took up an entire 100,050-square-foot warehouse on Buell Avenue in Cheektowaga last year, after it was completed by Benderson Development Co. That's why Amherst-based Uniland had barely started work on the foundations of its first warehouse on Dona Street in Lackawanna, in the new Renaissance Commerce Park, when it announced plans for a second one next door. Together, they will add 320,000 square feet of new industrial space, with an investment of $37 million, at the former Bethlehem Steel site in Lackawanna. It is also why David Kulbacki is putting up a 55,000-square-foot warehouse on Cemetery Road in Lancaster, and why Pinto owned by James Panepinto is constructing an 81,000-square-foot facility on Dingens Street in Buffalo. And it is the reason why Sonwil is adding a 335,868-square-foot distribution center in the Buffalo Lakeside Commerce Park, near its existing 308,000-square-foot building. Want to know more? Three stories to catch you up: IN THE WORKS Would you like your renovation in a cone or a cup? Anderson's Frozen Custard is proposing a tasty interior remodeling of its existing restaurant at 4855 Transit Road in the Town of Lancaster, which would also include the introduction of a drive-thru lane that would allow it to expand and serve more customers. The eatery also plans to modify its outdoor patio with a partially covered area. In the Town of Niagara, Wegmans wants to add six drive-thru grocery pick-up lanes for online orders and build a "slightly larger patio" than previously approved for its store at 1575-1653 Military Road. In Orchard Park, Holy Face Ministry is seeking to build a new retreat center at 6131 Newton Road, on the north side of the street near the intersection with Burton Road. Founded in 1999, the worship group currently has its Mother of Mercy House at the site. In Cheektowaga, Resurrection Life Church is constructing three additions to its existing church at 2145 Old Union Road to accommodate its expanding community food pantry, adding a drive-through canopy on the west side, a 3,000-square-foot addition to the northwest and connector between the two existing buildings. It will combine 2145 and 2155 Old Union as part of the project. Also in Cheektowaga, MBL Engineering is proposing construction of four apartment buildings of five units each at 5030 Genesee St., for a total of 20, with a two-car garage for each unit. ICYMI Five reads from Buffalo Next: 1. 43North winner TopSeedz is an unusual startup: The artisan seed and cracker manufacturer already has millions in sales. It is outgrowing its Cheektowaga space. And it is never raised money from outside investors, beyond the prizes its won from startup competitions. Natalie Brophy looks at one of the Buffalo Niagara region's promising homegrown startups. 2. ACV Auctions continues to expand with two new acquisitions: The Buffalo-grown tech company, which specializes in online vehicle auctions, purchased Monk and Drivably. 3. Sinatra plans conversion of former Hamburg convent into 260 apartments: Developer Nick Sinatra, in partnership with the Nanula family, is redeveloping the 20-acre former Immaculate Conception convent on South Park Avenue formerly home to the Franciscan Sisters of St. Joseph into a new residential campus with both senior and multi-family apartments. 4. Niagara Falls demolition firm to turn Buffalo's vacant Pierce & Stevens into warehouse: Apollo Dismantling Services will invest $10 million on Ohio Street to build out a new Buffalo hub, with 90,000 square feet of new space. 5. Unemployment benefits played a big role in propping up the Buffalo Niagara economy during the pandemic: And now, new data shows just how much those benefits meant to the region, especially as it struggled with more than 1 of every 5 workers out of their jobs during the dark days of the pandemic. The Buffalo Next team gives you the big picture on the regions economic revitalization. Reach Real Estate & Development reporter Jonathan D. Epstein at (716) 849-4478 or email him at jepstein@buffnews.com. Email tips to buffalonext@buffnews.com. Buffalo Next Must-read local business coverage that exposes the trends, connects the dots and contextualizes the impact to Buffalo's economy. Sign up! * I understand and agree that registration on or use of this site constitutes agreement to its user agreement and privacy policy. Businesses looking to get a liquor license in New York State could be facing a quicker, less arduous process. For craft brewers, the changes in a law passed late last year mean a much faster review process to obtain the liquor license needed to open, reducing what can be a six-month waiting period to a matter of as little as three to four weeks. And Gov. Kathy Hochul on Wednesday continued to press for the proposal in her state budget to permanently allow New York restaurants to offer the to-go drinks that were temporarily permitted during the early days of the pandemic. Jimmy Butera, owner of Buteras Craft Beer & Pizza in Hamburg and chapter president of the NY State Restaurant Association, said anything that can be done to help struggling bars and restaurants is much needed, especially for businesses still trying to make ends meet. "The alcohol-to-go is a lifeline for the entire industry. It's a game-changer," he said. "This is an immediate fix to a problem." Hochul says patrons can once again buy alcohol to go from bars, restaurants Hochul said in her State of the State address she will revive the policy allowing off-premises consumption that was in effect from March 2020 to last June Hochul also has proposed spending $2 million to increase staffing to help the State Liquor Authority facing a backlog of 3,700 applications review and process filings quicker. Hochul said the effort is an attempt to bring back the states hospitality industry one of the hardest hit sectors during the pandemic and help update antiquated liquor laws, most dating back around a century. Laws that were set back in the days of Prohibition were literally still on the books today, Hochul said. For businesses trying to figure out how we come out of this, there was still too much red tape and a colossal hassle with laws that have been on the books too long. Some of the initiatives already are underway. A law that took effect late last year allowed craft brewers to serve and produce alcoholic beverages while their request for a full license is pending. Those temporary permits, the first of which will take effect later this month, will allow craft brewers and distillers to start operating months sooner, bringing in revenue during what otherwise was a lengthy waiting period for their license to arrive. Hochul proposes relief to small businesses hit by pandemic Gov. Kathy Hochul proposed a "Billion Dollar Rescue Plan" to help small businesses including bars and restaurants endure through the pandemic. That's important, because craft breweries have been a fast-growing segment of the state's hospitality industry. New York ranks among the top five nationally in the number of craft brewers, and the growth has been a bright spot in the Buffalo Niagara region, too. More than two decades ago, when Tim Herzog was starting Flying Bison Brewing Company in Buffalo, he had to explain to state officials the business he was planning to operate. He had to work to get legislation changed and have permits and zoning classifications rewritten before he could open. It took him more than two years to get going. Anytime you can cut red tape for businesses, whether you're a brewery or candle maker, it is helping them to save money and open sooner," he said. While many craft breweries closed temporarily at the start of the pandemic, most have since reopened, and at least seven new ones opened in the Buffalo Niagara region. Most sold beer-to-go during pandemic peaks and reopened taprooms after the lockdown lifted. Sometimes, it feels like it takes 100 years to get a liquor license, said Max Bookman, council to The New York City Hospitality Alliance. Having sensible policies designed to improve the process and make it easier for small businesses to get open and operate easier is a no-brainer. The application process, which can take up to 26 weeks, will be significantly shaved down, Hochul said. She added the ability at some point in the future to apply online also will also help. Hochul also plans to form a group to look at other potential changes that would reduce the burdens on these businesses. The State Liquor Authority receives more than 75,000 applications a year, including 14,000 license applications, 30,000 renewal requests and 20,000 special event applications. About 30 of the authority's 114 employees are dedicated to reviewing those applications, Hochul said. With $2 million in additional funding in Hochul's budget proposal, the authority plans to hire 39 additional workers, most of whom will work on liquor license requests and the agency's backlog of 3,700 applications. Were constantly working to make things more efficient, said Vincent Bradley, the liquor authority's chairman. The additional resources are going to transform the review process of the applications. Hochul, speaking at a news conference at a Brooklyn wine bar, said her proposal to permanently legalize to-go drinks has been one of the most popular items to come out of her January State of the State address. Drinks-to-go were a lifeline to bars and restaurants during the pandemic, when many people were wary of going to crowded indoor spaces. The revenues from the drinks-to-go sales helped many struggling restaurants pay for upgrades to their patios or expanded outdoor dining spaces that offered another way to bring in wary consumers. The return of drinks-to-go could provide another boost to restaurants still recovering from their pandemic losses and revive a service that many customers tried after the lockdown was lifted and may use again. Bookman argued that drinks-to-go don't make consumers less likely to shop at a liquor store, many of which he said have not experienced the same challenges as the bar and restaurant industry. The liquor store industry has said that allowing bars and restaurants to sell to-go booze would upset their businesses. The business news you need Get the latest local business news delivered FREE to your inbox weekly. Sign up! * I understand and agree that registration on or use of this site constitutes agreement to its user agreement and privacy policy. WASHINGTON Rep. Chris Jacobs, an Orchard Park Republican who served for seven years on the Buffalo Board of Education, has been appointed to the House Education and Labor Committee. American students and businesses face unprecedented challenges in todays world, and I am honored to join a committee focused on finding solutions to these challenges, Jacobs said Wednesday after his appointment to the panel. Jacobs replaces Rep. Greg Murphy, a North Carolina Republican who was appointed to the House Ways and Means Committee in January, on the education panel. In addition to serving on the Buffalo school board from 2004 to 2011, Jacobs founded the Bison Children's Scholarship Fund, which provides aid to low-income Western New York students to attend private or religious schools. Giving our students access the highest quality education has long been a priority of mine," Jacobs said. "Additionally, Western New York, and many other regions in our nation, face a growing shortage of labor in advanced manufacturing and skilled trades. I will be using my position to advocate for policies that put our students first and support strong workforce development initiatives to address our nations skilled labor shortage. Jacobs is a co-sponsor of the federal Parents Bill of Rights, which forces school districts to be more transparent about their policies. He has also favored lifting mask requirements in schools as well as returning to in-person learning. As a small business owner and former school board member, Congressman Chris Jacobs is uniquely qualified to sit on the Education and Labor Committee," said Rep. Virginia Foxx of North Carolina, the top Republican on the education panel. "We welcome Rep. Jacobs insights on building a thriving workforce and making K-12 and postsecondary education as effective as possible." Jacobs will continue to serve on the House Agriculture and Budget committees. Rep. Elise Stefanik, a North Country Republican who also serves on the education panel, said she was thrilled that Jacobs had joined it. "I look forward to working with him more to advocate for our New York students, support our workforce and stand up for parental engagement in our state, said Stefanik, the third-ranking Republican in the House. The Buffalo News: Good Morning, Buffalo The smart way to start your day. We sift through all the news to give you a concise, informative look at the top headlines and must-read stories every weekday. Sign up! * I understand and agree that registration on or use of this site constitutes agreement to its user agreement and privacy policy. If you've always wanted to own a famous Italian restaurant with a loyal customer base in a city that draws millions of tourists each year, here's your chance. The Como Restaurant, an iconic red sauce spot that has anchored the Little Italy district on Pine Avenue since 1927, is to be sold in an online auction next month. Not only is the main restaurant at 2220 Pine Ave. for sale, but real estate broker Louis Rizzo said the winning bidder will have the option of picking up the leases on two other Como locations: on Niagara Falls Boulevard in the Falls and on Center Street in Lewiston. The Como has been owned for nearly a century by the Antonacci and Colucci families. Calls to the Como were not returned Tuesday, but Rizzo said the owners have decided it's time to retire. "It's a generational thing," said Rizzo, associate broker for Howard Hanna Real Estate. "The next generation isn't there. None of them work at the restaurant." The owners tried to simply list the Como for sale, but the Covid-19 pandemic scotched that plan. "We did have a sign on it, and with Covid, the banks put a stop on financing for restaurants," Rizzo said. Thus came the decision to hold an online auction with the help of Crexi, a national commercial real estate agency. Bidders must register in advance at the Crexi website. The restaurant, which has four banquet rooms, was hit hard by the pandemic, Rizzo said. Many steady customers came from Canada, which was cut off by international bridge closures. And it was hard to find staff. "A lot of their employees didn't come back," Rizzo said. Today, the eatery is open for dinner only Wednesday through Saturday, although its deli is open Monday through Saturday. In addition, the Como operates a smaller restaurant and deli near Niagara Falls International Airport, which is open Wednesday through Sunday. The Como leases that space after selling it for $450,000 Jan. 28 to Grand Island-based 118 Grant Properties, which also paid $250,000 for a commercial building next to the Pine Avenue restaurant. The Lewiston deli at 555 Center St., open every day but Monday, uses space leased from Buffalo-based Eagle Eye Properties. Bianca Diorio, who is working on the auction for Crexi, said bidding will start April 11 and will last 48 hours. If someone makes a bid in the final two minutes, that triggers a three-minute extension. "There's been multiple interests out of New York City, and we felt this was the best way to get a bidding war," Rizzo said. The owners have set a confidential reserve price below which they don't have to sell, Diorio said. That price can be reduced, but not increased. The auction announcement said the minimum opening bid is $475,000. Niagara County land records show the Pine Avenue building is assessed at $632,100, but all properties in Niagara Falls may be reassessed by 2024. The winning bidder has two hours to sign a purchase contract, Diorio said. Within 24 hours, the winner must wire a 10% deposit and pay Crexi's fee, which is 5% of the winning bid or $20,000, whichever is more. The winner must close on the deal within 30 days of the auction's end, Diorio said. The Buffalo News: Good Morning, Buffalo The smart way to start your day. We sift through all the news to give you a concise, informative look at the top headlines and must-read stories every weekday. Sign up! * I understand and agree that registration on or use of this site constitutes agreement to its user agreement and privacy policy. Police removed a JetBlue pilot from the cockpit of a plane about to depart Buffalo Niagara International Airport on Wednesday morning who had a blood-alcohol level more than four times the legal limit for pilots, a Niagara Frontier Transportation Authority spokesperson said. The pilot was "removed from his duties," the airline said in a statement released Wednesday afternoon. James Clifton, 52, of Orlando, was passing through security when Transportation Security Administration agents noticed he may have been impaired, the NFTA spokesperson said. NFTA police were contacted and removed Clifton from the cockpit of the plane headed for Fort Lauderdale, Fla. Police administered a Breathalyzer test and Clifton registered a blood-alcohol level of 0.17%. According to Federal Aviation Administration brochure called "Alcohol and Flying: A Deadly Combination," a pilot or other airline employee "who performs a safety-sensitive function" would be removed from performing their duties if they have a blood or breath alcohol concentration of 0.04 or more. That is half the legal limit for driving in the United States. Pilots also are not allowed to drink any alcohol within eight hours of acting or attempting to act as a crew member. Clifton was taken into police custody. Federal authorities were notified and Clifton was released to JetBlue security. He may face federal charges, the NFTA said. Derek Dombrowski, manager of corporate communications for JetBlue Airways, emailed a statement following the disclosure of the incident: "The safety of JetBlues customers and crewmembers is our first priority. We adhere to all DOT rules and requirements concerning alcohol at all times and have a very strict zero tolerance internal alcohol policy. We are aware of the incident that occurred this morning in Buffalo and are cooperating fully with law enforcement. We are also conducting our own internal investigation. The crewmember involved has been removed from his duties. Reach Aaron at abesecker[at]buffnews.com or 716-849-4602. Sign up for our Crime & Courts newsletter Get the latest in local public safety news with this weekly email. Sign up! * I understand and agree that registration on or use of this site constitutes agreement to its user agreement and privacy policy. The school mask mandate will come to an end Wednesday in districts across New York State, and Buffalo is no longer an exception. Buffalo's decision to drop the mask requirement was announced late Tuesday after the State Health Department issued guidance following Gov. Kathy Hochul's announcement Sunday that the mandate would end Wednesday. It reverses a declaration by Buffalo school officials Monday night that masks must continue to be worn. New York City schools are requiring masks this week, but other large city school districts, including Albany, Rochester, Syracuse and Yonkers, had decided that masks will be optional. Buffalo's announcement cited State Health Department recommendations that students, staff and teachers are free to continue wearing masks if they feel more comfortable doing so, if they are immunocompromised or if they have been exposed to someone with Covid-19 in school or elsewhere. The Buffalo district had notified parents Tuesday morning that masks would be required in school buildings and on public transportation taking students to and from school. The district said its Medical Advisory Team and Erie County Health Department partners met on the mandate question before making that decision. But the county Health Department said on Twitter it had not recommended that Buffalo continue to require masks. It also said that, in line with the state announcement and recent guidance from the Centers for Disease Control and Prevention, "Erie County schools are not required to mandate masks in their facilities after today, 3/1." ECDOH has not provided a recommendation to @Buffalo_Schools to continue to require masks in its facilities. Per the @HealthNYGov announcement from Sunday and recent @CDCgov guidance, Erie County schools are not required to mandate masks in their facilities after today, 3/1. /1 Erie County Department of Health (@ECDOH) March 1, 2022 The county Health Department said in a statement Monday that the shift came because the CDC guidance categorizes all counties with a community Covid-19 level. Erie County is at medium based on the new measures, and masks in school are not recommended at that level. Buffalo had said it would make a "science and data-driven decision" on when masks may be removed, using metrics for local Covid-19 rates of transmission over seven days; current pediatric hospitalization rates; and the level of orange, yellow and green, which correspond to the CDC levels of high, medium and low. Guidance released by the state Health Department late Tuesday said that local health departments may implement masking requirements that are more restrictive than the state, and LHDs and school districts and private schools should consult and collaborate on masking and testing decisions. Buffalo School Board Member-at-large Larry Scott said in a Facebook post Tuesday night that he received the following clarification from the executive director of the Conference of Big 5 School Districts: Per our conversation today, we have clarified that school districts/schools may NOT require masks unless the Local Health Department makes this determination/ authorization. Concerned about COVID-19? Sign up now to get the most recent coronavirus headlines and other important local and national news sent to your email inbox daily. Sign up! * I understand and agree that registration on or use of this site constitutes agreement to its user agreement and privacy policy. It's been a tumultuous time in Buffalo Public Schools, and Superintendent Kriner Cash, the subject of a no confidence vote by the teachers union, is out of town. Cash was front and center at news conferences on Feb. 9 after a student was stabbed and a security guard was shot outside McKinley High School. McKinley plan to resume in-person classes stresses security to 'create safe environment' Security guards and administrators will be strategically placed, and Peacemakers will be stationed at the front corners of the building, helping students with safe passage, said McKinley Principal Moustafa Khalil. But on Saturday, when the district announced its plans for bringing students back into the school, Cash was nowhere to be seen. And the districts letter explaining the plan for McKinley was signed not by Cash, but by Casandra Wright, an associate superintendent. She signed the letter as "acting superintendent," leading some people to wonder about the significance of that designation and Cash's future. This week, when Buffalo Public Schools announced its decision to drop its mask mandate, Cash still was not in town. The school mask mandate is ending everywhere, even Buffalo The announcement reverses a declaration by Buffalo school officials Monday night that masks must continue to be worn. New York City schools are requiring masks this week, but other large city school districts, including Albany, Rochester, Syracuse and Yonkers, had decided that masks will be optional. District officials are downplaying his absence. Cash was on a planned vacation last week, during February break, and will be on a family personal leave this week, General Counsel Nate Kuzma said Saturday. "And he is entitled to his privacy during this time, so I'm not going to say anything further regarding that," he said. A member of Cashs immediate family has been dealing with severe health issues for several months, according to School Board member Sharon Belton-Cottman, who said that Cashs personal leave was scheduled to end after Friday. It is standard procedure in a school district for the superintendent to designate someone to act in his or her place when the superintendent is out of town, according to several school officials. The School Board scheduled a special meeting at 5 p.m. Wednesday, before its regular work session, to discuss the violence at McKinley High School and to consider hiring a private firm to investigate security measures. The board may also go into executive session on Wednesday, according to the meeting notice that the district sent to reporters. Buffalo teachers vote no confidence in Superintendent Kriner Cash "He knew about violence problems at our school for years and did not provide a safe working and learning environment," states the resolution by BTF's Council of Delegates. Cash could not be reached for comment, and School Board President Louis Petrucci did not respond to repeated messages asking what the board is likely to discuss behind closed doors Wednesday. During his first several years in Buffalo, Cash enjoyed strong support both from the School Board and the larger community. In recent months, though, that support has begun to fade. When Cash arrived in Buffalo in 2015, the graduation rate hovered around 50%. In many schools, less than 10% of students were proficient in math and English. The teachers union contract had long been expired. Under Cashs tenure, the graduation rate has increased to 79%. About one-fourth of students are now proficient in math and English. The district negotiated a contract with the teachers union, breaking a 12-year stalemate. During the pandemic, Buffalo was the last district in New York State to remain fully remote a decision that Cash said was necessary to protect the health of students and their families. Despite significant criticism for that decision, both within Buffalo and elsewhere, the School Board continued to stand behind him. In 2020, the School Board gave Cash a three-year extension on his contract, extending it through June 30, 2023. In June, the board gave Cash an average score of 3.64 out of 4 in its annual evaluation of him, praising him for the districts collaboration with other community leaders and for the districts reopening plan during the pandemic. Our building operations remained agile, responsive and unfaltering, with Dr. Cash directly engaged on a daily basis with addressing each and every need brought to his attention, the board wrote. The next month, Cashs chief of staff, Darren Brown-Hall, left Buffalo Public Schools to become superintendent of the Williamsville School District. And that was when problems began to surface, according to Cashs most vocal critic on the board. Once Darren left the district, it became apparent how much he was doing, Belton-Cottman said. Darren was attending all of the meetings the superintendent should have attended on the local level and on the state level, as well as running the district on a day-to-day basis. In recent weeks, the district has come under fire from parents for what many saw as a series of poor decisions. One evening, for instance, the district announced that classes would be held in person the next day despite inclement weather only to reverse course an hour later and cancel classes altogether, sowing confusion and leaving many parents in a last-minute scramble for childcare. Parent discontent with the district peaked in early February, when a student was stabbed and a security guard was shot outside McKinley High School. The incident led to a lockdown in the school, leaving scores of students trapped inside, fearing for their lives. At no point that evening did the school or the district communicate with McKinley families to explain what was happening, leaving them wondering whether their children were in danger. About a week later, the Buffalo Teachers Federation took a vote of no confidence in the superintendent, citing what the union said was a series of failures to adequately address safety concerns in McKinley and throughout the district. Cash has done a lot of good things, but when it comes to all the violence, the buck stops on his desk, union president Phil Rumore said. Want to see more like this? Get our local education coverage delivered directly to your inbox. Sign up! * I understand and agree that registration on or use of this site constitutes agreement to its user agreement and privacy policy. Mary B. Pasciak Reporter I have been writing for my hometown paper for more than two decades. These days, I write about how the pandemic is affecting our community. If you have a story idea, call or text me at 716-710-9393, or email me at mpasciak@buffnews.com. Follow Mary B. Pasciak 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. Save Manage followed notifications Close Followed notifications Please log in to use this feature Log In Don't have an account? Sign Up Today KAMPALA, March 2 (Xinhua) -- Uganda's economy showed signs of recovery in the first half of the 2021/22 financial year despite the impact of new COVID-19 variants during the period, according to the country's ministry of finance Wednesday. The ministry of finance in its half-year economic report, spanning July 2021 to December 2021, said high-frequency indicators of economic activity reflected continued recovery in business activity. The indicators including the Composite Index of Economic Activity (CIEA), Purchasing Managers Index (PMI) and the Business Tendency Index (BTI) showed that although there was a bit of economic struggle during the month of July as the economy had just emerged from the second lockdown, the economy bounced back in the months that followed. The CIEA on average grew at 5 percent compared to the same period the previous year while the PMI and the BTI both recorded indices above the 50-mark threshold from August to December 2021 as the gradual easing of the June-July lockdown measures led to growth in output and new orders. The threshold of 50 is a baseline to indicate an increase or a decline in business conditions. The report showed that the first quarter of the financial year registered economic growth of 3.8 percent, reflecting an improvement in the gross domestic product (GDP) from the same quarter of the previous financial year. This is attributed to increased growth momentum in both the industry and services sectors. The services sector grew by 7.9 percent compared to negative growth of 4.5 percent in quarter one of the previous financial year while the industry sector grew by 0.3 percent compared to negative growth of 2.7 percent in quarter one of the previous financial year. The agricultural sector continued to grow although at a slower pace of 3.6 percent compared to 6.8 percent in the same quarter of the previous financial year. The report projected that the economy will grow at 3.8 percent this financial year from 3.4 percent registered in the previous year. This is on account of the expected recovery in production, aggregate demand and trade following the full reopening of the economy in January. Growth will also be driven by government policy interventions such as support to small businesses as well as an accommodative monetary policy. "The anticipated global recovery is expected to boost Uganda's international trade further supporting economic growth," the report showed. The global economy is projected to grow at 5.9 percent in 2021 and 4.4 percent in 2022 from the negative 3.1 percent in 2020, as vaccination and policy support continue, said the finance ministry, warning new variants of the COVID-19 virus, associated lockdown measures and supply chain disruptions would pose concerns for the outlook. There is much debate within local and state government regarding the environmental impacts of crypto mining and its economic role. Make no mistake, crypto mining and digital currency will shape the 21st century unlike any other evolving technology. Yet, there is a growing sentiment that the digital mining industry must move forward in a manner that contributes to society. Our company, Blockfusion, fully supports such a premise and is committed to sustainability and positive community impact. And we have the track record to prove it. One of our key facilities is in Niagara Falls, where we have rehabilitated a former fossil fuel plant into an innovative and sophisticated and nearly carbon-free operation. This location employs more than 55 area residents in well-paying, skilled jobs, with far more hiring on the horizon. Our energy use in Niagara Falls is nearly 100% from carbon-free sources almost entirely hydropower and we participate in demand-side curtailment programs, which can help with grid reliability on the most volatile days of the summer. A unique aspect of crypto mining is that it does not need to run 24/7, so it can be a critical load-balancing partner to the grid. Load-balancing will become increasingly important as more intermittent renewables are brought online as part of the states decarbonization plan. Various interest groups maintain that all bitcoin mining is dirty, inefficient and too energy intensive, when it is a business that is getting exponentially more proficient and valuable each year. Bitcoin uses far less energy than various activities that many deem worthy of power. Holiday lights, appliances and air conditioning all use a similar amount or more power. We believe that state or municipal policies should facilitate and enable decarbonization through alignment and coordination with clean industries. If legislators seek a partner to help decarbonize with a lucrative, clean technology industry that can be powered by renewable hydropower, they need look no further than impact-oriented miners like Blockfusion. New York has an opportunity to limit fossil fuel sources being brought back online to mine bitcoin. Carbon credit offsets should also be eliminated. These are tangible ways to ensure our industry advances for the better. Not all crypto mining operations are created equal. Companies that have built business models on sustainability and eco-conscious decision-making should be the ones selected to help guide digital mining regulations. It is time to separate the good actors from the bad. Alex Martini-LoManto is chief executive officer of Blockfusion, a digital asset company powered by renewable energy that operates a crypto mining data center in Niagara Falls. It is predictable, and not unhealthy, that school districts are taking different approaches to the states decision to relax masking rules. With crosscurrents of opinions about the status of the Covid-19 pandemic and worries about unrelenting emotional pressures on students, its a good time to allow school districts to make their own decisions. Thats whats happening. After Gov. Kathy Hochuls announcement that the state would, on Wednesday, end its requirement for masking in schools, a number of school officials expressed relief and even frustration that the decision didnt come sooner. In Buffalo, though, school officials have decided to keep the requirement in place, at least for now. Not everyone will agree when has that ever happened in this pandemic? but its a reasonable decision. In explaining the districts reasoning, a school spokesman observed that Buffalo remains in an infection zone designated as medium risk by the Centers for Disease Control and Prevention and also noted that the school districts Medical Advisory Team and the Erie County Department of Health met on Monday to evaluate rates of Covid transmission and of pediatric hospitalizations. It is also surely relevant that students are just returning from a week off of school, a time when traveling and unsupervised contacts could potentially raise those rates. Some will argue, also reasonably, that schools have proven to be safe zones during much of the pandemic. Thats true. Given close supervision of masking and other precautions, in-school transmission of Covid-19 has been remarkably low. Together with credible reports that the pandemic and its responses have created mental health stresses within student populations, schools have reason to want to move toward a more normal format than has been possible over the past two years. Still, its not universally accepted that now is the time for that return. A recent Washington Post-ABC News poll found a significant degree of wariness about Covid-19 remains among Americans. The survey found that just 33% of respondents believed that pandemic was mostly (27%) or completely (6%) under control. Meanwhile, 49% thought it was somewhat under control and 15% thought it was not at all under control. The remaining 2% had no opinion. If that distribution was echoed in Buffalo, more than half the population could plausibly be concerned about their unmasked childrens safety, in school or elsewhere. For most of the pandemic, the state has directed the response to the pandemic and, under both Gov. Kathy Hochul and her predecessor, Andrew Cuomo, it has generally done well. Some of Cuomos actions, in particular, have come under harsh criticism but, from a broader perspective, there is every reason to believe state oversight was crucial in preventing hospitals from being overwhelmed by Covid and the number of deaths from spiraling even higher. But, with the Omicron surge fading fast, its the right moment to return more authority to localities. Buffalo school officials plan to look at the numbers again on Friday, a time lag that may show whether the midwinter break increased infection rates among students. Its essential for the district, and others retaining masks, to stay on top of this. The masks need to come off as soon as safety allows. Whats your opinion? Send it to us at lettertoeditor@buffnews.com. Letters should be a maximum of 300 words and must convey an opinion. The column does not print poetry, announcements of community events or thank you letters. A writer or household may appear only once every 30 days. All letters are subject to fact-checking and editing. Call it a baptism by fire. David K. Balkin, the new president of SUNY Erie Community College, began his duties just a month ago, but it took only that long to grasp the colleges dire financial straits. Layoffs loom. Even union leaders recognize those realities as they scramble to find where else they might place their members throughout the county employment system. Observers have been warning about problems at ECC for a long time, former County Executive Joel Giambra among them. It is a shame that the painful process of layoffs, along with voluntary retirements, must ensue but the colleges long-term viability demands action. That needs to include not only the number of jobs ECC can legitimately support, but the structure of the college itself, including the number and purposes of its campuses. SUNY Erie trustees and Bill Reuter, who served as interim president prior to Balkins arrival, have been publicly discussing the colleges finances. The time for talking is past, and the new president has called for greater urgency and a pledge to take definitive action which has to happen quickly. College enrollment has plunged by nearly half over the past 11 years, from 14,000 students in 2011 to 7,737 today. With that, revenues also have been slashed, with tuition accounting for 50% of the colleges annual income. Nevertheless, the number of faculty and staff has remained flat at 1,767. Balkin called SUNY Eries student/employee ratio, which is an indicator of financial health, unacceptably low. It has been below the median ratio of the states 30 community colleges for the past eight years. Hovering over all of this is the maintenance of three campuses and administrative redundancies among them. The current practices are unsustainable, Balkin said without proscribing a solution. Instead, and wisely, he has invited ECCs unions to help put the college back on track. In the meantime, he plans a broad-based effort to attract more students: working with regional high schools; approaching local businesses to create company-sponsored degree programs; expanding short-term certification programs; and luring students who have stopped out of four-year SUNY colleges and universities. Balkin seems well equipped to act on the problems behind it. It is surely not coincidental that he turned around the underperforming South Bend-Elkhart Campus of Ivy Tech Community College in Indiana. Balkin will share progress reports with the community on the colleges home page, ecc.edu. The new president is not wasting time as he goes about the difficult task of re-imagining and re-engineering a new and better SUNY Erie. It will be painful, but there are no easy choices ahead. Whats your opinion? Send it to us at lettertoeditor@buffnews.com. Letters should be a maximum of 300 words and must convey an opinion. The column does not print poetry, announcements of community events or thank you letters. A writer or household may appear only once every 30 days. All letters are subject to fact-checking and editing. Halfpoint / Shutterstock.com No matter where a family lives, groceries are a regular expense. How much produce and household essentials cost varies from country to country based on the local economy and whats in demand. During the pandemic, we saw hand soap and hand sanitizer fly off the shelves, but now manufacturers have adjusted and those arent quite the rarities they were before. However, essentials stay the same. NetCredit defines essentials as breakfast cereal, a carton of eggs, a pound of boneless chicken breast, 16 ounces of local cheese, a liter of vegetable oil, a loaf of fresh white bread, a liter of milk, two pounds of potatoes, two pounds of tomatoes, two pounds of bananas, a can of tuna and a 1.5-liter bottle of water. These cost $25.71 on average in the United States, which is pretty close to the worlds average of $28.25. More Advice: 16 Ways To Save Money on Food Watch Out: Costly Mistakes People Make While Grocery Shopping Based on how much those staples are valued at internationally, heres a look at the cost of groceries around the world. Most Expensive: Switzerland Basket of essentials cost: $52.95 The cost of living in Switzerland is quite expensive, so it makes sense groceries would be as well. A one-bedroom apartment in the country costs the equivalent of about $2,150 on average. Swiss cities Zurich, Bern and Geneva were all ranked among the worlds 10 most expensive places. On the flip side, the average wage is comparably high, coming in at about the equivalent of $7,000 per month. Second-Most Expensive: Iceland Basket of essentials cost: $52.55 Youll find groceries just a hair less expensive in Iceland than in Switzerland. Iceland is the ninth-most expensive country in the world to live in. Regulations on farming contribute to the high cost of living, and specifically high grocery prices. All farm equipment is imported, as are many foods, which will both be reflected in food purchase costs. More: Supermarket Buys That Are a Waste of Money Story continues Third-Most Expensive: Cambodia Basket of essentials cost: $49.70 The average daily income in Cambodia is only $5.28, so a person would have to work 9.5 days to afford groceries. The reason for the high grocery costs have to do with a decline in trade and the rising prices of imports over the years. Cambodia spends nearly $1 billion annually to import meat such as pork, chicken and duck, plus vegetables from Thailand, Vietnam and China. Average: Greece Basket of essentials cost: $29.64 The overall average cost for groceries among all countries was $28.25. The individual country that was closest to that was Greece. A loaf of white bread is only $0.86 in Athens, but cheese will cost between $4 and $8. Compared to Switzerland, its much cheaper to live in Greece. A one-bedroom apartment in the center of Athens will cost you about $515 per month on average. Check Out: 25 Secret Money Traps at Target, Walmart and Other Big-Box Stores Cheapest: Djibouti Basket of essentials cost: $6.89 For groceries in the East African country of Djibouti, youll spend just under the equivalent of $7. However, the cost of living in Djibouti is about 11% higher than the United States. A one-bedroom apartment in a bigger city will cost $603 a month, and a three-bedroom apartment outside of the city will cost $499. Second Cheapest: Moldova Basket of essentials cost: $12.93 Shopping for groceries in Moldova is quite cheap. A loaf of white bread costs $0.31, and a pound of chicken filets is only $1.76 in Chisinau. When you buy a Coke or Pepsi at a restaurant in Chisinau, it will cost you $0.72 on average. Related: Budgeting 101: Essential Tips To Create the Perfect Budget Third Cheapest: Paraguay Basket of essentials cost: $13.35 Paraguay was one of the few entries on this list where most of the essential items on NetCredits grocery list cost under a dollar. A loaf of white bread is $0.52, while a pound of white rice is only $0.32 in Ciudad de Este. In Asuncion, the largest city in Paraguay, a one-bedroom apartment in the city is $303, while a three-bedroom apartment in the city is $581. The average monthly salary in Asuncion is $340.86; so, although $13.35 is cheap in comparison to the United States, its still a huge chunk of a Paraguay workers monthly check. More From GOBankingRates This article originally appeared on GOBankingRates.com: The Cost of Groceries Around the World Speaker / Lectures Vanessa Viruet Artist Talk and Closing Reception for PANUELXS Vanessa Viruet is a Chicago-based fiber artist of Puerto Rican descent who creates monumental scale artworks to examine the complex histories rooted in textiles such as identity, cultural heritage, gender, and class. Vanessa Viruet PANUELXS January 22March 5, 2022 New Harmony Gallery of Contemporary Art at University of Southern Indiana is proud to present PANUELXS by Chicago-based artist Vanessa Viruet. PANUELXS includes textile works and sculpture in the main gallery space, as well as a temporary public art piece in New Harmonys Maclure Square. The exhibition opens on Saturday, January 22, 2022 and runs through Saturday, March 5, 2022. Gallery hours are 10:00 AM 5:00 PM Central, Tuesday Saturday. COVID safety procedures will be required, including masks and social distancing, in accordance with University of Southern Indiana policy. ARTIST'S TALK March 5, 2022. 3pm CT PUBLIC RECEPTION March 5, 2022. 4-6pm CT Vanessa Viruet utilizes materials such as bandanas, hoop earrings, cars, and found objects to investigate gender roles, cultural identity, and socioeconomic experiences. In PANUELXS, large-scale installations, printed fabric, shiny objects, and repetitive patterns using bold shapes and colors serve as symbolsor flagsto share both communal and personal stories. PANUELXS (a play on the Spanish word for hanky) explores the various ways in which we present ourselves. Utilizing the gallerys exhibition space as the hyper-feminine interior space and an outdoor site-specific installation as a hyper-masculine public space, Viruet flamboyantly displays expressions of identity. While creating a shared space that speaks to community experience, PANUELXS is also a space to celebrate Viruets own experience as Queer, Latina, and a first-generation college graduate. Vanessa Viruet is a Chicago-based fiber artist of Puerto Rican descent. She creates monumental scale artworks to examine the complex histories rooted in textiles such as identity, cultural heritage, gender, and class. Viruet holds a BFA and a MA in Teaching from the Maryland Institute College of Art as well as an MFA from Cranbrook Academy of Art. She currently serves as an art instructor for Chicago Public Schools and teaches in the Fiber and Material Studies Department at the School of the Art Institute of Chicago. Someday she hopes to have her own scholarship for artists of color. New Harmony Gallery of Contemporary Art at University of Southern Indiana promotes discourse about and access to contemporary art in the southern Indiana region. nhgallery.com This exhibition is made possible in part by Arts Council of Southwestern Indiana, and the Indiana Arts Commission, which receives support from the State of Indiana and the National Endowment for the Arts. New Harmony Gallery of Contemporary Art is a proud outreach partner of the University of Southern Indiana. The exhibition is free and open to the public. by Feminist Anti-War Resistance Translation by Anastasia Kalk, Jan Surman In todays Russia, feminists form one of the most active social movements defying state repression. Now theyre uniting to resist Vladimir Putins war on Ukraine. The below text is a manifesto by Russian feminists who have united against the occupation and war in Ukraine. Feminism is one of the few opposition movements in contemporary Russia that has not been destroyed by the waves of persecution launched by Vladimir Putins government. At the moment, several dozen grassroots feminist groups are operating in at least thirty Russian cities. In this text, feminists taking part in antiwar demonstrations around the country call on feminists around the world to unite in opposing the military aggression launched by Putins government. On February 24, at around 5:30 AM Moscow time, Russian president Vladimir Putin announced a special operation on the territory of Ukraine in order to denazify and demilitarize this sovereign state. This operation had long been in preparation. For several months, Russian troops were moving up to the border with Ukraine. At the same time, the leadership of our country denied any possibility of a military attack. Now we see that this was a lie. Russia has declared war on its neighbor. It did not allow Ukraine the right to self-determination nor any hope of a peaceful life. We declare and not for the first time that war has been waged for the last eight years at the initiative of the Russian government. The war in Donbas is a consequence of the illegal annexation of Crimea. We believe that Russia and its president are not and have never been concerned about the fate of people in Luhansk and Donetsk, and the recognition of the republics after eight years was only a pretext for the invasion of Ukraine under the guise of liberation. As Russian citizens and feminists, we condemn this war. Feminism as a political force cannot be on the side of a war of aggression and military occupation. The feminist movement in Russia struggles for vulnerable groups and the development of a just society with equal opportunities and prospects, in which there can be no place for violence and military conflicts. War means violence, poverty, forced displacement, broken lives, insecurity, and the lack of a future. It is irreconcilable with the essential values and goals of the feminist movement. War exacerbates gender inequality and sets back gains for human rights by many years. War brings with it not only the violence of bombs and bullets but also sexual violence: as history shows, during war, the risk of being raped increases several times for any woman. For these and many other reasons, Russian feminists and those who share feminist values ??need to take a strong stand against this war unleashed by the leadership of our country. The current war, as Putins addresses show, is also fought under the banner of the traditional values declared by government ideologues values that Russia allegedly decided to promote throughout the world as a missionary, using violence against those who refuse to accept them or hold other views. Anyone who is capable of critical thinking understands well that these traditional values include gender inequality, exploitation of women, and state repression against those whose way of life, self-identification, and actions do not conform with narrow patriarchal norms. The justification of the occupation of a neighboring state by the desire to promote such distorted norms and pursue a demagogic liberation is another reason why feminists throughout Russia must oppose this war with all their energy. Today feminists are one of the few active political forces in Russia. For a long time, Russian authorities did not perceive us as a dangerous political movement, and therefore we were temporarily less affected by state repression than other political groups. Currently more than forty-five different feminist organizations are operating throughout the country, from Kaliningrad to Vladivostok, from Rostov-on-Don to Ulan-Ude and Murmansk. We call on Russian feminist groups and individual feminists to join the Feminist Anti-War Resistance and unite forces to actively oppose the war and the government that started it. We also call on feminists all over the world to join our resistance. We are many, and together we can do a lot: Over the past ten years, the feminist movement has gained enormous media and cultural power. It is time to turn it into political power. We are the opposition to war, patriarchy, authoritarianism, and militarism. We are the future that will prevail. We call on feminists around the world: Join peaceful demonstrations and launch offline and online campaigns against the war in Ukraine and Putins dictatorship, organizing your own actions. Feel free to use the symbol of the Feminist Anti-War Resistance movement in your materials and publications, as well as hashtags #FeministAntiWarResistance and #FeministsAgainstWar. Distribute the information about the war in Ukraine and Putins aggression. We need the whole world to support Ukraine at this moment and to refuse to help Putins regime in any way. Share this manifesto with others. Its necessary to show that feminists are against this war and any type of war. Its also essential to demonstrate that there are still Russian activists who are ready to unite in opposition to Putins regime. We are all in danger of persecution by the state now and need your support. Feminist Anti-War Resistance has a Telegram channel with additional information (in Russian). Members of the initiative are anonymous for security reasons. Its representative in London is Ella Rossman. U.S. Rep. Ron Kind, D-La Crosse, said Tuesday "there is absolutely no daylight" between the United States and its European allies in their response to Russia's invasion of Ukraine. Kind returned to Washington after spending last week in London as chair of the British American Parliamentary Group. He spoke with British leaders on how to coordinate sanctions against Russia, whose military crossed into Ukraine Feb. 24. He said "the world is united" against Russian president Vladimir Putin. "I was extremely pleased to see the amount of unity that we have from our NATO, our UK and our European allies," Kind said. "America's vital national security interests are implicated by what is happening in Ukraine and the surrounding area." Kind was also encouraged by Ukrainian resistance that has been more effective than most analysts anticipated. He said Putin miscalculated the response by Ukraine and other countries. "I think (Putin) was expecting a divided Ukraine, a divided Europe, a divided NATO and a divided United States," Kind said. "Instead, he's getting just the opposite an unprecedented show of unity to stand up to the worst military aggression the world has seen since the Second World War." Kind said economic sanctions are already starting to impact the Russian economy. He said Russian currency has suffered a "drastic decline" and that the Russian stock market has crashed by 40 percent. Kind said more sanctions are on the table. He said the House Ways and Means Committee is putting together a resolution to remove Russia's most-favored nation trade status and revoke Russia's membership in the World Trade Organization. "These are organizations that were set up after the Second World War to maintain global peace," Kind said. "We feel that Russia's membership in these institutions should be revoked until (Putin) stands down. We're thinking creatively on how we can bring this fight to his doorstep internally." Kind said President Joe Biden has been instrumental in uniting America's allies to take action. "I give a lot of the credit to President Biden," Kind said. "He knows these world leaders by name. He has a relationship with them. President Biden has taken a very strong leadership role in establishing this global sanctions regime. He has united the free world." Kind acknowledged that the war will cause energy prices to spike. Russia is the world's second-leading crude oil producer, and he said gas prices will rise at home even though the United States imports only a very small amount of Russian oil. He said the crisis should motivate countries to develop renewable sources of energy that are less impacted by global events. "It speaks to the necessity of pivoting from fossil fuels," Kind said. Love 0 Funny 0 Wow 0 Sad 0 Angry 0 RICE LAKE Gov. Tony Evers has announced the cities of Rice Lake, Altoona, Menomonie, and Eau Claire will receive more than $8 million as part of the Neighborhood Investment Fund grant program. These funds will be used to improve downtown infrastructure and pedestrian safety, promote business development initiatives, and support local affordable housing and shelter needs. From expanding affordable housing options to strengthening infrastructure and revitalizing our main streets, this grant program was designed to connect the dots in our communities to ensure they recover and succeed for years to come, said Evers. So I am thrilled to be awarding these funds today to support the good work folks are doing in Rice Lake, Altoona, Menomonie, and Eau Claire to collaborate together to tackle the needs in their communities. Of the awardees announced Wednesday, the city of Rice Lake will use a $3,157,057 grant to make improvements to their Main Street corridor that will provide a safe route within the city for all users and revitalize the citys historic downtown. The city of Altoona will use a $1,377,435 grant to redevelop two downtown properties into an office, restaurant, and retail incubator hub to bolster Altoonas downtown and create a unique regional attraction for residents and visitors. Additionally, through a $1,433,093 grant, the city of Menomonie will build a 20-bed shelter facility to help address homelessness in the community. Finally, the city of Eau Claire will use $2.5 million in grants support two projects that address affordable housing and shelter needs in the community, including $1 million to support the development of the Cannery Trail Residence Phase II, a 43-unit affordable housing development in downtown Eau Claire, and $1.5 million for the expansion of the Catholic Charities Sojourner House to provide emergency shelter for an additional 28 homeless adults and youth. Part of a nearly $650 million investment allocated by the governor for community building and recovery efforts statewide, the Neighborhood Investment Fund program was announced in August 2021 and is administered by the Wisconsin Department of Administration (DOA). Grants being awarded range in size from $1 million to a maximum of $15 million and are funded through the American Rescue Plan Act (ARPA). Applications opened on Sept. 30, 2021, and closed on Nov. 11, 2021. Additional information can be found on the program website. A full list of grant recipients of the Neighborhood Investment Fund program will be announced later this week. Wisconsinites can visit BadgerBounceback.wi.gov to view pandemic-related assistance information for families, farmers, businesses, organizations, and communities, as well as the latest data and success stories about how COVID-relief investments are making a difference across the state. For updates on other recovery-related grant opportunities, sign up for the Badger Bounceback update list. IN PHOTOS: Gov. Tony Evers visits vaccination site at UWL Uploaded Photos Evers at UWL Gov. Tony Evers, center, is accompanied by numerous officials Tuesday, including UW-La Crosse Chancellor Joe Gow, UW System President Tommy Th Uploaded Photos Gov. Evers at UWL Gov. Tony Evers, right, is accompanied by numerous officials including UW System President Tommy Thompson, center, during a tour of the new CO Uploaded Photos Gov. Evers at UWL Gov. Tony Evers tours the new COVID-19 vaccination clinic Tuesday at the Cleary Alumni & Friends Center on the UW-La Crosse campus. Lifestyles web only Governor Evers tours vaccine clinic at UWL Evers at UWL Gov. Tony Evers speaks at the opening of La Crosse County's COVID-19 vaccination clinic at UW-La Crosse on Tuesday. Initially, the clinic will Tour of site Aron Newberry, vaccine lead for the La Crosse County Health Department, leads Gov. Evers and other state officials on a tour of the site. Education top story Meet these 28 notable UW-La Crosse alumni This list, courtesy of the University of Wisconsin-La Crosse, highlights some of the most accomplished people who have studied there. Love 0 Funny 0 Wow 0 Sad 0 Angry 1 The Chippewa Valley is bustling with talented artists young and old who now will have a unique opportunity to showcase their art later this year. The Wisconsin Regional Art Exhibit will bring the Chippewa Valley Regional portion of its competition to Chippewa Falls for the first time this fall. From Oct. 13 Nov. 18 the Heyde Center for the Arts will host the exhibit, an exciting collaboration between WRAP, the Heyde Center and the Valley Art Association. WRAP encourages nonprofessional, student and emerging artists to create and exhibit their work across Wisconsin. It is for people who have a serious interest in art, and create art for the love of art. Each year the organization holds regional based exhibits where artists may include their work for competition, at which time a judge will analyze the pieces and choose who will move onto the state portion of the competition for a chance at a cash prize. Beth Creekmore, a member of the VAA Board of Directors, said the hope is for the event to be able to introduce younger artists to the Chippewa Valley arts scene and foster the next generation of talent in the area. We hope this event helps people embrace the younger generation of artists in the area, because we have a tremendous amount of talent in the Chippewa Valley, Creekmore said. We hope this will be an event we hold every year, so that younger artists have an outlet to show their work and get acquainted with the world of art. The Valley Art Association will host an exhibit alongside WRAP at the Heyde Center, leading to a pillar event for Chippewa Valley artists in the latter part of 2022. While the event is still in its planning stages, entries will begin to be accepted in August, with the deadline for entries coming in September. A public reception featuring a chance to meet the artists alongside music and a silent auction will be held on Saturday, Nov. 5 at the Heyde Center. For more information on the upcoming event you can visit valleyartassociation.org. Love 0 Funny 0 Wow 0 Sad 0 Angry 0 Get local news delivered to your inbox! Subscribe to our Daily Headlines newsletter. Sign up! * I understand and agree that registration on or use of this site constitutes agreement to its user agreement and privacy policy. Almost five months away from Wisconsins fall election primaries, Democratic U.S. Senate candidate Lt. Gov. Mandela Barnes and Republican gubernatorial candidate Rebecca Kleefisch are leading in their respective fields, according to a Marquette Law School Poll released Wednesday. Still, voters are largely undecided. Fifty-one percent of voters did not know whom they would support in the August primaries, according to the poll, which was administered in late February. This shows the potential for change over the course of the campaigns, poll director Charles Franklin said. Additionally, 50% of voters have no opinion of Kleefisch, who was the second-in-command under former Gov. Scott Walker, and 62% of voters polled have no opinion of Barnes. In the Democratic field, 23% support Barnes, 13% support Milwaukee Bucks executive-on-leave Alex Lasry, 5% support Outagamie County Executive Tom Nelson, 3% support state Treasurer Sarah Godlewski, 2% or fewer of registered voters support others and 48% have no preference. Among Republicans, 30% support Kleefisch, 8% support former Marine Kevin Nicholson, 5% support Rep. Timothy Ramthun, R-Campbellsport, and 54% have no preference. In November, Republicans will seek to reclaim all levers of state government by taking back the governors seat from first-term incumbent Democratic Gov. Tony Evers, which could prove consequential in overhauling the states education and elections laws. On the federal level, a field of Democratic candidates is vying for the U.S. Senate seat held by U.S. Sen. Ron Johnson, who announced in January that he will seek a third term despite previously declaring a second term would be his last. Political experts have declared Johnsons seat as one of the most critical to determining which party holds the Senate majority next year. But all Democratic candidates face headwinds in 2022: Midterm elections are notoriously disappointing for the party in presidential power. A Vox analysis found that between 1946 and 2018, the party in presidential power gained U.S. Senate seats nationwide in four midterms and governorships nationwide in one midterm. With that said, Johnson polled worse in February than last October. In the recent poll, 33% hold a favorable view of the Oshkosh Republican, while 45% hold an unfavorable view; in October 2021, 36% held a favorable view and 42% held an unfavorable one. For Evers, 50% approve of the job hes doing and 41% disapprove. In October 2021, 45% approved and 46% disapproved. President Joe Biden, who appeared in Superior on Wednesday to tout his infrastructure law, has a 43% approval rating in the poll, with 52% disapproval. Former President Donald Trump, who many expect to run for president in 2024, is viewed favorably by 36% and unfavorably by 57%. More Republicans are becoming confident in the accuracy of the 2020 election, with 38% saying they are confident now while 29% said they were confident in August 2021. Between August 2021 and the most recent poll, independents confidence fell from 79% to 55%, though the percentage didnt change much from the October 2021 poll. Democrats remain trusting of the accuracy of the election, with 96% saying they were confident. More topics When it comes to the Wisconsin Legislature, 37% of polled voters approve of the job its doing, while 46% disapprove. In October 2021, 38% approved and 48% disapproved. For Assembly Speaker Robin Vos, 13% of polled voters view him favorably, while 28% view him unfavorably. Fifty-nine percent did not give an opinion. Notably, more Republicans are giving unfavorable opinions of Vos: In January 2019, 6% of Republicans viewed him unfavorably; in the poll released Wednesday, 16% viewed him unfavorably. The issue concerning voters most, according to the poll, is inflation: 68% of respondents said they were very concerned and 28% said they were somewhat concerned with inflation. The percentage of people very concerned with undocumented immigration fell from 43% in October 2021 to 36% in the most recent poll. Expanding private school vouchers to all students, something Republicans have long championed, has 59% support and 37% opposition among polled voters. As for who should have the biggest role in determining public school curriculum, 35% said parents, 33% said teachers, 13% said school boards and 9% said superintendents and principals. The response was divided along party lines, with Democrats emphasizing teachers and Republicans emphasizing parents. Other results On marijuana legalization, 61% are in favor and 31% are opposed. Fifty-three percent say they trust Evers as a source of information about COVID-19 either a great deal or a fair amount, while 43% say they trust him not much or not at all. Thirty-one percent say they trust Johnson a great deal or a fair amount for COVID-19 information, with 61% saying they trust him not much or not at all. Democratic Sen. Tammy Baldwin, D-Madison, is rated favorably by 42% of voters and unfavorably by 36%. Twenty-one percent lack an opinion of her. Thirty-nine percent of voters say Wisconsin is headed in the right direction, while 53% say it is on the wrong track. Thats a marginally more pessimistic view compared with the October poll. Thirty-one percent of respondents are very concerned about unemployment, with 35% somewhat concerned, 20% not too concerned, and 13% not at all concerned. The states unemployment rate is around a record low of 3%. The poll included 802 registered voters interviewed by telephone between Feb. 22-27. The margin of error is 3.8%. For the primary vote choices, there was a sample size of 363 for the Republican primary and 354 for the Democratic primary, with margins of error of 5.8% and 5.7%. Love 0 Funny 0 Wow 0 Sad 0 Angry 0 No matter how Vladimir Putins invasion of Ukraine ends, it already marks a turning point in history: the end of a 30-year period of relative peace in Europe and a return to hostility between Russia and its neighbors a kind of Cold War 2.0. If were lucky. The first Cold War, from 1947 until 1991, divided the world between two hostile blocs. The United States and the Soviet Union reached the brink of nuclear war at least three times, most famously in the 1962 Cuban missile crisis, then negotiated a series of agreements to reduce the risk of conflict. Eventually the Soviet Union, burdened by a sclerotic economy, simply collapsed. Three decades later, that thumbnail history may sound oddly comforting: Alls well that ends well. But living through the Cold War, complete with bomb shelters and nuclear attack drills, was anything but comfortable. The world is different now. Russia is smaller and arguably weaker than the Soviet Union; the North Atlantic Treaty Organization, the U.S.-led alliance, is larger. But that doesnt mean the outcome is predictable. This is a new situation, warned John Lewis Gaddis of Yale, the dean of American Cold War historians. This is not a cold war; this is a hot war and it directly involves one of the great powers. In response to Russias invasion of Ukraine, the United States and its allies have quickly assembled an updated version of the Cold War strategy of containment countermeasures to deter Moscow from further aggression. They have imposed economic sanctions to punish Putin and his oligarchs, deployed troops to bolster Poland and other NATO countries on Russias western border, and stepped up military aid to Ukraine. Its not clear how effective those measures will be and all of them could prompt retaliation from Putin. Take economic sanctions. The United States and its allies have blocked most Russian banks from doing business in the West and imposed new controls on technology sales. Unlike in Cold War 1.0, however, the West is vulnerable to Russian economic retaliation. Putin can reduce his exports of natural gas, one of Europes main sources of heating fuel. He can launch cyberattacks on the United States and elsewhere. NATOs military reinforcements will likely draw Putins anger as well. One of his principal complaints about the way the first Cold War ended is that it allowed NATO to eventually add 14 countries that the Soviet Union considered part of its strategic buffer zone. Putins reckless behavior leaves the U.S. and its allies no choice but to augment the defenses on NATOs eastern flank, Charles A. Kupchan, a former National Security Council aide in the Obama administration, told me. The Russians are not going to like that and will respond in kind. Western aid to Ukrainian forces could be a trigger as well, whether its overt help to Ukraines government or covert aid to resistance fighters. Im guessing that this will happen military, economic and material support to Ukrainians resisting a Russian occupation, Kupchan said. It does not come without risk. ... If arms are coming from Poland, does that mean the Russians will start tinkering with Poland? If Putin is reckless enough to go into Ukraine, he may be reckless enough to test NATO. Putin has already intimated that he reserves the right to use nuclear weapons if he feels threatened by foreign powers a startling escalation of rhetoric. Whoever tries to hinder us, and even more to create threats to our country and our people, should know that Russias response will be immediate and it will lead you to such consequences that you have never encountered in your history, he said in his speech last week announcing the invasion. Finally, the map of Cold War 2.0 includes one more new element: a powerful China. During most of the 20th century Cold War, China was a poor country, a relatively minor player economically and militarily. Now its an economic superpower and Russias most important ally. Fifty years ago, President Richard Nixon wooed China away from its alliance with the Soviet Union. Kupchan argues that President Joe Biden should try to do likewise now. China has seen Russia as an important ally in pushing back against the West, Kupchan said. But the Chinese, unlike Putin, do not like disruption. They see Putin turning everything upside down, and theyre not sure thats a good idea. ... Its in the interest of the United States to take advantage of that. Cold War 1.0 lasted almost half a century. It was expensive and painful. Millions of people died in proxy wars in Korea, Vietnam, Afghanistan and elsewhere. But the antagonists avoided a third world war. Theres a lesson in that experience for Cold War 2.0: Even as the United States and its allies act against Putin, they need diplomacy, too to reduce the risk that this Cold War will be more costly than the first. Doyle McManus is a columnist for the Los Angeles Times. Readers may send him email at doyle.mcmanus@latimes.com. Love 0 Funny 0 Wow 0 Sad 0 Angry 0 Area high school students had the opportunity to test their knowledge in natural resources during the Central Region Nebraska Envirothon contest held Tuesday morning at Central Community College-Columbus. Hosted by the Lower Loup and Central Platte Natural Resources Districts, the event tested students in the areas of soils, aquatics, forestry, policy, range and wildlife. What the kids are doing is showing proficiency in each area. And then the team that scores the highest among all seven of the competitions, will get to go to the state contest and represent the central region for that, said Lower Loup NRD Information and Education Coordinator Larry Schultz. Envirothon is a national event for which competitions are conducted in almost every state in the country, as well as China and Canada, Schultz said. Nationals were held virtually in Nebraska last year. The natural resources districts in Nebraska sponsor the state contests. Fourteen teams from seven schools competed at Tuesdays event, including Humphrey. Up to five students could be on one team. The winners from Tuesdays contest will go onto the state competition, while the winner of the state contest will represent Nebraska at the national Envirothon. Upon arriving to Tuesdays event, the teams completed tests in each natural resources subject. The purpose is for students to demonstrate their knowledge, Schultz said. When they see the policy questions, we have a series of maps that they'll look at that identify different areas of the state that may be underground water control, something like that. The forestry section has different photographs, they have to identify an instrument, they have to identify what kind of tree might be involved with the cone or needles or something like that, Schultz said. One of the tests was based on soil and included tubs containing different types of soil. Students had to identify the different soil types based on their attributes. The state contest will actually have a pit dug, so the kids can go in and see the soil profiles and all that kind of stuff, Schultz added. Humphreys team consisted of Jeff Spier, Addison Schneider, Jason Sjuts, Mollie Groteluschen and Abilyn Schneider. Overall the kids thought they probably did well, said Humphrey ag teacher and FFA adviser Robyn Graham. We don't know how we scored because they have some additional scoring and then they'll send that out. But they felt like hopefully they did well, Graham said. There are some areas that are more of a struggle, like we don't know a lot about range. We know the basics, but not a whole bunch. Humphrey typically sends a team or two to Envirothon each year, she added. The students prepare for contests by taking a natural resources class and studying on the competitions topics. It's a good test of their knowledge of what they know, Graham said, noting that when there is an answer the kids dont know, they look it up so learning takes place no matter how well they do. Some students like Envirothon because its a team effort, she added. For some of them that don't like individual tests, this is a great time to work with your friends and for you to use all of your expertise, Graham said. They tend to be more successful because they can work together on that test. We love that the NRD is willing to invest in the youth and give them this opportunity and hopefully encourage them to look at natural resources careers and gain some knowledge on natural resources. Schultz said Envirothon allows students the opportunity to look at the overall scope of natural resources. This gives them the chance to take all the concepts and understand the natural world around them better, Schultz said. When they get to the state level, we actually provide them with a real world problem (such as) housing development has cropped up in the outside of a city and they're running into this issue and that issue maybe (an) endangered species or poor soil type or something. Then kids have to do a presentation on what they might propose to a local zoning board or a local city council. Most often, Envirothon team members are involved in FFA, such as Humphrey. But, as noted by Schultz, theres been a trend of urban schools bringing in their science students. Especially in the Lincoln and Omaha areas, it's more science teachers that are bringing them in, added Marcia Lee of Central Platte NRD. Loup City was one school present Tuesday that had teams comprised of science students. Loup City science teacher Teresa Walters said she had a large group competing this year four teams made up of 20 students in total. I just kind of open it up to whoever I have in class and say, 'Who wants to do this?' If they want to come, they volunteer and then we form teams, Walters said. I have an environmental science class and that one we do a little bit of studying in that class and reviewing and things along that line. Other schools present on Tuesday included Aurora, Brainard, Ord, St. Paul and Waverly. Hannah Schrodt is the news editor of The Columbus Telegram. Reach her via email at hannah.schrodt@lee.net. Love 0 Funny 0 Wow 0 Sad 0 Angry 0 Get local news delivered to your inbox! Subscribe to our Daily Headlines newsletter. Sign up! * I understand and agree that registration on or use of this site constitutes agreement to its user agreement and privacy policy. Now in its third year, the Central Pennsylvania Music Awards & Hall of Fame Induction Ceremony is bringing attention to artists on a local level. The ceremony itself will take place at 7 p.m. March 24 at Hershey Theatre, and it was created as a way to grow the regions music scene. The ceremony will be a Grammys-style, red-carpet event honoring the best of this past years musical groups and supporting businesses. More than 200 nominees have been selected in nearly 40 categories. Additionally, legendary musicians Les Brown, The Emperors, The Pixies Three, Third Stream, The Del McCoury Band and Live will be inducted to the Central Pennsylvania Music Hall of Fame as part of the evenings events. Ten nominees will be representing the Cumberland County area at the Central Pennsylvania Music Awards. They include Observe the 93rd (Best Song of the Year, Best Male Vocalist and Best Alternative Rock), DEAD (Best Tribute Band), Rock Mill Studio (Best Recording Studio), Woodshed Guitar Works (Best Instrument Shop), Cumberland Honey (Best Folk Band/Artist), Colt Wilbur Band (Best Cover Band), Gillian Smith (Best Female Country Artist, Best New Band/Artist), Christian Yeager (Best Youth Artist/Band), Nick Andrew Staver (Best Alt Country), and Nesmith Films (Best Videography). Asked what the Central Pennsylvania Music Awards means to him, Derek Henry, a Mechanicsburg resident who has been nominated for Best Male Vocalist said, Its obviously nice to be nominated and recognized, but the music community coming together to celebrate that mutual passion is really what we enjoy about it. Henry is one-half of the group Observe the 93rd, which he reports has kept itself pretty busy during the pandemic. Weve been dropping a new song every month or so and a handful of new music videos, he said. Our latest release is a song called Dopamine. Look for the group at Lovedrafts Brewing Co. in Hampden Township, which is one of their favorite new venues. Steph Landis said the nomination means being recognized for the heart and soul that Cumberland Honey puts into their music. We have a very supportive following of people who appreciate our music, so I feel like the chances of being selected in the folk category are strong, she said. But the same could be said about the other nominees as well. During the pandemic, the group did a few livestreams through Facebook and continued to practice together and worked up some new songs. They have many favorite local places to play, including Molly Pitcher Brewing Co. in Carlisle, The Winery at Long Shot Farm in West Pennsboro Township, Burds Nest Brewing Co. in Carlisle, Crostwater distillery in Lewisberry, Hook & Flask distillery in Carlisle, and any outdoor music festival. Both Landis and her musical partner Virginia Masland grew up in Carlisle, but have since moved to Gardners and Elliottsburg, respectively. Gillian Smith, who lives in Mechanicsburg, said she is excited and honored to have received nominations in two categories this year. I am very new to the PA music scene, so to even be considered for these awards is a success in my book, she said. During the pandemic, Smith focused a lot on writing songs with other people and playing anywhere where she was allowed. I think the Central Pennsylvania Music Hall of Fame Awards are doing a great job making sure that live music and artists are recognized, she said. Having their support helps all of us out, and it keeps the music scene alive in Central PA. Christian Yeager, a Mechanicsburg Area Senior High School senior, said he is thankful to the Central Pennsylvania Music Hall of Fame for supporting young artists in the area. Yeager is an aspiring performer and songwriter who has done very well on the charts with the debut single, Born For A Friday Night, which he recorded last fall in Nashville. A follow-up single will be released in March. Additionally, On March 3, 4, 5 and 6, he will be featured as Joseph in Mechanicsburgs spring musical, Joseph and The Amazing Technicolor Dreamcoat. Yeager plans to move to Nashville in the fall to attend Belmont University. Tickets for the awards show are $25 and can be purchased at cpmhof.com. The Hershey Theatre is located at 15 E. Caracas Ave., in Hershey. An after-party will be held at The Englewood located at 1219 Research Blvd., in Hummelstown beginning at 9:30 p.m. Love 0 Funny 0 Wow 0 Sad 0 Angry 0 On Monday afternoon, Newvilles yet-unopened Whiskers Brewing was engulfed in flames. Twenty four hours later, the brewery sold its first drinks. Refusing to let his dreams go up in smoke, owner Dean Yaukey set up shop and began to sell beer in the brewerys outdoor space Tuesday afternoon as firefighters worked to extinguish still-smoldering embers inside the building. [Its] not that I need the business, but we got beer, Yaukey said. A post on Whiskers Brewings Facebook page said the brewery would sell a few of its crafted drinks in cups to be consumed on the premises, as well as cans, crowlers or growlers for customers to take with them. The brewery will sell outside Thursday as well, as long as possible until the beer runs out, the post said. Yaukey said the idea to run the business outside for the time being came from his wife, Katie, and his daughter, Jordan. This morning, we were like what are we going to do, Yaukey said. And I said I got all that beer up there, I dont know what to do, and they said, Well, why dont we can it and offer it for people to go? And then we were like we can go a step further, we can invite them to sit out here and drink it because they could anyway before. Yaukey said since the business is operating outside, dogs are welcome too, fitting right in with the brewerys pet theme. Were going to sell beer to go while we have it, and also if people want to sit outside, they can drink here as well, he said. The fire Monday started between 3:55 p.m. when Yaukey said he found camera footage showing that nothing was happening and 4:12 p.m. when Yaukey arrived at the brewery at 9 S. High St. in Newville. When I came and I pulled onto the driveway, theres a vent right there, Yaukey said pointing to the front of his business. And thats just for like condensation, and theres black smoke coming out, and right away I know, oh thats not good. Thats a fire. I pulled around real quick, opened the kitchen door to make sure and boom its all over the place. According to Jacob Griffie, systems chief at Friendship Hose, crews from Friendship Hose, Upper Frankford, Walnut Bottom, Penn Township, West End, West Pennsboro, Carlisle Fire & Rescue and Cumberland Valley responded to the scene Monday. One firefighter was transported to UPMC Carlisle hospital due to smoke inhalation that happened outside the structure, State Fire Marshal Sean Polcha said. Polcha said the cause of the fire that damaged the bar and parts of the brewerys first floor has not been officially determined. I would only be guessing, but I think we have a pretty good idea, Yaukey said of the fires cause. There was one piece of equipment that we added within the last week and it ended up being one of these multiport USB chargers and it appears as though thats where the fire came from. Yaukey said that piece of equipment cost $32 on Amazon, which makes him half-sick to think about. Polcha said the fire was isolated to the bottom level of the brewery near electrical equipment and that it was extinguished before it caused major structural damage. It looks bad because when insulation falls it looks terrible, but I think it looks reparable ... , Yaukey said. Everything else was just smoke damage. Yaukey said the second floor was OK aside from smoke damage as well. Polcha said the damage estimates will come from the insurance company, and Yaukey confirmed the building was insured. Im a tenant, so I have insurance, plus the owner has insurance, so were good all around. In spite of the setback, Yaukey remains hopeful. All we can do is be positive. I mean, we dont want to sit around and cry about it, we want to be positive, plan on rebuilding. Yaukey had anticipated opening the brewery, Newvilles first since becoming a wet municipality in 2021 after being dry for more than 80 years, sometime in March. While he definitely plans to rebuild, Yaukey isnt sure what that will look like. I would love to build it exactly as we had it, Yaukey said. I dont know if that will happen. There were so many personal touches, so many things that I even built personally, woodwork and things, that I dont know when Id have time to do it again. Hes also not sure when the building will open. Were kind of hoping that ... maybe well hit June, maybe well hit July, Yaukey said, although that remains up in the air. Maddie Seiler is a news reporter for The Sentinel and cumberlink.com covering Carlisle and Newville. You can contact her at mseiler@cumberlink.com and follow her on Twitter at: @SeilerMadalyn Love 0 Funny 0 Wow 0 Sad 1 Angry 0 Be the first to know Get local news delivered to your inbox! Sign up! * I understand and agree that registration on or use of this site constitutes agreement to its user agreement and privacy policy. Cumberland County District Attorney Sean McCormack said an autopsy was performed Tuesday morning as part of a homicide investigation into an incident that occurred in Southampton Township last week. The incident occurred around 6 a.m. Feb. 23, when crews responded to a fire that began in the basement of a single-family home in the 100 block of Neil Road in Southampton Township. Two bodies were discovered in the home, and the Cumberland County coroner was called to the scene. Police have not yet identified the victims. McCormack said he has no further updates on the investigation but hopes that at some point in time hell be able to announce an arrest. We have certain things the police have been working, he said. I know from conversations with them, 24 hours a day theyve been working on this, but at this point in time we have no specifics to put out because it is such an active investigation. McCormack said during a news conference held Tuesday morning in Carlisle that the same Pennsylvania State Police officers involved with the homicide investigation were also involved with an investigation into the police-involved shooting that took place in North Middleton Township on Feb. 16. The investigation in Southampton Township delayed the release of information on the North Middleton Township shooting, McCormack said. Maddie Seiler is a news reporter for The Sentinel and cumberlink.com covering Carlisle and Newville. You can contact her at mseiler@cumberlink.com and follow her on Twitter at: @SeilerMadalyn Sign up for our Crime & Courts newsletter Get the latest in local public safety news with this weekly email. Sign up! * I understand and agree that registration on or use of this site constitutes agreement to its user agreement and privacy policy. [March 02, 2022] Element Electronics Wins Gold Stevie in 2022 Stevie Awards for Sales & Customer Service Element Electronics was presented with a Gold Stevie Award in the Customer Service Department of the Year - All Other Industries category in the 16th annual Stevie Awards for Sales & Customer Service last night. The Stevie Awards for Sales & Customer Service are the world's top honors for customer service, contact center, business development, and sales professionals. The Stevie Awards organizes eight of the world's leading business awards programs, including the prestigious American Business Awards and International Business Awards. Element received four awards in total, including: Gold Stevie Award Customer Service Department of the Year - All Other Industries Silver Stevie Award Contact Center of the Year (Up to 100 Seats) - All Other Industries Customer Service Success - All Other Industries Bronze Stevie Award Customer Service Team of the Year - Recovery Situation - All Other Industries Winners will be recognized during a virtual ceremony on May 11. One judge commented that Element, "shows how outstanding the company is compared to the sector average and its competitors during the past years. The investment in new technology (CRMs, chat bot), training, and team development really made a difference." "The Stevie Award is a tremendous, well-deserved honor," said Vlad Kazhdan, President of Element Electronics. "Customer service is a core belief at Element and something we live every day. It comes down to the character of our people-passion, empathy, patience, courtesy. We're grateful for such an incredible, dedicated team that supports our customers for life." More than 2300 nominations from organizations of all sizes and in virtually every industry, in 51 nations, were considered in this year's competition. Winners were determined by the average scores of more than 150 professionals worldwide on eight specialized judging committees. Entries were considered in more than 90 categories for customer service and contact center achievements; more than 60 categories for sales and business development achievements; and categories to recognize new products and services, solution providers, and organization and individual responses to the COVID-19 pandemic. Honoring excellence in thought leadership was a new category this year, as well. "The nominations we received for the 2022 competition illustrate that business development, customer service, and sales professionals worldwide, in all sorts of organizations, have continued to innovate, thrive, and meet customer expectations during the COVID-19 pandemic," said Stevie Awards president Maggie Gallagher Miller. "The judges have recognized and rewarded their achievements, and we join them in applauding this year's winners for their continued success. We look forward to recognizing them on May 11." Details about the Stevie Awards for Sales & Customer Service and the list of Stevie winners in all categories are available at www.StevieAwards.com/Sales. About Element Electronics Element Electronics, founded in 2007, started with a simple belief that every home should have access to televisions with the latest technology. In 2014, Element became the only major television company to assemble products in the U.S. Element's Winnsboro, South Carolina, factory assembles millions of TVs each year. Today, Element produces more than just TVs. By expanding its portfolio to consumer electronics, home appliances and more, Element continues to offer high-technology products, at the most accessible prices all while providing first-class, comprehensive customer service. For more information, visit ElementElectronics.com. About The Stevie Awards Stevie Awards are conferred in eight programs: the Asia-Pacific Stevie Awards, the German Stevie Awards, the Middle East & North Africa Stevie Awards, The American Business Awards, The International Business Awards, the Stevie Awards for Great Employers, the Stevie Awards for Women in Business, and the Stevie Awards for Sales & Customer Service. Stevie Awards competitions receive more than 12,000 entries from organizations in more than 70 nations each year. Honoring organizations of all types and sizes and the people behind them, the Stevie Awards recognize outstanding performances in the workplace worldwide. Learn more about the Stevie Awards at www.StevieAwards.com. Sponsors of the 16th annual Stevie Awards for Sales & Customer Service include Sales Partnerships, Inc., Thought Leadership Leverage, and ValueSelling Associates, Inc. View source version on businesswire.com: https://www.businesswire.com/news/home/20220302006018/en/ [ Back To SIP Trunking Home's Homepage ] Following an investigation by State Police, Cumberland County District Attorney Sean McCormack on Tuesday announced that no criminal charges will be filed in the fatal police-involved shooting in North Middleton Township in mid-February. At the conclusion of reviewing all of these factors, it is the determination of the district attorneys office that there are no criminal violations on behalf of the officers and this is what people might call, unfortunately, I dont like the term, but a 'good shoot,'" McCormack said. "This is a situation where the officers felt, particularly the officer that was hit, that his life was in danger and that he had no choice. McCormack said his investigation only determines whether there was a criminal violation in what law enforcement did during the Feb. 16 incident, and that any issues with department policies and procedures will be investigated by the department itself. Quote "This is a situation where the officers felt, particularly the officer that was hit, that his life was in danger and that he had no choice. Cumberland County District Attorney Sean McCormack State Police and the Cumberland County District Attorney's Criminal Investigation unit headed the investigation into the police-involved shooting that killed Roger Wayne Ellis, 54, of Carlisle, outside of a trailer on Brittney Drive in North Middleton Township. McCormack thanked the State Police for their help in the investigation and said that during the incident, police on the scene did what they could with the threat of a weapon and an injured officer, whom McCormack did not name during the conference. "The officers were composed," he said. "They all kept their heads. It's obvious their training kicked in." Searching for Ellis Though the shooting took place on Feb. 16, McCormack said the sequence of events that started things began on Jan. 14 when Camp Hill Police encountered Ellis' vehicle at a 7-11 store on Market and 32nd streets in Camp Hill. An officer determined Ellis owned the vehicle but should not be driving on a DUI-suspended license. Police attempted to conduct a traffic stop, but Ellis led police on what McCormack called a "low-speed chase," turning down a number of local roads. Police discontinued the pursuit but later spotted his vehicle again. When police attempted to conduct another traffic stop, Ellis ran a red light and fled at a higher rate of speed, leading police again to drop the pursuit. Police issued information on a warrant for Ellis' arrest. By Jan. 25, police received tips from the community that Ellis could either be at a North Middleton Township trailer or living in Newville, which is why members of Newville Borough Police became involved in the investigation. After receiving those tips, police spent time confirming Ellis' location and eventually settled on the North Middleton Township location. February shooting McCormack illustrated the site of the shooting incident on a PowerPoint presentation. He described the area as having one lower trailer where Ellis resided and another trailer beyond that, which was abandoned but would play a role in how the events played out. McCormack said Camp Hill Police officers took charge of serving the arrest warrant and requested presence from North Middleton Township Police, since it was their jurisdiction. They also requested the presence of a K9 officer from Newville Police because of reports that Ellis may be in possession of a handgun. Camp Hill officers collected near the main door to one side of the trailer, while a North Middleton officer and the K9 officer stood post on another door on the other side of the trailer. Camp Hill Police announced their presence and the owner of the trailer came out and confirmed Ellis was inside. That person was whisked away, and police again announced their presence and commanded Ellis to exit. Only one officer made it through the main door before spotting a handgun, and that Camp Hill officer announced the presence of the gun and backtracked out of the trailer. On the other side of the trailer, the North Middleton and Newville officers heard the call about a gun, but also heard noise in the trailer that they mistook for a struggle inside. McCormack said that they believed other officers were struggling with Ellis, so they went into the trailer and made their way to the back bedroom where Ellis was located. Before they reached it, Ellis pointed the handgun out of a crack in the door and fired at the North Middleton officer about 2 to 3 feet away, hitting him in the chest and his Kevlar vest. McCormack said those officers retreated, but in different directions. The Newville K9 officer joined Camp Hill Police on one side of the trailer, while the injured North Middleton officer retreated behind the abandoned trailer to check on his wounds, but effectively isolating himself from the rest of the police force. The North Middleton officer then got in contact with the rest of the police force to make sure they knew where he was to avoid any possibility of crossfire. At that point, McCormack said Ellis escaped through the bedroom window, checked to see the large group of police near the front of the trailer and then made his way north toward the abandoned trailer where the North Middleton officer was alone. When the North Middleton officer spotted Ellis, McCormack said the officer retreated into an open field expecting Ellis to either stay put or retreat into the line of woods. However, McCormack said that for unknown reasons, Ellis went toward where the officer had been and pointed his handgun. McCormack said that with the officer already having been shot and now alone in an open field facing a man with a weapon, he fired a series of shots, striking Ellis in the neck and leg. Resuscitation attempts were not successful and Ellis died at the scene. McCormack said an autopsy confirmed traces of drugs in Ellis' system, including methamphetamine, cocaine and marijuana. "We do not know what was going through his mind that afternoon," McCormack said. "We did learn after the fact, from what he told others, that he was not going back to jail again." But McCormack said that is hearsay from others regarding Ellis' motives. Posted at noon on Cumberlink: Cumberland County District Attorney Sean McCormack said during a news conference Tuesday that no charges will be filed in the police-involved shooting in North Middleton on Feb. 16. McCormack detailed the timeline of events that led to the shooting death of Roger Wayne Ellis, 54, outside a residence in the first block of Brittney Drive, and he said a North Middleton Township police officer was justified in using lethal force. At the conclusion of reviewing all of these factors, it is the determination of the district attorneys office that there are no criminal violations on behalf of the officers and this is what people might call, unfortunately, I dont like the term, but a 'good shoot,'" McCormack said. "This is a situation where the officers felt, particularly the officer that was hit, that his life was in danger and that he had no choice. State Police initially reported that North Middleton Township Police, along with Newville Police and Camp Hill Police went to a residence to serve an arrest warrant on Ellis, of Carlisle, who was wanted for fleeing and eluding police in a previous incident. After officers announced their presence, police said Ellis refused to comply with commands to exit the home and instead fired a handgun at a North Middleton officer at close range. The officer, who has not been identified, was injured, taking the shot in his bulletproof vest. Officers left the home, but Ellis reportedly approached the same officer again outside, and that officer shot Ellis, who was pronounced dead at the scene. For more information and for a video of the news conference, check back to Cumberlink.com. Sign up for our Crime & Courts newsletter Get the latest in local public safety news with this weekly email. Sign up! * I understand and agree that registration on or use of this site constitutes agreement to its user agreement and privacy policy. The Department of the Army has scheduled June 17 as the start date to disinter the remains of six Carlisle Indian Industrial School students who died between 1898 and 1905 and are believed to be buried in the post cemetery along Claremont Road. The notice of intended disinterment from the cemetery was published in the Feb. 14 edition of the Federal Register. The Office of the Army Cemeteries is honoring the requests of the closest living relatives of the following students who were enrolled at Carlisle, the first nonreservation boarding school in the country: Frank Green of the Oneida tribe Raleigh James of the Washoe tribe Annie Vereskin and Anatasia Achwack of the Alaskan (Aleut) tribe Wade Ayres of the Catawba tribe Ellen Macy of the Umqua tribe Five of the six students died of disease. As a 15-year-old runaway, Green was killed instantly when he fell off a train and onto the rails near Mexico, Juniata County, on June 25, 1898. While campus publications spoke highly of the other students on this list, Green was used as an example by school administrators of what behaviors to avoid. Open from 1879 to 1918, the school was designed as a social experiment to remove native boys and girls from tribal influences, assimilate them to the white mans culture and teach them a trade. Dickinson College has an ongoing project where Carlisle Indian School student records stored at the National Archives in Washington, D.C., are scanned into a digital resource center at carlisleindian.dickinson.edu. Here is what is known about children whose remains may be exhumed in June. Frank Green The Indian Helper, a student newspaper, reported that Green had left the campus without permission around midnight on June 25. That previous afternoon and evening, Carlisle played host to a performance of the Buffalo Bill Wild West Show in a field bounded by College, Walnut, West and Willow streets near the present-day Carlisle Family YMCA. A contingent of Indian School students attended the show. Evidence suggests that Green was taken in by the performance and wanted to leave Carlisle to join the show. While this is only speculation, the show left Carlisle that night over the Cumberland Valley Railroad to Harrisburg and then west for its next stop in Huntingdon. This would have taken the show train through the area of Juniata County where Greens body was reportedly found. It was thought that Green had fallen asleep while bumming a ride on the train. He was bruised about the head, his chest was crushed and his leg entire cut off, The Indian Helper reported that July. After due preparation for transportations, the remains were brought back to the school. School administrators had editorial control over the student newspapers on campus. They often used these publications to spread propaganda in support of the schools mission and as an instrument to shame the students into behaving properly. To administrators, the death was an inglorious end to a serial troublemaker. He [Green] tried to get others to run away with them, but their good sense prevailed and they refused to go, the article read. We trust that the lesson, though a severe one, will be of use to us all. The other students Raleigh James was 18 when he arrived in Carlisle from Carson, Nevada, on Sept. 20, 1898. He stayed on as a student until his death on April 18, 1900. Raleigh was a member of the band, the Indian Helper reported on April 20. He was a patient and cheerful invalid and made little trouble. Annie Vereskin was 11 when she arrived in Carlisle from Alaska on July 26, 1901. She died two months later on Sept. 30 after a short illness, the result of a hard cold which settled in her lungs and throat, the Red Man and Helper reported on Oct. 4. Wade Ayres was 13 when he arrived in Carlisle from South Carolina on Aug. 30, 1903. He died on Jan. 18, 1904. The Red Man and Helper reported that Ayres suffered complications after taking a vaccination in his arm. He was a boy of lovable disposition and with a keen sense of justice and right, the article read. Anastasia Achwack was 13 when she arrived in Carlisle from Alaska on July 11, 1901. She died almost three years later on June 20, 1904. Ellen Macy was 14 when she arrived in Carlisle from Oregon on Oct. 3, 1903. From April 5, 1904, to Sept. 16, 1904, she was assigned to an off-campus worksite in Media, Delaware County, to receive on-the-job training. Macy died of tuberculosis on April 3, 1905. She was a girl of sterling character and will be greatly missed by her host of friends, the Arrow, a student publication, reported on April 6. Email Joseph Cress at jcress@cumberlink.com. Love 0 Funny 0 Wow 0 Sad 0 Angry 0 Dear Friends, The General Assembly gave final approval to a supplemental spending plan that provides vital funding for K-12 schools and the states Medicaid program, as well as a pay increase for state employees. With the governors signature, HB 3014 authorizes nearly $4.6 billion in funding to be utilized in the current fiscal year that ends in June. The bill includes more than $2.2 billion in funding for K-12 schools in Missouri, of which nearly $1.8 billion is in Elementary and Secondary Education Relief funds. With this, Missouris school districts are fully funded! The bill also includes over $444 million for the Office of Childhood for stabilization services. HB 3014 also includes more than $1.5 billion in funding for the states MO HealthNet program. The funds are necessary to avoid a funding shortfall due to the increased population as a result of Medicaid expansion. Additionally, the bill allocates nearly $99 million for a pay increase for all state employees. Currently, state jobs have a 26% total turnover rate with more than a 55% turnover rate in jobs that pay less than $30,000 annually. State employees receive a 5.5% pay raise. Constitutional Medicaid Reform Amendment Receives House Approval (HJR 117) The Missouri House sent the Senate a proposed constitutional amendment that allows voters to decide if key reforms should be enacted for the states growing Medicaid program. House members approved HJR 117, which will ask voters if three key changes should be made to the Medicaid program in Missouri. One proposed change clarifies the legislatures authority to appropriate funds based on population. The bill would be very important in future years if Medicaid becomes prohibitively expensive and continues to encroach upon other priorities within our state budget. The second provision would put work and community engagement requirements in place for Medicaid recipients ages 19 to 64. They would be required to work at least 80 hours each month, or participate in education, job skills training, community service, or other alternatives. The proposal exempts individuals with disabilities or serious medical conditions, as well as pregnant women and primary caregivers for young children or dependent adults. It also allows the Department of Social Services to permit additional exemptions in areas of high unemployment, areas with limited economic or educational opportunities, areas that lack public transportation, or any other reason for good cause. The final component ensures Missouris Medicaid benefits are provided only to residents who live in Missouri. The change is meant to fix a problem that occurs in Missouri, which is the only state to provide add-on payments for non-Missouri recipients from other states who receive care in Missouri. The House Passed a Bill to Support the Creation of New Businesses (HB 1590) The House approved legislation meant to support the development of new businesses and promote economic growth in Missouri. The House gave strong bipartisan support to HB 1590, which creates the Right-to-Start Act and provides tax cuts for new businesses. Under HB 1590, the Right-to-Start Act requires the Office of Administration to compile a report each year that details key information on new businesses in the state. The report will be provided to the General Assembly, which will use the data to create new policies to encourage business and job growth. The bill also provides tax cuts to new businesses to allow these businesses to keep more money for capital so they can continue to grow. For limited liability companies (LLCs), the bill reduces the tax burden on their first $100,000 of income by 20% in each of their first three years of operation. For larger corporations, the bill reduces their tax burden during their first three years in business. They would see the corporate income tax reduced by 1% on their first $100,000 in income in each of their first three years. Over the last several decades most new jobs have come from new businesses. This bill encourages entrepreneurs to start a business and take a risk. The bill also creates the Office of Entrepreneurship within the Department of Economic Development and will promote policies and initiatives to support the growth of entrepreneurship in the state. The office would work with stakeholders and communities to provide information and technical support to entrepreneurs and support and advise the Office of Administration by making recommendations for improving access and resources for new Missouri businesses. The bill now moves to the Senate for consideration. (HB 1686 and HB 2358 & 1485) Protects Missourians Freedoms Bills designed to protect Missourians from mandates related to COVID-19 vaccinations are now on their way to the Senate. The House approved both HB 1686 and HB 2358 & 1485 last Wednesday morning. HB 1686 states that public entities such as government agencies and public schools cannot require a COVID-19 vaccination as a condition of employment. It also prohibits fines or other penalties based on an individuals vaccination status, including religious objections. HB 2358 & 1485 ensures an employee who is injured, disabled, or killed due to an employer-required COVID-19 vaccination would be compensated. The bill would treat the injuries resulting from the vaccine as an occupational disease. Additionally, an employee terminated or discharged for failing to comply with a COVID-19 vaccination requirement would be eligible for unemployment benefits. The bills are now under consideration in the Senate. If interested in tracking your filed tax return or any information relating to the Department of Revenue, click on this link. https://dor.mo.gov/taxation/return-status/ Our Capitol is beautiful and if you have the time, I encourage everyone to make the trip to Jefferson City to tour your Capitol of Missouri! My best to all of you! Rep. Dale Wright Love 0 Funny 0 Wow 0 Sad 0 Angry 0 A man faces burglary charges after allegedly breaking into Washington State Park facilities and stealing thousands of dollars worth of tools and equipment earlier this month. Ronald Dale Boyer, 27, of De Soto, was charged last week with two counts of second-degree burglary, felony stealing ($750 or more), and second-degree property damage. According to a probable cause statement from the Missouri State Park Rangers, sometime between Feb. 13 at 8 a.m. and Feb. 14 at 7 a.m., a burglary occurred within Washington State Park in which approximately $11,000 worth of items were stolen from the park and multiple buildings and barns were broken into with locks cut. The report states that several items were stolen, including a utility trailer, portable generator, MIG welder, portable air compressor, air tank, three backpack blowers, three chain saws, a pole saw, a tree trimmer, and a propane cylinder. Authorities reportedly located distinct and unique ATV tracks and footprints at the site of the thefts. On Feb. 17, at 6 a.m., the report states that another burglary occurred with multiple locks being cut in the same manner as the previous burglary. Several storage areas and buildings were reportedly broken into as well. No items were taken, but the same barn was broken into again, and forced entry was made onto the second level, which had not occurred on the first night, according to police. The report states that a person residing just north of Washington State Park reported hearing a distinct ATV during and around some of the times that the burglaries reportedly occurred. Photos were taken of the ATV and driver, which the witness had seen and heard. A park ranger reported hearing an ATV operate within the park's northern boundaries on the night of Feb. 13 before his departure at 10 a.m. The ranger reportedly witnessed the ATV and driver that same day and knew this ATV to have fled from him in the past when attempting to initiate traffic stops on it. Multiple reports of the ATV all mentioned the unique sound lt gave off as if the exhaust were damaged. The report states that game cameras were repositioned after the first burglary and caught pictures of an ATV and rider at the time of the second burglary, approximately 1-3 a.m. All photos obtained contained what appeared to be the same individual and the same ATV. The ATV is described in the report as an older style with a trailer hitch attached on the rear and having front, and back racks, a large singular headlight, floor running boards, and is darker in color. The report states that the operator pictured in the photos taken across multiple days appeared to be the same individual. The subject was described as being short in stature (size estimated when standing next to the ATV), wearing a black overcoat, facial mask, neon yellow hoodie under the coat, and dark pants. An area witness who wished to remain anonymous reportedly told rangers that he had been approached by a man he knew as Boyer, who tried to sell him several stolen items, such as an ATV and firearms. The report states that the witness recalled hearing about the theft from the park and wished to pass along this information. A computer check revealed Boyer had multiple active warrants and was on probation or parole for burglary. A DMV check showed that Boyer is five feet tall and weighs 115 pounds. The report states that rangers began surveillance of Boyer as the possible suspect. On Feb. 20, while en route to a possible address for the suspect, park rangers spotted the ATV and driver matching the description but could not catch up to the vehicle. Following the same road taken by the ATV to the possible residence, the report stated the rangers came to an address on Hillside Drive in De Soto where they saw the ATV parked on the lawn and took some photos of it. The following day, the report states park rangers heard the ATV while at Washington State Park. Following the sound, the rangers located the ATV and the suspect, identified as Boyer, at E&T Gas Station, directly across the road from Washington State Park. As soon as Boyer spotted the rangers, the man reportedly attempted to pull-start the ATV in an attempt to flee. Boyer had a small child with him on the ATV, according to police. A ranger quickly noticed the pattern of the ATV tires matched those he had photographed the morning after the first burglary. Boyer was then detained at E&T Gas Station, and a Washington County deputy took him into custody for his active warrants. With Boyer's consent, the child was given to Boyer's mother, the child's biological grandmother. The report states that ATV was seized for evidence in the investigation of the burglaries, and a computer check of the VIN revealed that the vehicle was stolen. An inventory search was performed of the ATV, which reportedly turned up a black backpack, a gasoline canister, a black overcoat, and dark camouflage bibs. Within the backpack, police allegedly found a prescription pill bottle belonging to one of Boyer's family members and folded up prescriptions to Boyer for the medication. The search allegedly yielded a baggie containing a crystalline substance identified as methamphetamine based on the officer's training and experience. Police also reportedly found a neon yellow hoodie, dark pants, a mask, leather gloves, multiple flashlights, multiple drug paraphernalia items, and a receipt for sold miscellaneous converters to a scrap yard. The report notes that the park rangers recognized the yellow hoodie, black coat, and dark pants to be the same clothing from the photos obtained of the suspect. On Feb. 21, a ranger interviewed Boyer. During the interview, Boyer reportedly said he could lead officers to the location of the stolen property. The man allegedly said that he was high on meth when he broke into the buildings at the park and that he took everything the first night but didn't think he took anything the second night. The report states that Boyer said he was too high to remember why he did it, but something had caught his eye in the park, and he needed money. Boyer reportedly told police that he was going to sell the items to random people he knew. A consent search was conducted of the curtilage at Boyer's listed De Soto residence. The current owner of the property consented to the search, according to the statement. While on the scene waiting for the property owner to answer the door, authorities there reportedly noticed the stolen trailer parked behind a small shed behind the residence. Police ultimately discovered the utility trailer, one portable generator, and one air compressor on the property. Boyer was booked at the Washington County Jail, and a $30,000 bond was set in the case. The criminal complaint filed in the case last week states that a separate case may be coming due to Boyer's alleged possession of a stolen ATV and possession of meth when he was taken into custody. Court records show that Boyer pleaded guilty last year to felony stealing in Jefferson County. The court suspended the execution of a seven-year prison sentence, placing Boyer on five years of supervised probation. In 2019, Boyer pleaded guilty to second-degree burglary in another suspended Jefferson County case. A seven-year prison sentence was suspended, and the man was placed on five years of supervised probation. Bobby Radford is a reporter for the Daily Journal. He can be reached at bradford@dailyjournalonline.com Love 0 Funny 0 Wow 1 Sad 0 Angry 3 Sign up for our Crime & Courts newsletter Get the latest in local public safety news with this weekly email. Sign up! * I understand and agree that registration on or use of this site constitutes agreement to its user agreement and privacy policy. Dozens of Albemarle High School students filed out into the schools parking lot Tuesday morning for a short walk-out to protest the end of mask mandates. Tuesday marked the first day that a new state law went into effect that strips local school boards of their authority to set mask policies. Albemarle and Charlottesville school divisions have required masks inside school buildings since summer 2020 a measure that officials have said helped to limit the virus spread. The Centers for Disease Control and Prevention considers Charlottesville and Albemarle County to be high risk areas for COVID-19 based on case counts in the last week and strain on hospitals. Those in high risk areas should continue to wear a mask while indoors at public settings, the CDC has recommended. The state law, which Gov. Glenn Youngkin attached an emergency clause to and signed last month, lets parents opt out of any mask requirement if their child is enrolled in a public school or school-based early childhood program. That change has concerned some parents of students with disabilities, whose children are at-risk of severe illness from COVID. A group of parents and legal groups are challenging the law in federal court. Others in the Charlottesville area have encouraged parents to choose to continue with masking, pointing in part to the fact the children under 5 years old are not yet eligible for the vaccine. School-based early childhood programs are open to 3 and 4-year-olds. Holding signs that encouraged people to protect the vulnerable and to wear a mask, the students gathered in the bus parking lot for 15 minutes. Teachers from the school stood watch and closed off entrances to the parking lot. Morgan Bizier, a senior at Albemarle High School, said the walkout was a way for students to voice their concerns with the policy. We were upset with the fact that we had really no agency in this decision, and that it felt like we were being placed in danger in a very life and death situation that is COVID, because its a really dangerous disease, said Bizier, who has family members with severe asthma. We wanted to actually speak up and do something about it instead of just taking it passively. Bizier said the walkout went well and attracted more students than initially thought. I do think that it was successful, and that I felt like we got our voices out, Bizier said. Officials with both school systems said they didnt receive any reports about issues in the schools over the policy change. Want to see more like this? Get our local education coverage delivered directly to your inbox. Sign up! * I understand and agree that registration on or use of this site constitutes agreement to its user agreement and privacy policy. Respecting individual differences and expressions is the mantra Charles Alexander thinks everyone should live by. Alexander, an activist and motivational speaker also known as Mr. Alex-Zan, spoke to a crowd at The Center at Belvedere on Tuesday about Black history in Charlottesville and his experience integrating Charlottesville City Schools as a child. The talk was part of The Centers Black History Month celebration. Alexander was one of the Charlottesville Twelve who integrated city schools in 1959, a year before Ruby Bridges famously integrated a white elementary school in Louisiana. Alexander was a 7-year-old second grader when his mother elected to send him to the white Venable Elementary School. People say Mr. Alex-Zan, youre a hero! I say, no Im not, I was seven years old! Alexander said, eliciting laughs from the audience. The real heroes of the Charlottesville Twelve were the parents of those children, who had the character to stand up. Alexander also addressed the current state of Charlottesville as it addresses its legacy of racism over the past decades. He said he likes current Mayor Lloyd Snook, whom he attended Venable Elementary with as a child, but wants him to do more to address inequities in the city. A lot has happened in Charlottesville, there is still a lot happening in Charlottesville, Alexander said. Until Mayor Snook and the city address the inequity and division within the city, the city is always going to have turmoil. Alexander said people need to show up and hold their public officials accountable to promote racial equity in Charlottesville. Ill say it. You white people need to speak up as well and hold Mayor Snook and city council accountable when it comes to doing what is right, he said. Alexander said he wants people to be open to learning from each others differences. I dont want to say negative things. But when folks say oh when I see Mr. Alex-Zan I dont see color. Oh, you dont? he laughed. Go ahead and admit you can see the color, but you respect the color. While he may not consider himself a hero, Alexander has used his experience and platform for activism and motivational speaking to encourage others. And he wants others to serve and become trailblazers in their own right. It aint too late for you to become a trailblazer, Alexander told the crowd. I dont like the word success. Why? Because weve got some successful people that are so selfish. But what Martin Luther King, Jr. said is We all can be great when we serve. Alexander said he has always considered himself a student, which is why he carries a backpack everywhere he goes. Im still a student, and when I listen to people like you, you are my teachers. I have my backpack because I want to learn something new every day and I hope that you want to learn something new here, he told the audience. I have always had a thirst for information and education. Alexander said his inspirations when he attended Venable were the schools only two Black employees at the time, Mr. Smith, a custodian and Mrs. Bryant, a cafeteria worker. He saw them as surrogate parents, he said. He also found a safe environment in the classroom of his teacher Miss Miller. While Miller was white, she supported Alexander and his mothers efforts to integrate the school and would secretly tuck notes into his pockets addressed to his mother to give her updates on how he was doing in school. Alexander said Miller is a role model for everyone. Kids would call me names, in particular they would call me blacky and darky. Miss Miller stood up and said Let me tell you students something: If you remove the top couple layers, we are all the same, Alexander said. Alexander said while he did experience some animosity, he had several friends at the school, and he credits that to his friendliness with students and teachers. Its hard to be mean to people who smile, although some people still do that, he said. Get Government & Politics updates in your inbox! Stay up-to-date on the latest in local and national government and political topics with our newsletter. Sign up! * I understand and agree that registration on or use of this site constitutes agreement to its user agreement and privacy policy. Virginia Beach School Board member Victoria Manning was removed from a state educational working group after a controversial social media post about educating children who didnt grow up speaking English. Following a presentation during a board meeting last week about the school divisions growing English as a Second Language program, Manning posted comments that questioned the cost and necessity of teaching ESL students, drawing criticism from fellow board members and the superintendent. (Virginia Beach) schools has 300 additional ESL students in the past year. Most are from South America, Manning wrote. Our ESL budget has increased over $1 million in two years. Continuing to educate South Americans is not sustainable. Virginia Secretary of Education Aimee Guidera condemned Mannings comments on Monday. We wholly condemn Mrs. Mannings comments. They are completely unacceptable and are in absolute opposition to the Youngkin administrations commitment to educate and prepare every child in the Commonwealth for success in life. Victoria Manning will no longer participate in our working group, Guidera said. Manning said her comment was in response to the school administration proposing the school division hire eight additional ESL teachers. In an interview Friday with The Virginian-Pilot, Manning said she was advocating for sustainability for all students and agrees the division should teach all students. She also said her main concern is having to hire additional ESL teachers and enroll more students, coupled with trying fill existing teacher vacancies and teaching kids who attend Virginia Beach schools. Manning has since released a statement on her campaign website. Teachers are already overburdened in their workload and are being required to continue to shoulder more and more work and that is unsustainable, Manning wrote. There is a teacher shortage and without teachers and proper funding, the current path is unsustainable. According to Virginia Beach schools, 2,084 students 3% of the student population qualify for ESL services, up from 1,774 last fall and 1,419 in fall 2020. Spanish is the most common first language among the divisions ESL students, followed by Tagalog, Mandarin Chinese and Vietnamese. China Daily: On March 1, the US Secretary of State Antony Blinken said in his video address at the 49th session of the UN Human Rights Council that the Chinese government continues to commit genocide and crimes against humanity in Xinjiang against Muslim Uyghurs and other minority groups. Do you have any response? Wang Wenbin: We condemn the latest US moves to smear and attack China by spreading lies. The word genocide has rigorous definition. The Convention on the Prevention and Punishment of the Crime of Genocide adopted by the United Nations General Assembly in December 1948 defined the crime of genocide as acts committed with intent to destroy, in whole or in part a national, ethnic, racial or religious group. Since its founding, the US has slaughtered the Native Americans, whose population nosedived from five million in 1492 to 250,000 at the beginning of the 20th century. This is nothing short of genocide. Roxanne Dunbar-Ortiz, an American historian dedicated to the study of indigenous peoples, concluded that all five acts of genocide listed in the Convention on the Prevention and Punishment of the Crime of Genocide can be found in the crimes the US committed against American Indians. Today, the Ministry of Foreign Affairs released on its website a report titled The American Genocide of the IndiansHistorical Facts and Real Evidence. It details crimes of genocide committed by the US. You may refer to that. Over the past 60-plus years, the population in Chinas Xinjiang region increased fourfold and the Uyghur population grew from 2.2 million to about 12 million. The accusation of genocide in Xinjiang is a flat-out lie of the century. Those who make this accusation are totally unethical. People behind this lie of the century are mainly anti-China forces in the US. Toward the end of the last administrations term in office, Mike Pompeo fabricated the lie of genocide in Xinjiang. Even though lawyers of the US State Department called this argument untenable, Pompeo insisted on using it as a main tool to smear and attack China to serve his anti-China political goals. After the new US administration came in office, instead of rooting out the former administrations poisonous legacy of concocting lies to smear China, it inherited the approach of manipulating lies to denigrate China, in an attempt to undermine Chinas ethnic unity and hobble Chinas development. I also noted media reports that revealed the US specific measures to formulate Xinjiang-related propaganda strategies and spread negative information about Xinjiang in an organized manner. They include encouraging US academic institutions, think tanks and non-governmental organizations to constantly fabricate so-called research reports about Xinjiang and publish related books. News agencies overseen by the US Agency for Global Media (USAGM) are instructed to produce fake news reports and propaganda materials about genocide and forced labor in Xinjiang in dozens of languages and hype up religious and sensitive topics. In the meanwhile, the USAGM coordinates with media networks in US ally countries to reprint and push such products. The US online media also chip in technologically through weakening and blocking true information about Xinjiang released by the Chinese side while providing technical assistance for anti-China forces to spread false information related to the region. Such efforts are also financially supported by the US government. As people can tell, in this production line of Xinjiang-related lies, the US government directly dominates the fabrication and dissemination by staging the show and marketing what it produces. This latest revelation echoes the personal statement by former US senior official Lawrence Wilkerson, who admitted that the US tries to incite Uyghurs and destabilize China from within. It fully reveals the US real intention to undermine Chinas stability and development by exploiting Xinjiang-related issues. Lies and rumors will eventually shatter into pieces in front of facts and truth. In recent years, more than 2,000 experts, scholars, journalists, diplomats and religious personnel from over 100 countries have visited Xinjiang. They have seen first-hand the facts about social stability, economic development and peoples happy life in Xinjiang. At the UN Human Rights Council, almost 100 countries unanimously expressed support for the Chinese governments policy in Xinjiang and opposition to interference in Chinas internal affairs in the name of human rights. None of the handful of countries that echoed the US position is a Muslim country. More and more visionary people are making rational and objective voices on Xinjiang-related issues. I want to stress that the door to Xinjiang is wide open. We welcome all unbiased people from all countries to visit Xinjiang. The US politicians move to discredit China by spreading lies will only damage their reputation and expose their sinister intention to the world. TASS: In the phone conversation between Chinese and Ukrainian foreign ministers yesterday, the Ukrainian Foreign Minister said he looked forward to Chinas mediation efforts for the ceasefire between Ukraine and Russia. Is China willing to take some concrete measures toward this end? Wang Wenbin: China always supports and encourages all diplomatic efforts that are conducive to the peaceful settlement of the Ukraine crisis and welcomes Russia and Ukraines effort to start peace talks. We hope both sides will continue to maintain the process of dialogue and negotiation, seek a political solution that accommodates the legitimate security concerns of both sides. China will continue to play a constructive role in promoting the deescalation of the situation in Ukraine. Xinhua News Agency: Recently, several international institutions have cut forecasts for global economic growth this year. In the meantime, we noted that the Statistical Communique of the Peoples Republic of China on the 2021 National Economic and Social Development released by the National Bureau of Statistics (NBS) said Chinas GDP grew by 8.1% year on year in 2021. It is a widely shared view that China remains a main engine driving global economic growth. Whats your comment? Wang Wenbin: Despite pressure and challenges arising from the changing economic environment at home and abroad, Chinas economy maintained sound development momentum and achieved outstanding performance with many highlights in 2021. In 2021, Chinas economy has made new breakthroughs both in aggregate and per capita terms. Chinas economy reached 114.4 trillion yuan, equivalent to $17.7 trillion at the yearly average exchange rate, accounting for more than 18% of the world economy and contributing about 25% to global growth. Chinas per capita GDP exceeded 80,000 yuan, surpassing the world average. Its consumption structure has continued to upgrade and the vitality for innovation continued to be unleashed, and overall innovation capability ranking has risen to the 12th place in the world. All this boosts the confidence in the steady and sustained operation of Chinas economy along the trajectory of high-quality development. It is particularly worth mentioning that though global economic and trade cooperation has experienced setbacks, China has bucked the trend and firmly expanded opening-up with the commitment to safeguarding stable global industrial and supply chains. In 2021, the total value of Chinas trade in goods was 39.1 trillion yuan, up 21.4% year on year, hitting a new record high. Chinas actual use of foreign capital last year exceeded the one trillion yuan mark for the first time, reaching 1.15 trillion yuan with an increase of 14.9%, the first double-digit growth rate in nearly a decade. This indicates that foreign investors are fully confident in the opportunities offered by Chinas broad market and its sound business environment. All these facts and statistics show that the Chinese economy has strong resilience and ample potential, and the fundamentals sustaining the long-term growth and the momentum for steady recovery remain unchanged. The international public opinion has an upbeat outlook on Chinese economys sustained and steady development. We stand ready to strengthen cooperation with all parties, share in development opportunities with the world, inject endurable impetus into the sustained recovery of the world economy and jointly add new chapters to the successful stories of economic growth and sustainable development. ABC Spanish Daily Newspaper: Will President Xi hold a telephone conversation with Ukrainian President Zelenskyy in future days? Has there been any preparation in this regard? Wang Wenbin: China and Ukraine have smooth communication channels. TV Tokyo: Firstly, will China continue to buy natural gas from Russia? Secondly, many Western countries have imposed sanctions on Russia but China is still having normal trade with the country. Will this have any impact on China? Wang Wenbin: We have answered relevant question multiple times. I would like to reiterate that China firmly opposes all illegal unilateral sanctions, and believes that sanctions are never fundamentally effective means to solve problems. They will only create serious difficulties to the economy and livelihood of relevant countries and further intensify division and confrontation. We ask the relevant parties not to hurt the legitimate rights and interests of China and other parties when handling the Ukraine issue and the relations with Russia. China and Russia will continue to conduct normal trade cooperation in the spirit of mutual respect, equality and mutual benefit. AFP: Firstly, there were reports of a Chinese national who was injured by a bullet in Ukraine. Do you have any comment? Secondly, during a call with Foreign Minister Wang Yi, Foreign Minister Dmytro Kuleba was quoted as saying that Ukraine looks forward to China launching mediations to bring about a ceasefire. Has China committed to these mediations? Wang Wenbin: On your first question, on the evening of March 1, Beijing time, a Chinese citizen was injured by gunfire while leaving Ukraine. The Chinese Embassy in Ukraine immediately contacted the person concerned to provide assistance. It is learned that the injured person is out of danger for the time being. The Chinese Embassy in Ukraine will continue to monitor the situation of the injured and provide assistance. On this occasion, I would also like to give you some updates on the relevant situation. For days, the Ministry of Foreign Affairs and Chinese embassies and consulates in relevant countries have coordinated with relevant sides and taken various measures to help Chinese citizens in Ukraine relocate to Ukraines neighboring countries through multiple channels. With the concerted efforts of all sides, relevant work is well underway in an orderly fashion. The Foreign Ministry and Chinese embassies and consulates in relevant countries will continue to spare no effort in protecting the safety of Chinese citizens and providing support and help for their evacuation and relocation. We hope our compatriots in Ukraine can stay safe and avert risks when staying somewhere or traveling. On your second question, I just gave my answer. We support and encourage all diplomatic efforts conducive to peacefully resolving the Ukraine crisis. We will continue to play a constructive role in deescalating the Ukraine situation. CRI: The Tigray forces reportedly accused the Ethiopian federal government of blocking humanitarian aid supplies from entering the state, and exchanged fire with the forces in the Afar state recently. What is Chinas comment on this? Wang Wenbin: We noticed that the Ethiopian government has declared to halt advances on Tigray, put an early end to the national state of emergency, and has been actively preparing for an inclusive political dialogue nationwide for some time, which have positive significance for easing the situation in north Ethiopia. As a sincere friend of the Ethiopian people, China calls on all relevant parties to work together to resolve differences through dialogue and negotiation and bring the country back onto the track of peace, development and revitalization. We are ready to continue to play an active and constructive part in this regard. AFP: The US issued a travel advisory warning citizens not to travel to Hong Kong due to strict coronavirus measures and the risk of parent-child separation. Whats your response to this? Wang Wenbin: The Hong Kong SAR governments COVID-19 protocols are aimed at effectively containing the virus and protecting the health of Hong Kong residents and foreign nationals in the SAR. They are necessary, science-based and responsible. We believe these anti-epidemic measures will further enhance the international communitys confidence in Hong Kongs COVID-19 response, ensure safe and orderly exchanges between Hong Kong and the rest of the world, and provide a safer and more stable business environment for international investors. Reuters: Are all Chinese evacuations done over land only, by buses or trains? Wang Wenbin: The Ministry of Foreign Affairs and the Chinese Embassy in Ukraine are monitoring and assessing the security risks in Ukraine and coordinating with relevant sides to mobilize all useful resources, in order to help Chinese citizens in Ukraine evacuate in an orderly manner under the precondition of ensuring their safety. Kyodo News: It is reported that former Chairman of the Joint Chiefs of Staff in the US had talks with the leader of the Taiwan region. Do you have any comment? Wang Wenbin: I would like to refer you to my answer to a relevant question yesterday. I want to stress again that the Chinese people are firmly determined and resolved to defend national sovereignty and territorial integrity. The attempt by the US to show support to Taiwan will be in vain, no matter who the US sends. ************************* To better meet the needs of foreign service and build a more authoritative and convenient platform for information release and interaction with the public, the social media accounts of Diplochat on Weibo and WeChat have been renamed The Ministry of Foreign Affairs. You are most welcome to follow and support Chinas diplomacy through these accounts. Released: March 2, 2022 March 6 will mark two years since the COVID-19 pandemic first affected our community. On March 6, 2020, the first case of COVID-19 in the state was reported in Delaware County. It was a day that would be the beginning of devastating impacts across our entire community. Tragically, in the past 2 years, Delaware County has lost over 1,800 people due to the virus. These are our family members, friends, neighbors, coworkers, and members of our community. During the pandemic, many family members and friends were not able to say goodbye to their loved ones due to public health concerns or travel restrictions, causing even more pain during an already difficult time of grieving. Delaware County Council extends our deepest condolences to those who have lost a loved one to the COVID-19 pandemic. The County will hold a Remembrance Vigil on Tuesday, March 8 at 1pm on the steps of the Courthouse. Members of the community are invited to attend to pay tribute to their loved ones. The memorial will also be live-streamed on the Countys website: https://delcopa.gov/covid/memorial.html In the midst of this deadly pandemic, where so many are grieving the loss of a family member, friend, neighbor, or coworker, its important that we pause and reflect, and remember each person we have lost. The hope is that the memorial will serve as a collective healing for our community. Linn County District Attorney Doug Marteeny's lawsuit challenging Gov. Kate Brown's clemency orders that release prisoners early was mostly rejected in Marion County Circuit Court. Marteeny was joined by Lane County District Attorney Patty Perlow and affected victims in requesting the courts prevent Brown from commuting sentences in the future according to specific procedures they challenged as illegal. But except in the instances of granting specific juvenile offenders a hearing before a parole board, Marion County Circuit Court Judge David E. Leith sided with attorneys for the state in an opinion issued on Tuesday, March 1. The lawsuit, filed in January, alleges the released prisoners pose a threat to their victims and communities. Commutations in Oregon can happen one of two ways. One requires victim input through an application process. The other is done by gubernatorial order. The district attorneys' argued that the governor should only consider applications, which give victims the right to be heard. She should not be able to go fishing for clemency candidates. And if she does, she should initiate the formal application process which would allow victims to voice their concerns. But Leith wrote that Brown's use of the latter method was within her prerogative and powers as governor. "If the legislature wanted to require an application from the Governor (or others in her administration) in order to self-initiate a clemency action, the legislature could have said so," Leith wrote. Moreover, removing the governor from the commutation process by only receiving requests would unconstitutionally restrict her clemency power, Leith wrote. "It would effectively divide the universe of offenders into two classes, one eligible for clemency because an application has been made, and one purportedly beyond the clemency power based on the lack of an application," Leith wrote. Under current state law, Leith wrote, there is no statutory guidelines restricting the governor from initiating the commutation process without victim input. Leith acknowledged the lack of notice could pose harm to the affected victims, but determined it was not substantive enough to find for the plaintiffs and restrain the governor. Meanwhile, the judge did find in favor of the district attorneys regarding commutations of juvenile offenders whose crimes predated a 2019 Oregon law which allows for their parole hearings. That law is only to be applied going forward, while Brown was using the clemency process to release those convicted before the bill's passage. In an interview, Marteeny said he was satisfied with much of the ruling and believes it highlights much needed changes to Oregon law. "I'd like to see a change that requires a commutation process where victims get a chance to be heard before the governor makes a decision on commutation," Marteeny said. Marteeny and his colleagues will study Leith's opinion further before deciding on whether to appeal, he said. Tim Gruver covers the city of Albany and Linn County. He can be contacted at 541-812-6114 or Tim.Gruver@lee.net. Follow him on Twitter via @T_TimeForce. Love 0 Funny 0 Wow 0 Sad 0 Angry 3 SALEM The Oregon Senate has voted overwhelmingly in favor of new logging standards negotiated by timber and environmental groups under the Private Forest Accord compromise. Senate Bill 1501, which enshrines the deal into law, was approved Wednesday, March 2 by the Senate 22-5 after a brief discussion during which no objections against the legislation were raised. Representatives of timber and environmental groups struck the deal last year after a year of talks mediated by the office of Gov. Kate Brown, who convened the panel in 2020 to avoid competing ballot measures on forestry regulations. The 44-page bill expands no-harvest buffers around streams, implements stricter requirements for road-building, prioritizes non-lethal control of beavers and creates a new modeling system to avoid and mitigate the effects of landslides. The legislation is expected to set the stage for a federal Habitat Conservation Plan for the states private forests, which would shield landowners from liability under the Endangered Species Act when harvesting trees. Several forest products companies and the Oregon Small Woodlands Association signed onto the Private Forest Accord with the understanding that it would provide more regulatory certainty and reduce the likelihood of disruptive lawsuits and ballot initiatives. The agreement is costly for the timber industry, not only financially but also in terms of its unity, since some companies remain opposed to the new regulations, said Chris Edwards, president of the Oregon Forest & Industries Council. However, there is too much at stake for the timber industry to roll the dice and move forward without the deal, he said during a legislative hearing on SB 1501. At its core, the Private Forest Accord is about protecting a future for forestry in Oregon, Edwards said. Its also about turning the page on the timber wars of the past. Support for the deal is not unanimous in the timber industry critics argue that it complicates forest management, excludes excessive amounts of land from logging and was developed without sufficient transparency and public input. Many members of the Oregon Farm Bureau who own forestlands believe the agreement is unworkable, said Lauren Smith, the organizations director of government affairs. With the new harvest buffers in place, some of our members risk losing up to 50% of their harvestable timber and have stated theyre likely to sell their woodlands to larger owners or sell the minimum parcel sizes for home sites, she said. Under the agreement, small forestland owners are subject to less rigorous logging restrictions in recognition of their tendency to grow trees on a longer rotation cycle. Small woodlands owners who choose to manage their properties under the standards required for larger landowners would be eligible for tax credits under a companion bill. Love 0 Funny 0 Wow 0 Sad 0 Angry 0 With the Downtown Corvallis Association dissolving after nearly four decades of service, the job of promoting and advocating for downtown businesses is up for grabs. The Chamber of Commerce, however, is only partly interested. Meanwhile, the executive director appears to be leaving town and the city is doing an audit of the organization whose goal it was to drive consumer traffic to downtown. The dissolution was announced in a Feb. 17 news release from the associations board of directors. The release cited COVID-19 as the cause, saying the pandemic shut down most of the large fundraising events of the past two years. Executive Director Jennifer Moreland did not respond to requests for comment. Moreland took over the association in 2018 when Joan Wessell retired after 25 years as executive director. Even before the announcement, the city requested to audit the nonprofit's last five years of financial records. It also requested contracts, payroll records, details related to revenue and expenditures, evidence of work performed, bank statements and any previous audits, to be provided by Tuesday, March 1. The city has a right to request these items because the nonprofit had been funded by a downtown economic improvement district the city created in 1993. It applies a voluntary surcharge to property owners who agreed to pay up in exchange for programming and advocacy that would help downtown businesses thrive. At the time, using improvement districts in this way was common, according to Economic Development Manager Kate Porsche of the Corvallis-Benton County Economic Development Office. But property owner participation, Porsche said, has declined over the years, shrinking the districts boundaries and revenue for Downtown Corvallis Association operations. Among those operations included business assistance, public advocacy, political involvement and community events. Now, many downtown organizations are moving away from improvement districts, focusing more on membership or sponsorship models, she added. According to city records, property in the district was annually assessed at $1.25 per $1,000 of real market value, with a maximum limit of $3,500. The assessments generated around $60,000 a year for the association, according to city records. Auditing the association In considering how effective the association has been, Porsche said the answer comes from looking at the great work Moreland did, such as providing popular events and advertising campaigns that attracted people to downtown. She noted the success of shop small Saturdays. Porsche said the pending audit may help understand the districts long-term impact. Its coming to an end; this is the logical time to do an audit, she said. Also, contractually, if they end up reverting any remaining funds back to us, then we would have the responsibility to handle pushing back out those funds. Porsche could not confirm whether there had been any previous audits of the association. The district is renewed by a two-thirds majority vote of building owners in the district every five years. The current five-year period began in 2017 and ends June 30. Porsche said its likely the district will not be renewed, in part because the renewal campaign work falls on the sun-setting association, not the city. Chamber of Commerce The Corvallis Chamber of Commerce may pick up some of the pieces for the Downtown Corvallis Association but the chamber is not absorbing its role or taking over the closing out of the economic improvement district. Those businesses are going to need support, Chamber President/CEO Simon Date said. Theyre going to need a resource to come to when they have issues with the city, or code, or regulations, or they just want to be part of the more basic stuff like marketing and networking. The two organizations shared similarities: The chamber works to attract, develop and improve businesses in Corvallis with an eye on sustainability. Date said his organization tended to leave the downtown area primarily to the association. The one thing that (the Downtown Corvallis Association) does different than us is they are a lot more events-driven, and that is a bigger part of their income, Date said, adding the chamber is largely funded through memberships. The other thing is they have a financial tie to the city in terms of entering into contacts with them, which we dont do. Speaking highly of the relationship and support between the two organizations as well Moreland herself, Date said the crossover between them included around 20 of the 343 chamber-member businesses who were also association members. The association lists 170 members on its website. Closing up shop Date also held a nonvoting position on the associations board of directors, which gave him some insight to the surprising dissolution as it was being considered. He said ending the economic improvement district leaves a major obstacle to keeping the association, especially without events revenue. Obviously, Jen leaving was a factor because shes been so instrumental to the success theyve had, he said, adding that replacing her would be difficult, even more so under the lingering economic hit from the pandemic. A recent vote by the chambers board of directors determined that any funding potentially coming to the chamber as part of the associations dissolution wont be accepted until after its audit is complete. Date said its a no-brainer to wait it out. He plans to use any infusion to fund an additional chamber position, which would allow him to focus more on downtown. That money, through an agreement with the DCA, would be to continue their mission but not their organization, he said. We have no illusion that were coming in like the knights in shining armor to save an organization thats unfortunately going out of business. Editor's note: This article has been edited to clarify that the Downtown Corvallis association executive director is leaving town. Cody Mann covers Benton County and the cities of Corvallis and Philomath. He can be contacted at 541-812-6113 or Cody.Mann@lee.net. Follow him on Twitter via @News_Mann_. Love 0 Funny 1 Wow 0 Sad 0 Angry 0 Get local news delivered to your inbox! Subscribe to our Daily Headlines newsletter. Sign up! * I understand and agree that registration on or use of this site constitutes agreement to its user agreement and privacy policy. My heart grieves as I watch the news coming out of Ukraine. Texts from Ukrainian friends of 20 years from our sister city of Uzhhorod detailing the situation in Uzhhorod, Kyiv and Kremenchuk as the Russian army invades their peaceful country. A mixture of emotions as friends, many who are like family, are coming to grips with the reality of the current situation in their country. On Feb. 19, the Corvallis Sister Cities Association hosted a Zoom call with some 20 Ukrainian friends and 60-some Americans affiliated with CSCA. At that time, there was some speculation about a major invasion, but most Ukrainians were of the impression that it would more likely be an expansion of what had been going on for the last eight years in the eastern part of Ukraine. Uzhhorod is the most western city in Ukraine, located in the southwestern part of the country on the Slovakian border and just a few kilometers north of the Hungarian border. Until the morning of Feb. 24, no one was worried about Uzhhorod being attacked. However, I learned from a friend who recently built a new house near the airport that he was moving back to the city center in case the airport was attacked. How quickly things evolve. In the past, items of conversations with Ukrainian included grandkids, health, birthdays, vacations, politics, etc. Not unlike conversations with American friends and family. Now we are discussing missile strikes and evacuation plans very surreal indeed! Ukraine is a peace-loving country that surrendered its nuclear weapons at the end of the Cold War in exchange for assurance of protection from the U.S., other Western allies and, ironically, Russia. Known as the Budapest Memorandum, it was not ratified by Congress and, as a result, is not enforceable. There is much conversation in the media about whether intervention is in the strategic and economic interests of the U.S. I will leave that discussion to the pundits. What I have observed in my 20-plus years of interaction with Ukrainian people and their civil institutions is a country that has eagerly adopted U.S. values and systems. Look closely at Ukraines economic, education, social service, environmental and criminal justice systems and you will see a strong influence from America. Their values are the same as ours. Ukrainians want economic security, health for their families and for their children to be successful! They have a strong belief in the importance of families, democracy, self-reliance and God. They have made tremendous progress in their journey to democracy in a relative short time. Many people have asked what they can do support Ukraine. In the short term, I would encourage individuals to let their senators and representative know their feelings about Ukraines situation and Russias behavior. In the longer term, there undoubtedly will be many humanitarian issues in Ukraine needing monetary support. I first visited Uzhhorod two days after 9/11. The outpouring of support and concern for America after the tragic attack on our country was incredible. Today it is our turn to reciprocate. Pete Bober is a retired community college administrator, community volunteer and long-term member of the Corvallis Sister Cities Association. He has traveled to Ukraine many times, working on a variety of projects between Corvallis and Uzhhorod. Love 0 Funny 0 Wow 0 Sad 0 Angry 0 Experience Your Best Lent Yet with Jonathan Roumie Catholic app Hallow issues #Pray40 Challenge, launches #AshTag for Ash Wednesday NEWS PROVIDED BY Hallow March 2, 2022 CHICAGO, March 2, 2022 /Standard Newswire/ -- Jonathan Roumie, who plays Jesus in the hit TV series "The Chosen," is helping Hallow, the No. 1 Catholic app in the world, guide Catholics to their best Lent yet, journeying through The Last 7 Words of Christ for Hallow's #Pray40 challenge. Each week, Roumie, through his narration, will help Catholics meditate on one of the seven last words Jesus spoke in his final hours before His death upon the cross. Watch Roumie's official Hallow TV commercial for Lent 2022: https://youtu.be/dVY1_xH2Qis. Roumie will guide Catholics into the mystery of these profound Last 7 Words of Christ and grow closer to Jesus during this season of Lent: "Father, forgive them; for they know not what they do" "Amen, I say to you, today you will be with me in paradise." "Woman, behold thy son! Behold thy mother!" "I thirst." "My God, My God, why have you forsaken me?" "It is finished." "Father, into thy hands I commend my spirit." Hallow also will launch a digital Lenten ashes filter for Ash Wednesday, the "AshTag" effect. Catholics can get their "AshTag" on both Facebook and Instagram. For more information, please visit hallow.com/ashtag. This Lent, so that fewer people will have to say "I thirst," Hallow is partnering with Cross Catholic Outreach to build 24 wells across Africa, providing a lifetime of clean water for almost 4,000 people. Hallow will donate $1 for each of the first 100,000 participants in the #Pray40 Challenge to Cross Catholic Outreach to build the wells. The #Pray40 Challenge will include: Daily Lenten sessions on The 7 Last Words of Christ with narrator Jonathan Roumie Writings on The 7 Last Words from Venerable Archbishop Fulton Sheen Meditations on the Sunday Gospels to help us enter more deeply into the mystery of The 7 Last Words The Stations of the Cross, adapted from St. Alphonsus Liguori's "Way of the Cross" Weekly Litanies, such as The Litany of Humility and The Litany of Trust Collections of Psalms and Petitions to lift each other up in intercessory prayer Brand new Lenten music for contemplation Writings and reflections from faith leaders and saints Visit www.hallow.com/pray40 to learn more about the #Pray40 Challenge. For more information, or to schedule an interview with Alex Jones, please contact Kevin Wandra (404-788-1276 or KWandra@CarmelCommunications.com) of Carmel Communications. About Hallow Hallow is a Catholic prayer and meditation app that helps people deepen their relationship with God through audio-guided prayer, sleep, bible readings, meditations, and music. The app has over 3,000 sessions including a Daily Rosary, Daily Gospel, Daily Saint, Novenas, Examens, Fr. Mike Schmitz's Bible in a Year, Jonathan Roumie from The Chosen's Audio Bible, Bishop Barron's Sunday Sermons, peaceful Christian music, Gregorian Chant, Sleep Bible Stories, and so much more. Launched in December 2018, Hallow is now the #1 Catholic app in the world with over 2 million downloads across over 150 countries. Hallow's Board of Advisors is led by Bishop Kevin Rhoades and includes Fr. Mike Schmitz, Dr. John Cavadini & Fr. Kevin Grove from the University of Notre Dame, Lisa Hendey, Fr. Steve Gunrow from Word on Fire, Scott Malpass, Dean Abela from the Catholic University of America, Laura Fanucci, and Sr. Jaime Mitchell. SOURCE Hallow CONTACT: Kevin Wandra, 404-788-1276, KWandra@CarmelCommunications.com Your morning rundown of the latest news from overnight and the stories to follow throughout the day. Sign Up View all of our newsletters. ZTE Corporations Next-gen Cloud AI Home Security Camera Pro has landed the Best Connected Consumer Device award at the Global Mobile (GLOMO) Awards during Mobile World Congress (MWC) 2022 in Barcelona, Spain. ZTE's Next-gen Cloud AI Home Security Camera Pro innovatively employs device-cloud collaboration technology whereby massive AI applications are deployed in the cloud and users can download them on demand to implement multiple use cases with just one camera. With this technology, the camera can deliver more functions and better experiences for users. In addition, the camera and cloud can jointly perform scenario analysis to boost analysis efficiency and save computing resources. The Next-gen Cloud AI Home Security Camera Pro also features interface openness and capability exposure, which is part of ZTE's commitment to helping build a smart care ecosystem. To date, the product has been deployed at scale in China, helping users guard homes, look after the elderly and children, protect against thefts and intrusions, etc. anytime, anywhere. The GLOMO Awards are the industry's most prestigious accolade, judged by the sector's most prominent subject matter experts. The Best Connected Consumer Device award that ZTE has won is for an everyday consumer electronic device or gadget that brings new and smart applications, efficiencies and functionality to the user, at home or on the move. Argentinas president, Alberto Fernandez, has announced plans, which are now apparently underway, to connect schools around the country to the internet. The aim, he suggested, is that in the next 90 days some 2,700 schools will be connected with internet services. Precise details of how this is to be done were not offered, though it may be connected with an announcement In January from Pablo Tognetti, the president of the Argentine government-owned telecommunications company Arsat, that Arsat and the education ministry were about to sign an agreement to connect 3,000 schools via satellite and, where possible, with fibre optics. The website BNamericas reports that Fernandez said that another 10,000 schools will be connected during the course of this year, presumably on top of the 2,700 mentioned; this will allow three million students to access internet services. Some 5.2 million students are already connected. This means, according to the president, that by the end of this year 90% of the countrys students enrolled in the education system will be connected to the internet. The president also announced that the government is distributing 600,000 computers to schools and has tendered the purchase of one million computers. The government plans to build 3,000 digital classrooms for early-stage students this year, with another 7,000 to be constructed in 2023. Educational connectivity has been a theme in Argentina for some time. We reported in October 2021 that Argentinas communications and media regulator (Enacom), its Ministry of Education, and its National University Council (CIN) had jointly agreed to implement a programme to provide and guarantee connectivity in university education centres throughout the country, including the deployment of Wi-Fi 6 within the countrys 58 National Universities. By Azernews By Sabina Mammadli Serbian businesses have a strong potential to contribute to the restoration of Azerbaijan's liberated territories, Labour and Social Security Minister Sahil Babayev has said. He made the remarks at an event to mark the Republic of Serbia's Statehood Day. "Active reconstruction work is underway in the liberated lands. I believe Serbian companies have high potential to take part in these projects as well. This issue has been discussed during the business forum whereby Serbian companies showed great interest in these drafts," he said. Babayev outlined the successful development of Serbia-Azerbaijan relations, noting that they are based on mutual respect for territorial integrity, sovereignty, and inviolability of borders. The minister stated that the agreements reached and documents signed during the two countries' high-level visits formed a strong legal basis for the two countries' comprehensive development of cooperation, and a total of 34 documents were signed. He emphasized the importance of the intergovernmental commission and its regular meetings in the development of Azerbaijani-Serbian cooperation. Babayev also stated that the elimination of visa requirements between Azerbaijan and Serbia will help strengthen bilateral trade relations. He expressed confidence that Serbian business circles would be interested in taking part in projects in the Alat Free Economic Zone, which was established last year. He stressed that the two countries support each other in international organizations. One of the notable examples is the celebration of the 60th anniversary of the Non-Aligned Movement in the capital of Serbia, Belgrade, which once again demonstrated Serbia's commitment to the principles of the Non-Aligned Movement. Mutual visits are intensive," Babayev added. During the same event, Serbian ambassador to Azerbaijan Dragan Vladisavljevic stated that bilateral relations have reached the level of strategic partnership. He described Azerbaijan as one of Serbia's closest friends. "Diplomatic relations between the two countries were established in 1997. During this time, relations between Azerbaijan and Serbia achieved the level of strategic partnership," he said. The ambassador said that the two countries' total coordination on issues of mutual interest has been ensured, as evidenced by a significant increase in trade between Azerbaijan and Serbia in 2021. I believe friendly relations between Azerbaijan and Serbia will become more intense in the future," the ambassador added. At the event, Babayev congratulated the ambassador and friendly Serbian people on Statehood Day on behalf of the Azerbaijani government. Azerbaijan and Serbia collaborate in a variety of economic sectors. The Azerbaijan-Serbia Declaration on Strategic Partnership, signed in 2013, and the Joint Action Plan on Strategic Partnership, signed in 2018, laid the groundwork for the development of relations. Last year, Azerbaijan and Serbia have signed an agreement on the mutual abolition of visa requirements for persons holding general civil passports. The agreement between Azerbaijan and Serbia on the mutual abolition of visa requirements for holders of general civil passports was signed during a meeting between the two countries' foreign ministers, Jeyhun Bayramov and Nikola Selakovic, on the sidelines of the high-level meeting commemorating the Non-Aligned Movement's 60th anniversary in Belgrade on October 11, 2021. The trade turnover between Azerbaijan and Serbia amounted to $9.2 million in 2021. In addition, the trade turnover between the two countries amounted to $758,650 in January 2022. Statement at the UNSC Briefing on Syria - Chemical Weapons Statement Thank you very much Madam President and I want to thank you, High Representative Nakamitsu, for your briefing today. As others have noted, today we mark 25years since the entry into force of the Chemical Weapons Convention. The Conventions aim, making the world safe from the threat of chemical weapons, through a comprehensive and verifiable ban, is as important now today as ever. On this important anniversary, Ireland takes the opportunity to reaffirm our unwavering support for the OPCW, its Director General, and the staff of the Technical Secretariat. A key element of the Convention is the establishment of the OPCW to ensure a credible, transparent verification regime, to verify the destruction of chemical weapons, and to prevent their re-emergence. That the Convention has been such a success is, in large part, thanks to the continued integrity, professionalism and impartiality of the OPCW. The Security Council has a crucial role to play in supporting the on-going work of the Convention and in upholding the legal norm against chemical weapons. The use of these weapons by anyone, anywhere and under any circumstances is an affront to international law, on which we all depend for our security and wellbeing. Madam President, Unfortunately, however, 25 years after the Conventions entry into force, the recent marked increase in the use of chemical weapons presents a serious threat to international peace and security. The ongoing case of Syria remains a significant challenge, and the failure to resolve this case represents a serious risk to the effective operation of the Convention. Thousands of Syrian civilians have experienced the devastating effects of chemical weapons, at the hands of the Syrian armed forces, and by ISIL, as evidenced in reports by the UN and the OPCW. At the same time, we see continued efforts by Syria and Russia, to undermine and politicise the work of the OPCW, in order to deflect attention from Syrias culpability. Madam President, Its essential that we, as a Council, uphold our responsibilities in resolving this file. We must be clear in our full support for the OPCW in its ongoing workin Syria, and in rejecting efforts to undermine the OPCW. We must continue to hold Syria to its obligations under the CWC and Council Resolutions. Equally, Syria must stop its policy of equivocation and delay, and engage in serious and meaningful cooperation with the OPCW. The Technical Secretariat, and the Conference of States Parties, have made clear the concrete actions necessary to resolve the outstanding issues with Syrias declarations. It is for Syria to implement these actions and provide the necessary clarity on all outstanding matters. It is unacceptable that Syria has prevented the deployment of the DAT for the last year, despite the efforts demonstrated by the Technical Secretariat to facilitate a meeting. The arrangements for the proposed meeting between DG Arias and the Foreign Minister Mekdad, also outstanding for a year, must be settled quickly, with the meeting focusing on achieving concrete outcomes. It is time that Syria moves on from empty words and delays. Ireland will continue to support all efforts to resolve outstanding issues on this file. Thank you. Previous Item | Following news that the Supreme Court may overturn Roe V. Wade, pro-choice protesters took to the streets of Moscow, and Planned Parenthood officials want to remind people that its health centers are still open and abortion services are currently legal. Court Clerk gets financial officer Jackson County Commissioners agreed Friday to give over the financial officer position to the Clerk of Courts office, after a lengthy meeting with Clerk of the Court Daun Crews. No man can serve two masters, Crews told the board, adding that since Florida statutes assign responsibility for handling all financial matters for the board to his office, he said he needs the financial officer in his office, handling financial matters only. For the past 15 months, financial officer Larry Spivey has been working from the County Commission business office, serving both as the finance officer and the budget officer to the board. The commission agreed to release the position to Crews, after the board hires a county administrator, who would take over the budget for the group. The budget and finance officer positions were combined some 15 months ago by the commission, reportedly to save money by hiring one individual to handle the two sets of duties. Jackson County Floridan, Tuesday, Feb. 19, 1985 Sex change eyed for Dozier school Dozier School for Boys could soon be emptied of all male juveniles and then filled with about 300 female youthful offenders, none older than 24, if Gov. Bob Graham gets his budget request of nearly $689,000 to staff the prison and $4.5 million to renovate the facility. Jackson County Floridan, Tuesday, Feb. 19, 1985 Woman dies in blaze Harriette Tyus, 63, of Marianna died this morning after fire swept through the 12x50 mobile home she was in. Investigators believed the fire started on the stove, where a valve was found open and a cooking utensil had melted. Her husband, Phillip Tyus, a Marianna city worker, was not at home at the time of the blaze; neither were their sons, Jeff and Bill. Her body was found on the floor, next to her bed. Jackson County Floridan, Tuesday, Feb. 19, 1985 Abortion bill tries to ease fetus pain A Republican legislator says doctors should be required to tell women seeking abortions that the procedure could cause pain to fetuses. Rep. Daniel Webster of Orlando, a staunch opponent of abortion, last week filed HB 253, which would require physicians to tell women that an anesthetic is available to ease the pain of aborted fetuses. Cynthia Lefever, president of the Tallahassee chapter of the National Organization of Women, said the bill was an attempt to circumvent the U.S. Supreme Court decision that legalized abortion and to make women feel guilty about having abortions. Jackson County Floridan, Tuesday, Feb. 19, 1985 Follow @JCFloridanNews on Twitter. Two Dothan Preparatory Academy students were arrested for making a bomb threat on Monday that forced the entire student body and much of the staff outside for two hours. Each student was charged by Dothan police with making terroristic threats and is subject to expulsion from Dothan City Schools. The bomb threat was called into the office at DPA at 12:15 p.m. on Monday and office staff and campus school resource officers immediately responded with appropriate protocols, DCS stated in a press release. Parents were notified via the automated call out system at 12:47 p.m. once all students were safely evacuated from the building and accounted for. At the time of the evacuation, a group of students were participating in a Black History Month event called the African American Living Wax Museum where students portrayed notable Black legends. The evacuation interrupted the program. Money collected from entry to the event were meant to fund transition activities in Briana Gibsons 7th and 8th grade combined self-contained class for students with disabilities of differing cognitive levels. Gibson coordinated the event and her students participated in hosting the program. Making a threat on a public school can have serious legal and financial consequences for the perpetrators, DCS said. At the very least, it disrupts the learning environment for the students and consumes staff resources. Law enforcement ended their sweep of the campus at 2:45 p.m. and students were allowed to return to their classrooms. We encourage our parents to talk with your child about the seriousness of threats and the importance of reporting suspicious activities, threats, or disturbing information to a trusted adult, DCS said. Students also need to be aware that Dothan City Schools and law enforcement agencies take these threats very seriously and pursue prosecution even when such incidents are intended as pranks. Besides the possibility of criminal charges, DCS will seek restitution from the court for the disruption created by the suspects. The district will impose the strongest penalty within our Code of Conduct. Please make sure your child is aware of these ramifications and that they understand hoaxes related to campus safety will not be tolerated. Making bomb threats is a Class III offense in the systems Code of Conduct. Students who violate the rule are subjected to immediate recommendation for expulsion to the DCS Student Disciplinary Tribunal. By Azernews By Laman Ismayilova The Carpet Museum continues to enrich its collection with a new exhibit. Beautiful "Tirmasayagi" carpet has been presented at the National Carpet Museum. This carpet, woven according to the sketch of the People's Artist Kamil Aliyev (1921-2005), an outstanding representative of the Azerbaijani carpet weaving art as part of the artist's centenary. The ceremony was held in compliance with the ancient customs that accompany this stage of work on the carpet. Kamil Aliyev creatively transformed the classical carpet compositions and designed the ornaments not only for carpets but also for different types of textiles, including ceramic. However, it was the portrait carpets that brought him worldwide fame. Kamil Aliyev managed to grow this genre into a whole direction in carpet weaving, which is still in demand today. During his long and creative life, Kamil Aliyev designed a wide variety of portrait carpets using different carpet weaving methods to portray the images of artists and political leaders: world-famous poets Nizami Ganjavi, Imadaddin Nasimi, Alexander Sergeyevich Pushkin, Shota Rustaveli, Rabindranath Tagore, politicians Heydar Aliyev, Mahammad Amin Rasulzade, Mustafa Kemal Ataturk, Indira Gandhi, Bill and Hillary Clinton, Akbar Hashemi Rafsanjani, Ruhollah Khomeini. The artist held solo exhibitions not only in Baku but also in Kyiv, Istanbul, Ankara,London, Tokyo and other cities. His carpets are preserved in world-famous museums and private collections. Founded in 1967, the National Carpet Museum never ceases to amaze everyone with its beautiful architecture. Initiated by eminent carpet artist Latif Karimov, it is beautiful inside and out. The museum's new building is designed in the form of a rolled carpet. The Carpet Museum stores over 14,000 exhibits of the finest Azerbaijani carpets. The museum hosts multiple events, including international symposiums, conferences and various exhibitions. In 2019, the museum received national status for its significant contribution to the popularization and promotion of the Azerbaijani Carpet Weaving Art. In 2020, the Carpet Museum enriched its collection with beautiful pile carpets purchased by the Culture Ministry at the Sartirana Textile Show in Italy. The 19th century Guba carpet Ugakh was donated to the Carpet Museum, while Karabakh carpet Chelebi enriched the collection of the museum's Shusha branch. The Carpet Museum also focuses on cooperation with world-leading museum organizations. Moreover, the Carpet Museum won Travelers' Choice Awards for the fourth time in a row last year. Last week the House of Representatives voted 65-37 on House Bill 272, which will allow Alabama citizens to carry concealed handguns without a permit. Rep. Shane Stringer from Mobile County has three decades of law enforcement experience. His bill omitted the requirement that gun owners acquire a permit to carry a concealed handgun on their person, in their bags, and in their vehicles in HB 272. With its passage, the bill will now be sent upstairs to the Senate for a vote. Pistol permits would still be accessible from each county sheriffs offices for other purposes. Such purposes would be the reciprocal agreements with other states and carrying guns in restricted areas. For instance, if you choose not to have a license in Alabama and you travel to Georgia and are stopped by law enforcement, you would be ticketed for not having a permit. This reason alone is enough to continue to get a permit for those who travel much. Permit-less Carry has become a catch phrase in the political arena with the Democrats and Republicans split on the controversial issue. Much of law enforcement is split on it too, with many of the states police chiefs and sheriffs having opposed the bill. Those officials say the permits are an important safety precaution for law enforcement officials. Others say criminals dont have gun permits so why does it matter if law-abiding citizens do? Maybe because it helps the law enforcement officials know the difference in the two? One of the pro arguments is if the bill passes, law-abiding citizens will be allowed to exercise their constitutional right to carry a concealed handgun without having to pay for that right by purchasing a pistol license. Some of the cons are that sheriffs departments will no longer have a big percentage of their budgets which they need to run their departments. Also, they will be more endangered because they wont know who is and is not a law-abiding citizen carrying pistols. I have a five-year pistol permit, and I carry a handgun. I will continue to carry a handgun and will do so legally whatever that requirement may be. Im just ready to know what it is. That too, is my constitutional right. Beth Chapman is Alabamas former State Auditor and 51st Secretary of State. She now owns and operates Beth Chapman & Associates, LLC. This is her weekly column, Around the Capitol published in newspapers and blogs across the state. She can be reached at Beth@bethchapman.com. A Blount County man whose personalized Alabama license plate has been recalled is digging in his heels and vows to fight the recall he says violates his First Amendment right of free speech. I have the right to put a tag on my vehicle and it can say what I want it to say, Nathan Kirk told al.com. My point is, its letters. It could be my kids initials. It could be my grandmother or grandfather. Its just letters. It doesnt spell anything. Many personalized license plates dont spell anything. There is room for only seven letters on standard plates, and six on a Dont Tread on Me plate like Kirks. The six letters he chose: LGBFJB. To underscore his intent, he placed a frame around the tag that reads FJB across the top, and Lets Go Brandon beneath. For those whove been living under a rock the last few months, the Brandon catch phrase took off after an announcer at Talladega Speedway mistook an offensive crowd chant, F- Joe Biden as a supportive cheer for driver Brandon Brown. Many conservatives adopted the phrase as denigrative shorthand, and its become as popular as May the force be with you or Theres no place like home. Kirk could cover his entire truck with Lets Go Brandon stickers if he chooses, as long as the vehicle still conforms to road safety requirements. A license plate is another matter; the Alabama Code gives authority of setting rules and regulations of license plates to the Department of Revenue, and those rules and regulations prohibit a wide swath of offensive messages on personalized license plates. Some people push the envelope to see what they can get away with, and sometimes questionable plates are issued by human error, a department spokesperson said, like a plate with the letters NOHOMO that was recalled in 2014. We predict Kirk would not prevail should he fight the departments recall of his tag. Given that surely at some point, a child in another vehicle pointed out the tag and asked a parent what it means, we wonder if this is really the hill on which Kirk wants to plant his flag. Microsoft has appointed Nguyen Quynh Tram as its managing director for Vietnam, replacing Pham The Truong who led the tech giant in the country for more than four years. Tram will oversee Microsoft operations in Vietnam and be responsible for accelerating the countrys digital transformation in ambition of becoming a high-income economy by 2045, the company announced Tuesday. Tram, an MBA from ESSEC Business School, was the head of Google operations in Vietnam, Cambodia and Thailand before joining Microsoft. New Microsoft Managing Director for Vietnam Nguyen Quynh Tram. Photo courtesy of Microsoft Prior to that, she was the Vice President and General Manager for FOX Networks Group and has held leadership positions in telecommunication and media firms. Tram said she is "grateful" for the opportunity to join Microsoft, and is looking forward to "supporting our customers, partners, and people in this great digital journey the whole country has been boldly embracing." Microsoft opened its representative office in Vietnam in 1996, and established a branch in the country in 2006. Its core activities in Vietnam include modern workplace and business solutions, data and cloud infrastructure, and artificial intelligence. A flight attendant on a Bamboo Airways domestic flight at the end of February, 2022. Photo by VnExpress/Anh Tu Bamboo Airways, Vietjet and Vietravel Airlines have started hiring again after an extended recruitment freeze due to Covid-19. Bamboo Airways has posted hiring announcements for many positions, including pilots, flight engineers and cabin crew aid plans to expand its fleet and destinations. The airline is offering captains a monthly salary of US$13,300 for flying wide-body Boeing 787s and $10,450 for narrow-body Airbus and Embraer jets, which are higher than pre-pandemic levels. Nguyen Ngoc Trong, its deputy general director, said the carrier is seeking permission to expand its 30-strong fleet by five to 10 aircraft each year. It operated at maximum capacity during the nine-day Tet, or Lunar New Year, holidays in early this month, and plans to launch new services to the US and Europe in the second quarter of this year, he added. Budget airlines Vietjet has also posted notices seeking captains and co-pilots for Airbus A320Fs and A330s. Vietravel Airlines is hiring pilots for its Airbus A320/A321 fleet as well as cabin crew. Representatives of Vietravel Airlines said the recruitment is to "ready for the expansion of the fleet" and "launch new routes to northeast and southeast Asian nations in the third quarter." But human resources could be scarce this year as airlines resume hiring after their Covid-19 woes, they added. Vietnam has resumed commercial flights to 20 of 28 countries and territories that it operated direct flights to before the pandemic. The country also ended all restrictions on international flights on Feb. 15. From March 15, Vietnam will reopen inbound and outbound tourism under new normal conditions, with foreign tourists allowed to visit the country without booking tour packages. In the best case scenario, Vietnams aviation industry would transport 42-43 million passengers in 2022, or around 50 percent of pre-pandemic numbers, Bui Minh Dang, deputy head of the air transportation department at the Civil Aviation Authority of Vietnam, said. Investigators said strong waves that hit a speedboat off Vietnam's central coast last weekend had caused it to capsize, killing 17. Colonel Vo Van Minh, deputy head of the investigation agency at Quang Nam Provinces police department, made the announcement Tuesday concerning the accident last Saturday that saw the speedboat operated by Phuong Dong Company from Cham Islands off Hoi An Town in Quang Nam to the shore engulfed by large waves around three kilometers from Cua Dai Beach. Investigators had collected testimonies from 15 survivors - 12 passengers and three crew members - to establish the preliminary conclusion, said Minh. Before sailing back to shore, the speedboat had been checked by border guards. Both the boat's owner and captain provided enough qualified papers for operating, investigators said. For now, they are collecting more evidence and working with related units to draw a final and official conclusion. Regarding comments stating authorities had failed to apply a sea ban following rough waters, Colonel Nguyen Quang Nam, deputy commander of Quang Nam Border Guard Command, said the decision must be made based on the weather forecast of the Provincial Hydrometeorological Station. "According to the weather forecast, the sea area off Hoi An had a northeast wind moving at a speed of 2-3 meters per second at the time, which means the wind would be light and would not affect maritime operations," he said. Nguyen Van Son, Hoi An chairman, confirmed the town will continue organizing tours to the islands, a tourist destination about 18 kilometers from Cua Dai Port in Hoi An, via motorboats. Town authorities will work with Cham Islands Tourism Association to handle all cases that could pose risks to the safety of motorboat tours on the route and replace all reckless captains. "The town will look further into the cause of the accident and make a proposal on what kind of motorboats are suitable to bring tourists from Cua Dai Beach to the islands," said Son. The motorboat that capsized when on its way from Cham Islands to Hoi An is turned over, February 2022. Photo by VnExpress/Dac Thanh The boat used in the accident was built in 2016 as a motorboat with a roof and an open-top to operate in rivers, lakes and closed bays. Three years later it was converted to have windows to carry more than 30 passengers and operate more than 12 nautical miles from shore following a Ministry of Transports regulation in 2018. With the conversion, it was qualified enough to carry passengers back and forth to Cham Islands. Before 2018, there were around 140 vessels operating on the route between the islands and Hoi An, and after considering them unsafe with open tops, the ministry decided to set the rule based on existing regulations on national inland waterway routes from shore to the islands. Following the new rule, many motorboat owners had converted their vessels to equip them with glass windows and a closed top. However, Hoi An chairman Son said before the conversion, there had not been any deadly accidents involving tourists being transported to Cham Islands. He said there had been accidents in which the boat sank or capsized but in all cases, passengers floated thanks to life jackets, making it easy for rescuers to save them. Son reaffirmed what survivors and insiders have been saying in the past few days: the converted motorboat was closed, leaving almost no way out for water once it flooded it and no exits for passengers. Le Tri Thanh, chairman of Quang Nam Province, said the number of deaths is too big and "it is necessary to learn the hard way to avoid the same mistake in future." He proposed reviewing the impact of converting motorboats. "When working with the Transport Ministry and Vietnam Register, Hoi An should take into consideration if the converted boat is still suited to current conditions," he said. For now, converted motorboats are still confirmed as meeting safety standards by Vietnam Register, with Quang Nam set to keep using them. Speaking at the session Tuesday the head of its Permanent Mission to the U.N., Dang Hoang Giang, also expressed deep concern at the situation in Ukraine and called for an end to the use of force and for making efforts for a lasting solution, according to the Vietnam News Agency. Welcoming the dialogue between the Ukrainian and Russian delegations on February 28, he hoped they would continue toward achieving a peaceful resolution. More than 100 countries and organizations expressed their views at the session. Giang also requested relevant parties to ensure the security and safety of expatriate communities living in Ukraine, including the Vietnamese, and enable the evacuation of Vietnamese nationals to safety. He underlined Vietnam's consistent stance on settling international disputes by peaceful means on the basis of respect for international law, the U.N. Charter, especially the principle of respect for independence, the sovereignty and territorial integrity of nations, non-interference in internal affairs, and non-use of force in international relations. With its own history of long and painful wars, he said, Vietnam found that wars and conflicts usually stem from outdated doctrines of great power politics, the ambition to dominate and use force to resolve international disputes. The U.N. General Assembly is expected to adopt a resolution calling on Russia to withdraw its troops from Ukraine on March 2, the third and final day of the special session. No media source currently available The URL has been copied to your clipboard The code has been copied to your clipboard. The United States is deeply concerned by the Guatemalan Public Ministrys unacceptable mistreatment and persistent abuse of current and former independent prosecutors. On the morning of February 24, Russia instigated a massive, deadly attack against its smaller neighbor Ukraine. The Russian military has begun a brutal assault on the people of Ukraine without provocation, without justification, without necessity. This is a premeditated attack," said President Joe Biden. [Russian President Vladimir] Putin is the aggressor. Putin chose this war. And now he and his country will bear the consequences. Today, I am authorizing additional strong sanctions and new limitations on what can be exported to Russia. This is going to impose severe costs on the Russian economy, both immediately and over time. We have purposely designed these sanctions to maximize the long-term impact on Russia, and to minimize the impact on the United States and our allies. The United States and its many Allies and partners have imposed full blocking sanctions on all ten of Russias largest financial institutions that together hold nearly 80 percent of Russian banking sector assets. We will limit Russias ability to do business in Dollars, Euros, Pounds, and Yen to be part of the global economy. We will limit their ability to do that. We are going to stunt the ability to finance and grow the Russian military. Were going to impair their ability to compete in a high-tech 21st century economy. Some of the most powerful impacts of our actions will come over time as we squeeze Russias access to finances and technology for strategic sectors of its economy and degrade its industrial capacity for years to come. Between our actions and those of our Allies and partners, we estimate it will cut off more than half of Russias high-tech imports. It will strike a blow to their ability to continue to modernize their military. It will degrade their defense, aerospace and maritime industries. And will be a major hit to Putins long-term strategic ambitions, said President Biden. Putins choice to make a totally unjustifiable war on Ukraine will have left Russia weaker and the rest of the world stronger, said President Biden. Liberty, democracy, human dignity these are forces far more powerful than fear and oppression. They cannot be extinguished by tyrants like Putin and his armies. They cannot be erased from peoples hearts and hopes by any amount of violence and intimidation. They endure. By Azernews By Laman Ismayilova World-famous violinist Gidon Kremer will celebrate his 75th birthday with a spectacular concert in Baku. The concert will take place at the Heydar Aliyev Center on March 5. The event is organized by Premier LTD. Together with the famous maestro, renowned violinist Madara Petersone (Latvia) and the Baku Chamber Orchestra will perform on the stage under the baton of the Honored Artist of Azerbaijan Fuad Ibrahimov. The creative collaboration between Fuad Ibrahimov and world-famous violinist started after Fuad Ibrahimov's victory at the Evgeny Svetlanov International Conducting Competition (2018) held in Paris. Since then, maestro Kremer has repeatedly invited the conductor both to participate in his performances and in festival concerts organized in different countries. He also warmly accepted the invitation to perform in Baku together with the Baku Chamber Orchestra conducted by Fuad Ibrahimov. "For the first time I learned about Gidon Kremer in the distant 90s. Then I came across the book "Fragments of Childhood", written by Gidon Kremer. I just fell in love with this book and read it many times. In his book, maestro speaks about his work and emotional experiences , trips and life, which inspired me a lot. Later, I got my hands on his album "Eight Seasons", recorded with his Kremerata Baltica Orchestra, which also made a deep impression on me," Fuad Ibrahimov told Trend Life. "Then I could not even imagine that I would not only meet the maestro, but also that he would be at the competition where I participated, and that we would repeatedly perform on the same stage. It makes me feel insanely happy and proud. Now I'm looking forward to a joint performance with the maestro in our city...," he said. Honored Artist Fuad Ibrahimov added that it's a great responsibility and excitement for him to perform together with the outstanding violinist as the conductor of the Baku Chamber Orchestra. Driven by his strikingly uncompromising artistic philosophy, Gidon Kremer has established a worldwide reputation as one of his generation's most original and compelling artists. His wide repertoire encompasses standard classical scores and music by leading 20-21st century composers. It is fair to say that no other soloist of comparable international stature has done more to promote the cause of contemporary composers and new music for violin. His name is closely associated with such composers as Alfred Schnittke, Arvo Part, Giya Kancheli, Sofia Gubaidulina, Valentin Silvestrov, Luigi Nono, Edison Denisov, Aribert Reimann, Peteris Vasks, John Adams, Victor Kissine, Michael Nyman, Philip Glass. Many of them dedicated their works to him, the first performer of which was usually the Maestro himself. As an international violinist, he performs with the greatest orchestras and the most prestigious conductors, such as Leonard Bernstein, Riccardo Muti, Claudio Abbado, Lorin Maazel, Herbert von Karajan, Nikolaus Arnoncourt or Seiji Ozawa. In 1997 Gidon Kremer founded the chamber orchestra Kremerata Baltica to gather outstanding young musicians from the Baltic States. During its existence, the orchestra has toured to more than 50 countries. Together the ensemble performed such outstanding performers of our time as Jesse Norman, Mikhail Pletnev, Thomas Zeitmeier, Yo-Yo Ma and many others. The musicians recorded over 50 CDs, for one of which in 2002 the orchestra was awarded two prestigious prizes - GRAMMY and ECHO. Gidon Kremer has recorded over 120 albums, many of which have received prestigious international awards such as Ernst von Siemens Musikpreis, the Bundesverdienstkreuz, Moscow's Triumph Prize, the Unesco Prize and the Una Vita Nella Musica Artur Rubinstein Prize. In addition, in 2016, the Emperor of Japan awarded him the Imperial Praemium Prize, equivalent to the Nobel Prize in the music. This year is also marked by the 25th anniversary of the Kremerata Baltica orchestra, founded by Gidon Kremer. Cultural figures will celebrate their double anniversary with numerous concerts in the cities of Canada, America, Europe, Asia. Media partners of the event are Trend.az, Day.az, Milli.az, Azernews.az. " " 3G mobile was a big deal back in 2009 when China Telecom became one of the first companies to provide 3G services in China. Here, a China Telecom hostess shows a man how to use a 3G mobile phone at a China Telecom 3G launch event. Visual China Group via Getty Images 3G was once the gold standard for cellular internet, but it's long been supplanted by 4G, and now 5G. In fact this year, 3G mobile data will be discontinued by American wireless carriers like Verizon, T-Mobile and AT&T. Those who have relatively new devices probably won't even notice a change, because they've already switched over to the newer services. However, there are plenty of older phones and smart devices out there that will begin to see loss of connectivity. It's especially an issue for things like car electronics and home security systems that were built with a 3G connection in mind, as those products are both pricy, and meant to be kept around for several years. 3G is simply shorthand for the third generation of wireless broadband standards agreed upon by the cellular industry, with a minimum data speed of 144 kilobits per second. 3G installation and service began to roll out in the early 2000s and would become much more popular once the smartphone era started ramping up around 2008. In fact, Apple's first major update to the iPhone was branded "the 3G," and touted its fast wireless internet capabilities. At the same time 3G was receiving widespread use, its successor, 4G LTE, was being developed. 4G possessed vastly superior capabilities, with download speeds up to 100 megabits per second, lower latency and longer range. In the 2010s, LTE started to replace 3G coverage as the most popular standard. However, many devices released at this time were compatible with both signals. In the 2020s, the cellular industry is laying the infrastructure for 5G, which uses higher frequency antennas for demanding tasks like high-definition video streaming. 5G offers lightning-fast download speeds of 20 gigabits per second but requires many more transmitters than previous standards. Why and How Is 3G Service Ending? In order to understand the discontinuation of 3G, we talked with Mark Richardson, a correspondent for The Big Phone Store over in the U.K. "One of the reasons why 3G is to be discontinued is due to infrastructure. When new technologies such as 5G are created, maintaining some or all older technologies can be a costly endeavor," says Richardson via email. "Another reason is that it frees up the spectrum, allowing more devices to be able to use 5G without worrying about clashes with older 3G technology." Verizon claims that less than 1 percent of its customer base is still using 3G in 2022. AT&T says the same thing. Phones often get replaced every few years, after all. On the other hand, there are many devices apart from smartphones that could rely on 3G. A statement by the Federal Communications Commission mentions that "medical devices, tablets, smartwatches, vehicle SOS services, [and] home security systems" may be affected. Security and alarm systems are a particular concern because many older installations are still in use today. Here are the shutdown plans of the three major networks: Advertisement AT&T AT&T ceased 3G service Feb. 22, 2022. The company has published a document detailing which carrier phones will or will not be affected by the changeover. Advertisement T-Mobile/Sprint Sprint's 3G network will shut down March 31, 2022. T-Mobile's 3G will shut down July 1, 2022. Additionally, Sprint's 4G LTE will be discontinued June 30, 2022, and affected devices will automatically be moved over to T-Mobile's 4G service. Advertisement Verizon Verizon is scheduled to end 3G service Dec. 31, 2022. It is currently not allowing new 3G devices to be activated. The company recommends contacting a local retailer for technical questions and upgrade plans. Advertisement How Will Phones be Affected? Any phone that is not capable of either 4G LTE or 5G connection will see its cellular service suspended. This includes internet data, texting, voice calling, as well as 911 calls. However, many phones manufactured in the 2010s are compatible with both 3G and 4G services and will still be able to access 4G after the shutdown. Some 4G connected phones still rely on 3G signal for voice calls, so if your phone isn't "HD Voice" (high-definition voice calling) compatible, it could lose the ability to make calls once 3G service is disconnected. Some models will allow HD Voice to be enabled via software update. If the device features Wi-Fi connectivity, it will still be able to access the web and stream content through a wireless router even if it can't send calls or texts via cellular connection. If you're unsure whether your phone model will be affected, contact your carrier for more details. They may even offer discount deals for those who switch from old model devices. Advertisement How Will Other Devices be Affected? "Any other devices, such as navigation systems, that are 3G only will lose certain functionality. They will still be able to turn on and any process that does not require a network will still be able to be performed, but things like updates will not be available. For example, a Sat-Nav will not be able to show live traffic reports," says Richardson. Devices which use a 3G SIM card for live information will lose some or all online functionality, although some may have firmware updates available to alleviate the problem. According to Consumer Reports, many older vehicle models have emergency contact features which can use a 3G signal to automatically alert rescue and medical personnel in the event of a crash. The website mentions that cars from Chrysler, Dodge, Hyundai, Jeep, Lexus, Nissan, Ram and Toyota are affected, some as recently as the 2021 model year: Nissan, Infiniti, Toyota and Lexus vehicles before 2019 will lose crash alert features, with no current plan for an update. Some Honda models will require console hardware to be upgraded at cost. General Motors vehicles will retain functionality after a software update, which should happen automatically Fiat-Chrysler models can be upgraded to 4G with a $10 per month data plan. However, automatic crash alerts will be discontinued. Some Hyundai, Genesis, and BMW vehicles will be eligible for a free update. Home security and alarm installations are another major use case for 3G. A report from Axios says as many as 2 million fire and burglar alarms in the United States rely on 3G services to alert authorities. The industry is trying to keep up with the demand for updates, but chip supply issues and the ongoing Covid-19 pandemic have slowed the process. If your home uses a wireless security system, contact the installation company for more information and possible update plans. Now That's Interesting Mark Richardson recommends GSM Arena as an online resource for determining whether your device is compatible with 4G and 5G. The website features an extensive catalog of mobile phone specifications going back many years. One of them wants to be everyones friend; the other is emerging as no ones. And yet: One yearns for a romantic past of domestic accord and accommodation; the other yearns for a past of superpower supremacy. One of them cannot bury his impulse to reach out and hug; the other cannot suppress his impulse to mobilize and mug. And yet: One of them is bewildered by the domestic rancor his initiatives have prompted; the other is bewildered that the world doesnt embrace his historical theories. One of them is the product of an open political system rewarding the exhortations of the extrovert; the other is the product of a closed political system rewarding the intrigues of the introvert. And yet: One of them has endured through defeat and disappointment over decades; the other has endured into his third decade of power. One of them is the heir of a tradition rooted in the tactile political techniques of Harry Truman and Lyndon Johnson; the other is the modern incarnation of the repressive political techniques of V.I. Lenin and Joseph Stalin. And yet: One of them is a prisoner of Cold War verities; the other wants to restore the precarious balance of the Cold War. Above all, one, with the temperament of the Irish, sees the world as an excerpt from William Butler Yeats; for decades, as Yeats put it, lingered awhile and said/Polite meaningless words; and now is confronting an era where the globes worst/Are full of passionate intensity. The other, bred in the worlds first Communist nation, sees the world as an excerpt from the Marxist Antonio Gramsci, who recognized that The old world is dying, and the new world struggles to be born: now is the time of monsters. Joe Biden and Vladimir Putin personify the complications and contradictions of the 21st century, burdened by the post-World War II past, where the passionate intensity of the one is defining the new world of modern monsters for the other. Here are the questions of the hour: What does Putin want? Can the aggressiveness that prompted him to mount what he called Thursday a special military operation now be regarded as past or prelude to something even greater? What will the next week of global tension bring after the past weeks of Winter Olympics competition? In all of this, Putin is the catalyst, Biden merely the reactor. No one, for good reason, quotes British Prime Minister Neville Chamberlain during international crises, but his remarks of April 4, 1940, a month before Adolph Hitler sent troops barreling into Belgium, the Netherlands, Luxembourg and France, are valuable for the ironic meaning they hold today. Speaking in Westminster, he said, Whether it was that Hitler thought he might get away with what he had got without fighting for it, or whether it was that after all the preparations were not sufficiently complete however, one thing is certain he missed the bus. In a way, Putin missed a bus as well. The bus that he missed was the chance to achieve one of his principal goals to appear to the world as Bidens equal and to restore Russia to its place as the antipode to America by engaging in the summit meeting that the newly minted diplomatic impresario French President Emmanuel Macron thought he had arranged. He wants the worlds attention, Margaret MacMillan, the University of Toronto historian and author of the 2020 volume War: How Conflict Shaped Us, told me hours before it became clear that Putin favored aggression over negotiation and rendered the notion of a summit moot. He has people coming to him, flying to see him. Hes already achieved a great deal. Hes regretted bitterly the disappearance of the Soviet Union. Then she added the critical insight that is the navigational North Star of this moment in history: Putin isnt capable of seeing that you can have security with friendly relations but instead prefers fraught relations. Perhaps Putin recognized the twin perils of a meeting with Biden would have been the impulse toward reconciliation that these events a parley at the summit, in the characterization of Winston Churchill, who invented the term in 1950 at another moment of tension between Russia and the West tend to produce, plus the need to reconcile his actions (mobilization at the frontiers of Ukraine) with his words (assurances that he wasnt planning military action). You cant lie overtly and do the opposite the next day without paying a real price, said Jeremy Kinsman, a former Canadian ambassador to Russia. A leader of a democracy couldnt survive doing that, and an autocrat couldnt survive doing that in the international community. This isnt middle school. From the viewpoint of both Putin and Biden, one truth prevails, and it has a middle-school simplicity: Biden never was going to send American military forces into battle in Ukraine, just as Dwight Eisenhower never was going to send American fighters into Hungary during the Soviet invasion of that Eastern European nation and amid conservative rhetoric of freeing the captive nations beyond the Iron Curtain of the newly formed Warsaw Pact. There was no pressure, in short, save for the amorphous one of world public opinion that Eisenhower could bring to bear on the Soviets in Hungary, the historian Stephen Ambrose wrote in his 1984 biography of the 34th president. He knew it, had known it all along, which made all the four years of Republican talk about liberation so essentially hypocritical. So Biden, in his terrible face-off with Putin, was left with the tools of moral suasion (passionate but essentially powerless) and sanctions (strong in global marketplaces, but in diplomacy more a sign of weakness than strength). Hungary shares 85 miles of borderlands and multiple geopolitical factors with Ukraine. In the 1956 episode, Nikita Khrushchev held the whip hand and Eisenhower held few cards. It was established, William Colby, then a junior CIA officer and a future director of the agency, wrote years afterward, that the United States, while firmly committed to the containment of the Soviets, was not going to liberate any of the areas within that sphere. So it can be said again, three-quarters of a century later. Love 0 Funny 0 Wow 0 Sad 0 Angry 0 An attempt by Chechen fighters to kill Ukrainian President Volodymyr Zelenskyy was thwarted and the attackers killed, according to the National Security and Defense Council (NSDC) of Ukraine. In a statement by NSDC secretary, Oleksiy Danilov, an "elite group of Kadyrovtsi [Kadyrov's thugs] were terminated" as they took part in a mission to kill the Ukrainian President. Removing President Zelenskyy is widely seen as one of Russia's key goals in its invasion of Ukraine, which started last Thursday. Chechen soldiers in Ukraine Kadyrov refers to Ramzan Kadyrov, the Head of the Chechen Republic, who is a staunch supporter of Putin and has sent troops to support the Russian invasion of Ukraine. He said he had sent 10,000 troops, however according to journalist Justin Ling, this is likely a vast overestimate. He also said the "carefully manicured ethos" presenting the Chechen fighters "are extremely ruthless" was mostly Russian propaganda. See also: Ukraine being hit by heavy bombing and missile strikes The alleged thwarted assassination attempt comes as Russian steps up its military campaign against Ukraine, having struggled to make as quick progress as the Russian army had expected. The capital Kyiv has been hit by strikes on residential neighbourhoods, while the second-largest city Kharkiv has again come in for heavy bombing. There are also reports that residential areas in Zhytomyr, a city in northwest Ukraine have been attacked. Zelenskyy staying put to lead defense of Ukraine President Zelenskyy has decided to stay in the capital Kyiv, despite acknowledging the high risk to his own life if captured by the Russians. When urged to head to safety by western countries the former comedian said he "needed ammunition not a ride". Zelenskyy has been highly active diplomatically during the first days of the invasion of his country, reaching out by telephone to the leaders of many countries, including the United States, the United Kingdon and many EU nations, including France and Germany. He has pleaded with them for support, both material and financial, as well as the imposition of tougher sanctions against Russia, and for fast-tracked entry to the EU for Ukraine. Some of these requests have been met, with the donation of significant amounts of military supplies to the Ukrainian army, as well as unprecedented sanctions on the Russian economy, which is taking a heavy toll on that country. While EU leaders have talked favourably about the entry of Ukraine into the Union, the reality is that this would likely be a lengthy process, given the bureaucracy involved and the need for unanimity in the bloc, no matter the urgency felt in Ukraine. Russian invasion of Ukraine: headlines - Evacuation of Mariupol postponed over accusations of Russia breaking a partial ceasefire that was meant to allow humanitarian corridors out of Mariupol and Volnovakha. - Ukraine President Zelenskyy condemns decision not to implement no-fly zone - Russia ready to "bomb cities into submission", intelligence official tells CNN - Ukraine can "absolutely" prevail over Russia - US secretary of state - Gas prices in US soar, however 80% of Americas says US should stop importing Russian oil even if that means higher prices at the pump What you need to know about the conflict - How can I support the refugees fleeing war in Ukraine? - China and Russia said their relationship had "no limits." Is the statement still true? - What would happen if Zaporizhzhia nuclear plant exploded? - Prolonged attack threatens the global supply of crops - Zelenskyy, Zelensky or Zelenskiy? Why spelling is important to Ukrainians - How long can Russia fight in Ukraine? Related news articles: The trade relationship between the Russia Federation and the United States, while larger than any point in history, is still considerably lower than each country's major trade partner. The sanctions imposed by the Untied States are already having an impact on the Russian economy. The price of the Russian ruble has dropped significantly since more severe sanctions were announced this week. This round included sanctions to the Central Bank of Russia which will limit the country's ability to manage its currency reserves, which are held by central banks all over the world. Russia is the fortieth largest export market for the US, and the twentieth largest important market relied on for imports. This amounts to the Russia spending on around $5.8 billion on US goods, which actually decreased 13.1 percent from 2018 to 2019. For the United States, the trade data shows that it imported more than $22.3 billion on Russian goods. What does the US exports and import from Russia? In 2019, according to data published by the United States Trade Representative, the US ran a trade deficit with Russia. A trade deficit refers to a situation where a country imports more than they export to a certain country. The most common products imported from Russia include "mineral fuels ($13 billion), precious metal and stone (platinum) ($2.2 billion), iron and steel ($1.4 billion), fertilizers ($963 million), and inorganic chemicals ($763 million)." Many of the important are critical to the manufacturing of highly technological products. The exports the US sends to Russia are also quite technological, including "machinery ($1.2 billion), aircraft ($1.2 billion), vehicles ($725 million), optical and medical instruments ($506 million), and electrical machinery ($349 million). How much oil does the US import from Russia? One major concern on the minds of many are how sanctions from the West could impact Russia's ability to produce oil and gas, which they export to many countries in Europe. From this morning's FP Energy newsletter: some #oilandgas charts putting the global energy sector in context during the Russian invasion of Ukraine. pic.twitter.com/6Nfep0W58U Stephanie Hughes (@StephHughes95) March 2, 2022 Oil imports from Russia to the US peaked in May 2021 at 26,171 barrels in one month. That same month, the US imported less oil from Saudi Arabia and the majority of other OPEC countries. By the end of the year, that number of barrels imported from Russia had dropped to 12,569. Will European countries place an embargo on Russian oil and gas? Europe is highly dependent on Russian natural gas and oil, over all Russia represents around a third of all energy imports. While some countries are more dependent on others, sanctions that impact the energy sector could have catastrophic consequences for Europe and the rest of the world. Until now, the West has tried to avoid attacking companies an banks involved in the sector, but this gives Russia an advantages as it is a main income source for the country. Nord Stream 2, operator of the controversial gas pipeline under the Baltic Sea to Germany, said it cant confirm reports that it has filed for bankruptcy amid a raft of international sanctions against Russian assets https://t.co/zdziJErYTg Bloomberg Asia (@BloombergAsia) March 2, 2022 While no sanctions or embargoes have been announced by European countries on the oil and gas sector, Germany has announced that they will postpone the construction of the Nord Stream 2 pipeline. One of the companies involved in the construction of the pipeline has announced that they are filing for bankruptcy after being hit hard by sanctions. This pipeline was planned to increase the quantity of natural gas able to be sent to Germany and other European countries. A farmer in Dak Lak province is harvesting coffee cherries. (Photo: VNA) According to the office, Algeria has to import completely coffee to serve its domestic demand. The country spends 300 million USD on importing about 130,000 tonnes of coffee beans every year. Vietnam is one of the main coffee suppliers for Algeria, along with Ivory Coast, Indonesia, Brazil, Italy and Uganda. Last year, Vietnam shipped over 56,000 tonnes of coffee worth nearly 99.7 million USD to Algeria, down 6.8 percent in volume but up 6.3 percent in value year-on-year. Coffee still remains Vietnam's main exports to Algeria, marking up 65 percent of the total export value to the market. The office said Vietnamese exporters can promote the export of processed and instant coffee with higher added value to Algeria beside coffee beans./. Vietnamese mangoes (Source: nongnghiep.vn) According to statistics of the General Department of Customs, in January, rice export reached 505,741 tonnes worth 246.02 million USD, sharp increases of 45.4 percent and 28.2 percent against last year, respectively. The Vietnam Food Association (VFA) forecast that Vietnam would ensure its 2022 overseas rice shipments at between 6 and 6.2 million tonnes, similar to the amount recorded in 2020 and 2021, for a revenue of over 3.2 billion USD. Rice exports this year is likely to maintain a good rank, as the local rice industry is increasingly improving in quality and large domestic enterprises such as Loc Troi, Tan Long, Intimex, and Trung An have sealed large orders of high value. In addition to the traditional key export earner, investment in new products such as spices is also very promising. Vietnamese rice for export (Photo: VNA) The Vietnamese high-quality spices producer Dh Foods Joint Stock Company has freshly signed a cooperation agreement with the US-based Heritage Beverage Company to export its products to this market. Accordingly, Heritage Beverage will become the exclusive distributor of Dh Foods' specialty spices in the US. About ten containers of the Vietnamese products are expected to leave for the US this year starting from the third quarter. Dh Foods General Director Nguyen Trung Dung hoped that Heritage Beverage will help his company conquer the share of the Asian food market in the US, which is valued up to 40 billion USD and serves about 30 million people of Asian origin, including 3 million people from Vietnam. It is estimated that more than 80 percent of supermarkets in this country have Asian food stalls. Currently, Vietnam's spices exporters are better meeting strict requirements of foreign partners, capable of providing value-added, good quality and safe products for many leading importers and premium distribution channels in many regions of the world. Contributing more than 3.5 billion USD to Vietnams total export turnover in 2021, the fruit and vegetable industry also successfully delivered a series of new orders from the outset of 2022. Notably, the Westerfarm limited company and Vietnam Golden Gate Joint Stock Company exported 3 tonnes of mangoes to the Netherlands. Minister of Agriculture and Rural Development Le Minh Hoan affirmed that this years agro-forestry-fishery exports will reach or even exceed 50 billion USD, growing by 3-4 percent./. Tourists at Sun World Fansipan Legend in Sa Pa (Source: VNA) To realise the goal, the province will to focus on developing tourism infrastructure, products, human resources; stepping up promotion activities; and building suitable plans, mechanisms, and policies. Lao Cai is mobilising capital and completing procedures to accelerate the progress of big projects like the Sa Pa airport and a road connecting the Noi Bai Lao Cai highway and Sa Pa, a popular holiday town which has long been among the countrys leading destinations. This year, the province plans to build a system of its typical festival and spiritual tourism products such as the Sa Pa love market, Bac Ha white plateau festival, rose - wine festival, and snow festival. It will also foster a range of tourism products regarding sports, adventure, nature exploration, wet market culture, and resort, among others. In addition, capital will be channeled into the conservation of the cultural space and architecture of the local Vang Leng hamlet, home to the Nung ethnic minority in Muong Khuong district. Another priority work is expanding links with other major tourism hubs like Hanoi, Da Nang, and Ho Chi Minh City for exploiting luxury mountain resort and beach tourism; and with Luang Prabang city in Laos and Chiang Mai in Thailand for developing specific products. In February, approximately 245,250 holidaymakers came to Lao Cai, up 261.2 percent from January. The February tourism revenue was about 993.9 billion VND, a monthly increase of 373.3./. COVID-19 patients arrives at a newly built community isolation facility (CIF) in Tsing Yi, south China's Hong Kong, March 1, 2022. A newly built CIF started admitting its first batch of COVID-19 patients in Hong Kong on Tuesday. The facility, located in Tsing Yi, is open for service one day after its construction was completed within just one week on Monday with the support of the mainland. With its construction started on Feb. 22, the CIF is the first of its kind completed since the fifth wave of the COVID-19 epidemic began in the Hong Kong Special Administrative Region (HKSAR). (Photo by Lui Siu Wai/Xinhua) HONG KONG, March 1 (Xinhua) -- A newly built community isolation facility (CIF) started admitting its first batch of COVID-19 patients in Hong Kong on Tuesday evening. The facility, located in Tsing Yi, is open for service one day after its construction was completed within just one week on Monday with the support of the mainland. At around 7 p.m. local time, Xinhua reporters saw vehicles, each carrying one confirmed patient, drive into the facility one after another. The patients were then accompanied by staff in protective clothing to go through the check-in procedures. The CIF, with the capacity of accommodating about 3,900 patients, is a combination of modular cubicles, with each room equipped with basic furniture and bedding, air conditioner, smoke detector, and fire extinguisher. John Lee, chief secretary for administration of the Hong Kong Special Administrative Region (HKSAR) government, said the Tsing Yi facility symbolizes the united fight against the epidemic, and the week-long fast construction is nothing short of a miracle. Designed and built by China State Construction International Holdings Ltd., the project took a total workforce of over 1,800 people, including about 300 mainland employees and over 1,500 Hong Kong workers, who had been working around the clock since Feb. 22. The facility, covering an area of about 60,000 square meters, is the first of its kind completed since the fifth wave of the COVID-19 epidemic began in the HKSAR. The facility will admit asymptomatic or mildly ill patients, and early isolation of those diagnosed can reduce the risk of infecting others and help break the chain of transmission in the community, Lee said on Tuesday during a visit to the compound. Meanwhile, site formation has been completed for HKSAR's five temporary CIFs. Two permanent CIF projects at Penny's Bay and Kai Tak Pier are also in progress. On Tuesday, Hong Kong registered 32,597 new COVID-19 cases and 117 deaths, official data showed. COVID-19 patients arrives at a newly built community isolation facility (CIF) in Tsing Yi, south China's Hong Kong, March 1, 2022. A newly built CIF started admitting its first batch of COVID-19 patients in Hong Kong on Tuesday. The facility, located in Tsing Yi, is open for service one day after its construction was completed within just one week on Monday with the support of the mainland. With its construction started on Feb. 22, the CIF is the first of its kind completed since the fifth wave of the COVID-19 epidemic began in the Hong Kong Special Administrative Region (HKSAR). (Photo by Lui Siu Wai/Xinhua) COVID-19 patients arrives at a newly built community isolation facility (CIF) in Tsing Yi, south China's Hong Kong, March 1, 2022. A newly built CIF started admitting its first batch of COVID-19 patients in Hong Kong on Tuesday. The facility, located in Tsing Yi, is open for service one day after its construction was completed within just one week on Monday with the support of the mainland. With its construction started on Feb. 22, the CIF is the first of its kind completed since the fifth wave of the COVID-19 epidemic began in the Hong Kong Special Administrative Region (HKSAR). (Photo by Lui Siu Wai/Xinhua) COVID-19 patients arrives at a newly built community isolation facility (CIF) in Tsing Yi, south China's Hong Kong, March 1, 2022. A newly built CIF started admitting its first batch of COVID-19 patients in Hong Kong on Tuesday. The facility, located in Tsing Yi, is open for service one day after its construction was completed within just one week on Monday with the support of the mainland. With its construction started on Feb. 22, the CIF is the first of its kind completed since the fifth wave of the COVID-19 epidemic began in the Hong Kong Special Administrative Region (HKSAR). (Photo by Lui Siu Wai/Xinhua) Editor: JYZ A visitor takes photos of the mascots for the 2022 China International Consumer Products Expo, styled after the Hainan gibbon, in Haikou, south China's Hainan Province, March 1, 2022. Hainan gibbons are the most endangered of all gibbons and the world's rarest primate. They are endemic to the southern Chinese island of Hainan. The mascots reflect the green consumption approach of the expo, according to Ruslan Tulenov, a global media officer at the Hainan Provincial Bureau of International Economic Development. The mascots embody the three dominant and distinctive industries of Hainan, namely the seed industry, deep-sea industry and aerospace industry. Designers have endowed the mascots with diverse personalities, expecting that global enterprises and consumers can share opportunities and create a better life together through the expo, Tulenov said. (Xinhua/Hu Zhixuan) HAIKOU, March 1 (Xinhua) -- Authorities in south China's Hainan Province on Tuesday revealed the mascots for the 2022 China International Consumer Products Expo, styled after the Hainan gibbon. Hainan gibbons are the most endangered of all gibbons and the world's rarest primate. They are endemic to the southern Chinese island of Hainan. The mascots reflect the green consumption approach of the expo, according to Ruslan Tulenov, a global media officer at the Hainan Provincial Bureau of International Economic Development. The mascots embody the three dominant and distinctive industries of Hainan, namely the seed industry, deep-sea industry and aerospace industry. Designers have endowed the mascots with diverse personalities, expecting that global enterprises and consumers can share opportunities and create a better life together through the expo, Tulenov said. Themed "Share open opportunities, co-create a better life," the event is scheduled to run from April 12 to 16 in Haikou, the capital of Hainan. France will be the guest-of-honor country this year. The exhibition area will span over 100,000 square meters, 80 percent of which will be set up for overseas exhibitors featuring fashion, jewelry, food, medicine and other professional services. The expo is expected to become a leading platform for global consumer fashion, and well-known brands will release their latest products during the exhibition. A visitor walks past a billboard showing the images of the mascots for the 2022 China International Consumer Products Expo, styled after the Hainan gibbon, in Haikou, south China's Hainan Province, March 1, 2022. Hainan gibbons are the most endangered of all gibbons and the world's rarest primate. They are endemic to the southern Chinese island of Hainan. The mascots reflect the green consumption approach of the expo, according to Ruslan Tulenov, a global media officer at the Hainan Provincial Bureau of International Economic Development. The mascots embody the three dominant and distinctive industries of Hainan, namely the seed industry, deep-sea industry and aerospace industry. Designers have endowed the mascots with diverse personalities, expecting that global enterprises and consumers can share opportunities and create a better life together through the expo, Tulenov said. (Xinhua/Hu Zhixuan) A visitor takes photos of the mascots for the 2022 China International Consumer Products Expo, styled after the Hainan gibbon, in Haikou, south China's Hainan Province, March 1, 2022. Hainan gibbons are the most endangered of all gibbons and the world's rarest primate. They are endemic to the southern Chinese island of Hainan. The mascots reflect the green consumption approach of the expo, according to Ruslan Tulenov, a global media officer at the Hainan Provincial Bureau of International Economic Development. The mascots embody the three dominant and distinctive industries of Hainan, namely the seed industry, deep-sea industry and aerospace industry. Designers have endowed the mascots with diverse personalities, expecting that global enterprises and consumers can share opportunities and create a better life together through the expo, Tulenov said. (Xinhua/Hu Zhixuan) Photo taken on March 1, 2022 shows the mascots for the 2022 China International Consumer Products Expo, styled after the Hainan gibbon, in Haikou, south China's Hainan Province. Hainan gibbons are the most endangered of all gibbons and the world's rarest primate. They are endemic to the southern Chinese island of Hainan. The mascots reflect the green consumption approach of the expo, according to Ruslan Tulenov, a global media officer at the Hainan Provincial Bureau of International Economic Development. The mascots embody the three dominant and distinctive industries of Hainan, namely the seed industry, deep-sea industry and aerospace industry. Designers have endowed the mascots with diverse personalities, expecting that global enterprises and consumers can share opportunities and create a better life together through the expo, Tulenov said. (Xinhua/Hu Zhixuan) Editor: WPY By Trend Azerbaijan as a country that has always made a significant contribution to ensuring peace and security at the global level is committed to a peaceful solution in the Ukrainian issue, Deputy Director of Trend news agency Sahil Karimli said, Trend reports via SIA. The processes taking place around Ukraine pose a threat to the whole world, he said. Military operations were small in the early days, but over time the situation became more serious, Deputy General Director of Trend news agency added. "Position on the events of the Azerbaijani state is known. Azerbaijan as a country that has always made a significant contribution to ensuring peace and security at the global level is committed to a peaceful solution to this issue. Meeting in Belarus did not produce results, unfortunately," Karimli said. Photo shows a view of the talks between the Ukrainian and Russian delegations held in the Gomel region in Belarus on Feb. 28, 2022. (Belta news agency via Xinhua) MOSCOW, March 1 (Xinhua) -- The second round of peace talks between Russia and Ukraine could take place on Wednesday, the TASS news agency reported Tuesday citing sources. The first round of the negotiations, which lasted about five hours, concluded on Monday in Belarus' Gomel region, with no clear breakthrough. "Most importantly, we agreed to continue the negotiation process. The next meeting will be held in the coming days on the Polish-Belarusian border," Vladimir Medinsky, head of the Russian delegation, said after the talks. Editor: WRX A woman walks to a polling station to cast her ballot in the Texas 2022 primary election in San Antonio, Texas, the United States, on March 1, 2022. (Photo by Nick Wagner/Xinhua) During the primary campaign, Republican and Democratic candidates in Texas have spent more time talking about the economy, pandemic, power grid, immigration, schools and health care, local analysts observe. HOUSTON, March 1 (Xinhua) -- Voters across the second most populous U.S. state of Texas are heading to the polls on Tuesday, kicking off the first primary of the country's 2022 midterm election season. It's also the first statewide election in which voters will cast their ballots following the redistricting based on the results of the 2020 national census, as well as the first statewide election after Texas enacted its controversial voting law. Governor Greg Abbott, 64, facing seven other Republicans, is seeking a third term. On the Democratic ticket, Beto O'Rourke, a 49-year-old former U.S. Senate nominee and presidential candidate, is the best known and challenged by four other Democrats. "I think the one big race here in Texas is going to be for governor. That is a huge race because it is very political, red, blue, it's time for change," Michael Martinez, a San Antonio voter, told Xinhua. Voters wait in line to cast their ballots in the Texas 2022 primary election in San Antonio, Texas, the United States, on March 1, 2022. (Photo by Nick Wagner/Xinhua) "This is stage one of what will be a tremendous battle as we go forward to November 8," Abbott said in a campaign speech in El Paso last week, touting the state's economy under his leadership while slamming O'Rourke on his climate change positions, catering to the fossil fuels industry seen as the state's lifeline. It is "a real struggle just to stay alive" in Texas under the all-Republican leadership, O'Rourke claimed during his weeks-long run, blasting the governor for the failures of the state energy grid last winter, which claimed at least 246 lives and resulted in huge economic damage in the state. Democrats haven't won a statewide election since 1994. During the primary campaign, Republican and Democratic candidates in Texas have spent more time talking about the economy, pandemic, power grid, immigration, schools and health care, local analysts observe. The abortion issue so far haven't taken center stage. "Hot topic for me would have to be education. As a former teacher, retired teacher, I always look to see how they're talking about education so that would be the hot button topic for me," Rosalinda Casillas, 63, told Xinhua at a polling place in San Antonio. Brianna Menard, a college student living in Austin, the capital city of Texas, told Xinhua that in her view, voter suppression "is the number one concern right now" after the state's new voting law took effect in December. Texas is one of 18 U.S. states that passed more restrictive voting laws after the 2020 presidential election. According to a National Public Radio report on Sunday, only in Harris County, home to Houston and the state's most populous county, 40 percent of mail-in ballot applications prior were flagged for rejection. Voters arrive at a polling station for the Texas 2022 primary election in Austin, Texas, the United States, on March 1, 2022. (Photo by Bo Lee/Xinhua) However, most Texans just skip the primary elections, said a report in The Texas Tribune on Friday, citing the seemingly low turn-out and the Republican-led redistricting following the 2020 national census. "The political maps rig most of the districts in the congressional delegation, state House and Senate and State Board of Education so that only a Democrat or only a Republican can win. Few are competitive," said the report. Three percent of Texans will decide who governs the other 97 percent, the report claimed, noting that a candidate could have won a Republican nomination for the governor race with support from 2.1 percent of voters while a Democrat would have needed just 1.5 percent. Data from the Texas secretary of state show that 17.1 million Texans are registered to vote but there are 29.1 million Texans and out of them, 21.7 million are 18 years old or older. The state's races for major state positions also include lieutenant governor, state attorney general and some others. Texan voters will also choose each party's candidates to face off in November for district-based congressional and legislative offices, which will offer clues about where the country's midterm cycle is headed, local analysts said. According to local media reports, Texas is an open primary state, which means voters in the state don't register as members of a particular political party. Instead, they can cast a ballot in either party's primary election, though not both. Editor: WRX Two people killed, three more wounded over missile attacks by Russian military in Vasylkiv - mayor In Vasylkiv (Kyiv region), two people were killed and three more wounded as a result of missile attacks, city mayor Natalia Balansynovych said in a video statement on Facebook. She also said that in the village of Kalynivka, as a result of a missile hit, three private houses were destroyed, information about the victims or injured is being investigated. "As a result of missile attacks... a five-story building in Vasylkiv. According to the information I have, there are two dead and three injured, who have already been taken to the hospital," the mayor of Vasylkiv said. "According to the information of the neighboring community in the village of Kalynivka, three private houses were destroyed as a result of a missile hit. At present, information about the victims is not known," Balansynovych said. Over 70 people died in Okhtyrka amid shelling of military unit by Russian military head of regional state administration Head of Sumy Regional State Administration Dmytro Zhyvytsky has said that more than 70 people were killed amid shelling of a military unit in Okhtyrka. Rescuers continue to search. "Yesterday, enemy artillery covered the military unit. They continue to get the bodies out of the rubble. The State Emergency Service, volunteers are working. There are many dead. Now, they are preparing places at the cemetery for 70 dead Ukrainian fighters," Zhyvytsky wrote in the Telegram channel. Later, the head of the region clarified in an appeal on Facebook that there were also dead among the civilian population. Zhyvytsky also reported on the many dead Russian invaders. "There were a lot of bodies of Russians around the city, we are collecting them. Employees of the Red Cross are taking them home," the head of the region said. Switzerland will send about 25 tonnes of humanitarian aid to Warsaw for Ukrainians, Swiss Foreign Minister Ignazio Cassis said. "Urgent support for the Ukrainian population. Switzerland is sending around 25 tonnes of relief supplies to Warsaw in the next two days, including medical equipment provided by the Swiss Federal Department of Defense. The Swiss Humanitarian Aid Unit is flying out tonight to prepare aid efforts on the ground," Cassis said on Twitter. The Ukrainian cyber police filed official requests to 30 international VPN services with a call to stop providing services to users with Russian IP addresses, the National Police of Ukraine press service said on Tuesday. "VPN services are used by the occupier to anonymize on the Internet and spread disinformation and commit illegal activities against the population of Ukraine," the police said on Telegram. According to the statement, Keepsolid has already responded to a request from Ukrainian law enforcement officers and has decided to terminate cooperation with Russian users. "Cyberpolice calls on other VPN services to support Ukraine and stop providing services to the occupier," the National Police said. The European Business Association (EBA) calls on companies to stop doing business with Russia. "European and American manufacturers (Audi, Volkswagen, Skoda, Porsche, General Motors, Land Rover, Jaguar, Bentley, Rolls-Royce) are massively refusing to supply cars to Russia due to the attack on Ukraine. Oschadbank has blocked all transactions that can be carried out with the help of payment cards of the aggressor countries the Russian Federation and Belarus. Cash withdrawals in the bank's ATM network, any transfers, payment for goods through POS terminals and information payment terminals of the bank with Russian and Belarusian cards are not possible. And, according to the decision of the NBU, all banks should do it," the EBA said on its website. "At the same time, we call on other businesses to support this trend and stop doing business in/with Russia because peace, life and justice are much more important than money!" the report says. Ukraine has received EUR110 million in grant assistance from Italy, for which Finance Minister of Ukraine Serhiy Marchenko thanked Italian Minister of Economy and Finance Daniele Franco in a telephone conversation on Monday. "We are very grateful to Italy for the support, which is now extremely valuable to us. The Italian authorities and society have demonstrated solidarity with Ukraine," Marchenko said. According to the release, in addition, the next steps to support Ukraine, as well as additional sanctions against the Russian Federation and Russian companies, were the subject of discussion. Ukrainian telcommunications operators have cut off the communications of the Russian military, blocking the access of phones with Russian numbers to their networks, after which the occupiers began to steal phones from ordinary Ukrainians. "Communication is one of the key elements of conducting effective military operations. Having deprived them of the opportunity to call their own numbers, the occupying forces are increasingly taking away phones from citizens. We call on Ukrainians whose mobile phones were taken away by representatives of enemy troops to inform the operator as soon as possible and ask block the stolen phone," the State Service of Special Communications and Information Protection (SSSC) of Ukraine has said on its Telegram channel. SSSC said that it is very important to notify the operator and block the stolen phone, since the security of the state and the life of Ukrainians depend on it. As reported, mobile operators Kyivstar, Vodafone Ukraine and lifecell have blocked access to their networks for subscribers in Russia and Belarus. Source: https://t.me/dsszzi_official/1328 Ukraine's State Emergency Service has said that the building of the regional state administration, the philharmonic society was damaged by an airstrike in the center of Kharkiv, rockets also hit part of a residential area, rescuers have not yet started work due to shelling. "The mad liberators no longer hide the fact that their airstrikes are carried out specifically against the civilian population. Now the enemy is cynically and defiantly bombarding the central part of Kharkiv, the center of the first capital of our long-suffering Ukraine, with rockets. According to preliminary information, the Kharkiv Regional State Administration building was hit, along with the Opera House, the Philharmonic and part of the residential area (mainly 4-5-storey residential buildings)," the Service said on its Telegram channel on Tuesday morning, noting that rescue units cannot yet be deployed due to continued shelling. "We ask Kharkiv residents not to leave shelters, pray for our soldiers," the message says. By Azernews By Vugar Khalilov Azerbaijani Foreign Minister Jeyhun Bayramov and UK Minister of State for European Neighbourhood and the Americas James Cleverley have discussed regional issues, especially the situation in Ukraine, the ministry reported on March 1. In a telephone conversation the sides reviewed current bilateral cooperation, as well as other topics of mutual interest, the report added. Azerbaijani Deputy Foreign Minister Araz Azimov earlier said that the situation around Ukraine should be resolved peacefully and in line with international law. Azimov made the remarks at the Organization for Security and Cooperation in Europe (OSCE) Permanent Councils special online meeting chaired by Poland. Azimov stressed that the current situation in Ukraine must be resolved peacefully and diplomatically in line with the norms and principles of international law, including the sovereignty of states, territorial integrity, inviolability of borders, as well as the indivisibility of security in the OSCE area, the ministry said. The deputy minister underlined that the situation in and around Ukraine is a matter of serious concern and an urgent dialogue is needed to prevent the situation from deteriorating further. Noting that the escalation of the situation caused casualties, Azimov expressed condolences to the families and relatives of the victims. Azerbaijan and the UK established a positive trade balance of $108.810 million in January 2022. Meanwhile, there was a negative balance of $20.008 million in January of last year. Azerbaijan and the UK are cooperating in different spheres of the economy. There are already 30 years of successful cooperation between the two countries in the oil and gas sector, which entered a new stage of development in line with the challenges of the global energy sector. The energy sector accounts for $ 28.8 billion out of $ 30.6 billion of the UK investments in Azerbaijan's economy. The UK is also the biggest investor in Azerbaijan. It should be noted that the trade turnover between the two countries amounted to $667.8 in 2021. Of the total turnover, Azerbaijani exports to the UK amounted to $396.6 million while import was $271.1 million. On February 24, Russian President Vladimir Putin announced that in response to the appeal of the leaders of the so-called "Donetsk People's Republic" and "Lugansk People's Republic" decided to conduct a special military operation in Eastern Ukraine. The Ukrainian authorities introduced martial law throughout the entire territory. Ukrainian media report explosions in a number of cities. The defenders of Kyiv, in the course of repelling the Russian offensive on the city, inflict irreparable losses on the enemy, a lot of Russian equipment was abandoned, even more burned, the commander of the defense of Kyiv, Colonel-General Oleksandr Syrsky has said. "The Defense Forces continue to carry out the tasks assigned to them to defend Kyiv. Our units inflict irreparable losses on the enemy around the clock. A lot of Russian equipment has been abandoned. Even more burned with the help of NLAW, FGM-148 Javelin, and from the air by Bayraktar. The enemy cannot hide from our means of destruction, during the daylight or at night," Deputy Minister of Defense of Ukraine Hanna Maliar quoted Syrsky on her Facebook page. Maliar added that the situation in Kyiv continues to be tense, as the occupiers use the tactics of destroying civilian infrastructure and launching rocket attacks throughout Ukraine. At least ten people killed, over 20 wounded as result of cruise missile attack on center of Kharkiv State Emergency Service As a result of a cruise missile attack on the central square in Kharkiv, at least ten people were killed, more than 20 were wounded, and ten people were rescued from the rubble, the State Emergency Service said. "At least ten people killed, more than 20 wounded, about ten people were rescued from the rubble by rescuers and volunteers. Work is underway to clear the rubble. The staircase has been completely destroyed and partially the corridors on all floors," the State Emergency Service said in a statement posted on Tuesday in the Telegram channel. The head of the Accounting Chamber, Valeriy Patskan, has called for the cancellation of Ukraine's foreign debt in connection with Russia's military aggression against Ukraine. "The scale of destruction in Ukraine caused by Russia's aggression is colossal! In view of this, our external creditors must be required to write off Ukraine's debts. Today, external debt is UAH 1.6 trillion, or more than $57 billion," he wrote on Facebook. "International financial organizations should review the debt policy and zero out Ukraine's debts," he added. President of the European Parliament Roberta Metsola, on behalf of this EU institution, strongly condemned the Russian aggression against Ukraine. She said today we are in the dark shadow of Putin's war. The war we didn't provoke. The war we didn't start. An outrageous invasion of a sovereign, independent state. On behalf of the European Parliament, she condemned in the strongest terms the Russian military aggression against Ukraine and expressed solidarity with all the victims and all the dead. These words were met by all those present with prolonged applause and standing up. Ukraine to never agree to any territorial division Arestovych Ukraine will never agree to any territorial partition, adviser to the President's Office head Oleksiy Arestovich says. "Our conditions are simple... The general trend is this: the end of the war, the ceasefire and the withdrawal of troops," Arestovych said on the air of the Ukraine 24 TV channel on Tuesday. He stressed that Kyiv will never agree to the recognition of "some kind of territorial division of Ukraine, which they propose, and it is impossible for Russian troops to remain on our territory." "This is not discussed under any circumstances," the adviser to the President's Office head assured. BES to monitor cases of unjustified increase in prices for housing for IDPs, services and goods The Bureau of Economic Security (BES) will monitor cases of unjustified increases in prices for housing for internally displaced persons (IDPs), services and goods and asks to report such cases to zvernennya@esbu.gov.ua. "The Bureau of Economic Security of Ukraine will monitor cases of unjustified increases in housing prices for internally displaced persons, services and goods. We believe that such actions of some businessmen in our native Ukraine during martial law should be equated with looting," the government agency wrote on the Telegram channel on Tuesday. In the future, the Bureau intends to treat these cases as economic crimes, and will now report this to the Territorial Defense. "We will promptly report to the Territorial Defense and record them at the BES for further investigation in peacetime," the statement said. Ukraine does not need to write off debts, but expects restructuring, Danylo Hetmantsev, head of the committee on finance, tax and customs policy, has said. "The initiative of the head of the Accounting Chamber [to writing off the debts of Ukraine] is more of his personal initiative, and I don't think that we can and will talk about writing off debts... Undoubtedly, we will talk about debt restructuring , but neither we nor our partners need a demand to write off all debts," he said on the Rada TV channel on Tuesday. As reported, on March 1, Head of the Accounting Chamber Valeriy Patskan called for the cancellation of Ukraine's external debt in connection with Russia's military aggression against Ukraine. According to him, by now the external debt is UAH 1.6 trillion, or more than $57 billion. The Security Service of Ukraine (SBU) warns citizens about possible misinformation regarding the surrender of the Ukrainian authorities. "Dear Ukrainians! Get ready for another fake that the Russian invaders will try to resort to. And also: as if the Ukrainian leadership and government have surrendered the country. But know that this is a fake! Its goal is to disorient, sow panic, dissuade citizens and persuade our troops to surrender," the SBU reports on its Telegram page. It is noted that disinformation can be replicated through the use of likely communication channels. The SBU also informs that in the event of a loss of communication, citizens should know that capitulation and the surrender of Ukraine's interests are impossible. The leadership of the state, together with the people, is against the Russian troops and is doing everything possible to liberate the Ukrainian territories from the invaders. Ukrainian Defense Minister Oleksiy Reznikov warned of impending disinformation about the alleged surrender of the country's military-political leadership. "According to reports, the Russian invaders are preparing to launch a large-scale information and psychological operation in the near future. Its goal is to break the resistance of Ukrainians and the Ukrainian army with the help of lies. First they plan to arrange communication interruptions. After that, fake messages will be massively thrown in that the Ukrainian military-political leadership allegedly agreed to surrender," Reznikov wrote on Facebook. According to him, allegedly signed "documents" as well as edited videos will be distributed to confirm disinformation materials. "This is a lie. They won't wait! There will be no surrender! Only victory. Warn everyone you can. Many who expected to take Kyiv in two-three days are already in hell. We hold our weapons tightly! We continue to resist! Glory to Ukraine!" Reznikov stressed. Kuleba: Ukraine to decide on its position, will prepare for anew meeting with Russia if necessary The Ukrainian delegation will decide on its position and, if necessary, will prepare for a new meeting with the Russian delegation, Ukrainian Foreign Minister Dmytro Kuleba said. "We are now analyzing what happened yesterday, the declared positions, the president is fully informed to the smallest detail about the conversation that took place yesterday. We will determine our position, and then we will, if necessary, prepare for a new meeting. We believe that such a meeting should take place, because Ukraine believes in diplomacy and we are ready for a diplomatic solution to this conflict," Kuleba said at an online briefing on Tuesday. The minister stressed that under no circumstances will the Ukrainian delegation go to the talks if the Russian Federation only plans to announce its ultimatums. "Negotiations are negotiations, and we will talk and look for solutions. But we will not comply with Russian ultimatums, whims," Kuleba said. Malaysia to exempt some travellers from COVID-19 test From March 3, travellers arriving in Malaysia from abroad through certain programmes will not be required to undergo COVID-19 test within one week following their arrival. People wear masks to prevent the COVID-19 pandemic in Kuala Lumpur, Malaysia on February 24. (Photo: XINHUA/VNA) Malaysias Health Minister Khairy Jamaluddin said on February 28 that the new procedure applied to tourists entering Malaysia via Vaccinated Travel Lane (VTL) programme between Malaysia and Singapore, One Stop Centre (OSC) for short-term business visitors and those coming from the United Kingdom. He said the Health Ministry (MOH) has also dropped the requirement to undergo the COVID-19 RT-PCR or RTK-Ag (professional) test for travellers arriving in Malaysia under the Langkawi International Tourism Bubble ( LITB) programme before leaving Langkawi island. According to the minister, these travellers will not be required to self test on the second, fourth and sixth days after arrival as well as a professional COVID-19 test on the third and fifth days. Tourists from the UK will be exempted from having to undergo self-testing during the quarantine period. However, the Malaysia minister said the requirement for PCR testing two days before departure and immediately upon arrival in Malaysia is still kept in place. He emphasized that the relaxation of Standard Operating Procedures (SOPs) only applies to visitors entering Malaysia under the VTL, LITB and OSC programmes, adding that the SOP and other protocols are still in effect for tourists who do not enter Malaysia through the three programmes. On March 1, French President Emmanuel Macron made a phone call to Azerbaijani President Ilham Aliyev, Azertag reported on March 2. During the conversation, the sides discussed the current crisis in Ukraine and the issues of providing humanitarian assistance to Ukraine. They also exchanged views on energy issues. ICRC says it needs EUR 243 mln to help Ukrainians The International Committee of the Red Cross (ICRC) has announced the collection of funds for the victims of military operations of the Russian Federation in Ukraine, according to French-language media. The humanitarian organization estimates that the goal is to raise EUR 243 million. "Escalation of the conflict in Ukraine has caused severe damage," ICRC director general Robert Mardini said. For its part, the International Federation of Red Cross and Red Crescent Societies, in connection with the events in Ukraine, called for the collection of another EUR 97 million to provide assistance to national organizations under the Red Cross to support 2 million people who need it. Hubs for distribution of food from EU operate in Ukraine Ministry of Agrarian Policy Distribution hubs capable of receiving and distributing food and humanitarian aid from collection points in Poland, Hungary, Slovakia, Romania and Italy are operating in Ukraine, the Facebook page of the Ministry of Agrarian Policy and Food reported on Tuesday. "The whole world is joining Ukraine in our efforts to repel Russian aggression. Food collection points for Ukraine have been opened in Poland, Hungary, Slovakia, Romania and Italy. Distribution hubs are currently operating in Ukraine. They can receive and distribute a large amount of food and other humanitarian aid to the regions of Ukraine most affected by the Russian invasion," the ministry said in a statement. The ministry also asked people to help contact European packaging manufacturers, primarily cans for canned food. As reported, the State Agency for Land Reclamation and Fisheries of Ukraine called on fish producers to establish communication with the agency to launch the production of canned fish on tolling terms in order to provide the Ukrainian army. The Center for Counteracting Disinformation under the National Security and Defense Council of Ukraine (NSDC) informs about the safest places in your home! In particular, such a place is a part of the housing behind two blank walls (the first takes the blow, the second blocks the debris), as well as a room without windows (a bathroom if there is no gas equipment in it). The Center notes that it is also necessary to remove from the hinges, put on the floor and cover the doors with glass inserts with a blanket, as well as tightly close the windows (do not even leave them for ventilation) and seal them with foil. Prosecutor General Iryna Venediktova announces the start of consultations with international partners to detain Russian criminals when they try to cross the border of civilized countries. "We have already begun consultations with our international partners to ensure the detention of Russian criminals when they try to cross the borders of civilized countries. So it will be. We will exert every effort, but we will arrest. We have already accomplished a lot in a relatively short time," the Prosecutor General wrote on her page in Facebook. The Prosecutor General emphasized: "It will not be easy to hide, to go to European villas, estates and to the seas too! You have already flooded our land with a sea of blood, so now your only destination is The Hague. The International Criminal Court (ICC) can issue arrest warrants in other countries around the world," Venediktova said in a video message on Tuesday. She recalled that the Prosecutor of the International Criminal Court (ICC), Karim Khan, has already made the most important decision he initiated the start of a full-fledged investigation into the situation in Ukraine. "The next step is the resolution of the Pre-Trial Chamber of the Court. After that, an open trial of the dictatorial regime, which destroys our state and brutally kills our people. The law should punish the aggressor for the suffering of Ukrainians!" Venediktova said. The Prosecutor General explained that the ICC ensures the responsibility of specific individuals, not the state. "That is, everyone: the president, his officials, deputies, generals and commanders will bear individual criminal responsibility. And functional immunities are inactive there," Venediktova said. At the same time, the Prosecutor General emphasized: "Each rocket fired by Putin's generals at Kyiv, Kharkiv, Akhtyrka, Vasylkiv, Chernihiv, Kherson, Mariupol, Mykolaiv, and Sumy is your sentence. You know about your crimes, we know about your crimes, the entire civilized world knows about your crimes!" "Criminal proceedings against Belarus a springboard and an accomplice of the invasion are also open. You are next in line," Venediktova added. First swap of prisoners takes place in Sumy region - Regional Administration head The first exchange of prisoners in Sumy region took place, head of Sumy Regional State Administration Dmytro Zhyvytsky said. "We have exchanged our five people from the territory defense unit for one Russian military police officer," he wrote on his Telegram channel. German Chancellor, ECB President discuss correctness of sanctions against Russia, speaks with Zelensky German Chancellor Olaf Scholz on Tuesday exchanged views with European Central Bank (ECB) President Christine Lagarde on the dramatic situation in Ukraine. "We see that our very strong sanctions as a response to Putin's aggressive war are right," Scholz said on Twitter following the talk. He also said that in a telephone conversation on Tuesday, Ukrainian President Volodymyr Zelensky described the situation to him amid Russia's ongoing attacks on his country. "I told him about the great sympathy and solidarity of Germany with the Ukrainians," the German Chancellor wrote. NATO will again host an emergency meeting of the North Atlantic Council at the level of foreign ministers. The meeting is scheduled for Friday, March 4 and will be held in person under the chairmanship of NATO Secretary General Jens Stoltenberg, the alliance headquarters announced on Tuesday. The agenda is not specified, however, based on the ongoing military actions of Russia against Ukraine, it can be assumed that this issue will be on the agenda. Not so long ago, on February 25, on the second day of military aggression of the Russian Federation against Ukraine, the leaders of states and governments gathered for an extraordinary summit of the alliance. On February 22, an extraordinary meeting of the Ukraine-NATO Commission was held at the headquarters, on February 16-17 a meeting of the North Atlantic Council at the level of defense ministers with the virtual participation of Ukrainian Defense Minister Oleksiy Reznikov was held, and on January 7 an extraordinary meeting of foreign ministers was held. Russian troops landed in Kharkiv, a battle is underway, according to the telegram channel of the Verkhovna Rada of Ukraine, citing the SBU. "Russian troops landed in Kharkiv. The invaders attacked the hospital - the Military Medical Clinical Center of the Northern Region. A battle has begun between the invaders and the Ukrainian defenders," the report says. NATO Secretary General Jens Stoltenberg has again appealed to Russian President Vladimir Putin: "Stop the war! The world together with Ukraine calls for peace," he said. Visiting Estonia on Tuesday, the secretary general said: "NATO is a defensive alliance. We are not looking for conflict with Russia. Our message to President Putin is: stop the war, withdraw all your forces from Ukraine and participate in good faith in diplomatic efforts. Peace together with Ukraine calls for peace." Stoltenberg assured that the alliance at this critical time, together with the people of Ukraine, which "courageously fights against the brutal and unprovoked Russian invasion." "We strongly condemn the Kremlin's war," he stressed. The Secretary General recalled that the allies have already applied serious sanctions against Russia, and the alliance itself has increased its presence throughout the North Atlantic Alliance "for deterrence and protection." And we are stepping up our support to help Ukraine defend itself. NATO allies are sending Ukraine anti-tank weapons, air defense missiles and ammunition, as well as financial and humanitarian assistance worth millions of euros," Stoltenberg added. U.S. President Joe Biden, in a telephone conversation with Ukrainian President Volodymyr Zelensky, assured him that the United States had consistently supported Ukraine in the military and economic spheres, according to a White House press release. The statement says that the U.S. President underlined the unrelenting U.S. support for Ukraine, including ongoing military, economic and humanitarian aid. In addition, the leaders of the two countries discussed the imposition of sanctions against the Russian Federation for its actions against Ukraine and the situation in Ukraine. Earlier, Zelensky said that he had discussed with Biden the issues of anti-Russian sanctions and military assistance to Ukraine. By Azernews By Vugar Khalilov The Azerbaijani embassy in Ukraine has stated that a train has been arranged to evacuate Azerbaijani citizens from Kyiv, Trend reported on March 2. The train will depart from Kyiv railway station to Mogilev-Podolsk at 12:00 on March 2, 2022, to transfer Azerbaijanis who are in danger due to the ongoing conflict in Ukraine, the report added. It was stated that no tickets would be required for the trip and that anyone would be allowed to board the train. The railway station's address is Vokzalna Ploshad 1. The embassy emphasized that, due to the emergency situation, passengers should arrive at the station 1.5-2 hours before the train's departure and take only the most essential personal belongings. Citizens are asked to cross the Ukrainian-Moldovan border once they arrive at their destination. For any concerns that may emerge, the citizens can contact the Azerbaijani Embassy in Moldova by phone: +373 781 81 361, +373 789 91 849, +373 222 32 277. Meanwhile, ambassador to Moldova Gudsi Osmanov said that about 700 more Azerbaijanis will be evacuated from Moldova on March 2. The ambassador stated that currently the number of Azerbaijanis evacuated from Ukraine in Moldova reaches 4,000. "The evacuation will be by bus. Each bus will have 70 passengers. In addition, 174 people will be evacuated from Romania by plane. We have created conditions for many of our citizens to be evacuated by their own cars. We must meet and accommodate them. In general, it is planned to evacuate 600-700 Azerbaijanis from Moldova during the day. The number of people crossing from Ukraine to Moldova will be many times higher," Osmanov underlined. He added that Azerbaijanis evacuated by bus in the previous days had already reached Istanbul. On March 2, 168 more Azerbaijani citizens evacuated from Ukraine arrived in Baku, Trend reported. At 0920, passengers on the third charter flight arrived at Heydar Aliyev International Airport. The majority of those evacuated were women and children. On March 1, Azerbaijan Airlines (AZAL) evacuated 176 Azerbaijanis from neighboring countries to Baku on a charter plane due to the situation in Ukraine. Moreover, Azerbaijans Honorary Consulate in Kharkiv evacuated 500 Azerbaijani citizens, supporting them to cross the Ukrainian-Polish border in Lviv. International Monetary Fund (IMF) Managing Director Kristalina Georgieva and World Bank Group President David Malpass today issued the following statement on support of the Ukrainian people in the war launched by Russia and announced soon financial support of the country. "At the IMF, we are responding to Ukraine's request for emergency financing through the Rapid Financing Instrument, which our Board could consider as early as next week," they said. "At the World Bank Group, we are preparing a $3 billion package of support in the coming months, starting with a fast-disbursing budget support operation for at least $350 million that will be submitted to the Board for approval this week, followed by $200 million in fast-disbursing support for health and education," they said. President of Ukraine Volodymyr Zelensky has addressed all the Jews of the world in connection with the Russian attacks on Babyn Yar and Uman. "Last night we were all bombed in Kyiv. And we all died again in Babyn Yar - from a missile attack ... I am now addressing all the Jews of the world - can't you see what is happening? Therefore, it is very important that now millions of Jews around the world won't be silent. Nazism is born in silence. Therefore, shout about the killings of civilians. Shout about the killings of Ukrainians," the head of state said in his video address. The United States is closing its airspace to all Russian flights, U.S. President Joe Biden said. "Tonight I am announcing that we will join our allies in closing American airspace to all Russian flights," Biden said in an address to the nation, which is being broadcast live on the U.S. State Department website. As of Wednesday morning, the Russian army is trying to continue its offensive in all directions, including the blockade of the capital and Mariupol. They are being rebuffed by the Armed Forces of Ukraine and suffer significant losses, the General Staff reported. According to the press service on the page of the General Staff on Facebook on Wednesday morning, in the Podilsk direction, the enemy is trying to continue the offensive along the border of Horenychi, Hostomel, Demidiv in the direction of Kyiv in order to block the capital from the northern and north-western directions. In the Zhytomyr region there are up to three Battalion Tactical Groups (BTGs) from the 5th Combined Arms Army of the Eastern Military District of the Russia's Armed Forces. "In the northern direction, there up to seventeen BTGs, which, despite the loss of manpower and equipment, continue offensive operations to block Kyiv from the northeast. The invaders were stopped in the areas of Kozelets, Bobrovytsia, and Makiiv. In the other direction, in the areas of the settlements Svitilnya, Peremoha, and Hostroluchcha, the enemy troops have lost their offensive potential," the statement says. According to the General Staff, enemy troops with forces up to two BTGs have made unsuccessful attempts to keep the heroic Ukrainian cities of Sumy, Lebedyn and Okhtyrka surrounded. "In the Slobozhansky direction, up to sixteen BTGs continue the offensive operation in the direction of Krasnohrad and part of the forces up to four BTGs in the direction of Izyum. The invader suffered losses and was stopped near the settlements of Bohodukhiv, Chuguiv and Shevchenkove," the report says. According to the General Staff, in the Donetsk direction, without success, the aggressor is focused on blocking the city of Mariupol. "In the Tavriya direction, the enemy continues its offensive operations in the areas of the settlements of Skadovsk, Hola Prystan, Kherson, Snihurivka, and Nova Kakhovka. After regrouping the enemy continues to move in the direction of Kherson and Mykolayiv. Up to two BTGs are operating in the areas of settlements Vasylivka, Chervone Pole, Novopetrivka. In the Black Sea Operational Zone, the enemy deploys a naval group and continues preparations for a naval landing operation," the report says. The General Staff says the invaders have been unsuccessful in advancing its forces, the enemy insidiously continues to launch missile and bomb strikes on critical infrastructure in order to intimidate the civilian population, "Our troups are sapping the morale of the enemy and his will to win. The invaders have suffered losses in all directions. Together we will break the enemy, because the truth is on our side! Victory will be ours! Glory to Ukraine!" the report says. In Zhytomyr, as a result of an air strike on the private sector, four people, including a child, were killed, said Anton Gerashchenko, adviser to the head of the Ministry of Internal Affairs. "I just spoke with mayor of Zhytomyr Serhiy Sukhomlyn. Russian scum - rocketeers or pilots - missed and hit not a military base, but residential buildings - the private sector. There are four people killed now, including a child," Gerashchenko wrote in the telegram channel. Fights going on in almost all nearby villages around Severodonetsk Head of Luhansk regional administration The situation around Severodonetsk, Luhansk region, is tense, fighting is going on in almost all nearby villages, there are casualties, Head of Luhansk Regional State Administration Serhiy Haidai has said. "The situation with the Russian invasion. Luhansk region is holding the line of defense along the entire front line. The Armed Forces of Ukraine are inflicting powerful blows on the enemy. The situation is tense around Severodonetsk. Fights are going on in almost all nearby villages. There is destruction and casualties. Access is complicated," Haidai wrote on his page in Facebook. In addition, according to him, there are three wounded in the city of Zolote, Lugansk region: one adult and two children of two and ten years old, who have already received medical assistance. "It is loud in Popasna and Hirska community... Access to the settlements of the community is limited, in some places houses are still on fire. We are waiting for silence to provide assistance," Haidai added. A group of U.S. senators has prepared and submitted to Congress a bill to ban imports of Russian oil to the United States, the press service of Republican Roger Marshall, the initiator of the document, said. On FoxNews, he explained: "First of all, President Biden needs to resume energy production in America and stop Putin from buying oil from Russia." He added: "Don't hesitate, if President Biden finds the courage to do so, we will no doubt work closely with him." Marshall, as well as Senator Jerry Moran and Congressman Tom Cole, in connection with the events in Ukraine, said in a letter to Biden: "We must strive to end the conflict before it escalates further, it's time to impose an embargo on Russian energy exports." The senators urged softening any price shocks caused by the embargo on Russian energy exports and reconsidering energy policies that have led to a reduction in domestic production of oil and natural gas. They believe that the United States should use its rich natural resources and relations with energy-producing allies "as leverage against Putin's Russian regime." White House press secretary Jen Psaki, in an interview with FoxNews, when discussing the topic of imposing a ban on Russian energy imports, said: "We have not removed various options from the agenda, including the one you mentioned, the president is following this very closely." She added that Biden is focusing on "minimizing the impact on global markets and the American people." Russian helicopters with paratroopers flew towards Voznesensk, Mykolaiv region, to Yuzhnoukrainsk nuclear power plant (NPP), an attack on the nuclear power plant is possible, adviser to the Minister of Internal Affairs Anton Gerashchenko has said. "We have just received information from National Guard of Ukraine that a group of more than 20 occupant helicopters with paratroopers flew from Mykolaiv region towards the city of Voznesensk, where Yuzhnoukrainsk nuclear power plant is located," Gerashchenko wrote in his Telegram channel. He said: "Perhaps there will be an attack on the nuclear power plant. The National Guard is ready to take the fight!" Sberbank, the largest Russian bank blacklisted by the United States and the European Union over the Russian military operation in Ukraine, has decided to leave the European market. "Subsidiary banks of the group have encountered an abnormal outflow of funds and a security threat to employees and offices. Sberbank of Russia is unable to supply subsidiary banks in Europe with liquidity due to the orders from the Russian Central Bank," Sberbank said in a statement. The subsidiary banks have a high level of capital and asset quality, and customer deposits are insured in accordance with local legislation. The bank's assets are sufficient to make payments to all depositors, it said. Google has blocked the Ekho Moskvy YouTube channel in Europe, Ekho Moskvy Editor-in-Chief Alexei Venediktov said. "Good morning! Yesterday, when the Prosecutor General's Office blocked our broadcast and website, Google synchronously shut down our YouTube channel in Europe due to our connection to Gazprom," Venediktov said on Telegram. Ekho Moskvy Deputy Editor-in-Chief Maxim Kurnikov said online that, according to radio listeners, the YouTube channel is unavailable in Germany, Finland, and some other European countries. The Ekho Moskvy broadcast in Russia was stopped and its website was blocked at 9 p.m. on March 1, and the same happened to the Rain TV channel (designated as a foreign-agent media outlet by the Russian Justice Ministry). The Russian Prosecutor General's Office accused both media outlets of spreading fake information about the Ukraine situation. Ekho Moskvy and Rain TV said they would challenge the decision of the Russian Prosecutor General's Office and denied any wrongdoing. Ekho Moskvy is part of the Gazprom Media holding. It has been operating since August 22, 1990. The Ekho Moskvy broadcast was halted in August 1991 on the orders from the State Committee on the State of Emergency, but the radio station managed to go back on the air. By Trend The health of three Azerbaijani drivers injured in the shooting in Ukrainian Kharkiv is assessed as satisfactory, Ruslan Eldaroghlu, spokesperson for the Azerbaijan International Road Carriers Association (ABADA) told Trend. According to Eldaroghlu, the drivers are currently being treated at the hospital. He also said that the evacuation of Azerbaijani drivers from Ukraine continues. As of today, seven trucks have been allowed to pass from Ukraine, the spokesman said. "Presently, six trucks are in Bulgaria. One of them will cross the Romanian border. Today, the evacuation of drivers carrying out international cargo transportation is also planned. The public will be informed about this in detail," added the spokesperson. Minister of Foreign Affairs of Ukraine Dmytro Kuleba has said that Ukraine will receive weapons from partners in the near future. "I want to tell you that weapons from our friends are coming to Ukraine, which will allow us to defend our state, defeat the aggressor and drive him out of our land," he said on the night of Tuesday to Wednesday in a video broadcast on Facebook. "We're having a hard time, we're bleeding, we're seeing our homes being destroyed, but in fact we're already winning," he said. Speaking about granting Ukraine the status of a candidate for membership in the EU, Kuleba said that three days ago this decision seemed impossible. "The dynamics of support for Ukraine is extremely powerful and unprecedented. The main thing is that it destroys Putin's myth that nobody needs Ukraine," he said. Defense Minister Oleksiy Reznikov has said new Bayraktar drones have already arrived in Ukraine and are on combat duty. "Some 147 hours of defense. Events are changing. The Russian invaders are trying to somehow keep the combat capability of their units. But it gets worse and worse. This is evidenced by the repeated surrender of groups of Russian soldiers with officers, as well as refusals to continue the offensive," he said on Facebook. The minister noted that in Russia the relatives of the prisoners and the dead are beginning to go to protests. "The total lies of Russian propaganda are shocking. The enemy was afraid of direct contact with the Ukrainian defenders and defenders. They switched to criminal tactics of remote shelling of peaceful cities," he added. Reznikov said that air and missile strikes from the territory of Russia and Belarus on residential buildings and schools, shelling of maternity hospitals with multiple rocket launch systems are "cowardly behavior of those who have no honor." "These are not soldiers. They are terrorists, representatives of a terrorist state. This stigma will remain for a long time," he said. Reznikov also believes that the shelling of Zhytomyr is a response to the successful completion of the 95th brigade's task in the Joint Forces Operation. "The invaders aimed at the brigade barracks and residential buildings nearby. By attacking the women and children of our soldiers, the Kremlin will not achieve the result it is striving for. Now many of our cities and villages are suffering from Russian terror, but most of all - Kharkiv, Mariupol and Kherson," he said. Reznikov said that on March 1 he had a long conversation with U.S. Secretary of Defense Lloyd Austin, and that experienced U.S. military officers were completely delighted with the professionalism of our defenders and the resilience of our people. "The amount of aid we receive is increasing. The number of countries providing this assistance is increasing. Even those who considered it impossible are joining," he said. According to Reznikov, new Bayraktar drones had already arrived in Ukraine and were on combat duty. He said there would be new deliveries of Stinger and Javelin rockets. The shelling of Kharkiv on February 28 with 16 high-precision missiles was carried out from a strategic bomber that did not even cross the Ukrainian-Russian border being in Belgorod region of Russia, the Ministry of Defense reported, citing the Air Force Command. "Yesterday, on February 28, the Tu-22m3 strategic bomber-missile carrier, as if in an exercise, without crossing the state border line, attacked the peaceful residential areas of Kharkiv with high-precision weapons - air-to-surface missiles. The bomber made four events at the direction of the settlement Besedino (Kursk region). Belgorod, having fired about 16 missiles at a defenseless city," the ministry said on its Facebook page on Tuesday evening. The Ministry of Defense stressed that the consequences of the missile strike were recorded by local residents. High-rise buildings, schools, kindergartens and other infrastructure of the city were destroyed. According to preliminary data, dozens of Kharkiv residents, including children, died from these airstrikes. "The Air Force recorded this crime against humanity between 19:07 and 19:51 on February 28, 2022. At one time, the materials will definitely be transferred to The Hague," the ministry noted. "Unfortunately, in the current situation, it is extremely difficult for the Air Force to cover the sky in this region, because part of the country's air defense system was destroyed by Russian ballistic and cruise missile strikes," the Defense Ministry added. "The invaders do not dare to storm the city, because they are to be killed, so they resorted to aerial terrorism, killing peaceful Kharkiv residents," the Ukrainian military stated. Kyiv's decision to recall the Ukrainian ambassador from Tbilisi for consultations will not affect the work of the Georgian embassy to Ukraine, Georgian Foreign Minister David Zalkaliani said. "The entire personnel of the Georgian embassy to Ukraine is on the ground, will continue their work, and will stay there till the end, until this escalation stops, and then we will continue normal functioning as befits strategic partners," Zalkaliani said on the Imedi television channel on Tuesday. Despite Ukraine's decision to recall its ambassador from Tbilisi, Georgia will continue to provide assistance to Ukrainian ordinary citizens and diplomats, he said. Kyiv's decision to recall Ukrainian Ambassador to Georgia Ihor Dolhov was a surprise even to him, Zalkaliani said. "As for the [Ukrainian] embassy here, we were maintaining relations with them. I can tell you based on our communication that the decision made for the ambassador was also a surprise, but he will certainly obey the instructions. Even though he is being recalled for relevant consultations, our relations are continuing," he said. Georgia stands ready to grant Ukraine's request on accommodating Ukrainian diplomats evacuated from Russia in Tbilisi, he said. Russian invaders continue to land troops in Mykolaiv, the invaders have already been suppressed at the airport, Head of the Mykolaiv Regional Military Administration Vitaliy Kim said. "The troops landed in Oktiabrsky. Shoot to kill in that area. They also landed at the airport already pressed to the ground. They ask to surrender," Kim wrote on the Telegram channel. Support for Ukraine's accession to the European Union and NATO is the highest in the history of surveys on the question, according to a study conducted by the Rating Sociological Group on March 1. Some 86% of Ukrainians support Ukraine's accession to the EU, 76% - for joining NATO. "Compared to the pre-war period, the level of support for joining the EU and NATO increased by more than 20 percentage points. The positive dynamics occurred due to the growth of support for joining Western structures among the population of the south and east. In terms of age, in all categories, there is unanimous support for Ukraine's entry into EU and NATO," the group said. Some 61% of respondents believe that Ukraine will become a member of the European Union in the near future (within 1-2 years). 13% believe that Ukraine will become a member of the EU in 5 years, in the longer term - 6%. Only 17% find it difficult to make estimates. Some 4% of respondents do not believe that Ukraine will become a member of the EU. Compared to last year, the number of those who do not believe in the European integration of Ukraine has significantly decreased (in November 2021, there were 26% of such people). The study interviewed 1,200 respondents over the age of 18 in all government-controlled regions using CATI (Computer Assisted Telephone Interviews - telephone interviews using a computer). The error of the representativeness of the study with a confidence probability of 0.95 does not exceed 2.8%. JSC "Ukrzaliznytsia" (UZ) has appeals to the International Committee of the Red Cross with a request to provide a "green corridor" for the evacuation of civilians from Volnovakha (Donetsk region), the company said on its Telegram channel on Wednesday. UZ, in particular, notes that there is a humanitarian catastrophe in Volnovakha: after many days of bombardment by the Russian troops, it is blocked by the enemy, it is impossible to deliver provisions, water and medicines to it. Ukrzaliznytsia is ready to send trains to evacuate the civilian population if the Red Cross can agree on the creation of a humanitarian corridor. In Donetsk direction, the Ukrainian military captured a group of representatives of the armed formations of the Russian Federation, who turned out to be residents of the occupied territories: locksmiths, teachers, social workers, the press center of the headquarters of the Joint Forces Operation (JFO) reports. "Today, in Donetsk direction, our defenders captured a group of representatives of the armed formations of the Russian Federation. They turned out to be residents of the occupied territories: locksmiths, teachers, social workers. The Kremlin authorities forcibly mobilized all of them into their army and cold-bloodedly sent forward like cannon fodder," the JFO staff said on Facebook. In addition, the Armed Forces of Ukraine note that today "the soldiers of the Azov regiment adequately met Kadyrovtsy (Kadyrov's followers) in the steppes of Donbas." "The elite troops of the Russian Federation turned out to be the usual cargo of 200, with which the invaders are now massively flooding Ukraine," the report says. Due to poor morale and fuel and food shortages, some Russian troops in Ukraine have surrendered en masse or sabotaged their own vehicles to avoid fighting. A senior Pentagon official refers to such a statement in an article published on Tuesday by the New York Times. Some entire Russian units laid down their arms without a fight after facing surprisingly tough Ukrainian defenses, the official said. Some Russian invaders deliberately poked holes in the gas tanks of their vehicles, presumably to avoid combat. However, a Pentagon spokesman declined to say how the military made these estimates - presumably from a mosaic of intelligence data, including statements by captured Russian soldiers and intercepted communications. In addition to addressing fuel, food and spare parts shortages, the Russian commanders leading this armored column towards Kyiv may also be "regrouping and rethinking" their battle plans, making adjustments on the fly to gain momentum, according to a Pentagon spokesman, for "an inevitable push in the next few days to encircle and eventually capture the capital." The officials said more than 80% of 150,000 the Russian invasion forces has already been deployed. U.S. said analysts were struck by the "risk-averse behavior" of such a large force. Russia landed an amphibious assault to capture Mariupol, a key port city on the Sea of Azov, but landed about 40 miles from the city. They added that the vaunted Russian air force has yet to gain air superiority over Ukraine as Russian warplanes are countered by Ukrainian fighter jets and a surprisingly resilient and powerful air defense system. Iryna Vereshchuk, Ukraine's Deputy Prime Minister for the Reintegration of the Temporarily Occupied Territories has called on international humanitarian organizations to provide humanitarian corridors in the Donbas for the evacuation of civilians. "I must admit that we expected more real support and assistance from international humanitarian structures, primarily from the International Committee of the Red Cross, the UN, the OSCE. Therefore, I appeal to these international organizations," she said. "I understand that you are worried about the safety of your staff, but at the same time, your internationally recognized neutral status gives you more security than our national structures ... You can't do all humanitarian work while sitting in Lviv," she said in an address on Tuesday evening. Vereshchuk said that if these organizations cannot fulfill their humanitarian mandate in Donetsk, Luhansk and other regions because of the danger posed by the Russian army, they must clearly, officially and unequivocally declare this to the whole world. "Who exactly is preventing you from fulfilling your humanitarian mandate? If you cannot do your work directly in Donbass, we ask you to provide us with urgent assistance by road transport. And most importantly, we ask you to do everything possible to ensure humanitarian corridors in Donbas, to evacuate civilians, primarily women and children, the elderly and people with disabilities," she said. By Azernews By Sabina Mammadli President Ilham Aliyev has approved two agreements earlier signed between Azerbaijan and Turkey, Azertag has reported. He signed a decree approving the "Agreement on cooperation between the government Azerbaijan and the government of Turkey in the mining industry", which was signed on December 22, 2021. According to the agreement, after it enters into force, the Azerbaijani Ecology and Natural Resources Ministry will ensure that its provisions are followed. In another paragraph, it was stated that Azerbaijan's Foreign Ministry will notify the Turkish government of the completion of internal procedures required for the agreement's entry into force. Meanwhile, President Aliyev signed another decree that approved the "Agreement between Azerbaijan and Turkey on cooperation in the field of fish farming", which was signed on November 11, 2021, in Ankara. Azerbaijan's Ecology and Natural Resources Ministry is ordered to ensure the implementation of its provisions after it enters into force. The Foreign Ministry is instructed to notify the Turkish government of the completion of domestic procedures required for the agreement's entry into force. Azerbaijan and Turkey cooperate in various fields of economy and have jointly completed giant energy and infrastructure projects such as Baku-Tbilisi-Ceyhan, Baku-Tbilisi-Kars, and TANAP. In 2021, Azerbaijan and Turkey signed the Shusha Declaration on Allied Relations, which focuses on defence cooperation, promoting regional stability and prosperity, and establishing new transportation routes. The two countries set up a goal to bring the mutual trade turnover to $15 billion in 2023. As of 2021, the trade turnover between the two countries amounted to $4.6 billion. It should be noted that so far, Turkey is Azerbaijans second-largest investor followed by the UK. Additionally, Turkey was one of the first countries that expressed its interest and readiness to participate in the restoration of Azerbaijans liberated territories. DTEK Group has begun supplying free electricity to medical institutions, military and law enforcement agencies, as well as bread producers in Kyiv, Donetsk and Dnipropetrovsk regions. According to a message on the group's website, during the period of hostilities, the company will not issue invoices to all medical institutions hospitals, hospitals and rehabilitation centers in these regions, institutions of law enforcement agencies the Security Service of Ukraine, the Ministry of Defense, the Ministry of Internal Affairs and other departments that ensure security and public order. DTEK will also supply electricity to bread producers located in these regions. "Ukraine is going through a difficult period in its history, and business will make every effort to help the state and the population. In addition to the humanitarian aid program and support for the army, from March we will provide all medical institutions, law enforcement agencies and bread producers in three regions with free electricity," CEO of DTEK Maksym Timchenko said. DTEK was established in 2005 to manage the energy assets of the System Capital Management Group (SCM, Donetsk) of Rinat Akhmetov. It has been delegated the functions of strategic management of the group's enterprises that make up a vertically integrated chain of coal mining and processing, production and sale of electricity, and natural gas production. The Security Service of Ukraine (SBU), together with the police of Ivano-Frankivsk region, has detained a fire spotter who directed a Russian Kalibr strike at the Ivano-Frankivsk airfield, the regional police has reported. "The traitor to Ukraine arrived in Ivano-Frankivsk on February 22. He settled in a motel near the airfield. On February 23, on the eve of the Russian missile and bomb attack on Ukraine, he transmitted information about the location of a military facility to Russia. As a result of missiles hitting the airfield, its infrastructure was destroyed. After that, the spotter reported the result of the strike to the Russian Federation," the police said in a message posted on its Facebook page. According to the police, the saboteur was caught red-handed when he tried to commit the next crime aimed at reducing the defense capability of Ukraine. Four people were killed in a strike on the Kharkiv Police and Security Service Office by Russia, Anton Gerashchenko, adviser to the Minister of Internal Affairs, has said. "The rubble continues to be removed after the barbaric attack on the office of the Kharkiv police and the SBU. 10 Kharkiv residents managed to be saved. Two were pulled out of the rubble. There are 4 dead so far. All police officers are from the Skhid police special forces unit," Gerashchenko wrote on Telegram on Wednesday. Kherson Mayor Ihor Kolykhaev announces a possible humanitarian disaster in the city and demands a "green corridor" for the removal of the wounded and the dead. "To the attention of all media Kherson, regional, national, global media! I ask all journalists who know me, who love Kherson, root for its fate, to use the power of their fourth power and help us get a 'green corridor' for the removal of the wounded and the dead, bringing medicines and food to the city. Without all this, the city will perish," he wrote on Facebook. Kolykhaev said that he was counting on the friendly participation of journalists and their connections not only with Ukrainian, but also with world politicians. "Help Kherson get the opportunity to save its people from an impending humanitarian disaster," he said. On February 28, the Lithuanian government approved the initiative of the ministries of justice and foreign affairs to turn to the prosecutor of the International Criminal Court (ICC) in connection with war crimes and crimes against humanity in Russia and Belarus, the Lithuanian Ministry of Foreign Affairs has reported. "The case is directed at the liability of specific individuals - namely the decision-takers from the regimes of Putin and Lukashenko. Lithuania states that an immediate action is needed in the face of the brutal aggression from Russia and Belarus against Ukraine," the Foreign Ministry said in a statement. The Ministry of Justice has collected and handed over the material needed to launch the investigation. The application describes the situation in Ukraine, outlines the violations of international law that are known to date, and provides their legal assessment, along with the reasoning. The application meets all the procedural terms and requirements for launching an investigation. "Under the Rome Statute establishing the International Criminal Court, any Member State may lodge a complaint with the Public Prosecutor. The purpose of this procedure is to provide the available information for the prosecutor to verify and, if warranted, to open up the proceedings. At the same time, it helps the prosecutor gather information from different entities and sources," the Lithuanian Foreign Ministry said. On the part of all Polish educational institutions, Ukraine can count on the support of children and their further education, Minister of Education and Science of Poland Przemyslaw Czarnek assured Minister of Education and Science of Ukraine Serhiy Shkarlet. "The consequences of the harsh, shameful and large-scale aggression of the Russian Federation were discussed with Mr. Czarnek. I turned to my colleague with a request to immediately stop all relations with the Russian Federation in the field of education and science, and also officially condemn the actions of the Russian Federation in speeches and statements and express support for Ukraine," the press service of the ministry quoted Shkarlet after a meeting with Czarnek. The Minister of Education of the Republic of Poland, in turn, assured of the absolute support of Ukraine and its people. "Poland is already one of the countries actively accepting Ukrainian citizens who were forced to leave their homes. Mr. Czarnek assured that we can count on any kind of support from all Polish educational institutions for children and their further education. Now I receive many questions from Ukrainian students who study at universities in Poland, about the possibility of deferring tuition and accommodation fees in connection with the dirty attack of the Russian Federation. Mr. Czarnek assured that he had already turned to the rectors regarding the provision of such an opportunity and absolute support to Ukrainian students," Shkarlet emphasized. NATO must work out general security guarantees for Ukraine if not ready to let Ukraine join - Zelensky NATO should work out common security guarantees for Ukraine if it is not ready to let us join, President of Ukraine Volodymyr Zelensky has said. "Our partners, if they are not ready to take Ukraine into NATO ... because Russia does not want Ukraine to be in NATO, should work out common security guarantees for Ukraine," Zelensky said in an interview with the Reuters news agency on Tuesday. Zelensky needs legal security guarantees, which would include guarantees of territorial integrity, border protection, as well as Ukraine's special relations with all neighbors and security. In his opinion, world leaders should support states that seek to uphold democratic principles. "We have a war every day, we need help every day," he said. "There is not a lot of time for discussion," the president said, adding "It is very important to know that if Ukraine falls, then all these (Russian) troops will be on the borders of your NATO member countries .... and you will be facing the same question there." Vasylkivsky city council announces mining of military airfield, urges not to approach it at 2 km distance Vasylkivsky City Council states that the military airfield is mined and urges citizens not to approach it closer than two kilometers. "Attention! Mining of the airfield. Movement is prohibited. Neither on foot, nor by car!" the press service of Vasylkivsky City Council said. The ENTSO-E Council highly appreciated the efforts made by the Ukrainian transmission system operator NPC Ukrenergo to prepare for the synchronization of the Ukrainian and European power systems and will urgently prepare the conditions for its swift implementation. "ENTSO-E's Board confirmed its full support for swift emergency synchronisation definition of key conditions for synchronisation by the Continental European TSOs," the ENTSO-E said on its website. On behalf of ENTSO-E and its Member TSOs, the Board of ENTSO-E today acknowledged the exceptional efforts of Ukrenergo to operate and maintain the power system in these difficult times and will continue to support their efforts. According to the announcement, identification of the conditions for urgent synchronisation will include an assessment of Protection and Dynamic Stability, Operations and Markets, Legal and Regulatory and Information Technology including Cybersecurity. "ENTSO-E and its Member TSOs understand the urgency to address the request for emergency synchronisation whilst ensuring the security and stability of the Continental European power system," the ENTSO-E Council said in the statement. ENTSO-E would like to thank the Commissioner Simson and the EU Energy Ministers for their support for the work of Continental European TSOs to ensure the safe operation of the concerned electricity systems. ENTSO-E said that at the Energy Council meeting on 28 February 2022, Member States underlined the importance of enabling the emergency synchronisation of the Ukrainian power grid to the power grid of Continental Europe and the need to consider the impact on Republic of Moldova. The High Anti-Corruption Court of Ukraine (HACC) has canceled the arrest of 38 engines that will be transferred to the Armed Forces of Ukraine. "Today, March 1, 2022, with the participation of the prosecutor of the Special Anti-corruption Prosecutor's Office (SAPO), HACC's investigator judge promptly considered the petition of the director of the State Enterprise Lviv Armored Plant and a representative of the Ministry of Defense of Ukraine, and decided to cancel the arrest of engines, which the Armed Forces of Ukraine will receive in order to confront Russian invaders," a post on HACC's website said on Tuesday evening. HACC recalled that these engines were arrested as part of a criminal proceeding on embezzlement of funds when purchasing engines for the needs of the Armed Forces of Ukraine. By Azernews By Vugar Khalilov An operational headquarters has been set up under the Azerbaijanis Council (Rada) in Ukraine, the Azerbaijani State Committee for Work with the Diaspora has said. The headquarters was established to support Azerbaijanis given their large number in Ukraine, the report added. The office phone number has changed. Our compatriots can contact via the following number: +380 (98) 949 70 38, or the email: [email protected], the committee said. The committee added that over 100 Azerbaijani citizens had been transported from Ukraines Odessa city to the border with Moldova. Meanwhile, Trend reported that 168 more Azerbaijani citizens evacuated from Ukraine arrived in Baku on March 2. At 0920, passengers on the third charter flight arrived at Heydar Aliyev International Airport. The majority of those evacuated were women and children. On March 1, Azerbaijan Airlines (AZAL) evacuated 176 Azerbaijanis from neighboring countries to Baku on a charter plane due to the situation in Ukraine. Moreover, Azerbaijans Honorary Consulate in Kharkiv evacuated 500 Azerbaijani citizens, supporting them to cross the Ukrainian-Polish border in Lviv. Law enforcement officers have begun criminal proceedings on the fact that the head of the Mikhailovska merged territorial community (hromada) in Zaporizhia region surrendered territory to Russian invaders, Prosecutor General Iryna Venediktova has said. "Enemy troops gathered in the police department, and this individual calmed the crowd and urged residents not to interfere with the occupiers. We qualify that as treason in the form of providing military personnel of the armed forces of the Russian Federation with assistance in carrying out subversive activities against Ukraine. The State Security Service and the prosecutor's office of Zaporozhia region have reacted. Suspicion notes have been drafted," she said. Tkachenko appeals to heads of Russian federal TV channels to influence: it is in your power to change situation Minister of Culture and Information Policy Oleksandr Tkachenko calls on the heads of Russian federal TV channels to influence Russian society to change the current situation. "I appeal to the heads of Russian federal channels: Konstantin Ernst, Oleg Dobrodeev, Tatyana Mitkova. I remember you as those who made the democratic revolution on Russian television in the 1990s. Then you believed in everything good and were against everything bad. What your channels have turned into in recent years, you see for yourself, it's not for me to tell you," Tkachenko wrote in his Telegram channel. The Minister published a video of the rocket attack on the central square of Kharkiv and wrote: "Maybe these shots will make you remember where you started everything. This is the broken city of Kharkiv, the dead civilians." Tkachenko said that it was in their power to do what they did in the 1990s when they toppled the Soviet regime. "Since it is useless to explain something to your current leader, I will try to get through to you. Television is a big force. It is in your power to change the situation. You can influence Russian society so that peaceful people in Ukraine stop suffering, and Russians do not slide into the abyss of poverty and suffering, just because one person wanted to start a war in the 21st century," he said. As a result of Russian aggression in eastern Ukraine, about 40,000 people are deprived of electricity and are experiencing difficulties with food, but the Russian side does not respond to attempts to coordinate the evacuation, Ukrainian Interior Minister Denys Monastyrsky has said. "Currently, the humanitarian situation is difficult in the east of the state. The issue of evacuating people from the cities of Volnovakha, Sartana, Talanovka, where active hostilities continue, is especially acute. But the Russian side has not given an answer about the evacuation of the population," the minister said according to his ministry's press service. Monastyrsky said Ukraine is seeking help from international organizations The situation is also critical in the city of Bucha, Kyiv region. "The government has already created a coordinating center for the provision of food, water, medicines and fuel. We are organizing the transfer of humanitarian goods to the neediest cities," the minister said. Source: https://t.me/mvs_ukraine/8989 Governor of the National Bank of Ukraine (NBU) Kyrylo Shevchenko addressed the International Monetary Fund and G7 with a request to restrict participation of representatives of the Russian Federation and Belarus in activities of the IMF and possibilities to use its instruments and that they are blocked from access to the recent SDR distribution, as these funds may be used to finance military actions against Ukraine. The regulator said on its website with reference to Shevchenko's letters to IMF Managing Director Kristalina Georgieva and to G7, the governor of the NBU also urged that the Executive Director for the IMF from the Russian Federation be suspended from participation in the meetings of the IMF Board of Directors. In addition, Shevchenko urged that the Russian and Belarusian delegations be banned from attending Spring Meetings of the International Monetary Fund and World Bank Group. "It is extremely important for us to do everything possible for the Russian financial sector to feel all the consequences of Russia's aggression against Ukraine," the governor of the NBU said. The Armed Forces of Ukraine in certain directions are beginning to seize the initiative from the Russian invaders, the press service of the General Staff of the Armed Forces of Ukraine said on Wednesday. "The enemy is trying to maintain the combat readiness of his units, realizing that the 'easy walk' did not work out. The enemy is trying to avoid direct clashes not only with the Ukrainian army, but also with civilians who block the movement of his columns. Russian propaganda ceases to operate on the territory of Ukraine and the liberators realize that no one expected them here," the statement says. In the Volyn direction the enemy has lost the initiative and is not conducting active operations. In the Polissya direction, the Russian invaders continue to advance in the direction of Makarov - Brusyliv - Fastiv with forces moving towards Kyiv. In the directions to Malyn and Irpin, the Russians have lost their offensive pace, suffered significant losses and were stopped. In the Chernobyl direction, the enemy tried to develop an offensive in the direction of Demidov and Irpen, but also lost its offensive potential, which was stopped. In Zhytomyr region, the invaders have reached several settlements. In the Seversk direction, enemy soldiers as part of the 1st Tank Army and the 20th Combined Arms Army of the Russian Armed Forces are conducting offensive operations in the direction of Krasnohrad and Izium were stopped near Bohodukhov, Chuguev, and Shevchenkovo. In the Chernihiv direction, the enemy was stopped. In the Nezhin direction the invaders moved in the direction of Nova Basan, Kozelets. In the Donetsk direction, the enemy, with the forces of the 1st, 2nd AK and 8th Army, concentrated his main efforts on the goal of reaching the administrative borders of the Donetsk and Luhansk regions. The enemy did not reach its goal and failed to block Mariupol. In the south, the enemy is making attempts to continue the offensive in the direction of Zaporizhia, with some forces heading towards Mariupol. In the Black Sea Operational Zone, the Russian invaders continue to prepare for an amphibious landing operation on the Black Sea coast of Ukraine (Zatoka and Odessa regions). The deployment of ship groups of the fleet on the high seas was noted. "The enemy is demoralized and continues to suffer losses in personnel and equipment. Russian propaganda is bursting at the seams! We will win!" the General Staff said. Ukraine will have enough weapons to beat the enemy, Ukrainian Foreign Minister Dmitry Kuleba said. "Weapons are on the move. There are many weapons: it will be enough to hit the enemy. There are problematic issues that are in the process of being resolved. But I am convinced that we will solve them too. They are problematic only because or something is missing and not available right now, or what we need, is extremely technically large and complex and needs additional transmission solutions," Kuleba said in Facebook on Wednesday. At the same time, the minister said that Ukrainian diplomacy will find everything that is needed for the defenders of Ukraine. "I promise. We will do absolutely everything for this, we will support our fighters who are fighting on the front line," Kuleba said. Dutch Airbus has announced that it is suspending the supply of spare parts and maintenance of its aircraft from Russian airlines. "Boeing and Airbus have suspended support for airlines from Russia and stopped delivering spare parts," Deputy Prime Minister - Minister of Digital Transformation of Ukraine Mykhailo Fedorov has said on his Telegram channel. He also recalled that in connection with Russia's military aggression against Ukraine, the U.S. government banned Russian aircraft from flying in American airspace after similar steps by the EU and Canada. The report recalls that as part of the measures and sanctions imposed by the world community on the Russian Federation for unleashing a war against Ukraine by Russia, Canada banned transactions with the Central Bank of Russia, the Deutsche Borse exchange organization stops trading in all Russian securities from March 2, Apple stopped exports to Russia and restricted other services, Instagram has blocked all RT and Sputnik accounts in 27 European countries, Japanese Honda and Mazda are stopping the export of cars, motorcycles and components to Russia, the Maersk shipping group is temporarily stopping all shipments to and from Russia. "The list of sanctions can be listed forever. Together against the enemy!" Fedorov said in a message. In Lysychansk, Russian troops attacked a TV tower, Anton Gerashchenko, adviser to the Minister of Internal Affairs of Ukraine, has said. "The occupiers attacked the TV tower in Lysychansk," he wrote on his Telegram channel. The State Emergency Service in the Telegram channel said that at 11:30 on Wednesday, after shelling of the city of Lysychansk, the Horodok store at 142, Peremohy Avenue, is on fire. "There was also a direct hit on the Lysychansk brewery, followed by a fire. Upon arrival, it was found that open burning was not detected, further reconnaissance is being carried out," Gerashchenko said. After this shelling information began to come in about the hit of shells in the city of Severodonetsk, namely: in a kindergarten, a gas pipeline. Russia is sending cadets of military schools to the war in Ukraine, Oleksiy Arestovych, adviser to the head of the President's Office, has said. "According to official reports, the Russians even throw cadets of military schools into battle. In particular, such information comes from the Serpukhov military school, where second year cadets were thrown into the war in Ukraine. This means that the entire powerful Russian army can no longer cope with Ukraine, the Ukrainian people and the Armed Forces. This means a disaster in terms of military command, because the cadets of the schools are not touched until the very last moment," Arestoych said at a briefing at the President's Office on Wednesday afternoon. He added that Russia's attempts to attract the Belarusian army can also be attributed here. "But so far there is no official data that the Belarusian army is taking part in hostilities against Ukraine. There are signals that are being rechecked, but the level of these signals does not yet allow us to talk about the participation of Belarusians," he said. In negotiations with aggressor in Konotop, agreement reached on no entry of troops, no shooting at them by Ukrainian side - Head of Sumy regional military administration Head of Sumy regional military administration Dmytro Zhyvytsky claims that in negotiations with the invaders in Konotop, an agreement was reached that there would be no troops, but the Ukrainian side would not shoot at them. "The conversation with the Russians in Konotop, authorized by me from the military administration, lasted about 12 minutes. I was on speakerphone during the negotiations. The agreement is as follows: There can be no question of any change of power. They are interested in law and order. There will be no entry of troops. The Ukrainian flag is in place," he wrote on the Telegram channel. At the same time, Zhyvytsky noted that there is an agreement that the Ukrainian side will not shoot at them and there will be no mutual provocations, but they will remain in their positions, and unhindered passage of public transport and services, ambulances, with food, humanitarian cargo will be provided. "In order to ensure security in the city and control by our volunteers, checkpoints will be additionally installed deep into the town of Konotop," he wrote. By Azernews By Vugar Khalilov The Azerbaijani State Border Service seized about 56 kg of drugs and some 1,000 psychotropic pills in February, the service reported on its website on March 2. The State Border Service maintained its efforts to ensure reliable border protection, combat smuggling, illegal migration, and drug trafficking. In the said period, 20 people were detained for illegally crossing the state border (11 Azerbaijani citizens, five Turkish, two Tajikistani, one Iranian, and one Pakistani). In an effort to combat illegal migration, 18 people were detained in 14 separate cases after attempting to cross the state border with forged Schengen visas and stamps. In 53 cases, 105 people were detained for violating the rules of the border regime, and appropriate action was taken against them. As a result of anti-crime initiatives, 204 people wanted by Azerbaijani law enforcement agencies were identified and turned over to the appropriate authorities. Some 285 people who were barred from leaving Azerbaijan were prevented from doing so, and 16 people who were previously barred from entering the country were denied entry. As a result of anti-smuggling measures, contraband worth approximately AZN 1,88 million ($1.1 million), including cigarettes, medicines, and telephone accessories, was detained. Measures are being taken to organize reliable border protection for our states, the report added. First in 7 days of war Ukrainian units go on offensive advancing to Horlivka Arestovych For the first time in seven days of the war, Ukrainian units went on the offensive, advancing towards Horlivka, Oleksiy Arestovych, adviser to the head of the President's Office, has said. "The JFO zone, there is good news. Most of our units are holding their positions, and one of our brigades has advanced to the outskirts of Horlivka. Now it is being fixed there... For the first time on the seventh day of the war, our units went on the offensive in a separate area," Arestovych said at a briefing at the President's Office on Wednesday afternoon. Regarding the situation throughout Ukraine, Arestovych added that the movement of Russian troops had been stopped towards Chernihiv and Sumy. In the north-west of Kyiv, the enemy continues to build up forces for a further offensive on the city. The Armed Forces of Ukraine make artillery strikes. In Kharkiv, the enemy is bombarding the city with multiple rocket launchers and aircraft. "The task has been set to psychologically break the city," he said, adding that the Armed Forces of Ukraine are resisting, which results in heavy losses of Russian soldiers. Ukrainian air defense destroyed two Russian SU-35S fighters, the public relations service of the Air Force Command of Ukraine has reported. "On the night of March 1, a fierce air battle broke out in Kyiv region between a pair of MiG-29 fighters of the tactical aviation brigade of the Air Force of the Ukrainian Armed Forces and a pair of Russian Su-35S fighters. As a result of the air battle, both Russian aircraft were destroyed! Together with the air-to-air missiles sent from the MiG-29, guided anti-aircraft missiles of the S-300 complex of the local anti-aircraft missile brigade of the air command Center worked out against the invaders," the PR service informs on the page of the Air Force Command of the Ukrainian Armed Forces in Facebook on Wednesday. According to the report, the Ukrainian Air Force lost one MiG-29 in the battle. They are looking for the pilot. Criminal proceedings have been opened on treason against the leaders of the settlement military-civilian administration in Luhansk region, the Prosecutor General's Office (PGO) reports. "The Specialized Prosecutor's Office of the Joint Forces has launched an investigation against the head of Stanytsia Luhanska settlement military-civilian administration and his two deputies on the fact of high treason (Part 1 of Article 111 of the Criminal Code of Ukraine)," the Prosecutor General's Office (PGO) said on the Telegram channel. The report notes that the leaders of the village administration "deliberately committed and continue to commit actions aimed at damaging the sovereignty, territorial integrity, inviolability, defense capability, state, economic and information security of Ukraine." "Under the conditions of martial law, these representatives of local authorities went over to the side of the aggressor country. They provide assistance to the occupying forces with a material and technical base," the Prosecutor General's Office said in a statement. Some 217 more children in risk groups escorted from Ukraine to Poland under simplified procedure Ministry of The Ministry of Social Policy of Ukraine has said that another 217 children from vulnerable categories with accompanying persons left for Poland under a simplified procedure. "Marina Lazebna, the Minister of Social Policy, said that a large group of 217 children from vulnerable groups and 20 accompanying people successfully left for Poland under the new simplified procedure," the ministry's press service said. It is noted that the group includes orphans, children deprived of parental care, children from family-type orphanages, foster families, specialized schools, educational and rehabilitation centers, centers for socio-psychological rehabilitation. The department says that the procedure for simplified travel abroad for children from vulnerable categories allows you to quickly move children in groups to safe places with only two documents for each child. During the seven days of the war, more than 2,000 Ukrainians have been killed, not counting the defenders, the State Emergency Service has reported. "During the seven days of the war, Russia destroyed hundreds of transport infrastructure facilities, residential buildings, hospitals and kindergartens. During this time, more than 2,000 Ukrainians have already died, not counting our defenders," the State Emergency Service reported on Facebook on Wednesday. According to the State Emergency Service, it was possible to save the lives of more than 150 people, to eliminate more than 400 fires that arose after enemy shelling, and to evacuate more than 500 people. Pyrotechnists neutralized 416 explosive objects. When performing tasks, 10 rescuers were killed and 13 were injured. The State Emergency Service also announced that on Wednesday the process of transferring seven units of modern fire and rescue equipment to Ukraine, which will immediately go into service with rescuers, is being completed. VW stops work at factories in Germany because of lack of parts deliveries from Ukraine The Volkswagen auto concern has forced to suspend the production of cars at several factories in Germany due to the cessation of supplies of components from Ukraine after the start of Russian military aggression. According to the Wall Street Journal, the automaker has created a working group whose task is to assess the risks and find ways to ensure the uninterrupted production of cars. The largest Volkswagen plant in Wolfsburg is operating normally this week, however, according to the concern's forecasts, car production will have to be reduced next week, and production will be completely stopped in another week. Supply disruptions will also affect the work of the Hannover truck plant and enterprises that produce auto parts. Earlier, Volkswagen had to suspend the work of enterprises in Dresden, as well as in Zwickau, where electric vehicles are produced, in particular, the ID.4 model exported to the United States. The National Bank of Ukraine (NBU) has urged foreign reinsurers to support Ukrainian insurers, in particular, to defer payments under concluded reinsurance agreements and continue providing reinsurance protection even if such agreements expire. This was reported in an open letter from the National Bank to foreign reinsurers, according to the website of the Central Bank. In addition, some insurers in Ukraine today are deprived of the opportunity to meet their obligations under reinsurance agreements regarding the timely payment of reinsurance premiums. This is due to the conditions of martial law imposed throughout Ukraine in connection with the military aggression of the Russian Federation against Ukraine, and the introduction of restrictions on the operation of the foreign exchange market of Ukraine by the National Bank from February 24, 2022. "Ukraine is grateful to its international partners for their support in the struggle for the independence and territorial integrity of our state during the period of armed aggression by the Russian Federation. We are counting on your help in these difficult times," Deputy Chairman of the National Bank of Ukraine Serhiy Nikolaichuk said. Ten servicemen of the Russian Armed Forces have been taken into custody in Kyiv region, the Prosecutor General's Office (PGO) said. "Prosecutors from Kyiv Regional Prosecutor's Office, in accordance with Article 615 of the Code of Criminal Procedure of Ukraine, arrested ten servicemen of the Armed Forces of Russia suspected of encroaching on the territorial integrity and inviolability of Ukraine (Part 3 of Article 110 of the Criminal Code of Ukraine)," the PGO said on its Telegram channel. As a result of the shelling of Mariupol by Russian servicemen, a shell hit a school and a two-story building in Kalmiusky district, according to preliminary data, there were no casualties, according to the National Police. "The shell hit a school and a two-story building in Kalmiusky district. According to preliminary data, there were no victims," the National Police said on the Telegram channel. According to the police, as of 13:30 on Wednesday, the city of Mariupol and the town of Manhush were shelled. "One person was killed, two policemen were wounded. Nine facilities were destroyed: a maternity hospital, a hostel, a grocery store, and others. On March 1, a child was wounded during the shelling. Today, the boy died in the hospital," the police said. Ukrainian national television and radio broadcasting is carried out through satellite platforms, on which the encoding has been removed, through broadcasting, cable networks and the Internet. "The management of the state operator, BRT Concern, which is under the management of the State Special Communications Service, reported that the operator was ready for terrorist attacks and ensured the signal was delivered to regional networks through European satellite stations in advance, out of the reach of Russian aggressor missiles," the State Special Communications Service said on the Telegram channel. Now the population has full access to Ukrainian television and radio programs. Broadcasting is carried out through satellite platforms, on which the encoding has been removed, through broadcasting, cable networks and the Internet. As reported, in Kyiv, as a result of rocket attacks on the television center on Dorohozhychi, the television tower and control rooms were damaged. The Russian aggressor did not hit the TV tower in Kyiv, the shells hit the building where the control room was located and the Babyn Yar memorial complex. As a result of the shelling of the Kyiv television tower in Shevchenkivsky district, five civilians were killed and the same number was wounded. By Azernews By Sabina Mammadli Azerbaijan has pledged to remain a reliable UN partner and make every effort to further contribute to international peace and security. The Azerbaijani Foreign Ministry said this in a statement made on the 30th anniversary of the country's membership in the UN. "Azerbaijan, as a defender of international law, will continue to be a reliable partner of the UN, and will make every effort to further contribute to international peace and security," the statement said. The ministry noted that over the past three decades, Azerbaijan has established itself as a responsible member of the UN. In order to make a valuable contribution to the achievement of the goals and principles enshrined in the UN Charter, Azerbaijan actively participates in the activities of the organization in all three areas, namely: peace and security, sustainable development and protection of human rights, the ministry said. Furthermore, the statement emphasized that during the first years of membership, which coincided with a period of armed aggression against the country, the organization expressed strong support for Azerbaijan's sovereignty, territorial integrity, and inviolability of its borders. During this difficult period, the UN also provided significant support to Azerbaijan in eliminating the serious humanitarian consequences of the occupation, the statement added. According to the ministry, almost 30 years later, based on the UN Charter, Azerbaijan liberated its territories from Armenian occupation in the 2020 second Karabakh war, and large-scale restoration work is currently underway on these lands. The ministry also stated that Azerbaijan will continue to work with the UN, including in the field of mine clearance, to ensure the right of internally displaced people to return safely. The statement drew attention to Azerbaijan's valuable contribution to UN peacekeeping operations, including the implementation of the 2030 Agenda for Sustainable Development goals, international activities to protect and promote human rights, and combating traditional and emerging global risks and threats. "It is no coincidence that Azerbaijan was elected a non-permanent member of the UN Security Council for 2012-2013 with the support of the absolute majority of UN member states in 2011," the ministry said. Concerning the COVID-19 pandemic, the ministry stated that Azerbaijan, as the chairman of the Non-Aligned Movement, has taken significant global initiatives that promote shared responsibility, strengthen solidarity, and international cooperation in the fight against the pandemic since its inception. Special session of the UN General Assembly dedicated to the fight against COVID-19, held at the initiative of the president of Azerbaijan as the Chairman of the Non-Aligned Movement, the resolutions adopted by the Human Rights Council and the UN General Assembly in 2021, and other initiatives on global recovery after the pandemic indicate that Azerbaijan has played an important and exemplary role in international cooperation in this sphere, the ministry pointed out. Azerbaijan marks the 30th anniversary of its UN membership on March 2, 2022. ATB Corporation has paid an advance tax payment to the country's state budget in the amount of UAH 100 million, its press service reported. According to the release, the company made such a decision to promptly ensure the country's defense capability in the course of military aggression. At the same time, the company provides daily humanitarian support, helps with its own transport and fuel. In particular, a list of reference stores of the ATB trading chain has been compiled in those cities that are in the zone of direct hostilities. All necessary measures are taken to ensure the safety of store employees, as well as hourly monitoring in the regions where the company operates. As reported, ATB stores are working in an enhanced mode. Former President of Ukraine Viktor Yanukovych is a political corpse for Ukraine, adviser to the head of the Office of the President of Ukraine Mikhail Podoliak has said. According to him, several aspects are important in reports about "Yanukovych, who is in Minsk". "First and key: any mention of the name Yanukovych as some kind of "opportunity" once again shows us the total ignorance of the Russian Federation of real sentiments in Ukraine. A complete lack of understanding of what kind of country this is. Russians have never had any objective analytics - hence such murderous decisions... The second aspect of this wondrous story is that Yanukovych is an absolute "political corpse," Podolyak said in a commentary given to Interfax-Ukraine. As an adviser to the head of the President's Office noted, Yanukovych is "an outsider with a toxic reputation" for Ukrainians. "The mention of his last name even sounds somehow defiant. It will definitely only provoke even more resistance. Like, by the way, the names of Medvedchuk and Murayev. These are completely negative characters with a sullied reputation. It's not even about the total lack of managerial skills and the immense stupidity of these people. And about their complete incompatibility with the Ukrainian context," he added. Podoliak also added that the Russian Federation does not know and does not understand Ukrainian realities. "Propaganda stories about a "mass meeting of Russian tanks with flowers." In fact, there are no even single "meetings" - only hatred, the most brutal destruction of these very tanks and even massive attempts to stop armored vehicles with their bodies. The falsely hoped that they would be treated kindly in a country that hates any invaders. The confidence of the Russian elites that hundreds of thousands of nationalist armies are marching through our streets shows they do not understand anything in Ukraine," he stressed. Earlier, a number of media outlets reported on the arrival of Yanukovych in Minsk and suggested that he could be nominated by Moscow as the leader of Ukraine. The UN General Assembly on Wednesday evening will adopt a historic resolution condemning the aggression of the Russian Federation, demanding an immediate ceasefire and the withdrawal of all its armed forces from the territory of Ukraine, Ukrainian Foreign Minister Dmitry Kuleba has said. "Tonight, the UN General Assembly will adopt a historic resolution condemning Russian aggression, demanding that Russia immediately cease fire and withdraw all its armed forces from the territory of Ukraine within its internationally recognized borders, including Crimea and Donbass. We expect record peace support. In fact, it will be fixing at the highest world level of the international anti-war coalition, which the President of Ukraine Volodymyr Zelensky called for from the very beginning of the war," Kuleba said at an online briefing on Wednesday. Kuleba pointed out that 95 states co-authored the measure. Source: https://www.facebook.com/UkraineMFA Korea plans to take active part in sanctions pressure on Russia Kuleba Korea strongly condemns Russian aggression against Ukraine and plans to take an active part in sanctions pressure on Russia, Ukrainian Foreign Minister Dmytro Kuleba said after talks with Korean Foreign Minister Chung Eui-yon. "The Republic of Korea strongly condemns Russian aggression against Ukraine and plans to take active part in sanctions pressure on Russia. Korean friends provide Ukraine with humanitarian assistance. Grateful for standing by Ukraine," Kuleba said on Twitter on Wednesday. On March 4, martial law may be introduced in the Russian Federation, adviser to the President's Office head Mykhailo Podoliak believes. "On March 4, both chambers of the Russian parliament will convene for an emergency extraordinary session. As I understand it, the preventive imposition of martial law in Russia is on the agenda. With a total ban on all rallies, disconnection from the outside world, large-scale food and financial restrictions. The evacuation of those who can afford it is now beginning across the country," he said on Twitter. Inspectors from the International Atomic Energy Agency (IAEA) currently have the ability to monitor the situation at nuclear facilities on the territory of Ukraine, the organization's director general Rafael Grossi said on Wednesday. "Remotely controlled equipment is functioning normally," he said at a briefing in Vienna. "We are able to continue security control activities," Grossi added. He noted that he expects that in the future it will be possible to send IAEA inspectors directly to facilities in Ukraine. "I am in contact with all parties. We need to understand how we can provide support," Grossi said. He noted that he was "inspired by the willingness of the parties to interact." Speaking about whether the events in Ukraine pose a threat to nuclear facilities, the head of the IAEA said: "I proceed from the fact that there will be no such strikes." Grossi explained that all countries had previously assured that they considered attacks on nuclear facilities unacceptable. Zelensky thanks PM of Norway for defense support of Ukraine in fight against Russian aggression President of Ukraine Volodymyr Zelensky thanked Prime Minister of Norway Jonas Gahr Stre for the defense support of Ukraine in the fight against Russian aggression. "Thanked the Prime Minister of Norway for a strong defense support to Ukraine in the fight against Russian aggression. Noted the strong sanctions imposed by Norway. Reported on the course of Ukrainian defense and the aggressor's crimes against civilians. We continue joint work, including with the UN Security Council," Zelensky wrote on Twitter. European Union High Representative for Foreign Affairs and Security Policy Josep Borrell during the talks in Moldova intends to discuss with the authorities of this country support for Ukraine and regional security. "Arrived for a two-day visit in the Republic of Moldova with Commissioner Oliver Varhelyi. Looking forward to discuss with the Moldovan leadership our joint efforts to support Ukraine and its people, and regional security in the context of Russia's invasion of Ukraine," Borrell said on Twitter. The integrated power system of Ukraine in an isolated mode and in the conditions of Russian military aggression was working stably as of 12:00 on Wednesday, according to the Facebook page of the Cabinet of Ministers. "As of 12:00 on March 2, the energy system of Ukraine is working stably in a grid-isolated mode. The network frequency is maintained at 50 Hz. All nuclear, thermal and hydroelectric power stations are operating in Ukraine, and critical energy infrastructure facilities are being controlled," the report says. The Cabinet of Ministers informed in the conditions of martial law and full-scale aggression of Russia, Energoatom strengthened control and determined the exclusive priority of the safety of nuclear plants over all others. There are no violations of the conditions for safe operation at nuclear power plants. At the same time, the equipment of reactor compartments of power units, premises and buildings of power plants, the perimeters of protected zones and nearby territories, as well as especially important NPP facilities outside their protected zones are under increased surveillance and control. In turn, as of 12:00, the Ukrainian GTS continued to meet the needs of Ukrainian consumers, energy and industry, despite the hostilities. "Yesterday, on March 1, we transported 73.4 million cubic meters of gas through the regional gas networks," the government said. In general, the gas transportation infrastructure worked without critical damage, however, seven gas distribution stations remained disconnected along the line of military clashes. The Naftogaz Trading gas supply company continues to provide full gas supply to large consumers. DTEK energy holding, for its part, began to supply electricity free of charge to medical institutions, military and law enforcement agencies, as well as bread producers in Kyiv, Donetsk and Dnipropetrovsk regions. Also free electricity will be provided to institutions of law enforcement agencies - the Security Service of Ukraine, the Ministry of Defense, the Interior Ministry and other departments that ensure security and public order. According to the Cabinet of Ministers, as a result of Russian aggression in Kyiv region, as of 12:00, about 350 settlements remained de-energized. At the same time, in many places it was not possible to establish repair work due to active hostilities. In total, 5,087 consumers remained without gas. Due to numerous damages to gas pipelines, there was a disconnection of subscribers in the village of Bohoyavlenka, Volnovakha district, Donetsk region. The matter concerns about 407 consumers. "Currently, it is impossible to resume deliveries to the settlement. In total, 5,087 consumers remain without gas," the Cabinet of Ministers stated. Systematic support for Ukraine with a plan to restore it for EUR100 billion, tougher sanctions against Russia and overall energy independence are the main postulates that Polish Prime Minister Mateusz Morawiecki presented at a meeting with European Commission President Ursula von der Leyen in Brussels on March 1. According to the report on the website of the Polish government, Morawiecki stressed the need for a broader view of the Ukrainian issue. In particular, in addition to the EU-funded EUR100 billion recovery plan for Ukraine, he proposed support for a fast way for Ukraine's accession to the European Union, joint investment and contribution to energy security, that is, independence from the aggressive imperial policy of Russia, implemented at the expense of oil, gas and other hydrocarbons. "It is also very important to prepare an investment package for Ukraine, because the economy needs new investments and new jobs, and energy security is necessary as an important element of recovery after the war, which may end soon," the official said. According to him, this will also lead to the fact that this part of Europe will finally become independent of Russian gas, oil and coal. "This is a necessary condition for peace to reign here in the long term," the prime minister of Poland summed up. During his visit to Brussels, Morawiecki demanded the most detailed package of sanctions and stressed that it was necessary. "I called for an embargo on Russian coal and not to buy oil and gas in the coming months. Today, this is the measure by which Putin could finance the war machine," the head of the Polish government explained. By Azernews By Vugar Khalilov Azerbaijani Airlines (AZAL) will operate daily flights to evacuate Azerbaijani citizens affected by the events in Ukraine, the company has reported. The evacuation flights, which will be organized in accordance with the presidential order, will be free of charge for Azerbaijani citizens, according to the report. On March 1, the company already carried out an evacuation flight, returning 176 Azerbaijani citizens to the country. Azerbaijan also organizes other charter flights to evacuate our compatriots from Ukraine to neighboring countries. Thus, 336 citizens of Azerbaijan were brought to Baku by these flights on February 28 and March 2, the company said. It stressed that Azerbaijani citizens willing to return to the country can contact Azerbaijani diplomatic missions abroad. Meanwhile, Azerbaijani Foreign Ministry Spokesperson Leyla Abdullayeva said at a press conference in Baku that the evacuation of Azerbaijanis from Ukraine is in the spotlight, Trend reported on March 2. Abdullayeva underlined that due to the fact that the airspace of Ukraine is closed, Azerbaijani citizens can only cross the land border with Poland, Moldova, and Slovakia. "Today, about 4,000 Azerbaijanis have crossed the border in the above directions," she said. She added that the topic of return certificates for Azerbaijani people in Ukraine who do not have passports or have issues with their documentation has been discussed. Abdullayeva underlined that the process is time-consuming, and the Azerbaijani embassy works and provides the citizens with relevant documents. "Some time is required to prepare return-home certificates," she added. Abdullayeva said that several diplomats had been dispatched to Azerbaijan's embassies in Moldova and Poland in connection with the intensive work on the evacuation of Azerbaijani citizens. Furthermore, the Azerbaijani embassy in Ukraine is still operational, and all necessary steps are being taken to evacuate Azerbaijani citizens, she added. On March 2, 168 more Azerbaijani citizens evacuated from Ukraine arrived in Baku, Trend reported. At 0920, passengers on the third charter flight arrived at Heydar Aliyev International Airport. The majority of those evacuated were women and children. On March 1, Azerbaijan Airlines (AZAL) evacuated 176 Azerbaijanis from neighboring countries to Baku on a charter plane due to the situation in Ukraine. Moreover, Azerbaijans Honorary Consulate in Kharkiv evacuated 500 Azerbaijani citizens, supporting them to cross the Ukrainian-Polish border in Lviv. Police are working at the site of an air strike in the city of Irpin (Kyiv region), information on civilian casualties is being specified, the National Police of Ukraine report. "On the morning of March 2, the occupants launched two air strikes on the city of Irpin. Rockets hit residential buildings. A gas pipeline was damaged, information about civilian casualties is being specified," the report says. At present, the police have not received information about the dead and injured as a result of the shelling. President of Ukraine Volodymyr Zelensky and President of the European Council Charles Michel discussed the current situation on the battlefield and diplomatic efforts. "I'm in constant contact with our trusted friend Charles Michel. We discussed the current situation on the battlefield and diplomatic efforts. Waiting for the positive signals about Ukraine's membership in the EU," Zelensky wrote on Twitter. Since the beginning of the Russian invasion of Ukraine, according to various sources, 21 children have died in the country, Verkhovna Rada Commissioner for Human Rights Liudmyla Denisova has said. "The situation in Ukraine remains tense. As of 13:00 on March 2, 2022, the Russian occupier continued to use heavy weapons and destroy the civilian population. Since the beginning of the Russian Federation's invasion of Ukraine, according to the analysis of information from various sources, 21 children have died and 55 have been injured," Denisova wrote on Facebook. As a result of shelling, the invaders destroyed the infrastructure of the cities: Kyiv, Irpin, Kharkiv, Mariupol, Zhytomyr, Kherson and the village of Vasylivka, Zaporizhia region. In Zhytomyr, a maternity hospital was damaged as a result of a missile strike. In Vasylivka, shells flew into the yard of a local school. Kharkiv and Kherson continue to be under heavy shelling. "Tonight, as a result of an air strike in the city of Zhytomyr, one child was killed and six children were injured. They were rescued from the basements of dilapidated houses. By their actions, the armed forces of the Russian Federation continue to cynically violate the basic rights of children the right to life and healthcare, guaranteed to every child in world with the UN Convention on the Rights of the Child," Denisova stressed. She noted that some of these deaths could have been avoided by establishing a no-fly zone over Ukraine, and called on the international community and international human rights organizations to support the initiative to close the Ukrainian skies from enemy fighters. "Meanwhile, under shelling in Chernihiv, two triplets were born in a maternity hospital. As long as such angels are born in Ukraine, we are invincible!" she added. In the city of Severodonetsk, an enemy shell hit the gym hall of a school where people were hiding in a shelter at that time, Head of Luhansk regional military administration Serhiy Haidai has said. "Severodonetsk. A shell hit the gym hall of school No. 16. At that time there were people in the shelter. Previously, no casualties," Haidai said on his Facebook. Moldovan President Maia Sandu said she plans to discuss Moldova's bid for European Union membership with High Representative of the EU for Foreign Affairs and Security Policy and European Commission Vice President Josep Borrell. "This issue will be brought up today as part of discussions on Moldova's security amid the war in Ukraine and the migration crisis," Sandu told journalists on Wednesday. "Certainly, we will discuss progress and the acceleration of the process of Moldova's accession to the EU. European integration is the best way toward prosperity and security for us. We will do our utmost to advance as quickly as possible," Sandu said. Borrell and European Commissioner for Neighborhood and Enlargement Oliver Varhelyi are to visit Chisinau on Wednesday to meet with the Moldovan leadership and get the firsthand knowledge of the situation surrounding the influx of refugees from Ukraine and the possible provision of assistance to Moldova. As Moldova's airspace remains closed, Borrell will arrive in Romania and then travel to Chisinau by car from the border city of Iasi. Ukrainian Foreign Minister Dmytro Kuleba had a telephone conversation with U.S. Secretary of State Anthony Blinken, the Ukrainian Foreign Ministry reported. "Dmytro Kuleba expressed his gratitude to the United States for the military assistance already provided to Ukraine. The parties agreed on new batches of defensive weapons for Ukraine. The minister emphasized the importance of strengthening the Air Force of the Armed Forces of Ukraine," the Ukrainian Foreign Ministry said. Kuleba and Blinken discussed new tough sanctions against Russia. "They agreed that sanctions pressure should constantly increase until Russia stops the war and liberates Ukrainian territories," the ministry said. The foreign ministers paid special attention to Russia's attempts to circumvent sanctions with the help of third countries and agreed to work together to close possible ways to ease sanctions. "Dmytro Kuleba stressed that Ukraine is committed to finding ways for a diplomatic settlement, but until the Russian Federation demonstrates readiness for constructive negotiations, all allies must demonstrate unity in increasing pressure on the Russian Federation on all fronts," the Ukrainian Foreign Ministry said. Second batch of Javelins arrives in Ukraine from Estonia Defense Ministry The second batch of Javelin anti-tank missile systems donated by Estonia has arrived in Ukraine, the Estonian Ministry of Defense has reported. "Second batch of Javelin anti-tank missile systems donated by Estonia has reached Ukraine. From decision to delivery within a few days," the ministry said in a statement on Wednesday. As a result of the morning shelling of buildings in the center of Kharkiv by the Russian servicemen, four people were killed and 15 were injured, the rescue operation continues, the National Police of Ukraine said. "On March 2, at about 08:10 in Kharkiv, Russian planes bombed the central quarter of the city. An armor school, an air force university, and the National Police administrative building were hit by a missile attack. According to preliminary data, one civilian and three policemen died as a result of the incident, 15 people were injured," the National Police said in the Telegram channel. According to the statement, the rescue operation continues, investigators are working on the spot. "The pretrial investigation is being conducted within criminal proceedings initiated under Part 2 of Article 438 (violation of the laws and customs of war) of the Criminal Code of Ukraine," the police said. On Wednesday, the EU announced sanctions against 22 representatives of the law enforcement agencies of Belarus, Official Journal of the European Union said. In particular, under the sanctions were the Assistant Minister of Defense for ideological work in the troops, Major General Leonid Kasinsky, Assistant Minister of Defense for financial and economic work, Major General Igor Mozhilovsky, Assistant Minister of Defense for international cooperation, Major General Oleg Voinov, Deputy Commander of the Air Force and Air Defense Forces Colonel Dmitry Mikholap. In addition, the sanctions affected Commander of the North-Western Operational Command of Belarus Alexander Naumenko; Chief of Staff, First Deputy Commander of the North-Western Operational Command Vadim Shadura; Head of the Armaments Department of the North-Western Operational Command Dmitry Surovich, as well as First Deputy Chief of the Chief Financial and Economic Directorate of the Ministry of Defense Dmitry Zabrotsky. Allianz SE announced that it would make available EUR 10 million to support humanitarian efforts in light of the invasion of Ukraine along with up to EUR 2.5 million to match employee donations, according to Xprimm. The first EUR 1 million will be immediately donated to the German Red Cross to provide humanitarian assistance to those displaced by the conflict and those who are in need in Ukraine. Allianz will also match employee donations with up to EUR 2.5 million. Further details on this program will be announced in due course. Allianz SE is a German financial multinational corporation founded in 1891, headquartered in Munich. By Trend Foreign partners will hand over as many as 70 warplanes to the Ukrainian Army MiG-29s and Su-25s, the Land Forces of Ukraine announced this on Facebook, Trend reports citing Ukrinform. Ghosts of Kyiv will now have more! Plus 70 planes for the Ukrainian Army! Our partners are giving us MiG-29s and Su-25s! If necessary, they will be able to be based on Polish airfields from which Ukrainian pilots will perform combat missions," said the report. Bulgaria will hand over 16 MiG-29s and 14 Su-25s, Poland 28 MiG-29s, and Slovakia 12 MiG-29s. The Ministry of Infrastructure of Ukraine has sent official letters to 11 largest infrastructure organizations in the world with a request to exclude Russia from international organizations. "We are talking about an appeal to the international community to take the necessary measures to close the airspace for the aggressor country, access to seaports, as well as expel Russia from international organizations. Among the addressees are the largest and most influential world structures in the field of aviation, sea, and rail transport, as well as construction and tourism," the Ministry of Infrastructure said on Telegram. In particular, the department addressed the following organizations: - International Bridge, Tunnels and Turnpike Association (IBTTA) - Airports Council International (ACI) - United Nations World Tourism Organization (UNWTO) - International Union of Railways (UIC) - International Civil Aviation Organization (ICAO) - UK Department for Transport - United Nations Economic Commission for Europe (UNECE) - Danube Commission - International Air Transport Association (IATA) - U.S. Federal Aviation Administration - International Transport Forum (ITF) The Ministry of Infrastructure reminded that the world is already closing the airspace for Russian aircraft, in particular, the EU, Canada, the United States, Australia, Finland and others have already done this. The UK and Canada have closed their ports for Russian ships, as well as companies associated with this country. The ports of Belgium do not process cargo for the Russian Federation, and Turkey has closed the Bosphorus and Dardanelles for warships. In addition, the world's largest companies are joining the blocking of the aggressor country. In particular, the Danish shipping company Maersk suspends all container traffic to/from Russia. The logistics companies DHL and FedEx stopped delivering goods to/from Russia. These steps are already becoming a powerful blow to the occupier's economy. Fridman, Aven, being under EU sanctions, to transfer their stake in Alfa-Bank (Kyiv) to Ukraine's residents agreed with NBU Businessmen Mikhail Fridman and Petr Aven, who fell under EU sanctions due to Russia's military aggression against Ukraine, will transfer their stake in Alfa-Bank (Kyiv) to individuals and legal entities-residents of Ukraine agreed with the National Bank of Ukraine (NBU), the bank's press service said on Wednesday. However, according to the statement, that negotiations are underway with large Polish and Ukrainian companies, as well as private investors. "Majority owners of the bank remain large European and American funds and companies," the financial institution said. The bank said this decision removes reputational risks amid sanctions restrictions on two individual shareholders. As reported, on February 28, the European Union announced sanctions against the shareholders of Alfa-Bank (Kyiv) Mikhail Fridman and Petr Aven. Mayor of the satellite town of Zaporizhia NPP, Energodar, Dmytro Orlov denied the information about the shelling of local residents by the troops of the Russian Federation. "We refute the information spread on the Internet about the victims of shelling in Energodar. There were no shellings in our city. There were no victims," Orlov wrote on Telegram on Wednesday evening. At the same time, he noted that two civilians were seriously wounded in the village of Vodiane, neighboring the city. "Unfortunately, today at about 15:30 in the village of Vodiane, two civilians were injured by a grenade of the occupiers. One man is in critical condition, the second received a moderate wound. The people were hospitalized in the Kamyanka hospital," the mayor explained. For his part, the representative of the Zaporizhia NPP press center, Andriy Tuz, in a video message posted on Telegram at about 18:00 noted that the enemy troops heading towards Energodar were stopped. "Energodar residents unitedly met these troops with a column of several kilometers. There were many thousands of workers of the nuclear power plant and ordinary residents," Tuz emphasized. At the same time, he noted that the situation in the city is working, the station is working stably. As reported, the inhabitants of Energodar have been holding back enemy troops from capturing the city for a long time, thousands of citizens came out to protest. "Residents of Energodar, a satellite city of Zaporizhia NPP, do not intend to let Russian troops into their city," the mayor said. Sweden will donate Ukraine eight trucks with artificial lung ventilation devices, masks, droppers, catheters, bandages, disinfectants, Swedish Foreign Minister Ann Linde has said. "Sweden donates medical supplies to support Ukraine in the framework of EU Civil Protection Mechanism. Eight trucks loaded with ventilators, facemasks, intravenous-drip lines, catheters, bandages, disinfectants etc. will soon be on their way to Ukraine," Linde said on Twitter on Wednesday. The Ukrainian delegation is going to talks with the Russian one, which is expected to be held in Bilovezka Puscha, the President's Office of Ukraine told Interfax-Ukraine on Wednesday. Earlier, Ukraine's participation in the next round of negotiations was confirmed by leader of the Servant of the People faction in the Verkhovna Rada, David Arakhamia. The first round took place on February28. Then, according to Mykhailo Podoliak, adviser to the head of the President's Office of Ukraine," the parties identified a number of priority topics on which certain decisions were outlined." The International Atomic Energy Agency (IAEA) listened to Ukraine's requests to establish a 30-kilometer security zone around its nuclear facilities in connection with the military aggression of the Russian Federation against Ukraine, as well as to influence the return of control over Chornobyl nuclear power plant, Energoatom head Petro Kotin said. He specified that the relevant decision of the IAEA should be taken today. "Our demands were accepted, and today we are waiting for a decision to establish a security zone around our nuclear facilities, as well as to return control over our nuclear facilities at Chornobyl nuclear power plant, to withdraw the invaders from Chornobyl nuclear power plant and prevent them from being admitted further," Kotin said in a video message posted on Telegram. "But, of course, the most important thing for us is that they get out of the territory of Ukraine altogether," the head of the company stressed. According to him, the Ukrainian Foreign Ministry takes part in meetings at the IAEA regarding the situation with Ukrainian nuclear power plants during hostilities. At the same time, according to the interlocutor of the Energy Reform online portal, an expert in the field of nuclear energy, Russia's influence in the IAEA is quite strong, "and the fact that it takes part in these meetings where topics related to it are discussed is beyond doubt." As reported, Energoatom, in connection with the military aggression of the Russian Federation against Ukraine, turned to the IAEA with a request to initiate the creation of a 30-kilometer safe zone around Ukraine's nuclear facilities. "In connection with the threats of a planetary scale caused by Russian aggression, we ask the IAEA to intervene to prevent Russian troops from entering the 30-kilometer zone around our nuclear power plants, and we also call on Russia to immediately leave the Chornobyl zone and return control over nuclear facilities to the Ukrainian side," Kotin said in a telephone conversation with IAEA Director General Rafael Mariano Grossi on February 28. UN resolution won't only become political signal of Russia's isolation, will also be used in intl courts - Kuleba The Aggression against Ukraine resolution adopted by the UN General Assembly will be used in international courts against the Russian Federation, Ukrainian Foreign Minister Dmytro Kuleba said. "The resolution states the existence of aggression, requires Russia to cease fire and withdraw troops from Ukraine beyond internationally recognized borders. This resolution will not only be an important political signal of Russia's isolation, it will also be used in international courts," Kuleba wrote on Facebook. He noted that the only countries that voted against the resolution were Russia, Syria, North Korea, Belarus and Eritrea. "Russia's loneliness in the world looks like this. Some 141 UN states voted for the resolution. This is a record number of votes for a Ukrainian resolution since 2014. Despite the fact that the text is as tough as possible. This is how the anti-war coalition for Ukraine looks like," the minister stressed. At the adoption of the UN General Assembly resolution requiring the Russian Federation to stop the attack on Ukraine and withdraw troops, 35 abstained (among them are China, India, South Africa, Kazakhstan, Pakistan, Iran, Iraq, Cuba, Central African Republic). AFU neutralizes Russian landing force, which tried to land in area of Mykolaiv General Staff The Armed Forces of Ukraine neutralized the Russian troops that tried to land in the area of Mykolaiv, the General Staff of the Armed Forces of Ukraine reported. "In the coastal direction, Ukrainian defenders continue to conduct a defensive operation, successfully holding back superior enemy forces. Our units neutralized the landing force that tried to land near the city of Mykolaiv," the General Staff said on Facebook. According to recent information, as of 18:00 in Volyn region, units of the Armed Forces of Ukraine have created a reliable defense system, and the nature of the enemy actions, who conducts demonstration actions along the border of Ukraine, is being constantly monitored. The surrender of groups of Russian soldiers and officers continues, as well as their refusal to continue the offensive. The Air Forces of Ukraine are repelling attacks from the air. Since the beginning of the Russian invasion on the territory of Ukraine, the enemy has fired more than 180 missiles. In addition to military facilities, civilian infrastructure and residential areas of settlements suffered significant losses. Over the current day, up to thirty combat aircraft violated the airspace of Ukraine, mainly from the side of the Republic of Belarus, and bombed the civilian population. Kyiv is being defended. President of Ukraine Volodymyr Zelensky adopted by the UN General Assembly by an unprecedented majority of votes a resolution strongly demanding that Russia immediately stop its treacherous attack on Ukraine. "I praise the approval by the UN GA with an unprecedented majority of votes of the resolution with a strong demand to Russia to immediately stop the treacherous attack on . I am grateful to everyone and every state that voted in favor. You have chosen the right side of history," he said on his Twitter page. He said the destructive results of the vote in for the aggressor convincingly show that a global anti-Putin coalition has been formed and is functioning. The world is with us. "The truth is on our side. Victory will be ours!" The president said. The UN General Assembly voted for a resolution demanding that Russia stop its attack on Ukraine and withdraw its troops. Some 141 states voted for, five against (Russia, Belarus, Syria, North Korea, Eritrea), some 35 abstained (among them China, India, South Africa, Kazakhstan, Pakistan, Iran, Iraq, Cuba, Central African Republic). WHO head calls to ensure security of movement for humanitarian workers, supplies for Ukraine WHO chief Tedros Adhanom Ghebreyesus said on Wednesday that it is necessary to ensure the freedom of movement of humanitarian workers and deliveries due to hostilities in Ukraine. "There is an urgent need to establish a corridor to ensure safe and uninterrupted humanitarian supplies to people in need," he said. According to him, the first batch of essential goods for Ukraine from the WHO will arrive in Poland on Thursday. Earlier Tuesday, UN Under-Secretary General Martin Griffiths said he had received certain necessary security guarantees for UN staff providing assistance in Ukraine. By Trend The bill "On Food Safety" was discussed at the Agrarian Policy Committee of the Azerbaijani parliament, Trend reports. Agrarian Policy Committee Chairman Tahir Rzayev, Chairman of the Food Safety Agency Goshgar Tahmazli, Deputy Minister of Agriculture Ilhama Gadimova, Deputy Chairman of the State Customs Committee Javad Gasimov, Head of the Standardization, Technical Regulation and Certification Department of the Ministry of Economy Ilgar Hasanov, Vice President of the National Confederation of Entrepreneurs' (Employers') Organizations of Azerbaijan Republic Vugar Zeynalov, Chairman of the Azerbaijani Fruit and Vegetable Producers and Exporters Association Bashir Guliyev and others attended the meeting. The bill was recommended for discussion in the first reading at the plenary session of the Azerbaijani parliament. President of Ukraine Volodymyr Zelensky in a phone conversation with Emir of Qatar Tamim bin Hamad Al Thani discussed Russian aggression against Ukraine and some bilateral issues. "Discussed with Tamim bin Hamad Al Thani Russia's aggression against Ukraine and some bilateral issues over the phone. I am grateful for the unconditional support to Ukraine in such a difficult time," he said on his Twitter page. Nomination for gas transit via Ukraine on Thurs still high The first published nomination for gas transit across Ukraine on March 3 is 109.5 million cubic meters, according to Gas Transmission System Operator of Ukraine data. In other words transit capacity utilization will again be high. The nomination is adjusted throughout the day and that for Wednesday is currently 109.3 mcm. European buyers have requested more gas from Gazprom after sanctions against Russia sent gas prices soaring: gas is trading at $1,825 per thousand cubic meters at the TTF hub. Apart from the Ukraine crisis, gas prices have risen in Europe due to an abrupt drop in temperatures this week and in wind power generation. Shmyhal thanks Switzerland for allocated financial support, humanitarian aid Prime Minister Denys Shmyhal thanked Switzerland for the financial support and humanitarian aid provided. "Welcome Switzerland's unconditional support to Ukraine's just struggle against Russian aggressor. Earmarked financial contributions and relief supplies strengthen our resilience in this grave hour. My deepest respect to President Ignazio Cassis," he said on Twitter. Poland has introduced a permit-free regime and abolished road tolls for humanitarian cargo carriers to Ukraine, the Ministry of Infrastructure of Ukraine reported on its Telegram channel on Wednesday. The ministry noted that the relevant agreements were reached during negotiations between the Ministers of Infrastructure of Ukraine and Poland, Oleksandr Kubrakov and Andrzej Adamczyk. At the same time, it is clarified that in order to cross the border, carriers operating trips to deliver humanitarian cargo to Ukraine must fill out a form in advance at the link https://cutt.ly/oAogy2O. Also the payment of all roads for vehicles transporting humanitarian goods is canceled. Penalties due to lack of payment for roads will not be applied to other Ukrainian vehicles, the report says. In addition, for all citizens of Ukraine who are forced to leave their own country, the Polish side will provide free travel by rail. Some 1,000 anti-tank grenade launchers, 500 missiles for Stinger delivered to Ukraine from Germany - media The Ukrainian military received from Germany 1,000 Panzerfaust 3 anti-tank grenade launchers and 500 missiles for Stinger MANPADS, Bild edition reported on Wednesday, citing sources in German government circles. It is noted that the German government last Saturday decided to supply these weapons to Kyiv, and three days later these weapons arrived in Ukraine. USA imposes restrictions on exports of equipment for oil, gas production to Russia White House The U.S. administration is introducing export controls on equipment supplied to Russia for oil and gas production, the White House said in a statement. "Through export controls on oil and gas extraction equipment, the Commerce Department will impose restrictions on technology exports that would support Russia's refining capacity over the long term," according to the document. It also argues that oil refining is a key source of revenue for the development of Russia's armed forces. At the same time, the statement states the United States and its allies are not interested in reducing global energy supplies, so the receipt of funds for them is withdrawn from the sanctions. "But we and our Allies and partners share a strong interest in degrading Russias status as a leading energy supplier over time," the White House said. The Ministry of Foreign Affairs of Ukraine has launched an emergency hotline for foreign students wishing to leave Ukraine because of the Russian invasion, Ukrainian Foreign Minister Dmytro Kuleba has said. "We have established an emergency hotline for African, Asian and other students wishing to leave Ukraine because of Russia's invasion. +380934185684. We are working intensively to ensure their safety and speed up their passage. Russia must stop its aggression which affects us all," Kuleba said on Twitter on Wednesday. UN resolution not to only become political signal of Russia's isolation, but also to be used in intl courts Kuleba The resolution titled "Aggression against Ukraine" adopted by the UN General Assembly will be used in international courts against Russia, Ukrainian Foreign Minister Dmytro Kuleba said. "The resolution states the existence of aggression, requires Russia to ceasefire and withdraw troops from Ukraine beyond internationally recognized borders. This resolution will not only be an important political signal of Russia's isolation, it will also be used in international courts," Kuleba said on Facebook. He said the only countries that voted against the resolution were Russia, Syria, North Korea, Belarus and Eritrea. "It looks like Russia's loneliness in the world. Some 141 UN states voted for the resolution. This is a record number of votes for a Ukrainian resolution since 2014. Despite the fact that the text is as tough as possible. This is how the anti-war coalition for Ukraine looks like," the minister said. At the adoption of the UN General Assembly resolution requiring Russia to stop the attack on Ukraine and withdraw troops, some 35 abstained (among them China, India, South Africa, Kazakhstan, Pakistan, Iran, Iraq, Cuba, Central African Republic). In turn, UN Secretary General Antonio Guterres said that the statement of the UN General Assembly is loud and clear, in particular, immediately stop hostilities in Ukraine, stop shooting, open the door for dialogue and diplomacy. "The territorial integrity and sovereignty of Ukraine must be respected in line with the United Nations Charter. We do not have a moment to lose. The brutal effects of the conflict are plain to see. But, as bad as the situation is for the people in Ukraine right now, it threatens to get much, much worse," Guterres said on the UN website. The Secretary General said he would continue to do everything in his power to promote an immediate cessation of hostilities and urgent peace talks. The United States has decided to impose blocking sanctions on 22 Russian companies associated with the defense sector, the White House said. "Among the actions being taken today are completely blocking sanctions against Russian defense structures," the White House said in the press release on website. "In total, 22 Russian defense-related entities will be designated, including firms that make combat aircraft, infantry fighting vehicles, electronic warfare systems, missiles, and unmanned aerial vehicles for Russia's military," according to the document. President of Ukraine Volodymyr Zelensky is the personification of honor, freedom and courage, French President Emmanuel Macron said. "I salute the courage of the Ukrainian people who are resisting under fire. On behalf of the French, I declare to President Zelensky about the fraternal support of France. Today he is the personification of honor, freedom and courage," Macron said on Twitter on Wednesday. Over 1,650 Vietnamese firms receive codes to export farm produce to China As of March 1, 1,656 Vietnamese firms had received codes granted by China, enabling them to export farm produce and food products to the Chinese market. Customs clearance at Tan Thanh-Po Chai border gate (Photo: VNA) According to the Vietnam Sanitary and Phytosanitary Notification Authority and Enquiry Point (SPS Vietnam) under the Ministry of Agriculture and Rural Development (MARD), as of March 1, 1,656 Vietnamese exporters with 1,776 products had received codes in line with the new regulations on farming region supervision and origin tracking of farm produce under Orders 248 and 249 of China. Of the total firms, 779 are exporters of aquatic products, 187 are recommended to the Chinese side by the MARD's Plant Protection Department, and 11 are milk producers. According to the SPS Vietnam, the current biggest difficulty is the slow approval process of the General Administration of Customs of China (GACC) without any regulation on the duration for approving the issuance of codes for businesses. The MARD has proposed that the Prime Minister allow it to discuss with the Chinese side on measures to deal with technical problems in registering on the GACC portal. The ministry has also asked the Ministry of Foreign Affairs and the Vietnamese Embassy in China to work with the Chinese side to remove obstacles during the implementation of the Orders 248 and 249. China stipulates 18 groups of goods that enterprises must register when exporting to the Chinese market under Order No. 248. For products outside those groups, exporters have to register via the foreign trade portal of the GACC./. The Central Bank of the UAE (CBUAE) has approved the Emiratisation of managerial positions in the banking and insurance sectors, with plans to create 5,000 new jobs by the end of 2026, in coordination with the Emirates Institute for Banking and Financial Studies and the Emirati Talent Competitiveness Council. The decision came following a CBUAE board meeting, which was held under the chairmanship of Sheikh Mansour bin Zayed Al Nahyan, Deputy Prime Minister, Minister of Presidential Affairs, today (March 2) in Qasr Al Watan, reported Wam. The meeting also discussed the implementation of the councils directives from previous meetings. The board approved an amendment to the banks notifications regarding maximum fee limits and commissions imposed on licensed financial institutions and agreed to amend the scope of work of the banks "Banking Risk Centre" regarding the bounced cheque system. The Infrastructure Ministry of Ukraine reported on the presence of a dead crew member of the Banglar Samriddhi vessel, who suffered from a missile attack by the Russian military near the port of Olvia in Mykolaiv region. "According to updated data, there is a dead person among the crew of the merchant ship. At the time of the defeat, he was on the bridge until his identity was identified. An ambulance was called to the place, the Security Service of Ukraine was informed," the ministry said in the Telegram channel. A missile attack on the Banglar Samriddhi vessel (the flag of Bangladesh) was carried out today at 17:25 by the Russian naval forces. Atkins, a member of the SNC-Lavalin Group, has become the first global engineering consultancy to achieve certification from BSI (British Standards Institution) for building information modelling (BIM) compliance, across its operations in Europe, the Middle East, and Asia Pacific. The BSI Kitemark for BIM - which incorporates international BIM standards (ISO 19650) 1, 2 and PAS 1192-3,5, ensures all projects adopt a fully collaborative and consistent BIM process throughout the whole project lifecycle to improve performance and increase the predictability of outcomes for clients, while protecting data and information, said the statement from Atkins. The certification recognizes Atkins incorporation of international BIM standards within its own Global Design Framework, which forms part of a Group-wide commitment to provide consistent project delivery across its core geographies by connecting people, data and technology, it added. "Digital solutions are transforming the way we deliver engineering services and enhance efficiency in our clients projects across the region," remarked Anastasios Dimas, Middle East Digital Lead at Atkins. "Achieving BSI BIM certification internationally is a significant milestone for our organization as we drive the global adoption of consistent digital practices which are transforming the way infrastructure is designed, built, operated and maintained through the use of secure data which reduces risk and increases certainty," noted Dimas. Lauding Atkins for the key achievement, Pietro Foschi, BSI Group Director Assurance Services, said: "This demonstrates their commitment to encouraging a collaborative approach across the entire life cycle of a built asset. Achieving BIM certification can help organizations to accelerate innovation and digital transformation, whilst embedding best practice across the built environment sector." Together with the SNC-Lavalin Group, Atkins has invested significantly in information management globally and is pioneering new data-driven approaches to project delivery and program management, including the use of artificial intelligence and development of digital twins. Some of the companys successful projects delivered in the Middle East by integrating international BIM standards include Six Flags Qiddiya by Qiddiya Investment Company; Diriyah Residences by Diriyah Gate Development Authority and Green Riyadh by Royal Commission for Riyadh City (all in Saudi Arabia) and Saadiyat Grove, Plot 9, by Aldar in the UAE.-TradeArabia News Service Al-Azhar condemned Friday terrorist attack on a mosque in Afghanistans capital Kabul that left dozens of worshippers dead and injured. Deputy chairperson of Egypt's National Council for Human Rights (NCHR), Mohamed Anwar Esmat El-Sadat issued a statement on Tuesday indicating that the issue of political prisoners in Egypt will be closed in the near future. Kidney failure patients in Dubai can now undergo dialysis from the comfort of their own homes. The new service of home dialysis is provided by NMC ProVita, through Americare, the UAE's largest provider of home health services. This service will involve an array of doctors, therapists, and nurses attending to dialysis patients at their chosen schedule in their homes. The launch ceremony was held in the Four Seasons Dubai and was attended by Dubai Health Authority seniors, Dr Sabah Ahmed Alshabebi, Director of Al Suroor Specialty Hospital, and Dr Amna Khalifa Al-Hadari, Head of the Department of Nephrology. NMCs CEO Michael Davis said: "It's time for people to access better healthcare services, and in Dubai, we have unmatched facilities that are now reaching the doorsteps of patients. We continue to work closely with the relevant authorities to ensure that all necessary Covid-19 measures are in place to allow home care services to be delivered by our professional staff." There is an increasing demand to improve the way we deliver dialysis care. By advocating patient-centered innovation, we can continue to provide a service that supports high-quality and high-value care to dialysis patients across the UAE," he added. Clancey Po, President of Operations at NMC Healthcare, said: Home dialysis patients can dialyse from the comfort of their home, giving them better control of their treatment schedules, more time for themselves, their families, their jobs, and the activities they enjoyed before starting dialysis. This service will also rule out traveling and lengthy waiting times, which is an additional cost and unnecessary burden. With this endeavour, we aspire to provide an improved quality of life for dialysis patients" Stanley Rodrigues, General Manager at NMC ProVita International Medical Centre, said: We at NMC ProVita always aim to provide medical services to support and enhance the physical and mental well-being of our patients. This revolutionary approach with Home dialysis will give the patients the freedom to live more normal lives. Dr Wael Jebur, Head of the Department of Nephrology and Dialysis department in NMC Specialty Hospital stated: The patient-centered customised hemodialysis modality is tailored to meet the need of each patient holistically; including lifestyle, psychology, adequacy of hemodialysis, and general health). The advantages of home hemodialysis includes a dedicated nurse, flexible schedule for dialysis, flexible duration of dialysis, ability to change set up as needed like SLED and SCUF, ability to curtail up to the need of the patients to achieve the target adequacy, and family support. NMC ProVita is the largest provider of post-acute care and rehabilitation services across the UAE. Serving patients of all ages, it provides long-term care, post-acute rehabilitation, outpatient rehabilitation, homecare and hemodialysis services.-- TradeArabia News Service Mali's junta said France no longer has a "legal basis" for carrying out military operations in the country after Bamako quit key defence accords, in the latest round of a spat between the two former allies. Complaining that the West is ``stuffing Ukraine with weapons,'' Russia bombarded railroad stations and other supply-line targets across the country, as the European Union moved to further punish Moscow for the war Wednesday by proposing a ban on oil imports. Slovakia and Hungary said Tuesday that they will not support sanctions against Russian energy that the European Union is preparing over the war in Ukraine, saying they are too reliant on those supplies and there are no immediate alternatives. Egypts President Abdel-Fattah El-Sisi inspected on Thursday construction works at a number of road projects in eastern Cairo. During his inspection tour, the president was briefed on the pace of work at the construction sites, calling for abiding by precautions against the coronavirus, said presidential spokesman Bassam Rady. The president was posted on the development works in the vicinity of Cairo Airport and the expansion of Abdel-Hameed Badawi street to become six lanes on each direction, as well as the establishment of some bridges to ease traffic congestion in this area, the spokesman added. President El-Sisi also checked on the new network of bridges and main axes that were built in Cairo's Nasr City district, the spokesman noted. Search Keywords: Short link: Ukrainian authorities said five people were killed in the attack on the TV tower, which is a couple of miles from central Kyiv and a short walk from numerous apartment buildings. A TV control room and power substation were hit, and at least some Ukrainian channels briefly stopped broadcasting, officials said. Zelenskyy's office also reported a powerful missile attack on the site of the Babyn Yar Holocaust memorial, near the tower. At the same time, a 40-mile (64-kilometer) convoy of hundreds of Russian tanks and other vehicles advanced slowly on Kyiv in what the West feared was a bid by Russian President Vladimir Putin to topple Ukraine's government and install a Kremlin-friendly regime. Russian forces pressed their assault on other towns and cities across the country, including the strategic ports of Odesa and Mariupol in the south. Day 6 of the biggest ground war in Europe since World War II found Russia increasingly isolated, beset by tough sanctions that have thrown its economy into turmoil and left the country practically friendless, apart from a few nations like China, Belarus and North Korea. Many military experts worry that Russia may be shifting tactics. Moscow's strategy in Chechnya and Syria was to use artillery and air bombardments to pulverize cities and crush fighters' resolve. The bombing on the TV tower came after Russia announced it would target transmission facilities in the capital used by Ukraine's intelligence agency. It urged people living near such places to leave their homes. Overall death tolls from the fighting remained unclear, but a senior Western intelligence official estimated that more than 5,000 Russian soldiers have been captured or killed. Britain's Defense Ministry said it had seen an increase in Russian air and artillery strikes on populated urban areas over the past two days. It also said three cities _ Kharkiv, Kherson and Mariupol _were encircled by Russian forces. In Kharkiv, with a population of about 1.5 million, at least six people were killed when the region's Soviet-era administrative building on Freedom Square was hit with what was believed to be a missile. The attack on Freedom Square _ Ukraine's largest plaza, and the nucleus of public life in the city _ was seen by many Ukrainians as brazen evidence that the Russian invasion wasn't just about hitting military targets but also about breaking their spirits. The bombardment blew out windows and walls of buildings that ring the massive square, which was piled high with debris and dust. Inside one building, chunks of plaster were scattered, and doors, ripped from their hinges, lay across hallways. "People are under the ruins. We have pulled out bodies,'' said Yevhen Vasylenko, an emergency official. Zelenskyy pronounced the attack on the square "frank, undisguised terror'' and a war crime. "This is state terrorism of the Russian Federation,'' he said. In an emotional appeal to the European Parliament later, Zelenskyy said: "We are fighting also to be equal members of Europe. I believe that today we are showing everybody that is what we are." He said 16 children had been killed around Ukraine on Monday, and he mocked Russia's claim that it is going after only military targets. "Where are the children? What kind of military factories do they work at? What tanks are they going at?" Zelenskyy said. Human Rights Watch said it documented a cluster bomb attack outside a hospital in Ukraine's east in recent days. Local residents also reported the use of the weapons in Kharkiv and the village of Kiyanka, The Kremlin denied using cluster bombs. If the allegations are confirmed, that would represent a new level of brutality in the war and could lead to even further isolation of Russia. Unbowed by Western condemnation, Russian officials upped their threats of escalation, days after raising the specter of nuclear war. A top Kremlin official warned that the West's "economic war'' against Russia could turn into a "real one.'' Inside Russia, a top radio station critical of the Kremlin was taken off the air after authorities threatened to shut it down over its coverage of the invasion. Among other things, the Kremlin is not allowing the fighting to be referred to as an "invasion'' or "war.'' More than a half-million people have fled the country, and countless others have taken shelter underground. Bomb damage to water pipes and other basic services have left hundreds of thousands of families without drinking water, U.N. humanitarian coordinator Martin Griffiths said. "It is a nightmare, and it seizes you from the inside very strongly. This cannot be explained with words,'' said Kharkiv resident Ekaterina Babenko, taking shelter in a basement with neighbors for a fifth straight day. "We have small children, elderly people, and frankly speaking it is very frightening.'' The U.N. human rights office said it has recorded 136 civilian deaths. The real toll is believed to be far higher. A Ukrainian military official said Belarusian troops joined the war Tuesday in the Chernihiv region in the north, without providing details. But just before that, Belarusian President Alexander Lukashenko said his country had no plans to join the fight. In Kharkiv, explosions burst one after another through a residential area in a video verified by The Associated Press. In the background, a man pleaded with a woman to leave, and a woman cried. Hospital workers moved a Kharkiv maternity ward to a bomb shelter. Amid mattresses piled up against the walls, pregnant women paced the crowded space, accompanied by the cries of dozens of newborns. Russia's goals in hitting central Kharkiv were not immediately clear. Western officials speculated that it is trying to pull in Ukrainian forces to defend the city while a larger Russian force encircles Kyiv. Russian troops continued to press toward the capital, a city of nearly 3 million. The leading edge of the convoy was 17 miles (25 kilometers) from the center of the city, according to satellite imagery from Maxar Technologies. A senior U.S. defense official described the long convoy as "bogged down,'' saying Russia appeared to be pausing and regrouping to re-evaluate how to retake the momentum in the fighting. Overall, the Russian military has been been stalled by fierce resistance on the ground and a surprising inability to completely dominate Ukraine's airspace. The immense convoy, packed together along narrow roads, would seemingly be "a big fat target'' for Ukrainian forces, the senior Western intelligence official said on condition of anonymity. "But it also shows you that the Russians feel pretty comfortable being out in the open in these concentrations because they feel that they're not going to come under air attack or rocket or missile attack,'' the official said. Ukrainians used whatever they had to try to stop the Russian advance. On a highway between Odesa and Mykolaiv in southern Ukraine, residents piled tractor tires filled with sand and topped with sandbags to block convoys. The vote on the document took place on Tuesday at an emergency plenary session of the European Parliament in Brussels. Members of the European Parliament (MEPs) almost unanimously approved a resolution condemning Russia's military operation in Ukraine and calling for tough sanctions against Moscow, including restriction of oil and gas imports from Russia and disconnecting the country from SWIFT. The European Parliament calls for the EU institutions to work towards granting EU candidate status to Ukraine, and, in the meantime, to continue to work towards its integration into the EU single market along the lines of the Association Agreement, the document reads. "The European Parliament condemns in the strongest possible terms the Russian Federations illegal, unprovoked and unjustified military aggression against and invasion of Ukraine, as well as the involvement of Belarus in this aggression," according to the resolution, which is recommendatory in nature. The members of the European Parliament called on the EU to impose new tough sanctions against Russia, which in particular should be "aimed at strategically weakening the Russian economy and industrial base, in particular the military-industrial complex, and thereby the ability of the Russian Federation to threaten international security in the future." Search Keywords: Short link: Minister of Foreign Affairs Sameh Shoukry stressed that Egypt supports any efforts for global disarmament, particularly nuclear disarmament. The ministers remarks came on Tuesday in a recorded speech he addressed to the high-level segment of the Conference on Disarmament (CD) in Geneva, urging countries to meet their commitments to the Non-Proliferation Treaty (NPT). Ahmed Ehab Egypts permanent envoy to the United Nations and international organisations in Geneva said that the minister also reviewed the efforts exerted over more than 26 years to keep the Middle East an area free of weapons of mass destruction (WMDs). Furthermore, Shoukry said that Egypt looks forward to making further contributions on disarmament and cooperating and coordinating with all member states to realise this goal. The CD which meets three times a year in Geneva is a multilateral disarmament forum established by the international community to negotiate arms control and disarmament agreements. The conference, which comprises 65 member states, always takes into account the recommendations of the United Nations General Assembly and the proposals of its member states. Search Keywords: Short link: Egypt started clinical trials on Tuesday for its second local coronavirus vaccine Egy-Vax, which will be produced in cooperation with private drug company Eva pharma, with plans to produce 1.6 million doses daily. The new vaccine is the result of a cooperation agreement signed in December between the Ministry of Education and Scientific Research, the Ministry of Agriculture, and Eva Pharma. The country has already started clinical trials for its first domestic vaccine COVI-VAX in November, which is set to be manufactured via state-owned VACSERA drug company. The announcement was made during a press conference on Tuesday evening attended by acting Minister of Health and Population Khaled Abdel-Ghaffar, Minister of Agriculture and Land Reclamation Sayed El-Qaseer, managing director of Eva Pharma Riad Armanious, and head of the Egyptian Drug Authority Tamer Essam. Armanious said his company is planning to manufacture around 500 million doses annually, at a daily rate of 1.6 million doses, through its production lines in 6 October City The step, he added, will contribute to achieving self-sufficiency in vaccine supply, meeting local needs and exporting the surplus. Pre-clinical trials for Egy-Vax conducted at laboratories and on animals registered an increase in antibody levels against the coronavirus after two doses, and the studies also showed "promising" indications in terms of the vaccine's efficacy and side effects, Armanious noted during the presser. The vaccine will be manufactured as per the requirements of the World Health Organization (WHO) and the FDA, in order to be accredited abroad for export, he added. In February, head of the clinical trial team for the first Egyptian vaccine COVI-VAX said it has shown promising results. Egypt has been locally producing the Sinovac/VACSERA COVID-19 vaccine since June 2021 at VACSERAs factories under an agreement signed in April of the same year with Chinas Sinovac biopharmaceutical company. Egypt will also start producing mRNA COVID-19 vaccines over the next few months after the country was chosen along with five other African nations by WHO to receive the technology needed for production. The process will include extracting the raw material needed to produce mRNA vaccines like the Pfizer-BioNTech and Moderna COVID-19 vaccines Hossam Abdel-Ghaffar, the spokesman for the Ministry of Health and Population, has said. Search Keywords: Short link: The US did not call on Egypt to ban Russian ships from navigating the Suez Canal following the Russian invasion of Ukraine and the imposition of sanctions on Russia by several influential countries, Suez Canal Authority head Osama Rabie said on Tuesday. The Suez Canal is an international strait that is neutral to political events and wars as per the Constantinople Agreement, Rabie told Sada El-Balad satellite channel. The Convention of Constantinople is a treaty signed by several countries, including Russia, concerning the free navigation of the Suez Canal on 29 October 1888. The first article of the treaty stipulates that the Suez Maritime Canal shall always be free and of commerce or of war, without distinction of flag. Consequently, the High Contracting Parties agree not in any way to interfere with the free use of the Canal, in time of war as in time of peace." The Suez Canal which connects the Mediterranean and Red seas is the shortest maritime route between Asia and Europe and the fastest crossing from the Atlantic Ocean to the Indian Ocean. The sea-level canal is also the longest in the world without locks, with a normal transit time from end to end of about 13 to 15 hours. Around 12 percent of the worlds trade passes through the canal, which is one of the main foreign-currency earners for Egypt. Last week, Ukraine asked Turkey to close the Bosphorus and Dardanelles straits to Russian ships. Ankara has the right to block warships from countries involved in the conflict from accessing the Black Sea under the 1936 Montreux Convention. The US and its allies have levied sanctions on Russia's biggest banks and its elite, frozen the assets of the country's central bank located outside the country, and excluded its financial institutions from the SWIFT bank messaging system. European Union countries are also considering a ban on Russian ships in a move to tighten sea restrictions and impede Russia's commercial shipments, Reuters reported. Britain and Canada are among the countries that spearheaded the ban. Denmark is still mulling over such a move. With tight global energy supplies, cutting off such shipments can be a challenge for Europe, Reuters added. Several countries have also imposed a ban on Russian airlines from their airspace, which so far include Poland, Romania, and Moldova. Search Keywords: Short link: UAE-based Gulf Capital an equity investment company that has been investing in the Egyptian market for more than 10 years announced on Wednesday the opening of its office in Egypt. The announcement came during a media round table held in Cairo with the companys co-founder and CEO Karim El-Solh. In his answer to Ahram Onlines question about Gulf Capitals operation in the Egyptian market and the companys future plan for it, El-Solh said that the company intends to double its total investments in the Egyptian market which amount to EGP 5 billion over the coming five years. He added that the company focuses on the sectors of the future, which include sustainability, solar energy, renewables, health tech, fintech, and business services. These sectors are the same ones Egypts government is focusing on to achieve the countrys economic growth, El-Solh explained. He also said that the company is planning to offer two of its private equity companies under the Initial Public Offering (IPO) Programme in Egypt, adding that the company already invests in nine companies in the local market. Furthermore, the company will launch its fourth equity investment portfolio in the summer season and Egypts share of these investments will be significant, with $2.5 million expected to be pumped in the market through this portfolio. Egypt continues to be an attractive and fast-growing market and a major investment destination for our company and our global investors. Opening a local office and hiring a senior Egyptian investment team will allow us to accelerate our investment pace in Egypt in promising sectors such as the digital economy and healthcare and to keep us closer to our existing portfolio companies and business partners. He noted that Egypt has a promising technology and fintech landscape and that this potential makes the country a rising star in the global technology scene. Recently, the company named Miray Zaki as its newly appointed managing director and head of Egypt. Miray was previously responsible for managing a large portfolio of investments across the US, Europe, Africa, and Asia within multiple asset classes, including private equity, venture capital, and public equity at the Abu Dhabi Investment Authority and the Sheikh Zayed Al-Nahyan Foundation. Additionally, the company appointed Fady George, who is experienced in private equity and investment banking, as its vice president, having previously been a member of SPE Capital Partners inaugural $250 million Africa Fund, a member of Beltone Financials investment banking team and a member of Axonic Capitals US real estate investment team. Our long-term commitment to Egypt and the broader Middle Eastern and African regions remains rock-solid. The new office opening in Egypt follows our recent office opening in Singapore last December, allowing Gulf Capital to invest across growth markets from North Africa to Southeast Asia, El-Solh expounded. Search Keywords: Short link: The Arabian Business Community (ABC) Bahrain edition delivered 1,570,604 referrals to businesses in Bahrain during 2021. The ABC portal has established itself as the leading business reference resource for contact and business information about companies in the Kingdom. The portal provides a unique promotional service which helps companies to increase their business potential by allowing them to promote themselves to customers for their products and services. In todays challenging market, companies are looking to obtain that leading edge on their competitors and ABC Bahrain provides the advantage of generating quantifiable business referrals to their corporate profiles on the portal, says Ahmed Suleiman, Director of Public Affairs of Al Hilal Group. For just BD8 per day, a company can join the community as a Premium Partner providing it with a range of benefits including Top of Mind positioning in their field of business. The enhanced profile pages effectively provide them with a Showroom for their products and services. In addition, a company will receive email campaigns and classified advertising on the site at no extra charge. Al Hilals strength as a media company will give added value promotional exposure not just on ABC but across Al Hilals range of publications and social media sites including the Gulf Daily News (GDN) and the groups market leading trade media such as Gulf Construction, Gulf Industry, Travel & Tourism News and Oil & Gas News, adds Suleiman. Al Hilal has recorded an increase in the number of Bahraini companies joining the community this year and ABC has now become the most highly ranked information resource in Bahrain. When searching for information about companies in the kingdom you will see that the Google search engine ranks ABC highly and in many cases above an individual companys social media platforms including LinkedIn, Facebook and Instagram, adds Ronnie Middleton, Managing Director of Al Hilal Group. This is the result of our very successful and ongoing SEO strategy which keeps ABC ahead of any other corporate information resourcing websites. Today, ABC represents the most cost-effective marketing tool any company can use. Our message to Bahrain based companies is to position yourself ahead of your competition, become a Premium Partner on ABC Bahrain! Al Hilal Group has rolled out country dedicated ABC portals across the GCC. Despite the difficulties caused by the pandemic, 2021 saw a record number of business referrals being delivered across all 14 portals totaling 6,016,977. TradeArabia News Service The U.N. refugee agency says more than 874,000 people have fled Ukraine since Russia's invasion last week and the figure is ``rising exponentially,'' putting it on track to cross the 1 million mark possibly within hours. UNHCR spokeswoman Shabia Mantoo said Wednesday that people are continuing to stream into Ukraine's neighboring countries to the west, with more than 200,000 fleeing since Tuesday. A day earlier, Mantoo had cautioned that the outflows from Ukraine could make it the source of the ``biggest refugee crisis this century'' _ eclipsing the one from Syria's war over the last decade. She noted that UNHCR had previously projected that as many as 4 million people might flee Ukraine, but noted that the agency will be re-evaluating its forecast. The latest figures show that more than half, or nearly 454,000, have gone to Poland, more than 116,300 to Hungary and over 79,300 to Moldova. Another 69,000 have gone to other European countries and 67,000 have fled to Slovakia. Mantoo noted that the figure of 874,000 was an increase from more than 660,000 only a day earlier, and some 116,000 on Saturday, in the wake of Russia's invasion of Ukraine on Feb. 24. Search Keywords: Short link: In preparation for the 29th edition of the Cairo International Festival for Experimental Theatre (CIFET), the festivals management opened the doors for entries to the Experimental Theatre Club competition. The Experimental Theatre Club competition was launched during the 28th edition of the festival by its president, Gamal Yakout. Its second round will take place during the upcoming edition of the festival that is scheduled to take place between 1 and 10 September 2022. The competition aims to shed light on experimental theatre practices outside Cairo, inviting professional and amateur troupes to submit their work. Last year, nine troupes from a variety of governorates Beni Suef, Damietta, Minya, Port Said, Wadi El-Natroun, among others participated with their performances. The award worth EGP 30,000 was distributed to two winners The Mask, a play from Port Said; and Still Here, by the actors from the Beni Suef Cultural Palace. Yakout revealed that in the upcoming edition, the prize will be doubled to EGP 60,000. Interested troupes should review the participation requirements by visiting the festivals website or through the festivals app that is available on the Google Store and App Store Among the requirements is that the performance carries clear experimental components. It should be one of the troupes bigger new projects, preferably staged within its community, and without being limited to the festivals days only. The evaluation committee will review the submitted projects and present the works that comply with all the regulations to the viewing committee. The latter body will choose the plays to participate in the competition. The chosen plays will be staged during the 29th CIFET. The awards amounting to EGP 60,000 will be distributed as follows: EGP 20,000 for the winner, EGP 15,000 for the first runner up, and EGP 10,000 for the second runner up. This is in addition to three other awards worth EGP 5,000 each that will be given to remarkable elements of the plays as specified by the jury. Scheduled to take place between 1 and 10 September 2022, the 29th CIFET is presided over by Gamal Yakout, who was also in charge of the festival in its 28th edition. Yakout introduced a number of changes to the festival and its awards system. Last year the festival allocated a total of EGP one million to awards spanning between the Best Performance (EGP 500,000) and chosen elements of plays (EGP 100,000 each). Launched in 1988 by former minister of culture Farouk Hosny with the aim of placing Egypt on the international theatrical map, since its second edition, the CIFET was presided over by the late scholar-writer Fawzy Fahmy, the former president of the Academy of Arts, who retained this post until 2010. The festival was then interrupted for five years after the January 2011 Revolution and then came back in 2016 with Sameh Mahran as its president. In that edition, it was renamed the Cairo International Festival for Contemporary and Experimental Theatre (CIFCET) and, limiting its programme, dropped its competitive character. The name was changed back to the CIFET in its 27th edition (2020), when Alaa Abdel-Aziz took over and the competition was reinstated, however, due to COVID-19, the international shows took place online, while Egyptian plays were staged across Cairos theatres. Search Keywords: Short link: A total of 453 Egyptians citizens have arrived in Poland from Ukraine since the Russian invasion started late last week, the Egyptian Ministry of Foreign Affairs said on Wednesday. Also, the Egyptian embassy in Warsaw is following up on the procedures for the travel of an additional 81 Egyptians to the Polish capital, the ministry added. A group of Egyptian citizens, including students, has returned to Cairo from Hungary, the ministry said, without providing exact numbers. With Russia continuing its full-scale invasion of its western neighbour for the seventh day on Wednesday, more than 874,000 people have fled Ukraine, according to the United Nations High Commissioner for Refugees (UNHCR). Before the Russian invasion of Ukraine started on Thursday, around 6,000 Egyptians lived in Ukraine, including 3,000 students studying at Ukraines universities, especially in medicine. The Egyptian authorities have been urging expats in western Ukrainian cities to head to the borders of Romania, Slovakia, Poland, and Hungary to be repatriated to Egypt. However, authorities have warned Egyptians in the eastern cities and the capital Kyiv where heavy fighting is taking place against leaving their homes or shelters until the situation becomes more stable. On Tuesday evening, an Air Cairo flight arrived in Egypt from Bucharest carrying 175 Egyptian students who fled from Ukraine into Romania. Egypts embassies in Ukraines neighbouring countries are working to provide all forms of support to the Egyptian expats who fled to these countries from Ukraine, the foreign ministry said today. This includes securing transportation from the border crossing points to the capitals, the ministry said in a statement. The embassies have also secured temporary housing for citizens in hotels and other places of residence in each of Hungary, Slovakia, and Poland, according to the ministry. In Budapest, Hungary, Egypts embassy has coordinated with EgyptAir to repatriate Egyptian nationals. Egypts Ambassador to Slovakia Bassem Khalil is following up on the influx of Egyptian citizens who crossed the Ukraine-Slovakia border and are on their way to the capital, Bratislava. This is in addition to providing transportation from crossing points to the Slovakian capital and securing temporary residence for them. Since the start of the war in Ukraine, neighbouring European countries have received hundreds of thousands of refugees, with many thousands more expected in the coming days. On Wednesday, the Kremlin said it is open for new peace talks with Ukraine, a day after Ukrainian President Volodymyr Zelensky said Russia must stop bombing before talks can take place. Russian Foreign Minister Sergei Lavrov warned on Wednesday against possible eruption of a World War III, threatening that it would be nuclear and destructive, according to the Russian state-owned RIA news agency. Search Keywords: Short link: Egypt called on Wednesday for a quick political solution to the Russia-Ukraine crisis through peaceful means, warning of the crisiss impact on the already-suffering global economy. However, Egypt warned against economic sanctions that are not based on the mechanisms of the multilateral international system. Seeking a political solution to the crisis using dialogue and peaceful means and through active diplomacy should remain in the sights of all of us to deal with the current crisis, Egypts Permanent Representative to the UN Osama Abdel-Khalek said. Abdel-Khalek made the remarks during a speech at a rare emergency special session of the 193-member UN General Assembly (UNGA) on Russia's invasion of Ukraine. His speech came shortly after 141 countries, including Egypt, voted for a UN resolution calling for a halt to Russias invasion of Ukraine and an immediate withdrawal of Russian forces from its western neighbour. Egypts vote for the decision is based on [the countrys] firm belief in the rules of international law and the principles and goals of the Charter of the United Nations, Abdel-Khalek said. Five of the UNGAs 193 member states, namely Belarus, North Korea, Eritrea, Syria, and Russia, voted against the resolution, and 35 nations abstained. The UNGAs resolutions are not legally-binding, unlike UN Security Councils (UNSC) resolutions. Russia has drawn global condemnation and was slapped by western sanctions after it launched a full-scale invasion of Ukraine, which has claimed the lives of scores and forced hundreds of thousands to flee from the country. Egypt rejects the approach of employing economic sanctions outside the framework of the mechanisms of the multilateral international system, Abdel-Khalek said. He warned that similar sanctions in the past had caused severe negative humanitarian effects and resulted in the exacerbation of the suffering of millions of people over the past decades Egypt reiterates its warning against economic and social effects of the current crisis on the entire global economy, which is still suffering from the pandemics repercussions, Abdel-Khalek said, adding that the growing disruption in supply chains and international air traffic is proof of this. Abdel-Khalek warned against ignoring the need to remove the roots of the Russia-Ukraine crisis to achieve security and stability and defuse the crisis. He also called for all parties to shoulder the responsibility of allowing the flow of humanitarian aid to all needy people as well as the crossing of foreign residents across borders without discrimination, as some discriminatory treatment has been reported in this regard. Abdel-Khalek also called for resolving the current crisis within fixed standards that go in line with the UN Charter. The effectiveness and credibility of the multilateral international action mechanisms ability to confront successive challenges and crises depends on dealing with all international crises in accordance with the same and consistent criteria that is in line with the principles and goals of the [UN] Charter, Abdel-Khalek said. He added that this should be applied before decades pass during which the reality and human suffering are perpetuated. The UNGA vote on Wednesday comes after Russia vetoed a UNSC resolution on Friday that deplored the Russian invasion of Ukraine. As 11 members of the 15-member council voted in favour of the resolution, the resolution was allowed to be taken to the UNGA. China, India, and the UAE abstained from the vote. Since the beginning of the Russian invasion, Egypt has called for upholding dialogue and diplomatic means of resolving the crisis. Egypt has also worked on facilitating the crossing of Egyptian expats in Ukraine, mostly students, to neighbouring European countries. Search Keywords: Short link: Egypt adopts a comprehensive strategy to enhance human rights and fundamental freedoms, said Foreign Minister Sameh Shoukry on Wednesday, adding that the country succeeded in achieving a remarkable progress with regards consolidating civil and political rights. In a recorded speech addressed to the high-level segment of the 49th session of the UN Human Rights Council, Shoukry said the session comes at a time when Egypt has achieved many developments related to the promotion of human rights and fundamental freedoms. This took place by achieving a real partnership with civil society with the aim of establishing a new republic that upholds the values of democracy, the principles of human rights and the rule of law, Shoukry added. In this new republic, everyone enjoys their basic rights and freedoms without discrimination, he added, citing the launching of the national strategy for human rights under the sponsorship of President Abdel-Fattah El-Sisi. Shoukry highlighted another great development, which is the recent establishment of many civil society associations in Egypt. Shoukry said El-Sisi's declaration of 2022 as the year of civil society is an indication of the importance the Egyptian state attaches to civil society as an essential partner in the development process. He also referred to a request by the government to the parliament to extend the deadline granted to civil society organisations to settle their situations. Shoukry also said the legal situation has been settled for more than 2,162 churches and religious services buildings, and that 74 new churches have been built under the law regulating the construction and restoration of churches. The top Egyptian diplomat also referred to the achievements made to empower women and protect them from discrimination and crimes of violence and harassment. He shed light on Egypt Vision 2030, which aims to secure decent housing, upgrade infrastructure, develop water, road, electricity and sewage networks, improve health and education mechanisms, and offer essential social services. Egypt Vision 2030 also aims to empower citizens economically without any discrimination by launching many national initiatives like Decent Life and 100 Million Healthy Lives. Promoting human rights is a continuous process and no country can claim that it has achieved perfection in this regard, he said, making it clear that there is no unified pattern that every country can follow, but rather each country sets its priorities and determines the challenges it faces according to its own circumstances. He noted that any multilateral action should be based on consensus and dialogue while avoiding politicisation, selectivity and attempts to impose controversial visions and concepts that hamper human rights and impede achieving desired goals. Shoukry called for handling human rights issues with utmost caution and staying away from incorrect information and reports that are circulated with the aim of achieving certain goals that have nothing to do with the promotion of human rights. He expressed hope that the UN Human Rights Council would play its role in assisting states to ensure that their citizens enjoy all basic human rights without any discrimination, consolidate tolerance and peaceful coexistence, discard discrimination, racism and hatred speech, and respect the privacy and religious and cultural differences of societies. Search Keywords: Short link: Reaching an agreement between Egypt, Sudan, and Ethiopia on the Grand Ethiopian Renaissance Dam (GERD) would pave the way for cooperation and regional integration, Egypts Minister of Water Resources Mohamed Abdel-Ati has said. Abdel-Ati made the remarks in a meeting with the European Unions Special Representative for the Horn of Africa Annette Weber on Wednesday in Cairo. Abdel-Ati warned against false statements on the GERD and the unilateral operation of the mega dam, saying this would disrupt the water management system in both Egypt and Sudan and harm the two downstream countries. Achieving cooperation requires the presence of a political will and seriousness from the Ethiopian side to reach an agreement on filling and operating the dam, Abdel-Ati said. The minister also highlighted the necessity of full coordination on the filling and operation of mega-dams that lie on transboundary rivers. Egypt and Sudan have frequently highlighted the necessity for a legally-binding agreement to be reached with Ethiopia on the filling and operation of the dam, a demand that Ethiopia has repeatedly dismissed. Last month, Ethiopia announced the operation of the GERD's first turbine, a step that Egypt and Sudan have both condemned and described as a violation of the Declaration of Principles (DoP) signed between Addis Ababa, Cairo and Khartoum in 2015. The 10-principle DoP obliges the three countries to take all the necessary procedures to avoid causing significant damage while utilising the Blue Nile. Egypt has also sent a letter to the current President of the UNSC Vassily Nebenzia to express its categorical rejection of Ethiopia's unilateral commencement of operations of the dam. Egypt, which mainly relies on the Nile for its water needs, fears that the unilateral and quick filling and operation of the GERD would have a negative impact on the country's water supply. Meanwhile, Sudan is concerned about regulating water flows to safeguard its own dams. However, Ethiopia implemented the first two phases of filling the mega-dam on the Blue Nile over the past two years without the two countries consent. Rounds of African Union-sponsored talks on the GERD, the last of which was in DR Congos capital of Kinshasa last April, have collapsed several times over the past years, with the two countries blaming the failure on Ethiopias intransigence. The two countries have also called for an increasing role of the international community, including the UN and the EU, to help break the stalemate in negotiations. In a meeting with the press on Tuesday, Weber said the EU is ready to engage more to help reach a satisfactory agreement for all parties involved in GERD. Trust building between Egypt, Sudan and Ethiopia will lead to reaching an agreement that is satisfactory for all, and will ensure regional integration in areas that include energy, water, infrastructure, trade and climate mitigation and adaptation efforts, Weber said. These are areas that the European Union is putting more money to support in the region, she pointed out, affirming the EUs readiness, as an observer to the AU talks on the GERD, to engage more with the three countries to help reach an agreement. Search Keywords: Short link: Thousands of Ukrainian tourists have been stranded in Egyptian resorts as a result of the war in Ukraine, as they are unable to fly home because of the closure of their countrys airspace, the chairman of Egypts Tourism Development Authority said this week, putting the number of people concerned at around 22,000. Egypts Ministry of Tourism and antiquities has requested the hotels in which the stranded tourists are staying to offer their guests continuing services at the same rates they originally booked at. But the stranded Ukrainian tourists are just one side of the story, as Egypts tourism sector seems to be facing another Russia-related crisis. Many Egyptian hotels and tour agencies are owed money by Russian and Ukrainian tour agencies and are having difficulty receiving their dues. The number of Russian and Ukrainian tourists visiting Egypt, once at the top of the list of the countrys foreign visitors, is also likely to shrink indefinitely. Tarek Shalabi, head of the Investors Association in Marsa Alam, said there were currently 1,800 to 1,900 Ukrainian tourists in Marsa Alam, but that many Russian and Ukrainian tour agencies have not paid Egypts hotels and were not likely to in the near future. Foreign tour agencies usually make final payments to hotels sometime after the return of tourists to their countries. Down payments vary by contract and the size of the business conducted between the hotel and the agency. Some hotels have decided to help the stranded tourists. In response to the governments request to host Ukrainian tourists whose stay has ended, the Hyatt Sharm Hotel prepared 10 fully furnished chalets to receive stranded families. The Cleopatra Hotels Group in Sharm El-Sheikh and Hurghada announced that it was extending the stay of its Ukrainian guests until the completion of procedures between the Ukrainian Embassy in Cairo and the Egyptian authorities to keep the tourists safe. It said in a statement that it appreciates the fact that the Ukrainian tourists had chosen Egypt as a destination during the period when Russian flights to Egypt were banned. It is not only hotels at tourist destinations that are owed money. So are the Egyptian authorities through services offered to Ukrainian airlines, including landing fees. Tamer Al-Shaer, a member of the Chamber of Tourism Establishments and manager of the Blue Sky Tour Agency who does business with Russia and Ukraine, said there needed to be a solution since if not Egyptian hotels would face difficulties in collecting money owed by Russian and Ukrainian tour agencies, especially with the halt of the SWIFT system to Russian banks. Many Ukrainian tourists have cancelled their trips, as have half of the Russian tourists expected to arrive shortly. More Russians may cancel their trips if the situation gets worse, Al-Shaer said. He said the war in Ukraine would likely negatively affect other markets exporting tourists to Egypt, including Poland, Romania, the Czech Republic, Yugoslavia, and Macedonia. The Russian and Ukrainian markets are among the largest markets for tourism to Egypt. Since the Covid-19 pandemic, Ukraine has occupied first place, while Russian tourism has still been disrupted. Russian tourists began to return to Egyptian resorts last October. In 2019, Ukraine had the second-largest number of tourists visiting Egypt at 1.6 million, a 32 per cent increase on the year before. The Ukrainian Embassy in Cairo said that more than 727,000 Ukrainian tourists had visited Egypt in 2020, making up 21 per cent of the total number of foreign tourists visiting Egypt that year. According to the Ukrainian State Tourism Agency, 1.46 million Ukrainians visited Egypt last year. Ahmed Hamdi, manager of New Star Aviation, an agent for six Russian airlines including the state-owned Air Russia, Royal, Yamal, and Siberia S7, said that only six flights from Russia had landed last Sunday in Hurghada (two flights) and Sharm El-Sheikh (four) out of the total of 25 that usually land daily through the company. There are six Ukrainian planes in Sharm El-Sheikh and Hurghada that fly under the Ukrainian Airlines and SkyUp flags, the latter being the second-largest airline after the state-owned company. These planes were unable to leave Egypt after the outbreak of the war between Russia and Ukraine, but their hospitality crews are being hosted in hotels. Hamdi said that the sanctions on Russia would affect the influx of Russian tourists coming to Egypt. The EU countries have also closed their airspace to Russian airlines in reaction to the war in Ukraine. Russian flights come to Egypt through Turkish airspace, Hamdi said, and if Turkey also closes its airspace to Russian airlines, no Russian tourists will be able to come to Egypt. Hisham Al-Damiri, manager of the Movenpick Sharm El-Sheikh Hotel, said that there would be arrangements to facilitate the arrival of tourists through neighbouring countries, but that this could take some time as few flights take off from Egypt to countries neighbouring Ukraine. He said that even after the end of the war, tourism from Ukraine would likely stop due to the economic conditions affecting the country, but that tourism from Russia would not be much affected. Al-Damiri, a former head of the Egypt Tourism Development Authority, noted that since the resumption of Russian tourism following a six-year hiatus, Egypt had been able to regain some 45 to 50 per cent of its previous number of Russian tourists. A version of this article appears in print in the 3 March, 2022 edition of Al-Ahram Weekly. Search Keywords: Short link: Israel is being challenged to take a position aligned with the US and EU on the Ukraine crisis while at the same time not angering Russia. In the light of the greatly polarised world stage after Russias invasion of Ukraine, Israel may be unable to maintain a neutral policy that is acceptable to Russia, which has extensive bilateral and regional interests with Israel, and Ukraine, which is supported by the US and EU. In the weeks leading up to Russias invasion of Ukraine when the US and EU were escalating warnings that Russia intended to invade Ukraine, Israel remained quiet in order not to upset either side. However, despite its efforts, Tel Aviv has been forced to declare positions more supportive of Ukraine than Russia. Israel has limited its response to statements by Foreign Minister Yair Lapid and has not emphasised statements by Prime Minister Naftali Bennett, who has only referenced concerns about the humanitarian crisis resulting from the conflict. Bennett has also offered humanitarian aid to Ukraine. The majority of the Israeli political parties have remained silent on the conflict. Israel shares various interests with Russia, including economically through giant investments by both sides, militarily through close cooperation in the two countries arms industries, and logistically through Russias silence about repeated Israeli air strikes in Syria. Israel claims its strikes on Syria have been intended to prevent Iran from gaining a foothold in the country and blocking greater influence by the Lebanese Shia group Hizbullah, which has transferred military capabilities from Syria to Lebanon to develop its military arsenal. Russias position on the Israeli air raids on Syria is a cornerstone of the relations between Moscow and Tel Aviv. It has ignored condemnations of Israels repeated air strikes on Syria and has not provided the Syrian government, an ally of Russian President Vladimir Putin, with effective anti-aircraft systems. Israeli reports have gone further, saying that Moscow has been providing logistical support for Israeli air raids on Syria through a disengagement mechanism with Moscow that requires informing Russia of Israeli strikes against Syria ahead of time. This shows that the two countries are coordinating to avoid any military confrontation, even by mistake, between Israeli and Russian planes. Israel has tried to remain neutral in the conflict in Ukraine in order to avoid losing its critical support from Russia on the Syrian issue, which represents a serious security challenge for Israel. With the start of the Russian military operations in Ukraine, Lapid condemned the attacks, prompting Moscow to immediately issue statements condemning Israels occupation of the Syrian Golan Heights, which the US recognises as part of Israeli territory. Lapid criticised the Russian invasion of Ukraine, describing it as a serious violation of international law and adding that Israel was ready to send humanitarian aid. This position aligned Israel with the more forthright posture of its US ally and the EU, both of which have introduced extensive sanctions against Russia and are sending military assistance to Ukraine. Israels mild tone in condemning Russias military operations in Ukraine has upset both Russia and the West in equal measure, however, causing Tel Aviv to adopt a more definite position. Lapid then declared his country would vote for a resolution condemning Russias invasion of Ukraine at the UN General Assembly. Putin rejected Israels offer of mediation in the Ukraine crisis, with Israels state-owned Kan TV channel saying Russia had rejected Israels offer to mediate, an idea Bennett had proposed during a call with Putin. The latter has chosen mediation by Russias close ally Belarus, with talks taking place in the country on Monday. Tel Aviv said that both Moscow and Washington understand the nature of the relationship between Israel and Russia, which is why the leadership of both countries are indulgent towards the Israeli position. Despite the heated escalation between Russia and Ukraines allies, Israels ability to walk a fine line in its relationships with Moscow and Kyiv will be a serious test of policy. In an attempt to maintain good relations with Russia, Israel leaked a statement by an unnamed official to the Israeli Public Broadcasting Corporation revealing that Israel had ignored a request by Ukraine for military assistance. Israel refused some months ago to provide Ukraine with the missile-intercept system called Iron Dome out of fears of angering Moscow. Another challenge facing Tel Aviv is the possibility of Israel joining the camp imposing sanctions on Russia, especially since many Russian organisations operate in Israel. Jews of Russian origin make up an important constituency in Israel, and many of them retain strong economic and other ties to their motherland. Lapid has warned Israeli cabinet members against helping the countrys minority of Russian origin out of fears of international sanctions or political damage. He said that many Russian Jews in Israel own companies and other assets in Israel, and while some of them are opponents of Putin, others are his close associates. Israel wants the conflict between Russia and Ukraine to be over quickly without further escalation in order to avoid paying a high political price due its obligatory support for the US and EU against Russia. Israel is also counting on Russia wanting to avoid adding to the list of its opponents and thus turning a blind eye to Israels position and minimising its reaction to avoid damaging relations with Israel. A version of this article appears in print in the 3 March, 2022 edition of Al-Ahram Weekly. Search Keywords: Short link: Russia on Wednesday mooted the possibility of ceasefire talks with Ukraine after Russian forces shelled several Ukrainian cities and troops battled in the streets of Kharkiv. Ukraine said a delegation was "on its way" for the talks at an undisclosed location on the Belarus-Poland border but Foreign Minister Dmytro Kuleba said Kyiv would not accept "ultimatums". Speaking seven days since President Vladimir Putin ordered Moscow's troops to attack Ukraine, Russian negotiator Vladimir Medinsky said the Ukrainian officials were expected at the location on Thursday. Hundreds of civilians have been killed and hundreds of thousands of Ukrainians have fled their country since the invasion began, while the West has imposed sanctions to cripple Russia's economy. Russia revealed on Wednesday that 498 of its troops had been killed in Ukraine -- the first official death toll Moscow has given during its assault. Kyiv 'Will Hold' Russian troops have defied the world and advanced into pro-Western Ukraine but have encountered determined resistance from a much smaller army. Several civilians were also reported killed in the latest shelling on Wednesday, adding to a civilian death toll of at least 350 people, including 14 children, according to Ukrainian authorities. Russia also said it had captured the Black Sea port of Kherson on the seventh day of Moscow's invasion, while Russian artillery massed outside the capital Kyiv -- raising fears of an imminent assault. AFP saw the aftermath of apparent Russian bombing on a market and a residential area in Zhytomyr, around 150 kilometres (93 miles) from Kyiv, and in Kharkiv, Ukraine's second biggest city. "There is nowhere in Kharkiv where shells have not yet struck," said Anton Gerashchenko, an adviser to Ukraine's interior minister, after Russian airborne troops landed in the city before dawn. In Kyiv, mayor Vitali Klitschko said that "the enemy is drawing up forces closer to the capital". "Kyiv is holding and will hold. We are going to fight," the former champion boxer added. Many residents have been hunkered down for a week and dozens of families could be seen sheltering on Wednesday in the Dorohozhychi metro station. "What happens to us down here when the food runs out? Do we try to get out and run?" said Volodymyr Dovgan, a 40-year-old IT engineer. 'Erase Us All' In a video address on Wednesday, Ukraine's President Volodymyr Zelensky said Russian forces wanted to "erase our country, erase us all". The leader said Tuesday's strike on a television mast in the capital Kyiv demonstrated Russia's threat to Ukrainian identity. Five people were killed in the attack on the tower at Babi Yar, the site of a Nazi massacre in which over 33,000 people were killed -- most of them Jews. The 44-year-old Zelensky, who is himself Jewish, urged Jewish people around the world to speak up. "Nazism is born in silence. So, shout about killings of civilians. Shout about the murders of Ukrainians," he said. In New York, Ukraine's ambassador to the United Nations, Sergiy Kyslytsya, said that "the goal of Russia is not an occupation only. It is genocide." The UN said nearly 875,000 people have fled since the conflict began, including thousands of students and migrant workers from Africa and the Middle East who had been living in Ukraine. "We left everything there as they came and ruined our lives," said Svitlana Mostepanenko, a refugee registering in Prague. 'The City Will Die' While Ukrainian forces have held Russian forces back from the country's main cities, the Russian army said it was now in "full control" of Kherson, a city with a population of 290,000 people. The claim was not confirmed by Kherson mayor Igor Nikolayev who appealed on Facebook for permission to transport the dead and wounded out of the city and for food and medicine to be allowed in. "Without all this, the city will die," he wrote. Ukraine's army also said there was a fierce battle under way in Kharkiv, in northeast Ukraine near the Russian border with a population of 1.4 million. "There is an ongoing fight between the invaders and the Ukrainians," the army said on the messaging app Telegram. Shelling in Kharkiv on Tuesday drew comparisons to the massacres of civilians in Sarajevo in the 1990s and condemnation for what Zelensky called a "war crime". The city of Mariupol on the Azov Sea was also reportedly encircled by Russian forces. In an important strategic victory, Russian troops attacking from the Crimean peninsula said they had linked up along the Azov Sea coast with pro-Moscow separatists in eastern Ukraine. The separatists have been fighting Ukrainian government forces since 2014 in a conflict that has killed more than 14,000 people. As the civilian death toll mounts, there is growing opposition to the conflict within Russia, with thousands detained for taking part in anti-war protests. "I am urging everyone to take to the streets and fight for peace," jailed Kremlin critic Alexei Navalny said in a statement posted on Facebook. He called on Russians not to be afraid of going to prison. "Everything has a price and now, in the spring of 2022, we should pay that price." Search Keywords: Short link: The International Court of Justice said Tuesday it would hold genocide hearings on March 7 and 8 over the war in Ukraine, as fighting intensifies. The Hague-based ICJ, the United Nations' top court, will open the public hearings after Ukraine lodged a complaint with the court to order Russia to stop its invasion. "The hearings will be devoted to the request for the indication of provisional measures submitted by Ukraine," the court said in a statement. More than 660,000 people have already fled abroad, the UN refugee agency said, estimating that a million people are displaced within ex-Soviet Ukraine, which has a population of 44 million. The UN estimates that up to four million refugees may need help in the coming months and 12 million more will need assistance within the country. The ICJ, which is based in the Netherlands' seat of government in The Hague, does not have a mandate to bring criminal charges against individual Russian leaders behind the invasion. But it is the world's top court for resolving legal complaints between states over alleged breaches of international law. International Criminal Court prosecutor Karim Khan had already announced he was launching an investigation on the "situation in Ukraine" following Russia's invasion. "I am satisfied that there is a reasonable basis to believe that both alleged war crimes and crimes against humanity have been committed in Ukraine" since 2014, Khan said in a statement Monday. Russia has defied international bans, boycotts and sanctions to press ahead with an offensive it says is aimed at defending Ukraine's Russian speakers and toppling the leadership. The United States trusts "the Court is taking into consideration the dire circumstances and rapidly unfolding events," the State Department said in a statement Tuesday. Spokesman Ned Price said Washington hopes the court "will act with utmost urgency on Ukraine's request for provisional measures" in the hearing. "Each day that Russia is unconstrained in its aggression is a day that brings more violence, suffering, death, and destruction in Ukraine," he said. Search Keywords: Short link: Due to changes in customers needs following the pandemic, the business model once proven for the region is no longer relevant, noted a comprehensive new report. Customers in the region have changed: conscious consumers are optimising their budgets without compromising on quality. Moreover, according to our research, more than 60% in the UAE and Saudi Arabia are willing to put a premium for quality. It is undeniable that the pandemic has made convenience paramount that shoppers are willing to pay extra for it, said Faisal Sheikh, a partner in Bain & Company Middle Easts Consumer Products and Retail Practices. As customers continue to evolve, digital is playing a key role in influencing consumer behaviour and changing purchasing habits, with more buyers preferring to shop online and at their convenience. The pandemic has accelerated the rise of digital beyond merely looking for information. The FMCG e-commerce market has nearly doubled in the past three years. Nearly 50% of shoppers in the UAE have visited an e-commerce site in the past seven days, a significant increase from last year, said Cyrille Fabre, Head of Bain & Company Middle Easts Consumer Products and Retail Practices. With todays customers willing to put a premium for quality and convenience, it is imperative that companies recognise and understand these changes and adapt approaches to maximise opportunities in this new environment. Companies are accelerating to meet the changing needs of consumers in the region, said Mike Gerousis, an analytics leader for Saudi Arabia, Africa & Levant at NielsenIQ. Those that make the best-informed decisions and take a systematic and rigorous approach to turning the flow of data into profitable growth, will be the ones that outperform. In the report, written in collaboration with NielsenIQ, an Advent International portfolio company, Bain & Company Middle East highlights how companies operating in the Gulf Cooperating Council (GCC) have been facing unprecedented challenges in recent years. A significant slowdown in market growth has led to an intense fight among players to gain market share. The global rise in raw materials and transportation prices, in addition to a structural increase in the cost of doing business in the region, has put Fast-moving Consumer Goods (FMCG) companies margins under significant pressure. Moreover, the research conducted by Bain & Company and NielsenIQ last year shows that trends in GCC consumer behaviours are broadly similar to the US. Consumers in the region care about health, affordability, and taste; they are though more satisfied by convenience and e-commerce but less satisfied with taste and freshness. The research looks at the type of conversations consumers are having online. This is based on data that categorised 1.4 billion posts over the last three-year period across Twitter, online forums, reviews, and blogs: covering the US, Saudi Arabia, UAE, and Egypt.-- TradeArabia News Service The UN General Assembly voted Wednesday to demand that Russia stop its offensive in Ukraine and withdraw all troops, with nations from world powers to tiny island states condemning Moscow's actions. Egypt, along with 140 other countries, has voted for a UN resolution calling for a halt to Russias invasion of Ukraine and an immediate withdrawal of Russian forces from its western neighbour. The vote was 141 to 5, with 35 abstentions. It came after the 193-member assembly convened its first emergency session since 1997. Assembly resolutions aren't legally binding, but they do have clout in reflecting international opinion. A Russian veto sank a similar resolution in the more powerful UN Security Council on Friday, but the assembly allows no vetoes. Under special emergency session rules, a resolution needs approval of two-thirds of those countries voting, and abstentions don't count. More than 90 countries co-sponsored the assembly resolution. It deplored Russia's ``aggression'' against Ukraine ``in the strongest terms'' and demanded an immediate halt to Moscow's use of force and the immediate, complete and unconditional withdrawal of all Russian forces from Ukraine's internationally recognized borders. The measure also called on Russia to reverse a decision to recognize two separatist parts of eastern Ukraine as independent. Countries that spoke up for Russia in the assembly included Belarus, Cuba, North Korea and Syria. Search Keywords: Short link: Nearly 200,000 people have fled Ukraine in just 24 hours, bringing to 875,000 the number of refugees seeking shelter in neighboring countries since the full-scale Russian military invasion began on February 24. The UN Refugee Agency (UNHCR) has projected that more than four million Ukrainian refugees may eventually need protection and assistance, while the European Union's crisis management commissioner has said the figure could reach seven million. More than 37 million people lived under the Kyiv government's control before last week's invasion. Here is a breakdown of where the 874,026 refugees have headed to: Poland Just over half of those who have fled Ukraine have crossed west into Poland. The UNHCR said Wednesday that 453,982 people had done so. Most arrivals are women and children from all parts of Ukraine. Polish officials have said that anyone fleeing Ukraine will be welcomed, whatever their nationality. Polish border guards said 98,000 people entered from Ukraine on Tuesday. Hungary Some 116,348 people have so far crossed from Ukraine into Hungary, the agency said. Thousands of refugees have arrived in Budapest. An AFP photographer saw dozens of refugees disembarking from trains arriving every 30 minutes in the Hungarian capital from the Ukrainian border on Tuesday. Several border towns such as Zahony have turned public buildings into reception centres, with ordinary people donating food and clothes, the interior ministry said. Moldova UNHCR said 79,315 people who fled Ukraine were now in Moldova. An airlift from Dubai was due to arrive on Wednesday bringing more emergency supplies for refugees. Slovakia The UNHCR said 67,000 had fled across Ukraine's shortest border to Slovakia. "The government is maintaining an open and welcoming policy towards refugees, and has rapidly changed asylum laws to help fast-track asylum procedures," the agency said Tuesday. Romania The UN Refugee Agency said 44,540 people who fled were now in Romania. Some refugees reported they had headed to Romania to avoid massive jams at the Polish border. Most are passing through Siret in the north of the country, where a camp has been set up, along with a second near Sighetu Marmatiei, where volunteers were handing out hot tea, coffee and pizza, as well as flowers and little charms to mark the beginning of spring, celebrated on Tuesday across the country. Officials said tens of thousands of refugees who entered Romania have now moved on elsewhere. Russia The UNHCR said 42,900 people had fled across Ukraine's longest border since the invasion began -- around five percent of the total number. Belarus Some 341 people had crossed north from Ukraine into Belarus, the UNHCR said. Onward Movement (Germany) The refugee agency said 69,600 of those who had fled Ukraine into neighbouring countries had already moved onwards towards other European states. Czech Prime Minister Petr Fiala said Wednesday his country had welcomed around 20,000 Ukrainian refugees since the conflict started. (Cezech Republic) Internally Displaced Karolina Lindholm Billing, the UNHCR representative to Ukraine, estimated Tuesday that a million people had been internally displaced by the invasion. She cautioned that the agency still did not have reliable figures. Search Keywords: Short link: The World Health Organization says its first shipment of medical supplies for invasion-hit Ukraine will arrive in neighboring Poland on Thursday, calling for a humanitarian corridor to ease delivery in the face of a crisis with ``ordinary civilians being broken'' in the fighting. WHO Director-General Tedros Adhanom Ghebreyesus said the shipment includes 36 metric tons (40 U.S. tons) of supplies for trauma care and emergency surgery to help 1,000 patients as well as other supplies to meet the needs of 150,000 people. He said WHO's prepositioned supplies in the capital, Kyiv are currently unavailable. He did not elaborate, but the agency alluded to logistical problems amid the fighting after Russia's invasion on Feb. 24. ``There is an urgent need to establish a corridor to ensure humanitarian workers and supplies have safe and continuous access to reach people in need,'' Tedros said. Dr. Jarno Habicht, WHO's country representative in Ukraine, said it was ``difficult to find drivers'' to deploy supplies. The agency said some of the supplies include treatment for noncommunicable diseases, insulin, and hypertension medication, as well as things like tetanus antitoxin. The WHO emergencies chief, Dr. Michael Ryan, said other supplies included sutures, skin graft equipment, and ``equipment for doing amputations, for bone grafting, for bone wiring.'' ``I think this gives you the graphic nature of what's happening,'' Ryan said. ``These are ordinary civilians being broken and the health system is going to have to put them back together again.'' Search Keywords: Short link: Leading Russian bank Sberbank announced Wednesday it is pulling out of European markets amid tightening Western sanctions over Russia's invasion of Ukraine. The bank said its subsidiaries in Europe were facing an ``abnormal outflow of funds and a threat to the safety of employees and branches,'' according to Russian news agencies. They did not provide details of the threats. Authorities in Austria and Czech Republic had taken actions in recent days against Sberbank's activities in Europe. The move was the latest consequence of Russia's invasion last week, which has led to warfare across Ukraine and unprecedented Western sanctions aimed at isolating Russia's economy. Search Keywords: Short link: The EU on Wednesday excluded seven Russian banks from the global SWIFT network, as sanctions were ratcheted up over Moscow's war on Ukraine. The seven banks cut out from the secure interbank messaging network that permits transactions are Russia's second-biggest lender VTB Bank as well as Bank Otkritie, Novikombank, Promsvyazbank, Rossiya Bank, Sovcombank and VEB (Vnesheconombank), effective immediately, according to an official EU publication. The list did not name two major Russian banks, Sberbank and Gazprombank, which were left connected to SWIFT to allow EU countries to pay for Russian gas and oil deliveries. Search Keywords: Short link: A delegation of former U.S. defense officials is in Taiwan to meet with senior leaders and signal support for the self-governing island, as Russia's invasion of Ukraine highlights threats to democracies around the world. The group includes former U.S. Chairman of the Joint Chiefs of Staff Admiral Michael Mullen; former Deputy National Security Advisor for Iraq and Afghanistan Meghan O'Sullivan; former Under Secretary of Defense for Policy Michele Flournoy; and former National Security Council senior directors for Asia Mike Green and Evan Medeiros. The group collectively served under former U.S. Presidents Bill Clinton, George W. Bush, and Barack Obama. "The selection of these five individuals sends an important signal about the bipartisan U.S. commitment to Taiwan and its democracy and demonstrates that the Biden administration's and the United States' commitment to Taiwan remains rock solid," a senior Biden administration official in Washington told VOA on background. The trip coincides with a separate visit by former Secretary of State Michael Pompeo, who will arrive in Taiwan on Wednesday to speak at the government-affiliated Prospect Foundation. He will also meet with Vice President Lai Ching-te and Foreign Minister Joseph Wu. Michael Mazza, a non-resident fellow at the American Enterprise Institute, speculated that Mullen may have come with a message for Taiwan's senior leadership and would return with a response for White House officials. While Mullen is a former official, someone of his stature carries more diplomatic weight than a normal diplomatic message, Mazza said. "The selection of Admiral Mullen to lead this delegation may serve multiple purposes. He is, first, well-poised to deliver important messages regarding defense and, second and related, to assess any defense-related issues or concerns that Taiwan's leaders may raise," Mazza told VOA by email. "There is significant concern in Washington right now that the Overall Defense Concept has been abandoned, or at least downgraded, in Taiwan's defense strategy. It is likewise unclear what, if anything, has replaced the ODC. I'd be surprised if Mullen did not raise these concerns and seek out details about the direction Taiwan's defense strategy is taking," he said. The four major presidential candidates go toe to toe again in their fifth and final TV debate on Wednesday evening, a week ahead of the presidential election. Taking to the stage will be Lee Jae-myung of the ruling Democratic Party, Yoon Seok-youl of the main opposition People Power Party, Sim Sang-jung of the Justice Party and Ahn Cheol-soo of the People's Party. They are expected to debate a range of issues in the field of social affairs and welfare. Established in 1964, the award is considered the industry's highest honor along with the North American Car, Truck and Utility Vehicle of the Year. The judging panel comprises 61 auto journalists from 23 European countries. Kia's all-electric EV6 sedan has been named this year's Car of the Year in Europe, the carmaker said Tuesday. This is the first time a Korean vehicle has been selected for the prestigious European automotive award. The EV6 competed with six other nominations -- Cupra Born, Ford Mustang Mach-E, Hyundai Ioniq 5, Peugeot 308, Renault Megane E-Tech and Skoda Enyaq. The EV6 received a total of 279 points to take first place. The jurors said, "The EV6 stands out by combining energy efficiency, a large capacity battery and ultra-fast charging." Renault's Megane E-Tech came second with 265 points, followed by Hyundai's Ioniq 5 with 261 points and Peugeot's 308 with 191 points. The EV6 went on sale in Europe last October and sold 11,303 units by the end of January. Earlier, it also won the Irish Car of the Year and the German Premium Car of the Year. Police have announced a major three-month crackdown on the growing trade of illicit drugs on social media. The crackdown starts on Wednesday. The number of people arrested for drug offenses rose from 12,613 in 2018 to 16,153 last year, according to the Supreme Prosecutors' Office. They are rising particularly sharply among internet-savvy young people. The number of drug offenders under 19 increased almost fourfold from 119 in 2017 to 450 last year, when 5,077 people in their 20s were also nabbed for drug crimes, accounting for the largest proportion at 31 percent. Police attribute the recent rise to drug rings that distribute narcotics though encrypted messengers like Telegram. South Korea has belatedly joined the international community in condemning North Korea's latest attention-seeking ballistic-missile launch. An official at the Foreign Ministry said Tuesday, "We took into consideration North Korea's repeated missile launches and the seriousness of the matter." The UN ambassadors of 11 countries including South Korea, France, Japan, the U.K. and the U.S. issued a joint statement Monday that said, "This is the 10th ballistic missile launch so far this year, each one a violation of multiple Security Council resolutions." It added, "These Security Council resolutions also obligate [North Korea] to abandon its weapons of mass destruction and ballistic missile programs in a complete, verifiable and irreversible manner." The North has fired 12 missiles so far this year, and the U.S. requested four emergency meetings of the UNSC and sought the cooperation of the international community to pressure Pyongyang, but the efforts floundered on opposition from China. Meanwhile, South Korea remains the only major U.S. ally not to be exempt from new U.S. licensing requirements for goods produced using U.S.-origin software and technology because it is dragging its heels in joining sanctions against Russia. The downstream hydrocarbon industry in the Arabian Gulf plays a critical role in achieving net zero goals, according to speakers at the second edition of the Gulf Petrochemicals & Chemicals Association (GPCA) Leaders Forum held today (March 2) at The Address Dubai Mall Hotel in Dubai, UAE. Delivering the Inaugural address at the Forum, Yousef Al-Benyan, Chairman, GPCA and Vice Chairman and CEO, Sabic, stated that the long journey of carbon neutrality begins with a few steps which includes creating a baseline, setting emission reduction targets, and establishing strong governance. He also highlighted the role of policymakers in shaping the pathway for hydrogen and facilitating international co-operation and collaboration. Achieving net-zero goals will require complete transformation of businesses, supported by policy makers, investors, companies and consumers. Following Al-Benyans address, a session on the Future of the Oil Market under Carbon Neutrality Policies was delivered by Dr Anas Al Hajji, Managing Partner of Energy Outlook Advisors and Editorial Advisor for Attaqa.net. Dr Al Hajji shared his insights on the shortcomings in current long-term forecasts of the oil market, discussed the true impact of renewable energy on the oil market and touched upon the key areas the petrochemical industry can benefit from. He also delved on the impact of the regional and global carbon neutrality policies and its implications on the petrochemical industry. The session also emphasised on the growing interest in sustainable hydrogen (blue and green hydrogen and ammonia) in the GCC and globally and how this will help reach their greenhouse gas emissions targets.TradeArabia News Service The government on Tuesday hastily joined an international ban on transactions with seven Russian banks and sales of Russian sovereign bonds. The decision came relatively late in the day, when the government learned that Korea is the only U.S. ally not to be exempt from a waiver in export licenses for products made with American technology. It is yet unclear that Korea will be eventually waived from the Foreign Direct Product Rule (FDPR) which requires companies to obtain U.S. approval for exports to Russia if they contain American technology. The EU, U.K., Japan and Australia had already announced their own export and financial sanctions against Russia for invading Ukraine. They also restricted dealings with the Russian central bank. But Korea will continue to export medical equipment and agricultural products to Russia to aid its fight against COVID-19 as well as importing energy from the renegade country even as major energy firms around the world are divesting themselves of their Russian interests. Ukrainian expats in Korea have been organizing protests and aid efforts after Russia invaded their home country last week. They are also calling on the Korean government to take more decisive action against Russian aggression. Around 300 people gathered last Sunday in front of the Russian Embassy to protest against Russia's invasion, carrying signs that said "Stand with Ukraine" and "Stop Putin, Stop War." Julia Shmuliak, a Ukrainian working for a trade company who has lived in Korea for the last 10 years, was among them. She said the demonstration was one of the several ways she has been trying to help her home country. "Even though I'm safer in Korea, my friends and family say it's easier for them emotionally to be in Ukraine," Shmuliak said. "I feel so useless and hopeless and devastated." She hopes that the Korean government will takes further action including heavier sanctions against Russia and opening visa-free travel for Ukrainians. Korea's announcement of sanctions against Russia on Monday came several days after the other countries', and they only encompass weapons and nuclear materials but not non-strategic goods like semiconductors. And while Korea has said it will participate in American and European sanctions against Russia, it has not announced its own sanctions, in contrast to other Asia-Pacific states such as Australia and Japan. Many were critical of Korea's delay in implementing sanctions, as well as of their limited scope. Korea's delayed action has its roots in the Moon Jae-in administration's policy of "strategic ambiguity," or its attempt to balance its alliance with the U.S. with its diplomatic ties with countries such as China and Russia. Hunter Martson at Australian National University said, "In terms of sanctions against Russia, Korea may be hesitating because it doesn't see its own interests at stake. You see that with other Southeast Asian countries like Indonesia -- none of them are really lining up to announce sanctions against Russia." The Justice Ministry has announced that Ukrainians will be allowed to stay in the country until the situation in Ukraine stabilizes, regardless of their visa status. The visas of some 538 of the 3,843 Ukrainians in Korea expire by June. But Ukrainians still require a visa to enter Korea in the first place. Shmuliak said she hopes that the Korean government suspends this rule and opens to Ukrainian refugees since the Korean Embassy in Ukraine is no longer operating. Darya Chemeris, a Ukrainian who has lived in Korea for the last five years, said she is the only child of elderly parents back home. When news came out that Russia was preparing to invade Ukraine, she tried to bring her parents to Korea, but they were unable to complete the visa application in time. "So now the only way I can bring them here is through another country's Korean embassy," she said. "But I'm not sure if it's possible for my parents, who are in their 70s, to figure it out." Ukrainians in Korea are also organizing their own fundraising efforts. Volodymyr Kadyrlyeyev, who has lived in Korea since 2008, has been collecting donations to send to Ukraine. "... I checked my Facebook just as usual, to see that Ukraine had been invaded," Kadyrlyeyev said. "It didn't seem real." South Korea has been pointedly left out of a list of 32 countries that are exempt from new U.S. licensing requirements for goods that use American technology, a curb aimed at punishing Russia for invading Ukraine. The U.S. Department of Commerce requires companies to obtain approval before exporting semiconductors, computers and communication, laser and sensor equipment to Russia that could be diverted for military purposes. The 27 EU member nations, Australia, Canada, Japan, New Zealand and the U.K., which announced similar sanctions against Russia, are exempt from the curb because the U.S. trusts them to refrain from exporting strategic materials to Russia. But South Korea has been excluded from that waiver, which essentially means that the country has been classified as untrustworthy despite its 70-year alliance with the U.S. The U.S. had good reason to do that. South Korea was the only U.S. ally that dragged its heels in announcing sanctions against Russia. Shortly after Russian tanks rolled into Ukraine, President Moon Jae-in pledged to "take part in efforts by the international community, including sanctions." But he hesitated to implement separate sanctions, provoking a barrage of criticism from the U.S. political establishment. Now the government here belatedly decided to ban dealings with certain Russian banks and block exports of strategic materials to Russia. The government was afraid of Russia's retaliation, but other U.S. allies probably had the same concerns yet were willing to take the risk in order to join the international response. South Korea was saved by the U.S. and 16 other UN nations when it was invaded by North Korea and was able to prosper based on that alliance, which is a promise to risk lives for mutual protection. Such a relationship must be based on absolute trust. But the very foundation of its alliance with the U.S. has been weakened to the point that Seoul is no longer included among America's trusted allies. How can South Korea reach out to the U.S. for help but hesitate to help its strongest ally? LIVE Razboi in Ucraina, ziua 70: Trupele ruse au intrat in uzina Azovstal / Noi sanctiuni impuse de UE Rusiei, intre care embargo pe importurile de titei / Apropiat al lui Putin, trimis la Mariupol pentru a pregati o parada de 9 mai KYODO NEWS - Mar 2, 2022 - 14:05 | All, World, Japan Japan said Wednesday it will temporarily close its embassy in Kyiv as Russia's invasion of Ukraine escalates, with many civilians desperately fleeing the country. The embassy's operations will be transferred to a temporary liaison office set up in Lviv in western Ukraine, according to the Foreign Ministry. The office, located near the border with Poland, will continue to provide support to Japanese citizens living in Ukraine, including those trying to evacuate from the country, the ministry said. The decision to close the embassy on Wednesday was announced after Russia's military said it would strike Ukrainian communications and intelligence sites in Kyiv, warning residents near them to leave. On Tuesday, Russian forces fired at the main television tower in the Ukrainian capital, killing at least five people. Since Russia's invasion of Ukraine started last week, the embassy's operations have been downscaled. But the Japanese ambassador to Ukraine, Kuninori Matsuda, and a few others have remained in Kyiv. As of Feb. 27, about 120 Japanese nationals were in Ukraine. The Japanese government has called on them to evacuate and secured a chartered plane to transport them from Poland to a third country. On Feb. 28, the government also set up a liaison office in Poland to help Japanese citizens seeking to leave Ukraine by land. Chief Cabinet Secretary Hirokazu Matsuno on Wednesday requested Japanese nationals to refrain from traveling to Ukraine "regardless of purpose," when asked about the recruitment of foreign military volunteers by the Ukraine Embassy in Tokyo. At a regular press conference, Matsuno stressed that the government has already raised its travel warning for the whole of Ukraine to the highest level. By Tomoyuki Tachikawa, KYODO NEWS - Mar 2, 2022 - 14:14 | World, All, Feature Russia's aggression in Ukraine, which gave up its huge nuclear arsenal 30 years ago in return for security guarantees by world powers, is expected to reinforce North Korea's determination not to give up its own nuclear weapons. Looking at the situation unfolding in the former Soviet republic, North Korean leader Kim Jong Un will likely conclude that possessing nuclear weapons is the most reliable way to maintain his family's dynasty, which began when the country was established in 1948 with the backing of the Soviet Union, foreign affair experts said. And since the Ukraine crisis is likely to absorb the attention of the United States and its allies, Pyongyang will probably see it as an opportunity to try to strengthen its nuclear and missile capabilities, they added. Russia's invasion of Ukraine has made North Koreans recognize that "multinational agreements will not amount to true guarantees of their survival and peace," said Young-Key Kim-Renaud, a professor emeritus at the George Washington University in the U.S. capital. "The current North Korean regime sees its nuclear and missile program as an existential matter and is willing to further sacrifice economic and social conditions," said the specialist in Korean Peninsula affairs. The United States and North Korea remain technically in a state of war as the 1950-1953 Korean War -- in which U.S.-led U.N. forces fought alongside South Korea against the North supported by China and the Soviet Union -- ended in a cease-fire, not a peace treaty. Ukraine signed the Budapest Memorandum and joined the Nuclear Non-Proliferation Treaty in 1994, agreeing to abandon all the nuclear weapons piled up on its territory before the Soviet Union collapsed in 1991. At the time, it was the world's third largest nuclear stockpile. At the same time, the United States, Britain and Russia, later joined by China and France, pledged to guarantee Ukraine's territorial integrity under the memorandum. All five are nuclear weapons states and permanent U.N. Security Council members. Nevertheless, even before Russia launched its aggression against Ukraine late last month, it had annexed the Crimean Peninsula from its neighbor in 2014 and is seen as having been behind the conflict that broke out the same year in the Donbas region that led to the formation of breakaway areas. But while Western nations and others are imposing stringent sanctions on Moscow, the administration of U.S. President Joe Biden has ruled out sending troops to fight Russia in Ukraine. South Korea's JoongAng Ilbo newspaper said in its editorial in late February that the Ukraine crisis "could set a bad precedent for North Korea." "Watching Ukraine without any nukes being invaded by Russia, North Korea could be even more determined to develop nuclear weapons," the daily said. At the first-ever U.S.-North Korea summit in June 2018, Kim and former U.S. President Donald Trump, Biden's predecessor, agreed that Washington would provide security guarantees to Pyongyang in exchange for "complete denuclearization" of the Korean Peninsula. But negotiations between the two countries over denuclearization and sanctions relief have been at a standstill for more than two years since North Korea effectively refused the U.S. demand to scrap all of its nuclear facilities and programs. While calling on the United States to drop its "hostile policy," North Korea has recently hinted at restarting nuclear and intercontinental ballistic missile tests, saying it may resume all "activities" it had temporarily suspended to build trust with Trump. A diplomatic source in Beijing said, "North Korea has claimed that Iraq and Libya, which did not have nuclear weapons, were invaded and their regimes were overturned by the United States. For Kim, abandoning the nuclear arsenal is not a rational decision." In the wake of the attack on Ukraine by Russia, "North Korea has become more skeptical about a promise of security guarantees without practical benefits in return for denuclearization," the source added. Troy Stangarone, a senior director at the Korea Economic Institute in Washington, echoed the view, saying, "The Budapest Memorandum is vague on how Ukraine's security would be assured." "Security assurances are worthless without real commitments to provide assistance," he said. "Whether friend or foe, strong states still attack the weak. This reality means it will be increasingly difficult to convince North Korea to give up its nuclear weapons." Pyongyang, meanwhile, has carried out a spate of weapons tests since early 2022. In late January, it launched its longest-range ballistic missile since November 2017 in defiance of U.N. Security Council resolutions imposing sanctions on it. During the 17-day Beijing Winter Olympics through Feb. 20, North Korea refrained from firing projectiles in apparent consideration of China, its key ally in security and economic terms. But Pyongyang conducted a test of a reconnaissance satellite system last Sunday. As launching long-range ballistic missiles carrying warheads and rockets capable of delivering satellites use similar technology, speculation has been rife that Pyongyang might be preparing to fire an ICBM that could reach the U.S. mainland with a nuclear payload. Later this month, the United States and its security ally South Korea are scheduled to stage joint military exercises that the North has slammed as a "rehearsal for war," probably prompting Pyongyang to take provocative actions against the two countries. North Korea, whose economy has languished amid the COVID-19 pandemic, will also mark the 110th anniversary on April 15 of the birth of Kim Il Sung, the nation's late founder and the current leader's grandfather. Pyongyang has often held military events on the occasion. "In an anarchic world ruled by the law of the jungle, North Korea must not be so naive as to give up its nuclear weapons," said Zhao Tong, a senior fellow in the Nuclear Policy Program at the Carnegie Endowment for International Peace in Beijing. With North Korea regarding the United States as its mortal enemy since the Korean War, Pyongyang "has a strong technical need to carry out more flight tests of its strategic missiles" including ICBMs, Zhao said. North Korea may launch an ICBM "in the foreseeable future" as Washington and other major powers including Russia are "unlikely to join hands" in imposing additional tough sanctions against Pyongyang even if it "tests strategic military technologies," he added. KYODO NEWS - Mar 3, 2022 - 00:19 | All, World The European Union said Wednesday its members agreed to exclude seven Russian banks from a key international payment network known as SWIFT, as part of financial sanctions against Russia for its invasion of Ukraine. Following the EU decision, the Society for Worldwide Interbank Financial Telecommunication, the service provider headquartered in Belgium, is expected to formally determine the cutoff certain to disrupt Russian trade and money transfer. The banks subjected to the restriction are Russia's second-largest bank VTB Bank, Bank Otkritie, Novikombank, Promsvyazbank, Bank Rossiya, Sovcombank and Vnesheconombank. The EU said the banks, to be excluded from the network on March 12, were chosen as they are already subject to sanctions by the bloc and other G-7 countries. "Today's decision builds on the wide-ranging and unprecedented packages of measures the EU has been taking in response to Russia's acts of aggression on Ukraine's territorial integrity," the EU said in a statement. The United States and the EU said on Feb. 26 that a select number of Russian banks will be removed from SWIFT, with Japanese Prime Minister Fumio Kishida saying the next day that Japan will also join the punitive effort. SWIFT connects more than 11,000 banks, other financial institutions and corporations in more than 200 countries and territories, according to its website. The United States, European countries and others have slapped a slew of sanctions on Russia, such as freezing assets of President Vladimir Putin and other officials and restricting transactions with the Russian central bank. Finance ministers and central bank governors of the Group of Seven industrialized nations agreed Tuesday to put further pressure on Russia, according to Japanese Finance Minister Shunichi Suzuki. "We agreed to continue taking further actions in a rapid manner," Suzuki said after the meeting. KYODO NEWS - Mar 2, 2022 - 19:45 | All, World, Japan Around 70 Japanese, mostly former members of the Self-Defense Forces, have answered the Ukrainian Embassy's since-deleted Twitter post soliciting volunteers to fight against invading Russian forces, an embassy official said Wednesday. The embassy in Tokyo had posted the tweet on the same day that President Volodymyr Zelenskyy called on foreigners to be part of an international legion to be organized to help repel Russian forces. Almost all Japanese who had applied as of Tuesday were men in their 20s to 60s. Their reasons for volunteering ranged from "not being able to forgive attacks on Ukraine by Russian forces" to "wanting to stop war as a Japanese," according to the official. The recruitment post was deleted Wednesday, with the embassy now seeking volunteers to aid in such fields as medicine, disaster prevention, information technology and communications. It is unclear why the post was deleted, but answering foreign military recruitment could run afoul of Japanese law against preparing or plotting to wage war privately on a foreign country. When asked at a press conference about the recruitment by the Ukrainian Embassy on Wednesday, Chief Cabinet Secretary Hirokazu Matsuno requested Japanese nationals to refrain from traveling to Ukraine "regardless of purpose." The government spokesman noted that the government has already issued an evacuation advisory for the whole of Ukraine, adding that it has also informed the embassy of the advisory. Foreign Minister Yoshimasa Hayashi also acknowledged to reporters on Tuesday that he was aware of the Twitter recruitment by the embassy and referred to the Foreign Ministry's evacuation advisory for Ukraine. The Ukrainian Embassy said on Twitter that it had raised close to 2 billion yen ($17.4 million) in donations from more than 60,000 people in Japan as of Tuesday. Related coverage: Japan, U.S., EU to aid refugees after Russia's invasion of Ukraine Japan to limit trade with Russian central bank amid Ukraine invasion 2,000 Ukrainians, supporters in Japan rally over Russia invasion KYODO NEWS - Mar 2, 2022 - 14:00 | All, World, Japan Japan will impose sanctions on Belarus as early as this week for its role in Russia's invasion of neighboring Ukraine, Prime Minister Fumio Kishida said Wednesday. "Given Belarus' obvious involvement in Russia's invasion of Ukraine, we have decided to take sanction measures against individuals including President (Alexander) Lukashenko as well as entities, and implement export control measures," Kishida said in parliament. "These should be carried out as early as within this week," Kishida said, as Belarus, known for its close ties with Russia, has served as an entry point for Moscow's forces invading Ukraine. In the House of Councillors Budget Committee session, Kishida again dismissed former Prime Minister Shinzo Abe's suggestion that Japan commence discussions on the possibility of a nuclear sharing arrangement with the United States in the wake of Russia's aggression in Ukraine, a non-nuclear state. "It is hard to allow for such an idea, and the government has no plan to discuss it," Kishida said, reiterating the idea is not in line with Japan's three non-nuclear principles of not producing, possessing or allowing nuclear arms on its territory. In World War II, the Japanese cities of Hiroshima and Nagasaki were devastated by U.S. atomic bombs. Elected from a Hiroshima constituency, Kishida has called for a world free of nuclear weapons. Over the Russian invasion, Japan has imposed various sanctions against Russia, including its officials and companies, and has suggested taking further measures in close cooperation with other countries. With the United States and European countries banning Russian aircraft from flying over their territories, Kishida said Japan will consider "what is an appropriate response for our country while working with the international community, including Group of Seven nations, in view of the situation." Kishida also called for understanding from the public for the economic fallout of the sanctions saying, "Japanese firms cannot escape the impact." "We will do everything to curb the impact on people," Kishida said, adding he will work with oil-producing countries to limit a sharp rise in gasoline prices. The International Energy Agency said Tuesday its member countries, including the United States and Japan, agreed to release 60 million barrels of oil from emergency reserves to ensure the stability of oil markets amid the Ukraine crisis. But oil prices soared to multiyear highs after U.S. oil major Exxon Mobil Corp. said it is exiting Sakhalin 1, a massive oil and gas project in eastern Russia. The exit followed British oil major Shell PLC's announcement of its withdrawal from the Sakhalin 2 project on the same island of Sakhalin in the wake of the Ukraine invasion. Related coverage: U.S., Japan, others to release oil reserves amid Russia invasion Japan to limit trade with Russian central bank amid Ukraine invasion Japan slaps sanctions on Belarus over Russian invasion of Ukraine BEIRUT, March 1 (Xinhua) -- Lebanon's Hezbollah Chief Sayyed Hassan Nasrallah on Tuesday blamed the United States for the events taking place in Ukraine, urging those trusting the United States to draw a lesson from the Russia-Ukraine conflict. Nasrallah made the remarks in a televised speech during a conference held on the 30th anniversary of the martyrdom of Hezbollah leader Sayyed Abbas al-Moussawi, the Lebanese National News Agency reported. "What's happening between Ukraine and Russia is very dangerous," Nasrallah warned, adding that "Washington has done everything to push for the current scenario." "The United States is responsible for what is happening in Ukraine," he said, accusing Washington of refraining from helping reach a diplomatic solution and complicating or even to certain degree inciting the Russia-Ukraine confrontation. Nasrallah also criticized the West's double standards in dealing with the Ukraine crisis, contrary to its stance regarding "the U.S. wars," for example in Afghanistan. "Western countries are doing everything against Russia except for direct combat." "What is happening is a lesson for those who trust and count on the United States," Nasrallah added. Lebanese President Michel Aoun has said that his country's "clear stance" is in favor of resolving the Russia-Ukraine conflict through "dialogue." "Lebanon supports political negotiations to resolve the current conflict between Russia and Ukraine, in line with the principles specified in the UN Charter and the relevant international laws that calls for peaceful means in resolving conflicts between nations," he added. Boeing will exhibit its diverse, and advanced range of defense technologies, products, and service capabilities at the first edition of the Saudi World Defense Show (WDS 2022) in Riyadh next week. Held under the patronage of His Royal Highness Prince Mohammed bin Salman, Crown prince, Deputy Prime Minister and the Minister of Defense, the show will take place from March 6 to 9 at the newly inaugurated WDS center. WDS is a key international platform for Boeing to highlight its products and services that support and advance Saudi Arabia and the wider regions defense and services requirements. Boeing continues to work with the Kingdom and regional governments to ensure future advancements in their defense and services capabilities, the company said. WDS is an important event for Boeing, as it presents an ideal opportunity to showcase our commitment to the Kingdom and the wider region. I am proud to say that Boeing shares a partnership of 77+ years with the Kingdom. At WDS 2022, Boeing will demonstrate its latest technology in defense, and our capabilities in the advancement of the services sector, said Ahmed Jazzar, President of Boeing Saudi Arabia. Boeing Defense Space & Security (BDS) backlog now stands at $60 billion with 33% of that coming from outside the United States. The 2021 Boeing Market Outlook also projects the defense and space market opportunity will remain consistent with last year's forecast at $2.6 trillion during the next decade. This spending projection continues to reflect the ongoing importance of military aircraft, autonomous systems, satellites, spacecraft and other products for national and international defense, with 40 percent of expenditures expected to originate outside of the United States. Boeing expects the market for support and services to be worth $3.2 trillion in the 10-year period between 2021 and 2030. However, regional Covid-19 case growth and new variants may continue to bring volatility to the market. Commercial services represent $1.7 trillion of the forecast and include the services to support the growing business and general aviation markets. Government services are forecasted to be worth $1.5 trillion. The support and services functions are diverse in terms of sales, activity scope, capital intensity, and competitive environment. At WDS, Boeing will be showcasing advanced platforms and capabilities including: The AH-64 Apache, the primary attack helicopter for 17 partner nations around the globe, including Egypt, with a reputation as the most proven attack helicopter in the world. There are more than 1,200 Apache aircraft in operation at present. The U.S. Army fleet has accumulated over 4 million flight hours and more than 1.3 million combat hours. The CH-47F Chinook is the most advanced, affordable, battle-tested heavy-lift helicopter in the world. The tandem rotor design allows the Chinook to devote all of its power to lift, and provides unmatched tactical and combat support mission capabilities. The F-15EX is an indispensable asset to global force structures with affordability, speed, range, heavy-weapon payload and rapid technology paths. With its contemporary sensors, high-speed open mission systems architecture and electronic warfare suite, the F-15EX delivers complementary and interoperable capabilities ready to take on the missions of today and adapt to meet the missions of tomorrow. The Wave Glider designed and manufactured by Liquid Robotics, is the worlds most experienced, long-duration un-crewed surface vehicle (USV). It supports a wide range of sensors and payloads to collect and transmit data in real-time from seabed to space, and is used by defense organizations around the world for anti-submarine warfare (ASW), and intelligence, surveillance, and reconnaissance (ISR) missions. The T-7A Red Hawk is an all-new advanced pilot training system designed for the US Air Force that will train the next generation of fighter and bomber pilots for decades to come. Designed using a digital thread, the T-7A aligns with the U.S. Air Forces Digital Century Series strategy by enabling the integration of new concepts and capabilities faster and more affordably through virtual testing. The Airpower Teaming System is a new uncrewed aircraft using artificial intelligence to be that force multiplier. Its designed to work as a smart team with existing military aircraft to complement and extend airborne missions. Boeing will also showcase solutions and capabilities from the Boeing Global Services portfolio, which includes sustainment, modifications and modernization, upgrades, training and maintenance services, many of which are deployed in support of governments in the region today. Boeing expects the government support and services 10-year market (between 2021 and 2030) to be worth $1.5 trillion. The Middle East represents $200 billion of the services market, it said. TradeArabia News Service The sample of a high-performance chip dedicated to block chain application is displayed at an exhibition to mark the 2021 National Mass Innovation and Entrepreneurship Week in Beijing, capital of China, Oct. 19, 2021.(Xinhua/Ren Chao) BEIJING, March 2 (Xinhua) -- Some Western media outlets are misreading China's efforts to be tech self-reliant, claiming that the aim is prompting fear that the world might decouple or split into markets with incompatible standards and products. Such worries are entirely unwarranted and unnecessary. Treating China's independent sci-tech innovation as a threat is a kind of hegemony mindset. The United States has not stopped deliberately slandering China's high-tech development and using all sorts of pretexts to sanction and suppress Chinese enterprises. Not only has the United States banned products of Chinese tech company Huawei from its own networks, but also pressured other countries to do the same. It has also barred its companies from supplying software and components to Chinese tech companies. Bullying and suppression cannot stop the development of China's high-tech enterprises or maintain the U.S. monopoly. China has learned from experience that it cannot ask for, buy or beg for core technologies in key fields from other countries. It seeks to surpass itself and serve high-quality growth without any intention of beating others. Self-reliance has enabled China to stand firmly among the world's nations, and innovation is the only path leading to new heights in science and technology. China adheres to the strategy of innovation-driven development and takes self-reliance in science and technology as the strategic support for national development. Self-reliance and self-improvement in science and technology are inevitable requirements for the country to realize the advanced industrial structure and the key to constructing a new development pattern. As the world is experiencing a pandemic and other changes unseen in a century, China's economy witnessed a good start during the 14th Five-Year Plan period (2021-2025). This benefits from the growth of the national sci-tech advances. Sci-tech innovation will continue to be a powerful engine for the steady and sustainable development of China's economy, which is shifting from rapid growth to high-quality development. From the macro perspective, one country can continue improving its position in the international industrial division by promoting independent innovation. The latter can also beef up economic efficiency. From the micro view, enterprises can scrap reliance on low-level competitiveness by improving independent innovation and gradually cultivating their core competitiveness. The country's total expenditure on research and development amounted to about 2.79 trillion yuan (about 441.13 billion U.S. dollars) last year, up 14.2 percent year on year, according to a report released by the National Bureau of Statistics. Enterprises spent about 76 percent of the total investment. The absolute majority of the research and development investment went to enterprises. It is necessary to note that the independent path of scientific innovation should not exclude international cooperation. China's Five-hundred-meter Aperture Spherical Radio Telescope has been available for scientists worldwide since April 1, 2021. It shows China's determination to increase its openness to international collaboration. Aerial panoramic photo taken on Dec. 19, 2021 shows China's Five-hundred-meter Aperture Spherical Radio Telescope (FAST) under maintenance in southwest China's Guizhou Province. (Xinhua/Ou Dongqu) The country collaborated with many countries in COVID-19 vaccine research, development, and production. Besides, more extensive cooperation in astronaut selection and training, joint flights, and other fields will take place between China and foreign countries, said a white paper released on Jan. 28, titled "China's Space Program: A 2021 Perspective". There is no doubt that China has made remarkable contributions to the sci-tech innovation of humankind. The country is fully aware that independent innovation should happen in an open environment. Aerial photo shows a freight train bound for Lao capital Vientiane departing from southwest China's Chongqing, Dec. 4, 2021. (Xinhua/Tang Yi) CHONGQING, March 2 (Xinhua) -- Carrying 37 twenty-foot equivalent units (TEU) of goods worth over 4 million yuan (630,000 U.S. dollars), the first cargo train departed Xiaonanya station in Jiangjin District, southwest China's Chongqing Municipality, for Vientiane Wednesday. The train, carrying chemicals, building materials, mechanical parts, and daily necessities, is expected to arrive in Vientiane by way of Yunnan Province in about five days, halving the time it used to take from Chongqing to Vientiane by road. Chongqing launched the China-Laos international freight train service in Chongqing International Logistics Hub on Dec. 4, just one day after the China-Laos railway launch. Photo provided by Tianjin University on Oct. 11, 2021 shows Ali Hasnain on the wheelchair surrounded by his teachers and classmates at an airport in Beijing, China. (Tianjin University/Handout via Xinhua) TIANJIN, March 2 (Xinhua) -- Ali Hasnain, a Pakistani studying in China, waved goodbye to his Chinese teachers and classmates at an airport in Beijing in last November, but he may never forget them for their companion and care during his hardest moment between life and death. In his first month of PhD studies in a foreign land, the 29-year-old Pakistani was diagnosed with a viral encephalitic caused by the Herpes Simplex Virus (HSVI) which attacks the human brain and can result in fatal brain damage. Hasnain started his study in China for a PhD degree in Control Science and Engineering at Tianjin University in north China's Tianjin Municipality last year. Unfortunately, he suddenly fell into a deep coma in his dormitory in the early morning of September 2021. The emergency waked up Wang Hai, director of the university's Admission Office of International Students, the School of International Education. He rushed to the Tianjin First Central Hospital, where the Pakistani student was receiving treatment. "He was lying on a stretcher and his body was twitching constantly. The nurses and I carried the stretcher together and ran for various examinations," Wang recalled. After the initial diagnosis, the hospital arranged Hasnain to an intensive care unit (ICU) for further brain surgery. "When I was shifted to the hospital by the management of Tianjin University, Chinese doctors told my family, who were in constant contact with the hospital administration, that I have a low chance of survival and that they are exploiting every single option to save my life," Hasnain said. Tang Bowen, Hasnain's counselor and teacher from the university's school of international education, came to the hospital almost every single day and helped update the boy's parents and university of his condition. With the help of an interpreter, Tang made video calls to Hasnain's family. "His father was really sad and sighed again and again. I also felt bad for the potential loss of such an energetic young man." Suggested by the Chinese doctors, Hasnain's family recorded some videos and voice clips that they could play for him in an effort to wake him up. Wang also helped to hire a full-time nurse to take care of Hasnain. "Hearing that Hasnain's family was facing some financial difficulties, the university provided necessary support in his treatment and nursing." A silver lining finally appeared after Hasnain underwent some major surgeries. On Oct. 20, 2021, Hasnain opened his eyes for the first time after he fell into a coma a month earlier. "He was on his way to receive a computed tomography (CT) scan. I was pushing his stretcher in the corridor when I suddenly found Hasnain opened his eyes," said Ali Mazhar, a fellow Pakistani student in the university. Tang immediately reported this to the doctors. "We finally see the hope after nearly one month of dark days." Hasnain recovered gradually and was moved out of ICU about eight days later. Tang helped to arrange a video call for Hasnain and his parents. "Although Hasnain could not speak, his eyes brightened up when seeing the faces of his parents. He nodded several times in response to his family members," Tang said. Ali Muhammad, Ali Hasnain's father, said he really appreciated the way his son was taken care of in China. "China is like a second home for us. That's why I have sent my son to China for higher education. The Chinese side also hired a full-time nurse for him," Muhammad said. "Besides providing huge financial support, they (the Chinese side) are still in contact with us and always inquire about my son's condition or if we are facing any financial problems regarding treatment," he added. As Muhammad would like to have his son back in Pakistan for further recovery under the companionship of his family members, the Embassy of the People's Republic of China in Pakistan arranged the flight as soon as possible with the help of Chinese teachers. Wang, Tang and Mazhar sent Hasnain to the airport in Beijing together. "He sat on the wheelchair and sent his sincere gratitude to all of us. I still remember him waving goodbye to us with a cotton hat on. The hat was a goodbye gift from me," Wang said. A worker cleans onion at a vegetable market in Islamabad, capital of Pakistan, on Feb. 28, 2022. (Xinhua/Ahmad Kamal) Agriculture is one of the focuses for cooperation in the second phase of the China-Pakistan Economic Corridor (CPEC) project, and Pakistan's production of many crops, including onions, will improve with the access to Chinese technology, said a Pakistani senior official. by Misbah Saba Malik ISLAMABAD, March 2 (Xinhua) -- Arshad Swati from Pakistan's northwestern province of Khyber Pakhtunkhwa is among the thousands of onion farmers in the Asian country. He dreams of selling his onions overseas to fund a better education for his children. In particular, he wants his onions to be sold to China. "Many farmers in Pakistan export their onions and have got rich by doing so. I want to join other producers in my hometown and export our crop to China. It will mean more money for everyone," Swati told Xinhua. Swati thinks that Khyber Pakhtunkhwa, which is located not very far from China, is well positioned to access China's huge market. A worker carries a sack of onion at a vegetable market in Islamabad, capital of Pakistan, on Feb. 28, 2022. (Xinhua/Ahmad Kamal) Pakistan is one of the world's largest onion producers. Malaysia, Gulf countries, Bangladesh and Sri Lanka are the major overseas destinations of Pakistani onions today. Currently, about 30 percent of Pakistan's fresh produce of onions are wasted due to the lack of storage facilities and substandard practices in packing and transportation. Pakistan exporting onions to China has not yet begun, but related rules were agreed on in November last year. Pakistani Minister for National Food Security and Research Syed Fakhar Imam told Xinhua that agriculture is one of the focuses for cooperation in the second phase of the China-Pakistan Economic Corridor (CPEC) project. Photo taken on Feb. 4, 2021 shows the Lahore converter station of the 660kV Matiari-Lahore high-voltage direct current (HVDC) transmission project under the China-Pakistan Economic Corridor (CPEC) in Pakistan's eastern Punjab province. (SGCC/Handout via Xinhua) Pakistan's production of many crops, including onions, will improve with the access to Chinese technology and research, he said. "The Chinese agriculture sector is very modern, and they have a high per acre yield. Pakistan too has a very fertile land with rich potential to produce crops of high export value. We are already producing some very high-quality onions, and our scope can be enhanced in cooperation with China," the minister noted. Yasar Saleem Khan, a provincial team manager at the Pakistan office of the Center for Agriculture and Bioscience International (CABI) said that the CPEC cooperation with China may "save millions of (U.S.) dollars and increase onion production by millions of tons" for Pakistan. According to the CABI, no onion processing of any kind currently takes place in Pakistan, even though the technology is very simple. With small investment, excellent export value can be generated. "Dried onions are in demand in the UAE (United Arab Emirates) and the Gulf at large. There is no supply from Pakistan so if we make better use of this potential, it will generate income and create a lot of jobs. Good quality onion seeds from China will greatly improve the crop," Khan told Xinhua. "The economic corridor is an opportunity for Pakistan to transport all kinds of commodities to international markets. Access to the Chinese market will have a great effect on the lives of our farmers," he added. ADEN, Yemen, March 2 (Xinhua) -- Yemen's Houthi group fired ballistic missiles against a military base of the Saudi Arabia-led coalition in the country's northwestern province of Hajjah on Wednesday, killing 10 Sudanese soldiers, a military official told Xinhua. "The missiles struck the units of Sudanese troops, who are part of the Saudi Arabia-led coalition troops, in Hajjah province near the border with Saudi Arabia," the local military source said on condition of anonymity. "A total of 10 Sudanese soldiers were killed and more than 25 others injured in Hajjah's district of Midi," the local military source said. The Sudanese troops were backing the Yemeni government forces in the ongoing military operations taking place against the Houthis in the northern regions of the war-ravaged Arab country, according to the official. Meanwhile, the Saudi-led coalition reported that its warplanes carried out more than 18 airstrikes against the Houthi-held sites in Yemen's Hajjah during the past 24 hours. Local Yemeni sources confirmed that most of the airstrikes bombed the Houthi sites in Haradh district and other key areas of Hajjah, causing casualties amongst the Houthi fighters. Under the cover of the intensified airstrikes by the Saudi-led coalition, the Yemeni government forces have been engaged in intense battles recently with the Houthi fighters in Haradh, the main gateway for Yemen's exports before a land port there was closed by the Houthis in 2014. Yemen has been mired in a civil war since late 2014 when the Houthi militia seized control of several northern provinces and forced the internationally-recognized government of President Abd-Rabbu Mansour Hadi out of the capital Sanaa. JUBA, March 1 (Xinhua) -- South Sudan's Ministry of Health, World Bank and UNICEF on Tuesday launched a communication campaign to highlight the ongoing joint health program and increase awareness among a broad coalition of partners to increase investment in the health sector. The communication campaign will run through the month of March and across multiple media platforms and messaging on the joint health services will be featured on billboards, videos and public service announcements. "The communication campaign will highlight the importance of various health interventions, including immunization campaigns and the vaccination against COVID-19," UNICEF said in a joint statement issued in Juba, the capital of South Sudan. It said the national communication campaign will highlight the joint project of the Ministry of Health, the World Bank and UNICEF supporting COVID-19 vaccine deployment in the country as well as the provision of essential health services for the most vulnerable populations in two of the most hard-to-reach areas -- the States of Jonglei and Upper Nile. It also said that the messages of the national communication campaign will be aired on radio channels and promoted on billboards and the media platforms of the three sides from Tuesday, highlighting the work done to support access to essential health services to the most vulnerable populations in South Sudan. It warned that preventable diseases like malaria, diarrhoea, pneumonia continue to exact a heavy toll on children and women nationwide. Since 2018, the three sides have been working together to implement a World Bank-financed health sector project that provides essential maternal and child health services in Jonglei and Upper Nile States. According to the UN Children's Fund, the project has so far contributed to immunizing 156,991 children with the penta 3 vaccines and 153,394 children with the measles vaccines and provided 67,956 pregnant women with antenatal care services. It also ensured that 26,358 newborns were delivered with the help of skilled health personnel. In 2021, the project facilitated the delivery of 587 metric tons of medical supplies and medicines and supplied soap, buckets, and water purification tablets for 685,000 people in both states. LAGOS, March 2 (Xinhua) -- Nigerian President Muhammadu Buhari said efforts have been intensified to deal with issues of kidnapping and disruption of schools by criminals across the country. The government would no longer tolerate disruption of the nation's educational system and economic activities by terrorists, bandits, and kidnappers, Buhari told a seminar on national security in Abuja, the nation's capital, on Tuesday. The seminar was organized by the Alumni Association of the National Defense College. "I have directed that all cases relating to kidnapping and economic sabotage across the entire nation be ruthlessly addressed," Buhari said. He said the security of Nigeria and all Nigerians remains a priority of his administration, and that the government would continue to build a thriving and sustainable economy. The government would continue to improve access to quality education, enhance social inclusion, and provide excellent infrastructure, Buhari said. He commended security agencies for their efforts in dealing with terrorism, insurgency, banditry, and other security challenges in different parts of the country. Buhari called on all Nigerians to support the armed forces and other security agencies in the fight against insecurity. VIENTIANE, March 2 (Xinhua) -- Nearly 1.7 million unexploded ordnance (UXO) items had been destroyed by clearance teams in Laos from 1996 to December 31, 2021, while over 71,000 hectares of land were cleared of munitions. The figures were released at a consultation meeting on the Draft Unexploded Ordnance National Strategic Plan in Laos "Safe Path Forward III" for 2021-2030, which took place in Lao capital Vientiane on Monday. According to the national UXO database, from 1996 until December 16, 2021, 71,943 hectares of land in the country's all 18 provincial regions were cleared. Of this, 55,286.3 hectares were agricultural land and 16,656.7 hectares were land targeted for development. A total of 1,693,487 UXO items were destroyed, of which 4,288 were large bombs, 968,447 were bombies, 2,379 were landmines and 718,367 were other types of unexploded ordnance. According to the National Regulatory Authority (NRA) for the UXO/Mine Action Sector, since 1996 the focus has been on UXO clearance in the nine most heavily impacted provinces of Laos, namely Huaphan, Xieng Khuang, Luang Prabang, Khammuan, Savannakhet, Champassak, Saravan, Xekong and Attapeu. Over the past 10 years, the NRA has conducted 18,862 Mine Risk Education activities. JAKARTA, March 2 (Xinhua) -- A wild Sumatran elephant has died two days after being treated intensively at the Saree Elephant Training Center in Indonesia's Aceh province, the Aceh Natural Resources Conservation Agency said on Tuesday. The agency's head Agus Arianto said forest guards found the 30-year-old female elephant last Friday, in a malnourished and critical condition in a forest in Lamtamot village, Aceh Besar district. "There is an old infected wound in the abdomen. We suspect it was due to being hit by a wooden pole," Arianto told Xinhua. The guards found no indication of violence on the elephant. Based on a necropsy result, the elephant died of infection from untreated wounds that triggered the spread of bacteria throughout the body, and then damaged the metabolic system. In 2022, this is the third death of Indonesian wild elephants that the International Union for Conservation of Nature classifies as Critically Endangered due to hunts, conflicts, and habitat destructions. BUDAPEST, March 2 (Xinhua) -- The Hungarian central bank MNB has revoked the activity license of the local branch of Russia's largest bank Sberbank and ordered its liquidation due to the latter's serious liquidity and capital position. The National Deposit Insurance Fund is guaranteeing 100,000 euros (about 110,870 U.S. dollars) within 10 days for all eligible customers, the MNB said in a press release Wednesday. Sberbank Hungary has entered a serious solvency and capital position due to negative effects of the Russia-Ukraine crisis on Vienna-based Sberbank Europe AG, parent company of Sberbank Hungary, and its owner, the Russian Sberbank, which has been hit by international sanctions. "In the situation arising from the declaration of insolvency of the parent company, MNB also revoked the activity license of Sberbank Hungary Ltd, and initiated its liquidation," MNB said. This came after the Single Resolution Board (SRB) opened a liquidation of Sberbank Europe AG. "Following the European Central Bank's assessment, the Single Resolution Board has today decided that Sberbank Europe AG in Austria and its subsidiaries in Croatia (Sberbank d.d.) and Slovenia (Sberbank banka d.d.) are failing or likely to fail," the SRB said in a statement on Monday. "Unfortunately, with Sberbank in Hungary and Austria, we have the first victim of the Brussels sanctions policy," Hungarian Foreign Minister Peter Szijjarto told a press conference on Wednesday morning. With 5G monetisation a key issue, Huawei hopes to become a trusted partner of operators in digital operations transformation and continue to contribute to the commercial success of operators. At a high-profile Operations Transformation Forum for leading Middle East carriers on the sidelines of the Mobile World Congress in Barcelona, Huawei aimed to create a platform for close communication with carriers and industry partners to share knowledge, experiences, and best practices to continuously create value for service providers and help carriers accelerate digital transformation. The Forum highlighted the right path for operations transformation working with carriers and industry leaders in the Middle East region. With the advent of the digital economy, 5G, new digital services, and digital operations transformation are becoming important factors for carriers' business success. In addition, there are challenges in service monetisation, user experience management and O&M (operation and maintenance). In attendance were senior Huawei executives, including Steven Yi, President of Huawei Middle East and Bill Tang, President of Huawei Global Technical Service Department. Additionally, more than 15 telecom carriers and industry partners in the Middle East were present at the Forum to discuss new digital services and digital operations transformation. Tang shared Huawei Service and Software strategies. He said: "Based on carrier's transformation trend, Huawei provides carriers with three transformation journeys in 2022: Convergent and Intelligent Digital Service, Data-driven Ultimate Experience, and Intelligent Predictive O&M." JazzCash, Omantel and STC shared their digital operations transformation strategies and best practices. Ahmed Shahab Nasir, CTO, JazzCash Pakistan, said: "We will continue to focus on building a robust payment ecosystem, and products drive continuous development." Dr Ali Al Hashmi, General Manager of Networks at Omantel, added: "Customer experience-driven 5G precision marketing and closed-loop network issues are the most critical to 5G commercial success." Khalid Attia, consultant of STC CCEx Programme, Saudi Arabia, said: "STC has entered the deep-water area of experience transformation. It is evolving to convergent data-driven smart operations through enterprise-level metrics throughout the CCEX lifecycle." Industry partners such as TM Forum, Ernst & Young, Roland Beger, and Analysys Mason were also at hand to share their expert opinion on industry trends and transformation. Aaron Boasman, Vice President, AI & Customer Experience, TM Forum, said: "The operator's priority should be to enhance the customer experience and prove its commercial value." Jose-Luis Garcia, Lead of Global Telco Solution and EMEIA Tech Sector, EY, said: The rollout of 5G technology has pushed the telecom CXOs to rethink their investment strategies and focus more toward upgrading network and technology platforms. Given Mena is at the helm of 5G revolution and is expected to account for 10% of total mobile subscriptions by 2025, the operators are impelled to commence OSS/BSS overhaul to monetise 5G effectively. Kushal Shah, Senior Partner Middle East, Roland Berger, added: Covid-19 impact on customer demand, technology advancements, and improved regulatory conditions have led to a substantial increase in the number of fintech startups in Mena. Jacky Zhou, Vice President, Marketing and Solution, Huawei, closed the Forum. He said: "Operational transformation is an important foundation for business success. At the same time, aligning with the planning, construction, maintenance and optimisation process, using digital platform tools to strengthen market and network side capabilities, developing digital business, and improving revenue, efficiency and user experience are the common perceptions of the direction of digital transformation."-- TradeArabia News Service BEIJING, March 2 (Xinhua) -- One of the United States' largest private prison companies, according to recent media reports, is set to run a new pilot program that would place hundreds of immigrants under house arrest. The approach allowing companies to retain a strong foothold in immigration enforcement is widely criticized as an extension of the highly controversial for-profit detention which U.S. President Joe Biden has vowed to end. "We will only see the same ugly cycle repeat, with those private companies once again lobbying for punitive and dehumanizing policies in order to increase their profit margin," a coalition of immigrant advocacy groups said in a statement protesting against the move. HUMAN RIGHTS ABUSES Ever since they were founded in the 1980s to make up for bed shortages in federal and state prisons, private prisons have been rife with alleged human rights abuses. A recent example is the prison labor on the frontlines of the COVID-19 pandemic that worked without protective equipment -- "mopping, serving food, and sanitizing cells," according to an article published on U.S. news organization The Appeal. The Leavenworth Detention Center, owned and run by private prison company CoreCivic, was described as an "absolute hellhole" by a judge, where multiple stabbings and a fatal beating took place in 2021. "Guards said weapons such as improvised shanks and drugs are rampant behind bars," CNN reported. William Rogers, a former correctional officer of Leavenworth, said he was assaulted seven times in the detention center over his four and a half years working there, including three times that sent him to the hospital. The situation in Leavenworth is just the tip of the iceberg. "It's about the profit for them. They don't care to make it better," Rogers told CNN. A CASH MACHINE Over the decades, for-profit detention has grown into a multibillion-dollar industry in the United States. Two of the biggest private prison companies, CoreCivic and The GEO Group, are publicly traded. Business model of such private prison companies, as multiple studies have shown, depends on high rate of incarceration, therefore, they are inclined to seek for more inmates and longer sentences, sometimes, through unlawful means. In 2011, two Pennsylvania judges were convicted of throwing out thousands of juvenile convictions while taking kickbacks from owners and builders of private prisons. That kids-for-cash scandal involved at least 2,400 juveniles. Over time, an intricately connected web of political influence has developed alongside the growth of for-profit detention. According to the Justice Policy Institute of the United States, for-profit private prison companies primarily use three strategies to influence policy: lobbying, direct campaign contributions, and building networks. Money just streams in. In contracts with U.S. Immigration and Customs Enforcement (ICE) only, CoreCivic and GEO Group together made about 1.3 billion U.S. dollars in 2019. According to Associated Press, each company relies on ICE for around 30 percent of its revenue. ORDER IN VAIN With domestic criticism and arguments about the private prison industry rising, Biden signed an executive order shortly after taking office in January 2021, supposedly to stop renewing Department of Justice (DOJ) contracts with privately operated detention facilities. What Biden didn't touch, however, was two other major sources of government contracts for these companies -- immigrant detention, and post-incarceration "services" like electronic monitoring. The executive order "does not affect ICE contracts because ICE is part of the Department of Homeland Security, not DOJ," the Brennan Center for Justice explained. In addition, it may create a scenario where companies sign more contracts with counties that then directly contract with the federal government, allowing the companies to essentially circumvent the order. Three months after the order, CoreCivic signed a new three-year contract with Mahoning County, Ohio for 990 beds at their Northeast Ohio Correctional Center, said the Brennan Center. Whether the companies can play a perfect maneuver remains unknown. The known fact, at this point, is that the profit makers are unhappy with any attempt to impact their business. "Our efforts are fully aligned with the administration's goal to prioritize rehabilitation and redemption for individuals in our criminal justice system," CNN reported, quoting the email of CoreCivic spokesperson Ryan Gustin to show objection to Biden's move. New Delhi : Eighty-five-year-old Akbari was waiting eagerly for the birth of her great grandchild. But her dream of seeing the baby was cut short by a rampaging mob that set her house at Gamri village near Delhi's Khajuri Khas on fire, suffocating her to death. One of her seven children Salmani, an exporter of readymade garments, said that he had gone out to get milk on Tuesday. "While returning, I got a call from my son that a mob has surrounded our home with petrol bombs and sticks in hands. My mother, wife and three kids were on the second floor. I told them over phone to rush to the terrace," he said. According to locals, the mob set the ground floor, which served as a godown, ablaze and threw petrol bombs at the second and third floor. "Ten of my labourers were on the ground floor at the time of the incident. They too rushed to the terrace. My son later noticed that my mother was missing and he tried to get down. But by then, the whole house was full of smoke. By the time they climbed down the terrace, she had passed away," Salmani said. For Salmani and his four brothers and three sisters, their mother was no less than a hero. Hailing from Chanduari village near Uttar Pradesh's Meerut, Akbari had lost her husband 40 years back and toiled as a labourer to bring up her seven children. "I have suffered losses more than one crore. The rioters also looted jewellery and cash worth Rs eight lakh. I had come to Delhi with only Rs. 250 and started this business from scratch. I have lost everything now, but mainly my mother," he said. The family has been waiting to receive Akbari's body from GTB Hospital and at the same time Salmani's eldest son was at a private hospital where his wife has given birth to a girl. The bereaved family has called off all celebrations, but consoles themselves by thinking that Akbari was back in the form of the baby. Their severely gutted house now poses a risk for the neighbourhood and fire service officials have warned that it has be brought down to avoid any accident. There were crates filled with stones and materials used in petrol bombs on the rooftop of the building (Photo Credit: Video Grab) New Delhi: Aam Aadmi Party (AAP) leader and local councillor Tahir Hussain has been blamed for the death IB personnel Ankit Sharma by the official's family. In a video that went viral on social media on Wednesday, people were seen throwing stones and petrol bombs from the rooftop of a bulding owned by Hussain. It was reported that Hussain had coordinated these attacks that happened on Tuesday and provided attackers with stones and bombs. Ankit Sharma was said to have died in these attacks and his body was later found inside a drain. Tahir had denied these allegation and claimed that he himself was a victim of the Delhi violence and blamed 'dirty politics' for the video. He had posted a video saying he and his family were himself stranded inside his office building and called Delhi police for help. However, when News Nation visited the building on Thursday, several incriminating evidence were on display there. There were crates filled with stones and materials used in petrol bombs on the rooftop of the building. Plastic bags and bottles seemingly filled with chemicals were also found. On Wednesday, the body of IB Officer Ankit Sharma was recovered from a drain in the Chand Bagh area of North-East Delhi. Sharma had been missing since Tuesday and his family members alleged that the local councillor and his associates were behind the killing. Tahir is a corporator from Ward 59 of Nehru Vihar in the East Delhi Municipal Corporation. New Delhi : The midnight circular by the Centre notifying the transfer of judge hearing the Delhi riots case has sparked a massive political storm. Former Congress chief and Wayanad MP Rahul Gandhi and sister Priyanka Gandhi raised concerns over the timing of the transfer of Justice S Murlidhar. Without taking any name, Rahul Gandhi took a dig at the Narendra Modi government and the reference was unmissable Remembering the brave Judge Loya, who wasnt transferred, Gandhi said on Twitter. Special CBI Judge BH Loya, who was hearing the high-profile Sohrabuddin Sheikh fake encounter case of Gujarat, had died of cardiac arrest in Nagpur on December 1, 2014, when he had gone to attend the wedding of a colleague's daughter. His sister and Congress general secretary Priyanka Gandhi Vadra was more specific in her scathing attack. Posting news article along with this circular of Justice Murlidhars transfer, Priyanka Gandhi Vadra said that the government was trying to muzzle justice. Remembering the brave Judge Loya, who wasnt transferred. Rahul Gandhi (@RahulGandhi) February 27, 2020 The midnight transfer of Justice Muralidhar isnt shocking given the current dispensation, but it is certianly sad & shameful. Millions of Indians have faith in a resilient & upright judiciary, the governments attempts to muzzle justice & break their faith are deplorable. pic.twitter.com/KKt4IeAMyv Priyanka Gandhi Vadra (@priyankagandhi) February 27, 2020 The midnight transfer of Justice Muralidhar isnt shocking given the current dispensation, but it is certianly sad & shameful. Millions of Indians have faith in a resilient & upright judiciary, the governments attempts to muzzle justice & break their faith are deplorable (sic), Priyanka Gandhi Vadra said on micro-blogging site. Congress spokesperson Randeep Singh Surjewala also attacked the Modi govt and tweeted, Modi Govts new hit & run show! Objective - Stifle the judiciary. Aim - Save the perpetrators of hate! Justice Murlidhar, while hearing the case related to Delhi riots, had ordered FIR against BJP leaders including Kapil Mishra. It should be noted that the Supreme Court Collegium, in a March 12 meeting, had recommended Justice Murlidhars transfer. "In exercise of the power conferred by clause (1) of Article 222 of the Constitution of India, the President, after consultation with the Chief Justice of India, is pleased to transfer Shri Justice S Muralidhar, Judge of the Delhi High Court, as a Judge of the Punjab and Haryana High Court and to direct him to assume charge of his office in the Punjab and Haryana High Court," the governments midnight notification said. Justice Muralidhar began his law practice in Chennai in September 1984 and in 1987 shifted to the Supreme Court of India and the Delhi High Court. He was active as a lawyer for the Supreme Court Legal Services Committee and was its member for two terms. His pro bono work included the cases for the victims of the Bhopal Gas Disaster and those displaced by the dams on the Narmada. (With agency inputs) For all the Latest India News, Download News Nation Android and iOS Mobile Apps. No major incident was reported from the riot-hit northeast Delhi in the last 36 hours (Photo Credit: PTI) New Delhi: No major incident was reported from the riot-hit northeast Delhi in the last 36 hours, the Home Ministry said Thursday night. The ministry issued the statement after Home Minister Amit Shah reviewed the situation in the violence-hit parts of the city in a meeting with seniors officials and top police brass. The ministry said there was no major incident in the last 36 hours in any affected police station of Delhis northeast district. As many as 514 suspects were either arrested or detained for questioning and further arrests would be made in the course of investigation, it said. Prohibitory orders imposed under section 144 of the CrPC will be relaxed for a total of 10 hours on Friday in view of improvement in the situation, the ministry said. So 48 FIRs, pertaining to clashes, loss of lives and property, etc., have already been registered and further FIRs would be registered in due course and police has detained or arrested 514 suspects for questioning so far, the ministry said. Further arrests would be effected in the course of investigation, it added. The Delhi Police has separately set up two SITs for investigating serious offences. Nearly 7,000 central paramilitary forces have been deployed in the affected areas of northeast District since February 24. Besides, the Delhi Police has also deployed three Special CPs, six Joint CPs, one Additional CP, 22 DCPs, 20 ACPs, 60 Inspectors, 1,200 other ranks and 200 lady police under the overall supervision of Commissioner of Police to effectively guide and supervise police response so as to contain and normalise the situation, the statement said. It said a total of 35 people have lost their lives in these tragic incidents since February 24 and the situation is slowly returning to normal. However, hospital sources said the death toll has reached 38. Among the dead include two security personnel. Besides, nearly 70 police personnel and senior officers have suffered injuries. The home ministry requested the people not to lay credence to any rumour. The Delhi Police has set up helplines 22829334 and 22829335 for round-the-clock assistance. These numbers are being given adequate publicity so that information about miscreants and any emerging situation may be conveyed to police, the statement said. Adequate steps have been taken to ensure medical support to the injured, the ministry said. As a confidence-building measure among different sections of the society, the Delhi Police has started holding peace committee meetings across Delhi to normalise situation and improve inter-community harmony, the statement said. Such peace committee meetings would continue till situation normalises, it added. So far, the statement said, nearly 330 peace committee meetings have been organised in various districts of Delhi in the last two days. Apart from this, meeting with Residents Welfare Associations (RWA) and Market Welfare Associations (MWA) have also been convened in several areas. Such meetings have been attended by different sections of the society including civil society groups, representatives of different political parties including the Congress, the AAP, the BJP, etc, it said. The East Delhi Municipal Corporation has already initiated steps to clean the streets and repair damaged public properties in riot-affected areas, the statement said. Other civic agencies, it said, are also ensuring the civic amenities to the citizens is restored as soon as possible. Movement of traffic on the highway and connecting roads is returning to normal, the statement said. The Union Home Minister has appealed to citizens not to believe in rumours and fall prey to evil designs of miscreants and groups interested in precipitating communal tension. The statement said only 12 police stations out of the 203 PSs in Delhi (about 4.2 per cent of the geographical area) have been affected by the riots, while normalcy and communal harmony has prevailed elsewhere in the national capital. The Delhi Police is mandated and obligated to provide security to all sections of society irrespective of caste and religion, it said. For all the Latest India News, Download News Nation Android and iOS Mobile Apps. Melbourne: Experiencing job insecurity in the form of short-term contracts or casual work over a long period of time may negatively change an individual's personality, according to a study unveiled on Thursday. The study, published in the Journal of Applied Psychology, found that people exposed to job insecurity for more than four years became less emotionally stable, less agreeable, and had reduced conscientiousness. "Traditionally, we have thought about the short-term consequences of job insecurity -- that it hurts your well-being, physical health, sense of self-esteem," said Lena Wang from RMIT University in Australia. "But now we are looking at how that actually changes who you are as a person over time, a long-term consequence that you may not even be aware of," Wang said. The study used nationally representative data from Australia for 1,046 employees over a nine-year period. It applied a well-established personality framework known as the Big Five, which categorises human personality into five broad traits: emotional stability, agreeableness, conscientiousness, extraversion and openness. The results showed that long-term job insecurity negatively affected the first three traits, which relate to a person's tendency to reliably achieve goals, get along with others, and cope with stress. Wang said the results went against some assumptions about job insecurity. Also Read: Walnut Intake Linked To Healthy Ageing In Women: Study "Some might believe that insecure work increases productivity because employees will work harder to keep their jobs, but our research suggests this may not be the case if job insecurity persists," she said. The researchers found that those chronically exposed to job insecurity are more likely to withdraw their effort and shy away from building strong, positive working relationships, which can undermine their productivity in the long run. Previous research has shown that insecure work -- including labour hire practices, contract and casual work, and underemployment -- is on the rise globally. Also Read: Organic Holi: Heres How To Celebrate Festival With Natural Colours The data drew on responses from employees belonging to a broad cross-section of professions and jobs, who were asked about how secure they perceived their jobs to be. According to study lead author Chia-Huei Wu, a professor at Leeds University in the UK, types of job insecurity might include short-term contracts or casual work, jobs threatened by automation, and positions that could be in line for a redundancy. Wu said there are ways that employers can support workers who are feeling worried about their jobs. "This is as much about perceived job insecurity as actual insecure contracts," he said. IndiGo had last month suspended Kunal Kamra from flying with the private airline for six months. (Photo Credit: File Photo) New Delhi : Standup comedian Kunal Kamra on Thursday said he was neither sorry nor regretful of his actions, hours after IndiGo's internal panel decided to reduce the flying ban to three months. The reduction in ban period was informed by Indigo to the Delhi High Court on Thursday. "... I have no comment to offer on IndiGo banning me for 3 months instead of the 6 months now," Kamra said in a Facebook post on Thursday. In a statement, IndiGo said the airline's internal committee after hearing both parties passed an order. Pursuant to the order, Kamra has been suspended from flying for a period of three months. "IndiGo will comply with the order of the iternal committee," it added. "I trust the IndiGo pilot's e mail & social media has helped explain why I did what I did. All I'd like to say is that I am neither sorry nor regretful of my actions," Kamra said in the post. IndiGo had last month suspended Kamra from flying with the private airline for six months, after he allegedly heckled journalist Arnab Goswami aboard one of its planes. Kamra thereafter approached the Delhi High Court against his suspension. For all the Latest India News, Download News Nation Android and iOS Mobile Apps. New Delhi: International Womens Day 2020 is right at the corner and though the society celebrates the genesis of gender- equality on this day pledging to not subject women to any kind of discrimination, not everyone is well versed with its history and significance. The first Womens Day was commemorated on February 28, 1909 in New York by the Socialist Party of America and hence this day is the precursor of Womens Day. March 08 as international Womens Day was suggested by International Woman's Conference in 1910 and got its place in the global calendar since 1913 when Russia observed the day. Nevertheless, the first notable march by 5,000 women to raise their voice against oppression & inequality in New York City happened in 1908. The rights available to a woman (ladies) in India can be classified into two categories, namely as constitutional rights and legal rights. The constitutional rights. India has come a long way in ensuring equality for women from dowry prohibition laws to sexual harassment a workplace laws. A lot has been attained yet then a lot needs to be attained. Women's Day Date 2020: Quotes, Images, Whatsapp Messages Wishes Here are some powerful quotes by women leaders that will rekindle the spirit of feminism on the day when the first ever Womens Day was celebrated: Feminism isn't about making women strong. Women are already strong. It's about changing the way the world perceives that strength. G,D Anderson. There is no limit to what we, as women, can accomplish. Michelle Obama Think like a queen. A queen is not afraid to fail. Failure is another stepping-stone to greatness. Oprah No woman should be told she cant make decisions about her own body. When womens rights are under attack, we fight back. Kamal Harris. I do not wish women to have power over men; but over themselves. Mary Shelly A woman with a voice is, by definition, a strong woman. Melinda Gates. A Woman is like a teabag-you never know how string she is until she gets in hot water. Eleanor Roosevalt Also Read: International Womens Day 2020: Theme And Facts All You Need To Know One is not born a woman, one becomes one. Simone De Beauvoir There are no good girls gone wring-just bad girls found out Mae west. For all the Latest Lifestyle News, Others News, Download News Nation Android and iOS Mobile Apps. Patna: The Bihar Assembly on Thursday unanimously passed a resolution favouring a caste-based Census in 2021. Speaker Vijay Kumar Choudhary made the announcement in the Assembly during the pre-lunch session. Choudhary said Chief Minister Nitish Kumar had made a proposal in the House on Tuesday for passing a resolution in this regard. On Tuesday, the Bihar assembly had passed a resolution to not implement the National Register of Citizens (NRC) in the state. The assembly also passed a resolution to implement the National Population Register (NPR) in its 2010 form, with an amendment. Bihar Government has written to Centre seeking omission of 'Contentious Clauses' from the NPR forms, Chief Minister Nitish Kumar said in the state Assembly. New Delhi: The official death count in the northeast Delhi communal violence rose to 34 on Thursday as seven more fatalities were recorded at three hospitals in the city. Meanwhile, two bodies were pulled out of a drain in the Gokulpuri (Gokalpuri) area. While it is not clear whether these dead bodies are related to the violence, the discovery was made a day after an Intelligence Bureau staffer was found dead in a drain in Chand Bagh. The official count of casualties had stood at 27 till Wednesday night. "Five more deaths recorded at GTB Hospital, and one more death at LNJP Hospital. One fatality was reported at Jag Pravesh Chandra Hospital on Thursday, taking the total death toll to 34," a senior official of the Delhi Health Department told PTI. One person was declared brought dead by doctors, while another had died during treatment at the LNJP Hospital on Wednesday. Over 50 patients have been provided treatment at the LNJP Hospital since the violence broke out on Sunday in various parts of northeast Delhi, officials at the hospital said. More than 200 people have been injured in the violence that raged in the areas over the last few days. ALSO READ: Bernie Sanders Slams Donald Trump's Statement on Delhi Violence As 'Failure Of Leadership' Delhi remained on edge Thursday morning with security forces on alert in violence-affected areas. Delhi Police conducted a flag march in Maujpur on Thursday morning with heavy deployement in Jaffrabad, Seelampur and Babarpur. Delhi Special Commissioner of Police SN Srivastava took stock of the situation on Wednesday night. The CBSE Class 12 exam on Thursday has been postponed in the northeast and parts of east Delhi in view of the turbulent situation due to violence. The Delhi fire service said it received 19 calls from the riots affected area since midnight with more than 100 firemen deployed in these areas. However, unlike the last few days, they did not face any resistance while conducting their job. ALSO READ: Delhi Wakes Up To Uneasy Quiet After Days Of Communal Mayhem On Wednesday, there was violence in some areas places with shops set ablaze and the body of an IB staffer found in a drain. Police had conducted flag marches in riot-hit areas with security personnel spread out across the northeastern edge of the national capital in a bid to quell the violence raging since Sunday. The Delhi Police said it has arrested 106 people for their alleged involvement in the violence and have registered 18 FIRs so far. The Intelligence Bureau staffer, identified as Ankit Sharma, was found dead in a drain in Chand Bagh where he stayed. Sharma may have been killed in stone pelting, officials said. According to Guru Teg Bahadur (GTB) Hospital authorities, the thirty people have died there including nine received due to gun shot injuries. Two deaths were also reported on Wednesday at LNJP Hospital. (With PTI Inputs) Middle East operators have opened the first regional community lab in collaboration with Telecom Infra Project (TIP) and Intel, following the signing of the Open Radio Access Network (Open RAN) MoU last year. The move will accelerate the implementation of Open RAN solutions in their existing telecom networks in order to support the early adoption and development of a robust regional ICT ecosystem. Two new operators Batelco and Omantel have also signed the Open RAN MoU, joining the e& formerly known as Etisalat Group, stc, Zain Group, Mobily, and du from Emirates Integrated Telecommunications Company (EITC), in their commitment to deploy Open RAN across their footprint and enhance supreme network experiences for end-users. The Middle East lab will provide a platform for the parties to jointly deploy open and disaggregated technologies into their networks to optimise the online experiences of businesses and consumers. Flexible, interoperable and standards-based solutions such as Open RAN present a compelling opportunity for operators to become more efficient in meeting the ever-growing need for high bandwidth, low latency, and advanced connectivity. The lab will provide shared facilities and access to the most innovative Intel technologies for members and vendors, and catalyst for Open RAN deployments. Through the TIP end-to-end process, operators become empowered to deploy more flexible and resilient networks optimised for specific use cases. By sharing industry knowledge to align and prioritise their technical requirements, TIP participants contribute to the creation of centralised technical roadmaps that will set the direction for the development of new network infrastructure products and solutions. Operators can then leverage TIPs test and validation process to quickly and easily assess those products and solutions that will best contribute to the transformation of their networks. Mohamed Al Marzooqi, Vice President, Technology Synergies, e& said: More than ever, our customers rely on high-quality connectivity for their daily requirements. The need for such smart connectivity will only increase in the future. Im delighted to witness more operators from our region partnering with us in our efforts to position the Middle East as a global leader in developing and deploying such innovative network solutions. e& is committed to supporting technology and service innovation within the markets where we operate, through our participation in TIP and our partnership with Intel. We strongly believe open technologies present the right prospects to achieve this, while helping enhance the flexibility and efficiency of our networks. Nawaf Al Gharabally, Group's Chief Technology Officer, Zain, said: We are pleased to welcome Batelco and OmanTel to the MoU. Through broad regional alignment on Open RAN and standardisation over Intel technologies, we will provide a clear demand signal to the industry that reflects the needs of our respective markets and customers. The new [Open RAN Labs] is a testament to this. We will work together through this collaborative hub to find solutions that address the specific use cases we encounter in the Middle East and are an essential component to faster commercial deployments. We urge all regional players to join us in this drive to deliver new and innovative solutions. Referring to the operator collaboration, Rashid Mohamed, General Manager Networks, Batelco said: "This collaboration and alignment of operators on Open RAN is a milestone for the telecommunications ecosystem in the Middle East. It will create a more competitive and robust supply chain, leading to faster 5G deployment, network efficiencies, opportunities for new technology vendors, and unlock advanced services for customers. We are pleased to join other like-minded and leading organisations in amplifying innovative opportunities in the region. Bernhard Merwe, CTO, OmanTel commented: OmanTel is excited to be joining this ground-breaking MoU. This is an initiative that will help us deliver on our mission to provide the highest quality connectivity to our customers while also benefiting from the shared experiences of our community in deploying open network technologies. We see a clear opportunity to enhance the way we work with the vendor community and build a more resilient and diverse ecosystem that benefits the region as well as our industry. Hisham Alabdaly, GM Infrastructure Design, stc said: By partnering with TIP, Intel and the operator community in the Middle East, we are helping pioneer a new and innovative approach to developing the solutions that align with our strategic goals and best support the present and future needs of our customers. In doing so, we are also supporting the growth of our local ICT sectors because open network technologies like Open RAN provide a trusted avenue for new entrants in both the hardware and software space to work with service providers. Saleem Al Balooshi, Chief Technology Officer du commented: du is committed to improving its networks while boosting the digital economy by stimulating greater technological innovation. We are excited to take the next step in accelerating the pace of innovation and promote the development of an open technology that will help to enhance the flexibility, efficiency and security of our networks. This has multiple advantages for the customers as our networks will become highly programmable and automated, so we can foster collaboration and innovation, release new features quickly, provide capacity on demand, automate network management and deliver tailored enterprise solutions." Mohammed Al Atawi, VP Technology Governance, Mobily said: Mobily is already committed to making our vendors active partners in our business operations, and the move towards open network technologies is the next logical step in that journey. We believe the end-to-end process established by the Telecom Infra Project, supported by Intel standard technologies is the best way to ensure we all benefit from the paradigm shift that open and disaggregated technologies represent. We are confident of its cooperative test and validation framework where results and learnings are shared between industry players. Referring to the partnerships among regional mobile operators, Caroline Chan, VP, Network and Edge Group & TIP Board Member, Intel said: This is a great example of how industry collaboration can accelerate the shift toward a software-defined infrastructure at the network edge. A virtualised, Open RAN is an area of tremendous innovation, which can be further propelled by leveraging Intels FlexRAN reference architecture with optimised software and hardware components. The lab opens new possibilities to innovate 5G services that can accelerate the digital transformation in the Middle East. Vish Mathur, Head of Engagement Telecom Infra Project highlighted the shared responsibility of each telco operator in the successful deployment of Open RAN. He said: Regional collaborations on Open RAN development, such as the Middle East MoU and the European MoU, clearly illustrate the growing momentum behind disaggregated technologies in our industry. He added: While specific use cases may differ depending on the region, the need for these technologies is universal. TIP and Intel play a key role in this context, bringing together stakeholders from across the world, such as the MoU signatories, to accelerate the development of a critical mass of open and disaggregated network solutions in response to operators needs. We hope to see more regional initiatives that leverage TIP and welcome all industry organisations to join our efforts to advance global connectivity.-- TradeArabia News Service New Delhi : A Congress delegation led by interim party chief Sonia Gandhi submitted a memorandum on Delhi riots to President Ram Nath Kovind on Thursday. After meeting the President, Gandhi said that he must call for immediate removal of Union Home Minister Amit Shah over his failure to control the violence in North-East Delhi. We call upon you (President) to ensure that life, liberty, & property of citizens are preserved, Gandhi said after submitted the memorandum. Former Prime Minister Manmohan Singh termed the violence as matter of national shame. The attack is in continuation of what the Congress has been saying since the emergency meeting of its highest decision-making body CWC in New Delhi. In the memorandum, the Congress questioned the way authorities both at the Centre and state level reacted even as Delhi was burning. Where was the Home Minister and what was he preoccupied with since last Sunday that he was unable, apparently, to give his attention to these grave events? For that matter, the Delhi Chief Minister, and the newly elected Delhi Government was also completely missing from the scene, the Congress asked. There is no option left but to demand the immediate sacking of the Home Minister, who has utterly and abjectly failed in the performance of his primary and principal duties, the Congress said in the memorandum to the President. The situation is so grim that the Delhi High Court has had to step in (on February 26th, 2020) and remind the Home Ministry and the Police of their principal duty to act against instigators, the rioters and those engaging in the acts of targeted violence. This is a shameful indictment of the Central Government, the Home Ministry and the Home Minister himself, the Congress further said. Meanwhile, the death count in the Delhi violence rose to 34 on Thursday with two more bodies being found inside a drain in Gokulpuri (Gokalpuri) area of North East Delhi while three more deaths were reported at Guru Teg Bahadur (GTB) Hospital. The two bodies were discovered a day after an Intelligence Bureau staffer was found dead in a drain in Chand Bagh. Meanwhile, Delhi remained on edge Thursday morning with security forces on alert in violence-affected areas. Delhi Police conducted a flag march in Maujpur on Thursday morning with heavy deployement in Jaffrabad, Seelampur and Babarpur. Delhi Special Commissioner of Police SN Srivastava took stock of the situation on Wednesday night. (With agency inputs) New Delhi: Gudi Pawda, one of the most popular summertime festivals of Maharashtra will be held on March 25 this year according to the Shalivahan Shaka calendar. The people from Maharashtra ushers in their new year with much traditional fervour by hoisting the Gudhi (victory flags) in front of the homes. According to the Marathi calender, their new year starts on the first day of Chaitra. Households witness hectic activities that starts with erecting the traditional aGudia a long bamboo stick with a dangling neem stick, a garland and a new silk cloth , essentially to A to commemorate the victories of Chatrapati Shivaji Maharaj. The aGuddia flag also has a silver or metal pot on it. According to the folklore Gudi Padwa celebrates the deafeat of Shakas by Shalivahan and the the long aGudia symbolises victory and incite mothe material and spiritual prosperity. The women remain extremely busy at the kitchen as Maharashtrian delicacies from Shrikhand, Puran Poli to Sunth Paak, Aambe Dal is savoured by the people after the puja.A Small and big businessmen conduct avaastu pujaa. The day is also considered auspicious for opening new business establishments. Children rejoice at community processions dancing to Marathi songs in traditional attire. A Farmers in the state plough the field on the day as it is belived this auspicious day will bring them good lick and great harvest in the coming agricultural season. Several mythological incidents are associated with the festival, some of the most popular ones that are recited on the day are atheory of creationaA. It is also believed that on this day Lord Ram returned to Ayodhya after defeating King Ravana in Lanka. Gudu Padwa Puja Customs and Rituals The head of the family conduct a special puja making offering to lord Ganesha Lakshmi, Saraswati for the wellbeing of their family and to keep them away from calamities and difficulties. A The offerings made to the deities consists of neem flowers, jaggery, soaked dal, honey, cumin seeds and the kinds that signifies a prosperous life. A People hang a Toran made of mango leaves on the front door. They then decorate the doorsteps with red flowers. Rangolis with a swastika design are drawn. Rice powder, vermillion and turmeric are used to draw the Rangoli. For all the Latest Lifestyle News, Religion News, Download News Nation Android and iOS Mobile Apps. New Delhi : SN Shrivastava, a 1985 batch AGMUT cadre officer, was appointed as the new Delhi Police Commissioner on Friday. Shrivastava takes over as the Delhi top cop a day before incumbent Amulya Patnaik's extended tenure is set to end on February 29. Earlier on February 26, Shrivastava was appointed as the new Delhi Police Special Commissioner (Law and Order). He was repatriated from the CRPF by the Union Home Ministry amid sharp criticism of the Delhi Police for its alleged apathy during the riots in North-East district. There was lots of buzz in power corridor that Shrivastava will be next Delhi Police Commissioner. On Thursday, he had also visited the riot-hit areas of the North-East Delhi to restore peoples faith in khaki. The Delhi Police has faced lot of backlash for allegedly not working diligently to quell the riots and act on time. In the 38 casualties in Delhi riots, there is one police constable. A DCP rank officer suffered head injury and had to undergo a brain surgery at a hospital in east Delhi. Shrivastava will have a huge responsibility to uplift the morale of the force. Many term Patnaik's quiet exit amid the outrage over the Delhi riots as honourable. From general public to political leaders, there was a widespread demand of Patnaiks removal after the Maujpur mayhem. However, an IANS report said that Patnaik didnt face a wrath as he was close to a senior bureaucrat in Prime Ministers Office. In fact, the IANS report added that when rioters ran amok on the streets of Jaffrabad, Ghonda and Bhajanpura, Patnaik was lobbying for postings of his favourite officers. The Opposition had said the very fact that the Prime Minister had to send National Security Advisor Ajit Doval to the riot-hit areas was testimony of Patnaiks abject failure. Back in November last year, the men and women of the Delhi Police staged protests against Patnaik after the showdown with the lawyers. After the violence in the Capital triggered massive dissent and crictisism over incompetence on part of Delhi Police, an NDTV report said how Patnaik used back door at home ministry to avoid media glare. Patnaik was appointed the Delhi Police chief in January 2017. He got a one-month extension due to the Delhi Assembly Elections. (With agency inputs) Mumbai: Maharashtra Home Minister Anil Deshmukh on Thursday told the Legislative Council that 348 cases related to the Koregaon Bhima violence have been withdrawn by the state government so far. He said this in response to a query by Congress legislator Sharad Ranpise. "Of the total 649 cases filed against several people in Koregaon Bhima violence, 348 cases have been withdrawn so far. Rest of the cases will be withdrawn as and when the inquiry gets over," he said. Deshmukh also said that the state government was considering to set up an inquiry commission under the Maharashtra Police Act to probe the Elgar Parishad case. He said he was disappointed over the way the National Investigation Agency (NIA) took over the probe into the Elgar Parishad case. Alos Read | ''Maha' Crisis Again: Uddhav Thackeray In Damage Control Mode, Says Bhima Koregaon Case Not Transferred To NIA The minister said he had received several representations complaining that the previous BJP-led dispensation stamped the people who spoke against the government as "urban naxals". According to Pune police, the Elgar Parishad conclave held in Pune on December 31, 2017, was supported by Maoists and inflammatory speeches made at the event led to caste violence at Koregaon Bhima war memorial in the district the next day. The Centre had last month transferred the probe into the Elgar Parishad case from the Pune Police to the NIA, a move then criticised by the Maharashtra Vikas Aghadi (MVA) government of Shiv Sena-NCP-Congress. However, the state government had later changed its stand and said that it had no objection to the central agency taking over the probe. Responding a query by BJP member Vinayak Mete about whether cases filed against Maratha youths during the protests over reservation for the community have been withdrawn, Deshmukh said, "Of the total 548 cases, 460 have been withdrawn so far." Also Read | Constitutionally Wrong: Sharad Pawar Takes On Uddhav Thackeray Over Transfer Of Bhima-Koregaon Case To NIA "Similarly out of the total five cases filed in connection with the agitation against the proposed Nanar refinery project, the state government has so far withdrawn three cases," he added. Talking to reporters outside the state legislature later, Deshmukh said, "These cases have been withdrawn as per norms." New Delhi: As deadly clashes between Hindu and Muslim groups rocked parts of Delhi this week, the family of a young Hindu woman living in a Muslim-majority area was forced to cancel her wedding. Dressed in her wedding finery, her hands laced maroon with henna and her skin cleansed with turmeric, 23-year-old Savitri Prasad said she was weeping in her home as violent mobs battled outside on Tuesday, which was to have been her wedding day. But Savitri's father then organised the wedding for the following day, saying his Muslim neighbours were family and he was comforted by their presence. "My Muslim brothers are protecting me today," Savitri told a Reuters team that visited the house on the day of the ceremony, breaking down again as her family and neighbours comforted her. The rituals took place at Savitri's home, a small brick building in a narrow alley in the Chand Bagh district. Steps away, the main street looked like a war zone, with cars and shops vandalised, a Muslim shrine torched and the area littered with rocks used in pitched battles between mobs on both sides. At least 38 people have been killed in the fighting in Chand Bagh and nearby areas of the capital this week, and hundreds of Hindus and Muslims have been injured in the worst sectarian riots in the Indian capital in decades. Also Read | IB Operative Ankit Sharma Died After Being Stabbed Multiple Times: Post-Mortem Report "We went to the terrace and just saw smoke and more smoke," Bhoday Prasad, Savitri's father, said of the scene on Monday and Tuesday. "It is terrifying. We just want peace." Bhoday Prasad said he has lived in the area for years alongside Muslims without any trouble. "We don't know who the people behind the violence are, but they are not my neighbours. There is no enmity between Hindus and Muslims here." On Monday evening, the day Savitri was to have henna applied on her hands in a pre-wedding ritual, violence had already spiralled out of control. "We could hear a lot of commotion outside, but I had the henna applied, hoping things would be better next day," she said. Instead, they got worse. Her father told the groom and his family it was too dangerous to come to the house. "Our heart pains for her, who would want their daughter to be sitting home crying when she is supposed to be happy?" said Sameena Begum, one of the Muslim neighbours. Violence ebbed on Wednesday, but markets remained shut and residents stayed indoors, fearful of further clashes. Savitris father said he decided to organise a scaled-down ceremony. Also Read | No Major Incident In Northeast Delhi In Last 36 Hours, Over 500 Held For Questioning: MHA "Hindu or Muslim, we are all humans and we are all terrified of the violence," said Savitri's cousin Pooja, as she helped the bride dress for the ceremony. "This fight was not about religion, but it has been made so." Muslim neighbours gathered to offer blessings as the groom arrived and the wedding rituals took place, with a Hindu priest reciting holy verses and the groom and bride taking the rounds of a small pyre set up inside the house. "We live peacefully with our Hindu brothers," said Aamir Malik, who was standing guard with several other men outside the home. "We are everything for them. It's been like that. We are here for them." Following an exchange of garlands, Savitri, her husband and his family were escorted out of the alleys by her family and neighbours. "Today, none of our relatives could attend my daughter's wedding," said Bhoday Prasad. "But our Muslim neighbours are here. They are our family." New Delhi: Martyrs' Day or Shaheed Diwas is celebrated every year on March 23 to remember the supreme sacrifices of all the freedom fighters who gave their lives for Indias Independence from the British rule. Freedom fighters list is uncountable but these three pillars can never be forgotten: Shaheed Bhagat Singh, Sukhdev, and Rajguru. The names whose sacrifices bring goosebumps and enthusiasm amongst us. It is to be noted that Bhagat Singh, Sukhdev, and Rajguru were hanged to death on March 23, 1931 in Lahore conspiracy case by the British Government. By hanging these brave freedom fighters, the British government believed that Indians will be scared and forget the spirit of Independence. However, Bhagat Singh, Sukhdev, and Rajgurus hanging increased the spirit of Independence in such a way that thousands of patriots tied the shroud on the head and waged patriotic war against the British. On March 23, the whole country will offer tribute to these immortal bravehearts who reach the echo of Inklab, on their martyrdom. News Nation brings you the top 10 inspirational quotes on martyrs and martyrdom that will give you goosebumps. Top 10 Inspirational Quotes: Shaheed Bhagat Singh: "Zindagi Apne Dum Par Ji Jaati Hai, Dusro Ke Kandhon Par To Sirf Janaje Uthate Hai." Miguel de Unamuno: "It is truer to say that martyrs create faith more than faith creates martyrs." Thomas Jefferson: "The tree of liberty must be refreshed from time to time with the blood of patriots and tyrants." Napoleon Bonaparte: "It is the cause, not the death, that makes the martyr." Indira Gandhi: "Martyrdom does not end something, it only a beginning." Florence Nightingale: "The martyr sacrifices themselves entirely in vain. Or rather not in vain; for they make the selfish more selfish, the lazy more lazy, the narrow narrower." Soren Kierkegaard: "The tyrant dies and his rule is over, the martyr dies and his rule begins." Aleister Crowley: "The people who have really made history are the martyrs." Horace Mann: "It is more difficult, and it calls for higher energies of soul, to live a martyr than to die one." Abraham Lincoln: "A nation that does not honour its heroes (martyrs) will not long endure." It is worth mentioning here that Martyrs Day or Shaheed Diwas is also celebrated on January 30 to pay homage to the victims who fought for the freedom, glory, welfare and progress of India. Also Read: Shaheed Diwas: Here are some powerful quotes by iconic freedom fighter Bhagat Singh Other than January 30 and March 23 Martyrs' Day or Shaheed Diwas is also celebrated on different days in different places: July 13 is celebrated as the Martyr's Day in Jammu and Kashmir to memorise the death of 22 people. November 17th is celebrated as Martyr's Day in Odisha to observe the death anniversary of Lala Lajpat Ray. November 19 is celebrated as Martyr's Day in the Jhansi. As, on 19th November, Rani Lakshmi Bai was born and sacrificed her life during the 1857 revolt. (With Agencies Input) For all the Latest India News, Download News Nation Android and iOS Mobile Apps. Mumbai: Tourists visiting Mumbai will soon be able to watch a ceremonial drill at the state police headquarters on the lines of the famous Changing The Guard ceremony at Buckingham Palace. The announcement was made by Maharashtra Tourism Minister Aaditya Thackeray. The government was also considering allowing tourists to walk through the headquarters of the Brihanmumbai Municipal Corporation, which is a heritage structure dating to colonial era, he said. "Our ceremony is very colourful and the Director General of Police's office will have the ceremonial drill just like the one at Buckingham Palace," Thackeray said, speaking at an event organised by the Confederation of Indian Industry (CII). The police headquarters, which housed the state legislature in the past, is located near the Gateway of India, a major tourist attraction. Thackeray said the government wants to develop Mumbai as the "Gateway to India". A policy on beach shacks would be rolled out within a month, he said, stating that the 700-km long coastline of Maharashtra offers immense tourism potential. Plans are afoot to provide night landing facility at the airport at Shirdi which houses a famous Saibaba temple, and to create additional parking facility at the Kolhapur airport, Thackeray aded. The state government has also decided to invest Rs 150 crore for upgrading infrastructure in Aurangabad, a gateway to tourist attractions such as Ajanta and Ellora Caves. The government will rope in the private sector for developing tourism through policy decisions such as allowing private firms to manage properties owned by the state, the minister said. On the lukewarm response to allowing malls and eateries in some areas of Mumbai to function all night, which was his pet idea, Thackeray said it should not be misconstrued as a festival and it is a change in lifestyle that the administration is driving. Taking a dig at Prime Minister Narendra Modi's monthly radio address, Thackeray said he would like to hear "everyone's Mann Ki Baat" if he made it to the top job in the country, and quipped that the industry lobby's backing will help him reach there. He also underlined virtues of civil liberties and said the state government, headed by his father Uddhav Thackeray, will ensure its protection. New Delhi: The Delhi Police on Thursday sealed a factory belonging to Aam Aadmi Party (AAP) councillor Tahir Hussain whose alleged involvement in the Delhi violence has culminated into a fresh round of mud-slinging between the AAP, BJP and Congress on the issue. Tahir Hussain, however denied any involvement in the riots or the killing of an Intelligence Bureau staffer whose family accused him of being behind the murder, saying these are "baseless accusations". He called for an impartial probe into the incident and said action should be taken against the guilty. "It is wrong to target me. I and my family have nothing to do with it," Hussain said. The AAP leader also demanded strict action against BJP leaders responsible for giving inflammatory speeches. Also Read | 'No Rioter From Whichever Party They Belong Should Be Spared': Arvind Kejriwal On AAP Councillor Tahir Hussain Ankit Sharma (26), who worked for the Intelligence Bureau (IB), had gone missing on Tuesday and his body was found in a drain near his home in northeast Delhis riot-hit Chand Bagh area on Wednesday. His family members claimed that the local councillor and his associates were behind the killing. Hussain has rejected the allegations. "I came to know from news reports that I am being blamed for the murder of a man. These are lies and baseless accusations. For our safety, my family and I had moved away from our home on Monday in police presence," he said. Earlier in the evening, Delhi Chief Minister and AAP convenor Arvind Kejriwal held a press briefing and urged police to take stern action against the rioters irrespective of the parties they belong. Speaking for the first time on alleged involvement of AAP councillor Tahir Hussain in the communal riots in northeast Delhi, Chief Minister Arvind Kejriwal on Thursday said no person from whichever party they belong to should be spared and should be given stringent punishment. Also Read | Farishte Scheme Will Be Extended To Riot Affected People In Both Private And Govt Hospitals: Arvind Kejriwal "Any person who is found guilty should be given stringent punishment. If any Aam Aadmi Party (AAP) person is found guilty then that person should be given double the punishment. There should be no politics on the issue of national security," Kejriwal said while addressing the media. Senior AAP leader Sanjay Singh also said the partys stand remains clear that strictest punishment must be taken against anyone associated with spreading violence and added that Hussain has given his statement on the matter. Thirty-four people have been killed and over 200 injured in the communal clashes that broke out in northeast Delhi three days ago after violence between anti and pro Citizenship (Amendment) Act groups spiralled out of control. Frenzied mobs torched houses, shops, vehicles, a petrol pump and pelted stones at locals and police personnel. Jaffrabad, Maujpur, Babarpur, Yamuna Vihar, Bhajanpura, Chand Bagh and Shiv Vihar are among the areas mainly affected by the riots. (With agency inputs) Britain's exit from the EU will end the current free movement of people from within the economic bloc at the end of the Brexit transition period on December 31 this year. (Photo Credit: File Photo) London: Indians have emerged as the fastest growing nationality for student visa applications to the UK, new official statistics released here on Thursday revealed. The UK's Office for National Statistics (ONS) found that over 37,500 Indian students received a Tier 4 (Study) visa in 2019, which marks a 93 per cent increase from the previous year and the largest number of visas issued in the Tier 4 category to Indians over the last eight years. Indian professionals also held on to their global lead in the Tier 2 skilled visa category for the UK, with over 57,000 visas granted to Indian workers last year - accounting for over 50 per cent of all such visas. This phenomenal increase in student visa numbers is testament both to the UK's world leading education system and to the exceptional talents of Indian students, said Jan Thompson, Acting High Commissioner to India. We couldn't be prouder that the best and brightest continue to pick the UK, making the living bridge between our countries stronger each day, she said. The introduction of a new Graduate Visa route, launched recently for the 2020-21 intake of international students, is likely to have a further impact on this upward trend from India, with its two-year post-study work option. Barbara Wickham, Director India, British Council, added: It is exciting to see so many Indian students trusting the UK as the destination for their education and furthering their careers. This bodes very well for both countries' continued focus on realising their knowledge ambitions in a fast changing world. The UK also continued to be a popular destination for Indian holidaymakers, with more than 515,000 Indian nationals being granted visit or tourist visas last year - an 8 per cent increase compared to the previous year. The overall statistics show that in 2019, 95 per cent of Indian nationals who applied for a UK visa were successful, an increase of 5 per cent over 2018. The latest ONS figures reveal a broader post-Brexit trend of rising migration from outside the European Union (EU), set for a further hike once the UK government's new points-based system kicks in from January 1, 2021. EU net migration has fallen, while non-EU net migration has gradually increased since 2013 and is now at the highest level since 2004, said Jay Lindop, Director of the Centre for International Migration at the ONS. Since 2016, immigration for work has decreased because of fewer EU citizens arriving for a job. Meanwhile, immigration for study has gone up and is now the main reason for migration. This is driven by more non-EU students arriving, specifically Chinese and Indian, said Lindop. Britain's exit from the EU will end the current free movement of people from within the economic bloc at the end of the Brexit transition period on December 31 this year, bringing EU and non-EU migrants under one system. We are ending free movement and will introduce an Immigration Bill to bring in a firm and fair points-based system that will attract the high-skilled workers we need to contribute to our economy, our communities and our public services," the Home Office has said. "We intend to create a high wage, high-skill, high productivity economy, it said in its policy document for the new points-based system, which the Prime Minister Boris Johnson led government hopes will ultimately bring down overall migration into the UK. New Delhi: Amazon founder and CEO Jeff Bezos retained the top spot in the list of richest persons in the world. According to the ninth annual Hurun Global Rich List, Amazon has lost USD 7 billion in one year. Bezos has retained the top spot for the third year with an estimated net worth of USD 140 billion. French billionaire business magnate Bernard Arnault ranked second, with an estimated worth of USD 107 billion, up USD 21 billion from last year, according to Hurun Global Rich List 2020. Microsoft founder Bill Gates and Warren Buffett were on third and fourth spots, respectively. Mukesh Ambani, Reliance Industries (RIL) Chairman, also featured in the list with a net worth of USD 67 billion. He is the only Indian who managed to grab a spot in the top 10 list. Ambani, 62, ranked among 10 richest billionaires for the second time after a USD 13 billion or 24 per cent jump in his wealth to USD 67 billion. According to a recent global rich list, Banker Uday Kotak is now the worlds richest self-made banker. The Indian billionaire banker is the executive vice chairman and managing director of Kotak Mahindra Bank. Also Read | Reliance To Merge Media, Distribution Businesses Into Network18 According to the Hurun Global Rich List for 2020, "With a net worth of Rs 1,04,300 crore ($15 bn), Kotak has stormed into global 100 making him the richest self-made banker in the world." The Kotak Mahindra Bank chairman holds the 91st rank in the list. Hinduja group's SP Hinduja and family (USD 27 billion), Adani group Chairman Gautam Adani (USD 17 billion), HCL's Shiv Nadar and family (USD 17 billion), ArcelorMittal's Lakshmi N Mittal (USD 15 billion), and Kotak Mahindra Bank's Uday Kotak (USD 15 billion), were among other Indians who featured in the top 100 of Hurun Global Rich List. Also Read | How Will It Impact Indian Telecom Sector If Vodafone Idea Disconnects? Bezos, Arnault, Gates and Buffett were the only four billionaires on the list with wealth over $100 billion. According to Business Today, Hurun Report India MD and chief researcher Anas Rahman Junaid said, "Indian billionaires are defying gravity. The structural slowdown in the economy does not seem to hamper the growth of Indians in the Hurun Global Rich List. The missing pieces in the puzzle are automobile and the real estate sector and we expect exponential wealth creation in those sectors in the coming years." "If the economy were to grow apace to meet the $5 trillion target, the total wealth creation would at least double the current value," Junaid added. For all the Latest Business News, Download News Nation Android and iOS Mobile Apps. Global technology company Zoho recorded a 45 per cent growth in Bahrain in 2021 and increased its channel partner network by 54 per cent. The announcement was made during Zoholics Bahrain, the company's annual user conference being held at The Intercontinental Bahrain. "Zoho's growth in the region is largely underpinned by local businesses realising the power of SaaS applications, as they reap benefits of digitising their operations. The breadth and depth of Zoho's product portfolio, which includes over 50 business apps and our integrated suite Zoho One, enables businesses to digitise every aspect of their operations, without worrying about data silos or integration hassles," said Hyther Nizam, President MEA, Zoho Corp. "Our vision for transnational localism has also helped us expand organically in the region, a strategy where our company growth is rooted in local business ecosystem development and community progress. Aside from increasing our on-ground presence with new offices and hiring local talent, our focus over the year has been on serving regional customer needs like local payment gateway integration, and enabling tech accessibility through partnerships with government bodies and local business networks," he added. In 2021, Zoho partnered with Dubai Culture to help make enterprise technology available to solopreneurs, and businesses of all sizes. As part of its growth strategy, Zoho is hiring locally, increasing its partner network and collaborating with local organisations to serve local businesses, while making its globally popular apps available and accessible to everyone. The company has also invested in upskilling initiatives, such as partnering with Emirates Academy of Hospitality Management to train their first-year BBA students in the 'Role of technology in business management'. "During the pandemic and its multiple waves, we have seen a surge in demand for customer experience platform, low-code platform and business intelligence offerings, as they became instrumental for any business to stay operational and react to the quickly changing market demands," said Ali Shabdar, Regional Director for MEA, Zoho Corp. "Zoho One the operating system for business, which unifies over 45 apps built on the same technology stack that contextually integrate with one another and are supported by a common data model allows business owners to transcend departmental silos, unify processes, and further leverage cross-functional smart reporting and analytics by combining data across different departments. This is an attractive offering for any business. Availability of RTL Arabic language support in our major apps such as CRM, Books and Creator, and other attributes like ease of use and affordable pricing have helped increase the adoption of our solutions in the region, he added. GROWTH IN MEA In 2021, Zoho grew by 52 per cent in the Middle East and Africa region, which is the second highest growing region for the company. It grew its partner network by 55 per cent and tripled its workforce in the region. The company also established its presence in seven countries, and set up new offices in Saudi Arabia, Egypt and South Africa. In 2022, Zoho plans to open offices in Kenya, Nigeria and three other countries, with Dubai serving as the regional headquarters. It also plans to continue hiring locally in other countries to serve its customers, as it expands its footprints across the region. Tradearabia News Service New Delhi: Renowned lyricist Javed Akhtar on Thursday questioned Delhi police action to seal the house of Aam Aadmi Party (AAP) councillor Tahir Hussain, who is allegedly involved in the communal riots that erupted in Northeast Delhi in which more than 30 people have lost their lives. Javed Akhtar took to Twitter and wrote, "So many killed, so many injured, so many house burned, so many shops looted so many people turned destitutes but police has sealed only one house and looking for his owner. Incidentally his name is Tahir. Hats off to the consistency of the Delhi police." The Delhi police on Thursday sealed Hussains factory located at North East Delhi's Khajoori Khaas area. Tahir Hussain, on the other hand, denied any involvement in the riots or the killing of an Intelligence Bureau staffer whose family accused him of being behind the murder, saying these are "baseless accusations". Also Read | Anti-CAA Protests: Police Seal Factory Belonging To AAP Councillor Tahir Hussain In Northeast Delhi He called for an impartial probe into the incident and said action should be taken against the guilty. "It is wrong to target me. I and my family have nothing to do with it," Hussain said. The AAP leader also demanded strict action against BJP leaders responsible for giving inflammatory speeches. Ankit Sharma (26), who worked for the Intelligence Bureau (IB), had gone missing on Tuesday and his body was found in a drain near his home in northeast Delhis riot-hit Chand Bagh area on Wednesday. His family members claimed that the local councillor and his associates were behind the killing. Hussain has rejected the allegations. "I came to know from news reports that I am being blamed for the murder of a man. These are lies and baseless accusations. For our safety, my family and I had moved away from our home on Monday in police presence," he said. Also Read | Farishte Scheme Will Be Extended To Riot Affected People In Both Private And Govt Hospitals: Arvind Kejriwal Earlier in the evening, Delhi Chief Minister and AAP convenor Arvind Kejriwal held a press briefing and urged police to take stern action against the rioters irrespective of the parties they belong. Speaking for the first time on alleged involvement of AAP councillor Tahir Hussain in the communal riots in northeast Delhi, Chief Minister Arvind Kejriwal on Thursday said no person from whichever party they belong to should be spared and should be given stringent punishment. "Any person who is found guilty should be given stringent punishment. If any Aam Aadmi Party (AAP) person is found guilty then that person should be given double the punishment. There should be no politics on the issue of national security," Kejriwal said while addressing the media. New Delhi: Shiromani Akali Dal (SAD) MP Naresh Gujral said on Thursday that the Delhi Police's inaction towards protecting the lives and properties of minorities in the national capital is a reminiscent of the 1984 anti-Sikh riots. The lawmaker, whose party is a BJP ally, said no one wants a repeat of what happened in 1984. Speaking to PTI after shooting off a letter to Delhi Police chief Amulya Patnaik, Gujral, the son of former prime minister IK Gujral, said that minorities in certain parts of Delhi are "frightened". Because their lives and properties have not been protected by the Delhi Police, which is very similar to what we saw in 1984. It's shocking. In his letter, which has also been marked to Union Home Minister Amit Shah and Delhi's Lieutenant Governor Anil Baijal, the MP has slammed the Police for allegedly not acting on his call on Wednesday, informing them that a group of 16 people from the minority community was trapped in a house surrounded by rioters and needed help. When a member of parliament's complaint is not paid heed to, one can imagine the plight of the common man. No sane Indian wants a repeat of 1984, Gujral said. Also Read | Delhi Violence: Petrol Bombs, Stones Found At AAP Leader Tahir Hussain's Rooftop- Watch In the letter, he has said that at around 11:30 pm on Wednesday, he received a call from an acquaintance from the minority community that he and 15 others were trapped in a house near Gonda Chowk in Maujpur and a mob was trying to break in. Gujral said he called the police for assistance and introduced himself as a member of parliament, and hoped that the distressed people would have got help. However, much to my disappointment, no action was taken on my complaint and the 16 individuals received no assistance from the Delhi Police. They fortunately managed to escape only because some Hindu neighbours came to their rescue. Also Read | CBSE Postpones Class 10, 12 Exams Scheduled On February 28, 29 In Violence-Hit Northeast Delhi If this is the situation when a MP makes a complaint personally, it is not surprising that certain parts of Delhi continue to burn while the police stand by apathetically, he wrote in his letter to the Delhi police chief. New Delhi : The Narendra Modi government has rejected the controversy over Justice S Muralidhars transfer to Punjab and Haryana High Court. Union Minister Ravi Shankar Prasad took to Twitter to make the point that the judge was shunted out as per the procedure and there is no scope of any controversy over the timing of the order. Transfer of Honble Justice Muralidhar was done pursuant to the recommendation dated 12.02.2020 of the Supreme Court collegium headed by Chief Justice of India. While transferring the judge consent of the judge is taken. The well settled process have been followed, Prasad said in a series of tweets. Attacking the Congress over creating the issue out of a normal procedure, Prasad further said that, By politicising a routine transfer, Congress has yet again displayed its scant regard for the judiciary. People of India have rejected Congress Party and hence it is hell bent on destroying the very institutions India cherishes by constantly attacking them. On Rahul Gandhis Twitter dig, Prasad said that, The Loya judgement has been well settled by the Supreme Court. Those raising questions do not respect the judgment of the Apex Court pronounced after elaborate arguments. Does Rahul Gandhi consider himself above even the Supreme Court? We respect independence of judiciary. Record of Congress in compromising independence of judiciary, superseding judges even of Supreme Court during Emergency is well known. They rejoice only when the judgment is of their liking otherwise raise questions on the institutions itself. The Party, which is the private property of one family, has no right to lecture about objectionable speeches. The family & its cronies have routinely used the harshest words against the Courts, the Army, the CAG, the PM and the people of India, the minister said on micro-blogging site. Without taking any name, Rahul Gandhi took a dig at the Narendra Modi government and the reference was unmissable Remembering the brave Judge Loya, who wasnt transferred, Gandhi said on Twitter. Special CBI Judge BH Loya, who was hearing the high-profile Sohrabuddin Sheikh fake encounter case of Gujarat, had died of cardiac arrest in Nagpur on December 1, 2014, when he had gone to attend the wedding of a colleague's daughter. His sister and Congress general secretary Priyanka Gandhi Vadra was more specific in her scathing attack. Posting news article along with this circular of Justice Murlidhars transfer, Priyanka Gandhi Vadra said that the government was trying to muzzle justice. Justice Murlidhar, while hearing the case related to Delhi riots, had ordered FIR against BJP leaders including Kapil Mishra. It should be noted that the Supreme Court Collegium, in a March 12 meeting, had recommended Justice Murlidhars transfer. "In exercise of the power conferred by clause (1) of Article 222 of the Constitution of India, the President, after consultation with the Chief Justice of India, is pleased to transfer Shri Justice S Muralidhar, Judge of the Delhi High Court, as a Judge of the Punjab and Haryana High Court and to direct him to assume charge of his office in the Punjab and Haryana High Court," the governments midnight notification said. For all the Latest India News, Download News Nation Android and iOS Mobile Apps. Owaisi was scheduled to address the rally at Parshuram Taware Stadium in Dhobi Talao area of Bhiwandi 6 pm onwards. (Photo Credit: PTI File) Mumbai: A public rally against CAA, NRC and NPR, scheduled to be addressed by AIMIM chief Asaduddin Owaisi at Bhiwandi in Maharashtras Thane district on Thursday evening, has been put off following a request by the police, an official said. The police had requested the organisers to postpone the rally in view of the prevailing situation in the country, he said. Owaisi was scheduled to address the rally at Parshuram Taware Stadium in Dhobi Talao area of Bhiwandi 6 pm onwards. The local unit of All India Majlis-e-Ittehad-ul-Muslimeen (AIMIM) had organised the rally. However, the Bhoiwada Police Station on Wednesday sent a letter to the partys local unit, urging it to postpone the the event. The police sent a letter to the organisers and requested them to postpone the public meeting considering the prevailing situation in the country and the organisers agreed to the request, DCP (Zone II) Rajkumar Shinde said. Taking to Twitter, AIMIM MP from Aurangabad Imtiaz Jaleel said, AIMIM chief MP Asad Owaisi public meeting in Bhivandi, Mumbai to be held today evening stands postponed after police denies permission and request the event to be held at a later date. We assure that same would now be held in 2nd week of March under leadership of Mr Khalid Guddu. Mohammad Khalid Mukhtar Shaikh (Guddu) is the Bhiwandi city unit president of the party. For all the Latest India News, Download News Nation Android and iOS Mobile Apps. Security personnel from the Delhi Police and the para forces conducted flag marches in the riot-hit North-East Delhi maintain peace. (Photo Credit: Reuters Photo) New Delhi : Delhi Riots: With no fresh incident of violence and arson reported on Thursday, the North-East Delhi is limping back to normalcy. The number of casualties in the riots continues to rise. As of now, 34 deaths were confirmed by officials so far. Almost half of those who died in the riots suffered gunshots. As many as three bodies, including IB officer Ankit Sharma, have been pulled out of drains in the violence-hit areas. Thursday saw new controversy over an AAP councillors role in inciting the riots. News Nation team also visited the house of the AAP councillor, where glass bottles, petrol bombs and stones were found on the terrace of the building. On other hand, the Delhi High Court is also hearing the matter related to the Delhi violence. Follow News Nations LIVE BLOG to read about accurate and verified developments from the region: 18:13 (IST) Facebook Twitter Whats app Linked In Police seals a factory belonging to AAP Councillor Tahir Hussain in North East Delhi's Khajoori Khaas area. 17:59 (IST) Facebook Twitter Whats app Linked In No question is being asked to people who are talking about dividing country or those on whose terrace petrol bombs were found. But someone who only requested for road to be cleared as it was causing inconvenience to 35 lakh people is being called a terrorist: Kapil Mishra. 15:35 (IST) Facebook Twitter Whats app Linked In CBSE postpones exams for class 10 and 12 in North-East Delhi. Heres complete list: CBSE postpones the following subject exams for class 10 and 12, scheduled for 28th and 29th February in #NortheastDelhi and affected parts of Delhi Exams in the rest of Delhi shall be conducted as scheduled. The next date of exam for affected students will be notified shortly. pic.twitter.com/pz58416ccI ANI (@ANI) February 27, 2020 15:25 (IST) Facebook Twitter Whats app Linked In Attempts to instigate violence were made for 2 months, Sonia Gandhi gave call for 'fight to the finish' at rally in December: Prakash Javadekar 15:21 (IST) Facebook Twitter Whats app Linked In Attempts to instigate violence were made for 2 months, Sonia Gandhi gave call for 'fight to the finish' at rally in December: Prakash Javadekar 15:17 (IST) Facebook Twitter Whats app Linked In AAP MLAs should have worked for peace, instead CM Kejriwal identified riot victims by religion in Assembly: Union Minister Prakash Javadekar. 15:07 (IST) Facebook Twitter Whats app Linked In The Kolkata Police has stepped up vigil, especially on social networking sites, as a precautionary measure in the wake of violence in Delhi. Kolkata Police Commissioner Anuj Sharma recently took to Twitter to caution citizens about the possibility of "motivated people" trying to create trouble by posting "inciting material. 15:04 (IST) Facebook Twitter Whats app Linked In UN Secretary General Antonio Guterres is "very saddened" by the casualties in the communal clashes in northeast Delh. Guterres' spokesman Stephane Dujarric said, "He's very saddened by the reports of casualties following the protests in Delhi, and as he has done in similar circumstances, he calls for maximum restraint and for violence to be avoided." 15:04 (IST) Facebook Twitter Whats app Linked In Delhi High Court allows impleadment of Centre in PIL seeking lodging of FIRs and arrests in northeast Delhi communal violence over CAA. 15:02 (IST) Facebook Twitter Whats app Linked In Delhi High Court asks Centre to file a response in the case and lists the matter for April 13. 14:57 (IST) Facebook Twitter Whats app Linked In UN Secretary General Antonio Guterres is "very saddened" by the casualties in the communal clashes in northeast Delhi over the amended citizenship law and calls for maximum restraint for violence to be avoided, his spokesperson said. 14:56 (IST) Facebook Twitter Whats app Linked In BJPs ideological parent RSS has also urged for peace. Modi government should ensure peace is restored, RSS general secretary Suresh 'Bhaiyyaji' Joshi said 14:55 (IST) Facebook Twitter Whats app Linked In Union Defence Minister Rajnath Singh reacts on Delhi violence: Situation is moving towards normalcy. ROMANIA: Prime Minister Mario Draghi informed Parliament that the Italian government is looking at ways to minimize the country's reliance on Russian gas supplies. Draghi sought to reassure Italians concerned about increased security threats and rising energy prices as a result of the military war between Russia and Ukraine, saying that "the government is working nonstop to counter the likely implications." Since before the Ukraine crisis, energy prices have been rising in Italy. According to the country's National Institute of Statistics (ISTAT), energy costs increased by 29.1% in December 2021 and by another 38.6% in January, according to reports. According to preliminary estimates, prices will continue to rise as a result of the crisis. Draghi stated that Italy imports 95% of its natural gas, with Russia accounting for more than 40% of its overall imports. He noted that while gas imports from Russia are unlikely to be halted, "it is critical to consider all possibilities." With the arrival of spring, the requirement for gas for heating will be reduced. According to him, the government has 2.5 billion cubic meters of gas in reserve, which should allow it to absorb supply disruptions. He admitted that the "situation risks becoming more problematic for the next winter months, as well as for the near future." NATO chief calls for diplomatic efforts to solve Ukraine crisis Russia and Ukraine expect to resume talks despite continuing conflict Until goals are achieved, Russian forces will continue their operation: Reports Mexico will not join the worldwide pile-on to censure Russia for its invasion of Ukraine since President Andres Manuel Lopez Obrador has stated that he wants to keep his country on friendly terms with all nations, the Russain Times reported. "We will not retaliate economically because we want to maintain good relations with all governments across the world," Lopez Obrador told reporters. He went on to say that being impartial will allow Mexico to "speak with the parties in conflict." The Mexican president's stance on the Ukraine crisis is a fresh diplomatic tactic, as other countries around the world, including former Warsaw Pact countries like Bulgaria and Romania, join the United States in attempting to punish Russia. The decision to remain neutral could damage Mexico's longstanding ties with the United States, but Lopez Obrador has been skeptical of US foreign policy. Mexico wants to retain economic connections with Russia and Moscow's Latin American allies while avoiding offending its largest trading partner, the United States. According to RT, Russia's Lukoil purchased a stake in a Mexican offshore oil project this year, and Lopez Obrador stated on Monday that his country will maintain its airspace open for Aeroflot flights to Mexico City. World's democracies strengthened settle counter rising autocracies: Biden Russian rocket attacks military academy in Ukraine, 21 people killed Putin's 'mistake' could pose huge threat across the world Jens Stoltenberg, the North Atlantic Treaty Organization's (NATO) Visiting Secretary General, has emphasized diplomatic efforts to resolve the ongoing Ukraine conflict. At a joint press conference with Estonian Prime Minister Kaja Kallas and visiting British Prime Minister Boris Johnson at the Tapa Army Base in northern Estonia on Tuesday, Stoltenberg made the statements. According to the report, Putin demanded an immediate end to the war in Ukraine, the withdrawal of Russian military, and the resumption of diplomatic attempts. "In response to Russia's strikes on Ukraine over the previous few weeks, we have strengthened our defense presence in the air, on land, and at sea," he said. "Over 100 jets on high alert operating from 30 different places and over 120 ships from the Baltic Sea to the Mediterranean," Stoltenberg said, adding that the United Kingdom, the United States, and other partners are deploying thousands more troops to the alliance's eastern flank. "We are deploying the NATO response force for the first time in our history," the NATO head added, describing NATO as a defensive alliance that does not desire conflict with Russia. The TASS news reported Tuesday, citing sources, that the second round of peace negotiations between Russia and Ukraine could take place on Wednesday. The first round of talks, which lasted approximately five hours in Belarus' Gomel region, ended on Monday with no evident result. Putin signs agreement on measures to ensure financial stability Russia-Ukraine Tention: Ukrainian forces repelling another Russian attack on Kharkiv Russia has begun to blow up power substations in Kharkiv NEW DELHI: Another special flight carrying 218 Indian nationals from Ukraine - evacuated via Bucharest - landed at Delhi airport on Wednesday morning as part of 'Operation Ganga.' This is the ninth flight of 'Operation Ganga,' which has rescued Indian citizens stranded in Ukraine. The Indian nationals were met at the airport by Union Minister Dr. Jitendra Singh. During a press conference, he said: "A total of 220 students arrived through Istanbul. I asked a girl where she was from, specifically what state she was from, but she just replied, "I'm from India." They can't believe they've returned to India owing to stress. We made certain they communicated with their parents ".. Another flight carrying Indian citizens is anticipated to arrive at the airport soon. Meanwhile, two Indian Air Force planes took off from Hindon airport this morning for Romania and Hungary to pick up trapped Indians.A total of 18,000 students were estimated to be stranded in the war-torn Ukraine. Foreign Secretary Harsh Vardhan Shringla stated on Tuesday that 12,000 of them had been returned. Biden announces US airspace closure to Russian planes Ukraine demands more weapons and assistance from France, Germany, Poland US shuts down airspace for Russia, said this about President Putin MOGADISHU The Somali National Army (SNA) has announced that ten al-Shabab militants have been killed in ongoing security operations in Lower Jubba in the country's south. On Tuesday, the SNA commanders in charge of the operation told state-run Radio Mogadishu that some terrorists were also wounded in the sting operation that took place in Yontoy, Raynerow, and Farbulay. "In special security operations conducted by the SNA in Yontoy, Raynerow, and Farbulay in Lower Jubba area on Tuesday, ten al-Shabab terrorists were killed, and several were wounded and seized," reports quote. The latest assault on the insurgents came just hours after security troops repelled an attack on their military facility in Hudur, Southwest State, killing five al-Shabab extremists early Tuesday. The terror group, which has increased its near-daily attacks during the election process, did not respond immediately. Prime Minister Mohamed Roble met with senior security and African Union Mission in Somalia (AMISOM) commanders on Tuesday, instructing them to improve the country's security. During the discussion, Roble told the officials that they needed to step up counter-terrorism efforts in the country and keep the capital stable ahead of the parliamentary speaker and presidential elections. Just as Mughals committed genocide in India, Russia is doing exactly same; Ukraine's ambassador Putin's Army returning! Ukraine evacuates territory in exchange for leaving Russian troops Russian rocket attacks military academy in Ukraine, 21 people killed